Daily evening bulletin. (Philadelphia, Pa.) 1856-1870, December 11, 1869, Image 6

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    znik*m mthoes.
6 or 'First Class Xesewood
Orient
TIVI ACTUAL COST TO
SI AN u FA
_TUBE.
11,rding detotintneft to offer otir.oxtenelve stook of
superior wed- firatirilaffefinisha sereo•ouace Rosewood
Pfeil Os at prices below thq actual cost to ' manufacture,
%re will sell during the mouth of December, aerates
LOWER THAN WE EVER OFFERED HERETO
• FORE,
In order dose out our surplus stock by the end of
the year.
The rePutation of our instruments makes it unneces
sary for us to any a word hi their favor. They aro tio
knoteledged to be equal, if not euportor, to any imitru
ment made in the world.
.
Persona wishing to purchase, or desiring to make
' CHRISTMAS PRESENTS,
Will find that the special and extraordinary reductions
of our prices will enable them to obtain
A FIRST-CLASS INSTRUMENT
At a, rice even Jess than they would otherwise have to
-
pa y for a second-rate or inferior one.
Those wanting bargains should not fail to call early at
our
WABEDOOMS, NO. 1103 CHESTNUT STREET, •
And extuthie mar stock, whore they can readily be con
vinced of the Superiority, of our instruments, and the
sacrifice at which we are offerinl i them.
SC °HACKER CO.
WAREROOMS, 1103 HESTNUT STREET.
B.—Sole Agents for the celebrated
BURDETT ORGAN.
A special discount of 30 per cent. during the month of
December. de4 a to th 12t§
The Weber •Pleitios;
The bast Pianos now manufachired,and need exclusively K
by Madame Parepa-Rosa, Miss ellogg % Miss Alide
Topp, Messrs. Theo. Thomas. Brignoli, Patter
son, Willason, Sanderson, fie., and by our resident
artists, Dietrich, Warner, Gaertner, Giles, & c., because
of their great superiority for brilliancy . , sonority and
great strength. The enormous increase In their sale in
two years has been over two hundred and ton per cent.,
es per Internal Revenue returns. For sale only by
J. A. GET E,
1102 Chestnut street.
Also, " Temple" and " Silver Tongue " Organs, in
every variety. dell s&w tf.4
Just Out!
" CHERRY PECTORAL TROCHES,"
For Colds, Coughs, Sore Throats, and Bronchitis
None as good, none so 4deasant, none care as quick.
RUSHTON & CO.,
10 Assoc Houss, New York.
ocl6-ea to th-3,mo§
Albrecht,
RIEKES & SCHMIDT,
Manufacturers of
• FIRST-CLASS AGREFFE PLATES
PIANO - FORTES.
Wareroorns,
No. 610 ARCH street,
se9th s ttt 4m§ Philadelphia. .
Planes.
eARD.—I have, for the last year, been selling my ele
gaat Steak & Co. grand square and upright Pianos; also
Raines Bros.' Pianos, nearly as low as at any former
time,hoping that an attempt to get back to Old Times'
prices would be made up by increase of trade. Results
are very satisfactory
nob-tf
Conrad Meyer, Inventor,avid
turer of the celebrated Iron Frame Piano, has received
the prize Medal of the World's Great Exhibition; Lon
don, England. The highest prizes ,awarded when, and
wherever exhibited. 11 arerooms, 722 Arch street.
Established 1823. tnyl-s m w tf§
Steinway dz Sons' Grand Square and
',bright Pianos, with their newly patented 'Resonator,
by which the original 'volume of sound can always be
retained the same as iu a violin. At
BLASI - QS BROS.,
sell tfi No. 1006 Ohestuut street.
Hutton's Piano linoms...Flrst. ► EMI
PIANOS AT FIXED PRICES.
Chicteriag & Sons' world-renowned Planes; Marshall
& Mittaur's celebrated Pianos; Ihne & Son's beautiful
pianos, at prices the very lowest, New Pianos to rent.
WM. 11. DUTTON,
se22-3m§ 111.4 and 1128 Chestnut street.
DISASTERS.
A MINING DISASTER.
Accident at Mauch Chunk...A Truck with
Two Men Precipitated to the Bottom of
a Mine.
The Mauch Chunk Gazette of yesterday says:
A night or two ago, about half-past twelve
o'clock, a remarkable and fatal accident oc
curred near Coleraine, on' the railroad between
Beaver Meadow and Tresckow, in this county.
A Mr. Duffey and wife had been attend
ing a wake in Beaver Meadow, and on return
ing afoot along the track of the railroad, Mr.
Duffey being a little in advance of his 'wife,
saw a depression of the rails a short distance
ahead, and on approaching nearer, the ties
suddenly began to give way under his feet.
He barely saved himself by jumping to' one
side, and immediately after, the road, rails,
ties, embankment, and everything caved
in, and left a cavern about
sixty feet deep. There had been an old coal
Mine and -rneath, and some of the pillars hav
ing become worn out or displaced, the whole
superincumbent mass of earth and the rock
had fallen in. Duffey and wife proceeded to
their house ,in Coleraine near the track, and
retired to bed, when shortly a truck was heard
approaching. Dutiiiy at once foresaw the.
consequences, and rushed out to give the
alarm. The truck contained two young.men,
Charles McConnell and Eduard Sweeney,
belongino to Trckow, who had started down
to attend the wake. Supposing Duffey only
wished to stop them so mat he could get on
himself, they disregarded his warning and the
truck rushed on at a furious rate, ..until
suddenly it was precipitated into the abyss.
The truck brought up on a projecting bank
part wa: down, but the men were thrown the
entire distance to the bottom, which was
found afterward to be about sixty feet from
the surface. Sweeney had sat at the rear of
the truck and was therefore thrown for
ward with a greater impetus as the
truck turned in mid air. He was evidently
much hurt by the fall and called to McConnell
to go and help him. 7he latter replied that be
had himself an arm badly broken and could do
nothing for him. Soon after another mass of
earth fell, covering Sweeney many feet deep,
and smothering and hushing forever his cries
for assistance.
Duffey, having tried in vain to prevent the
disaster, now hastened through the town and
neighborhood and rallied a crowd to assist in
getting out 'the unfortunate victims. Men
flocked from Tresekow, Beaver Meadow and
Coleraine; and despite the imminent danger
of being engulfed by another caving in of the
earth, went bravely and intelligently about
the hazardous work of rescue. Two.men were
let down with a rope to the bottom of the pit,
who fastened the rope around the body of
McConnell, and the latter was thou slowly
and painfully drawn up, though not till he
had been let part- way down again - several
times, to avoid being still further mangled
against the projecting rocks. When brought
to the surface, McConnell was found to Lm not
seriously injured beyond the breaking of his
left arm at the elboW, and his right reg, just
above the ankle.
Gangs of men then descended at the immi
nent peril of their lives, and began the labo
rious task of unearthing Sweeney, whose lo
cality was told by McConnell. After digging
two 'hours and a half his lifeleSS body was ex
humed,. and taken to Tresckow. Sweeney has
relatives in Mauch Chunk, and the body was
afterward brought here for interment. He
was about twenty-one years of ago and was
not married.
FIRE IN NEW YORK
The St. - Nicholas Hotel Stables Burnt...
Candles and Chandeliers—Excitement
among Clunnbernsaids—Two Persons
Darned.
The Ifor/(7 says :
Sonie excitement was created, yesterday,
by a rumor 'that the St. Nicholas Hotel, on
Broadway, was on fire, and many persons of
a curious nature rushed to the spot in order
to,view the conflagration. They were sadly
disappointed, for, on arrival at the hotel, it
proved that it was the laundry and gas-works
of the establishment, No. 61 Mercer st., with
the St. Nicholas stable, Nu. u 7 & 59, which were
on hFr....lt pppe,api that the it., Nicholas Hotel
is Supplied with gas manufactured by a gas
machine, which is at the rear' of the stables
and the laundry. There are tanks, retorts,
wash-room, purifying apparatus, and all the
fixtures of a gas-making factory, The factor
medial the manufacture of the gas is coal-tar.
It appears that about 3 o'clock yesterday, an
Englishman, named William Porter, aged :Ai,
who attended to the gas-Works, was' on the
top Of the tank filling it with coal
tar, when, "according to his statement,
everything seemed to he on lire, and
he was badly burned about the hamts and face.
The theories with regard to the cause of the
lire are Many: It is said by some that the
tank exploded, but themore probable cause is
that there was an overflow of coal-tar gas
vapor from the tank to the fire ben4ath the
• retort. The fire spread into the laundry and
" A. stables, causing some damage, but not much.
Thelaundry is owned: by Mr. Samuel Hawk,
who also owns the St. Nicholas Hotel, and is
damaged to the amount of $3,000 (clOthes in
vilified), fully insured. There were about
row pieces of linen in the laundry at the time
• of the fire, but the great part of them were re
ntoved not damaged.
J. E. GOUbD,
No, 923 Chestnut street
CONTINUE THE SALE
DRY GOODS.
GREATER REDUCTIONS.
Alpacas Reduced to 25 cents.
THE DAILY EVENiNG BtLLETIN-PHILADELPHIA, SATVADAY; DEOEITERO, 18694- , TitikE SHEET.
0 11 ) 1 110;
The Eseuised Nelirdeirek u r
inclieved,to hiete, in ,
Wedneadkr*Sdkillefods 'ere flee*
—Purges Gone- for , Seauteh s Or •
Proinshillitteliof capitOre. e ;
A:despatch to the Wilmington iNtiiatereicie
is' as follows: , ; .1' , ,
Dnr:Tort, Caroline County,' MC, Dec.
is believed that Goldsborough; che 4 1 4Edotor,
under sentence of death for the , murderer off,
Charles Marsh, passed thretightins
terday. He Was brought here by a friend In
an open wagon, arriving at about IQ , 11.; M.
and 'departing at about
He was conveyed to Wye roilia,,Quein,
county, by Mr. Richardson, Sheriff of this `
county, who had no suspicion as to whit he
was. No one suspected him , of being Gelds
borough, the murderer, until some time after
his departure. , ,
During his stay ho behaved in a peculiar
manner, and a comparison of his actions at
different places awakened suspicion and led to
an examination of the effects he left behind
him, and such examination led to the positive
conclusion that he was Robert Goldaborptigh.
upon a vest, thrown carelessly across a
chair, was found the name of the escaped con
vict's brother. In his valise was some chicken,
beef and tobacco. He had prod:deed to come
back for these things.
While ho was here he , got a youna man to
direct for him a package containing a , breast
pin and some rings to a girl at. Houston's X
Roads, in Sussex county, saying 'he had not
seen her for more than a year, and had had
no opportunity before now to fulfil a promise
made a year ago. There were other incidents,
going to show his familiarity with the scene of
the murder.
He told some one that be was a half-brother
of John G. Goldsborough, but finding this
aroused suspicion ho modified
,his statement,
saying he was only a cousin, ut they called
him brother.
He had plenty of money and seemed very
careless with it. He offered $lOO and $5OO
notes in payment of bills. He bought an
entirely new suit of clothes while in the
town.
He corresponds with the description of
Goldsborough in every particular, but the
color of his hair, but that had evidently been
dyed. It had grown out some since dyeing
and the new growth was of a different color
from the rest.
Parties went in pursuit of him last night.
Some of them have returned, but the others
are still searching for, him. think there is
little doubt that he will be captured. If he is
I will advise you further. .T. M. E.
HOME.
ThO'VEcumenictil Council.
The cable telegrams last night contained the
following. despatch, with the note appended
by the Associated Press Agent in .New York :
litomx, Dec. 10, 1869.—The Pope delivered
an allocution before the assembled Bishops.
He expressed his satisfaction in being able
to open the Council on the day which had
been fixed and at finding that the Bishops
came in such numbers to aid the Holy See,
helped by the Holy Spirit. False human
science and impiety were never .before so
strong as at the present day; for they were
well organized and hid themselves behind
pretended aspirationns for liberty. But there
was nothing to fear, [because the Church was
stronger even than heaven (sic)]. But time
would remedy the present evils.
The Holy Father concluded with an invoca
tion to the Holy Ghost, the blended Virgin,
and Saints Peter and Paul.
[The words inclosed in brackets are given
exactly as received by the Atlantic cable, in
cluding the interpolation "sic" at the end, of
the sentence.]
In spite of this note we venture to say that
the proper reading of the sentence in question
should be: "But there was nothing to fear,he
cause the church was stronger than ever.
Heaven and time would remedy the present
evils." In translating from Latin to Italian,
then to French, and then to English, and
afterwards telegraphing and transcribing, the
sentence has got into the confused and in
credible form in which it was given to the
press.---En. BULLETIN.
DRY GOODS.
J. M. HAFLEIGH,
012 and 1014 CHESTNUT STREET,
WILL
OF HIS
FINE STOCK OF
Commencing Monday, Dec. 13,
At Still
500 Pairs Blankets, at a Great Saerillee.
entstitebell Handkerchiefs, 12 1.2 eti.
IO Pieces Bonnet Velvets at one half
former pricer.
The Entire Stock Must be Closed Out
Before January Ist.
JOHN BURNS,
House-Fiarnishing' Dry Goods
AND IMPOR'T'ER OF lIOSIERY,
245 & 247 S. Eleventh St., ab. Spruce,
ffae inarlted down him wlvde .tack
BELOAV GoLI) i:OST,
A n d r.if(Ts tr nivnilous
?MAGNIFICENT DAMASK 'TABLE CLOTHS,
2,3, 711/11 1 yards long.
All sizes Double Damask Nankins. ' • •
H,rnsk•y Scotch and Irish Tablo Linens. ,
.11,1.1, RINDS TOWELS AND TOWELINGS.
Shaker, Welsh and Donaet Flannels.
('ANTON FLANNELS ALL REDUCED.
111anketh and hantlealpe :Marseilles
Waterlproofa at astounding low prices.
HOSIERY 1 HOSIERY !! HOSIERY !I I
cartwright az Warner's Underwear, down.
Lest American Makes Underwear.
Rest Englibh ,raper-stout Half .11.4 C, I , IIIICM] to 35e.
English and Garman 'Stockings rcdtmed.
100 dozen Ladies' Hemstitched Handkerchiefs, all
129 o.
Ladies' Hemstitched Ilandkurchisfs, 15c., 23c., 8/ 0 •t
35e,, d11e.,110 $1 00.
Gents' and Children's liandlierehlefa, very
VIENNA, FRENCH .AND ENGLISH
Pocket "Bunko, Card,Leiter and Cigar elms in licunda l
Turkey and Calf.
IIEABON so,
dog ru§ , 907 Chestnut street.
MARKING WITH INDELII3LE
Bmbroiderin& Braiding, Stamping So. TORREY. 10 Hilbert Wed.
-7 ‘7 , :441
s.o••••"' t •
4 ' •
Altai god
ibei foot 02.. •
•'
WOOI T AIEEW "BROMOS
AdverifsiMeit
ALTHOUGH THE CHARACTER
OF OUR CLOTHING
Is as High as Ever,
603 and 605 Yet the Prices ,
Chestnut Street 5 Are Muth Lower,
Much, Much, Lower,
Than ever before.
Sufficiently to offer
Unparalleled inducements
Even to Gentlemen
Who have been
Afraid to buy at all.
Nobody now need fear to call.
For the cheapest of bargains, at'
GREAT BROWN HALL.
We have made it '
An Especial Stl2iy I
To Cipher out
The Lowest Cent
At which we can sell
603 and 605 Our Winter Stock !
And that is the price
CHESTNUT. ST. . At which
. . The Public
Shall have it.
The Public understand this,
And are crowding
And clamoring
To take the Clothes away.
The Finest of Clothes,
At the Lowest of Prices.
There are a few more Clothes
Still remaining on hand,
And we've crowded the prices Down! Down !
Down!
At our Elegant Hall, so Big and so Brown!
ROCMLL & WILSON'S,
603, and 605 ,CHESTNUT Street,
EDWARD P. KELLY,
TA.11.011 1
HAS REMOVED
xo
No. 1300 Chestnut St.
S. W. Corner of Thirteenth.
WESTON & BRO.,
TAILORS,
No. 900 ARCH STREET,
PHTLADELPHIA,
GREAT REDUCTION IN PRICES.
SATISFACTION GUARANTEED.
ocli Sin
JAAIES S. EARLE & SONS
Are now occupying their own Building.
The Store having been entirely re
built since the Late Fire.
EARLES' GALLERIES
LOOKING GLASS
No. 816 Chestnirt Street.
C. F. JIASELTINE'S
GALLERIES OF THE ARTS,
N 0.1125 Chestnut Street.
CHRISTMAS PRESENTS.
ENGLISH WATER COLORS,
From 25 ctn. to titi) p^r box.
PICTURES AND 1.13,3iN1ES
Of every dqseripticq arid every Klee.
Reduced for the Holidays.
myL4•lytp§
VSEFUL FANCY AY.TICLES FOR
1115LIDAY an avarted assortment.
MASON do CO.,
907 Chestnut stree
T )OSEWOOD DESKS, RUSSIAAND
TI;IINEY WRITING CASES and liORTFOLIOS,
foreign and dqnlestio. •
MARON &'OO.,
OW. Cholitnitt mtruet.
GOLD PENS AND GOLD;TINORY,
IitiBBER and EBONY PENCILS and PEN BOLDEBB
MASON 4t CO.,
907 Cheetnut street.
DIE POCKET KNIVES ARIS
'loll s w 2t
HORS, Rogerm'a,Wasteallqua's and otlior bed English
makers,
13 7tUtUN'/.1; AND CARVED INKSTANDS,
PAPER KNIVES, , BOOK-MARKS, MATCH and
STAMP BOXES, &c
, 71; .5,
=l==ll7M
:cni;'r , ; t
1~~ ~~
On otir
~ ~.r,
CALL AT
PHILADELPHIA.
THE FINE ARTS.
WAREROOMS,
'MASON de CO.,
907 Chestnut street,
MASON- Jc 00.,
907 Cliontuut !Amt.
Gacievit 'AVMS.
... 1
--.:_ kitiii ... ~,, .
~.,._ ' yi,ll-47.18:
1' I ~ ~, ,4 P.,,,, :.k._';,.
e t - '..." , 'a ‘ ,l # t •,-,,'c,'A'
GEOCER,IE . S~
3
•
FOR, THE HOLIDAYS,
S. W..eornee Blind and Walnut Ste.
IMM=
FRESH GOODS
RECEIVED DAILY
Reduction in Prices Constantly
Being Made.
WHITE ALMERIA GRAPES,
Only 40 ets per pound,
Or by the Keg, at Wholesale Prices.
CHOICE FRUITS
Of Every Description.
New Walnuts, Filberts
Paper Shell Almonds.
Stewart's Broken Candy.
LADY APPLES and
BELLOW WE R APPLES
Fresh Canned Fruits and Preserves.
Jellies, Jams and Marmalades.
FRENCH CARDED FRUITS
In Small and Pietty Glass Boxes.
Fin,e Teas, Coffees,
Chocolates; &c.
STAPLE GROCERIES
Of the Finest Character.
Cheese, Do'nestle and Imported, In great
`variety.
Potted titune and StrasbottrA• Meats.
Pates.do Foles'Gras.
White Clover Honey, In the Comb and
Strained.
Queen Olives and French Olives.
Oltveikrarelps and caperti.
01415 Oil, unsurpasied in qu ality,'
Fine Importedl COrtlllabb
All the Popnlair Etninths o!:ChpmpsWite.
Every Varfety of Sherry.'
Old and Melt Port Wines:
litch.Medlant and X.4iir Carades Clarets.
California Wines.
Fine - Cigars;
And a'Great Variety or
Fine Goods for Table Use,
REDUCED PRICES..
SIMON COLTON & CLARKE,
S.W. nor. Broad'and Walnut Ste.
rtUST-OtAtlits '
Gi3fol.ol lll ,4ti,
,c 7
ill= 'FLETOREE
SIV.I2O4,OIIIOErrNITT BEET
; „ 4
; 3PROPPEIS ''" -'•
I Adjusted to the leresetit' *Ste - tit Odd.
44 , 31. Yr s ' '• •• • ' ' • ' • '
, WHITE •
AWRIA GRAPES,
060 loacis,
IN MAUI:IIUL CLUSTERS,
r AT
40, cents per pound.
SIMON COLTON & CLARKE,
S. W. corner Broad and Walnut BtB.
THOMPSON BLACK'S SON &
SEVENTEENTH AND ARCH STREETS,
and Pecan Nuts.
Invite attention to their stock of Fine Teas and Coffees
Flour, Fruits, end all rare end choice articles pertain
in Particular attention ry Store.
is paid to the careful selection of
Fine Teas of every description, nod with the facilities at
their command, they aro prepared to furnish every va-,
riety of goods of the very best qualities at the lowest
prices.
They endeavor to conduct their business on such
principles as they trust will meet
custom approbation of all
who may favor them with their .
de4 s to th 12trpeli
Lady Apples.
H9,vana Oranges.
Paper Shell Almonds.
Almeria Grapes,
In Fine Clusters
New Citron and Currants.
je RAVIS & RICHARDS.
A. .J. DE CAMP.
New Citron, Crystalized Orange and Lemon Peel, Now
Currants, Seedless Raisins and Pure Spices.
TABLE FRUITS.
White Almeria Grapes, Florida Oranges, Layer Pigs,
Double Crown Raisins, Paper• Shell Almonds, Brazil
Nuts, English Walnuts, Petans, Chestnuts and
lihellbarks.
CANNED FRUITS.
While and Yellow Peaches, Cherries, Dawson and
Gunge Plums, Pine Apples, Winslow Corn, Asparagus,
Tomatoes, &c., &c.
107 SOUTH SECOND STREET,
Col tf4p, . Below Chestnut, East Side.
SPANISH QUEEN OLIVES,
OF THE FINEST QUALITY,
For sale bithe Gallon at
JAMES R. WEBB'S,
nil i tiltit and Eighth Sts.
Delicious Champagne
The most delicate flavor, .at greatly reduced prfeee,
ALSO,
Pure Grape Brandy, for,lnvalids,
CARRICK & CO., Sele Agents,
doio titri No. 113 Chestnut Street.
) . •
D U Y THE
-1 1 , 1 1. \ k / Al 7
fu m
a fuIINATIIRAiIIAVOR 46
Bold by all first class Grocers
Ily our improved process in canning the QUINTON
TOMATOES excel all otbere Doty in the, quality aipl
quantity of the obit tents of each can.
Our labole and rases have been imitated. Beware 0
substitution. Ask for QUINTON TOMATOES.
xpaI,,YES
Wholesale itteney l 4s North Wilter St.'
mitom.s‘C.
GROCERS
BROAD AND CHESTNUT,-
PIIILALELPR[A,
ARCH AND TENTH STREETS.
GitocEltM, 4 r,toOft. arc.
I . :,:-;::-,': 1 '''--
,7 4. :: 7 :' ; ' : ' ';' ,:;',. .i' ''' , , ,
m
- ,•••
• •• • .•.;• • •-•-•
• •
ERNEST RO
Aco-os
Oarte Slan*,444 ,80004
ANDFRUITY GENEROUftWINESi '
r
Fatly equal 10 the beet on 411. Ai ilk tit
Champagnes.. , I,lr
• ' (, s
Iffop. BALE AT, THE Aool2o' P 410103
811110 N, COLTIW-avi LAR
d. W. tors Broad and Withist.'
1809.
COUSTI"B EAST . END GRQCERY.
White Almeria Onpes at 40 eh. per lb.
Nest Raisins, Currants. Citron, Orange and
Leman Peek Pure Seises.
Pie teaches In 1a rge oini),sionly 100. per can
Warranted good and of tllla year'n trait.
CoOlcing Wines and Brandies, New Cider.
OUR TABLE SHEARY,
S 2 GO per °alio,' by cask, or $2 75 by ,five-goilo7l
demijohn.
COUSTY'S EAST END GROCERY,
Na 118 S. Second St., below Chestnut.
luta tu th tdera 4p _
A LARGE VARIETY
NEW GOODS
Suitable for the Season.
JUST •IIECtIVED.
ALBERT C. ROBERTS.
DEALER IS FINE 0/100211118,
Corner Eleventh and Vine Streets.
ChriAtmas IPresents.
The Best and most dutiable Present to a
Friend or the Needy Is a barrel of our
EU. &Welch's" First Premium Flour,
And a bag or ballrbstrrel
"Sterling's Mountain' , Buckwheat Meal,
width wo warrant 8U I ERIOU to any other in the U. 8.
AII goods trarrentfd as sepreiented, and delireied free
GEO. F. ZEHNDER,
FOURTH AND VINE STREETS
tfrp
YARMOUTH SUGAR CORN
The ;non delicious,- in cans. Sold by all tret-clay
grocers. •
The award of the great PARIS EXPOSITION OF 13(1
was Orin for the Yarmouth Sugar Corn.
'Wholesale Agency, 45 North WATER Street.
BLIEV ES & PARTIN.
nol7 1m r
NEW PUBLICATIONS*
J. B, LIPPINCOTT & CO.,
Publishers, Booksellers, Importers
STATIONERS.
710 sad 711 Market Street, Phila.,
Itnito the attention of the public to their largo eiasrt
ment of Bli.calaueous 4114131 audard
BOOKS
FOR THE HOLIDAYS,
American and English, llandsOmely Illustrated and
Hound in a variety of beautiful 4tylear, suitable , for
CHRISTMAS GIFTS.
Also a great variety of Ilfustrated Juvenile
and Colorsd Toy . Books, by the most popular authors,
together with au extensive new stork of Foreign and
Docucatir. /
FANCY • STATIONERY.
A VALUABLE GMT.
One Year's Subscription to either
I.llPPlNC(YrrtlMAGAZlNEofidtterature,
Science taalEducatiou. Illuhtrated, 8l Da.
THE SUNDAY MAGAZINE. Profusely II•
lustrated. 83 60 per annum,' '
GOOD WORDS rOlt THE YOUNG. Pro f
Iljustratvd. 'e2 03 per apsturu.
J. B. LIPPINCOTT & CO.,
715 and -717-31arkettltireet,Ph1!Adel Okla.,
m w
New l3ooks.
A. HEMPIS'S IMMOLATION Ole otaturr. Cloth,
ilt,l2no,7scts; Tito only edition mall enough for a
'ocket Companion.
JANET'S TWO HOMES. Price, 61 00.
A very sweet pure story for children, showing how
much good can bo accomplialiod by a losing heart that
has been early given to Jeans. Price, 81.—The Prezby.
tcrian.
THOUGHTS THAT CLUSTER -ROUND OUR
/TOMBS. Price,-al O. By tho Compiler of "Drifted
Snow r7alles,"."lllauna for rho Pilgrim," "Leaves
Gathered, 'Ac.,&e. .
This le a pretty little reltime In full gilt, handsomely
printed. its contents are charming. The associations
chattering around honer art, the tenderest and sweetest
of our lives. In this volume are mere thane hundred
lyrical poems - upon subjects .connoctod With 'home and
tie+ varied experiences of life some of them of exceeding
beauty and sweetness, and nil of them touching come
chord that vibrateo in every human heart. The book
will be it jantutifnl and welcome. holiday present for any
on, old or young ; for, both alike will find In it send
',lento appropriate to their condition, Clothed in beauti
ful language and graceful verae—Portland Daily
Baiter:4.4.'4;lls.
-
'Published and female Uy
MRS. 3; HAMILTON THOMAS,
1344 Chestnut-Street,
PHILADELPHIA
INDIA CAI911111:11E SHAWLS,
Importedand for Sale by
dell Stir
SCOTCH GOODS IN GREAT VARIETY,
itney Pon wipers, Boxes of Initial Paper, ho,, Mono
grams, Wedding and Visiting Curds, elegantly on
graved. •
N. B. Qnr patrons will oblige ns by giving their orders
for engraving intended for Holiday presents at an early
date..
de4lBt rp§
MA.O4ZIN DES
,MODES.
10144 WALNUT STREET.
MIIB. PROOTOE
Cloaks, Walking Bu t te ESilke_i
Drawl Goode, Lace killftYliS •
Ladlee'lluderclottlipt •
Dimes taade to marmite in Twentylour ea mitre
MEE
j - 't.Ll
J. W. RULON & SON,
32 North Front street
MASON & CO.,
907 Chestnut street.
AEL I6 I 4 ?PI3
- lAreaCarad
' Dionor,Bnirsorr Will preach in the Tish
tieth Btreet,M. Church tesmorrecy Month*.
IT is stated that, the Rev. J. W. Brown has
resigned the parish of Trinity P. E. tlhurch.of
this city, and accepted a to.Chriat Church
Detroit. r,2_, rl
- Tax P. B. Church of Se: Janes tlie Lesil; of
ibis city, has lost its rector, the Rev. E. B.
Watson, that clergyman having resigned the
parish and accepted a call to Bt. James's
• Church, Lancaster, Pa. .
IT Is reported that one-halfiof,3l(o ozytabod
ministers in the (late) New Siihitel PfiXibyte-
Sfr fallarqb igaiWitlhOTAtiregUlatc cliargfer and ,
the tw o thotuanid five hundiedin the Old
Behoel Chtirch, one thousand art not lettP4
pastors.
Tun secretary•of the late fair in aid itrf tire
Orphans' Home at Germantown reporta tb
nowt!, at $270391/.70, the expenses OMB 172 s
• *hilts leaving a baltineitif $25 180:'b6;
sufficient to liquidate the indebtedness of the
institution • •-; •• ••,!.
lectitre-rnoui of the neWlfd:E, IChnish
of - Chapman Qttarrlek Pa: WO - dediCated re-. •
eently. The Rev. Peter. J. Cox; of Manaynnk,
preached the dedication sermon in the morn
ing and the Rev. Joseph 8. COok, of Eastorsin.
the afte rn oon and evening. . • .•
'•,;TB)21 vestry of %rut P. ES; Church,' G ers
reantoWn; atra inchtink held lest Wednesday
tvining; elected' the Rev, 'Williatri fil:Langs'
ford to be rector of the parisitswhieh theyrep4
"TAM,. The minister to whom the call .is ex
tended is nevi teeter of St. Paul's Church, BIS!.
glowood. •:H • .; • • „ ; -;
Tux bequest of Mrs. Sophia NeylitS of,Lan•••
easter, of $l,OOO to the 'Trinity Lutheran
Church,and $lO,OOO to Zion German Lutheran
Church, of that city, is said to be void, not
having been made at least a month before her
• decease; As required by the act of the' Legitila
tare relative to the bequests for religious or
charitable purposee.
