Daily evening bulletin. (Philadelphia, Pa.) 1856-1870, June 05, 1869, Image 4

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    REIAGJMIS .NEWS
. • -
THE anniVersary of the 'Methodist Home, on.
Lehigh avenue, t ikcs place on the Ifith inst:
Bisuor "Sinn-44mi, in an address at Pitts
burgh recently, advocated female suffrage.
Env. STOIIIO, of Brooklyn, has been
called to the charge of the Central Congrega
tional Church in Boston. •
THE Young Men's ChriAtian Association of
the United States and Canada will hold aeon.:
ventfon at Portland, Me., July 14.'
THE Rev. Henry - Neill, D. D., has been
elected pastor of the. Second Presbyterian
• Church of NeW Brunswick, N.J.
THE Rev. S. S. Shriver has resigned the pas
torate of the Presbyterian church at lights
to take efieetthe Ist Of July
A BAPTIST church on Long Island' adver
tises for a pastor at a salary of 51,000 . year.
This' regarded as a novel methed of calling a
minister.
THE get - . Mr.. Felix, pastor of the First Bap,,,
List Church, LeNington, ICy., has accepted - a
call to the Pilgrim Baptist Churbh,New York,
at a salary of :',5,600.
Tut; Board of Domestic Missions of the
Presbyterian church -will hold its annual meet
big on. Tuesday, the:lsth iumt. Officers forthe
ftiouing year are to be elected..
Sik Congregational churehes have been or
ganized in California since March; 1868, and
within the last five years 28 churches , hare
been constituted, nine of them ‘ self,supporting.
Tug Bev. Ichabod Clark; D. D.; for thirty
seyen years an eminent minister in the Bap.;
tist elturchiand for Some years. Superintendent
of Missions in New 'York, died recently at
Locliport, 111:
1r Sweden the Baptists have been subject to
persecution in.consequence of their 'religion.
Some. other,countries haVe forwarded remon
stratiCes against thisinterference with roll-)
gioakt freedom.
Tniellev. William H. Jandes, of Springdale,
Ohio,.lias received a .call to the litandy - Wine
Manor Church, Pa., of. whichthe 1.1.eV. J. N.
C. Grier, D. 13,, has been pastor for more than
lifty;four years. •
THE Freedmen's -Aid Society: has a larger
number of< teachers in the, field, ,than at any
previous time. :Its present: opportunities. for
usefulness are greater audits prospects brighter
than at any former,period. , •
ONE hundred and twenty-five persons, per
sonal friends of IteV. Dr. Boynton; have or
ganizedlliemfielves into au independent Con
gregatienalChurch, in Washington City, and
invOed the Doctor to become their pastor.
Wm. o.,Johnstone, of this city, is
under appointment as Commissioner from the
General AsSembly, late in session in New
York,to the Synodulthe Presbyterian Church
of Canada, to meet next Tuesday in Hamiltou,,
Nest Doininion. , . •
, - -
A OGSPATCIf from St. Lollis states that the
vote. of six out of twenty, Methodist churches
on lav delegation was 438 for and; against it.
In Chicago four churches took the vote mi the
inst.,The result was . 295 for and 13 votes
against ay delegation.
THE number 'of ministers connected with
evangelical churches in this country,according
to Schem's Fcclesiastical Almanac, is 43,600,0 r
one to GU of the Protestant poptilation, reck
oned at 27,000. The whole number of church
members reported is 6,064,976.
•
A fiOTE from Bev. Dr. Alday, dated at Liv
erpool; England, May 1.8, has. been.. received,
annaimeing the safe arrival at that point, of
himself and traveling companions,Bev. C. H.
pp
Pa, Rev. W. y. helley, with mos Phil-
Blefand Richard Jennings, Esqs.
( .11w. Congregational Quarterly reports 538
churches of that denomination without stated
pastors; in most of them however, regular
.services are maintained.lt reports, also, 850
ministers not in the`pastoral work. Cif these
101 are engaged ii. missionaries and teachers.
THE First Baptist Church of New York is
erecting a new house of worship, which will
be one of the finest in the city. The baptistry
is to.be of pure white marble, half o 1 its front
of plate glass, so that the entire ordinance of
immersion can be witnessed by the congre
gation.
THE Rev. D.. T: Morvel haS resigned , his
church in Newark, N.. 1., to accept the Fourth
Baptist Church in St. Louis. Fourteen years
ngole commenced as a missionary on new
ground in Newark, and during that time bap
tized 5,13 persons. He leaves a flourishing
church of 400 communicants.
A GENERAL meeting of the _lay members
"(male and female) of the Methodist Episcopal
Church will be held at the Green Street Church
(above Tenth), on Tuesday evening next, at 8
o'clock, to confet'on the important question of
lay representation. Addresses will be deliv
ered by Bishop Simpson, Rev. Alfred Cook
man, Rev. T: T. TaSker; Sr.; and others.
----- ATiFtililietifig - b - rtlie:Seturid - Presbytery - of
Philadelphia, on the 20th of May, hi the Pres
byterian Church at Forestville, Bucks county,
Pa., Mr. J. B. Erewson, a member of the class
recentlygraduated.at the: Theological Setni
nary at Princeton, Was set apart for the work
-- oftbeininistrtifyther"layhig•on of hands,"
and inStalled..afr pastor (if the Forestville
Chureh. ' •
TUE receipts of the Boards . of the Presbyte
Tian Church iii the month of April :were • as
follows: Board of Domestic 3lissions,Sti,6l3 :10
Board of EducatiOn, S 5 523 13; Board of For
eign Missions,:sB9,B36 04; Board of Publication
(colportage and distribution fund), 52,122, 33;
Board Church Extension, 515,031 84; Fund
for Disabled Ministers, $3,506 33; Committee
on Freedmen; $6,871 -47.
THE Episcopal Church in South Carolina,in
1860, numbered seventy parishes, and as many
rectop. Now there arc but tifty-three churches
hi all, and but forty-tw6 of these are occupied;
and of these only tell enjoy the stated services
of regular pastors. Thirteen churches and
twenty-six chapels were destroyed by the war,
mid more than half a million hi church funds
lost in Confederate intineSc!',
I)u: F. It. LEES, one of England's most elo
guild 11(h - tie:nes of temperance, has arrived in
this country. and has been delivering lectures
to large audiences in New York and New
England. The Young Men's Christian Asso
ciation of this city leis secured his services
one lecture only, which will begiven at Con
cert Hall on next Monday evening. IBS sub
ject will be "Objections Answered?'
THE BUSilless Connnittee,of the Trustees of
Prinectim Theological Seminary mot on May
to open the bids tor the erect Mu of the
new building to be called Dieldnson Hall.
Upon examining the estimates it was found
that instead of costing:. , •sli,noo, the stun pro
vided by Mr. John C. Creen,it would amount
to near $75,01.i(1, including the necessary f orni_
tore and arrangement of grotuels. The Com
mittee were just about to rroeuell to mum,e
the size and ctecorations of
: the proposed edi
fice, when Chancellor Green announce:l that
Ms brother would meet the additional ex
pense. This munificent gift of Mr. ( ; reel ) wiit
give to the college to building second in n.lll'
in America for the purposes intended.
TnE . following Methodist churches will take
the vote on Lay Delegation on the days named:
Nazareth, June 7; Asbiiry, ...lane 8; Eleventh
street, II ainitS Street and Germantown. d unit
9; Bethel and. Frairkford, Jime .Union,
Twelfth Street and Siloam, .1 une ---- 1 . 1; Green
Street, June 14; Salem, June to Nihkeenth
street, - Wharton Street, Front Street and
Scott, :Mute hi; Fifth Street. Tabernacle and
Cohocksint, ~trine 17; Trinity ttml Slimmer
field, ;June 19; Kensington, Port Itichniond
and Central, dime 21; Broad Street awl Six,
teenth Street titedding); ,1 nue 22; St;
Twentie,th Street, Al ount Zion, .M.anayipik, St.
George's and Fitzwater Street, June 23;
Thirty-eighth Street, June 24; Ebenezer and
3fortieth Street, June 24, and St. Paul's, 29111.
Tny. Society of Friends' (Bieksite branelh
has published extracts from the minutes of the
Philadelphia Yearly M e.eting;beltl last month.
.These minutes coin a i i nfortnatiOn in regard
to the operations of:the Friends among the In
- dians."- .fin Indian committee of o . enty-four
male and twenty fenuile.Friends has been ap
pointed, who are authorized to draw upon the
- Treatotrer of the Yearly Meeting for . thndS, if
theliceasion slot tiltiAriSe for the eicpentliture
of money- .In :iddition to this, eight nomititt
tionsof--14ielelstbrsuperintendents and agents
-sugge4tiect to the -P ro,adent had bee.o thinsmit
ted to the . Senate, six of whom were con
firmed; andtWoTejected in consequence of a
desiretoTetain old .sigents in their positions.
Th 6 . agent fOr the Omahas has since been re
moved, and. one of the rejected Friends ap
pointed in his place.
TO-MORROW interesting Hervicos will beheld.
in the 'Second Reformed. Church, Seventh
street, above Brown. They willbe conducted
by members of the Reformed. Church Synod,
as follows: In the morning the Communion
will take place,Rev.Dr. Eddy,of Brooklyn,pre
siding; .in the. afternoon, Rev.' J. :McClelland
Holmes, of Hudson, N: Y., and 'Rev. David
Sutphen, of Long Island,will address theliun
day schools; in the efenitig Rev. J. K. Allen,
of Hoboken, will preach. IVlany of the 'mem
bem of Synod will be present at the different
services. , •
CITY BULLETIN.
THE CONTESTJF,33 ELECTiONB.—Messrs. W.P.
Messick and R. M. Batturs, examiners, held
another session yesteidakafternoon.
Win. E. Robinson testified—Resided in Oc
tober at 1344 Marlborough street; offered to
vote tboDemocratie ticket in Third Division,.
Eighteenth Ward; I have been a citizen since.-
1853; iny original papers w*re , dated on 'that
year; 1 lost my papers in Canada - about ten
years ago; after my return from the army in .
1885 I went to get a duplicate but could not
find any record of my first Mers;,, in 1868, 1:
went to the cletk of the Supreme Court, taking
along the same voucher aS that in 1.853 and got
a new set of papers; showed my papers at the
poll last October and they Were :declared to be
fraudulent. . • • . , . , ' .
'Christian Krautter. ', „, testified—Resided
Shack - amaxon and Beach streets; First di
vision,y,ighteenth Ward, in . October; offered
to Vote in , that , division; was ,not allowed to
vote, as they said my paper was not,good;
they ltept
,niy ' paper; ',l 'offered to vote the
DemOcratic ticket. ' - • . - . +
- „Sylvester Connell testified—Reside back of
1'217 Crease street, 431 - fered to vote Democratic
ticket in • Third division, Eighteenth Ward;
they said that I had fraudulent "papers, and
threw out the vote; was naturalized in Su ,
preme Ciiiirt, Oct. - 1, 1868. .
Thomas W. Sutton testified---Iteside 407 East
Dauphin street, Tenth Division; Nineteenth
Ward; I was to have acted ass, clerk in that.
division; went to the p . olls about a qttarter be-.
fore 7 o'clock,. while waiting . for an organiza
tion three police officers and others entered,
the room, anti ejected the judge and Some
other officers. [The witness then corroborated
the evidence of Hooper and Brower, which
was addneetiat the . last two sittings:]; ;Had
been requested to act as clerk by Mr. Brower,
return inspector.
Henry McWilliams, -testified--“ Reside .1,37
Huston street; voted the Republican tieke in
the Tenth division of the. Eighteenth W r ;
showed my naturalization papers; got the n in
the Court of Colin:non Phas; am about thirty
one years old; L beliVve , .l was under eighteen
years of age When;,,l came here, just - before
Lincoln was „eli;cted; was here before Bu
chanan left the chair, but can't tell how long;
to the . beSt of My opiiiitiiiT eitine. here in .1.858.
[ll a dmi i ior's papers issued by Court of Q uarte r
Sessions, October 7, 1867.1 My first vote Was
for Governor Geary. . .
Carson testified—Reside 1451 Mont
avenue; voted the Republican ticket
to the Tenth Division of .the .Eighteenth
Ward; came to this country in 1847; am forty
six years old now; got my first and second
papers last October; can't tell in what court.
Wm. Gibson testified—Reside 1842 Memphis
street; voted the Republican ticket in the
Tenth Division, Eighteenth Ward; have been
in this country since 1854; six of us went to
the State House at Trenton in .1861 to deffiare
our intentions; we left Duf f papers there for
sat'e-keeping; never took out any papers
since; the officeo4 in the finny told me that my
discharge papers Were' sufficient; was not
ehalle»ged on my papers when 1 voted in
llctober. , •
Smith testifiett-:-.lle . sitle 1415 Htistoil
street; voted the Republican ticket in the
Tenth Division, liightecnth Ward, came to
this toiletry in JA:114 . ; ant forty-Aine Old;
was between eighteen; and ititiete6n , when
came to this country; never of out but one
paper; got, that just Wolf: the election last
.
CharleS Fay testified—Reside 1.130 Salmon
Street, Fourth division, Twenty-filth Ward; I
was Democratic' return inspector in that' di
vision in October; have lived in that neigh
borhood nearly 'seventeen years; am well ae
(lit:limed with the voters of that division, have
been an officer in two beneficial Societies and
president of another composed of voters of
that division; am acquainted with .two-thirds
or three-fourths of the Voters of that division;
was at the polls all day; the Republican
inspector administered the oath to the
judge. and then the judge swore
in the other officers in couples; the.
Republican inspector, David DrYburg, had'
charge of the window-book; when the crowd
outside gave in th‘eir names Mr. Dryburg had
great difficulty in finding them on the list of
taxables ; my attention was attracted by
knowing the names -which-he-could -not -find
on the list; l was looking over his shoulder
and i noticed that he could not find the
names; 1 assisted him to find the natiteS"the
tirSt hour; he made-no objection; we had the
book between us on the table; I did not take
tha.book from_him; _at...the....end. of _the...first
hour the crowd had thinned off and 1
was counting votes until after twelve
o'clock; then the men working for the Reading
Railroad Coltipany wanted to vote, and 1 again
assisted Mr. Dryburg with the book; about 1
o'clock a man named George . W. Myers, New
'Third street, voted; sliortly afterwards another
man giving the saffie nimie and residence
offered to vote; Mr. Dryhurg, told him that he
had already voted; he said he had not; 1 told
Mr. Dryburg to ask him if there was another
person of the same nanie living: in the
same house; the man said that there was
not; Mr. Dryburg then said, "We can
not receive the mates . vote;";the
vote was rejected unanimously; when the Re
pulffiean inspector could nottind the names, I
vouched fur some, whom I had known as
residents of the Ward for fourteen _or fifteen
years, and owners of property; Mr. Dryburg
vouched for sonic; when the election officers
would vouch in the morning they were sworn
as vouchers; while the clerk was about ad
ministering all oath to Inc. Mr. Dry
burg told the judge that it was unne
cessary and • a waste of time to swear
the officers whenever they' vouched, as the
oaths in the morning covered the acts of the
tiny; the judge:l:died if I hat was right, and
M r.Dryhurgsaid that in other divisions where.
be hall lweb au officer they had always
adopted that rule; after that all 'I if the otlieers
vouched without being sworn; I voted the
Democratic ticket that day.
Pros-exainineti—l did not know which was
the real Mr. Myers; I never had the book
aWay'from Mr. Dryburg.
The 31ayor and Recorder produced the
boxes of the Third division,Eightemith Ward,
I and Tel dh di visi on ~ Nineteenth Ward, and
the panels were taken out and otffired in
evidenee. The bus of the division was not
one of those Ilirilished by the City eimonts
siolicrs, but had been Used originfilly for the
ifiteliing: of peilper, and caudal ned all the bal
lots as well as the papers, and was the only
Ii ix returned by the election ottieei:A..
.lehn 1 itzlatriek, 113.1Sofilerset street, tes
tified, that he veto . ' the Dendicztttie ticket in
the Fourth DivisiOn of the Twenty-fifth Ward;
was, return clerk, and was there all day, ex.:
eept dinner time. Vie then Corroborated the
test inteny of - Mr. 'Pay, alai stitted'furthet that'
knew nt ne illegal vete having been polled;
that it was the duty of all the infieers to eon
duo the•eleedon legally, and at its close •the
:Republican drivers deidared thetashlves to be
"highly satisfied" with the conduct of the elee
lion; • J )rylittrgh further stated that he hard no it urs Of a contest as he deente,dt he election
_to
have been'eendneted lawfully.
,
Thomas 1..1 out 2113 Coral street, testified
that he went td the of the Tenth Divi
sion of the Nineteenth Ward to act as return
inspeetor; ant keerroborated substantially the
testimony of thy', WitlleSSpA U.S to the
,ejectiou.
of the oilfcers and the conchal; of the4decticem
Ile was thrown into the street hy Sergeant,
itlaint.S, Mill 'ribt . vOte; and he did not fuel
disposed to after that.
Thomas Day street, below Thompson,
testified that he voted in the Third Division of
the Eighteenth Ward the Itepublican ticket;
came here in *June, 1862 and was 21i years old
last, month (heproducedaminor'Spaper issued
by the Quarter Session + Court, and dated Sep
temher 1865); he never got any other paper.
Joseph Rafferty, 420 Oak gtiYet, testified that
be went to the polls of the Tenth Division of
the - Nineteenth Ward with the Intention to
vote the Democratic ticket, hut was put but of
the room, 4111 d was afraid to go near the poll
after the fuss, in the morning, the time Mr.
THE DAILY EVENING BULLETIN- - PHILADELP, SATURDAY I 4UNE 5, 1869:
llobper-wax put out; other parties who went
there. were beaten.
Adjourned until Monday afternoon.
• CITY lIMPROVEMENTB.-- - During May per
mits were issued for .the erection of new build
ings in this city as fellows : 20 four-story dwell
ings, :305 three-story dwellings, 327 two-story
dwellings; total, G 52. Bake-house, 1; boiler
lumse, 1; . coach-house, 1; chapel, 1; 'church, 1;
dye-house, 1; engine-house,l; factories, 2; de
pots, 3; hall, 1; offices , 9; mill, 1; store-houses,
4; Sheds, :3; stables, 20; shops,.ls; stores, 98;
tool-house, 1. Total, 94. During the month
fourteen old and dangerous buildings were or
dered to be taken down or made safe, and nine
weeden-buildings ordered,demolished.
BASE BA.m,.—A game was played yesterday,
between the Athletic and Keystone Clubs.
The score stood—Athletic; 2iV.Keystone,
WEST JERSEY . RAILIMAD:-A large force of
workmen are constantly employed attending
to the repairing of the track of this road, and
the improvements which haVe been made
since all the , roads have been consolidated
. under one management, have greatly contri
buted to the public convenience and safety.
General
. Sewell, the Superintendent, seems to
direct his entire energies towards the work of
providing every necessary • comfort
for • • the traveling commtmity, and the
road at ' the - present time is in
a thoroughly-substantial condition. The ar
rangements . made . for the season, at Cape
Island, are of the best and most commodious
character,. with every necessary requisite for
the pleasure and 'enjoyment of those who de
sire to spend the "heated term" at the sea-side.
Notwithstanding the. large outlay in the im
provement Of these roads; the business returns
the stockholders a handsome per: tentage: on
their. - investments, and it' is;. constantly
on , the increase; indicating; ,, that r : it is
destined to be a highway of com
munication with Calnden,: • Philadelphia,
and the lower counties of New . Jersey.of the
highest importance. The landing of due cable
connecting Cape Island and , this continent
with France and the eastern countriesiwill.
be anher stimulus to the rapitigrowth of the
ict\ii
plate, a d constitute an event of incalculable
interest to all parties Concerned. It is evident,
therefore, from the vast number of fine im
provements going forward and contemplated,
that, within a very few years, Cape Island will
be a city of no inconsiderable magnitude, and
number its permanent inhabitants by many
thousands.
POSTPONEMENT.—Notwithstanding the an
nouncement officially promulgated yby the
'
officers of the Building Committee that the
Third Street M. B. Church would bededicated
on the 10th inst.,it has been ascertained that it
will be impossile to get the building finished
by that date, and the Secretary, and Pastor
liaYe issued a circular to the variouifintieiiiii
terested, stating that "through unavoidable
circumstances the building committee have
been compelled to postpone the time of its
dedication." So soon as the time shall be de
finitely fixed, due notice of the dedicatory
services will lie -given.
Vito'rEcrioN INF:Env:lL—Great complaint is
made by citizens residing in the eastern sec
tion of Camden, bordering uPon Cooper's
creek, of the inadequate protection afforded
them iu police regulations, &c. The neighbor
hood is constantly annoyed late :it night and
on the Sabbath day by the congregating of
had men, boys and women, who get drunk,
curse, use profane and indecent language; and.
engage in dog-fighting and other improperainsements. The authoritiesshould certainly
look after these hardehed disturbers of the
peace.
•CA 31.1W5: o m E.—The SfailagerS of the Cam
den Home for Friendless Children have ar
pinged for holding a .StraWberry Festival, to
conim mice on the Bth inst.,and to, continue,until
the iwening of the 10th, the,proceeds.ofWhieh
are for the benefit Of,the.. institution. It is
represented that, in cousegnency of the ex
traordinary pressure upon the funds of the
Home, lino treasury needs replenishing, and
this is one of the measuresproposed to accom
plish that purpose.
ii.TTE.3” TED HIGHWAY 110 ItILERY.-A,_ night.
or two since, as a Mr. Harrap was .returning
lionie in 8( uth Ward, he was set upon by a
highwayman, who attemptel to ro . ) him, hut
his riles for the police brought tw., gentlemen
to his aQsistance, when the villa' n fled:
lat* SPECIALTY OF
Pony Phaetons and Velocipedes
Of the latest styles and lowest prices, together with all
this new Spring Patterns of first-cluHB
Phaetons and Carriages,
In stock and fini s hing. For sale by
pl.l w B 24t§
Lumber Under Cover,
ALWAYS DRY.
WATSON & GILLINGHAM,
924 Richmond Street.
nib29-Iy§
MAULE, BROTHER & CO.,
2500 South Street.
1869 1'A;7417,'. MAKERS.ii 1869.
CHOICE SELECTION
or
MICHIGAN CORK PINE
FOR PATTERNS.
1869.SPITRMAN, ) , ligVA" . lB69
LARGE STOCK. •
1869. EL
CITiROIdtAA FLOORING.
ALINA FLOORING. 869.
VIRGINIA FLOORING. •
DELAWARE FLOORING*
ASH FLOORING.
WALNUT FLOORING.
1869. b'LOIUII A WI - IVA:PS . IB69.
RAIL PLANK.
RAIL PLANK.
.
1869 * WALNUT BOARDS ANDIB6 •
PLANK. if
WALNUT BOARDS AND PLANK.
• WALNUT BOARDS.
WALNUT PLANK.
ASSORTED
FOR
CABINET MAKERS.
BUILDERS, AC.
UND i IAtSg - ERS IB69• i 1869.
uNDERTLeEitg , ta3IIER.
RED CEDAR.
WALNUT AND PINE.
1869. SE . 4\ E S ear i ii ()WW l' _1869.
WHITE OAK
111.MANK AND HOARDS
oRy.
CAI a ) II6I . IA
- 1869.
NORM 1Y SOANTLING.
•
CEDAR 8.1-11NOLES
1869,' cEnAit 15 ) .69.
• LARGE A.s.sonTm ENT.
FOR SALE LOW. . •
. .
1869 PL Mini: R 1 NO LATH. , 1869
. PLABTion N4l LATE.
. • liAll I . • \ . •
•
iIIIATJLE nnourcit & co.,
21,00 S OUT II STEEET.
__B ER _
rpli 0M A 8 & . POE L LUM MIM-
I chant,', No. 1011 S. Fourth iitroot. At • their yard
will be found Walnut, Ash. Poplar, Cliorry, Pilo), nom
loch, kr., Ac., ttt reasOnablo prawn, Giro them a 6,11.
MARTIN THOMAS,
11111174m'/ - ELIAS . POHL, .
• ... . .„
10 CON .7 I7ItACTORS, -•L UMB - M
ERE
J_ and Ship-hulldors,—Wo urn now prepared to execute
proutpltv order,' for tiouthern Yellow Pine 'Dallier,
Shlpstuff and Lumber. 'COCHRAN, RUSSELL & CO.,
22 north It root titre et ~ , inh24 tf
YELLOW PINE L U 'MBE R.-..-A CARGO
of 100.000 feet of Omirtfitt I umber,. afloat and .for
Halo by R. A. SOUDEE & CO., pork . Strict
Wharf. .. •- ' • -, job:lt.
Y - L
LOW PINE LUMBE R-ORD ERB
or cargoeo of every description Sawed Lumbor Imo.
euted at abort notice--ouallty subject to inspection.
Apply to 'EDW. R. :ROWLEY. 16 South Wharrea. fe6
C
HALK .—FOR SALE, 180 TONS OF
• WWI:, Afloat. Apply to WORKMAN &
• Wuluat atcooti
NEW JERSEY MATTERS;-
CARRIAGES
S. W. JACOBS,
. "No. 617---Arch-StreeL
LU IBER
AMUSEMENTS.
n •
" LET US HAVE PEACE,"
OFFICIAL PROGRAMME.
GREAT NATIONAL
PEACI3I JUBILEE
(Projected by Mr. P. 8. GILMORE.)
CITY OF BOSTON,
June 15,16, 17, 18 and 19,16169,
To Commemorate the — itestoratlon of
PEACE THROUGHOUT THE LAND.
This gloriouit event in our National III!Itory will be ecle
braced by the
•
GRANDEST MUSICAL FESTIVAL
Ever known in the Ithitory of the World.
• • •
THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES,
Members of his Cabinet, Heads of Departments, Gover
nors of all the States, and many other diStinguished
pOEBOIO4 from all parts of the country, together with the
Representatives of Foreign Governments at Washing
ton, ,have been invited by the Mayor and City Council
of Reston, to become the guests Of the city during the
Festival. . ' •
• FIRST DAY,A •
TUtSDAY, JUNE 13.184.3i,conunench3g nt 3 o'clock,P M.
INA UG URAL CEREMONIES.
PRAYER - BY REV. E. E. lIALE,
To I,e followed by, an Address by
lIIS HONOR MAYOR SIIUUTLLFF,
Welcoming all guests and visitors to Boston um! to Mos
sachusetts• also a Congratulatory Address by
. • DON. ALEX. 11. RICE,
Oa the RESTORATION or PEACE AND UNION
throughout the Land.
The Inaugural Ceremonies will be followed, by a
GRAM) MUSICAL PERFORMANCE,
in whirl) the
GREATEST ORATORIO pwaitus
ever assembled. comprising over
EIGHT HUNDRED VOCAL ORGANIZATIONS,
who have been in rehearsal for many months, will take
part, THOUSAND a MUSTrchestra of
ONI,.IANS,
selected from the- best Orchestras, Bands and Musical
Associations in the. United States,
SELECTIONS TO BE PERFORMED.
PART 1.
1. 1111 AND C.IIOIIAL. "A.Strong Croglo im our Lord."—
Luther.
FULL CHORUS. GRAND ORCHESTRA AND
"GREAT ORGAN.
2. OVERTVRE. "Tatiuhuu4er'• Wagner.
SELECT ORCHESTRA. WU PERFORMERS,
GLORY 81, TO GOD ON 111011. "Twelfth
11111.41.1", ...... . .. . ... . . . ......
FULL CHORUS, WITH ....... ........ AND ORGAN
ACCOMPANIMENT.
4. Punvitn. '•Ave Muria" Gunned.
Sung by MADAME PA REPS-ROSA .
The intrminetury V iolin Obligate inwally rendered by
etie perfumer will be played 1.1%*
TWO lICNIMED i'IOLINISTS. ---
5. NATIONAL AIR. "The :4111Y 5t1111141141 Manner." with
an lulditional vonet. by 11 .1. W. Ball:
•• Not as North or as South, In the future tre'd stand,
But as Brothrrs anited thrum:bout this broad land,
And the Star Spangled Banner forevershall wave,
Ver the land of the free and 11111 home ,'I the brave."
suug by thr-Pull Chorus ' with Orantl Orche4tra, Ors
wan, Military Baud. BrumCorps.' Claiming of Bolls, and
I:TILLERY ACCOMPANIMENT.
. . - .
F EEN MINUTES.
PART IL
VOCATION. A Hymn of Peace written
for this !WM/doll by Dr.ollrer wend el I
Holmes tb() MUSIC of s
•
FULL CHORUS, GRAND. ORCHESTRA, ORGAN
AND MILITARY BAND.
7. OvEßTumi. IPillintit Tell"
PERFORMED BY A SELECT otteIIESTRA ant
PERFORMERS.
S. INFLANLMATUN. '`Stabl.ll MILLiT" Rotldbii
Soli): by MADAME PABEPA-ROSA,„with full chorus,
organ and gyand orchestral accouganiment.
rottoNATlos MARcn. "Il Profeta llererbeer
PERFORMED 11l THE FULL "SAND OF ONE
THOUSAND INSTIU
JO. NATIONAL AIR. Words written by Key.
S. F. Smith, D. D. •
"My country of thee,
Sweet land of liberty."
Sung by the entire . Chorus acCompanied by the (trawl
Orehestru of ZOO; Military Band of WU, great organ, full
drum turps , chiming ofhells,infaittry tiring .ind rotation
The
the distance in exact time with the
'l'he audience are reApectfully" invited to join. in the last
eree.
WEDNEtzDAY, JUNE 16. 11i69. Commencing at 3P. M
GRAND CLAHSICAL PROGRAMME.
SY3IPIIONY AND onATanfto.. .
PART 1.
1. FLoTIVAL. Overture on Luther's Choral Nicolai
2. a—GLORY TO GOD. •
b—AND THE GLORY OF THE LORD. From
thu "Messiah" Mandel
.3. BECITATIoN AND ARIA. Non pia di jimi,
From "Lit Clemenza di Tito" Mozart
Sung by MISS ADELAIDE PHILLIPS.
4. ME WATCHING OYER ISRAEL. From
"Elijah" Mendelsohn
5. Ain. Let the Bright Seraphim. From
(ho oratorio "Samson" • Mandel
Sung by - MADAME PAEEPA =ROSA A.
6, SEE :TIIM CONVERING HERO COMES.
From "Judas Maecabaens' Handal
_.../RX.EIiNISSION, FIFTEEN MIN UTES.
---
SYI.4PIIONY (in C major) 'Zchuto , Tt
1. Andunte. Allegro,
2. Andante con Moto.
3. Scherzo.
4. Finale.
2. p--Tur.3lAnyEtovi WORK.
BEAVENt4 ARE TELLING. Fri)! the
"Creation''
UMIMI
URSDAY JUNE 17, 1869. Commencing at 3 P.M.
AAA I VERSA , Y
OF TBE BATTLE OFB UNKER
HILL.
. Patriotic and Military Programme.
POPELAIL AND FAMILIAR
. _
. , . ,
fi. OvEuTuar. Ira PlaYOlu." „
Amber.
Arranged for GRAND ORCHESTRA of Uno Thou
sand-Performers, Fifty Trumpeters performing the
solo part usually played by. one Trumpet.
2. CitottAL. Vudgment hymn • Luther.
FULL CHORUS, ORGAN, ORCHESTRA AND
BAND MILI TAME.
•
3. GRAND 31/111C11,"1'EACH FnSTIVAL." COlllposed for
this occasion and 111111.110011 for GRAND ORCHES
. TRA and 311LITAIty BAND combined.
4. ARIA. Robert, to ' i j n?n , . .... .... ....Meyerbeer.
Sung by / DAME PA REPA •IfOSA.
5. SCENE From I frovittore, introducing the Anvil
Chorus Verdi.
. Will be bronght out with GRAND CHORUS, Full
Band of One Thousand. One Hundred Anvils,Sevocal
Drum Corps. Artillery. Bells", 'The Anvil part
will be performed by One Hundred 3L•mberS. of the
BOston Fire Department.
ti. OvEnTultli TRIONIPIIALE, pn the Ameri
can National Air, "Hail Columbia,"
introducing the FULL CIIOIII.IS, itc
imnpanied fry the , GRAND ORCHES
TRA, MILITARY BAND, and other
accompaniments C.C. Converse.
INTERMISSION—FIFTEEN MINUTES.
7. ntmE 311 LITA Prince Frederick
. Carl.'
BAND OF LOW PE RIfORMERS.
S. NATIONAL Alit. •f -"The Star Spangled
Banner."
Sung by Madame PAREPA 7 ROSA, with chorus and
orchestral 'term paniment.
'3L Tiof HARP TILAT ONOFTIIIIO' TARA'S IIALL1.1".11100T0.
AITOIIgOII fol. FULL CHORUS, GRAND ORCHES
TRA., MILITARY !SAND till (MOAN.
10. ARIA FOR TR CMPET, o'olll "11 Bravo"..Mereadante.
Performed II)' 31. ARBUCKLE, with Orchestral Ae•
companiment.
H. CHORUS. "Night Shades no Longer." Rossini.
GRAND CHORUS. ORGAN AND ORCHESTRA.
12.•Ovifi1ruftE. "Stradella." Flutow.
REEL BAND OF WO PERFORMERS.
1::. 0110RAL. 000 10111111.01101 I'l4llllll.
CHORUS, ORGAN. ORCHESTRA, MILITARY
• BAND, &c. •
. The Audience ore respeelfully invited to join in the
lust verso.
FOURTI I DAY.
FRIDAY, JUNE IS. ISO. CommenciDg at 3 o'cloeltP.M
ORATORIO AND SYMPHONY.
Ensm
1. f)v.myrrittc,
e noß m i ,..T„ Goa on High." From "St.
I'Blll' . 310lieteltieult
- Sym rni,Ny. No. S, titCUamir Beethoven
1: Allegro motto.
3. -11111'110e coil moto.
3. Scherzo allegro and
• - - - FiNALE allegro.
4. ARIA, , 'Cantu piatiga" Handel
Swig ADELAIDItITIIILLIPS.
r , 4 A ~hlevel . l h 4 the W1)1'101114 Work." From
the "Creation" 'Haydn
G. "Thanks he to God." Front "Elijah"..Motalelssolin
IN TEIOIISSION, FIFIRNE JULY tr'f.ES.
I'.lllT 11.
1. a—" Sleepers Wake, a Voice is Calling."
Front "St. Patti" )10m1p1ssrihn
b- r Pit...YEtt. From "Mores in Egypt " Rossini
2. INFLAMItATI:H. From "Stahat Mater" Romsltil
3. t.LURIA. From the nth Mare 4 Itozart
4. 4./iL.1.131.1.7.1A1t.. FrOlii the "Mee411.1h'.............1itU1del
lIMMED2
.
SATURDAY,3tow 19, MO. Conanenolnit at 11 A.M.
'CONCERT BY TILE CBILDREN 0.1"1111.1 PUBLIC
.. .
SCHOOLS,
Within]] Orehsstrul Areoinitnimnt,--beingtbelargest
• Chorus of children eyer brought together. •
Cottnuerons--Ciatt. ZEIIItAIIN,4I./LILISIACtiIIETI.G and
.
P. S. Cotat u nE, .. '
01IGA NISTS-1111 . 3 OIIN WILCOX and J:l3. Su/MIAS-D.
TICKETS NOW ON SALE AT MUSIC HALL.
PRICES: • •
SINGLE A:OMISSION, WITII SECURED SEAT, e 5
AND 83, ACconDING TO LOCATION,
SINGLE ADMISSION, WITHOUT SECURED
SEAT, .$ 4 2: •
Ticket 0111ee open from 9 A. M. to 5 P. M.
Per Order, • „
je2-w,s,w,:st HENRY 0. PARKER, Secretary.
AMUSEMENTS.
AirRS. JOHN DREW'S ARCH STREET
THEATRE. Ei
iu at hto S. IBILi, FOR SATHR.
TO-NIGHT,BATUItI>AY, June sth, 1889.
THE MARBLE HEART,
By VIBE : JOHN DREW,
MR: ()HAS. WALCOTT,
And every member of the Company,
Al 4 Craig'a
Protean Piece
.TAR. CRAIG in all hie imitations. •
DIONDAY—BLACH. AND WHITE:
ALNUT, STREET ,THEATR. ,, E.
B eine at 714.
THIS (54TUARA v I
filfrilir
G, Juno 5,
Or the world-renowned t.m e l tr i 7111 1 ./i. i ns 0 N
WhO will appear ne
RIP p VAN WINNLFe,
In Dion Boueleal t t l
l' VAN WINKLE L
'
On, TILE SLEEP O TWENTYF YEARS.
TBEATRE . COMIQUE, ' SEVENTH
:ISt reet, below Arch. Commencing at 8.
• , LAST WEEK BUT. ONE
Of the brilliant engagement of the great favorite and
popular artiste,
MISS SUSAN. °ALTON, ' -
In the great hit of the season, •
• F HLORETTE, TE CRIOKET.
Cricket MISS SUSAN GALTON
Last appearance tn - Philadelphla nest week.
710. 'S AMERICAN,
, WALNUT STREET, ABOYE EIGHTH.
ATTRACTION RARE AND INIMITABLE,
REENGAGEMENT OE THE
DASHWOOD RISTERS. •
THE WONDER OF THE WORLD,
Excelling Zengah, or thr"Rizarellis, • who appear twice
during the evening,
THE TWO GRAND BALLETS EACH EVENING.
RIP VAN WINKLE BY JOE EMMETT.
MASTER CLARENCE, ON, THE TRAPEZE.
DON'T FORGET THE SATURDAY MATINEE. •
PRIVATE CLASSICAL SOIREE
cum GAERTNER'S VOCAL AND INSTRUMENTAL
SOCIETY. at the DRAWING-ROOM.
SEVENTEENTH Street, above CHESTNUT,
SATURDAY EVENING, June-80869, at 8 o'clock.
_ ,„: 9 . 2 00
Tickets for sale, only at Carl Gaertner's ; Private co
at the American Conservatory of Male, S. E. corner
Tenth and Walnut. je.3.3t§
A CADEM Y OF FINE - ARTS,
2 ( 1- peu i rom , A. M. p o ISSTIIIT street, above Tenth . .
Benjamin West's Great Pictur e of
CHR R
IST RJECTBD
still on exhibition. je22-tr
ENNSYLVA_NIA ACADEMY ` OF FINE
ARTS.
TDB FORTY-SIXTII ANNUAL SPRING •EXRIBI
TION ON PAINTINGS, SCULPTURE, &c.,. Is 130 W
open.
Admission 25 cents. Season Tickets 50 cents.
Open from 9 A. M. to 63: P. M., and from 7..% to 10 P.
M. a .28-6 w
arECTAVICOTICES.
FLORAL FESTIVAL AND PROM
ENADE CONCERT at Horticultural Hail on
TUESDAY and WEDNESDAY Afternoons and Even.
Rms. the Bth and oth of Jane, by the LADIES ' AID SO•
Cl ETY of the New Baptist Church, cot . of Broad and
Spruce streets. Open from 2.t0 10Ii a'clock. I'. M. •
Promenade Concert at 8 o'clock. Germania rchestra.
Stetson Tickets, 813 cents. Single 'pickets. 25 cents. liar
sale at C. W. A. Trampler's, 92d Chestnut street ; J. G.
Shinn's, southwest earner Broad atal.Spruce streets, and
at the Ball. je3titi;
10. GSLAND - Qll, COMPANY.—
An 'udjourn ed meeting of the Stockholders of this
COM pony will be held on MONDAY. June 2lst next, at
12:11.,
lit the office of the Delzell 1 , ;41, 218
Welnut street. W]tl. F. lIANSELL,
l'itit.Atoments.,3lny 2. 4 J. inly 29 r( :it SeereterY•
n-
AMERICANY' ACADEMY' OF MU
slc•-.Tily,Aufmut Meeting of the StiicklailiVN will
be held in the Foyer of the Academy. MONDAY AFTER
NOON, Amu, 7. ut .4;5 o'clock, when an eiretion vlll by
bold for twelve Directory to serve the ensuing year.
MICHAEL IN" ISBET,
tnyl3 15 22 2ti 29je2 Secretary.
.
n
UNION PACIFIC lIAILWAY COM
PANY, EASTERN DIVISION.
PIMA 1»:1.1.111A. May 2.43,
The interest in gold on . first Wortguse bond,' Union
Pacific Railway, Eastern Di•ision due June 1, 1.•.e9 . will
he paid on presentation of the you pint S therefor, on and
after that date, at the liankim„s• Mouse of
DABNEY, MORGAN tt CO.,
A 3 ExchanFe Place,
my29-ii itt th At§ t New York.
10, OFFICE RESOLUTE MINING .
Company, No. 324 Walnut hit rect.
PHILADELPHIA. Afay
Notice Is hereby given that all Stock of the Resolute
'Mining Company. on which instalments are due and un
paid, has been forfeited, and will lio sold at, public aue.
lion 310NDAY, 29thune I.StiV. at 12 o'clock. noon,
at the Office of the Secretary of the Corporation.
Cording to the Charter and By:Laws,/ mileys previously
tvsle , med.
Ity order of the Directors.
B. A. HOPES,
Secrolory and Treamirer
The Compouy claim,. the right to bid on said Stook.
t0):73
--
10
PHILADELPHIA, MAY 15, 1869.-
'.' The Annual Meeting of the Stockholders of.tho
Resolute Mining Company, of Lake Superior, will no
held at their Office, Nu.= Walnut street, on MONDAY,
the 7th day of June, Ma, at 12 &clock M. for the election
of Directors, and transaction of other busittess
. nty22tje7§• B. A. HOOP S, Secretary.
Ba. OFFICE OF THE 3 lETALLISE
LAND COM PAN Y, NO. r. 4 'WALNUT STREF.T.
PIIILADELPIIIA., May 7th:lSs9. .
The stated annual meeting of the stockholders of the
Metalline Land Company will b e held at the office of the
Company , . on MONDAY, June 7th, proximo, at 12
o'clock, M.
to Ti •e 74 M. IL TIOFFILVS, Clerk.
- 11 - IVIIVENITNOTTCES.
OFFICE OF 'THE BUCHANAN
IU b ROYALTY OIL COMPANY, 118 South Fourth st.
PHILAIMLNIIA, June24l, latt9.
The Directors of this Compan• have this d a y de
clared their 13th dividend, being Ono Per Cent. un tho
_eapital i etock ,Payalde on demand. Ay order,
y ett-3t .101 IN KALE3CA...EU, Secretary.'"
UNION BANK OF TENNESSEE
IN LIQUIDATION.
NASHVILLE, May 2011569;
DIVIDEND.
A stock dividend of twelve dollars and fifty cents on
each share of stock iu the Union Bank of Tennessee will
be pa id at the Philadelphia National Bank on and after
the, lath day of Jnue,
JOSEPH W. ALLEN,
LW -BO Cashier and Trustee.
cAssrstEtax,wc.
WASH INGTUN 311LLS,
LAWRENCE, MASS. •
G-4 SCOTCH CHEVIOTS
These goods are known to the Trade as "CHEVIOTS"
and "BANNOCKIttiTtNS," and are the strongest and
most durable woolen fabrics which can be madei as it is
inipMdbie to make them of shoddy or any other mate
rial with which the manufacture of wooleuc has usually
been cheapened.
WASHINGTON MILLS,
LAWRENCE, DIAS:i
CHEVIOTS. for H prime and Rummer wear,
BANNOCK BURNS, for autumn and winter,
have been copied frunt the beet Scotch styles, and viand
factymed from the imiorted wool, which alum, con give
the proper effect to them,
At that it was thought by the parties who contracted
for the goods that they would sell better without the
dietifictive mark of the Waehingto4 Mills; but it has
been fo r und that in general appearance and durability
they are quite equal to their foreign prototypes ; there
fore the largeet couslimars have requested that the regu
lar Washington Mille.ticket should be attached to every
piece ; and iu order that purchasere may be protected
front the poseibility of having inferior goods sold to them
in garments, under the canto of the Wamhingtou Milli
Cheviot e, the following named parties hereby advortiee
to the trade and public generally, that they have given
the preference to Mom goods, mid • will have them con
stantly in stock, AND NO INFERIOR GRADES WILL
BE OFFEEED AS SUBSTITUTES.
NEW YORK. . DOSTGF- ~..
Abernethy & Co. - ------ Whitten, llntkett & Young:
-LCollins-Illummer,t_Co—L:, Minem.lical A; Co.
Carhart, Wh itfoid & Co. C. W. Freeland, Bear 14
Janice Wilde, Jr,, A.; Co. Co. .
Devlin & Co, CINCINNATI.
Brokaw Bros. Lockwood lime &'l,O,
•
Brooks Brom. CHICAGO.
Geo. W. White & Co., for Field, Benedict .& Co,
- •
merly White, Whitman & ;',-tbilA NY, N. Y, ,
Ce. . Davis Craft &.% (loon.
A. Raymond. • Davie,
PA.
DiudebotT limo & Co. stein Bros.
• E friland, Babcock & Brom TROY, N. Y.
OWL . G. - Y.. 5, Quackenbush k•
PHILADELPHIA: ' ' Co: ' : - . - -
Wenamaker & Brown: . Dot e k-Ston
Gimp>, Wilgus & (M. .. • . ..i4 10YIDENCE; N.J.
Friee, Inalseed & Ilawkitis, James 11. Wail 400.
Blookileld & lick. I PORTLAND7IIE.,
cplb lb .to 2t . • Chadbourne & Kendall..; .
BOARDING —7 MO RENT—OOIII3IUNIT;A TING , RdOMS
on aveolal floor, No 132 Walnut struct. Well ailaidcd
for coal offices.. je541:41
riIIEANSiENT AND . PE It 111 ANE NT
J.. -Boarding at 012 Sprites Wrist
Also, table board
A I'IIIVATE FAINIILY WILL ACCO3L
imniate a few tirat-clues hoarders at No, 6769 3lomit
Airy, Gerniautown .afOntia.• Five minutes to the sta
tion. ' jel tuth a 3t*
.
D R S' AND WSTENHOLM'S
G E O
POCKET KNIVES, PEARL and STAG HAN
DLES of bountiful finish; RODGERS' gild WADE k BUTCHER'S, and the CELEBRATED . LECOELT RE
RAZOR. SCISSORS ;IN CASES of the ROA: qualltY
Razors, Knives, Schooirs and Table Cutlory ,grott tot awl
polished. EAR INSTRUMENTS Of the most approved
construction to assist the hearing, at P. MADEIRA'S,
Cutler and Surgical instrument Maker,lls Tenth strait,
below Chestnut. tuyl-tf
ATALUADLIE BUILDING LOTS;TWgif . -
• V TV-FOURTH WABD.—Eight lots of ground, of
the Estate of JOHN Mc()LURE, containing together 2Se
feet ion Bridge and Hamilton ,streets, and 213 feet cm
Thirty•oighth street.- Brick m ill, engine, boiler
and machinery on Bridge street,. To be sold by the
Sheriff, on MONDAY, June 7th, at 4 P: M., at the all
Quarter BesslonsitOinn, kr. flg corner-Stxth and Ohostirtir;^
streeM„Seleffinre under Arstpurchase money nfortgages.!:
to the Baring and Britton Einates. Purchasers' title ua- ,
doubted. For particulars, see handbills, and apply to '
J 0111. f WILI.4IiOISON, Au. 3939 Lancaster avenue. It''
(.)
n".' SALE 0101' OF' THE' MOST
F
desirable Pews middle aisle. Arch Street Piesbyte.
rian Church (Mr. W ithrow's).• Address PEW. Box 8.,
Ph andel Tana IP.. 0.. . • • my 22 sit*
NW. 210 PRICE STREET, GERMAN
town, for sale at a sacrifice. C. KErsEll KIN%
ittntown, It*
(4-I.IIIIVIANTOAVIi COTTAG'E,LINDEN
O O H nnd Knox streets; lot 100s200. C. _KEYSER KING,
ormantown. It*
4 4 :If,• qIOCICEN LT
vropert, • lot /05X300. 0, KEYSER KING, Ger
ruentoun. It'
efli GER AI AN TOWN. —FOR SAL
11Fiii.CatnfortOle, •Ifouse, 8 acres, pointed-stone stable
sind'euscli-liontto; water at stable; range, furnaco, bat 4,
9 chirmbers, sbade . and abundance of small fruits; plea.
sent grounds and dry,bouse. Jol-atti
fa' FOR SALE
Farms, Country Satan, Stores, Trills, Ace.,fifireat
variety. Sold for Catalogues. RANSOM. ItOGERS,
236 South Fifth street. jet Im`
RARE OHA.N, CTE.-F
SAirkE- - -
11lodern three-ntory liouse.ltio.ll9 South Nineteenth
street. 'Lot - 19. br 101 feet. For particulars apply 10
liENIIY C. BUTLIIER, 146 N. Front street. Je3-0t"
FOlt LIALE--DWELLI GS ,A.NID
tl STORE S.-1510 N. Tenth street, lot 21x75, aide yard,
and ,ill modern improvements.
1323 Brandywine street; lot 183 GO; 8 rooms and bath;
side alley, - a bargain.
2521 N. Broad. Lot 253177.10. - 15:7,800.
G 59 N. Broad at., ' 1911 N. Broad Rt. .
13tet'llnuttlywine at., 817 N. Slxteentlist.,
1307 N. Fifteenth.td., 1927 N.
_Flfteenth ht.,
1414 Blunter At., l:tdi N. Nineteenth at.,
1300 N. Nineteenth st., 2130 Franklin fit.,
N. Ninth st., 611 N. Eleventh
1630 111 t. 'Vernon it., 1521 Wallace st.
1104 Wellington street. Lot 16 by 72. Ten rooms. Ito-_,
dent Improvements. Terms easy. A first-class -neigh- 0
borhood. Only $5,706. For particulars get the Itcgister,
price 5 cents. Conveyancing and collecting promPOY
tended to, for which I most respectfully solicityour pa
tronago. • J.,S. W. 11NVENS,
nay2s tfi • 859 N. Brutal stret4.
In FOR SALE OR EXkliA - if . OF,A.
La.first-class Countr Seat and Farm. containing )
acres. 10 of which is in la wn ; Largo and Elegant Dian.
lon , Tenant Ilouse,Gardener's Cottage,Carriage floane,
Bent, Ice House, Spring 'louse ac.,B miles north of the
city, near railroad, and convenient to churchen. stork.
sic. Will be sold on very easy terms, or exchanged for
Ilrnt-clans city property. Addreaa J. S. T., Box 2751,
F. O. myll
t r t7 FOR SALE—A HANDSOISIE BItICIC
Residence, marble first story, with G feet side
yanl. Every convenience, - 2 batb-morns,, Ate. Situate
on the exi.t. side of Fifteenth street below, !spruce street.
.1. 31. 1.l 3151 EY SONS, 733 Walnut street.
NIARKET STICEEM—FOR
Ida 'rho valuable property' 26 feet 6 inches front by
lOt feet deep, with side light and back'outlet taituate No.
913 Market et,
_lmmediate posaeasiou. J. 31.11 11111.11EY
Jr SONS, 733 Walnut at.
LOGAN SQUARE.--lf SALE—THE
three-etury brick reaidenek with, double back
111.11111111gS, every colevenience . , and lot 18 feet front by 117
feet deepO
to a back Oval. No. 1921 Vine street. J. M.
f.it , 31.31EY ,Sc SONS, 713 Walnut street.
•
r. GERM ANTO \ V N-11011', SAL E—Til E
Handsome double pointed /Stan,' revidenee, vrith
pointed atone ',table and carriage onna!, and an acre of
grottn,l, vit nate on the S. W. vide of (!In•cv atreet.betvreen
Shoemaker and Church Lanes. Ilaa every city con
venience, and is in perfe c t order: grounds 'bt•autifutly
Proved with drive, walks. ehoiee evergreen and shad•
trees and an o,mA:owe of fruit. J. M. t/113131Er ,t
SONS. 7XI •
FOR SALE OR UENT-A .HOUSE
aßla and lot, 100 feerfront by. ire foot deop. on Elwood
Lune, Germantown avenue, Iti. ,ng Sall villagr. Alao,
large lot near the'auxue, about 200 feet squam.
Inquire at 712 MARKET etrott,
toy:tint§ •
tin FOlt SAIE.—NEAT 11i.ICEI. STORY
ka.i.ttt.ie Omagh, good location, Gennionown, near
depot; 9 rantnh; every con•enience. Lot, 30Ly 1W feat.
Plitt'. $4,300. .
apT-tfi J. 31. P. 'WALLACE ' LlB B. Sixtli street.
freß SALE.—MODERN T/IREFI
VI Story Brick Lwt 11tng.619 B. Ninth ht. Every Can
enimice.thinire On the prentihen. Iny 6-th,h,t ;LAO
• .
It 15 A E---ATLANTIC CITY,
ELEGANT COTTAGE, • .
04 C0734000C1,G 41.11110.1104 r
CONGRESS i(ALL.
ruy2.99, to th 6t§) A pply. 716 ChetituUt ittr.at. •
t•treet. POOS , 14.11711) r:VEIY. Apply to ColarUCK et J r UR`
DAN .4AI Walnut
4 STREET.—FOR STRET.—FOR SALB--THE
4t• BROAD
lot, 73 feet front on Woad street, situate
northeast corner of Fitzwater street; 130 feet deep of
Fitzwater street. J. N. ta;3I3IEY .k SONS, 733 Wal
la, t street.
41MA GEIOIAIsITOWN—FOR SALE.—A
modern ~cone Cottage, with niers city rorrielliellee.
Parlor, dining room,sitting room, kitchen and ihrecharn
hers; desirably located. within ten minutes" walk fr.nra
the railroad depot. Nicely shaded. • .1. 31. U31.311:17 &
SONS. 733 Walnut street.
VA . I? OIL S.A L 11.— , A • HANDSOME
=IL" Dwelling, 1721 Tine tartet. ---- •
A Handsome Itesidenee, West Philadelphia.
A Handsome Dwelling, A reit st. above Sixteenth.
A 31oderu Dwelling, lOW Sergeant street.
A Business Locat lOU. Straw LetTy .tref.t.
Two Moderu Dwellin4s. West Philadelphia.
A Modern ])welling. Sixteenth and Chorry streqa•
Arras. to Po PPUCK 11: JORDAN. 413 Walnut street.
TO RENT,
STORE AND BASEMENT,
S. E. ear. Chestnut and Seventh Sts.
EDWARD P. KELLY.
mym tY
CE EESE & 31 c COL:LI:TX EEAL ESTATE
Office, ancicson streot, oppodtte Mansion str.,t, Cape
Island, N. J. Real I:statt, bought and sold. Persons
desirous of renting cot tages during the belllloll,Win apply
or address es above.
lteepfeffittly refer to Cline. A. Rub Mil, Henry Itnmm,
Francis Auguiatte' Merino, Julio Mite
W. W..lnrena . fed-tf§
TO It EN DESIRABLE STOIC
ig.S . L. 011 Market street. north side. between Sixth and
t.4VI nth. rllllllll3g back to - Conaneree btto..t.
STOIIE, - this Wilco. jcV 2t'
FOR RENT—NO. 1834 SPRUCE ST.—
Furulehed.. Apply betweeu 10 and 2 to
J. L. IiAtIMAR,
jol to th s 4tg No. 708 Walnut street.
TO L.ET.—BUILDINGS AND STOR
=iii.m.t room, suitable for Factories, Foundries, -Ala
chine Shops.l;ivery Stables. AT., on tin oorth and south
side of Lombard streM. between TWOS ty-fonrila mid
Twenty-tiftli streets. Apply to. THOMAS E. CA HILL.
435 Wulnut street. . Jet-tir
fr E t A COMPLETELY : FURNISH ER
2.251. Dwelling to rent s :No. 150 d Vino street. Apply to
.1 . 42111:$ lit/UNG, 508 hpruce street,.
gfl TO RENT—GERMANTOWN—A
furnished Douse with Stelae attiwhed. Apply to
J. SERGEANT PRICE.
No. 811 Arch street.
ITE.NT—F URN.ISHED SUMMER
i* 11.01.11.1(110,, the. Delaware river, one• mile north
of Bristol. Commodious house, neatly lurid:4l,Q, thaw
acme of ground, testify hod out •and • bountifully sup
plied with fruit uud shade trees. A very desirable place.
1480 Lombard street. Illisiern ItonN”.• furnished,. for
tix months or year. ROBERT GRAFFEN & SON,
. • rfnestreet.
VI TO :RENT THE LARGE, C 0 N VE
utvnt and welldighted granite front Store, No. 110
---rionth-DF=l.-I.,WATI-D---AvenuO,with-fmmod to-posses-
Hien , the present tenant being ,obliged to retire from
IiIIN111(.14 owing to ill health: Apply to J. D.DIM
&Po.: 108 Smith Delaware evenly!: • miff tf§
fait TO LET—A THEEE-STOlt IM
tin Brown-stone Dwelling, 1211 °eaten street. can
tain ing rler.dining 7 reont,kitchen and Hammer kitchen
011 ground floor; sitting-tons 31:hambers en .2d; 3
chambers on third lloori with bath-roost, hot and cold
water and all modern conveniences.. Will bit rented fop
. one or mere yearato a gond tenant at a low rent. In
quire fors few days on the prentises;:or 4.IIYWARD
R. SelilVELY:ho. 128 N:LleYentli et., myl7tt§
t
E " :I N Ve tt \ d ' et l 'ul .
I trued take It.t.s i
rhtnity of . ilifortu
tog the trade that be has removed his hnsineso trout No.
47.9,._
_North Erout street to the convenient wareholufe, No.
20 North Front street.
I .'onoittuntentit Of deiood pt 101/8 of merehatittlite 80110-
ted. Storage HMI InSill . alice 011 . 4 . 1:Cod of tho loweAt rates.
Mr. ANDREW J. SIIICK Is this day tohnitted to an in
tereat iu any business. the thin HOMO romuhthtg OS here
tofore
• 3. C.% A Itri Saisi GRIFF
No. 29 North Front street. Phila., and
00 William street New York. '
•
r II
ILA DELPMA . ;Nile Ist, 1869. • je2-Ct§
1511 31. 0 V Ai.. :-: Tl - IE
11 lislwitilepot for the purchase' and sale of second
hand Doors, Windows, Story Fixturea, .kc.. from Sovouth
.atreet to Sixth street, above Oxford, where ouch articlee
are for Halo in great variety.
Also, now . pocrs, Sashes, Shutters _ •
• NAT'IIAN W. ELLIS
jel -t ,th
§PIRITS TURPENTINE AND WSW._
110 barrels Spirits Turpentine; 112 harrelff . Palo Soap
toxin; lira barrels No. 2 Slavonia 'Coffin, landing_ front
'fit- earner PlTjeer, for pilo by ELW. IL ROWLEY, 16 S.
I
Wharves.
FOR SALE..
TO RENT.
FBO3I 'JULY-
INQUIRE OF
REMOVALS
AT PARIS,
' - -
FO. IV.
The Fete !of Abe Bien -Venus.
Thiitinu:Sufy!oft scheoly when it bad ex—
addition'of two‘ , or three i more
"welcomes," betrayed a pressing distension,
-- quite appreciable to the wise ones. One of our
oldest heads, Lenoir e coMided,tome his appre
hension thatifrelief4as. tiot,atibrdedith4
common bag', it would go Wl—that is, the trea
sower would - Me it to marry upon, down in the
country: This Lamar, •in our diitributiOntif
parts, has been chosen for his qualities tO
spOltesinan and honorable ringleader. He can
crawl with our petitions 1404(l•( the, Bureau f or
he can flourish with otirlkinipliments np te the..
Professor. Yet, at first sight, Lenoir seems to
lack the graces of the persader. He is one of
tnolle,“viderized 'youths; dark.
flesh and quick :mil close-set eyes; whole
English, generalizers have often called the
moukeyisli or skipping French. Fox my part,
I will never disparage a man who is capable
4eneir's smile—it smile fathoms, deep,. and
sonie live inches broad, and one Of singular
ilinenessand art. Perhaps, this , maSterpieee is
effective heeau,se.--AS uotive when :his inus
cular cheeks work so ?et to show, as the tern!
gees here ; the teeth barefoot—iris really based
upon formidable foundations." . Here is a slight
bodily organization displaying (what is a per
develOpment among the Latinfathilies,
as a faunotiS dentist has told me) ii : gorilialaw,
and horse-teeth out o'f all seeming Kolibri:Min.
When the latest evapotation of race re/ink:44n
a jaw, and the jaw results in a smile, who shall
stand before it? 'One thinks how, several
times in Spanish, French, and Italian affairs,
the smiles of little men, planted uptin these in
ordinate and insatiable maxillaries, have wor
ried considerablb surfakils the earth; Lei Mir
is prosperous enough to dress.in.:nglish.style,
and comes team atelier wedged in Ins 'troWsers
and-lost In his sleeves: .
. -
"We of Paris , run after the English mode,"
he has said to me sagaciously, "though we can
only hope for a success of' caricature. , Would
any one take me for a petit erere of Pe-eaede-le?
But, after all,' what will you have? It is but a
piece of bad historic art. Our masters have
no better success. Do you suppose Piloty's
Romans look as the Romans really looked ?
Would . an Antwerp burgher' of the: foltrteepth
century acknowledge the b&t.airelialology id"
:Less or Tistiot? No...T,r,grylation is travesty."
bf:elui plain sophei. whe, illainhering upon
. a Istotit easel, proposes an inVestruent of the
nubile purse. • .
•
"Respect the attitude, of Lenoir!" ,cries the
nearest student; "he is waving a handkerchief -
like the man With asigual in Geriixtult's ' Me
, .Tbettindlierchiel was all:tint-rag. The ap
pia) interrupted a favorite game. School wati
done, and the model was hastily transforming..
himself', by a fatal ntismnption oPelothing,
from a Greek aristocrat to a miserable la.„.ir
of the centory, - .and the liberated spirits of the
studio, bestriding steels which they 'caused to
gallmt, were performing "the Metopes of the
Parthenon." Two lines of cavalry, meeting in
profile, were charging on these doughty quad
rupeds, at the pitee..o . l ails, but with a panto
mine indicating the -
stormiest yefinify. -- The
miserably slow approach, while Ijic warriors
kept up thees of martial satisfaction, a nd otio
seemed to, rear, and another • to heti-tins hat in
• the gale, was always a torture of dridlery: and
this was only:it „miented when, to stop for the
oratiienOlie opponents, brought tip in a hard
tret,f bead ii'' baelt uu cab r, and pitching
in their saddles With harrowing violencebefore •
they could halt.
