BIEVISIC. , 'Pat *nide 'Satanists is She 11Inittkd Etilitivo. The.BoOkietler's Gable f 0 t,A440 6 4 , 14* listed bY:tbe Arneriean NewifkOnipany, leori: tains an intere.sting sketch ortte ilt)t) and pro= great J of music publisting in tps cO,untly. :::.:We copy the. lnilleiPai Pas-' 34 4. ~ef: il li' . !: ',... ...Zl, '- . *lnto' progress tnusic enasquatie'l;during , the past twenty-live years isindy marvelous. In considering this progress it: should be borne hi znind that hitherto serious hindrances have al waysoldsted.-. -The -utilitarian ' spirit, . in its • rank and narrow growth in la new country, is net,faYOr4ible tscitte,-,tle:yelopnient, and cultiva lion Ofinnsicaltaate. Here in America the population fits always: been as a handful to the ,extent ~and' a riches : of;the ; country, ; and every impulbetah been inthedifection of success in .praetical business life. • For several generations there was little if, tiny musical progress: At the openingnf the centtuy, lioweverove note - the' beginning or that taste for the 'music of the piano which is the distinctive "charakieristic of the Americans a.nansleal people: "About the year 1800, there ' 'were. a . few pianomade every year in. the United:, States.- Psevi usly pianos ha n. dtee almoit exchtsively i , 1491, ed. john JacoltAstor sold here for a number of Years the pianos of his brother, 1-Jeffry, Aster, - who ~was . a, manufacturer in Enrope. Up to 1833 no pianos were made in tha United Stateslcomparable k with the• -best Pnade, in Paris,; and ,London, although ;Ame ricaots4l.r.-Partontas,ditcciveredrbeganearly 'to try her hand at improving, the t.instrinnent. -4 Mr: ;Jefferson, -in the year '1800; in One of 'his letters to ' his' dattgh :" ter Martha; speaks, of , a, ' very ingenious ttntsdest, and poor young'man'm . Pinta: , 'ileiplaia;'whizi has 'invented one of the prettiest • improvements in the forte-piano 1 have ever seen.' This instrument was an upright piano, • and 'Mr:Parton was able to find no mention ,of an upright of an earlier. date. As the ,Messrs. 13roadwood, of London, in the little book which lay upon their pianos in the Ex bibition of 1851, say that the first vertical or , cabinet:' pianos were constructed by William. Southwell, of their house, in 1804, it. is fair to conclude that they were the first makers in Europe, but that the nierit of the invention be longs to America. "The two Atnericans to whom music, iamost indebted in the United States, taking .Mr.,Par 'ton for atithority, are Jonas Chickering, piano 'inaker, born in New Hampshire, in nos, , and Lowell Mason, singing, teacher and composer ot;church tunes, born iu .Massachusetts, in 1792 While Lowell Mason was creating a taste for music; Jonas Chickering was . improv ing the instrumenelby vhich, that taste was gratified; and both being established in Boston, ;each of them was instrumental in advancing the fortunes of the other. Chickering began ' by making one or two pianos it month in 1823, and at the time of his death, in 1853, thirty ' years afterwards, the house of which. lie was the founder was manufacturing from fifteen hundred to two 'thonsand pianos a year. Ile was the first to.' introditce into the piano the full iron ,frame, and to. _make Ame rican ; pianos; equal to' the best im ported ones. In total number of instrtunents tnanufactured, this house exceeds any other, the number being over thirty-five thousand. There - are now many makers of pianos in the United'States, of ;which the annual production is'not' less than thirty thousand ,instruments: Steinway' &Sans now take tile lead in the .cumber annually Manufactured by any single house. It, 0 net just' to suppose that the pianos of the large manufacturers are superior to those of many houses not so extensive or well known. The organ has of late yea,rs become', a , very popular instrumentin America, of which there are fifty makers,;producing twelve thousand in struments per annum. There are also Maim facture's:of flutes, clarienets, flageolets, banjos, tambormes, drums, fifes, guitars, &c. The . guitars irilde bY Martin are considered equal to those made in any part of the world. "The earliest music_ publishers of whom we are able to find any trace, are George Willig and Blake, of Philadelphia ; Parker, of Boston; Measharn and Pond, of Albany ' and John and Adam Geib, James Hewitt and Riley & Co., of New York.' George Willig was the father of the head of the present - house of George Willig & Co,of Raltirnore, and at one time the largest music dealer in the,United States. Oliver Dit son, of Boston, connnericed his business career as a clerk in the store of Mr. Parker, becoming in time' partner, the style ,a the 'firm being Parker_&Ditson. _ The house of Oliver Ditson & Co. succeeded Parker & Ditson, and is thus one of the'oldest; as k is at Present the largest music publishing house in the country. Mr. Firth and Mr. Hall were clerks in the store of Riley,, Co. They both married daughters of their employer, Mr. Riley, and in .1810 went into business to_ether at No. 358 Pearl str e _ New. York; _the style of the firm being The first - viecerof - Musie - width they published was Burton's Rondo. Mr. S. = 8.-Pond of Meacham 4 Pond," afterwards he . came associated with tbem, - after which the , , Wise - Was known as 'Firth, Hall & Pond. Their establishineiit was at No. 1 Franldin - Squares-in - the - building which had: been - oceu pied by. General Washington during his Presi.- . deny. They had - also a branch store on Broadway. ' In the year 184'7 the firm of Firth; Hall & Pond was dissolved,' Messrs. Firth & Pond. , and their sons forming a copartnership Under the name of Firth, Pend. & CO., and re taining the old stand and niamifactory, and lylr.: his , son taking the Broadway :branch, which they have continued as the es- Jahlishment of William. Hall & Son up to the present , writing, Mr. Hall being probably the -.oldest., music• publisher living and engaged in the business. The house of William , A. Pond &CO, is substantially the same as that of Firth, Pond & Co:,.although Mr. Firth and: his son , axe dead. Ceorge, D. Russell &: f Bos ton, are the successors of George Co.,. ;teed and Russell & Taman, and next to Ditson & Co., are the largest house of New England. *, • - “Li the- west the house of Peters had *con trolled for over a third of a century the southern and western trade. The house of *W. O. Peters & Sons was established ,in Louis- Ville, in 1882, and branches subsequently were opened in Cincinnati, St. Louis and Baltimore. Cincinnati, from its central position and faCili tieSfor,publishing, became the centre of the business until 1860; When; by the Aestruetion by' fire Of Pike's Opera house, hi which , the Megan. Peters Occupied the central store, they entire stock, Sheet inuSie, books and plates, the : accumulations of over thirty :years, were de stroyed hit thirty minutes. The day after the fire the atilt purchased the stock 'of a rival :house:, Mr.:J. L. Peters, then in St. Louis, -purchased , 'the -copyright of- the de . oroyed plates, and .lunutediately, visited the ' east. • Through..' . ex ,eitiotitand.the-kfifiluess orilitiathe,tpidilisher - s; he secured the services Of alts.ost the whole ;Throe of Music engravers, and in, six months had the entire catalogue. again in the market. The came , year, S. L. Peters purchased the en tire business from the 'other metabera of the lnise.,;and removed the headquairters to New York, and has since Inaintained - the 'western houses as branches, Other, large western houses art Balmer 41,-, WOO,: )tit. Louis, a house, of ,twenty-five years; standing; arid in possession of an extensive and valuable cata . loom of:publications. John Church, Jr., of Cincinnati (Mr. Church was once-a, Clerk in the botise'ot Oliver Ditson & CO.); S,lBrainard & • iSionS;of Cleveland, and Root & CadY, 'Of cago a, bOuSd which, probably. does, more, busi ylOB #ai, the West than any otheri, except Peters. lireo as hate as thirty years ago the publics ,o4.l,oinusie did not :constitute a very exten sivis. The leading houses kept' also • piap.pglatd Other musical instruments, and every description of musical jrifichapdifie: the' oldest liouscs t lueh William ti: Pond 'YOk, tk01110 . 14, otisegtott*..4tcsiwoooA Wire factUtil;Of ; 'tfOri with Oliver idokiri ut • ':'1 3 0*,.; 'JOS , Co. also import directly froth' inanufacttirers . in Europe musical instrinnents 'and- merchan-. dise, as well as standard popular French, Ger.- ••musie, ,- ..:• - Oliver Dit.SOn& publish the prineipal portion of the music books. that are-published in this country. They 'are - also by . • far the largest advertisers, which in a .-- ;...gre4 - oopuro:.oe.builts: fore the extraordinary prosperity. of this • hense. "The catalogues of the largest musical pub-. slient , qtre 'very *oluMinous;- that - of •Ditson.k. - • CO:. - ; Jncludirg . .l . over thirty, thousand - pnblicsr trona;theseof Win. Hall & Son and;Was. A. i- Pond!:•&; nearly, equ'ar , Volunite. Probably' • the most popular music ever pub iished ...in America wereS.lle songs,. words and. music of Stephen • C.'Fester' ' published by Pond' 4' Co. Of his song 'Old Folks' at: Home,'' two hundred --copies were sold, and all almost equal, nnmher.of 'Nelly was a Lady,' 'Beautiful' Dreamer,' and 'Come where My Loire ,',Lies - 'Drearning.'". His post : hOMOus song!EISS.Me - Mother ere bids fair to: haye Of Richardson's • , Aletliod!..also - eploys a orde ttnnualsale,and- of, • Peters's , Electie'foe:are'assured the annual tSale: •eigliteentiniuSafid" . cOpies;,',Petors's•puttlica ',tions • are'inainly .COpyright. prodnetioris of 'na- tlyeiyriters and! :ti;niinesers.'..' Of . ;these he. has a highly: successful, specialtSr,,and; [ they are -ConspicuouS-by.,boaatiful lithographed - title pages: :• • • . • .:. , -There ;is.• an organization of the leading • music publishers,- - knowsn as the Board of Music Trade Of tie 'United States,' wblch' meets ()nee 'yeafandwhich:regtilates the`.prides, clianges and• , takes actiOn:iiitic4eference thOSe'larger intereStB in Whicliall the' publishers: ; Share. The hOuSes -represented in this Board, of Which Wm. A. Pond, of New York, -is PreSi-I . dent, , are G. . Andre ••& •Cb., of - Philadelphia; Balnier & Weber,of St. Louis; • S:•Brainard& . Sops; of . Cleveland; John Church, Jr.; of . Cin cinnati; Oliver Ditson & Co, and. Geo, D. Bus ' sell*Co. t of Boston; Fatilds, and Louis Tripp,.. - 'of.. Louisville; Win. A.. Pond cr.l. Co., • Wnr. Hall & Son,. Wm. E. Millet, J. L. Peters, C. W.- Harris, S.'-'l% Gordon, of New York; 'Lee & Walker, of Philadelphia; George Willig & - Co., W. C. • and -Henry McCaffrey, of Baltiniore; Root ‘5,-. 'Cady, of Chicago, and - A, & - S. Nordheimer, of Toronto: There are a num ber of publishers of music who are not repre ". sented .in this Board. The -publishers 'of cheap dime and half-dime music, as B. W. Hitch cock, of. New York, whose publications are now 'a feature of the music busineSs, R. De Witt and :others. _ . qt, Would be difficult to get, at the value of the nifisie pUblishing business of the United States: Mr. Pond estimates the capital. in- vested in the publication of sheet music and musical works at five: millions of dollars. There is comparatively little music imported. Probably two hundred thousand dollarswill cover the annual importation. Nearly every. piece of music pUblished abroad is: inunediately reprinted here, ,and the character of the music heard in the different households of the laud is creditable to the national taste." Great Guns Four Centuries Old. A 'writer in Cassell's Magazine says "Many, big gulls hate been made during the last few years, but Mine 'of them surpass in size thaSe which have guarded the • straits of the Dardanelles for the past, four ceitturies. •Of enorinonir weight and calibre, capable Of thibw ing stone cannon-balls of eleven and twelve hundred pounds,-these guns have remained for agestlismgardeand almost Unknown." Their existence, it is true; has been notified to us by travelers who, ever and anon, Voyaged from the Levant to the Black 'Sea, passing In close proximity to the frowning. muzzias ranged regular lines on either.shore of the Dardanelles; but the accounts of them appeared so fabulous and extravagant as scarcely to warrant belief. Indeed,:So unlike were these' engines of War to those • employed by Western nations,, - , and so much did they surpass sine .eur own castings that.itheir existence was generally believedin with about as much, credulity: as that of-the griffins mho watched- -.over-the--en-- chanted castles in the :-Arabian-nights. Aud :ivhen it is reniembered thatilhese weapons *ere cast within one hundred and fifty years Of the knowledge and application of guttPOW der to warlike purpoSes 'being first dill Used in Europe, there is certainly sufficient reason why grive doubts.should—halelieeti-ontertained_b the subject of their realitV,, more especially as, up to the present - thne,. no cannon; have lieen mannfactuied in this comitry capable Of throW ing projectiles of even half the' Weight Of that of the granite ball used"in cliargiiig largest of,these giant, guns. "In the year 1868 ; there were at the Castle of ASia ; on the Dardanelles, twenty-one guns of this description, eleven of them' being on the European slant and :the remainder on the Asiatic side., Of these,:mte has recently been presented .by the Sultan to her Majesty, and al though by no Means one of the largest of the series, it is still of the most gigantic propor tions. Bons. The weapon consists of two portions, almost equal in length, which - screw one into the other, and weigh together eighteen tons; its length is seventeen tea; 'and the shot cm ployed-has a diameter Of twenty inches, and: weighs six hundred and seventy Pounds. The exterior is ornamented with scone. handsome scrolls and bears inscriptions relative to the manidactine and-employment of the gun; and from these we learn that it was cast in the year 14414, that the charge of pOwder to be- em ployed was one him - tired and fifty pounds, and that the elevation otA, tiring was three degrees.. "This gland specimen of aniiient warlarehas ecently been tot winded to Woolwich, where it forms raft of the collection presorted in the Mitsemn of Art Met y, and it is to the researches of the mann', General t.etioy, that d• 4 are in debted for a tellable hist My of it and More important, Diu daiteles brethren, froni.which it has just been separated. Formerly the rutin ' her of cannon at the Castle of Asia. was much greater than at present:- M. Thevenot tells us that; when he passed up the Dardanelles in Itisfi, them were twenty guns on the European side alone, many of which, were SO large that a Mail Might. easily creep, into Hann, Itt the °ally part, of -the eighteentli• century • Bishop PotioChe narrowly exaMined the weapons, and. the information lie gives; is: very foteresting t - He testifies to the presence,of fortY4ilvirliieces of ordnance in twenti-two.,on the' hiediiortli side 'fir tty s(iitth; Al il;rced Upon seasltOte without any eatuages, Stone :cannon-balls were used !Or' Wading 'them, and they were always kept charged, so as to be :-ready to sink any ship which . attempt to pass before being properly seareheiL The , guns talwayelire ball when retarnitig,'sa 'lutes-made to the Castle, says the bishop; and as this mode of proceeding does much damage , to. the °pm - ate : coast, the lands across the water pay no rent'' • , • : .••• ' Ti u ' Freilell Senate has appointed De vienne, Delatigle; Bondet, Manias; Lagury niere, Bouchard, Lacaze, Bellice, , Cassabianca. and Suiii, as the Committee to examine the Senates Consultum; and the ' , Committee, has org,anized as a burea,m,hy... electing Roulier President, and Bouchard Secretabr.:"The Coin- Mittee has adopted3lie first .articleYof the Se natus Consultuin. -The ‘`diSPosithin of the Senate' is favorable to thp project. THE DAILY EVENING BULLETIN PHILADELPHIA, MONDAY, AUGUST 9, 1869. 11101 t The'fitst volume of verse that Alfred Tenny '-'6oo,wed as his oivikwelt-publiAheotin4ts: 3o :, _llkr.,andd it Poems \mektietzvyas Duffingham LlWe'worth 13*Arving has been lost lid Tie revision ! 4,SVlese pbems ; but or4thi;itt littleit,al4 this I:ipee' Olen of elegiacs : X t 1.2 "Loweflowing breeze:Olio ibrig the-broad' ....eovalley-dinuned in tiaming; Through the black-stermiled pines only the far river shines, Creeping through blossomy i.u.sheS and bowers of rose-blowing bushes; , . • Down by the poplar tall rivulets babble!and fall." This, again, is well pin, = • "The wise, Oathedraled caverns of thick-ribbed gold, . And branching silvers pf'therceptral globe, 'Would. marvel from 80 , bea}itifulasight .. How;scern late, ..could One marked:peculittrity in Tennyson in this early time wits the•nee.af • stfairg6 - co r,a pouiid fery.!Stititlingtct.:Ahn!,''orditial reader. Thus we 'get "globefilled," ''Cavernthroats," "thickstemmed" anct"dttieybloesorned," printed thus, without any connecting hyphen. Bngi lar to the eye is this apestrophe to the grass hopper, as '"Vnige of flie sumnierwind,. ' ,:Joy of the supanierplain „' '"Life of the stiminerhenii." , The...gem of thie•VOlurne, apart :froth matter afferward reps rotes, . a 'description of :Ike -- death of an animal; occurring in the:course of. a long poeni;Whieh I think has seldom been surpassed:: " . AThe lamb rejoiceth in the• Year, nd raceth freely with hiEi fere • And answers to his mother's calls • From the flowered :In a time Of Which he wots not run Short pains Through his warm heart;' and then, from whence He knows not', on,his light there falls A shadow; and his native slope, Where he was wont to leap" and climb, Floats'from his sick and filmed eyes, And something in the darkness draws His forehead earthwarcL and he dies." • There was, hOweyer, quite - enough in the volume to excite the laughter of the unsympa ..thetic ; and a review in Blackwood (vol. xxxi. .p", 721), by PrOfesser Wileon, was so savage in its tone, and so unfair,: that :it provoked a en tort. In those days, and in later years 3 Tenny son Was not disposed to let 'his critics get' off scot-free • and in this instance he wrote some lines in allusion to " Crusty Christopher," which he has since had the good sense to sup press: They were feeble, and unworthy of his pen. They appeared in his next volume, Poenth; iii 1833; published by MeSsrs. Moxon, who have brought out all his subsequent works.' ' When you order' Tennyson's Poems of your bookseller, yon get a book which is now in its sixteenth edition, but is substantially the same lig it was issued in 1842. It comprises selec tions from the volume of -- 1830 and 1833 (care fully retised), and a-Mass of-original matter, including the 'famous LocksleiyHall. The effect of this book was to give the poet a place in the forefront of the men of his day.. Yet it is singular that some of our greatest men failed at first 'to * recognize his surpassing genius. Lord Lytton was of the number.' The volume 'of 1833 had contained a poem, "0 darling Room," not very brilliant; yet it was reprinted. Over this his lordship made merry; and in the New ninon (1846) went (Mt of his way to hold - Tennyson {who had just received a-grant from the privy purse) up to. ridicule. He spoke of "The jingling medley of purloined conceits, Outbakyrng Wordsworth and outglittering Keates, (sk). - Where all the airs of patchwork pastoral chime To drowey earsin Tennysonian rhyme." And further "Let school-miss Alfred vent , her chaste de- On 'darling little rooms so warm and 'bright;' Chant 'l'm a-weary' in infectious strain, And catch her 'blue fly singing P the pane! " The incensed bard was not long iu retorting; atid'he has been thought to have had the best of it incertain verses in Punch Of that year, unmistakablYfrom his, pen. It is curious to turn to thein. There are eleven stanzas, but some among them are indifferent. The com position only amuses as a curiosity of litera ture. In two ways,,Lord Lytton has made the amende.' The offensive pas Sage was omitted from' the new ; '' editions of his work---,hi the fourth, now before ine, it is wanting;• and sub seqiiently;in a eneech at Hertford,. he Speke of the Laureate's genius becoming terms. :Ten , nysen; on his ,part, :lase abandoned the' - "little :moth," together with the "Skipping-Repe," and other puerilities.:- • ' I In 185.1.Tennyson:was _made Laureate; end to, an edition: of his Poems (the voluthel of 1842)Lpublished that year, he prefixed a dedication to the Queen—not a. very Urilhant performanceF . still-a - superior --- sort tof - latireate= - work. Curious to note that in subsequent re prints- these: lines iii allusion' to 'ltheorystal Palace are omitted:: ‘!*be brought a vast_design to pass When 'Europe and the scattered:ends' Of our fierce - world did meetas . friends -: And brethren in her hallS of glass.", • _- In 1855, came "Maud," to a considerable ex-. tent :a mosaic of verses Written years' before; Much of it is very beautiful.: • The ;new edi tion Of 1859 should. be , examined:' there is much new Matter in it. The "Idylls of' the King," (1859),j by many regarded as the poet's finest work,has gone through several editions. N one of ese are specially interesting. -in-a bibliographical pOini, of view; but the. dedica-: lion to Prince Albert was not added until after, the prince's death. "Enoch Arden" , (1804) Completes the series; if we except "a Selection" already alluded to, issued in 1805, interesting and, valuable in,tuany respects, since it. con tains new poems and new readings:--Bel 2 graria. *A valuable relic has just conic to light. It is a sonnet which appeated in The lodeshiro, Literary ft - iv 1832: "Tliellntretbree things that B)l.i* heart with sighs And steep my soul' iii hughter(When I view Fair maiden forms mOviag like melodies)— Dimples, rose-lips;and eyes of any line: • There arc three thing:4 beneath- the .blesSed• skies • For which i live—blaac eyes and brown and blue: I' bold thetif all Most de:lt but, 0 black eves! •1 live and die'and Only (lie' for you!. Of late such' eyes lookeilit me—While I unused ' At'smuset underneath ;I, shadoWy plane • In old Rayons; nigh the southern sea.• ' 1 . From a half-open lattice looked at•tne• • • ' .1 saw no more, only.these eyes, confused' And daz'ilect. to the heart with glorions , • . . . If is flit; charming sonnet should. not hue appealed in the' volume of 183:1,1lienpyeinitingfrthepresS. ": • fFirst part, called - EMI/ arid Nuance, or, the Trite 'and the Fulse, win' privately printed"in 1881. "The editionh; vety scarce. ' • - `‘‘il f rry Cricket Ei"'er Wicked." ' The crickets or graSSldppers, whose presenee' has been felt with such,4eVerity this tory fOrne 'past 'three or four years, are, thiS' season; isitiug other 'ieetions of the • Great ,West with their dread )resence. A late num ber cf the, Terriiorial IntePpriBe, published at Virginia, lieVada, says that a gentleman who: arrnled in that city a I'o days' since, from the niineS on the Owyhee Ater, eighty miles north of Elko, says that 'wide in that region, en ciwped the vicfnitl.of Mountain City, lie had an opportunity 9' seeing two or three armies: of: those grassioppers or crickets, of which we have beard so much through the litali;papers.: , le say that they mine In three or fout'diviSions- 7 ,eacha mile in length by half a xiiie• in width. The; sapped 'at nothlog— , , ,_ ,evidently;belonginglo - teclass of t. : talsv ;.hed. Fire'. and water.'were all,, the kgato :go., .them. '.,,On. t reachin„.,o . Owykte,e, they.swlo - e Pinyon' 10 1 legfiiiat, 11450NAtt,eh will*ist ':§•tret4 d , e se<the l , stOhniftits fa? a.f t4t9y 4.eac , en theY , ,Amped in - strn4legut 4 1 ler ' osite slktoret Y 43lllllom of rthaie tram in ts thks drOsselObe, yet--- In. .a. , ffiatilointilentio4f isAnt fbritiktiiiiirty' w reei4dit' =--and went hopping on to the southward. -. Each army by some instinct traveled in a southernAirection.• The whole face of the country'li'VoVered with" ginss";the'cilS'ijar faalf : of ; these inseets—but they held it cheap, 'there being - Snell" an abundance of it, and .went after :something stronger. Passing' by all vegetable food, they. attacked, „saddles, bridles, 'and such artrcles; Mna6A to the ntunber of millions, : they would climb upon any , such, artiele"left within' their - reacli;'and 'hi" a very; short space or mine it lvoitid be • almost totally devoured.. Although our friends were; able lt• a feiy:lnnus to catch „es many as :300 : trout; after the crichet army passed over the river not'. afiSh would bite for four days. , They were all completely gorged: `with crickets:—DesereL News. . ' 't - --' ' ' . , • '*, I 4 NTSON [From the Jewish Times, Progressive Jewish Organa • The Jews as Patrons of time Arts; Sciences. Medicine and GeneraliLiteratore- , Wag.: ner and Virchow Di6sected. • Richard Wagner; the greatest musical genius hi his eyes; but undoubtedly of superior talents, the,,pet Of kings ' the yecipient 'of, pipit- . lar,ineense r in _politic§ _a ~liberal,_butotherwis • mind of narrow conception and lurrhoring the prejudice against Jews which, though generally concealed, is still extant, became a prey to the ,feelings of ignoble, professional jealousy. Claiming to, be the creator of a music of the future; he bad not the greatness of mind to await the decision of the future, but grumbled at his contemporaries for not passing the pre,s ent, with a tremendous leap and at once appre ciate his music. •He could, not brook the en thusiasm of the public . for compositions 'of men, who, in his eyes, could never reach the artistic sublimity of a Wagner, it soured his temper to hear people' extol the compositions of a. Meyerbeer, Mendelssohn, Halevy, Rossini, Auber, Gounod, &c., and as, in his eyes, the cause could not be found in the excellence of these works or in the inferibrity of his own • compositions, it, had to be looked for some where else. It is a remarkable fait that opera houses and concert halls are' patronized by the JeWS More than any other class of people ; and as this is the experience Of,every artist and artistic qt.- trepreneur, so Mr. Wagner; iri . his grief and chagrin,,ascribed the splendid reception which the Huguenots, Robeil le Diable, La Juice, &c., met with, not to the excellence of the music, but to, the predilection of the Jews for the works of Jewish compesers,'and charges them with corrupting the taste of the public in general. In his insane rage lie committed an act of self-degradation. Ile sends ~.forth a pamphlet full of ,gall and Billings:against the poor Jews,, who were always counted as his best patrons, and'. against the works of masters whose creations are cherished by the lOers of music throughout the world. And what was 'the consequende?: There arose a cry of general indignation, such universal contempt of the reviler of' the Jews,7 of the new inStigatbr of religious hate, the mediaeval monk 'in the mask of a modern mu-, sician. The voice of outraged justice made it self heard so unmistakably everywhere through the public press and in' pamphlets, that Mr., Wagner was at once brought to his senses.: lie found out that the friends of the Jews were legion; that the admirers of Jewish composers were numberless; that his operas, where they were in preparation, had to be withdrawn,and that it was no Icinger advantageous to parade.' himself as an enemy of the 'Jews—as a hater of the Jewish race. Arid so one John Lange, who; in the ger - Vice of Wagner,ounded the first key-note against the imagined enemies of Wagner ,:sounds the retreat and endeavors, to .bring forth some lame excuses, andpleads for forgiveness, appeals to the Jews that they had' some years ago forgiven some literary writers : who were indiscreet enough to permit 'their' tongues to litter the feelings of their heart. The Jews; however, seem net 'to care for the one or the other, they appreciate the works of genius now as ever, and the. Duke , of 'Baden lately decorated with a princely order a Jewish musical director for his excellent production of Wagner's "Meistersinger." Wherever a talent is brolight to the surface, wherever _genius_ asks_for_ .sympathy, Wherever—genuine wOrth waits to be : recognised, the Jelvs_wilL Surely be found on the, right side—the patrons of art, the aihnirers of talent, and the friends of genius"! • They will not be disturbed in the path they have marked out 'for them Selves by sporadic outhursts_ofticism,_nor_b_y_the_sime of pOlite aristocrats. '_Ther_willhaVe their own-- emissaries in the spheres Of - idience, arts and literature, and they will enforce the respect_' which in tlie'end is ever paid IC the Mad liene: 7 factors of mankind.- Virehow, the eminent professor of medi-_ vine, 'the 'great physicist ) , the socialist and states iiititt,likewise saw fit to defame the ethical charatter of the ; JeWish religion. Thorough rationalist as he, is, he denied the Jews that love, charity, and benevolence which in their practical application. are the foundatiOns bf public hospitals and kindred institutions. While:he:did not perhaps make these state ments with a view to , depreciate the Jewish character, he yet indulged id these generalities which recognize in the Modern institutions for therelief of suffering ImManity the sole influ ence of Christianity. He joined the crowd of ignorants who believe that with the Christian religion the 'principles ,of loVe, benevolence, Charity and unsellislinesS were firSt proclaimed to a benighted humanity, and 'gave an affirma tive coloring to the prevailing ptejudiee, as if a Chiistian alone could be a true philanthropist. Immediately after the publication of his lecture a Jewish theologian, Dr. Cassel ; issued a pain phleowherein he demonstrated the inconSist encY of Professor Virchoiv as rationalist and the advocate of such narrow views as evinced in his lecture: He moreover proved,to hint his ignorance Of hiStory and. Ake deVelopment of civilization. It is with. Professor Virchow the same as with a great number of men who, with all the 'liberality of sentiments they parade, have not yet entaticipated'thenaseives altogether Boni the deep-seated, preebnceived notions of their youth. It seems; however, that ; the._ great scientist had to strike the fhig before the well-directed logic of the comParatively . unknown Jewish scholar, and he has now come out with a de fence,wherein he declares that, "All the respect which l have for the Jewish, Romani Catholic, Protestant and other public hoSpitals founded by religions sects, and for their , , tbtutders,,cat, not:Pretefit me to , esteearbigher : the general hospitals and these who. folio and; maintain them. What. I aim at .is' the yccognitien pf publiciinstitutions fOr the mireingof the sick as a purely Inunttnitarian , It is evident our co-religioniStS whO , gain distinction in the realni. , of science are the only representatives ; of the Jews; that only thrOugh their labors we shall be able to: combat suc cessfully the .gigantic :mountain of : , prejudiec;, that they are our, true'-miSsiOnaries, , and:: it is: but natural if- We feel a peculiar 'aide' in i,the, distinction which any . of thern'ehieve. :Etireipe' now among its proliiiiient journalistSi, Men of seience, artists, ; staies ui en : and legisla- s tors, a large number of .JeWs,. who shed glOry and honor' not only on the "ancient rake' frem Which they Sprittizon the coiiti' . 7lot64 claims theM as citizens,i bid 'on: hinnandy'atjarge., In, Our Cemitry inue4 kftto:': he done yet; our Countrymen seek too, much to dis-t tinction in the ranks of commerce. It :is time their , h I -,' life We 1 Paren I higher . )4 of that ':parents tralh their i. 1 7 ., „ pire' , Of the ~.i tires the p . rae .„,,, ti e - , 1 I leave= e -hem I..,:irifeA.,, cal, prot.t.- ,_ „,„,,ppi iiiu,;, „?...,.„6,1„,,,,,..,, Ittlrit, to see tue , t w e e /L athieve,,t, 1 , ,7' .1 more th 4 1, ,.!. , 1 ... •',. phsF,tt~X , !,,'olt,t veieu _,o eal , tretta glory; 6 tenors the y • x I t tlied 4, us t p • theraw!,;- fi , , laurels th . . I . 4, fists, , d - tri ~heih*,,k, 4 1 :741 then• c° ' - ‘, le, i'-ileollu- ,, ~ Itn 4km large.' ~,,,,- nst , look t,°& ' tliVii"°/: f 'eyes en d in til eyes .. I I 1 g i t a.,.. i -^,' • *34460 - 130tiro [FroniVirtlloycland Ek:SeeretarY'StatitenTiadan'interVieW With. Secretary Fist) yesterdayensation, Tact/ m i n. of Associated Press.. : 1 was present, at, that inteMew. : The sub ject Of it was Warts: -EkiSecretary Stanton said`that when he, was , boy he bad 'sixteen on his left hand, ,otte pr IWO to hi'right thumb, .tiidtolie on liese'ihii~v. Ile said he'-used Old;hellOW stumps with rain Water stanaipg in them - to Soak Ins Warta, in• SeeretarY Fish said lie bad Millions'oU : WartS when he ylas'aoy, and , sonietiiues : he split a heanand tied It:over ',Warti , and.:then !took: -that bean , andhuHed it.lin: the ' tt Midnight in theilark Of the,MoOn. • Ex-Seeretary Stanton said; he, had tried 'that' but it never worked.,: • l ecketal,-Y'ViSh Sild 'he Ciihkt net:Mineinher that it Wokke&the only remembered trying it a good nhiny tines, and intheinost utiguestion ing good faith::!: ; Ea-Secretary StatitOn•said his usual plait runs .0-ftura-needlelheptiglirthevit4rhutd=tl4pn-hOld the end' of -the:- needle in the,'Candle till 'it warmed that wart.'te that degree that it Would never take.au interett..in:the world's follies, and vanities any more: tbreveN , , • Secretary Fish - Said he thought likely he was the wartiest boy that ever - • At this inopporttine moment tOetretary Stanton's carriage was annotinced;and he arose and. took; his leave: The nektASsocitited Press despatch that distresSed the:people through the columns of every single,Tiewspitperlin America. 'read as follows : , , “The'snbjeet of the interview between ex- Secretary Stanton and Secretary Fish`has hot transpired. There are variou.s`'llying runners. It is.,generally believed that it referred to the Alabama question, andwas very important.” And yet . they were only. ,talking , about Warts. ' ' Hereafter When 1 see vague,: dreadful 'Asso ciated Press despatches stating that Jones called on the Secretary pf the "Interiorlast night, or Smith had an interview with the Attorney-Generat, "or BrOwn.: Was . closeted' with the President until a late hour yesterday evening ; I shall not be so terrified as I used pa be. I shall 'feePecrtairt: that they were only talking about WartS, or something like that. They can never,fireiny interest again with one of those despatches, unless' they state 'dud the interview was abo ut. 31AnksTw.v:S. EXCURSIONS. FOR CAPE MAY, On Tuesdays, ThUrsdayi and Saturdays. On and after SA,TURDAY, June 25th, the new and splendid 'Steamer LADY OF THE LAKE, Captain W. Thompson., will commence running regularly to Cape May,..leaving Arch Stteet Wharf on TUESDAY, THURSDAY and SATURDAY MORNINGS at 9 o'clock, and returning, leave the landing at 'Cape May 011 MONDAYS, WEDNESDAYS and -FRIDAYS at 8 o'clock. FARE, INCLUDING CARRIAGE HIRE, e 2 25, CHILDREN, "" 125. SERVANTS, • " " " M. SEASON TICKETS, elo. CARRIAGE BIER EXTRA. ' THE LADY OF THE LAKE Is a fine sea boat, has handsome state-room accommodations, and is fitted up with everything necessary for the safety and comfort of passenger*. • . Tickets sold. and Baggage checked at' the Transfer Office 828 Chestnut street. under the Continental Hotel. Freight received until al o'clock. For further particulars, inquire at the Office, No. Si North DELAWARE Avenue. G. H. HURbELL, CALVIN TAGGART. OFFICE OF PHILADELPHIA AND READING RAILROAD COMPANY, BROAD STREET. PILILADELPRIA, August ath.1869. READING RAILROAD PARK ACCOMMODATION TRAIN, between Philadelphia and Belmont. cowl:lone. ing August oth, 1869—Starting from Station Seventeenth. street and Pennsylvania avenue, and stelipingat Coates street (Park Entrance), Brown street (Park Entrance), Thompson street, Mina lane, (Entrance to Engel Sk Wolf's Farm,/ and east end Columbia Bridge (Entntrico to Washington Retreat); daily, Sundays excepted. Trains start from Seven- Trains start from Bel teenth and Penna. ay.: mont: At 7.30 A. M. At 6.30 A.M. • 0.10 A.. M. " 8.00 A.M. 11.00 A. 31. " 10.00 A. M. 130 P. M. " 12.20 Noon. " 3.00 P. N. •. 230 P, M. " CM P. . • , .'" -COOT. M. • " 0.30 P. M. • . " 5.35 P. Ill" 7.40 r. , 7.10 Arrangements have beet:made with Green and Coates, Seventeenth and Nineteenth Streets, and Union Passen ger Railways to sell Exchange Tickets in connection with above trains, good either way, for. . ... cts. Single fares on. Park Acconunodation Train 10 cts. Tickets In packages i l for 60 cts.;kNfor el 00. • Por sale at Offices; Eaventeentn .atreet ) Coates, street, and Behnont. J. LOWRIE'RELL ‘ General Agent: _C_OJU aUUI - ROBERT - TENTH, (lawirith - KB.TonOrWon, enrol- St. Wharf.) , DAVID GALBRAITH. TENER - GrA - LERAITIC . lIONEYBROOK. LV,HI9I-1, _ AND WYOMING. COAL , . No 95 North Front Streot. Wir - Trial Orders, personally or by mail Invited. jr2l-110 is. mason B n'tta. ' xott tt P. SIIRAVV., UNDERSIGNED INVITE ATTEIL. tion to their stock of . • Spring Mountain, Lehigh and Locust Mountain Coal, which, with the preparation given by us, we think can not ho excelled by any other Coal. Office, Franklin Institute Building,No.ls S. Seventh street. . BINMS k fiffMAF_ ialo-tf Arch street wharf. Schuylkill. GOVIPft. WHEWFS-A-LE-.- G 0 VERNMENT -WAGONS AT PU 41q_ SALE. • • WASHINGTON, D. C.; August 2, 18G9. Will be sold at public auction, in this city,at Jraliciary Square Depot, .13 street, on WED NESDA Y,the :31st day ,of,AuoSt,a,t 10 o'clock, El GII TEEN WAGONS, new atulin'superior order, and complete in every particular. Terms cash, in Government finicis. Wagons to be removed in forty-eigtt howl). • - CHAS.. SUTHERLAND, Assistant. Medical Purveyor, Brevet Colonel U. S. A. • • , 'au:3-614 • TYPE FOUNICEi'. priILADELI'HIA. TYPE FOUNDRY AND PRINTERS' FURNISHING WAHEIQUSE, Established l ill The enbecrlber, haVing greatly 'fitcreneed facilities' for manufacturing, calls particular, attention; to hie New Series of:W*111131C Faces, of and Newspaper-Typee, 'Lich will compare favorably with those of any other Founder. Nis practical experience in all branches ap pertaining to the Manufacture of Type. and the fact of constant Personal Sopervlsion of each department of his thobest.guaranteeoffered to the-Prlotorof tiniehed and - durable article. Everything,. necessary 'complete . tabltelnnent furniehed at tini.Phortest notice. • • HOE - 'TA.7IiOII.i , •• , uOR4STLOAMIRBELL 7GENER• , POTTER: ANDYAILL '.J,IIIIIBI3IIIANUFACTURE.ReTa" Sole Agents for tide City of 11. D. WADE & • CO.'S UNRIVALED ,-INKS, 04 - G4 t e g gl i i rr t i t a i l c . le 18 a Baring °F money ,k " • " ''L,VELO - 117gi N. W. corner of IrtIRD and . CIIESTNUT Street_ia my.9l-m wf f • , Philadelphia, GAS FIXTURES. A.E3 PIXTURES.-MlSitir,Y, .IVIRELE L ss & TBAOKARA:, No. 718 Chestnut street, manilfac furors of GRlVRlxtriree,'L - ampe, &o.; &c., would call the attention of tho ptiblto to their large and 'elegant assort ment of Gas Chandeliers Pendants, Brackets, &c. Th e y also introduce gas pipes into dwellings and nubile build ings, and attend to extending, altering and repairing gad nines. All work warranted. • - AgTON • PRESERVED GINGER.- Preeerved Ginger, in 'wrap or the. celebrated Ow' 'loons brand; also. Dry , Preeerved Ginger. in boxt3ll, ported and - for Sale by JOB. B. BUBBYER & f10..100 Houtb Delaware avenue. • ' W:lcM IP 4 .' i t,Rll4Oll A ' WINE CO.'S • , onT N.Y. ' ) 49 40). F, WINES SALE J CLARKSON GRIFFITH, goitttitiyrLin 3terchamt, Nr,"Vvorzt •Street,' 801 n Agent far Penult., New Joraey and Delaware SUMMER -RESORTS; SURF HOUSE, ATLANTIC CITY N, J ., WALL TIE OPEN UNT.II4 OEPTEarskaL Ifo}Boom Torino. . . . • THOMAS FARLEL . Priftrietor. Carl Sentz'., Parlor tcheora has been-enecrgtd for the itaeott. i.. • COLUMBIA HOUSE, ' CAPE MAY; With accommodations for 71:0 guests, Is now open. The Germania, Serenade Band, under the direction o tProf. Geo, Bastert, has been securisl,for thesesson. BOLTON, Proprietor. CAPE ISLAND N. J . k — dretlesir - ItESTADRA24T,Th — Ie opened by ADOLPH PROSKAITE'R, of 222 W. THIRD Street ...Philadelphia, OA the 7th of .1 ttne, under the nano and title of MATSON DOREE, at the corner of WASH INGTOPI and JACKSON Sta., known as Hart 4 Cottage. MIT Fernlike will be supplied at the Cottage. Lodging Rooms by Day or Week to Rent. . _ ORETTO SP;11 , 11i GS, CAMBRIA COUNTY, PA.. Will be opened to Guests' my let. "Excursion Tickets, " good for the season, over the Pennsylvania Central Railroad can be procared from I Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, and larrisburg, to Kayier ' station. zroiles from the Springs, where coaches will be in readiness to convey guests to the Springs. ' The proprietor takes pleasure in notifyinglia pnblis that the hotel is in proper order, and all amaSeutents usually found at watering places can be found at the above resort. Terms, #62 50 per day. or s.:q per month.. FRANCIS A. GIBBONS, Proprietor. SIMON NEWTON, Superintendent, Of the Atli:wile hotel, Newport. Qii.ORTLIDGE 1 ALL, PaitTFlitST: .CLASS , BOAUDERS, Concord Hill: Delnuniro and Thdritnoro Ccdral ,PA.,Thitudoodu Location elevated end beautiful': noted for its coolnels; gumbrotims; from 4 to 6 weoks, Inquire of 31r. cm A zu, Es DESIVER,I3::2 Chestnut titter. ddrese au6.40 JOSEPH SHOHTL I E, • • Proprietor. 'TIGHT HOUSE COTTAGE, ATLANTIC JLI• City. JONAH NVOOTTON, Proprietor, :The most desirable location on the Island, being the nearest point to the surf. Guests for thlouse wilt !MTV the care et the United States Hotel. bor. • . • • Jriv-/J4 ...... LEA r EATIIINGe-NATIONAL HALL, PJ Cape May City, N. J. This large and conunodious hotel, known tot the Motional Mall, is Door roceiving visitors. AAHO3I GARHETSON, je24-2rn§ 'Proprietor. _ . BROAD TOP MOUNTAIN HOUSE,' Broad Top, Huntingdon county, Pa-, now open. jylo Lui• NV. T. PEARSON, Proprietor. _ TIELAWARE HOUSE, CAPEISLAND, 4, Is now open for the reception of visitors. jel7-24 • JAMES iSIECHAY. Proprietor. Em:mEmmi 3E4 - tablished 1.705. A. S. ROBINSON FRENCN•PLATE LOOKING GLASSES, Beautiful Chroxrios, ' ENGRAVINGS AND PAINTLIGS, Manufacturer of all klnda'of Looking-Gbm,Portmlit&FietureFrames. 910 CHESTI'4UT STREET, /Mk Door above tho Continental, PHILADELPHIA. GENTS' FURNISDING GOODS. FINE DRESS SHIRTS GENTS' NOVELTIES. J. W. SCOTT & CO No. 814 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia, Four doors below Continental hotel. mta-f Ka w tf PATENT SHOULDER SEAM SHIRT MANUFACTORY. O_ r_ for these eelebrsted , Sh iris supplied promptly on • rd brief notice;7. Gentlemen's Furnishing Goods, dt late styles in full variety WINCUESTEIt & CO. - - '706 HESTNU T. 101-m w rtf ~[~CwrTtri QcC: -__. 1869. FURNITURE. „ 1316 CUESTNET STREET. Having just completed the finest lot of Furniture ever produced in HIM city, I will receive orders for the same, during the month of August, AT PRICES THAT WILL ovrtn INDUCEMENTS TO PURCHASERS. r The designs are new end elegant; The workmanship and materials are of the highest order. I Invitt: the gttention of those who intend furnishing to 'call and examine the stock of Furniture, and convince themselves of the above facts. • JOHN 31. GARDNER, 1316 Riestuut St. LIQTYRS, •szt— NEW SPICED • SALMON, FIRST OF THE SEASON,. ALBERT C. ROBERTS, Pr.ALEIIIN FINE GRO9BRIES, corner .Eleventh and. Streets. BAUB-ES . - 7- ./ - LB - E G — C2CNS, 1 at Fifty 'Dente pet. Oan - --tith chew eat and best goods in the city ;at'CIOTTST V'S- No. tiouth Seaotal ateOet. pRENtac PEAS, MUSHROOMS } T.lll7F— .E....4letriTontittoeh,GreenCorniAgparanus, dtc.,ln store and for sale at . COUSTY'S Esst; raid filTeotrY,No. 118. South Second street. Nrfp TEs t ,,FIGS, I'AUNES, ineandibnonda"—alt, o n f.nely r cr e op—in'etoro and for m& CIOUSTYI 3 ', ?t 4 it ,9,0:? No: 118 o ] nth Second - atreat.: - §Wl' gET O.IIL-1110 'DOZEN r o .EXTRA_ ottl iditY 011,oipresely imitiorted Par 0 011871"8- siEnd aroceo,Ltio.llßBouth idecond eitre'et.. L:TQI•TED ORE • RIES, pLugs, BLACK , berri6iii , Pettolie's,•Proin'ellas; Pearh; Lima 'Beane, er Sweet Oorrl.et Cpusurs East End,Groeery, No 118 Sonth Second street , NETWIITBCFC - X.TICiNS., PH 114 0 13, 0,,P : • OF': M new course, of Lbctiires,ns 'delivered at the New York , 11fuseuM of Anatomy: , embracing the subjects; How to Live and what to Liv review outh, Maturity' and , Old Age; Manhood generallyd; the Cause of In digestion, Flatulence and Nervous •Liseabes accounted for; Marriage--Fhilosophically Considered AM. Pocket volumes containing these Lectures will be • for warded, post paid,ou receipt of 25 , cents, by addressing. W. A. Leary, Jr Southeast corner of Fifth and Walnut. streets; Philadelphia..• • fad IY§ 3 y3l tgeN) 1869. VPIAAJARAPiIte- 151M144.14V. 'Cf. 111 E llollBer,Dt Canadian Loan bill. SENTEIi i S majerityht Tennessee is now esti mated at over. 00,000. • IT is reported that another Cuban. expedition is getting ready at New York. sNow fell in the ceuntry near Montreal, Canada, on 'Friday. THE great floating dock, , fioni -England, has arrived at Bermuda, after a quick passage. PRESIDENT GRANT 'bad a brilliant reception atNewburg on:Saturday He attend the Cabinet meeting 10Vashhigton to-morrow. • AnCIURSUOR 351(.:0Loslinly 'of 'Nevi :York for - Europe`-'on Sixturd4c . • The ..Arch; • bishop goes . to attend tie "Ecumenci al Connell. Dtritia'(i''adrun en row at lndianapolis, on Saturday night, Julius Black was shot to'death by Eugene Salleser.' A SAN pllANelso despatclisays the Demo ' ciatawhb are diSiatiSfied Ns:Rh - their patV'pbuni.: nations in that city, propose . to ruminate Inde , .. Pendent!eandidates., , IT is believed that the question of further instructions to General Sickles, our Minister to Spain, in mference to Cuba, will be discussed at. the Cabinet meeting to-morrow. THE revenue from tobacco, in three . dis tracts "- of Virginia; from ~ p;bruary' to Angust , Ist r is-over4l,ooo,ooojn-cxeess ef=the-receip for the corresponding time last year. A compi,F.TE:government for.the. Hudson's Bay Territory Will :soon be formed. 'McDou gall will probably be Lieutenant-Governor, and Bosse Ministerp f Finance., • Tin:Et:men,' mined Ilaigrove, Bland and' Lester, were arrested at Savannah on Saturday, charged with robbing the Southern Express Company:of .1,5,004. J. I). liAtutn.,• colored, later, candidate ilk' Liettte;iant-Goverpor,of suit at • BichniOnd - against • the'` Baltimore steamer Kennebeclor being ejected front the cabin .of : that , boat::; A Plll' . 11(i• F11;&flitown; entrtelii,' On Saturday, destroyed a 'number of buildings t and caused a loss of $125,000. Afire 'at Columbus vine, Long Island, on Friday night, destroyed $lOO, 000 reports worth of proPertv. . . rre . LA . Fi:Ar. ts that the leaders of the Caidist movement have just held a conference in the south. of France, at which they, re solved to r enter Spain and make an appeal to the people. . THE British government has refused:to grant an exequatur to Baggetty, appointed: consul of the 'United States at Glasgow. 'The refusal is based on the gronnd that he • was ' connected with the Fenian movement. Tim will of the :late Rufus' Dird; of New Yerk,.bequeaths t.b& - i bulk of hiS : estate to two of his brothers. 'llls other relations re ceive moderate amounts, and .$ . 20,00 . 01s giron to charitable societies. The estate' IS about 51,000,000:' A i.AIIGE land slide oceuired a feW days since from abill at the Confluence of two creeks, about fire miles fruit . ); Hudson,N. Y. The slide carried SeveraFacreS to a istance of over six hundred feet, and the subsidence was over eighty feet. Ax i English siptidion has Sailed frinn tbelßaY of Naples for Malta, where it will soon be joined by the Atlantic squadron. < This assem bling of British forces it intended .:to .be pres ent iu case of hostilities between Turkey and Egypt: ", ' • Tfikdifficulty tivhlch hag ti; between the Sublime Porte and the Viceroy of Egypt is in a fair way<of being satiSfactorilyand-peadefully: settled. Foreign PoWerS have advised_lsmail Paella to pursue ''"a moderate course, and to disavow'all intention of producing a rupture with the Sultan. 0 • , • ' • ' A MADnin despatch says: "Several priests and other parties have tieen arrestedat Astorga. Nome were armed, and had Carlist proclama tions in their possession. Skirmishes are re ported between the troops and Carlists in Cata lonia. Nine of the insurgents were jrilted, and many wounded and captured. Savarieges, the Carlist chieftain, has fled to Portugal.' • • FRACTIONAL currency printed for the Week ending August 7, $113,600; do. shipped • assist ant treasurer at • New Orleans, $10,000; do. shipped United States depository at; Chicago, $25,000;,d0. sbinied'national banks, $178,824. Securities held - for circulation, V 45,054,000; sr-, rarities held for public deposits, $20,909,500. Mutilated bills destrnyed, $141,200. Total out standing, $290,740,751. - • • • - . • . THE Dublin Freenuulf-refening to the state ment made by the .11onie Secretary in the House of Commons, :concendi_ the , : treatment; 111 Fenian prisoners, says It reason to -•,-lieve he has beerrisledh - fby - officials into justifying the' reatment of the prisoner -Rosso. New facts are known, - and will be the subject of further - Investigation, -"which-will show that the severities practiced upon him have been concealei). GEN'ERAD ROSECRANS - has - declined the ;.nomination for. Governer of. Ohio. Ile tele graphed to Ilon. A. 0. Thurman, of the Demo cratic Committee, as follows: "After the war I resigned a very desirable position in the army, and left my State to secure at least, the possibility of fulfilling duties deemed sacred to my creditors and family. Those duties forbid me the honor of leading the Democracy of Ohio in the pending canvass for. Governor." COMMISSIONER PARKER has received a: tele gram from Brevet Captain J. S. S. Hasler, at St. Paul, Minn., stating that, the Pillager In dians, a branch of the Chippewas, had burned the mill at Leech's Lake, and' that he had called upon General Hancock for troops, but that General H. was unable fo furnish them. The despatch is'not'fully understood at the In dian office, - as -Leech's Lake - is within the Chippewa reservation. • • - GEN. Jotix A. RAWLINS, president of the Society of the Army of the Tennessee, has notified that organization that the following named persons have been selected as the Execu tive Committee of Arrangements for.the fourth - annual meeting of the' society; to be held at , Louisville, Kentucky, on November 17, next, namely;—Col. S. R. H. Bristow, A. H. Mark land, Geri. ( E, l II Murin.y; CaPt, Harry Giles, Col. Thos. E. Brandette, Gen. W. T. Ward, Louisville ; Gen. W. G. Gertitom, Col. J. T. McQuiddy, and Surgeon D. W. Vogles, of Now Albany ; Gen. Ben Spooner, of Lawrenceburg, and. N. C. Ginnis, of Indianapolis. ADVICES from Cuba to July , 30, ,received here to-day, state that the Spanish troops in the . . insurrectionary districts have - iheen-reinforced by all the dispo eable threes on the - Island, pre . j)aratory, to ; active,. operations: •In tbe,placa, • Villas 'district' there have been several contests, in which small parties were engag,ed, but, in every instance:the Spaniards were defeated with loss. It is reported that in three engage menta.the wounded.. And , prisoners mounted Ao pearly 400. These re inforcements are' ',iirintiPally to the districts corn - mended by.Gen,,,Jordan,and the campaign promised to be Very x active, 'knit on ac count - ot% 'the setting in of the rainy both parties are compelled ..to suspend - opera- - tions. rue town of Holguin' is 'reported to be in possession of the Cubans, with its fortifica • flout and Stores:r. The ICespedes government: will be removed to that place, as ,the position is a very strong one., The Cubans continue 'to be reinforced by voltinteers•frOM the United States. Two 'hundred and - W/00411%re ;fe cruited in Indiana, Ohio mid KentuckY Suc ceeded in landing,on the 28th,, and jblood.) Quesada'.s forces. hey carded with them arms and ammunition, and a lame supply of camp equipage. The health of the Cuban troops is stated , to be good. omtom lies passed the TinNuAkiA. STAx,Nr,li f Collector of(`ustems lot li3t! ViS' drowned' lit 'Mat: PNee'on APPst 4tlh , ' . AClllCULAlt,r)ingler data ,o,f ; 4%l.gust 3d, has gime to the printer, over the sig . nature of , LIT - acting Secretary or' the 'lleasiny,. fealling atten tion of customs oflicers,to the .hoO of Congress of March, 1799, and cautioningrthem against admitting free ; of, duty articles not.'. upon the free list, and espechilly against alloWing a larger amount of mement.oes,lewelryySzet; to Passer''' . gers than the law VentempliteS,"; IN the session of the l timgartan delegation on Baturday, M. Caezy,, ort , gm - part of the. Government, presented ftne,•analksis, of its foreign jrolicy, and declared'itVas dictated,by his desire to preserve and develop the Interests _of peace aiid libertY, and' ft) ithibitain‘goed re lations With the east and west, but, as„such_ a policy had ria idirays Wen recelireft 'With the' same friendly spitithi lvhicll it'Atra.s einie:eived it could not sliow• equal success. everywhere. The I l lungarian dele.gation ; finally adopted all the items of the budget of . the Minister of Foreign MMus From our late Editions of. SAturday fly tlhe •Atiliantie‘C4bile; ' • Lorinori, August,,7,;4ThaGieforit boat crew .are expected at - Panay ati:lirednesdajr next,. l'he new beat for - tlib - Oxfard — Tellibarrived to-• day. It is forty-tw6 feet long.. The Harvard; crew were out for practice hod evening, and attained greater speed than -etrer. In the Rouge of, 00111111011 A, last evening, the Bight Hera..ifenry AustinAruce, !Secretary of State fortlie..ThimeZepartmeitt, in reply to a question of Mr, Fainter,Saidithat the • pres sure of public business had Trrevented' the ,in troduction of a bill toxstablish a uniform mar riage law for the - United Kingdom, but' when an opportrinity:preaented,,:the question would • Le dealtrwith on liberal and unsectarian prin ciples. 2'; = • ' 7.41 r. Moore . , inernber for Tipperary, inquired 'aa to the course of the Govertunent in regard to Fenian prisoners. Mr. Brue6 replicd , that O'D,Onovan and _Rosso were subjected =to the puniahment which strict, discipline and, their - misconduct required. Their treatment; however, was not unnecessarily . severe. , Mr. biaguire, M. P.;from Cork city, air pealed to:the govetnment to extend clemency to the Fenian& „ ' ; Viscount Melton male an inquiry respect- ing the boundaries between. the, British pos sepstons and the:United States.. 4 • 31.r.-Otway,Under t3ecretary for the Foreign , Department, replied that the land question was already settled. With '.respeet to the -water boundaries, Lord 'Russell, in 1860, had proposed that the matter be referred for- arbi tration, and the United States Government had agreed to this proposal but the negotia tions were interrupted jby the breaking-out of the war. In October Last the Amerlean government _renewed the proposition fornrbitration, and a convention was signed, which now awaits,the ratification of the - United States Senate. The prospectus of the West India and Panama Telegraph Company has just been. issued. The design is to conpeet South Americawith Europe and the United States by means of a cable from Cuba to Central , . The Times to-day has an . article on the duel yesterday between Paul .Ga.ssagnac and Gus tave Flowren.s. It concludes that if better days are in store for Fiance, if the Emperor is really bent on opening a, fair field for political .contest, we shall look for a gradual ant final discontinuance of appeals to the sword, which only escape being ridiculous when -absolutely. The Spectator to-day has an article on the difficulties between Turkey and Egypt„whicli says "It is fortunate that the Sultan and Viceroy always want money, otherwise war might result, but the, western powers are likely to put a preisure.on the disputants that win make Isruail yield and the Sublime Porte express satisfaction ." PAIL'S, August 7.—Gnstave Plowrens who Was wounded mu the duel with Paul' Cos sagnac, yesterday, is to-day prononticed out of danger. .CoNsrAyritroPLE,_ August 7.—A proPosal was made in the Council, yesterday, to de mand in this city the presence blinail l'acha, Viceroy of Egypt, to report on his pro ceedings in .Germany,- France and England. It is said that the representatives of the great powers in this ciOr interfered to prevent this step, but it, 1 probable 'that the Viceroy will come here naxt month and remove Winn pleasant feelings ~before the opening of the Suez Canal. • ' • . LONDON, AugtiSt ,T.—A -grand , dinner was given by the members of :the yacht . squadron at Cowes , Castle yesterday. James G.'Ben nett, Jr., and many other Americans were present. The Dauntless remained at.anchor yesterday; declining' to enter into the 'contest.: MADRID, August 7.--After the exeention of the Carlist insurrectionists recently; the band witi eh they -belonged-petitioned-the-Go - Lernment for amnesty, _ .The_.Carlist_ bands .are - everywhere disPenung,. MoiAlmj Poit of to-day says affairs -in Japan are so-unsettled, mind such hostility shown foreigners; that the English -nien-of-war. , in Chinese wafers . have _been ordered to Yokohaina,- 'and- the English regiment there that was .about to leavehns been ordered to remain. • . Reception of the Chinese Merchants in Chicago. . , CH - tem:op August -7.--Messrs.Sinaman and Cherchew were entertained at a private banquet at the Sherman House last evening, which was attended by leading citizens. ;g. M. Richards President of the Board of Trade, presided. Speeches were made by Mr. Eichards,Alderman Wicker;Hen. N.; B. Judd, A. G. Gould, of. San Francisco, Joseph Me den, of the Tribune,_ and ..,Chercliew. The speech of the latter' was' a gem, , as follows: , , - - - !' Eleven years ago I came from my hotne in. China to seek my future in your great republic. I landed on the golden shore of California ut terly ignorant of your language, unknown to your people, a stranger to your customs, and in'the minds of some an intruder on that race, and also my presence deemed a positive injury to the public, prosperity • but, gentlemen, I found both kindness and justice; I found that the prejudice which had'een formed against 118 there flowed adeep, broad stream of popular equality ; that the hand of friendship was ex tended to the people of every nation, and that even Chinamen might live, be hap cgaud sue ceSsfutand respects in America. Applause.] I gathered knowledge in your pub 'c schools; I learned to speak, as you do, read and write as, you do, to act and thlnk as you do; I. and gen tlemen, rejoice that it is so; that .l have been able to cross the, vast continent without an' in terpreter. ' [Applause.] That here, in- the heart of the [United,States, I can speak to you in. your own familiar speech, tell you s how very much I appreciate your hospitality" [ap plause], how grateful :I feel for 'the privileges" and'advantages Itave enjoyed in your glorious conntry,,a t nd 'IOW', earnestly I hope that your example,,enterprise, energy and. national gen- eresity may be' seen and .understood. I see that it is underBtoodly 44government. lAp , plause.L, lldr. purlingaute . had' doneanuch 'to promote good ' feelin - in China toward', the American nation: , if'e had made himself, well acquaintedwith the , anthbriptes at'Pekin; and ha, won;their eqpildence to a remarkable de gree. ,Ile la an excellent 'man, and' I - believe, if his advice is received and acted upen, China willsoonhathe cordial friend ,otaMthe'cona-' 'tnerciabpoWera of the earth. Already , we: are doing' something'' tti'' the`way' of progress. „and - .modern' improvement. Steamboat lines have been '• estiiblished in ';.our' ' riVerit,. and the telekraithl!...' This', wonderful 'Sover eignty of, the western,hinlsphere, where ;the people rule, where . everything. proclaims peace and goodwill to alliqhasAaken the., lead; and China must' owbrush away"the dust of her antiquity, and,tlooking across the Pacific, behold and profit by thanew , lessons from a new world. 'We trust our visit may be pro , ductive of good' reedits talon i of ' us, - that the , ."two great ecnintries; east and westA4. - Cliihatind, Anterilia—thay "be bound • forever together , in friendShinaud that a Ohinanien in Auterib and an American in China may : find • like pro- tection and like consideration in their seareli for happiness and wealth. , ~, 14 t•-• l• 'Ali 7:P kt 1';;/,' 111 r ' ; 4 - --. r X •jilia - TAlLYlllEBNllfil3tifit lUntrAlP 4 71841'" The New York Railroad War. I.A.Lnitair, Aug. 7.--The excitement 'in-the Sitsquebanna 'railroad imbroglio continues; Yerterday Judge Peckhau, on application of the 'Ramsey interest, appointed the Ron, It. Pruyn receiver' of the road, and Superin ,ladent Vim Valkenburg was put in. charge 'of .the office, This morning, on going to the ()dice, lie.found Mr..fierrick had been there, Opening kthe'p doonvir,-Pso.privpte- roomat whercppon ha called, aaeveratinen; and'ata tionetiAbenint'the duff- doors,-Witlrerders to let no one pass in. • ' James Fisk Jr., of New York, appeared and demandedatimutsfon, ,and waii,frefiised; Whereupon he produced patters showing that lie had been, appointed re9eiver of the road by Judge Barnard, of ' Newlork, and calling on several men he had witkhim, declared his in lention of forcibly taking.;pospeasion.lSuPPr irdentlent Van Valkenburg 'appeared and in -Iprmed Fisk - that he bad been appointed re ceiver;•aud thathe (VanValkeriburg) had been put in chit* Of the office, and ordered-1%4k anal his party out. ' f, • - IA melee ensued, Which resulted in Fisk and his party being ejected: - Still, II& remained attitude, making noisy demonstrations, when Mr., Van Valkenburg put•hirn in charge of an officer, to take him to the station house. Fisk 'accompanied the officer,. but showirig his pnpers, and li no one appearing against him, he IslB discharged. He then returned to the 'oaf ce,and in an interview with Superintendent Van Valkenburg, informed that gentleman that he (Fisk) had been in some twenty such , sc.rapes, but had never before met with .a man :Who dared-rAfacehim-anddischargeTlibii - du • , as lie,bpd., ad, further said' 'lie ,wanted',:just' nrich•a win* and if he; Van Valketilittrk,losti in the fight, he wanted him to come to him in New York. If h .wen„ tlieithe ( . 9k) wanted him to stay here." c..Thin:•niarterri stand at noon to-day- I =ME IFltinnefol,Wevirs froin,Lotidoft..:, NEWit You, Aug. 7."--=-A"despatch` from Lon don fags the feeling . in financial circles at London indicates an improvement, and Con- Fbl for,future4elivery are higter:. Yuma'. "1:1' per cents. are also up 40 centimes since "the last report, . SACO, Me., Auguit 7.—The Hon. Philip East man, a leading member-of the Now 'Vox* Itlar; and one of ours Most 'respected • citizensolied of heart disease last night. /Special Deecatch to the YORK, AuguSe7:—The following is a synopsis of the bank statement for the week Increase of Loans, $4,3411,132; Deposits $3,803,- 565; Decrease of Legal Tendem,S4.l,793.Specie, • -.• IM.POBTAfIONS. Reported for the Pnitadelphia Evening Bulletin. BOSTON—Steamer Arles, Wiley-96 eases boots and shoes Ashbridge A: Co ; 53 eases dry goods 10 bales MICE S Barrp; 18 do do 20 bags yarn 1 roll Boyd d; White; 16 eases oil cloth G W Blabon A-Co; 10 bales mdse 3 T Bailey; 71 cs boots and shoes unttugeDurborow A Co; 25 do mdse Chipman A White; I 5 cks starch thine righaut & Son; bids root J Handavan; 94 cast's Loots andshoes O S Clallin; 45 pkgs dry OAS Dale Brothers' 27 cs !Mors and shoes Early & Harris: 18 cases oil elpth-.Farguson Brother; 62 es sewin id machines Grover A Baker; 30 pkgs dry goods Gardner A Brewer; 126 tlo spring beds Gtiuld Co: 56 bills paper Howlett Onderdonk; 308 do do Ifowell A Tiro; 67 coils rope llinckle A Son; 10 bbls oil .1 T Hut son; 12 cc boots and shoes .31 Hay ward;,lo cs.indse John 'sop, Holloway & Cowden; 174 es boots add shoes T A J DI .lOnes; 64 packages mdse Laing. & Magtudls; 34 cases dry goods .A It Little & Co: 'lt 46 books J B Lippincott `A:Co; TO do boots and shoes Levickßrothers; 39 packages dry goods T T Lead Co: 12. cures twice .1 Lucas; 23 bales do It NV Maichet; 9 blunt shoulders' Duke 'Murphy; 90 cases 'boots and shoes Munroe Smaltz; 23.dt,d0, C'D 31celees A Co; 43 tons mintage naVy-yard; 40 cases shoes Newlin. A Fernley; al4 do idiots and shoes W Paul A Co; 41 bolts! skids E & C Stokes: 20 bales mdse W Simpson . ; 14 cks wire 4 Smith & Co: 41 ',dig paper Sey more A Scott; 117 es boots apd shoes J 31 Saunders; 45 do Skaare & Weerbach: 29 do A Tilden; 10 hints shoulders A artlann d: Co; 71 blds34 hlf do 18 tors fish J N Scheirer; 45 bblii hell Atwood A Radek; 70 do Koonz A Schwartz; 25 do Stroup; 100 do 5 110 3drdo 1 kitt fish order. TRINIDAD—Bark Addes,liheppard-r442. hhds`4s Ics molasses S & W Welsh. SAN S ALVA DOB—SchrEasitotti,Wilson-2500 thiz pine apples 4 Wail limes 2do green, ginger 1 do chew stick . G W Boyer. \ MOVEMENTS OF OCEAN STEAMERS. TO ARRIVE_ SHIPS WROSI DI aai ... --Southampton-New York.... Penn sylvania......Llverpool-New York .. Colorado _ Liverpool-New York.. City of Antwerp-Liverpool...New York - Cambria....., Glasgow...:New York-. Java Lirerpool-New York -.. Etna --; Liverpool-New York_... Maiota.-----London-New York .... Baltimore Rontbampton-Baltimore-__- ... York Lafayette Broct,...Npw York ', ' • ' • TO DEPART. • J Vi" Everman Philad'a....Charleston Aug. 10 Chubrie New York-Rambure Aug. 10 Nevada ._...L.:.....New York... Liverpool Aug. 10 Bellona New York... London • Aug. 10 Russia New 1 org....faverpool Aug.ll 0hi0... • Balt:more...Bremen. Aug.ll City of Antwep.New York... Antwerp ..-'.... ' Aug 11 City of Cork "New•York....Liverpoal via If. Aug. 11 Alaska' New York...Aspinwad Aug. 11 Virginia ............New York-.Lirerpool . . ..... ..........Aug. 11 Palmyra...—. ... ....New York...Livernool.,:._„. ... . . ......Atig.32 M li Missouri_ New York... Nassau and ay'a...Aug. 12 Pipneer.............Phitadelphia—Wiliningtort i Aug. 4.3 Tonawanda :-Philadelphia:..Savannah .:...».-.:.14.•Aug:14- Erin.... New-York—LiverpooL Aug. 14 Caledonia ' New York... Glasgow. Aug. 14 BOAR RD OF TADE. JOHN O. JABIEs, • - - - C. B. DUBBOBOW. MONTHLY CommirrEs THOS. L. GILLESPIE, SUN RISES 3 5 061 Kiri BE2E6 7_05 lama WILTER,3 16 7 7 '• - •• • ARRIVED 'YESTERDAY. Steamer Brunette;Rowe. 20 hours from N York, with rndse to John Y_ ---- • - • - - 33ark • Andres, Shep - p — ard; 21 days from Trinidini i irith molasses to B &•-•W_ Welsh. - - - - - - Schr Fastou,'Wilsen, 4 days from San Salvadar, with fruit, Sc, to Geo W.Boyef. Schr b C Fithian Tuft. I day frora - Port Deposit ? Md. with grain to Jug 1, Bewley & Co. - • • . CLEARED ONBA.TURDAY% ';•Steninerliornatiti‘ Crowell. Boston. II WinsOr St Co, Steamer F Franklin. Pierson "Baltimore; •A•Groves,•Je. Bark Rhea Sylvia (Br), McKenzie, Rotterdam, C C Van Brig Annie (Br), Larsen, St John, EA. Solid ante.), Brig Planet , Arey, St Johns, PR. do- • Brig Elizabeth. Ames' Sagua, J E BazleY & Co. Schr S fl Hammond Wiley ; Boston; David Coopar & Co. Schr Fawn, Baker,..floston,_ 'do Schr 'Mary & Virginia; Taylor', Alexandria. do Schr Gun Rock, Bangs,•Glotmester; Penn GrukCoal Co. Correopondenee of the Philadelphia Eicharige. LEWES. Ukt.;; Aug. 5, 1569. Bark Assent ti; from Alieatite; brig Frontier; from Gar diner. MO, and sehrs ti B WheeieN, from do for. Philit delphia, passed in to-diry. : , • The folloiving,lessels wore at the Breakwater to-day; Sehrs M AMetlannifronillavana for. Philadelphia; Eva, New York for Berlin, fild; A P Avery, Now Maven for Georgetown; De; T Golini'Baltirnore for Boston; L A Baylis, New York for Georgotown A . DC, and Tunis, Do pew, do forßiehniond, , Va. 'Wind Nf ' ' Yours, ,tc . LABAN :L. LYONS. ifAVRE DE GRACE, Aug. 7. The following boats left hero this morning, for Phila delphia, laden and consigtedna:follows: , Lizzie & I.,apra. with flint: for Trenton' Delaware .liudeon, , No 144; with lumber , for Now fork; Niagara, with lumber to Patterson ,t Limpincottf'fifartha. McCon key, with wheat and corn to COW!, & Co: A G Poe. telthwalte.; with lumber. ' MEMORANDA. • " Ship Saranak,' Turley, for. this port, entered out at •Lherpool 24th ult. Ship Favorita,Greennum;cleared at San Franoiscu 6th inst. forLiverpoolovith 36,000 sacks wheat:. • Ship Helicon, Rogers, cleared at San Francisco 6th inst. for Liverpool, with 40,000 sacks wheat ' • ' • Steamer Louisburg, Themas.'lit New York Instant from Jacksonville, Fla, July 31, via Charleston August 3, with 220. head of cattle. • • •• Steamier Tonawanda, Walteley, ,cleared at, Savannah 7th; inst. for this port. • Steamer J.Evernian, Snyder, sailed from Charleston 7tlg hist for this W poll. • - ' • • • BarkElgin ;Healey, from London' for this port, an "pired At Deal 26th ult. • • • ' • • Bark'Evelyn Schroeder, Pruetz, hence for Liverpool ' , sailed frolic Queenstown 24th ult.. • • Hark Chasm, Creckett, hence in the Sound,'Elsiuore. 22d•ult, for Cronstadt • • •• . Brig' Herald , Loughlin, sailed from Cardenas 30th tut • fora port north of Hatteras. ' ' Brig Mary 'Williams (Br), Fickett, sailed from bor dellos 3ilth•ilit; for a port north of Hatteras. Brig Rush, .• Petty, , froWrNow Haven for , this port, passed Hell Gate Mr . • - - Brig Cosmos, . Parsons, from Boston for tide • port , 'wiled front Ifolmete.nole AM /Sth inst Brig J D Lincoln, Merriman; hence at Portland'' 6th • • . Brig Etta'lll Tucker. Tucker, hence for Portland, was Spoken sth Hist'. by a New'York pilot boat. • Schr Castle Wilson, Floyd,'hence o at N York 7th int. Behr Shswsailed from St Thomas 18th nit.for Jamaica, to load fora northern Port. • • • Schr Bowdoin, Randall, cleared at St John, NS, Bth :test. for this nom e. • • • • ' Schr Belle HallidairEiilketiburg;from Athen's , Point for!this port, at New London 6th inst; - Sehr Lliza Plittror Shermam hence at' Pawtucket 'sth instant Schr.l` P'lllll,'Nfekerson; horMaießath nth inst. ' .§SchrNeantir,,smith, hence at'Portland atlfinst.• Behr Naanle BEako, Packard, hence at Belfast, Sic, 31st ult. - -.•- • Schrs Island,Belle,Plarde And Jova, Little, hence at Portomoid,h, NH 9th Met: Sour Anielia; honed at Newburyp_ort 6t twit. Schrs Hiawatha, Lee, and E Naylor, sailed from NeWburyport 6th inst. for this port. Behr Lucy Churoh,A:dantsisailedfromNew Bedford 6th inst. for this ^Dort .4 f - Schrßeta:Brown,.henco.nt Boston 6th bet. - ISchr: fo J rthis J Barrr.ll, Perry, cleared at Georaotown,DC Ant port • , I , 'Behr Atmie•lif Edwards Hettacm;ltente ht 'Richmond tSchrs Helen; Carroll, and Cyruso • Foosett, honco nt Salem sth mat. Schrs E Richardson,Nelson,and Alaska, Clark, cleared at Boston 6th inst. for this port. New York Bank Statement. MARINE BULLETIN.; 1 fI:I93II4:MIMET.iasI try :, , . FIRE 'INSURANCE.VOMPANY : , :op[Panumantumitio6.l tae.=-485 and 487 Ohentiut Street. 'on Jannarp Y; Z 69. tki l 7 - 6170 16: Os itsl . Atorned "." ' s. 1,1313.573 7 00 0 ... 43 , Ltif3ETTLED. OLATMB,77 1N003Ce4011 , 1869 • • - $ 23 4 )38 ../ 2 -,41601130. J . 'Paid Since 11129 " s - %1105 - '5OO 000 Perpetual an 4 Temporary PoHoles on, 3..lberaL , Terma The Company also issues Policies • npopt the Bents of all kinds of buildings, Ground Banta antr.Nortgages. - n i saine lf o r .n od ,wei , a l . r ß iapn a ha t7 da , lenadlea, ALrltiD • c., GEO. FAL JA'l3. W. MALLISTEE,' TIIICODOBE M. BEGEB. "„. • FIRE ASSOCIATION A PHILADELITIA. inorporalted march, ;az lB2O. Office - No 34,NortirTifth Street, iiisintz . BUILDINGS H OUSEHOLD FURNITURE AND MERCHANDISE GENERALLY FROM LOSS, BY FIRE. AAseis January 1, 1.869, *41,406,005 . OS. TRUSTEES: , 'William H. Hamilton, I Charles P. Bower, John'Carrow, Jesse Lightfoot,' George I. Young, Robert Shoemak,er, , Joseph R. Lyndon,l Peter Armbruster, Levi P. Coats, Dickinson. Srunnel Sparhawk, Peter 'Williamson, MM. Aug. Seeger . . WM. H. II AMlLTON,President, _ SAMUEL SPA RIIAWS, Vice President. WM. T. BUTLER. Secretory. JIa,AWARE MUTUAL SAFETY. IN SURANCE COMPANY. incorporated by the Legislat ore of l'ennsylvania,l33s; Office S. E. corner of THIRD and • WALNUT Streets, Philadelphia. , • MARINE INSURANCES • On Vessels, Cargo and Freight to all parts of the world. • INLAND INSURANCES On goods by river, canal, lake and land carriage to all parts of the Union.' FIRE INSURANCES On Merchandise generally, on' Stores, Dwellings Houses, 3:c. ---.- ASSETS OF TIIE COMPANY, November 1,1 5 0; 9400 00 United States Five Per Cent. Loan, - • 10-40 , e 8203 ,500 00 120,000 United States Six Per Cont. Loan, ♦• LSBI.O - '136,800 oo 50,000 United States Six Per. Cent. Loan (for Pacific Railroad) 60,000 00 • 200,000 State of Pennsylvania. Six , Per • Cent. Loan 211375 00. 125,000 ,City of Philadelphia Six Per Cont.,: •• r ao,ooo stat l eo a ll:f , ler t Elrg; r Pgtient.' 128'54. 00 •,L0an..... 00 20,000'Fennsylvanta ,Railroad• First s ' s°l? , Mortgage Six Per Cent . Bonds 20,200 25,11.11 Pennsylvaniaßailroad Second * 02 ' rt ! t lml 25 .000 Wesi l ern ga lFe e ntglva ( flia en ß . a4oad, 24" • , ,•:• • Mortgage Six Per Cent. Bonds sikoo stal , p P a•Vdket r 3 t s'erA i v a c u k e r )- Zl. 7 ;;i:. : 40 C h ? .oan 21,000 00. 000fi State of Per Cent. ' • Loan . . . 5,031 15,000 Germantown GasCompany;princi- -"- i g 4 611 Pit:fr Vlifirdren head, 1 .41) • .. shares. ... ... • 15,000 00 10,000, Pennsylvania Railroad Company, • .200 shares stock- • 11,300 00 5,000 North. Pennsylvania -Itadread • Company, 100 sharee stock •• • 3,500 00 ' 2000 Philadelphia and Southern. Mail „ • Steamship Company, 81) shares ' • ' stock.. • ' • • 15,000 00 0,900 Loans on Bond and Mortgage, first ' • liens on City Pr0pertie5....,...... ' 207,90,0 ; Cost,Market Value, $1,130,325 25 8103.5 Real Estate • • • ' 36,000 00 Bills receivable for Insurances made • ' .322,486 91 Balances due at Agencies—Pre miums on Marine Policies— Accrued Interest and other debts due the Company- 40,173 83 Stock and Scrip of sundry Corpo rations, 83,156 00. Estimated • value. L 1,813 oo Cash in Bank ' 8116,150 09 Cash in Drawer 413 65 116.563 73 July 27 - July 28 23 July 29 July 30 - ily 31 ,JUIY „July 31 .July3l_ f)1,109,900 Par • • DiREOTOI. 4 ..i • Thomas G. Hand, James B. McFarland, Edward - Darlington, William C. Ludwig, Joseph. H. Seal, Jacob P. Jones, Edmund A. Sunder, Joshua P. Eyre, Theophilus Paulding, William G. Moulton, Hugh Craig, Henry C.Mallett, Jr., John C.Daris, John D. Taylor, James C. Hand, Edward Lafourcade, John R. Penrose,' Jacob Seigel, • IL Jones Brooke, George W. Bernadou, Spencer Win. C. Houston. _ Henry Sloan, D. T. Morgan, Pittsburgh, Samuel E. Stokes, John B. Semple, do., James Traquair,• THOMAS CA .. HA B. B ND President. erger, " do. • • JOHN 0. pe.vs, Vice President. —HENRY--TALBURNi-Secretary HENRY BALL; Atm% Secretary I COMPANY OF . PHILADELPHIA. """ This Company takes risks at the lowest rates consistent, with safety, and confines its business exclusively - - FIRE INSURANCE IN THE CITY os' PHILADEL- oFFICE—No. 723 Arch - street,rourtli National Hank Building. , . DIRECTORS. - Thomas J. Martin, Henry W. Brenner, John Hirst. Albertus King, , Wm. A. Bolin, Henry Bimini, James lil ongan, James-Wood, -- William Glenn, John Shalicross, James Jenner, J. Henry Askin, Alexander T. Dickson, Hugh - Mulligan, Albert 0. Roberts RhiliPleitzpatrtck, . N. Dillon. James. .. . . . ! J CONRAD B. ANDRESS, President. WM. A.-Rolm!, TreiaS.. • WM. H. F.AGYN. SOOY. 11 - 1:1E PE.NNSYLVA.!I.Lei. INSU RANCE COMPANY. —lncorporated ISVA—Charter Perpetual. N 0.610 WALNUT street., opposite Independence Square. This Company, favorably known to the Community for over forty years, continues to insure against loss , or. damage by tire on, Public or Private Buildings, either permanently or for a limited time. • Also on Furniture, Stocks of Deeds, and Merchandise generally, on liberal terms. • Their Capital, together with a large Burping Frni; le invested lu the most careful mariner., which enables them to ofltr to the insured an undoubted security in the case of loss— -- • DIEFCTORS. Daniel Smith, J r., I John Devereux Alexander Benson, - 'Thomas Smith,— • Isaac Hezlelmrst, Henry Lewis Thomas Rolifos, J. Gillingham Fell, Daniel Haddock, Jr. • DANIEL SMITH., Ja., President.. WM. G. citovrELL', , Secretary. apl9-tf ' THE COUNTY FIRE INSURANCE COM PAN Y.-oMce, No, 110 Borah EiSurth, street, below Chestnut. The Fire Insurance Company of the bounty of Phila delphia," Incorporated by the Legislature of Pennsylva nia in 1839, for indemnity against loss or damage by Are, exclusively , - CHARTER PERPETUAL.' ' , This old and reliable 'institution, ,with; ample capital and contingent fund carefully; invested, continues to in sure buildings, furniture, merchandise, -,t0., either per momently or for a 'limited time against loss or damage by tire, at the lowest rates consistent with the absolute se fety of its customers. . • . Losses adjusted and paid with_a_lposSible despatch; : TiMEOTOMrt . • - • - , 1 Chas. J. Sutter, , ' Andrew II: Miller, 'Henry Budd, 'Jamc:p N. Stone Jahn Horn, Edwin L.:ltealtirt, Joseph Moore, ;': , Robert N. Massey, Jr., George Meck, ~-Matk..Dovine. ._. . MARL ti J. SUTTER, President. - '-- - ' — HENRY iIUMH,I 7 fc.O Fresideati -.. . BENJAMIN F. HOECKLEY, Secretary and Treasurer: AMERICAN FIRE INSURANCE COM PANY, incorporated 1810.—Oharter perpetual. No. 310 WALNUT street, above, Third, Philadelphia. Having a large pail-up CaPital Stock and Surplus in vested sound and available Securitlea; 'continua' to insure on dwellings,. stares, furniture, merchandise, vessels in port, and their cargoes, and , other personal property. All losses liberally and proMptly.adjusted. DIRECTORS. Thomas R. Marie, , Edmund _ John Welsh, Oharlea W. Poultney, Patrick Brady, k Israel Morris, John T. Lewis, John , P: Wetherill, ~;Willlaut W. ,Paul. ' • ' THOMAS R: lIARIS, President. ALBERT C. ORANYVORti, fioretary•- r ,• _ • I , COMPANY, ju 809 CHESTNUT STREET. INCORPORATED x.1856;' CHARTER ,PERPETUAL. CAPITAL:rOOO.. FIRE INSURANQi XCLUIVELT. Insures against Loss errand by F 1 either by Per % petual or Temporary Polk es. .Charles Richardson, Robert Pearce, Wm. H. Rhawn, ' Join). Keisler, Jr., Francis N. Buck, •Edwarddl. Onao, : Henry Lewis, - : Oharles-Stokes, Nathan Hilles. ' John WJ , Evorruan, George A.. Weal ' Mordecai Busby, OI ARLES , OffAEDSON, President; WM. H. RHAWN. Vice.Preeident. WILLIAMS I. BLANORARD. Secretary. an/ 11 trisuaitivez. ••• • , DU:MOTORS. ._- , I. Alfred Filler' „. • . Thomas Sparks. Wm. S. Grant. , .. • , • . Thomas S. Ellis, i Gustavus B:Bermotr. BAKER. President. dB, ViceEresident.• : ' . . Secretary. - :, Assistant Secr e tary . ' ' ... . fell tdo3l 1,647,307 80 :~.:i:: 'i`yvE I.` feStraitetEol,i ; • r d: Gl* l f • oii4eatwtoos :2 boii'odd' biiity'Reeelpt,4o7ki,sid,b66.o6 Prengu* in 1868,' •• • • , $5400:5,97:5:.00 rB6B, 53,662445 go No; 6, .11fercban41 Exchange, Philadelphia. r . TICE RELIAI4 CE INSURANCE'IIOII- PANT Ole - PILILADELPHIAO • • Incorporated in 1841. - Charter Perpetual. • office, No- 303 Walnutetrtet..- •;, . • ; ' • eAPITAL e 300,000. Ineureteagainst 1- 06S — cIrtifttiage - ByYINETent -7 /ITuseei Stores and other Buildings, limited or perpetual, and on Furniture, Goods, Wares and Merchandise In . town or LOSSES PROMPTLY 'ADJUSTED AND PAID. §s .... ... .... ... • . .... . ....$437,599 SZ Invested lathe following.SecuritieS, - 'First Mortgages on City Propnty, well se-, . cured - 8168,600 00 ()United States, Government L ' oans 117,000 00 Philadelphia City 6 Per Cent. Loans ' 75,000 00 • Pennsylvania 83,060,000 Per Cent Loan 30,0(4) 00 Henn'ttylVtiniußKilroad Bonds, First Mortgage • '5,000 00 Camiguin:ld Amboy ItailrotalCompany's 6 Per Cent.Doan • 6000 00 Loans on' ,Collaterals.. ' • ~500 00 Huntingdon and Broad Top 7 Fer Cent. Mort- • gage „Bonds ' • • ,4 4,560 00 County Fire Insurance Company's Stock:, 1,1110 06 Mechanics' Bank , Stock ' • ' '4,000 00 Commercial Bank of Pennsylvania Stock. 10,00000, Union Mutual Indurance Company's Stock 380 - 00 Reliance Insurance CnutpanyP,hiladelphia • ' Stock • . 3,290 00 Cash in Bank and on hand 12,280 92 Worth at Par Worth this date at market pricea DIRECTORS. • . Thomaa C. Hi 11,.:, Thomas 11, Moore, Musadr, SinnuelCastner;' Samuel Bispho,m,, James T. Ydnog, H. L. Carson, Isaac F..73alier, Wm. Stevenson, . Christian J. Hoffman, HAW • W. Tingley, Samuel H. Thomas, • Edward . THOMAS C. HILL, President 'Wm. CHUBB, Secretary. PHILADELPHIA, February 17, 1869. ANTHR A C ITE INSURANCE COM 11 PANY.--CHARTER PERPETUAL. Olhce No.3IIWALNUT Street, above Thirdi Philada.. AVM ham* against Loss or Damage by Fire on 'Build lugs, either perpetually or for a limited time, household Furniture and Alerchandisegenerally. Also, ,Marine 'lnsurance on' Vessele, , Cargoes and . Freights. Inland Insurance to all parts of the Union. DIRECTORS. • - - William Esher, . ; Lewis Audenried, D. Luther, John Ketcham, ' John E. Bldckiston,' , -.J;+E..Baum William F. Dean,- , - John 8..1141, ' Peter Sieger,' • ' • Samuel H.- otherni& WILLIAM. STIER.. President. : ..•, 'WILLIAM F. DEAN, Vice President.' WM M. SAlrmt. Secretary. ; ; jady,:tu th a tf r,PPERN SO,FIRE-INSIJRANCE COM tPANT of Philadelphla.-Office,No. 24 North Fifth street, near Market street. Incorporated by the .-Legitilature , of Pennsylvania. Charter perpetual. Capitatand Altiets. 8166,000, Make insurance against-Loss or dantage bY,Fire on Public or Private Buildings, Furniture, Stocks, Goods and Men chandisei eV favorable terms. .2 • • • ,DIRECTORS , ' Wm. McDaniel, , Edtrard P. Moyer , • • Israel Peterson, . Frederick Ladner' John F. Belsterling, AdartrJ.Glasz,' ' • Henry Troemner, Henry Delany, Jacob Sclizndein, • John Elliott, " Frederick - Doll, , Christian D. Frick, fiamuelllllller, George E. Fort, - William D. , Gardner. • VIhLIAM. McDANIEL President. • -• :• :ISRAEL PETERSON, Vico President. PHILIP E. COLEMAN, Secretary and Treasurer. sOIp.PER - SGVI,DE- MIOR BOSTON .—STEAI‘SHIP LINE ..I; DIRECT, SAILING FROM EA.CIEUPORT EVERY Wednesday and SatuidaY. . ' ' ' , . , "FROM PINE STREET WHARF. PIIILADELPIHA, . •AND LONG WHARF; BOSTON. • FROM PHILADELPHLAI If Ito.ll BOSTON, . . 10'A. M:' i , 8 P. M. • SA XON,Wednesday,A ug. 4 ARIES, Weduesday, Aug, 4, NORMAN, Saturday ," 7 ROMAN; Saturda y • " 7 ARIES, Wednesday, " 11 SAXON, WednesentY, it 11 ROMAN. Saturday, " 14 NORMAN, Saturday," 14 SAXON,Weduesslay, " 18 ARlES,Wednusday, tt 18 NORMANiSaturday, " 21 ROMAN, Saturday, " 21 ARIES, NY eduesday. ." • 25 SAXONOVeduesday, " 25 ROMAN, Saturday, . " 28 NORMAN,. Saturday," 28 These Steamships . sail punctually. FrelghV received every day. . , • ' ~ Freight forwarded tall points in Neiv'Efigland. For • Freight or. Plifisage tsupenor accommodattgato apply to . HENRY WINSOR At CO.,' - ~ , 888 South-Delaware avenue,— PHILADELPHIA, .R/C/3.31Q11D , NORFOLK STEAMSHIP LINE. THROUGILFREIGHT AIR - LINE . TO THE SOUTH : AND WEST. EVERY SATURDAY, at Noon; from FIRST WHARF above MARKET' Street, THROUGH RATES to all points luNorth and Smith Carolina via Seaboard,Air-Line Railroad, connecting at . Portsmouth, and to Lynctburi,ya.,lTennostgat_and tba ' iv eat a I , lrguata .and Tennessee h, and. Ric • mond and Danville Railroad. - Freight - HANDLERBUTDNCE,_iiiiiffiabifitWOWEA BATES THAN ANY OTHER LINL. _-The, regularitY. T safety_and cheapnessLot_thial route_ - commend It to the the - rnost desirable medium for carrying dvbry deacrintieu of-freight.- - - No charge for cemnliasiurt. drayage, or any expense for Steamahlis insure at lowest rates: , Freight received DAILY: . • - ' • • ...,: - WILLIATif D . , CLYDE dy 00 - - M 0.12 Smith Wharves and Pier No. 1 North Wharves - - W.-P. PORTER, Agent atßichmond and City Point. T. P. CROWELL & CO., Agentir at Norfolk. ADELPH.I.A. AND SOUTHERN J.P MAIL; ,BTEADISIIIP • COMPANY'S+ 'REGULAR LINES, FROM QUEEN STREET WHARF. The , YAZOO •will sail fdr NEW ORLEANS: •on Saturday. August 21; at 8 A. M. • • The JUNIATA Will sail from NEW ORLEANS, via HAVA.NA,August 7. „ , • . The - TONAWANDA van sail for' SAVANNAH - on Saturday. Aug. 14, at o'clock.A. •• , • • ' The TONAWANDA. will sail from SAVANNAH on . Sl ia n o rd p it io . N A E n tikwill sail for WILMINGTON,N.D.,on Friday, Aug. 13, at BA. DI. • • • . Through bills Of lading ,stg_ned, nnd . passage tickets sold to all points South and Wbst. BILLS of LADING SIGNED at ,QBEEN . ST. WHARF. For frelght_p orassage, apply to • • • WILLIAM L. JA.lslF.S.i.Heneral Agent, 130 South Third street. O'R L E R'P 00 L ' • • " TIM Fine ltirst-class Ship "V IIt.GINIA," tat Toni .Registcr—Uaptain , CampbelL • • This vesse l succeeds the "Matilda flilyard," and having a portion of her cargo engaged, will have despatch. Wr — Fpf balance of Frtinht or Passage; apply to . ' . . PETER WGI6,IIT dr. SONS, • jy2--(f No . 115 NYalutit street, Philadelphla. NEW EXPRESS LINE TO ALEXA N. drip, Georgetown and Washington, D. C., via Ches. uptake and Delaware Canal, with connections at Alex andria from the mostdirect route for Lynchburg, 'Brio- Vol, Knoxville, Nashville, Dalton and the Southwest. • Steamers leave regularly•frem the first wharf 'above Market street, every Saturday at noon., „ Freight received daily: . WM. P. CLYDE ' CO., ' No. 12 South Wharves and Vier 1 North :Wharves. HYDE ,VTYLICE, Agenta at Georgetown. 111..ELDR1DGE ,4$ -GO., Agents at,Atextindrle,!Ye,.: N(,)TI(M.--- r .FORE NW IrQ VI.A.,DEL AWARE AND .RARITAN CANAL. EXPRESS STEAMBOAT COMPANY: , • / , i• The CHEAPEST and 1.11;101IEST water communica tion between Philddelphta and New York') • • • - Steamers leave daiiy, frorn.liret ',wharf ,below, Market street t Ph iladelrthia' and font'of NVelretreat;'New YOrk. Goode forwarded b'y, nll Onilines ,running out •of Now 'York-North,t and Weet—freo Of Commiesion. Freight, received and - ;forWaided on accommodating. terms. WM., P. CLYDE & CO., Agony( • • No. diSoirßißelaware arenue,'Philadelpda, .;.i1:ApA1i . r . 11 . .,;119 st i rcer,Newy_ofk:' 6TICE.- I FOk,NEW'i i. (SEX; VIA pEt= AwAlleANtokktivrAskorAw TSUILII,TRANOTORTATION COMPANY. DFSPATCIi`AND'SWIFTSVItE LINES. The busineen efthese lines willhe resumed on and of ter the 19th of March, For freight, which will he taken on aceouttiondating,terins t almly toIWIC BAIRD , dt•CO., No. 132 South Wharves. ort lavr o rt - Dool, --THE FINE FIRST- L 4 • Oaks Bark B SSIE II d 72 tons register, ycseiel succeeds the Virginia, and haling the latilitfor her cargo engaged, will have :quick deft atcl). Vpr:balitrum of, freight or passage, apply to ER WRIGHT & SONS, 115 Wainnt Sr. , atiG-tf ET,A ARE - 1- CHESAPEAKE' • Steam Tow... Boat Corn pany,,Barges towed between Ph ladelphia; Baltimore, Uavre de Grace, Delaware City and intermediate points. ,• • City P ..CLYDE CO.,Agents; Capt. JOHN tAU44- IIIN;:13uVt Oftito,-12 Sent h.AV harVes,Plitladelphia. • VIADEL. .covarQ Railitar,Canal,—Swiftetire,Transporta tion ••Odmtra +lletiptitch , and , 'Swiftsure , Linee. —The business by t iese.4 t iaes.. wilh.be, resumed on awl, after . the ; Bth of March. FOr'Frelpht; which will be' taken .on accommodating Orme,•ppply 13 M. , .0.111) & • CO:, 182 South Wharves. . - SITE CASTILE SOAP.—I.QD 110XLS V • 'genuine Whlte Castile Soap;Conti brand, imported from Leghorn and for sale by JUS. D. BOSSIER 108 South Delaware aveuue. ; • , ~ .At.VIIO.I4:kkGES;- Jl 6* trA 4 1 0. P 4.0.11,0W,84 0 11110 • koo;oziond4a Eio n troei. corner of Bank4,o**,d . a , • mat%ilk • Ant mtivADAT,Bionratirfm, !f l og ] tr,atltl6 ' oidck on roUritiOnt Lasetimettli'locks'antl yonttis , caltkipiliultlea • r e ; graittOsvAW,'Napoletuk, The ft Mist OongteSs ir i Balmilialaritit', buff and polished gram B tilen:s.;misses, and children's 7 palff kidveuame mink botr.o f ttlor,sont ~ r nerpccii Eilmorals Doilmgess GaltenifiLacS llootiLAlllclaTi4ippee**4llllalkyor.,'..". stoseelitto4gtalA,t,Traveling, 4311001ametsykei, 344'0.i:SAISOk raftirlON August:J.2;AL Alli'.olool46on fturnionthli"eredit; Bales bielich' arid hronli Shootings and Shirthigs. • do brown, bleached and•Oplored Drills. da>whiteandfantrall wool Elatiketc---- , , , Cases Manchester - and Snatch Ginghanurant,Plaidit.t , dopull * Maddurtrikin,to, , Puttah etiNtfi Dtnet Elati- '- do Miners' and Shirting Flannels. trigt4.Dolitnes. do heavy Blue Denlins, - Ticktri'Stripettand•Ohecka. do Kentucky and Corset - Jeans , Cottonades. .. ; do:..Printed Cloakingsi,SatinetscLinseys,avfeeds:l-1t do black and colored Cambrian. Silechul,.Joiconebs. . DIERCTIANT;TAILORS!.GI73'.s! Pieces French and Saxony all yecied an linion,Oloths,„;,.. doo all wool Chinchillas; Contitigt,....F ncreassittierels.' '• do '. Castor, Moscow and Esquirnaux,lleageM(t • do, London Pilots, Doeskinir,llleltons,lvintntlifi'&o:;' blk and colored Italians. Velvetc,Velve.toons* lea DRESS GOODS, SILKS, &c. Pieces high lustre pure Mohan. Alpacas,. Cobargs. , do Mei-limes; Poplhis,Delaines, filik.Plaids;d a'„ - ' do Black colored and Fancy Dress SU ks, Sintv9,lf ,tkb;t - IVIIITI GOODS, Arc Full . _,,' • '— ' lines bleached and W . B.Vable Dannu , k,qiiinkin3.7% Fnii lines Barnsley Sheatings; 'Diaper, Table Oloths. Full lines bleached and broWnDrills,,DuckS. Full lines Jaconets,(. l ambrics, Natnsooks, Mulls, e4c, ' nilTipes of grass - Ks - ached Linens,,fine.to best lux- , Dortedid a favoriteiraportation. • ALSO , Ralnidral and 'Boot, 'Skirts, 'frareling Under ' Shirts atid.,Draweril,. dew hun t .111nrseilles , comb Quilts French•Pluites, Umbrellas, Silk res, Shirt Fronts, Linen f.kuribrleMdkfs,, &c. , LARGE SPECIAL . AND - PEILEMPTOIIir 4AL'EP.Or :llosiEity, GLOVES AND STAY BINDINGS,2I43 aIRPOItTATION "OF TEO': 0: EVANS. • ,' • ON FRIDAY MORNING, August 13, at 10 o'eloekf on four months' credit, ofn Ines Indies''cut and covered . regular, full regular, ' extra awl super extra WHI,TE, OOT TON:1108E, Full lines ladies full regplar Schauer:el and Recker 's . double soIe , WEITE COTTON , ROGE. ,, ,. - Full lines lad ies'pjain, and regular Hecker's,plida and double sole BROIVN COTTON I ROSE: - . • Full lines Indica . ..heavy mixed, hose. - , • .„' • Full lines mislies , heavy white and brain:those: . Full lines gents'__plain, full reg_ular, super steat BROWN and FANCY COTTON HALF ROSE. Full , linear bers', regular ;BROWN , BALW Full lines ladies? '.colore4l and :black, Berlin; Silk Atid., • cloth Gloves." Full llnealenestotored , Full lines misses' colored Perlin gloves and half gaunt lots , FUG lines ,English while, .brown and - slate, stay bit- - , 843408 32 ..45t,381 912 lIIPORTAIIT BALE - OF 43A,Bi'LTFtiOS, OIL QN VICIDA August 13, at 11 o'clockoin tatirmonthe credit, about 200 pieces Ingrain, Venetian, List, Hemp, Cottage :and Hag Carpetings, Ito. • - ' • jal-tn the tt DA.VIS & MARVEYi AUCTIONEERS, (Late with Iti.Thomas & Sons.) : •, ; • • Store NOFi:' , lB and SO North'SIXTH street: Sale at the Auction Store.. •,_• ••• • • SUPERIOR :W 40 I ALNUT PARLOR. CILIA AND DINING 'FURNITURE, .;:‘, ROSEWOOD, ••, PIA.NO. FRENCH. PLATE MANTEL • AND , PIER MIRRORS, , I3OOKCASES,. 'FIREPROOFS; •VINE e4. : 17E &N C] TUESDAY ' MORNINM< At 10' o'clock, by : catalogne - . the auction store. an tegcellent tissortmentet'supit s tior Furniture, Including— Walnut .and •• Hair Cloth; Parlor Suits.', Centro. Tables. ROsewobd Tian o_Forto, lino French Plate: Mantel and - Pleratirrora, handsome -Walnut Chamber Suits, with .; Wardrobes; very elegant Wardrobe ,with French Plato . .. front: handsotne Cottage-•Sults, with •tharble tops; Cabi net and Secretary Bookcases, several :Walnut and Oak , Extension Tables, Dining Room Chairs', Lounges; Mime • superior Firporoof, Safes, fine Tapestry abet other Cur- ,pets, SUPERIOR OFFICE FURNTI7II.E.' A complete , assoittnent, 'comp rising'counting 7 imuse ' Deskti Tables,,Wri Ong : ..„. • i Ajf„ ,Tap,MAS:4Sr,t3PNT3,:4LUCITIONEIVIk3; J-T.l_ N 05,139 and 141 South FOURTH Street. ' 'SALES. OF.STOCKS AND REAL ESTATE.,,,,' WV' Public sales at tha Philadelphia gxchang, every TUESDAYat 12 0 , c10ck,, , * , ,L • ' • • ' ' I Furniture sales at the Audtion Store ErRIAlr SW Sales at Residences receive es:peels} attention Sale at Abe Auction Rooms, Noll. ; 139 .and 141 ,Sbuttt ; Fourth street. SUPERIOR .11 OUSEROLD FURNITURE, FIREPROOF SAFE, CARPETS, &c, 'ON-THURSDAY MORNING; Lt August 12, at 9 o'clock, at. the Auction Rooms, an as 8 ortment 'of.Parlor; Chamber - and • Ditting lloom . Ear.= niture,French Plate. Pier Mirrors,.Bookcase,Extension Tables, Ogles Fitrnitare, China and Glassware, Hair Matresses and Feather , Beds, Refrigelutors,,StoyesciiiXt , pounds White Lead, Carpets, Mattingit„&c. Also. large Fireproof nixie, made by-OlivarEratta,•,.,,,' JAMES.,A. A EiignetitsBlll” c . orner TwOity.third'alditilliert •etroetn IifACtIINERY, LOOM'S. fiIIIAPTINGI3;BEtTINGS, BOBBINS, ao. ONAVEDNESDAY MOBNItTa, Augguuet,lB at 10 o'clock,,,w4ll be 804, hy ()Mgr of, Wm: K Pease, Medi:nee', tattle N, W. corner of Twenty third ,aril Rithert etreets,;thtv , Illachineryuf;.mj(lotten and IVoolen Manufectery. including, about 20 two-shuttle Looms:: .1M thremehuttle 'Looms, . 2 SpoOlinv-Frum.e, Deeming • Fremes,L 11 _ohbin:Winders, Counter; snafts, .Shafting.; teltlngirniturk'SUools Asir Perempta r V..-Terms Cash— r,• „, , 143.0TECK133, AUCT.I9I+TEF4tp id ,, ' (La Salesmen for Thomas & Song ' 9,,EaugESTNUT: street. r earl OntranCe frO. VP'. MAIM* Sale N 0.429 Chestnut street. MANPSONLE WALNUT , PA.RLOW.CRAMBEW AND, DINING ROOM. FURNITURE, - I-#EGE SINS FRENCH 'PLATE' bIIRRORR; LARG.ts.ANDSUI.E- • RIOR _FIREPROOF SAFES., FINE REUSSEDS, CARVETS,COUNTEItSI.BILEUVIN_,G“.te.• - , ON WEDNESDMORNING, August -11, at 'lO 'o'clerck; . at theaction-rooms. N 6: rral Chestnut •street-,rvefs, excellent and desirable Monselteld —Furniture.-&e, A SP - BRIDGE' lingtr-1 -EEBS. No. 505 MAllKFlTdtreetiaboveFittlr' LARGE FALL SALE OF BOOTS, SHOES AND " - ON WEDNESDAY, DIMMING ! • • A uaufit 11," at-10 o'clock:we - will eel by tatalogiie about 1200 pachuges of Boots. Shoes and Brogans, of , city and Eastern mannfacture, _to ,which the attention of , city_ end country buyers is called. - • Oir._ Open early on the morning _Of. stiki.:for_Oxittitkut-. t ion . with c stale:rites., ; ). , ; . BTROli'r 86: Solli, - AITOTIQ.N. A_ BEDS AND COMMISSION MENCLIANTS, No. 1110 , CHESTNUT street. • • • Rear entrance N0,.1107. Seasons street., HcinaehOld FurnitUre of everrdeseription received oti' VonsigTent. , Saleflor Furniture at dwelli • ea attended to on ,the ' remit reasonable tern*. ' • rpRE,PRIticIPAL MONEY. ESTABT , tnent-S. E,,cOrner - of SIXTH and RACE'streets. Money.advanced on' Merchandise.generally—Watohee,, • Jewelry, Diamonds, Gold and Silver Plate, and on all articles of value, for any length of time agreed om, .• WATCHES. AND JEWELRY AT .PRIVATE SALE,. , Fine Gold Hunting Case, Doubleo Bottom and Open Face English, .American and, Swiss Patent Lever Watohea; Fine Gold Hunting Case and Open Face Lepluelyatchea; Fine Gold Duplex and other Watches; Fine SilVer'Huntr.,: ' .;. mg Case, and Open Face Eliglish, American' and Swiss Patent Lever and Lepine Watches; Double GAM ailatibt Quartier and other . Watches; Ladies'. Fancy ,WAtchea• Diamond+ Breastpins; Finger ''Rinse; Ear Itings;+Studs; id Aci; Fine Gold !Chains; Medallions; Brupelete; Dorf Pins; Dreapint; Finger Rings; 'Pencil Cased and 'Jew-' elry generally. , • - - FOR SALE—A large:and yaluable Fireproof - Cheat. suitable for a Jeweller; cinit - 6660. • + Aloe, several Lots in South 'Camden, Fifth and Cheat nut streets. , - C . D. .111.,CODEES, .V , oq No:sob MARKET ttreet: RQOT A . BUM .BALES, EVERY 11191i:Di* AND • • V3ti/IBDAY , • CERT HALL ATICTION ROOMS, 1219 P "f i ng t e r tELLAND, Anainhoer. 'Jr' BABBITT '& (.70:; AIIUTIONBERS. •- , :_.CASH 'AUCTION HOUSE, _ , W M A ARKET street. corner of Bank street: ' Cash advanced, on consignments without extra charge. yANKT:a. GitEEN CORN'' TTER fag thing for the soulion; should be iwevery,hOusxY; great protection. Corn pulp is perfectly" , healthy; can be usikby old'and young with, itn punity i; ,T,lzurouttera arcy• made in various styles and may be hail atoll Jamie-fu rn stores,: Prices from 25 cents up. Address whole sale orders to YANKEE MANUFACTURING COI, PANY, Posteadice Box 2758. • auGift.*,l JAMES A. iVAIGHT. 2111/UNTON PLICE t 'CLEMINT 'F.?? ..1711411tHWiiiGairersNoKrig,!1', • - Importers of erthonwli,re,, . Shipping _oncl Commission dierchpnto No.,lls'Walunt - - ' et 0 9.1 , 0,14 7 ,4.K11. • DITI.ia OF Woo 23iiielloe told Ink.has 1 ,1 1 0 1. *WI:MI* I , Tent and Awvlug Duck , Papps-makor aVI !MC I ROI TWilikt, at. ' • ' •t` uHN• IY NVERNIALNIii, jo2o . No. 103, Church Eilreot e c tity,.sol.oB . , 10111,11,1VYQWN:tg8':OF44P,n0p .1L . arty-.Tlittotily w‘thtlitiitiisedliat disinfected.,l4 very. low ‘prices: .4„,,,PEXSAION4,IIIAn facture. of Pond ret to. Ofildbunith'w littPol4 po c KET KNlvEsopwat. n n .l STAG :lIA D .8 et beautiful 1111144 RQIVIOUS' and AVAPR & BUTOHEIt'Sj and , the ONLERRATED LecoubTas RAZOR. SCISSORS CA$V,$, theitneat,duatitY Rot.ors, Kniree, Siii4antir Table'Cutletyi stroand and-' perished. Belts INSTRUMEIM3 , of , the meat appnve.l4 conatritotlan to'asaibt the tieatina; at z-MADHLBANit, Outlet and Sytegicat,ittettpuletitXaker. /4- Tt",t4 Areal. below libeatunt: • cri7l4f , - '''...:. 1441AVAL 8Tf.)0. 7 00 BBL§ ~rIL1 04 4 , -IV No. 1 Wein, 1..561,W, tr11'...2 rttithiL7 '1.11:M 1 ' ntiOgtyn ?Itch % 100 141,115. , t% iirningthu : tr . r ,. 'frih..?,P E W Prtroo White' Sdutherrt Dirittile(t Soirtty..Turpo t e, fa . storo 1%1111 for Hale by•COUILUAY, BUSS - ELL 4 4 10.,. at Cliedtaut stroo. - • IMI=M BUSINESS 'CARDS. `, ,~, MIMI 3' .
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers