*VI ~[/ -l. 6AkTkiNM J. B. Lippincott & Co. from'rePublisi eir ..Ifatia;ine some of the tranilatioo Of German tales which have been highV'relislied by the readers of that periodiCat ; by the author of "Gold Elide," and "The Lonely Ones," by Paul Heyse, with the illustration by Bensell, are:bound together in a neat oc tavo pamphlet, and put at 3.5 cents. • /MSS COokery. llook, - the Code which' all Philadelphia cooks swear by, • seems to be solving the problem of perpetual motion by still "moving on" at its sixtieth edition. We are requested to copy the title-page in full, and state the price. The latter is $1 GO, and the 'former: Directions for Cookery in its Various Branches. By Miss Leslie. Sixtieth Edition. rhiladelphia, Henry Carej? Baird, Industrial publisher, No. 40fl Walnut street: 1870. " 1i Rena, or the Snow-bird," by Mrs. Caroline Lee Hentz, is issued to-day by T. B. Peterson .& Bros. as the third volume in their series of that author's novels. The commendable regu larity With which this edition is nicked offa book on the first and on the fifteenth of each 'month—makes it certain that the whole library will be completed in half a year from the in ception of the enterprise. Each of these stories has every element of popularity among the lovers of light romantic fiction. The Peterson republication of Mrs. Aun S. Stephens receives the addition of her last written novel, entitled "Wives and Widows, or 'the Broken Life." It shows the maturity of of her powers, and will give great pleasure to: her many admirers. The price of these vol umes is $1 15, cloth. The Peterson Bros. have published during the month just passed "Linda" and "Robert Graham," by Mrs. Rentz, • "Popping the Question,' by the author of "The Jilt," "The Prince of Darkness," Mrs. South worth's new book, anti "Roland Yorke," the last , effort of Mrs. Henry Wood. They will • publish during the month instant, "A Marriage in High Life," by Mrs. Grey, "The Family Doom," by Mrs. Sonthworth, "Hans Breit mann in Church, and other Ballads,"by Le , land,and "The Garstangs of Garstang Grange," one of the faithful and excellent delineations of T. Adolphus Trollope. ' ...Rev. John Lord's " Modern History", is one of the best, most vivid and .picturesque known to school literature.. •But, like every work of '.individuality and force, it is at times a little deficient in method, and to classify its lessons is a difficulty for inexperienced teachers. Ida P. Whitcomb, of Packer Institute, Brooklyn, offers a Summary of its dates and events,which she has composed and used with great advan tage in her own•class.es. Published by Charles Desilver. The third volume of Thaekeray's Miscella . • antes, Appleton's fifty cent pamphlet edition; is a -small one of less than three hundred pages, and . is occupied by " Men's Wives." Twelve of these brochures will be necessary to complete the issue at this rate, which therefore is scarcely less costly than the handsome cloth editien.of - Fields, Osgood & Co. Sheldon' & CO. 'Mite the First Part of Charles Reade's "Put, yourself in his Place," being as much as has so far appeared in their .organ, the Galaxy. It is the, finest work of fiction now issuing in the world. It details the efforts of. a heroic inventor to overcome the - Lrecie-conibinations, aim has a delicious under plot of love -and manly sentiment. Mr. Reade. shows his amusing self-assertion in the quota tion from Horace with which he heads his per-' formance : "I will frame a work of tictiOn npon notorious fact so that anybody shall think be can do the same ; shall labor and toil, at . . tempting the same, and fail—such is the power of sequence and connection in writing." The brilliant Charles, in his satisfaction, is blinded to the fact that sequence and °ounce tion are just his great . needs. To' many a reader the best significance of the present issue is the indication that there is as much more to come of this brilliant story, for perusal and en joyment in the Galaxy.. ' The "Folk-Songs," arranged some years ago by John Williamson Palmer, M. D., were re cognized as an adniirable selection, but the hulk and expense of the volume 'secluded it in the libraries of the rich alone. The publishers tave conceived the hippy idea of dividing the collection into four .parts, of which the first mow appears as a thin quarto entitled "Songs of Life," containing only about 200 pages, and bestrewn with fac-simile autographs and illus . trations by that group of American designers universally termed "the best." Among the en gravings, by the by, are two after Bensell, of this city, and one of them, an em ' bellishment of Mackay's poem, "Little .; . arid Great," is nearly as good as anything among the illustrations. The poems are well • sifted. There are the exquisite simplicity of Blake, the honey . of Keats, the crispness of Browning, the energetic politics : of his wife in her latter day, the perfect songs of Christina . Rossetti, the finish of Tennyson ; and, among American minstrels, Poe and Willis and Holmes and Lowell and Longfellow and Stednian and Stoddard. Every singer is •at his best, and holds the delicate page like a Bohemian cap tured by a fine lady and astonished to find him self so well-looking and in such good voice in a fine drawing-room. The edition is indeed dainty, and an enhancement to the beauty of the poetry. Scribner & Co. publish the volume, which we • receive from Claxton, Remsen & maireitinger The same publishers issue -as a holiday book the beautiful ballad of "Lady, : Geraldine's Courtship," probably the most faultless of Mrs. Browning,'s poems. Out' readers will remem ber the pretty story of the composition of this poem by its author in about twelve hours, on receiving word from her publishers that so many pages of "copy" were wanting to effect lteequal,dlylsioupcher _works into tvv0 , .191 7 , umes ; her conscientious • haste - was -rewai'ded by something like an inspiration, and this in imitable ballad, which othertvisg must have lain unexpressed in her heart, took being al ' most at - once. In her holiday ,robes . "Lady A.leraldin4" looks stately anti illustrious. She •'wjil be welcome in every parlor. Heunessy's Illustrations are good in' the level themes, but do not rise with the subject. .Sever, Francis & Co, haVe used the plates of, their handsome edition of De Tocqueville's upenaocracy in America" for au inexpensive but neat • text-book for colleges and schools. This abridgement,which represents De Tocque ville's first .volume, is called "American Insti talons." The value of De Tocqueville's „criticisms, as those of a disinterested soctabir eiamining the most important remtb let projected, - mood not u e asserted. - The version 'is by Mr. Henry Iteeve, revised, with .cotes, by Professor Bowen, of Harvard. Front 1 lel E DAILY Iq4Nllitt BULLETIN:-PHILA.DLPIIIA,IV,EDN'ESDAy, I)E44BEIt 1,1869. Oe. legantly-,OPed , plates of i 4blr „ ,Round4ll , rah:titer's celebrated “Gtsldent ., ,lCeasury , t ,Serloa” ,and die oSunday , 13oOk of Poetry "-selected .Alexunder, they , have. strnelv off iapon t,binpaper a pair, of littlO square Volumes' in itrhicli these eelebrated' and adinlia.ble col lections are adapted to the means-of all. TAFF CREAM Or THE NEW BOOKS. -- • • The Eloquence et ratheknyacluthe.; The collection of Discourses by Father Hya-, einthe, of which a translation, commendable when we consider the haste with which it has been forced through the Press, is sent us by Pittruirri & Son thrbugh-Torter 4D Coates, of this city, will perhaps disappoint many, who expect some visible apparititur of that oratorical grace,which is incommunicable. TO each of these' diseenrses the imagination' must add the, effect of that'stately.presence, of those heavily-, falling robes of white, of ,those liquid eyes, and of the voice that could easily fill with pilule the Vast interiors of the Madeleine and Notre Dame. The mere text of any of Father Ifyaeinthe's „ predications,' deprived' of these accessories, is as the diagram !to the ' picture. But . the :diagram, in this case is accurate enough, and does give a l Striking portrayal of the strange state of Father Hyacinthe's mind.. A Catholic of the Catholics; hiS soul is with the "family convent" at o , Pau, where every domestic in fluence conspired to make' his ancestral faith seem beautiful and noble. At the same time a close student of the forces of modern civiliza tion, he is vitally alive to the' strain which these ideas are giving to the old patriarchal system of, his church. The mental conflict which has led him to partial rupture and to ex ile is bible hi almost any page, while the naivete of the recluse and that natural con servatism which was strong in the • spirit of Luther too, lead him to gild with every re source of rhetoric the beauties of the Catholic faith and the old-world theory 'of moral subordination. Let no reader expect to find a Protestant in Father Hyacinthe. Nothing in the collection equals in startling originality the discourse which compromised Fatherlayacinthe with the clerical party—that delivered before the International Peace , League on the 10th of last July. In this he' pronounces the fiat of "equality betweenCath7 olic, Protestant and Jew." In this he asserts . that the three civilisations of France, England and America have the power of controlling the future peace of the world. These points, so brusque • and striking, are familiar to our readers in our own translation ofpassages from the address. . - We shall be thought to damage the standing of Father Hyacinthe before malty worthy souls, familiar with nothing bitt Protestantism', by the extract which we are going first ;to quote; but we consider it an invaluable expon ent of his precise position. It is from a sermon preached on the conversion to catholicism of an American protestant lady : - RELIGION AND LIBERTY. I do not wish to overstate anything; above all, I would give no offence to any .nran. But may I not say th 4 the orbit wherein. Protes tant piety ordinarily moves is the divine, rather' than God himself? It is conscience with its steely temper, at once evangelical and per sonal; it is reverence for truth, the instinctive love for, moral and religious things. I call all this divine, not God ; it is the glorious rays of the sun, not its dazzling disk. Where is the uPspringiog of the soul to the living God,? "My soul thirsteth for God, for the livin g God : when shall I come and appear before God?" •Where is the habitual communion of the heart and life with the Word made flesh ?—the tears shed, like 'the Magdalene's, upon his feet?