Daily evening bulletin. (Philadelphia, Pa.) 1856-1870, March 13, 1869, Image 4

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    RELIGIOUS. NEWS.
Tnit annual conference of the E. Church
begins in this city on the 17th inst. ,
THE Orthodox Quakers of this country num.'
her 54;000. They. have 766 churches, that furnish
'sittings for 269,000 persons.
TRH largest Young_Men's Christian Association
Is that in BrOoklyn, N. Y. It numbers more than
4,000 members.
Tim Presbyterians and Methodists in the
United States are each divided into ten different
ecclesiastical organizations.
Tun missionary collection of the Seventeenth
Street M. E. Church On the 7th inst., amounted
to $l,lOO, against $875 last year.
The Wilmington Annual Conference of the
Methodist Episcopal Church will commence its
sessions on Wednesday, the 17th Wet.,
Tux Rev. Charles Gillette, of Brooklyn, agent
of the American Board of Missions of the Epic
copel,Chureb, died suddenly in Baltimore on Sat
urday last.
Trull Rev. C. Van Meter has resigned the super
intendency of the Howard Mission, New York,to
which' he has been unremittingly devoted for the
last fifteen years.
THE • receipts of the Board of Missions of the
Protestant Episcopal Church for the Diocese of
Pennsylvania. from January Ist to March Ist,
amounted to $1,863 90.
Peasnanni . Gabler is a constant attendant at Dr.
Sunderland's (First Presbyterian) church, Wash
ington city, and his children ,are regularly in
their places at Sabbath school.
DR. Junsos baptized the first Barman convert
in 1819. Since, that tune more than 40,000 con
verts heYe been baptized, &amens, Karens and
Shane, making" an average of about two every
day. • '
REV. — Fektreis Viisrow, D. D., of Trinity
Church, New York, has been elected to the pro
fessorship of ecclesiastical polity and law, in the
Epkcopat 9exicfrel Theological Seminary of that
Cureberland Presbyterians North and
South have re-united. They had before the war
588ininistera; and 48,000 members. Their church
edifices.number 800, furnishing accommodation
for 26g,978,, ,
Tinn two fie:feral Assemblies of the Presbyte
rian Church are to meet in New York in May.
The Clid Scheel meets in Dr. Spring's Church, on
litirray l Hlll; Mid the Neve School at the Church
of ,the. Covenant, Park avenue.
ASIOVEStkErn 1B On foot to restore the parish
church , atifilatow, Bedford, England, the birth
place of Joluißunyan. It is intended to make
the chnteh'a monument to the memory of the
author of that wonderful work, "The Pilgrim's
Progress."
tonisiana annual conference of the
Methridkit EPiscopal Church there are now four
cokked presiding elders who a few years ago
were slaves . , They preside over large districts,
with so cinch intelligence and propriety as to re
ceive the hearty , commendation of the church.
kr re stated that the Fifth Avenue Baptist
Church, New. ;York, resolved unanimously to
withdraw its fellowship from Rev. Cramtnond
Kemiedy, known some years ago as the "Boy
Baptist ,'reacher," for, advocating the propriety.
of opeheommetnion. Mr. Kennedy, it is under
stood, wilitinite with the Presbyterian Church.
Tins Churell'ot England holds in fee simple the
right to property worth 040,000,000 in gold, the
annual income of which goes to support the
clergy. And yet not more than half the popula
tion of England and Wals is in S lal to that
church, anikbrit forty per - ceent. loyal
and
twelve percent. . in Ireland.
Tue. Rev. Alexander R. Thompson, D. D., of
New York, one of the best pulpit orators of the
day, has been;invited to preach in the Second
Reformed Church, Seventh street above Brown,
andwili occupy . the pulpit to-morrow morning
and evening. He will also address the Sunday
schools in the afternoon.
Ranee Sommenoo, of Jerusalem, has just de
livered a lecture, in Now York, on the Holy
Land. He says that the present inhabitants of
the city are Turks, Arabs, Christiana and Jews,
the latter numbering 3,200 families, divided into
four congregations. Thegovernment has con
ferred.upon their chief bishop authority to settle
ailmattersin dispute among the Jews. The
speaker expressed full confidence that the Lord
would,yet deliver Jerusalem into the hands of
Hiapeople.
Sr. 4ararts's EPISCOPAL Cuuncli, one of the
oldeat parishes of that denomination in Phila
delphia, has at last yielded to the necessities of
the westward emigration of its congregation,and
is to be removed to the corner of Twenty-second
and Walnut streets, where' lot has been pur
chased and a handsome edifice will be erected.
The demolition of the time-honored building will
not be commenced until next October, when it
will, be taken down and the site devoted to
busiinese purposes.
fallow= persons were received into the Co
hocksink Presbyterian Church, of this city, on
last Sabbath about sixty of whom were on pro
fession of faith. These were, for the most par ,
the fruits of a revival in the church during i e
past winter. The Rev. Mr. Muchmore, as
tor, purposes to leave for Europe BO time
in May, as a delegate to the . General Asse bly of
the Presbyterian Jhurch In Ireland. f ev. Dr.
Alex. Reed, okCentral Presbyterian C rch, is
also a delegate to the same body.
Tin Kensington M. E. Church, be er known
as the "Old Brick," of which the R . William
Paxson is pastor, has recently, thr ugh his in
strumentality, removed a debt of 10,000 from
its church building. The church, u der his pas
torate, has experienced a great de el:3 of pros.
perity,nearly 200 having been recel d into mem
bership. On Monday evening last a committee
of ladies took possession of the par onage, when
the pastor was presented with apu e containing
$250 ,and his wife with with a boa tiful set of
fur. Next Sabbath will close his erm at this
church.
TILE tenth anniversary of the You People's
Association of the Tabernacle Bapti Church,
Eighteenth and Chestnut streets, was hold on
Tuesday evening last. An address was slivered
by Rev. Thomas D. Anderson, D. D., New
York; subject—" Success." The annual ort,
read by the Secretary,-states that there are 93
active, 6 lite, 5 contributing and 65 ruiscellane s
members of the association. During the year th
members of the association visited 2,756 houses,
and distributed 42,505 tracts and 2,555 religious
books. A number were brought into the Sunday
schools. The receipts of the association were
$431 56, and the expenditures $3BO 63.
THE Church of the Messiah (Universalist), Lo
cust street, below Broad, have recently organized
a mode of Christian work on a novel plan.
Acting on the commendable principle that all
connected with their church organization should
be actively engaged in the promotion of her in
terests, they have reported and adopted a com
pact and rules of procedure, providing for the
care of the Sabbath schools, for a Bible class, a
ladies' auxiliary meeting and an Improvement
meeting. 'The congregation is divided into twelva
working committees, with an executive commit
tee for the general oversight and direction of the
whole. These committees comprise the entire
membership, and by keeping all earnestly work
ing for cause of each, great good is expected to
result. The pastor, Rev. Dr. Brooks, is laboring
earnestly and effectively in his charge.
Tun Geeeral Conference of the Evangelical Al
liance, which was to be held in the city of New
York next fall, has been postponed for one year,
as the branches of the Alliance in England, Ger
many and Holland cannot make their arrange
ments to be fully represented at the meeting dur
ing the present year. The Alliance has branches
in Great Britain, France, Holland, Germany,
Switzerland, Sweden, Palestine, Persia, Turkey,
New Zealand, Australia and Africa, most of
which were represented In the General Confer
ence in Amsterdam in 1867. If is the most pow
erful organization of Evangelical Christians in
the world, directing its energies to the promo
tion of greater unity, the defence of religions
liberty and the rights of conscience, and the
adoption of more elllcient measures for the
spread of the Redeemer's Kingdom, and the ame
lioration of the condition of the human Mee.
When the meeting occurs it will be one of the
great events of the times.
TUB MIDNIGHT Mission OF PHILADELPHIA.--
In the month of January. 1868, the Midnight
Mission of Philadelphia was organized by
number of our "citizens, after hearing satisfactorl
remade of kindred enterprises in Glasgow, Lon-4
don and the city of New York. Its prima ry
object is "to emancipate our fellow - creatu res
from afar worse than Egyptian bondage,and from
a far more terrible famine than bread and water,
to snap the chains which immorality has forged
1111 up fallen woman from the level of brutes
gnat perish, and to render her present character
and conduct worthy , or her glorious destinleshe
yond the grave." -
-The tint annual report of the organization has ,
just >been issued. ~it says: "An appropriate
house was secured in the central part of oar city,
every way adapted to the work, and in a simple,
childlike faith in Jesus, who received sinners and
ate with them, the enterprise was commenced.
On Thursday evening, the 20th of February,l.B6B,
the house alluded to having been cleansed and
comfortablyfurnished, was thrown open for the
,
reception of 'fallen women; A commit
tee from the Board of Managers assem
bled in the parlors, and invoked the
aid of ,the Rely Ghost—earnest and touching
prayers were offered—the streets marked out
into districts, to each of which two gentlemen
Were assigned, and then the little band started
out on its loving errand. As those who were
sought were met in groups or siugly,an envelope
was 'placed in their hands containing the in
scription. 'Admit' the bearer to Midnight Mis
sion, 911 Locust street, on Thursday evening.
Tea served at half-past ton o'clock.' This en
velope contained two little books otexhortatlon
to virtue.
"By scores the Ftrlß are strolling alone through
dark streets, and in the light pOured forth - from
taverns, oyster saloons, and danco-houtles, the
cards of admission are rapidly distributed—
strange is the effect of them; some laugh, some
are thankful, and very few receive them with
scorn. The question asked among the distribu
tors was, will they come? At ten o'clock they
went to the Mission House to see the result of
their labor—steaming coffee is waiting, gas send
ing forth a brilliant light, four or five cheerful
Christian ladles at the door, but nobody
has arrived yet, save two broken-hearted
girls, who are with a lady in one of
the upper rooms in prayer. Eleven
o'clock arrives,and a quarter of an hoar passes—
one, two, three or more; some together, others
singly, ascend the steps and enter, having first
shown their cards of admission. They hesi
tatingly look in the parlor and stop—immediately
words of welcome are spoken, and they are con
ducted in and handed some refreshment by, ladies,
who do not stand at a distance, but take seats at
their side, just as close to them as Jesus came to
us when seeking our wandering soul. Whilst
they partake of refreshment the ladies engage
them in conversation."
The Mission can accommodate twenty-five per
sons. These inmates are brought under home
influence,' and submit cheerfully 'to the regula
tions of the Home. They are taught leskons'of
punctuality, industry, systere, cleanliness and do
votion, and thus prepared to , earn an. honest
living. A sewing room, under the charge of an
efficient lady, is a valuable auxiliary to the work.
Here the girls are employed certain hours'daily,
and although the profit is not very great in a pe
cuniary sense, the instruction received by the
girls is invaluable.
Since the commencement of the work in Feb
ruary, theretave been at the meetings on Thurs
day evenings an aggregate of 450 visitors.
Ninety-four girls have been' inmates of the
Home, some of them remaining three, months,
others not as lone; 'ten have been sent ',tithe Hos
pital, six to the Magdalene, nine restored to their
families, twenty provided with situations in
Christian homes, while eleven are , at present at
the Mission. , The,memberts of the, female board
have been indefatigable in their, labors, nothing
being too difficult for them to undertake. 'A.t all
bburs, through snow, rain, and the heat of sum-
Mer, they have toiled steadily, fait t ily and with
great success. They visit the o daily, im
parting instruction and advice to the inmates,
and superintend the household affairs, look after
airls who have been placed in homes, or at the
- Hospital, and leave no available plan untried to
carry out the work of the Mission.
The expenses for the year reached the sum of
86,905 08.
The following are the officers for 1869 :
, Board of Managers—Rev. R. Reber Newton,
Rev. J.Wheaton Smith, Rev. Richard Humphreys,
Rev. George Bringhurst. Messrs. George H.
Stuart, H. D. Sherrerd, L. Montgomery Bond,
De F. Willard, Samuel Corey, William A. Farr.
Rev. George Bringhurst, General Superintendent.
FORTY•FISSP CONGIRESS—First bee
CLOSE OF YESTERDAY'S PROCEEDINGS. I
Holism—Mr. Schenck introduced a bill to
strengthen the public credit, and relating to con
tracts for the payment of coin, being his bill of
lest session of that title, as it had passed the two
Rouses on the report of the Committee of Con
ference.
Mr. Allison moved. to amend by striking out
the second section of the bill,which egalizee gold
contracts.
Mr. Burr moved to lay the bill on the table.
Negatived—yeas 53, nays 86.
The question being taken on Mr. Allison's
amendment striking out the second section of
the amendment, it was agreed to—yeas 86,
nays 57.
So the second section was struck out, and th),
AM was then passed.
The following are its provisions
Be it enacted, dT., That in order to remove any
doubt as to the purpose of the Government to
discharge all just obligations to the public credit,
and to settle conflicting questions and interpreta
tions of laws, by virtue of which such obligations
have been contracted, it is hereby provided and
declared that the faith of the United States is
solemnly pledged to the payment in coin or its
quivalent of all the interest-bearing obligations
of the United States, except in cases where the
law authorizing the issue of any such obligations
has expressly provided that the same may be
paid in lawinl money or other currency
than gold or silver ; but none of such
interest-bearing obligations not already duo
shell be redeemed, or paid before ma-
• . - .
turity, unless at such time United States notes
shall be convertible into win at the option of the
holder, or unless at such time bonds of the
United States, being at a lower rate of interest
than the bonds to be redeemed, can be sold at par
ha coin, and the United States shall also solemnly
pledge its faith to make provision at the earliest
practicable period for the redemption of United
t3tateis notes in coin.
The title of the bill was amended so as to make
it !lad: "Au act to strengthen the public credit
of the United States."
Mr. Butler suggested that he did not think the
bill did strengthen the public credit.
The vote on the passage of the bill was—yeas
. nays 47—as follows:
Allison, AmJble,' Ames, Armstrong, Ar
nett, Asper, ell - , - P•ailey, Banks, Beaman, Ben
jamin, Bennett, Bingham, Blair, Boles, Boyd,
Buflingtog, Burdett, Cessna, Churchill, Cobb,
Vook, Conger,
Cowles, Cullom, Dawes, Donley,
Duvall, Dyer, Farnsworth, Ferris, Ferrv,Finekel
bury, Fisher, Fitch, Glifillan, Hale, Hawley, Hea
ton, Hoar, Hooper, Hotchkiss, Jonekes, Jones
(N. C.), Judd, Julian, Kelley, Ketcham, Knapp,
Catlin, Lash, Lawrence (Ohio), Lynch, Maynard,
McCreery, McGrew, Mercur, Moore (III.),
Moore N. J.), Morrill (Me.), Negley, O'Neill,
Packard, Paine, Palmer,Phelps,Poland,Pomeroy,
Prosser, Rooto,Sanford,Sargent,Sawyer,Schenck,
Scofield, Sheldon, Smith (Ohio), Smith (Vt.),
Smith (Iowa), Stokes, Stoughton, Strickland,
Tanner, Tillman, Twiehell, Upson, Vanhorn,
Ward, Washburn (Wis.), Washburn (Vass.),
Welker, Wheeler, Whittemore, Wilkinson, Wil
lard, Williams, Winans-97.
NAYS.—Archer, Beatty, Beck, Briggs, Bird,
Barr, Butler (Mass.), Butler (Tenn.), Cobb,
Coburn. Cr,eg' Deweos, Dickinson, Eldridge,
Getz, Gollate, Hawkins, Holman, Hopkins,
Johnson, Jones (Ky ), Kerr, Knott, Marshall,
Mayhem, McCormick, McNeely. Moffet, Mungon,
Niblaek, Orth, Reading, Reeves, Rice, Shanks,
Smith (Oregon), Stiles, Stone, Sunder, Sweeney,
Tulle, Trimble. Tanner, Van Trump, Wilson.
(Ohio), Winchester, Woodward-47.
The Speaker announced the Committee on
Elections as follows: Messrs. Paine (Wis.,,„
Churchill (N. Y.), Heaton (N. C.), Cessna (Pa ,
Butler (Tenn.), Stevenson (Ohio), Burdett
(Mo.), Burr (Ill.), and Randall (Pa.)
The Speaker stated that ho would announce the
standing committees on Monday next.
The Speaker presented the resignation as
Representative of Mr. Boutittll (Mass.), now
Secretary of the Treasury.
Adjourned till Monday next.
—A French arsenal llas just given indefinite
leave of absence without pay to one whet/occu
pied an. Inferior position in it. Tho reason is
thus stated. It was accidentally discovered that
the laborer had once been connected with,a tra
veling show. The director of the arsenal sum
moned him. "You used to be a mountebank?"
"Yes." "You swallowed swords?" "That was
my business." "I discharge you. If you should
have a hankering for your old employment, you
would probably strip the arsenal, and it would be
impossible to detect you. We can't have sword
eaters bore."
.TIIFI DAILY EVENINO BULLETIN-PHILADELPHIA, SATURDAY MA.R,OII 13, 1869.
TOECowman:l Eratorrons.—Mesers. W. P.
. .
Messick and R. M. Datturs, ,, Examiners held
another seeelon yeaterdny_efteenaba,
.
The box of the Bixteenth - Division, .Twentieth
Ward, was produced _ lay the -Mayor's Clerk and
Recorder; was opened, and, the,papers taken oat
and submitted in eVidence: , - ' . • ' '
Mr. ,Gerhart objected Wthe opening of the box,
on the ground that there was no specification in
regard trethis DivisiOn.' '' " - - •
Levi Fiehlestified=Realde '616 Shippen street;
did not vote in Sixth Division, Fourth Ward, in
October; I was not in' the city. I Aseeseed and
marked "V," and No. 262'0n ihit of voters.l
Mts. Ellen C. 'Reinhart, lestWed—Resided 710
Passyunk road last October, 'Michael Cahill did
hot live there then , know no man ,by that
name; I have lived • there nearly'' three years.
Plichael Cahill is assented 710 Passynnk road,
marked "V," and No. 335 millet of voters.l
; Croes-examined—There are 'four' houses in a
court back of tf; 'I know all theparties who have
lived in those houses during the past three yerrs;
in October Wm; -Lafferty; Arthur, Cassidy, Mr.
Hanna and Geo. White lived in'the houses; none
Of these parties had any boarders. , ,
Mrs. Mary McCullough, testified—Resided 785
Sonth Seventh street lasteo,6tOber; Roger Herald
did not live there; he moved away in September
LNo. 207 on list of votersjelri37MOve,d, into the
country.... ,
J. Alex.Slmpson teetified-1 was present before
the Legislative committee when the ballot-box of
the Sixteenth division, Twentieth Ward, contain
ing the judiciary ticket, was opened and the bal
lots counted; the count was for Thayer 283, for
Greenbank 270; there , were bundles of tickets that
I saw containing more or less for Mr.Greenbank,
and made up to ten with Thayer's tickets; they
were nearly all in bundles of`ten;' each bundle
was opened, the name called off .and' tallied as it
7a6 called; the bundles, instead of containing ten
for each candidate, were intermixed; I have been
an election officer for many years; 'the usual
practice is to put the,tickets.ln bundles of ten, all
alike.
Cross-examined—l know tharthe bundles were
Made up with the Thayer ticketicbecause there
were more votes for Greenbank than for Thayer;
such as six for Greenbauteandleur for Thayer;
because in every 'eflame the upper ticket in the
mixed tickets in the bundle , was for Hirst and
Greenbank.'
Mr. Gerhart objected to tentiliony o f Mr. Simp
son. ,
David F. Foley.testifled—l ' was return-inspec
tor's clerk in- the Sixteenth ,Division, Twentieth
Ward, after one o'clock and • until the polls
closed: the Democratic return inspector , was
named Quinn; I think his firsttiatne was Edward;
Charles Meyerhather was the Repub li can return
inspector; the return ituVector'snlerie became
incompetent to act,'by sickneeo,. and 'I took his
place;'he was unable to keep.the tally for the
votes counted for three hours previous to any go
ing there; when I mine in I looked pretty care
fully as to the manner in which the tickets
were being counted; in the first, bundle, often
selected by the Demeeratic inspector, I detected
an inaccuracy in detail; I called the attention of
the Democratic inspector to H e I told him that
there were Republican tickets folded tip in a bun
dle of ten which he was about to count as Demo
cratic votes; he denied may right to question any
thing, and, on appealing to the judge, he decided
that I had a right to see what tickets were there;
upon opening the bundle and examining the
tickets there were five Democratic and five Re
publican tickets; the five Republican tickets were
taken from that and plat with the ican
tickets; the bundle was completed by adding five
Democratic tickets; after that I watched the do
ing up of the bundles and saw no attempt to
make such a count again; I was outside in the
early part of the morning when the pills were
opened; when I went in there was a general com
plaint or misgiving in regard to the manner in
which the vote was being counted, and it was
thought that the Republican ticket was not being
fully-counted.
Cross-examined—My impression was that the
clerk, whose place I took, was drunk, and the
other officers said that ho was too drunk to at
tend to his duties.
Edward Gideon testified=—l. was at the polls of
the Sixteenth division, Twentieth Ward.., at the
October election; -was there all day; I brought the
Republican tickets in the morning, and gave
them out to the men in line. and saw the voting
goingon; I beard the hourly announcement of
votes; from the number of Republican votes
polled, and the announcement of votes
made, I telt that the count was not fairly
made, and I sought to convey
that impression to the officers inside
to put them on their guard; I called upon Mr.
Samuel Bailey. and requested him•to hand a note
to his brother, Nathan Bailey, who was window
inspector; be requested I would write it for him,
which I did in the following words as near as I
can recollect . "Insist upon a recount of the
ballot at the close of the polls; there is something
wrong inside;" Samuel Bailey told me that he had
handed it in at the door, and Nathan Bailey told
me that be never received it, and I think he in
ormed me that he caw Mr. Quinn receive a note
. bout that time. ' our canvass gave the Republi
c, ,s from ten to twenty majority in the precinct;
1 au satisfied from the return made that the
tie is were not fairly counted.
F and Brady testified--I was Republican win
dow i , epector's clerk in the Sixteenth division,
Twen eth Ward, and took down the names of
the vot- re; I discovered a difference between the
numbe 'of votes as announced hourly and the
actual 13 tuber of ballots taken in at the window;
I notice . that in the first hour that although there
were nin • ty-six ballots actually taken in at the
window, -hick number was agreed to be correct
by the of %et clerk, the number announced as the
hourly return . differed from it; I
think 'he announcement was one
hundred n the second hour; the number at
the wind .w was ninety-eight votes polled, and
the ann.., teement of the hourly return varied
from it; be third hour a similar discrepancy oc
curred; =ll three of these inaccuracies differed
from e .11 (Abel; theirreguiarity was so manifest,
and it eing\ evident, that the return inspector's
/
clerk as incompetent and in an unfit condition
I ra n e time of the opening of the polls, I in
eiste that he ebonld be dismissed, and, after a
dies esion, all of the o ffi cers determined that he
silo id be dismissed; up to that time I had
no eed that the manner in which the return
inspectors were noting down the' result of the
count was very loose; at the close of the polls
I found that the return of the election was abso
lutely false as compared with the actual number
of votes polled during the day, in regard to every
candidate voted for, the discrepancies varying
among the different candidates from one to a
dozen in the total return as made; for instance
there were 555 ballots actually cast; on judi
cial ticket the eiscrepancy was one less;
on Auditor-General one more ; District-
Attorney cloven in excess ; Mayor tour
03QTC; did not discover any discrepancies after
Major Foley went in; I am positive that the votes
were inaccurately counted on that day; at the
close of the poll it was determined to have a re
count of the vote, tend a number of bundles were
counted by both parties, and the vote was found
to correspond with the window clerk's lists-555
ballots; the Democratic officers, except Mr. May
elhather, signed the return, , and the Republicans
refused to do so.
Mr. Mann offered in evidence a certified copy
of the return of the election in October, 1868, of
the Sixteenth division, Twentieth Ward s from the
Prothonotary's office, showing that Inayor Fox
had 310 votes, and Tyndale 249—Democratic
majority 61, and the election for Novemher,lB6B,
showing Democratic electors to have 250 votes,
end Republican electors 295 votes—Republican
majority 45, making a difference of 106.
W. Alexander Brilkley testified that ho was at
the polls of the Sixteenth Division, Twentieth
Word, and is satisfied that the vote woe not ac
ocurately counted: ho voted the Republican ticket
in that division; he had assisted in making a can
vass and thought that a lair count of the vote
would have shown a different result.
JatnesJenner also testified that be did not be
lieve that a fair count of the votes had been made
in the Sixteenth Division, Twentieth Ward.
John De Winton, testified—Live rear of 619
Fitzwater street; no William F. Biddle lived there
in October; I voted the Republican ticket. mid
dlb is assessed, mark.ed "V," and No. 283 on the
list of voters. I
William F. Patterson, 719 Eighth Street; Wm.
E. May, 708 Erie I not on the list of voters I;
Thomas Tindall, 728 Eighth, and Louie •A. Dols,
718 Eighth, testified to having voted the Ulu - Re
publican ticket in the Eighth division, Fourth
Ward.
CITY BVIOUL`TIN.
RUN Ovnu.—Mary -Johnson, forty years of age,
residing at Broad and Spring Garden streets, was
run over by a carriage at Tenth and Walnut
streets, 3 - Monday afternoon, and was severely
injured. She was admitted into the hospital.
OFFICIAL:V/61T TO EITATION.HOITSEEL--Yeater
day afternoon Mayor Fox and the Police Com
f o c ruled
rnittee o medal onti their o cial visits
to the different station-housee. his honoraddress-..
Log the men at length and urging them to .a faith-.
fol performance of their duties. • The first station
visited was the Fifteenth District, at Frankforde:
under charge of Lieutenant Street. This was in
good condition and, the most comfortable ;horse,
in the department. It was built during the ad
ministration of Mayor Henry, but now needs
some repairing. The party then returned to the
city and drove out to Germantown (Fourteenth
District), under charge of Lieutenant , Dungan.
The station-house is in the hall and conalsts of
three rooms. A cell-house outside contains three
cells, which need repairing badly, the
plastering being d,Own and the locks and
bolts out of order. The Cheating Hill force, un
der Sergeant Whitman, were present, and were •
inspected,, the men presenting a very creditable
appearance. The party next.proceeded to. the
Thirteenth District (Manaynnk), which is under,
charge of Lieutenant Kelly. The house is in good,
condition and everything , is kept very clean.
The Mayor Intends to have some fine improve
ments made in the spring, and gave .preparatory
orders. A part of , the force is in the 'rwenty
eighth Ward under Sergeant Cameron. The
party then re turned to the city.
The Mayor has ordered- that a -record of all
events that occur shall be kept at each station
house, which will be very valuable in later years.
PHILADELPHIAN'S SN EUROPE..—Listof Philadel
phians registered at the Banking House of Drexel,
HarJes & Co., 3 Rue Scribe, Paris, for the- weak
ending February 25, 1869; Mr. and Mrs. M. Wea
ver, Mrs. Mary A. Townsend, Mr. W. B. Bullock
and family, Miss Annie E. Biddle, Mr. R. H.
Townsend, Mrs. L. E. Fetterman, Mr. S. Espen,
Mr. James A. Wright, Miss Edith Wrlght,: Mr.
Theodore Wright, Mr. Joseph F. Page and
family.
RAILROAD ACOIDENT.—WiIIiam Mullen aged
eighteen years, had a leg broken yesterday, by .
falling while attempting to jump on a coal train
while It , was in motion. Ho ,was taken to the
Pennsylvania HospitaL He resides at, Consho
hocken.
NEW JERSEY RATTERS.
CITY COURCIL.—The last meeting of ,the old .
Council of Camden was held.last evening.
A committee was appointed to canvass the
election returns of Tuesday latit: The Committee
reported that they had counted the votes, and the
following gentlemen were declared dttly elected
for members of Council :
North Ward William CalhOun, Simnel C.
Harbert.
Middle Ward—Samuel Lizard, Jonathan Kirk
bride.
South Ward—Richard Perks, John Osier,
These gentlemen then' came forward, took the
oath of office, and were conducted to their seats,
an equal number °fold members retiring.
The election of officers was then proceeded
with, and Thomas O. Knight was unanimously
re-elected President, and Joseph C. Nicholls,
Clerk.
A committee was appointed to wait upon the
Mayor and Marshal and inform them of their
election. These gentlemen then came forward,
took the oath of office and entered upon their
duties.
The balance of the returns were canvassed,
with results the same as heretofore published.
James W. Ayres, of North Ward; Samuel
Owens, of Middle Ward; Jacob Wolf, of South
Ward, were elected Pound Keepers.
A motion was made that when the Council ad
journ it be to next Thursday evening to receive
the bonds of the officers. Adopted.
A committee was appointed to examine the
bonds of the 'officers to see if they are correct.
Tho Ulerk was authorized to procure the neces
sary stationery together with a copy of Cush
in 's Manual, for the use of the members.
Acommittee of three were appointed on the
new City Charter, to visit Trenton and urge its
passage before 'the Legislature. Tho same Com
mittee was also instructed to prevent the passage
of the bill locating the new City Hall.
OFFICIAL Vora.-The Board of Canvassers met
yesterday, and made an official count ot the vote
polled at the election on Tuesday. It is as fol
lows:
mayor_
Charles Cox, B. 7'. B. Atkinson, D
North Ward, Ist di5t...320 108
North Ward, 2d di5t....443 237
Middle Ward, Ist di5t...344 306
Middle Ward, 2d di5t...209 202
South Ward, Ist di5t...220 188
South Ward, 2d di5t....250 225
1,705
Charles Cox's majority, 425
CITY MARSHAL.
J. K. Brawn. R. Wm. H. Knox, D
North Ward, Ist diet... 216 108
North Ward, 2d di5t...440 237
Middle Ward, Ist diet... 353 306
Middle Ward, 2d diet... 229 202
South Ward, Ist di5t...215 188
south Ward, 2d d15t....288 225
Brown's majority 475.
The balance of the officers elected received ,
majorities which were not materially changed.
These figures have already been published. The
Republicans carried every officer on their ticket
except three. The official count does not change
ibis result. There are two ties on Commissioner
of Appeal in Middle Ward.
RECOUNTED.—In the election of Tuesday last,
in Camden, Abner Sparks, Republican, was
elected for Chosen Freeholder, in Middle Ward,
over Alexander H. Hamell, Democrat, by only
two majority. Mr. Hamel), yesterday, had the
votes recounted twice, and succeeded in finding
one vote more in his favor, leaving Mr. Sparks's
majority only one.
ELECTION IN NEWTON TOWNSIIIP.—The town
election in Newton township, on Wednesday,
resulted in the election of all the inen on the
Democratic ticket. Usually the Democrats have
about 170 majority In that township, but at the
recent election James S. Henry, Justice of the
Peace, received over two hundred majority.
Bonito Ole EnBEHOLDERS.—It is said that the
Board of Chosen Freeholders of Camden county,
at their organization in May next, will contain a
majority of Republicans, as the new members
elected at the recent township meetings give
them that majority. The Democrats have had
control of that body for three or four years.
REPUsLICAN CAUCUs.—The caucus of the Re
publican members of the new Council unani
mously fixed upon Hon. Thomas C. Knight for
President, and Joseph C. Nicholls for Clerk.
These gentlemen were officers of the old Council,
4 .
and have served with MAIL .
EVEN VOTES.—On tw the candidates for
Commissioners of Appe i ?diddle Ward, at the
f
Tuesday's election, the üblican and Demo
cratic candidates received be-sante number of
votes, leaving those positions vacant until other
wise filled.
Sam. Randall on the. Rampage
The Baltimore American, of yesterday,
in its
account of the dinner given to Andrew Johnson,
ELM:
11r. Samuel J. Bandall,the member of Congress
from the geographically and morally lower dis
trict of Philadelphia, became involved in a diffi
culty during the evening,which for a time threat•
ened to dissolve the affair into a general quarrel.
It appears that Mr. Randall had been partaking
rather freely of the potables, and when the toast
to the judiciary was given, and Judge Garey rose
to respond, be jumped -at the conclusion that
this was :a relative of Governor Geary, of Penn
sylvania, and marched up to the Judge in as
straight a line as the circumstances would admit
of. Be balled in front of Judge Garey and ad
dressed to him some words, of which "d—d
Rndlcaralone were distinguishable,and attempted
to strike him in the face. Judge Garoy pre
vented the blow, and in a few seconds a police
man was called and the muddled Congressman
was taken dht of the dining-room and safely dls
posed'of. The roncontre was over very quickly
—almost before it was noticed—and Judge Garey
pursued his remarks us if nothing had occurred
to mar the course of the festivities.
AGJEICIOVIATURAL.
prturr TREES FOR SALE.
Aryl% E v ergr e en s. and Cherry. Dwarf and
Standard for hedging.
Address J. PERKINS. Moorestown, N. J.
keH O. RBEDIAN S El I P SCIENTIFICALLY
taught at the Philadelphia Riding School, Pourth
. street above Vine. The horses are quiet and
thoroughly_ trained. For hire, saddle -horses. Also car.
Tinges at en times for weddings...parties, opera, funerals,
dto. Horses trained to the saddle.
THOMAS CRAIRIE di SON...
• FI r
Go sun see . o greatest entertain nent over in Phil*
)11I4DETAPHIA. PHILHARMONIC SOCIETY.—
THE THIRD GRAND CONCERT
Of thia Society will take place at the .
ACADEMY OF MUSIC, _
On SATURDAY EYENING NEXT lath ins_ ,t. at S o'clock,
SOLO ARTII3T. - 1(r. .8 H. MILL%
The eminent Pianist of Now York. who winner/one the
selections below named.
• , PROGRAMME.' • "
• , vit ,^
rr.••
m • "
I. Pastorale Byphonio--Eleethoven.
1. Allegro Ma Non Trappe.
I. Andante Mullett*.
3. Allem The Storm. Allegretto.
QRAND ORCHESTRA. •
PA= SZCIOND:
I. CONCERTO FOR PIANO . IN E MINOR (Op. IL).
Chopin.
(WithOrcbestral AccompanimenL)
• 1. Itomanz& . • .
9. Rondo Vivace.
MR. S. H. MILLS.
IL Cho OUNG
M M a I l E e
N V NERU T G RSOCIE T Y
(uN dSroch
direction of Mr. William Hartman), with accom
paniments by four French Horne.
111. SOLO—PIANO. "HUNGARIAN - GIPSY MELO
DIES." Jallriff.
IV. Overturefeerstille." Mendebisohn.:
GRAND ORCHESTRA.
CONDUCTOR ........ ....Mr. W. G. DIETRICH
Tickets ail 50, For sale at the office of the Society, 146
1102 Chestnut street, and at the principal Mush) stores,
C. B. DODWORTEL President.
J. A. GaTz. Secretary. mIL9-ta t ot.
so
CONCERT HALL TO-NIGHT.—GO AND SEE THE
great Carleton in • hie celebrated character, "Thu
Dublin Dancing Muter," pronounced. the greatest Irbil
burieeque of the day.
A .ME.R.WAN ACADEMY uF A 11.11310.
GERMAN DRAMA.
FOR SIX NIGHTS.
FANNY JANAUSCHER,
QUEEN OF THE GERIIAN STAGE.
Arriated by alkompany of first-clue Artists. engaged by
her in Europe, will give
SIX REPRESENTATIONS
GERMAN DRAMA.
Commencing
r MONDAY EVENING. March 15.
MARIA STUART.
TUESDAY EVENING March 16,
CATHA RINETHE SECOND.
WEDNESDAY EVENING March 17, ,
MARIANI4.
raw.E,l3: ,
Admiaalon. 'gilt; . . one Dollar
Family Circle . ................. . . ....... ....60 cents
Gallery. . . .25 cen t,
The ea se Beata Wcitiiiienc:e .
c;i3 Thom
day MorningXarch 11, at R. WITTIG'S Music Store. No.
1021 Cheistnut street,and at the Academy. mh6416
fIONCIERT BALL TO-NIGHT.--00 . AND BEE Trf..E
V beautiful Arabian Nights.Tableitig, fifty in num
bee. The most attractive Smits of Paintino tn the
CHESTNUT STREET THEATRE. j 4
ON TUESDAY EVENING. mama ia.
• .C. MUESLI & 00.15 ' •
Production tit , Brongh's ExtravAi ganza, the .
FIELD OF THE CLOTH OF GOLD.
FIELD OF .THE CLOTH OF GOLD, • L.l
SUPERB OPERATIC AND , DRAMATIO_LIAST.
NIFICENT COST EIKE S,JEWELs. .• •
- - BANNERficAIIetORS. &o. •
INTRODUCED AND SPECIAL FEATURES,
THE LEON BROTHERS:
Unrivaled in tho Groat Maguire
BREBAN"S SWIEP‘BELL 'RINGERS.
HERNANDEZ , . COWBELL RINGERS.
GIRARD'S ORNITHOLOGICAL. AND ZOOLOGICAL
IMITATI‘ INS.
HERNANDEZ' GUI eAs sows,
JAPANELM. TROUPE EEXTRAORDINARY I
Music by the celebrated KOPPITZ . Sale of Reserved .
Seats has commence • etTruinpferv'si MuMc Store. tahliAt
rtONOERT HALL TO-NIGHT.
V !Grand preeentatioe of Valuable Oltth to the Audi.
erica.
The Goods given sway at this exhibition are first.
class.
NE M JOHN DREW'S ARCH STREET THEATRE.
Bezins at IN.
SECOND SUAKSPEREAN REVIVAL.
MONDAY. AND4ILL FURTHER NOTICE.
Bbakspeare's Great Comedy of
''MUCH ADO ABOUT NOTHING."
With New Scenery, New Coetumea,
NEW APPOINTMENTS.
Characterietic Marie
Aud FineCest.
including
MRS. JOHN —.21.... ....BEATRICE
SEATS SECURED SIX DAYS IN ADVANCE.
lONCEDT BALL TONIGHT.,-00 AND nEms
the great Carleton ling the Whistling Thiettrith va
riations.
VVALNUT STREW 'THEATRE. Beidniiitigic`iiiiicß.
THIS iSATURDAYy EVENING Even la,
MR. and MRS. HARNEY WILLIAMS.
FOR THE FOURTEENTH TIME.
'I be romantic Irish Drama: entit ed
THE EMERALD BING.
Received on each representation be larg6e audiencee,with
ENTHUSIASTIC 'APPLAUSE.
MIKE MAUARTY,,. .... ... BARNEY WILLIAMS
MAGGIE MACARTY MRS. BARNEY WILLIANid
IRIS AFTERNOtiN--SECOND WILLIAMS MATINEE.
THE EMERALD RING.
CONCERT HALL TO-NIGHT.
ORTY T
ALI RABA, ALADDIN and the
FHIEVE&
IONCh.RT IIALL TO-NIGHT.
ki Go and hear Mae Jennie Wade dna her beautiful
Ballade.
IVHEATRE COMIQUEL-SEVENTII STREET, BELOW
.1 Arch. Commences to li o'clock
UNEQUIVOCAL SUCCESS
OF PROF. RISLEY'S
World.known
IMPERIAL AND ORIGINAL JAPANESE TROUPE.
With the Original
LITTLE "ALL RIGHT" and Full Company.
THEIR FAR. WELL PERFORMANCES.
MATINEE. SATURDAY. at 2 o'cl
Seats secured at Trumplcr's and Office.
Admission tO. 75 and 25 cents Private Boxes. fn.
rIONCERT HALL TO-NIGHT.
V The Great Arabian Nights Combination Entertain
ment.
Tickets, 60 cents.
iteserved Beata. 75 cents.
Children. 25 cents.
FOX'S AMERICAN THEATRE.
Walnut Street. above Eighth.
New Company. Programme Quadrupled.
FOUR PREMIERE DANSUESEB.
Including the Great Corps of Figurantee.
Doors open at 7. Commence at 7.10.
CIONCERT HALL TO-NIGHT. —BOX OFFICE OPEN
C
daily, from 9 A. M. to 6 P. M., for the said of reserved
Seats. Price 76 cents.
rl ERMANIA ORCHESTRA, PUBLIC REHEARSALS
kJ at the Horticultural Hall, every Wednesday. at 33d
P. M.
HORTICULTURAL HALL.
Tickets sold at the door and all principal music stores.
Packages of five, SI ; angle, 25 cents. Engagements can
be made by addressing G. 11ASTERT, 14151 MontereY
street. WITTIG'S Music Store. 1021 Chestnut street. or
ANDRE'S Music Store. 1104 Chestnut street. ocll.o
CONCERT BALL TO-NIGLIT.—GO AND SEE CAR-
D in his greatlriah CharCANN.ac.
PAT Moter
ACADEMY OF FINE ARTS. _
CLLEETNUT Otreet. above Tenth.
Open from 9 A. M. to 6 P. M.
Benjamin West's Groat
CILIUM REJECTED
dill on exhibltion4. lessl•ti
lONCERT HALL TO.NIGHT. 4 • -•
A- , A beautiful Silver Tea set. several Gold Watches.
Bayer Wax°. Jewelry. dm., to be given to the audience
co-night.
MUSICAL FUND HALL.
CARL BENI Z AND MARK mums=
GRAND ORCHESTRA MATINEES.
EVERY SATURDAY, AT Of P. 51.
Package of four Tickets. SL Single Admission. 50 Cents.
For sale at 1102 Chestnut street. ial•tf
GONC RT HALL TONIGHT.—GO AND BEE PROF.
M. O. REARDON, the great Pianist and Compose•,r
perform on his great invention, tho Ttunbloronicon, the
wonder of the musical age.
MAMMOTH VELOCIPEDE SCHOOL S
TWENTY-FIRST and RACE STREETS.
epen Day and Evening. MI etyles of Velocipedes,
both for sale and to rent. Headquarters of Philadelphia
Velocipede Club. Admiesion,,lo centa.
mhiLtim§ J. —
IV. POST.
CIONCERT HALL TO-NIGHT.—GO AND EIRE CEDIII3.
CIARMIO sing his great Character songs, Major Wel.
lington Do Boots. Up in a Ballooll. Fashionable bred,
Rollicking Rovers, itc. mhl2-tf
HEATERS AND STOVES.
THOMAS S. DLXON & 80NS.
Late 'Andrews & Dixon,
No. DM CHESTNUT street,Pidiada..
Oppoeite United Stated Mint.
Manufacturers of
LOW DOWN.
CLAMBER.
OFFICE, -
And other GRATES,
For Anthracite. Bittuninous and Wood Fire I
ALl5O,_
WARM-Alit FuRNACEB,
For Warming Public and . Private Buildings,
matBTERB, VETILATORd,
CHIMNEY OAP%
COMM G.RANGES. BATELBOILERS.
WHOLESALE and RETAIL.
CONSIGNEE'S NOVICES.
lAOTICE.—THE BR. BRIG EXCELSIOR, BROWN,
Master, from Liverpool, is now discharging under
general order at South Street Wharf. Consignees
will please attend to the reception of their goods. PETER
WRIGHT & SONS. 115 Walnut street. tablaif '
OTIOE.—ALL PERSONS ARE HEREBY CAE
tionedd against trusting any of the crew of the British
Brig Excelsior, Brown, Master, from Liverpool, as no
debts of their contracting will be Amid. by ,either the
captain or Consignees. PETER WEIWIIT & SONS,IIS
W,d lit street' mhlotf
MENTOR BrUIII4IIFSKINGS 600020
it - t GI W B .?
ANENT SPRING we). DDT ,
t, _ ../. 0110 VOL ltaiterauloth,Lesther,wmte and
0, , _
...V! e •oz,n Linens Children's Cloth and Velvet
.!-.. ord
?' = -.." W:di,BABI°SI9MIGIVG GOODS. a
... ~ of every.deeorltloN veil: loYr. 908 , Chestnut
for lidlee enitrgeeetiiartner o pt
' unt '.'' 'he beet Kid
(31 ! 5'yeal
___ _._ltl BAZAAR.
non-tit OPE04:111 T CGIEL VERIW R D.DE G.'S
. Ayer's
Hair Vigor,
For the - Renovation of the Haw.
The , Greatt,Desideratum of ,the !Age.
A dressing which
is at once agreettblq,,
healthy, and effectual
for preserving the ,
hair. Faded or gray
hair is soon restored
to its original' color
and the gloss
freshness ,of youth.
Thin hair is thick-'
ened, 'falling' hair checked, and bald- '
ness often, though not 'always, cured '
by its use. Nothing can restore
_the
hair where the follicles are destroyed,
or the glands atrophied and decayed.
But such as remain can be saved for
usefulness by this application. 'lnstead
of fouling the hair with a pasty sedi
ment, it will keep it clean and vigorous.
Its occasional use will Tirevent the, hair
from turning gray or, falling off, and
Consequently prevent baldness: Free
from those deleterious sibstances which
make some preparations dangerous`and
injurious to the hair, the , Vigor can
only benefit but not harm it. If wanted
merely for a
HAIR DRESSING,
nothing else can be found so desirable.
Containing neither : oil nor ,dye, it does
not soil white cainbric, and yet lasts
longer on the hair, giving it a rich
glossy lustre and 'a grateful perfume. •
Prepared by Dr. J. C. her & Co.,
PRACTICAL AND ANALYTICIa. tinrktf,STß,
LOWELL, 111 ASS. •
- „
PRIOEI $l.OO. ,
Bold by all Droights ovrywhete. .At wholesale bir
J. U. MARIO ds mh9 tw.sb44oTff-11
FRENCH! MEDIOII4OI3 • • ' • •
st
GRIHAUter & CO,
CHEMISTS Tg , B. I . H. PRINCIa NAPOLEON.
45 ItUE P4
DEItIC IJ
HELJZ.
44118.
CHILDREN'S DISEASES.
lODIZED SYRUP OF 11011SZ.R.ADISHi s.
PREPARED BY GILIMAULT & PAS
This syrup contains lodine cotobined with the nice of
watercress. eonte.mdlab: and scunT•grass. in which
iodine and sulphur exist natnrally, end for this reason Is
an excellent substitute for cod ilVl=WhiCh' gene , '
rally supposed to owe. its efficacy : to. be presence of
iodine. The Icidixed Syrup of Ilona hivartably pro
ducts mast eatidactory results administered to• children
suffering from lymphatism. rachithsm. xongestion of; the
ale fre qu enthe neck, or the vario"sernptitms on the face
CO during infancy. It is alto the .bost remedy
ler the first stage of consumption. Being at once Wale
and depuratirs It excit. s the appetite. promotes digits.
tion. and restores to the tiasues..their natural fin:mune
and vigor.
Agents In
FRENCI .1 RICHABDS & CO..
• E• 7 Em . H. W. cur. Tenth and Market streets..
COPAL DENTALLINA.—A SUPERIOR ARTICLE FOR
cleaning tto- Teeth, deetroyhm anhuslcula. which
feetthem, giving tone to the 'gums. and leaving* feeling '
of fragrance end perfect cloanlinees in the mouth. Limey
be used daily. and will be found to streogt ben weak awl
bteecing guma while. the - aroma and detendveneas will
recommend It to • ~. ore Botha com Posed with, the
assistance of the I': one , .4.-lsna and Microscopist. it
is confidently offer.-0 se a , ablet substitute for the un
certain waahea for!. • • in ,gne.
'Eminent_Dentists. ....atuted with thatanatitrienht at
the DentaWna. adv .-ate Its WC U contains nothing do
Prevent its unrestrained ployihent. - Made only by .
JAMES l': SHINN Apothem'''.
Broad an d amuck) stream
For sale by Druggists amorally. and
Fred. Browne; D. L. titatkhOute.
Eleseard di Co., Robert C. Davis,
C. R. !teeny. Oeo. C. Bower.
lease EL Kay. Cbaa. Shivers.
C. A. Needles, S. M. ?lice...olio.
T. J. Husband, S. C. Bunting.
Ambrose Smith. Chas. EL ,Eberla,
F.d sr ard Parrish. James N. Marks.
Wm. B. Webb. E. Brinahurat dt Co.„
James L. Shoham. Dyott tic Co..
Bushell & Combo, El. C. Blalr's Sone.
Henry A. Bower. Wyeth & Bro.
If3ARELLA MARIANN% M. D., iNS N. TWEI.AnD
AStreet. Cansoßations free. mi 9.17
LEGAL AlerrivEs.
1 TIIF COURT OF COMM.ON PLEAS FOR TUE
City County of Fbiladelphln Re. MAIM
J . DAV/FS to WILLIAM DAYTEI.—You will please
take notice that your wife. MARY J. DAVIES, ties filed
her petition In the Court of Common Pleas, praying to no
decreedla Femme Sole Trader( under the act of Assembly
of Febt nary rd. 1718), for the causes therein specified.
Ibe Forayer of said petition will be granted on SATUR
DAY fdarch 1869, unless ,you appear sod show
causeto the contrary. This advertisement is made on
account of your absence.
JOUR C. REDMEFFFIL
Attorney for Mery J. Davies.
mhl.l-eam4to
TN THE DISTRICT COURT OF TH EIVNIT ED STATES
A for the Kantern Dietrict of Pennsrloanta.—ln Rinke
ruptcy. In the matter. of ANDREW POI.LOCK,
Bankrupt. At Philadelphia, March 5, A. D. 11369,- , -The
undersigned hereby gives notice of • his appointment as
Aesiguce of ANDREW POLLOCK, of Philadelphhs,in the
county of Philadelphia and State of Pennsylvarda,withizi
said District, who Lae been adjudged a Bankrupt, on hie
own petition by the Dbitriet Court of said District.
W. H. ICEHKES. APaignee,
227 Walnut street, Philadelphia.
To the Creditors of said Bankrupt. 1ntr6.4.810
1N THE DISTRICTCOITET OF TB P. UNITED STATES
for the Eastern District of Peringylvania.---In.Bank
ruptcy. In the matter of J. NEWTON KIANE..Bank.
rept. At Philadelphia.. Hatch me. The .undersigned
hereby elves notice of his appointment as Assignee of J.
NEWTON KLletE(lste a member of the Erma of KLlNld
di CARROLL, and J. N. KLINE C 0..) of Philadelphia..
in the county of Philadelphta, and State of Pennsylva
nia who has been adjudged a Bankrupt noon his own n
by the District Court of saki Dietrict -
W. IL YES/C.15 4 . Aselanee,
327 Walnut street. Philadelphia;
, ditors of said Bankrupt.
.
RIME
--- • .
N THE COURT OF CDMMON PLEAS FOR THE
CITY AND cOUNTY OF PHILADELPHIA.
I
WILLIAM BTOPPEItAN va. EMMA M. STOPPERAN.
September Term. 1538. No 44. In Divorce., •
To.EMMA. M. SIOPPERAN, Respondent:
Aim:lam—Take notice, that the deposition's of witnesses
in the Obi:),0 calla. on the part of tho libellant. wilt be
taken before HARVEY C. WARREN, Esq . Examiner. at
the office of the subscriber. No. Ml North dixth street, in
the city of Philadelphia. on.FRIDAY, the 19th day of
March. IRA at 4 o'clock . P.M., when and where you may
attend if you think proper. . •
FRED. DirridANlL
inialst* Attorney for Libellant
IRON FENCE—
The undersigned aro prepared to execute orders for
ENGLIBII IRON FENCE, "
of the best make. The attention of owners of Country
Beats is especially asked to this as at Once themost sightly.
the most durable, and the mosteeonomical fence that Iran
be used.
Elpecimen yaneL3 may be seen at our office. .
I'ARNAL6 -4; TRIMBLE;
418 Routh Delaware avenue.
'MERRICK & SONS.
AIL SOUTHWARK FOUNDRY, , -. 1 • . T
430 WASHINGTON Avenue,TUßE Philadelphia.
MANUFAC
STRAM ENGINES—High and Low Pressure:Horizontal ,
it a rtical, Beam, Oscillating: Blast and .Cornish Pump ,
.
Bt 01LBR/3—Cylinder, Flue, Tubular. &c., '
STEAM HAMMERS—Nasmyth and Levy style% and of*
all sizes.
CASTINGS—Loam, Dry and Green Sand. Braes, &c.,
ROOFS=lrou Framer. for covering with Slate or Iron.
TANKS—Of Cast or Wrought Iron, for refineries, Water. • •
oil, &a. __ • •
GAS MACHINERY — Such as Retorts. •
Remelt Castings, ,
13 olderw and names. Purifier% poke and Charcoal Bar. , •
rows. Valves. Gcrvernorsr&o. • - T• - T 'T - " •
SUGAR fdACHiNBRY—Such fl as IlYacittun Pane and ~ •
Pumps, Derecators POLIO Black Filters, Burners,,Waslt- •
era and Elevators; Bag Filters; Sugar and Bono Black
Sole mannfacturers of the following specialties: , . • •
Ti, Plallattelp•hia and vicinity of William Wright's Patent
Variable cut off Steam Engine,: , : • T
/nPennsylvania.of Shaw &Justiceh Patent Dead-Stroke
Power B sumer. .
In thet United States. of Weston's Patent Selt.oonterlig
ano tßelf.balttnemgCelitritugalßug ardraiutugMachlae.
Glass & Bartot's improvement on dslidawall & Vf oo43eves
Centrifugal. , ,• , , •
Barrel's Patent Wrought.Tron Retort • Lid. il •
litrahan's DrilfiGrinding Rest. . • T
Contractors for the design, erectione and fit ng up of no.
rinm los for working Sugar or Molasses.
cIOPPER AND YELLOW METAL BRETHING.
Brazier'a Copper Nails. Bolts and Ingot Copper. con
stastly - on-band and for sale by LiENISY .WINS ed;
CO.. No; 88 Borah Wbarves. •
'TING IRON.—TO ARRIVE, NO. 1 SCOTCH PIG TRON—
A. Glengamorit and Oarnbroe bynndo. For este in lota to
in it, by PETER WRIGHT & BUNS. 115 Walnut area.
Philadelphia.
(MULL—FOR BALE, ISO TONS ' OP (MAUL
J. afloat. Apply to WORKMAN ds CO., 1,23 Waluut
AMA,
Mom the Saturday Betiew.l
DOLLS.
The love of dolls is instinctive with children,
and a nursery without sonic of these silent
simulacra for -the. entrustment of the little,
ones is a very liteleseaffair.. , But outside.the, , ,,
nursery door they tire stupid things enorigh;
and whether improvised of wisped-up bundles
of rags, or made of the costliest kindpf corn
pesition; they , are at the best' mere pretences
for the pastime of babies, not living creatures
to be loved , or artistic creations to be Ad
mired. Certainly they are pretty in their:
own way,and some are made to simulate hu
man actions quite cleverly; and one of their
charms with children is that they can treat
them like sentient beings without a chance of
being turned upon. They can scold them
for being naughty, and put them to bed in
broad daylight for a punishment, and seat
them in the corner with their impassive faces
turned to the wall, just as they are themselves
dealt with, the doll all the time smiling ex
actly as it smiled before, its round blue beads
staring just as they stared before, neither
scolding, nor cornering making more impres
sion on its sawdust soul than do little missy's
sobs and tears when nurse is cross and dolly
is her only friend. But the child has had its
hour of play and make-believe sentiment of
companionship and authority; and so, if the
doll can'do no good of itself, it can at least be
the occasion of pleasantness to others.
Now there are women who are dolls in all
but the mere accident of material. The doll
proper is a simple structure of wax or wood,
"its knees and elbows glued together;" and ,
the human doll is a complex mai:Sipe of flesh
and blood. But, saving such structural dif
ferences, these women are as essentially dolls
as those in the bazaar which open and shut
their eyes at the word of command, enforced
by a wire, and squeak *hell you pinch them
In the middle. There are women who seem
born into the world only as the playthings
and make- believes of human life. As im
passive as the waxe n creatures in thenursery,
no remonstrance touches' them and no ex
perience teaches them. Their final cause
seems to be to look pretty, to be always in
perfect ,drawing-room order, and to be the
o *stone i phieh their Mends and cilm
pentbes are taught patience and self
denial. And they perfectly - fulfil their
destiny; whicl may be so muc h
carried to their credit. A doll wo
man is hopelessly, useless, and can do noth
ing with her brains or hands. In distress or
sickness she can only sit by you, and look as
sorrowful as her round smooth face will per
mit, but she has 'not a helping suggestion to
make, not a fraction of practical power to
put forth. When a man has married a doll
wife he has assigned himself to absolute lone
liness .or a double burden.. He cannot live
With his pretty toy in any more reality of
sympathy than does a child with her puppet.
lire can tell her nothing of his a ff airs, nothing
of his troubles or of his thoughts, because
she can impart no new idea, even from the
woman's point of view. Not from want of
heart, but from want of brains to understand
another's life. Is she not a doll? and does
not the very essence of her dollhood lie in
this want of perceptive faculty' at all times,
both for things and feelings? What are the
hot flushes of passion, the bitter tears of grief,
the frenzy of despair, to her ? She sees them,
and she wonders that people can be so silly
as to melte themselves and her so uncom
fortable; but of the depth of the an
guish they express she knows no more
than does her waxen Image when little missy
sobs over it in her arms, and confides her sor
rows to its deaf ears. Whatever anxieties
oppress her husband, he must keep them
religiously to himself,he cannot share - them
with her; and the last shred of his credit, like
the last effort of his strength, mast be em
ployed in maintaining his toy wife in the
paradiee where alone she can make her
habitation. Many a man's back has broken
under the strain of such a burden, and many
a ruined fortune might have been held to
gether, and repaired when damaged, had it
not been for the exigencies and necessities of
the living doll, who had to be spared all want
or inconvenience at the cost of everything
else. How many men are groaning in spirit
at this moment over the infatuation that made
them sikerifice the whole worth of life for the
sake of a pretty face and a plastic manner!
The doll woman is as helpless prac
tically as she is useless morally. If
there is any personal danger about,
she either feints or becomes dazed,
according to her physiological conditions.
Sometimes she is hysterical and frantic, and
then she is actively troublesome. In gen
eral, however, she is just so much dead
weight on hand, to be thought for as well as
protected—a living corpse to be carried on
the shoulders of those who- are straggling for
their own lives. She can foresee no possi
bilities, measure no distances, think of no
means of escape. Never quick or ready,
there is a total paralysis of such wits as she
possesses in a moment of pressure; and it is
not from selfishness so much as from pure
incapacity to do otherwise, that the poor doll
falls down in a helpless heap of self-surrender,
and leta her very children perish before her
eyes without making an effort to protect
them. As a mother, indeed, the doll woman
is perhaps more unsatbsfactory than in any
other character. She gives up her nursery
into the absolute keeping of her nurse, and
does note attempt to control or to in
terfere. This, again, is not from want
of affection, but from want of capacity. In
her tepid way she has a heart, if only half
vitalized like the rest of her being; and she is
by no means- cruel. Indeed. she has not
force enough to , tie cruel or wicked anyhow;
her worst offence being a passive kind of
selfishness, not from greed, bat from inac
tivity, by which she' is made simply useless
for the general [food. As for her childree,she
understands neither their moral nature nor
their physical wante ; • and beyond a univer
sal "Oh, naughty!" if the little ones express
their lives in the rampant manner proper to
young things,or as universal an "'Oh, let them
have inhere is a howl over. what is' for
bidden or unwise, she has no , idea of disci
pline or management If they blaze her,theY
are sent away f if they are natightY,' they are
whipped at her request by papa or, nurse; if
they are ill, the doctor is eummoned,and they
have medicine ail he directs; but
none of ' the ffner and more in
timate relations usual , between mother
and child exist in the home of the
doll mother. The children are
~the' property
of the nurse only, unless, indeed the father
happenslo be a 'specially affectionate and a
specially domestic man, and.then he , does. the
work of the motherat 'the hestclum
oily, but, at the worst better than -the doll
could dolt. ' '
Very shocking and revolting are all the
more tragic facts of human life to the smooth
skinned, easy-going doll. When it comes to
her own turn to bear pain she wonders how
catepermit her to suffer. Had she brains
enough to „think, the great mystery of pain
would make' her atheistical in her angry sur
prise that she should be so hardly dealt with.
As dolls have a constitutional immunity from
suffeming, her first initiation into even a
minor' amdunt of anguish is generally a
tremendous affair; and though it may be pain
of a quite natural and universal character,
she is none the less indignant and astonished
at her portion. She invariably thinks herself
worse treated than her sisters, and cannot be
made to understand that others suffer as much
as, and more than, herself. As she has al-
ways shrunk from witnessing trouble of any
Itind, ands us, what she has ; seen, has passed
oVerhei`taind)without leaving any imPres7
'Bien; ilia conies to her own sorrows totally
inexperienced; and one of the most pitiable
sights in the world is_ that of, a poor doll
womanwrithing - in, 'the ! grasP of physical
agony,and broken down or rendered insanely
impatient by what other women can bear
without a murmur.' When she is in the pres
ence of the moral , tragedies of - life, she Is as
lost and bewildered as she is with , the,physi
cal. All sin and crime to her are odd and in
explicable. She cannot pity ,the sinner, be
cause ahercannottmderstand the" temptation;
and she cannot . condemn from any lofty
standpoint, beCause she, ,
',has not mind
enough to see the full meaning of iniquity. It
is simply something out of the ordinary run
of her life, and the doll naturally dislikes dis
turbance, . whether of habit or
of thought.':Yet if a noted
criminal came and sat down by her, '
she would -probably whisper' to her next
friend, "How shocking I" but she would
simper w,hen .he spoke, and perhaps in her
heart feel flattered by the attention r of even
so doubtful a notoriety. If she is a doll with
a bias towards naughtineas; the,, utmost limit
to' hiCh she can go is a mild kind of curi
osity about the outsides of things—the mere
husk and rind of the forbidden fruit—such as
wondering how such and such people look
who have done such dreadful things, and
what they felt the next morning, and how
could they ever come to think, of such hor
rors. She would be more interested in hear
ing about the dress and hair and eyes of the
female plaintiff or defendant in a famous cause
than many other women would be; but she
would not give herself the trouble to read the
evidence, and she would take all her opinions
secondhand. But whether the color of the
lady's gown was brown or blue, and whether
she wore her hair wisped or plaited,
would be matters in which she would take
as intense an interest as is possible to her.
The utmost limit to which enthusiasm can
be carried' with her is in the matter of
dress and fashion; and the only subject that
thoroughly arouses her is the last new color,
or the latest eccentricity of costume. Talk to
her`Of books, and she will' go to,,sleep; even.,
novels, her scole reading, she "forgets half an
hour after she has turned the last page; while
of any other 'kind of literature she is as pro
foundly ignorant as she II of mathematics;
but she can discuss tb,h , mysteries of fashion
with something like animation, these being to
her what the wire is to the eyes of the dolls
in the bazaar. Else she has no power of con
versation. At the head of her ownlable she
sits" like a pretty 'waxen dummyYlind can
only simper out a few commonplaces, or sim
per without the commonplaces, satisfied if
she is well appointed and looks lovely,', and if
her husband seems toleiably contentedivith '
the dinner. She is more in her element at a
ball, where she is only asked to dance and
not wanted to talk; but her ball-room days do
not last forever, and when they are over she
has no available retreat.
If a rich doll woman is a - mistake, a poor
ine who has been rich is-attput the greatest
infliction that can he laid on a suffering
household. • Not all the teaching of expe
rience can make wax and glue into flesh and
blood, and nothing can train the human doll
into a dignified or a capable womanhood.
She still dresses in faded finery, which she
calls keeping up appearances, and still has
pretensions, which no "inexorable logic of
facts" can oestroy. She spends her money
on sweets, and ribbons, and ignores the
family need for meat and calico; and she sits
by the fireside dozing over a trashy novel.
while her children are in rags, and her house
one scene of disorder. But then she has a
craze for the word ""lady-like," and thinks it
synonymous with ignorance and helpless
ness. She abhors the masculine-minded
woman who helps her—sister, cousin,
or daughter—so far as she can abhor any
thing; but she is glad to lean on her strength,
despite this abhorrence, and,while grumbling
at her masculinity, does not disdain to take
advantage of her power. She is only nega
tively disagreeable though; and for all that
she carps under her breath, will remain in
any position in which she is placed. She will
not act, but she will be passive; -which is
something gained whenyou have to
deal with fools. This quiescence of hers
passes with the world for plasticity and
amiability; it is neither; it is simply indolence
and want of originating force. While she is
young, she is nice enough to those who care
only for a pretty face and a character founded
on negatives; but when a man's pride of life
has gone, and he has come into the phase of
weakness, or under the barrow of affliction,
or into the shadow of the valley of deatb,then
she becomes in sorrowful truth the chain and
bullet which make him a galley-slave for the
remainder of his days,and which sign him to
drudgery and despair.
AB an old woman the doll has not a charm.
She has learned no handiness, come to none
of that grand maternal power of helping others
which should accompany maturity and age;
she has still to be thought for and protected,
to the exclusion of the younger and naturally
more helpless, as when she was young her
self, and beautiful and fascinating, and men
thought it a privilege to suffer for her sake.
Nine times out of ten she has lost her temper
as well as her complexion, and has become
peevish and unreasonable. She gets fat and
rouges; but she will not consent to get old.
she takes to false hair, and dyes, and padded
stays, and artful contrivances of every de
scription; but alas ! there is no "dolly's hos
pital" for her as there used to .be for
her battered old prototype in the nur
sery lumber closet ; and whether she
likes it or not, she has to succumb to the in
evitable decree, and to become faded, worn
out, and unlovely, till the final coup de
grace is given, and the poor doll is no more.
Poor, weak, frivilous doll! it requires some
faith to believe that she is of any good what
soever in this overladen life of ours; but
doubtless she has her final uses, though it
would puzzle a Sanhedrim of wise men to dis
cover them; and perhaps in the great readjust
ment of the future she may have her place
and her work assigned to her, when" the
melming of her being shall be made , manifest.
11:ranallated for the Phlladobats Evening Ballet/2i
111011U1SEKOLD RECIPES•
RY BARON BRINE.
The Recipe for Duck with olives,, i per
emptorily demanded of me. I give at the
same time Duck with turnips, from which it
differs very little.
Duck , and. , Turnips.—The &ink being
drawn, trues it like a fowl, fry it in butter
until nicely browned, then take it out of the
sauce- pan and replacer. it by turnips cut in
equal slices; when the turnips begin to color,
Powder them with a spoonful of sifted sugar;
stir constantly, and when of a proper brown,
take them out as you did the duck.
In the same butter and in the same sauce
pan put some flour and let it brown also,
then mix it with water, or still better, some
broth; Beason it with salt, 'pepper and pot
herbs, and at the first simmer ' put back
the duck. When it is' half cooked add the
turnips and let it finish slowly; take out the
pot-herbs, untie , the duck, surround it with
turnips, skim the grevy, cover it therewith,
and serve. •
Duck with °hem—Remove, by means
of a circular incision or, of a corer, the stones
from large, fine olives; let them blanch in
boiling water to destroy the acridity. Prepare
Pli DA L` iNiNa 1849,
'Abe duck as with turnips, but do not mit tin,
into tbe safice-pan until 5 or C minutes ,
t berore - serying. •
have a weakness for duck and . olives % .—
Petit 'Journat
1 4 MW 19713L10AT10N13.
Tun SYQMIL xo "FAut ?tam' We reedy°
from 'Messrs. T. B. Peterson & Broft. an ad
vance coPy of "How be Won Eier,!' by Mrs.
Bouthwortli,—a novel in Which'alie rourids off
pie history ofßritornrirte, the mad-liater; in
the good old way, by a happy marriage_ with
JUlltil];', HO - should every Beatrice find at last
her 'ordained Benedick. The unusual interest
created, by special circumstances, for "Fair
Play," will no doubt introduce the present
seqUel - to a larger public than the versatile
ituthoress has ever had before. It is published
in a iiirse duodecimo volume of over five
hundred pages, in uniform style with "Fair
Play," and all her previous works, and sold
at the low price of $1 75 in cloth, or $1 50
in paper cover.
BOOKS OF THE WEEK.
' Incidents of the United States Christian Com
ialesion. By Rev. Edward P. Smith, Field Sec
retary of the Commission. Bvo, pp. 512, illustra
tions on steel and wood after designs by Schwa-
Eel° and others. Philadelphia, J. B. Lippincott
dt., Co.
The Fisher Maiden. A Norwegian Tale by
jhrusou. From the author's German edition by
.E. Niles. 12mo, pp. 217. Published by Ley
poldt & Holt, for sale by Claxton, Remsen &
Haffelfinger.
I The Gain of a Loss. A Novel. By the author
z t ) ' "The Last of the Cavaliers." 12rno, pp. 439.
nblished hi Leypeld t & Holt, for sale by Clea
n Remsen &Halplfinger.
dut of the Streete. A Story ()Mew. York Life.
By Charles Gayler. 12mo. pp. 360. Published
by Robert M. De Witt, N. Y.; for sale by Claxton,
Remsen & Haffellinger.
LHousehold Edition.) Peg Woflington; Christie
onnetone, and other stories. By Charles Reade.
12mo, pp. 353. Published by Fielde, Osgood &
Co.;
for sale by Turner Bros. & Co.
A Series of Letters from London, writtendtt-,
ring the years of 1856, '57, '5B, '59 and '6O. By
Mullin George Min Dallas, then Minisior of the United
Rtates at the British Court. Edited by his &ugh.%
ter Julia: Two vols. in oue, Bvo, pp. 489, • Pub=
hailed by J. B. Lippincott & Co.
Pre-historie Nations; or,
Inquiries concerning
come, of the great pepplesand civilizations of an
liquitt, and their probable relation to a still older
hivilization of the Ethiopians or Cushites of Ara- .
is. By John D. Baldwin, A. M. 121310, pp. 411:
Published by Harper & Bros., for sale by Turner
Bros. & Co.
Think and Act. A series of Articles pertaining
to Men and Women, Work and Wages. By Vir-
Cinia Penny. 12mo, pp. 872. Philadelphia,
laxton, Remsen & Haftbltlnger.
S
John Smith's Funny Adventures on a Crutch.
By A. F. HID, author of "Our Boys; or, Adven
tures in the Army," &c. Illustrations by Schell.
12mo, pp. 374. Philadelphia, John E. Potter &
Co., 614 Ransom street.
• [Caesell's Representative Biographies.l Life of
William Ewan Gladetsne. By John M. Gilchrist.
16mo, pp. 128. New York, Felt & Dillingham;
Philadelphia, J. B. Lippincott & Co. Paper
covers, 50 cents.
IPoetical Works of Walter Scott, Bart. An
ther's Edition.] The Lay of the Last Minstrel. and
idarmion. Bvo, pp. 170 illustrations by John
Gilbert. Published by W. W. Swayne, New York
and Brooklyn; for sale by D. Aehmead. Paper
covers, 25 cents.
Tales df a Grandfather, Third Series. By Sir
Walter Scott. Bvo, pp. 476. paper covers. New
York and Brooklyn, W. W. Swayne. For sale
by A. Winch.
Griffith Gaunt; or, Jealousy. By Charles
Reade. Bvo, pp. 143, with illustrations. Pub
lished by Harper & Bros.; for sale by Tamer
Bros. & Co. Paper, 25 cents.
[Tales from Linen's Living Age. I A House of
Cards. A novel. by Mrs. Cashel Hoey. Bvo ' pp.
189. Boston, Littell & Gay. For sale by D. Ash
mead. Paper, 75 cents.
Moore's Poetical Works; 12mo. pp. 240, paper
covers. Glasgow, Cameron & Ferguson. For
sale by A. Winch.
Virginia Graham, the Spy of the Grand Army.
By Justin Jones. Boston, Loring. Bvo, pp. 165.
The Ring and the Book. By Robert Browning.
Part 11. Boston,Fields, Osgood & Co.; received
through Turner Bros. & Co.
Villa Eden: the Country-House on the Rhino.
By Berthold Auerbach. Translated by Charles
C. Shackford. Part I. Bvo. paper covers. Bos
ton, Roberts Brothers. For sale by Duffield
Aslmead.
Annual of Scientific Discovery for 1869.
Edited by Samuel Kneeland, A. M., M. D. 12mo,
pp. 877. Portrait of James D. Dana. Boston
Gould< Lincoln. For sale by Smith, Engliali
-4 Co.
Tke Brooklyn Monthly for March. Horace W.
Love, Brooklyn, N. Y.
Our Own. Vol. 1, No. I, for April. Conducted
by Fanny Warner. Published by Giffin, Mc-
Guigan & Griffin, 701 Chestnut street
•P1;01/W NOTICES.
st a r NOTICE.
A meeting of the Stockholders of the BIG BAND
CREEK OIL COMPANY, of West Virginia, will be held
at the office of 'J. B. Hoffman. 429 Walnut street, on the
16th day of March. utes, at 12 o'clock. for the purpose of
authorizing the sale of the Company's property, the set
tiement of Ito debte and surrendering up the Charter
from whence it came.
By order of
PATRICE( BRADY.
mh3 6 10 131 President.
PHILADELPHIA. MARCH 12 1E69.
lier A Meeting of the Stockholders of the NOH CH.
ERN LIGHT PETROLEUM COMPANY. the CHARTER
OAK PETROLEUM COMPANY. and the NEW Es A
OIL. LUMBER AND MINING COMPANY, will be held
on MONDAY. 22d inst., at 4M o'clock P. AL, at the office,
Me Walnut street. By order of the
mhl243t. BOARD OF DIREQTORS.
wir HEALTH OFFICE.
PHILADELPIII4I. Mat ch 6th.lBal
Proposals will be received at this Office until 8 o'clock,
P. M.. March 12th, 1869. to fill to street level a stagnant
water pond on the south aide of Park street, east from
Twenty-eighth street. For further information. bidders
will call at the Meath Office.
Address, HORATIO G. BICERL,
mh6-7tl Health Officer.
w i r OFFICE GIRARD bELNING COMPANY, NO.
82.4 WALNUT iiTREET.
Pintankbrma, March 8, 113114.
Notice im hereby given that all stock of the "Girard
Mjning Company of Michigan," on which inetalmente are
dde az d unpaid, has been forfeited, and will be . sold at
public auction on MONDAY., April sth, 1&19, at 12 o'clock
noon, at the Office of the decretary of the Corporation
(according to the Charter and By•LaweLunlese previously
redeemed. The Company claims the right to bid on said
Mock.
Hy order of the Directors.
B. A. HOOPES,
who t apE4 "lb Secretary and Treasurer
o OFFiCE OF THE RESOLUTE MINING} COM.
""' PANY.
• PIIILADELPHIA. March Ist, 186 q.
Notice is hereby given that an instalment of Fifty Conts per share on each and every Share of the Capital Stock of
the "Resolute Mining Company... has this day been called
in. parable on or before the lath day of March. MR at
t bp Mime of the Treasurer. No. WA Walnut street, Has ,
delphia.
By order of the Directors.
B. A. HOOPES.
mbl 160 Treasurer.
gair. OFFICE OF THE DELAWARE COAL COM
PANY. PHILADELPIIIA. Feb. 11, 1869
The Annual Meeting of the Stockholders of this Corn.
176nA4tliiniTtrtf.tiooril\VEITIrIllYw'lli!6111V at
Noof
March next, at 11 o'cloth, A. M.
felStombln .T. R. WHITE. President.
MUSICAL.
WG. P. RONDLREILA. TEACHES OF SinGING. PRI.
ist 43 lemony and 1 Beddow:o. 938 9. Thirteenth
street. an.9B.lit
1111118INE11111 VALUDIta
MAIMS A. WRIGHT. THOWITOIII IMS3I. CCUIMENIP a. OBLISOON
11111MODOILE WRIOIIT. vaunt L=AM.
PETER WEIGHT at 80NB.
Importers of Earthenware
Shipping anVommixdon M
N 0.115 Mind street. =hie.
COT! ON SAIL DUCK OF EVERY WIDTH, FROM
11.) 22 inch to 76 Inches wilds, aft numbers. Tent and
Awning Duck, Papenmaker's Felting, Raft Twine, &c.
' JOON . EVE MINN,
lad No. 103 Church street. MY Storm,
DRIVY WELLS—OWNERS OF PROPERTY—THE
1 • only place to get privy wells cleansed end diet&
(acted. at v.ery low prices. A. PEYSSON, Manufacturer
of Pondrette. Goldsmith's Hall. Library street.
GAB FIXTUBEB.
A FT U E 311111111.11,L di
LT THACKARA, No. 7th Chestnut street, manufacturers
`Sf Gas Fixtures, Lamps, dio., dve., would oall the attention
bf. the public to theirs arge and elegant assortment of flu
Chandeliers, rendanta, Brackets,dre. They also introduce
. l Ug r i te le into dwellings and public buildivis, and atte
altering and rep3dring gas pes. All Wo rk
W,,arrautid
WO R.ENW•
TO RENT.
sEcOriiksToßy FRONT ROOK
Hiaiwn WITH STEAM
IN THE
ISEW , BULLETINBUILDIth,
607 Chestnut Stree .
'AjgAirn'ihe; Publiea.tion Offil3e.
4J rIREESE & MoCOLLUM. REAL ESTATE AGENTS.
OfSee. Jackson street. opposite Mansion street, Cape
Island, N. J. Seal Estate bongbt and gold. Persona do•
of roue of renting cottages during the season wW apply or
address as above.
.
BeepecHullY refer to Chao A Rubfearn , Henry Bimini.
Francis Mclivain. Augustus AtezinoJJohn Davie. and
W. W. JnvenaL kW*
'FOR RENT.—THE SECOND, THIRD' AND FOURTH
Floor, of the new building at the N. W. corner of
Eighth and Market streets Apply to STRAWBRIDGE
de•CLOTWER, on the premiere, , ja.2stf9
(IFFICE ROOMS TO RENT ON TOTED FLOOR OF
vv Bulaing, No. 733 Walnut street. J. M. GUM.3IEY &
.
r CE TO LET
on recon 41 floor of
720 SAINSOM. STREET
1110 RENT—UPPER ROOMS, NOS. 426 and 428 MAR
-llket area. DICKSON BROS.
mhae.w.tio 820 Walnut. street.
rTO T— A LARGE MANSION IN WEST
aPhiladelphia. situated at Forty-fifth and Chestnut
" streets; entrance at present from Market street. It
contains on first floor a wide hail through the centre, e-T.'
for on west side, dining and sitting-rooms On east side,
two kitchens in the rear with range in each, and hot and
cold water; boat and gas throughout the house. 'Also, a
BlErr mei kitchen with a pump of excellent water, ice
house and milk-house adjoining: two stables with nine
stalls and carriage -home. The grounds extend from Mar
ket to Lbeidnut streets, having a frontof 165 feet through.
A fine vegetablo garden, variety of pear. cherry and other
trait trees. Also, two trellises, with twenty full bearing
grape-vlnee. Ste- Inquire of F. C. HOWELL, N. E. corner
of Fourth and Matket streets. mtal2-2t.
ETO RENT—A LARGE AND CONVENIENT
Douse. with five acres of land. ample enabling., and
abundance of fruit and ebade trees; sittotte four
miles from tho city, and within a eqaare of a Railroad
Madan. E. B. HARLAN.
t mhlB tfil 731 Walnut street.
TO LET. —A SUPERB COUNTRY BEAT. NEAR
ILLFranklord. with garden, lawn, stabling, carriage.
, - .bousei etc. • Inquire 1321 Girard avenue. mh6 s tfo
tiTO BENT—WALNUT BTREET. WEST PHILA:
:delphta—Handsome new 12-roomed House. finished -
with every convenience. Rent moderate. A. R.
GOV ETT. 181 S. Thirty-etzth St.. Wed Yhila. mhlol2t•
11 TO RENT—A HANDSOME COUNTRY BEAT,
FOR T.LIE SUMMER • SEASON. with two and a
half acres of ground, DotVs lane and; . ,Thorpe
lane, Germantown , with every convenience, gas,
bath, hot and cold water. stable, carriage.house, tee.
how" w ith 40 tone of ice, cow stable. chickewhouse. and
every improvement; will be rented with or without fnr
entire. Apply to OuPPIAIR m JORDA.N. 483 Walnut at.
t'TO RENT—A HANDSOIIE RESIDENCE AT
Tlogn. fifth /Uwe from Station. All iraPrOventent".
Rine *Arden with fruit and shrubbery, excellent
*Testify. *table and other improvamenta. APPLY V) COP. .
PUCK dc JORDAN. 433 Walnut etreet.
ELL STORE PROPERTIES FOR RENT.—IIAND.
- some Fourstory Building, No. 712 Chestnut street
" Possession. April. 1869.
LailreFour story Building, No. 41 North Third street.
Store and Basement. No. MI Minor street.
Tbird.story Store, 2634 feet front No 915 Market street
Handsome Store and Dwelling ,No. IIE4 Walnut street.
J. M: GUMMEY & BONS, 7133 Walnut street
I'oll. XA.11.155.
FOB SALE. -
COTTAGE. AT ATLANTIC CITY
One of the neatest and beet.bnild Houses on the bland
ON CONNECTICUT AVENUE.
Contains Nine Rooms. and is completely furnished,
and' 'ready .to occupy.
Apply to BENKERT.
total th s to 114 716 Chestnut street
FORBALE--COCNTRY BEAT. WITH TWENTY
scree of excellent land flve fruit and shade trees , large atone mansion. with every convenience,large
stabling and tenant house; CO miles! from Ninth and
Green etreete. and quite near a Station on the German
town and Norristow n Railroad, Situation high and com
manding. Surrounded ay first class residences. Lowest
rice 844000. 822.000 can remain. Address C. B. u
A.. at
this oflice. whip .w t
FOR SALE—A DESIRABLE TIIREESTJRY
Brick Dwelling.
No. Idd North SIXTH streetll Roome.
lot 18 feet by 90.
Immediate poseeeeion.
'Can be seen before 10 o'clock A. 31 , 1 to 3or 7 t 9
31. mh12,3t 0 .
EFOR SALE—AT BEVERLY. N. J.. THREE..
atm,' Brick Dwelling. containing Saloon Parlor,
Dining-room. Two Kitchens. Eight Chambers and
Batb-room. Lot 11i0 feet front and 220 feet deep. contain
ing% acre. with tine view of the river Apply at 112
Vv alnut street. Part may remain secured on the ere
mimes. fea tn-th-s-I.3t*.
OERMANTOWN.—FOR SALE OR TO LET—A
large double house. every conve , --lence. with !stable
and five acres of land. Five minute's walk from
railroad.
Inquire 224 North Fifth etreet. mhll-4t the w e•
itFOR SALE.—A VERY VALUABLE GERMAN
town oroperty, embracing a large lot of ground,
mansion. stable, ice house, and everything pertain
ing to a first class residence.
Terms accommodating.or would exchange for improved
city properties, or land in the northern part of the city.
Address Box 1706,
jape 10t• Post-office, ehiladelphin.
LEGERMANTOWN.— FOR BALE SUPERIOR
Dwelling, 76 Tulpettocken street, corner of Green;
modern conveniences; fine lot.
Key next door. mh&ewlet•
r. GERMANTOWN COTTAGE FOB BALE.
A first-class large dressed
bTONE DWELLING.
Every city convenience and near a station.
WM. E. S. BASER.
mh11.31.• No. 122 Race Street.
12 FOE BALE--A HANDSOME RESIDENCE, NO.
2008 Spring Darden street. Price ii 123.000.
Apply Co W. WILSON, on the premises. tatal•et;
a pi FOR SMAE—BIVERSIDE
-73.5 acres on, the Delaware—convenient to railroad
and steamboat—with .11011158 and Stable, furniture,
hones, carriages, tools. boats. &e.
Healthy situation, fine view, old trees and choice so.
le , tion of fruit in bearing. Ter;ns Ranh
Photographs at 201 South Third street. fe2o.lms
rCHESTNUT KILL.—FOR BALE—RESIDENCE.
"
Summit street and County Line road, with etable,
ice.housti (filled), and groundeplanted with fruit and
ornamental trees. !bruits. Ito. Also, Walnut etreet Resi
dence, No. 1206,mith lame stable, laundl7.&c., on Lyndall
street, immediately in the rear. Both Properties in com
plete order.. For further information, aPPILY to
bi. GRATZ.
fela-in No. 10 Merchants' Exchange.
—--
E. GERMANTOWN—FOR BALE—MODERN EITO
Residence. with parlor s library sitting room, di ing
" room, pantry and two kitchens on the first floor; alz
chambers on the second floor, end furnished, with every
city convenience, situate on Tulpehocken street, seven
minutes' walk from the Railroad Depot. Grounds hand
11001Ci9 improved. J. M. DUMMEY & BONS, 733 Wahmt
street.
rGERMANTOWN—RIR BALE—A HANDSOME
Modern Beeidence. with stable and carriage•houss.
green-bowie, end lot, 100 feet front by 300 feet deep.
situate on Duy'e sane, five minutes walk from the rail
road station; has every city convenience and is in perfect
order. Nicely shaded and surrounded with choice shrub.
bury. J. M. GUMMEY & BUNS, 733 Walnut street.
COUNTRY BRAT FOR SALE.—A HANDSO HE
mode/neon() mansion with three and a half acres
of land, situate on the Heights at Conshohocken,
within ten minutes walk from the elation on P. O. and
N. R. R. Stoble and carrlago.houeo. ice house, hot-house.
&c. The mission ie new and supplied with every con
venience. including water and Rae, and commands an ex
tended view of the Schuylkill river and surrounding
country. The ground. are handsomely laid out In lawn.
end the garden is stocked with every variety of choice
roils and vegetables. Photograpbe 'f the property can
be peen by applying to J. Id. GUMAIEY & BUNS. 733
Walnut street.
HOARDING.
TWO FAMILIES CAN BE ACkIOMMODATED WITH
board on a pleasant farm by addressing "C H,"
BULLETIN Office. mh MM.
WANTS.
!WANTED —A POSITION AS HOUBEKEEPER BY A
TY Lady of experience. Compeneatien no object. Ad.
dress A. B. BULLETIN Whim. nah1.2.2t.•
EDI7CATION.
BELLEVUE INIaTITUYE FOR YOUNG LADIES,
Attleboro, Pa.
The spring term commences Third Mo. (March) 22d,
and sow tnuea fourteen WOOllB. Addreso,
wBto W. T. HEAL. Principal.
ADDRESS REV. T. HANLON. PENNINGTON. N. J..
for Catalogue of Pennington Seminary. A first-claas
Boarding School for both sexes—within three miles of
Philadelphia. Reference—Bishop Simpson. mhle Imo
COAL AND WOOD.
CROSS CREEK LEHIGH COAL.
rimer_E_p a MoCOLLIN.
No. 8038 CHESTNUT Street, West PMladelPhia o
Bole Retail Agoutis for Ooze Brothers & Oo.'e celebrated
Cross Creek Lehigh Coal. from the Buck Mountain Vein.
Thin Mal is parUcularly_ adapted for making Steam for
Sugar and Malt Houses. Breweries. &c. It is also mune.
passed as a Family Coal. Orders left at the , office of the
Millen, No. 341 W.AIAUT - Street (Ist floor), will receive
our prompt attention. Liberal arrangements made with
manufacrers using a regular quantity. Mat!
IL .61/1002 7
LL .lllNEe ltax • . JOHN*. 8112/0/7.
ME 1U
NDB GTE!) INVITE ATTENT{ON TO
A. their stock
Bpring Mountain. Lehigh and Locust Monntahl Coal.
Isbicb, with the Xtrepanition4.lSen by as, we think can
not be excelled by opyother CoaL
Office:Franklin Matitute Building, N 0.15 B. Seventh
street. HINES & BIIKAFF__
jalo4l Arch etreet wharf. Schuylkill.
t SEW APlTWACatlttibra. •
i6 H **,'.,i - j'A'*:,',.4:'-.. - 0....4...k,
BOOKSE4LERS„ STATIONERS,
' And.' ',Liblimners;
TU'Noil#o,;soloof SCIOO Books
Have'REIVIOVED to
530 ?dirket St. and 523 Minor St.,
PHILADELPHIA,
A Fall Stock of
Misoeileneous 'end Semi:4 Books,
BlanK Books, Papers anti
Envelopes
AT REDUCED PRICES.
We will be plefised to see all our old friends and Cue
tome,rs, and Si erchants generally, at our Now Location.
BOWER, B ONES & POTTS,
530 M e akcet St. and 523 Minor St ,
.` PHILADELPHIA.
mb9 to th B lm
BOXES OF . FRENGII NOTE PAPER.
ENVELOPES TO MATCH.
LANDSCAPE INITIALS,
IN BRIGHT COLORS,
STAMPED WIT HOOT EXTRA CHARGE.
ONE QUIRE, 25c. FIVE QUIRES, Si 00.
STAMPED PAPER ALWAYS ON HAND,
OR STAMPED AT ONCE TO ORDER.
RARING A SPECIALTY . OF STAMPED PAPER.
Buying In large quantities, and having my own
DESIGNERS, ENGRAVERS AND STARTERS,
I can do work cheaper, give bettor paper. and dellve
promptly all orders.
WEDDING. VISITING and BUSINESS CA
printed in latest styles
DT" Plato engraved, and two packs of cards, $4.
Without r plate, $2 for two packs.
MONOGRAMS. CRESTS, LANDSCAPE, Initials en
graved and PRINTED IN COLORS.
ALL KINDS OF STATIONERY AS LOW. IF NOT
LOWER THAN ELSEWHERE.
CHALLSN, Fashionable Stationer,
No, 1308 Cheetnut street
HILOSOPHY OF MARRIAGE.—A. 'NEW COURSE
P
of Lectures. as delivered at the New York Museum
of Anatomy; embracing the eubjects : How to Live and
what to Live for; Youth. Maturity and Old Age; Man
hood generally reviewed; the Cause of Indigestion, Flat.
uleuce and bervous Dieeases accounted for; Marriage
Phito ophically Cooeidered. &c.. &c. Pocket volumes
containing theee Lectures will be forwarded, poet panto!)
receipt of 2.5 aeon, by addressing W. A. Leary, Jr., South.
eget corner of Fifth and Walnut streets. Philadel
phis. ' teal s§
BARATOGA WATER.
*
STAR
' SPRING,
SARATOGA, NEW YORK
The analysts proves tlat the Waters of the
SARATOGA STAR SPRINGS
have a much larger amount of solid sulbatance, richer is
medical ingredients than any other spring in Saratoga,
and shows what the taste indicates—namely, that it is the
STRONGEST WATER.
It also demcmetrates that the STAR WATER contaim
about
100 Cubic) Inches !Core of Gas
in a gallon than any other spring. It le this extra amount
of gas that imparts to this water its peculiarly epareling
appearance, and renders it so very agreeable to the taste
it also tends to preserve the delicious flavor of the water
when bottled, and causes it to uncork with an effervea•
mice almost equal to Champagne.
Bold by the leading Druggists and Hotels through•
out the country.
JOHN WYETH & BRO.,
1412 Walnut Street, Philada.
Wholesale Agents.
Aleo for vale by J. F. Heathcote,
_IIMB Market etreet,
Weet hia; Fred. tlro.m. Fifth and Chestnut.;
LJ. Grahame. Twelfth and Filbert; H. B Lippincott.
Twentie th and Cherry ; Peck .4 Co.. 195!8 Chestnut; Sam`l
S. Bunting, Tenth and Spruce; A. B. Taylor. 1015 Cheat
nut ; P. G. Oliver. Eighteenth and Spruce; F Jacoby. Jr.,
917 Chestnut; Geo. C. Bower. Sixth and Vi. ; James T.
Shinn. Broad and Spruce; Daniel S. Jones. welfth' and
Spruce; W. B. Webb. Tenth and baring Gar+ en.
del-tn th e ItyrniS
REAL ESTATE SALES.
EASSIGNEE'S PEREMPTORY SALE.—THOMAS
at bone, Auctioneers.—Valuable property, known 1113
the Lehigh Rolling MiII. Steam engines. macittnenly,
As,. Allentown, Pennsylvania. On Tuesday. March 16.
1869. At 12 o'clock, noon, will be eold at public sale, with.
out reserve, at the Philadelphia Exchange. all that valua
ble property, known an the "Lehigh Rolling Mill," con
taining about 4 acres of land, in the city of Allentown,
Penneylvania, adjoining lands of the Allentown Iron
'Company. and the Allentown Rolling Mill Go.. between
the Lehigh Valley Railroad, and the Lehigh Canal. with
all ha buildings and valuable machinery, consisting of 4
puddling furnace e, 2 beating furnaces, 1 159 torso steam
engine, vertical; 1 40 horse steam engine, hori
zontal; 1 8-inch train, complete, with extra rolls;
1 patent steam pump, 2 nut machines and furnaces, 2 bolt
machines and furnaces. 2 bolt and nut cutter's, I imp. oved
machine for cleaning belle and nuts, 8 solid die rivet ma
chines and furnaces, 1 open die rivet machine and fur
nace. 1 spike machine and furnace, 1 drill preen for m ak.
ing dies, extra boilers, blowing fan. 2 buggies, 5 wheel.
barrows, 1 squeezer anoe, 1 crocodile squeezer, 2 pair of
abeam a valuable lot of rivet patterns, 2 lathes, 2 planing
machines, an assortment of tools, blacksmith and carpen
ter shops, and a:counting home, with a switch for coal
and iron from the Lehigh Valley Railroad. All to be sold
in one lot.
Utrtificater from manufacturers, agents and the United
States IslaVy Yard in Philadelphia, of the superior quality
of the products of these works may be seen withihe As.
signee.
ISTerum--$l,OO may be paid when the property is struck
off; the balance cash ou delivery of the deed, to be pre.
pared by the purchaser-within hi days from the time of
sale.
No. 2.—Valuable machinery. Also, to be sold asps
rately, the following machinery on the adjacent lot,
being the machinery of a rolling mill not constructed:
One 11:14nch train 1 15-inch train, 1 flinch train 6 cylinder
boilers. 1 flue boiler. 2 spike machines with castings for
furnaces, 8 puddling and heating furnace plates, 6 fans. 4
theory, 1 lathe I saw, lumber, 3 steam engines , 1 grind
stone, 1 punching machine. 6 scales. 1 screw press. 1 drill
press, 2 buggies, 5 wheelbarrows cast and wrought iron
flooring and 'team pipes, All to be sold in - enelot.
Tel me—ssoo t he raid when the property , is struck off;
the balance cash on delivery, t 3 be mace within ten days
from the time of sale,
For further Pariienlara apply to J. H. MLLES, Jr.,
seeignee, No. 107 Walnut etroot, Philadelphia. or to
M. 'IIIO2IAB ez SONS. Auetloneere,
fe?.l3 20 27 mh6 11 129 and 141 South Fourth etre*.
REAL ESTATE .—THOMAB & BOW SALE.—
odern Three-story Buick Dwelling. No. 10161:berry
street, West of Tenth street. On Tuesday, March
16th, 1869, at 12 o'clock, noon, w ill be Bold at public
sale, at the Philadelphia Exchange. all that modern
three.storyg round eerjaage, with the south
back building
and lot of elthrate on the south aide of Cherry
street, west of Tenth street, No. lime. ; containing in front
on Cherry street 22 feet 6 Inches . and extending in depth
69 feet. Subject to the restriction that no building shall
be erected within five feet of the line of Cherry strept.
and no bui'ding or other obstruction to light and air sea
ever be erected on the southeasternmost part of the above
lot, containing in width 6 feet. and in depth 16 feet, with
the privilege for the owners of the adjoining property of
opening windows in his stable into the said Orin of
ground, and the property is built In conformity thereto.
It has gas, bath, hot and cold water, furnace, cooking
range, &c.
Terme—H.3,6oo may remain on mortgage.
Possession let of May next
tar May be examined from 1 to 2 o'clock.
M. THOMAS & BONS, Auctioneers,
mh4 613 ' 189 and 141 South Eotuth street -
REAL ESTATE.—THOMAS. & BONS` BACA—
Businees Man& Modern Three.etory. Brick Store
and. Dwelling, N. W. corner of Nineteenth/and
Thompson streets. On Tuesday,'March 16th 1869,at 12
o'clock, noon, will be sold Would's sale,,at ttue l'hiladel.
phis Exchange, all that modern three•etory brick mee
euage,' with three story back building and lot of ground,
eituate at the N. W. warier Of Nineteenth and Thotnpsou
strectet containing in front on Nineteenth etreot 18 feet.
and extending In depth along Thompson street 73 foot, in.
eluding on the west end part of an alley 3 feet wide, lead•
ing into Thetupeon street. It is occupied as a.atdre and
dwelling; hes gas, bath, hot and cold water, cooking
range, &a.
Tormas3.4oo may remain on mortgage.
Immediate poeueesion. Maybe examined any d pre.
violas to sale.
M. THOMAS & BONS, Auctioneer..
fei3 mb6 13 139 and 191 South Fourth street
tiBAL EBT ATB.--TIIOSIAB 6c SONB' aLE.—
Three•stoi 3 , Brick Dwelling, with side yard, No, 612
North Twelfth street. Lot 50 feet front —On Tues.
day, March nth. 1869, at 12 o'clock. noon. will be sold at
public mete, at the Philadelphia Exchange. all that three
story brick 'moulage, with three story back buildings
and lot of ground, situate on the west, side of Twelfth
street, WI fret north of lib:runt Vernon troot; containing
in front on Twelith street 5u feet, andellending in depth
48 litet.l inch. with the priv,lege of a Ipfeet wide Min.
bounding on the north. The house contains the gas, bath,
hot and cold water, cooking range, dm., and is in good
order.
Clear of all tneumbrance.
Terms-0,500 may remain on mortgage.
51. THOMAS di tioNd. Auctioneers,
mb4 813 139 and 141 B. Fourth street.
SEAL ESTALTIE.SALLES•
l'inst , tif
cceasid,Thontat dt Sons, Auctlo esent-= ,
Verf desirable Ccitintry' zdeat 'add' Farre,..ll tares,
Philadelphia and Trenton twain:tad, about ten Mlles fnSm
Philadelphia.,onmearter of a. mile of liiOlutesbutg.tato
'guar. a east of to .Bristol turn oikeilituronliAnsithe 'of a
Pq o are, of the, Penn3rpackitailroad, Station, Terency4hird7 .
Weird. 7 -OnTileaday. March 21.1889. it 12 o`loek..notio.
wit be Sold'atnablie sale; at the Pidladelp brit ' arch frig*
all that,very desirable, country neat and farm. eitnatoon.
the Westerly aide 6? the Philadelphi ail d"rtoklabtf
road, at Menovpack titatiou,'bounded , ,bjsWed violet&
lanes and wit bin.'s short, distance of two goodhicifirll9
roods end the river Delaware, rerriMffsiolt:o ol l - 114s.
acres of land,'• 'more 'or ' lees.' The.'ireprov iltst
are. a two.and 'a' half , story atone:.maOsittr,olWitly
porches. on .two sides; has par'Or,
kitchen op the first door ; 4 Chatubare'ori the secood.sed,ll;
miles above. frontalie a` private -avenue, hair reitivrn'
In front, laid out with gravel , walks luta': baxwekodilandS
planted with evergreen, ,shrubberY. litrapeorinea , alittelet:
tree.; Em. ' Also. tenant house, large and" well arkeusgeet
atone barn, with stabling for 6 homes and 4 cotter end'
other out beihilligs; vegetable gardeMaPPleterCharderid
a vruiety of other fruits and shadetreas. - . A stream of.wa
ter rune through one corner of the'farno. The land fetes,
high state of cultivation ; 'in the irimardiate vicinity oft
several very handsome country placea, and convenient to
churches, fumes. schools, dm. The ground is highs audit,
stands back from the turnpike on the first lents , abeyant°,
PfnnyPack creek, and commands a beautiful view of the
river Delaware and surrounding country A , ridacies:
dower, ariounting to (8254 42, must remain on , ilhe pro ,
rty.
q'et me-47.000 may remain on mortgage. ;
re' May be examined any day previous to Bala
POPEeed CM let April. 1E69
M. THOMAS & SONS. Auctioneer : o,,
139 and 141 South k'ourtitstreet,,t
ft:17.mb13,20
VREAL 16Triff—T11.0MAirdt SONS* 'SALE.-7,H
Valuable Lots, Twenty fifth Ward.', On Theildan . :
51arch 23d, 1869 fit 12 o'clock. noon, will:- be gold at'
publir sale, at tbe Philadelphia Exchange. the
described property, viz No. 1.- -Lot. Williainiftreetv
southeast of Belgrade street. All that lot of gronud situ.:
ate on the northeast side of William street, 15elfeet, gouth
east of helgrade street; contaloing In front on William'
street 20 feet, and extending in depth 105 feet. . •
No s.—Lot. William street northwest of Almond steeet.
All that lot of ground, situate on the southwest 'etde.er.
William street, 90 feet northwe at of Almond street con::
tatting in front on William street 20 feet, and extending;
in depth 100 feet to Fremont street-two fronts. ;
No. 3--Lot, South corner of Ann and Belgrade; streets...
All that lot of ground, situate at the South comerief ;Ann;
and Belgrade streets, thence extending S. E. along the.
tiouthw est side of Ann street aa feet 6 inches, mere or;
less, to a point; thence B. W. 123 feet 7 inches to a - noint,
17 feet, more or less,Trom ' Belgrade' street; 'thence eX.:'
tending N. W. 17 feet, Mot e or less, to Belgrade iltreetE
thence extending along the B. E. side of Belgrade street'
lid feet 9u
inches to the piece of beginning.
_;
No. .—not, Monmouth street, N. W. of Belgrade skeet'
--all that lot of ground situate on the' S. W. tilde of Mon.'
mouth street, IN feet N. W. of Belgrade -etreet:, thinicel
13
extending N. W. along the ~ W. .'side "
of, "Monmouth
street 24 feat 8.3 i inches to the N. W. bohndary.lloo of IL
li. Gibson's estate; thence extending la. W. • abentlOs feet ",
to a point; thence extending S. E. 33lfeeti6nahee ,te
point; thence extending N. E. 1.05 feet: to the piece of be!:
ginning.
A plan of the above lots may be seen at, theAtictiOrt;
Rooms.
M. THOMAS & SONS ' Auctieneers..;
139 and 191 S. ifolirth !greet,
frPUBLIC SALE.—THOMAS dt BONS,
tioneers.—Modem Stone Realdengg, Terrace-PMen,l
Northeast of Schuyler street' Germantown. , fent;
squares from Wayne btatton, on th e Germantown Rail-.
road. 78 feet front, Twenty-second' Ward.—On' Tnea- ,
day, April 6th, 1869. at 12 o'clock, neon, "Will be sold-at;
public sale, at the Philadelphia Exchange. all that haneW
some modern 239. story stone residence and lot of ground.;
situate on the southwesterly side of Terrace'Pienec,ioX
tending through to Clappier street, 473- feet' 734 Wheal;
northeast of klehuler meet, Germantown..'X'weety-s'‘,
second Ward; the lot containing in front on Terrace.; . -
Place, 77 feet 11 inches, and extending in 'depth ,
line 833 feet 734 Inches, and on the other, line 330 -,feetW.
inch to Clappler street, onnothich the front is 'l7 feet 10in
ches. The house is well•bWilt and has 'the modern con- ,
veniences; contains it rooms and numerous , elOsets; par
lor, dining room, library and kitchen .0n the:first/ floor ;
'commodious chambers, gas, bath; hot 'and cold' water, -
water closet, furnace, cooking range, &c. The gardenia
laid out in gravel walks, with boxwood. and'planted with
shrubbery. old oak nevi, &e. There. Is a stone spring. , "
house with excellent water. The residence .fronts, on .
Terrace Place, adjoining and in the immediate :viciity
of very elegant residences and country seats. t .
1130 - May be examined any day previous to sale' on..ap.
plication to the Auctioneers.
M: THOMAS & SONS, Anctioneerii; -
- mh4.13.20,27 , 189 and 191 South Fourth street
mh .13,20
PUBLIC SALE.—THOMAS & 601`18.TIKROT1011.;
sera.—Handsome Country Seat and Mansion, seven ;
acres, Wallidgford Mutton, Dahmer° ok.-renrnYlal
vania, two miles above Media and eleven miles front
Philadelphia. and.within tive minutes' walk o w h o the Wat,
lingtord Station on tee West Cheater Rai edJ, , ,
Tueaday, March 28d, 1259. at n o'clock, noon. 11 be sold,
at public sale, at the Philadelphia Exchange. all, that
handeome comity seat, comprising 7 acres, situate
5 minutes' walk of Wallingford Station on . the West
Chester Railroad, Smiles above Media. midi' miles from
Philadelphia. 'The mansion ie atone and brick rough-.
cast, French roof, portico on three aides, contains 13
rooms; ice-house, good water. abode end abundance of
fruit trees, stable and coach-house. The situation is •
high. and the land of excellent quality.
M" -- Clear of all tneurebrance.
• immediate possession. Keys, at Mr. Norman'e.ootner
of load, near the t tatlon.
M. THOMAS & SONS, Auctioneer".
139 and 141 tiouth Fourth street:
mb4 13 20
DEXECUTORB' BMP.—THOMAS & BONic
tioneers. Modern Tbree.etory Brick Rmidence.
with k ide yard. No. 461 North Seventh street. north'
of Noble street. 26ki feet front, an; Tncedart
Match 28d„ 1169, at 12 o'clock, noon, will
be geld at public pate, at the Philadelphia - Exchange. an
that modern three-stery brick meeauage, with 2344itorst
back buildtne and rnesstory kitchen and lot of ground.
situate on the end side of boventh etreet, north of Noble
area No. 461; the lot containing In front on seventh
etreet 26 feet It inches, and extending in depth 85 feet - 834
inches. more or less The home is well and'aubstantlallY
built, and in excellent repair; has parlor dining-room
kitchen on the tire,-floor , and commodious chambers
above; ban the gas introduced, bath, hot and cold water.
furnace, cooking-range, &c.
Terme-11 alf cash. Immediate polsessien.
May be examined any day previous to tale.
MB" Clear el all ineumbrance.
B. THOMAS d. SONS. Auctioneers. •
129 and 141 South Fourth street.
PUBLIC SALE—THOMAS dr SONS,_ AUG.
tioneera —Valuable Grazing and Dairy Farm 80
acres Island road. Twenty-seventh Ward; half a
mile from the Bell Road Station. on the Philadelphia..
Wilmington and Baltimore Railroad. On Tuesdav,
March 92, 18419, at 12 o'clock, noon. will be sold at übUop
sale, at the Philadelphia Exchange, all that valuable
grazing and dairy f arm, situate on the Island road,hall a
'pile from the Bell Road Station, on the Philadelphia.
Wilmington and Baltimore Railroad. lying immediately
in the rear of Captain James Serrill's hotel Twenty
seventh Ward. It comprises 80 acres of land, 43 acres. of
which being uplane.the balance meadow, in a good Mate
of cultivation. 'I ha imprcrt °manta are a small house and '
frame barn. The Phi adelphia, Wilmington and Bald
mate Railroad passes throuph the back part of the farm.
Terms-238,000 may remain on mortgage. Plan at tho
Auction Rooms
mb.l 13 29
Persons whiling to examine the premises will call on
Captain Junes Scull'.
M. THOMAS & SONS. Auctioneers.,,
199 and 141 South Fourthatreet
EXECUTORS PEREMPT , )RY BALE -ESTATE
116 of Frederic Hass, dec'd. —Thomas & Sons, nue
tioneers—Tweator7 Brick Dwelling, No. 613 North
Third street. above Green street. On Tuesday k _March ,
186 P. at 19 o'clock, noon, will be sold - at puhllosale..'
without reserve, at the Philadelphia bxchange, all that
two•etory brick mesruage and lot of ground, situate on
the east side of Third street,'at the distance of: 107 'feet
northward from Green street; containing in front oral
Third street it feet. including one-half of a three feet
wide alley, cne story in height, left open for the comeitla—
uee of this and the adjoining property to the southward.
and in depth of that width 115 feet to al5-feet wide
alley, lending from GI een to Coates street, with the free
use and privilege thereof.
Sale abeolute. , •
. . .
mh 4 13 30
M. THOMAS .1030148 AuettOneers..
139 and 141 South Fourth street..
mh4,113,20
rooKE w BOOKS, az.,
IMISCELJLANEOUS.
- 641 - 4teimirLy
Mac c2P7L - 044 flat
outeiaßezievat ai
if.-fectot4
123
mblMt
CLOTHS, 'l7-1
TAldEfi & LEE HAVING HAIM - EXTENdIVW_
eP rangements for all the noveltine WoOlext;HOOdst ,
ihat come tq the country, invite the attention , et Omit
blends and others to their large and choice sasettatrat
spring Goode, specially adapted to men andboyientenr.f
consletiog in part of . .
COATING GOODS.
Super. Blk. French. Cloths. .
Brown, Blue and Green, do.:
Ualored Coatings, all gradeai „:
Black and Colored, Hablta..
Superior Silk Mixed.Coatinga.
Tweeds, allehadesand qualitiee.
P.ANTALOOND CUFFS.
Black French DotakV44,, , .
Black Fterten Claraimorer.
kinalc Milled Caealtaeres. now styles.
New Stiles Plaid Cassimares.
Mixed tiaetint eras and Di:leek - in&
Cords, Satinette. Beaverteena:
At wholerolo or retail.
__
Bl au JAMES d; LEE.
No.ll North Second s.
of the (Oldentreet Lamb.