"_f.. , •Y~~~ x..44', 0 %, ',e.,-rh.4 7 1 ,,,, . ..7 - ." - .77:77 -.,--, ...----- ,-,-------; - ~ . ..::-,, . .5, ~, . ;.', , n. ,-- Tito 6soi t t's:Ki J:i 0 . . ~. .-.-? ,-- 7 ,- -'.-1~% - ---. - • • -., .;-•.: . :',7.;_!',,T,,.,,•,,#4l4""ititilerotiiiit ssimlstits......convie. ~--..-...,,,..,1:y.;;,., . ........,.,...:., . ..- n oin- -, plr Abe Deitendsmitic•' -- : -- ' -- t ---- •••,(iil.tiliti6v.StiOiii:l4.4llilie rifidlow.-=The • t'l,3ltl - ttit:: ; :tetisseriable4l at the appointed time on akittft,erooon:_. , ....,, ~. .., ... , •• ~. ~,..„,...„ , § T.igiiet.Dottehtit, . 12M.S.'"Nintliatitet,''.find 47Paitipli , Neville, 913 Badman street, testified that? they were ' in' 'Ataitin's. - .store after Mr. „ 41 , V33r00ks *as shot; and, .beard hint:(Broolo) say th5,t.4:10., could not•identifY the Parties *who shot r• ...,,,,to n-., C . • erry, 918 Market ; - Pat,'Dorsex,. 4410'':;klillei' Street;* Patrick Goi•mati -(police- Az+ an)„ 010 S. Sixth;'. , Daniel Green, Front and , iliValnot.; ''.. Miehael QUigley,4ll l S.:Eiglith ;• .JOll4 fl,..g.pArtghiaxii,2ll Walnut street; Thomas Waite, 4't - 9.0:5.. - Seventh, and Andrew Boyle, 930 Wash -1...',1,,,,,,''',11- - tqrt avenue, testified that Thomas Ilughes, , liflritne,S6 for . -the .Conimonmealth, has a' bad 4'...,l.!.,eiiiiitici-er for truth and veracity.• A. ;,..?...:..,..: erm Williaman,. .111caullm r "I sworn— am ~.T...i,: • att;; ; ,...kitler.mari of theiity;' I remeinber. the day aOtil.'...klfith Brooks was shot ; ' at twelve- • o'clock Itifithe.i3th. of September; I had -an engage ient- at My' office at twelve-o'clock with _Alder:. ..,4 - ._M;eu , Cidlins and :Devitt : they .came , ' there 'at , ;;•:..i:: : li,:fhliri. 'o'clock; to fix up the lists or. cOlta•iseo 4•eleetion °Ricers of the Second, TWO and •,I,t - ,, : , ,0nii4b :.."Wards; : Aldeimati:toevitt is of . tile ,2))ll.4lVard, and Collins. of the Second ; ' were 4ik:,-,.,* l oreinpled du this :about twentyminutes; made :1..p , tit'lle;W:alteratiens 'or changes; , 'inine were " iil , ..,:,64 . :•:tip, before :'they came, andl -ii..ed tV n ...•., '4'up ; • after ' we' - got' '. thrOugli .'*e . :I: , 24,efit'te..litine.s,lPoitt'S. f ,taveni Eighth. 'street; . ..ht ow itzwa :r ; s aye •,r ~ 7,7 --- c - i -- T k ~,041ftltes, • •ue had t drink while,and.talke d-,while, r . `;flt4j)evitt , and myself•went up in a car ; had fikft'tigtigeinent at- one o'clock at Fifth and it 6 „,.. tunt'streets ; - Can remember PerSeniwho .-..- • ':Fit the tavern betweentWelve and one ' 'l4k:: -. lrave knoWn''4he . prisoners . ' fifteen years%;w fltey'. were . them when we Went:;te. • c -DeViatl.rn , Prri4..llun.positimtligy were there :. .. :with Ofliers; , 'While:, Niro i':(Devitt, '.and7.l)rsidit iJ.standiOn• at Fifth and Chestniit , streets l waiting i fOllliellnitti with whom we' had , the engage 7 -, nient,,Donolnie caine . vp and told'us that' Mr. ' Hmohs was shot. .. ' :: , • Y: ' ;Cress-exaniined—There is,a clock in my of-, '_:flee, :in, front of my desk; I called their, atten tion ' • theirr - engagements at - twelve, o'clock; there '.':. wer9•lniffew names changed ' s zt the list' of fr* . canvassers and election officers; "I bad.a. printed list of all the canvassers in the city in my possession ; we Went ever it and scratched ?' .4 name,here and there; my office is but a few, doors '. from Devitt's tavern; the .prisbrier ' Dougherty lives, 'in . Wall ' street, a'' little street , that runs between. Christian • and. Catharine ; Mara:, lives- .in the neigh borhood, of Eighth .and Fitzwater; they sit around the hose-house sometimes; Dougherty is a carpenter, and Idarals- a hack-driver, but I -.- think be has given it ' up; do ;not linow Idc-` 'Laughlin; I saw him .in Count; he 'may go around the hose-housedatt I don't know half the Men who go .there; know , Pincer Kelly, and Lace -for about, three years; don't know .• . where he lives; he is on a beat: around. , my ' • neighborhood; I think I haVe seen him within • two' or three days ; don't kricitr'. whether he . ' knows. the prisoner's ; got to Fifth ' and' Chest ' nut streets - about a . nnartei to one o!elock: ....: Alderman Collins, sworn.—l .am an Alder-, Man of ; the Second Ward; was at a meeting of the Board. of Aldermen: on the 6th -of Septeiii.; "her; was at Eighth and Catharine , ' When 'B.t. Paul's' . Church; bell rang twelve -o'clock ; I was going to Alderman 31cMullIn's office ' • - I 'went \up Carpenter tb Eighth; and up Eighth; past .`dames Devitt's tavern; do not recollect seeing either of the prisoners there at that Aime-;. Alderman Devitt was sitting in a chair there ; we went to! ,- 310.1 - ullin's -', Mike g together ; we were there. about. -.eighteen or twenty .min utes,, ' liking - UP . the . lists; - . went ,froin -there to ADevitt's tavern; all went - to: gether ; asked them in to" take ''a ' drink;, the' prisoners Were both there and'dirank with me ; Aldo Men 'Devitt and .3.l.ellullin got on a car and - Went up Eighth' street after we had been ' thereabout' fifteen.minutes; I then went borne - with Officer Snyder; had seen these prisoners '--- - about the neighborhood, and knew them, so . • ' well that I could make no mistake about them. • ' ' • Cross-ciamined—Have known them for twelve or ,ffileen years; I-belong to•the same fire company that they do ; the Moyamensing Hose ; know - Officer Kelly ; lie was in my office a few days ago with a woman who had stolen a pair of shoes; do not know whether lie was in my office on night before last; I was out. . - Alderman Frank Devitt sworn—l am an alderman iu the Third Ward; about midday of the 6th of last September I had an engagement at Alderman Mcldullin's with Alderman Col lins; was there in . inusuande of that engage ment; was there until about twenty minutes after twelve ; we all went from there to my brother's tavern, at No. 752 South Eighth street,_ and went in and had a drink; during the time we Were . there I saw the prisoner; Alderman McMullin and I came up to Fifth and, Chestnut streets,; have known - the prisoner for fifteen or eighteen years • we all, drank to gether; Alderman McMullin and I had an engagement at Twelfth. and Chestnut streets, and between one and two o'clock, while we Were staWingTiliere, a man named Donohue i•oss,extun and eleven o'clock in the/ morning; I was sitting in front or my t he brother's t_p when aper; Alderman Collins' came up, reading I my office • is at No. 821 South Filth street; left at about twenty minutes after eleven o'clock, and was at my brother's when Alderman Collins came. up ; did not look at my watch wheii I left Mc . Mullin's .o,.flice; nor-when at my brother's 4 tavern; the appointment at- Twelfth and ad nothing _to to do with the_ meeting ‘' l : - o Clle itl s a t-1 : ut ßoard li of 4 Aldermen; I de not carry a positive that I was not at my tt ' Y ),,, ,, ';, leh biantthe; am r'stavern more than half an hour after leavin Alderman Mc.Mullin's office; I , , ''',' belong to the ' Moyhmeusing Hose Com pany, as del the prisoners; the pri., \' Bonerswere sitting on the steps of my brother's tavern,and some four or five others; Mr. Geo. : rahner was one of these; think Mr. Michael ' 'Riley A ''''l , was there; I believe the bartender, Mr. ' • Porter, was, there; cannot think whethei there l Were any others there or not; the whole . party b Alderman Collins; was sit --ling 'were invited inY.. I heard_the_hells _I 1 -. - - at -my brother's when _ . strikel2 o'clock, Alderman was Collins then . streets, coming Ma , i at Eighth and Catharine ,t,,,,, think when we got to. Alderman McMullin's ' •-• office I had, one canvasser„ altered; b the general i ' - conversation was about this,; . , earn , t think`of p illeniar remark being'rrim e. aril - a xamined—Q. Do you remember MIS” re •••‘‘, ' marl •,he , f a , in a de,about, being punctual. ' .14 Objected t ' ° ' . —Helnay state what conyer iti.; JOge-t(ndi° __. - • • 'tilln took Place ' ' ' ' •1 t .have made •, '',.-' ,, " Witness‘.-•' Ald MeMulliwong 4 . . the remark, bu . t tt . l. do o i l i . o n t — sfeak positively. ' . keep the- public f ,' James ,_P r , el .„) , bn ie - w it li e s seS i. I 'reneteuber ~ • - • house spoken ' filch Mr Brookl',,was 'l43ot'; f ' .... ' :kn tile o ll w 4l tie l 'e p n ris w oners and have for ten twelve years; they genmeally, . I.. sat lt a . bout ~,.-, -,,, ;. • or ~out , of , einPloYme ) ' ; there . When ' i t1 7:1* . ,,.:, `carne ingand sa dowo w stairs at 9 'o'clock that morn these two gentlemen in the :,--;' .- bar-mom; I walked up, to, Catharine street and .i. tleme making il a back - and saw these two ~,en , ~ I a proposition'to play a gamer,.cards . ,tread ' pa" . Pei ' iltle while. and went in and loiLkedlat , ''''ll- - m . a i. the risoners•antl a man fin '•': ":Llie 14aying ; , I) named Palmer were Play inlet '4nA)thcr named th ere • they com -4 `7lst 4til,jAy ;We-tender was • 2 . ~,,., , ~__ ;ry, • ilift playing about. eleven 0 eluett,l, ,x_' .. 1 ,7, 1' ' 'l —..t..' 4"- ' -' A nt there until ahput two 0 c1u,,u,!.; ...,;--, bonne I . Nide' lin n. lfellutim, kL.'l ,2 l'.valiere there v , icn • - .. , , a '''•;' iV...;' 14Fn ri 'd my Inother eamef these inenw re ' '"V "' - f between nine and ten o'clock . I ,•' : ' . ,r ' 24 B t, e a r t;a 1:1 ;;; they phiyed4n a little room -. .. :',9-, in ; ii ) A ejiti•4oolo. Say they crane r I ' ' ' ''' l ' ' '''' ' 4 "lax' mined—Cannot that they , ' ''';' , : , ' 4l ' i ":-. -.- .'• II • them the last time there, I '•",, • 1 ) **044 •saw T '4Nry- '',,,,''' ' • _ , ffi==EN thini,:"Oii the ilayltfint,lfi: Brt oksOs rt cannot say so pesitively; think that ibet were the*rtbe preceding' Sunday and tOonday, and should judge they were'there'On Friday from a bit of a conversatiOP:,ahout-getting them On the police force; they are there every day. that they are out of employment : I recollect this Was the ,day r thiit;they were playing cards; froth. the 'fad.. that all the' L tlitie Aldertheir weere there together; I . made that remark' to my bartender;' cannot remeraber Whether ,they we're' there' the fiat day did not ktiow.` that they' bad left . .Philadelphia; - did* not hear , of. it; they.:might have, been away n day. Or missing then), ; 'I do not pay attention,to ph° Is there ; I' did not miss them after Monday; do not remem ber any other person except those named he: . ing at niyhoute,that-day;vrbelievOthepriseiti ers lielong to the Moyathensing Hose; I 'be long to that coMpany; 'I have no doubt but that.they;tio ;: I : do:riot know AO such 'person;' belonging to the 'company company; did not-see the driver of the hack on the wit • ness;stand ; (McLatighlin Ordered to stand up) never saw that man before;: the. photographs of these.men were never ln my, house ; a frame' -ceritabiltig ;photographs -Of 'seine of the members of the company hanging in' my 1 1 house; their pliotograPhs,. to my knoWledge,' were never in my hous&or bar-room.' Win. Porter, sworn-- 7 I live, at No 7,52 South Eighth street; am bar-teriderlerWriea Devitt, tilldlitia tile day 'Mr: Brooks"' was ' r sbo4haire ImownDonglierty fceaboiit 'fifteenYeata„and rn . Mara for about nine years - saw„,:the at, the taterri on the day : that ,14.'Briieks was shot; --hodthalf-past-nine ti!otoelr, when I was-done cleaning the bar-room; , ,P . went -outside,' . and • ' Ma and . RileY were. , sitting-there ; semi after Mara Doligheity,CameidOgattifthen' Palmer, about half-past ten o'elock began playipg, euchre ill':OP:Yeek-rootia; - ,they-were - playmg there for,about an hour; they- then came out' / and sat down outsideOhis was very near 12 '`o'clock; Alderman Collins soon , after .came up',; InfrAlderniau - Devitti - who - was - sitting - there, -- went up the street with hire; after while AlderMen'lleMullin, Coiling and.' Devitt 'carne t& the tavern; these men:were:there then.; *ph, oamott.went , ,tip Eighth street , rin ear, and Alderman Collins went,down Eighth street; rwent to dinner at . half-past:twelves o'clock;, and left the , prisoner sitting on the steps there; trettirned about a quarter'to one &deck, - and Dougherty:Walked across SWeeny'S lot asfif to g° to his 'dinner, as l suppOged,; WaS there when he returned; saw, them both, there Until two or 'three o'clock thataiterpoon., 'CrOSsxainined-S4 , W . them both there the next daylt they_ fregfient the' house,..ancl are there.some time every day; they generally get there about ten o'clock . whe'n they come; can 'not tell what time they got there on Thursday;. I jUdge they got there on*Saturday about nine, ten or eleven o'clock; they neVer got there to gether;. judge it was ; that time, as they gene rally get, hereat-that time; On Friday they got there about nine or, ten o'clock; judge this be- Cause they generally got there about that tinie; cannot say at what time theyleft'the houSe on Friday. or Saturday ; ,cannot -say at what time they left the house on the' Tuesday following this Monday; think this Was:the last day I day,. their • they might' haVe left latec in the day : :.on ' Monday;, I said I saw . then , there that ....day between two and three o'elock. lie-examined--‘Whewthe - news came of the shooting of Mroßrooks on' that - day the pris onera weresitting'on the step, and I was: sin prised to hear ' that they had been 'arrested for 1 ' , live at No: :924 South EleVenth street; I: was at Devitt's tavern the day-Mr. Brooks'Was Shot,; got there Wait ten,o'dock -in the morning; the prisoners and Mr: Thompson were there; Palmer came af terwards ; rstayed 'until nearly' one o'clock; they Were there all that time ; Dougherty ',And I, and Mara. arid Palmer. were partners in :a game 'Of etichre;• we Played for nearly ar honr;, when I'got back from dinner they were there, and when I afterwards went away I left, them there ; was not_ there when news of the shoot ing. arrived. • - t Cross-examined—l got to Devitt's tavern on Saturday about ten o'clock; stayed until half past twelve o'clock; came back at two o'clock; - think - Dovigherty was - there • but - cannot say: whether Mara was ;on the Wednesday preced= ing- L cannot remember where I was from nine o'dock-in the morning until five o'clock in:the afternoon, nor on the Thursday-or Fri day preceding it. Re-exathined;-I heard of the shooting about half-past two' o'clock on the saine afternoon; heard that the officers were looking for Mara and:Dougherty, as being implitated in Ails, 011 the following Thursday evening. . • George W. Palmer, Jr.; sworn—l was at Devitt's tavern on this day; saw the prisoners there ; was in the back. room, playing cards with the priSoners and Reilly, about half-past ten or eleven o'clock; remember coming out and sitting down outside ; Alderman Collins came up, and Alderman Devitt,who was sitting there, went up Eighth street with him; Alder- Men McMullin; Collins and Devitt returned, and we all took aldrink; the prisoners were there; Dougherty 'went away with me at one' o'clock; -I came back about two o'clock; the prisoners were there. • Cross-examined—Am a bookbinder, and em ployed by William W. - Harding, on Third street, - below - Chestnut ; have played- cards with the' prisoners before; played on several . .. . .. .... ... ..,...... • ..' : .' -, ' , , , ..1 . -;1::: •.:'.. -{ . - r.:.. , ::::;' .. ?: 'llHre.:-DAti-iy: flay wit t em, on -- precec mg ays cont meficed to : play on the. preceding . Saturday; about ten o'clock, and . stopped' about tiverve o'clock; on Tuesday or Wednesday played cards with them, but cannot say on which day ; saw 'than last on the Tuesday fol lowing,: this Monday, about two o'clock iw the afternoon; generally spend my time there When' I ,have nothing else to - do'; have been with Mr: Harding about three weeks; I belong_ to the Moyanterising Ilosk Company; never saw the prisoners - in .the tavern ; generally met them at the tavern; but after this occurrence did not miss them; did not take account of who was t therkgenerally ; at twelve o'clock on every day, as general thing, be was sitting an Mr. Devitt's step for two Month'S Was there on the Tuesday fol lowing,. and fix' the -boar by reason of not going to dinner that day; never saw McLaugh- lin before. . , Thonipson sworn-,1 was, ,at Devitt's tavern on this Thompson, ; saw the prisoners there between twelve and one o'clock ; first saw thena abooti ,ten o'clock ;and 'saw these parties, and they nia;de a proposal` tO play a game of cards; besides the.orisoners there were Palmer, and PortZ . r„ there; have known all the parties for about twelve years; have known Mara for about ten' years and I)ougherty since I was a, boy ;I went home at, one &Mock and they were Still there. , - ' Cross-examined—l was before the building at twelve, o'clock ; the prisoners, Riley and Palmer were in the back room playing cards; am positive that tbey were about the building ; jj!was therewhen Collins:- cauteinp and!afterf , wards returned ' with Ald. MeMullifi and De vitt.; 1 think Palmer was not on the pavement wben)Ald.;Collins came up; believe!he'WaS playing cards ; every day that I was out of work I was at this tavern; was out of work for about two months; am now working for Mrs. ThouipSon.;'shelteeps tC • salQou; do! not ! recollect seeing these prisoners after this day; I was at thelavern on Tuesday andWeilnes ! day following';'couldnot' say:whethev I saw j them after this Mondays;,.it is . the habit of us all to play cards there; J. ;! ! Jbomas sworn 4' keep a cigar j store at No. South I;:iglith ,street; and Rite at,l6'l South Eighth street; know both'OltheSe prisoners; on MIS ' Monday; Mara, a Sew "Min utes, before ten o'clock, came, in to buy a collar of me;,,saw both of them between twelVe and one 'U'elock at' James Devitt's door when I was to iny' dinner; I waif for inYlittle, girl to come frOul school before I. get my dinner; she minds the store for are. CroSs-exaMined,---1 fns, from the fact that, I was a candidate' for an election: 001,7 eel) and, that was the day they were to be ap- .. - ,EVOitAq.7I3:(ILLtTINV..I4-_. - 14 - ,P. lif,'4l:-A.M.O.NPAY:OO.T:OIS:RI.S4--,4869:. VlEe j ii 1 Board r i 'iAldermen, when i'- ' ' --- • pc, i .k.th .o : -• .• ~ 1 ~_ ,': -: ,:; :.PrirtritilLLElll4. beard of these men being accused . the- fact of: I . :'. . - ' . .!; ..' •• •' ' . : , inltiraeoniffigfor . the'collar -- came' instantly to v‘ . ;-- est P r .. i ir a i d d e e i N r - ,: i la o te ; l4 - ase s.rc a c ti e l i te ve /joi a a c c o li m. sti m lle iss ry lo -i ii tn as Internal Revenue Assessor at large from:om' ; My memory ;.,heard the - report' . on'Wednesdar . or Thiirsda.yi but Wined 4ay. Which' day ; can not tell from whom:l heard it; . did not hear "IT!ePartment at Washington . ; '', . - '.' - Itnatthey, had the city, ; the first ,intimation, 1 : --An election for one Colonel, one Lieuten-,. i Flied of'ft'wailearingthatthey had. been arm!ant-Colonel and one Major will take Pliee on. 'rested in New York;: saw Dougherty hereon- November 2d, to •fill - vacancies :and ... e.omplete thesucceeding Tuesday aft(eFithOhooting; did:. i the 'organization of the Seventh Regiment.. ,: ~ not see Mara that ' day ; did net• miss them from - ..A boy - named; john; Maloney,. aged flue; the city.. -- , . .• --', - , iyears;',Was instantly killed- by a • counteri", in Ifrank Ittler, trwprin=.4,lzlomve :',, Mara . , and i front of; an auction store, at Barron and Sonth' s liOnglierty ; am a:constable Of the'llhird Ward ; - i streets; - fallingl • on him, •en i Saturday. ' lie, on the day:Mr. - Broeks was shot se* them at . )lived on parties interested in the' proceedings Ouilford street below• South. • ' • -., Devitt's hotel; -,.',Wits,. there l about half-past T r r , o'clOck ;.lia,d`. the;business'tn.- iaeighborliond ; ;before the colirt;lruartial ordered by the Major naritedi;tO,-.furil „Am -th. Alderman -evitt, ; .1 - stayed Genera' commanding the 'division, ' haVe' 'there about twenty; minutes, and, left; the prise-: taniicably settled their;; difileulty, and the pro 'nets there; and dhknat'colne huh.' '-• ' " :ceedings have been. quashed. - , Crosi.examined-4.10 not go to this tavern. -, About -four ,o'clock - yesterda . Y afternoon ' often ;. ant 'Alderinan Devitt'ae•Stistable ;do not, Chaldean% four years of gage, wnose parents knew, Whether -I am a meMbe-',I th. -Ma3a" 'reside at No. 820 South Thhteenth - street, 'fell ItieriShigjOsetomPanY ;. I wizs:Pr:49od , Put . ' 'from the second story window• 'to he :pave - - • merit,: badly injuring himself ' ... ~. .., -: -•• ' jois t :o4 l( l.6e 'daties of, ap• fireman , • I arrested -.at,. —Thomas Donohue; livin . at - Broad. and Fine'street, and took 11 3: L el - a ro Alle.rmav,i6nli Lombarcl,streetsi:fell from hishorse,' yesterday u p e evi a t u v n s , ~ . , , , • office ',;• *As net ore alot , with hint at: any time, ' afternoon,. at Broad - and Columbia' avenue. and:did:not meet: any: eneon•alOt; : '', '-': -. , . ' Henry- a.• Kane;- , sworn .',..ti. t ir o it, produced . The horse kicked him, injuring ,him so badly Dock my place* 'niskieSS I,' wasat . ' thit P his. recovery is doubtful :of,' i : ' ~•: ', ' ' ~ ----The.noW 'night-Air built for the :lights' Street Market at thethritiOf .. this; r, Occur rence ; on that :morning,l .**'ecothig- down ,hotthe Department at FiVe,Fathom Bank, near Front street; about 'one . inixtdred ',. yards the, Cape May, Was' launeled onSatiirday from the other side . of Arch' street I isksiu ca,b;and a ,yard of Mr. John W.:Lynn.' ' -She is powerfully t :i man - Struggling to get in ; about three. .•.:or . four h.ll.llt'FLahou3sotons burden seconds afterwards a mar4airie rtintiing up,' ! -=-Thaliedy of Joseph- Hershel) was fOund er . int!, " Stop tbat Carriage ;'" be had A.' istol in , earlY yeaterdayrranning, lying' Upon the. track. ' his ban ; ,o no t••• • • i'l . i • • 14:. , Intired if -- tla .e4ll-earikigAtitiiCity:Ta.rli: and went down Arch ,street ;- 77 04roners or- llotel., 'A post ,morteni examination made by; tiered to stand up)—the man trying 40 get in Dr. E. B. Shapleigh,- disclosed, that ' death re-, the carriage was a large and stouter ..one than sultedfrontwater on the brain. . ' • ~• ither of those two. . •• ' , , f., ,: • —Last eVening, a German,• supposed to -be , - :Cross-examined—l ' have -,' he '. business Philip. Goodman, was found lying on the Ger now ;••' I heard. of . this - case; . and mantovaillailroad,near Tioga station,.injured went to . Mr. Cassidy, ' and '.on - Thinsday about the arms and body. He 'was supposed last-lie brought me here,. and Ltold tam it_was Jo he a milkman, 'as a wagon and milk cans, neither one of those men; I did•not want to be were found broken;:. the- horses having get mixed up in this thing is the reason why I did 'loose. ': It was found: necessary to amputate not' go to the authorities ; L Cannot tell svhat one of his'arms. - It, is believed that he resided motive prompted me to.,„gp to the counsel for at Nicetown. -'.' • ' - - . '' • the defence. h -, ;..: ,* ' ) --Neil. McLaughlin, the beck " driver ill the . Be-examined;--I went to: , . ~Cassidy the Brooks conspiracy case', was, on Saturday, moment I heard of it. r. ~,,. T•- , , . taken before. Alderman Kerr, and on the oath ', .. By Mr. Cassidy —You never saw me - . before. of. Detective Tryon, Who'stated that McLaugh : Answer—No, sir: :- ". ' . 6 ~ lin told him and others in his presence that The defence closed: - Mara and Dougherty were the men in the hack, Detective Tryon--recalled forthe Common wealth. - and had:afterwards testified- in court that he • • AL.. Cassidy desire.d to . know' whatthey in - , had'met, them in New York;he'wa.s..committed tended to rebut, .' `' • - ' •' - for trial.' The bail demanded w4s $20,000. 1 Mr.:Divight stated that the Witnesses, for the `defence stated 'that they beard'of these` men • being implicated inthe shooting ,on therThurs iday or Wednesday,succeedingthe.oecurrence. ;Helm* promised to show that the first public !notice was not given until the 18th,inst. Mr. Cassidymaintained thatit, 'rebutted no thing, as it was a notorious fact,that, the, police officers and detectives were searching ; the houses - of people in that neighborhood on the iThersdayand Wednesday sucCeeding -the .oc-, amerce. . , -. '- • 1,•. - -.. Mr;Marm objected; to the: :Offering , ot the 'Mayor's proclamation in• evidenee as.' toL t any 'one fact in the (muse.' ' •' =`= •; I The objection.ofXr.. ca'ssiAy was overruled. Mr. Dwight=Are you aware Of 6..Proclama ,_ i tion? Mr. Caseidy--.-I object. :. ,-It is ail. writing and ,must be proVed in the regular way: - ' i . : : ; Jiidge Ludlow believed: it' cempetent. for the witness to ; state his knowledge of the. fact of a • preclamation having been. issued, • Ind over ruled the ,objection. •, ' ". • • ~,- , ,'' , Judge Ludlow—The , officer will, be' careful to state - simply his - knowledge `of: . having beenissued.: . • ~,,; ,„ , - : ~ 1 Mr. Dwight,-Are you aware' of a proclaim i don having been issued ",for the. :apprehension iof Neil MeLaughlip,' Hugh. . Mara : 'and . James I Dougherty, and a reward therefor, for an as- 1 , sault upon James J. Brooks ? ;'' .', , . • , Objected to. ' ' ' .. .' • • The question was Modified and the witness 'stated that there was such ,a proclamation . is - sued on the 18th inst. . 0/rosS-examined—l made an effort to get these men before that...._....... . , This closed the testimony. . , The rise was then stunmed up by the counsel. : • Judge Ludlow charged the jury: He said that the ' bill 'of indictment contained two counts—one charging assault and battery, and the other charging assault and battery with intent to kill. The law of the case is very simple. He who strikes another commits an 1 asamilt - and battery. - If ii . mati strikes another with Violence, with intent to do him bodily harm, then it was . not the offence charged here ; but If it resnits in death, it, of course, 'is murder in the second degree. 'lf a deadly weapon is used, and these are' the men, then the charge is 'made out. This case turns simply npon the evidence. Of the testi mony of Neil McLaughlin I will dispose at once. If the jury believes his statement de ' livered on the standthey ,will at once arrive at :the conclusion that these are not the men. But the Commonwealth have offered in eVi dence statements that he made before the Mayor, which are not evidente except ipso far as to affect the credibility of McLaughlin. Of :this the lury.-are-the judges. _ The case_ of_ the _ Commonwealth rests principally upon the testi • u , • • ' • • s--Tlenu,is Hughes - . - a. Deteetive. Brook's.', Hughes testified to :speaking to Mara ' while the car riage was standing I ...on Front street, and that James Dougherty was there at 'that three ; he subsequently sees them down town, • their clothing having been changed. Detective drool testifies, 'that while . leaning - over'- the ',desk in the office of . this store he sees three : men come into the store; and while still look ing at the books on the. desk he hears an ex:- plosion, - and immediately-feels that a-ball has ' entered into his body; running into the -store' a man throws a ,blackjack at him violently;' 'running into the street he sees a carriage being :driven off, and a man struggling to get in it, -and of, this man he obtains a good profile , view,.. keeping . .his .:..eye . upon him; ..;:he.: does riot _state that , these are the-men who -'assaulted him,: - but , idetifies Hugh Mara as being one'of the men who 'Avas in the store, and the other,James Dougherty,as A, Model • Ilbl arian ' - • ' , the man who was trying to get into the car- . The .:late Thomas Watts, chief ,Libinrian at I riage. The defence is threefold. It consists WO British Mtiseum;• had amemory so :ietentiire 1 ' of the 'destruction of Hindies, the contradictiont that he . seeined.never to forget anything lie had . 'Ol - 31r. Brooks and an alibi:" As to the testi= once ninny of the witnesses who attacked Hughes ,• it, was for the jury 'to.tlecide which were e uti- upon: record., It wasllia 'coMMOn, this respect one or two instances :have been Practice;.it P learnt. • ' Of_ his.. - extraordinarY P'?Nver. at , in t tied to belief. The contradiction of Mr. Brooks . seems, to .spend his leisure hours , in looking -.,. : wits found in the testiiiiony of Mr. • Martin; over. trade catalogues. in. .all. Manner of len-, who says that when . he asked .311.. Brooks guages„and iu checking off those of the hooks, !,whether he could recognize the inen who.. anentioned in them which he thought . the ' t shot him, he said that 'he could not. - An British' 3.lusetuta; did not' possess; antn,it is i ' itlibi is either overwhelming or destrue-: 'stated, that kwas very seldom-found, on, subse kive.l is ri defence' easily, niade; and often througlic .. chief -hustlee :shaw .states . that.:, it .Iquent investigation, that he had .put a mark 1 ,against ~ a- ,book ~which was: already.. in the, f bribery and subornation of 'perjury, anti the 'national library.- That , is to say; it was very' testimony adduced to sustain it should be sub- 'rarely that he could be found in error as re-. • jected to, the closest scrutiny. 'lf it is ,made gartled the existence' or non-existence.of any, out it:is conclusive; but' if,: it fails it iii: fatal work` of note among the ' three-quarters:Of a The defence basic attempted to prove an alibi,: :million of volumes which were under his ' and it is Tor 'You gentlemen, to judge of the ' e ,f la rge, ,; On one occasion, we are told,a visitor '; "testimony, ~ I have thins hrietlY and concise-IytO thelibrary coniPlained that a boOk Which he • laid befc,re you all the material points hi 'thehad presented to it twelve years previously was '. case; it would, be propee,however, for ,me to' inot to be found. Mr. Watts immediately, with state that flight' is 'slight evidence Of milk. • iout consulting any.catalogue,or -other work of if Further, itis a well-known principle °P-law: referenc:e; led hiin up to a bookcase, and there, that all concerned 'in,the perpetration of a Without a moment's hesitation, rented out the felony, are ecinally guilty, 1 1 1 )4 if one man did volume in questiori.. He batiplaCed it there on not enter - the store, if is concerned' kilt:: he . *the day of its arrival, and had not seen it again is equally guilty._-' --',. ' '(- .--. •:. -. t, , during the twelve years.Whielf _had elapsed The jury retired at ten minutes before twelve • since that time, but lie remembered Its history o'clock, and atitWent.Y minutes atter twelve re- and its locality at once Whenit,s-origival owner turuedwitha verdict of guilty - pf- the count inquired atter it. . . . . • Charging thorn with Assault and 'battery - with: It seemed Strange to find in , London 'a stn: to kill. • i 'dent who hail but rarely• been out of England, t ~, 7.: ............:t. 4. 4 . --,:-..-......__ . ' hut who was capable of solving at - sight Some A sT,Acm-coAcil was robbed by highway- : abstruse problem connected with the origin or men near : Los Angelos, Cal:, on Friday. A . the recent development of . the, Hungarian large =mint was taken from' the express :and ; language, or of giving • oft hand a list of the passengers', but the mall, containing 'several:,. chief , periodicals published ' at Moscow,. IR of hundred thousand dollars, was untouched. ' pointing • out at a Moment's notice, the [From Monouro Conytay's article on. the Interna , Bona Boat Race, In Harper's Magazino.] SIBIRIONS, OF TUE WAIRT.A.IID CREW. About one generation. ago there was at Ham- ward University. a young - man remarkable among his cOmpaniOns for his manly beauty, for his dashing genius, and his .athletic supe riority: He was amiable, -frank, impulsive? beloved by Ids fellow-students; but no one, would have attribute& to him' any superiority beyond that of being . the finest . athietat in the university. Tins. young man diSap peared'afte,r' graduation from the view of his' comrades. But presently there were tidings of 'a 'young New England minister 'borne by his few friends, under cover of night, froni - house to house in a _Southera_city cape the fury of a ineb. This youn minister had accepted a call to a pulpit in Mobile; stirred in spirit by ,the wrongs he saw around him, he 'had ventured to • deliver 'a discourse -“on the kind treatment of negroes," the result of whiCh was that be barely' escaped with his life, from the enraged 'slaveholders, He repaired' to his :ancestral home, Concord, 31a5.5,,. where he lived the life of a saint, and :thotight: the thoughts of as true a scholar as any: that ever added to the fame of the little town where .his dust re poses:- When, seventeen years. ago; I used to sit at the feet of George Simmons in his study, " - sacred to thought and - God," how did I marvel that in him was: to be seen. the handsome, dashing, athlete,-the youth of wit -and fun,.—who• at HarVard had :given no sign that his gay strength would presently be coping With. human wrongs, or his subtle wit be pene trating the mysterious recesses of spiritual 'truth! And when, an hour before the beat- I race, 'walked with his son—on whose grand frame thousands looked with hope, and ail with admirationand he told me that. hen his race was over he was going to Germany to study (even so hisTather did before him), I could not help feeling that the probabilities were that from the pluck and enthusiasm which had brought him and his comrades over the sea for that _strUggle : against so many odds the world might one, day, reap real victories. • * * _* • The last fish is a much more graceful animal than the first reptile. The one darts beautifully through the water ; the other wriggles helplessly and awkivaly through the - mud: - -- Yet the typo of the reptile is higherthanthe fish. The 'great future is not for fish, „ but reptile. As time. goes on its feet will - be more 'shapely, its shell will break into feathers, and it willsoar. Our superfluous undisciplined strength may not as 'yet haYe attained the finish and - completeness of a civilization at :its climax; the face and aim of the Harvard youth May not be se 'plump and round ; but the larger skeleton is there, and iu good time it shall be fairly in- I vested with its fulfilled outline: And may it 115 I ur scholarshi ), our literature, our religion: ac - ,not genius, but culture; not thought or originality, but the embodiment of these in the. artistic formS Which literary -industry alone can supply ; not devputness, but moral earnestness. We must be conscious of our infancy in many. thingS•before:We can enter upon moral and in-; telleetual aims corresponding to the grandeur of the continent given to us, and the opportu nities opening before • us. The high standard .must be planted in the vale of lunility.. It. will be worth the three thousand miles our Harvard boys have come, it 'be a hundred; fold compensation for their defeat, if they shall have been the means of 'furnishingus but one httle line in the great lesson,' we have to learn ere the New . World 'can contribute - to lifn , inanity ripe fruits that cannot be gathered , Shadowy, differences which e exist be-' theitteenBocech.. ' ' the' Hun-. .g# l 4 ll iS)Ovali.; I.ll d. that of:, ,the'Rohe than Czqeinsor of ,nrthesitatingly;,delivering ndebided. opinion as to,the relationship of the Aztecs and ,the Basques, or - the possibility of a Magyar. 'tottrist. who.; spoke . nothing but his native tOngue.fiuding that his "Remarks, proved intent.' ,gible' to a :Pircirsiraudienee. 'Oh all stitch mat-' tem as Meals ltr.:Watts spolie with the, readi ne.ss ; one who had ; just risen . from an, ex-, haustive study of,Ahe subject, -and yet if often happenedthat years had elapsed, since he had ;,last paid it any special attention.'.." AfiltElll3 DA.iffOING'A.CADEMT, , •'N O. .808 FILBERT STREET: A All the Now and sFaillionable Danced Taught. Ladies and Gentlemen—Monday, .Tuesday, Thursday . and Friday Evenins. , • , Misses' and M u s t ers ltleaday . and Eiattirday After. Gentlemen Only—Saturday Evening. . • ' Private lessons,singly or In classes, at any hour to pit' convenience., • oc2o-2n4 -s- A ti gEWAN ACADEMY Or % , MITESIO. stnAxosori ' 'DIRECTOR. The' public Is respectfully informed that the world.re tnownea and unrivalled Concert .Vocalist, Mile. CAR LOTTA " ' PATTI, will make her first appearance in Plilladelphiaistride her return from Elirops, 1 ' TWO GRAND' PATTI CONCERTS. , 's • FRIDAY 'AND SATURDAY-EVENINGS, • 29th; and. "80th October: 3llle. CARLOTTA PATTI will be allahliyir GIORGIO- RONCONL Monal'THEO. TER, h Eminent • Basso The Great , Classical Buffo.• ance anhitf ida first appear.' - • 1nc...) • ' PRUME, THEO. HADELISIANN, The 'Distinguished Vio- The Favorite Tenor. Mist. ith , JOSEF HERMANNS, is t s • at.. AND GRAND ORCHESTRA. Musical Director DINTRICH Accompanist.... s O. W. COLBY Admission. One Dollar; Reserved 'Seats, 50 canteen(' 91extra, accerding to location; Boxes els; Family Circle.e W cents; Amphitheatre, zit cents. The sale of Reserved Seats will commence Wednesday , at Mr. C. W. A. Trumplerls Music Store 9 2 1 Chestnut street. • titeinwafs rialtos are used st all of the PATTI CONCERTS. , 0c2511 FIVIItS:=JOHN---DREVIPS.- ARCIELHTIIEBT. THE ' • . - ' Begian!‘ to & 8 fIAKS, _PEEEA N ItEVXYAL. . MONDAY AND ipuniiia ENDS WEEK, • ALL'S WELL TEAT ENDS 'WELL. 'WEL .New Scenery, • • . : , I.4 " rle°gtnicue° ' 3l A u tltitf ' ili Quit, including MRS, JNO. DREW. • And the entire Company. . \ • MONDAY, Noy. let, Boneicault. and Eyrom'a LOSTAT SEA. . . r KEENE'S ILI CHESTNUT STREET THEATRE. HOUSES CROWDED TO THE DOME. SECOND WEEK OF THE GREAT SUCCESa. , Boucicault's three-act drama of . . , HUNTED DOWN;:: Or The Two Lives of Mary Llllgli. ' LAURA EEENE Leigh Supported by her splendid company. To conclude with a comedietta. Secured Seats in advance. • Doms open at 7; commence at '4 to 8. WALNUT ST. THEATRE, BEGINS I to 8. V N.E.' corner Ninth and Walnut Streets. THIS. MONDAY. EVENING. SIXTH AND LAST WEEK OF MR. EDWIN BOOTH. Itotzebueoe Patiat le Play. of • • THE STRANGER. THE STRANGER BOOTH And Shalcepeare s Conae4. in three acts, of the TAMING OF THE. PETEUCHIO SLR . - EDW IN BOOTH TUESDAY—EDWIN BOOTH AS HAMLET. AmEEICAN ACADEMY OP bIIISIO.-- .61• - GGItAND VOCAL AND INSTRUMENTAL CONCEHT, FOR THE BENEFIT as. TILE GERMAN T E A T E' , ' On TUESDAY. EVENING, .October 26th; Under the direction of Isaac L. Price. The following-emit/ea Artists and celebrated Singing t3ociettea have been secured for this occasion : MR. EMIL GA STEL, MR. WENZEL KOPTAI, THE IIiENNEItCHOR, THE HA micoNIE (chorus of mixed , voices - 1: THE SIENGERBUNDi and a GRAND OR CHESTRA, MR. CAItL SENTZ, Ctmductor. Titkets, Farquet,Parottet Circle, and Balcony._—_eloo 1 Can he secured at Trrunpler's Music Store, 9,3 Chestnut ;street, foe 15 cents extra. • . .... cents Tickets elm ha had at the principal - Music Stores,. sad on the evening at the door. floors open at 7 o'alock. Concert to commence at it o'clock. r T - DuPI &13 E N EDI T T BTOPERAt 11011E92, SEVENTH Street, below Arab., (Late Theatre Comigne.) ,iessees and proprietor* ...Musical and Siege Director —Businesa Manager , We come again to locate permanently And make Phila.- , delphia our lance home. (;RAND OPENING NIGHT, MONDAY EVENING, October Z 5, 1569, and continue every Night during the week. Return of the great incomparable DVPREZ A BENEDICT'S GIGANTIC MINSTRELS AND BURLESQUE , OPERA.• • TROUPE, who take great pleasure to annoimete to the citizens of Philadelphia and Rs adjoining towns that they have leased the very comfortable and popular Theatre Comb que for a term of years, and will openus above ter THE SEASON OF 1801 A ND 70, , with their Ilimmoth Double Troupe, composed of THIRTY PICKED ARTISTS of seventeen years of experience patronized by the fashion and elite of the entire continent. N. IL—This establishment will be known hereafter as DUPRRE d: BENEDICT'S OPERA PlousE, and Will be strictly conducted in every respect first-class. An entire CHANGE OF PROGRAMME WEEKLY . Duprez dt Beenudiet. Frank B. Cilley Prof. Calizalavallee, (Lae. H. Duprez...--.,.... Doors open at .1.1 before 7. Concert. cominenoes)OeforeS. , SCALE: OP TtalcEs.--Adraisslon, 50 cents ; Reserved Seats, 75c.; Parquet, 75e.; Gallery, 23c.: Seats in Colortd Boxes, 50c.; - Private Boxes-85. Ticket Offloo open at 10 A. M. to 1 P. M., and 2 to 4 P. M. 0c2342 . NTEW ELEVENTH STREET OPERA 1.11 HOUSE: ;IRE FAMILY RESORT. cpuvetcoss DIERY'S MINSTRELS. Erma EVENING. J. L. OARNCROI3B, Manager,_ FOX'S AVIERICAI4II 7 IEATE , THE OLODOCHE 1 , 11.011 P b." NEW BALLET—THE GREEK SLAVE. THE CAN:o4si. txrritALE 40 I RV . OAN-CA.N.: • Matinee?ou Saturday afternoon at 2 o'clock. A. JI N RI OAN CONSERVATORY OF li Dluaie.--Second Grand Orchestral IKatini,e,'Doc. 1 See notice under head of Musical.. , oc2O w dr% Stk . QE TZ AND SLER'S 111. AT IN ES.- 17 -, INlngicni Pand Hall INet7o. Every SATURDAY, o'rlq•tf AcADY.ITIY .tl_ CHINTbiUT etroet, above Tenth, Open from 9A.M.t06 P. M. • Betuamin WeErt's Great Picture of Ie CHRIST BEJEUTED still on exhibition. Je22-tf o IT T HAL FIRE IIIgITRANCE CONITANT PHILADBLPIIIA , Off:Me, No. 701 Arch etreet, From No. 3 South Fifth Street. , . . . ' The phantom in , announcing their 1tEa10V. ,,, ,L,t0. this with increased , facilities for business, ;would respectfully solicit the patronage' of their. frienda and the raiblic, believing the..advuntagesto the assured; iaro equal:ft() those offered by .any other Company. The only strictly Mutual WineSusuratica *ompany iu the consolidated City. ‘ll:Mebol'e of 83 per cont. is made, and a forthsr-dodna-. Mori may be expected if ths Company .conti nuvkLasAtuc - - casein] as it has been. .A.ll to Iliboin Bconomy is. an object. should. Insure ill 'this Company. • A,Tf. l lB LOW insurances made on iluiklings, Pemotttel .azal;L.lnalteti; on Merchandise and tlonseboldGooda antinni}Y4 Assets, $183402 32 Caleb Clothier, Benjamin Malone,, Thonma blather, _ ' • T,Ellwood Chap rap hi; BmSimeon Matlack • Aaron W. Ga 1 Il ' CALEB CLOT • • • BENJAMIN 3 "1114031A8 MATINEE, Troi T. ELLWOODONAPMA 7 a 0 4.5 'l2¢ . WASTERN DISTRICT OP PIONSYD.V.A.- nia .—ln 'Bankruptcy .r-In thotaatter of JOHN , B. STEVENSON,Jr. a hanlofpnt. The undersigned hereby wee notice that the Court due orderCd that IL eCeOlOl gietterabnloOthig of the cred I tore of said hankrn tbo hold in Philadelphia, in add. District, on TUBSI AY Jim 9th any of Novetribor,,A, D. 3669, at 11 o'clock'. A. Div, at the °Rice of 'EDWIN T. Clittsß,o.tll4 Walnut. atreet,ono of the. Buguniere in. Bankruvtey in said District...-. , AUSTIN C. 3f AVIIY, ;0023 - a --Aitolgnen eilthe Creditors of said Ponitvipt. IOSTATB OF RV.V. BENJAMIN DORR, ..12/ D. D., deceeard.--Lettera 'Testamentary Upon the 'estate of / 3 / 343 A 14114 MAD, deceased, late or thu city . or -Philadelphia, baying boon- grouted_ to the louder! etqued t 'a)l, pomade Indebtal to - the sofa estato aro re quegted to mite lellYraeut, arid those having claims twilled the Harem to proueut thorn Avith delay. to WIL LIAM WR.1113 owl EDWARD TA o4 . CLARK., Theoca tors ; or to their Attoraoy,J .(EDWARD. DARIEWNTER. 212 South Third 'Arcot. , oc2 ea* A. OEESE-7.-A OF NOR. FI TON'S celebrated Ditto Apple Gliaoso daily. ex- Ported , and for solo by JOB,D, Si. 000 Solo 41,geuta • D@RECTOI2B , ... Josepp.Ctimokulitu,- Francia' 'P: Edivatd 7L Neocbtea, Viilson Jetitchin, Lukens 'Webster., • 113E114.Presideoltr. SIALON.E.. Vico Trasklent 3asErez. ' • ' VOR. SALE.A.T A.GREAT BARGAIN . -- Interefits in valuable, Oil Lease now being worked, with all the ne&esarrttndehinery. 'A Bond for 65,5ta hoe been duly, executed to guarantee the fulfilling of all specifications, etc. This is W very desirable investment; portletqarsiopply to • WIFELY SrIIEINTZ, ' 506 North Third street, Philadelphis,ya. t oc2.l4iti 10 1 , YOE , SALE . A DESIRABLE _REST dance, No. 2021 Pine'street, Immediritepoßseagion:' APP , ( 1 ' EO. N. WATSON, N 0.2098. flixth etreet. Fog, " SALE : -*DWELLINC4 -- 4421, NOith TWrtntli street ; every convenience, silt ta : good order. Superior dwelling,l422 North Twelfth street, oa our ,Three,story,brlek, 235 horth Twelfth street, hatiug • :good two-story dwelling in the rear, - tome. , Three-story brick, 316-Powell street, in HON , 0 "7" $2,750.. • ,Storo and dwelling, W 0.340 South Sixth street. $5,01.• Frame house', 909, Third atroet, South Camden, near Spruce, clear. SIM 5 10 ?neon atreet, t w o-story brick, good yard, Sul ding ;.ota on ~ ; , a seyunk road, Linda good Lot of Rising °I2II SOY4EET bitd.FFRN iSON. • • - 637 Pine street. _ • Er§ DI; TllO3lABV.it SONS WILL KILL at the Exchange, on Tuesday next,, one of thee. roarhle7front,, threentory reahlenees, on south aide et Sprit' g Garden atreet, west of Nineteenth. • having ewer, convenience ; deep , lot, aide yard. hnmediete yea- They will Mao sell a -large, dwelling, N 0.120 Vino Arcot, well located for busineme. . ocZ-2t", GEI3I A 14, T 14,-4 0 R BADE.. Vreinlses No. 145 Price ' street, two and a ben rie or stone -toriglt-east*house, with extensive bark buildings: ' Lot fAxl5O feet; Apply , to - , • • ' • , , GAIIPENTER, c23•: 4 " , , • 242 South -Third street., - Paw.: SALE -- VALUABLE BURL.- ,ELL nese lorstion—Tbree-story, brick Dwelling, Ito: '22.6 North NINTH, above BADE street. Terms easg. itnmedinte PONtiessiOn. F to wILLIABISe , 0c22 6tw No. ,T 23 Walnut /art*. kr : d NORA'.II BROAD STREE'l%—roii Sirtiiittle—lirown-wtone Residence.. D. J. DODDINS et mutinies.oen St GERMANTOWN-FUR SALE, OR . Bent.—A handsome dressed :Stone . Oottage,' new, unoccnpled every, city pourenience: user staion" 11' rooms, largo Improved surroundings. JIE K R Y infsB,• 122 Bac° street. ocznit., 40-11 F R SALE TELE SESTEAIt-LE iffla APeldenco $4l North Sixth street. Every modera convenience. Lot 20x135, to Randolph street. Apply oa the prtinises. inunetliate possession. oci.S.dtv ... ..11— • A beautifully located Finn, on the Drondy. wine Railroad,. above Downingtown, within rice us - utes`walk of q station containing fifty-two acres ; tee. roomed. house ; large barn ; ,wagon.hause,vrork.shop o tc.. and, ll other necessary out-buildings; never.fulling IlAter . near the dotir young orchards, Ac. Also. a tenant - house and stalple. Fence. In complete order, being nearly all new. " The buillings ire all new and in com plete order- For particulars inquire, of Mr. A. N. EBREHART, .No. 42ti Market street, . Philadel phia. ^ oci4-120 pO,i'ARM STAEET-FOR SALE-TRIG elegant four.story brown stone *residence. situate Kin Arch street, built fa a very *nuttier Maser, and furnished with every modern convenience. Lot 211 feet front by 165 feet deep to Cuthbert street, Int whirls street, is erected a commodious ceaCh-hotfe and stable. J. Bi. GU.BIBIET & 50bi1d,753 Walnut st. FOIL SA L story Brick Dwelling, 619 H. Ninth at. Every cup ven &nee. Inquire on the premises. my6-th,s,tu,hf), WEST PINE STREET-FUR SAL E.. Mhzt .The handsome four-story brick residence, and three-atory back bulidlutts, situate No. 1803 Pine street; furnished with every convenience. end in rood order. Immediate poseession given. J. )1 .131.31.31E1C & 13ONti, 733 wadnnt at. —-- - - - - GERIANTOWN.—FORRALE--TILE hancbsotneatone Cottage Residence, situate N. W. corner East Walnut Lane end Morton street; has every modern einvvenkneo and fa In perfect order, Grounds handsomely shaikvl b t y toll grown trOrs. InnuMliste pas socsion g von . .1. M. GUMMI:I d tiONd. 7.1;1 Mania Street. Sig _ P F OR SAL E-THE VAL VA/41...N Nperty No. 114 South Twelfth street, below 4:been ut ; 2R feet front by 91 feet deep. J. X. OUMIIMEY 49 SONS. 733. 'Walnut etreet; . 6EIt3IA'NTO VN-4 1 "OR SALE-TWO new pointed stout, Cottmtes, just finishitio, with every city convenience, within tire min met' walk from :Church Lane Station. Price, 8600 Loeb, 81. GULL :3INY it SUNS: 733 Walnut street. #1 41. -- .FOZ--DIV,ELLINGS. , 121 IC SAL 0 Columbia avenue. r !linetroatb and ThOmpson. .144 . P.:lshii-it - AU street. .=1 Santora, West Phila. 'l3‘o Mt. Wiinott street. ' WON. Fifteenth street. LIZ' Brandywine. Lat Ifix6o. 8 rooms, newly pape red :and puinted . Only .SZIXI cash rennired, - Price $3 , ; , JAMES IY. MAVENS, 7 sad' ' ' S. IV. corner Broad and Chestnut. . ....,... . . . ,EFOR, SALE—A HAICDSOME REST- - .DENCE, 21184 prnr- street.- .- . - ' A Store and Dweltinif. northweit corner Eighth an d' Jefferson,.. , • A Ilne Ecaldence, 1721 Vino street. Altendeome Residence, 400 South Ninth street. 'A bandionte Itesidence.lTest Philadelphia. • ,A Baolnel4 Location, Strywberry street. A Mwelling,No. 1110 North Front street. Apply to. :corrucii. & JORDAN4.33 I BI.IInnt street. . NI FOR SALE.--T.RE 11.A.ND8O3ER RE Ala sidence, marble that story, finished in the beet manner, with *vary convenience, and Stet wide' side yard ; N 0.317 South Fifteenth street,. belowit mace. J. - 31. 01311111 NY do tiONli. 733 Walnut street. TO REITT: CREEB£& McCOLLIMIII3AVEZTATZN AOMITti. Orice,Jackson street, perant° Mansion.street, Cap* N: J. Neal Estate bought and 501 d, ., Persona • dihilrous of renting cottages during the season will apply • or addross as above. _Ttespectfally refer to blunt. A^. Rubles*: ,llenzy Btu= , m, Francis Melivain, Augustus Merino, John Davis ru . W __ _ . Juvenal. ted,t _ . To LET.—A SPACIOUS SUITE; .OF COUNTING BOOMS, with one, or Imam. lofts,on. Chestnut street. Apply to COCHRAN:. CO., 111 Chestnut otreet. TO LET—A COIiIIIODIOI. 7 S AND , L. large modern Dwelling-house, with stable and, aurroundirig ground, in tho suburbs of Camden. Apply to CHA It . No. &I Soutli•Seventb street, Philadelpha. ffit. TOlt .}.l URNIS ICE D; Owening, in Siiteelitp, abovo SDonco vtrnet. Apply to GEO. N. ATSON. 0t.2.5,2t" No. Z. 19 S. bixtb stroot. ... TO LET—TRULY CENTRAL LQOA.- -Hon.—Machinists, workers ht brume, or parties ("exiling light rooms for manufticturing7plettae eitautinr• building roar of 611 Conuneree. outlet Discount 'Place to- Sixth. et rect. Wi feet front, thrimeitoric* Itign—high front and - roar. tine -cellar -.-- engine - room , ant eruoke-etnelr. ADO,' daily front 10 toll to the Owner.ut SCG MARKET stmt. oc23tf TO RENT—HOUSE .116 •§ - 011141. Broad street. A PAY at Llti Spruce street, from. be till 12., 0c.23 3t* f3O4NcEl, 0c24.61" — , - FOR — ENT-11 ANDSOM - MLING, furnished, It.V.) North Tenth et: 011 - , - T - 0... ihrge convenient Dwelling, 400 .13ontli , Mntitst.; in complete order for immediate occupancy; will not be lot for a boarding hone°. . Apply from litto 2 &clocked the Itoutteo or to COPP UOK & JORDAN., 423 Wolltastroot. -- - . E. TO RENT. —TB E THREE,STORY Modern Residenco.with double thres•story back buildings and side yard.situate No.ll.UNortltNbuAeenth street, near Arcb. linniedlateponseseion. - it MI. GUM MET ac SONS, 783 Walnut street: - • " • ffiFURNISHED HOUSES Tto I RENT— situatu 1111 Girttrd stroot ; No. 250 South Twenty-first stroot, and mint hoost corner- Seventeenth and Summer streots. Jt Ilk GLIIIIVEY'at 80)18 753 INltlout streot. REAL ESTATE. SALES. ---- V.l. REAL ESTATE.—TH.OMAS & SON S'•• U.LIL ,Saile.—Threc-story Brtcl llwelloig, Ko. 4058,Lan caster avenue. On Tuesday, Octoben. 21, 1839, at LT: de 'c l l ph k, n E o x on h ; a w n i g l e b e an ol that n t b hre seako,r a y t the brick Ines, enaga and lot of ground, situate : on, thr soutliwardly side of Laneaster avenue, 208 feet %yeah of ikbeeea street.. Twenty -fourth Ward ; centedningdii lisyul on Lancaster; avenue feet S inches, and extending ilydopth 100 11(4et ton 4-feat wide alloy, with the.nrivilege , thereof. It has, gas, bnth,rango, xc . Terrna--ift, 1,1 may remain on ntortsage. . T/101dA,S dietioneers, 139 and IA Vourth'utnetit. HOARDING., A LAtill r liA.VlTG At. 4RIxE EEO:I - Sit; 1-,,verycoutval. would faro n Ears Atentlonkou anijitet. or [Anglo roost' breaktaa ; tea. it desired. _ Address '2OT South Tentla.mtreet, oc2oAto rilWO DbO3lE COIgtIUNIC =ENG itoomta for , itont. in a private family ) wittahoandi. at 2[0.41 Walnut stmot. . ocliHit* MORTGAGES. %10 000—'0(10'*4'pli° AND $3,00 0 TO iuvetst UPD Blurt gage Atadvath su , Inta, ra !As hakreet. ==6 THE :PHILADELPH.Lio, A:l5. 5eh001,.1i05...M., 3336, 3338.3.1htatnet35 1 2 Harkot. strew is now open. The School is the burgeet, boat ar ranged. and the Stables attached^ aro taw most comnia7 diens and thoroughly ventilated °Zany In the city. Horsmansblo scientifically laught,, and Horses thor oughly trained for the saddle. The most timid mayrrilla Ugh vorfect safety. - -To hire, handsaw' Carriages, \vies, careful drivers, for nisdd Inge, parties, opera, shooniur4,go. Horses halm at livery. , °e go • . BETH CM TOE. -Prot etor. It° D GEB. s' AND w Rt . itgir 1. - POCKET KNIVES, DEV I I, and BTACIAAN I ; LES of beautiful .finieh • It° ERB' ar4 W TCIIERI3, IOI,I file • tIKR ATED TuEool3li RAZOR. SCISSORS ,IN AsEs of the Most qualltx, Ravers. Knives, Seissors and Table Cutlery, ground and polishod. • EAU INSTRVIENTS of the most armored cou sirpotion to assist thdhearing, nt t. MADNIEAVI, Cutler and Surgical Instrument Makes, ES Tenth street, below Chestnut: . RAGS 3 AND 1R0N. 7 4 BALE 3 RAGS • 1 'Bbli, Iron. Now hulling 1117411 tittsimier "Plo , Aver, ,, f ro n t rwiimington. ittull for 141Vio by CKURA.Ii , (I(10 111 Cht,Etltititi gAM_ CUTLERY. GENIAL GEOGRAPIIER. riiikebe i rdi4nßectatotividtA,up osv in dbi ng • erxqiiiriltkt e etiltiired badfinga.ofilik count - fitrang,ford, whose "ReMains" have re costly 'been published by "his widow: (A *- Section from the 'Writings of Viscount Strang . ford on Political, Geological and Social Sub jects. Edited by the Viscountess Strangford. Londton.. . . Richard Bentley. . 1800): Loa ,gferfri;,,,Nyit,(deeidetk4.ll6,,Set att: s. clay R •• 4.0 144 4riirqmovilgifs*.iliC from the ioisterouti and artificial merriment of i professed funny writers. It comes nearer to ....Ishe.rehned wit of Addison or of Oibbon, and yeti it. is not exactly the same as either. A good deal of Lord t3trangford's wit consists in what the old, Greeks—perhaps the modern ( Greeks also-r-eall pant prostlokian. It is full of edd allusions , imexpected juxtapositions, epithets of irresistible ',quaintness, into all.. of which, ; just like Addison or Gibbon r he con 'titiieb throi 4rtalri aif of siniPliel . traii If • the author himself had no idea that he was saying. anything :witty., ne,touokyni g sage, for instance, is the'sort of thing at which' we can literally cut and come. again, on -which we can dwell at the time, and come. back to for fresh enjOyment.. LordStrangford is speaking certain travelers who had been talking npn sense about Poles, LithiunilM,3 l Atnisiatifir such like: -; . not long ago that one ijethen, halfnn steristiOuily becoming the', mouthpiece of a Russo-Scandinavian theory of history, talked with an odd 'air of spontaneous contempt of 'that mushroom nation the •Lithuanians.tr This is like talking of 'those parvenu familieS the Courtenays and the Derings ;' and it is a .singularly'unfortunate hit, because every other word of the Lithuanian's • ech Lwens to be A gen ne an remarkable yeucher.ef the„.very • hoariest • Aryan, anliqUity;Soketitites pre-lifo , tactic and 'even ptelVedie/ One-' is alMbst tempted to wish the writer up to his neck in a, Lithuanian swamp, banished to the Lithuanian backwoods to keep company with the last liv ing verb in -mi, the last Old-World bison, and, perhaps, the last patriot." Thic totrits-in_theslapter-on-G4aosf,,the-first.7j thing the book, anic‘the-opening ed•Whicli kV] ene of the wittiest things that we ever read. Now where doca the charm of such a passage • lie 1' To the general reader we "suppose that it. would . convey no idea whatever; it needs some, though happily . only a very littlei; , ,knorai , ledge of. Lithuanian matters to understand it. The beauty of the thing lies in the rare mixture of propriety and incongruity. „There is some thing so infinitely.grotesque in the picture of a man up to his peck in a swamp with a verb in -na and a bison,: to keep, him company, sand' yet, to anyone who has the faintest inkling' of Lithuaidaii philolo'a or of Lithuanian zoology, no more forcible way could be found of setting forth the absurdity of the man who calls; the Lithuanians a inushroom nation. 'Net equal to this, but most intelligible to the world at large, is Lent Strangferd's expression of amazement at the setting up of.Anieriam eon 'trulates atillucharest 'and Belgrade: • ' , What the States can want from Roumania or Servia, so far as commerce is concerned, is past comprehension. There is surely no lack of pOrk at Cincinnati, that they should go for fresh supply, to Servia, the grunt ciffiehni _per eornin of Ea.stern Europe, a country which lives by pork alone and produces nothing else. Nor can one fancy America reduced to fm porting her breadstuff!t from the Old World,' that she should trade with. Roiunania for the • one staple of that conntry." - • _ The • following again is wonderfully geoid.' Sir Stafford Northcote, when in 'office, ' was taken to a !fleeting of the Geographical Society at which-Sir Henry Rawhnson and Sir Samuel Baker discussed the propriety of England's annexing a port on the Red Sea : “Sir Staflord s feelings were relieved at Sir Henry's speech, much as those of the, shepherd', would be relieved on overbearing a' big wolf's, preposal to steal a sheep Combated by another molf'S proposal to take alanab instead. *ad , happy, accordingly. ' was nothing possible for the President to do, so, with his usual inimitable tact, he sat still and bided his time, trusting himself, and well knowing that Pho!bu.s Apollo himself, and no 'Phaeton; was holding,the reins of the fiery coursers, It was not in nature for Sir Henry, who has a*reat: deal of - the wild elephant m him; to see Sir liainttel rushing and trtunpeting about, and Crashing down everything, With: tusk andmink, exulting in his strength,,with out, eagerly accepting the'cliallenge of the rival monarch of the forest. When Wiese two huge male geographers were in the full shock of their' collision it ?would not Nave,. been 'pos sible to Call them tn order; nor would it have been safe for Sir. fibtletielt.. to have • handled theta like tame elephants: 'and . dug '.his hook into the brawny corrugated napes of their great bull necks, tryipg to coerce them. Yet we hope we may:respectfully - sUggest that at one tune the politics Inight have been stopped. Sirl - loderick„ after the Warning set by Sir 13alter; might . 'have' felt what was coming the Moment he heard Sir henry pro testing and avowing that, so help him 13el and :Nebo, 'he would not speak a word of polities _ - the whole. night. That was the time for pull hig hiM up. Nir Henry's impetuosity let, his tire he drawn before the time; when it wag mutter of some consequence that it should have lieen reserved for the right moment. The result of all this was that the :Minister found himself under the absblute necessity of then iere treating ;Burlington Bouse as the - much eniphasis In him lay, and with grea t tact and temper, the intention of annexing any-; thing great or small, even the barest entertain- 1 ment of :my project of the kind." The fun of "these tWo huge male—geo graphers,". when 'the reader of course looks lor-twolinge mule elephants, is -one - of the: best things of the kind we ever saw. =MHMMI An English writer says___, "It will not do to give a Parisian servant a ticket for the play, and expect him to go, as an' English servant would, simply because the play, is a mat and . a novelty. Before thanking you! the PariSian'servant will 'e,onsillt the paper to, see what pieces me on the bills, and he will. know at once by the sight of the author's name vr.bether lie is likely, to aninse himself or not. Rachel once gave her concierge some tickets to. see . PleZdre; 'Mademoiselle,' said the door-; kettper with a tone of slight contempt, 'j' at-; tendrai que vous en ayez pour Cinna. Racine ., n'est,pas demon gout ;...c'est trop, ampoule.' Otty ;lady, .I_,wilLivait,until you are torappear as' Cinna.', Riteine',dties not. suit 'nie; it is too: boinbasik.j, "In small towns where one would scarcely 4 laye,expected that a strolling circus 'could pay its expentes, one is shrprised to find well ; appointed:' theatres giving ;their two perfor-4 :minces a week and lined from. stalls to gallery! attengt - e but by no, means. indulgent! .atidiences: "It Would be a' tufs'takif to siipposel i % that „bad; actipg. pass more . easily on a pro- i t • vincial than a Parisian '-stege, Very .oftenit is i quite ; the reverse, and if , stranger would con-, vipoejthuself o(this.he has Duly, to attend ; at!: Perforinitlefi ofia French eoultry town theatre on the night of' the tlibuffi at the 4e-4. opening ;of, 4,the:.antlniin $4014. • . managers almost always engage au actor' sub-!, ject to the condition That lie shall beacceote.d/' by the public at his debut. The debut is? thus 'a regnlar;exandnatien,. and usually a vetyi '4'' , , • . • . , , "On the first three' nights of the theatrical it svaBo,,,,vhich.generallY opens k yetoblir, the VOAL I TELE ,- .44IgArrgT,,,AND BEST _ comitry to*li niallage:"preSents neW trot me .4 the Clt °United pItIJOGIST6 to the audienee, alltt at the end'of the Wit 4514Viciti:144ntifitigitikEligftiBilistuir i a ttit i e . r. o 4lnitt i tsVimgvi ( gitutzszi r e , , nem beforel lie.:CLU'itnil ell)l:Ditt.ltlie 4 1 1 4.4;a7,,A 1 ,207,PhieeJit,.. ; •Ya,r,43,f49.*:0ut1i fOritiiiiisW,o()&o , belirtiftilwarOtrt.iittigg i r tg gonebuiri 1ia114 , 14 or iTei.4l - 111i?re tit. a.ctoi. anil aetressesionu ;4 eh"' "itni Hoffimug., from Lsaaea,,i,...l4o,,,lcipT-atitimpLicss by one. Afte rear ll Jamie tliere is a pause, lad ri4l B• 'H A '74, - u,,pipipi4: l 44l ' l,4*4l-T !-In E" P A I/;, ftr;* , -1.7.1‘-7 d the MRlll'lll'l . Opp/alit! Of LISS aS II / ( V'fbaLllit. t ti o ,Oto hetes( ele6f" :3.1 , I ,rIV,VGGIt3TO3!!' &Dlr. ; ti.vy ;1111 it, is ;;11 1 110 clikga . 2*4- ,sprjtaz 11,1°.=114,411,17Mli;414,..)InyiatkAtoilitaln Coal. ,Jtilritteiltittortaz:ptlilew,;(l2flitagpftifilionflThitbrl, nielit;lshitt i1.044,1)11t, if. hisB. 0:01'013 an end !: , 11.1 by any '(4lt.tOlat r ! Y ‘" think can. - 23"4 51 4 11 . ri tl g r ICT I' ':mreprAgrtlI f in r l l i j • it, a 1,(1 I 0.1)0t:f.111 tntice3;r4s,,Ti,y.fn Itur r l4l. B .l3io. o r B. BOventli laeltGrliga tiyfiogeit,r&e., frit; itto aEirgt Stiiief hmilg they lt!sS bk; ; ';' 'lie : A:treat wharf lift" 1111 Jiatt.s gvo,, • ''BriOWDEIEW BROTHER; • 23 South Eighth tared. - •0 MI • Ir I • • : • . • . INIMINIS qng of theutibtimitecnnedian — who is waiting • t his ; ter • Sling fx l e, •ctlrtkin o e els tti • • lo' f b - leSte B t • • • it lin b g• • ber6d the theatre is".' .:,the bne, sole amusement of a country town, and that if the troupe be a bad one the whole year's enjoyment of the un lucky provincials is marred. Not many years ago'a young man was tried as first tenor at the Bordeaux Theatre, but lie failed to satisfy the MilliendOz,rinprat Miti f tlta Ntirtain there ‘i•taia terrifietliproSk . in'ilitilWof it the nfifortunate man came forward, very pale,and, after confronting the storm of hisses, said, hn ploringly : Ladies and gentlemen, I see the post of first tenor is above my strength, but -willyon give me a few weeketrial as second tenor? Is • • I premise 'I will do my best.' • " Here he broke down from emotion and the French, always generous, gave hint i three rounds of applause. .crAsiovegw....str.whitfiis pptiltir et - many, ta France; di ' net this ninte, in,Alta, cklef:towns,p,f small principalities thaiirlri iticlilaigeefties as' Berlin and Vienna., Whatever advantages trome of the little States may derive in the distant future from being an nexed by Herr von Bismarck, they will miss, and probably regret, the liberal patronage which was extended to their theatres bythe slifferent,:dpk4 dukes and kings. Some of the theatreS i • - it • - small German capitals are genii; and we may take as instances those of Hanover, Gotha and Brunswick.. 'The last named, which can be cited as a model of many others, is supported chiefly by the reigning , 'duke, who is said to spend one hundred and fifty thousand thalets (1:22,500) a year on it. It, is a beautiful little honse, smart with gilding, paint and red velvet. 'There are four to > opera 'and , :two to,e . entriedyq The sceneryi dresses genepl apiOntnterits are very rich, the - acting and singing ire excellent, and the • orchestra is by far superior to anything we 'have in London, except at the two opera houses. The admission is half-a-crown. to. the. stalls. the same to the dress circles, and a shit ling to the pit; but these prices are only paid Wth - e - fiWa 115liigocilctbOhaintiferfrequenteri usually becoming subscribers, and Paying forty eight, thalers a year—that is, seven pounds four shillings—for the full possession of a stall or a dress circle fauteuil. • For officers the subscrip tiop is only half; so that the good Brunswickers niay•really be said to get't heir theatre for next to nothing. • "Both at Brunswick and at Hanover we have seen ladies take their work with them to the theatre, and stitch quietly at Aapestry dur ,.ing the. .course, of the.,,perfornia.nees..., When anytlidng, song: oe tirade, pleiged them foiiticit larly well, they looked up from their work with their blue eyes fixed, gravely on. the stage, and afterward went on .sliently,with. their stitching, as if nothing •BetWeeri - .-: the acts men usually adjourn en nuuse to the re freshment rooms, but ladies scarcely ever. Perhaps the alature. of ...the .mfieshmentii.sup . Plied•rnay have: •Soniething. to':„do.l,lth•.this. Germany is the only country wher - 6We,have seen men beguile the intervals'-he.tvieetitthe stiring scenes of , Fuest by eating sandwitches made of gruyere cheese or strongly garlicked 40 Tu.rning notv-to ItatYlie see play going tui der asnew phasm . ,In .Frannig play:going . rs a 'reereatiOnOn GennanY it Is a 'Labe; in Italy; .among the upper classes, it seems to be a so.- cial necessity. The theatres are at once the '.elubs.antlitho,frawngtrool33B-71tr,ail the 'chiereiti6 Of 'the rieninstila; ••people- pay • their visits, transact their business, and make their appointments at the theatre. Italians; as • a rule, donut-. mceive much 4,- their homes. It iti4nly at'lrlorefice and t.ielioa• Quit-the spg lish customs of dinner-ving and party-giving prevail to •any extent. Speaking generally, the - life -which-. an: Italian le.ads-. within. Alders . is • • un tidy and inicernfortablei -L He .has . no-notion of entertaining visitors, looks upon; his house as a shelter against wind and- rain; :tresses in ~ it; sleeps %lint goeSibuhisrenjorment else- ' "At - Winn, for. Instance, every man who has fifteen pounds a - Year to `spare tikes a stall at the Scala, and goes them with'unvaryin,g regu larity every eVenittg. The ladies have; boxes, which they furnish as they please, some boxes spoiting blue curtains, others red, others yellow* which gives the theatre •:a. ,gay but, somewhat -taiyari a ie'arance.' If' a - - ladr hOdits - rnatir. friends, her box is filled with visitors from--the beginning of the performance to the end. Be tween the ad.'s .her liveried footman or foot, men .hand .round iceS, fruit and - colfte; and at the fall of the curtain she and ber gue.sts, tenor a dozen in number, often sup in the small boudoir which is attached to. the box'. This is a pleasant way 'of enjoying the theatre, ,but for married men Whose • wives have. 'boxes - it is a very, eXpensive - one. No wonder that' after paying the ice bill; the coffee. bill; the supper bill,, the upholsterer's bill and the . Millinees bill, which the possession of a box entails, an Italian husband has small, appetite for. dinner . o 1S111 , " o • • - "The • San .Carloi at. Naples, which the Neapolitans call .the theatre of the world, was ° celebrated Until recently fok its 'bench of critics,' the terror of - singers- The critics were about sweaty in number: ' They were mostly noblemen, and ljottrnalist&- having a thorough knowledge of 'and a mfined taste for music. They occupied the entire first row of orchestra 'stalls, and exercised an influence over the pertbrinance which is best defined in the Words-of7Malibran;-who said that;-she-Was obliged,to drink champagne before Venturiw* o ace eni. - was afterssec y th - 07 'bench of critics' at the San Carlo thatNourrit, the famous French tenor, committed suicide." HEATERS AND STOVES. ANDRNWS. HARIkISOMO, 4 :30.2 1827 RARILET STREET. • 1111P.U09ED AitTEAMc: KEATING • ;APPAICATUe s YURHAcES AN D ;COOKING BAN.G.pkis ..... THOMSOWS 'LONDON , ICITO/I soar, or Europea r Ranges, for families, hotels or public institutions, itt twenty different sises. Also, Philadelphia' Ranges,Mot Alr'Furnaces, Portable Heatera_, Low down Grates, Fireboard Stoves,. Bath Boilers , Stew-hole Plates Broilers. Cooking , Stoves. etc., wholesale and retail the manufacturers, No North THOMSON, my2B tm w gm§ . N 0.209 Second street. .... _ ... ~„, THOMAS E3.-DIXON^BO SON% -.. , - - Late Atalreweitiji,xon, _ N 0.1.924 CHESTNUT Street, Philada., • OPPositeUnitedStates Mint. atarfaeturerfor , , 1 • '. - ' • - ~ Dows, :, ~ , .P.O.IiOR ' 4 , CIFAM CE BER, , • OFFI, _.- ' .1. And ether OBATES, '- ForAiathracite'; Hittuninoue and Wood Fire; ALPO. .....-: WABH-A/IL FillifiADES, For' errsming.PAblie4md Private Mullah:lgs; `..' ', • r' , ELE IO /7RS,YENTAI4A.TO:IItivi A.ND 011.1111NEE OAPS, 00 0.KING-EANGES, HATIT-WHILERS. WHOLESALE atid nivreau, • ~ ;;•'::.i. ritOACANICIVOr",O,. I,' HA 1,), s'€~ UNITED STATES, BONDS Bough4 4 plii and Bxehanged - Test 111) ,T4Irter 36 1e e LJ) _ , =7,lbOlfiPoNs rAcirlaY RAMAT) 'B'ONDS Bought and Sold on' Comndsaldh Only:; Riad* on an Aeterostblle Polate. 40 Soutii Third Si., A RELIABLE SOME INVESTMENT THE FIRST MORTGAGE BONDS . 1 OF TRIG Wilmington and Reading Railroad s , . BBARING AT SEVEN PER CENT. IN CURRENCY, • - Payable April and October, free of State and United Slates Taxes. This roadr n n through a thickli r ioptdated and rich agricultural and manufacturing district. ''er the present, we are offering &limited amount of the above bonde at' , 85 Cents and Interest. The connection of ibis road ietth the Penusrivan and Reading Railroads insures large and remunerative trades We recommend the bonds as the cheapest Ana olass pay estment 111 the roarlfet. WM. PAINTER tlir, Co., Bankers and Bealers in Gavellintents, No. 36 S. THIRD-STREET, Pumumunfia 3atit • BANKING 11011$E JAYCooKEa6I 112 and 114 So. THIRD ST. PHILAD'A IN ALL GOVERNMENT SECURITIES. We will receive applications Tor Facies of Life Ititairance in the new National Life 'ln surance Company of the' United States. Full information given at our office. _ • ITVANDOIPIi f 4 BA---4 4r s _ . Dealers In V. S. Bonds and Members of Stock and Gold Exchange, receive ac. counts of Banks and Bankers on liberal terms. Issue Bills of Exchange on C. J. Hambro & Son, London. B. Metzler, S. Sohn & Co., Frankford. James W. Tucker & Co., Paris. And other principal cities, and Letters of Credit available throughout Europe S. W. corner Third and Chestnut Streets. SARATOGA - WATER. I -- - 0 SA_RATOGA,.IIEW YORK. The analysis proves that the wutersof the • Sar — a ' 'Oka ' SP/ e ingS l have a much larger arnourit of solid substance richer in medical ingredients than n cand shows what the taste ;Dgi s er n sprix , h :p t a i r t a i t s oa ; STUPNGEST It also demonstriites - that the STAB WATER contains , about 100 Coble Inches More of as > • In a gallon, than any other, spring. : ;lt , fa this extra amount of gas that imparts to this water its peculiarly sparkling appearance, and renders it so very agreeable to the taste. It also tends to preserve the delicious flavor ,the water when bottled, and ,causes, it, to uncork with effervescence almost equal to Champagne: Sold by the leading Druggists cold Hotels through out-the country._ 1412 Walnut Streetitihilada,, Wholesale .Agents: Also foist& by W.Walter Mutton, heetnut Ifill;Fred. Brown, corner of Fifth and Chestnut streets I. J. Gni- • Lame, Twelfth and Filbert,' 11. B. Lippincott,'Twentieth and Cherry; Peel( & 00.420 Chestnut; Samuel S. Bunt. ing, Tenth and Spruce; A. B. Taylor.BAS Chestnut,' P.O. ! 011113 r;Mighteentfrand , -BprneetP:JtwobyyJr.,ol7oheet nut; Geo. C. Bower, Sixth and Yint.,•Jas.T. Shinn,Broad and Spruce; Daniel S:Jdneif,'Twolfth and Spruce; W. B. Wobbi Tenth and Spring Gardelk, • d -ttt.th.s.iyrp§ - . - -- • gati t 3o.YEAßE3'.: A,CTIVE 'PRACTICE ; +7-1/r. jINE No ~219 Vine Ktroet, beiu‘v Third, inserts the Inindoetneet Teeth to thent priobe to end ell; Teeth; Plogged,,Teeth Itepulredy Exolianged s or Iternodolled to stIVI, Gas and•Ethbr, Igo petn-In, ex- treetinst: ()Moo Itours.B krbv, r. , tie2s:B.m.t6nt ASTILE,SOAP,-01;NITINV, AND VEAY guperinr=-204iboxesjilat jondeCfronibArk Itlc4alnd &pr sato by nongra 13110)LIIAKIMA:COji Impinting Diuggitits, N. IC..eotndrilrotrth andiltaeu treeto. , . u _F' . ANQ. :9;7:D ,-zr.,.-11 Boxaght, And, 5914., z si'i.iß:e'.o': . ':'it . :•-'.AV •,''•., ':1 .;',! ` , :l''.:.)•,' ' .l' „' jqR .. ,: . ! . i3q: F . ?' 1i......k, COLLECTIONS =Eli -ramanibrapniA. , DEALERS SPRINGS, DENTISTRY. 11 4 1 1 3 Gi4;% Rati i p /If G - RAILIIOAD. -GREAT ,Line from pEightdelalld&A 0 r . intent Fonairigws;•theniktingmul, ninierigh mai, ' land and wyoming Valleys, the ,North, orthweet a the Canadas,Suramer Arnmsetarmat of Passenger Trani. July 12, 1869, leaving the Cmnpany'• Depot, Th irtemath and Callowhill streets, Philadelphia. at the follo wing hour,: _ MORNING ACCOMMODATION,-At 7-93 A. at for geediag,and all In satiate Stationa,and itiltentalt: tetra Bettlalling.lairea Podia *IL% P.. 5, Aniqqr Phlladallh mac 916 i. 11. 5 ,. Ar. s-. .. o ...it MORNING EXPR M.-At 5.15 A. M. for Beading. Lebanon, Hanrisburg, Pottiville, Pine Grove,Tamanua, Stmbblair,zlV4ltionspestr,,Eltaltor- Sunbeam., Niagara Fai l e4il°6 • ll4/I kesbablue PMaibu,'-Yetir, tatnale, Ohamb erabarg, Hagerstown, do. The 720 A. M. train connects at Reading with the East pen neylvanis RaUtoad train s fer A i. Ilentdwn tdc.,ati d the 16 A. M. train connects with the Lebanon Valley train or Harriaburgoitc.;,at poreto4vith ijisaailt. trainsr Walloirn*rt; H al b „&c.,,i 1 ,4 Harrisburg with Northern tra, Cain Orland Val ley. and ficbuyik 111 and Suseuebaana trains for North omberland,/Willismarrbprerlfliebbirri, Pine grove,. do. , • . to , ,a • .' ANTERNOON EXPRESSI.-Beavea Philadelphia at Lacrp. di. for Read ttuli - PotleiWa, Iligriabarg, dir.i ens. meeting with Reading and Vol=nla Railroad trains for Col nmlb la. to. .. .., ~,f ' POTTSTOWN' ACCOMMOINITION.--teites t Patti town at 626 A. M.istopping aline Intermediate atationel,,.• arrives In Philadelphia lit SAGA. if .. , Itatarniug Waved. Philadelphia at 410 P. JrA arrives fa gcokutton at 640 P.R M KADENG AND POTT%llit i. ": ' d - 14 Idail;111. TION .-zgstaree 4'ett4itUltt a tdilltrd'llll2?= - „#,,.. 14 7,50 ~.. pl., sto a rinf i at all way nil, Telijil ...... " il i ttn i t i :. iel j /1 i Ai gaPifil '. ;if efil i : *A arrives . In T i r l itt i rgr at litll le Se?i i iitrtrertigtaMilltA. . 11., and Pottsville at 9,00 A. 16., an•iving in Puusgelphla at 1.00 P. M. Afternoon trans leave Harrisburg at 2XO p.. 11-, and Pothriille at 2.45 P., If.; afririnlyi P hilil deg/0%46,A PA/. ,ftlW e ,‘ ii e P, • A . •• arr burg Accommedat n leaves adiplat 7.15 A. M., and Harrisburg et 4.10 P. 31. Connecting at Read ' big with Afternoon Actotornodation south at 6.80 p, M., arriving in Philadelphia at 9.15 P. M. at t ac hed Philadelphia, at Ira noon for Pottsville and all Way Stations:leaves Pottavillo /46.40 A. 111...pprinecting at , !leading 14t h I l e • cc .KOM lo4 2 ll ana4l44t.,Phnid 4ll nd I all Way Station - ' -Oli# 6.11 the above trains run daily, Sunday', ereePted.,.... Phil s< crudity trains lens Pottsville at Q' A:M.,. and rani - . delPina trt 3.15 T. lf:; leave Ptaluibliph in for l / 4 Heading' at , 9.00 A. M. returning frjim Reading at 41,25 P.M_,______ - CHESTER - 17ALLET-BAILROAD.-PrCssengers for Downingtown and Intermediate points take the 720 A. M., 12,46 and 450 P. aittrainsfrom Philadelphla,retur6- Mr from Downingtown at 6.10 A. al.; 1.00 P..W., and 5.45 P3l pERKIOREN RAlLROAD::Passengers for Sehwenks. T wo take 7.10 A.M,.12.15 and 4.30 P.M. trains fer,Phila d °nada, returning from,Schwenksville • eit 5.65 , awl 8.12 A 3110.12.55 noon. Stage , lineeCfpr JiarlOna ,pointa in Perkiomen Valley connect with trains at Collegeville' and Schweaksville: ;- .-• , • ~,,,,,,...... , 1, • - COLEBROOKDALE •RdliTillo.lWk-Palisengere for Hoyertbwn and interned late points take the 720 A. M. iiiiTiall PAlrtfAu is friarisidiil§lfiiir, tallinilifg from. Boyertown at 7.25 andllso AA. M.•• , ~ ' " " ' ' NEW YORK EXPRESS YON., PITTSBURGH AND THE WEST.-Leaves New York at 9.00 A. If., 6.00 and 8.00 P. 31., passing Reading at 1225 M., 1.45 And 10.02 P: and connects at Harrisburg With. gennsylvazda . and Northern Central Railroad Baines. Trains for Pitts; burgh, Chicago, Williamsport, Elmira, Baltimore, dr, Retunting, Express Train leaves Harrisburg on arrival of Pennsylvania Exuma from P ittsburgh, at 2.10 and 520 A.M. and 4.45 P. 31., passinglleading at 4.loend 7.05 A. _X. and 6.h; P. M., arming at New York 10.00,and 11.45, A-11., and 10.20 P. M. Sleeping pare accompany these, trains through between 'Jersey City and:Pittsburgh,' without change. . . . . , Mail train for New .York.leaves Harrisburg at 8.10 A. M. and 2.00 P. IN: Man ~, ill for Harrhiburgleaves New York at 12 Noon. SCHUYLKILL VAI.I•EYrRAILROAD-Trains leave a'ottsville at 650 and 11.80 A3f.'and 6.50 P.M :. returning from Tama ggit at 955 A .11..vatal 2.16 and 4.50 P. M. SCHUYLKILL AND SUSQUEHANNA RAILROAD -Trains leave Auburn at 8.66 A. M. and 820 P. M. for Pincgrove and Harrisburg, and at 12.10 noon for Pine grove and Trement;returtning from Harrisburg at 725 and 1150 A. M., and from Tremont at 6.0 AX. and 5.05 P. al. t __ _ TICKETS.—Through first-class tickets and emigrant. tickets to all the principal points in theliorthand Went. and.Cardula.. • ; - Excursion Tickets froniTlilladelphiato . i , Tl eadingr-'and Intermediate Stations . , good for day only 3 are Boifs, Mor n ing Accommodation, Market Train, Readi tlli ng and Pottstown Accommodation Trains at reduced rates. Excursion Tickets to .Philadelpfilit, good for day only, are sold at Reading and Intermediate Stations by, Read ing and Pottstown Accommodation Trains at. reduced rates. The following ticket§ are obtainable only at the Office of S. Bradford, Treasurer; NO. South Fourth street, Philadelphia, or of G. A. Nicolls, General Superinten dent, Beading., . COmmutation Tickets,at:2s per cent. disCotmt ,'betWe'en anylioints desired, for families aad firms. Mileage Tickets,good for 2.ooonifics,betweerfallPOints at e 62 60 each for families and firms. Season Tickets, for three, six, nine or twelve months, for holdemonlysto all points; at --- rediMeirratein't'- Clergymen residing on the line of the road will be fur nished with cards, entitling themselves and wives to tickets at half fare ' , • • • • EXenrolon-Tickets from Philadelphia to principal sta. tiOril; good for Saturday, Sunday and Monday, at re. duced fare, to be had only'at the Ticitet,Oflice, at Thir teenth and Callowhill 'streets.' ' • ' FREIGHT.—Goode of all descriptions forwarded 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. If., 12.45 noon, 5.00 and 7.15 P. 11.. for Beading, Lebanon, Harrisburg, Pottsville; PortiOlh2tottiend•all paints be= pond. Mails close at the Philadelphia POSt-ollice feral] places on the road and its branches at 5 A. H., and for the prin cipal Stations only at 2.15P.M. • ~ • • BAIIGAGE. • . • Dungan's Express Will collect Baggage for all trains leaving Philadelphialsepot. Ordars can be left 'at No. 225 South Fourth street, or at the Depot, Thirteenth and Callowhill streets.. - . • , FoR - NEW . YORK..,--ZELE; . CAMDEN AND AMBOY and PHILADELPHIA ' AND 'RENTON RAILROAB COMPANY'S :LINES, front Philadelphia to New York, and way places, from Wal nut street wharf., •-' • • '. . • _ ..., - ',. Fare. At 6.30 A; hi.; via Camden and Amboy ACcom.. - 6225 At BA. M. via Camden and Jersey City_ Ex. Mail, SOO --At 2.00 P. M., vim Camden-and-Amboy Express r .-- - 800 At 6 P. M. for Amboy and intermediate stations At 6.30 and BA. M., and 2P. M., for Freehold. ~ At 2.00'•P. lit:. for - Long ` Branch and' Points' on R. dr. D. 8....11. R. At 8 and 10 A:M.:I2 M;2,,35.30 and 4.30 P. M.,for Trenton. At 6.30,8 and 10 A.31.,,12 31 ,2.3.30,4.30,6, 7 and_ll.3o,P.M., for Bordeiatown Florbnee,Barllngton,Beverlf and De -lance. - • • At 6.30 and 1 0A.M.,12 M. 3 . 30,4.30,6,7 and 11.30 P.M. for Edgewater,Rit s erside, 'Riverton, Palmyra and Fiab House, and 2 P. hi., for Riverton. • ti"' The 11...30 P. hi. Line leaves from foot of Market street by upper terry; -.- '‘ --. ',". From lieniirtgtou Belot: ,j•' ', , ..-;- A t /1 A. M., , ivia „Kensington and Jerey City, Now York Express Line..............._ .. .. ....,, S 3 00 At 7.30 and 11.00 A. M. , 2.31.173130 - and SP. M. for Trenton and Bristol. And at 10.15 A. M. and 6 P. hi. for Bristol. At 7.30 and 11 A. M., 2.30 and 5 P. M, for Morrisville and Tullytown. • . . At 7.30 and - ,10.1.5, A. M. 2.90, 5 and Gl . ..vat, for Schenck's end Eddingtort:' , ';' , - ' - ' .4 ' t'' At 7.30 and 10.15 A. :M., 2.30, 4, 5 and 6 P. M., for Corn wells, Torresdale, If ohnesburg, Tacony, Wissinoming, Bridesburg and Frankford, and 8.30 P. 31. for Holmes- ' I burg and ntermediate Stations. From West philadolphia Depot via Connecting_Railway At 9461 A; M., E2O, 4,6.45, 8 and 12. P. M. New tYork Ex - . pressLinecvinJersdy City . : ; ... .....4::.5 3 ' , 1 8 At 11.30 P. hi. Emigrant Line ' 200 At'-9.30 A. - ht ,1.30, 4, 6.45,8 and 12 P.M. for Trenton. At 9.38 A. Al ~ 4, 6.45 and 12 P. M., for Bristol. At 12 P.M.( Night) for lfforrisville,Tullytowa, Schenck's EddingtoniCornwells Torroadale, . Holmesburg; Ta cony, Wissinoming, VildeSburg and•Frankferd., The 9.30 A. M. and ti and 12 P. M. Lines rundaily. All others, Sundays excepted.' For Lines leavgig.)Nensington Depot, take,the cars on Third Ur Fifth streets ' ,at I,Chestnut,4d,4 half An hetk bd fore departhreT - Theartrof Allarltet'Street Railway rim - direct to West Philadelphia Depot, Chestnut and Walnut _,,,,-444 t ha_D iRK4tui r tre ,_4 1 „,s uli gay .., ths.lllll4,nt Plfror.4 (long. will run to connect with the 9.36 A : - M. and 8 and. 12P. M. lines - . . . , L • •. . , -. BELVIDERE from Kensington Depot. . At 7.30 A. M., ..for Niagara' , Falls, Buffalo,Dunkirk, Elmira, Ithaca, Owego, Rochester, Binjliampton, Oswego - , Syracuse , Great Bend, Montrose, W kesbarre, Schooley . 8 Mountain. &c. • • • • At 7.30 A...11:' and .3.30 P. M. for Scranton,' Strouds burg, _Water Gap,' Belvidere,e Easton,' Lambertville, Flemington &c. Gap, 3.30 . Id; Line connects - direct with the.traiii leatluit BeStO .Y nlor,:Mneck PY6pk)44lell toirn, Bethlehem, &c. • ' ' ' - '' - At 14 A. M. and h P..M. for Lambertville and interme diate Stations.. ' - " • ' • ' ' ' ' CAMDEN AND' URLINGTON C 0 . ,,, AND PEMBER TON AND MIGHTSTOWN.BALLROADH,-from Mar-- ket street Ferry (Upper Side.) __ , • , • ..; At 7 and 10 A. 31.,1, 2.15,3.30; a & 6.30 P..M.forMerchants ville,Moorestown, Hartford. , hittacinville, Ittinsport, Mount Holly, Sinithville, Ewanoville, .Nincentown, Birmingtotut dnd Pemberton. , ~. - • ,' . At 10 A. 31 . fer...lo3vistown, Wrightstowri, , Cookstown, New Egypt and Hernerstowni" -. ' • • • v " ' ' •At 7A, M.. 1 and 3.30 P. M. for Lewistown, W rights town ;Cookstown, Ee._,w Egypt,. liornerstown„ Cream Ridge, Indaystown, Sharon and Hightstown • Fifty; poprals ofßaggage only allowed each Passenger. PasseugOrs are prohibited from taking anything as bag gage lint their - Wearing apParel.'All baggage over fifty pounds to be paid for extra. The. Company limit their respontiibnitx.ler baggage itolOrte Dollar per ,i;innd, nun will riotbe liable 'Kw any 'ainbunt beyond 6100, 13Y cept by speciaLcorttract. , Tickets sold and Baggage checked , direct through' to 1 IlostentiWorceste,r; Springfleld i .Bartford, New Haven, Providefice,? , ,Nevi_port, : ','Albany, Ttoy,Saratogn, :Utica. 1-1101 "' , B Yraellgeirßtitheiteratuffaler,'NtagaraTallsta euspensioußridsop . ,, ,••• ~_...• -4,. N ~, t , ' ,-.‘ An edit/41611111 Ti4cet WINO hiloctiteu lit No. Chest nut street; lilleto tickets - to'lceir pork, ,, abil fill impor- . tant points Nortkand East, may be procured. Persons TurCiiMibit -, ,, Ticket:6 flit'tftls,pniet.)gtan hate'.•-theire_ bag :• I gaige checked fromreSidences or betel to'debtination,by ' Union 'Transfer Baggalm E l trelm-' '- linciarom New:York for 1 hiladelphia willleavetom footbf Ccirtlailif)dreet at lliaritl . !l.o9•:W.M.,i via : Jersey Cityand Vitrinteti.''.s.l 6130 ~ M .,- via ( 44reer , Ulty and Kensington. At 7, and , lo A.M., 12.30,5 and 9 P.M. and 12 Night , via 3 eraby city and West Philadelrillit. ,,,, • • Front Pier No. 1, N. 'River, itt 6.30 A. M. Accominoti?- Gen and. 2 P. M. Express, via, Amboy and Camden: W Aug. 30,1869. • • ~ .Tilt liiIGATZ.SIEIt, Agent. ---- 77 .-.--. ' - "'' - it" .. ."4' r . ... ~ .7r7 . 177177 - V --. . .. . . • . ' . VAT E str taita - stY R A.'ILLR 'O . A b. . • ti t ; k.A..T.m. ANDIVIN TER ARRANGEMENT. CO RunciwaluNsDAx,_ol3PT, 31st, 1 0 0 . , ' Leave ' hiladelphig' 'Foot' of 'llarket street ; ' ( Upper Ferry ) at • . , 831 . 14. 7 1,1 . 0, 11 5 1 440 r, Bridgeion„Baletn .31111ville,Vilio ?land, wndeAbOto'siniteliintprmedtate ei1 1 5.110. , : '... 3.15 . AL, Stall; for Cape Sfay;.Millv 110, Vineland , intliwittitoytifuts ti , 014 - s".(tittssbero: he ~. ,i:‘ ~• I , ~ rj.: . 4 ' 3 .361'.. DE 'Pliald.ng - tii,` tor art6ii)touVsaienv'opretieo .oro, and all intermediate s.tations.. 5301'. 317, - Woodbrityand - Glawboro accommedation.. iftelpirtra infer tip -mat ionsleavea,Ctndea . daily, . at 2.006440 a ' n''''' t . r,.`"!' .1 t:' 3; ..0. , - ti '. r _ ~ . r . e . , t. Freight . rece n itd ' hi•`•Philialelphia•at "tiecerid covered wharf nefew Walnut street-a-. Freight dollversti.at 40:24a B. Delaware avenue. ComtnutatiOlittacto, at IWUCCI ratts,3tetween pima,. dolphin mid'all • tat - lone°- '..''' " ' j '• "' ' ' • • . '• - .4i4 - ,i:y .r, ' N ' ' ' ,!„ 4A4.4,s ! ,,lritLy l .ppp g rtt l .p.t. .P4:1514 iiiitialai.Liith' VIA 'itoßTEt PEnmixi"l4/.& , ,, nAIT,Rodp;: to Valkesharre, 'lliithantiyultr'llltituir Carinel, Übiaraliaialui 'All Points o n Lehigh Nit,l l lo l Wlrildtt anti ire branches. • By new arra entseperfetted , thiti day,' this road is ens bled,t,ogive nereasedAlespatchto,tnercheadluesOtin signett to' thp"abov'oputtned Pointe; ',., ' ";" ,s : I l`P. 1 (1 t.' , Gocalirdolfiriztd'fitthdThriStilth'Freiklit Depot ~.' '' 8 • ; .E. cur. Front and Noble guests , Before 5 P. 11 . , ;..WilWatalt Wilkesliarre . atutint Carmel: Mithanoy City, and 'the other .stations la Dia liana) , lind AVYMniagYanuratbOfOre cYi A '.21.1 . - 0 0 Er „WU A R.44Y4 .1 - 027ii:••i''•!..), 0 ' l'i 7 • /. • ,. 1 - t,lr.: - 4 . :.: , ) bi`~~~~:~°i..... ''?~:i'i. ....Y - 2' 1_44-121r.c"ik' , • NI 4 '. • A • BYLVAINTIA, 3tA rLII,OADt t,.... 4 7.- ; • varp 1e,.. . i. 71C.-131191tesit, and most .dtt. _Alletntown, Msuott. ..rritals_;fisale ton, WNW i l laWni7P l ii_DireAharra) lialiaoo7 ty, T 25 t. 4hrmeli Pittaten,lTtinktiannock, Bcrantoird. i arbondile all the, points in, the Lehigh and Wyt. nig% on ... . , ' ex tin Phtladelladis i N.W. corner agrog 41/21 HEM NY, 15 -DAILY TRAINS,' -0- A ar.d after • 1118 DAY, June tat, ii 32), Passenger Tralcuilessiauthe • 400=10 of Berke pad Americaii itiplitdititr,(h.linditys excepted), as fotiowi: , , • . • .45 A. B. s,cconniatidation for Wort.:Washlngton rind • ' At 7.45 A.. 15.—Iforning)Express for 'Bethlehem' Principal, Matta : North Pen_ usylyania Railroad, connecting it Ode helm with Lehigh voile) Railroad for Alleintoirtiv, 13121111{ Bbitington, Mauch Chtink, i Westherli g , e l c aneirv. 1 ,110 Hazleton White Haven t llkes.. ban_44R I n Pit ater'. Yanklimmocki and points 1. 2 •in Lebi • prat Wyoming Valleys; also; In c ection , with Wand Majnisioy Railroad for if ahanoy Oltzi and with atiewisaa RsOroad for k i lnertillatitit• tort. and illianosport _,_) Arriveat rich chunk at 11.,T at Wllk wire at 2.110 . P.M.ntt Mahanoy City at 1 P.M.P I At. 8.45 A. , M.i.- 4 AccOmModation for Doylestokriti Our , ping at allitntotinlatetitatlotut. • Paesepgers for, Wii.i - low Crery , p mit po , an d pi ar tav , ille, by tois train, take • Stage lit id York oad: ' ' • 946 'A; ,DE (Expreni)_t for ). Bethlehem `, Allentownj Manch Chunk , , White Haven, ,NV ilkesbarre, . F.= Scranton and Carbondale via Lehigh and,i3oaiu Railroad .• - and Allentown and • ''Easton, and ! points on New Jersey Central Railroad and Morris and 44isex Railroad to New York via Lehigh Valleyltailroad. A . -At 1045 A. IL--Acootturiodation for fort Washington, stoPping at intermediate Stations. •• • , .-, . ! ~_ 1 .1.15,8.125,0,41 and fl_P.M.—Accommodat fon to A Dingtoth P' At 2:45 M.--Lobigli Valley Expreir for Bethlehem, raston,__Alientotirt4 Mauch Chunk Marloton,_ White' ) Haven Wilkesbarre Pittston, ticrantonoend Wyoming 1 Coal "pus ' i • t 4.46 .:in).—nroommodation for Doylestown4 stop ll' "V"'"*or• Doylestown, . I A . p. .n.Acconam ation for nstop., 1 Vi tfO a t a ir.! n M " .-M e ar at a ta frlre:thleiero;ron iding at' Bethlehem with Lehigh ;Valley- Evening Train for , i Boston ..allenjoWn,Mittich Chunk. • • _ _ _. ...) ,At 620 P. x '-:-Accommodation fop' Lanipide,Stos at nlllnteratiOta station& • ),, , ~ . • At /180 P, , .-r,ikcooriunddation_fal . Fart Waeldngton.. 1 ..., TRAINS ARRIVE UI PHILADELPHIA. • ___ , 'green Bethlehem at 17A. M. 2.11' , 4.45 . and 815 P. M. 2.10 P. M 1,11.45 WM) and 820 P. Trahurritake direct ' ,". connection. with Lehigh Valley or, Lektgh mid Etunnei 1 ) banns trains from. Easton, Bcranton, Wll/0/41erreiak i havoy City and Hazleton. . , ... From Lan.. Le ail-WA...71%1.i. • . t From Fort Waehington at V. 20 and 0.95 A.M. and 3.1.0 P.H. ON 131111DA.Td. Philadelphia for Bethlehem at 9.313A . :21. Philadelphia InzPoylestown at aargt. , Philadelphia for•Abington'at X' . 34 Doylestovnl for Philadniplila at 6.30 A. 3!. Betbkhem for Philadelphia at 4.00 P. M. ...Abington for Philadelphia at 8 P. M. • Fifth and Sixth Streets Passenger:cora convey paseetp, gere to and from the new Depot. • ' 19hite clire_ol..Second and_lblrd. &Coot! Ldll9 and_ nion Lit:o.min within a abort diopmco of the Da_poL Ticket/ meet be.procurcd at the Ticket Office, in order to secure the lowest rate' of fare. , • ELLIS (MAME, Agent. Ticket,' aold and Baggage ahecked through to_princl pal pointd, at lthinn'a 'Borth Penn. Baggage ..Expresa. office, No. 100 South Fifth street t. • "• • • ! 1011:174.DEOPHIA •; W..II.3.II2iGTONASD. • :BALTIMORIe ItatILBOAD—UMBTLBLE..OOM.. 'meriting MONDAY, May lath, 1869 i Truing ptill leave. •Depot. corner Broad and Washington avenue. . 1 111 . 1 . 01' lows: WAY MAIL TRAIN at 8.80 A. M. (Sundays exceptgED, ;for Baltimore, stopping at all ilegular Stations. Can .nectin . with ,Detaware Railroad at Virilmington for :Crisfield d and Intermediate Stations. ' • EXPRESS TRAIN at 12.00 M. (Sundays excepted), for Baltimore and Washingftni stopping at Wilmington, 'Perryville and , .Havre de Grate: , Connects at Wining ton with train for New. Castle. • • : EXPRESS TRAIN at 4.00 P. 31.( Sundays excepted), ifor Baltimore and Washington, mopping at Chester, Tharlow, Linwood Claymont, Wilmington, Reinert, Stanton, Newark, ' Elkton, North. Eaat, Charlestown, !Perryville Havre de Grace, Aberdeen, Perryman's, lEdgewood; Magnolht, Chase'sand Stemtner's Run. NIGHT EX PRESS at 11.30 P.' 111 . (daily) for Baltimore land • Washington, stoning at: Chester, Tharlow_,Lin wood, ,ClayntontWiltrungton, Newark, Elkton ` N orth East, Perryville, Havre de Grace, Perryman'e and Mag.: .nolia: • • . j • • . . the for Fortress Mobroe and blorfolk will take_ the 12.0031. Train. • . WILMINGTON TB . AlNS.Steriping•ist all Station. between Philadelphia and Wilmington.. • • • Leave ,PHILADELPHIA at 11.00 A. M.2.30_,5.00 and ,7.00 P. 31.The0.00 P. M. train connects with Delaware 4 Rail roadfor Herrington and intermediate stations. • Leave WILMINGTON 6.30 and 8.10 A.M.; 1.30, 4.16 and . 7:00 P . H. The 8.10 A. train .will not stop between Chester and Philadelphia. The 7.00 P. M. train from Wilmington. runs dally;allotherActommodationTraing ledunay excepted.' • • • • ••• _ I • From BALTLMORE *to PHILADELPHIA ,-- LeaVelt !Baltimore 7.25 A. 11., Way Mali. 0.35 A.. 11„, Express. 12.35 P. M..Express.7.2 , P. 11.,_EXpreSs.- - • • • SUNDAY' TRAIN' PROM BALTIMOB.E.—Leaves, , BALTIMORE at 1.25 P.M.. Stopping at Magnolia, Per ryman_s' ,•Alterdeen,llavre-de-Grace,Perryville,Charler town, North:East, Elkton Netvark; Stanton, Newport, ! Wilmington, Claymont, Linwood and Chester. PHILADELPHIA AND BALTIMORE CENTRAL RAILROAD TRAINS--Stoppingut all Stations on. Cheer t ter Creek and Philadelphia and Baltimore Central RR. Leaves PHILADELPHIA for PORT DEPOSIT (San : day excepted) at 7.00 A.M. and 413 P.M. • • _ The 7.00 A. M. Train will stop at. all Stations between Philadelphia and Hokin. ' A Freight - Train - *Mt Passenger rear attached will leave Philadelphia daily (Sundays excepted). at 1.00 P Sheavening to Oxford. POUT DEPOSIT for PHILADELPHIA (So.n , Ida_ye exceptedlat 5.40 A. 31,9.25 A. 11. and 2 . 30 P. M. Trains Teaming WILMINGTON at 6. 30 A. 3i. and 4.15 ! P.M., will connect at Lamokin Junction with the 7.00 A. Maud 4.30 P.M. trains for Baltimore Central R. Through tickets to all point West, South, and 'South west may be procured at the - ticket office; 628 Chestnut street, under Continental Hotel. where also State Roomi' • and Bertha in Sleeping Cars can .be secured •during the 667. Persons purchasing tickets at this office can have baggage checked at , their residence by the Union Trans fer Company. . • • H. B. KENNEDY. Supt. DENNISYLVANIA • CENTRAL . - MM. 'ROAD.—After SP. M. SUNDAY, SepteMberAth 2869.: The trains of 'the PennsylvanitrOentrel - Itaffroad - I leave the'Depot,atThirty-lirst and Markerstreets,which is reached directly_ by the care of the Market Street Pus- - , senger Railway s the last car connecting with each train leaving Front and Market street thirty minutes before' departure, Those of the Chestnut and Walnut Streets run within one square of the Depot. 1,1 • Sleeping Car Tickets can be had on application at the, ' Ticket Office, Northitest corner of Ninth • and.',Chestnnt streeta,lind htthe Depot.; l - ‘., • ' • Agents of ,the Union Transfer Company will cal • and deliver Baggage at the Depot. Orders lona No '9o;t Chestnut street, No. 116 Market street, will receive at tention ' • '. TRAINS vgA - vp. DEPOT, viz.: , Mall Tram.-- ' ' ' ' at 8.00 A; M: Paoli Accom., '430 A,31.0.10, and 7.10 Fast Line at 11.50 A. M. Erie Express .. . .... 11.50 A. 31. Harrisburg, Accom ' "at 2.30 P.M. Lancaster Accom • at 4.00 P .1,1 M. Parksburg Train at 5.30 P. M. Cincinnati Express ,• ' at . Erie Steil and Pittsburgh• Express. ............at. 9.30 P.M. Accommodation ' at 11.00 P. M. Philadelphia Express - at 12.00 night. Erio Mail leaves daily; except Sundayi•running on S Saturday night to Williamsport only. On unday night passengers will leave Philadtaphia at 8 o'clock. Philadelphia Express• leaves- daily. Cincinnati Ex press daily, except Saturday , . All other trains daily, except Sunday. • , 4, • , The Western AccOnimodatien Train runs daily, except Sunday. For this train tickets must be procured and baggage delivered by 5.00 P. M.. at 116 'Market street. TRAINS ARRIVE ATDEPOT, ' VIZ.: . Cincinnati Express ' at 2.45 A. M. Philadelphia Express at 6.29 A - M. Erie Mail • cat 6.20. - A'. M.• _Paoli. Accommodation at.6.20Aahand.4..01149 Parkeburg Train. ....... .. . . ..,.at 9.10 A. M. Fast Line ' at 9.35 A. M Erie Expre55...:....... . Lay, Express Pacific Express Harrisburg Accommodation' For further information, apply to, , JOHN F. VANLEEB Jit 'Ticket Agent, 901 Chestnut street.* FRANCIS FUNK, Ticket. Agent, 110 Market street. , SAMUEL H. WALLACE, Ticket Agent at the Depot. The - Pennsylvania 'Railroad Company-will not assume any risk for Baggage, except for wearing 'apparel; and limit their responsibility to One Hundred ,Dollars in value All Baggage exceeding that amount in value wilt be at the risk of the ewner, 'unless taken by special con. tract. • ' nIMVARD H. WLLLIAMS, , • General' Superintendent. Altoona. Pa. N THE DISTRICT - COURT. FOR THE . , J city and comity of Philedera.—ClTAS. BOSEN- BEIM vs. 'PH E ILIP_SIARRL . . Sept„_Term,' 1509;.;.... - - No: 278. Plitries Ten.' Ex. , The auditor appointed to . , 7 report distribution or the fund in Court, being the pro- - (Tills of a Sherift"testile under the above, stated writs, O , , '' e; ell.putt certain lot or piece of ground with the bricit ••," : - *i' inetomingee or tenements thereon .erected, situate ton the northeast sole 'of • the. Germantown Head, .at the t - - 0 - distance - of - -6Ofeet - northwestward - from - the no • --,-- rtkz side of N4#,,_ -,te (formerly called AtotirtiO, - street, in the - di'-.of Philadelphia aforesaid, • eontatOiv, "4 . Ng lu front or Itzeaffih on the said Gerniantown,road,, i k, 79 feet nil extending in length or depth northeastward A ' between , paralletlineaatright angles with , the said ter- ,I', intinteinixond y ou the northwestern. line thereof.ffi feet' 1. : ,. ' 9 inches and 3 4 i - end ou the, southeastern line thereof 53 2' ' v. feet'le Moves and 34'. Thence eatitword at right angles,' , : -. ''' witkflrettsler street on the northern line' thereof 54 feet - 7-- ' , 9 Welles and 4,-, and ,on the Southern line . thereof ;i , ~ ,52 feet ,10 , inches and 4,', to.,the ,wwit. side - i 1,,, of Bressler street, on whirl!' 'it has I d ',front of- s'e'c', 16 feet ;' N. B.—On tho above Int is erected a three-story ' - i-io.; brick store and dwelling on , Genutudown avenue, and ' ',•-• two three-story brick dwellings on the rear end of the - - 7,' 1 . ..' , lot, one of them fronting ,on. Kressler street,i.Will at -3, , ) 4 tend to the duties of hisappointinent on IVNO-NE.9DAY, November 3t1,1859, at .3 o'clock P.3r., lit his office, No .:I's ' 125 South Seventh street, in , the city of Philadelphia; '-- 4 Sa when' anti where all. parties - interested are . rennlrealo -, ..`, - make - their plating; or 150 - debarrni from - tenting .44 - ,iltijitL, , -,. , .1,1 said fund. '' --, '.; , '&.,,,,, ' ' '..' ' LEONAEMMTEES„ , . 4, v4. - , , 0e23-10t§ , , ' .• Anditor-,.', .. , COURT OF COMMON PLEAS - .. 7 ,, 1. 11 ,...,7the City and County of Phibuteiphia.-4ssigined 4-,4 state ofJOUN X. WILLIAMS & 00.••• The ''Atiolitor , ,',=, "'appointed. by the Court to audit, eettlei'atiti adjUitt the , •ef, t account of JOSEPH:J. DOIIAN, Ass c r ti nvof JOLIX.E. 1 WILLIAMS & CO., and to ,inake ributton.,or tho, 7 44;,d2 LalancB in the hands ,of, the accounts t a will metit't t,'l. 7 "4 parttaiv-interested, far the ourpooes'of hie a 0tt102. , ,A on MONDAY, October 25t ,h WO, ate &Moe 1P,.. • -t;, '.." - !iir k . hill , °Meet Np.AT tienth Third street in tha el at P2 - .4), pc i tidelphia. 8-li4„ . ;:ifq NOE MR ~- ,:. LI:-:.',',44„ , i. ocls tm w St§ • '- ' ' ' ---- '' - Anoverig , + 1%4,, DiiHILADELP&A. 1 LAVii- , ERIE ~E4JIIB. f IN Tlik ORPHANS' C0URT`„410,110414 ; 7, 0 1+ .1: • ROAD—MINTER: TIME TAELE. t • City' and County of Philattelthla.r#BstattVOlLOW 0:!): On and after DOEDAY.yRept. 6, • 1669 , the Trains an i OD% 1114,,deceasell.—The Auditor apPollitettdr ,-.,. - 4? 1 ft!: thd Plifladellttifa and/Erie liallroust , will tilti delottowe 1 (lotto , o -report distribution or, tlko /Orar In , on „Ty., , i - t 1 trout reinksypetudit jiltitrthanekot,,Wefit Rbiladebblik: 1 tieing ~t' e,rm eft€43 f r s, a mi aa tai l lo b .o Y ri ' atbeecrett'ettejogl ; YP,, , ,.,ll ` WESTWARD. , , , 1 Cote:, or he Vreol q. . Mail ,TAts t in lelre , a i P w h i i i l i n i d am eir po bia r i : . , 9.2.6 IY, X. : Stamen stroob at ttakatatanceof 184 feltytes front Mgt -4 4., 4..,:.•2 1 .5a A , . mf, 1 ptreetoslitaieet the, retail iptemte&forj, fr pulpy 01. i "' " arrivenat Ere. . 1, •, ot 8.15 Pp X or tie apoolutmont..on - 1% LDNESDAIf, M vrombof 1 ,-;, Erie Exprea wawa oll'46 . `his''' ''' ' ''' -- "-- ii.rol.'. y. 1 /869. at 2 o'clock; P. IT:. at Ms offloOi Nona Efousirl34lV. - 1- , " r.t .1./ ) 4' , ..- illiatusport 9.00 p. ic, i street, In the. city . a Philadelphia. -_, , ~ , ~,.. , .-..., - •,r,..; • -. mom A. m. ! 1 Ocill.th,d,ttifd§ ~: 1 "1' Jour; • Goro,.ltrat-iludit*ttt_ " '" arrivist tit" Erie - 1 _,..4 - - . ,t , Eltilialt*AlejiVelk PllllOO/Phia , 'Ot , .. 8 . °04 .. '; pfiffitTebilmw or - Vol l gp.m-_ Pte`- z .f , 04 . 1 ~ .t - - . Willlaunoport 6.MEP„ ~ . pon TILE miry yoni'COVNTy- , olicio,=4 02: AV - , " ‘r4 t .N ri, g e 1.4,1 ' 6 ' lintel ' 74° P; ••• i i•ETA.4-DAINNAHIaGEEfiIaLT brthOrilitkitts r •"", '.• , rlo* - '•'''. '• • ' • ‘. ''• ' 15.4.STIVAIID. 2tlsll , Ttrtlfilsairei Erie , - 8.15 A.M. ).A c `' -' W r .9 144 aN s or t efr A Al9l ,el- , --,,:'.:- .. 't Williamsport.; ''' : ' ... ... . 9,ELD,Itt , . • Yitill'' . 4,lLi r i;i4,4lthilomiptil,.. ', ' r! , ",, 6 , 10 A, m: i reopantiont.:-Sut : ploamo okt s how Aftta ,r, .. ....i . l , .., • , granted on you in,itur_ ors, cougu . • •.• .., L'ull EriorEwareSS leave* briti.i..0. , ..v...: '''''''' ............. 3.2/a P. w the supposed marriogo oetween-yan and iOO ''' k•P ' ts ii, &" piliiinlBl).olt _ • t..'.. - ,"..11.__As A. ". i vh . 011 , 1.010 ,j,,, 49 ,,,,p 1 u tu p„ , in , t , , in id i, , - 1'4.'4 " " "rriTl' a n t .141Wiel " il l . "" 3 . '"' 141) P. m. diver .e d' chard I; ..0441 imenii siteitld nici '. :) . '' r .f."' t- ' l 4 Elul itu. Mail lettveo .1.4w1c ' Mayon , %1' -‘ - 6 . 6W A• 11 .' tlll,Nelii4 , eot at* 1.0,16 , 411EA:ti liotilbia k r-: 'ii ~r;'. • . t ~,o 4n (4: 11•,; , ,.1,•, AVlllistlustert. ' 4.;Zi.. 5.45 A. 4., Jo • c l uc k,A;,,st „ip,il t zmat vj alayin hil. .'t '';:to - • f • • fler CO .. ' " arrivrti itt 11ilindilpftlit., ... .. .. . ............ ICIS P.l/4 P cffiAtii , Of , rpqr`slirpufe , , 0 ._,..: . •-sr , ro.c 1 1,4 -Xf.“-: , , , - , '-1 ; Butrido;Expoto payosieWilllittosport. ' r2.:2) A. M. • , •-- ... t0t , „5 ,- 1;,•r, . •v„ 1,. ' -', '. ‘.',:--- ' .. .. .. Ilarrifihnrg., 5 • /(11 ' hi ' I- , o Itiii tl , If§ , P:'-' , 'V - j , ;- '"'• Alto ‘',:o 4 . 1 . ,'.q?'''l •.: ' i ,', , •.- 4! .).,., ~, ~, arrives of Philadephia...L. . ...' 0.2.6A.M.. ' 1 'c ' ' rn • . AL. t.. • „,..,... .. , ..3 ~ . ..; ~. ".".- , .*r. ••- .. -..-... %Mt 4V ~,t)ft.i'kliti 011.,Hi4tt2ir 'meth at C•ort,V. 51,tia ettet at Corn' mut ) 111 1 - 113 „ .7"„140) ( 2,.0."fiAiigi , `1NJ...: ..- ...,— , L,,,,, , Jrtittutoli • .0-xlnliett , wlxt efuirvinuton milli truauti•un N- • -if.: - Ixt ‘'iliSi. ls ..,N; 'Mime 41 , 4 '. 1,..',„ sr,..;' igureit 111111 5.11(14.115ny,111v.r.141151). .••.• • ~ ~ ‘i U Iiiii , :(111:14, MIA. 'o., 1 LAN 1,.; ".• k. 1.4 'fi,di;:".',, p . ~; ~ f ~ .. , , ... , „ALI:AND, ..TyLsri, ~ i sule bi 11:0CIlltAN '4 IIII:88ELIA ..t' ,gl . l, .'•, t It .`• 1:' ':?•1.:' C • f, . ' ~ . , ~ u , , u. oiera iupertotso,Aost. mom,. I - , o , ' ! - : ''''):: 4 - : 4 :::: : , ,, 4 , : * r : )11'4 : : : • - . ' ~ . .5.4 ".. , ,tti,ITAI, 1, .:A.C , ;•;;41 1 ,=.V. , ~r . t.- ,R . A. 1 .:1,04; l .:i Zs4' . '•"l''" AP WEST CHESTER' AND: . PHILAD tcp- T ..PHIA ,RAILROAD.—W inter Arrangement and after . MONDAY, Oct. 4, /809, Trains will leavpail followa: - . . Leave Philadelphia, from' New Depot Thirty.firetaid Chestnut streets, 7.43 A. AL., 11.00 A. 31 2.30 P. M 44.13 P. 31,4.40 P. 1. 6.16 P. 51., 11'.80 r. Leave. West Obester, from Depot, on Emit Maiket street,6.23 A. 74.43.00 A. 31„ 2.0 A. m.. 00.45 A. P. 'M. 4.30 P. M.. tad P:3l. - - • • . • Train leaving West Chester at 8.00 A. M. will stop at D. 0. Junction, Lennt, Olen Riddle and Media: leaving :Philadelphia. at .430 P: AL' will stop. 14 Medini.Glon Riddle, -Lentil and J D. U. unction. •Passengers to or from stations between Wept Chester and 1.1.:0: Junction going' East; will take train leaving West Chester at 7.40 A.• 31.; and car 'will be attached to Express Train. at. B: C. Junction; and going West ' , Passengers for Stations above D. C. Junction will take train leaving Pliiladeb! Oita - at - 430 r. 31:, -- atid will - change care- at - B: -- Juno- - Oen., The Heidi in Philadelphia is leached directlk by 'the Cl:canna:and Walnut street cars: .Those of the , Markell street line run within one square. ..Thu cars of botitlinep connect with each train upon its arrival. ON SUNDAYS.-;LeavaPhilatlelphla for Weat Cheater at 8.30 A. M. mad 2.00 P. M. Leave West Chester for Philadelphiaat 7,56 A. M. and Ng- pn t ieengers are allowed to take 'Wearing Apparel only, ab Baegagoittud the Company will not in .aay Qua be responsible for an exceeding one handreddol ars, unless a erpetdat eodtract be made far the same. •, •Hi .WILLLat C. WHEELER. • • - '''".Onlneral hinPerinteadent. ?,3 1569. =ULM 11==3 I!l4l)atitogfiw?.‘ . it ' e s it ". - , 1 41..-. on and after Mondays Slay sa,,zo, . ~ , 4 -I _ . • . 4 ,,,,,, ~,,, . .., ~i etl,•• . ' 7l "r er P" --: Iron OIEBSIANTOViN. ' "'' ' - t - ', , s .11 , eave`PhIltIdelphia-8,7, 8, 8.08, 10, lIsl 3 A14. , 1 1 ; t 'l" 4 >- 3.16,3X , 44-35, 5" 6 g1 6 614.1 7, 8 ,9,10k.4,12 2 its '-; . ..'` ' Leave - Germantown-4,, ,'7,_7A, 8 1 8.2001 / 0 111,11 A. 1; 1. 3,4, 4M.5,04, 6,8,5,,7, 8,9, 10,11, P .81, 4 , The 8.2C1 down.traln , and the ax arid 8816 up trahn,, d. '3 not stop OU PHI GertrilitltoWll Branch. , E 6 • ON SIIIMAPS, re ..' , ...L. ( r .,,, , 4 t , - Leave Phlladelplll*-935 A, M.,S, ia IntunteeinlAlV,„-- D.55...,.1k: - a ,beve Germantown-813A. M.4.11,1;.5ind 9% P. H.> 5 ,1;1 1 , CBEBTNIIT BELL mrlditOlLD. , __,, . -. 1 , ',Leave Philadelft,lll l 111,41. 11.1 2, 650151,71111 ' 7 ,,./. ....i, and ii P. m, , . , R e ...L,2.32_. . ~, ~.. ........ .., nt , , , Li4ye ChestßuP sali MingtiMt Of 2 , SU, eaU Ai , . +.4. , " 1114 - 84 R, &Oh 0.4 a, 8. ,8.40 and 10A0 Pin. .• • - X ,•:: / ...--, • 1, 'ON BONDATB. ''. ' • • '.# L . -;1'^: / . LIHITIN Phriadelphla-9.l6mmutes 'A. X; Sand 7. my-. .? Leave Chestnut .111.11-.7.00 minutes A. X.; 12.*0, SAO aW.. 9.26 Minutes P. M. . ~, • * FOB CONBBOtrOOKEII AlglY NIARIBTOWN. ;-` ; • Leave Philadelphia-8.7g, 9s/LOB, A: M.l DC IS, 4X., 8,;'• , Ati 8.15,8.06,10,00 and lUts P. 11..,' , , i , •;' , 1 ,1•: . ... z ~,,,,, .74' Lave Norristown-819,0i, 7, sai; es'itiitte ' ll.i lull sts '4. : 4084.168 and 94_14 M. • _ . '• ' -.r- . ~ iv' T he 71A.m. Tref ns from Norristown mu 210; • ~.; a t e S2cets i , o v i e 3 L r f i ralp r t, ,, DArNr ig if ,b B i ch sy ss i te lito_ sy„ .... .; i I v ; .at School Line , Mlrmyunk and Oonshoho:kon, Ir rrA , ,!,ii, . ' . , x tON ' SUNDAYS. ;,, , - ,• , l ' + '',:' .. 4', LCSI,4I RififideiPWAr l . A. 111..;kand /:/ 5 P. M. ~ - ,„t i • ; . l . • , Leave, Notristown-itp i ii ir and,9K, 111. , : :,.. ,..4 4 7lol3Leave Phllladelphia-8,734.__,9 21.08A:11.; X3B, S s sOrciB4,„ i?, 64,8.15, 8.06,10.05 allOi P. 11 ..1.4., „.4,.'1,,,,;.1. , ..,1;g , '4 Leave Diana z rink .4 1 :Vipi?.atzT9 117 PsaRI,...i...ift,M, i I‘ 8, SPX. 8.80 and le , p. . - '• • ,'' 4 • -- ''• "• -.". 'A 'r . - ,,c. Itir The 6 P.M. Trisinfrotiinaliadellsblim#l ' ' ' ",*:,.., at achool Lane and Trlanat*. , ' . ' '..,,i ~ k., , ...r.)14 1- 't.f."-' , ./. . . , 014 8 D TAl t ,' , _.... ' .4. : ,4 , '". , ~..' Zeivii Philadelphia-9 A'. 1; Ries 4 sea V ' , CA I ' •,., ;Lssa ve Id l a y n , agu . w uk iL -T r itA 24 .:L.; e lii i o sn and vi. 919 , , , : sk., 22 1:2 L,, t ,;,.., , , , ,‘, .;, ; ; ;11.4 , Depot. Ninth an vs rIA "WIDEN , , -AND • ATLAIinII. iT:e] BOAD,--On and; after' MONDAY, Octabei ' l 4 trains will leave Nina stret ferr y . aa follp , soia•(11141 , . excepted) I. • . • .• . t • ; . 7.26 Freight (with nassengir ' AtilanHo Accommodation .. ... . . tfif: -Junction Accommodation to . .A.tco and hatar-) ,, mediate audio , , I: • I , l` Sr . . . . /7 s . I ..iitv't 1 Midi . - ~..,....44',..:.:....:«.:”...1,.., 'Freight. ' , . ' ..«.'.....„4.4 4 ...........'—'.;"110'. ~, - Atlantic" Accommodation,4.:. ...-,...,..• ...:;.......*...-... 6 • - , Junction Accommodaiion 111'4 Afgcr i .........i... ,• ' ' • Thuidonfleld A:tetrinniodition - trians letrati 1 , s; ~ ,,:,i '•• •• •' Vine , etreer.... - -.... - 4.-:..;:.. . .t.... 10.15 A. ELI and 2.00. P; ~ Haddonfield.... —. - 4 .4... r ,,....,.-- L.OO Pi_l4_. and S. • A....• • • DAVID H. SUNDY • • eat Citiartic Pills, *or , all the purposes of a , Lakative • Mediabia. - • Perhaps no one Medi. 1; J . :ine is to universally ye jnired ,by everybody: as f 2; cathartic, nor waa,ti'Ver:..•-• , -, illy before so , milvetsal.,`,": ,- ...1. ly adopted into. use, every country and atheng , • ail classes, as rthla mild `int efficient purgative, . Nil. The obvious Iva olin. is, that It is oilier° re- ' fable mid far more effect • turd remedy-than any - • • other. Those •who have • tried it; know that It cured them; those tvho have, , • not, know that it cures their neighbors and friends, and all know that what it doers once it'does always —that it never fails through any fault or neglectof its composition, - We 'have ' thousands upon thou sands of certificates of their remarkable curds of , the followhig complaints, bnt Stich cures are known in" every neighborhood, and we need not intbllsb them. - Adapted to all ages and eonditions inall,climates; containing neither calomel or any deleterimis drag, • they may be taken with safety by anybody . . Their sugar coating preserves them ever fresh and makes. -• • Went pleasant to take, while being pureiriegetable . ;.. no harm can arise from their use in any quantity. :s • They operate by pur ify powerful influenee..4l/0. :• • internal viscera. to the blood and stimulate it • • . into healthy action remove the obstructions of the. stomach, bowels, liver, and other organs of tho. body, restoring their irreg ular action to health; and by correcting, whereverthey exist, such derange- , meats as are: the first origin of disease. • - • Minute directions are given hi the .wrapper, on. the box, for. the following complaints, :which these Pills rapidly cure:— . • . For Dyspepsia) or indigestion, Listless's, nem, Languor and Zoos of Appetite, they .;.;. should be taken moderately to stimulate the atom. ach and restore its healthy tone and action. ' For :Liver Complaint'and its various syrnp 4 • toms, Bilious Headache, Sick 'Headache,' Jaundice, or ~Green Sickness, .‘ Colic and , DiliOssi Newels' theY should. be Ju-. diet° wily taken for each case, to correct tutu ell seasetl . ' action or remove the obstructions which cense it. ' For Dysentery Dysentery,or Diarrhoea, but one mild dose is generally'reqnlred. ' ' ' • For Rheumatism, Gout, Gravel, "saint. tattoo of ote Heart, Palo in the Side, Back and I qpi I, they should be continuously • taken, as reqmicti, to change the diseased action of the system. With such .change those complaints disappear.,For Dropsy and Dropsical Sivellings they ~, should be taken in large and frequent doses to pro duce the effect of a drastic Purge. • For Suppression a largo close should be.tidiest as it produces the desired effect by sympathy. • As a Dharier Pill, take *no or two Pills to_pro- mote digestion and relieve the stomach. , • - An occasional dose, stimulates the stomach andP bowels into healthy action, restores the appetite, . and invigorates the system.' Hence It is often ad vantageous where no serious derangement exists. •One who feels tolerably well, often finds that a dose of those Yllls makes Mai feel decidedly better, from their cleansing and renovating effect on the diges tive apparatus. " • 0,72..7. C. AY.E.R Co4.Practical Chemists, • LOW.E.LL. S. A. • At wholesale by J.. 11; MMUS.& CO.,PhiTedelPhia• . *. th tt•int nPAII.DENTALLINA:-1- , A, article for cleaning the Teeth,destroying animalcule which infest them, giving tone to the gums, and leaving a feeling of fragrance and perfect cleanliness in 'the mouth. - It quay ho used daily, and -will die) , found to strengthen weak and bleeding gums; ;while the aroma and detersiveness will recommend it M every one. Do ing composed with the assistance of the Dentist, Physi cians and ,3ficroscopiet, it le confidently offered. as a. reliable substitute for the unportainWashes formerly in Eminent Dentists,. acquainted with the constituents • of the Deatelling. adivcafe its use; it Contains nothing to prevent its unrestrained employment. Made only by • JAMES • k. SHINN, Apothecary. ,r ." . • , Broad and - Spruce streets. Foreale'bYD e; raggiets generally, and. • , • Fred. Brown --- D. L. Stackhonse ' , Hasserd'Ac Col, :,• Robert D. Davis, • ' C. R. Keeny,, . Gee. C. Bower, Isaac H. Kay, - Chas. Sh roars, C. 11..letsedles, ' , S. M,ll.cColin, S,,Cl,Bunting, . Ambrose'ilmith; Chas. H. Ebert, Edward Parrish 1 i ' e qtegi nt L, nieplia, glees Combe.. my A. Bower. ' ..at 11.11 P. M, ..at LSO P. IX, ..at 8.25 P. IC ..at 9.40 P. M. +• j o • t r t i r C: tat er° ' ISoII. Blairtri 11 8' WYOtl) drßro. . LEGAL NOTICtW.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers