Daily evening bulletin. (Philadelphia, Pa.) 1856-1870, August 20, 1869, Image 3

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o.42stgeld'reedal) at the Inte l
rnet °nal Exhi , 100;
• AW. bee ORlcial Repoo, at the 'Wareroom Of ,
."; 'BLASIUS BROS.,
' ' 1 , 14 v. 1006 Chestnut street.
MITG
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.‘,"` '''' -2 07" ersons leaving . the , city ' for the sum
., 4. si*r, apd:iiislaing 6 have the ,EvEstrie Buz:7
~ O LIKTER sent4o,them, will , please' send their:Ad.-
.A , 7)ltem to the office. :Price by Tail, 75 cents per
t!' Inkoritb. ,
MODERN ENGLISH EIMEIGN IPOLIEI4
' • The,iiehes of the English - neoi)le constitute,
4 :40 course,"An element the•power 1,:of the 'Eng-
Is — it government.. But these Tidies': liare,
recent times, become an important - atent in
iite*Sertatio - li of peace among; other povieri:
British capital, overflowing the limits of the
United 'Kingdom and' the capacities forinvesf,
irnent in home`enterprises, has been engagedin
~,.erorks in all parts of the world; ; and loaned to
overnmenisAnd_CMCoo4ollEUX!-AYMOSLCVeI
country.ch investments de
pends on the prosierity of each and all of these
4, untkiesornetbeiii*nds: ll P oll-
o r!,9f peace fkutoPE, ,a/ 1
Bence,- wleetret:eir' there is , an 'international
difficulty abroriAl,the effect is:felt ‘in “the cap;
' el ir dnbiO'Street , brinih
t to
bear npon ' DoWningstive4and all the
fence of England is empl oyedto lootl
over
'ditilenity or to isecenclle the disputants.";, t
Iniheseventeenth 'and ' eighteenth centriiies
was a diftbrent state, of affairs. Then
the policy of'England was a predatory policy,
*bleb either undertook works ,of conquest. to
erinch the nation, its chartered companies and
its citizens, or Promoted quarrels among petty
.4t):r. Semi-barbarous State.s, hi r theinidst of which
England or the English could step in and carry
' a large portion of the . spoils. In those
es, the'colonies, of Great Britain <Trere
earzled,tirst ,as fields of spectdation for the
rich'Subjeas at home, and,then as Sources of
reVenne for the home government, just as
Cuba is now regarded by Spain. The success
ful resistance of the people of this country
such taxation produced a change in English
policy, and the colonies of the subsequent
period have been literally.treated. The home
government, in fact,: derives no revenue from
Canada, Australia or. the other pr?linces•
'Their value to.Evkfland Consists chiefly in their
being` fields for,British enterprise and, for, , ibe
~, ,, iraploynaent of British capital, under the,"pro
,
..,,, t a-.l.tection of the British flag.
• ' force
ofNov that conquest and spoliation by
arrni have ceased to be`features of English
*cllicy, there is no foreign policy of a distine
• • *Ave character except that of conservatism and
peace, based on motives of etonomy. The
war against Russia in 1§54-5, Was the last one
4 into which the'other. European Powers could
kveigle Englarid, and she will probably never
. angage-in another war except for the preserve
4tion of her own territoly or for the punishment
' ofa,noutrage onher flag or ber subjects. She
ietired from the joint' expedition of France
antl , Spain against 'Mexico, before a kun'wes
fired: She refused to assist Denmark when
i.russfa, madellver upon her. She kept aloof
`the Italian war of 109, and of
ale l'AnstrO-PruSsian war of 1860.
40
' Teb.Ple' and statesmen.` liave 01031n
.'
nervous Arend of A a rupture , with
the Knifed , States, which cannot, be re
garded as owing to want of courage, and must,
he regarded as owing to a;dread of the cost,
and fear of the loss of some of , the numerous
investments of •Englisy,, : moneY'-in ';..kmerican
prove7ment,org9rpoi:ation , slßcks, pr in Amer-
ican mercantile,; undertakings; to ! say nothing'
..the , nataral dread_of the destniction Of•Eng
fish commerce, 'which tuldoubtecUy fol-
. _
low if a war should arise out of 'England's re-
Elk - 11 - go:Settle the Alabama' , chirp fa
Eliat'there" 'a: diffidnlty between the 'Siilkiii
and the_Viceroy of Ezypt, Englantlis said. to be
exerting allher,intluenc.e.. to effect ayeeoneWa-
Lion, anda pteservatton Of Egypeas'a dependen-
ey of Turkey, because a goat amount of En.g
-.---Ifshmioney-haa-been-invested-in.--Tinkish-rail--
Jamis i nnd this would be in danger' if •Turkey
)was to be despoiled of any part of her posses
atlons
t The preservation of the American • n.' and
the amazing power developed in our war of the
•
rebellion have unquestionably had much to do
in confaming the modem disposition of Eng
land to be a peace-maker rather than a war
maker among the nations. The only 'military
enterprise she has' engaged in recently isras the
Abyssinian expedition, and while many Eng
&amen boast of it as showing that British
iprowess is unimpaired, still. more of them are
l inumbling angrily at the cost of the expedi
•lon, and trying to cypher out arithmetically
the yomount of glory gained as compared with
the amount of money sPent. Twenty
'*rling, or one inindred millions of, dollars in
)N: as the price paid for the punishment of
*negro ghleftain and the liberation of a few
English - adventurers who had put them
.
selves._ average co* .I .l *.
liberated. Englishman_
turns out; to enor
' inously large, and the average glory per tax
'paying E iglisliman.= infinitesimally small.
When,nnother.party of roving subjects, ; , of the
13ritisii 7 drONVII PnetherciSelies in•the war of an
0 5 #4.V.VAltvagfit Ole that; un a
_ dertPia.
to relieve amp by a military expedition will
have theAliyssinian warihrust before them as
a warning.
ThiS2eepnokalei pounds, shillings , and pence
policy of England is ntionestionahly a humane
policy and a Piolie, :of But it
is <,'also can never figure in
song or , storylike the ancienV,warlike.poliey.
The military, Siren gth ~
of oreat Britain has
been ontgrown,bythat of yfFIOUS (4 /NV ARtiollso
and even if she were to i enpige iu s varivm)
any of them; there isno' proliabilit3r that, tfiere n
y
would be an repetition of the glorieS'or,cre.o 4 ,
Agincourt, Blenheim; 'or Waterloo, or those Of
the various naval battles ,that inspired the
boastful refrain 4, Britannia, rule the Waves:.
Such glories will become traditional. moo
of English military arid `ii:l,4ai heroes is -fast
dig enit; and it' is already surpa:44 by:the
race of English millionaires. If Engfand. is
not a nation of 6hopkeepers, it is a nation of
I ''' , 1 money-lenders, and these are more profitable
' than military 'heroes, if they are not so romantic
`
..,,,,
-T
or, glorious, ~hey restrain their government
, - f rom costly: wars, and they direct
the influence
04 2 4- iovernment in favor oP peace among ''' iotlier nations.
St 20; 1: :9
2.11 A,
It is charged - by certain partieSin Washing
ton, .04 4 44/4itte, d ,,:t4ysorrp, ' oPit:le"titheris
pate'ri; that'ohief , Clidse'ili s liard , 4
'work in the South ranging plato.for:,,the. , eap. 7
ture of the DM - Midis lil'ieSideittittl. Convention
'of 4 8 7 2 1 IlY,i9king,,ldmself theleader ; anti t FiF
thetniaSter of the new party iit'Av
forming in the South. ,The Richmond, Dis
patch says that the Chief •"-Jitstice gave Walker
the benefit of advice, and - Contributed
largelY to ilie..sucCess of "the 'so-called Corter
vative•Republican ticket in. yirginia ; and.,the
sanie'papethirds that lie Would be' an accept
ale Presidential Candidate to the men-rebels
and all—who supported - the Walker faction.
tf,:tdl ds: said upon the subject is true, it
seerith quite qikelj, that Mr. Chase has identified
himself with the:party which:is represented by
Walker hi Virginia Senter in Tennessee. and
Dent, in.:Mississippi ; and-we are Anore.thspased
to helieve thathe has thus gone over bodily to
ghat is nothing •-more nor less than a rebel
Democratic organization, because lir. Chase,
last, year, shoWed ,that he was ready to forget
hia honorable the past as a Unionlit
11( V,e llll. ffial - 1-
inimiliating intrigue to obtain the Demo:ale
norainatibn.' When: the Presidential fever
• • • •
attieki[a inan with sufficient violence to
'impel him to make such
m sacrifices as Mr. Chase
•
Las ade there very little hope of the victim
heCoining convalescent; and so nobody be
surprised to learn that the Chief Justice has
determined to devOte the four years of Grant's
administration to eager, ceaseless effort to "gain.
thoprize,' 13ut he is much too anxious to suc
cepd. The . office has rarely been given:to men
whp strove earnestly to reach it, as Mr. Chase's
familiarity with the political history of Webster;
Clay, Dmigla.s and others should have. taught
him., 'His anxiety is displayed so plainly that
it - ,has become pitiful. The Democrac,y will
take advantage of it to use him, and then fling
him aside; as they did bait year. it is perfectly
plain toeveryliay.• that he has no chance
whatever of rcizrin,g the nomination, and no
hope, of being elOcted even if he viere nomi
.
nate4for the Republican party is strong enough
to defeat finny man; no matter who he 'may be,
Atli° can stand upon a Democratic 'platforin.
It is. Arr. Chase's destiny to he munbered among
the politicians - who have . cast away everything
for a delusive-14e, : and sacrificed their reiu
tation and lappiness to reach , a prize which,
however ;, -, i(ent, is dearly bought at the expense
of honor. •
DENT.
.„
NCI :wonder. that the wrath of : Judge Dent
was kindled, and that his indignation ,found
expres'ilon in a' rude; intemperate' letter to,See:-
Staryßoutwell. • The refusal ;o1 „the President
t :countenance the Dent rebel-Democratic
party 'in MisSissippi, and the open , etieburage
ment given to 7the4adical RePublianis r by
Boutwell, - , have .shattered the hopes of Dent,
and demoralized his .forces completely: lt is
now announced that the Conservative move
ment" in
~ Mississippi has been abandoned; and
bat Dent has been abandoned with it, The
rebels'amiDeiitiaqatS who - were so eager to climb
topower, disgiiised as' conservative Republi
cans, have .gone hack : to their old party organi
zation; and will'probably atteMpt to fight their
radical enemieswithout the assistance of any
other ridiculous , subterfuge, . These men seized
upon Dent, notiheeause. he . is - a great Man or
an able • lezuler--ltis foolish letter to Secretary
foutwell proves his :lack of wisdom and
discretiOn—hut simply because lie, is, related to
the President; and they:hoped, through. his in
strumentality, to seduce :: General Grant into
supportini::,thein with the, pow,er of. the
administration. If. : thei , had succeeded in
the eitect have: • been disastrous;
thepure Rep4lidnns and Uninu , tueiilit the
-tate_i - oulalidve_Vedif_clislielirtened__anill de
nioraliied; and all the ',doubtful men in their
"milks wenn have gone:, With the Government
party. A rebel ticket would have been elected.
as in Virginia and Tennessee, and if Congress
had admittcd --the - - State, this -faction •would
then have thrown off its Re.publicandisg,ttise,
sent : . Democrats t o the Unite J States tienate,
'and bound the Statehand and foot in'the
of the - Democratic -- party -- But this-beautiful
and ingenious ;scheme has been ruined-by the
determination of the President to do his duty
to the conntry - and his'party, no matter who of
his relations suffers. And so Dent, having
tasted notoriety, having caught a glimpse of the
glories of office,'and -having spurted hikrage
at *great man'and so secured a certain kind
of fariae,fallshack-into the ranks a disappointed
politielawith only this to save him from utter
oblivion-Fthat be is brother-in-law of the Presi
dent; of the United States. •
Captain Shaw, Chief of the London Fire
Departnient is, in thiS country, and yesterday
inspected; the workings of the Paid Fire De
partment ,of New York. Having formerly
witnessed the beauties of the volunteer system
in NewlY:oriF t , taptain.,Shan expressed himself
in warm approbation of the great reform
achievedf by, the change. This gentleman is
coining to Philadelphia, and -our firemen are
prepaiingAo (give:him ' a, hospitable "reception.
This is as it should be, but we are sorry to hear
that, it is proposed to give him an exhibition
of our volunteer ustem. An alarm is to
be soluaded by thief Downey, and then
_captain Shaw is to have his 'politencssr taxed
by witnessing what, followt. We trust that
some of the regular features of a general alarm
will be omitted. clt should be strictly a "dress
parade." The yells and shouts and oaths , of
the swarming retainers of the several pet “ma
chineg," ought "to be suppres s sed. If possible,
fights, or, at least, bloodshed, should be :seen
pulopsly avoided. lf there is to be an sham
th. 4
it lt
9 ?;4 - 1 4: A oul d be limited to or "six
to
~,!,
r i,
Plig 'id'.oTriP,•_vvitli elleet.'ou th& eaves, but,
lielhot) ld not be allowed to chop unnecessary
holesfificthe r . adjoining roofs; Land the smash
ing of unsuspicious window-glass shOuld be
kept' down to some - reasonable point. Of
course there.must be a large quantity of water
splashed about, and we beg of Chief Downey,
who is really a gdod-natured and obliging
Chief, to assemble his forces somewhere near
the Delaware, for we really cannot, spare the
water from the tire-plugs. With these
,precau
tions we cab give Captain Shaw a very hand
sonie 'reception, and - Mayor Fox will undoubt
edly contribute one of his eloquent speecheS of
welconie, commencing ",0, Shaw !"
On the !.I.oth day of last. March Andrew
Johnson, returning fro n Wa,shington, set 1318
4,416.E , 1
4gLx-
TRL
f° o t. , '}; l o )3 SL NO -, 4 3 40,1V0N*.ct9P* cireenville)
Tei „
4:r;ttriinineiliatelk?iandp . it'Oeecli`to
his f44itSSliilkliglibtot i •i" in Which - he
purpose to , retire -from public 'lffe;' and
spend the ;,remainder of t „his; da,,y.s.,beneath his
own vineVint 2fid-tree. 4. Fr6i thi:lgornewhat
renia., i rPlickOl'ltifl, at the ,time t le , ry, satisfactory
1 oraton, we extractlhelellowing sentences:
.take - /the,f - adyied of the.'elder
. Cato tittlie', - 'son 'When he went'ont to meet
more Ctesari' yepair to the Temple, :and' then,
if nothArigore ,can be, done, I ;Aill,lift my
prayertbiHeaven;2that my, donntry , MaY be re
stored from its ruins. -* * * Let me 'say
00,11. again, that when vice preVails,,l Would
rather, be a private citizen. I(<' .* I
have, came .back,to live -- here , among . .ynn the
remainder ',of My life; and if Ras the wilt of.
Providen6 . , , ,to die and be ~buried Will
you - not let old nan, after hellithorne the
burden of ' his country'
: for - irdny' ,Years, and
spenthis time for his conntry's . good, come
back'and, live. With you the, remainder of his
daysq:'are there any that will deny him a little
to__earth. ay_away . .his_;body?..: . . .
But .Ifr:Jobilson turned traitor to his own
words, and 'again, entered the' political field,
first as a, violent advocate of Senter, ,then as an
„ . •
aspirant, to the United , States' Senate. From
this we, are • entitled to .believe s 'that he did
, ,
i/ r y vi..ll=l -- -ttrjulfll7,the - ,seAltvnises. - 7;when7_ - be
.
made _them;, that he ,fonnd, uPou trial, that
the prayers of the 'wicked Mtn nothing, that he
has concluded that vice oes not prevail,aut
that his fastklions neighborS w9re- not'nrillina
to let, the . " Old man" live With, 'them "tie .re
ruainderiof his days,' For the country's sake
icii.unfortunate that they thought it best to
"deny him a little earth to lay away his body."
Nothing less, than. Christian burial, and a pon
derous monument will ever keep him quiet.
The Aasociated Press is moat - . industriptisly
the,scheme to assemble rebel Ofti#rs at
the, Gettysburg. Springs %Iro; have
already expressed out ; Opinion nbont,thiS move
mene. 'When the battle .of. Gettysburg': was
fought, loyal Union:ofticers and mewifiVt, and
defeated a rebel army, led hy - Rebert.•-g; Lee
and other perjured
,traitors. ThouSands of
brave patriots died on that ;field, Strugling
against the wicketlest rebellion the .world ever
,„
saw. The six years that have:relied by have
not washed •. away ,"one.' ; ':.stain of the
great crime of ' these „men; and' • there
is no more .excuse for., putting„ them on •
an official epiality 'with the
. braYe J e llows
who fought and died .at Gettysburg for the
country's CauSe, Or who still. surtive that
bloody confliet, than there wasin 1863; 'These
rebel officers, as such, shoUld 'never have public
recognition' at the hands of any loyal' man.
Ilistog does not need their evidence of the
battle of Gettysliurg. If it 'does, then ,our
Union generals must go hob-bobbing with these
defeated traitors over Antietam ; 'and Chicka
mauga and Shiloh, and Bull Run and all
the other scenes of victory or . defeat that
marked the life-striwale.of the Republic. The
Gettysburg Springs may possess all the wonder-\
ful qualities attributed, to . them, 'or, possibly,
they May not. The Gettysburg Springs Hotel
May be the most notorious place of. entertain--
meat in the country, or; possibly, it may not.
But however this may be, the Gettysburg
'Memorial Association has got verymuch out of
itS'Proper position when it thus recognizes the
rebels who sowed the soil of Gettysburg with
loyal dead.
The sudden death of Alexander J. Harper,
Esq., briefly announced. in yesterday's Bur:
LETIN, has created a wide;spread feeling of re
gret. Ile inpre i pented the Eighth Ward in the'
Common Council for eight years, was Presi
dent nthat body for one tern, and was for,
several years chairman of the Finance Corn : .
inittee. His service in Cvmcils terminated at
the beginning of this year.' Ile was one of the
ablest and nioSt faithful members of our city
legislature. At thetime of his death he was a
member *of the -- "l'rustees of the Gas 'Works.
He bad - lately been -elected President of ibe
NicolsOn:Wood: Paving Company. Indeed in
all enterpriSeS intended for the, advantage r : of
this Hai* Jook,:an earnest, and
lively interest. He Waskt, Zealous Republican;
and \yds especially active in the National
Union=Globand thd on -League. In social
'tyitS highly respected; and-in!
iliS reinovalPhiladeiphia loses:Ole Othet best
and,moSt respected citizens.
,The New, York- Evening Post, in an article
on railiead management, says: "On the Penn
sylvania Centr4l, the other'day, for instance, a
train was thrown off the track, killing tWotnen
and seriously Wounding several more, by, a
rock that had been dislodged by the rains and
deposited on the road." No such accident be
curred on the PentiOylvania Central railroad.
It,was,on the Schuylkill and. Susquehanna, a
short road running on the left bank of the Sus
quehanna, above Harrisburg, part of which is
used for ióind , .of the trains of the Northern
Central COMpany. The Pennsylvania Central
is abmit the best managed railroad, of great
length, in'the United . States; and is so well
policed that an accident like that mentioned
could not occur upon it.
•
It is stated in a morning paper that " rumors
prevail 'that the -,Trisk Republic, the recognized
organ, of thb Irish Republicans, 'has sold out,, or
intends.: selling• out,' to Tammany Ilall.'?
such rumors prevail, and the reiiort of them is,
understood to„liaire'
: teen' started by a person
against • whom the Irish:Republic had found it
necessary, to warn its readers. We are author
ized:to-deny positively that the../rish Republic
has sold . , out, or intends .selling out, to Tam
nialiy 'Hall Or; any Other party.
Whose-fault that tons upon tons of
water were waged' last night upon a single box
of bUrning dry goods in the store of Messrs.
J. ;14', & ...lreigliton Twputy or thirty
thousand dollars' worth of goods were destroyed
by this 'useless .torrent of water, and the
precioulS . Storos',:bf', ytiirinount were draWn
down for no good , purpose whatever:. 'Sueli a
reeldess waste of water is: bid enough . at any
time.; at such a crisis as this; it is absolutelY
criminal.
The ,Colle.etok oflnternal Revenue of 'the
,
Second distriet„gf;this State 'anunounceg that
the
,annual iliceine tax forl§6B, tax on`Watchos,
darriages; ace.; - aild the special ,Ilnense' tai fior
the year'ending 4001 36, 1810, IS due and paY4 ,
able at his: office .Septeniber 11th, after
which the `peaialtie for; iioniiaynient will be
added. ' , • • .
'BOAUTILEM1 1 &1110
_ "We receive, too late for mit:gnat° notice to
day, the September. number of Lippincoit's
Magazine. It combines all the elements which
have built up the. previouß reputation , of ; ttie
g
• • e=
Pen0d1e4. 1 7440.4 14 03 7 4.01084P;h4d
fiction; Poe4'XiAnd.a - g0.04 , 4 6
o-Lon Laid ationopelyoin the Debt,4o*o.;
the'self respect of the ; reader >andand ',:nia3fe
feel that he etic4fYing hie 'l4€oledp. The
toillustrations - MY? ;Anthony TFoll6,Pb's novel
are two, one native and one foueign;, the latter
in the : English style, '$ an Isbnitation- of an
etching, the 'tither, Pieyltiusly noticed by its,
is one - of'Bensell'e subtle characterstudtei;
cut with great care and neatness; it is, much to
the iniblisherte credit that - they. , contribute
from their capital to, the eimmilagemonf - of
native art, by for".engravings so:ex
pensiveas this and its predecessors evidently
must be. Lippineett'sts sold by the publishers,
by Messrs. ?niter & Coates; and - by Turner
,„
The Atlantic and' 'Our Folks, are_re
ceived from Turner 'Eros. /46 CO. ;
CLOTIU I( .
We shaft hove enough!
CLOTHING.
We bave an immense supply
WANAMAIKER & .BROWN•
EDWARD P.. KELLY,
S. E. cor. £hestnut and Seventh Sts.
Complete Assortment of Choice Goons.
REDUCED PRICES.
LOW WATER IN THE SCHUYLKILL
A BIG DRY TIME!!
, • •
ROCKHILL & WILSON
, . .
NOT DRIED. UP YET!! !
River Schuylkill going dry! • ,
•
Now 1. - what d'ye think
All the water running out! ,
Not enough to drink'.
Fairmount drying up !,
•
Water all•gone!
Can't get enough to wash ;
Folks feel forlorn. •
Can't souse the pavements now ;
Dry! 'Dry!! Dry!!!
Won't Jet the hoses play;
- • • That's the reason why.
One comfort! Even if
' • Can't squirt the hose ;
llocturmr. & WILSON hawe
, - Lots ofsplendidclothes
Even if the river goes entirely drV— • '
,
--There- are yet-- • '—
Lots of splendid piles •
(lithe hest-of 'Summer Styles • '
,• Of Fine Clothes'at Low-Tide Prices at
-RO:C KRILL & :WILSON'S
. ,
Great Brown.stone Hall'
.
603.and-.6OS—CHESTNUT7,Stroti--
JONES'
CLOTHING HOUSE
604
MARKET. STREET,
runAnzurinA.
First Class Ready-Made Clothing, suitable
for all Seasons, constantly on hand. •
Also, a Handsome Line of
Piece Goods for Cus
tom Work.
GEO. W. PiniEWAIIN.
Proprietor
.TR. R. F. THOMAS,' THE LATE OPE
rator at the Colton Dental Association, is now the
only one in Philadelphia who devotes his entire time and
practice to extracting teeth, absolutely without pain, by
tosh•' nitrous oxide gas. Oilloe, No, 1027 Walnut
streets. mh6•ly
riOLTON DENTAL ASSOCIATION Olta
t.) giriated the anteethitic use of
NITROUS OXIDE, OR LAOGHING GAS,
And devote their whole time and practice , to extracting
teeth without pain.
Office, Eighth and Walnut street!. ' ap2Qly
JOHN: (RUMP ; BUILDER,
t/ 1731 CHESTNUT STREET, •
and 213 LODGE STREET.
]Mechanics of every branch required for house-building
and fitting promptly furnished. •fe27-tf
+ owls AND RAIL%IOSTSANDRAIIE,
r i lY le &ril c t ls M r igr l i r9 grAST:shlge—tbteirtesrep.l
first common boards.
Sheiv,ing, Ruing , and afore-fitting material made a spe
cialty..
~ NICHOLSON'S,
inyb-tfrp • Seventh and Carpenter streets
.
HENRY.
'CARPENTER AND ' iIIILDER,
NO. 1024 SANSOM 'STREET,
,-jelo-Iyry , PHILADELPHIA,. . 4
WARD:I:TETON 8 IBiPßovr,p, .VEN-
Mated and easy -fitting Dress flats (patented) in ell
the approved. fashions of ,the season. Uhestnut street,
next door,to the Poet-Office. - • , oc6-tfrp
Irk 7 YOir" CANNOT CHEW, YET - ARE
r on d.pf .boiled. corn, use the Para CornMrater,
tyltich remover] all the nutritious port ou'frout the nett,
end are waneri or in preparing corn. puln for fritters, &C.
'Sold by & SHWA 834 (light,Thirty-dve)
lifarkat qtreet, below Ninth. .
ABIRTH -DAY GIFT' ' TO 'YOUR' SON;
'' )ney be very useful ,to yourself, is it box of
Tuohy,- .A variety of them may be found , at MAAM , ' &
83.5 f Eight Thirty-five) Market etreet,be-.'
low: Ninth.
BRAISM; CURTAIN-- CRODHET AND
Picini° Ringo or a variety of sizesrtitoivod by
TitumAN SHAW No. 834 (Eight 'Thirty -live)
lilarket street, below Ninth, , ,
186
,4
9•::- . --' . i . );:1 1 -:-:. : :: , :: -,- ,::'...-1 , !;' , :-:'::'' . .; : ::: : .',.: -- ; - ' 2, : : ' , : : . , ' ,, T:; -1 . • . -. : . . ,,:,,,, i , j ,.. ' !,
i,,,,,,,.,...,1:4:4:4,4,41:-,'.:-::::
" NEW `MILBLIPATX, O „ 2, ( 6 7
_ • •,
/-froxiTtlEßElC l Viati2=b, ,;tA
).-.,
; LL2 ' t
ikHE-4A.TIJANITIt',,xO-N:Pgr4r.
HARRIET BEECHER
cig JOS ? ' '4ll
The True HistOry or:iiord
BAYARIti TAYLOR; • • •
-•• • . ;'
JacQb • Fl llllVs
,
L • le tit t -1 -
JAMES PARTO . Log o ng a CPI 111 9n•
JAMES`•FREEMAN CLARKE': ' Confuclua • and the
Cu'.hise • • t'• • p. 4 -
sym.D. HOWELLS. The First Cricket. •
HENRY JAMES, Jn. Gabrielle do =lle geran: Tart
JAMES JACKSON JARVIS„,.Tho Genius of Dore.
T. TROWBRIDGE., .31Y.,c0n1Y449 .
THHAVTI.IOit of"Vidor and 'Jttergillite,;'': l Ttia Yoe
in the Household. >Part 7. ' , ,"
And other Valuable and Attractive Artlelii;
OUR YOUNG FOLKS.
Cir THE STORY OF A RAP BOY. Another instal
ment of this' tielightftil story, Jay T. B: Aldrich.
scr EISCOVERY OP TUE piA.IDEIR4 /SLAKIRWRY
r -101013 T
*77 LOST AT SEA: By Georgitatit
THE APOSTLE OF LAKE SUPERIOR. By J.
aIIr'ItiV T DEN3 ADOr VIN IRON MDR. 14 , J.
'Er DR&A111 OF 4kiß LIZTLE BOY WRO WOULD
NOT' EAT 1118 MISTS. By lirs. A:3l. Diaz..
02 SWING AWAY. By Lncy Lircouf; with Iduele by
F. Mott. ' •
flEr With other, xcellent Airtieles,.Twenty-tivo Inmate,
- tione, Capital l'ntionae, Rebuses, Acs
*.* For sale by all Ilooksellera tint! eilealere.
FIELDS, OSGOOD & CO., Publishers,
124 Tremont Street, Roston.
SubrfcriptiOil Age4'foi Phithdiipitta,
B. ZIEBER, •
106 South Third tht,eet.
,R OIVS
BECK'S PHILADELPHIA; BAND, No. 1.
GRAN . ..D.-r EXCURSION
Are - and New York BaY
AND STATEN ISLAND, •
• Leaving Philadelphia, front 'Walnut Strekt Wharf. '
On TUViDAY, August 24,1863,1 d 7,30 -
. • FARE FOR VIE EXCURSION :
_Single Tickete eta 00
Gentleman and Lady ' 600
Tickets can be - procured at ihe' offices, Now. ell rind
828 Chequitt strret; office- of Dock's Dead, S>24 Market
ntreet; No. WI Girard avenue, and at the wharf on the
morning of the Excursion.
IM-Mrp`
GILIND AM) POPULAR. EXCURSION
Around New York Bay and Staten Island,
By SENATUSLODGE,I,.To.7O.II.O.O.F., of Catrideti,N.J.,
Accompanied by the National Cornet .Baud and Or
clieotra. Leave EbilailelPhin,from Walnut Street Wharf,
SATURDAY, August 21, BM at 7.30 A. At.,
And Camden at 7.12 A. IL .
FARE. FOR Tin xxcimsioN: •
Single Tickets *3'oo
Gentleman and ... . .... ... . 500
Make early . application ( or Tickets , soi a limited ulna
her only will be sold. Tickets can be procured at Um
United States liotel t foot of Walnut street. Philadelphia;
at Deltecour's end Rills:ere Drug Shires in eatlidell, or at
the Depot on the morning Of the Excursion. It*
. i ti g ly a ik ' t Olt . 1..:APII: Al A' . l7,' TO M On-
ItOW ....-The fine 11 rw ritilttller Ltiti y 'of the
A..AV u all !cave Anda street wharf 10-3101 t BOW I Satin"-
day ) 31011NING, August 21st, at 9 o'clock, and return
on MONDAY.
Sure, including carriage biro, 82 Excnrdon't facto.
gOod to return on 3londar, Tickotn, good to rcturti
.1w ears on Sunday afternoon, or Ur traintearing nt 6
A. Wit/18v. nro gold on tho b oo r for e c It
ti-LoUCEsTEIt : POLNT.—GO
yotweelf and take the fatally to thle cool,
spot. New stelinters, with every comfort,
lenvo teh oreet•lft, Oitily every ff , W MillUteg.jolB.SMS
CiTCYAI:E.
FOR SALE.
THE HANDSOME BROWN-STONE
ARCH STREET RESIDENCE,
N.W. corner Twenty-first Street.
RepUde with conveniences.
Let .64 feet on Arch Street.
Twenty.tirsit Stieet.
_lOG_
Furniture also, desired
APPLY TO
JOHN WRIGHT,
024i:Itlarket Street.
atflt 6tr
fEI. A First-Class Residence fll
FOR SALE.
The Now 'Brown-Stone Dwelling, with
Coach House
No. 1507 SPRUCE Street.
The house is 22 feet front; three-story and Mansard
roof, and Ihree•story double back buildings, with bath.
rooms on the' , second and third and water closets on first,
second and third floors, and every modern convenience.
The lot ts 22 feet'front by 240 deep to Latimer street,
on which there is, a. BIM coach house and stabling for
four horses. ,
The house was built and finished in the most complete
manner for the present owner, who? bus occupied it lama
a year, and offers it for sale only on account of leaving
the city. ;
Furniture new and will be included, if wished.
.Povession immediate, if desired.
APPLY ONLY TO
()HAI'S ROBINSON, ;
; At Drexel 4 Co.'s,
,
No. 84 'South Thiid Strea:.
InfT tf 4
, 14 - URNISH - ED• 1-10 - USE, ,
No. 206 Pyiqe.Street, Oermanp)wp,
TO RENT,
From October I until 'May 1:
.Apply on the pretulees i pr twifit,troßtgt rt. Writ%
• No. 227 South FOURTH Street.
etilB rptfli
.;.,FOR,RENT-r1
THE DWELLING; MO CHESTNUT . Stritet
Ye); suited for bkiPeß 4 . • ,•• • =
itatTSEVOVWS - 41;34 - N 01 . 6;L:AP;
Dusters, at very low rates at XNEAllhilf New
urnees Store, 3126 Market street,'opposite the Market.
B fir Horse in the door jyl7-ly
:Qum.
IO~dT 01 E3111 2 %4) ti, e br s
.flrfttit-VoTiss
set In
Shave and l if i g
Ladles' and Ctilldren,Y,e,llatr ti o un ' ilaytnorning.
125T.xchangePlase. • ' , , •
it* " • "" ' - , o
'ILF r PAIRt3 TO' WATCH,Et3 AND
" Musical BoXes, i¢ the bent stlidineri by tikkillttil
workmen. FARB & BROTHEBL , I.
. , 24 Mesh:int street , , below, Fourth,
ItrARKING WITH INDEEII3 — LEMY
17.1 Embroidering, Braiding, S tamp i ng ,
• , M. A. TOR FEY. 18W . Ebbortetreet.,
P: sr, O.'R. TAYLOR, •
JLL: , _ rERVITMEIIS. 1
Cll.l avid 64a North Ninth otro.et
warpta..!■k— . /3IMON , GARTLAND,: •
• UNDEITITAKE .
South Thirtoonte treot. -GU op
4": - :, - .-:...', -, .=:':
.4
-,v, -`4,,;.:,4.-,1,,-•'.i-,.,?;:':',..,,'
1 ...t,f;;:.,6', „,'-' • •-'.-- ~ • ~-1,:-.,, - ...,,.. „ ..
~ ,4, ,t ,, 3 PreservedfrAiii-?. ,
•,, ~..,-. -... ,-..,,:,-,,,,,,,,,,.•', ••• ,,, .•i•.-??,,,v475,:.$
~
.......,, ^\ • ;.'PL ,1.V5,- -4 )i7 , , !'.' i , l -,„'.0 Z::;;tijr:
' "r& --- ' t ' -
, O - A1 , 4 , ..'' , -, g . 4 , , x at* ,
'T Ft
~' Just Imported, In flnworderl ~ ,) T' l "
• •,. ,i.-..r , i ! . ~,,;t „ T., : _4 , ,7'
FOR
MITCHELL ruiTorteß- - -.
. .
~„•••••.
No:1204 CHESTNUT STREET::
.i _~. i
• • . -•-•• „,,•:
''l),R.'P4FAitlriNG..:.::').‘ll:A:.lo7,o4:l:.;;,?,
Ginune.aXid Pure. . ;, :
French 'White 'Pre,
Imported direct and for-sale
SIMON Y COLTON & CURLY
, , \
S.W. cor. Broad and Wahud Ste.
CHOICE
OLP GOVERNMENT JAYA COFFEE
BY•TRE BAG OR POUND,
FINE
GREEN AND BLAOK TEAS
IN SMALL ZONES,
DAVIS & RICHARDS,
'ARCH and TENTH STREETS.
THE FINE
-----
GREAT NOVELTIES
/.:
Looking r3;..1 aas OS,
QPICTIIRE FRAMES, &es, te.
New Chromoa„
=New Engravings.
EARLES' GALLERIES,
816',C1-lESTNUT
C. F. HASELTINE'S GALLERIES,
1125 Chestnut Street
Owing to. trnonrtent. alterations ibtr o
Paintings be dosed ttittil lieptennties.
For tbe scum reuron. ,we offor our; Inanoure Adcock of
LOOKING .01R03105
FllPlifEt 14.11:iTOGRAP/18, I " Sto., it!. a rettuction. ..Iku
tiuusiud , opportunity for the Public to ohtetnihargelne,
• - ,ruri3.lyro§
411SCELLAN.E9US. -
.• . 1147 KS (Pi ' : 4 - - $ 0:1141
N.00•,..-2: and •.* North Siztit-tt6iili
PRINTERS AND STTION.ERS.
BOOKS --
GENERAL. STAPLE STATIONERY.
PBINTING in every variety execateii at thisoillee at
the ahortent notice.