The ..wooden clatter ceased, and the studio
rmaiented to listen: Lenoir, with • anixitii"i' in
dieatittg his relations of trust and confidence'.
with his comrades, described the late magnifi
cent operations of the academie Bourse,. and •
announced an accumulation worth about two
francs to each of us. Be propctsed fife--in
aftiplitomin the suburbs, to; wind= up with a
ratritkilestipper.l';. His, Speech was made with a
plAsaut hfauirareatliness, and-Was not-with
out a few of those echoes from Latinliterature
and those scraps or parodies. of the FrenCh
classics which constantly given Certain air of
style and civility to colloquial hunter in this
country. He spoke like M asset's' " Enfant du
A few years ago the type would have'
been ditTereiat; the studio orator would have
formed himself upon some military
and
from
Dutuam,or imitated the dogniatitini and antithe-•
sis of B ago, to an audience smoking the clay
pipe and wearing the hair docked d
As Lenoir used considerable gesture, the
youths at his back fell to imitating hint,. with
s tudious gravity and: initindless exaggeration:
until the infection spread, aml every one in
the room moved to the same wires, each body
bending and all aties.•: - Shooting:: parallel; •
while the speaker - 'finished his addrei s .
w i t h ou t di sc omposure or any moderation of
his action. The motion for a Ate was carried
solemn joy of .the
andieitee mat:Oben expressed by.. What we call
aTe Dfaint. A fragment of an easel ft) rining
a large cross was `‘liorne along 10 Blanc, as
priest, in a white blouse. -- This garment-is- in--
',Teat ihmandas a scenic costume, and happy
Ls the participant in a studio Te Dcuot who can
find elle tU lierrow; 'though-a-trifling'-soleehuni
in one's ordinary way of dressing affords an
acceptable saistittne. 'The choir of rich young
voices, slowly chanting •'La Femme du Ser
gent," or something equally improving, to
melancholy tuithent music, creeps about the
room at the heels of the priest. It is his duty
to diversify the route by every possible vagary,
winding amongst the furniture, mounting or
jumping at seceession. Of Stools, etc., alwayti
trailing after him his ribbon of white-stolid
choristers, without, intermitting the gravity
(A. the march or the, doleful sonority of the
music. Lenoir brought up the rearof this pro
cession, likewise in a color suitable to his
name; draped-in a black surtont )ielongingto
the tallest student., and 'scattering holy-water;
largely fortified with soap and milk, from the
big kirsch bottle., which served him for !pupil-,
ion, he reached incredibly drift people with
his baptism, all the while s tiging with touch
gravity and elevation.
On the day following, at a fixed hour, we re
cruited in front of the l'alais des Beaux-Arts.
Our number was swelled by several alumni,
honorably lost to the school from having passtel
into professional art. Glaiy;e and .Leconne
balmily, whose works sometimes reach
Amerii:ll, were among these, and were looked
up to with highly-relished awe by the scholars,
the great majority of who'll had never pro
thiced a week able to,pass into the sit/on. _Le
titanto Was in a'reti shirt, and had boots that
gave him all the feeling of a pioneer going out
-to conquer at wilderness; and several wore cos
tumes more or less suggestive of huntingand
• heroism. Lenoir, the orator, merged easily
with as all after his special function was over,
merely turning up when there! were tickets to
buy or people , to address.
floWiltifing and suPerb it seemed, the =va-
# 4 eating school at the first recess, leaving our
class-room in solitiale" duriug study-hours!
, How we enjoyed our range and freedom !•
• What incidents we found as we trooped oft,past the Place de la Bastile, to take our phtees
at'the Embaretulerit , de.Lyon! Old Madame
Fleuron, publicly trying potatoes in her tiny
au.ticiativas_amazett_to_r_e_ceive_simultancous
-"protestattenti Of, love. Irma a crowd,• ot'suitors
that completely darkened her window. Slut
expressed her coyness by means of a dish of,
• • oold water that stood at hand; it was calming, •
" and hurt -nobody. The carter, haultpg stone
towards the 'Mazes pririinl, .11111 S - have boon
Stupefied to see the whole troop follow him ,
solemnly,' with their hats in their halals, as it'
his cart were the hearse containing the- object
'• of their joint atlection. Blanc, snatching the
white blouse again, passed on- ahead, walked
beside him in a ghotitly manner, and repeat- •
. eilly blessed hint with two fingers. The man
regarded, him like Sancho looking at Don
4,,2utixtete.
Thy
iphabitants of Paris disdain . too much,
'and 'strangers• ignore entirely, they etmrming
PCllinS i ula formed by the Marne with the Seine
on the. eastern side of Paris. Here the former •
streara,approarhing and retreating from and
again approaching the Woods of - Vincennes,
ea.saytt on a mailer settle the doubling's and co
quetries whieh the Seine uses in making for
the forest of Saint Germain. In this Vin
cennes region
. you have the eleati• suburban
villages nearly liiiteltiug'each Other,their lime- .
houses forinjalgliale silltoupt ! tes against
the soft hillside St. The ethereal ash and poplar
titica - ,- rising in lines like traceries of cathedral
^ windows or galleries" now branch into, the
. ...f.-ntost• tender-and-most- in - Mutt:Mate green, -fit
for the robe, of Beatrice.'.' And there is 'con
„_.. stain some ' - double of one of the' rivers. to
. _
„Z__CtOSS,i3l,arprepasterouii-flat-boakli ko , -a.---bmad-:-
tray.
,=lliroiligh this serene Watteau-landkeipe;ift
iterkli.sembatking at a little station half-l' tie
in its proper garden, we tramped for along
afternoon. \Ye were French, and therefore; {
'of_ coinse, ve,were . --poop-spiritcd:. and . 'min„ VentiVe. -i : W, inSulte(lno:':,pasSer-hii,-Inade 34
more tuaiceinly-nobteitheirworrie 'pretty stircing
choruses, hurt, nobody, had no fights among
ourselves, mid broke nothing except the violiri
.!of :v wandering . .ltailan:litkoin we incited nri
"hoax moricniiikie {kit Of &is shell than it wi
1
callable of ; the. ambitious instrument, burst i
the, attempt to please us, and we collected i '
Ataitieliniong ourselves. We had one wsii.),
game of ball, and a rather Olympian foot,-race
Till se exercises seemed to kindle our enthus&
- :t at for thelwactote. t, . . 2.
'' '. friVaS a - glorious nieSs of fish, floating anci
steaming in a bath of greasy wine. 'While (Hsi
~classing it, we-heard a good tenoryoice in the
• nexrrooin. , •Lenoir Was (1(44 - patehed r to invite
the tuimfid stranger to share ow dessert. The
Vilice Soon entered, latent in the person of a
little 'dark,.` curl< rimacing suburban bonis
geins. H e found al the bainpieters ~, f ot up like
Egyptians of.old,lim head:tall swathed in nap:.
kills folded to resemble the cup of the Sphynx,
and wi iie-bottles; like the erOwii 'Of Sesostris,
leanitig, -backwebt froth' every' tifth. oecilint.
Be lsywed,:pitzled, and was soon made at
borne innl set to sing. r ado ! he chose the m
lucky 'air frau' ” . rat Dante Blanche," "Ali, duel
plaisir d'etre soldet." The sentiment of this
romance is new :detestable' to • young Fiance,
and we were obliged.te_cover his'perfortualfee
with a ehoriis of ohr own: , This could ,not. , be
done, of course r teiseleSpily: We Sang . 3111.4 7
set's fine growling ' chorus, "Ntnis l'avons'eu,
votre Rhin Alleinand"' so patriotically and
well that au imitation came from the gend
armerie to display our uncommon vocal pow
ers in some other place: The "soldet" got hum
to a high window, and pursued enr"departUre
with his otliona refrain. We groaned. Sonic,.
body came .to the door to see U.S off, bearing a
large,kerosene lamm ;An enthusiast among us
ran lightly up and bleW it bit t , receiving some
applause for the supposed witticism.,
That poor joke suddenly Placed its in.the ex
quisite darkness of an April •• evening. The
broad meadows spread far on , either side the
31 arne, touched witlr a: - kind. :of 'fluctuating
green. The trees lay trabeeagiiiiist 'the 'sky;
each ,surrounded by a cone of young leaves;
like the Mune around a taper. The hills were
purplish and (lark. Lenoir wax thought to (*-
press completely the whole scene by saying,
with rapture: "It is a Daubigny."—Nation, ;
IVATCRES, JEWELRY ,'
t swis LADomis& co ,.
, DIAMOND DEALERS A; JEWELERS.
wiscumammtcy a, sum:. WARE.
DIAMOND
WATCHES and JEWELRY R'EPAIREID.
802 Chestnut St., nil%
I,adieS'and. Gents' Watches
AT/I°l'l4'4M and Itaport(ll, of 1130 , Tpait
Fine Vest Chains and i.,e-ciiitin.es;
In 14 and 19 karate.
and Other Jewelry,
i Of the lAteFt &signs,
ENGAGEJIENT AND WEDDING RINGS,
In 1$ karat and coin.
SOLID SILVER WARE FOR BRIDAL PRESENTS
,TABLE CUTLERY. PLATED WARE, Etc.
ia
MEDICAL.
Ayer's
Hair Vigor,
For the Renovation of the Hair.
The' Great Desideratum of the Age.
A dressing which
is at once agreeable;
healthy, and effectual
for preserving the
hair. Faded or gray
hair is soon restored
to its' original color
and the gloss and
Thin rair is thick
ened, falling hair checked, and bald
ness
,often, though , not alw,ays, 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 a pasty sedi
ment, it will keep it clean and vigorous.
Its occasional use will prevent the, hair
from turning gray or falling Of, and
consequently prevent baldness. Free
from those deleterious substances which
make some ptepa,ra.tions 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 cambric, and yet lasts
longer on the hair, giving it a rich
glossy lustre and a grateful perfume.
Prepared by Dr. .1. C. Ayer
.& Co.,
PRACTICAL AND ANALYTICAL CHEMISTS,
LOWELL, MASS.
mums $l.OO. '
80111 liVall Drtiet/iate .eierywhete. At wholesale liy
.M. MINIS A,CO.,Philiittelphia. inle)tuAlt•it-eow-ly
"IiNSTEAD OF . BITTER, USE SWEET
JL Mothers ! gii'e the Children
Ask your Doctor Tor QUINEsiE !
The Druggists all Nell je3 th.s.tnl3t§
L•RENCH ;MEDICINES
PREPARED BY
GR 'MAUVE` A:
CIIEMIATS TO 11. I. 11. PRINCR NAPOLEON,
45 Itur. nv: RICHELIEU,
PARIS.
INTERNAL 011.1,00 AL
NEW. cuit.vrivE
• MATICO. •
GEDIA.i;LT.SC • 00.; •
This new relloqlY ix prepared from the tkres of a Pe ,
_r_nyianippwrshruh,_mlledlls:o.and"ciirsii_promptiv
and infaillblythont any o.ll.r,...n.f,milatinnator; ro
snits. TllO gavot majori6 . phof ygicians in7'itik4,linssiO
(:erin any a nil .New York use uo ot Ito r remedy.
directions meows:la - ay each bottio and packet..,
Agents
Agents in Philadelphia; ~; •
• FRENCH, RICHARDS & CO., '
dei-Can N. W. cor. Tenth and Market streets...
PAINTS . ,
~..... ..
....r•fIIE.A.P PA.INTING.'-=
~.
:-. 1 100 lbs of the Ygoosa CourANT%
....,-, 7 . Cotontn,nitgr (coking 112..50) will,
4: paint as much as 250.1b5. of Lind;
sit / 3 . and wear longer. 'Tor particulars;
COQT 1 1. , \i)• whirr** S. BOWEN, Seev.. No. 150,
k' • "- • N. Fourth St., IPhilada .
-- - .
a .18-tn tL s 3m
CPPARTNERSHIPS.
C°PARTNERSHIP— THE' , SITBSCRI
b,rx have united hi Copartnership under. the - firm
of BAEGH. FARRELL t AVAEREN. for thu trnsaa•
Lion of the Paper and Paper Stock businean7 at No. 631
Chestnut utrrut, • Philadelplita.
• • ~ BAEHR, - • - ,
•
•
• . writ. E. F A ItILT2LL. ,
LUCIUS. 11. WARREN..
PlithAnEtrinA , Juno ISO. , • ,
311. 1 kICAL ' .'
QJG. P. RONDINELLA, TRACI-LER. OP
I.3"Shiping. PrivAte lepssope aid clasooe. lioßldenco,
Da S. Thirtetenthetregt. _ 44.112.6-Iy§-
TILE PA.j.4 iEYPTI.A.:O . iiP1.44,,E4:41!1 : 7-RA1M.P44411.1,4,-,SATII.4.PAYi:'! , WE,: ,t-1Ei.qp,:..1
freshness of youth.
~:F%i~-r~Oar SAES
oT.Txvicm..:myxs I .
i
; • Unsuccessful_ Burglary.
LETTER, OF 10:SSICS, DAVID BOWS /6
NEw Yonic, April 10,1869.
BEnniNo, FARREL & SILERMAR . , 4'40. 24
BrOadway:
iiightor 7..*iilt. ^ :nui storei
NO. 20 South street, was entered, and a desi
perate atte . piptirutdeilyrbimilarsTution 4pria of
your safes in our counting-room.
The key to the safe in which:.we'kept our se,
cufities was looked, inside ,of our fire-proof
bo6k-safe, the doors of 'whick were literally
cut to pieces; - from , this they obtained the key
to the, ether gap and,
..opened_ 'Forth;
'lately 'We' had' 'One Of' your'Burglar-Proof
Bankers', Chests inside, in which our valuables
were depOsited. - This they - went to work
at with a will, and evidently used
up,all their, time and toolsln. yain 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
laatured. iThey.tria wedging i the ikior, and
body of the Chest,_and the faithful sale beari
evidence of the lab& and 'skill'deVoted: to the
work. All was useles.4', and:44Bl%4th great satis'r
faction we report that, upon opening it we
found oursecurities all safe, and can therefore
`Cheerfully 'indorse 'the - BUrgidar-Proof Work
recommended by you: ..
• ,Yon7ill please send the new safe ,purchased
hy its to iout i tuntliai 7 house, and take the
old One to show that some safes are still Minn
factu red worthy of the ImMe.
, . '" 'DAVID ,. Doors &
HERRING'S PATENT CHAMPION
!SAFES, f‘THE MOE& REI.4 TOLE SECUr
RITY FROM FIRE NOW KNOWN," Manu'-
factured and sold by
/FAIIREIJ,
HERRING, FARREL : td SHERMAN; No.
2ZI Breadway,'K!ltw:Yoyk:
HERRING - 8i CO:,
HERRING, FARREL & SHERIIIAIsT,N.O
fe2 ttl this tW • 7 , •
MARTIN'S
PATE'INTT
Alum & Dry Plaster
FIRE' PROOF
SAFES
Are most - desirable for qnality,
. „
finish and price
MA
,RVIN'S
SPHERICAL BURGLAR
S'
. ... . . . ._ ..
Cannot be Sledged!
Cannot be Wedged !
Cannot be. Drilled!
BANK VAULTS,
VAULT DOORS;
EXPRESS BOXES,'
FAMILY PLATE SAFES;
COMBINATION LOCKS
Please eend Ibr a catalogue to
MARVIN & CO.„
7>l. Chestntxt Street,
ONIC HALL
26:5 BROADWAY, NEW YOUR,
108 BANK ST., CLEVELAND, OHIO
Second-Rand Safes of all makes for
sale low.
SAFES AND MACHINERY MOVED.
SARATOGA WATER.
STAR
I.SPRINGS,
SARATOGA, NEWYORK.
The analysis proves that the M aters of the
Saratoga -. Star Springs
have alatuciclarger amount of solid substance, richer in
weedical ingredients than any other spring in Saratoaa,
sod shows what the taste indicates—namely, that it is the
STRONGEST WATER.
It also demonstrates that, the STAltwAty.tt
, conbtiue
about .
100 Cubic Inches Vlore of bI ILI
Is a gallon .than any other spring. It is this extra
amount *1 gas that imparts to this Avatar its peculiarly
sparkling appearance, and renders it so Very agreeable
to the taste. It also tends* preserve the delicious flavor
of the water When bottled, and causes it to uncork, with
an effervescence almost equal to Champagne.
Mold by the leading'Druggists and Hotels through,
vet the country. ' • ,
a .
JOHN WYETH & BRO.,
~, • , •
1412, Walnut Street, Phllada,
Wholesale Agents. •
Also Tot sale by W.Walter lffullen,Chestunt Hill ;Fred
Brews. corner of Fifth and' Chestnut streets; I, J. Gra,
limbo, Twelfth and Filbert,' 11, B. Lippincott , Twentieth
and Cherry; Deck &Co.', i 2 Chestnut; Samuel S. Dilut
ing, Tenth and Sprticei. A. B. Taylor,lols Chestnut; P.O.
Oliver, Eighteenth and SPruce.;" F;Jacol.4, J
ant;.Geo. C. Bower, Sixth and Vine;',ltts,T. Shine,Broad
and Spruce; Daniel 8. Jones, Twelfth and Spruce; W. B.
Webb, Tenth and Spring Garden,
del-tu,th,s,lyrp§ : .
„____ATEAL ISTAT,E_ SALES._
Erg . ORP HAN S'• COURT SALE.—ESTA'J
~se.t. of John Wandell, Deceased.—Thornas
Auctioncerit.—Pursuant to an Order of the , Orphansi
Court, for the City and County of Philadelphia, will , bl
sold at, public tools,' on Tuesday Juno iith, 1869, , pt 1
, 'Oclock:, noon, at "Mel' hilndelPhla. Melange; thb fellow
log described preperty 4 late.of John Wandell,. deceased ;
viz.: - No. 1. Large and valuable Three-story Brick Beak
denceOlo.4ls North Fourth street, between Callowhill
and Willow streets, 20 feet frout,l3s feet deep. All that
lotof ground ,' with a three-story brick-rnessuage thereon
:erected ~sit nate on the east side of Fourth street,between
I%lll°lollll -and Willow iambi:, , being No. 415 North
Fourth street; containing in. front on Fourth street, 20
feet, and extending in depth 135 feet. Bounded south;
ward by ground conveyed to. John Brock, east by other
grOund of the said John Wendell, deceased, northward
by ground'now or late of Joseph J. Sbarplees, and west•
ward by Fourth street aforesaid.
. .
Together with the contemn use and privelige of ir;:1 feet'
wide alley; oxtentlin g - from the rear of these promiseo to
fliliwyn otreet„
N. B.—The improvements are is three:story brick reef;
dence,with three-story back building, has all the modern
convenieneen; large parlor, dining room and kitchen on
tiret .fleor;-has ens, bath, hot and cold water, water closet;
'heater, cookies; range,;tc:,marble mantels,marble base,
Ne.i. , .--Three-etory Erick liwelling, Nn. 416 Oiliwyn
street, in the rear of the above.' .A.ll t hat, lot, of groinel
, and the three-story brick niesoitage thereon' erected; sit
uate en the west side of Ifiliwyn,fimrsierly limiklestreet,
between Callowhili oil Willow streets, ureapl city, No.
416;tentaieing in front on Bill wyn street 16 fket, bitted
• ing on the north side thereof "one-half of it certain 3 .
feet wide alley in the clear, extending from. Hiliwyn
street, the depth of said lot, which to 43 feet, 'time.
Bounded southward by ground 'conveyed by' Joseph .J.
Sharpless to John B reek ,westvvard by the last hereinbe
fore described proinseS, northward by other g d
now . , or late' 01, the said' Sherpielle, and eastward 11Y
•MilIWYn street afortsaid. Together with the free, pee,
right, liberty and privilege of the said 3 feet wide alley .,
in the clear ue well for these said premises as 'the said
premiseithereinbefore last described ;in common with the
c - eters:and oetin piers of said premises adjoining on said
and of a water course over and along the eame,and
~ofdaying and repairing. tibiae Ofrondult therein ,for. the
purpose of introducing tire Schuylkill or other water ea
well luta •these frentines no the last above described
said alley is tabe end remain open and
uribifilt over at alttimes hereaftet forever, each of the
'said parties. their helix and assigns tone at the'expens•
of keeping the mild alley in good order and repair,
BY, the Court, JOSE Pit IrIEGARY, Clerk O. E.
M. THOMAS it • SONS,'Auet ioueerei •
MY17.2229jee • 189 and 141 South. Fourth street.
'• PUIII,IO SALE.-'--THOMAS icSON : S;
SEUL An et ion eerfi.—Vory . destrable Country Seat, twenty
acres - Washington street', Manayunky Twenty-first
Ward: On Tuetelay, June It dth, 69, fit 12 ' - o'eloek, noon',
will be Aida at pnblic kale, at the Philadelphia Exchange,
all that desirable country tent :and about 21.) , acres of
' . 'ground, situate on Wilsimigton'street, the borough of
- Ittiptiyunk. Twenty-first Ward; city of Philadelphia,and
•knoien mi the residence of Joseph Ripka, deceased. The
. improvt'ments are a large stone nimairon,'verY subStaii
'tinily built, reit,gli-cast, mid complete' in all Its arrange
meats; , containing parlor, dining, remit, library and
kitchen on the first floor; five large chambers on the se
toed floor. and ii chambers on the third floor; gas, bath,
het and cold 'wider. The, house ie supplied with' piire
' . spring Water. by a ram oath premises. Also,. tenant's
or COIICIIMIITCS house, carriage bowman(' barn, ice bowie,
green house, ke. - The grounds are. taxtefullY.laid out,
and decorated with evergreene and' other ormunonnd and
rare trees, and also a large number of fined treeti. The
ground is varied in its chanteter, and the whole place ie
pictured rue, and etre lir great beatify. The whole fs
well calculated for either a gentleman's meat residence,
or'for an institution, where beauty', capacity MO health
are essential. " • •
• 09 - Clear of all incumbrance.
" Immediate possession. ..
No. 2—Also ' adjoining the above on the southeast,,
*IA nnble lot of ground; 040 feet on a street to be laid out,
called Ripka street, by NO feet in depth to Walnut. street,
and through which flows a'guiall stream of water. mak,-
ing it desirable for will purposes. Also, on Mitch
street. Southeast of the almee, at the corner of- on
street, building let, 16 feet 6 inches front on Church
street, by 14) feet deep to Walnut street; said lot widen
ing to Xi feet of Walnut street, Also, adjoining the
above, 10 building lots, each 18 by lOU feet. Also, adjoin
ing the last named. 2 stone d‘relling houses, with lots,
each 18 feet 2 inches by 100 feet. .Also. adjoining the last
named, 3 building tors. each 18 by 1110 feet. Also u' join
lug the last nansed,lmilding lot. d 1 feet 1 inch by 100 feet.
Also. triangular lot and superior atone onnrry, on the
'Wegterly side of Washington :street, at the., corner of
31onrue street,
IrW Clear of all inemnbrance.
711031A8 & SONS, Auctioneerg:
my2i zjeli 139 and 141 S. Fourth street.
gfi4: TO .• CAPITALISTS, BLALDERS,
Coal Commission men, &c.—ThOmas &
Sons, Anetioneers.—Very valuable Busnwes Location,
'N. W . corner of Eighth mat Willow streets. 98 feet 10
"inches front on Eighth street. ni feet 101. inches front on
Willow-street. Large told deSiralde haven:ll yard;-large
two-story brick stable and twth , story • brick dwelling,
brick office, railroad track, shedding, planking, fenees,
coal scale, &c., kc.. &c. On Tuesday. .1 nee 80,,18i9. at
12 o'clock. noom will be sold at public sale, at the Phila
delphia Exchange, all that large and very valuable lot
of ground, with the improvements thereon (-meted , . situ
ate on the west side of Eighth street, running north
froth Willow street; eon Mining in front on Eighth street
98 feet 19 hiders, and extending in depth 149 feet; thence
southerly M feet 19 inches, and thence along Willow
street 133 fret 101,.: inches, being a nearly square lot, l see
survey,/ including all the improvements, viz.: a two
story brick dwelling, a two-story substantially built
...table, a one-story brick office, coal scale, fences, shed
ding and railrthal tuna-matt and track. The lot being
occupied and titled up as a coal , yard, and doing a very
profitableibusiness, being the best located coal yard in
the
The above lot is subject to an agreement made with all
other property owners on that side of Eighth street: from
Willow to .Nohle. to recede 3 feet from the present build
ing line. as new buildings are meted. The improving
eh:nth-ter of this ATM.. and the size of the lot adapting
it for any improvement, either for stores orthrge Commie
• sign depot, or manufacturing establishment requiring
railroad turnout, makes it an opportunity for investment
seldom offered.
Terms—One-half of the putehase Money may remain on
gromud rent. If desired; balance rash, or the whole may
be paid. at the option of the Purebaser.
&LW° to be paid at the time of sale.
M. THOMAS & SONS, Auctioneets,
139 and 141 Smith Fourth street.
my 22 29 Jc9
PUBLIC SALE.—BY ORDER, OF
the Court of Cemmou Pleas.—Thomas S Sons,
Auctioneers.—Large awl valuable Lot, Franklin Street,
between linter and Vine streets; 176 feet front, 142 feet
deep. Under authority of the Court of Common Pleas
of tließity and county of Philadelphia. will be sold at
public, sale, ou Tuesday, June sth, 1869, at 12 &cloak,
noon, at the Philadelphia Exchange, the following de
scribed property of the German Lutheran Congregation,.
viz.: All that large and very valuable lot of grenil,
composed of 7 contiguous lots, situate lin the WOSt sole
of }Tunklin street, le7 feet north of Race street; contain
ing in front-on-F-ranklin-street-173,feel—andetalnegin
depth 142 feet. It will be divided into seven 2t feet lots.
The above are located in the rear of the Eighth street lots,
on which Jtire now being built several handsome and
salriableStoresonalsing this valuable for that purpose,
as well ils Vi,ty iii , sTrable - for residences, tieing afreCtly
opposite Franklin Square. Each lot to be restricted by
a covenant against the erection or use of any slaughter
house, skitodressing business, hose or engine-house,
carpenter or blacksmith shop, a ify stable, or glue. starch
eatulle, or soap manufactory, or theatre, cirrus or opera,
convert ' , atom) or place • of amusement, or other building
for occupation of an offensive nature.
By the Court;
FRI:BBB ICI: G. WOLBERT. Prat honot ary
31. T.IIO3IAS 1 - SONS, Auctiouo,n4,
myl7 2.9jeri --.139 and 141 South FOllrtli r;trevt
L _ EXECUTORS'PEREMPTORY SALE'
2221L ., -Estate of Jacob 'Wagner, dd.-Thounts
!sons, Auctioneers. On Tuesday, Juno 8, 1959, at 12
o'tdoek. noon, will be sold at 'public sale, without re
sent, at the Philadelphia Exchange, the followingi de
scribed property, viz.: No. 1. Two-story brick dwelling,
No. h2O Noble street, east; of Sixth street. , All that two
story brick dwelling, No. 520 Noble street, and lot of
ground, situate on the south side of Noble Street, 27 feet
534 inches west of Magnolia street, Twelfth Ward; con
taining in front on Noble street 17 fret .I!.i inches, and in
depth On the nest side 70 feet C and on Cho east
01,11 30 feet 7 inches. and in breadth on rear end 17 feet :ii
inches. Together with the privilege of a 3 fret wide
alley leading eastward into Magnolia street.
the Clear of all incuntbrance.
ems-Cash. Possession with deed.
N0.2-Two-storyll
No. MS
Al) that two-story brick dwelling, o. 518 Noble street,
;Ind lot of ground, situate on the south sub! of, Noble
street, IS feet west of Magnolia street, Twelfth 'Ward;
containing in front nit Noble'street 12 feet 83.. inches, :Ind
dof)th 51 foot 71 4 inches. Together with the privilege
of a 3 feet' alley leading southward - and eastward . into
Magnolia street.
Me ,- Clear of all ineumbrance.
Terms=Casii. Rents far ;'....1/0 per tun nor.•
Sale absolute. • Ity order of Executors.
N. TllttMAl tC SONS„Victioneers,
my 20112je5 139 and 141 Sfflalt L ourtli sheet.
ESTATE.—THOMAS SONS . '
.L.lta. 4 Sale.—Elogind Four-story Brick Hosidenee, No.
.tai Spruce street. west of Nineteenth street, 20 by 104
feet to Ann street. the Tuesday , .Imie Sth. at 12
o'clock, noon. Will be sold at public sale. at the rhdatml
phia 'Exchange. till that elegant four-story brick MA
11t Ive. with three-story bad: building and lot of ground,
situate ou the north side of Spruce street, west of Nine
teenth street. NO. Da: the lot containing in front on
Spruce Street 20 feet. and in depth 104 re,t, to Ann street,
20 feet. Wide. It has parlor, dining room and kitchen on
the first floor; 2 chambers. bath-room adjoining, with hot
and cold water. water-closet„ kr...sit 1 ing-room and li
brary, with dumb waiter and butlers - pantry on the
A•c, , n4l floor 4 chemberg and 'store-roust net tie third
floor: 2 chabibers on the fourth Hour; gas , bath, water
claavt, range, 2•turnaves, stationary WaHlthlitild, 11111114 -
rolls. closets, and good dry tiller.
Mi , " Clear anti incumbrance.
Terms—Cash,-- , lnniietliate-posscsskin
•
7il. THOMAS A'. SONS. Auctioneers, •
In y2O 22 jett . 139 and 141 South Fourth stroet.
. EAT. ESTATE-I'B OMAS k SONS'
FA St - dr.—Substantial brick -Store and. Dwelling. No.
MI North Seventh street, and three-story brick
Dwelling. No. 7 Nicholson street, in the rear of the
above. On Tuesday, June 1144;9, at 12 o'clock, noon,
Will be sold at public sale. tin' Philadelphia! Exchange,
all that lot of ground, situate on the east side of Seventh
btreet, Its feet south of Roce street; containing hi front
20 feet. illHllik.(ll.4)til 107 tea to , Nieliolsani stri.et, Till)
itnprOventents are a very substantial three-story brick
store - and dwelling. with' attics, fronting on Seventh
street, and substantial three-story brick dwellillg• with
.attics. fronting on Nicholson Btreet; known 11e No. 7.
The Nicholson street house now rents for It':300 per an
limo. The walls being extra heavy, the whole could ho
t r • u a.i t ige r r y t . ed into one building to suit it bushier or 01a11-
1 erns— '3.000 unity remain on morttnige•
iff2l.lo to lie paid at the time of sale
M. THOMAS k SONS; Auctioneers,
niy22 V.INS • 13irand 141 South Fourth street,
C.IESTA'rEI--
.Tl-1014EAS 8.5 SONS'
katl. saie.—Yt ., ry Valuable Itherness Stilial.--Three , story
Brick Stare, No. Gab Ma rkvhstreet west of Seventh street,
22feet front, 132 feetvleep to Commerce street-2 fronts.
Tuesday,tl one 801.111611, at 12 u'eloek, noon, will be
sold et public sale, et the Philadelphia- Exellange,all that
largoUnd valuable thriu-store brick: nwssuago and lot
of ground. situate on the north side of 31arket street, 22
feet east of lii , voll2l street, No .:1;33; eontointitg in Front.
en Market. street 22 feet, and extending in depth 132 feet.
to.Coan street-r2ll'olllB. Tlw above is a. weli.,
i and
substantlullv bnilt With White• nia,blo iron'}
second etoi; has beep man ueettpled for •years its n
wholeSale. V roil and (Mnfet'llonery eetabl htuelst:
biu ();(..tends tho length of,ttai• .
.
7i raie—
• •- . T °MARI& SoNS, Allettetweriti,
in 22,Je5 , 130 unti 141 South Fourth street
AL.ESTATE
~- •,•t . .R.BAITit:S'.rATE.—THOMAS & SONS'
S S
Sgln.-Brick Stores and Bwollings, %Nos. 1518 and
.0 enll6whill greet. And Frame' Dwellings, Nos. 1517
'Mid 1519 Carlton street. - An• improving neighborhood for
, businttse.-On' Tuesday,'Juno "fith ; 160, !at 12 o'clock;
.nooll, mill be. sold-at• public sale, at the .Phil(idelphia
I.lxehtike,- all that lot of ground, with the' buildings
thereon erected. situate on the south sida'of Callowhill
street, 150 feet 4 inches west from Fifteenth street; con,
tailing in - front on.Callowloll street .32 feet, and iftde_ptli
100 .toot Ili., caritertAm
reet, a 30 feet wide Stmt.' , The
improvements on. Chllowhill 'etfeet are 2 two-Story.brick '
stores and dwellings, each having 11 front of 16 feet; with
• a depth of 100 feet to Carlton street; and on Carlton street
' alxvo-Story, frame dwelling, of .16 tea- front 'bh each lot
making two • distinct • properties. 'They :will.
separately, viz,: No: 1516,Callowhill etreet, , with the rear
dwellings Flo.. 1517 Carlton .street; Not 1520 Callowhill
street, with the rear dwelling, No. 1519 Carlton street;
Present rental $390; each property; ' •' . :
• , IQ - Clear of nil incumbrance. • • , •
Tenns-one-haif of the purchase money may remain od
mortgage, or all may he paid, at • the ord.% of the 14nr,
chaser, tffloo to be - paid ' at-the'time of sale on each
. ' 111: TI)O3fAS A: SBNB, Auctioneers, •
' my =29je 5' . ' 139 arid 141 Smith Fourth street:
Vi REAL ESTATE.—THOMAS SG SONS'. ~ : la. Sale.-liandsome Modern Three-story Brick Rest;
'deuce, with Aid(' yard, No. 703 North E ighth street, above
Coates street; 2.53 ii feet front. 'On Tilesda/I; June Btb., 1809,
at 12 o'clock, coon, vill be Sold- at publie sale, at the
Philadelphia, Exchange, all that thretestory brick mes
• image and lot,ofotmd • therminto belonging, situate on
gr
the. east' side of Eighth ' street, 21 feet north of Coates
street. 'No. 702; containing do front on • Eighth street 25
feet. 6 inches, . and extending , In: dept h 11.# feet, , The int
prove/node, are, a very superior brick residence, three ,
_story front, white marble facing, with attics, three-story
double back buildings, having every conveniedeetind in
complete, order; ,on first floor, parlor, diningsroom and
two kitchens; on second floor two chambers, sitting room.
• and verandah:" two chambers' In front and fh) in back,
building, two garret rooms. ' The house has a front of AI
feet; with, side yard of 5 feet 6 inches. Subject to a yearly `
"
ground rent of 4310, redeemable and payable in silver
money. A superior Esling range to kitithen; also, sum
mer range in 'out-kitchen, and heaters', in 'cellar-all
thoroughly underdrained..• .
_,. • • • .• . .
~. . . .: • „ 11..
THOMAS A: BONS, Auctioneers,"
• my22.29jeb , ' 139 and 141 South Fourth street.
E XECUT OR S'' . : ' PEREMPTORY
gi il Sale.-Estate of. Francie ' Thibault, 44,6 E-Thomas
& Sous Auttioneers. Very Elegant Four-story'Brown
Stone Residence, Ncr. , 11107 -- IVithiut street,' 34 feet front,
:120 feet deep to Lewis street, 2 fronts. On Tuesday, June
.Bth, 1869, at I 2 o'clock, neon, will be sold at puhlic sale,
Without reserve, at the •Philadelphia Exchange, all that
'very: elegant four-story brown stone . messuage,y with
three-story back building and lot 'of ground; situate on
the north side of Walnut street, : of Sixteenth street,
No. 1607 f containing fit, front ouWalnut : street 2U feet,
rand extending In 'depth 120 feet to 'Lewis street-2 &Mits.
The house is well-built 'and - finished in a very superi or
manner, in excellent repair 'handsomely pawed, awl
bainted, marble xestibule, 'hat/dreamt - saloon parlor,
reakfast' OOM lIIUT kitchen on. OM' first floor; 2.ehank
tiers, dining room and sitting room 'on the iiei!OlithiloOr.
1131t1 ,6 . chambers above; . nunteronsiSclosets.. ' butler's
pantry, stationary WiliilllitallthiOnith- robin, hot and cold
venter., inarble mantels, gas thrtnigliont; 2 furnaces,
'co'cking range, Ac. . ' ' ' - •..• ~ . '
Terms-Half cash. Sale absolute. Inimeiliabt
. poistes ,
.
sten.
Or Clear of till inetmiltraneo. .
•
. '
•- May be examined,duily,.from 10 toll and 3to 6 o'clock.
- M. , THOMAS 3c.S9NS, Auctioneers; :
_
iny.l7 2229 jes '. 139 U114.1.141,h0ut1i Fliurth street.
TRUS,TEE'S PEREMPTORY ~..9..LE.
.
Estate of john B. Sheller, dereased.-.Thomas &
' . ois,' 'Auetioneers.-Ilandsome - Modern ' Three-story
Brown4tone Residence, No. 1723 Walnut -street, east of
Eighteenth!: street, near itittenhonse 'Souare, 21, feet
front • 125 feet deep twLewis street; 2 fronts. On - Tuesday,
. June btlf, 1669, at .12 o'clock , noon, will be • sold at. public
sale: re-itheett reserve, at't he Philadelphia. E xehmige, all
that handsome modern' •3-story brown-stone massuagS,
with 3-story liack building and lot of 'ground, situateon
the north side of Walnut street, east of Eighteenth ct:,
No. 1723; containing in fronton Walnut street 21 foot,
and extruding in depth 125 feet to Lewis street-2 frontli.
The house is well built; has large and handsome porter,
library, dining-room. butler's pantryun the first flews;
2 chambers, - dressing-Tomo (with bath-tult and wash
stand/. sitting-room and bath-room on the tieeond. floor . ;
S eliamliersand store,room above; large kitchen, wwsli
• roon'i. with petulant/et tub, lint and cold water, cellar
paved, flag pavethent;gati, throughout, sta I lona ry'wash ;
siflude. funoce, cooking range, &e. . • • ~ 1
-Terms-Half (-ash. , • .
tr?•",,,t'leirr o f all too:nil/ranee.
hnnivdiate possession:, K eye at thin Auction Itteinis.
ealeabsoluto. .
• 11. THOMAS SON,S, Auctioneers, •
m3'l7 29P5 • 139 and 141 South Fourth street.
EXE 'l' Olt 6' Itl 3i1"rOI Y
tinTL — Eiasite of Wallet It. Hick, deceased.
'hones & Sims, ' A urtioneets, :Modern three.
story prick Residence, 'No. 923 North Eighth
street, south of Wallace ettret ,tin Tuesday, dnue`.tith,
.ltai9, at 12 o'clork,,noon, will be ' , add at public sale, beit4-
nut reserve, at the Philadelphia Exchange.'all that
-1110110111 three-stOry brick- inassuage. with the thre+
•story hack building and -lot—of ground, situate on the
east Side of Eighth street. 92 feet. P.,: ineiteS south (if
Wallace street, No; )41:, • runtaining itt front on Eighth
street is feet 4 inehes,•and extending in depth 105 feet a
loch tu. Logan start. The house haat parlor, iliniff 4-
room and 2 kitehens on the timt floor; gaff, bath, hot and
cold, water:Ml*llMP, cooking-range. &e. •
Terms—llall cash. Sale absolute,.
KG"' Clear of all incumbrance. ~
immediate nossession. • May he. examined any day
pees ions to sate.
M. THOMAS t SONS, Auctioneers.'
my 17 22 29;ie 5 139 afarl4l S. -Fourth-street.
oor_, REAL ESTATE.—THOMAS 'St SkiNs'
sate.— vaityide Rosiness Stands—Two
y Ihick.StOres and Dwellings, Nos. 10W and lir=
South street west of , Tenth street, with a -two-story
brick stable in thy rear on Bedford street, 32 by rat feet.
On Tuesday. June 9th, 1960, at 12 o'clock. noon, will - be
sold at public sale, at the Philadelphia 'Exchange, all
that lot of ground and the improvements thereon erected,
sit nate on the south side of South street, west of Tenth
street; containing ifi front on South street,32 feet. and .
extending in depth 120 had to Bedford street, The int
provements are two three-story bid , * stores, fronting on
Smith street. Nos. 10211 and ltr22; 'well-built WWI old estab
lished business stands; also. a two-story brick stable in
the rear on Bedford street.
Terms-85.000 may remain on mortgage.
M. THOMAS & SONS, Auctioneers,
tny27-29je5 139 and 141 S6atl. Fourth street.
,frft ! , RE kL ESTATE.—THOMAS SONS'
frp•wq! Sale.-- - Three-story' brick. Store and Dwelling., and 2
brick Dwellings, W. corner of Catharine and 'Essex
streets. On Tuesday, .tune 5, lib 1, at 12 o'clock noon,
will be sold at puolie sale, at the Philadelphia, Exchange,
all those brick messuages. and the lot of ground there
nirto belonging., situate at the S. W. corner dif Catharine
alba F.Ol:4`N streets; the lot containing in. frouVou
_rine.st reet feet iache,alatfxtatatitaomtleiltli
Essex street ce feet 9 inches, more or less, The Improve
ments area three-story brick store and dwelling on the
corner, a three-story brick dwelling:ndjoining on Catha
rine street, and a three-story brick dwelling on Essex
&freer.
Subject to a ymnrlp grim - sal - lent or - 5t82 - 50. .
• Id:THOMAS t SON S,Anctionvers. .
my 22 29 jeli 139 and 141 Sonth Fourth street..
art E A.L ESTAT.N.I.—TI - 10 .11 AS Sr, SONS'
Sale.—Vary Valuable Lot and Buildings, N. E.
corner of Broad street and Buttonwood street.:l9!z feet
front, 128 feet deep, 3 fronts. On Tuesklay..June gth,
1669. at 12 o'clock. noon, will be sold at public sale, at
the all that large mu! valuable
lot of ground, and the improvements thereon erected,
situate at the northeast corner of Brood and ButtonwoOd
streets; containing in front on Broad - Street 90 feet 414
inches. and extending indepth itlopg Buttonwood and
Whitehall streets 12S feet-3 very valuable fronts. The
improvements are a three.-story brick dwelling and brick
stable (Dotting on Whitehall street,and a one-story brick
fat etory on Buttonwood street.. ,
Siddeetto yearly ground rent of 62:340,and a Mortgage
amounting to :55,600. together, $19,600.
M. THOMAS SONS,Nuctieneers,•
Nos. 139 and 141 Soutlrrourth Street..
tt* 29.1(5
MASTER'S PEREMPTORY SALE.--
„,
L honnts a. Doris, A. 11et imwers.—lo the Court of Coni
-111 al Pleas for the City and County of Philadelphia,
Trustees of Isabella Coleman and her Childrni,vs. Moses.
Nathans, et al., of March Terra, 1805, No. —, Partition
iu Enuity.—ln pursuance to au order and decree made
'by the stud Conrt in the abov e, cause, will be 00111 at pub
lic sale, without reserve. on . Tuesday J ,
.Irmo 15th PM, at
12 o'clock, noon, at the Philadelphia 'Exchange,tho fol
lon i described property. v 12.: No. 1. Flue-story
Brlck.Balte-house, No. 150 Margarettit street. All that
throe-story brick inessuage told lot of ground,_situato tin
tloe south side of 31argaretta-st root, -between New Mar
ket and Second st root, :04out 00 feet east of.tiocond street;
them, extending oast 1111111 11101114 11111 motto tide ut z
3111ri111110/Lial'Olq 21/100i, MOM or_ leAs. to ' the_adjoining
tne,suago, southward 30 feet 5 '
2
inches• 'thence eastward
toot s inches; thence southward S feet 10 inches; then
oto.tward. 7 fort 4 inches; thence southward 17 foot lt
inches; thence westward 10 fort; thence northwanlly 21
foot 0 inches; thetWe westwardly 2tl feet, more or lass, and
thence northwardly 35 feet d invites, or thereabouts, to
the ]duce of beginning.
tki - Sale absolute.
No.._, 4-story .brick dwelling, N 44.347 North Front
street, i*ouding through to Water street, where it is
fire stones high. All that blink niessuage a n d lot of
grtmull. eittiato on the bank of Front 111141 Water streets,
10 feet 10 inches southward of Callowhill street: contain
ing in breadth north and south 13 foot, 'or thereaboutS,
111111 ill length cast and west about 40 feet ,More inure or losS.
Bounded north by till , corner ntessuage and lot of Thos.
Brit ton.eastwant by Water street, Southward by another
11111111Fh1111g1f lot, 111(11 of Thomas Britton, :11n1
west Ed bylfront street aforesaid. •
19 - Salt. Übsolute. .
N. n.s-Twu-stoo'Fritnic Thingle , cast Store, No. 171
Cullom-hill string. All that two-story Triune nii.BSlllo.o ,
:Mil lot of ground, situate on the south side of Callowltill
street. eioil of Second street, No. 124;:Aititaining_litirtelt
ou Callow hill street .0 feet, da extetallitg in 'depth tll
Poet. resew fig thereolit• for 1110. 10i a way 1001 Wi1113 . -
vourse forever for this property and that adjoining tin
the west, a certain alley Its the I.IIIIIC now existstteing a ft.
7 iitcht.e, tat width, and In depth 90 feet. more or less. It Is
alwo-stiwy triune rough-cast dwelling, with fico-stoey
brick back building: occuplint an 101 apothecary store.
81hiect to agromul-rent tit £O.
Sale absolute.
No. 4 .—Three-story Brick known no the
Eleventh Ward Blame," No. 126 Citllorthill street. Alt
that three-story brick hotel, called :the "Eleventh Wlllll
Muse, with buck buildings south ooh o 1
street east of Secena street, No. 126; containing in ft'ont
011 C{lllOWlllll street 20 feet, and extending in depth BU.
feet; together with the free use of the alley Itforesadd ,101
a way and water-eouree .forever. Subject td 19 yearly
ground rent of £2. .;. •
abeielitte. •
TIIOIIAS ‘it SONS, Anctioncer9,
my 20 :n.jeb 12 ' 139 and 141 South Fourth street.
•REAL ESTATE,—THOMAS & SONS'
Lek Sule.—On Tutnalay., June 15th, 1869, at 12 o'clock,
o
non. will be sold at public sale, at the Philadelphia Ex
change, the following described property, viz.: N,. I—
linden: Three-Story Mick Dwelling; No. 2207 Wallace
strt, All thut new modern three-story. , brick -
sunge, with tilrell-tISOYY back building and lot aground.
situate on the north nude. of , Wallace strceti west of
Twenty-second street, No. 2207: containing in front on;
Wallace 19 feet, tinil extending in depth 65 feet. It has
all the modern conveniences; drainer :Intel the sower,
Nil: 2 Threesetory Brick Dwelling; No. ^_2lB
Cbates st reet. All that modern' three-story , brick Mimi
.' suagn, with three-story back huildingu rind of ofttround,
nitunte gat the south fikie of Coutes street, west lit Twenty
second street, No. 2218; containing •in fronton_ Coates
street bi fret, and extending in depth 81 foot. - It has all
tho niottern convenivnees;dratitage into t)10110W0r, Ste.
M. THOMAS tt SONS, , Anctioneera,
'my:V.lo l 12 . 139 and 141 S. Fourth street.
aEAL,EsTA.T.E_
FtF% T ;REAL ESTATE—THOMAS & SONS' •
; Saie.—Very Valuable Business Location.—Thrce- -
story Brick Residence, N. W. corner of Sixth and Spring
Garden streets, ,opposite the Fountain. On Tuesday,
June tith,lB6o. at 12 o'clock, noon, will be sold at politic
saleint the Philittlelphist Exchange, all, that large and-
valuable three•story Vick messuage, with two-story
back-building and lot- of "Amount, situate . on 'the north
.- West corner .pf-Sixtk- and • Spring Garden streets; con
taining In trout on Sixth street 18 trot, anti' eitonding In
depth on the north line el feet; and on .the - South , line
along Spring qarden street G feet' 27f, .an
the rear Miti Z 3 feet 7% inches. The house Is -well And .
,substantially built; has saloon parlor, office and kitchen
on the first. tloor;. 3 chambers, dining-rod:it' (with dritub
waiter) and bath-roost on the second • floor,and -3 cluitu
. hers on the third floor; :has gas. Lath; Intt and cold water,
waterclpeet, furnace, cooking-range,..Stc.t vault under
pavement, large iirched cellar, which makes it, valuable
• for a witis bonito. Been • occnplod by phyitician' for a
number of . years, and- is a. good businesii,statid; situate
opposite the square that contains the fountain.;,,nolghber
hood very desirable.
tettbject to a yearly gtomid rent of -800,. -
.Terms—N7,ooo may remain on mortgage.'
immediate possession. - ,
Slay beexamined-nny day previous to Fiala. .
• ' T11031..-1S ,t.-SONS, Auctioneers,'
my3l jesa 130 and , 141 , S,'Fourth street.
ffbPVIILIC SA LE.—THOMAS & SONS
EEL Ituctioneers.—Let,' Cornelia Palmer And Ireliind
streetii, Eighteenth Ward, ;On '.Tuesday June. Bth, isea,
nt,l2 o'clock, upon,. will be gold at public sale, at itio
l'biladelphla Ilxeliange, thatlot of ground southwest
side of Palmerand sonthedet Aide of 'lreland etreet;'lato
Jackson etreeti Eighteenth IVard ;. thence. along Ireland
aired . 50 feet 4fidnclies;. thence ~eoutheastwardly 95 feet 8
inches; thence nortlicastwardly - 140 feet ter Palmer street
and nerthwesiwntilly ahiug PAlntcretreet 125 feet" 9' in
ches, to place of beginning •, c.
Tllo3lAii SONS, Atiakineerii,
my2lles 139 and 141 BoutkFonrth sweet.
EXECUTOR'S PEREMPTORY 'SA
.14. E.
--Estate of Zadock A.lngram, &
bus;' . .Auctioncers. On• TneSday,' June 2241, 1869 i at 12
o'clock, neon will be sold at:public .sale,i.wlthoutro-
Pliilatlelphia Exchange, the following de
iBi=lit.trteperty. viz.: I.—Two' three-story 'bticic
Stores and ltivellings,Nos. - 451 and 453 North Thirteenth
street: below' Buttonwood. street, with live :three-story
brick,dwellings in the rent, fon:lung a court; called4dair.
avenue. All those brick messuages and the lot efgrounil,
'thereunto belonging, situate' on the cast side, of ,Thir
teentli street; south of Buttonwood Street,'" the:lot 'con
taining in front on Thirteenth street 30 feet, andtts:
tending in depthf4,.% feet. . The improvements , are two
three-story brick storeis and dwellings, fronting on Thir
teenth street, Nos. 451 and 453; and :flve threa.story brick
dwellings in the rear, forming a court, called Allair,ave
1111C. r Together with the common use. and privilege of
V; feet wide alley', running into Buttonwoodstreet ,
• IlEir Clear id- all incnrubrance; • •
Sale absolute. , . • ..
. .. ;
No. 2.—Three-stimy Brick Dwelling, No. 15 1
18 :Viso
stmt, with a thremidorrbrick, dwelling in ••thtl rdor on ,
•State street, N0:1619,A8 those brick mettstutgeonntihe •
lot of ground. situate on the south side of Vine: st et,
'went M Fifteenth street, No, 1618;' the' ot Yeontaiiiiii in
front on Vine street 17 feet 6 inches;:atilit t3O foot! in depth:
to State.streetr-2fronts.l The 3mm - 0 - entente are st.t hree
story brick dwelling, No. 1518 Vino "street; - • lies 'patter,
dining-tome" end 'itunnuek' kill:bee 6W 'the Bret - llobr;-tgas,
:bath, ,tc,,,and a three-shirk britk dwelling in the'rettr oa
State street, No. 1519; containii,s rooms. . ~ , ' - 'l ,
~,, •
IW. Clear pr all incumbrinite,' . '. " -
By order of JOHN W , ..WHITE, Executor: - ,, -
•
N. THOMAS &SONS, Auctioneers,
• 139 and 111Sonth Fourth street.
pi 0.1 - CPTIANS. etOUILX SA4E.t7ESTA B
.1.,0f Chas.S. Johnson, a minor.dec'd.—Thereas Si 80;Dij
An et ioneers.--Well-Secnted grblind rent 44600 a Year, par
810.000: PursuauC td an Order - of the OrpharatrCourt
'tor the City and County , - of ;Philadelphia, mill. be• SOU
at, public sale, on Tuesday.;-Jnne 29, 1849 % at 12 o'clock.
noon. at the Phi ladelohlit Rtmliange, the 1011o*ing des
cribed property, late of Chas. S. Johnson, a minoroleed,
viz: All that certain •yearly ground rent ortoom tif• $2600,
lawful say crintoncy of the United States.of • America, is
sniug ' and,payal de on the Ist of January and _,Till} { ; b ut
of and from mcertairt wharf let or piece of greend? With
the largentrf Constructed theretin ,with.t he brick office
and Mime !taigas thereon erected, sittuite o n,the south
easterly,' e oftvPerm street.' at the distant° of-282, feet
6 inches sontliwitekrd triint - Ma Wen street, in - thelate
District of Kensington; containing In front' on: Penn
street 82 feet 0 inches, and extending then southeast
wardl y of that width in depth 290-feetmore or lesit,to the
River Delaware: ; • ; • • • ' ; , .• • • ..,
1 - .thc. Court, ~lOSEPH. 3 rEort:y. CIO& OD.
- JOSEPH: ENGLE, Guardian. • .
. .
.. r• Si. THOMAS &SONS:, Anctieneere,t
-- je3 6 19 26 - - - - - - -N0..139 awl 141,S. , Fottrth street. _
. . , ..
„ÜBtte -SAL E- . -,fi ITOMAS - S. , SO N b,
it Anetioneers—llinalsome Country . Seat, Mansion,
table and Carriage House, 11 Acres, Hereltanty yle
New ,Jersey, 4 miles from Cowden, on a, good driving
' road.—On TuesilaY, - .Tune ' 16; 1469, at 12 no - clock,inten 4 ,
Will be sold at pnl die sa 'mat the Pinlatlelphia Exchonge,
all. I hat handsone •Consitry Seot,,situato do,?tlerchatit
vine. Camden county: New jersey, containing nearly 11
acres. The improvements consist of a line Mansion
house, gas throughout ;:liars, carriage houtio, ids house,
and till necessary out buildings, in • complete order:,con
venlent to Philadelphia, bein only 4' MUCH frijol Cam
den, New „IPTNeYikiithillOti on g
lispHai of the Camden and.
Burlington Comity Railniail,hy which access may bo
bail five thimii a day, Vit.: at 7 and le A: M.', - anil 141, 3.30
linne diate possession. : ; May be . examined, any time
previous to sale. . . , • . , , . _
l' ('liaree.
of all incuntbran•' '' ' • -' ' ; .
Tiliiii , —thie-thiril cusp; 'silence limy remain ()Willett
!lige for 5 years. , luteres't 7 ,per cent. ; •• • .• -
- 31. THOMAS ,S: SONS, Auctioneers,'
- - ' 139 id 141 South FoUrth street.
In}•27jes 12
fr — PUBLIC SALII—THQMAS
rl d A uctioneers.--Very desirable tountiy Seat
1 , arm 23 acres, adjoining "erYStal - Springii„ ,
Hohnoti
burg...Twenr(4liird'!Ward, eight miles from Market
street, and near the-Turnpike and Holmesburg Station,
on the Philudelphin and iTrenton Railroad. On Tiles
day, June 15, Isal, at 12 O'clock MUM, will be Sold, At
yalilic sale, at the Philadelphia Exchange, all that desir
able country place and farm, sitilate on the Penny pock
creek and road leading to the Bristol turnpike;
Itolmeq
burfi' Twenty-third Ward, containing about , 23 neres of
excellent laud. the improvements • are a stone house,
contains io men's. good stone , barn carriage _house,
spring house. abundance Of fruit tend s , hade" trees; t rope
in the ground. Sc. , ' , • •
Tel in5—&3,401.1 may . remain on mortgage.
Immediate ,pessesson . Will. ba Shown on : apptiation
to the owner and occupant , Mr. Thimiags:sfott:.
- M..1.110.515S tk SONS; Auctioneot*-
my27,je5.12 jai? and 141 south Fourth street.
Ms PUBLIC SALET.H.O2IIAS &SONS,
ff.l6il Anctioneers.—Valuable TEMA of Land, 331 ucrea,
Cherry Jinn, Logan township, Chutes county', Pennsyl
vania, 12 miles southwest of Lock - Haven.--On TuesdaY,
June nth, 1869. at 12 o'clock; will , tie sold at public
sale, at the Philadelphia Exchange, all that traet et land,
containing 331 acres alma allowances, situate on. Cherry
nutiTin•Lugan township; Clinton eunntY, Panll6l l .•Yallia,.
about 12 miles southwest of Lock-Haven, the spat of Xs
tice of said county. it Is timbered with white and Yellow'
-plum oak and hemloCk, and a portion of the soil'
ceptible of cultivation. The Lock Haven and TYronii
Railroad is ationtlffliiilewilii , titut, and .the corvotot - ,the --
Oreat Western and Atlantic Railroad Wes bPinenfaiN on
or near this ttiiet
Clear of all'incumbrimee. • • ‘
11i;r This tract adjoins the property of the. ti Washing •
ton. roil Works,' owned lir the Coolish capitalists,
• • ' THOMAS SONS; Attetieneeri, •
je3 512 " • , .;139 and 141 S. Fourth street.
riatFar PTOItYSALE.—THf)34I, , AS
:1 . 1 Sons, A uctioneers.—Very Desirable Sakai. Dwell
us, No. 1429 Ontario street, Twentieth Ward.' On Tues
day:, .lime 15, 1869; at 12 o clot k, Mien, will lip sold' at
public. sale. , without rnserre, att the Philadelphia:Ex
chnge, all that three-story brick: dwelling, situate' on
the east sido of Ontario street, at•the distance of Lig feet
6 inches south of Jefferson street:in the Twentieth Ward;
contaiking . in front on Ontario street 12 feet 6 Inches true)!.
extending in depth eastward n 3 feet, ineludiag a - 3 feet.
wide alley...
. Subject ti a mortgage Of 2900. '• • • '
Sale absolute. • ' ' • ,
M. THOMAS & SoNS, Auctionoerdi
Jea 512 ' - 139 and 141 South-Fourth Street.
ESTATE:=THOM 'st SONY
,
seie.—meient Ihreo=story brick dwelling: No.
eul4 Sh ippon . street, west of Twentieth street . On.Tnem
dav, one 11th, 1869, at 12 o'clock, mem ..will. be old at
public sale,at the Philadelphia Exchangeiall that medern
mid 'new three-story brick messuage, with - twostory
back building, and lot oil ground. situate on the month
side of Sh input street, west of : Twentieth.,l4o. 21/I•4;,qon
bauble in trout on Shippen street 16 feet, and extending
iu depth 83 feet. The house is now contains 9 rooms and
kitchen: has gas-pines, bath, hot a nd Cold water, mime,
, .
Lints--e 1,3 00 may remahliniiiiiittgage.' - -
Immediate possession. Keys next bur west.
1t , :7! . Clear of all incumbranee, , • .
M. THOMAS A; SONS, •Alictroneera:
139 and 141 Sniff,' Fotirth Stn.
-
IFIEPARMT ENT -OF: pUBLIO 141G-1{-
WAYS,OFFICE,NO.IO4 SOUTH FIFTH STE CET.
• ' Pu ILA MILPII lA, .1 tine 4, ISA.
NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS.
Sealed Proposals - will be received lit,the Office Of the
Chiet Commissioner of highways until 12 o'cidek 4 , on
NoNDA. ath inst., fur the censtructiou of a Sewer on
:the llue.tif Hamilton street, from Twenty-second street to
,Twenty-third street , to he , 2 feet ti inauti in diameter on
Twenty-fourth street, from Walnut street to u point
eighty feet Mirth of Loelist street, three feet in diameter;
on Thirty -eighth street, from Sansoin•to Walnut street,
three feet:in diameter; on Fifteenth street, from Filbert
street to the smith shit. of Market street, to be three net
iu diunteter , with such tinin.lioles may be direpted
by
the Chief Engineer and Surveyor. The understanding to
lit tint tie contractor shall take bills p repared: against
the property fronting on said sewer tot e amount of one
d rand_filt cents for etch lineal loot of front on earn
side it the street as so mitclreash-pahli-theLbaltuicu
limited by Ordinance, to be pail by the city.
Whet the street is occupied by a City Passenger Rail
road tile - It, the. Sewer coustructed along side of
said truck in such manner as WA to obstruct m• : interfere
With the safe passage of the cars thereon; and no claim
for renomeration shall be . paid the Contractor by the
eompaoy using said track, as specified in Act .ef Assem
bly approved May SO, 181,9.
All bidders tire invited to be present at the time and
pine of opening the said proposals. Each proposaptrin
be to:completed by a certi fi cate' that a Bond hat .been
fibA Bribe Law Department as directed by ~ Onlinance of
lileY2Mh, MO.- If the Lowest Bidder shall not execute a
contract within live days after tho, ; work is, awarded ho •
will be doomed as declining, and will be hold liable oithia/ 7 " , ,
bond for the difference, between - hik bid and 'the' next
highest bid. Speriticatiomi maybe had- at; tiny De-Part
meta of hiirveyti, which will be strictly, adhered to. •
MAHLON DICKINSQN;
4 ' older Comilibisioner tif Ilfghwa s.
- BooTs - ANDAMMS:
NOTIUE TO THE PUB I I- 1 0 GENE.
ITIThe l GIAL
atest style; fltshinn and assoriinont of .
OUTS, SHOES AN TEIRS; - FOR MEN AND
1..-R UYQ, ......
Can be had at ~ .
- ' RR BST BO yr >a, ' -
ino . -
,' . No: ZO' NORTH NINTH sr...r.
Better elan anywhere.irr the City: , A •Int, Nirarrant , ed.
.ap2 Om§ . ..i.: GIVE HIM. A CALL.. ' - .
rIAS E1X 7 17111 - ES:—SITSKETTNERMILL
THACKAILA,.So. 71a Chestnut street, numufac
tame of Gas Fixtnns, Lamps, &c., .to., would call, tho
attention of the publie•to their large and elegant assort-,
!nog of Gas Oltaudglion, Pendants, Braeltots,_ke c ...l,,te t i,
also introduce gas pipes into dwellings and Wall Dikli -
lugs, and attend to extending, altering and repairing Ras
pipes, All work -warranted.