; SNektiii"•' am l ol l ****taiivi The following.. letter from ',Ridge Dent, of MisslaidA toßecretary 13outwell WMWINGTON, August 17, > P 309. -r-To Hon. Grine S. Boutwell, SecretatV'ke'the Treasury —SDI: I shall make little .apology for asking your attention' to, my letter,_ and, less for the riatbre'efitiietaitents. . You were the first to , deny:the political orthodosystf my friends and myself, and by all-the - rules of the forum I am entitled:to_ a defence. Again, yqtt hold an office of the' Republic, and your acts, therefoie, are legitimate subjects of criticism by the humblest citizen-,thereof. Brit in some respects we are alike. Por instance: we are both aspirants for place,with this difference : You aim to be the neXtrresident,,. with every- asmintureof.:snos" citis;eicePtin the opinion of the People; While seek an humbler place,- -with-my hopes in disastrous eclipse except in the judgement of , ' . Intlibproba,ble results of the'fnture we both'' stand. ainenable to the judgment 011ie cmintry. ... - liftlie - prntuit of yinu .- itrabitioir, - You Tare 'un-' gateftil,and unscrupulous as to. the means of success. Your organ, the New York 'Bun, in the same breath ridicules the Capacity of your mister and dwells 'with einpbasis upon' your pee:11114 for his office. ',Your excellent tool, Mr."Tulleek, `'became reckle,ss in the ma*Pub;itio*9 l . , your flePixtment in the , interest of your ambition, and so defiant of the wishe,B lof ~ t hef. President 'of the country, tliii~?! to save yeitirself of popular indignation you found-it convenient to 'transfer him toanother...sphere of scandalous,. 4 activ, ,where his 'talents might 'he -exerted with canal effect and lesSeffrontery. Tentiptiee;'XisSissippi and TexaS, not to men tion, aitlithii*-so huMble MYrielf," ,were obstructions the way of success, because,, thinner t President Grant's _intervention hi , , excluding.the.proscriptive clauseS from their orgardeclaW, these States are brought into the ;Union and firmly welded to 'his support,, Now,',this 'in direct conflict with your sys temized plans; for what General Grant gets in the' next Presidential election, „clearly Mr. Boutlvell will hot get, and:therefore havoyon deriouuced theC'ouservative Repu.blicaus, who are-for;Grant, that you may obtain the pro . scriptire•Sepublicaits, who are for Boutwell;• and iby , iionie strange dexterous management and 'occult 'political strategy •Ton* have so Worked upon the confidence of the President as, to cause him, to , nourish the club,with which you Intend to break his head, by inducing him to join,you in denunciation of the Conservative Republicans--& party created , by his magna and triumphant through his encourage ment. ~B ut;siryour purpose is easily discern ible, and has a two-fold object, viz.: to destroy 'the ~Istatronal 'Republican party' in the South, 'and then to reconstruct from its shattered frag *petits a Boutwell Party, with no Richmond in the field to strike. for your,crowi4.' .-But if you cannot isueceeti in. this scheme of desperate en-, terprige you mean to rnin—a_result; from pies ent,' appearances, much niore' likely , to be 'reached' Yonr official interventien for ,WellS, for - initance, gave tiveaty thousand 'niajoritY' to Yourletter,to Stokes gaVe Tennessee to Senter by an overwhelimng vote of seventy 'thousand :r ;•Yoni..'inarvellout politicasagacity,! no* actire MissiSiiPpi and 'Texas', will re peat your calamity, and again overwhelm you with discomfiture and defeat. Superadd to these • results of your unapproachable folly the imposi . tion on these States of your ironclad oath, and the alienation ;is complete, •landing .thern , all. into the Outstretched; your aims off;Democracy,. ,lint the f eonsequenees oyo folly do net - seep here. Ohio and Pennsylvania anti others follow, deciding their political status, in October, and the North,will echo back the cOodenanation of.. the South,' and peal inytair ears'-'this facti that there is still enough of the incorruptible virtue of the Republic to rebuke you for a wanton re _ ,piession of that most sacred right--- 7 the elective tranehise. ,hut, sir, this 'will not deter you from your v. mad course ; ' you will still . persist until every,; that supports 'our party Stricken, aiyak, and the whole grand superstructure tumbles, ,'„about our ears - in hopeless ruin. When you were appointed Secretary of the Treasury and unanimously confirmed by a Senate of every shade of political opinion, did you not take an oath to administer your- office; impar tially, and for' the exclusive objects of its creation—to collect the revenue and control the finances of the country-? t lanot that office theproperty_oftbe rritiori,_and yourself -only clothed for a time with a little brief authority ?. Thenisir, how-do you explain ~thist perversion. "uses its legitiinate ses arid' frinetionS into it' means and instrument of oppression to foice and compel an election of obnoxious rulers upon the people of the South ? Is such acorns! consistent with your oath of office? or do,-you call-this a greatmoral idea? But, Mr. Bontwell;though you have thus . Pros tituted the.pOwCr of your office for purposes o f oppression„Witlunitfluk w or law, it"M'ay be tliat.yotiCab4.ll.,Me by What authority you assume to pronounce upoil my political orthodoxy?,constituted-you the Piipd of -Republica - bisin ?„. Who gasve!. you authority to hurl the,politicaranathema,s of the party ? Again, what right had you to Com mit the Administration.to yourpolicy ?. Have,. you to learn yet that you', are only 'part of the' Administration, and not the whole of it, though your friends believe . that a. monomania has seized your mind on-that-subject, and that-you 'verily believe younelf the State:: Very respectfully, . , LEWIS DENT. Tax on Sales of Stocks. . , . A special Washington. despatch the ,Prets sass: it has been mentioned,in.,these - despatches that the New York , bi.oketS i 'who hild been : 'as- 4essed for a heavy tax on ~their dealings in gado, &c., had brought the matter before the Commisgioner of Internal. Bevel:l.4e, and .eiu cloyed able counsel to argue the " questions in - volved. To -day, Commissioner Delano. cided that the brokers should be taxed. The result is of great interest to business men in New York, Boston, and Philadelphia, and con , ..e.erns the general, public, - since the Commis sioner's decision :brinp_to the Trea.sury about $100;000 per 4 iveek from sources whiclr never paid tax beibre. - • The following is a copy Of the decision; In thq,".2ntiOer of Wood and Reich et al., clxiim inq-tglle-bruker.sancl-not-bankerx The.uanplication of Wood and Reich and: others,bankers,and brOkera• doing-,business in the-citfOf New York, but residing in Brooklyn, sets forth that suits have been commenced ; against them intlie Circuit Court for the Bust-:: ern District of New York, for. the recovery of certain taxes and penalties • alleged-to be ;due. • frin• tlieni•aW bankers, under; ,Sectkinill(Vaeff of June 30, 1800. The --applicants= further state these suits are based ssiiqts, : a. ensistructiozi • given to , that .section by the late assessor, Mr. B. D. Webster, holding thatparties hither./ to known and taxed as brokers, whose busi new it was to purchase and sell stocks, bonds, bullion,'coined: money; &c.i &c., for t.benselves and'others, as set forth in. artielel/, , Section were engaged ill the basiness of banking and liable to-a-tax of ong-twenty-fourth.of.ol,lB Per cent. on the, average amount of nioney'''em ployed in paymeat for such plirchases, and holding as brokers only the dealers who merely found purchasers and sellers without Complet: lug the'.contract • by delivering' and receiving. They also state that prior to April 30 they had no means of knowing that such a startling claim wpahl .be made, and respectfully subinir the — hardship of snaking such construction retroactive. 'They claim that the business of intying and selling stocks ; bonds, `&c., has always been considered to be that of a broker, and they ask that under all circuinsttni- co the Commissioner chrect th,eillscontinaraum of the snits 'now . commencetVand. that by the authority vested in him they ,nay be esgorod of immunity from the penalties forall*d,failure to make correct yettirns untilii d(!,cWion upon the question at Shall berrendered. No alrunent has been submitted with thio applica `don, but I find' 'among the 'papers filed in a former case relating to bankers' taxes, a printed ',argument, by counsel on this question. The , statutory provisions' which require construction in' this matter, are as follows: Article 1, section 78, of act of 30th June, 1804, provides,that ' , every person, firm or company,l3aving - a place of business where credits are opened by deposit or.c.ollection of money or currency, subject, to be 'paid or, re- Milted upon, draft, check or order; or where money is advanced or loaned on stocks, bonds,:, bullion, bills ofexchange or promissory notes; or where stocks, bonds, bullion, -bills of ex change or promissory notes, are received for `discount or sate, shall be regarded as * Article, 9 same section, provides that> every person, firm, or company, whose business it isi to negotiate purchases or sales of stocks, bonds, exchange, bullion, coined money, bank notes, promissory notes; or other securities, for themselves or others, shall' be regarded as a 14oker; provided, that any person having paid special tax as a banker shall not be required to pay a special tax, as a broker. - - Section. — ocs - saine -- act,, - provides - that - there be paid on all Sales made by brokers, banks, or hankers,Whether made for the benefit of others or,on their own aecount,the following taxes—that is to say, upon all sales and con tracts for salerof stocks, bonds, gold and silver Inillion and COlll, promissory notes, or' other secUrities, a tax rate of one per cent,. for every hundred dollars ,of amount of such sales'or con-; gnats; and on all sales andcontracts for sale negotiated and made' by any persbn, , firm, or ' company not payingaspeeial tax as broker, bank, Or banker, on ay gold or Silver bullion; coin, or promissory notes, stocks, bonds,, or other securities xiotbis or Lheir own property, there shall be paid a.,tax at ,'a rate of five cents fOr every,. hundred, dollars of the amount of 'such sale or. contract: • ,ISo9,tion 110, prpvides taxes that are t 6 be the,banks andjiankerS, Character and.form, their monthly retlitdSand penalty.for , : any: re fnsal or neglect-tosTender returns and payment. It;is for the enforcethent •of this penalty that the actions in question have been'eornmeneed, belt it is immaterial for the purposes of 'this in quiry to state particularly the provisions of the section. . • • - ' • , • at appeals by : hese citations.. that Congress has been;; careful to exclude s all • popular 'definitions of the vocations which • it intended to tax,: and has 'embodied in a statute the definitions by which alone it is to be construed. The meaning of the terms ninkers and brokera is there stated with, preci- Sten, and. We, are, not' to, look - for it. in the phraseology or practice of the_ persons who piliSne those vocations.. It is clear' hat every person - who, keeps a'place of business • * • • where stocks' • are received' for sale, ,or who, in, oilier and equiValent2.words, makes' his bi&_neSs 'tO . 'receive . and. sell - stocks: left w ith him for that purpose, must be regarded as banker, ,and.:;.it is, equally , clear r that eiery. persotr.d•.. • ..•. whose business .it is to , net otiate - purchaseS or: .sales ..of stocks 'least be regarded as broker; When we find' si distinction thus made in - the very, same. ,secL. ti on between the business of , receiving s ocks: fol• sale and-the. business of negotiating, sales of stocks, it is impossible to sill - PO - se that the }mai-, .ness.otalegbtiating sales includes the lid 'of re-1 . ceivino• ° and=- , delivering . 7 stock:-; leas :.bean sated,, in argumont, that--brokers are divided into tWo elassei: - The:, regular "brokers who purchase and it,64,boAils; etc on 'con 'on their`(Mil* aectinnt;; receiving and 'delivering Sante, ' *and smaller operators, who act only for -small commissions !and without capital,' finding sellers 'and'. purchasers at ,, a - specifiedprice' for ddsired property; and. it further urged that the \vox(' "negoPtite7; haS, , two . meanings. • ; • To negtitiate may:be .merely making a contract;pr it may complete the trans action by the' reeeipt.- or delivery', Of property. It is immaterial how brokers . are Classified' in "New Yeirk.. jr they - are not 'stichisSified in the ievenue laws the statute shows that there is no suell'perSonis 'a regular broker Who purchases and - sells 76tocki --- receiVing -l and - delivering - the - same. Nor are ' there two meanings of the, .ivord "negotiate" as it is used in thli statute. am constrained to deny entirely the statement' that to negotiate may be merely Making a con- . tract; or it may actually coMplete the tranaac-, thin by . the - receipt , or delivery of 'the: Property When the contract , Tnada' negotiation is ended,. . the receipt . of Stock ..purchased and the 'delivery of stock: sold-is merely_ the execution. of contract, and this negotiation takes no part. The neaotiator of the contract' may be authorized by ids -em ployer also to execute but-in doing- So.he acts in anew capacity, - and he cannot merge one capacity 4 into another by describing his snbsequent proCeedings 'as'only CoMpletine; his transaction... The nertotitator of sales for anOther , is a bargain-maker, who 'handleS neither prop city nor proceeds, and has no opportunity to make a profit but 'or any funds arising' froM• the sale. The receiver of stocks for sale receives the proceeds - or - sale; mingles them with his own funds, and can make profit out of them so long as they remain ,With him; precisely as he may Make profits from deposits. Ile was efassified as . a banker for purpoies oftaxation, just because he adds to his functions ofnegotiating' an ar rangement. by which he may use the proceeds of his sales as a business capital. Any person • whehtis.a place of buainess where he receives• stocks,whose sale he negotiates, does all' that' is done. by a banker in making such sales; and he Combines the.; ; very acts designated. in the statute as 'distinguishing a banker, and, there fore, he must be taxed 'as a banker. The argu ment' referred to calls attention to the phrase ology of the ninety-ninth section, where sales made by brokers are mentioned. lit is claimed that Congress ,has ;thus `.conceded that.persons who complete, transactions O of pie,' by receiving and delivering stock;,:are only brokers.' arid., an . argument.... is' inal)- plicable to this question until it,l4,:ahown Con .gress speaks of peisons'as ,brokers Who have places of business whereibey make it ,their . --voeation--to-effect such. Sales;,-iThis--seetion, also speaks of contracts 'fbr,'Sales' negotiated on account of others by, persons wheare not even iii . okers, but there is no concession that; such \ persons may make it their busirieas negoti- ate such contracts without becoming liable to be taxed as brokers. UndOubtedly it is not every,negotiation , or contract that would 'con- , vert casual perions into brokers, or every sale and delivery that would convert a broker into a banker. It' a broker has no place of business, or does not, in contemplation of the statute, make a practice of receiving stocks whose he negotiates,-he-cannot.. well be regarded as a banker, and such a sale made by him is properly described as - a sale ..made by a broker.. It was the object of this sec-'. tion to reach ' all • sales and contracts for sale made by one person.. on account of another, and not to furnish. a „definition of terms already defined. The rule all parts of a statute are to be taken together inn explain ing the moaning of each part is applicable only when there is a reasonable, question about the meaning of the latter, and is', wholly in. applicable to a precise definition. It May be added, however, with reference' to the meaning of the term negotiate as Used in the 18th section, that the very. section appealed to enumerates. sales made and con tracts for sale negotiated, and thus implies a definition of Mins by its application. After • , .• " • t • TDB ,. ;DA EsDAyAtie/J$ is, iB6 careful considezaiou.'7,ofthe 'statutel. am of 0 00 16 V tl l , lo .4iVOt*so,L* l `leise 'Posilles& it 1§ to. • e p a ' saes or „'efiteii , stooks .is a b ; icctinll,tig to the - p .- 011111g ',ut section o the:ait•itf,toth: of June, 18&4; if the has a place of business iiherehoocettes from others stOeks , ..whose% sales ho negiothites., or where money 44vallcsa or I.ol*(lPA'Stotlo. Internal Iterentle *weelnt& ;Internal ',Revenue reeeiPta•fok the':year end bigJdne 80, 1869, amounted, in round' num borer tO'slsB,ooo,otAderived aithllows, in part 'egtimated: ' ri•am ,Spirits $44 800 000 .... ..••••••••••••••. • Tobacco ••- • • • • 2 3 , 300 t 000 Phrmented I l iquors . ; 6,000,000 Gies :. " - ,2,100,000 Grieas Receipts 11,200,000 841 ea........ •• • • • •• • ••• • • • • • '. 8 , 20 4, 00 q /Incoine,iindiVldualS, $24,000,000 . 1 4403 Othersourbes, 9,100,e60 33,600,000 Banks and Bankers, 3,200,000 Skin -11)s• ••••• • • • • '''4 ,.. 1 . • - ••• ••• ••,• 10,500,000 salaries . . .... . . . ... . 580,000 Lg•acies andSucoessions.V.''..` ,- ; -- ;.". --, '2,300,000 Special taxes, not 'lncluded un der the heads of spirits, tobacco,' fermented quors, , 8,950,000 Penalties... ... . 1,200,000 SOurces not above. enumerated. y 2,140,000' THE NATIOM , LA.130.11. UNION. CONVEX npN.—The ,Convention , reassembled at 2 P.M. yesterday. , • • . The Secretary,having left for New York, the President stated that. a Secretary,.' 1.n:o tent should be nominated, and ; Frederiek Baker, of Philadelphia, 'was unardoactuslyi elected. , • A friend of Miss' Anthony' , withdrew her' name as a delegate, stating that she Would then be entitled to a seat ,alikveiceiti tip o:inven tion, but not to a vote. ; ;'' - A motion was made to la the .Whole; matter ou the table, resulting, in yeas anlll7 nays. Anthony. stated, that, she : only ;allowed hei name to be withdrawn to prevent the,Con vention from being disgraced by ita action. Xr. Walsh, of New York:''offeted' the mo tion tb, allovi the name Of 'Mi.i.§:',Antliony to be Withdrawn in this matter. Let 'the Working men take the responsibility' ,'of :Meeting this question fairly. • „ , ,• . ' • ;Mr. McLean, of Massachusetts, said that the suffrage question is coming and it cannot be stepped. There is no man in-the country who has done,more for Trades, nions than I have. They are the forlorn hope. • The workingmen of the country have taken themselves to a raft' tO save themselves. This body is higher and holier than all the. Trades - Unions. , believe it would be better for one-half of this body to secede than to exclekle ,•Miss : - Anthouy. The printers of New ,York are afraid t to allow Wo men to enter the arena with themselves. The speaker then bitterly denunciated men who do not follow the sterner out-door duties of life. Nero n scene of, great confusion ensued on seVerahPointa of:ciftler .:thattirera., raised; and: :.the speaker finally took his seat. 1 3.1 r. Walsh; of New Yorl:, said,'for the sake I .oflarmony, it' would be better to accept the .Withdroyalof.,MiFis Anthony—. , Who .Prdiptis :PleatiOu . was called; by several , persons, to allow the withdrawal; anti 'de ti2atetl. A motion was Wage to Iteou:Siderthe rote. Miss Walbridge, of Massachusetts, stated that the workingwomen of her. State desired to have Miss Anthony admitted. She charged that there were many men in the Convention NOWliat 4 e;t6 tight; there, ail'ePfesenting' , *ork-: 4 1 r1./Alolirl!,,Cf- 11 4 1 qe4 ) 4 1 N,e0001.)vas fa,vbf: 6P'reebtisitlititia-lhe'; iftOttoi,'and`lNii fighting the -battle (but.fairlY.. - ; The motion ti..recepsider*4S,fieta_gfrd to: ci Mr. Canleren fferir ea: ieSOlutfoii"tO 'allOw no de egate to speak more than onto on , .any sulaiept f arid.not More than . ten, minutes,. uniesS'by consent bf 'the Convention. --Agreed • The sape : gentlertip,offeregTa resplution . to a appoint Sprgeant-at-Anns. • • Da,vis, of Plplq..delphia,, moved, to ad „ A.s,apropedy Oier6dit,ed del legate. . t• Mr. Sylvis, of Philadelphia,, called for the yeas and nays on the'thotion. Mr. West, of Mississippi, characterized the wholevoceedings as boyish, and- deprecated the -bastpaCtion =of the AVreaf deal of impatience and confuSiOn now occurred, which Mr. Cavil, of Washing ton, stated Was going, almost beyond the limas. 'of' decency. liebeggel them to act with 134 2 tience, and proceeded to state the plain case, read ing-fromthc-Mamtal of 4he ; Congress., - The Obininittee en Cre_ientials 'Mported two' additional names as delegates, -who•were uuani Monsly elected. • The-vote on the question of admitting Miss Anthony was them - taken , np,- - cestaing, yreas,,i trays, • • , • Canieron, of Kansas, offered a resolu tion appointing a committee of nine to inquire . into the disposition of the public lands, or what is known as the Cherokee Reservation in Kansas.. ,Agreed t 0... WralSh, of New York, offered a resoliiiitimstating the: :preSent:_systeni •of `tracting for prison labor is detrimental to ,the interests of the workingman, and 'pledging the' wcirkifignim not to-vote,- any . man for the Legislature who will not promise to use his in ihteilee to hare the-ayston abolished.' Referred to the appropriate committee. Thonias - Collingtcin; -ce Maryland, offered . resolution,' ; appointing, a committee of itiv,e to Prepare.a Memorial to Congress and the State Legislature, protesting against•the importation or coolies.. Referred to the Committee on The following committee on the Cherohee Reservation was announced : Hugh Cameron, of,K.ansaii;;A..W. Phelps,-of .Connecticlit; J. E. West, of Mississippi; ,D. Towers, .of Massa.- chitsetts';'H.• N: Cramer; of Tennessee; R.T.' Walkeri-eff Alabama; John Maguire, of ~Mis 7 som.k . W: H. , Stewart, of Michigan; L. De Woolf, not', Wisconsin; - Frederick Peyer,,New York. , • • . Several other resohitions were presented and referred to committees. ;. , E. IL Davis read a paper on the relations'of labor "Mad;eapital:and`reflecting on the 'National bank systetwand fav,oting a paper currency to,. be,issued byithe_GO;ieniment, and--loaned—te4 iecurity,at it, per r ,cent, , interest, and also ;uni versal free trade. The • paper was referred to the Committee.on Platform. Adjourned. • AcOpENTArLyDnpyrxED.—Patrick .Kelly, who was droWned "frOm_a steamboat on Mon day éVenifig . ;!Wliile returning to the city:from:a,' steamboatexcursion,, was accidentallyjmoOked ) overboard' during a rush to get on the'' boat', As he, fell -into .the,,, „water • a ,ecene of, mat, eon4iiiOn - ensua in the\ liont w , and the omen cried. lustily to those on Shore to save the mtin` , Mr. Bernard Downey, one of the excursion ists, who happened to be on the wharf at the time; plunged , : ditt4: . ,: the river, caught s the; drowning: man by the ..shoulders, and .raised his heid ' abcive' the 'surface • of the " Water. A rope stretching from ;asmall vessel i,to the wharf, rendered Mr. Downey great assistance,' Ile caught hold of this, and.while endeavoring to raise himself several men jumped into the water 'and Interfered-so' much • that he' 1943,, - ; forced'to let' go his 'bold,' and Mr. Kelly sank CO the bottom. Deceased leaves a wife and three children. He was 31 years of age, and resided on Sorrel street, below Melvale: • BA£IE BALL.—Another game, between the Oriental Club, of New York, and the Keystone' Club, of this city; was: played.yesterday_after,!. noon; The score stood=Oriental," 17 ;Key-; stone 45. =gEZ=2 FAX , I4O"'A nitnitvp.—About,s o'clock last evening, a five broke out among the Mice* . of the inanufaetory oC the Philadelphia and Boston Dessicated Fislii•Company,• ¢ u Colum bia avenue,';above Fifth 'street, but the flames`.: Were extinguished without ,ankalarin' having beensminded.; While , the tre,"iYas bgrP l Pg; a ‘ shed iii, the rear kbe the ruins • gave way,,and in jtired, tt, number of lads, who I were Apon , it, at the time, , ; , ThomaS.'Franels O'Brien,•• aged 8 . y6ars residing at No.' '147 Cadwallader street, had left' arm brolen in'seVeral phieekand his head cut. Jacob Wetzel; aged eight. years,. living on Oxford:streetirbeloW Cadwallader, was injured ahbut the 'legs. ..'..enother, kul.;re , siding, s in ,the neighboxbood, of the ,Eptleopal Bbspital, .had several ribs broken. , Thera were , a'number of other boYb who were 4njared, but none set ous y. • • • • • Ffitp.--=-Iresterday afternoon the roof of:tlie old rough-cast.-burldin, .at the northwest , , corner , of Swanson and ueen streets, occupied , on the lowei, flooras a tavern, bY:Williatn. Don- 3 nelly, was - deitioyed . by, fire. %helip* poi thin of the house was occupied by different families:, The. flames, originated in the third story;. front room, in the ..apartnient of:, , Charles Brown. A large fire.: was , kindled in , the stove, the pipe from which ran through the roof, and becoming very hot",( , set fire' 'to' the wood-work around it. The 'dalnage siistained by, fire'and water Will,exceed. $1,060. , The _building_ is__lnsured in.the _Griten'Tree; hitt the occupants have, no insurance._ The proPerty belongs to the estate tif Daniel Wilson: TROT AT POINT BREEZE' PAnic.--Quite an exciting and Interesting race, caine , off yester day afternoon at ; , :.Point ,Breer.e Park between the ,little' stallion "Iron sides" and the Boston. torso "Regulator," • both with running nuftea.'• 'topsides • was> the, win ner in three strait heati: • ; The, following, lithe' Onnuldl7:, John If. 'g. S. IronsideS and mate,' 1 1 W. If. Doble b. h. Regulator and mate, ,2 2.2.. TIME ' • : Itt Fist beat, - - F 39 irst ~ 1. al 14 . Second heat, - ,- 35 I.loi 2.24 • Third beat, 3G 1.14 2.25 . Discuan?mn.---Cite' orge CraWford, Who was' arrested on susidelon of having been concerned with his brother, William in the murderons-as sault upon Mr. John Sharkey, at I:toward and Oxford streets, last week, had a further hearing , before Alderman' Kerr, yesterday, afternoMl, and was discharged from custody. The test,t mOny adduced did, not, show that the defendant' took any part whatever in the. , tfstentay rooming an unknown. white nian,'apparently,t,hirty years 'of 'age,',was found drowned in the Delaware, at., l'ainter." Street wharf. Deceased is feet two inches; in height, with sandy,bair and moustache. ~He, was attired in dark plaid pantaloons, red shirt and long boots. The Coroner took, charge of the Owl.—George reek, age,tWelve, years, was run, over , by a wag,on ,at Eleventh and Shippen :•streets yesterday, and sustained se ere injuries. He : , was' remoVed to his home in Joseph street, beloW Shippen. *v' , • • FELL• FROM. Wmpow.—About' 2 o'clock yesterday afternoon, Millie Orr, residing at , No. 1940 North Fifth street; Tell ont •of 'a 'sec ond-stoyy front window and' fracinred . het NEW JERSEY 3IATTERS. GLAND Excuusr i dx..ia-b'enatus , Lodge, No. .Independetit 4, 'lolide'e of Odc.l44'ellows, Camden;baVe made 'arraiigenients to give grand excursion; on , Saturday, next, to 'ork Bay. They will. leave. Camden in'a spa,. Gial train of rears.at 7.42 in, the morning, and oeeed over the Camden. and Burlington County Railroad, through Merchantvilio, moorestowni Mount vineentown, Perri:=, bertoii, NOW Egypt and Bights : : town;:in'Soptlf,Ainboy; thence by the,Steamer PoOk,.,ni,mind,,ltaritan Bay,,, the' through the Narrows, in full view of the forts, the surroundingeountry ,seenes r and the entire front of New York city, to the Palls- Retiuming will stop at .PierNO. l 'North river. 'foe about half an hour, and then start for home;' by'the,Channel Inikle of Staten Island; reaching, Camden about nine o'Clock: This will be a very pleasant, excursion. : .._ The Na= tional Cornet, Band and. Orchestra will worn -pany,,the party. RED Birttif4; l : 2 .l Liebe- .Icaelous , little birds, so much sought after by eiiicutes and loveis of good'eating, begin'. to appear in - abundanee, aloni the liver marshes where reeds grow plentifully, and litany of, them are killed by - sportemen. The season for talent, however, has not yet;arrived fully,-and-gunners-ought to be prohibited from shooting them. ' • Goinef AnEan.—A very-large - number of new:buildingsi - in - addition to those - already : under; ay, have been and are about to be commenced in Camden. The alacrity ex-. hibited in the building line indicates .how rapidly the:city is going ahead, while the itn-„ provements to the streets contribute materially , to the sanitary condition of the city. T . , IT STREETB.7-1 tie committees .on streets , in the various wards of Camden are busily. er4aged in repairing many of the, paved high ways where they need _it. If they repair every ;, place,- it will keep them at work.forsome TitE ttoos:---,Since the war was coranienced on the unmuizled dap, their owners -have bibited: a. gornmendable.degree of forethought in keeping them out of the streets, and now it is teidoirrone can be found without a muzkle:'• ` QuiET.—Everything n' liatuden forthe'paSt .. . few days liaa been exceedingly quict. With the exception of two or three, trifling police ' cases the offieera have'enjoyed animmitnity which to them has been quite refro'slting.. NASIBT. Mr. Nasby Dabbles in Ohio Politics... The Declination of Oen. Boseerans Opens a • Wield for him which he is not loth to en ter..-:lie Announces Himself as a Can. didate for tiovernor , in his Modest ' PEEPEE'S TAVERN, HOLMES Co., Auguat 9, 1809.-;.-.There wuz • a Providence in my bein compelled to leave Kentucky—a speshel and crownin Providence in my cornin to Ohio. I steel 'never doubt Providence agin. I thought it hard to be compelled to leave- say comfort able JAuarters at the Corners, and I murmured when forced to trust myself to the cold ,chari ties u'v an,unfeelin world at my advanst age, but it wuz after'all for the best.. - Fz high - and exalted ,ez the posishen uv a Kentucky Post Master, the posishen uv Cim'ernor 'of the third State uv . the , Yoopy,un is. more exalt- - - „ The declinin 'iv Gen. Rosyerans wuz not Onexpected. Indeed, when Senate'. Thunnan starte.4 for ,California the:nest: day after the "Convenshen to indoose him to - =decline I knowed be wood succeed. Thurman. hez a winnin way, with hina ez,Vallap.dyguin dis covered two years ago next winter.. RosycraW wuznt - never the proper man to lead' the DiniOcrisy nv Ohio to victry. . No, Matter - how sound he may be on all the ques tions nOW before the people there is an, odor' attaehed to his name wicli is a stench intcr, our nostrils, and' tbe , men wick run our State Convenshen ought to have knowed, it. The trip Dimocratic intellek is. Waited—it , don't take in too many ideas, to wont, noxl does;, it shift with facility. Dunn three years , nv the late onpleasantness we , - witz • kept' bizzy trainin the Dimocrisy to hate this name, with sickez Burnside, et cetenr. We ' suc ceeded. About the time uv the lightin uv the battles Jur Stone river, Inky,' Chictunauga, and pertikerly about the elate uv the arrest anti ''' then Maite saint,%Vali= 4) :iiieur reddygtuil t e very mOiep. tri,„,ltosyerans's name wood ; ; :r a4Dixirrodat i n ;Ohio to frothin at the 'milli like a mad dog. The Dim:Trak anti ,p4thy to the, nalne-140,14Clutbged: , Are nalto 401 em that this same Rosyemns wuz our can dfdate, but the people' wood ? in moments LW fortetfuhlesS, IletiV6liitbluil‘elt any man who perpose "three cheers for Rosyerana! ' • They'd apolygise immejitly : when they remembered tl4enaseiv,esi but „km: - an, . apology; repay", foV a; -1) ken head?' if uv our orators wood hey b n killed before the campagn wuz half over. T ere aint no . yoose in•tryia:to. git.up enthoa • pi sniunder tuck circumstances. - ' - Now that Rosyerans is out uv the way, the qt estion is wich uv our ,chieftatus shall take For obviona reasons ? it wood be sixdcidie to' nominate Vallandig : am. , Ile • can't get 4 Rel . publildn vote; , and thbr are hosts nV Demo= trats'who don't, like to hey it sod they voted flit., iiiin.Outiiir iegard foitheir posterty, It won't do to-nonlloate Cary, forle'lli too recent a:con— vert, and,.besides, he used to occasionally loo ter on temperance. • : 'Ramey -won't - . wiper becoz , 'Barney alluz - wears ' dean -ithirts ; • takes 'a bath ,• ' twict '''' a "'meek; end' goeS ,i,storae*4ri toechurch with his feMik; every, Sunday;' Tie, Yduld donl4leB§o49me l ITlePublikii, ~..., votes, but te'd,lo4e. more filanertuff uv ,the • memOerauY ,to ',balancer the aeeouur, , , Ilenry,Clay , Dean wood' soot exactly. bat •he liVestrloww - lesse - 11:-Brite - wood - atiselybut be is a-citiien Vs Kentucky. • SaMmy Cox hezr alluz• lived cleanly, tho he is suflisientlyireisa ' teal to change4all that intime, but onfortunatly, he's in-Spain, and, besides, he's , a citizen tttr "Noo York., \ ' ~ ' ' Who then shel we'nonilnate? ',- • 1 anser without hetitashit, without any Wee- Wien uv nindesty—,lllE. I urn:just' now, the chief among ten thou sand, and the one altogether rovely. lam the 31Oses with is to lead the Democrasy uv Ohio out uv their land uv bondage' into .the laud flowin with milk and honey. ' ', One advantage innonfinatin me wood be aint no danger uv my 'cteclinin. , Ind.ver , decline nothin. ' - .' " ' - ' ' It maybe urged that I ain't knowh., That's the very reason why' snood be nominatid. What wood Vallandygum give ef. he vntan't known?_ ,We never: succeed , with a known candidate. We kin say in counties where they prefer men whose bands wuz &elicit in goal' that ,I killed my thousands; in counties where they went for peece, by killin Provo Marshals and sick- - that 'I wood liev,died in my deor yard; ef I'd lied one, sooner than hew gone South. Aly . other pints are ez follows Ikm holdi more lav , the Dimocmtie party stratein traces than any other man in the State. I wuz originelly a' Dimocrat; ''l voted for Jackson and tor every Dimocratic nominee. from that date onto the ' present: -'lt' is my 'proudest boast, with ~I wish inscribed onto my tombstone when I hey gone hence—l never scratched a ,tikint, , My wax- record is deer. At the breakin out uv the war, I opposed every thing the Goverment did. I did not stun the 3rassaclioosetts soljers in Baltimore, becoz , I wuz not there, but I shmg up my hat when I 'Nerd uv it, and wept bitter teers becoz I `viz ..• not there. I ~did not;;.'%vino- Jeer. On the contrary, when - drafted, I made the. best UV my way to Canady, , to join, Vallandygum, and only failed to make my eseaPe thro thetreacherY , tti a Ablishnist ':who wormd hisself into my confidence by, heyin it copy , us the . .;ioo,"s.'ork Day. Book and a pint bottlentr'scid-corn whisky in his . hind coat...pocket, ,I thought, in my innocence, that, 'one so equippcd.cood not, be ; anything but a , troo`Dimocrat; but'l found, tomy sorrow, that well ee often put 'on sheep's elOthing so' per feckly ez to deceive the very ;elect.Arrested tanditake.hto a campus Lipkin. hirelings,..l NV= CiOthbti in ojus bloo, a musket, ; wuz ', forst into my :_unit , hauda, and 'I ; witz transported southward to dip my hands in the gear twiny friends: Did Ido it? No! I .;deserted the iirst nite,lind escaped to tlie'Dernocratic hosts, with whom I'served till a battle wuz imminent, when I seade'iny Wa:y worth sagin. RooMed `by this unlaWful seezure; for the bars at which'l wunst bed -credit refoOsed to open accounts with me agin,J. devoted myself , , to almsin 'a tyrannical government engaged in prosecootin'an imconstoosbenel-war. I beded the Holmes windy patriots who resisted drafts, ..I organized the Knites uv'the Golden Cirkle .in Ohio and Injany, and I organized more riots =than - anyone - man in - thetates: - I — kin say trooly that doorin that short time, no less thantwenty young men tinned and eddicated by me, Who hadn't the descreslien to get out at the proper time, was incarserated in Basteels, where they languisht for months, , My career sence the moithiful eudin uv the -.-war,-is - wellLitnown. -I-- supported- - Andrew- Johnson the moment he deserted the Ablish- Ixdses: I_w uz with hhti in •his - triumphal pro gress thro the, „North. _ I.__beld.-up -his -hands tloorin the impeachment struggle, and =I 'bought, up three uv of the Union Senators _wich voted for acquittah I ats.sisted also in the slaughter uv tuggers in ' 3deraphis and Noe" I arn,,uv course acceptable' to - the strateout pimocrisy, ez I hold Pews entirely in con sonance with them. I am inflexibly opposed to the payment uv the mania debt, I am op posed , to the fifteenth amendment, and my dawters, if I hed sich, shood never marry' niggers. On'these quest!otts no Man ha. Amerficy is more sounder than am , . , . _ e The Dimocrisy Oluo ow ma this, for ser vices rendered. I hey bin dragged throo horse troll§ for hurrahin for Vallaudygunr. I hey bin pulled' out uy my bed , in Janooary by sol jers and compelled to take oaths uv allegiance, and 1' languished once hl'a Baitile for my sted fastness to tilmocrisy. These things I ought not to dwell'onto, but if' no one else will, I must. , I hey made other sacrifices. When torn from my peeceftil home to Ste our ;friends uv the South, I lied a. wife wich I loved. Life wuz .a peeceful stieeme and we floated calmly along. She took iii *whin and I talked , poll-; % tics at a neighberhi grocery, investhi the ,pro ceeds uv her labor in the sustenance; afforded; at the bar. When, I returned wat met, me? The killin uv men 'outrite wuz not the most hart-rendht incidents uv that fratrisidle struggle. It wuz the sevrin uv domestic ties—the tearin down' uv domestie,altars; and the separatin families. When I returned I wuz coldly met. LoolzerJane wuz --- washin as yoosual, only harder than ever, and linotist the children bed new frocks and shoes. The .fust afternoon I wuz at home I askt her in my old familyer way for a'dollar and a half,' ez I wautid 'to go' down "That's pl4ed she remarkt. ".llevit't you got it ?" I askt,. • keep; " hev," she replied, "and I perposelo it. 1 hey, diskivered suthin since .yoove bin gone I hey found that it's easy enuff to support myself and the children; *Lain ' at a dollar :a dozen, but add to that,' a hulltlie man, with . a nose like yoors ' anti it's harder thin I keer. This house is nibse—yoo kin vacate." And she calialy rung out a shirt ez the Wet she. sod wuz a common-place remark lusted uv a practikel divorse. I left, her. A feendist••A`blishnist hed put this idea into her head and she hed actid onto it. Since that time I' hey wended, my way subsistinhy chance. Ablishnism owes me the home I lied. Ablishn'sm ewes ma the likker I. ought to hey lied, out uv vat that woman hez earned pence that crboel day" -, .0 wat a• fearful debt to pay. The acoor Democrat May ask Wat,l Want 'nv' a nomiiiishen'when defeat is certin Its; suthin to be a can(lidSte. • shood make a vigrons camprine. The masses in the rooral deestriks don't often see a. candidate for so high an offis, and I shoed beam on to em all. Uv course I .';',....r:::::,4.:! - ;' , ,,,;.',...:,,k, k ,:..,i,k4.4, :; .,.,,.,,. , .,,,i.q, : ..,,(.,,, .i.::;:.",,:.,'..,144-i:-?.':',i'..i::::-.''''..5.:.',4..,;.;.-4;....,•-‘4,:.i.i,!.•,:. ... .'x,sl fT. - 81too1frbat. Ilidetro the second °Os 4n OCtober her free-likker. The rank and Hie wood`OsteemAn Ace.lOr,.tO drift !Pith Mop and l shood consider it ktortvenience to drink With them., ,t'or ..twoWeeths I shood h4v, all wanted,,, wood. her the. happiest two Months in •my life. I shood probably die of delirium tremens, but good aeon/. it. Oh, wat gofgos, PrOVeoldcr;,' Oh; viat an elysidral - the Dirnoerisy nv' '9,1110 be so crooel ez .to deprive av it? Ma at least hold the votes, u r the bard4tandid Dimocricy wich wu2 'knewd "- et 'Ooppetteds doorin the war and I can't see that :we hey ever'got' any ot her Lind, no 'matter • who we hernominated. Ef that• element nint strong - eriull,to elect me, I spose I Shoed go : to jlite the unnumbered throng. uv Dimocratic candidate 's , r who hey encountered defeat in the dreary years gone ,by, and, whpse _ghosts still hover on the confines uv I submit this to ,the ,Dhuocrasy ?lay Ohip, feelin that, I am askiit vat "is my 'doo. . - Prritor..tuar V. NAKIY, (Wielk wur., Postinaster). UNITED 'STATES" INTERNAL REVENUE, COLVECTOWB OFTrozFOTJIITIL DISTRICT , rENNSIDVANIA, cORNED. or NLEVENDIdiAND RIDGE AVEiNiffo. _ • . , . • Plutiontrttia, A u gust o , l ooo.: • - • Notice is hereby 'Wen that the annual income tax for ,1888 v.ill be due and payable'at this office between 'An ' ifust.lo and Bentembery,.lBoo;after ivhlcltthe loot pen alifeuwill tie added.--lio—furtber ; Office hour between 8 4 . .. 741. add 3 P.. 11. 1 c'i • • HORATIO G. SIOKEL__, au9.tn,tr.f tact§ Collector Fourth District. P. A J..; WANTS TO RENT-FOR A SMALL, . 2111 genteel famity-n modern-built Dwelling Rouen , lqt containing melee Shade and room fop Croquet ground must be elevated position, Wand„of easy access ' to city (Ninth and Chestnut Weetl'hiladelchia, or Ger. mentown; preferred. Posheision any time bef?re let Oct. Addrese, , giving , exact location, am., care . P. P .O. Box 1980.' `1 anis at ',1,..,;,,,•.. , ,,,, SPECIAL' ROIL STREET_ ;tifnATRE .-., • A . ' 'Brilliant o.orib:hart:it llousesftjttlY. • , POSITIVELY THE LAST 1••EK, Commencing MONDAY EVENING, August Pith, and OverY night durinalliti week., •-, , Unlimited auccess of the famous DUPREE. BENEDICT'S • • GI A-11,2%1 Original TILE Ts.• The Great Benedict ht Specialties. First Time—•" Twice Married. ”First Time—" The Rival Lovers." First Time—"Growle's-Dontestia Trouble," • , Second Time -! Great Peace Jubllee,r Friday. Finn : Titus—Wow .Witticism. ' NeW,' 13allada: Songs; Choruses. Ihinces, Overtures,•&c.,. irc. * Auld tit‘ MATINEE. SATURDAY,,AFTERNOON, 2.iti o'clock. AITALNUT STREET ~ THEATRE, -t ii _ cornet Ninth and Walnut. threats. THISIMONDAY) EVENING Aug - lath:in). UNEQUIVOCAL' sudEss. A NEW SENSATiONAL DRAMA, In Prologue and three Acta by Hears ,Leslie, Esp.; author of the Orange Girl entitled • • With new scenery, byGeorge Delhi°. novel mechanical effects bp Arthur Wright, appointments by Edward Wood, Music selected runt arranged by Mr. Simon AX It 1 CAN C ONSERVATORY OF T. minoc.—see notl eo In Eduestiorial eoloron. (2twst2li dADE3I. k OF FINE ARTS, • rp T street, above Tenth, Open from A. 4.1. to 4 P,. Bemoan Wee' G' tPI toteof 0 still on extGl;lfionllElST REJZ 'OR SALE OR SALE.—THE 1 4 ! TIC S T-C LASS F American Bark BBILLIANT, 422 Tons Iteslater. 62 Tons dead weight, SOO Flour 'Harrell capacity; was Mott fall T rebuilt and thoroughly overhauled In lesos Ivor further partieulars SPAY to' WOIIIIIIA.N . ar'CO.. 123 Walnut street. • ' • r - FOR SALE—CHESTNUT STREET. -- - max. A new and eleattnt'lhrelling Hattie, No, 20(ki Chest nu t street„ justfinished ;r the 'entire front •I. of *late MaYbli3, - . selected viith . great cane, front the Manchester Quarries} with Mullet rd rteaf ; the inside Apish is of 'oral • nut the'zionse'coutains 'eyery modertreoutentence...suth as b peaking trumpets, heaters, bath-rooms, water thybeis, ettOwers,', walnut washstands,.Re.; marble 'mantles in chambers; large Wean parlor and reception room; library with hay *lnflow, dining -ratan. kitchen , and !sundry aki -40/Ping:milli stationary soap-stone wash rubs; in fact, for toratfon, contort, - cawresuence. and eleanneectt eatnnot be surpassed., Apply to FOX 4.• 11111tli AMT. miry .Nc.,..22lSoutti fifth *trees, - N.—FOR SALE—A .• GE.R3IANTON't ___. u6staance ~with_istana, , ri,ery superiorep_olnted•t?"Fte on h it, !It a i ntsiltzei Tv: ~ sulk& and tarring :I n al ne . ‘ , ,t i l aza: s bunt.atia...tutuvauci., . Gertzuthteece. ht. T T . "the owner-nr, hlO "3", atttreet . the beat manner al i r L or ,.l oo f ee t fron..,„ I rma:mit , ' a di n li d p? it t rin 'l l e flA c try. ! title:Lt t , / . , given , : . ,J. ,/,i,t":,...,,,+... ~,,,...,..._,..._- -.... ' .t. SONS, 733 1 % ni. . 14 ! 6 -2 -- vt171,71 - 1 4 d Eli - , • L.: . ' KALE---D it.. 7- ' i63o l4) lt it e..Yertion, • ; ...[l,ll7lnietrterintuh '! ''l 4l.l 4n d th, r e bretpeo l ' — t k, , - .c i 154 0415,5 mblasterleinr:tareettirt,t,, , ... . tr4 l3l74lAd iz en tee atra t t liret i ,; , H. 2227 P43laft;*6ttre6 scree ~, street, 21Z1 Vinestree . 101 tq: t 5 en - 85 '11., . • 3419 Walnut street . ;, /723 VirleisutheltphiliAelpile PrePortiottforul at , 4: • . i 8 1 9: . r enl i . wa ' rt":1-1.ulats :e h t ... th n e u t . Be. or tort price ~87.. T4EliiVairB,6l*,,u lid.l.lo4tEN & liAlrftheitini, Aaotri` ....,:. . ' =North Broett 'dive . , repg pi FOR SALE-;--THE • •THICEE-SIVEY MU. J3rlck Residence-18 :feat front, with every. 'Con venience, and lot 185 feet deep: No . , 230 Elouth.l'wentYr first street. J.M. GU/IMR fia/5,73 5 %Vtdtwit-stteet. FOIL . S.A L E—tHE 11.A.NI5SONIn Modern Residence, 22 feet front with three-story )ack 'building, every convenience and in excelleurt order, situate %No. -WaB Pine street. J. M. GURNEY & BONK. 733 1 Wnlnut street. WALN UT STREET:.--FOR SALE -20.2w elegant brlekileeidente,26 feelfront; with Is in ' tablWd coact' Mouse, and lot feet deep, fronting on three streets situate on the'south aide pf Walnut street, above , till:att.'. J. M. GUMMEY t 800. T 33 Walnut street. - ' in BROAD STREET.--FOR ,SALE-: The valuable lot of Grouud, N E. earner of Broad and; Fitzwater streets, 75 feet on Broad street by 'lBofeet on,Fitawitter street, J. Itf..GUIIISIF,Y-& BONGf 733 Wakiut street. k-G • 3 AN : OE SAL modern stone Ckittage, with every city convenience, in perfect order andfiandsomely shaded, Prorthwent car,- tier Mug Walnut lane and Morton'etreett J. M. ti y, ;1 % jo: . I t OA FOR BALE -A ' ROWN-STOlbil mas Dwelling 2118 Spruce street. A handsome Dwelling,l623 Arch -,- A handsome Dwelling - , 3721 Vine set: - r A handsome Residence, West Ph Ida. • ~ A modern Dwelling,lo2o Sergeant a ... A Business Location, 28 Strawberry street. A handsome Dwelling, SOO Sonth Ninth street. Apply 'to COPPUCK & JORDAN 433 Walnut street. TO RENT. OREESE &Mc COLLO - DI, REA% ESTATE da ff u l it ' ti a . c ritlf e t t AM ' argiff ' Vfi t ol i d t r. e it , , rl, a ar t desirous ofrenting cottages during the season wens's., or address es above. : • • 1.. • . Beepectfully Serer to Ohas...EtibicamarenV'Frttutd Augustus Merino . , John Darveiga OR RENT. F , • • . S7 4 ORBROOM AHD BASEMENT Df Now +Rnild-, int?, UV/MARKET Street. Apply to • f • • • . STEPHEN -F. ,WHITMAN, - • tins tf§ - 1210 Market street. WO OFFICES. TO RENT, AND FUR :.. nisbed Lodging Rooms' for GontlOmen, 1005 Spruco rtreet. _ aul3 ftn w St' DESIBABLEMILESTNIIT -,BT - REET Store to rent, No. 1210 Chestnut street. Apply in the second kitery of the building. all/S-w f nlAtg" TO ' , RENT ikkoliaine Varnished ' Dwelling, so: 409 South iui h street,, gas, bath,' aucl alt modern improveztents ; a tine. location. , Also, to rent, No., 7721- Vine target, hall modern uomtenionce. Apply' to. f../OPPROK & JORDAN, 483 Walnut street, . • • - • , TO RENT.;--A HANITSO,3IELY:FIinr- Aka niched house on the south tilde' of Areh'etreet, between Fifteenth and Sixteenth streets, with. pr with out a stable. AOBADAINNER. 1:10.;41:1V. co r ner of Ninth and Nlibert streets, ; pul2 Bt` del Olit - RENTL-VIE ma Brick Itesidenee i'WitkOVOT? bonveintetico 4 ,N0,, fat Clinton street. J. qum,try 001413,734 Walnut TU ..RENT--ELEGANT.,MODIDRN Residence, No., /421 Worth Thliteenth street, every modern convenience and in good itordeip s7so,,per Beautiful three-story brkk_' nrith back Thirty-soventh street, below ' Baring' street; Mantua; now, and every, convenience; front, side and, rear Yerdf: :SOO per annum.. , " , 716 South Ninth street, ioriveniont dwelling, $660. ROBERT - GO,AFFEN BPN:637lquo street'. pa- TO RENT THE LARGE, CONTE,' ' nient and well-llghted granite front Sto*ft, - No, 110 uth DELAWARE Avenues :with inirnedlate nosSes- Dion, the present tenant-being:o6l4%l to retire from Mildness owing -to ill - health.- Agility ,to .Dl3B-" BIER & C0..10D South Delaware avenue. myl7 t MORTO.A.GES, $ 600" S 00 ; TO INVEST'OINT Mortgage of City Property. J. M. GUM: 'EBY BONS 733 Walnut street. BOA VIN IDILE.ABANT SEOQIsTD-STOItY 'ROOMS, iL -with board, at 182.3 Ptir street. - Reference re uirod. : • aulEl3t* ()ANTON_ PRVIERTED- GINGER. - - - A./ Preserved Ginger, Ir, syrup of tho celebrated OhY loong brand; also, Dry Preserved Ginger, in boxes, im ported and for sale by J 08.13, & 00., w 8 Bouth Detawaro swage. . tiles tn ' lindfal. ; the rorrutnee or thel diseomforttt Of travel,•often Wastelain•regrete,over• lark of an: ex--. Pergilee that's? vAlloWtliPitiatid the life' ofi a ItaYaitt..rokii..,',6il . 4madauto Pregreif,' do not .ap p reciate; thebletiiiiigs thereOrnibli and security which they- daily enjoy,_an ij bo which thefollowing experiences of an .Amenpur missionary to the East Indies are in graphic contrast. He writes ' • "It is well Ahat the people in the 'United States should know what their friends out, in . North India are exposed to. First, there is the ' scorpion, 'whose sting,, as bad, perhaps, as that. , of ten hornets, is followed by the most agonizing pant for about twenty-four hours, and which" sonietitateenisair thelrijnred`: partY4cr ntortifyfi if not'Properlytreated. ,Theserepublive4ookingv , insects etnne`intupter•housetiehletlY Miring the rairtsil nestle theinseliei tinder ' , the and'lnitte,and ''firn over - o'ti? hath=oOMSlit a manner which -makes it quite dangerous to ' - move atiout." 'As -for 'walldrig ' Stocking-feet in our bed-rooms, we dare , not think of it. Some of them take it into their heads VI climb up on our doors : from which, when, suddenly 7 shut or opened they sometimes fall off. I re '-' member once a horrid creature fell in this way on my neck. The effort to keep my hand from rising to brash it off was most painful. The itching sensation and the dread of an imme diate sting made , my blood run cold. However, I fortunately bad presence of mind enough to leave_it akniellilLhad_b_eekoind torn.Y_INrfAAP24 , l who most cjeverly, With one. quipk, sweep the hand, kndG d, it on• to , the grennd,AOd then stamped on it with his shoe..: -‘-r; Another scorpion• found its way into the side of my wife's soft sponge, leaving nothing • but its sting exposed. During her short stay in India she had not happened to see one of these dreaded Insects. What, then, was my horror when coming into'our. room, I found her, alter washhig her face with- the sponge, feeling at r,ometlung which she described as ' "so I=l and so sharp." I went over to look, and there was her finger on the sting itself, which just then began slowly to move, for the creature was quite alive. _ The scorpions are numerous Itt our. gotilensi - ;. and iris most wonderfa , how thepoor. native' • gardeners escape. They ate constantly thrustl: ing their bands into eattoles'arul tither places where such things are lying concealed. One day my native groom stooped down to fill up a hole in the earth which I had observed, and directed his attention to. He instantly started up with a bitter cry. He had been stung by a 4 large black scorpion ; while the gardener, who was near; told me that for thirty years he had been constantly. , putting his hand into such boles, and bad never once been stung. But this reminds me, as I walk about. our pretty frint-garden I :hear,an unnatural, , guryling noise. • Looking roUnd, l'see teringabout three feel over the groand,,iind in a state of great estitement. once; by the well-known sound that it being f.i.sci nated by a snake. Calling aloud ("Sol-hai," or ."Quihye ") for my dark-colored and ever watchful: servants., I run with my stick, and with one blow just On the neck disabled a ser pent about seven feet long. It is of the largest kind I i lia,ve ever seen in their natural state. These are not poisonous;, they sometimes, however, give a very severe blow with their tail. The.dangerous kind are much smaller, • from six inches to three feet long, and are not so Geturnon as' the - l - khol. , Thwk," reptiles also at'times eome unin vited e into' our houses. One morning, after a night of heavy rain, I was walking up and down one of my moms, reading au important letter, aud„, wishing (Or • niore light, I turned suddenly to open a Vene tian door, outside •which some natives were sitting. The shock brought down a little snake. about a foot and a half long, and very poison ous, which must have been on the top of the door. It fell on my arm, arid gliding round to my hand, felt so cold that I dashed it off to the ground with great force. Many who have loeeniong India liave been so accustomed to' keep their eyes on the ground, for fear oftread--% ing on a snake, that they could not possibly advance on foot with their gaze on any object above the earth. The attempt to do so is just , like trying to keep the eye from blinking. Them.is another.most disagueable nuisance, experienced only by those who go out in tents or sleep under trees. It is the black, hairy caterpillar, called by the natives " Karrda." This is so very poisonous that if it only falls on any: one, or_ if even a single_ Irtir touches the.. ' body in zmy part, it Pi:cid - trees a Most, irritating' rash, which spreads rapidly over -the' whole body. I did not believe this latter fact about the single hair till I had myself experienced it in the following way :—One day I saw a small Insect of this kind creeping across my verandah. Knowing well how they ought to be avoided. I got a bit of stick to push it away. Tl> killed it, and got , it to the edge when the stick broke, so' I _gave it one touch with my slipper. ' Im mediately after I wiped the slipper carefully on a mat and examined it, in order to see that there were none of the hairs sticking to it. r torrid not: , see-anything of The :kind; but one at leaSt Must remainei,.though perhaps invisible, for a few days afterward, having occasion hastily to change my clothes, some part of them Aottched, the slipper,- and theirwas drawn along rarleg,"and as it touched, the poisonous iii arose on the skin, and for several days I was almost helpless, find.; ing relief only from constant applications of butter. • , The centipede is another most annoying in ., sect. : It sometimes creeps over the face or . :; hands of a. person lying asleep, who wakes up • in the morning with a most painful itching, which gradually rises into a dangerous rash. Should the sleeper awake at the time and at tempt to pull the insect off, it fixes its poison !. rots claws all the more tightly into the skin, : and will scarce let go when touched by a red hot iron. I have myself escaped this torture, but have often witnessed the sufferings of my , friends. ' California Fruit by Railroad. We are-in receipt- of a letter .from a proms- nent fruit-dealing house in New York which takes a lively dntere,st the Introduction of California fruits to that market. In this letter we are informed that, some. boxes.:of, , Sweet water giapes, sent thrinigh..by express,: arrived in tolerable condition; and the Istitek. D pinion,_froiwtheinappearancejhat . granea.pm perly packed can be ; put down. in New: York in good order. This opinion is thenier encour aging when we reflect that the Sweetwater's are • the 'earliest and tendereat, -- giape - ..0f our vineyards;.and our eOrreepondent Ls. probably correct in thinking that "there will , be. no profit.....to„ the grower . send-, ineanYthing to Isi - e* YOrk but-the Clioiceat,„;va-... rieties." The - average price- of the R4ern • Catawbas, Diaria.s and Delawares is :not Over 14 cents,ha currency,and..thiss average will bp reduced'eacli succeeding year as -new vineyards come Into' bearing. Hot-house- varieties now wholesale at $1,25 : to $l, 75 per pound t .and they must befrsh picked , 'to bring that.i Our correspondent says that a single car-load from California. Would break the market; we pre sume he means at the prices 'just, named, for he adds that "to induce,; free consump tion they..should be retailed at the outside ,as low as:4o eentsper,,pound, currencyinThis theyi can readily be. All . the . clioidesf. Meditet'- ranean.grape% such as are only raised in hot-: houses at the East, grow here in - the open- air with no Morecire than the:cob:into - nest viirie ties, and yield abundantly. The Muscat, of Alexandria,which is one of the most handsome and finely flavored of grapes, and larger ; than the White Malagas imported to New- York: In sawdust, is already retailing in San Francisco , k S. 1 9 41. ' xa 'blu g b ig e Pric ijll ffa e d pes, B ll :se are kl: of:' : r toc4t "* etuw ,, s; 4 nc7c:r:rje o e ' r t, c dvta hrcqii i .',.o:t . : , , 4!iovi: as e121k 4 eentit'ii 44, ittil..°The gra sroWerstif th# titatO are, wiselyAncreasingl , otebojed 4044 . . , '•111. - their Vlite_Yaritg;' „finding thele..ipriglthrsd'AoraVeven! for the , local market. s;i7 T.': , Viii Th e lets it 14b ive tnentie ) gives hints about grapes Yee are told liat'the SUrnetwatemrecttivied;"4o.o,to"Uiri: ipeen picked before fairlyaipened, to:l:svelte:en .ming, and4n.taltogclthentoo largejlioxes , and' ierylellsely.i!„ 4 A'saliVltV4` used lextensivelif at - the:ENO; came Biittr , the letter: ilt is 4nade of light. Pi*el'4le/gin cigar - 7 '.,board; except at ends, andloldi tror4three 1 ° * 4 • pounds arg,*, or - smaller. Packages% °MIAs size Pare imptilir Valle retail tpde; These 'small fibieS" may be inlaid nine together, for tranicortationi at an open elect box, made of stronger 'Stiff; laving only three eleets ateagh#44 6 ,,and three t0p0.nn1.4116116M;41t1i, - !sofir 44'0, ott*ltioh (weeks may he nailed fo;:lia49s4 Ale East ern Catawbas and rdiAlail, properly packed, are Ikept in store-threentontbs;, andt some growers ave beld them through the 'winter. Ontognil respondent thinks, therefore, that the best. Cal-.. 1 ornio, varieties might sent by slow ',freight; f shipped bycar-loads, so' that , Milk need not broken.before reaellinglOw York. 4 -, _ Packing beies are made •,.at the 4Fistin ; mem quatitidea - at - fiteCoriett 7 7doittited10 - this isPegialtYl andgrnwera gah' thlY 3 00= 4 14* ata 'very low 'price.CalifOihtnearly every 0 Iltl oWerakeil 0F61,'-bbies, and !are , tioit is greatly increased. lien- An opening for a geed bttsinesi. the Fruit „Growers' 'Associ ation, wonlY l afireg ho :a uniforms hods of pack -I lug, and,adept a Olen style of .. box, for. retOlint agd'tatuistiortati9n, ,capital r might judiciously invested in thewholesile manifice: ture of fruit-boxesi—Ran Francisco Bullethz.' ?Muscle or the - Olinati 4 4.011131.111V0u..- Chtnele, ustfelans. A legal protest/3as been Made in San rian, Chico ~against j ', the barbarous music of the. ChineSe bands:" ".Those who heard Ihe Musical, performances 'of, , the ~ J apatiese performing troupe in New York will remember the horrid discord. The Chinestihrebes'ams the - streets', of San Francisco produce similar, noises, and': not long ago an ordinance - !,vas passed by the. Commion' Council prohibiting such per foul:lances. The first prosecution under this ordinance took place a fortnightap and the 'flulletite gives the following account of the proceedings: complaining witness was a lady el re spectable appearance, wha has tried. o,keep a. lodging house oil Washington street, in the heighborhoodbf the Chinese Theatie,butso far , she has failed to find lodgers who had nerves. strong enough to remain more than a few nights at a time. Some stay only one night; midge away : lookinig anxious and mentally de,- meralized. So she had one of the niu.sicians; a gong-beater arrested. She mid the noise of, the is likenothing in'the heavens enure . or the earth below: call it-barbarous is not to describe it adequate,ly. It is wont" than savage. She cannot sleep; cannot. tear her bells ring; cannot bear people talk when that' *band' is performing. The only safe place in her house is the 'front Put* where the doors and: windows . are closed the clamor cannot reach. She said she was not actuated by.national prejudice fit the proir-- ecution; she would-have, prosecuted the, highL tort dignitary in the land if be should pourl,a- Chint%egong near ,her house till her lodgers were driven away and herself driven nearly to distraction. Her witnesses:testified that had heard the band; hear'd theg ngri;l shouts and yells, loud enough to disturb' - any: _neighborhood in the world. The'yelling *as' not as bad as the gongs. The cymbab; are bad; the squeaking fiddles worse. One old gentle man said he could stand a cymbal played in English. but in Chinese it is terrific; Norse for:; the combination'of shouts and banging pimp, He was willing to aceonmiodate '2a .good land lady, but if 811 C lives near a Chinese theatre be cannot obey . his generous impulses. at the expense of his nerves: mid 'pos.sibly reason. Another witness:has discovered that, the 'music' is the artost'.dietnal_ ever heard:on the earth. , He.had, borne. it - stoically about eight months, but his - health is ,ruined by it, absolutely ruined, and his temnQt. was hart; too i for be said he would like to see the place blown up. He is , hair-draser, and stays only because business absoltitely obliges him to re main. • • " The' ease was continued to enable the de-; fendants to find , sonie witnesses in the block ,whose 'health had not been destroyed by the !noises,' and who may testify that they. rather LIIMER. Immber Vnder Cover, ; ALWAMS . Walnut, White PineiYellow Pine; Sprnce, Hemlock; Ahingleo.4c.,alwaye on handnt-low WATSON 41.: GILLINGHAM. 9241110=010nd Ntreet,'Etghteenth•Ward. mh24-331 • MAULE BROTHER &CO 2500• South Street. 1869. PATTERN S. 1869 RN mamas. MAKER , CHOICE SELECTION MICHIGAN CORK PINE FOR PATTERNS.,- • 1869." - fI7VBANg Yi'll'oOK.C. '1869 LAIIGE STOOK. FLORIDA FLOORING. tWilltPU - 'FLORIDA FLOORING. 1869. CAROLINA. FLOORING., •VIRGINIA FLOORING. %,••:^ , DELAWARE FLOORING' • ' ASH FLOORING. WALNUT FLOORING. • 18 [, 6f]9 FLORIDA STEP BOARD. BIJOREDA AI L PLA STEP NK BOARDS. • . BAIL PLANK- WAIN - UT .BOARDS ANDI Q 69 r, , - . PLANK. • J.AJ 1869. , , .. - - , i , , IVO...,NUT'BOARDS"AND PLANK. ' .WALNUT BOARDS. ! ' - WALNUT' PLANK., ASSO P R d T R ED . . CABINETAIXERS, BUILDRBS,I6O.° ' ' ' ' • f -, ea .I:FNDERTAIr_ERS' 1869 love. 'LUMBER. ttripianTAKEßS! LUMBER. WALNUT .AND DINE. . _ONNDXUIEBRIt., , 1869.-,:skAb ( s )- NED - - I '°)L 4- m•-1869 ANL WHITE,O4C, PLANK AND 130Alip§,; 1869 CAROLINA , SCANTLING.' Qack .---./OAROLINA4-T. SILLS. :=1A)1/0. NORWAY BOANTL'LNG. - - 1869 . ED SD.RTGLES. - ' OEIYAit - sraDiontB. CYPREss sanionEs: - LARGE ASSORTMENT. ~ , , NOB SALE,,LOW., , 1869 -- PL LASTE ASTERE EING RG -LATH:'' , LATH: - iOUiF• '.! HBOTaleit# , ~, • T r • 2500-SOPTH t3TRENT , . THOMAS PQM4, , . obentaiNoClol3l .Fourth 'Street: .Alt , i litely e a rt re I.be 1010 W al4u t ,A S h a. s i"‘:' c hgVtli6nMertll - : , lock, &0,, aro., at reasonable pr ceb. ,AUVN THOMAS, e POHL. V'ELLOW _ LUMBER.—ORPEEP • foi,cartroeo of AVelbrdegoriptidn:Sa*ed Lunib or:on= exited at short notice—quality subject to inspection. A • , ly to BOW-. R. ROWLEY.I6 South Wharves. tel SOOTS AND. /SHOES. NOTICE TO - TEE ', PUBLIC GE RALLY. Ill The latest style ashion and assortment of AND GOTS) 8 4 1 .4 03 #ND GAITRAS, FOR ,MEN A Can be had tit ••;__,_,-, . 2°X , b ', - •n' • -„ ~, ERNEBT 801q 3 '8 . 1i0..230-NORTH. NINTH' STR EET.- Defter than anywhere brawl:My.' A Ott Warranted": • an26te4. ....•''GIVE REM A GALL: , • ' , v - A - irntacw - - - -atrmirp-AT-E-KErn 110. Ise R0at0,250 bbla 1 1,10. 2 Itottin,_7s bbls, Wil natation Pitch. 100 bbbt. iltralton • Tar, 125 Mao. primeWhtte,Southorniltati 104 8 rita.Turpotaino, in. store std for sole by COUHSA.II, , 118812144 111 . Vheatnut °trot r- THE DAILY EVENT IT, G,BULLETIN-PIIILADET , VHIA, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 18, 1869. 1 -,---,---:-:-.1-7-.... - - , ---- 7 4743T14118A , ."..1;,... i 4... ,,,,, ,-..- - : - : -2 . --,.. ~.'';,.4,4:.-15,4-1,-74''s 'OrlttftigE,',.2.,s 'i:r ! lts.,'.' t 0_ .s., f , 1:, ~ - q - ~: cm. ~ ► c . 1 ' Y 014ZE4SL i'llb and 114 so:Tilrep ST. PHILAD , 2 - , : ..4 '-• d' C 0:1 Yl'., ') ~, -- .til aW rinflAlimts ~ , _____Ett,'• ~ ..3 -- i 1 } ,-,' ' • ~Y :. , f,' ~,z ' , r,1 , , ir•.'Liti gOVN II ENT SEC URITIES - • --, - D-,e-t ,- ... , -p-o , ...„ . , We "Insurance in the new Nation al e Lif lici e es ln 4 , We williedehie4iiitetiilorikf inf etur rna gl o O: n PalM 3 .of i ttljetjt4l.o,o .. Jraii given a our office . . '- ' - •Itg!iifi 4l llweewalm MESE 1869 1869. " ,•• . • +c, -• t , ; ; • ).; AND' DEALBBS IN GOVERNMENT SECURITIES, ;i - UN ION , PAGIFIO 11,M13%0ADy...•. FIRST- MORTGAGE BONDS, . , 40 .04)TAD ''Bcd • • . . . South AIIELIABLEROMEINVESTMENT THE FIRST. MORTGAGE BONDS. OF THE' • and R eading REAAIN 9 z w rigigwr ; AT SEVEN PER CENT. IS COBBENOT .1; 'payable Sprit and October, free of State and*Vnited States Taxes. . This road inn through a thicili iiainliOd and agricultural and Manufaeturingdistrict: •Vor that:mint we iife offering a limited amount of the above boiada at . , - 85 ,vents and: • Interest. 4- The connection of this road with the Pennsslran and - `seadingHailzoade ineuree it a large and remunerative trade._ We iecommend the beads as the clieapeit flret class investment In the nrailiet • 'wm. kAr*TER, ar, CO., , •.J • Bankers and Deideraln itoverninents, Y,Ii7Q,A~uI;LPB lA. iestf; .. ' IR . 5 jOIDOILP II ' f ' f . ~: 1 1 p 4 , if ,/Ei ll. . _-. BA/VA , ' "----4 /. Ob 7.N...feet': '' 3 I i Dealers in ir;S: Bonds and Members of Stock and Gold - Exchange), .receive ,ac. counts of Banks and EankerS on liberal terms, issue Ballast ißschange on C. J. Hambro &Son, London. . . B. Metzler, S. Sohn &Co., Frankford. James W. Tucker & Co., Paris.. .- , ; .. .: And other principal cities,'and Letters Of Credit avaUable througout Europe S. W. corner Third and Chestnut Streets. W,ATCHES. JEWELRY, &C. rsv EWA___ ux4 „,sONusBr.cck____ INV° N1,12111, 8 8,f ' T IM ERS. TMISS and JEWIELBX R.SPlartit 808 Chestnut Bk, Phila. Ladies'ai3.dG . Gent s' • . • American aid Imported, the most celebrated makers. • • Fine Vest Chains. and :Tot ontines, In if and lakexata . ..,_ . Diamond and Other 4 - evrehsy, , • ' ENGAGEWMT AND INVEDRIX.G. :MN!" 1 •b . • In,lB karat and coin.. • SOLID SILVER WARE FOB `BRIDAL FRESENTP. TABLE OUTLERY;PLATED Ayanz, Etc, COAL AND WOOD. AOPERT , (late Niith L'aurel t Bf.,Whart'l. . PAVID 'OALBRAITEI. firPNVOR, 6i ALBIAITHa ,HC•N`EYI3R,O9IC.L-tHIGH, Alsito WYOMINWCUAL No 955 NOrth ,Front Street. ro-lrial'Oydei e ;ier e outilly or by Mail, invited. iv2lLlm§ . - , , • `A. ni__ . !_ , 41_6. 'IS i rain . - JOHN V, lIHEAVV,i. UNDETtRIGNED" INVITE,.A.TTEN'F TH B" tiont o their stock of ' 1 Burin Plountnin .tthigh and Locusitionntain Chints which,m g •ltl! the urepakationtven by us we think, can-, upexceiled by nuy other' (il. ' ',._-?' ' I Ofriee, 'Franklin Inntituto , nildinit, No:15 El. Seventh street. , , . ' ' BINIcS &SHEAFF, ~ ) non:tf 1 ' ' . A reh .treet whaif, Schuylkill. NEW PLIBLICATIONS. pll ILOSOP II Q iStrARRIAGE.A new course of Lecturesos , delivered at. the New York llliiseum of 'Anatomy; ettibrachig , the subjects How to Live and what to LiV,O for Ifouth; Maturity and , Mild Age; Manhood generally reviewed the ()auk, of In ;digestion; Platillenee and Nor votig EDlseases accounted for; Marriage Philosophically iticeisideredir.Sco.v&o. 'Pocket volumes containing these Lectures will be• for warded, post paid, on receipt.of 26 cents, by addressing A:•Leary, Jr:,, Southeast corner of Fifth and WSJ ut Atreats. .0326 •• , TEACHER OF' Sieging. _Private levione and ninnies; -Iteeidence' 80d Q.Thirteenth street { , at,243.t0 , , • .. -... , . .. 1 4 • , ',...,P r • AVELEIRI 0,11. - .. , 44.EW , Yoti l ipia___ , chow= , Alilistir ' and V ADVELPIrf* 0 IiPLONADAILBOAD 130 ANY% .1,11 0:04 : Fla to New Xork,atuttrAir t olaces; ;amyl 4-4 w a wharf., ~ -..„. e ., ~,, -; :lre, t. *fit 6 4.02., vla Camden atid 3.1111 D i tecorn.. ~ ,g 2 0518'16 -11ffjflaCtundeh r atittlJorser 1 Zg. Mail; - 3 -At.ll3oTgalieriaCarndeu'and Ainboy antes*, :0 SOY , At6P.M.,„for Amboy and intermediate statione At 6V and 11 A .11.,and 2P, M. for Froolsold. ACSJOO WV. '2Altr... , rd. for Long flranch and Pobitil ". '. I etch gsßl4 R. ,-1 **',, plii r c.f.• ~ . 1 -r ' , ' I At 8 and JO A ..0.., 1211, 2.3.30,and 4 r.M.,for Trenton. • At 040,8 and 1011 11.“2„11.,2.330,4 ,6,7_and 1130 P . M., forileadentoOrn,Florence,Burlingtonl.nrierly an& De. AM 7,01 A 0 _f ~12 M., 3 ,4'.80,0, and fl.BO p. 14; for JAdgewatetYolvervide, Rivetion; . Palnirra` and Flidi ; , ' mania, alia2.P. , M.; for Itiverteit. .•.: 0 ! , ' . -• • I lifir Tb o . - 1 / Si -PA , M. Liner leaveri from foot of. Market strtel by naßar . ferry. , - , 1 . .. 4 Van% Foinnittigton Dern; r r• , Atir.a4. In., vinEensingtan and Jeln* , City, NOWlentli . Dlilt i rlino.......—. —...... - . i.. , 4..,..,....,-.4. - 4483 oo ,• At 7 MAKI A. M., 2.30,8.30 an d 5 P.M_ „far Trenton. and Brieel. And at 10.15 A. 31 and &P. JID for Bristol. `Aiii,i i fd and . 1 1 A. 3 1 .4130 end I P.M. for 41orrIstrilleand Aft n 4140.15 A. M., 2.30, 8 and 6P. ?ltrfeal Saketick'ar ;Winston. -0, . • .111 ,-, '.i. - i l' At. T ands 0.10 A. X., 2.30; 4, 0 arid `0 P. m_i, for , Morn ' 3 wells; TOrreisiale; liolmesbnrgyTacony;wissinoming, 1 Difilesbur_g and grankford, and 8 P. la. for 'Holmes* i beirginia intermediate Stations. ~, ', k ~, , , Fp eat Philadelphia Depot via Cannectincllitilway A gzo .3E, 1.20;4, 6.45 and 12 P. 31. New 'York ork Ex-, . ~ -Lino_ ~, v ia, J ersey City' - ---, , ' Y `.4: - ..1,53 28 ' "A. 21.80 D. 31.,DmfgrantLine....i_ '- ..,.. '., 200; At,9.30 A. 2d t , 1,30, 4,615 and 12 p ,lif ~ for TrerktOA.. ~ ; At 9.30 A . M. 74, 6.46 and 12 P.'3f., for Bristol.' , ~ 'AvI2P.III .(Nigh t) for MorrievilloanitLtoent, Schenck i• i ElliiinjLton,Cornwelle,',,Torreadale, Roltn_eihurg, Ts— COXII72_Ny isoLuomitu;, Bridesbrirgind MrsinVoyd.. 0 „ The gzu A. 31. and 6 . 45 andl2 P.M. M Lillearun daily. Au others, Sundays excepted. . 1,, ,- f For Lines leaving Kensington Depot, take tbe cars on Thinior Fifth streetsi at Chestnut, at half an hour be fora The Care of , idarkettreet Baliwny run direct, to West Philadelphia DePot,tineanut4Ualows within One aartare. On Sundays, the Market S t Care Will run to cormect with tbe 9.80 A.' NC and 6A5 and 12 P. ill:inen--- , DELYNDBILE - PELAWAir , BALEIO4P LINES !ram llenslngtorepOt At7.BOA. M., for Niagara Falls, lhatride:•Dnuklales )Ihnixa s Ithaca, OWegq,--EnCh 1 Bins.hamptont Os:Ardso, picatuse, Great liendt *carotin, Witspiti"Tel. oenewey thlenntain. , ecc. • • ~ . > .sty .30A. M. and 330 P. 31. ,for Scranton , Shrouds- Its Water Gap, Beividere,_ltCtutton, "LarahOrti l l lo , eutingt on &e. The &AI P. 31 Linadordidete ' direct Die tra in -leaving Baston.for;Manch ()hunk. Allen tono, B_ethlehen4.lc. . ._ , ..,, ~„ • , , , „; , , • At ll'A. rd. and a P.,11. roy L amboitville aad ISAMU , - diatt! Stations. 2 _—_t,"-- ,_ rLL ''LL• O,W_ AN013 . 09 1 3_1"011 4 . 1 . AND B,,frroo I :e r n es - 17 1" ( U T p S tier T Side.) Tjeadß/JA.-11.,1, 2.16,10 p, 6 ,t 1 6.308,F1.f0r giaybants: Yllle.Boorestown, Hartford - . 3letariville,_Hiunatiort, mares -Holly, Birmingham anti' Pemberton. At 10A. Al. for Lewistown Wrightstown, Cookstow n, New Egypt anti KontawstOurn..-----, • At 7.1 A. 1 , . and 8.30 P. , for Lewbdowm,,,Wrighte , toWn ;Cookstown, Nets', Ai Egypt, ;Borgendownv Cream Wage, Inilaystown; Sharon anti Hightotown, Passengers pounds of Baggage only allowed esehTateengar. Passengers are 'prohibited from taking anything as bag gage but their wearing apparel. All baggage over. Any pounds to be paid for extra. The Companyßmit.their risibility for baggage to One Dollar per ! , pbtind, an ` wilt not be nable"for any amount Permit/44 00 , ox• cepthylspecial contract. • ' • •• - 1 Tickets sold and Baggage . checked direct .throngh-ta Doston, W,orcester, springtield, Hartford, New- Raven .Providence, Newport, Albany, Troy Saratoga, Utica Biome, , Syracuse, Rochester, Buffalo, -Niagara Falls and uspetision.Bridge. 2.. . • .• . iAn additional Ticket Office is located at No. SzitOhestr, but street, where tickets. to NOW. York, and all'inipor taut pointe North and;East, maybe procured. r Pertains ijurchasing Tickets at this Office, can have their baglat ago checked from residences or hotel to destination, Men Transfer Baggage Ex_Pre oB,- • • Lines from New York for Philadelphia will leave from foot of Cortland street at 1.00 and 401 via Jersey - City anti Camden. At 6.30 P. M. via Jersey City and Kensington. At 7, and 10 A. 11., 12,30;6 MA 9 , P• 31 ,11M1 12 Bight. via Jersey City and West Philadelphia.' • _ E From Pier No. 1, N River , at 6,30 A. M. AccomModa• lion and 2 P. M. Express, via Amboy arid Camden.: • July 12.1869. • WSI. R. IdA.TEMEII, Agent. luo.ily 12.1869. --- kiNSYLVA_NLI. - CENTRAL RAIL , ' ROAD.-SUMMERTIME -Taking effect June 6th, 1d69. The trains of the Pennsylvania Central railroad leavethe Depot,at Thirty-first and Market streete,which a reached directly by the cars of the Market Street Pas enger HailwaY, the last car connecting with•each train caving:Front and Market street thirty. minutes before is departure. Those of the Chestnut and Walnut treets Railway run within one square of the Depot. Sleeping Car Tickets can be had on application'at the Ticketc Office, Northwest corner of Ninth and Chestnut 'streets, and at the Depot., , ... . , „ , Agents of the Union - Transfer COuipany will call for end deliver Baggage at-the Danot—Oniers lett at N 0.901 Chestnutstreet,No. 116 Market .street, will receiveat tention , - - .TRAINSIMAVE,p, ...r . OT . ,_ItIz.: ' Mail Train-'-.....---.... - ' ---, .. at 8.00 A. M. .. Paoli Acc0m...........at dzo".a.m. , , Liu, and 7.00 P. IL Fast Line. at 11.60 A. 3L , '.. Erie Express ... .. --.....- .... at 11.50 A. M. Harrisburg Accom-.....- ..... .. --......---... at 2.30 P. M. LancasterAccom.......... . '...- - ... ..: . ..........at 4.00 P. M. Parksburg Train. ..... ....... :...:,.. . at 53) P. M. Cincinnati Express...... - -.-- .. .- . ....... .....at 8.00 P: M. Erie Mail and TittsburghEiliteift-. .- . . ...at 10.30 P. M. Philadelphia Expresa..--.: - *' at 12.00 night. i Erie nightve . daily, , except Sunday, running! on Saturday o Williamsport only. On Stmdar night passengers will leave Philadelphia at 12 o'clock. , Philadelphia , Express leaves daily. All other trains' Oaily, except Sunder. , - , The WesternAccommodation-Train runs daily, except Sunday. For this train; tickets' must •be procured and baggage delivered by 5.00 P. M.. at 116 Market street.. , ~., t TRAINS ARRIVE.AT DEPOT, VIZ.: Cincinnati Express ' _ at 3.10 A. EL -Philadelphia Express - -- --- -- -- - .at 6.50 A. M. M - E Accommouation at 8.20 A. ld. and 3.40 k 6.20 P. rie Mail and Buffalo Express at 9.35 A. M. parkshurg Train--.....-.-..........:- ...... ....at 9.10 A. M. Fast Line.- - - .. .. . .... ..... -, at 9.35 A. M Lancaster Train•; at 12.30 P. M. Pay Express.. at 4.20 P. M. Southern Express....' at 6.40-P. M. Harrisburg Accominodation.....•.....-- ........ ....at 9.40 P. M. 1 For further information, apply to JOHN r. VANLEER,JR., Ticket Agent, 901 Chestnut FRANCIS PUNK A Agent, 116 Market street. SA3IIJEL H. WALLACE, Tt Companyn at the Depot. The Pennsylvania Railroad will not assume any riidcfor Ba-ggageiexceptcfor-wearing- apparel,-and limit their responsibility , to One Hundred Dollars in value All Baggage exceixiing,that amount in value will be at the risk of the, owner.nnless taken by spealaisen tract. -EDWARD D. '.WILL.Ms_, ' General - Superintendent. Altoona, Pa. jJ H I'DADE L'PHIA, GERMANTOWN J. AND NORRISTOW,I , / „RAILROAD , TIME TA LE.—On and aftct Monday, May 1869; and anti further noticef' - • • " , • FOR GERMANTOWN. ' I Leave Philadelphia-0 8; SIM, 10; 11,12 A. 31., 1,2, 3.15, 3%, 4,4.35;5.05; 6%, 6,6%, 7,8, 9, 10, 11, 111 M- Leave Germantown-4, 7;731;8, 8.20,8,1012 A. M.; 1.2,3,4, 9, 10,11,T- 31- The 8.20 down-train, and the - 3% and 6% up trains, will not stop on the Germantown Branch. ON SUNDAYS. _ , Leave Philadelphia-9.14 A. M., 2, 4.03 minutes,/ and 10% P. IC Leave Germantown-8.15 A. M. 13, 6 and 9% P. M. CHESTNUT HILL RAILROAD. • Leave Philadelphia-6, 8,10, 12 A. M.; 2,3%, 551,7, 9 and 11 P. M. • Leave Chestnut Hill-7.10 minntes 8,9.40, and 11.40 A. M.; 1.40,3.40,6.40,6.40, 8.40 and 10.40 ' P. M • • ON SUNDAYS Leave Philadelphia-9.75 minutes A. M.; 2 and P. M. Leave Chestnut lIM-7.50 minutettA. M.; 12.40,5.40 and 925 minutes P. M. FOR CONSIIO,BOCREN AND NORRISTOWN. Leave Philadelplitt-5.7%, 9,11.05,A. M.;:135, 3,4%, 5, 04,6.15,8.05,10.05 and 11% P. M. Leave Norristown-5.40,6%, 7,7%, 9, 11 A.M.; 135, 3, 436, 9.15 8 and 935 P. M. . T'hel% A.M. Trains ftom Norrlstownwill not stop St•Mogee's, Potts' Landing, Domino or Schur's Lane. * The S.P. M. Train from P hiltudelphia will stop only at School Lane,Manay_unk and Conshohocken. ON SUNDAYS. Leave Philadelphia-9 A. .111.• 2%, 4 and 7.15 P. M. Leave Norristown-7 A. M. 4.5% and 9P. M. roulama tam.. Leave Pulladelphla-43,735,_ _,9 11.05 A. 31.; DA, 3, 435, 5, 5%,635,8.05,10.05and 11% P.M. - _ Leave Manayunk-5.10,7,735, 8.10,9%, 11% .; 2,3*, 5,6.%,8.30 and 10 P. M. ' • They P.M. Train front Philadelphia will stop only at School Lane and Manayunk. , • - ON SUNDAYS. ' ; Leave Philadelphia-9 4._._111.; 234,4 and 7.15 P. M. , Leave Manayunk-7% A. M.; 13,4,6 and 9% P. M. W. S. WILSON , General Superintendent, - • - - , -*-DepottNinth and Green streets. OMOKEST TIME; ON RECORD. THE PAN-HANDLE ROUTE. 417"26 HOURS to CINCINNATI, via PENNSYLV NIA RAILROAD AND PAN-HANDLE ,7% HOURSIess TIME than by COMPETING LINES. _ PASSENGERS taking the 8.00 P. M. TRAIN arrive in CINCINNATI next EVENING at 9.&, P. A 1,23 HOURS, ONLY ONE NIGHT on the-ROUTE. We THE WOODRUF.F!S ,calebrated Palace State Boom. SLEEPING-OARS run through from PHILA DELPHIA to' CINCINNATI. Posseng. ors taking the 12.00 M. and 11.00 P. M.. Trains reach CINCINNATI and allsints WEST and SOUTH ONE TRAIN IN AD V OE OtalLother_Routes, Passengers for OINCINNATI,INDIANAPOLIS, ST. LOUI S CAIRO_ODHICAGQ, , PEORIA,IIURLING TON, QEINCYiIdILWAUKEE, ST. PAUL, OMAHA, N.T.. and all ittointe - WE, in., NORTHWEST and SOUTH WEST, will be part i cular to ask for TICKETS riar Via pAN -HANDLE sROUTE.__:,_ • Wir To SECURE the: uNEQUALED advantages of this LINE, be VERY PARTICULAR and ASK FOR TIOKEIIS ." Via - PAN,HANDLE, ), at TICKET or, FLOES W: CORNER NINTH andtHESTNUT Sta. No. HA ARKET ETREET be . Second and Front eta., And THIRTY-FIRST and Tete., West Phila. B. F. 130.1 . 1eneral Tioket Agent, Pittsburgh. JOHN ..,,n t _SXMLEß,,General, Eastern Agent, 626 B road' wav+.4 17r- ' J..TABLE„-Throua p , °t , i l l isi l l i rbll N el : ll i ert h f 11 t g i t h i r a t °lA - Di d V P Tram p : tl3 rn: er p l4l 37 - . 4 : 4 4: 31 !5: el : 51:11 , * ? Pli I Fil 1 7 0 : r Ir N D Y : t v ißtv : :A4 A 71-h:y the . T ill 1 ": 6 : I 4' l . y , A . A 7 '!Atil No rth west l r i,,, P t iD l D gi 2 a . a' s : s tEßßilt o lle— t. r": l I Pd°i e nr Trains eta iiLteij I hal Cars'-rrare o ni as ! ' On and. tittim :11:ilii Railroad I.!itttrlievlitiytillitvw ti rry, d i ; ti r d,,,,,,... l o a ieirkitt, ~ will ru . n . a i908 5 ...: 1 1 :1 ppA 10 . 7 3mm e r : ... p i h e llndelbhiu. ' /15°P...1.. toe E*,presalfitYss'wfut sport 8.50 . m . • 10.uu A. • 11. ..," " k ‘ "lve4 11 'RiadAphia " ' ' " P t .. rir, ....linita,t,lail leaves Vllll port- 63° PM. •N nms r 7.45 . tick Haven.- , ~..,, . " 4‘ ' arrlYsffi ' 4 :L' ASTWAIIri , .21:!ii Tr , ain leavep Elt i .. ... g43. ' f t r, 1121.20. 9.2615AAA..'11-1.: ~ i , arrlvdriat phitodeloi,4, ~. . .. 6.2,5 p. m. Evlo.'" Elio Expresslsoo -- rL. 7.W A. 111. " ‘‘ , .5 4, ' ' . Williamspo rt _ . , cm P. M. lt ." arrivt4ll3sl,l4lll Mail and R E a re L L'e g a l l zmglo ft. oa T ori. 1 , ' h i • e" 13.17:" - "-" f: 7. _ft:":.c.ll:YßPqrternt:bilif:Tprillintael:ndLAlll.);::" • fte JRB' IDE sw I f- f. . 'A. D i,240 RAMROAD. -;GREAT:. l iErA tar. Line 'from PhfladelphhatO 414'..4ntertor ' of -; • 01131*:Fia,-thVlichuylkilL'utugpiabanntri Hinilber-• , Zagtd sod- 7 nialdleys. the:dial/14 aiiirlSWel. and I .tang elkn as a7Arratutement o Filter ai-04014, $t: 11 / 1 1 80p:- . t the C &Span ya It ;Thirteenth d C low 3. .. sets, phluidelphiaji . 11 . 140116W1M, ...:t ‘7,1 r uci f A ? commoramoN...:.:Ati.st A .,74...g.. treturgnr: g At* el e ra:t i traltaii. B .' titk .'ar riving' IV •41illadatpbiskat 935 P,3d., ',', • - • : : : ;_:_, . .Z. , ' 9 r'r t 340/CHING EXPRESO.-At 6.15 A:. M. for Resolaig,, I.abarnin,liarrisbrirg, Pottsville, Pino Orove,Tantamta' . 'Sunbu, ' Willlamsport, , Elmirai Rochester, Niagar a: Falls, Buffalo oWilkeabarre, Pittston, York, Carlildec? 'Chambersburg, Herstown, Ac. . • , The 7.80 A. 31: tra ag in connects at Raiding with the East Pennsylvanlli BallrOad trains for Allentown ,_&c., and the 8.15 A . 31. train connects with the Lebanon Valley train 'for llarrisbur_g, &c.; at Port Clinton ,with Catawhisa It. R. trains for WI Illanibport, Lock Haven. Elmira, &c__,.• at • Ilarrieburg With , erthern' Central, Cumberland Nal /02- and Behntik ill. and Susnuehanna; trains for North.. nmberland, Williamsport" York, Chamborsburg,Pint • AF ERNOON ' EXPREBI3--Ireavis Philadelphia at; 8.30 P, M. forneading, Pottsville, Harrisburg, 4c.i cow! Pectin% with Beading and Colum bia Railroad: trains for. . POTTSTOWN , ACCOMMODATIO3I.4-Leaves : Fong- Sown at 625 A ..il., stopping at . the hitermediate stations:: :arrives in Philadelphia at SAO A. M. 'Returning leaves, Threlphia at 4.. V P. 31 ' arrives In Pottstown at GOY • • • • rAt o g itip 0 f i•4D rorrErvill t ,LE . AColV d iOrlA t :, .7.30 Pr374lV P ottsv ille watasyrtationeaTrdivtettiin Reading at' last 10.1. A n ..u. . i Betuniingi leaves Philadelphia at 6.16 P. M. arrives lit ',Leading at 8.00 P. M., and at .Pottsvillo at 9.40 P. 11. ' Trait:teller Philadelphia leave Harrisburg .at 8.10 A. 'M.nd Pottsville 5t9.00 A. M., arriving in Philadelphia . ';at Loul. P.M. Afternoon train., leave Harrisburg at 2.00 I P. N., and Pottsville at 2.45 P.' M.; arriving at. Phila. deiphia at 6.46 P.M , • ,‘,, ••. • , I . Harrisburg Accommodation leaves' Reading at7.lllA. .:31., and Harrisburg.at 4.10 P. M. Connecting . at. Read .'.ing with Afternoon Accommodation south at 6.50 P. 31.,,. arriving ia Philadelphia at 9.16 P. M... ,• , . i... 1 .... : ,Market train, with a Passenger car 'attsched,lesvesr ' - Philadelphia at 12.45 noon for Pottsville - ainVall - : - Way Stations; leaves Pottsville at 6:40 A.' M . ' connecting at: • Reading with accommodation train for Philadelphia and all Way Stations '' - ~ . • . All, the above trains run dilly./ nanotays 'excepted. . Sunday tfainsieavo Pottsville at 8 A. M., 'and Plata ' delphia at 3.16 P. M.; leave Philadelphia for, nestling at 8.06,A. 31 „ retu tiling from Reading at 4 : 26 P; M. CHESTER VALLEY RAILROAD .- Pa s sen gers for', Downingtown and intermediate points take the 730 A. M.02%5 and 4.30 P. , M. trains from Philadelphia,return pittOto Downingtown at 6;10 A.31..1.00 P.M.. and 6.46 PEVOMEN RAILROAD.--Piutiengers tot likipOack take 7* A ..111...,4.80 and J. 15 P.3l;tralus far Philadelphia, returning from Skippacrat 6.16 and 8.16 A.H.,1.00 P.M. • !Baselines for various points in; Porklornen Valley con nect with train EXPRE S SgiIIe and Skippack. •• • • ••NEW YORKFOR PITTSBURGH AND ' THE WEST,-LcwaNew York at 9.00 A. 31., 6.00 and 8.00 P. M , pasengßeading at 1.05 A. M., 120 and 10.19 P:11.; and connects at -Harrisburg with Pennsylvania and Northern CentralHaliroadExpress Trains for ,Pitts burgh, Chicago, WlWamsport, Elmira, , Baltimore, &e. . . Returning, Barreiro Tramleavea Harrisburg onarrlval • 'of Pennsylvaniaß sprees from Pittsburgh, a t 225 and 6.20 ' A.ll. and 10.551'-11., passing Reading ata.3o and 7.05 AY ! i3 l - end • / 220 P. 31., arriving at New York 11.00 and 12.20 ,P. M., and 6.00 P. M. Bleeping Cars accompany these . trains through between Jersey. City and Pittsburgh, Without change. _._ • - , . •. , : ~ , • ! Dian train for NOW York leaves Harrisburg at 8.10 A. '3l. and. 2.06 IL'. M. ' Mail train for Harrisburg leaves No :Y "ork at 12 Noon.' • ' ' • • SCHUYLKILL VALLEY RAILBOAD--Trains leave Pottsvilleo at 6.60 and 11.36 and. 6.441 P.M..soturaing from Tanutomi at 835 A. 31.; 2.15 and 4.15 P. AI. • , SCIIILYLKILL Alp) SUSQUEHANNA RAILROAD' ;•-Trains • leave" Auburn at 8.56 A, M. and 3.20 P. for ; Pinegrove.andHarrisburg, and at : 2,10 mut for Pine , roe° and Tremont; returning from Lartisburg.. at 7.45 . M. and 3:40 P. 31., and fruits Tremont at 6.45 A.lii.'arar ',TICKETS;-Through first-class tickets and emigrant .tickets to all the principal points in the North and West .and Canada. • Excursion Tickets from Philadel,pluirs to Reading and tistermedlate Stations,, good fur day only, are sold by. orning Accominotiation, Market Train, Heading and Pottstown Avonutiodation Trains at reduced rates. • Excursion• Tickets to Philadelphia, good for day only, are told at Reading and Intermediate Stational)); Bead-. Inv and Pottstown Accommodation "Trifus i at reduced ra • io. The following tickets are obtainable only at the, Nike otßradford, Treasurer, No. 2= South Fourth street; Philadelphia, or of.G.A.-tilcothi;.•General 5110040041- dent, Beading. • • ‘s• • • " 1 1. 0 • Corantutation.Tickete,at %per cent. discount:betWeest any_ points desired,: for amilfes and firms.-. • • 4 kiiiieage • Tickete,good for R.;000 milea 3 li eta eau all rade at $62 60 each for Wallies anti Orme. •`!',', • • ... • Season Tickets; for throe, six 4 nine or -twelve moat*. fur holders only Wall puiuteat reduced rates. . . . : clergymen railing on Ilia line of ths road will be fur.' nisbed with' ca is,' entitling themselves and wives 'to • t ickete at half fare:: , • • itaciginon_Tickete from Philadelphia to principal eta=, flops goad for Saturday, barulay and Holiday, at roa anced ta re;to be hall only at the Ticket Office; dtThlte teenth and Callowhill streets.. FREIGHT.-Goods of all descriptions fOrwaraseto all the above points from the Company's New ft . alleht Duot, Broad and Willow stmts. • •• • • • , • • • Freight Trains leave Philadelphia 12.45 n'00n,5.00 and 7.15 P. M.. for Re f aqua, Ilarrlsburg, Pot Willie, ort Clinton, and.. 'itistttsße• pond.' • k Mails close at the Philadelphia Po st,oince tor sdipitiota, on the road and its branches at 5 A. AL, and fur the prin. tips' Stations' only at 2.15 P,M. • BAGGAGR. • • • • • ' Dungan's Express will collect Baggage for all trains leaving Philadelphia Depot.• Order* can be left at No. 225 South Fourth street ' or 4,o4e,pekoti Thirteenth and Callowbill streets. - •. • • • , • • • N ORTH PENNSYLVANIArBAILROAD . -THE MIDDLE ROUTE.-Shorteet and moat di , reit "line to .Bethlehem .. Easton,' Allentown, Manch Chunk, Hazleton White if aven; Wilkosbarre, - Mabanoy - City, Mt. Carme l; Pittston. aunklutnnock. Scranton, Carbondale and all the points in the Lehigh and Wyo ming coal regions . • . • , . Passenger Depot in Philadelphia, N. W. corner Berke • and American streets. SUMMER ARRANGEMENT, 15 DAILY TRAINS: On and after TUESDAY, 'June Ist, 1359, Passenger Trains leave the Depot, corner .of Berke and American Sire. .digtlYrucondaYosir:t?:fitfedoPgrit!'lll%?an:i '. ' i At 1.45 A. 11. c .-Ittorning Express fur Bethlehem and Principal. Stations. on North Pemmican's Railroad, connecting at Bethlehem with Lehigh Valley Railroad ' for Allentown, Catasauqua, Slatington, Mauch ()hunk,' 1 Weatherly,Jeanesville, liazleton,White Haven, Wilkes ' barrei Kingston -Pittston, Tunkhannock, and Lapointe: i n Lehigh anti Vilioraing Valleys,. also, In connection with Lehigh and 'thane) , 'Railroad for Mahanoy City, and with Catowissa Railroad for Rupert, Danville, Mil , tun and Wlllianieport. Arrive at Mauch oldhuulc at'l2 M.; at Wilkesbarra at 2.50 I'M. ;at Mahanoy City at 1.50 . P.M. ': At 8.45 A. M.-A.ecornmodatlon" for' Doylestown, stop ping at all intermediate Stations. Passengers' for Wil low Grove, Hatboro' and Hartsville, by this train, take 'Stage at Old York Road: .• - _,- - • .. .. 9.45 A. M.. (Ex rase) for Bethlehem, Allentown, Mauch Chunk; White - Haven, ' Wilkosbarre, Pittston, Scranton and Carbondale via L ehigh and Susquehanna Railroad, and . . Allentown , and Easton, -and points on New Jersey Central Railro ad and Idorriaand. ,Eesex Railroad to New York via Lehigh Valleyltailroad. 1 At 10.45 A: M.-ACcommodation for Fort - Washington, stopping at intermediate Stations. - - i 1.15,3.15,5.20 and 8 P.M.-Accommodation to Abington. At 1.46 P. M.-Lehigh Valley 'Express for Bethlehem, Easton, _ Allentown, Mauch Chunk, Hazleton,. IVhito /laven,Wllkesbarre, Pittston, !Scranton, and Wyoming Coal Regions. At 2.45 P. M..-Acconunodation for Doylestown, stop.; ping at all intermediate stations. , ~. i At 4.15 P. M.- Accommodation for. _Doylestown, atop pinßg at all intermediate Stations. i , , At 5.00 P. M. -Through for ethlehentioOnnecting at Xletblehem with Lehigh Valley Evening -.Train' for Easton. Allentown, Mauch Chuuk.. ' , • ..., ... ; At 6.20 P. M.-Accommodation for L a n sda le , Mappuir at all intermediate stations. . . • • . . ..... . • At 11:30 P. M.-Accommodation for' Fort Woehingtott. I - --- TRAINS ARRIVE IN .PIIILADELPHIA , . . • , From Bethlehem at 9A. M., 210, 4:4531 and 5.25 P. ; ' 2.10 P. M., 4.45 P. ?Cana 8.25 P. M. Trains make direct, Connection with Lehigh Valley or Lehigh' and Stump& Fianna trains from Easton, Scranton. Wilkesbarre, Ma hanoy City and Hazleton. • _. • , • From Doylestown at 8.25 A :M.,4.55 P.Mand 7.05 P. M . From Lansdale at 7.30 A. M. : From Fort Washington at 9.20 and 10.35 A.M. and 3.10 F. M . • ON SUNDAYS. ! Philadelphia for Bethlehem at 930 A. M. : Philadelphia for Doyhxdown at 2.00 P. M. i Philadelphia for Abington at 7 P. M. . Doylestown for Philadelphia at 6.30 A. M. 1 Bethlehem for PhiladelphLa at 4.00 P. M. . - Abington fur Philadelphia at 8 P. M. • Fifth and Sixth Streets Passenger curs convoy passon ge4vegitteand faronotfireconehwa and t Third Streets.. Lin o. and' Union Line run within a abort, distance of the Depot. , Tickets =at he proctored at the Ticket . oftice, in order to secure the lowest rates of fare. . ... ELLIS CLA.RK, Ag mt: .. 114 1 1 ickets sold and Baggage checked through to pan ' el- Pal points, at Mann 'e North ' Penn. Baggage Espress Ogee, N 0.105 South Fifth street. ' - 1 . . .EST CHESTER AND PHIG ira iP' WPHI A RAILROAD. -Summer Arrangement...Mr and after MONDAY, Apr 1112,1869, Trains will.liatilla • follows: - , • ••• • • ~ Leave Philadelphia, from Now Depot, Thirty-tiret and. Chestnut streets 7.25 A. M. 930 A. M.,'2:30 P. M.', 413 IP Ms' 7 15 P hi 'll 30 P M 'Lloitltt-4,llViet- de . ster . , - from Dena, On . Ea s t Market linnet, 6.25 A. M., 7.25 A. M., 7.40 A. 111:510.10 A. M., 143 --P.-31,4.50 P.31..6.45 P.kk Leave Philadelphia form. 0.• Junction :and Intermo. (Bute Pointe, at 1230 P. M. and 5.45: Leavol3,_o; JUnc tion for Philadelphia, at 5.30 3.:M. and 145 P. .51. Train leaving 'West Chester at 7.40 A. M. will' Stop at B. C. Junction, Lenni. Glen Riddle and Mediaz leaving. Philadelphia at 4.35 P. M. Will:atop at /I..Udiii,Gloll . Riddle, Laud and B. 0. Junction. Passengers to or front stations between Went Cheater and W.C. Junction' going East, will take train leaving West Chester at 7.26 A. M., and car will be attached to Express Train. at 13. C. Junction and going West, Passengers for Stations above 11. C. ;_ Junction will take train leavitut - Philador-• villa at 4.35 P. 31.1, and will ,change cars at II ~, (3, Junc tion. Tho Depot in Phtladetibla is reached directly• by the Chestnut and W alnntstroet cars.: Those of the Market , street lino runavithin one square. Thacara of both linos connect with each train upon its arrival.' ' • , • ON SUNDAYS.-Leave Philadelphia for Weet Chester at BA. M: and 2.30 P. M. • . . ' Leave Philadelphia for R. C. Junction at 7.15 P. M, Leave West Chester for Philadelphia at 7.45 A. 31. and 4.45 P. M. , .I.' . . .• . Leave B. O. Junction for Philadelphia at 6.00 A, M. • Or Passengers aro allowed to take Wearing Apparel only, an Baggage, and the Company will not in any cage' be responsible for au ounouut, exceeding 011 Q hundred dol tars, unless a special contract bo radio fcr the datrio: - WILLIAM O.'WHEELER. . . - • General SuPerhatendont. VAST FB,EIGIIT -LINE,: WI.: NORTH ..i.: PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAII I , , tii%Wilkesbarro, Mahanoy City, Mount CenueliContrallaind all'poltits OD Lehigh Valley Railroad and its brunt s. , , ~ , Br pew arrangements , perfected this da , this road is enabled to give increased -despatch to morehaadlao con signed to the above-named points.. , ( Goods • delivered at the Through Freight Depot, . , . . • •E. Mir. Front and Noble streets, EpforolsP. M.,wil Wilkesbarre, Mo_unt Carmel. Mahanoy City, an Athol.' stations la Mahanoy and •.- 7WYOMing valloye II A i l'of .; the snebeecting day. :. ': • It . 4g40 - ELLIS CLARK; Agents • at Tg.tr=4 , - JBAY,E4PR. 1;4. 1100111LA.DELPIlligig VALTIMOIIE RAILS° TIMETABLE.Ieave x alarming MOOD Y -May 10tb,1850. Trains will leave ^ Delp*: another Brnafl and Washingtons!*Pu'l. Mgr* WAY lows. lan TitAttrat A.V.(Sundayeeitcentag for Baltimore, stopping at all Regular Stations. 00n ; Bectrog' with Delaware liatlread at .Wilmington for :Crisfield and„Ltitermeliats Stations. -, rr • 1 EXPRESS TRAIN at 12.00 - 51:(8undaysekeented),for , Baltimore and Waabington; stopping at Wilmington, ;Perryville and Havre - tie Grace.. Connecta at Wilming- ;ten with train' for Now Castle. 'EXPRESS TRAIN at 4:00 :P... MI (Sundays erabepfeal, • for; Baltimore and. shington'. stoppinA at i rester, Tburlow,'Linal N Linwood 'Claymont, Wilmin n',, Stantonthanton, ewark,. ;Elkton, North Ea t Char Perryville; Havre: 'do Grace t -Abordeeir, , .....PerMinam . !Edgewoed‘hfagnaliski _ ChasaJein_lStatiunerfs Bum NIGHT EXPRESS at UM P. (daily I for Baltinuire' and Washington, stopping at, Chester.; TharlitWAl l iti-' {wood,' 011ynlont Netvark, DAUM, orth East, Perryville, Havre de Grace, Perryman's and, aa. nolia. - • , Ist • .'• • PassehgertiToY;rortitss °urea and Norfolk ii6ro the 12.0011 L :Train... „ . f. WILMINGTON TwN4r-stoppinii , 01 beJ.ween Pb lladelphfa and Wilibingtoa. _ . : -IgitTo' PHILADELPHIA at 11.00 AVIlf.l"6l/00 .7.00 P. M. Thd a.OO T. 31 ; train connects with Delaware ;Railroad for Hamng. ton and interntedialeatatic.ms. .• • ( Leave WILMINGTON 0.30 and 8.10 A.KI-80,41.18and 7.00 P. M. The 8.10 A. train wilr'n_et atop - between' Chester and ,Pliilad_elphia: The 7.00 P. - M.: tratial fret& • IVilmington rang tdailYAlletherAccetutitedatietaralrik :Stindayaexcented. .. • From DALTIMODD -PRiTAIAITAPIrMSZtotVeIi Baltimore 7.25 Ae•Blt',Wa . 9.35 A:.N.,.aittiresa 2:55 M.;tEmprees. 7 FR O M .. Express. - • •SIINBAY_.-TRAIN BA.LTIMARE:-r.1,44401i, BALTIMORE at 7.25 P.M. - Stopping at Magrioliai-Pklre rymittea, Aberdeen,Havre-da-Grace,Porryvillt town, North•EastrElkton 43 ter Newark, StadirriP4llKirN. Claypont. Linwood and . • • • • PIIMADELPMA AND BALTIMOR RAILROAD TEA INS—Stopping at ail Staticins on ghee , - :ter Creek and Philadelphia and Baltimore ,CetthAlSail-Tr !road. • Seaveli VIIILATiELPITIA.for PORT DZPOSlTaiiitij- t ' day excepted) at 7.00 A. 8. and 435P:31'.:+..17 a •.- • r . ÷ ..Lmve .Philadelpiia for Chadd's Ford .4 4. .4 7/NIZALI-.' ' The 7.00 A. M. Train will stop at . :Philadelphia and Lamokin. . ••- • • - •„). „t., ' • Freight' Train with Passenger •ear lattachadryloo. leave Philadelphia daily (Sundays excepted),-A , LR •kunning_to Oxford. • • • . . , , Leave'POßT DEPOSIT for PHILADELPHLV dela eXceptetl) A'S-tOR:IB4,OM A :-M.„'and 2MOJT:' , -Leave OhaddFs Ford for 'Philadelp,hyl. at 6.1545,,. • A Sunday,Train ;will leave Philadelphia at M. - A - mi'. . for West Grovd,and'intermodAte_ElMUons: • gie . willinavolgeet Wove at 4.80, VAIN.)),I I.!: . , Trains leaving WILMINGTON at.o-30.st. M.; sal i, P.M.will connect Itt. Lamokki „function with the • NO. A . 4.50 r. M. trains for Baltimore d ental R.R., . Through tickets to all taint Westl•Sotab;• tad west may be procuredet the ticket ollice,.,624Cliffq -- street, under, Continental hotel ; wheTe.o.lso State: . and'llerthd In 816op_Ing,Cara can- be . seenred.'dtaint • day. Persons purchasing tickets at' this talaiiitee! baggage checked at their residence by, the llniouTransv fer.Company. • .H. F. KEN • • Sp". - . . QHORIEEST '..ROUTE 49 . 1.0 AIM i.:131{,A., ),) •• , snoßti ..; ritEL : •/ •r: - :.11-3. • CAXIDEN AND ' ATLANTIC . BUNDLER TEIROIIGH T LIDI E - VI E V E T t I y p j eara se r i rr Thrdni. h Trainklegve.V.hip Street PART . ,1 ; f011014:.., Special Eicureloirda r 'nrrnr.rriat • ' " Freight (with p5im0irgi55ear)..:;.1::.1.4..tvw.1.Z..i.49.46*:311.. Express ) through inl% Pt Atlantic Acconaci P. . • tiAqALAitur 4511 1 i n iAtlantie Accommodation..:. : ..:. . USA . . ;Exprose, through: in hours • rqigllt Ortth psfstmk(ercar) 1110 A. N.., ' ' • 4:17 r _. Special' Excursion . :::..• • ,An. Extra Exproea train; (shyotok ',,A; 4 hews liwitiq , flew/A:Vine strwt Ferry every Saturday tit AP. 311:,_8# 7 ,. 'turningyleata AtlnatioCi_ , on Monday; at 9.40 A. • LOOAII °TRAINS-LEAVE .31INE STREET . . Atco AccOnmodaMon , .... , /0.331113 1 :/, - .. Haddonfield „ 8.011" • Hammonton • ' • .. ........ b4SI I : Id t • • ••• • ; ERTURind . I4pLE,VIOI4 . : ! AtCo4—tt 12 " 11 ....... 46 Hanimontbn • SUNDAY' N4IIOTBAII4, iiffi Leaved:l434 streott.:a.4.ea•-; 1 4%e•i4 i yy ,1f..,„ 31 - ; • 'F.- . , Fara.torAthinfio•-.Citi: .12J , RocATMETiekritavigeddi 'for the de,' lieurtrell; On mnich they are iDeftlPti Oaknian'it Local Ex rose , No. 30 'South - Fifth itr • villl tall for baggannitt ihypaart of thi, city and Atit nrb • att6 ChoCk to lotal or cottage. at Cityv ~ itactitioxialiild4ot °Picea bap bon 1 0 0, 6 (4 in ing,looins of Akio Iderchanta and colitilett! . .Z, alao No. 30 *Ninth Fifth atreett • • , • . •• .. ~ D. NUNDY, Atenti F. 9. C A P le A,'- - • 1C VIA4VEST - .TERBEF' RAILROAD. , •",::;•• COMAIENCING THURLODAF, , J HitY•lit,loMi ;.• •Leave Philadelphia; Font or Market street t as / folliust 9'.oo'A, M., Cape Mar Rantoul, doe at 12:26 • , 2.16 P,11.., • • •"• Passenger, dcie T.I&P,Iti• 41.001'.. rd.; Feet ;Ex PrAns. ,(comm en elov in flat k uriali IslYX),due6.sBp. , I_ Sunday Mail Trainktiesalf.lfA.22:,dnellt J "" ' Ca_p_Obrfty Freight leaves Camden daily., it 9.20 4T 11,. 1 " , .:,.,TUNNINII.+I'RA,INS LEAVE CAPE , MAW) is 640 A t. M ...Mottling Mail, dee at 10,00 At • c r •• 900 A. M., Feet Raprees (commending oil lironday;• July btk): nue 32.07; • ••• ' • i. 500P.:11..,•Passenger, due at 8.72 P-M. thonday Mail Train legves.Cape May, at is.jpy. Ceee'ldele Freight Train !eaves daily at 0.40 A.; M. ' : • • TIORETS. • !.."" '; A • ‘! • Annual Tickets,_oloo: . Quarterly Ticket*, B O* to 'he • . had only.„.oi the Treasurer . Camden. r . .20,1oupon ; • Tickets, 540; 10 Convene; $26. Excursion Ticke 1500, t. for Milo at the TJoket Oftleee.No. Chottneit'efteet,lreot • • Or Mlllrkfle street. also at Camden and Cape Mai« For Millville, Vinoland, Bridgeton, Seism and,.inter-.. mediate Stations, leave' Ptilladelphiadally at'B.oo 7k. MI; and 330 P. M. Passenger. • • • . • An. Accommodation Train for Woodbury,`Mtuitts, Barnesboro' an d Glassboro'_, leaves .Philailelphia at ‘ O.OO P. M. 'Reterning—Leavee Glaisbero , at 63) A. Comthutation .Books of 100 checks each, ati redi*ed rates, between Philadelp_hia and all stations: ••• FREIGHT TRAINS LEAVE CAMDEN. • . For Cape, Slay, Millville,Vinoland:fm:Ac.V9.2o For Bridgeton, Salem arid way stations, at 12.00 noon. Freight received at first covered wharf below' iWal nntt street. reight delivered No. VA S. Delaware aienne: • . • WILLIAM J: SEWEL.S.` 1 • . • ••••• ; Superintendent W • . LEGAL riono,Es. r. , VSTATE OF ROBERT: RALSTON DOR-. ALA BEY, deeense4i .—Letters •Testhmentary•upon: titoz Estate. of ROBERT RALSTON DORSEY, deemed, Inving.been greeted to .the undersigned, all persons baring claims will present them without delay,' and those, indebted to the. Estate will make paymcnt to • . , . •:.. • -.1 HENRY ORAMOND,. H ARRY O.' 621 Walnut streelp...: , • • ' MO. 271 South 'Fifth CLAY: gtreet,: : 1 ICxecutorc.. jy2&MBt F I STA.TE OF' WILLIAM._ GactINTZER, ~ diE ceasat.—Letters TestatnentarY . ow the Estate! o'. • V ILLLAM 0. MINTZER, deceased; late of • the city Ot l'hiladelphia, having been granted to the subscriber, all . 'persons having claims against the said 'estate tiro re-" 111417 14 :ed to' make known 'the sunie•withont - delay, mid . r indebted to makeay_ment to• :. ii: . ~. ,' , • . , .„ , , SAMI,TEL W : THACKARA,.., ~ . • No. 2i4 South Thirdst. , . Eiscutors : ii • - • • .ALEXANDER TRACK ARAi • ' • • • jy2l-w.,6t§ •.. •: N 0.4111 P.Luo it.. .. ;.E ..... : TN THE -SUPREME COURT FOR• THE:A. - :1 , Eastern District of Perinsylvania--ItiEqultE.—Na ;.V. July Terrm.lB6o ' •y • , • Between IV R.I3COTT, dtIiOADS and OWEN SHERIDAN. Niecutors' of the . hurt will and testament of • OWEN •SHERIDAN, - ideeenued, and Truetees Mulled therein,ELlZAßETil Y:: *SHERIDAN, the sahI.JOSHUA.T. OWEN and ANNIE 'J.' OWEN; wife, OWEN • 'SHERIDAN,. - • JR., PRA EMS SHERIDANaint ROBERT J. SHERIDAN,' • ,Plaintiffs, and JACOB S. CLINKER, CLINKER, CATHARINE MIIRPHEN, DANIET. ZEICLEY and ELIZABETH , ZERLEY, his wifo /late' BETIV •CLINKER . the • said JACOBI :CLINKER' MARIA CLlNKER,vrtrmuNs ...PEEN sod ELIZABETH ZERLE • being the children 'find boIN of JACOB CLINK ER.decoasedi MAGDALEN! , CLINKER, widow-of the said JACOB CLINKER, dens ceased, the said JAcon a.. OLIN/Mg.,' Adrninistrapr , r with th e will orate mild JACOB 0 LINKER lannemg rel-- all other persons 'chaining to be the heirs or devi or the said JACOB CLINKERMsoessed, Defendmitir. • The above numeddefendents will please to tokamak° that the plaintiffs have tiled their bill in" the said Court V., praying that they nevi:my° ull'their witiesseseMtmineit , • . and. their depositions taken, for thepurpose of perpetua- - ' ling their tostimeny of and ceacerniugthe R 0 , 1 , 3 , 0 ,1.011 of the plaintiffs 'of a certain lot of 'grOund situate on the th sou westerly sidd ' Thomas's „ 'road in the ,Tweuty-second Wart. of tho oity of Philadelphi a con- . eining 3 acres and Zi• perches, more or . loss;,which pro oases were•mico held by Jacob.Clkskor,, and conveyed by ' ,the said jacoli S. Clinker; Administrator t. a. , of the ;said Jacob Clinker; deceased, unto William °Binger, on 'the Id of Aprill333,and after severaLiumme.couveyances, were afterwar ds convoyed on' the:4th .March, /843, unto , the Said Owen Sheridan; and that the said, Court on'the 3d day of July, 1860;ordered and decreed that this notice • bo given to.the. defendants:requiring them, and every af, tbem, obq and appear in the said Court ; on tbo, FIRST 'MONDAY of September, 1309, 'to mitkdl answer , to • the • 'said bill of the plaintiffs, and abide the further order of ' .tho Court in the premises; • , • ' ' JOSEPH A. CLAY, , ;.' • SoAlcitors for plaintiffs. ;0 4 -•• br.1216 I`YPE7kratiNDlrit raILADSLPFLIA ii7Pli . roxmOur PRINTERS' . EURNISHINGI' i.ritiriol3SE;. EetabllslT . l 1411 The subicriber, having. mittlyllltfe!for ninuaracturiug calls particillar" attentteu • to !ADO New Series of Classic Faces of Book and Newspaper Tyme; which will compare favorably with those Of nuy ofber Founder,. , His •prectical. experience in Al branebee ap.' pertaining to the libittufacture of Typoi'and ytholg,ogot constant• Personal Supervision of each at of Ml business, to the best guarantee Offeretalq tpc!..ll, tutor , finished and durable article, • , 'Everything nocesiary 'in a' ciimplete 'Prlntfng' tablielnuent furnished at the Shiniest notice.. , ,• A L • / 031 SAT ROIL liOE, TAYLOB,• • GORDON', (OAIIPBRitiI. DEGENER... POTTER AND - ALL ' OTIINIt PRESS MANUFAITUItitIitS • • • • 11. 4111f' lus • 10 NRIVAI'Xi i - ' • A ; g0041,11 . 44.4 . 4F. pf: wooer.; ; ;;. ler - Giro tria,i'4••• L' PICLOUZE, N. W. corner of.TRIIIXIt . :..-Ltd.,9/713 , p T h NU ilad T o 9 . tro hla ili a. • nlyst•ni.w . ftt . ,• • , Alt]) Q.11.--gf11111 1 3:11 - 07 - fAVEST.Eini , LArd•l)ll,'4o.• Orive and for.'sale by WORMS It 13 . 104141 ttclC).ol/10teetntit l etrfs t. • .. / .•t0:r ,;? +;54. 11 * „~ _ „ ,