Daily evening bulletin. (Philadelphia, Pa.) 1856-1870, May 20, 1869, Image 2

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    IBILTHERIN
MY MISS M. H. N. MATIIEWAY.
In April, when the days
And growing longer in their rope,
When buds were shaking oil thOlir sleep,
And all the airs were lull pape3, - :
t
'We walked together, you,:andA;
In mood that sometimes-pensive grew;
For memories of a. gladness past,
Eclipsed the present to our view.•
By crooked foot-paths faintly.traced,
Our way along the fields we took;
Climbed broken fcnee and loosened wall,
:Arid errissed the cliallow, gliding brook:
We reached the hills, beneath whose base
The river flows with ceaseless sound,
And knovatig the enchanted spciti'
Kneit with our, faces to the gr0und........,
`Fat those - who corns *ith t lofty tread,
Arid tareless,.undiseermng eyes,
.3gay often go with empty hands,
or find this treasure where it lies.
We brushed the withered leaves away,
Old remnants of a worn-out, year,
And shouted with ecstatic glee,
"The flower is here! the flower is here!
When crowned with spoils we homeward• Went,
Our thoughts assumed's, gazer hue;
Beneath the magic touch of bpring,
Belief 'and courage bloomed anew.
Among all blossoms of the years
• Say, where shall I another find;
*hose sweetness thus the senses charms,
Whose energies content the mind. •
Nature's brave messenger, that tells
Of present good, and good to be';
Whose brief companionship excites
The brave desire in you and me.
That we might east old habits off.
To let a nobler growth appear ;
And greet all seasons with the thought,
"The flower is here! the floweris here."
• ---rmytton Gazette
THE MAGIAZINES
,
Of the magazines; otieed below we acknow
ledge copies :received from Turner Bros. &
Co.; and, as respects all of the higher class,
from Porter & Coates, , No. 822 Chestnut street,
likewise: • , , • ,
The June At/antic continues Mr. J. T. Trow
bridge's pleasant itinerary called - "A- Carpet
bagger in Pennsylvania;" and has another of
3. Freeman Clarke's learned articles about the
religions of; the. world,. this time treating of
Buddhism, "the Protestantism of the East"; in
!.China in our Eitchens" My. C. C. Coffin •
seemst6 have bees trying to steal a little of
Rev. Mr.'Loomia's thunder in the Overland.L.
the article having . the peculiar frontier tone
that is almost a speciality with the latter maga
sine; Sainuelßowles likewise trenches on the
great . ,,:West, '`by, contributing a third
paper on the opening of the Pacific
Railroad; N. S.' Slialer expatiates
npon earthquakes„ and John" - Burroughs on
nests. : The poetry is commenced by
Whittier, who takes ad.vantage of the legend
that a fabulous city, an American TimbuctOo,
exiStedaneiently on the banks of the Penob
scot; Celia Thexter has an extended, grace
ful piece of word-painting, a ballad called "By
the Wayside." The fiction of the number is
sustained by_ Mr....rligginson, in his "Malbone,"
and the author of "Victor and Jacqueline,"
who contributes the fourth part of "The foe in
the _household." The_book-notices are very
full and interesting this mouth, only failing,
according to custom, when the work criticised
happens to haVe been published, by a house
not a dozen miles from Boston known under
the style of Fields, Osgood & Co. In every
such book the Atlantic reviewer is apt to re
cognize a toad, and , fondly to eat it.
Our gifted fellow-citizen, Mr. L, Clartr”
prr utilatit's his strik
ing and successful story, "A Stranded Ship."
The most interesting article for the number is
ltir. G. P. Putnam's " Some Things in London
and Paris; 1836-69"; but though we allow the
palm to this, we may spare a grateful acknow
ledgment, to Mary 33. Kinney, who describes so
- winningly her " Sibyline Trio," that we cannot
.resist_eopying.lout!a,short extract :
•
.ILESDAMES SOM :STOWE AND BIZOIT:sZ—
ING.
The room was pleasantly: full.' A square
room, with angles mellowed in the chaste light
and tempered glow of wax-candles and 'olive
nil. A little apart from the groups scattered
here and there over the Turkish carpet, sat
three ladies, On a red soth, just athwart the
drapery of the window.
Little, littler, littlest, might have been the
analogy , in mind of a child beginning her
grammar.
"My dear, 1 Wish to show you something,
which, one of these days, you will be proud to
remember. .po you know who those ladies
are'.' •
Every ,Child of the circle knew well the plea
sant face of "Little"—now bending across
"Littlee to "Littlest"—with its smile of peren-
Mal youth and its setting of silver.
"Mrs. Somerville!"
"Yes; the next?"
Not so familiar or so magnetic, the more ro
tund, rubicund - , and rather so countenance
of the silent listener, corresponding to, the
secret denomination of "Littler."
"'Mrs. Stowe
"Right again; you know the third."
Yes, we knew, and we did not know; her of
the fragile !Orin, drooping with its curls of
black,like a weeptng-willow draped iirfunereal
color. The association Nv am gloomy, and we
stood in awe of the name we tremblingly .
whispered.
"Mr 6. Browning."
"Yes, the three most distinguished women
.of our era, side by side. Take your till
Artf the sight and the thought !"
It Was a gathering of literati in Florence; in
the good old time, before the dreamers along
the banks of the placid Arno bad awakened to
the sense that they were men. 'When the artist
and the student docked there, to follow, unin
terrupted by the encroachment of material
progress, each his vocation. Where no shriller
sound than the peddler, crying his wares in
-soft Italian, had as yet jarred the clear and
liquid atmosphere.. Where there was no steam
-tngine nigh; to dampen their fancies with its
vapor mid resolve their dreams to smoke;
though the relentless . Mercury of the nine
teenth century was even nowoon his sweeping
ourse to the very gates of the favored city.
Other contributors to the number, which is
a. savory olla podrida ,of articles just the right
are Edward de Leon, C. P. Cranch, F.
kitocloton, E. B. Kimball, and • the quatuor
who so ably manage the miscellaneous depart
anent,--Conant, Stedman, Clarence Cook, and
Bayard Taylor.
The titles and authors' names alone in the
*able of contents for June make the Galaxy
Atimulating. If we must pick and prefer, we
chink we must Own that Sheldon & Co. have
enlisted the likeliest set of recruits this month
among all the publishers. First conies Charles
Iteade, with his muscular style, sure to he
epigrananatical if not always grammatical; it
strikes us that Mr. It. Grant White, at the
iothei end of the magazine, must sutler tor-..
4nents .:very month at the novelist's heroic
lilfeitiiustaken with her Majesty's .English.--
mr. 11.0 - ;lirtlty was the. ..very, ~T ta-th
write the article about G.iqui;e:"Ellotl and her •
inorgiamilielrusba.ral George Lewes; and En
„Petition is also very graphic, in his
Erenchilletl . word-portrait of Godkin, of the
.Arntionfiils, certainly a keen analysis of char;
iti4ei„.`liertier illustrates with one of hi ,( flue
rußJti cirill'o6 B 6° 0 5 1 14°11
observer, Maj. Lie Fore t 4: John S. C. AblOti
aij)lies his smoothi,lped*gie, readable sWe
:to t) "Throne 0-I,oiiivirbitip m " ta!vtrez(t
-ni*lkLa-little ditlei•entra the
same tliircinelin "tiT
writes a ripely inoird-,of Ornitik.---gra4
Vale, w4O,Ande - rstandii;a titladlettir than
`Most writers,
under thelaking'eaptioii of 1 "fo be being, or
AIIBMIUF!4.
not to be being; that is the question."—Dr.
Draper again lends us his excellent advice on
alimentary Sulkjeas,Aliscoursing this anonth on.
the preparation of animal food. Three chap
ters, including the twentieth, of Mrs. Ed
wards's "Susan Fielding" are given. Poet
painter Cranch sings agreeably, but not; very
strongly,to Lowell on his fiftieth birthday,. The
miscellaneous departments are full and enter
tafiiiiig;"iuid the whole Minther . May be'Siia to
becomposed Or goodarticles signed by good
narnes—no t ,u universal, fellowship by any
Slowi's ..4relizieciural Review for June contains
its usual variety of hints for bitildets, designs
of buildings, and studies proper to its special
ity. The list of, the half-year's contents at the
close of the nuniber indicates a great wealth of
practical,cestlietic and historical matter.—Pub
lished and .sold .- by Claxton, l'enasen & Haffel
finger. •
,
Gotley's for June has a neat landscape steel
plate; a cOlored fashion picture exhibiting five
marionettes in origipai and striking toilettes,
and that variety of piquant but innocent .lady-
Matter Which Nix& Hale knows so well how to
'get togetter.--Received from Turner Bros.
FroM the same booksellers we receive all of
T. S.
,Arthar's agreeable periodicals for. the
Month; also The Vocalist, No. 6, with music
'from Offenbach, and that of "NOthing else to
do," and words besides of nine other songs,
all for five cents.
Frank Leslie's Lady's' Magazine, with Very
full plates, of the fashions; &c., is out for
We would Mention the fact that the proprie
tor, while attending to his duties at Paris in
1867 as U. S. Commissioner of the Fine Arts,
purchased great stores of wood-cut blocks,pre
viously used but not spoiled in French Maga
zines, ilhistrated papers and art-publications.
These areTerfectlyinew to. Anierican readers,
and, being introduced constantly in the Maga
zine under notice, give a quite exceptional
importance to the art-quality of its illustra
ted department; thus we have this June a fine
French print of the great painting of the
Salon of 1866, Breton wreckers watching •a
vessel, of which Cham jocularly said: "What,
near all that water and such dirty feet?"
With the last mmiber of Le .71Tonvean Monde,
a New York French weekly, we receive Le
Monde 11lustre' for May 22t1—the American
edition of a first-class Paris illustrated weekly;
the two may be subscribed for together at au
advantage. 91 Walker street, New York.
We receive the fifth monthly number of
The Manufacturer and Builder, a folio-size ilhis
trated monthly published by Western & Co.,
37 Park Row, New York. It is well and popu
larly edited, and many of its articles are made
clear by illustrations. """
Capt. Mayne Reid's Onuvir is out for June,
with its usual budget of narratives of adVen-
Ore, and illustrations which always afford ns
more innocent amusement than anything in
the monthly press. We call attention to a
capable article, evidently written from the in
side, on "Jqhn . Bull during the Rebellion;"
speaking of England's often-professed love for
the "chivalry," the author of this paper asks :
"How long, did it last? Not an hour beyond
the termination of th” .1--ray, in nays
n r o....(nruu (tautness, when shadows lowered
over their cause, the _door: of--their English
sympathizers became half-cloged against them;
and when, at length, came the final collapse,
and the cause was known to be really 'lost,'
these doors were shut altogether. We remem
ber the.day and the hour,. and can recall the
pitiful spectacle of those betrayed Confe
derates, somewhat out at heel, slippering
through the streets of London,dhmed the
entree of houses, iwen hotels, were for four
years_ they had sWaggered with a welcome.
We rerniiidcd - theWthem Of - what we had said
at the breaking out of_the rebellion; that Eng
land had sympathized with, and given them
support, solely because they were the weaker
party in the quarrel."
Dr. Mareet, of the Brompton Consumption-
Hospital, has been looking down the tluroat of
one of the Tyrolese singers who have lately
been warbling at St. Janies's : Hall, the object
of tlo, inspection being to ascertain the phy
siological conditions Which produce the beau
tiful falsetto 'notes for which the Swiss artists
are celebrated. The .observations were made
by means of a laryngoscope, a little instrtunent
whereof theprincipal member is a mirror placed
at the back of the patient's mouth. It is.vretty
generally known that the human vocal appa- -
mitts consists of a pair of membranes, situated
horizontally in the throat, and just touching
at their edges.. A drum-head, with a slit across
it, may convey a popular idea of them. In
the act of singing the lips of these cords, as
they are called, are brought into contact, and
they approach each other throughout their
whole length, and rennin parallel. When they
are set in vibration, 'by the paSsage of air
through them, tinder these conditions, a full
chest note is emitted; but if they (lo not meet
in their entire length, either a posterior or an
terior portion of them remaining apart, the
sound is no longer hill, but feeble and shrill;
the note emitted is what the stringed instru
ment, player calls a harmonic, and what a
singer- calls a falsetto, or head note. The
Violinist who would bring out a
harmonic so touches a string that, in
stead of making it vibrate as a whole; he 'di
vides it into segments, each of which vibrates
by itself, and emits the note due to its short
length, instead of that which the full length of
the string would yield. The same sort of thing
appears to be done by the falsetto singer; the
adept can at will shorten his vocal cords so as
to pass instantly front one to its harmonic.
The muscular process by which this transac
tion is effected is not clearly made out, so that
it cannot be determined whether singers are
alike gifted with powers of head-singing equal
to the Tyrolese, or_ whether Alpine melody
grew out of peculiar capabilities of. Alpine
throats.-:--Once a Week.
A French paper says that the widow: of Phil
ippe Jacques Wilhelm, late of the Eighty-eighth
Regiment of the Line, and a shoemaker, has
just died at Strasbourg, at the ripe old age of
eighty-four. When Napoleon I. married the
Archduchess Maria Louisa, he issued a decree
in his own military and absolute fashion that
6,000 soldiers who had earned half pay should
be married to girls in their respective etsm
munes, and • he fixed the dowry of the
young ladies at 1,200 fr. in. Paris_ and 600 fr.
elsewhere. At Strasbourg, 'ten of these Mat , '
lines took place; all the authorities of the town
were present, the newly-married couples were
invited to , the: theatre; gloves bouquets and .
catriages were fprnished by dm umnicipality:
In the evening there was ahanqueti at which
the EMperor and his newly-maitiqt*itb Were
Masted. the ten' o;'April 23,
Widow. Wilhelm WaS•the:last.skirviver.
0On:0N .-13 lIALES uOTTON , GW
%,..) landing from stentuPi• TOIIIM/1111111, and: for gale -by
Kxuat 'Arco;
THE DAILY EVENING. BULLETIN-PHILADELPHIA, THURSDAY, MAY , 20, 1869.
Falsetto Voice
Napoleonic Marriages.
t:
Unsuccessful
iiii H rEn OF MESSRS. , AVlQ ' l3 , o*§ &CO
Nniv Yitsitic r lt,prillo,
1 - lERRIN(;, FARREL &'" RERSIAN, N 0.201
Broadway:
:._., ~Cv:, r i..
tlrkt: On the night cif thn 22,d ltlt. Out store,
No. 20 South street, NyllB ellppW,1 2 ~ 4 . 1;4
. 11, deo . -
Perate attempt made by burglars 'one of
your4!ales in our counting-room. .
