EZZ=ZiM=== }' , - 4' z awsfiaggi•NoWlNEsiiD Selionmacker oak 41124:0 Iftrubre Ginsia lt a nd Planneereltitivereally acknow l edged to be 'the bun instritinents and , hare- been ,awarded ,the IHlLVet.arted.Atall the principal exhibitions , the iv PI y, Our ; extensive realities for menu. amt , lurktE et - us to offer great M:temente. .11E BURDETT °ROAN: , We haveistevired the a_gencV for the sale of The cele blited Burdett Organ. it has no rival, The ennerioritV of these lusts umcnts over all others is 50. groat that wO, shallette ecntradietion. ('all and cexamine our, extensive stock' of Pianos and Organs Ocetbre purchasing eleewhore. .S 8..-Telcy and second-hand Pianos to rent. SCROMACKER .t 00., oel2 dtz 1103 Chestnut street, • • Jae ittoramillfull. If you desire beauty, you rboAd nett Magan's Mti,gnolie. Balm. iteiVefSiS eat, refined, satin like texture to the Com gleiletf;temoves Roughness, Redness, Blotches% Sun burn+ num, kc., and adds a.tinge of Yearly Bloom to the tplaineektleataree. Ithiingi the Bloom of ioutb . to the lading /ilea, and'changes the rustic Country Girl into Fashevanable City In Übe ueo of the Magnolia Balm lice tho true secret of 'Meant', No lady need complain of her Complexion 'who 'will incest 75 cents in this delightful article. Lyon's .liathairon is the hest ,hair Dressing in • Albrecht, — RIERES do SCHMIDT, FINST-CLltguttalal rLATEs P/ANO FORTES. Warcrooms, No. 610 ARCII Street, Philadelphia. •-• Ergtlike i tasni - Durfra's Piano Rooms—First Class 7.1.AN10S AT XIX ETOPRICES. • Ohickering Sons , world-renowned 'Pianos Marshall tour c-8-1-rafell-Piaatot Ibuo-k-Sonis_beautifol , prietv the very lowest. Now PDUTTON,rent. WM. H. 'DUTO lea22-&n§ 1126 and 1128 Chestnut street. Strallwars Pianos received the highest • piaraxt(fiKitt geld , medal) at the International Exhibition, "ris• 1867. .00 Official Report, at the Wardroom of BLASIUS , 81108., No. 1006 Chestnut street. EVENINGBULLETIN. artiesday, October 12,1868. A VAST WORD. This„paper will reach, many readers. before' the 4 hour for closing the polls. If there are .among them :any qualified voters, who have . Sailedtto` vete, weleg 'them not to neglect the A. few• votes, , one way or the oiher, may -elect a:Councilman, or a member of the Legis ~latrtie,or, a Oity officer; or even a Governor and •a SUpreme Judge. No good Republican has • a right to remain away l'rom. the polls to-day, •any more than he haS on' the' day of a Presi .4lential election. • Our-adversaries are working desperately, • and resorting 'to 'many of the Schemes by ' "which they carried Philadelphia last October.' '.The - only way to , defeat them thoroughly is to, bring • 'Out the 'Whole Republican vote. business nor indisposition • should be made an' excuse 'for staying- - away from the polls. Good citizens can 'afford .to make rimy sactifices - forthe Tsake - rof - carrying - the R,epublican. ticket. The time for argument about candidates and platforms is past; but • there is still a little time left for voting. YTIIE ACADEMY AND THE“ DISPATCH.” • Yesterday we published a communication, on behalf of the Academy of Natural • Sciences • of Philadelphia. It was a vindication of the institution against a charge broUght by the • oldest of our Sunday papers, and one that is . always so zealous in italocalanibitiOn, as well . as truthful 'in. its local annals, that it is gene rally accepted as an -authority on all topics ) , relating to .the history of Philadelphia, its pro .gress and its projects. The Sunday Dispatch is never mercenary or selfish, but it is some times unjust.. Its injustice arises from its . intense vigilance, which leads it to suspect that there is a ring" everywhere, and that some body is paid for advocating every measure,' not already advocated by the Dispatch, that has • other advocates in Philadelphia. Not being purchasable itself, it still oughtnot to insinuate or declare that all others are in the market, or that they are: already bought up, when they happen to differ from it in discussing local enterprises. • The Dispatch: may suspect thtit the BULLE - bas been paid for urging that the Academy of Natural Sciences, and other insti tutions which:belong to the sphere of educa tion, enlightenment, culture and morality, should urge,- or should ever have urged, that the useless, and,—since great parks exist in the city,—the superfluous vacant patches of . Penn Sc iare should be appropriated gratui tously to such institutions. The suspicion against the Bur.LE:rix need not be:combated. . Everybody who knows anything about. the • earnest, .self-sacrifleing .students who compose the Academy of Natural Sciences; knoWs that -• they have no personal advantage to gain by placing their proposed building in Penn Square, . and, theatfore, that they have no money to spend in buying up newspaper support. That they should ever have entertained the idea of buying votes in . the Pennsylvania , LegislatfireAfor a work that-could not possibly have. put a ,peurly in the, pocket of any of • them, seems to be supremely absurd. It has -cost a great deal more than the Academy is worth to buitthe passage of. some of the most innocent of .caws, in the recent. history of -the Pennsylvania Legislature, and the.Acadeniy of ,N at iv:al Sciences, along with. kindred institu . tionsithat do not, give salaries. or declare divi . lends, cannot have money enough , to spend to buy tit sanetionof the State tnits occupation .44 eves, a small Tart of penar Square. The ..charge or insinstatinn of the Lii,spatch against -the managers of Ate Academyought to have : nome ; stihstantial tkaindation, or else it ought :to be witbdrawn. the communication of our correspon ,deut, 1 , 4 13," •it apppeays that the corporation ',known as ,the Acadory of Nat.isral .-Sciences bas•done nothing towassis Proeurittg.a' site for . 11 new building. The necessity Ter -such a taaccommodafie; preserve and. extend the, , ripvifliernt .museum of the Academy, is • felt more illy . its oilWers than by the 'most:. • • enthusiastic of its visitors. But all drat has been done towards procuring a grant of a.,pcir-' tion Tenn:Spare,' or 'money to buy a lot elsewhere, :and to erect a proper edifice for the , minetun, seems to have been the work of .a Board of Trustees, whose authority is conditioned on the • funds they, may reoeive, and whose funds seem un likely to reach the required amount during the 4 :j: life of the present generation of xoeii. The possession of a suitable piece: of ground might •—. accelerate :'the construction of the building. But that virtuous principle which allows. mil :• lions of the public money to be wasted worth . • _Jess objects, and refuses the use, of a piece of sitherWise :useless ground t o an histHutson : which' is a real honor to Philadelphia, has pre ,,,Penn &luare has been refused the honerable body that rules -US Elan . . . , . . . . ta TIMATAILY 7 EVE„ ., ISW.BUTAAN' Nr-RITILAAELPARIAMIESIIO - -QMOBBR A : 2.- . Harrisburg, r<,-„Ofspatcla, which is nsitaily severe, in its udgrrient of 'Wive work;liquanse it suspects bribery, com-, Mewls the 'failure of thitivrcileet and' stirs sinuates that, there was bribery; itlther,the_ Legislature , has,,,been incorruptible,. of, 'the, Academy has been too poor, for the comma illation of the Penn Square project. But' it is somewhat "unjust 'that the officers of the Academy should be suspected 'of committing felonious, acts, by,' which not one of them could be individually benefitted. It seems to be still more uiljust when it is seen that the Academy has , done nothing - at all but attend to its business as a scientific institution. If,with the consent of the State and the city, or by the gifts of good citizens, who take pride hi assist ing deserving institutions, the Academy of Natural Sciences should ever have a proper building for the preservation of it's treasures, its managers should lie of the insinuation made against them that, they have bought or tried to buy the Legislature, unless proofs to sustain it can be presented. • THE SPANISH: TROUBLES. It is impossible to obtain)frorn.the cable de aches an vel exact idia of the progress or defeat of the rebellion in -pain ation that we receive is meagre, fragmentary, and, to some extent, ccintradictory. Nearly all of it comes directly from Madrid, and it bears upon it the marks of a' rigid government censorship. We hear that the, republicans have been defeated in three or four places ; that . in Andalusia, Catalonia and . Aragon, where the rebellion began, it has lost its importance; that 'large bodies of the insurgents have surrendered, and that several of the leaders have been shot in cold blood. The last statement is, the - only one that we can accept with confidence. It isin the true Spanish manner, as we well know from the recent butcheries of Unarmed Cubans. Of the other. stories we are doubtful, partly because they come from the government, which has 'an: interest in misrepresentation, and, be sides, a Spanish disposition to exagerate Nieto ties ; but chiefly because other despatches declare that the goVernment apprehends an attack upon Madrid, and is making elatorate ,preparations to meet it. It will hardly' a con sidered probable that danger coup be feared in the capital from an insurrection which had been entirely crushed iri all the outlying provinces. If there is no hope for the re- Publicans in Andalusia and . Catalonia,—if they have been overwhelmed in Saragossa, it is simply out of the question that they should menace Madrid seriously. Either one story or the other is false . ; and, as that Whictells of the apprehended----assaultpoir -1 the capital is at least disinterested, we will ac cept it in preference to the others. It is strengthened by a report from republican sources in Paris that the movement is gaining ground rapidly. But we shall not be able to arrive at the exact truth until we receive by mail the statements of unprejudiced corres pondents. By that time the rebellion may, in deed, be crushed, for, despite its apparently .formidable character,we regard its success as • impossible. The republicans foil e bill a Small faction, and though tftey are directed by some of the ablest men in Spain, and Will ' assuredly rally about their standard members of other parties, they will still be un able to cope successfully with the organized ' forces. of the government. The only effect that will be produced by their demonstration will be a prolongation of the disorganization of Spanish politics and Spanish society which has existed since the overthrow; of Isabella. Perhaps, if this outbreak is followed by others in the interest of some other party, the conse quence will he utter. disgust of the people with the anarchy which prevails, and then a demand for a return to the ancient despotism. The republicans by tjtis untimely movement may contribute, unwittingly, to the destruction of the only chance that Over existed in Spain for the formation of a free government—the elec tion of a constitutional sovereign to the throne. OUR PAVEMENTS. We see with pleasure that attention is being directed to the very bad condition of the cobble stone pavement between the railway tracks. Month by month the stones become more and more polished and slippery, so that horses slide and slip, straining'and laming themselves, The evil is a very serious one, Voth to the public generally, and•to the railway companies. As respects 4 he public generally, it is to be remembered that the railway companies have occupied all the principal streets, and have taken not only the best part of the roadway itself, but the only good part. The roadway is curved ; the railways by flattening the top of the curve, have thrown the whole pitch to the sides ; these are always paved with the largest and most unmanageable pebbles and,:are pretty generally in bad order and cut up, for the rail wayshave very imperfectly fulfilled the con- • dition of their charters that they should keep the side , of the street in good repair. It re sults from all this that every one who uses a horse, best or worst alike, must either go over the slippery stones between the tracks, or risk breaking his vehicle by taking the sides. With' the railway cortipanieillie injury to the horse must be ,very great, and the suffering to the animals proportionate: Their horses, as well as all others, going over these round pebble stones, the dirt froM between the upper surfaces of which Las been removed, strike the frog - continnally - uponAlie rounded-- upper sur face with, a force, proportionate tec the heavy weiglit, of the body.-- go ing, .over a that surface the weight rests on the shoe and-on the hard crust of the hoof tc~ 4vhich the shoe is nailed, and, unless the.Sititace lie slippery as well as .flat;the shock is easily borne. Many persons, even .of those who use and own horses, are scarcely aware how much mis- Chief is done by our pavements. The number, of horses that are lamed by them in the course of a year must amount to many thousands. It is no uncommon thing that a horse that will beat a twenty mile drive without stop ping on a summer road, Without feeling his feet, will show signs of suffering after going half a mile between our rails. Many persons who live out of town will not drive to town at all for fear. of injuring their horses on •the cobble stones. f;kime • owners of 'valuable animals living in town, consider it necessary to walk the whole distance.' over the stones. But the eirect is the same, whether the horse bp valuable or ordinary. Any tendeney to weak ness becomes aggravated into confirmed lame,. A • ness, and even the best and, soundest feet are liable to stiffer. - • • Thereis-no doubt that our whole -.system of , paving needri- a `reforiff,r but o'st urgent need is for the , spacebetween; . thetTails. It is therefore with pleasure that lia. - se&the matter' . already before ;councils, and we hepe.for some .speedy'action. - - Eltperience ito*SAat there is • very little' wear on this portinn of the pave ment ; it is the wheel, forcing ita way like a wedge between the stones, and quickly widening every. 'crevice, that de'stroys the 'paving, and not the horse's, hoof. A good wooden pavement laid between the iails ISst almost indefinitely, itwould.efect an hii; mense saving in hoises, andshouldhe done in-' deed as a mere matter, of humanity. The reform is . needed for so ninny reasons that it is only a wonder that it sheuld havebeen so long postponed. PLIMBING IitORIK, AND IiCS 'F:XiiENSE • Probably, theFe : ip.o . eareely a householder in this connitunitywhobaS not at some time or another had a most; disagreeable .surprise over , - . his plumbing bill. -Indeed, this . tendency does not seem tote confined to this vicinity , for the London Times' lately Observed' 'of 'something fat-pit. 44 wa 'he a sluniber's bill which_ no- body could understand,,. or tolerate,. or he I), Paying." There is very little doubt that plumbing work is made to cost too much. The carpen ter, for example, charges fOr hiS work by measurement or by daY-work, :as has been agreed, and for hia materials he either sends the original bill, or pays it himself and charges 'it at cost. But the plumber, besidns making an equal profit oif,,lfis jonrneyinen,As very far from charging , his'materials at cost ~• nor is he satisfied with a moderate profit' . Any one who will analyse a plumber's bill, and' ascertain the actual charge of the manufacturer of . the lead pipe, iron pipe, brass fittings, &c., will fmd i that they have been charged to hits at Antes of sixty, eighty, one hundred, and even one hundred and fifty per cent. profit. Nor is, this confined to Small 'operators, but even in matters amount ing to thousands of dollars these exorbitant . • • overcharges are made. To carry on this system and prevent a re foOn,. the following two rules are Made : First, the owner is not alloWed to purchase his own materials;the plumber must furnish them, Or will not do the work. Second,the plumbers haYe combined to insist that the manufacturers shall sell to them only. - At *a meeting of the plumbers held a few months since, it was de termined to carry out this 'rule' ' even More stringently than heretofore. And it, will hardly •be believek but . is nevertheless literally true, that the Phil adelphia-manufacturers were threatened that unless they would positively refuse - to sell to those not hi the business, the plumbers would combine to purchase the whole of their materi als New York,' and reported that they had satisfactory , offers from New York to supply over a million of dollars of materials an ...finally. The result of this would be that the plumb ing and-gas-fitting in every Philadelphia house would be done.with NeW York materials, to the exclusion of the Philadelphia manufactures. The result of these systematic overcharges is seen in the , excessive multiplication of pluinbers'"shops. Every journeyman who can get together a little money opens a shop, in order that he may get a chance to furnish these materials and make the excessive profit on them. Itresults that the trade has becoMeab- . snrdly subdivided, set that, while a master-car penter will employ from fifty to several hun dred hands, the largest plumbing establish ments in this city find employment for but six or eight hands, and' even on this make very large profits. It is time that the whole matter was re formed. The overcharges_ foe plumbing tend to deprive persons Of moderate means from the free use of water, and to prevent its exten sion through their houses as generally as con venience demands. And no one, whether his means be large or anal), submits willingly to imposition, though it may be so systematized as to prevent his escape unless he chooses to appeal to a jury. Iteal Estate and-Stoeks.---For Sales of Real Estate, Stocks, Furniture, Machinery, &c.,,see Thomas d: Sons' advertisements, handbills and eata logue. DP..R. THOMAS, THE LATE OPE .1-1 rotor at the Colton Dental Association, is now the only one in Philadelphia who devotes his entire time and practice to extracting teeth, absolutely without pain. by fresh nitrous oxide gas. Waco, No. 1027 Walnut streets. thho-Iyrp§ OOLTON DENTAL ASSOCIATIOI4ORI 11.) ginated the ancesthetic use of NITROUS OXIDE, OR LAUGHING GAS, And devote their whole time and practice to extracting teeth without pain. Office, Eighth and Walnut street 4. aTkOli ENICYYIIILLIYPI, CARPENTER AND BUILDER, jelo-Iyrp POSTS AND RAILS, POSTS AND RAILS, all styles. Four-hole, square and half round posts. Shingles—Longtand short, heart and sap. 60,000 feet first common' boards. Shelving, lining and store-fitting material made a spe cialty. NICIIOLSON'S, mys .if r p Seventh and Carpenter etreetS. JOHN CRUMP, BUILDER, 1731 CIIESTEUT STREET, and 213 LODGE STREET. Mechanics of every branch required for house-building and lifting promptly furnished. fe.27,tf ------- (11 WARBURTON'S IMPROVED — , ism Slated and easy-Bettina Drees Hata (patented) in all the approved fashions of the season. Cheatnnt ()tree next door to the Post-Office. oe6-tire H. P. & TAYLOR, PERFUMERY AND TOILET SOAPS (VAL AND ROUND IRON CAKE Griddles, some of which aro very thick and large, for use in restaurants. Also soapstone *griddles, which moire no grease. and therefore emit very little smell or smoke. For sale by TRUMAN &HlIAW , No.B35lEight Thirty-live) Market street, below Ninth. REV OLVIN G CORN POPPERS ; OiR - Cheotnut lionetere a variety of Coffee Roasteiti and, a fair variety of housekeepers' Hardware, For sale by. T RUMAN & &HAW, N 0.836 (Eight Thirty-five) Market street • below Ninth. TIRIDGET FORGETS TO - "SHIIT THAT do•eithie cool weather. Put on it a door-sprin2, and it will shut itself and Have your temper. A variety and other salasonable hardware for sale by TRUMAN & SHAW, lio. au (Bight Thirty-live) Market streety be low Ninth. MAGAZIN DES MODES. 1014 WALNUT BTREET 111113. PROCTOR. Cloaks, Walking Suits Bilks, • Dress Id °ode,Lace Shawls Ladies' Underclothing . . and adios'L Furs. Dresses ratide4o measure in Twenty-four Hours. ;AT EDDING AND ENGAGEMENT Y Rings or solid 18 karat lino Gold—a apecialty; a fall assortment of sizes, and no chargo for engraving names, FARR ,k BROTHER, klakere t ' • 10y24-Arp tf 824 Oheetnot etreet below Fourth; PHIELADELPH_TA SURGEONS'' xr.,4" BANDAGE INSTITUTE 04 N. NINTH .: ' otreet, above Market. B. O. EVERETT'S Trues positlv4y cures Ruptures. Cheap Trusses, Elastic - Bells, Stockings, Supwrtere, Shoulder ppo Braces, Crutches, Susperles,Fßo Bandages, Ladle') attended to by Aire. E. • • • iyl-iyrp 1 O. 1024 SANSOM STREET, PHILADELPHIA! —CU and eka.liortit Ninth etroot „- = • • THE PEOPLE SAY "How can they sell so very cheap at W-ANAMAK ER at BR OWN'S.,"_ EDWA FrAmous, S. E. cora Chestnut and Seventh Sts. Large stock and complete assortment of ?: FALL AND WINTER GOODS, Including Argyle, 42d, Glen Lyon Scotch Tartan Plaids for Pants and Suits. WO, Quality Firet•Cfaee Clothes at MODERATE PRICES for CASH. . , F. .A:k, 110 YT & BRO., ASSEMBLY BUILDING. TENTH AND CHESTNUT STREETS, Have now ready a largo ock of VENIE CLOTHING FOR BOYS AND CHILDREN. Ale°, a largo assortment of Piece Goods for Gents' Wear. oc9 a to th 78trA MRS. KEYSER'.S OPENING OF Fall and Winter. Clothing, Thursday, October 14th, 1869, No. 1227 Chestnut Street. :Er LADIES' DRESS MAKING-ALSO DONE. oc7-6trp§ FURNITURE, itu. GEO. J..HENKELS, CABINET MAKER, • 1301 and 1303 CHESTNUT STfiEET. ESTAIMISIIED 1944. • Good Furnitnre at the lowest possible price. an3l 23:11 FURNITURE. T. & J. A. HENKELS, AT TIIEIR NEW STORE,IOO2 ARCH STREET, ?ireyv; r e i l c i e i t r:g their ELEGANT FURNITURE at very educed ae2S3rnrp§ I•~~71 x 771 ~:'ll~:7f'.(.=i ADAMEIN METZ ST STEAM MARBLE WORKS, lOW RIDGE AVENUE, Philadelphia, Has on hand a LARGE ASSORTMENT OF MARBLE MANTELS Persona from the Country would do well to CALL AND EXAMINE BEFORE PURCHASING • eeothetn3mr.6 'ELSEWHERE FOR SALE. - - ft ARCH STREET PROPERTY FOR SAI.JE, 1922. ARCH STREET. . . One of those splendid new Brown-Stone HOUSES three stories and Mansard roof, 20 feet front, 150 feet deep to Cuthbert street, on which there is a very tine Stable. The House Is very large and comniodions, hav ing all the modern improvements, and built by the pre sent owner in the vary best manner. inquire at 1924 ABCII Street. sal tfra GERMANTOWN PROPERTY FOR Salo—A Dwelling and largo and valuable lot of ground on the N. W. side of Wut lane, near Green street. The lot is 270 feet by33B feet deep. ocl24tu th s . G. CALVERT, 520 Walnut street. FRESH CHARCOAL BISCUIT—A remedy for Dyspepsia, Heartburn, Constipation Acidity, &c. Prepared only' by JAMBS T. SHINN: Broad and Spruce streets. • . oa-tfrp-- CHARLES GIBBONS HAS REMOVED his Law Office to the North American news paper building,' No. 132 South TIMM street, second floor, front. se22-26trp§ r READ ! READ READ! IM rt to Ladies I ELM, Economy, Duro ehoes with all the above qualities for s u es, Children and Youths, you can Mlle b Lo i a ti drm t i y ey 3,t; you want T, 8 NO. 234 B. Eleventh street. 8020 ° 41 4p§ 111:=26!1!IIN= "VV - • corner Ninth Old. Chestnut ,f4treets,_ , PHILADELPHIA. NN &- 00/ LL HOWE F 3 You can't expect to be elected Every candidate for office Is invited to call at Rockbill & Wilson's - .And make selections irons he-vaststock-o Fine Fall. Clothing Which is displayed In our magnificent _ GREAT BROWN HALL." Electoral -Suits for gentlemen of all sizes, who arc_pld enough to vote., , 'Young Gentlemen's Suits, for those who ex pect to vote before ruany r years. Vote the whole ticket; but remember that the people's • choice, in matters' of good taste, superior workrnan. 4 liip, and low prices, is AND' GRAVE STONES W'HOLESALE AND . RETAIL P::A . P..'EL L I : .IIA . . - N . ,G.1.,•.N_U._.: CLOTHING. Unless you present A respectable appearance ! Boys' and Lads' Suits, just the thing to please the more juvenile elassi of rising rnanbool: THE GREAT BROWN HALL ROCKHILL & WILSON, 603 and 605 CHESTNUT Street. MM=MM CURTAIN ESTABLISHMENT. The Subscribers are now receiving t fear FALL ASSORTMENT Of new arid elegant materials for Parlor, Drawing-Room, Chamber, Library and Dining-Room "' WINDOW 'CIIRTAINS, Cernprifing the Lab - et Importations and Newest De Nip no and Fabrics in RICH PLAIN 'SATINS, RICH SATIN DAMASKS, • DROCATELLES, BROGUE STRIPED TERRYS, SILK TY:BUYS, COTELLNS, ALL-WOOL TERAYS, REPS, DAMASKS, ego Also, &LARGE IMPORTATION of French and Swiss Lace Curtains in very choice awl elegant desigri. Made expressly for them, and not to be had elsewhere, in qualities ranging from the lowest up to the richest and most expensive. Carved and Plain Walnut, Ebony and Gilt Cornices. Shades in Great Varieties. WRITE HOLLAND, COLORED, BORDERED, LANDSCAPES, ,tc,, CRETONNES., CIIIJNTZLS, N. 11.—First-claas workmen employed to make and Lang Shades, Draperiea, Cortalna, &c. Ortlorc executed promptly, arid all work warranted. SHEPPARD, VAN HARLINGE(sI & 100 S CHESTNUT STREET. scr2 to th s REMOVALS. Xteniov - al. • STEPHEN F. WHITMAN • 11AS REMOVED HIS Confectionety &Chocolate Establishment Rican No, 1210 Market Stre?t, to hie New Building S. Ws corner Twelfth and Market Sts. oc.B6tra REMOVAL—THE OFFICE OF . THE PHILADELPHIA. WOOD PAVING CO. removed from B. W. corner Broad and Chestnut Streets to 238,4 WALNUT street. Tho Company are now pro ;trod to enter into contracts with property owners to lay Mr. Alex. M lailler's Improved Wood Payo ent.[oc7-Imrp§ S ABLE FUR,' . RUSSIAN AND HUDSON'S BAY, The Subscriber having made the abovo articles a SPECIALTY in hishusiness,has prepared a large assort ment inAlifferent styles at hie Store, No. 139 North Third Street, Philada. Established 44 years ago. JAMES REISKY. oc2 s to th Saw MONEY TO ANY AMOUNT LOANED UPON DIAMONDS, WATCHES, 1„? JEWELRY PLATE OLOTHENG, ie., at AWES & (50.11 OLD-ESTABLISHED LOAN OFFICE, Corner of Third andllaskill streets, Below Lombard. . _ N.B.—DIAMONDS, WATCHES, JEWELRY; IMS ao., POR BALI!. AT lIEDIAMIABLY LOW PRICES. tiiV24tfrp6 .T.p.ICNEABB'S , NEW HARNESS Ettore ; no better or cheaper goods in tho city expensee reduced by removal ; prices lowerect Ittd Market 'street ; Bic Rom in the door. jyll-ly4p ______ A • REPAIRS TO WATCHES -AND Munical Boxes, in the beet manner, by_ skillful workmen. FARR dc 13ROTHER rt , 24 Chestnut street below Fouh. PICKLES. ARRISON, FURS. a 1. GROCERIES, LIQUORS, &C. English and American PICKLES. Prepared in the best' Cider and Wine mine:imamiimsomn3 MITCHELL & FLETCHER, od' • A - • 102 lyrp • CHAMPAGNE. KUPFk;;TIi*RG'S IMPERIAL One. 6f the fineA Winerever used in this country, and among -the most popular known in Russia. . Received direct through the ,Agoncy, and 'or sale at the Agents' SIMON COLTON & CLARKE, S. W. corner Broad.and Walnut. to NVI-IrT9E CLOVER HONEY IN GLASS CASES. DAVIS' & RICHARDS, ARCH AND 'TENTH STREETS' tit T. KINGSFORD & SON'S Pure Cos . iveg,c• Starch. Ask your Grocer for ,KING7iiFORD'frj, and take no other. • Their Starch is perfo.lty pure, having the natural color, and not the chalk-white pro duced by artificial process. . . Use one-fourth less than of any other brand. KINGSFORD'S OSWEGO CORN' STARCH Is the roost delicious of all preparations for Puddings, Blanc Mange, Cake, dm. ee2l to th n 12trp' FIRST PREMIUM AWARDED BEST FAMILY FLOUR. Choice brands Pennsylvania, Ohio, Missouri, Indiana, Illinois, and •'lart but not least," James S. MelelN First Premium Flour, which we warrant superior to tiny other Flour in 00,4 market. All goods .tielivered tree of charire and war ranted as rewrernted Also, hod quality NEVI IlOPS,in lots to suit. GEO. F. ZEHNDER, FAMILY FLOUR DEPOT, FOURTH AND VINE STS. ncll tirr -7 111 E -VINE ARTS. JAMES S. EARLE & SONS Have now• possession of the entire premises No. 819 Chestnut Street, 'Where they are prepared to exhibit their AND'.!"RIISII STYLES LOOKING GLASSES, " PICTURE FRAMES, &c., &0.,, ROGERS'.GRO( ‘ .!PS, ENGRAVING'S,. NEWtHROMOS, AU latest importations received since t eir disastrous Pre. C. F. HASELTINE'S GALLERIES OF THE FINE ARTS, No. 1125 Chestnut Street.: A Choke Collection of Paintings • On exbibition at the Galleries' every day and on MON DAY EVENINGS until .. Wediumday and Thursday, Oct. 20 and 21, When they will bo sold at: Concert Hall,.Chestnut St., above Twelfth. ‘lll. THOMAS A SONS. Auctioneers.. 'myll -.lYrPi JQSEPH F.I3SSEI,L, MANUFAC-. furor of the best quality of Silk, Alpaca and Ging ham umbrellas, Nos, 2 and 4 North Fourth street. Philadelphia. eat-2mrp§le JORDAN'S CELEBRATED PURE TON/0 Ale for invalids, faintly use, /to. The subscriber is now furnished with his full 'Winter supply of his highly nutritious and well-known lt ever age. Its wide-spread and increasing use, by order of physitians, for invalids, nee of families, &c., commend it to tbD attention of all consumers who want a strictly pure article; peepared from the b material 4, and put 'up in the most careful manner for home nee or transpor tatkin . Orders by mail or otherwise proJmptl MA Y aPPN, nlied. JOR No. wo Pear street, de?' ' below Third and Waltin t street PICKLES, SECOND;MTION • w , -4 0 :1,1,.Th'it:/` B LATER''.:' , ,', , _:::-..•,ti . /..:;i31.i . tfi ,. : , --•':-*.i Financial and Commercial Quotations FRONI NSW YORK Irregular Issue of• Lake Shore Stook Advance •in Western Freight Rates By the Atlantic Cable., Loarnoar, 0ct.12, A. M.--oOnsols for inoney, 931 ) ,and for ' account, 931033. American se euntieS quiet and steady. Five-twentie4 Of 1882 843; of 1865, old, 84i ; of 1867,. 82E. Ten forties, 761. Railways steady. Ene, 2.3; Illi nois Central, 94; Atlantic and Great Western,. Livzin;ooL, Oct. 12, A. M.---Ootton dull; Middling Uplands, 12.012/d.; Middling ,Or 12iii120. Ditimated sales to-day, 7,000 bales. Loamort, 0ct.12, A. M.—Tallow, Ms. ad.• Lorrnotamttur,- Oat: 12. Arrived—stea mship Moravian, from Quebec. Lownox, 0ct.12,1 P. Consols for money and account; U. Erie, 23.1. - 141vEttroot, Oct - . 12,1. F. S. Corn, 295. Lard, 725. Cid. GLASGOW, Oct. 12.—Arrived=sthamship St. Andrew, from Quebec. • ' • ... • Ltiontrbor., Oct. 12, 2 P. M.—Yarns and fabrics at Manchester dull. Receipts of wheat for three days 20,000 quar ters, including 10,000 quarters ,American. PAnxs, Oct. 12, 2 P. 31;—.The Bourse is firm. iientes, 71f. 4tic. Pants, Oct. 12,--Cotton opens firm, both on the spot and afloat. Sates on the spot at 148 f. Irregular Inane of Lake .Shore Stock. 1 _Special DesFtch to the 'Phila. Evening Ealletin Rpm You , Oct. 12.—1 n the ,Stock I.x -change today a communication was read from the transportation agent of the Lake Shore Railroad, calling attention to the recent advertisment of the Oompanyrelating to the irregular issue of 100 shares of stock, of SlOO,- 000 each, stating that .112 - oe these certificates bad been presented and found genuine, in the hands of bona fide hosders. He asks that these and the balance of the stock be presented to the committee for their action. Advance In Western Fre*lit Rates. (Special Despatch to the Phila. Evening Bulletin.] NEW Yana, Oct. 12.—Another important advance in prices for the transportation of dry-goods', general merchandise and other Western freights, will be adopted uptin the New York Central, Hudson River, Erie and Pennsylvania Central Railroad lines to-ritOr• row. The following are the new rates- per cwt. on first-class goods:'Chicago, Dl,' $1 .2.5; Cincinnati,, $1 18; St. Louis, $1•60 ; Coburn him, $1 03 ; Toledo, $1 -00 ; Cleveland, 84c.; Buffalo, 60e.; Indianapolis, $1 Louisville, $1 4.5; Milivankee, 51 25; Detroit, 90c. The Lake rates are as follows : Chicago. Milwau kee, Racine and Green Bay, 85e.; Cleveland, Toledo and Detroit, 75c. Neir Twiny gtock Market. Special Despatch to tho Phila. Evening Bulletin.) NRW YORK, Oct. 12.—The stock market was very much .depressed this morning, Lake Shore was the only stock that did not decline. Reading . was steads but a shade lower. All the other stocks declined from 2 to 41 per cent. lei: Columba, Annive.rsary. CINCINNATI, Oct. 12.—Last night the Italians resident here who regard the day that Colum bus came in sight of Arnerica as the ,proper date of the discovery, celebrated that event by a, ball, at which. 3lrs. Angeline Pabst", an Italian lady of Cincinnati, 101 years old, led off in a grand march, and afterwards danced in ten sets. ' TO-night the Italians who date the discovery from the day Columbus landed. will have a commemoration ball. • • • ' Delaware Odd Yellows. NVIL3II.7IGrox, Del., Oct. 12.--The Grand Lodge of the Independent Order of Odd •Fel lows will bold a beSsion tomorrow awl elect the officers of the Grand Lodge. Shipment of Specie. (special Debpatcr, to the Philada. Evening Bnpotio.l NEW YOE lc, Oct. 12.—The steamship' am monia sailed today for Hamburg with $2/0,- OVO in specie. The specie shipped by the Hammonla caul przsed gold bars and Jivdcari gold and silver. state of Thermometer This Day at the Bulletin OEflee. 30 A. des. 12 M. 70 dog. 2P. EL 70 deg. Wianber clear; Wind banthw•est. Fl NADI Cl A.L AND V DMIERCIAL. Philadelphia Stock. Exchange Sales. 13311123331 • 1200 City 66 new 11.101 1 ii 27 eh Leh :Val R ItB 51 - ,:' .1.44.41 do 2dys. Its 1(411i 2UO eh Cataw phi 373. 1(4.0 do 3dys 100'1 td.) eh N Cen Rll' bswn 45 300 do 104110 200 eh Reading : 4714 4000 Penn lit nag Gs Its 9N.310 sh do 0 Its i 47; 1 i 2U() :do 65 tr73,12008h do reg&int lie 474 /000 Pen n 6sWar In cri 100,1200 eh do b3O 48 40%) Leh 68 Old Ln 2de Is 45'41100 eh do 47.09 25 eh Penn It Its 561-1110Ish do c 4% 12 13 sliCamtAnat ,1 111 ye 13) 100 sh do bliin 4r.i 2eh do 120 i . . .. . .. WE 'EN BOARDS. f. 01.) qitY CS new Sat 1004:300 eh Ocean Oil 14500 City 68 Old 97 100 eh Penn R bbl 5i 3000 l'enn It let ma Gebs973t I 2 eb MOrris Cl.pf eswit 15 eh Cam tliAnt eel? OS,IOO eh Read It 47?' lu Chem d: Del 111 k . 1200 eh do reg&l ,t 4r, 42 eh Eaet Penn R 2de 37 1100 ith do h3O 41 )0000 Penn Cp IA !ZVI/ 92,!ii 100 eh do 1.3) SECOND 'BOARD. - (ON elty6s neub3 lOUS 3000 Peuß Img 04 h" , 97% lOW Elumiraiss S 9 I 3 sh Pennit2 , ,lys Its LC'S 10.0 June it 2d mtg Bds 90 PliMadonna Money Market. t TVESDAY, 0ct.•12, 1669.—The weekly report •of our * • ,i, , t banks, which will be found below; so far from showing r io t: any improvement in resources, as hoped for, indicated a i ' very serious falling off in this respect. The loans have I ' been contracted ,fef,u7,01 , 6; legal tenders, 8515,501, whilst , the deposits have fallen oil 8920,596. There was a solitary ) increase of specie of $87,1:05. These losses, added 1 to that of last and previous weeks, fully account fot the •, extreme caution which has marked the course of the banke during the week, arid itistify the firmness In the ~. rates exacted for leans. The eOndition of the market is kentirely due to the outward flow of the money south and west, and sets the question of monetary ease for the bal , ance of the season at rest. • , Rates are unchanged. ---- 1. ' 1 Gold opened this morning w ith sales at 130%, closing at . '1 ',. noon at 130.'4. The transactions are entirely confined to; f legitimate linsinese demand. i Government securities aro extremely quiet, and prices t' show no change worthy of note. • • The business at the Stock Board was restricted some , what by the election going ,on at the various polls. 4'l . Prices were rather weak. State loans met with no in-• i t ulry„ Cityeixoe continuo without change ; salesnf the new issues at 100%. " - Reading - Railroad was dull and lower. Stiles at 47%, for the cash, and at 48 b. o. Pennsylvania Railroad was i very quiet at 6636, a decline of 34. Lehigh Valley Rail ' road was % lower,selling at 53X. Catawissa Railroad Pre- ferred was Holtl at 37%, and Camden and Amboy Ran i- •.--- There was no dispofdtion to operate In Canal shares. i 3436 was bid for Lehigh Navigation._ , ,•,., _ , ' There were no sales effected of Bank or Coal stocks. Passenger Railways w"ro quiet, with 44 bid for Second ana Third streets; 45 for Chestnut • and With:nit, and 69 for West Philo delplda. :',' , • , • Messrs. Dellaveit & Brother. No. 40 South Third street, make the followingqnotations of the rates of ox- change to-day at 1 P. M.: United States Sixes of 1: • :l. 11:45a120%; d0.d0.1862, 124a120%; d0.d0.1864, 119.4a119%; do, do. 1565.. 119%a119%; do. do. 1865. new, 11734a118.; do. • do. new, 1867, 118a118,4; do. do. 1868, 1173fit118; do. do., fives, 10.408,108%a/08%; do. d 0.30 year 6 . per cont. enrrency, 107.11a108; Duo comp. int. notes. /.9.44 Geld. 130,1‘030 , 4; Silver. Ma 129 ., . . ~, ---., .---.;---- ..-,, Smith, liandoinh & CO., bankers. Third and Chestnut streets, quote at 10.30 o'clock asfollowa; Gi01d.130%: U. S. Sixes, 1881. 119,.,ia120; do. do.' 5-20 s, '1662, 120; do. do. jou, 116.141t119.%; d0.d0., 1865, 119,14 a 119%; do. do. July 1865, 11Mall8;, do. do.. July, 1861, 118; do. July 1808, .118x118 ; 6 1 8,10•40'e, 1163 a110%'; Currency Sixes: ~, ,(. I,t pAlladelnhila Produce Marj TuEsah v, Oct. 12.—The election to-day has absorbed most of the attention ef the Merchants; and thOrCi ivas butt' small attendance at the "Commercial Exchange." itreacietutle are dull—no one in the trade will deny that, fact—yet there is no marked disposition to force sales at the expense of lower quotations.' The demand for Flour is extremely light, and only a few htindred Insrmis ,chanaell _ hanhs nt, x qtra ,, at -, lnyst- - NtiHrrkisy4trer - oni - -riterrt , #637,5ka7 ; 'Pennsylvania :(10.110 lOW 75; Indiana and Ohio do. do. at en 6057 25. and Taney lots at $7 503 BM. No activity In lips Flour or Corn Meal; sales of 'llO hernial:if; thoferineat s6a6 25 tier, Orrolit. The Wheat market Ia very dell, -,16Ma1l tales or good and whale Western Bed at $1 40./ansi 000 hnsliels choice Pennsylvania do. at, 45. - . 'is 'loWer. A' lot of 'AVestern,_. sold' _at ~ Cor,rf. la A very dull nd - priesa favor buyers. Saes ' 'of Yel- low at el Vial 05, and, Western Mixed at , 94a95e. 5,000 bushels Now. York two-rowed Barley sold on secret: Serino. - Qatbare in limited request, 'with sales ef 3,00(1 'lmohels Western and Pennsylvania at 58a50e. ,Whisky lb less active. Sales of /36 bbla. WesterusirOn bound, at el 2/lial 30. The Igew York Money Market. j From the New Fork 'Herald of td-day.) iti 3 ONDA Ir. Oct. ll,The calm prevailing in Wall , street 'had no interruption until late in the aftertioott,wWilthe stock market became weak in consequenee of telegraniue reports of a panic and large ,decline inwiteat at Chicago: Now, the wheat market 114 to the IYestern .metropolis what the Mock market Is to Now York; the centre of "speculation. . H ere onr operators ' as ty, general thing, confine themselves , .stocks ; there. they . deal in the proattee . the . Still almost exelusivelY. The great panic . which recently . v idled New York it:limn-reaching Chicago. We find In the plethora of money in the banks the Indisposition of Eastern capitalists to buy' Western grain or to discount grain Palter. The grain which has accumulated in Chi- cago, which has been bought for future delivery, re quires money, to carry.. The situation .fa exactly , the 'Sate as it was in tbo New York Stock Exchange. The "bulls" in both places have had to sell, and, hence the panic and decline. The rise in gold ander cliq tie manipu lation tempted the "buil" operation out West. , The decline to 130a131 ; has divested these operations of suc tees, and the operators will doubtless suffer heavy losses, at will be, fortunate for the community If the nefarious syStein (Amin opoculation is broken up. With a lower tariff for the different grades it will be possible to revive 'our export business, which is the real source of national 'nod social prosperity. Wheat must .undoubtedly -un dergo the ordeal' through which stocks have just vassal. When it touches cotton it will reascend according to legitimate Infinences. The local money market to-day Was. still ahundantlY supplied, and the range of the interest rate on cull loans ltutt from four to nix per cent. 'Whatever may- ,bo the eventual result of the crisis in Chicago, our city banks aVe-ratteed-titemitelyet-hrtt-veryistrongitosittomto-meet the demands of the fall trade. Looking at their condi tion now and a year ago, when they had a greater drain to meet than will be their lot thin winter, we find • a Hat- tering state of affairs. ' The last bank statement con-, tracts as follows with the corresponding ono of last 'year:— Loans. _ Ott. 10,1t388. • ' Oct. 9,1969. 1 ,, 25540,652 $260 769 974 8 pee e 9,346,097 21,311,528 Circulation— • 35,184,103 . 3t,1713,923 :! Deposits • ' 146,033,997 • 179,214,571; ' Le al-tenders... ..... . 6Q,003,056' • 52,017,388. The excess over the legal reservo last year wait only .513,510,614. This year it is $20,192,714. • Commercial paper was in less active roluest, but only through the genera) dullntes of • the day. litany of- the .usual buyers senneddispose& to make time loans, and 'money was rather freely offered at seven per cent. for thirty days. , One suspension was announced at the Stock Exchange, that of - 'llt.z.hugh & Jenkins, a commission broker firm. Lockwood it Co. proposed making a settlement wit their creditors at fifty cents )1% tho dollar, ten cents in 'cash, fifteen cents in six months, and twenty-five cents in one year, their notes for the latter hearing interest at seven per cent. The proposition was circulated to-day among the creditors and 'very generally received signs- The foreign otchange market was firm but quiet. The tiuteTreasury and Custom iiOllEO were closed to day out of remoct to the late ex-Ptcsident Pierce. The, g l o tho m g a h ke h t e a r s ice n th Ce m n t s neaue enAcev emmorge u ha np e 'u r s c u e a n ll t y C du s l i gold was in fair request: Loans were made at sto 3 per cent for carrying.. The Gold 'ffaiik will, it i 5 exptcted, retinue a tiring the week. This morning Judge earlego granted an order appOnthig C. N. Jourdan receiver of the bank ad interim, in place of Augustus L. Brown. Mr. Jourdan is cashier of the Third National flank. New 'York Stock Market. !Correspondence of tho Associated Preas.l ZilcAv Yowl, Getober 12.—Stocks unsettled. - Money to 7 ywr cent. Gold. 1.303.1 •, United States 6- 0 434,13162, ; United States 6.ais, U6l. 113 4 ' ;'do. ISM, 1173,1 : 16P , . new, 118; .do. MG% 118; do. - 14,23,11 10-40.3, lia23" ; Vir ginia 6's. new. 6.33 ; Missouri 6's, 813; int Cnerland preferred. 126: New York Central. 179 ; Erie. 1.V3.-"; Read ing. f63i ; Hudson River, 15034; Michigan Central, 121 Michigan Southern . lllinof s Central. 113234;Clevel1tul and Pittsbnrgh, 0634 ; Chicago and flock Inland. 105 Pittsburgh and Fort Wayne, 1 - 65%' ; Wt9tertt Union Telegraph Company,3634. Markets by TeleSruph. . (SPecial Despatch to the Philadelphia Evening Bulletin.) Ziety YORK. Oct. 12; 12); P.M.--Cotfoic:.L.-Themarket this morning was dull and heavy. We quote as fob lews : Middling Uplands,26a2tl4c. ; Middling Orleans, Flour. 10k0 bariels. The market for 'Western and State t lour is dull and irregular ; common it rsdes lower ; others Anil and heavy. The salesaro about 7.0t,0 barrels, including Superfine State at 65 When Extra State at 95 7:ABC 10 ; low grades Western rxtra ??.5 fitter , W. Southern Flour is dull. California Flour is quiet. Graiii.-Wheat—Recelpts,2l.l,ooo bushels. The market is firm and quiet. The - aales are 104100 bushels Amber Western at ftl 11a1 43. and Sprirof Fearce. Corn—Re ceipts,7.3r.tl bushels. Thennirket for Common is scarce and firm. with a good trate. ,ales of 40.000 bushels new Western at Sic.atrl 03 afloat: by rail, .91 0111 Oats—lteceipts. 11,900 bushels. Market firmer and in fair demand. Sales of 40/000blisliels at Glailt; cents. Frovisimis--The receipts of Pork are VAS barrels. The nu ie Anil and nominal at ,5;,:9) (1) for new Western Sleek. . Lard—The market is quiet. We quote fair to prime steamer at 17rgalt. _- Whisky—Receipts, WO ',bin. The market is firm : We quote Western free at el WalEsi 21. Groceries are generally dull and prices nominal. (Correspondence of the A£BOC tat tixr Pr eco .1 NEW YOR X Ort.l2.—Cotion heavy. Sales of MO bales at ',air. Flour doll and declined Salk. Wheat vanred lr. Corn firmer . ; mixed_ western for tin,ound and 99c .aBl 05 for sound. - Oat.; firmer. PI.On 310.0. Fleet erla.l3. Ltletoi Pork 430 I.ott+E.lo 021:4.. Lard unchanged. Whiky-e - P - -.2.11051 - 2114• ItAt.rtmottE, October 12.- 7 -Cotton dull 'and nominally 2 , 114 c. Flour dull and weak` Fancy Family dor:lined Howard Street Stipertine, ea 25,5 00; do. Extra, 7 25; do. Family, $7 50a5 50; City !dills Sup:Trine, ('I afi LO; do. Extra, 86 25a7 is;, do. Family,' 67 soall 75; Wee - tern Superfine !. 85 75a8 OOP; do. Extra. 85 . 0054 75; do. Family. 8 , 1 /10a7 SO. Wheat dull; prime to choice Ited. 4001 50. Corn firmer at 81 100.12 for White; Western, el 211 05. Oat/1,5.5358c. „Tire, 81 1031 15. Pork, 833. Bacon—Rib Sides, .a - i3c.; Clear do.. 21 - d.; Shoul ders. 11)40. Rams,. a2se. Lard, 19c: Whisky firm at 81:da1 7.2. . eIARINE OLTELEriri. PORT OP PHILADELPHIA—Ocr.,I2 'Ete Marini Bulletin ort.lnside Page ARRIVED TIIISYAT. Steamer A C Stimers_„Knaz,24 7hours. from New York, with m&r. to W P Circle & • Stearin , Monitor, inne".24 hours from New York,with lat. , to W N Balm Ac Co. Steamer Bristol, Wallace r 24 hours, from .timv York, with mdFe'to NY 1' Clyde (Jo. Bark Robert Book (Br). Jolly, 54 days from Liverpool, with snit to Wm l'intion & Son. • Scheßising 'Sun, Moore, 8 days from Norfolk, with shingles to Patterstin & Lippincott. Saw Thomas Borden, Wriglifingtop, 3 days from Fall River, in ballast to Costner, Stickney k Wellington. Schr I: J Pickup, Bowen, 10 days from Norfolk, with shingles to Patterson & Lippincott. Fehr A 3l Edwards, Ilynson, 15 days from Richmond, via Wilmington, Del. with mill feed to Matthews & Kalb —vessel to Lennox k Burgess. Srer W B MeShane, Adams, 14 days from Richmond, with railroodlies to Albright & Co. • • Schr Westmoreland, Rice, 4 days front Proyidenee, ballast to Westmoreland Coal Co.. Schr Mary Standish, Rich, Efloya from Gardiner,with ice to Penn Ice Co.. • , Schr Merrell. C Hart, RoWley, 12 days from Hath,with ice to Penn lee Co. Schr .3 V Wellington. Chipman, 5 days from Boston, with fish to Atwood & Co. Schr Cites Cooper,Nickerson, 5 days from Harwich, with fish to Crowell & Co. - • tiohr Jas Martin, Baker, 5 days from Boston, with fish to captain. ' - • • - Schr llorry Lee. Barrett, 14 days from Lynn. Schr If W McColly, Hubbard, from Lynn. Seim J W Evennan, Outen. from Salem. Tug Thos Jefferson Allen, from Baltimore, with a tow of barges to W P Clytie & Co. Tug Commodore, V orison. from' Havre de Grace,with a tow of barges to 'W P Clyde & Co. CLEARED THIS DAY. Steamer Fanita. Brooks, New York, John P Ohl. Steamer Beverly. Pierce. New Yonk, W P Clydo & Co. Bark Jane Adeline ; Hutchinson, Cardenas, E A Soudor Brig Edith Hall; Snow, Savannah, Scott, Walter dr. Co. Soler Nary Augusta; Lord, Boston, Schr Sltragdon, Newcomb, Boston, . do Schr L A Bennett, McDevitt, Norwich, do Schr Surge. Warwick, Greenwich. RI. do • Schr J W Everman, Onten, Portsmouth. Va. do Schr GVs Thompson, Yates, Georgetown, Lennox & Burgess. Tug Nicholson, ;'Baltimore, with a- tow. of P Clyde & Co: -' • Tug Chesapeake,Meraihew,from Havre de Grace, with S tow of bargekto W P Clyde & Co • • • MEMORANDA Ship Progreso. Simons, hence at London,l inst. Ship I)over, Stilphen, sailed,. from Liverpool 2i th ult. for this port. Ship Mcdora, Beet: Oiled from Llverpook 30th'. ulthno Ship Comington, Bell, 60 (lays from Rio Janeiro, was going-up to New_Orleanti 7th Inst._ Ship onsoon (Br). Chilton,cleared at Mobile 7th Inst. for Liverpool, with 2522. bales cotton weigh ing.1,278,236 lbs . 'valued at $231;765 SO; 500 bbls rosin : valued . at $2050. Ship Cathedral (Br), Nickerson, cleared at New Or: , 'Num 7th inst. for Havre, with 3483 'bales cotton and 2000 staves. • Ship Emma, Rich, cleared at" New Orleans 7th inst. for Havre, with 2233 bales cotton and 2400 staves. Steamer Whirlwind, Sherman, sailed from" Providence 9th hwt. for thin port. 13t reerl3lackstone,Loveland{cleated at New Orleane 7th ink. for Boston. Bark Bessie Harris, Allen.heuce at Livertioll 5. 1 . , th Bark Mary 'Pratt, Kilburn, hence for Llvo - pool; put into Queenstown 28th ult: through stress of we Cher and waut:of. provisions. , • ;rig blatikla.'Di3G-henoe at Boston 10th ;Brig Charles Henry (Br), Horn, cleared at Boston 9th list. for this port to load for'Europe Schrs Susan, sears; 0 S' Edwards, Corson; White ,Sea, Jones; July Fourth, Cobb ;i Lizslo, Tabbut; Lookout, Show, and 8 A Boico, Yates, hence at Boston 10th Inst. Schrlilaria LOTISN, Allen,henco at Gloucester Ath unit: Schrs.Eva Be lie , Active, Coombs; E Graham, Fountain; (21. B-. Wood, Gandy; . ..Anna Tibbetts, Brown; Jas Alderdice, Stutee; Ann S Brown, Corson; It dos Cor son, Grace; Elvie Davis, Shaw; Mary Johnson, Bonny; J B Marshall, Marshall; Trade Wind;Coreon;-Elisabetle English, CroWell;' , Wave Cretit,'-Davis; :Wooley; King; Pathwo_.y. Haley; n S Brooks, Lord; Ann S Cannon, Cobb; Edna Harwood, Harwood; E Jackson, Black; J Stroup. Compton; Chas B Smith, Hansort,_• William 11 Tiers, Gifford; D- E. Eelley, Kelley, and J.Sattorth waite, inney, hence at Boston, Oth inst. Bohr Five Sisters, (of Machias), 'Peterson, hence at Boston, eth inst, reports off Barnegat oth in a WNW . gale, lost deck of coal of 20 tons. . , . fnv TELEomarit a ' LEWES, Dol. Oct 12—Arrived at Bre*water, birk Cienfuegos.— Wind SW and fair; thermometer 70. NEW YORK, Oct. 12— Arrived,13.13,atorealtip Guard, from Lisbon. , . THE DAILY EVENING BULLETIN' .PHILADELPHIA. TUFSDAIi. OCT() Democratic Frauds in Wilmington, Del. :•• ~;.:4; - Failure ; , of Lockwood & Co. •in New : : York Pa el fi c Railroad`;; 7 T,,4 c ; rir2,4l Sales Vice-I:tesLient Colfax Serena.ded Illemocratle Frandii in Virl111113;1'1On. [Special Deeputch to the 1 4 b ila.Ev coin g Bulletin. WiLliminToN,DeL, Oct: contested election case, involving the seat of a member in the City Council from , the First 'Ward, was decided by that body yesterday. An examina tion of the votes in the ballot-box showed, that there were fifteen votes less than the tally-list called for; arid several other irregularities were noted. Dillon (Dern.), who bad been returned by the election officers, was' ousted, his seat - declared vacallt, .:nil a new election was ordered to fill the vacancy. I SPectaintiilatcb to the Philada.Bvenirut Bulletin.' NEW Yona, Oct. 12.—1 t is stated tbat there is to be a rnectifig_ of_he - creditors - Of_Lock wood & Co. te-da.y, The latest proposition of the, firm is to pay fifty Ciffts n the dollar, in instalments, - as 10 cipts days; 15 cents in six months, and 25 cents in the year. A number of, creditors have accepted ;the proposal ' ' . Pacific Railroad Land Sales—Colfax Sere;• melded. ST. Lbws, Oct. Omaha; despateh says the sales of land at the Union Pacific Land Office to October let were '94,491 acres, valued at, Vice President Colfax was serenaded at' las night, andmade a speeCli, was k ell.received. . . Ilingbairiptora. ' • finainAmr , rox, Oct. 12. L--d tire occurred this morning in La Fayette block, in' Coiirt street. The shoe store of _E. P. Halbert was d:unaged ; loss, 5,43,000 ; insurance, $3,000. The 'dry goods store of P. Raritan was danaaked 5;2,5€0 ; insured for $.1,000. The buildings are owned by D. "lif . Stocking 'and were. damaged PARIS, Oct. 12. P. 3L—The B^urge is cyfipt. ItenteA, 71f. 40c. ' FRANKFORT, Oct. 12.—FtyC7tAyelltiCii firm at 8711188. C031310N . PLE,As—Judges Allison, Ludlow, Peirce and Brewster. 7 --The court met at 7 o'clock this morning for the. purpose of hear ing cases, 'growing out of the election law. There t were a number of applications for substitution in cases where election officers failed to appear. In the fourth precinct of the Sixteenth Ward (Fourth and George streets), ,complaint was made 'that—one • of the Demo crane election officers had become a Republi can since his appointment, and had appointed a Republican clerk, and a substitute was asked. The Court said there was no power to make a substitute in such a case. An application was then Made for.watchers. : The Court appointed the parties named. ' Subsequently the watchers returned and. stated that they were refused admission. The Court sent tor the Sheriff, and when, Mr. Lyle appeared, instrneted him to see that !"the watchers were admitted and protected. At 11 o'clock the Sheriff returned and stated that he had accompanied the watchers to the polls, and had endeavored to secure their ad mission; but without sifccess. He found an angry and turbulent crowd around the polls, and was hinviell refused admission in order to imtruet the election officers in regard to the Judge's orders The judge of the election did come out, and with him the Sheriff had a con versation, instructing him in' reference to the order, but failed to accomplish anything. The Court then instructed the Sheriff to take a pc.)&e and see that the order of the Court was obeyed I. E. WAIJRAVEN, No. 719 CHESTNUT STREET, is now receiving his Fall Importations, con• sisting in part of ' CURTAIN in Silk, Mohair, Worsted, Linen and Cotton, embracing many novelties, LACE CURTAINS of Parisian,St. Gallen and Nottingham make. CORNICES AND DECORATIONS IV lAI3 0 MU_S_ILA_D E S by the thousand or single one at manufac. , turers prices. Mosquito Canopies, Closing, out at reduced prices. ,CONTRA.CTQRS AND BUILDERS.-- - 1 SEALED PROPOSALS; endorsed "Pro powils for building a public, .school-house in the. Filth Ward," will be received" by the un dersigned at the office, S. E. corner of SIXTH and ADELPH/ streets, until THURSDA Y,, October 14;48E9; at 12 O'cloek.ll4•for building , a public ~school-house on a lot of grand situate o n' Thirdvatreet; ' above 'Lombard; in the Fifth Ward.' ! Said school-house te ; he built in aecordance with the plans of L. H. Eslor, Superintendent of School Buildings, to be seen at the office of the Controllers pi public Schools. ' bids:Will be.eonsered unless aecompa-; nied by a certificate f rom 'the City Solicitor that the provisions of an ordinance approved May 25, 1860, have been complied with. The r centract „ will., be awarded only to ..l6lawmAnasterdiuilders.-' By order Of the Committee Oil Property. H. W. BALLIWELL, se2s 27 30 oe4 f)11: „ Secretary ISHOPT o R c Jul-School for girls, on the'south bank of the Lehigh, will begin its second -year, I), V., on the 1 51 h of Septem ber.: The number of pupils is limited to thirty. French , is taught by a resident governess, and, so fur as possible made the language of the family, Address for circulars, !kn., _ MISS USASS,' ilishopthorpo, - Bethlehem"Pa )Y3-e.w t toc3s§ 1 4_41 2 2:15 O'Clook. . , . _ The Failure of LockwOod & Co. Ily the Atlantic Cable. THE COURTS CIIIRTrIII4 - 14ntTERIALS. !MASONIC BULL, MATERIALS, of new and original designs. PROPOSALS.:, - FOVRTE T.:E4POXPOI - 1.; FRONI 13 AL T I MOR An Important Decision in Reference to National Banks., From Baltlmore. BALTIMORE, Oct. 12.--In the United States Cireniteourt, yesterday; in the case of Joseph B. Stewart, agent of th'd• National 'Union and other c bj s tiopal,BjltlkfOp'thie'city,:,lndge Giles delivered an °Pinion sustaining .tie demurrer of the 'defendants and , dismissieg ' the bill of the conaplainants, from which the 'emineel for the omplalnants reserved eiceptions to the United states Supreme Court. The court decides that the violation of the Aib'section of the National Banking act, pro hibiting National Banks from loaning to any one individual or company manic, than one tenth part of the amount of the capital stock of the bank, does not invalidate 'Contracts of that nature by said banks, but -subjects the banks to the forfeiture of the franchises as provided in the 33d section of said act., Tew orb Jrinances EASY MONEY MARKET T4!..1,G0LD MARK.ET DULL GOVERNMENTS DULL AND LOWER , {Special Despatch to the Phila. Evening Bulletin.] NEW YORE, Oct. 12.—Tho money market ;was easy at sto 6 per cent. on call, with ex ceptions at 4a7 per cent. Foieign Exchange was dull on the basis of, 1091 for 60-days' bills and 109; for sight. The Gold roarket was dull, 'ranging from 1301t0130h.. The:rates paid for, carrying were 3 to 4 per cent. and for borrow ing "flat. The Assistant-Treasurer received proposals to-day for a million in Treasury gold froin a number of bidders; thi3 total amount bid for .was 13,953,000, at ,prices ranging from 1213.55 to 130.13. The whole amount will pro bably be awarded at 130 and over. The government bond market was dull and loiver. Southern State securities were heavy and lower. The greatest activity and decline were in Tennessee's and North Carolina's. There was a heavy feeling on the Stock Ex change early in the day, and a marked decline followed in all the leading shares. At the height of the depression during the morning New York Central sold. down to 174, Lake Shore 84!, Pittsburgh 98, Northwestern 69E, Rock Island 1011, Pacific Mail 63g. At this juncture a number of brokers iden tified with Mr. Drew, and also with the , Van derbilt party, suddenly appeared in the mar ket as large buyers of Lake Shore, which, in , connection with the communication sent to the Exchange, turned the drift , of speculation from the "bear", to the "bull." There was some talk of a combination to "bull" the mar ket for a short term, which caused some outside buying and also some covering of short contracts. Under these influences and reports, there was a general recovery from the ;lowest point of the morning, with a steadier feeling. One Lo'clOck prices: New York Central, 175;a175, 7 , ; Reading, 95ia.96; St. Paul, 66;a861 Preferred do., 80;a81; Fort Wayne, 85;a851,; Northwestern, 70a701 ; Preferred do., 83a831; Wabash, 58a60 ; Pacific Mail, 651:1852. The Gold Award. (Special Despatch to the Philada. Evening Bulletin. I NEW YORK, Oct. 12.—The million in gold was awarded at 130.01 and upwards. IMPORTANT TO ELECTORS A Qualified Voter Not Deprived of his Vote by Another Person Voting in his Name. A gnalified voter is not deprived of his right to vote by reason of some,other person unlawfully voting in his name. Wm. S. PEIRCE, F. C. BREWSTER. PODRT AT lONS ve . RepOrterl for the Philadelphia Ening Bulletin. fLII,I VElt POOL—Bark Robert Book., Jolly-7700 sacks c-inntoll salt 1250 do Ashton's line do 25 tons rock do W Bunim sit Son. IiORFOLK—Schr Rising Sun, ltfoore-53.000 2-feet /wart cypress shingles . 12,500 20-inch do do 2500 20-inch sap do Patterson k Lippincott. JOHN BURNS, (Leader of Low Prices for Good Articles,) House-Furnishing Dry Goods AND IMPORTER OF HOSIERY, 245 & 247 S. Eleventh St., ab. Spruce. All Linen Towels, 1234 c., size 20 by .30 inches. Watson &Armstrong Damask Napkins, 81 35'per doz. Two yards widd Bleached Table Linen, 75c., up. Richardson's celebrated Shirting Linens, 31a.77;40, Nursery Diapering by the piece. $1 1.2,;i, up. Auction lots Gents', Lad les' and Children's Pillow Linens and 11-4 and 12-4 Linen Sheetings. Wamsutta, 200.' • 23 wide Shootings, 50, 55, 60, 65c. Pillow Case /dueling, 20,28, 27c. WATER-PROOF - 1 - 1 ---- BLANKETSI - FIA - NNEhI Black Waterproof Cloaking, 80c., el, el 123 . Plaid, Striped, Gold-mixed Water-proof, for Suits. Yard-wide Ballardvale and Shaker Flannels, 45c• Heavy All-Wool 10-4 Blankets, B'4 25. Extra heavy 11- All-wool 4 Blankets, $5 50., . , CARTWRIGHT & WARNER'S HOSIERY. Baffles' Heavy Merino Tests 75c. and 81, 1 1P. Childreu's Heavy Merino Underwear, all sizes. Gents' Shirts and Drawers 150 c., 75c. to $B. Ladies' regular-made Hose, 31c. and 373gc. Ladies' genuine Balbriggan Hose, 65c. and 75c. Gents' super stout Half Hose, 31c. and 373,ic. • Children's Balbriggan Fancy and Extralong Hose. oc9Bw2t DR. J. DE HAVEN WHITE'S , •, • • MOUTH WASH AND GARGLE. The name' and stand „M.' WRITE in - Medical Dentistry are a guarantee for the efficiency of whatever he prescribes for the Month and Teeth." Bis Mouth Wash Gargle, an entirely now remedy, based on science in every respect, contains the best in gredients, medically: to correct irritation , of the mucous surfaces. and chemically to Arrest the decay, of the Teeth and insure a clean' Mouth, a sweet Breath, and a healthy+ DIi:J..DE HAVEN MEDICATED This entirely now (gray).Tootli .Powder, the molt of many years' experience, uurpasses far, in the rfr(KtorN4 Mdgment;:his former (Pink .cotored ) . Powder, so extent sively known to the' public - under tie name of "Dr. White's PonDtio." - - Ile advises his customers to iliscon— t lone Unitise of Detitine altogether; and Vepadiates all Tooth Powders • and Ittouth Washes sold under his o u ti err t w o ur a tit i f a lo u t d is p , r e e x p c a o r p e t o lt o io nl a y il) b o y vei with his signature . • „ , GUSTAVUS HIRAUSE, A pothecar:Y, N. W. corner TWELFTH laid CHESTNUT etrceto • J..DWITAvEN wurrEli 01 , 01 r B I 3 R WUS.;:r, ImprtovErunNi 1860. 'Superior to,as)y iq Hre world. lor at tire forma place• . „ vcfut w .3:60 otOt«;k: DENTIFRICE. ER 12, 1869. BY TEfligOrnAPtii4 ,- - . unlit rum wAsHniGrov THE CUBAN QUESTION;. Gen. Butler , an 'Attorney for the Cubans The Indian Peace • Conamission THECASE OF THE HORNET Election , of trio Railway Directinlk General Butler and the Cubans. 'Special Despatch to the Phila. EventtigDnilethi.i Wesuinorolv,oo.l2.—lt is.unaerstood that Generalßutler, Who has been Sele.cted as an, attorney for the Cubans, advised them while here - to change from ,their present course, which he condemned as ill-devised, and one which would only insure their defeat if pur sued longer. In fact, the indications are • that General Butler has taken tn-somo-,-extent the management of The - Tub - an • cause in the United States, although :it is not believed that the course Which he would have prevail will be adopted by the leading Cubans. It is even 'doubtful whether they will mani fest due respect to his, opinions, Which; if pnrsued,, would, it is averred, improve the prospects of the Cuban cause very materially. There is a better feeling manifested towards the policy carried out by Secretary Fish regarding this question, than existed a shorttime , ago, and prominent politicians who have heretofore condemned it now say that he has managed the case with a good deal of ability, and that when all the facts become known it will be,said that ander • his management the record of the State De partment has been fully kept up to its old standard. The Indian Peaee Commission. [ Special Despatch to the Phila.' - Evening DulletinA .WAsEiNoxow, Oct.,l2.—Sbme time ago the' Indian Peace COM:IA.1481On, 'appointed by President Gra n t to visit the Indian country to examine and report as to the condition of the various tribes, divided itself 'into" three sub-committees, one to visit the southvve.st, the second the tribes west and the third to go up into the extreme northwestern country. The first committee performed its labors in a manner which gave great satisfaction to the Indian Bureau, returning only three weeks ago. Neither of the • two other committees having indicated any intention of visiting the section of country assigned them, Commis sioner Pafker to-day addressed letters to the members, requesting them, as soon as possible, to visit . the Indian tribes, as it was intended they should when appointed by the Presialit," It is be-, lieved that if the Commission had promptly performed its mission, no troubles with the Indians would have taken place, and to their failure to do so alonb is attributed' the dissat-, isfaction which exists with the few warlike tribes in the Northwest. " The Hornet Case. (Special Despatch to the Pitla. Evening Bulletin.] WADHINGTON, Oct.. 12.—1 n regard to the case of the privateer Hornet, it is ktioCvn to day that the Government is in the posses sion of evidence of the most important diame ter, showing clearly that that vessel was fitted out within the jurisdiction of the United States. Eleetion of Erie Railroad Directors. ' f Special Despatch to the Phila. Evening Bulletin.] NEW You's, Oct. .12.—The Erie Railroad stockholders this morning accepted the amendment to the Company's charter made by the Legislature, wherein the directors are authorized to classify themselves so that,, as nearly as may be, one-fifth of their number shall go out of office at each annual meeting. There was a large representation of the stockholders—the largest ever held. Resolutions-were passed approving • of the policy of the fate board in developing and improving the road and. extending and per fecting its connections. r • The following directors were elected : Jay Gould, Jas. Fisk, Jr. ' Wm. M. Tweed, Frederick A. Lane, Alex. Diven, Justin D. White, Jno. Ganson, 0. W. Chapman, Horatio N. Ods, Charles G. Sisson; Henry Thompson, John Hilton, J. N. Smith,' X. R. Sigons, 0. C. Hall. • Jay Gould was re-elected President. From Boston. DosToN, Oct. 12.—The whaling schooner Susan N. Smith, of Boston, Was lost in a hur ricane on August %th, and all hands were drowned, except the captain and four sailors, who, after remaining on the wreck , foieight days and nights, without food or water, were taken off and carried into. London by au Eng lish bark. The captain's wife and two chil dren were drovvned in the cabin. An attempt was made at 3 A. M. to-day to rob the National Bank of Townsend, Mass.; but the burglars used too much powder. alarm ing the citizens by the explosion. The outer door was blown oil and much damage done to the building. The burglars fled;leaving their tools. The Italian Mutual Relief Society, of this city, is celebrating the 373 d anniversary, of the dNeTv - try - clf — Arnerica by Columbus by a pub lic parade and picnic. Frightful Explpsion in Williamsburg, New York. NEW Youx,Oct.l2.—An explosion occurred .t the new gas-house in Williamsburg, thiS morning, and three men are reported to have keen killed. By the Atlantio.Cable. Lortnott, Oct.l2tb.—The Times, in, an edi torial on the Fenian amnesty meetings, says, "the crown is illYited to pardon rebels who do not pretend to - ,pettitent, not be cause the conspiracy is crushed', but because it is still tbriniciable enough to • rally syrup~. thizers. No one doubts the right of the Gov erninent to suppress with vigor outrages against law and order. - , liad the forbearance of the crown been ha 113ked in a becoming tone with a •recognition of its rights to protect peaceable and loyal citi zens, amnesty might be the message of peace. As preventive see no presumption that it would be received in that spirit by the de manders, while it must operate as a (Ks eowagement to those - who helped, to crush the Fenian outbreak., There can be no greater injustice or iMpoliey than such an act. If Ireland is still Fenian at heart er,boatile to the Union,'we • believe that triniljtnity-of the Irish would rejoieti- at. the suppression of Fenianism, and that some`who sign the ainnesty.petitions would be thankful if the petitions were rejected. PAnis. Oet.l2.—lt is again reported that the corpse of the father of the murdered Kinck family has been discovered in Allude. The Emperor left tbr-Compeigne to-day. LosnoN, Oct, 12, Evening.'-United States Ten-forties, 136. ItailwayJ firm ; Erie, 231. Consol6 closed atio3l for money. • LivEnrOon, 0ct.12, Evening,--Bales of cot • — ar .ton , toAlay.44o2Ylbalea;,...l,o* fin. port and speculation. - Wheat, Ss I.ld. co Western.. Refined Telfiliettik-Vgd:sto , ' LONDO.Iq - ; - Oet /*EV eilingX - It efinefia,o4 "6o . , le Unl: Ira 7ittald. ?jai' - "4 - 7f 4 Oct, 10 - :=Votton,quiptinntintadya k - m „, 41 1 EzNAToislri90:x 2 d,13. A)epp • - T 8 PayE, - 9 et. ESZI2 t The Newt York Exehooligank. I•Irm Vara -.Oct, 12,-The • ew YOrk fbange Bank! very hosYteldaY« • • The ac. , „:- counts of Sept. 23d are; being rapidly ao4tisCed, and'those of `Sept,.`24th Will scrod 1)(e/reached.. In the nointieae 'application has been to Judge•Blatehfoid by some of the creditors to have the -balliedeclared insolvent arid foreAl into banktirptcy,' The trotter came upfor ar- g he jotnentud to-day but the case was dismissed by, tge. ' , TAI FIRST. . IVMORTdAGO,,IIONDS,' OF, THE UNION - PACIFIC - :: RAILROAD `lnterest Six Per Cent. in 'Oeld . • . Since the opening of the Pacific Railroad, May lona its'earnfogs have been at the rate of about EIGHT Int.' LION DOLLARS PEE YEAR. The earniegs,lor 6762,177 43. The First. Moittmge Bonds of the 'Company liinortni to 028,816,000, and the - interest liability to 01,728,96trg0id, or anent 02,354490 in currency. •It *ill be noticed that the pretent earnings provide an ample fund for the pay... , ment of tide interest and leave a large Surplus: THE LAND 01:1ANT BONDS to the amount.of Ten Million Dollare, were issued to ob tain weeps. to finish the road, and are secured by a, FIRST MORTGAGE noon the entire Land Grant of the, Company, amounting to 43,824,000 acres. The sales of land wore opened in Omaha, July 27th, and average at the rate of 0200,000 per month, THE LAND GRANT BONDS ARE RECEIVED ilk payment for all the Company's ",lands, at , par, and the de- ' mond from actual settlers will giye them a certain mar- , ket. They run twenty, years and pay seven per cant. in- . tercet in currency. . . Although the Company have dThposed of all their betide, yet, as they are offered in market, we continue'to , till orders a the current rater:l.. - • We' have hesitatiOn ii, recorranending boith the Pivot Ifortgag d - therliamtCrant Bonds as , a very valuable and perfec efeiritestment. , • . . „ DE EN 'r.s,e BRO. Bainkeru ' 40 South :Third Stroot. ' ' ' St. Louis,,Vandalia and Term Haut. First Mortgage Sevens. . • We would call the attention of investors to the abdtie. Bonds. The Mortgage is at the rate of 812,000 per milt), with a sinking fund proviso of $20,000 per anunm. The Bonds are also endorsed by the following companies: . Terre Haute and Indianapolis Railroad, A 'Company baying po debt and a large surplus fund 1 Columbus, ChicagdandlndianaCentralßailroad, PittBburgh; Cincinnati and Si. Louis Railway Co. The last two endorsements being guaranteed by the Pennsylvania Railroad Company. We are selling the above Bonds at a price that will pa a good rate of,lnterest, DREXEL & CO. No. 34 Soutb.yllid Street. mhle test. , , The Coupons of the TIBST MORTGAGE BONDS of the • iillilLtaington and Reading. Railroad Co., maturing October I, will be paid, free of taies, on and after that date, at the Banking House of 'WILLIAM PAINTER. & CO. N 0.36 8 . THIRD Street, Philadelphia. WILLIAM S. HILLES, Secretary and Treasurer. se29 lin§ JAMES S., NEWBOLD & SON, BILL BROKERS AND GENERAL FINANCIAL ACFENTS, .se2l-]ms. SOUTH SECOND STREET SUDDARDS .8z FENIsTEMORE,, Artists and Photographers, • HAVE OPENED THEIHNEW ,GALLERIES, No. 820 Arch' Street. " Call and see them. Pictures in every style, and satin faCtion.guaranteed. , • . N. B.—All the Negatives of HEELER \ FENNE MORE, late or Ho:s S. EIGHTH Street, have been re moved to the New Galleries. ' • ' ' ' len w! ZELL'S. POPULAR - JENCYCLADOMEDI:2 I / 4 _, A Dictionary of Universal Knowledge. T. ELLWOOD ZELL, Pablisher, jyti l w 7 B a an yd 19 South Sixth Street. PRICE & WOOD, N. W. corner Eighth and Filbert, WILL OPEN ON MONDAY MORNING, Froth Now York Auction Sulu and other Boureeß : Several Jab Lots of Linen Goods under regular prices. Linen Buckaback, nnipleached,l2Nc. a yard. Scotch 'Diaper, all linen, 14c. a yard. " - Linen Towels, 12h.c. ' • Linen-Buckaback Towels, large'size` at 20, 23,25, 31c. Cheap lots of Damask Towels. at 35,28.40 and 500 • _ • Job lots of Linen Napkins, at .91 50, $ 1 75, 42,12 5 $ 260 and $3 a dozen... ; • 4 • Scotch Diaper by the piece, at $ 26, $1,50; $1 75, $2, $2 25, un to $5 a`plece. ,‘ • • ,) Linen Bird-eye, for aprons, fine enalities,atvery low prices. .Marseilles Quilts, at $4; $5, $6, $6 50, up to $52, - ;Colored Marseilles Quilts, a cheap lot, at $ 1 laps. BLANKETS • 4 , BLANKETS I A large assortment of Blankets, at the very lowest market prices. • - . , Best makes Bleached and Unbleached Muslim, at the, very lowest market prices, . • Flannehi.-1.5 bales of All-Wool and Dolma Flannels, bought for cash ,under regular prices. . All-Wool Flannels, at 25,31,37 h, 45,50 Ballardvnlo and Shaker Flannels. • ',Bernet Flanaele, 12%, 155:j. 25,31,3734 ,41. and 50c. a yard Bed and Gray Plain and Twilled Flannels. • ,Plaid and Shirting Flannels, ao., &c. • Canton Flannels, 1234,16, 15.19, 20, 23.25,upt0 fee, a yd.. Black Alpacas, at 37 45, 50 62%, 69, 75,80, 90 and Black' Silkit, Black' N Silks, at' 82, $2 25, $2 50, up ,to. • :A cheap lot of. Plaid Poplins, at WC. a yard. :Plaid Poplins, at 65, 76, 81; up to el 50a yard. Po • Stripe Pplins, at 7.5 c, a yard , , , , • , Black Velveteens, ut very low prices. • Irish Roll Poplins, 191 25 ayard. • From New York, 5,000 yards Hamburg Edgings and In partings, bought for cash, under regular 'prices. • Dimity Bancla,_Guipure Bands, Infante' Waists, Regis- tered Edgings, Coventry EuMings, dro., "cc. Ladies' and, Gents' Merino Underwear: • Misses and Boys' Merino Underwear. .• Ladies' and Gents' Hoeiery and Gloves, Sic, Children's Hosiery and Gloves. 'Jouvin '8 Kid Gloves, choice colors. Ladies' Hdkfs., all linpn, 8, 10. 11, 12%, 15,18,p,S 26. and 810. Ladies' and Gents' Hemstitched Hdkftt., &c., , PRICE iC WOOD, N. W. corner Eighth and Filbert Sts. . TS/a.A.E; NA1.11.A.b113, AUCTIONEKEti N, corner Third arid •Spruca 19 treote,ouly. ode sonars below the Exchange. *260,000 to loan, ia /cargo, or email amounts, on diamonds, silver 0140f-watches. , welry, and all goods of value. Office homer from 8 A. 01 . to 7 P. DI. ffir 'Established for, Ake lest forty yearn. Ad vances made 'in large mounts at the Intros market rates. Jae Urn TUST RECEIVED .MIND' IN STORE 1,000 ty cases of Champagne, sparkling Catawba And Dalt 'fornia Wines, Port, Madeira , Sherri. JamairnAnt Santa Druz Ruin, tine old Brandies and Achlskies,Wholosals and , P.LJ JORDAN.= Poar street, Below Third 'and Walnut streets. wit obeys Doric street,• - , de7rl4l , ' • 4 q;s4 lIM=2 COUPONS.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers