llhot tkeTMltwSclphiftKvcTilng Bulletin. ' FAITH. iflheer up, dear heart! I know the way Is - - Weary, - - - And the stones rough unto thy tender tcct; X know tho walkis sad and daTk and dreary, And seems so far until , our pathways meet, Cheer np,dear love! Time’s hand upon the I know,’ so slowly marks the creeping hours, *Tbat thy heart faints honeathi the wearying ■'■■.■.trial,. A« roses die awaiting summer showers. 'Cheer np, my own! I know thy life is lonely; lionc as a night, with neither moon nor ' '■•'''■ "star:*'.' ... :■ ......, And 0, if I could cheer and soothe it only. By words that come thns. to thee from afar! Tf T can know, thy woman’s faith, endering, ; ‘ (Still lives beneath the darkness of that sky, Still dreams of joys, the heart to hope alluring, That e’en grow dearer as they seem to die. ■ Cheer tip; dear .Love! I know thy tears are falling. ■Would I were near to Mss them from thy '•cheek! I know thy heart is faint, and fainter grow , j".: ing; . .■■■■■• Though not thy faith, and not thy love more ,-weak, Cheer up, dear one! the ocean waves are heating,— . •In vain against the rock far out at sea. So let thy heart in proud resistance meeting, Conquer the fate that keeps me far from thee [From the Saturday Kerlew.j COUNTERFEITS. The relation between art and morals in volved in the production respectively of a good picture and a bad shilling is capable of very easy definition. In the border-land which lies .between the two extremes it may not be so easy to draw the separating line, or to decide at what point the admiration which has faded into ac quiescence nnist give place to the condition of mind in which we despise the counterfeit while it stops short of actual fraud and crime. The summary method of escape from the necessity of any such decision which the author of the De liejmblica proposed to society in his time would scarcely be acceptable in ours, even were it possible. The ingenious artist who could offer to us an illu sion either of hearing- or sight—let us say Mrs. (German Reed, or Professor Pepper—w:is to be received with something like semi-divine hon ors, and conducted over the border. If he should come to London, and announce by ad vertisement his exhibition or his entertain ment, it would be our duty, through the agency of either the Lord Mayor or Mr. Glad stone, to pour ointment on his head and crown him with wool—unless we preferred - to invite him to dinner—but to inform him that there are no persons of his class in the metropolis, that their residence here is illegal, and that therefore W'e are compelled with great regret to dismiss him to another city, pro bably to Paris. The world, how ever, has not made any very marked advance since Plato’s time, notwithstanding the tem porary spmt of Puritanism, towards the “aus tere and unpleasant” social tone after which the philosopher professed to long, and the day is still at some distance when lus agreeable theory may become popular, that a consum mate artist is, ti termini, a consummate liar. The ethical difficulty therefore remains un solved, and the art tof counterfeiting pervades the whole of our social life. We propose now to deal with this eminently poptdar art only as : it appeals to the eye id the ornamental accesso ries which 'mark, or are supposed to mark, the various degrees of wealth or social position, and independently of personal shame, such as rouge, false hah, . and the stock-in-trade of Madame . Rachel. The simplest rales of natural and unconven tional existence would require that everything in a man’s surroundings should seem to be exactly what it is; that the furniture of his life should be in keeping with his station and means, and that there should he no affectation either of a lower or a higher position, ner any pretence in the direction either of meanness or of luxury. But probably this ideal of life would be found in practice as unattainable as Plato’s absolute banishment from the State of all imitative artists. An unsettled time, when the possession of wealth and the appliances of luxury become a positive source of danger, will render the dis simulation of wealth a social necessity; and a highly civilized and luxurious time, when men are measured by what they have rather than by what they are, and when loss of social esti mation follows almost as a certainty on the failure to keep up an outward appearance, will “make the simulation of-wealth a-matter, of al most equal obligation.’ To cover a marble pil lar with a coat of plaster and whitewash, and to overlay a rough brick column with graining and polish in imitation of marble,' are equally substitutions of the counterfeit for the true, ■whether adopted, in the one case, as a protection agsdust fanaticism in the seventeenth century, or, in the other, as a concession to the uninstructed public opinion of a latertime. In our own day the counterfeit is adopted solely for the purpose of giving to the less costly fabric or material the semblance of the higher value; and the in fluence of such a habit on the national charac ter, and even in some cases the morality of the process, may fairly be called in question. The whole class of fraudulent imitations have a dis tinctive character of their own, and they may he set aside at once as more or less nearly aj>- proaching to the bad shilling or the forged bank-note; but short of this there lies a wide field of social siiams the construction or adoj>- tion of which is supposed to bring in a return in value received, though, the value is not mea sured by a money standard. Of these it may, perhaps, be safe to assume 'generally that they become absolutely harmless as soon as they are confessedly found out. That which is recognized and admitted to be a counterfeit can deceive no one, and it can do no harm, for the very reason that it can do no good. . _ You may be supposed to be a very substantial A Kcllc of Feudalism in England, and well-to-do person so long as all-the wood- The Duke of Manchester lately sued a cattle work of your house, and all the furnit,ufo you dealer named Reason for tolls. The story is possess, is thought to be of solid oak; but no i told by a London paper as follows : . one is really deceived for a moment by the j “The action brought by the Duke of Man graining of a painted deal door or bookcase, : Chester against a cattle-dealer called Benson; arid the painted'wood ceases absolutely to be a and decided in favor of the most noble counterfeit, because no one imagines it to bo : plaintiff, is a fine specimen of the feudalism anything else. The same rale holds good of , which survives in the midst of English civiliza : stucco in imitation of stone-building, and also, 1 tion. St. Ives is a great cattle market from g fhopgh perhaps not quite—ln tlie ’is largelyrthougii perhaps iudi degree,' of veneering as a substitute ‘ rectly, supplied with food. In 1203 king John; for Die solid wood. But the conn- ;it appears, granted to the Abbot of Ramsay forfeit afforded by veneer is a sham of a dif- i the right to hold a market there, and this "rant ferent kind from that which is supplied by j lias descended to the present Duke of Man • paint or stucco. It is a counterfeit of quantity . i Chester. Two foils are levied by bis Grace—one instead of quality, and corresponds to; the arti- ‘rover a bridge loading into tlie tlfe otbef . .fiee by which the garrison in a siege has occa- outlie sale of beasts in the town;'and so pro-' ! ssiopafiy exhibited to. messengers from the be- j ductive are these tolls that in 1844 the Duke sieging force the heads of empty barrels covered j demised them for an annual rent of £5(10 on <wßh ffour, to as to give the impression of an ; which, of course,, liis tenant made a profit, abundance of provisions. But in this, and in | The dealers in cattle very naturally were oi>- ;tfae somewhat analogous device by which the j posed to such exactions in restraint of their i nse of mirrors is made to counterfeit a large j trade; so, terminating the lease, the Duke took , extension of iritririor in shops'and hotels, the to business, and "became' his, own tpli-bol • Sanitation issocastly discoverable asto be exempt ; ector. , ~ fjrtqm.ariy appearance of trickery, and may be I “The defendant Reason refused to paygtlie defendedas a perfectly legitimate gratification j tolls, and on one occasion the report of the ’eft&te.'. Speh a defence fails altogether iirtlie . trial states had ‘a scuttle’ about them with his •ease of, what is probably the most extensive j Grace’s bailiff. Thereupon the Duke brought as weJJ ofl the most objectionable form in which ! his action against Benson, which action other , the modern art of counterfeiting is exhibited— cattle-dealers assisted Benson hr defending. that of imitationijcwclry and sliams sorial omanifint. 1?or theSe wq danot a filnrieiword cjui fee.oflered in ex.ctis&\ Their natural'place is on tlie stage, wherettliey are, in keeping with everything clse.in.scenes which, do not profess to be other thnn'.unreali But m actualdife they aHsiused with an express inten tion to deceive. Every, lad who sports a base metal chain, and every girl who wears ear rings of the same material, does so in the hope” _sijiy enough as it may seem in fact—that the trash may be mistaken for gold,-and is as con sciously putting forward a false pretence as the lady of higher social standing who displays a set of paste ornaments when she lias pawned the diamonds which they" replace. It makes no difference to the moral character of a sham of this kind that no one is actually taken in by it: The failure of its intended effect "merely makes without inifik-: iiig it ahy the less "objectionable. A counter feit, however, of this class., may become per fectly harmless by lapse of time, when the re ality which it: imitates lias so. far passed , out of ordinary experience as practically to have ceased to exist. This is the case with the grotesque absurdities attendant on what is popularly called “a line funeral.” They have losttlieir character as a counterfeit, and remain simply as a ludicrous and unmeaning display, not one man in a thousand probably knowing anything about the ancient privileges of the Heralds’ College, or having the slightest idea of what is meant by the name of an “undertaker.” ; , . ; The counterfeit in other cases loses its char acter as such by openly proclaiming itself to be the sham which it is. In a few years it may be hoped that the rhubarb champagne with which the guests at Bikd-rate. wedding breakfasts are at present systematically poisoned may have vindicated its own moral character, and that of its givers, in this way. Mock champagne has nothing in it more essentially immoral than mock-turtle soup, but the last-named luxury is perfectly honest, because it does not profess'to be anything more than a counterfeit of the civic delicacy whose name it adopts. Indeed, since the publication of “Alice’s” delightful “Adventures in Wonderland,” we seem to have a personal knowledge of the '“Mock Turtle,” and to sympa thize with him in his sorrows as we may with any other hero ”of fiction. But though we may accept at a modest dinner-table a menu which includes this humble and unpretending luxury, we feel at oncetbat the case is altered if our host has proposed that we should eat it with an electrsi-plated spoon. Here,at any rate, we are met w itli a sham, deliberate and of malice prepense. With the highest possible respect for Birmingham and its trade, we are bound to admit that between an electro-plated dinner service and a bad half-crown there exists a very near degree of consanguinity. The one is as much a counterfeit of the social tender of respectability as the other is that of tbdegal tender value. The touch of an ordinary guest is not so delicate as to appreciate the distinc tion in weight, nor is las ear in the midst of a dinner-table conversation so accurate as to dis tinguish the metallic ring by which the counter feit silver is detected; and as yet, although the sham is widely prevailing and its use notorious, there has not been found among either pro ducers or consumers sufficient honesty and candor for its open acknowledgment. In the present condition of the electro-plating trade, therefore, we fear that there must be allowed to exist a large amount of admitted deceit and social fraud; and this state of things may be found to bear rather hardly on honest and straightforward men of small means, for the questionable benefit of that considerable class of soeial pretenders whom. Mr. Thackeray has taught us briefly to describe as “snobs.” In itself, there is clearly no more harm in an infe rior metal silvered than there is in silver gilt. No one ever professed that in the “parcel gilt” plate of a medueval church, or in the earlier glories of ecclesiastical furniture “overlaid with gold,” there was any pretence, to the solid value of the more precious metal. Some ques tion might indeed arise in reference to the plate of an English cathedral which—if we were content to blunder in good company—we might describe as metropolitan, where it is whispered that the gilding as it wears away, reveals a basis, not of silver, but of copper. But, for the most part, the use of gilding is confessedly ornamented, and has in it nothing of the counterfeit; and there is no good reason whatever why the same rule should not hold good for silvering. As matter, of fact, however, while gilt-plate in no way pretends to be gold, silvered metal does pretend to be silver, and is so far a counterfeit, and, it must be added, so long as it does not openly acknowledge its character, a fraud. The counterfeit hall-marks used by some manufac turers of electro-plate cannot be justified by any rides of common honesty or by any cus toms of trade. They are devised, we will not say intentionally, but with an ingenuity which could not have been greater if it had been intentional, so as to mislead and deceive , the ordinary and to obtain for the sonal means and appliances of domestic luxury to which, in nine caseS””<mt—of—ten r lie is not entitled. And this kind of sham hears hardly upon men who, while they appreciate the conveniences which en able households of moderate means to enjoy | more of the minor comforts of modern life than would otherwise he hi their reach, yet detest trickery and pretense in any shape. Such men no more want to go back at their dinner-tables to the three-pronged non forks of then grandfathers than they propose to ex change their morning tub for the partial ablu tions—in many cases, it is to be feared, post poned till after breakfast—of their grandfathers at the pantry sink; hut they would rather even do this than he supjxised to condescend to the meanness of pretending to a table covered with silver plate when all the while they are rejoicing in the payment of each successive quarter’s hills as a hard-won victory over for tune. It is probable, however, that the “Brum magem” manufacturers of counterfeits in the present day would reply to any such objec tions as those which we have suggested, on the most approved principles of political economy, that the demand for honest wares is not sufficient to justify the production of a supply, and that the demand for dis.ionest wares is more than sufficient. T. J. D. EVENING BULLETIN—PHILADELPHIA, SATURDAY, JULY THE DAIL Wut7Sfter J a i QaM^of'four”dajV^ef6i - e^ai‘on“ e^atrt^li^very^as<m^\Vlly'gv^%ia^^Ojiil®H Martin, the jury found a .verdict,, in favor of invest ill an article,ofthis kind, for then.te pan the righj; of the Duke of- Manchester; tnJCvy a' go I penny ahead on all animals purchased within Jug successful vvhen. : certain limits of the town of St. IyesJ riot, .on puttinMup a ‘horsewhip, ,ha asks: OTpw however, without the expression-' pf; some what sensible fellow wbuld T go, and spoil sthe doubts from the learned: Judge as to the lavy.. best pokor-Wi dressing ;tlie; knots of.,‘his |wife,;: But, setting the law ofthe caseaside, thojiided, ■ whcnhe earf buyttnaiticlelike tins for ashil-.- of a great Duke levying tolls for his own profit, ling ?’ For Jack, though a clever fellow in his' and deriving hundreds of 'pounds a year from way, is a believer in the popular notion that the sale of animals for food in an open market wife-beating is the rule and not the exception in the nineteenth century, has surely' - some- in these parts. " : thing very odious about it. of .England , “In being sober and steady, many such a spectacle of extortioriisiidttohe found ; of are also religious. The nu yet England is pre-eminently ; the country of merous churches in the districts are generally free trade. Why, then, should England be in pretty well attended, and in those of them in so exceptional a’plight V" clineitto be ‘high] tlie] choristers are.men from the neighboring mines and forges—mostly members of the brass bands, who have a know ledge of and taste for music. The : majority of the religionists, however, are Primitive Metho dists. On the mornings of love-feasts, and other special occasions, the members of this sect form .themselves into . ‘hallelujah bands,’ and, walk from village ito : village singing hymns, and diuing the summer, months they holdfield-preachings, which draw; large and enthusiastic congregations. The religion of these Methodists is one, of faith and of the simplest and sincerest kind; They have prob ably never heard ofthe “Essays and Reviews,” Colenso .on tlie Pentateuch, or Newman’s ‘Apologia,’ and rack not of doctrinal theology. I once heard : a miner of a skeptical turn of niind address a Methodist fellow-workman thus:':.' :■ ‘“Now I’ll put it to thee, Bill; dost thou really believe that the 'whale swallowed Jonah?” “ ‘Ay, my lad, yes,’.replied Billwith a confi dent smile ; ‘and if my Bible told, me that Jonah swallowed the whale, I’d believe it.’ “This answer was a floorer tor the ques tioner, and it is a good illsutration of the un questioning faith' of these primitive believers.” KKTEIATIOSS OF E.VOHSII IJFE. cX'wiltef ; in 'an. English magazine gives the following unpleasant picture ot life: antf man iiiers among,the coal-pit workersiri that part of England called “the Black Country”: ' ' “ Though less cultivated than soirie other sections of the working ’classes, the Black Country operatives are not quite, the savages which many good people honestly be lieve them to be. The Black Country life of. a generation back had much, the Black Coun try life of to-day lias little, of the ! savage ele ment in it. The' district and its inhabitants have, in a greater or less degree, kept pace with the march of civilization. Railways Tim through the. country in all directions, and though they may not themselves receive tele grams, the natives are no longer under the im pression that you can send a pair of new boots by telegraph. The cheap press has shed its light upon the district. The men subscribe to the penny daily and weekly newspapers,and the women- to the London-Journal class of serials; while there are reading-rooms and libraries established in which the workmen can seethe magazines and higher-priced papers, or borrow standard books. “On this point, however, it must be confessed that the Illustrated Police News is the only leading of some, and the favorite publication of a great number, of the natives. : They seem to have a natural taste for the dramatically horrible. They point with a kind of pride to the scene of a sensational murder that took place in the neighborhood—murder for which a man was tried and acquitted; which was worked up into a melodrama at the theatre of the nearest country town, and the perpetrator of which now ranks in the long list of undis covered criminals. Tlieylike to dwell upon the stories of'crime and misery associated with the many disused pits scattered about the locality. They tell of the body of a cashier found at the bottom of an old shaft, long after he was sup posed to have absconded with the moiiey for the sake of which, as the event showed, he had been foully murdered. They point to one par ticularly gloomy pit, down which a girl, a beauty inker way—for Black Country villages, as well as rural ones, have their belles—mad dened by her shame, plunged headlong, under the very eyes of the ‘London lover’ who had betrayed her, and who, from the shock, became a maniac. 7 “Indeed, miserable suicidal lovers’-leaps form the staple of these pit-stories; though the most remarkable incident told in this connec tion arose, as do many of the more dramatic stories of working-class life, out of a trade strike. A number of desperate miners on strike resolved to avenge themselves upon a ‘gaffer’whom they conceived had cruelly op pressed them, by throwing him down a certain disused pit ill a very lonely part of the country. They knew the road by which lie drove home from his office, and in the darkness of a wet December night tliey lay in wait for him in the black shadow of the bank of the pit which, iii-m in their murderous purpose, they had determined should be his grave. Presently the gleam of the gig-lamp was seen coming through the dark ness, arid they silently prepared for action. The instant the conveyance came abreast of them they rushed out, stopped the horse, put out the light, and throwing a coat over their victim’s head dragged him from the vehicle and up the bank. From their muttered imprecation he gathered the fate intended for him, and strug gled desperately, but in vain, to free himself or cry out. Be clung to some of his captors, but the others shook off his grasp, and when they at last held him dear, flung him into the sharp, sloping, bell-shaped pitmoutli. In his blind convulsive struggle he got his aims round a broken pulley-post just as he w r as going over -the edge of the shaft. Before his would-be murderers could lay their hands upon anything with which to push him from this his last frail hold on life, the coat fell from his head, and iu his mortal agony he screamed out: “ ‘What lpas the old doctor done, lads?’ “ Then they knew that they had mistaken their man, that they had been within a hair’s breadth of murdering their best-friend; the man who never spared himself in serving tliem in case of sickness or accident, and who had TflwayrcxertwMiiinsdfTaT^ronrote'Uieir'wel-' fare in every way; the man whom, with all the strength off them -warped- natures,' they really loved, and for whom any of them would have risked their lives, as now some of them did risk theirs in releasing him from his peril ous position the instant they recognized his voice. After that night not one of those con cerned in the outrage was ever seen in that part of the country again, though it was proba bly more from fear of their fellow-workmen than of anything the doctor would have done that they fled. “Dog-lighting and wife-beating are unhap pily not extinct in the Black Country, but they are certainly not the sole amusements of the district. They lire exceptional occurrences— more exceptional, probably, than they are in London and other large towns. The general diversions of the neighborhood are quite, of <a civilised order. Every village lias its work man’s cricket-club, and many of them large brass bands, some of which have taken a not inglorious part in many a well-disputed band contest; and if in celebrating a triumph the bandsmen have sometimes chunk, not wisely but too well—why, that is a weakness not altogether peculiar to the Black Country. Cheap trips, too, are a very popular pleasure among the operatives of these parts. They flock to Chester on the Cup-day, and to the special galas at the Belle vue Gardens, Manchester, though the dayrtrips to. the Welsh watering-places And the greatest favor among them. Many of the Black Coun try workmen are stanch teetotallers, and the bulk of them are fairly steady and provident. The Comptroller of the Post-office savings bank could, if need be, show, that numbers of them are depositors in his department; and in most of the. villages there is a penny savings bank, bearing the announcement that it is ‘Open every reckoning-f'Monday.t-Eortriightly pays are the rule of the district, the-pay-week being styled ‘ reckoning,’ the intervening one blank week. “One of tliq most animated scenes of Black Country life is the reckoning Saturday markets hi the village districts." The markets are held at stalls in' the streets of the little towns, which serve as centres to villagers for a mile or two around. The,''streets are crowded, not merely by the women bent on market purposes, but also by friends and courting couples, who may have little other opportunity for meeting. Alto gether, the market presents a very fair-like ap- an appearance grearty enhanced by tliepresehceofaCiieap JaclTs The stock jokes of this gentleman are always well received by the crowd that is to be found't.listening to him. He elicits a roar of laughter when, on offering a look ing-glass for sale, he exclaims: ‘Well, I know that times are hard, and money scarce; but The People of the Block Country. The probable influence of the Chinese on our politics affords, of course, matter for'grave consideration. But does their arrival not pro mise an opportunity once more of proposing an educational test for the exercise of the suffrage with a better chance of a favorable hearing than we have hitlierto had ? The Fenian who now thinks every male has an “inalienable right” to vote without reference totliestate of his intelli gence, would probably support the exaction from the Chinese voter of a knowledge of the English language and of the principles of this government, and this might furnish the first step towards a formal recognition, applicable to all, of the absolute necessity of general educa tion to the success of democracy. We notice as a favorable sign of the times that many of those who have during the last .seven years been pleaching, in the interest of the negro, the ab solute sufficiency of mere instinct to a man to use the franchise both for his own in terest and that of the community, are now ac counting for the hostility of the Democratic party to all social and political reform by the enormous amount of ignorance in its ranks, which shows that the world moves. — Nation. CITY ORDINANCES. COMMON COUNCIL OF PHILADED PHIA. [CLERK’S OFFICE.] Philadelphia, June 25,1800. In accordance with a Resolution adopted by the Common Council of the City of Phila delphia, on Thursday, the twenty-fourth day of June, I 860! the annexed bill, entitled ‘•An Ordinance to authorize a loan for the payment of Ground Kents and 1 Mortgages, is hereby published for public information. JOHN ECKSTEIN, Clerk of Common Council. An ordinance to authorize a loan for the payment of ground rents audmort gages. Section 1. 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 to time, seven hundred thousand dollars for the payment of ground rents and mortgages held against the city, for which interest not to exceed the rate ot six per cent, per annum shall he paid-, half yearly, on the first days of January and July, at the office of" the City Treasurer. The principal of said loan shall 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- Suire, but not for any fractional part ot one undred dollars, or, if required, in amounts of five hundred or one 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 oe made by virtue thereof there shall be, by force of 4 tlus 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 oh said certificates, and the further sum of three-tenths of one per centum mi 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, ot said certificates. RESOLUTION TO PUBLISH A LOAN BILL, 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 24,1869, entitled, “An Or dinance to Authorize a Loan for the payment of Ground Kents and Mortgages.” And the said Clerk, at the stated meeting of after the expiration of four weeks from the first day of said publication, shall present to this Council one of each of said newspapers for every day in which the same shall have been made. .je2o 24t$ GROCERIES, LIQUORS, &V. NEW SPICED SALMON, FIRST OF THE SEASON. ALBERT 0. ROBERTS, DEALERIN FINE GROCERIES, Corner Eleventh and Vine Streets. FKESn PEACHES IN LARGE CAN'S, at Fifty Cents p«*r Can—the cheapest and boat goods in the city, at COUSTY'S East Eud Grocery, No. 118 South Second street* ' T7IREKOH PEAS, MUSHROOMS, TRUEV JP - fli BiToniatoesi.Greftn Corn, Asparagus, &c.,iri stord and for sale at COuBTY’S Bust End Grocery, No. 119 South Bacond street. . "VTEW DATES. FIGS, PRUNES, RAT- J_N sins and Almonds—all of new crop—in store and for sale at COCSTY’S East End Grocory,No. 118 South Second street. . • Q WEET 01U.—150 DOZEN OF “EXTRA O quality Olivo Oil,expressly impprted fbrCOUSTY’S EflßtEnd Grocery, No. llßSouth Second etroot. S' TONED CHERRIES, PLUMS, BLACK berries, Peaches, Prunellas, Pears, Lima Boans, Shaker B\veetCorn*atCOUSTY 5 8IJaBtEnd Grocery, No, 118 South Second street. • - THE FINE ARTS. TUfW. JM PORTED OHj PAINTINGS. -AN - This collection (recently importod ) comprißes.Hpa cimens of tho following celebrated artiste, and is on freo exhibition at U. PELMAN’S GALLERY, C32,CALLOWniLL. A. Wuut, , Eiliidan, L.VanKuyek, . E.Accurd. Daßylandt, J. ROBiorsu, W. Vershuur, H. Hchnfcls, . 11. Rownor, Pttvid Coiv M . Ton Kata, J. Jacobs, 11. Von Sci on. Robbe, and many others. Part-of tho collection is exhibited at Mr, E. KRETZ MAIVS new Jewelry Store, 1311 Chestnut. jyl2*l2t§ 17, 1869. »~~E PART ME NsT OWi HIGH WAYS, BRID GKS?SBWERB~»c.-OFFICE OF CHIEF COMMISSIONER} N 0.104 SOUTH FIFTH -•!?,{ Fit v, /-V _ - IFhiladelphia, July: 10,186 Q. _ • ■■ NOTICFITQ-CONTRACTORS. • " Sealed proposals Will horeceiyodat the-of fice of the Chief CoihmiiSionfer of Highways until 12 o’clock* Ht, ; pniMONDAY, lUth inst., for the constriictioh bf a Sower on the lino ot Columbia avenue from the Sewer in Eighth street, to the west curb-lino of Hutchinson street, with a clear inside diameter of three feet, and witli such man-holes as may bo di rected by the Chief Engineer and Surveyor. The understanding to bo that the Contractor shall take bills prepared against the property fronting on said sewer to the amount of one dollar and fifty cents- for each lineal foot ot front on'each side of the street as so much cash paid; the balance; us limited by Ordi nance, to be paid by the city. " v When the street is occupied by a City Pas senger Railroad track, the Sewer shall be"cou strueted along side of said track in such rhan ner as not to obstruct or interfere with the safe passage oftlie eavs thereon; and no claim for remuneration, shall be paid the Contractor by the company triingsaiil track, as specified in act of Assembly approved May Bth, 18(H). All bidders are Invited to he present at the time and place of opening the said proposals. Each proposal will be accompanied by a cer tificate that a Bond had been filed in the Law Department as directed by Ordinance of May 25th, 1880. If tho lowest Didder shall not exe cute a contract within flvedas’s after the work is awarded, he .wil] be deemed as declining, and will he held liable on liis bond for the (In ference between his hid and the next highest hid. Specifications may be had at the Depart ment of Surveys,■■■which will he strictly ad , hered to. No alio wanceVwill bp made for rock excavation unless by special contract. MAHLON H. DICKINSON, jylf>-3ts Chief Commissioner of Highways. Department of highways, BRIDGES, SEWERS, &<)., OFFICE OF CHIEF COMMISSIONER, NO. 104 SOUTH FIFTH STREET. Philabelpiiia, July 10,1809. NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS. Sealed Proposals will he received at the Of fice of the Chief Commissioner of Highways until 11 o’clock A. M. on MONDAY, 19th inst.,-for tlie construction of-a sewer on—the - line of Hunter street, from Tenth to Eleventh., streets, with a clear inside diameter of three feet, and with such man-holes as may be di rected by'tlio Chief Engineer and Surveyor. The understanding to be that the Contractor shall take bills prepared against the property fronting on said sewer to the amount of one dollar and fifty cents for each lineal foot of front on each side of the street as so mueli cash paid; the balance, as limited by Ordinance, to he paid by the city. When the street is occupied by a City Pas senger Railroad track, the Sewer shall be con structed along side of said track in such man ner as not to obstruct Orinterfere with the safe passage of the cars thereon; and no claim for remuneration shall he paid the Contractor by .the company'using'said track, as specified in act of Assembly approved May Bth, 1866. All Bidders are invited to be present at the time and place of opening the said Proposals. Each proposal will be accompanied by a certi ficate that a Bond has been filed in the Law Department as directed by Ordinance of May 25tn, 1860. If the lowest bidder shall not exe cute a Contract within five days after the work is awarded, he will be deemed as declining, and will he held liable on his bond for the dif ference between his hid and the next highest hid. Specifications may he had at the Depart ment of Surveys,which will be strictly adhered to. No allowance will be.made for rock exca vation unless by special contract. MAHLON H. DICKINSON, jyl(>-3t§ Chief Commissioner of Highways, iKOPOSALS FOR COAL, Office of Paymaster U. S. Navy, ) No. 425 Chestnut Stkeet, Philadelphia, July 15,1869. ) SEALED PROPOSALS, endorsed “Pro posals for Supplies,” will be received at I this office until 12 o’clock M. on the 20tli of July, for furnishing the United States Navy Depart ment with the following article, to hoof the best quality, and subject to inspection by the inspecting officer -in the Philadelphia Nnvjj Yard, where it is to be delivered in the coal bin. tree of expense to the Government, for which security must he given : FOR BUREAU OF STEAM ENGINEER- VO tons Broken Locust Mountain Coal. 30 tons Lehigh Lump Coal. 15 tons Bituminous Coal. Blank forms for Proposals can be obtained at this office. jyls3t Notice to contractors.— pro jmsals will be received until noon of SATURDAY, July 17, at the Office of the “PARK COMMISSION, 23* South FIFTH street, for delivering on the Park road, west of the Girard avenue bridge, 1,000 CUBIC YARDS OP COARSE GRAVEL, suitable for making a hard road/Surface, free from loam or clay. Also, for/ carting 1,000 cubic yards, or more, of Furnace Cinder, from a deposit at the west end of the Columbia bridge, to various points on the Park roads. The price to be by-siubic yard, and by the thousand yards of haul. : JOIIkFC. G BESSON,— I Chief Engineer, Office on Landing Avenue. Fairinount, July 11,1800. "QTONE — SCOWS - J^ANTED.—PIIOPO- O SALS ■will be received until noon—of- SA' l URDAY, July 17, at the Office of tho PARK COMMISSION, No. 224 South FIFTH street, for delivering in Fairraount I*ool ONE OR MORE DECKED SCOWS, Seventeen feet wide and forty feet long, capa ble of carrying forty tons of stone or sand. Specifications mast accompany the bids, stat ingmanner of construction, number of kelsons and size of timbers, and time of delivery. JOHN C. CRESSON, . jyl2 fit Chief Engineer. 1 P“~ “STEAM CUTTERS. • . m Theasuhy Department, i '■ Wahiungton, June 23, 1809. S Proposals will bo received at this Department until 12 M., AV KDNEBDAY, the 21st day of July next, for tho construction of four Rovcnuo Steam Cutters, of wood or iron—one Propeller and three side-wheel. \ Specifications in detail will be furnished bidtlors on ap\ plication in person or by letter to this Department, or to the Collectors of the Customs at Boston, Now Yorkj\ PHILADELPHIA and Baltimore. Proposals should bo sealed and addressed to tho Secretary of tho Treasury, and endorsed on the onvelopo, V Proposals for Building Revenue Steam Cutter..* ■ flBO g BoimvELlj] ‘ J<‘24 th,« tiv2lS Secretary of Treasury. _ REMOVALS. REMOVAL. MESSRS. KEELER & FENNEMORE, PHOTOGRAPHERS, No. 5 S. Eighth Street', Respectfully announce that, oil July Ist, ISG9 they will open their new ami splendid. PHOTOGRAPH GALLERIES, No. 820 Ar«h Street, Fliiladelpliln, whero, with greatly Increased facilities fur transacting their business, under.the ilrm of. KFI t.IHI. SUDDAKDS &■ FENNEMORE, they will ho pleased to welcomo all who nnvy favor them with a call. Jol2Bwtf BooTSTANirsnoEs: •fa NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC GENE- Jt B Thu , iatcst stylo, fashion and assortment or ISOOTB, SHOES AND GAITERS, FOR MEN AND BOYS, ~ i Can bo had nt E nNE a T aOPP’B, _ , ;N0;230 NORTH NIN.TH.STREET.. Better than anywhero in the City. A Fit Warranted. HEATERS AND STOVES." «<&_ THOMAS S. DIXON & SONS,' #EHS| Late'Andrews & Dixon, dgny . No. 1324 CHESTNUT,Stroot, Philada., 'wr: Opposite United States Mint, anufacturers of LOW DOWN, PARLOR, CHAMBER,. OFFIOE, A«d other GRATES, “ For Anthracite, Bituminous und Wood FIro; 1 ALHO'. WARM-AIR FURNACES, For Warming Public and Private Buildings. ■ REGISTERS, VENTILATORS, 'AND CHIMNEY CAPS, COOKING-RANGES; BATH-BOILERS. WHOLESALE and RETAIL. “ H. M. HIESKELE, Paymaster IT. S. Navy. jyl2 fit «* FOE LONG BRANCH Without Change of Cars. » -EBAY® - -PH n&XBEWHiA r—FROM-—WALN OT STREET WHAJSE, 8.00 A. J1.,2.00 P. M. DtIEXONG BltANdHjat 12.10 P. M., 0.12 P. M, " FAKE Philadelphia to Long Branch... Excursion Ticket 5..,.................. 93 00 «> WM. H.OA'i'ZMEIt, Agent. jrfjgfe FOR CAPE MAY, On Tuesdays, ThiirsdaysandSaturdayq. On and after SATURDAY, Juno 20th, tho now anil splendid Stertmer LADY OF THE LAKE, Captain W. Thompson,.,will commence jruuning regulni Iy to Capo May, loavlug Arch Stteol Wharf on TUESDAY, THUKSDAy and SATURDAY MORNINGS at 9 o’clock, and returning, leave tlio landing at Cape May on MONDAYS, WEDNESDAYS and FRIDAYS at ? FAKE,"INCLUDING CAftRrAQK HIRE, @2 25, CHILDREN, V. \\ }£>• RVUVANTB “ »* . j ; SEASON TICKETS, 810. CARRIAGE HIRE EXTRA. .. . THE LADY OF THE LAKE Is a fine sea boat, has handsome otato-rooni accommodations, and Is fitted up with everything necessary for tho safety and comfort of anil Baggage checked at the Transfer Ottice, 828 Cliestnnt street, under the,Continental Hotel, Freight recolved until B>i o'clock. _ For further particulars, inuuire at tho Office, No. 33 North DELAWARE Avenue, jj jnjDDELL, , CALVIN TAGGART, ie29tfl ' SUMMER RESORTS. UNITED STATES HOTEL, ATLANTIC CITY, N. J„ Will open for tho reception of Gneats Saturday, Juno 20tli, 1869. Hassler’s Band, nnder tho direction of Mr. Simo Hassler, is engaged for tho season. Persons wishing to ongago Rooms will apply to GEO. FREEMAN, Superintendent, Atlahtio City, N. J., Or BROWN A WOELPPEB, 827 Richmond Street,. Philadelphia. jes 2ro ■ SURF ROUSE, ATLANTIC CITY, N.J., NOW OPEN FOR GUESTS. For Boojns, Terms, Ac., address THOMAS FARLEY, Proprietor. Carl Senlz’s Parlor Orchestra has been engaged for the season , CAPE ISLAND, N.J. A first'ClAgfl RESTAURANT, a 1» carte, will to opened by ADOLPH PBOSKAUfiB,of 222 S, THIRD Street, Philudelnhia. on tl»o 7tb of Juno, under the nnrao And title of MAISUN DOKEE, at tlio corner of WASH* IN ft TON and JACKSON St*., known as Hart's Cottage. V&" PamHlea will bo supplied nt the Cottage, Lodging Booms by Day or Week to Beut, COLUMBIA HOUSE, CAPE MAY, With accommodations for. 750 gnosis, (snow open. ThoGinmmia Serenade Band, under tho direction of Prof. Geo. Bastert, has been secured for the season. GEO. J. BOLTON, Proprietor. >•26 2nis TOBETTO SPRINGS, CAMBRIA COUNTYi PA., Will bo opened to GnctU July Ist. “Excursion Ticket*,” good (or the season, over tb© Pennsylvania Central Railroad, can bo procured from Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, and Harrisburg, to Kayler Station.imiles from tho Springs, where coaches will bo In rcadiue** to convey guest* to the tipring*. Tho piojprietor take*. pleasure in notifying tho public that tho hotel is in proper order, and all amusement* usually found at watering place* can bo found at tho above resort. Term*, 82 W per day, or §5O per month, jctitl jy2G* FRANCIS A. GIBBONS, Proprietor. (IRESSON SPRINGS.—THIS FAVORITE J SUMMER RESORT,situatedon thewummltof tho ALLEGHANY MOUNTAINS, 2,200 FEET ABOVE THE LEVEL OF THE SEA,will bo opm f«r there* ceptiou of guests on tho 15th day of June. Tho buildings connected with this establishment have been entirely renovated and newly famished. Excursion tickets sold by the P. R. R.,at Ncw'York, Philadelphia, Lancaster, Harrisburg, and Pittsburgh, good for tho scuaon. AH trains stop at Crenson. TWO FURNISHED COTTAGES FOR RENT. For further information mltlra*# GEO. W. MULLIN, Proprietor, Crwt*ou Springs, Cambria county, Pa. kJKA BATHING.—NATIONAL' HALL* D Cape May City, N.J. This large and commodious hotel, kuown A* tho National Itnll, Is now receiving visitors. AARON GARRETBON, je£i*2ro§_ _ _ • _ Proprietor. Broad" top mountain house; Broad Top, Huntingdon county. Pa., now open. jylO ltn- W. T. PEARSON, Proprietor. Delaware house'cape island, N. J, is now open for the reception of visitor*. jel7-2m§ , JA3IES 3IECKAY, Proprietor. Lumber Under cover, AIWAYS DRY. WATSON & GILLINGHAM, 924 Richmond Street. MAULE, BROTHER & CO., 2500 1 O£Q PATTERN MAKERS. 1 Q/?Q 1005/. PATTERN MAKERS. 1005/. CHOICE SELECTION MICHIGAn’cORK PINE FOR PATTERNS. 1 QUO SPRUCE AND HEMLOCK.! Q£Q 1005/. SPRUCE AND HEMLOCK. 1005/. LARGE STOCK. IOPQ FLORIDA FLOORING. 1 Q/?Q IOOt/. FLORIDA FLOORING. 100«7. CAROLINA FLOORING. VIRGINIA FLOORING. DELAWARE FLOORING ASH FLOORING. WALNUT FLOORING. Tq/JQ FLORIDA STEP BOARDS7i oV?Q 1005/. FLORIDA STEP BOARDS. 10Q5/. KAIL IILAfJK A KAIL PLANK. \ WALNUT BOARDS AND PLANK. WALNUT BOARDS. WALNUT PLANK. ASSORTED FOR CABINETMAKERS, BUILDERS, AC. 1869. NI M^IBKIL^ B 1869. , UNDERTAKERS’ LUMBER. ■ RED CEDAR. WALNUT AND PINE. -1 Q/>n SEASONED POPLAR. 1 Q/?Q 1005/. SEASONED CHERRY. 1005/. WHITE OAK PLANK AND BOARDS. HICKORY. 1 QtfQ CAROLINA SCANTLING.I Q£Q IOUi/. CAROLINA H. T. SILLS. IOUtJ. _ NORWAY SCANTLING. -I Q£Q CEDAR SHINGLES. 1 Q/?Q ±OOl7. ±oo*7. CYPRESS SHINGLES. LARGE ASSORTMENT, ; ,FOK SALE LOW. 1 Q£Q PLASTER I NOL ATH. 1 0/?Q jLOUt/. PLASTERING LATH. XOU«7. JIAVLE BKOTIIKB & CO., , saw SOUTH STREET. mHOMAS ' & POHL, LUMBER MER- X clifints, No. 1011 S. ; Fourth street. At tlieirvard will be found Walnut, Ash, Poplar, Cherry , Pino, Hem lock, Ac., Ac., at reasonable cull. ELIAS POIIL. A ’ mO ■ CONTRACTORS, LUMBERMEN Xnnd Ship-builders.—Wo are now prepared to oxeouto nromutly orders for Southern Yellow Pine Timber, BhiSsluff and Lumber. COCHRAN, RUSSELL & CO., 22 North Front street: _ , mli24tf ELLOW PINE LUMBER.—ORDERS for cargoes of, every description Sawed Lumber oxo ented at short notice—quality subject to inspection. Apply to EDW.H. ROWLEY. 18 South WhnrveS. ■ fe6 xnlil7-6m* NEW PUBLICATIONS. Philosophy op marriage.—a. now coureo bf.Loctur6B t 'iiß UoUvornd lit (ho Now York Museum of Anatomy; embracing the subjects: How to Live and wlmt to Live for; Youth, Maturity and 1 Old Age; Manhood generally reviewed; tho Cau.so ot In digestion, Flatulence niuTNorvouc! Diseahos accounted' for; Marriago Philosophically Considered, -Ao., Ac. Pocket volumes containing theso Lectures will ho for warded, post paid, on receipt of 25 cents, by mldreHsinff W. A. Leary, JrA Southeast cornpr of Fifth and Walnut streets, Philadelphia. _^fo2iMy§ ' txr. -± \ jyl taul Street. lEUBGBAPHIO SUMMARY. A Richmond despatch reports the serious ill ness of Gen, Custis Lee. <• Tiib rebels have burned eighteen houses near Arrayoßlnnco, Mbs. Em Haudy lias been arrested in Al bany on the charge of murdering her infant. Tub new 13-cent currency will be ready for issue on Monday. • TrtE ; Bishop of .-Lite refuses the Austrian EmperOr's amnesty)’and has decided to submit to the sentence imposed. ; Tub Gray iVeseiVes airived safely at Cape Island yesterdays and received a gratify ing re ception. At Washington yesterday, the thermometer reached 101 degrees in the shade, and at Hich roond, Ya., it reached 105 degrees. . Tub official count of the vote of Virginia at the'military headquarters, in Richmond shows a niajority’for Walker of 17,500. ■. The house of a fanner in Rensselaer county, K. Y., was robbed ofsl,ooo in U. S. bonds and greenbacks 6n Wednesday night.)? f ■■/? Coi.. ILu,n,the ncw Governor of Newfound land, arrived at Halifax, from England, on Thursday iijght. „ , The Catholic Church at Cohoes, Yew York, was robbed of altar property a week ago. The missing articles were found on Thursday in the Mohawk l iver. Thebe were several cases of sun-stroke, two of them fatal,in ...Cincinnati/, yesterday. One death from sun-stroke occurred in ' Rich mond. Ya. ’ : The convicts working at the quarry at Sing- Sing Penitentiary, X. Y., have rei>elle<l,and arc now locked up, A general revolt of - the priso ners is apprehended. Thebe is trouble in Pleasant Valley, N. Y., owing to the resisting of a Sheriffs attachment by a gang of Laborers, and soldiers are to be sent from Poughkeepsie to aid the Sheriff. At Watebfobh, X. Y.. on Timisday even ing, a meet ing of citizens Was held to organize a Vigilance Committee, to prevent burglaries and incendiarism: The brig Abbey Larabee, from Bangor to Xew York, capsized yesterday, in Long Island Sound, and the captain's wife and child and two seamen were drowned. .President Grant and party,in the steamer Tallapoosa, stopped at Fortress Mom-oe, yester day, on tlieir way to Long Branch. Postmaster- General (-res well and ex-Secre:ary Bone were of the party. A portion of-the Eighth UnitedSiates Cav alry, near Wickesbiirg, Arizama, a few . days ago attacked a band of Indians ahd defeated them, killing nine of the savages." One soldier was seriously wounded. . Govebnok-em:ct Warner, of Virginia, was serenaded at Bingliampton, X. Y., ills na tive town, last evening. lie made a brief speech, 'declaring the election in Virginia a tri umph for tlie policy of General Grant. It has been agreed to suspend the applica tion for a haljea* corjnw in the Yerger case un til tlie question involved can be brought before the Supreme Court, in October next. Mean while, no sentence of the military court, ex cept what may be necessary for the safe custody of Yerger, will be carried into effect. A despatch from Lexington, Missouri, tlie 10th, says a terrible tornado lias just swept over Lexington. Trec3 and fences were blown down in every direction* and the streets were blocked with tire w recks; Many houses were imroofed and otherwise daiihaged,'and ? soirie roofs were earned a liumdred yards. Tlie CaucmUm newspaper office is a perfect wreck,' Several horses were injured by flying timbers, bricks, shutters, &c. Xo lives were lost as far as heard. Tlie damages to the city and county at present cannot be estimated. The growing crops were prostrated, fruit trees destroyed, aud tlie deuce played generally. The V'nlon Pacific Railroad. The following letter was received by Jaj Cooke & Co. from IV. Milnor Kobcrts, a pro minent civil engineer, and one of the commis sion sent out by Jay Cooke & Co.: to examine a route for the Northern Pacific Itailroad Com pany eastward from Puget Sound. In passing over the Union Pacific Itailroad, he makes the following flattering rejKirt,: Sai.t'Lakk City, June 18, 18C9.—Messrs. - Jay Cooke & Co.: GeKtlkmen—AVe arrived .here yesterday morning by stage, twenty-eiglit miles'from the railroad station “ Deseret," changed the day we left Omaha to “ Wintah," after a prominent range of snow mountains, in sight of which we were nearly all day of the Kith. The view of these snow-clad summits, . standing at an elevation of eleven or twelve thousand feet above the sea, is both beautiful - 'and grand. . The railroad from Omaha to Cheyenne, Old miles, is equal, in all respects, to the best of our first-class' Eastern- roads,"and superior to most •of them on account of its easy grades. Oirthfer ' whole distance the road is remarkably-smootb r so that it is easier to write as the carsaie going ■ than on anv railroad I know of. Nearly the j whole of it is ballasted with fine gravelly mate rnal. It is all prairie land, and all the way in # the valley of the Platte river or its branches. At “North Platte,” 201 miles from Omaha, the line takes the valley of the South Platte, and * runs 0n .7 the north side of it to “Julesburg, 377 miles from Omaha. Thence it follows the “lodge-pole” fork : of the South Platte to “Pine mulls,” 473 miles from * Omaha. It then passes across an easy “divide" oyer to the waters of i Crow/creek,” .another tributary of the’South Platte, and de- I scends to Cheyenne, 510 miles from Omaha. Omaha, the starting point, is 700 feet above the sea; Cheyenne is 5,021 feet above the sea; so. . that the total rise is 4,001 .feet, in 510 miles, or an average of 0 0-10 feet per milejthe liiaxiinum rise for short distances being 35 feet per mile, excepting tliat in getting out troin Omaha there is at present a. grade of 02 feet per mile, which, however, on the completion of the bridge across the Missouri at Omaha! now in progress, will. ’ be reduced to about 40 feet per mile, and which, occurring at an important city,, is not of much lhoiftent. Practically, the railroad from Onialia tb Cheyenne is a'straight lino for 510 miles, with ruling grades below 30,feet per mile, and averaging about TO feet iter mile. This entire distance is a grass country, but most of the way -it iipvy be cultivated, and pro - duce spring wheat," corn, potatoes, oats, etc. At present it is virgin soil, ranged' over by ante lopes, occasional Indians and emigrants, and latterly by the, railroad, and; now dotted with railroad villages about every fifteen miles, these villages, as yet depending wholly on tire rail road employes.and the travel by rail, no local j. trade. esisti'ng along the -route till- we reach .Cheyenne, where the stage road runs to “Dear ver,” 110 miles oil 1 ." As far as Cheyenne we. were, .honored w itli the company 6f eS-Secretii!y’ Seiv;ird and liis family! At Chevenne .lie was-’welcomed by a crowd and a band of music; and hero he bade our party farewell,’ Intending to proceed to Denver, aiidafterwardsjto the Pacific. . ,• /, <» , Cheyenne hears somewhat the same relation to the passage of the, Black Hills range of the * Jlocky Mountains that Altoona boars tlie. Allegheny range, on the/Pennsylvania Central’' Hoad; only, however,’ in this,:that at Cheyenne the grade*, increases; anti continues gradually increasing to tliepaskpf the ..mountain.at the mihimit. at Sherman; tile highest point attained by the railroad'.anywhere between the Atlantic ainl the. Pacific, Ocean—Sherman beiug’B,23s feet above the sea. ■But'hero-the resemblance ceases. The as cent of the Black Hills,from Cheyenne to Sher man, a distance of 33 miles, is'entirely dilVorcnt f«,in’' that, on the Allegheny slope. In the 33 _ - THE B miles tlw rise,ls 2,3i4feet, or an averageof 70 feet peri'inile!/ and ’’ tKeSirtiixiniifrn at any: point 85 feet per mile. But, in attaining this easy as cent there is no heavy crest, no deep fills, the deepest" ciifs only about 20 feet, and no ;tun-; nels, • and •on ,■ the> - very top, at -Sher maii; it.io lmpixjiis- that there is a slight depres-: sion, requiring an embankment about, four feet -Uigli- . , . i 1 watched this, 'portion of the line critically , all the way, although it was by moonlight, in, - company with DrT Claxton; looking from the hind platform of the hinder car, anu-I was_par tiiularly struck with the fact • that there is little more work on these 83 miles than on the route approaching Cheyenne fijoirt tli,e;East, an(l no appearance ofa mountain ascent. Such istliis remarkable pass. * In fact, it was not necessary ..that even this summit should lie passedby the railroad, for the Laramie Fork; as well as the .main North Fork of the Platte, cuts, through the Black BUlls,’ and could have been followed' .with reg ularly ascending grades, though on more cir cuitous aml inore : costly" routes. Wherethe line now crosses the Laramie west oi the Black Hills, it is 7,123. feet above the sea, or 1,112 feet lower than the Sheraian summit; and at the crossing of the North Platte, >vest of the Black Bills, it js 0n1^ 0,4X7 ieetahoveihe sea,;»rl,osB feet below , These features are not generally understood by oiir people in the East. On the entire dis tance,"s49 miles' front Omahato; Sherman, on the. highest summit passed between the two oceans,.the work is absolutely trilling,, the cun es of the easiest kind, and grades are as above stated. - > - . ; r; - %■ r;— From the Sherman summit, descending the slopes of the Black Hills, thblwoik) is,’ heavier and the grades somewhat undulating, the maximum descending grade being 86 feet per mile for about, ten miles into the valley of the Laramie. TUe'general range of the height of grade above the sea, from : the Laramie,.cross ing 23$ miles west of Sherman to Green river, is frohi *7,000 to 0,000 feet in ii distance of 274 miles, between. Laramieand Green liver, with no very heavy work at any points At ;Grcen river the grade is 0,112 feet above the sea, and at the Asixrn summit, !>2£ miles further west, it is 7,403 feet. Aspen is' the; second highest summit on the Union Pacific Road, and it is 772 feet lower than Sherman, at a point 030 miles from 'Omaha; At Deseret, or Wintah now,we left the cars to go over to Salt Lake City, 28 miles south of the railroad, by stage over a tolerably good road, which we passed in a little less than six hours, between 1 and 7 o’clock, on the morning of Thursday, June 17. I will not take time to write a description of this curious city, or of the little incidents at tending our journey, and stay here since yester day morning. I prefer to generalize a. little in connection with the Union'Pacific Railroad, as. far as we have passed over it. It is a good, well-located and well-constructed railroad in most of the distance from Omaha to Wintah, 1,024 miles. From Piedmont west for about 90 miles the track was hastily laid durum the winter, and at a number of points trestle-work still supplies the'"place of the more permanent bridge structures which are in pro cess of erection; but it will require only a.short time and no large expenditure of money to make it as good’as the best in the country. -We made very good time over even the .worst parts of it, with ho extraordinary motion of the cars., I could take notes comfortably on the very roughest portions;, I cart have no doubt; there; lore (haying been over all excepting. 00 miles of the Union Pacific), that." the whole 1,084 miles will, in a very; .short tune, be equal throughout to thebest roads in the East. Respecting.tlie business to lie done .on these one thousand and eighty-four miles, it is obvious that, it must be almost wholly* through travel and transportation. There can be no local trade or travel excepting what may come in from Denver, at Cheyenne, and from Salt Lake City, at Wintah, or tliat vicinity. Branch railroads will be at once constructed to both Denver and Salt Lake City. At all other points the only business must be such as arises from the working of the road, nothing more. After some yens the country between Omaha andUheyenne will be settled and culti vated, and thus create local business; but be yond Chevenne the nature of the ground is such that Very little settlement can take place in the present age, a large portion of the dis tance being sage desert and alkali plains. Con cerning tlie tlirough trade and travel lam not yet prepared to speak. As to snow, my, opinion is, from_tlie _ best data 1 liave been able to gather, that the snow difficulty bn the Black Hills, anti on the Union Pacific line (1,084 miles) generally, lias been greatly, exaggerated in the newspapers, and that it will not prove to he so very formidable. Last winter was, however, a favorable one; less snow than usual fell; and the railroad, was obstructed for several weeks; but it is to be considered that the track was being laid in the dead of winter, and tliat there was not time to perfect all the appliances for guarding against tin' snow or removing it from the cuts. There will be more or liiss trouble from snows every winter, doubtless; bal l feel constrained to, come to the conclusion tliat, with first-class snow-phmghs and good manage me lit, the ditli culty from snow between Omaha andPromon torv Point will be little il'any greater than on some of the New'England railroads. All our party are well and perfectly harmonious. Very truly yours, "\V. Milxoii Roberts. From our late editions of Yesterday - By the Atlantic Cable. London, July 16. —The Times, in an editor rial on the action of the House of Commons last night, says the hill wall go hack to the House of Lords almost in its original shape. The Commons have decided that the amend ments adopted by the Lords are inconsistent with the bill, and there is no reason to believe that the Commons will surrender. At Lexigan, Ireland, on July 12th, an Or aiige mol) was ' pelted with stones, and re taunted by destroying, seventeen houses ocou pied by Catholics. The woodwork of the build ings and the furniture weifecarried into the streets and burned. At the latest accounts or der had been restored. At Newry, an Orange Hall was attacked by the Catholics. The occu pants fired on their assailants, driving theca off, leaving three badly wounded on the fund. From Washington. ; Washington, July 16.—General Sherman. directs the commanding of military departments on the' frontier, to furnish such military protection and escort as may be necessary to the members of the Commission upon Indian Affairs, in their toiir of inspec tion of the Indian - tribes upon reservations,, about to be made by sub-committees of said : Commission. . ; Richard P. Dehart,‘.of Indiana, has been ap,- :gpiu^edXrnited : States Consul at St. Jago ;;d.e; i'The Executive Mansion is nearly deserted of occupants, and oniy one clerk is now om ployed in the Presi dent’s offices. ; The ante room is vacated by the officials usually in at tcnilanee, as in the 1 President s absence their ; function's are 'necessarily! suspended, There .were numerous visitors to-day, however, to see the premises, among them a German so ciety, inst returned fyom this Sangertest, who gave, in the East room, to the few listeners, a brief concert in cliorus, 'including several ot .the loudestand most .enthusiastic songs ortho- Fatherland. - • . - Erom present. indications at the .Treasury Department, it is-believed .that the next public debt statement will show, another large reduc . tion of the debt, though liot nearly as large as was exhibited on. July IstA Tlie receipts from customs' and internal -revenue arc considered good for the dull season. It is probable the statement,' 'tm August- Ist will show a r.edu(h. lion of upwards of §5,000,000. iY* EVENING BULLETIN—PHILADELPHIA, SATURDAY, JD ' : ' From Havnnn. - : : July l(i.—Arrived Steamship Darien, from France. Exchange on London, liprcmhun; on I’aris, lall.premium; on the United JHMUiyfi. Jhitf preiniuuv Lfang sight cuiTency, 5!(i1H25l discount. Sugar, Mtiail business; prices tirin. ! JEehavarma, the railroad I’resiilcnt arrested yesterday, has.been sent to Spain. j Arrest of New York Brokers, ; iNew Yoiik, July 10.—The Grand Jury having found true bills against several brokers, iii Wall street for charging illegal rates of in terest, Captain Jpurdan, to-day, arrested. L. J. Vahlioskerek, Oftlieiinii ofL'oclhvbod -,Bs Co,. Ejlivafd it. Jonerf, George Phipps, David hi. Morrison and others. . All were balled in $lOOO to appear. A man has been arrested hire who boasted that he had robbed the Ocean - Bank;? jTbe'detailrAyCTe ffflppiiessed iff tlie hope Of catching others. 1 - •• • ■ Rollrond Accident. . iIsKW Yoitic, July 10.—A despatch in the evening papers of this city, from Itodney, off. the Union Pacific Kailroau, says tliat by an ac eidentnear there, two men had been killed. Their names were Melville Spears, of Miolii jhn, and John Durger, of Emmettsburg, Md. TVo others were badly hurt. I Reported!^mcT’hiLdt'lplifii rTveniiu: Bulletin. MESSINA—Mark Albert Dhcgood, 801t—5120 cimtars briiiißtono O FiCG Lomiig; 55 bales rags Isaac Jeanes * BOSTON—Steam ship Saxon, Scara—2s bales drygoods T;W & M Brosin A Co: 18 pkga do G B Brower Afio; 18 do Boyd A.White; » do Bale,Bros ACo -21 do, Hainil-. ton, Evans A Co; 3Ut(O A soJdo Beww, ' Wharton A, Co:d77d!tl,eland, Allen'Aßatcs: 11 IT Lea A;C(>;'l9 doB W Miilcliitt; « bales dpongd Penn Elastic Sponge Co; 06 c* boot* and G G Brennon; ll a<> O STUaflln A Co; 6 do Early, Harris A Co; ‘27 do 31 Hay ward; US do B9 do J 'AM bamitlerH;- Udo butter A Jlillcrr T^do-A lildcn ACoibi pkgs glass 8 G Boughfon; 23 cs mdse A C Hauer; 100 bucketH 50 bills prills Chipmun & White; 20 is mdse French, Richards, A Go: 49 rolls paper W 11 fcTitcruft; 37 cs machine* Grover it linker; 751>.x* tucks C M Ohrisky;ls organs J*E Gould? 232 rolls paper Hewlett A Omlerdonk; 72 pkps rope Ail. Hinkle A Hon; 100 rolls paper Howell Bros; 9 bales ropo Jessup A Moore; 12c* paper CMngarge;24 plntss iron JW bturr A Son; Pi*ks wire J Smith A Co; DO bbls hah , 2*hnlf do CrowclJ &.CoUiiis'2o bhls fish 2W bxs herring J I’ower & Co; 20 bbls huh Atwood, Itanck A Co: o 5 dp b H A H Levin: 30 bis duck Wilder A Leavitt; 91 bbl* fi&h Hi hf do 4J cij mdseSO pkgsironprdcr. . _ " MOTLMENJrH OF OC^NmfiJEBS. TO ARRIVE. _ atllPS FROM _ FOB DAT* / Britannia ; .G!aegow.,.N«w Y0rk............. r .Juiy 2 I'arasuii) London,..NeW Y0r1v.,....i.~....-*|h]y 3 St. Laurent ;....;..l)tvht...Xow York.. July 3- C of BaJtlmore....L!Verpool...New York via 1L..... July 3 Leipzig Siniibampton... 8a1tim0re........ July 3 City of Mexico...VeraCruz...New York- J» >* *> Tripoli.- ~..LiverpooL..New York viaii....... July 0 Bhein Soutlmmi»tou...Ncw York-.... .July J> Idaho .’.Liverpool...NewYork— July 7 Virginia Liverpool...Ncv\York- July 7 City of London...Liverpool...New York- July. % Columbia—.... Ghi*gow~.New YorkJ uly-fl t'uba. Liverpool... New York- July 10 Uoleatia York„.... J uly 10 : Juniata..........Pbilmleljjhia— Hay -a and N Orlus—Jnly 20 Alleinaiitiin New York...H»mburg July 20 H Chauneey.......Xew York...Aspiuwall - July 21 Scotia-... —New Y r ork...Liverpool— J uly 21 ihiuhattan.... New Y'ork-.Liverpool..- ..'...July 21 Wiser .....New York-.BremenJuly 22 Morro Castle New Y'ork,..Hav«na - -....Ju1y 22 Tnriftt New Yorki-Liverpool— July 22 Merrimack New York-..1ti0 Janeiro, &c July 23 St Laurent......... New Y'ork.-Hurro.— .....July 24 France New York... Liverpool.. - -Jnly 24 Oitv of London-New York—LiTerpool July 24 Britannia New York-GlaSgow- J uly 2< BOARD OF TRADE. JOHN O. JA3IKS U -• \ m , • c. B. BCBBOltow, < Monthly Committee. THUS. L. GILLESPIE, ( MARINE BUEEETIN. PORT OF PIULABELPIIIA— July 17. Sun Rifns,4 4.vjSux Sets,7 ABBIVEI) XESTEBBAY. ' Steamer Saxon.,- Sear*, 4S hours from Boston, with mdse and passengers to II Winsor & Co. 1 ' Brunette, Howe. 24 hours from N York, with mdsetojohn K Ohl. • ' ' , ' __ L ;Steamer J W Everiuan, Snyder,24 hours from N York, with uidse to K A Souder A Co, • , lf Steamer Biamond State, lletvl3 hours from Baltimore j With imlse to A Gmvos Jr. •SteaflterE N Fairchild, Trout, 24 honri from New York, witluudse to \V3L,Baird A Co.‘ • . , j Steamer Cobcord, Norman,24 hours from New York, With mdse to AV 31 Baird A Co-- 'i/ . , •. • Sehr Four Sinters, Lawt=,l tlay from Milford,Bel. with graiu to Jas L Bcwley A Co. ‘ _ . . fSchr\Vnu Townsend, McNUt, 1 day from Froderiea, P*d. with grain to JaaL Bcrwley A - ?. Sclir Clayton & Lowbcr. Jackson, 1 day from femyrna, l)el. with grain to Jas L. Bewley A Co. . , • • Schr Arutdne. Thomas, 1 day from Smyrna, Bel. with grain to Jas L A Co. • . . . " Sclir Wm S 3lason. 2 days from Milton* Bel. with grain to ChristiOii'A Gov - : , *l^ Sclir II L Seed, , 1 day from Frederica, Bel. with grain to Jus L Bewley A Co- •_ ■■ . Schr.Annie Fall River. ■ SctirOrrilHoo, small. New York. ~ i : • CLEABEB YESTEBBAY. . ; _ i Steamer Tonawhnda, Jennings,Savannah, Philadelphia and Southern 31ail SS Co. , . . _ Steamer \\ WhilldiiivKiggius, Baltimore; A Groves. Jr. Bark Salini (Buss), Eckbolm, Cronstadt, b L Mercnunt Burk Agostina.Thom.lvigtntj J-E:Baticy'& Cq^ Schr Orralloo, Small, Boston, L Audenrieu A Co. Sclir Maryland, Green r ßofltou, captain. x . Correspondence of the T^enmg The following;boats from the/CJnipn Canal passed into the Schuylkill Canal* bound to Philadelphia, laden and cowsiunwl as follows: ’ • • : 11K with lumber to fcaylor T Pay & Morey, Thompson, do 10 H Croskcy & Coj Samuel Uncli, do to M >*ox & llro: J H McCoukey r limc»toho to Peacock & Orth: J Keitn, do-to Mr Brown; Annie Jane, timber to SchKav Co. - - *• MEMORANDA. Steamer Aries, Wiley. hence at Boston yesterday. Steamer Helvetia {lir), Thompson, from hiew lork 3d Jnst. at Queenstown 16th. , , , _ Burk Hannibal, Goodspecd, cleared at Boston lith Inst, for Valparaiso. ■ ’ 1 ; ■ , : Brig Isabella, Bowman, cleared at Nowkork yester day for this port ' _ . i Sclir Jns W urren.DnskOt lienee at Boston 35tii inßt. - cleared at Portland 13tli mat. for this port. . ' „ ,i. .. . ■ ; tk'hr Sarah A Boice. Yates* sailed from Newburyport 13th inst. for this port. ' _ t ■ Schr A J Fnbens,l3ragg» hence at Nuwburyport Uth instant. . „ . . , ■ , , . . LL^> ira timn.heuce at SalmTllTh instA . _ * _ SchrsAE Salford, PowellAnnd Ephraim & Anna, Greene, sailed fromSulera 13th lust, for this port. Selirs NicbtiiigalcMlro'wn, awd/\\)\ Suite, McDcvitt, cleared at Baltimore 13th -this port . . Schr Marcus cleared at Portland 15th Inst, for this „ . _ . mT : Schr Alice Lee, for this port, was at Grand Tnrk, TI. 4th inst. • „ • Schr Hattie Baker, Crowell, lienee for Boston, at Holmes’ Hole 14th inst. T Schrs A M Aldridge, Fisher; Jesse A\jlliumson, Jr. Comm; W WlMmro, Juckawny, and. Aid, Smith, hence for Boston, at Holmes’ Hole AM 13th inst. Schr* Ocean Bird, Kelley; TbosG Smith, Lake, and Z L Adams, Nickerson, hence at Boston loth mst. * MAItINB MISCELLANY. Schr David E Welle, of Philadelphia, 122 tons reg s ter, built at Milton, Bel. in 185 S, has. been purchased by Cap! Freeman Crowell, and others, of Providence, and parties in Warwick, 111. for cash, hereafter hail from Providence, under command of Capt Crowell. , « Tt ; Schr Nellie Potter, before reported ashore; on Nigger Head, Hell Gate, and subsequently towed ashore at As 'toria, has been pumped out and taken to the sectional dock. , ■ • ■ , - ; • •• SARATOGA WATER. STAR RINGS, SAEATOOA,HEW YORK. Tlio analysis proves that tho wators of the Saratoga Star Springs have a much larger amount of solid unhßtnnce, riohor in nu dicitl ingredients than any other Bpring in Baratoga, 'and showswhat tlie taste indicates— uamoly, that it is the ! STRONGEST WATER. It also demonstrates that the STAR WATER contains, about /_■ . i 100 Cubic Inches More .Of Om . .in a gallon than any' Other;spring, at ; isi tills-extra iamouiit of gas that imparts .to this-water its peculiarly (sparkling appearance, and reuders ! to tho tusio. tit.also tends to preservo tho delicious flavor, •of the •watfrrVlich bottled, aud causes it to. uncork with ! an effervescence almost equal to Champagne. • Sold by the leading Jtimyi/lsts and Hotels through [out the country. i JOHN WYETH & BR0„ i 1412 W aliiut Street, IMiilmla, Wholesale Agents. . > Also for sale l>y W. Walter Million,Chestnut HilljFted. i Brown, corner of Fifth and Chestnut streets; I. J • Gra heme. Twelfth and Filbert! H.B. Lippllicott, Twentieth and cliorry; l’eclt&Co.,T22B Chestnut; Bunniel b;limit ing, Tenth and Spruce; A’. B. Taylor, 1015 Chostmit;l Q OKver. Kighteeutli and Spruco: F. Jncohy, Jr.,Sl7 Ohost mlt; Geo. C. Bower, Sixth aud.ViliotiTas.T. Shinn,Broad and Spruce; Daniel S.'Jones, Twelfth and Spruco; W. B. Welili, Tenth and Spring Gattlem ; - del-tu.tli.s.lvrps rnoit SALE.—T H E E lE, S T-0 L ASS T Ainerieun Bark BBXIhIANT, 422 Tons ltegister, 023 Tons deed weight,- #,MX) Flour Barrels capacity; was oartielly rebuilt und tliorouglily overlianied ill ISC.,. 1' or r,,"1,«r particulars'apply to WOHKSIAH A CO., 1» Walnut street. 1829 ~ CIIAB,rBR pEßpE ' ruAL ‘ FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY OFFHIM»£WHIjI. Office —435 and 437 Chestnut Street. j. vi Assets on J axt.xia.vy. 1, XBQ9," ..8400,000 00 ...ifieajaaio 1,193^4343 unsettled claims, r income foe isra 823,788 12. • 8360,000. . i Losses Paid. Since 1829-Over ; r #5,500,000, Perpetufti and Temporary Policies on Liberal Terms The Company also issues policies uponltho Bents of all kinds of buildings, Ground Bents and Mortgages. Oapltßl,,. Accrued Surplus*.. Premium 5.......... directors. ' Alfred G. Baker, Alfred Filler, Samuel Grunt, Thomas Sparks, Geo. W. Richards, Win. 8. Grant, Isaac Lea, Thomas 8. Ellis, Geo.-Fates, Gustavos 8. Benson, f . ALFRED G. BAKEU.Prosident. ’ ( ■ GF.O.FALES, Vico President. JAS. W. McALLISTER, Secretary-. .... ■ 'CHEODORE M. REGEIIi Assistant Scoret f^ i tdo3l T\EI/AWAItE MUTUAL SAFETST IN JJ SURANCE COMPANY. , ... Incorporated by the Legislature of 1 Pennsylvania, 1835, Office S. E, corner of TfilßD and WALNUT Streets, ; - MARINE INSURANCES. On Vessels, On goods by. river, canulyloke and land carriage to all parts of the Union. . Flllß JNSUBANCES tll : On Merchandise generally, on Stores, Dwellings • Honses,* Ac; assets of the company, November 1, WoS. 8200,000 United States Five Per Coot. Loan, 10-40 V... .... 3208,500 00 ..120,000 United States Six Per Cent. Loan, „ ' 1881 ... 138,800 00 : 50,000 United States Six Per Cent. Loan . . (for Pacitic itailroad).;...:.'..*..— , 50,000 00- • 200(000 State of . Pennsylvania Six Per Cent. L0an...211,375 00 125/100 City of Philadelphin SixEer Cent. , ....... Loan (exempt from Tax)...... 128,581 00 50,000 State of New Jersey SixPer.Cent. v Loan . 51,500 00 20,000 Pennsylvania Bailroml : First. -j.-'-- Mortgage,Six For Cent. Bonds 20)200 00 25J300 Pennsylvania Bailroad Second • - Mortgage Six I*er Cent. Bonds 24,000 00 25.000 'Western Pennsylvania; Bailroad , Mortgage Six Per Cent. Bonds (Pemm. it. B. guarantee);.;.....'. 20,625 00 30/W0 State of Tennessee Five Per Cent. Loan 7,000 State of Tennessee Six Per Cent. Loan - ICjQOQ Germantown GaaCompany,princi pal and interest guaranteed l>y the City of Philadelphia, 300 1K lwinft shares 5t0ck...*......-......-"—*-*• 15,wU W 10/100 Pennsylvania Kuilrdad Company, 200 slmres stock-..:....*.....-........ OO 5/>OO North Pennsylvania Bailroad 0 rni . M Company, 100 shares 5t0ck....... 3,500 00 20 000 Philadelphia and Southern Steamship Company,Bo shares . gnMM et0ck..—.......15,000 00 207,900 Loans on Bond and Mortgage, first ■ lienson City Properties,.;........ 207>900 00 $1,100,000 Par 271H10H Water, S2J DIRECTORS. Thomas O, Hand, J,!o*c BB.McFarland, 8 B.McFarland, Edward Darlington, ■ - SViliiajnC.Budwig, Joseph H. Seal, Jacob 1> Jones, Edmund-A. Souder, , Joslma P. Byre, Theopliilus Paulding, . William U. Boulton, Hugh Craig, Henry C.Dallett, Jr., John C. Davis. John D. Taylor, i* Juines C.Huua," Edward Lafourcade, John B. Penrose, Jacob Be'Wi'i ~. H. Jones Brooke, Georgo IV. Bernadoa, Socuccr Jl’Uvainfii C* Houston* • JfriiinFslSan, D.T. Morgan, Pittsburgh Sanmel E. Stokes, John B. Semple, do., , ■ Janies Trnnnnir, A. B. Berger, , do. jamci uwnait, TBOMA3 c . HAI{ j) president, 1 . . JOHN C. DAVIS, Vice President, HENRY LYLBUBN, Secretary. lIKNBY BALL, Ass’t Secretary, rrtHE COUNTY EIRE LNSHRANCE COM iL DANY.—Office, No. 110 South Fourth street, below “lflmFlre Insurance Company of the County of Bhila delphia,’’lncorporated by theli'emslatnre of Pennsylva nia in.lS39, for indemnity against loss or.damage by fire, exclusively. CHARTEE pBBPETUAL. .. This old and reliable institution, with ample capital and contingent fond .carefully invested, continues to in sure bnildmes, furniture, merchandise, Ac., either per manently orfor a limited time, against loss or damage liy fire, at the lowest rates consistent with the absolute ““bosses idjnsHaandVidvrithall possible despatch. Georgo Mecke, j sUTTEß?’Presidont. HENBY BDDD, Vice President. BENJAMIN F. II PECK LEY. Secretary and Treasurer. I)H (E NIX INSURANCE COMPANY INCOItPOBATED I )*!—CHAItTEK A PBRPETDAL. No. 224 WALNUT Street,opposite tlie Exchange. This Company insures losses or damage by on liberal terms, on buildings, merchandise, furniture, &Cs t for limited periods, and on buildings, b> The P Compauyllas Übecn U becn in active operation f6r more ahan sixty years, during which all losses have been pr u mptiya.huste,laud i^d.ToKß , 7 l John L. Hodge, David Lewis, M.B.Mnhouy, Benjamin Etting, John T Lewis, Tlios. 11. Powers, Wm S Grant, A. B. McHenry, Bobert'W. Learning, Edmond Castillon, I). Clark Wharton, Samuel Wilcox, T.iiwrenco Lewis t Jr>« Lewis C • Norris. •• lmw renco u b \VIJCHEBEIi, President. Samubl Wilcox, Secretary. T' HE PENNSYLVANIA FIRE INSU KANCE COStPANY. —lncorporated 18257-Cliarter Perpetual. No. 510 WALNUT street, opposite Independeliui Saaaro This Company, favorably known to the commnmts for over forty years, continues to insure ngamst loss or damage by lire on Public or Private Buudnigs, either permanently or for a limited time. Also Stocks of Goods, and Merchandise gcaeroUy, on liberal te Thc’ir Capital, together with a largo .Surplus Fund, is invested ill the most careful manner, which euables them to offer to the insured an undoubted seenritj in the case of less. V DIRECTORS. Daniel Smith, Jr., |.lolm Dovercnx Alexander Benson, S’ 10 !;!?? IsaacHazlehurst, IHenryl.ewih. Thomas Robins, . „IL Gillingham Fell, Daniel Haddock, Jr. .. . DANIEL SMITH, Jb„ President WM. G. CROWELL, Secretary. »P l 9 tt TEEEERSON EIRE INSUBANCR.COM J I*ANY of Phlladelpliia.—Office, No. 24 North Fifth Charter ntTpetuid. Capital and Assets. §166,000. Make iiißuranco aaainßt Losb or dnmago by Fire on Puldic or Private BuildingSi Furniture, btocka, Goods and Mor* chaudiso,onfavorabmtoms ioßS In. McDaniel, YEdward r. Moyer IsrnelPcterson, I J rederich Ladnbr . • ! John F.Bolsterling, |AdamJ.Was», Henry Troemner, ?‘V ,rs s'n li,? 1 ’ F^erick^on, 11 ’ CtefluHiiii I»’Frick, - Samuel MiUor, wiiliam nt Philip E. Coleman, Secretary mid Treasurer. ; NITED FIREMEN'S INSURANCE COMPANY OF PHILADELPHIA. INSURANCE. FRANKLIN #5,677,379 13. Market Valve, 31,130,325 25 Cost, SIJkW/iOl a. Beal Estate,;.. - —. Bills receivable for Insurance*! made 322,436 9 Balances due at Agencies—Pre^•.... iniunis on Marino Policies— ' Accrued Interest and other „ • debts due the Company- 40,1/3 S 3 Stock and Scrip of sundry Corpu rations, §3,158 00. Estuuated V»ilH* l|Ola U 0 Cash in Bank... ......-.§116450 03 Cash in Drawer. 413 05 This Company takes risks at the lowest ratos consistonl with safety! and confines its business exclusively to FIBE INSURANCE IN THE CITY OF PHILADEL ! . - PHI A. , ■ ; v. ; OFFICE—No. 723 Arcli street, Fourth ftiUbiihl Bank -Building.. titRECTORS. I Thomas J. Martin, I Vn'Sos iUne o^' : Jbliu Hirst. - iVSn™ 8 ' Wm. A. Bolin, I ’ Jomcs Mojigan, ! "Jh-rV,a William Glenn, I 'I 01 , 1 , 11 ’ 'Janies Jehniir; 1 1 'Ji ’ H@! r J &fe‘ on ’ J : V . , ' . COraADB. ANDRESS, Pres Wont. Wm. A. Bolin- Treas. !»■ H- Fagkn. Soo v. ~ FIRE ASSOCIATION OF pMB-v PHILADELPHIA, Incorporated March : - BMS 27.1820. Officii, No. 34 North 1 ifth street. MM 1111 II I I I -SiMSir-' .' William Hr Hamilton, - »}««»» ?» P Bower 1C ’ ’ Peter A. Reyser, Churiiisi P. Bow<nr, . John Currow, i^^Pihnunmker Georco I Young* Itobort Shoemaker, JoB 0 ' 1 ’ I Peter Wi O ; WM. T. BUTLEB, Secretary. ,Y 17,1868, J The &werpoQ[l&, Lon don, M Globe Ins* Co*- Assets Gold) $17,690,3 90 u in the United States 2,000,000 Daily Receipts over szo t 6qp.6o Premiums in' rB6B, $5> 66 5> 0 75-°° Losses in 1868, $3,662,445.00 No. 6 Merchants' Exchange, The keliahce insurance com- PANY OP PHILADELPHIA _ , „ T lucorporatedtn 1841. Charter Perpetual. Office* No. 80S Walnut Street. i CAPITAL $300,000. _ . I InenreBagß!nstloßß,or by PlltE,on^Houses* „ v »wHBor damage , Stores and other Buildings, Umited or perpetual, and on,. Furniture, Goods, Wares and Merchandise in town or I ““IOSSEbI’BOSrPTLT AD JUSTED ANDPAID. A95et8._....._... .$437,509 32 Invested in the following Securities* vise.:' First Mortgages on City Property, well se? cured...... - ...U.„..........51G8,000 00 United states GoyemmentLoaiifl..... 117,000 00 Philadelphia City 0 Per Cent; L0an5...... 75,000 00 Pennsylvania §3,000,000 0 Per Cent L0an....,..., 30,000.00 Pemisylvanialirtilrondßonds.FirstMortgago 5,00000' CouiUen and Amboy Bailroad Company’sO Per: -j. •■■■ Cent. Loan— 6,000 00 Loans on Collaterals..,^...;..s 500 00 Huntingdon and Brood Top 7 Per Cent. Mort* - 4,5G0 00: County Fire Insuranco Company’s 5t0ck...... 1,050 00 McehaniCB , ''Bank ' 4,000 00 • Commercial Bank of Pennsylvania 5t0ck......10,000 00 Union Mutual Insurance Company’s Stock....;. 350 00 Reliance Insurance Company of Philadelphia ; . . Stock... 1.....;...............; 3,250 oo Cash in Bank and on hand...... u. 12,253 32 5437,603 32 Worth this date at market price 5............... $454381 32 • Worth at Par. DIRECTORS. Thomas C. Hill,T Thomas H. Moore, William Musser, Samuel Costner, j Samuel Bispham, JamesY. Young, ~ 11. L. Carson, Isaac F. Baker, Wm; Stevenson, Christian J. Hoffman, Benj. W. Tingley, Samuel B. Thomas, Edward Slter. • . . THOMAS C. HILL, President 21,000 00 6,03125 Wm.Chvb'b, Secretary. ... .. ' ’ Philadelphia, February 17,1869. jal-tu th 8 tf A STHKACITK INSURANCE COM jtIcPANY.-CHAKTER PERPETUAL/ . ■ . Oillcc, No. 311 WALNUT Street, above Third, Philada. Will iiiHure against Ross or Damage liy Fire on Build; inge, either perpetually or for a limited time, Household Furniture and Mcrchandlsegoncmlly. A Also, Marino Insurance on-Vessels, Cargoes and Freights.; Inland Insurance to all parts of the Union. DIRECTORS. , ... William Esher, Lewis Audonried, D. Luther, JohnKutcham, John R. Blackiston, J.E.ltaum, William'F; Dean, John B. lleyl, Peter Sieger, Samuel H. ltothermel. A ear oieg : rr . ]!;sheß, President. ■ , AVILLIAM F. DEAN, Vice President. Wm.M. Smith. Secretary. ja22 tn tlißtf 36,000 00 MIKICANIFIItE INSURANCE COM PANY, incorporated 1810.-Chartcf perpetual; . ■N0.310 WALNUT street,above Ylilrd,Philadelphia. Having a large pnii-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 other personal property. All losses liberally and promptly adjusted. DIRECTORS. ■ , Thomas R. Maris, Edmund G.Dutjlh, John Welsh; Charles \\. Poultnoy, ; 1 Patrick Brady, IsraelMorrifi, John T. Lewis, Jolin P. Wethonll, William W . Paul. . ' THOMAS R.MARIS, President. AlrertC. Crawford, Secretary. •.. . T7AME INSURANCE COMPANY, NO. Sco«»'U tee lsarter' perpetual . FIRE INSURANCIi IfdLU'SIVELY Insureß against Loss or Damage by F ire, either by Per petuM or Temporary Policies.’' ■ ■ ; -. DIRECTORS. Charles Richnrdson, Robert Pearce. ■ Wm.H.Rhawn, . : John Kessler, Jr., Francis N. Buck,: Edward B Orne, • ; Henry Lewis, Charles Stokes, Nathan Hillcs, , John W. Everman, George A. West. Mordecai Bnzby, . ucorge CHARLES RICHARDSON, President, WM. H. RHAWN.Vice-President.'.-.. WILLIAMS I, BLANCHARD. Secretary. npl tt —— —"SHIPPERS’ “GTJXJJE. $1,647407 80 Fob bost o n.—steamship line DIRECT, SAILING FROM EACH PORT EVERT Wednesday and Saturday. •FROM PINE STREET IVIIARF. PHILADELPHIA, AND LONG WHARF,BOSTON. ; Fkom Philadelphia . From Boston. 10 A. M. \ 3 P. M. SAXON .Wednesday .July 7 ARIES, Wedneailay T July 7 NORMAN, Saturday, 1 ' 10 ROMAN, Saturday, }0 ARIES, Wedneaday, “ U SAXON, Wednesday, 14 ROMAN. Satunlay,’ “ 17 NOR3IAN, Saturday, ;* 17 SAXON. Wednesday, “ 21 ARIES. Wednesday, 21 NORMAN_, S:iturday, '• 21 ROMAN, Saturdav, 2* ARIES. Wednesday ", .28 SAXON . Wednesday,23 ROMAN, Saturday, “ 31 NORMAN, Saturday, “ 31 These Steamships sail punctually. Freight received forwarded to all points in Now England. aM td,k, ,r 33S South Delaware avenue. Philadelphia, bichmond and NORFOLK STEAMSHIP LINE. „ „„„„„ THROCGH FREIGHT AIR LINE TO THE SOUTH \\ E SX• EVERY SATURDAY, at Noon, from FIRST WHARF above SIARKET Street. THROUGH RATESto oil points inNorth and South Carolina via Seaboaril Air-Lino Railroads connecting at Portsmouth,and umTtßa West via Virginia and Tennessee Air-Lino and Rich: mond and Danville Railroad. Freielit HANDLED BUT ONCE,and taken at LOWER BATES THAN ANY OTHER LINE. The regularity, safety and cheapness of this route commend it to tlio public as the most desirable medium for carrying every description of freight. ' No charge for commission, drayage, or any expense for transfer. ' ' Steamships insure at lowest rates. » - Freight received DAlLY.^ ia3i p A cO - 12 South Wharves arid Pier No. 1 North Wharves. W. P. PORTER, Agent atKicluuond and City Point. T. P. CROWELL k CO., Agents at Norfolk. PHILADELPHIA AND SOUTHERN X MAIL STEAMSHIP COMPANY’S REGULAR LINES, FROM yUEKN STREET.WHARF. „ 4 „„ Tiic JUNIATA will sail for NEW ORLEANS, T 'Fhe J s i}NlATA’wilUoUfrom NEW ORLEANS, via **Tlm TONAWANDA will Bail for SAVANNAH on S ThFTiNAA^ANDA t wu{°aail from SAVANNAH oil S Tl'wiaONEiEß will Fail for WILMINGTON, N. C., on Hiursday, July 10, at SA. 3L. v . , . En ough bills of lading siernod, and passage tickets bills^of Fading siGNED V ut : ‘queen st. wharf. For ireiglit or^u to g ' VI 13U South Third street. AT EW EXPRESS LINE TO ALEXAN- J\l (l r hi, Georgetown anil Washington, D. 0., via Olios an’ako and Delaware Canal, with connections at Alex anilria from the most direct route for Lynchburg, Bris tol, Knoxville, Nashville, Dalton and the Southwest. ■■ Steamers leave regularly Irom tho first wharf above Market street, every Saturday at noon, • • . _ Freight received daily. I; CD*, Ur, « CO., . No. 12 South Wharves and Pierl North Wharves. HYDE & TYLEIt; Agents at Georgetown." M ELDKIDGE A CO., Agents at Alexandria, Va. vfOTIUK—POR NEW YORK. VLAPEL JN AWAKE AND RAIUTAN CANAL EXPKESS riptmCHEAPl^T>anfl'QUiCKEST\v'ntor'coinnmnioa tiou between Philadelphia and New York. , Steamers leave daily from first wharf below Jlarkot street, Philadelphia, and foot ot Wall street, Now York. Goois forwarded by all the lines running out of New York—North, East anil West—free ol Commission. Freight received aiiil forwarded on accommodating terms. • “ WM. P. CLYDE A CO., Agents, , r No. 12 South Delaware avenue, Philadelphia. JAS. HAND, AgiintiNo. 119 Wall street,New York. ATOTICE.—EORNEWYORK.VIADEL ;JrhvWAKE ANTi KAIUTANjCANAL, . swiFTsmuo tiiakspoutation company. DESPATCH AND SWIFJCSBItE. LINES. Tim lumini’Hrt of those linos will ho rosnmoil on «nl oftcr tlio lOtli of Slnrcln Eor frcightvwhich will lio tiilan on nccon.mpdoting terms, apply t^jai^StiPwuSVt’g.. tSebaware and ohesaveake lU Stonm Tow-Boat Company .—Burges towuitbetweon Philadelphia, Baltimore, Havre do Groce, Delaware JLIN, Biip’t Office, 12Joulk.Wliarvee. Philadelphia.. . , ATOTICE—E OR NEW VORK, VIA DEL- I\ n,viirc iuhl Itnritnn Canal—Siviftsuro Transporta tion CoD^paiiy—Bi'spntcli tuul Styiltsnre Lines.-The linsinesß liv these Lilies will bo resumed on Mid after thoatliof Hliueb‘ d , 'er l’reinht > '\vluch 'vill be taken on accommodating termsj apply to J CO ■ Smitii AVnarvcrj. . . ■ AIITIN BROTHERS, AUCTIONEERS, -Y ; :;;':1; MIME Philadelphia. INSURANCE. uctionsales. , W,THOMAS iiyjL. .*• ~ r * J 1, .-8 AIKS OF, STOCKBAND REAL A - r WT"- Public(mlMfit-tbc Philadelphia: ExcbangoteTS**' YUESDAY-atl2 o’clock.,. r -i _ . (i.< jt„_ py.l’arnUnrQrsales at the,Action Store JSVEjTO v , ■'. AtßMfdfcnwA’recotre especialAttention'. ■•' :■’■ v... . '.'..Peremptory Sale on the Premises.' r'' ■, COAT, YARD. BUILDING LOIS, TRACTS OF TtW' - , BER LAND. Lumber, Fence Rail#! Posts, CordS’of Wood, Kindling. Horae, Harness, Wagon, / Jim Cojudcn county,N.:J.,,«ljont; 1. , i niileg S. E;,of .. i Camden, pn the Osnt!it‘!i end Atlantic Railroad. [ ; ON SATURDAY.' ' • ••• i .Tnly,Zl,' JSfiP, at lAoclork.noonrOvili bo Bold at public ' sale, without reserve, on the premises. „ , ..‘a Full particulars In plans niuHiaiidhills. ■; ISaV'IS'&THAHVHT, AUOTICWSTEEES, I I , (Late with NT. Thomas A Sons.) , ' Store Noa. 48 mid tONortlx SlXTHstreet ■ 1 i - Sole ’.Non, 4f) and fONortli Sixtimtrcot... :: ■ j r j ... HANDSOME FURNITURE, FRENCH. PLATE MXB- .... 110 HS, COTTAGE SUITS, FIREPROOF SAFES, ' ’ FINE BRUSSELS: AND VELVET tJARPETS, *o. OS .TUESDAY MORNING. - s j-... At IP o’clock, .fit tl|o paction rooms, .Inclnding hand »onm ChnmberAnUa, hnlsfied tepll; eoperior httir doth.' •M 1 reps 1 PirrlOT Mato 'Mer Mirrors and Consol: Table, oicwint Wnialrobesihandsoia; Cabinet Bookcases, Library Tobies, Office Desks, toad . ■ Tables,. Rei-linibent Chairs, superior Fireproof Safca, made by Evans i&W«tedm>Fa:n-Bl>* Herring (Uidbtjiersr MO.pannasWidteLend/fiiiov.Velvqh Brussels anitljnpe rial Carpets vsuperior-Extension 'XttDlo&nnd.Ow.uni»lro* ~ Oliefttß, &C., &0. _ , _ _ -y < rnjabMAS 7 BIRCH & SOH, AUCTION- I eees and COMMISSION MERCHANTS, . i r ■ ... : Roar entrance No. 1107, Sanßoro street, ** •. •-■ •• Household Furniture of every description received oa ... ■ i :■> i Consignment. v • . . ; 8 alee of Fnmltnre at dwelling attonded to on the moat reasonable terms. y Ta. McClelland, auctioneer, . ••. 1219 CHKBTNUT street. , CONCERT HAIiD AUCTION ROOMS. r ■* . Roar entranco on Clover strcot. - •Household Fumituro and -Merchandise of every do-. ncription received on consignment. Sales of Furniture >; at dwellings attended toon reasonable terms. .y. . CD. MoCLEES &UO., " ' .7 . u AUCTIONEERS, . : No. 508 MARKET street. BOOT AND SHOE HAI/E8 EVERY MONDAY ANO . ; THURSDAY. , By barritt & co., auctioneers. ' CASH AUCTIOITHOUSE, • - ■ i- No. 230 MARKET street; corner of Bank street, : ; Cash advanced on conßiinuiienta without extra charge, ■ J" AMES A. ATJOTIOKEEB, .... , --Hr - No.422WALNftTatre<rf«> TE A9HBB3BGE & CO., AUCTION*. » EEBS, No. 6p6 MARKET atreefcabovo Fifth, ? mHEFKINCBPAL MONEY ESTABLISH p meat—S: E; comer of SIXTH and IIAOE streets. ;Money advanced on Merchandise 'generally*—watchtw* Jewelry* Diamonds,,Gold/anti Silver Plate* and on all articles of value* for any length of timdnarpctron. WATCHES AND JEWELRY AT PRIVATE SAX®. . Fine Gold Hunting Case, Double Bottom and Open Foc« English, American, and mvißB>Patent Dever. : Watches; Kino Gold Hunting Case and Open FaceLepine Watches; Fine Gold Duplex and other Watches; Fine Silver Hunt-, ing Case and Open Face English* American and Swiss Patentiever and Lepine Watches; Donbla Cose English. Suartier and ’other : Watches; Ladiea’ Fancy Watches; iamond Breastpins; Finiror Rings; Ear ; Bingß; Studs: &c.; Fine Gold Chains; Medallions; Bracelets; Scarf pins; Breastpins; Finger Rings; Pencil Cases and Jew- large and valuable Fireproof Chest* suitable for a Jeweller;cost .s6§o . ' . Also, several Lots in South Camden, Fifth and Chest nut streets. ..'.li— REAL ESTATE SAjLES. a EXEC U TOR &P EK EMTTORY SALE. '—Thomas A Sons, Auctioneer*.—On Tuesday, duly •„7th, 1869, nt!2 o’clock, nooiw will bo sold at public sale, ■without reserve, at the Pldladeljihift Exchange, ’ th<y fol lowing duscribed.proporties, viz.: N6.l—-Grouud Rent,. $6B a year: all that ground rent .of $6B a year, clear of taxes;, issuing out of all that lot of ground* situate ou the north side of Poplnr street, 18 foot 11% inches west ofOntnrio street; 16 feet front, and m ; depth About W feet. It is secured by a, tliree-etory. brick dwelling, and is punctually paid. ’ . '' ! v '. Nos, 2 and 3.-2 Ground Bents* each $5l a that grmmd'rent of $6l a year, lawfnl silver money, clear of taxes, issuing out of all that lot of -ground, situate on • the east Bide of Thirteenth street, 88 feet north of Brown street; 17 feet front, SO feet deep. It is secured by ft three- ; story brick dwelling, and is punctually paid. : All that ground rent of $6l a vearvlawfiit silver monoy, clear of taxes, inning out of all that lot of, ground,. situ ate on the oast eide of Thirteenth street, 105 north* of Drown street;]/toot front,.79 feet 8 inches deep. It is secured by a three-story brick dwelling, and is punc ; No. 4 —Ground Bent $4B a year.—All that ground rent Of $4B a year, lawfnl silver monoy* clear of tuxcs{iHsning; out of all that lot of grouml t .situata ou tlio west aide of Fifth street, 158% feet south of Diamond street, 12 feet front, 10U feet deep to Parry street. It is well secured by a three-story brick dwelling; and is punctually paid. I Sale absolute.. r ; . ; i JOSEPH W. FORSYTH, Executor and Trustee.. M. THOMAS A SONS, Auctioneers, ■ - I39.and 141 SqiithFonrtlistreet. S^PJMIEMEXQKY ? v"SAEE -ON THE pmnfaus.—Thonms & Sons, Auctioneers.—(Joal l, BriUditigLota, Tracts of Timber Land* dumber, Feuce mils, posts, cords of wood, kindling; horses, har ness, wagon, &e.Y drei; at Berlin, Camden county. N. J.. about 15 miles southeast of C»mden r on the Camden and. and Atlantic Railroad. On Saturday; ,Tuly 24,1869;at twelve o'clock, noon* will be sold at public sale, without roserve, bn the promises, the following described proper ties,via,:—No. J/t’oal Yard.*: A lot ofcgronnd occupied as a coal yard, fronting oil Washington and Jeffe-non streets, neitr the depot, at Berlin, Camden eoiintyyN. J.« : the lot containing in front on Jefferson street 82 and. in depth 125 feet. ‘ ‘ ' . . , i; No. 2.—Ririltling Lots.—f» desirable building lots, ad joining ilie above; each 40 feet front, 125 feet deep. N 0.3.—20% acres of timber,'divided into 14-lots,-each pf about 1i f acres,situate about ono,milo cast of thodb; pot. 3 years to move the timber. i •-.j. •"■No. 4.—Tract of land, known as “Pomremy, about 2% miles from Berlin depot. Dividisl into 13 tracts, each ot about 25 acres, adapted to tho growth of cranberries* truck and fruit. With 3 miles'of marl. , , ’ • No.s.—At the depot. 125 cords of wood, red cedar, posts and boards; 1,000 pine rails, cypress shingles, horse., team wagon, harness, kindling wood, grind stone, ; sled,.<vc;, Ac. . , t See Plan. ' ■ ; •' ' ... t . Pull particulars erven; and the properties will !>» Blimvnijv Clms. K. French,at BerliniN. J. Slllv A^°l|ltH ‘M; THO3IAS&SOKS, Auctioneers, ■ 1%) anti 111 South Fourth street. I jy.l 101723 SALE—THOMAS & Sons, Auctioneers. —Very valuable tract White I l»ina and other - Timber JUinds,-: Jefferson and. Clarion counties, Clarion River, Pennsylvania. about nine miles from ClarionP- On Tuesday, July 27th,T8a9,nt 12 o’clock, noon, will be sold at public Hale, without resertf, at the Philadelphia Exchange, a tract of land of 4,740 acres of white pine and other timber lauds, situate in Jeffwrsou sylvania, about nine miles from the Town of Clarion > the* county-seat of Clarion county. It lias a front of about three miles on the Clarion river, aiul some five miles on Gather’s or Laurel Run, which goes tnrough the centro of the tract, and which stream is of sufficient size to float logs to the Clarion river. The timber is of the largest rtizeund growth, and there are largo bodies of. coal and iron on the tract. A large portion of the tract is adapted for agricultural purposes, the country around being m a liiah state of cultivation. ■ • - , Estimated nmount of difterent kinds of-timberon tin* tract HR foflotvu: White pine, 4U,000.p<)0 feet; hemlock, f 0.000.000 feet! oukyS,U<M,(WO foot: besides large amounts of chestnut anil other timber.. This .tract w compose,l of parts of the original, warrunta, *sus. 5,001, 5,092, 5,09 u 5,090and5,100/ U , . . .. •- '• Tlu* accompanying plan isa plot ofthctract. i Terois—to be paid at tho time of sale; balanco cash on the execution of the deed, say within t\>cuty <ll For fnrthcr Q imrtlcuiftra apply to B. A. Mitcholl, N. E cornorof Fifth and Walnut streets, . ! ii.tornproiau , 110 MAS & SON i Auctioneers, 139 and 141 South Fourth, street. S' Seal estate.—thuhas & sons* Sale.— Three-story llrick Tuvoni anil More and Dwelling, Nos. 020'and 922 South Ninth, street, between Christian and Carpenter Tuesday, July 27tli, IM9, at 12 o’clock, noon, will be sold lit nut die sale, at tlio Philadelphia Kxchunge, all thatdot of ground, and the improvements thereon, erected* sltilT ate on tho west aide of. Ninth; street, between, Christian and Carpenter streets,corner of Manilla street; the dot containing in front on Ninth sttodt32 foot, and oxteudiui, in depth.'ll) feet. The iniprovemeuta are a.fhree stoiy brick tavern and'dwelling on tlu» corner, and a three fttory brick drug store adjoining. They have tho modem, : Immediate poesoHslon of tho tavern and dwelling. . : Bubject to a vearly ground rent ofJjl2a. . ‘.V .. Mi THOMAS * SONS, Auchonqej*.,--- ; jylO 17 24 ~ 139 and 111 South FoiivtUstreet. a HEAL ESTATE—THOMAS & ' SONS'- Sale.—Two-story Frame Strolling.No:s22 Marriot struct, liutwueu Carnoutor. nullLbrlsthm, »n»l Fifth and Sixtii streets Ou 'Tuo»da> lf July * 27tl»i ItflUh tit 12 o'clock, noon, will ho sold at Yttho PhiladelphiaExchange, air that tnoxHuiuro ami lot ot ground,situated on two sou in. »iu«* No r>'-° ■ thence smithfiSfoot 3 inches; thouco oust W feet*i tl«nc"iiorth 5S S 3 indies to Marriott struct; tlieuce \S 23fcoM Inches to tti« place of. , • um and 141 South. Fourth street. jy 10 17 24 HkEAIi ESTATE—-THOMAS &. SOBS’ Sulo.—3Framo DwiiliingBi.No:.6llCatTwrlnb BtMut*:' 1 Exclu wuiirawgca. «ml tho lot of ground- thereunto t)m Mtdo ,fr f’lit liar iu*' stroot * west', of •'F Utluirtwot).. f)il-oontttinhiK liifn'it on Cullmrino street 18. foot, ?n i rVtuihlli c In urpth «i fi-'i-b B.lnchos.nioro or-lefcs.to: ’J'^fc"?w lo nil wltli tho privilege tWpf„ 'Che ira «r< vcinentsi ro utwostoVy fnimu ilweMng,-iroiitlii«<m 3t»wt. with two frame ilwellitigß, in tho roar.. Cloitr of iHI , . ; / ' IVniM—Oiwly • T jioMA’a &’ SON8 t !Auct!oiit*m». , . JSantnl Ml.tiouHi Kom'fh fjilji SONS, AuctiQncertf.—BniWiup . Lot> OtjH northwest* of Girded avoimui'Eightc’eutfi. Tut" lav, July 27*3£% at 33, o’clpckvitooto. f lit imbllc salts SvitboutrOßcrvo v at tlio lMU.oulelpteßxv ihauga, all that ilcHirublGlot of gn>umkHituHte*«Hi tji/v 'So\ulm*o«Si‘rly ?Weof Omtlnte \fooilWte*Utitiht* dU tiiiivu «f •Itw.fwfe 113* lw\m IH wm»« Kiuhtcunth AVaril? containing h» f C o,l ! K o, iVw- 1 , *iKStret fc Tonne—-Cash; •' ; ' IST CMOur of all inctunhrawto. Sulv ulwoluU' ... J[OMAS j sONS.Auotionwinu .». ivll) Hr 34 I . ’)j W null’ Ml -Bonth Kimrtjujgißßt. . OKKATiiIKO FELT.-TEN FBAME3 bßncUeti Sl.Mtlang Felt, for imlcbyPKlEa.WßlQaT; A 6QHB, 118 Wnlmit tfreaty -i” <' ■
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers