Daily evening bulletin. (Philadelphia, Pa.) 1856-1870, December 18, 1869, Image 5
:~{r.?7Ff.. i.:?f,~ t ~ ~ ~ :} n , } ~, x 1 Froth tips Mmithly for itstairy.l ZS EAIIIINti NINOW.LINE. zw OX.fvE2i' NVENDEi.t. ifoLifitH Slow toiling upward from the Misty vale, I leave the bright enamelled zones below ; • No mere. for me.their beauteous bloom shall Their lingering sweetness load the morning Few are the slender flowerets, scentless, pile, That on their ice-elad stems all trembling blow 'Along the Margin' of uninelting snow ; ' Yet with unsaddened-voice thy verge I hail, White of peaee above the flowering line ; • Weleo . me thy frozen domes, thy rooky spires ! ".,:O'er thee undimmed the moon-girt planets • shine, thy majestic altars fade the fires That'filied the air with smoke of vain desires, And all the , unelouded blue of heaven is t thine! THE CREAM Or THE NEW. BOOKE. Ittr. Xeres Newilitudies in Church Itlitory. Our lesson to-day will be from the leaves of. the new work by Mr. Henry C. Lea, the cede r.., %rated scholar, and historian of Sacerdotal 'Celibacy, whose rank is at least asligh in the • foreign centres of philosophical litemtunt as here. The book arrives with the press of • ephemeral publications intended to catch the eye of holiday purchasers,and we shall reserve to • ourselves the privilege of approaching it again when there will be more time for a respectful examination. But we do not like to deprive our readers of some tastes at least of the feast in its freshness. Mr. Lea's researches comprise the following problems: Rise of the Temporal Power, Benefit.of Clergy, and. Excommunication, ;massed under the modest title of "Studies." After explaining that the first essay is a de velopment of one publish4d in the 2forth Ame rican Review, and grbefully apologizing to the Church for seeming to dwell too exclusively in the region of stricture and accusation, Mr. Lea embarks in the broad current of study to which he has addressed himwlf. In detailing the 'steps by which the Papacy clambered to its seat of temporal power, our author comes to the age of Rabelais, arid, in quoting that satirist's account of "How by virtue of the DecretaLsgold is subtly withdrawn from France to Rome," justifies the - old wit by the following rich mass of facts appended in'a, foot-note : VENALITY OF THE P..h..PAL COURT. All the incidental prerogatives acquired by the Roman curia were thus turned into,eofia. Few Popes . have left a better reputation than Calixtus 11., and yet the history, recorded by an eye -witness, of the negotiations . for the elevation of Compostella to an archbishopric, reveal acynicism of venality almost incredible. . Diego Geltuirez, who sought this promotion for his see, opened negotiations by sending 200 ounces of gold taken from the tablets &his altars. This was stolen on the road, when he sent one hundred more, Of which only 50 reached its destination. He then forwarded a casket of gold, weighina e nine marks, and a !age amount of coin; to Calixtus, who had meanwhile succeeded. to Gelasius 11. His cautious envoy, finding Calixtus hesi tate, only gave him twenty ounces and reserved the rest. Finally Calixtus acceded ‘ on condition of receiving the reserved funds with 260 marks of silver in addition. To ob tain this, the church of Compostella was stripped of its ornaments, and to convey it safely it was.confided to some ecclesiastics pro ceeding to the Crusade, each man receiving ab solution of a year of penance for every ounce of gold that he should succeed in carrying . safely. The money was duly paid, when Calixtus complained that his gold casket was partly silver, and demanded 20 ounces of gold to make it -good ; his chamberlain, moreover, declared that of 200 ounces of gold received one-fourth had proved to be base metal, so that the exhausted archbishop in expectation was obliged to furnish 70 ounces more. The narrator of this tissue of swindling simony relates it all With - the utmost composure, as a matter of course, only interrupting his narrative occa sionally to express his admiration of the vir tues of the Popes who thus sold their spiritual privileges, and of the Archbishop who was so liberal in his bribes. The naive account given by Guibert de Nogent Of the Confirma tion by Paschal 11. of Gaudri's election to the see of Latin, in 1107; is an equally instructive illustration of the barefaced plundering and venality with which the Papal Court exploited the power it had obtained over the Episcopal office. Perhaps the most significant illustra tion of the monervalue of the Papacy, how ever, is the fact that among the documents connected with the proposed canonization of Henry VI., of England, towards the close of the fifteenth century, is a memorandum of the expenses connected with obtaining a place in the calender of saints, amounting in all to 783 ducats—the first item being a fee to the Pope biniself of 100 ducats! The shameful immunities in which the elergy of the fourteenth century wallowed and battened by the mere privilege of the shaven scalp, are thus alluded to in the essay on Bone tits of the Clergy.: ADVANTAGES OF TRH TONS.CRE. . How useful au official the barber sometimes was, and how desperately the miserable wretches clung to the protecting influence of the Church, is shoWn by a case occurrire , in January, 1390, when Fleurent de Saiut- e Lue was brought before Chtitelet on a charge of theft. So constant was the claim of clergy that the first proceeding with the prisoner was to examine bim'rffinutely for the tonsure or other signs of clericature,and none were found on Fleurent. To prevent collusion he was shut up alone for 'the night and next morning, to the surprise of the court, he boldly pleaded clergy and exhibited a tonsured head. The barber was forthwith summoned, and after a careful inspection of the scalp de 'dared that the tonsure was not produced by shaving, but by pulling out the hairs one by one—the ingenious expedient of the prisoner during the night, in his solitary cell. Unfor tunately for the success of this device, he had adinitted to the jailer that lie was betrothed in marriage to a certain Marguerite of Com piegne. The court therefore had no hesita tion in pi °flouncing him a "puns bigames ;" as a married man he had no right to benefit of clergy, so his pretended tonsure • was promptly destroyed by shaving, and he was tried and ex ecuted. A still more perplexing case for the tonsorial expert occurred in October of the same year, when Jehan Jourge, a jeweler, was accused by au accomplice of coining.. He pleaded clergy, though he confessed to—have been married for twelve years, and the condition of 'his scalp seems to have puzzled the official barber, for a- jury of thirteen of his brethren was summoned to examine the prisoner's bead. Under oath they reported that after full inves tigation they found him not to lie tonsured, though he. had several bald spots. The court decided that as a married man and untonsured he had no right to plead clergy. The crime . was a heinous one and speedy justice was re quired, so within two days of his apprehen sion, be was convicted, sentenced, and duly boiled to death. In the early centuries of our era, when the Church was confronted against the barbarians; and,struggled for supremacy with a strong yet ignorant and superstitious laic power, it brought to its keenest edge the ingenious weapon of ,ex-' communication. But outside the hordes who confessed to the authority of the Church there ' were the downright heathen barbarians; now 'I , , , , • -, , !...4 . Vt. i'9 1 I , I ; 1 / THE DAILY EVENrNGSULLETTN - rllth ' DELPHIA, SATURDAY,:DROF2Atgg,I% 1869 - " TRIPLE SHEET , , , , the. religion of, tbe day acted npon' the: igno rance of these wild men is suggested'; by the follOoing anecdotes , -TriEiL4R44 ll l4u4 is interesting. :Observe thatin where the barbarian oppressor with whom the , 'priest had to deal tvaigeneraily atheatheni an Arian, and therefore incapable of 'idOzom munication; the Vengettn& Of heaven 'iipner ally eYettakes Oe sPO4et aid* krdireekyttett position Oillirough Ash:epic exec ra tion: When, for instance, Panda the, Cloth overran..Sain4 nium, some of his troops chanced to overtake' Libertinus, prior of the monastery of Fondi, threw him , : . from.horse, and took the animal with them. The holy man not only offered no .resistance,hab even banded them' his whip wftla vgbich tO 4144 the heast, and re sumed his interrupted prayer. The river Yoli torn° crossed their road at a short distance, and when they reached the ford they found that no amount of spurring and beating could farce their horses.to enter. the water, ,Exhausted by fruitless efihrts, - theY rehtenibered the 'priest whom they had just despoiled, and taking his' horse back, found him still absorbed in putter. He refused to receive the horse again, and t ey were obliged to lift him by force upon the ani mal's back, after which they had no diffictilty in fording the river. A more pregnant wdrn ing was given M Todi, under the episcopate of Fortunatu...s , when sore Gothi Awing Were ontheir way tb - Ravenna requited the hospi tality shown them by seizing two boys front a . farm of the church of Todi. Fortanatus sent for the leader and offered to redeem them at a liberal price, but was refused, when he .quietly assured the barbarian that it would prove the worse for him. Disregarding the' threat, the Goths set out with their captives,' but before they had cleared the town, while passing the church.of St. Peter; the, horse of the chief fell, andlis riderrwas , disibled with a broken thigh. Recognizing the cause of his mishap to be the curse of the bishop,he at once sent him the two boys with a prayer for mercy. The placable Fortin= responded with some holy water, a Single e f application ' of which restored the' Gotli to pierfect soundness, and he went on his way rejoicing. But it was not the barbarians alone who bad cause to dread the anger of .these holy men, so pecu liarly befriended of heaven, as was shown by .13oniface, Bishop of Ferentino, when, after saying mass, he had gone to dine at the house of a noble. she E.at, down at the table, a stroll ing minstrel with'a monkey came to the doot and began striking his cymbals. "Alas, alas!" exclaimed the prelate, that miserable ,wretch is dead.- Here have I seated myself at table, and have not yet opened my mouth 'in the praise of God, and he comes 'with-his monkey and plays with his. cymbals. For mercy's sake give him meat and , drink, but I tell you he is dead." The servants hastened to the vagrant with bread and wine, but, as he turned to leave the courtyard, a heavy stone fell on him from the gateway, inflicting on him a mortal injury of which he died the next day, giving, as Greg gory remarks, a' fearful warning , -of the dread with which the saints, the temples of God, are to he regarded. These specimens will probably suffice as examples of innumerable similar teachings, by which :the priest was exalted above the-limits' of humanity, and his weakness was rendered a tower of strength' by' the direct favor of God. The interesting details of Excommunication lead Mr. Lea into an infinity of those curious historical reminiscences of which he, as the possessor of an almost unique mass of authori ties on these points, is alone the competent annotator. Here is an old form of excommu nication arranged for the needs of an assassin knight named WinemaNwho slew Fulk, Arch bishop of Rheims, in the beginning of the tenth century : EXCOMMUNICATION AS THE WEAPON OF THE. CHURCH. In 893,,Baudoin-le-Chanve of Flanders had endeavored to get possession of the celebrated and wealthy abbey of St. Bertin, but Fulk managed to forestall him, caused himself to be elected, and refused to surrender it.' For seven years Baldwin dissembled his disappointment, but at length, inihe year 900, he' despatched a knight named Winemar to Falk and Charles le-Simple to negotiate for the abbey, but Fulk refused to listen to any propositions, and Charles, who owed his crown te Fulk, declined to interfere. Winemar, stung by his ill suc cess, lay in wait for Fulk, on his return to - Rheims, June 17th, and slew 'him. HIS - suc cessor Hervey was consecrated without loss of time on July 6th, and the bishops assembled at the ceremony thus excommunicated Winemar, with Everard, Ratfrid, and his other accom plices in the bloody sacrilege • "In the name of God, and by the power of the Holy Ghost, and the, authority divinely granted to bishops by Peter, chief of , the, Apostles, we separate them from the bosons of holy mother church, and condemn them with the anathema of the eternal curse, that they may have no help of man nor any con verse with Christians. Let them be accursed in the city and accursed in the country, Ac cursed be their barns and accursed their bones ; accursed be the seed of their loins and the• seed of their lands, their hocks of sheep and their herds of cattle. Accursed be they in their entering and their outgoing. Be they ac cursed at home and homeless elsewhere. Let them strain out their bowels and die the death of Arius. Upon their heads fall all the curses with which God through His servant Moses threatened the transgressors of the divine law. Let them be anathema maranatha, and let them perish in the second corning of the Lord; and let, them moreover endure what ever of evil is provided in the sacred.