• 7 r , • . t • f.--.4-;, -1 ,:?N MEW pvinicAiritpAtic , : r , tilSruions prettched atTat:o l l.9k . ] rkbton, by Rev. Frederick W. P.*ltgitti, lI r '4o,' , 'Two vols. 'Fields, Osgood kf.lokiSnldi 3 Turner ~ B ros. Co. =n A moulder of men,—a Mac* With sOne ot.l . ',4hat stin 6 of personality we ascribe to Arnold,'' Pf.;.; , :anfl a persuader gifted with the magic. of 71Moral Arayery,seems to liaNzehcen the ;late Mr. Robertson, of Brighton 'llls .• cmR. was clually' stiong up9n 'the wealthy and the artisan classes of the population of the Wafering-place in which his , stewardship was cast. llobertton; of Military ancestry and oronal, 'predilietion tin* the, army4was, -.throughout his comse„of seryice the advocate of war, the defender of British 'glory, the ,chanter of- his c,onntry's army s prtuses-Lthe ,i4levoted admirer Of such soldiers as 1 - ,laveloqk and Aledley ;Vicars. There was „somethincr , -- militinit . .and provocative ,of 'opposition hi ,his original and bold utterances; but they were keeri,' . 'fresh, and scholarly heSides, and We aregbid 'Alessi's: Fields, Osgood have Minded to present them to the American public.- • „...Iklessrs. Fields, Osgood & Co..have put forth,: t ait Trf : ' vonl — ortneS . , t e-7-- a ary 0 thejate Henry Crabb,Eobinioni'a collectfon reminiscences of the people, heloi - 37 - gm„ to the last generation. This Diary has as in terest for book-lcrvirg men comparable,to that: of 13os - war s Johnson. It is 'an invaluablere; cord:from the pen of a littirateur wild knew . everybody in his-day, who had the cultivation to comprehend such as were Worth attending to, and whose character bad the temperance -and sweetness .necessary to their charitable, kindly and balanced appreciation. The Per. trait in front recall§ the senile comeliness of • Sully, our venerated painte.r. Evorybody was glad when Patna' rii's Maya- zinc—which had died the hardest and ° I L harshest of deaths, after emitting a soft, con_ • ' servatory-like , breath, just flavored with senti , • mentality, • and Paris essence, and George W. Curtis,—pushedrup its modest pea-green germ 4' . again from'the old stock in IS6S. The plant took, this time, and throve, and we have the ' l2 'harvest in the shape of three goodly and band `some volumes, packed with little hard, solid, • articulated and rattling, paragraphs and essays. irtallOneS, in these three half-years, has earned a sort of character for being sbort, pithy, and to the point, It has bad few • extended articles, but its indexes show many papers thatanade a mark upon the opinion of 4 'their time. A certan disjointed, loose-hung independence and occasional self-contradiction ° in its editorship we recog,nize not without pleasUre, being reminded th;reby that the con tributions, Such as they are, (and most of them • Armed not wish to be better), are, in every case ,'•: , ,twritten for the Magazine by Americans. ,pees is the old, neat appearance °which is a r is of the taste of the origi . ' • triumvirate, arke Godwin, Curtis and C. F. Brigis=and a more, honest, bright-faced open 4page is not. presented by any of our periodi cals. It is bound somewhat loosely and epheme rally. • lt has views of its own •on magazine I andthe discrepancy between the ;excellent portrait of Huntingdon which graced its first number, and the dreadful pen sketches from the fist of mr. Nast—and then the view . a Naples; and so' on, pure fol-vie-rol and irrele 'Taney from this and that publication of Mr. Putnam's—these discrepant embellishments are likewise , very typical of the hobbledehoy 1 ; hood of American art, and proclaimconstantly, °I • ',.My Country "Tis of Thee," Sold by Duffield ' Ashmead. The fifth Monthly Part of Appleton's Jpor-. gal reaches Vs , through Messrs. 'Claxton Rem- • geft'&; Hallelift:lgen 'The Works of art,' ter take up 'that department first, are sometimes very good. There 3is steel-engraving - after - one - of Darley's fine and thoroughly Ainerican draw . - ings, repreSenting Emigrant Wagons. Crossing the Plains; a peculiar and , piquant design by Winslow ITomeicalled "On the Beach at Long . liranch;" some rarely-fine woodcuts represent ing the great Cardens of Europe; and a,variety 44 other excellent illustrations, with very few Ilkat are.an insult to the intelligence. of the.pub lie. The literature may be described, in gross, as Vietof _up' tempered by Professor Tyn 'dale. There is an oscillation between the wild e%:.vagaries of fiction and_the small, neat tbiugs of science, carefully paragraphed. "The lan who Lauglis".is nearly liniehed ;,'Mul the rrofound question, to be solved in the wisdom ; #44he publishers, now arises: what will Apple :ooi4 be without ‘f The Man who LtuighS ?" 7n.E .FATIIkIi OF 110lm:orAnix.--4Ve re ceive•from T tuner Bros. a lithographic portrait of-Samuel ijahnemann,fmmder of the 11011Fe0- igtipc system of medicine. The' head has the expression of a billiard-ball. THE COLORADO EXPEDITION: Further Particulars from COL Powell— „Slow they Rua the Rapitis..Eateltirig• AdNentures. . \ The Chicago Tribune publishes the follow *, letters from Col. J. W. Powell, commander or the famous Colorado river exploring' Party. • ;The dates are not More recent than that of a peirions letter published by us, but the details , are interesting PARK, Motyrn OF BEAR RIVER, ray, Jtme 18,1869.—0 n the Bth our boats en -iered the canon of Lodore—a name suggested by one, of the men. We soon came to rapids, • over which the boats had to be taken with lines. 'We. had a 'succession of these until coon.' :iritist explain the plan of running these plaCett: The light boat, Emma _Dean, with two gOod oarsmen and mysdf, explore .them; then with a flag I signal the boats to ad vance,'and guide them by signals around dan - 'lgerousjsekS., ;When we come to rapids filled with boivlderolsontetimes find it necessary to walk along the shore for 'examination. If it is thinzght posSible 'run,_ the light boat spro seeds. if • not, the others are flagged to come' • on'''to the .head of the dam. ; gerousplace, and: we ' let down with” sr:make - a portage.;. At . the foot of one of these runs, early, in the afternoon, I fomul a place whew itiwould,be necessary to make a portage, and •signaling.the boats to come down,l walked along the bank to examine the ground for the • rrtage; and left one of the men of my boat to ;st o ma' lie others to laud at the right point: I soon sa"*.ontt of the boats land all • right, and felt ra , M ore' care about them. 'But five Oninute : l44l.er 1 heard a shout, and looking 'xottntl i iSai,tr one of the liciats coining over • the Lalls• i!caPt:,. Howland; of the No Name,'had not seen he signal' in time, and the swift cur rent hikteaxiied kiln to the brink. I saw that ::-.43goh7leOgit.'waA inevitable, and turned to give 111 two minutes more Saw that turn the point and head to shore, and to I. wOnt;aftei'llie boat going over the f a ll s , first fall WM, not great, . 0 11 1 Y two or three ana.wo Uutl oftpn run 51101, but, b e ii m it ~'.~~~*'~F,'E'M ii''' Ont4l,Pii. to: ttnnble : ~ xi : : ,. „,. . Jeetiiii#l:o, ,- * . ,;. 0 , totrivArgy , !,, , , - , : Noty : liiiaiiajwif,,s :, ,,, ,zillitt i lf#J, ~ Illio:, ..*i,VeiliitOW)iiiiis6ol;44taliego6iii m•.:4..,04,:; ; th ~ I;tirriie4jiist COW tai ';Otlttike&*l . ' . '4x, 'Oro* fht , i'lleli,44a il .!Ont4:l;lslllltb.ay. ., ng?, tteiherOdes'aildleWlihiiftitinVid.,o.o lait.iif the , oafs; but she WaStulkiliiiratee', and they : could not Man*: her: ' Still , down the river they 'went, 200 'or: 300 yards,to auether " rocky rapid just as:'bad,.and the boat striick,. 40i3il‘dhilagilig4iiirWaTilligheaTti:6166i: - Tlie7 Men were thrown intp,the river and carried' yowl:my:Sight. Very soon I . turned the point,' and effithl.Se„e, a, mait'ahead ,- aboVe the;' waters seemingly washed abOtit by a whirlpool helpw : , a rock. This Was Frank ,Goodinan Clinging to the rock, with a yip on'whieli life* depeddet. AS'l76l - 6011iiiii - site.l - Saii'7llolanil trying' Co ~1 go to his aid , freid the' island ' - lie, finally' got',;,' near: 'entiiigli to Frank to reatli hint the end of . a,.pole, and Getting .gO- -, the rock ;, , ,lie, grasped., it, and ;iViiS pulled out : Seneca:, Howland,' ' the; : Captain's brother, , ; Wag ;ivaalied further ,down the Wand :onto.. „Spine." 41locks'imiCniatiaited,*get;tinaliOrainji , SM'ety; l'e.7;een ' ting;Sothe bad hrinses.,::Tlds;,o.6 - nda ,a. long • ng time, but was, quickly:done, ::,Alukneiv, The three nion.were On..the island, with :a Idan gerons river on each side and faltS WOW. The Eninia;Deari 'was StSnittit'ffitiVirtitid' Sinn:Mei, one of thanien'of 'nik Wat," started with it for ..A.hatslatd " -1 3iglaAdlifully,...heLtilinif aliZ - 4 7 ,rai - V"76l,liiites,SA:Wartne .proper ~point, and back he brought lus„; . cargo, „of Men: , :We: wereas glattol4, - litittds - ivitlitheitratiftheY7 had ',been on a , ,Vitiyage , 'reinid' the world ; and wrecked ona,di.stante,OaSt'Onthe night ef the 12th *6' ti4ed ina,lie4tifni giitiVe of 1)40460 . on theleft'b*,,alidliere 'we : remained , two. daYs;Wdr3(.o.• i rations, : whichWere in a: ,spOil-, ing . COMlitiOn:,, , ;,We ', found:- the wreck :of; ;a, . ;boat neat Mir own,, , that had been carried above,: high4ater mark, and; with it the lid of a bake-. ,oven, ;an'oldlin plate,:rand 'other 'things; Sliovitt: 4ng that Softie: citie;e,ke'.liad been' *reeked there, : and tainiied'liij:litie . CatiOn`after tlia : , disast,ei ' "This, Ithink; eOnfir4 the story Of; an ,attempt; to tnn:itlieiCanbii, ,sOme' years ago,: 7 nientioned i beforei!'! On the:l4th; Howland and I 'Climbed ;the walls;of the canon; on the , WeSt 'side, to the altitude:of:2,ooo:feet. On 'ffieking'oVetto the , west we . sawn . , ,ntirk five or si±..tiiileSwide'aiid twenty-five biN.;finity *Mg: . :The cliff ; Dinned . 'ti wallbetiveeillthe Canon and the park, for it was 800 feet POWAY:the West sidato the vtilley. , A creek came Wiiidip,g down the park 1,200 feet . abeve:,.. , :the-'7, - ; river,: ;mid, ;, ; ending - the :. wall -by ar . ; , canon; it: ;at last' . PlUnged; 1 2 000 ;feet,. 'by a : brOken':':caSeade into the, river below:' :, The . :16.3, aster; While, we Made another ptiitage;''a: - '; peak ,on the east'. Was climbed by two of the Men: and, found. to be „ '2,700 feet, high., On each side of the river, at, this point; a vast artifiliitheatte has been cut out, with deep, dark alcoves and massive buttresses, ' and in these alcoves grow beautiful mosses and: ferns. Amithetday was' spent on the waves,,, among the rockS, :and weCame &Aim to Alcove Creek, and made au early ,halt for the night. ' The camp was made by; a group of cedars on One side, and a- mass :of dead .WillOws: on the other... A whirliVind : eanie, and: scattered the fire among the dead willows and cedar' spray, 1 and soon there was a ;conflagration. The men. rushed for the ,boats, leaVing all behind that they could not carry atllitL . Even” then, they got their 'clothes burned and' hair singed,and Bradley got his.. 'ear • Scorched: '. The : ernik . filled his arms ; with the riiesSkiti, and, .jiituping on to the-boat, stumbled -and threw it over board and his load was lost. Our , plates are: gone. There are yet somatin-cups, basins and: . camP-Itettles, mid we do'just as-well as' ever, When on the; boats the men had 'to cut loose,' or the overhanging WillowsWOuld have set the fleet on fire;.and-loose on' the stream tbey had to go flown, , for they were just at the head of rapids that Carried them nearly a mile. This had been a- chapter of disasters and toils, but the Canon of Lodore was 'not devoid' of scenic interest. It was grandbekond the power 'of pen to tell. Its Waters roared nnceasinglyfroni the. hour we entered it ;until we' landed . here. No quiet hi.all that time; but its walls and Cliffs, itspeaks and crags, the , amphitheatres and alcoves told a story that; I hear . yet, and , shall hear, otbeauty and of grandeur. . • SIT:4DAY, - June 20.—At the.point where the Bear. or'with greater. correctness, the Yampa River, enters the (weep, the 'river 'runs along, a rock abOutloo"feet high and a Mile long then sharply mound to the right and runs back parallel to its former course for another 'mile, with the opposite sides of this long, nar- row rock fonts bank. • Obi the east side of the river, oppositelhe rock and below the Yampa, is a little,park just large enough for a farm. The river has worn out hollow domes in this sandstone rock, and , standing opposite, your i ; words are repeated with a strange clear- I ness, but•softened, mellow tone. ConverSation in a loud key is transformed into magical I music.' You can hatdly„believe that it is the , echo of your own voice. In some places two, or three echoes conic back; in others, the 'echoes themselves are repeated, passing forth: and back.across the river, flit there is another 1 rock making the eastern wall of the little park. To hear these echoes well, you must shout. Some thought they could count ten or twelve , echoes. To ine they seemed to rapidly vanish in multiplicity, auditory ,perspective, or per tauditory, like the telegraph poles on the out ; stretched prairie. I observed this same phe- I nornenon once before among the cliffs near I Long's Peak, and was delighted to meet with • ! it again. ' CAILI , AT MOLTTR (iii' WINTER RIVER, IsLARD PARR, June 23, 1869..,—When we „ left .Echo Park op the 21st, we soon ran into a canon, very narrow, with high vertical walls. \ Here and there huffetockS jutted into the wa ter from the walls, and the canon made fre quent and sharp curves. The waters of the Green are greatly increased since the Yampa came in ' as that has more waterthan the Green above:. All this voluine of water, confined as it is in a narrow channel, is set eddying and spinning by the projecting reeks' and points, and curves into whirlpools, and the waters waltz- their way through the canon, making their own tippling, rushing,: roaring music. It was a difficult task to get our ' boats through here', as the Whirlpools would set them spinning about the canon, and we found it impossible to' keep them headed down stream. At first this ' caused us great alarm, but we soon found, that there was no' danger and that there was a motion of translation down the river to which this whirling was but an adjunct. It was the merry mood of the river to dance through this deep, narrow, dark, gorge, and right gaily did wejoin in the dance; Soon our revel 'was interrupted by the view of a cataract, and its routing command, was beetled with all our power at the oars as We pulled against the , whirling erlilrent. The Enivaa Dean was landed,againSt a rocki about- , fifty feet above the brink ofthe cataracts The boats ffillowing obeyed the signal to land. The, Maid of the Canon was pulled to the left wall, where the cliff overhangs the water,: and where, by constant rowing, they could hold her against the rock. The Sister was pulled' into an alcove on the right where an eddy was in a dance, and in this she joined. I found that the pottage could be best made off the right bank. The little boat was on the left, and too „ near• the falls to be taken across,' but we' thought,it possible to take her down on the lift. The Maid of the Canon„was under the cliff, out,of Melt. , The roaring of the cataract would drown any human voice, and :I must get them word what to do. 13y . much. search I found a Way offing the cliff. to B,liliiiit just over where the boat lay, and,.by shouting hind and Slow, made, them understand., „ The portage ' was "made before dinner. , Below the falls the Calton (VMS 011t,there , is more or les4 space between the river mid the walls, which is often .211B,;PALLY,EV,E MAE G BULL t. ''°6 i e '''' si N ; (td",woo(Litai46‘Widel* but the tie i . . ngh wlde,iswrapixii rods at,' a, 1 ie., .1; • long , the rocks 1p34, we '`.libi l ' 1 fee 4(1'0. •ii, Weat caution, : . i • taNkthe 34',,,,a0" ca t NO4o4ls.4Otlter' by the Mfg. - 1 ,- nip at 41glk ;id . th6s7knth of a small creelci4hi , afforil.) tr ~,,,, r ofid anppVr and breakfasti of4roi ,a4fpr.4., , ode& itgain'iby stagesof ak4alttnille to a mile In length. One, two, thrte4pWniles we go, rearing and plunging withlWWaVes, and 4 1 90 t 91A,,,.1ind Pa / 1 0,a belMPifillPa*filie4„.W4h. islands-Lis - rk, we call it, and the canon above, Whirlpool Canini. ~I =, , *;:' , , J.' 'W'. PoirELL. nisint - or coxr; OF - sizw roam. , . 31161.fiiinnont Addresseentatatablflabi ment of the Irish Clotted", aopult!ike' ,CEca• ' , ,naientenl ' • The : Episcopal Diocesan ' of WeStern - Neiv York WaSlolll",4Cliiiiit ,Churchi ',llocheSter; orf',Weduesday.;:i'ißiShop Coxe ,read his annual addreSs.-He • said , thht since,, the diVisionlpf , the'dideeWbie,,tOWhair been , greater;„thaii•eVet;',444 - PW'peStfYear7,,Was otre of the most difficult periods of, hislife,by reason of the, necessary and of the perplexing cares With regard tifilElobart De lra t itx Colleges.' • He spoke oftbe,DieteSepf 'Central: New York, saying that its inn** Were most fitvorable, and that it: had a Bishop :',e'Very way:COuVetentAo theinalLivhicli.lifuLbeen ToSeirtilitnflifinTElTiniaWhWACOTtlie WrilT ber of and Changes in the ..Clergy; ',gave anao , count oftheoOndition-Of-nObartand - DeNaux Colleges; denoOnced the 'VisionarY theorieS of Woman's rights, which wOultrredtice them to the level of mere eitizeiti;:eondepned"the'ap, Propriations - OVenby New, Yeirk•State, for the, support of Monkiandinni*after the eon - Vent - 7, tual system had been rejected byltaly;,Austria and Spain; ridiculedthepropoSed:CEenmenical Council as a thine' utterly ' beyond the ; power of the POPete-converie; applauded diSestali liSliment of the Irish' Church andtlie extinction 'of Coleri*BishOp, Of Natal; Said that the Ritual ism of the;, °Mitch embraced only, an insignificant olimber, and , Were fast dying put ; gave some excellent advice , to, the 'clergy, mid laity in their mutual relations, and &sett bymentiOning 'his tipprOhthing - depart nre for Europe to :M.-tint' hia', health. We quote: the fient thei:. address The =Clinrch,, then, sound. at ; heart,' and equally removed from: Popery and Puritanism, represents in America; the -undying principle of Catholicity.' It is the American part:Of the Church' which Jeonsifounded On a.ll.ack, and 'which continues, by AnOstiffie ,sticeessiOn;the identical society He eitablished,:in the 'earth after He rose Ulm • the (lead.. Vitherte ow. countrymen : have. :chosen • to - ,.be, ignorant - of „these: matters, and ; to sneer. , at what they have taken to uxideratindi But events are close at hhnd • Which will make them' POpery'presseS upon them with its delusive PretensiOnS and :unscrupulous inachinery ;. Puritanism • ;IS loSing its poStige of superior Piety: , and :evangelical purity; Rationalism destroying , the vitality of many sects which have hitherto "had a name to live;" and political and 'fanatical issues are . scattering the forces of popular religioM Even its gloat gatherings and apparent Cannot bear ,analyihig. ,:They, Shake, - handS'en plat forms, but they part to biteand...devour one another. They are getting up new transtifticins of the Bible, and destroying ideas tof 'a ministry by admitting females to'•lfiepreachers. They-are--more-and Iriore 'confotindii;g their eonfiiSion. ' ' 1 take,no Pleasure in speaking thus* : the lack of organic life in large bodies of our fellow. Christians, in which are sonic of the purest fel ' lowers of the Lord Jesus, that live.. But of these very Christians thousands feel and laMent just, what lam pointing out. If We Were more con sistent and more active in good -works, they would flock to us "as doves to. the windows."' But, alas! we are far - froth being what We should be. Our enemies make the most of our faults, proclaim our disgraces, and circulate the most senseless rumors about our condition and our prospects. So thoroughly is the American peo ple ignorant of our real history'and indifferent to all the grand historic facts of whiCh we are witnesses and keepers, that for the ,present we cannot look for:the increase and prosperity for which nothing less than the coming religious revolution can open : the way. Fora time; then, our strength is to be found "in quietness and confidence," itr "strengthening the„ things that remain," and in'S'itidying, co - Cdrifoith Per-, selves more and more to the scriptural pattern - `"of "first love" and -"firit works." Ol ! for, more holy livingnore of the power of the Gospel manifeSted in. our life and conversation. fly.brethren of the. Orthodox Catholic Church of , Americh, for such is your real character; and Such IS precisely what is meant by the terins:"ProteStant Episcopal," you hate world-wide relatiOns and interests which are,ht this moment becoming, more and . more ,im portant to you, and to your children. We pro- , fess to believe• in "One Jloly Catholic and Apostolic Church," and our faith in this:rd sped must now become more and 'more prac,' tical.. The whole World, is . moving,, the Church of God, in every part, is Moving , under the iniffience of His, Holy Spirit., If I had the time, I should Seel , it my 'duty to speak to you largely on , theSe points. 1 shall reserve what I wish to say, however, for a pastoral letter, which, if life - lie spared, I propose to address to _you before long. You ought to watch 'and to understhnd yourepoch. Our journalists and their foreign cor respondents have never made the Church a study, and hence they "darken council by words without knowledge" in nearly all they write about kedesiastical affairs. The disestab.-' lishment of the Irish Church; what does it mean? Why, simply this: that the Orthodox' Catholic Chinch of Ireland, its historic Church, , the, Church of St. Patrick and of St. Columba, that Church froM Which the simple and:4., norant Irish peasantry have been beguiled by .a modem and intrusive Popish mission, but to, which they will, now begin to return ; that Church is emancipated and placed where God meant His Church to stand, free frOM Kingh„ and free,frem Popes, just where the Nicene. Church stood, and just where we stand. They' have robbed her and deSpoiled her, but what of it? It is a small price to pay for freedom; and God grant-that-the Irish Bishops may feel and understand their glorious liberty, and hence- - forth assert their apostleship in the spirit of Cyprian andAthanasius, and of the old time befere,them. , • So as to the east and west of Europe. A . weak Pontiff at Rome has been led to summon Council to which lie vainly endeavors to fix the credit of being "(Ecumenical." 'He has' done a very foolish thing for his own ideas; but God has already ;overruled it for the most ,glotiOus avVakening of` the true. CatholiOspirit,; :the spirit of the creed and the' gospel. , The - Oriental Bishops, 6reey ; Armenian .and Russian, have . spOken in Miles worthy of the ancient Sees, rebuking the Pontiff fot .his presumption 'and -reminding , him - thdt 140. (Ecumenical Council was ever 'by a. ' Bishop Rome: But, thank, f.-lbd;'‘a council iffthe.Trent, Bishops has, been"eidied, and God grant'. that, 'they may,OSSePble. Pius the Ninth seemhbord to break down the:Trent:system by working it to death. He will drive Europe into a reforma4, tion by his efforts to fasten the shaekleS of the' Middle Ages on the fullgroWn limbs of the Chinch of the Nineteenth Century. ; Brethren, let your prayerogO:np to God; Continually '4O unitedly, fbt, the. whole Church of ChriStlhnd - rimy fOr the Bishops :now about to meet at Rome, that the ;Holy Spirit' may indeed come down upon them. 'Then we shall see a di& ferent result from that which is intended; for " where the spirit of the:LOrd is there is liberty." TIN-PHILADELPHIA, TUESDAY A -. V ' AND..CUBA .. ~. '' ' ' Ali c Abf --0 - -. ,-.....--i. ~,, :tae .‘4.k.,. ~, . ..it,, ....,..... rhot.npm. 0 gtolgtioDAy 101 N Clakprill; Isii4Opeli ej , "— Mao ItOce tylol Sp4,liN toNoeil t,' 11 : nd. ' ,- 1-:: , 1 .,, 1ed ~'• - ' 1 a t ~ , , ,i 1* n, ". ( mon 1 , • oi, - 'g, d: k 3" - ' .. When 4, ,t,re , .eda s Ott**. , ,10, tkeon-I, cl ride; intr.,1614•1 "' , e on"'- thiVrlaitentiii? etWeenj , ' Sualii andiOtib - 'ly a ,hint il's tii' , Ahe' exile'- ,, diency of • a cOMpromise between two foes, neither of whom hid. anYthing_to hope from a' ,P0910.4.19P.94:14 , Q,5414101.1v.a., ,, QA/Y4 ,4l tOJAterT , ance to a conviction springing from our irripar-, tial survsrpt - the;so,9p, without :claiming the leaSt kni - Afellge'lS to any transaction of the , nature- recommendeff,..being - :. - actuallyin Con templation.- ~SincetheMhoweVprittnnors have. heen, iilloatiginiiiiiled,'W4 .''stiptiOSeon some thing momSolikthan,o,firmlgintdilifienlatiQut. Inducing alieliefthatnegotia,tione for-a. qPiOa., , of CtibirliainheenfOr l ,neoM than two months,..• and stillat' ,e,,'PendiNt:' Spainkft, A. sii*, „11s )iin,= unwinifig,t9Tot vy.iof, tbat island;-rand -, :witb. the restof cher,Westi with;;. possessions, "for: a consideratiom"-_ The 'price , she , iseta '.,ppon'. those colonieS is pUt downat-it.'ionlastin t Of £4o;ooo,ooo,and'Aie:liaSialreadyMeelye4,ofF: fers to. the' e N tehe.of`:ll,s',iooo,6Qo*4 :4 20 ,7 . :, 000,000, The Scheine,lt: is, added, - Consists . in opening ;a stibScription among the wealthiest . classes in Onbato raise -the suer required to: re-, deem their island from Spanish thraldom and , to, constitute it .ffito. !an 'independent ,;State.. The:Rokerimient , at 'Washiin,don - would '' take - 141011 - ItSelftlin z itiffitioirot theterm.t•itiFtlie" , contract, and "..glVe seetiritY for its fulfillinent. lie ; inaMouvres 7 LbY-whieb , :simplicatetLa piece, of bnsifiess would have to. be brought to a happy and speedy teimination'could not re main long a secret, nor could : they•get • wind Withouteraising'such an uproar ali 'might ,cori siderably mar, without; however, averting the ultiniate !sane. ' "The 'rumor of the intended, sale of ,Cuba," we . are, told; "has, excited great: discontent in'the Spanish army„"_.while, on_the otherhand,;"the Cuban Jinita .(lit*.New. York) have forinallY prOteatenntaliiistale. Propesed purchase." This Is entirely according to pre cedent. - • The - SPinish 'armY Is In' honor, bOundf. to shed the last dropniltslikiodlo enffiree the : fight of the :Crown of.Castile to the "Pearl, of the Antilles," and the- Cuban Junta, as repre sentatives of the insurgent 'cause in the island, ai'e justified in contending that 'the • emancipa tion of ' a 'people should be wrought out with steel; and not with gold. But, between the military punctilio of the former and the pa trioticllmatleism , of the latter, there are the interests of both countries and of. their. inhabi tants to be consulted; and, above the mere im- pulse of passion, there nught to be the control of sound reason. If it can he proved, as.is, indeed, evident, that a separation of the colony from the mother country LS an Unavoidable and : by no means remote consummation, it seems the height of madness to carry on hostilities' fraught. with ruin to the other side. ' • • Independently of :her arduous enterprise in. subjugating 'Cuba; Spain has. such desperately hard work on hand as may 'well task her strength beyond its not very extensive Limits. No revolution ever more miserably collapsed,. from sheer impotence than the movement which, nearly a twelvemonli ago i lituled Queen Isabella from her throne. 'A: bad government was, at that crisis, overthrown by it smaller fraction of the nation; Nit the nation has ever since been unable to substitute another govern ment in the place of the fallen' one. General, lzquierdo, the. Captain-General of Madrid, and one of the leaders of the September pronuncia ;nano, formally intimates to the -Ministry Ministry that unless a king is elected, he will resign MS oft:- lice, "despairing of the revolution." 'The mere proclamation ot , ii king; however, Would. 'not brinn , about the cure of the evil. The Sovereign migla"reigm" but theM would still :be the same lack ofa man to "govern." Of all the men placed, by the late change, at the head .of the Spanish Administration, General Prim alone was credited with sufficient energy, yet . hope less coiruptinn appears -to have been dis covered iii ills own'' military department, The necessity fOr the pronnitiOn of so-called "de 7 serving patriots," and the . anxiety to limiter devoted partisans about the Government, have led to an indiscriminatelasishness of patronage which has raised' ill-will in the army, while it has lowered its tone: 'People have been dis tracted of late by alarms about Cadist disturb-, ances, the defection of garrisons, the mutinous ' ' bearing of the, artillery ,and engineer., corps.• IV)lat i however, constitutes the Government's ' weakness equally bathes the efforts of - the :Op position. It- is the complete apathy and supine-.: ness of the nation in Spain that gives the army' ' - all - its ascendency.:The expillSion of the, Queen .'has led, to no . innovation - whatever on that point. •It has only effectenthe substitution of Prim for O'Donnell: or Narvaez. ,For the sake. of peace, it is desirable that whoever has power should. retain : it. But- Prim's policy ''under difficulties cannot be said greatly - to differ from: that of the Marshals; his ' prede ' cessoiS,', ' Like - them,' lie• swots, he transpOrts,' he goes ack An . the. most murderous edicts of 1821 for:a. sufficiently stringent martial law. In other respects it woud be difficult to point to any: step in ad vance made by revolutionized Spain, either 'in ' the theory or in the practice of Government:. And set, improvident and helpless as Trim's . Government, may 'be, it' ' can safely - be , pro claimed the best that Spain c4 . 3i11d, have under, .present circumstanceS ;, and,ita chances of Ml provement lie in. the' power, it.. may have of di recting all its energies to • domestic!, *organiza tion and reform;' undisturbed by 'foreign: •or colonial complications. ' But strin - 'such :.a Goverinnent of its troops, by sending, them on distant expeditions; drain its resources for an internecine struggle with a kindred race, and then tell us whether any amount of genius, character or good will can raise its members to a level with the difficulties of their situation. ' , On the other InuaLthere is in Cuba an insurr''. rection which could never' rely on its own .strength either,for 'a successful, or. even. for •a sustained, effort. Au island Intended-byiNa.- tme for an Eden, turned, by civil strife into , a field oflblood, has • become the 'rendezvous • of .adventurers, interested not in the issue of 'the contest one way or another; htit,'siniply, in its 'indefinite ,prolongation: • Without the busterS, Cuba would have lain forever in if 4 ". helpless prostration. , With the filibus ters, it-,can , never work out its regenera tion; but:neither will it ever bebrought'. back to ' that state of quiescence which is ceSsarkfor its prosperity; The many "politi ' cal • and social - knots, of which time and , yeasonOughtto, have brought about ,the so lution, are cut by, the, sword of , party mar ;fare unexampled for its ruthlessness in the an-'. mals'elmankind. The slaves, whom a provi dent Law - ought to prepare for gradual emanei- • pOtien;' are roused .into a mutiny Which Will insure their' own as well as their masters' down- Yet Ope'st.....‘ason more:. of the e c xploitS 'of ,QW`Sllda and Jordan,,and Cuba will cease to.be., an Apple of, discord either for her own people or for aliens; arid, if admitted into the American Union, it will take rank=with some of those ravaged Southern 'States WhOSe' restoration to •sereething like their fernier' ejc-, istprice,COnAtituteS the great problem of - canpolicy.. , Under such eirctiinStaneeS we need not wen- , that:prim Should have listened, to the first ,propOsals,:bta bargain which, without , comPrO , i mising the honor of Spain, procured for ber, sides - a relief from • heavy Sacrifices tfie gai Et- be-. considerable:materialadvantages. : Again and '061111161r place's •in . the ,Cqftes, with. that „;:Spanish , frankness which. characterizes 'them, the present !inlets have. declared; in the midst of . a. , consciously silent aSsembly, , that' .."time loss: Of. Cuba was but a oeittoiv of tune . .! ) , The most' fanatical member of the•Oppeskien is Well • aware that all the exertions 'of Spahreau only ,temporarily crash,. but not Permanently 'subdue, the 'r6bellious spirit 'of the colony. T 24, 1869. 1 list take ,no ; !`little , E.,,,, tic- 'entla.fi -7.; as to advise .. ' leAeOnti 4'l:it& 0 . , i t nflit'iti wldch d i t Z' 4 4410 1 .41as.cr)glit , I 'nibs 00,nutn'y thotlsamis , ZB.. 's bOsoldi ' and fg>, nuigy millions o - 'al t.Z. min. ',doll: 1. -; ve Ilted , ,Wasted iii ; . - fn alio I , tiler ' coplU ' i'y to be quit . thficol"vitti; tho defigt compensation, el (t ins D r tbq baiiiki. , riddance might well 4 - /gP4401 , in every, church throughout the Peniiisula... But if a large sum r--.say 0n1y,415,000,0000r...C4000,0 0 0.—i5ta , be. got into the bargain, if Cuba; which is so much worse than useless, is to supply Spain with the means of con t'ronting her most urgent,financial difficulties, and to enable her to live from liii tO' day, till a (lovernment can be installed'capable of giving her resources a full development, the ..Spaniards.cannot be•too thank/do •',..Out , of,the many blows which adverse fortune-Tuts A ealt to that long-sitflering natien3 this c severing of one'of the last links which lwurill„,ft:,otlict,des- tinies of , its Transatlantic Pe,ltsc4stons, wi;ahl, have done it not only tio it albarin,,but "haVe been a.Most' weiconie 'delivCMli4c..... The last French campaign in Mexico' ought to baye'fitade t it. manifest that there is neither' hottoe nor prntit to gain for the Powers of the ordteditt; neat by meddling with the affairs of ,the new. :.Those mho have no open accounts' there. hi tl better , try no. , new,ventures, , and thew mho have ougbt,to deem themselves fortunate if all lowed to wind them up on the first opportunity : 4 Y+•I•. , 4VOPIA'Pu‘w ---CAPE - SLANT, 1 A first-cless JtESTAIIRANT, a" la carte' , will be opened by ADOLPH , PROSKAUER,of 22208. THIRD Street, Philadelphia t on the 7th of June, under the name and title of )IA 'SON DORER, at the corner of WASH. INOTON end JACKSON known at Hart's Cottage,. war Familieswl be supplied at the Cottage. Lodittag Bombe by Day or Week to Bent; COLUMI3TA : ,: : -.:00,0.:,:: • CAPE MAY, ,•,- _ • , With secommedations for 750 guests is now open. The Germania kierenado niAer,tho direction o 'Prof. Geo. Bastert; Vas 15 , 004 secnrk ftir'the Season. GEO, J. BOLTON, Proprietor. SURF Kin nn, tit*, N. .14 wiDD DE OPEN UNTIL sErDEm DER, 20. For, Booms, Terms, ! tio•adilress " ' • THOMAS FABLE?, Proprietor;_ Carl Seitz'3 Parloi Orchesirqtecis , een elisacedfor s(!ion, 7 ;, : sysl t,6,01 L o - , , • . CA IIBRIA: COUNTY, PA., , Will be opened . to Guests .1 uly Ist. ”ExcursionTickets,' good for the season, over the PennsYlvania 'Ventral Itailroad,• cart be procured from Philadelphia, Pitte,rnrgh, and , Harrisburg, to Rayinr Station. 2 miles from tho Springs, where coaches will be in readiness to convey , guests to the Springs.. _ The 'proprietor takes pleasure notifying the publis that the hotel, is in, proper order, and all amusements usually, found at wateringjplaces can be found at the above resort. Terms, „1 GIBBONS, 60 Per daY. qr ew per mouth. , • 'FRAN 'IS A. Proprietor. _ • __olldo. NEWTON, Snperinteadent, or the Atlantic Hotel, Newpett. DIEN ATLANTIC CITY, N. J ELISLIA BOTIERTg, Proprietor anlo Itni ---- EXCIIRSION.S;` , &gag! FOR CAPE MAY , on Tuesdays, Thundaysand fikturclays. On and after . SATURDAY. Jnne 26th, the • new and siGendld Steamer LADY OW THE L AKE, Captain W. Thompson will commence running regnlailv to Cepa , MaY, leaving Arch Street Wharf on TUESDAY, THURSDAY and SATURDAY • MORNINGS at o'clock and returning; leave the • landing_at Cape May ou MONDAYS, 'WEDNESDAYS and NRIDAIS at 6 o'clock. FARE. INCLUDING CARRIAGE - Euns, 82. 26, CHILDREN, " " 2.5. SERVANTS " " _ IW. SEASON TICKETS, 4110. CARRIAGE HIRE EXTRA.' THE LADY OF THE' LASE Is a tine 'sea host. has toutdeorae state-room accommodations, and to fitted up with everything necessary for thesafetY and comfort of passengers. . • Tickets sold and Baggage checked at the Transfer °nice 828 Chestnut street. under the Continental Hotel. Freight received 8.4 o'clock. * _ For urtherAaarticulars, inquire at the Olhce, No. au North DELAWARE Avenue. ' G. H. lIVDDELL_ CALVIN TAGGAzT. VXCURSION . 'l7O CAMP , lIANCOCIN.- .42..1 "PIIILADEL,PIII.S,, CITY. GUARD," at 'White hall; Lehigh county, l'a. Excursion Tickets front Philadelphia to \ Vbitehall , will be issued from" the offices of North Pennsylvania. Railroad Company, .105 South, Fifth• street, and corner Berko soul-kinetic:in streets, on August 21, 21, 24, 2 4, Vje• 27 good to return until August L'ii, 'inclusive. Fare, e 2 75 fur round triP. '' '• •', , • ' ' ' ELL'S _CL AUK - a iislt27 ' , • . Agent. . • , , a, 1,1 j.,,E, OF . phi LAD Rh PIIIA• AND' Tli 'REA DING .. RAILItO.A.D CORPANI, •BILOAD STREET. PHILADELPHIA, August sth, 1652_, _ r • HEADING RAILROAD PARK ACCO3ISIODATION TRAIN, between Philadelphia and Belmont. commenc ing August oth. ldi4:-Starting from Station Serventeent li street and Pennsyltiania. avenue, and stopping :it (bates street (Park-Entrancel,:Brown street ( Park Entrance) Thi•mpsim street, • Mifflin lane, (Entrance to Engel tr. Wolf's Farm,) and 0.4)4 end Columbia Bridget Entrance to Washington Retreat), daily, Sundays excepted. • Trains 'start from' Seven-'Trains start ' frOta 'Bel -1 teenth and POllllll. tiV.: ' , ' - moot; At 7,10 A. M. . - . • At 6.30 A. H. ' " 930 A. 31: ' ' " B.OOA. M. • - " 11.00 A : Ifi . ' ' '". lnda) A. 31. ~ Lsizi p, 1!, • ' 1, " .12.20 Noon. " 3.00 1.....51.: . ..) 2.10 P. 51. " 4.0) P.M. ' ' " 4.001. M. " 6.20 P. Id. ' ' - - • ` . •5.35 P. 111 ' • " 7.40 P. M. •- • • I , ". 7.10 P. M. • - Arrangements havebee» made with Green and Coates, Seventeenth avid Nineteenth Streets. and Ullioll Pliehen ger Itailwaya to sell 'Exchange Tickets( In cultneedioco -withabove trains,'good hither way:for ' -` " ' 12 obi. Single fares on Park Accommodation Train IU cts TicketirinpaCkages, 7 for 50 cts. ; 14 for ei 00.- For gale 'at Offices, Seventeenth street, Coates street, and Belmont. „ J. LOWRIE BELL, General 'Agent. HEATERS AND STOVES I 0 4-4 '0 ANDREWS; HAREtI ON 6c CO-. 7,3`,:7, MARKET switEET. • IMPROVED f3TEMNI REAT/140 APPARATUS, FIDMACES Al 9) COOKING .RA.RGES. Je22 to th 3rn , , 40: THOMAS. S. DIXON So SON'S, ' Lino And fr I A: Dixon .N4l. i82•100HESTN1111 , Street, Philada., , • cuut o.,4 l e r r 'f l oaite Patted Statpo mint. . ''' ° '''•LOW DOWN, '- RAMBLE ' \ OFFICE L ' . ' ' - • " - ' . : And other %HATES, ' . r rint or Anteite, Bituminoue and.Wnod iflre;‘ , -- ,_\ , ALso _, A ~_.. , • ' ' _' ' - -- WARM.-AIIVDR - NOBtl, - • ' '- For Warming Public. and PrivatO'Bnildlngd: REGIBTE.BB, - YEIn'ILATORSi , , • , ". ' ' • 01111424TIT'OAT__, ._:' ' , j_ ..' ' COOKING.P.APRES, i , BAT.I - 143011, - ERS: . • - WHOLIIIIMPAt and IVEITAIL, ' . THE FINE,ARTS. Established 1795. A.: , S;EQBINSON FRENCH PLATE LOOKING GLASSES, Chrozno,. Looking-GlassyPortrait &picture Trollies. 910 013.ES'I'lq1n` SIRE T, Fifth Doornbovo the Contitientat, PHILADELPHIA. , ~.1 . , .. - - :-.•:.;, -. . --- 7-`, — ;"!Kr, , •. --, 05A1.5 .. .t7'-y -, , •.„ . 9 . - QV. G r .; t' 0 ~.14 itA tit o.lt 5.,-- sEAL ED; kJ 11!•.:P„n; ) . "C'•-. .Si '.._•„,:;"V elm endorsed Proposals AoifOrtu 4.11 -•• • •' f . 0 '" , eceived -until ;noon:, Or g/r.,1 - office ' of:the::- 14- 7 a is -A - L i lo , ~-.,,.-, • airmount Park; . - for :. 4 gn u 4 . , '' '':4.i.";l.'i'o‘tilat, from POHTIETIif ti .-0and.0,,,-„, t " _ •Ifitenue: to the . foOt , or:i...L • G e orge's Hill , tie street,::: Troll es and specifionfrens . may be seen at the "•.,, office of the Chief-Engineer, on LANDING •"„: avointerXidintouno,74nds-stiordtbr:qeelltV7r cubic...yard of ekeavation. ',Tim Stefacfj 104 P,:;: ,. - be deposited 'qp-ltWiad.Ws4.4Antt'l4o3l44ol, sidewiilks, and .I he - grtb - Aoltheenmatiltraents, ..- '; '' .:without - -extra conijiniatiOrn-in,:aa ,:fieetion.„-;:,•J,;,..,, . Where the Overage s i lb; thuefor haul hi. em:l4% :, ...' . 400 yards.. ; 1. 1 1. f.' . 9 - ; VN9,i . cISI,II,IE 9A4 j ~ I c .) '' 'l' :. 4 • auffl.e't -• . • , ,..„. ' . Ohlef.lttigitiber: •, ~.: ; : , . „... I •. d , - 7 6ElfitkaStrifffiT71"tvt - trtnrxwxtV. - 7 , - 41ErthilitafVf Olitialk,:*lll.alitkateliiiialthWen,4: ' ' ',Office of the Commissioners of Fairmount.:,• ... ,Park, until noon ,of "PltlDAY;s:Augnst 2/th ••-• -: ... for delivering: t. itbe-T , P,firk'r-411`fitt V . lftlitilb4' •:: . J;if laurel, Holly and Cedar!l'rees, alma le for '': . '„v. • . . ;Bustle iNVork. :, ,• .1 ~• ~„ ... ~,,..•••,, :,. ~:,•". ..', •-", , ; „,-,'c,,„:: The ,price, should- be, by AM, 40yitksiire, o ,- •:;„ „ entire trunki - 'with , - limbS,;.'hippe4:9fr itt'si ; ..:-.'•:: ',litehei(fiont ' the think; Atirtor. linEths - dyer ;`4511.61L'.;!_;,:.2 -- ' I iieli - iii;diktiiiter: ; % •• , , L ; :-, .1 .. i:,!.P; t •-;, ‘ *t : •,',. • , ';:-.,24 ; ; ~„ *'• :f • -.-• , J0NN,C,.:04E103015;: -t : • : '-', allifi , Gt .: -...-,:; : . ; ;-; , ;., ; , ,-4 , ql - tigt •If,PgiPiccr• ' snfrit - As 3 ‘ 641/DE OR 840 ST O--N.STE - 1,: - • - • 'sr ' LIRE ~' 11111ECT.S C/ 1, AILTNIIOIIEACIE 1!011 EVERY . •-.3ffAstlintl-fitAttirdafi-1:.--,Lt-.,.-7.---::-...,..=__ 1310351 PINE STIMET' - WIIAII.P.PHILADELL-ttla t ' - _ -, 4 1 4 1 1 .1 , 0DIGWBABF,BOSTO_Zi• 1. ' ; ~_.F REM PIITLAWMPUIA_..„4______FRO4JJORTthi4—! '‘ __' 10 A.' , 11: , . -. 1 SP. m. 13AX011;WeduesdayAug. alllEEOVettuesday, Aug., I NORMAN; Saturday ," 7 .110141 Ari, aturday, " 7 1 ARllll4‘3lr,oduradaYi " 11 BAXON/ edumlay, " 11 MORAN turday,.. " 14 NORMA, Saturday," 14 SAXON, cdneartaYi "' IS ARISE 7 011teatht7, " IS i ta NoitmA s nur d ay , tt„, 2i RClALV,Satrtrdst AItIES,N ednesday " gs Sil 0.„ , Wed nes y, , 4 BOMAN, Saturday; " -°4l NOllll.&N,SattirdaY," n Thom biteartuOtpa aail pular-1011y. , •grolglir Foretratr i "Freight forwaraed tO sat * oititaiu New Eugland. ~ ; apply Fa r F : dght „ us Pasettogiau ;dor accouunodatiooa) . •- to . ' , ' HENRY nison & co., ,• ~, • .. . , , ~ -- south Delaware avenue. , ILADELPHIA., „g/4311119,01) PNORFOLK BTOAMFgrtic Lila r m ~ • : THROUGH VitgiGun "INl4' TO TIIE BORTH ' • - AND ‘ I ,E R EVtrtV SATMIDAT{ D at 2% Mum Vivar %CRABS' __above UERR'? Street , . TRll,Ouull ATES. fo .all polotot in. North and BOoth Carolina via'Seaboard'Air-Idne Railroad,connecting at • Porterwtnh, and ; to Lynchburg, Va., Zonealiecr and the Vieat via Virginia and Tennearce Airline and Rich- • trioud and=butivilie Railroad. . ,• ; „ , Freight HANDLED BII_T_ONOEd taken at fr,Or'N# Thti THAN ANY OTRP.II L INE. The' regularity cal and cheapness of , this route, commend it to the pub 'ite the. moat &Wahl? ',' for carrying every deise ption of freight: , • = • No charge for 'cotutuiocadon ~irayage,or any ex poise for - Steamships insure at lowest rates. d• = Freight 1 : "(411311)41.t aiLT,1A,31 P et,Tnia - *eity; N 0.33 South Wharf% and Pier No. 1 lierth Wharrea. W. P. POII.TEIt_, Agent'atillelanond "and City Point. T. I'. CROW ELL lc CO.. Agents at Norfolk, , , • 11,3111LADELPHLk. AND NOUTHLERN , MALL STEAMSHIP COMPANY'S_ HE GllloAl/ LINES FROM QUEE,N STREET WHARF'. The JUN LiTAwill sail for NEW VILLEANS on'' Ti"etday. Sept. 7. at 8 A. M. The YAZOO 'will rail from NEC ORLEANS. via lIA YANA, Sept. , . , • The TONAWANDA Will tail for SA VANNAH on Saturday. Aug. 25 at b o'clock A. lit. The WYOMING will awl ,from SAVANN. All on Saturday. Aug. 2 , 1. Tho PlONEtilt. will sail for NYILMINGTON, N. 0,.0n Friday, Aug at 5 A. M. Through bills of lading alerted? and natuniga Helot. sold to all pointi South and 'Woo. BILLS of LADING SIGNED at QUEEN ST. WHARF. For furled or omniaga, - JAM EO, General Asstd. 130 South Third *treat. LIVERPOOL F UIi The Fine VIM-class SNP -• • I. G l'N L 934 Tons, Register—Captalti esimpbell. This Newt/ succeeds itilyard," baying portionN . den tcher eon° etiogal', will Nava rot balsore_of Vrebrkt or Pruisitit. 'attar to witmati .k - SONS, 'ir44l lill.yslinttstreol t .Plillsilelplils. . SIG Nl'' or xgo pze,os of /39 fret tww) Iron, from ,Newport, oleo, by brig Mole Ilatebelder, lampreys:is for ward, ywy freight, and tisko the sumo awsy. otherstiso they will be stored at owners experms. Walnut street. LIVE'RPOOL—WITUDESPATOR-L Tim linearst-ches Britfshbarktlleslcan, 1 7 Welch, maater, stir.cecils the `Davkl "Itrlintt, and having the 'balk of liefeantaaapagcti. will hare despatch as abOre. For hatance of freight applT I aula4l" PETNIt Info Wattat !meet. Lion - LIVER OOL:—TILE STRICTLY: flist•class bark DAVID-MCNUTT; a* tOttii rraitttr, captain -Luckliart.—ThlA ve,o4r4 .ucct , l9 , As the Dessir Dorris, and being of small capacity, and having the bulk of her r,argo engaged, will have dthointteb. , For balance, of freight fir passage, ti pray to PETER, WRIGHT ..k; WAWA, irtrod,Titibidelphia, ' *- s null tf 'MEW EXPRESS LIN'E' TO dria . Georgetown and Washington, D ? 0,, ita Ches. :intake and Delaware Catial„.w it h connectiana at Ak a ,. a ;atria from tho roost direct: r 0 tito for 'LYnehbarg, 101, NIIQX rill°, Nos hrllle.Dal ton and the dont hweat. Steamers leavo regularly from the nrat wharf shorn Market strtal, exert' Freight received daily. W.I.I.I!..CLYDE CO., • • N0..19 8 putt, Wharaes and Pier 1 North' Wharretr. lIIIiE.tTYLI:IL,Amts at floorgetown. , ELDRIDGE CO, Agents at AlkliCalldrlll', Va. Writ FOR'serw YORK' VIA Drr _ _ . ,* •A.AWARE AND .11AR1TAN CANAL EXPRESS nTEA3IBOAT ,COMPANY , _ The CIfEAREST and.QUICEEST watf,r cOnimtmica- Don I.otween Pld latielnh la and Now 'York.. • Steamers leave daily, from first wharf below ...11arket alt. it' Yh'iladrll Lin, and foot of \Fall street, New York. Goods foris anted by all the lines running , out. of New York—North. East and 'West—fri.?e or (,oramission . Freight' recelVed And forwarded 'tin accommodating , terms. W.ll. P.. CLYDE 0.13), Agents, N - 0.12 south *Delaware AV4IIIIIV, Phi lathph fa. JAS. 11 AN D, Agent, No. 119 Wall atroet, New York. (YrIVE.-11:0it NEW YORK, VIA. DEL:: .L AWARE AND RARITAN CANAL. • 81%1 F TBI.IIIE -ritA NS P RTA TI ON COMPANY. DEt.TATCII AND BWIFTSUILE. • The bmnineas of these lines.will bo reatuuedork and after the 19th or March. For freight, which will be taken on accommodating terms, apply. WM • DAIND4 , 00, No. in South Wharves.. DELAWARE AND , CITESAYEAKE . ,Steant Tow-Boat Company.—Bares towed between Philadelphia, Baltimore, Havre do ,Grace, Delaware City and intermediate points. . P. CLYDE az CO4Agents; Capt.4ollll LAUGH LIN, Sup't 0111 co, 12 South vy harve;f4l4iitilociphia, , • i'VtITICE,FOR NEAP YORK, VIA DEL „LI aware and Raritan Canal—t4Wiltsure Transporta. lien CelnlntaY—Despatch and 'fluttftsure Lincs.— The business by these ,Lines will be resumed ou .and, after. the Bth or March. For Freight; which will be taken on accommodating terms, apply to WM. M., BAIRD At. CO., 132 South Wharves. TIOR , SALE.—T FIE It S T A.-0 S— -1. American Bark' BRILLIANT; 422 tale Register, 62 Tons deadweight, 6,490 Flour Barrels capacity; was partially rebuilt and thoroughly overhauled in 1!4i3. For further particulars apply. to WORKMAN. & CO., 123 Walnut street. • ... GROCERIES,' LIQUORS, okti. °NEW SPICED SALMON, FIRST, OF-THE SEASON. ALBERT C. ROBERTS, DEALER IN FINE OBOCERIEB; Corner Elev . en*, .iuni Oireete. .71ff .131TITHIV - 014::.E.OREPliruS411 , VINGr.; i A. -. cboice ar HO o just ; recolynd ,tunVforiaident C STY'S' Etna 'End ' Grocery No:11W 86ntlOkicond tit eet,lplow.o4e4nnt sprOnt ,- —,, r :,N '::: ;:' , - .,„ .,„ t . •`. •1 4 of , elioien . , Green Ginger in etore and, for galest , 'GUSTY'S Ettet-End Grbeery,llo, 118 Sevin. Second treet,belpw Clkeflput..o4_o9t. , . EW. I>lg - 88 KI - lAD AND kraPJOBM t it Yin it ti'T:AgligU n a d OtA n 4 l, l4q l all i ka r a e r r dcg t rec;..' No.' is South tic•colid coreut.betov,o4oautlitrn!?t, S 0 II P. 0 VE44,-; Turtle and AiGlen .getips of Bostou, Club Mi unfac tutu otte of the tinekt , articles for' plenics'hilli sailing '. parties.- ,For sale at CQUHTICei.Enet End Grocery, ; lo street,lielon Chestnut street.. . . U ,GROUND .1) WHOLE —Pried , i/tiglloll - Atuatard by the' White ',Wino and Crab- Apple - Vinegar for picsUngjp; it store, and for sadosat COUST,E'S East End Grocery,. 0.. tiontlrtioeond street. below Chestnut idreet.!i. • , • CUM; .44:N ITWO01). B. MASON'TUNES: • ' .11darV.1171EAVY T r HE'UNDERSIGN.ED. INVITILATTENI tion to their stock of • , SPring Mountain, Lehigh and Lociudlifoimtain Which, withlhelproparationgiven_ by us, we think can- ') , ,i not be excelled by any other OffiCO; Franklin instant° . 'Buildirigs,l4b.ils ileVero street.. -- . , SMlgAii'Vll lalo-tf Arch street Liirdn o. to qtravo - tdo for tint° by . 00nival JIVE3I3ELL & 00 .111 (Thextinit t. ItIMEM=MtfM=EI : C •1I , • it; „ siAs latency or. captured' • . • . .•. • • •.• • , , EtToEntris preparing for an hinnedlatestart to tale East Loprouo, fiaiti r iwere burped were four deaths from.. Sunstroke in. St.: Louis . Yesterday. ,A.bATN.Oectirred iii , mew York Yesterday • . . Asiatic cholera. • • • : CAPT. Bn,A yesterday inspected ,' the 'Fire Deirartnient.' Tim Harvard crew assert that they will tuie . : `'-tlieli•i 3 OWn:Styrtif, of row higin the': §araing mee. Ituan cousTY, hansas, is being surveye by agents who are looking fora location for a.l 1 43 c010i4y of Welshmen from this.. State, --;" • A LArtni open Arnieethig ~`as held it Drog Aieda, yesterday, - -'in"favor 'ainnestY:for mans: .. ••• ..:.Pk:TEn IL W.m.amt has been. arrested in. .New • York for' attempting to shoot Ms . wife and o;ebildwa4pd : bistrother,,y • a 1 stem hi the' barber ofCron . stadt, yesterday,: a monitor raninto and: sunk a_serew-frigate r .sixteen 'Of whose---crew-_*cre -drowned.. • ' • _LAT_Jetleissonville,....ind.,...au_Sunda,34.::A_. .‘ "' teii by drinking poisoned liquor. They bail been , . . • - of-„•' ; ',llk•ph,trre thc hot. •,tveather and, drought'. Continue to come fronipoitions_tif this Btiate, from Kentitcky, Tennessee and t -Phi0. , ..-The eorninl tobacco erops.Arel-strifer :`t ding YyN A PATITY of I,liieVes stole $l,OOO worth of. goods from stores , in,,,.youghkeepsie N. Y:4 • yesterday. afternoon. Three of diem,. two. being wompo, were arrested a t, the railroad' • depot.; littil4kla weitli OP the gaidis .reCovered: LA. FrtAxtl: :is exercised on the .Cuban quest': tion, and think's' that Mier.' Atherieun govet mane Cuba Wouhrlioi4regress. It rebukes;, the . American : penchant for. absorption, :and . • says:that •Cubri,.if annexed, would.be; titian hi” the Texas st utq. f ' GENETIAL AMES has issued- the following: .orderto - Areconitinuiders - Of Military posts in . . • "The, Cortuiandink;-General directs that you .. - • do not Obey in future any writ of habeas corpus., imued.by, the Vnit4Nl....states District ..Cqurt COUrtc; ort,:atiY. ',Order . such Courts, for the ~rclease of prisoners in your custody; Should such :ti': Writ •or order .be served tgxm. you, report the fact by telegnaph.2l,s AnNr4Sfilartt ey.ba...4! August:lN reCeiied lii.tp . oo,4l,leo;:glit'an''..aectintit of Ai tight be ' tween aportion of Jordan's conunand and the trooreptkVelmaseaa,-.?tterto Padre. The Cabatlanithibering - hiss than 41Q0,.fac • ---- /eampettitear7rlteM - latherWifere - they 'Were . attacked by t Ake Sidnish regulars - over Atinng, Lite: first 'Attack, Cubans fait' 'WO; but' lley Ji - ythOro defensible position, repulsed the'Sounaids in their second. attack:;;'Vhe'lcias orthe'Cribani the contest ' • was li"it) ldlied, ,wotthilfs and missing,. and that. of. the 'Spaniards' is represented as more than doubje'tbatnuinhir.. Cot Viguerel,COnitnanded Jight.l4'repreiented tal.have `been one. OfTa..:l4ost desperate ,character, the Cubans lighting:with, an earnestness that was - The ilhasernanossall Boas Estee In England LONDON, August 2,3.-'-;.-The Telegraph to-day .' has an edittnial on the forthcoming interna tional boat race wherein it/ says: "The point .* in favor ofthe Americans is that they are in - , each a - state elf high'training of the best;;kind," . and have neriubmitted to "a sharp rigirne far a few, Mettt4l;;Witle:'a > - '-‘I4W - 10 - : this * "ParilWar event, but have been in perfect training for the last three years. , What, with such hardness of , ' Muscle; soundness of lung, and Honesty of • heart, must be the result? It is , ahnost , impos sible to overrate the effect such a State of facts „I will liatel , upon th 6 event 'of rtha race. Four young athletes kept for three -years under con ditions to develop ,'every available power is something-mare ellective than theresult of a few 311011tliS tminin . g. AV.hat may not be ex pected from a. crew called upon for a quarter , of. an hour's strata, when ;they have been at work for sears? . Taking our information as correct, we should consider the superior hardness oldie Americans more than a set,* IT .againt t the style of the Enciish, and we coa r , chide that the contest will be mainly a battle of coxswains. Whatever may be the event, we trust that kindly feeling and good fel lowship between the two nations will be the - retudt,” Loignox, August 23.—The Ilarvard and ' . Oxford crews were out, on the Thames to-day. The banks were crowded on account of the re gatta, and the American and E English crews were, heartily, cheered: The Oxoniaus to-day • rowed fiii. the first time in a new boat, built by Elliott. She measures 45 feet in length and 214 inches across at the widest part. Siturnobl, of the Tlarvard crew, has entirely :,.. :recovered from . his recent indisposition:- "The Ilarvards desire a contradiction to be made that they have adopted the English style of rowing, anti maintain that the matchNvill be a, contest of style as well as of men. They ex ,..press , t l , l mseives tvell satisfied , with v all the arranaetnenta that bare been' made - far then', and are satisfied with the results of their prac tice on,theahamesi , „They hare , not , yet de cided" What: boat ' they will Y take ' for ' the race. Their coxswain Neill be lighter in weight Mut the. Oxford's, .> ...The Ameticans purpose to invite the Prince of Wales and 311',"Metler•t0 11,Ceoin ' ' * . paDy the crews on ihe day, of tbe race, and for that purpose the use of theThievarti's launches will be tendered. . , . • , •1424 mm, j.Atigtist '2:,The- Tetegr'a ph, to day, in its sporting article, alludes again to the inter-university boat race. It. 'says many of, the best judges .boating offer. two to one on ;,,theo,.xfords. It,.predicts that' Oirford wiThwin, but believes the arvards will make a better fight than was anticipated by the supporters 'of the Oxfordil. :5, - ", .' ' ',,, - Y'' .. j The. Times has the following editorial on the forthcoming race: ".The momentous question has to bedecided whether an American or Eng lish University can turn out the oarsmen. t 1 It fortunately • happens that in each country leading Universities simultaneousiy boast of theposSession,4 an excellerit IcreW: ,We know' = • '' what OXford'cando, and how proud she is of her repeated triumphs, despite the tone of re spectful synlPatltYTOr phibit*lth *filch Cara „ , 3 , bridgeatinuAlly-tenows. the contest. , , - Harvard it ' is, by c curious Coincidence, in the ,, a'unb lioal f Lion As Oxford., ~ She bas heater” her usual 'rival, \ to say pant of unlettered professionals, untit'": no mom-glory iti'taiiii, got at homer T,hO . ,NeV • World conquered, . there. was .notiffqg to seek- , but fresh latOlti in the: Old. ,, The fame of Oxford had reached Harvard, and with a spirit worthy Of 'rnediteval. Paladins the Ainericans resolyed to ,' Plneastire, OM "With 13.ritons'.7" great; difffeulty 'arosein the Style of the luiating"litactited,4 The • • Americans, make gieboW , oar steer. ,As nothing could induce. theEnglishAew'to introduce this ',Lfasldori,,while, the mace could not t ;have ;been fair if one boat had , four ,and the other 'five men, thiT,diflicultY delayed the contest. lii .evet, your true Paladins would rather fight on any terms than not. at all. ." ' , ," . . ,;,.,- Thel . ITarvards' ,chlyalronsly accepte d' 'the - 7:palish custtan, es tlie only compromise practi : cable. ) A 'Coxswain is' indiSP9nsable , iir', our '''' rivers; 'and th‘rericanS, in i earrying,:one, sacrifice what ' uld . have been an Undue adiatitage , and' , do not hicuithe ' ( . 11.4advaiittige. We prefer to, comproinis been,* ' there ,', seenia to be a notion that the Americans have • ' - conceded too mach for the race to be' a fah' trial • , • c 4 3 , 4 4„ 1 ,- 2,3 of SPeed bet Weer representatives of •Alie. t •o: countries. e'Whf3, ,, ,,lTtlprestuon OY gradually 'ai,Shallited ;their style 'of. rowing T that of guglishi-) It is cep plained that.`an , 'Ettngl&American race'is net a 'test of the relative merits-of: distinct risittollal, styles of lowing the object whidrinirmitef to. -he the 'Chief Sottree ''of interest; but 'CO decide -Whieh young Men' roWing, ifiikien to be he `best t . This' seenis'-' , ''peklatitie Way, of. putt...ng, 'the matter.• , • • . • It Misinterprets the charieter of internetiepal :struggles; ;What is style , of rowing "CoMpa,7d With inen WhO" ' "When' the fight-between, 'ire/114 1 ,mA sayers excited - ,wpridwAde interest, the 'question was, Whether ' . ..4,ter ric.4 or gland could turnout, not a better style of „Vo4rig: hat a betteeniati:',.:-There is,,thc,:sa)ne stake In this , ,Issite, ',NOW:good rowing must bethe same all the 'world over, however aeci dental the circumstances, but there may be versity of external characteristics. The Ilarvards have not waterlikethe Tharnes at Putney, and, they have therefore wisely mo dified their pidlingtosnit the change..lfthe Ox fords went to Charles river they would have,' to do the s.ame thing, but the , essentialqualities Of Skill. flue and strenol4 which have nton. for both crews their ruany laurels, requireino change, araiiilibelnit — reiitli with perfect ness to the test. Ilhichever wins must be ire- WeAO not write in the ' slightest degree Ito detract front the high praise deservedly Atte the in. - ,Wilith;r. tlrrowing prejudices to the winds, they: have, conic to micottuter the Oxfords iir their own waters in their Own way, and also for the prompt versatility diameter/4W of their nation with which theyitive"adolteirtheir rietel,P6si tiort.- It is linpossible mot to admire the busi ness-like, unpretentious way • in which they' -have settled down to work, carefully-phunnlng opponunitieS of parade and publicity. They have done all 'they can to deserve stye-, teas llf they fain it. no Englishthan, hoWerer he may wish lus.own _side to win, will grudge it to them. - We trust'that the hearty , goodwill 'they hate from the lint received, , and are still 'receiving front all daises, will convince their anxious fellow-cotuitrymen that there is no ground for apprehensions of fottl play. One of the best points about boat-races is their freedoin from trickery whish now distill guisheS the English turf. r Boat-racing hashap pil4y,_ escaped,- this foul . _contagion— • There is do danger - thar:an}filing butan aeci dent- kill preVent`the' race being fairly rotted. ' We are glad to see, the, most stringent pmcatt tions to prevent 'an' acbidenr hate been adopted. ' Only two stearife'rs Will follow time crews while rowing ' and the river will be, kept care frilly clear. We are not without expectations of seeing a really good rave. Notwithstanding tids,,contalence,„each. patty. luts 'predicted an easy victory for its oivn side: We hope the day will find both.crews come to the'start, in prime condition and:equal - pluck;andmay the best man win." ' " IMPOUT'X'IOS. Benorteu for the ebnad A N elphts Evening Bulletin BOSTON—Steamer Roman. Boggs—Z. bales mdse Alt man. billings: &-Co-,.^65 balea.4) bagsdo i t y White; 7.7. es do G o.baleis !Sr/Moths ner, Brewer A co:3 es Collin & Ahem us; sdo Doug ot. lienaltaw A Wilkins; 5 bales 4 co do Dale Bros; 11 rolls do Leedom & Shau•;lo es do T T Lea & Co; 9 do Lewis, Wharton' & Co: 251.10 ,•'• 4.T y'allic4ll , 7•43lcpalltun.. Crease & Sloan; 7 bales , do 0 . Mundell' & 1.,o; SMI W alutchett & Co; 6 bales 5 bags do Newell A. Co:s baled do Sutton. Smith A Co; 10 bales 1 cue do 11 W P Smith; 2 bales 15 hags do J T Sproul A. CO; 5 bales .10 RT.White; 9 do - Wilson * ftkgs do hismall lots order; 43 CS boots and shoes T 11, AShbridge A C0;72 do Bolter Bros; At do .1' F Clayton; 46 do Chandler. Hart & 51!d0 ii s•Claflin A (7o; =3 do Conover. Imrff & Co• 110 4A • • Graee; 152,d0. P.* SL.Jonettpil do Lorick broil; 52 do 'Munroe,- tmlaitz A Co; Sf,do , Niekerson & Mossier ;45.10 E 5 11 , 'evo I.V do Shultz A. Else; 151 do .1 I Slater; o".`do A Tilden A Co; 158 do Winebretinor & McWilliams; 2.55.10 small lotsprder:9l..pkgs.,spring beds J.ll.lluntitor; 69 es, '(:sorer & Baker; 50 rolls 40 bdls•papei slunk if s'?; ; Uit! Incise loritku imoullegkiolc.V.Denkla; 25 bags dye stuff W Jones;'s4 es furniture stoek 5 lodes •• (cceloor " Kilburn & Gstes; 22 plots mdse Laing & Mn• ginnis: 64 Ldls iron B Liggett. & Co; 21 tibia dubs. S AT . MeDbagalt 5:45 paper C Illegarger.; SO Wig trams Miller - 5; Elder; 29 eks potush'Powers Weightman ;75 bbls fish C P Knight & Bro; 220 bbls 50 hit do Skits fish .1 Stroup& Co; 50 bbls fish Koons, Seliwarz A Co; 458 do 3 lilf de fish fir,owell &Collins; 69 do 6 lilf,do fish 1 bbl ban Hard 71'0g Jrl3r4il 42 bales . goer ',Janet ))1.7 SpOoner,* 8ra;172-• 'bbls EnOrit A Wool: 125 bbls Si) lilt do 40 bxs fish 2500 pkgs • miscellaneous .irtier. • CHABLESTGN, SC,—Steamship Prometheim, 59 bales yarn Hay, & :McDevitt; satio and domestics Bdo sottott.Chighorn,•Herring & Co; 55' do cotton 1 bundle:. leather If Sloan & Sons; 7 bales mg': Jessup A Moore; 1 do wool .A Whilldin A Sons; 6 rolls leather Kirkpatrick. • Kinley k ev; S bids roots 1 4o metal Sellers, Koddet & Co; 9 bids liquor 11 A J livers; 3161ibls rosin do sits: turpt E 11 llowley:.= blifs twi s t' Prentice A 50 wheels3l miles 24 tibls rosin: If bales rags' and sundry packages order. • 1 • MOVEMENTS. OF OCEAN STEAM FRS. *HIPS - E VRON ' E F0R•• 11 .472 Nebraeka Liverpool... New York-. AIM: 4 Iltuninonia......--...llaVre.'»New York.; .7 Euglarld - Liverpool—Now York-.....----Attg. 11, Britannia- Glaegow....New York - ' Atig',l2 City of Ilesteo,Yera Crpz-.Ne,w,York 14 .. . York Aug. 14 City of Porte. Liverpool.:.New York via IL Aug:l4 Sileela-. ....... York Aug. 14 cella Lontlo4.-New York 'tug 14 Soitlitimoton"...BaltErnore TO DEPART. Nebriugka New York—Liverpool Scotia York.:...LiTerpooL.. Falt-koe • - New York.'....llertuuda-...., Malta_ New York . . .Liverpool City of parts - " New York... Liverpool - Eagle New Yortt...llavana Main • •Newlfork....llrenten .Pioneer C. of Baltimore... New York, - ...tiverpool Atalanta ' • New Yerk...tliondon Tonawandal-.Plilladelphial...Savannah 13 - oAgb OF - .TRADI.I. • • ' JOHN , JAM C. 13. DERBOROW.I3I4-riiroz CO**ITTEE. THOS. L: GILLESPIE, MARINE BULLETIN. PORT, OF PHILADELPHIA-ArG.24 HUN Risis, 6 211 SUN Sri's, 6 44'1 Axon AVATER,4I27 . ARRIVED YESTERDAY. tneanier Roman, Boggs, 46 hours from Bostoriovith pulse and passengers to H WinsUr & Co. Passenge'ra— Miss Montgomery llltss McLean, 3liss Cass, .Mr N .7. Bush and wile:Mr 'A Sturtevant ;Mr E Elroy, 31r .1 11 Wartington, Mr CF Evans: Mr -Ryan,' Mr C Williams.:(My, Mr cur the Overfalls, passed ships Tus-' carom and Reeord,ffrom Liverpool; also, a ship and a Mirk, .unknown ; off Brandywine,..one . bark, deeply laden on .Delawbre' City.; ti barkentine, probably the Hutche, from Bordeaux. Steamer .lame) S Green; Vtince, .6 hours front Rich mond, via Norfolk, with noise to \V P Clrde &Co. _ •• Stesmeriltrrinetteirreenunt,24-hours from New York, With nidse to Tolin . F , Steamer:Vulcan, Morrison,, 24 hours from NeW York, with mdse to \V 3t Baird & Co, ' - Steamer E C Biddle,Wrane,24 hauls from Now York,: • with nalee to W P Clyde & Co. , Brig ,Guilllng StaryFreethy,Boston. • -,Bchr , Vandalit4 day from Leipsit, Del: with grain to Jos 'E pa Fehr Zounve, - Short; - rdayfrom Magnolia, Del. with grain to Jai; L Bewley & Schr Win 8 Matio, Lacey, I:day front Milton, Del. . graingrain.to JoeT. Rowley'& Co. • Rehr R-Nickerson, oily., from Boston, with mdse. l Seim olt Vickery, Demon, from Dighton. - 1 Tug Thos Jefferson, Allen, from Baltimore, with a bia, of barges to 'A Co . Tug (kinuidlord, Marro de Grace, with, a tow of barges to - W P Clyde & Co. r t - .4T"ONARKNTIIiN;',Iv ; Brt Alm On Rowell; froth, 'thiantanampt , Reportdd by. Wm Baker, pilot. • f ' CLEARED 'YESTERDAY. Astfaineißristot:ValloogeNeva ,- Yorke-W P (Side &C j Steamer F.Franklin,Pieriton', , Balthuore, A Groves, Jr Burk Raphael t NG ), Btettrii,:P-Wright & Sons. Brig Ortolan. Leeman, Leghorn,. .Warren Gregg." Brig Lizzie Wyrinan: Idtdafige,tPortimitlc . do Brig Caseatello.-Carlisle,l3ostoni..liorda, Kellar A Nat- , ting. lEltdir S P,AdannuTabbut, , BostOns'W_akrini &Gregg, Rehr Nautilus, Ram, Racklauthallaltistbu g Limit& Co., schr E A Conkling, Daniels, Now London, •do eltr R .I.3lqrcer,iKing,Notyburvpurt, • " dq - sehrH dreonwich, ' ' "Seim Beni Strong:Brown, Providenco, do Barge R I RRNoSq, - ;Ciwither,Naw Noyk; z do: ' — Barge C& J Shoe, Foster, Troy, . : . Barge Ben.; IlaytrOtal Neinau; Plermont, • do •.; Tug 'Mason, Nicholson, Baltimore, with a tow t: barges,lty IClydo,4 V. , 1 4 • • Tug Chdkarpodke-, Merriliew',lfavre US-Grace, with a to‘v of barges, W P Clyde .ot Co. V f • • ( ".••••,- • , oiietipondenceorine Philadelphia Exchange. , " • LEWBS,„Dttr.., Aug. 22,1869: Shipe Otliello';' for -Ban Prittelaeo; Martha. for Ant werp, add brig. ohn,Welsh,for, Salina, all. from Philtt delphitt: tr`eptto‘AicaLtO•dar..9oo barki barkentine and a brig, name.unknown, have passed In • Noura,,,ke,;, .r DAMAN L. LYONS: Correspondence of the „Philadelphia 'Evening Bulletin. ••• • V. '2 ,, ,-.MBAB,IM, Aug. 240869: The' rolloiy i ing heath frottfthe'LiniOiCthnohl patiseil into the Bchuyik 11 Canalthoutt . d.,to,Thilatielphia, ladou aBd consigned follotW: 9 • TWo Sisteri and Simi, , J.lteelv; F< tit withorß, do toJII Days her; -Durango,- do- to '1 aylor Betts; Sallie Sr. Harry, do So 'B Prick; Clipper, do to A!..1 Geiger; Lime Lady,. lima to 'l' t.Finfrock; AerrY.'/C.ltig•- limodtone to J ShaelTert.Jetinte;cititito & S o.l.ofert., • - .„ .. ... - MAYBB tiP4GBACM, , Ang.24 The' roiroit t oats" hillier() morning, for-Plilla dolphin, laden and consigned n. fnllowo M ltitia, with bark to Kern & Coatis; B M Pores man, lumber to Taylor fi Betts , 'Fronk ~S; Alice, (10 for. tiatoin; , . tiro M •Taltdogrlyt; snr volts, dote D D. rayler h Sop; Simi Christ, do to Tay- tor Bi. Bats; tqconll to It orcross blteett ; MEMORANDA " ' Sldp !Brian Star, Raymond, sailed from Troan )3tlt.) mot. tor this sort, • . Ship Beeline .Von brood Or, d'rentz, entered for , ing at. Liverpool eth Inst. for this port, •• • . Ship elms smithard, Rose,- from Liverpool for t _port, was spoken Augl7, let 40 IT. lon 65. .Btearner City of London, Loltch, from Liverpool of ..lsiew York vesterdav . • Steamer Perris); Buchesne, from Brest, at -New Yorir Yesrday, - • • St t e e amer George Wallington ! Gager. from NeW,YOrko: -at New Orleans yeaterdayt,„—. , ,- Steamer Gee Cromwell, Vaill, sailed from N'eWOrleans yesterday for No* York. Steamer Manhattan (Br), Forsyth, from Liverpool ! : at NewXorluestentov; . • f . 1; • Brig DatlineriVeHsercherieVfOr-Rlsinore, off Beacby , Head fith tnst. . Brig Torrent, Gould, hence at Salem 20th inst. Brig Barry Stem - art, Weeks; at Novena 2d instant to. load tor this port. ; . • -chr Ocean Traveler, Adlarnson, sailed from Beverly. 14th inst. for this port. • ' •Schrs,A id, Clut.o, and W B Darling, Mansfield, hence . at SalCrirVOttpirl • , , , Sohn Dick' millinms, neon: 'Vfortwingi Naafi; llti&s henry. ',like hence at Lynn 20th m O 1 et. Seim-0 Green, *eetcott. hence at Lynn lath Inst. :Bohr fd: itankiw, tienee at Boston =1 Inst. -• AL - AL - 7%.1UT - STItEgT K. E. Cornet Ninth and 'Walnut Simi:lL' THIS (TUESDAY) EVENING. August The pliarming - ActreFe and Vocalist. . ROSE WATKINS, •(fornierlr - Miss Itosinn Shaw,/ and the eminont Comedian, _ • - Mit. 'I:LANNY WATKINS. • . Thew digingn artiste will appear in their grand romantic Irish Drama of - TS FO F APADE 'MY OF FIN.E-AILTS; t I.IILESTIWT street sbove.Tentit— : opin 6 PAL Benjamin We gni Great yktdre Of • 4 CHRIST DEJECTED' still on exhibition. • 0224 f I.pc ! A'p7N9TICES. "UN THE ORPHANS" COURT FOR Trig, City and Connty n PliiiadelPilio. - -Estate of BEV. lUHN BANNEGAIi, deceased: 7 nm Aurlitor.'ap-' ,pointed by` the Ctitirt to 'atiditOeltieaiid MIA= gixwmc count of B. SHARKEY, Administrator of the Estafe of NEV. JOHN N. lI.ANNEGAN, deceased', and to report ! , distribution of the bale nceln the. hands of the account: anti-will meet %the parlies inPleeted,for thoptresu Of' -Lis uppaionnent,..on WEDNESDAY, t4t Il o'clock A. M., at litilogise,No. 144 South SEctli street, in' the city of PhtladeWo. WA. 13. MANN,, , 0n19.t4 a 1.0 5t." „ , 8 -1 1 ; A.d'E' - JCIRN 7 SIiNGLE; EtEr ceased, Letters of Afkululatration..ciam testamOuto annex°. having been granted to the underbignedoll . Persons indebted to ;saidestate, :am rmuested to makb payinenttend thoseliaring claimetepresent them toi , RGARE TTA P. MINGLE, Adm - x. C. T. A.,. N 0.3.906 Walnut street. .oul7 to 6t" August 14, 13C9 ri STATE - OF "-,ANNA C.' TINGLE, DE-. Lacraned—Letters-it haring. !ipso grunted to the undersigned, Sall parsons indaded to said (suite are ; requested to make payment, and "those having dolma to.preint them to . ' . • t • 1 • MARGAIIETTA P. AirsoLF. , Admiumtratrix, - -, N0.,39w Walnut street. itul7-tn 13 VSTAI'h 0.1 0 ELIZABETH; Ci K. LATI _EA MElt,deveaue4.—letterii !Testamentary having !Men etimted to the'atiloterther npoir thefistate of BETH C.K. LATIM}IIII, ileeetteed;all persons JOIN/till to the same will muhe payment,. and those having claims present them to..' • • CA_DWALADER RIDDLE, Executor,';, )y27-ttiGt•-` , 2ai South Fourth street. SPECIAL T NOTICES.' , 10'31titt:AWilITELflitARYL-TENTII, .above'Chestent MONDAY; 2.3{1 !net.. ' , awl until farther notice, the Newsp a per Room Will be opened at Ve. &deck A 'she Libra:x . l'i, Room ' wilt the opened at 9 o'clock, as heretofore: au2l § to 2 DIVIDEND NOTICES: ' ' _ _ _ fug , O]?FICE OF TBE LOCUST TAIN COAL AND IRON COMPANY, No: SOUTH THIRD STREET.. • - ' PHILAbELPEiTA, A Ugnit 19, 4 1569. At a meeting of the Board of Directors, held this day,' ax semi.llllllllilidividend of TIIREE•PEWCENT. on the capital clock clear of:Stato taxem, ae declared, oayablo to. the Wad:kidders or:their legal repreMentatives on 4uti, after the 3Uth host:'. • 5 Tin trinaler books trill he dosed 'until September 2ml , MI • atil9 to ie2ii t, FOR .SALE.:-.MODE4N TIMED- Story Erick Du ening, 510 S. Ninth st; • Every etim venience. Inquire on the premises. my6-thtu,tf§ fp . -1 Fon, SALP,3IODEIC.N. roatiil first story, with every convenience, antl 6 v eet side-ani, No. MT S.,,nth Fifteenth street, 'below Spruce. J. M. GE.3IJIEY it: SONS, 733.Waluut 'street. GJITH '-STREE O T. - 4 --; 011 i .+ 4 TI)- Pi . operti,No.327Nortlt Eight gtt,N:t. 6,, 733 lyaltin t FOfl SALIAIN" •EL EGAN . T' OLIN • TRY Seat and Farm, oontaininn $5, acre,, saperlor land;bbaritifullf Irlirated On the Nestraininy creek, eon vontent Sehen o k's Station, on tho Philadelphia and Trenton Italliericl. Edelint double nesidenCe, wit h every eoliVen fence; stable.: and. Carriage-house, tenaint-lionse, .green:rhOuse;'ket;lionsei ice-house, &c.; g.rounds tudirlsentely irnOtovert with drains,aud walk., tine Old shade and eiergiereti trees', ehetce slrubbery..t.c. Views may be seen at the office J. M. GUM.IIIEY C. SONS, 733 le, FOR SALE—DWELLLNGS: 1 ' li,:l MC Verrion, , -. , 1711 North Ninth street, 141 U Master street ; •.• . -, Nineteenth and Thompson 1510Mervine street, . , 1317 Ogden street, ! 122/ Poplar street, • '' KO N. Sixteenth street, 142 d N. Seventeenth street,,, 2124 Vino street, . , 1723 Vine street: ' , 3419 Walnut street. • Several Vest 'P hiladelph ia Proßerties for sale. . ' ' For particulars , g,et , the Register, prico ,, Sc., at. J TBBNWITU'S, 614 Chest - ma. or • CARMEN & IrAYENS. • . B. W. corner Broad and Chestnut • je..39 (I§ ' ' &59Ncirth Broad street. l' FOR SALE—NO. 1104 SPRUCE ST. i• +.41 Lot is 2314 feet front, .).S feel deep to a Street: Has large Purim, 'Dining Room, Hitehen,, Ironing and Washing rooms on first floor. Large three-story buck buildings with the modern improvements. Possession on receiving deed. Apply between 11 and 12 o'clock, to E. A. 13111GRAM.:No. 311% Walnut street. • auW2l-7t! • Aug.' 14 Aug: 25 Aug: 25 Um: 26 Aug 1 26 Aug. 26 Aug. 26 ...%.-Ang: 26 .Aug. 27 Aug, 28 .....Aug; 26 -...-Aug: GERMA_NTOWN.-L-VOR SALE—TWO 11 . 1.• pointed stone Cettages with every city conee- Moire just 'finishing, within.; itre miles' walk from rhurch Lane' Station.3:.ONS.V3 :Waliiitt target.. -, • • CA FOR SALE. A BROWN-STONE JELL, Dwelling,2llS.Sprti6e street:, .• - • . A.ltandsorue Dwellmg,lo23Arcli street. • • ..A handsome Dwelling, 1721,Tine street. • , 'A handsome Reeidence,'WesePhiladelphirs. • A imodom Dwelli,ng, 1020 Sergeant street. ' • Bo:dares LOcation s 28 Strawberry etreet. ' A handsome Dwelling, 400 SonthNinth street.' Apply to COPPUCK & JORDAN 433 :Walnut street. CREESE & 31CCOLL1731, ERA'T, ESTATE OENT9. Ofllo,Jachson West opposite Mansion street, Cape Island, N.: Real Estate bought and sold. Persons desirous of renting cottages during the season will apply or address liSabore; • • • • Respectfully relent° Chas. A. Ruble= ,Henry Bum in, W. . Francis .11.1clIvain, Augustus, Merino, 'John Davis and W W Juvenal. feS-tf§ STORE ROON. AND BASEMENT of New Build g *St aiith AV A ly r t . o WilltSlAN, nue tf§ , , l2lO Market, street. Vgl TO . .11ENI.` THE ii . FurUished', No ,:400 South Niutit street ;wow, bath, 11111 i all ,tnoilurn Improvements ; a, line location. Also, to rent, No. 1721 Tine street, modern convenience. Apply, to COPPUCK ‘l,; W JOliDAN,433.ainnt atteet. , , TOR RENT THE THREVy-STORY 16.10; Resliteneo, with every: convenience, No. 024 Cl i nt J. M. GUMMEY SONS,TS.I Walnut , ' - ' fa, TO „RENT=ELEGANT MODERN ,Ttesidenco, 'No:. 1421, i;Nerth, Thirteenth street, evury modern convenience and in gOod.order., .9750 per eautifUl 'Alirim-Story .brick r lt-ith , back buildings, Baring :street, Blantua• ' i r V r , t gl e e v t li er t y ll. c% t ri re v e e t nie 'b n ei ce ° ; l , l. front,,side and rear yard: 600, pr.annum ' 718, Bo ; nth. Ninth street, convenientwe ng,gsSO. BUBERT,GIA . kN it BON, /337 Pine street IEIRN TH LARGE, CONVE- - . - ntont and well-lighted gran itttfront Stere,No. 110, 'nab with immediate posses . ston,"the;,present tenant being obliged to retire from busittess owing' to ill hea1t14.....,,App1y . d,„lt. BUB BIER-& 103 South Delaware avenue. ' awl? 1317.NDitIES GRADE!' itru.G Mortar, Pill Brushers, Mirrors, Tweezers; /Puff; 'Boxas,lforn Somme, Shrgical Instru manta , • Trusses 4 ;Bard, and Soft ' Rubber! Gr..ods; Vial Cases, Glass and ,Metal, Syriuges,/to.i all at " First Bands"- prices: • - ' • BNOWDBIsr d4BBOTHER, '' ao4l* • • ' 1 24 SO.Uth Igl,gbth street._'• S " IRET:rO I TS INVITED ,TO 'EX- - ALA_ amino our large stock of fresh Drugs and Chemicals of the latest importation. 1.:4, ~ • , • • .• Also, essential Oils, :vanilla Beans, Sponges, Chamois• Skins, etc. ROBERT F IMOISMAXER Co.,N. 4. cor ner 'Fourth anddlace streets. $ • • - 4 . , OLIVE QIIALITY, ON' draught and in, hottlea;Narions brands:. ROBERT, 4404MAKBli, Nt: El 'corner Fourth and Baas C— TILE S N o'4 • „O.” L )11.10.-390 boxes White andliettled (Inane Seas ,very suileriqr _quality,. ROBERT , 81:10MIAILEIt VO., Wholesale vrugglsts. earner VoUrth ead Race streets. REIVIOy2U.s. inrSSEIZ: 80 CO. have reolOved from 22 North lfront street to 11 CHESTNUT STREET, north side, above Fro at street. ..'.0... ‘ 1 4 0 , .0/leNter: Annie, el ono. for Maroill, Flllll5lO I tkii it:l4 E 1.),W AUDI SWAIN; Tte,fiscirei*. - Foa - MU. TO RENT. DRUGS, 7 1Y.,. ~ 1 ~'., F ~ ~'!l~ -- CE, ::. . FIRE ASSOGIATION • •or PHIL DELPHIA. , - . zneorporated Illspreli, 27, 1820, '13140--.,Niti= 34 North rift h Street.' loisußE'initauvos, , 4fotkrtotar rorgirrrur, 4AriDNEBCIIANDiSEGENERALLy OM, • LOSS BY FITIE. AsSets4anuin , ^l: 1;1869„ $1 44:401 'o'os' os . ' ' . TRUSTEES: wago n H. gamm on , Charles P. Bower, ,Jell Carroty , fakhrfoot ei.ong ,c Sho ema ker, „ose:U.lV. Lyndall, , Peter Armbruster, Amid P. Coats, ' •, ' 'Bt. E. Dickinson. ~ • Bamnol B' par'- h awk Peter . M ll bureen t' wm.Ar(Leger vl 'l ptPi SAMUEL President.SPAßlNVE,Tie r', '...P/111; ?I', /3BTLBB, SeeretarY. ~• ' ~. , . ••' frik'ALAWARE 141J21174.14 SAFETY I.N SUTIANOR COMPANY." , iffberPorated by the Legislature of Penilsyivants,lB33, Ohre cornet'-of TIiIE and-VirAlffiltT treeiat ' • ' ' `."• • wit Vessels, Carß e and Fraitht to all parts of the world. .L.NI.ANI) BUB/OWES - O n speeds by river, canal, ake, and land carriage to all , .• _parte of the Union. • • •.' • n_RE - INSURANCES • 4)iilleirchatidise generally, on Stores, Dwellings • ilonsesoftc.- • , • ,li . " - ovember - • • R2OOOOO United States Five Per Cent,LOan, Itate •i 4 r, 0 120,N1- per (A 18ri1,,11,...-,11? 62 , 609 136,800 00 00000 United St"aFes Six Per Cent. /An, 0 ' • (for Paelfle Railroad) ... 00 ,000 000 , 200,000 State of Pennsylv ania Six Iser; • ^ - Cent. Loan.: 211. 4 ., 6 00 ilia-S.lx Per Cent. , 125,01)0 city of piiiladeli Loan_texempt from Tax) • 10,0110 State of New JeraeY.SixX'er Cent.. Loan ' °LPN 00 20,000 Pennsylvania - Railroad Fist llortgage Six Per Cont. Bonds ,20,200 00 25,000 Pennsylvania , Railroad - Second Mortgage Six Per Cent. Ronda 24.000 CO 25.000 Westeri .Ponesylt Ilia Railroad' 3fortgage Rix P er a Cent. Honda ".„ peana..B. R. guaranteo)....... , =bozo W •I, 00,0(X) State of Tennessee 03 ° 23 4. • ' 00 Loan Loan. ... 7 000 State of:Y .. emen/me Six Per Coat. Loan 15,000 Germantown Gas CompanY,princi- andDDal the t y lel eft h c i r o tt; 1. 3 1 ) ; , shares stock.» 1 0 , 00 0 00 10,000 - Pennsylvania Rallt-oad Company, •• ' • 200 shares .... /1000 00 5,000 North Pennsylvania Railroad • Company,loo shares:Stook -..... • . 3,50 00 20 . 000 Philadelphia and Southern Dlafi • . Stock.teamship Company, 80 shares mow 00 s 207,900 Loans on Bond and Mortgage, first liens on City Properties.. 207,000 00 _bliatiy4Yalue,4l,i3o,l37s 25 614109000 Par Real E5ta 1p t ° e gt ...... 8 ... 1 ... °93 „: " 26 'SAW 00 Dills • receivable for, Insurances • mde C 2,486 DA Balan a ces due at . Agencies—Pre mituns on 31arine Policies— , Accrued Interest and other ' debts dne the CoMpany- ':'10;175.83 Stock and Scrip of sundry Corpo-. ' - rations, f 53,156 OD: ' Estimated value-. • . . . 1,814 00 ,Cash Dank-. ..... . Cash in Drawer ' • CM 65 - . . ••• , . 61,647,341... v DIRECTORS. • ThOmas G. Hand, ' Jaynes B. 'McFarland,' 4 , Edward Darlington, William C. Ludwig, Joseph H. Seal, • • ' Jacob P. Jones, Edmund A. Souder, Joshua T. Eyre Theophilus Paulding, William G. Bou . t ton, , Hugh Craig, • Heurr.C. Dallett,Jr., John C. Davis, . John D. Taylor, James C. Hand, ; Eduard Latourcade, John R. Penroo,. • Jacob Beige', 11. Jdnes Brooke, George W.Mernadou, Spencer M'llvaine,. C. Houston.. Henry Sloan, • ' D. T; Morgan, Pittsburgh, Samuel E. Stokes, John R. Semple, do., ; James Traouair', A.B. Berger, do. t THOMAS D. HAND, President. ' JOHN C. DAVIS, Vice President. HENRY .LYLBURN. Secretary. HENRY' BALL, Aee't Secretary. e2l-if. THE RELIANCE INSURANCE' COBS- P ANY OF PHILADELPHLSA •-• • ' Incorporated in 1841. . Charter Perpettial. Oftlee, No. 808 Walnut Street. CAPITAL 3300,000. . Insures against loss or diumage by FIBS% on !louses, !Bores and other Buildings, limited or, perpetual, tlnd,on Furniture, Goods, Wares and ,Merchandise in town. or , .LOtiSF.S PROMPTLY ADJUSTED AND PAID. Assets ' ' • —.:3437,598 82 Invested in the following Securities, viz. : First ,Mortgages on City ,Property, well se- 1 • cured.-- 9168,600 00 United States Government Loans 117,000 00 Philadelphia City 6 Per Cent: Loans' 75,000 00 Pennsylvania 6.3.000,000 6 Per Cent L0an......... 80,000 00 Pennsylvania Bailrondßonda First Mbrtuage 6,600 00 Camden and Amboy Railroad Company's Vent. Leah- ' ' ' ' 6,000 0 0 Loans on• Collaterals WO 00 linntinuden and Broad Top 7 Per Cent.-Mort .... .- ..„ ........... * County „Fire Insurance Company's Stock.' - Mechanics' Bank Stock Commercial Bank of Pennsylvania Stock Union Mutual IniuranceCempanstitock. Re ia nce Insurance Company of Philadelphia 8,256 00 Cash in Bank and on band. 12.25 d 32 Worth at Par „. , 5437,593 32 Worth this date at mark - et prices.... DIRECTORS. Thomas C. Hill,t Thomas H. Moore, William Musser, Samuel Castner, Samuel Bispham, James T. Young, H. L. Carson, Isaac F. Baker, Wnr. Stevenson, Christian J. Hoffman, Benj. W. Tingley; Samuel B. Thomas, Edwar Sitar. THOMAS C. HILL, President _ _ . Wm. Cnuna, Secretary. ILADELPH Ls, February 17,1869. jal-tu th s tf _ _ A NTHR A_CZTE INSURANCE COM XIL•PANY.—CHARTER PERPETUAL. Unice, No. 311 WALN UT Street, above Third, Philada. Will insure against Loss or Damage by Fire on Build-. lugs, either perpetually or,for.a limited time, Rottabhuld kurnituro and Merchandise generaak." • ANC), :,Marine -Insurance, on Vessels, Cargoes and Freights. Inland Disunities to all parts of the Union.— DIRECTORS. William Esher, , Lewis Audeuried, D. Luther,. . • ‘• John lietchiun, John R. Inackiston, E. Damn, • William J. Dean, •• • • - Jobb B. MO, Peter '% ILLIAAi Samuel 13. Bothermel. SHElttpre.eident. • EiiilV, 41C - el ; President. Vim. N. &Willi. Secretary ja22 to th e tI THE b ATNTY VIRE IN'SIJAA_NCE COM , - PANY.—Office, No. 110 South Fourth, street, below. Chestnut., 4 - The Fire:lnSuranee ComPany 61 the County of Phila delphia," Incorporated by the Legisla tore of Pennsylva nia in 1830, for indemnity against loss or damage by Bre, exclusively. • • - • • ' • CHARTER PERPETUAL. This old and reliable institution, with ample capital and contingent fund carefully- invested, continueeto in sure buildings, furniture; merchandise, &c., either per manently or for a limited time against loss or damage by fire, at the loweStrates consistent with thenbsolute safety of its customers • Losses adj : usted and raid with all possible despatch., • • • • DO.ECTORS: C = has. Britter,• Andrew H. Millers Henry Budd, James N Stone, John Horn, L.. Reakirt, Joseph Moore, .• Robert V. Massey, Jr., • George Mecke, Mark Devine. • . CH_A.RI.I,S J. SUTTER, President. • __HENRY BUDD, Vice P resident. BENJAMIN F. HOECKLEY, Secretary and Treasurer. UNITED NITER'' - ` PIREMENIS .'rNSITRANCb COMPANY OF PHILADELPHIA'. Thie'Company takes risks at the lowest rates consistent With safety, .and coptihes its business exclusively to FIRE INSURANCE IN THE orrY OP PHILADEL ' PHIA ' • OFFICENo.'723 Arch shoot, Fourth National Bank DIRE,OTOBS , • • Thomas J • Martin, , kiel, l l7 W.. Brenner,, John Hiri.t. ..Albertiba ntrun u.iug, A. . • , _ t Jams ongan t ood. • William Glom, Jgbn Jaynes Jenneri a k Albert 'l'9/n _ -Alexaudor aon, • • to Philip iiptzpatrict, - - r . Dillon: • • • • _ . _ _. ; CO NitAD B. ANDRESS, President. A W.i.. Ito Mil; Treas. -: . 'Wm. - 11.•raoil. tlee'Y. AM.EiiIC.A.I7 . FIRE "INSURANCE COM ANY t ilueoippiated 1810iCharteir petiatual. • ' , ' No. 810 WALNUT -street, above iThird, hiladelphia. Haviniert large pail-Up Capital titnek an 'Surplus in veste,d in sound and aysulable , §oeurlties, continuo to insure on dwellings'stores, - furniture, merchandise, vesselsiu port an t'hoir, cargoes, and , other persona' property. .411 losses li stiffly and promptly adjusted. .. ‘ ' - , YABECTORS. , :1 • 1 ,, Thomas R. marts , . , • Edmund G. Dutilh, John Welsh,. , ! - ;1; I CharleaW;PoultneY, • , Patriek Brady, .„ ~ , - .. lerael_lklorris, John' T. Lewis, '• ! •-' • John - r.Vetherill, ' ' , ; -: , -• ", William V. Paul. ••. 1 THOMAS It. DIARDEi, President. ' ALBEHTO: . 014wPonni Secretary. . • • . . . • MIAME INSURANCE c t COMPANY; NO, ~.c . 809 CHESTNUT STREET. • • ..” • , INCORPORATED 1856. CRAR'kEII 'PERPTtrif42: ' • • • • CAPITAL 8200 1 000. , . ' FIRE INSURANCE' 'RXCLUSIVELY : 1 Insures against Loss or Damage by Fire, either by Pon, - ~ • . Potual..orATemporarfr•Dolicies. • . . . • DIRECTORS. ‘ OhRI4CRAICIIIITIISOI)j': ~ ' Robert Pearce, . , ~ 6 .; )1. Vim , 'Mown, ' -, Joint lim J ier, r., . t Frarteis If, p Ittlok, , . -. • 'Edward D. Orne• '.: HOOP Lewis, , 1 , -. • • . , ' Tharies Stokes, ' ' ' ~ Nathan Allies': •"' ,'::: ." • - John W. Everman,' .' ,.190"14tr 0 liA B , LESI , t, f Mo ta ec p a s D N rb P y, 3 sMent 4,... _ Wm. ff. DRAWN, lrice.Preeident; WiLLIAM§ Z. Dl.AtiOlLAUJNOocrotary. ' apl tt . . • aipfral:tib i tomo r e E. , , ! • Thes•Likbeip;9al '•6 f don&:01obe . ;assets Gqld, 8 . x 1 - ,096;303 cc 171 the' United , States 2 2 006 ;000. , Daily Receipt:s2. 0ver0,006. 9 0 Premiunis i 868 • • it 5,665,675.60 Losses in 1868,113,662,445.09, No,(); Merayints! Exchange, • ' 9PFI. PENNSYLVANIA. -FISE---INSIP' • Relict . 00MPANY" 1824—Clirtor Perpetual:: •••• WALlMTinrcet_epnesitelndopendenenlannars. f , iiiryttioioTiibly•knowntirtheyounturnitrinr - over forty years, continues to insure against loss or damage by are on Public or Private Buildinp, either, rtf.tt°7lll,lo7,4VlllTZletillthge ant P . tonne. • Their Capital, together with a large Surplus ir and, is invested in the most careful manner, which enables thorn to °Mr to the Insured an undoubted security In the case ofioee• • DIE701 1 0E8." • •• ' I Daniel Smith, Jr:l John DeverellX• • - • Alexander Benson, Thomas Smith, 1 • . Isaac Hazleburst, Henry Lewis . • • Thomas Robins, J. Gillingham Fell, Daniel Haddock Jr. • DANIEL EibIITLI, Ja., President. WIC G. euciWELL-.' Secretary. • • apl9-tf. SARATOGA WATER. STAR SPRINGS, SARATOGA, NEW , YORK.; . The analysis proves that the waters of th e Saratoga... Star Springs have a much largerimonnt of solid substance; richer in' medical ingredients than any other spring in, Saratoga. and ahows what the taste indicates;-namely, that Itie the. • STRONGEST•WATERi% It also demonstrates that the STAB WATlB:contalos . about • „ 100 Cubic Inches llori3nf Oats • in a gallon than any other spring. It is this extra amount of gas that imparts to this water Its peculiarly' sparkling appearance, and renders •it so very agreeable, tlthe taste. It also tends to preserve the delicious flavor o the Water when bottled, and causes it to uncork with". a effervesernce almost equal to Champagne.. ,•: Sold by the leading Dnegglate oaldHoietatienitigiV out the country. • . •• . • • • JOHN WYETH • 1412 Witiniat Street,.Phllada, • • • . • . • Wholesale @Sale A gents. Also for sale by :W.Walter Glll;Fred. 'frown. cornerof Fifth and c Cheatnut wtrecteLL , J. Gra , home, Twelfth and Filbert; 11. 11, Lippincott. Twentieth kridebeny; Peck & Co., 'MS Chestnut; Samuel 8: Bunt line, Tenth and Spruce; A. B. Taylori lo ls cheetnut_;P.G, OllVee,•Eighteenthnnd Sprnce• F. Jacoby!, Jr.,lllTChsat nit; Geo. C. Bower, Sixth and ' Vine,* Jati.T Shlnn,Broad and Spruce; Daniel S. Joetu,' Twelfth and BpFuce; Webb, Tenth tind..BpriugGarden. • ••'; • • •: • ' • `MISCELLANEOUS. DEALERS:'`'PAPERS r ALL 1461 . 16, 631 Chestaptlind 620 f 4ayke ifreets; _ 244ADEPPII4A, PLUMBING:\ • . WM. Cr. IRJEICIA..I3OS 1221 11.1.AR1 ET STREET, PHILADELPHIA. Steam and Gas titting,Hand Power and Steam Pumps, Plumbers' Marble and Soapstone Work. • - Terra Cotta Pipe; Chimney Tops, &e., wholesale and retail. Samples of finished work may bmseen at my store. rny6 Sul§ 4,560 00 1,050 00 4,000 00 /0,000 00 380 00 $451,331 32 ap2A 6m, F E-A- Z.IIER BEDS - AND; HAIR MAT trestsCe Renovated. Selina and Chairs Restafred; also, Feathers constantly on hand. Factory 311 Lombard !street. . sushi Lao* 1869. . . 1869. FURNITURE: 1316' CHESTNUT. 'STREET. prl!tiltf iillt,W l ge,V,lllert vo o t r o d r e r s u r r o .n r i Bi ,i ff e s ovtr during the month of August, • AT PRICES THAT WILL ORTER INDUCEMENTS TO PURCHASERS.. - The designs are - new lind elegant. The workmanship and materials are of tke blithest order. . • I Invite the attention of those who intend furnishing to call and examine the 'stock of Puniiture, and convince themselves of the ahove facts. . . JOHN M. GARPNER, 131 G Chestnut St. Jy3i lm• BUSINESS :CARDS. Vstablished 1821. WM. G. FLANAGAN & SON, HOUSE AND ' SHIP No. 129 Walnut Street . , MHE.(NICOLSON) WOOL? -PAyslly4Tx, COMPANY Is now prepared to enter Into contracts witkproperty, owners tp lay this unrivalled patent pavement in front of any property Where theewner is desirous of Improving the street and getting rid of cobble-stones. Apply tit the Office of the Corapauy, 7.41 WALNUT' Street, between Mud 2 Q'cleek each day.'ALEX : J. HilRhETi, • - I President. JOHN W. 21IIIRPHY, ' ', - Secretary and 'l'reasurer TH O Ptazi 4 7.14 3 MANT 4. GRIP , 'FRANK L. :YEALL.' rm . rian:viiii,o,uT &. - BUB, • • . . Importers or earthenware ShipplugAnd Connnission'Nerchants, , •• • . 'No 11 Vilma street, PhilanelPnis.; -- ___ • W1.9 , 11.T; -1, • - • . E. • O.,A,TTQIINEY-AT-LAW, . • COnunissioner ed ;3 of De for the State of. Ferinsiaritula in 96 lilndison Street; No; n, Chicago, nitl9tf§: OTT O T SAIL DUCK OF EVERY' C.ryidW, front 22 inches to 76 Inches wip.e. all nutaliers Tent, and Awning puck, Paper-ruelters• Felting,. bail Twittof4tc.. t JOHN. AV. EVERNAti, /c 204 reiTY WELLS.,: OWNERS OF. PROF = riy—Tho_Only 'place to get privy •Welisclennsed,and' infected; at very, low .prices.. ALPICY,i3,9Obi: Diann. facturer'of Portdrette.. Goldsmith's Hall; Library atreet 777.11 , 101tIrGAGIES. - $8 000 '4''43'' INVIST ON ,v‘ ISONV , Ig3rWittfgarSPYPrtmertr. J. U. GUM- 111USt T(}; giIiSTDINELLX EACHEE OF to Singing: Private lessons and clams. Benidenco Thirteenth street, au.25411 FURNITURE, BEZEIES 1 ., ;$ ,r44.-„c„ _ 44:k e , iq:.;-v,Xtilbtl6l4-11ACEEs. -,-. .t.:i i'Vr l lllo • ILEI4O3(.9.IiB±AUCT.IO • -4:1: . ttfl-v ~ ...19.11.ii• • .:' - 24 I Now 139 and'ill South FOURTH • 4 . 4' ' 1 ' ;.•,.. O_ALES: OFISTOOKS,A.ND HELL ESTATEL.ec: ', '%F , 1 .......EriT.PnbliO sales at the Philadelphia:K=lo9;e, " TuESDAY,st n o'clock. ••• • ' ' ""'• ,• - '-,.- ' • ri - A .• IGO' Furniture sales at the Auction St6tV •• 1 • • . •, DAY.. •• ~• : . ~. 14;4 . q•••';•,,,-• .... Wit:isles at Residences receive eneeisl atten le '''''-'-': . • • *, Execntot's Peremptory Sale of Pinto:U . :if Peitt. , /.e. 0',.. , ' Richmond, Philadelphia , . , • . i._... tt., ': ',.3 . ,, , ' l,: ‘ , . ft , L „.• i CANAL . OAT. "OAT IiAItINE LOGANI - :.. , %/.7,•' , •!..,,', • ON ' WF.DNESDAY AFTERNOON..',. J.,' " .•••• •''''••;;;.: 7 Anglia(' 25,nt Z o'clOck; without' resOrve, at -Pir Ad .11 , ''' - ...A.' , Port , :Richmond, ono- half , interest •in . the cattail hone. •'‘'•.? . 7 0(pyin ea the Cutlarine Logau. ;.'; :• •'• ' l ,l. c ii , .e. g •• . " • ......-•••- '1 oiliest the Auction Rooms, Nos. 139 and l lif !battik . ''f.; ..,, . ...., ... ....- .. ..:Fourth street.. ••- - • : qr. Jr • litl'iriiiPli• - •1101VSP110/bD suntormrt ;Nlsr, . - • WOOD oftA.Nl?. P I ANO, ,AUDROES. kill 00, , ....' SAFts :LIMN ;;CIIEST.••,OFFICE FU R-N T RE, 341 !. BIATIrEssEs;::,FEATIIER BEDS, DINS. D GLASSIV.,_ _AR_ ,E ,' iIEFIt/DERATORS.. WIN- D IN115 : -KOliES.'10.9.11PRTS,..90. -, •. , • ON . THURSDAY MORNING. , . '. . . . August 26, at 9 o'cloclt, at the Auction' Rooms, by'cabs.... - log tie, 011 assortntent ol'Auperior- Household Funaltursr -. . ••••,' &c.r.&c • ,-, ... , 1 4. 1 . ;J, •-• :,,..., . , .., -, • ; ..-. ~ • ~ 1• a,.. •••••. . . - Sale S. E. corner of Dro a d a nd _Synter Itts. . -' NEAT • IiOUSEIIO Lit; t.r 1P ORNITI/ ii 7 BflagOitit FEATHER ....REDS, 941.it.ftp.r0,... ; 11 - ...YIATORES. . ' )'FINES, Re. . ' • • •••• . .• -I i,• ',:',, •.• . .1 - r• - ,....- s•€. , ON MONDAY MORNI NG•I;'' .- ''''ff : l : , :.l .-- •'" '• ''-' ''' ' Attgtuitatt;ittlo o'clnak; at the 8,.,E: corner _ mad and rMarpenter. streets, - by • catalogue; %the' • 'elteilitj'htrasehold : Furniture; 'Cottage Chamber Snits ; Wirtorso ,l Figith er Beds. Distresses, Chinn, and • fibutiarate .'fitriffetta Birds,- ..Per.Riattites, Wines, Kitchen Utensils', CerpetatAwri • /Its 124•Ftstutes.dc. .....;.........„..: ..,,..,......,..... ~ .1.. ...,. ‘. . *v.,% r I. Eliki'..Noi2o7 Southlrenth:Street!'r,l .L. • 1...-.... .. • 'A111i80111)1 i.ftT.RNITURE: PIEII :MARIA :•11 - • • ; 16.31A,NDSODIA.-' •VEL.Y.F.i:r • • ' ' ..--1 . P - 7. , :. •'' • Azar ~. ~.._._. ,„ .7 rr•-• -c— , ••-•-• , , '• " '' '' 'OW ' IDAT 'MORNING ' • ...1',,,tt ...... September 9, at 10 o'clock : et No. - 207 South Tana - et,. , 4 . b y '. catalogue, the entiro. klionsehold • Farultnre. coml.' • prisinglYalmit - ParlarletitnlOtkirTco•vi , reTlvlttrigreeit - f reps;lvalnyit and. Oak : Dining - Room Furniture , elegant ', t„ Oiled, Walnut Chamber Snit, Walnut, Mahogany '• and . • ,'. Cottage. Chattiber' 'luniituroi Alhtal I' ihtibhiTlnti.Piers , • ' Mirror.. Lounges. Centro Tables, French, Clock. tell flaw • . Hair • •Matreasts, Feather •Bolstets'• and -Pinatas, Ohina. and Glasaware. fine 011 Paintings and Engravings, Sewing Machine and Table, 9 gas consuming Stoves. • handsome Velvet -- Brntselircarpets, Oil 'Cloth, Kitchen . zplx.ruilleichoice^Presyrrea ;o tee •,., r .41.3: . I tAl 111 1 .',L • May be examined on the morning °tattle. a • t 8 - o'clock.. .. • .- , . .. ' Salo N 0.13111, Arstkf_lll4lo;,, Ll ... . ~,... iSDPKRIOIt." PAllLoll , ,•%4lnflria- ••• diOtellt ;: i./11.:4 ' :,...1.4 JIA MISER .11311.NITURE4JdlititORS. cAsTpre, i . , AIR.' AND . SPItINISPBTATREErdES 'Ord; k. . ' • •. ' '.. ox-wEriprEsDAr MORNING :'• , 11:1 • ''‘ RIO, 8. at' 10 o'clock, at No, )314 Arch' 'etreee k hy'eata- • 'ague. the superior r nrnitard. Sac:i,CoMprising--Balta of At alnut Parlor Funaituro, coveeed with piing' and hair clot 11 ; se t en suite of . 'oiled atal.vernialtedlValnut 'Cham ber Furniture. _seven handsome. Roecwood, Zalunt and M ahogany 'Wat•drobes,-. tire Lounge Bedew s ; covered with rope; Spring. and Matz Platresael,,oak and walnut DlO big Room Furniture,t*o Walnut Lotecieton Tablea, • - . two elegant Pier Mirrors, gilt trainee; atterto_gßi-ussels ..,,. Carpets, Oil -Cloths, large RefrigoraDer, Kitehen Uton- ... The alnico Furniture lin; b&m in are but ii . short time, ' and is equal Ti. now. • ..).: ... ,•. • . . , • . Mantle elaunined at 8 o'clock on the morning.of sale. •;, igARTIN BRUT ; B_L k ATTOTIONEIpIfc (Lately Salesmen fbr M. Thomas Sofis,3 o.pzi car.sviuT street. rear entrance front Minor. Sale No. 520 Cliciitnut street. _ HANDSOME WALNUT PARLOH FUANITUE, • ELEGANT WALNUT CHAMBER. SUIT:3„HAND SOME ;WALNUT CABINE,T ORGAN. LARGE • FRENCH. PLATE MANTLE AND PIER, MIR - mots. LARGE AND SUruxiloß , JFIREpROGIP • SAFES. FINE BRUSSELS AND qsa, PETS; FINE' 'PLATED 'WARE,* cc. ••• ; • ON WEDNESDAY MORNING, - it airtter 25, at 10 o'clock, at tie 'auction rooms, by snta- • logo°, yeti excelleut Hotueliold Furniture. - • , • - • - ..,. -:''.. _L. .: ...:' *.--. Nato No. 4. ir G corkei street: • . " •'• •..' , r , .... . 11A108601r. WALNUT, PARLOR. FURNITURE. 2 l'jtt ...Handsome iTninut Uluinther Suitt', ilandsOlue 'Bullet .. Sidelmuni and,Extension,Toblo Fine French Chinn is';,.:. .' .thit Classwere, Finn Noir 11Intri:mes.'llandsoint'llrus-7 1 " • • • Nelsolnapdr!al and yeactlan,•Curpete l ,Kltulteu l'uilti . ' tcre,' &u . • • •71; ,• •• .• • • .ON• TIII.7RSDAY H011,N12113;'• • • • • •• i t , • • ugilat Mt. At 10 actork • at No. 4g George. street. be- isteen•Popiar street andl)lrrtil nvonne; helots: Filth et,. by catalogue, the entire ehold Furjiltuo t • &et- ~,y.. . . • Sale No ,1403 North Sixtebnth 4 _,04 k?" • .7TANDSO3IE WA.I24I:IICHOITSEIIOLD FI:II,PRTURE; 4 • ,leitio Erennh Dinner . !Service; ,Bp ring. wids, Hank s i 3latresses. nudsomoEnglish Brussels Carpets, Fins' Venethin•Carpets,_ _Kitchen .Utoruill,s • ; • , . IeIIIDAY HOEN.ING, .. • ..ltignst27l at 10 otiotk, Ity^..Chtaltigitb, at Dry... 14U3 Nbrth SlXteelkth .1311Vet, , aboNe ,21.11t0r .B.t . rCOti tho •Iyunlsontitt Wain utlelarilithrtn • • ' " • oteeteently 00 them tniutt‘efteio. • t' rpitomAtti , .131R031. 85„ BO.NI..AUCZEQN. , •a: 'EBBS' AND COMMISSION IFFRCIIANTB; • * • •At c' Y ltr Runielmiti Furniture 'of ?very description recellfga non. dales Of Furnituren C edleEr m ifftittaridedtdou Sale at Nof 2620 • .Ipti II 13 11 181 h, BE 1)P/Na Ore. Auguat n, Ill:o'clock?. at No.- 2YlOi Pophtcatreeti*ili be sold. the Furniture of a family removing from the city, combriaing Bruseels Venetian- and, Ingrain ,Car pets. Walnut Parlor Furniture. Feather Bodaililankets, 'Chamber. Furnitture, Dining Room hod Kitchen Furni ture, two largo Bookenedi.Atc • • •• TIM furniture can be examined after S' • n'dinCieon the morning of nolo. . . 'Ay.' • •• • • ' ' '' ' • - AUCTIOkEERS, 2.72.11nd2.34 , ,MANKAT street.corttennt tinkattreit. Successors to 'JOHN E. MYERS le CO,_ LARGE, SALE .or. PRENOII: , GERMANI AND DOMESTIC PRY GOODS, r• ' 2 ON THURSDAY, ItfORNING;• August 26, at, 10 o'clock it en fakir months' credit. stile - • pales bleache.d.antrbrown - do ‘. id le, gray - and bluu Nvoofßlitnkdts.' ' Canes; indigo blue Checlos, , Stripes,.Deninnt,_Tickingo..* do iilanclastter and Scotch Ginghatint an 'do „Cantentiolunnels,•Silecias,linings, Prints. , • do white and scarlet Shirting Flannels.. •••. .do .'Kentucky , Jeans, Cottonadea,Mlnere.ilantieli. do Satinets, Tweeds, Moneys, Printed. Cloak-trigs., .MILITARY CLOTHING: • —cases Infantry Overcoats. • cases lined , • • MERCHANT TAILORS , GOODS , ; • - Pieces English, French and Saxony all wool and black and: • • do Aix la Chapelle - , Enquiniati.X and - Castoriteaiers. do French blk Doeskins, dU wool, tie London Hieltons, Tricota, Italian Cloths. dci all wool'French Fancy' Cassimeres and Coating t • . DRESS GOODS,: SILIT.,S, &a. - Ficcestlk and colored real' M aloltairslpacas, COburglie do 6-4 and 3.4 new style fancy Dress Stuffs. 'do ' French fill weal plain Midpritited Delaines - . do' Mohair Mixtures, Saxony. and drench Plaids.•.; s,s, • do Paris Merinoes, Plain and - Fancy Poplius, do;-blk and colored Lyons heavy drosn Silks. ' , S.TI.ILLA.SHAW - LS. , 600 black centre brOche border Stella Shawls, of a 'WOW''' . make. • . • LINENS, WHITE " Pull lines Irish Shirting Linettn,'D/aper,Towellingi&e.l: Full linedblca' and Imo Canvas; Crash 'Shootins. • Full lines tisk.). 8x8,:837. and' 7x7 .bleached linen Tubbs:- Cloths._ • ost, Fall lines 8.4 power looni bleachaid linen Table Datnaldutt Full linen 46, 42 and 40-inch blpachod Pillowcase Liam. Full linen Jaconets,'Cambrics z ulls Nalusooks, ace +4.e, L. C. HANDKERCHIEFS, • . ; Full line r, linen cambric Ilditts; In all qualities': . Full line do do 'do de, Inll line 7., do ' do- do beim:nod. , _tt - Full line - 1107 - do hemstitch e d. ? ' ,Th t Full line?;" 'do 'do . for children, • ;`.ire.' • SO Hosiery, Gloves, Balmoral and Hoop Skirts, Trafeling. • and Under Shirts anil.DrawOrs, Sowings Tailors' Trim- , - mings, Umbrellas. Ntlkfn., Suspenders;Zephyr Goods * LARGE SALE OF CARPETINGS, OIL CLGTHS,i&n. • ' ON FRIDAY MORNING,' . - August 27, at 11 o'clock,ou four months' credit, about 200 . pieces Ingrain, Venetian, List, Hemp, Cottage , and. Rag Carpetings, Oil Cloths, Rugs; '&o.' • LANGE SALE. OF FRENCH. AND OTHER AUtiatt PEAN DAY GOODS. ON. MONDAY MOANING, . ;- August 30 at 10 o'cloCks on' four months'credit.' ' ' „BABBITT: i& CO AUOTIONEEB& •• CASH' ABOTIO.ot ROUSE, •-, • - No. 2.30 MARKET 'street, corner of Bank styes .t..” ; Cash advanced MP conshamieuts without mars charge. SX) LOTS FOREIGN AND DOMESTRI DRY GOODS; HOSIERY,. BILK • AND.. VELVET ...unatoxs. :a4 N P' I9Nt3 oIi & I t. V . EDNESDAY MORNING' , August 25, commencing at 10 o'clooki also. Cloths, Cassinieres,Dress Goods, Linen Goods, Counter , panes, Shawls, Shirts' and , Drawers, . Hosiorr, Fancr lloods, Silk' Velvet Ribbons, Suspenders &c. Also, 100 lots white shirts and overskihs,..liondynnulo.: Clothing, Boots, Shoos, lintsrt aps, &c. • 1 - . ).a ty ,t§:st ICA.AV.EY, AUCTIONEBAS, Lat e;with M. Thomas Sons./ o Store s t 48 anti o bo North SI...‘TH street Atli& AtiV 9 b 2 4 yp u rEf 9 1 4 LARGE SALE * OF BOOTS,. SiturrA -s .E.nuGAN §Axis HALS. • . • ' • ON WEDNESDAY ISORNING, August 25, at 10 o'clock, we will sell by catalogue, about • 1200 packages of Boots. Shoes and. Brogans of ,citrand', • Eastern manufacture._ Also, vases of corn's Ear anti Brush Hats,- t Par Open early on tho morning- of sale for,mtaraina. ' tion,' with catalogues, Nithenithe attention' ofcity s Lan t,l ; country buyers is called. • • • • i ONCIiffT HALL AUCTION , 4 ROOMS t '1219 pIIESTNUT strekt. 44 T. A. McCLELLANlV,,,Auctiortef3r4 AMU. A. .1 0 .13X 14 1MAN, I kUCTIPN - F4Kar No.4ZiWALNIT tweet. r PILE PRINCIPAL MONEY ,EBTABITztn. meni—S, E. corner of SIXTH and 10.0 E Money advanced on Merchnndlee gouttrally,,AVatotiegh Jowelry, Diamonds, Gold and Sliver %Plate, and Uti'all articles of value, for any lengtkortimougreed on. WATCHES AND ONW.rj.i.RY AT PRIVATE 'BADE. Fine flold i ntingCaee, DOlAbleTtOtt01111:4114 ort Face English, American and Swiss Lever "itichaai • Nino Gold Hunting Coale and Open'ElltoeliepinoN aches; Flu° Gold Duplex AO. other Watchenalue Sliver Hunt. j ag case and Open 'Food arei'derivi ilint Lever and .I,atlge Watchlsl Double Gala Englien iartier and other Watches` Ladles' randy Watchee; • iamond Breaetpino., , itiago; Ear o,.„tud s" &c.; Flue Gold Ohaligq. Medallions; Pencil man' Dim; Breastplate; Finger Dlnigol? Tenon Cases and , Jew. drygenerally_ , 11 SALE--A jargell ,iattuible Firuprcpf Cheat: suitable' for oaey, eller; coot 4650,. Alim,tioveraVLote.iu South Caold'en, nth and •C4filt."o nut ptreote ,• ____ . _ • • C d P•*CcILP'."ES A ACTIONESIIii t No. NAREET,strect. , • BOOT dlrl2o STIOB SALES EVERY nitYLIDAT &PM. TRUBSDAY,
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