71V‘VEILINfi1 1111•111111 The Poll Mall 'Gazette contains • the folloW- Ing . very interesting arfiefe : The announcement that the line of rail be tween St. Petersburg and Odessa has just been coMpleted, recalls the comparatively recent time When a' journey between:, those two, ciGira, was one of those tritili : to';wlfich a , 'OlO resigned himself under the nreisine of stern necessity. Within, the memory of middle-aged --men the Imperial courier who set out once a week for the South with the Government despatebes;' took an affecting leaVe of his friends before starting; for unless it was dur ing the fine season—and , : , :‘,Rtissia :the_ fine season for traveling was 'the winter-at re quired about six weeks to reach Odessa and as many More to return, added to which the ' risks of the voyage were such that no insur 'ance company against accidents • could have paid its expenses. When Catherine 11. went on her famous journey through .the empire with Potemkin she wria stilt& diY:thatoolo, con dition of, the roads,' and' set a French engineer to work, upon a colossal scheme for cutting new highways throughout the whole of Russia. Such as they were the roads at that time were due to the enterprising spirit of Peter the Great, before whose reign no such thing as a compe tent engineer had ever been seen in the coun try. • With that feverish ambition which char, acterized him,. the eccentric •nionarch, had conceived the project of intersecting 'the whele of his dominions with fine roads like the one he had admired between Paris and, 'ersailles; and although with such incapable subjects as the Ilit:ssiatis then were, it was impossible that such a grandiose plan could ever be executed, • yet; the.' Czar ; succeeded:' so far that lie covered the country with roads of some, sort and—what was a still greater feat—.-conipelled : the provincial gOvern ors to keep them in repair. At his,, death, however, the Russians, who had been kept during twenty' years in a state of preternatural activity, took breathingtime'once more. , The roads were left to themselves, and by the time the Empress Catharine went on her voyage they had in a great many localities ,disappeared altogether. The French engineer commissioned by the Empress to remedy this state of things drew up a plan as he was bidden ; and a,yery fine plan it was. But Russia was a country iu which good intentions were easier to form than to realize. A decree was, indeed, , issued, en joining provincial governors and land-holding nobles to have the roads every Where repaired, and a - special . tax was levied to aid them in their exertions. But the proceeds of the tax went into the pockets of the officials deputed to levy it, and nothing was definitely accomplished In the way of road-making until the reign of Paul; when the "Great Highway," as it was euphemistically termed, stood completed. This great highway consisted in an unbroken double row of posts, placed eighty yards apart, and extending from Moscow to Odessa. Between the two rows was ,supposed to be a road; but this was an illusion entertained by geography books for the instruction of schoolboys, and by offi cial eulogists for the edification of the Emperor. In point of fact there was no road. The posts, however, were useful, for, when' they were not cut down by the peasants for firewood, they served to show travelers the shortest way from one town to another, and prevented them from losing themselves on the snow-covered steppes. During the • whole of the reign of Paul' and the greater part of that of Alexander I. traveling continued to be a pil grimage full of discomfort and danger. In the summer months it took eighteen days to go from St. Petersburg ,to Moscow, a distance of 577 miles ; and by the end of the journey one's carriage—e'en when it' had been brand new at staitingwas hopelessly smashed and ruined. Those whO could hot afford a new carriage every time they traveled, rode in a conveyance called the lelegit, which is still used in the interior of the country where there are no railways. It is a sort of box parched on two high wheels, 'but without springs. Three horses are 'harnessed abreast to it; the coachman sits in front, on a board, which acts as seat, and the passenger places himself on a similar board behind. No one but a Russian can stand a jour ney in one of these vehicles. The horses go at full gallop, the telega bounds over ruts and stones like a football. The passenger is not jerked or shaken—these words have no sense in this case—but posi tively thrown aloft hibi), the air. By the time he reaches his deftination a foreigner in a telega gasps for breath ; he is - sick and haggard, and feels as completely disjointed as if he had . been under the rack. Alexander I. set about improving the means of traveling, and during his reign a really magnificent road was laid down between the old and new capital of Russia. After his death the work of 'reform was continued by his brother, the Emperor Nicholas, who, whatever may have been his faults, knew how to make his orders obeyed, and always pushed to a very speedy termina tion any schemes he had set his heart Upon. In 1832 a regular system of commu nication was inaugurated between St; Petersburg and Moscow on the French diligence plan. Eleven public diligences and one mail-coach started every day from each of the two cities. Post-houses with relays were established at intervals of fifteen miles apart, and the journey that had formerly occupied eighteen days was now performed in four, the fare being for the whole distance no more than twenty roubles (.1:3 45.). This was not all, however. for a great . deal yet remained to be (-done before traveling was bearable. There were no inns or hotels in Russia, - except at St. Petersburo• b and Moscow. , Nidjni-Novgorod, Mew, and Odessa had not so much as a decent tavern where a stranger might rest. The only places where travelers could alight if they had no friends to offer them hospitality were the public houses, dens infinitely more unsavory than the beer-shops of Seven Dials. There were no beds there, no dressing rooms, nothing, in short, but a common tap room, where travelers who had 'not brought their provisions were obliged to content them selves with a drink of abominably strong whisky (vodki), sour Cabbage soup, and black bread of a taste impossible to conceive. The Emperor Nicholas, who knew that it was useless to ex pect that private enterprise should endow the country with hotels, undertook to do it him self. All the post-houses were converted into inns by the addition of large barrack-looking buildings of red brick, uniform in size and as-, pect. These edifices took the generic name of "The Czar's hospitality," and accommodation; in so far as hot tea, a warm fire, and a comfortable bedroom went, was afforded to all travelers gratis, From this time may be said virtually to date the practice of traveling in Russia; for previously to the institution of the diligences and post houses the only people who journeyed were noblemen, postmen,. soldiers, and exiles. Mer chants and commercial travelers at most went on a voyage once in the course of a year; but • trade was so limited in its operroions that few merchants looked for customers beyond the limits of their native cities. It was with a sort of stupefaction that the Russians of the middle classes witnessed the inauguration of the splen did diligence terminus in the Great Morskaia street at St: Petersburg. Everything that lux ury and comfort could devise had been lavished upon the furnishing of the waiting rooms and bedrooms. Passengers who arrived late at night were into apartments which to many of them r . itht• have teemed like the chambers of a palace, and what appeared not the least sur prising feature of the new institution was that ' the hungry could regale themselves upon . an 'excellent hot supper at a very small cost. If i! we dwell upon these facts, it is that the same V coziness' which presided over the arrangements of the:first post-houses was introduced later by. the Russians into the appointing of their rail way carriages and railway stations. The first Russian railway, that from St., Petersburg to Czarakoe-Selo, was a marvel of comfort and . .......Vieggitftol4o4.**43l.(46 ... 0. , .^..1 ' ' mu.4witr..M 4 olo, l / 4 ? wr,..01-,.... , 7.1.. - A . 2 , ....1„,• . ........74....=== ‘ ,6 ,-,. .t. *,.,.. , : r,0. i • •.,..,..!0 rit14F , 2.1.4 _. • ....4,31g.0 ,-.,,,' ~,'"'",,,,,....., . ~,,.. . , . . . THE DAILY EVENING:I3UL JE TI .._,..._., PH ...'...... ILADEWITt k.:...SATURDAr DECEMBER 4 1869 . ''TRIPILE lig ~ , elegtureyaud • the l ine 'fromTetemburg, Mo> at.preseut ono of tkmo.4'Corafo able in Finn:me. ' ' Up to the prosent,fle laying dotyn , of rail roads bas done much to facilitate' communica tions between the prhielpal.eities, and in ten years' time the country will doubtless be en tirely imnsforrned. —But traveling is still a eimaftittleas and expensive thineitiooBo'l , ol.N 'Of the empire Where • ,ritilWaya do-Ant waist. There are few more inns now than there were fifty years ago; the roads are bad, the relays uncertain, and in cases of accident 'one must shift for oneself, for farriers and wheelwrights by no means abound. The best time for trav eling is in the depth of winter,when it has been , freezinkbard for 'bevel . * *eeks. The snow then affords thi - best possible of roads, and in a three-horse troika one may go at a speed very much swifter than that Of the fastest of mail coaches. The troika is a light sledge built to hold two besides the driver. The Onto horses are harnessed abreast, and gallop. like the wind. The passengers llep . ather thab ,bit,prapped lapin furs,,and'if the'driver lie skiffid4tliat iS, if he does not spill his conveyance every now and then in the snow—the exhilarating speed makes the journey a very pleasant one. The enjoyment is, however, considerably marred at times by the tedious formalities that have to be gone through at each relay. If a person be traveling in his own vehicle, sledge, or car riage, he mnst be provided with a padoroslina or ofliciaParitherization;.'whieli ,be is to exhibit at each, post-house. This paper states the distance and object of the passenger's journey, and the riumbdr of liaises to whiehlie is entitled; the charge being two kopecki.(id.) ' a yeist for each horse. If by any ill-lack he should lose his padoroshna, his journey, comes to a dead stop until he can procure a fresh onb from the town whence he started. =Ella There is no country for which railways can do more than for Russia. Hitherto the diffi culties of traveling have been so numerous that the empire can scarcely be said to have had any real unity. St. Petersburg was as much of a foreign land to Odessa as Paris was, and in the interior of the country there were 'cer tainly a good many peasants who were igno rant that such a place as St. Petersburg ex isted. Russia was, in fact, nothing more than: an inert, disjointed agglomeration of provinces; The extension of railways will galvanize this vast body and give it life ; with what results events, will probably soon show. The foll — Wing keen little essay is taken by Every Saiiiiday cram Murray's new monthly, the Academy This is neither the time nor the place to attempt any complete, account of .the remark able man whose pen, busy to the end, and to the end charming and instructing us, has within the last few weeks dropped from :his hand forever. A few words 'are all that the occasion allows, and it is hard not, to make them words of mere regret and eulogy. , Most of what is•at this mement written about . him is in this strain, and very naturally : the world has some arrears to make up, to him, and now, if ever, it feels this. Late, and' as it were by accident, he came to his due estimation in France; here in England it is only within the last ten years that he can be said to have been publicly known at all. We who write these lines knew him long and • owed' him much ; something of that debt we will en deavor to pay, not, as we our selves might be most inclined, by fol lowing the' impulse . of the hour and simply praising him, but, as he himself would ..have preferred by recalling what, in sum he chiefly was, and what is the essential scope of his ef .fort and working. Shortly before Sainte-Beuve's death appeared a new edition of his Portraits Contemporains, one of his earlier works, of which the contents date from 1b:32 and 1833, before his method and manner of criticism were finally formed. But the new edition is enriched with notes and retouches, added as the volumes were going through the press, and which bring our communications with him down to these very latest months of his life. Among them is a com ment on a letter of • Madame George Sand, in .which she had spoken of the admiration excited by. of his articles. "I leave this as it standS,".says he, "because the sense and the connection of the passage require it; but, per swine ne salt mieux que moi a quoi s'en tenir stir le merite absolu de ces articles qui sont tout au plus, et BE me lorsqu'ils retaBiBB67d le dcs chases sensies dans un uenre , re. Ce qu'rlsont eu d'alerte et proposes leiir moment sugit a peine a expliquer, ces ex aggerations de l'amitie. Reserrons pour les wurres de paisie et d'art, pour les compositions elevees ; la plus gran& gloire (la critique cat dens l'approbation " et dans l'estime des buns esprits." This comment, which extends to his whole work as a critic, has all the good-breeding and delicacy by which Sainte-Beuve's writing was diStinguished, and it expresses, too, what was Lola great extent, no doubt, his sincere convic tion. Like so many who have tried their hand at' worres de poesie et d'art, his preference, his dream, his ideal, was there ; the rest was com paratively journeyman work, to be done well and estimably rather than ill and discreditably, and with precious rewards of its own besides imexereising the faculties and in keeping! off ennui : but still work of an inferior order. Net when one looks at the names on the title-pace of the Portraits Contemporuins : Cbateardiriand, Belanger, Laniennais, Lamar' tine. Victor Ingo, George Sand,—nanies rep resenting, in our judgment, very different degrees of eminence, but none of which We 114ve the least inclination to disparage,—is it certain that the works of poetry and art to which these names are: attached eclipse the %%ink done by Sainte-Beuve ? Could Sainte lleuve have had what was no doubt his will, and in the line of the Consolations and Vo/upte haNe produced works with the power and vogue ofi tatnartine's works, or Chateaubriand's, or Iltigo's, would he have been more interesting to us to-day,—would he have stood perma nently higher:' We venture to doubt it,. Woilis of poetry and art like Moliere'S and Mil ton's eclipse no doubt all productions of the order of the Cthiseries an "'vital, and the highest language of admiration may very pro very be reserved for such works alone. In ferior works in the sane kind have their mo ment of vogue when their admirers apply to them this language ; there is a moment when a drama of lingo's finds a public to speak of it • .te if it were Moliere's, and a poem of Lamar ' tine's finds a public to speak of it as if it weie Milton's. At no moment will a public be found to speak of work like Sainte-Beuve's Causeries in such fashion ; and if this alone were re gal ded, one might allow one's self to leave to his work the humbler- rank which he assigns to it. But the esteem inspired by his work re mains and grows, while the vogue of all works of poetry and art but the best, and high-pitched .admiration which goes with Negue, diminish and disappear; and this re dresses the balance. Five-arid-twenty years ago it would have seemed absurd in France to place Sainte-Beuve, as a French author, on a level with Lamartine. Lamartine bad, at that tintei still his vogue, and though assuredly no Moliere or Milton,had for the time of his vogue the halo which sur rounds properly none but great poets like these. 'Fo this Sainte-13euve cannot:pretend, but what does Lamartine retain of it now? It would still be absurd to place Sainte-Beuve on a level with Moliere or Milton; is it any longer ab surd to place him on a level with Lamartine, or even above him? In other words, eked lent work in a lower kind counts in the king inn above work which is short of excellence in, a higher; first-rate criticism has a permanent value greater than that of any bUt first-rate works of poetry and art. And Sainte-Beuve's criticism.may be called • first-rate. llis cariosity was unbounded; and Le was born a nutuntlie, carrying into letters, SAJI NTE•BEIJ V E. BY MATTHEW ARNOLD •-•• is 054:OfteiCk the Mere doinitin of rhetoric and.fatile. amusement, the ideas and methods,of scientific natural ;, ',AO this he did while keep milli perfection-the ease of -movement, ,and charm of h torich , ,I?elizing i . , to letters properly so called, and which give them their, unique power of- tlnWetsal perietra-. lion' nd.^.`cninciPtigailditim. of_ he is;.atiC as his history and-the productions of his spirit shim hirri, was the object Of his study, and in terest;' lielstrOe to find the ;ioal, .datilwith which, in dealing with man and his affairs, we 'hate. to do,' Beyond- this study,he i dlil not ; go; —4o find the real Aat6.: "Thal he. was deter mined they should' the milt" data` and 'not fictitious and conventional ' data,-:.if he . could 7.ghts. is what,. in.; rout. .jadgment,„ distinguishes 'him, and mak6s 'hie work of singular use and • inStructiVeness. Most- of that, ' Already possess the data required, and have only to proceed . to,deal with human affairs in the light of theni. This as fe *ell) knoViii;ailiepi roughly English persuasion.. It is what makes ' , us 'such, keen politicians ; It 'Kan honor to an Englislnan, we say, to take, pan hi political strife... Solomon says, on the Other. hand, "It , is anhonortO' a man to cease from strife, but every. fool. will be meddling ;", and- Sainte- Bettye held with Solomon., , Manyof•uS.again, have prifiCiples and Connections 'which are all in all 'to irs, and - we 'arrangeodatntO'snit them;' —n hook a character `a: period of history we see from a point of view given princi ples and,connections, and to the requirements of this point., of view we • make the book, the character, the period adjust them selves. Sainte-Benve nev,ekdid so, and criti cised with unfailing acuteness those who did “Toequeville areidait aced son mottle tout prit ; le reality n'y repond paB, et les choses ne se 2n•elent pas a y entree." M. de Tocqueville commands Mitch more siimpathy in England than his critic, and the very mention of him will awaken impressions unfavorable to Sainte-Beuve ; for the French Liberals honor Tocqueville and at heart dis like Sainte-Beuve ; and people in England al ways take their cue from the French Liberals. For that very reason have we boldly selected for quotation this criticism on him because the course criticised in Tocqueville is precisely the course with which an Englishman would sym pathize, and which he would be apt to take himself; while Sainte-Beuve, in criticising him shows just the tendency which ishis characteris tic and by. which he is of use to us. Tocqueville, as 'is well known; finds in the ancient regime all the germs of, the centralization which the French Revolution developed and established. This centralization is his bugbear, as it is the bugbear of English Liberalism; and directly he finds it, the system where it appears is ,judged. Disliking, therefore, the French Revo lution for its centralization, and then' finding centralization hi the ancient regime also, he at once sees. in this discovery "mile motifs nou veaux de hair ranelen regime." How entirely does every Englishman abound hero as the French say, in Tocqueville's sense; how faith fully have all Englishmen repeated and re echoed Tocqueville's book on the . ancient regime ever since it was published; how in capable are they of supple or of imagining the need of supplying, any corrective to it ! But hear Sainte-Beuve : "Dans son effioi de la ceittralisation,l'auteur en vient a meconnaitre de bands bienfaits d'equiti.; dus a Richelieu et A. Louis XIV. IlOmme du peuple on bourgeois, sous Louis NHL, tie valait-il pas mieux avoir un intendant, a rhomme du roi, (ea tin gouver neur de province, a quelque due trEpernon ? Ne inaudissons pas ceux a qui - nous devous les commencements de l'egalite decant la loi, la premiere ehauclie de l'ordre moderne qui nous a attrancliis, nous et nos pores, et le tiers-etat tout entier, de rate quantite - de petits tyraus qui couvraient le sol, grinds seigneurs ou hob ereaux." The point of view of Sainte-Betive,is as little that of aglowing Revolutionist as it is' that of a chagrined Liberal ; it is that of a Man who seeks the , truth about the ancient regime and its institutions, anti who instinctively seeks to correct anything strained and arranged in the representation of them. " Voyonm les ehoses de Thistoire tales" Welles se sort yamies." At the risk of offending the prejudices of English readers we have thus gone for an ex ample of Sainte-Teuve's essential method to a sphere where bis application of it makes a keen impression, and created for him, in his lifetime, warm enemies and detractors. In that sphere it is not easily permitted to a man to be a naturalist, blit a naturalist Sainte- Bettye could not help being always. Acd dentally, at the end of his life, he (Ave delight to the Liberal opinion of his own country and ours by his famous speech in the Senate ou behalf of . free thought: He did but follow his instinct, however, of opposing, in what ever medium he was, the current of that me diuin when it seemed excessive and tyrannous. The extraordinary Social power of French Catholicism makes itself specially felt in an assembly like the Senate. An elderly Frenchman of the upper class is apt to be, not 'infrequently, a man of pleasure, reformed or . exhausted, and the deference of such a per sonage to repression and Cardinals is gener ally excessive.. This was enough to rouse Sainte-Heti - v . 6's opposition; but he would have had the same tendency to oppose the heady current of a medium wheie there Liberalism reigned, where it was Professor Fawcett, and not the Archbishop of Bordeaux, who took the bit.in his teeth: That Sainte-Beuve stopped short at curiosity, at the desire to know things , as they really are, and did not press on with faith and ardor to the various and immense aPplications of this knowledge which suggest themselves, and of which the accomplishment is reserved for the futme, was due in part to his character, but more to his date, his period, his circumstances. 14 it be enough for a man to have served well one need of his age ; and among and rhetoricianB to have been a natu ralist, at a Lime when for any good and lasting work in government and literature our old con ventional draught of the nature 'of things Wanted in a thousand directions reverifying and correcting. DANCING ACADEMIES. ASHER'S DANCING ACADEMY, NO. 808 FILBERT STREET. All the Now and Fashionable Dances Taught. Ladies and Gentlemen—Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and Friday Evenings. 'Misses and Masters—Tuesday and Saturday After -1100 Gentlemen Only—Saturday Evening. Private lessons.singly or in classes, at any hour to snit convenience. oc2B-2m§ HEATERS AND STOVES. rti ANDREWS, HARRISON & co.. 1327 MAIIIK/Er STREET. IMPROVED 'STEAM HEATING APPARATDes' FURNAOSB AND COOKING RANGES. °el th to 3m THOMAS 8. DIXON & sorts, Late Andrews & Dixon, N 0.1324 DIINSTNIIT Street, Philsda.. Opposite United States Mint. annfacturers of • LOWDOWN. - PADLOR, OHAMDDR, OFFICEL And other GRATES, For Anthracite, Bituminous and Wood acre: AL SO. WARM-Ant FURNAOEB, B For Warming Public and Private uildingS. REGISTERS, VENTILATORS, Al 4 a) - - CHIMNEYOAPS, COOKING-RANGES, NATN - DoILEBB. WILOLK.U.LN onct i4g.TALL. ' •' ; ; ,'. - 4 , if , ,••,, 1 . -'' '. ''4. .i.' „° , BANKING HOUSE , f I;' , ' ,'. 1! :. • . %. ' OP . - IC 00 4S; A3E . - , ~, , gg ' , no n 22.1114. po. Tninai el. PHIX.,ff.DA g, . ;• , , .. , , '•• -,, f '4'.• ' 5 4':' , . v;;,, 1-, V A bv.. - Ax...iik IN; ALL GOVeRNMENTSECURITIEB 4 O ie r e vgill receive applications kr Policies of •I. 'lnsinense 14, the new-liatiOnal i ts , P 44 , e hoe Company of the 'United - States. Pull information given at our office. - BAN IM . 1 4AND01111 0,,.~•? ~, q,„is , ~, Dealers In XL. Ilcinonds and. IliernbeTh c't ;took -id fit!lq Diroltal • Jr,e9tv lem. ant-, -.2cange, ..ocivek counts of Banks and Bankers on littoral' terms. Moue Bills of Exchange on'.., C.'l. Hombre) & Son, ' B. Metzler, S. Sohn &,Co., Frankford. James.W. Tucker & Co., Parls. And other principal eines, and Lettere of Credit available throughout Europe S. W. corner Third and Chestnut Streets. UNITED STATES BONDS Bought, Sold and Exchanged on most liberal terms. GOLD Bought and Sold at Market Bates. COUPONS CASHED. PACIFIC RAILROAD BONDS Bought and Sold. STOCKS <-• Bought and Sold on Commission Only. COLLECTIONS, Blade on all Accessible Pointe. - I - 'I A , KO• 40 South Third St., PHILADELPHIA. sidif A RELIABLE HOME INVESTMENT THE FIRST MORTGAGE BONDS OF THE Wilmington and Reading Railroad, MAMBO INTICBIEBT AT SEVEN PER CENT. IN CURRENCY, Payable April and Oetober, free of State and ignited States Taxes. This roadern Through a thickly Ventilated- and rich agricultural and manufacturing district. For the present we are offering a limited amount of the above bonds at 85 Cents and Interest. The connection of this road with the Pennsylvan and Reading Railroads insures it a large and remunerative trade. We recommend the bonds as the cheapest Ant class investment in the market. WM. PAINTER dir , CO., Bankers and Dealers in Governinents. No. 36.8• THER,I3 STREET, PHILADELPHIA. • jetitg MACHINERY. IRON,,Szi.;. -- MERRICK et SON b, SOUTHWARK FOUNDRY, 00 WASHINGTON Avenues Philadelphia, MA NUFACTURE STEAM ENGINES—High and Low Pressure Horizon Vertical, Beam, Oscillating, Blast and Cornish Pumping, BOlLF.lib—Cylinder, Flue, Tubular, STEAM HAMMERS — Naemyth and Davy styles, and of all sizes. CASTINGS—Loam, Dry and Green Sand, Brass, &o. ROOFS—Iron Frames, for covering with Slate or Iron. TAN E S—Of Cast or Wrought Iron , for refineries, water. oil, &c. GAS MACHINERY—Socha@ Retorts, Bunch Castings. Holders. and Frames, Purifiers, Coke and Charcoal Barrows, Valves, Governors, &c. SUGAR MACHINERY—Such as Vacuum Pans and - Pumps, llefecaters. Bone Black Filters, Burners, %tellers and Elevators, Bag Filters, Sugar mud Bone Blaek Cars, &c. - Sole manufacturers of the following specialties: In Philadelphia and vicinity ,of William Wright's Patent Variable Cut-off Steam Engine. In the United States, of Weston's Patent Self-center• trig and Self-balancing Centrifugal Sugar-draining Ma. chine. Glans k Barton's improvement on Aspinwall & Woolsey's centrifugal. Bartol's Patent Wronght-Iron Retort Lid. Btralian's Drill Grinding Rest. Contractors for the design, erection and fitting up an& fineries for working Sugar or Molasses. COPPER AND YELLOW METAL Sheathing, Brazier's Copper Nails, Bolts and Ingot Copper, constantly on hand and for sale by MUM WINSOB CO.. No. ti 32 South Wharves. OASTILE SOAP—GENUINE AND VERY lJ euporlor-200 boxes just landed from bark Idea, and for sale by ROBERT SHOEMAKER & 60., Importing Druggists, N. E. corner Fourth and Race streets. DRUGGISTS WILL FIND A LARGE stock of Allen's Medicinal Extracts and Oil Almonds, Rad. libel. Opt., Citric Acid, Coxe's Sparkling Gelatin, genuine Wedgwood Mortars. &c., just landed from bark IBlioffnung, from London. ROBERT SHOEMAKER & 00., Wholesale Druggists, N. E. corner Fourth and Race streets. r 0 o 0 DRUGGISTS' SUNDRIES. GRADIT sten, Mortar, Plll Tiles, Combs, Brushers 'Mirrors, Twoezers, Puff Boxog,Hora Scoups t Surgical Inotxtr manta, Trusses, Hard and Soft Rubber Gcoda, Vfal Caeca, Glass and Metal Syringes, /to, all at "Fire' Hands" prices. SNOWDEN & BROTHEL ard-tf 29 South Eighth street. COAL AND WOOD. CIOAL ! THE CHEAPEST AND BEST v.ln the city.—Keep constantly on hnnd the celebrated HONEY BB OK and HA KLEMM LEHIGH ; also - EAGLE VEIN, LOCUST MOUNTAIN and BOSTON HUN COAL. J. MA.CDONALD. JR. Yards, 619 South Broad et. and 1140 Washington avenue. ocl a. MASON BINER. lOHN V. 81113AVII. riIIELE UNDERSIGNED INVITE ATTEN tfor, to their stook of priug Mountain, Lehigh and Leonid MonntainTioal, which, with the preparation given by us, we think can not he excelled by any other Coal. Office, Franklin institute Building, No:111 B. Seventh street. DINES A SHICAFF. talo-tf Arch street wharf, Schuylkill. HENRYG. THUNDER, 230 S. FOURTH 4-1 street. Plano, Organ nod flinging, In class or prt.' vats leneoue. uoB-tu th e•Sin* JAMESPEA.ROE, M. 7 13;, - ORGANIST St. Mark's (1430 Spruce eirect), can be seen from 9 tin 10 A. M. and from 7 till 8. Teaches the Organ, Piano tund Harmony. ocit-e to 2.Stg, SIG. P. RONDINELLA, TEAOHER OF. Singing. Private kimono pud claimed. Beeidenge 608 S. Thirtoonth etroot. 0tt.25-ta DitUGS. MEM tirzciAL NOTICES.: . . - ri* , . ..'/', EM.I L IC4 Ai. •: .EL .H.. , : E : BEN e ..4,... ir• ITiret'Anniveraturr.: hfseting,HCOncert Ha? ' Chest :, ipt nut ithiat, • *bora . Twelfth , ;ISATURDAY,, , ,•AW NOM, 'D . 4.1569,, - hlonitJoir, Allison still preside. i , .x,Ay.er 1 He ..lartin4 Mien ,_..11).Dt . Addresses by ROY. 4, A. - W i ti 1 • lot , D,.D_ r . 'Aar. liorriok Johnson rD. D.,and - Tlios , AL Co nani: sal. ' All frie . lfds:of,Tonipstartoo are ordially ' VIZ - PP , A.rrIiIOATION,', VirlltT,i 'i5E' . :31,4,13 1 . lk . U ire Xranklin Insuratiop Conip.intto reissue) Polio 213 .4.s,•in nanio of WlLLit„tatay..tuo. Aop, on elm/mile 18il' . Wallatip litroot..z-Orisin ralslitt ... ,,. d.'26l. a477fllftf D EL 0 4 A ' , Ir' XV 0 41 41 7 . 67; • ‘;6o.niro -,, r .' ....-,.,.. i ~,- , - •„..., . ~• ...'.. __ l _ .'. L• ~...•..:;,r ..., -,'••, :... • ...,... litnigpannii ; iii69:`,..' .ritrtill3..•• , -ksanoralinOotlng of U1°,016((1019100 ,•.o. tho , P ill doh% ExcliangO.Posapany, will ..ii,D, : bad 'o , mo,Npitx. Deo. 6, 1860, at n oon, at tho,lgiclianitolrtio ,- . i. 1 1 04 24.1-4 bird floOlf, for . thit:llturPoil 4, •ct el eat itkil'• 3l/ Ae • rnataig•erli to . servo•duritig the entiullig kear,"tinit nit • the ' transaction nf, oiliar.lan sin u ov, . ii., . 5it . i . R... ,. . •”111;2.476ii :,":: . ::, . .' • - t l P 6 riliarY and, Trlnitler, . Flt ' 45 - FFicE ' .. 01 , ` -, 4 ! Tg,to ~.tcELLittro D. . , IitSfIItANCE ' COMP NY Qh'.. :guir,,,u)EL 4,',' lit), hahWALN UT ,fiTitJOICT, " ~ . . :•. ~ ...; ,• , ,^ . , .:, 'PIIII.4DELPIttSt PIP* 2g869. ' ' The Annual:3l'o44lw of. tho' ritockholdors ot" •Olto7 Bailee Insurance i r fabnipany • tit ~rrilladelphia," and • th , Animal EkTtgatintilihrtoon (13) Liireotiirs,to servo lot tharnsninit your, will 'be held at, .this Olhee an 1519 A: DAY Deceintier Otlii INB, 0.1'1 2 0 CirACM.' ..' . ' ' 10 %,, ,- .0) to 0 . . 204 ,' _ Whf. C 1111,1313 ; Secretary: ' 7 . . PHILADF NOV 2 1 1809. , ikeY I ,An electleit for It anagera Of On Plynionth ; ioail Company *ill be held at the - office of the Ootripany. northeast corner of Ninth and Green etroetn, in the city of 'Philadelphia. on MONDAY, the 13th day Of Decent , .bor, M 9, between the hours of 10 A. M. and 2 M. A. B. DOUOITERTY, !'n622-184 . . tiecretars. gab .t! 'C.v., OF THE • MOUNT OAR . DDN . RAALROAD COMPANY. ' • • PU A tortoni's., Novetnber 13;1561I. The anntial Meeting of the Mock holders of this Corn. pony and an election for u President and eight Managers. IN ill be held at No. 810 Witlnnt street. on MONDAY, the Bth day'of December next, at 12 o'clock, DI. • • • WILLIAM 11.011INSON, Jr., DM to deal Secretary. OEIENTAL AND BIBLE LANDS. Do not fall to hear the lion. ISRAEL S. DI HIM on the above subject, at the Second Reformed Church, Seventh street, above Brown, on the following evenings: MONDAY EVENING, December 6th. TUESDAY EVENING t December rth. MONDAY EVEN rNo, December 131.1). TUESDAY EVENING, December lith, At half-past 7 o'clock. Tickets for the course (four lectures), 6l 00. Single Lecture, 10 cents: Tickets for sale by George C. 'Mans. Druggist, Sixth and Poplar streets, and at the door on the evening of tho Lecture. n 029 .t• de 4.23 UPHILADELPHIA EYE AND EAR INFIRMARY, S. W. corner Eleventh and But tonwood streete, and Ridge avonum—Opert daily at 12 o'clock. : ' ATTENDING SURGEONS. P. D. KEYSER, M. D., IlllArch street. JAS. COLLINS, M. D. BW. Marshall and Green. VISITING TRUSTEES. T. ELLWOOD ZELL, 17 Booth Sixth street. ALAN WOOD, 619 Arch - street. S. GRANT. Jr., 1.39 South Water. ' nods Imo§ OFFJ OE OF THE RO LISEVILLE OIL COMPANY, No. 10 4 34 South FOurth street. ILA DEL Pll IA . November 241, 1809. The annual meeting of the stockholders of the Ramse y ilie Oil Company will he held at the Office of the Com pang, on WEDNESDAY. the Bth day of December, A. D, NO, at 12 o'clock, M., for the election of Directors and the transaction of such other business as may be brought before the meeting 1107 a lb w tt • D. V ANDERVEER Secretary. FOR SALTS. • BARGAIN! NEW AND HANDSOME DWELLING, 2107 SPRUCE STREET, 4-Story (French roof.) Flubbed In Fine Style. Built for Owner. be sold reasonable, and not ninth nuntev needed. APPLY TO JOHN WANAMAKER, Sixth and Market Streets. IR, ARCH STREET RESIDENCE 11 FOR SALE, No. 1922 ARCH STREET. Elegant Brown-Stone Residence, three stories and Mansard roof ; very commodious, furnished with atm modern convenience, and built in a very superior and substantial manner. Lot 26 feet front by LSO feet deep to Cuthbert street, on which is erected a handsome brie* Stable and Coach House. Si.d. GUMMEY St SONS, 733 WALNUT Street. so2o tfro IrOR ti A D.E—TH E HANDSOME three-story brick dwelling with attics and three story back buildings, situate No. North Nineteenth street; has every modern convenience and improvement, and in perfect order. Lot 26 feet front by 103 feet deep. Immediate possession given. J. M. GUM= Y t SOltd 733 Walnut Street. F9ll, SALE—DWELLINGS 1113 2524 FU R Broad, 11239 North Niateenth, 27 South Second, 1509 North street, 2520 Christian, 909 North Fifteenth street Also many others for sale and rent. JAMES W. HAVENS. no3tf4 .S. W. cor. Broad and Chestnut ' .-- -- tem FOR - SALE—DWELLING cony Mg North 'Thirteenth street ; every etilatme, and to good order. .. Superior dwelling. 1422 North Twelfth street, on easy terms. 85.600. Three-story brick. 235 North Twelfth street, having • good two-story dwelling in the rear. 8 8 . 00 0• Three-story brick, 516 Powell street, in good order. 62,750. Store and dwelling, N 0.340 South Sixth street. $5,00),. Frame house, 909 Third street, South Camden, near Spruce, clear. 8600. !AO Queen street, two-story brick, good yard. Building Lots on Pasayunk road, and a good Lot at lasing Sun. • ROBERT 011AFFEN & SON. 537 Pine street. ipdmcFOß SALE THE RANDSO - MR Bfown Stone and Press Brick Dwelling, No. 2118 e street, with all and every improvement. Built in lla the beat manner. Immediate possession. One. half can remain, if desired: Apply-to COPPUOK a JORDAN, 433 Walnut street. ctFOR SALE. —THE VALUABLE Property S.W. corner of Fifth' and Adelptil stisstS, below %% alma. 62 feet front by 19t toot deep fronting on tbre!! streets. J. M. GUALMEY dc SONS, 733 Walnut street. r ARCH STREET--4'ORSKEET.--- - TH' . Elegaut Brown-Stone Residence, 26 feet trent, built and finished throughout in a superior manner, with lot 156 feet deep to Cuthlmrt street with bilge sta ble and ruiieloliouse on the rear. J. At, G1i.51111.:Y & EONS, 733 Walnut street. • Fon SALE-I'IIE HANDSOME, threo-titory brick reahlcuces, with Dieu, - aril roof and thrca-titory itotililc , back buildingii built throughout in Noii. 2t3 and 2.4 South Thlrtccuit. Ki below locu,t. J. hi. OU.3I.IiLEY & SONS. 733 Walnut erck. _ . P 0 SAL E7—MODERN THREE. " Story Brick Dweiling, 810 S. Ninth ht. Every con• yen temp. Inquire on t prethiSes. my6-thot,tu,tll fit FOR SALE—A HANDSOME RES'. wa BENCE, 2118 Sprnmt street. A Storonud Dweihug, northwest corner Eighth and Jefferson. A fine Residence,l72l Vine street. A handsome Residence, 400 South Ninth etreet. A handsome Residence. Weitt Philadelphia; A Business Location, Strawberry Street. A Dwelling, No. 1110 North Front street. Apply tc COPPITCIK Wolnut atreet. TO RENT. CREESE & McCOLLUM, KRA T. ESTATE AGENTS. 011ice,Jackson greet, opposite Mansion street, Gape Island, N. J. Real Estate bought and sold. Persons desirous or ranting cottages during the season.will apply or address as above: Respectfully refer to Chas, A. Rubicam ,Henry Bumm Francis Mcllvain,,,,Augustus Merino, John Davis to W. w. Juvenal. feB-t , rpo LET,—A SPACIOUS SUITE OF COUNTING ROOMS, with one or more torte, on Chestnut streot. Apply to COCHRAN, RUSSELL & CO., 111 Chestnut street. • 0c22411 TO BENT—THE MU Hotel, on Second etreet, below Spruce. Addreem, LANDLORD, Ode office. (le2 6t* — "t.O., E N T--TILE DESIRABLE Balfour-storied new ~toreti, Nos. 1204 and 120 G Market street. Apply to S. B. VA:NSYOKEL, No, IW7 Arch etreet. IaFOR RENT-A LARGE AND SPLEN DID Mansion House, northeast corner Thirty ninth and Locust etroeta, formerly belonging' to 'Samuel T. Anomie. Esq., and adjoining r A. Drexel, Esq. Apply to Wharton E. Barris, 3907, Spruce street. ( declAt w e-7t* . 4.11 , LET:- .1111TATION . BROWN sEri Stone Dwelling, eide yard.' 1214 ' COATES eireet, 12 rooms. In perfect order, EDWARD S. SCHIV ELY, 128,NOrth Eleventh 'lima.. no3o to th H 3t* . TO LET—HOUSE 706 SOUTH SEVEN. TENNTI - 1 street:. Portable :heater, rangey bath, hot water, gitte-hll modern .conyeniences.. Night rooms.. Apply on trio Premises, DOW HOUSE FOE: • Erfl FUIiNISHED HOU RENT La situate on Pine street, west of Twentieth. Dome diate possession given. J. AL, U.LIMMEN - di SONS, 7 . 33 I'Valnut street. ' ' ' • 10 FOR RENT-THE STORE AND 'dwelling situate .No.'3loWalriut street. Will be altered to cult the tenant. J. id...(4113.1111EY SBUNS, 733 Walnut street. NORTH NINETEENTH. STREET.— LE To Rent—The three-story residence, with three. story double bock buildings and side yard Lae al the modern conveniences.' Situate tio. 102 North Nineteenth ' titreit., second dour above Arch... :4. ,111...GUIVIMEY SONG, 73 3 Walnut steeet.. • ' ' • FOR RENT-THE DESIRABLE 4. Mita Story brick store No. 612 Market street.' J. 1 %. GUI 11111 1 411( 'k SONS. 733 Walnut street. REMOV.A.L ST. BEALE, M. D.,'& SON, DENTISTSI IlktVe removed to 1110 Garold street, • oc):,l3Ul' N=IMI ORPHANS' OOURT ' SALP„--pii: tate of . Jobte,"NfilitiniOn, defeaotte,—. Mita/Milt & it, Anctioneortd-LotriNarithalitst.rest, netweo..n y e . SI& yard Tioga stroeta: Pursuant, to an order of tins ""I 0 ans' Court for the City and County of Philadelphia , w I leritEttbnetiebbrAlt ylidarePeOwlbeiltbi- ; ~, 1 Wre ; pcitut /AA* sue ri h ale , dsiltptl,ll Algo the Fo llo w ng destrlb propert Oak, o John wlUtin- ami, deceasedalz.: MI those 2contignous lota of ground - situate on the west hide Rf Marshall titlVOt, between VO- , 110.1)&011.04 TiOlP4•lltwaltal 4100,10e54 jnallese.NottLorard r I froinithe 'Mut hareOr oofttertill'lrmattitgo-liba 21araltall' ,, streets, in the unincorporated towneWp of the Northern Liberties; containing in front on Mae/Mall street 43 ; feet Tobes(eashlottming u 2l fect, it, Inches tu, fry► .and e toilful* in dmithypewarrilLatifeen Moo pare,!! with (mango street 02 met 25-4 inched . " fiubjeot to " the ' • restriction that no bone-boiling netablishtnent, soap o r rile manufactory. stlp t it e tuch.,or Ivory- btu', u m ". &CtOr,ioolll'dtOtto t Or n -rpot 00; menitfacitiry,white' ead or chemical labors or ,or establishment' for !welt- goo of pigs, or a gunpowder manufactory, shall be *netted, or any of the beforenamed business - shall be oar- ' yied on. ' * W '' W 0 - UT '' " Ny the Court, Jol3l . A ;(51ark.. ~... , EL%I 'IN -W LICIINIMIAN, Admidiettator; '' I , M. TIIO Ati lc ito 8, Auctioneers nil 27 ; (let ' No, 139 and VII la nth Four It street ' _ ..• Ttlitti, ItIitEMkTOII.IC , SiaTE. Flllit--Botatti Of Miran FOX, deceased. Tltornaa b & Ina , Auctioneers. " Large and'.-taluaulo loot, mhard atomic.' betWeeit Franklin and Eighth steosts,- (hYTuesdo, tio; cembesi 7th, 1ti69, 1 (4.12 o'clock, noon, will be sold :at , pubito ,aalgooithatit reScrl'A, at, the Philadelphia change, all' that largo and 'valuable lot of geound, Alta ateon the north aide of Girard avenue, between Flank: lin land Eighth streets ;' containing In fruit on,Olgard, ave,IIILIO feet 374: OXtrdikg nOtVporard, 78 feet 314 inches ; thence east 138 feet 74; inches to rank- Jin 'street ; thence month along Franklin street 334 inches'. thence Sollthwest to fit rard ,arenuo. Stibleet 'to a. rot doemable ground rent of $lOO a year, lawful money. Sea .plan at the Auction lt4.mtua. It) order of 11 FINRY Triorms, 4110). !SAUCY vox, . „ • Exoeittors. • Dr. THOMAS &SONS, Auctioneers, nola 27 del 139 and 141 Houth Fourth It. — ilt itEAI. ESTATir.—fli(lM. AS - irfiati Er niSiln.--tritndsome btodern Three-Starr Brick Beal-' 'mace, N 0,2019 West De lancet' Place. On , Tuesday, De. noon , wilt her sold , at pub. cemberlth, PM at 12 o'clock, lie sale, its the Philadelphia Exchange, all that hand some 1110flern three•story brick me:sewage (French :tooth and lot of ground, situate on the north side of West Do Latieex'. Place,No, 2019 ;.containing in front on - West De Lancey Place 22 feet 8 inches. and extending in depth SO feet to it street. 'The' house contains la rooms, .and finished with all the modern convenientes ; has gar, two bathn, three water-closets, two otationary wash sums and tubs, low-down grates, furnace, cooking range, underground drainage, dc. Terms-8%400 may remain on mortgage. Immediate possession. M. TllOblAB k SONS. Auctiotwern, tio77de4 ' l'M and lil South Fourth street. .--_—___ & . ~ 1: .. REALESTATEL—TETOMAS 30NS' Sale.—Modern Two.and.a -half story Brick Dwell n)111 g,_No. All North Fourth street: above Poplar street. On Tuesday, !December Ith,lia, at 12 o'clock, noon. will be sold at public sale. at the Philadelphia Exchango, all that modern two -R-halfetory brick messuage„ trait throe start' back buildings and Int of ground _, o situ ate on the east side of Fourth street, north of Pplar street , No. trill; containing in front on Fourth street U feet 2 inches, and extending in depth 100 feet a inches. It has 12 rooms, gas, buth,,bot and cohi water, cooking ran ge..kc: • sir clear Of all int unabrance. . , • Tennoi—ellio.l may remain ou mortgage. Immediate pogsveglon. Kora at t I lurtion Boomm. M. THOMAS dt SONS. Auctioneers. =land 141 South Fourth street 41ffl . EAL ESTATE.—TH 031413 & SONS' MB; Kale...—liuninP 4 llBtand—Threr-story brick Stare and dwelling, No.l 1 Vine street. On Tuesday. Decent • ber 7, 1869, at 12 o'clock, noon. will be sold a public sale, at the Philadelphia Exchange, all that modern threeidory brick tnesnuage, with three-story back building and lot of ground, situate an the north aide of Vine atrtet, east of Thirteenth Street, No. IVO ; con taining in frcnt on Vine. street 17 feet C inches, and ex tending in depth 90 feet to an 0 feet wide alley, with the privilege thereof. It In oecupleflaa a Moro And dwelling. and ten good business stand has gas. bath, hot and colt) water. furnace, cooking' range. tc. Immediate possweelon. May be • examined any dap previous to oak. WY - Clear of all Incumbrance. Tenne—erlonn mss remain on mortgage. M. THOMAS & SONS, Anctioneern. L 39 and 141 South Fourth street. ~];t;l '1 Olt IS' PER,ESIPTOII:I7 o. —T11017144 bi Rona, ' Auctione , :rs,—:Welbseettred Re deemable ground nent. 6112:Y1-100 a year. On luewlai. lb ember 7111,180, at 120 ;lock, T 144.011 will be soul at public sale. without reAerre, at the hilsdaiphlr Ex change, all that well.scl'Aired ri.deemsble ground rent of 6 , 112 20.100 a year, clear of taxes. payable half Yearly. - ereured by all that three-story brick mesSigage and tot of ground, situate on the south side of 'Girard avenue. Fr, feet east of Second street. N 0.162 ; the lot containing In front 16 feet, and extruding in depth on the rest: line 54 fret 61.4: inches. and on the west line 67 feet 5 inches, including on the rear end the whole of an alley 2 feet 6 inchre wide in the clear. sale absolute. • By order of Executurs III.TIIfI3MA!t s 801 i B. Auctionr.ru, 3.,7.1 and 141 South Fourth atreot n 077 dc 4 LX Eel) TO Ii 8' PEREAIPTOILY ma!'ale—Estate of Evan Fox,. 41orenee.41„—Thonu t i Sons. Auctioneers.—Large and valuable lot. Girard avenue. helmet% Franklin and Eighth streets. 'On Tuesday. December 7, Pso9, at l 2 o'cimit, noon. will be Fold at public eale, without Tarter. at th e Philadel phia Exchange, all that largo an d valuable lot of ground. eat uate on the north side of Girard avenue. be• tweet Franklin and Eighth streets ; containing iu front 'on Girard avenue ti, foul ri Inches ; thence extending northward 76 feet 3' inches; thence cast 138 feet Tv, !Novi to Franklin street ;thence south along Franklin street 3h, i 111.7 ; thence southwest ,to Girard avenue. Sublect to a redeemable ground rent of Wenn year,law • ful money. lice plan at the Auction Ronnie, BY order of HENRI' HAINES, • GEO. WIDENER, Executors. MARCY FOX. M.• THOMAS I SONS, A uctioneers no2o tie 4 139 and 141 8. Fourth 'street. JREAL ESTATE.—THOMAB B,r; SONS' Sale.—Modern Three-story Ilriek Dwelling. No. 1.511 Wallace street, east of Sixteenth id/cal.—On Tues day. Deettuber 7tb, 1369, at 12 o'clock, noon „will bit sold at public stile, at the Philadelphia Exchange, all that three-story (rough-cacti suessuage and lot of ground, situate'on the swath aide of Wailare street, west of Fifteenth street. No. 1318; containing' in front on Wallace street 17 feet a% inches, and extenning In depth b 0 feet. Terms—Half Cash. Possession January next. M. THOMAS dr. SONS, Auctioneers, • 139 and 141 South Fourth street. not! des MMESI - - , ORPHANS' COURT tIALE:--ESTATE Miami Aaron McCarty, deceased.—Thonutir & Eons. Auctioneers.—Pursuant to an order of the Orphans' Court for the City and County of Philadelphia, will be sold et public sale, on Tuesday, December 14, 1869, at 111 o'clock noon. at the Philadelphia Exchange. the follow ing described property. late of Aaron Dre Carty, de ceased,: No. I.—Three-story brick Dwelling. Beach street, Eighteenth Ward. All that throe-ston brick nessmige and lot of ground. situate on the east side of Beach street. Eighteenth Ward ; containing in front 19 feet 9 inches. more or less, and in depth ,94 feel, or there abouts. Bound.northward by ground late of Andrew Dltitalerson, astwerd by as alley called Cemac alley, 10 feet wide, leading southwarilly into Madsen street, smithy:ant by ground now or late of William Swindell. and westward bY Reach street. Being the sante premises which Wm. Johnson and wife by indenture bearing date Opt 77th day of May, A. P. 18M. recorded at Philadel plila in deed book N. L. L., N0.'47. page 179, A.c., granted and eonvey'ell unto the said Aaron McCarty in.fee. Subject to the payment of a proportionate yearbY ground rent of f?,2.4 -400 ( lawful money). • No. 2.—Tu 0 Two-story Brick Dwelllogs, Hutchinson street,.Twentleth Ward. All that lot of ground. with the two two-story brick tnessuages thereon ereuted, situate on the west side of Hutchinson street, 192 fL•et south .r Muster street, Twentieth Ward; containing in front on Mitchinson' etreet 18 feet, MO iu depth at right angles with Hutchinson street .50 feet to Prospect siren. Bounded northward by ground of Ceorg. U. K. Tessler, southward by groom' now or late of NVilliani Lewis. eastward by said Mitehluson street, and weetwaril by- Prospext Strd.t aforesaid.. Being the value premise. , which lyilliam Else mid wit , . by inden• turn bearing date the 4th day of Sephili b er. A. I).. laid. ri corded at Philadelphia, in deed book A. W. M.. No.. 77. page iO2, 43c., granted and conveyed unto the field Aaron McCarty. in fee. . . One-third of, the purchase to remain charged upon the , ' promises daring the tirctlinc of the widow for her dower. By the Court, JOSEPII ?BEWLEY, Clerk O. C. DIARY ANN 31cCA ETV. Trustee. M. THOMAS & ONS, AuctiOneers, _ . . • noM del 11 189 and 111 South Fourth street. 1141 REM, ESTATE.—THOMAS SONS' Sale.:—ldodern' Three-story Brick Vireiling.No. l!'20 North To enty-third street. On Tuesd,ty, pee. 11th. at 12 o'clock, noon, will be sold at public sale.at the Philadelphia Exchange, all that modern three-story brick me/silage. with two-stoty back building and tot .01 ground, situate on the west tide of Twenty-third street, north of Brown street, No. 820; containing in front on t wenty-third street 16 feet and extending - in depth 64 feet to a i feet wide alley, with the privilege thereof. It has parlor, dining-room and kitchen unthe. drat Boor; gas, bath, lint awl cold water. Re. • Subject to a yearly ground rent of '126. Immediate possession. Keys next door south. , M. THOMAS ,S; SONS. Auctioneers, , n 027 de4 11 Nos. 139 and 141 S. Fourth street, EXECUTORS' PEREMPTORY SALE: Wl—Thomas & Scant, Auctioneers. Lot, Thompson i street, west of Twenty•fifth street. On Tue,iday, De amber 11,1569, at 12 o'clock, noon, wilt be sold at pubite sale, without rt..are, nt the Philadelphia Exchange, all that of'groaad. situate on the.nortit side of ,Thomp- Mall street. 72 feet %vest of Twenty-fifth street, containing t in front on Thompson street 19 feet, and extending in "l death 71 f , -et 3'.,i inches. • UC,rSale absolute. M. THOMAS & SONS, Auctioneers, tor 7 .1 , 4 11 199 and HI South Fourth street • GROCERIES. LIQUORS, dm. NEW MESS SHAD AND SPICED t• Salmon, Tongues and Sounds, In prime order ' Just received and for sale at COUSTY'S East End Grocery • No, 118 South Second street. below Chestnut street. ' PlJitE SPICES I _GIEOUND AND. WHOfa '4 —Pore English Mustard by the pound ...Choice White Wind and Crab Apple Vinegar for pickling irr store, and for mule at 00Th:ill( '8 East End Grocery. tio. 118„S.uth Second street. below Obeetnut etreet. NEW GREEN GINGER,---400 POUNDS of choice Green Ginger in store and for sales; COUSTYIi East End Grocery, No. 118 South Spoond r street. below Chestnut. otreet, • NITRITE BRALNDY FOR PRESER,VING. 1.... OttsTil i S c hift e tt i d le ager;, e r.iis a s n o d utP r i:C:a / i r ,l Street. below Chentnut otreet. + A __ Moos 'nlitipia. 8.--T OMAT 0; PEA, STurtle and Julllen Soaps of Eaton Club Mantnik, two, ono of tho • finest artionai for plo.-nies and sailing parties. Second at COUSTY'S . East End rociiry,, If o 118 smithntrnot, below Ohoatnut street. / GAS FIXTURES. (11..A13 & THACKARA, No. 718 Chestnut street, manatee. turas of Gas Fixtures, Lamps t &0., &a., would call the attention of the public to their large and elegant assort , moat of GU Chandeliers Pendants, Brackets, &o. They also introduce gas pipes into dwellings and public build— lugs, and attend to extending. alteriva and tepairinu MI& lot op. 11 wnrk warranipei, , • , NA.VAL STO.RES.-; , 41/6 15.13ESTRUSIX;132 Casks Spirits Turpntine. Now landing from steanior "Pioneer" from Wilmington, N. C., and for sale 17 GQ(J/ntAzi, itv*§giz ci, l ll/Glaeotuut titreot. I 1 18 anOt waft - verr,dot47l4is, .;.: HA ^: was lying under an azalea bush, in pretty nitich the same attitude in which he had fallen some hours befgre. HOW long he had been lying there he •b:40,0t Itelf i and didn't 'tare ; hew. Isniv he ,•,; ebotild lie'diere, Vas a matter equally Itillefl nite and unconsidered. A tranquil philosophy, born of his ;physical vonditkm, anfinsed and saturated his moral being. ' The spectacle of a drunken man—and of this drunken' man in 'partieular—was not. I W s ; to say, of sufficient novelty ,In Red I', - Mi attract attention. Earlief , in.l4Oflity, ~ gim e local Satirist had , erected a • ternporary tombstone at Sandy's head, • bearing the , in scription,' "Effects 'of McCorkle's whisky— kills at 40 rods," with a hand pointing to, McCtirldetti Saloon'.' , But this, r I s,, imagine, watielike most local, 'Mani, personal; and was a reflection uppn ,• the unfairness of the process, rather than a commentary upon / She impropriety of the,reeult. With this fa cetious exception Sandy had been undisturbed. A Wandering mule, released from his pack,had cropped the scant: herbage s botilde hitn, arid sniped curiously at the prostrate man ; a vaga bond dog, with that deep sytispa.thy which the species have for .' drunken men, had licked his dusty boots,,and, curled himself up at his' feet; and lay there, blinking one eye in the sunlight, with . a simulation of dissipation that, was iellenictUe and dog-like in its implied flattery' of the unconscious man beside him. Meanwhile, the shadows, of the pine trees bad elowly swung around until they, crossed the road, and their trunks barred the open meadow with gigantic parallels of black and yellow. Little putts of red dust, lifted by the. plunging hoofs of pass ing teams,dispersed in a grimy , shower upon the recumbent man: The sun sank lower and lower ; and still Sandy stirred not. And then the repose of this philosopher was disturbed-- as other philosophers have been—by the in trasion of an unphilosophical sex!. "Miss Mary" as she was known to the lit• fie flock that she had just dismissed from the log schoof-house beyond the pines—was taking her afternoon walk. Observing an unusually fine cluster of blossoms on the azalea bush op posite. she crossed the road to pluck it--pick ing her way through the red dust, note without certain fierce little shivers of disgust,and some feline circumlocution. And then she came suddenly upon Sandy! Of COMM, she uttered the little staccato cry of her sex. But when she had paid that tribute to her physical weakness she became overbold, and halted for a moment--ritleast six feet from this prostate monster—with her white skirts gathered in her hand, ready for flight. But neither sound nor motion came from the bush. With one little foot she then overturned the satirical head-board, and muttered "Beasts!" , —an epithet which probably, at that moment, conveniently classified in her mind the entire male population of Red Quid'. For Miss Mary, being possessed of certain rigid notions of her own, had not, perh, properly appre el 4$ fin. ated the demonstrative gal ntry which the Californian has been so j by celebrated by his brother Californians, .had, as a new comer, perhaps, fairly can the reputation of being " stuck up."'s-,--r- •'" As she stood there, she noticed, also, that the Merit sunbeams were healing Sandy's head to what she judged to be an un healthy temperature, and that his bat was lying uselessly at his side. To pick it up and place it over his face was a work requiring some courage. particularly as his eyes were open. Yet she did it, and made good her retreat. But. she was somewhat concerned, on looking back, to see that the hat was removed, and that Sandy was sitting up and saying something. The truth was, that its the calm depths of Sandy's mind, he was satisfied that the rays of the sun were beneficial and healthful; that, fruit childhood he had objected to iyinfrdown in a hat ; that no people but condemne7l fools, past redemption, ever wore, hats; and that his right, to dispense with them when lie pleased V. as inalienable. This was the statement of his inner consciousness. Unfortunately, its outward exprsion was vague, being limited to a repetition of the following formula : uSu'shine all ri' ! Wasser =tar, eh? ‘Vass up, stt'shine ?" Miss Mary stopped, and, taking fresh courage from her vantage of• distance, asked him if time was anything that be•wanted "Wass up? WaSSet wear?" continued San dy, in a very high kty. ..t.iet up, you horrid man!" said Miss Mary. now thoroughly incensed ; "get up, and go lionie. Sandy staggered to his feet. He was six feet High , and Miss Mary trembled.' Ile started for ward a few paces, and then stopped. "Wass I ce hum for 1" he suddenly asked, with great gravity. "Go and take a bath,',' replied Miss Mary, • ying his grimy person with great disfavor. To her infinite dismay, Sandy suddenly pulled ff his coat. and vest, threw them on the ground, • eked off his boots, and plunging wildly for ward, darted headlong over the hill, ip the di ! •ction of the river. - "Goodness heavens! the man will be' '•4 rowned !" said Miss Mary; and then, with ' eminine inconsistency, she ran back to the . pool-house, and locked herself in. That night, while seated at supper, with her hostess--the blacksmith's wife—it came to Miss Mary to ask, demurely, if her husband. • ver got drunk. ' "Almer"—responded Mrs. ctidger, reflectively—"bet's see,: Abner hasn't , i •• n Mta since last riection.7 - Miss Mary ;••ould have liked to ask if he preferred lying In - .o sun on these occasions, and if a cold bath Would have hurt him; but this would have in volved an explanatiou, which shedid not then ' =re to give. So the contented herself with : pening her grey eyes widely at the red-cheeked Mts. Stidgera fine specimen of southwestern .ffiereseence—and then dismissed the subject iltogether. The next day she wrote to her earest friend, in Boston: "I think I find the moxicated portion of this community the least bjectionable. I refer, my dear,to the men, of .ourse. Ido not know anything that could ake the women tolerable." In less than a week Miss Mary hnd for often this episode—except that her afternoon elks took, thereafter, almost unconsciously, ?pother direction. She noticed, however, that every morning a fresh cluster of azalea blos- t o' ins appeared among the IThWers on her desk. fhis was not strange, as her little flock were ware of her fondness for dowers;And invari- Illy kept her' desk . bright With 'anemones, yriugas and lupines ; but, on questioning 1. • trolley; one and all, professed.ignorance of •le azaleas. A few days later, Master Johnny tidger—whote desk was nearest to the win-' . ow—was suddenly taken with spathis ofap arently gratuitous 'laughter, that threatened iin discipline of the school. ' All that bliss lary could get from him was, that une one bad •, been ' "looking in the gilder." Irate autl , indignant, she :sat ed from her hive to do battle with the intrti er. As she turned the corner of 'the scheol . ouse, she came plump upon the quondam unkard,noW perfectly sober, and inexpressi y sheepish and guilty-looking. ! These facts Miss Mary was. not. slew to take feniinine advantage of, in her present humor. ut it was somewhat confusing. to -observe, so, that the beast—despite some - faint signs pa.t dissipation—was amiable-looking,—ln t, a kind of blonde Samson, whose ' corn bored, silken beard apparently had never. yet 1 , iown the touch of barber's razor or Delilah's hears. So that the cutting speech which qttiv :ed on her ready tongue died upon her lips, • d she contented herself with receiving his. aretuerhig apology with supercillops' eyelids' d the . gathered skirts • of uncantamination. hen she re-entered the school-rooni, her eyes 'll upon the azaleas with a new sense of re- 4 ' IFrom tho Orer)axid Mfmtbb. tor Docember•J TIIE IDYL or suentotmcn. BY4, l F i li• AREW AL I TPRAPV.`" I nig i a , UCK ' I OP 110AAINO ONAIrdi'ItTO THE DAILY EVENING BULLETIN - PEILADELPIII A, SATC,TIMAY D"CEYBER 4, 1.849.--T`'ll)l,E SHEET .Anntlien . she latighed,and the little people.all laughed ' ' and „they ".were. unc.on : . scionislir i'ery happy; • It tvaa,otarthokday--sand not. long after - thiS —that tWeiShiartsfegged'boye Mine to 'grief o the threshold of • the school with - a pail 'or water,., Which they 'had laboriouslybrought frinte *bag, and git9rAniFita. shulatelY seized the 'pall sftfted , ' foie - - the spring -herself. At the foot of the hill a shade.* crossed her path, and a blue-shined arm de teitinatil4;litttlgerittly relieved] ierlef AVM MariwaS. Moth emband -r ritid "angry. "If you carried more of that for yourself; Bil§ said t saneftilly,,to the. lue Ann, without 404* 'Mg to raise l her lashes to 118 - fawner;'“ you'd do better." In the sabirsissive silence that foie lowed, she regretted the speech, and thanked him so sweetly at the door that he stumbled. 'Which mined oe: 01144 ltd . laugh again—a `laugh in which Might - my:Pained, ruatil the cobir ettayiefaintlY.inep,47l4e . ; ate*t day a barrel . ' waS mysteriously plafaed'iaMide the door and as mysteriously filled , with fresh spring 'Water every grpritiPg- - Nor - *mats itipedoe.Youngperionfivithout_ other quiet. ttentions. "Profane Bill," driver of the Slunagullion Stage-widely known in the alewepapers for his - '"gallantry" inihnvail 4bly;tatering the box-seat to•the fair sex--had excepted Miss Mary from this atteneon, on the groundthat _hehad:a habit of "cussin' on . up grades," and gave her half the coach to hers self. .Jack, Ilamlin, a gambler, having once - silently ridden with iit'• the Mine coach, ' _afterward threw. a decanter ; at the head of a • cOnfederate for anenthaning her name in a bar room., The over-dressed mother of a pupil *hose paternitYwas doubtful,' had ''often 'lin gered near this 'astute Vestal's temple, never daring to.enter its sacred preclnets,,but con tent to warship the priestess from afar. • With .such tmeonscions intervais,,the mo notaninis procession of. bine ikiett,'?glittering sunshine, brief twilights, and starlit nights pasted over. Red Gulch. ~Miss liciarTgrew fond of walking' in the' sedate and proper; woods. Perhaps she believed, with Mrs. Stidger, that the balsamic odors of the firs did_ her chest good," for . certainly her slight l ebugh 'Was less frequent and her step was firmer; perhaps she had learned the unending lesson which the patient pines are never weary of repeating to heedful or listless. ears. / And so, one day, she planned a picnic on Buckeye Mil, and took the children with her. 'Away from the dusty road, the . atragglipg. shanties, the yellow ditches, the denier of restless engines, the cheap finery of shop-windows; the deeper glitter of paint and colored, glass, and the thin veneering which barbarism takes upon Itself in such localities what infinite infinite relief was theirs! The last heap of ragged reek ~ and Clay passed---Abe last unsightly chasm crossed—how the waiting woods opened their' lotag,,' files to receive them ! flow the children—perhaps because they had not yet grown quite away from the breast of tine bounteous *other- threw thernselVes face downv, - ard on herbrown bosom with uncouth caresses, filling the- air with their laughter; and how Miss Mary her self—felinely fastidious and entrenched as she was in the purity of spotless skirts, dollar and cuffs4orgot,all, and ran like a crested quail at the head of her brood, until romping, laughing and panting, with a loosened braid of brown hair, a hat hanging by a knotted ribbon from her throat, she came suddenly and violently, in the hmrt of the. forest, upon—the luckless Sandy! • The explanations, apologies ' and not oven wise conversation that ensued, need not be in dicated here. , It would seem, however, that Miss 'Mary bad already established some acquaintance with this , ex drunkard. Enough • that he was soon accepted as ono of the party; that the children, with that quick intelligence which Providence gives the helpless. recognized -a friend, and played with, his blonde heard, and long, silken mustache, and took other liberties—as the helpless are apt to do. And when he bad built a fire against a tree, and had shown them other mysteries of woodcraft, their admiration knew no bounds. At the close -of two such foolish, idle, happy hours, he found himself lying at the feet of the school-mistress, gazing dreamily in her face—as she sat upon the sloping hill side, weaving wreaths of laurel and syringa— in very much the same attitude as he had lain when first they met. Nor was the similitude greatly, forced. The weakness of an easy, sen suous nature, that hatifound a dreamy exalta tion in liquor, it is 'to be feared was now find ing an equal intoxication in love. I think that Sandy was dimly con scious •of this, himself. I kmow that he longed to be doing something—slaying a grizzly, scalping a savage, or sacrificing him self in some way for the sake of this sallow faced, gray-eyed school-mistress. As 1 shouht like to present him in au heroic attitude, I stay My hand with great difficulty at this moment, being only withheld from introducing such an episode by a strong conviction that it does not usually occur at s uch times. And I trust , that. my fairest reader, who remembers that, in a real crisis, it is • always some uninteresting stranger or unromantic policeman—and not Adolplitis—who rescues; will forgive the orris. lion So they sat there, undisturbed—the wood peckers chattering overhead, and the voices of the children coming pleasantly from the hollow below. What they said matters' little. What they thought—which 'might have been inter esting7-did not transpire. The woodpeckers only learned how Miss Mary was an orphan; how she left her uncle's house, to come to Cal- . ifornia, for the sake of health and independ-; _ence; bow Sandy was an orphan, too; bow he came to California for excitement; bow he had lived a wild life, and hoW he was trying to reform; and other details, which, from a woOdpecker's view point, undoubtedly must have seemed stupid, and a waste of time. . But-even in such trifles was the afternoon spent ; and when the chil dren were again gathered, and Sandy, with a• delicacy which the school-mistress well under stood, took leave of'them quietly at the out skirts of the settlement, it had seemed the shortest day of her weary life. -As the long, dry summer withered to its roots, the school term of Red Gulch—to use 'a local euphuism 7 --" dried up" also. In another day Miss Mary Would be free ; and for a season, at least, Red Gulch would know her no more. She was seated alone in the school-house, her cheek resting on her hand, her eyes half cloied in one of those day-dreams in which Miss Mary—l. fear, to the dan ger of school discipline—was lately in the habit of indulging. Her lap was full of mosses, ferns, and other woodland memories. She was so preoccupied with these rind her other thoughts that a gentle tapping at the door passed un heard, or translated itself into the remembrance of far-pff woodpeckeis. When at last it as serted itself more . distinctly, she Started up ,with a'ilushed cheek and opened the door. On the threshold stood a woman, the self-assertion and audacity of whose dress were in singular contrast to her timid, irresolute bearing. Miss Mary recognized at a glance the dubiou s mother of her anonymous pupil. Perhaps she was disappointed—perhaps she was only -fas tidious—but as she coldly invited her to enter, she half unconsciously settled her white cuffs and collar, and gathered closer her own chaste skitta. It was, Nrhaps; for this reason that the embarraSsed stranger, 'after.. a moment's hesitation, left her gorgeous parasol ,open and sticking .in the dust beside• the door, and then sat down at the farther end of a long bench. Her voice was husky as she I heerd tell that you were goin' down to the Bay to-morrow and I couldn't let you go until I came to thank you fiar your,kindness to my Tornmy." Tommy, Miss Mary said, was' a good boy, and deserved more than the poqr attention she could'give him. "Thank you, Miss ! Thank ye!" cried the stranger, brightening _ even through the color which Red Gulch knew facetiously as her " wat, ,paint," and striving,in her eitibarras"B-, I ment, to drag the long bench ; nearer the school mistress. '' thank yeti, Miss, for that! anti if I am his mother, there ain't a sweeter, dearer _ii lives than him. And if I ain't much, as says it, thar ain't a sweeter, dearer, angelet teacher lives than he's got." Miss Mary, sitting primly behind her deski with a .ruler - over her shoulder, opened het gray eyes widely at this; but said no th ing. "It ain't for you to be complimented by the like ofme"--she went on hurriedly—"l Itmin i lt AT* 4, 44 ptcatv byei 4 1 :.4.4 i 144 1 4 to do it, either ; bti`Cl COM; to ask a wirer— , not for me, Miss—not roi me—but for the darling b0y:,.7"1 r : I Encoritgedbit a look in 'the Young schook ' ' mistress oyeAndputting hergiwginvedhande together; the'fingers dintnwaaV; between her: knees, she went on in a low voice : "You see, Miss, there's no one the boy has any claim on but me, and I ain't the propet Pettit* to bring - hint ItirOttglit tome „'Wt year, of sending him away'to 'Frisco to school, but when they talked of, bringing a school ma'am here, I waited till I saw you, and then , I knew it was all right, and ,I could keep, my boy a little longer., And 0. Miss. he loves you so much ; and if corild'hearhim talk about , you, in his pnitty way, and if he could ask you .what I.ask you now, ,yoWtotiltin't reftw: him. "It is natural," she Went on; rapidly, hi" a 'Voice that treinbled strangely between pride and humility, "It's natural *that he should take to you, Miss, for his father, when first knew him, was a gentleman—and the boy must for get me, sooner or later—and so I ain't a goin' to cry about that. For I come to ask you to take my Tommy—God bless him for the bestest, sweetest boy that lives—to—to—take him with you." She had risen and caught the young girl's hand in her own, and bad fallen on her knees beside her. "I've money plenty, aid it's all yours and his. Put him in some:good school where you can go and see bin), and help hiin to—to--to forget his mother. Do with him what you like. The worst you can do will be kindness to what he will learn with me. Only take him out of this wicked life—this cruel place—this home of shame and sorrow: You will;. I know yon will--won't ' you ? You will=-you Must not—you cannot say no ! You will make him as pure, as gentle as yourself ; and when he has grown up you will tell him , his father'S name—the name that hasn't passed my lipsfor years—the name of ,Alexander Morton whom they call hire Sandy!. ' Miss- Mary not take your hand away! Miss Mary, speak to me ! You will take my boy ? Do not put your face from me: I know it ought not look on such as me. Miss Mary !--my God, be meret ful !=she is leaving me!'" . Mary had risen, and, in the gathering twilight, had felt her way to the open window. She stood there, leaning against the easement, her eyes fixed on the last rosy tints that were fading from the western sky. There was still some of its light on her pure young forehead, on her white collar, on her clasped white hands, but all fading slowly away.. The sup- pliant haftdragged herself, still on ber knees, , beside Ler. "I know it takes time to consider. I will wait here all night,; but I cannot go until you speak: Do not deny me now.- You will see it in your sweet face a face asl have seen in my dreams. I see it in your eyes, Mist+ Mary !—you will take my boy !" The last red beam crept higher, suffused Miss Mary's eyes with something of its glory, flickered, and faded; and went out. The sun bad set on Red Gulch. In the twilight silence Miss Mary's voice sounded pleasantly. willtake the boy. Send him to me to nig,ht." The happy mother raised the hem of Miss Mary's skirts to her lips. She would 'have buried, her hot face in its 'virgin folds—but she dared not. She rose to MEM "Does—this man—know Eaf your intention?" asked Mary, suddenly. "No—nor cares. He has never even • seen the child to knoiv it." "Go to him at " once—to-night—how ! Tell him what you have done. Tell him I have taken his child, and tell him—he must never see—see—the child again. Wherever it may he, he must not come; wherever I may take •it be must not follow! There, go now, .please —l'm weary, and—and have much yet to do!" They walked together to the door. On the threshold, the woman turned— " Good night." • She would have fallen at Miss Mary's feet. But at the same moment the young girl reached out her arms, caught the sinful woman to her own pure breast for one brief moment, and then dosed and locked the door. It was with a sudden sense of great respon sibility that Profane Bill took the reins of the Slunigullion Stage the next morning, for the school mistress was one of his passengers. As he entered the high-road, in obedience to a 'pleasant voice from the "inside," he suddenly reined up his horses and respectfully waited, as "Tommy" hopped out, at the command of Miss Mary. "Not that bush, Tommy—the next." Tonimv whipped out his new pocket knife, and, cutting a„ branch from a tall azalea bush, returned wi_h it to Miss Mary. "All right now `1" " All right." And the stage door closed on the, Idyl of Red Gulch. LUMBER. MAULE, BROTHER & CO., _ 2500 South Street. 1869 P APA T TERN IYAKERS R . 1869. . CHOICE SELECTION OF MICHIGAN CORE PINE YOB PATTERNS. • AND HE o_ ll . 1869. 8 Pr . puBMA" 9869. LARUE 6T0(4%. 1569. CAROLINA 1869. FL ORIDA ifLORIDA FLOORING. . • CAROLINA FLOORING. VIRGINIA FLOORING. DELAWARE FLOoRING• ASH FLOORING. WALNUT FLOORING. iQga FLORIDA STEP BOARDS QOQ ELORIDA STEP BOARDS. .B.olJih BAIL PLANK. RAIL PLANK. • 1869 WALNUT AND ALto uT BOARDS AND PLANK. WALNUT BOARDS. WALNUT PLANK. . ASSORTED FOR VADINBT MAKERS, BUILDERS, &O. 1869. uNDIE.I7I,rII.F . R B ' 1.869. UNDERTAKERS' LUMBER. RED CEDAR. WALNUT AND PINE. SEASONED •POPLAR . 1869. 1.869. .‘ sEmioNg,p °HERBY. ASIT. WHITE OAK PLANK AND BOARDS. 1869'A l t .011 1 6LLNAA. H. SILLS G . 1869• NOWAY SCANTLING. R 1869 aP4DAI'Bil-n46LES ' • CEDAR SHINGRES. CYPRESS SHINGLES. LARGE ASSORTMENT • FOU SALE LOW. PLASTERING} LATA ' .1.869. • P PLASTERING LATH. - • 1869. LATH. .auktrix BROTHER & co, • 2500 BOOTH STREET. Lumber Under Cover, ALWAYS DRY. Want, White Pine, Yellow Phle, Sysmeo, Hemlock Elhingles, ac., always on band nt low rates. WATSON & GILLINGHAM, 924 Richmond Street, Eighteenth Ward. mh29-lyi RTAT4OW PINE LUMBER.--ORDERS _IL for cargoe• of every descrlstiou Sawed Lumber exe cuted at abort atottce—quality subject to immection Apply to EDW. H. BO 16 South Wharves. _ . WT CRT' I'ENN 8 YLIVANLA.. RAILROAD. 1 1 1 -TIM SHORT MIDDLE ROUTE to , The Lehigh and Wyoming Valley, Northern Pennityltania*Southera and Interior. New York, Rochester,Buffalo, Niagara Falls, the Otett Lekesentl thd Boeti of - Cankia. 'l. TA TER 'ARRANORM NTB. .r TAK 8 E_NFECT, November 224,.1869. 1. 14 DAILY TRAINS leave Passenger Depot, corner or Berks and Americas. stre ets ttiondays excepted), all relieve: " • ' ' 7.3 u A. M. Acclmmodatioil for Fort. Washington. At 8 A. M.-morning Express for Bethlehem and Principal Stations on mala-lbseef North Pennsylvania 'Reliffitut conicting At IltdhlaketnWithigthigh Valley "LtatircA for A entognalbach,llhtuArk.. 'thuds City, wilkesb rre,P tater', Towattia and w verly; Unmet- tin* st Waverly with ERIE RAILW AY for Niagara Fall's, Bu ff alo Rochester, Clevelsin ,d Chicago, San Francisco, and'all points to the Great West. I At BA6 A. 11 . - Accommodation for Doylestown, !to* ping Mali f termediate Stations . Passengers for Wit. ;14ye t rye ttboro' and narieeMe y by thle.train,takti ptoork Roadir ' -). i '. ~ .. ...' ' .A -i A. : tEriireatf) - ter' Wetntehemi , Afientowni Idench Chunk, White Haven,Wllkembarre Pittston Scranton and Carbondale via Lehigh , and 13usiquehanne Railroad, and 'Allentotrn Zealot', Hackettstown, and Elett-Pn. New Jellify oe4tral BallroadAnd Morris and ilBAllrOtilll.o ne'Vr reds Ifilefhigh, Valleallroad. t .4.5 A. M , -Acciimmodation for Fort Washington, stopping at intermediate Stations. 1.115, 6.20 end 8 P.M.-Accommodation to Abington. At 1A16F , M.-Isehigh Valley Express Bethlehem, Agatitoki,' Allentown, Manch ChM*eton, White Haven,Wilkesbarre Pittston Scranton, and Wyoming Coll Segions. At.3.41P. M. - Accommodation for Doylestown, stop• ping at silt intermediate stations. At 4.15 P. M.-Accommodation for DoyiestoarmatOP ping at all intermediate stations. ' At tiAli P. M.-Through for Bethlehem, connecting at Bethlehem with Lehigh Valley Evening Train for Easton, Allentown, Mauch Chat*. , • At 6.20 P. M. - AccommOdation for Lansdale, stopping at all intermediate stations. At /1.80 P. M.-Accotomodatlon for Fort:Washington. PromRAINS ARRIVE IN PHLLADELPHIA. Bethlehem at 9A. M.,. 2.15, 4.40 and 8 . 25 P. M. 2.18 T. M., 4.40 P. M. and 8.25 P.M. Trains make direct connection with Lehigh Valley or Lehigh and Susetto. henna trains from Easton, Scranton. Wilkerbarre, Ma , hanoy City and Hazleton. From Derylestown 14 , 8.35 A. 141.30 P.ldAnd 7.05 Pal From Lanadale at 7.20 A. M. , . From Fort - Washington at 9.25 and 10.55 A . M . and 3.10 P. M. ON SUNDAYS. Philadelphia for Bethlehem at 9.30 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 Street. and Second and Third Streets sl.dpia pf City Passenger cart run directly to and from the Depot. Union Lino run within a Short distanee of the Depot. ' Tickets must be procured at the Ticket Office, in order to secure the lomat rates of fare. ELLIS CLARK, Agent. Tickets sold and Baggage checked through to_princi pal points, at Mann's North Penn. Baggage Express ofttce. No. 105 South Fifth street . • VOENNSYL VA_NIA. 'CENTRAL ' 'RAIL -11.. GOAD: After 8 P. M., SUNDAY, November Ink We. The trains of the Pennsylvania Central Railroad leave the Depot,at Thirty-first and Market streets,which is reached directly.by the cars of the Market Street Pas senger Railway, the last car connecting with each train leaving Front and Market street thirty minutes before its departure. Those of the Chestnut and Walnut Streets:Railway _run within one square of. the Depot. Sleening Car Tickets can be bed on application at the Ticket Office, Northwest corner of Ninth and Chestnut streets, and at the Depot. . ..„ Agents of the Union Transfer Con:many. Will call for and deliver Baggage at the Depot. Orders lett at - N0.901 Chestnut street, No. 118 Market street, will receive at, tentop TRAINS LEAVE DEPOT, VIZ.: Mail atn-... at 8.00A.M. Paoli, eceta. • at 10.30 A.M. 5 1.10, and 640 P. M. Nast ine. ~ at 11.30 A. M. - Erie xpress...-- at 1150 A. M. II arrisborg Acc0tn,....»..... .....- - .......-...... ... .at 2.30 P. M. k ,,,,r Lancaster Accom-.-.-.......-..........-.....„........at 4.10 P. 31. Parksburg Train • at 5.30 P. M. Cincinnati Express --...- ..... ....at 8.00 P. M. , Erie Mail and Pittsburgh Express.... .... ......at 9.45 P. M. `..Actoroth -- 0dati0n......-.-...... at 12.11 A M. Pacific Ernress... .- .. - . . _at 12.00 night. , Erie' Mail lhavels ifs:ifi, .e : fticriE 1 31;ail'h running on Saturday night to Williamsport only, On Sunday right passengers will leave Philadelphia at 8 o'clock. Pacific Express leaves . daily. ' . Cincinnati Ex' press daily, except Saturday. All other trains daily, except Sunder. . . • The Western Aceommodation Train runs daily, except Sunday. • For this train tickets most beprocured and baggage delivered by s.o _ o_l'. M.. at 116 Market street. TRAINI3• ARRIVE AT DEPOT, VIZ : Cincinnati Express.-. ....- .at 3.10 A. M. Philadelphia 'repress at 6.30 A. M. ErleldalL .... . .... . ........ .at 6.30 A. M. Paoli Acca . 2 - m . odailimi aili * .iia.ii. an7f3.:so s: 6.25 I'. M Parksbnrg Train-------.-------........at 910 A. M. Feat Line.-- ».. .at 940 A. M Lancaster Train at 1245 P. id% Erie Express.....-.---.-.-- ........ -..-.. ..... .. at 12.55 P. M. Southern Expreis , . . .... -. ....... -.-.... at 7.001'. M. Lock Haven and Elmira Express .. ... ...-...at 7.00 P. M. Pacific Express ....._.... .. . .... -at 4.25 P. M. Harrisburg Acc0mm0dati0n........_..... at 9.60 P . M. For further information, apply to JOHN F. VANLEER,Ja., Ticket Agent,9ol Chestnut street. FRANCIS FUNK, Ticket Agent, 116 Market street. SAMUEL H. WALLACE, Ticket Agent at the Depot. The Pennsylvania Railroad Company will not assume any rick for Baggage, except for wearing apparel, and limit their responsibility to One Hundred Dollars in value. All Baggage exceeding that amount in value will be at the risk of the owner, unless taken by special con. tract. - EDWARD H. WILLIAMS, . General Superintendent. Altoona, Pa, IaIiPIDLA_DELPHIA, WILMINGTON AND .BALTIIIOIIB RAILROAD—TIME TABLE. Com mencing MONDAY, May 10th , 1869. Trains will leave Depot. corner Broad and Washington avenue. 138 fol lcrws• WAY MAIL TRAIN at 8.30 A. M. (Sundays excepted) for Baltimore, stopping at all lie tear Stations. OM necting with' Delaware Kallroad at Wilmington for Criglield and Intermediate Sltations. EXPRESS TRAIN at 72.00 711. t Sundays excepted I, for Baltimore and Washington, stopping at Wilmington, Perryville and Havre do Grace. Connecta at Wilming ton with train for New Castle. EXPRESS TRAIN at 4.00 P. H. (Sundays excepted), for Baltimore and Washington. stopping at Chester, Thtirlow, Linwood, .Claymont, Wilmington, Newport, Stanton, 'Newark, Elkton, North East, Charlestown, Perryville, Havre do Grace, Aberdeen, Perryman% Edrwood, Magnolia, Chase's and Stemmer's Run. .I.IIGHT EXPRESS at 11.30 P. 31. ( daily ) for Baltimore and Waahingtoti stoping at Chester, Thurlow Lin wood, Claymont, 'Wilmington , Newark, Elkton,North East, Perry - ville, Havre de Greco, Perryman's and .1111ag- Delia. Passengers far Fortress Monroe and Norfolk will take the 12.00 M. Train. WILMINGTON TRAINS.--Stopping •at all Stations between Philadelphia and Wilmington. Leave PHILADELPHIA at 1100 A. M. 2.30, LOU and , 7.00 P. M. The 0.00 P. M. train connects with Delaware Railroad for Harrington and intermediate stations. Leave WILMINGTON 6.30 mad B.IOA. IC, 130, 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 Trains Sundays excepted. Trains leaving WILMINGTON at 6.30 A. M. and 4.15 P. M. will connect at Lamokin Junction with the 7.00 A.M. and 4.30 P. 51. trains for Baltimore Central R. R. From BALTIMORE to PHILADELPHIA.—Leaves Baltimore 7.25 A. M., Way Mail. 9.35 A. M.,Express. 2.35 P. M. Express. 7.25 P. M.Express. SUNDAY TRAIN FROM ' BALTIMORE.—Leaven BALTIMORE at 7.25 P.M. Stopping at Magnolia, Per ryman's, Aberdeen, 11 avre-de-Grace,Perryville,Charles town, North-. East, Elkton Newark, Stanton, Newport, Wilmington, Claymont, Li nwood and Chester. Through tickets to all point West, South, and South west may be procured at the ticket office,E.% Chestnut street, under Continental Hotel, where also State Booms and Berths in Sleeping Cars can be secured during the day. Persons purchaamgtickets at this office can have baggage checked at their residence by the Union Trans fer OompanY. 11. F. KENNEY, 13E11)1. W.EST CHESTER AND PHILADEL;. PHIA.RAILROAD.—Winter Arrangement —On • and after MONDAY, Oct. 4, 1869,Trains will leavens follows: . Leave Philadelphia, from New Depot Thirty L-first and Chestnut streets, .7.415 A. M., 11.00 A. M 2.30 P. M., 4.15 P. M., 4.40 P.M., 6.16 P. M., 11.30 P. M. Leave West Chester, from Depot, on' East , Market street, 6.26 A. M., 8.00 A. M., 7.46 A. M., 10.45 A. M., 1.66 P.M.,4LOP. 24.03.66P.M. •• Train leaving West Chester at 8.00 A. M. will stop at B, C. Junction, Lenni; Glen Riddle and Media: leaving Philadelphia at 4.40 P. M. will stop ' at Media, Glen Riddle, Lewd and B. 0. Junction. Passengers to or from stations between West Chester West B. Junction ggoingg will and East , IVpieteetlegg at 7.45 G.-junction; and going West, Passengers for Stations above B. C. Junction ' will take trairtleavin_g Philadel phia at 4.40 P. M., and will change cars at B. C. Junc tion. • The Depot in Philadelphia Is reached directly by the Chestnut and Walnut street cars. 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 8.30 A.M. and2.oo P. it!. • Leave West Chester for Philadelphia at 246 A. 31. and 4.00 P. P.M. Palseengers are allowed to take Wearing Apparel only, as Baggage, and the Company will not in any case be I.mi:tenable for alien:mint exceeding one hundred dol.. /ere, uniess a special contract be made far the same. " • WILLIAM 0. WHEELER. General Superintendent. I)II.I.LADELPHIA. AND ERItRAIL - ~t. BOAR—WINTER TIME TABLE. On and after MONDAY, Nov. 15, 259, the Trains on the Philadelphia and Erie Railroad will run ae follows from Pennsylvania RailroactDepot, West Philadelphia : WESTWAB.D. Mail Train leaves Philadelphia. 9.35 P. M. .•, " " Williamsport . A. M. " " arrivimint Erie 8.20 P. M. Erie Express leaves Philadelphia 11.40 A. M. Williamsport 9.00 P. M. " " arrives at Erie. 10.00 A. M. Elmira Mail leaves Philadelphia 7.50 A. M. " " • •r 4 Williamsport- 6.00 P. M. " " arrives at Lock Haven 7.20 P. M. EASTWARD. Mail Train leaves Er illfirmsis. _ 8.10 A. M. Wport 9. P. M. " " arrives at Philadelphia. 6.20 25 A. AL Erie Express leaves Erie 4.00 P. M. Williamsport 3.30 A. M , " arrives at Philadelphia 12.45 P. M. Elmira Mail leaves Leek Haven f 8.00 A. HI. ai " , Williamsport- 9.45 A. M. " arrives at Philadelphia 6.50 P. M. Buffalo Express leaves Williamsport 12.25 A.M. •. .. Harrisburg 5.20 A. M. " '. arrives at Philadelphia 9.25 A. M. ixpress east Connect, at Corry. Mail east at (lorry and Irvineton. Express west at Irvineton with trains on Oil Creek and Allegheny River Railroad. ALFRED L. TYLER, General Superintendent. 1869. EST JERSEY RAILROAD TT__ FALL AN' r ALL AN_DWlN'ilit ARRANGEMEN T. COMMENCING TUESDAY SEPT. 2lst, 1853. Leave Philadelphia, Foot of Market street ( Upper Ferry) at 8.15 A. M., Mail, for Bridgeton, Salem, Miliville,Vine land , Swedesboro and all intermediate stations. 3.15 P. M., Mail, for Cape May, Millville, Vineland and way stations below. Glassboro. 3.30. P. M., Passenger, for Bridgeton, Salem, Swedes bore. and all intermediato stations. 5.30 P. M., Woodbury and Climber° 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 N 0.228 S. Delaware avenue. Commutation tickets, at reduced rates, between Phila delphia and all stations, EXTRA TRAIN POE CAPE MAY. Leave Philadelphia, 8. (Saturdls A e M only. i Leave Cape May, 1,10 P. M. WILLIAM J.NEWELTA,liitiverfatendellt. ntAvELEw , GUIDE 4rn TRAVk LERB' GUIDE E. .. DING RAILROAD. - GREAT e d ' Traink Lind frOM 'Philadelphia to' he * interior of .., einnslivania, thee achtlyikill, nusonehantia, Ctunbeta and Wyoming Valleys, the North, Northweet and gthethtladas Whiter ArtangententniPtutaeney Trains, avoit.2ll, 1869, 'Haling the Company a Minot, Thirteenth ' and • Callow:hill .streeta4PWadalahlat ni th. olo / 10101 4 hors'o _ _,..• •• _ MORlilighirliMODATlOrit.-At 710 'A: Id for Beading an nterMediate Station., and Allehkenis, Bath ming, , : oath At 11.55. P. Ma Arrtring in Philadelphig at ,9 26,P; M. -,_ . MORNING EXPRESS.-At 8. MA.' AL 'for , Ihigiling.. Lebanon,Harrisharg, Po Ills, PineHrove,Teanagna, Seminary, 'Willthinsaort, Elmira, Rochester, Niagara Falls,Buffalo, Vilikesbarre, Pittstn, York. Clarinda, VhateberliblgrA, Hagerstown, ko. ' ' The7.3o A. M.' trMn connects at Reading With the East Pennsylvania Railroad trainaforAllentowei4g,,and the 1.15 A. M. train connects with the Lebanop Valley train for Ilarrtsbur_g,',4c.; at Port Clinton with Catawlswi 11. IL teethe far Willianispert,Lock Eirten.Elnlith,eta_.at Harrisburg With Northern Clentthl, GinnberjanA:. Tal ley. andlichnetill mad Suannekanna, trains for n o grove untherland, illiatheport. York, ChamberiantrliPlnna ~ A KRBOON EXPRESS. .- Leaves Philadelphia. at 5.30 .m, for Reading, Pottsville, Hayrisburg, arc., con electing 'with Reading and Columbia Railroad train. for Columbia. ac. , • • , . . POTTSTOWN ACCOMMODATION.--Leaves Potts town at 6.46 A. M a stopping at the intermediate stations: arriets in Philadelphia at 9.10 A.M. Returning leaves Philadelphia at 4.00 P.M.: arrives in POttetoWA at 8.15 P . :.. • B M EADING AND POTTSVILLE ACCOILAIODA TION.--Leaves-Pottaville at 11.40 A. M., and 'Refuting. at ' 7.30 A. M. Mapping st all way stations; arrives irrPtilla delphia at 10.20 A.M. Returning, leaves Philadelphia at 4.45 P. M. arrives ln'Reading at 7.40 P. M'.., add at Pottsville at 9.90 P. M. Trains for Philadelphia leave Harrisburg at B.IOA. 11. and Pottrrille at 9.00 A. M.,arriving in Philadelphia at LouL P. M. Afternoon trains leave Harrisburg at 2.55 P.' M., and Pottsville at 3.05 P. Al.; arriving At Phila delphia at 7.05 P, M ' •• ' Harrisburg Accommodation leaves Reading it 7,15 A. AL, and Harrisburg at 4.10 P. M. Connecting at Read ing with Afternoon Accommodation south at 6.35 P. M., arriving insPhiladelabia at 9.258. M. , Market train, with a Passenger car attached, loaves Philadelphia at 12.30 noon for Pottsville and ail Way Stations; leaves Pottsville at 5.40 A. M. connecting at Reading with accommodation train for Philadelphia and all •Way Statioas. • • •Ati the above trains tam daily, Sundaes excepted. Sunday traind leave Pottsville at 8 A. Al., and Phila delphia at 3,15 P. M.; leave Philadelphia for Reading at 8.00 A. N. returning from Wading at 4.25 P. M. CHESTER VALLEY RAILROAD.-Passengers for Downingtovni and intermediate points take the 7.30 A. M., 12.30 and 4.00 P. M. trains from Philadelphia,return ing from Downingtown at 6.30 A. 111..12,46 and 5.15 P.M. PF.REIOMEN RAlLROAD:Passengers for tichwenks vine take 7.30 A.M., 12.30 and 4.00 P.M. trains for Phila delphia, returning from Schwenksville at 6.10 and 8.12 A.M. 12.45 noon. Stage lines for various points in Perkionion Valley coanuct with trains at Collegevillo and tichwenksville. COLEBROOKDALE RAILROAD -Passengers for train P f e om Phila d d el ppp hia intermediate n o ng r t o a m ke Mto 4 P .00 e Ps. Mnt at 7.00 and 11.00 A. M. NEW YORK EXPRESS FOR PITTSBURGH AND THE WEST.-Leaves New York at 9.00 A.M., 6.00 and 8.00 P.M.passing Beading at 12.43 A. M. 1.45 and 10.05 p, M „ and connects at Harrisburg with Penneylvania and Northern Central Railroad Express Trains for Pitts burgh, Chicago, Williamsport, Elmira, Baltimore,- &c. Returning, Express Train leaves Harrisburg on arrival of Pennsylvania Express from Pittsburgh, at 2.40 and 5.35 A. 'M., 12.20 noon, 2.6 band 11.00 P. M. passing Reading at 12.65, 4.30 'and 7.20 A. M. and 2 . 0 0 and 4.40 P. M., arriving at New York 6.00 and 10.15 A.M., 12.05 noon, and 6.35 and 10.00 P. M. Sleeping Cars accompany these trains through between Jersey City and Pittsburgh, without change. . Mail train for New York leaves Harrisburg at 8.10 A. St. and 2.55 P. M. Mail train for Ilarrbiburg leaves New York at 12 Noon. a • BCIIUTLKILL VALLEY RAILROAD-Trains leave r• ottsv ilia at 0.30 and 11.30 A.M. and 6.50 P.M.. returning from Tamaqua at 9.35 A. M., and 2.15 and 4.60 P. M. SCHUYLKILL AND SUSQUEHANNA RAILROAD -Trains leave Auburn at 8.65 A. M. and 3.38 P. M. for Pincgrovo and Harrisburg, and at 12.10 noon for Pine grove, Tret and Brookside; returning from liar rieburg at 730 and 11.50 A. M., and 3.40 P It; from Brookable at 4.00 P. M. and from Tremont at. 7.16 A.M. and 5.05 P. M. TICKETS.-Through first-class tickets and etalgrtmt tickets to all the principal points in the North and West and Canada. i. Excursion Tickets from Philadelphia to Beading and Intermediate Statione, good for day only, are sold by Morning Accommodation, Market Train, Reading and Pottstown Accommodation Trains at reduced rates. Excursion Tickets to Philadelphia, good for day.only, are sold at Reading and Intermediate Stations by Read ing and Pottstown Accommodation Trains at reduced rater. The following tickets are obtainable only at the Office of S. Bradford, Treasuxer, No. 227 South Fourth street, Philadelphia, or of G. A. Nicolls, General Superinten dent, Beading. Commutation Tickets at 25 per cent. discount. between any points desired, for bunnies and firma. Mileage Tickets, good for 2,000 miles,between allpoints at 852 50 each for families and firms. Samoa Tickets, for three, six, nine or twelve months. for holders only, to all points, at reduced rates. Clergymen residin enti t ling ne of the road will be fur nished- with cards, themselves and wives to tickets at half fare Excursion Tickets from Philadelphia to principal sta. Cons, good for Saturday, Sunday and Monday, at re - deiced fare, to be had only at the Ticket,ollice, at Thir teenth and Callowhill Streets. FREIGHT.-Goode of all descriptions forwarded to all the above point, from the Company's New Freight Depot, Broad and Willow streets. 1 reight Trains leave Philadelphia daily at 4.33 A. M., .1230 noon, 5.00 and 7.13 P. M.. for Reading, Lebanon, Harrisburg, Pottsville, Port Clinton, and all peinte be yond. Mails close at the Philadelphia Post-office for all places on the road and its branches at 5 A. M., and for the prin cipal Stations only at 2.15 P. 31. . - BAGGAGE. Dungan's Express will collect Baggage for all trains leaving Philadelphia Depot. Orders can be left at No. 2.15 South Fourth street, or at the Depot, Thirteenth and Callowhill streets. ilO.ll NEW VORK.-THE CAMDEN AND • AMBOY • and PHILADELPHIA AND TRENTON RAILROAD COMPANY'S LINES, from Philadelphia to New York, and way places, from Wal nut street wharf..- - . , Fare. Al 6.30 A. Al., via Camden and AmboyAccom.. 82 25 At BA. M. via Camden and Jersey Ci ty Ex. Mail, 300 A t 2 0 0 P. Di., via Camden and Amboyxpress, 800 At 6 P. M. for Amboy and intermediate stations. At 6.30 and 8 A. M., and 2 P. at., for Freehold. At 2.00 P: ,M. for Long Branch and Points on R. dc D. B. R. A. ' At 8 and 10 A.M., 1251,2,330 and 4.30 P. Al.,for Trenton. At 6.30,8 nod 10 A. 31., 12 111.,2,3.30,4.30,6, 7 and 11.30 P. M., for Borden town,Florence,Burlingtoa,Boverly and Da lanco. At 6.30 and 10 A.111.,12 Al., 3 . 30,4.30,6,7 and 11.30 P.M. for Edgewater, Riverside, Riverton, Palmyra and Fish P Honee 6 A. 31. and 2P . M., for Riverton. 'Mir T Lo 11.30 P. M. Line leaves from foot of Market street by upper ferry. From Kensington Depot: At 7.30 A-. M. 2.30, 331 and 5 P. N. for Trenton and Bristol. And at 10.45 A. M. and 6 P. M. for Bristol. At 7.30 A. M., 2.30 and 5 P. M. for Morrisville and Tully towu. At 7,30 and 10.4.5 A. AL, 2.30, 5 and 6 P. M. for Scbenck's and Eddington. At 730 and 10.45 A.M., 2.30, 4, 5 and 6 P. AI., for Corn wells, Torresdale,llolraeeloirg,Tacony,Wissinoming, Ilridesburg and Frankforil and 8.30 P.M. for Holmes burg and Intermediate Stations. From `Vest Philadelphia Depot via Connecting Railway At 7, 9.30 and-11 A. al. ' Lai, 4, 6.45, and 12. P. M. Now York Express Line , via Jersey City. ..... „... ..... .......43 25 At 1130 P.M. Emigrant Line' 4 - 2 ca . At 7,9.30 and 11 A. B.!. .1.20,4 ,6.45,and 1 -...,... 2 P.M.foe Trenton. At 7, 9.30 and 11 A. M., 4, 6.45 and 12 P. M., for Bristol. At 12 P.M .( N ight) for Morrisville,Tulltown, Schenck's, Eddington 1 Cornwallis Torresdale, Holmesburg, Ta. cony, Wissinoming, Bridesburg and Frankford. The9.3o A. M.and .and 12 P.M. Linea run daily. All °theta, Sundays excepted. For Lines leaving Kensington Depot, take the cars on Third or. Fifth streets, at Chestnut, at half an hour be fore departure. The Cars of Market Street Railway run direct to West Philadelphia Depot Chestnut and Walnut within one square. On Sundays, the Market Street Cars will rem to connect with the 9.30 A. M., 6.45 and 12 P. M. lines BELVIDERE DELAWARE RAILROAD LINES from Kensington Depot. • At 730 A. DI., for Niagara Falls, Buffalo, Dunkirk, Elmira, Ithaca, Owego, Rochester, Binghamptou, Oswego, Syracuse, Great Bend, Afontrose,wilkesbarre, Scranton, btrondcburg, Water Gap, achooley's Moun tain. lie. At 7.30 A. Mend 3.80 P.M.for Belvidere,Eaeton, Lam bertville. Flemington, ac. The 3.30 P. AL Line con nect, direct with the train leaving Easton for Manch Chunk- Allentown, Bethlehem, .4c. At al A. M. from West Philadelphia Depot, and 5 P. M. Pram K enshigton Depot,for Lambertville and interme diate Stations. CAMDEN AND BURLINGTON CO., AND PEMBA TON AND HIGHTSTOWN RAILROADS, from Mar ket street Ferry ( Upper Side.) At 7 and 10 A. M.,1, 2.15,3.30,6 k 6.30 P.M.for Merchants ville, Moorestown, Hartford. Alinionville, Hainsport, Mount Holly, Smithville, Ewanaville, Vlncentown, Birmingham and Pemberton. • . • At 10 A. M. for Lewistown, Wrightstown, Cookstown, New Egypt and Hornerstown. At 7 A. A1..1 and 3.30 P. M. for Lewistown, Wrights. town, Cookstown, New Egypt, Ilornerstown, Cream Ridge, Irulaystown, Sharon and Hightetown . Fifty pounds of Baggage only allowed each Passenger. Passengers are prohibited from taking anything as bag gage but their wearing apparel. All baggage over fifty pounds to be paid for extra. The Company limit their responsibility for baggage to One Dollar per pound, and will not be liable for any amount beyond 8100. ex cept by special contract. Tickets sold and Baggage checked direct throggh to Boston, Worcester, Springfield, Hartford, New Haven Providence, Newport, Albany, Troy, Saratoga, Utica, Rome, Syracuse,Rochester, Buffalo, Niagara Falls and Suspension B de. , An additional Ticket Office is located at No. frail Chest nut street, where tickets to New York, and all impor tant points North and East, may be procured. Persons purchasing Tickets at this Office,_ can ha ve their bag gage checked from residences or hotel to d estination, by Union Transfer Baggage Express. Lines from New York for Philadelphia will leave from foot of Cortland etreet at 1.00 and 4.01 P. M., via Jersey City and Camden. At 8.80 dud 10 A.M., 13.30, 3, 6 and 9 P. 31., and at 12 Night, via Jersey City and West Phila . delphia. F - rers Pier No. 1, N. River, at 130 A. AL AcCommoda- Con and 2 P. Al. Express, via Amboy and Camden. Nov. 20. 1869. WM. , H. GATZAIEIt, Agent PHILADELPHIA AND BALTIMORE 1 CENTRAL RAILROAD COMPANY. • WINTER ARRANGEMENT. On and after MONDAY, Nov. hit., /869, Trains will leave as follaws, 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 Company,,cornor Broad and Washington avenue, at 7.00 4. Id and 4.30 P. M. A Freight Train with Passenger car attachod,will leave Philadelphia for Oxford at 2.30 P. M. Leave PORT DEPOSIT for PIIILADELPMA. at 5.40 A. 11., 9.26 A. M., and 2.25 P. M. On Saturday tho 2.26 train will leave at 4.30 P. M. Passengers are allowed to take wearing apparel onl as baggage', and the Company will not be responsinie for an amount exceeding one hundred dollars,, , uulJ/4 special contract is made for the same. HENRY WOOD / President and General Superintendent. AST FREIGHT LINE, VIA NORTH: IFPENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD. to ,Wilkesbarre, hanoy City/ Mount Cannel, Oentralite, and all points OD Lehigh Valley Railroad and its branches. • By new syrangements,Printed this day, this road is enabled to give inerealed despatch to merchamidise con siEned to the above-named points Goods delivered at thelhrouglOrreight Depot, S. E. cor. out and Noble streets, Belore 5 P.31 ty ..30S reach Wilkosbarre, Mount Cannel: litahanoy Oi, the' otr stations in Mahano and Wyoming vanes and 'before - A he . Mt. the eucceedlng da y y. 1131LI8 ()LABS &ant, TRAVELERS' MDR HILA DE L PHIA, GERMANTOWN AND. NORRISTOWN RAILROAD TIME TA- B E.—On and after Monday, Ney. 27d, ne.,, log gum further notlem , • NOR GERMANTOWN. Leave Philadelphia-447, .8, 0.05, 10, IL 12A, IL, LA I 3.15,35‘,4.05, 4.85,5, 55(, 5 , 83 1,7400 d, 10 0 1 ; Leave Oermantcrwu-0 6.65 736 & 8.20, 9,10,10.50,13 A N I. 201_3. 2 10, 43‘.5 t 6%, 6,6347,11, 4,, Jo, 11, P. nt. The Sao down-tram, anti the' 636 and ax tralini, not atop On the Germantown Branch. , ON SUND_AYS. Leave Phila d ephia - 9.16 A . 51. ' 2, 4.06 ininntes,7 and este Germantann-8.15 A. M. L 8,5 and 934' P. CHESTNUT HILL RAILROAD. teave,Prulelphis-4, 8, 10, 12A.M.; 334;11Min 17.211 Leave chestnut minutes, 8,9.40, and 11.48 A. Ai.; 1.40,330, SAO, 5.441, 5.40 end 10A0 P. M. • • , . ON SUNDAYS. LIMO Philadelphia-4.lsminute' A. M.;•2 and 7P .•M, Leave Chestnut Hill-7.69 mint's A. AL; 1 2,40,11.4010a5 • 9.25 minutes P M. NOR CONAIOROOKEN AND NORRISTOWN, Leave Philadelphia-6 1 ;N, 9, 11.96, A. K.; D 6,8,4, 54, 6.15,8.06, 10.im and 11..4 r. M. Leave Norristown—GAO, 8.25, 7,734, 440, 11 A. AV; DV, 3,1& 8 .0.R and 9}5 P• 111 * The 731 Trains from Norristown wijl p'ol *fop at Ilogee'e,Potte , Landing, Dom in o or Sehur's bane. 59 - The 4 P. AI: Train from Philadelphia will atop 01117 at School Lane,Mnainnk mad Conshohocken. • - 'ON SUNDAYS. 'Leave Phlladelphla-9 A. M. 214 and 7.15 P. M. Leave•Norriatown--7 A. M.; I, 5 end OP POE MANAY R. Leave Phlladelphia-8,7N4, 11.06 A. M.; 1%, 3, 4,435 ; 536,6.18, &Of., 10.05 and 11%, P.M. • Leave blanayrink-6.10. 0.65 1 754,11.10,9,20, 634.6, 64, 5.30 and 10 P. M. ON SUNDAYS. Leave Philadelphia-9 A. M.,' 4 and 7.16 P. M. Leave Manammk-735 A. M. - 1%. and 935 P.M. PLYMOCTII R. R. Leave Philadelphia, 731 A. Dl ° 43; P. M. Leave Plymouth, 6, 0 4 A. M., 44 P. M. W., S. WILSON, General Superintendent, Depot, Ninth and Green streets. DHILADELPHIA, GERM AN TOWN AND NORRISTOWN RAILROAD COMPANY.— rties going from Philadelnliitt to Now York can save time by taking the cora at Ninth and Green and Ninth and Columbia avenue, at 7, 9.05,11 A. M. and 4.08 P. M,, to the Intersection Station, and there take the trains for New York leaving West Philadelphia on the Same hours as above mentioned. W. S. WILSON, Gen,'Sain, NOVIMMIt 22.1869. n 022 Wt§ CAMDEN AND ATLANTIC RAIL- N..) ROAD.—CHANGE OF ROUES—WINTER AR RANGEMENT. On and afterIIONDAY, Nov.l, 1869, trains will leave Vine erect ferry as follows,viz : Mail and Freight: 8.00 A. M. Atlantic Accommodation ' 3.45 P. M. Junction Accommodation to Atco and Inter mediate stations 5..10.P. M. RETURNING, LEAVE ATLANTIC. Mall and Freight. 1.48 P.M. Atlantic Accommodation 6.05 A. M. Junction Accommodation from Atco. 832 A.M. Haddonfield Accommodation trains leave . Vine Street Ferry.— 10.15 A. M. and 2.80P.M. Haddonfield 1.00 P. M. and 3.15 P. M. DAVID H. MUNDY. Agent. MEDICAL Ayer-'s Hair Vigor, For the Renovation of the Hair. The Great Desideratum of the Age. A. dressing which is at once agreeable.; healthy, and effectual for preserving the hair. Faded or gray hair is soon restored to its original color and the gloss and freshness of , youth. Thin hair is thick ened, falling hair checked, and bald ness often, though not always, cured by its use. Nothing can restore the hair where the follicles are destroyed, or the glands atrophied and decayed. But such as remain can be saved for usefulness by this application. Instead of fouling the hair with a pasty sedi ment, it will keep it clean and vigorous. Its occasional use;will . prevent the hair from , turning gray or falling off, and consequently prevent baldness. Free from those deleterious substances which make some preparations dangerous and injurious to the hair, the Vigor can only benefit but not harm it. If wanted merely for a HAIR DRESSING, nothing, else can be found so desirable. Containing neither oil nor dye, it does not soil white cambric, and yet lasts longer on the hair, giving it a rich glossy, lustre and a grateful perfume. Prepared by Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., PRACTICAL AND ANALYTICAL CIIEIRItiI% LOWELL, HASS. PRICE $l.OO. sold py all Druggists everywhere, At wholesale by J. M. MARIS it CO., Philadelphia. mll9 to th s eow ly PAL DENTALLINA. A SIIPtRIOR article for cleaning the Teeth,destroying animalcule w licit infest them, giving tone to the gums and leaving a feeling of fragrance and perfect cleanliness in the Month. It may be used daily, and will be found to strengthen weak and bleeding gums while the aroma and detersiveness will recommend it to every one. Be ing composed with the assistance of the Dentist, Physi cians and Microscopist, it is confidently offered as a reliable substitute for the uncertain washes formerly in vogue. Eminent Dentists, acquai of the Dentallina. advocate to prevent its unrestrained JAlifil . 1 For sale by Druggists gone Fred. Browne, 13,,ssard & Co., C, B. Keeey, . Isaac 11. Kai, C. IP. Needles, . T. J. Husband, - Ambrose Smith, Edward Parrish, Win. B. Webb, James L. Bispliam, Hughes & Combo, Henry A. Bower. LEGAL -NOTICM-7 IN THE ORPHANS' COURT FOR THE City and County of Philudelphia—Estate of JOSZPH PA TTERSON. d eeeased.—T he Auditor appointed by the Court to audit, settle and adjust the first accounts of JOHN p. McCORD and ,HUGH BRADY WILKINS, Executors of. and Trustees under, the last will of JO SEPH PATTERSON. deceased, and to report distribu tion of the balance lu the hands Of the accountants, will meet the parties interested for the purpose of his appointment, on MONDAY,' December 13th,1869. at 4 o clock, P.,111.. at his allies. No. Pt! Walnut street (room N 0.9), In the city of Philadelphia. - de2th s to 35 5 THE ORPHANS' COURT .FOR THE I - City and County of Philadelphia.—Estate of E. Y. FAllQUHARoleceittn4.—The Auditor appointed by the Courtto audit. settle and adjust the account of ANNA 11. FARQUHAR, Adminfstratrix of E. Y. FAR QUHAR, deceased, and to make distribution of the balance in the hands of the accountant, will meet the parties Interested, for the purposes of his appointment, on 310NDAY, December Edit, 1999. at 4 o'clock P. M.. at his office; No. 707 Walnut street, in the city of Phila delphia. del-th 8 tuso GEORGE D. BUDD, Auditor ....,. I N THE ORPHANS' COURT FOR THE City and County of Philadelphia.—Estate of ;LILLIAN HAWKINS, 1181:888(8L—The Auditor ap pointed by the Court to audit. settle and adjust the ac count of SAMUEL A. WIDMER, Administrator of the Estate of W)11. HAWKINS. &TA, and to report distri bution of the balance in the bands of the accountant,*lll meet the patties interested for the purpose of his appoint • ment, on SATURDAY. December 4th. 1869, at 4 o'clock P.M.; at the office of J. A SPENCER, Esq., N 0.423 Walnut et., in the city of Philadelphia. n026-th a tnAtS Fr (STATE OF GEORGE CHAMBER Wig, deceased.—Letters Testamentary upon said estate having been granted to the undersigned, all persona in debted to the estate are requested to make payment, and those having claims to present them without delay to EDWARD It. HANG.;/ Executors. U CHARLES 31. LKEN 8, n0213-s re 1033 Beach street. IN THE DISTRICT COURT FOR THE City and County of Philadelphia. CHARLES '4 HUMPHREYS and wife vs. JQHN 311.711TLAND. Lev. Fa. M. 69, 678.._HERRE.RT D. TURNER. Executor, vs. JOIIN MURTLAND. Vend. Ex. S. 69. N. 389. The Auditor appointed by the Court to distebute the funds arising from the sale under the above writs of all that messuage and lot on east side of Front street and west side of Water street, front on Front street 21 feet 6 inches, depth 40 teat to Water street. Also 4 10t, with brick messuago thereon, on North side of Concord street, 180 feet west of Second street; front 64 feet's inches, depth 61 feet 10 meet the partiesin Interest on ,T UESDAY December 7.' 1869 at 4P. his office, 119 South Fifth street. when and where persona will make their claims or Ito debarred .flow °ming in upon sald fund . • • - JAMES H..CARTLR: Auditor: PEriMi^xx. am3o YEARS' ACTIVE PRACTICC„ —lor. VINE, No. MO Vine street, below - Third, triterta the haw:looniest Toeth in the city,o prices to snit ell. Teeth Pinstled, Teathßomilrod, Ritchainged, or Remodelled to suitg Rita and Rifler. No pain in ex trading. Moe Willi to IL ss74•s.lnAtas • nted with the conetitneate its use; it contains nothing employment. Made only by. S T. 811114. N, Apothecary. Broad and Spruce streets.. ally, and D. L. Steakhouse, Robert G. Davis, Geo. 0. Bower, Chns.Shlvers, S. M. McColl'', S. C. Bunting, Chas. B. Eberle, James N. Marke t " E. Bringhuret & Oa, Dyott & Co., B. C. Blair'e Sone§ Wyeth /t Bro. .