MIMI CITY BlLf4t i vrtri,, Cu kouivierA.--ilib Pinance Ccim- ~ nuttee ,of the City Councils held a meeting last evening to receive a report from a sub committee appointed to examine the report of •.; the City Controller, relative to the finances of the city. . _The following is the estimated expenses of the city foithe year .11570 : , Interest on City Loans, • -I, Police, - - - . -4. Board of Health, , - - ;1;' Highways, Guardians of the Poor, - ..'„. City Commissioners, - :M Markets and City Property, ,'" City Treasurer, • - • - Av Board of Revision, - - -', Park Commission, - - ~,`;',. Water, -' - - - ...,. Clerks of Councils, - - ',V - Receiver of Taxes, - - iii Surveys, - - - - Az . City Solicitor, - - - ,t Fire, - ' - - - - ir Lighting of the City, - - Public Schools, - - - .1- 'OO County Prison, - - - t ' City Ice Boat, - - - City Comptroller, - - 6ifildng Funds,- - - , • City Railroads, - - . - Inspectors of Steam Engines ~.. , . and Boilers, - . -c - ' . Police and Fire Alarm( Tele . . Defence - - - . -,---,) - Defence sod Protection, - - 04General Expenses, ' - $5,165 25 Interest Account, - - 13,560 00 ' - Sinking Fund Ac , ~.. cOunt, - - - - 9,600 00 .ttin Total Estimated Expenses for 1870, . - - - - $8,652,101 97 All estimates for 1870 not marked thus * are subject to revision by the Committee, on Fi , mance. The assets of the city for the year 1870 are as follows : 7 . ; Cash an hand.NoY. 1, 1809, - $1,068,439. 85 Estimated receipts from sources other than taxes prior to Janu : my, 1870; - - - And for the year 1870, - - Estimated receipts froni taxes and ,registered taxes prior to January 15, 1870, - - - • "Estimated receipts from Trus tees of Gas Works for balance of 1809,and 1870, - - - Estimated receipt§ - froisa tered taxes in 1870, Amount to be provided by taxa tion, - - 'rotas assets, LIABILITIES The liabilities of the city for 1870. are as fol lows : , Estimated expenses of depart ments for• 1870, - - - $8,652,101 97 Outstandina warrants on No vember 1, 1869, - - - Estimated discount—allowance on taxes, - - Estimated amount of warrants which will be drawn prior to F' January, 1870, - - Estimated amount of special ap propriations carried forward - in 1870 (during years past, which do not merge), - - Estimated amount of interest on city warrants, - - - Total liabilities,. - $12,083,000 12 The committee say that from the records of the city they have been unable to find that any property has of late years been sold for unpaid taxes. Any man desirous of evading the pay ment of taxes has full opportunity to. do so successftilly, provided he can keep the collector of outstanding taxes of his ward in good hu, nor, and provided he has no occasion to sell the propertynpon which the. taxed are due. The. result is" that the taxPayet who pays readily and willingly not only pays his own fair proportion of the expedseS Of the city gov erritnent, but from ten to twenty or twenty five per cent. additional, by reason of the dis honesty of his fellow,eitizens. To remedy this the committee ;recommend the repeal of the act authorizing the Receiver of Taxes to enforce the collection of outstand, ing taxes, and the 'transfer of this whole busi ness to the - City . Solicitor, with power and direction to lien property upon which taxes , are unpaid on or before the first day of March, of the year succeeding that in which they were levied, and the sale of the property liened within ninety days from the date of the filing Of the lien. A second plan recommends that immedi ately after the re g istering of the unpaid taxes in January 15 of eachyear, schedules of the amounts outstanding, including' personal tax, , shall be made, and public notice given that within thirty days front date of notice, the total amount so outstanding will be sold at public outcry to the highest bidder, lie to pay into the city treastuY thirty, sixty, ninety, and one hundred and twenty days, with sufficient se mirky for the balance unpaid, the whole ' amount' at which he or she has purchased the schedule sold f the purchasers, to have all the powers now 'vested in the 'city' to enforce the collection of outstanding taxes by suit or otherwise. • This plan would at once assure to the city a certain definite sum for the -tax levy uncol lected at the end of the year, the whole of which sum would reach the City Treasury by the Ist day - of July next succeeding. Councils are urged to immediate action. Looking to the collection of taxes is impera tive, as it is the height of folly to levy a tax only sufficient for the expenses of the city, and , then to be forced to report .at the close of the year that from $750,000 to $1,200,000 of the amount levied is still due, and the great por tion thereof uncollectable. Measures must lie adopted to secure the col lection of the amounts now outstanding and the amount to be levied, or else the levy about to be made must be made with sufficient margin to cover the posSible non-collection of $1,250,- ot,o of the' taxes of 1870. If neither' the one nor the other of these plans is adopted, we will be compelled to fund at the rate of more than 81.000.00 u per annum for current expenses, the inevitable result of which is utter bankruptcy, and that in no very distant future. CASTE. " —ME. SOLNER AT THE ACAp . — Els!Y LAST lczoirr.—At the Academy of Mu sic, last evening; Senator Charles Stunner de livered to an immense audience his lecture upon " Caste." He was introduced by Robert Purvis, Esq. Mn Sumner began his lecture by saying that in the question of Caste he opened a subject of immediate practical interest. Happily slavery, no longer exists to obstruct the peace of our Republic ; but it is not yet dead iu Other lands, while among us the impious pretension of this great wrong still survives against the' African because he is black, and against the Chinese because he is yellow. This is a claim of he reditary power from color, all of which is in- consistent with that sublime truth, being a part of God's law for the government of the , world, 1 which is for the unity of the human family,and -- its final on earth.. A 'Government has for centuries been a device, an expedient—at most. an art. It ',mist become, a scieneei subject to laWs as fixedas astronetny and clituistry. This will be the science, of justice on earth. To this end there must be knowledge. The laws 'must be understood. Every human soul testifies to the law of right; and under the safeguard of this law I note, said Mr. Sumner, place the rights of all man kind—hoping to contribute sozpethin o that . , .. . .. ~, , . , ::.411.:i:!oi: 1 .:,...,.:;:i0p.,,;,., . , - $2,500,000 • 00 - 854,843 90 - _288,596 00 - . 592,462 50 - 434,769 00 - *227,356 00 144,801. 49, - 23;100 - 00` - 82,725 00 - 82,500 00 - 435,400 00 - •36,75100 - *35,200 Off .'41.239. 00. 19;06, 00 - 113,250`00 - 457,290 00 - 1,433,607 83 - 138,039 00 - ' 34,800 00 - *21,500 00 - 550,330 00 - *B,BOO 00 " K 650 00 •49,025 00 3,000 00 28,925 25 ASSETS 286;952 50 1,564,345 .00 000,000 00 370,500 00 400,000 00 $4,299,237 35 - 8,684,662 12 $12,983,900 12 2,866,668 15 :150,000 00 1,000,000 00 15,-130 00 100,000 00 THE DAILY VuLIitTIN—PIII.I,AbELPMA, THUKS IAY, .1/40EMBill, 2, 1869., jed,gment which blasts the:offronrY OflPaS te' 4B ! dettiq offensive, first to, tlieideaof 4eptiblic, and secondly :to human nature • He then presented a picture of Caste in , India, exhibiting the contrast between the' Brahmin, child of rank and privilege; and the: Sudra, child of degradation and disability, The; sacred Hindoo• book says, " When rt BrahininspringsAo the light ho' above the Worki." flisini.anelerit India to our, republic, the caste claiming • hereditary rank and privilege is white,,aud the caste deemed to; hereditary degradation and disability , is black and this pretension is vindicated by an alleged. difference of capacity, and it is said that al men do not proceed from a common stock. Here Mr: Stimner:;iplcited from Genesis the Creation of man, and also the words of SC Paul, that all are of "one blood." He their said that the apologists for caste hurry from: these tests to science, 'and these he followed. He then sketched the varieties of the human,' family, as indicated by color,, skull and lan guage,- showing 4bat, people:differ widely in color, skull' ~ .and Ainiguage, *Lich philosophy. traced to a common origin. Here he quoted the.testimOny4of Humboldt, in his "cosmos," to the unity of the human family and against caste. • The unquestionable unity appeared in the common organization, common nature and? common destiny, being at once physical, moral and prophetic. By these tokens is he known everywhere to be man, and by' these tokens is he:'evefyWhere:'`eiltitlia td :the'; rights of man. The dog Is cosmopolitan as man, and makes no discrimination of . condition or com plexion his fidelity. EVery Whole is unity. this is the laW. Of creationjrom theautt in the • heavens to the soul of man; not one law for one group of stars, and one law for one group of men ; but one , lasi for'all stars, and one law for all men. Only when we consider the uni versality of the moral law, do we,appreciate the goodness of this unity. :Religion takes hp the cross, and the daily prayer, "Our Father, who art in heaven," is the daily witness f the brotherhood of man. If not children of Adam, we are all children of God. Sunnier then' Considered' the Common- Destiny of Humanity, and the promise of a common universal civilization. , Why this corn- Mon •; humanity-why this Common brother hootlL—if the inheritance is for Brahmins only? He was not disturbed that this result had not been reached already.' It ,wouldcome under the law .of pro,greSs. Already our European civilization leads the way. But there is no section of. Europe which • has not , risen :from Well attested degradation. Here he dwelt on England as described by Julius Ciesari . whose people *ere painted lava - ges, and whose conjugal system was an inces tuous conebbinage. These were our progeni tors. The - Seine, report might be 'made of France. Nothing worse is now said of Africa,. But progress here prefigures progress every where; nay,•it is the first stage in the World— progress., To the • inquiry how is this 'destiny to be accomplished, he, said . 'simply* recog nizing the law's of unity and acting accordingly. The law is plain; obey it. Drive caste from this Republic and it would be like Cain, a vagabond. , • Bountiful agencies of civilizaticin are now at Work. Time and space—ancient tyrants— keeping people apart--are now overcome. There is nothing of aspiration for universal man which is not within the reach of well directed effort. By the printing press and steam engine civilization is extended and se cured. These two agencies are more than Greece and Rome contributed to man. The question "How?" is followed by the 'question "When?" Not at once; not iu any way which does not recog,nize nature as Co-worker. To help in the work it is not necessary to be em peror or king. EverYbody can do something. Not a thing done, not a thing said, which does not help in part the beautiful consummation. In conclusion, Xr. Sumner said that he was impressed anew With the grandeur of the ques tion. Let caste prevail and civilization is threatened. Let caste be trampled out and there will be a triumph which will male the Republic more than ever an example. In the large interest beyond, said he, I have not lost sight of the practical interest at hothe. This question must be settled ; and again I repeat, nothing is settled which is not right. Here, as always, justice :is' practical, politic—the best practice,the best policy. Hospitality of citizen ship is the law• of oar. .national: life. If the Chi nese come for• labor, we have the.. advantage of their wonderful and docile industry; if for citizenship, then' do they offer the pledged in corporation in our RepUblic. Nor is there peril in the gifts they bring. As all rivers are lost in the sea, so will all peoples be lost in our . Republic. —At, the tT. S. Mint a handsome gold medal in honor of, the opening of the Pacific Railway has been struck, and is intended as a testimo nial from the officers of the Mint to President Grant. This med4l measures nearly two inches in diameter. On the obverse is a raised bust of the recipient. Over hiS headforming a circle, are the words : "Presidency of U. S. Grant." Immediately beneath is the following "The Oceans United By the Pacific Railway, May 10, 1.860." The reVerse of the medal presents the most striking. characteristiCs of the road; also the most prominent featitre§ of the great. internal plateau through which the road passes. The peaks incident-to the Mountain ranges of the plateau form the most conspiduous feature in the medal, and in the foreground, to the left, is a rugged column of rock. A train of cars pass ing around these elevntions occupiei the middle ~,M 2nd-oftle Medal. In the immediate fore ground is the great Canon system. In a scroll over the picture we have described are the words : "Evifry mountain shall be made low." Underneath is the following: "Medal series of the U. S. Mint. "JAMES Poi.LocK, Director." Silver and bronze copies of this medal are now being struck, and are for sale at the Mint. —Tbe:Grand Lodge A. Y. M. of Pennsyl vania yesterday elected the following officers : IL W. G. M.—Robert A. Ltimberton; IL W. Dep. G. M.—Sanmel C. Perkins ;, R. W. S. G. Warden—Alfred E. Potter'; R. W. J. G. War- . den—Robert Clark: It. W. G. Treasurer . — Peter Williamstm ; R. W. Gr: Secretary—John Thomson. Trustees Girard Bequest—Samuel IL Per kins, James Hutchinson; Charles M. Prevost, George Thomson, Jacob Bennett. Trustees Grand Lodge Charity Fund—Jos. S. Riley, Jacob Loudenslager. George Gris com, John Wilson, Sr., Daniel Brittan. —The Drug •Exchauge met yesterday to Consider the decision of Acting United States Commissioner Douglass, with reference t.t) dealers in alcohol. By this decision the dealer in alcohol is termed a "liquor dealer," and any druggist who shall dispose of more than live gallons of alcohol shall be known as a whole sale liquor-dealer; and taxed as such. After a general exchange e tf opihion the whole matter was referred to a committee composed of W. J. Miller, Edward A. Malcolm; William M. Wilson, D. Ci Landis and 'Robert Shoemaker, who will report, on Wednesday —The reunion of the Presbyterian Churches was celebrated by a mass-meeting last night, in the First Presbyterian Church, Washington square. The Pastor, Rev. Dr. Johnson, pre . - sided. The exercises were opened with Sing ing and prayer by Rev. Dr. Schemil,:. Ad dresses were delivered by Rev. Dr. Johnsou, lies. Daniel Marsh, of Clinton Street .Church ; lion. James Pollock; and Rev. A. A. Willets, of West Arch Street Church. General Synod of the Reformed Church of the United StateS, at its aftOrnoon session, yesterday, adopted the report of the Committee on Memorials. Also, the report of the Committee on Overtures. The report of the Committee on Contested Seats of Rev. C. Cort and ReV. Mr. Neale was presented, and was discUssed lip to the time of adjournment. arisesnet oneer,so Nester reean A. dayal'noon et the Exthange the following: - 2 shares''Philadelphia and Southern_ Mail Steamship Company, at VP share, 00. 2,772ltuirerilronitor rri Votlany at $250. "2,000 shares • Northwestern 011 Company at $l. ' 2 ' l6tdOdd Fellevvi' 'CtinieterSr at $27 and $l9, $46. Front and Raw Atreet6;. three-StOry brick 'store and divellingi, at the southeast corner; lot 32 by 26 feet, $5,700. ..No.,6o4.lSpruce street; 'cleSiiiible three-stork brick residence, with back bulldhids ; lot 18 by 100 feet; $7,700. . Ground rent. of $B6 Or ::annum, : well secured, out of a lot . 17 by 05 feet; Ellsworth, west of Twenty-first streets, $1,290. , Building lot; Plarker street; east of Eigh teenth, 26 by 105 feet, $2,300,, No. 1713 North Third street; three-story brick dwelling and lot, I.s'b? ost feet. Sub ject to $54 ground rent, $1,200. 1730 Howard street; genteel 7dwelling, and two, .story, factory on Waterloo street; above Colinnbiaavenue lot do by 96 feet , $5,023. 13.28 North, VoUrth street ; Iramie bouse and lei, 20 by 229 feet to Apple street. Subject to $3O ground rent, $3,100. 1504 South Second' streeb: three-story brick dwelling and lot, 16 by 671 feet, $2,500. Court House; three-story *mile , house in rear of 907 Ogden street, lot 14 by 34 feet, $1,060. . , Ground rent. of $24 per annum, well secured and payable in silver; $332 50. 2 ground rents of $32 50 per annum, well secured and payable , in silver, at $430 each, $B6O. Three-story brick dwelling, No. 1819 South Fifth street, lot 16 by 98 feet, $3;500. —A man; apparently about 30years of age, drowned himself in the Schuylkill, near Gray's Ferry, yesterday. He took off pis hat, coat and boots on the wharf and leaped over board. His body was recovered and was taken in charge by Coroner Taylor to await ideutill e-ation. —Henry Hill, colored, steward of the schooner Ida F. Wheeler, was before Alderman Kerr, yesterday, on the charge of the larceny of. $llO from one of the pockets of Captain 'lobed Dyer, in the cabin of the vessel. He was held for a further hearing. —High Constable Kelch yesterday reported, to the Board Of 'Health thirty-six streets in the Fifth Ward as being in a filthy condition, and requiring the immediate attention of the con tractors. CAMDEN 01013 SIP. —Storekeepers in Camden are fixing up their establishments in a tasteful manner, prepara tory to the holidays. —The different ferry companies of Camden are laying in their winter supply of coal for their boats. —lt is the general impression that much destitution and suffering will be experienced among the poor of Camden this winter. —Rents in Camden are now held at a pretty high figure, but it is thought they will soon ex perience a downward tendency. —Several partiei are anxious to secure the job of taking the census in Cathden the coming year. —Forty-two overcoats are being made for the members Who are to compose the Paid Fire Department of Camden. , • —The tax warrant for South Ward has been placed for the present year in the bands of John W. Campbell for collection, and he will proceed at once'to make the amounts due. —To4light the ninth aniversary of the Tabernacle M. E. Churc ~ of North Ward, will be celebrated by an entertainment'of the children belonging to the Sunday-school at tached to said Church. ,- , The turnpike between Blackwoodtown and Williamstown, Camden county, is being improved in an. advantageous manner. It was very much needed, for it was almOst impass able. —Some parties in Camden are silly enough to entertain the idea that the Camden and Am boy Railroad Company had paid for . paving 'Second street its entire length, when; in fact, they were only required to paylor paving in front of their own property. --;-A night or two since Officer Mason, of Camden, arrested a bag, With a colored man attached to it, on suspicion that it contained articles which had been stolen. While march ing him towards the station-house the bag be came detached from the man and he made off raster than the officer could run. On search ing the bag it was found to contain portions of a set of harness.. The .bag was marked "Buzby, Moorestown," and may be seen at the Mayor's office. The darkey is non est. —The question in reference to building a new City, flail, Seems to have lain dormant for some time past, until recently it has started up again with renewed vigor and earnestness. The near approach of the convening of the Legislature may have something to do with it, fOr, unless the new charter is passed by that body. the City Council will have no power to raise money for that purpose. It Was once proposed to levy a tax of two mills on all taxable propertyper dollar towards a fund to be applied towards building it, yet they have 'not even authority for that. There is a great 'necessity for a new hall,' but it ought not to be erected on the site the old one Occupies. A square of ground should be secured in some 'eligible position, which could be used for a public park. • Jews in Russia A correspondent at St. Petersburg • Says, writing on the ;id of NoVember "The Jews here have at length, after much negotiation with the Government, obtained permission to erect a synagogiie. This will be the first building of the kind that has ever existed in Russia. Hitherto the Jews have legally had DO right to reside in the empire, and were consequently obliged to account for their pre sence under various pretexts, for the 'admission of which by the authorities they had to pay large sums; and as they were regarded as tem porary residents ply, they were not allowed to build any permanent houses of prayer. A Committee, consisting of the wealthiest Jews of St. Petersburg, has now been formed to collect funds for the new building, which is to be got up on a scale of great magnificence. The Coloss, ever ready to suspect separatist ten dencies in the empire, takes this opportunity Of lecturing the Jews on their attachment to their religion and customs, and recommending such of them as may wish to remain in Russia to become Russians. This mania, for Russi fying all the foreign elements in the empire is manifesting itself in a very extravagant way in the Baltic provinces. M. Galkin, the Governor of Esthoma, haS ordered all the German offi cials in that province, who are Protestants, to go on holidays to the Russian church in order to liSten to the Russian :hymn, ' God save the Czar.' The officials protested against this Order, on the ground that they have hitherto always prayed for the Emperor in their own Churches, and that they cannot conscientiously attend the services of-another religion. The Governor, however, remained obdurate, and the officials have now appealed to St. Peters.; burg; but the Ministry here is so attached to the policy of Ruisification that the appeal will probably be unsuccessful." Plain Common Eiepniie in Architeetnre There is a passage :in Fergusson's "History of Modern Architecture" which, speaking of Dance's designs for Newgate prison: refers to "the design for the prison of Newgate, which, though only a prison, and pretending,,to ho nothing else, Is still one of the best public buildings of the metropolis. It attained this eminence .by a process which amounts as much to a. discovery on the part of its architect as Coumbus's celebrated in vention of making an egg stand on its end 13Y simply .setting his Mind to. think of The purposes to which his building , was appro- ' piloted; without turning aside to think of Ore-; elan temples or Gothic castles, a very second rale areltit,eopjildneqdn'YerY Perfdet There is nothing in it but two great, window less blocks, each ninety feet square, and be tweekt th'ftanizi Very nOmilOnplithe,„ gitoler'si reit dence, five windows wide and five stories high, and two simple entrances. With these slight ma,tei:lolB he has,irnade up afaoade 297 reet*"eXtenti and, every mpilaite of,good.architecture, ; If any architect would only designs chureb,or.a,palace" on .the :same principles on i which old Geo rge Dance designed Nemgatd, or oh an engineer designs a 'bridge, he would astonished to find how simple the art, of architecture - 14, and how easy it is,to do right,Ond, how difficult to do wrong, "when honestly bent on expressing.tbe • truth, and the truth only. From what we ,know of. Danee's character we are led to suspect that it may have been , mere ignorance that , led •hiti. to do right on this occasion, but it was instthis amount of ignorance' which 'enabled ' every vil lage architect hi every part or England to pro ducelhoSe perfect , chnrches which our cleverest and best, educated architects find difficulty in copying, and scarcely even dream of emulating." SPECIAL - NOTICES to. NORTH PENNSYLVANIA RAIL ROAD AND GREEN LANE STATION. The bliners ,having resumed work .wo aro again re ceiving a fullsnpply of HARLEIGH GOAL, which we are soiling without advance in price. , HINES & SHEAPP, no9•lmrnS Office 1a South Seventh street, Phila. lUD 1109 GIRARD STREET. 1109 • TURKISH, ,RUSSIAII, AND PERFUMED BATHS. Departments for Ladies. liaths °nen from 6A. U. to 9 P. M. vitt ra STEREOIIVIOOg AND M AGIO Lantern Exhibitions g iv en to Sunday Schools, ScSe 00l Colleges, and for private entertainments. W. MITCHELL MoALLISTER, 728 Chestnut street, second story. no22mrp§ N OT ICI E.-PARTIES HOLDING Lehigh Valley Railroad Company receipts for full paid stock can receive certificates of stock in exchange therefor, by applying at the office of the Company, o. 303 Walnut street. _ _ . CHAS. O. LONOSTRETH, Treasurer n 022 12tr p B HOWARD HOSPITAL, NOS. 1518 nnd la2o Lombard street, Dispensary Department. —Medical treatment and medicine furnished gratuitously to the poor. SWEDESBORO RAILROAD, NOTICE TO BONDHOLDERS. Notice is hereby given to the Holders of the Bonds of the Swedeshoro Railroad Company that the Interest Warrants on said bonds, falling due on the , first day of December, 1869. 'will be paid on Presentation at the' Office of the Treasurer of the West Jersey Railroad Company, in the city of Camden, New Jersey. GEO. J. RONBINS, no3o-3t§ Treas. W. J. R. R. Co. ua. %PHILADELPHIA EXCHA N G E COMPANY. NOVP.MBER 29, 1869. NOTICE:—A general meethig•of the Stookholdere of the Philadelphia Exchange Company will be held on MONDAY, Dec. 6, 1869, at noon, at the Exchange (room No. 24-third floor) for the purpose of electing nine managers to serve during the ensuingz'ear, and for the transaction of other business. liENTLY D. SIIERRERD, n029-6f § • Secretary and Treasurer. OFFICE OF "THE ICELIANCE INSURANCE COMPANY OF PHIL ADEL, PliIA," NO. 308 WALNUT STREET. PHILADELPHIA, N0v.29.1869. The Annual Meeting of the Stockholders of "The Re liance Insurance Company of Philadelphia," and the Annual Election of thirteen (13) Directors, to serve for the ensuing year, will be held at this Office on MON DAY. December 20th, 1869, at 12 o'clock M. n 029 to de2o§ WM. CHUBB, Secretaryi UPHILADELPHIA, NOV. 20, 1869. . An election for Managers of the Plymouth Rail road Company will he held at the office of the Company. northeast corner of Ninth and Green streets, in the city of Philadelphia, on MONDAY, the 13th day of Decem ber, 1869, between the hours of 10 A. M. and 2 P. M. A. R. DOUGHERTY, n022-18t§ Secretary. OFFICE OF THE MOUNT CAR BON RAILROAD COMPANY. PHILADELPHIA, November 13,1849. The annual meeting of the Stockholders of this Com pany and an election for a President and eight Managers, will be held at No. 316 Walnut street. on MONDAY, the 6th day of December nowt, at 12 o'clock, M. WILLIAM ROBINSON, Jr., nols to de9s Secretary. HEATERS AND STOVES. GO AisTDREWS 2 iIAti.RISON ds CO.. 1327 MARKET SFREET. IMPROVED BEAM HEATING' APPARATUS, FURNACE'S AND COOKING RANGES. oc7 th e ta em THOMAS S. DIXON & SONS, Late Andrews & Dixon , • `No. HU CHESTNUT Street, Philada., Opposite United States Illicit. anufacture" of LOW DOWN, • PARLOR., • CHAMBER, OFFICE And other GRATES, For Anthracite, Bituminous and Wood,Fire; arso. WARM-AIRFURNACES, B For Warming Public and Private raidings. REGISTERS, VENTILATORS, Ann CHIMNEy CAPS 000 K INHOL G-RA ESNAL EGES, and RETAI BATH-ROM L. ER% W T EAD Q ETARTERS FOR EXTRACTING I TEETH WITH FRESH - NITROUS OXIDE GAS.' "ABSOLUTELY NO PAIN." - - DB. F. It. 11.101VIA8, " formerly Operator at Colton Dental Booms," positively the only Office in the city entirely devoted to extracting teeth without pain. Office 911 Walnut street. mhs lyrp§ CIOLTON DENTAL ASSOCIATION ORI gi N at TROUSOXIDE, c OR LAUGHING UGHING GAS, And devote their whole timeand practice to extracting teeth without pain. Office, Eighth and Walnut street!. apZOly JOBIT CRUMP, BUILDER, 1731 CHESTNUT STREET, - and 213 LODGE STREET. Mechanics of every branch required for home-banding and fitting groin .tly furnished. fe27-tf H ENBY PHILLIPPI, CARPENTER AND BUILDER, NO. 1024 SANSOM STREET, .11310 -lyre PHILADELPHIA. CROQUET SETS FOR PARLOR OR Field use.—A full variety of Chests of Tools, fine Pocket• Knives. neat Shoe-blacking Stools for chambers er offices, Skates, Carved Walnut Brackets, Carpet sweepers, Clothes-wringers, and a variety of other use ful articles for Christmas Gifts, for sale by TRUMAN et SHAW, No. 836 (Eight Thirty-five) Market street, below Ninth. DE ETTY TINY POCKET-KNIVES AND Scissors for Watch Charms . , at TRUMAN & SHAW'S. Np. 835 Right Thirty-five) Market street. below Ninth. LY' 8 PLAY-HOUSE MAY BE neatly furnielied from the variety of beautiful and durable Iron Furniture in the assortment of TRUMAN ric SHAW. N 0.835 (Eight Thirty-tlye)fdarket greet, be low Ninth. W ., E D,D-I N 0 A N D ENGA.GE L MENT Rings of solid 18 karat fine Gold—a speciatty; a fall assortment of sizes, and no charge for en4aving names, ate. FARR & BROI TR Makers,. iny24-rp U VA Chestnut street be ow Fourth. AII4:4SAZIN DES MODES. k. 1014 WALNUT STREET MRS. PROOTOIL Cloaks, Walking. Einits, L ace S hawls Goods, ace Shawls I,adies , Duderelothing and Ladies'. Fars. Dresses made to measure in Twenty-four Hours 1694 - ARCH STREET 1004 GRIFFITH & PAGE RECOMMEND SHERMAN'S COG-WHEEL Clothes Wringers, with. raoulton's Patent Rolls, wired en the shaft. ocl4 ly Ll3/Ll4- I , ,NATIIANS; ATRITIONEER, N. E. corner Third and Spruce streets, only one square ow the Excange. 6,250,000 to lean,ln large or small amounts, on d iamonds, silver plate, Watches, jewehy. and all gilods of valne. Office hours from 8 A. M. to 7 P. M. Mr — . Establiehed for the last forty years. Ad vance s made in large amounts at the lowest market rates, . • iaB Urn -1 - IR - INVALIDS.-A FINE MUSIO4L Do: se 0, companion for the etch chamber; the finest agaortment, in the city, and a great variety of airs to se lect from. Imported direct by FARE & BROTERI4 1124 Choetnut street. below Fourth. mblatf r ri TORILCN'S OELEBRATEb REIIIIITONI . O co Ale for invalids,randly use, dm The subscriber is now furnished with hie full Winter anPnly of his highly nutritious and well known hover age. Its wide-spread and increasing use, by order of physicians, tor invalids, use of families, ao., commend it to the attention of all consumers who want a strictly pure article; prepared from the best materials, and put up in the most careful manner for home nee or transpor tation. Orders by *nail or otherwise promptly suPplied. P. J. JORDAN, No. 720 Pear street, • de7 below Third and Walnut etre° • ' DANOING;AVADEMIEI3. ASUEWS DATIMIIII44 ACADEMY, 608 - FITAIIIIIII.I I 131'1141111". Allthexp and Zilibaottsgebillisiicies Trittiht. utties mid GentlomeuiT-Mouday, Tuesday, Thrindur and Friday Raenintre; • . i o t li gZ e r N 4 .44 ,1 : 4 9 11 7 2 ni and silr, GeniloMeu'orkiy—tfaiuncei Eirening. Privetoieesoue.eingly or lauleseoe, at any hour to gilt convenience; 00221-Suit _ ITALNUT STREET T e ATRE • ;.,,Ortiiir Ninth tibilltalAratittleht. - T to Dl ' arm gement has much pleasure lu announcing an engagement with the vonowneil artist, MISS BATEMAN , , Who will inaketex firstappemtance in, — Philadelphia, in six yeare,` on • ' - • MONDAY , Eecember 6th, 1869, When will be-presented the Now Drama, by Tom Tay- I or, - written exply for lifiss Bateman, entitled ' MARV WARNER:. • •-•- The play will be presented with now and appropriate scenery' appointments, Scc., . Miss Bateman will be ,sumorted by, Mr. GEORGE JORDAN t MISS 'VIRGINIA. irictimpi and the full strength cif the Company. Chairs Scoured Six Days in advanoe. no29-st§ UTALNUT STREET TUEATRE, v v N. E. eor..blinth and Walnut streets. TDIS, TRUESDAV, , EVENING, Dm, 2, Will be produced UNCLE TOM'S CABIN OR, LIFE AMONG TICE LOWLY. The intense power and exptislterthos of which have E secured for it ANNEQPA LED SUCCESS. In order to accommodate !awl es an UNCLE TOM MATINEE WILL BE GIVEN ON SATURDAY. Deors,oren at IN o'clock. Commence at 2 o'clock. LAURA HERNITS , • eRESTNUT STREET THEATRE. :DIMING THE. WEEK, . With now scenery and appointments, an adaptation of It °tierces 46 Lallialade 'wag 'mitre" Comedy to 3 acts, by Charles Ronde, Esq., entitled l• ( Tug SAUcY HOUSEMAID. LAURA KEENE as TOINETTE, as performed by_ her to crowded houses at Laura Keene% Theatre, .New. York. • • ' Concluding with A POPULAR COMEDIETTA, ' Messrs. Frank Mordeuni and Yining Bowers appear- SECOND CHILDREN'S "MATINEE" SATURDAY. BOLD JACK, THE GIANT KILLER. PATRICK PATRIOE ; • Or. the White Lady of Wicklow' ON MONDAY, with new, aceuery and effects. WERS. JOHN DR*W'S AILOB •STREBT LY,L THEATRE. 13esics iI to 8, THURSDAY AND FRIDAY EVENINGS, SINGLE LIFE. MRS. JNO. DREW as MISS ,KITTY SKYLARK. Aided by the Foil - Company. Concluding with the Comic Drama, OUR WIFE. Messrs, Craig, Il maple James, 'Miss Price and Mrs. Stoddart. MONDAY—THE OVERLAND ROUTE. • MUSICAL FUND HALL. GRAND VOCAL AND INSTRUMENTAL CONCERT • ov THE • • JUNGER 312ENNERCIIOR, Assisted•by the GERMANIA ORCHESTRA: (35 Performers), FRIDAY EVENING, December 341, ADIIIISSION, on. Tickets for 'sale at Tramplers, 928 Chestnut street Boner's, 1102 Chestnut street; IL t A. O. Van Bell. 1310 Chestnut street, and at the door on the evening of the Concert. Members Tickets will admit with one lady. no3o-!t• TAUPREZ & BENEDICT'S OPERA HOIISE,'SEVENTH Street, below Arch. (Late Theatre Condone.) Animate(' Briiiiant Audiences Nightly. THIS EVENING AND CONTINUE EVERY NIGHT. DUPREE dt BENEDICT'S GREAT GIGANTIC MINSTRELS: A n'Extraortinary New Programme Tide Week. Engagement of the Artist Mr. Frank Kent. from San Francisco Mlnstrelb, Broawday,New . York. Firrt Week—Bnrlewine 4—T—Thlevee. Firbt Week—Groot Railroad Exploalon. I.I.ANDEL AND HAYDN SOCIETY'S CONCERT-Decetriber 14th,, February sth and April igth. Subscription hook open at "frumpier's, 928 Chestnut street. . n021,91 FOX'S AMERICAN THEATRE, Every Evening, RITA PERCY, GREAT STATU ESQUE ARTISTE:MISS EVA BRENT, Queen of Song The Perfection of Art, Mlle. PE ROSA." New Ballets. Now Songs, Dances, ,tc., &c. Matinee on Saturday afternoon at 2 o!cIock. T EMPLE OF WONDERS, ' ASSEMBLY' BUILDINGS. SIGNOR, BLITZ in ids new mysteries, assisted by but son, THEODORE BLITZ. Evenings at Matinee, Wedliesda7 and Saturtla.T. at 3. Magic, entrlloquisun, Canaries and Burlesque Min strels. • - Admission, Reserved Beats,soc. M A ER ICA N. CONSERVATORY OF A 1111.71310,—WINTER TERM. will begin MON DAY. Jan. 3, IMO. Names of Nvw Pupils should be en tered BEFORE THE lath of DECEMBER. There are a few vacancies which may be filled by early application at the office. • No. 1024 WALNUT STREET. del-141 X" , ELEVENTH STREET OPERA. I.IIE FAMILY RESORT. CARNCROSS 1 Dixisris MINSTRELS, EVERY EVENING. . J. L. CARNCROSS, Manager. fI N ASI Lr.sl FOR LADIES, OEN TLEM EN and CHILDREN. Northeast corner NINTH and ARCH Streets. Open day and evening. Sparring and Fencing taught. noV-St PROF. LEWIS. QENTZ AND HASSLER'S MATINEES::: /7 Musical Fund Hall, 1869-70. Every SATURDAY AFTERNOON, at 3ia" o clock. 0c1.94f ACADEMY OF FINE ARTS, • aps t. Blll . llT street, above Tenth. Open from 0 A. M. Benjamin West's Great Picture of , • CHRIST REJECTED • Is still on exhibition. e22-tf BUSINESS CARDS. Established 1821. WM. G. FLANAGAN & SON, HOUSE AND SHIP PLUMBERS, J771Y4N0. 129 Walnut Street. JAMES A. WEIGHT, THORNTON PIES, CLEMENT A. GEID CQE, WEIGHT, WEANS L. MULL. PETER "WRIGHT Sr BONS - Importers of earthenware and Shipping and Commission Merchants No. 115 Walnut street, IThilatielphls. 1 - 1 B. WIGHT, - . 1... a. ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, t:ommissloner of Deeds for the State of Pennsylvania in Illinois. . 86 Madison street, No. 11, Chicago, Illinois. atil9tf§ COTTON width, from 22 inches to 76 inches wide, all numbers Tent 1/131i Awning Duck, Paper-makor's Felting, Sail Twine, &c. JOlllf W. EVE =Alf, ja26 • No. 103 Church street, City Stores. DRIVY WELLS.-OWNERS OF PROP erty—The only place to got privy wells cleansed and disinfected, at very low prices. A.' PEYSSON, Mann• tactnrer of Poudrette. Goldsmith's Hall. Library street MACHINERY. IRON, 4cc. MERRIGIC & SON I3 A SOUTHWARK FOUNDRY 430 WASHINGTON Avenue, Philadelphia, MANUFACTURE STEAM ENGINM—Itigh and Low Pressure, Horizon tel, Vertical, Beam, Oscillating, Bleat and Cornish Pumping. BOlLERS—Cylinder, Flue, Tubular, &c. STEAM JlAMAlEll6—Naemyth and Davy styles, and of all sizes. CASTINGS—Loam, Dry andtreen Sand, Brass, &e. ROOFS—Iron Frames, for covering with Slate or Iron. TANKS—Of Cast or Wrought Iron,for refineries, water, oil, &c. GAS MACHINERY—Such as Retorts, Bench Castings, Holders and Frames, Purifiers, Coke ,and Charcoal Barrows, Valves, Governors, &c. SUGAR MACHINERY—Such as Vacuum Pans and Pumps, Defecators. Bone Black Filters, Burners, Washers and Elevators, Bag Filters, Sugar and Bone Bleak Oars, &c. Solo manufactums of the following specialties: In Philadelphia and vicinity,of Williiun Wright's Patent Variable Cut-off Steam Engine. In the United States, of Weston's Patent. Belf-center ing and Self-balancing Centrifugal Sugar-drainfrigldta , chine. Glass & Barton's improvement on Aspinwall & Woolsers Oentrlfugal. Bartol's Patent Wrought-Iron Retort Lid. Strahan's Drill Grinding Rest. Contractors for the design, erection and fitting up of Be. fineries for working Sugar or Molasses. COPPER AND ,YELLOW METAL vv Sheathing, Brazier's Copper Nails, Bolts and Ingot Copper, constantly on hand and for sale by lIKNAI WINSOB & 00..110. =South Wharves. m MONEY TO ANY AMOUNT !LOANED UPON DIAMONDI3 2 WATOHEE, JEWELRY PLATE CLOTHING, &0., at J6NRS a 430.'6 OLD-EBTABLIEWED LOAN OPRIOE, Gomm of Third and Gaakill atreetin Below Lombard. 1ti.8.---DIAMONa,iitAidiIEI3,JEWELEY,OII/A8 0,, DOS unießsTl4 l 7ll47 PRIOZO. olv24trevi KNEASBI:3 NEW HARNESS . Store; no better or cheaper goods in the city ; expenses reduced by removal ; price" lowered. 11)3 Si ark et street : Bt¢ Horse in the door. 1y174Y4D WARBURTON'S IMPROVED ' , _PEN dIre tilatod and easy-fittlng Dram Hata (patented) to all the approved fashions of-the season. Ohestint street. next door to the Post-Ortice. . cood•titp - R. LEIGH'S IMPROVED HARD Rubber Truss never rusts, breaks, or 'soils, SAI/Jii?), used in bathing ; Supporters, - Elastic Rolls, Stockings, all kinds of Trusses and Braces.' Ladies attended to by MRS. LEIGH. 1230 Ohestutttosc ond story. , doOky PHILADELPHIA 131TRGEON8' BANDAGE INSTITUTE, 14 N.• NINTH street, above Market.. B. G. EVERETT'S Trues positivelly cures Ruptures. ()heap Trtieses, Elastic - 130Ra, Stockings, Supporters, Shoulder. Braces, Crutches, Suepensorles,File Bandages. Ladles attended to by Hrs. E. .IYI-Iyrp iron 8 NEW. ANIA,HARPOPMg DWELLING, svirititir; 4-Btorr(Fres - etre root.) , Badlt for °wattle., Will be 'sold reasona4le; and not much money APPLY TO 4 Joll* VANAMA.E.ER, Mx* and Nitrket Streets. III'ARCH STREET RESIDENCE FOR SALE, No. 192 AjeCtill STT. •• 'Elegant ,Ertown-Stotte lisiddsoce. throd Hes s ?ad Mansard roof; very oonnuckliens. Yurtiiskixt 'with vO r i , taiitiet'n convenience., and built Tit St very inverter. stibitential =tuner. , ',Lot 26 feet front by 120 feet d eep Cuthbert street; on!tvhiult is ereottid !andel:rate , btfett Statile and Coach Souse. . tr.'atrumitr'ai StiEfee 723 WAIGNIIT Street. seta , el V O'R SALE-THE HANDSOME MEL tbree-story brick dvreiltog with Attica and three laUry beak buildinge, situate No. 118 North Ntrieteenti etreet;hae every modern convenience and improvement, and in perfect order. Lot 25 feet front in 103 feet deep. iftemedlitte poeacesion given. J. 411111. GUDINEY *BONS 253 Walnut street. ' • . - ' FOR' SALE--D WELL IN OS ER 2524 North Broad, Inn North Ifinteentbi 27 South Second, . 1609 North street, 2620 Christian, WI North Fifteenth street Also many (Altera for sale and rent. JAMES W. 'HAVENS, noiltfl 8. W. cor. Broad and Chestnut. FOR .SALE DWELL-NQ 1421 MEI. North Thirteenth street; every convenience, and in good order. Superior dwelUng. 14.22 North Twelfth street, on ear terms. 85,600. Three story brick, 22 3 North Twelfth street, haring a good two-story dwelling in the rear: $B,OOO. Three-story brick, 616 Powell street, in good order. $2,760. Store and dwelling, No. 340 ficitith Sixth street. $BO3OO. Frame house, 609 Third street, Bonn; Camden, nea r Spruce, clear. $6OO. 510 Queen street, two-story brick, good yard. Building Lots on Passyunk road, and a gtiod Lot at Rising Sun. ROBERT GAMMEN tk SQL 637 Pine attest, FOR SALE -- THE HANDBOgIi Brown Stone and PIM Brick Dwelling, No. 2118 Spruce .treat, with all and every improvement. Built la the beet manner. Immediate &menden. One half can remain , if dunked, Apply to - COPAYOK JORDAN, 433 Walnut street FOR 8, DALE. -- THE' VALUABLE' _ Property S.W. corner of Fifth and Adolph! streets, oelow Walnut. 62 feet front by 198 feet deep, frontine on three streets. J.l IL. GIUMBIZY A.tiONS, 733 Wa/nut street. ARCH STREET—FOR 13ALIC—THA Elegant Brown-Stone Residence, 26 feet fruits withand finished throughout in a superior otatuter. 1 1 ; 1 lot 166 feet deep to Cuthbert street • with large sta. ble and coach-house on the rear. J. lii. OUREIGT a 802 , 18,733 Walnut street. FOR SALE—THE HANDSOME, new three-story brick residences, with Mansard roof and three-story double back buildings, boat throughout in a superior manner, Nes.= sit d 231 Seutlt Thirteenth street,below Locust. J. M. GURNEY BONS, 733 Walnut street,. , fffi FOR BALE .- MODERN TR:RE-E -wa Story Brick Dwell' ng, 519 S. Ninth et. Every ctne. venience. Inquire on the premises. mytttha,to,U) ea FOR SALE—A HANDSOME "RESI DENCE, 2118 Spruce street. A Store and Dwel/Ing, northwest corner Eighth and Jefferson. A tine Residence var Vine street. A handsome Residence, 400 South Ninth street. A handsome Residence, West Philadelphia. .A Business Location, _Strawberry street. A Dwelling, No. 1110 North Yront street. Apply to COPPUCK. & JORDAN. 433 Walnut street. TO RENT. CIiEEBE & McCOLLIT I 3I, REAL ESTATE! Office, Jackson street, opposite Mansion street, Oapir Island, N. J. Real Estate bought and sold. Pens:gut desirous of renting cottages during the $42480t1 will apply or addreits as llbot a. Respectfully refer to Chum. A. Rubles:xi, Henry Btu= Francis Idolhatu, Augustus Merino, John Do ri s • lti . Juvenal. fete • T" TLET.—A SPACIOUS SUITE OF COUNTING ROOMS, with one or more 10111, on Cheetnnt etrret. Apply to COCHRAN, RUSSELL It CO., 111 Chestnut strret et,22411 fril TO RE N T—THE DESIRABLE fou r • btortird new stores. Nos. 191 and IRE Market street. Apply to S. B. VANSTOKEL, No. 1:117 Arch s treet. eg TO LET. --- IMITATION 'MRtowg Skit. Stone Dwelling, side ya.rd. 1211 COAT} street. 12 rooms. In perfect order. EDWARD 8.. SCIIIT EL Y , 128 North Eleventh street. nu2o to th s St" taFOR RENT-A LARGE AND SPLEN DID Mauston Honer, nortinend corner Thirty ninth and toe Wit streets, formerly belonging to Hammel T. A Denis. rtiq., and. adjoining A. J. Drexel, Egg. Apply to Wharton E. flarrle, XVI Spruce street. . deed-it w e•2t" fey, TO RENT—FF.O3i JANUARY Ili?, Jea Desirable Busincluestand for Dry Goods or No tion business. N 0.31.9 Market street. J. COOKE, LoNGSTitEnt, n029-3t§ No. 126 South-Seventh street. AINA TO LET-HOUSE 7O SOUTH SEVEN. ma TEE:4ITH street. Portable heater. range, bath, hot water, pos.—all the modern conveniences. Eight rooms. Apply on the premises. no2ttf la F ov URNISHED HOUSE FOR RENT situate on Pine street, Ireet of Twentieth. [me late nut poeseesion given. J. N. OUMMEY J: SONS, 73.3 Wal street. ----- EFOB RENT—THE STORE AND L- dwelling. situate No. 810 Walnut street. Will to, altered to suit the tenant. J.. 81. “1:1111.Elf it SONS. ns Walnut tames. . . iff — A NOICTII NINETEENTIt. AMTo Rent=The three-story residence. with three story double back buildings and stile yard ; lisoi mill the modern COTlYeniencep. Situate No. 102 North Nineteenth Igtro.t, second door above Arch, J. M. Gunaiwit .t EONS, 733 Walnut street. LFOR RENT-THE, DESIRABLE 4: story brick More No. 612 Market street. J. M. GUDIMES lc SONS, 733 Walnut Mreet. MMI WANTED, AS A SPECIAt. OR GENE raj Partner, to enlarge the business. a capitalist. With eaum.g.). in an old established solid !MVP/Ware man ufactory. The best of references given and required. For farther details apply to GEORGE S. WEST, ' Attorney at Law. No. 419 Locust street uon to th LEGAL NOTICES. TN THE ORPHANS' COURT FOR THE J. City and County of Philadelphla.--Estate ofjOSE pit PATTERSON. deceased.—The Alulitor appointed by the Court to audit. settle end adjust the first accounts of • JOHN It; McCORD and HUGII IHIADY WILKINS. Executors of. and Trustees under, the last- will of JO SEPH PATTERSON. deceased, and to report distribu tion of the balance fu the hands of the accountants. will meet the parties interested fur the purpose of his appointment, on MONDAY. Docember 13th, 1869, at 4 o clock. P. M.. at his office. No. 5;.0 \Valuta street (room N 0.9), in the city of Philadelphia. depth a to st.' IN THE COURT FOR THE . City and Connty of .Philadelphia.—Estate or E. Y. 14 ARQUEIAR, deceinied.—The Auditor appointed by the Courtto audit. settle and adjust the account of ANNA H. FARQUHAR, Administratrix of E. Y.-FAR QUHAR; handsnd to accountant,bution of the balance in theof the will nirtet the parties Interested, for the purposes of his appointment, on MONDAY, December 13th, 1869. at 4 o'clock P. if., at his office, N 0.707 Walnut street, in the city of Phlii delphia. ^ i1e2411 s turd' GEORGE D. BUDD:, Auditor. IN THE ORPHANS' COURT FOR THE City and County_ of Philadelphia- Estate of ILLIAM HAWKINS, deceased.—The Auditor ap. pointed by the Court to audit. settle and adjust the au- count of SAMUEL A. win WEB, Administrator of the. Estate of WM. HAWKINS. deed, aad to report distri bution of the balance in the bands of the accountent,wlll meet the parties interested for the purpose of hie appoint - ment, on SATURDAY, December 4th, 1889, at' 4 o clock P. 24., at the office of J. A SPENCER, Eeq., No. 423 Walnut et., in the city of Philadelphia. n025-th a tut VISTATE OF WILLIAM NEAL, DE cfased.—Letters testamentary upon the estate of '1 LLIA hi NEAL. deceased, late of the city of Phila delphia, have been granted to the•nadersigned ; all per sontiltidebted to said estate are requested to make pay ment, and those having claims spina ' the same, to present them, without delay, to 'ALFRED 'WEEKS, 31. D., 1 No. 522 Franklin st JAMES, No. Executors. CHARLES D: No. 11 N. Second at.. TN THE .DISTRICT. COURT FOR THE 1 , City and County of !Philadelphia. CHARLES HUMPHREYS and wife vs. JOHN. MIIRTLANN. • Lov. Fa, if.' 69, 578, HERBERT D. TURNERAIxecutor, vs. JOHN MURTLAND. Vend. Ex. S. 69, N. 389. • The Auditor appointed by the Court to distribute tho funds arising item the sale under, the above write of all that messuage and lot on east 'side of Front atreet and west side'of 4 Water street front on Front atteet 21 feet 6 inches, depth 40 feet to Water street. Also, - a lot, with brick meesuuge thereon, on North side of Contord street, 160. feet west of Second street ; front 64 feet 6 inches, depth 61 feet 10 Indica-will meet the puttee hi intermit on TUESDAY. December 7, 1869 at 4 P_. if., at his- office, 115 South , Fifth street, when and where all persons will make their claims or be debarred from coining in upon, said fund . • n 02510 1 JAMES' H. CASTLE. Auditor. no4-th6t* VOREIGNFRUITS, NUTS,. &C.--MES sins Oranges and LC/31011S. Turkey -Figs, in kegs, drums and boxes ; Austrian !Prunellos iu logs and fancy boxes : Arabian Dates, new crop ; Turkey Prunes in casks and fancy. boxes; Raisins—Layers Seedless. Imperial, &v.; Fig Paste 13111 i Guava Poste : Naples and Bordeaux Walnuts, Paper Shell Almonds, for sale by J. B. IIUSSIER C0...108 South 'Delaware avenue, NAVAL STORES.-495 BBLS. ROSIN, 132 Casks Spirits Turpentine.. Now landing from steamer "Pioneer"frem Wilmington, N. C. 1., and for sale by COtaill&N , RUSSELL. & CO., 111 Chestnut street., EMM OLD L4nD3; I From the EtathrtitT , p , evievg,') . , • The world is notoriously-M:ll4st to its vete - Tans, and above all it is tinliad its females. -Everywhere, and from all time, an old woman has been taken to express the last stage of, ulteleslinest and eXhauffpon ; and wiille a meeting of bearded dotards goesby the name of a 'council of sages, and its deliberations are respected accordingly, arcongregationof,palsied, matrons is nothing but a k.'ongreiation , old • ' women, whose thoughts and opinions on any subject whatsoever have no' more value than the chattering of so many magpies. In fact the poor old ladies have • a hard time of it; , ante' if we look at it in its right light, perhaps noth ing proves more thoroughly, the , coarse flavor of the world's esteem.respecting woinen'aian this disdain which they excite when they are old. And yet what charming old ladies one has knewn at times—women quite: as charming in their own way at seventy as their grand-daughters are at seventeen, and all the more so becatuze ; they •haVe' no , design. now to be charming ,' hecitukilhey have tgiVen% up.the attempt to please for the reaction of praise, and long since have consented to "be come physically old, though they have never drifted into unpersonableness or neglect. While retaining the intellectual vivacity and active sympathies of maturity, they have added the softness, the mellowness, the tempering got only, frosa experience aml advancing eitot; they are women who have seen and known and read a great deal, and who have suffered vouch, but whose sorrows have neither hard-, cued nor soured titem7—rather , have made ' them even more sympathetic with the sorrows of others, and pitiful for all the young.. They ; , have lived through and . live 3 doWn all their own trials, and have come out into peace on the other side ; but they remember the trials of the fiery passage, and they feel for those who have still to bear the pressure of the pain they have overcome. These are not women much met iVith'in society; they are of the kind which mostly stays at home, and lets the world come to them., Theyhave done. with the hurry and glitter of life, 'and they- no longer care to carry their gray , brim abroad;, they retain their hold on - the affections of their kind; they 'take , an , interest: In the history, the science, the progress of the day, but they rest tranquil and content by their own fireside, and they sit to' receive, but do not go out to gather. 'The fashionable old lady, , who haunts the theatres= and',`' drawing-rooms; bewigged, befiizzled„ painted, ghastly in her vain attemPts to' ppear yoting,fbideons . in her frenzied clutch at. the pleasures ,melting from her graspOlesperate her,wild hold .on a life' that is. passing away from her so rapidly, knows nothing of the quiet dignity and happiness of her ancient sister who ' has been wise enough to renounce before she lost. In her own-- house, where gather a small knot of men , of mind and women of character, where the young bring their perplexities and the ma ture their deeper theughts, the dear old lady of ripe experience and loving sympathies and cul tivated intellect holds a better court than is known to any of those miserable old creatures, who prowl about the gay places'ef the world; and 'wrestle with the young for their crowns and garlands—those wretched simulacra of womanhood who will not grow old and who cannot become wise. She is ;the best kindof old lady extant, answering to 'the Matron Of classic times—to the Mother In Israel before whom the tribes made obeisance in-,. token 'of . respect ;= the woman whose book of life has been well studied and closely read, and kept clean in all its pages. She has been no prude, - however, and no mere idealist. She must have' been wife, mother and widoW ; that is, she must bare known many things of joy and grief, and have had the fountains of life unseale4. How ever wise and good she May. be, as a spinster she has had only half a life ; and it is the best half which has been denied her. How can she tell others, when they come Ite. her in their troubles; what time and a healthy will have wrought with her, if. she has never passed through the same circumstances? Theoretic comfort- is all very well, but one word of expe rience goes beyond voltimes of counsel based on general principles and a lively imagination. One type of old- lady, growing yearly scatter, is the old lady of Radical' pithiest tendencies based on the doctrines of Voltaire and Paine's' Rights of Idan—the old lady who remembers Hunt and Thistlewobd and the nghatn riots, who talks of the French revolation as if it was yesterday, and who has heard so often of the Porteus mob from poor papa, that one would think she' bad assisted at the hanging herself. Sliels an infinitely old woman, for. the most part birdlike, chirrupy, and wonder fullyi alive. „ She has never gone far beyond her early teaching, but, is a fossil Radical of the old school, and sh 'thinks the'Gods departed when Hunt and his set died out.. She is an irreligious old creature, and scoffs with more eleveiliess than- grace 'at everything new or earnest; she would as lief see Romanism ram pant at once as this new-tangled . mummery they call Ritualism, and Hornanism is her ver sion of the unchaining of Satan. As for science =well, it is all very Wonderful; but more wonderful she thinks than true; and " she cannot quite make up her mind about the spectroscope or the protoplasm. Of the two, the protoplasm com mends! itself most to her imagination, foi• private reasons of her own connected with the Pentateuch ; bnt these things are not so much in her way as Voltaire and Diderot, Volney and Tom Paine, and she is content to abide by her ancient loves, and to leave the leaping-poles of science to younger and stronger hands. And this type of old lady is for the most part an an cient spinster, whose life has worn itself away in the arid deserts .Of mental dOubt and anio tiorial negation: If she ever loved it was in secret, some thin-lipped embodied idea long years ago ; but most likely she did not get even, to this-unsatisfactory length; but contented' her-: self with books and discussions only. If she has ever. honestly loved and been loved, per haps she would have gone beyond-doubt; and have learned something - holier than a scoff: The old lady of strong instinctive affections, who never reflectaanenever attempts to re strain, her kindly weakness, stands at the other end o the scale. She is the grandmother par excellence, and spends her life in spoilin g the little ones, crammingAlMM with sugar-phuns and rich cake whenever she has the chance, and nullifying mamma's punishments by sur- reptitious a fts atid , goodies. She is the dearly beloved of our childish recollections, and to the last days of our life we cherish the remem brance of the kind old lady with her beatnitig smile, taking out of her large black reticule, or the 'more mysterious recesses of her Unfathom able pocket, wonderful little screws of paper, which her withered hand§ <thrust into our chubby fists; but we can understand now what an awful nuisance she must have beers to the authoritiesomd bow impossible‘she - made it to preserve anything like discipline and the ter rors of the domestic law in the family. The old lady who remains a mere child to' the end, who looks very much like a faded old wax-doll with her scanty bair blown ontinto transparent ringlets, and her jaunty cap be decked with flowers and rgay-colored bows, who cannot rise into dignity or true woinauli ness, who knows nothing, can give, no advice, has no sentiment of protection, hitt on the contrary : demands all sorts of care and protec tion 'for herself—:-she; Simpering and giggling as if she were fifteen, is by no.meins aitdd lady of the finest type, ; But:she is better than the leering old lady who sayscoarse things, and who, like.Beranger's inimortal creation, passes her time in regretting her plump arms and her well-turned' ,ancle, and the lost time that can never be recalled, and who is altogether a most unedifying old person, and by no means nice company for the. young.• Then there is the irascible old •lady, who. rates her Servants, and is •free With fedl-flavorectepi tilos against sluts in general; who is like a tigress over ber laSt . unmarried daughter; and, wben cri ppl ed And disabled,still insists oniceep• ing the- eys, which she-delivers up, when wan y only Whim Snarl And a **pidgins cau-' tion: 'She his been ( one, 6f the race of active .. housekeepers, and has mrided Herself on her exceptional'ability that way for so long that she otthot beo . to gtve rqqtfert wherialie can no 'hanger do.. my good; so "s 1 Site in her easy chair, like old Pope and Pagan in Pitgrbsea Proflresu, .and gnaws • her • fingers at, .; the ~ yantagetweild which passes theii ,Pshe..je th e _ 1 infliction to her daughterfer all the years of her life,and to the last keepS tier in leading-strings, tied up as tight as the sinewy old hands can knot theta; treating her.always as an irk:Opens's , hie young oh* that needs both guidance and control, though the girl has passed into the„ `Middle-aged woman by nor=-a pooi spiritless' thing, that has faded - before she has fully blossomed, ~ and dies ; like ,a, fruitx that „has dibpped =ro ad the tree 'before; it has ripened. Twin sister to this kind ie the grim female be come ancient; the gaunt, 'old lady with a stiff backbone, whet sits upright, arld, walks • whirrs ' fi rfn tread.like,a ban ;., a leathery old lady,who despises all your weak slips of girls that have nerves and headaches and cannot walk their paltry, mile without fatigue; a desiccated old lady, large-boned and lean,without an ounce of superposes fat about her, with keen eyes yet, with which' she beastS that-she can thread a needle and read small jolt); - hy (4141010 W; an ?intiestfuetible - old 'lady, who lookeAs if ziothing shert,:of an earth ) , quake would put an end to her. The friend of her youth: is npw ,a stout, soft, helpless old lady; math tiesdrapeddn woollen shawls, given to frequent sippings of brandy and water, and ensconced in , the chimney corner like a huge clay kure'set to' dry. For her the indestruc tible old lady bas the. supremest contempt, heightened in intensity fry the remembrance of, the tirtufWheir they were friends and rivali. Mr, peor Laura, she,says, straightening herself; she was Always a poor creature, and see what she is now ! To those who wait long 1 enough the wheels alwayi comes round, she thinks; ~ and the days when_ Laura, bore away the bell •from her for grace' and sweetness and loveableness generally, ns avenged now, when the one ls,a, mere' rnollute and the Other has 'a serviceable backbone= that will last' for , many a year ,yet, Then there is the musical old lady, who is fond of playing small anonymous pieces of atjiggrcharacter, 'full - of queer turns and shakes, music - that - seems all - written in dead seml-quavers, and that she gives in a trip ping, catching - way, as if the keys of , the plann were ' hot. Sometimes she will sing, as a great favor, old-world songs that are almost pathetic: for the thin and broken voice that chirrups out the sentiment with which they abound ; - and sometimes, as a still greater favor, she will stand up in the dance, and do the poor uncertain ghosts of what were once .steps, in the days when dancing was dancing, and not the graceless lounge it is now., But her dancing days are over, she says, after half-a-dozen turns; though, indeed, sometimes she takes a frisky fit,' and pays for it the next .: The very dress of old ladies is in itself a study, and a revelation , of character. There are the beautiful ohi Women who make them selves like old *trues' ItY a profusion of soft lace and tender greys • and the stately old ladles ' who affect rich rusting silks and 'sombre vet vet; and there are the original and individual old ladies, who dress themselves after their own kind, like Mrs. Basil Montage and' Miss, Jane Posrter;and have a Cachet of their own, with which fashion las nothing to do. And there are the old women who wear rusty black stuffs and ugly 'helmeblike caps; , and those who affect. uniformity and going with the stream, when the fashion has become national; and these have been much exercised of late with the chignons and the new bonnets. But Providence is liberal, and milliners are fertile in resources. In fact,in this as in all other sections of humanity, there are those who are beautiful and wise, and those who are foolish and unlovely; those who make the best of things as they - are, and those who make the worst,by treating them as some thing they are not, those who extract honey, , and those who find only poLlon. Fors in old age, as in youth, are to be found beauty, use, grace and value,but in different aspects and on auother, platform. altogether; and, the folly, is when this difference' is not allowed for, and when 7:he possibility of these'grates is denied and their utility ignored. , , , . , TitAv'ELEfes. - i4urii. P . . . H ILA DEL PHIA. L ' GERMANTOWN AND NOBRISTOWN • RAILROAD TIME TA. DLE.—On andalter Monday, Nov,22d, 1989, and , anal further notice; ' • TOR GERMANTOWN. Leave Philadelphia-6, 7,8, 9.06, 10, 11,12 A. M. 1,2, 335,5% 4.05, 4.55, 5,6 X, 6,639,7,8,9.20,10, 11, 12 P. M. LeavtjGermaiitown-6, 6.55, 73,6, 8.20, 94040.50, LT A II 1. 2,3,320,434.5,5%4i, ,8 9, 10,11,P.M. The 8.2) down-train, and the 334 k and is% up Iraina, will net atop on the Germantown Branch. ON SUNDAYS.. • Leave Philadelphia-935 A. 21,2, 4.05 minutes ' ? and 10 1 :' P. M. Leave Germantownz-8.16A...M.:11.4,.8, and 99‘ P. M. • CHESTNUT HILL 13A1LIIOAD. Leave Philadelphia-6, 8,10, 12 A.M.; 2, 5X,5X,7, 9.20 and 11 P. M. Leave Chestnut Hill-7.10 lablUtell, 8, 9.10, and U. 40 A. M.; 1.40,330,5.40, 6. 40] 8. SUNDAYS4O and 10A0 P. M. . Leave Philadelphia-9.15 minutes A. lif.• 2 and 7P. M. Leuye Chestnut 1t 111 7.50 minutes A. M..; U. 40,5.40 aud 9.25 minutes P. M. FOR CONSHOHOCKEN AND NORRISTOWN. Leave Philadelphia--6.73X.9, U. 05, A. M.; 1X,3,4, 4.5‘, 5%, 6.15,805,10.05 and UX P. M. Leave Norristown-45.40,6.25,7,7X, 5.50,11 A. M.; IX, 3,4 X, 6.15,8 and 9.% P. M. The 7X A.M. Trains from Norristown will not stop at lieges's, Potts' Landing, Domino or Schnes Lane. fiEr T he 4 P. M. 'Praia from Philadelphia will stop only it School lana,Manayunk sad Conshohocken. ON SUNDAYS. Leave Philadelphia-9 A. Id.; 2X, 4 and 7.15 P.M. Leave Norristown-7 A.M.; I, 5X and 9P. M. 808 MANAYUNK. Leave Philadelphia 4-6,736.9, 11.05 A.M.; IX, 3,4, 4.56, 5%4.15,805,10.05 and 1184 P.M. Leave Mannyunk-6.10.6.55,7X,8.10,9.20, 1 13 A. M.; 2, 5X.5, 6X, 8.30 and 10 P. M. _ _ .031 Leave Philadelphic.lll2: 4 ; , 4 and 7.15 P; N. Leave Man synnk-7% A:151.; 1.5 i, 6 and 934 P.M. ' , PLY MOU TlI R. B Leave Philadelplaia,73l A. R., 43i P.M. Leave Plyrnontli. 63i,' A. M., 41 4 i P. M. W. S. WILSON, General Superintendent, Depot, Ninth'and Green streets. TIRJLADELPHIA AND ERIE RAIL -1 ROAD—WINTER TIME TABLE. On. and after MONDAY, Nov. 15, 1869, the Trains on the Philadelphia and Erie Railroad will run as follows. from Pannsrivania Railroad Depot, West Philadelphia: ' 4 WESTWARD. 4 Mall Train leaves Philadelphia 9.35 P. M. * 6 ** 6 .6 Williamsport ........... . . ..... .... 7.40 A. M. " "Atrritea at Erie ' 4 ... 8.20 P. M. Erie Etpreas leaves Philmielphitt ^ 11.40 A.:' 31. . •L " Williamsport..._ 9.00 P. M. " " arrives at Erick . 10.00 A. M. Elmira Mail leaves Philadelphia - • 7.50 A. M. . . " William port.: ' 6.09 P. M. " " arrives at Lock Baron 7.20 P. M. EASTWARD. Mail Train leaves Erie "8.40 A.M. " " " Williamsport..., ' 7... 9.25 P.M. 66 " arrives at Philadelphia - 6.20 A. M. Erie Express leaves Erie...... ' 4.00 P. M. . 4." Williamsport I3OA. M .4 « arrives at Philaflolphia 12.45 P. M. Elmira Mail leav - H es Lock. aven -... 4 A.M. .00 fill . '" Willlanispori... ' ' 9.45 A, M. ** " arrives at Plilladelphia. - 6.50 P. M. Buffalo Express leaves Williamsport 12.25 A.M. ". , " uarri5kturg..—........,..,6.2f) A . 61. 0 •. . arrives at - Philadelplvia.......«.. 9:25A. M. Express east connects at Cony. Mall oust ut Corry and Irvineton. Express west at Irvineton with trains,on Oil Creek and Allegheny River Railroad. ALFRED L. TYLER, General . Superintendent. WBST 4E1t,1313Y: FALL AND WINTER, ARRANGEMENT. COMMDNOING TUESDAY, _SEPT. 21st, lads. Leave Philadelphia, Foot of Blarket street (Upper . Ferry) at 830 A. M., Mail, for Bridgeton, Salem, Millville,Yine land, Swetiesboro and all intermediate stations. 3.10 P. W. Mall, 'for Cape Jtay, Millvillec - Vineland and way statione below Glassboro. 3.20 P. EL, Passenger, for Bridgeton, Salem, Swedes boro. and all intermediate stations. 5.20 P. M., Woodbury and Glassboro accommodation. Freight train for all stations leaves Camden daily, at 12.00 o clock, noon. Freight received in Philadelphia - at second covered wharf below Walnut street. Freight delivered at No. 228 S.,Delaware avenue. ' Commutation tickotat at redu9ed rates, between Phila delphia and all stations. EXTRA TRAIN FOR CAPE MAY. (Saturdays only.) Leave Philadelphia, 8.15 A. M. Leave Cape Ma y,_1.10 P. M. WELLIAM. J. SEWELL. Superintendent. CAMDEN AND ATLANTIC RAIL. ROAD.-01IANGE OF HOURS—WINTER AR RANGEMENT. Qn and after MONDAY, Nov. 1, 1880, trains wiltleave Vine street lerry ,as Tollowiqviz ' • Mail and..Frelabta ' • • • 8.00 A. Mi Atlantic Accommodation 3,45 Junction Accommodation to Atco and inter mediate stations 5.30 P. M. RETURNING, LEAVE ATLANTIC. Mall and-Freight...,... 1,98 P. M. Atlantis-Accommo dation 8.05 A. M. Junction Accommodation from Atco 8.22 A. M. Haddonfield Accommodation trains leave Vine Street Ferri r. , ..10.15 At M. and 2.00 P. M. Haddonfield. ' 1.00 rat. and 3.15 P. M. DAVID MUNDY. Agent. DAILY zirgYIN,G.I3,III,I4ETM-VIIILADAPHIA. THURSDAY, DACESIBER 2;1869. %PELEES' GUIDE 1/ 1 EA 4 ING RAJLROAD. - GREAT 1 Trunk tine *op P h iladelphia. to the interior of ennsylVania, the•Schtlyikill, Suegnehanna, Cumber' iand and Wyoming Pallets, the. North, Norttnrslit and the Canadas, Winter Arrangement Of Paaganitl'lTrsiull. Nev,22, 1869, leaving the Company's Depot, Th irteenth ' and 'C llowhillotreeitkPldisidelphits, at Co taming bent* ~ t, i 4 . 4 , t i ; MO VINO ACCO ODATION - ;-At 720 A. * for Rea eland %Rink late Statfoliallid 'AllsittoWne eturii il,leaTiNt Residing at 6.85 r.• ..ortivitig In P lal I 1111111 - 0.2%r. q r A E4P SB.--At 8. 15 A. M. for sesame Ika 6 nand: ' POttalrille, Pine trovaatimaquat nn nry, ill, port , Elmira, Roo eater, Niagara Falls .Buffalo, 'Wilkosbarre, Pittston, York. Car li sle, Chourbereburg_, Hagerstown:Re. The 7.80 A. X. train connects at Reading with the EMI Penneylyaniaßallroadftaing for Allentown ,_ke ~ and the 8.15 A. 41 Arabi connects with the Lebanon Valley train /r Hatrhiburg, Ac.; at Port Clinton with Catawba* B. . trains for Willismnort, Lock Haven. Elmira, *o_,.•at arrlsbnyv v g:th Northgeentral, Cumberland Tal ley.ond Pk Mill; and- nehanna trains for North'- tlinbethind, illiailtsport - . York, Oluunberaburg,Pins grove, ge. AITERNOON EXPRESS.-Leaves Philadelphia at 820 r. xi for Reading, Potteville, Harrisburg, Ac., con necting iiith Reading and Columbia Railroad trains for Columbia, Ac. . POTTSTOWN ACCOMMODATIONe-Leaves Pettit town at 6.46 A . M.,stopping at theintermediate elation.;, arrives in Philadelphia at 9.10 A. M. Returning leaves Phisidelphia 14410' PA.: orivea in Pottstown at 6.15 4 BX.6intra ;AND POYTSVdtaII -- ACCOMMODA TION .-Leaves Pottsville at 5.40 A. 11., and Reading at 710 E. M. stopping_nt all way stations: arrives in Phil,ll7. deritelo.:6/ A. et.. ,i " , it .. ' rr ii , tn interleaveaPhflade phis IA 4.45 P. M. a vett 'in a ing at 7.40 'P.-Blit, and Pottsville at. 9.301". M. ' Trains for Philadelphia , leave Harrisburg at 8.10 A. M. and Pottsville at 960 A. 21., arriving in Philadelphin I at Ap: id, Aftertfeen trains leave Harrisburg at 2.55 P. M. and olisvllle at lea P. M.; arriving at Phila delphia at 7.08 P. M Harrisburg Accommodation leaves Beading at 7.15 A. M., and Harrisburg at 4.10 P. M. Connecting at Read ing with Afternoon Accommodation south at 6.35 P. M., arriving in Philadelphia at 9.251'. M. Market train, with a Passenger car attached,leaves Philadejahlei at 12.30 neon for Pottsville and all Way Stations; leaves Pottsville at?/5.40 A. :M. connecting at Beadingvoithacconimodation traits for Philadelphia and all Way Stations All the above train's run daily, Sundays excepted. Sunday trains hear° Pottsv Ole at 8 A. M., and Philit= delphia at 3.16 P. M.; leave Philadelphia for Reading at 8.00 A. M. returning from Reading at 425 P. M. - CHESTER VALLEY RAILIIOAD.-Passengers for Downingtown and intermediate points take the 7.30 A. ~111., 12..Nand 460 P. M. trains from Philadelphia,return in g from Downingtown at 620 A. M.. 12.45 and 6.15 P.M . PERKIOMEN RAILBOAD.-Passengers I or Schwenks villa take 7.30 A.M., 12.30 and 4.00 P.M. trains. or Phila dea, returning from Schwenksville at 6.10 and 8.12 A.M..M, 12.45 noon. Stage lines for various points in Perklomen Valley connect with trains at Collegeville and Schwenkeville. COLEBROOKDALE RAILROAD.-Passengers for 'Mt. Pleasant and intermediate points take the 4.00 P. M. train from Philadelphia. returning from Mt. Pleasant at 7 00 and 11.00 A. 21 THNEW YORK EXPRESS FOR PITTSBURGH AND E IMT.-Leaves New York at 9417 A. M., 5.00 and 8.00 P. M. ' passing Reading at 12.43 A. 111.,1.45 and 10.05. P.M.„., and connects at. Harrisburg wit!, Pennsylvania: and rtorthern Central Railroad Bargees. T rains for 'Pitts burgh. Chicago, Williamsport, Elmira, Baltigiore, Ac. Retnrning,Exprees Train leaves flarnsburg on arrival of Pennsylvania E x press from Pittsburgh, at 2.40 and 6.35 A. Id., 12.20 noon, 2.115and11.03 P. M., passing 'Reading at MIS, 4.30 and 7.20 A. M. and 200 and 4.40 P. M., arriving at New York 6.00 and 10.15 A.M., 12.05 noon, and 6.35 andlo.oo P. M. Sleeping Cars , accampany thee* trains through between Jersey City , and Pittsburgh, without change. , . Mail train for New York leave, Harrisburg at 8.10 A. M. and 225 P. 111: Mail train for Harrisburg leaves New jerk at 12 Noon. '' • .. tiertunan,r, VALLEY RAILROAD-LTraine leave ' Pottsville at 6.30 and 1120 A.M. and 6/50 P.M.. returning from TAU]Willa, Itt 925 A . Id.. and 2.15 andel.° P. M. SCRUYLKILL AND SUSQUEHANNA RAILROAD -Trains leave Auburn' at 826 A. M. and 3.38 P. M. for Pinegrove and Harrisburg, and at 12.10 noon for PiLle• grove, Tremont and Brooke kle; returning from Ilar rieburg at 7.30 and 1150 A . M., and 3.40 P M.; from Brookside at' 420 P. M. and from Tremont at 7.15 A.M. and 5.05 P. M. TICKETS.- Through fint-ciass tickets and emigrant tickets to all the principal points in the North and West laid Canada. Excursion Tickets from Philadelphia to Reading and Intermediate Stations ' good for de_.y only are sold by Morning Accommodation, Market Train, Reading and Pottstown Accommodation Trains at redu ced rates. Excursion Tickets to Philadelphia, good for day only, are sold at Reading and Intermediate Stations by Read ing and Pottstown Accommodation , Trains at reduced The fel:hoeing tickets are obtainable only at the 'Ogee of S. Bradford, Treasurer, No. 227 South Fourth street, Philadelphia, or onG. A. Nicolls, General Superinten dent, Reading. Commutation Ticket/I,ot 25 per cent. discount, between an y• points desired , for families and firms. Mileage Tickets, good for 2.ooomiles,between anoints at eat CO each for families and firms. Beason' Tickets, for three, six, nine or twelve months, for holders only to all points., at reduced rates. Clergymen residing on the line of the road will be fur nished with cards, entitling themselves and wires to tickets at half fare Excursion Tickets from Philadelphia to principal sta tions, good, for Saturday. Sunday and Monday, at re duced fare, to be had only at the Ticket Office, at Thir teenth and Callowhill streets. FREIGHT.-Goode' of all descriptions forwarded to all the above points from the Company's Now Freight Depot, Broad and Willow streets. Freight Trains leave Philadelphia daily at 4.55 A. M., 12.30 noon, 5.00 and 7.15 P. M. for Reading, Lebanon, Harrisburg, Pottsville, Port Clinton, and all points be yond. • Mails closest the Philadelphia Postoffi ce for all placed MI the road and its branches at 5 A. It., and for the prin cipal Stations only at 2.15 P. 11. • .. BAGGAGE. _ Durigan's ExPress will collect Baggage for all trains ,leaving Philadelphia Depot. Orders can be left at No. • 225 South Fourth street, or at the Depot, Thirteenth and Callow hilt streets. ---------- OR • NEW 4 1101:11C.---TILE CAMDEN AND AMBOY and PHILADELPHIA AND RENTON RAILROAD COMPANY'S LINES, from Philadelphia to New York, and way places, from Wal nnt street wharf. Fare. At 6.30'A . N., via Camden and Amboy, Accom.. 0225 AtB A. M.. via Camden and Jersey LityEa.Mall, 3110 `At 2.00 P: 3i., via Camden and Amboy Express, 600 At 6 P. M. for Amboy and intermediate stations ALCM and AA. 31 and 2P. 31., for Freehold. At 2.00 P. IN for Lotig Branch and Points on - & - D. It. It: 11.- • ' At ft and 10 A.11.,12 M, 23130 and 4= P. 31 „for Trenton. At 6.30,6 and 10 A .3t ~, 1 2 and 11.30 P. M., for Ilordentown,Florence,Burlington,BeverlY and De lances. At 6.30 and 10 A .31 ~12 3.30,430,6; and 11.30 P.lll. for Ftigewater, Riverside, Riverton. PalmYra and Fish lionseol A. M. and 2 P. M.. for Riverton. Sir The 11.30 P. M. Line leaves from foot of Market street by upper ferry.: . , From Kensington Deplt: At 7.30 A. M. 2.30, 3,30 and 5 P. M. for Trenion and Bristol. And - at 10.45 A. M. and 6 P.M. for Bristol. At 7.30 A. 31„2,30 and 6 P. M. for Morrisville and Tully • town. At 7.30 and 10.45 A. 31,, 2.30, 5 awl 6 P.. M. for Schenck's and Eddington. At 7.30 and 10.45 A. M.,2.30, 4,5 and 6 P. M, for Corn wells, Torreadale,llohnesburgiTacony, Wissinoming, Bridesbnrg and Frankford 4 and AM P.M.. for Holmes burg and Intermediate, Stations.. • 'ruin West Philadelphia Depot vie Connecting Railway At 7.930 and 11 A.. 31. 1.2 0 , 5, 6415, swill P. M. New York Expreas - Line,via Jersey City 9325 At 11.30 P. M. Emigrant Line 2 00 At 7,9.30 add 11.A.31 .1,20,4,6:15,and 12 P.M for Trenton. At 7,0.36 and 11 A. M.. 4, 6.45 and 12 M., for Bristol. At 12 P.M .f Night Morrisville,Tally town, Bebenck's, Eddie ton Cornelis, Tc)rreadale, Holmesburg, Ta cony, Wien/fuming. Etideeburg and Frankford. The9.3U A. M. and and 12 P. M. Lines run daily: All others . , Sunda ye excepted. For L ines leaving Kensington Depot, take the cars on Third or Fifth streete, at chestnut, at half an hour bo fore departure. The Cara of Market street Railway run direct to Weta Philadelphia Depot,Ohestnut and Walnut - within one square. On Sundays, the Market Street Oars will run to 'connect vvith the 0.30 A. M.. 6.45 and 12 P. M. lines BELVIDEXE DELAWARE RAILROAD LINES from Kensington Depot. At 7.30 A. M., for Niagara Falls, Buffalo, Dunkirk, Elmira, Ithaca, Owego, Rochester, Binghampton, Oswego, Syracuse, Great Bend, ldoutrose, Wilkesbarre, berabtou, btrunaaburg, Water Gap, Schooley's Moun tain. &c. At 750 A. Maind 3.30 P.ll for Belvidere,Easton, Lam bertville Flemington Ac. The 3.30 P. 31: Line con nects direct with the 'train leaving Easton for Mauch Chunk Allentown, Bethlehem, &o. At M A. M. from Weld Philadelphia Depot,' end 5 p. m. from Kensington Depdt,for Lambertville and interme- diate Stations. CAMDEN AND BURLINGTON CO., AND PEMBER TON AND HIGHTSTOWSi de N .) B.A.T.LROLDS, from Mar ket street Ferry (Upper At 7 and 10 A. 31.,1, 2.15,3.30,96 c 6.30 P.M.for Merchants vine, Moorestown Hartford. Masonville, Hainsport, Mount Holly, thidthville. ,Ewansylllo, Yincentown, Birmingham andTemberton. At 10 A. M. for Lewistown, Wrlghtstown, Cookstovin, New Egypt and Hornerstown. At 7 A. 31..1 and 3.30 P. M. for Lewistown, W rights-. town, Cookstown, New Egypt 4 Hornerstown, Cream Ridge, Irelaystown, Sharon and Hightstown. Fifty pounds of Baggage only allowed each Passenger. Passengers are prohibited from taking anything as bag gage but their wearing apparel. Company over fifty pounds to be paid for extra. Thelimit their responsibility for baggage to 'One Dollar per ',pound, and will not be liable for any amount beyond sieo, ex cept by special contract. Tickets sold and Baggage checked direct' through to Boston, Worcester, Springfield, Hartford, New Haven Providence, Newport, Albany, Troy, Saratoga, , Utica, Rome, Syracuse,Rochester. Buffalo, Nlagara - Falls and Suspension RH. An additional icket Office is located at N 0.828 Chest nut streets where tickets to New. York, and all inapor - taut panda North and East, may be procured. Persons puichasitig' Tickets at this Office, can have their bag ga e checked from residences or hotel to destinatlon,by Un on. Transfer Baggage Express. _ Linea from New.lork for Philadelphia will leave from foot of Cortland street at 1.00 and 4.00 P. M., via Jersey City and. Vanden 8.80 and 10 A.M., 12.304, 6 and 9 P.M.. and at 12 Night, via Jeraey City and West Phila delphia. • - From Pier No-1, N. River, at 6.30 A. M. Accommoda tion and 2T. Id:Express, vla Amboy And Camden. Nov. 20.1869 . WIS. U. GATZMER, Agent. j. HILADEI,PELCA: AND' BALTIRIORE , orsTAAJ , RAILROAD COMPANY. WINTER ARRANGEMENT. On and after. MONDAY, Nov. let., 7869, Trains will leave •as follows, stopping at all Stations on Philadel phia, Baltimore Central and Chester Creek Railroads: Leave PHILADELPHIA for PORT DEPOSIT. from Depot of .Philadelphia, Wilmington and Baltimore' Railroad Conalien,Y,' corner Broad and Washington I avenue, at 7.00 A. M.. and 4.30 P. M. " A Freight Train, with Passenger car attached,will leave Philadelphia for Ofoyd at 2.30 T., M.. Leave PORT DEPOSIT,. for. PIiILA.RELPHIA at 5.40 A. M., 9.25 A. M., and 2.25 P. M. - Saturday the 2.25 train will leave at 4.30 P. M. Passengers are.allowt.9l to take :wearing .aPparel only as baggage, and the Company will not be responsible for an amount exceeding. oue hundred dollars, unless special contract is ;trade ipt• the evhq. r• . • L'.. , II.NRY WOOD, Presidentlind General Superintendent. FAST FREIGHT LINE, VIA , NORTH: PBNNBYLVANIA BAILROAD, , to Wilkesbarro*, slum City t allount,Carmel. Oentyalia, and all points on Lehigh Valle,' lialltead and its t i By new arrangements, serfee4ed Ai* day, this road is enabled to give inereased &spew% Ato Inerehaadlse con signed to the above-nanted.pointa Goods delivered at the Thretlgti . FrOlght Depot, • . 8, B. ror. Ilkont and Noble streets, Before P_,IIt•NUI) reaahViiktoibatze t Mount Oattnel. _NahaneY viA7, And the other stations in hiahanoy and VI Masi Thies shefors A. It the succeeding day. BILIS MASK Amt. . • , - ..r.,,,,,.,,,,..,,, , ',out., NORTH P.IgIiNRYLV.ARIA RAILROAD... - 1 -Tillit Bit WIT MIDDLE ROUTE to the- Lehigh . Wymeig IVlley,'Nortq c n•Perineylvania; Oontberxi and 'Telt r,,New lark; liestei, jittfrale_, Niagara Palle; tit Breit Lake* and t 6Dominider of "Uanathis:•. 1,• i•• i -4161 INTER •ARRANORMENTs; ", • \ ''• • , "• • T i tisX6 .EFFECT, Novampoy 22d,min, , • 14 MAII, TRAINS leave-Passenger Depot, corner of BerldP tea folluwa:, ,dakericaa streetaillitakdayis isfcePtedi, 'all 7./iti.A. MLAccouoillt:ton for . Felt WasidaittOw. :-, .- At VA. Me-4110ra' ,ExPress for' B hlel4asa..and` Principal Stations onm a i n lit of-North ' etwielitiania Mao , onineoting et Bath eham with high Valley Rail tar.Allentown t _Matic °Ann .• ohm:KW 00 F4 wag, 4, Pittston, Towanda a d aver connee- I A tingatt Weedy' with , NEIL lIAI AY for Niagara 4 t. Falisi aftiffsid, Rochester ,. 'Cleveland, Chicago, San Fralig Snit all points' In:the Great West, , , ,-, , , , . I • .4te . , 411:—Accomni °dation , for bOyisisto•em t ; pibriv Intermediate ' Statumm ' 'Passenger} for l a low Ohne iliMboro' and'llartindlle,hy this train, StatirlYork Road. , ' . ~, . (II xpress Raven , Bethlehem, illientmen,, Matfett nki Whits ' Wiliteliberre,Plttatim, Scranton and' arbondale via Lehigh and: Suaguehasili Railroad, and Allentown, Reston% MacitettsiOwn a points on New Jersey Central Bauroad and Morriemn Essex , l44lralad to New York Ida Lehigh Vaileyklodlroad, • At 70.04 A. IC—Accommodation, for ion Washington, sta ohm` at intermediate Stationi. ' 1.15. SAO and 8 P.M. , —Accortunodattors fa Abington, l a k i i4OWP , Ai.—Lebig. h Valley limpets for Bethlehem, It on Allentown Mauch Chuna, Raallitos,, White, He etwilkesbarre," Pittston,' &Malan, and Wyoming A Lab , M.—Accommodation for Doyledowni stop* pin at I intenuediate Abalone. • . A 4.16'F; It—Accommodation for Dejleatirten, stop pg at All intermediate stations.stations. in At &DO Pe 11.—Throogh for Bethlehein, connecting at Bethlehem with Lehigh Valley livening Train for Rastoy 21. llentown, Mauch , Chunk. ' •., .' ' At 6 r. Accommodation for lautedaloottopping at tat ntettnediate station's. , At 11.80 P. M.—Accommodation for Port Washington. PromRAINS ARRIVE IN PHILADELPHIA: , • ,Bethlehem at 9 A,.M..,_ 2 - 15 , 4 . 4 0 and 8- 2 .4 P. 74. 2.16 P. Itt., 4AO P. M. and Sae P.M. Trainii Make direct connection with Lehigh Valley or Lehigh , and Susan& . hattiraina from. Easton, Seranton.Wilkepharre, Ma, ban vity and Hazleton. fr Doyisitown at 8.35 A.M.,420 P.ltand 7.06 P.m From Lansdale at 7.80 A. M. , From; Fort Washington at 9.25 andlo.BB A.M. and 330 ON SUNDAYS. Philidelphia for Bethlehem at 9.80 A. M. Philadelphia for Doylestown at 2.00 P. M. Doylestown for Philadelphia at 7.00 A. M. . Bethlehem for Philadelphia at 4.00 P. M. Fifth and Sixth Streets and Second and Third Streets Lines of City Passenger cars - run directly to and from the Depot. Union Line run within n short distance of the Depot. ~. Tickets must be procured at the Ticket Moe, in order to secure the lowest raters:titers; ••• • . ]DELIS CLARK, Agent. Tickets sold and Baggage checked through ' t.o_princ.l- pal points, at Mann ' s - Borth Penn, Baggage x•xpross office;No. 106 South Fifth street . ' .P D " A Alt V e r - 8 14 1 1 if ,SUNDAY "November tis, 1869.. The trains of the Pennsylvania ..,initral Railro leave the Depot,at Thirty-first and Market streets,which Is reached directly by the cats of the Market Street Pas senger Railway, the last car connecting with each train leaving Front and Market street thirty minutes before its departure. Those of the Chestnut and Walnut Streets Railway run within one square of the Depot. Steeping Car 'Tickets can be had on application at the Ticket Office, Northwest corner of Ninth and Chestnut streets. and at the Depot. Agents of the Union Tramifer Company will call for and deliver Baggage at the Depot. Orders lett at N 0.901 Chestnut street, No. 118 Market Street, will receive at leaden TRAINS LEAVE DEPOT; VIZ.: A Mail Train.- ... ....at 8.00 A. M. Paoli AC40113 at 10.30 ;CM., 1.10, and 660 P. M. Fast Line-. . ....-..... ........... . ......... . . ..... .......at 11.60 A...M. Erie Express.„--- ....... ..... at 11.60 A. M. Harrisburg .at 2.30 P. M. Lancaster Accom.- ... at 4.10 P. M. Parksburg Train. at 6.30 P.M. Cincinnati Express • at 8.00P.M.. Erie Mall and Pittaburgh Express. . . ..... .....at 9.46-P. M. Accommodation ...... .....at12,11 A M. pacific Express.-. 12.00 night. Erie Mail leaves - dai ly, except Sunday running on fiatardarnightto Williamsport only. On Sunday night passengers will leave Philadelphia at 8 o'clock. Pacific Express leaves daily. Cincinnati Ex press daily, except Saturday. All other trains daily, except Sunday. • • The Western Accommodation Train rune daily, except Sunday. For this train tickets must be procured .and baggage delivered by_s.oo P. M... at 116 Market street. TRAINS ARRIVE AT DEPOT, VLZ : Cincinnati at 3.10 A. M. Philadelphia Express ... at 6.30 A. M. Erie Mail at 6.30 A. 31, Paoli' Accommodation at 8.20 A. M. and 3.40 A 6.26 P. 31 Parkstitirg ....... .... ..... at 9.10 A. N. Fast Line-- at 9.40 A. ld Lancaater. Train at 12.65 P. M. Erie Express..... . Express ... at 12.55 P. 3f . Scsathern Express. - . 7.00 P. M. Lock Haven and Elmira Express .at 7.00 P. M. Pacific Expre55.._............„.......... -....-. ..... -at 4.25 P.M. Harrisburg Accommdalon.... ...... ...........at 9.60 P. M. For further information, apply to _.• JOHN F. VARLEER, Ti cket Agent,9olt:nestunt street. FRANCIS FUNK, Ticket Agent, 116 Market street. SAMUEL R. WALLACE, Ticket Agent at the Depot. The Pennsylvania Railroad Company will nottunitune any risk for Baggage, except for wearing apparel, and limit their responsibility to One Hundred Dollars in value. All Baggage exceeding that amount inteluer will be at the risheof the owner, unless taken by special con tract. EDWARD H. WILLIAMS, General Superintendent. Altoona, Pa. PILADELPHLA,, WILMINGTON AND BALTIMORE RAILROAD—TIME I..s:BLit:Com mencing MONDAY, May 10th, 1869. Trains will leave Depot, corner Broad and Washington avenue. as fol lows WAY MAIL TRAIN at B.EO A. M. (Sundays excepted), for Baltimore, stopping at all Regular Stations. Can meeting with Delaware Railroad at Wilmington fur Crisfield and Intermediate Stations. EXPRESS TRAIN at 12.00 M., Sundays excepted', for Baltimore. and; Washington, stopping at Wilmington, Perryville and Havre de . Grace. Connects at Wilming ton with train for New Castle. EXPRESS TRAIN at 4.00 P. M.(Stindays excepted), for Baltimore and Washington, stopping - at Chester, Tharlow, Linwood Claymont', 'Wilmington, Newport, Stanton, Newark, ' Elkton , North East, Charlestown, Perryville Havre do Grate Aberdeen, Perryman's, Edgewood:lllagnolia,Chase's' and Steranaer's Run. NIGHT EXPRESS at 11.30 P. M. (daily) for Baltimore and Washington, stopping at; Chester,Thurlow,Lin wood, Claymont,'WilniingtOn,' Newark, Elktrin,North East, Perryville, Havre de Grace, Perryman'e and Mag nolia. Passengers for Fortress Monroe and Norfolk will take the 12.00 M. Train. • WILMINGTON TRAlNS.—Stopping at all iitations between Philadelphia and Wilmington. . Leave PHILADELPHIA at 11.00 A. M. 2.30 , 5.00 and 7.00 P. M. The a.OO P. M. train conneots with Delaware Railroad for Harrington and intermediate stations. " Leave WILMINGTON 6.30 and 8.10 A. M.,1.30, 4.15 and 7.00 P. M. The 8.10 A. M. train will not stop between Chester and Philadelphia. The 7.00 P. M. train from Wilmington runs daily;allotherAccommodation Trani Sundays excepted, - Trains leaving WILMINGTON at 6.30 A. M. and 4.15 P. 51.wi1l connect at Lamokin Junction with the 7.'10 A.M. and 4.30 P. M.trains for Baltimore Central R. B. From. BALTIMORE to PHILADELPHIA.—Leaves Baltimore 7.25 M., Way Mail. 9-35 A. M., Exprefui. 2.35 P.M., Express. 7.25 P. M.,Express. SUNDAY RAIN FROM BALTIMORE.---Leaves, BALTIMORE at 1.25 P. M. Stopping tit Magnolia, Per ryman's, Aberdeen, Havre-de-Grace,Perryville,Charles town,North-East, Elkton Newark, Stanton,Newport, - .Wilmington Claymont Linwood and Cheater. - • Through tickets to a ppoint West, Smith, and South west may be procured at the ticket office, KtB tlheidlatit street, under Continental Hotel, where also State Rooms. and Berths in Sleeping Cars can be secured during the day. Persons purchasing tickets at this -office can have baggage checked at their residence by the Union Train*. ferpompany. J H. F. KENNEY, Sup't. WEST CHESTER AND PHILADEL PHIA RAILROAD.—W inter Arrangement —On and after MONDAY, Oct. 4, 1868,Trains will Isaveas follows: Leave Philadelphia, from New Depot .Thirty-first and Chestnut streets, 7.45 A. M., 11.00 A. DI 2.30 P. M., 4.15 P.M., 4.40 P. M., 6.15 P. 31.01.30 P. M. Leave West Chester, from Depot, on East Market street, 6.25 A. M.,8.00 A. M., 7.45 A. M.,10.46 A. M.,1.66 P. M.:4.50 P. M. 6.55 P.M. - - Train leaving West Chester at 8.00 A. M. Will stop at B. C. Junction, Lenni, Glen Riddle and Media: leaving Phihulelphia at - ' 430 P. M. will atop at Media, Glen Riddle, Lanni and B. 0. , Junction. Passengers to or from stations between West Chester and 11. C. Junction going East, will take train leaving. West Chester at 7.45 A. M., and car will be attached to Express Train at B. C. J unction; and going West, Passengers for Stations above R.Q. Junction will take train leaving Philadel ?lila at 4.40 P.^ M., and will change cars at B. O. J unc- Tho Depotin Philadelphia is reached directly by the Chestnut and Walnut street care. Those of the Market street line run within one square. The cars of both lines connect with each train upon its arrival. • ON SUNDAYS.—Leave Philadelphia for West Chester at 8.50 A, M. and 2.00 P. M. Leave West Chester for Philadelphia at 7.55 A. M. anir 4.00 P. M. 116 0- Passengers aro allowed to take Wearing Apparel Only, as Daggage, , and the Company avill not in any case be responsible for an amount exceeding one hundred dol. lam unless a special contract be made for the same. WILLIAM O. WHEELER. General Superintendent. PHILADELPHIA, GERMANTOWN AND NORRISTOWN RAILROAD COMPANY Parties going from Philadelphia to New York can save time by taking the cata'at Ninth and Green and Ninth and Columbia avenue, at 7, 9.05, 11 A. N. and 4.06 P. 151,, to the Intersection Station'and there take the trains for New York leaving West Philadelphia on the same hours us above mentioned. W. S. , WILSON, Gen. Sup't. NOVEMBER 22, 1869. • • n 022 WO. I;.E.AL .ESTATE SALES ORPIIA.NS' COURT SALE.- , —ESTATE of Julia Ann Gerhard, deceased.—James A. Free num. Auctioneer.—Genteel three-story Brick Dwelling, No. 1414 Franklin 6tii , et. Boiler authority of the . Or pline'Court for. the City and County of Philadelphia,on Wednesday; DecOnber 15, 1862, at. 12 o'clock, noon, will be sold at public sale, at the Philadelphia Exchange, the following deem:dried real estate, late the ,property of Julia Ann Gerhard, ileeeused : All that certain lot of ground withlbe three-story brick messunge with two story l,rick back building and bath-room thereon erected, situate on the west side of Franklin street, at the illa tion:not 112 feet 2.4irinches northward of Master street: in the Twentieth Ward of the cityi; containing in front on Franklin el root, 17 feet, and extending In depth west wsrd lariat anglea with Franklin street 6. feet. Ws' Subject to a mortgage of /5'500. tw , emu to be ;laid at tbsithne of sale. By the Court. JOSEPH MEGARY, Clerk O. C. FRANCIS GERHARD. Administrator. JAMES A. FREEMAN, Auctioneer, no2sde2 9 •. Store, 422 Walnut street. EXECUTOR'S SALE.—ESTATE OF Patrick I evir, deceased. James A. Freeman, Auc tioneer. Public Il ouse, S. W. coiner Locust street and Currant alley (No. lo 20). On Wednesday, .I),(3,tolabor 15,• 1869, at 12 o'clock, noon, will be sold at public dale, without reserve, at rho Philadelphia Exchange, the following described real' estate, late the property of Patrick Drvit, deceased :. All that valuable tavern stand and lot of 'hound, situate on the south shin of Locust street, between Tenth and Eleventh streets. No. 1020, 35 feet 7 3-5 inches trout on Locust street, and 45 feet on Currant alley. Oa" Thts tat a, valuable tancru slaw!, 4 71 . 4 1 t o .Ti 27111, 1573, at a Monthly of 140, with need .I.titeity, and a revidiriba ifirreitiat his lease on ow: day's ittfanit. Clear Of all inctnbrartee.% 'Sale peremptory. (Cr 41 1 860 to be paid atllmo of male.' By order of P. BRAMAN, Exeeuter. n02541c2 9 3 A MEs 4. FREEMAN, Auctioneer.. Stare, 422 Walnut Nt tat. ESTATE SALES. TRugivtgst'sA 31.=-19 CAPITAL NOL hits, Opel%Wiwi add, Mstfinfartiatetre,.-Jameß A IcKeemanLAuctfoileeti-zratiox , Ltft4- atv Ottb fib:o/TM tEl"nen ,6 4l ll Z XJOlrli A 4911.1 t, )irOlit 1f73, AND OBLF: latt .. OW I STWERT . Property oftho Second 'WA itertall'ef Church: A ' 140 feet. ~ . tt?..l , • ,Noble Street.. 4il Wednesday:, 100elabor 15, 1859, 72' . ,0c10cig,, noon, be add at public eialcat t h e Philadelphiti'EsChtloge, ND'followlirgwlnsLlertvtal esratdhlii.s. - A if tbatproperty situate() n the etatikeideofjEighth stfeetJti the Thirteenth 14( ard At the tity.Do feet front on Eighth street t od- 140, feet deep on2he newt!, !hie and 17 feet deep drithel eduth lilies ',AM) /Mai Ow" Jar 01re:111nd ow the. nerth; 'Side of 'lkieblyrt 7pfect 736 frac es clot. of Ibightb street; 60, fit riches front. *n429,4 , 04 / inch-deep to the former 1 0 t local side, and 29 feet irlti inches on the past 0114 0- * The above is a'nerg valuabts piece its Property. With sffotants;lol a rapidly . imPsOsinf. aeltien Um rift .011' street" now narrowed at ins sfreet,witi tvidolted atimprecements are extended; as thg law tom. Yes , nopr to raYde, caul the opus stasis built struth.af this sguare .are so, healer/. =Oq the Mg is a csib aria/ building, long welt as a church, whieh; do not / ge, , trpeAsty caw be. altered rain a Manufactory, for irls it is :well adarded, having fine light, or far a pnblic buibline of any sort. There are also , substantial brt infings fronting. on ..Noble street. 'ICT Stitvey at the store.' Subject to two around' Rents, amounting toga. tiler to ill:3l6,per annum. Itir Terme easy. 6,5 W to be . raid when , the properly IS Struck off. 9' order of Trueteee of' the Second`, Unlversaliste Church. • •, , JAMS A. FREEMAN. Anctione'er. isoi2.sde,2 9 No. 422 Walcott street. AD 1 4 1 I ST RAT ORPIST:glirafT— Estap3 of. John , "Kelchline, demmed.—Jamett A. ,Anctioueor:-.Dwellings, Nos. 114, DS Dena street. (Dana street 'co'nnecte!Front and Second streets; abotto Noble street!). _Minder authority con tained in the, will of tllO fate: John Ifeidantei deceased, oa Wednesday, Decemb, 1ath,1869, at 12 o'clock noon, will be 'sold at public :sale, at the Philadelphia' Ex change, the following described real estate : No. 1 that certain two and a half story brick , dwelling, NO.IIB Dina street, coatalaing in fronton said Dana street 16 111;in61, es, and including half of, a 2feet 5 inches. wide alley on the east; sad extending in' depth 78 feet 3 3 4 ' inches, then westward 76 feetB inches, then northward' 26 feet 2 Inches, then eastward 59 feet 6 inches, then northward 55 feet 734 inches to Dana street aforesaid. N0.2.—A1l that certain two and a half story brick dwel ling No. 116 Dana street,containingin front on said Dana street 16 feet 67 inches, and including the half of. a 2 font 634 inches wide alley oh the west, and extending in depth 76 feet lel inches on the east line, end 78 feet inches on the west lino, with the privilege of said alloy • No.3—All that certain 2;n-storybrick dwelling 'No. 114 Dana titreet, containing • in front on said Dana street 15 feet 104 inches, including the half of a 23 , 1 feet wide alley ou the east, and in depth on the east lino 75 feet 6i inches and upon the west line 76 feet 103. i Inches, with' thepriv liege of said alley. The above will be gold according to a survey arid plan by the City Surveyer,which may be examined at the Auction Store. , Ili" Clear of till inctunbrance.. WI - Terms cash upon the execution of the deed. iihr 4)100 to be paid, on each when .the property is struck off. . . W. H. KEICHLINE; Adnitnistrator, d. b. n. c. t. a JAMES A. FREEMAN, Auctioneer, .445 de2 9 Stare, 422 Walnut street loaOltrilAN 8' COURT SALE.-ESTATE. of John Paravicini,deceasedi—Valuable Property, tel and Dwellings, 1010 and 1012 Sensom street, Lot 3b by 107;b to Medical street. Under authority of the Or phons' Court for the City and County of Philadelphia, on; Wedoesday,December 15, 1869, at 12 o'clock nein', will be sold at public tale, at the. Philadelphia; Ex change, the folloWing-deseribed real estate, late the property of John Paraotein i, deceased; No. 1. All that certain lot of ground with the buildings thereon erected; situate on the south side of George street (No. 1010) be tween Tenth and Eleventh streets, in the Eighthh ard of the city ; containing in front on George street 18 feet, and in depth 107 feet 0 inches to Medical' etreet. On the above lot are erected a 3-story brick hotel on sow street, in the rear of which is h one-story summer ba -room which connects with the , Sansom street properly, r an a3-story brick house on Medical street (being. No. MEd . um Subject to a yearly ground rent of 1536 per ;whom and a mortgage of W4O. • No. 2--All that certain lot of ground with the improve - owlets thereon erected, situate on the south side of ' San moth erect (No. 1012), between Tenth and Eleventh streets, in tine Eighth Ward of the city ; containing in froht on Bansom street 17 feet,' and in depth 107 teet 6 it:iliest° Medical street. . •She noprortnients consist of a large four-story bark toesstiage fronting on Sansone street, walk two-story • baOkbuildings connecting with a three-story brick dwelt incfronting on Medical striet,(llro.loo WOO tp be yak) at time of sale. y the C onti, ;JOSEPH MEGABIr t Clerk 0. C. 110SINA GElitleACH, Admlnistratrix. FBEEMAN t A act oneer, Sture,422 Walnut street, JAMES A nb2s•de7 9 ORPITANS I ZOIIRT SALE,ESTATE Bpi of Benjamin Beddow, deceased.—James A. Free titan, Auctioneer.—Hotel, and Dwelling,. N. W. corner SiXth and Dauphin streets. Under authority of the Orjahans' Court for the City and County of Philadelphia, on ViAlnesilay, Dec.l6, 1869, at 12 o'clock, noon will be sold at public sale, without - reserve, at the Philadel; phia Exchange, the following described real estate, late ail property of Beniamin Beddow, deceased :—All that certain lot of • ground. with the three-story brick aes midge with back buildings thereon erected; . situate on this northwest corner of Sixth and Dauphin Streets, in the Nineteenth Ward of the City ;containing in front on Dauphin street 12 feet 931 inches, and in depth north— ward of that width along Sixth street 61 feet to a 3 feet wide alley leading eastward into Sixth street; bounded northward by the said. 3 feet wide alley, southward by Dauphin street; westward by. other ground now or late of Adam Steinmetz and Charles A. Doerr, and eastward by Sixth street; being the same premises which Adam Steinmetz and wife and Charles A. Doerr, by Indenture bearing date the Ist day of November, A. D., 1867, re corded in Deed Book J. 7.0., No. 93, page 613, granted and conveyed unto the said Benjamin Beddow in fee simple. Under and Subject to a certain mortgage debt If el,!it,O. With the free use and privilege of the said 3 feet wide alley. The fixtures of the bar-room use included in the sale. We' ‘5200 to be paid a . t time of sale. Mr Sale per emptory. By the Court, JOSEPH MEGARY, Clerk O. C. JOSEPH W. BEDDOW. Adru'or. • JAMES A. FREEMAN. Auctioneer. nn2s de2 • store. 422 Walnut street. Crl P C i a t' ter l ine N F S O;Par ° d U ee kt ei T tbe l d S F T re.em T it E n ' A uctioneer.--LU acres, Main street, Germantown, oppo site the seven mile stone. Under the authority of the 'Orphans' Court for the City and County of Philadelphia, on Wednesday, 'December 15, 1859, at 12' o'clock, noon, will be sold at public sale, at the Philadelphia Exchange, thelollow ing described real estate, late the property of Catherine 1 oiler, deceased ; all that certain lot of grotind With the building thereon erected, situate in the Twenty:second Ward of the city, near the Mt. Airy and 311'4 Pleasant Statiods, on the Germantown and Chestnut Bill Railroad. Beginning by the side of Germantown. Main Street, at a corner of other binds late Benjantiii Gotgas, thence by the same south 40 deg. 45 min. weft 41 5 perches to a stone set for a corner, . thence by land late of Abraham Kerner, south 49 deg.' 15 min. east 5 putties to another stone set for a corner, thence by land late of Frederick Smith, north 41 deg. east 39.9 perchea to a corner, by the side of Main street, thence slot g Main Street north 30 deg. west 5 perches 9 feet and 3 inthes to the place of beginning. Containing 134 acre' andB perches of land, be the same more or less within said limits. liarelear of Inzumbrance. I 5? 03/0 0 to bo paid at the time of sale. By the Court, JOSEPH MEGARY, Cferk 0. C. SAMUEL F. SMITH, Administrator, d. b. tr. c. t. a. ' JAMES A. 'FREEMAN, Auctioneer, n 025 dot 9 , Store, 4'2.2 Walnut street. LEXECUTORS' SALE.-ESTATE OF: Chrlatitinna Lipsey, deceased.Jumes A . Frew:min. Auctioneer.—Under authority contained iu the will of thelate Christianne. Lipsey, deceased, on Wednesday, December 15,1869, at 12 o'clock, noon, will be sold at public sale, at the Philadelphia_Exchange,the following described reel estate, vie.: No. 1. Business Location— Three-story Brick Dwelling, No. 1208 Pine street, with three-story Brick Hones on Remble street. All that certain lot of ground situate on the south side of Pine Mile*. at the distance of 75 feet west*rd of Twelfth street, in the Seventh Ward of the city'; containing In front on Pito street 19 feet, and in depth 90 feet to Item blielreet. On, the abees int are erected a three. atom/ brick dwell ing fronting on Pine street, with basement and attics, and a three-story brick house front tng on Kemble street. Mr Clear of inmanbrance. Nb. 2.—Brick Stable end Lot, Rumble street. All that certain lot of ground with the two-Story brick stable and shedding thereon erected, satiate on the south side of Reliable street, at the distance of 60 foot 6 inches west of Twelfth street, in the Seventh Ward of the city-contain ins tin front on Rumble street 61 feetand iu depth 45 feoi. 07 1 Clear of Membrane°. 1313 — ' $lOO to be paid on each at the time ofsale. JAMES COOK, JOHN TAIT, Executors. • JAMES A. FREEMAN, Auctioneer, n 425 de2 9 Stor 1, 422 Walnut street. „__ ORPHAN' COURT SALE.—ESTATE of John O'Donnell, deceased.—James A. Freeman, Au tioneer. Neat two-story brick dwelling, No. 1214 C I Wm dbine street, Second W ard. Under authority of the Orphans' Court for the City and County of Philadelphia. On NVednenday,'Occ. 15,15;9, at 12 o'clock. noon, will be sold at public sale, at the Philadelphia Exchange, the following described real eetate,late the property of Min O'1?. n Bea; deceased : All that certain two-story brick mensuage end the lot of ground, situate on tho west side of Woodbine street, beginning at the distance of 125 feet 4.% Lichen simthward from Federal street, in the Second Ward of the city; containing. in front on Woodbine street 14 feet, and extending in depth between parallel lines at right angles with Woodbine street, on the north- , erntline 3n lest 7 inches, and on the southern line 40 feet 10 inches more or lees. glEr Clear of incumbrance, EGPtifleo to be paid at the time of toile. By the Court, JOSEPH _MEGA SY. Clerk. 0. C. . : SAMUEL M. 00I1LEI, Truntee. JAMES A. FlLEEMAN,'Auctioneer, mop de2 9 , Store, 422 \Valuta street. ORPII.ANS' COURT t3AfE.—EBTATE of Mary O'Donnell, decensml.—James A. Freeman, A uutioneer.—Busineas Stand. Four-story Brick Store and:Dwelling, No. 1833 Lombard street. Under autho rity of the, Orphans' Court fur the City and County of Philadelpia, mi 'Wednesday, Dec. 15, 18CO, at 12 o'clock, Timm, Will be sold at public! 'sale, at the Philadelphia Exchange, the following described Real Estate, lato the preperty• of „Mary O'Driine(f, deceastl:—All that cer tin lot of ground With ;the four-story brick store laid dwelling them:di erected,'Sit hat' on the north side of Lombard' street, at tbt distantly Of. 103 feet eastward of Nineteenth street, in the Seventh. Ward of the city: containing in front on Lombard street, 17 feet, and In depth eo feet to 3 feet wide alloy, with the privilege thereof. IllEr Clear of incumbrunce. 110 -- $lOO to be paid at the lithe of sale. By the Court, JOSEPH 'MEGARY. Clerk O. C. SAMUEL M. GOULD, Trustee. JAMES A. FREEMAN, Auctioneer . , n 025 de2 9 Stere'422 Mania striiet. , Ca PUBLIC' •ISAIJE—JAMES A. 111 AN,• .Auttioneer.---Gented • , Three-story 'Brick Dwelllnt, 241, South ,Twenty-titirti st.reeto),bove kornce nfrOef. On Weelnoxilliy, Poo. ,15, 1 , 450, at 12 O'clock noon, will bo HUM - 1)3 public'ealo;;lt' tho .E.nc Oir bhp follnwfn i ftlAnnoll)94 es mt e - certain .threont6 - brick wftli the two-eriay• brick' Welt s. l.ittirtitirtt I thereon. erected,' tif unto, itn t hi) 4i wit laii)e lettrintjAllird street. 31 foot fionlb of 0 street, in the Eighth Ward of the city; con, Wiling in front on Twenty-tbirdlltrOOt 15 foot, by co feet floor ton' 3 P.etettbio: 4111,,, , tritb,trbe, privilege !hereof Hnbject fo pround - ten fritraiiltripluq4,l,,es . ston. • 810010 bo tied nt the".tin troftwiln ' . n 026 41(.29 . , Sitf. 411Wainot street. 601`.1,41.r o. rdAsori Bunts._ __Jontv MBE CINDERSIGNIp ni . nTA,Anipw. tic., to their stock of - doting Mountain, Lobisb And LoondtJiloallteluOW; which, with the preparation givkin by us, WO /WUXI**. IPA I; e excelled,by any other Mal, • • , When, Franklin i institute utiati • Arab streollartutraertaiki • , Q T. BEA J.S., lif; D., & tiON: D liaveron9vtd to I.lld Trard street, Den Sta REAL 'gSTAirt S AL firti • 1{ 1)1 1.4 - iia40.17,E , TSALESTA,Tri'` , • on Varotioe McLean" decki , ..lanaes A. .1 1 'reornart, Auctioneer, Undegputtai i rity of the Oroa9A'Bonnir' tbetWand Cotiiity bf Pli ladelphia;mt eimbft e. • - comber lb, 11:69; ii6l9 n'clech, iltnin, will lie , old at , is• side,,atclhe,,EhiladelPhia 'Bulging% • tho,f4riri scribed Real Estate, late thst 'Droner/4e 9 1 IL . Co'. Lealij deteased:' libit - , hreestory brick is . ~' ing VS eginnor of 'NO. '230 'Cathlitines street i.'' Alb' y , certain thretl i gto,ibribllctessii e and lot of i roruisk i sitatile , mit sim IWO 474 cer in, 8 ,feet.,wf 0 slier . leading:Me n 4 mUitt rine tteet, laid - .op agthie , distance•ofddreetemittgardof , T ird street,be nrilltigat • 1 00.01414° 44 Olihreir sultthward or .0140 no attests n" 1 c gl ect r P194 0171 24 the P i.d f e lt '" Tra 4V 1 ' cen a rg it c o t r . ning 1 , ado 14 fleet erg . 41111111, and in dob2.4Elt aches. Together' with t . let-, loge , Of V ,glr l l l oo and 4 the 11. feet. wide alley wither • south, weer of incumbrance....,, No. 2 —Neat Twp-shiry Brick Dwelling, N0.', 74 o Third it * treet.. 'All that cerMiti tW eat id I half a 'br ok l e t nieutm n ie, and. tha toted ottad 4, sithate otr the corgi 6 ' of Thi atrei ti ott, Shp f. , too ey feet nprwit7tfrospi, Clutha ne'lle et; in t frd . aid bf er 1,, cria,,. tairling,lti , TY thou } hi AW ' 16' feet, en lirdliath eastWard 69 feat Ohm:hex t„ itlithoprtvilegeo a 230 feet, ' wide IWO Aeaill,4lo l Al l o , tharirte street. Eir clear a, inegntittree% ' • . . ~. . Nti..3.Twto-itbrY Fiatne Boats No; 203 cialiltilliiiiiiiia All; that certahi lot of ground,cwith the two. dtory TOWe messuagtitherepairecl, situate on - the. nortf..6l4p tot , Gas - kill 0 reel ,at e distant; of shout a% feet ironer. west aided!' Stideit '' btreet, lit' the Fifth' Ward el - h.' city; contain ing lit frontsirt 0 alkilt street 16 feetotiad II • depth 23 feet. SW Subject to , aground rent of;8124 per • ,, optima, ." • - ,• a Er $lOO to be paid oh been at the tint* 31 sales„ . By the Court. ' JOSEPH ICOARY, Clerk 0.0.'' ~ • 8.0111E14 I.s 11,0011, Administrator. '. t • j A idxs j. pli, itKAN, Auction er.,,, t. . . • fled:6 de2 9 ' • Ore, 422 'Walnut t.._ , ' in li.Ein, S'T.,il.T.g---J " Alti.E.,'B A. xe ~. ILilinah, Auctioneer. On Wednesday, Becerett t letig •at 12 o'clocli, anon, will be sold At ,übllc ea e, ' . Phitadelphia.Er change, the, followinr deeeribeit• Mary este e, via. : No I.—Largo prick build mg,•NAIOO7I - : Jefferson. arld.Stillman directs, Twont oth that certain , , ‘ lot of'' ground; W J .. , ~ ' ha'. large . building,. • eulinbla , for ' A 01011111.0 eWiti , thereron ~ erected; eituate on • the 'NJ 4 . 4' Corner of Jefferson and 'Stillman streets, in. the, Twero tioth Ward of the city ;62 feet 9 inches front on Jefferson v stroet,and 84 feet 6 inches along Stillman street,includiniC a3-feet, a llem running eastward from Stillman street,' or, which it. lois the privilege.., . The above' property is, well suited for a rnanufactorik ' haring a huge building; a stable, with stalls for 4 horse's, ~ erected upon tt, and being A corner lot, surrounded! ear a s übxtan t tat /curt.. ~; •f • ' No. 2:—Three'llWtillings, Nn. 1418 Shipper, strdet. • AR' that •lot of groundobith the throb dwelliage thereon , On- ' f the southeido of Bhippon street,-weer Of-. Word ittreets No. 2418, hi feetfront and 76 feet deep to a d feet 'alloy, • leading to Eloyd street. Stir Subject tb e 32 ground rent; , - clear of all taxes.' Half of the purchase money May re.' main on each property if desired... ' . : 11Xr 18)06 to be paid at the time of desired., . ' ' 3 , /iLlifeti A. FREVIR AN,Anctio'neer, no2Bde2 9 ' , , . Store, 422 Walnut street. puctOlitiHANlT CO •T :A E4-g - • of Elizabeth Strewn , deceased- James A. Eredinati, ioneer.—Under authority of the. Orpheus', Court - for' M. the City A County. of Philadeilbia, on ' , Weiltieetlnifs December, 15, 1i309,at,12 naon, , will too 8141 public sale, at the Philadelphia Exationge, the'folfe - described: real, eutate,', tato the ' propertr.ofr - .Kazan Ni, deceased No, 1, Threelstor3r trick 'her Re,: • 44Past Thoinpson street, Eighicenth.Word. I 'OM corn lot Of grOund with the three-story brick coinage thereon erected,' situate. On the Southeasterly ;aide of Thompson street, at the distance of 361 feet nottheastOf II snever street, in the Eighteenth Ward of thecity, eon-, Seining In front on Thompdon street 15 feet'4 ;inches, and in depth 30 feet.' Ifir Clear of incumbrande. • No. 2 ....Three-story brick house, 446. East Thompson' street. All that certain let of ground with the, three+, story brick mesiinage thereon erected, sift:into on , the' southeasterly side of Thoinpson street , at the distance of ' 376 feet 4 inchrO northeastwartily at Hanover , street,in the Eighteenth Ward of the city, containing in front on Thompson street:ls feet 4 inches, and In depth 30 feet.' itfre'Clear 61 • lucumbrance. ei 100 to be paid on each at time of sale. ,By the Court, JOSEPH DIEGARE, Ctsrk O. C. EDWARD PRICK ETT, Execoter.: JAMES A. FREEMAN Auctioneer. n 025 4029 Store, 422'Walnut street,,: tn . EXECUTORS' ESTA or' MEL • James S. Shindier, deceased ,- ,, Jamee A. ,Freeman.' Auctioneer:—]SodomAuctioneer:—]SodomFour , storY Brick Resident% No , 111 vine street, 'On WednesdnY,Detenther VS, iikio.at-13 o'clock, noon, will be eold at public kale, at the .Phila delphia Exchange, the following , described' read eatib3, viz.: All that certain four story: brick tanning° and the lot of ground, innate on the north. pide of. Vino, stoat (No. 111), between Now Market and Front streets,ite the Eleventh Ward of the city • containing in. Front on Vine street, 17 feet 4 inches, including the moiety of a 3 feet wide alley, extending 40 feet from Vine street, and in depth 84 feet. SW Subject to a ground rent of sin lawful silver The above is a genteel four.story brick dwelling with two-Story brick back buildings, has saloon ; parlor, dining room and kitchen, on first floor, marble mantles, gas, hot, and told water, private stairway, Baltimore heater its din i ng-room, furnaee cellar,fiag parorrnrot, 05r Sale absbittte. Rte' 8200 to be paid at the timo of sale. ' By order of Executors. JAMES A. FREEMAN, Auctioneers rm 25029 Store.4=Walnut street. ORPHANS' t) (JET SAL E.--EPTATE !EL of Patrick McNally, deceased.—James A. Free man,tAnctimicer. Three-story Brick Hotel and Dwel lings, southwest corner Twenty-third and Spring Gar den streets. tinder authority of the Orphans Court for the City and County of Philadelphia, ,on - Wednesday, December 18, 1809, at 12 o'clock, noon, will be sold at public sale, at the Philadelphia Fachange. the follow lowing described real estate, late the property of Patrick .51rNalts, deceased: All that lot or piece of ground. with the large 3-story brick hotel and dwelling thereon erected, situate on the southwest corner of 'Spring Gar den and Twenty-third streets, in the Fifteenth Ward of the'city ; containing iu front on Twenty-third street ,18 feet, and in depth along Spring Garden street NO feet to a 20 feet wide street, called McNally street. • tKr' Clear of all incumbrance. . It On the above lot are erected a large and substantially built three-story pres'e't brick hold and dwelling at ,the corner of Twenty-third street, and a genteel three-story brick dwelling; .211 . 0. 2304 Sprrng Oarden street. trar 81110 to be paid at the time of sale. • . By the Court, JOSEPH 11i EC A.B.X, Clerk 0: C. • 31.311 , 1 S MURRA IC, Guardian. JAMES A. FBERMAN, Auctioneer. • n025-del 9 , Rove 422 Walnut street. _ ESALE BY ORDLIt OF THE COUBT of Common Pleas.—Jrunes A. Freethan,Auctioneer. —Three-story brick Nouse, No. 119 Church street, above Front and Dlarket streets. Under 'authority ofthe Court of Common Pleas for the city and county of Phila delphia, on Wednesday, December 15th, 1869, ..at 12 o'clock, upon, will be sold at public sale, mt the Phila delphia Pachange, 'the following described real estate, late the property of Jacob Beck • deceased, three-story brick messnage and lot or piece of ,ground, situate on the north side of Jones alley, now celled Church street (between Market 'and • Arch streets.and Front and Second streets), in the Sixth Ward of the City ; contain ing in front 11 feet 2 'lnches and. in depth 30 feet. To gether with the use and privilege of a 2 feet 6 Inches wide tlEr Clear of all incumbrance. MirBloo to he paid at dine of sale. By the Court, E;BED'K. G. VOLBERT, Clerk O. C JACOB W. BECK, LEVI BECK, surviving Executors CHARLES BECK. • JAMEB A. FBLEMAII, Auctioneer, nolD 2lde 2 • Ne. 422 Walnut street erg PEREMPTORY SALE.—JAMES A. Mil Freeman, Auctioneer.—GENTEEL DWELLING, THIRD, ABOVE NORRIS.STBEET. NINNTNENTH WARD.—On Wednesday, Dec. lath, 1869, 412 o'clock, neon, will besold at public sale,' at the Philadelphia Exchange, the following described real estate, 'dn.:— All that genteel three-story brick dwelling-house and the lot of ground on which it is, erected, situate on 'the east side of: Third street,ll3o feet north of Norris street, in the Nineteenth Ward td the eity,l6 feet front and feet deep . to a 4 feet alloy, of which it has the privilege. Reese ss well built; has 9 rooms; is underdratacd; gas; hpt and cold baths, and goad yard. • • war Subject to a mortgage of el,300; may be examined any time. Mr Sale peremptory. 6100 to be paid at the sale. .IAMEIB A. FREEMAN, Auctioneer. Store 4t2 Walnut street. PEREMPTORY SAL E.—JAMES A. FiEldl. Freeman. Auctioneer. —Building Lot. Lehigh avenue.—On Wednesday, December la, 1869,a It o'clock, noon, will be sold at public sale, at the Philadelphia Exchange, the following-described real estate vir..• All tLat certain lot of ground situate on the soutliweeeside of Lehigh avenue tO feet southeast of Tulip street - , in the Nineteenth Ward of the city of Philadelphia -- ; con taining in front on said Lehigh avenue 18 feat, and ex tending in length or depth of that width 1.50 feet to Sack son street. Lehigh avenue is paved, water and gas pipe laid and neighborhood improving. per Olear of inctimbrance. 'Salo absolute. Stir ,$lOO to be paid at time of pale. JAMES A. FREEMAN, Auctioneer. Store. 422 Walnut Street. n 02,5 del 9 noUde 9 el ADMINISTRATOR'S SALE.- EEL &tato of Frederick Juppoulatz, deceased.—James A. Freeman,Auctioneer. Old Irredeemable Silver Ground Dent $7225 per annum—Under authority con tained. In the will of the late Fre , lericla JapPea. ars. de ceased, on Wednesday, December 15th. ]8691, at 12 o'clock, noon, will be sold at public sale, without reserve, at the Philadelphia Exchange, the following described real estate, vie.: A certain yearly ground rout of 872 25, law ful silver Money of the United States, payable ltalL yearly in the first day of the months of January and July, is suing out of a lot of ground, with tie' improvements thereon erected, situate on the west side of Delaware Fifth street, 53 feet. inches northward from the north west corner of Fifth and Noble streets ( Northern Liber ties of the city of Philadelphia ; containing in front or breadth on Fifth street 17 feel, and in depth westward 60 , feet. Itir,Bloe to be paal•at the time of sale. J. AUSTIN SPENCER, A dmr. (1.1).n. 0. t. u. JAMES A. FREEMAN, Auctieueor, , • n02.5de2 9 St 0re,422 ,{Nish dr4 street.; MPUBLIC SALE.---,IAM ES . A.. FI:01E4 num, Auctioneer —Modern liwelling, Thirty , sevent lt street, south of Wainut.- , -On Wednesday. De cumber7Gth, 1869, at 12 o'clock, noon,will he sold at public sale, at the Philadelphia Exchage., the following described real candy. viz.: , All that certain now 011 4 307 story brick mid . cough cast dwelling , with the two-start' buck bni , ditign and the lot of ground. situate on the east tilde of Thirty -seventhetreet at the distance of 125 feet northward of Locust street, in the Twenty-seventh Ward of the city; containing in front 25 feet and in depth, 111 q, feet. ; fi3.1 , 00 th remain on mortgage. Immediate pos session. Keys at Combs Stack's Lumber' Yard.;. Thirtiein I}treet, below. Market Street. $•100 to at the time of Hale. JAMES A. PREEMAN'Auctloneer. Store , 422 Walnut streeC n 02.5 (1( 2 9 COAL AND WOOD. CUAL t TUE CHEAPEST,.A*D, 0-00 in thn'elty.—Reep bonotantly on RonditiocieloV4ed iIoNEY BROOK and IiABLEIGIL LNKIGII2; ,, EAGLE VEIN LOOnSTIdOUNTAIN and ROWAISIF -B J UN COAL. J. MACDONALD.Ja. Yar4s,lll9Boarb Broad et. and 1140 Waaldngton'arenno. , REMOVAL., y ~}' •••
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