- canons and the apostolic decrees for murder and sacri lege. Let the righteous-sentence of divine con- . derunation consign them to eternal death. Let no Christian salute them. Let no priest say Mass for them, nor in sickness receive their jconfession, nor, unless they repent, grant them ,the sacrosanct communion even on their death bed. But let them be burled the grave of an ass, face and rot in a dunghill on the fa of the earth, that their shame and malediction may be a warning to present and future generations. And, as these lights which we now cast from our hands are extinguished, so may their light be quenched in eternal darkness." Before we utterly condemn the hideous ferocity of the curse thus belchdd forth in the name of the Redeemer, we should give fair consideration to the rage and fear which prompted it, and which -justified it as fully as so foul an abuse of powers assumed from God could be justified. That the church was un armed and defenceless except in so far as it could by means like this strike terror into the breasts of savages was shown by the result. The bishops feeling the impotence of their own wrath, procured in addition for the mur derers a special excommunication from the Holy See itself;, but Winemar laughed both to scorn, boasted of his deed as a proof of his fidelity to his suzerain, and took no pains to procure absolution, which shows that his lord and his associates, paid no heed to the injunc thins of the'anathema. Nay, more; Fulk had been the tried and trusted friend ofCharles-le- Simple, who owed to him his throne; yet when Baldwin of Flanders claimed of him the coveted abbey,. 'rendered vacant by this inui*7 derons deed, Charles dared not refuse it to his powelful vassal, and St. Bertin became hered itary in the House of ;Flanders, like any other lief. As' a relief to the furious strokes of the, church when battling 'for life against its human. enemies, we will contemplate iconclusion some deeds of so quaint and trivial nature as to have for the , modern mind the effect or humer. The middle ages, hOwever, found the foalowing facti'sober and dignified enough. In animate 'objects, even, suffered excouuntinioa tion; and there was; still . more .frequently, the ExcoloatracATlb' e The earliest instance on record, I believer 'me reed 11 3, , ' when a blab p • Leon exceni municatedtbe,caterpillais, which were ravag ing his'dloceiat, with the same formida as that employed the,prevlous year by the council of Rheims id the priests who persist edin marrying in spite of the canons. What success . : •attended his efforts'•,lo:llot reeordedi but Aeon afterwards St. 'Bernard &trail Ahd remedy effectual when, preaching in the " monastery of, Foigtay, which he foundedl,4 , l.l.ll, he wasp terrtipted by swarms of irreligious flies whose buzzing sorely tried the patience of the orator and the attention :of , his. audience; f,,Nirearied beyond endurance, the saint at last exclaimed to his +lexcomn u you," and the nextinernitig tile:y*ore' rovid lying dead P 11 46 the floor of the ehaPel in sucVmultitudes that they had to be swept out t "f: •14:411 these cases it is observable how com pletely the•original idea of:excornmunkation— the depriving a sinner , of 'participation in a saertmient of .which was unworthy—is lost in the seeondary notion. of ,'a ben ;or curse in- Illeted on persons or things who never had en joyed or couldenJoy communion. Perhaps the best .known .of. theie curious proceedings was that by which the distinguished lawyer, Bartholomew Chassanee, in 1510, made the reputation which sabsequently elevated him to the post of Premier . President' of the. Parliament of Aix. The country around Autun being intolerably infested witkrats, whose numbers resisted all ordinary nitoin.s - of extermination, the inhabitants applied to the bishop to have the vermin regularly excommu nicated. The episcopal court nominated Chas sane° to appear as counsel for ' the rats, in consequence of his havingshortly before printed a consultation of vast erudition on trials of that kind. He accordingly undertoek the de fence, and proved that the rats had not been properly summoned to appe,ar,and the trial went over until a formal citation to the defendants was published by the priests of all the parishes 'in the infested distfict. He then moved for a longer delay, alleging that the time allowed the rats to put in an appearance was too short, in view of the danger incurred by them through reason of the cats which rendered all access to the court dangerous for them; and his learned argument on the point gained an additional postponement. De Thou, to whom we are indebted for these curious details, does not state the conclusion of the trial, but ills fair to presume that the rats were finally condemned and duly exeommunleated„ in spite of the learning and ability of their advocate, for that w as the usual result in these cases, and Chi s sanee in his consultation hid admitted its pro priety. He argues, after.various :getieralizine reatous, that on permits to lay siaares for Wads and other animals destroetive . of the fruits of the earth, and that the anathema is the surest, and most comprehensive of snares. That to preserve the harvests, incantations and other forbidden proceediegs are tolerated by the law ' ci and ,fortiori it is permissible to use against destructive vermin the excemlnunica ticea which is authorized and employed by the church itself. In support of this opinion he cites a case in which the sparrows who sealed the church of St. Vincent, were excommuni cated by the bishop, and another where the rats and caterpillius who swarmed over a wide ex tent of country were jointly anathematizod by the ecclesiastical authorities of Autun, Macon, and Lyons. Such cases, indeed, were by no. means rare. In 1451 the fish of the Lake of Geneva were . _ threatened with destruction by the abounding multitudes of leeches: By order of William of 'Salutes, Bishop of Lausanne, a regular 'trial was held; the leeches were ordered, under, pain of excommunication, to confine themselves to et certain spot, and they duly obeyed, no longer venturing to wander beyond- the limits pre scribed. I.n 1480 the spiritual court of Autun, on complaint of the inhabitants of Mussy and Pernan excommunicated the caterpillars, and ordered priests to repeat the anathema from their pulpits, until it should produce the desired effect. In 1481 a similar sentence was rendered at Macon, against the snails, which was re peated in 1487. Another was delivered in 1488, at Autun, against the caterpillars, and the same year at Beatkieu, against the snails. At Troyes, in 1516, there were similar proceedings against caterpillars; and about the sane time against grasshoppers at Milliere in Normandy. The progress of enlightenment, however, made it self apparent in 1587 at Valence, where a plague of caterpillars led to a formal trial and sentence of banishment under pain of excom munication. The obstinate insects refusing obedience, the grand vicar of the Bishop of Valence was proceeding •to fulminate the' threatened anathema, when he was dissuaded by some discreet lawyers and theologians. With this we close our random explorations among these profoundly interesting pages, promising to submit at an early day a theoret- cal examination of the whole work Prehistoric Jisu. A somewhat remarkable discovery of human and animal remains is announced by Professor Capellini, of Bologna,in a letter to the Gazzetta dell' Emilia. The professor, on his return from Denmark, whither he had gone to be present at the International Prehistoric Con gress, was rendered so zealous by what he had beard that he was induced to make many ex cursions in the neighborhood of Spezzia. In the course of these excursions he visited many caverns, and in one of these he was successful in discovering traces of prehistoric man. 'ThiS was in a grotto in the Island of Pal meria, the access to which was difficult and dangerous. Here he caused excavations to be made, and the result was the discovery of nu merous flint and stone implements, the woEk manship of which showed that they belonged to the earliest period of the stone -age:- Besides these wrought implements and various other objects brought into the cavern by its human occupants, hefound a considerable quantity of bones of animals mingled with bones of human beings. "Ile condition of these latter bones, he says, "world justify the interference that* the grotto had been inhabited by antliropo phagi, and that the Italians of that epoch were cannibals, like their contemporaries in Belgium, France and'Denmark." "Among the human bones were found those of women, and pare of the jawbone of a child sonic seven or eight years of age. Some of these bones were entire, others were pktially calcined. In the centre of the cave it was pos sible to discern traces of a fire-place. Pro fessor Capellini says: 'Whoever has busied himself in prehistoric researches, whoever has read Spring's excellent work on the Chauvaux cavern in Belgium, and the writings of other authors on the subject of the caverns in France, will not hesitate to, admit that the - discoveries in the island Zf,Palineria prove that the italianS were, as 1 have said, man-eaters. For the pre sent it will be sufficient for me to direct the attention of naturalists to the subject. The Cyclopeans spoken of in the fable were prO bably these cannibalS.i'" —A recently published biography of, Bishop Hugh Latimer, who was burned at the stake at Oxford in 1.655, gives some curious ex amples of his style of writingand preaching. In his sermons before, Edward the Sixth, he warns the young .King against the "claw backs" who flattered him, inveighs against the (( tussocks .and tufts" (the, chignons of the time) of women's hair, and speaks of persons being "cocksure" ofsalvation. lie describes a coinpromise in doctrine as a "mingle -mangle and hutch-potch," like, that to Nvhich hogs Were Called in . his country with . the cry, "Come to thy Mingle-mangle! come pur, come cur !" and freely paraphrases the ..laharisees' question, "Are ye also deceived . "' by f' What ! ye brainsiek fools, ye hoddypecks, ye dod dypones, ye huddes,,dO believe him?, Be fore aeless exalted audience his language was still less hampered by.conventional restraints. FOIIEIGN EUITS,.P • NNUTS, • shut Oranges and LOMQIIi. ttlrkty. Inge 113 kegs . , drums and boxes ; Austrian IPrunelies in 'kegs and fancy boxes ; Arabian Dates, new Crop ; Turkey . Prunes lit an 4 fa nc y toxca Raisins--Layers•.meedlool• Imperial, are.; Pid Paste,,andOttalm Paste ; and Bordeaux WaltintmPaper Shell" Almonds, tor sale by J. B. BUtitilEß I.; GO., 10$ Bouth Delaware avenue. tirECIAL ravrwft. CITY OF ALLEGHENY, PA, , i , I . 4amirTrtfa 017VICIC, December 13,1819. ALLEGHENY CITY ; ;' COMPlcCali.ol3.43o2ldsWallted; , „ • Persons. holding Compromise Bonds of the Oily of, Allegheny, pp., pre , hereby , notified,tbat the.,Biniting 'Punt! of 18604111b° itiv'eatedin these Bonds ailhe lowest rates of erect.: Proposals will be received by the under , signed until SATIJEDA,,, Ist day of January, 1870.' ?, •D. MiLOVEIBBAN, TreesUrer of the City bf AlloilhouY. Ps. 1:01 CITY OP ALLEGHENY, PA. TitgAsumnes Omen, December 13, 1809. - Notice ib heteby given to the lioldein of thi;* SIX PER, Atnnielpal - Bonds of the City of Allegheny that, the Coupons on mild Bonds Ceinitnedue 'January lat o 1870, will be paid on laid day (Ims the State tax) at the Bank of Pittsburgh, in the Citrof Pittsburgh. Pa. MAOO . IOBRON, Treasurer of the City of Allegheny, Pa,' EAST PENNSYLVANIA. RAIL- U_l ROAD COMPANY. PHILADELkiIIA, Dec. 14,1869. Notire is hereby given to the Stockholders of tide Company that the Annual Meeting and Election for President and eight Directors will, be hold at the , Office of the Company Jin the city of Roadiug, on MONDAY, the 10th day of January, ,li7o, between the hours of 12 M. and 2 P.M. , HENRY C. JONES, deffitojalo§ Secretary. JLENTOIirN RAILROAD CO] f: 11;3il'PANY. PUILADIII.PIIIA, December 15th, 11169. Tho annual mN.ting of the Stockholders of the Allen town Railroad Company will be held at the office of the Philadelphia and Ending Railroad Compapy, No. 347 South Fourth street, Philadelphia i on MOEDA January 10th, 1870, at 10g o'clock A. M. 1004 an oleo- Don will be hold for a President -and six - Directors to born for the ensuing year. WM. H. WEBB, delstjalo§ Secretary. LORBERRY OREEK RAILROAD wry COMPANY. . Puritannt.rnra, DeComber 15,. DO9. al The Annual eatimrpf the Stockholders of the " Lor berry Creek Railroad Company" will bo hold itt the of fice of the Philadelphia and Reading Railroad Company, 80. 2A South. Fourth street: Philtuleluhla, on MON DAY, January lOth, President 'ck A. DI wben an election *will be held fora and six Directors to serve for the ensuing year. ' .1VM...11. WEBB, dell t jalo§ Secretary. PHILADELPHIA AND READING RAILROAD COMPANY, OFFICE. m SOUTH FOURTH STREET, PITILADELPIIIA 7 Thic.IS,IB69. Notice la hereby given to, the •Stockhold_ere of Me Company that the. Annual -Meeting and ,Meotton for President, six Managers, Treasurer and Secretary will take place on the necond MONDAY (lOthi of January next, at 12 M. WM. ii; W 101311; delaci — alo§ ' Secretary. • - -------- THE PINE GROVE AND LEBANON RAILROAD COMPANY,. OFFICE 227. SOUTH FOURIII STREET: • I'gII.4DELPIIIA, December 15, 1569. The Amino! Afeettug of the Stoekholdere of this Com pany, and an election for officers to seri e for the eneu• lug rear. will be held at . the Office , of the Company on MONDAY, January 10th, 1870, at 11 o'clock A. DE, • ' SICIIARD COE, del:1004 ' Secretory. ••• • - • "Til E. 31 AHAN OY VA CLEY R. It'. U. COMPAN Yi " OFFICE. M SOUTH . - FOUR ru • . PIM P, DR1.r11.4 ;Deo. 15, PO- Tie Annual Meeting of the Stockholders , of thin Com pany, and nu Election for °Meer* to nerve for the en. suing ) tar, will bo held at the Office of the Company, on MONDAY, January 10,)670, at 11 o'clock A. M. 0 deli ,10 COE, Secretary. _ . "THE SHAMOKIM 7 AYI - TE [ l-- ',VORTON RAILROAD COMPANY," OFFICE tr 2 7 SOUTH FOURTH STREET. - . PITIL St o ckho ld e rs ee. this B. The Annual Meeting of the of Com. pany Kill an election tor officers to verve for the ensuing rear, be held at the 'Office of the Company, On. ONDA7f, January 10. 1870, at la o'clock A. DI. • RICHARD CO}. &n4Jaio; Secretary. up OFFICE OF "THE RELIANCE iNstatANcE COMPANY OP PIIILADDL PIM, N0....,1/8 WALNUT STREET. PHILADELPHIA, N0v:29.1869. • The Annual Meeting of the Stockholders of "The Re liance Insurance Company of Philadelphia," and tho' Annual Election of thirteen f 13) Directors, to servo for the ensuing year, 'trill be.held at this Office on MON DAY, December A1th,1869, at 12 o'clock M. n 022 to ilel4 WM. till ÜBB. Secretary. _ . PHILADELPHIA, DEC. 7, 1869. The Directors of the Butler Coal Oompany have this day declared a semt•annual dividend of eizhty•tiyo (ils) cent. per ehare, payable on and after Dec. 20, lasi). SAMUEL DUTTON, 'Treasurer. deBl2t§ 138 South Third street' tub FARMERS' AND 31EUHANICS' NATIONAL BANK. PHILADELPHIA, Bank 1562 The annual election of Directors of this will be held at the Banking House, on WEDNESDAY, the 12th day of January noyct, between the hours of II o'clock A. M. and 2 o'clock P. M. W. Rliiilf TON, Ja., delo-tjanl2§ Cashier. oya FIRST RATIONAL J3ANK, P/I/LADELPIIIA, DPe. 11, 18G9. The Annual Election for Directors of this bank will be held at the banking-11°We on TUESDAY, January 11, 1870, between the hours of 11 o'clock A. M. and 2 o'clock P.M. deL3,tjallfi MORTON 31cIIICITA EL, Jr.,Cashisr. 06FOURTH NATIONAL BANK, NO 723 ARCH STREET. PHIL ADELPIITA, 'Dee. 11, m6O. The annual election of the Directors of this Bank will be held on TUESDAY, , January /1, 11170, between 12 o clock M. and 2 o'clock P. 11 del3-20t§ NATIONAL BANK OF COM NIECE. PIIILADALPHIA I December 10. 18 C 2 . The Annual Election for threate' will be held at the banking-boume on THURSDAY, the 13th day of January next. between the hours of 10A . ht. 'and 2 P. M: del3 tja.l.3§ JOHN A . LEWIS, Cashier. [us , MECHANICS' NATIONAL BANK. PHILADELPHIA. Dec. 13, 1R 9. The Annual Meeting of the Stockholders of this Bank, for the election of Director' will be held at the banking house on WEDNESDAY. January 12, It between the hours of 12 M. and 2 P. al. 013 tjal2.§ J. WIEGAND, In., Cashier. up THIRD NATIONAL BANK. • PHILADELPHIA, De‘t. 11,15 9. The Annual Election for Directors will be held et the baukina•hour;o on TUESDAY, January 11, IE7O, between the hour&of 12 M. and 2 (103 tjall§ R. CLENDINNING, Cashier. U CO3I3EUNNyEALTy NATIONAL BANK. PHILADELPHIA. December 11. 1880_ The Annual Election for Di reetore will be held tat the banhing-tionge o tt . TUESDAY, January 11.1870, between the holm.) of Itho clock A. M. and 2 o'clock P. M. del3tjall§ 11. C. YOUNG, CaPhier. Erov KENSINGTON NATIONAL BANK PIMA DISLPHIA , DOceMber 11, )80, An election for Intectoro of thin Bank will be hold at the banking bowie, on TUESDAY, :January lltll, 13 U. between the. hours. of 10 A.-M. and 2. P.-M. ' t u th-lm§ WM. McCONN L. Cashier. ub CORN (CHANGE NATIONAL BANEC. PUMA DELPLIIA, Deeeniber 11, The annual election for thirteen llirecture of this Bank will be held at the banking Home, on TIif:SDA Y, January 11, MO, between the hours of 10 o'clock A. M. and 2 o clock I. 111. to th tlll jaB S , R. P.-§CHETKY. Cabbier. CITY NATIONAL BANK. PHILADELPHIA, Dec. 7, MO. The annual election for _Directors will he held. at the Th i nking 'louse, on WEDNESDAY. the 12th day of January, ld7o, between the hours of 10 o'clock A. M. and 2 o'clock P. M. G. ALBERT LEWIS. deS.w to jal2§ Cashier. E CONSOLIDATION NATIONAL BANK. . Pnltaingtrum, Dec. 71, Ma. The regular annual meeting of the Stockholders of this Bank will be held at the Banking House, on TUF,S -DA Y , January 11th, 1870; at 12 o'clock ill., and an elec tion for thirteen Directors to serve for the ensuing year will be held at the came place on the same day between the hours of 11 o'clock A. M. and 2 o'clock I'. M. dell s.ithr WBl. 11. WEBB, Cushier. _ _ '. BE COMMERCIAL NATIONAL BANK OF PENNSYLVANIA. Pll IL APELPLILA December IL I:169. The annual election fur Directors of thin Bank will be hold at the Banking-House, on WEDNESDAY, the I2th day of Januaryheeween the hours of 11 A. 111. and 2 P.M. dells w t jal2 § • S. C. PALMER, Cashier. . . . luo WILLS OPHTHALMIC HOSPI taI, Race, above Eighteenth street. Open daily at 11 A.M. for treatment of diseases of the eye. ATTENDING DUDGEON: Dr.ll..l.Lovis, N. W. cur. Arch and Thirteenth streets. visTrusu NANAGEns • Charles Ellis, S. W. corner Tenth and Market streets. Joselh C. Turnpeni N 0.813 Spruce street. Diliwyn Parrish, S. W. corner Eighth and Arch streets, de-lEOl,l'O PENN NATIONAL. BAN IC PHILADELPHIA, Bee. 10. 18411. The Annual Meeting of the Stockholders will be held at the Banking Donee on TUESDAYi•IannarY 11, 1870, at 10 o'clock A. M., and on the same day, between the hours of 11 A. M. and 3 P. M., an election for Directors will he held. dell x w Imo GEO, P. LOUGIIIIAD, Canhier. GIRAiiI) NATIONAL BANK. OIDELPII IA D e c. 10, Pa. The annual meeting of the Stockholders, for the elec tion of Directors and for other_purpoacti, trill be held at' the 13atiking House on WEDNESDAY, 12th January, 1870, at 12 o'clock M. The election will take place between the hours of2lo A 31. and 2 P. At dell 40 'V. L. SCHAFFER,Cadhier. • TIT E _PHILADELPHIA IsTA tr•ZC'TIONAL BANK, Dec. 11, 1869. The annual meeting of Stockholders for the election of Directors will be held at the Banking House on . T BESDAY , January 11, between the hours of 11 o'clock A. M. and 2 o'clock Y. B. F. CHATHAM, dells thin§ • . • Assistant Cashier. 1.. J 66 barrels Spirits Turpentine ; 292 barrels Palo Soap 'Eosin . ; 199 barrels No. 2 RO9lll, landing 'per steamsp "Pionaer." For sale by EDW. UW hi U. RO LEY ' 16 bout Front street. F -71"- ' 1 ` kir nOOKS. ,1 - Uit NO. 80$. 111.1)181Ort firliNNT.' 24ew entliraihtondble , Thincielltritughtl ,1 JrAniilc, mut Ofeli 4 el o o l3, 7o lo 4r„c'ineisdnr, Tiwrikvoi 0,40 Fkkqay Xirepln, ; • whiles anti r illiate gs re—nieedlir aad Sattnligf After moons. • o • Oentleipen 7 Yaning Private leseene.ehug!rpriA9 , c,lairo. eFur tour to sgtt convenience. ' - toc2s.2mi • r L AURA Apr, E':' TO-17I13(S ji.!.ffgalriltita7t4TßlD4 THE GRiantBllooElego. - Ot E ATRIult,;l WJIITE LAorpr w.toxLQN, PATRICE , ' duhni LAURA KEENE, ''Aud Conic Drama . Till% TODDLES. • In rehearsal a t9vr hut ont ir WALNUT i4T li, Vit'4 THEATRE , __ __N. E etw,_ • Blnth and Walnut streets. TW ELFTH ' NIGH_ T Opfir, mOIIoWNED ARTIST! AI LS MATEMAN; _ When will be presented the New Drains, bf. Tons Tay. I or, written ekpreselY for Miss D ottoman, entitled MARY WARNER__ I MARY WARNER.. MSS BATEMAN Miss Bateman miff ' oaultax JORDAN, MliiS 1(1.1111INIA FRANtuS and the full strength of tho Company 4 - Chairs Secured Six Days in Advance. DREW'S ARCH STREET •• THEATRE, Begins 7H o'clock. OF It. CRAIG. TO-NIG, SATITBDAY, Dec. Us 1 ?69. TILE IRIS 4 E GRANT_, _ BURLESQUE DON JUAN DRESS RE HE it t lISA L. P. P.; ORIKAN AND TIGER. And a rtICCITATION BY Mr. J OATHCART Mr ()RAI° gvisity kukos. ONDAY—THE NEEDFUL. CHRISTMAS EVE.—"LITTLE DORRIT." VOYAGE_OF LIFE, OR THE WORLD'S PROGRESB,—Nercantile Library hail, Tenth, above Chestnut. Will open on SATURDAY DYRNING, 18th inst., for a short season, a magnificent ULstorical and instructive series of Illuminated Works of AM blending the most beautiful Chemical effects of lights and shades as founded upoi the principles of Natural Philosophy. Xxcellent music, and interesting Lecture at leach entertainment, Admission, tO coats. dol7 2t • TAUPREZ & BENEDIertiIiPERA 1101188, SEVENTH Otreet, below Arch. (Late Theatre Cromique.l BUR WEEK STAB WEEK it THIS .131(RNING ANo EVERY NIGHT. _ DUPILEZ &BEN/DIOVS Gigantic Minstrels and Burlesque Opera Troupe. Ingagranent or the Greet (loreediaw, Mr. FRAN BROWBIL FOR SIX BIGOTS ONLY ,First Week—Mr. Brower'a Virginia Murmur. First Week—Great Giraffe Dance. First Week—Kent's Girl of Period. 11( AMERIVA,I4 THEATRE, EVERY EVENING, LAST NIGILTS OF TUE lIIZARELLI BROTHERS; Pritzker* LIIPO,UIIe. DE ROMA; MILLER BE ALL, The Bay State Boys, Mr. Jobufiluty, Ao.; Arnie EVA BERT, Queen of Sung, Matinee on Saturday aßmoors at 2 o'clock. TEMPLE OF WONDERS, ASSEMBLY BUILDINGS. SiON'OR BLITZ in bin new inyeteries, asalated by Ina son, THEODORE BLITZ. Evenings at 7:i4. Matinees Wednenday and Saturday. at 3_ Magic, Yentrilequhru, Canaries and Burleson() Min- Orel e. Adiniasion, 25e.; Itemerved Seats, 51k. . ?ARLOR CONCERTB.—rtiECOND VON cEnT will be given at NATATORIUM HALL, road street, below Walnut, SATURDAY EVENING, December 18th. IST Subscription Tickets for the remainder of the SERIES and single tickets to be had at L. MEYER'S Music Store, N 0.1413 Chealnut street, and single ticket* at the door. deli ua w f s 4t.* TEW 'ELEVENTH STREET OPERA, 110176. g J. L. OANNOROSS,'Manitger. ; czENTz .AND 1 - IAsSLEWs 3fATOIEES.-- Iluetral Fund Mil t 18040. Evert SATURDAY AFTERNOON. at 3); o cloth, 001941 A CADEMY OF FINE ARTS, m. g ri p T I EUT street, *bore Tenth Open from 9 A Benjamin Visit's Omit Picture of CHRIST AZ/Et:TED Is still on exhibition G. lIANAGAN & SON, HOUSE AND SHIP PLUMBERS, No. 129 Walnut Street. irrif /A.NIEE A. WHICH?, THORNTON pica CLEMENT A. ORM COM, THEODORE WRIGHT. FRANK L. NitALL• PATER & 80N8, Importers oeartheaware and Shipplatlind Comageelon Ilerehah ,te Vialaut street, Philadelphia E B. WIGHT . • ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, tiolll6' 111/1011er of Deeds for the State of Pennsylvania in liiinois. 96 Madison street, No. It. Chicago, Illinois. aul9tfj 0 0 TTON SAIL DUCH OF_ EVERY V width, from 22 inches to 76 Medea wide. all numbers Tent and Awning Dusk, Paver- maker's Pelting, Sall Twine, as. JOIIN W. EVERMAN lad No. 303 Church street, Oily Stores. LRIVY WELLS.-OWNERS OF PROP effty—The only place to get privy wellseleansed and i ll nfeeted at very low prices. A. PlCYBBoo.lllanto lecturer of l'ondrette. GoWimittes Ball. Library street E. F. MOODY, Cashier NEW MESS SHAD ANDSP-I-OED „LI Bahl:ion, Tongues and Bounds, in prime order.joat received and for Bale at (MUSTY'S East End Grocery Ito. 118 South Second Street, below Chestnut street. PUBE SPICRIA, GROUND AND WHOLE —Pore English Mustard by the pound —Choice White Wine and Crab Apple Vinegar for pickling_in store, and for sale at GOUISTY'S East End Grocery, No, 114Elenth tleeond street, below Chestnut street. NEW GREEN GINGER.--400 POUNDS of choice Green Ginger in store and for sale at ()GUSTY'S Hest End Grocery, No. 118 South Second street. below Chestnut street. HITE BRANDY FOR PRESERVING. —A choice article j•tst received and for sale at STY'S East End Gzwery, N 0.1141 Booth Second street, below Chestnut street. QOUP 13.—T OM AT Q, PEA, 310 - 011 IL7 Turtle and Jullien Soups of Boston Club Manufac ture one of the finest articles for plc-nice and sallin4 parties. Yor sale at COUSTT'S East End Grocery, No 118 South Second street..below Chestnut street. COAL! THE CHEAPEST AND BEST in the; city —Keep conatantly on hnnd the celebrated HONEY BROOK and TIAELEIGH LEHIGH, also, J NAGLE VEIN LOCTTST MOUNTAIN and BoSTON N N COAL. J. MACDONALD. Js. Yards, 118 donna Broad st. 1140 Washington avenue. ocl 3m IL MASON BINISS. JOHN F. SNEAD'S': MILE UNDERSIGNED INVITE ATTEN. tion to their stock of Spring Mountain, Lehigh and Locust Mountain Coal, ..which, with the preparation given by us, we think can. not be excelled by any other Coal. , Office, Ifranklin Institute Bu ild ing, N 14 8. 84ventb street. 13ThilE8 it B.llEdirr, Arch street wharf, Schuylkill. PHILADELPHIA RLDINGi School and Livery Stable, Nos. 3334,3336,3633, •10 and 3342 Market street, Philadelphia_ An afternoon leas for young ladle... An evening Mills for gentlemen Wednesday and Friday. Handsome carriages to hire ! Horses taken to livery t hovel a trained to the saddle! SETH ()RAID:, Proprietor. AS FIXTUREEL—MISKEY,INIERRItt & THACHABA, No. 718 Obostnut street, mantas& turers of Gas Fixtures, Lamps, &c., &0,, would call the attention of the public to their large and elegant assort• merit of Gas Chandeliers Pendants Brackett', &o. The into y also introduce gas pipes dwellings and public build. trigs, and attend to extending, altering and repairing gas thou!. All work warranted. PIANOS. KINDT 3IANZ FIRST CLASS Agraph Pianos. athusheek's unsurpassed Orchestra,, and Colibri Pianos. For salo at bu t gainm only l de-th s tulm.§„, A. SIAM RZErt. OS Arch vtreet. ACTIVE PRACTICE. --Dr. PINE, No. 219 ♦ins street,helow Third, -.44U.Er inserts the handsomest Teeth !nth° city,at prices to suit all. Teeth Plugged, Teeth Repaired, Exchanged, or .Remodelled to snit. Goa and Ether. No pain in ex t ractine.• Office hours. tO 5 . seU.s.m.tato K EEPI4 11 .-A COMPETENT Book-keeper, of experience in business monorails", is open - for an engagement on Ist January. Address P. 0. Box 2182. del4-tu th 53t* TORDAN'S CELEBRATED PURE TONIC! Ale for invalids, family tore, &o. The subscriber is nowfurnished with hls fall Winter of his highly nutritious and well-known bever age. Its wide-spread and increasing use, by order of physicians, for invalids, use of families, &o.,cornmend it to the attention of all consumers 'who .want a strictly pure artickg prepared mannere Wet materials, and put up in the most careful for home use or trouper tation. Orders by mallor otherwise promptly supplied. . , P. J. OB.DA,NNo.22Oear Pet,atre de? • below Third and Walnutstroo NAVAL STORES.-298: BBLS. ROSIN, . 80bble. Tar, 50 bbls. f Pitch, 208 bias. prime '%l , lllte Spirits Turpentine. Now ;sliding flan steamer Pioneer,' from Wilmington ;. N. C. and • or sale by COOILUAN, RUSSELL & CO.; 111 Chestnu street. COTTON AND ...RICE.;-:182 BALES. COT ton, 14 enske Rice—Now landing front etehmer " Tonewentle," from Savannah, tie., and for sale by COWMAN, RUSSELL ,k CO., 11l Oltestuut street. IMMMZ===9 .',:i • .,..,,';.,00,0frN0;',*.p, - 0: ! ..1P*. , : AMUSEMINDrrh. 11111 FAMILY 40380)1T. CAR/SW/106S D/XEI 6 fifINSTRELS, EVfraIYEV!CNING. BUSINESS CARDS. Established 1821. GROCERIES, LIQUORS, &v. COAL AND INSTRUCTIONS. GAS FIXTURES. DEN TlSTiti WANTS. Irolt" *ALE. BAItt;AINI, NEW AND HANDSOME DWELLING, . mrsuiriot .STREET, 4.Btory (1lrIN:1cl' tool.) Elnished In Pine Style: Bat larei Owner., Will be sold 'reasonable, and not /nth:lt - money needed. APPLY TO JOHN ; WAN.II.I4A.TCEU, Sixth 1104 Market Streeta. a ARCH STREET RESIDENCE a FOR SALE, No. 1922 ARCS! S T ILEET. , Megan! Itrown-Stone Ileeklence, three stii4tes sap Itenaard root ; eery counnodlous, furnished with even modern convenience, and built fa a very impeder s a d substantial manner. Lot 26 foot front by 160 feet deep to Cuthbert greet, on which is erected a handsome brim Stable and Coach /louse. • .020 nn fit GER M A NTOWN FOR MAL E. -- Tbe Handsome Stone Itesidence, laving, every city conveniences, lit perfect order anti well shaded. Situate northweei corner Rest Walnut Line end Mor ton street. J. 31.OUM11JCY & SONS, 722 Walnut st. NORTH ElGHTEER`itrimi,e," na. above Cherry. Modern Reeidetme, FEND. HYLFESTII2, dell-ot§lolB. Fourthstreet. MI -ARCH STREET FItOFERTY Aar Sale.—lmmedlate p , jseension. The handsome tour /dory reorient*, No. DM Arch Steel'. Apply I. • William • Hansel! Allen ,324 3t dole • AP HIGH STREET, GEICSiA.WTT)WN 11111 a For Elsle.—A double atone reeldmmi with all the city convenience. The grounds are handsomely Ltd out and planted with choice fruit, ehrderrees and ihrebberi. Located within tire minutes walk of Itailroad Depot. J. M. 6113111,12 F & 8018,223 Wilber street. OR tALF,- THE LItNDSO MII three• story risk dwelling with at ce Arid throe etory back buildings, elttutte No. ILES Nort h 17 Ntrieteosta street; bait evert modern C 4 MSetliCarA6 an d imprerement, amble perfect order. Lot 2$ feet front by 102 feet deep. Immediate poems/ion ghee. J. H. oilumEratllollB 733 Walnut street. • • FOR SALE—DiireLtSISIGS 1NR.25.21 North Smut, 11292 North Ninteenth, rianth Second, itor North etreeti 24.20 Christian, 500 North Fifteenth strew: Also many others for sale and rent. JAMES W. IJAVENS. S. W. ror. Broad and tthestaut ita — FOR SA LE DWELLING 1421. North Thirteenth street ; every convertioneo, and in good order Superior dwelling. li3l North Twelfth Steer, cm easy terms. 65,500. Three-etory brick.= North Twelfth street, hariag a good two-story dwelling hv the rear. asucu, Three odors brick, old Powell street', Ju good order. e7gso. store and dwelling, N 0.310 Booth Alaih 'trust. 8641). Frame. house, 909 Third street, South liansteru, near Spruce, clear. SW& MO Queen street, two-story brick good yard. Building Lots on Passyunk roa d, and a good Lot at Elston' bun. ROBERT emayncm a sem, 537 Pine irtraet inFOR SALE THE HANDSOME: Brown Stone end ni P Brick - Dwelling, NO. 21t 8 lonics street, with all and every improvement. Built la halfhest manner. Immediate posseasiow.. One can remain. if desired, Apply to OUPPOCIC. & JORDAN. 03 Walnut street. ifig FOR B.437LE 77 —Tilic VALUABLE 101. Property S.W. corner of Fifth and Adolph' streets, below Walnut. 62 feet front by 194 test deep. frosting on three streets. J. M. GlalklKT & SONS, TO Walnut street. FUR BALE-31pDERN71"ittikt. Story Brick Dwelling, MS. Ninth at. Every oou• ire Saco. inquire on the premien. iny4-th,s,tu.l29 • maFOR SALE -A HANDSOME ,11,E81- DEVON, 211 S Spruce street. A Store and Dwelling, northwest corner Eighth and Jefferson. • A tine Itsiddence, Vll 'Vine street. ' A handwrite Residence, 4UO South Ninth street. A handsome Residence. West Philadelphia, A Business Locatloth l trawben7 street. A Dwelling, No. :225 Spruce street. Apply to CO PPUCK & JORDAN. 433 Walnut street. TO RENT. CREME & McCOLLUM, REAL ESTATE AGENTS. laand, Ofßee,Jsekson , opposite Mansion street, 011911 N. J. Baal Estate bought and sold. Perscust desirous of rem tins coastal! during the sawn will app, or address as above. Hosorettolly refer to Mao. A. Rablotm • Botl7 B Francis Keltooln, Aitsurtos Morino, .ifobn. Dart w. W. Juyonal. - fed- CI A COMFORTABLE DOUBLE OFFICE to rent, at No. 112 South Fourth street. near Clleetuut street. Very central for any btunneea. drl7-4t . --- • 'TO LET.—A . SPAOIOIS3 SUITE. OF COUNTING KOONS, with one or wore loft/40n eton! etrert. Apply to ' COCILBAN, RUEISXLE, a CO., 11l Chestnut street 0.:22-tf6 _ inTO RENT— Store and Fistui eii, with seven-mato Ilon8,). Apply to JA)IES ALCORN, delLw a war • N0.2t07 tzwater street. ergi FOR RENT-148 NORTH .FIFTR— .IIELDwaning, It room.. /315 JetTorsoni dwelling, 12 room. Woodland atrvot (3119). West Philadelphia, New. Low rent. FILED. SYLVEISTRit, 205 South Fourth atreet. del7 St . fAll TO RENT — DESIRABLE STORE, 83M.N0. 511 Market eared. Apply to ALFMND G. BAKER. 435 Chestnut street. deleSt in FOR RENT.—S. W. CORNER MAR ket and Sixth etroeta, largo and desirable atom 44/ feat front: J. N. GUMAII g ik SUNS, 733 Walnut attest. 113. 'OR RENT-THE LARGE situate N. E. corner Eighteenth end Vino litreete, suitable for a Boarding ilouso. J. M. GUN 111EY dr 803(8,733 Walnut Omer. THIRD bTI~I;I:T.—I'UIt RENT THE old-estaldietted Business Stand, situate lie. 34 North Third street. J.. E. GUAINEY & SONS, 733 Waluut street. .., an: TO LET—DESIRABLE NENV IRON front Store, iv o . 63.5 Market street, 22 by 120 foot to Commerce. Excellent ligbt. Aprly to de4 12t* JOHN PEARCE, No. 227 Market 'street. TO LET—ROUSE 706 SOUTR. SEVEN. TEENTJI street. Portable heater, range, bath, of water, gee—all the modern conveniences.' Hight rooms. Apply on the premises. no2ttf FURNISHED HOUSE FOR RENT— situate on Pine street, west of Twentietli:-.lmme diate possession given. J. M. GUMMY & BONS, T. 53 Walnut street. et NORTH NINETEENTH STREET.- JWJA To Rent—The three-story residence. with three story double back buildings and side. yard• haa all the modern conveniencta. Situate No. 102 North Nineteenth street, second door above •Arch. J. 01331111 ET & PONS, 733 Walnut street. . HEATERS AND STOVES. ANDREWS. FIARRIS9II 00.. 1327 MARKET STREZT. lIIIPROVED STEAM HEATING • APPARATUS. FURNACES AND COOKING RANGER. ocl th a to 8m , • TROIKAS S. DIXON 86' SONS, Late Andrews & Dixon N 0.1124 CHESTNUT Street, Philada.l tinufsotugfrs of Opposite United States Mint. LOW DOWN, PARLOR, CHAMBER, OF nog, And other GRATES, For Anthracite, Bituminous and Wood•Fise; ALBO. WARM-AIR VURNAOES For Warming Public and Private Buildings. AEGISTERS,, , VENTILATOIDL. • AND • OnINNEYOAPS COOKINU-RANGEs, BATII-BOBLEREL WHOLESALE aud RETAIL. J. 4. oumatky a BONS, 7,U WALNUT fittest : z .c, , Wrest ilietorlectl Sketches 01 the Bityso 0 LO 11„ , • • hi hlrs. • Loup ciNgsffl OW aiMi t itil' VattiOlt- i 'JIVE INSIDE ' HUI LIPIPOIIIIIS ... It1111.11t: 11110 . • 0" , lied •Chesterfield been working in clay or marble, his perseverance must have had its resvard,ifieitufaial Irtle44 .1 was 00 4 sets Imp genius eauaot• spv boy on w homall these °Midi were spent de i hated them b that dumb power of human '••1 stupidity e is s erhaps the , • ssessfq.bef t all for • s etould' be hi :laud the; ambition which his father entertained for him in dime days of his y outh when everythine might -Welt 4 rii4tiiißai' ovdf wadg figure riv Parliament was the Indispensable and undoubted beginning, anaiously looketl for.- . ••S ward to, yet still a matter of course; . and that being secured, eseryttdeg else wonkleaaturally ind fici follow. "If to yotifidebit , 4iviedge you add the art of pleasing," he writes,. 'temple . t 1 very pfdlgiblfternielih dinettae`'isiefelaffi fi titate ; but take my word for It, twice yOrtfr 0 merit and knowledge without 'the art of V' pleasing would at most raise ••you to the int . f portent post of Resident at Hamburg or Rads ben." The father did not know when he s , said these words that he was uttering an un cl conscious prophecy. Almost the only posts which poor Philip ever held were these two very missions which are here mentioned with I contempt. , '• We are told ebyewhete gradual', Prose 4 , 1 statesman's liiglehopes were brotight r doWn to a certain satisfaction, or pretended satisfaction, • with this poor loVels efSpossibilityo; heater :•field is heroic JAW tiilenee ; he r leavee i not a H word behind him to express the Passionate disappointmentilhe bitteritemcfriltsbatibri,*litch must have been his as he looked on the com rnonsdace figure of which his -imagination had -• made a hero. iielr6 to the young man him ••. belt, nor- to soy ins correspondents,-does be: e bewail thesdnwilfall,'or blame the heavy sold which "I.es resisted all his e ff ort, In the silence, Id all the lathering' shadows of his own infirmities, in his deafness and sediSsien and ux ? Bufferi w of appreaeldeg, a 6, the" father must have taken his burden 'to 111114: unit 4it up his' mind to it with '• a dumb,' fortitude which is more noble than, any ye t i% VhLs 'patience; like his' loVe, bektg At bus' tbe moment arrived wheu ail them anxious preparations were to come to the trial. The boy took his seat in Parliament at the age of twenty-one • and with "infinite pains" his father attempted "to prepare him for his first appearance as a speaker." " The young man ' seems to have succeeded tolerably well on the whole," says Dr. Maly, "but on account of his shyness was obliged to stop, and, if I am not mistaken, to have recourse to his notes. Lord Chesterfield Used every transient in his power , to couttfortfhlin;ind to duspne *kb ton fidence and stewage' Co' , make some Other' attempt ; but I have not heard that Mr. Stan hope ever spoke again in the House." . Thus eaSeskto Ws end all the high "eipeCta s done with ithith Chesterfield for twenty yeitte had beguiled his own troubles, the tedium of declining health, of forted • inactivity, and an unsuccessful public career. Ills son had been • to mend all and create a, new = hustre :for the fading life ;'and 'now tbe cherithed boy had taken hie tint step, not. within the 'brilliant boundariest of success, but to that fiatjulairt of mediocrity from width no aorta- could ever raise him. The event WAS One of as great int portant* in the life of Chesterfield as the loss of an emplre,.and his personal condition was r such as to give every blow of the kind double weight;.but r not a moan, was complainti Ors capes froni the lips of , the • vanquished man: S Me must have reconciled himself to the ext./ge r,' don of gilds' heilmeiwith an incredible force' of will, a power of self-restraint which reaches the sublime. Ile describes himself with pathetic playfaltiess `as "conversing with my equals the vegetables" in his Blackheath garden immediately after. "All the infirmities of an age still mere advanced than mine crowd in upon me," he says. "I must bear them as well as 1 care—they are more or less the lot of bumanit t ieland litave notzlalki to an exclusive privilege ‘sigahlit them. In thisSituatiori you' will easily suppose that 1 have no very pleseeara hours; but, on the other hand, thank God," s adds the indomitable soul, " I have not one melancholy one, and I •rather think my phi losophy increases with my infirmitieser . Thim he takes welds burden with a patlince worthy f. a nobler creed. No more hope for him— ti no dream of tender glory in his boy. Life over, health over, the dear fiction scattered to the winds t h at had been. Ids joy.. But not a• word breaks from the father's corn ?, pressed lips—not to Dayrolles even not to Madame de „Monconsell, who, had shared his hopes and icheites, does he ever acknowledge that Philip has failed. Never was there a pic i Sure of proud patience, love and self-command more complete. Some years after, young Stanhope went to Hamburg as Resident there, a post which his '1 father immediately, with the strange, half ' conscious cunning , of affection, represents to himself and everybody else as for the mo ment exceptionably important. He after `: • wards went •to ltatisbou, as if a certain fate had attended • Chesterfield's words. A better, appointment, that, of Resident at Venice, of which he had been confident, was refused by the - King himself, on account of his illegitimate birth—a sting which his father 'mast have felt in all its keenness, Finally he went to• Dresden, and after re peated attacks of illness; died at the age of thirty-six. The fact of his failure does not diminish Chesterfield's care of him, nor make his eagerness to seize every opportunity of ad vancing or improving both him and his posi tion less apparent. But tbe interest of _the. reader fails in Philip when his education is over. From the moment we ascertain how little credit he will ever do to all those pains, how little he will ever realize all those hopes, a certain anger and contempt takes posse-seen of the spectator's mind. Vier are less patient with him than is • his father. Indignation • takes the place of forbearance. But yet the unfortunate young fellow, forced upwards to , a -point of attainment which nature for • bade him to reach, put upon a strain to which his strength was totally unequal,. is riot without a certain claim upon."' our sympathy. No doubt his father at the last, opening his sad eyes, came to recognize the limits of nature, suedsuffered the last pang of paternal pride,—the consent of his own judgment that nothing else was possible— the melancholy indulgence of contempt. Alter Philip's death a discovery almost mis, erable was made by his father. The son for whom he had done so much, and with whom be had given up, as-it were, the privilegei of a father to insure, perfect confidence and trust, bad contracted a secret marriage, which he had not the courage, even on his deathbed, to re veal. We judge of the effect of this commie's cation only by analogy, for Chesterfield says not a word of his own Pangs Plaint breaks from him on his son's death, no word of' re proach or unkjndness disturbs the grave po litenees with whiela he Stddreesee the 'widow of whose existence he had no idea. There is something awful lathe silence with winch the man shrouds his heart s -ethat heart which had spoken so lavishly, so minutely, so tenderly in . the old days. Deaf, old, fee'ble, racked with pain, worn out with the exquisite contrivances of suffering which are permitted to strike us, body and soul, in our most susceptible points ' not one cry still breaks front his lIPS. Christian, half Stoic, he stands alone 'and sees. everything he bad loved and trusted crumble down around him; end says nothings Itie s ast polished trifler, a social philosopher, an instance of extreme cultivation, jinesse, and falsehood, that the ordinary English seeder, looka Upon' Chesterfield ; yet there he stands, sad as any prophet, stern as' a Roman, patient as a Chris tian, forgiving .all things, tearing all Wimp. Strange, splemn, almost sublime ending to an , unheroic. life. - • , For at, tile'very last of all, a ft er all those griefe, his heart doe riot close up, as a heart ravaged by ovendifchl ve' t w ig , i / I ,, h ti e t --a r X-• M c e e d ir 6) , a d n i ll : iiii i t i agi li li, d ore l l' l * l 4 1 1 ' T kill* if f o r his his pitome of philosophy; and the last letter wa hall quote is one addressed to his grand son , Philip's bolsi barsoitiem y , ver y bei ghe mighttbage 11;004 1 1840.1 1 131 '''' had fho been as . worldly . a man as he gave himself to be, but whom, on the contrary, he took to is heart, and at ones undertook to provide forfrom the moment, be .was' aware of their ext tence. It is thus he writes in the last year of is lice, w p hqn . Iqt : orqr s E t vmbyi yalfnessrid t i su rhqtrO,tifeseftwri f Ildniln 4 6 Aims Alth - itir ' ANitornt': ' 4 ' V!" receiverfa few days ago two of the best wry letters I over saw in my life—the one signed Charles Stanhope, the other Philip Stan hope. As for you, Charles, I did not wonder at 4 for ytia`lrilbakor f ritinAlAtindarettl love let rs ;WI Idiom 'roglie; AittPhil, bovi^eAni youlto write so well that one can almost say of bni two, Et eantare pares et respondere pa uratA? Charles will e*platn, this Latin to you. " , " am told, I'hfl7,Ultr WHiaiiegora nick na eat school from your intimacy with Master Str geways, and that they call you Master Sta geways—for to be sure you'are a strange boy r iir OAS 0 1 10, r f. 'ir 7 T. 1 '\ ~.f: 1 ",' t, 0* ~, 0 ~ or 'ill'o,*war yotrlsrilitllit Wave me" bring i you;both from home, and I will bring it you Whelk I come to town. In the meantime, (Rd bless you both!"-- NlVith this last touch of nature let us wind up 'tile pathetic record.' "Give Dayrolles a chair were the dying man's last words, they say, and the attendantAoctpr,ealls the worldto ohserve that" his 05440014 ViittedthiatitulY . with his life." But with all deference to established prejudices, we believe our readers will conclude with us that the tender little letter above is a more titre cpnehisionp th 4 tdrange' fofike . 9r, paternal love which lasted as long as Chester field's life. We are aware that in all. this we have de parted entirely from the traditional usage which should have made Chesterfield's letters and its system of philosophy. our. su.bject in ,etead :Utters are 'wadi everybody's reach; bpt r they , are.; nut , so won derful, so unique, or' se nadnifold; as" was the man: PINM(CIAL:: THE .7E`ir-st ,,, ,lVlrprtgage SINKING FUND 7 PER CENT ` . 40 'YEAR ' GOLD BONDS Or THE Chicago, Danville and Vincennes RAILROAD COMPANY. Total amount to be issued $2,600,600 on 140 Miles of Road, (extending from Chicago through Eastern Il linois to the junctionwith the Evansville and ,Terre Haute Bailroad, with which it forms the shortest TRUNK LINE to Louisville and the South); ,mahhig, the average of Bonds about $lB,OOO per mile, and it is expreSsly guaranteed that the bond issue shall not ex ceed that sum. The Road traverses a country, that assures' a large and prdiltable bueinein; 'is built and equipped from Chicago to 3lomenee, a dis tance of 55 miles, AND urop; rtitaxonTiox OF TBEIINE ONLY WE NOW OFFER THE BONDS FOR Shi e r.' • ' : 'ese bonds are protected with extraordi nary care by registration and otherwise ; the interest upon them will be paid out of one third the net earnings, and the Sinking Fund, created and set aside, will provide ample means for their redemption. They aro Officially ftegitered and Trans ferred by the UNION TRUST CONPANY, of New York, who thus beconie the custodian of these. Bondi ..IT is co/wt.') 'E.:STI.Y BELIEVED THAT 2:0 BOlkliS CAN BE MADE MORE.-PER FECTLY SECURE, OR MORE ABSOLUTELY SAFE. It is a CAPITAL' ADVANTAGE'of these Bonds that they bear 7 per cent. gold interest for 40 years ;'and compared with 6 per cent. gold bonds, the additional 1 per cent., at com pound interest, for thirty years, would give the owner of this Bond a profit of 5051 28,and for forty years, 55,003 43. Government Si XeS might be exchanged with this result: 510,000 would buy $12,001;of these Bonds, payable in gold, yielding a profit in hand, and besides the gain of g'.1,000 PRIN CIPAL -nod the annual 6 Per Cent. thereon, would, at maturity, pet the buyer 821,031 16 additional prelim in IN TERIAT. Price at present, 93, and accrued interest from October Ist. 4,- Pamphlets, with Maps and detail. and the BONDS way be : had directly of us, ur of DE HAVEN & BROTHER, Dealers in Government Securities, &c., No. 40 South Third Street, Philadelphia. Raving personally examinal this cntirt, line .of finished and projected, as welt as the country through which it runs, We ofer awe .Bonds with every confidence in their full worth and sounanem. W. BAILEY LANG & CO., 54 Cliff - Street, New York, Agents fbr the Sate of the Bonds dell s to th dell BANKING HOUSE op JAYCOOIWACP• 112 and 114 So. THIRD ST. PHILADVi DEALERS IN ALL GOVMINNENT SECURITIES. We will receive applications for Policies of Life Insurance in the new National Life In surance Company,of, the United States. In]] information givegAt our ofillel• REMOVAL. -°AIV irERs t° HAVE REMOVED TO *0: 1.21 S. .:,T.Watif Opposite Pirar4l Bank. MM:=IM ' I,FIRST, MPRTOAGE SEEN FIR (MST.% 6016 BO . 168 • OF THE FrefteTidifiltHrg,_a l lid , 410 n 1018.X11,10, ei it ittielig; tr: ,' A: . . .. incipal and Intereat,Psiyabla In Gold. ' . . tito:l3tVled:eaarleert:lfed by a First and Onl Mortgage w I and rolling Weir ti r e ll' ' l tgrraryr m err g n ge . 1 a ere' Loan • and Trtur Company oNew York, Yrn tees. bur le T i o tt i C i l l iaTio n t l t i llineryv t r i 4 Or(irre9n"l:llolfurgfirgitel im r t ifa_trotAt i t2Lee . ttini . 22lll3;ttelelfro,n Valley they ow;tezei ygetil..q.W44lst a )We i esa ty and e Or y 0 the ompany 0 Bonds 9" offert be eltVe29e9teliiiintuoi doubt. Bonds at OM and into eg 4 f l r e o tl n ,r4;: fl iit e d r i t =t7lrtinilelled on non eati to .r :,)^ .• , „TANNER ;4 i. eql . ' ''nth':) . g No. 49 WALL street, New York. ti ''; Igo. 25 S.iiniiiiisi:eei,AilieliWi i ii.' d . tfi O'S :AND' 1881'S Bought, Sold and Exchangedterm on most ' ' 'GOLD songht and Sold at Market Rage& ~6otji)bt4' ti,:-',4ii-ABiith;.'i r4oiriq R)VaOMI, BONDS; Bought. and Scrld. s rr e Nrk,. S Bought and Sold on Commission Only. COUECTIONS ltlimle on all ileeesallide Points. D E t, YEN k KO. 40 South Third St.., PHILADELPHIA. &Ott A RELIABLE HAMS INVESTMENT THE FIRST MORTGAGE BONDS OF TEM Wilmington and Reading Railroad. BEARING inmate? AT SEVEN PER CUM IN CURRENCY, Payable Avail and October', free of State and Waited States Taxes. . This roadr a through a thickly populated and rich agricultural and manufacturing district. For the present we are offering a limited amoral* of the, above bonds at 85 Cents and interest. The connection of this road with the Pennitylran and Beading Bailroade insures it a large and remunerative trade. We recommend the bonds as the cheapest tint ) claas invedxsent in the market. WM.. PAINTER dr, CO., Bankers and Dealers in Governments, No. 36 S. THIRD STREET, PHILADELPHIA. lastif LUMBER. MAULE, BROTHER &CO., 2500 South Street. 1869: PA PATTERN !CARERS. a '1869 CHOICE SELECTION OF MICHIGAN CORK PINE FOR PATTERNS. LTA°. HIY 1869.PPAVEA - NDA. 9869. LARGE STOCK. 1869 FLORIDA FLOORING. G. 1869 CAROLINA 'FLOORING. VIRGINIA FLOORING. DELAWARE FLOORING' • ASH FLOORING. WALNUT. FLOORING. 1869. " A r aMPR E I P '1 1 011C 5. 1869 RAI PLANK. ~ - nti7~~:~?i 1869. WALNU- BOAIN DIB69. S S - ALNUT BOARDS AND PLANK. WALNUT BOARDS. WALNUT PLANE. ASSORTED FOR CA BINET MASERS, Bunprals,4sso, "ErYD L ER IIIIL ARM EII - 1-869 - ENDEBTAKERS , ttriiiilElL 1869 RED CEDAR. WALNUT AND PINE. 1869. 'ANA'? H 0 - 1(1 1869. WHITE OAK HICISORY. PLANK AND BOARDS. 1869. CA MU N IN A A gm l l nG* lB69 NORWAY* SCANTLI.".. 1869.. 6RTSAR§I4-.6461.ES CEDAR SH INGLES. CYPREBB.B.MNGLES: LARGE ASSORTMENTi FOR SALE LOW 1869. PitalfilsaTZlEL 1869. LATH. BLAME BROTHER * C4lll__ 4600 SOUTH STEW. 4 'Lumber - ITU der Cover, 'ALWAYS Walnut, White, Pine, Yellow Pine, Spruce, Hemlock Shingles, de., always on hand at low rates. • WATSON, do GUJJ4-INGITAM. 924 Richmond ''ilit;reit; -Etighteetailla-Ward. Imr,OW PIKE LITAIIIKEL-ORDERB, .1 ibr cargoes of every descrlytion sawed Lttinber exe crated at short notictorquallty , *abject to fnepeotion A• • 1.9 to EDW. H. BOWLET.II6 Booth Wharves: - CIITLERit: IO D G Kit& , ANDP , 03711INIEfOLMS ' POVICZT ood. STAG Rit, L t S of beautiful - l DONIIEF 'Sod' wAli BUT E CREIVO t ittitlkn TRR'I,..IOOITET RAZOR. 801580118 CANIS ottbotneit tit+. Raz ors. Uhler, Soissoss srof Table Otittot7fßrOa4a aroz "Wished. + I.IISTRUXENTS eof the Mid 111 , 41V5 . oonstraotkot to stadstritits. , at P. PtIARRVii Cutler and Surecol otNotors,llB Tooth below Oteatont.+ c;F : 44I#IIILIbiA. 4W:it .ntgOlt 44 , 44 1 ,14.1,4 6. #14 WltelM" l .4"*F Cluateatoß t l4. - 1 1 ....4Vi t tnrs5NC14 N,103,f1 Sak Co., 11.1 voltam mot. 4 ., • 11 ORIN PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD. , I-Tar snorer *fume. ROUTS tot he'liehlgli art •Ivsoming VallonltOrtMacreptiebnit a T or ern. A s l? 41K and 'lnterior 11 1 . r s i bc a ...w.: Ifalla, tke,Clitti a s aud tilkf i h l i,,,Mt i r!`'..l , *! _ Altli VON ~....... 1 .- gg , terwrr o N ‘ , /swia Atc.t f•- , 4 il iV . ; TB Nitleart tgliAtgrg foil V 4 ,' A.oilpf.i"..a.Pr l T'l'f,ittitff .4. .:.'';' l i i f ti 1,--.Z. 4,i-M(iikocotirmodatien ,- fer Writ, klan. - f.. A 8 t„, sir-Morning ...I . le eas Pri , ciP Statiops op Main 8 0 11/1821 , 8 a gal op &meeting 'at Beth e - , 'e ' h 'Val by Rai , cad fortAllentown,Manch Cluinlo.' ha op 1 0104 WII ealwrre, Pitteton, Towanda and Waverly; cameo. , . tin at Waverly , with 'NIUE ItAI..DWAI for Mlackra '''. Pa , lingstio llobhestere• uleveland,'" ChlautE, biatt FM • ristisfoatheall points - 1n the Great Weet.; , ':, ~ 7: ; 1: . A , 8.4 e A m.—Accommodation for Doylest ow n, ' e l l , pin • twist! 'intermediate rOnii. paseengem.for W .i - 4 low t rate 'l..ttborii' and 'IAN by this train, n'' ki st , Ll &York Road:r... 14-, ~. ~.. ,--, ,- fl' 10 '' • %li B)hlehaszi, Alfent4iffit i .. 014 9. .' li rinki l Vtitt 411_, filtealnirrel' PlAsteni '' . d earbonlake /Mb gb itrid•Atie4tietiannsil ze , , d Ajlentimm,,i',llAsiiiillackettatOif , and ; l; ,On g7_elleY,CmfitT*, oad mut; Mo egnd , AI'S • to riew x ork vaTi gls, Valley total, A c A',.' . o .+AechmtnodistiOni for Tort Was titsal, { sty ' i if. , Ultermediatktitatiosw, .„71 ',_,_,,, i ;': . r c.... ....... , I ; 1i t ..• .-, I.r.at a l 8 P,M.-4_cognmottatoPtq4brar ^ A ) , ,_ f4whig. b triailey Express 'or ' le 1 ,Za • . yI/A3 Mum, Mouth .ohankil lisideteg i White 111 W 4 , #V, ,.. Itharre...Pittstott; BOrein2o2* and W2cdrth I nO 1 • of At 711 7 7;1.-41cionuicidatiOsi for ZO leatoirui' pin 'at all triterinedlatd attitiOna, '' , .k. ,, ', , . ir , ~ " A 4.10 P. 'IL —Accommodation for PoilesfoinkinoP ping at.,44,U intermediate stations. -, -. ~-. 1 •• 1 . 1 At 15,00 P. 11.- , -Througlr for Bethlineminorinert. Mg' at ' Bethlehem' with Lehigh -Tetley -livening , Train , for Zairtfm. Allentown, Nanch.Chunki %a , - .. -, ,i," •., . • , c . • At , 2 Q P., M. , --Accominodation for Laniatale,etoptinot at as intermediate stations. _ ' A Xll.llO P.M.—Accommodation for.. Tort NVitsisingtOn4' I 'MAINS- ARRIVE IN 'POILADZLPHIA4 l k ie eheZe at 9A, liS ti : ?Al t .4,40 ,and 11;28 P. M. , ' 23 P. .',IIAO r: Id.'alid 15.10'.r; DI: Tramp Make direct connection with Lehigh Valley or , Lehigh and Suaotie•F henna trains from, liseton; Screntep, Willteabarre. Nor hanir City and Hazleton: • Prom Doylestown at 8.25 A.M.,4.88 P.M.and 7.03 P. M .. Fr.= Lansdale atI.NIA: M.:` '• ' -, - • ' From Port Waishingiant at 0 .28 and KM A. IL and 8.10 ' •' 0* 'I9I)*P&YA. - - • , ' - Philadelphia for Ilethiehern at 920 A. M. " ' '''• '. ~ Philadelphia for DoMstqgn.at 2.00,P1 Ti e feetown for Phitadelphia at 7 . 0 9. - t -- • Z lehrm for Philadelphia - M:4M r. . - • ' ''Fi hand Sixth Streets and Second and Third Streets , tines of city passo_or tart ran airectl to ara from the Deal.' Anion Line run with* a a ort„dis two ot thepep Tickets iiluet be proecred at the Ticket Office, in order to secure Am lOweet rates of pire. -.,. • , .4 _ ~ .. 'JILL'S CLARK, Agent. Tickets sold and Baggage 'checked through to ' pal roints;at 'Manors North Penis; • Baggage Zxpretw' °Mew'. li , . /Oa Soutb , Fifth *trees 1 , . , ' • . • • EENNEYLVANIA ' CENTRAL' RAIL. 80AD.4-Aiter 8 P. ILi SUNDAY, Novern i tat . ! The train' of the Pennsylvania Central i /urt. leave the Depot,at hirty-ftlit and Market streets,which is reached directly the can of the Market Street Pas senger Railway, the car connect ing with each train leaving Front and Market street thirty mtnntes_before its departure: Theist •ot the Ches th lit and Walnut Streets Railwa y within one 'square of the Depot. ' Bleeping Ca: Tickets can be bad on application At the Ticket Office, Northwest corner of Ninth and Chest n ut streets, and at the Depot. Agente of the MIRA% Traimfer Company will call for and deliver Baggaito at the Depot.. Orders lefts* N 0.901 Chestnut street, No. 116 Market street. will receive sit • tention _ TRAINS LEAVE DEPOT, VIZ.: • '' " Mail Train. ... .... ..........,.....-..4. ...- ... . ........st&00 A. M. Paoli Accost. ' _...at 10.30A.111,12.11, and 650 P. M. Fast Line. at 1150 A. M. Brie Entrees- - -......--:„.:-..4.-.4.........:...:.atU.50 A. M. Harrisburg ACc0r..............-.. „....... - at 2.80 P. M. Lancaster Accom..-.......-......—..................at 4.10 P. M. Parkeburg Train. _.., at 5.50 P. M. Cincinnati Express-- ---- ---- .........at 8.00 P. M. Erie Mail and Pittsbu rgh Express ...-...:--...at 9.45 P. M. Acco_wunodation__________._._-.- ...... -.at 12.11 A M. PaciSo Express...-..*-....... ..... —....... ....Alt 12.00 night. Erie Mail leaves daily, except Sun"day, running on Saturday night to Williamsport only. On Sunday Watht passengers will leave Philadelphia at 8 o'clock. Pacific Express leaves daily. , Cincinnati Ex prees daily, except Saturday, All Other trains daily. except Sunday. The Western Accommodation Train runs daily, except Sunday. • For this train tickets mast be procured and baggage delivered by 50 P.P. Al, at 116 Market street. TRAINS ARRIVE AT DEPOT, VIE: Cincinnati Express -..---- ---lit 3.10 A. M. Philadelphia txpress.....----- -at 630 A. M. Erie Man- _ . - -.. --at 6.30 A. M. Paoli. Accommodation at 8.20 . A. - M.ltn7l - 340 A 6.25 P. M Farhat: 4 MT Trilin.4------.- ...-.a -14 ...- .9.10 A. M.. Fart Line-`..5..- - ... ..... ----........- ...----at9,49 A. M - Lancaster Train -.....- .... at 12.55 P. M. Erie Expreee.--_-- ...... ---------.....at 12.55 P.M. Southern Expreen-_---, .-- .. --.....at LOOP: M. Lock Maven and 'ltimiraExpreee..- ...at 7.00 P. M. Paciiic Express__...._ ..._..... -.-.-.......... at 4.25 P. M. Harrisburg Accommdation.--------.at 9.50 P. M. For further information, apply to JOHN F. VANLEER, Is., Ticket Agent, 101 Chestntit FRANCIS FUNK _Ticket Agent, 118 Market street. SAMUEL H. -WALLACE, Ticket Agent at the Depot., The Pethisylvinitt Railroad' Company, willnot assume any riak for Baggage, except for wearing apparel, and limit their responsibility to One Hundred - Dollars in value, All Baggage exceeding that amountin value will be at the risk of the owner, unions taken by uncial con-. General fi tract. EDWARD H. WILLI 3 0 1t3_, ntanintendent. Altoona, Pa. P HILADELPHIA, WILMINGTON AND BALTIMORE RAILROAD—TIME TABLE. Com mencing MONDAY, May Idtb,ll3(o. Trains will Mare Depot. corner Broad and Washington armste.mt tows: WAY MAIL TRAIN at 8.30 A. M. (Sunclaya excepft), for Baltimore, stopping at all Regular Stations. Odb necting with Delaware Railroad at-Wilmington for Criefield and Intermediate Stations. EXPRESS TRAIN at 1203 M. (Sundays excepted], for Baltimore and Washington, stopping at Wilmington, Perryville and Havre de Grace. Connecta at Wilming ton with train for New Mello. EXPRESS TRAIN at 400 P M.(Sundays excepted), for Baltimore and Washington,stop i ph ur it on at Chester, Thturlow., Linwood,_Claymont,'Wlhein _, Newport, Stanton Newark, Elkton, North E Charlestown, Perryville, Havre de Greco, -Aberdeen, - Perryman's, Edgewood.lllagnolia, Chase e and Stemmer's Run. InGHT EXPRESS at 11.30_P. M. daily) for Baltimore and Washington. Stoppingat aliester,Vhgriow,_Lin wood, Claymont, Wilmington , Newark,Elkten;North H East, Perryville, avre de. Grace, Perryman'a and Mag. nolia. . Passengers for Fortress Monroe and Norfolk will take the 1200 M. Train. WILMINGTON TRAINS.--Stopping at all Shillong between Philadelphia and Wilmington. Leave PHILADELPHIA at 11.00 A. 81,5.30,5110 and 7.00 P. M. The 0.00 P. M. train connects with Delaware Railroad for Harrington and Intermediate stations. Leave WILMINGTON6.3O and ti.lo A, 31.,1.30, 4.15 and 7.100 P. M. The 8.10 A. M. train will not stop between Chester and Philadelphia. •The 7.00 P. M. train from Wilmington rune daily;tillotherAccomraodation Train/ Sundays excepted: Trains leaving WILMINGTON at 1130 A. M. and 4.18 P. M. will connect at Lamokin Junction with the 7.00 A.M. and 4.30 . trains. for BaltimoruCentral R. B. From BALTIMORE, to PIULADELPHLA.—Leaves Baltimore 7.215 A.M., Way Mail. 9.35 A. 151., Express. 235 P. M. Express.._ F. 25 P.M., Repress. SUNDAY TRAIN FROM BALTIMORE.—Leaves BALTEMOREat 7.2 A P. M. Stopping at Mairnolia,Per , rYman 'a, Aberdeen, Havro.de-Grace,Peeryville,Charles town,North-East, Elkton; Newark, Stanton, New - port, Wilmington, Claymont, Linwood and Cheater. Through tickets to all Point West, South, and South west may be procured at ,the tigket office, tall Chestnut street, under Continental Hotel; where also State Rooms and Bertha in Sleeping Care can be secured during the day. Persons purchasing tickets at this office can have baggage checked at their residence by the Union Trans fer Company. B. F. KENNEY. Sup't. WEST CEEESYEE, AND PHILADEL PHIA BAUROAD.—Winter Arrangement —On and after MONDAY, Oct. 4, 18651,Traina will leaves' Leave Philadelphia, from New Depot Thlity-trist and Chestnut streets, 7.45 A. M., 11.00 A. Id 130 P. M., 4.16 4.40 P. M. &lb R. M., 1130 P.M. Leave* West Chester, from Depot, on East Market street, 6.28 A. M., 8.00 A. M., 7.4 6 A. M., 10.4 b A. M., 1.56 P.M.,,42:0P.M...,i5.ta p.m. Tram leaving West Chester at 8.00 A. M. will stop at B. C. Junction, Lanni, Glen Riddle and Media: leaving Philadelphia at 4.40. P. M. will stop at Media, Glen Riddle, Lena and B. C. Junction- Passengers to or from stations between West Chester and B. C. Junction going Eset,Will take train leaving West Chester at 7.46 A. al, and car will 'be attached to Exprese Train at B. C.Junction; and going West, Passengers for Stations above B: C. Junction will take train leaving Philadel phia at 4.40 P. M., and will change cars at B. C. Junc tion. • The Depot in Philadelphia is reached directly by the Chestnut and Walnut street cars. Those of the Market street line run within one square. The cars of both lines connect with each train upon its arrival. ON BENDAYS.—Leave Philadelphia for West Chester at 8.30 A. M. and .2.00 P. M. At Leave West Cheater for Philadelphia at 7.66 A. M. and 4.00 P. M. Fl' peasengers are allowed to take Wearing Apparel only, as Baggage, and the Company will not in any case be responsible for an amount exceeding one hundreddol- Jars, unless special contract be made for the sam. WILLIAM C. WHEELER. General Superintendent. riff, A DELPHIA. AND ERIE RAIL . ROAD—WINTER TIME TABLE. On and after MONDAY, Nov. 15, 1359, the Trains on the Philsuleipida and Erie Railroad will run as follows from Permaylvaniallailrmul 'Depot, West Philadelphia : WESTWARD. Mail Train leaves Philadelphia...-. ..... ........... 9.35 P. M. 14 64 44 Williamsport 7.40 A. M. " " arrives at Erie ....... 8.20 P. M. Erie Express leaves Philadelphia.- 11.40 A. hi. Williamsport ...-...... ....... . 9.00 P. 11.1. " • " arrives at Eria, 10.00 A. M. Elmira Mail leaves Philadelphia--- 7.50 A. M. IA 46 " Williamsport- 8.00 P. M. " " arrives at Lock Haven ................. 7.20 P. M. EASTWARD. Mail Train leaves Eri . s. 8.40 A. M. 64 Wililstasport 9-15 -P.M. " arrfires at Philadelphia.-- ....... ----- 8.20 A. M. egress leave* Erie....... 4.00 P. M. _ . Williseport- 3.30 A. M arrives a±. Philadelphia 12.45 P. M. 'lleaves Lock Haven 8.00 A. M. " - Williamsrt_ 9.45 A. M. :Ives ..at' Philadelp hi a . 8.50 P. M. press leaves Williamsport 12.25 A.M. . 4 .` • Harrisbur 5.. VA OR. arrives at Philade l phia 0.2 6 A.M. Express ~.- Connects at Corry. Mail east at Corry and Iry ineton. ExpreaS Weateat Irvineton with trains on 011 Greek and Allmeheny Ittvor Railroad. ALFRED L. T,TLE R , General Superintends_ 1869. EST - JEiteßY RAILRO.A:D, FALL ABIe_WINTI3II. ARRANGEIII,I3NT' . • COMMENOING,TMESDAY, SEPT. 215t,1809. . Leave Pkiladelphiso,lifoot of Market ascot (11frgsr Ferry) at , 8J A. M., Mall, for BrMgeton,, Salem, Millville,Vlno. land, Swedoeboro and au Intermedin to statione. _44•LS P. /LI Ittsil,..„ijibrSatte Vineland gnd way eltsonseviowaelassbore. 331 P. M., Passenger; for Bridgeton, tialeM Swedem bora. end 'alt intermeditsinistattons. • • , • • f &MP. 31.. Woodtrlteratntllisseborattecorameelation. - • larigh t r PlfAßifjapis leaves: CartOen, daily, at 'iri wbo aNh e, ta w er , his it second' covered t: „ Weight , , 4 emait).,Wlawaxesienuip. , (lb/gu n ° 4 -v ' , ;40;40 04 rteetbeVY1 1. 1 4PI OUP': 4 1 1 1 da; 0 01 1 1 ,%-v 1; 1 , ; ' • ,44t • : 4 , /*NAT° •• 4 4'f y PLY• I.( ? ' Lsave ‘, P 4`i 00,, , WFAllitintiatAieZgigitc • • , DE=BElt 7:;:i7M - 7714 -7 1 in 11 INIESIELIII 9.--.. TRIPLE SHEET. MEM V ELEitS*.6U!DJ el' 1 1 1.. t 4 ' il , 14 1: 4. 10; l i trie:44KM fkaVJ . , .., : ~ ,•. ........ .. .... , . ~ • ' , .1 IitTIUNOFIZPBX6O. , -liekitethntilidelleilitt. 'NV ,•,.5 , 4 1 ) Y. M.rov Ins; Pottsville, Harrisburg, etc., con-,,. ,nocting teltli adlail,ap4 lio!vibl6.„Btilroad train tbr ,itimblii..kc • • s I ort • iroftdmv ea- pa ~,,,, at 11:171P.it p wartWe into fit train I l'' ,4 ° il ••- - • g.l v 'P Pet iiti l lild. , ... 911 . AWliiiiPtirvilif iir llt P I 44111 4 AD1N0 AND P0TTED741..,48,4101T1A0DA4. 0 .-Leaves Pottsville atilAal ...M.! alfat Reaa/Af i e„ , tfe.f., H.iildilitg_lit all SOW a tlerallikttikes lit z " • • delphia at .10 Ai M. i; '.! - 1 i !, Y,,f ~J , .I . :_j.;„ - ,;',,,, ~ ' L V il ) ' in * Ling at r 0 : )1%; , ... tPe itivil ed 9 P. , -Ting ' le 72 figh il li r l6 l Ca t r i .ll ,4 " • Traitir for 'Phil ' aphis" leitee•ltafrisbtleg. at 830 A . 1 , L N. and P i Trrillit at 9/10.CM.Otritirt itiPhillidelphis " •at 1.00• P . ,Aft i cirneen trains leave aniebtrgat. 243 rP. M ,liiiif intayme at apt. p.-',11.: ribs At *law' i , delphiastixocat .; •f; ; I.k • ; ~-.;;, ; , ,- ~ ;,„, ~ 1,, „.L.Harriablitit Ccommodation levee. fteltding-5it1,15,4„ - • M., MA Barristurg at 4.10 P.M. Centlecting•:at „Haupt , big with "Afternoilti Acconutiodatlen [tenth at 0.521,D. H.; f arriving in • Philadelphia ill 9.25 , P.M. , •• , ,•., I , ' r i :• , • -J. ~- 1 ••• liarketariOnjwilb a •Pastreng_dr • car .ilt lialt./ 0 0 '.• , Dhiladelphia, at 1200 imon for, Pottsville ta , way 'Stations; leaves rat file at 5.40 A. kr.,, twinge lug 'at: Reading with d elatioll train fbr'philadelphill and - 'all liar Stations& r• , •••• • •,. • : , 11. j ; ~ ^V (.... }!, Ai the &bi l e trains run daily; Sundays ivacetitedd Supday tie s Mato Pottttrllle tit BA.m. ' and Phila.; ' ' del phi at 3. P. • leave Philadelphia for ' Reading' at M.; 00 - A. a ki. L teranyffersll44aß V*. r , CHERITbRAA NIL • livAp.-7.raasengers- for . Downingtown' II i nte rne itte i gints lake the 7•210 ',A. li, , 12. w and LW Pi N. teal from PhiNdelphiatrtatmo ing_frrihD at.,30,94 X.; /2,45 001546 P.M. • t riet PIM 0 QAI I .-,Passetorgers for Schwenks- ville tak 7 .' AO and 480 P.M. trains for,Phila- Pdelphia, _ urn i' , ' from • fichtirstkilvllle , at B.G I! A Jl., 12 ' .46llcoorty, tago• line* !for various *that' • • hi' Perklomen Valley ;pined. i with , trains at ,Collogoville and Schwenkrtril10. • COLBBROOKDALE BAlLBOAD.L.Passengers. for'" Ht. Pleasant midintattliadiata 100litake io 4,00 P.M. train fromPldiadt i r returning rem M t. Pleasant. ' at 7.00 and* A . • ." .• mrie T • Auzss;irOm:virrEsstacra 'AND THE WIS Leaves:.%=• ow York at 9.00_4. Mir 489 and • 8.00 P . 1 1., passing Beading a_t 12.43 A ,..61.0.46 and 10.0.5 ,1". M__,. and connects at ' Harrisburg with.' Pennsylvania and Northern Central Baliread ItirpreeeTraltis for Pi ttro , 'burgh, Chicago, Williamsport, Elmira, Baltimore, &O, Betvirning,EzFess Trani loly i erillarrisburg on arrival of Pennsylvania xprese f.rom ttsburgh, it 2.40 a.nd 5.36 •A. 51., 19.25 now , 286 arid 11. P.m_ 4 painting Reading ' at 12.66.. 4.39 and; 7.20 A: 'H. wail kW ap_d 14.40 P. M.,; arriving at New York 4.00 and 10.15 A.M., 1945 noon, and t 1.35 and 10.00 P. kf. Meaning Cara a 4 e•allpant "lege trains through between Mussy City and Mahwah, • without change. , , •,,• , • • , • • • .• Mail train foliew,Tgrk !saw. Harrisburg at 8./e,_ A. Yorkd 155 T. N. strain forllarriaburgleaveS bieW . at 13 No ni. _ • _ • _. • • " '' 15011011,111 LL VALLEY HAILBOAII-Trains leave . .Pottavllie at 6,30 rind 1141 /4.51. and 6.60 P.M.. returning from Tamaauttat 8.35 A , av, arid 1.40 and 4.60 P. X; , _ . SCHUTDRILII AND , SUSQUEHANNA ;RAILROAD • 1 -Trains leave Auburn •at 8.66 A. M. and 3,35: f•i IL. for • Pinegrove aid Harrisburg, And at 12.10 neon for Pine- ' grove, Tretoont and Brookside; ret_nrning from Ilar-' rieburt at 7.30• A. N. 'and 3 . 40 ' P ' 11;• from Brookside. 1 -et 4541 P. If. and from Tremont 117.15 A.M.tita1.6.05 P.M . TICHLETS.-Through first-clam tickets and emigrant tickets to NI theprincipal Rohde in theNortli and West and Canada./ '• ' • • • ' • • ' Excursion Tickets from Philadelphia to, Beading and • Intermediate Stations, good . for 04y only, ' are. sold by. Morning n Accommodation, Market Train, Beading and Pottstown Aecomniodation Trains at reduced rates, • ' Excursion Tickets to Philadelphia,good for day mars are sold at Beading and lutermediatlitsitione by Bead inund•pottstown :AccomModation rahul at ,reduced The following tickets are obtainable only at the Mace of S. Bragg - Tit, Treasurer. No. 227 Sandi sourth street, Philadelphia, or of C. A. mjcous,.Goncild fitiperinten dent, Beading: 4 • • • • - Commutation Tliketazit 25 per cent, dlscotint.between aniepoints des ired , for families and firms. • _ fleas T keta,gooti for 2,ooomlloll,hetween a ll points at $52 60eac for families and firms. • • • Season Tickets, for three, six, nine or twelve months, for holders only, to all points, at reduced rates. . Clergymen reeding oo the Una of the road will be fur nished with esrdel, entitling themselves and - wives to tickets at half fate • Excursion Tickets from Philadelphia to principal sta• tions, good for Saturday, Sunday and Monday, at re. duced fare, to be bad only at Os Ticket °Mee, at Thir teenth and Callowhill streets; • "IR-. • FREIGHT...-Goode of all deeeziptions forwarded to all the above points from the eotnpany 'a New Freight De_pot, Broad and Willow streets. Freight Trains leave Philadelphia dolly at 4.35 A. N., noon, SAO and 715 . P. M. - for.Bmding, Lebanon, Harrisburg, Pottsville, Pert Clinton, and all points be yond. , • Mails close the Philadelphia Post-office tor all places on the road and its branches at 6 A. 31.., and for the prin cipal Stations only at 2.15 P. H. BAOGIAOII. Dungan's Express will collect Baggage for all trains leaving Philadelphia Depot. Orders can be lett at No. 225 South Fourth street, or at the Depot, Thirteenth and Callowhill streete. • fOR NEW YORK.—THE CAMDEN AND AMBOY and PHILADELPRIA AND I i tENTON RAILROAD COMPANY'S LINES, from Philadelphia to New York, and way places, from Wal nut street wharf. Fare. At 6.30 A . 31., via Camden and 'Amber AceoM," 12 26 At BA. M.,via Camden anti • dereer Lai Ex. Mail% Oil At 2.00 P . M., via Camden and Amboy iltress, 100 At 6 P. M. for Amboy and intermediate stations, At 6.30 and 8 A. 31., and 2 P.M., for Freehold: At 2.00 P. M. for Long Branch and ; Polite 011 B. & D. B. B. R. At 8 and 10A.R., 12 31,2,3.30 and 4.30 P. 31.,f0r Trontpn. At 630,8 and 16A.M., 12 31 ,3fi.30,430,6,7 and 11-30P•31", for Bordentown.Florence,Brirlingttm,BeVerly and De lance. At 630 and 10 A .M.,12 M. 3.30,4.30,8,7 and 11.30 P.M. for Edgewater, Riverside„ Riverton, PalirtYnt and With" House, O A .31. and 2 P. M., for Riverton. The • 1130 P. M. Line leaves from foot of Market street by upper ferry. From Kensington Depot: At 7.30. A. 31 230, .330 and 6P. M. for Trenton and Bristol. And at 10.46 A. M. and 6 P. M. for Bristol. At 7.3 D A. M., 2.30 . and 5 P. M. for Morrisville and Tully- At 7.3 and 10.46 A. 21„ 230,5 ander. M. for Schenck's and Eddington. At 733 and 10.46 A. Ef.,2.30,4,5and6 P. M. for Corn wells, Torreedale, Holm esb urg , Tacony, Wlssinoming, Bridesbmg and Frankford and 8.30 P.M. for Holmes burg and intermediate Stations. 1 From West Philadelphia Depot via Connecting Railway At 7,9.30 and 11 A. 31,, 1..2200,4, 6.45, and 12 P. M. New York Expross Line,via Jersey At 11.30 P. M. Emigrant Line.- . . ... Trento At 7,9.30 and 11 A.M .1.20,4,614 and I . 2 — P.M.for At 7, 9.30 and 11 A. 11,4, 5.46 and 12 P. M., for Bristol. At 12 P.31.(N ight)for Morrienrille,Tullytown, Schenck's, Eddington,Cothwells, Torresdale, Holmesburg, We -cony, Witennoming, Bridesbarg and Frankford. The9.3o A. M. and and 12 P. M. Lines run daily. All others, Sundays excepted. For Lines leaving Kensington Depot, take the cars on 'third or Fifth streets, at Chestnut, at half an hour be fore departure. The Cars of Market Street Railway run direct to West Philadelphia Depot Chestnut and Walnut within one square. On Sundays, the Market Street Cars will run to connect with the 9.30 A. M., 6.46 and la P. M. lines BELVIDERE, DELAWARE RAILROAD LINES from Kensington Depot. At 7.30 A. M. for Niagara Falls, Entfalo, Dunkirk,. Elmira, Ithaca , Owego, Rochester, Binghampten, Oswego, Syracuse, Great Bend, Montrose, Wilkesbarre, Scranton, ntrondsburg, Water Gap, Schooley 's Moun tain. &c. At 730 A. M.and 3.30 P.M.for Belvidere,Easton, Lam bertville, Flemington, &c. The 3.30 P. M. Line con nects direct with the train leaving Easton for Manch Chunk A Hen town , Bethlehem, &c. At SI A. M. him West Philadelphia Depot, and 5 P. M. from Kennington Depot,for Lambertville and interme diate Stations. CAMDEN 'AND BURLINGTON CO., AND PEMBER TON AND HIGIITSTOWN RAILROADS, from Mar ket street Ferry Upper Side.) , At 7 and 10 A. 31,1, 2.15,330,6 &DM P.X.,and on Thurs day and Saturday nights at 1130 P. M for Merchants v tlle,Moorestown, Hartford. Maaonvflle,. Hainsport atio Mount Holly. At 7 and 10 A. M, 1, 2-15,3-30 & 5 P. M., for Smithville, Swanevllle.Vincontown,Birmingham and Pemberton. At 10 A. M. for Lewistown, Wrightetown, Coultatown, New Egypt and Hornerstown. At 7A. 111..1 and 3.30 P. AL for Lewistown, Wright/- town, Cookstown, New Egypt, Hornerstown, Cream • Ridge, linlaystown, Sharon and Hightstown. Fifty pomade of Baggage only allowed each Passenger. Passengers are prohibited from taking anything as by; gage but their wearing apparel. All baggage over fl pounds to be paid for extra. The Company t th ir responsibility for baggage to One Dollar per pound, and will not be Gablefor any amount beyond 8100, ex cept by snecial contract. Ticaets sold and Baggage checked direct through Co Boston W orcester, Springfield, Hartford, New Haven Providence, New port, Albany, Troy, Saratoga, Utica, Rome, Syracuse Rochester, Buffalo, Niagara Falls and Suspension Br idg e, An additional Ticket Offlools located at N 0.838 Chest nut street, where ticketa to New York, and all impor tant points North and East, may he procured. Persons purchasing Tickets at this Office, can have their bag gage checked from residences or hotel, to destination,by Union Transfer Baggage Ex_press. Lines from New York for Philadelphia will leave Irma foot of Cortland street at 100 and 4.00 P. 31., via Jersey City and Camden. At. 8.30 and 10 A.. 11., 12.30,5, 6 and P.M.. and at 12 Night, vie Jersey City and Went Nina- del erom Lis. ' No.l, N. Siv er. , at 8.30 A. M. Accommoda tion and 2 P. M. Einreee i l Amboy and Camden. 'Dec. 9 , 1860 • GIATZMEIt, Agent. • PHILADELPHIA CENTRAL, RAILROAD COMPANY. WINTER. ARRANGEMENT. Ou and after MONDAY Novihtt., kW, Trains , will leave as follows, stooping at all' Stationa on Philadel phia, Baltimore Central and Chester Om* Railroads: Leave PHILADELPHIA for PORT DEPOSIT front Depot 'of Pidladelphio,. Wilmington and -Baltimore • Raulroad •Companyr, ,- eornen Broad- end Wathingtou entitle, /4'7.00' A.-Ad.a.ad 430 P, I. ~• A FjpiEht Train, • . with Passenger ear attache:4pm leave Philadelphia for Oxford at 2.30 P, M. Leave PORT - DEPMIT for 5.40 A. sad 2.25 P.M. On Satardayllie 243 train will leave at. 4.80 P. Psamengers ars al/OW(4 to take wearing apparel only as baggage, and the , Uontpany 'will not he rosponsiblir for an amount' 8100011 l lit one hundred dollars, union. *mint tontratt is glade ter the same. movulowoop, • "Prisideitt and General daueriuteudent GERDLA NT9 W.1%1' AND NOJEIRINTOWN RAYDROAD COMPANY.— Parties going ttognqiilladajihirsw York can save Itakins'tgre Sant ataillt? 4.,Arben • titabia atanuir, tit/ it s°, A,'.we and 4.06• r. M,,• to, itbe tarsentiont Slatted • and .; take .tke trains', fos,Now York leaving Wed Pbtladelubia ou the • sans notire as above inemiobl ir ICANDN, Gen. Sno't 22; , •TlO=Nti TRAVELERAtfatIik BEAT 'ir of lberf _____,. x , 1L A' DEL PRIA T _ _-: GigRitANTOWN '' ' 4-itenillikl'inlidliMB / 1 1 " Ond Will ai I B it i oi l :22(1 114 , 4 1869 " : 1 0119 1 rin Tik tii' ' ..Dar or notice: ~.. 1 . FOR GERMANTOWN. 4 ,..,.‘L To Philadelphia-4, 7., , 8, 9.06, 10 ,- 11,11 A. 111. th 1. sx, 4.05, Las, a, tli ille OW, 11 1 .9,26,10 i 11, n P 111 - r", Lve Germantown-so. ,66 rss, ,10,16.66 * IA . fhls r 2, 8,43.30, , OS; 6,_63i 6 6,,61i, r ~,' 8 9 4 , 10,11,1*;..m. , ' , , I 1 . ' ..T e 8.20 down -train, alp and 6% up traina, sill t. not top so the Gernitnto ranch. . . . . •. _ , ,_, UN S PAYS. . __, • ... , . k ' , L4 Atte rniaaialpida-fr.ls . st ~ 2, 4.05 Winne*, 7 and . ' 4l( P v . o 3 G L oHilliThitOWT-8 ' ' .lB A. lli."I i6Si d 934' P. it . i. 1.4 C H ESTNUT HILL HAI. ROAD. .. ,, L ve Plithadelphitvegh 8, le r 12 A , 111.1 - 11, 3561 Miro 930,1 ,Lridill P. M. '''''. tave.CbtiOnlit Mlll-4.l(liniputss, 84,40, and 11461, 4, 1141140 am 4. 0 0 7 . 40 010, m 0dkit0 p, AL a l . phibidaphig4ismihrite. A:x,i 2 and ,i '' 4E. El l , avo Chestnut 11111-7.60 minutes A. M.:11.40,5.40an5t ' "1 . . 26 at u t e 4l4 . e i ;,,,',;pl '''' 6 0tepeiTHil 61044:: ' , ape Pkiladelp ,3. • , , A. 614 ) allet Oh 6 )t , 06,010_,.„,ti.• . 4 •,, ' j ... . . , ~, vo Note , ' 10,6d,"1:66 f 11.50,11 A.X; Hi: 3 ' 4 R i tlifv, ,' , : itili H6 l 4lltrnitlti6iiitai,' at offrieft,'. attli,'/41:141 ;111,01444 o Mittel LOSS, L i The a ,'EI. Trill? Flillattai Matti!! skiff Omar -' - sfhoo)Pltos4Vilt go Ji040cke74 , 0. , F, , i 1 - ,A.,,•,•• . . . ~., rv . r., , e,, .1 , L .ariii"Phtladel 34, . 0 , xi : f i lit.a 2o ••• ms ! r,' 4 , . !, L v'e NOrristoilla : :*. .r.,f,"A". ;.• . I )t " 4'illilA t6 ll l l I 4 iff 1 4 1XWPA . . 244 .# 4 . As 4 , MI ,. • i f Is , .15,1116; 10. ad 1 ~. ~,, ~..i.,.. ..: 20 ~ ..) iA. , h i .. • • lave lilanaranh-6.1 .p i Tif., , ftsm,.s,. , 1 , s t i . ~ SM, , lig t 049 PS Pori, o r snAino, k:1:,..a , 3! : ~ '',, '',,•, , A , tr i Leave PhihidelPhlSL---9 A. ~. .; Mii, 4 anf t 6 F . M. ' Llave Manaynnk i m i44 P)". . 61., , . ' lift ', A 4..), 4, Q. it te 11 . , 1,,, ; ..,4,r , , , L ave. PbOattelp, , A, , .., Aim, .''',' ‘,',' 1 ' ' ' . ' '' i' '-", if i , i, , L ail) ,rloasiuf24l4 ' •litZtt ~ i twit i t, : i „;., "*!"*. .7 A A ,* - gt i4metwofre4,,, , i c4imri__„*.....Amor uottna..-W e 1 , • it ,l l-N ,A. • 't A. ATLA NT 14' 4 ..it t i - ' - '0 :. B '4, N I I G 9 Mt 2. .. (r,d Old shay., ItlONliAg, Ot t 1,, , , i.,,, ,trails wlitleityp'llitily atreot Terry as !a owl, viz • ... • 3141 and Pretrial.. •••-•••••••- B.OOA. ma. , Ail ntic Ace', atatiorr...4 440 0:1i,.,,. Junction Ac ~. ~ cisfis t ? , to Atco and inter- ' 3O r ~ , Inallate stations.... 1;1. 1 RETURNING, I,l 64vVE.AttaafiO• . WO and Freight (~.74,..r..,,,,..,.,......,.......ia.:f 1.4r1 P. M. Atlantic Accomtoodaiion,. ... . ..... .....,........*.. 6.06 A. M. , Jitnotion eccononoilation'fromatco..:.......i4. ei2414 61•- ~ Haddonfield Accommodation ; trains leave '. ... P . M . ,_' Vine Street Ferri- ....RIZ 4 1 .4 and 2.00 z". al. it add i 0nfie1d.............. ..... ... rA. ...._ vi .... 0 1,40. 34 ,' . sp . ant 3 41404 .16 P. M e P.M. -L._.„..._ , I.lkterk '; FREIGHT -LINF.4 ;,: VIA a.,14.01111114 , %1 BNI[WYLVAjfik:StAILIWALiiiot Willterlpiirt , :r: nor uityillcit earnsej a tlate=l3, al i t, ? ...., 1 ,,,,1„ 1 .., t - pri e n bigh VaL fyin i t i l i ta lerfected, trittirday t , _.3lthiCrotoilllP t' 4 „rank ed Ultra nareasea despatch to meronatotmetoxt... stop to the above-named points._ , , G &delivers/pat the .Tbrotig_b Freight Degloti, ,LI, t . , 1 . : ~, mx; or,Frotis and No 10_11, tt 4 ": oreiltP:llL, will. reach Wilkesbamr i M64 Vara i hauoy 4), It}; and: the . other ottattoft An Maori? ti 'waningnuoselbefte A: f. f. lbottonr k _ ,1 isi o r ti lisOf 4 f for mown. g fir 44 4 , ~nr+~w~ AYeer's Hair,Nigor For the Renovation of the Hair.?, ' roil Great Desideratuni of the Age. A dressing which once aweetible, law, and effectual preserOing • the .Faded ew'gray • is soon restored its original color the gkas and - Ands of youth,. ' in. hair Is, thick- 1 eL _Jar _..ecked, , and bald-. , if ness often,, though not always, .eurecV by its use, • Nothing can 'resters = the •' • hair - where the follicles are destroyed,' ''"' or the glands' atrophied' and decayed. But such as remain can be' saved for usefulness ,by this application. Instead of fouling the hair with a pasty sedi- „ merit, it will keep it , clean and vigorous., , Its occasional use will prevent the hair n from turning gray or falling off, and'' consequently prevent baldneSs. • `Free' from those deleterious substances winch 1 ' make some preparations dangerous and injurious to the hair, the -Vigor can • only benefit but not harm it. If wanted merely for a ' HAIR DRESSING, nothing else can be found so desirable. Containing neither oil nor dye, it does not soil white , cambric, and . yet lasts conger on the hair, giving it a rich glossy lustre and a grateful perfume. Prepared by Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co.; PRACTICAL AND ANALYTICALTothiTS, I,OWELL, ILTAISS. ' PRICE, SLOQ. Sold_ty all Druggists everywnere. At wholesale by J. M. & CO., Philadelphia. mh9 to th a cow 17 _ gPALDENTALLENA.— A SUPERIOR article for cleaning the Teetb,deetroying animalcula lob infest them, giving tone to the gums and leaving a feelin of fragrance and perfect cleanliness in the g_ month. It may be need daily, and will be found ter strengthen weak and bleeding gums, while the aroma and detersivenest will recommend it to every one. Be ing composed with the assistance of the Dentist, Phyla. Clang and Microscopist, it is confidently offered as a reliable substitute for the uncertain washes formerly is TO ent Dentists, acquainted with the constituents' of the Dentallina„ advocate its use; it contain', nothing to 'prevent its unrestrained employment. Made emir by. SHINN, Apoliecanr, Broad and Spruce streets.. rally, and D. L. Stackhouse, • Robert C. Davis,. _ Geo. 0. Bower, . Ohas.B4ryere, 8. M. McColin, 8. 0. Bunting • rDhea. Bly„i e . James N. iv Aa n ixr E. Bringt,,nr" AI at, r „ yott & c o , • I - C. P.fair 'a Sous. WYM!'s Bro For sale by Druggists gene Fred. Browne, .Hassard &-Eo., C.ll. Keeny, Isaac H. Bari ' , • 0.11. Needles, T. J. Husband 4, • Ambrose Smith, Edward Parrish, Wm. 0, James L. Bispham, Hughes L Oombe, Hen • A. Bower. COPARTNETA - 4iiiig. LIMITED P.A.RTN Witsifjp . • The enbecribirs hereb4r.give . notice that they have entered into a lirattedpart_nership, tinder the provisions , of the arta of Animal) Y of the Commonwealth of Penn sylvania. in such cases 'quote amid providad,.upon the fol lowing terms : First—The name or , the firm under which sai;l partner ship shall be condrm ' ted is EDWIN.L. MINTZER, JR. Second—The,ger flatlets of the business intended to be transacted: in that of Forel/zit 'and Domestic' Frnit and Produce b r Asiness, said business to be carried on in the city of PI , Jeadelphia. Th trd—Tlv i niune of the general partner is EDWIN L. MINT 2 EIk;Ja.., who resides at No. 261 is_ Third Otree,tAin tine city of Philadelphia: and • the name of the special PrArtper to lIAIZDING WILLIAMS, who resides at No. North Tenth street, In the city of Philadel phia. bowitit—The amount of capital contributed by the said special partner, lIARDING WILLIAMS, to the con, Ipm 1 4 0 VJC of, said firm, is ten thousand dullard ttr, ifloloo/' in 'goods anti nisrchandi4s, duly appraisal: by WILLIAM H. DUNLAP, an appraiser appointed by 'the Court of Common Pleas for the county of Philadelphia, for said purpose, which said appraisement, son she, showing the nature and value thereof, has been ciftlY tiled in the office of the Recorder of Deeds for the cat y and county of Philadelphia. Fifth—Said partnership is to commence on the 9th day of December, 1869. and-is to terminate on the 9th ley of Pet:ember , doh) 38t4 • - , OTICE.—ALL PERSONS . ARE 11'14.5ntinned against inviting any, of the craw ot the Slidell bark B. noirera. Crosby, meter, from Bite tut, England! as no, debte of their contractlor wit; he] ' nab) by either Captain' Cortigneee. PET AS WEIGHT - itt SONS, Tbi Walnut, street. cleittf NOTICE.—ALL„P.EIIOOIiS ti,rebycanticillied agalnat trueting aoy of the er of the Norwchtian ehip Refondo, Blegen notaterifroM brititol.-Eugtand, ay no debts of th4lt contractt *fig ho pant by either Captain..or Consignees.- PET. 107„.. ., WRIGHT 4% BONS „,115 Walnut street. , 4144, C AUTIO N.:-,ALL , PERSONS , AR" El — NJ hereby ,cavtioned dgainst harboring or Arni+ttoF , i ;,,, any of the crew of ..the British brig " . .Estalle A , Otia f ..p. , 'V.:% master, from 'Rotteram; atm) (*btu of their f.4inttan - , ! .'t 4 0 , 41 , ing will be paid. by Captain! or (Yousigneeii. •WORK - 111AN ,, t'o 4 .14. &CO • • COnSignef4ll.' ' : ' ,-- , ,-, . dad W , !fig 4 , ( TICE ALLiiFRSON)3. ' 7 4.'hil ' 1 ,.... 4.3 - k - T ) ... 4 4- 4 . ,''," ' .Lli hereby'. cautioned against .Alrnstin as Y. tif , , tboa , l e , = , ... crow of the A' Q. Bark Ariton, a delta, . ~ ft .-„,,4. IA ~ New York; asilm'Aebts of thoin co*p.mj l ig A. , s il t k , ‘Lt:, by , either(.7.aptain or Conalgneea:' ?NT ' W .t SCRS. )111 Walnut ottreet . ) ', .',•: , .:,,!17, 'e. r , k1,.,; = ' , itt a .4. ,, ,.4 . 11-, (3) 1 L8. -liooo GALS.' WINTER SPEpt-:' I .,';', Olt, 1.200d0..11, W. Sit4ioovii, sao,ao; B. ti - ' v . ..e. ,,, ,i•''.., 0 I, I v or dO,:ittiohnd I Whala 44.14;26 1, , 10181: It 9.114 . ., 14 1,1V - ::ze:i!.-!a' in story and fur *ale 14( 4 4)P1.114.1<, UVSSY.I4. •44',4, 1 . 0. (... al Chestnut an - re?.' * . • • ' . ""' ': . EDWIN L. ALINTZER, Jrc., • General Partner, HARDING WILLIAMS, - Special-Partner;