GOLD. Gold, next, to iron, is the most widely dif fused metal upon the surface' of our globe.' It occurs in granite, the oldest nick kne,ivii to us, rocks and in all the derived, from it,, :it is also found in the vein-stones which traverse other geological formations, but it . has never, been found in any secondary formation. It is ) how ever, much more etnlittiOn in alluvial groundi, than among primitive and pyrogenous rocks. It is found disseminated, under the, form of spangles, in the silicious, ,argillaccous, and fer-, ruginous sands ,of certain plains and rivers, and especially at their junctien, at the season of low water, and after storms and temporary floods. It i 8 the only metal of a yellow color; it is readily. crystali7able ; and always assumes one or more , of the symmetrical shapes, such as the cube 'or octahedron. It affords a reslenii •ent polish, and may be exposed to the atinp sphere for any length oftime without suffering any change. It is remarkable for its beauty; is nineteen times heavier than water, and, next ' to platinum, the heaviest Ictiowii substance. Its malleability is such that a cubic inch will ,6 toier thirty-five hundred square feet; and ifs• ductility is such that a lump of the value of four hundred dollars could be drawn into a wire which would reach rotfud the globe. It is first mentioned in, Genesis, c. 2, v. 11. It was found in the country of Ilavilah, where the. rivers Euphrates and Tigris unite and dis charge their waters into the Persian Gulf. The relative value of gold to silver, in the days of the patriarch Abraham, was one to eight; at the period 13. C. 1000, it was one to twelve ; B. C. 500, it was one to thirteen; at the commencement of the Christian Era it was one to nine ; A. D. 500, it was one to eighteen A. D. 1100, it was one to eight; A. D. 1400, it was one to eleven; A. D. 1013, it was one to fifteen and a half; which latter ratio, with but slight variation, it has maintained to the pre sent day. Gold was considered bullion in Palestine, for a long period after silver had been current as money. The first mention of gold in the Bible is in David's reign, (B. C. • 10560 when that king purchased the threshing floor of Oman; for six hundred shekels of gold by weight. • In the early period of Grecian his tory, the quantity 'of the precious metals in creased but slowly; the circulating medium did not increase in proportion to the quantity of bullion. In the earliest days of Greece, the precious metals existed in great abundance in the lA taut. Cabul and Little Thibet (B. C. 600) were abundant in gold. It was obtained in considerable quantity in the Island of Siphnos and also from Mount Pangaea. It 'was an article of great rarity at that time in Italy, and only existed either in the form of female orna ments or of offerings in temples. There was no gold plate in the possession of private per sons and no gold coin. It was also found in abundance in Turdeltania. in Spain. It seems to be a well-ascertained fact that it was obtained near the surface; so that countries which formerly yielded the metal in great abtindance are now entirely destitute of it. Gold was also obtained by the Greeks from Asia Minor, the adjacent islands, which pos sessed it in abundance, and from Indla,Arabia, Armenia, Coichis and Troas. It was found mixed with the sands of Pactolus and ether rivers. Crcesus (B. C. 500) coined the golden stater, which contained one hundred and 'thirty-three grains of pure metal. Darius, son of Ilystaspes - (B. C. 538), coined darks containing one hun dred and twenty-one grains of pure metal, Ihich were preferred for several ages through out the east for their fineness. Next to the darks were some coins of the reigns of the tyrants of Sicily; of Gelo (B. C. 401); of Hiero (B. C. 4'18) ; and of. Dionysius (B. C. 404). Specimens'of the two former are still preserved in modern cabinets. Darks are supposed to be mentioned in the Old Testament under the name of drams. Very few specimens of the dark bade come down to us; their scarcity may be accounted for by the fact that they were melted down under the type of Alexander. Gold coin was by no means abundant in Greece until Philp of Macedon had put the mates of Thrace into full operation, about B. C. 360. There are only about a dozen Greek coins in existence, three of which are in the British Museum; and of the latter two are staters, of the weight of one hundred and twenty-nine grains each. About B. C. 207, gold coins were first struck off at Rome, and were denominated aurei, four specimens of which are in the institution before alluded to. Their weight was one hundred and twenty-one trains each. Sold coins, were first issued in France by Clovis, A.D. 489. About the same time they were issued in Spain by Amalric, the' Gothic king. In. both countries they were called trien ties. They were first issued in England in ° 1.257 in the shape,of a penny, of the value• of twenty pence; only two specimens have come down to us. Florins were next issued in 1344, of the value of six shillings. The noble fol lowed next, of the value of six shillings and eight pence ; being stamped with a rose, it was called the rose noble. Angels of the same value as the latter were issued in 1465. The royal followed next in 1466, of the value of ten shillings.' Then came the sovereign, of twenty shillings, in 1489. The gold crown, of the value of ten shillings, followed in 1527. Unites and lions were issued in 1603,and exurgats in 1664. The guinea was first issued in 1663, of Guinea gold. in 1733 all the gold coins .(except the guinea) were called in and forbidden to circu late. The present sovereign was first issued in 1817. The Americas half-eagle was first issued in 1793. From the earliest times to the commence ment of the Christian era, the amount of gold obtained from the surface and bowels of the earth was fourteen hundred millions of dol- lars; from the date of the latter event to the discovery of America, thirty-nine hundred mil lions were obtained ; thence to the cloSe of 1842, twenty-eight hundred millions were ob..- tained. The discovery and extensive working of the Russian mines added, to the close of 1832, six hundred millions more. The double discovery of the California mines in 1848 and the Australian mines In 1851, has added to the present time thirty-three hundred millions; making . a grand total of twelve thousand mil lions of dollars. The average loss by abrasion of coins is estimated to be one-tenth of one per cent. per annum; and the loss by eon suinption in the arts, and destruction by fire and shipwreck, at from one to three millions per annum. A cubic inch of gold is worth (at 17s. lOtd., or $lB 09 per ounce) two hundred. and ten dollars;. a cubic foot, three hundred and sixty-two thousand eight hundred and eight dollars; a cubic yard,. nine million seven hundred and ninety-seven thousand seven hundred and sixty dollars. The amount of gold in existence at the commencement of the Christian Era is estimated to be four hundred and twenty-seven millions of dollars; at the period of the discovery of America it had diminished to fifty-seven millions; after the occurrence of that event it gradually increased, and in 1000 it attained to one hundred and five millions; iu I'7oo, to three hundred and fifty . one millions; in 1800, to eleven hundred and twenty-five millions; in MI, to two thousand millions; in 1b53, to three thousand millions; and at the present time the amount of gold in existence is estimated to be six thousand millions of dollars, which, welded into one mass, could be contained in a cube of twenty six feet, Of the amount now in existence, four thousand millions are estimated to be in coin and bullion, one million in watches, and the remainder in jewelry, plate, etc. The Russian gold mines Nvere discovered in 3819, and extend over one-third of flu• eiteu ni ; terellee of the globe, upon the parallel of degrees north latitude. -Their Proddct, since their discovery the present - time,' has - amounted to•one thousand - millions of.-dollars The finst gold mine in the United States was discovered in Meadow Creek; Cabarets county (N. C.), in 1799, by Conrad Reed. - The Cali fornia gold mines were discovered by William Marshall, on the ninth day of February, 1848, at Sutter's mill, upon the American fork, a tributary of the Sacramento, and extend from 34 to 49 degrees of north latitude. Their pro duct since their discovery to the present' Mine bas'aniotinted to folirteetf hundred millions of dollars. The product of the Nova Scotia gold mines from 1860 to the present time has. amounted tb three and a half Millions of dol lars. The Australia gold Mines were discovered by Edward Hammond Hargraves, on the twelfth day of February, 1851, in the I3athurst and Wellington districts; and extend from thirty degrees to thirty-eight degrees southlati . tilde. Their product, since their discovery to the present time, has amounted to eleven hundred millions of dollars. The' finest gold was obtained at Ballarat, and the largest nugget yet obtained was dug- up at Victoria, and weighed twenty-five hundred and sixty eight ounces, valued at forty-eight thousand dollars. The New Zealand 'gold mines were discovered on the twentieth day of August, 1861, by Messrs. Hartley and Reilly; in the Octago . district, watered -by .the Molyneux river, on the forty-fifth degree of south latitude. Their product to the present time has amounted to seventy-five millions of dol lars. The annual product of gold at the com mencement of the Christian Era is estimated at eight hundred thousand dollars ; at the period of the discovery of America it had di minished to one hundred thousand;'after the occurrence of that event it gradually increased, and in 1600 it attained to two millions; in, 1700, to five millions; in 1800, to fifteen mil lions; in 1843, to thirty-four millions; in 1850, to eighty-eight millions; in 1853, to two hun dred and thirty-six millions; but 'owing to the falling off of the California as well as the -Australian mines, the product of the present year will not exceed one hundred and seventy millions.: Since 1702 to, thb present time the gold coinage .of the United States mint has amounted to nine hundred and forty-six mil lions of dollars,4-which eight hundred and forty-four millialU.have been issued since 1850. The gold-coinage of the French mint since 1726 has amounted to ten thousand eight hundred millions of francs, of which sixty-six hundred millions have been issued since 1850. The gold coinage of the British mint since 1603 his amounted' to three hundred and twenty millions of poands sterling, of which one hundred and fifteen pillions have been issued since 1850. The aold coinage of the Russian mint, since 1664,' has amounted to six hundred 'and twenty-six millions of roubles, of which three hundred and sixty millions have been issued since 1850. The sovereign of England contains one hun dred and thirteen grains of pure metal; the new doubloon of Spain and the half-eagle of the United States one hundred and sixty grains each ; the gold lion of the Netherlands and the double-ounce of Sicily, one hundred and sev enteen grains each; and the twenty-five. franc piece of France one hundred and twelve grains. It has recently been proposed to adopt a uni fOrm system of coinage throughout the world, so that the coins of one nation may circulate in any other without the expense of recoivage," a consummation most devoutly to be wished." The fact, that the large amount of gold, which has been thrown into the monetary circula tion 'of the world within the last twenty-one years has exercised so little influence upon the •money market or prices generally is at variance with the predictions of fiancial writers upon both sides of the Atlantic. The increase in the present prodUction of gold, compared with former periods, is enormous; and the price has not declined, although the annual product has increased four-fold within twenty-seven years. --Charlestown Chronicle. • CITY BULLETIN. —The Pennsylvania College of Dental Sur gery held its annual commencement at Musi cal Fund Hall on Saturday 'evening. The graduates Were as follows : J. Fred. Babcock, Maine ; Charles 11. Bagley, Pa.; Edward F. Barnes, Mass.; Harry E. Beach, Va.; Fran cisco E. Brunet, Cuba; Geo. T. Carpenter,lll.; Chas. P. Cotlee, Ohio; Frank L. De Gour,Pa.; E. Rubio y Diaz, M. D., Cuba; Chas. E. Ed wards, Pa.; Thomas H. Gilpin, Md.; Augustus V. Hartlevan, Pa.; Ferdinand Hasrouck, Pa.; John Hellings, Pa.; W. H. I. Hilliard, N. J.; Louis G. Honard, Cuba ' • Saml. F. Howland, Mass.; Jay H. Johnston,Pa.; Geo. W. Klunip, Pa.; 0. L. De Lalande, M. D. France; Jona than T. Leet, Pa.; William A. Marler,N. C.; J. Henry Mease, Pa.; Charles W. Meloney, Del.; Gustovtis J. R. Miller, Pa.; Jose M. Portuondoi Cuba; Alfred • Maud, France; Augustus J. Roderick, Iowa; Granville L. Robb, Pa.; Charles H. Scott, Ohio ; .John Sheldon, N. Y.;-Melville C. Simi Ohio. ' George W. Smith, Pa.; James G. Templeton, I'a.; James T. Turner Md.; Charles Tyson, Pa.; John D. Ware, N. :I.; DI. Milnor Worrall, Pa.; Seneca B. Brown, Indiana; H. H. Martin, Pa.; J. B. Prescott, N. H. The valedictory address was delivered by Professor James Truman, D. D. S. —Dwelling No, 1103 Girard street, owned by the Girard estate and occupied by C. P. Williams as a boarding-house, was badly damaged by fire yesterday morning, about half-past four o'clock. The fire began in the cellar, and burned through the parlor and rear portion of the second-Story floors, and up the stairways and along the passage-ways from the cellar to the garret. All the rooms in the house are more or less damaged by