k ''~'i. bOVE LIGHTEN* "LABOR:` / A good wife rose from her bed cue morn, And - thought with a:, nervous dread ) Of the plies of clothes to bo washed, and more Than a dozen mouths to be fed. °, Thern's the melds to get ror the Mob in the field, AncLthe children to fix away To school, and the milk to be skimmed and churned; Aud all to be done this day. ed n I the nighty and all the wood - • Weirwet'as t could be; There were puddings and plea to bake, besides A loaf of cake for tea. And the day was hot and her aching head Throbbed wearily as she said, maidens but knew what good wives know. Thebwould be in no haste towed!" "Jennie, what do yon think , I told Ben Brown?" Called the farmer'freid the well; And a flush crept to his bronzed brow, And his eyes half baslifitify fell; "It was ibis," he said, and coming near, He smiled, and stooping town, Kissed her creek- 4 ' .'twas this, that VA were the best, And the dearest wife in Mwni",, Thu farmer went back to the field, and tke wife In a smiling and absent way, Bang snatches of tender 4ittle songs She'd not sungfor =my a day, And the -pain' in her head' , wee gone, and the clothes Were white as the foam of this sed; Her broad was light, and her butter was sweet, And as golden as it-could be. "Just think," the childrtfrf all called in a breath., "Tom Mood hoo,run off,,to He weuldn't, I know, if ate only. had As happy , a home as we." ' - The night came down and the.gopd wife smiled To herself, stalthe softly said: •"Tis so sweet to labor for those we love, It's not strange that &al& will wed!" (11Snimarekle Student Vile. (Translated for. thel Cinch: Bomai Ocinuneanial. from no Bismarck ok.] Otto von Bismarck- dealrixl to study in Heidelberg; but his mother was opposed to it; _ I believe; : because she thought - for- some reason m other that bop son might, at that university, contract the habit of drinking beer, Which was highly distasteful to tier, and so she chose, in F accordance with the advice of a , relative, Finance Ceunttelor E.earl, upon whom she Jelied2greatlY in matters of learning, the Univertity of Gottingen, where that cousin'of hers once had himself been a law student. Bismarck acquiesced in the change; he enjoyed already, by anticipation, tae pleatures of academic freedem,which seemed to him the more, delightful the more rigorous had been the surveillance under which he had been kept up to this time, and the less he had hitherto seen and known. Student life in Berlin was decidedly dull and uninteresting; it was not conspicuous anywhere, and, be sides Bismarck had been kept aloof from the circles of the students. He entered upon the enjoyment of his new liberty with a naivete of which the young men of our times can hardly form an adequate idea, and led, in his exuberant spirits and extraordinary vitality, a reckless life, and was not checked by sensible advisers, of whom he had none. - Even before lie reached Gottingen he fought his first duel, in. Berlin, as a- "mule," with a valiant *voting Israelite by the name of Wolf. It is true, Wolf fought like- the an cient P.arthians, only in-fleeing, but he did fight. For the rest, the rules of the code must hays heen utterly' disregarded at the first duel of Bismarck, ilifil3MllCh as he was wounded in the leg, while he struck the spec taeles, from; the nose of his younger adver s When Bismarck came to Gottingen, as we said before, he had no idea whatever of what student life was;acadernic customs, the"com ment," in short, everything was unknown to him. Nor was he immediately initiated into everything, for he did not meet there a•single intimate friend. Through the kindness of a certain M. Von Drenckhn n, whom he had formerly met quite casually, he was first in troduced to a circle of Mecklenburg students, who did not belong to certain corps, but led, nevertheless, a very . merry life. We made with them an excursion to the Hartz moun tains, and it was not until after his return from thence that the real delights of student life lva°. r. t 0 ... -dawtt - :;) upon hint. ;Bis marck gave a breakfast to his 'fellow excursionists as a coronation of the trip; on this occasion theyoung men were rather merrier than was in keeping with strict de corum, and finally a bottle was flung out of the window. Next morning "Dominus de Bismarck" was summoned before - the Uni - veraity Judge, and, in obedience to the orders of his superior, he set out to appear before that functionary. He wore on that occasion, a round hat, a gay-colored Berlin dressing-gown and large cavalry boots, accompanied by Ids; huge dog. The University Judge : was greatly , astonished • at this fantastic costume, and did not venture to pass by the dog until Bismarck had called it back. In consequence of bringing along this animal its fortunate owner was, in the first place, fined five dollars, and , then com menced a searching examination concerning the bottle that had been thrown out of the window. The conscientious functionary refused to content himself with Bismarck's explanation, namely, that the bottle had been thrown oat of the window, and had flown out of it. He insisted on knowing how it had come to pass, and was not satisfied until the defendant showed him, in a very . simple manner, how he had held the bottle in his hand, and, by a movement of the muscles, gave it the neces sary impulsion. The examination had proba bly vexed the young student somewhat, and, when on his way home,he waxed very wroth at four students of the corps of the Hano i verians, who met him and laughed at his cos a,., tume,although hardly any body could look at v , it without laughing. "Are you laughing at me ?" asked Bismarck, of the first of the four. N'~ The reply" was, "Why, of courife; I should do >,- think you might see that." For want of ex cel., perience, Bismarck was at a loss to know Vii. what to do under the circum dut, stances ; it is true that he felt that _4 he had a good prospect of fighting 1 " 9- ir a duel; but he lacked the necessary know- L 1 'it ledge of the forms and usages, and ho feared lest he should show his ignorance, when fortunately the words, generally used by German students under each circumstances, "stupid boy !" (Dummer funge!) occurred He flung these words into the teeth of his °adversary, and felt proud beyond measure when finally the four Hanoverlans challenged him. He took immediately all necessary steps,' and applied to the corps of the Brunswlekers for permission to fight with their arms. None of those four duels, however, were destined to come off;' fora shrewd officer of the corps of , the Hanover= inns, who lived in the same house with Bis marck, and had already kfound out:that Bis marck was made of the true stuff of genuine "corps" students, induced the four challen gers to take back their offensive remarks and apologizejo Bismarck, and shortly afterward Bismarck joined the society of the Han overlain. This exasperated the Brunswickers exceed ingly, for it was certainly contrary to aca demic ustge to apply for permission to fight a duel with the arms of one "corps," and then join another. But of this Bismarck had no idea. The second °dicers of the Bruns wick ets challenged Bismarck; they fought a &lel, and the upshot of the affair was that Bis marck, whose ire had been excited by some "flat" b1o•78 which his adversay had inflicted upon bim,cut an ugly gash across the Bruns wicker's rorehead. This first duel was followed by some twenty =more during the eighteen months which Bismarck passed at Gottingen. lie march passed through all of them very luck ily, beiug wounded only once by a piece from , 1,, =MEI THE DAIL'kO . BUPA...TIN --PIIILADELPHIA, r SA.TURDAY, .D7,cJIIpEIL ptip,3l,rg the blade of his adversary, which broke off and , hit 'his face, The scar is still visible on theiTrime Minister's cheek. , °Wing to the stormy life which Bismarck kd in Gottingen, he naturally did not find time to visit the lectures of the professors; nevertheless, they gave him very flattering testimonials for his application;' only old Pro fessor Hugo, the celebrated jurist, remarked that he had never 'non - :Bismarck `at.any of his leatures: Bismarck , had believed Hugo's lectures would 136 - 615 - drOwded that it would be safe for , him to itscribe hie ?name as a , 1 regular hearer of tiaem, end that his constant abseneitwoild net be nodded. ,lllifortiinately, hojyever, ; the old' jurist . had only, three hearers, and had noticed rand felt greatlY Offended at Bismarck's non=attendance. Once; during vacation , time; Bismarck had been at home,,but, what with the bla:ck, velvet coat which he wore, Wad his; blunt student tone, be had met with , very little approbation at the hands of his mother, whe Counted to '3nake__a_diploinatistef hiin a teed who ihongiit' that his condect and apPear-:. ance, yere bY theanithi. keeping yith the, career which ' she had m arked out for him., , itryperlin; too; whither Bismarck returned in _the, fall of 180, he still found tho free and' easy student life, by far too sweet' to ,bid fare well to it. It was not until the - State exami— nation, drew pigh, like a threatening l spectre, that he. consented` to visit, for the first time in his life, the lecture'of one of his professors. He went there, also, a second and last time, and saw very,clearly that even in the lec -tures of the illuitrious StivignY-ha‘ could--not learn, in the short time still remaining to him, as much law as he needed in - order to pass the' State examination. -after these two visits to the leothres of his'profea- Sore, he never returned to them. But his in defatigable industry, greatnattual ability, and the assistance of a clever private tutor, en!-_ ebled him to pass the State examination quite creditably at the appointed time. . During his student life in Berlin, Bismarck roomed at first with a Count Kayserlinzk from Courlimd, _who afterwfird became Cure ter of-llie_Vniveritity.of Dorpat; _ through hie constant intercourse with that young mai, he first learned to appreciate music, and often caused him to play to him; especially did he like to listen to . Beethoven's compositions. After Kayserlinak's departtire, an A.merican, Mr. Motley, who obtained - great celebrity by his histoty of the Dutch Republic and other historical-writings,, and ,also-represanted the North - American Republic for, some, time at Vienna, lived in . the, smite house with Bia muck. Clerical :Anecdo tes. In noticing a-little volume recently pub lished by the venerable Dean Ramsay, en titled "Pulpit Table-Talk," a cotemporary culls from its pages the following pointed and amusing anecdotes : The famous Robert Hill was of an inde pendent spirit, and winced, naturally enough, under the control exercised, or attempted to be exercised, by English Dissenters over the preaching of their pastors. A. member of his flock, presuming on his weight and influence in the congregation, had called, upon him and took him.to task for not more frequently or more fully preaching Predestination,which he hoped would -in future be more referred to. Hall, the most moderate and cautious of men on this dark question, was very indig nant; he looked steadily his censor for a time, and replied : "Sir, ~I perceive that you are predestined to- be. an ass i• and what is more, I see shat you are determined to 'make your calling and election sure " Some of the most striking preachers are eloquent. only; their discourses,when printed. often seem dull andwordy. George White field, the most prominent and . popular preacher of whom the Noncomforoustli can boast, was one of this class. He'could make himself audible to thirty , thousand people,and lrid them all attentive by his impassioned words : . .but he did not trust to, words only. He practised "effects;" and among 'them the' following foul. de force, which Dean Ram say tells us he often repeated. In preaching upon the discipline and self-denial of the saved, he wished to represent to his hearers that to secure this end they must enter the straight gate and pursue the narrow way; that salvation was not to he won except with labor and self-denial, adding: "You seem to think it a very simple matter; you think it quite easy. Oh, just as easy as for me to catch that insect flying past me," (grasping at a fly or supposed fly.) Then; after a little pause, he opened his hand, saying, in solemn tones : "But I have missed it ! ' Few open-air preachers have George Whitefield's lungs, and still fewer .his talent, and it is surprising what twaddle is listened to from itinerant divines,under the impression of' its being improving. There was a famous Methodist member or this sort in Somerset shire, whose repute on one occasion brought quite a large party of "the quality" of the country to hear,him; but the poor man, confused at seeing so unusual a number of hearers of the higher rank before him, got quite confused, and, wiping his forehead in his agitatien,coulcl only bring out in his Som ersetehire dialect, "Leadies and gentlemen, I be sal in a puzzlement !" Another Somersetshire preapher—a collier —adopted a very strange device to gain the attention of his hearers, who perhaps were of a sporting turn. He gave out for a text: "I can do all things." He then paused, and, looking at the Bible keenly, said ' in his own native Somersetshire dialect: "What's that thee say, Paul—`l can do sal things ?' I'li bet thee half a crown , o' that." So he took half a crown out of his pocket, and put it on the book. "However," he added, "let's see what the apostle has to say for himself." So he read on the next words: "Through Christ that strengtheneth me." "0," says he "if that's the terms of the bet, I'm off." And he put the half crown in his pocket again, and preached his sermon on the power of Chris tian grace. The other may bave an irreverent way with him; but after all, thelhing most needed by our modern divines is the secret of inter esting their congregations. Even John Wes ley found it sometimes necessary to rouse nodding heads and halt shut eyes with -the cry of "Fire, fire!" and when his alarmed people cried out: "Where, 'sir? where?" he would earnestly and solemnly reply:"ln hell, for those who sleep under, the preaching of the Word." 13 wift,taking the misfortune of Eutychus for his argument, began a ser mon with: "I have chosen these words with design, if possible.ha