The key to the.safe in whiehw,e,lcept our se
ciirities was locked.' inidde 'ohr fire-Proof
book-safe,.the doors .of, which.„wore,
cut to pieces; from this they obtained the key
to the other safe and opened it. .Vortii-
'lately we had one of your „Burglar-Proof
Bankers' Chests inside,. in whiehoUr valuables
were deposited. This they ,went to work
at with a will, and' evidently used
up all, their time and tools. ie, vain, attempts to
force it. The night was dark—and stormy,
and the fact of their knowing, ; where our key
was kept shows that their plans, were well
matured. They tried wedging the door, and
body_ef the Chest, and the faithful sale bers
evidence of the rabor and skill devoted - to the
work. All was useless,44o 4 I§ . with great satis
faction we report that: upon, opening it we
found our securities all &tip, and, can, therefore
cheerfully indorse the Burgular-proof work
recommended by you. , „ .
You will please send the new safe, purchased
by us to our counting-how, ,and, take the
old one to show that,senie safes are still manu
factured worthy of the name.
• HERRING'S PATENT :CHAMPION
SAFES, "THE MOST RELIABLE
.SECU
RITY FROM FIRE NOW IcNOWN," Maau
facturod and Fold by
FARREL, HERRING *OO.,Bhiladelphia.
HERRING, FARREL . ASS SHERMAN, No.
251 Broadway, New 17prIc, '
.•
HERRIZTO & CO.; Chicago. .
HERRTICG, FARREL & SFIERIIAN ' N.O
fed IL th t •
SATITATOGA WATER,.
STAR
SPRINGS,
SARATOGA NEW YORK.
The analysis proves that the waters of the
. .
Saratoga Star Springs
have a much larger amount of 'solid substance; richer in
medical ingredients than any other—spring in Saratoga,
and shows what the taste indicates=nainely; that it is the
STRONGEST WATER.
It also demonstrates that the STAR WATER contains
about
100 Cubic Inches ]!tore of GICSI
in a gallon than any other spring. It is this extra
amount of gas that imparts to this - water' its peculiarly
sparkling 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 effervescence almost equal to Champagne.
Sold by the leading Druggista and Hotels through
out the country.
JOHN WYETH &8R0.,-
. _
1412 Walnut Street, Philada,
Wholesale Agents.
Also for sale by W.Walter Mullen .Ches.out 11111 Fred.
Brown, mules of Fifth awl ottenttut streets; Gra
hame Twelfth and Filbert; 11. B. Lippincott, Twentieth
„ n d,ch er ,;. c0.,1228 Chestnut; Samuel S. Bunt
ing, Tetitit and Spruce ; A. B. Taylor,lols Chestnut; P.G.
Oliver, Eighteenth and Spruce F. Jacoby. Jr.. 917 Chest
nut; Geo. C. Bower, Sixth and - Vine; Jas.T. Shien,Broad
and Spruce; Daniel S. Jones, Twelfth and Spruce; W. B.
Webb, Tenth and Spring Garden.
del-tu,th.s.lyrp§
IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS
forAhe city and county of -Philatlelphia..—Assig
estate of CHALK LEY SOMERS and WarfiLsaH E.
SOMERS, copartnere as C. SOMERS A: SON. The
Auditor appointed by the Court to audit and adjust the
account W.II LOVE, Aesignee of CHALKLEY
SOMERS an WILLIAM. E. SOMERS. copartners,
trading as C. SOMERS 'a SON, and to report distribu
tion of balance in Mut& of said 'acoountant, will Meet
the Rattlers - interested for the purpose of his appointment
on MONDAY,,May M5f,1869, at ll o'clock, M.,at hie
)1 - 11c-e, No. 217 South :Third streat,' Itt;the city.of
phia. S. HENRY NOItRIS, Auditor. [iny2O the to ate
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE
UniteAl Htittes for the Eastern District of Pentisyh•a
-nia.—.l.n Bankruptcy Philadelphia. the 19th day of
May. A. D. 1869. The undersigned hereby give's ncitico
of his appointment as assignee of ,LAMES (!. BELL, of
Philadelphia, in the county. of Philadelphia, and State
of Pennsrlvinda, , Witilin said 'District; who has been ad
judged a hank rapt upon his own petition. by the Dis
trict Court of said District.
A. HALLER GROSS, Assignee,
735 Walnut street.
ma) th t3t•
IN TEE ORPHANS' COURT FOR TILE
I. City -and County of Philadel ph ia.—Estato of
WALTER F. SOUTHGATE, dereased.—The Auditor
appointed by the Court to audit. tif.tth. Mid adjust 'the
iterollia of J. HARVEY' BEALE Adnuiristrator of the.
R
Ebtate of said WALTE SAITHGATE, deceased,.
and to report distribution Of tlothalanee In the hands of
the ;,ecountant, will meet the parties interested for tho
purpose of his appointment on _TUESDAY. May 25,12169,
at It A. IN.. at his Omen, No. 221 South Fifth street, in
the city of Philadelphia. JOHN O'BRIEN ,
my 13 th s turd' Auditor.
N THE ORPHANS' COURT FOR, THE
L City and County of Philadelphia.—Entate of
ANDREW C. BARCLAY. deceased.—The Auditor ap
pointed by the Court to audit, Wattle and adjust the first
account of GEORGE - B. ih3tl AY
BARCLAY, Executors of the last Will and Testament
of ANDREW C. BARCLAY, late of the city of Phila
delphia deceased, and to report distribution of the
balance in the hands Of the accountant, will meet the
parties interested, for the purpose of his appointment,
on FRIDAY, the 4th day of .tune, A. D. 18u71 at 4 1;cloek
P. M. at his office, No. 271 south Fifth street, in the
city of Philadelphia. niyl3 th s In btt
TN Tlig DISTRICT C() IT ItT OF THE
I UNITED STATES FOR TILE EASTERN BIS
TIUCT OF PENNSYLVANIA. •
JACOB KOLLER, of Philadelphia, bankrupt, havin
petitioned for his discharge, a meeting of creditors twill
be held on the Ist day of June, 1112. at, 2 o'clock I'. 31.,
hefore Register WILLIAM McMICIJA EL, Esq., at his
office, No. 530 Walnut street, in the city of Philadetphia,
that the examination of the bankrupt may be finished,
mad any business of meetin gsrequired by sectionstwenty -
seven and twenty:eight of the act of Congress may be
transacted.
The Register trill certify whether the bankrupt has
conformed to his duty.
A hearing will also be hell on WEDNESDAY. the Pith
day of Juni!, 1e69, before theCourtut Philadelphia, at 10
o'clock A. 31,, when all parties interested may show
cause against the discharge. • .
1 ,---------,1 Witness the Honorable JOHN
Seal of (3eui.t. CADWALADER,Judge of the nktid.
District,Coort, and the seal there
-:'8--0 J of, lit Philadelphia, May 5,1859.
G. R. FOX, Clerk,
Attest—Wm. MeMicHAEL, Register. . myoth3tl
I.4 , STATE OF ED W AII I) 31 [ILL INS,
deceased.-- ( letters testamentarY upon the above
having been granted to the undersigned by the
Register of. Wills for the City and County of Philadel
phia, all perilous indebted to the said estate will make
payment, HIM those 'UMW claims against the same will
present then) to ELIZABETH F. 211ULLINS, No. 515
North SeVenth street. , EDWARD MULLINS, No, 410
Commerce street, - LEWIS THOMPSON, Eleventh
streetand Ridge avenue. Philadelphia, Executors; or to
their Attorneys, WAKEDINII 111100., No. 522 Walnut
street, Philadelphia. , - my6-th tit* '.
•
T.N .- THE - DISTRICT COURT OF THE
1' United States for-the Ea'Steittitishict Pounsylva
Bankruptey. In the matter of . .
n • '
• . nicliAßD RITCHINGS, Bankrupt.
May 12th, the Court.
Upon return of alias order to she* cause, proof of ser
vice is filed, whereupon it is ordered that notice, once a
week for three weeks, be published in each of two news
papers in Philadelphia, of general circulation, requiring
alleged bankrupt to appear on the 2d of June next to
show cause why he should : not be adjudged a bankrupt.
Certified front the record
. s ea l . p r a: R. FOX,
theCourti Clerk of the Court,
ntyl3 tli3r
IZZIE GALLAG'HEII, - BY ITER,NEXT
L friend, CHARLES S,RitOWN, VB. LEWIS F. GAL -
'LAGHER.—Coannon Pima Court. In Dlvoree-Al. T.
No. 70.—Tó LEWIS E. GALLAGHER, Itespondent--"-
Sir:—Take notice that a rule On you hum Rita ihty - been
granted, by the Court to ahow ,cutole why a dlyurce a--pine,
Wet. H110111(1 not-be granted-In the tdowe came, Rotuma
bletiatoda`y, ldtty 22;1869, at 11Volock A. Peroonat
service haying failed oaacco A u , t, N tt v 'o
TY
Attorney BG ll pro aAi L Wn l c hi
TfuLa-DELPItta May 8,'1869.', 1ny1.3-thrit§
LYAFTERS TESTAMENTARY' ,URaN
the Estate of JOHN C. lIIIEMENIIANT,deceIised,
having been granted to the uaderaignoa, all veraana in
di3bted to said Estate 'will make payment, and tlioee
having claims :present Ahem toL JOSEPH M. COUUTT,
r(UgUl9rdle C4utaut otruct, MIRO. tit*
DAN-Ip. Doors .Co
I --- 7, - - nrAIMER-RESORTB4
V ----------------- -- '' . -e.,,Z -- , :4 -- rtv -
silmivivii RFi t sORTS f '' ftt
~, .--, i 4. A ~- ~, 4'.' 4 , '•' ' ' r
, , t , ON lil l polAtir - 4 4 0
' ' ;'.' • ~,, , P 1 , , 4 ; ''''': ? 1 ''
%.
4,l),biladeliiliia and:Meallidg Railroad
0 , . 't, *4
t ) --,..t . .1 , f
,- ' ' '''; ~„?, tANtIk3O,NONE.SV '' 5 ,-:;,
'N 7 r '4* '"4-4'?
31ansion House, Mt. Carbon.
biro. Caroline Wunder, Pottsville P. 0., Schuylkill co..
Tuscarora Hotel,
4. L. xiii(m,,Tuscarorkr...o., .SChuYlkilLeounty.
Mansion House,
.
X,. F. Smith, Mahttuoy City P. 0., Schuylkill county.
-11ottitt Carmel House.
Charles Culp, Mount Carmel P. 0., Northumberland co.
White House,
E. A. ]dose, Rending P. 0,-3 A t ••
' Analaittsih, 9ft •
Henry Weaver, Reading P.O.
• -11.1ving-Springs-Hotel;'• ' • ••-•'"-• •
Pr. A. Smith,
,Wernereville r. 0., Berke county.
Cold Springs Hotel, Lebanon Cou nty,
Win. Lurch ; CiroVo P. 0., Schuylkill county.'
Boycetosvia Sendnary,
F. S „Stauffer, .13oyertown P. 0., Berke county. •
.
Litis Springs,
Geo. F. Greider,ldtiz P: 0.., Lancaster county.
ippla rata S pri nes, •
John Frederick, Ephrata P. 0., - Lauctieter county.
Perklanten
Davie.Longliker; Freeland P: 0., Montgomery county.
Prospect Terrace,
Dr. James Palmer, Freeland,P.,o., Montgomery county.
Spring DM Heights, •
JacobH. Dreisch, Conshohocken P. O.; 'Montgomery Co.
Douty House,
Theodore Howell, Shamokin, NorthuMberland county.
roy4-2mft
DROSPECT TERRACE.
.k • FREELAND MONTGOMERY COUNTY.
This delightful Summer Residence will Le open for the
reception of guests on and after
The lawn and grounderhave been arranged' with eurri
mer arbors, croquet grounds, billiard rooms, &c., and
lot Shade and beauty are very delightful ,• boating fish.
ing, plunge-hathe, & c, tr.ddreee, , JAME EALMkR,
apl6 tb s tu amo§' , Freeland, Pa'.
MISCELLA.NEOITS.
CEDAR CAMPHOR
ix ChoapOaf; Ploasont44, , most Desirable as defenco
against CLontai-MOTHS: Dia'ggists evarywhore solt It.
THEO)). S. HABILIS, Facturer, Boston. 60c; and
larger. nty2o.9t
•
wm. immo.A.ros,
1221 : MARKET STREET, .
• • —.PHILADELPHIA.
Steam and Gas fitting; Harid Power and Steam Pumps,
Plumbers' Marble and Soapstone Work.
Terra Gotta Pipe, Chimney Tops, &c.; wholesale and
retail.
Samples of finished work may be seen at pty store. .
iny6 tint§
Flies and Mosquitc•es.
Magoun's Patent Adjustable
WINDOW SCREEN
WILL FIT ANY WINDOW.
SELLERS BROTHERS; -
No. 623 Market Street, Philadelphia,
- SOLE MANUFACTURERS.
Liberal diecomit to the Trade. - "
ati29lro§
PATENT OFFICE.
Wssurgnres, D.C., March 2,1889.
W. D. CUTLER, Es9.—Please find below a communi
cation from the Examiner, in the 'Matter of interference
between-Rand, Lewis and Cutlerjor_manufacture_from
Codfish. Very respectfully,
EMMA FOOTE, Commis inner of Patents.
EXAMINER'S ROOM : In the matter above referred to
priority of invention IS AWARDED TO CUTLER, an
the applications of nand and Lewis are rejected.
R. 8. lIENDRICK, Examiner.
This establishes the patent under which the BOSTON
AND PHILADELPHIA SALT FISH COMPANY, No.
AM COLUMBIA Avenue, manufacture their DESIC
CATED CODFISH.
For sale by all good Grocers.
WARNER, RHODES & CO.,
WATER and CHESTNUT streets, General Agents.
None genuine unless bearing our trade marklis above.
Parties offering any other will be summarily prosecuted.
nOl9-eom Gm§
Of the latest and most beriutiftil deihms, and all other
Slate work on hand or made to order.
Factory and Salesrooms,SlXTEENTli and C ALLOW
IIILL
21 Streets. . WILSON & MILLER.
a Sn-16
CORSETS
Wholesale and Retail
CORSET STORES,
329-atid 819 Arch St.,
Where Ole Merchants and.Ladiee
will find an extensive assnrtment
tuned Corsets and Hoop Skirts.
PUBLICATIONS
To Sunday-School Superintendents
and Teachers.
NEW UNION EXPL 'ATO'RY QUESTION BOOK
on the Harmony of ti Gospels. Fifty4wo lessons.,
Each question answered full,dispenslng with commen
taries. Geographical por nu, with interesting illustra
tions front Oriental trave . Price, id cents.
IMPROVED QUEST BOOK on the Life of
CIIRIST,with the test. Art ged for clasSes of all ages.
Price, If; cents.
Justpnblislied and for sale \ y. tin AMERICAN SUN
DAY-I,CIIOOL UNION, ll= Chestnut street, Philndel
rnyll In th s Gag
BOORS BOUGHT, AND CATALOG U tIS
of New York and Boston Br ok Sales for distribution
at 740 Santioni street, 'JOHN CAMPBELL. my . X-Im*
•
1110 - H I L 0 S' OP HY 'OF MARRIAGR—A
.new Collil4o . of Lectures; as delivered at the • New
York Museum of Anatomy; embracing the subjects;•
How to Live and what to Live for; Youth, Maturity and
Old Age; Manhood generally reviewed; the Cause of In
digestion, Flatulence and Nervous Diseases accounted
for; 'Marriage FhilosophicallY Considered, &c.,
roOket volumes containing these Lectures will be for
warded, poet paid, on receipt of 25 cents, by addressing
W. A. Leary; Jr. Southeast corner of Fifth and Walnutstreets,
streets, ,
e 26-10
DRUGS
SUNDRIES: GRAD U-
D'ateH,Aliirtnr, , Pill Tiles, Combs, BrusherS,Milvori,
Tweezers, Puff Boxes,Horn Scoops, Surgical Instru
ments Trusses, Hard and Soft Rubber Goods Vial
Cases; Glass and Metal Syringes, &c.,a1l 'la' "? First
Hands" prlces. 81.1oWDE N ,kBROTHER,
' ttps4.f 23 South Eighth street.
DRUGGISTS ARE INVITED TO EX-
undue our large stock of fresh Drugs and Chemicals
of the latest Importation.
Also, essential Oils, Vanilfa Beans, Sponges. Chamois
Skins etc. ..ROBERT SHOEMAKER CO., N. E. cor
ner Fourth and Race streets.
_
OLIVE UIL SUPERIOR QUALITY, OM
draught and in' bottles; various brands. ROBERT
SHOEMAKER & 00., N. E. corner... Fourth and Race
streets.
•
0 AIiTILE SOAP--NOW, •LANDIN G.-300
Loxes White and Mottled Castilii tidapo.'erysuiferier
quality...llolllMT 13110EMAKER & CO., 'Wholesale
Druggists, N.. E: corner Irottrtli ata - ,lltace streets.
ItOPF'ING
__.._ . • . . . ..
T ° .O UILbERS- AND KCIt..?NT'RACTOTt§, ,
Wear o prepared to faintehjqigli,akiplported
• ASPII4JakO ROOFING' Ft:l,w . ..
'ln quantities to suit. • This rooting woe uqp3 to cover
tlAFarla•Fochipitioti inif367.
MERCHANT k CO
••
" •'
10114 1 Di - - ;' ' 9 r
tit
131E1CoNVN''S
0 T
----.:EINANG
r4,, , OV,y"Lst,
lea-i1..1. 6 ,77 -4 :' B N
i
t .. - 7 0. , 14 - 1,4 1 :." ‘
Ravings 4Pitoy ~:Ip their ', - v Ilti ng, '
, 9 BOUT , -.tee - 0 '43- V,
~. ~ , ~,,4 -
Are no PrepalV tO transaet a ,
GENERAL OWING BUSINESS
And deal in GOYEAN,AIE,Ig,anti.PIIIer—SEPIMITIE 7 4 ,
"LOOLIrIITLIDS: he.
Receive MONEY ON DEPOSIT, allowing Interest.
NEGOTIATE LOANS, giving special attention to
Mercantile paper.
Will execute orders for Stocks, Donde, Am, on Com
mission, at the Stock Exchanges of Philadelphia New
York, Boston and Baltimore. . opote.lin§
THE GREAT
PACIFIC RAILROAD
IS ' FINISHED.
FIRST MORTGAGE BONDS
OF TILE
UNION AND CENTRAL PACIFIC It
BOUGHT AND SOLD.
MESE
~ge . 14 • L. '• .11
• .11 . 1 Au•
Bankers and , Dealers in Governments,
40 S. Third. Street.
ay9 tr
BANKING HOUSE
PN . CooKE&G).
112 and 114 So. THIRD ST. PEULAD'A
DEALERS
IN ALL GOVERNMENT SECURITIES.
We will receive applications for Policirm of
Life Insurance in the new National Life In
surance Company of the United States. Full
information given at our office.
SMITIL AHDOLPH
emikEßs
Dealers in V. B. Bonds and Members of
Stock and. Gold Exchange receive ac
counts of Banks and Banke rs on liberal
terms, Issue Rills of kbrehange on
0. J. Hambro & Son, London.
B. Metzler, S. Sohn & Co., Frankford.
James W. Tucker & Co., Paris.
And other principal cities, and Letters
of Credit available throughout Europe
S. W. corner Third and Chestnut Streets.
LUMBER
Lumber Under Cover,
ALWAYS DRY.
WATSON & GILLINGHAM.
924 Richmond Street.
rh1129 ly§
MULE; BROTHER
2500 South Street.
1869. 1869
CHOICE SELECTION
31ICHIGAN COKE PINE
FOR PATTERNS. •
1,869 SPRUCE AND HEMLOCK. IB69
• sr.RucE ANO HEMLOCK.
LARGE S'l'OCh. .
1869. if t l!- - g,I,VA 1869
• CAROLINA FLOORING.
VIRGINIA FLOORING.
DELAWARE FLOORING'
FLOORING.
WALNUT FLOORING.
_ - _
1.81.ak FLORIDA STEP BOARDS.I-8-6
Uzi FLORIDA STEP BOARDS. 1_
RA IL PLANK.
RA IL PLANK..
.-
1869 WAL.Nff
_)A_RDS &NM ‘., - )00
PLANK: JLOU
'WALNUT BOARDS AND PLANK .
WALNUT BOARDS.
• WALNUT PLANK.
ASSORTED " -
FOR ,
CABINET MAKERS,
BUILDERS,
UNDERTAKERS'
1869
LUM.
UNDERTAKERS' BER LUMBER.
RED CEDAR.
WALNUT AND PINE.
1869. "AVaigel'igh& R. 1869
•
WHITE OAK PLANK AND BOARDS.
HICKORY.
18e0 . UARPLINA *U/PITLING.IQ69
lie CAROLINA It. T. SILLS. -
NORWAY SCANTLING.
1869 CEDAR
SHINGLES. CLS, 1869
• -
CYPRESS SHINGLE S.
• •
LARGE ASSORTMENT.
FOR SALE LOW.
1869. PIALURTTL I AT. H f 1869
LATH, •
MAUL*: BROTHER dc CO.,
2:Alti SOUTH STREET.
111110 MAS & POHL, LUMBER ' IVLER
i. cliontil, No. 1011 S. 'Fourth greet. At their » arc
will be found Walnut, Ash, Poplar, Cherry, Pine, Hon
lock, &c., &v., 0 . 1. evocable prices. Give them a call.
, IkIARTIN THOMAS,
roll7-6re ELIAS POHL.
rpo CONTRACTORS,- LUALB
1. and Ship-builders.—We are.uow prepared to execute
promptly orders for. Southern Yellow .Pine Timber,
Shipstuff and Lumber. COCHRAN, RUSSELL ec CO,,
22 North root street. mh24 tf
YELL M
OW PINE LUER.-
EORDERS
for cargoes of every description Sawed Lumber ego•
ruled at short notice---guality subject to inspection.
Apply to EDW. IL ROWLEY, 16 South Wharves. ' fee
--- -
HEATERS AND STOVES..
THOMAS
THOMAS S. DIXON ,Sc SONS,
Late AndKews &Dixon,
..4 No. 1324 CHESTNUT Street, India& ~
Opposite United States Mint.
IdOnikfacturerp of
• , LOW DOWN,
~ •
PARLOR,
,
And °Hier GiIATES , ,
For Antliratilto, Bituminous and Wood Flr4;
LRO ' . .
WARM-AIR FURNACES,
•
For Warming „Public and Private
-REGISTERS VENTILATORS,
NO
'CIIIMNFY CATEI, • "
COOKING -11 Ar OEB 4 HATILMOILEER.
;0': :'
74,1:Nit4i
ELAA.IDEORMs
ualUySisjitErßComits.
T. .
c40 ,-.._, A ,, :i s rA m i g u l. wri ur a
rly
RTrpAniED. 1
a_' - '' , 4 "l6'i ch '• tnnt st.. Phila.
qqalliNallail
Ladies'and. Gents' Watches
Antorientrendimported, of the thoireelebratedliielteie.
Fine V egt , Chainsl andr4 etpki*elp,
itt 14 arid 18 'hereto. •t 4
Diaiii"d and Other
°Cill intent drat Jewelry,
—2 E l 4
T4.l' '
DDIPie)giNGS,
In 18 karat and coin.
SOLTATTLVItIivrAirg - riArßwrirArrpnvlstxlll.
„ in i .t T r APPP CUTLERY,.Etf.ti
,' •--. : A WM. O.IIIIMINE ft CO.,
I x .t. .
I. *lnSteiitleDotilorti in
WATCHES AND JEWELRY,
S. E. eer. S ererithand 'Chestnut , Street*,
Andlate of No. ss Sontktlnid irCet. • in 2 ly
GROCERIES; LIQUORS, &C. 1-
FRESH ;FRUITY IN CANS.
Peaches, Flue Apples, &c.,
dreen Corn ? rrcrxTvcces,. -- '-
French Fens, lintihroolas,
Asparague, &e., &a.
ALBERT C. ROBERTS,
DEALEII•IN GROCtRIES. i
•
Corner Eleventh and Vine Streets,
noz..EN OF FX,
Itt:6l - 1 . I\,LAT:(IK. (&NS,
at Fifty (nt 11 ,, r (an—the - cllearwak . ruldlnzt
gmxlkin thu Alt): oat COUSTY'S Eaat End,'Grociry,;fo.
,113 South tr•contl. pliant ; . . ,
1R li ENC l'EASi' 31 'Ut4ll.l{.oAf 0 TRIM
fli u,Tomato' ri, CI reoii Com ,'A aratea lec.,ltfitgre
and for kW,: at COUSTy East. Lud, GrSk rry, *to 318
South Second street.
_ _
NEW DATES, FIGS, ritilN,l3B,
sinri mot A Inionris—all ta , v erag—in stors , quil for
Male at COUSTY 7 IS; East Elul Grac,ry i lio.ll6, South
§TON E
ED CHRRIES, - PLUMS .' lIL ACK
.
bprri..g. - Peahve, Prnin.llos. Nap', Unlit Wows,
F Ink 4' rSweet Corn At OOUST Y 13 East End Gr0w:17,1 4 10.
118 South Second IS treot . ' .. . .
Naar Vigo,
,for: the Renovation of the, tiairo r
The - triat - Desideratum of the . Age.
A- dressing which
is at once agreeable,
healthy, and effectual
for preserving the
hair: Faded orgrag
hair is . soon, restored
to its eriyinat color
and the gloes and
freshness of youth.
Thitr7-hair is- thick
ened, falling hair chetked, 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.. „Instead
of fouling the hair with `i pasty sedi
ment, it will keep it clean and vigorous..
lis occasional' use 'will - prevent 4he
from turning gray or falling off, and
consequently, prevent baldness. Free
from those deleterious substances which
make amid:preparations dangerous and
injurious to the hair, the Vigor can
only benefit but' not harm it. _lLwanted
merely fora ,-
DRESSING,
nothing mls_e t can be found Ao. dookable.
Containing neither oil iaor dye, it does
not soil white cambric, and yet lasts
longer on the hair, giving it a rich
glossy lustre and a grateful perfume.
Prepared by Dr. .I. C. Ayer & Co.,
PRACTICAL AND ANALYTICAL CH43IIBTB,
LONITELL S ?J ABS.
PRIM $l.OO.
Sold by all Dru irgbits everywhere.
. M. MA HIS it CU.. Philadel punt
r ENCIi MEDICINES
PREPARED BY -
GRIMAULT s CG.,
CIfE3IPITB TO U.' 1. If. PRINCE NAPOLEON,
45 RUE DE lIICIIELIEG,
DISEASES OF THE CHEST. • -
SYRUP CF' IIYPCpCOSDIIITE 0E LIME.
, GRIMAULT K. CO.. COEMltrro, P.OllB.
A syrup compounded with this now salt has been in
troduced by Dr. Churchill fur the treatment of putmo,-,
miry phthims. Recent trials made at the lirompton Con
sumption Hotniital, anOaßtltiOn eHportitlirdevoted td
the treatment of 'diseases of the chest, have abundantly
demonstrated , t he. absolute necessity of obtaining this
new therapeutic agent in the most perfectly pure and
neutral condition. Each tablespoonful of syrup contains
four grains of perfectly li
pure yDOpilOsphito of lime.; and,
us compounded by MDT. Gritimult & Co., of Paris, this
syrup is the only preparation which guarantees to tho
medical profession all the properties requil cd iu this
valuable medicine.
Agents in Philadelphia, . _
[CHARDS & CO'
de7-6lii N. W. ow., Tenth and Market streets.
OXAL DENTALLI NA. --- A SUPERIOR,
. article for cleaning the Teeth,destroying animalculte
which infest them, giving tong, to the gums and leavinga
(feeling of fragrance and. perfect cleanliness 'ir!' the
mouth. It may be used 'daily, and will be : found' to
strengtheioveak and bleeding gums, while the aroma'
and detersivenees will recommend it to' every one. Be.
log composed with the assistance of the Dentist, Physi-L:
Chins and 'Microscopist, it .is confidently offered as . a:
reliable substitute for the uncertain washes formerly . in
vogue.
Eminent D . entiste,. acquainted with the constituent*,
of the Dentallina. advocate its use; it contains nothing
to prevent its unrestrained employment. Made only by,
JAMES T. SHINN. Apothecary,.
Broad and Spruce streets.
ally, and
D. L. Stackhouse,. •
Robert C. Davis,
eleo. C. Bower,
Chas. Shivers,
S. M. McColin,
S. C. Bunting.
Chas. R. Eberle,
Janice -IL Marks, - •• •
N. Bringhurst & Co.,
Dyott '.14 C 0.,. • •
H. C. Illair's Sous, ; • . •
NryPtli & Bro..
For sale by Druggists`goner
Prod. Browne.
astuird A, Co.,
C. U. Koeny, •
Issue M. Kay,
C. 11. Needles,
T. J. Husband,'
Ambrose Smith,
Win. B. Webb, i
James L. Iliephum, -
Hughes A. Combo,
Moir • A. Bower. •
ER,MEN
?,.!"*.A.TR1cE.4,11.-PAXSPDIPT . '' .
X. 31-- - ' et , thil. PrpcpL. oolPANY's
• ~ . 17 ,..,.„1.b0.,,, ( c0,,,,,,,, t . i . gt : g. o r 111 1,
'..?• -1 / ' point os mach n's Nu
las
-;:, ' i 0 • , an d N'year ) onger. ' Tor
.. . Par , N0 c . 1 15 . 0 .
••: • . oddress S. 31()V 1.14 NP 874,5xad0i. .
ron 1,1:.k . n. N . ro artb, St:.
.. ...
'. • • , , ,
R
•
tiohed depot for the purclutee and sale of Fie(towl ,
hood DooroilVindows, Store rixtur., froet Seventh
street to Sixth street; above Oxford, wheto o'ol artieletO
ore for mile in'greatvariety. t - • .
Alm°, new 1)06ro, Softiies, Shutters, ke. • •
uk.:3-;!na 1;.12::11:3 W. Eldsls.,
LRY _440
JDTC L.
Ayer's,
AV1101.13:11 , 1 by
nibgtu:tb.l4-4!ow-1Y
• 5 Al 3 !r- 6
• -..--.... pyrmluvENTNGeturiplut -- prni - moimm . TORarms- —imAy_2o 1169
Fll,
IrELF4111AMIIIII541§111111‘Akirr•
Mxiszi t{: JAY left London yesterday, for
-
byE Chixese Embassy exped, to 'cave
titc midfile ot!line att. g,
Iwrimbritil'revenue•rb iptqaestetday, Were
$4:11,112 78. '
THE Attorney-General is now preparing an
opinion on the act of March 3,,ll3tipein relation s
to bounties. It will be submitted in a few days.
Ilotio KONG advices state that a placard, de
nouncing Christian : missionaries, has been
posted throughout the Empire.
MR. Bunr.iifoatinl; laid before thcEreocli
Ministeff qf the ti r elirniit
of a treaty' between 'France and China,
ficsciety of the Cincinnati held itseighty
sixth anniversary in Baltimore yesterdaY,Hon.
Hamiltß l2, PHAtare B 4 lll lB; 'l l 3r
A. Rim occturred at Tralee, Ireland, in which
the police used their revolvers freely. Ono
man was killed, and several others were
severely wounded.
'all -Excelsior Iron Works, at Chicago s were
burned last evening. , Loss, $130,000: A large
Boar mill atillil4 hi 11, Canada, was liurned yes
tertiaV " eausiiig ajoss"Of $OO 000..7 ; ' • .
I 4 !IA tindbriitootll that the Mbisksippi ease
will at once be taken up by the Cabinet, and
the smile coimie will be taken with reference
to that Btatt: as .in the .case, of fr iiut, -
Pr IN rumoreir that, a IrekliColifebil of hi g h
rank recently slappetl, the Prench Ainba.ssaiier
in. the face,:ind,as a (onsequence, tile flag over
the of the Freneli Legation: ha ct! been
taken down. , •
Ch:NAIC WiGaiNs one of the'ten ,in.lgroes on
terr 7 in Bavannah; Gir., 'for the murder of
Broad, Barker and Buckman, on ~the Oth, of
December, was fount! guilty, of Murder. • The
others will be tried in.suceession.
AusTusmAxadidees to „Mareli 20, by way of
San Franeiseo,state thilt the drought WaS'eatts
ing terrible mortality among the shetip in
Victoria, and all' the crops, had failed. The
sniall-pox raged at, Melbourne.
Trip. ()Ricers and midshipmen of the Naval
Academy at Annapolis will give a grand, ball,.
as aVlOWßltcominimept A:diniral Porten,
on theoveililig of - jfiria'gat'Wbieh,,PreSidOnt
GrantLi en*t tole..pr9qeitte.-%
Tnii,pigtill of Mii - .T.W:•Nixon; situated ,''
nearkltoribitoww, - -was 'entirely :destryed
fireF;!e*ly7.'yimtocia.y 'Xotirritug.. abaßt.:-
$A),000; itikured` for Sl6,O(Xt. The, lire is At v-„:
posed tii — liave originated` fromspontanebus
combustion.
. ,
A the anniversary of the Peace Society,
held yesterday, in London, resolutionti were
adopted regretting the rejection or JOhason's
AlaWma treaty, and hoping that the people of
GrVat BritAin and the 'Wilted Stows will inter
pose to prevebt war., - • - • • •-;
Tax nieSSeriger of 'the Irving Bank; New
York; yesterday morning pla in the hands
of the messenger °flirt: Corn Exchange Bank
$25,000, to be delivered to the latter bank,
since which'
„time , nothing has heel* seen'pf
either the intfuey or the lattermeiseriket.
MAunici T. livirxxs, a porter in D. _Kelly&
Co.'s store, on Eighth avenue,
New York,
yesterday, morning deli berg 4cly attempted to
shoot a filestn4ti njuned:Birarri 'Levy, With.
whoin ber'sontie tittle Killee hail_ a quarreb.. T he
ball grazed Levy's kwad and entered the wall
behind him. ByrAes was.. Attested before he
could lire again.
-THE American-, Baptist Illottu3r) - 31iskiiimary
Society held ita tbirty4sevemth annual meeting
in.. Tremont _Temple, .Dirdon, • 7,, , cterday, jtov.
Dr. 'Aot6r,)prstrhilog.!' The:. rtiiii*rof the ex,
tend ve board was read, 611/Mug the receipts
0f411e,490 4.y for the t pastyear t-o be more than
SI4VIOO. 'The nurnlor of miissiOnarres eniployed
is 270, one-third at the South. 5
Tilt cottusel for the Erie llailway Company,
in the stain New York brought by Sperry and
wife,,to_ compel the payment of litykle rids -pit
prefeYreastoelt behtby tpeyn, li vc;anoy`eps
mkt:rifle thc tiles of the Court, on the
ground that the suit was, speculative, plaintifiii
receivit4nuctinlideratimi.; - .40r - the ,--- ukto - of:their
names. fhe argument will be continued on
Saturday. • •
AN abstract of the conditioll" of tlfe'4"erin
tWlc-iin la' banks' On Ainil 17, exi:Tinlind 1 3 hi hc
delphia and
.Pittaburgh,-tiliows resources and
,aggregating 677,MQ ) 037.. , Thespeci0
on liana tuiunlnted t0'...5e4;730. 'TheNew'York
banks, excluding the of New York city arid
Albany', at the same date, had resources and
aggregating 5120,805,5:14- the .specie
amounted to $,219,627.
-
AT die annual meeting -of - of the , New''York
Statt^.4Aisq.ei4tetl-F,Yestertiay,, ther.: 3 / 6 ,
tropolitan Hotel in New York, the following
oflieeM4were elected , for thelen..4itittk
President, 'Joseph Warren, of the litiflalo
Courier; Secretary and Treasurer, Ellis H.
Roberts, of the Utica Herald and Grizette; Ex
ecutive Committee, Jacob C. Cuyler, of- the
Albany ExpreSs; 11:1XICTiteker, of the Troy
- Times; V: - .E. - Smith, of the, Syracuse Journal:
GeorgeTtiAnope.r;, of flit Itochextet.G r itiOn. and..
Advertiser, and Mr:Thurston, - of the Elmira
Advertiser.
TIIN. Grand Master of the .1. 0. 0. F. yester
day announced his appointments a& follows:
Grand Marshal, Robert L. Bodine, of No. 2V.; .
Grand Condubtor, Theodore Cortunan, of No.
91; Gratid:..Guardian,' H. P Itinnear, of. No.
500; Grand Herald, Augustus Pfaff, of No. 100.
Committee on Finance, Messrs. Stedman, of
No. 113; Huhn, of No. 150; Geuther, of No.
106; Haworth, of No. 243. Committee on
Printing, Messrs. Eckstein l of No. 104; Mil
late of No. 155; Seel, of Noi . 93; Gruber, of
No. .tl 2 ; Bums, of No. 61. Cwinnittee on State
of the Order, Grand Representative J. Alex
ander Simpson - , and Messrs. Foust, of No. 237,
and Kinsey; of No. 87. Committee on Appeals,
Messrs. George . Fling, of No. 10; Hawks, of
No. 325; Masonof No. tl; William Carlisle, Jr:,
of No. 21)6; Reuben Stedinan,of NO. 113; Maurer,
of No. 171.
A PLEA ,FOR BABE FEET.
I saw in the newspapers, not long ago, a
piteous appeal tritm a clergyman in behalf of
the poor, and. especially of the little children,
who had, as the reverend gentleman patheti
cally asserted, "scarcely a shoe or stocking to
their poor Little feet." Now, as I Went bare
footed mytielf, when a "wee callant," as most
Scottish lads and lasses do in the rural districts,
whether their parents be rich or poor, or of the
decent middle' class, I- bethought myself that
much might be said on behalf of bare feet for
youut children, Whether, regarded health,
cleanliness,beauty or economy.. . •
) *Niz,,The late Adiairal Sir' 'Charles Napier once
said in my hearing, that until he was twelve
yearS of age he never wore shoe or boot, unless
he went into a town, and that he was always
glad to get back into the country again and
take offthe , encumbrance from his feet and
legs. Sir Charles was proud of his agility, and
when close upon three score years and ten,
could dance Fling - 7' and, the
"Gillie Callum" with grace' and alertneSS
which men young enough to be his . grandsons
might have•erivied Attribtited.much of his
vigor to his early training, and to the fact that
his feet 'bad been left in his childhood and
youth to the wholesome regimen• , of Scottish'
out-dot life, to develop themselves as Nature
intended. Sir Charles Napiez-'s (!petience Was
•
not i : eculiar, as many a sturdy Scot in' 'every;
part of the' Wollti:einf testify: •i:Every.one who z ;
has traveled, either dfigldatith'Or
Lowlands, , utust'have.notieed thejegs,areand ,
shapelY; and especially of the lasses - the
gleifS, and on the moors, and- in; the streets of
the towns and villages; and if he . .tiwere a reader
of Robert 13tiros, have titught,'uZwei 'the',llries
where he describes, lu the guise Of a rural
maiden, the genius of Caledonia, without -shoe.
9 _._or stocking.," as a spirit should be:
Down flowt.tl m r tppr a', tartan sliren,
a lug %vas serimply SOH;
• A 1494011 HJPg rxy , boquia
Along ; could. poor 0.1 • •
•
Most children ill SCOtittlai are in TioCent
of all.pattpnage.of the craft of tit, Crispin, 1 , 4nd
the lininertar sot says. to the .
burns that all. over the, niOuntais land are as
plentiful zoi,ineadoWs in Engln 111.
1 .7 OxelainiS the . Englishreader,::"What
is piddling?" Ir othing, my friend, bid piddling:
about ',hi the water With harm feetl=ii,v 11 0
err
voi ite Orel irith the ehilA Iron of Ole:glens;
auu the nfountainsouid kin of
which, whew;brought t? rai94 irra`aapwanY of
Scotsmen by 'the einging.orwilat inks , ' be called
their .natictipl solsg,:prarlablttorowiert, their (
entiktslasm, and - fills them w•
ith patriotic exuo
,
tion.
It can scarcely be depled „that a ;bare foot:
and !cilia more picturesque object than a
foot:witlr an patehet4 down-trodden boot'
or a' dirty, dartidd Stocking.' •But' for •
young people the bare foot has other than. ar
tisticand :esthetic recommendations, and much
may be said in favor of its economy, and, what
is more- hapOrtant, of its healthfulness: Noth
ing in the back slums of English cities is more
suggestive of squalor and misery than the sue
cessful attempts of the poor ,to be directly •
shod. A ragged coat or gown is less suggestive
of extreme want than the forlorn boots and
shoes of the ,children, and the filthiness of
• their stocking& And, yet the, poor of England
must spend a ••ConSiderable portion of their
scanty earnings in the attempt to procure what
custom, habit, use and the consent of society
agree to think indispensable pieces of attire. If
it be estimated that the number of poor
.eliil
dren tinder twelye years of age living in the ,
-rnral districts and cities of England is' three"'
millioris—a moderate calculation—and that
each child costs . five• shillin,gS a year, for such
ppor boots, shoes and stockings aS his parents
ca ii.purchaseovo, have a ,syrn. , •ornoP:.. less
_E7150,4700 fiir 'a purpose
which thd children of the poor 'Scotch, as well
as the , lrish; never,' either% think essential of
airrjeAtte;'' tin if the' SIM tiat Ain be ninitiPlied
by twelve, we have no less than nine millions
of poliMlSsiterlinkloiftO the laarefits..'ivitlfithit.
any real advantage to ' the ' children. Ainong
the poorest of the poor. would it not be an ad
vantage-.'if the
of
cMitributthemhy the
this large total of 'wealth Were. ,- expended in;
bread and butter;•and the other food 'required,'
or if a little Share - of it, went' to pay the school
fees? There IA no greater reason in Nature
why, the feet Staiidd tik'edvered-thati the I
or face; and a hatidsothe foot, is, as everybody
knows, as pleasant an object as a well-shaped
hand. And if the hand could. onlybecra,ntped
by the glove'a quarter as intuit "as - ,the',footis
cramped by the shoemakets,therewofild mum*
be a pretty hand left in England, Unless it be
longed to some strong ,ruinded person of either
sex, who was bold anti firm enough to set
fashion at defiance' . ' and to refuse to outrage
the simplicity of nattu'e.
As regards health, grace, and agility, we have
but to ask ourselves whence come corns and
burdons, and: how continually - the sufferers
from these painful callosities are.prevented
by the
.torture they indict, from taking the
'walking, exercise which is alike the cheapest,
the most healthful, and the most agreeable, to
be convinced that of all the handicrafts that
minister to the •wants andthe comforts of man,
that of the shoemaker, could be most easily and
ad; antage . ously dispensed with. In England,
amo rich and poor alike, the normally
shaped foot of an adult, is very seldom to he
-seen, as any doctor or surgeon can easily
ti+stify out of his experience. In fact, the feet
of most men and women are deforrned, and
the great toe forced tiom its natural poiition in
curve toward the little toe, which, in like
manner, is curved inward. - Were it not for the
respite `;and; libeifyitecorded night—Which"
'mitigate, but 'do not remove the evil—the feet,
of Englishmen, and more especially English
women, who cOmp i (thenkjn 'Order - that,they.
may appear .small and pretty, would he as little
serviceable for wholesome' exercise as those, of
the Chinese ladies, Whom we all agree'to laugh
at; seeing the mote in our neighbor's
eve, but not in our own. It has been
cynically sugg,ested that' the' boot and
shoemakers ___are - -in --league- =with---the
chiropodists .and doctors to damage our
health hy minous of our fok, and that' they are
allowed a per centage by the profession tor
the &Booklet+ which they create by, the faulty
Cut struction of our nether integtanents.
Iltit evnics are privileged to believe the worst
Of everything"and ovelybodr; and doubtless
the Crispins, great and small, WoUldlie quite
as
willing to, make , boots nand shoes on
natural principles, to , allow. ..for.,.the
healthful play and motion of th foot, as
to make unnatural ones, if fashion and cus
tom would but rtm in that direction. But
eystona is like the mountain, not to, be moved
IfT the blast of a trumpet, and fashion is more
obstinate in having its own way, in spite of rea
son and remonstrance, than all the mules, pip
and asses that ever existed sincethecreation of
the world.
I end in the spirit in which I begun., Better
a dean hand than !a dirty `glare 7 •' - better bare
feet. than clouted
,shoou and; ragged stockings,
and better, far, .bOtter; feet such as: Nature in
tended, than the feet which we owe to fashion
and the bootniaker.-4/1 the Year .nounil.
IMPORTATIONS.
Reported for the Philadelphia txeuing Bulletin.
PALER3IO,-Brig Scotseraig. Simpson--2000 boxes
lemons 4057 do oranges 40 tons brimstone I Jeanes 4.1 c. Co.
PONCE, PR.—Brig John Chrystal, Barnes-833 hhds
39 Mils sugar J Mason '& Co.
PENSACOLA—Schr E N Olcver,lngersoll-,174,803 ft
yellow pine lumber I) S Stetson & Co.
PENSACOLA---gchr 31 II Somers, Toing-240,000 feet
lumber order.
31D.—Behr Josepbus & Edwin, Gravner
—43,000 ft 44 np pine [wards 3 cords gum loge 50 blocks
Patterson & Lippincott:
MOVEMENTS OF OCEAN STEAMERS.,
TO ARRIVE.
FROM -
..... York May 5
Glasgow—Now York May 5
.Liverpool...liew York via IL. May 8
• Havro...Now York May 8
._ Brest... Now York May 8
London... New York May 8
Southan2p!ollAtltiluore May
lIIPS
C. nibria
Dorian
Etna
Itatainonlit-
St. Laurent.
Atalanta
Leipzig
. - -
TO DEPART.
II Chauncey -.New York—Aspinwall.,
Falelee Now York... Bermuda.....
G Washington... New York... New Orleans.
Tonawanda _Philadelphia—Savannah.'
Nine India Xork...Glasgovr ....... ...
C. of Brooklyn-New York...Liverpool__
England New York... Liverpool
Paraguay-- .... ...New York... Liverpool ....- - ....
south America... New York... Rio Janeiro, ;1T....
Dacian New York... Glasgow
Colorado Now York... Liverpool . ...... -L...
Columbia- New York... Havana
Samaria New York... Liverpool
Cityof Antwerp. New - York...Liverpool
St. Laurent New York-Marro
Cleopatra .New York... Vern Cruz
• BpAR-D-OF' TRADE.
lIENRY INSOII 2
GEORGE N. AILEN. gONTELY COMMITTEE
G. MORRISON COATES,
COMMITTEE ON ARBITRATIONS.
John 0. Jsmes t _.. Geo.i L. Busby,
E. A. Sou,lor, IWO. M. Pant,
Thos. L. Gillespie. , , .
MARINE RITLEETIN.
PORT OF PRILADnPITIAMAA• 20:
SuN • nisgs, 4 411 SUN SETS, 7 12 1 Mall WATER, 9 12
ARRIVED:yER'
Steamer Brunette, HoNvf,'242hout•s,from If:York, with
incise to John; F Ohl.
Steamer W C pferrepont l , Shropshire, 21 lours. from
New York, with mdse toll , Di Baird & Co:
Steamer Mars, Gruntley, 21 hours from New York ,with
mdse to W N Bahil & Co: . • , • ' •
Steamer A C St imers, Knox, 24 hoNtra from Now York,
with Inds° to NV P Clyde & Co.
Brig Scotscraig (Br), Simpson, from Palermo Feb 25,
via Gibraltar March 21/, with fruit to Isaac' Jeanes & Co.
Brig Jobn Chrystal, Burnes, 18 days from Ponce, PR.
.with auger tojolui Naomi & Co.
Schr E V Glover, Ingersoll, from Pensaccila, with
lumber toll 8 Steteon•&.Co. , .
Schr M ItSomers, Young, - .from Pensacola, withlolio.
ber to order. ' •
Sehr Jokiephus & Edwin Groveller, G days front River-
ton, Md. with lumber to Patterson & Lippincott.
•Bchr. l'otosi, .Truax, - 1 day from Leipsio, Del. with
grain to B H Lea-A Co. ' • .--
Schr Mary & Cdrolhm Fowler, :24days froui , BrnYrna,•.:
Del, with grain to .JatfL Bewley '& Gio. • • • . . •
Schr Alaska. Plorco,l day from Brandywino,Dol. with
corn meal to it M Lea A Co.• . •
Schr E R Graham, Smith, Salem'. • • •
' Tug 'Judson, Nicholson, from Baltimore , with a tow
of barges to W. P Clyde & Co.- „
Tug Thos Jefferson, Allen, fronillaltiinoro, with a tow
of barges to W P Clyde & Co. - •
CLEA,III.3.D- YESTNR.DAE. •
Steamer Cheater, JOllOB, New York, MIY P Clyde & Co. • •
Stenmer If 1. Claw, Iler, Baltimore. A Groves, Jr.
Brig Chas Ilenry,•Roni, Pietoui NS. Workman & Co,
Schr Teo& Bird. McDougall, St. Juhn x NB. do '•
Schr E Pratt,,Kondrick,Malden.•J Bazley & Co,
Schr J Truman, Whits, New Bedford Castner, Stickney
& Wellington. • . , •: . •.' • •
Selo II Prescott, Freeninn,.A.iiitienitAni,Enlght &
Schr War Eagle, Crowell, .1t0th,... • .do , , .•
Tug Hudson; Nicholson,Baltimoto,with a t w of barges,'
P Clyde & '
Tug Thos Jefferson, Allen, Baltituore; with h toW
horges; W P Clyde &• CO• . '
-•- -
Correspondence of the Philadelphia Evegjpg Bgli tin
• - - RNADING.,May 16 i mciß.
The following 'pats from the Caton Csnol_polop.d,luto
tln. St huh Ikill Canal, bound to Philadelphia, lal.h and
conalgued as follows:
*At°, lotatt& I t4t 8.4.01 1 , &
Annie, d "to'NOrctv 'it 8 wetg, W A BUnpiion;"tto to C
Wainwright Co&; Two .111stens, do to Boat ¢ Itondntl;
st,hBt4 C Grhng l litnotorie thehatter /ICc
MEMORANDA.
Ship Rutland; 'Gardner,' from Moeda' - .nth': Jain me
Melbourne. wan ooken 9th March, no lat,
,SteamerAries,.iVlloy,cleat,datßdston ridth instant
for Ihb port
,steamer Pioheer, - 13:Irian:hence at - 'Wilmington, NC.
Steamer Prometheus, Gray, Renee at Charlgat9n yea:
litevreer Eagle ; Greene, at Ifavana ' yesterday frrom
- Steamer Dorian, Small, sailed front Cir,eenock sth ,ins
tor New York. - -
%Steamer 8t Laurent, Lemaire, cleared at Havre sth
inst. fur New York. ' , •. • •
;Bark R A Kennedy, Horses, cleared, at , Liverpool Lth
inst, for this port. •
.Bark Glendoveer, Wilson - from llong Kong 16th Jan.
for New York, woe mriiiken 9th March, hot 25 8, lon 56 E.
Bark Rocket, Dill, from Penang 25th Jan at. Boston
yestPrlbly
Bark Adelaide, Eteliberger,s from Baltiniore for Rio
Janeiro, sailed from Fort Monroe yesterday..
Bark Lorena, Lorena, Hlchliorn, called from Cardenas. Bth
inFt• tor a port north of Hatteras. .
Brig Jflllll4 Crosby, Baldwin, hence for Tortemonth,
at Holmes' nolo Ittli - . •
Trig Minnie Miller, Anderson, sailed from Matanzas
12th inst. for a port north of Hatteras. • ,
Brig Harry Stewart, ~W eekii;rialled from Matanzas 9th
hist. for Cardenas, ' • •
Brigs J Bickunire, Henley, and E Kelley,Hobinson,
Thence at Boston yesterday. •• ' ' • •
Brig Waltham; 'Hammond, sailed from - Cardenas 12th
- .inst. for a port north tif 'Hatteras. - . • •
Brig Muria Wheeler, Wheeler, sailed froth Wiscasset
Bith inst. for ellr 4 1(1/404. .
Brig Mariposa; Lancaster, sailed from Cienfteigo Bth
hod. for this port. •
Brig Long Reach, Hutchins, cleared at Pensacpla 11th
, inst. for this port. . •
Behr Babcock. Colcord, cleared at Pensacola 11th
Gist. for Boston. -
P Eta - man, Ilarria, hence at Norfolk 17th inst.
Behr CaliforniniGnie, ;cleared at; Baltimore, 18th inst.
'for Burlington - NJ. .
Behr Whittaker, cleared at Boston 16th
inst. for IVilsnington, NC. ; ; . ;
Schr W T Cushing, sailed front' Cbarleaton yesterday
for this
_port. . ;
fiches W -NalkiY; C. , ;:k.i . aa4Cirk;l#utttlei; L
Blew, Blew; 11-A May ;-.L . iikerv: tiß- Wheeler . , Lloyd;-;ts L
Simmons, Gandy; Armenia, lye, and Paul ,S; Thomp
son, Garwood; hence•at BMW 18th inst ,
helm A Hannuond, Paine, c eared at Boston 18th bed.
for Baltimore. , ; ,
Saar Geo A Tretnain'ihetic4at Norwich 17th inst:
Behr Cohasset. Gibbs, hence at New Bedford 18th inst.
tichr lit;oBwellpp,front Orrdenaa, at Portland -,l7th
instant.
Fehr Ida L, Bonne, hence at Portland 17th imt. .:._:
Behr Morn m ' Star, hence at New London 17th
BOOTS AND `SHOES:
SP'ring •
BOOTS AND SHOES
FOR trzziprse wick*,
B A.R TLETT:
33 S. Sixth Street, above Chestnut.
ocl7 tu th lyrp3
ELAWARE 3113TUAT,.. SAFETY IN
-
SUBANCEE COMPANY.
Incorporated by the legistat ure penneybrania,lB3s..
Offide 8 E. corner. 'of TiIIBD and YTA tNtrr Streets,'
Pbiladeltplins. )
On Vesaehg, Cargo and Freight tohil pate of the'wBrld
1NET.1.13,A ZiCES
Op goods by rfrer,canal, - lake tratrlfthd Carriage to all
parts of the Union._
-FIRE :INSURANCES •
On Merchandise generally, on Stores. Dwellings,
Houses, &c.
•
;ASSETS OF THE COMPANY, ,
November 1, 1833.
8290,000 Unit lo ed States Five Per Cent. Loan,
. . .. . . 24y5' ,500 00
1210 X) United States Six Per bint. Loan.'"
1881 136,800 OD
00,000 United-States Six Per Cent. Loan
";_t• t (for t •Pacitic . • t. 50 .
00(1
200,000 State 'Pennsylvania * Six "Per --
Cent. Loan-. .......... ..... 211,375 00
125,000 City of Philadelphia Six Per Cent.,
• Loan (exempt from Tax)
50,000 State of New Jersey . Six Per Cent.
Loan
20,0u0 Pennsylvania. Itailroad First
Mortgage Six Per Gent. points too
25,000 'Pennsylvania Railroad ";Se
Mortgage SlS:Pereent. Bonds 24,000 00
25.000 Western Pennsylvania Railroad
Mortgage' Six .Per Cent; Bonds
(Penna. 'lt. R. guarantee/ .....
3),000 State of Tennessee Five Per Cent.
Loan
7,000 State • of. Termenst* Six Ber.GentLoan .
.....-..-.
15,000 Germantown Gas Company, princi
pal and interest guaranteed by -
the City of 'Philadelphia. 300
shares stock 15,000 00
10,000 Pennsylvahlw,RalltOad-ConlitalfY i l4x> 00
200 shares stock
5,000 North Pennsylvania Railroad
Company, 100 shares stock 3,500 00
XI 000 Philadelphia and Southern 11fai1.
° Steamship Company, St/ shares
stock-- 15,000 00
207,900 Loans on Bond and Illiirttni4q,
liens on City Properties_....
e 1,109,900 Par
Market Value, 41,130,325 25
Cost; e/0334/04 •
nerd rotate
Bills receivable for Insurances
made .
Balances due at Agencies—Pre
miums' on game , Polielee , - ,
Accrued 'lnterest and other
debts due the Company
Stock and Scrip of sundry Corpo
rations; $3,156 00. 'Estimated
value. • 1,513 00
Cash in Beak ~_Bll6,Lsti Ott
Cush in Drawer ' 413 65
DIRECTORS.
Thomas C. Hand, James B. McFailand,
Edward Darlington i 'William C. Ludwig,
Joseph IL. Seal, Jacob P. Jones,`._
Edmund A. Souder, Joshua P. Eyre,
Theophilus Paulding, William' G. Bouillon,
Hugh Craig, Henry C. Hallett, Jr.,
-John C. Davis. John D. Taylor,
Jellies C. Hand, . , Edward Lafouncade,
John R. Penrose,: Jacob Beige!, - 2
11. Jones Brooke, George W. Bernadon,
S pencerlll 'Brainy, Wni. C. Houston,
Henry Sloan. • D. T. Morgan, Pittsburgh
Siunuel E. Stokes, John B. Semple, do.,
James Traquair, A. B. Berger, do.
: . THOMAS. C. HAND, President.
• • . JOHN C. DAVIS, Vice President.
HENRY LYLBURN, Secretary.
HENRY BALL, Ass't Secretary. dell-if
.B lay 21
.May 21
.May 22
.May 22
.Mal 22
.May 22
:May 22
.May
May 24
.May 26
.May 26
..May 27
May 27
:May 29
.May 29
May 29
FIRE ASSOCIATION. OF
41145+
F ~ , A PHILADELPHIA, Incorporated March
: i• , ,,__ . . 27, 1820. Office, No. 34 North
. Fiftli Street.
in . ,,,- -"'".-_,.. Insure Buildings, Household Furniture
and Meichandise generally, from Loss by
Fire.
Asiets Jan.], 1569 i. '
TRUSTEES.
Willi:mill. Hamilton, Samuel Sparhawk,
Peter A. Keyser, . Charles P. Bower,
John Carroll , • • Jesse Lightfoot, .
George I. Young Robert Shoemaker,
Joseph R. Lyndah, . 'Peter.A.rmbruster,
Levi P. Coats, . M. H. Dickinson,
Peter Wi Benison.. . ..
WM. H. HAMILTON, President,
• SAMUEL SPARHAWK, Vice President
. WM. T. BUTLER, Secretary
AN THRACI TB 7:ICSURANQE COM
PANY.—CHARTER. PERPETUAL.
Office, No. 311 WALNUT Street, abolie Third, .Philada.
Will instals against Loss or Damage by Fire on Build
ings, either Perpetually or for a limited time, Household
Furniture and Merchandise generally.
Also, Marine Insurance on Vessels, Cargoes and
Dreights. Inland Insurance tp allparts of She Union. .
DIRECTORS., • ' •
William'Eshur; Dewit_Audenried,
D. Luther,' • JohnKetcham,
John It. Illaelciston, J. E. Baum,
William le. Dean, John B. Heyl,
Potse Sieger,
... ILIIAEI SUER, Fresident. ,,
, •
WILLIAM F. DEAN, Vice President.
Wst. M. SMITH, Secretary. , , , th 8 tf
IfiIAME INSURANCE' COMPANY, go.
1..' ' 809 CHESTNUT STREET. '
INCORPORATED 1856. CHARTER JpRpETUAL:
CAPITAL, 51200 CLU 000: -
FIRE INSU.RANCE EXSIVELY.
Insures against Loss or flutings by rEfre' tither by Per
petual or Temporary 'Policies.'
. DIRECTORS.
Charles Richanisonv v, . ~ Robert Pearce,
Wm. HAthawn; r. , , 1 '-''' ‘ 401 m Ressler, Jr.,
Francis N. Buck, Edward B. °nu?,
--,. Henry Lewis,l -
, . Clutrios Stokgsri
'., Nathan Hines. - - - 1 1 : 1 3ohn W. Ever - man,
George A. West, Mordecai Busby,
CHARLES CHARDSON, President, -
WM. H. RIIAWN, Wico-President.
WILLIAMS I. BLA.KHARD.Seoretary . anl U.,
'UNITED' FIREMEN'S INSURANCE
J' COMPANY OF PHILADELPHIA. . - - ,
. . . , .
Tiiis Company takcs.risks at,tholowestratos consistent
with safety, and confines ft.8.1)Xt6h;966 exduslvely to , -, 7
A ., i/LP.M, SU . k4 ,. /I,C_E__l_N__T p rilclTY ) OF ,PLIIL,4I)EL-
iFFIC.E—No.I2.3 Arch street, Fourth Wationnt Bauk
s , DIDECTOK'S. • `
!toms nine . Henry W. - Brenner,
'5 1 .:"..id olui Ilirbt. Albertun King,
I%t . A. Bolin, Henry Dutrip,
ht negate ; :Paniefl W a tir.
0 1% 11118111 (Nonn i !. :4•Tohn cros
_1 .1 ainem Jenrii , r L. J. Hour," Aslcin I
Atexqu,~er T. Piulllg4nt
A 111.. y Ifu
t ltotiorisi p Fi3Zptitr_Fk,,
Jniii08110: Dillon. •
CON.RAD .13:ANDRESS, Prefilgenr.
Wm. A. ItoLizi,_Treua., WM.
INSURANCE.
! -- '537,900 00
81,617,367 bl)
81,406,038 OS
The Liverpool Ce Lon
d o n & Globe Ins. Co.
A f ssets G 044 g z 7,699,390
Uhited States 2,000,000
Daily Receifits aver $20,0.50.'00
Premiums in 1868,
;07500
Losses in 1868, $3,662,445.00
No. 6 Merchants' Exchange,
Philadelphia.
1829- CHARTER PERPETUAL
FRANKLIN
FIRE INSURANCE "COMPANY
OF PIIILADELP ELLA.
Office-435'and 437 Ohettnut Street.
ssetr -4 on J anuar 3r t 4.* 1869 ' •
$2;677;'3V2' ta:
Capital
Acerurtl Surplus
„Premiums
UNSETTLED CLAIMS, , INCOME „FOR I,BOP
t Losses Paid Sitietel.B9 Over
Z 15,500,000.,
•
Perpetual and. TeMportirfralickaattr Libefil Terms.
The Company 111/10 teattea 'npona OW' Rents of
all kinds of 13111Idiugs, Ground Rents and Mortgages.
Alfrod G. Baker,
Samuel Grant,
Geo. W. Richards,
Isaac Lea,
Geo. Fairs,
GEO. FAL,
JAS. W. 16ALLISTER,
THEODORE 11. HEGER
THE :RELIANCE INSURANCE COM
PANT OF PHILADELPHIA'.
Incorporated in 1541. . Charter Perpetual.
Office, No. aoa Walnut street.
CAPITAL',I3OO;OOO.
'lnsures against loss or damage by FIRE, on Houses,
Stores and other Buildings, limited or perpetual, and on
Furniture, Goods, {Titres and Merchandise in town or
country.
LOSSES PROMPTLY ADJUSTED AND PAID.
Assetd $437,59.3 32
, Invested in the following Securities, viz.:
First Mortg - ages on City Property, well se
cured • 8168;600 00
~.tinited•States Government Loans_ " 117,0(0 00
Philadelphia City 6 Per Cent; ..... 70,000 49
Pennsylvania ri , 3.000,000 6 Per Cent Loan.. ...... . 30,000 00
Pennsylvania Railroad Bonds. First Mortgage 5,000 00
Calllfiell anti Amboy Railroad CompanyB6 Per
Cent. Loan_
Loans on Collaterals
Huntingdon and Broad TUp 7 Per Cent. Mort
gage Bonin, • 4.503 00
County Fir!.. insurance Company's Stock. 1,050.00
.Mechanics'Bank Stock • ' 4,00000
COmmercial Bank of Pennsylvania Stock 10,000 IYJ
3l usual Insurance Company's tllockLa. iOO
Reliance Imurance (*many of Philadelp* ,
Stock ' ' '3,2.50'00
Cash in Bank and on hand 12.255 32
Worth at Par 537450 32
Worth thisdate at market•pricee
Thomas C. Hill,'-Thomas ELMoore,
'William Musser, Samuel Castuer,
Samuel Bisphain, • James T. Young.
H. L. Car min. Isaac F. Baker,
Wm. Stevenson, Christian J. Hoffman,
Benj. W. Tingley, Samuel B. Thomas,
_ Edwar,Siter. •
THOMAS C. HILL, President,
Wst Curtin' Secretary.
PIIILADELPICIA. February IT. IJe63. jal-tu th a tf
pH ck? ' X INSURANCE CO3IPAN
1 ' :OF 'PHILADEL'PHIA.
INCORPOMATED PlO4--.CHARTE It PERPETUAL.
No. 224 WALNUT Street, opposite the Exchange.
This Company insures from losses or damage by
MITE,
123,534 on
si,oo oo
21,0 V 00
on liberal terms, on buildings, Merchandise. furniture,
&c.. for limitrni - periodig, and permarnutly on bii.ildings,
by deposit be pretnlinn
The Compagg. has been in active operation for. more
than sixty , years; during which all losses nave been;
promptly adjusted and &aid.
John L. Hodge,- Lewis , ' '• • -
M. B:Mahony, Benjamin Etting,
John T. Lewis, - Powers.'
\Wm. S. Grunt, A. R. Mel-teary,
Robert W. Learning, Edmond Castillon;
D. Clark Wharton Samuel Wilcox, J
Lawrence Lewis, r.: Lewis C. Norris.
JOHN - R.-AV-TCLlEBER,Treshleui •
SAMUEL. Wit.cbi.; Secretary.
THE, C OVNTY FIRE .LNSURANeg 01741
PANY.—Office, No.llo South Fourth street, below
" The - Ei& Inahrance - Corii pany of the County of Mita
delphia,
"Incorporated by the Legislature of Penusylva
nia in. 1830. for indemnity against loss or damage by fire
exclusively
36.000 00
CHARTER PERPETUAL.,
This old and reliable' institittion, with ample capital
and contingent fund carefully invested, continues to in
sure buildings. furniture, merchandise, - &c., either per
nienently or for a limited time againilt loss or damage
by fire, at the lowest rates consistent with the absolute
safety of its customers.
Losses adjusted and paid with all possible despatch.
. DIRECTORS: - •
ChaS. J. gutter; • Andrew U.' Miller,
Henry Budd, ' James N. - Stone, •
John Horn, Edwin L. Reakirt,
Joseph Moore, Robert V. Massey, Jr..
Geortb Mecke, • Mark Devine.-
CHARLES'J. SUTTER. President.
HENRY 'BUM; Vice-President.
BENJAMIN F. HOECKLEY, Secretary and Treasurer.
116,563 73
T HE PEVSYLVANTA FTEtg: INStr-
RANCE COMPANY • , '
—lncorporated 1825—Charter Perpetual.
No. 510 WALNUT street, opposite IndiFpendente Solaro.
This Company, favorably known to thocougaunity for
over forty years, continues to insure against loss tm
damage by lire on Public Or Private - Buildlugs, either
permanently or for a limited time. Also on Furniture,
Stocks of Goods, am! Illerehandise generally,•on liberal
terms.
Their Capital, together with a large SurplUtr Fund, is
invested in the most careful manner, which enables them
to offer to the insured ' nan undoubted is the case
of loss.
DIREC
-Daniel Smith, Jr., J T o O ili jl t S lD .
Alexander Benson, Thomas Smith,
Isna Hazlehurst t , Henry. LI3WIB,
Thomas Robins, - - J. Gillingham Fell,
Daniel Haddoelt.dr.
DANIEL SMITH, JR.
wisi,q.,c.nowELL, Secretary. • • apl9-tf
AMERICAN i FIRE INSUIfiANCE COM
PANY,. incorporated 1810.—Charter perpetual.
No. 310 WALNUT street, above ,_Third, Philadelphia.
Ilaving,alitriter,pail-tin Capital Steel:lei-id SnrpWS in ;
vested ih sound and availaide Securities, ctintinue' to
insure on dwellings stores, furniture, merehaudise,
vessels in *Pit, and th6ir cargoes, and other personat
property. All Iosses DIRECTORS promptly adjusted.
V and promptly adjusted.
Thomas R. Maria, , • Edniund.G„Dutilli;
lohra Welsh, ' • - Charles W. Poultney,
Patrick Brady, . Israel Morris,
John T. Lewis, John I'. Wetherlll, .; •
William Paul. • ; • •
. ;
ALBERT U. URAIVFORDTHOMASecretarY. R. MARIS, President.. -.
, S
JEFFERSON FIRE INSURANCE COM
PANY of. Philadelphia.—office, No: 24 North 'Fifth
street, near Market street.
jncorporated by ,the Legislature of Pennsylvania:
Charter perpetual. 'Capital and Assets ; 8126,U00. Make
insurance against Loss or damage by 1• ire on Public•'or
Private 14, , Ildingsi Furniture, Stocks, Goode and Mar- •
chandise n favorable toms.
DIRECTORS. ' •
1
N yin. McDanbil,' • ' . l • ' Edward P.
liftiyer?'
Lintel Peterson, . • • Frederick. Ladner,'
John F. Belsterling, .killua .1. Glasz,
Henry Troeniner, ' Iltuiry Detsny, .
Jamb Schandein, ' John Elliott,
Frederick Doll, 'Christian D. Frick,- - -- •• •
Samuel. Miller, ,• • • •• . • •-,._ George R. Fort,
Williain D. Gardner. . . ' '
WILLIAM McDANTEL, Fresh - Witt -..
• ' ISRAEL PETERSON, Vico President.
PHILIP E. Oetitinit N. Secretary and TrettflUlCOP4 , T .
.= . T1118 7 .• : . T
' ANOUN
u ted with lit* risk end largo
$2 500e'RWbAis f ewelTiMuvee
returns, the adVertisor being •it business num in good
standing. 4 kny ono answering can do so confidentiallY,
giving real-num 'and addVess.• "MONEY;" Bak. 2160'
Tost-ornce, Philadelphia. rn,M 4tlll
$,6 500
4 2 nty2o-4t* 293 Norti Tenth street.
CELEBRATED P TJRE TONIC
; it/ Ale for invalid's, family use, Ace. • '
The subscriber ie.now furnished with his full Winter
'suPtilY.of 4l l sql l / 1 143 , tkotrithrile:ol4 'WellJtMoWtt„,bevor
age. /a. de:sprtia/1,-and. , litcreasitinmsev. by order of
physicians, for invalids, usebf families, Ac.,*c m
omend it
to thef.attentiont Of all consumers whO want'a strictly!'
pure article; prepared from the best ttisiterlals, and put
up,in the most careful manner for horns use or-transpor
tation. OracrelirMilltor:'otherwleeprornPtlyr suppitecn ,
• • .J. JORDAN',
' No. 220 War street, •
Below Third and Walnut strsete.
INSURANCE.
in the
',5403,000 00
1A83423.70 ,
/,/03313 43
. ,
DIRECTORS. • • •
1
_ , Alfred rifler, -
Thomas Spark,,,
Win. S. Grant. , •
Thomas S,Ellie,
Gustavus S. Benson, •
BAKER. President.
,ES, Vice President.
Secretary. •
~ Assistani. Secretary.
fell tde3l
ALFRED
=llira
MORTGAGES.
Atrdriim SALES:
TR.O lit 3 & SO11114; AU I I NEk.RS;
j KM - 133 landl4l FlOuthFOßATlLstreet. V
, SALES OF STOCKS AND REAL ESTATE. ,
I W - "" 'Ptddlestdes atths Philadelolllll 'Ettafttlifb:eVerr .
TDESDAY,tit 12 o!clock. • -
iftfir Furniture 'Bates' at t he Auction' Store EVERY
TItUItSBAY.z . • •, •,. • • ~
tar Saleitat lletlidenees receive especial attentlen:
Xxecuttor,'s .s—Estati.of Joshua Longstreth, deed.
• - VALUABLE 'STOCKS.
OK TUESDAY, MAY 2r,
At 12 o'clock noon,,nt the 'Philadelphia Exchange— '
110 shares 'Philadelphia National Bank. .. .
100 shares Northern Liberties National Bunk.
45 shares Girard National Bank.
16 Shares North America Nation al Bunk.
10 shares Commercial National Bank.
15 shares PhihuielphimExchange.
B) shares New CAlgle and Wilmington. Railroad.
3 shares Pennsylvania Insurance Co.
1 share Philadelphia-Library Co.
For Account of Whom it may Concern
-80 shares - Fameinsurance. Co. •
. For Other Accounts—
' 24 shares Union Bank of Tennessee.'
5 shares Horticultural Hall.
100 shares American Buttonhole Machine.
8 shares ContlnentalMotel Co.'
Pew No. 23 holy TrinitilChurch.'
- 100 shares Manufacturers' National Bank. .•
100 shares Abbott Iron CO. of Baltimore.
BEM ! gsTATKBALK, MAY
...
Orphans' Court Sole- , - - Estate 'of Stephen E. Smith,
deceased.--lIANDSOME MODERNTIIREE-STORY
BRICK RESIDENCE, No. 2032 Mount Vernon st.'
'Orphans' Court Sale—Estate of John Evans, dec'd.—
! THREE-STORY BRICK DWELLING; No. 1307 Mount
Vernon at
OrplianS' Court Sale—EshilO - OrWilsou .rewoll, M. D_,.
deed.- and VALITARI;E' TIIREE-STORY
BRICK ESIDENCE , No. 420 North Sixth st. ••
'orphans' Court Sale—:Estate of Joseph Kulp, tlec'd.—
VERY VALUABLE COUNTRY' PLACE, IM itereg, Old
York. Road, ,N. E. corner of Oak lane, 22d Ward, .14 of a
mho Of Oak Lane Station, on the' North Pennsylvania
Ito bond . and near the 6-miio atone.
Sante Estate—TWO-STOItY FRAME DWELLING
4 and 8 acres, Pittville, Limekiln turnpike, 22d Ward.
8411110 Estate—COUNTRY PLACE, 6 ACRES, County
Liner road, between: , Branchtown and Icrunkford, 22d
Ward.
Master's Sale—By Order of the Court of CUtitmon
Pleas—VEßY, VALUABLE BUSINESS STAND-Five--
story Building. N. E. corner of Third and Chestnut sts.
Salo by Order of Guitrdhuis—Estate of Edwin A. Hen
dry dec'd.—HANDSOME -MODERN FOUR-SplltY
'BRICK. RES 'VENCE,_No. 2006 Arch at. ' •
1,100 ACRES OF LANB,Clinton county, Pa.
_„
Executors' Peremptory; Sale---Estntu ofJoshua Long.;
streth, deceased.--'VERY VALUABLE BUSINESS
STANDS' -3 THREE-STORY BRICK STORES,: /ins.
219, Vl.and 221 Church at.. •
Sante Estate—S OCATION-4 THREE , :
STORY BRICK DWELLINGS, Nos. 619. arid 62I•North
i'ptreet-40 feet front.
Sandi Estate-'-VERY VALUABLE BUSINESS 'LO-'
CATION-2 TIIKEE-STORY. BRICK RESIDENCES,
Nos. 613 and •616 Arch street; extending through to
Cherry street, 4714 feet front '&8 feet deep-2 fronts.
Same Estate-11 THREE:-STORY BRICK DWEL;
LINOS, runnings'. court, known. as "Northarripton,' ,
Nos. 426 and 425 otreet, north, 'of Valittwhill,
Some Estate—LA.BGE and VERY VALUABLE LOT'
Eighth street, Eieventh'street, Fitzwater shunt—three
valuable fronts; 39.8 s feet by 2213% feet
__
Same .Estate---VERY VALUABLE BUSINESS LO
CA.TION —2 THREE-STORY BRICK. STORES, Nos.
23Z and 234 . South Second street with 7 Three-story
Brick Dwellinga in the rear, formin a court, fronting
on Levant street, 3135" feet front t 280
feet deep -2 frontti.
Same Estate—LAßGE andVERY VALUALE LOT,
11 ACRES, known as "Barclay Hall," Turner's lane.
HANDSOME MODERNS:THREE-STORY BRICK
RESIDENCE, with Side Yard, No. 1123 Spruce street—
,
27 feot front.
4 VERY DESIRABLE THREE-STORY BRICK RE
SIDENCES, Nos. 1700, 1702. 1704 and 1700 Chestnut st:,
with 4 Three-story Brick Dwellings adjoining, being
Nos. 108. 110,112 and 114 South Seventeenth street. Lot
76ft.-0, front, 150 feet deep to Exeter st—Zironts.
Administrator's Sale—. Estate of John, Minium, deed.—
BUSINESS STAND—TAVERN, No. 1:07 North Third
street, above Buttonwood.
HANDSOME MODERN FOUR-STORY BRICK RE
.BI BENCE, with Side Yard, No. 1518 North Tenth street,
above .lefferSon, 28 feet front.
VERY ELEGANT COUNTRY SEAT and MAN
SION, 8 ACRES, Oak lane, Cheltenham township,
Montgomery county, /%. 1 71,1- miles from Philadelphia.
1.1,j miles of Oak lane. Station, North _Pennsylvania Rail
road. and near the Second street turnpike.
VERY ELEGANT THREE-STORI BROWN-STONE
RESIDENCE, S.W. corner of Broad and Thompson sta..
25 feet front, 160 feet deep to Carlisle streek-3 fronts,
Built by R. J. Dobbins.
THREE-STORY BRICK RESIDENCE, N 0.1026 Fil
bert st.
THREE-STORY BRICK DWELLING, No. 817
Fitzwater I , 1
VALUABLE LOT, Lombard street, west of Twenty
third.
VALUABLE BUSINESS STAND-214-STORY
FRAME STORE, No. 510 South st.
Peremptory SaIe—VALUABLE THREE • STORY
BRICK STORE and DWELLING, No. 512 North Se
cond et.
. .
Executors! 'Perenni tory' , Sfile-L-Estntei 'of Intneg c... ,
Tlugnson. dee'(I.—VALUAI3LE BUSINESS. STAND--
TliftEE-STOIIY ERICK STORE and OWELLINt/i No.
12 South Tenth street.• .
_ _ _
PO-1.381
VALUABLE BUSINESS: STANDS- , -2 THREE
STORY BRICK STORES • and DWELLINGS, Nos.
242.:4254, 244 and 246 South'SeemL street, above Simms.
ELEGANT FOUR-STORY PICTOU STONE RESI
DENCE, with Brown-stone Dressings, No. 1323 North
Brmol street, south of Master. - • .
ELEGANT STONE'.'rMANSION AND 'LOT OF
GROUND. Stable and. Coach House,Summit street,
Chestnut Hill, between' Chestnut Hill and Spring Manse
turnpikes..on the' Chestnut Hill - and Philadelphia Rail
road. shoat WS 'yards from the depot. • •
GENTEEL THREE-STORY BRICK COTTAGE,
3,,ek e
street, west of Twenty-third, 21.1 feet frorit; 95 toot
THE -STOlrtf BRICH "Hlt•EiLy.x.l4n, inns
North Seventh street, above Thompson.
THREE-STORY BRICK DWELLING No 417 Vine
street.
MODERN THREE-STORY BRICK DWELLING,
No. 929 North Twelfth street, above Poplar. ; .
MEDICAT,'LIBRATIT:'
ON THURSPAY AFTERNOON,
kay 20, at 4 o'clock, English nag French Works
MISCELLANEOUS ROOKS FROM LIBRARIES
ON FRIDAY AFTERNOON,
May 21, at. 4 o'clock.
Estate of Peter A .R eyser, - deceased.
ELEGANT FURNITURE. GRAND PIANO;BUPE;
RICK Parlor Organ, Billiard Table,Mirrors, Oil
Paintings,ltronzes, and FrenchChina,Morses,
Carriages, Farming Implements,
ON SATURDAY MORNING
May at 10 o!clock, at the residence of the late Peter
• A. Keyser- Green street, between Washington and John
'_Son streets, Germantown, by catalogue, the entire Fur
niture, compthmig elegant rosewood and ebony finish
and walnut Parlor, Dining Room and Chamber Furni
ture, grand action 7-octave Piano, made by Schomacker;
large and superior Parlor Organ, superior walnut Book
case, ebony finish Cabinet, line French Plato Mirrors,
valuable Oil Paintings, real Bronze Ornaments, tine In
dia and French China, rich Cut Glass, handsome Velvet
and English Brussels Carpets, fine Hair Illatresses, Fea
ther Beds, large assortment ofliitchen Utensils, &c.
Alto, superior Billiard Table, marble bed.
HORSES, CARRIAGES, COWS, &c.
Also, pair bay Ponies, Farm Horse, 2 Cows, 2 Calves, 5
Carriages, Carte, large lot Harness, Farming Imple
ments, Work Bench, Carpenters' Tools, lot lumber, &c,
VERY ELEGANT COUNTRY SEAT
Previous to the sale of furniture will be sold, by order
of the Orphans' Court. the elegant Country Seat known
as ‘.`Engle Wald," with mansion, stable, carriage-house,
&C.. &c.; about 53. i, acres land.
Particulars in handbills and catalogues.
TO RENT—A very largo and elegant Country Seat
and Mansion, with all modern conveniences, gas, hotand
cold water, out-buildings, beautiful garden, As., Twen
ty-sexeuth Ward, suitable for a boarding-house.
B UNTING, DURBOROW &
AUCTIONEERS,
Nos. 232 and 234 MARKET street, corner of Bank treet.
• Successors to JOHN B. MYERS CO.
LARGE SALE OF CARPETINGS, CANTON
TINOS, OIL CLOTHS, &c,.ON FRU/4Y MORNING, -
May 21, at 11 o'clock. on four months' credit, about NO
pieces Ingrain. Venetian, List, Hemp, Cottage and Rag
Carpetings, LW rolls Canton Mattlngs, Oil Clothe, &c.
- • .
LARGE SALE OF FRENCH AND OTHER EURO
PEAN DRY GOODS, &c.,
ON MONDAY MORNING,
May 24, at 10 o'clock_ •
, on four months' credit.
• SALE OF 1(00 CASES BOOTS, SHOES, HATS,
CAPS, STRAW GOODS,
ON TUESDAY MORNIN(I,
•
slay 25, at 10 o'clock, on four montlia' credit.
BSCOTT, JR., AUCTIONEER,
. SCOTT'S ART GALLERY,
1020 CHESTNUT street. Phihulelphia.
. CONTRIBUTORS' SALE OF PAINTINGS.
We intend making a Halo of Paintings during the corn
ing week, at oar Art Gallery, 1020 Chestnut street. Per
soap desirous of contributing should do so at once.
11. SCOTT, jR.
SPECIAL SALE OF BEST QUALITY TRIPLE SIL
VER PLATED WARE, FRENCH CLOCKS, &cc.
ON FRIDAY MORNING,
Mny 21; at EN o'clock, at Scott's Art Gallery. 1020ChCst
mit street, will be cold without reserve, a fall •and genM
rat assortmeutiof best quality Triple Silver Plated NVam
: .E.RENCIL CLOCKS.
Alan, an invoice of French Ormolu Gilt 8 and 21-day
Clocks. . ,
.
DAMAN AND '6I'ITER VASES
Alen, an invoice of Parkin and other Vases.
DY B4ERITT . 8o A.ECTIONEERS.
111 l OA SII AUCTIpN HOUSE, • •
, No. 230 MARKET street, Corner of Bank street.
Cash advanced on consignments without extra, charge,
. LARGE PEREMPTORY SALE
ON FRIDAY MORNING,
Coniprising a large assortment of - Spring and Suminer
G odds, Stocks of (leads fronilletail.Steres, 3:c.
. Also. Boots, Slows, Hats; Cops, Snirts, Overalls,
• STRAW GOODS. . STRAW GOODS.
At 11 o'clock, cases men's, boys' and, cbildron's Straw
Bats.
Also, ladies' and misses' Hats, Sundowns,,Ac.•
Also, cases Shaker Hoods. .' • • . '
•
OKEYY ESTA B
E. corner of SIXTH and RACE streets.
Lonny advanced on Merchandise genet . ..lb .— Watches,
dewelVY,'Diainontlii; Gold nu Silver Plate, and on ill
articles of vellum for any length'albino. !agreed on.
WATCHES. AND JEWELRY AT PRIVATE SALE.
*in° Gold Minting Califi, , Dolll4o Bottom awl 00 011 Face ,
Eugthili; 'Antoricoo and Swiss' Patent Liver..
Phil) Gold Hunting Case and 000 Face LeolnelV W
Watches;
Ytno Gold Duplex and other Watches; Fine Silver Mint
ing Case and Open Face English. -American null Swiss
Patent Lever aml Lepino - Widelies; Double Case English,
_gar-tier and other •Ntrittehest Lattice' s r /Ailey Watches;
Diamond Breastplinu. I. hew, itiorto,:_latr •.11Ingo; Studs:
,ket.;! Fine: 7041 VIOtlio4; -1,1011(011°os; Bracelets; Scam',.
rine; Broastrod;,,Finger Caseermnl Jaw
-oiterg . 141'16 1, Mut viiiiinble''Fireproof
suitable . lbe'Jen tMst'ls6 o o.
also; several Lots In South thunder', Fifth and Ghost-
C D. McOltlilES•&.CO., ,
AUCTIONEERS; , '
yo LOG MARKET street.
BOOTSTiot SA
UU LES - gri
. my raolsiDAY ANT)
TRSDAY.
SM=M!M=
-.•` fAteritrit • A •
Ali 16 4' 6
pH • - • V. '
• k:44 I B , AND,CO 2II XISSIALI4IicitatIM . V ;,
Aft"T_NUTStreet
„.
Rear entrance No. 1107 fiatutotristre*.
- Rouseholcr.7furnitute of 'stall deectiptkinereOulted•
• Sides OfFuriaittire at dwe Ih m s . e t t. , ll 44P??!.kOPP49 l 4 -
_reasonable term . _ . , ; .1
_ Saleat.eratur era. • .
MACHINERY AND TOOLS OF TOE.. COOPER_AI •
ARMS AND MANUFACTURING COMPAAry; •i;..
. ON FRIDAY MORNINC4' „
May M. at 'lO O'clock, at the' Caciper - Fith•'Arilitif
Manufacturing Company-, on Frankford road, at thy
creek,will be sold, ugp a
Hand
Hand & Slide Rest Lathes, Ifand•', ••••,
Trip Ramthers, , - , Index Maellladalob, 6.
('ore Machines, Large Circular ,
Rfting Machines, " . Frame hnd Saws; , ~
Hope Iron Co t 's Shears, Large Soda Water - got/v.
Large Silting Machine, ' with colt of steam pipd „y
Drill Presses. •;'
Alsh, over WO feet Main ,Shafting, pulleys, aangert4 r
couplings, over SAM feet bolting, 600 feet -oak portable
benching, machinists' and blacksraiths tools, or eiteirg,
description, portable forges, furnacett, platform' scales,, &c. - ' •
Also, a lot of special machines and tools used trionaud ,-
'factoring tire arms.' . . r,,
Also. over 3,010 Artafeet Arta'nll:o6; 2 6 denote - point
ta
109 sawing brackets,- 70 plain bracketsastr,. , ... ,
Also, 2 pattern makers' benches, large took vre, a wl
tools. Also . large Shed ant fencing: , . • •
•
OF ICE FURNITURE, ,
Also, largo Farrell St Herring Fireproof Safe,-gakbfglti v .•
Desk, oak pedestal office na Table, 12 oak A
.9#4,414
Matti uSale' f,. Stoves, arc. ' . „ , r., ;
LEASE 0 Tfh PREIS! SL'ffi—At the, •camraeaca-,
Ment of the sale will be sold the'lmlance'ef :Pm Lease
the premises for 7 years. - •
Catalogues ready at the Auction- Store; Ott,4itnnars.
Aeneas calf be had by the Second and third Street ipad,
Fifth'and Sixth Street Pamenger Chits tiy, stopping at
the lane leading to Paxton ,Flenunlng E;Lloyd'a Oat andl;':;:;
lumber yard. , . :
• Sale No: 1110 Cheinnut etreot
LARGE STOCK OF ELEGANT CABINET Ittu
TUBE, FINE CARPETS FRENCH PLAT Dna-
RORS,,CABINET ORGANS,MELODEO/1PVG11444, •
GLASSWARE. PAINTINGS, dm.
ON FRIDAY MORNING,
At 9 o'clock, at the auction, store, No. 1110 Chestnut
will be sold, a portion of. the stock of a Cabineunaker de
clining business, comprising several .sets Of first - class- ,
Walnut Chamber Suits. Also,Antique Parlor Snit - , to and reps.•
FURNITURE FROM-PRIVATE FAMILIES.
Also, from families declining-bousekeeping—Elegant
Rosewood, Ebony and Wallin. Parlor S. uits,ln plush and
reps; Brussels,_ Velvet anti Ingrain 'Carpets,. Chamber
Suits, Dining ROOM Furniture Wal*ObCB, Bookcases,
Library suits, Canton Chhm, ( !ut Glass, Silver Plated
Ware, French Plate Mantel and Pier Glass . os, Spring and
Hair blatresses, & c.
PARLOR ORGANS.
Also, 4 , Parlor Organs, made by Easy w& - ' Co., Paget 1
and others. Also, one Melodeon. , • ' ,
. ,
JAMES A. FREEMAN, AUCTIONEER;;;
No. 4.M WALNUT skeet.
• t
REAL ESTATE SALE, MAY 26.
This Sale, on WEDNESDAY, at 12 o'clock Mod, lit MN
Exchange/ will include the following—.
IRREDEEMABLE , ' GROUND RENT of $37 50 per
annum, payable in silver,secured by dwelling. and lOC
Milton et. 16 by t 8 feet. Sale PeremplarY. , ,,, . • •:•
No. 156 GIRARD three-shirr hrtek - Stoie andi"
dwelling, with three- story frame' house, Hancock street,
15 by 60 feet. - Orphans' Court Sale -Estate of ,Samuel
7. 1 '1531 AMERICAN ST. :•:A"iiireo-stOrrl;rig'i thief!.
lug below Oxford, 18 by 76 feet. Santo Estate
N . 15312 PHILIP ST. — Alltree-story,hriekdWPßll4o#
by to feet. - Same Estate.
NO. 15.34 PHILIP ST -A three-story .hrick
adjoining, 15 by rid feet. el{ Ground Rent: 'SAME Estate.
COUNTRY SEAT NEAR FORT WASHINGTON
STATION .—A country sent and farm containing 40 acres
and iniprovements, Morris Itoad, Fort WaShington Sta
tion. North Pennsylvania Railroad: - Mansion hOttscr/.!
tenant house. barn, tic. Immediate possession. '
YALUSIN - HAV., 24th WARM—Three "3 Story- brick '
nnd rough cast dwellings, each containing 6 rooms, WY - e - .
M . using av and bith street, each'26 'feet,•36 inch front,hif
117 feet deep. Subject to Fxs2 Ground Rent each. The _
above are neat dwellings. Till' Market at. cars run within
two squares. IVill he sold-separately. Sale peremptory;
IsSAHICKON TURNPIKE ROAD—The Turnpike
Road houses and nil other propertY; extending from , •-.k
the Ridge Turnpike howl, where it crosses the Wissa
hickon, creek along the Creek to Chestnut Hill, aerosti
the same to Flourtown, a distance of about 10 miles. At
is bedded with gone. and in good traveling Condition'.
Peremptory sale, by order of the Supreme Court. ;%, ~ • .
Sale No. 23 South Tentivstreet.
LEASE,' GOODWILL AND FIXTURES OF A
DRINKING 'SALOON . , LIQUORS, •Rou9pli6LD , 7
FURNITURE, ,tc.
ON FRIDAY MORNING,' ' •
At 10 o'clock, will Le. Hold without remervu., the Loma!
harlag 3i4. rearm to -run), antl - Fixtureo of a • •
Restaurant, Brandies, ,Winea, Whiskice, ; Household ,
Furniture, Cottage itits,"Cat'petu, - .Mirrors, Kitchen
.1:I c. • •• = •.; , • S i
MARTIN:IV
-•
_ ,—,II,QTHERS,AUCTIONEERS
- Salesmen for M. Thomas & Sondd ' •
No. 529 GILE6TN UT street; rear , entrance' froat
ria le at No. 207 South Teeth street.
HA NRSOME WALNUT ROUSEHOLD.FMNTIVRE,'
ELEGANT , E
CHAMBR- .S.CIT. FINE . BRUSSELS
AND OTHER CA RPETS.;E.I.N.E...O.Th tc '
' •• ON TUESDAY MoRNING, • ' • • '
May 25, at 10 o'clock, at N0.:207:130uth, Teeth street,. by
catalogue; the handsome Wahiet.Parlor Furniture; Suits
of 110 lIIIdOMO Olakt Walnut-Chamber Furniture,' fine
Ps i dugs, "St. Peter at the Gate-of the Temple " 'Wash
ington, ndHcap Sc
e, o.• fine-BrnsBels and other , Ctirpetsi , '
tiss•consining . ritoycs,'&e. , .
May be (ii(lnuned'etirly on morning ' of • '
Nue Ni,. woe .ov.
HANDSOME WALNUT FURNITURE • HARDW Aug, 7
WILTON AND BRUSSELS CARPETS, I.;c. •
ON THURSDAY MORNING,- •
Mn y 27, at 10 o'clock, at No. 1705 Wallace street, by cats
logne, the entire Household Furniture, handsome Wel;
int and Hair-cloth Parlor Furniture. Oak Dining Room
urhiture - i bandsinne 'Walnut:Chamber Furniture" fine
Brussels Carpets, Handsome Secretary and ,Bookcase - -
le rge Library Table,Chine. and,Glassware,'Kitchen Fur.
niture, &c., &c.
Bair satresses, Feather Beds, Handsome Wilton and
lay be ermined on morning of 8/110. • - ;
TAAVLS &'; .11A.RVEY, AUCTTONEF 4 ItA, :
•-- Mate-with-M. 1110Mfill & Sem) , , --
Store Nos. 48 and 50 North SIXTH Arcot' •
Sale at the Auction 'Rome, Nos. 48 and 50 North Birth
ELEGANT OILED WALNUT PARLOR AND CRAM
BER'FURNITURE, FRENCH PLATE 'MIRRORS,
i FIREPROOF - SAFES, DESKS', BOOKOASKS,
HANDSOME CARPETS, BEDS MATRESSES, &c.
ON FRIDAY . MORNING, • -
At 10 o'clock, at the auction rooms, Nos. 48 and 80 North
Sixth street, below Arch street, comprising elegant •!
Parlor Furniture, in .suits; handsome Oiled Walnut
Chamber Furniture, fine French Plato 'Mantel and Pier
Mirrors, Dining Room Furniture, elegant Sideboards,..
Extension Tables, superior Fireproof Safes, Of fi ce' Ts- -
Ides and Desks, Secretary Bookcases, Spring and. Hair, •
Matresses, Mice Cream Tables, Housekeeping Articles,.
China and Glassware, Kitchen Utensils, &c.
ENTIRE FURNITURE OF A RESIDENCE.
This sale includes the entire elegant Furniture, Car
4
"yn . l3, &c., of a residence, removed to the store ter conve.
memo.
VALUABLE MISCELLANEOUS BOORS,.
ON FRIDAY EVENING, • •
May 21, nt n. o'clock, at the auction store, valuable
Miscellaneous Books. Also, an invoice of School Books.
UTM. WOLBERT, AUCTIONEER,
I South SIXTH street.
SALE OF ROSES. IN BLOOM, AND. MISCELLA , -
NEOUS BEDDING AND SUMMER BLOOMING
PLANTS. _ •
ON SATURDAY MORNING,
May 22, at 11 o'clock, at the auction rooms, be eeld,
a largo collection or choice Roses, in' bloom together
with a general assortment of Bedding and Summer
Clowning Plants.
Ladiestip particularly invited.
111 A. McCLELLAND, AUCTIONEER
• 1219 CHESTNUT street.' •
CONCERT HALL AUCTION ROOMS.
Rear entrance on Clover street: . • •
Household Furniture and Merchandise of every descrip
tion revolved on consignment. -Sales of 'Furniture at
dwellings,attended to on reasonable torsos.
L
• E t;:4'3IS'IISPAGICIt'
COAL AI WOOD.
IS; MASON II NES. .41431 N ', SHEAF?.
TH'UNDERSIGNED INVITE ATTEN-
Lion to their stock of . :c•
Spring Mountain, Lehigh and LoCust Mountain Coat,
which, with the preparation. given by us, we think can
not be excelled by any other Coal.
'Office, Franklin institute Building, N 0.16 S. Seventh
street. , , DINES A- SILNAFF,
• jalo.tf ' - ! Arch street wharf, Schuylkill:
N 0 ' CHANGE OP PEACES ON AC-
count of a strike. Furnace, coal, $7 BO,' 'store,
~,
51 75; nut, 87; pea. 554 75. Coal breaker, exactly as in
mining -region; breaking and preparing coal in the yard, , , , ~,
by machinery. Gross tons,Minti,EsiirGEß,
nin29,3m -. S. W. .S . W cor. Thirteenth and 'Washington aro,
CUTLERY.. •. :
ItO.D ES' WQ:STEN.UOLDCS
POCKET KNIVES, PEARL and STAG RAW
D ES of beautiful finish RODGERS? and WAD.r..it ~ .r
BUTCHER'S and the CELEBRATED LECOU,LTREI
RAZOR. • SCISSORS IN CASES of the thieiMluntitr.;.
Razors, Kitheri, Scissors and Table Cutlet - 9, amain:l,4mi
Polished. EAR INSTRUMENTS of the most approved
construction assist the hearing, at P. 31ADE.m05„,,,,,.
Cutler and Surgical Instrument Makor,/15 - Teath Street,
below.Cliestuut_ • . • -
- - BOARDING:
_ .
PLEASANT FRONT. ROOMS •(COMbil
r , '' . i t
nhliting), in tho Bocond and third otor.y.t.now l y4cont;
olso, Tullio Board, at Misti TURNER'S; IC w. &trie r
Eighteenth and Pint. stteatn:. • ,il, myt3,42ir qe•
NOTIOE ,THE PIIBLIG')GENFot ;
ItA LLY.
The• latest lityloL fofiltioit and as 140 — rtm . on ;It 11, 1 1 t 1 41. 1
BOoTS, 8110E8 AND. GAlT.!ilti,
O m be Lmi et E; RNEST • 't4 0 #"l` r, ' ' •
iNo. 230 110.1iT.11 NlNTll.tinikiTZt •LA
Bettor thau anywhere IA tho City.. A ritli o.oo7ltodr.
o p 2 ding : • 01V1 6 ,1 •
rici~z~x~R~r.~ , ~ .~.r.
ft, AN ELEGANT ASSORTMENT or
tine French Millinery always on band by Mtn A.
wilier, at per, show rooma,, No. /10,3, Oheoin*
street.'.- ‘r - a bits '
H E. rimaira't
'CARPENTER AND BUILDER,
NU
• 1024 SANSOM STRLET,
PRILADELPIDA.