/.440 Ff./ 4 4 ~.“.cfe A 1.0.1- The 'Woman of the Velure. *A' Ax?viTNOVOIS, sayg the Pall...Llß:di Grazettc, are not 40re , eitige.rly .-devoured by the tuithinking than the clap-trap : written in the oreifent day about women. Pone's famous 1 •;.;:y:': , ,•'41.1f6.-- , ".4.:nd fools rush In where aiigels fear to 0,-;.',14:'::41ad"4 , ..-k *an be so fitly applied to no other kind ,Vikko ,eritielsin, and naturally enough, as re frfoitilkes little else but audacity and proves, ex •:o'Cittn* iely lucrative, the crop is abundant. One . ; ,:4*tiy.tafely say that a'young author's fortune is .Z4 o .•,:irtitide who can. abuse women in a lively, ill , ,•S tilefittited, and authoritative manner. Frivolous, 4;:gliikeniented, irratiord a creature of %thin's, aetotee, at fashion; a victim of ennui, Itl.:'lrtiotdly,'.physically, and intellectually feeble -I`tChit, the woman of the present according to fzile:% the satirists, 'The niarvel,is that they wish to ':;:liee-unclitiged•what they denounce as -con teniptible. If anything is proposed' by which some' of these faults must inevitably be cated these consistent critic,s take affright. Let us keep these angels of perfection as they are, ,e.i.y`they soft cushions whereen ' to. rest • Inas-, •:•!„;•; ••• culine asperities. What would the woad be like Womankind were changed from , the. lovely, ft is ? and so on, the inconsequent multi tide. listening and believing. ..... • ' Fortunately for all, this kind of writing like • any:other form of sensationalism in literalure, is of,the day only; and will pass away, What has been said so often will tire even the fool , ish at last, and "we have piped unto but you ye hafe"not danced" will be the lament of ' these once •op emeor . gra - Mang,. , • (m -over; is,taking place in public opinion regarding the education of women. The wise are more inclined to weep than to laugh over the fri volities of the sex, and see no reason why this as well- as. any other element of unhappiness should not be, eradicated from society. On one Point we imagine alike the serious-minded and the ,scoffer, the reformer and the epigram nratiat,.to be at one—namely, that frivolity is evil and,not good. Those who love the truth for troth's sake ' and consider each individual life as an important unit of humanity are be stirring, themselves to remedy the evil; those wholive without any sense' of moral respon sibility whatever try to. hinder the work from pure selfishness or prejudice. To discuss thts numerous, schemes on behalf of the better) education of women is qniteloreign to the pur-' Pose of this paper. A few of these have already passed Trom the ordeal of public - a:adenine into the'smashine of popular favor ; some still' in embryo are too rational to meet with opposi tion from any quarter. Many others will doubtless be proposed when the world is ready for them. 'To own in the faceof these facts that the women of the future will reSemble the wo- man of the present is to deny the entire sex all capability of-moral and intellectual growth. If occupation exercises any influence upon the character whateverand there is little doubt that it exercises „great influence—generations to come .will indeed feel thankful for the chaxige. Deprecating.as we do the sweeping assertions .of clap-trap critics, we are forced to admit that there is . wide room for improve ment. Women are not universally, so beauti ful. so moist; and so.goed as they 'might be, talitai4l:l--tlwinterests-of timanity-that—the should be beautiful, wise and good. Consider, in the first place, the question of beauty. • The more hopeful look toward to the time when something .of the old Greek feeling for physical. .perfection shall have:revived, and a simpler and more healthful life shall have fitted women to become mothers of a noble race. In this re spect we• are wiser than of, old, but, though hygiene and co n sense have' done much for, ourselyes, they lave done, much morri . for our children. e of the present generation' are the 'off.spring of tight-lacing mothers;' but small waists, tight .shoes, and, other abomina tions are no longer uniVersal. Dress' is much better adapted to out-of-door life than formerly. Etiquette, has, been 'relaxed, and our young women enjoy a freedom from physical restraint undreathed of by their grandmothers. Health has ceased tvbe the monopoly, of,the other sex, Still the majority of women km d far from wholesome lives; and as beauty is more or less a nuttier of health, too much can never be said against such abuses of it as are yet in fashion. The worst of these abuses is, that they lead. to a perversion of taste. Quite natu rally the fragile type of beauty has become the' standard of the.present day, and men admire in real life the lily-cheeked, small-waisted diaphanous-looking creatures idealized by living artists. When we beeome accustomed to a nobjer kind, of beauty we shall attain to a loftier idbal. Men Will seek nobility rather than prettiness, strength rather than weakness, physical perfection rather than physical degen eracy, in the women they select as mothers of their children. Artists will rejoice and sculptors will cease to despair when this happy ' consummation is reached. Let none regard it as chimerical or Utopian. A very little ration alism brought to bear upon daily life would place physical well-being with in reach of women of all ranks ; and where health leads the way, beauty is seldom slow to follow. • Foy will deny that wisdom whose essenze is common sense has a large share in deternun ing the happiness of social and domestic life. Is it not xeasonable to suppose that the various reforms in female education will have propor tionate eflect, upon the female character, and . that the woman of the future will differ from the woman of the present intellectually as well physically?as :Steady culture, increased habits of self-reliance, Wider views of life, and a keener appreciation of the truth • for truth's sake, can but enlarge and elevate the whole sex. The obvious inference is . that just as a more healthful mode of existence will invigor ate and beautify the bodies of 'women, so a ra tional mode of existence will strengthen and improve their minds, Frivolity, pettiness, in activity, and other faults of 'which men most complain will make room for opposite qualities ; and who shall aver this to be against the inter- . ests of humanity? Perhaps nothino• b causes more domestic unhappiness than downright silliness. A foolish wife will often bring about, as much mischief in her husband's home as a persistently evil-tempered one could do, and with the best intentions in the world, is sare to hinder and hamper him upon every occasion. Now silliness is the first stronghold of evil that a good system Of education will storm. Just so long as girls are trained to frivolity and irresponsible habits from childhood upwards will they become frivolous and irresponsible wives and mothers. In granting, then, that the woman of the future must of necessity . inherit a.largeshare. of physical and intellectual excellence ' we are led to extend the same happy prophecy to the moral faculties. Women often :,pritaniit grave as well as small errors, not be- Cause they 'are perverse by nature but because their reason is at fault ; and they fail to recog '' vise' the proportionate relation of things. ''Agaltl;habits of subservience" Induce .a, cow ;Ordir:attitude of mind. Very few women have the: courage to be individual. • •Very few wo ined estimate their own livres of any value in .J he f ullest sense of the word. They know enough that they have some use as , wives,. itiMthers, daughters ; but that they can have .le,tiy'sliare in the well-being of the world does occur to them. Self 7 development conveys Ito :their minds something quite apart, from the dritY,sf Wife, mother, or daughter,. while the truth that self-developMent emraces every ::.other duty. El, therefore, does' it become • those who satirize women, to hinder any efforts made idtheir behalf, whether educational or social.; altyqs remembering this; however, that such effort's' ate likely to do very little good which tend:to Make of women weak talons of Men. • • ITA.Ne ra. aeolmtch states that the appear 11M of a United Man-of-war in the jaw or las but -geod effect. • RELIGIOUS INTELLIGENCE. 'Philadelphia Baptist Association. At yesteidaY's session the following resolu tiona were. offered by fieir.: Dr. J. Wheaton. Smith on the subject of communion: Re.Olved, That in reaffirming the action Of last year, we declare more fully, First—That in eominon with Baptists gene rally, we hold the burial of . a believer with Christ in baptisni naturally and scripturally, recedes his participation at, the table of the _ . second---Tllat believing, with our Christian brethren of whatever name, that baptiSm natu rally and scripturally precedes 'communion, we protest against the "manifest unfairness of bandying such terms as.close communion, ex clusiveness, in :application to a people whose oilly,closeneSs, if Closeness it' be, isthe Closeness of _Scripture, baptism. ' nird--That while We distingnish between the utter neglect of haptiStn and a mistake as, tn NV hat eonstitutesbaptiSm;giving our brethren of other denominations the-benefit of the distinc, tion, We cannot endorse:what we believe to be their error by inviting them to communion in our churches, and we protest against, their de mand for pitch endorsement as indecorous, ungeneus ;and an assault upon Christian unity. Fourth-:-That while we hold against all comers-,and in our Lord's behalf that mode in which alone the spirit of a Christian bap isin, is sym o ize' —we are s more rm y set when an ordinance of Get's own faslaioU- Mg, marred and mutilated in . the, house . of His friends, is administered to - unregenerate subjects. Ofth—That while we marvel at the temerity of ; those who in the sprinkling of children can repea., "Seeing now, dearly belOVed brethren, , that the child is regenerate and grafted into. the - body of Christ's - Church," we wonder hardly leis at the practice of others who, disclainiing, this form of, words, still keep their substance,. Commingling even an infant's consecration With believers' baptism, and forcing us to say with the good old patriarch : "The voice is the voice of ,Jacob, but the hand is the hand of Esan." Alter remarks from Revs. J. Spencer Kennard, ,Williaiii . "Bucknell, Thomas Winter, J. Whea, on Smith, Charles Keyser, Howard Malcom, William Cathcart, Warren Randolph. and Wil liam Wilder, the resolutions were unanimously adopted. . . The Association , -reassernbled at 2 o'clock, when addresses were made by the foreign delegates, after. which the . reading. of the letters was resumed. Allentown Clurcli—Baptisms, 8; received by letter, 17; number of schools, 3; officers, 10; teachers, 18; volumes in library, 400; scholars, 145. Second Church, Germantown—Baptisms, 21; received by letter 9 ; experience, 1 ; num ber of schools, 1; pincers, 8; teachers, 37 ; volumes in library, 759. • !bird Church—Baptisms, 19; received by letter, 2; experience, 14 ; restoration, 30 ; present number, 748; number of 'schools,. 1; officers, 10 ; teachers, 26 ; volumes in library, _ilfomit Zion Church Baptisms, 0; re ceived by letter, 15 ; ilresefil membership, 231; viililmes in library, 000; number, of scholars, .31inersville Church-r-Present membership, 13 ; number of schools, 1 ; officers, 3 ; teachers, 14; volumes in library, 025. First Church, , Chester- . --Bap isms, 613; ceived by letter, 11.; expel•rence, 7 ; present membership; 189:; nimiber 4f schools, 1; Offi cC.rs,4; "teachers, 19; volniues iu library, 400; number of scholars ' 200. Church; Wilmington—Baptisms, 42; received by letter, 5; experience, 11; restora tion, 4;' number of schools, 1; officers, 3; teachers, 6; scholars, 105. :Plymouth Church—Baptisms, s* ' received 14 letter, 6; experience, 2'; present,member ship, 30. Delaware Avenue Church,, Wilmington, gelaware-LBaptisms, 9; received by letter, 6; experience, 2 ; present membership, '169 ; number of schools, 2; officers, 10; teachers, -11; volumes in library, 712; scholars, 452. Fourth Church, Washington, D. C.—Bap tisms, 20; received 'by letter ; 4; experience, 7; restoration, 0; present membership, 378; Munber of schools, 1; officers, 1; teachers, 2; scholars. 25. •Shiloh Church—BaptiSms, 15; letter,„4 ; ex- \ perience, ;'restoration, 2 ; present member ship, 442 ; number ,of schools, 1 ; officers, 5 ; teachers, 17; volumes in library, 425; scholars, 125. . Carnarton Church—Baptisms, 2; present membership, 22 ; schools, 1 ; officers, •4 ; teach ers, 12; volumes in library, 300; scholars, 133. First Church (Br. P.)—Baptisni, ; re ceived by letter, tfr ; restoration, ; present membership, 408; number of schools, 2 ; offi cers, 10 ; teachers, 00 ;. volumes in library, 1,833; scholars, '712. in the evening the claims of the Pennsylva nia Baptist Education Society, the Pennsylva nia Baptist General Association, and the Bap tist Rome of Philadelphia were presented. SCOTCh SAVAGES. The Tinkers of Caithness. A curious account of the tinkers of Caith ness is given by Mr. J. Mackie in his evidence before the Select Committee on Poor Law (Scotland). Ile says that as a race they are in all respects different from, and have little or nothing in common with; the inhabitants. They live entirely by themselves, intermarry with each other, and in their, general habits and modes of life are peculiar. About twenty years ago they numbered only from twelve to fifteen, and as they, wandered about through the live northern counties,generally living in the open air, and bivouacking for a few days at a time by the borders of • a moss or moor, their influence for evil was not so felt as to attract attention. Since then they have in creased so rapidly as to render division neces sary, and now there are hordes of them per manently attached to each county, occasion ally visiting one another, but claiMing as their residence those localities where they generally congregate. There are two colonies of them, residing on either side of Wick Bay, in natural rocky eaves, looking into the sea, and_so_near it that one of the tribe, a wOmanoiithin a few clays of her confinement, was not long ago washed away by a wave while .entering the cave on the south side of the bay, and was drowned. In these caves whole families live, day and night, with no furniture, notedding, uo privacy. They herd like cattle: A fire is kindled in the centre of the cave, and around •it they gather and have their orgies. Children _without a ra ,, b to coverthem run about the caves and their entrances, and when thoy come to town are frequently enveloped in a sack or a piece of sailcloth. • Their chairs arehoulders; their beds are the bare ground, and their dishes are tins made by themselves. Children are horn there frequently, and morning visitors en tering suddenly have more than 'once found adults lying drunk and in a state of entire nudity. Girls of fourteen are frequently mo thers. Their SOIII Ce of living is • three-fold. The men occasionally work at.making tins, which the women sell, but the main means of liveli hood is in begging and phuider. The children are taught to beg and steal from earliest-years, and are most inmortunate, ;and the women, who are always accompanied by several chit dren in rags and wretchedness, are knot less tronblegome. 'Every penny they earn in labor and by begging and stealing goes for drink. Mr. Mackie thinks "they are . the most degraded tribes M the kingdom, if not in the empire." TITE DAILY EV.ENING_I3ULJJETIN--PHILADELPHIA L THURSDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1.69. The German ReptibliCaii:vdters,'Of the° Sev enteenth,-; Eighteenth . and - Nineteenth Wards held a large and enthusiastic meeting at Third .street and . ColuMbla avenue On Tuesday night: Lewis trOck, Esq., presided., After addresses had been delivered; the following resolutions, were offered and adopted Resolved, That at the coming election we Will, as we have always before, maintain and defend the principles'of uniiersal liberty and -equalitY, of the honest fulfilment of existingt. Obligations, and of adequate protection for-our hoine . industry; and. that .we's :therefore, support the . candidates of the Republleanparty, and not the representatives of oppression of race, of repudiation ,, and of , ruinous free trade. ' Resolved, That we. will not make ;an excep tion from this rule in faVOr of one Candidate on the Democratic ticket for the - reason that he is our countryman:. We know that Mr. J.. M. Reichard, the Democratic candidate . for Coro ,flei, has long ago departed frOin'the principles of liberty and equality for Whiph he fought in G.Crmany in 1848 and 1349; thatlie has joined in this country the party which defended the most infamous institutions of the'eentitry and declared slavery a bles4ingi . arid that' he,during 'the war, presided over a Dethocratic meeting which Strongly recommended, 'submission to the demands of the-rebels and advocated com promise with traitors. By so doing-he has for- t fritpd nll rbims to otu• support at ii roost los•P fi the votes of all men of Itcedlibemtprinciples BURNING Ar:IF STAtti,E.-•—Last evening about eight ( o'clock a fire brolte,Put in the stable fronting .on Quincestreet, between Walnut and. Locust streets 'llie.Lstable is a diMble'one, claimed by Dr. Georp..l 4 floehring. The eastern portion of it was occupied by James Steel; dealer in chinaware, who kept there two carriage horses, his vehicle; :&c.' The 'western Portion was occupied' for a, dinner purpose by Banauel .H. Hart, card manufacturer:, The horses, Vehicles and harness, ,were taken• out before the flames had:gained , great headway. From the burning of hay recently bought by them, and other petty articles, these occupants lose each about $l5O. The loss the'stable, of which the entire roof was destroyed, will not be above $1,000; insurance Covers all these damages. The dwelling No. 211 Quince street, owned by Hannah Lambert, and occupied by Joseph Davis, had h portion of its roof de stroyed and was pretty well drenched. Loss about $2OO. TfIE 3.1.1.*CAL Asscieu noN,—The annual election•of this bodyrcom posed of the musical profession of Philadel phia. which was , held yesterday afternoon, at their mon), Ninth and callowhill streets, re sulted as follows : President, John Ritter; Vice President, C. F. Stolte ; Secretnry, Heim ; Treasurer, L. A. Tschirner. • r Executive Com mitt ec—Theobald Herryinnn, Louis - Mueller, John Griem, J. Orr Finnic, W. G. Dietrich, 11. L. Albrecht and , Henry Felling. Cotimittee—Charles Hagemanu, Janes W. Holden and CharleS Heck. SALE OF REAL ESTATE.—James A. Free man, auctioneer, sold yesterday at noon, at the Exchange, the following : Three-story brick dwelling. No. 2330 Brown street, lot 15 by CO feet, subject t 0.566 ground rent, $1,E55, Building lot, Tulpeliocken street, near An del son street; Germantown, ISO by 230, $O5O, Valuable public b6use, known as "Shinn's," Broad street, above Chestnut street, lot 34 by c 0 feet, at $l,OOO per foot, $34,000. • I'iLoTAnE.—A meeting of the Board of Dhectors of the "Vessel owners', and Cap tains' Association" was held yesteiday. A resolution was passed declaring , that believing half-pilotage.charges to be unjust and uncon stitutional, the Association was opposed to paying them any longer when assessed against vessels enrolled and licensed in the coasting trade. FATAL R ATLI:OAD ACCIDENT.—Last even ing a lad, named John Hess, residing at No. •1919 North Fifth street, was crushed between two cars on the North Pennsylvania Railroad, at Front and Peg streets, and died from his in juries in a few minutes. The unfortunate lad was taken to the residence of his parents. Bov DROWNED.—Last evening, a boat, con taining Charles Smith and his son, 12 years old, was capsized by a ferry boat, near Smith's Island. Mr. Smith was rescued, but the lad sank before assistance could - Teach him. The body was not recovered. TEE CA MrArGiv.—The political campaign in Camden city and county, especially on the Re publican side, is going on earnestly, and, from indications, successfully. The nominations which have been regularly made give full and complete satisfaction, and are composed of gentlemen of whose private and public virtues no honest man can say aught. Hon. Edward Bettie has been for many years one of the west esteemed and respected citizens of Camden county, whose business integrity and political uprightness have elicited the universal appreciation of the people. His course in the State Senate was admired by. even his Democratic opponents, tbr he was incapa ble of betraying the trusts confided to him by his constituency. In view of these facts and the high regard with which he is held, his nomination for the State Senate was cordial and unanimous. It is evident, too, that his election will be secured by a much larger ma jority than that which he received three years ago, notwithstanding the eflbrts of a few mat= contents to detract from his strength. r , COUNTY EXECUTIVE commirrm--.Hon. G. W. Custis, President of the last County Repub lican Convention, has appointed, by virtue of a resolution passed by that body, the following gentlemen as the County Executive Commit;. tee : Charles P. Stratton, Chairman ; North Ward, Charles Cotting, Jr.; Middle Ward,Geo. W. Gilbert; South Ward, Captain Samuel Gaul ; Centro township, Jos. M. Harms; Dela-, ware,lsaac W. Nicholson; Gloucester, Richard Herring; Gloucester City, Henry P. Fowler; Haddon, Win. Bettie; Monroe; John F. Bo dine ; Newton, Jesse W. Starr • Stockton, Mr. Sines ; Washington, Joshua harris; Water ford; Joel Rirkbride ;: .C, Hay. LEGISLATIVE CONVENTION.—Hon. Henry L. Bonsall,, who represented the First' Legisla tive District of Camden county in the Assem bly last winter with much ability and great satisfaction, has. been unanimously renomi nated by. the Republicans- of -Camden for the same position. His conduct in that-body won the highest praise from his colleagues of both parties and • the warmest appreciation of 'his constituents: His nomination, therefore, is only another act of duty on the part of his friends, - and is tantamount to an election. DIED rnom Inru - mEs:-A day or two since a nian named John McGarvey was aeci-, dentally, run over by a cart which he was driving, at Third and Pine streets, South Cam den, and so -severely hurt that he has since (lied from the effects of the injuries received. THE RELIEF FUND.—The Avondale Relief Fund in. Camden is gradually increasing, the. Tabernacle Baptist Church.couttibuting $O3 30 to it during the past few days. , -Theßaltiniore Amement blames the D ernO emu° patio/Tot' the . freshet in that city. I And doubtlemi they ha(l something to do with it, there and here too. " POLITICAL. The. German Reianbli!eans CITY BULLETIN. NEW JERSEY HATTERS. An English Traveler at the New York Custom Mouse—A Carious Story orPer. Bonet Experience.: - _ _ An English traVeler writes from - New York to the London . Daily News as follows: "The Cunard, steamer, on_which I embarked for America, entered the inner bay of New York at eight A.. M.,and I 'fondly imagined that in halt an hour I should be sitting down to breakfa.st on terra firma. Alas i I had not reckoned upon , the Custom HOuse, that purga tory through which all who visit foreign climes have to pass. Our ,boat soon reached the quay, and we were ushered into a long barn; our luggage was carried' into it, andafter some delay each passenger gathered his impediments about him., Slowly, one by one, we passed before the open window of an office; where we were aiven Printed forms to fill hp, specifying the number' of our packages and their con- , 'The forfns were collected: by a clerk, who sent iis•each : back to: our luggage in company with a subordinate. My keeper was a young man of &Inure,. appearance,' who might have been taken for It village schoolmaster. In obe dience to' his ,Orders .1 opened all Tyboxes. The first thing which be lit upon were some cigarettes. 'I pointed out that I had entered them in the printed form, and they were laid aside. 13eneatlf the cigarettes were some gloves. The schoolmaster shook his head. 'Do you know that; gloves are dutiable?' he said. I replied that I had not been aware that a traveler would be charged for a few----pairshey—were-placed-with the cigarettes: Then ensued a search which I thought would: never end., Everything was turned out: The schoolmaster pried into my boots, and his fingers into my bear's grease, • because, as . he observed, watches, :and jewels, may be : concealed anywhere.' • 'As faun not in -the habit of earry nig these costly 'articles either' in my boots or my pornature-pot, none . were - forthcoming, and we went back — to the ; office with the gloves and . the 'cigarettes. On the lat ter I paid two Aollais.' and fifty cents per. pound, besideS an ad, valorem duty of :twenty live per cent., but the former,. L contended, were wearing-apparel, which it 'was absurd to tax. ' , To come to a just conclusion upon the sub ject, one of my cigarette boxes was opened; and each clerk lit a cigarette. The schoolmas ter observed that he was not a smoker himself, butthat he had a cousin who was, and he thought that perhaps this relative would like a box of cigarettes. I begged hi,* not to baulk his family erections, and a box was put aside for the cousin. By this time the conclave, worked by the fumes of my excellent Latakia, had decided that the United States Treasury were to derive no profit from my gloves, and they and my cigarettes were carried back to my trunks. got you off fifty cents , a pair on these gloves,' observed ' the schoolmaster, 'and 1 think they Would just fit inc.' py num ber is seven and three-quarters, the schoolmas ter had a hand like a leg of mutton, but, over looking this physical difficulty, I handed him a pair, which he at once absorbed into his pocket. "My goods and chattels were put back, and my trunks were locked up. I thought that my ti fiend's extortions bad dome to au end—not at all. 'lf it had not been for me,' he said, 'you would have paid ten dollars duty on those gloves,- DOW don't you think'—and he gave me a running, greedy look. .1 responded with ~rne dollars, for, as a matter of curiosity, I as determined to test to. the full the capacity for robbing possessed by this guardian of the public purse, and I saw no more of the school caster. As I observe that the Collector of Customs in New York has inaugurated a reign of purity, I ()tier these facts to his consideration. When excessively high duties are levied upon articles of small bulk it is perhaps necessary to make the Custora Ilonse search inquisitorial in its minuterteSs. But. travelers have a right to ask that, if they are to be subjected to this annoy ance, they at least should not have black mail levied upon them. ~ 1 have had my luggage narrowly examined on entering Prussia from the Polish frontier,but then I was not expected to fee the 'examiner . ; and I have biibed the Custom notise. officers of the late Kinn. l . Bomba, but then they did not even open my baggage. I am•equal to either fortune ; but I 'protest against being the victim of both. My school master was, I imagine, neither better nor worse than his colleagues. • " Ou the day after my arrival I met a fellow passenger, who, I observed, had only been sub jected to a nominal examination, and I asked hinkivlty he had been specially favored. lie told me that he had given his card, with his address, to the officer hi whose hands he fell, and begged him to call upon him. That morn ing be had received a visit from him, and had handed him ten dollars. This, he assured me, is the plan adopted by those who are expe rienced in the ways of United States• Custom house officers. CITY N OTICES. CUTLERY, TEA TEAYS, and Japanned Tinware at thu K itehon Furnishing • Rooms. EAMON & Co., Dock street, below Walnut. . THE MARYLAND INSTITUTE, Baltimore, nwardt Premium to BURNETT . S Cooking Ex tracts. EXQUISITE NEW FALL CONFECTIONS, lelonanetur,d by WHITMAN Co., 318 CbeAnut street Retailers supplied at the lowest wholesale prices. HOLT'S PATENT MARKING WHEEL,. Wm. F. SOLE AGENT, NO. 49 SOUTH THIRD _ . . . . tiritaE`r, Pit it.A.DELPitrA. This machine is designed to supersede the 11;0 of slim .cil plates on cases, wrapping-paper, cloth or paper bags. The type being made of rubber, it will print on any level surface. It is self-inking. It is simple, durable', and always ready for use. A VERY FULL AND CHOICE STOCK •OP Ready-made Clothing, at the lowest rated, may be found Ut CIIAIILEA STOICE , 4 7 , No. 824. Chestnut street. • • -- erBA ! CCBA ! ! CeltA !! ! The new style of Gents' Hat. At the Store of Citas, OAICFORD L SONS, Under the Continental LADIES: CHAS OAKFORD & SoNs,under the Continental, keep the lateet and met beautiful atylea of Hate to be found in the city. Give them a call. JUDICIOUS MOTIIERS and nurses use tor children a safe and pleasant Medicine in Bowe''• Infant Cordial, SURGICAL INSTRUMENTS and dritggiShie BUn-• dries. SNOWDEN & BROTHER., • 29 South Eighth street. IIiENTS -. AND yOUTITS' HATS AT OA.IC6ORW, ,where all the latest stjles call always be bad at the low est prices Stores iinaer tits Continental CORNS, Bunions, luyerted skillfully by Dr. J. Davidson, No. 91.5 Chestnut street.. Charges moderate. DRAYABBH, BLINDNRBB AND CATARRH. J. Isaacs, M. D., Profeiwor of the Eye and Ear, treats all diseases 'appertaining to the above members with the utmost success.' Testimonials from the most reliable sources in the city can be seen at his office, No. 805 Arch 'street. The medical faculty are invited to accompany their patients, as he has no secrets in his practice. Arti ficial eyes inserted. No charge made for examination TORDAN'S CELEBRATED PURE TONIC ty Ale for invalids, family nee, &c. The subscriber is now furnished with his fall Winter oupp l o f hie .bighly nutritious and well-known bever age. Its wide-spread and increasing use, by order of pliant', for invalids, use of families, Ao.,commead it to attention of all consumers who wank a strictly pur rticle; prepared from the liost materials, and put up in the most careful manner for home use or transpor tation. Orders by mail or othenvise promptly supplied. P. J 011 DAN, •No. 22 Walnut treet. de7 • below Third and street ISAAC NATRANS, A.UOTIONEER, N. B. _L. corner Third and Spruce streets, only one square below the El aclba a g e . 4260,000 to loan, in large or small amonnte, diamonds, sliver plate, watches, jewelry, and all sof value. Office hours from 8 A. M . to 7 P. Established, for the last forty years. Ad vances. made irl large amounta at the lowest market _rates. . ' iaB dry D D N. 4• A N D.• ENCIAGEMENT y llings;of solid 18 karat line Gold=o specialty; a full assortineui of sizes; and fib charge for engraving names, ate. FARR & BROTIII4II, Blakeref my24-rp tf 324 Chestnut street below Fourth. POLITICAL ,NOTICES. OZ REPUBLICAN MASS-MEETINGS. -;.THE UNION REPUBLICAN STATE • OEN. TEAL COMMITTED have, - made arrangements for MASS-NEE TINOS as follows, • THURSDAY,' October T. Mercer—Hon John Scott, U. Bucker. Swope, DmKittanning—Hon. Kittanning—Hon. G. A. Gro s w. Butler. Newton, Delaware =county—Hon. A: Wilson Ironton* Berwlck—Oaptain G. W. Guru. Station,-Hon. William Will/ame, Olohniel A, S. Fuller. Lewisburg—Hon. James Pollocic, .General Joshua Owen FRIDAY, October 8 Headvllle—,Gov. J. W. Geary,llbn. John Scott, Bucher Swope, Fail. Tyrone, Ephrata, Laneaster county—Hon. J. W. Foruoy,Mati. A. It. Calhoun., Millyille.—Catain G. W. Curry. SATURDAY, October 9. Eris—Gov. J. W. GoarY Ron. John Scott. Corry—Hon. G. A. Grow. Slnunokin—Hon. A.l9ilson Ileneccy. Lebanon. FreaburgSnyder coupty, llbi:r:li'ountgi tc' er Swope, E sq. nflyglon.Ru county—H. MeAllistervllle. Latrobe—Eon. William Williatne, Colonel A Fuller, MONDAY, October 11. Montour county-11 or. J. W. Goary: Harrisburg—Con. Jawea Pollock. Mount Pleasant—lion. Colonel A 8. Fuller. • __ • ' JOIIN CQVCDH, Chairman; • (}RU. W. lIANERSLEY, At. 8. QUAY, Socretarice w. J. P. Wnint, S. F. Chvirt n -- --- - - --- Ba. FIFTEENTH WARD.-INDEPEN DENT REPUBLICAN TICKET. For Soloct ConnoII—BENJAMIN• F. GLENN. For Common CounciI—CHARLES D. SUPPLER. Nominated at Ward meetimr. . oc2 84 AMUSEMENTS ASHER'S DANCING ACADEMY, 808 FILBERT STREET. . . . All the New and Fashionable DRI/CO5l Taught. Ladies und Gentlemen—Tuesday and Friday Evenings. and Masters—Tuesday and Saturday After noons. Gentlemen Only—Saturday Evening. Private lessons, singly or in anises, at any hour to snit convenience• se2l.hu" AilitltlOAN ACADEMY OF MUSIC.- - TRIUMPHANT SUCCESS OF PAREPA -ROSA ENGLISH OPERA. CARL ROSA, C. I). HESS dr CO:, Proprietors and Directors. D. DE VIVO Busineed Manager 00 THIS EVENING, Fourth •Opera Night, Mill be presented, in the most superb style, Balfe's beautiful and most popular opera, THE BOHEMIAN Grim. • _ _ Debut of the youiig Swedish Tenor Mr. NORD• BLOM. Seccnd apvearcnce of Miss RUSE lIERSEE, Nvith DliBB F. STOCKTON, Mr. S. C. CAMPBELL, Mr. E. SEGUIN, Mr. DE SOLLA arid others. Conductor Mr. ANTHONY REIFF FRIDAT—TBE PURITAN'S DAUGHTHIL. SATUBDAY-IGRAND MATINEE, ItIARITANA. SATURDAY—GRAND GALA NIGHT. A dnalssionto Parquet, Dress Circle and Balcony SI Reserved Seat 81 60 Family Circle tO ctH. 1 Gallery .26 cts. SEATS FOR ANY NIGHT CAN BE SECURED at the Academy, and at Tmunpler e Music Store, N 0.956 Chestnut street. • f AURA KEENE'S CHESTNUT STREETTHRATILS. OUR AMERICAN COUSIN. Witnessed last week by CROWDED AND RELIGHTED ASSEMBLAGES. FLORENCE THE,NCHARD (her original oharacter), MISS LAURA. Assisted by tho members of the new Company.. Dion Boucleaultts celebrated Drains, written expressly for bliss Keene, entitled ' . HUNTED DOWN. And T. W. Robertootus comedy of ROME, will shortly be produced. Seats secured six days in advance. Doors open at 7; commence at Li to. S. . W ALNUT ST. THEATRE, HEGINS to 8. N. E. corner Ninth and Walnut Street'. THIS, Til URSDAY. EYENINO. MR. EDWIN BOOTH In Bulwer's Illetrtonic Play, in fire aide, of RICHELIEU. CARDINAL RICHELIEU °EDWIN BOOTH FRIDAY—BENEFIT OF EDWIN BOOTH. OTHELLO. O fHELLO BDWIN BOOTH TB IRD BOOTIFIIATINItH. Saturday PLY P.,11. .SATURDAY NIGHT—RICHARD .I.IL NT RS. JOHN DREW'S ARCH STREET THEATRE. Regius to 8. HOUSES (mow DED TO THE ROOF. PRO _ NOUNCED SUCCESS. - SECOND WEEK Or • FORMOSA • OR, THE BAILROAD'TO RUIN. With Neer Scenery, Fine Effects And Efficient Cush including MRS. JOHN DREW FORMOSA EVERY NIGHT. Scuts secured six days in advance. U.MPH Al. RETURN OF THE GREAT EUROPEAN CIRCUS. THE LARGEST CIRCUS ON THIS CONTINENT. FOR A SHORT SEASON ONLY. ON THE ILLUMINATED GROUNDS, FIGHTH STREET,. BETWEEN RACE AND yor.x. EIGHTIISTREET, BETWEEN RACE AND VINE. . . TWO GRAND PEMFORMANCHEI BICH DAY, , . uud o 'clock P.M. • DOORS OPEN 2 AND 7 O'CLOCK. The Performances are fully equal to the splendors of the street display. THE CELEBRATED ARTISTES from thepriutinal arenas and hippodrome', of Europe. TROMAb WATSON. principal pad rider; Mr. JAMES R. COOKE, the great leaner and four-horse rider; EREDERICK WATSON, in hie principal act of horsemanship; SNAPPY AND WHITNEY, the daring trapeziste and gyeaniuns; CHARLES SANDS. the champion tumbler; SAM LONG, the great clown; FRANK WHITTAKER, the man or wit, humor and sentiment; CHAS. CONRAD AND HIS TALENTED SONS (Charles and Henry), in their acrobatic feats; ELLE. CARLOTTA DE BERG, premiere equestrienne of the world; MIIR. CRCFLII WATSON, BCCItliO eques trienne; MISS JENNETTII WATSON, English eques trienne, from Astley , e, London; M'LLE. HENRIQUES, the daring horsewoMan; MISS GRACE BRILLAIR, from the Alhandsra Palace, London; MISS 'AMANDA LBESOII. from the Angle-American Cireus; bi'LLE. JOSEPHINE, special favorite of Europe; MISS JENNIE sT. CLAIR, from the Royal Hippodrome, Paris. With other Riders, Vaulters, Gymnasts, Lady and Geu• tlemen Performers, .1 c. HE. PIERCE, Till! CELEBRATED' LION TAMER, WILL ENTF,I4 THE DEN OF WILL LIONS - - - - - - at the Adobe of each performance, and feed them In tit* intwtce of the audience. . . REMEMBER! REME3II3F.R I ! A PERFORMANCE EVERY AFTERNOON I ! A PERFORMANCE EVERY NIGIIT!! ADMISMON FIFTY CENTS. Children under ten (10) yeare, ZS cents. F OX'S AMERICAN THEATRE, 'alnut street. above Eighth NEW COMPANY—NEW FEATURES. Marie Zoll. Fernando Fleury, Maggio Bowere. The liugheS Bros. Two New . . Ballots. lle Rosa • New Drama, THE PATE' OF CRIME. Matinee on Saturday afternoon at 2 o'clock. - MEW ELEVENTH STREET OPERA I_ll DOUSE! . _ _ _ IIIE FAMILY lIESORT. ' CA liNCTOSS .5' DIX ET h MINSTRELS, EVERY EVENING. J. L. OARNCROSS, Manner. 7kAl Elti CAN CONSERVATORY MUSIC. THIRTY-SECOND MATINEE, December ht, Seo Notice in " Dineicar column. FINE ARTS, A CADEMY OF CHESTNUT etreut, above Tenth. Open from 9.-A,J51,-toa p, M. Beujeuiiit CHRIST REJest'a Groat PECTictureED of • C still on exhibition CLOTHING. JONES' CD N . V. - _PIZ' CIE CLOTHING HOUSE, 604 MARKET STREET, PHILADELPHIA. First .Class Ready-illade Clothing, suitable for all Beason -8, constantly on hand. .9/80, a Handsome Lihe of Piece Goods for Otis , _tom Work. • _ GEO. - W. - WIEMANN. Proprietor COPAILTNERSHIPS. TH E - UNDER SIGNED_ .HAVE FORMED A. Copartnership in this city for the transaction of a General Commission and !Importing BUSitICHB, under the firm and style of 0. do C. H O'CALLAGHAN A, CO. CORNELIUS O'CALLAGHAN. COURTENAY 111: O'CALLAGLIANi ALFRED L. CLAY: PIIILA ny.m. Ii lA, Octobor Ist, Mg. oc7-6t* "PARTNERSHIP NOTICE. 1 Mr. BENJAMIN C. SLOAN is admitted to a part nerehip in our,firm this dato. H. BLOAN & SONS. PIIILADELPHIA, lot OCtObOr t 80. • ' OC/".60., TXTBITE CASTILE SOAP.-100 BOXES Vl' genuine White Castile Soap, Conti brand,imporAed frerdLeghorn and for sale by JOB. B. BUSSIER CO. 108 Sleuth Delaware avenue. - CiOTTON-43 BALES COTTON NOW ‘i landing from . stontner "Wyoming . ," from Sayininith, Ga., and for solo by COCHRAN, RUSSLI,L & CO., 111 Chestnut street. SPECIAL NOTICES. THE ~ ,C AORAL CLUB" WILL they hold its FIRST REHEARSAL Mi , THUBSDAY EVENING, October 7, at 1024 WALNUT Street (Con servatory Building). Members and applicants will please attend 2t" HENRY G. THUNDER, Director lut.' LADIES' FAIR ,IN AID OF TEIE 11(.4 church of St. Charles Borromeo, Rev, James WlWltoy , Pastor, at Contort Hall,, commencing DION- , DAY, 4th October,l6l3o. Tickets, 10 cents.' Season tickets; 25 emits. ' se22.l2t* DIVIDEND .NOTICES. OFFICE. OF THE ficRANKLIN LitY" VIRE INSTINANCN COMPANY. PIia..A.DHLPHIA, Oct. 9,1969. Tho-Dcmnl of Directors have this day declared a nomi annual dividend of Six. Per. Cont. aa extra, dividend of Ten Per Cont ., and a special dividend of Two Per Cont., payable to the Stockholders, or their legal roprceenta• tives, on and after the 35th inst., clear of 'taxes. och-tl.O . J. W. McALLISTDR,'Sca'ry. FOR SALE. BILLIARD TA - I3LE FOR SALE. A First-class Second Sizo MARBLE BED BIL- L (ATM TABLE, with two sets of balls, pins and halls for pool, CII(91, rack and gas fixtures. tiomplote for 8275. Seen at 2004 IValbut street, after 4 Y. M. ocs-10 OR SALE VALUABLE COAL, IRON _F SALE-VALUABLE Lands in Elk county, Penna.. on tho line or the Philadelphia and Erie Buliroad For do acriptiona apply to B. A. HOOPES, 003 if§ 324 Walnut amt. frg FOR SALE—NO. 2008 CHESTNUT street—lb° ilrbt-chuis ntarble•frout dwelling, replete. with every modern COllVQllil'llea. FOX .te BURKAAT, 221 South Fifth litroot. JFOR SAL E.-.III6IERN THREE- Story Brick Dwelling, 510 S. Ninth st. EvorYo2„n* venience. Inquire on the premises. iny6-tit,s,tuktf _ F --FOR SALE 07 following properties . No. 3392 tltestnut street. No. 6.47 North Sixteenth street. No. 1817 North Seventh Fltreot. No. Iri42 North Seventh street, For particuistra apply to BAND, I'4/MINS dr v 4 i),t 12,1 Nor th Sixth street. self 12E. 01 FOR SALE—DWELLINGS. laiiiil2lo Columbia avenue. INineteeath and Thompson 144 N. Eighteenth stroet. 3221 Hansom, Vest Phila. 1307 Mt. Vernon street. ' 900 N. Fifteenth street. 1323 Brandywine. Lgt . lBloll. 8 rooms, newly papered And painted. Only .980) cash required. Price 83400. JAMES W. 11AVENS, se2tf 8. W . . corner Broad and Chestnut. FSR SAI .- Property on the wing side of Germantown Road ; PA feet front, and extending through with a front of 200 feet on Sixth street, between .Iterks and Norris etreete. J. N. °EMMET St SONS, 73.3 Walnut btreet6 If Olt te. A L L—THE HANDSOME ."Jetag Dwelling N 0.2118 Spruce street. Built in the best manner ; all and esery improvement. PQ4Netoilr.n Not. let One-halt can remain. Apply to OOPPIJCK do JORDAN; 433 Walnut street. fri CHESTNUT STREET—FOIL SALE. - 9 ,4 a A hantisom• brick Residence, 20 foot front, replete 'with warn conveniences and in perfect order ; situate on Chestnut street, east of Jrifinith street. Lot 1(i feet deep to a street. J, ktiONB, 733 Walnut street. WA FOR SALE: THEHANDSOME Three-story Brick Residence. with three story double back buildings, situate No. 611 Vine street, oppo site Fraliklin Square. Lot feet front. by 173 feet deep to Wood street. Terms. seconunielating. Immediate possession. J. 31. GI7IIIIIBY do SONS, 733 Walnut street. VI: FOR. SALE—A HANIiSOIE-liiIKI ja.igiLDENCE, 21.18 Spruce street. A Store and Dwelling, northwest corner Eighth. and Jefferson. A fine Residence. 1721 Tin• street. • A handsome Residence. 4W Smith Ninth street. A handsome Residence. West Philadelphia, A Basinees Location, Strawberry street. A Dwelling, No. 1110 North Front errEwt. Apply to COPP reit. & JORDAN, 433 Walnut street. : t FOR SALE.—THE If A.NDSOME eidence, marble first stork, finished in the beet manner. with every convenience, and 5-feet wide side yard ; N 0.517 South Fifteenth street, below spruce.. J. . GRIMILY t SONS, 733 Walnut street. FOR SALE—A VERY VALUABLE. 114 and desirable Residence ' with lot of ground IUI feet trout by 175 feet deep. shaded by full grown forest trees, and a variety of ornamental shrubbery ; situate In one of the highest and beet improved parts of West Walnut el rect. Immediate possession given. Tenni cmcornmodet• ti,g. J. Id . T t SONS. 755 Walnut street. frt , FOR SALE DWELLING 14.41 Pg:; ; North Thirteenth street ; every convenience, and in good order. Convenient Dwelling, No. 637 Pine street ; ten rooms, bath.rs. &a. 510 'teen street. two-story brick, good yard. stamper street. below Piths, entail house. - Alter street. two nevi fi,ur •rotl;r3 hoisos. ilmildiug Lots oa Paasynak road, and a good Lot at Elting Sa■ BODII&T GU/IEI , EN & EON, &ST Pinu street TO nEriT. CB.EEISE & McCOLLITM, REAL ESTATE AgiiNTS. . . . • Oftlee r iackson street, opposite Hanlon street, Gaps Island, N. J. Beal Estate bought and sold. Persons desirous of renting cottage during the season will apply or address es above. Respectfully refsr to Chas. Rubicam,Renry Bumnv, Francis Augustus ilerinO % John Davis and NV. NV . Juvenal. fol4fit CLUB STABLE.—TWO STALLS Tacant m tbe best Club Stably in thu n”ur bruit and Waluxit strrets. Addrem" C. T. N., Bta.• LETIN ortire. It" irig TO LET-ZDESIItA_BLB BUILDING, ,%.celitralilocatl.m." rear of all Cerrunarce stroA, 2S teat front, 3 etorleii, lipid front and rear, fine cellar, and engine. room, with chimney Mack: outlet upon Diecount Place to Sixtli etreet. A pply,to tlio owner at . 80S MARKET, ocTlf§ from 101011 daily. - OP TO I:E\ T—FURNI SHED OR UN ES:rd furnished—No. 110,S. Twenty-first street. Apply front 11 to ',o'clock. M TO LET—THE UPPER FLOORS, with counting-room ' of the store No. 11l Cliesnint street. Apply on thy premises to COCHRAN, RUS SELL Sr. CO. oc2-tri To LET—FURNISHED HOUSE, No. Vel Walnut street. Replete with everr con• •enience in fixtures and furniture. Apply to S. DAY.IS PA fvE, tilt/ Walnut street. or! •It` r1.1:li, FOR RENT OR FOR SALE—Nu. :zit t South Seventeenth street, a neat throe-story Brick Building, -with attics, and three-story back buildings. Inquire at 3:101 Walnut street. to-Gt•' FOR RENT, FURNI:J. HED.—HAND: some Reside Walnut street. Also—Handsome Residence No. Girard street. .1. N. GIThildRY 6r. SONS, T 3 3, Walnut street. itFUR RENT.—THE FURNISHED Residesice,lol4 Rittenhouse Square : will be rented fora year or longer if desired. It is desirably iewatomi, handsomely and newly furnished. and replete with all conveniences. • CLARK ,4* ETTING, - sell-tfi• 711 Walnut street. BOARDING. ' IOPERMANENT BOARD 1:524 CHEST ant street. Private parlor, If desired.' MO ET —NV ITH BO ARD —SI3 . IOC --- 0 Rooms and Roosts. Tubb, Board. )OAR E DING.—DESIRABL It 0 0 MS , .1) with Board, may now tie secure , ) at octi tit§ 1R39 CHESTNUT Streot. 1013'...:E LARGE B0031S:WITH BOARD, 418 Broad street, below Pine. Boforoucee 1:a -ctin II god . oc6-3t* 1608 CHESTN UT STREET—HAND- 8 °me apartments to rent with full or partial board. oc6-6t" BOARD.—HANDSOME D .—HAND SO M E COM. UNICA TING rooms, and other Tactician, with board, at 7-S South Broad street. ciel•dt* TWO HAN DSOM El COMMUNICATING Booms to Rent, with board, at 2001 WALNUT street, in a private family. 6630 th a We* Isa,l all MODERN .RMIDENCE WANTED, LIM centrally situatedmest of Broad street value about 416,000. Also, one south of Market street, front 820,000 to ,925,000. Apply to H. B. JONES, .No. TUT Walnut street. Oct 3t* WAN TBD--F UENISHED HOUSE. about Nov. let until let to 15th April,weet of Broad street, between Arch no Spruce, Tenant unexception able. Family—Four grown portions ;no children. State lacatien and tome per month, payable monthly. Ad dregs box 1.'047, P. 0., Phila. . eell3-tf* DittlGS. CASTILE SOAP—GENUINE AND VERY superior-200 boxes just landrvi.frorn hark Idea, owl for sale by ROBERT SHOEMAKER .1t 00 . , Importing Druggists; N, N. corner Fourth and Baca etrootTi.. TRUGGISTS WILL. FIND A LARGE stock of Allen's Medicinal Extracts and Oil Almonds, ltad. Rho'. Opt., Citric Acid, Ooze's Sparkling Gelatin, gennine,Wedgwood Mortars. Ste., Just landed fr(»n bark Hoffnutig: from London. ROBERT SHOEMAKER Br, Wbelosale Druggists, N. B. corner Fourth and Blie.Ntroets. gRUG GISTS' SUNDRIES; -- GRAD ll ates, Mortar, Pill Tiles, Combs, Brushers, Mirrors, azers, Puff Boxes,Horn Scamps, Surgical Instru ments, Trusses, Hard and Soft Rubber fh.ods, Arial eases, Glass and Metal Scrimp*, /to., all at " First Hands" prices. B>,IOwDEN• & BROTHIIIR, a -If 23 South El lith street. LOST. N OTICE. ,--- CERTIFICATE OF STOCK: • tost.—Certificate No. 197, of the West Branch Canal Company, dated the 11th Juno, 1868, in favor of W. A. Martin, for forty-two (42) shares, of the capital stock Of said company, has been lost, and the under- signed, the lawful - owner of tho same, has applied .for new certificate to be issued to him in lieu of the one lost • thBt4 W. A. MARTIN. • ' ARD OIL.-20 BMA NO. 1 WItIS I JLI Lard Oil, to arrive and for sale by 000 BUSSELL & 00..1.110bentunt street ' • 1317 Spruce street MAT FEIII4 IN 44ENERAL. Comfortable Suicides. An exchangesays Comfort keeps pace - with civilization, or Pos sibly the two terms are nearly synonymous. Unpleasant. duties will always exist, - but the growth of civilization tends to make their per formance easier and less distasteful. - The ordinary bu.siness of life is now transacted far snore easily -than it was twenty years ago, thanks to telegraphs, underground railways, concrete pavements, and other modern con veniences. And slow the friends of the art of becorneAmbued :with what New England pedple call " prowgresi," :_and are making the act of self-destruction as easy and' comfortable as possible. in `place of clumsily blowing one's head to isieces with an uncertain charge of buckshot or 'with an unreliable' pistol-ball, one can now avail one's self of the sweet boon of. nitro-glycerine, and by its aid. suddenly blow head, body, and the• entire. animated - neighborhood into minutely commi nuted awl utterly irretrievable smash. Drown . ing, too, has been vastly imprOved. We now no longer jump roughly into muddy mill-ponds, or coarsely and inartistically choke ourselves in - Only ferry-slips.. There is now a -better way of drowning, and it was only the other day illustrated by an unknown suicidal artist at Niagara. This person, after having laid his clothes,where they would be secure from harm, - waded out into' the`current above the fallS, and,"' sitting down," calmly suffered himself to be washed into etrnity.. Here was ,seen the ripe results of civilization and "prowgress." This man scorned to tire hireßelf by walking over the falls, or to clownishly suffer himself to flounder disorderly over the brink. On the contrary, he sat down and leisurely, gracefully and comfortably permitted himself to float over. ..So ranch hai civilization taught the suicidally disposed man. The Old Spaniards. The Saturday Review closes a !wiz and able *article on "Old Spain" with the following Para Al graph ong with Columbus, Cortez and Francisco Pizarro, the Spaniards recken as the fourth of the chief'conqufstadores of America Ilernarido de Soto, who explored the mouth of ' the sissippi and conquered, or at least fought and died in, Florida. lie was the son of a. poor nobleman, and he began the would with noth ing but his' coat of arms, his sword and shield. Ile served under Pizarro in Peru, _and being sent to meet the Inca, his foaming and rearing steed struck the Pernvians with astonishment and terror. Soto died on the banks of the Missis sippi, and his- followers, dreading that if they buried him on land the Indians would desecrate his remains, lo,adt I his' coffin with stones and sank it in the river lied. His funeral has been compared to that of Alarie the Goth, whose body the distant ancestors of the Spaniards cast into an Italian -river; and, in truth, the history of the Old World.hardly produces any name so mighty that the names of the conquis tadores may not deServe to be plaCed beside it. The Spaniards of that day were cast in a heroic mould, 'but the wealth after which they craved destroyed the viAue by which 'they gained it. Happy was the fate of our own country, Whose seamen were forbidden to ap proach the tropics, and acquired amid polar. -icya-hardihood-before-which-the—sueressors-of the conquistadores quailed. rln fifty years from the discoverY of America the Spaniards founded a far-reaching and magnificent do minion. In another fifty years the English shook that dominion to its foundation. From that time to the present the energy of Spain has dwindled, and both the old country and her colonies, or what is left of thern,have been given over to decrepitude and decay. It is still an open question, after a year of revolution, whether she* has it in her to begin a new and vigorous life, and whether she has among her leaders men Capable of displaying the courage and policy of the old con quistadores. Progress. This is the age of progress. "Psycbomancy," "witchcraft," and all ' such branches of the "black art" are practiced nowadays after an improved fashion that throws far into the shade the most wondetful efforts of the magicians of old. The paper teem with advertisements from necromancers and numerous other re mancers connected with the kind of swindle referred to. "By' sending thirty cents and stamp," says one of the advertisers, "you will receive by return of mail a correct picture of your future husband or wife, with name -and date of marriage." Another calls attention to his book on "soul-charming," which "has full instructions to enable the reader to fasci nate either sex.or any animal at will." There are "dream-books," too, and it is wonderful to observe the faith repoSed in them by persons of some edueation even. Women who dwell in boarding-houses, and have no household duties to occupy them, are greatly fascinated by these dream-bboks, and they acquire a re markable facility in twisting the interpretat loos to meet the forewarnings of the visions that arpear to them' in sleep. Gamblers, also. are much given to consulting dream-books, by which they often regulate their play. Alto gether, superstition is quite, or nearly, as rife now as it was in what are sometimes called the " dark ages." But the means for pro moting it, the modern applianCes and hocus pocus, are vastly superior to what they then were because this is the. age of progress. = World. ' Old Advertisement Curiosities. The reader will not peruse without interest the following specimens of curious advertise rnents of olden English times, bearing date I Vid : To be Sold, a Genteel Place at Court. Sal ary £lOO a year. Little or no attendance re quired, and is transferable at pleaspre thesame as Bank .Stock. • Martin Van Butchell, Surgeon Dentist, at tends at his house, in Upper Mount street, Grosvenor square, always from 10 till 4; open till dusk. Advice,£l ls.• taking out tooth or stump, £5 Gs.; a hole under row, £42; upper row, £0.3 ; an entire set £lO5. Natural teeth, £lO 10s. each. No transplanting. No annual patients. N. B. The money paid first. This was au eccentric doctor, notorious at the time, who used to ride a pony in Hyde Park, painted in various brilliant colors; and who kept the embalmed body of his late wile • in a glass ease in his drawing-room. Nutmegs., The'' Indian Archipelago is the country of.? the nutmeg. It, grows on trees, which enm mence, to bear at the age of, seven years, and continue to bear for' many years, like apple, From flowering to - the ,ripening of the fruit is about seven Months. The average pio duet of a tree in full bearing is five pounds of nutmegs and one and a• quarter pounds of mace. The harvest is from September to December, but a small:harvest is made in May and JOne. The mace is an imperfect covering . for the nut-_ meg - (not the busk ) . The mace is, , ffattened by the hands' and laid on mats - to dry in the sun. Afterward it is dried by coal fires, and packed for exportation. The nutmegs are more dun cult to dry. They are dried by fire alone; for several mtmths, like smoking meat, althciugh *without much smoke. When thoroughly dried they are packed in tight casks, lined ,and Range of the Etonian Eye. The range of the human eye may be judged of from a considemtion which gives, us at the same time a good Idea, of the scope of animal structure. Supposing that, an. Individual of every known species - were to take its stand be tween the two species that were respectively the next larger and the next, smaller than itself, the smallest known animal at one ; ex tremity of the line, and the largest standing at the other; and then supposing we were to ask which creature , occupied the middle place; hav ing-asmanr-degrees:ofFAsize:lsflo. and as many above it as below, that place would be found to be occupied by the commo house fly." What a' stupendcius opticaLinstra ment must that be which,;.assisted with a few brass tubes and some disks of glass, shall dls- Cern a creature as much smaller than a fly as a sly is smaller than an elephant. . ART ITEMS. . —Tbe Philadelphia Sketch Club has resumed is Meetings. Inian Hunt has gone to. Egypt to paint another picture. ' . —Rotherrnel's picture of "The Battle of Gettysburg" is to be placed, it is said, in 'the Capitol at:Washington., —The precious Madonna of the Dresden Gallery, arid all the other treasures of that. fatirOus collection, have been in imMinent peril Of destruction. A lire broke , out on the; 21st ultimo in the :Royal Opera House whichis e part of the group ofdifices in thelltstadt of the' capital of Saxony, arid connected "with` th" palace by a covered way. Closely united with both are the famous "Green Vaults," contain ing precious ~s pecimeas in jewelry, porcelain and carvings in amber and ivory ; and the Stallgellaude, with its statuary and ancient armor, libraries, cabinets of engravings, gather ings of exquisite Meissen china, and portraits of all the Bavarian and Saxon princes. Hap pily the Court Theatre only was burned. FINANCIAL UNION PACIFIC RAILROAD FIRST MORTGAGE BONDS, fix Per Cent. Interest in Gold. LAND GRANTS, Seven Per Cent, Currency, (Taken at par in payment for tan& of Company.) For vale at best market price , AlitilN c u . ygli 4 _ I) ; 1 " li ) . ~ 1 N.Y. Dealers in overnmen Isecuri= ties, Gold, &c., 40 Sbuth 'Third St. apinf A RELIABLE HOME INVESTMENT THE FIRST MORTGAGE. BONDS Or TIIS • Wilmington and Reading Railroad, BRIBING INTEREST AT SEVEN PER, CENT. IN CITRBENCY, Payable April and October, free of State and Tinned States Taxes. This road run through a thickly populated and rich agricultural and manufacturing district. For the present we are offering a limited amount of the above bonds at 85 Cents and Intetest. The connection of this road with the l'ennwYlvan and Reading Railroads insures it a large and remunerative trade. We recommend the bonds as the cheapest first clam investment in the market. WM. PAINTER dip CO.; Bankers and Dealers In Governments, No. 36 S. THIRD STREET, pinuLADELpin[A. - Jew§ 'BANKING HOUSE • • fit JAYC°Ok-E6' I. }l2 and 114 So. THIRD ST. PHILAD'A DEALERS IN ALL GOVERNMENT SECURITIES. We will receive applications for Policies of. Life Insurance in the new National Life In. enrollee CoMpany of, the United States. Full information given at our office. , "I ' ITN,IIDOLPII4I '4 eiwk P ERs I M)ealeril in 11. B , Bonds and. Nembera i of ock and Gold Exchange, receive i ac counts Of Banks and Hai:Mora on liberal feriae, of Exchange on • 'J. Hambro & Son; Undone , B. Metzler, S. Sofia & co., Frankfordi James, W. Tucicer & Co., Paris. Aildroiher girincinal cities, and 'Letters of Credit available throughout EurOpr ,00Tiler Third and Che stnut Streets. eto - XLAN'D - WoOD. OD AL ! , THE CHEAPEST AND DEgt V in Gad oity , llCeep constantly on hand the celebrated HONEY BROOK FI K and HARLEIGH LEHIG ; Ise. EAGLE VEIN A LOCTIST MOUNTAIN and 808 ON RUN COAL. J. IdACDONALD. JR. Yarde,6l9 South Broad.st. and 1140 Washington avenue, ocl Am S. 114 Linn Biting. ' • ' • JOHN D. gIinATP, HE UNDgitSIGNED INVITE ATTEIT- J ,tion to their sleek of Spring llornitain, Lehigh and , Loeuet Mountain Opal, which, with the preparation given by tie, we think, can• not be excelled by any other Coal. Office, Franklin lnatitute Building, No. It B. Seventh street. BINES dt SHEAFF, • utlll-tr Arob street wharf. Schuylkill. - GAS FIXTURES (IAS FIXTURES.—MISKEY, MERRILL G - dt T ?Al/AMARA, No. 718 Oheetuut street, manatee torero of ties Fixtures, Lampe ,_&e., ate:, would call the attention of the public to their large and elegant allsort• relent of Gas Chandeliers Pendants, Brackets , Ac. They also introduce gas piped into dwellings and public build• Inge, a nd attend to extending, altering and repairing gas ,rdpes. All work Barrantedi- THE DAILY itTENING BULLETIN ;PHILADELPHIA, THURSDAI. OCTcBER .7, 1869. Hair Vigor, For the Renovation of the Hair. The Great Desideratum of the Age. A ,dressing which. is at once agreeable,' healthy, and effectual for preserving the hair. Faded or gray hair is soon restored to' its 'original rotor and, the gloss and freshness of youth. Thin hair is thick ened, falling hair checked, and bald ness often, though not alwttys, cured by its use. Nothing can restore the hair where the follicles are destroyed, or the glands atrophied and decayed. But such as' remain can be saved for usefulicess by this application. Instead of fouling the hair with a pasty sedi; n'aent, it will keep it clean and vigorous. Its occasional use will prevent the hair •tt ning gray or falling — off, and consequently prevent baldness. Free. from those deleterious substances which make some preparations dangerous and injurious to the hair the Vigor can only benefit but not harm it. If wanted merely for a HAIR DRESSING, nothing else can be found so.desirable. Containing neither oil nor dye, it doe? not soil white cambric, and yet lasts longer on the hair, giving it 'a rich glossy lustre and a grateful perfume. Prepared by Dr; J. C. Ayer & Co., 01 - k LOWELL, - MASS. PRICIt $l.OO. Subl by all 'Druggists everywhere. At wholesale by J. M. MAIM A*. CU., Philadelphia. mh9 tu th s cow ly MIDDLETOWN MINERAL SPRINGS Never before have any Mineral Waters attained in short a time a reputation so general as the Middletown Mineral Spring Waters, solely, too, by, the numbet of almost marvellous cures they have effected. EXTRACTS FROM A FEW OF OUR MANY' A. It. %/rant, No. 269 River et., Troy. N. Y., (Kidney Dioempe), says : • " It Ilea renovated me thoroughly, killed my pains,nad gives me back a healthy appetite, digestion, and circula tion." • F. F. Bader' k, No. 89 Clinton place, N. Y.,(Goneral Debility), eaya : " I am sure that I owe my p r iesent health solely to the daily and persistent use of the water." • Call for a copy of testimonials in full. THIS WATER IS FOR SALE BY ALL FIRST- Addreiße: Middletown Mineral Spring Company, Wholesale Agent for Philadelphia and vicinity aul9 th s to 2.ln§ A VITAL QUESTION ANSWERED. Thousands of dyspeptic and bilious sufferers. who have exhausted the lint of official remedies iii vain, are asking what they shall do next, and if there is, any remedy for their misery . There in. TARRANT'S EFFERVESCENT SELTZER APERIENT will give them immediate re lief, and eventually restore them to perfect health. It is a stomachic, an alterative, a purgative, and a gentle diuretic, combined in ono delicious and refreshing draught. •, • , SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS. jyl3 In th aBmA OPAL' bENTA.LLINA.— A SUPERIOR article for cleaning the Teeth,destroying animalcule which infest them; givgiving tone to the gnms and leaving a feeling_ of , fragrance and perfect cleanliness in' the month. It may be used daily, and will be found to strengthen weak and bleeding . gums, while the aroma and detersivenees will recommend it to everyono. Bo ing composed with the assistance of the Dentist, Physi cians and Microscopist, , it is. confidently offered as a reliable substitute for the uncertain washes formerly in r T ne imnent Doetiets, acquainted with the conetituenis of the Dentallina. advocate its use; it contains nothing to prevent its unrestrained employment. Made only by JAMES T. bliniN, ApothecarY ) Broad and Spruce streets. •ally, and ILS eTl:°'LOrtta Oeo. 0. Bower, ' Ohne. Shivers, S. M. McColin, . 0. Bunting, Chas. U. Eberle, James N. Marks, E Bringhttret it E. Co., Dyott & Oo„ 11. o:Blair's Sons, Wyeth & Bro. F . or sale by Druggist. gene Fred. Browne, Bossard & Co, 0, B. Seeny, - lease H. Bay, C. H. Needies t T. J. Husband, Ambrose Smith, Edward Parrish, Wm. B.'Webb,: James L. Bispham, Hughes & Combo, Hen • A. Bower. THOMAS S. DIXON SONS, Late Andrews 65 Dixon No. 1A24 CHESTNUT Street, t • Oppoeite United States Mint: • antifentarere of LOW DOWN. PARLOR • CHAAIBiII, , OFFICE ,• • • And other GRATES, For Anthracite, Dittiminone and Wood Fire; ALSO • ° WANK-AIR FURNACES, For Warnahag Public • arid Private Huildinge. BEWSTERS, VENTILATORS, minaEy diPs_, • COOEING-HANuES, HATH-IBLEHLERS. , • .„ WHOLESALE and RETAIL. T H 0 M. S 0 14' 13. LONDON HlTCH enert'or, European Ranges, for families, hotels or public institutions, in twenty different sizes. Also, Philadelphia Ranges, Hot Air Furnaces, Portable Heaters, Low doWn Grates,.Fireboard Stoves, Bath Boilers, Stewholo Plates Broilers. Oooking Stoves, etc., wholesale and retail 14 the manufacturers, SHAR E dc TIIOIIIBON, itiy2B I m w Cm§ No. 200 North Seeond street. MEDICAL. Ayer's TESTIMONIALS CLASS DRUGGISTS IithDLETOWN ,VT C. LIPPINCOTT, 916 Filbert Street, HEATER.SI AND STOVES TRAVELERS. GOADEI . OR . . NEW.' _ KORIL-4111E ,-OADIDEIT, ~ AIm...AMBOY and ..,..PHICILADELPHIA AND , r BENTON ' RAILII.OAD . COMPANY'S INES, from • tillidelPhis to Nnw Ifcrtk, and Attlff 'Platen i ant street what ~,..,,: , ~ . ~ c r are . At .30 A. hi,. V darrideri arid Anatiy; AC'econlP t ', - 82 26:: ' At BA. 3114. Via Camden arid Jersey , City Ex. Xlif l l 300; •At 2.00 P. /11,:i vla.Camden and Andb_OF 11 1 . 1 Pretib, ". ; Ba 9• At illt i 111. ter Amboy.and intermediate stationii. • , • ' C At m iind 8A: M., and 2P. N., for Freehold. - ' , 1 , At 2.110-P: . 'M. , for Long! Branch and ' Pointe ; Orl', ~S.A. ILIL Ital.', - , .Lti , -.. ,• P . ' - , At 8 and 10A M., 12 11, 2,3= abd 4.40 P M.,for ;Ironton ', At 6.40,8 and 30 AM .42 M.4,3.30„4.80,6,7 'andtz.3o P.M., . • for BOrdentown,Floreneeißurlington,Beverly and Ds. •1 At 6.30 and 1 OA .M.,12, /1., 8.304 - A0,6,7 and 11.80 PAL! for Edgewater, Riverside, - Merton, Palmyra and' Fish lionaei anot 2P. M., for , Riverton .' '. • - • . :.. par il'ho"11.30 'P. M. .'Line leaves from foot of Markets treat by upper ferry. •.. , ~. ~, • , I From Kensington Depot:: '- ' • ' ._ A t 11 A. ~H via Kensington'and.larsey City; New York • Exprees Line - • ..... . , • ~....,.. ... . . 43 00, , At,7.w and 11.00 A. 31.,2.3073 . X;rin Pi lirfoci'nratou. I . ,and Bride'. And at 10.15 A. M. and. 8 P,_ -- ki: for Bristol. ~. 'At- 7 .30 and 11 A. - M., 2.30 and 5 P. M. forMorritrvllle and -At 7.80 and 10.15 A. 31., 2.30,5 amid P. itt. for SchtinCit's . . and Eddington. • , - _ At 7.30 and 10.15 A. 11., 2.30,4, /5 and 0 P. 3r.; for Cord ':. wells, Torresd ale, Rolm esburg, Tacony,Nissinomingi . Ernteshure and 1 rankford, awl 8.30 P.M. for Holmes ' burgt.nd Intermediate Stations. ' • • From West Philadelphia Depot via Connectingßallway ..At 9.39 A. - Di., 1.20 4,6.45,8 and 12 P . Id. New York Ex - press Line, vin. J ersey City 33 25 At 11. 201 '• 11 . Emigrant Line • • ' ' d. 200 ' At 9.30 A. M , 1.30,4,6.456 and 12 P.M.. for Trenton. • At 9.3P_ A. .lra .. 4 , 6.45 and 12 P. M., for Bristol. • At 12 P.M .(N ightlfor lilorrisv ille,Tallytelwit , Schenck's Eddington, Conmells, Torresdaile, Hohnesbnrg, Ta cony,,,,Wissinoming, Bridesburg and Erankford. . Tile 9-w A. M. and 6 and 12 P. ALLinearun daily. All ' others Sundays excepted. ' ' ' • • - 'For Lines leaving Kensington Depot, take . the cars on . f bird or Fifth streets, itt •Cheatnut, at half an hour be fore departure. The Cars of Market' Street Rallw_ay run direct to West Piffled elphlaDepot,Chestnut and Walnut within one square. On Sundays, the Market Street Cars . will rtua to connect with the 9.30 A; M. and a and Vl'. M. lines , lELYIDERE DELAWARE RAILROAD .LINES front Kensington Depot. • __, , At 7.30 A . 11., for Niagara Falls, Bursae; Dunkirk; Elmira, Ithaca, Owego, Rochester, ~ Dinghampton, Oswego, l'racuse, Great'Bend, Montrose, WBkesbarre. , Schooley 13 Mountain, Ac. _ At 7.30 A. F. and 3.30 P. 31. for. Scranton, Strouds burg, Water Gap Belvidere, Easton, 'Lambertville, Flemington, toe. The 3.30 P. M. Line connects direct with the train lest ing Easton for, Manch Chunk-Allen town, Bethlehem, As. , • " At 11 A. 11. and 5sP. M. for Lambertville And interme .diate Stations. CAMDEN AND BURLINGTON CO., AND PENISES.- , TON AND 111 011 TSTOWN RAILROADS, from Mar ket street Ferry (Upper Bide./ At 7 and 10 A.11.,1, 2.15;350,is & 620 P.M.for Merchants. vlile,lifoorestown, Hartford. Maseinville, Reimport, Mount Holly,- Einithville, Ewansville, Vincentown, 131rniingbam and Pemberton. . • , - , At 10 A. 31. for Lev. istovm, Wrightatown, Cookstown, New'Egypt and liornerstown. ' : , • Lewistown, Wrignts- A.t 7 A. N., l and 330 Y. M. for, town, Cookstown, New Egypt, Ilornerstown, Cream Ridge. Indaystown, Sharon and Hightstown. Fifty pounds of Baggage only allowed each Passenger.' Passengers are prohibited from taking anything as bag gage Is ut their wearing apparel. ' All baggage over ilft y pounds to be paid for extra. The Company limit their , responsibility for baggage to One Dolher per pound, and will not be Liable for any amount beyond 3100, ax cept by special contract. Tickets sold and Baggage checked direct through to Easton, Worcester, Springfield, Hartford, New Haven Providence, Newport, Albany, Troy, Saratoga,, Utica, Monte, Syracuse, Itochester, Butfalo, Niagara Falls tind : ouspension Bridge. • • An additional Ticket Office is located at N 0.828 Chest nut street, where tickets to New York, and all impor tant points North and East, may be procured. Personal purchasing Ticketp qt this Oilice, Can have their beg, gage checked from residences or hotel to destination, by . Onion Transfer Baggage Express. Lines from New York for Philadelphia will leave from foot of Cortland street at 116) and 4.00 1'..31., via Jersey City and Canteen.. At 6.30 P. M.. via Jersey City and Kensington. At 7, and 10 A.M., 12.30,5 and 9 P.M., and 12 Night. via J ersey City and West Philadelphia. From Pier No. 1, N. River, at 6.30 A. M. Accommoda tion and 2 P. It. Express via Amboy and Camden. Aug. 30,1869. t 'NM. Li. GATZMEII, Agent. DENNSYLVAI9 - IA. CENTRAL 'RAIL .I: OAD.—After 3 P. M., SUNDAY, September sth 9369. The trains of the Pennsylvania Central Railroad leave: the liepst,at Thirty-first and Market streets,which is reached directly by the cars of the Market Street Pas senger Railway, the last car connecting with each train leaving Front and Market street thirty minutes before its departure. Those of the Chestnut and Walnut sets Railway- run within onesquare of the Depot. bleeping Car TFCK.Rs can be had - on-appliestioriat4. - - Ticket Office, Northwest corner of Ninth and Chestnut streets, act at the Depot. Agents of the Union Transfer Company will call for and deliver Baggage at the Depot. Orders lett at 340.901 Chestnut street, No. 116 Market street. will receive at tention TRAINS LEAVE DEPOT, VIZ.: ' Mail Train.— ._ at 8.00 A.M. Paoli Ace= ......... ..-...at 10,30 A.M., 1.10, and 7.10 P. H. :Fast Line .......... ... .... --at 11.60 A. M. ErieEl press • atil-'0 A. It. Harrisburg Accom • ' at 2.30 P. M. Lancaster A mom at 4.00 P. M. Parksburg Train at 5.30 P. M. Cincinnati Express Eris Mail and Pittsburgh t. - 37.pr - ess. ....... ......at 9.30 P. M. Accommodation at 11.00 P. M. Philadelphia Express. 4. at 12.00 night. Erie Mail leaves daily, except Sunday running on Sunday Saturday night to Williamsport only. nn night passengers will leave Philadelphia at 8 o'clock, Philadelphia Express leaves daily. Cincinnati Ex.- Press daily. except Saturday: All other trains daily, except Sunday. The Western Accommodation Train nun daily, except Sunday. For this train tickets must be procured and baggage delivered by 5.00 P. M.. at 116 Market street. • TRAINS ARBIYE AT DEPOT, VIZ • • • Cincinnati Express at 2.45 A. IL Philadelphia Expressat 6.20 A. M. Erie Mail ' at 5.20 A. M. Paoli Accommodation at 8.1.1) A. M. and 4.os n tt 6.35 P. M Parke:burg Train t 9.10 A.M. Fast Line at 9.35 A. at 12.90 P. Lancaster Train Erie Express at 0.10 P. M. Day Express at 1.30 P. M. Pacific Express at 9.40 8.25 P. M. at 9.40 P.M .Harrisburg Accommodation For further information, apply to JOHN F. VANLEER,Jn., Ticket Agent, 901 Chestnut. street. FRANCIS FUNK „Ticket Agent, 116 Market street. SAMUEL H. WALLACE, Ticket Agent at the Depot. The Pennsylvania Railroad Company, will not assume any riskfor Baggage, except for wearing apparel, and limit their responsibility to One Hundred Dollars in value All Baggage exceeding that amount in value will be at the risk of the owner. unless taken by special con tract. EDWARD-11. WILLIAMS, General Superintendent. Altoona, Pa. PH IL ADE L PHIA, GERMANTOWN AND NORRISTOWN RAILROAD TIME TA-. BLE,—On and alter Monday, May 3d, 1869, and nuts further notice; FOR GERMANTOWN. Leave Philadelphia-6,7, 8, 0.04, 10,11,M., 1,2, 3.16, 4,4.36,6.06, 6, 7,8, 9, 10, 11, 12 P. M. Leave Germantown-6, d, 8.%), 9, 10, 11, 12 A. M.; 1.2, 3, 40%.'5, 5%, 6, 63.;,7, 8, MO, 0. P. M. . , The 8.20 down-train, and the M and 13 up trains, wil not stop on the Germantown Branch. ON SYS. LeaveThiladelphia-9.15 A. 31., 2, 4.05 minutes, 7 and 10% P. M. Leave Germantown-8.18 A. M.; 1 3, 6 and 01i P. 31. CHESTNUT HILL RAILROAD: Leave Philadelphia-0, 8, 10, 12 A. M.; 2, 3/5,435,7 ' ,9 and 11 P. M. Leave Chestnut Mill-7.10 minutes, 8, 0.40, and 11.40 A M.; 1.40, 3.40,5.40,6.4 0 0 N , 8.40 and 10.40 P. • SUNDAYS Leave M.• 2 and P. M. Leave Chestnut 11i11-7 .541 minutes A. 31.'; 12.40,5.40 and 9.15 minutes. P. M. FOR CONSROIIOCKEN AND NORRISTOWN. Leave Pc' 9 11.05, A. M.; 1%, 3,4%, 5, 536, 6.15, 6.05, 10.05 and 1136 P. M. Leave Norristown-5.40,6%, 7,7% 9, 11 A. M.; 1%, 3 , 435 6.15,8 and 936 P. M. oar The Tr: ins from Norristown will not stop at ltogee's, Potts' Landing, Domino or Schur's Lane. V - Theb P. 11. Train from Philadelphia will stop oul at School Lane,Manayunk end Conshohocken. • ON SUNDAYS. Leave Philadelphia-9 A. M. 236,4 and 7.15 P. M. Leave Norristown-7 A.M.; 1,536 and 9P. M. NOR MANA•Y Ii UN. • •-. • . Leave Philadelphia-6,T 9 11.05 A.A11.; 1%,'3, 4%, 6, 53,,,6.154,8.05,10.0.5 and 1136 Pi M. . , • • Leave 51 anay unk—0.R4411061;934',..1DVA0: 2., ; 2,33 t , " , 5,6 3 .6,6.50 and 10 P.M. •• 10 - The b P.M. Train from P only at School Lane,and Minaynnk. • • ON SUNDAYS, Leave Philadelphia-9 A. 61.; 236;4 and 7.15 P. M. Leave 3lanayunk-736 A. M.; 136,6 and 936 P. M. W. S. WILSON, General Superintendent, • Depot, Ninth and Green streets. - - PHILADELPHIA AND ERIE RAIL ROAD—WINTER TIME TABLE. On and after MONDAY, Sept. 6, 1869, the Trains on the Philadelphia and Erie Railromi will run as follows from Pennsylvania Railroad Depot, West Philadelphia : WESTWARD. Rail Train leaves Philadelphia 9.20 P. M. .. .. 1 . Williamsport 7.30 A. M. e " arrives at Erie , -8.15 P. M. Erie Express leaves Philadelphia 11.50 A. M. 1, .. Williamsport 9.00 P. M. . 1 arrives at Erie. 10.90 A. Bt. Elmira Mail leaves Philadelphia, 8.00 A, M. .. .. Williamsport.. 8.10 P. M. .. arrives 'at Lock Haven 7.80 P. M. __._. EASTWARD ' ' - Mail Trnln leaves fklrilainePari " 'arrives at Philadelphia Epressiegves prig williarnspdrt. " arrives at Philadelphia e ai l'Areilligasevenrt -0., arrives at Philadelpma. Buffalo Express Leaves Uri= •• " • " arrives at Philadelphia: Express east'eonnects at Corry. Hail east at Corry and Irrineton. Express west at Irvineton with trains on Oil Creek and Allegheny River Railroad. ALFRED L. TYLER, General Superintendent. 'WEST JERSEY RAILROAD. v' • FALL AND WINTER ARRANGEMENT. 00)1MENOING TUESDAY SEPT. 2lst, 1869. Leave( Philadelphia, Foot of Market street (Upper Berry) at 8.15 A.M. Mail, for Bridgeton, Salem, Millville,Yine land, and all intermediate stations. • 4_, • 3.15 P. M. Mall, for Cape May, vmeland and way stations below Glassboro. 8.801'.11..t Passenger, for Bridgeton, Salem, and ea intermediate stations. - • 5.30 P. M., Woodbury, and 4G/inshore accommodation. Freight train for all stations leaves Camden daily, at 12.00 o'clock, noon. Freight received in Philadelphia at second covered wharf below Walnut street. ' Freight delivered at No, 228 S. Delaware avenue. _ Ocanakutetion tickets, et reduced rates, between Phlial delphia and nitstations. WILLIAM J. SEWELL. SnPorintendent. I'RAVELERS',GUIDE Trunk Line from Philadelphia to .tho interior of' etweltrattia,lthti;t3chaylkilt; StaltinehatuViimber „ land and Wyjming.ValleYll, the ,Northi /fort est rand the Cansuliu; ummer Arrangement of Passenger Trains,. Jeir 12,1869,1caying the cempany,l Depot, Thirteenth • and , streets, Philadelphia; at the folbrAdltg.. 11° M ili gNiNG' A ODAPI '6 IL-At 7,30. for lJteadingand,all interniediate t3tation4and Allentown. ~ • Returning, 'caveat Beading at 8.30 P. arriving he Philadelolda at 9.111 P.M. •• • MORNING; EXPRESS:-At e. 15 for' a tiling, :Lebanon; Harrisburg, Pottsville, Pine Grove,Tamagua,; Sunbury, .Williamepert, Elmira, Nochestery .Nlagara` Falle,Entralo, : Willteabarre, Pittlitoni York,, Chambersburg, Hagerstown, ao. • Tha7.3o.X. M. train connects at Otailteg iiith the East Pennlykrania Railroad trainti for Allentown,•c., and the 8.15 A . M. train connects with the ; Lebanon V,allr train for H.arrisburg, iko.; at Port Clinton with•Catavdssa B. , R. trains for Wallitunaport,LockHaven,Elmint, drc_,. - at Harrisburg with . Northern 'Central, Cumberland Val ley. and Schuylkill and Susg_nohanna. trains for North ; - umbetiandi Ohataberiffitirg,Pine, EIINOON EXPILESS.-LtsweiThilidelphliV at '8.30 - P. M. forßeading,ttatrille, Harrisburg, &c., eon.. necting•with Reading and Railroad trains for Columbia, Arc. 'POTTSTOWN ACCOMMODATION-LLeaves Paths.: town at 6.25 A.M. stopping at the intermediate stations; arrives in Philadekhia At 8.40 A. M. -Returning leaves' Philadelphia , at 4 P.:21.; arrives irl Pottstown at 6,40•, • READING AND potrsviiiit'AbbiiiiiitirDA, TION-Leavea Pottsville at 5.401A,.-M, and. Reading at 730 L. M., stoppiniat allway stallons; arrives in phuaJ. • eturning, leaves Philadelphia atl3s PAL: arrives In Reading at 810 I': If and at Potttiville at 9,40 T. M.: Trains for Philadelphia leave Harrisburg at 15.10 A. M. and Pottstille at 9.00 A. M , arriving in Philadelphia, at 1.00 P. Afternoon trains leave Harrisburg at 2.00 P. 11., and Pottsville at 2.45 P. M.; arriving , dB Phils delphia at 6,45 P. M • 13 arriaburg Accommodation leavea Reading at 7.15 M., and Harrisburg at 4.10 P. M. ;Connecting at Read ing with Afternoon Accommodation south at 6.30 P.M., arriving in Philadelphia at 9.15 P.M.. Markettrain,With Passatiger: car : ' attached, leaves' Philadelphia atl2:4slmon for Pottsville and all , Way Stations; leaves Pottsville at 5.40 A. 31.,_ connecting at Reading with accommodation train for Philadelphia and all Way Statione. ' k li thetibnve trains rnirdallyT-Sunctays - exeept unday trains leave Pottaville at 8 A. M., and Phila delphia at 335 P.M.; leave Philadelphia for Beading at 8.06 A. M., returning from Reading at 4.25 P.M: • • CHESTER- VALLEY ,RAILROAD. -Passengers for Downingtown and intermediate points take the 730 A. M.,.12,46 and 4.30 P. M. trains from Philtuielphia,return imifrom Dowl,ingtown at 6:10 A. M., 1.00 P. M. and 5.45 PERKIOMEN RAILROAD.-Passengars for Skippack take 7.30 A .51„4.30 and 635 P.M.trains for Philadelphia, returning from Skippack at 6.16 and 8.15 A.M.,1.00 Stage lines for various points in Porklomen Valley con • nect with train EXPRE S S giIIe and Skippack; NEW YORKFOR PITTSBURGH AND THE WEST.-Leaves New York at 9.00 A. M., 6.00 'and' 8.00 P; M passing Reading at 1.06 A. Id., 1.60 and 10.19 • P, M., and connects at • Harrisburg with Pennsylvania and Northern Central Railroad Expresa Trainafor btirgh, Chicago, Williamsport, Elmira, Baltimore, ' /4c. Returning, Expreas Tram leaves Bilirrieburg on arrival' • of Pennsylvania Express from Pitteburgh, at 235 and 5.20 A. M. and 10.65 P. M., passing Reading at 4.30 and 7.05 A. - M. and 12.60 P.M., arriving at New York 11.00 A.M. and 1230 and 6.00'P. M. •Sleeping Cars accompany these trains through between Jersey City and Pittsburgh, without change. Mail train for New York leaves Harrisburg at 8.10 A. M. and 2.05 P. M. Mail train for Harrisburg leaves No York at 12 Noon. SCHUYLKILL VALLEY RAILROAD-Trains leavo Pottsville at 6.30 and 1130 A.M. and 6.40 P.M..returning from Taninana at 8.35 A. M., 2.15 and 4.15 P. M. , • SCHUYLKILL AND SUSQUEHANNA RAILROAD -Trains leave Auburn at 8.65 A. 3. awl 3.20 P. M; for Pinegrove and Harrisburg, and at 12.10 noon for Pine grove and Treinont; retuning from Harrisburg at' 7.46 A.: M. and 3.40 P. M., and from Tremont at 6.46 A.M. and 5.05 P. M. •TICKETS. -Through first-class tickets and emigrant tickets to-all the principal points in the North and West and Canada. Excursion Tickets from Philadelphia to Reading :and . Datermediate Stations, good for day - only, are sold by Morning Accommoda ti on , Market Train, Reading and - Pottstown Accommodation Trains at reduced rates. Excursion Tickets to,Philadelphia, good for day only, are sold at Reading and Intermediate Stations by' Read ing and Pottstown Accommodation Trains at reduced rater.: , The following tickets aro obtainable only at the Office of S. Bradford, Treasurer, No. 227 South Fourth street, Philadelphia, or of G. A. Nicolls, General Superinten dent, Reading. • Commutation Tickets at 25 per cent. discount , between. any points desired, for families and firms. • Mileage Tickets, good for 2400 miles, between anis:di:its at 552 50 each for families awl firms. • Season Tickets, for three, ex, nine or twelve months_ or faldercouly;to - all - pcinWat'redaced - rateti. Clergymen residing tin the line of the road will be far niehed with cards, entitling themselves and wives to tickets at half fare Excursion Tickets from Philadelphia to principal sta-, dons, good for Saturday, Sunday. and Monday, at- re. duced fare, to be had only at the Ticket Office, at This. teenth and Calinwhill streets. • _ ~,. • FREIGHT.-Goods of all descriptions retwardad to all the above points from the Company's New Freight Depot, Broad and Willow streets. Freight Trains leave . Philadelphia daily at 4.35 A. 12,46 noon, 5.00 and 735 P. M. for Reading, Lebanon, Harrisburg, Pottsville, Port Clinton, and all , mint* bee yowl.' Rails close at the Philadelphia Post - office for all plasm on the road and its branches at Si. M and for the prin cipal Stations only at 2.15 P. M. , - BAGGAGE. Dungan's Express will collect Biggo.ge for all • trains . leaving Philadelphia Depot. Orders can be left At No. 225 South Fourth street, or at tke Depot, Thirteenth and Callowhill streets. . NORTH PENNSYLVANIA. RAILROAD. —THE MIDDLE ROUTE.-Shorteet and most di rect line to Bethlehem, Euston, Allentown, Mauch Chunk, Hazleton, Whitt Haven,Wilkesbarre, Mahanoy City, lit. Carmel Eittston,,Tunkluirmock , Scranton, Carbondale and all the points in the Lehigh and Wyo ming coal regions Passenger Depot in Philadelphia, N. W. corner Berko and American strees. SUMMER ARRANGEMENT, 15 DAILY - TRAINS. —On and after TUESDAY, June Ist, LW, Passenger Trains leave the Depot, corner of Berke and American streets, daily (Sundays excepted), as follows:( 6.45 A. M. Accommodation for Fort Washington. , AtA. /51.—Ittorning Express for Bethlehem .and Principal - Stations on North Pennsylvania Railroad, connecting at ',Bethlehem with Lehigh Valley Railroad, for Allentown, Catasauqua, Slutington; Mauch Chunk; Weatherly ,Jeanetrville, Hazleton,White Haven, Wilkes barre, Kingston, Pittston, Tunklutnnock, and All points in Lehigh and - Wyoming Valleys,' also, in connection with Leuigh and Mahanoy Railroad for Mahanoy fifty, and with Catawissa Railroad for Rupert, Danville, Mil ton and Williamsport. Arrive at Mauch Chunk at 12111 at Wilkesharre at 2.50 PM.;at Mahanoy City at 1.50 P.M: At 8.45 A. 31.—A.cconnn0dation for DoylestoWn, atopp 'ping at all intermediate Stations. Passengers' for low Grove, 11...tboro' and Hartsville, by this .train, take Stage at Old York Road. 9.45 A. M. (Express) for Bethlehem, Allentown, Mauch Chunk,. White Haven Wilkosbarre, Pittston, Scranton and Carbondale via Lehighi and Susquehanna Railroad, and Allentown and Easton, - and points on New Jersey Central Railroad and Morris and Essex Railroad to New York via,Lehigh Valleyßailroad. At 10.45 A. M.—Accommodation for Fort Washington, stopping at intermediate Stations. 1.15, 3.120 and S P.M..—Accommodation to Abington. At 1.42 P. 111.—Lehigh'Valley Express for Bethlehem, Easton, Allentown, Blanch Chunk, Hazleton, White Haven,W W ilkesbarre, Pittston, Scranton, and YoMing Coal Regions. At 2.45 P. M.—Accommodation for Doylestown, stop - , ping at all intermediate stations. At 4.15 P. M.—Accommodation for. Doylestown, stop ping at all intermediate stations. At 5.00 P. 351.—Through for Bethlehem, connecting at Bethlehem with Lehigh Valley Evening Train for Easton. Allentown, Mauch Chunk. At 6.20 P. M.—Accommodation for Lansdale, stopping at all intermediate stations. At 11.30 P. M.—Accommodation for Fort Washington. TRAINS ARRIVE IN 'PHILADELPHIA. • From Bethlehem at 9A. li., 2.10, 4.45 and 8.26 P. M. 2.101'. M., 4.45 P. M. and 8.251`..)E. Trains make direct connection with Lehigh Valley or Lehigh and Susque hanna trains from Easton, Scranton, Wilksabarre, hanoY City and Hazleton. From Doylestown at 8.25 A.M.,4.55 P.M.and 7.05 P.M From Lansdale at 7.30 A. M. ?From Fort Washington at 9.20 and 10.35 A. AL and 3.10 ON SUNDAYS. - Philadelphia for Bethlehem at 9.30 A. M. Philadelphia for Doylestown at 2.00 P. M. Philadelphia for Abington at 7 P 111: Doylestown for Philadelphia at 6.30 A. M. Bethlehem for Philadelphia at 4.00 P. M. Abington for Philadelphia at 8 P. M. • Filth and Sixth Streets Passenger curs convey passen gers to and from the new Depot. White curs of Second and Third Streets Line and Union Line run within a short distance of the Depot. Tickets must be procured at the Ticket (Mice, in order to secure the lowest rates of fare. ELLIS CLARK, Agent. Tickets sold and Baggage chocked through to_princl pal points, at Bann's - North Penn. Baggage Expreall olhee. No. 105 South Fifth street. WEST CHESTER AND PHILADEL PHIA RAILROAD.—Winter Arraugement.—On and after MONDAY, Oct. 4, 1869, Trains will leaves' follows: Leave Philadelphia, from NOW Depot Thirty-first and Chestnut streets, 7.45 A. M., 11.00 A. Al .4.30 P. P. Id., 4.40 P. M. 6.15 P. Id., 11.30 Leave West Chester, from Depot, on sts; Market . street, 6.25 A. IC, 8.00 A. IC, 7.45 A. SI., 1045 A. M..,1,A0 P. D.. 4.60 P. M. 6.55 Train leaving West Cheste Riddleo A. will, leaving Philadelphia Junction, Lenni, Gleu and Media: leaving Philadelphia at 4.40 P. H. will stop at Media, Glen Riddle, Lentil and B. O. Junction. Passengers to or from stations between West Chester _and Di O. Junction going Rest, will take train leaving. West Chester at T. 4451 A. 51., and car will be attached to Rixprees. Train at C. Junction; and going West, Passengers for titatiOni above D. C. Junction will take train leaving Philadel— rhia at 4.40 P. 31., and will change Ors' at p. O. Juno,' The Depot In Philedelphle; la' reached 'directly by th . o Chestnut and 'Walnut street cars. Those ot the 'Market, street line run within onesatuite, The cars of both KIM connect with each train tr its arriyal. , ON BUN DAYS .-- Leave hiladelphia for Weet cheater ni i at aA. X. and 2.00 P. . _ Leave Weld Cheater for Philadelphia at TA A. M, and Polsengers are alloWed to, take' Wearing Apparel only, ge Baggage, and thcl'Ootripany will not in any MN) be responsible for an amount exceeding one hundreddoll• tars, unless a special contract be made for the same. WILLIAMO. WI3IBLIDE. I General Superintendent_' .. 8.15 A. M. . 9.15 P.M. .. 6.10 A.M. . 3.20 P. M. .. 4.25 A. n. .. 1.20 P. 111. . 6.50 A. M. . 8.45 A. M. 7.15 P. M. .32.20 A.ll. .. 5.10 A. 11. 9.25 A. M. GARDEN AND ATLANTIC ROAD.--On and after MONDAY, October 4, 1869, trains will leate Vine street ferry as follow.: , Mail 'B.OO A. M. Freight (with paesenger oar) ' 9J5 A. Atlantic Aocommodation , 34 P. H. Junction -Aorommodation to duo and Ude.- • mediate stations.. .. .. 8.80 P. .'MAIN ........... Freight. .. .. ....... 11.30 A. 16. Atlantic Acco.namodation..-..- • 6.06 A. 11.. Junction Accommodation Irani (Ate° t..:. (1.20 A. M. HaddiMileld Aoe.onamoilatior,trainkletive ' • - Vine street , • " 10.WA.11. and 2'.00 Haddonfield. . . .. . I.en F. M. and 3,15 P. 14, . , t " 3304.11/D . DrUNIA Agent. TRAVELERS GUIDE e - • : 7P BALTIMORERAILROAD , --TIMET'ABL CotWq,ll.o-4: `‘`i;•• mencing..MONLEVAX t , May , 10th, 1859. Trains wlll"*.ouvtlp Depot, corner Broad and Washington aventlas, frid.k; - lows: . • - • - . (la WAY MAIL TRAIN at 8.50 A t i Ya 001104. for Balllmore,atopping at all. Re r tations.•:. •• 'fleeting with Delaware Railroad ' at Wilmingtrat',; , , orty••!.•P Crisfield and Intermediate Station_ - , EXPRESS TRAIN at 12.00 M. (Sundaya eiceptesilifor.Fo. Baltimore and Washington, stopping at Wilmingtotti,',7,4,fi Perryville and Havre tie Grace. Oennects at Wiltain ,„ o.‘,;•„B( - .1`," top with train for New Castle. • - • XX PRESS TR 4711 at 4:1,0 IP; ' Et`ifiOnditY - it for, Baltimore, and WashingtonAdoPpipt Thnxiow, 140WOod,"Chtymel.44 I`NaviTOrteil-111 0 ?? Stanton t Newark, E'lkton, North Rai , Chariestowttc;•'. , g,ttlf:' , . , Perryville-, Barre_ de Grace, , . . ' Abenleen, Perrinit,Well*P4' ! ;;;.44,fer Edgewood,Nslia_, Obese sand Stemmer's Ilan. ••. _ GHT_EXPRESS at 11.80 P. M, (daily) for•Baltiffielitt,,-W2c . i . and WashingtonstopPing •Chester,.Therlow: t 'LlAz;•_sL"•44qL^T, wood, Claymont ' Wilmington, Newark, ElkttaitNortbfV4 , 4 East, Perry - ville,,Rarre de Grage, Perrin:lWO and Mallt• Passengers for )I'ortrese Monroe and Norfelk !aka the )2.00 id. Train. • , WILMINGTON between Philadelphia and iVilmington, Leave ITILLADELPICIA *at MOP A.:31:4812,`/LCO and • 7.00 P.M. The O.OOP. al, train terinecta with .Delaware` Railroad for liarringtflei and intermediate statinair. , :Leave WILMINGTOgase and 0301... 314.AMt...fiti and , TAO P. M. The A.lO .A. trainl.wlll not stop Demean, Cheater - and ••Phibadellibin. ,,, Tits 0O TAN, train' frogt:„ „Wilmington runs daillia ll ol l P l '# CPP/ 111 4!"49 4 1 . : inidayS'excePted.' - • ' • " • • FrozdtBALTIMOA(E•th: THILADETIEBTA.`e-ltaiVall- • rialtlinere 7 lei, A. EfWayy Mail. 04 A. g,..4z - prees.; • 2.85 P. If. Expresii: .. 7.2s•P:M.,Rivrestri • ; •••, , • 131113 DA TRAIN FROM • 'BALTIMORE at 7.26 P, 31. Sionning at Magnolia, Perrr..„',43§ •tryman'S,oerdeen, Havre-de-Grace,Perryville,ollarlegwi. , ;;,:, town, North-East, Elkton Newark, Stanton, Nerrport,rl, 'Wilmington, Clamant; Linwood and Chester:- • , • ' • pHILADELPHOIA .AND'BALTIMORE ...OlDsl2'.ltAls , RAILROAD TRAlNS—Stopping at all Stations on °hes-, ter Creek'and Philadelphia and - Baltimore central . Leaves PHILADELPHIA for PORT DEP,CSITAS Sun; ,f•'' dal excepted) at 7.00 A. If: and 4.35 The 7.00 A. M. Train will atop at all Stations. between Philadelphia and Lamokin. A Freight Train with Passenger car attahleit will •leave Philadelphia daily (Sundays excepted) at. LOO P • Id., rennin c to Otford. ..`‘,• • " •• - . •t DEPOSIT for 'PHILADELPHIA - San dals except • • at 5.70 - ATI. ‘. • . .1 .mans ieaving WLLMIIitiTON at6.BOA. 81.:'atid 4.15 . ~• P.Mglwili connect at Lamokin' Junction'• wititt,the 7.00 A. And 420, P. M. trains for Baltimore Cenhal R. R. :Through tickets to all point West, South ; andqiiionth „ west may be procured at the ticket , office, 825 Cleiisinut 3- street, ander Continental Hotely where also State Rooms and Berths in Sleeping Cars can be secured !during the '• day.,, Persona purchasing tickets at this office can have • baggge checked at their residence by the- in Trans- , far Company. • , • H. , F .KENNEDY, finp3. , • , IfAST • FREIGHT, LINE ' , VI.A. NORTH. PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD, to Wilkesbarre, ahanoy"City, Mount Carmel, Centralia; and all Points !` on _Lehigh Valley padlrgadand its , branehes:l , • , By new arrangements, perfecto:l this'daf,!tls road ' is ' enabled to give increased despatch . to merchandise con signed to the above-mulled points. - -‘ Goods deliveced at the Through Freight'DePot; B. Z. cor. ,- h'rout and Noble streets, Be tore SP. M., will reach Wilkeabarre 'Mount Carmel. MIRY City , and the other stations ha Mahanoy and Wy vsfiesrsbefore A. ki„„the succeeoing day. ELLIS CLAIM Agent LEGAL ,NOTICES. 'TN THE ORPHANS' COURT FOR THE City, and County' of Philadelpihia-,Eitate of. JAMES e. 'CHRISTY, 'deceased.—The Auditor pointed by the Court to audit, aettle and adjust.the fine and final' account of CA.LVIN'IIt.•CII ISTY, 'Adintnia trator c. t. a. of;JAMES 0: C HRISTYi deceased, , , and , ta report distribution of the p Mance in the hands of tinf accountant, will meat the_ parties interested,' for the purpose, of hisappointmeut, on .PRlDAY.,,October 15th,,' ate o ' clock , P. AI., at his office, 707 NS , ainut atteet,in, the pity , of Philadelphia." . _• GEORGE D. Rupp, 'OO5 th At'' • • - Antlitor. I. - N THE ORPHANS' COURT FOR'THE •• . City and County. of , Philadelphia.—Eitate of. HARLES S, PEA SLEE, decoaeod.—The; Auditor ap- Peinted by the Court to audit. settle and adjust the Bret and Broil account of GBORG . E. P. PEABOD-Y, Execu tor of the last will and testament of sold deCcaeod, and to' report distribution of the balance in tho hands of the accountant, will meet the parties interested, for the purpose of his appointment. ou MONDAY. -October 18th, A. D. 1869, at 4 o'clock P. BL, 'at-his office 8. E. corner Sixth and Walnut streets ( mw.ond-atory),' in the city of Philadelphia. , ,ocs-tu th sst* Gib. JURE.It, Auditor LN THE ORPHANS' COURT FOB, I TII.E . Cityjuni. County of Philadelphia.—Estate WAI. - - ENEM-HA-LDWELL:deceaßecL—.Thu Anditor.ap 'pointed by the Court to audit, settle and adjust the first account of WINTHROP SARGENT and GEORGE W. .NEWMAN, Executors of the last will - and testa ment of WILLIAM WARNER CAI.DWELL, deceased,'W and to report distribution of the balance in the 'hands Of ' the accountant, willmeet the parties interested for theliarpose of his appointment, on MONDAY October llth, 1869, at 4 o'clock P. M. at I his office, To. 707 Saneom street, the pity of Phila delphia. : D. P. MURPHY, Auditor. ISt! -- 1 N THE ORPHANS!, COUILT FOR. , THE 1 City and County of Philadelphia.--Estate of PATRICK NcGOWEN, dectiased:Thit Auditor ap• pointed by the Court to audit, settle 'and adjust the ac count . of .JAMES WILSON , Administrator of tho Estate of , PATRICK, lifcGOWEN,deceased.ead to report 'Hari bation of the balance in the bands of the accountantoicill ' meet the Parties interested for the purpose of his appoint ment, on FRIDAY. October 15th, 1865, at 3 o'clock P.M. at, his office, No. 128 South Sixth street, in the city of PhiladelpbJa. RICHARDSON I.:WRIGHT, oca•ttt th s st§ rAuditor.' FASTATE OF ,THOMAS L. EVANS,. DE .CEASED.—Letters Testamentary on Gm 'Estate of I.IIOMAS 'L. EVANS, deceased, having been granted to The Pennsylvania Company for Insurances on Idree and Granting Annuities, all persons indebted to said Estate are requested to make payment, and those havingg.. claims against the same to present thew at the office of said Company, Ne..%4 Walnutstreet. CHARLES DCTILH, segith studt* • President, VSTATE OF AN.I4,E E. BANCKER, DE .III. ceased.--Letters 'of Administration, cum testa motto auuexo, having heed granted to the - Undersigned, persons indebted to said Estate are requested, to make payment, and those having claims to present them to JANES 'A. BANCKER. care of CHAS. 13. PAN COA ST, Esq.,. 416 Walnut'street. , ' 8'951116V H Ur': BANCICER, . STATE deceased.—Letters a Administration tie //anis ann cum testarnento annexe having been granted to the undersigned, all persons indebted to said , Estate Ore requested to make payment, And those having claims to present them to JAS A. BAZICKEIt, care of. CHAS. 13, I!AATCOAST, gsq., 418 Walnut street. Sag-that* ET'I`ERS. TESTAMENTARY HAVI NG L I_4 been grantedlo the aubscriber - *llion the Eitate'of I 011,N It. PENROSE, deceased. all persons' indebted to the same will make payment, and those' baring claims preeent them to EDWARD BURTON, No. AS , Walnut treat. eel° th,6t. TN THE COURT OP, COMMON. PLEAS IN for the City and County of Philadelphia. - ANNA C. BECKER VS% 'CHRISTOPHER BECKER. Idarch . Term 0869. No. 43. •In Divorce. To CHRISTOPHER BECKER, Respondent :—Tho Depositions of witnesses in the above case, on thrtpart of the Libellant, will, be taken "before JOHN H. SLOAN, Esq.,,Exarniner, at his office, No: 217 &Oh Sixth street, in the City of Philadelphia, on MONDAT, Oct.-18, 1869, at 3 o'clock P. M., Nirlitti and where you may attend if You think proper. Personal service , having, failed on account of your absence. • • G. C, PORVES, se27 16t4 Attorney for Libellant. INSTRITcTIONS. --- , . - RIDING- . SCHOOL;.-- MR. E. , it ~ ...,..L. DE KIEFFER will' open his Riding , :r School,. SOS and3lo Dugan street, below ~ ~.,,..V ..,:. c,: Spruce, ow SEPTEMBER 13,1869, with .ifs k..",y Om a good stock of • well-trained ' horses. • C .,_ . • Horses trained, to the saddle,',. Those, . keeping their horses at this stable can ~- "- , -. , , , i - - ,e• hare tho .privilege.or using the, riding- k room. Saddle horses and carriages for partiesi'ac., to,, hire. --,. PHILADELPHIA School removed to' Noe. 33360338, '1340, 3342 unii3344 Market street, West Philadelphia . . The Pro prietor of this establishment ,informs• his patrons and the public generally, that he has lealied the large' Depot and Stables, formerly °cot:pied by the' Market Street Passenger Railway Company, and is ,new altering and arranging them for his businesst and expects to occupy them, about October lat. The Schoolle the largest in the city, covering an area of over t ; 000 • Sonar() feet.' It its light, he airy, well ventilated in summer; and will be com fortably, ated in winter.. The ptablea ;attached aro also thoroughly : ventilated, anti the lutist coinfortable of any' in the city, .. llandsOme fatally carriages tobire.with careful •drivers, ' Horses taken at'Hones thoroughly trained tb theaaddle. SETH ORAIGE, seo-40 • • Proprietor. MACMN R RO :MERRICK & BON_ - • , , • BOWIILLWATIK FOUNDAY, • ' 430 W.II6}III(GTON Avenue, Philadelphia, • • • ' IfANUFACTURY , • STEAM ENGINES--high and Lovr Pressnraillorisoia tai,.;Vertical, Beam,. and ' Cornish • • B 0 Lk.l —Cyiindor,Pine, Tabular,eo I N :..t ••• ET*/ RABal n tvpa,snd • t r. 'CASTINGS—Learn, Dry and Green Sand; Ornie, , ,to; 'ltOtiFti—lrott Frsme A s for aordring with Skits' : or Iron: • - • TANKS-4)l'o , lst or Wronglit Irou,for refigq;ll47,ter, • 01, • , GAB kta.pltxitr_RY- 1 8ech as 11,c4OAti_ jiineh v tglitining ''' Holders and Trainee, 'Paella:4, Uowe'lwActiWorteek• Burrow':Valv Governor', arGATt DIACIIIIIIIIRT—Ptsch as ..V•C‘lnirl YAW' And ,Pzu:nps, Defeestors. Bona Blsek "FiltersPilitraenw, '•w aahere and Elevators, Bag Fllioati, 811161W1414"Bout„, •plaalt. Os r y a ? ' De MOM SC ofa *0 In Philadelphia and vietnitr,ot iTlCautiVrl Paton% • Variable Cut-off BteanrEnninei ) , " 1 i( 1 ; . 4 ' T. Ia the United States, of WsinorallyratOnt • tiott int end tielf-balanciugOanyllngsp sir cads. & Barton'' Improisthist iallssiothltalletrhotiamit Centrifugal , Sartori , Potent wr i o n pronsageorf, ; ' trohan is Drill Grind g Bast fk• • Contractors the d ot - mi.:, • . Starlet' for work Sugar or saohists", ir!"t, , ArioPPEE . AND ,, YELLOW .kiagETAL, 2 1,../ SheethitlMßr Co illonotaolteltag lotralt Copper cooetantl or.-103 1. 717,1 1 Mx.0 WINS U& 0 .. ee - . ViARIZESTOCK'a TABIRLATark 1 :IN-: ; r dereigned are uo Wit fifth thitlHUlCiFshoo - stook'. eeiebristett lat • Fatiwathtett they ear tat . e trade. .1 . , &.4111 1 . s 4tierkte tOr a ohnewt . 0 .ledsonth . ware tortrae.- , • - , 4 - Fili.o.l. K.-704 , ~,BA.tp.i „ , 14344 iow ‘...1 Olulk.Afkotit.: ' 4103.11,10 Ur t ..'. , - 4 44 ' ( • 2 '''.','".F., we, IX fr•l'• ' •'• '' • •