HUFNAL'S
PI3II'.4IIELPRIA PHARMACY,:
Corner'•Washington and Jackson Streets,
Vape May, City, N. J.
MAGAZIN DES MODE.
; 1014 WALNUT ,STREET.
9
2 MRB. PROCTOR.
Cloatas Wanting Sulte,,Silka ‘ • ,
.). , •, • Drees Ge s eder die , - S L,
u ae n e 4 S er ba c; w ct ih nato ,
Hle : • '
Dresses made to metianta iip, Tarezdy-fonr ennare.
ITLER, WEAVER & 00.
NEW CORDAGE FACTORY
• ,• • ' ' lo l 7 t r ;r 2l rl'tlLrf' QPERAT/97 5 4 •r •' •
No. 22 N.WATER street and 23 N,RELAWARE avenue.
: , ,.'. ,. AITIDTIONISALE;
1 6 „,, HERKNESS'S'IJAZ,A.A
• 'Tax SPEOIAL 1 RALE 'AN EbEGANT
G ESTADDISHBLENT. •„ „
n, , •
On SATURDAY MORNING next, at 10 O'cle'dli.at the ,
Inlzaari• will ' be +Sold a ' , pair of beautiful 'aud , stylish
purses, dark Nil! end dark. iron grey. sondagisix years
old, believeto trot together near to 3 ininutea, '
A shlfting4op .Bitggy,-equare bar, pole 'unit shafts; L.
Tb l i ti, 4 e l 1 1 4,Zfrif ,„, 0 )
and sba i glo•ifarnesketiniendid'reny. Sleilv,• r fluislia to
order.; lileighTtells, Robes;•coyerii,Ao,y , t ll;f9PArlY:
eetitlerritin abotittfoithlitr.lp hig , ,
111 r May be Male by applrit qt t h o Baz • .
lifter, tie above the untai ' catalogue' of
witir.o &O. ~ .
.gar,', Salo of Norm s. . cin ;Wednesday. ;
'able 2t. , ALFRED I. , HERKI4 t4l,',Aollortger.„,
i,•; I • MONEY) Amp . . . 43 i to .ox i ,
BOANED • lIPOY•BTANONDB,WATOTIESA
JBIyBLBY6 xE PLApB 43 B,LOTILTN%
• ' OBD-ISTABLISHED LOAIT I O/PWICE, • '
• . • Corner of Third and Gaekill etreeia•
Below tonthard.__ l ,
N. WATCHES a isyilLiux '9 UM OF
/40,4 1. ok-eAI• 1 .
lf._ . •
•
• BENATIKABIrIf ' LOW PRICES
I[I:AVE. -ITTINDOW CURTAINS, - i
road Supplies, Pluolice, tilytdes•
prceo. . •
• . • '' WAS. CARRYL. di SONS,
, 723 Chestnut stroot, •
It* Below Eighth stropt:
•-• P,HILADELPHIA. SURGEONS,
BANDAGE INSTITDTE, 14 N.' NINTH
stroot, Above Narket: 11:D. EVERETT'S
Trails , posltively cures, Ruptures. Choap Truoooe,
Elaotiollelts, Stockings," Supportors, Shoulder Braces
Crutches, Suerionsoriel ;Pile Bandages. Ladies attondod
to by blre, 10.. • • • .IYI-Iyry ,
l A",
. I ~ J
'ri
aILIS 4 t 4p
SECON . ,
4c BY TELEGRAPH.
TO D4Y'S`CA;BLE NEWS
European. Finahcial "QuotatiOnef
American Securities Quiet andSteadV
COTTON SALES FOR IItE MEEK
FROM "WASKINGIVOIV
THE CUBAN QUESTION.'
The Ottiseicsiciiii-;. AOCini-A*.Pafriols
-,:r-
Departure of Vaseis with Ammunition
- lity the Atlantic ; Cable.
LoxvoN, 'Angust, 20, A. M.—C'onsols; 03
'ofintiney and . 931 for amain.. • ~ e can
seenritics quiet and steady. U. $., Five-twen
ties ar19 62 ; 8 3 11; of 1805, 'Old;t32l ; of 1867, 811,t
Ten-forties; 741; Erie Railroad, 101;' Ilh
Central, 941
LtrmisaoL, Auguit 20, A. 31.---Cottow ac
tive; , 31iddling Uplands, 131 d; ',Middling Or
leans, 14d. The sales for to-day 'are estimated:
at 20,000 bales ? The sales of the week amo}int
t 0,111,000 bales, including for . e*port 18,000
and for speculationlo,ooo bales.' ° !The The stock , of,
cotton in port is 228,000 bales,> of which 105,000
bales are Anierican..,
Other markets are unclumgdd. ' '`
Lumnol , t, Angus 20, A.. '24,--LinSeed
.£lO Bs. Spirits Petroleum, - 101 d. Sugars, 'on,
the spot,
,tirrn..
QUEENSTOWN,' August Al, A 31;-Alriveill-
Blearners _Russia and Denmark;from NFw
York.
LONDON, soon.—United , States
Five -Twenties of 1802, 83,1; of 1865, - Old, 821
011867, 8l
LIVERPOOL; August 20, .Noon.—Corn, '32s
for European, - California wheat, 118. 2d r .
lied Western, 9s. lilda9s.,lld.
Lols•nox, August 20, P. M.—The weather is
fair and favorable for th e growing prom.
Ame
riean securities•are firtner. -
August:Xi,. p. ; 31. 7 -The cotton
afloat is estimated at 680,000 haltA,
,of which
39,000 bales are American.
Corn is easier , hut not lower Thexeccipts
of w4eitt. at Liverpo'ol for the past three days
have been 30,000 qnarters, whereof Is,ooo were
American.
Lard is quoted at 78s. Bacon, als.
478.3 d.
I . ,,ownoitz; Atigust,al, P. :St.—Sugar is firmer,
and Ms. tk1.0.3N. 9d. on ;:the spot, and 275. !WA
Zis: afloat.
The Cuban IjNioimMlons.
pipette! Demuth to the Phila. Evening Bulletin.]
WitsittNuTo - s,, ,ng. ' W.—The divisions
,
among the ,Cultans, *torero .alluded to.in
these despatches, have amuned more import-
ance Since it has - beceme, known that nver
tures baVe been made to the Spanish Govern
ment for the purNhase of Cuba by the United
States aufhoritivi. rt is well understood that,
uhile Mr Letnus gave his full assent
to . thistscheme, Mr. Madam, on the contrary,
protested :against it This division, it is
feared,‘Weakens the position taken 'by Seem
tary,Fish in regard to Sp:tin, it being appa
rent that' he cannot control both the Cuban
factions.
Ittimor has it that the financial condition of
the . Cuban Junta and the use made of
money by Mr. tVIIIIII4, Li; not foreign to this
controretsi,'-which,has iissitined a Very wide, v.
range
,sinec it hogan. • "
. , . . ,
InforniatiOn hiLY 'been received; - hero that
two vesgels 'lately left Jacksonville;',FlOrida,
with atitmunition. every description, 'for
Cubit, —.7 It - 7 that the . United
States. authorities, . although ,aware where
the VesSels •• • were going,
.and • for
What purpose the - Cargo wonlii be laird, took
no meanit tO - prevent them from-sailing. This
.newLvicdatienofthe.Aientralitrylaw,s is the sub.=
ject Of a good deal Of , talk in political circles.
SulOlde of a brtmlnal.
WlLLlA.sisront,. Atig..29-,Tho body of
- 31artitriiillnryeri - of -- Northuntberiand - county;
wi) 'was convk dof • illicit di'stilling at the
last term' of the - United States Clillyt, and con
lined in jail-hero,. Was_ found_ hack of the jail,
this morning, - with [ bis -throat- cut. ,
been misqbg Tuesday evening. On ae
couireor aberration of mind, hO' had been
alloWed lantistial liberty' by the jailor. fie
held tho,fatal knife) in his baud when rotinn.
The Neiv-Cetton.Crop.
ClNctigNiri, Aug. 20:—The first bale of new
cotton msts , 4received. by a commission mer
chant here•yesterday, and will be.soltlin Chi
cago to-day. It was grown near Natchez,
MiEsimppt.
State or Thermometer This Day at Use
etln office.
10 A: BI 11° 2
Weather clear, Willa oOlitlill'OßL
FINANCIAL AND COMMERCIAL
Philadelphia Stoc k Richsume Sale*.
3500 City 6s Old '-, Its. 97'; i "15 eh West Jeriaiy It Its 6234
Wilo Oh, Canova , 4 , . • ; ; 101M1100 sh Leh Nar Stk Its 35
25 eh Girard Bk • its _, 57.• i2OO eh Reading R ; 49V
I
1 sltlttanuf 13k • j '. 3034 600 eh . do c ' ' 49U
100 Or Carn&Auf - ,',..' • 1223. 2006 h ~ do - 5,30 Ite 4Bii
11l Fenn It 571,; 200 oh 'do lts . :4.0.31'
10 eh _ , do , ' Its ' . ' 6Pti 100 eh do - ' 1)30 .:, 493,i
soh 51Ine BMX , - 35 'l2OO eh do 85 Rs 98
... ,
'BETWEEN BOARDS.
30 eh L OVA u , 5617006 City& new IOPi;
'lOO oh Reaping - .es ' ''- 48.31 7000 ' do c. 100 s"
1W eh ,do la ~. '484 20 Ai 2d &911, St It 47
t vo eh •do Own .' , '561,000 oh Putt It 1+49 574
_ ,- encoso.leosuo. . . . . . .
1000 Allegh ( o 411 ' .: 61 t 21. sh Cum &Ant Its : I Vais.
1500 City Os low nit • ' 101):1' 100 sh` llostoorille It ' 12
Mk. •. ; do, . ; J ..)' ' .., 101 % NO Reading It h 01): . ‘ 41g .
WhOameloOnomon,y.
FRIDAY, Aiii..2o:F4lttr local money,' market cent Inuce,'
nen exceptiOnal condition for the dog days. GlaterallY
et this perlod;iheto is verelittle itettiity dir'ctuatlons
in rates, het thiri 'Season affairs aro slightly different.
Thddenurtidferaerinit; especialty;Citt tithe, is quite brisk;'}
though the ' -terms ! ,- ",ttre', , ii;k4ltc)(o,l3v, ;:they . 1
are verstrong, end tititaisitther ?nerettorpeNyhhr,liji).,Ope:
4 ' . 4o.pip*o.cptgippe,to,:iefpo6 op. two
,and ,
t h r 6 e ninnibst,diticourits, even forArpositortii'and exemitil
their actio4,, ( - 1 0b 0 :Nre,u. 1 1 ! 1,3 futlf.aY°T. 11 tieRMPtamOdtd:o
uncertainty to:Alie financial' future. The result. is In4',
creasing activity in the streets an a corresponding scale
of rates.,
dell lavits:critinet, raisitaflesti than .7 percent. on..
choice Collet:3ra Is, and discounts at 10 per cent. for choice
Parer' 2 `,f I_
Gold openedutl3V; and , continued steady at that fig
uro, without much change up to, noon,' •
In flovernment I. , qatis the doings art mall, 1)14 priced
are steady: ' ' ' ' '
The Stock.. market -exhil3its , no-new , feature.. State e
loans were neglected, but , prices ore, anchanged. City
sixes sold at 97 for and' inlß‘for the now,. •
Railroad Sharea" were flat, Railroad , tvai r l
steady at 4814a48.31. Sales Of FennsylVania, ',Railroad '
ati; Leg was bid for Lehigh Valley Railroad; '37!.,i :for
Catawisia Railroad rreferred; anti,3o)-4 for Philtulelphia
and 'Erie Railroad: ' - '' ' •
Canal .stocks were not active. l'he only transaction t
wore itv Lehigh , Navigation; which-Sold^ etronglitl6-
ttaleS Of Girard Bhrik at f 7. and of Maniifacturere' at 30;a4,`
In Coal,; and Pasienger Railway slitiree . theie wore,
r';• 0
ItAtOib4f 4 N* 4ll ' ' , . 4,0.tk.'ddA110 1 4 1 Pi. 5 . 3 * f dr '.
AlPirt,all4A!,toi.; t o tof) ,stv.wo,-,4104 - 1),1
~ 4 ,tpt s c
Oreitd tiiii-Thlid fited4S #:1 litirtolid irkfirl .l4 *lol- 1 ,1
44 1511 65iitO,t t llieelit: ' 1 r., ;' :.:' .''..'.',:`, '..,, ir,-- . .t. , ,; , ,,,,,,
, Smith, Nsitidlibl4 gq.i bin:liars. Third'itral;' , oll:Ottlatlt,
reetsp i t i a!ki..at-11 a leck as foLlows: Gold. INI: 8.6
taxes,. I ,12231:11,280...d0: 6-20 e., /862, 12'23)4a14:4; -d o:.
do- 0 36 ‘.. 1 2 x 1 21i1,,d0. .do.N 1666,12111/213 7 4; do. do: JulYi
1865; pigial.2o;- de, ito.i July,f, /867 i 11040.1204,7,010. , iths
Jul. 180: i 116 N al:0; 684.10405,113,14a1.14;:, Currency, a T O:
Il22Jay I,oAtoAtr,Co.llpte eoveritiontseenrltfee. iC.. to
deb_ es folio we: ~1 1, . a5.18131,122'i1a1=3,;:5-20e of 0N41.2216
eraai1.d0,,i , n644.4 lal2l4;‘,.dor—NerrehiberP-1.8.85:-121s
-12114; do. Jn1y.3886.T 3161. , A12014: , 11e,itagia103,1,120 , i; do.
1868, 11S3a12o: Ten-fortles. 118liall4; gaeltlea.,/o B li 3 r
10034: Gold: WS:: ~, ' l, 3: , . ';.A '-_,' ~ :., t/ ' ' ' ,:-
•N*l4/ent. , DeN avert .76 Orothm' ' No.( 40 nti.OUth'Tblid. ,
street, make the followlne quotations of the rates 'or ex-
°bane° today at 1_" P. M.: United. States Sixes. or 1881.
122:ia1f.'27 , 1; do. d. .1862.5, 122? - inltiP6';do.: do-. 1861, 129!i1a
t 214; do do. 1686. 1Z).1 , a121,311;'d0. do. 1868. new,ll9l(al2o; , '
6o- do. , now. 186;, 1101'x12U; do. 1868. new, -11elharx; .
5'5,,. 10.46'5, 11831014 i :: 6. 80 ; Year 6 per eent. , Cnr.
reney, 108Sa1001;:Dne ontnannd Interest Notes: MU: .
G01d.1344',1133: t+l,lver. 128a130.i, ', . ..' •
The renewing is thr stmonot ` id' coat transported•evet
tits Sr hilylkill Canal, during the week ending Thursday,
~,,mg Inth, latilh • / ' ' •._:' '
.• v.. , ~, , P ..... ,,, --- , lfonsr.etpu.
From lort Carton
'.'• "::- , . 5,6.51 00
l'ottevile '
'„.„
IN 00
1” .• roil %lion iial- , , p.. 4 ..:.....-. .. ....,.-....... . . ... ... - ;12,732 30,
[ " Port' Clinton ...... ;,. .:....: . . ... . ... ', .... "..,...,..."..... 831 00
. _
Total for the
Previously this year_ "
•Total
To the tqune time Mat yea e
,
The folloWing is tbd inepection of flour and meat for: .
the week end' Atm.ll9, 180:
Bail-els of .8n e
do: Condemn - 0a . ." 147,,
' r*
'
• Vbilatiehilillei Prodnee Market.:••
Fninav, August 20y1869,..—Thentorements in Seeds are
of an unimportant character; "and; in - the' absence, of
sales:lvo quote Timothy AV et 2564'Cblyer at 8608 '.'
9 Wand Flaxseed at e 2101411.5 per bushel.' A lot Of 300,
sacks new: the first of the season, watt rewired by Messrs`
raeff. 4k. Co.. and sold on secret terms. 4
No. "IQuereltron Bark Is "olfere4l at; $4O Pei ton, but,
there is nothing 4.oilag in the article. ,
There is less doing In Flotir, but, with a continuation
of light receipts and stocks, tholders are enabled. to main
tain fanner unotationa: About 900 barrels changed hands,
including Superfine at $5256.180; Extras at $5 North
Western ,Extra Family at $6 60a7 75; Pounsylvanbt, old
and new do. do. at $6 2.5a7 25; Indiana and Ohio do. do
at e7al3, and fancy lottfot'sll 25a10. t No change in Ere'
Flour and Corn Meal mall salmi of the 'former at,
The heat: Market'.. la dnil. the shipper' haiing tem-.
poratily withdrattrn, and prices favor.buyers; sales of
• good and prime new Fettrorylvania and Southern, Bedsit
62a1 6•6. and. White,at. 70ali 80: - .% Rye is stead)*
with small sisleS or eisttrn at el 20;4
torn Is - 2 count per bushel 'higher. Males of , ,osq
bushels yellow at $1 19a1 20, and. liVestern mixed at
el 1681 M. .oats are dull at 68070 cents for old Western,
and 5 . 88 rents for new gennlyynwis..swil Delaware.
Whisky l held firmly. klales of wood and iron-bound
kiwis at el 1801 21, tax 'paid. . • •
New York Money Market: '
:..... , • . .
frierii'llie New York ler4of today.l . . ,
Til int ii DA ir , 'Aug. 19.—WerS. it ailffher Scamp:* of the
year the streetled materials enough •tesday for a- very',
dative time in the.stockAnarket: In some -of the lister
more directly *Meted • there were fluctuations more 41.
lees wide, but the dullness of the summer season and the
apathy of the general market have robbed operations
of spirit and interest. In the first, place there was a re,
dm: flan ,• 'ln the - - Bank, •of '• England' rate of
discount to two and ' a half per cent.-s-heretofere
a antral' for palurbationa: in the 'geld 'and -gee
ernmenttnarkets—which was rather •quietly. regarded.
Then there was a dozen 'rumors of new railway consoli
dation sat/nes, the most prominent of which was one
to theater* that the Chicago and Northwestern Railway..
Company • had leased or intended to lease, the k
Island road—the two lime . bearing much the samea
r
Genie lieeli other that the
two
River and IL m
reads do in connecting two important points. They
form a loop between Chicago and *Omaha, and are Its the
line of - the great xontinentaironte from the Atbudic:
to the nwifle.' • The Bock ' Island is the tie xer
road, having been only recently completed and the
shorter, but the Northwestern IS ni easy running order.
The street has been long exercised to know upon which
ci the two the through trallie would concentrate. and
upon which the speculative spirit of reusolidation would
alight In' extending the Lao. Shore series of railway
anuilLialtnitions. , bbonid both be, brought under one
managaruent :and all ' rivalry iliF , Sinnt.4., as in
the rase of the : Mason, Elver and liar •
lem. preliminary' to consolidation with the New
York Central, the' Gordian knot . would ..he cut
and theprehleut solved. Tlc, public would be the man
era Ily is heathy competition of course; but the ,days of
sach rninena m
ritalhave:hearlY,gone bY, and . rtillw.V
directors have found it more protitablo to combine with
each other than to wage titeirtild wars for the public
benefit mei their individual loss. fader these rumors'
the stock market, which had been very dull - In the fore
noon, became rather animated for 64, sultry a summer
afternOoniand the Stork Exchange {Val et *antes almost
There was rontillerable activity bathe gold market Abe
opening sabi; ranging sae bigh before the'
news of the reduction in the Bank of England discount
rate haul been. retteircsl:suiceisling stitich there was a
rather sharp decline to 1.32i1. The feeling biter in the
day WM , unsettled and the popnlar inipreesion that a large
Ti
decline It at hand wax elwelosl by the sales of bonds on • •
foreign et-count rind by the shipment of gold to California
by prominent houses. There hoe been great monetary
distress in San
,Ernnelsco lately and 85 . 111th as 2 . 1 i per
cent. per' onth phi for discounts. On this neenusittlie
Secretory of the Treasury has instructed the Assistant
Treasurer hereto reveivi- gold tie tire extmit of e4-00t/AX/..
to be dishtirstsi'from the Treasury in San Francisco, for . -'
the twronnwalat ion of the merelinti ts awl the 1110110 Y mar- .
kid in that city Theilisbitrsetnents of coin itipirest tiglay
amounted to :QM 432. The steumerEttion tool; out 6135,402
in specie'.'
Yor
Yor cash gold the Inquiry was It-se active, hut still
sufficiently so to occasion rates from six down to three
:out-a-holt per cent. fOrenrrying: The operatiowi of thud;:
'fold Exchantreilank neday,were as fellows •
iross 10.3,031,000 '
(Odd balances ' ..... . 1,a0.043
Currency 'balances • 2,5111.811
The government gold sold by the Assistant, Treasurer
brought fair prices. as' will. be seen by the following .
awards : ft 1.0.00) 1t 1:13.13, t".... , 44.1.00.1 at 1:33.10. 91.50.000
~ ,,, ..100.0s) ,133.06. 5'9114(1 at I:13.13, B , ltx,i,tain ...
.•'•!.0.,11 1 00 at.1.13..41—eL001LL1.133.41.i-4.11.000 nt-1334ei,--
*lTalsttil at 133.10. 89).01.00 at 41.12, .571.1,1Xxl at 1:13.14.
WO at ISIAH. & . ...3609trat 13,3.03, ,7,000 133.113, .5:7,000 at
The oils amounted to over 6'4.000.000.
Goveroments were stesely after the dearth of offerings.
yetenlay, but the proposals for the remnant oft lie two
millions being Plentiful to-day prices weakein.d. awl the
whole market broke down with, the decline - in Shia.
reperteil hens . y sales: of bowls ori foreign ficl . llllllt
bowls purchased for the coned-ni.tit of the two null lions
were hi the lots, :twilit
coupons. new, at : 116'2, registered,
110.35 ; WA. coupons, Js , ;2„,
leered, 119.34; 83:540(11, Lt 3 2, registered.. 119.40
isa.t. registered. 119.40. •
Foreign exchange w ii.wicak Mid rower ;Miler the effect
of a hence supple of bills, the prowlikiit JuittsT.
free sellers in order to gel:fiairiliFfiliMmiit CalifOr-
Dia. lint the xi eaker feeling was mom, manifest in the .
slaty Any sterling bills, -which-tit.— drawers-except- to
cover by shipments of California produce.
The New York-Steck 3Lneket.
I eorrespoudettee of the AMOCidted Press.l
NEW. YORK, Aug. 20.—Stocks Money steady
0.'637 per cent. Gold. 13'_7a; 11162, columns, 122;:i; do.
18(4..1o., ; do, km, eo., 120%; do. new. ng?i,_' do. 13 5 7,
119?: ; 195 i ; 1040s,113!i ; Virginia g's, Alia.
sour' Canton. Company, Cumberland pro
fernrd. —: New York Cent ral. 209...i::Erie,lf&sig; Beading
96iS; 'Hudson 'Firer, hi; Michigan Central.3l): Michigan
Stontlwrn. ICU; Central. Cleveland and
Pittsburgh, 106; . _ Chicago and Nock Island. Nei;
Pittsburg!) and Fort Wayne, 314; Western Uuiou Tele
:graph C0.,383C. - •
3tarkts by
("Wail IMSPate446:tlie Ea r ening Bulletin.] ,
• MAI" 'toms...Aug - Cod 20, 31.-llottou—The market
this morning' was excited, active and high: fillleS of
..boat Lfilti bales. We quote as follows: 31141111111 g UP
.30,';:;11 1.111 ing Orleans. 35.
Flour, Se.—Reetipts-14,M0linrrOIS: The market for
Western and State Flour is dull. heavy awl 5 cents
lower. The sales are about 6.10111 barrels ' including
Superfine State at. 15ati•Lf.); Extra State at cial 35 15;
Low grades Western Extra, $6 6016 85.• Southern Flour
L. dull and heavy. Sales of 400 barrebs. California Flour
, pu M. Sales of sxlo barrels. ' •
Provislons.—The receipts of Pork are 49 barrels. The
market is dull and manilla! at 6,Cf3a33 12" S for new West-
Lard.-Receipbe-460 packages. _The market .
iiiloweivithd dull.. We quad() fair to primp steam at 19414
20 rents„
Whleki•7lteCelpta,47o barrels, The market io firm-and '
Groceries are'doil, with firmer prieea. • •
raiti.—Recei pte—Whent , 12;4;000 htuilfids. The market
is lower. doll and unsettled. Sales of. N0..2 Milwaukee
at Mal 68, .• Corn.—Receipts.--40,0011 bushels. • The
market is dull 11.111 tame. Sales of 20,000 bushels Western
of $1 Dial 23 afloat. Oats.—Receipts-82.000 bushels.
The. market Is , higher, with. a good demand. Sales of
60.000 b,ttehebt at Otani cents Rye'nominal. ' •
PITiSBURGH,August 20,—Conaiderable transactions in
Oil yesterday, both for Crinie and Refined. Crude Sales •
of 4,00 barrels, 1.000 barrels each mouth, September to
December at - 18 ',cent..;: 4,000 barrelsMc43,ooo We.
b. 6.;Augu9t.lllc., Refitted-Sale.. of 4,000 bbls August,
31%a32; 1,000 bbls., each, September, td - - .December; 32,4 re
cent... We quote, August , 3lyg cents; September, 32'4e.
and September to LBeeembera• at .323,canfic. f Receipts,
2.440 barrels:: Shipped by A V. and 1' 11. R. oil line,
2,060 barrels Refined i •timibrPounsylyktda Ballreffil, - 343
barrels •Retinod , ri , ai'
(Correspondence of the Am:Minted Press 4 .
BALTImong. Atm 20,771110tt0n. very :km.' Stork very,'
Nearer. Helmut 34a31 c.; Flour quiet; loxy grade Bearer;
Howard Stroot.'.l;lurperfine,./i6Va7oo;:do,, , ..Extrit • $7 25a
25; do:Faraily; 60a9 . 50; City Mills Superfine,' 01' 25
tiB 60; .dm , Extray $7: 25ai 26;'d0.. Family, $8 Mal° '76;'
Western . : Superfine. 4 a Lead 78; db. Extra, 87'25a7 76;
do: Family sBaB 60. Wheat irregular; prime to choice
red $1 M .0
al 65. Corn firm; prime 'White, $116;
$ El 6. e. Oats dull at 63a58c. 'Fork ' firm ' itt 534. Bacon
Quiet; r
'. ib-shies, 10V,c.• elear i lk; 1935a10,5e.; shoulders,
16. 1 ..ia16310. Hatu5,2411250.L firm at 20a21c. Whisky ;
sells at •1 18 with fair dem d.
PATENT OFFIOES I
.W.eor.i'ourth and Chestnut'
(Entrange on MIRTH Street.) .
FRANCIEkAi PASTORIFS I
Solicitor of Patents.
ratan - is procured for Anventions in do United SUNS
and Foreign Countries, and all business relating to, the
same promptly transacted., Call or eend,for circular on
Fatents. Offices open until 9 o'clock every averting.
VANTON
• Nil Preeeivod Ginger, Ir. syrup of the :celebiated Chk=
pported and ' ft ll2a gil l b P y r ltE i rltß i tta i lr i l li :CB(l l %
math Delaware avenue, , . . ,
Trig. AC
'19'013110
~ '417,961. 01
. .
, ......
489.749 09
c,Gzi
limtlmtJo . oo:4looo**/*: . o . *4**.OV.
T - 7-4
A 4,0
__..
'43:k ' r L~.GRAPII
Additional Cable Quotations
AA Suicide in . ',ler,.sey Cit-3 Pa.
the.Anaittile rabic..
LlvEnrooL, Aug. 20,1.30 P - 31 The sales
of cotton to-day trill not exceed .18,000 bales..
Yarns and fabrics are firmer at .4queliester at
better vriecs r . • •
frAlds, Aug. 20, ...q.--tbe'l3otirge is firm"
lie - Mt:oBf. 45p:
HAvTit, Aug. 20, A. 3.G.-=Cotton - `opened ac•
rive; on the spot quiet; sales at 163 f: 50e.r`
• Netteilde its:Jersey Ctrs: °-- ' -
Specfal Deeptdch to tho Phila. Evenina
.
NEW ,•Augibit 2.1).—A , Jersey. City po=.'
)iceman named Samuel Ramsey, it brother of
General John Ilamsey.eonlmitted nnicide this
morning; by Shooting Iduiself ittthe 'General's
store, Is o..,2'ltlontgotnery 'street.' It, iikiears
that *Ramsey had been drinking for several
[Corregandence of- the,Maociated Provs.i
NEW Augwit .93th.4-13arnuel Ramsay,
frotlier-- , of•-43Eatieral , a-aminw---61.1thenio
Army, committed snicide py shooting jnjer-,
bf,doiripatio'
tr °P i r
- e tj iAP ( TA I O iT4 B r4ec4 l . l e; 1491e.4ves f ai.
laWla'
Yt Blacksmith , ar r ived • ere Y
from California. - .• • • • , •
FINANCIAL AFFAIRS IN NEW YORK
AN`EASINESS IN THE MONEY MARKET
ADV.4.N 7' CE IN GOLD
Govenninents Firmer and Improved
Stocks Firm and Slightly- Better
, .
[Special Despateh tcwthe Alla. Evening DulletinA
'NB* YoRK, August 20.-The Toledo' aid
Wabash and Lake Shore roads have been 'con-;
solidated.'; - Wabash stock ' haS been put in at
100; Lake Shore stoat at 120, -with a tax divi--
dend of 4lier cent. -on the- Litter:: ~lichigati
Southern gave notice to the :Stock' Exchange
to-day of an issue, of 51,200,000 'of. new stock
in :30 days. . • '
,
The money market is easy at. fia7 per cent.
on call. Foreign exchange is firm; and. prime
bankers' bills at, sixty days are quoted at 1091:'
The gold market was weak at the opening at'
132111,1323,' and afterwards rallied to Loans
were made at 2:15 per cent:for carrying.
The government bond market was steady
and lower early in, the, day, but afterwards
became firmer and improved, and Southern
State securities are generally' steady. • •
The railwaY market was active and excited
in the WabaSh and Lake Shore stink in conse
quence of the consolidation. Wabash opened
at .81, and finally rose, with frequent
and wild fluctuations' and heavy
ings. Lake Shore onened at 107 g, and
rose to 1084, with an active basines.s. The',
balanci of the market was firni, and, on the
whole, a little better. 'Sew York Central is
selling ex-dividend of 4- per cent. on the
certificates, equal to 3`-11 ' per
.cent.; . :New York Central, 110.'ilaa03;
Rock Island, 1161:111lif; Wabash, 85a851; Pre
ferred, 841a8. - r, Michigan Southern, , 109a10fil;
Erie, 281a281. The unseellaneous list was
strong on Pacific Mail, and the stock sold up
to P. 5. The balance and . Express stocks
were dull., '
Election Frauds In Tennessee.
A NaShYille despatch says: .
As the time passes by we receive further ac
counts of the manner in which the legal
voters of Tennessee were, at. the recent elec
tion, deprived.of their suffrage, In one por
tion of th e county in- which Nashville is
situated;ti half -dozen colored nieni - partially
inclined to favor Softer,- were stationed on
the road leading . to Nashville, Where they
were paid to remain during the day and tell all
the colored Republicans . whom- --they saw
going toward 'Nashville that they would
certainly be Nit in jail if they went to the
city that day. The plan succeeded, and several
_hundrett_colored_men in_that portion of the
comity were deprived of their votes. A num
ber of colored men living iiithe neighborhood
of Jackson Hermitage were warned not to go
near the polls on election day on pain of death.
Only one man ref Used to obey the Mandate,
ain't Walked in nearly ten miles to-'vote. Re
titrnifig:late in the ev.ening; be was :set upon
by three men . ; Whoeharged him with
going to the city to Vote. •‘ [. H& had hidden his
(4611c:tie in his shoe;: and strenuously denied
that. lie had voted. NotWithStandi lig this Int
- shot-'doWn and left hit' dead. Jilt! recto
-Vet-EA SUbSequently 'drag; himself to a house
near by, where he now lies in a' dangerous'
ccindition. The inanlins ; a brother-in-law iii
Nashville; from whom I received these facts.
At Datidritlue,enptain . Shade Harris; the well
- known loyalist and 'Unfelt soldier„ was set
. upon and so badly beaten that .his life has
been despaired Of. General Stokes 'arrived
here last night from his home in DeKalb
county, and started this: evening Wash
ingtou city. He is in good healthanctspirits,
and confidentthat•the enormous frauds per
petrated in this State have only temporarily
overborne the. Republican cause. The
amended election retUrna, as . - they : come in,
constantly increase the StokeS vote, Which is
now pretty/certain will fully equal that given
last year 'to 'Gen. Grant.
FIRE-PROOF 'SAFEkf
THE GREAT FIRE AT YONKERS.
Berrhig's Safes Again Tested !
.YONNERS, N. Y., A ugua 13, 1569
Messrs:NEM:NG; FARREL.. & SHERISIAN, Now
York—Genf/mita :' At, the great fire. hero ou Sunday
night lust (Bth inst.), which covered an area of two
blocks, we had two of your safes in our, building, which
passed safely through the ordeal. When first discovered
they were surrounded by "limning lanther, and bear ovi-:
knee of having had a severe test,as our' lace of business
occupied seven lots, all covered with buildingS and lum-'
ber,alt of which: were entirely consumed, and to' this
heat the safes were exposed. It was ylth great satisfac
tion that we found, upon cutting into our Safes, as they
were so warped and Mrollen they could lie opened. lu no
otbet j avor, that our books and • paperi and' nioneY were
all Anted ;'indeedthe bills . came out of sa w t out
a singe; nod" nothing is discolored but the binding of
the booke: Respectfully yours, • .
• '• ' • ACKERT & QUICK-
HERRING'S PATENT. CHAMPION SAFES, tho
most relintilo protection ,from fire now, known. HEA
RING'S NEW, PATENT BANKERS', SAFES. com
bining hardened steel and iron with the Potent Fnifik
lin Ito or SPIEGELEISEN, furnishes a'reilstant against
boring and cutting toolo to an. extent berotoforo nn
known. . • •
Farrel, Herring & Co., Philadelphia.
Herring., Farrel & Sherman,' No. 2 - 51
Broadway, corner Murray St., N. Y.
Herring & Co., Chicago.
Herring, Farrel & Sherman, New Orleans.
rptf§
p:l5 p!Citiwc4
THE RESULT .OF. ,TH „INQUIRY
E'rocialiVastilnictqu. '
,W4fzlziljGioN, Aug. 20 ..The result tpf,,iii
9,ulry, at the Treasmy Depart:at/A.ls4th ie.
gard to; he transfer, of funds frOnv California
to New. York' is that S.- & W. Seligman de-
Posited with Assisfant,Trew"atrer Butterfield
f200;000 oirtlie ]7th of AUgust. and on'the'ilth '
Of August $150,000, pro days before tit r e ieedipt
of ; ' - the telegratn 'from, •VidePresident`,col-,
tai, Sen4tor Stewart and pi. Linderman was;
..,,
e,eeiVed at the Treasury pepartment, and two
ays,befOre,the application was niade:biLeeo
- Walter,, of New York, agents for, the Bank
_7_44CalfcEtriaiTrAtuff 34ll3, 4, l 7
the lit , although dated the 16th inst. • Their ap.:
,li eati o ,_ tbrou _lt Gen'. Butterfield was for the •
0; • : -
ti i tjllo.V
. .L.••• •
i-PEILEO4 4: I7III 7c )
f - "
L.A.TER'y FROM , '.iWA.SEEINGTON
•
lie TrAnfer of Funds' from `California`]
depotO of $300,000. The proposition was; int7*
Mediniely accepted, and Ihe parties so noti,
fled' .by ; telegraph.' Lees &Walker were also
Authorized to make a further', deposit of
4b110,000 on account of the Bank of California.'
Messim Dabney, Morgan .
f.,10/$O, and, Selegiman &
$1,000,000., ' The entire matter of tratisfers'
rests with''Gen. Spinier; whosaya; be alone is
responsible for what has been F done..in. the
premised, and he shows that the lantat as
they stand on the Treasury books, entirely
disprove the allegation, that ;favoritism
has'. been -extended-to any party.- 3lessrs. '
Seligman & Co., the firm to which `
is made in the San Francisco telegrarni as
having profited by the public necessities; have
for'i long time conducted the transfers of Spe
cie -between San Francisco and' New 'York; "
and' performed the Service at a lower rate of
Prerititun than others, and always, 'it is tiaid,
at'the Department in the interest of
,Govern
ment against all 'contbined.
.
Ifflehignn and Lake Shore - Itailraad
[Special Despatch to the Phila. Evening Bulletin.] ,
Nr.w•Tong, Aug, 20.—There is •a rumor on
Wall Street; generally credited, - that the Lake
Shore and Michigan - Southern . Railroad Cont.
pany tviP issue slo,oooofshares*ithin 30 days:
Fire in Rochester, N. Y.
ROCHESTER, August 20:—A. fire.hero to-day
destroyed property valued at -.515,000.;
Wanzer, dentist. xs the, :heaviest loser. „The
life was started by bursdars Who rObbe.d W,an
zer's safe of 5170. .
- CITY BULLETIN.
THE NATIONAL LABOR 'CONGRESS
The following report froth Mr.. Jolison was
received and read by Mr. Daily, of Ohio :
The report is as follows:
It is undeniably trite that the prejudices of
the workingmen, as well as the manufacturers
of the whole country, have been unjustly
Faused,against the miners of. Pennsylvania.
. si careful and dispassionate examination of
this whole question will astonish every fair
minded man. With the press and the tele
graph manipulated in the interest of Capihil,
it is not strange that the impression has , gone
forth that the miners are responsible. for the
present high price.of coal. , • ,
What are the facts in the case?, We find by,
carefurlitquiry that up to,the time of the for
illation of the present or, known as'
the W. 13. A., - the Miners had'atiftbred,Outrage
and long-continued abuse in many ways, with= .
out the power of redress. The operatori4 had
cheated and . oppressed . their, men until a
snontaneouS. ,movernent • placed thirty, thou
sand laborers in line to defend their common-
Among . "the grievances 'against which the
men protested were these:
The collection of all bills; Whether they are
right or - wrong: , The lmte,her' the- end of
each month handed I bis accounts into the
otlice - withonk- !consulting; - the -miner. The
operator charges tire per cent. for collecting,
and, the butcher not . eating to lose,.sells time
beef for enough indie to make up tbr fire per
cent. Next were the, doctor's bills. '•
The TphysiCian. -charges seventy-five cents
per month for a married man, and fifty cents
- for a-single-perSorthelnerivere'lint.--very
particular about this item, still they. claimed
the-privilege-of - their blVIr physti
instead of liming the operator to do for:
them:_:The Shanutker'S ;hill _ was 4 collected .at
the, endjortheinonth i the same as-thelmtcher's
bill. lustances„ axe related where the shoe
- maker - took MateicmeriSureTcollectedthebill7
at tlia_oftice; .andthen never_fulislied eLla
I_Tso e Operators had stores i which ftiey
colopelledflie-men patroniSe:T , This, 'they
said, was against the laws of , the. 'State; :and
they felt greatly grieved that they could
spend their money where they pleased. They:
say that for years,
,and-years they worked for
two dollark or IeSS per clay; while the operators
were making fabfflons snms." Said one miner :
" The operators keep 'lei ignorant, and then
they-blackguard ns hebanse we:',;cannot read
and. write.'• • • •• ..; , ~ •
We would like to...devoten part of your time .
to books and papers, hut, how.cau we when the
press and the: operators are opposed to ,the
"eight-hour law It was the universal com
plaint that the operators' Were not in ftvor of .
the miners sending their children to seheol.'
Thousands upen thousands of the, children 'of
miners, from eight to' ten years.of 'age,' are
obliged to work ten hours per day.. .
Much has been said about the miners seek-,
in to control the market- .I`bis is the miners'
statement; ,`.`When.all the, men .are at, work,
they Can Supply the'nfarket in, ;about 80XOTI.,
months. - Last 'year'l3,ooo,ooo tops", - Were 're
quired ;Abb.% year the ninon nt ie . qUired Will be
about 14,000,101. Now they - elann it is Much',
better for to' work nioderately all 'the
year, or ..at least nine : Or ten months, than - to
glut the market Anthe, spring, andthen lie idle
a part of the year.l Again, they think far
better to` keep coal at about ss.or ;id the.year
round, than to, bitve'the, prices, ranging
.frown
814 to $l5. '
, ,
"For yearspsistthe"opperators have c,oinpeted
with each , other; 'and"lulled' :'the :Market, at
the miner's expense, 'and at the expenseof the
country. ..tiow they propposes to stop this busi-•
netts and get control of the market,•or, if= this
cannot be dello in ; every: instance, at • least to
share the•profits' with - their emPleyers, Efere
seems tobe•the trouble, The operators have
no idea of being content with`fair returns;' and
to share with theit , wprkmen is to them some
thing ridiehlous: - f , scale of prices
works - both:ways; hoWever, • for' the . men are
willing to, :mine cheaper when the -prices fall'
below a certain point,' • . • • •
Who, then, is respOnsible for the present
high ,price, of .coalf Unquestionably,, it is
divided hetween - theSe three classes :
First-:--The'.great' mining monopolies, the
managers 'of vhielf are not satisfied with a fair
profit on the coal mined, but who " bull" , the
market in a score of,-ways.. • •
At the verY;tinfewheit our ~great commer
cial centres are suffering on account of a, short
suPP/Y . of coal, and the price is *lug forced to
nil outrageens figure; it is a lot unusual for the,
railroads to'amiss - freighting the coal. Vast,
armies' of railroad laberers• are thus compelled
to lift idle auttdirectlk aid the swindling, one
rations. Trititspertation tariffs are increased;
ears are refused to. the tonalier companies out
of the ring, and all the machinery of ailment
puluus•railroaut zmintopolies is thrown into the
setthe to force the price of coal to a higher
figure. • •
Seep/id—The Transport«tion - Monopolies, tho
railroads and Canals owned by these,' the small
cum paniei•soul the intlividuil operators who;
2f1111.36.9:‘
.'
.'. M n rnle''are r ttln ' a
it or atil Pi in t he idein
0143'Ni/t j the men, Wouldbehble f&brenkthe i
e
:
oree oftveculative lbpertaidno aimed o:the.
iknufackming and gonsdiningjnterottfof Stff
kountre,;:::s , . .... .. . , ~, . 0, .;,. : z
1 - Third-;The,iCigiblificuleOrss.....'l2.l44 ST
Nei liaist;:are .. noynverltegup - M0 , i..., L o ut.e J.
! II
•• uithei ildvant.lge'octlik'neediq!of :the
. nary, ~ . A -.-4.4.. •., -1' 1 t,,h iv I . l' + r'' 4.7. •it
The Miliera. theinaelves , sitoukl..pitifei Unit .
, Pe price .of costrahould remain at rive( or , i4dx
polkas in New York.,the. year., roundeAf *lt
drops below the. mipiremg, price , th5 . .413.04;:i
annot auppot / their fainihes,,and, they must,.
O n' nit work.. O. the Other Mind': they, do nbt
desire that 'the price of coal .should ' • eirer ' a -
ancenbove the ma:dynum iigurei
ifere . givee
I When coal sold at NewTork . for $$ per ton;
Arid at Port Carbon. for: $3 per ton, the wages
In Scht xylkill county was for. miners, Sl4 per..
I week; inside laborers; $l4; ontsidelaborers,sll. .
per week. In :Luzerne r minete .. received $l6,
intiide laborers .sl4;.:„*ontside . laborers •
sll . lll4'and 'When price:e for coal' adv anced, ,
the miner* ;denunided .'nnd -halm' • feceived '
twenty per -tent.`otsaltlindvance. • To illua- '
• trate: If coal advanced toi.S.ll per . tOnnt Port
Varbon (Width it has not yet ilotiej ; thd *aerie'
Wages would then be. $22,40.per week. .It is
hot the miners who put up, the,price of coal Id l ,
Port Carbon and New York. They 4o nod .
deMand nor reeeiVe any advanee - of wages.''
until 'the coal is mined and *sold; and the.
money in the pockets of the operators. - :Then .
• they demand the twenty per cent. of the"gd- ,
attee•n" . tild.A. .OL - 41M : 11110 -- okt.. ~.. • L.- .1. -s
; =
go or; $3 flxea as the' basis. •• But it the price:of:
• coil is reduced (heir pages weuld be reduced ;
hontclintrnnwimrth. . . . . ,
. .
Yomf committee mould soggost 'that ita
question , G
Whether overnment , should 'riot
sid
t a k e
. posseon thecoal mines of ' the coun
try,'paying the present owners 'a' fair valua
tion for.the same; and run these mines as the
gold mines of California have been run, in the
interest of the, whole people. The reserve
right to all the national wealth of the country
shouldriever pass out of the hands of the
people lilt° the bands of the monopolists.
E. L. Rom:triton, Salim an B. Pratt, Samuel Y.
! Buck; John Siney, Caineron, Com
' Adjourned until two P. 3r. • - •
Dzirrnucnvn, lents:—.A: despatch received
at the • Central Station' this' afternoon, an
nounced • 'that Schofield's. woolen in
Montgomery connty,,i , opposite .M.stnayunk,
waxen fire.. The flames burned fiercely.. The
fire companies from, 31 a 11 .Vilnk were, soon
present, but owing to the saircity,of. ; water in
the'Schtiylkill, were 'unable to do.'intfish to-
Wards saving the building: • • • • '
A steam engine from Gerrnantoivir was or
dered to the scene of the conflagration..
At two o'clockthis . afternoon the fire 142.9
still burning, with . every prospect:of the total:
estruction of the mill. . . •
Itjr.l 3IA D 4 knaZ
PORT OF ' 1.
"zirrigiariaine,Bniletin on Inaule fare. •• ... • :
• .ArturvED THIS DAY. •
Steamert Bristol, Wellace, 24 hours; fram'Newtork;
witkoulse to W P Clyde & Cm' , • • : . .
Bark b`rederick Louise (Dan), 'Larch°, 5 days from
Ivigtnt: with kryolite to 'Penne Salt Manufg Co—vesnel
to J E Barley & Co. . • •
' Barkentine White Cloud,. Freeman, from Boston, in
ballast to Lennox' eßur g ess.
Brig .3 W•Drisko, Haskella drays horn Gardiner, with
ice to Knickerbocker Ice Co, • • . . .
Fehr P Adorns, Tabbutt;3 ;days from New ` toil, ha
ballasta to J E Barley & Co.; , • • • . ;
&hr Lucy, Townsend, 1 ,lay from lintudywine, with
flour to UM Lea. • .
• Schr Abbie town, Lambert, from ; NewburTP9res
ballast to Knight A Sons. • •
Sam Rebecca Florence, Rich, from Nowburyport, In
ballast to Knight A Sons. • •• • • .
Sclir Mary A. Holt, Holt, from •Rostort in ballast to
-Knight 1.• Solis. •
Schr Henrietta, White, from Saco, in ballast to Knight
Sous. •
itchy Julia E Pratt, Niekerson.rh days' from Boston,
mdse to Mershon A Cloud. ; • .
Schr Eugene, Howes, ti days from Welifieet, with mdse.
to Crowell & Collins. • •
Schr Active, Goombs:s days from Boston, with ice to
Carpenter Ice Cc.. ,
• Seim Fauny G Warner, Dickinson, front Middletown,
withatone to captain.. • • • . •.•• •• • •
Schr Ploueor,,Brewer, 4 days front Norfolk, with -bast
bolts-to Yates & Co. • • • • . • •
• Seim Caroline Hall, Vickers, 3 days from • Riclithond,
With mill feed to qtptaln.. • .
, Sebr M W Griffins, Grilling; Bridgeport, Ct. • •
Schr Geo Fides, Little, . • ..*.,
Schr Brun,N wine, Adams, PrOrldellCO, , ', . • .
Schr E A Conkling. Daniels, Providence. • •• • ,
Schr W F Phelps, Cramer, Salem. • •
Schr Il T Hedges. Franklin, Boston. • •
Schr 11 Allen: Tatem, Boston. .
•
tk•hr R W Toll Itylibine, Boston.
Schr 11 11 Huntley, Nickerson - , Boston.
Schr L A Danenhowet, Shoppanl. Dolton. •
Schr 11 B Metcalf. Rogers, Boston. ' . •
Schr It F Reeves; Brannin,Boston.
Seim Nantllus, Harrison. New York. • • .• •
•
&hr Billow, Billow, Near York:. • • • • ; •••
Seim J Boynton, Mitchell, Now York. .. • ,
Schr Cliellenge.Nickman. St George, Mee' • ' '•
Schr I N Tower, Perry, Newhuryport..-:. . • , ,
Seim .1 P McDevitt, Mullen,Norw , . .
Schr Jlt Perry, Kelly, New - Maori . • " '
.
Tug Thos erson. Allen, from Baltimore,Nitkaiow:.
of bergco to TV P Clyde ACo - - • , „
.•
Tug Chem peak° Merrihew; from 'Havre& Grace,W '
a tow of bargee to , W
P Clyde & Co. ' . ‘;;
CLEARED THIS DAY.
Steamer A CStimers, Knox, N York; W P , Clydu &'0
S-in A Tirrell, Atwood, Boston, D Cooper A
.Schr.L Sturtevant , Cruse, Hatteras Iniet.via 110:1111.1Mpre.,_
Lennow &Surges:B, .; ; .:•. • ; • •
Seim Althea, Smith. Charlestown, Day4luddall ,
Schr JDI Vence. Anderson, Cambrldsgport: 'd6
S.eltr V Sharp, Sharp, ; • do • do
Schr .1 Parsons. Stephetia.Porisincintli.
Schr L Stront,l'enzlo, Bostott..i: .• du' • I . :
Schr Alaska, Clark, Salem, flordraiKellyml Nutting, ..,
•;
Seim Littly„Elleu; Somers'iSSlCtry," • ; • . da•
Sets 3lnirlialtoraisit. Palmer, Saloni, - . ; ;•.,e
SC•lir
Selo - A Repplier,3leFitilden, Washington, ' • •Rd •"•••••
SI(I or Mery Carroll, Ballon_ger. Britt soton,
Tug Commodoto WUsini,,ll,avre du Grace, wid.h,ktlrrj_ ..
bargee. W P & Co.
Tug Hudson: Nicholinn i f,Holtiinore; :With;',Mfilaw7;.of
; be rites
t MiIItORANDA..:: • • "
:(I
- , -St:•:mier Aleppo-( Br/Alamein:tailor Liverpool - t ele:area
at New York yesterday,..... .
• Steamer Union NG/4-Hreffirrr•foi; uremia; Bleared at
New York - vesterday ; - ••••• • - -
Steamer Multi:, Hithire,froml ,therpobtivialiailori,;:it
New 'York yesterday. ;_• • ! • . • •• •
Bark Linde Abbott Ilk), Scohy,'sl:etired. at ,Neiv. lciiirk:
yesterday for Buenos Ayres. • ''• • '•- • "
Sarre Rachel, Scanlon. and. J'4l
hence ut Providence 1,201 inst.
Sohn , C A Greiner,* Mercer, hence 'for ProvidancO;
Mary Anna. Bums, Alo' for • Norwich; -.I oSephltie, Ball,
do tor Bridgeport, and Mary Mershon, Brightman, do
for Fall River, at Now. York yesterday. • • • • ;
Seta's F Cubado, Small; J.)1111 E Dailey, Wall; • SS.
Leverius, Conlon. and • A Falkenburg, Terrell, sailed.
from Providence IStit !net. for this port. ' • • • •
• Schr Alibi° lanreloy. beforo • reported totally wrecked
on Block Island, has been pumped out and taken off the
beackby Cu pt. Mitchell, agent of the Atlantic Sabina
rine Wrecking Co, and towed . into.. Newport by their
steamer Rescue, Iyhere she arrived at 9 AM yesterday.
Fehr Seluh B strong, from Charleston- for Delaware
City, with a cargo of phorphutee, fo adored. in the Gulf .
Strewn on (ho 9th inst. Crow saved,
. -
• FORTRESS - lO.ls Aug. 20-- aimed in; for lini
timore, Helm Commerce, -from Eleuthera. Sailed ; brig
Chattanoona, fur Porto Rico.
4 )-8)
+.•
M 7 ' LINEN STORE, tc-
sas .Arch Street.
1128 CHESTNT.IT stri3;Farr.
Just Reeej.ved,
A FEW MORE
PRINTED 14114,EN LAWN.pitgisEs":
Ladies who want a LIN,IM LAWN , DRESS should
call immediately
NEW .HA 1t
EMBROIDERED INITIAL LETTERS,
Pretty Deaigns and Quite Cheap.
L IQUID BENNE.I
A MOST CONVENIENT ; •
ARTICLE for rnuking JUNK ET or CURDS and WHEY
in a few minutes at trilling expense. , Made from frost
rev/lets, and always reliable. JAMES T. SOWN, • ,
Je9,tf.rp§ ' Broad and Spruce atreeta.
A._ a CHEESE. -AN INVOICE OF NOR
JL. TON'S colubr ted 'Pine Apple Clioeso daily' e
til t: and for sale by ,JOS. BUSSIED. S . -CO., Sole
_ •
(AIM! . BBLS. NO. 1 WESTERN
'..LJ °LIM Oil, to arrivo and fi)r ante 'by COCHRAN.
RUSSELL ,Sc CO.. rt I Chestnut stre t.
4'l* ;
•• • -
cicrivrAllirld'Afrintr4s:
...Ai
,t
••:. „
-
7 7 E7 !" • -
• . • . ;:.
OO'
ITTPItOLSTERY G. -
L. T NS
. . .
f•
• ;;
•.,
FOr,Aterlor ,Pewations. ,
;'~,
.Pt i t!aorclinary; efforts have been made to
"excel In taste, quality and variety of Fabrics
for this Autumn's trade, selected personalty
our resident agent abroad from the
Celebtated manufactories of Europe. "
•
Mosquito Canopies
Lace and Getize.;ll4iiiid-
WINDOW su A • witrigicig
• - . A . •
In Perfect Whim;
I_E. - . - W...-...A.T.4g,A . , - ,.!, : , -,'.0.. ;;.
•*MASOIUC HALL,
Noi 719 OKEST3ITITH...STREW
."•
IMZUiI3Mh
A SEVEI(PER CENT : ! .60t - D . AN
$10,500;000:- -
The 'Kansas Paciflo Railway, now in successful ore iii6H:l, 4 .
t ion from Kansas City to Shorldtm,Apreposes to build en , -
extension to Denver, Colorado. The Government h •
as
granted Three Millions of Acres of the finest lands Infq
Ranenaand Colorado, which aro mortgaged for the ,
turlty of a loau of • '
• -- $015005000s • •
This loan is steered In the mod etfcettia Manner. ,It •
representa a road In-profitable operation, and will opert :,
the trade of the Itoekyllountain countrrandeonnect'utt
with. the areat markets of the East, It le , considered t 0...
be - one Of the best loans in the market; • - • •- • -
Even better in some respeoto tban Govern,:
ment Securities:
The loan hne thirty years to run;principal nntl Int4reet.`
payable in gold. semi-annually, seven per cent: • • .
Tile cqupone will be payable semi-annually, in ulther,.: t
Frankfort. London, or New York, and will bo.freo from
Goverment' taxation. The bonds for 'the present. are •
sold in currency at9l, with accrued Interest. •
Clrculan,maps ancl pans phlets sent on application.
DAI3NEY, MORGAN
53 ExchangerPlacei*NY4
.• • . . • . •
M. Ic...J.KSOP ,C; s 0 • •
l 2 Plne etriet, N. Y. , • , ''!!"ai.
• - • , :•.‘. • • 1 •;•i-'l4 : ':
We are authorized to sell the bonds in PhllibliNilibiTi* -
and offerthem n*n reliable inveStratint-to,our frictule:' • •s•••
TOWNSEND.. .WHELEN '&.. CO.
No. 209•WOInd Street . PhiladelphilL.
y 27 f)rur.
St. Leuis,llandalia and Terre Flute
First•Moitgage Sevens,.
, •
WO AV : ollid call the attentiono . f favestortrte• trie itbolllo
Bonds. The Blortgarce Is at the ntto bf 812,000 per MK/
with a sinking fund proviso of 120,000 perruinum.,,ltub . • •
Ilondo are also eudorsed by the following compootoor •
, Terre Haute and
.Indidatrilis Ruiirdaii ''r
eompalarltitilug no.:(1c14 attAaltyge, aitrilmt
sh' s treasary,. , • ,„. :4: ••.; •
Vphitnbui'elricirdo : aazdindtana
• - .'• :•• -•
Vitisiritibli;ViliiinniitC and St. .oiti.s . , 4?ltiito,ay
: • : •,, fis . b(Ong 04ra by ilte •
Pen rinaVan ia Rai/road Compth2y. • : 'r:
We nye the above Bonds at a price that.will
a good ;ate oF !ny r ent
•
DILEXEL. CO.''
;.:.• •• •
lEMUEZ'I==iNEI
PENNSYLVMIA :;AN D' , `
,1 *OR IC
CANAL.ANW - RAILROAD CO.'S
• ••
SEVEN.*:PEit •;CENT. , BONDS,
- guaranteetblifathe 4 AßniiMmAlolailL. 11.4,11 , D
- A limittid amoimt-itt r theso-..Donde hail l ered at
--NINETY-ONE. • -
The Canal Of - this comPanY is 16,0 miles lone. Th'eir t
'Railroad, of theleme length, is fast approaching cam.;
pletion. and; being 'Principally owned by the Lehigh
Valley Railroad Company, will open in connection there- -
with an Rumens° and.protitable trade. Northward from
the Coal Regions to Western and. Southern New York
and the great Laken. Apply at the
:Lehigh Valley Railroad Co.'s (Mew
: • No. 3p3 Walnut Street, Philada..
. . , =ARLES O;.LONGSTRETR, ,
Treasurer Lehigh Valley lialtrilfinomptkni•
• •
. jy3l tfro.
• • •• . ....
_....„.„4„.
~......,,...
~,.... .....:.BAN . ; ." , i`. :,. , .;44,-:,''," .
Ait o . KR - ''..: ''''
• ' --"""' . ~, . , . ;7,.' .. 4 .
! No. 35 SOUTH THIRD.'ZTREEr e ,'-' .
. PHILADELPHIA' : '"'' : "'-'" -: . 1,- ; ,,4 '
, .
~...
, ~ " • .
', L ENERAL aENTB . '" '
"q
JS PENNSYLVANIA' 'A'
Ak,,,... ii do il
I , 2, 4 9 rz Inl g• iir I
3015 : , :>
pOr THE ' ' ' •
~
EFE N ~. ,_
0
-i , r
oto ,Of THE
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA , ~
The NATrozrAr. Liam Iriatrnazwei etnnikkirir Is . ii-•
i'
corporation chartered by spocittiv Act Or Contra% apo't
proved July 2, 1868, with 6 c , . r , 7 , ,
CASH CAPITAL, L 1,000,090, PULL PAM
Liberal terms offered to Agents. and giolleyems,tvebel
are Invited to apply at our • • -; -
Full particulars to be had on application 'it ottrollle
lose ted In the second story of. our BatilthAVVltilte%,
where Circulars' and Pamphlets;'ltilly- ing the
imlvuntages offered br the Company, trulrbe,hast..
. • Ms, OLINALNIK 6 A
- 371 ' 2 Are t l.s Otutlizuns
- • • •
JORDAN'S CEL E BRATED PU.ItE TONTO
, Ale for invalida,family ntle, &az
Tbeauheerther le now furnished with.les. full Wititer.
supply w 'of his highly:nutritiona and - reel -known Dever
'age. Its hie•eproad ' and lnoteasing ' bY Order ut ':
PhYliicans, for invalids, pf families, de. commend
to the attention 'of; all` common who wa ) nt a atriCtir
Pure article; prepared from the. Mt, materials,. and putt
up in the moat careful manner for home twe or trattekori,
tatlon, Orders by mall or o del therwise promBtli p 'ingpnett,'
No. ni) ear street.,
belt w Third end Walnut streeta:4
=SI
21661
t ~[i
I•~~'
ff==ffi