iMM NEW Immutomritoss., MisslEvans's Nett "Orel. ' Mrs., Agla Gerome,or VashtVor Ifirelyn Car lyle, oven in infancy, WAR Mk* unpleasant:. 'When* she was a baby, cutti she had a spasm, straighten! I • out and rolling back her eyes till Only .the white 100 , , showed. She grows up with “gray globe-like eyes," and with secretions so seriously de: ranged that her lips are always white,and that /*Vv. - sins wander - visibly over her surfaces without ,fliishing the complexion. She has , 4 !gbaining white flesh," hair with a "metallic glitter"—in fact a "gray woman of twenty 'thtes." The spirit impriloned in this living in jeotlon is of a kind easily imagined by readers of Miss Evans's works. Pining for a eareer,it takes to art. "Sometimes I have thought , I iirOuld paint a picture of Handel standing up' its listen to that sad story from pis own &mum, -'-otothl eclipse, .no sun,. no moonl', ,Again, I haVe vague visions of a dead . . Schlopenhauer,,-seated in the corner , _ cf,the,sofa, with his 'pet poodle, Put; howl .',= in his master's ghastly white features, with . Ili Indian Oupnekhat lying on his rigid knee, '':. and his gilded statuette of Gotaroa 'Buddha `' ginning at him from the mantel-piece, wel coming , him 'to N,erwana." What she does • Paint is a Judas Iscariot, a "handsonadsman." -This lady, having effected a, marriage evi dently adapted from that of Lady Byron, and being much pained to heat that her bride groom loved another womanhettet, In "agony and shame clenched my 'hands 'so savagely, ono upon the other-'that m 1 diamond be trothal ring out sharply into the quivering flesh, and blood-drops oozed and dropped on my shining gossamer veil and white velvet (Item." The insincere husband finally comes, and serve him right, to a cot in a small-pox hospital, where hewrithesia"bloated crimson mass," on his narrow bed. The wife's rival, Edith the governess, who happens to bo a sublunary angel, goes about all the time doing good. Dr. Grey, who has loved the white mouthed woman, arrives with news of the dissipated husband's demise just in time to find the lady dead, with her eyes turned to the sea. Miss Evans treats all this it her well-known spasmodic style, whieh.she prefatorially ex plains is as much a part of her aS her nose: Her reading of late has been in Matthew Arnold and tha'authors he has criticised and reccminended. Her bric-a-brac erudition dresses all the pages, and her heroeS are con ceived With a woman's nervous determination to carve out great personages. Her art is of course entirely rococo and false. Her book, called " Vashti, or Until Death us do Part," is very neatly put out by Carleton, aid sold by . Claxton, Remsen & Haffellinget. Other recent publications by Mr. Carleton .are the following, to be found on the shelves of Claxton, Remsen & Haffellinger : In . his monograph on "The Living Writers of the South," James W. Davidson, A. M., ac cumulates notices of no less than 241 literary persons still alive below Mason and Dixon's line. We think the book a decidedly valuable one. Under the better auspices now favoring the career of letters in the South, we feel sure that she ds soon to have a literature; and this book, in which she takes her account of stock, will show exactly with what capital she begins at the close of het greatest crisis. It will sur prise a good many people to learn that two hun dred and oneliving Southerners have published books ; forty more are engaged in the profes sion of literature in one way or another. Of the bookmakers, 74 have written fiction'; verse, 112; poetry, 8; in history—including geography, biography, memoirs and travels there are 63; in theology, 20; in science, 15; in philology, 6; in philosophy, 5; in law, 2. The aggregate number of volumes is 739. Mr: Davidson gives a good many examples of the lucubration of his her'oes and heroines ; they are of every degree of merit, and it is a fine trait in the biographer that he does not puff the bad ones. His idea has been, as lie frankly explains, • "to present Southern writers as they are, not to prove that the South has this or that literature, but only to ' show • what literature the South hart." To adhere to such a resolution without partisan ship must be very difficult, and it is Mr Davidson's merit that he has done so with integrity. We have but one fault to find. In a work destined to- a modest but permanent place in the history of American letters, it is a pity that the names of authors are not sepa rated from the merely topical contents of the index ; the latter is a very large one, and the proper names are so to speak lost in it. Why Carlton has consented to print his, name as publisher on the title-page of "Strange Visitors," the clairvoyant book of horrible travesties, is a mystery to us. The stuff pro f_se-tily dictated by " Byron, Thackeray, Mrs. Browning, lrving r " and the rest, is quite un grammatical, and beneath contempt. Per haps the most revolting is Artemus Ward, with his address to the Queen as " Victoria .Thown." . "Phemie's Temptaton," by Marion Har land, is a novel written in vielentpartisanship of woman's rights. Phernie is represented as a writer, an original character and a genius,— not always the most agreeable kind of person - for a husband to live with. One instinctively feels that Hart's side of the story is not told. The genius considers that she ought to dis regard her husband's wishes and as sert her own superior will. , The hus band, to do him justice, is particularly worthless, and is a figure that must. have given great pain to the author to delineate, if she is at all womanly. A divorce concludes 'this disagreeable novel, which is put forward not as a story with a moral, but as a realistic study from real (married) life. As uch it is squalid and- unpleasant, without the pro fundity that gives some unpleasant books their reason for existence. A nouvelette ) Charybdis, is bound up with it. In "To-day," Mr. Richard B. Kimball at tempts once more that kind of thing pre determined to suit every taste, to tickle every fancy, which in the kindred art of painting is knomon as the eclectic. From Smollett's Confessions of a Lady of Quality Mr. Kim. bad takes, with much taming down for mo dern ideas, his "History of one of the Queens of Fashion." Til, character Of the vile, sel fish, fashionable preacher, ; _•Rev. Croton ElLsvrortb, will be familiar to all the readers of Thackeray, • who in troduced this sort of , humbug, and made a good deal more out of him. The book is, however, perhaps above the average , of workS of fiction; and readers who may have glanced at odd chapters of it in magazine shape aril' find it worth possessing in the neat form .it assumes under the patronage of Carleton. Standard books of very fatr character, issued by the same publisher; are, inter alitt, " The :Habits of Good Society," " The Art of Con- Verk-ation," and " Art of Writing, Reading and tipe-ailing." =The Rev. J. A. Bowden LL. D., in his "=book .on the wild animals an&birds of prey _of plorway,braks of a lady - whose lap-dog was Pinata:l/A from her sleigh by a wolf while she vas driving in the outskirts of the town of Chritstiana. -- 4 % competent organist",h4 wanted for a itity church in I 4 ondou at a salary of £5 a year. Chicago girls have been added to the Farepa4tosa troupe. Hooider named Thomas Brand put Some powder in a Move to clean out a pipe, ;tad it cleaned out his house. EM:== ME CREAM OP THE NEW BOOKS: , • .. , ..., A falsity.° clitsysiiiit the uture, FA* The Collik Mitory ethe *fed Mate% By, i 1 .01in rt, Sherwdoll. Httlilisher - by ;Fields, pstsSod &,' Co. Ilestorg;i For ' sale ;Iv .1:',03,1 ppincott & C4Philatlelphiss: '•-•,•.' :_••:.. PstoPle aRIIPOsIt. that 'kt :Iff'. dititPult .4o V wi tii liPe story in apVitriea.' Thersiti4 greaterdout o n. 'Tads—even when we yget....at - them and are sure'of them,Whlch s ea om hav . pens—aro great obstructions .to a narrative. They involve sudden-leaps into unforeseen -depths of.human-action,perplexing - struggles through very dynastic uncertainties, or ascents to unexpected developments of oharaider, try ing to one's judgment and patience, and often hurtful to one's pride of opinion. • Our pre conceptions, unverified by a set of obstinate facts, are distressed by the unsatisfactory con tradictions. We halt dissatisfied on a dusty road, which the tramp of events has 'worn smooth, and left.nothing lotinovelty or an in dustrious fancy.e • 1 : .. • -- ,T' ' ' , ' Besides, • the great majority, of readers are partisans, and have a right to be disappointed at and to blame those unreasoning conclusions, . which slide inevitably out of realities. They confront sternly , , those facts which affront them; by insisting on happening in .a . way or order different from their , expectations or wishes. Hitherto, we have been obliged to conform to the hard conditions .thas Inherent in actual chronicles, and haye -been forced to submit our readers to these annoying cer tainties, . . . We can, however, now dismiss these tan talizing fixities of events; which have run be fore us, and left us the wearisome business of catching• up to them; and leaving them to overtake us, if they can, to write .up a future history of events, which ought to happen, and which will greatly disappoint the sanguine ex pectations of Americans if they do not. The excuse for failure will be lessened by the out• lined path which we here stretc h downward into the wooded future. . We take it for granted, then,: that all our future Presidents will be the very best and most competent men in the nation, spontane ously acclimated to the office, and not wrung out by industrious party conventions for politi cal ends. Uncommitted to committees or po litical sponsors, and unweighted by onerous .gratitude to'ex-working party canvassers, they will naturally hereafter pensively appoint to Cabinetplacea and diplomatic posts statesmen of pre-eminent ability, patriotism ' and integ rity, who will as modestly wait to be invited in, as the same clasp now, when in, stand as if hopelessly deaf, to be distinctly invited out. That they will reluettintly, if' at all, subject weak citizens to the pains and penalties of ex ecuting and garroting • the laws, or the slow and unpracticed, to the,,heavy tasks of carry ing the public burdens. The public debt will naturally disappear. Per haps some fortunate speculator in petroleum or Erie stock will pay it off rather than have it in the way, or see it left to bear the market in opportunely. The secret of making money scarce will doubtless lead to the discovery of making it plenty; and then the public debt, being of no use to anybody, will naturally stand aside, as poor relations in times of plenty. Besides, gentlenien being selected, not for their own interests, but for the public good, will, it is to be expected . ; donate their salaries to a sinking fund, which will carry it off, as some companies do their stock holders' dividends, to unfathomed bot toms. In fact, if the debt. could be cut up into dividends, nothing more would be heard of it. If the whole truth may be safely told, the difficulty in the extinguishment of the debt will not bo so much in its undoubted dis appearance, as in settling. upon that plan among the numbers presented, which will be permitted to hurry it out of sight. Of course, when the Federal obligations quit, the State and city debts will not have the face to remain behind. These subjects out of the way, members of Congress, being then gentlemen, as well as educated, capable and honest men ; , dragged unwillingly from and not into business, will deal withthe few remaining topics with a wise silence,—and this course - we take for.grant-ed now; or else will discuss them and not each other, or the encyclopaedia of unrelated ques tions, the publication of which now so en hances the price of paper. .., This improvement in our iiirongressional de bates will have . a corresponding advantage, also, to those foreigners who, desirous of learning our system, venture upon the speeches made at the Capitol, and, hopelessly misled by the terms employed, and the ferocious adjec tives that commit horrible murders on almost every paragraph, confound our • geography with that of the Cannibal Islands. We also take it for granted, that our public men will wait for events to justify the crude specula -lions, which they toss out in conversations ' with reporters,before cruelly amusing the good natured public with their vaticinations. Posy sibly, too, the spread of common schools and Sunday schools, teaching grammar and mo rality, may lead to the disuse by our print rushing politicians of styles of speech quite incomprehensible, and of words so raw in out line and so destitu te of middle letters as to lead profane people to fancy that they are imita tions of their own heedless expressions. Of course, in the better days now dawning, "rings" will only be used to tie quadrupeds to posts, or to restrain vicious bipeds in state prisons. Combinations to do good and in crease the general happiness , will naturally supplant those curious American circles,whose peripheries are not equidistant from thp centre, but which consist in fact only of a centre, and that centre, self. Happiness, and not wealth, being thus the main pursuit, of course many kinds of occu pations, now called business, such as brokers, money-lenders, etc., will cease, and those now engaged in these so-called pursuits—of others, will look after the-poor to minister unto them and not take then! in. The superior claims of charity upon the fortunate, who are now liv ing, will naturally be enhanced by the fact that, being at present in the world, they can not reasonably expect to live much longer than Ifl7o, and may quit much earlier, leaving some selfish heirs not disposed to divide ex cept for an equivalent. Many judges being released from their pre sent arduous duties of so administering law as to get re-elected—for then no one will value an - office so much a sinecure—Vll have some time r especially_in_New _."York,_to_ study law; and some courts of appeal can be repealed. The only injunctions issued will' be oral, de livered, not to railroad speculators, but to in discreet juveniles,unwarily betrayed into their first and last offence. The expense of court houses being thus partially saved, it• is ex pected, that the small unventilated places in which law is peddled out will bo enlarged, and. ahumane effort be thus made to save the exposed lives of suitors, lawyers, jurorii, and judges. The American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals will naturally, with larger means, extend its operations, and embrace employers, suffering from servants of inde pendent ways, from domestics who take six evenings in the 'week out, and allow their mis tress one, and who, for certain discreet con siderations, not worth mentioning here, per mit those, who diVide their estates with them, to occupy a portion of the same house, on con dition of not interfering with their separate apartments. We also take it for granted that woman's rights will not be wrongfully urged or with held ; but will be so adjusted, that the public will ascertain what some people would ask for, if they •did not become incomprehensible through abundant talking, or what—consider ing the modesty of the applicants—they really ought,to have, although they do not clamor for it in a way that makes some:suspect, that men are either to be extinguished outright, or else kept for a few hundred years on pro-: bation, until they shall have learned to be re spectful, just; and umnanlike. In this coming good time, men and women aro to be ! equal,—especially the women. If any differences are discdvered in any way be tween them, these differences are to be sub mitted to conventions chosen by the wisest women, and the differences either to be en tirely suppressed, or theAissenters all expelled from the United States. Uniformity is to be secured at all hazards. if necessary, ballot boxes will be attached to cradles; and women, by any cause confined from active canvassing, will be allowed to vote twice at the next elec tion, in order t o bring up their rights to a point' where nature left them. We further take it for granted, that children will then be content to ,be vivacious; will be left tOibe witching ways, the pulpy and dewy frctilmess, of the morning glory of life,'Until they shall Lave gradually come to the ripe maturities of action ; that they will not fall from grace into 'the condemnation of mis chievous notice ; will not daily burst into as tonishiug feats of memory or attainment be fore reluctant, domestic auliences, nor carry on social insurrections against the United THE DAILY EVENING BULLETIN-PHILADELPHIA; WEDNESDAY; I E ; 8 :69. Stateti — of.,:lheit begetters until they . have 44104 their , independence, nor hold a reurilf Of Julvevery day in year. ,4sllorild:lrefdlins'in. this `direction not take. &Watts anticipated, it'en We shill.Cipect that, infantile precocities Will Ala utilized 'be- I fore they ohalfhave evaPOtated into the in ,sipiditles of manhood and wOnianhitiod.. At. present, it is ‘ well undatitoOd, children - are anachroniains Sadly out t:if squandering uselessly theiribetsfpowentwitlunitycorrespond ingrespensibilities s legally - treated as minors when they are in fact majors; denied the legal, - rights to ititirrYnntil they renal* Period when' marriage is tame and idle, nOld ,flte, moans to. support a Wife exhausted; qProhibited from going to Congress and being Presidents, while full of original Idea, and itibifinietratiVe' ability r and ,allowed to go ',when they have, oozed tiWay - throtigh the leakages': Of active growths all capacity, and become just—what , we sentheta at Washington; and 'warding in' pantalets; the money which, if suffered„they might earn better'than. the, old heads which are mow only figure-heads. We shall ,not be 'surprised to ' see, if not during Grant's time, at 'least before the cen tury runs out, a constitutional amendment ro ,lieving aged Americans:--those, for example,, who have attained the ripe, very ripe age of twenty-one—from the duties and cares of of flee, and securing to the public the benefit of young vigorous intellects, varying from twelve to seventeen years of age. The happy results of this change Will be ap parent-to any infant-mind. Short-jacketed M. C.'s will impart new vivacity to Congres sional . debate;young ministers to foreign courts will be able to acquire, if they "do not know, some language beside the American, and be able to converse with those with whom they have business,:—.on unspeakable luxury • now. Active, bustling infants will give a new ardor to journalism, and produce a more enter prising corps of wide-awake newspaper cor respondents, to keep up the stock of telegraph companies by information which, being con stantly in advance of the facts, would fairly represent and be fitting types of the infantile correspondents themselves, and necessitate additional contradictions. As territorial gover nors, obliged to take hazardeus journeys on our railways,—which often intervene and pre vent older men from reaching their destina tion—they would be nimble enough to get out of the wreck, or perhaps smart enough to keep their deaths secret, and have their ances tors draw their salary,—thus accomplishing, although not present, the principal businesS of that office. Then, too, how much livelier would things go on in our churches, if, instead of the dull, old elders, deacons, or vestrymen, .now seldom elected before they reach the great age of thirty, and who, when they were boys, were smart enough, although .not as alert as their own boys now, were allowed to rest their stiffer awkward limbs in their pews, and eccle siastical affairs were managed by their young ers ? The sick would be visited by cheerful, round-faced persons, bright with the 'health which would be brought as a living fact to the invalid; widows would be comforted by the presence of dark-haired and hopeful youths, and not depressed by the aspect of people en cumbered with wives and the chilling experi ence of at least a score and a halt' of years; while the poor would receive liberally from those who well know, that the best use for money is to keep it in vigilant circulation. Business would also be conducted on youth ful principles, in consonance with the other rapid ways' oft the times ; capital .would be nimble and alert, creating . 'profits so lively that they, would leap back into the common and rapidly running current. Old legislative . peculators, bank and trust defaulters, would soon in thenatural course of things, and with out shocks of legal trials,—which generally -produce no resulta,—be displaced ; while young iniquity would scarcely acquire the rime and rust which now incrust so many of the old in struments of corruption, making them almost respectable. Biographies, now often running tediously through' so many chapters, would be. brief; as an American life might be assumed to close by substantially at twenty-five at least, and we should get the rich morning. cream, without wearying ourselves with col lecting the thin globules that float on the pan of age. In the better times to which of course every body looks, we take it for granted, also, that the every-day arts and the familiar sciences, now taught in schools and colleges, will be laid aside; and that Greek, Latin, French, German, Italian, Irish, and other tongues,— those sad reminders of Babels and other poly glot attempts and results,—will give place to more practical studies. How to cook, so as 'not to destroy the remnants of stomachs left by candy-eating, hot breads, and other delect able addictions of the old barbarous times w hich America has passed dyspeptically through; how to get a husband or 'wife, in. every way suited to the expectations andideas of different members of the family, and on a scale mathematically mljusted to the pecuniary latitude and longitude calculated from the pa ternal meridian; ?row to scale a.tariff for-con ductors, 'Which shall riot raise the market price of gold rings, studs, and heavy watches, and yet leave something for the directors to operate the stock with; the best methods of acquiring a fortune without the stale process of failure and .settling with creditors; the mode of conducting railway Collisions and steamboat explosions, without ruining whole families and destroying rising communities at a blow, and without leaving so many facetious queslions to funny coroners and irresistibly comic jurors; a method of advertising wares and leaving some praiseful adjectives not used I up; a system which should graduate the de crease in weights and measures to the price; and how to make an hour's work go as far as ten old-fashioned absurd hours,—these• will help to furnish out a curriculum of study for institutions high and low. The fashions will be regulated by the Secre tary of the Treasury, who wiffuse a daily tele graphic bulletin, so that no one shall have any advantage over another. The President of the United States, by way of keeping his band in, may practice on a Sunday-school every Sunday„addressing them in rotation, and going over those in New Jer sey and Texas several times, if a safe pais can be secured. The antique modes of mining will be abolished altogether. A central bureau, located in Wall street, will so work all kinds of veins and arteries, auriferous, argentiferous and verdibackish, as to entice out all their values on call. 'The traditions about gold are to be wrought up into poetry, and thus forever forgotten. ' We have been put in possession of the ad- van& sheetS of several reports, to he made to •the various State legislatures in 1909, on "The Absence of Legislative Corruption," from which it is manifest, that nothing with moaay in it ever reaches the capitals of that clay and that the members are left to the tedious busi ness of practical legislation, their spare time bbing,uniused with antiquarian researches into the capital chances for money-making . be tween 1800 and 1870, It is also apparent from these coming reports that great amusement is to be afforded by the study of the severely vir tuous styles of examinations, conducted by committees of our time, into alleged briberies of fellow-members; while the hotel - bills of the cautious investigators are to be 're garded as inimitable specimens of the gastro nomic abundance of their predecessors in America. We also take for granted, that the railway system of the United States will be wonder fully simplified. We now make it a matter of boasting that since, the beginning of our rail ways, in 1829, we have extended them until, in forty years, they have reached a length of 38,600 - index, or a circuit around the earth one mare half times ; costing in their construction arfd, equipm ,rit $1,700 ; 000.000, or a sum equal • to two-thirds of the debt of the United States; employing 8,000 engines and 13'6,000 ears, or enofh, if plaCed side by side, to reach from No . York to Chicago, and carrying *annually 145,0'0,000 of passengers, or a number more than four times the whole population, men,' women, children,. and John Smiths put to• gether. We are mbilant over the completion, in four years, of hue Pacific Railroad; .1,900 miles in length; forming a line from New York to.Sair I.!ranersco of 3,353 miles, strain inu across prairies; chasing off herds of buf falo, spitting Utah with a skower,',elirribing the, Sierras:B,ooo feet high, and leveling the Rocky Mountains with iron maces. All these performances are, in the absence of anything better, and in our poor beginning - A, not disdainful topics of conversation or news paper comment.; But in the near future we take it, that a single consolidation of all lines in the hands of one inan,—whose name at present we. mercifully withhold,--replacing our. 4 ooden depots with stone structures .tastefi fully decorated with waving flags and live eagles, our, tressel-work bridges , with solid granite buttresses, spanned by iron girders,— the old. ones being .kept under glass cases for curious exhibition,---will so prolong, carry round, and multiply iron ways, that the en ~ ‘r ' • are population of the 'United States, lixelipt;n: ins, perhaps, newspaper repertera% and - ineni T ll hero of Congress, wilLbe invited aaVerattiln* a year to takaa`ploseurie trip, OrituitoutilY, every teWnf, , btivin,gl,_ a 'thotUtancvinhabitanks,, , , ebd be -enter, tained 84 - months' on the Oeil* - pended.dividends, made palatable by, watered stbck. 1 'Orunb Brig ladsonio days be left to the:' unnaturalized Englishmen among us, and to those wry-faced observers of the weather and crops, who get up such very, unlively stooks of figtires,, and 04 1 - gate their rueful faces beneath their cold TatriOtittni will - of course, be merged in. a cosmopolitan feeling; for, as our boundarlea Will naturally take - in nearly ail thee world; what is outside ;be the , suidects bf our pity and eomniiaeration; as those portions of the globe n n fortunately , left Autsido of gu land - were, a fe* years ago, to Englishmen... Chicago will then have so many elevators, that she will raise not only-her surface above Lake Michigan, but her, manners to a point where mending can begin. New York will doubtless be ruled by a descendant of the . Fisk-al family, who will utilize New Jersey as a railroad depot or a coal-yard. Philadelphia, letting go , of - New York as a bad job, beneath her satire, will have such .ti Rush-ing library 'as to be the book lender of the Union. Bos ton will be, to her delight, roofed in, and be come tho Publication Office of Fields, Os good '&5 Co. ' with Faueull Hall and tho. Atheineum fo r and lithographing; while the Southern cities along the coast wil t ' serve as light-houses for the dark land scapes which have , hitherto glowered behind them. Cotton will be more than king,—will be a good thrifty farmer, replacing broom-sedgy fields with smiling furrows, razor-backed hogs with blooded stock, and will stand out in round completeness, not isolated by a heritage which kept it aloof from the world, but linked in a rosy chain of productive good with the happy brotherho o d. of work, prosperity, and well-doing. We need hardly add, that we shall leave oil praising ourselves when we shall most de serve praise, and cease to bo sensitive to for eign censure when we shall be hardy enough to laugh at it. As everybody is naturally expecting to be happy, so we expect that everybody will be, without being seriously hurt or stunted by any, of the little taps of this history. Paz vo biscum. Meanwhile, and until these' blessed times and expectations shall converge into the focal- . izing future, we trust that our readers, jolly, good, and happy, will get over, as best, they can, the intermediate 'spaces, keeping their eye and faith steadily upon THE) END HOLIDAY GOODS• THE VATICAN, 1010, Cheetnut Street, STATUARY, . BRONZES, AND VASES, CHOICE GEMS OF ART AND ARTICLES OF TASTE FOR IRE ADORNMENT Or PARLOR, LIBRARY, HALL & BOUDOIR, AND FOR Bridal and Christmas Gifts: Articit 4 all prices, from one dollar to one hundred each. Spacious show rooms u➢ stairs. del 19th 1004. ARCH STREET 1004. GRIFFITH & PAGE. HOLIDAY LI s PLATED WARE. BRONZES. CARVED WOOD. BRACKETS. Boon SHELVES. BLACKING CASES. TOWEL RACKS. ' CRUMB TRAYS. TABLE TRAYS. de4 Bridal, Birthday and Holiday Presents. ATJ BON MAB,O HE. The One Dollar Department contains a large assortment Of Fine Frsnoh Goods, Embracing Desks, Work, Glove, Handkerchief and Dressing Boxes, in great variety. Dolls. Hectranieal Toys Ulla Tree Trimmings, Silk. Fans, Leather Bags, Pocket Books, China Vases and ornaments, Lo., ntom qi oo to too W. ' Call and examine our Paris Goods. Party and evening dresses made and Trimmed from French and English Fashion Plates. Fancy Cstum r Nasotierades,lialls, &c., made to order in Forty-eight Hours' Notice, at . • MRS. M. A. BINDER'S Eadies'Dresstrinurdmrs, • Paper Pattern, Dress and Cloak nailing Establishment, N. W. Con ELEVENTH and EVENING- Streets. OPEN DI THE EVENING -2.5-tt rp FIRE-PROOF SAFES. HERRING'S CHAMPION SAFES. Late Destructive Fire in Third Street. rittLADlmputA, Nov. 1869 NlEsszts. r,saitEL. HERRING CO., No 629 Chestnut street. • GENTLEMEN ; On Wednesday night, the 9d inst., our large Slam Manufactory, No. 118 North Third street, was burned (mt., We lost our large stock of goods, but were the fortunate owners of one of your Patented Chum ' pion lire-Proof Safes, which was exposed for many hours to an intense heat, and did its duty most man , fully ; in fact, the books, papers and money that it con ' tained curie out as good as when they wore put in. The contents of the safe were all we saved. Please send us another, of larger size, to our now place as early as possible. . Yours Yory. Respectfully, • JOHN A. BOOAR. tr. CO. HERRING'S PATENT CHAMPION RAVES, the most reliable protection from fire now known. HER RING'S NEW PATENT BANKERS' SAFES, com. bining hardened steel and 'iron ' With the Patent Franklinite, or SPIEGEL EISEN, furnish a resistant against horing and cutting tools to an extent heretofore unknown. Farrel, Herring & Co.; Philadelphia. Herring; Farrel tt Sherman, No. 261 Broadway, corner Hurray - St., N. Y. Herring k'Co., Chicago. Ilerrhig, Farrel ofc Sherman, New Orleans. nolti r .tf FINE ARTS Established 1795. A. S. ROBINSON FRENCH PLATE LOOKING GLASSES. Beautiful Chro-n-tos, ENGRAVINGS AND PAINTINGS, I'Looolnetttrer of all kinds of • Lookiag.;6-lass, Portrait & Piataro From% incy CHESTNUT STREET. Fifth Door above the Continental, PHILADELPHIA. MiSCELLANIMUb IfOURITt ' , AGAINST LOSS ' r ' BURGLARY, I t.ll*V ACol)6ll t ri, TAE SA POSIT'COMPANY Tillan New Fireand Burglar-Proof Building, Nos. 829 and 831 Chestnut Street. TEE 'FIDELITY INSTROCE, TRUST SAFE DEPOSIT COMPANY. capital. • P . DIRECTORS N. B. Browne, , Edward W. Clark, Clarence H. Clark, Alexander Henry, John Welsh, Stephen A. Caldwell, Charles klacaletteHer, nry C. GGibs eorg on e F. Tyler, President—N. B. BROWNE. ' Vice Prealdent—CLAßENCE H. CLARK. Secretary and Treasurer—ROßEßT PATTERbON Assistant Secretary—JAMES W. HAELEHURST. The Company haVo provided, in their new Building and. Vaults, absolute security against loss by IfIRE, BURGLARY or ACCIDENT, and RECEIVE' SECURITIES AND VALUABLES ON DE. POSIT, UNDER GUARANTEE. Upon thd following rates for ono year or less period : Government 'and all other Coupon Se curities, or those transferable by do- SI 00 per $l,OOO Goveninient ana all other Securities registered and negotiable only by in dorsement 50 per !LIM Gold Coin Or Bullion el 15 per LOCO Silver Coln or Bullion 442 00 per 1,000 Silver or Gold Plate, under seal, on own er's estimate of value. and rate subject to adjustment for bulk.. 151 00 per $lOO Jewelry, Diamonds, 50 per $l,OOO Deeds, Mortgagee and Valuable Papers generally, when of no fixed value, $1 a year each or according to bulk. These latter, when deposited in lin boxes, are charged according to bulk, upon a basis of Vi feet cubic capa- city, 4 1 110 a year. Coupons and interest will be collectml when desired, and remitted to the owners, tor one per cent. Tho Company offer for RENT, the lessee exclusively holding the key, SAFES INSIDE TILE DUIIGLAIt-Plloolf VAULTS, P t rates varying from $l5 to $75 each por annum, ac cording tome. Deposits or money received. on which: interest will be allowed :-3 per cent. on Call deposits, payable! by Check at eight, and 4 per cent. on Time de - posits, payable on ten days'notice. Travelers'Lotters of Credit furnished, available in all parts of Europe. Thia Company Is also antheriuml to act as Executors, Administrators and Guardians, to receive and execute Trusts of every description trona the Courts, Corpora tions or individuals. N. B. BUOIVIVE, President, ROBERT PATTEMION. Secretary and Tretuturer no2l-w th f2in.§ DR. J. DE DAVIN WITITE'S MOUTH WASH AND GARGLE. The name and standing of Dr. WHITE in Medical Dentistry are a guarantee for the efficiency of whatever be_preseribes for the Month and Teeth. Ilia Month Wash and Gargle, an entirely new remodY, based on 'science In every respect, contains the best In gredients, =Nile-ally to correct irritation of the mncons surfaces. and chemically to arrest the decay of the Teeth and insure a clean Mouth, a sweet Breath, anda healthy 'flroat. DR. J. DE HAVEN WRITE'S DEDICATED DENTIFRICE. This entirely new (gray) Tooth Powder, the result of many years' experience, surpasses far, in th e Doctor's judgment, hie former (pink colored) Powder, co exten sively known to the • public under the mane of "Dr. White's Deutine." He advisee his customers to discou- Done the use of the Dentine altogether, and repudiates all Tooth Powders and Mouth Washes sold under his name as spurious, except the above, with his signature on the label, and prepared only by GUSTAVUS KRAUSE, Apothecary, N. W. comer TWELFTH end CIIESTNUT atrvets DR. DE HAVEN WHITE'S TOOTH BRUSHES, /NIKE° VEKENT 1959. ' Superior Many In the world. Tor tale at the teurta ()cam w atru2_ Removal. J. H. MICHENER & CO., CURERS OW THE CELEBRATED " Excelsior" Sugar-Cured Hams, • Tongues and Beef, Have Removed to their' NEW STORE, NOS. 122 AND 124 ARCH STREET. not 6 imp _ GAS FIXTURES. Prom the Deiebrated Manufacturers, Mitchell, Vance & Co., New York, and Tucker Munufacturing Co., Boston. And every rariety of COAL OIL LAMPS, From our own Manufactory, Camden, New Jersey. COULTER, JONES & . C 0 .70 2 ARCH STREET, PHILADELPHIA. se23-3m rP SPECTACLES AND NOSE GLASSES OF EVERY KIND. MICROSCOPES, SPY GLASSES, OPERA GLASSES, THERMOMETERS, • &c., &c.. • For eale by W. Y. IIicALLISTE72, 728 WELESTNUT Street, Philadelphia, Plate)fished 1723. 0e.30 ettw 2mrp§ _ GOLD NEVADA/La Gold Medal awarded to us over all competitors at the late Exhibition of the dfarylCuicl • Lwti tute, at Baltimore, Md. [ VL -' Of the Ittted and ni a Are" dopi,gns, anik all other Slate wolic oh lin nit huntide to order, , • Factory and Solearooma Sixteenth and ,CallotrhitiStreets. WILSON etc MILLER. no2Q NY tjal FRED. SYLVESTER, REAL ESTATE BROKER, I I I i. 2mcD3; • ' ' FITLER, WEAVER , Si NEW CORDAGE . FACTORY NOW IN MAN iirEItATION, No, 22 :WATER treot and 23 N.PELAWARE avenue REMOVAL: - - REMOVAL.. 410SIIIVA. COW.PLAND :=49:NS HA.v.s.iticasovED - LOOKING , GLASS AND P ICTUItE- MAN& STORE To No.lB NoRTII mill STREET,' Where they offer, at Reduced Priem, a. general' asiort. moot of LOOKING. GLASsES, PlOl3lltE-FRAISIES_, CORNICES, RENCH. NATE AI.IIRRORti, CURTAIN ROOM AIOUL 1),I)41*; • not w in'ttle3l.§ Q T. BEALE, M. D. ,& SON, DENTISTS; bave removed to 1118 Girardqtreet '0022 Ste- BALES COTTON,'LAND. ‘.../ing from Stemmer Tonowanda, for unto by (70011- BAN, RUSSELL & CO., 111 Chestnut street. 1 f'' ;1113. 11.16. , GREAT CLOSIN G OUT SALE ' . _ HOOP SKIRTS AND CORSETS, Corrimencing Saiurday - neoember 4, And will be continued until January arid prices marked down to, and below tho who{ esale gold priOesi affording an opportunitr for unplreoedented bargains In first-class 1100 P SKIRTS and COJISETti for the time above•stated ONLY. 15,000 hoop Skirts for Ladies, Kisses and Children In . 400 varieties of stYloo, Eiger .40411ty and prices, from hle, to s2,annuy of thetu marked down to lees than one third price. Over 19,000 Cornets, including 83 kinds and prices, such en Thomson's Glove fitting i.lorsete In fi ve grades; Jas. Becket's BnPeitior French W I oven. n •all q ualities Worir's, in' four varieties; Mrs, Moody 's Patent Solf-ed jesting_ Supporting' Corsets; Madame Foy's Corot and skirt anpportpre; Superior fLual.nnoe Corsets call grades, Misses ', Children ' s, &p. Together with our own make of Comte, In great variety. • All of which will bo ii,ooo,oea lI[IRKED' DOWN TO PANIC PRICES. Call cart'', while the stock remains unbroken, as there, eau to no duplicates at the prices. At 1115 Chestnut Street. WM. T. HOPKINS. debon w f3aift, CARPETINGS, iirt;. NEW CARPETS. AXMINSTERS, WILTONS, VELTETS, BRUSSELS, 3 PLYS AND. INGRAINS, Venetians, Druggets, Oil Cloths, &e. 1. - JOEDOIII & 9 hem GENTS' FURNDITIING GOODS. HOLIDAY PRESENTS J. W. SCOTT & CO., No. 814 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia, PATENT SHOULDER SEAM SHIRT MANUFACTORY. Orders for these colebrsteii Shirts snypllwd promptly brief notice. Gentlemen's Furnishing Goods, WINCHESTER & CO. fl-tri w f tr aßbeEitiiis, LIQUORS, LAARGE VARIETY NEW GO OD S ALBERT C. ROBERTS. DEALER IN FINE cutoczsmai, Corner Eleventh and Vine Streets. NEW MESS SHAD AND SPICED Salmon, Tongues and Sounds, In' prime order; just received and for sale at COUBTY . 8 East End Grocery No.llB South Second street. below Chestnut Arcot. "DUBEt3PIOEB, GROUND AND WHOLE —Pure English--Mustard by the.. pound —Choice s W to h e, e aWdi nor R nd e C CO U Ap T p- lle'B Vinegar ndG r p c k yngN n 114,8suth &wood street, below Chestnut street. NEW GREEN „ GINGER,--400 POUNDS of choice Grail Ginger to store and for sale at COVOTIPB. Nast End Grocery, N. 118 South Second street, bolo* Chestnut street., WHITE BRANDY FOR PRESERVING. —A choke article' j.tat Tecelved and for sale at 07.4.113 TY'S East Znd Grocery, No.llB South Second street, below Chestnut street. QOUPS.—TOMATO, PEA, MOCK LI Turtle and Jullien Soups of Boston Club Manufac ture oue of the - fluent' articles for nit-tiles and sailing parties. For sale at COUSTY'S East End Grocery, No 118 South Secotui street, below Chestnut street. ZELL'S ,POPULAR VANG 4 VCIA:OI 7 ".EpIA.. , A Diotiorlary,or Universal Knowledge., T. EIL I VII(4100D .Z.E1.1., Publisher, 17 a iacl9'gouth Sixth Street. nos w in smft PHILOSOPHY OF MARRIAGE.- - A new (ionise of Lectures, as 611mi:wed at the New rk Museum 'of Anatomy; .embrabing the teabjeetej Oldto L Manhoodwhat to Lire reviewed Yuth.:MaturlPF Ona Age; generally ; the Cause or, In digestion, Flatulence and Nervous ,Dlsesaisi accounted for; Marriage Philosophically Clousidered, Pocket volumes conslning these O will be for post paid,' on receipt of 24 , by addr °B6l W. A. Leary, Jr.,, Southeast corny }' of KU( and walla streets. Philadelphia". , ~. , , fe26 ly) ClAs FIXT P g MERRILL & THA ► ' 'A, No. 71Li Cheetaut street, inanufati 'hirers of t ' Ixturee, Lampe, A n., &0., would can the alto of the publics to , their large and 'elegant iutert rn • erase Ohluidellere, Pendants, Braoketa, ttc , 1330 1 shoo traduce e pipes into dwellings and public! ban - ipso, atten dextending, altering and repairing BF. Saheb. All wor warranted. BROWN'S Wholesale and Retell Corset Warehouse REMOVED 819 ARCH STREET. BARATET. ORSETS. TOURNURES, PANIERS. 112 S. Eleventh St. 0 ARCH STREET. FOE GENTLEMEN. Four doors below Contlnentol ruhtlln w ti Of late styles in full variety 706 C3IIESTNUT. POCKIET BOOKS. &C Suitable for the Season, JUST RECEIPT]) 'NEW PUBLIcATIONS. ffffi Tice. French task ea ireitaday. VERY rich gold discoveries have been made in Nicaragua. , „ NAirnxn iconveritionof eofored 'men teetalaii at 'Washington. - • TIIE - Internal Revenue receipts were yester day a quarter of a million dollars. , IFis denied tbattbe Hudson- Bay Cunipany is implicated in the Red River insurrection, EASTRIIN Texas gives a majority for Ham , .. • Tni Kentu9ky Legislature will elect a United States Senator, to succeed McCreery, on the 14th. , TILE Boston flour mills, org Commercial wharf, in Bilsten," were burned last evening. ' T4p ,loss estimated at $150,000, to $2,00,000, Tip; Viceroyof E t gyp is making extensive preparation.s to increase the cotton crop in that country. r IN THE * f) oro non pleas at Harris ' • burg, yesterday, themotion ; for S new trial in • the Credit Mobiller case was overruled. Aufanin. wants the consent of the Ettio pean powers to cross Turkish territory for the purpose of quelling the Dalmatian , Insurree , tiqn. • . . A CONCEfiSION has been obtained from 'the Czar for laying a telegraph cable from some, point on the coast of Asiatic Russia to China and Japan. THE New York city election was held yes terday, and resulted in the success of the Tammany candidates, and the continuance in office of Mayor flair. The vote was light. ItsFonstAnox has reached General Sheri dan's headquarters that the Blackfeet In dians, in mounted parties, are murdering and plundering the white settlers in Mon tana. UNITED STATES District-AttOrney Pierre pont, it is reported, has been instructed, at Washington, to let the Spanish gunboats go, unless the Peruvian government make out a good case against them. The supposition is that they will be released. THE Postmaster-General, in a communi cation to Congress, estimates that $25,581,000 will be required for the expenses of his de partment the next fiscal year. Of this, $13,- 507,000 is for inland, and $480,000 for foreign. waittransportation. • "Additional sums. arrnre gating $725,000 will be required for steamship service to Japan, Chiba, Brazil and the Sand wich Islands. THE BOHAN' COUNCIL. An Austrian Opinion. From the Wanderer of Vienna, Nov. 22.1 Though few practical results are expected .froni the December ecclesiastical, assembly it is attracting more and more the attention of the ixilitical world. A correspondent of the Augsburg Gazette writes from Rome to that journal that now,as in the time of the Council of Constance, two parties stand opposite to each other in the Eternal City. Olio of these rrialritains the doctrine that "the Pope is supe rior to the Council, which represents, so to speak, the Holy Father's assessor:" while the other insists that "the attribute of infallibility does not belong to the Pope,but to the Church assembled in Council" In the expression, " the Pope Is the minister ing head (cop': niinisteriele) of the Church," the hierarchical absolutists lay the stress on the head and the others on the minister. It Is known to what contests trifles like these gave rise at the councils of Basel and Ferrara. The Paris Libor: i lately published a letter from Rome which gave some curious particulars about the parties in the coming Council. Car dinal Antonelli, it is stated, will have no in fluence whatever, and his opponent, Morode, to his own great disappointment, just as little. On the other hand, the foreign prelates seem likely to be the roasters of the situation. Dupan loup- will' play a very important part, and Deschamps, Bishop of Mantles, will be the leader of the Belgian clergy. The bishops of Fulda will form agroup by themselves, which will comprehend the majority of the German bishops. Equally, the Jesuits will rally to their standard all who desire to elevate the Sylla bus into a creed, and who are covinced or affect to be so, that the personal infallibility of the Pope will be the crowning glory of the Catholic ecclesiastical constitution. In spite of all the efforts of the last-named party, how ever, it cannot be doubted that many of the clergy will decline to :march in leading strings. , FOREIGN ITEMS. Lesseps versus France. A Paris letter, in the Indepenciancs Beige, says People here have been greatly aston ished at the attack taide by 31. de Lasseps at the Ismailia banquet, and in the presenceof the Empress, against the French government, relative to its refusal to press for a reform in the capitulations. From this circumstance the conclusion is 'drawn that the famous title of Duke de Suez is burled. For myself, I never attached the slightest importance to that rumor." Earl Derby's Fortune. The Londen.Recerd says that the late Earl of Derby has left a fortune of .£1.90,0 a year. When his lordship succeeded to bis estates they sere said to be worth 1:60,000 a year ; but the greatincrease is attributed to the wonder fal extension of factories in Lancashire, and t comequent en ormolu, increase of buildings. A illiyieteathe Letter. • Pire Hyacinthe has written a letter from New York to Emile de Girardin, in which he Says : I offer up prayers that the cause of liberty .may triumph and bear fruit in Europe as it does in this noble country: — That, with the triumph and fruitfluness of Christianity, is the sole safety of the present, the solo hope of the future. I congratulate you, Monsieur, on the talent you apply to the service of the first •of these causes and on the respect which, lacking faith, you accord the see ond. A Noble Bankrupt. Lord Justice Gifford : of England, reversed the decision of Commissioner Winslow and decided that the Duke of Newcastle, though a peer, can be made a bankrupt. Notice of ap peal to the House of Lords against this judg ment was at once given. MMON.. South • SintirJesus Cotton Cultivated in Georgia. (From thq Columbus (Ga.) "Enquirer, Dec.2.l 4 1Ve have noticed that a diploma was awarded at the Georgia State Fair to Dr. 0. B. Leitner, of Geneva, for a fine specimen of Routh merican cotton. Dr. Leitner yesterday left a boll of this cotton with us, and it is really a variety that de serves attention. The boll is much larger than any cotton boll we ever saw before. The flocks or locks bang down beneath. the tod* to the length of five and six inches, and hese flocks are distinct in their whole length, being five in number. It is easier to believe than to doubt after seeing this boll, that fifty such will weigh a pound ! The fibre is flue and silky. Dr. Leitner procured the seed of this cotton from Venezuela. He alai • li4 for it,after cultiva ting it in an unfavorable season, that it grows rapidly and matures within fourteen weeks after the seed are planted; that if planteclln •July it will mature earlier than the native cot ton planted early in the Spring; that it is very productive, the stalks averaging one hundred and fifty Rolle-and such bolls! that, it is exempt from rust, stands drought extrordi narily well and is of superior staple. It re luires no comment of ours to convince plan ters that a variety of cotton possessing these qualities is a most valuable one. ANOTHER LORDLY SPORTSMAN. The Marquis ef Westminster: The Marquis of Westminster, whose in -.dome is said to be equal to about ,for,ooo,gold, a day, and is largely increasing every year,hus 7 -- so we are teld—become a member 01 the racing fraternity in England. This will be joyful news for the-" Spiders" of the turf. They have been rather down-hearted lately. The casualties among their once wealthy Victims have been unpleasantly numerous. The ) . farquis of Hast ings died a bankrupt. The Dukes of Newcastle and Hamilton, the Earl of Westmoreland, and ball a score more have been sold up. •It really began-to be a very dark prospect for 4 tentlemen" who live by their wits. But now, in the very nick of time, comes another fat c , ofimiiun'lr. IDROPOkiALS FOR STREET CLEAN ING. Sealed Proposals will be received at the OFFICE OF THE BOARD OF HEALTH, Southwest corner of sixth and Sansomstreets, until 12 o'clock, noon, on the 18th day of De cember, 1869, for the period of two (2) years, commencing on the Ist day of January, 1870, and ending on the atst day of December, 1871, for cleaning. and keepingthoroughly clean, at all times, all the paved streets, alleys, courts, inlets, uuuket-hous, gutters, gutters under railroad crossings, gutters of unpaved streets, and all other public highways, together with the collection and removal of all ashes, as well as the collection and burial of all dead ani mals. Plans and specifications, with full particu lars, may be had• on, application to the Health Office. TORDA.NB CELEBRATED PURE TONIO u Ale for invalids, family use, Jtc. The subecriber is now furnished with hie full Winter ' , Way of bie highly nutritious and well-known bever age. Its wide-spread and increasing use, by order of physicians, for invalids, use of families, &c. commend it to the attention of all consumers who w ant a strictly pure article; prepared from the beet materials, and but up in the West careful manner for home use or tranreor iill4oll. Orders by mail or otherwise promptly supplied. J. ORDAN, No. 720 Pearstreet, del below Third and Wainurstree VOREIGN FRITITS, NUTS, &e.—DIES. • Sina Orangespdad Demeter. Turkey Figs, in kegig, drums and boxeilloAnstrian 'Prunellos in - kes and fancy boxes : Arabian Dates, new crop ; Turkey Prunes in casks and fancy boxes ; Raisins—Layers. Seelless, Imperial, Sic.; Fig Paste and Guava Paste; Naples and Bordeaux Walnuts, Paper Shell Almortds, tor sale by 'J. B. BOSSIER & CO., 105 South Delawarg avenue. JUST BECRIVED AND INIII'ORE 1,000 cases of Champagne, sparkling Catawba and Cali fornia Wines, Port, Madeira, Sherry ' Jamaica and Santa erns Born, floe old Brandies and Whiskies, Wholesale and Retail. P. J. JORDAN, 920 Pear ativet street Bel ow Third and Walnut streets. awl abine Dock NAVAL STORES.-495 BBLS.ROSIN, 1.32 Casks Spirits Turentine. Now landing from steamer "Pioneer" from Wilmington, N. C., and for asla• by COCBIIak.N. RUSSELL lc CO., 111 Chestnut street. SHEATHING FELT.—TEN FRAMES ragtteh Sheathing Felt, for sale by PETER WRIGHT SONS, U a Walnut street. A''te pi g eon to be pluelte e rquls of West- Ing g piater will ohimta good deal of pluakiag. Ui readk Niamey, cannet.;,bii.. - Much .41eis :than £6,000,000. We estates bring in 'an enormous sum. Eveli , Padvorick, who ,has built his own fortrfnes on the'rbili of.other !men's, will have all his Ave.& to' da tb get the 'Marquis of Westminster fairly I nto his web. But there are several metubers,efthajookey Club who will be proud awl &lighted to hel_ him.' The heir apparent himso , - . g ht n ot re fuse t o join in the sport unless he,baaCaltered hid tastes, since the idle. { 4, ,„Negrote's spoils wGro divided.— thiet . Reported ( NC e9IIATTA r A I t 4 i notin. L ONDUN—Bark i il oro pik , in t teis.74 . 2/17 1 bars trim :Naylor & Co; I ease linivnro `o' risetavat; 2 4;s books Dawson & Co; 1000 pigs fetid J:TLasiet , Bro__,t 260 tons chalk 46 boles mdse order; 168 ot mite W. hi Wilson; :230 do Powers & Weightpau; 2do Richards " & Co; 22 do kosengartcal & 80n5:17440 r ›a.4,o• , Lonnig; 183 bble venetian red it Seegor & _ BA MlCR—Brig' 'lsabella Beaman; N.Sanard-03,000 pickets 600.000 laths J W Gnskill , &, SOBS: wr, JOHN. HB.—Sebr , Wayeott-481,600 laths T P Galvin & Co. . . ~ JOHN, —Sobs Mitring. Jane; Width-703,000 laths J W Gnrkllt & Sons, TUItIC,'S ISTJAr —Behr Itcbecca Illorencei Bich 9,triO hiptholt salt 7..rtt, fturam:.s.: Sou. AVILMINGTO 'lNC—Steanoldn Pionnei" Barrett -114 bbis rosin IV ads _spirits turpentine 11 bales cotton Prentlca A:Fitter; Milan feet ydllow pine lutither lOd bbis spirits turpentine/ H Howley; 11k , . , bblic. rosin 208 do spirits turpontino r alo pitch 110 do tar (locbran 'Cassell & Co; 11 bales cotton 0111 2 ) orb, Herring & Co; 7 ilo rags 2 bagodo I moss , 2 11 0143.bbis bdlss pea iron , W -S. Onnlitle;d bags rags 2 do feathers Jungerlch.dc Smith; 15. bags dried fruit Woodward & Jiro; 15 bags peanuts fl Jones; 3 rudders 7 pelf Iron 1 bog. l'aser, Jones & Go: 1 empty 55 do bit bits Massey , . Huston & Co; 5 empty blf bble Whitney & i 4 Oti: 1 hale cnrlcs Torrmicis, Wills & Co; sundry ilkgs order:. MOTENKETN OF OCEAN MIMEIERS. TU iinBIVZ. . . . . :RIIIPS ' FAUM POR DATA! Atalanta ' LOTldon...New York.. Nov.'27/ Palmyra Liverpool—Now York via B Nov. 2".1 Virginia Liverpool—New rork Nov. 24 India Glaagow.,.Now York... N0v.25 Nenieele - Liverpool... New York N0v.27 Allemannia— Havre—New York N0v.27 Cuba..." Liverpool—New York Nov. 27 Dentechland..Sontbarnpron—New York.. Nov. 30 Siberia Liverpool—New York yin B —.Nov. 30 Erin— Liverpool—New York Dec. 1 I C. of I rooklyn—Ll verpool—Nevr York Dec. - 2 Cleopatra Vera Cruz—New York via 11......D0c. 2 TO DEPART. Eagle ` - New York—Harm". Dec. 9 Weser.. —. New York—Bremen Dec. 9 Samaria . Now York...Liverpool..._ Doc. 9 Prometheus—PliiLadelphia—Charletdon Dec. 9 Vioneer...--Philedelplila—Wilmington Dec. 10 14 yorn Mg. Pill iadel plilit...Savannah.— Dec.ll Pereira Now York...Havre Dec.ll (dip of Peri? , hew York... Liverpool Doc. 11 Denmark New York... Liverpool Dec.ll Europa New York... Glasgow ~. .. ...... Dec. 11 C. of Antwerp—NewTork—Liverpool via II Dee. 14 A Ilernanula New York—Hamburff ..,..Dec. 14 Cuba New York... Liverpool Dec. 15 Cuba . ... . ..... . . --Baltimore—N Orleana via Hav—Doc. 15 lievada...,..— New York... Liverpool Dec. 15 BOPARD OF TRADE. JA~iP9 DO uG RTY, tSA~iCEL F,. sTOK ES, MONTILLY Colmar= JOKEPII C. GRUBB, COMUITTER ON ARBITRATION. Jarnen,f E. A. Bonder , Geo. L. Bush!, I Wm. W. Paulo Thomas L. OillesPlo• MARINE PORT OF PRILADELPIIIA—Dsr. 8. BIIN Riess, 7 1 I Sys Says, 4 341 lion WATER, S 'A ARRIVED YESTERDAY. - Steamer Whirlwind, Sherman, 35 hours from Provi denco, with incise to 1) ti Stetson k Co. Bark Ella Moore (Br),ldarstera,63 days from London, wit) noise to CP&GG Lennig. Brig Nuevitas, Trask,lo days from Calais. with laths to W A Lev ering—veshel to Lennox 6; Burgess. Brig Isabella Denman, Kennard, IO days from Ban gor, with laths to J W Gaakill k Sons—vessel to Lennox & Burgess. Brig Cosmos, Parsons, 5 days from Boston, in ballast to captain. Schr Calvin, Waycott, from St John, NB via St. An drews,7 nays, with laths to Tl' Galvin & Co. The C encountered heavy gales soon atter leaving St John, and put into St Andrew. Oct 2 for repairs, having broken the keel and some of her deck planks. Schr Ittalvina Jane (Br), Smith. 9 days from St John. NB, with laths to .1 W Gadd!' & Sons, . Schr Ida Grant. Freemen. from Squan Beach. with 127 carks palm oil, from edit. Marcia S Lewis, before re ported wrecked at Squan. Schr F atle Lunt, Lent, from Bed Beach. Me. with knees, itc. to W A Levering—vessel to E A Solider & Co. Schr Wake, Gand y. 6 dare from liorfolk,with lumber, ebingles and knees to J W Gailkill & Sons. :seta Clayton & I,c.wl , er. Jackson. 1 day frau Smyrna, Del. with grain to Jae L Bewley & Co. BELOW. The diernasted bark reported below is the Medora, from Liverpool. Reported by Mr Geo Conwell, pilot. CLEARED YESTERDAY. Steamer H L Gitvr. Iler. Baltimore, A GroTee. Jr. Brig Eunice Br). Barker, St John, NB C C Vaal Horn Fria- Ramon de Aluria (new), Mcßride, Segue, Isaac Hough & Morris. HAVRE DE GRACE. Dec. 7. No tow out this morning. Itadi a severe snow storm yesterday. Sfmie slush iCC, running In the river, but not enough to impede navigation. DIEMOBANDII.. Ship Chancellor, Coffin, satlesl from,. Liverpool 211 ult. or this port bbip Devonshire, Pack, entered out at Liverpool =di it. for this Dort. Ship Progress, Simons ' from London for this port, ut into Salo:mime 2:11 Just: Ship titailacona. Cassidr,fromLondonderry,was below el, Orleans •.:di inst. . Ship Ringleader, ifamlin, at London 3d Instant from Idanda. Ship Borneo, Bursley, at Bangkok 3d Oct. from Singa pore and railed :oth fur Boston. 1p P C klerryman, Soule, from Callao, at Bordeaux =d ult. - . titeatner .1 W Evennan, Hinckley, hence at Charleston yesterday. Steamer Virginia, Thomas, galled from Liverpool 2lth ult . for New York. Bark Taint,. Bellegaard, Balled from Liverpool Ztd ult. for this port Bark Geo Canning, Bradford, cleared at Llyerueol ult. for this Dort Bark Serene, 011serr, at Buenos Ayres 18th Oct. from Baltimore. Bark William (Dr), Cole hence at Ilelvoet. Bark Deflating, St allis, hence at Swinemunde 2lst ult. Bark Clara, Probst, cleared at Rotterdam r.d ult. for NOw York. Bark Isaac B Davis, Rand, at Messina 14th ult. from Licata. Bark Schamyl, Crosby, sailed from Messina 13th ult for Bost on. Bork Omaha, Ballard. ailed from Liverpool 24th for thie port. Bark uTker of Hope (NG), Peterson, hence at Gibraltar 16th ult. and clear.4l for Genoa. Bark John Williamson, Nichols. from Liverpool for this port, put into Holyhead .V.d ult. with cargo sniffed. Would hate to discharge portion of cargo to get to the 'menu deck beams, four being broken. Bark Albert the Good, Bolt, hence at Odessa sth tilt— so supposed, reported the A de Boot Root: Bark Theone (NG), Belittler, which arrived at Rotter dam from Philadelphia Nor. 16, having on board 250 bbis petroleum, has been burned in the harbor. The T registered 762 tons, was built at Bremerhaven in 1661, and belongod in Bremen. Brig Almon - Drisco, cleared at. Portland 6th net. Jor Brig Betty Mary, Davis, sailed from Rio Janeiro 29th Oet for New York. e3ebr Minnie Repplier, Conoeer, from Rotterdam fur Cardiff. was off South Foreland 24th ult. Schr W F Culiing, Cook, hence at Galveston 49thSchr L D Email. Tice. hence at DallVerS bit inst. Schre Wm L Spring. lialsey, from New York. and Artie Garwood, Godfrey, from Bristol. at Baltimore yeaerda Y. Svias Benj Strong, Brown, fur this port, and Frank Herbert, Crowell, for do , via New,York, sailed from Providence 4th inst., • - Setirs Ann S Cannon. Cobb; 11 H. Shannon, Dilks, and Lizzie Evans. Mahan, hence at PrOvidence sth inst. NOTICE TO MARINERS The Lichthouse Board gives notice that it fixed white light,varied by ilaehes every 30 seconds will be exhibited one end after the 15th inst. from the light station on and near the centre of Docket's or Senntit's Island, in St. Croix River, opposite Red Beach, about 12 utiles south of Calais, Me. PROPOSALS. E. WARD, 31. D., President, CHAS. B. BARRETT, Secretary. deS 10t TIIE,DAItEk kVENitditrill;WElN - PidiDiltatit; WEDNESDAY, DteEtißEtt, 8, 1869. v YulsiL i o`l 4- .tOE OY'tHE DELAWARE MUTUAL SAFETY imonapicE ',oooAst. Phitadilphla t November,lo,':ll369. ,c,.. — t.....;‘' , -- , _--.)J , 1 lis'' 'l'be following Stateistestt o f ,'the affairs of the Company published its conformity with .; a prorisicu of its charter r .. ~, ‘ .. PromiutUt -received' ftorti Iforemberl, 185erto October I • 81, 1809 iOn Marine and Inbiud Risks 819i,3,765 S 1 Ri e k e 17 re oo /°// - , • 16/,605 95 —.31,105,701 29 460,634 02 , ‘Premiums on Policies not mariced, '( oft November 1,"1868 Premitima marked off as earned from ',ember 1,1868, to October 31,1869: " On 111nrIne and Inland 111ek5.•89 14 ,21 3 29 011 Fire R 181513... ...... 0.••.1.• ....... '148,828 70 ' • 99 interest dttring the nanie period-- balvages, ...... ..... 115,027 66 • 01,1711,873 64 - Looses, Expcnaea, &c., during the year.as • above: Marino and Inland Naviga tion Loyben 8418,100 39 Fire Welles ' -94,244 81 Retnni Prenifanut 49,828 10 Ite-Insurancce 41427 84 Agency. Charges, Adver tleing„Printing. dr 64,60 10. • Taxea—United brutes, Btate and Municipal TalLea 62,190 61 Ex penNee .......... ..... 83.927 09 8144,284 01 • ASSETS OF TIII4I COMPANY November 1,1800. $200,000 United States Five Per Cent. Loan, ten-forties.. $216,000 00 100,000 United States Six Per Cent. Loan (lawful money) 107,750 00 50,000 United Smolt Six Per Cent. Loan, 1801 .......... ~. . —.. 60,0)0 00 200,000 State of Pennsylvania Six Per Cent. Loan... 213,950 00 200,000 City of Philadelphia Six Per Cent Loan (exempt from tax).— 200,925 00 100,000 State of New Jersey Six Per Cent. Loan 102,030 00 20,000 Pennsylvania Railroad First Mortgage Six Per Cent. Bonds... 19,450 00 25,000 Pennsylvania Railroad Second Mortgage Six Per Cent. Bonds.:. 23,625 00 25,000 Western Pennsylvania Railroad Mortgage Six Per Cent. Bonds (Pennsylvania Railroad guar ante,,) 20,000 00 33,000 State of Tennessee •Five Per Cent. Loan ...... '.. .... .. . , 15,000 00 7,0f/0 State of Tennessee Six Per ....... Loan 4,270 00 12,500 Pennsylvania Railroad Cu.n Dan Y, 250 shares stock, . . . 14,000 00 5,000 North Pennsylvania Railroad Company, 100 shares stock 3,900.00 10,600 Philadelphia and Southern Mail • . Steamship Company, SO shares 00 246,900 L sto oans ck on Bond and Mortgage, 7,500 first liens on City Properties • 246,900 00 IS 1,2Z1.400 Par. - Cost, sl,2lsMarket value, $1,255,5000 ,622 27. Real Estate 36,000 00 Bills Receivable for Insurance PIOLADELPROI. Nov. 10.1869. The Board of Directors have this day declared a CASH DIVIDEND of TEN PER CENT. on the CAPITAL STOCK. and SIX PER CENT. interest on the SCRIP of the Company, Payable on awl after the Ist of December proximo. free - of National and State Taxes. They have also declared a SCRIP DIVIDEND of THIRTY-FIVE PER CENT. on the EARNED PRE )SIII.I3IS for the year ending October 31,1569, certificates of which will be issued to the parties entitled to the same, on and after the Ist of December proximo, free of .National and State Taxes. They have ordered, also; that the Scrip Certificates of Profits of the Cornpaoy, for the year ending October 31,1865, be redeemed in Cash, at the office of the Com- , . .... . . . . .. . _... . . . . _ . .. _ ... nanY. on and after cease .of December proximo, all ..in , . terest thereon to cease on that day. By a provision of }'the Charter, all Certificates of Scrip not presented for redemption within five years after public notice that , • they wilt be redeemed. shall be forfeited and cancelled on the books of the Company. No certificate of profits issued under $25. By the act of incorporation, "no certificate shall issue unless claimed within two years after the declaration of the dividend whereof it is evidence." • . . . . DIRECTORS. Thomas C. Hand, , Samuel E. Stokes, John C. Davisi William G. Boulton, Edmund E. Solider, Edward Darlington, Theophilus Paulding, . H. Jones Brooke, ' Janice Traci uair, Edward Lafourcide, Henry Sloan, . Jacob Riegel, - Henry C. Dallett, Jr., Jacob P. Jones, James C. Hand, ' James B. M'Farland, William C. Ludwig, Joshua P. Eyre t • . • Joseph IkSeal, ' Spencer fil'llvain, Hugh Craig, J. B. Semple, Pittsburg, John D. Taylor, • A.B. Berger,. " . George W. Bernadou, D. T. Horgan, " William C. Houston TH' -- OMAS 0. HAND, President. JOHN C. DAVIS, Vice President. • • HENRY LYLBURN, Secretary. HENRY BALL, Asidatantßecretary. nol2 Imr.p gum RELIANCE INSURANCE COM .I PANT OF PHILADILLPRIAB Incorporated in /841. Charter Perpetual. Office, N 0.308 Walnut street. CAPITAL 41300,(00. IruPuree against loss or damage by FIRE, on Houses, Store, and other Buildings, halted or perpetual, and en Furniture, Goods, Waxes and Merchandise in town or coutry. LOSSES PROMPTLY ADJUST= AND PAID. Invested in the following Securities, vi z. ..."7" -- First Mortgages on City Property, well go cured-- United States Government 117,030 06 Philadelphia City 6 Per Cent. Loans ... 75,000 00 Pennsylvania V,01.10,000 6 Per Cent Loan 50,000 oo Pennsylvania Railroad Bonds, First Mort g age 6,00000 Camden and Amboy Railroad Company' 6 er Cent. .. ... .. 6,020 00 Loans on Col Laterals— , 600 00 Huntingdon and Broad Top 7 - Per Cent. -.1-6-rt gage 80nd5..—...-4,5a) 00 County Fire Insurance Company's 5t0ck...... 1,050 00 Mechanics' Bank Stock---.....—.- 4,000 00 Commercial Bank of Pennsylvania Stock. /0, 000 1 00 Union Mutual Insurance Company's Stock. 880 00 Reliance Insurance Company of Philadelphia 3,250 00 Stock Cash in Bank and on hand... L.',958 39 • e 437,598 32 Worth this date at market $454331 32 Worth at Par..... .... _ _ _ Thomas C. Hlll,l . Thoraas H. Moore, William Musser, Samuel Currier, Samuel Ills pbaxn, JaMes T. Young, ' 11. L. Carson, • Isaac F. Baker, Wm. Sim enson, ' Christian J. Hoffman, Benj. W. Tinglo7, Samuel B. Thomas, Edwar Siter. THOMAS O. HILL, President. 011IIIIit, - Seeretary. PHILADELPHIA, February 17,1869. jal-tu th s UNITED FIREMEN'S INSURANCE COMPANY OF PHILADELPHIA. This Company takes risks at the lowest rates consistent with safety, and confines its business exclusively to FIBS INsugAlioz IN T PHUHE CITY PHILADiIe• , oggICE—No. 723 Arch street, Fourth National Bank Building. DuggeTOßS. Thomas J. Martin, Henry W. Brenner, John Hirst, aihertus King, Wm. A. Bolin, henry Brown, James Itongan, &Mee Wood, William Glenn, John Eihallcrose, James Jenner, J. Henry Askin, • Hugh Mulligan, Philip Fitzpatrick, A mt lez ert an o de . r no T b . ID er i ts chso t James F. Dillon. • CONRAD B. ANDRESS, President. Ws. A. HOLM Treas. Wx. H. CLOSER. fiec'y. FAME INSURANCE > COMPANY, NO. 209 CHESTNUT STREET. INCORPORATED 13561TAL. CHARTER PERPETUAL. CAP, SAX,OOO. FIRE INSURANCE EXCURSIVELY. Dawes against Loss or Damage by Fire either by Per , ritual or Temporary Policies. DIRECTORS. Charles Richardson, Robert Pearce, Wm. H. Shawn, John Kessler, Jr., William M. Seyfert, Edward B. Orne, Henry Lewis, Cheries.titokes, Nathan Billet. John W, Everman, George A. West Mordecai Busby, CIIABLER CHANDSON, President, WILLUMB I.WRKLA.N.B.CEBAARWedeereVicarary-Fred. de a lt tr A IMIERIOAN FIRE INSURANC-E'COM- XlP.Bll7_,incorporated 1810.—Clu9tter perpetual. No. 310 WALNUT street, above Third, Philadelphia. Having a large pall-up Capital_ Black and Surplus in vested in sound and available 61:ectirities, continue to insure on dwellings, litores, furniture, merchandise, vessels in port, and: their cargoes, and other ,perifonal property. All lessee liberally and promptly adjusted. DIRECTORS. Thomas R. Marls, 'Edmund G. Dutilh, John Welsh, Charles W. Poultney, Patrick Brady, , I srael Morris, Pau John T. Lewis, ohn P. l Wetherill, Wi THOMAS B. MARIO, President. ALBIIRT C. Ciu.veloan. Secretary. ANTHRACITE INSURANUE COM PANY.--CUARTER PERPETUAL. • Office , No. 311 WALNUT Street, above Third, Philitda. Will insure agidnet Loss or Damage by Fire en Build ings, either perpetually or fora limited time, Household Furniture and Merchandisegenerallr. Also, Marine Insurance on Vessels' Cargoes and Freights, Inland Insurance to all partsof the Union, DIRECTORS. I William Esher, Lewis Andenrled, D. Luther,. • John Ketcham, John R. Bistkiston, j. E. Baum, • William F. Dean, John B. 1:161 , 1, Peter Sieger WILLIAM ' Sainuel H. uothermel. SHER, President. WILLIAM, F. DEAN, Vice President. Widi M. Biarrit,Secretary. in= to th s tf itistrktrick. made 323,700 75 Balances due at Agenclete-Pre , mining on Marine Policies. Ac crued interest and other debts due the Comany 85,037 95 Stock, Scrip, p c.. of sundry Cor. ponstions, $4,706. Esthnated value 2,740 20 Cash in 8ank......- ......... 5168,113 88 Cash in Drtsst cc 972 29 • 189,291 14 DIRECITOItS, NC)7CICYE.. THE INSURANCE COMPANY OF :NORTH AMERICA, z lEinix•Amemputic, • cmARINky. isconi;oiATim'ina. $500,000 00 lAssets July 15t,'1969,' $2,593,92210' This CootPalt3r,ifiliktfli PORDIIWIRAI to issue Certificates of Insurance, payable in :Louden, at the CountinpUouse of Ileum, 'Brown, Shipley & Co. CHARLES PLATT, Vice-President. 0c2941 de,il rye 1,680,316 81 -CTS PERPETUAL. • 1.829. • .IFIELANIEC.L: • FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY ~ OF PIIIIIADFXXXIIILIL • • Office--435 and 437 Ohestnut Street. Assets on January 3.1869 a 2,6►7 13. capital . . Accrued'' —1493,843 4$ UIiiiICTTLED CLAIM, ..IN,COALIC FOR $23,789 12, 413100300. Losses Paid Since 1829 Over 0 5 , 500 9 4 10 as Perpetual and Temporary Policies on Liberal Terms, The Company also lamas Policies upon the Bents of all kinds of buildings, Groand Bents and Mortgages. 431419 63 Alfred G. Baker, Samuel Grant, Geo. W. Richards, Isaac Len, Geo. Bales, ALFRED JAB. W. MeAL E LISTER O. 'FAL ), THEODORE hi. REGER FIRE ASSOCIATION • PHILADELPHIA. Incorporated! March, 2% 1820. Offiee---No. 84 North - Fifth Street. IN$ URE BITILDINGS, HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE AND MERCHANDISE GENERALLY FROM LOSS BY FIRE. Assets. January 1,1869, 51 5 400,095 OS. TRUSTEES: William H. Hamilton, Charles P. Bower, John () arrow, Jesse Lightfoot, George I. Young Hobert Shoemaker, Joseph R. Lynda ll, Peter Armbruster, Levi P. Coate, NL H. Dickinson, Samuel Sportiest,' Peter Williamson, 173 11A111hT Auße ar er. WN. H. , SAMUEL SPABHAWk, Vice President. WM. T. BUTLER. Secretary. ta1,&52,100 04 TL I F E INSURANCE AND TRUST CO. THE GIRARD LIFE INSURANNCE, ANNUITY AND TRUST COMPANY OF PHILADELPHIA.— OFFICE, 408 CHESTNUT STREET. _ ASSETS, 83,083,545 56, JANUARY 1169. The oldest Company of the kind but one in the State; continue to insure lives on the most reasonable terms and declare profits to the insured for the whole of life. „Premiums paid yearly, half yearly, or quarterly. They receive Trusts of all kinds, whether as Trustees, As signees, Guardians, or Committee of Lunacy. Also, act as Executors and Administrators, to the duties of which particular attention is paid. Deposits and Trust Funds are not in any event liable for the Debts or Obligations of the Company. Charter perpetual. ' THOMAS RIDGWAY, President. . . SETH I. COSILY, Tice President. Song F. Juntas, Actuary. WiLmare H. STOEVEIL Liget Actuary. N. B.—Dr. S. CHAMBERLAIN, No. 1411 LOCUST street, attends every day at 1 o' ,lock precisely at the office. 0c77 3m TVECOUNTY , FIRE INSITRA_NCE COM 'ANT.--0111.ce. No. 110 Bonn' Fourth street, below Chestnut. "The Fire Insurance Company of the County dolphin." Incorporated by theLegislistore of Pennsylva nia is 1819, for indemnity against loss or danutge by are, exclusively. CHASTEIII PEPZTITAL. This old and reliable institution, with ample capital and contingent fund carefully invested, continues to in sure buildings , furniture, Merchandise, go., either per manently or r a limited time, against loss damage by fi re, at the lowest rates consultant with the absolute safety of its customers. Losses adjusted and pad with all Possible despatch. DIRECTORS: Chas. J. Sutter, Andrew H. Miller, Henri Budd , , James N. Stone, John Horn, Edwin L:Reakirt Joseph Moore, Hobert V. Massey, Jr. George Meoke, Mark Devine. CHAIM SJ. SUTTER, President. HENRY BUDD, Vice President. BENJAMIN P. HOECKLEY. Secretary and Treasurer. --- THE PENNSYLVANIA FIRE ENSIT RAIICE COMPANY. —lncporated 152.50liarter PerPetrie]. No. 510 WALT UT street, opposite Independents Square, This Company, favorably known to the community for over forty years, continues to insure Buildings, loss or damage by lire on Public or Private _ either permanently or for a limited time. Also on rniture, EltoCks of iloocui, and Merchandise generally, on liberal terms. Their Capital, together with a large Surplus Fund, is invested in the most careful manner, which enables them to offer to the insured an undoubted security in the cage of lose. DIRIOTOBS. Daniel Smith, Jr., [John Dewereux Alexander Benson, . Thomas Smith, Isaac Eittalehun3t, Henry Lewis Thomas Robins, J. Gillingham rell, Daniel HaddetcX,_jr. --DANIEL SMITH, Js., President. WM. G. CROWELL. Secretary. „ spl9-tf JEFFERSON FIRE INSURANCE COM PANY of Philadelphia.--Office, No. 24 North Fifth street, near Market street. Incorporated by the Legislature of Pennsylvania. Charter perpetual. Capital and Assets. e 166.000. Make insurance againet Less or damage by Fire on Public or Private Buildings, Furniture, otocka, Goods and Mer chandise, on favorable terms. DIRECTORS. Wm. McDaniel, Edward P. Moyer Israel Peterson. ' Frederick Ladner John F. Belsterlin , Adam J. Glass, Henry Troemner, Henry Delany, Jacob t3chandem, John Elliott , Frederick Doll, Christian D. Frick, Samuel Miller, George E. Fort, William D. Gardner. WILLIAM:McDANIEL, President. ISRAEL PETERSON, Vice President. PRIZIP E. Coratatart. Secretary and Treasurer. 111.4CEIINERIC. IRON, &U. MERIUCK & BONN, SOUTHWARK FOUNDRY; 430 WASHINGTON Avenue, Philadelphia, MANUFACTURE STEAM ENGI.NES—High and Low Pressure, Horizon tal, Vertical, Beam, Oscillating, Blast and Cornlab . t BOlLERb Pumping —Cyllnder, Flue, Tubular ac. STZAM HAMMERS—Nasmyth and 'Davy styles, and of an sizes. CASTINGS—Loam, Dry and Green Sand, Brass, &o. ROOFS—Iron Frames, for covering with Slate or Iron. TANKS—Of Card or Wrought Iron,for, refineries, water, oil, &c. GAB MACHINERY—Such as Retorts, Bench Castings. Holders and Frames, Purifiers, Coke and Charcoal Barrows, Valves, Governore, ac • SUGAR MACHINERY—Such as .Vacuum Pans and Pumps, Defecators, Bone Black Filters, Burners, Washers and Elevators, Bag Filters, Sugar and Bone flask 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 1 CI g and Self-balancing Centrifugal Sugar-draining Ma. chine. • - Glass & Barton's improvement on Aspinwall & Woolsey's Centrifugal. Bartol's Patent Wroughtiron Retort Lid. Strahan'a Drill Grinding Rest. - Contractors for the design, erection and fitting unpf fineries for working Sugar or Molasses. °OPFER AND YELLOW METAL Sheathing, Brazier's Copper Nails, Bolts and Ingot Copper,, constan on , hand and for sale by HENRY WINSOR & CO.. tly_ No. 332 South Wharves. DASTILE SOAP--GENITINE A.1%11;0 VERY superior --900 boxes just landed from bark Idea, and for sale by ROBERT SHOEMAKER & 00., Importing Druggists, N. E. corner Fourth and Race streets. ERUGGISTS WILL FIND A LARGE stock of Allen% Medicinal Extracts and on Almonds, . Rhei. Opt., Citric Acid, COxe's Sparkling Gelatin. genuine Wedgwood Mortars. ac., just landed from bark Hoffnung, from .London. ROBERT SHOEMAKER & CO., Wholesale Druggists, N. H. corner Fourth and Dace streeta. 1 ERUG GISTS' SUNDRIES, -- GR ADU .) atm, Mortar Pill nes, Combs, Brushers, Mlrtorti esters, Puffkoxes,Horn Scoops, Surgical Learn— mepte, Tralatic, Bi rd and Soft Rubber Goode, Vial Duet, Glass and IRAS srringoe, &0., all at "•Find Ilauda"priota. SNOWDEN & BIIOTHIM atel-tf - Id South Illahtb *treat. ' ~ ----'-- O ILS ' :—Loco GALLS. WINTER 'SPEfi la Oil, 1,200 do. B. W. Whale Oil, 81X/ do. B. Elephant 011,1,100 do. Racked Whale Oil, 25 bbla. No. 114aril Oil, in stcre and for sale by 0001111,bli, RUSSELL & 00 111 Chestnut street. . =MME DIEEGT OIB ' . Alfred Fitter, Thomas Spark/11, Wm. 8. Grant, Thomas S. Ellie, I Gustavus S. Benson, 1. BAILEE, President. ES, Vice President. Secr6tarY. Secretar ik . ;,Assistant fe tden DRUGS. - • • ( : c dt'tiOiribti Wiat -14°13.1 11h 6irr i ont PAIR II Area; liPiert IaRIVIES 40 1 / 1 4/ Mcaß„ A , to sategat tni• Magid' XX WM/ XIIESDAY,st 12 o'clock. . •• •3 ffir Furniture, salmi at the AttOßA J Otdirit Seleaia , ReiddennOilrlillir , Otnd . • • *anon ra - Setae tirI'HAJI(.I,,,P,, , GAIt o tAllTTi:ilinieitied. , • ?itt ) • ejektladelptna ttrehtle,Po, - , . t 9 'shales Lehigh Cool and N49lgat on 00. •.•.14r abardallittanisCoal'Oml, . • 107, shoros,Coal Ridge Imptovenient 'and Omit CO. 60 idaresliletioSChtlyikUl Railroad atidThial Co. • 100 shares Loc ust Mountain Lindnd CoaPoo. ' 2Stallitree - McKean and Rik and ImprovoMent figartiiiettriet'Cliekthr ''Prirriplke Co. 2 mimes _Berrettsford Plank Rood Co: , • 1,-, t share Dolattard County Turn plk'etlo. 10 shares Darby Turnplko or. Plank Road 0.0., • • 100 shares Allegheny Railroad and' Coal Co. ' ' 'SS , ', 100 Bares Tarr "NO) ; . t; • , 20(1 ahareat Union Petroleum CO. 305 shame Beaver Valley O .Co' 813,000, Schuylkill Navigation Boat and Cdr Loan. 412,690 Lehigh Coal andllatigationeonvertible Loan.. 22 shares Coal Ridge,,lmprovl, and Coal preforred. 41900 Cool Ridge lin preelt and Coal Co. Loan. • r 92,000 Pidlada. and ErJo R. 4. Loan, 6 per cent. 1171.0(N) Sunbury and Brio it. B. Loan,7 per cent. , e 360 Allegheny 4, Land,Coal Loma per cent. VAIMATIJJEr,MISOELLANEODS BOOKS. ON WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON. .8,4 t 4 o'clock, works .on Science, Art, IL Travels, Olatteicib FolioPude , &c, • sale at the Auction Rooms, Noe. 139 end 141 South FoUrth street. SUPERIOR HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE, PIANO, ' MIRRORS; FIREPROOF SAFE', HANDSOME VELVET, , BRUSSELS AND OTHER CARPETS, &0., &c., • • = ON ; THURSDAY MORNING. 'Dec. 9, at 9 o'clock, at the Auction Rooms, by_ cata logue, a large assortment of Superior Household Furni ture, comprislog—Walnut Parlor Suit, covered with plush Walnut Furniture, , covered with l ush, reps and hair c l oth; oth; Library and Dining Room Furniture, Wal nut Chamber'Suite, rosewood Plano Fortes. fine French Plate Mirrors. superior Walnut Wardrobes, Bookcases. Sideboards, Extension, Centro and Bouquet 'Wiles, lounges,Ann Chairs. Etageres, Hat Stands, O ffi ce 'Desks and Tables, Oil Paintings, Engravings, fine Flair , 31atresses, Feather Beds. Bolsters and Pillows, China and Glassware, Fireproof Safe, made by Farrel dc Her ring;handeorne Chandeliers, Gas-consuming and Cook ing Stoves, Counters, handsome Velvet. Brussels and other Carpet., dec. Peremptory Stile in Rear of N 05.227 and 229 Noble Rt. STOCK AND FIXTURES OF A BRASS FOUNDRY, Cock Manufactory and Silver Plated Manufacturing Establishment, Steam Engine, Machinery, &c. ON THURSD AY MORNING, Dec. 9, at 11 o'clock, in tear of NOR, 227 and 229 Noble Street, by catalogue, the entire Stock and Fixturee,com prising—Portable Steam Engine, three horse power, made by Wilcox; Fox Lathe, made by Wm, Burlingame, complete and nearly new; Monitor Lathe, Oval Lathe, Lathe Tools ,3 lines Shafting and Pulleys, Water and Gas Stop Patterns, about lu.ooo pounds Babbitt Metal, pounds Braes Castings and Old Copper and Zinc, 3 Steel Rollers, 3 Punching Presses, lot of Belting, Screw Press, Iron Sheared Lathe, with Treadle; two Counter Shafts, Lap, with Pulleys and Roller; 4 Vises, Grind etone.3 Cog Wheels, Electra Plating Battery, com plete; Smelting Pot, Buffing Maine, Counter and Platform Scales, pounds Tindion's Solder, pounds telreletal, pewter and braes; 21 Smelting Furnaces, Patent Chuck, Universal Chuck, 'Drying Oven, Silver. mitt's' Dies,Models and Patterns, Oak O ffi ce Bask. Fireproof Sae, made by Scott; Show Case, Glass Sash, finished and unfinished Plated Ware, Ac. May be examined on the morning of sale at 8 o'clock. VALUABLE MISCELLANEOUS BOOKS. Also, Standard Medical Works, late ON THURSDAY AFTERNOON, Dec. 9, at 4 o'clock. • ESPECIAL SALE - . - No. 410 Library street. 75 VERY SUPERIOR NEW AND SECONDHAND ALBANY AND PORTLAND SLEIGHS. ON FRIDAY MORNING. . Dec. 10, at 10 o'clock, at the Sale and Exchange Rooms of WILLIAM JACK 4!.: SON, No 410 Library Street, between Fourth and Fifth and Chestnut and Walnut streets, 75 very superior new and secondhand Albany and Portland Pony and Family Sleighs, Cutters, Ac,, with one and two seats. They are well made and hand comely finished with plush linings, Lc. • ' May now be exosnined with catalogues. • Peremptory Sale nt N 0.717 North Twentieth street. 'RESIDENCE AND FURNITURE, HANDSOME ROSEWOOD AND WALNUT FURNITURE, FINE BRUSSELS, VENETIAN AND OTHER EAR PETS, &c. ON MONDAY MORNING, Dec. 13 at 10 o'clock, at No. 717 North Twentieth street, below Prune street. the entire Furniture, comprising_. Handsome Walnut Parlor Furniture,covcred with hair cloth; Walnut Bouquet Table, marble top; Walnut Ex tension Tablo, snit elegant Rosewood Chamber Furni ture, three pieces; Walnut and Cottage Furniture. fine Hair Matresses, Refrigerator, Cooking Utensils, ok(i. /Fir Previous to the sale of Furniture will be sold, the THREE-STORY BRICK RESIDENCE. with throe story double back buildings, lot 18 feet by 103 feet 10 inches deep. Beattie modern improvements. May be examined at 8 o'clock on the morning of sale. BUNTING, DURBOROW CO., _ AUCTIONICRRS. Nos, 232 en. Ze MARKET street. cornero_Lß a nk street Successors to JOHN B. lIIYERff - & - LARGE SALE OF FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC DRY GOODS, ON THURSDAY MORNING, Dec. 9, at 10 o'clock, on four months' credit. DOMESTICS. • Bales bleached and brown Shirtitge and Shootings do bleached and colored Drills. do white, blue and . gray all wool Blankets. do white and scarlet alt wool and Canton Flannels Cases miners', doraet and fancy Shirting Flannels. do Indigo blue Ticks, Stripes. Checks, Denims. do Kentucky Jeans, Ginghams, Prints, Delaines. do Corset Jeans, Cambric', Linings. Macias. ° • do Manchester and Scotch Ginghams. do Cassimeres, Satinets, Kerseys, Linssys, &c. ARMY GOODS. —cases Cavalry Pants. do Infantry Pants. do blue lined Blouses. do heavy gray Army Shirts. MERCHANT TAILORS' GOODS. Pieces Belgian, English and Saxony all wool and Union black and blue Clothe and Doeskins. do Aix la Chapelle all wool Tricots and Doeskins. do black and colored Esquimaux and Moscowas. do Fancy Cassimeres, Castors, Pilots, Chinchillas. do Whitneys, Velours Petershanis, Meltons. do black and colored Italians,, atin de Ohlnesrirol veteens. DRESS (mops, SILKS SHAWLS, &c. Pieces Paris plain and printed Merinos and Delalnes. do Empress Cloth, pure Mohairs, Alpacas, Coburge. do Persians. Alpacas,Melanges, Poplins, Borges. do black and colored Fancy Dress Silks, Velvets. Full line Broche, Stella and Woolen Shawls, Cloala i &c ' LINENS, WHITE GOODS. &c. Full lines Irish Shirtin g` Linens, Barnsley Sheeting!. Full lines bleached andV B. Damask:, Diaper, _Crash. Fall lines Cream Canvas; Bucks, Ducks, Drills, Towels. Full lines Cambrics, Jaconets, Nainsooks,Mulls,Lawas. LARGE SALE OF EMBROIDERIES. LINEN CAM BRIC HDRFS, &c. ON FRIDAY MORNING, Dec. 10, at 10 o'clock., on four months' credit— A fun line of 4-8 all linen hemstitched handkerchiefs. A full line of 5 8 do do do A full line of 3-4 do do do A full line of 5•8 do do mourning do A full line of 3:4 do hemmed handkerchiefs. A full line of 3 4 do do and printed do A full line of 3-8 do do children's do A full Hue of button edge lawn do. A full line of embroidered corner lawn do. A full line of hemmed and embroidered lawn do. A full line of hemstitched and embroidered linen and lawn do. A full line of hemstitched & embroideredgrass finest do. A fnll,line of embroidered handkerchiefs, comprising novelties in initials, names, mottoes. &c.,white and colored. • Full lines of 4-8, 3-8 and 3.4 printed lawn hall's. A full line of 3-4 printed condi hdklS. Also, A magnificent Rae of embroidered linen calare and cuffs, in the latest novelties. Ifeilr The above sale will- comprise one of the largest and best selected assortments of this class of goods of fered this season. . A line of lamb back' and lined buck', beaver and kid Gloves and Gauntlets: ftv A line of English super stout regular made brown cotton Half Hose. • Hosiery. Gloves,Hoop Skirts, Trays Hag and Hader shirts and Drawers, Sowings, Tailors' Trimmings, Um brellas, Bdkfs., Suspenders, &c. IMPORTANT SLOTHS MORNING, Dec. OIL &c ON FRIDAY Dec. 10, arll o'clock, on four months' credit, about 200 pieces Ingrain, Venetian, List, Hemp, Cottage and Rag Carpetings, Oil Cloths, Rugs, &c. LARGE SALE OF FRENCH . OTHER EURO. EAN DR GOO ON MONDAY MORNING, Dec.l3, at 10 o'clock, on four months• credit. Also. by order of Assignees— SALE OF THE ENTIRE STOCK OF A JOBBER. including the Lease, Goodwill and Fixtures of Store, No. 3‘` , 5 Mara et street. SALE OF 2000 CASES BOOTS, SHOES, BRO GANS, Ac.. , ON TUESDAY MORNING. Dec. M. at 10 o'clock, on four months' credit. THOMAS BIRCH St SON AUCTION. BEES AND COMMISSION MERCHANTS, No. 1410 CHESTNUT street, Rear entrance No. 1107 Sanaom street. Hottsehold Furniture of every description received on Constent. Sales of Furniture at dweas attended to on the mod reasonable terms. Sale at No. 1110 Chestnut street SUPERIOR NEW AND SECONDHAND HOUSE HOLD FURNITI3IIE, ROSEWOOD PIANO FORTES. FRENCH PLATE MANTEL AND PIER MIRRORS, BRUSSELS, INGRAIN AND VENETIAN CARPETS, SPRING AND HAIR MATRESSES, COTTAGE SUITS, PAINTINGS AND ENGRAVINGS. CHINA TOILET SETS, GLASSWARE, STOVES, KITCHEN FURNITURE; Sc., 3/c. ON FRIDAY MORNING, At 9 o'clock, at the auctiOn s ertore. No. 1110 Chestatit street, will be sold, by cataloguea large assortment of New and Secondhand Household 'Furnitare, for Parlor, Chamber, Library, Dining Room and Kitchen. CARPETS. . - . Also, Velvet, Brussels, Ingrain and Venetian Carpets. . FINE FURNITURE, • Also, several snits of Parlor and Chamber Furniture, Made by, our boat cabinetmakers tor their retell sales. Catalogues ready and Furniture arranged for exami nation on Thursday afternoon. BY BABBITT & CO. AUCTIONEEIW. CASH AUCTION HOUSE, N 0.231 MARSET street. corner of Bank street. • Cub advanced on conaionmetita 'without extra charge. FURS! FURS I FURS 1 , TENTH TRADE SALE OF , IMPORTED AND AME, RICAN FURS, SLEIGH. AND CARRIAGE ROBES, AFGHANS. &c.. ON THURSDAY MORNING, Dec. 9, commencing at 10 , o'clock, by catalogue, compri-' wog 1000 lots, In largo variety. meCTl:fe. _ _ AUCTIONEER No. % o. 508 KARIM str t BOOT AND MOB SALES BVERY m BONDAT AM) THURSDAY. AtiC lON NALLEX lit ' 4 7 TIN ; ; ROTLVatei_' Attell • ;I:. : . ..,,,.11 , , tor IX.,Tboruse X 0 0 . - ~: • It *tree. Mr' entllllOl4lMW, 4,01111 M, .:!':. ..___," 4- "' - • " 0 , -.13$ Nortteßlerenth street. ' '. ',' t/PRIFEW . . . LNIIT IitirEROLII FURNITISRA , ,R,B 0. ~ •lATE .111,1 ORR, FINN ,VRtlf till,': . :totituriveAligrs,sotisewt a ' ...... ~.,, tSc. ~ 0 Itulit3DAY MORNING, , ' c., S 9, 410 O'c ock, si, No, 138 Nosth Eloyesktb istreSts..r. he entirosuparior Farhiture, AMERICAN ARTISTS , LARGE PEREMPTORY • SilLk OF' VALUABLE MODERN, OIL PAI.Nre 401 TII,UIII3D Y, FRIDAY a 0 13A.TuntkAir;, December 17, Igand 19, Attins auction rooms, No. On Pheetnutstreet.,4 'Arai And valuable collection of Moaern Oli Paintingo. Among, the a eta represented are Paul Ritter, George Y. Hart. kit: art, (;Date, Stonefield, Lotichieue, Van Nerakili c otho , eatially celebrated.. . The Pictures ~are all •nromitett I n elegant :gold gi l t rram oe, 'Xhe collection will be on exhibition on. TUESO4.It,', the 14th hint., and on the Jaye of Bale. r , N...#ONCERT 7 IIALL AATOTION ' • 1219 CHESTNUT street. • , A. hicOLELLAND. Auctioliser_ ' Sale at Conceit Hall Auction Roemsil2l9 Chestnee Street. ELEGANT regLan AND 'CHAMBER FUREY.... TUBE in Mullet*, variety; Handsome Walnut and.itelt„. 'Dining Room Furniture, Bookcases, Wardrobes; Etts. gores, Hat and Umbrella Standa. Towel Rack, Rick lug and Eaey Chairs, Mistresses-, Mirrors, Pietist Wrre, Ac. _ THIJIISDA.Y MORNIAG, ?• 7 • At 1016 _o'clock, by catalogue, we will sell rinnittel , "•; large assortment of superior household Furniture, consisting of elegant Walnut Parlor Salts, covered ins ariety of colon of plush and terry. hair cloth Parlor' Suits in. oil and varnish finish; Hunch ome Chamber Suits, finished In all the latest designs; , Walnut end Oak , Extension Tables. Lounges, Bookcasee, handsetne Side, boards. In oak and walnut, Dining ROOM Chairs, Eta. gores, Hat and Umbrella Stands, walnut and gilt frants. 7 : - NV Mirrors, Chairs of all style, TOol RaCke, Husk Straw .slntresses, Wardrobea, fine Plated Ware, ko . MHE PRINCIPAL MONEY ESTABLISH* -, went—d..E. corner of SIXTH and RACE streets, Money advanced on Merchandise generally—Watchd, Jewelry, Diamonds, Gold and Sliver Plate, and, on OE articles of value, for any length of time agreed on. WATCHES AND JEWELRY, AT PRIVATE SALA, Fine Gold Renting ('ace Doable Bottom and °venire*. English, American and Swiss Patent Lever . Watchdog; Fine Gold Duplex and and_Open Face Levine Watches; Fine Gold Duplex and other Watches; Fine Silver Ham; lug Case and Open Face English, American and Sly.* Patent Lever and Lopine Watches; Double Cue English, Quartier and other Watches; La dies' Fancy Watches; Diamond Breastpins; Finger Rings; Ear Rings; 13_ „Whir •••• &c.; Fine Gold Chains; Illodallions; Bracelette seen Pins; Breastpins; Finger Rings; Pencil Cues and Sew- *lFgenerally. OR BALE—A, large and valuable Fireproof Meet. .••••''' [ Also, several eweller; cost sm. Lots In South Camden. 'Fifth and Chest• nut streets. TAMEB A. FREEMAN, AUCTIONEB,R, No. 422 WALNUT street. TL. ASHBRBX3E & Ca, AUG lON. . BEES. No. 605 MARKET street. above Fifth. DAVII3 & HARVEY, AUCTIONEERS. (Late with M. Thomae di Sone.) Store Noe. 48 and CO North SIXTH street GOVERNMENT SALE. BUREAU OF ORDNANCE. NAVY DEPARTMENT, WASHINGTON CITY, Dec. 3, 18f39.,1 SALE OF SERVICEABLE • AND, N SERVICEABLE ORDNANCE STORES. There will be sold, at public auction; to the highest bidder, at noon, on Wednesday, Janu ary 12, 1810,-in the office of the Inspector of Ordnance, Nary-Yard, Norfolk, a large lot of articles of ordnance ) comprising gan-oar riago and miscellaneous stores.. TERAIS : One-half cash, in Government funds, on the conclusion of the sale, and they remainder within ten days afterwards, during which time the articles must he removed from the yard ; otherwise they will revert to the Government. It is to be distinctly understood that no guarantee will be given to purchasers of arti-. cies offered for sale, and noted in the cata logue,. as regards their exact condition or ivality, but it is believed, however, that every thing offered for sale is as represented. A. LUDLOW CASE, Chief of Bureau. deb-m,w,tjal2§ SHIPPERS' GUIDE. FOR BUST 0 14.—STEAMSHIP LINE! MIREOT.SAILENG FROM EACH. PORT EVERT -Wednesday and Saturday. FROM PINE STREE,T WHARF, PHILADELPHIA* AND LONG WHARF, BOSTON . FROM PHILADELPHIA FROM FosTON, ARIES, WednesdayaDec. l SAXON, Wednesday,Dec: 1 ROMAN, Saturday, " 4 NORMA.N, Saturday," 4 SAXON,Wednesday, " 8 ARIES, Wednesday, 44 ' a NORMAN, Saturday, " 11 ROMAN, Saturday, " 11 ARIES, NS , ednesday " Is SAXON, Wednesday, " 15 RODIAN, Saturday, " lb NORMAN. Saturday," , 18 SAXON, Wednesday " 221 ARIES, Wednesday, 44 22 NORMAN, Saturday," 2a ROMAN c Saturday, " 25 ARIES, M edneaday, " 29 SAXON,Wednesday, " 2s These Steamships sail punctually. Freight received every day. Freight forwarded to all points In New England. For. Freight or Passage (superior accommodations) apply to HENRY wINSOR dt 00., 838 South Delaware avenue. PHILADELPHIA RICHMOND AND NORFOLK STEAMSHIP LINE. THROUGH FB.EIGEIT, AIR LINE TO 'HE SOUTH AND WEST. EVERY SATURDAY, at Noon from FIRST WHARF' above MARKET Street. THROUGH RATES to all points in North and South Carolina via Seaboard Air-Line Railroad, connecting as Portsmouth, and to Lnchburg, Va., Tennessee and the West via Virginia an d Tennessee Air-Line and Rich mond and Danville Railroad. Freight HANDLED T ONCE,and taken at LOWER RATES THAN ANY OTHER LINE. The reg ularity , safety and cheapness of this route commend it to the public as the most desirable medical for carrying every description of freight. No charge for commission, drayage, or any expense far transfer. Steamships insure at lowest rates. Freight received DAILY. WILLIAM P. CLYDE & CO. N 0.12 Sonil Wharves and Pier No. I North Wharvell, W. P. PORTER, Agent atßichmond and City Point. T. P. CROWELL & CO., Agents at Norfolk PHILADELPHIA AND SOUTHERN , MAIL STEAMSHIP COMPANY'S REGULAR LINES FROM QUEEN STREET WHARF. The JUNIATA will sail for NEW ORLEANS, via Havana, on Saturday. Dec. 18, at 8 A. M. The YAZOO will sail from NEW ORLEANS, via HAVANA, on Friday, Dec. 17. The WYOMING will sail for SAVANNAH on Saturday, Dec. 11, at 8 o'clock A.M. The TONAWANDA. will sail from SAVANNAH! out Saturday, Dec. 11. The PIONEER will sail for WILMINGTON, N.C.,ort • Friday, Dec.lo, at BA. id. Through bills of lading signed, and passage tickets sold to all points South and West. BILLS of LADING SIGNED at QUEEN ST. WEARY. For freight or_passage, apply to WILLIAM L. JANES, General Agent, 1311 South Third street. NOTICE.—FOR NEW YORK, VIA DEL. AWARE AND RARITAN CANAL EXPRESS STEAMBOAT COMPANY. The CHEAPEST and QUICKEST water communica tion between Philadelphia and New York Steamers leave daily from first wharf below Market • street, Philadelphia, and foot of Wall street, New YOrk. G oo d s forwarded by all the lines running out of New York—North, East and West—free of Commission. Freight received and forwarded on accommodating terms. W5l. P. CLYDE Si CO, Agents No. 12 South Delaware avenue, Philadelphia. JAS. HAND, Agent, No. 119 Wall street, New York. NEW EXPRESS LINE TO ALEXAIT dria, Georgetown and Washington, D. Cl., via Ches. apeake and Delaware Canal, with connections at Alex andria from the most direct route for Lynchburg, Bris tol, Knoxville, Nashville, Dalton and the Southwest. Steamers leave regularly from the first wharf obese Market street, every Saturday at noon. Freight received daily. Vlld. P. CLYDE & CO., No. 12 South Wharves and Pier 1 North Wharves. HYDE & TYLER, Agents at Georgetown. N. ELDRIDGE & CO., Agents at Alexandria. Vs. N OTICE -FOR NEW YORK, VIA DEL. aware and Raritan Canal—Bwiftsuro Transporta tion Company—Despatch and Bwittsure Lines. Tha business by these Lines will be resumed on and after the Bth of March. For Freight, which will be taken on accommodating terms, apply to WAX. M. BAIRD At C 0.032 South Wharves. riELAWARE AND CHESAPP AWE Steam Tow-Boat Companp.—Bargee towed between Philadelphia, Baltimore, Havre de Grace, Delaware Citt and intermediate point!. NV 3L P. CLYDE l& CO.,Agenta; Capt. JOHN LAUGH- , LIN, Snp't Office, 12 South - Wharves, Philadelphia. NOTICE. -FOR NEW YORK, VIA. DEL AWARE AND RARITAN CANAL. SWIFTSURE TRANSPORTATION COMPANY. DESPATCH AND SWIFTSURE LINES. The business of these lines will be resumed on and after. 19th of March. For freight which will be taken o kzommodating terms, applrto z )FM. BAIRD CO., o. DS South Wharves. : rxr.tritirx • CRT.. THOMSON'S LONDON HITCH. ener, or European Ranges, for ' families, hotel* or public institutiona, in twenty different sizes. Also, Philadelphia P.anses, Hot Air Furnaces. Portable Heaters, Low down Grates rireboard Stores. Batts Boilers, Stew-hole Plates, Broilers .. Cooking Stoves, etc., wholesale and retail 14 the manufacturers * SHAH E & THOMSON,. it oZlin w f emi No. .c , , North Second street. THOMAS 8. Dix N & SONS,. Late Late Andrew* Dion -- No. I= OHESTNITT-S ix treet_,Phileoda., . ..z Opposite United States Mint. - , . annfacturers of LOW DOWN. PARLOR, 7 CHAMBER, OFFICS, • .". And other ORATES, - For Anthracite, -Dituminotts easel Wood Firs; WARN-AIR FITRNACRIS_, 13 .. For Warming Public and Private nildinipi. ' . .1 REOISTERS,TENTLLIATOSS, ' -'••• - . . 01111ENET °Atli • , '. -:; 000.KINO-RANGES, SAUDI:MIRE,' . ( .11 ''' WHOLESALE awl TAIL. . ~ - • :-, - . . . IN~1T~:~I~TIOiVi3. 9).11011k, P R I•P 111 A li.ll)lNtit. , . School and Livery 8.t0b1e,333.5 a:Dirket Attrist. tat . irriMlly. Ail overalls elatio for geutDmuta Britt ton . mance txbout December I. Ifonibome CorfiaiD* tar hire, 'ltorsys takeu to livery . • -• Of47114:111AIQX, PrOetcotor. tiOr.s . f
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