IPiOmVThc In*htun P»peM!.”J DINNER SPEAKtm A LETTER TO MY NEPHEW. j '• %' v " 1 v 'j'~J \ ' • J So you did not enjoy your first Phi Beta, dinner, dear Tom, because youere pfraid all Uie time that the now ufembers would bo toasted, and then “ the fellows” had said you must reply for them. ■ That is a pity. > As,after all, the fellows were not toasted, it is a great pity. T am. glad you write to me' about it, however, and now it is for me to take care that thlacneverhappens to, you again. I will'fell you how to be always ready. I will tell you how I do. . - My, first, Bin Beta dimier was, like yours, my first public diniier. It was on the . flay, which this everybody remembered who enough, wiieu Mr. Emerson delivered liisnrsfc Phi Beta oration at Cambridge. How proudly he has the right to look back on the generation between, aU of which lie has seen, so much of which be has been! Well, be is no older this day, to all appearance, tlian he was then, —and, your uncle, my. dear boy, though older,, to ap pearance, is. not Older in reality'. What- is it dear G— Q sings, who sat behind'me that early day at Phi Beta? “ when we’ve been there ten million years, Bright shining as the Bun, Wc’H hqKc.more days ;. • To sing Gdd’B praise, Than wheh we'first begiin!” "Remember .that, my desm ‘oldest nephew,-as the ten million! years go remembering itj keep young or grow young. Mr- Emerson was young, I say,—and I. We were all young. jMjwEdwrard. Everett was young. He was then -Govemor,—and, I / think, presided, certainly spoke, at that Phi Beta dinner; By the almanac lie must have been that year forty-five years'old,—just as old, dear Tom, as some other people are this year by the alma nac.'' He had beenprettymuckeverything, had'gone most everywhere, liad seen rtlmostal 1 the people that were worth seeing, ind remem-. bered more than all the rest of us had forgot ten.’, ‘..And lie was very young. To . those who knew him he always was. The day he died he. was about the youngest man m most things that,! knew. . ■ . And so it happened that he made , the first dinner speech that I remember. We were all In the South Commons Hall of University, now'used as somebody’s lecture-room, say ;at a guess, Professor Lovering’s. And he gave, some charming reminiscences of Edward Emerson, brother: of the philosopher, too early lost, add everywhere loved, —and ' then, 'speak ing:; of the oration of the .day, and of tlie new philosophy to which it. belonged, and of which the orator was, is, and will be tlie prophet, he said, in his gracious, funny, courtly, and hearty way, that lie always thought of its thunders as he did of the bolts of Jupiter himself! Could one have compli mented an orator more than to compare him to Jupiter? And then he went on to verify the comparison by quoting tlie descriptidn,— “Tres imhris torti radios, tres nubis aquosse Addiderant;- rutili—tres ignis, et; alitis Austri,”— and translated tlie words for Ills purpose,— “ Three parts were raging fire, and three were whelming waves,! But three were thirsty cloud, and three were empty wind!” Ah well, my boy! You do not remember what- all the world, except a few of the elect, then said of “Transcendentalism.” So you cannot imagine the scream of fun and applause which saluted this good-natured analysis of its’ thunder. And I, —I : was delighted at this aptness of quotation. Should 1 ever bring my capping lines to such a market? Here was a hit* as good'as the famous parliamentary retorts,which werd sA precious to us in the I. O. H. and in the Harvard Union. Should I ever live to see the happy day when ! should find that it was wisCj'witty, and 1 just the thing to say,’ “Tu quoquo litoribus nostris, yEneia nutrix” ? or, “Tityre dum redeo, brevis est via, pasce ca !pcllhs;’’ , or any other of the T’s ? Or, • ViEsopiis auctor' quam materiam repent,” or, ' “JE acus iiigemuit, tristique ita vofe loeiitus,” or any other of the iE, dipthongs?, It did not seem possible, but we would see. How it happened that, in the vacation follow ing, a French steamer, I- think the Geryon, came to Boston. And there, was, perhaps, a civic dinner, certainly an exeui-sion : down the harbor, to persuade lier oflicers, and through them, Louis Philippe, lor this was In the early age'of stone, that Boston Harbor was the best point—for the projected -line—of—French packets to stop at, —aiul : ... some body invited me to go. And it turned out that few of the Frenchmen spoke English, and Jew of the Common Councilmcn spoke French, so that poor little 1 (mine to some mis erable use as a, half-interpreter. I remember telling a Lieutenant de Yaisseau that the ‘‘Cen turion” was called so because the 74 Centurion was lost there; and that an indignant civic authority, guessing out my speech, told me they did not want the Frenchmen to know anything was ever lost in Boston. Harbor! Perhaps that was the reason the French packets - never came. Well, by and by there was the inevitable collation in the cabin. (A collation, dear boy, is a dinner where you have nothing to eat.) : And we went down stabs to collate. I began to think of the speeches. Suppose they should call on the youngest of the iuter preters, what could he say? What Latin quotation that would answer ? Hot Tityrus, certainly! Ho. Nor nurse certainly, for she went overboard, —bad luck to her !—or was she buried decently ? Bad; omen that! But—yes! ‘ certainly—-what better than the thunderbolts of Jove? Steam navigation forever, —Robert Fulton, Marquis of Worcester,'madman in the French bedlam, -—bolts of heaven seem ed for service of earth, —Franklin,—the great alliance,—steam navi gation uniting the world! Was not the whole prefigured, messieurs, qmttul le (/mud /mite forged the very thunderbolts of the Dieu des Cicux ? "Tr.es imbris torti radios, tres nubis aquos:e '. Addiderant, rutili tres ignis, et alitis Austri.” What better description of the power which at that moment was driving us along,— “Three rays of writhen rain, of fire three ; more, Of winged southern winds, and cloudy store, AS many parts the dreadful mixture frame”? Could anything have been more happy? And fortunately no member of Phi Bern was pre sent bat myself.' But Unfortunately there was no speaking, and for the moment I lost my op portunity. ' ' But not ; my preparation, dear Tom. And for this purpose have I written this long story to show you how, id thirty (happy years, since, when:! have had nothing else to say,- “Tres imbris torti ’ radios” ljas mrydys stood me in stead. One good quotation -makes !an after dinner speaker the match' of the .whole world. And,if you have it in Latin, the who understand that’ language enjoy it, especially, and tliose who <lo not’al ways appear - to ienjoy it more especially. IV.rhaps they do. There i . * Advantage of 'slight variations in the • translation. Note the diflferehe# between ilr.- Everetvs above, and John l)rydert’S:'' : 1 dlßOgine X® ul '? e djd*? l ' instaucey,an,invited Kuest tit/ ci Cincinnati dinuci.’ Wisconsin ,■ Unfortunately, my dear boy , none of your, am cestors rose i even to the rank of drummer in tlm'mmyof tlie Kevolution. Your great-' grsmilMHr'fi brother had Chastellux to dinner one day.;, yimr .speech ;0f .But^ I do,; nob |hlnk jou cam «» called up td speak- ‘(Opr frieild IWWitNet# Eflg land,”—“Connecticut, —Israel k ,;What will you do, mv, somar Thin” add you must not disgrace bid Wooster. Do?*’You have your thunderbolts. “This ainiy,”—“gathered: from North and South,mid .Eastland*"V^t,”—■‘like..another. anny,”— “whoseS brave officers still linger, among us,—cheer ns.’? &c., &c., —“this army,”; —“combining such various elements of power, endurance and wisdom, —this army, always when 1 think of it, —more than ever to-day, sir, when I see these who represent it in another generation,—when I think of Manly coining- from ; the y’easty waves, of .the out-. stretched -Ethan Allen descending from .the cloudy tops of the Green Mountains, of Knox sweaty and black r from the ; hot fur-. Pace work of Salisbury, where , ‘He created all the stores of war,’—'' all meeting at the samemopaent.with,the Mor gans- and 1 Marions, and the one Washington from the distant South,—this- army always seems to me to be the prefigured thunderbolt which the Cyclops forged for Jupiter. ■Tres imhris torti radios, tres nubis aqnosm Addideraiit, rutili tres; ignis, ot alitis Anstri? ‘Threie‘from the sultry Soutli, three from the i ’',; storm-beat shore* ■■■., , Three parts from distant mountains’ cloudy ; store,' While raging heat fused all. with three parts morel’” , ; , . , ; You see, dear Tom, these audiences are al ways gbochhatured, and by no means critical o. - your version. , Why, at.the only- time I was ever at a regi-. nieiitahdmner.onlhe .Plains, long, before tlie war, you.know. when to the untaught mind it, did seCmias if there:was ~ no. reason. , why we were there, and no pretence for mutual: con-, gratiilaitionjl TeihCmber 1 when-poor Pender grass' called me up to represent science (I was at tliat time in thq telegraph b'usiness),tlie deai old'quotation camife to ihy relief like an inspira tion; | got round to the Flag.: Do you remem ber how safe General Halleck always found* it to allude to.the. Flag? , . : “The : flag, gentlemen,”—“colors,”—“rain bow of our liberties,”— “Liberty everywhere:” “Biue, whrfte, and. red Of LOW Countries,”— “Red, white, aiid blue of France,’!—“English fathers, Cavaliers,’’; “Does it seem too mucli to say, gentlemen, that, with the divine instinct of poetry. theun equaUed bafd Of the Court of Augustus; looking down the agesbeydnd the! sickly purple of the palace, to tlie days W lien armies should be the armies of, freemen,.' and not the Praetorian guards .df , a lie veiled the .glad prophecy of the.future in the words in which lie describes-even the thunderbolt itself ? The white crest of the foam, the blue of the sky, the red of the fiery furnace, are all tossed together, and play together, and rejoice together tliepe in the smile or in the rage of-the '.very breeze of Heaven.. • ‘Tres imhris torti radios, tres nubis aquos® Addiderant, rutili tres ignis, et alitis Austri? ‘Three parts of white the crested. billows lent, Three parts of blue tlie heavens themselves . had sent, ... , - Three parts of fiery red with these were blent. And on the fiee-born wind across the world they went?” . You are not old enough, my dear nephew, to remember the great consistory which the Pope li«d at f Somerville, when for ’. a mo ment lie thought that the churches of the .world had recognized that union which in fact does make! them one, and were willing to offer one front to the Devil, instead of fight ing, as they always liad done, on ten thousand hooks of their own. You understand, it was not this Pope, Pius IX.' It was the pope who came after Gregory XVI. and before Pius IX.. Well, at. that immense dinner-table, which had been built on the plan of John O’Groat’s, so, that each of the eleven thousand six hundred and thirty folks present might sit: at the head,— I was fortunate enough to be appointed to represent the Sandemanian clergy,v-the only body, as I will venture to say to you, which really preserves the simplicity of Gospel insti tutions, or in the least carries into our own time, the spirit and life of fundamental Chris tianity. Now you may. imagine, the difficulty of speaking on such an occasion. 1 Iliad thought it proper to speak in Latin.. The difficulty was not so much in the. language as in wliat .to say, that one might be at once ; brave us a ; Sande manian, and at tlie same tirpe tolerant, and catholic as aChristiaii. Now it is not for iiie to say how well I acquitted: myself. If you want o see my speech, you had better look in the . Amide* de Foi ; and, if it is there, you will certainly finditr-Idid-notthinkrikaiqissvcer--- lainly, that I was able to close by. comparing the great agencies which the United Church would he able to employ to the thunderbolt itself. We laid there present bishops from England of perpetual rain., from Sitka-of perpetual cloud, from the eternal fires of the torrid zone, and from the farthest south of Patagonia. When we selected our sacred twelve, it was easy for its to take them, as if we were forging thunders. “Tres imhris torti radios, tres nubis aquos® Addiderant, rutdli tres ignis et alitis Austri.” Now, my dear Tom, I am sure my lesson needs no moral. Of course Ido Jiot think that you had better start in life with my quotation. To tell you the truth, lam still young. I am a life-member of many societies, and, as they, outlive other usefulness, the more frequently do they dine together. I may therefore have some other occasion when 1 may be reminded outlie Cyclops,. But if, at your dinner, I had happened' to be called upon, I think —I do not know, but I think that, seeing such men as you describe, I should have been irresistibly led to consider the varied gifts which tlie University every year scatters over the land, .and tlie exquisite harinony by which, from such different callings, different homes, and different destinies, they unite hi the merriment or in tlie wisdoid of her ; festivities. The men of practice wlio have been taming 'the waterfall, and made it subservient; the men of the gentle ministries of peace,' whose blessings distil upon: Uslike the'very deWs of heaven ; amt the men of the spoken word, — of the spirit of truth, of which, like the, wind itself, no man knowetli whence it cometh or whither it goeth,—these, pud, the men of war who have" passed through its fires to give us the free ’ America of to-day, all were around., you. Surely hi sucli a imioh I'shoitld have been* re minded of tlie divine harmony, by. which elements tlie most diverse were welded into the bolts of Jove. ; .. “Tres imhris torti -radios, tres nubis acquosns Addiderant, rutili tres ignis, et alitis Austri.”, “ Three-parte like dews from heaven, three : from the wave-beat shore, - Three from the soft-winged breeze, and three from blood-red war.” 1 Always, dear Tom, your affectionate uncle,. , . Fukdemc Ingram. •sunsicqrENT rosTscjtirr by sot. ingham. - - -The - subject,-perhaps, needs no further illus-' tration; but I am tempted to add,—as I.file this printed copy of the letter away,—that my friend, George Hussey, hearing, the week alter it was printed, that we had no good cherry-brandy at our house, sent me Hound some,- winch lias: proved excellent in a year’s ,medical practice,, with the following formula fmrits manufacture :, i. : • o Tres imbris torti radios, tres hubis aqiiosm ; Adiliderant, rdtili tres ignis, et alitis Austvi,’ •> Three parts from fruits wet from thb' dews of Heaven, THE DAILy jByENIKg BULLETIN—PHILADELPHIA > WEDNESDAY, JULY 28, 1869. f ThrCe hy stifi southern gales brought from ‘ Jamaica’s shore; * -i, s ’ ' Threoroys of torri d heat;!in tropic cave in-. '■ ~i t. Audi-three of pelting rain from Nature’s .-•I r^ueous store.” i' i l ?. ' «__* ” Nor tyas it long after, thkt;, ilfoupd myself called on for a few af tcr-difiner remarks’ at the Beta Phi,- t ~ v It was just after Edward Bice had delivered his admirable poein of “An dromedd,” Tlie ' old world set free,” hr which'were brilliant passages,on our late war,; and tlie various European’, revolutions. 'VVliat.more inevitable than that I should be re minded—as I saw the thunderbolt, which liad been forge for the overthrow of tyVants —of “ Tres imhris torti radios,” which for the purpose I rendered 1 as follows: “ Three- tempest blasts of Prussia’s wrath . • divine, . • Forged in three twisted rays of W estern sun- . j. * Fanned by three blaste of stormy Apennine, And!throej—OwiiaEuroclydonoiCrete!— were thine.” [From tho Sntnnlay 80-view.l : SCBAgjUMUEBS. There arepeoplo who rife never ,wliat North ern housewives call “ straight’’—people who seem to have been born in a scramble, who live in a scramble, and who, when, then-time comes, Will die: in a scrainbte; just able to s(TOwl’'^eir-Mgnatui^to^a^l ,! :ifiat-ougJit to have been made years ago, 1 and tliat does not: embody their real intentions,, now. : Eiriphati caliy the Unready, they are never prepared for anything, whether: expected or imexpected; they make no plans more stable than good in tentions ; and they neither calculate nor fore see. .Everything with them is hurry arid con fusion, not because tliey havfe; ihbfe to do’ than other people, but because they do it more loosely and less methodically—because they have hot .'-learnt . the art :of i dovetailing or the mystery of packing; Consequently half their pleasures and’more than half their duties slip through their lingers for want of the knack of compact-holding; and their lives are passed in trying to pick up what',tliey have let drop,'and in frantic etideayprs 1 to remedy their mistakes. For scramblers are always making •mistakes,’and going through-an endless round of forgetting. For one,-thing, they never re inember their engagements, but’ accept in the blandest arid way,imaginable, two or more invitations for the same day and hour, and assrire you ; quite seridUsljr 'Wheh; taught by push:therii hardand probe them deep, that ..they have mo engagement whatever on. hand, and are certain; not to fail you. In an / evil hour you trust to them. When the day cymes they suddenly wake to the fact that they had accepted Mrs. So-and- So’s invitation before yours?; and all you| get for your empty place, and your careful ar rangements ruthlessly upset; is a hurried note of apology which comes perhaps in the middle Of dinner, perhaps some time next day, when too late to be of ;use. If they for get their own engagements they also ignore yours, no matter how distinctly you may have tabulated them; and are sure; to some rattling to' your bouse on tlie day when you said em phatically you were engaged and could not see them, if you keep to your programme and re fuse to admit them, more likely than not you affront them. Engagements being in theireyes movable feasts, which-it .does not in the least degree signify whether they keep on the date set down or not, they cannot understand your rigidity" of purpose; and were it not .that as a tribe they are good-natured, and too fluid to hold-even'annoyance for any length of time, you would m ail probability have a quarrel fastened on you because your scrambling friends chose to make a calendar for themselves, and to insist on your setting your diary by it. And as they ignore your appointed hours,/ so do they forget your .street, and number. They ahyays stick to. yo'ur first card,, though _ you may have moved many times since it was printed, duly apprising them of each change as it occurred. That does not help you, for they never note the Changes of their friends’ ad dresses, but keep loyally to the first. It all conies to the" same in the end, they say, arid the postman is cleverer, than they. But they do not often troiiljlc Wends with letters on their own account;/ and they have a special-, ity for not answering such as are written to them, and, when tliey do answer them, ,of not replying to the questions asked or giving the news' demanded. 1 They do not even reply to' irivitations likerother people, but leave you to , infer from their. silence.the yes.or. no/.they, .arc/ meditating. When they in their turivinvite you,~,they genera11y........ puzzle . you , by T mismatching the day of the week with- the date of the nioiitli, leaving you tomiented with doubt which you are to go by j and they forger to give you the hour. Besides tliis; they Write an illegible sprawling hand, and tliey are famous for the blots tliey make and tlie Queen’s headr they omit, v ' A scrambling wife is no light cross to a man who values order and regularity as part of his home" life. : ’ She may be, and probably is,' the best-tempered creature in the world—a pedvisli scrambler woidd be ’ too unendurable—but'.d fresh face, bright eyes and a merry langli <Io/ not /atone for never-ending disorder and dis comfort. This kind-of thing does not depend on income, arid is not to be remedied by riches/ The households ;where my lady has nothing to do but jet her riiaid keep her to the hours she herself lias appointed 1 are just as uncomfortable in tlieirway as poorer establishments,ifmy lady is a scrambler, and cannot be taught method and/ the value of bolding on by the forelock. Some times my lady goes herself into such an inextri cable coil of promises and engagements, all crossing eacli other, that in despair she takes to her bed and gives herself out as ill, and so cuts what she cannot untie. People wonder at her \ sudden indisposition, looking as she did. only yesterday in the very bloom of health; and they wonder at her radiant reappearance with out a trace of even languor upon her ; they do not know that her retirement was simply a version of the famous rope trick,and that,like the Brothers Daveripoi-f; she went into the dark to shake herself free of the cords with wliich she had suffered herself to bo bound. It is a short and easy method certainly, but it has rather too much of tlie echo of “Wolf” in’ it to bear frequent repetitions. In houses of a lower grade, where tlie lady is lier own housekeeper, the habit of scrambling of course leads to far greater and more mani fest' confusion. , The .servants catch from the mistress the trick? of overstaying time, and punctuality at last comes to mean an elastic margin; where fixed duties and their appointed times appear-cometically at irregular intervals.; The cook is the coaclgnan begins to put-to : a little after the hour lie, was ordered to be at tlie door; but tliey know that, however late tliey are, the chances are ten to one their mistress will not be ready for them, arid that in her heart she Will be grateful to > them for the shelter their own unpunctuality ■’ aflords her. This being so, they take their ’ time,' and dawdle at their pleasure; thus adding 1 to, the-pressure, which always comes at the end of . the ,(Scrambler's day, when everything is thrown into a chaotic mass, and nothing comes out straight or complete. Did any one ever know a scramb ling woman ready at tlie moment in her own lioasri?:; That sliei should be punctual to any appointment' out of her house is, of course, not to be/thorightof; hut she makes an awkward, thing of it> sometimes at home. Her guests are ofterivall assembled, and the dinner hour lias-struck,-before she'"has tom off one gown aiid.draggbd ,otf another. ‘What she cannot tie she pins; ririd her pins are many and demon strative. She wisps up her hair, not liaving left herself time :to braid it; anSsjhe quence is.that .before 9be has in the rbohf^ds^ind‘'t&ils arebiurc t 0..: Stray/ their. jfi&teriirigsjf/Zj’and 'come',- tumbling/abojut her eafsllj nfefyeWhls are misf! matched; i lierj-jcolors illfassijpedjv her, belt? isl - her'bonquct &iM| to i3^^«;?Bheii^bes r » into the f drawlfig-rooiS'in Her mdrnirig slippers;; smiling and good-tempered, with a patch work look about her—something forgotten in her attire that.,makes, her.. whole.,appearance. shaky and unfinished—fast ening her last but ton, or clasping; on Tier first bracelet. She is full of regrets aiid excuses delivered in her joy ous, buoyant manner, or in a voice so winning; an accent so eoaxihg,. that >you; .cannot be an noyed. Besides, you leave the'' annoyance to her husband, who is sure to liave in reserve a pickle qqite.sufflciently .strong for. Hie inevita . lile rod,"as tbe.ppor scrambler,.knows too well.. All youcarifio is.to'afcopt lier 'apologies.'witli a good grace, and to carry away with you a vivid, recollection of aii awkward ‘ a spoilt dinner, and a scrambling hostess all abroad and out of time; sweeping through the room very boated, very good-tempered, only, luilf-dressed, aiul chronically out of breath. Scramblers can never learn the value of money, either for themselves or for others. They are famous for borrowing small sums which they forget to retiinlbut, to dd them justice, they are just as willing to lend what they never dream of asking for again.; Long ago they caught.hold of. the fact that money is only 1 a; .circulating ' medium, t and they. have added an extra .speed ito the circulation at ; which slower folks stand aghast. To. be sure, 'he practical results of their -theory are not’very satisfactoryadd the tonfusibn-'be weeri possessive prohouris Which distinguishes' ilieir financial catechism is. apt tb ‘lead to un -1 leasantissues. Scrambling .women are es pecially notorious for • the way hi which they et themselves afloat without sufficient means o carry them on; finding themselves stranded; n mid-qareerbecause they have made no cal culations, arid have forgotten the rale of sub ! raction. They find themselves at a small Italian :own, say, where the virtues of the British banking system are unknown, and ; where their letters of credit and circular notes are not worth more than ilie value of the paper they are written oiri ; More than one British, matron of respectable condition and weak arithmetic has found: herself in such a plight; as this, with her black-eved landlord perfectly civil and wellr bred;; but as firm as a rock in his resolution that tlie Signora shall riot depart out of his custody till his little account is paid—a plight out of which she has to scramble the best way she can, With the loss perhaps of a little dignity and of riiore repute, at least in the locality where her solid sctidi gave outand her precious paper could not he cashed. This is the same woman who offers ari omnibus conductor a sovereign for a threepenny fare; who gives the village grocer/ a; ten-pound note for a ■ shilling’s-worth of sugar; and who, when she comes up to London for a day’s shop ping, and has got her last parcel made up and ready to put into her cab, finds she has not left herself half enough money to pay for it—with a shopman whose faith in human nature is by no means lively, and who only last week was bit ten by a lady swindler of undeniable manners and appearance, and not very unlike herself. She bas been known, too, to go into a confec tioners, and, after having made an excellent luncheon, find to her dismay that she lias left her purse in the pocket of/her other dress at home, and that she has not sixpence about her. InfactJthere is notan equivocal position in which forgetfulness, Want of method, want of fore sight, and all the other characteristics which make up scrambling in the con crete, can place her, in which she bas not been at some time or other. But no experience teaches her the scrambler she was bom the scrambler she Will die, and to tlie last will tumble through her life, all her ends flying, arid deprecating excuses oil her lips. . . Scramblers are notoriously great in making promises, and as notorious for not performing what they promise. Kindhearted as they are in general, and willing to do their friends a service—going but of their way indeed to prof fer kindness quite beyond yoflr expectations and the range of their duties towards you, and always undertaking works of supererogation, which in fact lead to more than half their normal scramble—they forget the next hour the promise on which you have based your dearest hopes. Or, if they do not forget it, they find it is crowded out of time by a multitude of engagements and prior , promises, of all of which they , were iunoceutly oblivious when they ottered to do your busi ; ness so frankly, and swore so confidently they Z would set about it now; at once, and get it out of hand without delay. The oath and~ the offer which yoii took to be as sure as the best ’ chain cable, you will find on trial to be only a _ rope of sand that could not bind so much as a hunch of tow together, still less hold the anchor / of a life; and many a heart, sick with hope de ferred, and With the disappointment which : might have been so easily prevented, lias been : half broken before now from the anguish that has followed on tlie failure of the kind-hearted scrambler to perfoim the promise ; voluntarily / made, and tlie service '.freely.'offered and . earnestly pressed on a reluctant acceptor. This ; is the tragic side of the scrambler’s career, the shadow thrown by almost eveiy one of the class. For all the minor delinquencies of hurry and uupunctuality in social afiairs it is not dif ficult to find full and ample forgiveness; but when it comes to untrastworthiness in graver matters, then the scrambler becomes a scourge instead of only an incorivenience. The only safe way of dealing with the class is to take them when we can get hold of them, and to \ accept them for what they are worth; but not A to rely on them,and not to atteiript any mortis ing of one’s own affairs.with' their promises. They are the froth and foam of society, pretty and pleasant enough in tlie sunlight as they splash and splutter about the rocks, but they are not the deep waters which bear tlie burden of our ships, and by which the life of tlie world is maintained,: “ ‘ True Names of Prominent Frenchmen. French journalists and artists are seldom con tent with the names which Heaven has allotted them. The Frenchman is aiixlous, above all, that the name which be signs, to an article, or which appears as his on a play-hill, Shall have a striking, uncommon appearance which may separate its owner from the , vulgar. For this reason a great many writers' and actors on the other side of the Channeladopt pseudonyms whi Jh cling to them through life,, and ,by which they continue to be known even after death. ! A Parisian has just taken the trouble to write a hook on the subject of this mania, and to un mapk all liis'pseudonymous contemporaries for the edification pf the public. We are told in this wdrlc " that ' the name , of Sldm'e..George Sand is Dudevant; of M. de Persigny, Fialiu; of Arsene HojisSaye, Housset; of 31. Grauier, de Cassagnac simply Gramer (the “deCassag nac” was tacked • on when 31. Granier became an • official candi date); of Eugene de Alirecourt' the * biographer, 1 Gigot (there Is some; excuse diere); of Alicliel 31asson, author of tlie “Contes de I’Atelier,” Gaudiclipt; of Belval, the singer, Gaflfot (these two are excusable again—ho Frenchman with such a name as': Gaudichot or Gafifot could make his Way in France) ; of Mdme. Carvalho, Caryaillie; of Marie- Cabel,;', of the Opera Gomique, Cabu; of Father : Hyacintlie,' Loyson (Loyson means ‘.(the gosling’?); and of the, well-known restaurateur Peters, Fraise,- .- e. strawberry, which name appeara more , ap propriate, than the. pseudonym. ,It is ram that a Frenchman, being possessed of an authentic title; conceals it out of modesty; nevertheless, this happens in the case of Cham and Gill, the two caricaturists, the first of whom is Viscount the second .CouitteJ-Ouines, and in'fchat of M. fa most-' people are tie® Rocligfort Lu gay.v ‘ M M V'i '* * , Mi v iM' ■ • -rV^S edgl .aXLi^sbWdoi* 'Will begin its next sontei|dn£)is Now Academy Building , .4,. AtMe*Wpi«pUe,S. J., (Four ililleirfrom Camden,) ' ON MONDAYBEPTEMBEB if. “ For Oircularsi apply to Rev. T. IV. OATTEJjL. iyai ow§. ' • '- ■ "/■ ■. ' . *. :' J • EOTyiof eHEGAKAY INSTITUTE. F E E N O H and'Englisli,for yoxing ladies dhdlmssctf.briardihg and day pupllßjlsZ7 and I629Sprucost., Phiiad'a.,wiUro-opsn oni THURSDAY.September 20th, French la tholanguage oftlio family, and Is constantly spoken In the Institute. MADABK.D’HERV.IDDy.I’tIncIpaI. ~Jyi2 mwl 3m BI S HOl* T H OEl* Er-THJB CHUIiOH ' School for girli 1 , onthesouth ; bnnk of tho Lehigh, will begin ita second year, D. V.,on the lflili of 'Septem ber. V Tho number, ofptipus is limited to thirty, French' ie tnught by a resident govemi'Bß.fthd so, far as possible made tho language of;the fondly,. . :..... Address forcirculars.&c., Mlsß flJlAflEi ; Bishopthorpc, Jy3-s,w,toclBS HetliloheuV.Pa. ,T7EMAEE C’OEEEGE, BOEDBNTOWN, •JI. N..X.—Thislustitutloii;so, long,-imd-BO favorably known, continues to furnish tliobest educational mlvnii tnges, In connection with a plcasnnt, Christian homo; Catologues, with teruiß* etc.v furnished on application. C «r nßtBCt ' t @!^Eto E L g Y, Resident. A CONSERVATORY OF 3IU ;J\. BIO.) ; ; ClnBH-Koamßlo24Wa!nutjiml 857. North Broad. Instructions Will bocth-MONDAY, Sept: 6, 1869. • CIBCLLAKS.ATyife MUSIC STOBEES. (jy2lwfil2t§ SOiENTlF ljfgTzS*.call? taught at tho Philadelphia Biding School, Puurtn etroet, above YinO. Tho horses aroQuici-and thoroughly trained, For biroj saddle, horses. Also car riages at all times for weddings, parties, opera, f nuorais, Ac.; Horsestralned to tha^o^ ;hkAloE & 8Q y QIG. F, EONDENELEA, TEAGHEE OF >3 Singing. Private lessons, and classes. Residence) 308 8. Thirteenth street. ' . an2B-tf} COAL AND WOOD. ROBERT TENEB, (iato with J. R. Tomlinson, Lanrel St, Wharf.) V DAVID GALBRAITH. TEN3BR & CtAIiBR AITH, HONEYBROOK LEHIGH, AND WYOMING COAL, No 955 North Front Street. ,80?" Trial Orders, personally or by mail, Invited, ... jy2l-lm§ . 1 S.MASOItBINBS. • JOIIST. sbbafv, mHE UNDERSIGNED INVITE ATTEN JL tion to their stock of ■ m i-- Spring Mountain, Lehigh and Locust Mountain Coal, which, with tho preparation given by us, we think can* not be excelled by any other Coal. . ■ Office, Franklin Institute Building, No. IS B.. Seventh street. , BINES & BHEAFF, )alfl-tf -■! ' . Arch street;wharf. Schuylkill. GENTB’~FUENISIIINGGOODn:~" PATENT SHOULDER SEAM SHIRT MANUFACTORY. Orders for these celebrated Shirts supplied promptly on brief notice. Gentlemen’s Furnishing Goods, , Of late styles in full variety. WINCHESTER & CO. ,700 CHESTNUT. _je3-mwftf_ . . __ FINE DRESS SHIRTS AND - . GENTS’ NOVELTIES. J. W. SCOTT & CO., No. 814 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia, Four doors below Continental Hotel. r , mhl-fm w tf THE EItNE ARTsr Established. 1795. A. S. ROBINSON, FRENCH PLATE LOOKING GLASSES, Beautiful Chrdmos, 9BHGRAVIIVGS AND PAISTISGS, Manufacturer of all kinds'or Looking-Glass, Portrait & Picture Frames. OXO OHESTNXJT STREKT, i- -L.-FiftlpJ)oflP.ftbpVßlhG .Continental,.- PHILADELPHIA. KEELER. SUDDARPS & FENNEMORE. Artists and Photographers, HAVE OPENED THEIR NEW GALLERIES, No. 820 Arch Street. Coll and sec them. Pictures in ct©ry style, and satis faction guaranteed^ N. 8.-AII tho Negatives of KEELEB & FENNE MOKE, late of No. 6 S. EIGHTH Btreet, have bceu re moved to the New Galleries ItuoKsr&^^i^ NEW SPICED SALMON, FIRST OF THE SEASON. ROBERTS, DEALER IN FINE GROCERIES, Corner Eleventh and Vine Streets. TjiRESH peaches in large cans, Jj at Fifty Cents per Can—the cheapest and best goods in the city, at OOUSTY’S East End Grocery, No. 118 South Second street;: ’ > "CIRENOH PEAS, MTOHBOOMB. TRITF- J} ties, Tomntocß.Green Corn, Aspanurne, sc.,ln store and for sale at COUSTY’S East End : Grocery t No. 118 Sonth Heconfl street,. : . t : ■VfEW HATES, EIGS, PRUNES, RAI- V : Bins andiAlmonds—all of how crop—in store and for salo : at, eOIISTY’S K»Bt End .Grocery, No. 118 South Second street. , - . v , Q WEET OIL.—IOO DOZEN. OP EXTRA ►3 quality Olive Oil,cxpreHHly imported Jbr GOUSTY’S EfiStEndGrdceryi'No, 1183puth Secondetroet. ' § TONED CHERRIES. PLUMS, BLACK berries! Peaches, Prnnollas,_Pearfl, Lima Beans, alter Sweet Corn mtOOUSIY'SEast End Grocery, No, 118 Bonth Second street.- - 1 * . r 7"" ~ J>ROPOBALS FOK BOTFLIES, Office of Paymaster. XJ. S. Navy, ) No. 425 Chestnut Street, V ■ PHIIjADEEJIHIAj IBO9J . , : SEALED PROPOSALS, endorsed “Pro posals fop Supplies,” .will be .received, at; this officeuntil 12 o'clock M. on the 2<l of August next, for furnishing the United States Navy Department with,the followingarticles,' to he of the best quality) and subject; to inspection by the inspecting officer in the. Philadelphia. Navy Yard, where they are to be delivered, free of expense to the Government,overnment, for which security must be given: FOR bureau of construction, &c. ■ : 5,000 Ibit.'fted Lead; dry, in 100 lb, kegs. 1,000 lbs. White Lead, dry. >■, ; 120 gals'. Winter Strained Sperm Oil. ■ fill 1 7 (> gal)i .Winter Strained Lard Oil., Eor further particulars, apply at Naval Con structor’s QfHcei Navy Yard, Philadcllihia. .. •..Blank fornis for proposals: can 1 be obtained at this office. : ' 'H. MyHTE§KELL,. Paymaster, LT. S. Navy. jy2(i-3t ’ -- MAY, * OnTii&kays, ‘i'hursdays and Saturdays: On and after. feATjORDAY, Juno 2Cth, tho now and splendid. Btcamer,LAPY OF TIIE LAKE, Captain w. Thompßon, WUlConuiionce running regnlaify to, R rt’tfdock * ■ - ■ FARE,' INCLUDING CARRIAGE HIRE, 82,25. ~ '.'CHILDREN, ‘ ' - " “7 XW. BFHVAUTB i* - • ■ ■■• it •■-. ■ » SEASON I'IUKETS, 910. , ■ CARBIAGEiTIIBID' EXTRA. < THE LADY OF THE LAKE 1b ft fine uca boat, has . handsome(date-room accommodations, and la fitted up with everything nccceßary fortboeafoty and comfort of passengers.- 1 - ''t i . - \ ■■ ■ V- V. Tickets Bold and Baggage checked at tlio Transfer OfllcerB2B ohoßtuutatrcet.runder.tho Continental Hotel.. Freight received ontil Sh o'clock. Forfurther portlcnlnrtiliiiiuli-arattnd OHlce, No. 38 North DELAWABE Avenue. • „ G. H. HHDHELL, ~ ;*■ CALVIN TAGGART. 1 SUMMER RESORTS. COLUMBIA HOUSE, CAPE MAY, With accommodations for ICO guests, is now open. Tho Germania Serenade Band, hhdor tho direction o Prof. Geo. Bustert, lias hoen secured for thosooeoD.- ; . GEO. J. BOLTON, Proprietor. ■J‘gg.gn| ' . UNITED STATES HOTEL, ATLANTIC OITY.N.J., Will open for tho reception of Gnests Saturday, June 20tli, 1869. Boeder's Band, under tho direction of. Hr. SftnoD Ilasslcr, is engaged for tho sflnson. Persons wishing to engage Booms will arplyto '' GKO, FItEEMAN, Superintendent, , i Atlantic. City, N. J., Or BBOWNAWOBLFPBB,, JeSihn ’ 827 Bichmond Street, Philadelphia. SIJRF HOUSE, ATLANTIC CITY, N. J., NOW OPEN FOB GUESTS. , ■ For Booms, Tonne, Ac., address H THOMAS FABBEY, Proprietor. M Carl Btntz’c Parlor Orch’Mra has bun tntagtdfor tht . ■ season. H CAPE ISLAND, N. J. A. firet-clanr RESTAURANT, a la carte, will be opened b» AIJOLI'U PROSKAinBII. of m 8. THIRD 'i I '/] 11 ’"TS of June, under the name “5<1 ‘Ifloof MAIbOKpOUEE, at the earner of WASH INGTON and JACKSON Sta.,knownaa Hurt’a Cottage. WGF~ t amities will be supplied at the Cottage Lodging Booms by Pay or Week to Bent SPRINGS, , CAMBBIA COUNTY, PA., Will bo opened to Gneßta July l»t. “Excumion Ticket*,” good for the season, oyer tha Pennsylvania Central Bailroad, can bo procorod from Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, and Harrisburg, to Kayler Station. 2 mile* from the Spring*, tv hero coaches will be in readiness to convey guest* to the Springs. The proprietor lake* pleasure in notifying the public tlmt the hotel is in proper order, and all amusements usually fonnd sf watering places can be found at tho above resort. Terms. 82 so per day, or STd per month. VKANOJB A. GIBBONS, Proprietor. MOSES NEWTON, Superintendent, _jyCT-tIS Ofthc Atlantic Hotel, Newport. CKKSSON SPIiJNGS.—THXS FAVOBITE " BOMM EB BKSOHT. situated on the summit of th* ALLEGHANY MOUNTAINS, 2,201 FEET ABOVE THE LEVEL OF THE SEA, wlllTw open for the re ception of guests on the 12th day of Jane. The building* connected with this establishment have been entirely renovated and uewly funnelled. Excursion tickets sold by tlie P. B. 8., at New York, Philadelphia, Lancaster, Harrisburg, and Pittsburgh, good for the season. All trains stop «t Cresson. • TWO FUBNISHED COTTAGES FOB BENT. For farther information addre« GEO. W. MOLLIN, Proprietor, _ Crewon Springs, jy2-lms __ _ _ _Cambriacoqnty,Pa. Light house cottage^atua^tio City. JONAH WOOTTUN, Proprietor. The rurwt de»ir&blc 1 acallon OB the Inland, being the nearest point lo the surf. Gueat* for the house will leave the car* at the United State* Hotel, No bar. ;• jyl£Mtn§ hIEA BATHiNGv--HATI6NAii HA Cape May City, N.J. - - ' ■■ This largo and commodious hotel, known as the National Hall, is now receiving visitor*. AABON GABBBTSON, je24-2ni§ _ Proprietor. BHOAV ~ Broad Top, liuntfniHiojicotmtjvPa.. now open. jyMUw* W.T. PEARSON, Proprietor. DEBAWAKE HOUSE, GAPE 18BAHD, N. I, Is now open for thoreception of visitors. jel7»2m§ JAMES MKCKAY. Proprietor. LUMBER. Lumber TJruler Cover*, AIWATO »KY. Wfllnntt White Pirns, Yellow Pino, Spruce* Hemlock, Sliingkti, Ax., always on liami ut low rates. WATSON & GILLINGHAM, 034 Richmond Street, Eighteenth Ward. mh2»“ly§ , v . MAULE, BROTHER & CO., 2000 South Street. IQ/»Q PATTERN MAKERS. IQ£Q 10057. PATTERN MAKERS. l«Ol/. CHOICE SELECTION MICinOAN , 'cOBK PINE ; FOB PATTERNS. . 1 Q/»A SPRUCE AND HEJIIiOOKII Q/»Q 10057. SPRUCE AND HEMLOCK. 10U57. . LABGE.STOCK. 1 QUO FLORIDA FLOORING. IQfiQ IOOy. FLORIDA B’LOOBING. 1005/. CAROLINA FLOORING. VIRGINIA FLOORING. DELAWARE FLOORING 1 ASH FLOORING. WALNUTFLOORING. 1 QCQ PLOBIX)A STEP BOAUDS.I obQ 10057. FLORIDA STEP BOARD* 10057. RAIL PLANK. BAIL PLANK. UT AND IB69. WALNUT BOARDS AND PLANK. WALNUT BOARDS. WALNUT. PLANK. ASSORTED FOR \ CABINET MAKERS, .. BUILDERS. AO. 1869. 1869. UNDERTAKERS’LUMBER. BED CEDAR. WALNUT AND PINE. -|Cf£Q .SEASONED POPLAR. 1 Q£Q 10057. SEASONED CHERRY. 10057. , WHITE OAK PLANK AND BOARDS. HICKORY. • 1 Q£Q CAROLINA SCANTLING.-! Q/»Q 10057. CAROLINA H. T; SILLS: 1005/. NORWAY SCANTLING? . IQ/>Q CEDAR SHINGLES. • IQ£Q 10057. CEDAR SHINGLES. . 10057. CYPRESS SHINGLES. LARGE ASSORTMENT. FOR.SALE LOW. IQPQ PLASTEItiNGLATH. 1Of»Q 10057. PLASTERING LATH. 10057. MAULEBROTME«AjUO.j/ 2500 SOUTH STREET. mHOMAS '& POHL. . LUMBER. MER-, X chantß, No. 1011 S. Fourth; street. ’.At tte*r jrarfl,: will bo foun4 Walnut, Ash, Paplor, Cherry, Pine, Hem lock, Ao/j&o:, ot reaiionahleprlccfi^^ve^thcm^aoan. nihl7-6tu w - . : ELIAS POHL. ■ T" O • CONTRACTORS, v LUMBERMEN and Sbip-huiWcTH.—Wo are nowuropared to exccuto promptly orders ; for, Soutlu-nv Yellow Pine Timber, Slilpernff and'Lumber.'COCHßAN, BUSSELL &CO., 22 North Front Btreet:.;. ’ mhM tf vrF.T.TinW i PINE • DUfIIBER.—ORDERS X-for cnrKoesof ovbfraeßerlption BKwed Lumber exo-/ entod ■ at snort not ce-T-guallty’ subject ito Inspection. Anniv to EI)W H.iROWLEY, 16 South Wharvee. r feC BOOTS AND, SHOES. jj, NOTICE to the PUBLIC &ENE JB Threat stylo, fashion and a 9 aortuient of ' SHOES AND GAITERS, FOR MEN ANI> Can b 0 KNK BT'B O P P ’ 8, ' "> No. 230 NORTH NINTH STREET. Better than anywlimUn the Clty. A Flt.Warrantedi ■ at)26mS . AT V W LOST. Lost ob; .mislaid - perpetual Policy No. 8,091, leaned by Enterjprlee liianranco Comnnny/dated Jannaty. 2(itli,:iSll9; WILLIAMS, No. 323 Walnut,etreet, application lies been made for a hew pylioy. jyl6-fmw3t* - jyltanl T*&i^icAjtaixo States Practice 'Squadron fsat Qicrbdurg. IThk report that the MUcado has captured -Hakodadi is confirmed. t The American Philological Convention is in session at'Poughkeepsie, ST. Y. The internal revenue receipts from July Ist to date amount to $17,8(10,000. . - . A x.ajiok number of emigrants have "ar rived at Montreal from, London* General Candy has ordered the payment -at once of 1 per cent.'of” the January interest. ; on the debt of Virginia. William 11. Sylvi&> President of the National. Labor yesterday, •, morn ing,' after a shdrf illuesSj aged years. -President GBA^twiHvgq- to Washington to attend the Cabinet meeting oh Friday, ahd return to Long Branch on Saturday. A vote of thanks was passed at a meeting of Southerners, at White Sulphur Springs, yes* terday, expressing gratitude to George Peabody for his aid of education in'tiie South. ... . . Charj.kn E. Qiiikcy was arrested yester day in New -Yorki' for offering forged certifi cates on the Chicago and Rock Island llail road Company. . During afire at St. Louis, yesterday morn ing, seven men were injured by the upsetting of hook and ladder truck, sonic of them seri ously. /'’■ Four Ice houses of the Washington Ice Company,, at Rondout, N. Y., were yesterday destroyed by tire. ■ The disaster was caused by lightning. Ralph- Witihnoton, of Philadelphia, jumped front an -excursion train on the Great Western Railroad, in Canada, yesterday, and received injuries which may be fatal, * MaJortGeNijrAL : ;5..« Wedii luis ; ac cepted the presidency of tiie College of the City of New York, and will assume its duties on August Ist. v . -r At A meeting of the Trustees of Union Col lege, Schenectady, N. Y., yesterday, Charles A. Ail;enj professor at Princeton, was elected President'.’ A few days ago, a negro man and woman were taken from the jail at Applin, Columbia county, Georgia, by a crowd,most of whom / were disguised, and the [nest day they were found dead by the road. ( Alexander P. Tutton,' of Pittsburgh, Pa., and 1), P. Southwortb, of Philadelphia, Pa., were onSaturday re-appointed supervisors of intemid revenue, without reference to terri tory. ■■ ;/F y>■ ' ‘ Dir. Cci.vkr, of Georgia, left Washington last night with authority to take possession of the Confederate Laboratory, at Macon, for the use of the State Agricultural Fain After Jan uary 1, 1870, it is probable the building will be converted into a hospital for aged and infirm negroes. '' The Governor of tiie jirrisdiction Of Trini dad lias issued orders obliging all Spaniards be tween the ages of .fifteen and sixty t» do mili tary duty in the field or in the reserve corps. Persons unfit for active service are to garrison the towns. The press praise the measure, and demand that it be made general in its applica tion-thtenghout tlie island. - / • Baron Vos Beust yesterday received the budget of thecommittee of the Hungarian delegation, and made an important address. He said tiie relations between Austria' and France liad been on the best possible footing ever since. Austria relinquished her Italian ter ritories; arid; tiie interests and intentions of the two countries were identical. Alluding to tiie Eastern policy, be said he would not insist on the programme.of 1807, but leave it to the op tion of Turkey to follow his Counsels regarding eoncesslons to the Christians. On tliis jioint lie would bring no, pressure to bear, and de clared that he had honestly striven to establish more cordial relations with Prussia, but his efforts were not met in a similar spirit, and he liad been unsuccessful. He dosed with a strong defence of the general policy of the Austrian government. <? .. ; , Internal Revenue Officer* in Pennsvlva nla. The following is a* official Hat *f the Assos sors and Collectors of Internal Revenue in this .State, and where located: Jjiat. Assessors. Collectors. 1. John B. Kenney, Wm, H. Barnes, ; * Philadj. , Philad’a. 2. —Wm.S. Stokley, Wm. R. Leeds, Pbilad'a.' Philad’a. Wm. B. Elliott, Geo. C. Evans, Philad’a. Philad’a. 4.—Chas. B. Barrett, Honuid G. Sickel, - Philad'a. ' Philad’a. s—Jxs. Ashworth, Joseph Barnsley, Frankford. Doylestown. : (i.—Edward Uulie, Jos. B. Breitenbaek, Allentown. “Norristown. 7. —J- Lee Euglebert, Wm. 2d. Swayne, i , West Chester. .. West Chester. 8. —Jo's.T; Valentine, Wm. M. Baird, • Reading. Reading, it.—John I*. Rea, : H. E. Muhlenbtug, Lancaster. Lancaster. 10. —D. M. Cafmany,' Simon J. Stine, Lebanon. » Lebanon. 11. VSH. Thomson, Owen A. Luckeubah, Easton. Bethlehem. 12. —A. Chamberlain, Henry 2d. Hoyt, . Montrose. ’ - Wilkesbarre. IS.—Samuel Knorr, Geo. de la Montayne, Bloomsbtirv. ’ Towanda. 14. —BP.Wagenseller, Chas. J. Bruner, Selins Grove. Sunbury. 15. —D. F. Williams, Wm. Penn Lloyd, York. Mechanicsburg. 10—Edw. Scull, Clias. W. Ashcom, Somerset. Hopewell. 17.—J.Sewail Stewart, Samuel J. Royer, Huntingdon. , • ; Johnstown. -18.—John R. Bowen, George Biibb, . Willsboro. Williamsport. lff.-jD.' Livingston, Henry ©. Rogers, ' Cunvensville. , ; . ■, Erie. 20. John A. 'Carnes, Peter McGougli', . Greenville. . 1 Franklin. 21. Joseph R. Smith, William H. Marlde, , Indiana. Greensburg. 22. —Russell Errett, Thomas W. Davis, Pittsburgh. Pittsburgh. 23:—Daniel E. Kevin, • Robt. L. Brown, Alleghany City. ' Alleghany City. 24—Jas. B. Ruple, Chas. 3d. Merrick, Washington. New Brighton. B'tlie Anti-Bent Trouble in New York. ; Ai.many, July 27.—Later advices from the scene of the Anti-rent troubles in East Green bush, Rensselaer, county, yesterday, give ad ditional particulars of the affair. The property about to be levied upon belongs to William Whitbeck, and not to 3lr. Demiison. As the Sheriffs posse advanced up the road, they'en countered 'skirmishers from the enemy, who were on the look-out. The skirmishers re treated as the posse advanced. Finally tlie; Sheriff'reached tiie, premises. WillianuiWhii beck' Was in front,, while the , others ..were! standing 'apparently . unconcerned,, spectatois. Some of them were whit- 3 tling. : Sheriff Grlgg , approached Wil-r liam Wliitbeek and ■ demanded : possession, of.the farm under a process which' he i held. WRitbeck: drew a revolver and declared that he would relinquish his hold upon the property only with ills life! Just then a rupture between , one of Wbitheck’s sons and one ofDie Sheriff's posse occurred. Blows were struck, and in a minute a general fight was in progress. Pis tols, stones and clubs were freely used, flic anti-renters being prepared,fought witk.advan tage. Tlie attack was so sudden and unex pected that the sheriff ’s posse were taken aback, Tha result of the engagement was that tho 5. k sheriff’a.paity. were’Mvetxfrbm the. ground in consternation and dismay, and the anti renters ‘ left mastenTonthe situation. Tiie fight lasted onreaba&L ten jtamuteftyet it was a regular 4»ai®& to hand eKcOimrer, and was dcspcratetyTontestcd. In the mele'e sir {Jersons are kribwif to have been 'it is likei/some otheWjW<®e fjßuK/3 (One ’iftccount lias ft . that eight WundOdi In addition to those reported wounded last night are special deputies .Southard end Gideon- Mc- Menomy, botlVdf this cfty/affwell ’as’ William Whitbeck, the person sought to be dispossessed. Deputy Sheriff Grigg and spectal deputy Whit beck are jare i’frpt; Ex pected to survive their injuries. Tiie first named is reported dead n though as we left the ground his’fate' is" tiiicertaiti. “ Albany, July 27.—Colonel Church, at whose instancei'tfifef.wntTidf ;? ejection against Whitbeck, tiie East Greenwich Anti-renter, was issued, went to Troy to procure warrants for the arrest of Whitbeck and the parties im plicated in the assault of yesterday.. The ■wounded are ail comfortable; Wnitjicck claims . that tiie deputies fired the first shot, and that lie tendered his rent, hut .it, was refused, and lie then defeuded liiß.property;; F. ' Erection of Hfhi.hoiise9, «te. The,Congressional appropriation of $1,300,- 807 for ilib-support of the Light-house Board, erection and repair of lighthouses, &c., for tiie present fiscal year, is . now available. It pro vides for tiie erection of a number of light houses at the following-named points, and they will he • constructed as speedily'as ;possible: Half Way BoCk| bay, 1 Maine; Plum Island, Cape IlaUefas: Cat Island, Point aux Ilerbes, Louisiana; Tlmbalier, Shell Keys, at tiie ‘“Swash,"Texas'; Grand river,Lake Erie ; Cleveland, Ohio; Spectacle Reef, Lake Huron; Portage river, Lake' Superior; Eagle river, Lake. Superior. Repairs at the following named lighthouse stations are also authorized by this appropriation, and , they, too, will be made as soon as practicable: ThrogVNcck, Highlands at Nevereink, Sandy Hook, Cono ver Beacon, and Fort Tompkins, New Jersey; Black Rock, Connecticut; Proctorville Beacon, Pass a l’Outre; Genesee, Lake Ontario; Grassy Island and Monroe, South Manitott-ond. Point Betsy, Lake Michigan; Baily’s Harbor,,. St. Joecplis, Michigan City, Raspberry Island, and Minnesota Point. Of appropriation $2,000 will be used for placing stake lights in the Hudson river; and at White Hail Narrows, Lake Champlain, New York, $5,000 will he expended for ..the same purpose. For repair ing and coping the brick, wall on the • north side of and for filling in and grading the grounds at the Staten Island light-house depot tiie sum of $12,500 will be expended. For re placing the ten-day lieacons formerly marking the Florida reefs, sqp,ooo, At Presque Isle harbor, Lake Huron, range fights will be placed, at a cost of $7,500. Material for this work is being gotten out as rapidly as possible, and some has already been transported to the points where it is designed to use it. On the Ist of January there were on the Atlantic, Gulf, and Pacific coasts of tiie United States, 383 light-houses, lighted bea cons, and tloating lights, and of the same estab lishments on tiie northern and northwestern lakes there are 124, making in all 507. The number of light-house keepers, not including assistants, is 589. / ,■ “7 3 . From our late editions of Yesterday By the Atlantic Cable. London, July 27.—The Right Honorable Wm. E. Gladstone is quite unwell, and was un able to be in his place in the House of Com mons last night. ■' Parliament will be prorogued on August 10th. , . ' , A fault has been found in the Atlantic cable of 1800, and lias beenlocated about 130 miles from, Valencia Madiud, July 27.—A party, of Carlists were defeated bythe volunteers yesterday at Taras onc. -Offers of aid to the government to put down the rebellion come from. all quarters of Spain. Espartero has .offered his services. Liverpool, July 27tH, P. M-—The market for yarns and fabrics is quiet and firm. ■ 1 -.'."".‘‘'H ~: -V. Queenstown, July 27th.—The steamship City of Boston, from New York on : Jiffy 17th, arrived here at 8 A, M. to-day. Southampton, July 27th.—The steamship Berlin, from’ Baltimore, July 15th,for Bremen, arrived here tojay. London, July 27, P.M.—UJS. Five-twenties, 82 j. Liverpool, July 27, P. At.—Cotton un changed; shipments from Bombay to the 23d inst., since last report, 5,500 bales. Pork flat. No. 2 Kod Western Wheat, Its. 2d. Peas, 40s. Havkb, July 2L-rCotton .opens easier for both oil the spot and ’ afloat; low Middlings afloat, 1501 francs. . From Washington. [Spceial Despatch to the Philadelphia Evening Bulletin.] THE CUBAN JUNTA, Washington, July . 27,—Hfessrs. Lemtis, Ruiz and other Cubans are hero. They say the difliculties have all been settled, and that Macias,Lemusandthe Junta will hereafter act together. ' ' ' '’ ■ THE ACCIDENT TO MU. CBEBWELL. It is feared that the Postmaster-General will he laid up some time with his . broken arm, as the fractures are more serious than at first reported. Washington, July 27.—Alfred Appel and G eorge P. HCywoodhave been nominated by Assistant Assessor Cleveland, of the Thirty second Collection District ot New York, as Assistant Assessors, to be designated under, section G of the bet of March 2d,-1867, to make assessments of the income tax in the city of New York. Air. Heywoodlias been for several y ears in charge of an important division of the Internal Revenue Bureau. Captain Harrison, commanding the practice squadron of tlie Naval Academy, lias reported to the Navy Department the arrival of tho squadron at Cherbourg On July 14. All well. Secretary Rawlins has returned to this city,, and is at the Department to-day, looking much improved in health. Extensive Larcenies- Syracuse, Jttiy 27.— Charges of extensive larcenies Rave been made against John H. Sims and others.’ It is alleged that while Sims was a convict in- Auburu State Prison, in ■packing goods for Howland & Co., tool-making contractors, he, with the aid of other convicts, and a clerk named Teneyok, sent but valuable goods to accomplices in various localities! ■ The amountof-tlie articles thus stolen is stated to bo valued at $20,000. Suits have been com menced against Sims, Ezra. Brown, of. Mace doh, Wayne county, andHepry B. Teneyck, ’of Aubuirii, for' the valu'e of ‘tlie goods. These parties have been arrested and held to hail in §5,000 each. ' ; ' , t-M I-'ntal Accident at Niimnrn Tails.''.> ■ Buffalo,. July, • 27.—Edward Halpin, an elderly man, from Black Rock, fell from Table .Rock,.Kiagath i FaUs f !last:iught, a -distance, of 180 feet, and was instantly, killed, his body be ing mangled in a dreadful manner. : jSusplclouu Tcssci Overhauled. ' Baetimoke;-' July 27.—Tlie'British steamer Lord Lowell; which cleared from this port on' Friday last for Havana,' laden heayily-yvith. cbiil and about =350 empty sugar hogsheads, was overhdoledoD Saturday evening off Capo, Henry by the revenue cutt'et; gNortheruer, Captain McGowan, by orders frbm -Washing ton, on suspicion of being engaged in carrying arms, Jfcc., to.puba, in the interest of the revo lutionists. 'After a' thorough -search she was released, nothing being- fpund to justify her seizure.. ' ." '. ' . .. . From Atlantic City. Atlantic City, July 27! jTliq weather and, bathing aro greatly effjojied by the thousands of residents and visitors. includnig a large ex cursion from Philadelphia at' tho Excursion House. All the hotel proprietors are busy making arrangements; for .the arrivals ox.-, pected next week during the. encampment jf: • the Fire Zouaves.: An-effort is being madoto induct President GTarft Atlantic City, reyiew-the Zoffaves, nud lbg lwcsent at ooei of s takepJtdcf during the lir^veek J*ilv-Bnd BerrUfllßit Mlnls.Br.J Minl»„MrE SLattirap nndliidy, JaditeKuunriU, Mt J P Hunter,Mr O Drew. Mr O C DnUnmDndiMis* JCdomliS, Mr iShaldoaHrAb Payne,ilcUKMnyi'r,SU TM*lonny,MrL_TorliO,M? <J Vamliwn. Mr B z lnn,Mr J Draco, Mrs Knimr and children, ilMnd Mrs Cnmcroni, .Mr and Sirs Fisher. Mr Di»lauaM,Mr HMcllonotißh. Mr T MOhrlßtr .Miss Allen, Mm Fltliiarmnd-danghteriMraMAßradloy. . . — BtwmiHh!p TbDftwj»nda, Wakelejr--A)2 skip* ; woolvl^iW' aclphia and Boston »S vorlbalo cotton 1 do waste 8 F Blake; 5 do cotton OocbrtniEaSBeU &Oo; 23Sdodomes* tics Clatthorn,'Herring dr Co; 36d0 Har drMcDevitt; 5 do cotton Ido waste 2u do rags 1, bbl wax MlUer A Bro; 86 bales cotton order; 32d0 llandolphJenks: ID casks riceW Butcher & Son; 140 kegs C Engel; 3LO bdls shovel handles^GtoGrinUh; 3J hf bb& Q Orayr 19 Caskrf rice W Huston & Co; 21 hhua 13bbi« G tes 31 pcs iron 1 lot loose do B.Patmiel; 10 bbls rootd Sellers, Boiden & Co; sundry pkgsJSV If JemeStGeul Agt, > j POBTO^CABELbO—BrIgHermea, Blockcrt—bags coffee <43 lone fustic J BaJlott A Co. KOBFOLK—Hcbr Jolm Kowlott; Bradley—27 JSTS 2-foot heart cypress shingles Pattefßon & Lippincott, V, TOABBiyifi. / SHIPS FBOM « FOR . DATE Denmark ;..tiverpdol...New York July li Minnesota Europo,... ....;.;.Glasgow.,.New Y0rk,....: July 16 China July 37 City of Cork York l7 Gennania...........^..»..Havrc..;NeW'Yorkw j .«..;..;.....>Ju1y17 Bellona.. ~..liondon...New York,. .......July 17 I’almyra—... .Itivcrpool.V.NewYork viaß- July 20 Hennnmi Jsouthainpton..;New York.~. July 26 Erin ..........,...Liverpool,..Now Yorkw.. .July 21 Nevudn...........;.;..ljirerpdoli.:New York-.. July2i C ,of Wanhlijg : n-liivfrpooi...New York -/....Ju1y 22 . TO DEPABX.. Fioncer2.....;,.Fhiladelphla;i.%V!lmlngton-..^.,.^;J'u.1y29 Tripoli .v...... .New York... Liverpool.-, i.Jnly 29 Klitdn-......-. ~,Ncw York... Bremen ./..July 29 Columbia. .....New York...Nussan aud Hav 7 a—July 29 Arizona.. ...New York..,AspiuwaU July 31 -.TopaWHiida.-Philadelphia...Savannab .^..;..Ju1y31 - 1iiberty...............8H1tiin0re...New Orleans, 31, C01umbia............N0w York... Glasgow, July 31 V irginia - New &ork...Liverpool ...Jnly3l Gilyof Brooklyn. New York.,.Liverpool. July3l M aripoFa..,-.... ; ..i.Ncw York... New Orleans July 31 Mfnnesotu ..—...New York..Xiverpool.—........ t .....Ang. 4 China«.. M .... M New York...LiYerpool_.. Aug. 4 Eag1e,.....,..„.N«w Y'ork...Havana .a.,.,.. Aug. 5 JOHN mmp OF TRAI>K. thos^lJ^uillesfie, j MoaraLY MARINE BULLETIWy POBT OF PHILADELPHIA—JuTTOT. Bvy BttEs,4 65J8pai Sets, 7 17~i Hroi VTater/5 46 ABBIYED YEBTEBDAY, Steamer Tormwanda, Wakoley, 70 hours from Savan mihi with cotton, Ac. to Philadelphia aud Southern Mail 88Co. ' *; Brig Hermes (Br), Blackert, from Porto Cabello July 10. with coflee and fustic to John Dullett & Co. Brig Ernestine. Knight, New York. Bchr John Bow3ett,Bradley,s days from Norfolk, Va. lumber to Patterson & Lippincott. - Schr John Benjamin. Davis, 5 days from Pawtucket, with cement to Lennox & Burgess. Schr Telegraph, Knark, from Kappahnnnock,Ya. with lumber to Gorgas & Co,. r--*- hchr Mary Elizabeth, Smith, 1‘ day from Christiana, with grain to Cbristinn A Co. Schr Aurora. Artis. 1 day from Frederica, Del. with grain to Jos L Bewley & Co.. • c AT WILMINGTON, Dkl. Brig Sionica, Cobb, 6 days from Charleston, with phosphate rock to Warren & Gregg. V. . CLEARED YESTERDAY. Rteanier J & Shrivpr. A .Groves. Jr. Brig J D ’Lincoln, Merryman, Portland, L Audenned A Co. , - Schr Lena Hnme, Appleby, Eastport, E A Bonder A Co. Schr J Benjamin, Davis,Pawtucket, Lennox A Burgess. Correspondence of the Philadelphia Evening Bulletin. r READING, J illy 26,18G9. The following boats from the Union Canal passed Into the Schuylkill Canal, bound to Philadelphia, laden and consigned »s follows:... ; - \- Bnitiniore Co. No. 11, with lumber toßoas Bouden-' bush; T D WAlton,do to Taylor A Betts; Two Brothera. do to A H Deysher; C Grlng, limestone to O Gring: J H McCoDker, do to Peacock A Orth; Lime Lady, liglit to captain; Maj Anderson, flour to captain.' F. w ,v MEMORANDA. Ship Queen Victoria, Lenders, for this port, entered out at Liverpool 14th inst. v Steamer George H Stout, Ford, hence at Georgetown, DC. 2«h in-*. \ • . ; Steamer Sherman, Henry, at New Orleans 2stit Inst, from New York. • Steamer United States. Norton, sailed from New Or-' leans 25th inst. for New York. ‘ ’ , ' Steamer Rattlesnake, Gallagher, hedco at Portsmouth 22d iunt. 1 ; i? Bark Abrahßm Skalle, Gregerson, from. London for this port, sailed from De»l 15th inet. Bark Thomas Dalletty Lineeay, cleared at New York yeftterday for Lagunyra and Porto Cabello. Bark Jehu, Crowell, from Girgenti, and: Palermo 4tb instant. Bark Savannah. Knowlton, hence at Havre 15th inst: Bark Rigina do Fiori, Davilllo, hence at Helv6et9th Snfftapt. : Bark Lepanto, Bell, hence, sailed from Falmoath 12th infit, for London. Bark Kate Langton, Bose, sailed from Penarth 7th inst. tor this port. Brig Marianna IV, Goncalves, hence at Lisbon 20th instants • ' Brlff Planet (Br), Arey, cleared at NYork j-esterdajr for tblajKirt. , Brtg John Welsh, Jr. Mnndav, at Sagua lsth inst. for north of Hatteras in 5 days; Brig S V Merrick. Lippincott, cleared at Fernandina 2ist inst. for Harana. Brig Beportcr, CoonlcS, cleared at N York yesterday for this port. . . Brig Ottawa (Br), for this port, at Holmes’ Hole 25th instant- 7 ~ - ... Brig Torrent, Gould, at Sagua 15th inst. for north of- Hatteros next day. - - ■ • - SchrO C Clark, Cook, was at St Andrews 7th instant Baylcs,at Georgetown, DC. 26th inst. from Jacksonvillo. Scbr W G Andenried, Baker, at Jacksonville 20th inst. from Savannah. . : 7 - - - : Schr J P Wyman, Urann, cleared at Jacksonville 13th in»t. forthfo nort. . "SchrW L Springs, Halsey; at Charleston SOthinatant: from New York. Schr M B Sampson, henco at Alexandria 26th Inat. AOCTIONSAI.ES. M-THOMASj&rSONSfA^OTIOIOTERS^ . Noe. 13?andlil South FOURTH street. SALES OF BEAL ESTATE; sales at the Philadelphia Exchange every TUEBDAY,at 12 o’clock. , • ■;■ Tr..-. galeß at the Auction Store EVERY. THURSDAY. - - _ _ „ -•- at Residences receive especial attention* . Sale at the Auction Rooms, Nos. 239 and' 141 South • _Fonrth street. - SUPERIOR HOUSEnOLBrFURNITURE, MIRRORS, CARPETS. Ac., Ac. , • : ON THURSDAY MORNING, July 29, at 9 o’clock, at tbo Auction Rooms, by cata* 1 logue; an assortment 'of Parlor, Chamber, Library and Diningßoom Furniture,French Pinto Mirrors,Rook- i case, Extension Tables, Office 1 Furniture, Hair Mat- | rcsscs, Feather Bods, Cluua and Glassware,/Refrigera tors, Stoves, Carpets, <fcc. Also, 2 elegant Italian marble Statuette*. “Greek Slave” and “Venus do Medici.” 1 . . . ■ w. Also, superior Musical Box, with drum and bell attachment. Also, lady’s Gold Watch. / Assignees* Sule-rEstatc of Bromboy Wharton iilius. • FIXTURES OF AN ALCOHOL DISTILLERY AND RECTIFYING ESTABLISHMENT. ON SATURDAY MORNING, July 31; at II o’clock, at No. 225 North Third street will bo sold at public sale.Jsy order ofWni. Vogdes, Assignee in Bankruptcy, the Fixtures of rin Alcohol Distillery and Rectifying Establishment, all in good order, consist iny of 1 French column still of 4SO gallons, with nil the appurtenances, in working order; 8 receiving stands and' copper Uxtures, completo; I syrup Kettle, 25 rectifying tubs, 3 cisterns. .. .. OFFICE FURNITURE. 1 stove and scuttle, 3‘old chairs, 1 old deßk. . , ' Also, leasehold of premises, which expires August 12, 1870. Rdiit per -anniun, considered worth ($2,010/ Administrator’s Sale. Estate of ManassesMcOloskey,deceased.- STOCK OF BRANDIES, WINES,jGINi WHISKY, ON WEDNESDAY MOENINO. i August 4, at 11 o’clock, nt No. 1310 Edgemont st., above Huntingdon street, will be sold, by catalogue, the entire stock of a Hotel, comprising Brandies, Wines, Holland Gin, fmo old Scotch, and Mononguhela Whiskies, Stand Casks, Bnrrels v Acr j ; - Full’jm/ticUlflrs in catalogues ; TMjtfTiNG, DUBBOBOW & GO.. ■ | j ■=-.«>- . AUCTIONEERS ' No?. 232 and 234 MARKET BtrqdUcorner of Bank street. •> Successors to JOHN H-MYERS & CO. - IMPORTANT OPENING FALL SALE OF 12000 CASES BOOTSVSHOKS, TRAVELING BAGS, Ac. I » ON TUESDAY MORNING, August 3,at 10 o’clock-on four montlis’crcdit,including— Cubub men's, boys’ unit youths? calfvklp, buff leather and 'grain Cavalry, Napoleon,‘Dress and Congress Boots and .Balmorals; kip, buff and polishod grain Brogtuis; wo men’s, mUmetr and children's calf, kid; onnmellcd aud buff leather, coat and morocco Balmorals: Congress Gaiters; Luce Boots: Ankle Ties; Slippers} Metallic Over* i a hoes and. Sa.mValsj.TraypliugJßa.gSiShQqLacQtaidsc, Davis & habvey, auctioneers, : (Date-with M.Thomnß & Sons.) Store Nos. 48 and 50 North SIXTII street i ■:Sale corner Seventh and Medina streets. :STOOK- AND . FIXTUItES' OF A> ÜBOCEBY AND CKOCKEttY STOKE. • 1 .. .• \ i ,ON THUBSDAY MORNING, At. 10 o clock, at ,tho Vomer of Seventh and Medina eta., below Wharton Btreet, tho'entire stock,including a large oiiautlty of China and Crockery, Tinware, Ac.'- - ■=■ ■ JAMES A. FREEMAN, AUCTIONEER, No. 422 WALNUT, street. SALE OF BEAL'ESTATE, AUGUST 4,1869. : TldsHalepon- -WEDNEHJ>AY, nt' 12 o’c]u(:k noon, .it tlu'Kxclinlig<),vill luolimo tliu'foUowine— ' i 2 01tODNI) EBNTS 0F'825 90 oacU, out of-.lots of in-outiil.Wiatar Btrwt,S,E:,pfj Oollom strout, 22J Wanl.; Satenhsiilvle. ’ •• - - . i OOLLOM BT—A Mrip of kfoiiud, N. .E. of Wnltofielil strout; gil Wiird: Sale absolute. ■ GD. McOLEES & GO., ‘ V' No. MBB URKETffi IO^ BB9 ’ BOOT AND SHOE BALNSNWSBY MONDAY AND DY BARRITT & CO., AUCTIONEERS. D • CASH AUCTION,HOUSE,: ' ‘ No. 830 MAltKETsfreot, corner of Batik Btroot. Cttßli advanced on cotißieninonta without extra charge.'; TL. ASHBRIDGE « 00;, AUCTION-. .EBBS.No.6osMAßKETBtroot.aboveFfft.tr. f -'< . AWTIOfC«A*.EiS. rpHOMAS B£BCH « dON* ATTOTIOS. JL KEKS AND COMMISSION MEBOHAHTB. , „ No.'-IIID'CHKSTNOT ttnd. ’ »,. H«ftrentnuv!«K9ill(9',9ftni(om,<tr«et. jiopiwnoM . of Enrol tute at dwesUns* attendod to on tbs most roasonable tiniu. .. u ..■z. ■'.Bato.OtNoi'BM.OTnßatroet. ■ BJEOANT,. WAENUT-JPABIiOB, CHAMBEIt AW) ■ BIKING ItOOM 'FBBNITBBK; FINE OABPETS; V«v*t »v< *:•. V :-\t !i':< i ■■■. ... ONTIIunSDAT' HOBOING, "’dock, at No;vSSffl *Jno jßtrcot, will bo Bom, tiio Household Fnrniturd of.a family, declining Suit, In hair alnut Chamber undDiningßoom Furniture. liißrfliu art<l ''VeiirtlAn r O«rpetB, China-and Cooking Utensils. Bofrlgerator* Ac. i.. : ''Too Furniture h* in excellent order'and betn in use Inita short time.: i „ ■. , Can be examined early on the morning of Bale, SALE OF A PRIVATE COlXEbfatiN OF AIIEBI OAN ANDsFOBEIGM.jCOJNS. T , „„ ON THUBSDAY AFTERNOON, <Tuly29, at 3)1 o’clockiat 1 the auctions .tore, Na. 1110 Chestnut street, will bo.sold, a Collection of Foreign Mill Anlorlcan Gold. Silvernnd Copper Coins. , Catalogues can bo luulat tlientictionetoro, ... . Pnlo at the Auction Btoro.No.HlO Ghefetnut street. BUJPEBIOH WALNUT FtjhNIXBBEj'MANTEIi AND FlEBs GLASSES, BRUSSELS AND, OTHER CAR PETS, DECORATED CHINA' OHAMBEIt _BETS, lIAIRMATRESSEB, BEDDING, ENGRANINGS, (iLAebWABE, See. „ V ■ , ON FRIDAY MORNING, At 9 o’clock, at No. 11W Chestnut street, •will be soldi a large assortment of superior 'Furniture, comprising Parlor, Chamber, Library And Dining Boom Baits, Mat' respes, Carpets, Chirm, Glassware, &t. ° -!: Secondhand from fuDiUfcaleuvingtho Ti/fARTIN AUCTIONEER^ Salesmen for M f Thomas 4f Sons,) s No. £>29 CHESTNUT street, rear entrance from Minor. ~. Administrator’s Bale No. 714 NortlrEf chth street.- SUPERIOR HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE, FINE FRENCH PLATE MANTEL-:: MIRROR, HIGH ", CLOCK, FINE CARPETS, GOLD H. C. - WATCH, 2 GOLD CHAINS,; SILVER -PLATE, &C: • _ ON THUBSDAY MORNING, , • i July 2ft, at 30 o’clock, at No. 714 North Eighth street, by* catalogue, by/order of Administrator, the entire supe rior Household Furniture, Solid Silver Forks, Spoons and Ladles, Gold Hunting Cose Watch, 2 Gold Chains, Ac.,-Act. ?- ■■ ■ 'c Maybe seen early on the morning fcfaalo. > Peremptory Sale N. W;corner Sixth and Chestnut sts. LARGE BAIR BAB FIXTURES. FRENCH PLATE MIRROR, MARBLE TOP' TABLES* STEAM TA BLE, LIQUORS. &C.. /- V / V . ' ON FRIDAY MORNING, July SO, at 10 o’clock,by cdtaloguetto close the partner ship concern of Jackson & Boyco, the superior Fixtures, including largo Bar, with marble: tops; large French Plate Mirror, gilt frame; Bar Fixtures, roarblo top Ta bles, Glassware, Decaliters, Crockery, Steam Table, Utensils, Stationary WosjUstand,. two outside Xnrnps, Ac. 7 Also, a quantity of Whisky, Bum, Liquors, Ac. Ta. McClelland, auctioneer. " • 3219 CHESTNUT street. CONCERT HALL AUCTION ROOMS. - , Rear entrance on Clover street. Household Furnitnte and Merchandise of every de scription received on consignment. Sales of Furniture at dwellings attended to on reasonable terms.; SALE AT TUB AUCTION ROOM 8; 1219 CHESTNUT STREET • f ■' ’' ' ON FRIDAY MORNING, July.3o, will bo sold, by catalogue, at Concert Hall Auction-Rooms, 1219 Chestnut Street;at 10 o’clock, the entire Household Furniture of a family leaving tho city. Also, two Secondhand'Pianos, superior Walnut Chamber Suits, new style Cottage Suits, Parlor suits, in Hair Cloth, Terry, Plush, AC.: Extension Tables,Book cases, \Vardrobee, Sideboards, Rocking Chairs, Mat resses, Ac. mp PRINCIPAL MONEY ESTABLISH JL ment—S. E. corner of SIXTH and RACE streets. . money advanced on'Merchandise generally—Watches, Jewelry, Diamonds, Gold and Silver Plato, and on all articles of value, for any length of time agreed on. WATCHES AND JEWELRY AT PRIVATE SALE. Fine Gold Hunting Case, Double Bottom and Open Face English. American and Swiss Patent Lever Watches;; Fine 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 Patent Lever and Lepine Watches; Double Gass'English Guartier and other Watches: Ladies* Fancy Watches; Diamond Breastpins; Finger Rings; Ear Bings; Studs: Ac.; Fine Gold Chains; Medallions; Bracelets:-Scan Pins;Breastpins; Finger Bings; Pencil Cases and Jew elry generally. v FOR SALE—A large and valuable Fireproof Chest suitable for a Jeweller; cost s63ft Also, several Lots in South Camden, Fifth and Cheat nnt streets. , A SHIPPERS* GUIDE. For boston.—steamship line DIRECT, SAILING FROM EACH PORT EVERY Wednesday and Saturday. FROM PINE BTEEEX WHAHF.PHII.AbEI.PHIA, AND LONG WHARF, BOSTON . From Philadelphia . From Boston. ••••.■ io a.-m. ■• ■ 3 p: m; : SAXON .Wednesday ,July 7 ARlES,'Wednestlay, July 7 NORMAN, Saturdays** 10 ROMAN,Saturday, “ W ARIES, Wednesday, “ 34 SAXON, "Wednesday, “ 14 ROMAN, Saturday, u 17 NORMAN, Saturday,** 17 SAXON,Wednesday, * 4 . 2DARIEB, Wednesday, u 21 NORMANj Saturday, u 24 ROMAN, Saturday, ** 24 ABIESi Wednesday * k ..28 SAXON, Wednesday, u : 28 ROHAN,Saturday, “. 31 NORMAN. Saturday,** 31 These Steamships Ball punctually. Freight received everyday. - r Freight forwarded to all pointaiu New England. ' v >’or^ Freight or, P^wjg^tsu^eHorawcmrmodatioiia) , . 33d South Delaware avenue. PHILADELPHIA, RJCHSIOJND AND JT NORFOLK STEAMSHIP LINE. THROUGH FREIGHT AIJULINK TO THE SOUTH - AfiD IVEBX. "ISVEinrBATCRDAYrBt NOonjfrolu FIRST-WHARF „ ; . .above MARKET Street. BATES to all 'pointsln North and Sonth Carolina via Seaboard Air-Line Railroad, connecting at Portsmouth; and toLynchburgr/Va.. Tennessee and the Westvia-Virginia and Tennessee Air-Line and Rich 'taond andDanvilteßallroatf.’ ---•- BMSlW?g?ggI» dtakcaotI ‘ OWEB Tbo rcgularityusafety^and .cheapness of this route commend it to tha publifc as the most desirable medium for carrying every deßcriptibnoffreight.' N o charge for commf BHinn., rirayage, or any expense for transfer. " .. .•• • - ; - Steamships insure at lowest rates. Freight received DAILY. r: - r — 7 - W ILLIAM:-P7CLYDE-&CO N 0.12 South'Wharves and Pier No. 1 North Wharves, -W. P. PORTERvAgent atßichmondand City Point, T. P. CROWELL jk CO., Agents at Norfolk. PHILADELPHIA AND SOUTHERN A 31 AIL STEAMSHIP CO3IPANY*B REGULAR* LINESrFROMQUEEN STREET IVHABFr 7 The Juniata win sail for? new Orleans, r , August—,at# A^M.. The JUNIATA will Bail from NEW ORLEANS, via HAVANA, August—v - , r The TONAWANDA will sail for SAVANNAH on Saturday* July. 31, at 8 o’clock A. 31,.. Thu TONAWANDA will sail from SAVANNAH on Saturday* July 24;, '<v, i; The PIONEER will sail for WILMINGTON, N.G.,on Thursday, July29,atB A.M. - ; Through bills of lading signed, and passage tickets sold to all points South and West. BILLS of LADING SIGNED at QUEEN ST. WHARF. For freight orjpaßaage, apply to WILLIAM L. JAMES, General Agent, l3O South Third street. FO R LIVERP O O li . “ . The Fine First-class Ship “V I R G I N I A, ,: ‘934 Tons Register—Captain Campbell. Thi« vessel succeeds tho u Matilda Hilyard.V and having a portion of her cargo engaged, will have ‘despatch. , , balance of Freight or Passage, apply to PETER WRIGHT & SONS, jy22-tf No. 115 Walnut Btreet, Philadelphia. New express line to alexan dria, Georgetown and Washington, D. 0., via Ches apeake and Delaware Canal, with connections at Alex andria from the most direct routq for Lynchburg, Bris tol, Knoxville, Nashville, Dalton and the Southwest. Steamers leave regulnrly from the flrst wharf above II urket street, every Saturday at noon. Freight received daily*. W3I. P. CLYDE «fe CO., No. 12 South Wharves and Pier 1 North Wharves, HYDE & TYLER, Agents at Georgetown. * M. ELDBIDGE & CO., Agents at Alexandria, Va. Vf OTICE,—EOR NEW YORK, VIA DEL i_N AWARE AND RARITAN CANAL EXPRESS STEA3IBOAT COMPANY. - ■ The CHEAPEST and QUIOKESIwutor communica tion between Philadelphia and New York. - ' Steamers leavo daily from first wharf bolow alhrket atreot, Philadelphia, aud foot of Wall street, New York, Goods forwarded by all the lines running out of New York—North, East and Weßt—free of Commission. Freight received and forwnrded on accommodating terms. W3I. P. CLYDE <fe CO., Agonts, * No. 12 South Delaware hvonuo, Philadelphia, • JA9. HAND, Agent, No. 119 Wail street, Now York.. Notice.— eor new York, via del aware AND RARITAN CANAL. SWIFTSURK TRANSPORTATION CO3IPANY. DESPATCH AND LINKS. Tho business of these lines will bo restunod on and uftor the 19th of filarch. For freight, which will betaken on accommodating terms,apply toWM. BAIRD <fe CO., • No. 132 South Wharves. DELAWARE AND CHESAPEAKE Steam Tow-Boat Company.—Bargoßtowed between Philadelphia, Baltimore, Havre de Grace, Delaware City aud intermediate points. " mi. P. CLYDEA GO;,Agents; Capt, JOHN LAUGH LIN, Sup’t Office, 12 South wharves, Philadelphia. IvrOTICE—EOR NEW YORK, VIA DEL- Ai aware and Raritan Canal—Swiftsnro- Transporta-i tion Company—Despatch and Swiftsure Lines. Tho business by those Lines will- bo resumed on and aftor the Bth of.. March. For Freight, which, will be taken on accommodating terms', apply to WM. M. BAIRD A C0.,032 South Wharves: V: ' ■ . ■ * mHE (KIOOIa$OK) jWO'CXD PAVEMENT 1 COMPANY .. . . - , Is now prepared to enterfiiito contracts with property owners to lay this tinrivalled patent-pavement in front of any property whore tho owper is desirous of improving the street and getting rid of cobblestones. r ' ' Apply at tho Office of.tho, Company) 731. •'NVAXNUT Street, betweon II and ?• O'clbcK each day. ALtt&.J. HAKPEIt, Presidout. JOHN \v. MtiKPHY, :: Secretary an 4 treasurer. An experienced teacher wished a situation as in touni or coim-' "try'- ;Tew.'hcß"UiePlan6 and usual English* branches; or:; would teach the Piano for board in sumo family Ideated wliero other pupils could behud. Roforendogiven: Adr dress B. B. t ITiQNorth Tweuty-sedoiul street, Phllndoi; phiu, Pa. jyZMtGth.tft*, ; f- } lit, t t rr "^' r " *'V 1 V ,- ?, 'WJSgSBSSBSff*.- Qffice- : 43sand437OlieBtimtSti , oat. Klifirsrrfcr""' —- vtoojmoo -'••'••“• -...ijwmm n incoke -Poft lata Over f5,5Q0,0Q0. Perpetual nnaTeniPorary Policies Qa Liberal Term* The Comnanv also leauesPolicios uponVthe Renta ol all kind* pf buildfngp, Ground BonU apd Mortgagea. DIBEGTOBB. . AlfredO.Baker,'•' ■ -I'Alfrfed-Fmor, Bamuel Grant, Thomas Sparks, Geo. \Y. Richards, 'Wm?BcQrant,- laaocßea, „ -■ •; ThomiiaS.'EHis,- Geo. Falos, ■ ■ Gnetavus 8.: lieneon, ALFBED 'G. BAKER; President. JAS. W. iTcAL^Bl’ l ta^°r? roa,dont / THEODORE M. .REGEIf, Assistant . PHILADELPHIA. lncorpora tert ; Mnrcli, 27, B2oi oflsce—?No. 34>North: Fifth Street. XNSUBTS BUItDIKOSv BOOBEHOLD FIIBNITDBE AND SIEBCHANDISE OENEBAiLY FBOM BOSS BY FIBK. Assets January 1,1869, $1,400,095 08. TBBBXEKS: ; William H. Hamilton, Sumne! Spnrli&wk, . Peter A, Keyser, . Charles p. Bower, * John Cariw, ‘•- Jesaelxlcbtfoot, j ■ Georgel. Young* ...» Robert Shoemaker,*. Josephß.Lynaall, PoteP Armbruster, LeviP.Coats. •/,.M.H»Dickinson* - ' Peter Wi llamsoa.,' TOI.JI. FUMnxTONjPreßidcnt, « Tice President. WM. T.B.tjTLKRv Secretary. ; < DKL.AW.ABE MUTUAL SAFETY XN -BURANCK COMPANY. . , Incorporated by the Legislature of' Pennsylvania,lB3s. Office S. B. corner of TIIIED and WALNOT 'streets, -.-Philadelphia. MARINE -INSURANCES On Vessels, of »e world. On goods by-river, canal, lake and land carriage to all parts of the Union. r rfliE INSURANCES. On Merchandise generally, oh Storeß, Dwellings f Houses,Ac. ASSETS OF tSb COMPANY* November l* 1868. * S2OODOO UnitedStatea FivePerCent.Loan, MM0’5........™.;... ....... 8203J500 00 120X00 United States Six Per Cent. Loan, r 138,800 00 80,000 United States Six Per Cent. Loan vm: < (forPaciflc Railroad; 60,000 00 200X00 Btate of. Pennsylvania Six Per • ' Cent/Loah.^^..V...u;..;.^^ k . 211,375 00 125,000 City of Philadelphia Six Per Cent. \ Loan/exempt from TAxh~...... 128,594 00 50,00# State of New Jersey Six Per Cent. , r L0an..................;......' 51,500 00 20X00 Pennsylvania . Railroad First ' Mortgage Six Per Cent. Bonds 20,200 00 25X00 Pennsylvania Railroad Second ■' ' ' Mortgage Six Per Cent'. Bonds '■ 24X00 00 25X00 Western -Pennsylvania Railroad Mortgage Six Per Cent. Bonds . (Penna.R. B.guarantee).;....:... 20,625 00 30X00 State of Tennessee Five. Per Cent. , , ; 3v:Loan 21X00 00 ' 7J)00 State of Tennessee Six Per Cent. - ; Load 5X3125 15X00 Germantown Gas Company ,princi< Sal and interest guaranteed by le City of PUladelphitt,3oO " • shares stock 15,000 00 10,000 Pennsylvania Railroad Companyj 200 shares stock-.—... «• 11X00 00 SXOO North Pennsylvania- Railroad •< - ;: Company, 100 shares stock 3XOO 00 20 000 Philadelphia and Southern Mail <,■ r Steamship Company, 80 shares . : 5t0ck............. 15X00 0O 207,900 Loans on Bond and Mortgage, first . liens on City Properties^......... 207X00 00 •J' : Market Value, 31,130,325 25' . . Cost, 81X93X04 26 : Beal Estate...... 38X00 00 Bille f receivable for Insurances made 322,486 94 Balances due at Agencies—Pro- ’ . miums on Harine Policies— ’ ' Accrued Interest and' other . debts due the 40,178 88- Stock and Scrip of sundry <?orpo v' rations, §3,158 00. Estimated / -v 1( value_ IXI3 00 ! Cash in OB ‘ . Cash in Drawer. . 41A65 > . 116X63 73 Par. DIRECTORS. rr—-rr— - Thomas G.Haod, : - J&mcs B.McFarland, ; Edward Darlington, william C.'Ludwig, JosephH; £eal, * Jacob jP^Jones, Edmund A.'Souder, Joshua P. Eyre. . TbeophiluaPaulding, ; WUllanfG; Boulton, Hugh Craig, : Henry C.Dallett, Jr., John O. Davis* Jdhn lKTaylor, ■ > James C.Haud, Edward Lafourcaae, John B.Penrose, ... Jadob Beigel, • H.- Jones Brooke, , , . George —— Spencer M’Hvainti,' Wm. 0. Houston, ••• Henry Sloan, X). T.Morgan, Pittsburgh, Samuel E. Stokes, John B. Semple, do., JameaTnuiuair, = THOMAS C. HAND, President. 1 -i: JOHHO. BAYIS, Vice President. I HENKY XYI,BURN, Secretary. . V' ; : HENBY BALL, AgST Secretary.- ’ ' ■ ■ :> ■ ■: deal-tf : The couN'xy.i'iKE hihubance com- PANYOffice, No. Jlo.South Sourth street, below Chestnut; ~ “The Fire Insurance Company of the County of Phila-. delphia,*’ Incorporated by thoEeglSlature OfPentißylvii*’ nia in.lB39»for,lndmniti.ag¥nst loss or damage.by fire, exclusively. _ CHAB x BR puHpETCAL. This old and reliable institution, , with ample capital and contingentftind caraflilly.'inYeßted, continues to in-/ sure buildings, furniture, merchandise, Ac., oithor per manently or fdr a limited or damage by flre,atthe lowest ratys cojwqtent with the absolute safety of its customers. t *'" *• . ‘'• 4 . liosses adjppted and jpoflslble despatch. Oboe. J. Sutter, :: * ■ AniirewH. Miller, Henry Budd, Jiuiiee N. Stone, i John Horrn ' ■ i Edwin B, Beuttjrti •• Joseph Moore, Bebort V. Miiasoy, Jr., Georco Mecke, » Mark Devine, ueorgo mtcu. , OHAJttL^s t SUTTEB p re sidoat. HENBY BtTDD, Vice President. BENJAMIN F; HOECKLEYv Secretary and Treasurer. TTNITED FIBBMEN’S r INSURAHCE U COMPANY Off PHILADELPHIA. This Company takes risks at the lowest rates consistent with safety, and confines its business exclusively to FISH INBUBANCE IN THE CITY OF PHttADEL PHIA. ■ r OFFICE—Noi 723 Arch street, Fourth National Bank Building. DIMECTOBS. , , Thomas J.Martin, . Henry W. Brenner, John Hirst, ■ Albertus King, Wn. A. Bolin, Henry Biimiu, James' Mongan, Janies Wood, William Glenn, John Sliallcross, James Jenner, , • J. Henry Askin, Alexander T. Dickson, Hugh Mulligan, , Albert 0. BobertSL Phmp Fitzpatrick, ■ . James V. Dillon. CONBAD B. AKDBESS, President, Wm. A. Bolin Trees. : • Wm. H.YAoris.Sec’y. : THE PENNBYIiVANIA FIBE INST - RANGE COMPANY. , . —lncorporated 1825—Charter Perpetual. - No. 51J WALNUT street, opposite ImlenendenceSauare. This Company, favorably known to the community for oyer forty years, continues to insure-against loss or damage by fire on Public or Private Buildings, either or for a limited time;' Also oh Furniture* t Btoqks of Goods, and Merchandise generally, on liberal iterms; 1 s i .■ v 5 • •’ ; TheirCapitftl, together with a large Burplus Fund, is ;invested in the most careful manner, whichenableithem )to offer to the ifisured anAipdouhted security lu tho case 0fl08 “ - . ■■■■.. DIBFOTOEB. ,'• . : Daniel Smith, Jr., I John Devereux Alexander Bonß*n, Thomas Smith, Isaac Hazlehnrst, . ! {Henry Lmviri Thomas Boh ins, ' Jr&iHlngliam Folli . Daniel Haddock, Jr,,, «... „ ■ BMITH, Jb.,'President. WM. G. CBPWELL, Secretary. : aplS-tf A NTHMCITE INBTJEANCB COM j£x PANY.—CHARTER PERPETUAL., Ofllcoj No; 3U above Third, Philada. AVill inßurc against Loss or Damage by Fire on Build ings; either perpetually or for alhnited tim'e, Household Furniture and Merchandise generally. lnßiirimcb oh Vessels, Cargoes and ! Ereightßj. , Inland Insurance to all parts of the ITuiou. ~r V; DIRECTORS. t 4 WUliamEsher, Lewis Audonriod, i D. Luther, JohiiKotchum, ' John 8.-BlackistOn, J. E.Baam, : ; ; . William F. Dean, John B.Heyl, ” Pctef'Blesof; SemuolH. ltothormol. ; , WILLIAM ESHER, President.,- 1 " ■ > WILLIAM F; DEAN, Vico President. Wm.M. Smith,Secretary. ? > ja22tu;th.gtf \ MERICAN EIRE INSURANCE COM XYPANY, Incorporated WlO.-Ohartcr perpotual. Philadelphia. 1 Having a lnrgo paij-up Capital Stock and Surplus In vestedln sonna and available Securities, continue to «ro on dwellings,. atarcp,'.furniture, merchandise, bu in port; and their cargoes,.and otuor personal lorty. adjusted. ■ irhomnß B. Marlsli. 5 .',. fijßdmyntLO.'PaHlht John Welsh,: . . Charles W. Poultuey, Patrick Brady, : Israel Morris, ; John I'. Lewis. . John P. \Vetherl 1 ’ jy27tu tli Kl3t§ William \v° PnuL THOMAS H.-MA'RJSi President ALJ®BIC. CRAWtfoKDj Secretary, * M •: TNBVK FERE ASSOCIATION ‘” t v/Av.pfrT^^ipLi*,' - v ’ THE NATIONAL LIFE OOMPAfV, I ( \, OF TUB * f UNITED STATES OF AMEEICA. - Chartered'by Special Act of Congrede. Cash. Capital, \ Branch Office, Philadelphia. OFFICERS: CLARENCE H. CLARK, Philadelphia, President;' JAY. COOKE, Philadelphia, Chairman - Finance and Executive Committee.. v HES?RY D. COpKE, Washington, Vice President. EMERSON W. ' PEET,; Philadelphia, Secretary and „ Actuary*.. . • FRANCIS G. SMITH, M. D.» Philadelphia, Medical '•Director. /. EWING.MEABS.M, D., Philadelphia,.Assistant Medical Director. This Company issued, in tho first TEN MONTHS of ' ’existence, 5,395 POLICIES, INSUEING $]L5,143,800. This Company affords to ils Policy -Holddrs PERFECT SECURITY by its Cosh paid up Capital of OtieMfllion Dollars, and guarantees tor tlxo lusured * by its LOW RITES OF PREMIUM, LARGE DIVIDENDS IN ADVANCE, OB A BEVEBSIONABY DIVIDEND OF 100 FEB CENT. BY ITS 7 RETURN' PREMIUM PLAN. E. W. CLARK & GO., Bankers, No., 35 South Third Street, Philadelphia* General Agents for Pennsylvania and Southern New Jersey. ", v B. S, RUSSELL, Manager. ' . The Liverpool Lon don : £§P Globe Ins. Co. Assets Gold, Mi 7,690, “ in the United States 2,000,000' Daily Receipts {520,000,00 Premiums in 1868, X. 665,075^- sififfjiii'BD' Losses in 1868, $3,662,445.00 No. (s Merchants* Exchange, Philadelphia. rpHB RELIANCE INSURANCE COX- J; sPANY OF-PHILADELPHIA* Incorporated, CharterPorpotual. . 1 • .'Offldo,K6.'SoB=WA«ntetrcot. ■ ~OAPixAi».;«m4no.L: > Inaurea agninat losa or domago by I'IBE, on Honaej,® Stores and other Tiuildluga, limited or perpetual, and on Furniture, Goods,Worea and Merchandise in town or “’“LOOSES PBOMPTLT ADJUSTED AHD PAID. - Assets., ................ Invested in thefollowing Securities, viz.;.. First Mortgages on City Propcrty,v.'oU se- United States Government Loans..... 117,000 OO Philadelphia City 6 Per Gent. L0an5.;:....... - 75,000 00 " Pennsylvania 53i000,000 6 Per CentL0an......... SO,OOO OO PfeßUsylvanfftiiailroad Bonds; KirßtMortqage 5,000 OO Ganidenand AmboyKailroad Company’s 6 Per . ‘Cent. L0an....... 6,000 OO Loans on ....................... . • r/fiOO 00 Huntingdon and Broad Top 7 per Cent. Mort* \ ; gage 80nd5'...;...... • 4,560 00 \ County Firo Insurance Company’s 5t0ck...... 1,050 00 Mechanics’ Bank 5t0ck..;...........4,000 OO Commercial Bank of Pennsylvania Stock 10,000 00. Unioh MutuullnauranceCompany’sStock...... 380 OO KuHanco Insurance Company of Philadelphia CuHhinßankundonl2,2s3 3X Worth at Par.;...../...;.;..... #437,598 31 Worth this date at market prices, DIRfcCTOBS. Thomas H. Moore, Samuel Castuer,' James Isaac F. Baker, Christian J.HofTnmn, Samuel B. Thomas, , (I Sitor. .i' >MAS C.HILL, Tresldont ThomaaC. Hill,' . ... William Muaacr, Bumuel Bisphaw, H.X. Caraou, Wm. Stevenson, Beuj. W. Tiugloy, : Edward THOJ Wm. Chubb, Secretary. « , Philadelphia, February O PANY 6f Philadelphia.—Office,No. ETdrtli Fifth 6t£eot, near Market Btrept4 ;: t- , : ? v «s Incorporated by, the *Leglfilaturtf ! of Pennsylvania. Churterinerpethal. ;CapUalandA&seta. 3166,000.: Make insurance against Loss or damage by Fire on Public or Private>Buudlqg&i Furniture* tJtdckH,'Goodß and Mer chandiso. on fftYorablo . , ...... oiivl r;• •• .• • DlllBCTOKS; ; Wm. McDaniel,. .. Edward P. Moyer : Israel Peterson, - • Frederick Laduor JphnJVßotaterling,. . v Adam J. Glasz, lienry Yroeinhor, HonryDolauy, Jacob,Schmidflin, . . John Elliott, ; ; . Christian P. Frick, > SamuelMillerj . -j GeorgeE.Fort,. William I). Gardner.. • - ' WILLIAM McDANIKLi President. ISRAEL PETERSON/YicoProsidonl. Philip E. Secretary and Treasurer. __ Fame insurance company, no. ''Bo9 CHESTNUT STREET. _ ’ INCORPORATED 1856. CHARTER PERPKTUAIi, ill , .".1+ -CAPITAXii S2OO.IJX). ' “ r .EIRE INSURANdf IxdDUSIVEI.y. Insures against Lose or Diunaga by Eire: either by Per . , petuul or Temporary Policies. DinSCTOUS. Charles Richardson, .. . Robortpesreo, ? Wm.H.Jtbawn*. , .John Kessler, Jr., > Francis NORuck,- •. - Edwanl.R.rOrno, Henry Lowia, ChnrloaStokea, Nathan Hilies, John Wi Kvemau, i GuorgoA.AVest, ~ . . CHARLES RICHARDSON, President, WM.H.RHAWNjVicp-Prealdout. . WILLIAMS I. BLANCHARD. Secretary. . Opl tt NEW PUBLICATIONS. Philosophy op marriage;—a new caurso of Lectures, #* doUYcred OtnbßNew York Museum of Anatomy; Smbracing the, subjects: How to Live and what to Live for; Yonth, Maturity and warded, post paid,un receipted2s cents, by addressing T>O DGERS‘ AND WOSTENHOLM’RI JjL POCKET KNIVES, PHARE and STAG HAH- ' DDESofboautlful finish: RODGERS’ and WADS, * BUTOHER’B.nnd the CIiLEBRAtED LECOUI.TH* ItAZOBiO SpisSORS: IN CASKS orthaAneatttuaMty * Rotors, KmVesf, Scissors and Table Cutlery, ground aial polished. -EAR INSTRUMENTS of thsmoKapprotoil > construction to assist tho hearing, at P. i Cfttlcr and Surgical Instrument Maker, USTeathatsiot;. 1 belew Chestnut. outt&l $1,000,000 -''CUTLERY.' ■ 33 jal-tu th a tf
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers