44 111APILE 1 " A7' 111007H19 --BY -BUB - .(J ANTWITTE. '•The Clown 4.1,,,g," In the Galaxy for filarohj Of Mr. Booth's peiformance of I Hamlet litile eau be said, at least in praise, that has 'not' been wel said already. Probably no more thoughtful and finished a representation of character has been•seen since the playcvas written.. It is mere opinion, perhaps no more than mere Surmise, but I doubt so much was made of the character and of the tragedy,. it the significance and thematic value, of every line and ahnost every _word uttered by the principal parsonages was so carefully sought out and vveighed, when it was first produced under Shakespeare's ()Val eye as is now done under Dlr. Booth's. And as to the mounting of the:piece, the material fond in which it is presented, it is needless to 'say that nothing like it'Was dreamed of then, and safe to say that nothing superior if equal to, it, has since been seen in any theatre. Every scene is a grand and impressive historical picture in which the figures move and speak. It is difficult to' conceive of stage effects more' real in their seething, inore brilliant and imposing, and more in harmony with the sentiment of the tragedy, than those •we have here prodnced. Each one is a study, a composition well balanced and thought; out to the minutest de tails. The great hall in which the second act and most of the third act pais, the grouping and the movement of the personages down to • the most unimportant of them, the, cliurehyard, and the burial of Ophelia, are 'poetic concep tions, pictorial treatments of their subjects, which in spirit, keeping, and composition,' and even in effects of color, few living painters could hope to, rival. They are so complete that they leave nothing to be desired that is attainable 'by thought, research, ample' re sources, and the artist's skill. The most ex acting spectator confesses that his imagination of these scenes has been fully equalled, if not surpassed. And in this fact is to be found one reason of the dramatic ,failtire and esthetic emptiness ef this performance. For the llauzlet of Booth's , Theatre is a splendid blunder.' The blunder is in the purpose. The end in view is attained with a completeness almost without a parallel in the history of the stage ; but tharend is a false one, and all the means by which it is sought, are directly at variance with the spirit of the play, and even the mani fest material purpose of the author. Ilamlet, Is an ideal, romantic drama; a tragedy the events of which can be conceived as possible, if possible at all, only in the rudest times and among a people hardly held together by sifficient cohesive social power to be called a community. Shakespeare, taking a story made to his hand, disregarded absolutely all unity of time, of place, and even all consis tency of action and congruity of manners, that he might present in its hero his ever-living con ception of a musing, wayward, procrastinating, purposeless man, whose imagination ever out runs his action, checked as that is by reflection so quick and penetrative that he seems to see both sides of every questidn, not successively, bat at once. Now this supremely ideal and extravagantly romantic tragedy, a play the conditions of which, - regarded from the point of physical pos sibility, are impossible, Mr. Booth—yielding, as he must needs yield, to the demands of a degraded dramatic taste,or else cease playing— presents, or attempts to present, as if it were a composition in the real school of art, a drama of real, every-day life, in which the stage and the actors are to represent, and can represent, that which has been or might have been, or— like Tom Taylor's cleverly constructed " Mary Warner," which gives Miss Bateman such fine opportunities to move the hearts of her au dience to sympathy with sorrows which might 'be', their own—that which is now daily: • The realiiim of the representation sometimes embodies conceptions of great ma terial grandeur, as in the scene which is played in the gallery over the arches in the great hall, froth which the personages descend the long flights of the grand staircase ; and this realism,. on the other hand, more consistently cares even for the minutest detail of costume and of court etiquette. No obeisance due ,to the heir apparent is omitted; and even when the two recorder-players enter in their flame-colored robes, the Prince of Den mark does not receive an instrument from one of them, but through the hands of a courtier. • But the realism of the representation goes further : it penetrates even Mr. Booth's action and his speech. Of this au instance, exhibiV ing perhaps the most extraordinary combina tion of attitude and elocution ever seen on the stage, appears in the first act. When the ghost disappears, saying, "Hamlet. remember me," Mr. Booth, who has listened kneeling, falls to the ground, representing Hamlet as over whelmed by the tumult of his emotion. He lies still a moment, and then, tossing about as a man might who had been so disturbed and was so exhausted, be begins the following so-' liloqity before he rises, and actually speaks the first - lines, 'Kt' all you host of heaven? 0 earth ! What else? And shall I couple. bell ?" etc., lying flat on his back looking up to the sky, and with his head toward the. audience. Now, as so liloquy . represents, in the only possible way, man's unuttered thoughts and feelings such a delivery of this speech represents what! Would' be very : likely, and almost sure, to • happen in real life, were a man so prostrated by the effect of such a: vision. Before he collected himself sufficiently to rise and become self-possessed . and coherent, he would begin to think thoughts that spoken would be exclamations. But we may be sure that Shakespeare had no such de livery of this soliloquy in mind when he wrote it; for there is so great an incongruity between the realism of the actor's treatment and the ' ideal and romantic conception of the scene as to void the performance of all dignity, and to make it approach as nearly to the ridiculous as is possible in the hands of an artist of Mr. Booth's histrionic power. Briefly, Mr. Booth has attempted what is impossible, and what would not be desirable even if it were possible. To put Hamlet cor rectly upon the stage as to the scenery and costume is beyond the reach of research and the attainment of art; for some parts of it must needs be badly and bluntly incongruous with others. • liamlet,is, from beginning to end, in its ex ternal conditions and in its very structure and spirit, one monstrous anachronism. The play moves and ends in absolute defiance of material coherence and physical possibility. The period of its action is the most indeterminable pro blem in dramatic criticism. It runs through a possible range of nearly a thousand years, and while some passages take us back to the re motest verge of the dark ages, others not less essential bring, us down to the time of Shakespeare himself. What need to trouble ourselves about correct conformity , to the archi tecture, the furniture, and the costume of Den mark before the tenth century, when we must listen not only to the firing of cannon but to the talking about them, and when,the turbu lent close of the tragedy is brought about by a duel with rapiers in which all the,terme of the. modern fencing-school pass between the com-., Wants and the bystanders? In such a play of what value is correctness of costume? What correctness can there be ? The very upper and loWer limbs of the perisonages at 'Booth's 'Theatre are at variance, opeiaAnd palpable; the legs tied up with cress-bands in the style of the Bayeux ta pestry, ,-, , and • their arms holding "rapiers which dklrnot come into use until the . reign of .Elizabeth,. .six hundred. years afierwards. " Hamlet " and "LaerteS," to fight in char acter, should hack at each other with double- edged axes. Andnote's.antent with such anaCht otlisms as those already indicated, Shakespeare giventO the Danes in the dark ages the Frq„diali coroner's inquest with its laws, and the funehl Ceram:Mies 'of the Ro man pathetic Church; although the period of the story on which, the tragedy is founded is four centuries before that at which Christianity was introduced into Denmark.. Finally,the anachronism of this great tragedy is not limited to its material forms and physical conditions, to points of cOstume, of custom, or, even of law. The anachronism most monstrous of all in Hamlet is "HamletThimself,embodying as he does in act and speech the thought; the spirit, the purpose of the tragedy. At any time of the many centuries during which the events of the tragedy may be supposed to have taken, place, and certainly at that chosen, 'and well chosen,by Mr. Booth,such a character as "Ham let" .was impothible, or, irnot•Bath a character; at least a character so revealing itself in Words. The period of the i story which is the frame work of the play, and that indicated by the events in the play itself,is oneof bartiavism and the reign of physical force,onein which Ilata let's" introspective philosophizing was as abso lutely impossihle as " Pol obi owes?. reference tb,' the supremacy of France in the realm of rastion. Andeth the Dane, the soliloquy. "To be or not to be," and the musingain the churchyard, the reflection §on men, indeed'— alma every thought uttered' by >Shakespeare% Prince, .were ea'inconceivable as a discourse on the electric telegraph or a discussion of the laW, of nations. Wise men live'in all: ges'of the iverld's gross, and among all peoples; but speculations in psycholou and introspective dissections of men's hidden motives belong to periods of high intellectual culture, when brute force has long been subjected to reason; and the mind, of man, grown familiar with the world'S 'outside, begins to turn its eye upon itself. In the Iliad, the Nibelungenlied, the Chanson de Roland, and the Norse Sagas—those great and almost contemporary epics'of rude times; like those in which the Hamlet presented to us ,in the old tale and at Booth's Theatre lived—we find no trace • of the speculative habit and power of mind, the representation of which in an extreme and morbid form is ' the chief end and purpose of Shakespeare's tragedy. To attempt the representation of such a play as this in a realistic style is preposterous. It seeks the unknown and tries the impossible; and more tbanall, it is at• war with the very purpose and spirit 'of the work. In Hamlet, costume, scene, all material forms and physical conditions are nothing. Here, more even than in any'other of his plays,Sbakespeare deals with the naked soul of man. The scenery required is only enough to suggest the situations. And indeed, to put Hamlet on the stage as Shake speare wrote it with realistic scenery would be a physical impossibility. In the Hamlet of our stage, even with Mr. Booth's intelligent and reverential restorations, much of the original is omitted. To present the succession of scenes that Shakespeare wrote in the style in which Mr. Booth produces it, would be beyond the ingenuity of the carpenter and the art of the scene painter. As to the cos tume, it may well be that of any period except our own—that of Elizabeth's day, in which we may be sure it was first performed, that of Charles the First's time, or even the bob-wig, broad-flapped velvet coat, and knee-buckles 'in which Garrick played it, or any other that would remove the action from associations with our practical and materialistic time., The only point as to the scenery and costume of this play which is absolute and essential to its proper presentation, is that neither should at tract any attention; a good point as to the scenery and costume of any play that rises above burlesque or spectacle,an important point as to high comedy and tragedy, but most im portant as to Hamlet among all tragedies. CITY BULLETIN. . --,The stated meeting of Councils was held yesterday afternoon. In the Select Branch Mr. Shallcross presented the following: Resolved,. That the counsel of the plaintiffs in the case of the City .of Philadelphia vs. Daniel M. Fox, Mayor, et al. (Board of Trusts bill), in the Supreme Court, be authorized in their discretion to enter an appeal to the Su preme Court, and that in case of such, ap peal .being entered, the Mayor be authorized b and directed to provide bail in error, '&e. Agreed to. • . Mr. Barlow, Chairman of the Special Com mittee on the Contested Election .Case of Coxe vs. Hodgdon, presented a' report' setting forth, after hearing all the evidence, that the contest ants have failed to sustain the.. material aver ments of. their petition, and that Alexander L. llodgdon, the 'sitting member, is entitled to the seat as member of Select Council. from the Eighth Ward. The' report was signed by . the seven members of the Committee. The , re port was accepted and the Committee dis charged::, Mr. Trodgdon, from the Committee on Water, reported a resolution awarding certain contracts : S. Fulton & Co„ for. 4-inch iron pipe, at 3.1-10 cents per: pound ; for 0-inch iron pipe,.at 3 cents per pound; for 3-inch, pipe, at 3 2 , cents per pound, and for cast-iron branches, sleeves,- Fec., -at 4 cents, per pound. D. J.. Siriflith, for iron castings for shop, at 27 1 cents' per pound: George R. Kirk, for brass castings for shop, at 20 cents per pound, and with Thomas •C. Stokes for lead,, at 8'20:100 cents per pound. The resolution was agreed to. The Committee on Water reported a resolu tion authorizing the Chief Engineer to ap point three additional impectors. Agreed to.. Mr. Fareira, from the Committee On Schools, reported back, with a negative recom mendation, the ordinance for the •pirrchase of a lot at Twenty-fourth and Locust streets for school purposes. The report was accepted: • Attention was called to the bill now before the Legislature incorporating the Pennsylvania 'and New. Jersey Water Power Company, and the subject was referred to. - the Committee on , Legislation, with a request to prepare a resolu tion protesting against its passage. Mr. Ilumin presented an ordinance estab lishing the Department of Port Wardens. 