Tits last Legislature of New York passed an
act setting aside $300,000 of the public school
fund for denominational schools in Now York
city, intending it for the use of Roman Catho
lic schools. As the wording of the law opened
it for all tlenenduationa, sixtsstive schoolsof
er
which a nutnb are Protestant, have applied
for an equitable share of the fund.
TIIE friends of the McDowell Presbyterian
Sabbath school, at Twenty-second and Nichol
streets, have issued a circular appealing for
aid to enable them to erect a church in that
neighborhood, and setting forth the ythed of
such building, as their present quarter are Oaci
contracted for their increasing tinimberit., It
is proposed to make this is "Memorial
•Mis
sion" of the great Reunion. " • • • •S • ,
TILE next Monday Afternoon Onion Prayer
Meeting•will beheld:at the. Church of the
Evangelist, Catharine street, above Seventh,
on Monday next, 13th inst., at 4 o'clock . . The:
Tuesday E t V(ll.ling Union Prayer Meeting will
be held at the Third Baptist . Church, Second
street, opposite German, at' 'if o'clock.- Sub
ject for ptayer—"The Holy Spirit's Influence."
-Christians andbthers invited to attend. -
Ix Madagascar no less than' ',twenty thou
sand natives attend. Protestant worship in one
hundred And forty-eight different eangregai• • •
lions. One hundied and twenty chape l "are
now in process either of building or enlarge
ment. In Antananative, the city where the
Queen resides, there are nine large" churches:
Ten years ago, to be known as a Christian ou
this island would have imperiled both lifeiand
property.
Tne.,ltev. W. P. Ilellings, of the Second.
Ge'rrnaritovin Baptist Church, tendered hist°.
signation Of the pastorate of the church; to
take effect November Ist, but the church: re
fused to accept it. Upon dtio deliberation,
however, he has declined to recall it. When
be became pastor, in 1667, the church num
bered a tremixirs, and it reported to theAs- •
:iodation, at its last meeting, in October, a
membership of 136.
I i the recent successful effort to exclude the
Bible from the common schools in Cincinnati,
Dr. Lilienthal, a prominent Jewishrabbi,took
strong ground against the .Romanists. saying
that in this contest the Jews must side with
America against Rome. Though they have
stronger grounds for objecting to the reading
the Bible in the schools, • particularly to the
New Testament, yet they waive all their, ob
jection.s, and send their children to the public
schools, and consent that the Bible shall be
read there. •
'Twe years ago the Rev. Mr. livaspastor' of
the Kensington Presbyterian Church, wont
out with a colony of one hundred and ninety
members, and formed the• Bethesda Presbyte
rian Church's& this city. At the prits•ent time
there are three hundred, and eighty-six ntern
lifts's. The church building is under roof, and
the congregation is worshipping in the lecture
rosins During, thel.2,oll3ing year they hope to
couiplete their Church edifice. The church
being now able to sutain itself, the Home
Missionary Society is no longer called upon
fur assistance
SOME idea of the present condition of the
tleubmlteition may be fotradd from
the Pact that in' the' ten counties of Philadel-
Oda, Chester, Delaware, Bucks, Berks,Mont
gothery, Schuylkill, Lehigh. Northampton
and Carbon, in this . State; Which'cou.stitutes
what is known tut tlicibioceSe of Philadelphia,
in charge of the Rt. Rev., ,I tomes Frederic
Wood, I). D., there are 100 .churcheS (includ
ing the magnificent Cathedral on Eighteenth
street, near Vine), 'lB9 priests, and 220,000
communicants,: -They have several seminaries
for the education of young men who intend
entering the church.
A SENDAI' mcnoor.. Institute for the city of
Philadelphia will be held in Old Pine Street
Church, Pine street, above rourth. on Mon
day evening - .It)th inst.; at a- .quarter befote
eight o'clock'. George H. Stuart will preside.
The Rev. It. IL Allen, I). D.,- will deliver an
address on "Preparation of the Lesson."
Teaching the lesson will he practically illus
trated with a class of boys and girls by Wm.
M. Shoemaker, Esq. Discussions" by the au
dience in five-minute addresses. These insti-
tutus will be . ,hold monthly, on the third Mon
day evening of each month, in the different
diuretic* in the city.. .
TUE Clerk of Shiloh -•flaptist Church has
published the follotiving : "Rev. 3ereiniah H.
Turpin,
pastor for the past year of the Shiloh
Baptist Church, in this city, recently resigned
his•pastoral charge and received a General
Letter ot Dismission to any Baptist Church.
The letter was not addressed to any particular
clinrch, as Mr. Turpin said he was going out
West, and did not know .where he might fix
his residence, Since hiS resignation he has
united with a Methodist Churoli in his neigh
borhood. Upon gaining a certain knowledge
of this fact, the Shiloh Church has withdrawn
the hand of fellowship from Mr. Turpin."
Tur.lwenty-third anniversary of the Sab
bath schools connected with the Spring Gar
den Presbyterian Church, Eleventh street,
above Spring Garden, Rev. D. A. Cunning
ham, pastor; was held on -Thursday evening
last. The spacious church was crowded to its
tamest capacity, and the exercises were of a
very interesting character. From the report
of the superintendent ; Mr. A. G. Rowland, we
learn tbat .the school numbers 450 scholars,
with 100 in the Infant school. The contralti
lions for the year amounted to $622 60. The
superintendent reports the school iu a very
prosperouB condition. Au able address was
delivered by Rev. A. A. Willits, D.D. An in
teresting feature was the presentation ofilow
ers,Ae., to the pastor, superintendents and
teachers.
THE Rev. Dr. Clark. Secretary of the Ame
rican Board, simimarizes some -of the results
of modern missions since' 'their beginning,
when Carey became a missionary, eighty-one
years ago, iThere are now 42 societies, with
1,800 missionaries, giving • the gospel to the
heathen. The American Board, which was
not in existence sixty years ago, has now 200
churehea and 70,000 converts. There are 800
native preachers in the. South Bea Islands and
200,000 comp:tunic:l i nts. There are 100 preach
ers in li t atiagascar, 600 missionaries in India,
20,000 communicants in South Africa, 15,:;00
on the West VoaSt of Africa, 100 native
churches in Turkey and Persia, and 40,000
people taught to read at a single station in
Eastern Turkey in twelve, years. In 1788
pealing vvas given for the evangelization of
the heathen • in 1808 $lOO,OOO was
,givett; in
1828, $1,000,000; in 1842, $2,000,000,and in 1868,
V 5,000,000.
—The latest description of Mr. Greeley's
necktie : ‘, o lt looked as if it bad grown upon
laid shirt•collar llke a mushroom, and bad been,
torn to pieces in a hailstorm."
—Richard Wagner, the composer of Tann
hanser, is at work upon a history of music,
which is •to be published in three large
volumes.
TfigDAIIN EVENING BULLETIN-PHILADELPHIA,
SIM
ossolvo* of Onoto Ailtatodhee.
Froml*Nemokt i rtof Mint° 1 tp. u-Shee•
P6r V from
1 1826 ance frolB2o tit' 4848; just pub
lished by Lacroix, Paris, we extract a curious
anecdote of the composerAtellieland the an
t.
tipathi foi s t fin iimt i pbe :
* ,
B TAXI"AND geltia. 4
They met in the salon of the Princess 8e17,,
giojoso. The Sicilian composer, mit, super-.
lenOri'afteVoilitto>q_ gllfsir r fefilled
by natun, Jbut not baring the,,slighteef,i4emor
social ilKinWans, Of, antitianca, or tiff; Mot'-
, alo9,ottie4l himself at the feet of the ladies and
rested bli'cbilitiihg head on their knees. He
h i sted,pobody, bisincritluylyewwn ;mei*);
tot) great fiSt-hinilii• be' iiiitfiodt Odethies'c'taild
4943tipatby felt, for. , him by, ~lieteeVi. have .
wevei `Seen' egnalle4. - niefeliest aatfrtst
• Chooo bind this day for hh s TictiPr..an4 ra r
deinotiitrated by 'nnnlero#,examples ,t hat
0' 41 0) co I'•' deers died •in by "Attie,
by little, : gayety-Art.B63lC tint, and
turning to me With a shiver '
". be, whisPered,
"This man with the spectacles is a jellatore."
Fifteen days afterward I3ellini, at the age of
thirty-two,,was dead;. _ ; While it. would be "ab
surd to hold Heine tesponSible for this minus
coincidence, there,is little doub that. tile mind ,
of tho dylng matfln the deliricinx Of 'fever ant
fered greatly from tile Tenuinibrance of the
strange regard and' Mephlstoptelifuf laugh
tbißJettatore with the tipeetaclei. 1 met Ifeine
and informed him of Ilellini's sudden death.
"I foresaw that," he said, lang,hingly.
With lielne hitnself t e relations of the
Count Werelntimate throngli'his sister. Maio.
Jaubert, always a tender friend of the witty
poet:
ILEUM
r . "Aimed with murderous irony lie continued
his lifelong win' against revealed religion;.
'delivered the 'oppressedbody', so long con
demned by the greater glory of the soul, drew
it frotn the charnel-house to which Christianity
had consigped it for . eighteen centuries, re
stored'its titles of nobility, sang its splendor, its
divine,. beauty. Alas! with what ingratitude
The object' of his devotion: repaid him'? Struck
with paralysis,his body inflicted upon him eight
years of horrible sufferings ; he lost sight,
movements, bis"arms and legs resembled para.-
Site growths iatber than members of a human
Creature.. The brain alone survived, the mouth
dictated, and to the last hour poems sublime
and desolate—veritable cries of Lazarus—es . =
cape'', from this royal intelligence. His heart
remained always tender toward. his mothen
He hid his illness from her, and the German
journals having given the details of his condi
tion, he *rote to her that it was the device of
his publisher to augment the sale of his Works.
The poor woman replied that each day she
rendered thanks to God for having preserved
tlia life of ber son. 'Et Jehovah,'.be exclaimed;
'Jehovah, aceepte cela sans remords! c'est
hien ld un dieu 'barbare de la farpn des EgYp
tiens! Ce n'est pas nil (lieu de la Grdce qui
traherait it ainsi un poille;'"
ALFRED DE Ell6/.:V.:T.
Count Altou-Shie,a page of Charles X., and
then a furious rireur about Paris, did nothing
himself, and is only valuable for what he re
fleets ofhis great contemporaries. With Alfred
de bfusset, for instance, he lived for years' on
terms of intimacy, which never, hoivever, at
tained friendship. The poet he describes as a
slight,tinely-built man of fair complesion,brown
eyes, long nose, pleasing though sulky mouth.
The habit of incessant smoking had yellowed
his teeth, lips, even fingers. With men he
talked little, and laughed much; it was for
women he reserved all his strength; for them
his manner was full of fascination and his
of wit and eviiglerie, but,' like them,
he dreaded, all political and serious subjects.
Upon his own creative power be prided him
self but little; but of his good birth and repu
tation as a roué, he was vain to childishness.
TheDetieleneiesin the Appropriations.
The &mural' : of the Treasitry transmitted
yesterday to the Speaker of the House the
following letter, accompanying the estimates
for the fiscal year 1870- . 71 and the deficiencies
for the current year; •
Tuf;A,ATirsc DiA•AirrstENT, Dec. 6, 18t33.
Sir: In conformityto the requirements of the
joint resolution of January 7, 1816, I have the
honor to transmit, for the inforination of Con
gress, the following estimate of appropriations
required to supply deficiencleS in the appropri
ations for the service of the current fiscal year
ending June :10, 1670, amounting to 51,343.-
408 71, and estimates of the amount which
will be required for the service of the fiscal
year ending June•Bo, 7 lB7l, amounting. in the
aggregate to 5331,097,825 62, including esti
mates for the postal service, payable out of its
revenues, and the amount est'matPd as needed
under the various standing appropriations
made by Congress at former sessions. I have
the honor to be,very respectfully, your obedient
servant, GEORGE S. Bouzwir.t.t.,
The deficiencies are as follows
Treasury Department.
Territorial Governments
Public sands, Rc
War Department
Supreme Court, United States..
Pen ions
Coast Survey ,
Agliculturaf Department
Treasury Department, viz.:
Custom-bouse, Astoria, Oregon... :o,ooo'oo
Custom-house, Cairo 25,0110 00
Custom-house, Detroit 15,000 00
Custom-house, Knoxville . how oo
Custom-house, Ogdensburg 25,000 no
Custom-house, Mobile 20,004) 00
Custom-hoit-se, P0rt1and...,....... Bo,ttuo th)
Custom-house, Richmond 25,000 00
Custom-house, Sandusky 10.000 00
Custorn-house, St. Paul 50,000 00
Court-house, Des Moines 40,573 00
Court-house, 3fadison, Wis 40,000 00
Court-house, Portland, •Me 2.5,000 00
Court-house, Springfield, .. 12,000 00
Post Office and Court-house, N. Y.. 1,000,000 00
Post Office Se Court-house,Oinabi. 25,000 00
Post Office and Sub-Tteasury Boa- •
on ...... .
Branch Mint;San Fraticiseo
.Diarine „Hospital; Chicago..
Barge °lupe, w r. . ....
Appraiters Wits, Philadelphia
Treasury building..
Other public buildings— ..
Furniture, carpets, &c., for public
buildings
Fuel, lights, vaults, safes, Ste., of
public . . ....
ALL TaLtarELER$ who have been to Cologne
must remember the martyrdom they suffered at
the bands of the vendors of the famous coo.
One has scarcely settled down in one's rooms
at the hotel when up comes a waiter with
`different sized boxes full of bottles of the
scent. In the streets it is the commissionaires
who are on the lookout for strangers, and
who bear down upon them three or four to
gether with offers to sell some of the perfume
cheap'and already packed for travel. In the
cathedral even there is a beadle who wispers
that he knows a shop where the eau de Cologne
is much better than elsewhere, and can be
bought half-price. All this is tiresome enongb,
but what makes the, matter really perplexing is
that wherever one may buy . one s cat t whether
at the hotel or at the'perfather's, of the
beadle's friend or of the commissionaires,
it invariably bears the same hieroglyphic
looking label with the name of Jean
Maria Farinacand this, although each vendor,
beadle, commissionaire, or waiter assures that
the only genuine water is that which he is puff
ing, and that all the others, are spurious. A
singular trial has just: taken place at Cologne to
clear up the point as to whether a matt may
sell false eau de Cologne with l impunity. A.
French traveler 'who had been allured by the
cheapness of some of the vaunted perfunae
bought a bottle, but found that it was both
scentless and dangerous, for on rubbing, his
hands with it he burned himself as though with
vitriol The tribunal judged, however, that it
cou`ldgivs.biiu no.reliet, tar the.lahel, ugh
so closely, resembling that of the genuine
p wp.ter, had been candid enough to state in,
141crosotkpic characters MO ! the contents were'
an imitation of which the.purfty was not guar4
anteed." The person obviously wron g
in the wng' ,
was, therefore, the Frenchman for not being;
able to,#..ad GOrmari.l,
•,, ti 6l 3lP rOPoiILIAA4O AMA $
J.., .4 • • ‘, • •
The lielselrilte i t raulantry and thebr
A writer in Chamber's Journal says :
"In spite of railways and telegraphs, of for
eign travel and foreign literature, the national'
life . of .Russia—that quaint, striking, grotesque,.
Inifestfaibli,life of which the tourist sees kw ;
little—is as yet but slightly altered ; and within,
„hearing of the railway whistle many a rite is
still celebrated which was practised in Russia ,
*ldle the' Wild grad of the Steppe , gra* high
cover, the cradle Of Moscow, and, the still un
converted Prince. Viaditnir vvas,, hanging his
shield of dellante at the gates ,of Constanti
nople.
"My landlord oceupieB - a log but so near , tity
own, that as he leai.s out of his side window I
Can almost shake hands with him from my own
doorway; his garrison, consisting of the wife,
slater, and mother-hi-laW, r for children he has
wipe, Be is w carpenter by: trade, . tutt. doubt-
Jess owes as Much. of WS ; worldly wealth to the
sleek, comfortable4oking , Poultry that cluck
around bis ∨ and to the huge substantial
wasli-tribinto' whielf his itidustriOus helpmate
has - just plungedn vast pyramid of linen, as to
his own handicraft; for in this land of forests
every man is his own carpenter, and
Jack (I should say Ivan) is as good as his
master. In appearance and manners,
my host . forms an admirable speci
men of the better Class of Muscovite 'peasantry.
lie is a slender, trimly-built fellow of thirty-five
Or thereabouts, remarkably lithe and active for
a country-bred Russian, with a brown, hand
some face, bright, restless eyes not unlike those
of a squirrel, and one of those magnificent
beards which are seldem seen west of the
NieMen Or the Lower Danube. In marked
contradistinction to the majority of his class,
he is able to read fluently, write tolerably, and
claim acquaintance with the works of several
famous native authors, whose names sound
. very strangely in the mouth of a laboring man.
In temper he is frank and sociable, as fond as
any child of picture books 'and new stories,
and enjoying nothing so much as a chat with
one from foreign parts—a penchant which my
advent has enabled him to gratify ad
"Here - he comes, "even while I Speak (Thin',
with his white holiday smock froCk 'thrown
over his rough working dress, moving slowly
along the front of the low two-railed fence 14e- :
bind which I am sitting at my al-fresco tea,
with a huge roll of brown bread on one side; a
tumbler of strong, fragrant, amber-colored .tea
(such as one fords only in China or Central .
Russia) on the other, and a book of Slavonic
legends, in the racy mother tongue of the
ancient nation,
propped against' the tea-urn in
front of me. Be halts before my table; under
the slanting radiance of the glorious July sun
set, and plants himself in the attitude of a man
who has made up- his mind for a good long
talk.
Good evening,' Basin (that is master);
'see what Splendid weather God has sent us to,
day!' -
" 'Splendid indeed, brother. There were
plenty of folks about the park this evening.
But come, sit down a Minute; I've hardly a
word with you all day.'
"My Companion takes off his cap and seats
himself on the extreme end of the bench with
a dubious air; as if he did so under protest;
one characteristic feature of the Russian
peasant being the marked deference and sub
missiveness ingrained in his nature by the yoke
that has pressed his neck for two hundred and
fifty years. Indeed, it is no easy matter to
wean the lower-ciass Russian from this habitual
obsequiousness, as Peter the Great discovered
to his cost. When finding that even his impe
rial ukase, forbidding prostration and genu
flexions on the part of his subjects' toward
bimiself, proved ineffectual to restrain thee, he
at length seized upon one of the most pertina
cious of his worshippers, and' cudgelled :him
soundly, coran populo, with his own august
bands.
" , 1 hear, Barin, that you have been a great
traveler, and seen Many lands; but tell me,
did you ever, in any of the places where you,
have been, see finer sunsets than ours?' and he'
looks admiringly at the green waving woods
that girdle the base of the hill on which we
stand, now all ablaze with the glow of the
western sunlight.
brother, to tell the truth, I haven't
seen many to beat them, although Ethero are
fine ones in Switzerland, and Italy* too. But
you are mistaken lu thinking me a great
traveler, for I've seen very little as yet; the
only thing is, I can go where I like, which not
every traveler can do.'
" }jell, that's just what I said to my wife
the other day. "Dunasha," said I, "it seems
to me the English Barin goes about as he
pleases, without anything to stop him." Per
mit me to ask of what occupation are you? I
see they've put down "Tourist" in your pass
port; but I don't know what that means.
Secretary
$132,280 (H)
97,758 94
20,300 00
6,000 00
25,686 00
80,000°00
69;000 00
8,606 42
" means a traveler, brother—nothing
more ; and it's pretty nearly all the occupation
I have. After all, you know, one sees more
by traveling than by sitting still.' •
"‘Well,.yes, that's true. Just• as our proverb
says: "Water runs not under the stone that
lies still." :For all that, though, one can be
very comfortable in one place ; in this little
village of ours, for instance, one may live very
snugly, without ever wanting to travel. I've
been at Moscow once or twice, but I -didni
like it; what with the dust, and the noise, and
the erowd,,l felt as if I hardly• knew ; where I
was; whereas, out here where everything's so
fresh and green, and quiet and still, it seems
more like the world that God created.'
" 'Bu t don't you find it rather dull• some
timesin winter, when you can't go about.'
" Well, perhaps it is so, a little, now and
then; but there's always plenty of work that
can be done in-doors—Aliat piece of carving,
for instance, which you saw yesterday morn
ing, was done in the long eveningstist winter
—and every now and then . you drop in upon
550,000 00
250 - ,000 00
.. 50,000 00
- 350,000 00
50,000 00
..- 29,650 00
50,000 00
some one for a . visit; or a neighbor looks hi
upon you; and you put on the tea-urn, and
have a glass or two together, and sing songs,
and are merry ,enough.'
"'Sing songs; eh?' Suppose - you sing me
one now? I'm sexy fond of Russian songs.'
" Why, I'm iaot nincli.of a singer ; but ifyou
wish it I'll try.' And in a clear, mellow voice
lie strikes up the liold; characteristic, ungallant
song put by .I.,,erinoutoff into the mouth of his.
Circassiariniaratider-the best character of the
135,000 00
100,000 00
best novel in Russia:
4 " THE cm4F's COUNSEL TO HIS SON.
" Maidens thrOng ourhillS, I wet—
Starry night is in their eyes :
Life with them, an envied lot—
. But our freedom more we prize!
" 'Wed not:Avedthe'e lief; godd youth ;
Well my counsel heed;
Fiere is gold for thee', good youth—
Bity thyself a steed !
He who seeks hirsselt a wife,:
11l bath chosen, wretch forlorn!
Never rides he to the strife—
Why
?=Because his spouse will mourn !
Wed not, wed thee not, &c.
He betrays not—thy good steed!!
Flood nor fire with him we fear;
Like the desert blast, his speed
Makes the farthest distance near.
Wed bot,wed thee not, itc.'
Where did you learn that song ?' asked 1,
astonished at this new proof 'of his extensive
acquirements.
heard it, at first from a soldier, who was
hilletted upon us when part of the Semion
isovski regiment was quartered bere. He know
plenty of songs, but that was always his favor
te, he said it mminded him of what
be had- seen when. he served in the Caucasus.
The tune pleased me, and 'so I got him to teach
SATURDAY. DECEMBER 1, 18
. • • . • ,
me the Words as well ;and after tbat,l -I n
with it in Lennontoire booh, and read.: it over
•
A 414.6411550ry ofiLeado Cam
migarom; fe known all
The way ;on the MississlPpi froril New' Orleans
to , ThibUque, as a big-hearted; jovial:, folio*,
who does not stand on the cereihony
introduction before comMenting an
be,`Cap fain - is 'fond. 4f a drink, and
menet:met sides not like to drink alone. It so,
happened that bnsiness - catledbint to. Washing
ton, and ' , he bad as a coMpsgnott de verge a
stone, thick-set'' mail - NORIO "10, years, who,
wore a wig, and who 'presented,a strlidegre
kAitildneti Co the late Utile Veguile
the tedium of the voyage, they chatted to
ge.ther and. drank togetber,
Captain A-----, one evening' after his ar
rival; thought 'he espiedlis companion in the
densely crowded office of Tirowri'S 'Hotel, and
stepping up to bim, he briskly slapped him on
the back, and remarked, "Come, old fellow,
let's take ,a drink."
"You mistake your man," replied the other,
with great gravity: "My name: is Cass, sena
tor' Cass, from Michigan."
The Captain, it is hardly necessary to say,
was greatly disconcerted, and slunk away.
.In the course of the evening, however, he was
certain that he spied his Irian, and rushing up
to him , - he broke out with.great' glee, "Well,
I've found you at last. Het he! he! -Capital
joke to tell you, lie! he! he! Don't yott
think, met old Cass, and took him for you.
Ile! he! he! Clapped the old fellow ,on the
back, be! he! he! and says I, come, let's take a
drink, he! he! he ! and when he told me I mis
took mY man, thunder and lightning! didn't
I slope, be he! he 1" The. Captain observed,
however, that his companion did not appear to
appreciate the joke, but for a time preserved a
rigid countenance, and then broke in upon
him, "I, sir, am Lewis Cass, as I told you be
fore, and I cannot allow you to indulgo further
in these fathillarities."
The Captain made no further attempts to
hunt up his former companion. He is yet hale
Mid jovial; but he is not fond 'of, how:ging hovi
be made the acquaintance of the late distin
guished Senator from Michigan.— Western
Monthly.
Coal Statement.
The following ie the amount 01 coal tmnapinted over
OM Philadelphia and Reading Itaiircoul during the week
ending Thureday, Leo. 9, 1569:
From St. Clair'
20" ' Port Carbon
•
Potteri
'Haven..
''• Auburn.
Port Clinton
" Harrisburg awl Dauphin
Allentown and ARA/rtes..
Total Anthracite Coal for week 73,611 OJ
Bit LIZIIIIIOIIb Coat front Ilarriaturg and Dan-_ for week • 9,267 11
Total for week paying freight;
Coal for the Company's use
Total of all kinds for the week.
Previously this year
T0ta1.......
To Thursday, De , .. 9 t 3.
jMPQ.I3,TAT IS)NS .
Ben Orren for the Philadelphia b6vening
BOSTON—Steamer Aries, Wiley—ail sacks wool Bul
lock & Son; 7 pkes mdse J B Bossier; 14 bur do S Booth
& Co; 10 eflAo H P. Blake; 21 du oilcloth G- W Blabota; 5 do
oranges G W Bezer; 28 pkgs glassware S P Boughton; 59
ca boob! and shoes Boston Rubber Shoe Co; 16 bills sand-
Raper Cluntnirigs; L 3 bxe mdse 11 Csthburt; Mdo nails
creosote & Ross; 11 Cs boots and shoes 0 S Clatlin; 16 do
Chandler. Hart & Co; 9 do Conover. Dorff &Co; 20 bble
mdse-Mavis, Warner & Co; 53 pkgs do Darrah & Elwell:4
do dry goods Dale Bros; 6 bbls oil England & Hon; 46
rolls paper Flitcraft & Co; 47 co machines Grover & Ba
ker S 21 Co; 93 pkgs chair stock F Gottleib; 40 pkgs dry
goods Gardner, Brewer & Co; 6 es boots and shoes Graff,
Watkins & Co:s do J A Glace; 97 pkgs rodeo Heaton &
Den ckla; 28 rolls paper Dowell Bros; 14 sleighs Herkness;
83 rolls paper Howlett & Onderdonk; 11 bales skins W
Humme - 11; 15 bbls oil .1 Kendrick; 64 bag chair stock Kil
burn & Gates; 42 pkgs plates J B Lippincott & Co; 10
bbls oil Z Locke; 40 pkgs mdse Laing & klaginnir; 144 do
dry goods Lewis, Wharton & Co; 15 do Leland, Allen &
Bates; 12 do Lacy &Co; 5 cs boots and shoes Levick Bros;
15 bales mdse McCallum, Crease & Sloan, - 16Jpcs speller
Alarshall. Phillips & Co; 446 do Philailelphia Gas Works;
15 cs boots and shoes C D & Co; 13 do Munroe,
Smaitz & Cu; 144 empty bbls J L Nicholson; 8 Nils mdse
Ogden.* Chase; 10 cs indite 3 J Richurdson; 42 bales do
Stewart Eros; 10 do skins E C Stokes; 13 bags wool .1 T
Sproul: 10 bbls mdse It A Shetzlin; 27 pkgs do D P super;
4 cs boots and shoes Shut' z & Else: 6 do W W Smedley; 7
bxs miles Thompson, Black 4t Co; 4 cases boots and shoes
Townseud & Co; 24 pkgs steel 11 - Wilson & Ellison; 2 ra
diators J P Ward & Co: 20 hble nide° J Wilkins; 27 ago
do IV biliden & Levitt; m bbls do Woodruff limo; 100 bxs
fish Roans & Schwarz; 100 do J Stroup & Co; 11 es incise
French & Richards.
PASSENGERS SAILED.
In ble.tuur Wyoming, for Savannah—litre John C
Rollin, two children and servant, Wm Brown, F L
Stockn ell, Geo Lochinati; wife and child, Miss Annie
GowneY, J Wilmarth,CJ Purcell, Chas Bergboff, Thos
Platt, 14 iss M Thompson.-Master 0 Thompson. Mrs
Wolters, two sons and infant, J Butler.
MOVEMENTS OF OCEAN STEAMERS.
TO ARRIVE.
SHIPS FROM FOR DATE
Atalanta London... New York.. Nov. 20
Palmyra- ... . . ......Liverpool-New York via B Nov. al
Dsutschland_Southampton-New Yurk N0v.30
Siberia Liverpool-New York via B -.Nov. Xi
Erin Liverpool... New York - .... . ... —Doc. 1
C. of Brooklyn...Liverpool-New York----... Dec. 2
Cleonatra Vera Cruz... New York via M. ....Dec. 2
Cambria- Glasgow... Now York Dec. 5
Cella.- London-New York Dec. 4
Nemesis Liverpool-New York- Dec. 4
Cimbria.. ......... _.....llavre_New York.... .... . -.....Dec. 4
Etna iiverfanal-New York via 11 Dec. 4
Ville da Paris Brest... New York Doc. 4
TO DEPART.
C. of Antwerp-....NowYork...Liverpool via 11 Dee. 14
Allemannia- ....Now York-Hamburg -...- ....... -.Dm /4
Cuba New York... Liverpool Dec. 15
Cuba Baltimore-N Orleans via Hav-Dec. 15
Nt.Nada. New York... Liverpool Dec. 15
Palmyra-.......,...New York.2. - Liverpool Dec.l6 .
Morro Castle New York -Havana-- Dee. 16
Hansa New York... Bremen Dec. 16
Marathon . . .. ....New York... Liverpool Dec. 16
C. of Brooklyn_New Nork-Liverpool Dec. 111
Virginia-- New York... Liverpool Dec. 18
India New York... Glasgow Dec.l3
Charm New York-Han:dame ............._....Dec. 18
Alaska.:, ... . ...... New York...Aspinwall Dec.2l
BOARD OF TRADE.
JAMESSAMUELoUGHERTY,t
SAMUEL E. STOKES, MONTHLY COMMITTER
JOSEPH C. GRUBB,
COBLIIITTKS ON ARBITRATION.
J. O. James,l E. A. Sondor,
Geo. L. Buzby, I Wm. W. Paul,
Thomas L. Grneepie.
_..... ,
MARINE BULLETIN.
PORT OF PHILIADELPHIA—Dac. 11.
Sun RISES, 7 121 SUN ' kin. 4 31 1 pilau WATER. 7
ARRIVED YESTERDAY.
Ship /Won& I Nor I, Mogen, 43 days from Bristol, E.
via Now York, la ballast to Peter Wright & Sona r
Steamer Aries, Wiley, 47 hours from Boston, with
mdse to II Wlusor & Co. OR' the Brown, saw ship Bit
v.aar. from Liverpool.
Steamer Regulator. Pennington, 24 hours from Now
York, with rude° to John F Out.
Steamer Mars, Grumley, 21 hours from New York.witb
mdse to W M Baird & C,,„
Steamer H L (law. Wehh,L3 hours from Ital timoreovith
mdse to A Groves. Jr. .
CLEARED YESTERDAY.
Steamer Wyoming. Teal. Savannah, Phtladelphia and
Southern Mail es co.
Sc hr John A Griffin, Foster, St Thomas, WorkinauS:Co.
tichr E & L Cordery, Grace, 'Barbados, S titetson&Co.
Seta . V. G Collins, Endicott. Barbados. E A Souder&Co.
Sehr Bertha Bonder, Wooster, tit Mary's, Ga. do
MEMORANDA..
Ship Ceylon, Tilton, sailed from Honolulu 27th Ang.
for New Bedford. •
Ship St Albans (Br), Pike, from Boston 10th July, at
Bombay previous to 15th ult. _
Steamer Srcson, Soars, hence at Boston yesterday.
Steamer Concordia, Hedge, at Boston yesterday from
New Orleans.
Steamer Nova Scotian, Watts, at Portland 9th instant
from Livornooi,
Steamer St Lotiis, Babson, sailed from New Orleans
Bth inat. for Brtton.
Steamer Claymont. Robinson, sailed from Norfolk
Bth illat. for this port. '
Bark It HWalkor. Pettingith at Matanzas 3d instant
for a port north of Hatteras.
Brig Barry Virden, Collins, at Cardenas ^29th ult. from
Quebec.
'Brig Faust tna, Patto - eon.. sailed from Cardenas nth
tilt. for a port north of Hatteras.
Brig It is Hasseli4 Clifford, at Matanzas inst for a
port a port north or Mattel-ale. - -
Brig Frank E Allen. Clark, sailed from Cardena_e 29th
tilt. fora port north of Hatteras.
Brig Nellie Clifford.:liittleffeld, cleared at New York.
Brig Frances Jane, Jones. cleared at Baltimore 9th
inst. fur Rio Janoiro
Siam Mary J Snaltli,'cleared at Savannah 6th
inst. for Port Henry, Fa. to load for Now York.
Schre B Vans, Whitaker, and John Shay, Fisher, at
New York 3th inlet. from Georgetown, Be.
Behr liput, - piateruon. hence at Salem 7th inst.
Schre H Simmons, Godfrey, and .1 Cadwalader, Steel-
Nailed from Salem tith inst. for this port.
Schr Hamburg. Wescott, sailed from Richmond Sth
inst. for this port via cabin
Schr R M Brooking, Douglas, tine, remained at Ma
tanzus 14 inst.
Schr Artio Garwood ! Godfrey,` cleared at Baltimore
901 inst. for Savannah. •
Schr T B , Franklin, Mull, henco at Portsmouth 6th
Want.
Schr Queen of the West, Beatty, et Cardonas Roth oft
froth Nome°
Selz Eliza Ann Hooper., Champion. hence at Bucks-
Willa. 8C• and wee loading fur thisport, to sail lOtli inst.
Helm , Shokinah, Rogers; Goorgo Middleton. Camp
bell. and J P Meshane, Gallagher, oleo at Norfolk bth
instant.
Bohr Win B Mann, Rollers, at Charleston 9th inst from
New York..
Behr B C Morton, ItlOpfOrt, cleared at New York yeS
terday for this port. ,
fichre L B wing, Endthott, and N W Benedict, Crane.
from Boston; D Perri. Baldwin, and Win Arthur,
Andrews, from. Providence, all for this port, at. N York
9th inst. •
Schr Selene, Baker, hence at Savanna!' 6tlx Mat.
MABINS MISCEL LANY'
Part of tlie Cargo (te).i/of - ;t4ir Willie }lowe.orau
9.-TRIPLE SHEET.
CM: 141 01ort Tier Nihon) at .Townsend
nlet, was toren to rirw or* Ku inst by the Atlantic
'arine. Wreck mg 00's steamer :Yankee. Captain'
BBrown ? Agent or the company, expects to save the be?. niT4oll.l4l Boston for entilla. whiehl
Wen it ore at tong Point in the gale Of 17th Wt.'.
Was honied off Bth that, and taken 'to Crlielaport, where?
she will go, on.JIM Wils,rerr,egairm, r, • •
,
'; scoring To itAntnuns:
trhhe Crmfir daring 14, re,taineet
oder obit( tb voissware nay tbn Tinter,
twines cent at tb idirtelb ke: -
COD 'LIVE R 'OIL
the titperlilitiOf this Oil; Aft tabl fah 641 oiler 20 Years
stgo,`atifi d4ilni!eiviaily acknowledged by 'the **al
7ScUlti Oh; Publie t renders any further praised
Its qualities useless.
It undergoes no process of purification Whatever, but
as it flows frozo the Liver of the Irish so it is sold by the
Proprietor.
GUSTAVUS KRAUSE,'
N. W. cor Twelfth and Chestnut Stss,
And by Druggists generally.
w s m Muroll
n FIXTURES. G AS F
riom the Oelebratod Manufacturers,
Mitchell, Vance & Co., New York, and
Tucker. MUnufacturing Co., Boston.
And every variety of
COA.L OIL LAMPS,
From our own Manufactory, Camden,
. , New Jersey.
J
r%
COULTER, ONES &C 0.
'702 ARCH STREET,
PIIILAMELPHIA.
Re 23- am rP •
Tims.Ciat
29,611 17
6,462 73
3,88 176
19,137 19
2,621 01
9,072 11
1,t 4 19 00
252 17
Removal.
J. H. MICHENER & CO.,
- CURERS OF THE
CELEBRATED
" Exettsior " Sugar-Cured Hams,
Tongues and Beef,.
Have Removed to their
NEW STORE,
NOS. 122 AND 124 ARCH STREET.
nol6 burp
82,979 U)
3,„2i3 o
. 86,042, 04
, 47.216 le
1=261 00
61,17005
PATENT OFFICES,
N". W. cor. Fourth and Chestnut,
(Second story, Entrance on FOLIETICStreet.)
FRANCIS D. PASTORIDS,
Attorney•at,Law,
SOLICITOR OF PATE,'NTS.
Patents procured for inventions, and all business per
taining to the same promptly transacted. Call or send
for circular on Patents. Offices open until 83; o 'clock clock
every evening. mh2o-s to th lyroi
WIRE WORK.
GALVANIZED and Painted WIRE GUARDS, for
tore fronts and windows '
for factory . and warehouse
windows, for churches and cellar windows.
IRON and WIRE RAILINGS. for balconies, emcee,
cemetery and garden fences. .
Liberal allowance made to Contractors, Builders and
Carpenters. All orders filled with promptness and work
guaranteed.
ROBERT WOOD, et 00.,
1136 Ridge Aveime, Phila.
c:10 to the 6atriDs
M. MARSHALL,
DRUGGIST AND CHEMIST,
AND WHOLESALE DEALEIIIN ' '
PAINTS, OILS, GLASS AND
PATENT MEDICINES,
Nos. 1301 and 1303 MARKET STREET.
oc3o-E , to th.lmrD§
SPECTACLES AND NOSE GLASSES
MICROSCOPES OF EVERY KIND.
,
SPY GLASSES, .
OPERA GLASSES,
THERMOMETERS,
Ace., dcc., Ace
For ■ala by
lgetablished 1783
FRED. SYLVESTER,
REAL ESTATE BROKER,
20S SOUTH FOURTH STREET.
cel4 anrp§
FITLER, WEAVER & CO.
NEW CORDAGE FACTORY
NOW IN BULL OPEBATION, ,
Nu. 22 N.WATEB treet and 23 N.DELAWASE avenue
FOR - SA - Lk;.
atJ GERMANTOW .N COTTAGE
- Pointed Stone—East Walnut Lane ,_- 13 rooms ; tot,
.e 32; cheap. Apply to C. KEYSER KING, next de
pot, Germantown. It`
• egl GERMANTOWN FRENCH . ROOF
Ma, Cottage, West Walnut lane ; 13 rooms '• lot, 63x2X1.
Five mlnutes front depot. Apply to C. KEYSER KING,
next depot. Germantown. it"
G E5.31.49.2‘1 TOW N. --A :13 Alt,G AI N.—
NakBtono House. ten rnotne l near lOW's station. let
tiSEISIO. Only 44,000: C. ELYSE": KENO, next depot,
(ermantown. It*
LEGAL NOTICES
OTICi.-THE UNDERSIGNED
having been appointed Administrator of, the
Estate of MARGARET McDOWALL, deceased, all par
dee indebted to the said Estate aro requested to make
payment, and those having claims against the Pattie, to
prevent them to W. 11. MERRICK, 4311 Washington
avenue. dell-*St§
• •ECTIIR.E _HAIL . _
OF THE MERCANTILE LIBRARY,
Tenth street, above Chestnut.
Can be engaged for Lectures. .dell-B.w-gt§
EAD Q (TARTER S FOR EXTRACTING
11 TEETH_ WITH FRESH NITROUS, OXIDE GAS.
" ABSOLUTELY NO PAIN."
DR. F. R. THOMAS, " formerly Operator at Colton
Dental Booms." positively the only Office in the city
entirely devoted to extracting teeth without v4ll.
Office, 911 Walnut street. mhs lyrp§
t a WARBURTON'S IMPROVED,,
_VEY.
4ww. Mated and easy-fitting Drew' Hats (~ patented) in all
tho approved fashions of the season, Uneatnnt street.
next door to the Ppet.OeSce. .' oe6- tiro
REPAIRS TO 4 iirATOTIRS .1 li
Musical Boxes In tho bestmanner, tyakilltuf
Oheat
workmen.
nn . FAtßßwit BROTHER 'Fourth,
atr twlow
prni • r)ELPHIA, SURGEONS'
jai -6 '. ' BANDAGE INSTITUTE, 14 N. NINTH
street, above Market. B. U. EVERETT'S
Trues positively cures Ruptures. Cheap Truman, '
Elastio - Belts, Stockinge, Supporters, Shoulder Braces,
Crutches, Suspeneories,Pile Ilanditgas. Ladies attended
to bv Mrs. EL - - irl-Iyre
di:)R. LEIGH'S' IMPROVED HARD
Rubber Truss tumor rusts, breaks (n• soils,
used In 'bathing; Rupportem Elastic Bolts,
Stockings. all kinds of Trtleitil* and Braces.
Ladies attended to by MRS. Luton 1230 Chestnut, sec
ond story. nog Yy rp
," j~rlt~+C'
~~oub.
NV: Y. IicALLISTER,
728 CILIESYNUT Street,
Philadelpha.
op) B&W 2tarp§
AMUSEMENTS.
'PRINTING.'
The rocket,lkok Calendar and
' ' Diredory for 1870, lii
-*neat, style of
t.
1 TING
Ia nov! ready and may.be had -
FOR.
NT N G
wilich. Is as near ea possible the rates
at which work generally Ls done
•
BY
A. c.l BRYSON & CO.,
Steam-power Printers,
No. 607 CHESTNUT STREET,
(Bulletin Building.)
FUffNITU'kET&t;.
GEO. J. HENKELK
CABINET MAKER,
1301 and 1303: CHESTNUT STREET.
EATABLISHED 1844.
Good Furniture at the lowest possible
price.
noMmrp§
FURNITURE.
T. &J. A. HENKELS;
AT THEIR
NEW STORE, 1002 ARCH STREET,
Are now selling their ELEGANT FURNITURE at rit7
minced 6nees,
se26 gmrpf
AIJeTrON - S.4I;EK
kkr_vg,flawit'
• 9 • AUCTIONEERS*
Not,. 232 and 231 Market street, gorner of Bank.
Also, by Order ot Assigneetb fur Casti,
SALE OF THE ENTIRE STOCh, OF A JOBBER,
including the Lease, Goodwill and Fixtures of Store,
•• . • No. 305 Market street,
ON MONDAY MORNING. '••
The stork embraces ono ease rich Foulard Silks; large
line of elegant black, colored, and fancy - Silks. Also,
Penalises, Surges. Eplnglines, Mobeit s. Winceys, Otto
mans. high colored Melds, Camietn, Velours, Skirtings,
Piques, Spring Dress Stuffs. Sc. ,
LARGE SALE OP 2000 CASES BOOTS, SHOES, 440.
O TUESDAY MORNING.
Dec 14, at 10 o'clock, on four months' credit,including—
Cases men's, boys and youths' calf, kin, buff leather and
grain Cavalry. Napoleon, Dresa and Congress Dot/bland.
Delmore's; kip, huff and plished grain Brogans; we
a •
men's, misses' and children's calf kid, enamelled and
buff leather, goat. and morocco Delmore's; Cawood
Gaiters; Lace Boots;Ankle TieS;Slippers,&c.
IMPORTANT SALE 'OF CARPETINGS. OIL
• 01 , 071121,&c.
ON FRIDAY MORNING,
Dec. 17, at 11 o'clock, on four months' credit, about 200
pint* Ingrain, 'Venetian, List, Hemp, Cottage and Bid ,
Carpeting°, Oil Cloths, Rugs, ,te.
CONCEHALL AUCTIORRATO — A
RT
1219 CHESTNUT street.
CHESTNUT
. McCI,ELLA ND. Anotlcrerser
• HANDSOME WALNUT CHAMBER, SUITS, IN 011,
awl Tarnish: Parlor Suits ire numerous 'styles, .and
covered with Plush. Reps, Hair Cloth; Walnut and
.Oak Dining Room Furnitnre, Cottage Snits, Hat and
Umbrella Stands. BOokcases, Etageres, Chairs, k.c..
ON MONDAY MORNING,-
Dec.l3, at 1034 o'clock, wo aftl s9ll by ,catalogua,.aL
elegant assortment of household urniture, consisting
of Walnut Chamber Suits, finishedia oil and varnish;
Cottage Suits, with or without marble tops;. elegant,r
Parlor Suits, covered in plural or various colors . ; Draw
ing Room Snits, in rep, torrysi*nd hair cloth;-Walnut
and Oak Extension Tables. Bookcases, Dining Room,
Chairs, fled Lounges, Elegant Willunt, and Oak Side
'wards, Flat and Umbrella Stands, Etageres, Walnut
Bourruet Tables,
Easy, Cane and Spanish Chairs. Towel.
Racks, Mirrors,Jif at resses, Lounges, Wardrobes. Nook
shelves, fine Plated Ware, .2c. ,
'Sale at EN Ituttonw,iod aired.
ON TUESDAY MORNING, -
Dec. lf, at 104 o'clock, the entire. Furnialonent
filth OMAS 4 i3IRCH & HON t AUCTION.
A ERRS AND COMMISSION MERCHANTS,.
N 0.1410 CHESTNUT street.
Bear entrance No. MOT Salmon:. street.
Household Furniture of everygnmen description received on
ot.
Sales of Furniture a t d nsi we ll ings attended to on the mod
re")nable ' te.
Kateat No'. 111 U Chestnut street.
REAT SALE F MARBLE STATUARY, FRENCH
CLOCKS, Bronzes, Vases, Jardiniere, Pariao and
BWitte China Figures. Yamea, Inkstands. &c.
ON TVISDAY_and WEDNESDAY, . .
Dec. 14 and 14, at 10'Sb A. M. and'
. M. each day, at
the auction store, No.lllo Chestnut street, will be seild,
by order of B. Pandolphliti k . Co. Importers, floe
Carrara Marble Statuary , French Bronze Mantel
Clocks and Figures, together with a large assortment or
.Vases, Statuettes, Tazzas, arc.
PABIAN AND BISQUE CHINA.
Also. a large assortment of tine China Vases, Jardi'
Mop, Figures, Catd Receivers: Inkkands and Fancy
Goods. suitable fur the coming holidays.
Itaralognes ready and 11 ,4 goods open for examinatioa
on dummy.
D AVIS HARVEY,. AUCTIONEERS
No.. 48 and La North Sixth Wen.
LAST DAY'S SALE OF THE'pANCEER
LIDTtARpT. •
The eau; wilt continuo TIIIN MOUNING, commencing
et 9 o'clock. conitheneing at No. 4,000, and wlll include
Works on Natural !listen', Occult PillicatoPh!, Optics,
General Physics, Scientific Works b}}• /omen Authors,
liucellsneous Geaoral Literature, Epitaphs, Voyage*
sod Travels, and library for young, people, &c.
'Sate at the Atiettuo Store
SUPERIOR • FURNITURE. FRENCH PLATE MIR
RORS. OFFICE FURNITURE, CARPETS, MA,T-•
NIMES, &c.
' • • ON TUESDAY MORNING.
_ - - -
At: ]D o'cloelt, et the auction store. Nov. 48 and at ,
North Sixth street, superior Walnut Parlor and Chant- '
her Furniture, enperior Bookcases, elegant Sideleciardi .
line French Plate Mirrors, fine Tapestry Carreto. new
Matte's 6043. Bede, Chula and Glassware, Office Tables end
Depkg, tte. _ '
_ .
100 Y 'BAIIICITT Br,- CO., AUCTIONERIIB.
• ,• CASH AUCTION MOUSE,
No. VD MARKET street, corner of Bank street.
Oasb adyanced on consignments without extra charge. •
Permuntory Sale
DRY GOODS. Lc.
ON MONDAY MORNING-, 3
Dec. 12, at 10 o'clock, comprising r large variety of
Staple and Fancy Dry Goode. Shirts, Drawers, Iloelery ‘
MI. Also, Ready-made Clothing, Stocks of $40640-,
- FURSI FURS , {..- - -
EI,EVENTII TRADE SALE OF AMERICA 'AND
I._,MPORTED FURS, CARRIAGE AND S L EIGH EIGH
ROBES, AFGHANS. &c.; • •
Cornnriping 1000 lota, by catalooe, in largo variety and
elogant quality,
thot THURSDAY MORNING
•
Dec. 16, conunonclug et 10 o'clocls L L
IRom &ONS ,AUCTIONEES
A
5 0 e.139 and 74.1 So S ath FOURTH , atreet. • ,
STOCKS'
oN TOBBDAY.:DEO.I4, ' -
At 12 o'clock noon, at the Philadelphia Exchange
-100 (+hares Catawiaea Railroad Co. common.
100 shame SchuylklltNarlgatlim'conttooti.
344 shares Amyetdalold 1 1 , 0-pf
8 shares Kensington awl New Jelses kerty 4. 1 44
10 shales Bank of. Northern Libentnit,- '
ni L. 81301111,IDGE ATYOTIVZI 4
DORS. No. NIAMARIENTstreet.
WOES 'bear* FOUL
LeupE, SALE OF BOOTS. AND OAFS.
ON WEDNESDAY MORNING,
Dec. 15,, at 10 o'clock we will sell br catalogue,.
~alSout .
1,400 rackages of Boole 117/t1 1340e6 . , 9 1 oh/ . and • 11 "&crern
ttianofecture.•
Ale° „25 Cabe. of klen'it glad Boye'"Ootoi.," to which
attention of buyers is called. -•• •
Rte' Open early on the-m0=0,4 of solo for oxamaiiii-
J OIII4IOIMISIP, - IfenTjEit ----
011ESTNIIT STRAT,
ond 213 LODGE STREET.
kloclmrike of every branch hotine-buildbit
Ind fitting promptly furulabod. wait
11 4
W . Na