Daily evening bulletin. (Philadelphia, Pa.) 1856-1870, July 06, 1869, Image 3

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| so*-. 1 - *•-• ’
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B^^TIIISINJE^i^aSICES;'; . v
. yoa wonlil bo
fs-yia ?:iv. ii.
Blooming Cwnplciicn and rnstorcs
8' * ‘Svlito#~<J*»!aTegradDal,iiatUTaVand perfect ■,
and PliapTes,cures Tan.
’Hagnolla Balm snakes the Skin Smooth and
tihh'Eye bright, and clear ;tho Cheek; glow with
* lfOhth; ahd ; impartattiVeßhVpltttijp appear
■o Countenance. Ko lady need complain of her
on when ?5 cehts wIH purchase this delightful
t thing to dress the Hair with is Lyon's Kath
•• * - : ju)s*to,th,9,lm§
OrfcentiU creAm or Ma-
This preparfltlon has acquired a
which makes it Bought after by ladies coming
••^;'v_ v w:riyal fn its beantlfyingquaHties. Like all other
, «preparatioiiß,this has extended its sale
'* ; < become a specialty by its o;>vti merits, and is
of mere advertising notoriety. It is
s recommended frdm one customer to another on actual..
J®owledgo of its value and utility.-: Prepared by Dr.
V]^wuis % OovracDv’No. 4S Bond Btroot, removed from
Broadway, Kew York, and to be had of.all
r' : C£SwSrf&' . je26-stuthl2t§v
A' Noticeable Faet—Tlmt one way of
-J&jpiXuOhig to a mams renson is through his eye. Iu tnesi)
Bfttity-.times men-ol*e so deeply immersed m tlie-conunct
•f*&kgniflc«ut projects, that they forget all about the
condition of their sysiwus. and hence it la .that tuo Pro
:3>rictors of the PLASt\Tiox ; lllTTEßB;which l)y
sropßia*'purities the bloody improves' the tone oi tno
stomach, regulates tlio ‘bowels, and, indeod, invigorates
ihe whole inner man, are bo active m advertising. In
Snct, advertisements arc merely sky-rockets sent up to
-attract attention to a really good article.
CSlagsoi-ta Water-.— Superior to .
Berman Cologne, and sold at half the price. jyC-tii.tli&U
SteClt a CoSnndilainra Bros.’ Pianos,
Mason A Hamlinls' Cabinet and Metropolitan Or^ans^with
th No. 923 Chestnut street.
~sKinway’sli*ianos receiveu tlie hifrtipst
award (first gold medal) at tho International Exhibition,
Paris, 1867. See Official Eoport, aUho WMnroom ot^
aeU-tf NO. 1003 Chestnut stro'oj._
~Tho 'CT.IcUeri7.B Pianos’"rcicclvod the
****** award at
■ 914 Chestnut etroot.
EVENING BULLETIN:
Tuesday, Jwly 6. ISBff.
...., i 7\n r !>-rr ■' . ' ' .
leaving , the city fei“"the sum-
Bier, and wishing to have the Evening Bun-
T-wrTxr sent to them, will please send their ad:
•dress to the office. Price by mail, 75 cents per
% month. v
AFTEK IMBJaPESMSCE DAY.
* The Fourth 1 of July was distributed over
three days, this year, and the public have had
their annua] national holiday to their abundant
satisfaction. The delightful weather of yester
day. riiade the celebration unusually agreeable,
and the whole population was out of doors to
enjoy it. .The Park and the many resorts in
the neighborhood were filled with happy men,
•women and Children. Our reporters have given
pretty fMI accounts of the proceedings of the
day. They, also bave a long list Of fires and
Slight casualties which were the results of the
Superabundant consumption of fireworks and
crackers, and the very liberal discharge of pis
tols and guns. However much the holiday may
•have been enjoyed, there is a general feeling of
satisfaction that it .is over, witlvits turmoil and
danger, and especially tliit so few of the casu
.Sßtaes were serious in their nature.
iItF!T . ... •■. - ' : • ' . . ■
FAXBISOIIM PARK.
We are sorry to see that Councils hare
taken their summer vacation without making
appropriation from the Park Loan which
the Commissioners heed for the immediate
prosecution of their work. Tlie Park is now
•pen to the people, and they are rapidly avail
ing themselves of its inestimable advantages..
The Cbninhissioners will havertheir hands full
to keep VP with the increasing requirements of
the public, and, there, should be no hindrance
-thrown in their way. There was no quorum
•f Select Council, last week,—a large num
ber of thfe members having gone
to .Gettysburg, but Common Council
fcould have passed the appropriation recom
mended by tk& Committee of Finance, but For
aome feeling of jealousy winch seems to with
hold froiri tbie Commissioners that hearty con
fidence and support which the people so cor-
dially extend to tkem.~We trust that some
means will be devised to “tide over” the coining
two months, so that this .important work shall
not be brought to a halt, just at the time most
favorable to its rapid prosecution.
This temporary embarrassment of the opera-
lions /at Fairmount Park suggests, afresh,
the Mportance of securing some perma
nent and easily available income for
the improvements which trill be re-
<juired, for years to come, in tliis great Plea
sure Ground of the People. While successive;
Legislatures have sold out the valuable railway
franchises of Philadelphia for nothing but what
may have been paid for votes,Baltimore enjoys a
• .handsome income from its street-railways which
mis applied to the improvement of Druid Hill
fiPaxb. Now that itis tbo late, our people begin
1, to see the folly, and wastefulness of this’ policy.
|»But it is not altogether too late to prevent a
of this wasteful folly. The Twelfth
Knud. Sixteenth Streets Itailroad is the last that
K will ever rob this city of its valuable property
Br and, give, nothing hack in compensation. We
[■/•fcannot often learn anything good from New
K Yrnk’s, municipal government, but even New
B'York .has;found out that these railway fran-
are. worth, money, and she sells them to
bidder. If there are any more rail
built in Philadelphia, they should
and controlled as to give us a
income for the improvement of
.t Park, and when tills plan is once
profitably to new roads, oar.
lieginto consider the expediency of
possession of some of the old ones.
Commissioners are daily dernon
thtir iitness, for tlieir important duties.
and good taste', mark
.nibst-coainiendable degree.
public demand for wider drives;
caressed in the Evunixg Bul
weekwso, has ibeeri respondod to,
that Tista Drivej—hap-
Isto_ be
the other principal drives
iSS'ojd'-W* oll the,enlarged scale. With
If the liberal teadinessiof the
a meet tiie grtnrhig wants of
should be an equally liberal
je part of Councils to promote
Commissioners by all means
V ■ ■
I) Jot fora nxan to have lived nearly
■ luive been an .interested observer
ft literature for three-quarters of it
Bte fiave left a record of bis
andliiirnienof hisloitg
the benetit of those
such was the lot of
by his
•-r-s* 4 prr?r l 1
-V?*:
rfflend John beett‘lpnWfslUJd:*
1 Laiulor could' speak -of 'the jjcojilo oi , three
average ; generations as his contemporaries.
'Born,before theAmericanDeclaration <>f Indc
- pendenceylie Jived, to the: last days ,• of-tlie,
slaveholders’ rebellion against llie American
i Republic, nHe lived through a great - part'-'of
! the long reign of George the Third, through
‘the reigns of George» the Fourth,
; William the- .Fourth, aiiffl' 'through, twenty--
seven years of , the reign of’ yictoria. He
j remembered tlie first French Revolution, And
lived through the Directory, the first; Empire,
; the restoration of the Orleans dynasty, the Re
pulilic of 1848,
Empire. His first published b ook appeared in
1795,and be, oniy.ceastid to write for the public in
; 18(54; so that he was’an active author for nearly
the periodofthfee-scoio and ten years,which are.
considered to make a good old ,age for .the
average-man. ■ ■ ; • iX ’ '
.Bandm* was a very positive thinker, and a
Very emphatic speaker and writer of his
thoughts. He was sensitive, quick-temperedj
and, iii many cases, head-strong. Although in
tensely English, his disgust with certain Eng
lish politicians made linn expatriate himself for
the greater part of his life. He can scarcely
be said tohave loved the continent or its people.
He was theoretically democratic in liis opinions;
but 1 no case is known of his giving any kind
pf . aid to any people struggling for' free
dom. At the same tiine, while heartily.; con
demning tlie; ‘ English politicians, lie was a
stiu-dy upholder of the English tin-one, and any
attempt to overturn; or weaken; or . degrade it
would have received his hearty censure. There
are many singular traits in tlie character of
this Strange, independent and strong-minded
old man, which would furnish material for a
much fuller analysis than we have, room,for,
But there are only two or three points that we
are disposed now to touch upon, because they
relate to subjects that are now particularly in
teresting to tlie public. .
The question of the disestablishment of, the
Protestant Church in Ireland, o now agitating
Great Britain; is only a development of' the
Catholic Emancipation and the Parliamentary
Reform-questions of forty or fifty -years* ago.
In 1822, Sontliey, who was a nem>iis alarmist
andan intense conservative jin politics and re
ligion, wrote to Eandor in a fright : about
Catholic Emancipation and Parliamentary Re
form, wliicli, lie saw, had “become inevitable.”
He declared that either would suffice to over
throw British institutions, and that the only re
maining question would be whether Church or
State would go-first. Landor* then in Italy,
replied ln a'totally different vein. He said “the
polities of England are what Pitt and tlie.Par
liaihent made-them. Tlie Catholics should have
been emancipated at the Revolution, when
the best imported
they were conquered, that nothing might be
attributed to threats and power.” This idea
oeciu's,-in,different shapes, at various times ip
Landor's correspondence. One of his famous
“Imaginary-Conversations,” Which are his best
writings, is -between Washington and Franklin,
who discuss'■ the relations between England and :
Ireland.' iHe makessFranklin' propose certain
remedies for-existing evils in Ireland. These,
are: “to have .middle-men abolished to check’
absenteeism, Irish gentlemen ennobled to en-,
courage residence, the Protestant Establish
ment removed to arrest Popery, and, fisheries
established to relieve the potato.” On this
Irish Church question, therefore, Latuior was
nearly a half centiiry ahead of the public men
of England, 1 for the disestablishment is only
now struggling, amid many difficulties, to get
through Parliament.
On American subjects, as far as Mr. Forster
has thought fit to introduce them in his book
Lando;- was, in his middle life, very far astray.
Southey had written to him, expressing the.
opinion that because the United States went
to war with Great Britain in 1812, Mr. Madi
son and Congress were in the pay-ofJßona
parte! Landor did not agree with him, but in
Ins reply to this letter, he expressed detestation
of the’American character. - This detestation,
there is reason to believe, Landor had over
come in later years. The fa;»"jnot developed
in this biography; but during our civil war he
wrote some noble and manly words on the
side of freedom. The great Northern Republic
had grown so as to command his confidence
and respect. In his earlier years, Landor had
conceived the idea that the South American
Republics, then newly freed from Spain and
setting up for themselves, were to become the
fulfilment of all that was noble in the com
monly received ideas of popular governments.
Here is a part of a letter written to Southey in
March, 1812: ~
“I shall not cease to uphold the cause of
Lord Wellington, and to recommend his es
tablishment on the throne of Portugal; to revo
lutionize South America, which is a far more
civilized country than any in Europe (as I
myself know from conversing with both offi
cers and soldiers who were natives),and which
will otherwise be under the power of Bona
parte in another year. The people of South
America are of a military origin, the descend
ants of brave and honorable men; they are un
cohtaminated by blackguard religions, and
neither befooled by kings nor cowed by in
quisitions. Their religion and all their other
habits must perpetually remind them of their
ancestors; and those men are always the best
between whom and their forefathers no cloud
or indistinctness intervenes. A North' Ame
rican can see his only through the pillory: this
is a very different view from thatwhiclus pre
sented under the banners of Pizarro and
Cortes. It must also be conceded that an
Englishman does not lift his foot so high above
the dirt as a Spaniard, and that he
niucli sooner and much more.”
Landor must have , lived to realize the folly
of such ideas as these. He w;as ignorant, at
thirty-seven, of the people of both Nortll
America and South America. Revolutionized
South America has been, and still is, a vast
theatre of civil war*; while the North America
that he despised has become the greatest of the
, nations of the earth. Its abolition of slavery;-
w hich Landor always detested, must have given
him a better opinion,of ,it before he died. At
all events, lie is known to have been much in
terested in our country and our people in the
Tlastryeais - 'of - some
.competent American, among those" who were
acquainted with him in Italy, should not un
dertake a supplementary biography, in which
Landorts views and feelings, towards our
country, should he morefully exposed than they
have been in the otherwise satisfactory work
of Mr. Forater.
. It is currently' reported that New York jn
ten<tedo getup a nuisical-fe6tivalrwith-the-de
; sign of covering Boston with confusion and
making tille recent jubilee contemptibleby com
parison. yfe'are yeiygljp) tp hear this, not
A STEW YOUK niMLEE.
ILY EVENING BULLETIff-PH
THE;!).
sfonnaiices, for if. New York dependsriipon its
jown iesonr6esjitliere will priJbably-be ,sncli ,a
hideous jangle that all the .visitors will: -leavb,
town the next dayj but because, after the sour-,
i mean- ./fnlsehoodSi uttered
i against the Boston festival by New York nejys-.
: paper reporters,!-.with .long, but uneducated
cars, we would like - New • York to de
i nioiisiratc its infinite inferiority to. the
Hub in musical eultiu-e. It Is not possible that
[New York%i6uhr-organize such concerts .as
■ thosejgiven-in' Boston,.but of any domestic
. material With the exception of the few liun
\ died deluded musicians of foreign birth, wiiose :
■ ignorahcejdf the country excuses their choice
{of New York,as a placft of residenbe, .that city
• does not Contain enohgh good instrumentalists
i for a theatre. orchestra, and 'there are not as
many proficient chorus singers among its in
; habitants as there were fiddlers in the Boston
; concerts. As the siurounding country Is in a
! similar condition of artistic imbecility, it is
quite;; impossible that, any worthy at
tempt at monster concerts should be suc
cessfulunless a levy is madeupon the Boston
singers, and such strong inducements held out
to itlieih, that they -will he willing, to Sacrifice
their very natural aversion to appearance before
uncultivated, and wholly unappreciative New
Yorkers. If they do come, the festival will, per
haps,; be agreeably successful, and we shall have
tlie journals of that city shouting tlie praises of
the very vocalists who were thought worthy ol
ridicule when they sang in Boston. So we
should have,a correct judgment given for once
by these sagacious critics, not because they
Would appreciate tlie performances, hut be
cause.tlie music would he sung in Now York.
There would be just as much enthusiasm
if New York depended solely upon its own
people, and the inusic, consequently, was poor.
.The-journals exhausted tlie list, of eulogistic ad
jectives upon the Siengerfest given in: that city
hist year, and thus brought themselves into
disgrace with the intelligent people who knew
that festival to be, in an artistic sense, an utter,
disgraceful failure. A city which luis'sent Ital
ian opera to the demnition bow-wows for two
or three seasons past, while it went crazy, over
dirty French, buffoonery and Offenbach, and
filled the coffers of half-naked blqiidg burlesque
actresses, cannot he expected to have any just
appreciation of highart. ~ '
But if New York irudertakes this fest ival,the
journals of more refined and cultivated cities
will be careful to do it critical justice. As
newspapers everywhere else are published fbr
the purpose of giving correct information to
their readers, they will not suffer their pro-:
judices to strangle their judgment, and so heap
indiscriminate abuse upon the whole affair as
the New York journals did :upon Boston.
They will tell the truth about it whether it is
good or bad; and thus give the country an op
portunity to estimate correctly the failure or
successor the enterprise—an opportunity which
could not otherwise be obtained, for nobody;
outside of New York attaches any importance
to the musical opinions of the journals of that
city since their miserable attempts to ridicule
the Boston jubilee.
Not one of the Democratic papers of this
city has uttered a hearty word in favor of the
disgraceful nominations that were made by
their mob conventions of last week. The Age
has become totally dumb on the subject. But
the Sunday Mercury, which is always bold in
expressing its opinions, comes out honestly and
condemns the ticket as unworthy the support
of the party. Every respectable Democrat
entertains the same views, and it is evident
that the ruffians who have heretofore ruled the
conventions have qt last gone, too far. The
mass of the party are determined to submit to
them no longer.
DR. R. E. THOMAS, THE LATE OPE
-rator at the Golton-Dental-Associatlon, is now- the
only one in Philadelphia who devotes his ontire timo and
practice to extracting teeth, absolutely without pain, by
fresh nitrons oxide gas. Office, No*, 1027 walnut
streets. mhs-lyrp§ ;
COLTON DENTAL ASSOCIATION 081
limited tho anresthetic use of
NITKOUB OXIDE, OB LAUGHING GAS,
And devote their whole time and practice to extracting
teeth without pain.
Office, Eighth and Walnut street!
JOHN CRUMP, BUILDER,
1731 CHESTNUT STREET,
_ , and 213 LODGE STREET.
Mechanics of ©very branch required for house-building
and fitting promptly furnished. fe27-tf
PEREUMERY AND TOILET SOAPS.
H.P. <te C. It. TAYLOR,
C4l AND 643 N. NINTH STREET.
POSTS AND RAILS, POSTS AND RAILS,
X all styles. Four-hole, square and half round posts.
Shingles—Long and short, heart and sap. 50,000 foot
first common boards.
Shelving, lining and store-fitting material made a spe
cialty. NICHOLSON’S,
snyfi-tfrp Seventh and Carpenter streets,
JJENBY PHILLIPPI,
joKMyrp
(1 WARBURTON’S> IMPROVED, VEN
tilated and easy-fitting Dross Hats (patented)in all
the approved fashions of tho season. Chestnut street
next door to the Post-Offlco. oc6*tfrp
UPRIGHT GRIDIRONS AND '-BROIL
EBS, Toast Racks, Mont Stands, Fluted and Plain
Gridirons, and agcnoral vnriotyv of Cooking Hardware,
for sale by TRUMAN & SHAW, No.B3s(Eight Thirty
five) Market street, below Ninth. ’
YOU TURN THU CRANK OP A OHER
EY-Stoning Machine, then drop in your cherries,
nmVthe stones slip out on one side ‘While the fruit falls
in a plate beneath. And thus you can do two bushels an
hour. They are sold by TRUMAN & SHAW, No. 835
(Eight Thirty-five) Market street, below Ninth, Phila-
-
MATTRASS, UPHOLSTERERS’, BAG
and Sail Needles, Sprigging, Pegging, Sewing,
dug. and Ice Awls, for sale at TRUMAN &
SHAW’S. No. 836 (Eight Thirty-five) Murket street,
below Ninth. *
IQ£Q—<*KT YO UK HAIR CUT AT
lOUv* KOPP’S Saloon,by first-class Hair Cutters.
Shave and-Bath oely 25 cents. Razors set in order:
Ladies’and Children's Hair Cut. Open Sunday morning;
125 Exchange Place
It*
906 yuii - f,o(i
-' ARCH STREET, PHILADELPHIA.
JOHN MAYER informs the public that 110 has lately
importcd.au immeuso lot of
“HUMAN HAIR.”
no is the inventor oftlio best hind of Hair Work, and
challenges tlio world to surpass it. jyi-tit-rps
jyjAGAZIN DEB MODES
MBS. PBOCTOB.
Clodks, Walking Suits, Bilks,
Dresß Goodß,Locoßbawl6,
Ladles’ Underclothing
: — and Ladles’ Furs.
Dreßses made to jnoa«uro In Twenty-four Hours
JOED AN’S CELEBRATED BURE TONIC
Alo for invalids, fnnilly üBO, Ac.
The subscriber la now furnished with his full Winter
supplyofliis highly nutritious and well-known hover
age . Its wldo-sprend aud lucronßlng use, by order of
physicians, for iuvnlidfl, use of families, &c., commend it
to the attention of all consumers who want a strictly
pure article; prepared from The Inrst materials, und put
up in the most caroful manner for homo use dr transpor
tation. Orders by mailor otherwls^prom^tl^juijjpnod.
' —— -■ - -- - - No, 220 PearHtreer
de7- , elo Third and Walnutstreets. '
T IQUID RENNET—
IJ A MOST CONVENIENT
ABTICLK formuking JUNKET or CUBDS and WHEY
-in a few minuterafrtrifling-expeneor- Made froin fresh
rennets, and always rtliabll. JAMES T. SHINN,
je9,tf.rps Broad and Spruco stroots.
Marking" with indelible ink;
Embroidering, Braiding, Stomping, &c.
£l, /it TOmf, ifilbcrf street.
CAEPENTEE AND BDIIDBB,
NO. 1024 SANSOM BTEEET,
PHILADELPHIA.
1014 WALNUT BTBEET.
ILADELFHIA s TPESPAY, JUL
FIF TH EDI®
BY TBUBGRAPIR
/, . -. / *y ; -y...;. r v .v Vr>
FROM,NEW YORK
Meeting of the Grand Army of the Potomac
LATER CABLE NEWS
LATER ADVICES FROM SOUTH AMERICA
Minister McMahon at Buenos Ayres
Progress of the Laying of the New Cable
Progress of the , Virginia Election
The Grand Army of the Potomac;
[Special Despatch to the Pliila. Evonfnsr llullotin.l
New - Yokk, , Tilly o.—The second and last
day’s session- of the, Grand Army of the Po
tomac closed to-day, and the commanders and
braves parted, as they met, full of cheer, and
happy. As the object of the meeting to-day
was simply to fill the remaining offices, to
hear letters read, and to say go6d-l>ye until the
next meeting, Major-Geneva] H. E. Davies
was chosen Treasurer; General Geoige Sharpe,
Recording Secretary, and Win. O. Church, of
the Army and Navy Journal, Corresponding
Sercetary. , .
Philadelphia was chosen as-the n.ext place of
meeting, and April ilthjthe day on which. Grant
received the sword from Bee, was tho day
fixed. , ■ : ■■ ■ ■ : ■
A badge:for the Association, designed hy a
Philadelphia jeweller, was' adopted.
The Executive Committee to make arrange
ments in Philadelphia will ho appointed oy
General Sheridan, President of the Associa
tion. ’ ' ■' /
Lettr - ead f’"’ G' :ls T< v
jjctters -were read /rpiii >eherals x'erry,
Hancock, Geary and Hooker, expressing their
disappointment at not being present.
With rousing cheers, the convention ad
journed.
By the Atlantic Cable.
»' Lisbon, July 6th.—-Later advices received from South.
Amoricaiiavebeen, received by the arrival of the mail
steamer, from'Rio Janeiro on June 10. The war news is
unimportant. 1 . • ' <
Minister MucMahon vne at Buenos Ayres, and would
Kail at once for Rio Janeiro.
London, July Cth.—Up to Sunday noon:the Great
Eastern had made 1,269 miles, and. had paid out 1,420
miles of cable.' 1 ,
Brest, July 6.—Advices from the Great Eastern are to
10.30 ouMoudny night. The distance sailed is not'given,
but all were well on board. The‘signals are still good:
Paris. July 6.—-No further troublo is apprehended
among the miners at St. Etienne, and other places in
that vicinity,and the strikes arc in a fair way of settle
ment, Forty-nine more of the recent oleetious for mem
bers of the C orpß Leirislatif have been declared valid.
,Madrid, July 6.— I There were several Republican de
monstrations throughout Catalonia yestorday. Herrera
recently appointed Minister of Justice, has resigned.
London, July 6. —There is unusual depression i.u the
cotton trado inLancasliiro,nnd soveral firms in tho busi
ness have been obliged to suspend.
Despatches from Cork stato that outrages on tlio part
of the Fenian organization, continue to be perpetrated.
The police near that city were attacked night before
last by concealed ruffians, and soveral of them badly
hurt. Some arrests were made yesterday on sus
picion.
The Timex to-day, editorially, on tho subject of the
nnniverFHn-' of American j independence, says: uAmeri
cans now feel that they can speak of< themselves and of
their neighbors in a calm and dignified tone without
boasting of the old time, and wo may expect most of the
old acrimony to vanish. The American people ought to
he in a friendly spirit after their monster peace festival.
Such demonstrations in favor of peace and such prodi
gious condemnation of strife ought to luivo u softening
effect on tho most strenuous asserter of the Alabama
dptas.”
Cork, July®.— I The Common Council of this city yes
terday unanimously passed a resolution calling upon the
government to release the imprisoned Fenians. A
monster meeting was held at Blallon yesterday. Reso
lutions wen; passed and speeches made protesting
against the reply of Sullivan, member of Parliament for
Mallon. to Mr. Moore’s resolution touching tlio rclonso
of Fenian prisoners, In tho House of Commons re
cently.
London, Jnly 6, Evening.—Consols 931* for money and
account; Five-twenties dull at 81?«; Railways steady;
Erie, 39)£; Illinois Centra!, 95^.
. Liverpool. July 6, Evening.—Cotton a shndo easier;
Uplands, Orleans, 12%d.: sales to-day, B,OUO bales.
California White Wheat,los. fid.
London, July 6th, Evening.—Linseed Oil firm; Refined
-Petroleum' firmer at Is. 1 Gild. Sugarqyietuud steady;
afloat, 28s. 9d.a295.
Antwerp, July 6, M.—Petroleum firm at 4S?£f.
RlciiaiONDf JulyGth.—The Olection, as far as it Ims
progressed, is the qnictcst ever hold in Virginia, and the
city presents the appearance of a Sunday. A body of
troops arc bivouacked in the public parkland tho ambu
lances of the two parties, covered with national flags ,arc
driving about for the weak and infirm. A number of
blacks have openly voted tho Walker ticket without any
of tho hostile demonstrations from their brethren which i
characterized the lustelections. The whites, uptol.SU
P.M., have 439 majority in the three wards.
Washington, July 6. —Commander It. \Y. Meade has
,bocn ordered to special duty in tho Bureau of Naviga
tion; Surgeon Thomas Hiband .has been ordered to ape--
cial duty at tho Quarantine Hospital, near Portsmouth,
i-New- Hampshire;-Captain. John. j1...8^-Clita—ifl-detached:
from the command ofthe Pawnee and pluccxl on waiting
orders. Tho following are also detached from the Paw*;
neo and placed on waiting orders: Lieutenant-Com
manders Henry B. Seely, B. P. Smith and 'W. Wheeler;'
Lieutenant Henry C. Nields and Chief -Engineer George
S. Bright.
Eiisigms Frank A; Courtess, George A. Bildy. Thco-;
doro STWillis and George A. Norris are do inched from
tho Pawnee and ordered to Washington for examination
for promotion.
General Sherman returned tp Washington this morn
ing from St. Louis.
Information has been received at the Navy Depart
ment of the death of Midshipman William Wire, of
Augusta, Maine, who was drowned on tho 18th of Juno,
near San Francisco. He was on duty on tho steamer
Mohicun.
Secretary Robeson is at tho Navy Department this
morning, Oiigagcd in tho duties of his office.
SpniNc.riKLD, Mass., July ib—The ..day was celebrated
in the usual way, with the addition of velocipede
matches, trcch and hall playing, which were witnessed
by a large number of pooplo.
CiNCJNNATijJuIy ti:—lndependence Day was celebrated
yesterday by pic-nics principally. Last night the
grandest display of fireworks ever mode in tills city came
off and wns witnessed by 2CJ,f 50 spectators.
St. LOUI6, July G.—• The National Anniversary was al
most universally celebrated here yesterday. The Mer
chants’ Exchange, courts,and all the public offices, were
closed and business generally suspended. In tlio even
ing there was a fine display of tire-works. A fow acci
dents occurred, but nothing serious has been reported.
There is no Cuban recruiting offico in this city, as ad
vertised in some of tho Eastern papers," and no known
Chinese Emigration Company in this city.
Burglary—Balloon Ascension.
Boston, July 6.— An unsuccessful attempt was ma le
yesterday to rob the safe of Chafe© & Cummings, in East
Cambridge. Hugh Riley, one of theburglnrs, was ar
rested, and says fie belongs in Now York, an l hat aorvod
two terms of imprisonment there.
Tho balloon ‘’Monarch of Abo Air,” which ascended
from Boston Common yesterday, lauded at Lakeville, 40
miles distant, two hours after starting.
Havana, July f>.—The steamship Louisiana arrived
hero yesterday. A number of torpedoes have been
found in tho cool at the gas works in the city of Espirito
banto. •
Elmiha, July C.—A breach in tho foedor of Chemung
canal,near Corning, suspends navigation throughout
the canal for four or five days.
‘ ‘New York, July G.— Mrs. Christopher McGuire, who
was beaton last night by. her husband, has since died.
McGnirc has,beon arrested.
G. C K.OPP,
, Providence, It. 1., July 6.— W. T. Bennett’s dwelling,
at Bristol, was burned yesterday. Tho loss is $6,000. In
surance, ®2, COO. --
Rochester, July 6.—Robert Do Garmo was shot, last
evening, while entering his own house, by a burglar,
who had secreted himself therein.
Charged with Larceny.— CarolinG Gray,
alias Carolina Fletcher, alias Louisa Smith, bad a further
hearing before Alderman Kerr,this afternoon, at two_
o’clock, oh" flu* charge of the larceny of clothing from
the residences of ludics that she lias bocn employediu us
a domestic.
Fanny Kent, residing in Upper Darby, Delaware
county, testified that Curolino came to live with her in
July. 1860, 1 under the name of Caroline Flotcher; staid
two days, and then left with two silk dresses, ono lawn
dress, sleeve buttons, juwolry, and some sllvorwaro.
..valued at. 115160; I have not seen tho woman or goods rliico. '
• Mrs. Elizabeth Golbeck, residing at 212 G. Girard
avenue, testified that the woinancamo and .hired- with
her, in .December, JBG7, under tho name of Louisa Smith;-
staid six duys; then leit in the middle of tho night, rob-.
biug the money-drawer ot #2OO, besides taking a number,
of ansfliw^'flhd'dther'We'affhg'nppnrGrr-' 1 ’' VT "
Detective Levy testified that lie arrested Caroline in
April, JfifO, fop the larceny of silk dresses and 'other
valuable articles from Madame Eilsbergh’s, in Market
street, above Fifteenth street.
Held in #2,C00 bail for a further hearing onthol2ih
net, •
J 2. REPAIRS TO WATCHES AND
Musical Bo?ccB, inthehost wanner, by skillful
JuA WWfcmeD'. FARR & BROTHER,
w J^9l»«fitiinOtree|>eJowF(?flrtii,
> 4:00 O'Oloolt.
The Tlrglnln Election.
From WasblnKton.
Celebration of tbe Fourth.
From Cuba.
From Kew YorU.
Fire In Bristol.
Shotby a'Bwrglar.
CITY BULLETIN.
r 6, 1869,
fihe^proo
;b a fetera 1: v Tdf-' f bqb>
ffllßßiiTGr’k" PATENT
mmmm banker’s chest.
THE REAL TEST!
BDRSLARS FOILED!
PEBBYVILLE STATION, PENNA. 8.R., )
■■ ■ -.f : Jun0J2,1869. i
MESSES. FABBEL, IIEBHING & CO.,
No. 629 CHESTNUT Streot, Philadelphia 1 .
Gbnts—A persistent but unsuccessful effort was made
on tho night of Huy 29,1869, to drill tho Bankers’ Chest
received from you a few months ago.
From facts that havo come to our knowlcdgo, it is evi
dent that tho attempt to opon it was renewed on Sunday
evening following. Finding all efforts to drill it use
less, the effortwas then.mado to break tho look. Tho
hammering was heard by ■ parties in tho neighborhopd
for.several hours, but supposing it to arise from tho
railroad mon replacing a defective rail, oxcltcd no
alarms Tho tools, with thcoxccptlon of tho drills, were
left. It is ovideut that they were not ouly prepared, but
perfectly familiar with the construction of your Chest, '
That they failed Is another evidence that your
Bankers* Chests aro what yon claim forthem—Burglar-
Proof. Respectfully yours,
' : . , J; BALSBACK, Agent.
HERRING’S NEW PATENT
Champion. Bankex-s’ Safes,
Made of wrought'iron and hardened steel, and the
patent Frahklinite, or '
“SPIEGEL EISEN,”
The best resistant to burglars 7 tools yet invented
MANUFACTUBED ONLY BY
FARREL, HERRING & CO.,
No. 629 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia*
Herring, Farrcl &. Sherman, 251 Broad?
way, corner. Murray Sheet, N» Y.
Herring, Farrcl & Sherman, Jiew Oceans,
Herring & Co., Chicago.
' ■ ' 1 :J ' - ' ■ ■■■' jtrMtfrp
CHAMPION SAFES!
GREAT FIRE AT CAMDEN.
(■' CAMDEN, Juno 7,1669.
MESSES. FABBEL, IIEBBING& CO.,
No. 629 CHESTNUT STEEET,
PHILADELPHIA.
DeabSihs: At the. very destructive fire of Afessra.
McKeen & Bingham’s Saw* Mill, which occurred ou the
evening of the 6th iusUiut in this place—
Tho SafemauufnctureO by you, belonging to tho late
firm of F. M.Bingham & Garrison,waB iu tho building
and subjected to ft yery severe test, as the firo raged
fiercely for several hours; and so great was the heat that
the brass plates were melted off, anti to our. groat sur
prise, whon the Safe was opened,wo found all tho books
and papers uninjured.
Yours, respectfully,
SAMI*. B. GARRISON,
Late ofF. M. Bingham & Garrison.
HERRINGS PATENT CHAMPION SAFES, “THE
MOST RELIABLE SECURITY FROM FIRE NOW
KNOWN.” Manufactured and sold by ,
FABREL,HERRING & CO., 629 CHESTNUT.Street,
Philadelphia.
HERRING, FABREL & SHERMAN, No. 2M
BROADWAY, Now York.
HERRING A CO., Chicago.
HERRING, FABREL & SHERMAN, N. O.
Moro than 30,000 HERRING S SAFES have been and
are now in use; and over SIX' HUNDREB have passed
tbrongh accidental fires, preserving their contents in
some Instances where many others failed.
Second-hand Safes of our own and other makers,having
been received in part pay for the improved Herring’s
Patent Champion, for sale at low prices. je2s-tfrp
W ATCMLS. JE WELItY, &C.
Removal.
J. T. GALLAGHER,
JEWELER,
LATE OF BAILEY & CO.,
Has Removed from his old location, Thirteenth
and Chestnut, to his
NEW STORE,
1016 CHESTNUT STREET.
jy3-tfrp§ - ■
CHESTNUT AND TWELFTH STS.
NOTICE.
From tho SIXTH of JULY until further
notice we will CLOSE our Store at FIVE
P.M.
BAILEY & CO.,
. • , JEWELERS.
jyitj>.»-tq_iotrp_
excursions:
Catawissa Railroad.
Tourists’ Summer Excursion Tickets
TO
Niagara Falls, Montreal, Quebec, White
Mountains, Boston, Lake George,
Saratoga, New York, &c.-, &c.,
Are now ready for sale at tho Ticket Office,
, . 811 Chestnut Street.
jy27trp§ •_ - • • •«
GLOUCESTER POINT.—GO
MBBsSSiMauyourself and toko the family to this cool,
uelightiul spot. New steamoru, with every comfort,
leave South street Blip daily everyTew minutes. jelB-3m§
BARGH, FARRELL A WARREN,
DEALERS IN PAPERS
OF ALL KINDS,
631 Chestnut and 624 Jayne Streets,
PHILADELPHIA.
■— -jyfi-Zm— •_ ' I ■" - ;
HUFNAL’B
PHILADELPHIA PHARMACY,
Corner Washington and Jackson Streets,
. „„ , Cape May City,N. J.
y23Bm4pii
A?\ LOANED DPONi DIAMONDS, WATCHES,
6 & JKWELE^T^ a ° Tuiko ’ &c " ut
OLD-ESTABLISHED LOAN OFFICE,
Comer-of-Third-aud Oaskill-etreots,
Below Lombard.
N.8.-DIAMONDS, WATCHES, JEWELRY,GUNS,
&c.» - : '
FOR SALK AT
REMARKABLY LOW PRICES. r
'j»y2*tfrp§
;s. ; ,S kf i'*sf •," ■ '■’**
MITCHELL & FLETCHER’S
66 M. £c
"• ' ,T ’ .'M. 'l'-j il' ■
UNSURPASSED
WASHING SOAP*
1204 CHESTNUT STREET
ap2I yrn
CHAMPAGNE.
KUPFERBERG'S. IMPERIAL.*
One of the finest Wines ever used in t.hn,
country, and among the most popular known
In Russia. \/\
Received direct through the Agency, and
for sale at the Agents’ prices by
SIMON COLTON & CLARKE,
$. W. corner Broad and Walnut.
“ FIRST OF THE SEASON.”
NEW SMOKED
S A L M O ISM
FRESH SPICED SALMON
IN CANS.
DAVIS & RICHARDS,
ABCH and TENTH STBEETS.
jc2C rptf , ; -:• ; ■;
TflE FINK ARTS:
GREAT NOVELTIES
Looking <3*l ass ©s>
PICTURE FRAMES, fcc., fcc.
New Ohromos,
New Engravings.
EARLES’GALLERIES,
810 CHESTNUT STREET.
HASELTINE’S
GALLERIES OF THE ARTS,
1135 Chestnut Street.
Always on FBEE Exhibition and for sale, Fine and
Original Oil Pointings.
A complete stock on band of old and new Engravings'
Ohromoa, FrenchFbotographs l Looking Glasses, Artists’
Materials, Ac.
On Special Exhibition—Admission 23 cents.—“ The
Princess of Morocco,”by I.ecompto of Paris; ’‘Bearing
Homo thcSheaTes,”jfj'-Texon,of Parie.withotherraro
and great work* of art.
DRYGOODS.
REMOVEDTO REAR BUILDING.
ENTRANCE ON NINTH STREET.
COOPER & CONARD,
During the rebuilding of the front half of their Store,
will be fully prepared to transact business iu’tlir-ir com
modious rooms on
Ninth Street, below Market,
to where they invite their friend* and patrons,promising
a succession of inducements from u mammoth stock.
DEPARTMENTS AIL IN PULL BLAST.
Vigorouß efforts to reduce summer stock
Ruinous prices for fancy goods.
Extra low prices for desirables goods.
Attentive appliance to business.
Buyers* interests always in view,
And Well meant endeavors to please,
Will characterize the summer campaign
LINEN STORE, tP
838 Arch Street*
1138 CHESTNUT STREET.
SPECIAL CHEAP LOTS.
Linen Sheetings, Si 25; .worth $1 75.
PLAIN DRESS LINENS,
In Flnx Gray, I/ead Color,' Chocolate, Flo,
uamoh.BuOr, D rlnirose, &c.,
FINE QUALITIES, FROM 87M CENTS.
LINEN DRILLS AND DUCKS
BEDIiOED 15 to 25 PEIt CENT. TO CLEAR OUT TIIB-
STOCK. .
LADIES’ HEMSTITCHED HDKFS.,
2D, 25, SI, SMi, 50 conta. ——-
The cheapest' Handkerchiefs wo have opened this
season. ‘
WHITE LINEN CAMBRIC DRESSES.
JUST RECEIVED, ' ,
Bargains in Thin White Goods, Piques, Ac.
VTfHITMANte GKILAT OONPECTIOND
VV hud Chocolates, for 'pleasure resorts and ter
tourists. Manufactured only l>y Stephen F. Whitman,
an( L sold* wfeoJesalH r and retail, at No% .1210 ,3l«rlkot
street. . . ;.~.r ciadmrpii
TJldB INYAIjIBS.—A FINE >I08I<;Ai
Jj Box as a companion fox ftiesick chamber; tho finest*
assortment in the city, and u great vuriety. of airs to so
lectfrom.-Enported'«iirectbi:ifAnßi-. 11RO:[ ,
mhlGtfrp 324 Chestnut stropt. below Fourth.
I. ■ -i SIMON GABTLAND,
IHIPP 01 UNDERTAKER
HfipttthXUriwptii treot* »jymw
te*assifj}~==
myl3-lyrps
SEeeNDEDITI®
, BY .TELEGRAPH.
Intent Market* by Cable
liQWßON, July 0, A. Mr— 1 Consols; 92ga93for
liotb money ana. account. ! United States Five
twenfieS,-fill. Brie Ilailroad/191. Illinois
Central, 953. , > .i ' ' " 1
I/rvßßi'Oot;. July 0, A. M.—Cotton market,
Middling Upldnds, 121(1.; Middling Or
leans, 123 d. ' The sales to-day are estimated at.
8.000 bales. The ehipinenw of cotton from
Bombay; iit> ’to the 22d: nit.; are reported at.
22,000 bales. .
Uermnu MunlcalFcstlvnl.
BAijTiMOREj July :sth.—The'Northeastern ,
fbmgerbnnd, of America, will celebrate their i
grand hi-annual musical, I'astiyal (toeiug the*; >'
Eleventh National Singing Festival), in this:. ! i
city; on the 10th, 11th, 12th, 13th, 14tli, loth :.i
and 10th iof July. The Northeastern Sanger- v
bund (Singing Union) comprises societies from
the Eastern, Middle, and Southern States,
numbering about IGO societies: 120 in New
York and vicinity; .10 in Philadelphia and
vicihity; 10 in Baltimore ahd vicinity; embra
ei ng about 1 (1,000 active and about 20,000 passive
members. A large majority of these societies
will be present. . y. .. "V,.: ; > w;
The Executive Committee here have been' .
laboring for the last fifteen months to make
this: festival tho; superior of ali preceding
ones; and the different societies, have been
practicing for - the : last eight months. Mr,
Leiiscliow, the festival leader,! about four
weeks sinee visited New York and Phihidci- <-
phia, and there lmd rehearsals with tho united ,
singers of those cities. - ,
In addition, to'the societies mentioned, a
number of'eminent composers from Europe,
and representatives of European societies will
he present. ,
The visiting societies enjoy the hospitality
of the city, being required n, comply with the
rules qf atteiiihng.proijiptly thevrnheareaLs,
and provided they pave etlectually stiuhed.thw
festal chofuSespas'evidence of which the re
spective leaden must send a faithful report to
theFcstiynlCommittee. :$> f ; f > , :
I'nvitati dim'were giventor prize eomposi
tion« to the composers of tlie Old and
World, to be pertormfed at tins festival, Hixty
eight composers.! responded. - The, first prize,
s](>o gold, was awarded trtUrofcssbr Franko,
of Crossen, Prussia; ,tlie second prize, 550 gold,
to Professor Metzger, of Vienna, Austria.
Tho first prize composition willbexung by the
BaltSmbreatte; with ftdl orchestyal'accompani
ments, on Tuesday, July l.t. _
For the prize-singing at the icstival, four
valuable prizes,' consisting of two grand pi
anos, from Knahe’s manufactory , valued at
51,500 each; and two square, ditto, trom
Gachlc,.will bp, awarded. -, 5 . .. ■
These- festivals are celebrated onlym New
York, Philadelphia and Baltimore, and have
taken-place as follows: ’ '--%■■■ ■
First in Philadelpela, 1850; second, m
Baltimore, 3851; third,- in. York,
1852;, fourth, in, Philadelphia, >Ba.»; fifth,
Baltimore,. 1851: sixth, hew York,
1853; seventh, Philadelphia, 1857; eighth,
Baltimore, 1850; and in i «>1 were suspended
on account of the war. The, ninth in New
York, 1803; tentliiu Philadelphia, 1807,and tho
present is the eleventh. • . .
At the last festival in Philadelphia the
Bangerbund adopted a resolution having tor
its object a more strict observance and atten
tion to the highest cultivation of vocal music.
Specific and minute rules were laid down lor
this purpose. Among the rules is one that no
society m cities where more than one society
exists Shall be admitted into the Saogerbund,
unless it has at least 20 members.
The business of the Sangerbiind is trans
acted by a hoarcl of seven, five of whom reside,
in the city where the festival takes place, and
one each in the other cities. . -
The programme for the festival embraces on
the first day a grand public reception of
guests, with an imposing procession. On the
second day the. performance of Handels
oratorio Messiah, by a chorus of
about four hundred male and female voices,
organized and selected from among the best
talent of the city, assisted by an adequate
orchestra—the solo parts- to be
sung liy artists of acknowledged reputation,
under the leadership of Prof. Benschow; on
the third day prize singing' by the diflerent
societies from abroad; on the. fourth day a
grand concert, in which all the societies will
unite; on the two following days a repetition
of choruses and picnics on the ground.
A. number of dlstinguisbe*! musicians from
Europe have already arrived, among whom is
the eminent composer,Capellmeister Tschirch,
from Gera, a special delegate to represent the
German Bund of 80,000 members. He is the
special guest of the Sangerbund of 1 hiladelr
P Madame Hotter. Madame Friederici,
Himmer, Joseph Hermann, and-other-tUshn
guished opera singers will be present. . r ■
Baces at poutUwtj^le.
PouoHKKKi-BU:, July Otli.—The iirst race at
Doley’s Park yesterday, mile heats, for 8300,
was wen hy “Fet.” The second race, for
S5OO, was won hv “Finnegan,” and the third
race, for $l,OOO, by “Bosa Golddust.”
State of Thermometer This Day at the
Bulletin Offlce. ■■
10 A. M........ 74 deg. 12 M........ 77 deg. 2P. M-—.is deg.
Weather clear. Wlna Kortheaat. ■
FINANCIAL ANJ
Philadelphia Steel
FIBfT I
100 City 6a old 95 14 bU Beading B 49;»
4000 City «a new lta WO M idi do tranf 49jj
1000 do c 100 100 sb do bSO 49.50
600 Lehigh 6a BLn lta 88 100 ab dos3owu. 49’.
3000 Lehigh Gin In lta 93? i lOOah • do do 49U
1000 do c 94 300 ah do oUs 49.31
80 ah Venn B 5674 500 ah do bli Its 49.44
.28 ah dorecelpta 5654 100 all do c 497..
12 ah do lta 57 100 all do 4954
■26 ah do c 5674 16 eh Lehigh Inlß 55?=,
ehCiroi&Ainß 131 150 ah NV A Middle c 4.81
3ah do ItOU 300 ah tit Nicholas Cl 2-1.16
4 ah Leh 24av atk 8654
210 City Ca Old 85 100 ah Phil & Erie l,lt 3174
500 City 6a new 10U 100 all do bW 31>,
2000 Bead Jl 6* 44*S0 fW 100 sh do biW M>c
S S il-ffl 91 100 aWßcading blO 495,
1500 Lehigh Con Ln 79 , 300 ah dobS&lut 49.4
44)0 Lehigh 6a Bln 87JX 800 ah do e lta 493-16
4ah Com&Am 131 100 all do c . 4954
it ali do 2dys 131 2Uoali do blO 4to
Ish do 131 700 ah do Its 49)4
6 aliLeliValß du hill 6574 200 ah 1 do fits 49.1-16
14 ah Morris Cl pfil b 5 60
’ ancoNn
200 ah Leh Nav atk b3O 36)S|
2,0 eh do 361.'
100 eh Sch Sav pld 1,30 20)41
160 all CatawleaapdrB6o 37
ion ah do « 37 .
lUh)h —dtr —-b3O 4 57-'
3 Cam X Am B 13074
Philadelphia Money Market.
IJTuksdav, July 6, 1869.—Th0 local money raurkot to-day
Knows ftmeasuru of.'relief-resulting from the disburse- -
mrnt of large amounts of gold and currency since the Ist
inst.. but it Is doubtful if the steady demand lor cur
rency In tho Interest of Southern and Western products
will not keep the demand and supply pretty evenly
balanced for some weeks to come. The
banka continue to. do all they cun to accommo
date their customers, and as the cull for
money to-day to very light, after “Independence Day,;
no difficulty is felt in obtaining accommodation on good
necurily. The rates at the bonks for callloons on Gov
ernment bonds art* 6a7 per cent., but on miscellaneoUH
securities 708 is the usual range. Discounting is‘gener
ally* done ou tho street, as the banks continue consorva
tive, and the rates for uiscouuts aro Bu 9 per cent, for A 1
Cl s.'be U fronb ac tion s in gold to-day are light, and the
market is lower, opening at 137 and at 12 M. soiling
lit 136, and weak at that figure. It*.Government Loans
thero is little doing, and prices are rather unsettled.
-The stock market was <iuiet, but firm. City loans were
Htoadv at 100 for the new and 06 for the old issuos. Lehigh
Gold Bonds closed utH&aM. f 4 , ,
Reading Railroad closed afihst at 49?£. Ontnden and.
Amboy-Rall road was steadv.nt.l3l. Pennsylvania Rail?
road was stronger, aud closed at 67. was bid for
Jlline Hill Railroad! 36 for North Pennsylvania Railroad,
and 31>i for Philadelphia and Krlo Railroad. -.r ,
Bank, Caiial and Passenger R. R. shares were without
__A semiannual dividend of!foor pw cent.,.clear of
faxes retinal fk*B2 per shUreTrlfire been declared bjrtli©
Mino Hill'and Schuylkill llaven Railroad Company,
payable on and after tho 16th inst. y : _
The Directors of the Spring Garden-Insurance- Com
pany announce ii dividend of 6 per cent, on the earning*
for tho last six months, payable on and after July loth.
* Notice is given. ;to the- Stockholders of the Delaware
and Raritan .Canal Company, the Camden and Amboy
Railroad and Transportation Company, the Now.. Jersey.
Railroad and Transportation Company, and tuo-.1 hila-*
dolpbia and Trenton Railroad Company, that tlioy will
bo entitled to subscribe for; 15 per cent, of their aggro
gale interests in tho four companies in new stock, at
par,ns follows : One-half between July-22 and August
10,1869, and tho other half between January 22 and Fob
r,TbeßankbfNorth Amor lea. declares a somi-hmnial
iUvldend bf lO per cent.i payablfl on and after July 8.
Tho Pennsylvania Compauy. for Insurance on Lives
and Granting Annuities declares a semi-annual
dend of7is-Jper cent, on-thocapital stock.—----- —
Messrs. DeHavon : No. 40 South Third
atroetvraAlto the.following Quotations of the rates ofex-
at 1 JVM.; United States Sixes of 1881,
B’a, 10-40>, 'sl’SOVjttrS'p'r cont. Onr
»rebcy, logJfajißJi: il)U#Wßnn<mn<Mnt4re^N9lte»vl9Wi.
' Smith, Khttd(nph'«Cb.; blinker*; Third kud'Chertirot;
sttcctK,quotaat: 15% o'clock Uß follovv*bflold.l3ti,a; U. S.
-Slxeg.lSJl, U7%a1175; ikUfolfi&MmimmX C do*. Mo.
;‘JBM, 117yaJJ8l; do. do.,' lfato, JJ8y»n8?«! d0.d0., July,
toes, H6‘J«iiek do. do.; Jnly.'lBuf,n%all6?«: do. do.,
July;' 1808;. )ld/;n1167{; do., V* 10-40. IdO.'aOlOS',: Cur
•r Jay cloUotf&-.HU.ito GovernmOiit.socurHieij, Ac,, to
dny. as follows: U. 8. «K lft)l,'Jl7?«all<*« a*kafjto},'m
■alilli; Jo. ;l#l, SovomW. IIKS, W’.ia
119: do.' 116*„im6%: do, 1807.1Hi?»alL,? c .Vjdo.
,”1868, lW'i'ftllfe:, Ten-forties.- mJiaVUSii Gold, 137 J«:
-Pacifies. lOOllaWOit.. -
. % fKJj-'
Philadelphia Produce Market. „
Tuesday, July 6.— As usual during “Fourth ol July ;
work, th" Hansnclloiiefii all .departments are of a vary
linmod character, and there In:frat little fluctuation to
record in prices. ■ < " s. •
No. 1 Quercitron Bark is, offered at. 847. per-.-ton, hut
there NllO demand for thr'nrticlc. .. ' , ,
The Flour mnrket presents no now aspect, the demand
befnff extremely llnmed and confined to th© wantaoftbo
homo , consumers, r e Small sales i (buprrflno
iutBfaBs 25 per barrel; Extras at sr, MM.roi aWJiarrela:
L Wisconsin and Minnesota Extra .JamllY “f ® l ’ 1 25 A?t 7 '
. some Pennsylvania do. do. at 86a8.6 50; 200 barrels Ohio
am! Indiana do.do. at 86 75n57 00; nnd fancy lota at-
S9niu to. ns In quality. •. Ityo Flour moves slowly at
lie 25. Prices ofCorn Meal aroiiotninnl.
' * Thu W heat market Is almost at a stand, and prices re
main as last Quoted. ; Kales jOl’-gooiUimd prime! Kid at
SI 40nl 47;Ambcr at 81 COi-aud White at 81 65al 70.
live command* il'MlConi is steady, with sales of
Tellow at !Ba94c*, end ’Western mixed at 80a9kj. Oats
are unchanged; S/WO bushels Western Bold at 7en77 cents.
V Whisky Is «n|ot and ranges from 94c. to 81 oa. AOO
bids. “Mt. Pleasant, 1 ' June, 08, tax paid, Sold at 82 20.
The Sew York Stock Market,
f Correspondence ol the Associated.Press.l.
New yoßK.lnlyO.--Stocks unsettled butnetive. Money
7 per rent. Gold, IKK: 6-20 s, IM; do,
1K?I, d 0.,. JI7K; do.„ 1665. - tin.. lW.i;nuw, 116«; 1807,
110%; -1868,-116%; HMD*, 108 k; Virginia6’s, 61; Missouri
C's, 88%: Canton Oo„ -00: Cumberland profeired,
01; N. y. Central, 195%; Erie,- 29%;* Heading,.9B%;
■ Hudson River, 103%; Slfclilgan Central. 110; Michigan
southern. 109%; Illinois Central. 144: Clovcbmd and
Pittsburgh, 100; Chicago nmUßockl Island, U 8;. Pitts
burgh and Fort Wayne, 106; Western Union Tele
graph, 38%. • _____
f Special Despatch to the Phlla. Evening Bulletin.}
New Yoiik, July 0, 12% P.M.—Cotton.—The market
this morning was quiet .and firm, bales of about r/J0
•halt**, Wo yiioto n« follow*: .Middling. Upland*,3Ca;
MiddlingOrTeniiB.3s, ! , '
Flour* Ac.—Bepcipt*. 14,0)0 barrels. The markefcfbr
Western and State Flour is active and higher. The
sales - are about BJX» barrels, including Superfine
State at 85 25a85 Oil; Extra State at §0 80*86 7(l;.low
grades Western Extra, 86 UsaB6 35. Southern Fleur is
fairly active and firmer, especially .standard brands;
sales of7«u barrels at 80 46*86 8) for Extra Baltimore'
and Country, and 86 40a88So for Family do. California
Flour is firm with a fair demand; sales of 600 barrels.at
86 00a88 40 lor-old via; the Horny and-8a 9(iaB? 49 . for
new Tin the Isthmus. Bye Hour Is firm, with a fair
business; sales of 400 barrels at. §3 90a86 30,
Grain.--Receipts of .Wheat, 2424)00 bushels. Tlie mar-.
kef is better, active and unsettled. The sales aru.OMMO
bnshi-lsNn.SMtlirnnkee,'Bl OOal 52,and No: I do. 81 06
al OS. COrii;—Receipts—l4SJ«l bushels,, The market
is active with a higher demand 'chiefly for consumption.
Kales of 30-13)0 bushels New* "Western- at «7aH9 afloat.
Oats—Receipts—3s4)oo bushels. * The market!* better
with a good ib-mand- Kales of 304X10 bushels .at-7rfaBo.
live, Bariev'- and .Malt are nominal. Breadstuff's are
xira'-Wkat excilt d under unfavorable Western advices
regarding tlie crops, and prices are advancing.
Provisions.—The receipts of Pork are .1! bids. The
market is dull at 832 for new Western -Sirs*., Egrd—
- Receipts'. 75 pkgs. The mnrket is easier and dull. Me
quote fair lo prime steam at VSfaWic. ... ~,
Msldsky—lleeeipts- 370 bbis. The mnrket is dull. M e
- quote Western fre-e at !bcaBl- . . , ~
Groceries are generally dull, and prices are nominally
of the Associated Prcss.l
NevvYoek. July o.—Cotton quiet: 300 bales sold at
34i-. Flour firm and advanced lOnlSc; sales of 84X10 bar
rels; State at Ssa6 t»; Western at B*a7 25. W beat buoy
ant and advanced 4a5c,; sale* of 254JW bushels No, 1 ut
81 65%: No. 2at $1 50. nud Amber-at w>. torn
firmer and higher; sales of 43.000 bushels lolxed West
ern at 65sS9c. by canal, and 86a89c. by railroad. Oats
firmer at 7sc. Reef quiet. Pork quiet: new Mess at 832
-uKS 12%. I.ard dull: steam 19a19%c. W hisky quiet at 81.
Baj.ti:jo«e. July o.—Cotton quletnral steady at 31%.
Flonrdnll but prices are nuchangcd. W beat steady;
Prime New Red 81 CoaBl 70. Yellow Cora 93n98. Oats,
dull. Mess Tork quiet at 834 00. Bacon quiet bntfinu;
rib sides.lB; Clear do. 18%a1e%; Shoulders. 15; namß.
22 bard dull at 3); Whisky scarce and in demand at
81 03a 881 01.
COMMERCIAL
k Exdirag* Sales.
JOA.RD.
200 City 6s new 100
1000 N Penn R7s 87 .
1000 Sell Nav 6tTB26d« 65
28 sh Ponn R o 66K
172 sh do Its 66? f
100'sh Mfi-
Harketflby Telegrapli.
Roporietf Bnlletin.
I.ONDoNDKKRy—Shi P Ktailacoua, Cassidav—6.loo
sacks salt 508 brick baths Kobt Taylor A Co. ,
SAGI A—Burk Triumph, Nichols—sC3 hhds sugar 59
tcsdoSA-W Welsh, ... . '
CARDENAS—Bark Almoner, Gary—743 hhds 75 tea
molasses Thos Wottsou A Sons.
BAHIA—Brig F Gerstacker. Anderson—2o.3 cs sugar
338 bags do A F _
CAluABIES—Sclir Mary Louisa, Norton—293 hhds
30 tes do 8 Morris Wain ACo. _ , ■ ,
PERNAMBUCO—Brig Avance, Schuldt—37oo bags
8 "ifA HD E NAS— Brig Eudorus. Haskell—l6s hhds 29 tes
molasses order: 2 bols do captain.
NEVIS—Brig J Howland, Freeman-375 tons sulphur
or* Moro Phillip*. _ ~ _ ' .
SC.—Suamfbip Prometlicua, Gray—
-44 cratt-s 2 bhtb vegetables Champion, bonder A Co: »do
tomatoes Schaffer & »<»««: Sfi do vegetable Maag&Dct
%Tilet: 41 bales yarn Hay & McDevitt; 13 do A T Stewart
Si Co: 44 do and domestics 313 do cotton Clachorn. Her*
rinff A* Co: 20 do cotton 6do wool H Sloan Si 30n5.2d0
wool 2do skins A Whilldin & Sons; to c o«on Ht-nry
Winsor & Co: 16 do Bandolph & Jenks; CO hbl# tnrpt I<2
do rosin E HBowle> ;31 tes nee J Graham & Co; 8 craU s
A Bonder A Co; CO pkgs sundries various
couftignecs'l • • '
MAKING BULUSTIN.
POST OF PHILADELPHIA July 8.
WSee Marine Bulletin on Inside Pane.
ARRIVRD THIS DAY. , „ .
Steamer Whirlwind, Sherman, 36 hours from Provi
dence, with mdse to D S Stetson A Co.
Steamer Frank, Pierce, 24 hours from New York, with
mdw.* to AV 31 Baird & Co.
Stemner J S 81iriver,Biggans,13 hours from Baltimore,
with mdseto A Groves. Jr. , „ _ t , .
Steamer Norfolk, Vaucc. 36 hours from Richmond,
with mdse to \V P Clyde & Co. v
Steamer Ann Eliza. Richards, 21 hours from New
York, with mdse to \VF Civile A: Co. . , . .
Steamer Chester, Jones, 24 hours from New Yprk,mtn
liiciso Cl>’de-& Co; - ...
Steamer Susan Grumley, from Hartford, Conn, with
mdse to IV 31 Baird.A* Co. _ .
Bark Ann Elizabeth- Norgrave, 9 days from Turks
Island, with salt to Wmßumm & Son.
Bark Triumph, Nichols, 9 days from Sagua, with
Bn ßark Ahnoner''6roy‘,B days from Cardenas, with mo
lasses to ThosWattson & Sons. •
K-lir 31 ary Louisa. Norton, 9 days from Caibanen,
with to h Morris Wain A Co. „ . „
Behr L A BurHnsume.Burlingame,4 days from Boston,
with mdse to Knight,* Sons. . _
Schr 7. L Adams. Nickerson, 7 days from Boston, with
mdse to 3lershon * Clond. _ .
Schr Onward, Evans. 1 day from Indian River, Del.
with grain to J L Bewley & Co.
Scbr Maggie P Smith, Grace, 7 days from Saco, Me.
with ice to Knickerbocker Ice Co. • .. .
SebrJJ Worthington, Terry, 3 days from Rockland
W ,h rails .0
Dornu.ee &'»°gg , lilvE |> YESTERDAY.
Steamer Norman, Crowell, 48 .Hours irom Boston with
indscawl passengers to H D msor & Co. Sasv n large
ship lit UieX'«p«i, standing in; also, a laree sdiouner
auround opposite Rewly Island, on Black Ditch Bar.
'Steamer Anthracite, Green, 24 hours from New York,
withnulsetoWßlßuml&Co. „ _ . ...
Brig Avance, Bchuldt,3o days from Pernambuco, with
sugar to A F Damon—vessel to L NVesterpuird & Co.
Brig Eudorus, Haskell,, 7 days from Cardenas, with
molasses to order— vcp sc Ito M arren & (*regg._ 4
Brig J Howland, Freeman, days from Nevis, with
sulphur ore and 6 passengers to More 1 fillups ' easel to
Brig F Gerstacker(NG),Anderson,44 daysfrom Bahia,
do la Davis, from Rockland Lake,with
ice to Knickerbocker Ice Co.
CorKspondonco of
Burl. Geo H Jenkins, from Pbilndelphin for Antwerp
undone lirig unknown, pussed to sea today, llireo
burksund two lirigs went in. .. T
July t—Burk lioannko, for LngnityTit; Goo H Jenkins,
for Antwerp; lirigs •Kellie Clifford,for CnpedeAerdes,
mid Dock iomoiui. for Boston, oil from Philtidelplnn,
-went tomtt^etdaXi-llUK^lidS^^itan^-^gjjs.
MEMORANDA. . „„ . T .
Ship Wyoming, Julius,Jr, from StJohn,Nß. at Li
verpool yenterday.
Ship Asia (NG), Wendehorst, hence for Bremen, was
spoken 16tli ult. lat 46. lon 35. .„ , '
Ship Sunspnreil, McAlpiu, sailed from Liverpool 22d
Pioneer, Barrett, henco at Wilmington, NC.
| ]lB f
* Burk John Boulton, Dlndsny, from Porto Cubello via
Suit Cay, TI. 11 dnyß. at Now York yesterday. ,
Burk Vesta (Nor), Koldrdp, henco at Cronstudt 18th
"Bri? Annie Bntcbelder, Gilbert (or Steelmnn),soiled
from Newport, E. 21st ult. for this port.
fBYTEI.KOHArH.I ... ,
QTKEN STOWN. J ulv 6—Arrived, Btcamer Minncaotn,
fl NEW°'yOKK: July G—Arrived, stoamors Java,No:,
brnsku nnd Silesiu, from Liverpool. > .
Also nrnved. steamer Eixtlnud, from Diverpom.
LONDONDERRY. July G—Arrived;, steamer Nova
S< BAN n ’FRAN§iSCO. July G—Arrivpd, ships City of
New York and Ludy Ann, from Sydney. ■
buggy umbrellas,
For Open Carriages, No-Top Wagons,
Fxpress Wagons, &e.,
In Linen, Scotch nnd American Gingknm, straight nnd
jointed sticks, with revolving joints. ~ . ,
Very useful aud necessary for driving In hot weather.
Manufactured and for sale by
WILLIAM A. DItOWN & CO.,
"IG tIABHEI STItEET
jeB tu tli b 13trp ; j. .... .. ; ..
TUST BECTIWED AOT> IM STORE .1,000
tl cases of Champagne,; spark Hug Catawba ftud CaU*
fornln Wines,rQrtyMdaoirn-.ShorrvVJnmnicnnndSijnto
Cruz Rum, fine olu Brandies and AvhwWeSfWholosiilo
and Retail! k .> P. J. JORDAN,22O Pear stroeu.^
Below Third and Walnut streets, and above rDock
street , . o 7»
'IIEEINED RETKOiuKIJM.—IOO BAll-
JLV RKLS Heßned l'ctroleiiih; ’ For sale by COCHRAN.
RUSSELL & 00.. 23North Front street.
LY EVENING BULLETIN—PEI
THE DAI
T’ i: > y-' v -f. v, P"
a. „ r
BY iJ '* ■'•
■T ■. ■'* ■■■■'<! -: v
Celebration rtf thd, Fonrth, Throughout the
/ - Country. .
'V #..r» i ). : .y, I'. '•'{>*
•••I'
TO-DAY’S CABLE QUOTATIONS
4‘clebratioki of the Fourth.
80.-rrox, July (>.—The city was thronged.
Th.- progranmie included iv concert at. the
Coliseum, by Mr.'Gilmore; an oration byß. ,
AV; Morton, Sic.' The Harvard boat crew won <
aTour-oared r;ice in 22mimites and 27} seconds.
?The distance rowed was: three,miles. ‘Walter
Brown-won a single scull race of two nines in,
13 ■■'miiiuteB’" , ’'aiia''- v 2o'';'HeeontlH;‘'-:da:h'e"''"wtiir'
Base Ball Club,'; of;2ffew iVorkf, heat the
Howells., a A balloon .ascension and a
"land display of fireworks closed the ‘lay. A
son of Bon. Albert J. Wright was drowned
in the harbor. There were no other acci
dents. . ' ■’ ', , ', • ,
Ai.iiany, JulyO.—The day was nnely cele
brated. There wore very few accidents, and
only one or two small lives. Sonie_ nfty arrests
were made for firing.pistols early in the day.
; Buffalo, .July o.—The day was celebrated
by a grand procession" of tlie military arid
schoolchildren, and a balloon ascension. The
day wound npwitli a grand strawberry fcstrval
and fireworks by the Grand Army Of the Be
public. • , , , , ..
Jitly-.fi.—The day was celebrated by
a huge procession, including Trades’Unions.
There were lio accidents.
P.niNKiiKCK, July (!.—The day was cele
brated by the Good Templars by a large pro
cession and a Temperance Jubilee., ■
'Hie FonrtlilnWilmiMiitoii, IS- ®—jStcnm
Pont JExploslon—-SevcralUves I^ost,
Wii-mjnctos, 15. C., July 6, 180!t.—Yester
day ww generally observed as a holiday. All
tlie principal liouses but no gene
ral celebration took place. The weather was
cloudy, slight rain, with indications of heavy
rain, which will prove of much advantage to
the suffering crop. The steamtug Brandt,
with' a large party'; of excureioiusts tronl
abroad, while returning v ; to the city this
evening, had a piece blown ironi her boiler at
a point allontsix miles below the city.. The
utmost consternation prevailed. AV. B. Meare
son. Colonel Thomas, 1). Means, Cat. Archand
E.H. Biers jumped overboard. Arch, after
sinking twice, and Biers, were rescued by a,
colored man in a lifeboat from tlie steamer
'SVaecajnago. 'Means,, alter swimming 1,000
varrts, was drowned- H. Gillegan was so
badly scalded tliat bis life is despaired of. ..M.
M ctaurin, ’ son of Joseph Mcßaurin, was
painfully blit not dangerously hurt. The sad
affair plunged tlie community into tlie deepest
grief- ./
■ By tlie Atlantic Cable.
Eoxijoa', July 0, P. M.—Arrived, steamship
Bellona, from Sew York. Consols, 03 for
money ana account. Five-twenties quiet at
81 5
ijiVEBPOOL, Julv 0, P. 51.—California wheat
10s. 4a.: Beil Western, its. 2d.a!>s. 3d. Card de
clining; sales at 70s. OtL Bacon, 02s. Cd. Cheese
60s. Tallow4ss.;
HAvbe, July o.—Cotton quiet on the spot
and afloat. ' . ' .
Queenstown, July 6.—Arrived, steamship
City ef Brooklyn from Hew York.
CivKnrooi., July 0, 2 P. 511—The market
for yarns and fabrics at Manchester is "quiet
but firm.
W From Wasblogtou,
Washington, July o.— ln the interview of
Bepresentatives Edwards and Clift and Dr.
Culver, of Georgia, with the President, on
Friday last, the Macon Postmaster apnoint
mentwas merely incidentally mentioned by the
President, in connection with the Augusta ap
pointments, and was not a matter with which
thev interfered one way or the other. The
business which these gentlemen had with the
President was not to ask the appointment to
or removal of any man from office, but to se
cure the use of the government laboratory
building, at Macon, Ga., to the State Agricul
tural Society, for the purposes of the Agricul
tural Exposition next November. _
It is rumored here that General Van Wyck,
of New York, will soon ho married to Miss
Broadhead, a lady of Pennsylvania, who spent
the last two or three winters at Washington
with the Hon.D. M. Van Auken, her brother
in-law, one of the Kepreseutatives from that
State.
From San Francisco.
San Francisco, July s.—The National An
niversary was observed in this city by a pro
cession of the military and literary societies.
William H. Seward, accompanied by Mayor
McCoppin, occupied a carriage in the hne,
and w/ls greeted by the waving of handker
chiefe and other demonstrations of respect by
thotesandK'of people who tlironged the streeta. .
Salutes were fired from the different forta in
thdharbor.'tlie city and shipping were decked
with flags and presented a gala appearance.
The Fourth of July was generally observed
throughout the Pacific coast—some places cele
bratiog Saturday, some Sunday and others
Monday. ■
The trial of the model of the air-ship Avifcor
vesterdiiy is pronounced successful by the
‘Times, while the Alia says the performance
was something like a failure. The wind was
blowingso hard that it was impossible to make
the experiment in the open air { so the trial
was made under cover. The ship rpse in the
air and was propelled backward and forward,
being gnideu any desired direction by the
steering apparatus. It is claimed that the
present Avitor is a criterion of success. Its
machinery is so trifling, the engines and boiler
weighing less than a hundred pounds, thi t
its failure or success would be no matter
surprise. ' • . _
Kcpnlae •* the Spanish Troops by the
l'orces of den. Jordon Sear Holguin
—Loss Estimated ot Two Hundred on
Ench Side—Twenty Americans Killed.
■Washington, July 5, IB6o.—Cubans here
have the following advices: The Spanish
troops, between the 22il and 25tli of Juno, atr
tacked the forces of General Jordan near Hol
guin, aiid after a light, which, it is reported,
Tasted over eight hours, they were repulsed,
and compelled to take refuge in the town.
The loss of the Cubans 'was nearly two hun
dred in killed and wounded. Among those
killed were twenty Americans. The Span
ish loss was about the same. The Spanish
troops consist ed of two brigades, and outnum
bered the Cubans two to one. Genoral Jordan
commanded the revolutionary army.
Volunteer Charges Against the Bishop
of Havana.
1 The volunteers , of Matauzas have ad
dressed an appeal,to the volunteers of Havana,
the principal aim of which seems to be an at
tack upon the Bishop of the Diocese. They
say that though the leading traitor, Dulce, has
been sent away, there is one other who should
be compelled to leave the island, because he is
an insurgent, is corrupt, unprincipled, and has
been guilty of bribery. They allege that he
paid tbDulge’s Secretary,Diaz, s2s,ooo,“which
act resulted in leaving the traitor Bishop with
ample and full powers to have and carry on an
understanding with the principal chiefs of the
insurrection, aim also with its friends and
agents in Madrid and in the United States.”
They charge that by liis machinations Dr.
Egano was removed from his post as Admin
istrator of the'Havana Cemetery, in order
that all the money coming from that source—
which is large—into the hands of the Bishop
h)iKlifl)eappropriatedtotlieuurposesof-'the-
Rebellion. Another serious charge is made,
viz.; That the Bishop, by the aid of the money
of certain rich' Cubans at Matanzas, was
enabled tb pave his wayTo the high position
which he holds ill the church, and winch he
has ever since been disposed to use in the
interests of liis friends tlie Cubans/ '. :
UOHIIKItY AM) ItECOVERY OF STOLEN
fiuoiM.-KinK'fl slioo storo, ut : Twonty-thinl anil Cherry
Bt roots, woe eutured by broukinghpon a front window at
an ourly lionr yostorday xuprmng, and was rnbbod oi a
iiundior of pairs 1 of ehoos. liioutonant Gcrcko, ol tlio
Sixth District Police, was notified ot Dio robbery, and
snliso/incntlv rocovoroil the stolen goods at a small shop
at Twenty-third and filbert streets, kept by a -woman
lmmed-Long. The proprietress ..waif, arri-sted npon the
ebarao of receiving stolen goods,.and will have a lieiiring
iit tie' Central Stniion this uffernopn:
J) edition.
Illy the Cuba Cable I
CUBA.
LADELPHIA, TUESDAY, JULY
' 3 Wme
iOtb«Mln of * Coiu,
: fttifn«lon~*Or»tioiiby&etieral du»m«
)i«rliilit»Ban^a«t ■
ln
, ywldwy: , inoi‘iriflav;Ancl ! wa<» to: i
' order, by Si ajor-General George B, McClellan, tenypo
rary order, (ten ,
eraiMcClellan at the full ••at
tendance. and hopedtbat the; proceedings would
markedthroughout withharmony. . . •,. ♦.
The Committee Appointed gt the- previous meeting to
pro pare a draft ofji constitution and: by-laws reported,
through Owi* fli I*i lleintzelmnin, their chairman. Tin*
draft, ns submitted,yvasnccfcpted. It provider, among
other thfnga, for an,animal election of officers by. ballot,
a majority of all the Votes cast to be requisite to a choice
(Jen. John Cochrane moved to amend this clause s<i ns
i to require the Election of President from the , ex-com
launders of the army, they to serve in turn according, to
rank*, eftclifor dn£ wouldtaake Gen.McClel: *!
lan the first President, the second, Gen.
llookerthe third, and Gen. Meade the fourth.
Gen. Sheridan atremionaly opposed the amendment on
the ground that there-trgw .capablemid deserving officer*
beside those whohndeemimandeu the Army. Theumenu*
ment was withdrawn. r x ; ; , r.,
„• The CoiiHtltutUm ad submitted provides for an inltLv
tion fee of SlO-nml reaulrftfim annual tax of 81,
,Gen. .Burnwdo moved to amend by fixing the initiation
.fee at &3,ftiid the annual dueitat#!. ,
i -A division was culled for on this amendment, when tlin
fiWt part, fixing the initiation fee at f3,wos adopted,
and the second part lost. This fixes the initiation fee at
S 3, and the annual dues were subsequently fixed at S 3.
iThe report of the Committee us amended was thou
adopted. v •• ..• . ,
; Gms. Franklin. McQnnde, Owen and Green acted as
? tellers in the election ior President. The first ballot ro
suited as follows: McClellan, 1M; Sheridan, 142; Meads,
!. Ill; scattering^
KJtCO S D BAt LOT 4
.Sheridan. 204;'McCh*iiaiT.'M«7 3*. ’ ’! '
On motion of Gen. McClellan, Gen./bheridan was de
clured ununhuouidy elected; l; , ~. • .
(The following-mwied-VJco-PrceWonte. were thenclio
bc*u on the nomination of the-, representatives ot their
several corps:—First Corps-r-Goneral John. Newton; .Se
cond-General W S. Haucm:kL:.TWrd--Generol-H.-P.
Ilclutzelman; Fifth-GcneraV J. 1.. Cliambodain; Sixth
—General U. G. Wright: Ninth—General Juo. G. Parke;
Twelfth—General'll! W. Slocum? Cavalry-General Al
fred I’lpnxunton: Artillery—General Henry, d. Hunt;
GenenU Stuff-^en,A. A. Humphrey. \ j
Tlu* meet lug then adjourned until this morning. .
l At 7.30 P. M. on nmfon 'delivered before- the
Society iu Steinway 11011, by.Major-General J. L. Cham
iAt Delnionlco'H, the. cloth.’ haying been removed,
founts were given and responses tverc made by Governor
Fairchild, onviwoiwtaj Cpvpnior. Chamberlain, AJml
ral Knrragut. Geuerai\ Humphreys. General Burnside.
General Sharp, General Gaylor, General Meade, General
Stahard, Major Hastings* and : General Shaler.T--*Y. 1.
Sun:
: § CITY BUjLJLETIN.
• Skizciie ok, the Fire ; , iron
steamer Fire Fly, belonging to Mr. Joint W.
Middleton, of tills .city; has been,'for Home
time past, under the surveillance of the autho
rities, under suspicion that, there was a possi
bility of her being engaged in the filibustering
business. On Friday aiul Saturday'last , she
was visited and searched,and although nothing
wasfoimd on her of- a suspicious character;
her owner received a'Caution from-the Col
lector of the I’ort that she would certaiuly.be
slopped if she attempted to leave with any
irregularity about lier panels. , ■
; Notwithstanding this friendly cautionVtho
revenue cutter Win; JT. ; Seward,„ stationed at
Chester, discovered the Fire Flycomingdown
the river on Snndav morning, between 10 and
11 o’clock, with a large number of persons on
board. Slie was imihediately recognized, and
the cutter’s fires were spread, in readiness to
five chase if necessary. A blank shot,however,
rought the Fire; Fly to, and
the commander of the revenue
ter, Lieutenant Balaton, boarded . her. Her
o\, ..er and his family and several hundred
men and women were found.on board, hound
on a Fourth of July excursion to Cape May
and the Fishing Banks. Her captain, James
Merslion, was unable,, to produce tlio ships
papers, pleading that they, had been forgotten.
Lieut, lialston decided that such a blunder
was “ worse than a crime,” and, despite the
angry protestations of the excursionists, piit
an officer on hoard, and sent the nimble but
careless Fire Fly hack to the Navy .Yard, fol
lowing her with the Seward. Notice Of the
capture was sent to the Collector of the Port,
and, at a, late hour in the afternoon, the grum
bling and unhappy victims of a piece of re
markable stupidity were landed and found
their way to tneir homes, with a new realiza
tion of the meaning of “ a Sabbath day’s jour
ney.” ...
Lieutenant Kalston acted in the whole aflair
with commendable promptness and discretion.
The stupidity consisted in sending a suspected
vessel to sea, without her necessary papers,
with the idea that she could elude the vigilance
of the two revenue cutters at Chester and in
the lower Bay. The Collector, having satis
fied himself that stupidity aftd not filibustering
was at the bottom oi the affair, has released
the vessel, with a lenient penalty, bnt the
' Fire Fly has received a practical suggestion
of the vigilance of our Port authorities which
will probably last for some time.
The Fire Fly was a Clyde-built iron block
ade-runner, originally called the Boxer, rap
tured duriDg the war, and afterwards sold to
Mr. Middleton, who is not suspected of Cuban
tendencies. She is registered 320 tons, and is
Vety fast. It has been the intention of the
owner of the Fire Fly to run her, in the
peach trade, between Dover .and New York;
but she has been the subject of so much official
surveillance that he fears to send her outside,
the Capes, as the peach crop is rather too i
perishable forsUeli detentions as shemightr
experience at the hands of the Itevenue
I Cutters. |
Cathodic Phidomathean Literary In
stitute. —The; semi-annual election tor ofh
cers last evening resulted as follows::
President —Bov.John J. Elcocli. -
Pice President—David McMenamm.
Corresponding Secretary —Clias. P. Brady.
Becoming Secretary —Frank Logue.
Treasurer —John H. Brady.
Librarian—James Shields. ■ .
Assistant lAbrariqn —Clias. J. McGrath.
Board of J) irectoA -John McGovern, Kohert
Barry, Thomas Doyle, William F. Duffy, Neal
F-Dunlevy. John P. McGovern, John M.
Donnelly. 1 .
This organization is in a prosperous state.
Many new features, especially a lull supply of
foreign and domestic papers, will he intro
duced in the reading-room, which will prove
quite acceptable to the, young men west ot
Broad street. The' Institute celebrated Inde
pendence yesterday. The exercises consisted
of the reading of the Declaration, with an ora
tion, declamation,and music, vocal and instru
mental,
New Cavalry Reoiment..—Col. William
late of the 12th Pennsylvania
CaVuiry, lias .received permission to raise a
regiment of CiaMry for the First Division,
Pennsylvania Snptia. One company, com
manded by Capt. John Mcßride, ofl‘ raukiord,
is full, and ready to lie mustered i*. Capt.
Louis Wanner,Who will be oho of the Majors,
will have three companies ready to be mus
tered in in a short time, and two others are
organizing. Col. Frishmutli expects—foraise
one of the finest regiments In the State.
Incendiarism—A frame building at IS. h.
corner of Thirty-third and Chestnut streets,
owned by James Welsh, was set on tire
about three o’clock this m iming and was
damaged to the extent otjSloO.
Drowned.— Yesterday morning, as .tho
steamboat John Sylvester was about landing
at Arch street wharf, a man attempted to
jump ashore. Ho fell overboard aud was
drowned, .
Badly Beaten.—Joseph Bussell, 22 years
of ace, employed on board tho steamer 1 av
mathenas, waii badly- beaten this morning by
the second inate of the vessel. . He was ad
mitted to the Pennsylvania Hospital.
Supposed Suicide.—A suit of clothing was
found upon Chestnut stroet wharf at an-€arly hour this
morning mid was takeu to the Second l oUco
Station.. The clothingisßUppoßodtohave bolonged to a
person who has comimttod suicide, undcomprisi*B a blue
Chesterfield coat. light pants und vest, bluck .ailk hat
und low,shoes.
, A Makine in TkoChle. —John Murray, a
marine.. was arrested Fifth JJH 1
streets for assaulting a citizen, lie was loihul up iutjio
prisoners who wore in tho sumo celF, and beat them
severely about tho head. Murray had a hearing before
Alderman Carpenter this morulug and was iudd .in
bail.
"AI ill on Fire—This morning, about half
past nine o'clock, a firo occurred in the pickor room of
tho Star Mill, owned by Thomas.ll. Craigp«fc to., and
located at the southwest corner of H o wnrdandJufferrion
street*.' Tho lojjs sustained will amount to about
utiU Isiulljfrcovcred by Insurance.; After tho drc.hat
been extinguished, a friiino stable uttaclied. tothumil.
was disovered to boon tiro and was destroyed.. ;
' Sailor' Badly Beaten,;—Johu^Mnrphy
and arrested at,Delaware, aVqmta and
Spruce street; and .taken beioio Aldernian Carpenter,
upon the charge ot <liuylus asßiuilted-rJamcß Russell, a
RiSlor.: Russell was badly beaten injured,
lie Won taken to; the Pennsylvania V* O ,.V;\
CusCdwero commuted, sl,os bad> to an
swer at court. .
6, 1869.
MIRTH EDITION.
BY TEL-iiGR^H.
FROM CHICAGO.
THE IRISH REPUBLICAN CONVENTION
TO-DA Y ’ S .'PROCEEDINGS
Irish Bepahlletm Convention-
• Chicago, -July <>.—The Irish National Re
jniblican Convention met in Farwcll Hall, in
this city,-yesterday -morning. Tiio hall was
appropriately decorated with tings and ‘mot
toes. The Convention was called to order by
Mr. Bell, of the Irish Republican, who pro
posed a* temporary Chairman of the Conven
tion the Hon. J. W. Fitzgerald, of Cincin
nati. He was declared elected. Hr. Fitz
gerald addreased"the’delegates at considerable
length, taking ground in favor of universal
1 liberty to all classes and colors; also, in favor
of the protection of American industry.
Messrs. John Pope Hodnett, of Dacotali; Mr.
Kelley, of New York, and J. O’Conner, of
"Washington city, were'elected temporary
. Secretant s.
: A Committee on Credentials was appointed,
consisting of one person from each State, as
follows: John A. Mullen; Kansas,
H. H. Cooney;AVisconsini'E. Sweeney; lowa,
.John Halsey; Michigan, E.D’Connor; Louisi
ana, P. V. Manney; Ohio, Titos. Streedv;
Pennsylvania^Martin Laibell; Missouri, Peter
Daily; District Of Columbia, J. D. O’Connell;
Daeotah, John Pope Hodnett; Illinois, Mi
chael Pigott; Connecticut, Itichard MeClosed;
Nebraska, John-Turnfer; North Carolina, J. F.
Lee; . Kentucky, j M. Bolands New Jersey.
David Ball; Minnesota, Paid Fitzgerald, and
New York, Capt. "Wtn. H. Grow. M
A Committee On Permanent Organization
was also appointed, represPAiting tlio same
Slates and Territories,;.as folloite: '
■ Ww-ensiii. Reynold*; low si, J. J. McDonald;
Minnesota, Paul Fitzgerald;Tennessee, John J. Miillen;
Mirli iioui, JolinX'ieney; Louisiana, R.L. Shorly; Ohio,
P.O’Ncill.-MissourLM. C. Enright: Dakotah, John -P.;
Hodnett: llUuriM 0. Moore: 1 Pennsylvania! James A.-
llognn; Connecticut, Richard McCloud; Nebraska, John
Quinn; District of Columbia, M. Dufly; North Carolina.,
J. F. Lee; Kentucky. M. Donnld; New Jersey; David
Bell : Minnesota, Paul Fitzgerald; 'New York. John
O'Brirn. • - t ....
‘ The,Convention then took ,a recess and reassembled. fit
Thc’coiinniliee on’Credentials reported tile following
States and Territories rcnreseuted::Coiinectient, Id dele
gates; Dnkotah,l; District of Columbia. 2; Illinois,s2;
lowa.Tl; 0hi0,25; Nebraska, (i; New Jersey. 1; North
Carolina, s; Michigan 8; Missouri,6; Pennsylvania,:!;
Kcnturky,s; Louisiana,o;Minnesota, 7;Massachusetts,
6; Wisconsin. H: Kansas, 3; New York. 39. The total
number of delegates reported was 221. A large number
of delegates on the rolls lire not hero. ‘
: Oil motion ofMr. Qninn(N.C.), each delegation was
authorized to strike off the names of those not present. .
i After some delay the Committee on Bormaneut Orguni
zation made the following roportr President,Hon. O.
W. Fitzgerald, of Ohio. Vme-Frcsideiits, W. J. Loas
liaw, of Wisconsin: James Magonagle, of Michigan; P,
H.Dunn.of Illinois; G.'M.'Alnrinrty, of Pennsylvania;
It. C. Olcinl, of Connecticut.* M. Dnffy, District of Co
lumbia; M. McKinley,-of Tennessee; D. Bell, of New
Jersey;- Mottliew Byrne, Now York; ILL. Shelly,of
Louisiana; Thomas Lavin, of Ohio; V. W. .Cooney, of
Kansas; IfODry o Conner, of Iowa: .Dennis O’Brian, ol
Missouri; GeorgeM. O’Brien;of Nebraska; Paul Fitz-
Serald, of Minnesota; John Reilly; Uf North. Carolina;
. Pope Hodnett, of Dacotuh. The report was adopted:
and the convention adjourned until to-day.
From New Torh.
Neiv Yokk, July 6.—There were twenty
casualties from fireworks here" yesterday, and
ten in Brooklyn, ,and 30 fires in both cases.
None of the fires were serious.
Fatal Accident.
Milwaukee, July 6.—A. Cary, Treasurer ol
the Milwaukee and St. Paul Railroad, was
accidentally killed by falling under a car yes
terday.
From Kolmcsburgr-
- Holjiesbubg, July 6.—The tire,last night at
this place was Quite large.. The bam of Deo.
Clark was destroyed by au incendiary.
From Washlnstcn.
Washington, July tk-Tho second party fitted, out
from the Naval Observatory to observe tlio solar eclipse
of August 7th. left this city with tlioir instruments on
Mondav evening for the vicinity of Pes Monies, lowa.
Professors William Harkncss anil J. K. Eastman, U S.
Navy, have charge of the meteorological and astronomi
cal work, and the party has been joined liy Dr-.hilwuril
Cnrtis. U. S. Anny, under orders from the Surgeon-
Generals Department, to photograph, in connection with
the observatory party, the various phases of tlio eclipse.
Fire In I oolsville—Cricket.
Louisville, July. 6— Laßtnight tho store of H.TH.
Heal,dry goods denier, was damaged by lire to tho
ninmmt of from 840,000 to §60,000 on stock ami fixtures,
and iB insured for $30,000 in the following companies:
Louisville Insurance and Banking Company, Liverpool
and London, Cleveland. Buckeye and North American
conrpauieß. A Roman candle is supposed to have caused
cricket match between the Bluo Stockings, of Cin
cinnati, and the Kentucky Club, of Louisville, resulted
—Blue Stockings, 125; Kentucky, 120.
MEW YORK. MONEY MARKET
Continued Stringency in the Marke 1
A DECLINE IN GOLD
Governments Strong .and Advanced
StoClif? Heavy and. Declined
[Special Despatch to thoThila. Evening Bnlletin.l
New Yimk..Tnly 6.—The week opium with a continued
stringency iu monev. Cull loans aro made atl-lhafj, per
cent, and legal interest. The public were generally dis
posed to discount too much relief lroni the pmdrnso of
three million in bonds: the result was disappointment at
the turn of nftuirs to-day. In conseiiuoucethero was an
increuswljprcssuro to sell on the Stock Exchange and in
the Gold Room. . . „ * A -, r
Foreign Exchange is nominally firm at for
prime bankers’ sixty days, nnd 10la fdr sight. There
has been very little business transacting for Wednes
day's packet iie yet. , Gold opened steady at ]37iil37.ht, at
lerwurds became heavy dir the rise m bonds in London to
Si?*, and declined to 33B?*nW6. Loans made as high as
7-64 per cent, for carrying. Tho Government Bond Mtir
ket is strong, and mlvaiiccd 3i(n.U per cent.
Southern securities are dull. Stocks were generally
firm at theopeuing, but as the day advanced a hvnvy
feeling set in, and there was a pressure to sell the entire
list. This resulted iu a general and marked dudino ni
• prices. Northern Omnil foil from 105% to 194; Michi
gan Southern from 109)4 to 108%: Pacific Mail from 92J d
toflOK; Rock Island from 118)4 to 117)4; Northwestern
Common from At toSl 3 «. The other changes wer*; less
important, and the speculative interest centred ui the
above. . •
Crime In Sow Yorls.
NRW" York, duly C,—Christopher McGuirtMUaburer
while in a fit of furious drunkenness, late last night, at
1 ached his wife and beat her so fearfully as to render ho)
recovery doubtful. , ' . . . „ ,
John Rolan was stubbed in a bar-room fight, in Brook
lyn, early this morning.
The Powell Exploring Expedition.
Chicago, July 6.—There can scarcely be any doubt
that John A.Risdon, win* reported he loss of the-Powell
Exploring Expedition, is an impostor. A despatch from
La Salle, where Rifidon claimed to belong, says tint no
such mau Is known there.
Sailing of the llammonia.
f Special Besnatch to the Philada. Kvouing Bulletin.)
New York, July 0 —The steamer Ilammonin, sailing
to-day for Hamburg, takes out .$160,000 in specie.
THE COURTS.
Supreme Court— Chief Justice Thompson and Jus
tices Reud,Agnow,Sharswood and Williams.—Judgments
were ohteredlii the following cases: By Thompson, Chief
Justice—Bankholder et al. vs. Slmhl et al. Error tu
C. IN, Somerset county. Judgment, affirmed, i v,-.
Woodward et ui. vs. The Cumberland \ alley Railroad
Contpuny. Appeal dismissed at the cost of the up-
P Snmu B *Va* Snnio. Emjr to OY’l*.,of Cambeilum!
county. Bill dismissed. ■ ■ ■ . _ ,
Horner’s Ex. vs. McGaughey. Error to Frank:
B.Cook, Errov.o
m InsurancoCoTl
of York county. Error to C.. V . -of York county.- Judg , x
"'wfllituns'Kappeal. Error to Cumberland coimty. Ap-
el'al--vs. Row, otal. . Error to Cumberland
county. Judgment reversed, and a -ec/urs; ifa .noro
n 'wehjt* YB. Jacoby. Error to ; Cumberland county..
YifvJor Ex., vb.E. Eldridgo. Error to O.
FI. Evcomiugcounty. .JudgmentlUlirmed. ; : ■
By Read, J.-i?roitH vH. Austiu, utul. Kcrm-tob.f.,
Franklin, county..-4>idgmeutreversed. ; . -
John O.Kinlwoll' vdl Joseph BeUner. Error to fcouu.D.ot
:. c ®i mo
Va._ Xtiv Mifflin County Nationiq
Biiiil;. .liiilKiiießt’nlDfmcil;: . '
Appeal of John Kry:ui and olhorß/i tl no- t>
nnil nppcul thu curtt of
. _»*t/jilihmitj. vfl, 1 {Johnnl • DoncpHtcr..; Juaga^M
■} A pi>«*al ot : JosjopbSinple. ..Dcerco rtflrißfd at font
tkllnnl. J * <
Jloati)Upr>v«i Jno. Hykns, -
Mlnry Ann Wit In nndAVm. Wnlu
JuiUiDHiit affirmed. , „ , „ ' ’ v
’tv.ir.mon wealth ra. Venn Gus Coni Company.
t . •- a•' -.TO
tSohothot nl. va.Foreman. Juamnent affirm'd. , -
■ Jain' I ** Patton and JohitßutlirnufT. -Thoof Or* . ;°y
phnn» T t.’ourt reveriiwl, 1 ami tho first report of tho Audi- m
tor f oiittrnirrt, {
WunderHchJfc vs. The Cumberland \alloy Rail* , ? • v
i rond (‘onfpniiiyr Decren aftinneddiHinissing tho bill and ’
i diMwolvmg-thftinjunction. ' ;'- w V *
i *By- A jtnew, JJohn tirecn & John >nnlymnsvß.Thftv , *
l. Ashland Iron Company. Judgment nffirinnl. ' '
I Henr>*Fitron,c*tul.,vs. llonry Korhenovr. Juilirm/jut ;. 4 i*
4 Abnihiim Forney vs. Abraham Banl. Jndgmen» - M
re TlK ,f ’coDrtTnoHwealth vb. Tho Pliilnddphlft and Btwdtuc- *. .fi
KnliroaclCompnny;'Snmc vs. Tlio,Erie Itailroad t.ont-,;.,'
iwiiy: Mime vs.-Tho Jjtiekawnnna and .Blopnisnurehail* j,
road Coinpaiiy; same vs. Tlu> Mnnongalioltt Bwllroiul '
: Company: Ssaine th. The Clovelnnd ntnl Pittsburgh Rail- , J j, ■
road Company. In thcw v rawcBi Brotiylitto. wst thfl con
atltutlomußy of the tonnage tax, the judginont reversoH,
' the, decision of the Court below and declares thohiw . %
V^»au S h vs. Fred. Mcntzcl et ol,; Beoreo
3:00 O’Olook.
BanKVwoyard, v«. Samuel Gaither.. Pcorep afflnm-d.
John I> Roddy va. Win. S. Hiirab. ■ Jiulgfiicnt-.ro-.
T Penpb IKB Go. vs. Jacob K. Goodman. Jmlgmoat
a District of IleldolberGr vs. John IIi>«o. ;
i -Th^lykrafvalicy Coal Co. ts. Glllard Dock, as-v
c. Mciggs. et al. Deere,,
& Hay vs. Joseph Kcim. Judgment ro
'‘Tho'cdnimonwdnlth vs. the Plilenix Iron Company.
Judimieut reversed. . . •• •-■. * _ ■ .
By Sharswoodi J.—Jones-8 appeal. Decree re*erned,
• Elder vh.'Bccl. Judgment reversed.
Jvliiler’sappeal. DedreoiLfnrnicd. .• ■■
Davis etaV.vs. Bigler ct ah; ro _
(’ommomvenlth tothmwe of Mary 0. Miller ya.. Miy
ihTCtal. Judgment nflirmed., .
Bowhct vs Cessna. Judgment affirmed.
Hoover vs. Gehr. Jndgmontofflnncil. . ... , •
Myer'fl Appeal. Decree of the court below mpdiliid.
Koontzvs' Hammond. Judgment afilrmed. ,
Tho Gettysbnrg"Natioual Bank Vfa.,Knhns. Judgment
r< Mlshlef vs. The Commomycaltli.- Jndgmont afl'u mail.
Hartman vs. Dillor et. nl- Judgnicnt iillinned.
Hnldenuah & Grubb vs. Haldcrman et al. Judgment
reversed iiiuV judgment ill the case.
By WilliomSi J.—Buzby’s Appeal,—Appeal disinbsed
Hull vs; RnlOri:—Decree reversed anil modihed,
IfcHotiry ■
, Diinicl G. May vb. Elizabotli May..Judgnienf .it
f‘PennWivania Fkllteati Company vs ; ,Rev'. J. M. Bui
• Judgrtientalflrmed. ■ ... ~.\4
(joimuoiiwcalth of Pcnnaylvanui \ . .
A. Kgorton.’ Judgment affirmed. „ . ,
Rupp c*t ah vs: Uvor. Judmncnt nmrmcd*
Madavn ftSpanif ysvEyorsolo. .Tuilcmcnt .
Tho Pittsburgh* .Columbus and .Cinciinmti RlLilroud
Company i*et - a1.,-vs,- Alexander and Thomiirt. Joms.
ljoiijoifoluiil'ot "nl.* y« Thomaf* Kickoy b ■Judamont.
n Iniriictinu
vb. Tatriuk McNiclipl. Judgment v;- 4 ;. ■
verstwf. Ll_ ; l—v
CERTAIN materials.
MOSQUITO
CANOPIES!..
iTHK MOST IMPROVKI>B
In Various Colors 1 ,
Tarletan, for Covering Mirrors, &c..
.Piltk, Buff, Blue, Green, White.
FRENCH CRETONNES
And Dotted Mull Lined,
For Summer Chamber Curtains, Made aiii
Hung in the Latest Styles.
Lace and Nottingham Mains!
All file Newest Shades In FI e
FURNITURE PLUSH,
And Materials for
FURNITURE SUPS.
w I If® ® W SH A PBS
Of the Latest Tints.
I. E. WALRAVEN,
MASOMIC HAIL,
No. 719 CHESTNUT STREET.
riNANCIAIi.
PENNSYLVANIA AND NEW YORK
CANAL AND RAILROAD CO.’S
SEVEN PER CENT. BONDS
A limited amount of these Bonds, guaranteed by the
LEHIGH VALLEY BAILBOAD COMPANY, in
offered at
NINETY AND ONE-HALF PER CENT.
The Canal of this Company iB 105 miles lent. Their a
Bailroad, of the same length, la fast approaching cptn A
plotion. and, being principally owned by the Lohigffl
Valley Bailroad Company, will open In connection therojfc
with an immense and profitable trade Northward fir a
the Coal Beglons to'Western and Southern lie* Y j
and tho great Lakes,. Apply at the
Leliigh Valley Railroad Co.’s Offii
No. 303 Walnut Street, Philada. ;.fO
CHARLES c. LONGSTBETH, 't*j
Trcasnrex Lehigh Valley Bailroad Company,^,
;»T : : j
No. 35 South Third Sjfcjf
PHILADELPHIA.^
<][enera£%ef
S- PENNSYLVANI/Li
AStej . of V e
j*»KN
UNITED STATES OF AMI
ThaNjkTIONAtLIITIiINmTKANCIi J 3
corporation chartered by special'Act 0t
proved July 28,1808, with a
" CASH CAPIMX, IliOOOjOOO,'!
Liberal terms ottered to Agents in
are Invited to apply at our office. ,f.
Full particulars to be had on applM
located In the second storyof offit
tvhero Clrcnlnro and ftattpWcts, fn
advantages offered by the Company,
TAMES 8.
v GKNi3BAi^i^|ggp
jyl ImCp
M'-A
■
e. w. eiu
- ■ A'<fc