disturb some part of this audience of half an hour's sleep, for the con venience and exercise thereof this place, at this season of the day, is very much cele brated." Then he goeB on, in allusion, to Eutychus sleeping in the window: "The preachers' now in' the world, however they may exceed St. Paul in the art of setting men to sleep, do extremely fall short of him in the power of working miracles—therefore,hearers are become more cautious, so as to choose more safe and convenient stations and pos tures for their repose, without hazard of their persona, and upon the whole matter choose rather to trust , their destruction to a miracle than their safety." The Rev. James Bonner of Auchter muchty, of the Scottish Relief Kirk, hit upon a very pleasant means of rousing a drowsy congregation. It was a very warm day, the church closely packed, the occasion the Monday following communion.. Re observed, with some annoyance, many of the congre gation nodding and sleeping in their pews while be was preaching. He took his mea , sures accordingly, and introduced the word "hyperbolical" into his sermon, but ho paused, and said., "Nov, my friends, some t of you may not uoduretand this word hyper- I. I boncal-111 explain it. Suppose I were to say that this congregation were all asleep in this church at the present time, I would be .mow -:~ speaking hyperbolically, because" (looking around) don't believe much, more ' .than one-half of you are sleeping." The effect Was instantaneous, and -those who -were nodding recovered •themselves, and nudged their - sleeping -. neighbors, and the preacher went on, as if nothing had happened. , • In Crabbe's time it seems people sorhetimea slept in church, for he describes the effects of the vehethence of a • certain • preacher thus: • "He such gad coil with words, of vengeance That our best, sleepers , startled as, they ' slept 4 . - a coupletwhieh Dean Ramsay happily illus trates by 'a recent instance. " An'old clergy- man, who had got a strong-lunged helper, observed that one of,his hearers ,was becom ing rather irregular in his attendance at .church. .0f course, the divine 'felt it his duty to limit the backslider, and he accord ingly went to the house; but the guidman was not in, He inquired of the wife Way_ John was so seldom at church now. "On, indeed, minister," she replied, without the least hesitation, "that ,young man ye've: got roars sae loud that: John ,canna - sleep sae comfortable ;as he did when Preachin' yersel, sae peaceably." , • \ But, however lightly the subject of sleep • lug in church may be_txeated, - the question of interesting's congregation is a most import- . ant one to be considered by nll preachers, and is growing more ',so dal* , •In the general spread of knowledge and (especially) of thought (that is, Or the habit of f thinking for ourselves), • it is certainly, not so easy as of yore for the clergy to arrest the attention of their hearers. It is , true that we have no longer divines , who attach such extreme im portance to every syllable of the Sacred, text as'to select one insignificant word to preach _upon. Thus, a very devotional writer of the time of James I.; William. Austen, has left :a sermon for St. Bartholomew Day (although, by 'the' way, he was a ; layman), ,on the words "and BarthOlomew." , He points Out, how ,_ of this _Apostle never occurs in ScriPtiird - AxCept:.when- pre= : ceded by the copulative particle "and." He deduces from this - fact, the, general Christian duty and advantage of our giving each other mutual help and kindly, astastance, and he evolves this doctrine entirely from this use Made by the -tamed writers-of the - word "and." _Bat we have beard of a. preacher of this class meeting - with a• repartee of an 'equally Ingenious character with his own sermon. He was a candidate - for a lecture ship, and had to deliver a discoUrse before the trustees of the endowment, in the way of competition,so he - VritS detirmined to show how clever he could be, and ; took for his text the single word "but." He deduced from pence the great truth, and the important doctrine that no position is without some corresponding cross or opposite trial.. Naaman was a mighty man of valor and honorable, but he was a leper. The five cities of the plain were as fruitful as the gar den of Eden, but the men, of Sodom were awful sinners. The inhabitants of Ai put the Israelites to flight. but they wist not of the Hers in wait behind the city. . I called you, but ye answered not. Come, for all things are ready, but they would not come. And so on. When the clerical oitupetitor came down to the Vestrf; the Senior trustee of the lectureship met him, and politely remarked: "Sir,you gave us a most ingenious discoufse, and we are much obliged to you, but we don't think you are the preather that will do for us.'. There are, we'say; happily few such hair-snlitters in our modern pulpits as these; yet there is no doubt that the attraction of pulpit discourses is on the wane, and it be hoves our clergy to look to it. ILAUSELBEB• FALL, 1868. LUMBER FOR BUILDERS, LOW. F. H. W ILLIAMS, Seventeenth and Spring Garden Sts. no, th atu . .. . MAULS, B ROTHER & COo 1868. SPRUCE. aOIST. SPRUCE JOIST. 1868' SPRUHEMLOCE JCKOIST. B. R ERBBI LARGE 'STOOL ..-- LARGE.STOCK. RILIII.VMS, . avorrittEn. a co., v.. : : 2500 SOUTH STREET. 1868. FLORIDA FLOORING. FLORIDA FLOORING. 1868. CAROLINA rwartitier. VIRMLS.. FLOORSN___,G DELAWARE FLOQUX4G. AIM FLOORING. WALNUT FLOORING. FLORIDA ST PLANE.EP BOARDS. RAIL 1368. 4111M118N21'21:EME. 1868. WALN BOARDS. WALNUT PLANK. 1868. UN UNEFIME: L,8E32 1868• RED CEDAR. WALNUT AND PINE. 1868. SEASONED POPLAR. SEMESONED MERRY. 1868. ABEL WHITE Oa r LIOK PLANK AND BOARDS. ORY. 1868. CI GAR GAR BOX M MAKER& A TrFRCI 1868. CI SPANISH CEDAR L BOXW. BOARDS. FOR BALE O 1868. CAROLINA SCANTLING. 186& CAROLINA H: T. BILLS, NORWAY SCANTLING. LARGE ASSORTMENT. 1868. CEDAR SHINGLES. 186 a. CEDAR SHINGLES. PL PRE AST CYS ERING L ATH BRINDLE H. S. CREt3TNUT PLANE AND BOARDS. 1868. BEEtsurs C U R I A PIN E. 1868 CHOICE PATTERN PINE. FLORIDA CEDAR, FOR PATTERNS, FLORIDA RED CEDAR. HAIME, BROTHER 00. 51500 SOUTH lama FOR SALE. TO ARRIVE.- Fifty thousand tint quality Yellow Pine and illoant hns, from Enterprise Mills. B. Q w t . AHERN dic GREGG. delE4t4 134 South Delaware Avenue. DOPAILTNERSHIP9 • ISttOLUTION. D The old firm of Thomas H. Craig() dc Co. WWI dbl. solved, by mutual consent, on the 7th of December, 1868. CHARLES H. ORAIGE THOMAd W °HAK Je... Estate of THOMAS H. CRAlGE.dereased,late partners. Dna 17, 1868. The undereigned, on the '7th of December. 1848, entered into a ro.partuerenip ne manufacturers of cotton and crol. M len goods, at "Star'Wa." Philadelphia, under the name and etyle of THOMAS U. CRAIGE dr CO. CIIARLES ft. CRAIGIf, THOMAS H. CRAIGE„ A. H. mile& Duo. 17, 1868. dell 6L YA RTNERSIIIP DISSOLVED. ..The partnership _heretofore existing under the firm of ROOP, KIBBE & b/ tide day diesolved by the dew h of SAMUEL W. BOO?. The business will be settled by the surviving partnere at Noe, 24 and 25 Liank. etrett. • j°B l E r..x. r e li cut C o'r Sa F muelmnel W. Roop: , HENRY IL KIBBE, CLINTON J. TROUT, • JOSEPH C. ROOP, _ WILLIAM V. COLLADY, • Surviving Partnere. PaILAIMLIMIA, December 1,1668. TIARTNERSIIIP FORMED. 1 The tuudersigned hereby give. notice that they have formed a limited partnership, under the provislone of the act of Assembly, entitled 'Au act relative to special part InerehiPs." approved March 91,1816, and the supplements thereto, the tame of - which are the following, viz.: . I. 'J he name of the firm under which each partnerelilp Is to be conducted le KIBBE, COLLADA r & IROUr. 2. The general nature of the bueinesa intended to IA transacted le a general Dry Goode Importing and Com. imeiness. 3. lie General Partners are HENRY IL KIBBE, ro' aiding at the Girard lioueo, In the City of Philadelphia ; ILLIAIA Y. CuLLADAN • rteldinv at No. 1628 North 1 - ro .d area, in Inc Mee city. end WON J THOU rending at Ao. 742 Nts:ll Nineteenth: titroct, in the dame city ' • and the t metal Partner is JoSEPIi HOOP. resid ing at No. MB-Wallace Street, in the acid city of Phila delphia. • 4. The areount of capital contributed to the common stock by :mid Special Partner is J if ty Thousiusd (I 165,030) Dullare in cash. 6 The said partnerehip is to commence on the firat day of December, A . iso, and is to terminate on the drat day of January, A. D., 1871 HENRY R. KIBBE., WILLIAM Y. CuLLADAY, CLIPiTON J. TROUT - General Partners. JOSEPH U. ROUP, f3voclal Radnor. 00 linol TO RENT. • SECOND-STORY fR9NT - Room, WITIFt_STVI4II6, THE NEW BULLETIN BUILDING, 601 Chesinut St,x'ee l t. Apply: in the Publipatiork. Ofiloe.„ , r jrCO:ltMiV r i l THE LARGE AND-DESIRABLE STORE, No. 626 . ' Chestnut Street , Extending through to Jayno street. Be/4 80,090 per iirintra. Apply at 627, next door. • TO ,01F4 LET. The Second, Third and Fourth Mori OF WEE BElf BEHMEVO AT THE I N. W. Coiner' Eighth mndlinairot St& These are very desirable rooms,Aad the looatiod• Warp eurpassedforlaadaess purposes: APPLY to ON' THE PBEIYUBEd.. FOE RENT. Rtie Uremially Desirableßoerne on Second and Upper to , loora of Noe. 428 and .9IM Market etroet., 882118 feet to. Merchant street. PeneestenJanuaryl. ,noSwdretil BENT.—THE HANDSOME COUNTRY ile&T and -Brown Btone Mansion' and eight scree • o f r Ground. Edgewater. , N. 'J. All modern Worm. •Mentsvioe•bouser• stables -and 2 coachlionse:- Ground prey ed fruit and ornamental freest 100 fultbearin it fruit trees. Can be'bad'on leaSe of three yeas.' Four minutes* - walk of depot at Edgewater. Apply to CO P.EUVIC b JORDAN. 483 Walnut street. . . • •• • TO BENT---A !LARUE • AND CJMMODIOUS renal Yard, newly fitted up. %-lioply to MOYDSR a 0TE1314 .No. 2500 Marketatreet. the premises; - -delTett--= FOR RENT THE DEBIRAItLE STORE PROP. erty: N 0.680 Market street, running througgh - to Mi nor street. 'lwo k rotas: Also. first fluor and base. nient of Store, No, 5211dinor street. J. M. GUMMY & SONS. ?f3 Walnut street. _ r_TO LET.-9 ROOMED MODERN HOME, NO. 2224 Locust street.- By M. S. HOFFMAN, deb tfl) Bs4 Walnut street. _;. fitTO Lk T.—THE DESIRABLE RESIDENCE, NO. 924 Clinton serail; 10 rooms. 2 bath rooms. heater. Lot and cold water. and gas to third floor ; _in com plete orderA _immediate possession. a. Id. OUMMEY es SONS, 733 Walnut street • ' • NOR RENT—LARGE AND SMALL ROOMS well lighten. suitable for Insurance or Company offices or business purposes. in the handsome build ing, No. 612 and 614 Chestnut street. 3.1 H. GUALMEY & 50N8,4 • Walnut street rFOR BENT=THE HANDSOME rORE- AND Dwelling, No. 1024 Walnut street. J. M. GUMMY it SONS, 783 Walnut !kraut. 11/0111 Silk FOR SALE.—THE SUPERIOR. DWELLING. NO. 63b North Seventh. street. Lot SI feet front and about 57 feet in depth; containing eleven room. be. sides attics. within's. bath. dm. Apply on the premises or at No. 140 North Front street. dell) Zit TO EXCHANGE.-13 BRICK HOUSES IN CA3 den for a emtll farm near.- , del9 2t• GABDINER. va Walnut street. • ART • RXCETANGE.—K 270 .s ,; F:rm. land and building' f. ; Walnutatraet. IcFOR -SALE OW , acieOraln and Ora del9 good, near Salem. lie !ATE " OF - HENRY' HOFF. • airable farm. 11236 acrea.'Wii • Road to .131a.ckwoodatown, .d house. 2 barns and outbuild• of cultivation; near churches, Price $lOO ar acre. For fur. THOMAS Zs SONS. 189 and ' hilada. de&1e.12.14.17-1.9 FOR SALE—ES 1 Deceased. A very .d liametorrn Turnpik Camden county, N. J.; go tam: land In high state schools, 'stores, &c., &c ther particulars apply to 141 South Fourth atrett, TO SENT, Ell evi lS.IBLIED.— A owns bre an nne dence,with kback buildings, situ do on the west of Fifteenth; has every id is in good order. Lot 20 feet to a erect. J. M. OILS:131.El( & FOB. 6.A.LE 0 : liandeome Pour three•etory doubl south side of Pine etre , modern convenience I front by. 130 feet deep BONS, 7 , 33 Wa'nut et JIBE_ HANDSOME. MODERN 4k Residence with three-story double two heaters, range, bath. &o.; -well ;act order. No. 613 Nerth Eleventh. m SONS. 783 Walnut street. r FOR. - BALE, FOR. ix • ''backbuilding built. and in p_n J. M. OUMMEYI MODEBN BUILT BOUdEli SITU. ifteenth, N. Sixteenth. N. Thirteenth th. N. Bread'etreetWeat Weiteee,w. 8 psinig Belden arid N. Nineteenth et.. 1 Wainutetreet. ra FUR SAL ate North street, N. Green etreet, W M. C. MI KEY. OR RENT. —THE LARGE STORE, v,otteet. Apply on the premises, or to No. 540 North Fifth street, or the owner ddressing Box Pall Philadelphia Post. de4 tt inFOR SAL b 10.418 Are D. M. FO 4 offimay be eeen by ce. 12 FOR- BA .E—THE HANDSOME DOUBLE 3 story brick, Residence,. 86 feet front, with back buildings; lolled in the beet manner, with extra conveniences. o. 400 Aouth Eighth street. Lot 114 feet deep. J. M. GU MEY ds SONS. 733 Walnut street. itFOR BALE—THE VALUABLE FOUR-STORY Brick Residence.eituate on the southeast cor. Broad and Spruce streets; 90 feet front on Spruce Iv too feet on Broad. street. J. M. OUMMBY & SUNS. 783 Walnutetreet. - A EFFOR SALE ---THE HANDSOME THREE STORY rlck Beddow" with attics and back baffling& ituate No. 819 south Tenth street. Lot 21 feet inch a front by 95 feet deep. immediate poeseeelon given. J. M., GUMMLY & SONS. 783 Walnut Weer. GREEN STREET—FOE SALE.—A HANDSOME seModern Brick Residence, 20 feet front, with three " story double back buildings, built and is:Wished throughout in the beet manner, with extra conveniences, and in excellent order, situate on the north side of Green street, above Twentieth street. Immediate possession given. J. M. SUMMEY & SONS. 733 Walnut at eat: en FOR' SALE—DWELLINGS.— FIRST-CLASS Country Beet, &hoot-house lane. No. 150 s North Broad street. No. 2044 Locust street. No. 118 North Nineteenth - above Arch street. No. 508 South Filth street. Two Fine Cottages, Stable . iladelphia. Fine Dwelling, with West ehriadelphia. Two three story Dwellings, Kensington. A pply to COPPUOK JORDAN. 433 Walnut street. srou.AGE RECEIVING AND STORAGE YARD. 20084 MO, 2012 Market street.—Trackage and atorage for lumbdr.iron„ coal, grain, bark. prodube and all Linda of merchan dise. Also, room for loading cars from shipment. Terms Reasonable. no2o tf F. L. STEIN 411MIMPEESJ8* IStIJIDZS* For Boston---Steamshiu Line Direot SAILING FROM EACH PORT EVERY FIVE DAYS. FROM PINE STREE , T PIULADELFILIA. AND LONG WHARF BOSTON t - This line is cotnposed of the first-class Steamships. HOMAN, 1,488 tons, Captain 0. Baker. SIA X 094 1,230 tone, Captain F. M. Boggs. A 0 gin As N. 1,298 tone. Captain Crowell. The ROMAN. from Phila..Baturday. Dec. 19, at 6P. M. The SAXON, from Boston, on Saturday, Dec. 19, at 8 P.M These titeamships sail 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 all points in New England and for warded as directed. insurance For Freight or Passage (superior accommodations) apply to HENRY WINBOti mv3l 838 South Delaware avenue. PHILADELPHIA A ND SOUTHERN M ILL 1131 EAMBHIP COMPANY'S REGULAB LINES. QUEEN STREET WHARF. The JUNIATA wilt sail for NEW ORLEANS,' vin AVANA, on Tuesday'. Dee. , 2l3at o'clock A.. M. , • . The will sail from tillW ORLEANS:Ida HA VANA. '1 he WYOMING will sail for, SAVANNAH on Bator. turday. December 26th, at 8 o'clock A. M. The TONAWANDAwI,I nail from SAVANNAH on 80, turday. December 26th. The PIONEER will nail for 'WILMINGTON. N.C., on at 8 o'clock A.M. Through Hills of Lading signed, and Plunge Tickets cold for all pointe South and West. For Freight or Paesage apply to CHARLES E. LILImPf3. Freight and Passenger Agent, 186 Walnut street. WILLIAM L. JAMES, General Agent, e ...' Queen Street Wharf. HAVANA STE/MEM. • • BAILING EVIsItV 21 DAYS. These steamers will leave this port for Ha. vana every third Wednesday, at 8 o'clock A. M. • • _Tim steamship STARS AND 6TRIPES, Captain Holmes, will sail for Havana on Wednesday morning, January 6, at 8 o'clock A.H. Passage. 640 currency. Pas% rims mart be Tr pith passports. No freight received • lay. Rocamed rates of ft WATTSON k SONS, lora' Delaware avenue. _ FOR 131tEMFN—PETROLEUM. TEIE N. G. Ship Gorrui ho dee atchi s 4 — f r un tu o o n it y bov4 port. t' or eight of Refined i'otroli?t - poeeage. aPPIY to WOAKIIIAN No. 123 Walnut NOTICE—FOR NEW YORii, VIA .r .NDelaware and Raritan Canal—Swiftsure ,^ , -•''..,...:. Traigrnortation Coinpany—liealwelt and Eiwitteure 1 ibee.—The butinesa by diene Lifted win be re turned on and after the 19th of March. For Freight, wilful) wi 1 lie taken en ao , ounnodating torms,apply to Win. M. 1341h1) & CO.. 11 1 1 tioutli Whin yea. .... • /10NbIUNEE9 •StX. TONS OLD IRON / I laugo bnits (561 pieet.H), ohipperl by M.euprrl J. fi,holn. field none Cloodmxp per Amer, Brig Louisa Miller." Leighton. Molitor. from Liver, Oct „Philadetnliiik. will pleaae canal the °nice , f the uudureigned, pay froixtit on the above, end receive the mune.. Apyguit, WRIGHT dr. 1301'1E4 LID Walnut etroel. • del Ll y IXL 13: a si< 1m Corner or Ninth and: 'Arch Sireati, loor Ladlem Ana Gentlemen and Children. °nen for the Wintrr Course. - • ' . - Open Day 'and Even'ng. • _ __Callin _Denson errand tor_CArcular..l.. • dald-tu th 84, , LEIVIa• AMERICAN LCADEMY OE.MUBIO. respectfully airnouncee one coutio amour= BATURDAY DVENgI G and AFTERNOON.Dec.I9.IB6B. _ assisted by. the follemOntorite aribta MlBO BARTON, of 800 n, ' 77- Mit. GUBTAVOB P. Ha Baritone. MR. EGbEILT LANSlNG,..rfaulet and Accompanist. , ADVINIoN, ONBIA/LLAII.. e.AMILIr CIRCLE.. FIFTY CENTS; - Beale can be secured, tvitheut e*tra charge, at Gould'e Plano Warordoma, No. 923' Chestnut street, and at the •Academrof ; Bala of beats will commence on 'Wednesday morning, Dec. 16,"at 0 O'clock. • CONDERT.—Doore open at 7 commence at -8 o'clock. - _ ;MATINEE -Doors open at ISO; commence at *BO B. M. . kt. TUU.SBULL. delg.7t ' 7 . flualnom Manager. USICAL FUND HALL _ 17.1. RA4 URDAY EVENlNfi,Docctubilr 19th„ 1801. GRAND fiYhirlitilly CONCERT BY , BENTZ HASSLER% COMBINED OItUDESTRA. OP _ Y PERFOR MERS. 311813 IiENRIETTA MARESTEIN. The first Appesslateo • in this city of this young rand wonderful Findsr.• . . • MR. wet 13TOD JIC A REFOAMATION n'Y PROXY. - By Mendelasohn. . • BIEN °VERTU= D 9 Wagner. • Tickets. . i . • . • • . . • ••be 00 For B ale by Dfr Boner . ler, prA Chestnut so reek • Ticket* et the door, on the evening of Concert . $1 Doors oven at COneat Ala r . C • Cbestnut itres_L, iiebove tivelfth., WEDNESDAY Pecember 23d, ' FLllbire&l3l', - . kossINEAB T. Ballot U&L.' PIIINE& T.BARNUM. PIIINFLtiII T. N UM. rLIINEAS T. BaRNUM, • ' pHINFABT.BABNUM. WILL. LEUTUR,III ON • _THE ART. ORM ON EYGETI7IIOI--. TICKETS- - OR. . - .FFTY CENTS For Bale at 838 estn street. ' "Ch ut'l9.3t. DIOKBON 11110/3. 820 Walnut street. A, NATIONAL POULTRY EXIIIIIIIION. • Under the auspices of the PENNBYLVANLs. POULTRY . SOCIETY . Will be held it HORTICULTURAL rum, Broad street, below Locust from Bcceter Open freht 10 A. M. until 10 P. daily. . Admiselon. 25 cents: Children.ls cents; Season Tickets, BL • The Germania Orchestra. Brigade Bind hew been es. gaged for the occasion. • 00.11141TTSE OF ASSALISOEMENIS. Thomas A. Andrews, Samuel J•otrarfleol. John McGowan. Wm. Wister. Charles T. Bonsai': _ _ 41617.18151 u th tat BE PUBLIC REHEARSALS OF THE GERMANIA T ORCHEbTBA svtil be discontinued on account or the Ball having been previously engaged tor fah% die. .1 her will_ be resumed on December 'Engagements team be made by addressing - G. BASTER?. _nit Monterey streft vnTuGps hiusbc StoM 1031 'Chestnut street. sr ANDRA% Music Store; 1101 Obestnut street. ocll4ll MUSICAL FUND ALL. CARL SEM Z ANTS MARK HASSLER'S GRAN_D OROIakSTRAISIATINEE9._ EVERY. SATURDAY AFT/MtNOOR, AT 534 O'CLOCK. Package of lour Ticket 5..:......... . .. ....... SI Single *di:pinion, .For sole at Carl Sentes Offiee(Boner's Storo).1102 Cheat nut eet. street. aid at Mark Mudd% Oilice. 2 14 et, Eigheelth str " • • tl DARLUR COINCERTS.—N ATATORKINC AVG. .L Broad Streetdbelow Walnut. -'BE(XIND C4' jNBER of the 8e11501:1 SeTURDAY EVENING. December letb. Tickets aed• programmes at L. hf egar's elude Store, and at the door. de14at.w.44.4t• AMERICAN CONSERVATORYIq_E" MUBIC. TWENTY-Y - 11 , TH DIATINZE, J&N. 6. Fowth Grand Concert, ,Inaugaratlan Day, March 4th. Bea Notice in Mutlcal column. doll 100 AoADEhnr OFONE AE STN RTS. _UT CH Street, above Tenth. Ofea from 9A. M. to e P. M.' Berdamln West's Gy . t P . iCtirre of ' .: C • ..._ ECTED earl on : . 1.; . ~, lir ' . 10290 FOX'S AMERICAN VARIETY THEATRE. EVERY EVENING and GREAT COMBIRMSSRVitfigrNr /• • . . 11 Birsj ••• it eeetier. Bonz. wanes- ORPHANS` WHIT BALE.—EBTATE liEt..• nard,ltie deceased. .THOMIMS & tiON2. Atte. Coveter. rilusble property Three-story brick Tav ern and Dwel ling and large Lot,No: 2518 Callowhin Street with a stone building in the rear, 88. feet front. Fifteenth Ward. ,l'orstrant to an order of the Orphans , Cout. for the city and county of rhiladelphbs. Will be gold at Public sale , on Tuesday 'January sth, PRA at 12 o'clock, noon, at the Fbiladeltpla Exchange.' the fol owing de. scribed property. late o Bernard [teeny, deceased,vir.: All that lot of ground. with t he buildings thereon erected, situate' in the latadistrict of 'Spring Garden. now. Fit. teenth Ward, of the city of Fbiladelph;a; on the north side of,Villovibill street. be at the distance of 61 ft et from the east ling of a street, lormerly called resat street, and now vacated; and the elle thereof being the property of the city of Philadelphia; extending thence eoutheastwardly along Callow - hill stre et lit feet: thence extending northeaetwardly at right angler with said Cal• lowhill sir' et gi feet lo'' inches; thence northeastwartily at right angles with Biddle street 68 feet 2% inches to the south side of Biddle street- thence Westwardly ' along the south side of Biddle street 88 ft. to scorner of ground.cow or late of limyL Williams; thence sonthwardly at right tingles with Biddle street 58 feet 734 inches to a Boundedint:theme° southwestsyardly at tight angles with Cal. et 72 feet 831 inches to the place of beginning. the north by Biddle stmt. south by Callow hill street and east ard west by other ground newer late of the said Henry I. Williams. Under and subject to a certain yearly pound rent or sum of 111119, payable half yearly, on the brat day of the months of January and July, in each and every year hereaftdr forever, 4 5 he abet e premises aro subject to a mortgage of $2,275 = By the Court. JOB P.P H MFOARY. Cie* O. C. JOHN MoBRIDE. Administrator. N. B. —The improvements are a three-story brick tav ern and dwelling, with three-story back buildings. No. 21119 Callewhill street, with a stone building in the rear on Biddle street, now need es a distillery. M. THOMAS & BONS, Auctioneers, ad 2 19.403 139 and 141 South Fourth street. EORPHANS , COURT PEREMPTORY SALK - Estate of Dr. David Gilbert, deceased.-Thomas b• s one. Auctioneers Very Valuable Businees Loca tion. Modern Four story Brick Residence. No. 781 Arch etreet, east of Eighth 'Arcot: 17 feet front, 140 feet deep to a 22 feet wide street.. Two fronts. Pursuant to an -atlas order of the Orphans" Court for the city and ,peurity of Philedelebia, will be sold at public sale. without reserve, on Tuesday, December 29, leM, at 12 o ' clock noon, at the Ph il adelphia Exchange. the following described pre. part.. late of Dr. David Gilbert, decea s ed : All th t tour-story brick meesuage and lot of ground, situate on the. north side of Arch street, at the distance of 62 feet east of Eighth street; containing in iront' on Arch street 17 feet, and extending in depth 140 feet to a 92 feet wide avenue called Winfield Place. Bounded northward by the said Winfield Place, northward by tho' said Ar lr street, eastward by a messuage and let late of rileho.rur Weaver, and westwardly by a me,stage and let now tr late of Joseph Price and Elizabeth Ge his wife. Being the 611[1113 To embus which Joseph Price and Elizabeth lite wife by indenture dated November PA A. D. 1864. recorded in the office for recording deeds. &c., in the city of Phila delphia, in Dead Book L. R. 8.. No. 63. Page 848. &c.. granted and conveyed unto the maid David Gilbert, in fee. Together with the free "and common use:right, lib. arty, ana privilege of the geld Winfield Place at all times hereafter forever. The above is a very desirable arid valuable residence; Lae all the modem conveniences, and located in one of the most valuable bustnese eqUares on Arch street; four stories high. marble to second-story: four-story baoc buildings; has office, dining room. breakfast room , win. ter and mummer kitchen on the firetiloor; largo parlor and reception room on second floor; sewing room and commodious chambers above; gas throughout; bath and hot and cold wider. water cloeet, furnace, cooking range,' die.; flax pavement; vault under front pavement, 4 4,- • Sale absolute. JOSEPH MEGARY, Clerk 0..0. WM. tR. GILBe.RT, Adminietrator. . , M. THOMAS dr.E.OAk, Auctioneera. de8,19,28 • 133 and 141 Smith Fourth street. --- • --- - • -.- tPEREMPTORY SALE--BY OR DER OF HEIRS end alias order of Orphans' Coure - - . . homes & Bone, ' Auctioneers.-Estates of Maturate, Minors, Isabella Coltman, under will of lealab Betimes!. deceased.-Four Mon' Prick Dwelling, No: 847 North Front etreet extend lug through to Water street, where it is five stores high. - On Tuesday:December 22tb, at -12 o'clock, soon, will be sold et public sale, at the _Exchange, all that buck met. silage , and lot of ground situate on tho bank of Front and Water streets, 10 feet' 10 inches southward of. Callowhitl street; contaiziog in breadth north and south 13 feet or then' &bouts, a, d in length mutt and west about 40 feet, more toeless. Bounded north by the corner nreeSuage and lot of Thomas Britton, eastward by Water street, south• ward by another bank messuago and lot late of Thomas Britton. add westward by Front street - aforettaid. - Being tbe EMI+ premises which Jonethan Penrose. Esq., High Sheriff of the city and county of Philadelphia. ty Deed Polk bearing date let of April. A. D. 1800, acanowledg..d in open Supreme Court at Philadelpbia. September ad A. D. 'IRO, and entered in Book 8., page 16; grented and con yed auto lsatah Nathan, in foe. , IW" Bale absolute. • JOSEPH - MEGARY, Clerk O. 0. By the,Court, M THOMAS A SOD.B, Auotioneers, , . .de0,19. 0 8 ' 189 and 141 South Fourth street, Phila. EXEIJUTORS , •• BALE.—ESTATE' OF WILLIAM Reshworth, deceased.—Thomas & Sons,Auctioneers. - -Business Stand.—Threostoty Brick Hotel and Dwelling, known as the "Friendship," Tuesdaytral W r stir t, E' Guth of - Walnut street.—On Dec. 29, 18C8. at 12 o'clock, Doon, wilt be sold at public sale, at the Philadelphia I. xcbange, all,thote two continuous lots or ground, and three-story brick hotel and dwelling. known as the '?Filendship , " situate on the east side of Water street. about ea feet south of Walnut street, Nos. 2c9 and 211; containing together in front about 83 fret, and in depth about 46 feet to al2 feet wide court or a llP" . Cloar of all incumbrancs. IMr" lunuacalate possession M. TBOM AS & SONS. Auctioneers. del9 19 26 139 aid 141 South Fourth street. , -tn kI L ESTATE.-'rHOMAS littolaceo Stand. Throo-otor, Brick Moro and 1./walling, ho. 209 Arch otr. at, oart of Third. On. Tueiday, 1/comber 99, Ng% at 12 o'clock, noon, . ill bo sold at public dale. without retetste, at the.. Phibdelphia. -Exchtnige. ''•all .t three story in'o,knittlittuaga and lotof ground, eltuate on tit, north ride of Arch Arta, west of Idecond mtrea, 219; contdinlag itd f. out on Arch' strect 12 foot ilvo itichto, and ex t 4.n ding in &Oh 51 feat. it itt occupied as a store and dwollint:. TcrJne-$2,000 way remain on : Mortgage. THOMAS & Audio/Uteri% don V 26 . 129 and 141 Qoath, Focixt& lltteat. lIIIIIIIM G): ND: MATINEE REAL _ESTATE ISALLE/Pse ORPHANS' COURT BALK—THOMAS & BONS I • Auctioneers.-=Fourstory „Brick Beeldetice. No. Md outh Fifth street, boiow Spruce street.' On Tam. . di y December 12. NM& at lit o'clock, noon, will be sold _ , itali3, at the Philadelphia Exchange. the following ;- described nroperty. vie.: A ll that fourstory brick mos. Image end lot- of 'ground, situate emene east side of Plitt& !street. ho 'OlB, between titmice and Pine - shoe' . in the City of Philadelphia • beginning at a_polat on Fifth etreett being a point of ground of t;harlos Robb; thence extend. ins eastward slop g thesroun of Charles - Robb aforeesid •48 feet 2 'tootles; thence ".ettendlng `southward 434'1 inches; thence ea - lending eastward 82 feet 8 inches; thence extending southward -14 feet 1034 inches; thence extending westward at right angles with .1 , Mb street 81 toot 6 inches( to Fifth street and thence extending northward along the 114171016 feet 3 - bloke-lite the place of beginning. Bounded on the north' by 'round of the said Charles Robb; en the east partly, . by the said' ground. of Ober's' Robb. and ' partly by the head Of a 2 feet (Finches wide alley h. on the south by , ground.of Cbristion, and on the wes gu n y Fifth strei t aferesaid.-- Together , with the full use oriel. lege of the said 2 feet it inches wide alley, leading into and from Green's court, and of free Ingress, ogress and re grcre.'into, out of ; over and along the same. at• all times hereafter forever...end tegother with the aPportenances By an order of: the Orphans" Court -for the city and • county of iiiilaeolphia. James M. Nesmith. Trust.° et the - ono fall undivided third part of the alms described Ora robes, held by him in trust for the separate use of Mary B. bitsmith..un der the lest will of James deed: Ohs% the BAIA Mary 11,'Neernith. being seised of two undt „- , videe third parts, thereof In fee). was authorized and. I directed to unite with the. said Mary B. No.mith in the , sale of the said premises," and cell at public side, Infer' _ simple. clear of all trusts and limitations whatever, all that, said one undivided third.plut thereof, eo as aferesaid held by him in trust. ire. N. H.—The bottle contains ten . irooras ; blur gas, bath. &e. • MARY B. NEAMITLI. JAMES M NESMITH. Trustee. JOSEPII MEGARY, Clerk • M.: 110MA8 & SONS. Auctioneers.' del 12 19. , ' Nos. IE9 and 141 South Fourth street. ri., REAL , F.STAPI9 - - THOMAS- .h BONG' .8 aLE.- - ,B anthem° Modern three.etory Brick Residence, No 6.93 North Twelfth street. south Wallace street, 11 feet frent,"l2o,feet deep to Andress street, two fronts —On , Tuesday, eel% 1808, at 12 o'clock, noon. will to sold at public , sale, at the PhllitAelphts, Exchange, all that hand. some modern threastory,nrick toessusge.withttirmtstory bark buildtrigs and lot of ground, situate on the west side _ of Twelfth street, south - of Wallace. !Moat, 631; con. taking -in front-en-Twellth-street 17.feet.-and-ext=de- - ins In depth 190 feet to Andress, street. The house is well and substantially built , and has all the modern - convent• maces; has parlor. dining room breakfast room, and kitchen on Gle find:floor: commodious ehambers. sitting room and "owing. room above; gas throughout, stationary wastudard, bath:and cold water. water closet, fur. nate, cooking range, ventilators In every room; marble vestibule. wash pave, large yard planted with shrubbstY. gra•oew waste water The propedy is, thorotighly drained all waste water by s 6 Inch iron pipe laid.' through t he' " cellar to tho culvert. Mll situate in. . a very desirable ;neighborhood, convenientto - Market, 'passenger rail. wave. ; , subject to a redeemable yearly ground rent of 6180. - Terms-68,000 may rtmairt on mortgage. May be ex amined any day - previous to side. - M.. TIIOMAS dr. SONS. Auctioneers. 189 and 141 South Fourth Street ..t-runav flArr • '- roontAtf • : -_- 1 Large and derdribiti - LO - r , Green lane. -East of the Yhliadalphia: GormantOwn and Nor ristown Railroad. Manaynnk. Twenty-lint Ward. On Tuesday, December 21. 1860. at 12 o'clock. noon. will bo sold at public aide. at the Yhllad.lphla Exchang4, all that Ipt of gromi. situate on Green tape. oast of the_Phil. Adelaide, hermantown and Noniaroven-naiirsad. Matm y-onk. Twenty.first Ward; huh:ming at. a point, on _northwesterly aide. of. Orecti_lane. a_ corner of_tids. and __ land Fold to the Philadelphia. Germantown an 4 Norris town Railroad Companvishence extending north 1:01 de& 40 min.;' west 67 feet 1 inch to point: thence northout. wardlY 62 feet-10 inches to a point; thence southeast wardly lo a line at riaht angles with eald Gresnians 69 . feet 2 irches to a point in the line of Green lane; thence along the aids of Green lane 22-feettrinehes to the place of beginning. • , See plan at the suction rooms. Smith M. ?DUMAS SS. Auctioneers. de 12e-12 122 and 141 Fourth street. fiEX ECbTOBS , SALE. _ESTATO OF ENOOII Dickinson. deceased. 66. Thomait & Sons. Auction. tem. On Tuesday. - December 22. - 166 d at 11 o'clock noon. will be sold et public sale, et the Philadelphia EX. change, the following described property. viz; No. I Two.etom brick dwelling. No. 4006 Story street. Twenty. fourth Ward. All that two brick dwelling and lot of ground: situate No. 40138 Story street, east 'of sorty.tl rat street; 16 feet trout. 76 feet 6 inches deep, to s 4 feet wide allay. with the prlviirge thereof. Irir" incumbronce. No. 2-:-Tsetostetry fume dwelling. No. 2840 Bridge street All that twost ry frame dwelling and lot of ground. south sldel of Bride° sweet, No. 3640; 26 feet I,ti inches front, and extending Indepth to land of William Bingo ham. deceased. by order of WILLI 4.11 , DICKINSON, EXecuter. -- El. T.U.081613 d SONS. Audllurets, - - 129 and 141 S. Fourth street. "[ PUBLIC SALE—THOMAS & — SONS. Ali(1TION. ems - Modem gototy brick residence, No 22 Pine street. On 'Tuesday, December 22, -et It coctock., neon, will be sold at public rate. at the I ladevins Ex. chef, ell that modern . 3. brick I:ecstatic. with 2- sto ack. "End lot of ground, situate on tee sou side' of Pine street. 96 - feet east of Twenty-third street. No. M'il; the lot czntalning In trout on Pine street 17 hot, ind extending In' depth 76 feet to aTi feet wide alley,leeding into Ta el:ay-third street, The house is new. and has all the modern co Veniences: gas, bath, hot and cold water, cooking ranee. &c.; parlor , dining room and kitchen on first fluor; two chambers. fittiog-room end bathroom on seconi_iloor. and two _reems.en. third door. Subject to a red. erns I,le ground rent ot $175. Immediate pouereion. Noy'. at N 0.226 South P•tirth street. THOMAS & SONEI. Auctioneers. LT.) ItL4 141 South Fotrth 'tract. ILEAC. F:-TATE.—TIIOIIAS SONS' SALE.— welt seemed redeemable Ground Rentz. each gee *year. On Tuesday. Dec. 29, Ltd% at 12 o'clock. noon. will be sold - at public sale, at the Philadelphia Ex. change. ell those 2 well secured redeemable ground mtg. ea each, clear of taxes, issuing out- of ,all those lots of ground and the bit k mean:ewes themon erected...a-Stoats on the south side of Wharton •• street,- Nos. 3 and Kll, commencing 147 feet JIM Inches east of Ninth street: one of them containing In rout 16 feet 234 inched, and the other 16 feet 1134 inches. and extending la depth 60 feet to *3 feet Wide alley and communicating with another alley 3 feot wide, leading southward into ar4 feet wide street, called Leonard street They are secured by 9 threostory brick dwellings. They will he sold towers:air. M. THOMAS dr SONO, Auctioneers. doll. , 19,18 - • 14 .t 141 Etouth Fourth street. eREAL ESTATE.—TUOMAR di BONS* BALE— llodern three-etory Brick Residence. N 0.142 South Third street. aboye dpruce street On Tnesday. preenlber 1868. at 12 Wclock. noon, will be sold at pith. 11c sale. at the rhilad4lph a Exchange. all that modern three-story brick messuage and lot of ground, sit safe on the west sids of Third street. 3d feet 6 Inches north of Spruce etrt N0..02: coo tenting in front on Third street 18 feet 8 inches and extending in depth 80 feet. together with the privilege of a 3 feet wide alley. It has the gas introduced ; bate, hot and cold water. &c. 1V:Cl, ar of all incumbrazme. Terme—Sauk may remain on mortgage. Br' Immediate rpossession. Keys at the Auction Rooms. M. TllOBl AB d BORIS, Auctioneers. 189 ad 141 South Fourth street. inREAL ESTATE. TE1031,613 & BONS' SALE" On Tuesday,. December 27,'68, at 12 o'clock noon. will be sold at public sate. at the Philadelphia Ex. change, the followieg de Berthed property. viz,:,Noel to 16. 16 three-story brick dwellings, r. og. 9111 to MG theta eive, Christian street. between Twenty-first and Twenty. second 'treas. All Mote 16 thmostory brick dwellings and lots of groundtbereunto belonging, situate, on the north side of Christian street. west of Tvrenty.fir4 street. Nos. 2111 to 2141 iticlttelve; each 16 feet front, and 70 feet deep to a Bfeet wide alley. a ith the privilege thereof Terme-832M0 may remain on ground rent and mortgage on each. L Immediate possession. Keys at N. W. corner Twenty. first and littleneck streets. LW They will be void separately, M. THOMAS & 13 INS, Auctioneers deb 19 189 and 141 South Fourth street. ORRIIANI3' COURT SALF.--E"-LTATE OF DANLEL E" McGee. deceased:-9 homes & Sons. Auctioneers.— Tnreostory Brick Dwelling, No. 967 Otsego street. north of Washington street. tiecond Ward.—Parmaet to an order of the Orphans' Court far the City and County of Philadelphia. will be sold at public sale, on Tuesday. December W. 1868, at 12 o'clock. noon, at the Philadelphia Exthenge. the fol - owing deecribed property,- late bf Daniel McGee. deceased, viz : All that lot of groundmith the three story brick messuage thereon erectef: situate on the east elde of Church (now (Melte) street, ho 967.47 feet 234 inches north of Washington street, Second Ward. containing in front on Church street 14 feet, and to depth 48 feet, includit gon the rear end thereof the •southern pat tof 11 8 feet wide alley to be left open. Bounded on the north and east bygreund now oriole of Wiliam P. Snyder, on the west by Claire h street, on the south by ground granted or, intended to have been granted' to William 1' Snyder and George 13. Sewell. Under and subject to the payment of a certain yearly ground rent of e2i6o-100, payable on the first days of January and JOY.. in each and every Year. unto Clement clumphreys and Andrew A. nroptuays. their heirs and assigns That the said premises have recently been tut in good repair, by the expenditures of the awn of i9200.+ 13y the Count. . JOSEPEI .NEGARY. Clerk O. C. JANE Ideal& Adrainistratrix. M.•THOMAS & BONS,. Auctioneer& Nee, 139 and 141 n. Fourth atreet de51926 ir.‘ PUBLIC BALE .- M. THOMAS & BONS. ACC lyiloneere.-7Very valuable Farm and Country Seat. 123 Acres, and !dill Property. If addondold. Camden county, iN. J,elx. miles from Camden by turnoike and railroad. -On Tuesday, December 29th, 1864. at 12 o'clock. noon.. will be sold at public sale, at the Philadelphia Ex change, all that.valurble farm and country seat, situate on a private lane, which is about one square from the main Weal . . and having a large front on Cooper's creek, Grover street, and convenient distance to the railroad station. El addondeld. Camden county. N. J., comprising re 128 acs, more or less, 20 acres of which is woodland. The improvements are a two•story frame mansion..4o feet front, 03 feet deep, with, a twovtory kitchen. hall 8 feet wide, rooms on - the - first - floor. and - 9 chambers; 8 frame tenant houses, frame barn and , stabling and out ' buildings. The land is in a high state of cultivation. The marl be de are inexhaustible. and t renounced. to be as good as any 'in the Water, There is a•mill seat,,the pond covering an area of about ten acres: along which is a beautiful grove of trees. The stream of water is never failiug, having tt fell of 24 feet-This power-is well cal culated for the manufacturing of cotton or woollen fab. ries, t Hint works or paper =titter. There is also a three story mill house, 80 by 40 feet. The house stands high. giving abe Malta view of th e antrounding country; it, adjoins the handsome country rents of William Mann. Er and others.' - .lt is about 6 miles from - Camden 'by railroad, and ono of the best driving AurePlkee in New Jersey. Terme-Half Cash. Possession March 25tb. It will be shown on application to the owner and occu pant, Mr John R. Borkins. See plan at the'A notion Rooms. • M. THOMAS & SONS. Auctioneers.. de 12 19 24 26 • . 139 and 1418 . Fourth street. rPEREMPTORY BALE.-FOR ACCOUNT CIF whom it may concern,- Thorned & Sons. Auctioneers, "II Mortgages, 86,681, 84,010 and $6186, given .by Bemire I Work and William McCoucli to the Hostonvillo. „Mantua and Fairmount Passenger Rail say Company. , -- On 't 'lmlay, December 29th, 1068, at 12 o'clock, twee, will Exchange, public sale,without r. servo, at the Philadelphia the following deic ibed inortgaipe, which may he Feen at the Auction tome, viz.: N..1.-All that mor t. gamier $6,887, secured by 1,807 acres of land in Bethel Township, Fulton county. Perresyleania.— , No. 3 -All that mortgage for :84 010. secured by 802 acres of lazd in , Providence township, Bedford coantY, Penn sylvan a.. • , • Ne. it -All that mortgage for s6,lB6secured by 1.2,26 acres of land in Howard township, Centre county, Pone:vi a,- Sale absolute. - hi. TBOMAB & SONS, Auctionents, del2 19 26 .• 189 arid 141 sout h Fourth street, taught A NBUIP fiCIENTIPWALLIe - taught at tho Philadelphia Riding school, ieourtit Ftteut above Vino. The horowi aro quiet and Moroi:01y trained+ For biro, aaddlo horaea.- Mao oar ringea ar all tinlen Or vedditi alt. parties,, opera, funerals. &0.. notooti trained to the as affle. THOMAS OttatGE & BO MEMO. 4 1 People who are fond - of dividing human , - creatures. by process of simple dichotomy°. into two classes, varying according to the' variattoe in the principle of dieltdon, might peat - ape - find a more significant classification thatemany-which-they- steopt r if -they- should " eeparate the world into those who make plans. and those who do not. Such a division Would have a feel root In nature, and would tell us in a single phrase ever, BJ many things about`the persons thus arranged, It is agreed that themill is. practically tbe most, important of the energies of the mind, bepause more than any other quality it determiaes, the use= 'fulness to a Stan ' himself, as well .as to , his neighbors, of all the rest of him, Now we can nowhere obtain a , better view' of. the strength and_other_prepertice of thiewill than- in considering the'atritude 'taken with respect to plans. Does a man make them, or does he drift through life "without • them? oaoe made, are they his master's, or'.does - he- yet retain a hand over-them? or does the mastery alternate, to the torment of all his days? How much effort does itneed to form a plan, and how much to, draw him away from the plan that, he hiss .formed? •In answering these questione yori fathom your friend's will to its veil lowest depths. - Obvi-- ' • "onely, - too, a study-of his plans, of his waht of them, reveals much else that, la good for One to know; whether' be makes rapidly -- . or tardily. whether after e,,broad, And pene-- • trating survey or only after a single glance. over the fide, whether be is pleased to reach , or is restleis arid unhasipy.under it—ail these points shed floods of light upon character, its prudence,. insight and, generel practicableness. People often stedy eharac ter in an-abstract and inferential Way: They take a hint or two from this- or that casual circeinstance, and then construct .the rest from this too slight •fonndetion, ailt . ; , learned zoologists - restoreextinct creatures from teeth. Nothing is so easy to do; no conclu sion is so hard, to expel from thimind as,orie -thus formed; 812dt:tone commonly ao shallow • - and delusive._ It b time_tk!Ats as _Philosophers constantly :enjoin upon ° 1113, must heeds argue from tilo-k9OW9 and, Itecertairiable to the unknoln; but then we must be Tully cer tified that the known is 'adequate to bear the . weight:we put upon it of •inference teeth... in libtewns and that we do not' natant) with the ascertainable and ascertained - what is only hypothetical- -and- --interred. 'And so,_ in reflecting - .on the character of aequaintanceaor , intimates, .. a great deal of foolish - Misinterpretation, leading to all manner of social vexations and mishaps, would be averted If people would follow the right method, and observes man eimply, not in imputed motives and casual htenorsjetor only in one or'-two-of` the things which he does, but in the plans which he forms, and the firmness or otherwise with which he sticks to them. This thing or that which one does =may be fcirtuitous, and in any :case is only_,a_fragment, not to be -judged rightly _ excepi in its relations with a judged circum stances that are difficult or impossible to reach 'A pi:. on the contrary, covers enough ground„ eludes s sufficient quantity of motive and as s• tion, stretches far enough, to lay open a Co itplete set of facts about the person who has ed it. Here the motives are tbleratt- .• 4, and yen are Sure that they are genuine and characteristic, not merely the casual prompting of the hour or single incident; because, though all men are constantly. liable to be drawn aside from their own nature by accidentor Mistake, everybody constructs his future course as he would wish it to be; and what a man wishes b a better test of his nature, ° from a friend's point of view, than any other. The world, of course, is mainly or entirely concerned with what he does, as is the friend too upon oceanion. If it were possible to sum up the .miseries which have come to men from excess of plan; and the miseries which have sprung from defect of plan, it would probably be very difficult to'strike a balance. We all of tiskpow people who go to either extreme— thcieewrhose life is one long process of drift ing,and their antity,pea whose ways are drawn in framework of iron. One can hardly tell who is the more linkleas—the man who lives from hand to mouth, not merely in matters of money, but in purpose, project, and work , done; or the other who, for want of, tact and pliancy, in'lses opportunity,-and faili to fit in with the thousand odd, occasions which circumstances present, but for which his pland of east iron has made •no allowance. In each case there is tremendous waste. 0 aly the irresolute unforeseeing person knows the misery of his own care. To the by sbender he is > usually a spectacle pleasantly ridiculous. He is an amusement to his friends, a half-humorous plague to, those wh) have to live with him or -•°k° " a him; but to him self he is me seen not a seriou. torment. To final-. ~,iabate and material for mental disputatiba " two courses are open, only one of follow, seems to be the temper pe.eiof a farce. Yet in fact it is nit_ NO "farcical to the hero himself to ,ht, and ponder and deeply deliberate , unit of two trains he shall take, which of two routes will suit him besewhich of half a dozen tasks he shall set about firstwhich of two schemes of life will best meet the needs of the time, the scope of his own faculties, the range of his own opportunities. Unless he is .a mere good-for-nothing.which on the whole very few men are,this indecision afflicts its victim as much as if it were a severe bodily sickness. The loss of time, first in the process of de liberation, and nest, in the interval between decision and action, the woful attrition of energy, and the general lowering of moral tone, overwhelm, a man who has any con science, and among his fellows he moves as one with a single leg and a single arm. His weakness is patent, and the world, with no will of his, soon finds out the skeleton. The weakness of the over-provident people is less -:-visible. To_the careless, outer eye theynre• worthy of. hendmiration and envy of all men. It is majestic - never to be in donbt never to" halt between twos desires, never to WM back, nor even dream Of turn ing back, after putting the - hand to the plow. No wonder that earnest novelists, especially if they be of the,-more ; eager and less con • centred sex, rim to this type for their heroes. To be able to make up, one's -mind in a trice, and then to be horribly unhappy if anything • interveneslo'hinder itlfitant i atition' upon one's resoletion, ia":,a temper for` pads. man of this stamp marches through lifelike the loco motive of an'express train EdOlig the rails,and weaker brethren who are dither without plans or else only moulkthem in clay or India rub ber look on the adamauttne creature as a hypochondriac might survey ' .a,; prize-fighter fresh from his training. Yet adamant has ito drawbacks, First,of • all, it is seldom found in natures of the finest: quality. In the char acter of sweetest savor, of delicacy, of con siderateness and humanity, there is mostly a touch ofsirresolution, a shade of unwilling ness to form plans which may • Jar with the little interests and little wishes of this person or that, as most plans are • found to do: somehow or other. There is d rigidity and fixedness about a plan, if you intend to • stick to it, from which men of the finest call 'bre are apt to shrink; it works too perempto rily, is too square, ; for a mind with 'a lurking sympathy for vagueness in the outlines of a purpose. Again, anybody with a natural propensity towards a planned life is pretty sure to be deeply penetrated with' egotism. Even those who make plans for the good of other people, as some of the most egotistic of human beings are immensely fond of doing, not uncommonly place their own personality fn everydetail and item,.' and any modiflea- Lion of the plan which Would get rid of ever se little of this would render it no better than chaps in their oyes. The adamantine person - 5.: 1 '71\ 4 ; ' „, ,!1 ,?,,.,' Tin jjAILYANAT EtlilliatiiliPTDP4llli.itADELPHlA SATURDAY DECEM ER 19 ; 1868.' - -'TRIPLE SHEET. Is seldom amiable: ' Consideration tor other people disturbs ,:,symmetry of construction and consistency 'of execution in plane.- la*e made, ;your , arrangements with every possible - regard -. in anticipation for the' well being of everybody concerned, and, this be ,,; mg_eone, any uiterruption t arising either from changed circumstances or froinitidepOtkiett opinion in -thepeople concerned, is of the na ture of an, irrelevancy, of' which the man hav ing what; he thinks a proper respeet • Jim hie down - will and purpose cannot be expected to take much account. Few situations that the world idlers arse more miserable in 'their 'kind than the;conjunction in marriage, in business, in tripi of pleasure, of ,the creature of;plans and the opposite kind of person to whom a plan .is a burdenandu terror. The brass, pot and the earthen pot' 'floating down the stream , together are meet types . of such a pOr, clash ing and striking against one another at every turn. The one wbo*ould fain drift easily from circumstance to circumstance, from one place to another; from a narrow present to ; a narrow future, is a frettkng thorn the ..flesh to the other for whom the present is 'a blank unless the future., is , exactly settled and de fined; and the latter in turn with his schem- , ing and . precision andfdetialedness, lays sore burdens one the weaker back of his com panion. kerhaps; then; it-is better to have al fragment of - adamant in one'S- - --compositida which may:enlarge itself, on fitting'occasions than to be encased in ft. :Above all things it:. is needful in ' Ole world that one , should be, pliant and anionniodating,'neVin principle„ but in the manner of its 'application. For duty is a thing of difficulty,and,niceness,callitig for much'delicate PondentOg, much outlook on this and on that, upon many , circunx stances and mutable conditions. Without °- this a man whersimply `ticks c to prinei- - :' ple," as he calls'acting on - 'the 'most rough, and ready or most convenihnt 'interpretation' of it ',that offers; is more likely than not to , rim a muck like s Malay, and Conuilo an end gninfous,tolinnelf and to all others who stand in his way. il:habit of If:inning in -1 flexible plantria-verriAten-Aso-morer4han , - a neat arti f ice fersbirking a ,laborioua and in terminable process.. -Pit sales the trouble of examining cases of conduct as they arise, and` tb a temperainent that - Valdes 'prompt cer tainty more, than the certainty of being as _right as careful thought could make one, it is no smallgiin toliaire a mind made - up;and a plan - ready shafiedY and fixed, in the face of every contingency that may . arise. ;:Just as people are said sometimes to join the Church of Rome-for : certainty's - sak.e,- surrendering the right of private judgment by one tremen dous act of private judgment, so an indolent waverer working himself up by colossal ef fort, not seldom settles his plan in reference to a set of difficulties before him, and then adheres to it in-mitArof alteration ofefte.tun- Standee; just anjthough„lt - Mated on reason, ildtfitta stukherrinens originally bern`of.eon scionavienkness.-zSaturciay Review:- Fesnintase - amenialea. A man's foes are those of his own house hold, and the keenest enemies of women are women themselves. No one can Inflict such humiliation on a woman as a woman can when she chooses; for if the art of high handed snubbing belongs to men, that of subtle wounding is peculiarly feminine, and is praetised - by the best bred of the sex. Women are nlways more or less antagonistic to each other... They are gregarious in lash-. ions and emulative in follies, but they cannot combine; they never suppott their weak sis ters; they shrink from those whd are stronger than the average; and if they could speak the truth boldly, they would confess to a 'radical contempt for each other's intellect, which perhaps is thereal-- _reason_ mby the sect of the "emancipated" commands so small a following. ; Half , a' dozen ordi nary men advecating 'emancipation" doc trines would do more .towards leavening the whole balletif wenuatklnd than any number of first-clasitwomen. Where they do stand by each other it latrominstinctive or peraonal affection, rather than from class solidarity. Andthia is one of the most striking distinc tions of sex, and one cause, among others, why men have the upper band; and , why they are able to;keep IL Certainly there are roe `sons, - sufficiently gotid,why women - do not more readily/ coalesce; and one is the im mense difference between thb two extremes —the silly being too silly to appreciate the .wise;: nd the weak too weak to bear the ar mow, of the strong. There is more .differ ence bettieen the outsiders among women *then there Is between those among rhea; the feminine characteristic of exaggeration making a gap which the medium or average man fills. The ways of women with each other more than > all else show the great difference between their morale and that of men. They flatter and coax as men could not do, but they are also more rude to each other than any man would,be to his fellow., It is amazing , to see the things they cars doand will bear—things which no man would dream of standing„' and which no man would dare to attempt. This is because they are not taught to respect each other, and because they have no 'fear of consequences. If one woman is insulted by 'another,' she cannot demand satisfaction or knock the of fender down,-and it is 'unladylike to swear and call names. She must bear what she can repay only in kind; but, to do her justice, she repays in a manner undeniably effective and to the point. There is nothing very pro flounced about the feminine mode of aggres sion and retaliation, and yet iris eloquent and sufficient for its purpose. It may be only a stare,' a shrug, a toss of the head; but women can throw an intensity of disdain into the Simplest gesture which answers the whole end perfectly. The un - abashed serenity and unflinching constancy with which one woman can stare down an other is in itself an art that requires a certain amount of natural genius, as well as careful milfivatioe.'' She puts up her eyeglass—not being shortsighted—and surveys the_ enemy standing two feet from her, with a sublime contempt for her whole condition, or with a 'Still more sublimeignoring ;of her existence altogether, that no words could give. If the enemy is sensitive and unused to , the kind of thing, she is absolutely crushed, des troyed for the time, and reduced t, the most pitiable , state. .. of self-abase ment.. If she of a teughr , fibre, and has had some experience °lieu:thane warlare,she returns the stare with a _corresponding 'amount Of contempt or of obliviousness ;;;and from that moment a, contest is begun which never ceases, and which continually g,a,ins in bitterness. The stare is the weapon ot offence most, in use among women, and is specially favored by the experienced against the younger and less seasoned. It le one of the instinctive arms native to the sex, and we ,haVe only to watch the introduction of two - girls to , each other to see this, and to learn bow even in youth is begun the exercise which tinielnd Use raise to such deadly perfection. In the conversations of women with each other we again meet with examples of their peculiar amenities to their own sex. They never refrain from showing how much they are bore* they contradict flatly, without the flimsiest veil of apology to hide their rudeness; and they interrupt ruthlessly, whatever , the subject in hand may be. One lady was giv ing another a minute account of how the lady looked yesterday'when she was married • to Mr. A.,of somewhat formidable repute,and with whom, if report -was to be trusted, her listener bad bad sundry,tender passages which made the mention of his marriage a notori ously sore subject. "AM I see volt have taken that old silk which Madame Josephine • wanted to palm off on ' me, q last . year," said the tortured listener brusquely, breaking into the narrative with out a lead of any kind; and the speaker was silenced. In this case it was the interchange of doubtful courtesies, vberein neither deserved pity; but to' make a - disparaging remark about a gown, in revenge Tor inning :tho knife - in. a- - wound, - - - was a :thoroughly feminine manner of retaliation, and one that would not have touched a man, - Such - shafts would - fall -- blunted -against. -the ragged skin of the coarser creature; and the date or pattern ofa bit of cloth would not have told Much against the loss-of a lover. But as most- women passionately care for dress, their toilet is one of their Most vulnerable parts. Ashamed to be unfashionable, they tolerate anything in each other rather .than shabbiness or eccentricity, even when plc turesque; hence a sarcastic allusion to the age of a few yards of silk is a return ,Wound of considerable depth when cleverly given. The introduction of• the womankind be longing to a favorite male acquaintance of lower ,social condition affords a splendid opportunity for the display- of feminine -temerity. The presentation cannot be refused, yet it is resented as an intrusion; and the :smaller woman is made to feel - that she has 'offended, "Another daughter, Mr. C.! You must have a dozen ;daughters, purely," a pee.ress said disilainfully to a commoner -whom personally she liked, but whose family she did not want to know. The pitior man' had but -two,-and- this was the itintrodnetion, of the second. Very painful to a high-spirited . gentlewomeniust be the - ,*65. , in Which a ',superior creature of this kind receives her, if Mot of the same set as herself. , ,The husband . ,of the inferior eteattireinaY-lie"adored;'-us -..men are adored by fashionable women who ,love only themselves ? • - and 'care 0011 , for,their; llown pleat - air& Artist, man of letters, beau s eabreur, he is the passing idol, the temporary •• toy-pf a certain circle; end his; wife has turbe tolerated for his sake,andhecause shelse, lady and -- fie to bepresented, thiough an outsider. Sothey.`patrone her...till_ the Poor-Wonitin'ts blood is on-fire; Or-they snub her till .. -she_ has no Moral consistency leftie her, and is reduced - Urit:Mere mass of Pnip. • They keep 4. . herinanetheirobM4lllle - they - tidk_ to - their intimates; or they - Orldt her into their eirele, where-she is made -to feel , like 'a Gentile 'among - the faithful, where either they leave her unspoken to altogether or else speak to her on subjects quite apar t the , general conversation, as if she was incapable - of nu de/standing them on their own gebund. They ask her to dinner-without 'her ;husband; and lake care that there is no one to meet her . whom she would like to see; but they Xtik him when they are at their grandest; and ex press their deep regret that his wife (Min, - vited)Pennot accompany him. They knew every turn and twist that can huniiliate her if she, has , pretensions which they .*hoose •tp demolish. - They praise her toilet for: its good-taste• in simplicity, when she thinks she - is One 'of the:finest - on - an - occasion on which no one can be too fine ; they tell her that pat-. ternefhers is perfect, and made just like the deaiducheas's famous dress last season, when elie believes :that shelias Madame Josephine's last, freshly imported ferim reris; they . cele brate her dinner as the very perfection of a refined-tinnily dinner without Parade or cost, though it has all been had from the crack confectioner's, and though the bill for the en tertainment will cause many,s day of family pinching.:. These are the things which women say to one another < when they wi n to pain and humiltate, and which pain an humiliatesome mere than would a positi • diagrite. - Fortsome women are,distaessingly sensitive about these little matters. Theit lives.am made Pp of trifles, and a failure iii a trifle is a failure in their object of life. i .•-. Women - cande,each other no end of le apitein a 'small way in society, not to speak of mischief of a graver kind. A hostess who has a grudge against one of her gueste can - al ways insure her a., disappointing evening tinder cover `'' of 'doing her supreme honor and ming her extra attention. If she sees the enemy engaged in a pleasant convex- Alien with one of the =de, stars, down she swoops, and lithe sweetest manner possible ' carries her off to another part of roomy to introduce her to' some sclitiol.girl-who can Only say yes or no in the wrong place- 7 .-"whe is dying for the honor of talking to you, my dear;" or to Bente unfledged stripling , who blushes groWS hot, and cannot stammer out two coesecutive sentences, but who is presented as a risinggeniue, and to be treated with the: consideration due to his future. As the persecution ,i,s.. done under the guise of extra friendliness, the poor victim cannot cry tint, nor yet resist ; but she knows that whenever, the,gpeatp Mrs._So had So's she will be seated next the stupidest man at table, and prevented froni`talking to any one she likes in the evening; ;end that. every visit to that ladi is made in some occult manner un pleasant to her. -'' - And' yet what has she to complain of ? She cannot complain that her hostess trusts to her for help in the success of her entertainment, and MOVealter about the room as a perambulating attraction which she has to dispense fairly among her guests, lest some should be jealous of the others. Eibe may know that the meaning is to annoy; but who can act on meaning as against manner ? How crooked soaves the first may be, if the last is straight the, case falls to the ground, and there is no room for rem.ottstrance. Wen women flirt as much 'to annoy other women as to attract men.• or amuse thetn „selves. If a wife has crossed swords with a friend, and the husband is in any way endur able, let her look out for retaliation. The woman she has offended will , take her re venge by flirting more or less openly with the husband* all the while loading the enemy with flattery if she is afraid of her, or snub. bing her without much disguise if she feels herself the etronger. The wife cannot help herself, unless things go too far , for public patience. • A jealous woman without proof is the butt of her society, and brings the whole world of women like a nest of . wasps about her ears. Ifehe is wise,she„ will ignore what she cannot laugh at; if sensitive,she will fret; if vindictive, she will repay., Nine times out ten, She - does - the last, - and, may be, with in tereat ; and so goes on 'the duel,though all the time the fighters appear to be most intimate friends, and on the best possible terms to welter. ~:But the range of these femtnine amenities is - not confined to women; it includes men as well ; and women continually,, take advantage of their posi tion to insult the Stronger sex by saying to •them things w hich can be neither answered nor resented. .A: woman can insinuate that yeti - have - just;-cheated;at cards, with _the miietest face and the gentlest voice imagin able; she can give you the lie direct as coolly as ir she was correcting: a misprint; and you cannot defend yourself.' To 'brawl with her would be pardonable,to contradict her is use less, and the sense o r society' does not allow you to show her any active •displeasure. Ia this instance ::the:. weaker creature is the stronger, and the most defenceless is the sufest. You have only the 'rather question- , able consolation of knowing that you are not •singular in your discomfiture, and• that when she has made an end of you she will probably have a turn with your betters,and make them, too,dance to her piping,whether they like the tune or riot. At all events; if she httmiliates you she humiliates your sisters still more; and with the knowledge that, hardly handled as you have been,others are yet more severely dealt with, you must learn to be coetent,and to "practice' a grim kind of patienee as well as nature will , permit.--Saturday Review. , 'ODGERS' - 'AND." and POCKET JR , KNIVE.S,IPEARL and STAG ..lIANDLEA of beau. tiful finish. RODGERS , and WADE & BUTOtIEN'S, and the CELEBRATED LECOULTEE RAZOR, SCISSORS IN CASES of the finest 'quality. Razors. Knives, Scissors and Table Cutlery, Oround and Polished. EAR INSTRUMENTS of the most approvod construction to asaist the hearing,. at P. MADEIRA'S. (haler and Sur. nglen] Instrument Maker.llA Tenth Wed tt , below Uhsst • ut. myl. fliesp. PENN MUTUAL. LIFE " INdURANCE EANY. , -Oftice No. Ell Chestnut etreet. P 11,111410- phis. • ELECTION.—An Election for Nine Trustees' to serve for three years will be held at the Office of the Company on 'MONDAY. the'Ela day otJanusuy; ltoB. between: the boort of 10 A.M.andl2td. • 1:f. S. STEPHENts. _ - decrotal7'. _ _ . . PENN NAIIONAIiDANK. Pinnanzustra, December IA 1 MIL . • e Annual Meeting of the ntockholdere will be held at the Banking Dome, on 'TUESDAY. January la, 1889, at lb o'clock A. ?d.; and on the earne day. between the hoar, of 11 A. M. and aY. M., an election will be held for nine Directora to serve daring the enzuhauar. 'dell•fdre tial24 atitip-s- PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD. ""••• OFFICE OF. GENERAL .teREIGIIT AGENT.'No. Inlgarketstreot. • • YIDLADELPUTA. ECCOMbei 15, ltrei.. ICOTICF,—The rates for itransportation of. Gas and other Bituminous Coal to be carried on tho Pennsylvania (fad, western Penasylvania'F direful. and: Philadel phia and Erie Railroad. to take effect January Ist, 180, CAD be obtained upon application at Oda Office. S. B. KINGSTON, - • • • -General Freight Agent - Pennsylvania Railroad ilompany. delatjal4 • A SPECIAL MEETING OF TIIE STOCKHOLM (WS of the - Clarion Met and ilorincOreek - 011 Conibany wlll be 'held at tie. 'SI' North Frontetreet. , . on TUb eIoAY, the 29th mat., at 10 o'clock A. M. deltel2V ing-tise PHILADELPHIA AND READING RAMADA Pr'"'• COMPANY,DPORIE 227 souTru FOURTH • PIMADIELPIITA, Dee. 14,"18118. Notice Ls hereby given to the Stocishqlders of thbrilorn nAnythat the anima n eating, and election for President, silt Manager's, 'Treasurer and Becretary'svill take placie on the HEWN D MONDAY (11th) of January nest at 12 M. dentjallt - =• W. BocrethrY Mgr FIRST N4TIOWA.X. plum. OF, gguppr... Pirmenctrma. December 12, Idea - "Thil'Amlual ElWlop - tor - Direetore of Bank will be held at the Balng House on Totesthe 12th.day of Jannarv. 1889, between the hours of o'cloclr. A. Al. and 2 o'clock P. de UOIISON MoIdICHAEL.Je., (Ashler. stir NATIONAL EXCHANGE BANK. —,!• Pultansurnts.,December 12t1.18e8.. The annual election for Directors will be held . at. the Banking House, on TUESDAY. the 12th day of. January. 1862. between the hours of 10 o'clock A. D. and 2 o'clock Y. II J. W. OLLBOIIOI3. del24stS I , IION NATIONAL' BANK. ' 4 - Deal L1..1 - 888. The regular Aiming Meeting pf the Stockholdere of ttis +%gtank for the election of.lane'Direetore will ;be held at the Rankin House on the _ _ BEGOND I'ITEBDAY (1 2 th of Jluniary, low,) Ifettreen the hours of, Cashier. , g'4P-0_ AM! ,TIYOAF.A.. ELicrizEß.. SOUTLINYABK r4eTioNAL BeNS ' ' • P.anza.ruta.. Dee.'11,1863. , Theitnnuaftleitienier•Diriaeterevf :Barak-Wlll held et the Bankins House on TUESDAY. January 12th, low, between the hears of 10 O'clock A, BL and 12 o'clock PJ„. - LARS. deli•tb a tu;telil3 , ll` • , ' ; ' Gadder.; INES. THE CONSOLIDATION NATIONAL BANK. PITILADIMPUTA. Dec. 12,1101 The annual ilea:lon for Directors of this. bank wlll be held at the Backlog-Dons% on TI;.ESDAY. tho 11th day of Januati next it hettyeett the hours of .11 o'clock M. tt.Tho annual meeting of stockholders wUI be heldeo the Battle day at 12 o'clock. - • 'WEI: IL WEBB. -.4lel7.th.e,tn.tjalr- . . • Cashier. ser OplAlat NATIONAL BANK. , • • PratAnatrurs,Dec. 8,1869. ' The Annual Meeting:of the kitockbolders for tao elee eon of Directors and for other_ purposes will be held on WEDNESDAY, the 41 WEDNESDAY,of - January, '1869. at in o'clock M. The el etio_n w ..take place between the hours of 10 A. M. and 2 • - W. LL. scEtAnr.EH, Cashier. deb w &di ser CITY NATIONAL BANK, Put -1.-snutrma, Dec. 9th, 1868. - The annual election for Directors will be held at the Danicingli once. Oil _WEDNESDAY, the 1311 t 1153 , A1 Jane 'an IW. between 'the-hours of 10 o'cloca A M. and .2 o'clock P. M. - _G. ALBERT LEWIS, deb) jal3 w4nall - - Cashier.. Jae WESTERN_NATIONAL BANK. wov - Ettir.Antaxtmt. -- Decl2,4m. An Election for Directors of this Bank for the ensuies year will be held at the Banking House on IUESDAY. January 12. lox between the hours of 11 A. K. and 1 P. B. • 7 . . JOS. PATTERSON. del2 e.tvr t jabgi ' , President LORttßltilY CREEK RAILROAD COMPANY, PirmanstrinA, December 14,1868. The annual meeting of the Stockholders of the Lorberry Creek Railroad Company will be held ett the office of the Philadelphia and Reading Railroad Company. 1127 booth Fourth street, Philadelphia. cm MOADAY.January 11th. 1869. at 10 o'clock.A. M. when an election will be held for a President snd six Directors to serve for the ensuing year. IdelE4lollol W. M. WEBB. Sec'ry. ser EAST MATIANOY RAILROAD COMPANY. OFEJ.Gb. 2517 SOUTH FOURTH. 8 CREST. ' -Prtitanzralize. Dec 1d,1868. The Annual Mieting of the Stockholders of this Gom psny and an election for officers to, serve for the ensuing year _will b en li t hest glair w o c = . o;tlta . Company, on MON . ALBERT ; P O STER. deify-478.in Secretary. sor ALLENTOWN RAILROAD COMPANY. PEEILADELPIIIIA. Dec. 1l,188& The annual meeting of-the ,stockhokiers of the Allen town itsilroed Company wIU be held at tlie office of the Philadelphia — and Reading Railroad Company.__No. 227 I3outh Fourth street. Philadphia. on MONOA.Y. Jana. my IL 1869, at 103 g o'clock A; M .. when an election will bo held for a President and six Directors to serve for the en suing year. - - ------- • deg.-Call§ W. H. WF33B.Seetetdri. oar THE MA.HANOY AND BROAD MOUNTAIN ."'•" RAILROAD COMPAbIY.—OFFICE,No 227 BOUT 4 FOURTH STREET. - - PIIILADELPILIA. December 14t81268. The Annual M eetink of the Stockholders of the Mahoney and BroadMilllntainHailroad Companc." Wilt he held at the Mee of. the Company. .No. 221 South Fourth street on MONDA:Iri Janullth, we.. at on o o'clock P. M. when . an eleetlon Wile held fora Presi dent toad six Directors toServe forthe ensuing year. • • . ALBEAT FOSTER. dr,1541,1111.14 . • , Secretary,. . 'FED E OF THE RELIANCE INSURANCE s lslr COMPANY OF PHILAUELPHIA.. No. 308 Walnut street. PIIIELADELPUIA., November 3G, 1868. The gliiitatiniiiting of the ntockholdera of the Reliance Insurance Company of Philadelphia, and the amino' election of ,(18) thirteen Directors to terve for tile ensuing 'Tear. will be held at this office; on MONDAY, Dee. 2.1, 1.868,at 12 o'clock M. TROSILAS C. £11.1.L, deg-10tf. Secretary. , ssr FA fhla„.E Et E.' AND MECHANICS' NATIONAL .I"tra.Annt.rtri.A, pecember 11,1569. The eennsT etection for Directors of.'-thia Bank will be held at the-Ehnking house, on WEDN er.BDAY, the lath day of Jenunre xt, between the hour% of 11 o'clock A. M. and 2 o'clock P.M: de11.02.124 W. BO B biTON: Cutler. •.weiv~ar~. SIXI,OO0 -WANTED. A PERSON WITH 'THIS 7 amoinit az equal partner in introducing a now : invention, . needed in tvery city In the United States.' • Apply to'- JOSEPH BALL. • • Attorney-at-Law. 51 North Math street, dele-3t , .... Prom 10 A. M. tO. 1 P. M. . . . t, STOREHOUSE WANTED.—WANTED TO RENT, etoreltoute„ between Vine and Spruce atreat and ' Delaware avenue and Second street. APPLY COCH RAN. RUSSRLI , dt CO.. 22 N. Front etreet. nolttf TpICAVESILEBSI 1111 JUDE. .1&41. T QUO)P.4.T TIME ON 8E0013,p. TOE PAN-HOME map. We' HOUEB to CINCINNATI, PE:NNSYLV NIA RAILItOAD AND PAN-HANDLE. 7,6 HOURS leers TIMvI than by COMPETING LINES. PASSENOBREltalning_the 13.00 P. M. TRAIN arrive La CINCINNATI next EVENING at 9.55 P. M.. 55 HOURS . ONLY ONE NIGHT on the ROUTE.' • ' SW" THE WOODRUFF'S 'celebrated Paiaco arm: Room I3LF.EITNG.CAP.B run through from PUILADFJ... PHIA to,CINCINNATL Passengers takiii& tho 1200 M. and iLoo P. M. Trains roach CHICH4NATI and all nohata WEST''and sours ONE TRAIN IN ADVAISCE of all other Route& _ ' • 1137 -7 •Paccengera for' CINuntIIATI, INDIANAPOLIS, ST. LOUIS, CALEO,__fJHICAuw, PF.ORIA. BURLING. TON. QUTNGIC, FULWAUKEE,n. PAUt, OMAHA, N. T,, and all volute WEST. NORTHWEST and SOUTH. WERT. will be,particular t ask for ICE: TS Via PAN.BANDLE ROUTE. • • 1155rT0 SECURE the 17NE4.1UALED aeriestmes oi this LINE, be VERY PARTIO:.LAR and ASK FOR TICKETS.."Via. PAN.HANDLE." at Timm OFFICES. N. W. CORNER NINTH and CHESTNUT Strata; NO. 116 MARKET STREET, but. Sooond and Front Stu. And THIRTY-FIRST Ind MARKET Streeta.Weat Phila. S. F. SCULL, Goal, Tieket Agt, Pittsburgh. JOHN H. MILLER, Gong East`n ARt.b26 Broadway.N.B WEST CHESTER AND DELPHIA RAILROAD, VIA ME. _ tYs:.a "'' ,_DIA. WINTER ARRANGEMENTS. On and,e,fter MONDAY, Oct. sth, 1868. the trains will leave Depot, Thi. ty. tint and Chestnut streets, as follows! Trains leave Philadelphia for _West* Chester, at 7,45 A. M., 11 A. M., 2.80, 4.15, 4.10, 6.15 and 11.80 P. 51. I t eavaWest Chester for Philadelphia, from Depot on E. Marketstreet., 8,25,7.45, 8.00 and - 10.95 A. M. L 55,41.50 a. d 6.55 P. M Trains leasing West Chester at 8.00 A. 51.. and leavio milaoclPina at . 4.50T . .M.. will SLOP at B. C. Junction and Media' only. • Passeage 'j rato or Irom; stations between West Chester and .B„ C. unction going haat, will take train , leaving West Chester at 7.45 A. AL, and going West will take train , Junction Pldiadelpliia at 4.50 P. U. and transfer at B. Tratua Leavin_ag-Pliiiadelphitt at 7.45 A. M. and 4.50 P. M., and,leaving Went Chester at 6.90 A. M. and 4.10 P. M., c.connect,Rt tl. Junction with Traine on V. and WC. It 11: /Or OxfordA 'and intermediate points,- ' ON'SUIVDAY67.ISeave - Philadelphia at 8.30 A. M. and 2,00 • • ..LeaVe Went Cheater 7 55 A. M. and 9.00 P. M. Tao 'Depot is reached directly by the Chestnut and Wal nut Street cars. Those of the Market Street Lino run within; eue square. Tho cars of both lines connect with uponeaatrit sn s it a vat. eeeraare allowed to'takeOwearing apparo only nsßasga6o. and the Company will not, in any ease, ho responsible for an amount exceeding Slue 111)1°313 special contrast is made for the same. Nlt 1. WO01), %,• • • • General duperintendent. - - • VAtiT FEERIELT LINE; VIA NOliall PENNSYLVANIA RAIL. ROAD to Withasbarro, Mahanoy . 191t8:44dountolCuntyglgetrtlihae„st.nd all points oripthigh By new arrangementa, perfected this day, thin road Is etustoled.to give lneteaced despatch to raorchandisa eon thgleddit°t'ab3ve ttairledirbiute. Frei _ oo_ deli ver ed the T rough Fr jao B. E, cur, of VIIONT and OBLOIStreM, Before 6 P. M.. will reach Wilkusbarre, Mount tiarme4 Nfahanoy City:, and the other stations in Mahanoy and WICIIIII3B valtan before it A. fd. of the succeeding day, And. 11_11SIL, _BM LR 0 GREAT Taurus LANE how PhDs. delphta to 'the interior or, Pennsylva the Spbuyikitt, stnlitans,;'Camberland • and Sorchlg Valleys, - the N Nerthwir r za ti the Can lYiterArraigement of er . • Dec.' 14, , • 'I Alaing • the ,- Cornsfxrp_ot, • townie streets, Phi Lade attliefo owing hours. • _ MORNING Aq nn 0 TION,AI 'A. IL ; for Ecrathert ... Wl all eater,. atatkms and Allentown. Beaditirral 5 25' an Allentown. - Philad7,Wa at 9.15 P. M.: •_ k t : - , • MOHNEN* Expanse-At US A. M. for Reading. lAi. Panoli• Harrisburg.' Pottsville. PineGrov4 Tamaqua, Ptinbur3oYilliez3l2orl._Ehetra. Rocheiter,Niagars , Falls.. natal°. wll kesbarre; xittston. York.. Carithe. Othun. Ths7 connects at ReadiretWith thetast Penn sylvarda trains for Allentowg end the 8.15 A.M. connects with -t2O - Lebanon Valley train . for Ilarrieborg._ Am; at Port Clinton with Catawba; B.R. trains for Willitunsport, Lock Haven, • Emir/deal at Liarristauwwl_th Northern Central,' Cumberlan • Valley. and Bohn Lau and Busquehannatratrus for No amber. lan or k,Channbersbung, Piegrove, dre. • 00 BEZEL-Leaves Philadelphia at 8.10 .P. M.. or Pottsvill_ _Efa._7l. ha, connect. ins t ßeading andColumaila .RaIII hams, for Clot. • % B B e. TOWn. eadommotiazom Les . Potts. town 5t_0.45'4.m.. _stopping at intermediate 'billowier. riv Phtisael e tia at 8.10 A. M. L :Retorning leaves Pa. paigh o mit 4,00 . kt._ arrives in Pottstown at 8.15 P.M. DaqsODATIQN I -Leaved Ithadin at 7.80 stoppthtstt all way , "Ullman arrives In Phila. delobla at 1.230 - -• . • ; _ • &tonal*. leaves Ihnadelo4 . 3 s farbes in . ' Reading at 7.40 P.M. ' • - - ; Trains for Co Efin7is at 610 , 411. and Pottsvillearriving •Phliadelt: at LOO P. IL' `AfteneM Codas willarristil PJL, and Pottemilie : at brag aCanealledation Iftwes,. Reading at 7.11 d. .-be l allarrieburg at 4.10-P.M. Corasecting • atileading with Afternoon Accommodation - south at 285 P. ii.. arrithatin Philadelphia at 9.21 PAL_ • • Market train.' with a - Passenger _cat attache.A. leave ' Philadelphia at 12.10 noon for Pottsville and all Way Bta._ honk; leaves Pathan° at 7,80 A. M.. for Philadallua all way Stations. . • All the above tinhalther c ; , ,:e 23 9lartdays excepted. Sunday todz n e B.oq A. M., and Phila. de his at 515 P. .feu va_ lads for Raiding -at 8.00 A. M.. from Reading at 425 P M. • GEOBTER V . ,AILEOAD.-Passangers for -li k Do to" -- 4.00 wnb inadl istown and intermediate tinl thita take ik the 7.80 ALIL. • " 3 r hh a tMli g ,Icoru:Doehdiestawn 680 A. 2L,12.45 6.11$ PERKIOVIeaI:. err vOAD....raasengeni 44•44Mit pack tike 7.80 A. IL and 4.00 P.' M. trains from au k returning hem Skippack at 8.10 A. M. and 1245 M. Bte nil l l 3 E l ilpfor various points In Perktomellt Valay • connect wi alas at Co and and Bkippack. N If IEiLFREIIIB,__ AND THE ,44;_avin NeW goy at l"9 5.00 and ains at 1.05 A. M. 1.50 and 10.19 P.l4,and connect th Pennsy•__ Normal Central' Transfer GilleagO. Williartemort, Baltimore, dm__ Returning, ExEress Train leaves Hanaburg. on arrigal -ctreonsilvania=prwirom Pttelltergh, 44 aB.so muld.so `cttALADllti li.lßerekill /Wading a 3. and 7.81, - AL M. . 1250 anions at New xerkILOO and 1280 and 5.00 P. M. Bleeping Came accompany-Alelie tram '-tbr°,thAnicusti-PePreez!ATeni.a isithatit, - 7 Mal train for Ifjois Votkieavernant anal at B.IOA. W and nal F 4 XL l trainforßarrithing leaves New York at II Noon. • SCIIIIYLETLL VALLEY RAILROAD.-Trains Pottsville at 8.45. A. M. and 6.40 P. lid,returnhag from • at 95 J-L and 2.15 and L 8,5 P. AL • BCH AND BUM ' , MANNA RAILROAD-.. Trains leave Au at 7.55 A. M. for Pinegrove and ILO. risking, and at 12.15 P. M. for Pinegrove and Tremont; re. turning from Bardeburg_ra,&Blll'. aid berm Tremont at 7.40 a. M. and 5.86 P.: M . ' TICKETB.- - Through!linitclanylickettrand 'theirLtunt. tickets to all the Principal points in the North and West • -,, •Escrecalon Ticketifrati; 'Philadelphia to F.;. 7 leig and Intermediate Stations,. good for ti g aJ n oAy, are sold by Morning. Acc o mmod a t i on „ lliarket Reading sad Pottetowth - AccOmmidation Trans reduced race - Excursion Ticket; to Philadelphia. good, for day only. are sold at Reeding and Inter - White Btanons by Read- Podater,svn ;Aecommdation Trains at reduced The following tickets are obtainable only at the Office of B. Bradford. Treasurer No Ed- South , Fourth street. Philadelphia, or 17401 1 1kthinerid BaDerintenekra. Comnintaticat- Ticl2 sea $5 - perassitAbdcrant. between earlalinte desired, for mates and Arms. •• ;DeasagsTicinets. g fOr 8.000 miles, between all pedalo at $5B 60 each. Or families and firms. Baron Tickets,. for three. six, nine cr.-twelve months. for holders oily, to all points at reduced rates. Clara: Man residing on the line of the road will be fur. niched with cards. entitling themselves and wives te 'tickets at half fare.. _ , • ; Escunacra Tickets from Phileidahabia to Principal sta. Hons. good for Baturday,,Bund _an Monday, at reduced fare, to be 'lna only at the Ye t Office. at Thirteenth and enllowhill streets. - FREIGHT -Goode of all descriptions forwarded to all the above from the Company'. New Freight Depot. Broad W we str , - Freight Trains leavrAledelplithibelly at 4.80 A. M., 12.45 noon 8.00 mid gP. Id..for,Reading, 'Lebanon, Barrie_ bont_Potisvillell'ort Clinton. _and all points beyond. iftlle close st e Philadelphia . Of for for Miami on the road and ts branches at SA. M.. and for therein. rival Ratio= only ata,M. P. M. * 1 • - BaGGAG I2 ElingarAf ripreasC will collect Baggate for all tralna blaving_Philadelphia Depot, Orders can be left at No.jep South Fourth street. or at the Depot, Thirteenth and uas lowhill streets. : • " • :a: -..- ...4- 11MINIRAND :I Y and 2131ILADELPHL6 , AND TRENTON RAILROAD 006 L PANE'S LINER•from Philadelphia te NeW - WSJ places. from Walnut street wh - arL .- At 6.80 A. M.. Via Camden and Ambey.4theatd. (112 26 AtBA.M visaamdenendJerseytlty Empress Mak 8 00 At 2.43) P. IIL. via Camden and Amboy Exprea. 8 . 00 At 6 P. M. for Amboy and intermediate gallon; At 6.30 and 8 A. M„ and 6L 2 P. M.. for Freehold. h Freehold. At 8 and 10 A. 21.. 8.80 and 4.90 P. , for Trenton. At 6.30.8 and 10 A. 1. 2. BA 41 .- .2 0. 6 swill-BOP. M.,. for Bordautovvn; Burlington. Beverly and Itclanta, At 6.80 and le'A. 6L.1.,:„3.80.4.20, 6 and ILiitt.P. M. , for- nor . . ranee Edgewater. Riverside. Riverton Palmyra and Fish House. and 4 P.-M/ for Florenee and Riverton. Ner - The 1 and 11.8.7 P. M. Linea will leave from Coot c. of arket atiret ush ia o npßer ferry. , „ ; AdF rom Re At .11 A. N. via and Janet City. New York Express Ldne P . M . .... ...$8 00 At 7.80 and MOO A.M.2.80,11.80 and 6 M far Trenton and Bristol.. And at 10.15A.1 - Ms for Blida •4 - At 7.80 and,' 11 , di. M.. LBO and 6,P. M. for;Blerristviffie and At 7.30 and b 1154. M., 2.80 and i P.M. foi: Schenck' anti At 7.80 and 10.16 A.M.. 2.00,4. and 6 P.M,. for Cornwell; Torresdale.Nolreeslearg, Tacony,Wissinoming, Brides burg and Frannord. and BP. M. for Holmesburg and intermediate Btationa. From West Philadelphia •Depot.via Conneeting Railway At 0.45 A. M..1.20._ ,4 due and 12 P. AL new York Express . Line: via Jersey_City.._, ........ .... . . I At 11134) P. M. Emigrant Line.. .... . -.200 • 7.45 A. M..1.20 .' 4, 8.13 u andilt . P.aiLjor Trenton. I . At1).45.9 M.. 4. 6.80 and 12 P. Pd.. for: Bristol. • At 12 M. (Night) for Morrisville, Tullytown, Schenck; Ed n. (N ig ht ) for Holmesburg.TaconY. Whainoming, Bridesburs and Prankford. The 8.45 AM.and 8.80 &12 P,M.Linea ran dailv. All others. Sundays excepted. • -.- For Lutes leaving K ensington Depot. take the can on Third or Fifth streerts. at Chestnut,et half-an hour before departure. The Cars of Market' i 3 treat RailwaY run di. rect. to West Philadelphia Depot, Chestnut and Walnat within. one square.' On Bandage, the Market:Street our. will run to connect with the 0.45 A. IA and 6.10 and 12 P M.lthes BELVIDERE DELAWARE RAILROAD LINES front Kennington Depot. At 7.30 A. If.. for Niagara Falls, Buffalo. Dunkirk. Elmira, Ithaca, Owego. Rochester,Binghampton. Oswego. Syracuse, Great Bend Montrose. Wilkeabarra,.ticrtunon. I:Stroudsburg. Water dap, lichoolev's Mountain; dm: At 7:80 A. M. and 8.20 P. M. for Belvidere. Easton, Lambertville,Flemingtcrn, &a. The 8.80 P. M. Line con nect direct with the train leaving Easton for Match Chunk. Allentown. Bethlehem, Ac. At 6 P. AL tor Lambertville and intermediate a-stations. CAMDEN AND BURIANGTON CO..AND PEMt3ERTON • AND HIGHTBTQWN RAILROADS, irons Market Street Ferry . ( Upper Bid en.)d 5.30 P or Merchane.AMOWestown2,lßarnad,agasonvo.ieM,fsiainsport, mllnt olly,timithville,' EwansvilleVincentoWnihrmingham and _Pemberton.' At 7 A.81..1.80 and 3.80 P.M.for Lewistown.Wrightstown. Cookstown, New Egypt, Horn:xi:town, Cream Ridge, Imlay.town, Sharon and Hightetown. • Fffty Pounds of Baggage only allowed each Passenger. Paseengers are prohibited from taking anYthing as bag gage lint r their wearing apparel. All braggago• over liftY pounds to be paid for extra. 'The Company limit their re. sponaitnlity for baggage to One per pound,and will not be liable for any amount beyond 43100. except by ape. • cial contract. • • - • _ Tickets sold and. Batt 'checked direct turomih to Boston. N 7 arrester, Bp Bold. Hartford, New Haven. Providence. Newport , any. 'rroy, Baratoga, Utica, Rome, Byracus; Rochester, Buffalo. Niagara Palls and Buspension Bridge. An additional-Ticket Or_me is located at No. 823 Chestnut street, where tickets to New York, and all ha. _Portant points North and East, may be procured. Per- EP= purchasing Tickets at this Office. can havo their bag gage checked from residences or hotel to destination. by Union Tranafer Baggage. Express. , Linea from New York for Philadelphia will leave tram foot of Cortland street - LOU and 4.00- P. M.. via Jersev-Cititaoid Camden. ' At 6.20 P. M.v . ia Jorsoy Citp . and Rena n, At 7, and 10 A. M.. 12 80, and a r• • and 12 Nig ht; via Jersey (My and West Plilladol ph a. • - From Pier No. I.N. MC!, at aao A. M. Accommodation and 2 P. M.: Express. via Amboy and Camden. Nov. 23. 1662. WM. B. GATZMER. Agent. ' •;. PHILADELPHIA AND ERIE RAILBOAD,i-- FALL TIME TA. —7—, BLE',—.Throng)t. and. Dhabi Route be tween rianguiplpmet, Baltimore, carrisborg. port, to thellorthwest and the Great Oil Region of Penn. sylvania.—Flsgant Sleeping Cars on all Night Trains. On and actor MONDAY Nov. 23.1, 1848, the Trams on theyhiladelphia and Erie Railroad will rim ni follows: WESTWARD , - Mail Train leaves Philadelphia Widiamsport. .... arrives at Erie...„ • • .. • Erioaliavresa leaves Philadeipnia..... • • • " 4 • " ,Williaranort..... • • " " - arrives at Erie.. Main! Mall leaves Philadelphia • ••• • , •• • • , " • " ..... " ' " arrivtin at Lock flaxen EASTWARD. Mnil Train leitves Erie . . 10 E 5 A. M. ' Williamsport: .:: :............ 12.55 A. M. 0 arrives at Philadelphia.. ..... A. M. EVress !paves Erie. ....... A. M. . Williamsport- arrives at . Philadelphia.. , 4.01 P. M. Mail andr r ess comical with Otl — Creek and Alle gheny River oad. Baggage Checked Through. ATXRED L. , TYLEh. General Superintendent. F. , ....v.- PIItrADELPMA BALTIMORE d'7s/a.L'ai?.,'P' CENTRAL ' RAILROAD. Winter Arrangements. On and after Blenday, Depot 1858, West Trains Will leave, Philadelphia,from the f the Cheater Zt Philadelphia Railroad, or. nor of Thirty.firat arid Chestnut streets tWtutt Philada„). at 7.45 A. M. and 4.50 P. M. Leave Mang Sun, at 5.45 lli,andltisford at Ali A. hl.. and leaVe Oxford at 3.25 P.:M. A Market Train with 'Palteelifter Car attached will run on Tuesdays and Fridays, leaving thp Basing Bun at 11.05 A. M., Oxford at 11.45 and Kennett at 1.00 P. M. con netting at West Chester Junction with a train for Phila delphia. Ow Wednesdays - and .Baturdays train leaves Philadolidda at 180 P. M.,ruus through to Oxford.. The. Train loving Philadelphia at 7.45 A.M. connects at Oxford with U'daily line of Stages for Poach Bottom, in Lancaster county.' Returning, loaves Peach BOttorn to eminent at Oxford with. GOD 'Afternoon Train for Philadel. The Traiu leaving •Pldladelphia at ,t6O I'. M. nina to Rising thin. /dd. , .Ptessengent allowed toI take wearing apparel 'ortii, Baggage, and the Company will not, in any came, be re. sponsiblo for an amount exceeding ono huudind doilars. unless a special contract be made for the MUM. PAIS, /EMMY WOOD. General Sup% WEST OBESgar EiILIPWAIEL 'IVEN4MEMM---ONN PALL AND WINTER 4131111ANGEDLENT: From Foot of Illiaket-Stralliwi'eny)e Con4lpenclisg*etlajLe!day'l6;l96fii Trains leave ens follows: For cape May and stations below Mfiliirki SIB P. For MinvillkVincland and. intermediatetinatknut_Als, For Bridgeton. Belem and way datieniB.lg A. M. and For. Woodbury at 1115 A. BL, g. 1,511.110 end IL 8. , Freight train 'eaves Camden d ai ly At. 12 o'clock. noon: Freight receivog.at geoid covered wkart not street. daily • , Freight Delivered No. 2211 B. Delaware Avenue. . ' Superintendent. . .. „ , . ' NORTH PENNSYLVANIA 11. R. THE "MIDDLE ROUTE-Shortest , .. . , and most direct line ler Bethlehem., Easton Allentown _Manch Chunk, Hazleton, White Ha ven. Wiliresbarre. , Mahandi filty r illt.' , Carrael,Pittaton. Tunkharmock" Scranton,' Carbon:rale and all the points in the Lehigh and. Wyoroing coal regf_ons. Passenger Depot in,Philadelphia. N.; ,W. conger:Berke - - WINTIIR GEMENT, TEN DAILY TRAINS. -LOn.and. ter MONDAY, NOVEMBER 23d. Passenger Trains leave the Depot, corner of. Berke and American streets:daily ABundays excentedL as follows: At 7.45 A. M.-Morning - Express - for Bethlehem and Prineipai Bitting to North Pennsylvania-Railroad, con. , meeting at Bethlehem: w `Lehigh Valleyglidirroad for , Allentown.. Catagauqua itk„ - Slatiustem.: Manchu Chunk. Weatherly:Jeargesville. ziOleten, WWI* kles,VeVilk o6 - Pane; Kingston. Pittston ' - Tunkninnotk,- - linfi f points in Lehigh•andlN yarning-WM(7a r alSCl:itt conneattausatith ...Lehigh and Mthanoyllailroad -for , fitatirmw. , ,Citenand ia.lth Catawissa Railroad far RuPerk.Dan•ill a t. llll ls, o 4 . rid illiernsport. 'Arrive at Mauch . : Chunk 12' , •”. at Wilkesboro at .2.60 P. SE;.atlglethanoY City et LiIdIVII. :Passengers. img-this...train. eau takeAthee LehiahTeillat__ _ Train, passing 'Bethlehem at 11,554.61 ,;:far Foote - am; - - i i i Points on New,Jensey Conk! Ra il road to NOW YO .., At 8.45 A.M.-r-Accornmogationfor Doyhistfromoto oing at arl intermediate Stations . Passengers for ow ' ---- - GroVe; Hatboro' and Hartgrethe.ley this train. take Stage at Old:York Road. 0.45 A:gll::(Expreagillor Bethlehem. Allentown.Mineh -1.11: -.. isihiter Ha n -Voilkesbarrm - licsranton arid Carbondale via and dusquehoiria Railroad. also to Easton and points on Morris'and Essex Railroad I. P 4 ea York and Allentown and Easton. and points on-New 'Jersey tlentml , Raittosel t 0 New York vin'lzilMjiriValleW .., At 1245 A....M.AccoMmoilaidon for Fort "Worthington stopping at intermediate Stations.. , .., • ~, -, •, ) g g At 1.45 P: M.-Lehigh .yalley , 'Enna for Bethlehem • AltentowniManieh Chunk.,White Haven. • WiLkeebarre. Pittetonßcrantomand , Wyoming Mal Regions; g -,, ggc e At 2,45 P., • - M.-Accommodation for • Derlestown:. slop ping at all intermediate stations. ~ -., _-. 7.: ' ...g.: ~ At 4. Th. P...M.--Accommodation for , ProyleeternlAMP ping atedlintennediate stations... , .g A- . - .....,. --, g g1., 1 - At 1:00 P.-11.=.11proughaecommodatiOn , for,Bethiehenh -. - and stations on main line of North PennOlvanietß ath road, connecting at Bethlehem with Lehigh - Vallerltve. - zing Train forte:atm Allentown: Manch tilimoLt - • At 0.20 P. 11.-Accomo dation for Leuusdale."; stOPPlntg at ' all hoe:mediate etations. . . „ - , • ~... , ~. ... :-At U.BO P. 11--A,ccem nodations for Fart Washing:ton TRAINS ARRIVE 1N PHILADELPHIA.' From Bethlehem at 9.10 A. M., 2.10, 5.25 and 8.80 P.M. 2.10.1'.. M.; 6.26 P. M..and 8.80 P. M. Trains make direct connection.ith Lehigh Valley 'or ' Lehigh , and Susque hanna trains from Easton , Scranton, Wrivatharzo, Matut• nor City- and Hazleton.- , - . . .., ..,. . , . , ..,„._, .. Paw engem leaving Wilkesboro at 10.18 A.M., 1.45 P. IL; - connect - at Bethlehem and arrive in Philadelphia at LIS . and 8;80 P M • From Doylestown at 8.36 A. M.; 4.55 P. M. and 7: P.M. • From Lansdale at 7.30 A. M. __. ' - From Fort Washington at 1046 A. bl - and 3.10 P,' rd. , - ... ON SUNDAYS. , Philadelphia for Bethlehem at 9.30 A. M. Philadelphia for "Doylestown at 2.00 P. M. , Dowleigtown for Philadelphia at 7.A. M. Bethlehem for Pluladelphis at 4.00 P. M. ' . • Fifth and Sixth Streets Paezenger care convey pasien. gets to and - from the new De- - - - White cars of Second and 'phi d StrzetsLine and Union Line run within a short distance . ..l o le Beret, Tickets must be procured eV,: krt 3ket O ffice. it order to secure the lowest rates of fat ',..,.-,:.. ' • - ..... • iS CLARK, Agent. Tickets sold and Homo cher,ii through to princip al points, • at Mann ' s North Penn . ` gage Express office. No. 105 bout.h Fifth etreet. . ~ , • STIMMINeffer/rNNSEINANLi gIIINTEdy, Salltcad. Fall •-•.' Taking et Nov ~29d, ,1868. The trains et the Penoilisola - Centailliallrog h teave tbe I=at Tblrty.flrs and,Market streets, w is reached try the cars of -the Market Street Passenger Railway, the MarkoconneqSze with each fxsin, leaving Front and titreettsth= tainut.as before Jai departure.- --Those ,of. the Chestnut. end, Walnut Street Railway tuitt within one square of the Depot. _ . Tbe Lad on application at icket N ' t = s e t all Or o f otreeto, and at the Depot. _ Amato of toe Union Truitt,/ Compiat call for a nd deuver Baggage at the Depot. Ortlelmt at No. 9010104" nut street, No. 116 Market itheo4 win receive 4taolloa,- ~._ Tfia.ThEi 1,,,F4V10 DE.POT. 17/56. : 4 .11Ou ..at 100 h. MI P;Oli ACCOM: i iiiiii ii i 000 9AG P. nt Fast Lin 0....• • • .• • • • • • , •at /11•5°L; M. HExpress— —.—...., ....... 11:61 /AM. armsbitecommodateae. :.41t 820 P; M. Lancaster .. M. Parksburg 9.80-P. Cliudnaati Expres., • . •. . ..... B.OOP. M. • Ede Mail and Buffalo .Ex press at 10.46 P. PE. • - Philadelphia Phi adelpbiaExpred at.hU l Onig ht Erie Man leaves daily: except Sunday running .oa Onturdar algid , to 1;91111orroPorf only Oat ~nadaynight Bigwig ore will leave Philadelphia at 19 o'clock. • ,- Philadelphia Emmen leans- daily.- Ali- other lr a lns The Wessern-Accomaiodation Train mittens: except Sunday. For ;this train tickets must be procured and baggage deli meg bk6.ol l,l 2 n P t e., at 116 Marketstnavt, TB.AIN IsT DEPOT. NTT. Express " et Philadelphia Express— .. ... . . . ... • Paoli An 8.80 A. , M. and 8.40 :lc 7.10 P. M. l'Edo Mailo rkot and •ounato . Erpress.......•.. purg.Train.... ... .. ... •• LI Fast Line,, ~........ "10.00 " -Lancaster . . .. . P.,' MI; , ..•. - . .. .. 4 , 29 - Day Excreee. .................... .. .. '.....ttt 4,20 1 ", EferrieberA . 9.41 . For fuser informatlon, apply to, • JOHN. C. ALLEN. Ticket Agent.. cal Chestnut street: FRANCIS FUNK, ant 116 Market slyest. • SAMUEL H. WALLACE, Ticket Agent at the Depot, The Pennsylvania Railroad Company. will not. mama any risk for liaggate. except for , wearing apparel; and limit their Kesponinbuity . to One Hundred Dollars invalues,J. • All Baggage exceeding' that; ailment in Yale° will be at the risk of the owner, unless tsars bit . ecraract. (lateral Superintendent, Altoona,f l at' ~ . PHILADEtInITA- GE ATIMMTOWN .AN ' • , ROAD-TIME TABLE.-On sad after EridaY* MAY GERmtavro*N; Leave Philadelphia-6,M, 9.0 10.11. 12A. 61., 1. 9. a.m. 0N• , 4. 5.6 x. full tu, ix. 12. r. , • Leave Germantown-6,1. 1%. 8•20. 6. 10. H. 12 A. PL. 11. 9, A, 4. 434 ekt 8. 9. 10, 11 P. M. Tne LAW down train, and the 3% and 15% tip trains. WU not stop on the Germantown 13ranolt. ON SUNDAYS. _ Leave Philadelptda-9.16 minutes A. LT ;11,71ind mrli; rm Leave Geantown-AS 6M I'.• • otiTkluT PAILItOAD Leave PhiLtdelphia-6 , 8.10.12,A. BL i 2. BBC, 614.7. 9 ma 11 P. 111. Leave Chestnut 13111-7.10 mhinte 80.40 and 11.40 A' M.; L4O, 8.40. 6.40, 6.40.&40 and 1140 L. BA, ON SUNDAYS. Leave I'hiladelbhiti---9.16 minutes A. M. t 11 find 7 P. M • , Leaps Chestnut 1:101-7.50 minutes A. M.; 12.40. 6.40 and 0. 2 25 minutes P. Dd._ • - • FOR CONSHOHOCKEN AND NORRISTOW . Leave Philadelphia-0. 716. 9, '.L0.1; A. IL i 136.0. 434. 636. 6.16, 8.06 and 1136 Y. M. Leave Norristown-6:40. 7,1.50. 9.11 A. MI 134.3. 436.411 and 831 ON SUNDAYS. Leave Philadelphia-9 A. M. 2K and 7.15 P. M. • Leave Norristown --7 A. 1d..5 and 9P. M. Eon AtADlATurac. Leave Pkiladelphla-6, 736, 9,11.06 A. M. IM, 8.431. 136. 11.15, 6.06 and 11M P. M. _ Leave Manars4-6,10. 7 3 6. 1 3.60. itX,1136 A. M.; 2, 8.14, IX and 9 P. M. • ON SUNDAYS. • • Leave Philadeirphia-9 A. M.; WS andl.l6 P. M. "Leave 61amkruik-Ail A. M.; 6 and 934 P. Bi. • W. 8. WitinON, General Superintendent. Depot. Ninth and Green stroata, PLITLAELP/11WI STON .1 AND liALTlslOnz vain TABLE: - -Commencing: Mon.. day. Nov. Md. 1888. Trains will leave Depot. corner of '• Broad etreet and Waahington avorme, as follows: t Way-mail Train. at 8.30 A. M. (Sundays excepted). for Baltimore. stopping at all regular stations. Connecting with Delaware Railroad at Wilmington for Crisfield ami l intermediate atations. Express train at Ll.OO M. (Sundays exted) !for ,Ralti. t .Wilmington., more and Washington. atopping at Perry. IL. vino and Ilavro-cle-Grace. Connects at Wilndrigton. with If train for New Castle. Express Train at LOO P. M. (Sundaya exceptedkfor I, timer° and Washinen. stopping _at Chester. Tburlow. Linwood. Claymont, WilmingtomNewport.Ellanton, New , ark, Eikton,Northenst,Charleatowe.Porrriale. ll aV r e -n b . Grace, Aberdeen, Perry_mall'a. ndgewood, Magni/UN Chruseits and Stemmer's Hun. Right Express at 11.80 P. M. (daily) 'for Baltimore and Waahingtou, stopping at. Chester, Thurlow, Linwood. Claymont, Wilmington. Newark, Elkton, Northeast. Perryvillo and liavre.de Grace. - Passengers tor Fortran Monroe and Norfolk will - take the 13.00 al. Train. • Trains, denying at all steßons between PhiLadolphis , and Wilmington:. Leave Philadel_p_hia at 11.00 A. BL 9.110. Ago. 700 P. DL Tho 5.00 P. M. - train Connects with the, i ßolaware Railroad for Bar ri ngton and intermediate sta tions. Leave Wilmington 7.00 and 5.10 A. M. and Lni,cls and 7.09 P. M. The 830 A.M._ Train wilt not atop petwean Chester and Philadelphia. The '7.00 P. Iff. Train from _ Wilmington runs Daily: all other Accommodation Trait; s undays excepted. • , _ From Baltimore to Ptuladelphla..—Limirti Baltlinoto 7.911 ' A A. SL, WaMaiL 9.35 A. 1%, Excretal. LW P. 3114 p SUND AY TRA IN ntes ; FROM BAVITMORE.-Iteave Bal. Smote at 1.85 P. stopping' at' m.aitnelia, Perryntanve. "Aberdeen, Lfavre de Grace, Perryvnle,. Charlestown. Vorth•east. Elkton, Newark.' Stan one NenTort. • toington, Claymont, Linwood and Chester. , intro ugb tickets to pouttelymi:noata andSMtUit4st, may bo procured at tickebeffloo, iflB ti o n: o rtut streed,linder • Continental Dotal. where also . State maraud Bora:lain Sieeping.Cars can be securod during , day. -Persons purchasing tickets at this office oan have baggage at their rosidonce by tho Urtion'Fransfor Co soW t EL F. ICENNEY. fin ant. .( : • -10.45 P. M. - 8.15 A.M. . 9.5 u P. M. .11.50 A. M. . 8.50 p M .10.04 A. M. . 8.00 A. M. . 6.80'P. M. 1.45 P. 111. CAMDEN AND ATLANTIC RAID - REL • rzr WINTER ARRANGEMENT. AEI On and after MONDAY, October ilu 1868, trains will. leave Vino Street Wharf aa'followa, viz.; „ Blatt and Freight 86 A.' M. Atlantic Accommodation.. . P. M.' Junction Accommodation, Xic . o • diate........ ...... ..•.... .6.00 P. • • RETURNING, WILL LGAVE ATLANTIC. , Mail and P.M. tlftntle A cco turned tO A M. Junction Accommodation, Arm A. -•7 • • lIADDONFIELD ACCOMMODATION TRAIN WILL LEAVE; • , Vine Street Ferry ..............10.16 A. M and. 900 P. M.. Iladdonlield at. 00 P ' and 910 Y. 9L .103041 ® D. 11. MUNDY Agent. 9,.., ____ ,„,„1.