the flames and water. The loss on building is estimated at about $4,000 and is insured. The furniture, width was either all destroyed or ruined, is also insured. Mr. Williams was in New York at the time. Mrs. Williams and her son and. daughter escaped from a second-story back window, by means of sheets rolled into a rope. Mrs. Williams fell and was severely injured. Four other inmates of the house escaped with out injury. The origin of the fire is myste rious and is under investigation by Fire Mar shal Blackburn. The charred remains of some kindling-wood in the cellar are said to be pretty well saturated with coal oil. —Mrs. Sarah Ritchie, aged forty-seven years, was burned to death on Saturday night, at her residence, on Somerset, near C street. She was seen in the evening on Frankford road. About ten o'clock Bernard Green and his son, while passing the deceased's house, discovered it to be on fire. They broke in and extin guished the flames with a bucket of water, and then found the body of the deceased burned to a crisp, with a bri).ken lamp near it. The lamp is supposed to have exploded. ' • —Christ M. E. Church; at Thirty-eighth and Bridge' streets, was dedicated yesterday by Bishop Simpson. Rev. R. 'l'. Ives, of Auburn, N. T., and the pastor of the church,, Rev. H. A. Cleveland, also officiated in the services during the day. The new building is •of Trenton brown stone, 43 by 88 feet, and, with the lot, cost about $50,000. —Charles Herbert was arrested by the agent of the Women's Branch of the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty. to Animals, on Saturday, for driving a horse badly galled on the shoulder, and, also for ierking the hit in the animal's mouth in a cruel manner. Alderman Belshaw lined him. William Welsh, President, for the new Board of City Trusts, deposited in the vaults of the Fidelity Safe Deposit Company all se curities tiertaiuing to the various trusts which' that Board controls. , TIM DAILY EVENING BULLETIN-PHI , Ooitimandant at the Philadelphia Navy 'Yard' on Satuiday received an order from -Secretary Robeson to. - re-employ all ,of. the workmen recently discharged.. The new order will reinstate.. 975 men, 900 of whom will be set to work in the construction department, and 75 In the steam engineering division. They will resume work to-morrow. —The' amount; of money'', received ,at the office of the Receiver of Taxes on Saturday was $105,098 00 ; 'which, 'added to the amount, $928,585 02, previously received, makes a total. for the tiVe days' ; of $1;093,084.'18. The Director of the Mint, under instructions from Washington to redUce the. working force, dispensed with the services of twenty male and twenty female einployds. . --James Pidgeon, a soldier • of the war of 1812, died on Saturday. Ile was '7O years of age. • TIIE MAYonALTy.—,By general consent it .conceded that Hon. Charles Cox, present Mayor of Camden ' will, be renominated at the Republican . City Convention this 'evening. This will be a *compliment to deserving worth, for the courteous, affable and-able manner in which he has discharged the duties of that of lice for the two years he has,'occupied it has wen the commendation and approval of even his political opponents. Last spring his ma jority. was about four hundred, and as the Re publicans are taking a deep interest in thisi , municipal election ' it is quite evident that his majority will not be diminished from that of last year. The hardest contest will be upon members of Council,.as the Demo crats are trying earnestly to get a majority in that body. There will be also a pretty sharp contest on City Treasurer, but from the efficient manner in which Captain Huffty has dis charged the duties of that office, there will be no difficulty in replacing him in that position. There are, however, several aspirants to the Mayoralty, and among the Democracy they are quite numerous. Whoever is the fortunate man on election day, it will be hard to. get a better than the present incumbent. THE WATER WORKS AGAIN.—The ques tion of purchasing the Camden Water Works by the City Council may be considered as settled, that body having submitted a bill, which is now before the lower House of As sembly, authorizing such a consummation. Upon examination it was found that this legis lation is needed, else the committee would have reported an ordinance to that effect at the last meeting. However, •it may be done in time'for the next. The terms of purchase are easy; and now, if ever, is the time to cousum• mate the bargain., ;AN . ELOQUENT SETZMON.--Inthe Tabernacle Baptist Church; yesterday morning, the Rev. P: L. Davies preached his farewell sermon to the little flock of worshippers over whom he has exercised a Pastor's care for the past six years. The house was crowded to its fullest capacity, and his discourse was earnest, deeply feeling and effective. Mr. Davies leaves this cliurch for a wider field of labor, having re ceived' and accepted a call, to the Berean Church, New York. On Tuesday evening next. the members of Post No. 6, Grand Army of the Republic; will attend the Tabernacle Church in a body, to listen to a parting address from Mr. Davies to them. CI?-4 D CONCEIT.—Miss Clara Hindle, the faVorite vocalist of Camden. gives her second annual grand concert to-night in the Camden court-house. She will be assisted by such emi nent talent as Miss Josephine Scbimpf and Miss Katie Brevoort, of Philadelphia,sOpranos : Professors A. B. Stiles, of Chicago, and Mr. George String, tenors; Mr. Julian Breban, of Philadelphia,basso; Mr. Amo Leighnharte and Prof. horn, pianists ; Mr. Albert Kennecht (the child wonder). violinist ; Mr. J. C. Bniwn, of Camden, pianist. The concert will be under the direction of Prof. Joseph Steinhauser, of Lancaster. , A GREAT REVIVAL.—The most extensive revival of religion that ever took place in Atlantic City is now in progress In the Metho dist Episcopal Church there. Over one hun dred persons have experienced religion, and the work is progreising. Yesterday a large number were baptised and taken into a pro., bationary membership. The converts are from all classes of the community, and the old church members rujoice that such a glorious revolution is in progress. BANIKRUT'TCY.—The property known as the geptune House, in .Atlantic City, with its grounds and contents, has gone into the hands of Joshua L. Howell, Esq., Assignee in Bank, ruptcy, and will be sold on the 19th of March, proximo. 1115. 1115 GREAT CLOSING OUT SALE OF HOOP SKIRTS AND CORSETS, Commencing Saturday, December 4, And will be continued until January 1, 1870, with prices marked down to and below the wholesale gold prices, affording an opportunity for unprecedented bargains in first-class HOOP SKIRTS and CORSETS for the time above-stated ONLY. 15,000 Hoop Skirt, for Ladles Misses and Children in 400 varieties of styles, size, quality and prices, from 15c. to 82, many of them marked down to less than one third price. Over 10,000 Cornets, including 83 kinds and prices, each as Thomson's Glove fitting Corsets, in five grades; Jas. Beckel's Superior French IVoven, In all qualities; S. :iVerly's, in four varieties; Mrs. Moody's Patent Self-ad matinliiupporting Corsets; Madame Foy's Corset and Skirt porters; Superior Hand-made Corsets, in al grades, imp', Children's, &c. Together with our own make of Corsets, in groat variety. All of which will be NARKED DOWN TO PANIC PRICES. Call early, while the stock remains unbroken, as there can be no duplicates at the prices. At 1115 Chestnut Street. deft rn w f 3Eng. WM. T. HOPKINS. WANTED. A Good Room Suitable for an Office, In the Vicinity of Third and Chestnut. Address, stating terrns,&c.; "O. G. D., BULLETIN Office fc22•tf HY. LAUDERBACH'S ACADEMY, . Assembly Buildings, No. 108 South Tenth street. A primary, elementary and finishing school for boys aud young mon. Circulars at Mr. WARBURTON'S, No. 120 Chestnut street. fe2s-Im§ BELLEVUE INSTITUTE __ LADIES, The Spring Term of thin Institution °pait March 21. For Catalogue and information apply- to Israel J. Grahame, Twelfth and Filbert krauts, Philadelphia ; Gilbert Coombe, A. Spring Garden Instltute,Phila.; J. 0. Garrig nes, 606 Arch street, Phila.; Josiah Jackson, of Gownerthwait k Co., 628 Chestnut street, Phila.; IL It. Warriner, Eon., 26 North Seventh street, Phila. Or addresa the Principal, 1e2.4 th a to 6tl W. T. SEAL. CARL GAERTNER'S NATIONAL CON ervatory of Music, S. E. corner Tenth and Walnut him had no connection whatever with any con servatory in Philadelphia. 'Rieke now open for Spring Quarter, commencing 1110NDAY, March 14th,1570. fe2l7t§ QIG. P. RONDINELLA, TEACHER OF AD Singing.. Private lessons and dames. Residerigo 308 Thirteenth street.. an 26-411 aatt3o YEARS' ACTIVE PRAOTICE. —Dr. FINN, No, 219 Vino etroet, below Third* ineorte the handeomost Toetkin tho city,at prices to suit all. Teeth Plug ed, Tooth Repaired, Rachangedr or Remodelled to suit. Elm and Ether. No pain in ex truth's. Office noun). tb 6 titnts-ihoutent NEW JERSEY MATTERS. HOOP SKIRTS AND GORSETS. CESill EDUCATIOP4. ATTLEBORO, - ?A MITSICO. DENTISTRY. ADELPHIA, MCiI4bAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1870. AmltS*Dinil TM, AMERICAN ACADEMY OE ONLY,TWO NIGHTS, Arid positively last ,of the unorecedentedly Successful season of • PAREPA-ROSA,ENGLISH OPERA • • • CARL ROBA , t ' ' C. :D. HESS & CO., t Proptletors and Directors. D.'ll/E VIVO , Business Manager HARRY JACKSON 4."...., • Stage MAnager ON TUESDiII;E'VNING March A, Will be produced, wit a - gorgeous nillitteri amend and an „unrivaled Star Cast, Plotow's charming Ojpera, MARTHA! MARTHA I MARTHA! ' • Mine.,PAR,EPA-ROSA as Martha; Mrs. E: SEQUIN, Nancy; Mr.?: CASTLE, Lionel; Mr: OA i rIIBLL, Plunket ; Mr. , SEGUIN, Sir Triatano ; Mr. ALL, the Sheriff. Conductor, .111r.OAJIL itOSA. A correct representation of the GREAT ENGLISH' , FAIR SCENE will be given. - ON WEDNESDAY EVENING, March 9, _ For the Ant time In Ammica oil!! bo produced Von Weber'smasterplece, . • ' • ' • , OBERON I OBERON! OBERON I Which Opera has created the utmost enthusiasm when ever it has beencoduced, and run over MO consecittlie nights in Viotti and,in London.. ;' ' Dame. PAREP -ROSA In her unapproachable role of Relzu. with . M rtil E. SEQUIN, Messrs. CASTLE, L AU RANCE, CAMPBELL, HALL, DE SOLLA ,, and Mies GERALDINE WARDEN, her first appearance; Con ductor, Mr. CARL ROSA. Admission, 151. Reserved Seats, $1 O. Family Ciidle, 50 collie. - ,Anaphitheatreas mite. The sale of seats will cotoriience on Pride"; March 4, at '9 A. M., only at the Box Office'of the Academy. AMATEUR'S - DitAWIN4. Seventeenth street, above Chestnut, west side. NEW YORK FRENCH COMEDY, THURSDAY, MARCH First appearance of the Parisian Artists, MONS. and MADAME monEml, From the•Theatre du Vaudeville (Paris.) 1111 R. ANGELE GUERETTI, Prima Donna, and M. CESAR ALARD, the celebrated Violoncellist. Assisted by all the Artists pf the New York Dramatic Performances every li C lO om NrA n k, TUESDAY', THURS DAY, FRIDAY evenings, and SATURDAY matinee at 2 o'clock. . Commencing THURSDAY, MARCH 9, With the celebrated comedin three acts, by Scribe, BATAILLEDES DAMES. (The Checkmate), '• ann a miscellaneousperformance. Subscription price fr the-EIGHT EVENING PER FORMANCES $lO Change of Programme Every Evening. The subscription , list is now open,at BONER'S music store, No. 1102 Chestnut street. fette-tf§ P. JUIGNET. !UR& JOHN DREW'S ARCH STREET 17.1. THEATRE. Begins ni o'clock. ONLY NIGIIT OF HAMLET. THIS, MONDAY, EVENING, Feb. 28 th , 1 8 70. HAMLET. HAMLET B. L. MATLACK Aided by the Full Compouy. TUESDAY—THE SCHOOL .FOR SCANDAL. WEDNESDAY—BENEFIT OF L. L. JAMES. THURSDAY—Hiss ANNIF.FIRMIN'Is BENEFIT. SATURDAYBENEFIT OF MR. HALTON. MONDAY NEXTLOTTA. tAtTit - A • RENE'S 13 , ins at 87 CHESTNUT-STREET THEATRE. THIRD AND'LAST WEEK Of the successful engaement of MR.FRANK MAYO. First time of the Historical Drama, THE THREE OUARDSDIEN ; Or, The Queen. Cardinal and AdTenturer. D'ARTAG NAM Mr. FRANK MAYO Lady Do Winter Miss Alire Plackle FRIDAY—BENEFIT OF MR. FRANK MAYO. MATINEE, SATURDAY, at 2 O'CLOCK, WALNUT STREET THEATRE, THIS,' MONDAY, EVENING, Feb. 25, Lent week of the distinguished Artiste, ROSE AND HARRY WATKINS. • Fire time on any Maize. an entirely new drama, SETIN GOLD On, THE ONE BRIGHT SPOT. Fardorougli HARRY WATKINS Una O'Brien. with Image ....ROSE WATKINS ON MONDAY EVENING, Mar. 7, the eminent Artist MR: CHARLES FRUITER, FOR TWELVE NIGHTS ONLY. TILE GREAT CHAMPION CIRCUS, • TENTH AND CALLOWHILL STREETS. Mrs. CHAR. WARNER ...... .Directress. EVERY EVENING o'clock. WEDNESDAY AND SATURDAY AFTERNOONS, 23 o'clock. MOST POSITIVELY LAST WEEK OF THE SEN SATION RIDER. Mlle. EMILIE HENRIETTA. First week of little EMMA FOSTER, the Danssuse ; also Metamorphosis Rider, CHAS. MA DlGAN,with the WHOLE STAR TROUPE. Admission 25 cents ; Children under 10 years, 'Scents ; Reserved chairs, &I cents each. Respectable Parties desiring Benefits' should apply at Ticket Office. CONCERT HALL—THE PILGRIM!! THIRD WEEK OF CROWDED HOUSES, To sea THE PILGRIM, the marvel of -the day. PAINTINGS ! MUSIC I GRAND TRANSITION • is SCENE! Endoree-1 by the PRESS and PULPIT as the Greatest, most Enchanting and truly Artistic Sensational Enter tainment of the Nineteenth Century. .EVERY EVENING at S. MATINEES, Wednesday and Saturday at 2.30. Admission, 50 cents. Reserved Seats. 