Daily evening bulletin. (Philadelphia, Pa.) 1856-1870, August 19, 1869, Image 3

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    •
• • -
^$•••Ii-•.•; •''•:•••••'
:.-v....i'•••••Wi-eP•:-....?e'•i-:,"•,•v•f.,-,:;.n..-•,'k••.' •"••.'•-• • .
'
• :. •
« zx
• :...
t•f
• .
;*:;
•to
-•'.• •
• .I':•4I•4•'•.KV,,ittiSIN,ESS,
Viriettir conqirmailvely few ,
11461**VIOnolionzti the IleentY lia'a.ell•itAliet attention of
Thiß ought not to be so.-tut itdri;t•and be
Wfe Min ere;foolish and singlebut Dretty faces for corn-.
?his can all be changed by using Hagan 's Ilfagnolia
Balm 'which gives the Bloom of ,Youth and a refined
eparkling Beauty to theConaplption, pleasing, Puwecful
and natural: •;• ,•• , :
e, !1b lady' need complain' of a:red, tanned, freckled
' trilitidlFcOniPle.ion 'Who tiv3ll bireit, s6ventY-Ilve cents
iliXfigeynYit Magindief Bath). Its effects aro truly
artful.' •To praerve and Dress' • the Hair use Lyon's
. Hathairort. • aul7-tu,th,slm.
. ,•, ' 1-310 .1418pereard hits - net, New 13/CAW
,-• - • 11013,1867.—Dnan Sin:—lt is with much pleasure that
11. - say to you that consider the PLANTATION IlirrEnr: of
• vintold value, -In the fall of 1867 I was taken with Chills
• slid Ftver, with the most serer° pains in my chest and
head, -Titres with great difficulty that I could breathe.
. - 1,-c• 'My lungs were greatly dletrestied. and there uses severe
e,'" in in my right side, hy spells. I could hardly get up
my bed: 1 called a lleeter, who attended ate all
winter without the least benefit. About the first of.
•••=•--,-;-,..A,tigestl,enurtenced.using your Mara:nos BITTERS
• —a wineglass :fall - three - times , a day—and hirvensetrit
'nest of the time since, and j ant now well and strong,
' • able to do an my own work and the care of a.large
• * : SUSAN WILSON.
•
- ItAGNOLIA WATTin.--SWOerlOr 'to the 'best • inipo ea
German Cologne, and sold at half the price. anlltu th sat
• ^ OE/TAM'S PIANO . ROOMS Chichering Grand.
•• . Saner° said 'Upright Pianos), removed to .1120 and lilt
• Wheat:int street, „ . •
j•-"' an 9 •- . ' • . W. 11. DUTTON
-•••
ntwarslidatios received the highest
19fta
eft thetornational Exhibition,
'neel".Viket n t the Wareroom of
Path ', 9. /11 : ala - 337- Pc '. rt . a BLASIUS BROS.;
. ;- . Nn.3006 Ohoetnnt street.
E . VENING BULLETIN.
Thursday, August 19, 1869.
'IW" Per Sons leaving ' the 'city 'for the sum
mer, and Whiling to have . the EVENING Buie
=TER, sent to them, will please send their ad
dreii to the office. Price by mail, 75 cents per
month.
ANIA_AIIIEitiIOA• EUROPE.
111 a recorded history ; there haa never:been
2nention, , id.any voluntaryA emigration , o
f .the
Asiatic remain foreign lan S; until now. .. The
people of , of Japan, and of the
Western nations
O f Asia, have . -clung to their
oivii . goil with •a. tenacitty that has' had init
lunch, of prejudice as of ..patriotism.:They
have repelled as, much as possible the advances
of the Europeans; resistingall . efforta'to intro
. duce their commerce; their politics, their
gion'andtheir social institutions. Such resist
ance would probably have continued foreVer,
and tbe Asiatics Would haVe'niaintained their
old exclusiveness; but for the growth of
a: great and: freenation,- upon the American
Continent;. a nation that has become known
all eveithe World:as liberal in its own policy
and religion, and as never interfering midevo:
"•
lently - with the policy and the religion of others.
The Dutch, by a some What similar course,
„ •
• obtained,.e. long time' ago, a partial foothold in
- JaPan;:. but the. privileges' granted them , were
jealously guarded. The • restrictions , imPose4
upon theta would, most probablY, have never
teen relaxed, but for the perseverance:of-the.
.•
weater and more liberal government..of.tlid
•
.United StateS of Anierica.
The policy of England'in. Asia, especially in
the early days.of the East India Company, was
*policy of ,etinquest; and froin that circum
stance arose the feeling among the Asiatic races
• that the EuroPeeiao viere'their natural enemies.
• The EnglisbniesterO of India made war upon
• the - religious faith, ution :the caste. systent, and
• upon all the political and, social institutions
that had been . held sacred in the eyes of the
• -natives through.uncountedcenturies. English
enterprises ,were never so successful in China
as in India, because the Chinese were put On
their guard by the calamities of the Ilindoos,
and shut their 'doors more rigidly than ever
against the rapacious Western aggressors. A
commerce • was . estabhthed between the
two natiOns, • but only after several conflicts of..
arms. This commerce has been mutually ad
vantageous, Wit the.wise and the philanthropic
among,the.Ckineselvould willingly have -in- .
• tercel:irk with Great Britainforever broken off,
, 'for 'the sake of destraying the infamous opium
smuggling, , -which has produced such . mis
ehleVous effects upon the popidace of China.
The poisonous- drug, grown in Britisher India,
l'andMirodnee,d-in-Chinaby--British-agents, is_
as' hard a burden upon the Chinese as is. the
politieal - yoke endured by the Ea st Indians.
the - Whole'`course - of English - policy -- has'
• 'been such as• to make the European and
Asiatic peoples as‘antipodal .„feeling.as their
.eountries are geographically.. - •
The United States, in their efforts to estab
.
lishintercourse with the great Asiatic powers,
' had the
. advantage of being known to differ
y. from Great Britain and the other European
powers in their., form of Government, and
especially of being blown as a nation tolerant_
of ell religiOns. Propagandism, whether •pe
'4,7,,,`t lineal or religious, has never been attempted by
any accredited agent of,, our Government in
Asia, and:. the American missionaries of
the different ecclesiastical bodies have
always gone and always acted indepen
dently, and have been known . to be 'without
any authority from the gOveriuneht. The
government has been known by its embassies,
and its power has been represented by its
ships of war. The American people have been
known by their mercantile enterprises, their
manufactures of all ldnds, and by their active,
aggressive, but never unfriendly endeavors to
, bring about intimate commercial relations. In
the common course °ethnics it might have re
quired several generations to bring about such
relations. But the acquisition of California by
the United States and the discoveries of gold,
a score or more of years ago,have done the work
of many generations. The creation of our
Pacific States, and their occupation by a great,
industriOus and intelligent population, have
made the Pacific line of, steamers and the Pa
• cific Railroad necessities, and these necessities
being supplied, the United States are now . vir
lually as near to Asia as they are to Europe.
The Asiatics recognize the adv,aptage of the
approximatiou r and now Japanese and Chinese
emigration to America is so extensive as to
have become a question that is exercising the
winds of many intelligent men as to the proba
ble effects, for good or evil, of the influx of this
new element in our already mitred and .hetero
geneous population. But those must be weak
arid tireld minds that, after alrtlie trials that
our Government has gone through,
'am doubt its ability to preserve its system in
Dante Wials, and to Maintain the principle of
equal rights to all, which was proclaimed in
1770, but was only fairly established, nearly a
century later, by a bloody War.
• The , Miscellaneous immigration from Europe
to America is now. to be met with a iniscel-
Uncoils emigration from Asia to America, The
Chinese have already come our Pacific
States in swarms, and . are making railroads,
.w;
y..,.+e~r~m~r :~'e¢ ~ ,ate ;~ks~~. • . .
',tilling farms, and doing their full share , in
'hundreds of *milt , minorf,
;.The Japanese haVe• •begtfn to ; Cqollow
'tbem, and are,l•introduein, 8 . • new in
dustries from their 'native land, which are
:likely to add, greatly to the wealth of
,the land
they have adopted. Intelligent Chinese rner l N
chants are traveling through the United States,
and speaking, in good American English, and
not in the °barbarous Anglo-Chine , se, ,or,
tipigeon" jargon, behalf of their country=
inen'e,claims upon the kindness and protection
of the AineriCan government and people. Hoiv
,ever much these claims May •be resisted by
k such demagogues and Pols as resisted the likd
claims of the negro race for
, generations, they ,
will eventually 12e.—fidly acknowledged; and
these :sine • demagog will, before many
years, be manoeuvring to secure----Jhe'vote---•,-,of
the despised Asian, as they'are now Maikeuver
rug to secure the vote of the despised African.
This is a safe and easy prediction, upon which
we need not enlarge. , . ,
The map of the•world which ought, now to
be - adopted and studieds by Americans at least,
is thatknown as 4 illlercat4ei Projection ," which the American continent is in the centre,
with gurope'payi Afifea: at the right or east, and
Asia% - and Australia On the left or .<west.
AraViicals really the centre of the superficial
earth,:,, towards Whose 4 fresh woods and ids:.
tures new," the ,redundant popplations of
Eurppe and -Asia are docking, and will continue
to' flock. The amazing growth of this country,
in past years, will be greatly surpassed by that
of the years'yet to come. The conimerce Of
the:Pacific is going to surpass that of the com
tierce of the Atlantic. The United States of.
America,' which , are destined to include the
wbOle continent, will become the central , por
tion of the political, commercial and financial
world, and the time will come, to many, now
living, when our -,relations with the great na
tions of Asia valre,regarde - d as' far more im
portant than our relations with the diminished
nations of Europe.
ANTI ANTHONY.
The .National Labor Convention has got
into a, world, of trouble over Miss Anthony. It
feels . equal to a radical re-adjustment of all
the great political, financial and social relations
of the world, but when it comes to deal with
one Woman, maintaining her claim, single
tongued against a whole Convention of, able
bodied, men, it confesses its impotence and
flounders helplessly in a sea of contradictioris.
Through mucli, tribulation,. • Miss Alitbony
achieved'a seat in the ConventiOn, and, as a
natural consequence, immediately began to
make speeches, and her
,speechek
very far' from dull', ones. She pis
Speaker and-agitator r and she perfectly net' only
;Miderstood' the noble science okstilVilefene,e,
but, Grant-lika, she proposed to •move imme
diately upon the works of the enemy.. The
New York Typogmphical Union took natural
alarm at the advanee.s made by this champion
of fethinine hinters; and straightway ordered
up reinforcements. Their Cnisius, one William
Stirk; despatched ,•hkstant telegmms' to their
Brutus; One Mareui BOnuiltis Walsh
• '"Brutus, a word with you.
You know not what you do; do not consent
That Anthony speak, in this convention :
Know you 'how much the people may be
moved , •_
By that which she will utter 7";
Walsh ruShed to the rescue, and threatened
•
that he and his fellow S--brave men all, honor-
mile men conrteous,'hig,h-toned, chivalric
men all—winild pack'right off to dear New,
Yerk. if the terriblelAnthony was not instantly
ejected from her seat in the Convention. 'AO
this brave Convention wilted at the threat, and,
although it had 'declared, only the day before.
&tat the lady was ' a delegate, they wheeled
round and londly pretested that she was not.
And then, adding insult to injury, or injury to
insult, we do not know which, they determined
that Miss Anthony shotad sit,as an ex-delegate,
but not., .to be ,:allouted to `speak _! .". This
_was simply the old torture of _Tantalus roivived,
and we are not sure that the "S. P.'C: A."
-might not:probably_ and Ammftnely interfere in
-Miss-Anthopyls-befialf ,- - -
The action of the Convention m this btusi
ness has laid it open to general ridicule. it
has devoted so verklarge a portion of its ses
sions to deterniining the status of a single
woman, and has ended with:such, 'a flat, sur
render to the arbitrary dictation of a single
man in New York, assuming to speak, at best,.
for but one society. of "workiiignien, , .that it has,
necessarily brought itself into' contempt, while ;
its opposition to women'slabofbas, by itS bitter.
unreasonableness and by its glaring, inconsist
.ency, formed the strongest reiuforcenient . to the
women's rights movement that it has yet re-
ceiyea.
The'ConventiOn is managing its affairs as
might be . expected from a body of men who
trace resolutely shut their ; eyes to the rights of
eierybody hut, ,themselves , : ,By the . reVetiu-'
tionary doctrines
.which it is announcing, by
the unmixed selfishness °fits' propositions, and .
!Wits coWardly retreat from the position which
it had taken on the right of women to earn.
their ; own living, , it has accomplished much •
good. It has'.,shoWed. , to, the country, in-;, •
eluding many thOnSands of, honest, intelligent,
sensible mechanics, its trne:drifts and tenden-,
cies, and itlias onened the,eYes of multitudes of
people to the essential tyranny.which IS , the
main spring of its • •
Miss Anthony, whese — Obampion do not
pretend or propose to be, has no cause to coin,:
plain of her treatment fit.the'llands of the
tional Labor Convention. Her cause will be
greatly set forward by it. : The women of the
country, who are now seeking enlarged avenues
of Self-support, will see that those who make
the loudest professions of devotion to the cause
of labor are not always its best friends. They
will learn the Wise lesson of .self-dependence;
and will steer clear of the shoalS and breakers
among which they are sure to be involved, if
they lend themselves to the mischievous sophis
tries and the increasing tyrannies of the trades
' unions. -
- The National - Labor ConVention- desires - the:
highest wages for Its members that can be at;
.tained by any means whatever. It does not
want its chances interfered with, by an increase
in the laboring forces of the- country. It no
more'wants women to come into competition
with it than if they were those new bugbears;
the Chinamen. It regardS equality with women
a degradation. ' One of its delegates expressed
this brilliant idea, yesterday, when he said,
the 'object bPliss Anthony Ayas not to elevate
women to the Standard of men, but to degrade
TIE 'DAILY INEMNIaltetllllllll-I)IIItATALPIWTOuItstiAT
pen 40. - , , standard or worien. . -What a
pretty SOltitiliPt ~to.` P°l4lltollif the • MP ll43 '
of an American workingman I "Degrade men:
to the standard of women!" There are a few
places in gtfroye,`and. 4104: Antfily in: Japan,
lehiPa,a4l, central Africa . Wigre..,this 'idea of
;w°nll6l'44:deiradti6il" bkiiiittiktliOistaildar a
Pf >Men "^would be in perfeet accordance with
the general conditioWor - Seciety; 'but we can
fancy the sublime pity with , which Miss An
,
pony oil.tik Dickiition bi '''il',fli,,otlier,strong
inded, ,independent woman must have heard
the expression,of this sentiment frOrn the lips
of a.4elegatp of an AmeriCan I%TatiOnal Labor
ponvention., '1
Upon the `whole, the LahOY 'Convention is
doing good; 'by its extravSgiinceg. ' 1 It is teach-
Mg thousands of people lessons which they will
= . not besloW-to learn.,z Its Oivn failure Ao grasp
Any true and noble idea of the dignity and the
,'universality of huma.n labor will
,tend,' by its
startling contrasts,,bs' inculcate higher and bet
ter views on the , whole subject among the
masses which constitidethe great army of real
American laborers, and so the, Rational Labor
• ConventiOn will not be without its beneficial
results, even although they,spring from its own
I' exbibitibts of tyrannical selfishness and short
, sighted ignorance .of, the great subjects with
which it has attempted to deal.
Tuz BYRON"SCANDAL•
We continue publication of ex
tracts frem Mrs. Marriet,l3e,e.cher Stowe's his
tory of the causes Of' Lord, tyron's separation
from his Wife. 'This article, which' appears in
the ,Atlantic .31ontlity, for , September, is the
most extranrdinary bit;of scandal with which
we have been .favored for many years, and it
will be certain to create au miexampled sensa
tion in literary circles in •this country and in
Europe. Mrs. Stowe's , stini, epitomized, is to
the effect that Lady Byron separated• from her
husband, becausc ahe,•diSeevered that before
and after his marriage,he had been guilty of the
hoiTible crime otep,r , Fyinct on an intrigue with his
'nearest:blood relation: ' .,itra.:StOwe makes this
charge deliberately, and then, asserts that Lady
Byron, after making' a heroic but hopeless at
tempt to redeem her husband, left him, and
determined to keep the:dreadfal secret, prefer
ring rather to bear the charges brought against
her by the,world and .by` the sinner- himself,
and to submit patientlY to misrepresentation and
slander, dark' to expose Lord Byron's wicked
ness: To the remorse and the dread' of the
consequences of discpvery, Mrs. Stowe natu
rally , attributes Lord Byron's misanthropy,
melancholy, and gloominess, and also the
wild dissipation in __which he indulged so
recklessly. These former characteristics, once
subjects for the enthusituitic admiration of
romantic school girls, have long been reku . . — ded
by sensible men and women. as the affectations
of a vain man of genius, who was fond of at
titudinizing before the world. It may be, after
all, that they were real, and that this man's
soul was not only gloomy, but devilish, and that
he was tormented by the consciousness of the
foulest guilt which can blacken the human
heart. This revelation throws a. new light
upon many of his actions, and we can now
see that his affected tenderness Tor his wire, his
pretended regret at their separation,' and
his assumption :of • the position
of a martyr were mere blinds to
hide the truth from the world, and to cast upon
the wife, in whose silence and determination
to save him from shame he implicitly trusted,.
the odium of having caused their domestic
troubles. If Mrs. Stowe's story is true, his
treatment of this patient, noble woman adds
immeasurably to' his infamy, and makes him
appear wholly monstrous. .`
Of course there will be differences ofOpinion
as to the truth Of-the! narrative; and the' evi
dence in support-Of 6... Charge which. will mak&
a man's name .a.l?Yerword and a reproach for
all time . , ought, certainly, to be -Very ;'stroig.;
Mrs. Stowe says that'Lady Byron confided the l
particulars_ to her during . her fiiSt` visit.
to England, and that she has
refrained from publishing theni - hitherto - bie- ,
cause She thought., inc,h, a' proceeding niinecei-:
sary until --the_Countes. Guiccioli„ Byron's
mistress, issued - her - book, which is, froni be
ginning to . end, 'a mere indictment of. Lady
Byron. This Story of the wife is - related to`'
vindicate her character from the slanders of the,
mistress. Of course nobody will,for a moment,,
doubt Mrs. Stowe,'s statement of the 'manner
by which she came into possession of 'the,
`narrative. It is Lady Byron's veracity that is:
in question. But it is fair to believe that .Mrs.'
Stowe would not - have - accepted the statement
without knowing something of the
dence upon: which •it was founded.'
Of . course the circumstantial, „details;
of the manner inwhich Lady Byron ascertained,
the truth cannot be published;' . butZirs. Stowe(
gives us sufficient assurance ,of her' r
quaintanee with them when she says •
," But;
therecame an . honr when, in a manner whit h
left no kind of room for doubt, Lady Byroni
saw the full depth of the abyss of infamy which
her marriage was expected to 'cOVer,.&e.r Be-:
sides 'this, the indications of , the' truth . of the
story, as presented by Mrii.'Stowe, have almost
the'styength of positive proof, so nearly to they
coincide with • the . narrative. Lady . Byron's,,
character, .too;, is worthy g o -consideration in
weighing the matter. She was known.. t i O` the,
world, and to her friends as an eminently pure:
and--good_wornan, who led a_blameless
made amore. beautiful: by most : gracious and
kindly charities.l Even her husband admitted
her . surpassing 'goodness; %, i goodness that
seemed to him too nearly perfect to be, pleas.:
ant. The : sin:4de' statement of such, ti,wonian,
in Usual cases, would need no collateral > testi
mony. 'Some. Persons in screking - for tins
might clahn to find it in , the strange conduct of
Byron'S biographer,.Tom Moore, who knoWn
to have , - destroyed numbers .of - !penitents.
left in his hands, by his friend:
sponsibility for this deed has been charged upon
Lady Byron and her influential. friertils,of
whom Moore stood in awe. But this is mere
Surmise; and' there is at least the color of pro
--bability- to the thepry_that, the papers eentained
tlie
proOfs of ' Byron's 'great - crime,, and that
Moore.deitroyed. theta aakept, their contents
secret, to save the reputation of the poet. These
things, and Others, beiuing upon the' truthful
: ness or falsehood. of 'the story, are likely to be
thoroughly - diseussed during the exeitenient
which : will be surd to : ibllow Mrs. Stove's pub=
lication.
One of the first questions that will be likely
to arise in every mind 'upon perusal of 'the
narrative Willbe-r:Why did Lady Byron reveal
her seerd.t 131astttheAnemo .her ea
IniShand;;:' :'hav# 1}:,
faithfully!
for so long ,! When ,She took Airs z}
stolve,int._o ho.edididOnce shP 4110 11 0 4
upon her deathbtd, and she. conceives it to be
her duty, posbibly, to do what, she -could W roan
tercet the hurtful effetts of Ityriiiod
Mrs, StOweV,Jindii.CO was, isked, f r and it vas
d d ithh Id h
finally e e w P e acts Ant. .;
ter Lady Byfonle,':death, , INrhel. Mrs. Stowe was ,
to pUblibh i,htm or not, at her own,discretion ,
Perliaps.l2ady Overestlinated the Present
inilueitee: of Byron's poems:, :Once it Was
enormous: but as yeam have passed, men have
come, not to disparage -the greatness of his'
ability, but to estinalito his chafaeter at some
thing of its trim worth; 'andthe i 'ne,w q'ttera
tion have neglected him, in a great d ' q*P?•f?' :
later and purer •and more natural, poets. But
in tlf6liglit-Of newtevelation-comparative
indifference Will be transformed into posith - e
dispst, and no man will be able to read his
uncleanness, his ,apologies for vice and hiS
gibes at goodness and pUrity, without a sensar,
tion of horror. lii name will go down to
posteritY linked with 'a crime whose hideous
ness is made more appalling by the granderir
of his genius. ,
WORDS OF WISDOM.
Mr. Isaac Myers of Maryland, or whoever
may have written the powerful address pre
sented by lihn, in behalf of the colored work
men to the Labor Convention, yesterday,'de
serves honorable mention; as having produced
by far the ablest docinnent which bas
been
laid before that body. • This, alone, would,not
be saying much, as there has mot been any
very late iimount;Of ability
.displayed in the
documents of the ''Convention.' But the ad
dress is, in itself, worthy;of the highest' com
mendation, for its excellent, language, its
moderate tone, its sound logie r and its co.urW
ous protest agaiust the' false doctrines and
practlces of the ,trades-unions and of the Con 7
vention.
The colored men in the Labor Convention,
if this address speaks their mina, have sin,git ,
larly - clear views of the various branches of
human labor. Only yesterday they were ig,no
rant of 'everything but the enter - reed labor of
human slavery. To-day they discuss the ques
tion from a higher point of view and with a
wider comprehension than have been exhibited
by anything yet said or done in the Cenven
tion. They plead eloquently against the pro
scription of the colored lataer. They com
prehend the harmonious relations of capital
to labor. They oppose to the Convention's doc
trine of repudiation one of the ablest
arguments which has yet been condensed into
a small space, and every word of their areu
nient on this point should bespread over the
country in letters of geld. The whole docu
ment is a remarkable production, and would be
creditable to, the mind and pen of any states
man inAmerica. Wliatnoticethe Convention
will take of' it remaineto be seen: - 'it is an
elephant much larger than 'Miss Susan An
thony, and v.'e imagine that the Convention
will walk around it very carefully ll and not un
deitake to handle it at all.
The conduct of the Schuylkill Navigation I
Company'during the present drouth has been
so generous as to entitle the officers to the
gratitude of this entire community. Controlling
the water of the Schuylkill absolutely, they
possessed' the power to deprive the city of a
supply, and if they, had closen to consult their
own immediate interests and to (nay on their
business without regard to the wants of our
citizens; they could have caused incalculable
suffering. Inaead of this, they, opened their
dams successively, and gave: the water to the
city, while their traffic, which at this season is
at its height;was completely stopped. In the'
meantime, while Their boats are lying idle, the
wages of their hands are continued, and there ,
is' a constant expenditure of money for' the
support of the stock belonging to the company. l
-We . think it but fair that the city should reim-,
-btuse the-company-for_theselosses r not_perhaps_
for the suppositious losses consequent ;Man the
cessation of their business, but for the actual pe-`
cuniary, mtlay - widely they - are campelled - to, -
make tO keep their line in readiness for imme
diate- operations when the_ water _comes- The
cost to the city will be small, and out of all pro
portion to the benefits received, but it will be a
simple act of justice to the company. We
hope Councils will consider the subject at
their first/meeting.
"We have at last extorted a confession from
- one - of our Radical contemporaries- that their
ticket is not what it should be.—Ave.
But blandishments, gibes, 'gentle reinon=,
strances, friendly advice, and severe denuncia
tion,
have all failed to ,extort from the Age any
opinion, either favorable or unfavorable, upon
the merits of the Democratic city ticket. To
this day nobody Imows whether the Age thinks
John P. Ahern ,a suitable person for the Clerk-,
ship of the Quarter Sessions Court, or, whether
it considers the fact that he stands indicted for
felony upon the records of said Courtsa suffi
cient reason for his rejection by Democratic
voters. We have this satisfaction," however;
even if the Age has no opinion 'upon the
subject, the people have, and they will express
it Intelligibly at the polls. ' '
DR. R. F. THOMAS, THE LATE,' OPE.
rotor at the Colton Dental, Association, 18 now the;
only one in Philadelphia who devotes his entire thao and
practice to extracting teeth, absolutelymfithout pain, by
nitrous oxide gas. Office, No. 1027 Walnut
streets. , - ' , mhs-Iyra
OOLTON DENTAL ASSOCIATION 011,1'
ginateithe anenthetic Me of , •
NIT OUS OXIDE; OR LAUGHING GAS,
And,tlevote their whole timet and .prectioe to ,oxtrecting
teetinvitholit pain.' • • • -•
Office,"Eightb end 'Minot etreet4:- apnly.
QHN ;CRUMP,- BUILDER,
- 1731 CHESTNUT STREET,'
and 213 LQDGE STREET.
Mechanics of etery Unmet required for bodee-building
and fitting promptly furnished. fe27-tf
OSTS AND HAILS, POSTS AND RAILS;
all etylee: Four-hole, square and half round:peat&
Shingles—Long and short, heart and eaP. .50,000 foot
first common boards.
Shelving, Suing and eterediftink material made a spa.
Oats. NICHOLSON'S,
mytt4frp . Saventh and Carpenter street.
HENRY PHILLIPPI,
CADPENTER AND BUILDER,.
NO. 1024 SANSOM STREET,
PHILADELPHIA.
jelo-Iyrp
_
cu. WARBURTON'S IMPROVED, - PEN
drib tilated and easy-fitting Dress Hate (patented) in all
the approved fashions of the season. -Chestnut street,
next door.to the Post-Mee. oga-tfrp,
0 0 14 , 4 ])lON'tir TO 'ANY AMOUNT
LOANED UPON DIAMONDS WATCHES,
JEWELRY PLATE (3LOTHINGote., at
JONES Br, do. , s
OLD-ESTABLISHED LOAN OFFIOE, • '
. ; • Corner of Third and (Wain streets,
• Below Lombard.
N.II.—DIAMONDSONATCHEB,JEWWW,GUNIA
&0.,
POE 6ALB AT
IMIAEKABLY LOW PRICES.
my2,4trril
:..,.i.:i.' 4 : . i:',,._!'
"..'.':t•'2g;9-!'''',.';,,,-..,•.'',,'5,;'
..4Auswie v
' "te,qt
• .1".•
s • 4 n ' {.l..c'',/poti:;.; . 4;tt
1 ,!((1!!
•
• •
•
. .
• . . •
•2 WATERS + `
t-
We shall have enoughl
We have an immense supply l'
" • WANAMAKER 81:BROWN:' ,
- ,
14 ti ±
1 1
EDWARD , 1* K LLY
TAJ0r.....93%;
B. E. core Chestnut and Seventh Sts•
, .
Complete Assortment Choice Goods.
REDUCED" PRICES.
LOW WATER _I THE S,OHITILKILL
A BIG liOTCY,IIPIE4/1
.:4Q:c.,,,iiii: 4 L..-'.: . ..4 . :,.,,,..NT.150x
NOT DRIED UPYET!..!
River Schrtylkillgoing dry!
Now! what Wye think':
All the water running oull
Not enough to drink!
Fairmount drying up !
Water all gonel
Can't get enough to wash;
Folks feel forlorn.
Can't souse the pavements now ;
,'Dry'! Dr•!! Dry!!!
Won't let the hoses plaY ;
'fliat's the reason why.
One comfort! Even if
"Can't squirt the hoes •
Itocramt, & Wxt.soat have
Lots of.splendia clothes I!
Even if the river goes entirely
There are yet
Lots of splend4dpiles ,
Of the best of Bummer Styles
• Of F'ine,Olothes at Low-Tide Prices at
A . 0p.. - If; i fij..m;: . . - ;',.:,.',4..,- . . - :.wILsoN.:!S
Great , Brown Stone Hall,
600atid 605 CHESTNUT Street.
FIRWPROOV -SAFES:
THE GREAT FIRE; AT YONKERS
Hefing'i Safes, Again Tested
, YONKERS; N. Y., August 13,18 M.;
-Messrs. lIERIIIINGYEARREL d: BIiERMAN, New'
•Toik=-Gentletnen: . At the great fire-here-on -Sunday:
night_hist4BiLinst.);wilich covered an area of two
blochs,..we ha two of your safes in our building, which
passed safely, throughtihe ordeal. When first discoicre&
they were surrounded by burning lumber, alai bear ovi-;
derice of-haying bed a Severe test,ssour placeof business.
occupied given lots; all 'covered With buildings anti ltun-'
ber;all of which - Were - entirely -consumed, and to this
beat the safes_were:expoiled. It was with great satisfac
tion that-we found, nion cutting Into our Befell, lie they,
- were so warped and swollen , they- could be opened in no
other waY, that our books and papers and money were:
all saved ; indeed the bills
came out of the tittle without
singe, and nothing is discolored but the binding of
the books. Respectfully yontd,
ACKERT it QUICK.
NEREING , S PATENT CHAMPION SAFES, the
most reliablo protection from tire now known. IIEIE•
- HING'frNEW — PA - TENT — BA NICE SAF ES. - -com
hdraned 'steel and iron with the Patent Frank
finite or SPIEL EL EISEN, furniebee a resistant ago I nal
boring and cutting tools to, an extent heretofore un
. known
Farrel, Herring & C,0., Philadelphia.
Herring, 'Farrel & Sherman, No. 251
Broadway, wrier Ilurrtty St., N. T.
Herring & Chicago.
Haring, Farrel & Sherman, New Orleans;
%via .tf,§
TCWPL - MV"WrT: GRTSTSaIritTGII,MINTO
tm Ili particles, to quickly, cool soda water or other
bevera'iehi 'or for 'medical TogniremAnts. For sale by
TRUMAN 4 BIiKW, N 0.4335 (Bight,Tlurty-tivo) Diarket
street, below Nlntb.„
,11190A.T.V4sIT TOQL AND, AWL .HANDLES;
1.. w Malting a variety of small thole, all fitting, Into
=one -I andle.,__and --a , variety. of cheete of. toolP. Int`
.Fale at TIRIMAN SHAW, No. 835 (Eight Thirty,•
live) Market street, below Ninth. '
riIINMEN'S SHIP, SPIEARS, OF SIIIVE
raI sizes, Soldering Irons; Itlvet Punches, Cold
Wall Nails, Mallets, &c., for unlo by TRIMAN
& 131.14 W, No. gg (Fight : "Thirty-live) .Market street,
below Ninth. ,
B. WIGHT, '
E,
. ATTORNEY-AT-LA.IV - ,
Commissioner of Deeds for the State' of Pennsylvania In
• •hlinole.
Olihiadisen street, No. 11, Chicago, Illinois. • aul9tf§
' GLOUCESTER POINT _GO
yoUtself tindiake the Dimity to this cool,
a S o u t h pot., New steamers,- with every-comfort,
leave street slip daily every few minutes. JelB-3mg
11,; P. 4 P i '
WI and nt3 Nartillitnth street
MARKING' WiliirWS - ki41W171i3.114 - 11
EmbtOiderlng, Dkniding, stamping. & c.
M A TORRMY. 1800 .83Thert street.
sae aigairsms. , BEYLON—GARTLAND,_
' • Lb 'l`ll • UNDERTAKER
BA
nth irteenth treat.h26-6mrni
TDIGE D r G A N ENGAQEMENT
V V 'Ringo of solid 18 karat flue GOld—a specialty; a full
aeaortment of sizes, awl no charge for engraving names,
etc. , IMRE &BROTHER, Dlaxeret
my24-rti ti 824 Unnestnutstreet, baloW Fourto.
1 7 1 UR INVALIDS,--A7PINE 'MUSICAL
Box as a companion for the sick chamber; the finest
assortment In the city, and a great variety of airs to se
lect from, imported direct B y FARR & 4.11101,ffER,,,
• •
nibl6tf ro 824 Chestnut street, belovr Jrnurfts,
~,---- ,
REPAIRS: TO W ATORES , AND
Musical Boxes, in the besl it ragn i naar n ittgliful
Als,
workmen, . Ait
24 Cheinn ir ut street below Youral.
~,,, : ::, ; ,,:..„- . .,.,!.:. . .:.::..., .. ..':.:.:y.:- ; ,:, : .!6--.;.:,,:-..,..:,:,:-.:',.
~,,g;F:?,',!.i'4,:,!',t..?p.m7.;..-y•*,z,.'--:rit;,.75_.,,:1.
. __.: ... _~ ~4;
•rtc.i.i2O4 - ,dar.inisrti,tge,rAt*ii
BLACK AND GREEN :
largo assortment of the firiefit rinalifY of
Oolong; Young 'Tyson; Imperial; Gun—,
roviiloTk - Japan and 'Chulan Teas.
; • t tboi finest 4nalit3 of • '
0/4 Government • Savaand.- Mocha
MON , COLTON., -'& CLARKE
fi.
eor.,Broad and Walnut
EMU=
ii5M9P.4....-.•.::46.: . .:;.::4,4Ti0#P!; 3 ;,:•':'':
in Small tliespi'
At Moaerate Prices
sp2
TEA.:.
POIOeOI
AlwaYs on hand at very law prlcea.: ,
`, •
CHOICE
OLD GOVERNMENT JAVA COFFEE
BY VIE BAG OR,POGND.
EiEEEE
GREEN AND BLACK `TEAS
TN SMALL'BOXES;
DAYTS,A f :AIQ,II..:AAPS;
TENTH STILFM
413 rot!'
~E FISL-~t~
GREAT. NOVELTIES
laooking Wittes es,
PICTURE FRAMES, U., Sc.
New Chromes,
New Engalrings.
EARLE& GALLERIES,
816 'CHESTNUT sykri,krr.
C. F. HASELTINE'S GALLERIES,
1125 Chestnut Street:
Owing to important.. alterations tho Galleries b
ralattngs will be closed until September.
For tbe frame reason wo - offer our liomeoso stook of
LOOKING '4I•ABIfES; BtiGßAViNqgy CEFROMOd
MOTO6nArlig, 4c.;at a raluctlon. •Au
,unusual oiportuolty for tho Public 4.obtuin bargains_
• ' myl.3-11i. •
_ • 0
Nos. 2 and 8 North Sixth Street,
PRINTERS = AND STATIONERS.
. - 77 BLANK BOOKS
GENERAL. STIFLE. STATIONERY.
PRINTING in every variety executed at this office a
the shortest notice
11U F-N-A-L ' S
PHILADELPHIA ETIARMAOYI
Corner Washington and Jackson Street,
EiPp May City, N. J.
.3/140 . ..14E11 . 7 DES' MOPES.
, 1014 WALNUT, STREET,
.11118. PROCTOR. "- •
Cloaks, Walking Suite Silks
pre , u iitul g esFt e rt e df B 3: l :l7lllll,:" .
, • • . And ,a.autes' Furs
Droste* rondo to inesiuro inTwenty.four Hours,
Fr?1;131B, WEAVER & CO. '
NEW CORDAGE FACTORY
• . ,NOW IN BULL OPERATION,
No. 22 N.WA'llen stroileand 2.2 14.11 EL AWARE aveao
•AUCTION SALE. k
FIERK_NESS'S' BAZAAR.
SPECIAL SALE OF AN ELEGPIT
i G ESTABLISHMENT.
On A DEBAT' MORNING next, at 10'Welock,atlio
Bazaar, will be , sold , a pair ,:of beautiful and stlish.
Horses, dark tpy and dark, iron ; . grey, coming six pirs
old; believed to' trot together near to 3 minutes. _,
A shifting-top Buggy; square box, polo and shag, by
Wallis & Blakisto,n In perfect order. .
An extensiongop'Phaeten'by Jacobs; superior (bible
and single. Harness splendid POnY• ffinifda
order ; Bells, Itobds, Covers, & tlie propey of
'a gentleman about breaking up his stable.
Mir May be keen by applying at theßazaar.
ALSO,
Immediately after the 'above the usual eataloie of
Horses, &c. • , •
4E7 Sale ofHorees,_,&c., M.
on Wednesday. ,
- aul9 2t - — ALFRED . BERKE ESSiAtietio
lIORSE COVERS,FL NETSJI/I'-
.....a. Dusters, at very low'rates, ENEAS WI3
omen; Store, 11. W 3farhat street, opposite the Ilia et.
Dig ilorso in the door • , )yl7-1Y
SAAO I%t&THAITES; AUCTIONEER, •
corner Third and Spruce streets, only one So re
below the Exchange 1J280,000,t0 loan, in large six
amounts, on diamonds, silver plata, watches, jewiT,
and all grds of value. Office hours from 8 A. D. 7
P. DI. • Estabilahed: far the, DAV forty yeart.
vanct39 made in large amounts ate the lowestalnatet
LIQUID RENNET.--- . - ~ , ,
. .! It. HOST.CONVENIENT • _ •
I t,__! y
ARTIOLX for making JUNE XT or (71311116
,a_nd .g,
in a low minutes at triOng e exponab. Made fro blab
ronnots, apd diways teltabl ..,2 'JAMES T. Sill N;
Broad and Spruce tact
, jeg,tf.rPti , -
4
PHILADELPHIA 6 'l7lO 4 OlV§
BANDA I ” o i?a r T c y t I:UT I EbI 4 E ,INFR
Trues positiv s e t i r y nut gr:s . BllAtllreS. Cheap - Pumes,
Aquatic Belts, Stockings, Supporters, Shoulds Brume,
Crutches, Suspeneoried,Pilel3audages. Ladtptined
to by Mrs. E. I-1y
IMMN
aulB--ltjy_
f 3 TAPII? : :;
I c
Mate> of the' , Loidon
•
' e
Liverpool Cotton Market 9;c ive
•
, FROM, SAN VRANCISO 0
• • '
The GqttyBbui.ig
. ass t4e'4ll:tgintte • •
LONDON, August 10, A
,:11 •--Tbe WeatherE is
and - favorable for th - af4rOwlifiersPs;"" ---
Consale,.o3 for.mnueYAild 9 4,for aacouut ;.
U. S. Five-twenties, 83} for hOtads'.of 18'2; 821
for old bonds`of 1865; and 81f.for bendsßf 1887,
U. Si Ten-fortieS; 74f. Erie Rallrbad,l9l. , nu,
-Alois Central, 04f , .., .! ' r
Livictipoo4 Atigtist 10, A.4."---Cottonaotive;
Middling..Vplandn, ,130.;
13Id. The sales Are estimated, at 15,000 bales. /
..C31470, Sugar, to arriVe, (Inlet and. stiady,'.
Calentta Lin Seed '678. 6d. •
Lomnoti, Aug.:19..--Tbe minimum rate of
disount.of the Bank of. England has been "re+
duced to 2f per ,cent. •
Lonnox, Aug. 19, Afternoork—c, ontailki; 93
for money and 031 for aecount. •Amerlaiti
securities qpiet.. Five-twenties, 831 for ,1862',5;,
21 for lt3sti's, old, and, 811 ler ~1887%. Ten- -
fortfeS, 741. Railways Erie. 791;' nli-%
LtvznrooL, Aug. 19, Aftenieon.---4. l otton.
active and exited; Uplands,' 1.3.1414131d.;'pr
1e.an5, 1:1Id.a13/d. The sales to-day will reach
20,900 bales. J'ork,, 1034: ed. lz -Ilacon; 60: M.
Tallow 41,s %LOG.. ‘, • -
Ifovux,E, Aug. 19.-LArrived, stcawship
Dap:pa, from New. York, for Olasgow, •
Sss , FnAls,cwo,"Angust 18th.—Vice Prod
-
dent Colfax:, Senator Stewart, Dr. Lindernum,
of Philadelphia, and > others, appdtsl to Sed
retatilleut4ellV the transfer of sev.4
eral Milliotis'frem the iSub•TreasurY here;
..the
amount tieing replaced in the Sub-l'reasury of
New Yorlr, asa relief for the present shin=
gency of the money market, but reeeiyed no.
It has since transpired that the Secretary of
the'rreatiury permitted firm to draw funds
from the , San - Francisco sulkreasury, ani
these.take advantage et' the public necessities.
The action of the Seeretary is denouneed by
the press and is creating die indignation of
the entire community.
The steamer Golden. City sailed for Panama
to-day withl.,Z3o,ooo in treasure ;of this VIA,-
000 is for France, $lO,OOO for Loudon and slo,= ,
000 for Panama.
, .
,
Whaling Intelllgence.—.l4,dvices from St
Lawrence Bay to July lit,h; of the whaling
fleet,•are unfavorable. The whaleship COrin-
Chian,which left St. Lawrencejast winter, has
been sunk, and is a'total loss. Vhe following
whaleis have been spoken: Ships IL Y. Taber,
Active,'California, George ,flowland, Hlber
Josepldne arid Ohio,With two whales
each. S hi p John Howlail, six whales; ships
Helen gar, Onward, mid Florida, one whale
each; )114 Trident, fOur whales; ship,Progrese,
rive whales; Ship Daniel Webster, one whale.
Fkmi nt quiet at 55 5 0 306. Niheat—choice
nominal' at $1 75. Legal tenders, 75.
Arrived---Ship Maria J. Smith, from Sidney.
Cleared=-Ships Neories, for Liverpool, with
31,000 sacks wheat; Glenerass, for Liverpool,
with 33,000 Sacks; Carnsmine, for Liverpool,
with 31',000 saiks, and Portiand,for Liverpool,
with 37,000 sacks. • • •
Sailed—Ships Lady Ann, for London, and
Haze, for Liverpool. "
Tb'e eletWibuiri; Re union. i.
Gerrysiivuo, Aug. '11).-•:-The bearding
houses and hotels of this rtetir watering place
are rapidly, Ming up ; in anticipation of the at
tendance of the generals of both armies at the
indication of the battielield, to commence
next wegjiht A. recent military arrival here re-
ports thal holm' tur interview with General
Lee, ;• and, expres§es the , opinion that
--attend,
and that he wholly approves of -the Meas
.
ure but that regarding the • indication
feregtitte conchadon, - it= is pe.rlittps due to
the men he commanded 171 this battle to be.
present at afwork Which will probably asstene
a histthic;charac ter, but above a iie - mbs( -- Tho ---
• desi.r,es to avoid thp misconstruction Which
would be placed upon his refusal to attend by
the enemies to pacification and re-union be
tween the' two sections. It is' proposed to
mark the termination of the labors of the dis
tinguished military visitors, by a grand bell,
in which the fashion and beauty of the princi
pal cities are expected,to participate.
(Special Deepatch to the Philada. Evening Itullettn.)
liEw YORK., August 19.—The first. bale of ;
new cotton, class Low , .11iddling; changed,
hands liere yestently, at 36i cents a . pound.
Fitzgerald, of
Starres township, was burned.to death a few
d4,S*4:*V4o"liigte ".Eillosion a coal oil lamp
. .
State' 9,ll,Thetwnonseter This Dar at the :
4 r, • ." Office.' vtt
ro gita....78 deg.- 'l2 es deg: t 2P. rd.... 86 deg.l
Weatherolotury. ••"iViun Southwest. ~ • •
F NA:NCIAL' A140'43011 ERVIAL
phiiiia lima oftecil ' ''-
e a Ezeh ' 'Fla
, ~.,. , ans . ° les,
'.-- P . , inioriisoAis,- . " t -
700 City 6s Old - -. Rill ssh Na's - i, Bk ' 4.
' R 2;.;
100 (X* Ss n ovil - 4 4, :. ilo SO lk i A - -..- 1
----
fi t ftt ...101 t+, tap. 32 3 g
6400 do 101 4' 10 0 Gintrd Bk '' . ' '
2000 Lehigh Val RCo 400 sh Ocean Oil '' ' 57
-
• 4
New--Bde re 95 1 '
8000 Elmira 7s_ -,, , f fff ,89 - , ` , 1 . 1 4 0 7 6' 3 1 2 , en a n n R if '. :' . 6 (4'4
3000 rellll it 2d mg 6e ;`.97,Y; 1009h ' ,, ',',d - o" ." ' lts: ' 5...
ZETWEEN 1301k11119.-; ''' . ' 5T h
1100,11 SA-20a G7:' cp o 12234 .500 nibv& Sunb rs II I
'2OOO, City Gs .new Ite 'la 1 , 4 1000 Jo eh, Val rt 0 u n' is . 4 '''
2000 Western Pa Bds ''''' f ; :., 0, dB ' t
new reg 0W
storri ;81, -5 Rh Ear& ?Aleph 814 120
500 CI '0 ' '
15 , Et 510 W 101 41 Penn R. ':' ' lie' r :
' 57 . '
7800 -do ~. do Ite 101,',0 L 20.eh LehVal. It ~ :
A sli; thinaAnt . ..- 12231100 5ti,'130.4.1 . 7 litk r . 3 6 211
1000 Lehigh Gla In ~ '9B i XOO eh ' : itp 4 /; l l3owii ' Rsl7
13 sh 2d 6: 3d St it lte ' 1 147 -- ' '' ''''''''
.._ _
: '
A -. lz Ji
From San FlameAtm).
Sales Of New Cotten.
Ilurueit fo - Death;
Markpt.
"'yeast/Kr , Aug.141.--Tne mein 'Money market toTtlaty
i ff .without; distinct fentnrti, .anti eurrericy continues in
good deinand.' at ;rates PreViciiisly 'Minted, 'The banks •
are loaning lieulY • Ott and • qn short. paper, • lint
Jong tithe loans are generally 4olded in view of Mi.
certain condition of . the marltei for the lopit'Sixty
The.,OlMY of,m9lleißt tin banks ,exhibits .HP' grV4
prOVClllellt front day to day, and they are prudently
conSerVati4e'in 'their disemititing' oPorhtliins. Though
the,present condition ; of 'Ole not,vefy,comfertk
btu, the largo surplus of curroney,in the :United Btates
Treasury and thq heavy ' payments duo early next
month,randeriug viTy tlistresstng Stiti in '111'911(1r
itvprol able NV:e coutlnue our quidn'tiOns lota a'
at' ,(la7, per . the :loit'oe, otk oi i h tck
rot". liritiM commercial, Paper itt :Al Uhl.;
duthut de steady at - ":11.3y; ' XT.; §* hnitar ited
strong: no quotations tt'ildon ere slightly hi !Wynne')
of plotting Prices. resterilal".` ,
The'steek market continues u fain "prices are
out - ninelt change lii Slate loanp there 'Were up paled,.;,
but dind,c:ea were sieltily. MO' Sties sold at 00 4 , 'or
old .441034 for the t o w etrtificates. ; •
_.,, TIl
, 11;irriiiiiiiiiIViWririetitOrWififellirtre 4 ' n
,q P tediiidtkil, Plitera4lvaniaillailroad eoldwfiiii4a6l4 l 4
I
',tli latter MI MiStolotimfli:i-lifinatillrillifilrcaufht 1104.'
Plin Lehigh'Valley Gailrotul at /470‘ heeding' uarttom , ,
I,lfied dull at 04. ee.l . -, , ' '''t ...‘, -; iti ti , .., ,1 .•, r(}'
',it (lanai Stocks ^were little noticed,; 17.1,i was hid for.
t .
Schurlkllll,NATigatipa preferred, and VS for,iLchigli ;
II '‘.l ti '• _ • ' '
.: •'" ' '
Sank. shares were Yeti:ter ' more actlvei,llol4o, o f Me-•
chit n ice 'at 32Ai and ail - Girard at 5r I COO wad PV , 4 oo g9r• '
Iteilways contittueviithottt t imlirovmnent ovvitalitYyl. (fl
the latter•4s watt l'id fenTSecOnd and Third slrettla l, 3 4fdf
::. Fifth and Sixth streets, and 12 for Ilestoavllle, -
The receipts of thcePhiledelphia and Erie Rai Iriad-for
the nionth of Ti37,Y,•119f9.•••, ( .-e-,••••••../.-,4•• , • , .e•••;k111 78 ‘,.. 3 12;
l r q July, 1868 • „.: ' •-• ' " " Poo 4
, • • •• , ~',,, ~ •i,. ) t, P . , I) 4 ' (. 1.44-......... 4. i....
~,i 0 tleroase... ..,,, J., ',. ..... 1„.. .:',...17.....- 40411 90
'For the sevetx . rilenths si'eliii . * JiilYiii li/6 9 4 1 1 1 115,17, / it
1" '• ' ' ' •!. , ••• • ill)" 1,1804..'. vt,44l,ciei.
4 ,ii g/ ' ' JO ;. `. I # . t .”.....4.....-....14 -1
1 ' Tuercase for 180L,A. i.....i•.' , i.. 4
..., -SSA ilkill9 7 .
Messrs. Deliaven ,Asi ,Brothel .. VA. 40 Math irriad
etreet,lnaktithefolloWingAtiotatLots of the rated fez
1/ -,
Ohang o 40•54Y•1it '4, PilL: vatted States Sixes of 99'1:
I,22 i'cai 2 3;• '.ilo, do. 4862., I=36ll2:SSAlia46 , 186 4 12 /1 4
Gl's; 40 dO. /Ea. /21!461.i'llii,do.do t tw, new.l2o Ap1a1245;
do. do. neW,"l/387,12114a3.20,4; do: ism, nets. 120•1 4120 ,6;
s's# 104irs, , '113lifillk U. bvta Year 6 , percent , . (kw/ '
A renc_y, 108,31110814 Moe' Compound interest 'Natoli 19 -i(:
, G01d,133i,,a1.1'01 . ; SilverAZSE4/90.„ ' ,'.• , •
1 SMltb, Ituudol ph & Co., banserei•Tillri aad Chestnut
streets, quote at 11 ,o'elsele as follows!' Gold. tall': U. S.
Sixes - , 0451...7122 1 4a12V do: d6:15-208.• 186202$4tfMi: "doi.-
d.lg4, 1213:11122; do. dt'..1861,121/ia 1211 1 , ; do. _do, Jul'',
41865, 1 w i ,a12 0 , 4 •; d o. d o .i July. 1867020,p1M1Aii dO. do-,, ,
tiVilfM,l2olAial2 , o%;a's,lo•lo4,ll.37gall 4 ; ' °arrears" 611,
108,Aitt108,4".. , , ' . A 4- , 1 •,-) / 4, ) •• „ i
Jay LooSe* bo. quota Government securities. ac., to
dily, ea followk 1.T., S. 64.1M1, IZltalZli 9'4 1 4 or 32112423
&MU V do: 186 i, 1213,1a121,f4 ; lio. November.•l/366. 4.21qa
121%; do. Jcillri ISO. ,1203ia.120, 1 4:;d0. 1)3674201t120.14; do.
ISee 120.'4a1203i;Ten-forties 4 .llo:4,4lll; l'avulca. 108 3‘a
+109: G0id,11134. .. . _ ~.. _
=IIKEIIMME
VhUedelplil Produce Market.
TIIUBSDAT, August 19.-rabere is less doing in tha
ced - fUlreeOf liotti`conie f ioNianV
odoisly and ~, with greatfi'!iedileed stock—mulch,
less tioriod' for
foal* . litiet.•••prieia'steadily meintafned ` 4 There
scarcely any aldtvtdng demand, but the trade purchase
to a f full extent. o About MOO .! barrels clumgod
bandit, Including .` Superfine% at 15' n
50 per ;bad
extrad'at ; Northwest Extra reutilly at
at 86 , 7508715 r:Pennsylvattiatdo.. do. at 46 tinas7 25 ;
Ohio do. do, at enueB, and fancy lots, at higher figures.
`• There is no Ro chtmyo and It sells in a small •
way.at e 6 37N. , Yrices of Ctiralßeal are nominal.
; There is less :activity la the Wheat markt:4 - sam or•••
,ders for shipment being vidtbdrwrn,and prince are barely.
nuslientte, - Sales of .2ai1,000 bushels Pennsylvania: aud
' Southern ' Red •• at la '151091 6404, ' arid'" 1,000-
-bushels fair Indiana White at 81 Q. Corn
'is scarce 2,00 D bushels Yellow.
at sllBxl 14 1,000 bushels White at 8118, and Western
mixed at 81 teal 17. theta' are dull and 'prices have dO
- Zr. per husbel. tittles of 3000 , new , Pennsylvania
andtrent ttt 55a60c., and' Western cannot' he ttuoted
over VorldshY is held firmly !alas of,Western maxi bound
;pkgs. at $l2O, and iron bound pkgs. at higher figures;
a mato of wo barrels nye enSecret tens
••• The Newirtirk Metter Market.
IF e rori the N. Y.',Derald of to-day.J , ' •
, .
WErrsz AV, Aug. b3.—Wall street
—that is so mueliof
it as is notaccustomed to exercise. any deep Cousidens
tion upon the complex features of the great financial
problem Which la bare every day presented' for solution '
an some new and hitherto, unthought of shape; or the
hidden Currents , flowing from unktuswn and to them •an
discoverable sources that feed this great lake of ,specula
tion. producing .varhal agitation as their volume
or number itterease or diminish; aud tlust
110 SOW' portion of ,it--was'surprised at' the • ex-
eel...tingly light. offeringe; of ,hoods made • the govern
ment to-day noels the 00008100 of the third of the Au- '
gust purchases by ASsistant-Treasurer Butterfield under
$. cretary Boutwell's order. Proposals were wanted for
the rode of 82M1i,00t1 of five-twenties, as on. the 11th and
4th inst. Upon these dates the offerings list been of
„25000 god six-woo while at a lister
ate, when proposals wore invited fertile sale of el,-
OW,OOOi the. offerings were 82,258,(11k1. To-day, lerwever,
the amount offered was short of the. uttmber advertised'
for,. ,hggregating 'only - 8 . 1,135.200, "and these Were
.meetly at tigurca 'shove the current market. under the
circumstances: (Actinism; the whole amount offezed
accepted, and the Assistant Treasurer subsequently an
his intention et advertising for the - baltinee of
8851430 fur purchase to-morrow:. The circumstanee of
eu hew offerings, of .obese intrueillittely suggested a corns
blnistlon on the Dart of leading dealer', wise did not are
par se sellers, with a VIPS' to intinencethe open market:
It is not asserted here that smelt hug not been the cane,
a coalition of that kind being by 110 means a thing likely
to be untliought of by -many operators dealing pretty
largely In government bond& tmt there - is y •
that the incident which , suggests It may• have occurred
without any concerted'artfon. 'lrhas been more than
once mentioncat here that the Offerings of bonds on, the
market were very light, and especially of late, since the
depreciation became so markisl, t hat the re
ceipts from .the country had fallen off to almost.
nothing.' Moreover, brokers having orders fur ',
large amounts , have; found : extretnelY
difficult. and in tome cases Impossible. to fill them at the
current figures of the market, the quotations of which
were mostly made Upon dealings in • Yeti. Entail lets, the
. large holders decling to, sell tinleas at very considerable
advance upon the morket,'"lt is antarent-from this that
the recent decline /II prices has been retightahouttuainlY
through the voraltnees nod timidity otthe small ex-deal,
ere unacqUainted 'with the strong tinder current that,
existed in lite market arid' frightened at the decline In
gold. , Under these cireurastamses, its - Jima° who under- ,
stood. all this. and the undiminiehed. .ambience which
hivestors., great and email alike, ba d. In a sPeedY uP
-. ward torn, it was really, less a mutterer aurprise that
the • offerings' to the Government were 00 .light to-dar
than would have hien the' offer of auk.' cousiderable
amoutati at the price, at which, they were then quoted
uu the street. ,It is possible that if there haul been any
anisplchm on the
,part of the large dealers that the
" prevalent to lei I would have fallen. so much short of the
amount to be purchased setue of them might have offered
' bonds at "figures above the market, on the. chance of
their, bids being accegrog. but, of course. no such know
ledge was attainable„tend each acting from their own
understandingof the 'real $11330t49 of these securities,
the • larger .dealers"..knowing this best, might
naturally enough,. and without any com
bination. have foreborne to submit any pro
pohals. It may be further remembered, in support of
this theory, that one of the most prcaninent dealers on
the street did not offer any bonds to the Government
upon the feet two occasions of these purchases, and that
on Tiranulay last the entire amount of 81,000,01 A was ob-,
tained from one house below the their market
figure which' offer bud net been repeated. , is
not -- impossible - to-day • that the offerings- Mar
greatly exceed the amount to be purcbesed upon the
speculative Idea above euggested, but it would not be
safe therefore, to assume , . that this was the result-of
another combination- The market for governments was
buoyant end active after noon, when the proposals were •
Averted. and prices advanced generally from Ito;per
i•Thefirstu-tutsofguldthismorning were made in the
street , at 132°,'J- and Mi. The ;opened -
the room at 113, when it again fell off to 1323.1 a few min
. :Mew-ate, elevorireactingsbethe
hum the adjournment of the board, to L33's% At the for,
mai cloelng or thereon' the price wile 133,4 . Subserviently.
801e8 were made at 15334. and umlaut 133 U—the price later
edvancing, and touching 1.13% at five o'clock. at which
:7 - figure - If - closed Thin - riceof -- the premiemhr.. the after
noon /Er attributed to heavy purchases - by - importers for
the payment 'of customs duties and the covering of - short
contracts. Cash goldlyas In demand, and the rate of
..-carrying ranged -trate- 2to 5 per cent:, with exceptional
transactions at 53i mid 7 per cent .. Tho disbursements
• (Amin interest to-day_amounted to 3115.792. The trans
fere cif gold between New York and San Francisco thus
far amounts to about 8800;020. '
'the operations of the, Gold Exchange Bank to day
Crises Clearings ' ' • 135221,600
Gold balances..-..... ........... --...-- ... 21.413,x92
Cuarency . . .. 3;218.754
The money market worked without new features, 'and
' borrowers on cell were easily supplied at six and SeVen per
cent. on government and stock collaterals respectively.
— At - New - Orleans - exchauge-ou-New-York- gnu, and
shipments of specie here are reported:. The demand fur
• currents* from the 'West is sufficient yet to meet tide
market, but banks there give notice of is probable
active dernand for funds at an early day. Clommercial
paper is dull, and•prinio :awes from 834 to 12 per cent.
The New York Stock Harker.
'Correspondence of theAssociated - Press.l
RIM Yorta, Aug. 19.—Stocks steady. Money , steady
at 6a7 per cent. G01d,1333b; 6-20 s, 1862; coupons, 122; do.
1861. d..,121.%; do. 1865,d0.,121%; do. 10‘14120%; 110., 1a69,
120%; d0.,1868, 12034;10-40s, 10%; Virginia 6's, MU; Mis
souri 13'e,86%,z. Canton Company,. SS; Cumberland pre
ferred,lls,4; Vow York Central,N9%; Erie,l2B; Reading,
9011; Midden River, 85,14 - ,Michigan Central 80; Michig,aw
Southern. 105%; Illinois, Central, ISO; Cleveland and
Pittsburgh, 105,!4; Chicago and Rock Island. 1159 a;
Pittsburgh ithd Yort3YnYlie, 51%; Nl'estern Union, Tele
graOb Co• 13831 i. : ,
('Spedial Despatch to the Piffle Evening Bulletin. )
NEw Yona,August 19.1236 P..ol.—Cotton—The market
this morning was quiet , and . firm: Sales - of, apaut • '5OO
Flour, ke.—lleeelp_ts-000 barrels. The market 'Tor
Western and State Flour is moderately i active with a
steadier feeling. The sales are about 9,000 barrels.
Grain pts of wheat 6d,000 bushels. The market
is firmer and in fair ' deinand. The sales aro ~ 000
bushels choice No. 2 Milwatakee at fai 60, and NM
o. I do.
at el 70. Corn.—Receipts-34,000 bushels. The nutikeo
Is liquor with a 'fair demand., Sales of- 35,000
newyWesterti at ggl 20a1 21 afloat: Onts.—Recelate--
10,000 bushels/ The market 'is firmer: Sales at 62
. .
57 rents. . • .
Frovisionrithlt—Ttie market is. nominal at $33 1236
for new Walden' Mess. , Lard- , --Tho market , is notitinol,
Ve quote fair to prime steam at 20a2036% •
• Whisky-.,ltticelpts 100 barrels. Tye market ,firtn.
nuote Western free at $1 17: ' .
Grigerien are dull. . - .
Pirrsaunott, August was but little done
in Oil yesterday. Crude, quiet but - Sinn at last week's
ollotatitnei.!. Relined oil dull and weak...
Crude-,Sales of,
4,005 barrels, s. o.,Auginit, at: 15 cents.Reilned--A sale
of 1.011! barrels; August, last half, at 32 cents: We 'quote.'
tiellteintier at at 323iii32% cents; hoptemlier t 6 Reeember
at 3231centsi'll. 04-111 the year tit-33"li. : .cents.
2620 barrels. ''Sb4nned.by A and V. It. Oil 'line,
2,010 barrel Refined," qo Petiutlylvfitiln: Railroad 103
barrels Relined:"
, (Correspondence eftho.Associated Pres.t
NEW 'Yoi x 1 Angtnitl9.—illetton firmer Middling Up ,
1ande,3414. .I.lcitir-:•State' ' and Western•dull, and 6aloc.
lothr; superfine %camel , . State; 55 aOar,SOVEnknortl , to.:
choice winto,wheat - Western ~$5; 50a7 05* Southernquiet
and oEo o Pillg..enralno , ,n.to clionm extra ~ittl,7sall 75: q
forma lower; sAles. tit e 4,7440 70. Whoa dull and nu
changed Spring, - $1.5.2at ,Teitnesace
nori,.'e/.10. • *Corn, yhry,• sci‘rce nod- higher. new
Western mixed; same atiiBodtsl , l9 , for Unsounti,sitti $1 20,
al 23 for sound. Orttolltre± it Idiotic...firmer; new Western,
,63a6.5c..8eaf quiet.' Vork dull ; HOW ',togs, 533 05; prime,
,s27'7sa2B6o:l;Tdird dullictierties2oo;Air 5 0 10 0 ):0I° " (1 "
.V.AlitiltY-ultipt . ; . free $1 !•;
artTllsitont.glott..l9.- , uotton very.ririn at.3la.. Flour ,
dull anti tionatul,liglittilowardtreet iittperilli6, , 50 251 t;
711 D: 25;:d0t../fantilt, 501di 'ISO; OILY,
Mtlls Suphrilne. sti 57.2110125; do,
eer7onio-74 Wttotertir'Superthid. $0 buns 75;
do Extra.;,. etinz44oo4 - - , Wherit ,
stesidyiot 5 ;51/05#1:115;;:cOrn. 44 to
Ytjlytv t ek 101 Oats/ ,5115 , 8 c.
tiym.ot ft 34 liabot), rib aidled oltl9t. 103,7e.•1e1ear de.'
.INlllll3‘e. . 'tillonblers,:lsl;irt,l63 3 , o'; ' Mains, outootvsl to
kicitreo ilt-$1
'-' - ,'......•P,: . 'JY:... , q.i..
MEE
/:itiePi_! o YlMlegmskipi.
1 ,
.;
1946-
gi A a
.V• g -IO •
215 'o'ol.oalt'''''
VORAPIE- t ;
ft,
- „.•• t„ ".4
SNIT G L.,T ( N - O, , iN TEI,CLId;
Rlaw,N4. ION AC C
'or STOLE* ',PROPEII,TY
The irewsoffinutigglertg.
• ; Depiinch to the Ppila EirelliElfr
WAsuirre'roN, AngustlJ A citizen of
-
*hob, has airlift - 34'16re, reports "that
smuggling 173 being carried on to, a great e..xtetie,
betwetn that Stale and Memo?, and that
rings i have ~been formed by:,, theSe,
engaged --- '-'' , fn -3 i° l *lo t‘4 6-1 41vs - " , to;
-. prevent, the ;.„Custom oilleers
from performing their duty by suppressing the
: illicit trade. cleneral ,Davis, who . ' had been
Called on by the authorities; ga,fce assurances
that the military would aid' the civil authorities
in ; punishing ;thos&detected 'in violating the
AlgesignationlLecepted. I;
• • • • • • ..Idll9lllBlll.llglßUlleti
.
Wtuni!NtoTiuly Aug.- 1 9.--Acting seeretart
Bicharlson• ,yesterday , accepted the , resigna
thin of Thaa. L. 'ridlock, - who has performed.,
inial-very.satisfactory manner the duties of,
APPointnient Clerk since the:4th of Marche.
His eucceinior will net be appointed nntil Oa .
return of Secretßy Bontwell; 'lt is announced •
antbority; however, that no. person Will be' ,
appointed who applies tor the position.
Recovery or Stolen Money.
RocntsrEn, Aug. 19,-ip is , reported here,
on good authority, tbat's.%,ooo of the Money,
'stolen from the- 'American and lifercbantie
tiniort Express Company, near Albany, a few:
days since, was'found on Monday last, Oe
ereted in a barn by the railroad near New
ark, ;Wayne county. One of the boys who,
made the discovery is named Kelly, 'and .re 7,
sides in this city.
The Coninterfelt Tens. ' ' •
(Special Despatch to the Philadelphia Evening' B alleti n.]
WASniNoTo.3 , r, 'Aug. 19.—The series of ten- 1
dollar, notes - so well counterfeited, h.
whie
TreasurerPinner has called in to" be can
eelled,'are Coming in rapidly kor redemption:
Quite. a,n-uniber Ofthe qounterfeit notes, wbieh
palmed successfully: through several banks,
*ere found among the genuine - notes yesterl
day and the day,previcius:, , , ,
Ball at Lout Branch:
Loral. BRANCH, Aug. 19. —Gov. Tioflinan;
Gen. Meade, and other celebritiee will be pre
sent at: the ball at, the 'Continent.al liotel on
Friday evening. Invitations have • been sent
to the l'resident, Generals Sherman, Sheridan,
and others. , .
FINANCIAL AFFAIRS IN NEW YORK
Money Market Quiet and Easy
GOLD HEAVY AND LOWER
GOVERNMENTS DULL AND HEAVY
Special Desaatch to the Philada. Evening Bulletin..
NEW 'Vona, Aug.. 19,1 P. .M.—The money
market is quiet and steady at fia7 per cent. on
call. The Bank of England to-day reduced its
late of discount to 2i per cent. The foreign
exchange market is dull, at 91a.9.1 -for
prime bankers' 60 days sterling bills,. and
.10-ialo4 for sight, but,bilis are offered at a re
duction of per cent. from these quotations.
The Gold market is heavy and lower, , owing
to the reduction of the rate of dis
count by the Bank of En land, the free
sales by bears on that point. eprice opened
at 133/ and declined to 133. 'X latest quota
tion is 1331. Loans are made at 31a6 per.
cent.
The Government sold $1,000,060. at 133. 15a
133. Bids were received for $4,100,009. '
Government: bonds were dull and heavy,
• and opentiors were waiting until the Gr:overn
inent propbsids and awards •for' bonds were
made; after the awards, prices were irregular,
and in some eases rower than at •the morning
The award of •SB. 63,000 in Fite-twenty bonds
was made at prices ranging froM,II9AO to
- 11k195." - Offers - made for - $2,177,3011 - Southern
Stale_seeurities ate stendY,' but Tennessees are
weak. The railway market is dull but steady.
New York Central, - 2091a2091;'• Rock Island,
1151a1157; Erie, 1.20041; Erie preferred, 521 a,
5,31.---TheAniscellaneous-amizexpress -stocks4.
are dull and neglected; -
_ShipmentloriSpecle.'_
(BPecial Despatch to the 'Pilllada. Eteninz Bulletin.]
N.e:w - Yon n.; August - ,19:2 -The specie ship
to-da;yhy the steameitnion,forßremen,
was 51.40 5 000.
, .
THE WILIECE- OF THE SAN JACINTO.
Arrival Or lier'Psuisengerx at Sivannah—
rartiertlars of -- thr,--illiaaster. --
,The Savanzial RePubliCan gtves the follow
ing. account of the ;; loss of the steamer San
Jacinto—before briefly reported by telegraph--
derived from statements by paasevgers,twenty
ui no of wbenn hAve arrived in that city,
STATEMENT OE.A . PABBE3iGhlt
We sailed 'from New ;York .on. Saturday
afternoon, the Tth,initant, at four o'clock. At
ten minutes to, twelve o'clock on. Monday
Morning last she strUck..un a sand bar oppo
site the old lighthouse' op,, Body ;Island. The
watch at. that tine was clutr4e of the
second officer. A strong, under current was
rtuming. The captain states Olathe was steer
ing the' same course h l win
em], dy done.
Inmiediately. upon discovering she was
aground five attempts were ineffectually made
to get her over the bar, slieburstingher steam
pipe in the last,. The fires Were ,at once ex
tinguished and daylight , was anxiously looked
for, ,the tide bringing her in shore all:the time.
When she struck a number of, crates of cabba
ges ami other deck freight were thrown over
board. Atdaylight we were within one-six
teenth of fl mile of shore, and found that
.a
heavy surf bad begun making and a, strong
northeast wind blowing. About ten o'clock a
rope was got'ashore, and tlie baggage was be?
lag taken off. , •
4 ,no.km„snimiriEn., .•
•In the: Otterntit oho, of the,. steartiship's
boots was smashed, to pieees,W the -.surf, and'
its • oceupatibi„ prepiphated';tho, ; water.,
~,They.,werel , hewever,:4ll picked up, but 1014•.:
narrew eSearie ,;6f theit, . After. alLthe
hoggag6 had been brought. ashore, 4nuniher
of gentlemen were lowered by ropes into the.
boat, they ,going first .o as to give the ladies .
courage to: folio*, end, ' Safely 1040, The.
boots theh took the,lai ich, whO,wore • equally
forthnate:. • The` balance 61-die,prew.followed„
and at - 4 . o'elock, thiiiiteinnshiPmas:l6ft, subject;
p? *lll4 : And ; 1 1N*Vc§,r440111tg JO, anchor'
oat, and , bard i hgrOutid., , „
Early the next morning', (Thesday);.o. two,.
o',(!look, , Captain Atkihs;andrXr.paivis walked,••
to the. steamship,the. kft,hi, and,
found, her high, and dry.l4,thp sand: : $ll.O , '
eight feet ih. the:l4o l 4: , ,Watei;,;. l
eice,eptibhe had Quo'
a h
the:shore shio,
font aer she
had foiir feet,• and had hugged oglitcoultielies: •
4(.16610. of, the sand Washlug.froih, ; tiOur 7 •
i nehtli her bow and stern., •••,:: .• • ;.:-. • •
,• .After' the pi . isSengers bad landed they. built ".
A.tent, , 6166100 ,ai•nuinher of olitho ditigS 11
and rpailo themselves 0nti1f04401,4 . 49 4kofria=
• ble.plikr the • unfortunate;, eirethiistanueS : Of
their sitiition,beildi lig and, fed j)emg.l,4o.wht:
lA,
TfOltengilhilfiilliti;34 - iiiiteliOri""ctit*lrt;
'their` wan' vintAthlii , r , ,'.. , 'll, -, 2 ,,- ",%.”•:, :, P4,IE,NC .- ;4.14
i 3 is P..f;,.st'-, , notTltn , TO,'l , 4 ZAld3r4ll;clTyk7-,7 , 1 - Titt.
~,..' Captain, Atkins Imd eucceeded in cha,rie n a m t - ,
,two sloiiPs, one of ten and the otheiXl, r.:i
teiu tilos in which to take the palmieng*td:
tliiitbetli. • CitY, ''distatit - ,'siity-five' inilee: 4 ' Ate'
',liahlpast one o'clock *O -4 'etirted fronvethe ,
'lsland; but there being tud'ilad ',calm; we ,iierei, ,
eokripelled to row„an&at six o'clock ,on Wed-.
'it4idey,morning we reached the: ,city, afteraDy i
:ditous work,just in time to take,,the steamer,.
,thiough," the. Dismal Swamp to ,Norfolk,'ar',-
ri i
at i
ng at the latter place - at' five O'clock in the
- ernoon.., We went to the hotels, our bag,
a e -geing, by tile' Seaboard- Mid ' Roanoke'
R head. ''We reached' SavOitnah 'yesterday',
`rii ruling, at -' five &block. i .11r., , -Nlckertion,,
'th' ,proprietor , of the Screven hottse, with
'ol4traoenstic generosity, offered the passen...
,gets rooms and - board atliiiibotelfreeof charge
as' t
on as they reinained,ii,c - the:.citY. . •
pen stopping at Augusta,' the propiietoi ot.
H wett's'Globe Hotel Idtully fiiiiushed us with
:a sup pet, and otherwise - displayed a, generous
,hospitality, for which nopayment' would be
. .. ..
taken
' ' r •• 1
f.:•" . 3 21gree - aNyjb --- ri.ii iffiaii - getrielit Made al:Ong:
the passengers of the vrrecked. steamer ban 1
Jacinto, ,on the way . to Savannah. a meeting,
. was - held` at the "Marshall House to 'express
their appreciation of the manner in which the
Rev: 31r. Mitchell, pastor of . Christ Church,
' city.. had performed ;the: arduous . ' and.,
'llianl4less duty assigned to hint by the utiai*
, mhus voice of his fellow-pa.sserigers at Body,
:Island in, making arrangements for the com-,
fettable transportation of the passengers
R. l B. l l)avis, J. 31. 31iteliell, ;T. D. 8uck:5;,31..
Williams, J. W. Gilder, H. S. Brackett, W.
Btovin, C.. P.. Bally, T. Marshal),
,•' , Sobwenn, J. W. Smith, Sngniund Lang, O. C.,
Fitzgerald; Daniel Murphy, A. E.. Porter, T.
..Er. Stevens, James Quin, P. J. Doody,'Nicho
. las Byer, A. E. Swain, Potter Strauss, Mrs. E.
Hudnall, Mrs. T. Daniels, 'Mts. W. T. Rice,
Mit. Swain, Mrs. 31eCarty. , 4
THE WRECKERS Al' worts:.
i'We learn that on Tuesday,: evening last, at
six ;o' Clock a steamer had arrived from Nor
'folk, with. the necessary apparatus for the n- 4 . 41 %.
'fano of the Can Jacinto; also, that when the:
passengers were leaving ab,ont two -himdred
wreckers' with teams, were ready to work on
the steamship. , '
CITY BULLETIN.
• li,ruit IN.r nEn.—About half-past. n.
eleve
~ o'clock this '
morning, James Carlin, eleven,
years of age, had his arm badly injured by,
_having it caught in the machinery at IVO:
lace's mill. Taken to his home in Smether's
'Court. . •
IMPORTATIO.NS. '
'Reported for the Phthulelphid Evening Itulletittr .:
WNDON—Bark .11altina •Helmer Spreugen÷2o •ckti ,
satiswaitle Hart & Co; 12 toile Parts white 40 kegs rose
pink 40 bags French talc 2 cks flake white 30 - kegadrop
black 11 Seeger Co; JO cm wise C Benkert; :17 do H
Kellogg; 345 pkge do Powers k. Weightinan;l3o76 bare.
iron 50 libls liaise 4 eke oil 70 pkgs rodeo order.
SA OCA—Schr Frances Satterlee-r446 hhils 95 tea l'bbl
augor S Morrie Wain ,17 Co.
'ARINE BULLETIN.
POUT OF FIIILADELPELLS. 7 -Atra;
/See Ararine Bulletin on Inside Page.:
ARRIVED THIS DAY. •
Strainer Brunette. Freeman. 24 hours fromeN. ew York, '
with mdse to John F Ohl. . • • '
Stetuner Mayflower, Fultz :7 24 hours from . ..NOW York,
with Incise to W P Clyde & to.
• Steamer Tacony, Nichols, 24 Miura from'New York,
with mdse to W3l Baird & Co. ' • -
Steamer Sarah Jones, 24 hours from New York, with
mdse to'W M Baird & Co. • ' • - •
Bork 31alyina Degner_(NO), Sprenger, 61 days front;
London, with melee to CF&GO Lenig.
Bark Mary Pratt, 'Kilburn, 5 days from Bosten,in
ballast to J E Bailey & Co. . . •
Brig Caroline E Adanis,s days from Bestim.
Behr DiH Read. •Berison, 4 days from New Bedford,.
with oil to Louden & Bro. . ' • " ,
• Behr Alice 11, J Alley, 4 days from Saco, with head-:
ings to I Hough & Morris.
_-
Behr Matilda Brooks, Oakes, from New York i in ,bal
hint° Lennoz.& Burgess.
Sclu. Helen Holgate, Golding, 3 days front; Pantego,
NC. with lumber to Norcross & Sheets. • -
Schr Florence 3hay. Hulse,7 days from. Boston,' with
• ice to K nickerbocker Ice Co. •- • • ,• -
Schr 3,Truman, Gibbs, 3 days from New Bedford, with
oil to Hastings & Co.
Schr Mary Adeline,Cain, 4 days from Reppahannock,
with lumber to Crump. _
&lir Wit Gann, Small, Barnstable, Mass. '
fichrj A Garrison, Smith, Boston. • . '
W Johnson, Has, Boston. . .
SchrJ Bartlett. Dickertion, Boston. , • '
• Sebr W Cloud, Freeman Boston: •
Sam It .1 Mercer, King, Boston.
Schr H B Gratuun, Smith, Boston - . . ' " '
Schr L Malloy, Russell, Boston. ' •
• . - Schr J3l Flanagan, Shaw, Boston. . • •-• • ~
Schr Caroline 1 oung, Young, Boston.
'Schr Northern Light, Ireton, Boston. •
Bchr 31 Smolt, Frisbee, New Bedford. •
Schr L Robinson. Robinson, New Bodford.
Schr 8 G Hotchkiss, Ilotchkiss, New York,. . •
Schr Rescue. Kelly, New York.
Schr L& 31 Knowles, Cleataan, Addison' f llte. •
•Schr Josephine, Whit emote, Dennis, 31e. •
Schr Poarl, Brown, Providence. • -
Schr S R Thomas, Arnold. Providence.
Seim W 11. Dennis, Lake, Fall River. ,
Tug Hudson,Nicholson, from Baltimore,with a tow of
barges to W I" Clyde & Co. •
,Tug Commodore, Wilson. from .I:tarred° Grace, with
tow of barges to W P.Clyde & Co. .
AT:QUARANTINE.
SChr Frances Satterlee (late Tucker. who dietlat Fort
Monroe),front Sagan la Grainie with - Sugar to`S.Morris
•
Wain & Co.
CLEARED THIS DAY. •
Steamer Chester, Jones. Now York. IV P Clyde & CO.
Bark Belvidere (Br); Harrison, Liverpool,' L Wester
gguuurd.Y Co.
-
r Lizzie Batchelder,Euglish,Saivannah, Scott. Walter
& Co. m
Schr Ema L Porter, Sparks, Boston. • do ..
Schr_Dirigo, Snow, Charlestown, _ __do _
Schr Subino. Currier,'Nowntarket, NH. do
_Schr_Cherith,Layman,Anuarailis.--.l'do
Schr J J Worthington, Terry, Salem, Jahn Rommel, r.
Schr Caroline Young. Young, Salem, , do
Schr, Hiawatha, Lee. Haverhill,'" • •-• do
Selur-lie ant' - Kelly Chelsea . - -Ldo—
Schr Sarah, Cobb . , Now_itedford,
Schr Sewall, .1 risheo. Providence, do • •
Schr S B Thomas, Arnold, do 'do
Seim Ira Bliss, Hudson, Dighton, . • do
Tug Thos - Jefterson , - Allen; Balffinore with - a'_tow. of
barges, NV P Clyde .& Co. ' • -1 • ;
Tug Chesapeake, Illerrlhow, Havre do Grace, with a tow
of barges, W P Clyde & CO.' , ' • •
• • MEMORANDA.
Steamer •Panita; Brooks. hence at New 'York Yes-
Steamer Hunter, Harding, 6116 at Providence 17th
Steamer Colorado (Br), IVilliams, cleared at Now• York
yesturdity for Liverpool... 2-
Steamer .1 ii_y_a_Lßrl,,_Ooolt,_for_Li_yerppita, cleor e d.
Newyork yesterday . • • .
Bark E A Sonder,Paryne,.cleared New York yester
day for St. John , NB; • - •
Seim J J Spenter,Stnith,sailed from Cardenas !Rh hist,
for this nert. • •' .--
Schrs Funny Ilannier, Brooks; Geo S Adams; Baker;
E A Hooper, Champion; and_ Goo , Squires,' Timmons,
hence at Providence 17th inst. .
Selma J 31. Taylor, Fowler;. Lockwood; A
II Leanilnir,r Brown; R • Knight.. Bartlett; , Lamartine,
Butler; .1 11 Wiiiiivirright,for this port,and Vapor, John-
Son, for Trenton, sailed from Providence'llth inst. '
Seim A At Lee, Taylor, sailed from' Newport 17th:inst.
for this „port.
Schr BMA Palmer' Arnold. hence di-Norwich 16th inst.
tichri3 West 4 Dennis, Lewis, and Revenue, hence, for
Boston, passed Hell Gate yesterday .
~•,. . . . •
47. LA ' • • -'
, . . • . •
,•Eaukth . and , Akoh.' - e,
~..
FtfItRIERSiiHLKS—WIIOLESALE PRICES.
. . STEEL GBEY SILKS.
• CHANGEABLE SILKS.
1 LOW 'BLACK SILKS, - • ,
BLACK LIITESTRINGS. '
DIARCELINES;ALL SHADES.
.WHITE SILKS, LOW._ ~ - . • .
SILKS BY THE PIECE: - ' ' •
'LOW,BROWN SILKS:
; - ; 101 V . 1 1 Y1 1 / . ,NE §4 4 ILAN.
: BYRN. „
04 LANDELL,
in
• ''
;•*;
___-•;' ,
II - ,
' stf ' • ' " 'FOURT - AND - ARCS STREETS.'
w' ; -," __ r , "4 • . : :•• ;• , , ; . _
NEW $1 25',MUSIC ALBUMS. $1 25
. z, • -4 PEW LEFT.
Reduced to One Dollar and Twenty-five Cents.
Idafi J: E. Gould's Plano Room,
No. OP
Gent ain ink , FIFINY PIECES ISIUS lb, Vocal and Instru
mentnl Wort i tt al4boind In Morocco and handsomely_
gilded. Dimling alone worth 4010. Reduced to One Dollar
anti Twenty -Jive Crtits,Atl. , E.' GOULD'Ss 0111DE4T
liIJT Street,Thiladelphhs •• • • •
TN THE ORPHANS' COURT FOR THE .
_L
City fincl__Oduntv. .Philailelphia.—Estate ;of REV.
JOHN .N..HANNHAN, deceused.—Tho Auditor ap-,
Phinted by the kloart to audit ,eettlo and adjust the' ao- ,
eount, , ot 11.13HAILlf.E.X.2Adininistrator tho Ed at,
REV. JOHN N.LiANNEOAN , deceased, and to report
distribution of the balance in ttte hinds of the account-'
anti 111 wet- the 't.Athei•intereirtod, for the purpose Of
hid a p WEDNlfitiDAY,lt.ht,lBoi at II
o'clock A. "A' No. Bout. Sixth street, in
the eity 'of demur: 13.111 ANN,
IttulDjk " , Auditor.
MIME
onfirm
SOAY,
4 6 9,
&MTH EDIT.I O'NT
T' • . •••
.„ 2
:3 a;:,
•-••.‘. • •
•
LATER'. ALENCB ., =• . : •
. . ; , • • r
The ',Xr4ertiational-
Lendoi Thnee Commente,im the'laprraribi
They' s how Sigas : : off tatd' W di*
LATER FROM
,',,ivA.sia6j.iiox'
Itg , PEXPirS m
.AAITA:L INTELLIGENCE'
By the Annette cable.
laciNDaw; August 19.—The TiOtes, of to-day,
ht liii*Otorfalon the forthcoming interim
iace, and says the Itarvardds she*
work, IS their time . fliadti s l .
'Wei; not So good as formed
,nsfn seemed mid; more fats th an on other,
r despatch from Aembay, dated 'August 17,
s4nthe nunor of an attempt to assassinate
Shere Ali b; false. It is reported that the city
• of Herat had been captured.
PARIS; August 19.-The specie in the Bank
of France has increased 11;300;000 francs since
last week: ' ' . 1 •
• HAVBE, Aug."ll)-:-Cotton opens active on
ttie Hpot at . lo3"ribmcs for both on the spot and
" '
From WastalmMnti
WASHINGTON, Aug. 19.--cfficial, proclamar ,
tion has been made of a convOntiOn bet Ween
the United States and . Franco;secnripg in
their respective ct," gdaratiO of pro:
perOf trade:Maki to' take effect on'Oetober
3d, and& eantibue foxee'for tett years:. ;
The Custom-House receipts _ from4nguit: 7 .
to August 14 were as 011ows •
, . .
New York : • . • $3,M,000
Philadelphia • ' ' "4.• 133,563
Baltimore... • ' 214,967
Admiral' Hoff left the NorthAtlantie squad:.
ron in charge of Commander W . IV. Queen,
pie 84311101 1 officer on the' station, who was at
Key West in Collin:land Of the Tuscarora.
:Cadet Engineer names steel, of the Albany,
died at see on the 1411'inat. of fever, and was
buried in the ocean on the folloWingday.
The .Franklin, flag-ship of Rear Admiral
Radford, of the European Squadron; arrived.
at Naples July from Genoa.
The : Plymouth arrived the same day from
Leghorn. . • •
The Revenue office receives many coin- .
plaints fiom different mrts of the country,
paiticularly 'away from the large cities, of
bogus - Deputy Marshals and Revenue De
tectives, who are engaged ,in levying black
mail. The public should knoir that all parties
making demands by authority of the Revenue •
kiwi are provided with a written authority
for so doing. prompt measures have - been
taken by the Commission to have such
im
postors dealt with according, to the strictest
rigor of the law. -
The Treasury Department is daily in receipt
of letters from all parts of the country.contain
ing enclosures of U. S. greenbacks of various•
denoriiinatiOns with inquiries as to their gene . -
ineness.
,
Union' Pacific Railroad Meeting.
• BOSTON, August 19.--The quarterly meeting
Of the Union Pacific Railroad was held here
to-day.-' There were present, as Goirernment
Directors, ex-Vice President Ben Wade, Hen.
Hit am P rice and Hon. James M. Nelson, the
latter both of 10wa..• Mr..,Nelson tills the va
cancy made : by the, removal of the Hon. James
Brooks„of New'Yotk. Mr. Brooks hdd bee
just elected to lill a vacancy created especially
to'cOntinue Idm in the Board.
Albany-Orimlnal Matters.
.
va
ALIANY,Ag.I9.—COrge . 1111VOILq, ft
clerk in the employ of Craft & Wilson,.
clothiers;,has been arrested on, the charge of
robbing them of goods valued at $l,OOO, Ruch
of the property_ was recovered. ' ,
David 'Kingman, who last April falsely
swore that he .was worth $4,600, in
_order that, _
he might be accepted as a bondsman, was
--trdeed to -Warren county,--and—brought-hera--
lest•night to.answer the charge.
Weather Report.
m _W
.
Alibt,l9-9 A. M. Wind. _ Weather .
Portlaral,'He - S. Overcast. 64
Boßton.3lam. S. W.clear 4a
New :York W. Hazy. 70
Wilmington, De S. Y, 3itet3 -
Waabington, D C Cloudy,. SO
Fortress Monroe S. W. Clear. - Su .
Richmond S. W. " Clear. • 76
. blear. • •
S. W. Clear.
... S. W. Clear.
S. Clear. ,
S. Clear.
L.
Clear,
ohaileSton, 8,C.......
Savannah, Oa
Pittsburgh.' •
Chicago....
Louisville.
Mobile
New Orleans
Rey West
_Havana.
• ,
kA4 •
4?
Ce", BAP', ,K ER
R
........._
No:15 SOUTH THIRD STREET,
PHI . LADLPHIA..
l ' ''El\l E - RAL- „I t -VENTS,.
FO R
, , •
m PEN N SYLVAN IA ,-k i
t
A
4 .11 Zal NVI StlV
0/ (...) OF THE . ( 5\ ... 9 1 :
IFE •
jerAll ° OT:THE, d •
UNITED , STATES OF AMERICA.
• The NATIONAL' Ll= INSURANCE COMPANY Is 0
'corporatton_chartered .by special Act of Congress, 410.
proved July 25, 1868,wltki a
CASH. CAPITAL, $1,000,0Q0 FULL PAID.
, .. ...,, , '
Liberal terms Offered to Agents and Solicitors, who
are invited to imply at our office.
Full particulars to be had on application at our office.
located in the second story of our Banking House,
where Circulars and Pamphlets, billy describing the
'sdiciusMges offered by the Company, may be had.
Z. W CLARK . a co.,
,
No. 85 South Thir d 44
TOgiarSITELEERMTYPVIENTWT 0
V Ale for invalids, family use, /to. •
sulnicriher is now furnished with. his full-Winter
supply of hia highly nutritious and well-known hover
tir.- Its wide spread and increasing .use, .by order of
ysicians, for ',wands, use of families, dm.,commeud it
the-attention of all consumers who 'want a strictly'
Pw.llridn a
t n h k m le o s p c p r a erfeudl
fmroam nehe.f .o r homanri ds and put
tramper.
tatlon - Orders by mail orotherwisoprol t %
t urned,
• , Pear street,'
below Thirdand' Wittnut streets.'
CANTQr
N, PI , Et3RVED
I Yreserveu Gincor,in'syrup of the .aelebrated, Ohy.
Leong brand; also, Dry Preserved . Ginger, In boxes, int
ported and for sale by '39S. BUK4IER A C0..08
South Delaware avenue: . • • • . •
_.. . K , Q
.':,.. ... , .'::• - ..-44011
•••••••.':..; ~';.",..,.:-.,7.-1-..$
BY TEL:p;GRAPH.,
Cable Quotations
, :lAdditional
~.
,i , r Bi the Atlantic Cable. ;
a troa
N
t NDO, :August . l9th, Everting.,--( 0nia15, • ,,, - ,
!I'o oSed at 93,f0r honey , and ;.1 ) 31:-for , • account. '.,,':
t;nveotwenties of 1862, 831; do 1865, old, 82$ ; 37,
1 .0.1867, 8111.`, • .Ten-fosties, 741., Firie,l93; Ills •`
:4 32 ai 5 :c e itr0.p.m.t.,1. , .!•.ii.•••!. ~ 4'. . A-. . . , ,::-.
'" X.,rv - Eir.rnosi;' , Augiiik 4 19; j:Edening,;-.Cetton .; 4 1 0 ,e,
"closed' ketilia'at 131d. k .inritrinandS, and 14d.' fob; -,1 % - ,
°T lo 4 l iff• . ' ales ' ' t4 4 /4.. -Mloo'''qalo. including?'
wilik e r lo'eriand'speciibtff!ti.' ''. ' '' " • 445,:.
:Larininfi4tek.'.:l9',' Even -8 u closed ay.
.gnint;ste,ao,.:,tuid.',unehange,dx4t.iteed.o,ll,t •
I , / ,. . .t . ,4
.. £3l:lsx . ,l3pftdikof -Turpentine', 261.1au&sr9d,-
-CURTAIN >MATERRIALS
1869. A.UTUMN2,
TJ-PHGLMItY-
L:4O.E .•CURT:AIN'S',..'":;-:':..'
For Interioi Decorations.
•
EktraOrdinary efforts hays peen , made to
- Owe! In taste, quality and variety of Fabrics
forthis Autumn's trade, selected' . personally
by our resident agent abroad from the it,
celebrated manufactories of Europe. II
Mos , 9:uitc, Caxicopiesl,
Lace mull Gan.ze, Reduced.
,NV I N.D OliSr SH A D'E
In Perfect Tints..
.
1..
. .
.. . .. .
LE. - WALRAVE,I4,.:-.4:),.. , ... , .
:~~~
....„....i....:.
~.4.....,.-..:7.
2.IIASI . INIC HALL,
719, , tit E4TAZET,
11NANCIAL.'
A SEVEN PER CENT.` GOLD LOAN4',
6,500
. .
• ..
The Kansas Pacific Railway, now In seccessfol opera. • • 4• ,
tion from Kansas City to Sheridan, proposed to build en ,
extension to Denver, Colorado. - The Government has
i r gett ed s n r u h d i t e dl i gt i r, l ZA ' rell t cart?: oT efinest funds in
mortgagedfor the se
curity of a loan of •
$4:l/5009000.
This loan is seemed In the most effectual manner. lfit
represents a road in profitable operation, and will* open 'skr- •
the trade of the Rocky Mountain court ry and connect it
with the great Markets of the East: ft is considered to -
be one of the hest loans in the market. •
. .
Eten better in some. reaped/3 than Gover
n • -
meat , SettalUes
Thi loan has thirty year it to run,principal an • interest
payable In gold, sembnlinnallY, seven per cent. - •
The conpons willbe payable semi-annually in either
Frankfort. Landon, or Now York, and will be free from
Government , tagatinn. .The bonds for the .prosent are
sold in currency at 96, with accrued interest
Circulars;umps and pamphlet/1 senton application. •
DABNE'ir, MORGAN 4 i Q O ,-? r
33. Exchange linee*N.lr.;:
'l4 K JP81.31)±.&
12 rine street, Iv Y.
We are authorized to sell the lianas in: Philadelphia,
and offer them as a reliable investment to our.
TOWNSEND , WDETAEN ilto
No. 309:Wa out Street Philadel his.
.1y if Ail
St. Nandalia and. Terre, Hatits..k - :' , '
Virdt - libitgAge - Oevei(g
We would call the attention of investors to the above
Bonds., The Mortgage is at the rate of 4.12,000 per mile,.
with a sinking fund proviso of $20,000 per annum. Vier
Bonds are also endOrsed by the following companies • .
• Terre Haute and Indianapolis Railroad, •
,
A Coinpanyhaving tie debt and a large surplus fund
the treasury: • . '
Columbus, Chicago andindiona Contralßailroaxt,,
Pittsburgh, Cincimulti and St. Louis Railway Cod , '
The huit two endorsements being guaranteed by the
Pemisylonnia Railroad Company. pi 4 b o o .
We are sellinythe above ponds at a price that will
a good rate of t r aterest. \ •
• ^
DIOXEL CO.,
whit) ti
NQ. 34 South Third Street. •
fan ' I
PENNSYLVANIM-AND.'NEW .YORK ,,
_CANAL AND ,RAILR . RAILROAD CO..
SEVEN PER dtirsii.. tioNDs
guarantaed by the , LEHIG/t VAI ! 4T' RAILIT:00‘;
• 0011PANT.': -• , -• • • •
A limited amount' of these' Bolide le offered at
NINETY-ONE,: .
The Canal of this Company la 'lO5- miles lone. Their::
Railroad, of the nine length, is'-feat approaching cora ,
pletion, and, being principally owned by, the'Lehigh
Valley Railroad Compauy,will open itt connection there
with an immeueo and
,profitable trade Northward ) from"
the ; oal Regions to Weitern and Southern New York'
and the great Lakes. ' Apply at the •• - • •
Lehigh Valley Railroad Co.'s 0111004,,
No. 303 Walnut . Street,'Philada.
' CHART:ES O. lONGSTRETH. •
• Troastrer LehighNalleY Railroad Company:
-FENNEMORE;
Artists and rhotagraphnrs,
HAVE OPENED THEIR NEW , GALLERIES.'.
No.
Call and see them. Pictures •In'overi st7.le% and GAGA
faction guaranteed. , . , . s ,
N. the Negatives tf IkEEEER
*GEE, late of No , 6S. EIGHTH Street, :been re
meted to the New Cathodes. t
.jel2ow tf
SUDD
ZELL'S POPULAR
EweloUr , ol 3 'l3oXA.
A Diet'°nary of Universal Knowledge.
T. EOL*6OO
17 and 19 SolituSixthStreet , = , ' •
LA -11 I:Le,-20 11.131.0. fBvEBTPArg.-:,,
Lard.on,l. to atrivif oil for sale L'oollttlig
RUSSELL & CO.,lll(Votitutetre•t
==ZA
7 . P '1
\
t
. ~ `. i 4