'Re ferred to the Committee on Finance. The 'ordinance from Common Council .making an appropriation to the Board of School Controllers for 1810 was taken up, and, after a variety of motions, was consi dered to the item of “music in schools," when Mr. Cramer moved to strike Out the appropria tion of $lO,OOO. Mr. Shoemaker and Mr. McCall favored the ;motion to 'strike out, and Mr. King and Dr. 'Kramerly favored the retention of the item, and the motion to strike out was agreed to ;(in Committee of the Whole) by a standing vote of yeas 12, nays 0. After the bill was reported to the Chamber, ;Mr. Franciscus moved to insert an item of $lO,OOO for music. This was lost; yeas '7, nays :12. The bill then passed finally. Adjourned. In Common Council a number of petitions were received and referred to appropriate com mittees. A communication was received inviting the Chamber to be present at the Temperance cele bration on the 22d instant, at Horticultural Hall. Accepted. A communication was received from the Board of Building Inspectors, setting forth that the amounts paid into the City Treasury since 1800 were as follows Amount paid in .1860, $500; deficiency in 1861 and 1803, paid in 1863, $5B 29 ; deficiency in 1864 and 1805, 'paid in 1806, $740 81; paid in 1867, $1,721 03; in 1668, $2,310 70 ; in 1869, $4,596 04. The communication was laid upon the table. The consideration of the appropriation for public schools was resumed in Committee. of the Whole. A motion of Mr. Stewart to insert au addi- THE DAILY EVENING BULLETIN-PHILADELPHIA, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 18;1870. tiontditem of $O,OOO to tin h-- the new school house at Seventeenth and Christian streets Was not agreed to. Minor amendments" were made, and the Committee rose and the bill patted., As amended, it appropriates $1,195,790 95, increase over last year of $18,815 21. The increase_ .appropriatiog *30,200 to thd, geiver of Taxes was then taken and passed ivithout debate--a decrease from' bit year of $1,400. 1 Thu following bills and resolutions from Se lect Council were'considered: A 'resolution authorizing an appeal to the Supreme Court of the United States - An the;c asp of The City vs. Daniel M. Fox et al. (the (Pity Trust, case). Agreed to. One authorizing the erection of a frame building. liefened to > Nice Commit tee. An ordinance authorizing the Chief En gineer of the Water Works to draw certain wanzuns. Agreed , to. A resolution-. autho rizing the erection at the Schujikill Water Works of five steam boilers. Agreed to. A resolution protestingageinst thepcssage of the ewerage and 'Utilization COnipany bill by the In a debate which followed upon the pro priety of the. resolationi': Mr. ills its stigma tized the rassage of bill by the,Legislature creating a Board for the: erection, of &House of Correction for the city as, the most outrageous act oiler perpetrated in this or any Monarchiaal Government: 'lt ''alloWed the commissioners to fix their own- pqaties ? and enrpoWerk them to levy a special tax,uPon our citizenS; and if the tax levieddebouN,..not be fsatticieni, they' had•the right to require' Councils t,e ,appropri ate such asum as they (the .Commissioners) might deem necessary. • •, - • !, _ _•_ . Mr tr.!) Wagner bawled the 'clerk ritelmgram, amouneing that the bill,hadbe , been ettled . by the Mr. lietzell said' 'that if the chaMlier bad agreed to the Cloud Farm, reported b) the committee, there would have been , "none of this Ming. . The bill under , consideration was ) then agreed to. , The consideration of Select Councils bills and resolution's was resumed. , A resolution authorizing the purchase, of iron pipes and castings for the Water Department. TA. resolution changing the plan of a street in the Twenty-fifth. Ward. Agreed to. A resolution for the laying of water-pipe on Washington lane, in the Twenty-second Ward. Agreed to. Mr. Willitts offered an ordinance appropri ating to the Public Building Commission $150,- 000. Referred to the Finance Committee. Air. Bardsley, Chauman of . the Pittance Committee, presented an ordinance appro priating $235,250 to the Board of Health for 1870. Postponed until next Thursday. Also, an ordinance providing for the employ. ment of an expert to audit the accounts of the various departments. It named A. P. Miche ner as auditor. Recommitted to the Com mittee. Mr. Bardsley presented a resolution request ing the Legislature to pass the following sup plement to the act of Consolidation: SECTION 1. Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the Commonwealth of Pennsylrania in General AsseMbly met, and it is hereby enacted by the authority, of the same, That all power and authority ,under ex isting statutes for the collection of taxes now vested in the Receiver of Taxes for the City of Philadelphia, be and hereby is transfetted to and vested in the Select and Common Coun cils of said city, and that said CouncilS be and hereby are authorized and empowered, to pass such ordinances as they may deem prom to enforce the collection of said taxes, and that the Receiver of Taxes for said city shall hereafter collect all taxes in conformity thereto. , , SEC. 2. That the said CounciLs shall . have full powerto allow, such percentage for' the payment of taxes, or add such penalty for their non-payment as may be fixed by ordinances from time to time during any part of the cur rent year. Sxo. 3. That the said Councils shall have full power to file liens and sell such properties as the taxes remain unpaid upon, at any time after the expiration of six months from the time said taxes have bepome delinquent. Provided, That this act shah not take effect for the collection of any taxes except such as are delinquent prior to the Ist day of January, A. D. 1871. Agreed to. Mr. Oram, Chairman of the Committee on Gas, Works; presented a resolution redqesting, the Finance Committees tio 'report a loan of sl,ooo,ooo.far the extension of the Gas Works. Agreed to. ~ Mr. S. Miller; Cbairrean of ' the Highway Committee,• presented resolutions for the pay ing, grading, &e., of Unity and 'other streets; which were agreed too Mr. Leighton; temporary chairman' of the Survey Committee, presented a: report, setting forth that the draining of the meadoWs in the First and Twenty-sixth Wards, for Which an appropriation of $20,000 has been made, could not be done until careful surveys had been made and plans prepared, and presented a resolution authorizing the. Chief , En g ineer to have such plans and surveys made. Agreed to. Also, ordinance for a' culvert on, - Hamilton . and other. streets. Agreed to. Mr. Stewart offered ordinance appropri-1 sting $6,000 additional for the completion of a new school house at Seventeenth and Christian streets, together with $28,000 previously ap propriated, to be obtained out of a loan here after to be created. Referred to Finance Com mittee. Adjourned. —A brief notice was given yesterday of the arrival of the • barkentine John Williaisson, after a most distressiag, voyage, froni Liver pool. She is schooner -rigged, and of 260 tons,. British measurement. On the,lsth of Novena- , berllast; she left Liverpool , for this city, with a cargo' consigned to Penrose, Maisey de Co. From the very first moment of her departure, a variable stone prevailed. On the sth of De cember she put into llOlyhead bay, for repairs. When she had completed these, a steam tug, , the Rescue, in essaying to tow her to sea, collided with the barkentine, crushing the ; Planks on the starboard side, bending the iron rods of lower rigging, and starting some ;of the seams. On the 30th of :December, a ter rific sea broke over her, completely engulphing her; the gale burst the main sails, and the rush ,p 1 water tore off the bulwarks, setting !everything movable on, deck adrift. On the sth of January, the wirestays to the top-masts (parted, and the sea broke over the unfortunate ;vessel fore and. aft,tearing away more of the bulwarks and starting the timbers. The ship leaked badly, and the men were constantly 'kept at the pumps. On the Bth another sea burst over the vessel. In endeavoring to take ''in sail, the schooner laboring heavily, the can .vas was torn to shreds. On the oth, to the !horror of the men, the rudder was discovered , 'to be gone. In this condition a squall from !the north struck her, careening her over and ;burdening her with water. The men worked at the pumps all day and night. On the 10th, while engaged in' constructing a temporary frudder, a sea broke over the vessel, laying her lover on her bearn. ,ends. Ou the 11th, she pitched so heavily that the' men could hardly }save theinselVes m. .fro going over; the jury 'rudder erected was of no avail. On the 12th a new set of sails were torn to shreds. On the 13th, a steamer was signalled, but refused' to 'come to the , ald of the crew: On the 14th, the vessel was unmanageable. It was evident that the crew were in a position, of great peril. The , sails were again blown 'to rags. The sea was ,on fire with phOsphorus. She was then thirty miles froni the capes.. The steamship Juniata - was signalled, and towed the battered vessel and exhausted crew into port. 'She uow lies , at Race street wharf, a sorry sight. he men` passed from the very jawli of a terrible death. The safety of their, .livei depended Ja.a great, mearre -upon , the -bravery'qof their captaio, James Robertson.. i t ~ , f• ,;" ' ~, , , , —Yesterday', afternbon „Chief,' rngintper,' Downey, 'of the Fire,- Department, submitted his annual report of the operations of ,the' ‘ ,4e . 4, Ointment, from which Ire; make the 'following abstract: There' were during the• year :508i,' alarms of fire and 14 false ; the totalklosses: Wine: $4,212,815 ; , insnrances, ^ $3,0'15,,940;, actual loss, $1,100,915, , There were , the i . fol !Owing number of alert:m.9 , in' the varlou.o dia.!: trlets : Prsl,lso Second; 124 ;Tbird, 17: rourtb,i t o1141,15 , sito,20;Seiprltb, : 43 1 total; 598. There are 87 companies in active service, 47, atnamers, 113 hose carriages. 10: trucks, J,407 feet of ladders, 81,130 , , feet , of, hose r .lll2P Met 0 suction hose and ',7 'l4ttid engines. There Bree 93 active members, and 10,004 contributing Menibers. '-=A colored man named Gilbert Ball, aged 20 years, residing at 930 Auburn street, was stabbed last evening in the left leg during' a quarrel with another colored man,. named §hadrach Davis. Tlie - affair took place at, sevenib and §t; lsary streets, and was caused,. it i*,elleged, by Ball giving information to the police, in regard to a theft said to bare been , lierpetrated by a colored woman. , , The , wound as ebout two Inches long , and half an inch eio.' 'rile injured semi Was conveyed, to the etineylvabiallespitai .by rolleetnari,Varley: nd the accused was arrested and taken to thet. ifth District Station-house liy °dicer O'Brian. The wound was considered to be of aserieus --John Holloway, the late Warden of the Eastern Penitentiary, died on. Wednesday, 9th instant, and was buried last 'Saturday. Ms wife, who had been in delicate• health for ten years past, overcome by the death of her hus band, died on Wednesday morning, 16th in stant. A favorite sister (residing with the Rev. William Holloway, of Paterson, New Jersey), and who was on a visit to her brother, fatigued by. over-exertion in watching over bim, sickened, and died with pneumonia yester day (Thursday) morning, at .3 o'clock. NEW JERSEY MATTERS. SPECIAL MPFTINO'.—Last evening a special meeting of Camden :City Council was held for the purpose of appointing a committee of two from each Ward to act in conjunction with a similar committee which had already been ap pointed by the citizens at a meeting held on the 10th inst. The object of this joint com mittee .is to investigate the complaints go numerously made in reference. to the ,bad . quality, high rates and scanty supply of gas as furnished to consumers. The Chair appointed on the committee . the following named gentlemen: North Ward—Messrs. Cole and Calhoun; Middle Ward, Messrs. Iszard and Watson South Ward, Messrs. McDowell and H. B. Wilson: This committee were au thorized to make' the necessary investigations and report the result of their labors to the next meeting of Council. After adopting the Treasurer's report, Council adjourned. The Committee , subsequently met to deliberate what course of policy shall be, pursued.. It is thought that if the present Gas Company will not sell their works at a reasonable price, legis lative authority will be gauped to the city to build new work's. TILE REVIVALS.—Camden has not enjoyed such a religious awakening as it is now ex periencing for many years. The revivals in the various churches exceed the, most sanguine expectations of those who have them in charge, and the deep feelings and interest pervade all classes of the community. Meetings are held nightly and scores profess to have experienced a change of heart. The work is going on. vigorously, especially among the young folks, and the membership of each church is being largely increased. , SHOOTING ACCIDIINT.—WhiIe at a pigeon shooting match at Ellisburg, about seven miles from Camden, on Wednesday, a man named Charles Jones was accidentally killed by the discharge of his own gun. As too many are in . the habit of doing, he stood leaning on the gun, when, by some mishap, it was discharvd, the contents taking effect in his face and head, shattering them in a fearful manner. lie Lived only a few minutes afterwanisr. • A JVBILEE.---The The , colored population of Camdedare making extensive preparations to have a grand Jubilee, in honor of the indorse mentof the Fifteenth Amendment to the Con. ititution, giving them the right to vote. The Jubilee will take place when the President makes official announcement of the fact. Sev eral preliminary meetings haie been held at the Macidona Church relative tuthe matter. The Mountain Partridge is on the wing,again. PUBTAC M 1 Tl' general public tem perance meeting has been arranged bythe temperance societies of Camden; for-the'even ing of the 224 inst., in the First Baptist Church. Addresses.are to be made on the Subject by Captain Charters, of Brooklyn, ll,' Y., and Dr. B. F. Chatten,. of, Philadelphia. The teMperance movement Is decidedly on the advance in Camden county. , ANITIVITSAIIY.—The Rev. D. Bartine has been 'engaged by . a. Committee Of gentle- Men to deliver an oration - upon the it Life and Character of General George Washington," at. the Court Thmse, in Camden, on Monday even ing, the 21st inst. The prOceeds.of the oration are to' he in aid of the Camden Home for Friendless Children. • ', . ATTEMPT ' To Iton.----Burglars are still About. A night or two since an attempt was triade to force an entrance into the - store of Sliwabble, in South Camden, but the bur glars were frightened off before obtaining any booty. , FINGERS Cirr OFF.—A serious accident oc curred at the door, sash' and blind manufactory Of Messrs. Dou,ghten & Coles, at Kaighn's point, yesterday aftertuki, by "•which` one of the worlonep,named Samuel . Pefticks,had three bf his ftgers cut off by a circular saw. NEW PUBLICATIONS TT NDAY SVHOOLS DESIRING THE liest Pliblicationeosend to J. 17. GABRIGDES & ~ 00 at the El. B. Bniporhun, No. 60li Arch Bt., Phila. , lUST PUBLISHED-THE , FIRST, NUM ity ber of the HIIITORY OF DELAWARE, by Fla `vitts-Viocent. To be completed in 20 numbers, at 30 rents each. JOHN CAMPBELL, Publisher,74o 5an .0153 street • fon 4t* rorH. --- ILOISOP HY OF DIABRIAGE.---A new course of Lectures, as delivered at the New k Idtmenin of Anatomy; embracing the subjects; lliOvv telive and What to Live for; Youth, Maturity and Old Age; Manhood generally reviewed' the Clause of In. toigestion, Flatulence and Nervous Diseases accounted r; , Marriage Philosophically Considered dm., &o. opket volumee containing these Lectures will be for worded poet paid, on receipt of 2.6 cents by addressing *r.. A. Leary, Jr., Boutheastoornor of Fifth and Wal • tit ~ttreets , streets, Philadelphia. . WAS, : ~~ - - TRITE HANDSOME RESIDENCE, S. 1 E. corner of Eighth and Sprnce streets, is open to receive boarders.. Suites oi rooms, with private table_,if leeired:• ia22 INISTRUCTIMM. .eD vao HORSEMANSHIP. —THE? HILAT DELPILIA lIIDXNG SCHOOL ,No. 3338 113Ar ut met, 15 open dolly for ,Ladies and' Itlentlernen, Xt hi' the largest, best lighted and heated establishment in thp, city. ~The horses. Are 'thorough y broken for the most timid. 41). Afternoon Class 'for Young Indies at tefidtng , school, 38onday , WednesdaY_And 3Fr OW, Anil au .Evening Close for Gentlemen. H 07806 t orotighly trained for the Aaddle . Horses taken , to Ilivery. Handy genie carriages to hire. Storage for 14ageons and Sleighs. , , , • SETH C52410:31E, ' ' ion:later'. , VOIMIG.N teo.,.BrEs. tr sina Oranges and I,e'mona, Turkey rigs, in kegs, drums and boxes ; Austrian , PrtmeliSs .in 'togs and fancy boxes ; Arabian Dates, now crop' Turkey Pr_uned in puska and , Sandy boxes ; .11.alsins—Laforts. liosdless &o.; Fig Paste.. Audi:lnstal Pasta tNapies. and Bordeaux Walnuts,Par Shell Almonds, tarsals by J. lI.DUBSIETI k pe tilouth Delftware avenue. ' 4111131318141E1 1 4110 . . •,,, ikMERMAN ACJA.DIIMY Or MUSIC.-- ~ ~• moist FRIDAY/ EVENING, 'Fob. 18, act night butone of the . _ i PAREPA.EOI3A 111NOLTHI1 OPERA §/IAIOIB. '' lOnly ;erformacce of You %robes's' , ' , =r 4 , 1 DEB inalsouutz'. me. PAREPA nos*, MlBB RERREX; CASTLE, AM PRELL, amutqui, py , sopoA NI eum.Altioau E iTo-Morrow, iipi 0111 thecaat 4 Mitlttec,' , , ~.= • ' 4 , 4.11T14A. • ' • - 8111 E PA R ) r A4l BA . . Mrs, E. Seiinhi, Messrs. Mile, Onnipbell,^Regran, Hall, &c. 10 -morrow Nisfht—EAREWELII. PEREORMANOE. TUE miviniA lip (IEAPIOA I R(.I. ~ ~T , - 4 1 A' 4 CANT 1,..E REYOIIBI. I ,•= = , ' ; ',, Pests sold it the Academy only. Rib. ,1:1:1. A Y Ait'p' 1311:4 EVI T, •• • • , SNOT . WED/qn IllitYi, ltE II WARY, .2110., IVO. l - It .. hIEWIN A VititallA NT VILABA.OTEIV . gommencinll4glVir, I l l y ttgoo l forr Comedy of 3/: OR, filial anti:NG an , TH I E BIIETTA4B. r. Jeremiah Beetle (first time)......... KB. CRAIG ; rs. Arabella Beetle MRS. THAYER C t withAioatteogth,of the ,comPati.V._ - ~. ~...e Mr; ..bi , Me lileatallul; viatellOclueityA , fropktO DIe.,LICATE GROUND ; OR, PARIS IN 1793. ••Pauline MRS. JOHN DREW. i rucluding witit Illn. Craig's greatest effort Mut most, c :Mem bttiesoutiP ` IiONJU4H..t. . ,-., 0 f I, 4 ;iii ii i aid.° ' Toe . 1 I • """" I '' . .i ' ' 41 1 111 L JOS .{....114A..bi447...1.. ...di «i:/... EPII Sultana MRS. THAYER from the evening a 'beautiful Selection of Music from the Orchestra, conducted by Ches. Dodsworth. :Boit RictßlMw:Opemt , . '. ~. T , 11 17 ‘ 1,1 /e1j!,;!....t , LA I LTRA KrE ' 'EF ' '' . Tliins aii. '. CHESTNUT-STREET THEATRE. i CROWDED EVERY hVENING ii BENE.FIT4O.-NIGIITGE. 1 v3lRi FRANK MA . 40 . ,. , ,; 1 ' Who appears in his catebrated character of BADGER, IC' 11(4"1". 46P WlTY#4largff 'PT . 9 . 1,11e, ' . 1 _., _ , -- -0 , -.• --- 14 Mr who will eppes r t o ireahia t 7tene. • araNARP,HAANI9 II , !,,. fR the liraroVN - DREADS OYDELUSION, tied ROYER,' • is the btautiful Comedy et WILD OATS . Setntdaylflatiee ' LADY 06 L.TONS Menclap : LAtr. Red litra. HARRYVATKINF.t. NA RS. JOON D t EW'S ARCH STREET Lll THEATRIC. Bettina 7N: o'clock. COMPLIMENTARY BENEFIT TO M FRIDAY;RADY TO•NIGIIT Veto. IS. IVO, EYERYBODYIS FRIEND. 3IAJOR DE 1300 TO A.E: BRADY Aided by the Full prop"Y. Previous to the 00 ietiv j tbe Arce LEND 3FE FIVE SIIILLINGS. LITTLE lIIILY MATINEE TQ monnow. s A TUNDAY NIGHT-- BENEFIT Or 11EMPLE. rplili GREAT CHAMPION' CIII,CUS, TENTE AND CALIOWITTLL STREETS. Mrs. cues. AvARNEn. EVERY.EVENING atB o'clock. WEDNESDAY' AND sA,TuRpAY AFTERNOONS, 2%_o'clock. NEW FACES. NEW FACES. NEW FACES. The supercmitient awl transcetolent . E.tuostrienne Mlle. }MIME HENRIETTA, the Goddess of the Circle, appears with 'the Gloat Star Troupe at Ma c entvrtnitiment this week. Admission 25 cents ; Children under 10 years, 15 cents ; Reserved chitirs, 50 cents each. Parties desiring Benefits, apply at Ticket Office. Am ATEUR DRAWING' ROOM, Seventeenth Street, shove Cheatnnt, THEATRICAL ENTERTALNXENT • 111 P TES' • TALYA DRAIIIRTIO' ASSOCIATION ON FRIDAY EVENING. Feb. Id, MO, Doora open at 74 o'clock,' Curtain rises at 8 o'clock. Tickets at Coatinentel Book Stand, nt Could's. 423 Chestnut. and at the Ulailadelphia University, Ninth street, below Loci-t. fell-3t • 1.) P REZ & BENEDIO Titi OPERA HOUSE. SEVENTH Street, below Arch. . THIS EVENING, DUPREZ BENEDICT'S • tilirantle Minstrels Introduce First Time—Burlesque Opera, Peper•Rosy-Ob.. Engagement 111211 Firet-ADitranoe of the Immense Fa vorite Comedian, fdi• 'H pe UGHEY DOUGHERTY. Admbiaton, 50 rte. .Paronet, 75 eta. Gallery, 25 chi. TILE PILGRIM, CONCERT HALL. - • OPENS THURSDAY NIGHT. Mntinee Wedrowlay an Satuolsy,,At 339 P. Al. PAINTINGS UNEQUALED, SONGS FIRST-CLASS, LECTURE ELOQUENT, TRANSITION If INAL. This grand tuoral rind moritorious eutertainment to qtteterl to Philadelphia, hoping to St: soatiOuNl in 2t)o tAtkitittons. feiri 4t TEMPLE OF WONDERS—ASSEMBLY BUILDINGS. SIGNOR BLITE, ASSISTED BY .111 IS SON THEODORE. , Eveiy evening at 7n. 'Matinees "on Wednesday and Battled ay at 3: All the Modern and Ancient Mytteries. F OXIB AMERICAN THEATRE, • WALNUT street, above EranTri. Itrarlell/31)611CCOSS of the great artiAteg, ' tifiKBIDAN and MACK. rucsT wEEK. OF J, S. BUDWORTH.the Great Dutch Comedian In tits Songs and Dances. NEW ELEVENTH STREET OPERA /30178 Z IHW FAMILY BEBOJIT. CARNCROSS Ir DIXENS MINSTRELS, 13.4.38 Y '.EVIN MG. . '' .J. 1/..OA.ICIRMOSEI, Manager. WENTZ AND HASIShER'S MATINEES, 17 Musks' Fund all, 11105:70, Svery SATURDAY AFTERNOON. ak o'dock. 0c1941 y . Y. 0.11 FINB .A.RTS • OHTN A. o 6Vi t i /12 . tv e at * 4 bOTO Tl;Uta. Open from Benjamin West's Orosi Picture of Q.H Is ROB on exhibHg ßlßT 1111"°"1° PLNPrfEs. PHILADELPHIA AND READING RAILBOADOOPANY, Office, No. Yr/ South M M Th:Street. • - - PHILA nyirnza. Dec. 22, 1'360..'. DIVIDER) NOTlCE.—The'Transfer Books or the Company will be closed on PRI DAY; thei Slat Dist., arid reopened on TUESDAY, January n t , A dividend of FIVE PER CENT. has been declared on the Preferred and Cotnnien Stock, clear of • National,' and State taxes, payable in OABILon and after January 17,18T0, to the holders thereof as they shall gaud romi. - tered on the booke of the Company on the 31st instant., All payable at this Mike. Ail orders for divldend must be witnessed andstamped. 4 10 2 2' GOO. . 8. BRADFORD, Treasurer. U' OFFICE OF THE.PRESTON COAL AND. IMPORTATION COMPANY, PHILA. D ' N0.,526 WALNUT STREET. Fannvany At a Meeting of the Hoard of Direct/me` held .this day: a Dividend• of EiNVENTY4IYE CENTS; a. share Wag declared, payable the let of March. • The transfer books 1,011 be closed on the 24th proximo. fel7l2t§ JOHN WIEHTLING Treainrer. .0.1.?F11.;.E (i_F", THE PRESTON try COAL AND ImPoliTATioN, COMPANY, PHILADELPHIA, NO. 320 WALNUT STREET.' • Thu awrual.meetiug of the Stockholders will be held Mt WEDNESDAY, March 2, at 12 clock. M., at the Once of 'the Company. . • L At the same meeting *ill !be held an election • for PireCtors to serve during the ensuing year, • . „ • J - 0111 , ,111, WIESTIJINP. fell t mh2§ • ' • Secretary. OFFICE OF THE ,CANNQN IRON rD ). COMPANY. • •Pitrtainervitia., Feb. 17.1870. Notice tj hereby given that an .intitallment Of TEN CENTS per ehare, on each and every skate of the capitol Mock of the Cannon'lron Company, bee been called in, Payable on or before the first dtiy of March, , lB7o, at the Office 9f the Treaeuter, No. 324, Walnut greet, Phila ileiphia„' Bv'ordefof the Directors. ' ' fol7tmhl§. ' 11. A MOOPES, Treasurer.- 'OFFICE OF THE . DELAWARE COAL COMPANY.' • '', • • • • • PIIILAUELPIIIA,' February 44,,1670: Tho annual meet intr. of the Stockholders of Lille Own riny, and an election for Dlrcetorsovill be holpt 316 Walnut street, on WEDNESDAY,- the lath 'day of •March next, at U o'clock, A. M. felt 27t" J. R. WHITE, President. NESQUEHONING VALLEY RAIL , ROAD COMPANY', OF.PICIE,P-V SOUTH SE 'CONE STREET. PHILADELPHIA. 'Feb. 19th, WO. NOTICE TO STOCKHOLDERS. • i The mu-annual paYmcot of ilterest on the cordial !stock of this conipany: tinder the ease the LEUIGII (COAL ANDNAVIGATION CO PANE, at the rate of .s • TEN PER CENT. • ‘, • • , Per Annum: or two and 'a:half dollttro;por ' ttutro,! dear of tuxes, will be made- at We, ,oftico on , and after VUESDAY,Itte.rvb let 1870, . , felt-At/NA AO' W. B. WITITNBY; Irentarer. [O. ' DIVIDE .p. NOTIC• • , WEST'JERSEY RAILROAD"COMPANY. - - TREASURER '8 °P.m*.onm Dim, Feb. 1b,1870. The Board of Directory have this day.deciaredtfroM the earnings of the past montti, semi - annual dividend Hof FIVE PER CENT. on the capital:stock , of the Cora-; --,na - able to the stock- T9 3 l l le — r: l o e f ar thi ' e f t a ker the°l Comgapy, , in .t he , City of Camden, on anctafter SATURDAY,: x The Stock Transfer Books will bo closed from the date hereof nntilthe 19th fruit, ~; ) - • J:ttunDiNS, felt 44§ 'Treasurer West Jersey It. It.: TEMPERANCE' U- Clergy of all danrenfnatidne ate 'respectfully ,ro • ;notice of C li e " :l7 r , Wiir t gr e ir 2 1 0 n , gr a e n g it ti trg, ;notice of the'great Temperance gathering at Eforticitl-' aural Hall on the afternoon and evening of the 13E tTWZNTY•OOND,,to 011,societies,, 9 inches, Eic"uols 494. Y " R ie PF?j n:vile : 4 i.igplinf , rsTmoNs. folor4o, ,.1 r •putirtnali,otopmrnittep... '0 VICE OF RONEY BROOK:COAL"' ti-eY COMPANY, 209 WALNUT BTSEF,'III • • '; • , ; • PuttAng, °?". o'ilVnual 'Blotting' of i3tOctrol;terleitkfilui,r7rerliqt7i Or) Directors of t,40 c%noonr te, bolo at tho 'Coto- :I""'ag°l2cn ' on IVEtiNgSDAt 1.2.3 d , ..11Vono o'clock 1. 0 4 1)1. iti t ,lo# ; BY, "rrl fo9 12 1618 22 • ' #.•rt rY : (nod sweet Fish Oil low-priced, for Dale by EDW D. ROWLEY, 16 South Trent street. , . 11. ARCH STREET RESIDENCE ilk__ 1 'iii:::cii, 8 Att. ' 1 Bro. pitalw Ancu STREET.. Illegant /#l4ikBt.ink ;lesidenC6; Ulna . 4101'im mad anieurd tobrl'Vbey'cOrnmodl6llo; filitlishe 'Willi every odern convenience, and built In k very euperior lad botintiel manner. Lot 26 feet front by 150 feet deep t tiP 1111 0 110.614 ; 01 1biCh 0, c 11 : 11 91 4 , 4 a bill d.i40l b 491114. !table end' ouch Noise. J. N. aulutuay a soars. • 73.1 WALNUT Attest. sea Unk i t TO EXCHANGE a Alargu aluildlni Lot ,s7arZo for a lapaufactur tabllshment or small houses, valued at i $): 7 , 500 . and . 1:5 .000 In cash will bo mithangedlor improvedClty' or OUR r - iroperty. Address s. WM. N. NoIiNIGHT & 241 pug!, )3TASET, PtIIbADA. -.... ...---,-....--..- -- ...... - - ... . To VV . FSt SPRUCE STREET—FOR BAL ir —Tjig . diatlysioto, ;#O/41aLti , o; Noel 2102 lben 4 .• e rCet.' 22 reef front,_oyjou met deep to a street, _ .." . AC., i tiegmEyetertiONB, isn W a l ettbstreet: .1 t. ,-. t ..", ,0+ 114' OREWI'XUT STItEEIV4fORISAbBLA:A"; .44 40 elsga n t modern Itesidence i , gal ,fset trent•Prltilha, tett ry convenience, boilt and turnientd ,toroughoac I rn suparlar outanet. and lotlttS hnitdeep (through $0.11a0i.417. , som street situate west of Eighteenth street. J. a, , OUBIIdEi A fiUNK, 733 Walnut street. inFOR SALop----,, „lilt/WANT BROAD street reshlodite.e4 aka akar& Mane Mansion at 8. W, corner Broad end Thompson streets, corner next above Girard avenue, being 27 feet trent on Broad, and ill depth 160 fret srp.i(jeriii,le A t ifeettLehrefn e lttlet, with lamps vd.roof,largo hack hpil (nip, tintsb be the. en/ nest Meitner with black irtuns t,frestoed stied 1160'6'6/d couyeaternce t wilt lb* *tad 'On , accatamodsting!tesdi A r ply to D. T. PRATT. 40it 8. Yourthot, fett'lnlf '; , MI ,ls,E W ..1..18 OWN STON 1 HOUNENi N S, 1 BELOWL2OO4_, tOtO'SPNIIeg 81' NET_" vre tt 8A E; ' EINIHRED .WITII WALNUT 1 , TIM MOST U-' U P FIN I VEN R IE II Pvu N E E . It it i . 4 ._l l / . flZ • jsit H El lC ..!fi V ..9l/3 - i f nti l li N lß STIIeNT. if t .P.PLY, .02.T . WEEN 2 ANN '4 Iij'UNOCA., . feli-lrn¢ iti6GE -* ' - ki ' '--- t- 1 -:till " RMAN'rOWN.---F RBA". . andsome Stone Uottarte, situated Northwest tor.'- ner-EastWalnnt lane and Morton street. 'Every city convenience and n perfect order. ()monde wed/ elisded by full groan tram. J. M. GUllblEY ' & SUNS' rat- , ivgintit 'street. • . • s. , grt Eltll,l Als; TO WIS.—FOR SA LE- r -T WO w.• ." new pointed Stow. Cottagen, with every city, con yeuience. Built in best mauler. an+ cnnYenietit to Church Latin Station, n Gennuutawn 'Rant price• en,ooo eacb. J. M. GUMMEY k BONS, Th-rWolnue ttrect. • , -FOR SALE—HANDSOM E MODERN Residence, with Mansard roof, three !dory double buck bnildinge, every convenience. rind lotitts feet doe, to n street—suunte on Seventeenth street, below Spruce, J. Id. GUNN-EX A ti02i8,733 Wsluut *treat,. , • FOR RILE DWELLING - 1421. Ma North Thirteenth street; every convenienCe, and la good order, • Superior dwelling, IW North Twelfth Arent, oa egg terms. ee,LOO. Three-story brick, 235 North Twelfth street, good two-story dwelling In the rear. 88000., Three-story brick, 414 Powell Street, In F ood order. 82.750. Store and dwelling, No. 340 Bout), Sixth street: 03,0011: Frame house, WO Third street, South Camden. isair Spruce, elver. 15344.1. • . 510 Queen street, two-story brick good yard. Building Lotion Paseyank road, aud a good Lot it ailing dun. - FOBERi . GSA IMEN tiONt 337 Pine street. Ult SALE-TEIE IiANDBO3 fon r• story Seel , ' en ce. with three•etOry dont)10 back uildinge.and Intrinq every modern convenience and Mit proyement, aittutte fro. , Xiti gyros* street. Lot 25 root front by 1115 feet deep to a 20 feet wide Rtotet. J. 31. 011312,1E1' Jr BONS. r 33 Walnut greet. Tenr.F.o R - SA L. 4.-310L)FAR TITRE Story Dclo) Dwelling, 519 8. Ninth at. Every clln. ence, infin roan the premteee. myd-thAMIM -,- . dirl WEST F r iILLADELPiIIA pitribilitr MI: TIES For Sale. WH L A. 'WEIS, fe32ft" 3336 (II es in at street. OR SALE-TEN ACRES OF -7 01[01 F ou'Oray 'ft /Perry Road and Schuylkill rkrer I/BARGES RHOADS. No. 38 Santh Susanth street fell Gt . Fort BALE Olt T(571.7tt 0 Very Doefral.fe SlOre Proporry,No.,ll4 North Nfnth et ' 30 by 71s Sent.. .Posarrston soon. , DIOKBON DROP.. 320 Watnnt strert telt w e tf TO RENT. FOR RENT---THE LARGE ROOM, IV fell by 44 feet. on the first door of the late Poet OfSea building, on DOCK, !street, with or without steam pourer lighted and eJdrvenient ter a manufactory or large ealeerooin. Also, RODMs in Third and Fourth Stories Nue. Ms ■rut le7 Routh THIRD Street. Inquire at the office of the Executor and Trustees of the Estate of Dr. DA - vip JAYNE, No. 613 CBE . STN pT Street, second story• fo9 f met§ CRZEKE & McCOLtUM, 11.FITY4 ESTArtrAI AGENTS. otHte,.lickßon street, opimrlie Mangan street, Gape I.dmad, N. J. Real Estioto bought. sad sold. Pert. den irons of reuttos cottages 4uslag the *aeon will apply pt giddress as abom itopectPally rarer to ass. A :Bab IC= Henn BtUr k i )francla Idellvala, Augustus bierino, ,Ntux PUN W Juvenal. F 66- CHUBC:II ALLEY., NO. '417,F OUR,- Etory brick Storehonie, vvit y h eit i lla i r eo tit i r g v 3 it , by . fell 6t' s North Tenth street. • A Furnished House; modern conyenlencra twenty-ttro foot front ; lot,lllo by 30 feet ; ride yard. ten Sett; throoltdry bock buthiingli; Ave taiunten'lrallf.froat Broarl beefaut, . To rent for slx monthe or e Ye4r...• Atldtere" ILBERT," 111.1.1..E.T1N Office. fell ff ; /111,T1 TO RENT, BTOB,Z, No. 519 COMMETtcretieet, '.lB by 1110 PAET. - Apply to W. ♦. KNIGHT. del& th-tf 611 Commerce etreet fIA HOTEL. PROPERTY- ~ P OR. RENT.— Ea. The Ashland House—Nos. 707 and 709 Arch at reet— will be to leaxe after April 1, my. Apply to, A. W. RAND, 124 North Sixth 'street. ' w f ft TO RENT—NEST , Cottaces-5 tals ottne; convenient and In goon/ order; 816 to ' , W:L.. CROWELL, Ell It: Thirty,- pixth street. ja22 lru" FOR RENT—CIiEST.NUT .STREET. ;r "rTho desirable 'property northeast corner ';of leal.nut and Eleventh etreeta ; will he Improved. IN ARE ET STEEET—VaIUabIe note - property, 40 feet'. : front. southvAist corner of Math Street. Four•atory Store, 617 MARKET street._ • VINE STREET—LoriteDevelling, suitable for hoard- ' .ipg-houao. situate N. E. - korner Eighteenth and Vigo. GUM JOEY & 80148,733 Walnut street.. 1 FOR RENT-;-A ItANDSOMBFtrit: niehed Hnuso on Manhelm ettcet, Gormantown„ opposite Judge 13rowstmososithin th roe minutes' . walk. of Wayne : lityfpn;r All improvements in house; stable, cOach-house, garden with: all kind Pf fruit; a fine lawn front of house. A 'first-class .meuntry placo. '•Applir o COPPITCH JORDAN, 433 Walnut street. 1 111178' , ii,ENT ON A LEASE FOR ONE ~ms. or two years.—Tbe desirable country placo In Germantown, furnished or unfurnished. too Minutes' walk of Duy's Lane station ; 2n acres cq grouod ; all improvements ; stable, ice•bense. ctcc.; fine garden and a W irara lnut iety street Of fruit. Apply to OOPPUCH. & JORDAN, 613 TO LET—HOUSE 706 SOUTH SEVEN: miiTEENTS street. Portable heater; rabae; bath; ‘hot wateri goo-,all the tnedern coprealleaces: Eight room!. A .1y on be .routiaoe. notitf D CATI H. Y. 6(6I)MittACH'S CLASSICAL, SCIENTIFIC AND comnizninEd - • • AoevErgy, ,ASSEIVIILY EVILDINGSyNo.'IOB S. TENTH Street.' n Thorough prepaiatlon for Business or College. Special attention giVen tePrautical Mathematics, Sur- Viv 4 Rug4lenfthg. dm. A first-alas Trirnary,Pepartinent." , •Circular. , at Mr, WurhUrtOn'S,No.'4B.lptiostout strunp. 4 09 Doe • At#HAVAL. , eIARL GiERTNERIS -.NATIONAL COX vv SEUVATORY 011 ; liftiSlO, Southeast corner TENTH and WALZUDT Anvils can,begin ) heir studies at any period of Ake Item And , at proport calla rates., . . Shia Conservator Lai ho eohnectiontygn any emu sr , ,institution v,. fett.m w s 1 0.714. P. .R0xfkrN104,476 142 .1t olio. kJ Singing. PjrlV)lo .logoonss and Red. en.o IS S. Thirstientti annum GOVERNMENT MALE.. : IN 0 T I C E.—IN'T.ERRAL ' It p V E grltr ii .... SALE.—The'rindottignadV lll sell at public Baby on . TlluitspAY, Vnbrtuul.•24ll4,lB7o, • itt 11 o'clock A. 'l4 ~"at 218 North &coi', knot, tho fctliowina. dk A iii n „ anuarattie and appnitettannesi_vin. : ,-; , 7 -. 1 1)n . ste nt h,lengine and litolleri . IllislpTubs, •Plimps, - ••revs, e. , I— I. ),,„,,i , ; , ~. The anal articles are. soined anti (Para lied mop for,, en.psyntpnt of taiidif, .7t., duo 'United 'Spited Internal lt evenuo. I •i ' , , •', •" • • ' }. I .: . '• . ;‘ . 3 I JANES. N. ..KB r $13,, ~ . r 'fil4 ihts • • De .utY Oellocto • First 1) tea; . . PERSONAL OTIOE 1$ Gt.v,E - N, the laderaigned haa mode application far thn "Iowa!, Uoytificate Ico. 4; dated July 73, 1858,,fpe *O4 01micaln. tho." Capital Stock of tilif'Bloolnaburir Iron' Company of -Philadelphia') leaned to the: roadop. ! 8113111 d. ANNA L. tlhtdinu Care Will. E. S. Baker, 122 Race street. fel tit tilt' r/lILADELPIIIA, jun. 31,1870.. CrIT s . s - inv i ttrtrw -- Rut tonILAMELPHIA E~EIYIN6i BULLETIN r*,'T Wl4ll.l.Y L lPRffiqy VAT. lit' c. c. • kJ k' ).* Answer% to Correspondento. "N. C. 11."—You_kage„strangely enough, •verlooked that 'hi Q. 6 *muld allow Kto Q 2, .as a reply. Always glad to hear from you. he e. h as te ‘ t ' ll Z eiggg ß dat ° l47 S: : 3l ` tte'r°llt4 x. As the niktVerf aeOnia to have excited sane discussion," we will state here that the ImOriaittlitieliidlitieiebliatii 4444 Astaiii at theoool,9rArliqhfialflss ,itvp„ t i e per, in laver df-lfr).Miethebal. ' ' . During the past week Mr. Jacob Bison piiiesi *kit to . Itew Yoile, and `gt the Cafe Europa,,playeq,a ,witia. Mr. Mason, ~, which be won. It was mush regretted that he untes 191 1 . 1 ! 4 441 9 1 . 1 54 9 1, T Second Correspondence game between latkibtodLliewlYosit„. Wu. (Pn‘n4n.m.,osti.c.). t I;tt.. 3 ,lKnw Zona.) I.PtoK4 PtoK4 2.11,Ktt0133 taKtto-B3 3.PtoQ4 4. Htz 4cx ict p. 11 to 4 .1 B 4 , fa toP tifit Preinatnreinoiissent , tbe Qdtel.) . Caatlea . , • 1.1 to , 7. P to Ifi Q to B -11;PleitaB• PrP O. Kt x . KVIo K 2 10. B toll 3 Qtak3 flf Q x K P, then Black ;must imp, an the ad mirable analysis of the . .philadelphia Vonamit 16$ bids Ohown.) • 11. , Kt to K 4 LI to 5 12. Nth, Kt , 44 to Q Kt 3 13. tt to It 5 P to Kt 3 14,4 to 13, 6 .111xICP (utimptilsory, in order to prevent Q to Kt 7,) •115. EtaH QtoK'l33 - AO: Kt $0 B 3 PtoQ 13 , 17, IS to K Kt, 5 Qto K 3 K$ x B P x Kt 19..QK1 Beq It to B sqi , 24. 11 to 134 Q, to 13 4 21.13 x t x B 22.1 P toI3 4 " ((1 to Kt 7 also wins ; bnt Mr. Montgomery and his colleagues wish to win indstb/e.) 22 PtoK S (For the exhaustive critique on the Correa pondentie games, eee the brochure istued by' the Philadelphia Committee.) , 23. lito (113 BtoK3 24. 13xP Q to Q It 4 25. Q to R 4 (el) (But for one variation, by which the mouse might have escaped, P to B 5 would have been played.) K to Q 2 26. KFtto Q sq (ch) KtoK sq ,27. K to 1$ sq Pto( 133 '2B.RxP Ittogsq Q R to B R x R (ch) 30. Rx It P It 4 ' 31. Qtoß6 13 to Bsq lif B x It I', then mate in four, moves.) x Q Kt P, vfinning the game; for, ii B IS, then PtoQKt 4, and if B to' Q 2, . White mates in eight moves. Problem No. - 710. BY MR. O. BLUMENTHAL. BLACK r 0. ,% j `/ , ;„, a;;: , • ; • v , 74 7 ,- , " 74 j/., f 44 '% #ip A v&al •AA , 2 / 2 / WiP2; v/," , „.;i, , , • ,:,-, pl,/) 9 // , / /;///4 4 . 1 4 White to play and mate in three moved Esid.bazne note No. 5. , For the prior mover, see Game No. 2416 Is LACK •:// Fro A / 444. %/,- 1267 /,,; • v, ~0 ;17 , V 77/ - , F;fa r 4 F 4 vi7m 7 4 '4 /AA '44, • • A • p -4 4 rcm%3 • WAA Whitt to play and mate in seventeen moves Ea End.tiame Mate No. 6. (F. BrlonAltpsoal.) (AMATEUR,) I.PtoK4 PtoK4 2. IClitto.ll 3, KKttoß3 3. Ftet4 4 ' • KtxP 4. Kt to B 3 Kt x ICt 5.KtPxKt KPxP 6.PxP ' QtoK2(ch) 7. BtoK3 Q to Kt 5 (eh) Bto 2 -,Q to Kt 3 9, 11'to Q 3 lit° IC 2 10. Castles tialtles 11.PtoQB4 P to Q B 4 12. FttoQ6 Itta 13 3', .16.1;'to.Q1t 4, • Bx ,14. Qxll , Qto ICE 3 1 15111t0133 Qto(llt3 /11: Q,to eq. , Pto KB. 3' 17. K Kt to K P (0 Q 3 N r , A OVA * ll , / a / rid 0, IL/ /A . r/4„ J. 4 v 12 PA atr y .44t e eAI tvoirn. White to play and l mate in ten moves.. entss P TL AD EL 'pm A. • Game. No. 2416. -80W,1,911 Mr, C. F. Buell awl another player , (Granibit clu'NOrq.) Wri: (rin. liven.) Dn. (AtsArEull.) .1. to , K 4 Rtolf 4 .2.PtoQ4 ,PxP P to Q P x P 4. Bto B 4 px P (?) 5..4R11xP KKtt,ol33 ¢.PtoK Ii to Kt I; (oh) 7.1Ttt0".83 QtoK2' 1. Kt to R 2 Kt to .K. ti • 9. Culla litzKt , *--- 717:711:1'.1K‘ 11. B x B t r ::4 l I to Al' °Lt to )3 " ' • ,tl3; P 1,1 7' : 1 7 e 4 Q 17: - It to t 2 ft q " ' ' Irto 18. P to B P to Q R 3 19. R toB 3 tot i lKt4 .1t1t.26' . rc!(t, al t itSfs p..PAE crAgx*' (Bix cktodlno longer iar s ave the game,•)' 3i •r), :' , lrsKßotr • 74: 13 14)*Blil to 245. Rto R 7 , ' 34 '' • ',.,K ' It Q 2 26. Rx P (ch) • Ktoß sq 27.x_,Kt B x B • ';2114;}!, :to QM r Itt . tokir WPite //VS'S Aiiiseyent , ceTtrslP:Vcs., ( 19ce,.414() taitie,44a4,7fo;... ' CHESB , IN-BROOKLYN. , • P/At No. 24i7, l'''lkreitiet3l aV errizte, - Barpett trat Delmar COUPtlit against IttAherfLißrenzinger, Marache and RiC9. r thuli r Lepei .( 13 REPrzxmiz# 46 (194•IMaxrcliz1*& Co I.PtoR4 k 2,4K , KtUB'3'. AttliVtorll , 3';'' •-• all to Kt6' ' 11 ; Pto QR 3, PAO Q 84, 'l ' (Too tarne—better two ' sonazes.) to SA iCt ro ' V K to J.: Btb - xitoßT • E. Q to K 2 Cahtlee 9. Castes (Q li) • Pto K I.O.PtoKR4 (AFX,4tr,Y, but BetrireiN an,gazzed-move.) . " r fk .11. RP il' KS to at 5 12. R to It 38t0K2 13. P td (414 ' x , r4cb). 14. KtOKt mg , Q to 113 - Nl6, Kt x B x Kt 6. Q to B 4(441)' B 2 7.44lttoßeq Kttoß3 18.1'.x P, P 19. R tti.R•tt. • Q to Kt 3 20.Pt083 BtoK3 21. Q to 44 84 0 ,9 2 22. Q to l3 2 R lig Qtoß4 Kttolt` 24,1) , 1* Q, Kt 3 Q "AST • 26: 'Q 3113-P Q JO Q 7 26. Qx Q ' Rx Q 2"/. P tdl:l4 Bto Kt 5 , • . RtoKtl: 29:1' to'D ti Q, tO Q 7 ' :ATto,K6 KttO R 3. ' 31. Pto K 7 : 2 , 32. P to B 6 - Kt to Kt sq! 33.,P to.K lito 8 , 4 , •34.. 1 Rt0R8 Kt x•KP ;15. P x Kt And White resigned the game : C)11 0 ,M IN GI c iRMAITY. • ifJaand 7(0. 2418. Weeers, Keller and Vbihom consult _against }tr. Louis Paulsen. , (Scotch Gambit.) iirn. (Mk. L., PAULOES4 ' "EL. (ALLIZS.) 1.1 4 t4.1(4 Pto,K4 2.1C - Kttoß3 Cllittoß3 3. P to 444 PIE P 4 .KtaPt0,,13 4 5.8t0K3 Kt x ltt (?) 6.'13,A~ Et • . .8 B 7. (jitit - ` Qto 13 3 Lo to, Q K.t. 3 9. Qxqf ItPx(,l 10.- KS to B P to 4-13 3 11.8t084' ' • -Ptot,l Kt 4 12. II to (4 Kt 3 KKttoK2 13. P to II , Cantles 14. P tO nt 4 K to R sq 15. (lastie* (Q k to K B 4 (?) ' (This and the next move' ice a quietus to he Keller patty.), 'P x `P' (en pas) R x P(?) 17. K It to K sq, winning. • ' Game Ito;2410.. 13etween.pr. Max Lange._autl Mr. Minckwitz. r flit'slines-G(rinbit.) W. (Dn. M. LANGE.). B. (ME. litacEwtaz.) 1. P.to K 4 P to K 4 , 2. Pio Kl 3 4 - Px P 0- 3. It to It 4 Q to R 5 (eh) 4. K to 13 sq P. to Q 3 b. P to Q 4 • .1( Kt to B 6. K Kt to B 3 Q to R 3 7. Kt to B 3 IttoKts 8. Pto K 5 P P (?) (A taros.) 0, 9. B x P (ch) K x B 10. Kt x P (ch) K to Kt sq 11. Kt ,• . Kta Kt. 12.. Q Kt " KS to It 3 13. 13 x P Qto 3 • 14: Kt to K 4 , • ' • 44-168 2 • 15. Pto 3 It to K 16.1tt0 K sq • toK:2 • 37.Pt0.KR4 PtoKR. 4 18. Q to B 3 ' K to R 2 19.. Kt to Kt 5 (ch) B a Kt 20. P B " x R (eh) 2L K x B. J to K sq (ch) 22. K to B 2 .P,to K Kt 3 2IPtoKKt4 ' IttiKßsq 24. K to Kt 3 P to R 5 (ch)! 25.1 P(ch) KtoKt 2 26. QtoK4 .R, to•K sq 27. Qtoß sq . QtoKt sq • 28.Rt0R6 . IttoK2„ 29. P'to Q 5 Kt to K 4. 30. Q to K 4 t,g to K sq 31. Bx Kt (ch) • It x B 32. It x P (ch) Q x It 33. Q-alt (eh); and wins. • LI) MUER. `MALE ; BRO ER & CO., 0500 South Strotet. 1870• 'AWL ifaV.'`. 1870 CHOWN EIRLNOTIQN MICHIGAN CORK PINT NOR PATTNENB. I.B7O."I'puRWE ANI! AN HEIVVEKIB7O. LaBOX EMOOII. 1870 ' 1870. VIRGINIA FLOORING. DELAWA.R.R FLOORING' ABU FLOORING. WALNUT FLOORING. 1870.'artid s ieirAtiVE B lB7o. HAIL FLANK. RAIL PLANK. WALNUT "!49'"P134ND1870 10 4 pLernr. _ • ~A LDT HOARDS AND LANS. . 'WALNUT' DO_A_RDS. WALNUT TLANK, Ak3BOIIIND • Q BUIL D ERB B, , 80 8• UNDERTAKE#BI 1870 BNDIB7O. _ _ *B ffif SW; Alit l3 : 2lßE WAT4I , 7III' AND /".1 E. 187fi SEASONED POPLAR. 1 QvYfi I,r • Or4SONS(34ERRY. .1.47 Iv. WillT3T, OAR r u tti c t i tiiD gpASAS. tOpyil * CAROLINA SCANTLING. iv • CAROLINA I t ' I Q (O s NORWAY aoernixo. O.ED ABS. .111titfra • = 1870. OE 1870 D i AR EIRINOLEO. ST_P_ 1 EBB 8111NOLRB, Leir.Oß ABRORTMENT. FOR SALE LOW. 1870. 1870 • RWITH STRVIIN 'tinder Cover, ALWAYS DRY. Walnut; White Pine, 'fellow Rine.' Roklani. Manlack shingles, An.. Orlon nn hand at brerattil. wAl.'soll GILLINGII.A.M. 924 RtehrdOnd Strtrt,'Elghteentis Ward. mh29-IY4 ArEI,LONV ' PINE for oatWo s of emery desoriptlonl3atved Lumber exe cuted at net not—suallity subject told sosotton Apply to 'Yf . .11.110WIAICT .16 South Wbsrv4l4s... • , 6 TUTS TURPENTINE' AND R 56 561706 Pidritir 4'ttriantinsl292 lOarela gap Et ' 159 barrels NODS Eno_tn, latut , per , g "Piotegr.” 1/02 ph) by = ing EV, ELOW4II22et "'LEGAL NOT - ICM jNTat; o . ll:ol . §' ldetiliM, po ---- ` 3 f,frA Pitt all i t o ilty% bti . ttitikdolfibta—XlittA ?NI n L ecedeed. ho Awl itoeitp lot eiftrt , ,lXandtt a <d l ytift_ f Itntlf adjust the .1160.0914 F 0.1108 EV, Atireiois!nstria,pt lit 6 A fey S. , dbceaseq„, ittil 14 repert Magri. Lofton of the baletre int the Witold Hof the zusoiaittiptt, will meet the startle* intereated for the par re of Itie APplatraivat, pit THURSDAY, e..ruary 2 4th, t B7p, at o clock, P. M., at the elk° of JOHN A. CLAII , ER13.010. 439 W dent rrt t. 243 story buck room, No. 13, I retem , city of Phila delphia. felt In w f collet§ I N COURT OF' CO 141 - 0 N PLEAS A for the City , and Conon+ of Philadelphia:—ln the matter of the Aemiglled Rotate of JOHN, W, PROCTOR{ feedbag sta JOHN W. PROCTOR, et 00.—The Auditor appointtli by the Court to audit. eat:let and ad act the first and second accounts of HENRY C. MOORE, As • soignee for the benefit of creditor's bf JOHN W. PROC TOR, trading ap JOHN W-o-PROCIOIL A. CO., and,to ht lOctt dharlbutkin bill& balance in tholisulde'or theAc cecina nt, will meet the partietintemted, fen tha , pari pose cif his appointment / • **Ai:AIDA Y, February 2.5ih, 1170, at 4 o'clock I:M.' tit hIA ~ e ilioo; No: Walitut rotes, in,,tha pity. of Pidladialatile..r 'Jell sum f dt6 SIMON 0 1 14221 Auditor. "f IP ttE 014 . 1 1W 4 r - ,COURM - THE Aity Ind :County iron Vadat° 'Of rr AS' WOODWARD deceased:L.l7W Auditor *pi poloteda the Court t0....1t, 'settle slid adjust the nxid loft Alec:rot tif ,I 3 TON J yOD.WAnD, 0. E %OOP ADM: SEPH J. ARTIN and JO NPR JAMS ' fteentore et' e bet will god otestchient THOMAS WOODWARD, de' rested, and to reporrtlitiftititttioli of the balance In' tho headset the ticeduntorntAwilltihtot tbepartins interestwii for the purpose of his appointuient, , on TUESDAY. February 21k1, A. D. HAP, at - 334 o'clock, P. M., at hie SerreXO , NS Walnut ptrettOn the rit! or Phibidelphia. fell fto w 6tl THOMAS A. ROWER. Atiditer, , THR COURT OF COMMON PLEAS 1 fer the City and Clitinty Philadelphie.—ELlZA. C. SWARTZ, by her next frienit, Au • vs. OLIVER R. 601 1 4,L1A LK lieptember T.,1866 1 . , No. O. In Ilkivorro. Tor/3,01114. rule os trep granted on you in the above calleito *bow tatteti, if any you have, why a divorcee{ vincula migrivonit should not be de creed *bora*, RetornableBATURIAAT, Februz iSth. 119,041f1h o'clock A. 74, Paraottal setake bavi h rafted on iireroot of,foor abgebo.. LASE A R(1 1441tfrat* / Attorney* for LEballaat.' 311 E COURT FOR .1 the City, andConnty' of Pidladelphia.—Estate of ALLEM 3: EUBBS,.dec'd. r T h e Auditor appointed by the Mag i to audit. Bottle; and adjust,tha account, of CAFEA THE RUBES; Admintstrattlx of the Estate of ALLE J. BIINES, deesasedi and te report the dis , tribution of the bedsit ce in the hands of the accountant. Will sheet the penny interested. for the purpose of his appohoment,(ut SATURDAY. February ' 19 , A.D. PM. at 12 o'clock E. at his office, Ep. 12d Bout' street, in the .tity ef Fbibtdelphia. regrr f § J,OHN - 0. ITEDUEVFMt, Auditor. 131A1' r 6F. SAMIIEL JACKSON, M. D.i ALI devessed.—Letters Testasnentary upon the *III of HA M DEL JACKSON, late of the eitS of Philadelphia, formerly of Northmnberland, M. D., deceased', having been granted to the undersigfied;all persons indebted to his estate are requested to make pennant, and those having claim s against the same to present them to • 'BARD'S A. JAeKEION, Bole Executor. , fes et§ No, Mt Pine street, ,Ph lied el phis/. tikiTATE OF. VECAKLES SCHELL, reand.—Lettrn Testamentary upon the above estate tinving been wanted to the undersigned. all per eons indebted to sabi estatearn requested to make pay ment, and those hit yin w claims against the somata pre sent themtto ELIZABETH SCHELL, Executrix. MI Vine street, or to her Attorney, THOMAS H. SPEAK.; MAN. 26 North Seventh street. fel2 a 6t' ESTATE OF 'LEWIS WALTON, 'DE ceased.—Letterstestamentary basing boen granted to the nndemigned, fill persons haying claims against the ebtate are requested to present them, and those ()Wing to make payment to . JOHN WUNPERGIOR, Executor'. 1145 Bunton street. ROBERT INt}RA SL 416 Walnut street. Or his Attoimeyi jaliS s 6t• ------ rISTATEOF.TORN GIVEN, DECEASED. j.:l Letters Testamentary upon the estate of JOllll GIVEN. deceased. having.been granted to the embscrt ber, all pawns indebted to said estate are requested to make payment, aid those 'having • claims to present them, Without delay, to wmpAni RUTHERFORD, Executor. , . Er konth Seventh street, or to his Attorney, CLIFFORD P. MACCALLA,. 703 elip!om Ptrmt jals to VtE TN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS i FOR THE CITY AND COUNTY OF PHILA DELPHIA. • •• Notice la hereby given. that application has been made to the said Court for au Order on the Reconier of Feeds to enter sat letaction of reranl on an Indent ore of Mortgage given by JOHN HALL and HIABELLA. his wife, to JOSEPH SWIFT MERCHANT, to secure the payment of the sum of one hundred and fifty pounds, lawful money , of Pennsylvania. dated September -21, 1776, and recorded at Philadelphia in Mortgage Eloolc X, No. ".0, page 14. &c., cm premises situate in the late Die trict of Southwark, city of Philadelphia, containing in breadth on South (late Cedarlstreet sixty-six feet, and iu length or depth forty-lour feet or thereabouts, bathe came more or less. boundesion the east by other ground of the-said John Hall. mattes west brThird street, on the north by South street, aforesaid, and on the month by ground of Alexander Alexander, which is aserred is. have been long _since paid off and discharged, and said.ladcuture of hiortgago.to have been lost, mislaid, nr destroyed. and thnt Pahl mortgagor died without en tering satisfaction thereof of record, and or , ying for a decree for enteriug such satisfactlOli by the Recorder -of Deeds Whereupon the legal representatives of the deceased mortgagor, or any or all persons claiming Till aer nom- are t'eu ipred- to appear in said Court , the first MONPAY of March, A. D 11+70, and answer said peti tion, otherwise the prayer thereof will be granted. ' PETER LYLE. Sheriff. (i. ru - Rvzs. for Petithevr. fel tti H.§ 11% '1 HE (ARC UIT • COURT OF Tlll 1 rEll ED STATFS FOR - THE EASTERN DIA TRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA,II4 THE THIRD CIR CUIT. THOMAS C. BRAINERD, a citizen of tne'State of New york, YU. JOSETII HEATLET DULLES, JR.. • eit , imi of the State of Pennayl, ants. and the LEHIGH ROLLING MILL. a Corporation chartered by the said b eat e. Ito. 44. October be'. ions. Ma Tim Fleeter appomted in the above ease to take the ac count of the sal& f . HEATLEY DULLE'S, as Araignee of the LEHIGH 'ROLLING MILL. gad Of tho clairnii of the Creditors of the said Corporation, and report the proper distribntion of the balance In the handa of the Aseranee among the said creditors, will hold n meeting for the purpnaea of his appointment. on TUESDAY the first day of March, A.D. at 33:1 o'clock 'P. ll'.. at hie Lace.. No. 271 South Fifth street (second story) in the City of Philadelphia. • JOSEPH A. CLAY, Muter. FEBRUARY 160870.1 • fell th In .5t,S 1N THE ORPHANS' COURT FOR THE City and County of Phibidelphin.--Estate of WIL LIAM BROWN, deceased.—The Auditors appointed by the Court to audit, settle and admit the aecotint of ISA AC NORRIS, Surviving Executor of WILLIAM BROWN, deceased, and to report distribution of the bal ance in the hands of the accountant. will'. meet the parties interested, for the purpose of their appointment, on MONDAY, the 21st day of February, A. D. 1870. at 4 o'clock, P.M., at No. 271 South Fifth street, In the oity of Philadelphia. WILIJAM BA.K . E felOth s tnst§ JOSEPH A. CLAY Auditors. - IN THE ORPHANS' COURT FOR THE .1 City and County of Philadelphia.—Estite of LOUISA STEVENS. deed The Angkor appointed by the Court to audit sett .— le and adjust the first and final ac e( ant of ELIJAH THOMAS, Executor of .LOUISA SI EVENS, deceased, and to report distribution of the balance in the hands of the accountant, will meet the mo ties interested,. for the janrpose of Iris appointment, on MONDAY, February :Nth. 1870, at 4 o'clock P. M., er hie office, No. 113 South Fifth street, in the City of Philadelphia. fell th s W 5t5 ' WM. L. DENNIS. Auditor. .1N THE ORPHANS' COURT. FOR THE City and County of Philadelphla.—Estate of STEPHEN D. CHILDS —The Auditor appointed by the Court to Audit.settle and adjnat the acconnt of RACHEL A. CITILI/BiA dirdniifrittrix of . STE PH E N bD9, deceased, and to report distribution of the balance in the hands of the accountant, win meet the parties interested for the purposes of his appointment, on WED NESDAY, February 23d, ISIO, at 4 o'clock, at his office, No. 319 Walnut street, in the city of Philadelphia. GEORGE EMLEN, Auditor. felo-th,s,tu-st" WINES - A - ND Lill ORS MISSO/Jltl WINES. The steady and Increasing demand for those Wines, the growth of a titate peculiarly adapted in soil, climate, &c., has induced the einhscrlher to give , them special at. tentlon. ;It be well 'ascertained that, the and well ripened gralies of that Particular' section impart to the WlllO favor,ti,pqfnet unit body equal to the best foreign wines, and of a character peculiarly its o wn—tho unani mous opinion of (experiences) conhoissetts of this and neighboring cities. The undersigned, has Accepted the Agency of ,the cele-. "OAK RILL. VINEYARDS,' of the township of Rt. Louis; arid being in direct and constantsommunlcation. la' prapared to furnish to con• Burners the product of them" Vineyard'', which can be relied upon for strict purity,ta addition to other (Wattle already mentioned. PERFUNERY lEirray „ - • Florida Water 9 The Most celebrated and most, delightful of all per. fumes, for use on the hand kerchief, at the toilet, and in the bath, fer sale by, all Druggist 4no Perfumers. .f. „ w4IDE - 00TT01 4 1.-17670.4.1;FAT10QTT0147 — 1N IL.) , store and tor sale , by 000uRAM, SUBSEML4 illClliestautstreet. X Al) IS 0 iiAtt•ROADi l- 1 ORRLAT slLlCTrunli Line from "PhdadelPhil to 1664Vtateribr'Of P 4 PEIFIIV Is i , the 'l3ohur 011141thil4BOMUweb*R‘ 18114 and to Valleys, t Nardi. (6A:el the Canadloo • Whiter Arrahgetnimrdf ef Vote, imicas, isw: teeMnit the tkoinpa6Pa Dir., ~,Al l, ,,alti,th and Callowhill streate, Philadelphia, ST tile ww"."". hilgiiNlNG Ationmittnizitthic-At v . A'P i ii " ' Ur Reading 'and all Intermediate Stations an t , Alle tOMM iir in V e nrieli at 6•36 P. ',l l l 6'lUktfM/81111 i, cliM at O. .M. . ' ' IMMO' DEP Piiiiii.-.61,0116d: , M. tpi i Mill 01.14" pliallon 4 Harriabom PottrrUlei Villa Grove: PAIR/ LAO) 7 1 / I tmasport, Elmira, Rochaater;• i a somffa 0, Wilkeabarre, Pittston ark b bomb rit, Haretitewb, , -- , 1 , h , f ) : The 7.30 A. H. train conneete at Rtsdhig,wltli tkelliliat Pemnsylvaniaßallread tmine for A llontown.rtf and he /PAPA. M. tintin'OOturattaMtal the , Lebtiohow i t In A as %o r w tik A dlt t : tal OrteA v wit244% . 7 . ) 1 4 lery and ii , 6 riehAtrill 1 a rev/brit i t 1116 ~_1 31 14,, illiattispartd pit , Otmtubentlargi Phi& TCMl4hkiN t 1 MIPREdi-Betivi4i Road ipimi ' I 4 - &A ° 8 , s .Id. fo Reading, Pot Iles Harriabarki At.; MU quit with *Ohm and I.l6lmmhis Iktilroad :trains for Ila ht. Ac. • , , , swrowN ACOOMMODATIO2I. , -,Pitiei Potti- Weer it 11,461V.M‘jatopping at the Intertdediata stations; %ea In ,PhiMit la M 9,10 A,. M. Batumi)* team adalnbiti at ii . .r-rirea in jPottatowniat 41 4 6 ,P.M. ADM° A OTTSVILLN sow aimvoA- Tl .-Leavilli Potts's , lb) 616.40 At M.', and Reeding' at 112 1 4:4111toPPitut et all tray Itatlose; arrtrmilt Phtlas tie et 10A d• M ', •' - ' ing„ lesiVos'itilladelptia tit' ',4s P. Pi.. `iititeiti: 1°1141411). 8" t 11 441 .4641d ie 5t Pg r an trglt r B l 4l i ra i lmr lativlilleTnt9.41 n 1 leaps wi ItChs P l itil2t l oht at .00 P. at, -Af atin train/limed uarriabtir t 2.115 P..., _.ltind POMO( leaf 2AI P. l lif,t Orrivflig hi/a• 44damism amp; • lf i I , , , ~, ' , i i i , - ~ s i , ~ 1 Harplabn Accommodation Imre', lug a 1 Et ;„;and n aburg at 4.10 P.M.,' Cotm ng ' - tnegtith Afternoon VLlMotainodatiOn gaunt at 41M1 ..' .) shit; In PhilidelPhia 0026 Pal. ,p ~f t, i . , 10 ( 53 Philadelphia' Market train, with a Pawnor ,cor Aultpdatettne at 12.30ucton for youstmc, ti au Way iltatiotni; leaves POthrrilleat.6,4o A. , •U. vemheothlg at Reading with accommodaticm train for Philadelphisaad all Way Statioas , Millie tibovistrairis run vaunt/ 6 7a mintfited. , ` lienday train' hpava,Pottav a std,A. M., Willa. deliptda at 3.16 P. M. tleaie eIPAIS for g at esp A . M. retuning trent ing , 61446 P: ~ . • CHICBTERI VALLEY RAILMOAD.-Passengers for 4 1 1 Downingtown and intormedlate Poimteialm,thek • : l •3o A) g..i2.3dand 400P.M, trtina.,,,finlitrhdbde)Pbitri7 _g min Doirtingtown a 0.00 A. ..111.46 and . 'P. PERMlOMENRAlLROADAhmsenagratertiettwanks. villa take 7.10 A .M., 1240 and 4,00 P.M. trains for Phila. delphia, returning from Schwenkaville at 5ka4.10.., MSS noon, 4.16 P.M. Stage linen for various points ln Peritkomen Valley cope eat. with imam at 0011agatillti andißchwenksyllia. • , , , COLEBROOKDAE Illitt , BOAD,Peasemgere tor Mt. Plohaant and intermediate points take the 7.30 A. M. and 4.00 P.M. trains from PhiladtAphis; returning from Iflt,_,Ptsant at 7.00 and 1125 41,„ al, from __ - _ - E YORK _XXYIiESti 808 PlTTBanar THE life-Leered New York at 9.030 A. H. and a P. 11., passing Reading at 1.46 and 10/8 P, M, and cownrcut at HerrisbUrg witA PflirYarkia awl northers Lentralßallroid Express Trains r Pitts- Margit. Chicago, Williamsport, Elmira , EMU ore, Ake. Beterning,lttn_rees Tratti leaves Etarrsabtwg on hrtiva) allan Doi vatda Helmets% from Pittsburgh, at 6.36 A. St, 12-M noon, mooing Reading at 7.23 A. H. and 7A; P. ~ arriving at New York at 12.05 noon and 69.3 P. M. Bleepitig Cars accompany these trams through between Jens.. City and Pittil ureb. without change. l train for Mew York loaves liarrisburg at 8.10 A. in. and 2.06 P. M. Hail train for Harrisburg matte New York at 12 Noon. BCH hITLEILL VALLEY RAILROAD-Trains leave Pottsville at 6,30 and 11.30 A.M.' and 6.60 P.M-returning from Tamaqua at 0.56 A. M.. and 2d6 and 4.50 P, M. 'SCHUYLKILL AND SUSQUEHANNA RAH,ROAD , -Trains leave Auburn at 8.65 A. Id, for Plnegrove and HArriaburg, and at 12.10 noon for Pine grove, Tremont and Brookside; returning from Har risburg at 9.40 P 11; from Brookside at 4.00 P. M. and from Tremont at 7.16 A .M and 5.05 P.M. TICKETS.-Throngh firstclass tickets and emigrant tickets to all the principal points in the North and West and Canada, Xxcnreion Tickets from Philadelphia to Reading and Intermediate Station.; , good for day only, are mold by Morning Accommodation, Market Train, Reading and Pottstown Accommodation Trains at reduced rates. Excursion Tic k t, to Philadelphia, good for day only. are sold at Reading and Intermediate Stations by Read ing and Pottstown Accommodation Trains at reduced roam The following tickets are obtainable only at the Office of S. Bradford, Treasurer, Nu. 227 South Fourth street Philadelphia, or of G. A. Nicoll!, General Sursarinten dent, Reading • Commutat ion Tickets,at 25 per cent. discount, between y points desired, for families and firms. • Mileage Tickete,good for 2,000 miles, between all points at etb2 60 ..ach for families am& firms. _ Season Tickets, for three, six, nine or twelve months, for holders only, to all points, at rednced rates. Clergymen residing on the line of the road will be fur nished with cards, entitling themselves and wives tickets at half fare - Excursion Tickets from Philadelphia to principal sta. lions, good for Saturday. liniAday and Monday, at re dnced fare. to be had only at the Ticket Office, at Thir teenth and Caliewbill streets, FREIGIIT.—Goods of all descriptions forwarded to all the above points from the Company's New Freight Depot, Broad And Willow streets. ' Freight Trains leave Philadelphia daily at 4.35 A. M., 1230 noon, 5.00 and 7.15 P. Df., for Bowling, Lebanon, riarrisburg, Pottsville, Port Clinton, and all points be yond. Mails close at the Philadelphia Post-oflce for all phew, on the road and its branchewat 5 it. M., and for the prin. cipal Stations only at 2.15 P. 51. BAGGAGFI. • • Dungan's Express will collect Baggage tor all , trains leaving Philadelphia Depot. Orders can be left at No. V. 5 South Fourth street, or at the Depot, Thirteenth and Callowlaill streets. • . VCR NEW YORK.—THE CAMDEN _l3: AND ' AMBOY and PRILADELPRIIA. AND TRENTON RAILROAD COMPANY'S. LINES, from Philadelphia to. Now York, mid way places, • from Wal nut street wharf. Fare. At 6.30 21., via Camden and Amboy Accom.. •82 211 At ti A ..11,, via Camden and Jersey (ilk Es. Mail, 900 At 2.00 P. M., via Camden and Amboy sprees, 3 127 At 6 P. M. for Amboy and intermediate stations. At 6.30 and 8 A: M., and 2 P. 21., for Freehold. 'At 2.00 P. M. for Long Branch and Points on E. & D. B. R. E. At 8 and 10 A.M.,12 M, 2,337 and 4.30 P. M.,for Trenton. At 6.30,8 and 10 A.M., 12 21.,2,3374.303, 7 and 1130P.M., for Bordentow n,Florence,Barlinston,Beverly and De lance. - At 830 and 10 A.M.,12 M. 037,4.30,8,7 and 11.30 PAL for Edgewater, Riverside, Riverton, Palmyra and Fish Sense, A .21. and 2P. M.: for Riverton. Sir The 11.30' ' P. M. Line leaves from foot of Market street by tipper ferry. From Kensington Dbpot: At 7.30 A. M„ 2.30, 337 and 5 P. M. for Trenton and Bristol. And at 10.46 A. 11. and 8 P. M. for Bristol. At 730 A. 21.,2.30 and 6 P. M. for Morrisville and Tully town. At 7.30 and 10.43 A. M.,2.30, 6 and 6 P. M. for Schenck's and Edditurton. At 7.30 and 10.45 A. M.,2.30, 4, 5 and 6 P. M., for Corn wells, Torresdal,e Hohnetibturg,Tacony, Wissinsmi ng , Bridesburg and Frankford and 8.90 P.M. for Holmes burg and Intermediab3 Stations. From West Philadelphia Depot via Connecting Railway At 7.9.30 and 11 A. M., 1.20, 408.45, and 12 P. M. New York Express Line,via Jersey 26 At 11.30 P.M.: Emigrant . 2 00 At 7,9.30 and 11 A.M . .1.20,43.46,and1/P..11.f0r Trenton. At 7, 9.30 and 11 A. M.. 4, 6.46 and 12 P. M., for Bristol. At 12 P.DI.( N felt )forMorrieville,Tullytown, Schenck's, Eddington,Cornwells Torresdale, Idelmesburg, Ta cony, IYissinoming, Brideebnrg l and Frankford. The9.3o A. M. and and 12 P. M. Lines run daily. AU others, Sundays excepted. For Lines leaving Kensington Depot, take the care 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 actuate. On Sundays, the Market Street Oars will run to connect with the 9..10 A. M.. 8,46 and 12 P. M. lines • ma, viDERR DELAWARE RAILROAD Dunce from Kensington Depot. At 7.30 A. al for Niagara Falls, Buffalo, Dunkirk, Elmira .Itha ca, , Owego, itecheeter, Bingliampton Oswego, ' Syracuse , Great Bend, Montrose, Wilkesharre, Scranton, t3trondebtarg, Water Gap, Schooley's Moan tain, Stc. • At 730 1 A. M,and 331 P.M.for Belvidere,Easton, Lam bertville. Flemington, Tho 3.30 F. 18. Line con nects direct With the train . leaving Easton for Manch Chunk- Allentown, Bethlehem, , At N A. M. from West Philadelphia Depot; and 5 P. M. ' from Kensington Depot,for Lambertville and Interme diate 'Hallam,. CAMDEN AND BURLINGTON CO., AND PEMBER TON AND HIGHTSTOWN RAH,ROADS, from Mar ket street FerrY flipper Sido./ . At 7 and 10 A. NJ, 2.164304 6 & 649 P.M.,atl on Thurs day and Saturday nights at 1/.30 r. M Inc Merchants ville,Moorestown Hartford, 31asonville, Hainsport and Mount , • ' • • At 7 A.M.,2,15and 6.31.1 P. M, for Lumberton and Med ford. At 7 and , 10 A M., 1, 3-30 &5 P. M. for Smithrille, Ewaneville,Vincentown,l3irmingleani and Pemberton. At Ili A. M. for. Lewistown, Wrightstown, Cookstown, New Egypt and Horneratown. At 7 A. M.:l and 3.30 P. Id. for Lewistown, Wrights town, Ofloketown, New Egypt, Horntgstown, Cream Ridge, Iminystown, Sharon and Ilightstown. Fifty pounds of Baggage only allowed each Passen,ger.' Passengers are prohibited from taking anything as bag gage but their wearing apparel. All baggage over fif t y ponnos to be paid for extra. The Company limit the ir responsibility for baggago to Ond Dollar per pound, and will not be liable for any. amount beyond $lOO, ex cept by Special contract. ' Tickets sold and Baggage checked direct through to Boston, Worcester, Sptingfleld,llartford, Now Haven Providence, Newport, Albany, Troy,Saratoga, Utica, Rome, Syracuse, Rochester, Buffalo, Niagara Falls and Nnapension Bridge. An additional Ticket Office Is located at No. 828 Chest- , nut street, where tickets to Now York, and all impor tant points North and Eon, may be procured. Persons purchasing Tickets at this' 011ie°, can barn their bag , tag° checked from residences or hotel to deethiation,by Union Transfer Baggage Expretat. Lines from New York for Philadelphia will leave from foot of Cortland street at 1.00 and 4,00 P. M., viaJorsoy City and. Camden. At 8.80 and 10 A.M., 12.30; 6,'6 and 9 P.M and at 12 Night, via Jersey CU* and West From Pier No. I,N. River, at 6.30 A. M. Accommoda tion and 2 P. M. Express, rift Amboy and Camden. Dec. 22, 1869. WM. H. GATEMER 'digest. PrJ JOitDAN. 220 Pear etreet DIIILADELP AND BALTINIORE .1_ CENTRAL' RAILROAD COMPANY. WlNTrit, ARRANGEMENT. On and , after 11.0ND.'.y, Nov-; let., 1869, Trains will leave ,U 3 follows, ntoppitun at all Stations on Phladel phia, Baitimore , (.outral and Cheater Oreek Railroads: Leave PR fLADELPIIIA for PART DEPOSIT from Depot of Philadelphia, wiltningtou and Baltimore Railroad Company:,+ corner Broad and Washington avenue, at 7.00 A. M. and 4.30 P. al. a A Freght Train, with Paa agar car littaohedwill leave Ph i ladelphia for. Oxford at 2,30 P. Mt, , Leave PUILAI)ELPIIIA for all Stations on WAtoinfi ton and Reading Brilreada at 4.30 P: M. Leave 'PORT DEPOSIT for PIII.DADEI•PUTA at 6.4OA:Mi,L2LA.M:,and2.2BP.M r. 00 tiedurdayi t150n.26 train will leave at 4* Passengers are allowed to take wearing 'apparel 'only as baggage, and the Company will not'be• teeportbible for ag_tanongt x :ring one hundred dollars, unless ! tineelal ooktrant VOA tbe WM. ' YU "'NOON, faan6rol Superinteedeal. , TRAVELSWGIIIDE CRAVEJLEREP otani . - - • . N4partezioavittutei.tu t goo). •___Tit .6 hvidi Ito UT to • t - ' Lehigh gaff W yoming Valleradertherti Plowisyltilthle, SOtithern and Interior New York, Rochester, Belisle, Niagara Irons, the Great Lakes and the Dominion of Canada. , . , •,. ,4-k-. WINTER ARRANGEMENTS: '• • / • . e , WINTER BOT•• N 6 r • • , I ldildi Y TRAlltileaie t Paseen "" jer Fee' l ir cm . er' of Berke' and ' 'Alpert ir etreela - altnfa 4 'excepted), as foil 'an d ,- . ..: i fL it/•', 107 , • , .7.8 U 4.: .111:Accohorpodotbm,for,con Washlugton. • • At- i,- A. BC.-.slbruing -liktor'e4 ' for Bedhlohere sind Principal Stations on mate line e North Ptronsylvanie load,ltionnecting at 'Bethlehem with• Lehigh Valley .t t r i st kr. Ad. elle ovra, tPla4qh (Al l y liforti tilts , , _arra 'r, Ittslon, Towatela end atter Ft connec tithe htwitverlr with ERIS' RAIL AY 'or Niagara s almi • thigraiog illoohestetv.lolereltiddit ehleaga, San er. •. . t .o,ler gO r, P 6 OM De l r lt i li.lAGM 9,00t.a1t. V I t lAte o 4t4 ttiV: 347 iredbefre'and ilea hyit • • n. t gsz . n • • • time, take ./1 01r2elk idr " Beifile ' to 'Allentown 1 xemierti di it te irre#, , Licgk site .Pithrton: e wig/Amiga end Staquettanna til t ql•lllentOwn,- ',Tali tilachettstawn, and p.' tits' il ongeyfflon.t . Ea (wetland ld orris and men Rail BOW Tort se aLe Ate Valleyßsilrmd. , •AL IMO half .....Amortuntidgtfon for roil , W,shingiont 114 1 113°14t Aut-prie , P4af9l,ii t i t .iA,. i ton ~ ...... it oco i .L , At La P. kir eh Vill ' n lt ...., fe 't Be bleeetzl i x ei t ent.:Ancintoirbi imb h , 1 „.,.,,etcoo,' White B e e 7M i etbatte,rPittstool .fiefarttput *ld , Wroming Coal e s . - • At • '•,/ieniinit4ditfen I thi` 9o o, l o 6l 7 o i step. P i n 2.lbai l tlig.Tr i ate "a th liitit 'i o 'l - V o il4liiii; lithl• P l ift3o ll l'. l . b li t e.- 7 2Prer f igatVigkb_ _ i bthirtn - 'ft ntl i.n tn i ff at Bethlehem with L ehigh I yeller 'irreales for liistcgtiAjlentown, Bomb iOlotetnk, •, ~ ~. ' , . 4 tr-F ti , v—moil!tuonfor,”uppsimpir at al hiteritt lat etatletts. •• • —. ' Atilt.de P. 11....-Aeconneedatkruieutitro . P ' lru i tak• • • il e r4t a titier ail!, 2 ,4_ ~' and dB P. 71. • 2. 11 P.,.. ,41. P.:if. an . 0.26 , 1". Id; TOMO maliddiropt ponneesten . with Lehigh Valley or &A . M., ,h and Smne- Joanne trains frone I eaten i Cleriatont tr tlfteaFtlyM, MI6 b1p t .' 01 1 ,0,, ,, a ni- trf i l.4s Allf .0.60 PaLareS tilt P. !i rnimL:illodare ALTA:IA. kin -.• • • • ' , From Pin Washington at PAS and 2 0.0 l l eAttsit4 0 1 9 • • •. ON 'MIDDAY& • • ' , • ' • Philadelphia for Bethlehem at LSO Aj It Philadelphia forjpoyLeolar i n at 11l • ' . . ' EA Y arh il iOt r Ptti t i statptlaVrOle P. ..., Fifth and ft Ith Streets and Second and; Third Streets Lines of Ulty Possenimr oars son directly to and , from the Depot, Briton• Line run within a ollortdlatanca al the Depot. .. . .. Vic'keta met be procuredat the Ticket Mks, In order to secure the lowest rates of flati t i. ° ta lk. a t n:3o Tickets sold and Bggage chocked thronah to rind . . boll points, at Man 's North , Penn. Baggage , oiSce ‘ lip. 106 South Fifth ot,r4et , . • • , ~. I . , LIMNER; ' 'PANT& - CENTRAL . ~. RAIL. F.QADr-After S P. H., OUNDANTA tioressiber Uth, . .Tialtrains of the.. Pennsylvapja_uantyal. Ratlre leave the Depot,at Thirty-distend Market streets;which IS reached directly by the bars of the Market Street Paa senge,r Railway, the fast car connecting with ette ritin leaving Front and Market street' thirty minutes be fore its departure. ' Those of the ' °hesitant and tablet Streets Railway run withitiOne 'square of the Depot. • Sleening Car Tickets can be had on apPlication at the Ticketc Omen, northwest corner of Ninth, aDd Phestant tr seets. and at the Depot. ' . • Agents 'of the Briton Traulter °cravat, will call for and deliver Bag-gage at the Depot. Orders left at N 0.901 Chestnut street, No: 110 Market street. will receive at tention ' TRAINS LEAVE DEPOT, VIZ.: Mail Train- - ...,...--- ..., vv.: --z. At BM A.M. Paoli Accom.....- ..... .....aV10.39 . a.m.....5.10,, and 8.50 P. M. Fast Line.-- ' ~. • at 11.60 A.M. Erie Espies& ' ' at 1126 A. M. Harrisburg Accom. ....... .....-........ .... -..........at 3.30 P. M. Lancaster Accom. at 4.10 P. M. Parkaburg Train ',.at 0.30 P. M. Cincinnati Express'. ' at B.OOP. M. Erie Mail and Pittaburgh Express. ...et 9.43 P. M. Accommodation.....— ... at 12.11 A M. Pacific Express. at 12100 night. Erie Mai} leaves daily, except Sunday, running On Saturday night to Williamsport only. 'flu Sunday al.ght passengers will leave Philadelphia at 8 o'clock. • Pacific Express leaves daily. Cincinnati Ex press daily, except Saturday. All other trains' dell'', except Sunday. - The Western Aveommodation Train.rune daily, except Sunday. For this train tickets must be procured and baggage delivered by 6100 P. M.. at 116 Market street. TRAINS ARRIVE AT DEPOT, VIZ : Cincinnati Expresa.......-. ...... - .... - ... --....at3.10 A. M. Philadelphia Rxpress. ... : at 6.30 A. M. Erie Mail .. ... . - . -.....-..... - 'at 6.30 A. M. Paoli •AccommOdation at 8.20 A. M. and 3.406 6.2.3 P. M Parksburg Train:. .at 9.10 A. M. Fast Line--.- ..._ at 9.40 A. M Lancaster Train at 12155 P. M. Erie Express. at 12.65 P. M. Southern ExPress ' _. at 7.%) P. 111. bock Haven and Elmira Express. ....... --at 7.00 P. M. Pacific Express at 4.25 P. M. Harrisburg Accommodation .at 9.00 P. M. For further infortnation, apply to JOHN F. VANLEER, Ja., Ticket Agent, 901 Chestnut Street. . . . . FRANCIS EIINR, Ticket Agent, 116 Market street. SAMUEL H. WALLACE, Ticket Agent at the Depot. The Pennsylvania Railroad . Company will not assuilie any rick ler Baggage, except for wearing apparel, and limit their responsibility to One Hundred Dollars in value.. All Baggage exceeding that amount In value will be at the risk of the owner, unless taken by special con tract. EDWARD H. WILLIAMS, d'eneral Superintendent. Altoona, Ps. "'PHILADELPHIA, WILMINGTON AND J.. BALTIMORE RAILROAD—TIMID TABLE. Com mencing MONDAY, May 10th, 1869: Trains will leave Depot, corner Broad and Washington avenue, as fol low.s WAY NAIL TRAIN at 8.80 A. M.(Stindays excepted), for Baltimore, stopping at all &wilier Stations. Cdb netting with Delaware Railroad at Wilmington for Crisfield and Intermediate SiOttiorte. EXPRESS TRAIN at 12.09 M;iSimdays °monied'', for Baltimore and Washington, stopping at Wilmington, Perryville and Havre de Grace. Connects at Wilming ton with train for Newc astle. EXPRESS TRAIN'a,9.O(I P. M.(Sundays excepted), for Baltimore and. Washington, stopping at' Chester, Thurlow, Linwood,',Claytuont, Wilmington, Newport; Stanton, Newark, Elkton, North East, Charlestown, Perryville, Havre do Grace, Aberdeen, Perryman's, E Edg_ewood, Magnolia, Chase's and Stemmer's Run. NIGHT E XPRES S at 11.30 P. M. daily/ for Baltimore and Washington, stopping at Chester, Thrtrlow,Lin wood, Claymont,_•Wllnungton, Newark, Elkton W orth . East, Perryville, Haire de Grace, PerryMan'el and Mag nolia. Passengere for Fortress Monroe and Norfolk will take the 12.00 Train. WILMINGTON TRAlNS.—Stopping at all Statletie between Philadelphia and Wilmington. Leave PRhI , ADELPHIA at 11.00 A. k 1.11.30,6.00 and 7.00 P. M. The 0.00 P. M. train connects with Delaware Railroad for Harrington and Intermediate stations. Leave WILMINGTON 6.3oand 8.10 A. M., 1.30, 4.15 and 74)0 P. M. The 8.10 A. M. train will not stop between Chester and Philadelphia. The 7.00 P. M. train from Wilmington runs dallyAllotherAccommodatlonTraing Sundays excepted. Trains leav ing , WILMINGTON at 6.30 A. M. and 4.16 P. M. will connect at Lamokin Junction with tit? 7.00 A.M. and 4.30 P. 11. trains for Baltimore Central R. R. .From BALTIMORE to PHILADELPHIA -Leaves Baltimore 7.2.5 At M. Way Mall. 9.36 A. Ido Express. 2.35 P. ittrExpress. - 7.25 P. M., Express. SUNDAIR TRAIN FROM BALTIMORE:LeaveI BALTIMORE at 1.25 P. M. Stopping at Magnolia, Per mean's, Aberdeen, Havre-de-Grace,Perryville_,Charles town, North-East, Elkton Newark, Stauton,Newport, Wilmington Claymont, Linwood and Chester, Through tickets to all point West, South, and South west may be procured at the ticket oMce, if2B Chestnut street, under Continental Hotel, where also State Booms and Berths in Sleeping Cars can be secured during the day. Persona purchasing tickets at this office eon have baggage checked at their residence by the Union Trans fer Company. H. F. KENNEY, Supt. PRE IL ADELPHIA L GERMA_NTOWN ANT) NORRISTOWN AILROAD TIME TA. BLE.—On and after Monday, NoY.22d, 1869, and , until further notice: FOR GERMANTOWN. , Leave Philadelphia-8,7, 8, 9.06, 10, 11, 11 A. N. 8350% 0 1.05, 4.36, 5, 636, 6,6,4 i, 7,0, 9.20, 10, 11, 12 P. M. Leave Germantown-41,6.60, 734,8, 8.20, 9,10,10.60,12 A Al 1.2 , 9, 3.10, 42(.5,6%, 6, 656,7, ,ff 9,10, 11, P. 21. The 8.20 down-train, and the Wand 6% up trainS, will not stop on the Germantown Branch. • ON, SUNDAYS. Leave Philadelphia-9.15 A. AL, 2, 4.06 minutes ' ? and /0% P. M. • Leave Germantown-8.15 A. M.;l 9, 6 and 9% P. M. CHESTNUT HILL RAILROAD. Leave Philadelphia-6, 8, Io,' 11 A.M.; 2, 921,1%, 7, 9.20 and HP. M. • • Leave Chestnut 11111-7.10 minutes 8,9.40, and 11.40 A 2141. .40, 3.30, 6.46, 6.40, 8. 5UNY5 40 anDAd 10.40'P. M. ON . Leave Philadelphia-9.1b minutes A. M.• 2 and TP. M. Leave Chestnut 11.111-7.60 mlnntea A. 11 :1 / 14 0,04 0 8nd 9.26 minutes P. M. FOR COMM 01100 H HN AND NORRISTOWN. Leave Philadelphia-8.736, 9,11.06, A. M.; 1X,3,4, 4. 3 6. /3%, 636, 8.06, 10.06 and 113 P. M. Leave Norristown-5.40,6.26, 7,7%, 8:60,11 A. Al.; 1%, • 9,4 Y, 6.16, B'an'd 9% P. M. i t The 7% A. 21. Trains from Norristown will not stop at ogee's, Potts' Landing, Domino or Schur's Lane. Sc 4 P. M. Train from Philadelphia will stop only at School Line, Manayunk and Conshohocken. ON SUNDAYS. Leave Philadelphia-9 A. M..; 2.36,4 and 7.16 P. M. Leave NorristownOß 21ANAYU-7 A. DI.; 1, 636 and 9P M. FNR. • Leave Philadelphia-6, 736,9, 11.06 A. M.; 136, 3, 4,.43% 634,6.16,8.06,10.06 and 1 1 v . . P. M. Leave Manayunk--6.10.6,66,736,8.10,9.20, 113¢ A. M.; 13b,13, 6%;b.30 and 10 P. DI. • ON SUNDAYS. Leave Philadelphia-9 A. 111,; 236,4 and 7.16 P. 31, Leave ManaYnnk-736 A. M. 136,6 and 934 P. 21. PLYMOUTH R. R. Leave Philadelphia, 734 A. M ' ..4% P. . . Leave Plynionth, . M., 434 P. M. . S. WM ON, General Superintendent, epot, Ninth and Green streets. ' 7 IIDHILADELPHIA. AND ER= RAIL. ROAD—WINTER TIME TABLE. On and. after AIONDAY,_ Nov, 15, 1869, the Trains on the Ph iladelphit and Erie Railroad will rums follows 'from Pennsylvania Railroad Depot, West Philadelphia • I WESTWARD. , Mail Train leaves Philadelphia...., 9.35 P. M. 6l " Williamsport ' 7.40 A. M. " " arrives at Erie 8.20 P., M. Erie Express leaves Philadelphia. .. 11.91 A. A. AI. " Williamsport 9.00 P. M. arrives Ert.4 A. M. -Elmira Mail leaveg Philadelphia.. .... 7.60 A.M. " Williamsport. " ' • 6.00 P. M. " " arrives atLook 11a.:ert i • 7.23 p, M. • . EASTWARD, • Mall Train leaveo Ert • BALI A. M. sl Wi 1 1 a.25 P.M. . , arriveii at Ph ladolohis. 4.. 9 6.20 A. M. ' Erie Express leaver . . ..... ... 4.0 0 P. M. ii Philade l p hia 130 m " arrl o oo Phuadettokta" • ' ' rtAa PM. anima haver Lark Haven ' BO A. M. A 4, " " • IllrijilitleflpOrt. • 9,45 A. N. I s Arrives ,at &fa P.,Ai. 13; 1 !#1?Rfr" ; le s .tvee yygtionspor . t.... .. . -....12.25 A.M. Barriebnr • 5.20 A. M. if. sieves at Phtladelphia 9.26 A. M. erltramt east eilrin oo 4 o at OorrY. ail oast Oorry and tot. Ent rear troat Irvinnton with trains on fN npa%...n. FUT.?. 710311044. 'Alai l llMP'l6 1=11.14,611mi1 OuJlariatts6o • • TRAVELERS' G tam "VI - TEST CHIESTER7 --- 1-7 1 ' - PHILADETio; TV. rifle HA I LROA B.—Winter Arraniongent —Oa awl after MONDAY,;. Oct. 4, BirthoTtiatuF 74 1/ 1 .11411°1110 Bs he ws: . ' Leave Philadelphia, from NeW Ottmt. Thigfir I"' , chest g. nut streets ,7.4 e A.M., 11.00 A. :it 'SA f ~4.71 p.,4.40 P.M .% 6.15 P. 111., IMO p. M. ~._, . 1 ~,,-, Leave West Chester , from 'Tolson on rat arkit , ' , l i "atreet i Mb A .'W., 8.00 .4. M.,746 Ad it, MIAS A. ' iii; l 4 IP. 111.4 440 P - ht:,13,56 PfM. . , .:., l a. , egt ~., r Trsip leaving West Cheater at 8.00 A , M. 104.04 •o.'o. urinetibn, Lentil, Glen Riddle and M e ._.• 104 m Pliihidera M 4.40' r. 'N o will slog at Msdia, , Glie woo, unil and . Is :AL Junction. relived...lo4W ..front shAt. Onsbetween West Chester and N. 0 Jnit CO ittrin_ g lt sift lMill take train leaving West Cheiteriseirtli -A, M., and car willbe attached to ilxprf ss , TrainnjA C. Junction; and going West, Passengers tor , 8 above B. 0. Jugetion. will take train leaving . Pllll7rda: lima at 4:40 P. IL; and Will am:1 , 0011V at 8.,. 0; Juno . ' on bigot la t. hitadelphite to 'niched ' dfrottlg_§g Ilse Obeid - Mgt and Wilnutstreet card. Those of the Market arrest line run.within one entail:nu 'The catgut bdthilines • iscrogfeet %although in upon it% saTival, ___ :, itBIINDATB,—,,Leave - Phliadelhkra riIe:WWII Mbeeiteg it 8.30 A'. M. and 3.140 P. !!.:,. ' ' ' , ~, , I ', , g I f? • i Leaves West Okesterfor fidledliPhief as t' Bs A 4E: liald 4.00 P. M. . . . i Mr' Passeisgers are allowed to take Wearing` Aggarog only, as BS gag,e, and the COttroangwill not in ay ease t . restgottal le or an amount ex7tUng °netsurf go. ',wane a epeeist contrast bfi ado far the e:- WILLI DI O. WHOM. B, ..' sa v t ..• , , , • . 'Croneralkuvorinteldeat.: fIAMDEN AND 'ATLANTIC RAIL - - %J.NCIAD.4-4:31401011 OW , HOUB 4 - O iVINTEN MANOICIdEXT, On and alley MO N D AY , idov t l t 186.14 'trains 10 ant 'Fine street' ferry ' Mail and Freight ... .......... 8118A.111; Accommodation.lug P.M. dant:Mon Accommodation to AG; ' atition6.4 P: Aihititio--.owzoodatrosi;::::::•:;......nr. 4.4 ter: §* 4nsirtion.ActAgromtatlon rat atom.. .. 022 A. M. MiddovAfild-ASAPPinIM,O4IIiOti irainajiari 7 r, vine tw ee t ]arty .. - ' 10 : 15 / 1 ::111;antlIA0 y, Itaddontleld. 1.00 P. 11.1112d , 335 fl. VI; 31,X111„0., TAN IN - FUR: AVIAN TIO OIT Y. BATUMI:P AYS On' and afar Tebrilary',oth: nn extra train Wiltrid avairy BATORDAYofn advance of the Mail Train:, Leaving Philadelphia at—........ .......B.OOA. pg. frATO Atlantic at-, P:111. Allowingpi-rtons nosily rive haritittai r to mach,- - DAVID H. MU • V. Agent,' • •11A7 10s j.ERSICY'JBA , kIiROA - DS T ARRAXGRIRNST.. 1* CO 3 fMINOINGTII,ZBDAL, 11,1irT. 2let,Mff_. • f i r ,pvie • bilideiria, Font of Market • ktriet (Unet , 0. 4. tem DrldsVailerp, len Sweiliegort , and ail info 1,144, dationg. sai P. llf Milli for • Cape ay, , lllUfrille4 Vineland! {ndwaya below, 910epltoro,r 340?. ; paeieng ri,,fq Brldgetan, Salem, Foffe4Po- boratend . 611InterInediatestatircur. , • - • • 'l.BO V. 314,• Woodbury, Glasehora and Clayton &ocean modatio n Toit•CAPIII itl4: Batwnayi • , Leave Pillad Y elphia Sla a 3t , s• Fre iawi l v irt a tra " in i ftko l il iu n r altrYlenies Camden dilly, at 12.00 o'clock,- Freight received in , ildiadgighis,nt iecond, clogged wharf - below Walnut streeL ' Weight delivered at Nu. lON. Ocansittatliitk tioketet, Si reduced interi•batirecirPtiller dolphin and all fits-lions , • 'LI ' • • WILLIAM J,FtWICLIENfiII '•• • rAST FREIGHT LI E VIA N PENNSYLVANIA RALE,BoAD, ts• Willteabarre, ahanoy Oi y, onnt Cannel, tientretia, and all 'whit" on Lehigh Valley Bailrotui and Its branches. • By new arrangenientatiperfected thin day, this road ib enabled to give inaretteed despatch' to Merebandille con signed to the above-named point!. • ClFoods delivered at4he•Throngh Freight Denoti • , • B. cor. Front and. Noble street', Before "'P. Will reach Wllkosbarre, Monnt Barite!. Matutiby City; and 'the other' station" in Mebane)! and WyOnaingvaUer shoos. . the succeedieg der. 101,1.18 Agents' ACEDICAL a' Cherry Pectoral, For Diseases of the Throat And Lunge, ouch as :Coughs, Colds, IX/looping Cough, Bronchitis, A,stluna, and . Consumption., • • • Probably never before in the whole history: of medicine, has anything weikso widely and so deeplP upon the confidence of mankind, as this excellent remedy for pulitionaryetatiPlaittle.' .Through a lonic series of years, and among most of the races of men it has risen higher and higher in their estima.• tion, , aa it 'has become better known:; Its uniferm, characterand•ponter to curl the Narieue affections of the lungs and threat, have m ado. flown as, a re liable protector against them- 'Whtlo , adaPt?,d milder forms of tlisease'ail. to yslung chirdrea, 4' le: at the same time the most effectualreMetly'lhat can be given for incipient consumption, , anti the` gerous'ainctionti of the threat and:lungs. :Asa iro. vision against Sudden attacks of Croup, it should .be kept on hand in every family, and indeed as all are sometimes subject ;to c.olda and coughs, ,all should provided with this antidote forlhein. Although settled. Consuinptio thought' n in curable, still greet numbers of cases' where' the dis ease' seemed settled, have been cempletely cured, and the patient les tored to sound health by 'the Cherry .Pectorat. So complete is :its mastery over the disorders of the Lungs and Throat, that the most obstinate of them yield to it. When noth ing else could reach them, under the Cheriw,Pec feral they sub Side and disappear.. . Singers and Public Speakers find great - pro- t • tection from It. Asthma Is always relieved and' 'often *holly 'cured by it. . Bronchitis is genarally cured by taking the Cherry .PectOral in smolt and frequent So generally aro its videos known that ism r d not publish the certificates of theni here, or ore than assure the public, that its qualities' Ara ify maintained. ' •'' • - Aye Jr's Ane Cure, For .l'ever and ,A.,mue, Intermittent l'ever; Mill Fever, It' enuttont Fever, -Dumb Ague, Periodical or Bilious Fever, 860. and indeed the affections which arise fortna malarious, marsh, or , miasmatic pcasons. As its name implies; it does Cure, and does not fall. Containing neither Arsenic, Quinine, Ilia moth, Zinc, nor any other mineral or polsoumminthstance whatever, it; In, nowise, injures any, patient, , The number and importance of Its mires lu.the aguedis, tricts, are literally beyond account , and we believe withont a parallel in the history of Ague medicine. Our pride is gritided by the acknowledgments wo receive of the radical cures effected. In obi3thiate cases, and whore other remedies had wholly piled. Unacclimated persons, either • resident ui,i or travelling through miasmatic localities, will be prq tected by taking the AGUE. CURE ' dftily. For-Liver Couptatnts, arising fliom torpidity of the Liver, it Is an' excellent remedy , ' stimulating • the Liver into healthy activity. For Bilious.Diserders and Liver Complaints, it IS an excellent remedy, producing many truly .m.r. markable cures, where other medicines bad failed. Prepared - by DR. J. C. AYER. PractleaA and Analytical Chemists, Lowell, Alaimo and 8024 ail round the world. PRICE, $lOO PER BOATXX•._ At wholeeale tbyJ M. MARIS 00..Philptielptaa. lualtta th e lm gPAL DEN TALLINA. A CllZTßElillnl artiele for cleaning the Teeth,destroying enintalotde ich infest them, giving tone to the gums and leaving a feeling of fragrance and perfect cleanliness in the month. It •Aay be used 'dally;: ands will be friend to strengthen weak and bleeding frankBl White the aroma and deteraivenes23 will recommend it to every one. Be ing composed'with the assistance of the Dentist, Phyla-- eland and Mioroseoplet, it is confidently offered as a reliable substitute for the uncertain muskies formerly tp T rntient Dentleis, acquainted 'with the canstittients of the Dentallina. advocate its use; it Contains nothing to prevent its unrestrained em_ploymeut. Made only by • JAMES T. SHlNN,Apothecarr i A Broad and Spruce streets.' For sale by Druggists generally, end • • • Fred. Browne, D. L. Stackhotlee, Bossard & Co., Hobert O. Davis, U. R. Reeny, • Geo. C. Bower, Isaac H. Ear, Chao. Sb n e rs* C. H. Needles, S. M. itleColin, T. J . Husband, . S. H. Hunting, Ambrose Smith, • Chas. H. Eberle, Edward Parrish, James N. Marks, Wm. B. Webb, E. Brinnhuret as CO., James L. Db . :Them,Dyott & Hughes &Combo, H. C. Blair's Sone, Henry A. BOWOT." Wyeth &Bro. THE WONDERS ACCOMPLISHED through the agency of the genuine Cod•Lieey Oil in Scrofula,Bronchitis; Chronic Cough,' Asthma. e n d oven Cenenrprienolltnoßt surpaxe hell Iu 'JOIN C. BAKEC At Co. 'e_'• Pure Medicinal Cod:Ltver each bottle of which to acconipankal by ntedlodlgilgt ,k t i t - tees of the highest order—the public have tho bent d of • the preparation known 'to ,the acientitio , Ivor*. JOB N O. BAKER & CO.; N 0.71 8, Market .street d del hia t Penn. • NW' 'For tale h • all di nagiate. , • fa 74,5 HEATERS AND STOVES, tiO THOMSON'S LONDON :42 a : mum, or 2 uropetui Ranged, furl i . ' ilnitail or public lnfiti . tu . tip a nit, In twenty , , • . ice, rortataiik:le P rst il i,o a V P Ewß u trAV - •„ 4 1 2 .. ,' rt !, ' Bath Bollerc utew.bole ?tat 1 1 roil . i ''ll7 ' Stovesaeto., wholesale/and retAft the , e r , , d am . BRA "14 no29m w f imi RO• 2109 4itt=t4f f Tll()M.Atti U. DLICON litklinkt II o. 2 2 24 L ekk i ttgfill p e t a l 11 . / ai 4 1 anntem t hwigi l l • r , • ta4, ' A ' , , n . t1411 11 01 1 I'l ''!..'+; ^ ~ .i, , P*4 • Pu t mit! bis,l t t(l4o reit 1 11:, 1 MB2 . 44 . / i,,,, i -,rr. ilik ~,.., 1_, h r i tcl;lti, f ~i,),t,, I.teli liitr Aat*loTarlia:miX Zi74,'Wooatiie t t 4 1 • •, i niuso 7 t15,-;_,_ , ~ ,,V p... 1.1114.1 WAEM-Alli. F AMP :11,,, . ..' 41...5." ter NPR Warm! ng Publlo,4ll.44lSlPSti X•I443WIRS 11 T A ' - ' „ ...,.. „..,' 0111,1V211 - wujEu443-11•AN(INg A -IS i A i 1• ' ITH P LIP P# 34I7 MO T. • " if,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers