Daily evening bulletin. (Philadelphia, Pa.) 1856-1870, August 13, 1869, Image 2

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    WMCA
Iles. 39 . and 40 of zcwa'.:gi'; ,,, PPiligfct
Universal. Oictton y ..trobramitdefitik4ons of
' AO),
nelaihely large and frequentAluWatiOns. r•
' se,
The August number of INnzeriAz
(have and Review presents an attractive list
.1 eontents,,including 'a good paper on Sir
• P Vslemn, a curious'on e.f?? , 49 ) ..P,Pp if ie,;:.of riames,..and another
defining 116 qtfalities' :of dis
tingusbing—it 'from • —that of the GAeks; the
atttient . ':of4trielicAn history rOchei the
battles 'ol'Spettsylvania COurt libttse , and the*
edlioritWeritabli reprintS Athiluctint's re
port of a leetrire cultuie by Mr.
Deutsch the: orientalist. The departments "to
which the _Review is especially devoted, such 'as
finance, mining transportation, arts and Op- -
,
icsiiienbundantly filled _ fertile month; that of
miAng receiving the continued , care of H. S.
Osborn, LL. D., Prof. in Lafayette College:
Tbis_brisk and instructive Review is published
by Fowler & Moore, NO. 5'21. Chestnut Street.
Journal .of ilbitioulturo for Au
gust attends to, the interests of the season, be
ing particularly full in reporting the lessons of
the EnceeSsfill - Stravberryryear just - closed; - its
noted" oil graPe-culture, and on various items
of floriculture,, are , careful: ,and important:
, Tilton & Co.
Our ; National , Game - is a pamphlet jilt-.
treSprik filled with pictures by an artist who
cannot draw,' addressed tb apublie Who can-.
not laugh .As .tlier former has not , been. in
spired to suppress, his book before publication',
we kindlyr suppress his name' 'before any halm
is dbne.'" The trifle,' which failsr. lamentably in
itsOortsto extract pictorial fun out of the
common , terns of base-ball, is published by
Holmes di Co. and for sale by Turner Bros.
ART I'TVWS.
discovery ha.s been Made at Herculaneuni
of two gold brooches of, moderate' size. still
fastened to two pieces of stuff. They probably
served as a clasp for apephim. A small faun
was also found—an indifferent. copy of a very
valuable original. .
.2-The grand statue Of David, by Michael
Angelo, is soon to be-removed from the Piazza
Signoria, at Florence, to some place under
cover t s' step rendered necessary by the rapid
internal decay of the marble. The great hall
of the Pretorio will, it is probable, be .honored
by: ying shelter to this the earliest triumph of
Buonarotti's chisel. The Florentine sculptors
of-whom the Art Commission and the Minister
of Public Instructions has taken counsel, in the
matter, and who are to superintend the re
'mad, recommend that an exact copy, also in
'white marble, should as soon as possible be
mide,.. and occupy the pedestal to be - vacated
by the . great original: , • ,
—The subscriptions to the proposed meino-.
rial of Chopin continue totome in. . The monu
ment is to be erected' in Warsaw, and to 'be
executed by M. Godebski, son-in-law of M.
Servals, and sculptor of, a successful bust of
Ressini. '
-A _statue of Goethe is to be inaugurated at
Munich in the early part of September: On
this occasion three productions of the illristrious
poet Will -be given, either At , the Court Theatre
or at the National Theatre—/phigenia in
Tauris, Torquato 'l'asso, and Faust. •• .
-The C.ourrier t/,' Orient,states that, by the
lalior of, Alidliat J'acha, a palace has been disc
.covered beneath the ruins of 'ancient Babylon
lilted with archaeological treasures. Among the
most curious objects is a"library built'of 'bricks
of extraordinary composition. The characters
with which these bricks, or rather, pages, are
covered, are in a perfect state of preservation.
THE IDLEN JESS IN OMR minsr.
(From .Ruskin , e new work,'" The Queen of the Air."]
Singe for every idle person , Some one else
must be working somewhere else to provide
him with clothes and ; food, and doing, there
fore; double the quantity . of work that would
be ,enough for, his bull needs, , it is Only a:mat
ter of pure justice to Compel; the idle person to
work for,his,maintenance hitnSelf. The cen
ser-10ton bas been used in .- many countries to
take aWay ; laborers who sUpported, their , faro
.
ilies, from their usual work, and inaintainthem
for putposes chiefly of military display - .at the
public expense. Since - this - has - beeir - long--en
dured•by the most' civilized nations,let it not be
thought thatAhey would riot much more gladly
--- ilditre a conScription which should seize only
the vicious and idle, already living by criminal
prOCedures at the *public ekpense;„ and which.
`-
should : discipline and educate them to labor
_ which would not only .maintain themselves,but
be serviceable to , the commonwealth. The
question is simply this: we must feed' the
drunkard,. vagabond and thief; but shall 'we do
so by letting them steal their food and do no
work for it? or shall we give them their food
- in appointed quantity,:and enforce their doing
:work which shall be worth it? and which, in
process of time, will redeem their own ' charac
ters, and make them happy and serviceable
members ef society ?. • - .. „
I find, by - me a; violent little fragment of
undeliVemtilecture, which puts this, perhaps,
still more Clearly. Your idle people (it saYs)
as they are now, are not merely waste coal
beds. They are ekplosive coal-beds,,which
you pay a high annual rent Mr. you are keep
ing all - these idle persons, remember, at far
greater cost than if they were buSy. ' "pc) . you
think a vicious person eats less than an honest
one? or that it is cheaper to keep a had .
Man di - Unit than a good man sober ?'
There. . is, I 'suppose as dint idea
,in the
mind of the public that they don't pay for the
maintenance
_of people they don't employ. : TlieSe staggering rascals at the street corner,
grouped around its .splendid angle of public
house, we fancy they are no servants of ours?
that we pay them no wages? that, no cash out
of our pockets is spent over that beer-stained
:counter! - - . • .„ . .
Whose cash is it, then, they are spending?
It 4is. - ,not got ' honestly:by •work. You kno*
that much. . Where do they get it from ? Who
has-ititid- for-their-dinner- and-their-pot ?-These
fellows can only live in one of two ways—by
pillage or beggary. • Their annual income by
thieving comes out of the , public pocket, you
• win admit.: ' They are not cheaply fed, so far as
-:, ... ' - they - areled by thei'W 'But the 'rest ertheirlit';T:
ingall that they don't steal—they Must beg.
Not, with success from you, Yon. think. Wise
as benevolent, you never gave a penny in "in
diScriminate charity." . Well, 1 - emigratulate
you ou the freedom of your-. conscience from
that sin; mine being bitterly burdened' With the
memory of many a sixpence given to beggars
-of WhOM I- kite* nothing, save that they .had
pale faces and thin waists. . But it is nottlet
kirWof street beggary that.: the .. vagabonds - - of
our
people Chiefly pactiee,...lt is home beggary
that is the worst beggars' trade. , Rome alms
which lt. is their worst degradation. ,to .receive.
ThOie scamps know well enough that you, and
your wisdom are worth nothing to them.' They
woraireg of you. They will beg of their sisters,
ancrifiocirera j and wives,and children,and 'of any
oneWwllo is enough am:tined of • being of
the'*oolOod with them to pay to keep them
eukr, k
..; . Every one of those bla,ckguards
. is . e bane of afaudly. • That is - the—deadly
0 , 111 'berlioinate charity"—the chanty which
=EN
~
eaellatouseholdpays . I. .• • 1 its owtrprivateo'
, 4 4 i
Alf(lYdirtidttk t , . s t. ; tat• tdl4.6urs",,,
andViat &err/ #,v #ug #:. • vi' . .'i k r# sOroir atkil.
subitile its olqi...iivi i i i .1. _ .•`..''' ' 1 , ... • ..A it er, yo
selvi*l this tWiix, t , •,, •,' ~ t7:.. L .,3,‘,4i n i. .
evel,,lantotAllose ev.. ~,3 , , : , 7r -k - '1 . . 14.
' , inner • roomt=a,'" , b j'-'. : ' . i. 0,, • fr, • ' , tor'
which daily sacrifice and oblationiwas made; at
whose feet so much beer and brandy was
,pouredout every monliu&on tile groung; and
before which, every night, good meat, enough
e ,
for women's keep, was set, and left till it was
/
put id, and then carried out and thrown on
th dunghilk—you would put an .end to that
form of idolatry with your best•diligenc,e,l sup
pose. You would understand then that the
beer, and,brandy, and.meat. ere wasted; and
that the burden imposed by,each household on
itseg,lay heavily through Meal on the - whble
donnbunity?, But, suppose farther, that this
i4oi i were not of silent and quiet bronze only;—
,but an ingenious mechanism : wound up every .
morning, to ran itself down in automatic bias
, iihemies; that, it struck and tore - with its
• hands
the people who set food before it; that it was
anointed *ith pdiSonous ungtients,find infected
'the air for miles round. You would interfere'
with the idolatry then, straightway ?-• Will you
not interfere with it now, when the infection
that the venernous idol spreads is not merely
death—but sin?
PARIS GOSSIP.
51 ;+:-Peakhes be - tan to - be extkosed - iii - Paris
about July 28th; . the fruit was from Montreull;.
being rated at nine francs per box of ten
peaches, it was generally voted unwholesome..
—The new Opera • House is, burnishing itself
up, foi the fetes. statues in white marble have
taken their places son the rez-de-clientsBCe,•
statues in bronze have mounted the roof; both
species are evidently acquainted with no other'
dressmakers than those. accustomed to ;make
for 'Eve, They appear in tostunie •peculiarly`.
,adapted to the present season..
—The preaching of Pere Hyacinthe at the
Madeleine has caused inuetrxrunment.
-
The Vatette'deltraitte records the death of
"le 'pire Epinal,". the king 'Of the Paris chiffon-,
More.than 1,200 cliffoniers accUmpanied
hiireinains to the, grave. Under his pillow was
discovered a bundle of papers, with the direc.: 7 .
tion;• "To be burnt after my death;' and•
round his neck he - carried a medallion, which
concealed a • Tortrait •of Rachel, the great
French'actress. Of his life nothingis . known,
but lie had a reputation as a doctor, and was a
well-read man. -
case, which, althOogh :attended with
disastrous r6ults, was not of a fatal character,
has Occurred. within the last few days in Paris.
A gentleman,• supposed to be of irreproaChable
Character in . all respects, called on - a lady
friend, who informed him in course of conver
sation that she had 50,000 fr. in her drawer.
Ite left her. and she shortly after Wards went
out. On her return she found that the seeni
taire had been broken , open and her money
stolen. On making a statement of the faCt to
the con of police, that functionary was
of opinion that the gentleman of irreproacha
ble character was the. thief. Re was arrested.
In the chignon of a lady with' whom. he was
connected , greater part of the notes were
found, and the - parties are now in durance vile.'
—lt is curious to notice the diference which
exists between nations in the matter of love of
science. M. Oustave Lambert has been an
nouncing in France; for the, last three years,
that he intends setting out on an expedition to
the Arctic seas in tuest of the long-lookedjor
Northwest passage. All he is waiting for is
phoney; but as there were sixty committees at
Work gathering subscriptions, it was hoped at
the outset that he would not be long in collect
ing
what he wanted.. It is melancholy to re
cbrd that the united efforts of all the commit
tees dnring three years have only. succeeded in
producing 264,1)29 francs: In (lermany, a few
yeara ago, a million of franca Were collected
within two months for an Arctic expedition.
In the United States $20,000,000 were raised
by shares, within a week, for a similar pur
poae; ,and finally, in England, at the time of
Sir 'Jelin Franklin's last voyage; a, single
banker subscribed £20,000 - out of his own
pocket.
Religious Equality in Spatu..:A Pro..
testant-Porlal.
A Madrid correspondent, of an English paper
writes:
• Your readers will be ;interested to learn that
a'great triumph has just been . Obtained for reli
gious 'equality in the practical testing of the
principles Contained in' Article 21 of the new
onstitutiOn'hy the,Cominittee of the Spanish
Protestant Chtu•eh in the Calle de Madera,
under the pastorate • of, ?Senor Ruet,. which
Church,-by-the way, is- flourishing;.if one may---
judge may- by the fact that the hall'in which it/was .
held, and which is adapted for over one ;thou
sand persons, is net large - enough to contain
the crowds who flock to every Sunday"morn,
lug and evening, and also every Thmtday even
ing. A young female member of that Church,
who had made an open prottssion of Pro,
testuntism, died the other day. Her friends
Were anxious to bury her in the general public
cemetery,bnt on application to the priests who
bad the charge of it they were refused, On the
! -ground that she, being a Protestant, could not
I be buried in a Catholic cemetery. . •
The committee of the Spanish Protestant-
Chtreh applied to President River° 'tor advice,
there being no place that was not Catholic ex
cept the little British cemetery, `and that has
never been used for the interment of any„Spati,
iah subject; in fact it was part of the conditions
on which ale land was sold to the- British go
vernment in 1E54 and English Protestants per-
Mitted to be buried here at all, that it should be
exclusively deVoted to foreignem. President
Rivero, the instant the case was brought before
him, issued the following order to the authori
ties of the General Cemetery. 'The horror and
astonishment Of the priests hi question may be
imagined : • •
: Avila:lndent° of Madrid--Dona Paulina
Gomez, inhabitant of Calle de Juanda No. 16,
belonging to the 'Madrid Spanish Protestant
Mitch, died laSt 'night at ten 0'416c.k. Liberty
of worship having t heen decreed by the Cortes
Cotistitu3entes, She has a right, as a Spaniard
and a Protestant, that hem' Jentains rest in one.
of the general cemeteries, and that they may
be interred tere• with - the ceremonies prOper
to the religion to which' she belonged. In the
iesent epidemic State of the popUlation, and
many hems having now 'transpired since' her
_ deatit,•itls_uecessary that-,within
- scribed the Sanitary' lawS (.14-' Borers), tlie
body should be buried, and all the
. conditions:
of the &aid laws fulfilled, t< the v ,d4ngPrOms-
consequences Want 'of compliance might entail.
l.,directimyself,therefoite; to EXeelleiley, ,
that without loss of a single moment you. will
please to giVe the proper orders to thoSe charged
With the General Cemetery del Sur, to the end
Butt Within the period indicated the interment
of the cbody of the said Pattlina-GomeiLinay be
verified, requiring only the presentation 'of the
proper certificate.. God guard you many yeats.
. NICOLAS MARIA RIVER°,
' • Aleidd of Madrid.
' , To the Senor Ticar-General EccleSiastien.
, Rivero sent a copy of this order to the friends'
of the deCeased, and at the same time charged
three officials of the corporation to accompany
the body to the cemetery, with instructions to
force the gates If they should find them locked,
and to take into' cnstodt any who'offered- any
impediment to the ititertnent:: Atkiotdingly,, at
six o'clock the same 6 . lt6xj4?B;e:fhP - 'bOtly was
carried to the place,,aceompanted by the three
officials referred to, and by about two hundred
of the attendants at the Spanish Protestant
Church. They walked - through the streets in
, THE q:I3ULLATIN-01 : 4L.A.pur i lli f 4, FRIDAY 4.
Eto ;4 , lbce s on,amu
ILK;t4 , •e. At the
. a simple
'; hiel' of c(
funeral f
.4t ve by Pastoi
,Intfte I . What a chi
thelik, Were no
Prinestants in 111aMic
they could not have R.
BONED irossecirDs,
[From the 'Saturday ReView.l
The curtain falls on joined - lauds when it,
does not, descend on a t i ngedy; tpadi novels , for
the most part endftir w ewreatit or orange
blossoms and a pair of high-stepping•,groysras
the last act that claims to pArecorded, for both
novelists and
,plaY-wrights assume, that, with
Marriage all, the great events ,of life have ceased,
and that, once wedded to, ,the ,beloved object,
there is sure to he smooth Sailhig and halcyon
aeas to the end of title. 'lt *sounds very cynical
and shocking to question this pretty belief, buk
Unfortunately for us who live in the world as it
and not as it is supposed to be, we find that
even a union with the beloved object does not
always insure perfect, contentment in the hame,
and that, bored husbands are bynO means rare.
The ideal honeymoon is of course an Ely
sian time, during which nothing works rusty or
gets out of joint; and the ideal marriage is only
a lik-long honeymoon, where the happiness is
-more-secure and the love_deeper, if more sober;
-but the prose reality of one and the other has
often a terrible dash of weariness in, it, even
under 'the most favorable Conditions. Bore
dom begins in the very:honeymoon itself. At
first startina b in married life there are many
dangers to be encountered, not a shadow of
which was seen in the, wooing. There
are odd freaks of ,temper turning up
quite unexpectedly; there ':, ; ,is the sense,
So painful to some men, of being
.tied for life, of never.being able to be alone
again, never free and without 'responsibilities;
, there are misundersta.ndings to-day, and the
struggle for mastery to-morrow—the cloud, no
bigger than a man's hand, which may prove to
be the tempest -that will destroy all; s there is
the unrest of traveling, and the awkwardness
of unusual asseciation, to hell) in the general
discomfort; or, if the happy pair. , have settled
down in a vale and a cottage for their month,
there is the "sad satiety" which all men feel
after a time when they have had one corn-
panion only, with no, outside diversion to cause
a break.
But the honeymoon at last draws to a close,
and the relieved bridegroom" gets back to his
old haunts, to his work, his • friends, and his •
club ; and though lie, takes to all these things
again " with a difference,". still they are helps
and additions. This is the thne of trial to a
woman. If she gets over this Pinch, and is.
sensible
,enough to understand . that human
nature cannot be kept up at high pressure, even
in love, and that a man must sooner or later
come down from romance to work-a-day. prose,
from the paSsionate lover to the cool and 'sober
husband—if she can understand this; and settle
into his pace, without fretting on,the one hand,
or. casting about for unhealthy distractions
on the other—she will do )'veil, - and will
probably make a pleasant. home ' and thereby
diminish the boredom of life ? But, unfortu
nately, not every woman can do this; and it is
just durina b this time of the man ' s transition
from the lmier io the friend that so many wo
men begin to make shipwreck of their own
happiness and his. They think- to keep hint a
romantic:wooer still, by their tears at his pro
saic indifference to the little : sentimentalities'
once so eagerly accepted and offered, they try
to hold hiin close by their flattering, but some
what tiresome exactions; their jealousies—very
pretty perhaps, and quite as flattering- - -are in
and as baseleSs as they are infinite; all
of which is very nice up to a certain point and
in the beginning of things, but all of which
gets awfully wearisome'as time goes on, and a
man wants both a littlechange and a little rest;
But women do not see this; or; seeing it, they
cannot accept it as a necessary condition of
things; wherefore they go on in their fatal way,
,and, by the very unwisdom of their own- love,
bore their husband out of his. Or they grow
substantially cold because he is superficially
ccoler, and think themselves jilitified in ceasing
to loVe him altogetheebecansehe takes their
love for granted; and'so hits 'ceased to woo it; ,
If they are jealous, or shy, or unsocial, as so
many women are, they make life very heavy
by 'their exclusiveness, and the monastic char,-
-aeter'they give to the home. A man married
to a Woman of this kind ls, in fact, a house
'piisonei, whose only hoUrs of freedom , lie be
yond the four walls of home. His bachelor
friends are shut out. They smoke, Or entice
him.to drink more than his wife thinks is good
for_hithe_y_lnfluae_ifirn—to-bet—On—the--
Derby,' or to play for half crowns at
whist or° billiards, or they - lead hinr, in
some other .way of offence abhorrent
tO women. SO the Wader friend are
shoiiidered -, mit and "when " the Mahan&
wants to entertain them,he must invite them_to
his club—if he has one—acid pay the_lienalty
when . he gets home. Tri a few years' time his
wife will be glad to encourage her sons' friend's
to the house, for the sake of the daughters
hand; 'but husbands and sons are iu a different
category, and there are few fatheis who do 'not
learn, as time goes on, how much the Mother
will allow that. the wife refused. If baehelor
friends are shouldered out of the house: all
Male friends are forbidden anything like an
intimate footing,save those few whom the wife
thinks 'specially-devoted to hqrself and -of
whom-she is not jealous. And they are very
few.
There are perhaps no women in the world;
exclusiVe towards their husbands as are Eng
lislaomen. A husband is bound to one woman
Only, no doubt but she thinks him also bbtuid
to have no affection whatsoever ,outside the,
houSe and family. If he meets an intelligent
womap, pleasant to talk to, of agreeable man- :
hers and' ready wit, and if he talks to • her :in
consequence with anything like persistency or
interest, he offends, apinst the unwritten laW;,
and hiS wife, whose utmost Of - conversa
tion consists in putting in a yes or no
tolerable accuraey of aim, thinks ',.herSelf
slighted and ill-used. She may be young and,
pretty, and dearly loved for her own, special,.
qualities, and her husband may riot :"hate,,
thought towards his new friend, or Other
woman, In the remotest degree trenching „on ,
• his allegiance to her; imp the 'fact th if he finds„
. pleaSufv, though only of au hitelleetital ' and
7 it,sthetic kind, In the" SoCiety - of tihy other-
Woman, that he' feelS'an'ifiterest, in her life,
chooses her for his friend,;or, (Inds community
Of,pursitits or sVmpathy in ideas, makes, c his
*ire by ;just. .s . c) . Much-a victim and aggrieved.
And, yet ~ w hat a miserahlym6untonous:houie
is that to which she would confine 'Miff! He
is at - his Office all day; badgered and; worried
with various ,Mishicss eumplic ttiuits and he :
CoMeshOnie tired, Perhaps eroSseyen
ConduCted litiSharids have that
Ilefinds his wife tired and cross too; so-that
they hegin the evening together mutually sat
Odds, she irritated by small' gars, and: he.
Mrbed by WO anxieties. Or he fiards'her:
Pre-occUrned and abSerbed in her own pursuits;
and . quite disinclined -to Make - any 'diver
sion, for ' his sake. lie asks)(er : for :
some music; she used to -be, ready.enough to
sing and play to him in the old Love-making
days;: but she refuses now. Either she has'
-sOme needlework to do, which might have been
. done during the day when lie was out, or baby;
i§
. asleep
_ •
, the nursery, and music in the
dravi,i9glooxik would disturb him=at all events
site cannot Sing or. play to-night; and even ,if
- she does—he has heard all her pieces so often!
If he is not a reading man, those long, dull;
silent 'evenings- are Neil: trying:, ' =-Ite. r )
i 4i
111 , ,d 'l7. kit 1 Nviids . ith• , ~,,,
~. ~I , rtv ,Pi
n e; ~' , ' 4j ‘," t k , - i ks'• :t '' -2 ''' i)!4: 1
h' : sno I,' , '., dge k Acld i.` l : , '
hipists o :‘e ~,. bun cE.: .„:, I , k , s ; 8
s l e
t ei: ' P: • , sr Ake c.i.b. ‘ .W.Ves,
4.. 1 : --4 . - *:;.cf 11 4 t7%1:1A-i.&,....' ,, he..„
won ' 1 oy , ' the pa, .r dees n; '1 - : tehi,..
perhaps it sends him to sleep, when at least he
is not bored. - -• , , ,
,
Bt fildl;.Ottiectless,and,xacant,..as,tivicnVerit:
ings are, his wife would not hear of any help
from Wikhoutterne . just that little 'fillip which
would Prevent boredom and riot-'create cere
mony.. , She .would think her life had gone to
pieces, and thritonly„desolationwas before her,
he hinted -*at biegionie\ Wail,: 'dull and that,
th o POIJMJ9Yes,bOVer3r,..S I MIY4 od,-Wants, 11 °-
other wife but her, yet that her soclepy conlY
to4oiirs 'pe2'arLiVitliout,Cha4igo or addition,'
is a little stupid, however nice: _ the partridge,
may be,and that, things would' be_ better if Mrs.
or :illisaSo-and-So , e• Me SOMetiMeg, 'just to
brighten 'up, the hours: And , ' if he
were to make 'it 'practice of 'bringing 'home
his - menfriends, , she 4 wciiild-"Vrobably -jet all'
parties concerned feel pretty distinctlY that she
considered' the home her special sanctuary, and.
that vests whom she did not, invite were little
else:than intruders. She mould perhapsgowill—
ingly enough; to a ball , Or crowded soiree,' or •
she might like to give one; but that 'intimate
form, of society which; is a mere enlargement of
the' licinie life she 'dreads as too much - like *the
dupplementing of deficiencies, and thinks her
Married happiness - safer -- ni boredom . than
any diverSiorifrom herself as the sole centre of
her hirsband's pleasure. • '
The home life stagnates in England, and in
Very fewlfamilies is there-any mean -between
dissipation , and, firs ‘stagnation. ; We, can
scarcely wonder that SOrmany husbands think
matritriony, a Mistake as we have it in'ciur in
sider arrangements, ,:that they look back regret
fully to the'time when ,they were unfettered
and not bored, iii.that,their free friends, who,
watch them as wild , birds, watch their ; caged
companions, curiously ',and fellectively,•come
to share theiropiniont. ' , Wife 'and home, after
all, make up but one part of a man's life; they';
are not his all, and do not satisfy the whole-of
his social instinct, nor is there any one woman
the concentration of all womanhood to a man,
leaving nothing that is beautiful, or in its way
desirable, on the outside. Besides, when with
his wife a man.is often as Much isolated as "
when alone, for any real Companionship there is',
between them. ` Few women fake a living in
terest in the lives - of mem.and 'fewer still 'en
derstand them. They exPect the husband to- ;
sympathize with them in the kitcherrgossip and
the nursery: chatter, the neighbors' doings, and
all the small household politics ; but as a race
they are utterly unable to comprehend his
pleasures, his thoughts; his'duties, the respon
sibilities of his profes.sion, or the bearings of
any public question in which he takes'a part.
But even if this were not so, arid granting,that
they could enter fully into Ins life, and sympa
thize with him as intelligent - equals, not only
as compassionate saints •or loving children,
there would still he the need of novelty, and ,
still the certainty of boredom without it. For
human life, like all other forms of life, must
have a due proportion of fresh elements con
tinually added to keep it sweet and growing,
else it becomes stagnant and stunted, as every-
thing else would be. And daily intercourse
undeniably exhausts the moral ground.
After the close companionship of years, no
one can remain mentally fresh to the. other,
unless, indeed, one or both be of the rarest or
der of mind, and of a practically inexhaustible
knowledge. Save these exceptional instances,
we must all of necessity get worn out, 'by con
stant intercourse. We know every thought,
every opinion, and almost every square inch of
information possessed ; we have heard the old
:Ztories again and again, and at, what point they
will begin; we have measured:the whele sweep
of mind, and have probed its depths; • and
though we may love and value what we have
learnt,yet we want something new—fresh food
for interest, though not necessarily a new love
for the displacement of the old. But this is
' what veryffew English Women can understand or
will allow.. They hold so intensely by the doc
trine of unity that they , are even jealous of a
man's pursuys, if they think these take up
any Place in his mind which might else he
theirs. * They must be:good for every part of
his life; and the poorest of them all, must„be
his only source , of , interest; suffering no other
woman to share his admiration or . obtain his
friendship, though this would not touch his
love for themselves or interfere with their
rights. But this is a hard saying te them, and
one they cannot receive; wherefore they keep
a tight grasp on the' marital', collar, and suffer
no relief of monotony by judieious loosening
or by generous faith in integral "fidelity. The
_practical result of which is that most men are
.horribly ' . 64::ed at borne, arrdhat . the mass of
us really suitor frOm - the 'domestic_stagnation-
to which national customs and the exclusive
ness of our women doonr - us - as - soon - l$ - We b e
come family. men. -It must, however, in fair
ness be added, that, most men obtain some
kind of compensation, and that, very few walk
meekly in their bonds -- Without, at, times - slip- -
ping them off; without, the concurrence of
their w ives.
liow Indian 'Ontrages Cripple Indindry.
A Correspondent of the 'Chicago 'Tr/btu - Lc
writes from New Mexico a doleful story about
'lndian outrages. He says ,
The Indians ' hold the , . hand of industry
Paralyze,d in. New, Moieo - ; and have 'done so
fOr Months ;; and neither General SberMan nor
the Quaker agents come to the relief of the
people at 'all.: In the' Pines Altos:district, in
Grant connty, a dozen of the most extensive
"copper, gold . and silver, mines, supplied, with
Machinery at enormous - expense, have been
. abandoned on: account: - Of the‘hoStility of the
Indians, and thousands of
.nipti,* thrown out
of employment and 'the' machinery left to to be
burned and 'destroyed. `AMOng. thOSe 640.;
dotted are the celebmtedllamiver.cOppermine,
the Santa :Rita and Jose Atlantic gold mine,
Stewart lode, Apache Pass, •Harris lode; and
• many others Might beliaineth . • ; • ,
, Itt'Etbna Anna county MOO thakn dezen
prOtitahle milted have been
*DeetTp ,equittY valuable
,abandoned,
haVe„heen,
abandoned, and the miners driven away by the
Navajees. In. San Juan sixty-seven: mines
have been. ahandoriek • In:Yalentia County
more than dozen profitable' - lodes have been ,
abandofted.:' people here' are at
the mercy - bf ;,the Indians, , who steal *ides,
Sheep; ~ and everything they' can.
--get . their hantla• T on,-besidea , -Coliatautly.-killing,
murdering%and kidnapping the, people.: The
People regard the military as a nuisance,:scrfar
aa : protection is edneerned.: A few weeks ago
the Indians ''drOve or four !Mildred head of
Urules frail the town'; i day,
ortyo since they drove away a herd .of six
thousand .sheep ,not twebtylive,
Santa Fe.. Within ten days: they have ,de,
gt toyed four mails; stolen' twelve mules:, and;
shot, the drivers; ' within ; a hundred .!ittiles ,
of 'here. Every day ' brlnas news Of. 'fresh:
outrages -
only nre all; or nearly ail; of the mines
of New Mexico abandOned on account of : 'the
; hostility of the Indians, but no prospecting ! can
be: done and:rio new mines Canbe opened. , Tlie
Indians gobble up • every Party!Whe venture
five miles from. a' fort; or large 'town; and the
conSeqUence is' miners, are ',leaVirig the' terri ,
tory, business is Oott4ed and merehants are
failing. to pay, becau4e „they' Itave. lost , their
c stoners and camint.selltbetr:goodS."..
REMOVALS:
. .
-ItEMOVAL.LCOCHR.A# RLTt3SLLL 8c
ao: have removed . froiri o ' rth .Front• street to'
In CHESTNUT tialtEET, ' side, above Front,
street.- -
T 13, 1869.
,-.....01710110.., 1 ,•. . • , ..- •, 1
_..,
.. , ,,..:7',..t . ,,...,__ -. .':t:C-, • ~ ..v 4 , ',*-• '1,,• , .. A • C.A .. ' 'IR '
-.1. • ~...:•,.... 44,,, • ~. ,-,-,..,. ?; ,
~it!,
.. ‘ 4 . :,; ,5 , ' " TtieS dalt, 5; i ..' ',..:, ' n. ! . 8 ,•:' %. Rai 'ti,(rUS . : 01,
1 :1,) , .nd • aftei: l3 .& ‘.: , .i . ' 1 .',-. ' . 'ditit,•l . •th . 74 . ttew r ,4
~ ,..fi..):., L ti ns pt:6 7 ,..Li te., .....!„ i::,..-..' 4 ! ..1,,i: I I,: . !'?"1 , 1 43 a 11 ,
''':"' '{lPl l 6 ' l:ar ia . ,'ll a n n g •
i5YY,,,4,.. 2.4 . i ' ' .. / :: :'- t' id ; 7:, 0 . ; 4' 1 0 . 1'. a ' 4
o'clock and roturnin•• -. • prv, ..• • • 'laltdlng__ltt Cappgdoi
on MONDAYS , ''..i "- '-' i , 5 , ,..' 'ft •ond • FRIDAY -' at
8 o'clock. - • • •-• .-..,'..,
..- . • - .
FARE,' 11411L'OD,I t ' - '.I7ABEt.LAG?,. ! -1112Ftp I. tp,23 ? ,..,,
~
..- , fit -, . '"''`'••?'' . ? 4 , 6 4 "''"'''''':" - f- ''''. .I*- 25 :1 .-
BRVAN.TIib_2L;....;
~-..._,
BEASON •• wiumszitst •, 4 1 10. • ....CIARICIAGE -
.411111 r,
whin
story
Vekcing
'TILE LADY OF THE LAKE Is a flno sea boat, has
handsome. state-room' accomModationg, and ie fitted up
with everything necessary for the safety and comfort of
, passengers.
Tickets sold and Baggage checked at tho Transfer
„Office, 828-Chestnut street,,tuiffer theXordwaitai mow.,
FreightitbSived'utitil B,3ii o'clock.
‘, For further 'particulars; hatatireitt thtro2l3CO,'llo. 38
North DELAWARE Avenue. r.
1 - ' " 'oAI VIN II T*G4ART
Je2stfg,. t •
4- • :41
. OP PHILADELPHIA...'ANti
READING RAILE_CAb COM.PANY,,BUOAD
STREET; PIIII.ADELPRIA, Angnat.43thilses."-
I READING RAILROAD. PARK ACCOMMODATION.
TRAIN, betwcyt.pniladelphis common- .
.
inn August fith,l/360L-Starthig (rem tationibovoritOuth
^street and Pennaylvadia aventte. and Mcippiwg . at (Mates
Otrect trark - ,Entrancqh. Brown street (Park Entrance)
Vionllnien street' Mifflin lane, lEntwyme sto Engel AL ,
oirs'parm,/ and east chd Columbia Bridge.pntrance
to Washington 'Retreat), Stmdaya mice d.
Trains start front , Seven- Trains • , start rom
tenth and Penna. av,: -• ' moat; . ••• . •
JAL 7.10 ' 'At 6.30 A. 31. •.
" 0.10 'Ai " • B.OOA 111:
" -11.00 A. M., .". 10.00 A. -•
" 1.30 P. 31. , " 12.20 Noon. ; •
t^ 3.00 P; 31 ' ," -
• " 4.00 P. N. - '" - '4.00 P. '31,2
-1 , "
"
Airangementa hallo been made with Croon and Coates,
Seventeenth and Nineteenth Streets; and Union Passen
ger Railways to sell :Exchange Tickets in connection
with above treina, good either way, for cts:
Single fares on Park Accommodation Train...—. 10 eta
• Tickets in peickagesj fort.° cts. ;' for, ei 00.
For sale at Offices, Seventeenth , Street; Coates street,
and LOWRIE BELL,
' • General Agent.
parliAl)ELPn:u
PRINTERS! VARIMOTTSE,
' • ,L Establfebed 1941.,
The
•
The subscriber, having greatly increased facilitiee for
manufacturing,. calls ,particular attention to his , New
Series of Classic Paces of Bock and New 0 PaPar TYR OO,
which will compare favombly 'with those of any otner
Pounder:. lite practical experience in all branches ap
pertaining. to t he , Manufacture of Type: and the fact of
constant Personal Supervision of each department of his
business; is the best guarantee offered to the Printer of
finished and durable article. '
Everything necessary do a . complete „Printing Es
tsblistunent furnished at the shortest, notice..
AGENT FOR •
ROE, CAMPBELL
pEOENER
~,K
I,o;rK M. AND ALL OTHER
mAriUSACTURESS.
• SOIO
33 . WADE. Agents for thin City of
'8 UNRIVALED INFO
A good arti cle
, sir Cilvo , llB t r a .B a saving . of money.
l. • '
PELODZE,
m .
73 , i. co rn r w ne i r tr of T. 7 111D and CHE STNUT Stree t s
s.
N L
Plailidelphla, Fa.
GENTS' FURNISDING' GOODS.
PATENT' SHOULDER SEAM SHIRT
MANUFACTORY.
Orders for these celettr b a r tag= annulled promptly on
Gentifimen'i Funiiihing Goods,
Of late styles in full variety.
WINCHESTER &
706 CHESTNUT.
FINEDRESS SHIRTS
AND.
• GENTS' NOVELTIES.
J. W. SCOTT &
No. 814 Chestnut Street, PhiledelPhia, ,
Four doors below Continental
-- • -mhldm w
THE FINEIJARTS.
1795..
A... S. ROBIN ON
FRENCH PLATE LOOKING GLASSES,
Beautiful Chromoa,
. ,
ElirtiltAirilliGS AHED' 141.1 1 11TINIGIS;
mabufacturer Oen triads of
Locadil*ool3;rpitrit
910 HESTNUT STRhET,
ROBERT TEbliti7(late with J. R. TOn k . linger', Laurel
_ WharL) CiALDRAITH.
TENER ‘..410 GAtll3ls “Tit
9
HONEYBROOK LEHIGH,
AND ;WYOMING COAL,
No 955;NOrth Fixnit Street. • •
;sir Trial ()Were, peraoually or by malt, invited.
jy2l-sm§ • :"
BL MASON 'out; V. igniAvv,
THE UNDERSIGNED INVITE ATTEN
..tioti to their etock of. • . • . -
Spring Mountain, Lehigh and Locust Mountain Coal,
which, with the preparation given hy n uti, we thillit
can
not be excelled by any other Coal. .. •
t Office, Franklin Institute 15 B. Seventh
stree. , 11INES
ttalo-tf . Arch street wharr.Elchuylkill.
GROCERIES, Litivuoni, &to.
NEW SPICED SALMON
FIRST OF THE SEASON.
ALBERT C., ROBERTS,
DEALER IN FINE °ROMANIES,
Caller Bitten* ally Vinci Street&
lIITE BRAiNDI( ,, FOR . PRESAItATIN.
--' A cliolee artkla. just 'll.463ived.F:aati for`anio at
COVSTX'S GrocorYi lio.jl.B„Soatti Second,
ti,trtl4; beloW (Iliwitnut strtlet., , . ,
NT EW,....01t, BEN 2. 1111,N. It% II:r-409
elloice . . Green :Ginger, in.. store . and for sale at
0 G,STVS ',End Grocerk.," N.0. - .MB South Second
street', below Ohedtiviit'strciiti• ~ r.
TF ~V Xll SS
SRS? TA-1;1D:
.SJ ivsktimon Tongues Ond'Sintinfic; prime' 'order, just
received arnifor saleatiGo.7l3'flPS .EaSt
118 South Second 'st rect. below Cliedtnut kltreet..
0 UP- S' , ;:i•l'• 0 'A T • PEA ; 'MOCK
TurtlC.andquiliett Sotips of liostOni .010 Mannino.
Ore one of Clip finest art toles fpri'•picliiics and , sailing
RRu rite.,
Forenle cOVETYS EnEit End Groc
ry 'No
Ar butli3ecOndeieer, - 3elms Chestnut street; '
.
_Lp
Vitli'iBPl,l.l3XlS it GltOUND AND WiI(P)LE
ueo — NagGelfi, iutturd :the • 'pound .4011 ole o.
White Witio , and - Ur Apple . Vlnegar • for
stOreyend for Bele fit 1001JST , East End Grocery, No. -
118 South Seeond street. below Itentant etreet: • • •-• •
N
1 $ O IVE TO TILE guBLIo GENE
Tim
lateet etyl_,e fashion and iteeortineiliof '• " 1
0T.8,-BLIOBB GAITERIi, .F4)11- MEN AND
Can - be r bidat ' . PP YS ' - • '
" ' F DNEBT“'SOPP , I3 t _''
4.1 . 0. 230 NOBTRNINTD BTRvET:
Better t han alrywhero in the
_City,, A' Fit Warranted.
1420m§ GIVE RIM A VAL.D. _
T YPIT .FOIIN .
• TYPE YODNDRY
rifth-DimqtAhtLepnt I r!f.ntitili
' ;Path ADELERIA •
co AL
itpcits :A
~~ ~:: }3e' ~' :R%:~v nYi :a a
. .
.G f NMENT* SALE;
A. l . gito Is •p Uin 4 0 . 8 . A , "
a 5 ei .. 14t..., Ptinvirron's ,OriznE, t
' * -4 1 4sn ot* , C., July, 201809. j
o •.. • ptiblie auction in this city,
li c kju 4; . :-,pepot; B.street, between
ourthan gte6ets, on WEDNESDAY,
the 18thilay*Of.A.tiignst„ at 10 A. M., a. large as
soriment of IThspital Furnitnre'. and ,'A._ppli-
MUCCI4 % , among which will'he*.fontid the follow
-3000 'fin Basins, 3,000 Iron Bedsteads 3,b00
Deif Bowls, 000Leathet. , 13treliOtsill00*(4041.
Buckets, 19,000 ilitt. - Cupg,•24solPDAlf -
assorted, 15,000 RIOTS and. Forks; each, 2,000
Litters, 300 Delf . Pitchers, .4000 Pkt,e. ,s
800 D elf iTe4 POyi,'6oo salt;c9lais;l42oo l 2apt4l4/
and Strops, 1,500 Spittorins;lo,oooTablesPbons,
- -31.ess.Chests r 8 , 00,3£ubber -
Cushions, moo y . ards Gottrie . perUhaPlOtit,2,ooo
Gutta;pereha Bed-covers; and - a-large i'ariety
of other articles, embracing Funnels, ,Cork
screws, Dippers, -Gridironiii Lanternii, Scales
and Weights Slates and Pencils Bed
side-Tables, Cbto;
COffee4l Tiff Tuniblers;*&d.','&69
. With a . small exception the above articl es new.,. .Catalognes p#tieidars
furnished upon application. . .
in Government hinds. 'only;
per 'cent. deposit required at the time of
sale, and all purchases to he removed within
. fiVe days.' • • •
4 ißj
CHAS. SUTHEHLAND,
Afiiistant Purveyor, Brevet Colonel
tr. S.
PROPOSALS. '
117% :EP A Rini E NT. P;- HMO:MAYS,
j.:7,7I3ICMGEEr - SEWSPSAC.- 7 -OPPICE OP'
CITIFY :commnisiox44„isTo. 104 SOUTH
FIFTH. STREET. :
PiritsimmrrtiA, August 12 180.
'NOTICE :TO CONTRACTORS.
Scaled proposals will be received at the of
fice of the Chief Commissioner of. Highways
lint:all-o'clock A.M., on MONDAY, 16th inst.,
for tho.eonstruction of a Sewer on the line of
Ridge avenue from the ' Sewer in- Twenty
second street to, a point ten feet north of the
summit. at Twenty-first street. On Kessler'
street, beghining at; . the sewer on Brown
street and extending southward to .f.kiates
street, to be three feet in , ekar inside diameter;
thence westward along Coates street to, the
sewer in Tenth street , two feet sixinches in
diameter, with such man-holes, as may be', di
rected by the Chief Engineer and Surveyor.
The ;understanding to be that the; Sewers
herein advertlied are to be completed, 'on or
before the Mst day of December, 1E69, and the
Contractor shall take bids prepared gainst
tho, property fronting on said sewer'to the
amount of one dollar and fifty. cents for each
lirteal foot of front on each side of the street
as so much cash paid; the balance, as limited
by Ordinance, to I,)€ , paid by the city ; and the
Contractor will be required to keep the street
and sewer hi good order for three years after
the sewer is finished. •
• 'When the street is occupied by a City Pas
senger Railroad track, the Sewer shall be con
structed along side of said track in such man
ner as not to obstruct or interfere with the Nat)
passage of the cars thereon; ,and no claim for
remuneration shall be naid the Contractor by
,the company using said track, as specified in
act of Assembly approved May htli, 1860.
Each proposal will be accompanied by a cer
tificate that a Bond has been filed in the Law
Department as directed bv Ordinance of 11lay
25th, 1131X1. . If thelowe4 'bidder skill not exe
cute a contract within five days after the work
is awarded, he will be deemed as declining !
and will be held liable on his bond for the dlr.
ferenee between Ids bid and the next lowest
bidder; Specifications may .be had at the Dr
partment of Surveys,which will be strictly ad
hered to. ~T hee Department of .highways re
servessatisfa th right to reject all bids not deemed
ctory, , •
• All bidders maybe present at the time and
place of opening the said proposals, and no
allowance will be made for rock { excavation
except by special contract
• MAHLON EL bieKrigNic,
aul2-3t4 Chief Commissioner of. ,hways.
SUMMER RESORMS.
81[4iF 11018E 1 LTLANTie CITY, N. is,
WILL BE OPEN UNTIL SEPTEMBER 20.
For ROoms; Terms, &e.. address ' .
THOMAS VARLET, Proprietor.
151 r/ fSesetz's„ Parlor' Orchestra has tun eataitidfor tM
season,
CAPE 'ISLAND, N. J.
A Arst-clase RESTAURANT. a la carte, will be
opent4 by
_ADOLPH' PROBKAUER, of 222 8. THIRD
Street. Philadelphia, on the 7th of June, under the name
acill Nile of. N MA/SO DOREE, at the corner of WASH.-
INeteniged4illitr,4l,Tiam_ °°ttaye.
lodging dooms bp . Day or Week to Rent.
tf.
COLUMBIA ROUSE,
CAPE MAY,
With accommodations for 740 guests, la now open.
The Gera:Lints 'Serenade Bend, under the direction o
Prof. Geo. Bastert, bat been secured for'the season.
GEO: J. BOLTON, Pronrieh)r.
_ )04 2D3§
LORETTO SPRI;tIG-5,
Wiltbenpened to Guestsly Ist;
"Eacurelon; Tickets," good for-;be season, over the
Pennsylvania -Central-Batiroad, can bo procured from
Philadelphia, Plitt& *ugh, and Harrisburg, to ILayler
- Station:2 Mika from-thelipringa, where coaches will be
in 'readiness to convey guests to the Sprin Re. , '
The proprietor takes pleasure in notifying the publis
that the hotel Is in proper order, and all amusements
usually'fonnd at 'watering places' can .be ' found at the
above resort.,,Terms,__B2 per day, or elk) per month.
• • , FRANOIS A. GIBBONS, Proprietor.
SIMON NEWTON. Snperintendent,
Of the Atlantic Hotel, Newport.
sT,TI W
ALFONT''‘ . -
ATLANTIC 'CITY, N, J.
ELISIIAMOBEILTri,
' 'Yroprictor.
' • •
T IGHT „liousF, COTTAGAATLA,I•4I.IC
JONAH WOOTTONi Proprintor. '
The most desirable Itication on the Island, being the
nearest:point to the Surf. , • , • .; •
Guests for the house will leave the care at the United.
States Motel. No bar.
WEA •BATHING-.—NAIIONAL HALL,
N., Cape May MY, N. 3 . • t. .• . K
This large and commodious • rioter, nown as t h e
National Hali, ii now receiving visitors.
AARON GARRETSON,
je24.2m§ . , froprietor. ,
DF.LA:WARE HOCTSB,.CAPE ISLAND,
N. J, is now open for the reception.orvisitors,
jel7-2m§ „ JAMES ME9tAY. Proprietor.
COUNTRY BOARDING 1 1. 611, GROWN
r i a m ons. llfteen minutes' ride of the city by
ei
locution.
Address H. H., Bei.t.Ertiaittie: nitlo.6r
inamm=
1869.
- IFtatglTUßt
STAIOET. ,
t eeinplete the fineatlet of Furniture' ever
nrodit emir thieeity; 0 of& rti for the s amt.;
during the month of August, ,; • • ' '
.• .
AT PRICE'S THAT WILL' OFIrETI INDUCEMENTS
. • •. • • ma DURO LIASEItS. •, . • •
• ,
Thedeeimis are. neiv . and ',elegant. The workmanship
and tuatetialeate of the highest ; order. . .
I invite the attention of those - who intelnifurntehink to
call and examine the - stock , of Furniture, and ;convince
themselves of the td3ove faettl.
JOHN, GARDnR; ,1316; distuut St.
~,r-.:;
--.r,-.-
pRU G GISTS' . SUNDRIES: --GRAD IT
, itteQ Noitari/P nor Hes, Oombs, , Brnshers, Mirrors,
,wrens, .Fufr. , ,Boxesillorn Opplit, Surgical Instni
rotate; l'pueses," 'Hard and, Sol ' Runher 01.0:104' ViaY
, Cases, Glass and mi3tal , Fining s: &Q.,. all at 'First
Handle! prices. - SNOWDEN BROTHER,
apa-tf ; . , , <, litnith Eighth street.
RU
GGISTS-;' ;ARE -, INVITED t , TO EX-
Amin') init.-large stock of fresh Drugs and Chemicals
'of the latest importation.: •
Also; essentialßils, 'Vanilla Tiering, Sponges;Chm
aois
Skins', etc..; ROBERT SHOEMAKER CO., N. E, cor
ner Fourth and Race:streets: r ;.
_
OuavE OIL; SUPERIOR QUALITY, ON
.clraught and' in battlef4l various brands. _ROBERT
SHOEMAKER & CO., N. E. canter rourth and Ram'.
• CIASTILE SOAP=NOW LANDLN G.-=3OO
I.) boxes White and Mottled Onsti n la ki st nadi d ifer l y v s h l o m je o li r a lo lo r
quality ROBERT 8111.4ENAKE
ungiste, N :E. corner Fo urth and Race sgootß.
jim tt, ea o
"sap.
'llll.l*Aktmil - C,t
Stlg l nktiAu Alan'4t,, , ,or (taboo!, it is*rtel . 4
hits been shot and wounded. •
Tin; rebellion in Uruguay has ended, and
the'leaderii in it are held for trial.
and,. .Secretary,
arrived in'lreatir ork, yesterdak,;, • •
nratu are reports of the appearance of the
94 t9 d , P.ITTOPAs 6I , 3B IPP/.
specie arid nine - bags , 'of mail- matter
have been recovered from the wreck of the
Gel mtinia..
BlitokirEn 3lcM.Anox has been heard from,
by way of England. He had left, the head
quarters of Lopez On June' 24. • '
Tito wheat crops about Odessa are large,
but nothing is said of the oinality..l The recent
rains may have, injured it.
A .I,ErrEit teeticidolence ;kill be sent to the
members of the family of Mr. Grinnell, by the
members of the,lloyal'VietariaXacht Club.
_ Tutalli. is.. no _ ue to . he. e press_ robbers
on the New York Central Railroad. It is
know(that their haul inclitdeds2o,ooo in gold.
.`Ax exploring party of tile No thern':Pacifc
Railroad has arrived at Minneaopolis. They
. report the route - as favorable. ,
A llErtlitit;ix ineethig-witS lield at Wil
mington, Ohio, yesterday, at which Senator
Morton and Governor Hayes spoke.
- Two xssels cailtded oia Lake' Erie duringn
znd'ti a men' were
thrown overboard and drowned. r
Tilt: lobs by the, burulug ef- the Crysta
Lake ice houses, near Chicago, is stated at
$7:),000. ,
.
Secretary; 'llobesom,e General
Sheithan'and Vice .Idmiral 'Ritter %vent to
Noi folk on the United States steamer Talla
'"National Capital 'Conventidn" > will
meet in St. Louis on October 20th. - Its object
will be to v,dopt, , measures looking to the re
moval oft e national capital West:
(.'ilov-cuEw. and Sing-Man, the Chinese
inerchantS; Wife ' , lave. ? arrived in NevriXork
fr i tiinthiceigo; - .Were taken yesterday • to` see' the
arious points of interest of - the city, including
'Central Park.
--- GEN. AMES has deposed a number of offi
cials iiiMiscicittipkil, , who were Pro'rninent in the
Conservative moveinent there, among them
Judge Jeflhrds, of the Supreme Count, and A.
Warner, of State.
Secretary,
A nEsPATcn received at General' Sheridan's
headquarters, from Colonel .Nelson, at Camp
Supply, dated July 31, says eighteen hundred
Che,yenne Indians came to that placr. on, July
'27, and are drawing rations. This includes,
it is believed, all the Cheyennes south of the
"A stE.E.Tixti. of Lehigh coal operatois, held
at Mauch Chunk, yesterday; decided • upon a
step which will probably lead to a suspension
of work fin:some time to come in the:times
• of this region. They are to offer. their melt:a
new sliding scale, based upon the pride' of coal
at 31ruich Chunk, instead of the price at New
York t and making the wages paid hi April last
the starting point. Beginning with these, they
will allow a certain per centage (10 per Wnt., it
is stated) on advances' on coal, beyond three
• dollars per ton, at Manch 'Chunk April prices.
Western Geography in the - Ear East.
• The August nuMber of the English magazine
called The Lcisnie Hour >contains an article
from a correspondent in India concerning
.31oluuninedati , :s?uralz , and , geOgraphiett,
A Map in the 44 6liYes. ul Laghat," a Persian
dictionary of high, standing,printed by Moon
shee Nawrd Kisbore, the Longfnan or 3lurray
of India, at Lucknow, in the year 1860, A. D.,
is accompanied by an exhaustive tazetteer,"
• contribiing the names; and latitudes and longi
tudes of no less than one'hundreir and twenty
- oneplaces of note. •
In this map (says the writer) we are not to
suirpoSe that we have an abstract of the accu
mulated experience of all Indian'navigators
and travelers; it is only the idea the learned
men have gathered. ..n atlas> in, the, Persian
character, beautifully engraved under Erigliah
.auspices, was published years ago in 'Calcutta,
in which the then latest discoveries ' were
' shown. Maps:a4d treatises on gergtaphy in
English have abounded for a long time. - And
,yet the result ma 'these on , the unfettered
native ntimd is 'just nothing at all. Ptoleiny
had clearer ideas of the shape and relatiye
positions• of the •countries of , the • earth than
this map discloses, The truth is, the whole
country has been so saturated and is so per
meated with lies, that the truth, nomatter by
whom:or in whiit, warmer brought before the
people,. is_received with doubt—_This_is _ not
confined to geography; it is exactly the same
-- - - =withrcspect, to history - . ,
Throughout the whole of India, there are
two names foiEurope - - - Farun,g and Walayat.
g Tlie fernier is said to mean - the country of the
Franks, and,the latter 'any foreigre_ comrtryL
The idea, however, represented by both words
--- is - veryindistinet; Par - the terra Watavat is ap
' lineable to Arabia, Persia, China, or any' for ,
eign country, and some of the most learned
men maintain that Arabia is in consequence
nearer to Eneland than to llindostan. Learned
Bengalee baboos, have maintained that Britain
is a small mull-bank in the Bay of Bengal.
• Mohammedans divide the world into seven
climates or iones, each of which is termed an
-akleeni. Every country should be by rights in
one of these seven strips. This is the standard
by which the orthodoxy, of all geography,must
be tested. If a country come not in one of the
seven akleetos - it eannot be said to bell:country,
for all countries are comprised within one or
other of the seven orthodox bandsi Neverthe
less we .fiud on the pap nine sneh divisions.
,'..4 - .)ne:was certainly an oversi.bt,,and.:'thenther
is a vast, watery.waste, coutainiiigan island the
Farangees call the Cape, which of course does
not exist, for 'we read of it neither in. the
"Koran" or the'"lladis."
The countries of Enrope are all: mentioned
in the map, except Austria and Switzerland,
whose trade with India is nil. Germany is
,termed Atteniani',Gree.ce , Tynan, and Turkey
Room. We may . charitably suppose that the
Poland which figures-by the side 'of Belgium
is meant for .11olland, although Ashtar
dam, which' ti perhaps Amsterdam, ,v is
put in a far-off part. The island z Andalus,
which stands out,so prominently t is, of course,
'Andalusia, Memory' Of zifiii g e rs ' i n
- the literature oftlie 3lussulmaus long after they,
have ceased — to - freqieuf the T .. 9r.gr 10 old
nnosque of. Cordovai- ortread the , liana •of Al
hambra. Spain:figures' as an island and part
tof the continent. , al p. gpr
tugal,.ftedent Perniunit and Finland. -Fran&
, gets peed:l44ot° 4::corner.;%tid,taly no
,,where like manner. What the. Suits will
say ,to ' their capital being • stuck between. F14,-
, land and .SWetien• .(eontiteintal) one cannot
say. And how is a poor kali*
which Lon non is"th,e city?,
In the map there are no marks for rivers,
'and mane for title's, or mountains; oriak/mai
though of , ' the . latter there .is quelinctitioned:4-.
;The`iinpOrtance of ,this map is,
however, great 't t O an eastern . ettideot.?)s9We
.allti)oritieS Say...that the Said,Tsakruidar'(wall
•of Alexander) is the'same n.s'tbe Bab ul abwab
(the gate of gates:), ,The'Mohaiiimedau hy
drographer phteeo there-on opposite sides of the
continent. Beth opinions` were probably come
it by 'a study of the text of eastern, historie.s. •
—lt is said that the Sultan intends to humil
iate+ the , Viceroy of Egypt by 14endliag.s.ktlike
GrAnd Vizier to Suet - to represent - the Porte
nt the opening: cif the canal; leavingto the
Viceroy but an inferior•positi!)n in tire dere
raoly. • '
How 1D aiet i 'lr itiqkkrf . 4lll t
ik: 4411
' CE*Mintlaaltailliblind3
The f heref m 9iftiV B o et.•
brown tier onig ', and glittiries
,4irlialdifdlicifit74.-3th,e_leblittO of a
hundred acrea.ef oozy, Water', thkk
With ''spit'ead"
eleven shallow. Creeks; 'etaF i fashion. These
rays, about sixyards wide ' at their mouth, nar
rowing graduall y'as theyeeden, and craftily
curved' to rthe f tight,n:ahq . ut -seventy:five
yards each, and terminate tvehst, At About
thirty feetfrotn, theMaath! of xacti:',there ages,
an iron. rod ; arch sotnet.tenjeg4.llo, prrp.l.leT
ladies the - fshiking; to
l eee. then . so94'„ , Wide.
These arches are covered with a card'
net Which
staked' to .-- • the' ground,-
forms aglAldicagit bX'44 l l4' . 4: 6 PeultAlhea
P e
These are what Irefolk Mensall ",‘ pipes." On
each side oldie airy' triatie 'sereelis Ce gray
ish Sethia:t.rVedSfAVe feet
run in zigzag .0 0 .0 11, f 0 Ptt..ctruul..Phe ;waterS
edge, iii :traverse edge. the."pipe,
alter
nately high and• 14*. " Wd."'fowt. always fly
against the wind; solhat; a pipe to-be success
ful must, have the wind blowing,down it from
the narrow and towards the mouth. In Nor
folk the northeast „pifie is a special favorite:
There is no mystery in decoying, :it needs Only
a man r some decoy,ducks,and. trained ,dog.
The ducks are'.taught to rise and come to the
man for tbe bruise.'d barley hesprinkleson the
- Water - at the, signal of,a very,,faint yet clear
Whistle. The "piper" dog 'may' be' a Mon
grel, but it must,- be s ot a.gray color, and of
quiet, obedient,' staid habits. 'The decoy sea
son is almost eliactly. _contemporaneous with
the oyster season. , time chosen is often
noon on a bright'daY.:' The decoy-nun carries
with bim a .piece of lighted ; peat, to neutralize
any scent. of himself that Might scare the fowl.
Stealing along like a, inurderer,-the man slips
behind the screen, and leeks through'loopholes
prepared in the Teed' Walls.. If there be any
signs of emerald necks and brOirn hacks.he
gives the whistle, fatal as Varney's, signal to
Amy Robsart. The moment the "decoy duck
swims toward.the moutir of, the'pipe the• wild
birds - gain eonfidence, and enter, more or less
.eagerly into the pipe, allured 'by the floating
barley; at, the same moment the• piper
dog, running along the"screen, leaps
back through, the ' first break in
search of the biscuit' throniihim. This in
stantly allures the teal and widgeon,who then
flock with great confidence. r They are now
safe in the _ tolls; and'the decoy-man having
fitted a purse-netabentt,as large as a corn-sack
to the narrow end of the opening, an assistant,
on a given signal, shows hiruself .at one of the
brealii in the screen in ' the rear of the ducks,
and without,:shouting, throws , up his arms or
Waves his bat. The sensitive'bird, always sus-
Pieious of man, instantly with splash, flap:and'
screaming quack, raevap'thl, pipe in utter
sn
panic, and making for' the first Aopening. find
themselves in the inhospitable purse-net. The ,
decoy-maif soon appears to, the , jostling cap
tives,,,a.nd in five minutes they are ready for
Leadenhall market.
But the decoy-min has many vexations.
There is one artful species of duck ktiown as
the, „BoChard i , . whieb is always ,fatal ° his
sclierneS: •A'denioillacal'erdt fls'' , peseSSed
these birds, who, the moment there is an
alarm,. tur, dive „. and s re-eraerge beyond the
pipes. Often' de' 'They viutgtiard and
swim 'forward in line;‘, taking precedence .
probably on . the strength ef superior subtlety,
and so keep back their '..tininSpeeting Compan
ions. Decoy-men bave.tried to capture these
. sagacions wretches . by sunken bait, brist ling with' arribitshe'd linokS,' but the -• pochard's
dying struggles are scarcely, very al
luring the Inquiring,.
' , heron: perched 'ote ;.the trolvii". of. the
netted arch . will often scare ttie suspicious
birds, a sullen pike splashing in the shallows,
or the sight of'even the lip of theblack nose of
an otter is also fatal to
.sport. A gunshot in
the distant field, the ring of a hammer, or the
rambling of ixtd-wheels,. Will 'frighten ..away
'ducks` for iveeks. Decaying, , says . a very
sound authority, was 'more profitable before
steamboats brought over such heaps of. Dutch .
and Flemish ducLi:', - 'Yet there' 'are 'still times
when wild ducks fetch eight Shillings a couple •
in - Leadenhall Market. Two thousand birds
all but thirty-seven were captured at Ranworth
decoy in 1858-59.: •• • .
From ourlate Editiou of-Usterd
By the Atlantic (.Itble.
,Lo.woox, August.l2.—The Times to-dax has ;
an editorial on the relations between Great
Britain and the, Ufiited•• States, suggested b*.
the Queen's-closing speech to Pailiament yes
te.rday. _Th,e_writer-says:„"-ThaQueen's open ;
ing and elosing!_speeches_ are anparantly ;
- consistent, but - an - expinaation -- is ft:4nd iii the
;facts-that-international 4elations depend °tin i
• reei Prod ty of-feelings - of-the-people - and nor
on the negotiations of theirMinistem"
Messrs. Johnson, Stanley , and Seward have
been succeeded by others, but the sureties pf ;
peace and; friendship 'abide :iir:istiongerbases
than deplomacy - can
OxFonn, August-12.-3ohn Rusken, art
critic, has been electvii to the "Slade", art pro
fessorship of OxfordlTniversitir.
GtAsnow, August 12,--Jeffenson Davis - and
Chailes Mackay are in this city.
LONDON, August 12.—The Times, to-day,
publishes a, Madrid. letter ? -whereof the follow,-
nag is ma extract : "Spain cannot ta% in a,
worse ;condition, and a change'must come,
unless the rulers are prepared fore revolution.
The treasury if; empty, and itis iMpossible to
collect the , taxes. Popular discontent is 'utd- -
versa!, and,Prina and his • colleagues have un
easy tunes ahead." • ;
Part of the crew of the ship Grassondirle,
from. Sunderland March 15th, for San'rrau
else°, wrecked off Cape Horn, arrived here
to-day.
-,- • =
By the French Cable..
PAnts, Aug. 12.—The Emperor
indisposed to-day, but will remain at Chalons
until Satutday. The ease of Marshal. Neil ; is
desperate. ;
Ltsuozi, Aug. 12.—The :resignation of the
Ministers has been accepted, and the Duke de
Lorete has been charged with the formation
of a new Cabinet.
The Itaibroad War.
, ALBANY, Allgliiitl2,-:-Thisiness is now trans
acted at the Susquehanna Railroad office as
quietlyas before the trouble. Blverythingls
also quiet a105 . ,,,c , the line of the road. The
force sent out in Ramsey interest is ex
pected back here at = notm. All the men col
lected at the / different points have 'dispersed„
and the trao.l.B being _rapidly repaired, and
the rolling stock put ln order for running.
General McQuade has gone out to Bingham
ton as Superintendent, and Mr. Van'Valken-
Mug is here lir (charge 'oft ,the office in cob
neetiOn with the executive, agent,' Col: Banks.
The decision of ;SurrOgtrte Lawton, a 8 to who
Is legally theireceiver,of •the road, is not BX,-
pected to be made to-day, as he is still taking
testimony.
- Brnomorroir, Aug. 12t11,--Mcquade, Gov,-
armor. ‘. IXefiman's Superintendent of the Al
bany' and thisquehanna Railroad, arrived here
at 11 A i t having left Albany last night, Me
took Posilesaion of the road on his, way from
, Ilarßersvilleto , theAnnnel, distance pfseyOn
miles if with of .the Susque
hanna road, (and one or two others, found, it
necessary to ride" in a carriage, the 'rails !nil'
Ing been rein:smell So that the Trio trains could
riot proceed' ' The Military have been, witht
ilrawn; . and arego* hero, . ' The wai is over,
but it 18 impossible to 'open' tke road fortravel
under three days; which will be required to
repair the trestle work which vas burned. It
is probable that will Commence
running onSaturdny next." e
Zifirge Wh
[Bpecii)l tits * thlitulti. ,, Evenliig,,Viniotiti4-
Ew onu Anki412...4--.4. fir&brol,co ant at
3.L , 0 this afternoon in the wholesale whisky
warrhonse of Van Diel & Fisk, 38 Broadmik.
4 Cf`f mo d
+-
meet e
OXPretised:;:„.44;',44. cloer*ai.thowqvurritAc
fr'f,.l• - • x.- ,v,
kiVrasttrndierei'Ariallst';•l2.l.. e , ; 010 rig
• bakbeenVepare4,anclyiN be 4011
qv tniainnty?"Dii4i4ilErvr,' 'l . niAarritizeit
Oil conVireshutofiror4 August 12.1869.-This
offieewill reeelre, at -the expense of pe l
partment, from anyoflicer of the oierrunent,
pritateliqty, -- Por &ofporaticin; any Government,
of the eta'-
renordetare&belovr s; , United. States notes. of.
MO , denomination of „ten dollars, and ,of
the denonflhathin' of fifty dollars; United
• States s< nota. khowa{. k 7 aa , the' coritsiti-
Die ' issue, autitgrize& -under the act
of February Mho, and . July, 11, and
all Mites which are tnutilated'or an any yak
unfit for provide& such remittan
ces are made in amounts , of , or more, or
exceeding, $l 3 OOO, or a multiple therein', by
more by t•500;,' by Adametapress,' or by any
express with whieh that company, has made
such arrangements. . The above restrictions
are made necessary by the terms of the enntract
with'the Adams txpress Company. Assistant
Treasurers' and' United States Depositories
are requested to gelect from ,?the currenek
which thee have, on hand, each •as is defined
above, and forward if fo Me in accordance
It the above condition, cliargingthe amount '
df such, remittance to `me , on ,account;as''a
transfer of funds, unless they desire ,returns
as specified by la*. 'For remittances made in
••compliance with this circular, I will, if so re
questedsz_return__.any.,cheek,on—New,--Yorkr
— Boston, Piladelphia, New Orleans or San
Francisco,'or will send tither 'currency free of
charge bv express, - whenever there'. 'ls on
band in this (Ace currency of the description i
desired fn return
.
• The Alabama Cotton Crop. •
MONTGOMERY, .Ala,,Ang. , l2.—The .first bale
of , new - cotton- grown- .Alabama .was • re
ceived yesterday:after/mon too late to put in
the market, and was sold this morning at 58e.
It classes strict middling, of fine staple, and
the bale weighed nearly 600 pounds.
Honorable Conduct of a Bankrupt Firm
[ Special Despatch to ihoThila. Evening Dunedin.]
NEW Sons, Aug. 12.--The Greek firm that
failed last week will, it is said, pay in full.
Their healiest creditor refuses to take 95 per.
cent.
From New York;
NEW YORK, August 12.—The Idbricating oil
works of F: Wright & Co, at Hunter's
pointkwerA (.14naged :kryttlse to dor
,p): the ex
tent of ',541,N0, insured "for $2;000:
The steamship Hermann, for Europe to-day,
took out $312.•
Arrestor a Noted Thief.
BurrALo, August 12.—John Bunker, said
to benuAerthe most Sated ,tAie;ctes of, New
York, was yesterdiy caught in the act of
snatching a diamond ring from • a citizen.
Bunker, ..and an accomplice, named,.. George
Scott c have been beld for-IAM: • • ,
M PQ,I3,TA .1." I 0 NS
Reported for the ruitadelphia Evening . Bulletin.
LIVERPOOL—Bark James Campbell, Ehlert-2350
sacks ground salt 900 do Falks' factory ailed do .fta
Manna k Sma.
tiT..JOHN,NB.—Schr L A Johnston, Mahlman—M, ,
00u plastering laths T P Galvin & Co. • '
BUFFALO, NR.--Canal boat Kate Tubbs, Bander
-95400 tt Michigan white pine limber T P Galvin & Co.
— III.OVESIEIFTB OF OCEAN 'ISTEA3IEILS.
.. .
SHIPS ' VHOII FOR . DATE
Moravian .... ..... •Liverpooli-Quebec July 281
Cambria Glasgow... New York_ July 313
Etna- ----Liverpool.-New York-- -July 31
Atalanta_ - London : ,NiYork ' July 31
Baltinoret.....Souyanptpw-Baja wnv,„, 4 ,inii t luly3 , l
7 7670-4,--2qo4amptan..NettrYo .4..:Ang.3
73161t10-.2.4.1.»-:: iverpoa_NeWAtr -Vii B ....Aug. , 3
liiberuian_..-- -.Liverpool- quebee ... .. . _ ..... ...... Aug., 7,
lowa- Glaagovr-Isew York Aug. 6
• ,TO ' DEPART. _ .
TonawandaLphitidelphia:LSavanniih .:. ...... ..._-Aug. 14
Erin ' New I at* - Livt•rpool ' _Aug 14
Caledonia ' New York-Glasgow ' Aug. 14
A U 9 t ri AM..-- .... .- Quebec-Liverpool... Aug, 14
tip° Wnsiungt.pl-NeW. 7 f o F 7 >•••New Orleans -1 , -r- A 7 7 . 9 -17
, t , olortulci.:l-t. 'Net# , Yorn.i.Liverpeor-t. ' '' • ' ' 1 . 1 311%15
Java_ ........ ....--.New York...Liverpool_
.- Aug, 18
Aleppo..-. -.-.... New York-Liverpool Aug, 19
Uni0n_......... • New York..
_.Breinen ........... -........Ang. 19
Coturid-...Nerivi0rk.,..11avatt..........- .. . . . .... • . Atlgi 79
Yazoo ''' ' P ..4.. hilidelphiti...Ntw Orleans.: ... :.....I.Aitg: 21
Lafayette.-- ..-New 1 ork...llavre ...... _.- ... '.. . _.-.Aug. 21
Catubri_ .a- . --New York-Glitsgow-.._...-...._-Aug. 21
City of Boston.... New lork-Liverp00t......',.1 - 4-Aug. 21
Peuripylvania."-:NoWYork-Liverpoot ' ' ' Aug. 21
Etna_.._......-...New York... Liverpool via JfaUx:Aug. 24
Nebraska - New York-Liverpool • Aug. 23
Scotia --47 6 :11( York-Liverpool...-. ...... ...Aug.23
13 OF_TRAD El:
JOHN O. Alli "
C. B. DURH!),OIv.:. ptION'THLT COItITTE.E
THOS. L:"OIbLESPIH,' ' • • .
SUN BIRES,S 10 1130N03z16.:6 591 HIGH WATER. 6 I
. AMIIVED YESTERDAY.
Steamer S C Walker, Sherin, 24 hours from New York,
with mdse toW 11 Baird & Co. .
Steamer Bridal,Wallace, 24_ hours,. from-New-York,
- with tudit - etii Wl' . Clyde At Co: • - -
Steamer Sarah Jones; 21 hours from New , York, Wltk
mdse W3l Baudlt:Co.
Bark4aw .Catopbell, Ehlert, from Ltverpoel June hi,
with salt to W Flamm it Son. • .
Bark David Nichols, Wyman, from Portland.'
Brig Maria Wheeler, Wheeler, from New York.
Brig Caroline Ilddy,.Yeasey, from BridgepOrt. Ct.
Schr Louisa A Johnion Mahlmari, 15, clays from St.
Joku, NB: with tithe to - ?•'P Galvin & CC • •
Schr Hendrik Yisja,
_Webber, from,
to Da rte A Aees
IlchrClaytonA Lcarber, Jackson, - ILday.from Smyrna,
Der: with gram - to J'asir Bewley - ,k'Co. -
Behr Josephine. Brown, New York. '
Schr Admiral, Steelman,
Setif Sallie B, Bateman, Boston.
Schr A'S Cannon, Cobb. Boston.
Schr L A Burlingame, Burlingame, Boston.
SchrM B McCauley. Cain, Boston..
-=- Schr A - Burton, FrohockT Providence.
Sehr J •Kienzle, Steelman, Boston.
Schr P Simmons, CorsoPeters _ .. rg.
Scbr &Chamberlain, Porter, Boil' .
Schr Larnertine, Hix, Boston. • •
Schr S Hotchkiss. Hotchkiss, B' ston.
Schr F Hanmer. Brooks, Newp t.
Schr Alexander, Baker, Norwic _ •
Canal boat Kate Tubbs, Bande , days from Buffalo,
lumber to T P Galvin ,k Co. ' •
Tug !Judson, Nicholson,-from Baltisnore.with a tow of
barges to W P Clyde 4 Co.
Tug Fairy Queen,Perkins,from Havre de Grace,with a
to of barges to W Clyde & Co.
CLEARED YESTERDAY.
Steamer A C Slime's, Knox, N York, WT Clyde & Co.
Steamer F Franklin.APiersot," Baltimore, fit Groves, Jr.
Brig Herineelßri;Bllickert„,Laguayra', John Dittlett&Co
Brig Caroline Eddy, Yease),,,• Boston, Penu,Gas.Coal Co.
Schr Willie hat4.l9"bato n' D.VoOpers' 5 .
Schr C Chamberlain, Porter. Newport, Weld, Nagle&Co.
SOT A lieetoo, Phinney4atera ' , , do
Sclir Arthur'Burtml; Frohodk; Provlidtnee; - Bitumen,
Neill & Co. ; s
Schr E Ewing. Ireland% New Haven, John Bommel, Jr.
A; 8r0..,
:Rehr M Meibtrinian:Mabbitt;;Dighton s .' i.a. do
Schr Eliza & Rebecca, Thompson, Providence, do
Schr E C Gates,.Ereeman,, • , do ~do
Tug There JefferisOn, A ll en, Bath:pp, VII" tow of
- batrges,lY-1 0 CIYde Co. '
Tug Commodore Wilson, Havre de Grace, with a tow of
bargesi.W , P OIAO4 'Po v• •
HAVRE DE GRACE, Aug. 12
The followinglioits left here -this morning, for =Philo
del phia, laden and consigned as follows:
. .
2:11N an Stream, Mary and John ..Cullen,, with coal to
'•W Laticer Rohr -141ater;do'to 'Edaorr Cok; Kt) ,
stone,
itimber to New York; Charles
.& Carrie, grain to
' • ':••• , ' '
IflE
ifORANDA.- , • '
Ship Stadacona, Cassidy., cleared at St John, NB. 6th
met, torlioudonderry._ .. • .
" t
instant
Steamer Saxon. at os on 'Sears. bleatpd
for this port. ~
Steamer liormann (NG), WenkO, Cleared at New York
yesterday , for Bremen, - •'• • •
Steamer Cambria (Br), from GlasgoW, at New York
yesterday.
Steamer Ohlo(NG), Besse, cleared at, Baltimore 11th
inst. for Bremen and. Southampton. 1 ,
BarkN it
orthWood,Milliam,uleared at-Baltimoro 11th
inst: far Montevideb'andßuenos Ayres. . •
I .llarkDemetra;Roseicleared et New Bedford Ilth lust
for Baltic via Philadelphia. ' • • ' '
Brig R
,Thembs. cleared at :Havana sth inst.
forßaltlinore. • . ; t
Brig kl.ll • Kennedy, Geyer, sailed from Cardenas 2d
inst. fora port north, of Hatteras.' • •
BNg ,Essei, Sleeper, from Beaton - for 'thla Pert; 'at
Holmes' 8010 llth inst. - ' . . •
Brig Ettli.M.Tucker, hence at Portland 10th inst.
Schr Wataugn,'Lawrence, hence at Savannah 7th inst.
Schr Sarah Clark, hence at Norwich oth inst.
Schr J S Mallory, Russell, hence at Lynn oth inst.
Schr Caroline Ball, Vickers, - sailed irons Richmond
10th inst. for'thbi tort.
Schr Boston, Nickerson, cleared at Boston ' 11th inst.
for Gardiner; to load for this port. ~ • •
Schr Lady. Ellen. Somers, sailed from Newport 10th
Inst. for this ; Pert.... . . ,
Seim Anaerican•liagla, Shaw,' hence at Paw tucket‘llth
instant. • • , • ,
Sohn Wm Tice, 'flee Hedges, Hedges; Susan • II
Gibson, Bartlett; L i rimier, Steelman; E W Pratt,
Hendrick; M D Mahoney Plunimer,•.MarY. Riley, Riley;
Flora, Smith; George 3.; Diary,. Lord, and N 11 Hagan,
Coombs, hence at Bostonllth inst.
Schrs Admiral Eaton, Wells, and. Quickstep, Smith,
hence at Lymiliali. •
Schr Pacers., Caril, hence at Lynn 11th' inst. .
••• . - •
iStABINE-MISCELLANY, '
Pitgaengera .In . .steamer'!3utdata, ,- froni - tcew 'Orleans
via Havana Tor Philadelphia: 113 W'badler, H C
Lucien Lo Blair, biro Sophie tieudricke and child; Mrs
E :A Bughes end child. CitrgO fbr. Philadelehia,l2s
bales cotton, 8 tulips paper stoat, pkgs bone blttek,
42 bble Clay.
! Brig Yankee Blade,• which arrived rypert
tram Philo del phitratt . Monday' evening, in going up the
harbor drifted on to the Gangway - Itock—whiCh is soon,
to lie Teintwed--.and eti stridnedlier arr to causer leer to
leak:badly. Her pumps had to be worked', througL the
night and Tuesday, but the leak was not stepped.
MEM
'• ' • g, SeiNVErs,
"Treasurer of the' United States:',
TO ABlirVii
AIIPIE BULLETIN.
PORT - OF I'BEGADELPHIA-ArG.l.3
OUNIMOIDAri' AriffiliMUMN:
MsaerWww.
s''' ~':_~;_
i•-',.',,f,,,,.- ' , 1 2.:Lfitit 5 ..„.„.....,
- . .. ~., ~ ~t . ..v • .I, r• ,t, C., ,r, '7 , - V,
. t liva . .," . r...r. , t
~ t. ~' • . Plp jitiVirElLl:l '..
t 9
, =-I!..;ttit , oti.o .,..,b A .
z„ , ./ ti t l , ', ~ -, 7:'
EIRE iNSURANCEIitOMPANY .T .
9r , riliatjaginbleniAP-' ! . ,
Office' - 435 and 43T.Ohestnut Street:
Ainifets on. ti s ni.i.:stry`l..,..l&l9, ' •
•
o,2,ooiviii;aok,q , l:34„ - '
~:. .,„ ...... ,..- ... Coca.r.lt.L. .... ...............,......._.......... 4 a0,c00 C
Accrued Strolaa.... . ..:..:...h...'...»..;..;.:;-..1.0020523 70
tr. t s ci a luiml l- - "---o—tt• •••••• , -;--. 4 .•-•••••••-.4 8 113,43
IVNBE L TTLED CLAW '
' „ . 111601‘13 , EOM ISM
• - - ' 4123.78812. • 41350,030.
'Losses 'Paid Sirice 1829" Oyek '
Perpetual and - Temporary Politica On. Liberal Tot=
The Company also harms Policies uponf thellionte of
ail k4tds of Intutlinge t Ciroutol Rents and Mortgagee. •
. . DIRECTORS. •
Alfrod a. Baker, ' - ' Alfred Piller,
Saltillel Grant. Thomas Sparks..
Geo. W. Richards, " r A. EL Grant. ' • " ''
JAS 43 .11:W81.7311'cAGALELTII Ij.I3ITFEE"DR4ES.B::
Ante Lea; , . . ThernaaLß EMS,
austarus S. BensOn.
THEODORE H. HEGER Assistant Setretari
rAVelKtrißri.Dreß.: Presi dent aden , t
...
e • • ell
..
.- '' ETRE—ASSOCIATION
„ ~.. • ,
' .. PHILADELPHIA.
inco n Hiiiitimi March, 27, 1820.
Office''N --0.'34 NOitif Fifth - StreOt.
- ,
I,llstnerg BtriLDINGs . ficrusployin Irsgs . yin=
AND ; NERO iittglEiriGFEn U. 414.1,11."111
2 , ' ; Assets January 1, 1E369, f
$1;400,095,,05.
TRUSTEES:
ur
William H. Hamilton, . I Charles P.'Boer, ,
John Ostrow, - Jesse Lightfoot,
George I. Young Robert Shoemaker,
Joseph Lynda il, Peter Armbrtuiter;
Levi P. Coats, M. H. Dickinson.
Samuel Soarhawk. Peter Williamson,
, • Wm: Aug. Seeger.
• WM. H. HAIII.ILTON, President,
SAMUEL SPADHAWK, Vice • Wesident.
WM T. BUTLER, Secretary.' ,
LLAWARE MUTUAL SAE' TY IN
SUBANCETOMPANY;; _
Incorporated brthe Legislature of. Pennsylvanits,l33s.
ogles O. E. corner of - marap and WA,LNOT Streets,
'•
IdARINE INSDRANCES •, •
On Vessels, Cargo and Freight to all parts' of the world.
• INLAND INSURANCES • •
On gonds by river, canal, lake and land carriage to all
carts of the Union.
FIRE INSURANCES •
On Merchandise generally,'oh Stores, Dwellings
Houses,
• .
ASSETS OF THE COMPANY,
November 1,1868.' • •
5200 000 United
0-40 States Five Per Cent. Loan.
. 's. ' $203500 00
12000 United States Six . Per Cent. Loan; , •
136,800 00
50,000 United lB,3l
States Six Per Cent. Loan
, • for Pacific !sop:* ie
200,000 State of Pennsylvania Six "Per •
Cent. Loan. . . .. .. . 211,375 00
125,000 City of Philadel p hia Six 'Per "Cent.
50,000 Siat i e o o a f n l e e l :fl n e P r t s4Tx T PV Cent. 123 ' 598
60
. Loam.— '
20,000 Pennsylvania Railroad First 51,590 00
Mortgage Six Per Cent. ponds .10,200‘00
25,000 Pennsylvania Railroad Second"
Mortgage Six Per Cent. Bonds 24,000 00
25000 Western Pennsylvania Railroad
• Mortgage Six Per Cent. Bonds
80,000 Stallo7 n T a en l i g iegierM a e n l t e e hrnl. 29 ' 125 W
21,000 00
7 000 State of 'Tennessee Six Per Cent.
Loan .... .. ... .. . . 5,031 25
13,001 Germantown Gas Compel/5, Princi- '
pal and interest guaranteed by
the City of Philadelphia, 300
'shares stock _
_' - 15,000 00
10,000 Pennaylvania Railroad Company,.
200 shares stock • 11,300 00
5,000 North Pennsylvania Railroad
Company, 100 shares stock ' 3,550 00
20 000 Philadelphia and Southern .
' Steamship Company, SO shares
ock.
205,900 Loans st on Bond and Mort7age, Frei
liens on City Properties- 20T,900 00
Market Value, 81,130,325 25
Cost, $1.00.3,601 26
Real Estate 58,000 00
Bills, receivable for Insurances
made 322,486 94
Balances due a Agencies—Pre
minors on Marine Policies— ..
Accrued' Interest and other • .
debts due the Company.. 40,178 83
Stock and Scrip of sundry Corpo
rations, 53,150 00. Eatinnited.
value • 3,813 00
Cash in Bank_. .... 03
Cash ix Drawer 413 65
/15,563 73
81,109,900 Par
.-. • DIRECTORt s .i.
Thomas G. Hand, Jame D. McFarland,
Edward Darlington, William C. Ludwft,
Joseph H. Seed, . Jacob P. Jotioa,
Edmund A. Sonder, Joshua P. Eyre.
Theophilus Paulding, William G. Moulton,
Hugh Craig, Henry C. Hallett, Jr.,
John C:Daile, John D Taylor,
James C. Hand . Edward Lafoureade,
John R. Penrose, - Jaeoblleigel,
H. cones Brooke, George W. Bernadou,
Speuper M'llyaine, Wm. C. Houston,
Henry Sloan, D. T. Morgan, Pittsburgh,
Samuel E. Stokes, John B. Semple, do.,
James Traquatr . ~2_ A It, Borger. do.
THOMAS 6. HAND President.
JOHN C. DAVIS, Vice President.
HENRY LYLBURN, Secretary.
HENRY BALL, Ass't SecretarY
NITET) F TIVPIAIEN'S INSURANCE
U
COMPANY OF PHILADELPHIA.
This Gempany-takee tisks at-the loNirest rates consistent
with safety, and confines its business exclusively to
FIRE INSURANCE IN THE CITY OF PHILADEL
PHIA._. . .
0FF1CE,,N0.723 Arch street, Fourth National Bank
Building.
DIRECTORS.
Thomas J. Martin, , Henry W. Brenner, .'
John Hirst. Albertus King,
Wm. A. 'Bolin, ' Henry Bimini,
Jaraek M ongan, James Wood,
William Glenn, , , John Shalleross,
James J miner . Jr: Henry Asking.
..xeeder T. D ickson,' Huggh Mulligan
Albert C. Roberts Philip Fitzpatrick,
James
.Dillon.. - •
CONRAD B. ANDRESS; President.
Wm. A. ROLTN. TTOORI WM II
. . RAGYNdiee'R..
T - PENNSYLVANIA FIRE
INSU
.'RANCE COMPANY. ' • ,
—lncorporated. 1E125--C hat ter Perpetual.
No. 510 WALNUT street, opposite Independence Sguare.
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,
Stocksot Goons, and Merchandise generally, on liberal
terms.
Their Capital, together with a large Surplus Fund, is
invested in the most - careful Manner which enables them
to oiler to the insured_an undoubtecesecurity in .the case
of loss.
DIRECTORS. •
Daniel Smith,:Jr., 'l.l . ohn Deveretix
Alexander Benson,
• - IThomas Smith,
Isaac Hazlehurst, Henry Lewis •
Thomas Robins; J. Gillingham Fell,
,Daniel Haddock Jr.: . -
DANIEL SMITH, JR., President.
WM. Cl; CROWELL', Secretary. • , apl9-tf.
rpHE couriT3r FXRICINSURANCE COM
1. PANY.—OtliCe No. Mt/ South Fourth street, below
Chestnut.' -- • • , I . . . . • . . . . •
"The Fire Insurance Company of the County pf Phila
tiphia,,, Incorporated by the Legislature of Perinsylea
nisi in ISM, ,Mr Indemnity against loss or damage by fire,
exclusively.
~ CHARTER PFRPETIJAL.
This old and reliable institution, with ample capital
and contingent fund carefully invested, continued to in
sure buildinge furniture, imerchandise, &c., either per
manently or fo r e ' limited time against lose or damage
by tire, at the lowest rates cons istent with the absolute
safety of Its customers. •
Losses adjusted and paid with all possible despatch,___
DIRECTORS:
i
Chas. J, Sutter,' • ,= ; ,-',! 'Andrew H. Miller,
Henry Budd, James N. Stone
It ,
John'tirti, . Edwin L. Reakirt,
Joseph Moore, Robert V. Massey, Jr.,
George Mecke, ' ''• ' • Mark Devine.
CHARLES J, SUTTER, President.
BENJAMIN ' •:,--,' -•::_' 1 1 EN/IF BUDD; Nice President: -
ir..ROECALEY, Secretary and Treasurer.
A MERICAN:gIII,E niSITRA.NCE COM
PANY, incorporated 1810.--C hurter Perpetual.'
N 0.310 WALNUT street, above Third, Philadelyilda.
Having a large pail-up Capital Stock and Surplus in
vested in sound and- available Securities, continue to
insure on dwellings, stores,- furniture, merchandise,
vessels in port,' and - their cargoes, and etnar 'Yersonai
property. All losses . liberally and promptly adjusted.
DINECTORS. ,
Thomas E. 'Jazz's, Edmund G. Dutilh,
John Welsh, Charles W. Poultuey,
Patrick Brady, - -- - Israel Morris,
John T. Lewp, ' ' John P. Wetherill,
l w
William . Paul. •
THGNAS R. MAWS, President.
ALBERT O. ORAWFoRtp, SecretarY• •
----------
FAME'INSURANCE *COMPANY, NO.
809 CHESTNIIT STREET,
INCORp9RATED cu er vii
AL C , 11 8 A 200 .1 704. 11
FIRE INSURANCE :EXCLUSIVELY.
PERPETUAL.'
Insures, against Loi3B or Damage by . Fire, either by Per
petual;or Temporary Policies.
'rdnacTons. •
Charles Richardson, Robort Pearce,
Wm. H. Rhawn, " John
..
Francis N Buck, - , Edward B. Arne,
Henry Lowia; - : Charles Stokes,
Nathan Hines. , '
~ --John. W . }Warman, ' • ,
George A, Wont" Mordecai Buzby,
• .0 MILES IICHARDSON, President, ;
WM. H. RUA WN, Viso.Prosident. •
WILLIAMS I. BLAMOHARTqlocrotary. api td
lOSIEIIUUMEfr 3"
tith i tt*GiebtliteikAo 60i:7
zloiv vt(T%.." , ?' • c l
Ade.tsi43oa%ll}l7;69(43r
(hilted StdteS 2 , 000,000
Daily Receipts over szo,boo.op
Premiums in 1868; ‘'n
i ,66c,075.00
L05grm....18.613,,,, 3,66.2,445.0 p,
No. 6 Aferzhaiiis' . :o;ithang 4
PM/aerie/phia.
quer..E . .
_ L _BELLELNOE INI3I7R4pTCIE, 004 . -
1 TANK. OF PHINADELPRIAP _
Incorporated •in t•. Charter:Perpetual.
• opce, No 308 Wairint street.
• ' • •t CAPITAL_:S3S,OOO._
Insures agninet bee - or damage 7.FIRE, on Howes,
Stoma and other Bnildinga;iinfit perpetual, and on
Furniture, Goods, Waxer and Morollandlae in town or
•tountil. " • •
LOSSES PNOMPTI . S ADJUSTEA AND, PAID.
&meta. • , " , 8437,69 3
.3§
InVested in theß)llowirg Securities, vTi. :
First, 2,lortgages on • City,' Property, well se- • •
cured ' ' $168600 00
United Shiite. Government .. .117,003
Philadelphia City. 6 Per Cent. Loana 75,000 00
Pennsylvania 83,060,000 &Per Cent L0an. :: ......:30,000 00
Pennsylvania Railroadßondsairst Mortgage 0,4 g. pa
Camden and Amboy Railroad Cottipany's 6 Per • •
•CeUt. Loan ........ 6,000 00
Lonna on Collaterals 600 00
'Huntingdon anti Broad Top 7 PerUent. Mort- - •
•gage Bonds. • 4,660 00
County Fire 'lnsurance Company's 'Stock. 1,050 00
Mechanics' Bank Stock. 4,00000
Commercial Bank' of Pennsylvania' Stock. 'lO, O OO 00
Union Mutual Insurance Company's Stock. 380 00
'Reliance Insurance Conipany of. Philadelphia • •
Stock 3,250 00
Cash in Bank and on hand 12,258 32
Worth at Par '
Worth this date,at market prices.,
DIRECTORS.,
. ..
Thomas 04 Hill, ' • , i , Thomas H. Mooie,
William Musser, , Samuel Castner,
Samuel ItiephaM, . i Janne T:lfoung",
m
. H.,L. Cap,' ~ - . ' 1
leaac..Fc., Baker,
Wm. Stevenson, " , ' Chdetian .1: 'Hoffman,
Benj. W. Tingley, • '. , Samnel i .ll; Thomas,,._.
EdWard biter. '- -
. THOMAS 0. HILL, President
Wm. Cuuss, Secretary.
Puit.i.nEtruts, February 17,1339.
ANTIIRA C I T, E , INSURANCE Coll.
1 - 1., PANY.—CHARTER PERPETUAL.
°ince, No. 311 WALNUT Street,' above Third,' Philada.
,Will insuneugainst Loss r Damage by . Fire on Build
ings, either perpetually or for a limited time, Household
Furniture and Merchandis generally., •
Also, Marine 'lnsurance on Vessels, Cargoes and
Freights. Inland Insurance to all parts of the Union.
DIRECTORS. , ,
1
William Esher, . . _ ' Lewis Andenried,
D. Luther, John Ketcham,
John It . Mickleton, , ' J. E. Baum,'
William. F. Dean, John B. Heil,
Peter Sieger l Samuel 13L'Itothennel.
IN ILLIAM SHE R„President.
WILLIAM F. DEAN, Vice President.
WM. M. SMITH. Secretary. , . jti22 to the atf
TEFFERSON FIRE INSURANCE' COM
.0 •PANT.of .Philadelphia.—Oftice,No. 21 North Fifth
street, near Market street. • • •
Incorporated by 'the Legislature of Pennsylvania.
Charter perpetual. Capitarand Meets. $166,000. Make
insurance against Lose or dmnage by Fire on Public or
Private Buildings, Furniture, StoCks,Gdods, and Mer
chandise, on favorableterms. - = -
DIRECTORS. ,
Wm. McDaniel,. - Edward P. Moyer
Israel Peterson, Frederick Ladner
'John F. Belsterling, • Adam J . : Ghtsz;
Ilenry•Troemner, - Henry Delany,
Jacob &Landoll', John Elliott,
Frederick Doll, Christihn D. Frick ' ,
Samuel Miller, George E. Fort,
D. Gardner.
WILLIAM MeDANIEL, President.
ISRAEL • PETERSONiee President.
PHILIP E. Cotsmast, Secretary end ,V Treasurer.
SHIFPEICST - GIT IDE.
FO B BOSTOI.I.—STE. 4 9,3ISHIP LINE
DIRECT, SAILING F.ROItI EACH PORT EVERY
4
Wednesday and Saturday.
. •
FROM- PINE STREET , WHARF. PHILADELPHIA,
•
AND LONG WHARF ;BOSTON ; •
FROM PHILADELPHIA 1 , -3051.110:;TOPI.
-10 A. M .: - - i ' •; 3L P. M. , - •
1
SA XON,Wednesday,Aug. 4 ARlES,Wednesday, Aug. 4
NORMAN, Saturday, " I 7
ROMAN; StaurdnY " 7
ARIES, Wednesday, ," .11 SAXON, Wednem2Y, " 1 1
ROMAN, Saturday, " 14 NORMAN, Saturday," 14
SAXON,Wednotiday, " 18 ARlES,Vednesday, " 18
NORMAN, Saturday ," 21 ROMAN, Saturday, ' " 21
ARIES. Wednesday . " 25 SAXON,. WednesdaY, " 2.5
ROMAN , Saturday, ~" Zi NORMA.N,Saturday, Saturday," 23
' These Steamships sail punctually. i Freight received
every day. , • , .
Freight forwarded to all iointe in New England.
For Freight .or Passage (superior accommodations)
apply td ' HENRY WINSOR & CO., •
' . • 3:38 South : Delaware avenue.
1.617467 80
PPHILADELPHIA,•RICHM,ONLI 10115
NORFOLK STEAMSHIP LINE.
THROUGH FREIGHT AIR 'LINE TO THE SOUTH
AND WEST.
EVERY SATUEIMY at Noon from MOIST WHARF
.
at .r.oon, _
above IVIARKET . Street.
THROUGH BATES to all points in North and South
Carolina via Seaboard Air-Line Railroad, connecting at
Portsmouth, and to Lynchburg, Va:. Tennessee and the
West vM Virginia and Tennessee and Bich
mond and Manville _Railroad.
Frejght HANDLED BUT ONCE and taken at LOWER
BATEILTHAN_AN 1E OTHER LINE.
The .regularity, safety and cheapness of this *route
commend it to the plata% as the most desirable medium
.for-carrying-every-description of freight.
No charge fur commission. drayage, or any expense for
titeams'A;is intone at lowest rates.
Freight received DAILY. •
1.2
South
,wirimem P. CLYDE & CO.
No. •w narves and Pier No. 1 North Wharves
PORTER, Agent atitichniond 'and City Point.
T. P. CROWELL & 130., Agents at Norfolk. '
PHILADELPHIA AND SOUTHERN
MAIL STEAMSHIP COMPANY'S REGULAR
LINES, FROM QUEEN STREET WHARF.
The 'YAZOO will sail for NEW ORLEANS on
Saturday. August 21. at 8 A. M.
The JUNIATA will sail from NEW ORLEANS, via
HA YANA ,August 7. • •
The TONAWANDA will sail for_ SA,VANNAR on
Saturday. Aug.,
__.144 at 8 o'clock A, .151-. •
The 'TONAWANDA will sail from SAVANNAH on
Saturday. Aug • • • - - • .
The PIONEER will sail for WILMINGTON, N. Coen
Saturday Aug. 14, at 14 A; M. • • • •
Through bills of lading signed, and passage tickets
sold to all points Sotith end West.' - • • •
BILLS of LADING SIGNED,at .QUEEN ST. WHARF.
For freight or ensilage, apply to
WILLIAM L. JAMES, General Agent,
130 South Third street.
FOR L'IVREPOQL.'
' The Fine First-clase Shin
"V 1.11, O .1 N I A., "
934 Tons Register—Ch
This vessel succeeds the, "Dlatilda tlilyard,r and
having a portion of her cargo engaged, will have
de a l For balance of freight or PaSsagc, apply to
PETER, WRIIiJI & SONS,'
jy22-tf No. 115 Walnut street, Philadelphia.
-j OR LIVERPOOL.L—THE STRICT,LY
'first-claiss bark DAVID McNIITT, 802 tons register,
captain Lockhart.—Thls vessel 811eCtellie the.. ..ite§ele
Harris, and being of small capacity; tindhaving the bulk
of her cargo engaged, will. have despatch, For balance
of freight or passage; apply' to - PETER WRIGHT 0,
bOlis,lls Walnut Amp Thiladebbia: auutft
'JEW P RX4.5.9 LINg. -TO XJtl
AA des, Georgetown and Washington, 1). (1, via Ches
apeake and Delaware Canal; with 'connections at Alex ,
andria from the most direct route for Lynchburg, Bris
tol, Knoxville, Nashville, Dalton anti:the Southwest:
Steamers leave regularly rpm, _the. arta wharf above
Market street, every Saturday _ M noon.
Freight received daily: P:CLYDR: &CO.,
N 0.12 South,Wharves and Pier I,Northr,Wharvea.
_HYDE & TYLER, Agents at Georgetown . : •
hI..ELDIGLQD & col.,:Akents at Alexarldria,.Va,
MOTIVE.—FUR NEW 2 1 7 011 , Kfi VIA -DEL
AWARE AND RARITAN- CANAL EXPRESS
STEAMBOAT- COMPANY.-
_,, • ,• , . • • •
The CHEAPEST and QUICKEST 'water- comuninicee
Hon between Philadelphia and New York. •-• • -
- Steamers leave daily . from -llrst.wharf _•below Market
street,Philadelphin,, and foot of Waltstreet, Now -York.
Goods forwarded by. all the lines running out o f New
York—North, Eit et and Wed—free of Commission. -
_Freight received. and „forwarded- on accommodating
terms. WM. P: CLYDE & CO.: Agents; •
No.'l2.Soutb Delaware avenue, Philadelphia. -
JAB. HAND, Agent, No. 1.19 W street; New York.
OTIOE.—L-FOR. NE V'YURK, VaiiEt;
ill AWARE AND ItARITAN CANAL.
- 13WIrftl.tryll TJIANSPORTATION COMPANY.
.....
• ,- 111TWAilbilA.141VsWi1TsuRE LINIy
The businobti.of bo reKtinled on and after
the 19th of Mirth. • For frehtht, which I betakon 'on
acconunodating Orme, apply to W,)I. BAIRD At C 0... ,
• ' • Nit.= Sotttlt Wharves. .
D. Steam Tow-Boat Company towed between
PhiladelPhin, Baltimore, Havre it Grace,.Delaware
City and.intennettinte ' , points. • • - •
WM. P. CLYDE At CO.,Agents; Ctipt. JOHN LAUGH
LIN, Sup% Office,l2 South' Wharves, Pkfiladelithia.
MTICE-.--FOR NEW 'YORK; VIA DEL- -
Canal—liwitlenre Trausporta
tonve hitathy.—DlApatoh and 'Swlfteure The
taken
on acconanotiatina termer; apply to WM. M..BAIRD
CO., 182 South Wharves.
1177111Tir
V r pUnit Wbite'Citatile Boni) Conti brand, imported
front • Leghorn and for sale by JUS. B. 11U8811111 R go.,
108 South Dulaware uvenuo:
~,•,--,- c,f,•!•l ~•
.:,. • - ; 11 , ,t,- : - , -,•-;
TH. rilikkr i tt- .i . 33 , E, A. 3.LA3 , 3:3, i, - '
e e ' a ' 7.7W— lii 1 •* - 4''' • -•.,
rti
.... ti iit ft, ,- i ftp - , - i 3`.., , 3 ~, , ... --''..
, tialat , at the-Mutton- 8 • ' ' -
tlßMUDAltillt.lap:ext, , t7 , ls r ,,, itrit'l o , egra yr 0
4, alnirAillgel h&A , W , APPlreceilrilillilloeclilatk ''''' 4 ''''
, iitte li. sTiitt-ii#6utt • .1!
!au it_tca
_kg hal:itch/awe will inala '' ' ~ -
—5-
f ill. mai , 01 ~,,m ., , . t .
Nos,. 1 r la 4-' ' , ~. 4.
all tilt ligi t ia
I
~. ,
No.-117711- allratat;z:Gotatitatili 7fS r
DENTE44OVBAR - gpagilrgtpirELLMGl,
Norris greet nortawdet or
GENTEIre,TH.REE-EITO,RY.:BiIIeIIt iipirllumm,
/ P • - F 26 T,F 4ne ?.. / h si r ra i rgattfgt 1 . •• r' 1 7'o/
lea rtatimpv., .., , „ ),,,
unitlexrwrotantozza 1 '''•
ti
*3OO PitiObarghtilltlikill pent, batik: 4 . •,^ "I?
$ll,OOO Philadelphia dad Erie Railroad Ta.
' katelfa:79,l3tillratklatellur6b. ~,,': Jli, ~ , ,:7 i ' -A.':
Administrator's Side. •
No.2lB.N.Rrill_Fent street.
STOCK OF A Otani AtANUFACTuni,
9 ,2 CMDAT 0444`
August ao 10 axle tint aiitet,
by catalogue, the entire fitook,of HaluefW.Ory . ,
comgrising very large assortment of Witidsoei - Arrltml,
Socking Chairs, fudosar.,Ohairif ;dlairkitleVegAilq
Chair Standa, 10,000 foot Chair 'Plankif Benches.
Lead, Oils', Paints, Ac. ? •;• !trif 'V) Nl' atm,
.H-AaVEY,, ATIQ'XHR?BIiaIIh
(bate with M. Thomas & Sons.), , ,
Store Nos 48 Mitlso North SIXTELs 4 s'
ASSIGNEES' PEREMPTORY P, ALF. otr,,,gr_Ltn.E.
MIRES, -REVERLYL IF: • J t READ , LNSTAT-Err
BTEAIR. ENGINE AND BOILER,- Mtlig_lKlN.
RURLA.PS" 'BENZIN PAINTS; ' rtf AVERT
OLOTIEUNYORKR:iiI
ON MONDAY '
August 16Lat1.d'hiockiMili,tion thkOamdettandAtiiiiiir
Railroad, Beverly, containing tOcres ant or- foot, With
Dietary' buildiugs;steam ongtriiiatul- boilet . ,, thaeluttiorifi
stock, Mucks, ,paints, yontioh u bonAino, oshrs,, Isms
quantity of bartapti, Subjer.t to artiortgage
60000...8tOCkartd,ireopal propsrty to he, 81:141.4.i5.4
c-
AbW rOady`. ' - - ' -• ,
4aAMEN 'FREEMAN, AUOTIO • ')Si
.2 _
signee , e Sale N. W. corner Twenty-third and Filbert
rdAOBINNET, LOOMS.
81IAFTINOB, B*LTILYG.S.
' 2 i. 411
ON WEDNESDAY-MORN/NG.,
August la, at 10 o'clock, will be dold4 , by order i tif - Wm.
H. Femm, Assigne.e, et the N. W. Verner of Tnty.thint
and Filbert streets, the' Machititryat"a- ife Cattail 'and
WoolenManufaOtory,,includincabout<2o. tattretatttio
LOOMS. 10,_three-shuttle Loonis, 2 Elpoollng Frame',
Beaming Framea, , Bobbia IWln4(_as,,Cloantet llaatta.
Bbaftin3, Belting, Bobbins. Ottice Furniture, 5n06134P.
Q r. Sale ReTemPlory.. , Terms , i) . 4 ,, • ,
THOMAS !Bii • BON
FEES &N) COMMISSION:M W14#'474
No. 1 ,
1110 OHESTNTIT sweet. , •
, Rear entrance No: 1107$.ansom street, -,
How3eltold.rnruiture 'of Ovetk dedcription on
Sales of Eqmitore at r dwelTinsas attended to o n the mo a t
reasonable terms: • . • • • • ' •
)a ~,,a=;
•-••• 8437498 32
-.44454431 32
114:171CTIENO, PIETRAOROW , '&, Caj_
Vs. 2.n and 234 MARKET str6oi.O.lgn°l2ratAi
Succepsorit to JOHN H. =Ens & co..
SALE OF 2,000 GASES BOOTS 'BIIOEB,- &ci •
ING
Auginit 17; '
LARGE SALE OF EUEOPEAN AND DUffiE~TLO
<' DRY GOODb
' ON THURSDAY MOIINIIIG,
Auguet 19, at 10 o'clmk; on' fotir tuoixtha' credit' , •"- ' '
ittl-ttt the tf
trEiFiPRINCIPAL MONEY ESTABLISH
meat—S. H 7. corner of SIXTH and RACE streets...
Money advanced en - Merchandise geiterly-4Watchee.
Jewelry, Diamonds, Gold• and. Silver-, P late, , and, onall
articles of value, for any length of time agreed on.
WATCHES AND , JEWELSY. AT:PWLVA'IE,•SALE.
Fine dold Hunting Cage, Double Bottom and OPen Face
English, ' , American' and , SWifill Patent : Lever Watches:
Flue Gold Hunting Case and Open FaceLepine Watches;
Fine Gold Duplex and other Watches; Fine Silver Hunt
ing • Case,and Open: Face English, Anterican and Swiss
Patent Leverand Lenin° Watches; Double Case
Quartier and other Watches;_Ladiesiancy Watches:
Diamond Breastpins; Finger Rings; Ear Eings;" Studs;
. •&c.; Fine Gold Chains; • Medalliens; • Braceleter Scarf
Pins; Breastpins; Finger Rings; Pencil Cases and Jew
elr, genornl l
FOB SAL —A largo and valuable Fireproof Cheat.
suitable for a Jeweller; cost SW. • •
Also, several Lots i i South. Camden, Fifth and Chest
nut streets.- • • • • • • . • • • •
CD. Mc ()LEES tt. '- • • ,
DlA.llKt'r ttl lC Ert i : l°l4EßS '
BOOT . AND SHOE BALMILVERAP MONDAY ; - AND
THU DLL. •
„ , ,
BY. & CO. AucTicwituuTf.
CASH AUCTIONHOUSE,— •
No. ZOO MARKET street. corner of Bank street.
Cash advance& on consiatimenta without extra aflame.
-IUrARTINIiirOTHERS, AUCTIONEERS
ILL (Lately Salesmen fer,M. Thomas 41; Sane r ) ,' •
No. 15Z CHESTNUT 'street. rear entranbe froln Minor.
CuNtlEßTruax AueTioN Rooms,
1219 T streetl;. •
T. A. McCLELLAND, Auctioneer.
TL. ASHBRIDGE - At C 0.,. AUCTICN
. 'BEM. 505 MAIIKET str6iit. aboie Fifth.
TN' THE DISTRICT' COURT FOR THE
• 1 City.and CountY - Of thiladelphia: .
City, of Philadelphia vs. Joseph Shaick f und Jacob
Antenreith. Tend. ex: June Term, 1889% - No.= '-
The underaigned gives . notice that he has:been.ap
pointed Auditor by the District. Court for the City and
County.of Philadelphia to distribute the , fund:now, in
Court; ariaing.froni the sale bY the Sheriff 'oflhe follow
ing delleribed reatestato, to wit t, - ; MI that eertaihthiee
story brick inessuage. or ,tenement and lot or piece of
round situateetrthe•south side-of4Well • street at the of ene hundred and thirty-sixr-feet .westward
from the , - west side' of .Fifth street in AWL:
of—Philadelphia; - 7 - contaitiing in. front - or. breadth
on ' the said Powell - street 'fifteen feet '
and extending that breadth southward ;between Ifni*
.parellel with the said Fifth street dixty.eight feet:More
or less, to an'alley four. feet- in width leading; into the
said Fifth street, left open for the accommodation of the
ground bounding thereon. Bounded :on .the Inortleby
the, said Powell street, on the east by. ground Of James
Lyndall, on the south by the said alle3c,mid_on toe - West
by ground of. John Warner. , , ; -
The Auditor gives notice that hearall parties
having claim pram the said-fund,ut his ollice,,A, E.
corner Sixth and Locust streets, on'MONDAY,August
16th, 1869 at o'clock P.-111 ,w hen and ; where ail persons.,
are required to. Make their claims or be debarred4rom_____.
coining in on said fund. ' • •
an3-10t§ J. D. MEREDITH ; Andiior.
p • TIIFT,SIIiriekbtE C.OITRT• FOR - THE —
Eastern District of Pennsylvaniti.--In
pi a July Term, 1869. -
Betwe Wm. R.. SCOTT; JOSHUA T. OWEN, CHAS.
BROAD ' S and OWEN SHEMDAN,JP._,.• Executors, of -
the last will and testament Of. OWEN SHERIDAN,
deceased, and. Trustees named therein_. E
SHERIDAN, the said JOSHUA T. OWEN and' ANNIE
J. OWEN % his , wife, i OWEN MERU/AL,' 'JR.,
FRANCIS sIIERIDAN and ROBERT 3811ERIDAN, .
Plaintifni and 'JACOB S. CLINKER ,-.- MARIA
CLINKER,.. CATHARINE MURPHEN,. DANIEL
ZERLEY and ELIZABETH ZERLEY, his wire (late
ELIZABETH CLINKER), , the ' said • JACOB .'8
,CLINKEM,IIIARIA CLINKER,' CATHARINE DICE
PHEN and ELIZABETH ZERLEF , beinl i the children
and heirs of JACOB CLINKER deceased,* AGDALEN
CLINKER, widow of thesaid JACOB C de , .
ceaaed , the said JACOB S. CLINKER, Administrator,
with the will of the said JACOB CLINKER anuexed,and
all other persons claiming to be the Mini or devisees . of
tlioeaid JACOB CLINKER, - deceased, Defendaida. • -
The above named defendants will please. todake notice
that the plaintiffs have tiled their bill in the said Court,
prayingt that they inay have all their witnesses - examined
and their depositions taken, for the purpose qf•perpetua.-.
ting their testimony of and concerning the possession of
the plaintiffs of a certain lot of ground, situate cin -the
southwesterly side of Thomas's Mill • road, in the
Twenty-second Ward of, the city Of. Pli
ta filing acres and 29 perches, more or 'less; Which pre
mines were once held by. Jacob (Binker,,and convoyed by
the said Jacob S. Clinker, Administrator C. t. 0. of the
said Jacob Ol hiker, deceased, unto William Ottinger, on
the l i of AprillBM, and after several - mesa(' conveyances, —
were afterwards conveyed on the 20th March; 180, Unto
the said Owen Sheridan:mid that the said, Court nu the
3d day of July, 1869, ordered and decreed that this notice
be given to the defendants.requiring them, and every of
than, to be and appear in the said Court', on' the FIRST
JflONPAYofSeptember, 1869,'• to .runke /answer..to:- the
said bill of the plaintiffs; and abide the further order of
' lie Court in the premises.: '; • „
, . H. C.
JOSEPH A. CLAY,
Solicitors for plaintiffs.
jylfw&Lnt§
1I N THE ORPHANS' COURT F OR 'THE
City J tied - County': of Philadelphia.-=-Eetate , of
C.ATHARINE RO LAND. Tito Auditor :appointed
by . the Court to /matt settle and adjust the . first and final
account of ISIII.I. AIC 0. TIENDERSON Itrel, THOMAS
POWEllS,Ex'ecutors of•DATHARINE F. ROLAND.
deceased,und to report distribution of the balautre.in tbs.
bands of the accountant, xIII meet the putties Interested
for the purpose of his appointment, on' 110NDAY.-16th
of Almost, at 12 Weloeh 111„ at fe24Yelnuf street, Hootu
9; in the elty C
of Philadelphl'• • •- • •-• •
aul.w f - JAMS: STARK Auditor=.-:
STATE , '13.41VC.A.- 1191c84:1C,.
decQats'ed.- 4 4etters of .kdlninfstraffon upon the
estate of send decedent having been'grunted to thomMder
signed , all persons Indebted to liaid estate pre .fiNaisted
to, mike payment, and , those having °lithos tti!,present
them to 3011N14.•TIAILSIA11, - A - droloistrator, - .N6::ltt?
North- Fifteenth • Street:. 'PhitedelPhia ; ' or , to .ii hto
Attorney, Witt, J. filcELROYi_ 8. -E., cor.,,,inixth and =
Witlont'streets. • ' ' • )y,184:111t*,?
'IVSTATE OF .1-I:ENEY
_EA ceoßgd.—Lotters of Atimttlistratfon iptylog.Ateert
grunted 11., nuarrsighed ttpon, the above 6itate,"all
porHonwintlebtfa thereto arorequeittillt9ll:taki) rymetit s
titi Thom , ayll om, b Hitt clatnii , pregont. OUI6IA.
CllRlSTOPlLER,VBilipinlstratrit, 932 jlanntAtii - v.:titreet;
or to hor, AttorneY,_.7lloMAS 11... ) :M1SAKMATi, 25
North St . , / entli street. ; ;! 4: :'' 4ll :'.bilie/fr ONE
IN7 . .T.IFiEintSTRICT.•.COURT•;OIk7.4II,IS3
United States lor .ttttt Esstortt ,PtstrioA :of.PAttiosylvs,
nkro ptcy :—.Thii.'nudeptiguotl)therthip
notice of his^appalttiniout, 34 Assion33ox,.wiLL
vE y. of the city or Pitthittelphitti - iirtthliirßiad'Dhttricr:
who loth been nd.jotttzed.m, cltottlcTup;• ' , opott a ogottitoest
pet ittodby the District Doha 'of 14101 district .
. . - JOll tZt".II I OI3IANi Assigno
131.3 Sotath•dixth street.
To t crthiltorti of. stild ; V3t4.3t.
1)11) 0 - D G 1 R C S -l ANlS 77, WiisTENtioLlres
_LI, POCKET. KNIVES^sPEARL and , STAO4 0./tru.
BLES of beautiful finia_ h* RODOERS , and WAD
'S E a
BUTCHER. and CELEBRATED. IiECOULTRII
RA ZOR„ HCIMORB. /N. CABEB of the puma! quality
Razors; ki,niveft, &Won and Table Cutlery'srout:dm&
polished. EAII,IR6TRUMENTS -of the most its,pm,
construction to attest the hearing. - at 141MIgLnafilli
Cutler mud-Surgical Inetrantent liNiker,lll Tenth etiatoti
below Obeetnut. Oß
LEGAL NOTICES.