— the head bowed, like John's, upon his breast? —all that which' the "Imitation of Jes 6 Christ" calls so well "the familiar friendship of. Jesus ?" Where, to express it, in a - single word, is that Real Presence which flows from a bidden spring, like a river of peace, upon the true Catholic, all the day long, gladdening and .fertilizing all his life? 1 his Immanuel—God with us—awaited you in our church, and in that sacrament which so powerfully attracted you, even when you but half believed it. In your own worship, as in the ancient synagogue, you found naught but types and shadows; they spoke to you of reality, but did not contain it; they awakened' your thirst, but did not quench it : weak and , empty rudiments, which have no longer the right to exist; since the veil of the temple 'has been rent asunder, and eternal realities been revealed. "Old things are passed away; be hold, all things are become new." Ah ! blessed art thou who have been led to the nun- 1 tial chamber of the Lamb! And yet, my daughter, if Christ has enticed your heart (it is the Prophet's own word, "0 Lord, thou enticed me and I• was enticed; 1 thou art stronger than I, and bast a vailed"), 1 he has respected all the righ of your t. 412, reason and free will. You have \ • lied long in the balance of your judgment w at you have resolved, what you are' about to accom plish: I must do you the justice to say that you have been scrupulous in reflection, and maturely deliberate in the 'fulfilment of yogi. design :—so much haVe , you feared lest this great religious act shoidd bear any other char acter than personal 'conviction; so strongly have you 'persisted in avoiding any shadow of litnuan influence from without, or any shadow of the influence of imagination or sentiment within 1 " • I . " It is thus that Jesus. Christ has sought you for himself. Spouse or love, he is, at the same time, the Spouse of truth and freedom; and this is why, when he draws souls to himself, he never beguiles nor compels them. He is the eternal Word, begotten of the reason of .the Father, born in the outflow of his infinite splendor; he remembers his origin,. and when be comes to us, it is not under cover of our darkness, but in the sincerity of 'his light. And because he is Truth, he is Liberty; he bows with respect before the liberty of the soul, his image and offspring, and unlearns the language of eurnmand to employ none but that of prayer. "Open to me, my sister, my love,, my unde filed," he says in the sacred Song; ' "for my head is filled with dew, and my' locks with the' drops of the night." "Behold," he says in the Revelation, "1 stand at the door and knock; if any man hear my voice, and open • the. door,, I will come in to him, amiwill sup with hint :... beWith.me." ji,e, Alanst-p9t, fprep . an en 'irance into. the heart,- but he--enters • if--it is opeueil to him. 0 rapturous words, which show that with God love has the same delicacy as with man! True love respects as well as loves, and will accept its triumph only at the hands of our Wee, choice. - , ' .. But is this all ? Liberty is not sufficient to this jealous love ; there must' be struggle and, sacrifice. What were the cruel conflicts which • rendered your choice,' though free, so difficult . : and painful ? I may not answer this. Fafillly, friends, country,-1 have Seen, these sacred wounds too near to dare to touch theM. I will only say that I' never knew, till now, hoW much it costs 4 the most completely settled mind,' and the will most firmly resolved, to leave the region Of mother and (if native land! Al 1 why, on the whip soil' of the United States, must our .church be still-4 do not say „unknown—but despised by. so - many souls? Would to God, that it wore: simply - unknown! A new' apostle might then go to invoke opOn those shores that "Unknown God" whom Paul invoked before the Aieopagns, that Church which they love in the ideal without knowing it`':'irt. the reality, andAree from inejudices, thorightful America . kv#4,Areeelvelt -better thanfrivolouS Athens.6BOtheY,:thiedi* they k'neir'us, and they see ntx thtphgh SiOlt!cloust: of•evil teport ) that ouilnune excitbs riOthing:. ' but, disgust and hatred:Pklimeshall these, age-lOng misundersttuadingkeridure? and when Shall God at last coutrou4"division-wall to be thrown down? It Certainly depends upon ourselves, to prepare for thationged-for „day ,by draWing neater to haeli' etiieirHnot;Cditattily, by making doctrinal concestdowwhich would. ; be sinful if they were notelihneri6l, but by the abandonment of our mutual prejudices in the presence of facts better. Anderstood, and, by: the fotina.kion - of those' kindly . relatiOns.'in which esteem and charity.. might even now unite ` those whom differeriee - of belief still', separates. ' As . for' myself,lthis is' my: rifest' ardent wish ; and the mere ;1' come to appre ciate tlie condltien of.religibua'-'affai4 in this country, the more 'living and:, Urgent necessity this question assumed., .Since, then, "the time is come that judgment must beginiat the hotise of God," let us, Homan Catholics, learn how 'to give the example; let us ' , boldly arise. and reach out a loyal hand to our .separated but brethren. , ' . . • , We append a few short and • characteristic • excerpts ,„ • „ I acknowledge; gentleMeri r that many of our philosophers and theologians have not kept quite clear of this. doctrine (the Divine Right of Kings). Musts it be confessed? Bossttet is one of them. I'own no Connection with that line of vulgar detractors who think to magnify theuiselvea by attacking, BOSsitet.. Bossuet,the laSt link in the august tradition' of the Fathers of the Church ! • Bossuet, the glory not 'of France, but of all Catholicism l But the loftiest • genius is affected in some degree by the delu sive spirit of its age. Bossuet Game after the ruin of thoSe Middle Ages, which, . misunder stand them as we may, were in, so many re spects an era of libertY. Me lived in the splendor of those absolute monarchies - which have risen upon the modern world, and which seem to have 'conceutred the whole social sys tem in themselves. Under,. the dominion of the prejudices "of his time it Was possible for. this great man to teach that the right of pro perty was derived from the. Government,' and that " in general every right must needs be de rivedfrom' the-public authority." But, pushed to its last results, and aimed, in turn, by the absolutism of demagogues' against the absolutism of kings, such a principle would justify the crimes of the French Revolution, and the criminal dreams of socialism itself. No; the right of property's not derived from the State ! Land, that foothold of the faMily, the - basis of the home, is owned by abetter title than the concession of the State ! It takes hold of the deepest secrets of human nature, the most absolute necessities of a free and intelli gent man. The Columbus of primitive ages, or of the newly-discovered regions, I tread some uninhabited land, I gaze upon it in its virgin beauty, its wild uncomeliness, perhaps ;—no matter, I am . charmed by it. I form with it that bond, so ftill of mystery, which unites per son and thing, and in which interest, reason, allection itself, are intotwisted. Ah ! when I have done this, there is, no power on earth, even though it call itself Louis XJV., which has the right to stand up and say, as thus monarch once said, "I am the owner, you are the tenant." No! the owner is myself. It is called mine, soil as well as crop. You cannot rend that patch of earth from me; neither can you give me a title to it. My right consists in the act of My will, which said to this field, this forest, "Be mine." My right consists in the landmark I have placed, in the hedge I have planted. My right to it is in the sweat of my brow, the blood upon my bands, the rude embraCes with which my love and. labor have seized and . fertiliied , the land. HencefOrth that land belongs to the person of man. I hold it in my own right, and God stands by me in the claim. - eftr.smcr CONDITION OF CIVIL RIOSITS. TO civil soeiety, whatever the form of it, republic or empire, belong now the' sceptre and the sword. But the father of the family still retains all' his rights, excepting that one which, consists in regulating and guarding all the rest, and which constitutes the sovereign. One of the cutest and exactest thinkers of our day, whom ,I desire,' to mention by name, on account of thembligation I am under to hinr in my . own studies, the illustrious Abbe Ilosmini-Serbati—a genuine Italian to the very marrow of his hones, and at the same time a Catholic to the very core of his heart— •lias helped me to the best conception , Of civil society. According to him, civil society has for its Object, not, like the family in the natural order, or the church in the supethatltral order, the substance of rights,but simply the modality of rights. It does not create rights. Man exists before the State, with all those essential and inalienable rights which he holds directly from God,. by virtue of reason and moral liberty. The family, also, exists before the State, with rights equally essential, equally inalienable, exercised in its human bosom by the human person raised to his fullest dignity and felicity. It is not for the State to create those rights which are antecedent to it, and which come, I am bold to say, from a far higher source; it is • only for the State not to destroy them, nor encroach upon them. Its mission extends no further than to protect them, and to establish over them the sway of what the English, in their noble language, call "the queen's peace"—what St. Paul bids us ask for when We pray for kings and all that are in authority, "that we may lead a quiet and peaceable life in all godliness and honesty." The mission of the State consists, then, in fixing the modality of rights; that is, in regulating the best way in which the reci procal duties of individuals and families shoUld be exercised in order to help rather than hinder each other in their common develop ment. It Consists, further, in protecting,by force the rights and interests which belongto it from every unjust and violent ' attack, whether from within or from without. SUch are, the inatun al 'frontiers of. civil society and. domestic society, the family and the State— frontiers far•more:important , for the peace and liberty of the world than those of the Pyrenees, the Alps; or the Rhine ! trim siovsiftEuisi• PEOPLE. I turn now to modern times. I look there for nations formed under our own eyes, or at least under perfect. cognizance of their own consciousness: What example shall I take? Shall Igo to Switzerland? Shall I question the' commonwealth of the Lakes, the people of the glaciers, the sons of William Tell ? Shall 1 tread again the dear paths of Belgium ? No ! Let me cross the ocean, and stall& in presence of that gigantic nation of which I have spoken. lam no courtier of the United States of America; thanks to my priestly office - I am no one's courtier. lam not even a blind 'ad mirer of then ; and if this were the' proper place, I would warn them that they are slipping dowc_the.steep slope of 'tibial deCayriamithat , they will -infallibly come, as we have eeine, to' political and social decay. I would call thew: back to the better spirit of their - early age, and to the genuine patriotism of their founders. This I may say, gentlemen, I am atitte .son.ef Pius, IX.; and Pius IX. has put honor on him . se lf i n sending his homage and his gift - of a block of stone to the National Monument to Washington." Oh, how grand that nation, was! bow grand it continues, still ! 0 people, thou art like the lion's whelp that has gone up to seine his prey! Thy prey is the wealth of both. the 'hemispheres; thy proud 'independence, thy • vast and fertile continent. Thou bast couched bet ‘yeen the two oceans, in the shadow of thy. lofty mountains, and on the banks of thy rivers that in tb a m, like seas! ,Thou bast. roared like the lioniand like the lioness thou art slumbering y, najgbt. . Who shall dare rouse thee up? , Quis r•ti.scitabit ~ton ? Well,lhen, who is it that bolds the sove reignty in this tuition? ..None but itself. The very day V‘ lien it was born in pangs of travail, it grasped the sovereignty in -its own bloody la=tiiiiMaiiiMM , . and jealous_junals, and to.this my IOW"; let It go. ‘Ttlere dvary man s is at, onee;'citaan and King, u •. r , ARM ITEM* • . Roos,l'lllr.h7rrr , rlir[~ silo Sndt* yn , ' turned to their oltiqUarters Nb. i 316 Chest, nut street, are as busy as beaverS, selling and filming pictures for the holiday trade. „.; CH I CA.O 0 now boasts •between .two!•arid• three score of professional artists. Among tlieni CourtidDichl is at work upon: a large painting of Adam and Eve. The walls , of tlie Chicago Academy of De- • 'sign are to be decorated with' *traits of all its niernbers: eiceilent idea, and as a nu cleus,: there •• are , •tiowv completed --those- Of :Charles! , Knickerbocker,. by Wm. Cogswell ; Theo. Pine; by bithself; and of Drury, a copy by himself, after one by Healy. The Life 'school at the , Chicag,nAcadethy of .Design is well attended, and affords an invaluable op portunity for those who ere intending to make art a profession. . . IN TEE G °TWIT, GALLEEY, NEW. YOTtK, a number of new paintings have , recently been added to the collection.' Among them is 'an "Early Evening View—Bay of Naples," by Oswald Achenbach, showing in the foreground various groups Of fishermen at their sports, and spectators looking •on ; in the distance, across the bay, are the .mountains. CARPJETINGS, &C. GREAT REDUCTION Ii THE PRICE OF CARPETINGS. $lOO,OOO worth of Carpets at a Sacrifice. To reduce our stock beforo making alterations to store, we are now selling goods below cost. English Brussels, 62 ZS, 62 50,-62 65. English Tapestry Brumels. Oil 50, 65. Superfine All-wool Ingrain, 95e., 6 11 00. E. H. GODSHALK AS6 CO. 723 Chestnut Street. no2ftel w s 3trp NEW CARPETS. AXMINSTERS, WILTONS, VELTETS, BRUSSELS, 3 PLYS ANI? INGRAINS, Venetians, Druggets, Oil , Cloths, &e. I.OFJEI3OIVI Sr, SHAW, 9 0 ARCH STREET. STATIONERY. IMPORTANT TO BOOK-KEEPERS. JUST PUBLISHED, THE " CATCH-WORD 11 LEDGER INDEX. (COPYRIGHT. SECURED.) Book-keepers and all others having' to use au Index will find this a Very valuable book. By using the" Catch-word" Index. it will not only save time and eyesight brit - the finding of a name quick], is a mathematical certainty. You arc invited to call and examine IL PUBLISHED BY ' BAS. B. SMITH & CO, Whole Sale and Retail Blank Book Manufacturers Ault • Stationers, • No. 27 South SEVENTH Street, PHILADELPHIA. • W Star .6 NEW PUBLICATIONS._ ZP4. 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TO-DAY—EI ustßALL's fascinating new neve l'rice, el 75. * 4 l'heso books aro all beautifully bound in cloth, aro sold everywhere, and will be sent by mall, postagefree, on receipt of price by OARLETON, Publisher, New York, -• .- .Madition Bc , ,tuaro, Filth.ave. and Broadway: 1100' s sSt . - • - aiILOBO.I ) HY OF MABRIAGE.-A new course of Lectures, as delivered et the New York Museum`of Anatomy; embracing the eubioots; How to Live and what to Live for; Youth, Maturity and Old Ago; Manhood generally-reviewed; the Cause of In. `digestion, Flatulence and Nervous Diseabee accounted for; Marriage Philosophically Considered dm., Alm. Pocket volumes containing these Lectures will bo for• warded, post paid, on receipt of 26 cents, by addressing W. A. Leary, Jr, Southeast cornenof Fifth and Walnut streets. Philadelphia. fe26 Iy4 REMOVAL. . . REMOV JOSHUA. COWIPLAND 4 SON' HAVE REMOVED Timm: LOORING•GLASS' AND PICTURE-FRAME STORE To No.lB NoRTR sivra STREET, %viler() they offer. at Reduced Erb:ex, a general ILAHOM Inept of LOOK INC. GLAsSE , PICTIIREFRA.MES, LARGE FRENCH. PLATE MIRRORS, CURTAIN CORNICES, - ROOM MOULDINGS &c. n 024 w 1 in Wong_ Q T. BEALE, M. D.'&,.SON,.DENTISTS A 7, have removed to 1178 Girard greet. ' 0022 Sia* - pp ICE.-22 CASKS - STRICTLY P MAE ivebarieston nice IttudiuOund fur bale by EDW. H. ROWLE YOG South Front street. ItUSCELLAXEOU .''-)':`steli,i'i:.i.::ii:A4lislo LOSS RGLARt tliE - OR ACCIDENT. THE SAFE itrom COMPANY New, Fire and. Burglar-Proof Building, Nos. 3M3+ and 831 Chestnut Street. TIIE FIDELITY INSURANCE, TREST AND SAFE DEPOSIT COMPANY. - 00,000,000 • B. DIRECTORS. N. B. Browne, IldWixrd W. CIRO Clarence H. Clark,' Alexander Hen John Welsh, Stephen A. Cal ell, Charles Daceleiter, George F. Tyler, Henry G. Gibson. President—N. 11, BROWNE, Vice President—CLAßENCE 11. CLARK. Secretary and Treneurcr—ROßEßT PATTERSON, Aselstant Secretary—JAMES W. LIAZLEHURST. Capital, . -- The Canipanw have provided, in their new Building and Vaults, absolute security against lees by FIRE, BURGLARY or ACCIDENT,and .. . . . . . RECEIVE hECURITIES AND VALUABLES ON DE POSIT, UNDER GUARANTEE. Upon the following rates for one yenr or less period Government and all other Coupon Se curities, or those transferable by de livery 1 00 per ,', 1,000 Government and all other Securities registered and negotiable only by in' dorsement . 50 per 11,000 Gold Coin or Bullion $1 25 per 11100 Silver Coin or Bullion . $2 00 per 111X0 Silver or Gold Plate, under seal, on own er'. estimate ol value, and rate subject to adjustment for bulk. SI 00 per 414:0 Jewelry, s andDiamons, generally, r $l,OOO Deeds, Mortgages Valuable Papers when of no Axed value, $1 a year each or according to bulk. These latter, when deposited in lin boxes, are charged according y e lpalk, upon a basis of 17; feet cubic capa city, $lO aar Coupon* and tntereat will be collected when desired, and reuntted to the owners, for One per cent. Tho Company offer fordin REg rho NT,key, tho Icgseo exylnaively bol SAFES INSIDE THE BURGLAR-PROOF VAULTS, At rates varying from eia tog to s7ize.6 each per witnatn, ac ordin • Deposita of money received, on which interest will be ,allowed per cent. on Cali deposits,' payable by Chick at eight, and 4 pe days rnt. on Time de • • posite, payable on ten' notice. Tray eltra' Letters of Credit turnikflod, available in al parts of Europe This Company is Aiilo antbotjzed to art as FAccUtors, Administrators and Guardians, to recoil . . and execnto Trusts of every description from the Courts, corpora :longer individuals ROBERT PATTERSON, StrrPtitry and VealVlM* nol4-w tb f 2o § DE. J. DE HAVEN WHITE'S MOUTH WASH AND • GARGLE. The name and standing of Dr. WHITE in Medical Dentistry ars a guarantee for the efficiency of whatever lie prescribes for this Month and Teeth. llis Mouth Wash and Gurgle, an entirely new remedy, based on /clear'? in every respect, contains the beat m• gredieuts, medically, to correct irritation of the mucous surfaces. and chemically to arrest the decay of the hea l thy Throat insure a clean Mouth, a sweet Breath, and a healthy IlltrOat TIR .L DE HAVEN WHITE'S MEDICATED . DENTIFRICE. This entirely new (gray) Tooth Powder, the result of many years' experience, surpasses far, in the Doctor's jildgrnent, his former f pink colored) Powder, so exten sively known to the public under the name of **Dr. White's Dentine." Ho advises his customers to discon tinue the use of the Dentine altogether, and repudiates all Tooth Powders and Mouth Washes sold under his same as spnrious, except the above, with his signature in the label, and prepared only by GUSTAVUS KRAUSE, APoth.carT, N. W;corner TWELFTH antI.CUESTNUT streets do • DR. J. DE RAVEN WHITE'S. TOOTH BRUSHES, ImruovridENT 1569. ' Superior to any in the' world. Fur eale at the alma place.oz-trow a3m9 =4414 CHARLES RUMPP, PORTE MONNAIE, POCKET BOOK AND SATCHEL MANUFACTORY, S 7 N. Sixth Street, below Arch, PHILAVELVIIIA Port Folios, . . lllonoy Bolts, Pressing Cases, . Work boxes, Cigor Cases, Blinkers' Cases, . Puma. Sze. WHOLESALE AND ItETAI Cuban, L. n 029 Inirpt _ .. ._ Iternoval. J. 11. MICHENER & CO., CURERS OF THE CELEBRATED Excelsior " Sugar-Cured Ilams, Tongues and Beef, Have Removed to their NEW STORE, NOS. 122 AND 124 MICR STREET. nob) Irtirp . GAS FIXTURE.S. From the Celebrated Ilaniifacturere, Mitchell, Vance & Co., New York, and Tucker Munufacturing Co., Boston. And every variety of COAL OIL LAMPS, From our own 3Lonurnetory, Camden, New Jersey. COULTER, JONES .& CO 70/ AIICEI STREET, PIIILADELPHIA. se23-Sm rp SPECTACLES AND NOSE GLASSES , . mcadscorEs, OF EVERY" KIND. . SPY GLASSES, OPERA GLASSES, THERMOMETERSitc., , /to For sale by IV. Y. MoALLISTER, • 728 CHESTNUT Strout, Philadelpha, Established 1783. oedO sem 2corps FRED. SYLVESTER, REAL ESTATE BROKER 204 SMITH'; FOURTIII STREET ocl4 2mrp§ . _ GrOrit) Gold Medal awarded to us over all competitors • nf At lace l f xldOiciou, of Og Altar u .11 r 940; rO, Mg . SVW.OLM - kkkiik.S.l . Of tbaletuat and ropot beautiful doeign,e, and all other Slate vrork on band of Mnde t 6 order: Factory and Snlearoome Sixteenth and tlollowhiliStreetti. WILSON 41c BULLER. no2o s w tjal FTLER,7ATILV.EI3, .kt CO, , NEW CORDAGE FACTORY NOW IN PULL OPERATION, No. 22 Z .WATER greet and 29 14 .I#3lllaW/LBE &tonne iogo.. 4 4.:itgNic,.-gLs s ..j 301 and 1303 CHESTNUT STREET. Good FUrniture at the lowest peeeible" ri p , AT TIIIELII NEW stoRE,IOO2 ARCH STREET,; lire now selling their 'SLIM/NU FURNITIISZ sent reduced prices. N. B. BROWNE, President FURNITURE, &t: F CABINET MAKER, ESTABLISUED 1544. ttol&sznp FURNITURE. T. & J. A. BENKELS, FIRE-PROOF SAFES. HERRING'S CHAMPION SAFES. Late Destructive Fire in Third Street. PIULAMILPIIIA , NOP. )649 11EPIIIII. num... HERRING & Co., No 629 Cliestuut street. GENT - LUMEN : On Wednesday night, the 3dtnst., onr large Snot) 'Hanufactory, No. 118 North. Third street, was burned out. Wo lost our large stock of goods, but were the fortunate owners of one of your Patented Cham pion Sire•;'roof Safes, Which was exposed for many hours to an intense heat, and did its duty most man fully ; in fact, the books, papers and money that it con tained CAME ont as good as when they were put in. The contents of the Safe were all we saved. Please send no another,of larger size, to our nen place as early as possible. Yours Very Respectfully, JOHN A. BOGAR * CO. HERRING'S PATENT CHAMPION . 8, the mod reliable protection from fire no known. 11.- RING'S NEW PATENT BANKER ' SAFES, co - billing ,hardened steel and iron, with the Pate Prank Unite, or SPIEGEL EISEN, furnish a realetan against boring and cutting tools to an extent heretofor unknown. - Farrel, Herring & Co., Philadelphia,. Herring, Farrel & Sherman, No. esi Broadway, corner Murray St.., N. Y. Herring & Co., Chicago. Herring, Farrel & Sherman, New Orleans* nols r , Li' GROCERIES, LIQUORS, ticu. NEW BETHLEHEM BUCKWHEAT White Clover rioney. ALBERT C. ROBERTS. DEALER IN FINE GROCERIES, Corner Eleventh and Vine Streets, NEW MESS SHAD AND SPICED Salmon, Tongues and Sounds, iu prime order, Just SF received and for sale at COE ST Y . i East End Grocery ez No. 118 South Second st rect. below Chestoutstreet. t -- YORE SPICES, GR ND OU AND' WHOLE]- —Pure English Idustani by the pound —Choice White Wine and Crab Apple Vinegar for pickling•_in store, and for sale at couriT Y'S East End Grocery, No. , 114.Ssuth Second street. below Chestnut stre.et. . 'DS N 'E cY - ,, ( lrc'e E l -' , N .T ,', X } i'n" . . -4 ., 0 °0 and for at cousTY's East End Grot:erY, No. 118 South Second`„ ' street, below Chestnut street. INTHITEBRANDY F4OR PRESERVING. —ft choice article j•tot received and for sale at COUSTY'S East, End Gr.scery, No.llB South Second street, below pAt stunt street. • • ~ ci 0U P 5.7- - T OMA T 0, PEA., MOOS -', ID Turtle and Julllen Soups of Boston Club Idanufac- tare ono of the finest articles for plc nice and sailing '.. parties. For sale at COUSTY'S East End Grocery, No, 1125 South Second street. below Chestnut street.:_ • • _. . -GENTSI-FITHNISITING- O.OODh. _ FINE DRESS SHIRTS GENTS' NOVELTIES. J. W. SCOTT & 09., No. 814 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia, • Four doors below Coutizental Batt. mhl-f m w tt • PATENT SHOULDER SEAM SHIRT MANUFACTORY.. Orders for these celebrated Shirts supplied promptly i brief notice. . Gentlemen's Furnishing Goods, Of late dyke In full variety. WINCHESTER & CO. 706 CIIESU'NIJT. el-mwftf rE FI NE — A KT s Established 1795. A. S. ROBINSON FRENCH PLATE LOOKING GLASSES, 'Beautiful Chrom.os, ENGRAVINGS AND PAINTINGSi . : llanntaeturer of all kinds of Looking-Glass, Portrait lePictureFrames.` 910 CHESTNUT STREET. Fifth Door abOve the Continental, • PIIILADELYDIA. _ 0 0 1/.-4,5110 7 , POUNDS WESTER VV.Woologgortvil :modem. in 0,, and for Ando COOKIIAN, It11S:50.11. e(O,, N. , . 111 Chortnut aret, CORSgTS. 'BROWN'S Wholesale and Retail Corset 'Warehouses; REMOVED 819 ARCH STREET. BARATET. C It S E 7 1' S TOT:ERNI:IMES, PANIERS. 112 S. Eleventh S ismseliAPlU43 OgRUWIT,r, -- A - FIRE at TOpeka L llBX3, on Sunday nlgbt. destroyed $15,000-Worth of property Ti: National Board of Trade Will meet at Ricbmond, Va,, to-day. • Tun Red River insurgents sorganized a pro visional government on Nov. 10. A FmIALE suffrage bill passed the•Wyotning Council, yesterday, ahnost unanimousbr- Tim eleetions in Texas and Mississippi are progressing, quietly. Nothing definite can be known until to-night. , BY AN accident' on the New Orleans and Jackson Railroad; the fireman was' killed and the engineer had his legs- broken. , DomiNteus S. VOOTIME9, a prominent builder in Brooklym has . , failed , his' liabilities being'slBo,ooo,. A STOnsty debate occurmit 'in. the French Corps Legislatif yesterday over is series of in terpellations submitted by the Opposition. , THE National Council of. the, Union League will hold Its anneal session in :New York on Dec. 8. THE internal revenue receipts for the month. of November were $13,145,570, being an excess of 53.505,570 over the receipts for the corres ponding month of last Year. • ANoTHER rising in Ireland is anticipated by the English Governruent, which: is considering the suspension of the &them corpm: Extreme measures, it is said, will be adopted: - • NATHANIEL Lorin, who was knocked down and robbed in Peabody, Mass., on Sunday night, has led of his injuries. Two men have been arrested for the crime. THE celebrated McCarraban case has been removed to the Supreme Court by Secretary Cox, who denies the right of the United States District Court to require him to issue a patent for the land. TnE charge of manslaughter against Kane, the switchman on the Virestern Pacific Rail road, through whose ignorance and negligence the fearful slaughter at Alameda occurred, has been dismissed, and the man discharged. INTELLIGENCE from Paraguay, s by way of Lisbon, is to the effect that the Main Brazilian army were unable to advance against Lopez for want of provisions ; the men were living on horseflesh. ON SUNDAY, a western bound, freight train on the Burlington and Missouri Railroad Caine in collision with a wood train 'near Skunk river bridge, lowa. One man was killed and four injured. Both tiieengines and fifteen cars were wrecked. • • THE case of the Commonwealth aainst the Cmtlit , 3lobilier came up before Judge Pearson ,in Harrisburg, yesterday,on a.motion for a new trial, and was postponed at the re quest of li. C. 31e3Iurtrle, defendantis comisel, till yesterday one week. Wm. Ti. Gma,ono, Treasurer of the Avon dale Relief Fund, reports total receipts to No vember 27, inclusive, $115,099; disposed of as follows : In railroad bonds t par value seven per cent., $21,071 ; in United States sixes of .1808, $28,901 ; deposited in four banks in Luzern county. $24,006; paid to the Disbursing Corn mittee and Assistant Treasurer, $10,747 ; bal ance in bands of Treasurer, $7,513. A visAsTnous fire broke out in Jackson, night, originating front an at tempt by a man to draw gasoline near a lamp. Among the sufferers are W. Jackson, g•ocer ; Holmes & Avereil, tobacco and liquors: Mrs. ItrandatT, millinery and fancy goods; Kelly & Casey, boots and shoes; A. A. Bless, crockery; A. Barclay, shoe leather; F. nursh & Co., hardware; Illbondield & Co., crockery. The total loss is estimated at' $200,000, with small insiiranee. • JEFF, DAVIS'S lII,IINDER. Impulalve WaxqueradLag eof in a Wa• • ter•Pr. Extrectot a Lecture by General , ' A. 11. Wilton. :11 lla vett:tort, lowa, November 2.1.) General Wilson said that the friends of Davis strenuously denied that he was disguised ,as a woman, and he therefore detailed the proofs with considerable minuteness. Lieutenant Dickinson states that Davis had a black mantle wrapped aroundlis head, through which could be seen locks of his hair. Capt. G. W. Lawton, of the Fourth Michigan Cavalry, 'lvens expli ,citly that • Davis had on a lady's water-proof cloak, gathered at the waist, with a shawl drawn over the head, and carrying a tin pail, Col. Pritchard, in his official report, says that. he received from Mrs. Davis on board the Clyde, off Fortress Monroe, a "water-proof cloak or robe" Of : dark or almost black water proof stuff, 'whicb Was worn by Davis as a dis guise, and which was identified by the ufen who saw it on him at the time of the capture. Pritch ard secured the other part of the disguise tffe next day. It consisted of a small black shawl, with a red border four or five inches deep, which was identified in a similar manner by Mrs. Davis and the soldiers. A convincing cir cumstance in this connection was related. In ' looking over the articles on board the steamer for the shawl, Colonel Pritchard picked out one like it, when little Jeff., a boy of seven or eight years, said: "That isn't the shawl my father wore when captured; this is the one"— picking up the right one- "Even the friends of Davis," said the General, "in their efforts to explain away the story, have confirmed it in all its essential particulars. Col. Harrison, of Davis's stall, admits that Mrs. Davis had thrown over him a dressing-gown, and Pollard says that a shawl was thrown across his shoulders." Gen. Wilson gave a sketch of conversations between Davis and himself at Macon, where tbetilayed-out rebel was very free in his ex pressions concerning his own and the leading Federal Generals, entertaining a high opinion of Grant, Sherman and Thomas, and speaking of President Lincoln in terms of great respect. Woman's Rights in the East...A social Revolution Completed .by the French Imperial. Visit. I OPsttantisoPle ( Oct. 211 Ccrywpontlesce of the London Your readers will be astonished to hear that during the past ten 'days there has been a revolution in Constantinople. A bloodless one, it is true, yet one that in its results may have a lasting and all-powerfal influence for good on the future of Turkey. The ladies have begun to make themselves beard, and they no longer intend to be com pvlled to hide their beauty beneath the dis figuring yashmak, or be hid away in the recesses of the harem. They. , have „looked upon the lovely Fransa ImperatHzassy they have seen the, peerless beauty of her face, and the inex pressible elegance of her form, and they do not ntiderstand why their charms should not. also dazzle and delight beholders. They have seen the Lord of the Meslems himself give his arm to 'a woman, and not only conduct her to her palace, but accompany. her in the carriage 'and • the calque, and they naturally ask why they should be obliged to veil their bright eyes and fair complexions - in a cloud of gauze, and take their solitary pleasUre on the water or at the Gtienkson, without the escort and Onipanion ship of their own immediate lords.. A "revolt of the harem" has, therefore, broken out in every yali on the Bosphorus, and the inner life of Stamboul is troubled. This revolution has been going on silently_ for some,..tinie,ltit-the visit of the Empress of the French appears to have brought it to the crisis. It is only a few years since the yashmak was worn of so dense :material that it was imposSible to 'recognize the features of thh wearer; and the ladies ambled along in wide trousers and loose yel low papoothea that gave a most ungainlY ap pearance to figures otherwise stately. and well proportioned. Now, however, the bright eyes flash end the pearly' teeth dazzle with their brightness beneath the veil which, from the fineness of its texture, n longer serves ' toCconceal; • but rather adds a coquettish charm to the natural beauties beneath. The slipshod papooshes, too, are discarded, and in-• stead a pretty foot, encased in a heat Ftench 4 , oititic, peeps out from under the flowing dra: pery. lint the:fredjfr still remains to.sliroud the tigtire, and prevenV the suppleness and !native elegance of the form, being seen; while, worse still; , the total seParatiOns of the sexes, both in and out of doors, is rigOrMisly ; exacted. Thif; custom, there can be no doubt,, will now Soon disappear, and then the Turkish women will safely bear comparison, ith the , :beauties of any other country in the: world.: None of the Turkish: lginisterS of State pos sess Mere thaii one wife, and that One is both' honored and respected. The poorer classes cannot alliwd the 4 , luxury" of several wives. while the rich Ttirks in Stamboul have long, show. , abalidoned :the .practice., Novvhere, Met, is woman more tenderly- annlimightfully protected than in Turkey. Statement of the Asidstant Treasurer of the United States. at Philadelphia. • The following 18 the statement of tho buainealt ut the tare cf . the ANahttant Treatotrer of the United Statea. at Plillatielphilt, for the inotttli of November. 1869 : 1869. • ' . Cr. 'Nov. I—Balvnc , s on hatul at thik ...... 16,005.617 22 IteeelptB during the mouth,viz: • . " 30—Aeromit General Treoetiry. Inelo - ding (MBtoms.... ....... 82488.483 81 • • • , Post °thee Fond, ..... 27,289 47 Interest , Fund 887,633 RI ' ItinburBoCit .748,035 81 4.149,422 2:4 Dr. Paynie lit, daring Ilia mouth, viz: " 30—Account General Traasary 82.1119.257 1;1 • Pont OOice 81.821'99 interest 1.253433 14 • Dlabarsara,_ 834,957 95 4419,579 69 Rnloroe iit dose of lookinen4 MIR dity . ... 6540499 12 71mporary Loan Departgii.nt.for 11looth of Norember.l363: Nov.l-13o1unce doe to ilepositorh Ut this date 3.400 00 30—flopnynient of Depogitorg duihm the month . 30—Balaneem due depositor* at close of bliffillOlN nth) day... 3,400 00 " .30—Frnetiontd Currency redeemed Miring the month /5325.212 00 1 1 14 POnTT_ONS., Ilenortellor the rnuade AT lphia Evening Bulletin. SAYARNAH iiteumship Tonawanda, Wakeley -97 bales cotton Cochran, Russell & Co: 40 bales domestics Chighorn, Herring & Co; .8 butes cotton 3do rags 1 do waste Miller & Bro_• 28 bales cotton Randolph' & Jenks; 2 do 12 bales yarn A Whildin & dons; 50 balea cotton. R Wood & Sons; 7 do Philadelphia and Boston Steamship Co:1 box `ll' Black • 1 do 8 Dickson; & 1 beer kegs C Engle; 1 box (online, Woichsl &Co; 33 hbds iron 1 lot shell Edw Samuel; l 5 cks rice A Steplainl & Co; 30 pee timber Rea ney, Sons & Co: 12 bbls oranges sundry bxs W L James ;3 bales cotton 2 do 31 do 55 do 51 do order. MOVENFISTIS OF OCRAJW 8 TO ABEIVE. . _ . . AEIPS FROM , DOE . DATE Smidt . . Bremen-New Y0rk'........ ........ Nov. 4 Enropa... ........... ....Glaagow-New York Nov. 18 , C. of Antwerp-Liverpool-Nov, York via 8.--Nov. 20 II oloat I a -... .. -.norm-New York_ • Nov. al Atalanta._ London-New York_ N0v.20 Ilansa............Sontbampton-Novr York_ .. ... , ... -N0v.21 Palmyra,- Liverpool-New.York via Nov. Ti Virginia Livorpool...New York N0v.24 City of Par& Liverpool... New York.. ......... .--N0v.2.5 India. • -Glaegow...New York. N0v.28 NerneeLa Liverpool-New York N0v.27 Allemannla Havre...New York N0v.27 TO DEPART.. .1 W Eiennan Philfura...Cliarledon Dec. 2 Yazoo__ Ehilatielphla...N Orleans via Hay... Dec. 2 A10pp0.... .... --New York... Liverpool Dec. 2 Columbia New York-Havana vitalisation...Dec. 2 • 'Union Now York-liromen- -...Dec. 2 ii Chauncey NIAV York-Aspinwiiii- Dec 4 Tonawanda...Plilladelnhia-Savannah Dec. 4 C. of Brussela...New York... Liverpool ................_Dec. 4 Columbia New York-Glasgow . Dec. 4 F rance ....... .......'..New York-Liverpool -.-...- ...... Dec. 4 Denims New Ycrlt...L , ,ndon Dec. 4 Arizona New York...Aapinwall ' Doc. 4 C of Mexico New Yorg... Vera Cruz, Ac..........1),?c. 4 Hol , acia New York... Hamburg • Dec. 7 ric otia _ New York-Liverpool Dec. 8 BOARD OF TRADE. JAMES DO t'GI i EILTYI SAMUEL E. STOKES, Ms:mita 00)narrTEL JOSEPH C. GRUBB. COLMIITEE ON ARBITRATION. J. 0. Jane, E. A. Sander, Geo. L. Buzby, I Wm. W. Paul, Thomas L. a niesp4,. MARINE BULLETIN. PORT OF PHILADELPIIIA-DEC. SUN Risits,7 041 Si Sea SETA. 4 351 Hiatt WATER. 12 :i . ' ARRIVED YESTERDAY... Ship . Ellza 3lcLaugblin air), Ilibbert, 5 days from Prosmenco, in ballast to captain. Steamer Tonawanda. Waltepy. 70 boura from Sal an nab. with cotton. dce. to Pllllll,lopliia and Southern 31ail SS Co Passenoer,o—D C Rulnn,J L Tomlinson, Mrs E Moran. G W J ordan, Jos Manion, Thomas Fortan 'l' C WI I W Steamer J W Ever-man. Hinckley, 70 hours from cliorleston. with cotton, rico, &c. to E A Bonder .k Cu. Passed in the bay, barks Bessie Rogers. froncDublin, in ballast; Louisa, from New York; brig Etta 31 Tucker, from do. and edir Bertha Souder. from Windsor Nb. Bark Bessie Dorris, Allen, 33 days front Liverpool. with mike to I' Wright & Sons—vessel to 14 S Stetson & co. Put back twice through stream of weather. Towed tap by th , Monona. Come the northern passage, and up to Cape Race had brisk northerly breezes. with smooth sea and pleasant weather. From tt e Banks westward have had strong westerly winds and gales, and on the • 25111 Nov, lit 39 PO, lon el 30. encountered a hurricane, veering from S to NNE.and blowing with the utmost fury, the sea much confused atid washing the ship like a half. ale rock. At its commencement endeavored to ' carry a little sail to keep out of the stream, but had it rill blown away. together with half a suit of sails from the gaskets. Sustained no further damage than loss of sails and wrenching tiller front the rudder bead. Brig Max. INGO, Knoche!, 00 days from New Castle, Eng., with mdse to order-4 cis:4e! to L Weaterimard A Co. Brig II C Brooks. Briggs, 10 days from. St Mary's, Ga. with lumber to E A Souder & Co. Brig Hunter air). Wilson.—days from Sombrero, with plait° to E H Atwood & Co. ltchr A 141cGalian.Call,5 days from Provideric. Schr Clara Smith. Smith, 10 days from Vinalhaven, with granite to Barker Bros. Schr Jas A Parsons. Clark, 10 days from Wilmington. NC. with lumber to Norcross & Sheets. Schr T Borden,Wrightington, 4 days from Fall River, in ballast to Costner. Sticknev .1 Wellington. Schr M C Burnite.Dnrborow, 1 day from Camden,Del. ith grain to J L Bowie): A Co. Schr E Sitinirksou, insmnre, Allen k Point. Schr Alabama, Vangilder, Lynn. Schr J Stroup, Crawford, Boston. Schr S B Wheeler, Lloyd, Boston. kilt- 31 B Wes tcott, Gamble, Bridgeton. Canal boat E L Anthony, Penfield, from Oswego, with barley to G Jamison. CLEARED YESTERDAY. Steamer Aries, Wiley, Boston. H. Winsor A Co. Steamer Fanita. Freeman. New York. John I , Ohl. Bark Astrea I NG/. 11111e1,12remen.L Wectergaard A Co. Shr 31 E Smith, Smith, Wilmington, NC. S Lathbury &Co. Schr J B John•win, Smith, Warren. RI, Blakiston,Graeff . . & Co. • . Schr. Ephraim & Anna, Green. Boston, do Schr S A Hoffman, Hoffman. Boston. • do Seim Tramit. Hackett, Providence. • do Sign* J 5 We!den, Crowell. Providence, do - Seim Village Queen, Conklin, Providence. do Stilt' H W Benedict. Case, Newport, do Schr Brandi-wigs. Adams E Greenwich, - do Fehr it P Ililu4'Highee. Lynchburg, , do Schr It RR No 4F, ROSS, New Haven, - .lo Schr S II Franklin, Mull,_POrtsmuuth, do Schr Jos Maxfi Lightay, Milton. .1 Hommel. Jr. & Bra Seta Northern . Ireland, Fall Mu, do Schr S J Bright, Stephens, do ' do Schr Ad, Smith, du . do Schr A i P Simpson. Simpson, Nahant, .lo Schr D S Siner, Huntley, Boston, , du Schr II Reinhart, Hand, Boston, ' do Schr Cora, Seaman. New Haven, - de Seim John Walker, Davis, Providence, do Schr Cerro Gordo, Pearson, Now London. ' do HAVRE DE GRACE, Nov. 30. The following boats left hero this morning, laden and consigned KB follows: James Hasvey. with lumber to Taylor & Betts; Lydia Ann, lumber to Craig & Blanchard; Maggie, wood to Manayunk. PORT OF PIiII.ADELPTIL% Foreign and eoastw He arrivals for the month of No vember, I6ti9, its compared with the sante period in 1868: IMO. , For. Cete‘t. Total. For. Coast. Total Steamships__ 2 ~. 2 Ship +, 110 rk.. • 5 ... 5 2 1 3 2.1 .... 22 10 2 12 Brigs 9 19 19 16 22 31 Schooner.. 11 003 1001 - 9 031 940 Sloopti ... 579 170 ... 473 473 1.: t earners ... 314 311 ... 373 373 Barge, ... 13,32 1392 ... 1399 1366 Boat ... 933 932 ... 1032 1432 ') 4190 MEMORANDA. Ship Chieftain, Godfrey, from New York:l3d June for. San I. I -autism, was spoken 2lst Aug. lat 3073 S, lon 37 tiO NV. Ship Iromidoa. Mallard, Cleared at Savannah 2tlth nit for Liverpool, with 4403 hake cotton. Steamer San Antonio, from Wilmington, Del. at Sa vannah 25th inat. Steamer Wyoming, Teal. nonce at iiiavanuali yes terday.. Steamer Do Soto, :Morton. frem New Orleans 'for New York, Railed from Havana yesterday. Steamer ]lorro Oldie, Palmer. at liavana seeterdaY from New York. Steamer Dentnark.Forbes. from Liverpool 17th at New York yesterday. Steamer Tyrian (Br). Smith, front Messina 211 and Palermo 6th . at NOW York yesterday. Steamer North American, from Liverpool, at Portland ' l lti a rarrin - iiiatf th cleared" (Br), Jo neon, at New York yedterday for Laguayra and Porto Cabello. Bark Snowden, Wood, cleared at New York yesterday for Bnenos Ayres. Bark Minnie Cameron( Br),Graham,hence tar Queens town, was spoken 2tith ult. lat 4206. lon 63 42. Brig . Abbie C Titoomb ! Tltconm. from Ivlgtut, Orem land, tor this port, put , into- lialifax, NS. 23d inst. With logs of sails and leaky. . • . Brig Geo E Prescott, Mills, hence for Saco, at Holmes' Hole 29th ult.' Bchr J J Spencer, Heath, cleared at Galveston 2.1 d nit for Boston. _ _Behr Rebecca. Florence, Rich.salled from Turks Island 17th ult. for this port and returned to port next day. leaking. Would have to discharge cargo and repair. ' Schr Alice G Grace, hence for Boston, before reported ashore, has been got off and is at Edgartown.'disclig.. GAS FIXTURES. GAS FIXTURES.—MISKEY, MERRILL & THAOKARA, No. 718 Chestnut ,wouldanufao tnrers of Gee Fixtures, Lamps, &0., &0., call the attention of the public to their large and elegant assort ment of Gas Chandeliers Pendants, Brackets, &o.; They also introduce gas pipes into dwellings and publio bu legs, and Miento extending, altering add repairing gag • Dined. All wowarranted. COTTON. -125 BALES COTTON NOW landing from steamer Wyoming, for sale by COCA. lax, RUSSELL CO:, No:111 Chostu!At stmt.' " THE DA LY EVENING- BULLETIN-THILADJCLPHIA, WEDNESPAY,',DFIGEMRP 1, 186%; $10,155,069 - 61 4...M9 40 4600 4640 INCORPORATED ISM. • OFFICE OF THE iDELAWARE MUTUAL SAFETY iNsERANCE COMPANY. Philadelphia, November 10, 1869. Tbe following Statement of the affairs of the Company is published, in conformity . with , a provision, of its r, charte - • ;Premiumskeceired froin November 1,186 s, to October 31, 1359. • • ;On Marine and Inland Bloke 6013,795 " On Pirtqlisks- /31,903 96 -----, :Premiums on Policies not marked 51,103 701 29 off liovember , l, 1868, 'Prernituns marked off as earned from No. Tember 1,1868, to October 31,1869: On Id urine and Inland ft , i5k5,,6911,216 29 On Fire Risks.... 149,629 71/ , 'lnterest during the same period— --01063,316 99 balruges, Ke • $1,178,873 61 Losses, Expenses, &c., during the year as - above : • Marine and Inland Naviga- • , tfon Losses e 418,100 39 Fire Losses 91,244 81 , • Return Premiums - '0,628 10 • Re-Insurances - 41,217 84 -, Agency • Charges, Adver _Using, Printing. arc 64,687 10 T • ' , axes--linited• titates, State • ' and Municipal Taxes 52,390 61 Expenses 23,9/7 as e 74 4 . 254 01 ASSETS OF TILE COMPANY November I,lBlp, 8200,000 United States me Per Cent. Loan, ten-forties 6 , 215,000 00 100,000 United States .Six Per Cent. • Loan (lawful money) 107,750 00 60,000 toiled States Six Per Cent. • Loan, 1&3I • ' 200,030 State of Pennsylvania Six Per Cent. Loan 213,950 00 200,000 City of Philadelphia Six Per Cent Loan( exempt from taxi... 200,925 00 100,000 State of New ,Jersey Six Per Cent. Loan 102,000 00 20,000 Pennsyliania Railroad First Mortgage Six Per Cent. Bonds.., 19,450 00 25,000 Pennsylvania Railroad Second Mortgage Six PerCerif. Bonds... 23,625 00 25,000 Western Pennsylvania Railroad Alorigage Six Per Cent. Bonds • (Pennsylvania Rallroa , l gnu!. antee),,_ 20,000 00 30.660 State of • Tennessee Five Per Cent. Loan 15,000 00 7,000 State of Tennessee Six Per Cent. Loan —. 4',27000 12,500 Pennsylvania Railroad Corn. pany, 250 shares stock; 10,000 00 5,000 North Pennsylvania Railroad CompanY,loo shares stock 3,0/0 00 10,000 Philadelphia and Southern Mail Steamship Company, S 0 shares • ' stock TAO co 245,900 Loans on Bend and Mortgage, first liens on City Properties 246.900 00 • e 1,131,400 Par. Market value, .5.1,256,236 00 Cost, 81,215,0 N Real Estate.. 36,000 00' Bills Receivable for Insurance made 323,700 75 • Balances due at Agencies—Pre minima on Marine Policies, Ac ' cruet! Interest and ,other debts_ due the Company 65,097 95 Stock. Scrip, &c.. of sundry Cnr. ' porations, e 4,706. Estimated value 2,740 20 Cash in Bank 8163,318 63 Cashlu Brauer' 972 26 -- 169,20114 PIIILADELI'MA, Nov. 10,1869. The Board of Directors have this day declared a CAST DIVIDEND of TEN l'Elt CENT. on the CAPITAL STOCK, and SIX PER CENT. interest on the SCRIP of the Company, payable on and after the Ist of December ro pximo. f of National and State Taxes. They have also declared a SCRIP DIVIDEND of TH itTY-FIVE PER CENT. on the EARNED PRE MIUMS for the year ending October 31, 160. certificates of which will be issued to the parties entitled to the same, on and after the Lt of December proximo, free of National and State Taxes. They have ordered, also, that the Scrip Certificates of Profits of the Company, for the year ending October 11, NZ, be redeemed in Cash, at the office of the Com pany. on and alter let of Vecember proximo, all in terest thereon to cease on that day. By a provision of the Charter, nll Certificates of Scrip not presented for redemption within five years atter public notice that' they will be redeemed, shalt tie forfeited and cancelled on the books of the Company. No certificate of profits leaned under $26. By the act of incorporation, "no certificate shall issue unless claimed within two years after the declaration of the dividend whereof it is evidence." DIRECTORS. Samuel E. Stokes, R'illiam R. Boulton, Edward Darlington, H. Jones Brooke, Edward Lafourcade, Jacob Riegel, Jacob P. Jones, James B. 111 'Farland Joshua-P. Eyre. Spencer M n I J. B. Semple, Pittsburg, A, B. Berger, D. T. Morgan, " kS C. HAND,•President. 3. DAVIS, Vice President. • retary. t Secretary. noII harp Thomas C. Hand, Jelin C. Pavia. Edmund E. Solider, Theophilus Paulding., James Tryoutlr, Henry Sloan, Henry C. Dall.tt, James C. Hand. ' William C. Ludwig. Joseph H. Seal, Hugh Craig. Jahn I): Taylor. George W. Bernadon, William C. nucleon fiaom JOHN HENRY LYLBURN, Be HENRY BA LL,Aleistan ITByff.TA NOE INSURANCE COM NY OF PHILADELPHLO Incorporated in 1841. . Charter Perpetual. Whoa, N 0.306 Walnut stmt. CAPITAL 6;300,000. Insure' against loss or damage by FIOIE, on Houses, Stores and other Buildings, limited or perpetual, and an Furniture, Goods, Wares and Merchandise in town or country. LOSSES PROMPTLY ADJUSTED AND PAW. Assets...—... ........ 19437,598 32 Invested in the following Securities, via.: First Mortgages on City Property, well se cured— .... e169,61X1 00 United Sta tes Government Loans. ---- 117,000 00 Philadelphia City 6 Per Cent. Loans 75,000 00 Pennsylvania $3,000,000 6 Per Cent Loan sopa 00 Pennsylvania Railroad Bonds, First Mortgage 6,00000 Camden and Amboy Railroad Company's 6 Per Cent. L0an...........- ........ 6,000 00 Loans on Collaterals .. . *.. - ... , 600 00 Huntingdon and Broad Top 7 Per lent. Mort gage 80nde......... .... . „ ....... -- . . ..... 4,560 00 County Fire Insurance C ompany ' s Stock. 1,050 00 Mechanics' Bank Stock. 4,000 00 Commercial Bank of Pennsylvania Stock 10,000 00 Union Mutual Insurance Company's Stock. 380 00 Reliance Insurance Company of Philadelphia Stock 3,250 CO Cash in Bank and on hand. 12,258 MI 843708 33 Worth this date at market prices. $454,381 32 DIRECTORS. ° Thomas C. 111S,1 , Thema H. Moore, William Musser, Samuel Castner, Samuel Bispbam, James T. Youngi H. L. Carson, Isaac F. Baker, Wm. Stevenson, Christian J. Hoffman, Beni. W. Tingley, Samuel IL Thomas, Edward Sitar. THOMAS 0. HILL, President. Wid CLIUBB, Secretary, PHLLARELPHIA, February 17,1869. - jal-tu the tt -- - - UNITED FIREMEN'S INSURANCE COMPANY or PHILADELPHIA. Worth at Par This Company takes risks at the lowest rates consistent with safety, and confines its business exclusively to FINE INSURANCE IN Tim CITY OF PHILADEL - FRIA. OFBlBE—No.723B.refaixeet,Forirtb National Bank Building. DIRECTORS. Thomas J. Martin, Henry W. Brenner, John Hirst, Albertus King, Wm. A. Bolin; Henry Burox James II ongan, . James Wood; ' William Glenn, John Shalleross, James Jennor, J. Hen_ry Askin, Alexander T. Dickson; Hugh Mulligan, Albert 0. Rob erle t ames F. Fluiil lon.ly Fitzpatrick , J D . . . . . . CONE Wm. A. Rams. Treas. FAME INSURANCE COMPANY, NO. 809 CHESTNUT STREET. INCORPORATED WC CHARTER PERPETUAL. CAPITAL 5200.000. FIRE INSURANCR I EXCLUSIVELY. Lurares against Loss or Damage by Fire either by Per. petnal or Temporary Policies. higgcreate, Charles Bichardeon,L Itoliert Pearce, Wm. H. 'damn, John Hessler, Jr., William M. Beyiert, Edward B. ..onre, Henry Lewis, Charlea Stokee, Nathan Hilles. John W. Everman, West Mordecai BuzbY, geerge A • ordASLS ICHAPATISON, President, WM. H. BRAWN, Tice-President. ''WILLIAMS I. BLANCHAID,Secretary. tt A KERIt'AN FIRE INSURANCE QOM= , .L7LPANYAormated 1210.—Charter perpetual. N 0.310 W AL N UT street. above Third, Philadelphia. Having a large pail-np Capital Stock and Surplus in yarded in sound' and available' Securities, continue to insure' . an . dwellings stores,' furniture, merchandise, vemela la port, ant t h eir ' cargoes, and , other property. All louses liberally and promptly adjusted. DIBECTOBS. Thomas B. Marls, Edmund Cl.Butilh, John Welsh, Charles W. Poultney, Patrick Brady, Israel Morris, John T. Lewis,John P. Wetherill, „ . Paul. TKODLAS 11.;'IdALLIS, President. &Lagar C. Onaivroan, Secretary. AT HR A OITE INSURANUE (10M ANY.—PRAIITER PERPETUAL. . ~ Office, No. 311WAI,NUT Street , above Third, P llll . Ol . Will insure against Loss or Damage by Fire on Build ings, either perpetually or for a limited time, Household Furniture and Merchandise generally. Also, Marine Insurance on Vessels, , Car ca and Freights. Inland Insurance to all pasta of the Union. DIREOTOItii. William Esher,' ' Lewis Audenried, D. Luther t • John Ket a am , , John B. Belokiston, j, E„ Baem, ' - William F. Dean, • John B. lleil t Pet" Eiege 4;/ILLIAk 811 8 717, 114 Pr i e n std' u4 ent hennel. 1 • „ WILLIAM If,_DEAN, Vice President: Wu. M. liMlni,Serretary. je2•4l to the tr 4C0,631 02 171,566,335 31 115,027' 65 8431.619 (Li 60,00000 .81,852300 04 B. UNDRESS, Preeidant. Wat.ll. FABRN.Sec'v. SPECIAL. NOTICE. THE INSURANCE' ' COMPANY OF NORTII AMERICA, P OF PINIZADIELPHIA, (MARiNEk INCORPORATED 1794. Capital, $500,000 00 Assets July Ist, 1809, $2,593,92210 ThisEempany fit now Preparedte Witte 'Certificates or Insurance, - payable In ;London, at the ConntiefiElease ernes/4ra. Brown, hhipleytt Co. CHARLES PLATT, 0c2941 Vico-President. • :1829. -CHARTER FRANKLIN FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY • OF'PHIMADIEZILPHIA. Offisie--435 and 437 Chestnut Street. Assets on Jarkuai*,l, l669a 62,6'77 ,372 13. ;carnet— —.. 8400,000 00 Accraibd .70 MI SETTLED CLAIMS, . INCOME YOB 180p 1523,7633 12. 8360,000. Losses Paid SineeolB29 Over *5,500,"700. ' Perpetual and temporary Policies on Liberal Terms, The Company also issues Policies upon • the Bents of all kinds of buildings, Ground Bents and Mortgages. "- • DIIIBOTOS S. Alfred Fitter, Thomas sparks, Wm. 8. Grant; Thomas 8. Ellie, 1 ,Gustayns S. Benson, 3.' BAH ER, President. EB, Vice President. Secretary. ~ Assistant Secre tary fell men 'Alfred G. 13aker, Bantnel Grant, Geo. W. Richards, Isaac Lea, Geo. Fales, ALFRED ... GEO. FA JAB. W. MoALLIBTEI L] L , THEODORE M. HEGER FIRE ASSOCIATION F =A ov PHILADELPHIA. Incorporated Marclt, 27, 1820. Office---No. 34 North Fifth Street. INSITAtt E E TERNAOEViC i IitaI t I L VI r t i IIi o ITITER LOSS BY 8188. Assets Janu.ary 1, 1869, 51 v 400 5 095 OS.. TRUSTEES: Willi a m eri t imiii ma , Charles P. Bower, John Carrow, Jesse Lightfoot, • George I. Young, - Robert Shoemaker, Joseph B. Lyndall, . . Peter Armbruster, Levi P. Coats, M. H. Dickinson, Samuel Sparhawk, ' Peter Williamson, NS ro. Aug,. Seeger. WM. .H. HAMILTON, President, - - SAMUEL SPARHAWH, Vice President. WM. T. BUTLER, Secretary: T IFE INSUE,A.NCE AND TRUST CO. 1.1 TIIE GIRARD LIFE INSITBANIWE,ANNEITY AND TRUST COMPANY OF PHILADELPHIA.- OFFICE.. 408 CHESTNUT STREET. . . - - - - . - ASSETS, 83,083,646 56, JANUARY 1,.1869. The oldest• Company of the kind butane in the State; continue to insure lives on the most reasonable terms andslecisre profits to the insured for the whole of life. 'Premiums paid year7y; half yearly, or quarterly. They receive Trusts of all kinds, whether as Trustee 9, As signees. Guardians, or Committee of Lunacy. Also act 'as Executors and Administrators, to the duties of which particular attention is paid. Deposits and Trust Funds are not in any event liable for the Debts or Obligations of the Company. • Charter perpetual. THOMAS RIDGWAY, President. BETH I. COMLY, Vice President. Jones F. JAMES, Actuary. WILLIAM H. 6TOEVER Asst Actuary. N. B.—Dr. 8. CHAMBERLAIN, No. 1411 LOCUST street, attends every day at 1 cOnlock precisely at the office. 0c27 3m TRH PENNSYLVANIA FIRE /NSIT RANCE COMPANY. —lncorporated ISM—Charter Perpetual. No. 510 WALNUT` street, opposite Independence Square. This Company, favorably known to the con:sunnily for over forty years, continues to insure' against lose or damage by fire Public or Private Buildings, either permanently or fora limited time. Also on 'rniture, Stocks of Gooos, and Merchandise seawall , . on liberal "terms. Their Capital, together with a large Surplus Fund, is Invested firth e most careful manner, which enables them to offer to the insured an undoubted security in the case of loss. DIRECTORS. Daniel Smith, Jr., John Devereux Alexander Benson, Thomas Smith, Isaac Bayleburst, He Lewis • Thomas Robins, J. Gillingham Fell s Daniel Haddock, Jr. DANIEL SMITH, JR., President. WM. G. CROWELL, Secretary. THE COUNTY FIRE INSURANCE COM PANY.—Office, No.llo South Fourth street, below Chestnut. • "The Fire Itumrance Company of the County of Phila- Incorporated by the Legislature of Pennsylva nia in 1839, for indemnity against loss or damage by fire, exclusively. CHARTER PERPETUAL. This old and reliable institution, with ample capital and contingent fund carefully invested, continues to in sure hufldinii, furniture, merchandise, &c., either per manently or r a limited time, against loos or damage by fire, at the west rates cousiatent with the absolute safety of its customers. Losses adjusted and paid with all possible despatch. DIRECTORS: Ches. J. Sutter, Andrew H. Miller, Henry Budd, James N. Stone, John Horn, Edwin L. ResJurt, Joseph Moore, Robert V. ne Massey, Jr. , George 41"kei Mark Devi CHABL SJ. SUTTER, Preeident. ' ' HENRY BUDD, Vice President. BENJAMINY. HOECRLEY, Secretary and Treasurer. TEFFERSON FIRE INSURANCE COM- O PANY of Philadelphia.*Oillce, No. 2i, North Fifth street, near Market street. Incorporated by the Legislature of Pennsylvania. Charter perpetual. Capital and Assets..Bl66,ooo. Make insurance against Less or damage by Fire on Public or Private Buibdings, Furniture, StOoks, Goods and Mar , chandise, on favorable terms. . Wm , McDaniel, I) , lrrEG n iS i Edward P. Moyer Israel Peterson, . Frederick Ladner. John F. Belsterlin , Adiun J. Glass, 'Henry-Troemnen, fienrDelany, Jacob Schandein, John Elliott, Frederick Doll, . Christian D. Frick, thu " e i min er , George E. Fort; Williarn D. Gardner. • WILLIAM McDANIEL A President. ISRAEL PETERSON, Vice President. Pam, E. OOLISMAII. Secretary and Treasurer. HEATERS AND STOYJEB TROMSO IPS LONDON HlTCH ener, or .European Ranges, for families, hotels or public institutions, in twenty different sizes. Also, Philadelphia Ranges, Hot Air Furnaces, Portable Beaters. Low down Grates. Fireboard Stoves, Bath Boilers, Stew-hole Plates, Broilers. Cooking Stoves, etc., wholesale and retail by the manufacturers, SIIARPE R THOMSON, no29m w f 6m6 N 0.209 North Second street. • ... THOMAS S. DIXON & SONS, Late Andrews Sc Dixon, No. INS CHESTNUT Street, Philada., _ Opposite United States Mint. anutacturers f • , -° LOW DOWN, PARLOR, CHAMBER, . OFFICE, • And other GRATES, Dior Anthracite, .Bituminous and Wood Fire; ALSO. WARM-AIR FURNACES, For. Warming Pu blio and Priv ate Buildings. BEGISTERS, VENTILATRS, • _ fIosIMNEF ND CAPS, COMING-RANGES, BATHIBOILERS. WHOLESALE and RETAIL. 'DItU(YS. DA_STTLE SO4L—GEN.ICrINE AND VERY -- ...:1 - urtieriei=;-2001;M:tehlust landed ll:din 1:44V - them, mai for Pale by ROBERT SHOEMAKER CO., Importing 'Druggists, N. E. cor k er fourth and Race streets. TARUGGI.STS. WILL FIND A LARGE i_retock of Allen'e Medicinal Extracts sital Oil Almonds, Bad. Rhel. .Coses Sparkling Gelatin. genuine Wedgwood Mortars. &c.onet landed 'from bark untintlogo from London. ..ROBERT 811013MAKB11 & CO. Wholesale ivugglets, N. E. corner Fourth 1114 TARUGGISTS' , *RAD U.. aka, Ifortar L Plll Tiles, Combs, Brughere, Mirrors, TweeZeqt PofP, miesiilornScoo_pot Surgical lus..tra• menta l rustics, Hard and Soft Author . Goods., 'Oat Casea,Glaes and Metak Syringeti i _ dic., all at Banda" priveg. ~.O„NOWDNN t lIRQTHAt, a 23 South Eighth street. CAUTION.. '? Ci ATJT I 0 L PERSONS All hereby forbid - harboring or trueting any. of the crew of the Br, Bork "Satellite," Turner, Master—from Ardrosann—as nedebte r their contraeting•wilnk, Raid. by Captain or ,;comeignees, WORKMAN k CO., 123' Walnut street. • - • teriirn RO I I ELI,A, TICAOHER Singing. Ptivata intent. and ninnfie*. Besidenne aoB#,Uirtelentti etroet. sual•ta 4VCTION SALMI M THOMAS , 8a 130203, , AUCTIONION118 4-TJll3Ain th-t'OURTH O l kfi l liri t WELL ES TATr et " Publio salegatt e Pfd ligigiangs attar TUESDAY.st 'l2 o'clock. P . „. Funiittne salsa at the AtMllen Stoie avian °THURSDAY. flaleistaiiddeUces rendre deatidald SALE OF A PRIVATE LIBRA • ON WEDNESOAY, ASTERNOO2i. 'Dee, I, at 4 o'clock; including rare ,warke cot 'History, Theology, LaW;Ac. dish,' Autograph Letters.' Sale at the Auction Booms, Noe. ,09 and 141 South ', Fortrth street. SUPERIOR HOUSEHOLD FURNITUREL PAllO_, MIRRORS, HANDSOME VELVET, BRUSSELS' FR. CARPETS ,tro ' • - AND - °T4 op VII - nionNnro. TII S A Dec, 2,T at 9,0 clock, at the Auction it0(41141. by_ cats- Josue, a large assortment of Superior HottifehOld Vitra tura comPrieluit---Wainut Parlor Ftlrolture: covered rays and hair cloth; Library, Dining Room andlmarnber Furniture, rosewood severt-octave Plano Forte. made_by ballet 66 Co.; French Plate -Mirrors, ;andsdrobes. llookcases,' Sidebo'ardtscxtensloW. Centro Bouquet Tahles,Lounges, Arm .Cl - mire, Hat,„.and ;Umbrella Stands, Etageres, lino Hair Matresses,' Hea ther Beds, Bolsters and Pillows, China l und Glassware, ...Office Furniture, Gas.consuming and Cooking Stoves, 'Cabinetmaker's Bench, Chandeliers; Sewing Machines, handsome Velvet. Brussels and other Oarnet_e_, &C. ' Also, superior doable -barrel Gun; made by Blaguard. Also, line 'Violin. Also. elegant rceewood I octave Piano Forto, made by G. Steck Sr Co. A 1116.6 nninhei of fine Oil Paintings, handsomely framed. ' _ fine Military • Saddle and E6nlpinentid. ~ 7 • 'VALUABLE MISCELLANEOUS BOOKS, Includin't Tanchnltea British Anthers, Sc., ON THURSDAY AFTERNOON. Dec. 2, at 4 OselOdi.., RAKE AND crRIODs MDR's. ON FRIDAY AFTERNOON. Pec. 3, of 4 o'civelc, It collection of rare, 'curious and in t crest ing_works, including liistAry‘ Biography, Drama Poetry, Facetile, Architecture, American Ilistory, &c. BRICK MACHINE. ' • ON MONDAY , Dec. at 12 o'clock, at No. 1160 Beach street, corner Marlborough street, will be sold at public sale, without reserve, for account of whom it may concern, ono Ex celsior Brick Machine. Peremptory' Sale. 1.39 TONS COAL ON MONDAY, Dec. 6. at 12 o'clock7nOoTi. - Will6c; sold at public sale, without reserve for account of whom it may concern,at J. Barclay flacker's•whaff, west end of Market Street bridge, per boat Manhattan. 43 tons Egg. and 06 tons Stove freo burning Coal, slightly stained by being under water. Terms cash. VALUABLE STOCKSOANS, &c. DEC.D ON TUESDAY, 7. _ _ , A t 12 o'clock Dom at the Exchange, will be sold— s],ooo Harrisburg. P. M.J. and Lancaster,,Rallroad. ,912,000 Bald Eagle Valley Railroad, m o rtgage. 10,000 Western Penn'a Railroad 6 per t„. , etf,ooo Connecting It ti llroad Co. 6 per ; $12,000 Western Penn a Railroad ( - Branch bonds.) $6,000 Huntingdon and Broad Top Consolidated. • 100 shares Awygdaloid Mining Co. of L.'S. LEASES OF CITY WHARVES AND LANDINGS. ON TUESDAY. Dec.,7. 1860, At 12 o'clock,7noon, at the Philadelphia Exchange, will be leased at public sale, for a term of one or three yearn, to the highest' nd best bidder, Dock street wharf, on the river Delaware. South street wharf, on the river 'Delaware. Christian street wharf, on the river Delaware. Washington street wharf, on the river Delaware. Bridesburg wharf, on the river Delaware, Arch street wharf, on the river Schuylkill. Race street wharf, on the river Scintylkill. • By Order J. R. PUG H, Ocurnisidoner. Sale Noe. 625 and 627 North Second street. STOCK OF ELEGANT CABINET FIJRNITLTRE. ON WEDNESDAY 3110.RN1N%. . • Dec. S, at 10 o'clock. at N 05.625 and 627 North Second street, by catalogue, a stock of superior Cabinet Furni• ture, manufactured for anteroom 'sales, comprising— Elegant Walnut Parlor Suite, green aid crimson plush and-hair cloth coverings; 'elegant'Centre' and Bouquet Tables, serious fine marbles; 'Bookcases, Etageres.supe rior Dining Room 'Furniture, Extension Dining Tables, Sideboards, elegant Walnut Chamber: Furniture, fin ished in oil and Tarnish; Wardrobes, Cottage Furniture, Cane-si at Chairs, Loan get+, Hat Racks, 4c.:, comprising a general assortment, of first•class Furniture. lir May be examined two days previous to sale, with catalogues. • - WITTING, DURBOROW &CO., ' • AUCTIONEERS, Nos. 232 and 234 MARKET street. coratrg_Lßs nk street Successors to JOHN B. MYERS - A - CI). LARGE SALE OF FOREIGN AND DOMESTIS DRY .„. GOODS • • ON THURSDAY MORNING, I) ec. 2, at 10 o'clock,' on four months' credit DOMESTICS. Bales bleached and brown Shirtitgs and Sheetings do bleached and colored Drills. do white and scarlet all wool and Canton Flannels do white, blue and gray all wool Blankets. Caeca Manchester Gingham!, Silecias, Corset Jeans. do Tickings, Stripes, Checks, Denims, Wignits. ilo Jaconets, Cambrlcs, Kentucky Jeans. do CassimeresSatinets, Kersey's, Linseys, &c. MERC ' HANT TAILORS' GOODS. Pieces Belgian, English and Saxon -all wool and Union ' black and bine Clothe and Dooskins. do Astrachans, Tricots, Chinchillas. Coatings. do Esquimaux. Castor and Moscow Beavers do Fancy Caseimeres,Tilots,Whitneys, Vestintia do London black Italians, A elate; Velveteens!, &c. ARMY GOODS. —casea Infantry Overcoats, do blue lined Simms. DRESS GOODS, SILKS, SHAWLS, &e. Pieces Paris plain and printed Merino's and Debtines. do Empress Cloth, pure Alohairs, Alpacas,. Coburg's. do Persians. Alpacas, Melanges, Poplins, Serges. do tdack*and colored Fancy Dress Silks, Velvets. Full line Brocbe, Stella and Woolen Shawls, Cloaks,&c. . LINENS, WHITE GOODS, &c. • Full lines Irish Shining Linens. Barnsley Sheeting& Full lines bleached and brown Damasks, Table Cloths, Jtc.. &c. • Full lines Huck Towels. Russia Diapers, Canvas,Cruals. Full lines Cambrics, Jaconota. Nainsooks,Mcills,Lawns. FURS. French Mink. French Sable and real Mink sets. Siberian Squirrel. White Ermine and black Astrachan& Sete. Beaver Collars and children's Furs in variety. River Mink. Rock Martin and Bohemian sets. - • Also, A line offer-top Winter Gloves. Also, Hosiery, Gloves, Balmoral and Hoop Skirts,Trav sling and Undershirts and Drawers, Sewings, Umbrellas, Silk lies. Shirt Fronts, Hdkfs. &c. IMPORTANT SALE OF CARPETINGB, CLOTHS, Lc ON FRIDAY MORNING. Dec. 3at 11 o'clockdon four months' credlt;abont- 210 pleceslngrain, Venetian, _List, Hemp, Cottage and Rag CerPotings, Oil Cloths, Rugs, - Au. LARGE SALE OF FRENCH AND OTHER EURO. PEAN DRY GOODS. ON MONDAY MORNING Dec. 6, at ID o ' clock ; on four months' credit. SALE OF 2000 CASES BOOTS, SHOES, BRO (TANS. An., N TUESDAY IdORpING. Dec. 7. at 10 o'clock, on tour months credit. DAVIS & HARVEY, ATTOTIONEE.Re, (Late with H. Thomas dr Bone.) Store Nos. 42 and 00 North SIXTH street Executor's' Sale 123.5 North Seventh street—Estate of . Conrad and Sarah Roakirt. ' SUPERIOR FURNITURE, WAX FRUIT, FINE TAPESTRY CARPETS. Sc. ON THURSDAY- MORNING; By catalogue. at 10 o'clock, by order of Executors, sn - perior Walnut Parlor ,Furniture, Centre and Bouquet Tables, Etagere, Mahogany Chamber and Pining Room Furniture, several large cases Wax Fruit, large Vases, line 'Venetian Blinds, fine Tapestry, Ingrain end 'Vene tian Carpets, Kitchen Furniture and Utensils, 3:c. Administrator's Salo. VALUABLE PRIVATE LIBRARY of tho late CHARLES, N. .lIANCKER.Eaq. OVER 10,000 VOLUMEiI. ON WEDNESDAY MORNING. Dec. 8, and successive days, commencing at 10 o'clock A. M., and continuing day and evening until sold, a col• lection of Bare and Valuable Books, choice editions, representing almost every branch in Literature, Art 'and ticienct.T being the entire Library of Charles N. Banckar, Est., deceased, carefully collected during the last seventy years. and forming one of the must com plete and extensive Libraries ever offered at public sale in this country. The books are in excellent condi tion, and chiefly of vety superior bindings. Catalogues now ready. The Books will be open for inspectibn one week pre-; vious to sale. • • • • ' lON CERT-111 . ALL .A.IICTION 'ROOMS, N.) 124 CHESTNUT street. • 'T. A. McCLELLAND. Auctioneer ATTRACTIVE SALE OF FURNITURE. .uptlor.,- STERY AND TRIPLE PLATE SILVER WARE, FOR ACCOUNT O N F MANUFACTURERS. O THURSDAY, Dec. 2, at 10.4 A. M. • Embtaced In the- above will he found Parlor Suits of Walnut, finished in oil, and co vered with'pluah, reps, terry and hair cloth; handsome. Walnut Chamber Suite, in oil and varnish, and of the, latest designs, Etageres, Sideboards, Mirrors,Matresse a, Wardrobes and Bookcases, in the latest styles; Beil steads,Bureaus, Washetands, Marble Top Tablee,Towel Racke t Spanish Chairsi Rockers. in • hair cloth; Calle seat, Side arm and Rocking. Chairs. Walnut Stands, Whatnots, Dining Chairs of Walnut and Oak, Extension Dining Tables, of Oak and Walnut; Cottage Suits, ,tc. . Also{ assortment of tine Triple Plath Silver Ware, to close invoices. JAMES A. FEEEMAIT7,AVeTibIitiMM4 ' -No: Ln WALNUT street. Marshal's Sale, No. 41 , -1 Wain ut street. PIECES HILLSDALE CASSIMERES. n WEDNESDAY. Dectniber 5, at 1.1. o'clock, will be sold at public sale, at the Auction Store, by direction of the Hon. John Cadawalader, under proceedings in Bankruptcy, PS PIECES OF GOLDMIX HILLSDALE CASS I M EBBS, containing 3,298 yards. Will be sold in lots to suit purchasers. Terms each. Sa!e Peremptory. E GREGORY, U. S. Dlarshal L as ,Hessenger. 'ADSOpir.7.I - .7.41ateiy..-; ,- a•Mer :of the Atsignree of Clark .v EVUIP4, a number. : of Silver NVatcbes, etc. TailE PRINCIPAL MONEY ESTABLISH. ment—S. E. corner of 81XTH and RACE streets. - - oney advanced on Merchandise generally—Watches, Jewelry, Diamonds, Gold and Silver Plato , and on. all articles of value, for any length gl time agreed on. WATCHES AND , JEWELRY AT' PRIVATE. SALE. Fine Gold Hunting Case,Doubleßottomand,Qppn Ears Vnglish, American and Swiss Patent Lever watches; Fine Gold Hunting Case and Open .I'aopLepine Watches; Fine Gold Darien and other Watches; TineSilVei Hung tug Case and Open ;Face English, American, awl swiss Patent Lever and Lepine Watches; Double ease English D:natter and other . Watches; Ladles! Fancy, Watches' Diamond. Breastpins; Finger Rings; „Ear Rings Stud ac.; Fine Gold Chains; Medallionsvßeaceled; Sear' Pins; Breastpins; Finger , Rings; pencilptees,and, Eneraliy. 10 bALI. 4 - large and valutdde Ffteproof Chest. suits e fora Jeweller; cent 8660. Also", several Leta 401Ith , eanule,1)411111 quA OROat• nut streets. - No AI IT I 1 BROTHEifki; ATTOTTO.NtiTEITV , an for Thom* St tOnss); (latei g Balea rroar eutranco fire /1111 1°1, .29 OBE TNU street . • , b ci. tot - I•IO — CLES:k = A , AuoTio Ems.. AND 81/ 4 0 ° 111,A l tb D ita ZT ;4Y' fit:o ,. !DA , Y r ‘ 41:151, rPHOMAB unten & 80,N, A 1702105. NIBS A-ND COMMISSION JILISOBANTSI Near entran ce 51cir kilo =eh 914 T urhitt z h n , n . 4 °f B „ m ver t n d t ,Alo l4 l l 'Pc7"ll Selati of 'ttinitare ardTvalitiiiiitended ONO lONS reasonable tetras ' _ _. __ Elle at lio. 11100Kestittf streCif;'' , ...,.. NEW: AND ECDNDRAND HOU:3E1101M •EURNee' TUBE, II SENVOOD PIANO FORTES,_I4.I24 MIRROREILELEGANT LARGE OAS, BOURG& ) FINE , CARPETS,. PARLOR AND oiitex,rm ,:,,' • BUITII, &c. ___ ON FRIDAY MORNING, _ _ ' '' At 0 9 7 cleek, at,ther auction store, No. 1110, Clifilftlt '' street, will, be iipi l d;l7vatalogne, a largo. assartioen "titi 'elegant Parlor, C am er and Dining Room Furniture,. - 2 . , • t 7 Ono large,and e egaut Oak llookcase, cast 8000, ' . -. ..7, I •r, . , „EI,EGANT PIANO FORTES,. ' . ';.1; f One splendid Piano Forte, made by, Steltivreq . A gate m twowade by C.. Meyer; one by Haines & Bro., one &Ballet &Davin; one,by Gravenstein At' Co.; one by.Y 1111C3E, 13,A 88 ITT & co,: Auoirio .5.-P ' _.cAR/I _AUCTION HOUSE, ' .. L. .1. , „1,. ; , , NO; MO NUIRKRT street, corner of Bank itteet: ...,'.' i , ,' r 1", 'Rash advanced on consienmentkvvitbout eatta.obstripeAK!;."'. 7 ,_ ?. ' ETRE I . _ ' , FURS i FURS I __ i!.7 ININtil TRADE rFALE OF AMERICAN AND 11.M''''''/ PORTED FURS, aontS, AFGHANS, &c., compd..' ' 0110000 lots..by i . catalogue, , ' . - , . o, 4 t ON TMJRSDAY MORNING, •,V Tee. 2, Commencing' at 10 o'clock. ; ' :: ,' Alt 111 L. AMBRIDGE , & CO. I 'ATICTIOIk 1. ERRS. No. 505 MARKET street. above rift, 'FURS ! ' - FURS t' , . A. K. & ,F. K. WOM B A T -..:,. , %,.. ~ • , ~ , •, , N0..1212 Chestnut Street; , 4 Lato stand 07 ARCH Street,/ • , ~4 7/ . ' . ARE' SRLLING 1. ',.; ,' • ' ~" Chil.dienca Sete Of Furl at $3. ' 1 . 1 ' • '''4. , Ladies' Siberian Squirrel Sets, SS lalurizoili,:''..' " flunk Sable cc $lO . " German Fitch " S ES " Stone 'Marten '" " eta ' • ''''. • 'Royal Ermine , 'c 404 - , " Hudaon Bay Sable ' 46 IMO .4 Mandan Sable .. ss 0150 English Riding Boas, Skating MOS, &a., Fur Gloves, Foot Muffs, Lap Blankets. A great variety of Carriage and Sleigh RobeS.,- A. X. f &I F. K. WO,MRA.I'H.:, No. 1212 Chestnut Street, ' . ' PnrwrntArnts.. , not th s to Starp§ :__—________ S . ABLE FURS, - „ . RUSSIAN AND HUDSON'S*BAL 8 z i s A velter aN b i t , tlllg made the above articles prepared a large assort mane in different atylem at e glit s o No. 189 NOrth Third Street, Philados' Established 44 years ago. trAmriS oe2 a tn thamr .§ SEWING MAUEINES. 914 WHEELER & WILSON'S ill( • sowing Machines,' FOR SALE ON EASY PAYMENTS, 914 Chestnut Street, 914 PET G E: N S E O R N A & L C A A G R E P N EN TS T ER, 914 je26 a to th lyrp NrE AL Ayer's Hair Vigor, For the Renovation of the Hair. The Great Desideratum of the Age. A dressing which is at once agreeable, healthy, and effectual for, preserving the hair. Faded or ,gray. hair is soon, restored' to, its original color and the gloss and freshness of youth. Thin hair is thick-' tined,' tailing hair checked, and bald ness often, though not alwayg; cured by its use. Nothing can restore the hair where the follicles are destroyed, or the glands atrophied and decayed. But such as remain can be saved for usefulness by this application. Instead , of fouling the hair with a pasty 'sal ment, it will keep it clean and vi,ortms. Its occasional use will prevent the hair from turning gray or falling off, and consequently prevent baldness. Free from those deleterious substances - which make some preparations dangerous and' - injurious to the hair, the Vigor can only benefit but not harm it. If wanted merely for a HAIR DRESSING, nothing else can be found so desirable. Containing neither oil nor dye, it does , not soil white cambric, and yet lasts longer on the hair, .giving it a rich glossy lustre and a grateful perfume. Prepared by Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., PRACTICAL AND ANALYTICAL CHEMISTS/. LOWELL, MASS• DoE sl.oos Sold by nil Druggists everywhere. At wholesale by J. M. MARIS * CU., Philadelphia. anb9 tu th is eow ly OPAL D.ENTALLINA..— A SUPERIOR article for cleaning the Teeth,destroying imMuticali w icb infest them, giving tone to the gurnel and leaving , a feeling_ of fragrance and perfect cleanliness in the month. It may be need daily, and will be fOund to strengthen weak and bleeding gums, while the 'aroma and detersiveness will recommend it to every one. 'Be g 001114. - -.l.' , Steistance. of the Dentist,Phytk. arm and Microscopist, it is confidently offered ass a reliable substitute for the uncertain washes 'formed, kV vogue. Eminent Dentists. acquainted with the constitnents !or the Deutallina, advocate its use; it contains nothing to prevent its unrestrained employment. Made' only by JAMES T. siii-biN,Apothosery t ~ -- - • • * Broad andßpruce etreets. For sale by Draggisbi generallyiand L ' ~ ~,. ' Fred. Browne, D. L. Stackhouse, R a beard & cO., • . Robert U. Davie; • C. It. Keeley, (.co. C. Bower, Isaac 11. Nay, Chas.glavere, , C. H. Needles. , S. M. McColin, T. J. Husband, B. C.'Benting,' 1 ArobroseSmith, Chas; ii_.2llberle, , Edward‘Parrith, James N. Marks, Wm. B wehh, , , E. Bringhtirst cit'ClO,l James L. Bispharr, Byott k Co., • Rushee &Combo, , • R : C;Bliiir '0 idorle• ' HenryA. Bowe . IVYoth g Bto. CUT Id' • - riTirt - if.g 4 rocIi•EVICH .. IvEs SI•ACt llAft Btßiethistulimitehtginamr..tigiirailli ItAZOitu itips.uS94lit !IA ri,,t4to toast truslitgL' rallgt e eal L ya l a l tWart il lar 011Wa r attlik l a' construction to o . l 4 4l tAtla 1 1 14004JgtPP. At .132 " D gi Ontier and' titt Wind instriduttuttutioari t On . 4 , af tolpw qierftwati, -• = • • , • .• 07;4;,, • • • • FURttp.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers