Daily evening bulletin. (Philadelphia, Pa.) 1856-1870, July 07, 1869, Image 2

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y& J y ; ’E»*tO)P*SAW AFFAIRS.
ÜBITEBTROiI PARIS.
.. .'!,V M
v:, tDorwapflndcncc of tho Ptiila. EVcnimj'Oollclin.V
ipAßie, Tuesday, June 25,1869. —Tho tele
•Vjß*Bph will long sinco have informed you that
*l}is quiet again in Paris, as well as have com
municated to you the chief incident which
• marked the late riots. My task must,bo one
•f-aVlHretiiation rather than ■ detail; but it is not
: vMlirthat account, perhaps, the less necessary
of the two. If one may con-
What; has . gone, forth to tho
' United ' States on the subject by
". ’’wifaaV"" has appeared in England,
' yort;- twillhave great need of ' being
afetilightened as to tho true character and pro
jbrtioiis of what has taken place hero,in.order
to tfarm a correct judgment respecting it. Lot
say at once that most English ao
: oonnlii have either. grossly exaggerated and
’ misrepresented, or else greatly misconceived
• ■: thevfhole matter. It requires a seme what
iong' experieiice of tho Parisian population to
Understand when it is really in earnest and
TOtffiritkcn masse and when it is merely amusing
itself or looking on with curiosity at the
pranks of the gamins slid mauvais su-
JetB, who always form a considerable
portion of its ranks. IN ow I have no hesita
tion whatever in asserting that it is chiefly the
latter, and not the former element, which has
lately been disturbing tlie public peace, and
that, as a whole, the Parisian population have
had no further share in the proceedings than
as lookers-on, and without any serious inten
tion of either taking part in the fray, or in
creasing it to tho dimensions of a political
revolt. At no one moment were the late, dis
orders gt all formidable in that point of
view r , or regarded as being so either, by
the Government 01; the more discerning por
tion of tlie public. We have had street rows
and rioting to a considerable extent, and a
good deal of broken glass, and even, perhaps,
one or two broken heads;—but there tlie con
sequences, fortunately, have ended. Not only
has not a single life been lost, but. not one
•well-autlienticated Instance of a deliberate at
tempt to shed blood has been brought to light.
A few gamins have climbed up the lamp-posts
and blown out the gas, amidst tlie applause
and laughter of a fashionable crowd, admiring
their Almost up to the hour of
midniglit the Boulevards, were thronged with
carriages, mostly containing ladies, and Ame
rican ladies ' especially, waiting to see the
“fun.” Now', this is not language I should
permit myself to use liad there been any loss
of human life, even through accident, or had
anyiSerious disaster occurred in consequence
of these rows. But when all has passed off
with nothing worse to report than the punish
ment of a few window-panes and tlie over
turning of a few' not very solid kiosks, one
may he permitted to treat as something
like a joke the tremendoas accounts of
the “serried ranks of the agitators,” and
the “imposing advance of the troops,” which
have been narrated by some correspondents,
while somehow or other all the time neither
party ever once managed to come into con
fligt or even cbntact with each other. Not for
• one moment, or at any one point, did tlie mob
of rioters, mischief-makers and small thieves,
"Over make even a semblance of serious resis
tance. They disappeared on every side, liter
ally like dust before tlie w’iud, whenever the
police or city guards could reach them ; and
the chief impediment offered to the latter was
by the crowd of earriagesandpedestriaus which
thronged the streets. When the "troops did
manage to inarch up the Boulevard, they had
"' to squeeze tlieir way through hosts of idltrs of
all ranks. I wonder whether some of the.
writers who have described this scene in such
grandiloquent terms ever saw a real French
political emeiita. There is a scene of that kind
'Which rises to my mind, as I write, in striking
contrast to the one above spoken of. At the
■time: of‘the coup d'etat, tlie majority of the
citizens looked on in sullen acquiescence. But
there was a portion of the i population de
termined \o fujhl, at all hazards, and against
. all odds. Now how did these latter conduct
themselves? and how did they manifest their
, intention? Did they occupy tliem
-1 selves with breaking window-panes and
»’ smashing a few kiosks, tunidst a crowd of
lookers-on? Not exactly. I saw, in Decem
}••/ her, 1851, a prodigious barricade at the Porte
l s St. Denis, built right across the Boulevard as
high as the windows of the third or fourth
story of the adjoining houses. The men who
engaged on it scarcely spoke, but worked !
Jf away with a will, knowing well what they j
'i were about and wliat was coming. There was j
# scarcely a soul to be seen in the streets, and ,
the silence was quite ominous; every carriage !
i had long ago disappeared. At last a look-out |
[ gave the signal la troupe! The troops were !
t advancing. .They marched up in ;
L dehd silence along the deserted Boule- !
■ pvstrd, and when they came' in
■'Cyrohfc of the barricade,not a man who defended t
was yisihle,every man at his post behind the 1
attack in dcadsilenee. |
the voice of the commanding of- j
ringing out loud and clear in the still- i
as lie formed his column of assault, ami j
the word to advance. This is the aspect ;
d' things when real lighting is meant on both !
and they know it; and not such rout and j
and mere chasing of a pack of vagabonds j
one point of assemblage to another, as I
which we saw the oilier day, and j
ignorant people have magniiied j
an insurrection. 1 am of opinion
the insurrectionary element in Paris at
is conlinod to a very small class,
to a few desperate individuals. Mo
were behind ilie scenes on
attempting to pull the wires,
distributing a little money
amused at reading the soph
confessions of some of the rioters now
to the effect that they had received
francs, fifty centimes!” I thought the
: of the ‘ fifty Centimes'’ remarkably
am surprised, indeed, that some
who .cherishes the tradi-
autipathy. to Great _dsritiau and leu
Has not. discovered that 12 -francs
are jnst half it . pound sterling,
ilnfisli ghldhitist have beeii;
or theinsurrection, in the shape
that the French Government
riots prewieditatediy. But
doubt that. it is the government
thc only gainer by them, aud
impossible to doubt that
them with a certain degree of
afforded the Emperor
opportunity qf agai n turning t o the,
saying: “You see how it is;
better . me; you
"cry " for ‘liberty’ --pro
it inevitably leads to,
toa.sk rue
into the ’hand
' And, doubt, the
wil off again;
towns, and
*;»- PAILY-iyEKiyO BULLETIN—PHILADELPHIA, 1869,
mains as a solid testimony of a groatly changedj
state of public feeiftig. - - "
Everything- is np/w perfectly tranquil, and,.,
will no doubt remairi so until the now thtimber.
meets and tlie, new’,elections takO placo in
Paris for thosocir'cumscrfptiotjs where - there
has been a donblo election. We are rather
looking out for a fresh breeze in tbc latter case,
though its object will only be to keep alive tho
Tenewed political feeling of the. country.
fßy tlio Atlantic Cable.l
The Irish Chnrch Bill.
London, July 6.—-In the House of Lords Inst
niglit the Irish Church bill was resumed. Lord
Lifford moved an amendment granting the
value of their manses to the Presbyterians.
Earl Granville opposed the amendment on
the ground that it."would, aggravate the mis
chief of the decision arrived at by the House
.oh Eriilay niglit;’ when it rejected the amend
•merit to permit' churches to retain-their eccle
'siastical residences without paying therefor. .
Lord Lifford withdrew, his amendment, and
the Archbishop of Canterbury moved an
amendment to clause 29, that private endow
ments made since 1660, lnstlgacf of 1660, bo .re
tained by the Church. He pointed out , that
large endowments were inane prior .to 1660, '
and said there was no reason why they should
' not be dealt with in the same manner as those
made after that date. To show such an unjust
discrimination, lie thought, was most danger
ous,arid destined to shake the faith of the peo-;
pie in private endowment. .
Lord Hatherly opposed the amendment on
the ground that private endowments made
prior to 3660 were purely mythical, - and he
saidUhe trister grant was an appropriation to
church uses of public money and lands wori
by the English while putting down rebellion,
and was in no serise a private endowment;
The Bishop of Peterborough supported the
amendment, urging that neither on the ground
of justice nor of legal right ought the church
to be deprived of these early endowments.
Earl Granville said the difficulty iri estab
lishing the legality of those early endowment
rights would swallow up the. whole" amount
of their value in litigation, and he proposed to
grant half a million sterling instead.
The Marquis of Salisbury objected to bring
ing in at the hist moment Iresh proposals
by the government,and proposed that the con
sideration of Clause 2!) be postponed.
Lord Cairns suggested the passage of the
clause without date or amendment,: leaving
Earl. Granville’s proposition to be considered
in the report.
The Archbishop of Canterbury then moved
an amendment that all glebe lands granted by
the Crown since 1660 be given to the new
church body. After a long discussion,
the amendment was carried by a vote of 105
to 55.
Clauses .30, 31 and 32 were agreed to, and
clause 33 was taken up.
The Earl of Limerick moved an amend
ment providing that poor rates be deducted
from any rent-charge sold in lieu of tithes.
The Marquis of Salisbury remarked that this
amendment was an arithmetical puzzle, hut
was evidently intended as a sop to Irish land
lords. '
The government proposed to act fairly, but
the hill was tlie most penurious and exacting
measure ever devised. If the government had
come boldly forward anil avowed the clauses
which distinctly represented their principles,
they would have commended themselves more
to all classes in the country. The House
divided on the Marquis of Limerick’s amend-:
ment, arid it was adopted by a vote of ill to 64.
Clause 33, as amended, and clauses 34, 35, 3G,
37 and 38, were agreed to.
Tlie Earl of Courtown, believing the feeling
of tlie House was against the amendment to '
cancel the “Regium Donum” and Maynooth
College clarises, withdrew it, and the former
was agreed to.
Lord Eitz waiter renewed tlie amendment to
strike the Maynooth clause from the bill, and
the Earl of Bandon objected to the clause as a
violation of the preamble.
Lord Cairns admitted that that was a goed
ground for objection, but he would not vote
for jthe rejection of the clause, because it
would result in throwing tlie Maynooth grant
on the consolidated fund.
Tlie Duke of Argyle defended the clause,
and the Duke of Rutland opposed it.
The House voted to retain the clause as it
stood by a vote of 146 to 22.
Clauses forty to sixty-seven (inclusive) were
agreed to, and tlie House adjourned.
London, July 6—Midniglit.—In the House
of Commons, to-day, tlie Telegraph Purchase
! bill was read for the first time.
The House of Lords, to-night, took up the
Irish Church bill at clause (58.
Lord Cairns moved, as an amendment, to
postpone the question of the disposal of the
surplus,j because much time must elapse before
its realization, and he objected to its applica
tion to relieve others from legal obligations.
liarl Granville condemned the amendment,
anil said it would, if adopted, have the effect
to verify the prophecies that the bill -would
give no'satisfaction. ,
The Duke of Cleveland regretted the failure
of the proposition for concurrent endowment,
and urged that the surplus fund be held until
Parliament should be more fully able to decide
its application.
The Duke of Argyle supported the original
clause.
The Marquis of Salisbury protested against
the reckless cc 'act shown in throwing away
a large fund. He ridiculed the declarations of
members of the government that though indi
vidually in favor of concurrent endowment,
under present circumstances they deemed it
impossible. It was lamentable to see mem
bers sacrifice not only their own convictions,
but considerations of the ldgliest policy and
statesmanship at the bidding of a liberation
society.
The Earl of Kimberly urged the Lords to be
content with theamendments made, and not
to forfeit them by rendering it impossible for
the Commons to accept the bill as amended.
The House divided, and Lord Cairns’ amend
ment to postpone the disposal of the surplus
fund was adopted by a vote of l(iO to 90.
The clauses previously passed over were
then considered and agreed to, with some ver
bal alterations. The preamble of the bill was
amended to make it agree with the alteration
made in clause 68, and the bill then passed the
committee.
in>- Muii.j
' ito.tiu.
Anniversary of tlie Election of the Pope
—'.Celebration in Home.
A lie-man correspondent, writing under
dale uf June 18th, says: -
At dawn yesterday the cannon -of,Fort. St.
Angelo announced to the Eternal City tlie an
niversary of the election to the Papal throne
of Pius fX. twei 1,-three years ago, and tlie
l’opc opened the nay by attending a religious
service in the Sistine Chapel. The Holy
Fatlief afterwards received"'the Sacred College,
headed by Cardinal I’atrizi, wlio, as sub-dean,
expressed to him. the congratulations of tlie
Cardinals. Tlie Pope replied by first ae
: knowledging the mercy of the author of all
! good and all light, who liad enabled hint for
! twonty-tliree years to confront the eneniies of
i the Church. lie .then thanked the Sacred
| College for its eo-ppemtioil aud support .’during
r this period, which had been' signalized by so
j -many • diificiilt-circumstances— and sinister
• events. The time .was an unhappy one, for
j society ranged itself in two great parties, one
! composed of men of peace and order and mo
' rality, the other of innovators and disturbers,
Tull of evil passions, and more and more in
j dining to communism, socialism, and impious
i. philosophy. Governments could certainly darn
i up the toi rent if they resorted to rigorous and
salutary repression; but, unfortunately, they
showed the revolution too much indulgence.
.Still, we must not despair of the future, for
there is no limit to the divine control, and the
future rests with Hod.
i ~This address’was:rtcllvered by the Holy Father
with so much sadiiessthat a deeper impression
was made by ,Ins . ipnjiiitjE.ttiijVr his; words.
“The truth is
alarming from P'aris/ these
eoimrmiiichte T aih' unable' to-'&iy/blif? • fcobft
, as they arrived the l’ope summoned an extra
ordinary cpuiiell, composed almost wholly of
reactionary cardinals. This consultation is
said to have resulted hi a resolution to send to
the French capital Cartlmhl Bcraidi, tljeinostv Vejghing.againstfthe shortcomuws, fiad-i
Subtle rdiplomatist of the Court of Horrid,' 1 afid' 'led to ruin with'a bittorhebs which jcoulah&vdly.r
the alter ego of Cardinal Atitonelli. But tjiis have heeh'caused by pfecimiaryloss. {, The soK
statement must lx? received With u certain, cau? rowful .indignation of a sllfent.;and jsohtaiy old',
tion, for the belief is generalthari the. Cardinal. lnririua drab, who was said;to '.have .been, a ser
started oh his mission some/dhysago/thougli l- vanttothe present Duchess. sinceirifancy, cnl r
have ascertained that he is |till iriißdmel ' niinated when certain articles of frirniture were
Ovcnmcnical offered up; but his pained look did not stop the
Opposition to It; gossip or the covert sneering, and for the next
A correspondent.at Florence, writing on.the, two years the household gods of the-Dukc of
17th of June, says: “A report, which is very Newcastle will continue to be distributed to
generally credited, is spread here,; accordingto just such a ruhnihg lire of cynical criticism as
which serious difficulties have occurred as to generous minds shrink from and loathe,
the convocation of the (Ecumenical Council. The following were the more' valuable lots
It seems that* (he overtures made to various d.isposed of l VOurig Ladies’Room. —
Powers by'Prince Holienlohe, the : Bavarian \Lots 518-10. !A nearly hew walnutwood pedes-,
Minister, with the object of organizing a coali- tal dressing-table, with nine -drawers; patent'
tion against the papal pretensions, have had a locks and keys, and a waslistand to correspond,
certain degree of success. France. 1 and Italy -with drawers, marble tray top; and shelf—£4o
' appear disposed to join 1 Bavaria in its opposi- (Walters); 523. • A walnutwood lVinged Ward
, tion, and neither,Austria nor. Spain is l willing robe, 'with sliding 1 trays arid other interior
tp support tlie Pope, though .they decline to fittings,with plate glass cehtre-doore-33 guineas
,take any active steps against him. Cardinal (Ditto.) Wardrobe Room.—C24rs. Al 2 foot
Berkrdi, it is added, lias been sent by his Holi- painted and oak-grained wardrobe, fitted with:
ness on a special mission to Paris, in order, if 'numerous sliding trays, drawers, &c., enclosed
possible, to arrange matters. There is,. I by three pair folding panelled.:'doors,’ aud
have reason toßelieve,some truth in this rumor. a similar wardrobe, fitted with movable
;It is Jaiown that France has again, attempted dress yokes, apd enclosed 'by ' three pair
to establish a modus vivendi between Victor folding panelled doors—44 guineas (Pur-
Emmanuel and tlie Pope, on tlie basis of cer- her). Best A, velvet-pile
tain proposals which had been previously*ar- carpet .of elegapt design, and nearly new,
ranged between tlie Cabinets of Florence and planned to room, about 76 yards—22 guineas
'tlie/Tuileries, and her present attitude as re- (11i1den).635. A brilliant plate chimney
gards the (Ecumenical Council is. supposed to glass, covered with pink silk and handworked
be caused by tlie failure of this negotiation.” lace, the plate measuring 10 in. by 54 in.—2o
1 guineas (Watson). 036. A pair of Svalnut
wood pedestal cabinets of six drawers each, in
laid,with'tulip ’wood, .with ormolu galleries,
patent locks and keys—Bo guineas (Watson).
062.. A vory rich white ground brocaded satin
curtain, 10 feet by 7i feet," lined : with pink
honeycomb—4ss guineas (Vivian).' 663. A
6-feet handsome brass tubular bedstead on
patent castors, 1 and the richly carved gilt
canopy over the same, with figured Cretonne
curtains, the drapery and bases trimmed with
silk gimp and tassels —35-J guineas (Ditto),
Ornamental Objects.—oB2. A toilet glass, in
costly Dresden china frame, richly gilt, and
painted with raised birds and, cupids,
with'' branches for four lights,
the plate measuring 24 inches by 18
inches—3o guineas (Frazer). 683. A very
costly clieval glass in massively-designed frame
of fine old Dresden, richly gilt, and painted
with raised birds and cupids, with branches for
eight lights, (lie plate measuring 50 inches by
20 inches—s 2 guineas (B.Benjamin). 086. A.
pair of mirrors in elegant Dresden china
frames, witli raised flowers, .figures and birds,
witli branches for six lights each—2o guineas
(Frazer). 001. A beautifully-designed oxy
dized timepiece, .with blue enameled dial and
figures, and a pair of candelabra to. match,
witli velvet stands for the same—2B guineas
(Lane). Dressing-room. —703. A handsoinely
marked walnut wardrobe, with tulip-wood
beading and edges, the centre fitted with dress
yokes and drawers, enclosed by a silver plate
glass door; tlie wings fitted with sliding trays
and drawers. In yesterday’s sale the splendid
old Madeira, 1816, Roda, sold at 110 s.
per dozen.
King Theodore’s Son.~lle is to’’heave
England.
The Pall Mall Gazette says:
We are informed tliat Prince Alamayoo, son
of King Theodore of Abyssinia, will leave
England for India, under the care Of Captain
Speedy, by the next steamer from, Southamp
ton. The Indian climate will probably suit
him better than our own; and it would have_
been an act of great uhkindness on the part oi
Government to have severed the boy from; his
guardian, who has received an appointment in
Oudli. As to the future of the young prince,
it is impossible to speculate. It is not an ; easy
problem that we may haver, to solve after the
lapse of some ten years. Meanwhile it is our
duty to do the best that can be done for him in
the way of general education and training to
fit him to-play his part, whatever it may be, in
the great drama of life. He is represented to
be an intelligent and lovable child, with great
quickness of observation, and a somewhat ex
citable temperament.
The Prussian Navy.
It is tlie Strongest in tlie World.
The Pall Mall Gazette says;
A few years ago it would scarcely be an ex
aggeration to say that the long-boat of a British
man-of-war would bo a fan match for Prussia’s
whole fleet; and one can understand the feeling
of legitimate pride with which Count Bismarck
lately found himself able to assertjthat her navy
is at this moment second to none in the Baltic.
The extraordinary rapidity with which iron
clad alter iron-clad lias been built and launched
in the Prussian ports,' and the scarcely-dis
guised pretensions of the Prussian Govern
ment to the supremacy of the Baltic sea, have
created no little jealousy in Russia. Last year,
at the suggestion of Count Bismarck,the Prus
sian and Russian fleets cruised and manoeuvred
together during the summer months; but a pro
posal to renew the same exercises has met at St.
Petersburg with an unqualified refusal. This
incident has caused much sensation in Russian
naval circles, the general impression being that
the Government is aware of the present superi
ority of the Prussian navy and unwilling to
let their fleet serve as a foil to that of their ac
tive and enterprising neighbor.
A OTISED BIKE.
Sale of tbe Dnhe of Newcastle’s Effects in
Carlton House Terrace.
[From the London Daily News, Juno 24.)
Members of both Houses,some looking grave
and sad, others, whose air seemed to say: “I
told you so;” sporting men, who seemed ex
clusively bored at the whole proceedings, and
fashionables of both sexes, whose great care
was to edge away from the brokers who tried
to fasten on them, were welded together in a
strange medley in thO dining-room of 18 Carlton
House Terrace, yesterday. The policemen
who kept guard at the foot of the great stair
case and at the entrance to cellars and rooms
had no sinecure, tortile applications to wander
freely througirthe mansion were both nume
rous and persistent; the man who stood in the
hall with catalogues had disposed of his stock
at a shilling each soon after 3 P. M., and even
such things as japanned water cans, house
maids’ boxes and baskets, hand-brooms and
dust-pans, gave rise to animated bidding. This
increased when more interesting articles came
to be offered, and between 4P. M. and 5 P.
M-, when hand-work and gilded chairs and
tables were put up, what may be termed “fancy
prices” were obtained.
The house in which this scene is taking
place is one of the largest in Carlton House
Terrace, and stands at the Spring Gardens end,
with oilices which cross the road, forming a ml
da .sac, and communicating apparently with a
house on the other side. The auctioneers’ bills
tell their story directly the corner by the Duke
of York’s Column is passed, making the Duke’s
ruin manifest on both sides of the roall. The
words “Heirloom—Clumber” on a large case
of stuffed birds meet the visitor’s eye directly
he is in the hall, and they are repeated upon
marble busts and other articles which stand
between him and the dining-room door. The
vast place seenis to be in many respects as its
unfortunate holders left it. The line oil paint
ings are hanging in their accustomed places,
some with “heirloom” on the label attached,
others, and those the most numerous, num
bered as lots. The din'ing-table is just where
it would be if a party were to be given. It
needs no great stretch of fancy to people the
noble room with host, hostess and guests,
where Mr. Lumley now does, the •spiriting at
tbe head of the table, round which keen-faced
men are ticking oil' the prices in their cata
logues.
It is seldom that anything so disastrous as a
sale by auction takes place in Carlton House
Terrace, and the idlers assembled then! yester
day might be suspected of deriving a gloomy
relish from the knowledge of this fact. That a
duke should be sold tip, “just as you or me
might lie to-morrer, my dear,” was an unfail
ing source of trite moralizing on the part of
one stout lady, who bought nothing, but prosed
much; and that the sale was taking place
within half it dozen doors of the residence of
■the Premier of England, the Duke’s father’s
friend, was given out quite frequently as an
item of news, by an old . gentleman who
took -possession - ot-a—snug comer early
in the day, and never once looked at
the auctioneer. Now and then anecdotes
would fly round of real or imaginary accidents
which had taken place, when it was thought
the crash could be and minute de
tails of personal history were freely given, just
as if those inventing, and retailing them had
had tlie duke in their possession like a tame
animal. It is, of’ course, not to be expected
that sympathy for reverses, even when due to
unavoidable misfortune, should be found in an
auction-room; but. its utter absence, was never
more marked thaii yesterday. Had those jjx-e
-..-.seiji bMiLstej:iL.3Gto)'J.Bft^3vUasa.VMiisdous». , .l
, ness of virtue impelled them to be hard upon
the : weak and falling, fclieir tone could not have
'been more didactically severe. However,
everybody present who touched on the sub
'jebt 'at. , all seemed . to,', consider themselves
entitled to have . a fling, at. the .absent.
prodigal; and men and women wlio,if physiog
nomy is to be trusted, were not exemplars of
all the Christian, virtues, might be heard in-
SPIBITVAXJBH.
The medium Home and Napoleon.
A London correspondent writes as follows:
Mr. Home was present last night at a meet
ing of the Committee of the Dialectical Society
which is investigating spiritual manifestations,
and gave a long account of his experience.
Certain manifestations, he said, occur only in a
trance. He is sometimes awakened even out
of a sound sleep by a presence in the room,
and then tlie spirit will tell him what is doing
at a distance. He writes it down at tlie time,
and it invariably proves correct. “The only
thing (he added) 1 can explain about a trance
is, that I have always felt it necessary for the
people ahout me to be in a harmonious condi
tion. Then I become like one in a dream, and
then comes a dizzy sensation,and I forget every
thing; when 1 awake, it is sometimes with the
utmost difficulty that I get the blood to circu
late,_. I never know what occurs in a trance.
Indeed, 1 am sceptical as to what people tell
me I have said while in that state. It is un
pleasant to me.” Being asked what he meant by
persons being “harmonious,” Mr. Home said:
“I cannot tell any more than that on. going
into a drawing-room I sometimes feel at home
at once; and at another time you can go in
when two or three persons are there, and you
- do not feel at home. It is nothing more than
that.” Mr. Home said that lie had been given
over by tlie doctors several times, but the spirits
told him he woidd get better. During tlie pro
gress of tlie law-suit with Mis. Lyon he had
congestion of tlie brain, and liis memory left
him. Tlie spirits told him he woidd recover,
and lie had recovered. Mr.' Home related a
fact which occurred some years ago in tlie pre
sence of tlie Emperor Napoleon. “We were,”
he said, “in a large room in tlie Salon de Louis
Quatorze. The Empress and Emperor were
present. I am now telling the story as I heard
the Emperor tell it. A table was moved—then
a hand was seen to come. It was a very beau
tifully formed- hand. There were pencils
on the table. It lifted, not the one
next it, but one on the far side. We heard the
sound of writing, and saw it writing on fine
note-paper. Tlie hand passed before me and
went to the Emperor, and lie kissed tlie hand.
It went to the Empress; she withdrew-from its
touch, and the hand followed her. The Em
peror said, ‘Do not he frightened;’ and she
kissed it too. It was disappearing. I said I
would like to kiss it. Tlie hand seemed to be
like a person thinking, and as if it were saying,
‘Wliy should 1?’ It came back to me. It hail
written tlie word Napoleon, and it remains
written now. It was as much a material
hand, seemingly, as my hand is now. Tlie
writing was an autograph of the Emperor Na
poleon 1., who had an exceedingly beautiful
hand.” Mr. Home said that the Emperor of
Russia, as well as tlie Emperor Napoleon, had
seen' hands, and had taken hold of them,
“when they seemed to float away into thin air.”
In reply to a question whether lie could give
any information as to the state and condition
of departed human spirits, Mr. Home
said that his information led him to tlie
opinion that precisely as we go to sleep here
so .we awake in -the'other world—Wesleyans
were Wesleyans,Swedcnborginns were Sweden
borgians, Mahometans were Mahometans. As
to future rewards and punishments, bad spirits
seethe continuous results of the wrong they
have done, and in some instances have en
deavored to repair it by declaring where con
cealed papers were.' Two or three other per
sons expressed their opinion on this subject.
One of them, a Mr. Dainrain, who said that,
though not himself a medium, lie “had been
in the. presence of 100. mediums at 200 seances,
and had in his library 500 volumes on Spiritual-;
Ism,” gave it as his opinion that there are mar
riages in tlie spiritual world between opposite
sexes, but no spiritual children. Spiritual boys
go to school, and continue to grow' until 35;
old men return to that age; painters paint with
spiritual pigments,and mechanics make spiritual
tables, i" ■
BOARDING,
Board wanted in gkrmantown.
Two ndjbinhig'Roomsj from August Ist. Address
.0. A.* at this _• -- ' , It*..
tveSlß ABLE BOARD;/OAK BE HAD
17. fi>r two families, within fivo minutes’ walk from
” Wayne ElogTihr^YouVuW~at'-'
tiic,hcd,-Ac. Apply at'No; 114 North water Ht-.* jyd 2t* \
-COALA»D:WOODrr^-
s.’mabonßines. John f; sheaef.
rpHE UNDERSIGNED INVITE ATTEN
JL tioi) to their etock of .; _ . , r
Spring Mountain, Lehigh ana Locuat Mountain Coal,
which, with the preparation given by üb, wo think can-*
not bo excelled by any other Coal. • 0 ‘
Ofllce, Franklin Institute Building, No. 1«B. Seventh
uti-H t, BINES & SHEAF.F.
ja)o-tf ATcbetroet wharf, Schuylkill.
OMMON coins OIL OKTHTEADEIi
'■'■S3PHIA. . If-'&IS' *&' !U V
. - [CLERK’SiPFPTCE.} £‘, ■’
*■.. PHiStilDfflKPinA/Jjano 28,1969. ,’.
In accordance «Mth> a Resolntiom'adopted
Toy the Common Covtncilof tlio City of Pliila
delphia, on day
of June, 18C9, theannexed hill, entitled
‘■An Ordinance to authorize a loan for the
payment of Ground Rents and Mortgages,
is hereby published forjpublic information.
JOHN ECKSTEIN,
Clerk of Common Council.
An ordinance to authorize a
loan for the payment of ground rents
audmortgages. . , ......
Section I.' The Select and Common
Councils of the City of Philadelphia do or
dain, That the Mayor of Philadelphia be and
he is hereby authorized to borrow, at not less
than par, on ; the credit of the city, from time
totime, seven : hundred thousand dollars for
the payment of ground rents and mortgages
held against> the city,.for which interest not
to exceed therate tof six per cent, por annum
shall ho paid, half yearly; on the first days of
January and July, at the office of. .the City
Treasurer. The principal of said loan Bhall be
payable and paid at the expiration of thirty
years from the date of the same and not be
fore, without the consent of the holders there
of; and the certificates therefor in the usual
form of the certificates of city loan shall be is
sued in such.amounts as the lenders may re
quire, hut pot for any fractional part of one
hundred dollars, or, if required, in amounts
of five hundred orone thousand dollars; and
it shall be expressed: in said certificates that
the loan therein .mentioned and the interest
thereof are payable free from all taxes.
Sec. 2. whenever any loan shall be made by
virtue; thereof there shall be, by force of *this
ordinance, annually appropriated out of . the
income of the corporate estates, and from the
sum raised by taxation; a sum sufficient to
pay the interest on said certificates, and the
furthor sum of three-tenths of one per centum
on the par value of such certificates so issued
shall be appropriated quarterly out of said in
come and taxes to a sinking fund, Which fund
and its accumulations are hereby especially
pledged for. the redemption and payment of
said certificates.
ItESOT.UTION TOPUIiLISH A EOAX TilLt.
Resolved, That the Clerk of Common Coun
cil be authorized to publish in two daily news
papers of this city, daily, for four weeks, the
ordinance presented to the Common Council
on Thursday, June 24,1865 J, entitled, “An Or
dinance to Authorize a Loan for the payment
of Ground Rents and Mortgages;” And the
said Clerk, at the stated meeting of Councils
after the expiration of four weeks from tlm
first day of said publication; shall present to
this Council-one of each of said newspapers
for every day in winch the same shall have
been made. je2o 24t$
FURNTTURE, &C.
FURNITURE.
I am selling at present, at the exact cost, of
production, the finest lot of Furniture, in
quality, style and finish, ever offered in this
city. My intention is to meet the views of
purchasers, and make it an object for them to
buy.
Any doubts as to the above facts will easily
bo dispelled by calling at my Warerooms,
1316 CHESTNUT STREET.
JOHN M. GARDNER.
jclGlm
GROCERIES, LIQUORS, &C.
NEW SPICED SALMON,
OF THE SEASON.
ALBERT C. ROBERTS,
BEALEB IN FINE GBOCERIKS,
Corner Eleventh and Vine Streets.
CHOICE FAMILY LARD.
PROCTER & GAMBLE,
CINCINNATI,
are now pocking in Wood Caddies of 3,5 and 10 pounds
each,
A Strictly phoice Article of Pure Lard
for Family Use.
The wood from which the caddy is mado is prepared by
a patent process,which prevents absorption and leakage.
The advantages over the old stylo are:
Ist—lt is always a strictly choice, reliable nrticle.
2<l— Unlike packages put up by other houses, these
packages arc always full weight .
3d—lt is much cleaner and mors easily handled.
4th—lt will keep for any length of time, and is particu
larly adapted for Hot Climates.
Families can obtain it at all first-class Grocers.
Ask for Procter & Gamble’s Brand of Lard
in Caddies.
COLLINS ROBB,
WHOLESALE AGENTS,
240 and 242 North Front Street,
„ PHILADELPHIA.
jc!4 mw f 13t§ ; .
TpRESH PEACHES IN LARGE. CANS,
Jj at Fifty Cents per Can—the cheapest ami best
goods in the city, at COUSTY’S Eaßt Enu Grocery, No.
116 South Second street.
French peas, mushrooms, truf
fleß, Tomatoes, Green Corn, Asparagus, <tc.,inetoro
and for sale at COUSTY’S East Eud Grocery, No. 118
South Second street. ,
•\r EW DATES, figs, prunes, rai-
XI sins and Almonds—all of now crop—ln store and for
sale at COUSTY’S East End Grocery, No. 118 South
Second street.
SWEET 01L.—160 DOZEN OF EXTRA
quality Olive Oil,expressly imported fbr COUSTY’S
East End Grocery, No. 118 South Second street.
STONED CHERRIES. PLUMS, BLACK
berries, Peaches, Prunellas, Fears, Limaßeans,
Shaker Sweet Corn, End Grocory, No.
118 South Second street. . . • •
GENTS* FllKNlSlillNG GOOUS.
PATENT SHOULDER SEAM SHIRT
. ■
Orders for those celebrated Shirts supplied promptly on
brief notice. . .
Gentlemen’s Furnishing Goods,
Of late stylea in full variety.
WINCHESTER & CO.
700 CHESTNUT.
jc3-m wftr • . v ,
PINE DRESS SHIRTS
CENTS’ NOVELTIES.
J. W. SCOTT & CO.,
No. 814 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia,
Four doors below Continental Hotol.
mhl-f m w tf
-SUMMER RESORTS. .X
-COLUMBIA HOUSE,
' iOAPE MAY,
With occommodatiotis far 780 sueetß, is now open.
Tho Germania Sorenado Bond, under the direction of
Prof. Geo. Baetcrt, has boon secured for tho Bcaaon.
: leZganS . ..J GEO. J. BOLTON, Proprietor.
UNITED STATES HOTEL,
ATLANTIC OIT Y, N. J
Will open for the rpbepUon of Gueete !
Saturday., Jane 20tb, 1860.
Haeßlor’o Band, under tlio direction of Mr. Simo
Hassler, is engaged for the season . '
Persons wishing to cngago Booms will apply to
OEO. FBEEMAS, Superintendent,
Atlantic City,#. J„
Or BBOWN & WOEBPPEB,
827 Bichmond Street, Philadelphia.
SURF HOUSE, ATLANTIC CITY, N. J.,
NOW OPEN.FOB GDEBTS. t
For. Booms, Terms, &c, y address ’
, ; , THOSIAB FARLEY, Proprietor.
Carl Sentz's'Parlor' 'drchisita'ktu'-iktn'tnihkidfw tht
season.
CAPE ISLAND, N. J.
THIBD
Btr /i’ I t .’i P , 1 «5 l f2 l AvV%fj!?- 7 4V of Jnno, under thonamo
“"d titlepf MAISOJt pOKEE/at tho corner of WASH*
iiiGTON anil JACKSON Bta., known aa Hart’, Cottage.
«GT Fiunlliee will be supplied at the Cottage. K
Lodging ltoume bjr Day or Week to Bent.
C ONGRE S S H ALL ,
CAPE MAY.
Now Open for Rooms. .
J. F. CAIiE, Proprietor.
jcH-m w ■ 12t"
BWiJLNU»;' : "
Addrosß,
Hasster'i Full Band ,
CAM BUI A COUNTY, PA; T
Will bo opened to Guests July lot.
“Excursion Tickets,” good for the season, over tho
Pennsylvania Central Railroad, can be procured from
Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, and Harrisburg, to Kayler
station *2 miles from the Springs, vrbero coaches will bo
in readiness to convey guests to tlio Hprliiss.
Tho proprietor takes pleasure in notifying thft pnbllc
that the hotel is in-proper order, and all amusements
usually found at watering places can be found at tho
above resort. Terms, S 2 60 per day, or SCO per month.
jeB tl jy26» FKANOIB A. GIBBONS, Proprietor.
C” KEB3OX SPItIKGS.—THIS PAVORITE
BUMMER KEBORT, situated on the summit Of tho
alTjKuhany mountXinh, 2m feet above
TIIK EKVKL OF THE HE A, will bo open for there
crption of guests on the loth day of .Juno. Tho building*
connects! with Ibis establishment have been entirely
renovated and newly furnished. Excursion tickets sold
bvtlieP.H. K..at New York, Philadelphia, LnncdaWr.
Harrieburg, and Pittsburgh, good for the season. All
inline atop at Cretan.
TWO FURNISHED COTTAGES
.. , , FOR KENT.
For farther information address
GEO. \Y'. MULLIK, Proprietor,
Cr<?**on Spring?,
■ '■ ■ • Cambria county, l'a
Gettysburg suitings hoteu w ili,
VJT be opened J una 28; Visitors to Hummer resorts will
find this one of Ibo beat hotels In the world. Hotel and
furniture entirely new. Gas, hot and cold water, with
of over 100 acres: two large groves and drive*.
[orac railroad from Gettysburg depot to House and
Spring. Two daily mails, telegraph, etc., in connection
w itii the Katalratne Spring, the battle-field, and a high,
rolling country. Pure mountain alrgiml nomosnnitoes.
je3owfm6ls l
Light house cottage,
«2. ATLANTIC CITY, N. J.,
Conveniently located to good and safe bathing, la cow
open. Leave cars at U,». llob‘l.
„ JONAH WOOTTON,
_ jel6 lm§ Proprietor.
UEA BATHING—NATIONAL HALL,
D Cape May City, N.,T.
This large and commodious bote!, known as thu
National Hall, is now receiving visitors.
AAEON GAEBETBON,
je2i-2ro§ __ _ Proprietor.
Delaware house, cape island,
N. J, fa now open for the reception of visitors.
jeJ7*2m§ J ABIES BIECKAY, Proprietor.
The broad top mountain house
will be opened for the reception of guests Juno2£rtli.
Eorterma, Ac., address,
W. T. PEAHBON, Proprietor,
Broad Top, Huntingdon county, Pa.
FOR LONG BRANCH
Without Change oi'Cars.
LEAVE PHILADELPHIA, FROM WALNUT
BTBEET WHARF, 840 A. M.,2.00 P. M.
DUE LONG BRANCH at 12.19 P. H„ 6.12 P. Jl
FABE
Philadelphia to Long Branch
Excursion Tickets,
s3 00
-ISO
WiimrGX’CZHEB, Ag«nt.
-BsgSSl* FOR CAPE MAY,
On Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays.
On and after SATURDAY. June 28th, the new and
eplendid Steamer LADY OK TUB LAKE, Captain
W. Thompfion, will commence running regularly to
Capo Mar, leaving Arch Street Wharf on TUESDAY*
TIfURSDAY aud SATURDAY MORNINGS at 9
o'clock, and returning* leave the landing at Cape May
on MONDAYS, WEDNESDAYS and FRIDAYS at
8 FAHKi*INCLUDING CARRIAGE HIRE, 52 25,
CHILDREN, “ “ “ 125.
SERVANTS, “ “ 1 50.
SEASON TICKETS, SIO. CARRIAGE HIRE
EXTRA.
THE LADY OF THE LAKE is a fine sea boat, has
handsome Mate-room accommodations, and is titled up
with everything necessary for the safety and comfort of
passengers. ■
Freight received until B>i o’clock.
For further particulars, inquire at tho Office, No. 33
North i>ELA\VAItE Avenue
ELASTIC SPONGE.
Pennsylvania Elastic Snonge Co.,
1111 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia.
ELASTIC^PONGE.
A SUBSTITUTE FOR CURBED HAIR FOR ALU
UPHOLSTERY PURPOSES.
CHEAPER THAN FEATHERS Olt HAIR AND FAR
SUPERIOR.
The Lightest, Softest, and most Elastic and Durable
material known for
MATTRESSES, PILLOWS, CAR, CARRIAGE AND
• \ CHAIR CUSHIONS.
It is entirely indestructible, perfectly clean and free
from dust.
IT DDES NOT PACK AT ALL!
Is always free from insect life; Is perfectly healthy,and
for tho sick/Unequalled.
If soiled in any way, can‘bo renovated quicker and*
easier than any other Muttrcss.
Special attention given to
FURNISHING CHURCHES, HALLS, Ac.
Railroadmen aro especially invited to oxumiuo tho
Cushion FACTION GUARANTEED.
THE TRADE SUPPLIED.
jy2omwfly§
THE FINE ARTS,
Established 1795.
A. S. ROBINSON,
FRENCH PLATE LOOKING GLASSES,
Beautiful Ohromos,
EKGRAVINGSAXD PAISTWGS,.
Manufacturer of all kinds of -,
Looking-Glass, Portrait & Picture Frames.
910 CHESTNUT STREET,
Fifth Door above the Continental,
. PHILADELPHIA.
CUTLERY-
fJODUER S r AND W OSTENHOL M’S -
IUPOOKET KNIVES, PEARL „and STAG HAN- -
DLFS of beautiful finish: RODGEItS 1 eml WADK.& .
butcher's, and tho CELEBRATED liECOULTItH.
RAZOR? SCISSORS IN OASES of tiio finesthlmlity.; '
.Hn7.0r8,-Kidve»,Bcißspr«atHlTi|hle.CnUerx,cround.aud.:._
nolished, EARTNSTRUMENTs ol the most approved'.
construction to lissißt tho hearing, Ut P. MADEIRA'S,-
Cutler and Surgical Instrument Maker, 115 Tenth Street,-
fi«lowOl»e«tnnt..'~L' ■■ ioyr-tf..
7?AS FIXTURES.—MISKISY, MERRIIjE
It * THACKARA, No.7lB'Cld;Htnut street; manufac
turers of Gas Fixtures, Lamps, Ac., Ac, would call tho •
attention of tho public to their largo and. elegant assortr
roent of Gas Chandeliers. Pendants, Brackets, 4c. They
also introduce gas pipes into dwellings and public build
ings, and attend to extending, ultoriug and repairing sac *
pipes. All work warranted.
G.H.HITDDKLL,
CALVIN TAGOAKT.
;,-TJ
Internal Revenue receipts yesterday,
The schooner Vokimnia, with a cargo of
brandies and cigars, lias been-seizcd at Pensa
cola. The vessel was 'Worn Tampico.
Gkn. John Cochrane has.declined the ap
pointment .of Collector ol>,the Sixth District of
New York, 1 ]:<> , v ; t.'iii. t ; ‘V’L ' ,
Thk Treasury Department, yesterday con
firmed the sale of fifty-three hydraulic
presses, which sold for $lOO each and cost
$2,000 each.
~ Twenty-five persons were killed, and
many others injured, by a recent "accident on
the railroad between Vera Criiz and the City
of Mexico.
- The. Commissioner under the: Mexican
treaty,'to /adjudicate the clairnsbetween,that
, country arid our Government.; has not yet ar
rived in Washington.
William , Penn Lloyd,; Collector of the
fifteenth Pennsylvania District, has sent in
his resignation, to take effect on the appoint
ment of liis successor. ,
1 At a special meeting of the St. Louis Board
of Trade last night. Captain Brown reported
the result of bis trip to New York to charter
a vessel to go ,to St. Louis and take a cargo of
grain to that city. »
Ik the New Hampshire Senate yesterday,
the usury bill, making nine per cent, the legal
rate, of interest, was indefinitely postponed.
A bill has passed the House to tax all toreign
insurance companies one per cent, on busi
ness done in the State.
A desperate attempt was made to break
jail in Hudson, N.Y., on Monday. The plas
tering and mortar had been removed, and the
stones in a wall loosened so that a slight push
would throw them out and' allow the prisoners
to escape, hut the plot was discovered in time
to prevent its execution. , . -
AT New Bedford*, yesterday, seven men
were swept overboard from a yacht by the,
oscillation of a boom, and two of them were
drowned. At Booth Bay, Maine, on
Monday night, a pleasure boat was run over
by a schooner, and two 'young ladles: were
drowned. Miss Nora Giles, daughter of Itev.
Henry "Giles, the essayist, was drowned at
Bricksjiort, Me., on Mpnday.
At Tkhue Haute, jnd., ‘yesterday, C. W.
“Brown and-Major O. Y. Smith, editors and
proprietors of the Saturday Evening Gazette,
were shot and wounded by a policeman
named Erwin Sernia, Sernia is reported to
have first assaulted Smith with a billy in the
street, and on the latter drawing a pistol, shot
himinthe leg. At this time Mr. Brown ap
peared, and Sernia fired at him ®so, danger
ously wounding him in the breast.
Jeremiah Baltimore, a colored boy, who
constructed a beautiful model of a steam
engine, which attracted great attention at the
l’atent Office, called yesterday upon Presi
dent Grant, who received him very kindly,
and who was so well pleased with him that he
at once directed an appointment to he made
out for the lad as an apprentice in the Bureau
of Steam Engiuceringat the Washington Navy
Yard, on the same footing as the white boys
employed there.
The following despatch, from the Commis
sioners appointed to examine the Pacific Kail
roads, has been received by Secretary Cox:
“San PitANCisco, June 28 .—T0 the Secretary
of the Interior : We have been over the two
Pacific Railroads,from Omaha to Sacramento,
almost all the way by daylight, going at the
rate of thirty miles an hour and over, and we
find them to*be as good as any new roads ever
made in this country. They were not per
fected from Echo Canon to the Humboldt, but
hundreds of laborers are now perfecting the
work as fast as possible. We are satisfied
-fbatall lias been clone in good faith.
“B. F. Wade,
“James Bkooks.”
.The Fourth of July was celebrated in the
principal cities of Europe. At Vienna a ban
quet was given, at which Mr. Hay presided,
and, bn-toasting the health of the Emperor of
Austria, called romind the 1 despatch sent by
.Secretary Seward to Mr. Motley, in 1862, in
which a tribute was paid to the dignity, mode
ration and justice 1 which had marked the
policy of Austria at the beginning of the. re
bellion in America,and, added Mr. Hay, these
qualities continued to characterize the conduct
of the Austrian government throughout
the war. Minister Jay gave a toast to the
health of Baron Von Bcust. At Stuttgart, two
hundred Americans and their friends had a
dinner, at which Mr, Herman presided, and
toasts were drank to the independence of
America, President Grant, Congress, the Army
and Navy of the United States, and to the
King of Wirt cm burg. At night a ball was
given, at which one thousand people were
present. Banquets were given on July 4, in
Paris and Berlin. At the latter place, the
health of Grant and the King of Prussia, Ban
croft and Bismarck were toasted, ami the
speakers compared the American anniversary
with that of Koonigrat-z.
THE EO&S 5? THE POWELL EXPEDI-
Statement of John A. Blsdon—Tuenty*
one Hen Engulfed in the Colorado in a
Bloment.
I From the Chicago Tribune. I V
SritINOFiELU, 111., Friday, July 2.—The late
of the I’owell expedition has caused a feeling
of intense anxiety among his friends and the
public generally, and is now determined by the
report i as brought by the only survivor of the
ill-fated party. 1 send you the story as told
to me to-day by him, which settles the fate of
Major Powell and party.
The survivor's name is John A. Risdon; he
was a member of the Powell expedition.
Joined Major Powell's party on the 10th day of
July, 1865, at La Salle. -His duties, were to
assist as chain man, and whatever he could do
to be made useful. He has been with the party
every day-since it left Illinois, and, of course,
is well acquainted with all who composed it.
On the 7th or Stli day of May the party
readied the Colorado river, at a point called
Williamsburg, a small -Indian settlement. At
tliat time the party consisted of Major Powell,
Wm. C. Hurley,Clias. Hurley,Andrew Knoxton,
Smith. Win. S. Dalton, Charles-Slierman,T. W.
William Scott, Perry Duncan, John A.-Jones,
Frederick Buckingham, David Sellers, Edward
Spencer, William Murray, Isaac Thomas,
Thomas lleuglis,a half-breed named Chic-a-wa
nee, the guide, and two men who lived at
Fairbury, 111., who acted as runners, and
whose names he could not remember. There
were also two teamsters named Fred. Myers
and Thomas Walch. The party remained at
Williamsburg seven or eight days, the Major
sending out scouting parties of observation
during the time.
On the 16th or 18tli of May the camp was
broken up, and the whole party moved down
the river for the purpose of exploring tributa
ries of the Colorado named Big. Black and the
Heleban. At a point 160 yards above Big
Biaek the party embarked on board of a large
bark canoe, called a yawl by the Indians (the
boats the Major bad haying been left behind),
witli the exception of Mr. Risdon, who was
directed by Major Powell to go below the Col
orado Rapids, which had a fall of about 100
feet,, between the mouth of the Big Black and
Deieban, a distance of a mile and a quarter,
and to see if the party could go up the Deieban,
and then to return and await the return of the
party from its exploration of the mouth of the
Big Black. Mr. Risdon and four or five
others- 1 of the party tried to dissuade the Major
from crossing at that point, as they
considered, by observations made a day or two
before, that the attempt would be dangerous.
But Major Powell said laughingly in reply:
“We have crossed worse rapids than these,
boys. You. must be getting cowardly. If seven
. or eight -men'cannot paddle us across there,-we
will have to go under. Wlieru they -left tlie
shore, there were twenty-live men on the boat,
with 1 instruments,7 ail'd all of the
~ Major s iidfe'-bookhvSe; .Tliey'piished outlnto
theriver with three'hearty cheers, using seven
paddles, the Major standing in the stern steer
ing. Risdon stood on this shore waving,his
hat, and said: -“You must be back in time for
dinner, for I will have a good lunch for yon
when you . return.” They cried back in
THEY.
=reply-: - “Good-bye, -Jack; -you-.wilLJncveit:
see us again.” A moment afterward Risdon
saw the boat commence whirjing aroumj, gnd,
Jifce a living thing,divc ilown totb thidepHia of
the liverwith its living ft eight, Major Powell
standing at his post, and wasthe last man Ris
ckjmitioji,
and Risdon was left alone, the only survivor of
the party. His feelings din lie better imagined
than described. Iti his ■ own language," * “For
two home I lay on the bank of the river, cit
ing like a baby.”. He then went up and down
the river'for half a mile or more, to see if lie
could find aiiy remains rif' the.party» jiu£ could
not do so. tie then went' down the river for
about time; or four miles,-and,-while sitting on
the river bank resting himself, lie saw a carpet
bag floating dowri the Stream,' about four
roils from him. lie had no other way
to roach it but to swim, which he did,
and',brought it to the shore, j It “proved to be
Major Powell’s, and contained; meinorandujn'
and sketch books. Risilpu: cpjfthiued ifbur
•lavs searching for the'remains of the Joist
1 patty without finding anything but the ‘ carpet
bag,’and then gathering up all the effects tlie
party left" behind; arid taking tlie two/teams
and wagons, started for the bordeis of civiliza
tion, and after eight days of travel he readied
Le Roy, a small military post anil settleirient
on Red River, about : the/ first of-. June. In
reaching this place Risdon was obliged to ford
different livers and streams' twenty/times, arid
several times came near losing one of the
teams. At Le Roy, Risdon reported to Colo
onel Smith.-coniriianding the post, and turned
over to liiin all tlie property lie had .brought
through. C’oloriel Smith received him kindly,
and did all indiis power to make liim comfort
able after his loiig; lonesome tiip, • and at tlie
end of three days, gaye Risdon. transportation
for St. Louis, where lie Arrived about three
days ago, arid is now in this city, oil his way to,
LaSalle, his home., : All of Major Powell’s
baggage, together with the carpet-bag found
by Risdori, were sent to Mrs. Powell by express,
yesterday, from St. Louis.
I liave written this sketch hastily, as it, fell
from the lips of Mr. Risdon, who lias the ap
pearance of an honest, reliable man, and well
posted in tlie doings of the expedition; and by
liis words and by the tangible proofs lie brings
with him, tlie fate of Major Powell’s expedition
is left without a doubt, and another name is
added to the long roll of martyrs to science.
Mr. 1 Risdon served under Major Powell in Co.
B, Fifst Illinois Artillery, for three years during
the late war. ,
lIISDON’S STORY NOT ENTIRELY CREDITED.
I From the Chicago Kvening Journol. July,?]
Tliere is st iiii reason to "doubt tlie report of
the loss of Major Powell and bis party of scien
tific explorers, in the Colorado river. The
mother of Major Powell, who resides at Whea
ton. in this State, lias received a letter from
Jiim dated May 28. Risdon’s account, pub
lished in our Springfield despatch of yesterday,
states that the disaster to the party occurred
MayS. Major Powell did not leave Illinois
until Slay T. Mrs. Powell also states that gome
of those alleged as having been of the party
when lost, were not With the party at all. She
does ntit credit the story, and it certainly needs
confirmation.
the earthquake.
Kl'lccls of tbe Shock In Missouri ami VI.
cluity.
ITrom the St. Xoula Republican, July 8.1
At 2.09 o’clock yesterday , morning many per
sons in this city were conscious of a positive
shock of ah earthquake in this neighborhood.
A person who seems to have marked the time
at which the shock occurred, sends us a note,
stating: “At 2.09' o'clock this morning there
was an earthquake,the earth moving north and
south, the main shock lasting about five sec
onds, causing considerable ahum. The shock
was preceded by a rumbling noise.” Another
authority states that the oscillation was from
east to west, and gives "the testimony of some
lady friends, one of whom said that, during the
shock, she felt i“as if she were on the ribbed
side of a -washboard,wliile the ribs were shaken
by somebody.” Another lady, our informant
states, described it “as if a tremolo were played
on an instrument;” and he himself “felt it as a
trembling of the floor from east to west upon
about six or seven trembling waves.” The air
at the time was close almost to suffocation, and
those who did not feel the immediate effects of
the earth-shaking felt oppressed and uucomfort
' able.'
Councilman Driscoll stated that he was sit
ting in a chair when the shock came, and was
sensibly shaken from one side of the chair to
another. This testimony ought to be con,
vincing if not conclusive. Various parties give
testimony of the rattling of china in cupboards,
the jingling of glass pendants, and swinging of
loose shutters in the absence of any agitation
of the air, &c.
At Kirkwood the shock was distinctly felt. A
gentleman who was lying in bed at the time
states that an oscillating motion was ex
perienced as if the building was shaken by a
strong wind. He was not aware‘that the dis
turbance was caused by an earthquake until,oii
comparing his observations with those of his
neighbors next morning, lie attributed it to the
earthquake.
At .Jefferson Barracks and Carondelet the
shoe ks were distinctly felt. At the former
place it was noticed by several itersons. A lady
at Carondelet thought the house was coming
down over her head. The telegraph .operator
at the general office of the Iron Mountain
Railroad, at our request, communicated with
the stations at Belmont, Frederickstown, the
tunnel in Bolinger county and De Solo,and the
replies were that the earthquake was not. ob
served at either of those plaees.
[ From the St.Jjouta Democrat of July 3d. |
Observations of the phenomenon come to us
from points many * miles apart, showing that
the range of the shock was quite extensive. It
was sensibly felt at Alton, and from points
south of that at least fifty miles distant. From
conversation with various gentlemen we think
tlie greatest force of the vibration was in St.
Louis and the district immediately adjacent on
the southwest. Its time is quite definitely,
fixed by different parties. General N. Ranney
places it at 12.01) o'clock A. M., and the move
ment lasted five seconds, the vibrations being
north dnd south. An intelligent gentleman,
who resides on the plateau, just east of Cote
Brilliant, was awakened, with his family, by a
rough shaking of the house, and his first idea
was that a hurricane was raging without. : His
watch denoted 2.15, with a duration of six
seconds. The first shock was the heaviest, im
mediately followed by another more gentle one.
In many localities articles of furniture were
moved, and small ornaments thrown down,
but as far as we know little damage resulted.
The Shock in Alnbantn.
[From the lluntßvillo Democrat, July 2.]
At about 2.30: this morning, we and several
members of our household were aroused by
the shock of anrearthquaker and; alter a slight
interval, furniture in our room was shaken, so:
as to rattle, for a quarter of a minute. Several
other citizens have made similar reports to us,
but many have assured ns they knew nothing
of any such convulsion of nature during the
niglit. Two have told ns of dogs in their
houses barking very excitedly and unaccount
ably, a little after 2 o’clock. A gentleman, re
siding a few miles frpm Huntsville, says he felt
two distinct earthquake shocks, about!) o’clock
last, niglit. There was a brief tlmnderislorin
last evening, and, we are told, several thunder
peals were-heard between 12 and 2 o’clock.
Tte-tlieroiometer -indicated-- about- 90 degrees
yesterday, and is higher to-day.
-Rase Itnll.
A very exciting match game of base ball
was played at Bethlehem, Pa., on Monday,
July titb, between -the North Pennsylvania
Railroad Base Ball Club, of Philadelphia.; and
MEPAILYTOroftjMjIiUg
which rt-Kulleaiiia ivldtoty fur the/ormur, by
a fccor* of IK ta.2B.
Plillodclptila” Bank statement. . .
The following is, tho weekly statement of the Pnilo*
dclpliia Danks, made up du Tuesday afternoon, which
presents the following aggregates: cruw-.’isn
Specie... * i S?
Erne from other Banks ityi’liS
Clearings; - ■<**».*«
DoIBIICC6< . r - OtVWfjli
The followfnf!'’staienient shows, the condition Of the
Banks of Philadelphia, at various times during the la»t
fc ;r montliß:, , , sptfieXGriuWim.
■ ‘352,433''-MS®,7l9 '
Feb. 1 .52,632,813 302,7112 10.593.3.01 |W245l
Mur 1 . ...52.2M.35i 250,933 10,4.V< *540 31,053*9.>1
Ap’1i6’..'.’’........60,499,869 189,003 , ,10,022,396 WJ6I.M7
Muy 3, 201,758: 10,817,315 . *&2iKS-
June 7....... 52,820,367 169,810 10,619,989 30.4783191
11 14 S3d24WiOO 152,151 10,621,932 JMiUCiSO.
“21 ..3aj>i(l.(W 148,795 10,617,864 35,672520
A‘‘ f; 130,684 tj f.Mi88.701 ;;|1,7ai,|72
: Ji'ily 8.i...:...V:.f3-9373i21 ■' 303,621 10,618316 34,944,832
The following is a detailed statement of the husrnoss at
the Philadelphia Clearing House for the past week, fur
nished by O. K. Arnold; I!iHi;,ManagciT / --y >
time 28 85.933,469 72 8522,916.15
J v, nt . so!?!™ 66
•• 7.691.118 15 721,293 111
8.912,945 58 947,263 69
9,440,995 90 920,439,92
7,9733)91 89 673,158 58
EvcnlnE Bulletin. j
BOSTON—Steumer Normnu, Oron-ell—l2 r 0115.% troßMa
fi codes J 5 bales dry goods Gardner, llrewer & Co; ft ad 6/
bags 2 cases 4 bales dry goods Boyd AW bite: 3? bales
coat skins George Bockus; 17 cases ofl cloth G w lllabou,
29 pligb glassware B G Bouglitoh; 101 bills iron 23 boxes
nails Cresson A Hoss; 60 bales drygoods ami I.icases do
,11AV Chase ft Son: 3a eases iindso 'SlDaily: 16 do wwta
KldriUgeEro; lno doz/ -palls’ Gowaleyvßdiinctt ft.Oo; 3r
eases Grover, Baker A Co: 100 bags coffee J Graliam &
Co; 8 organs .1 E Goulil; 9 bales rags Hey a; Hidsdale: 16
do dry goods llnmllton, Evans ft C0;69 boxes lib bundles
furniture stocjt KHlmm ft Gates: 33 cases dry goods T;T
Lea ft Co: 31 do do A RT/ftHo; 2Tdo do Lewis, Wharton
ft Co; 2.1 ltlida 43 bbls 4 half do Massey, Huston & Go; 2,
bales dry goods Sutton ft Smith; 160 boxes nails Shield!
Bro; 9 bales rags J H AV'hitakor: 200 or bbls -*» Utt<
empty <3 S Crowell: 22 bbls 61 liaif and'a bOxMfiSli C P
Knight: 75 do fish J N Sbriver; 136 bbls 76 half do fish
Crowell ft Collins; 100 bbls fish Kennedy .Stairs & Co: 2 •
cs boots and shoes T L Aslibridge; 463 do Boston Bubbo *
Shoe Co; 130 do O ,S Clafiin; 31 do Graff ft Watkins; 2.
do C B McOlees: f 0 do J il Souders; 11 do J W Bonders;
16 do A Tilden ft Co:
TURKS ISLAND—Bark Ann Elizabeth,Norgrave—
lIA2B bushels salt Wm Bumm ft Son._ .
WINDSOR; »S—Schr .B L Tay, Baker—73B,9oo lath
41,925 palings T I* Galvin ft Co.
BIOTKM KBITS OF OCEAN STEAMERS.
TO ABBIVE.
SHIPS - FROM • J .FOR P ATE ,„
Celln —London—New York- June 19
Bornnsia Hamburg-New York- June W
Deutachland..Soathampton—New York- -—..June 22
England -..Liverpool-New York- - June 23
Dacian --Glasgow-New York-..-... .June 23
.City of Bari* Liyerpool,..New York-.. June 24
lowa Glasgow..'.New York —June 26
Hniit-a - Havre.J.NewYork~. Juno 26
.-.Southampton-New York Juno 29
Tarifa ..... Liverpool-New York via B June 29
Manhattan.—* GJa»gow‘-N>w York -June 30
France. - Liverpool-New York Jane SO
City of Bostdr— Liverpool—New York July 1
. TO DEPART. _ ,
Borion .New York—Glasgow — July 7
Colimib.n New York—Nassau and Hav’a—July 8
Cleopatra —New York—Vera Cruz..——.—. July ,8
Bcutfchhui New York—Bremen July a
f-uninrin New York—Liverpool- July 8
Pereire. New York—Havre - July 10
Geo Croniwell—New York-New Orleans July 10
Citv of Paris—New York—Liverpool ....July 10
f'ariibrin New York—Glasgow- '•July JO
The Oueen- -New York—Liverpool— July 10
Celia- ....New York... London July 10
Alaska i. —New York—Aspinwall— July 10
Pioneer— Philadelphia—Wfhninffton -July 15
Tmmwnnda—Philadelphia—Savannah - July 17
BOARD OF TRADE.
JOHN O. JAMES, \ m
c.B. BCBBOKOW, {Moxthl* Committee,
THOS. L. GILLESPIE: /
Sun Risks, 4 39 j Bus Sets, 7 30 j liiGH Water, 1 I
' “ Alt BIV EBYE S TE RDAY. _ •
Schr It L Tay, Baker, 28 days from Windsor 1 , NS. with
laths and picket* to T P Galvin & Co.
Sehr Walton, Coombe, from Richmond, Me. with tee
to Knickerbocker Ice Co—vessel to Lennox A Burgess.
Schr Telegraph, Ruark, from Rappahannock River,
with lumber to captain.
Schr H B Fay, Prescott, 12 dayßfrom Calais, with
Inmber to T P Gal Tin & Co—vessel to Lcnuoxikßurgess.
Sehr Jtts Warren, Drisko, New Y r ork. t
Sehr Annie Sheppard, Bowditch, New Haven.
CLEARED YESTERDAY.
Steamer H L Gaw. Her, Baltimore, A Groves, Jr.
Bark FReck(NG), Denker, Bremen, Hnrjcs Bros.
Bark La Rochelle (Ital), Cafiero. Gibraltar for orders,
Paul Fold, Jr.
SchrW Slater, Watts, Salisbury, Blakiston,Graeff&Co.
fcehr Jas Warren, Drisko,.Boston, L Audenried & Co. .
Schr 31 P Hudson, Hndson,Bostou ,Hamuiett,Neill£rt.o.
Schr Yraie. Mafeon, Boston. - do
Schr R RU No 58, Worrell, New York, do
Sclir R lilt No 8, Brown, do do
SchrM J Lawton. LawfoD, Roxbury, Lennox&Burgees.
Schr Webster Barnard, Smith, Boston, do
Correspondence of the Pbiladcl Bulletin.
The following boats from the Union Canal passed into
the Schuylkill Canal, bound to Philadelphia, laden and
consigned as follows: „ _
Judge Dean, Extenuate and M B Hicks, with lumber
to J B Parker: J L Walters, do to Hoffa&Son; My
Hope, do to \Vm Kolbs; Reading, Fisher «fe Co, do to
Huliug Son; John <fc Willie, do to Mcllvuine & Bush;
Harry Logan, do to Sell Nav Co; Sandusky, bark to M
&M D Long; Lebanon Transportation Co. No. 4, pig
iron to Phoenix Iron Co. '
Ship Record, Colfer, sailed from Liverpool 21st nit.
fur thi* port.
Ship Helicon, Rosier*, from New York Ist fret*, at ban
Fnmcisco 4th inst.
Ship Singapore, Fordyce, at San Francisco 4tn inst.
from GlnsgoML
Steamer Tonawnnda. Jenningn, hence at Savannah
yesterday. • ~
Steamer Rattlesnake, Shaw, from Boston for this port,
passed ilohiie*c Hole 2d insd.
Steemer Kensiuguu, Batson, at New Orleans Ist mat.
from Boston. „ , „„ . ,
Bark Geo Henrv, Jenkins, hence at Quebec 30th mt.
Bark Glide, Hathome, cleared at Salem 2d instant for
Zmixibar and n market. . ,
Brig Isaac Carver. SliutG, lienee at Portland 2d inst.
BrigOC Clary, Gould, for Boston, was loading at
Smyrna J2th ult. ...
Sehr Aimawan, Kimball, cleared at Baltimore 3d mst.
for Montevideo and Bnenos Ayres.
Schr Flight. Crowell, hence at Bangor 2d mst.
Schr Eva, May, for this port, sailed from Bath 2d mst.
Schrs N A H Gould, Crowell; Lucy K Cogswell, Isaac
Baker and Taylor & Mathis, hence at Bath 2d inst. and
all passed up river. ; , .
Schr Vernal, Sawyer, cleared at Now Haven 3d mst.
behr if Blackman, Jones, hence at Bristol 3d inst.
Selir Archer A Reeves, Ireland, hence at Salem 2d inst.
Schr J Bright, Shaw, cleared at Boston 3d instant
for tin's port,. .
Sehr.Louisu Frazer. Steelman, at Portland 2d instant
from Georgetown, SC.
SchrH P Russell, Nickerson, cleared at Boston 4th
inst. for New Orleans,
Schr A M. Edwards, Hinson, hence at Richmond 2d
instant.
Schr C S Watson. Adams, hence at Nantucket Ist inst.
Schr 1 Thompson, Endicott, sailed from Bristol 3d
inst. for this port. .
Schr Clara Davidson, Everett, hence at New Bedtord
3d inst. ■* ....
Schr -Admiral, .Steelman, at Boston 3d instant from
-Alexandria. - .' • ,
Schr Morning Light, Ireland,hence at New London 2d
Instant. -v
Schr Aid. Smith, lienee at Beverly Ist mst.
SchrH. Simmons, Godfrey, hence at Salem 3d inst.
Selir Ifiawatha, Lee, lienee at Newburyport Ist mst.
MARINE MISCELLANY.
Steamer Nebraska, at Now York from Liverpool, has
177") passengers.
The bark Rebecca. Rittgard, at New York trom Lou
don, reports May 2, hit 45, lon 2U, saw the wreck ut a
white schooner dismasted and abandoned,with name
palntul in brown letters'in a half circle and partly
e fib c e d.
DRUGGISTS' SUNDRIES. GRADU*
Otea, Mortar, Pill Tiles, Combs, Brushera, Mirrors
Tweezers, Puff Boxes,Horn Scoops, Surgical Inßtru
menta, Trasses, Hard and Soft Rubber. Goods, Via]
Cases, Glass and Metal Syringes, Ac., alll at, “ First
Hands” prices. SNOWDEN & BROTHER,
nps*tf _ 23 South Eighth street.
Druggists ark Invited to" Ex
amine our large stock of fresh Drags and Chemicals
of the latest importation. •
Also, essential Oils, Vanilla Beans, Sponges,Chamois
Skins, etc. ROBERT SHOEMAKER & CO., N. E. cor
ner Fourth and Raco streets.
OLIVE OIL, SUPERIOR QUALITY, ON
dnuiglit and m I'ottU-.; various brands. ROBERT
SHOEMAKER* 00., N.E. corner Fourth aud Race
streets. ' . .
/f ASTILE SOAL*—NOW IjANDING.—3OO
\J boxes White and Mottled Castile Soap.vury superior
totality ROBERT SHOEMAKER & CO., Wholesale
■Dniggista.N. E. corner Fourth and Rnco streets.
Notice* is heri
on SATURDAY, Jul
EMANUEL PETERS will
Highways for a contract for
of Penn street, from Ortlunh
lowing owners of property
the points aforesum, having
iiig in pursimncoof Resoluti
M. Fredricks, . I
J.M. Smith,
William F. Guernsey, 1
Wharton Moody,-
William Hiffge,
George G. Shock,
E.l). Marshall,
Janies England,
. Jcsso tt. Clioyney,
William Keas. . ■ .
Tbos. S. Foulkrod,
And.ull owners of property
requested to Lo'prcsent at tli
cause why said contract shou
riiiLAifeLPiitA, Jwly 3,186!
XT AVAL STORES.—too BARBELS PALE
JN and No: 1 Rosin; 160 barrels No. i Roslmia ■bar
rels Common Ilosin;150, barrels Wilmington Pitch: 6Q
barrels Wilmington Tni;; 128.barrelarPrinie, White.
Spirits Turpentino, in etoro nnd for sale.by OOCIHtAN. t
IVUSSELIi js CO.| a North Front etroet, , . - ,
U 5.792.102 91 $4,406,3*2
MARINE BULLETIN.
POUT OF PHILADELPHIA— 7.
MEMORANDA
DRUGS.
I3BV GIVEN THAT
ly 17tb, 1860, at 12 o’clock,
apply to. tho Department of
tho paving of tho cartway
ox to Arrott street, thefol
fronting thoroon, between
selected nim to do tho pnv
ioh dated July 3d, 1869.
W.B. Dutton,
Joseph Bhoeh, !
-Benjamin Hoopos.
Charles Cotnly, Jr.,
Thomas Castor,
11. Rowland, Jr.,
Hlirry T. Gursodj-
Wilson MiliioiN
William 11. Hobson,
Jacob Smedloy.
fronting pn Bfticl etioot ftro
ho time ttml plhco to show
uld not be awarded to
; KSIANUEIi pPBTBJtS
>9. . , - jy3-3t§
MMEN=YME
2g29 —CHAETEK PKSFETUAL.
FRANKLIN
FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY
OF PH ILAIDIXPHIA.
Office-435 and 437 Chestnut Street.
Assets oil January- i,
$3,67y,3ya 13. :
Capital... „...:......SMO/MO 00
Accrnwl BMplua-......:...........- 7O
Premiums , 43
UNSETTLED CLAIMS," INCOME POE 1369
323,78412. 3360,000.
Losses PaidSirioolBS9 Over '
$5,500,000.
Pcrpetuftl.ftnd Temporary Policies on Liberal Terms
The Company atflO ; issues. Policies; upon* the Rents of
all kinds of buildings,Bents and Mortgages.
DIRECTORS.
• Alfred G. Baker, Alfred Fitter,
, Banim-l Grant, ThomasJJparks,
• JI Geo.-W. Richards, Wm: 8. Grant.
7 . Isaac Lea, - 8. Ellis,
Geo. Fales, ‘ Gustavus 8. Benson,
ALFRED G. BAKER. President.
~ GEO. YALES, Vice President.
JAB. W. McALLISTER, Secretary.-
THEODORE M. REGER, Assistant Secretary. •
•• • fell tdo3l
Delaw abe mutual safety ik
-BUBANCE COMPANY. ■ ' "
Incorporated by the Legislature of Pennsy Ivauia, 1335.
Office 8. E. corner: of THIRD and WALNUT Streets,
Philadelphia.
MARINE INSURANCES
On Vessels, amlFrefghttg ftH garta of the world.
On goods by river, canal, lake and land carriage to all
• parts bf the Union.
FIRE INSURANCES ltf
On Merchandise generally, on Stores, Dwellings
- Houses* dx.
ASSETS OF THE COMPANY,
November!,!#?#.,.
8200,000 Uuited States FivePerCent.Loan s
10*40*d.:....w.; ........... $203,500 00
120jOOO United States Six Per Cent. Loan,
1381 138300 00
United States Six Per .Cent. Loan A
(for Pacific Rai1r0ad)............... 60,000 00
200,000 State of Pennsylvania Six Per ■
Cent. Loan. - 211,375 00
125,000 City of Philadelphia Six Per-Cent. •
Loan (.exempt from Tax) 123,504 00
60,000 State of New Jersey Six Por Cent.
Loan 61,500 00
20,000 Pennsylvania Railroad First « t
Mortgage Six Per Cent. Bonds VDfittO 00
25,000. PennsylratHa Railroad Second _ _
Mortgage Six Per Cent. Bonds 24,000 00
25.000 Western Pennsylvania Railroad
3lortgage Six Per Cent. Bonds '
(Penna. R: BV guarantee) 20,625 00
90,000 State of Tennessee Five Per Cent. '
Loan - 21*000 00
7,000 State of Tennessee Six Per Cent. •
Loan - 6,03125
15,000 GermautownGnsCompany,princi
pal and interest guaranteed by
the City of Philadelphia, 300 mmntxn l^
shares stock - 15,000 00
10,000 Pennsylvania Railroad Company,
200 shares stock 11,300 00
6,000 North Pennsylvania Railroad •
Company, 100 shares 5t0ck....... 3,500 00
20000 Philadelphia-and Southdrii Mail
Steamship Company, 80 Shares , ir/W4/lrt
stock. .' ~. 15,000 00
207,900 Loans on Bond and Mortgage, first _
Hens on City Properties.......... 207,900 00
81,109,900 Par. Market Value, $1,130,325 25
Cost, $1,093,604 26 -
Real Estate 36,000
Bills receivable for Insurances
made - 322,436 94
Balances due at Agencies—Pre
miums on -Marine Policies —
Accrued Interest and other
debts due the Company-... 40,173 83
Stock and Scrip of sundry Corpo- ;
rations, $3,156 00. Estimated „ !
value.— ~ 1,813 00
Cash in Bank- $116,150 03
Cash in Drawer ■ ~6353 73
\ SI, 80
DIRECTORS. “ “
Thomas C. Hand, James B. McFarland,
Edward Darlington, . WilliamC. Ludwig, :
Joseph H. Seal, Jacob P. Jones,
Edmund A. Souder, Joshua P.Eyro.
Thcophilns Paulding, William G. Boulton,
Hugh Craig, Henry C. Dallett, Jr.,
John C. Davis, 'John D. Taylor,
James C. Hand, Edward Lafourcade,
John R. Penrose, Jacob Reigol,
H. Jones Brooke, George W. Bernadon,
Spencer M’llvaine, Wm. C. Houston,
Henry Sloan, D. T. Morgan, Pittsburgh,
Samuel E. Stokes, Jobuß. Semple, do.,
James Traouair, • A.B.Berger, do.
J m 1 * THOMAS C. HAND, President.
JOHN C. DAVIS, Vice President.
HENRY LYLBURN, Secretary. , _
HENRY BALL, Asa’t Secretary. de2l-tf
The county fire insurance com
pany.— Office,No. 110 Sonth Fourth street,below
lnsurance Company of the County of Phila
delphia Incorporated by tho Legislate re of Pennsylva
nia in 1839, for indemnity againßt loss or damage by fire,
exclusively. c PERPETUAL.
This old and reliable institution, with ample cnpital
nnd contingent fund carefully invested, continues to in
sure buildings, fumiture.merchandise, Ac., either per
manently or for a limited time, against loss or damage
by fire, at the lowest rates consistent with the absolute
safety of its customers.
Lobscs adjusted andf£^nTimS' l,oBBll,lo despatch.
Chas7j. J Sntter, I Andrew H. Miller,
Henry Budd, James N. stone,
John Horn, I Edwin L Heakirt,
Joseph Moore, | Robert V. Slaßsey, Jr.,
Genree Mecke, I Mark Devine.
George rnecao, cffAKI ,^j„ sl j TTEK( president,
HENRY BUDD, Vice President.
BENJAMIN F. HOECKLEY. Secretary and Treasurer.
PH (E NIX INSURANCE COMP AN Y
OF PHILADELPHIA.
INCORPORATED 1604—CHARTER PERPETUAL.
No. 224 WALNUT Street, opposite the Exchange.
This Company insures from losses or damage by
FIRE
on liberal terms, on buildings, merchandise, furniture,
Ac,, for limited periods, ana permanently on buildings,
bv deposit or premium. . -
The Company bas been in active operation for moro
than sixty years, during which all losses uavo been
promptly adjusted and^aUl. iroKS ;
John L. Hodge, David Lewis,
M. B. Maliony, Benjamin Ltting,
John T. Lewis, Thos. H. Powers,
Wm. 8. Grant, , A. R. McHenry,
Robert W. Learning, Edmond Castillon,
D. Clark Wharton, Samuel Wilcox,
Lawrence LowiBiJr“ Lewis C. Norris.
j6hN R. WUCIIEREK, President.
Samuel Wilcox, Secretary.
TEFFERSON FIRE INSURANCE COM:
U PANY of Philadelphia.—Office,No. 24 North Fifth
street, near Market street.
Incorporated' by tlio. Legislature of Pennsylvnn a.
Charter perpetual. Capital and Assets. 5166,000. Mako
insurance against Lobb or damage by l ire on Public or
Private Buildings, Furniture, Stocks, Goods and Mer
chandise, on favorable teriuß
DlBliviiUiw-
Wm McDaniel, Edward P. Moyer,
Israel Peterson, Frederick Ladner,
John F. lielstorling, Adam J. Glasz,
Xlenry Troemiier, Uc.ni-y Uel.'in'-,
Jacob Schniidein, J/Ju' tJludt,
Frederick Doll, Christian D. 1 rick,
Samuel Miller, , G« ,r ge L. 1-ort,
W llluim D. Gardner.
WILLIAM McUANIEL. President.
ISRAEL PETERSONJfice President.
Philip E. Colemax, Secretary and Treasurer.
UNITED FIREMEN’S INSURANCE
COMPANY OF PHILADELPHIA.
This Company takes risks at the lowest rates consistent
with safety, and confines ise business exclusively to
FIRE INSURANCE IN THE CITY OF PIIXLADEL
• PHIA.
OFFICE—No. 723 Arch street, Fourth National Bank
Building. DIKECTOBS.
Thomas J. Martin, I Henry W. Brenner,
John Hirst. Albortus King,
Wm. A.'Bolin, I -Henry Bnnun,
James Monguh, I Jumoa^Vupd,
William Glenn, | John blialjcross,
James Jeuner, . | -J- *, Ln , r / A. H k ln -
Alexander T. Dickson, Hus 1 Mulligan,
Alberto. Roberts, I riifltp Fitzpatrick,
James F. Dillon.
CONRAD B. ANDRESS, Prosident.
Wm. A. Ronin Troas. Wm. %Faoum. Soc’v.
rflHli PEN NSYI-i VANIA FI HE INSU
± KANCE COMPANY. . ,
—lncorporated 1825—Charter Perpetual.
No. 510 WALNUT street, opposite Independency Square.
This Company, favorably known to the community- for
over, forty years, continues to insure against loss or
damage by lire on Public or Private Buildings, oither
permanently or for a limited time. Also on f urniture.
Stocks of Goods, and Merchandise generally, on liberal
te Their Oapital, together -with a largo 'Bui-plus Fund,- is
invested in tho inpst careful maimer, which enables them
to oflor to the influrecl.au undoubted security in the case
ofloss. DIRECTORS. -
I John Deveroux,
Thomas Smith,
lllenry Lewis, •
|J. Gillingham Fell,
‘“da'nied SMITH, Jr.
‘.retary.__ apl9-tf
Daniel Smith, Jr.,
Alexander Benson,
Isaac Hazloburst,
Thomas Robins, , , ,
Daniel Hai
WH. G. CKOWELIi, Soci
fi&rf FERE ASSOCIATION OF
It' SB A = PHILADELPHIA, Incorporated March
27,1820. Oflico, N0..31 North Fifth stroot.
CfiGSG Insure Buildings, Household Furniture
£99gE|i niul Merchandise generally, from Loss by
Asscta Jan. 08
William H. Hamilton, Swnnel Spsrhawk, , ..
PrtcrA.Ko\aer, Charles P.Bower,
John Harrow, Jcsao Llahtfoot, ,
Georffo l Youupfi - * . ...Roburt o|w!(?nwkMi....
■ TOwrsfi* ■ • -
LevlP.Coats, . . ~M.lt,Dickinsoni..
“*** - , Pctor Williamsont. ,
WM. H. HAMlLTON^President,, -
SAMUEL BPABHAWK, Vice President-*
WM. T. BHIIiEB, Secretary. :
.V ; 7,„18f»9.
THEp3T.SH9qEp?m
HEE ;rtSl®|S®l:.SSC!l!t4Ny ■
Or THEWORLD,
THE"
NATIONAL LIFE
INSURANCE COWANY
OP TUB
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA.
Chartered by Special Act of Congress.
Cash Capital. 5i,000,000
Branch Office, Philadelphia.
OFFICERS:
CLARENCE H. CLAKK, Philadelphia, President.
JAY CQOKE, Philadelphia, Chairman Finance and
Executive Committee. ,
HENRY D. COOKE, Washington, Vice President.
EMERSON W. PEET, Philadelphia, Secretary and
Actuary.
FRANCIS G. SMITH, M. D., Philadelphia, Medical
Rirector.
J. EWING HEARS, M. D>i- • Philadelphia,- 'Assistant
Medical director. i
This Company Issued, iu the first TEN MONTHS of
its existence, .
5,395 POLICIES,
INSURING
$15,14a,800.
This Company affords to Ha Policy-Holders
PERFECT SECURITY
by its Cash paid up Capital of One Million Dollars, and
guarantees to the by its
LOW RATES OF PREMIUM,
LARGE DIVIDENDS IN ADVANCE,
OR A REVERSIONARY DIVIDEND OF 100 PER
CENT. BY ITS
RETURN PREMIUM PLAN.
E, W. CLARK & CO., Bankers,
No. 35 South Third Street, Philadelphia,
General Agents for Pennsylvania ami I'southern
New Jersey.
B. a RXJggELL, Manager.
American fere insurance com,
PANY, incorporated 1810. —Charter perpetual.
No. 310 WALNUT afreet, above Third, Philadelphia.
Having a large pail*up Capital Stock and Surplus in
vested in sound and available Securities, continue to
insure on dwellings, stores, furniture, merchandise,
vessels in port, and their cargoes, and otner personal
property. All losses promptly adjusted.
Thomna R. Maris, Edmund G. Dutilh,
JohnWVlBh, Charles W . Poultney,
Patrick Brady, Israel Morris,
Johu T. Lewis, John P. Wetherill,
William W. Panl.
THOMAS R. MARIS, President.
AlbebtC. Crawford, Secretary.
Fame insurance company, no‘
809 CHESTNUT STREET. „
INCORPORATED 1856. CHARTER PERPETUAL;
CAPITAL, §200,000.
FIRE INSURANCE EXCLUSIVELY.
Insures against Loss or Damage by Fire, either by Fer
petual or Temporary Policies.
DIRECTORS..
Chnrlesßichardson, Robert Pearce,
Wm.'H. Rhawn, John Kessler, Jr.,
Francis N. Buck, Edward B. Orno,
Henry Lowis t Charles Stokes,
Nathan Hillea, John W. Evorman,
George A. West, Mordecai Bii2by,
* CHARLES RICHARDSON, President,
WM. H. RUAWNTvice*President.
WILLIAMSI. BLANCHARD,Secretary. apl.tt
LUMBER,
Lumber Under Cover,
ALWAYS SKY.
WATSON & GILUNGHAM,
924 Richmond Street.
mh29-Iy§
MAULE, BROTHER & CO.,
3500 South Street.
-| Q£o PATTERN MAKERS. 1 Q£Q
1003. PATTERN MAKERS. 1003.
- CHOICE SELECTION
MICHIGAN 0 CORK PINE
FOB PATTERNS. _
1 o£o SPRUCE AND HEMLOCK.I Q/»Q
1003. SPRUCE AND HEMLOCK. ±OO3.
LARGE STOCK.
1 QUO FLORIDA FLOORING. 1 Q£Q
1003. FLORIDA FLOORING. 1003.
CAROLINA FLOORING.
VIRGINIA FLOORING.
DELAWARE FLOORING
ASH FLOORING.
WALNUT FLOORING.
1 QUO FLORIDA STEP BOARDS. I
1003. FLORIDA STEP BOARDS. ±OO3.
RAIL PLANK.
RAIL PLANK.
1869. WA L L
WALNUT BOARDS AND PLANK.
walnut Boards. .
WALNUT.PLANK.
ASSORTED
FOR
CABINET MAKERS,
BUILDERS, 40. '
1869. UNDERTAKERS 1869.
' UNDERTAKERS’ LUMBER.
RED CEDAR.
WALNUT AND PINE.
1 QfiQ SEASONED POPLAR. 10£Q
1003. REASONED CHERRY. 1003.
T ASH,
WHITE OAK PLANK AND BOARDS.
HICKORY.
1 Q£G CAROLINA SCANTLING. >Q
1003. CAROLINA H. T. SILLS. a J 3.
NORWAY SCANTLING.
1 QCQ CEDAR SHINGLES. 1 Oj»Q
1003. CEDAR SHINGLES. 1003.
CYPRESS SHINGLES.
LARGE ASSORTMENT.
FOR SALE LOW.
ICfiQ PLASTERING LATH. 1 Q£Q
1003. PLASTERING LATH. 1003.
■ LATH.
KAVUIBIKOTHEn 4 CO.,
■; ~ . ~,2aw south street.^
T~HOMAS & POHL, LUMBER MER
chnntS,No.'loil 8: Fourth’street. At their yard
will bu found Walnut, Ash, p«»hir, Cherry, Pino, Hem
lock, &c., Ac., at reasonably.U thojias'
mlilt-Cm*. ■ ELIAS POIIL. .
TO . ZCONTRACTORS, _ JCiUSiBERMEN
and Ship-ltuildrrs.—We nfo now prepared to bxooUte
promptly orders for Seuthem Jfallow Pino Timber,
Shlpstulf and Lumber. -COCHRAN-, RUSSELL 4 00.,
22 North Front,street.. _ - ■ mti-1 tt
~\r ELLO W PIN E LUMBER.—ORDERS
■ for carpers of every description Sawed Lumber exe
cuted at abort liotictf—gnallty- subject to .inspection.
Apply to EDW- H. RpWLEY. 10 South Wharves. , fed
BUSINESS CARDS.
. JAMES Ai W'RIOHT, tIIonXTO.N- TIKE,'CLEMENT A. OBIS-
,
- Importers of.oarthynware i
. {and .
Shippinkand Ooni mi bs ipn erch an ta. '
Ttfo.- 115 VVnlmifstreet,
Go ttok s of3Svery
width, from 22 inches toffi inches wldoiMl numbers
" - No. 103 Church stroct, City Stores.
TYBIVY. WELLS;- OWN BISS OF PROP
JU place to Rot privy wfllscleansedauil
disinfected. at vory low prices. A. PEYSBON, Manu
facturer osVißbirettet GoWsmith'* HaU,library *Ue^t
!E.
i. AST PohlhJ mtlesrtt tHoPhtliWolphis ™
.TStnUSDAYamiVfclbck.'' '} - &
aykTfumittirei'ealea af tho Auction Storo'Byßfttr \
ntHUBSDAY. .■■••• “J#**
at rosjqenccs receive. especial attention - .
ffafft pit: the Auctloitlloom3iNoB.l39.and;lil:4ot[tti .
c . - Fmirfh h 1 root. , i
SUPERIOR . HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE' piftN*.
MUHtOKSvVjIANDSOME VKL>ET, BittfSSKLlf
AND OTHER CARPETS. Ac.. 4c., '
„ .jIbWON THURSDAY. MOBNING. ' .
Julj 0, at 9 Apctioo BootnsibycauaMrna,
Sideboards, Extension, Centraand Bouquet TabteKfin* i J
Hair MatfegseSr Feather BoTstera tfntprMlows,
Chinn r Glass:ftnd Plated OffltOr’F'ami. (
turerßefrigeratorfl»PlatforroScAleo,BnraftudShelv»Dg, ,
Stoves, baridsome Velvet, Brußsela and other Carpets,
&C.’* Ac.' 1 --' iV : .* . .7,«..,. ■.. f,
Also, by order.of .Assignee, the Stock or.a- Furniture •»>
Stdro. comprising Bedsteads, Bureaus,!Washatnnds.Ta
bloB. Clin ire, Ac. ' ' .
Sale at Hoi 3718 Baringjstreot,WostFhUadotphi».
SURPLUS HOUSEHOLTB FURNITURE. BRUSSEL*
, AND OTHER CARPETS, fie;
‘ ON- WEDNESDAY 1 MORNING.
July 14, at II o’clock, at No. 371 S Baring street,-Wert
Philadelphia,' the.ROrplnS: Household;. Furniture, com- .
prißing—Walnut Parlor anil Dining-Boom Fumituro, ■
Walnut Hall Furniture, Piano, Extension Dining
Table, Mahogany Sideboard, Bouquet and Sofa Tables,
Mahogany Cottage and Chambor 'Furniture,/Feather
Bede, Brussels nud other Carpets, China and ulasswaro,
Befrigerator. Kitchen Utensils, Sc. " 1 ‘
oar Take Baco and Vine street cars.. ; r ■
rpHOMAS BIBCH & SON, ATXCTION
JL EEES AND COMMISSION MERCHANTS,
No. 1110 CHESTNUT street
llO7 Sanaora street. .
Household Furniture of every description received on
• . Conalgnmeht;; J . - .
Bales of Furniture at dwoTlinga attended to.on the moat
reasonable i
Sale at ttio Auction Store, No. 1110 Obestant Btrebt. ■
SHOWCASES, SILVER PLATED WARE; OIL
PAINTINGS AND CHROMOS,
r LIERS. REFRIGERATORS, MOSOBITO'NETS,
TIN CHAMBER SETS. BRONZE CLOCKS, OAIC
AND WALNUT DINING^BOOM-FUBNIittRB,
STOVES* CHINA,. GLABSWARE. Ac.
' ONFRIDAYMORNING, t t
At 9 o’clock, at tlio auction store. No. 1110 Chestnuts!.*
will_be sold, ft largo assortment of superior Parlor*
Library, Chnmber and Dining Boom. Furniture, Boa®-
wood Piano, by Loud; Mantel and Pier (Hasses, Brus
sels, Ingrain nnd VenoHan^Jaggt^S^wwcases,«C, * •
Also,Beverol suits of. Cottage Furniture* in oak, wal
nut and chestnut woods. . «
SECONDHAND FURNITURE. ;
Also, an assortment of Secondhand Furniture : from
families leaving the city. ' „ ,
The Furniture is now ready for examination., ‘
JAMES A. FREEMAN* AUCTIONEER,
No. 422 WALNUT street.
Executor’s Sale at Frankford. “ '
TOOLS, LATHES AND MACHINERY OF A BRASS
ROLLING BULL AND LAMP-TOP FACTORY.
ON FRIDAY MORNING, „ „
July 9, nt 11 o’clock, will l)e bold by order of the Ec
ecutor of Joseph T. v Vankirk, deceased, at Hedgo
and Oxford streets, Frankford, the entire Machinery f
comprising Side Lathes. Foot and Power Presses, Form
ing and Drawing nnd Piercing Turning, Bur
nishing and Assorted Lathes, CollarGuttingMncliiae,
Slitting Machine, Orndfeer, Benched, Boxes, Tools, Ac.
Salo absolute. Terms cash.. . \
SALE OF THE STEAM TUG BOAT
GENERAL GEORGE G. MEADE. , jg|§jg|s£
; ON WEDNESDAY
July 14, at 3 o’clock, will be sold at Vine street wharf,
on the Delaware, the steam tug-boat General Menaoj
59)5 feet long, 15)5 feet wide, 6310 feet in dopth,aud
measures 3l tons. Has steam enginoj boiler, safotf
valves, supply pipes, gunges, Ac., and Ism good tombing
order. May be examined auy duy after 3 o’clock,, at
Sansom street wharf, on the river Schuylkill;-* 95001#
he paid at time of sale.
Ta. McClelland, auctioneer,
. 1219 CHESTNUT street.
CONCERT HALL AUCTION ROOMS.
Bear entrance on Clover street. .
Honselioia Furniture flnd Merchandise of every da
scription received on consigntiieut. Qt JcuraUuro
at dwellings attended to on reasonable teriiSS,
Sale at flic Anction Rooms, 1219 CheaftiutstWfefc.
>; SUPERIOR WALNUT AND COTTAGE CHAMBER
SUITS, PARLOR. DINING ROOM AND LIBRARY
FURNITURE, MATRESBEB, OFFICE DESKS, Ac.
ON FRIDAYrMORNING,
July 9, will be 1 sold, hr catalogue, commencing at.lt
o’clock, at Concert Hall Auction Rooms, 1219 Chestnut
street, a large and desirable assortment of handsome*
Walnut Chnmber Suits, new style Cottage Suits, supe
rior Parlor Suits, in haircloth and terry; Wardrobes,
Lounges, Office Desks, Carpets, Matresses; Ac.
Also, superior Secondhand Furniture, from families
declining housekeeping.
THE PRINCIPAL MONEY ESTABLISH-,
ment—S. E. corner of SIXTH and RACE streets.
Money advanced on Merchandise generally—Watches,
Jewelry, Diamonds, Gold and . Silver Plato, and on all
articles of value, for any length of time agreed on. „
WATCHES AND JEWELRY AT PRIVATE SALE.
Fine Gold Hunting Caeo, Doublcrßottom and Open Face
English, American and Swiss Patent Lover Watches;
Fine Gold Hunting Case and Open Face Lepino Watches;
Fine Gold Durlex and otlier Watches;Fmo Silvor Hunt
ing Case and Open Fnco English, American and Swiss
Patent Levor and Lepine Watches; Double Cose English
guartier and other Watches; Ladies’ Fancy Watches;
iamond Breastpins; Finger Rings; Ear Rings; Studs:
Ac.; Fino Gold Chains; Medallions; Bracelets; Scarf
Pins; Breastpins; Finger Rings; Pencil Coses and Jew
elry generally.
FOli SALE—A largo and valuable Fireproof Chest,
suitable for a Jeweller; cost $650.
Also, several Lots in South Camden, Fifth and Chest
nut streets.
CD. McCLEES & CO.,
. , , AUCTIONEERS,
No. 606 MARKET street.
BOOT AND SHOE SALES EVERY MONDAY AND
THURSDAY.
Bunting, durborow & co.,
AUCTIONEERS,
Nos. 232 and 234 MARKET street, corner of Bank street.
Successors to JOHN Q. MYERS 4 CO. - L ,
TYY BARRITT & CO., AUCTIONEERS.
XJ CASH AUCTION HOUSE,
No. 230 MARKET street, comer of Bank fltroet.
Cash advanced on consignments without extra charge.
Davis & harvey, auctioneers,
(Late with M. Thomas 4 Sons.)
Btoro Nos. 48 and 50 North SXXXHstreet .
B SCOTT, Jr., AUCTIONEER,
. SCOTT’S ART GALLERY,
1020 CHESTNUT street. Philadelphia.
Martin brothers, auctioneers,
(Lntoly Salesmen for/M. Thonms 4 Sous,)
No. 629 CHESTNUT street, roar entrance from Minor.
L. ASHBRIDGE & CO., AUCTION
. KERB. No. 60.1 MARKET street, above Fifth.
Edward walsh vs. nancy walsh. J|
C. 0.P., M. T., 1569, No. M. In divorce. . H
To NANCY WALSH, tho respondent above ni\mou-*sj
Madame : The depositions of witnesses will bo takeirj|
before tlio Examiner in tlio above case On tho23tb dapOrcgl
July, 1809, at 7 o'clock P. M., at 433 Nprtli Third street;**!
iu the city of Philadelphia. ' „ , ' - / J
TUOS. It. FINLETTER, Ajg
y7-15t* Attorney for Libellant. S'-'Ti
TN THK 'ORPHANS’COURT FOK THHi®
Ji. City and County of .Philadelphia.—Estate of JOHRcigl
MARK, deceased.—The Auditornppointed by tho County
to.-audit, settle and adjust tho account of GEORG-®'-1
ASJIMEAI), Trustee under the will of JOHN MARK*, ii
deceased, and to report distribution of the balance/lu )'
the hands of the accountaut, will meet the parties in- J
terested, for the purpose of his appointment, orr MON- >
DAY, July 12,1869, at 12 o’clock, M., at bis office, No.
128 South Sixtlistreot, in the City of IMiiladelphia.
,T. M. POWER WALLACE,
jy3G7B9lo(Jt§
COtfRT POK THE.
X Eastern District, of Pennsylvania.—CHAßLES L..-;
KOWaNDys. PHILIP 8. JUSTICE and
J. MITCHELL, trading ns PHILIP S.;JUSTICE,
January Term, 1883, No. 174:Ji./a.. Januan' torui, 18*)?*
No. 27. Tho Auaitor appointed* by the Court
tribute tin* fund inCourt realized umlervthe abovopxM®
cution will attend to tho duties of his appointment?
TUESDAY, July 13, 1869. at. 11 o’clock; JV.;*!*,at&jfjg
office, No. 630 Walnut street, in the city of Phlladelph»Ur ; £l
when and where all parties interested tiro
mnkc known their claims, or be delmrred
in fnnd. THOMAS
TK THE COURT FOR TJgftxM
X City and Conuty of Philadelphia.—‘Estate of JAVsgHB
ARGUE,deceased.—The Auditor appointod by the.CQMHK
to audit,settlo and adhist tho account of THpM&MfSH
MARIS, Executor of the last will and,
JANE Argue, deceased, nnd to report distr{butl«Mmß
tiie balance in tho bunds of the accountant, will
part ies Interested, for tho purpose of Ills
MONDAY, the 12thday ot July, A.D.ilBC9.at ity&iHi
A. M., at his office, No. 2/1 South I*lfth street (£B9BHjQ
story.) in tho city u f PWUa.lphla/^
TK TIIE OKI*WANS’ COURT FOK
Xcity mid County of
IIHYAN, -deceased.—Thu Auditor appointed l
Court to audit, settle mid adjust tlio account <gft
THY M. BItYAN, acting Trustoo for MAItS
SHABB , EBEItETH, uitdor tlto will ofiGUY®
deceased,and to'report distribution oftho balnJSI
hands of the: accountant, will moottho part®
ested.for tlio purpose of ids appinntmimt.oji TIBS
■July 13th, at 4 b clock Pi M., uUiis office, No®
Third street, in tlio citruf
.....jeidi.w fni St* SAMUBB Bj-gOTOgHj
a AHlii ESTATE OF M AltG ARET li
doconpert.—Letters- of jiUlijlnitftrtttiouißt
tuft* of the Hiu'rl decedent hating.beenjprantwf
dendgned, nil. persona indebted to snldeate
uueuteil to make payment, npd _tliOHQ having,
deimindaUigainettb» name to mako Jmttvi
delay . to SIAHY LEWUY.
Adm’fi.v No. ISU3 Wallace street; or. to tftvw
KOBE RT M. BOGAN . «!,«
fSSTATE OF. OK. WILLIAM,.
_Ei dota-aiied'.—Betters tmtumeutary
tnte having biwn grnntca to
indebted aye requested to mujto JnimcduttjjS
tlioßß having claims td'nreeoufcfhnnwttjH
. , , JOHN J. ItEEtJE, M.Si
i: inVcr. ' ■ - v -vaMw
rt ANTON ' FKESE;
\J Preserved Ginji'eritf.aw
loong brand; also> DryyPrftftg
ported' and; fot.
South Deiawari wetSmmS
TAPcyiby sales."
LEGAL NOTICES.
•2f m wstB
HPi
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