70 cte. Reserved Seat in Gallery, el. Children under 12,25 cents. f023-6i DIIPREZ RENEDICTS OPERA ROUSE. SEVENTH Street, below Arch. • Family Resort of Fashion Crowded Nightly THIS LVENING, DUPIIEZ kBENEInOT'S Mammoth Gistantfe Minstrels. Third and Last Week of the Brilliant and Successful Engagement of Mr. Hughey Dougherty. First Week—Dougherty on Bone End. TEMPLE OF WONDERS--ASSEMBLY BUILDINGS—SIGNOR BLITZ, - And Ilia 80n, THEODORE. SPII.YEX I SPHYSX I SPIIYNX ! Evenings nt 7; l '. l .',Wednesday and Saturday Afternoons at 3. Admission, 25 cents; Reserved Seats, 50 cdnts. • FOX'S AMERICAN THEATRE, WALNUT Street. above EIGHTH . . Wonderful RIZ ABELL' BROTHERS; J. ff. BUD WORTH; New Grand Military Ballet, Abduction ot Nina; Mies Blanche Stanley, Miss Adult Richmond. &c. Mlle. DE ROSA and LUPO to two Grand Ballets. NEW ELEVENTH STREET OPERA HOUSE. IRE FAMILY RESORT. CARNCROSS 1 DIXEY'S MINSTRELS, EVERY EVENING. .I. L. CARNOROSS, Manager. 70,ENTZ AND HASSLER'S MATINEES.— ktrtaical Fund Hall, 1869-70. Every SATURDAY AFTERNOON, at U.' o'clock. ocl9-tf AOADEM Y OF FINE ARTS, CHESTNUT etroet, above Tenth. open from 9 A. M. to 6 P. M. Benjamin CHR IS Teat Picture of REJECTED Is still on exhibition. jett•tf FOR SALE. dit . ARCH STREET RESIDENCE I FOR SAL _E, No. 1922 ARCH STREET. . . _ . Elegant Brown-Stone Residence, three stories and Hansard roof; very commodious, furnished with ever, modern convenience, and built in a very superior and substantial manner. Lot 26feet front by 130 feet deep to Cuthbert street, on which is erected a handsome brick Stable and Coach HOMO. J. M, GIIIIIMat 81 SONS, 0020 tfrp 733 W NUT Street, For Sale Cheap. A FIRST-CLASS FIRE PROOF SAFE. Addrese, "LEON," this office. de2o-ttre& INNU. 131 EIGTEITENTH", ABOVE Walnut ; elegant four•story (mansard roof)mod ern dwelling ; every convenience, walnut finish. 64c. N 0,2.026 Canine street ' • modern dwelling, medium size. Both for sale; possession soon. N. R. 1 want to buy mayoral small /nausea centrally located. - • J. FREDERICK LIST, fell tf§ 621 Walnut et. eV FOR. BALE A RANDSOME .1101tbree-story brick dwelling with double three-story back buildings and lot of gronnd,•on the south side of Arch street, between Fifteenth and Sixteenth streets. A poly to A. B. CAItVIOI. & 00., S. W. corner Ninth and Filbert streets. ' fe2.5-fit* GERMANTOWN.—FOR SALE—A Jaavery desirable Stone Mansion, with storm stable and carriage-honse, with tbreo acres of land attached, situate on Duy'e lane, within ..t<f of a mile from Day's lane station. on Germantowit Railroad. Has every con venience and, is in good order. Grounds handsomely laid out and Planted with every variety of choice shrub bery. Terms, accommodating. Immediate possession. J. M. GUMMY ez 80148,733 Walnut street. an FOR SALE—THE MODERN THREE ERUtory brick Residenco situate No. 207 North Thlr tecoth'streot. Inimediato possession. hi. GURNEY Lk BONS, 733 Walnut 'Arcot. ittWEST SPRUCE STREET=--FOILSALE —Thu desirable Building Lot' No. 2102 Spruce street. 22 feet front by 160 feet deep to a street: J.lll. GUISIIIIBY eel SeNS, 733 Walnut street. CHESTNUT STREET.-FOR SALE- An elegant modern Residence ' 25 feet front, with every convenience, built and furnished throughout in a superior manner, and lot 235 feet deep through, to Sam coin street t, situate west of Eighteenth strbot. J. M. GUMIVIET & SONS, 755 Walnut street. ea NEW BROWN STONE HOU'AES, NOS. J 1151110), 2004, 2010 SPRUCE STREET. FOR SALE, FINISHED WITII WALNUT IN THE MOST SU PERIOR MANNER AND WITH EVERY ,MODERN CoNYENIENCE. E. D. WARREN. 2013 SPRUCE STREET. APPLY B CLOCK .2 AND 4 O'CLOCK P. • fo.lm§ Wir O:Et 8A L E—THE HANDSOME Drown Stone and Pressed DrlckDwolling, No. 2118 Epruoe Area. All and every Iniprovomunte, • Half can remain, if deeired. Aleo, a Dwelling, No. 2= Spruco street. "All Ineprovernente. inunediato possession for both; and other property for sale: 'Apply to 00eptrog, 8, JORDAN, 43.3 Walnut otroot. Eon. a/Cm 7 WEST PH/LAP E APII - B. vratrtl E l l 4 TIES For Sale. sow oheetztut it oet. re 3 24t* , eff • GERMA,NTOWN.-FOR A 4E- 1 -='r . .1111gthandaomp Stone Cottage, situated if Orthwelit - cdr l net EastWeJnnt lane and Morton etteet, Byety pity convettiende and in peyfectrorder. Grottnds well shaded . 1 2Y fuli'grown trope. J, SUNS, 733 Waintdetreet, =4S}E4SIANTOWN.—IfOR SAL '—'ll7(.), •new Pointed Stone Cottagem, With everie city con vonlence.• Built In' beet mangler. and convenient te Church Lane Station, on Germantown' Railroads Prlce 83,000 ~ each. J. hi., GU/UMW ct BOBS, 733 Walnut' street. • FOR SALE-THE HANDSOME ttoor•etoryy Residence, with three-story dodge back buildings And having orery modern Convenience and int. provament; situate No. N 8 Borneo street. Let , 25' feet r i nnalg. f a ee_t deep to a 20 feet wide street. J. N. BONS, 733 Walnut etreet. . OF -FOR atILLE.---DWELLINGS -1331 North Twelfthl street. Three-story modern welling. . • 1422 North Twelfth street. Three•stery modern dwell- ZSS.North Twelfth street.. Three-story dwelling with three.titory, tenement on rear of lot. 1520 South Tehth street. Three-story dwelling. woe South Third street. ' Three.etory 1212 btarllioroogh street, 'Richmond. Three-40y brick dwelling/. „ BUSINESS PROPERTIES.' SOO South Second street. Three-story brick, 22 by 13t. 250 North Eleventh street rour-xtery brick, -13 by 53. 42 ROvd street. Verner demand dwelling. CM South Sixth street. Tavern and ; 105 Passyunk Bead. ROBERT GBAFTEN & SON. No. 597 Pine street. FOILSALE—A VALUABLE AND CEN trolly located lot of ground on the south shle of Vansent hti eet, between Tenth and Eleventh streete—loo feet front by 107 feet In depth-3 fronla. Apply to LIS, CARVER ,14 Co., S. W. corner Ninth and Filbert streets. feall46t* lk/FERCHANTVILL.E, N. J.—BUILDING .15.1 Bites for sale, five minutes' walk ' froth Welwood atiol i ImtTyININIUTFA FROM FRONT AND BIARILE'T STREETS. Phlladelpbia. Address J. W. TORREY, fel9 boo§ No. 177 Chestnut street, Philadelphia. ~~n ;+1.+I;G"~!9 CREESE & MoCOLLUM, REAL ESTATiI AGENTS, oMce,Jackson street, opposite Mansion street, Gaps Island, N. J. Neal Estate bought and sold, Parana desirous of renting cottages during - the season apply or address as above. Respectftily refer to Chas. A. ilubicam, Henry Marcus Francis hiclivein, Augustus Merino, John Deals:k i r' W. W. Juvenal. . feti- WTO LET —SECOND.STORY FRONT ltoom,n4 Meetslit street, about ll2l x feet.j boilable for an °Moo or light business. jalb tt rp IVARIt & BIIOTITER in A FURNISHED HOUSE FOR RENT ZOI on Walnut, near Twelfth street. Address, X. Y., BULLETIN Office. MS St" IeTO LET-THE THREE-STORY BRICK Dwelling, No. 656 North Twelfth street, abtire Wallace. Three-story double back buildings, with alt modern courenitmces complete. Rout, $699: Inquire on premises. • fe9411-tf ftw TO LET-THE FINE HOUSE, 416 AU South Broad. Apply to E. R. JONES, 707 Walnut street. fol9-12r in TO RENT.-A HANDSOME 20. Country Residence, Duy's lane, Germantown. A handsome country residence, Manheim street, Ger mantown. A dwelling house, No. 119 Rittenhouse street, Ger. inantown. A dwelling house, No. 1341 North Twentieth street. A dwelling house, No. 2130 Walden street. A stable on Miles street, below Walnut street and abuse Tenth street. Room for three horses and car riages. Apply to OOPPOCK. & JORDAN, 433 Walnut street. el FOR RENT-CHESTNUT STREET. miiii.-The desirable property northeast corner of Chestnut anti Eleventh streets ; will be improved, MARKET STREET— Valuable store property, 40 feet front, southwest corner of Sixth street. • Four•story Store, 011 MA RENT street. VINE STREET—Large Dwelling, suitable for Wird trig- honse. situate N. F. corner Eighteenth and Vine. J. M. GUMMI & 50N5.73.1 Walnut street. ' -- SPECIAL - NOTIOES: -- yr — b NESQUEHONIN (I VALLEY RAIL, •u€ 9-. ROA r) COMPANY, OFFICE, IM SOUTII.SE- C'OND STREET. PH I.9tb, NOTICE TO STOCK lIOLDERd. The eempannual payment of Interest on the capital crock of thle company, under the letup) to the LEHIGH COAL ANL NAVIGATION COMPANY, at the rate of TEN PER CENT. Per Miriam, or two and a-half dollars per share, clear of taxes. will he made at this office on and after TUESDAY ! March Ist, 1870. Subscriptions will he received for a limited amount of additional stock, payable in fall. or in monthly bastal• moats of 85 per share, at the option of the enbseriber. feletstrp§ W. 11. WHITNEY, Treaaurer. 10. OFFICE OF THE SOUTH 'l.Ol/N -?AIN IRON COMPANY, NO. 424 WALNUT street, Boom No. 4, second story. PIIIT.A.DELPHIA. Feb. 29. 1870. Coupons due March let, 1870, on the Mortgage Bands of this Company will be paid at the Baukina House of Jay Cooke A Co., Third street, Philtulelphloi, on and after that date. fe.25 lOt§ A. BOYD. Treasurer. PHILADELPHIA UNIVERSITY, Ninth street, south of Locust.—The regular Lectures of the Spring, and Summer Session commence MONDAY EVENING, February Zi, at o'clock. Free to the public. This affords an excellent opportunity for physicians and advanced students of Medicine to com plete their collegiate education. fe262t• uu CEMETERY LOTS-- , MT. MORIAH. —Very choice. located Lots, near the large circle, old gronnd, on accommodating Ammo. Apply to E NRY C. TITUS, fe% 3t§ Ltd South Sixth street. PHILADELPHIA AND HEADING U RAILROAD COMPANY, Office, No. VT South FOURTII Street. PHILADELPHIA. Dee. 22, 1869. DIVIDEND NOTICE.—The Transfer Books of the Company will be closed on FRIDAY, the 31st Inst., and reopened on TUESDAY, January II 1870. A dividend of FIVE PER CENT. line been declared on the Preferred and Common Stock, clear of National and State taxes,payable in CASII,on and after January 17, 1870, to the holders thereof as they shall stand regis tered on the books of the Company on the Slat Instant. All payable at this office. All orders for dividend must be witnessed and stamped. de22- 60t§ . S. BRADFORD, Treasurer. 1:L"?. THE CONTINENTAL HOTEL COM PANY. The Board of ManagerS of THE CONTINENTAL HOTEL COMPANY have declared a aemi-annual Divi dend of THREE PER VENT. upon the Preferred Stock of the Company. payable on and after March I, MO. at the office 01 the Treasurer, N 0.700 Walnut street. Phila delphia.' .T. SERGEANT PRICE, fe24-a Treasurer.' OFFICE OF THE PRESTON COAL AND IMPROVEMENT COMPANY, PHILA DELPHIA, NO. .1 2.6 WALNUT STREET. FEBRUARY 16th, 1.47'0. At a meeting of the Board of Directors held this day, a Dividend of SEVENTY-FIVE CENTS a short, was derlared, payable theist of March. The transfer books will be closed on the 24th proximo, 1'017120 JOHN H. WIESTLING, Treasurer. °FYI (.7 E OF THE PRESTON COAL AND IMPROVEMENT COMPANY, PHILADELPHIA No. nt"; WALNUT STREET. The animal meeting of the Stockholders will be held on WEDNESDAY, March 2. at 12 o'clock M., at the office of tho Company. At the same meeting will be hold an , oloctlnn for Directois to servo during the ensuing year. JOHN lc WIESTLING, fell t mb2§ Secretary. OFFICE, OF THE CANNON IRON urD" COMPANY. PHILADELPHIA. Feb. 17, 1870. Notice Is hereby given that an installment of TEN CENTS per share, on each and every share of the capital stock of the Cannon Iron Company, has been called In, payable on or before the first day of March, 1570, at the race of the Treasurer, No. - 324 Walnut street, Phila-' delphia. By order of the Directors, fsl7tmhl§ B. A lIOOPES, Treasurer. KYOFFICE OF. TaE DELAWARE ' COAL COMPANY. PIIILAthiLIIIIA, February 14 1870. The annual meeting of the Stockholders of this Com pany,, and au election for Directors. will be held at No. 316 IA alma street, on WEDNESDAY, the 16th day of Dlarch next, at 11 o'clock, A. M. felt 271* J. E. WHITE, President. WILLS OPHTFI HOSE% Ih,D" tat, Race, above Eighteenth street. Open daily at 11 A. X. for treatment of diseases of the eye. ,ATTRNIRNG BURGEON:• Dr. Thomas George Morton, No. 1421 Chestnut street. VISITING MANAGERS: Oliver Evans, No. TO Spruce'street. Amos 11illborn, No. 44 North Tenth street. Elmore C. Nine, N 0.1834 Green street. dels,wtf§ WINES 7AIND - LIQUO RS. MISSOURI WINES. , The steady and Increasing demand for those Wines, the growth of a State peculiarly adapted in soil, climate, &c., has induced the subscriber to give them special at tention. It is well ascertained that the rich and well ripened grapes of that particular section impart to the wino flavor, bouquet and body equal to the best foreign wines, and of a character peculiarly its own—the unani mous opinion of, experienced connoisseurs at . this and neighboring cities. The undersigned has accepted the Agency of the cele brated "OAK HILT VINEYARDS,' of the tnship of 6t. Louis ; and being in direct and constantcommunication, prepared to furnish to con• smote the product of those Vineyards, which can be relied upon for strict puritylu addition to other qualitie already mentioned. P. J. JOUTJANi O 's. --1,000 G - Al - 4 LONS W. SPERM OIL; 809 gallona B. W. Whale Oil; 'l4OO Nat.' W. Whalo Oil ; 25 barrels No. I Lard Oil. In alOre ani,l for sale by COWMAN, 11USEIFILL Scoo., 111 Oboattiut atroot. _ __. . 113111 10E.-:-100 .CASICE3 CAROLINA RICE. ~ .a.v, lii.storo and for wale by 00011 RAN, 1.11,16*1014L. &- CO, ' 111 Ohnignlittitreut . `IORWERIM. atitiOM, 4G. CURRANT WINE. ALBERT%C. ROBERTS. , i; Dealer In every dencrlption of fine Grocerld, Corner eleventh and ,Vine Streete. lv • MI4BB 1311AIV Ali ElitialED All Salmon, Tongues and Solids, in prime order, just geuirol and for sale at 011§ East End 000081 Second street. be or/ Oheetnnt street: . 4 • INTRO. SPICIES - I_GB - 0 - 17 - 1 1 111 - 7AND IS WHOL —pore English mustard by the pound —Choice' bite 'Wine and Crab Apple Vinegar for pickllng._ht store, and for sale at COUBTIf '8 East End Grocery, Mo. 134Ssuth be•ond street, below Chestnut street. W GREEN 'GI CivElt.'=-400 'POUNDS of choice Green Ginger in store end for Delo at MISTY'S EISt End Grocety, No. fth South sec o nd street, below Chestnut street. QSOUP B.—T M ATO, PEA, MOOS. Turtleand Julllen Soups of Boston Club fdanufao• tom one of the , finest articles for plo-nice and aalllng parties. For sole at CODETT , S East- End Grocery, No, Ma South Second street. below Chestnut street. WRITE ,BRANDY FOR PREti&EVIETII - 1 , 0 7 . 4 0371 -/cha t e n ic rit i l i fle o jeat reaelved and for sae es greet. below Obeognut street.erY' No. 03 Solltb Becloud girt EXECUTRIXES' BALE.—ON THE preneisee.--Eetate of Dr. John F. Lamb, deceased. emelt A. Freeman, Auctioneer.—Yalualele Properties, Maill and 'Pine streets, Frankfort', Under authority contnimei in the AVM of Dr. Join F. Lamb_.decemoid, on !Saturday afternoon, March 12,1870, at 4 o'cloeks *lll bf!! Bold at public sule, on the. premises. the following described real enate, viz.: .240,, lrDMelllttg and large lot, Main and Pine 'Meets. All that certain lot of ground, with the improvements thereon erected, com mencing. at Om northerly corner of Maio and Pine streets in the Twenty-third Ward of the city „ thence extending along said Main street '39 feet 3M inches to ground No. 2, hereinafter described; thence N.,64 deg, 14 min.; W. 61 feet I inch passing through the party well to a point, thence st ill further N. 61 • deg .53 coin .4 W. 96 feet- 1 inches to ground No. 3, hereinafter do- .. scribed ; thence on a line parallel 'or nearly se, with . Franklin street 21 feet leiit It:Wheel° p lea street; and thence along said Pine street lel feet 1 inches to the place of beginning: ' • Feer On Use *bore lot Is erected a 2%-11:0rY Ernes dwelling, brick paned, with two etery atone back build ing, with attics. Parlor,dining-romn. sitting-roans awl kitchen on the first floor ; five chambers in seem:Astor". end four finished at tit/ ,thorn; good cellar under lb., whelp building. The house has gas Introduced, water andgas-oven kltebene numerous' closets , pump in yard, Arc. The lot le very desirable. being 'm feet3ll invitee on Main street, and 191 feet 7 16 farina on Pine street, Clear of all incumbrance. 114,0%) can remain, Immediate posseseion. Iday be eXlitllin , llauy time. 2.—Handeome l ot hheridence and Let. Main etreet.—All that certatis of ground. with the im provenionte thereon, situate on the northwest side of Main etreet, beginning 39 feet 3M inched from Puce street ; thence extending 31 feet 6M inches along said Main street ; thence N. 64 deg. mitt. W . 123 feet 2 Inches to a point ; thence N. 13 des. 463; min.; S. 2 feet 6 inches to a point • thence deg% 12 % rola. W• 64 fest ISM inches to a point Of ground No. 3, next do f•rtilml ; thence on a line parallel, or nearly so. with Franklin street 31 feet 6 1 1 inches to ground No. 1. aim v. described, and thence along the same 16. 61deg. 63 min. : E. 96 feet 11 inches to a pumt, and thince, still by the same, through the party wa 1, $.61 deg. 14 min.; II: Of feet 1 inch to the place elheginntnit. fir On the above 10t In erected a large thres•abwy . stone iteeidence, with w marble stereo. *lain ing 2ti by 40 fever. with twoettory steno bark building and two-story brick kitchen ittarbed, The ben.. to veer torinnodume. ith tw(o pattern, v. hie fold ing.doors, n ing . two k Helmet*, large hall eight feet v. ide.lengtia of the main building ' on firet noon On the woad floor five clambers, those in the main building toeing . eery large. bath roam. eercanm' rooms and play ysegn. On the tbird floor main building are four chambers, 'with • large loft above. Lail:o4lW V.°l l / 3 1 - 11, with C 41611401, tic-, aile :)rot !sten vault and wine cellar. The properly 111 t horonghly and enbetanitally built of the hen materials, the being of unusual thteknese, rendering it cool in autemer n germ in inter, and being lathed and eesetered three/timed. (6 preWily - dry. -Numer ous closets iu tamest every name, • also largo linen closets. china closets, butte r'n pantry, At. Per manent marble-top wash-stand* In the ge• coed Mori chambers of the main building and wlll.tr intreduced in the emend story back I.fUllidjugg, g ad throughout, the fixtures being included in the sale ; pre sate stairway.. low •down gt.te in the dining•roem, su perior heater in celinranade by Andrews A MIMI: in the kitchen mitt) hot and 1',0141 water. also gas even in summer kitchen, cistern ac. The prom my erected back frotn the forret wit h . good reed in front. May he nes:Mind any time. Clear of ail Lactunbrance. 8 7,opt may remain if desired by the purchaser. Immediate post. send]. Nos. Sand 4 linfiding Lots. Pine etreet.—No. 3.—A1l that certain lot ofgrolluil on the N. N. side of Pine street, In the rear of NOM. 1 and 2 above described, van merle lag 191 Net 7.4 inchee from Main street, beingl23; feet front on 1.1110 street anti extending in depth onlin e . parallel. or nearly go, with Franklin street. ou thoseutit • eset lino 63 feet 6 Mate, and on the northwest line 33 feet lON inebes. N0.4.—A11 that certain lot of ground.adigiining the above to the west, being 22 `: feet front on Pine street. and extending la depth on lines parallel, or nearly to, with Franklin strret, on theta . E.line, s6feet W2i inches, and ou the N. W. line2i feet 2 indica. No.s,—Lpt,cyrner Franklin and Pine streets. A de sirable lot of ground Situate at the N. E. corner ef Pine and Franklin itret-te, Irving 52 fret .11 Indira front on l'ineetreet and 64 feet 5 inches front on Franklin Street. in depth on the S. E feet 2 1-21nches, and on the N.E. line 22 feet 11 lushes. Mr The abort 13 a desirable corner tor frithiratiat-stabto thereon everted. . hio.ti.-13riek nous , . and Largo Lot, Franblin street. All that certain lot of ground. with the intproromonte thereon oreeted, situate on the W. side of Franklin sq.-et, being 21 feet trout and extending In depth of that width VP foot. ar• On the above lot is erected a tiro- story brick now. eoptaining 3 morns. I'ossearion May Mth, 1870. Clear of incurnbrance. Survey and plan 41" the trhole estate may be ex emitted at the Auetton Store. . _ . eMO each to be paid on Nos.l and 2, end a 100eacir ou the ether properties et the time or sale. By Order of Executrixes. JAM.Et3 A. FREE3IAN, Auctioueer, fell 24 nah3 Store, 4r..1 Waluut street. in PEREMPTORY SALE.-TO CLOSE a concern. James A. Freeman, Auctioneer. On 'Wednesday. March 9, IZfio, at 12 o'clock, noon, will be sok! at public oak without reserve, at the Philadelphia Exchange, the following described real estate, •ip,•: genteel three-story brick dwelling. No. 1912 KM Norris street. All that certain three:llton' 'brick rnessuage and the lot ot ground situate_ on the north • eitstwardly elite of Norriestreid, at the distance of 214 feet 11 inches northwestward of Thompson street, in the Nineteenth Ward of the city ; containing introit' on Norris street, 16feet 9 inches, and extending in depth of that width on the northwest line 101 feet Hu inches, and ou the gontheast line 102 feet Mi Inches to ' a 4 feet wide alley, with the privilege thereof. The nbare is a gentfel three story brick dicellirts, meth too•story brick bath building, hat bath, range, hot aped cold 'water, gasfixtures, trash pare, marble steps, 6c1.0., Reads and Said. r $2,000 may remain. Salo ab - solute. Neat three•story, brick dwellings, i• 08 and 810 Almond street,Eighteenth Ward. All those 2 neat three-story brick dwellings, containing each 6 rooms and bath.situ ate on the southerly ride : of Almond street, at the die , • lance of 98 feet • easterly from Otis street, in the ..! Eighteenth Ward of the city ; each containing in front ,' on Almond street 14 feet, and in depth southerly 46 feet ' to a 4 feet wide alloy communicatmg with a 3 feet wide 'alley which leads into Almond steeet, and with the use and privilege thereof. el Wimpy remain en eaeh. Sale absolute. Will 'be sold separately. Dents for e 240 per annum: • Dwellings 829 and 839 Almond street. All those certain three-story brick messuagoe, each containing brooms and bath; situate on the northerly side of Almond street, crust of Otis street, in. the Eighteenth Ward of the city (Nos 829 arid +339), each containing in front nu Almond street 14 feet, and in depth 54 feet to W 4 feet wide alley, and with the prirdege thereof. $1,200 may ;rema in. Clear of incumbrance. Will be sold separately. Sale of the whole aboolnte to Meson concern, JAMES A FREEMAN. Auctioneer, fell 24 mb3 Store, 422 Walnut street. • eV SALE BY ORDER OF HEIRS.— ma. Estate of Eliza Risden.decessed.—James A. From, , Auctioneer.—Nino Acres of Land, Grover's lane, Paschalville, Tweraytseventh Ward,--On Wednesday, March gth,ls7o,'ltt l 2 o'clotk, noon, will be sold at public sale, at the Philadelphia Exchange, the following de• scrioed real estate, late the property of Elizaltisden,de ceased: all that certain lot or piece of ground, situate in' Kingsessing township (now the Twenty-seventh Ward), of the city of Philadelphia, and marked On 'a certain 'plan " C." ' Beginning by a recent survey at ill point on the northerly side of the aforesaid Drover's lane and irr a line of land herein allotted and assigned to Benjamin E. Moore: thence crossing the said lane and by laud herein allotted to Andrew Rive!) and Safah his wife ha rightof the said Sarah, 5.1936 deg., W. a 0.15 perches to Andrews land; theace by said Andrews land B. tiOg dog , E. 30,0 Ferchec to a stone, a corner of 'this and Elizabeth Grover s land; thence by the said Elizabeth Grover's laud and recrossing the said , lane N. 2234 deg., E,.49.9 perches, to a poist on the northerly side of striatum); thence along-the northerly side of the aforhsald lane N: 70% dog., W. 33 perphes to the place of -beginning Con taining 94 acres, reserving a right of way at ail times to Elizabeth,. Grover and cullers along said line, Pianist the Auction Store. , My_order of Heirs. . • w• 8100 to be paid at the time of sale. , JAMES A, FREEMAN, Auctioneer, fe2.l 24 nib 3 Store, 42 Walnut woo • tagl ASSIGNEE'S PEREMPTORY SALE.;-- .Itimes A.. Freeman, Auctioneer.—Gonteel three story brick Dwelling, No. 1422 Lombard street. On Wednesday, March 9,1870, at 12 o'clock, noon, will be Hold at public salon without reserve at the Philadel - R p o b l ia change. the folloivingdescrihed real estate. via.: All that certain lot or piece of ground, with the! three story brick dwelling house thereon erected, .situuto on the south aide of Lombard street, ut the distance of 180 feet eastward from Fifteenth 'street, in the Seventh Ward of the city, being 18 feet front on Lombard street, and extending indepth southward of that width between yarnllel lines with Fifteenth street, 78 feet.. ,The above a 'genteel three-story brick dwelling: with three-story brick bark build ili KS, hoc saloon parlor; dining Mom,' kttrhen and summer kitchen 00 first floor;, marble niant(eS ; Baltimore beater in dining room heating back buildings; JNrnare in tellar heating main building ; gas, bath.range, hot and rota 'water, poivolo stairway, tr. With the 1180 of alley lending lute Fifteenth street, Subject to $lOB 00 ground - rent per annum. ittsrlt will be sold without reserve by order , of 'Assignee. ' o'l'l2oo to be paid at the time of solo.. . . JA Altai 'A. EItIGEMAN, noetionen. . fo2l 2.1tu1t3 Stet 0, 422 Waluut Attoot. 220 Pear street, LITIZ REAL ESTATE SALES. I f'rern •Om Saturday Itiviewl BROODING. $ There are Sortie pereonO iv d ifi sne it .Yaertity Of OCCupdtionir and i4te bat the s least implisitiveaabserifor"cantiet lielia somepassing curiosity as ,to how they get through the time, or certain spaces of time, . which to outward appearance are vacant. Thus briefly described, the class 'may seem larger than we mean to indicate here. Busy spirits are apt to speculate as to how all ieisiii`e exercises itself; how leisure without any, visible pursuits passes the time. But it is one of the functions of society trietipply a sham of occu pation for such of its members as have nothing real to do. "Anybody," it has been said, "can get through a day." .; What with liairpging,what with gazing and stating I.goairtant lryhat with eating and'ditirkingiand , eard=pXyifigi; the old fogy does not even know, except at odd limes, that he neither does' anything nor, has anything to do.' When we see tibia doing nothing be, is mush like the ; .peo n le„ aroundati iffeeth" lrltt terests of other ,men. But sthestS ar_ o l/ 0 90: 1 . , who do none of thelie - Aliiiigs, who 46 not care to be seen in concourses, who despise public and fashionable haunts, who are silent amid talkers add out of the way where anything is to be looked at, who are-never seen doing anything, and yet are never apparently at a loss or bored; who, if forced into periodical occupation, relapse into quiescence as a normal condition. They are probably taciturn people, or, if they talk, it is of externals; abstract questions involving thought are irritating to them as a disturbance ; the subjects they voluntarily discourse upon leave the mystery of their inner life unsolved. And yet we may know that they possess brains, and therefore have an inner life, only their_ talk and action give no index to it and furnish no suggestion; until indeed they surpriseus by some sudden outbreak, some ebrillithin - oe , anger or impatience or violence of opinion, for which nothing about them bad prepared us or given warning. Silent, passionless, difficult to move, slow to act, they had given us no glimpse of the mind's working, and then comes a lava burst as though they had suddenly taken up. some false exaggerated impression. , But sullden'nutbritstis in natiirri . ".alivalis'.indieate slow, unnoticed processes somewhere; and here we ate surprised because we had not kept pace with that silent, ruminating, inner growth which we *ill call brooding—the quietest, the , most passive, and also the most developins, transforming, exaggerating of all mental pro cesses, and issuing like natural incubation in hatching something in direct contrast to jhrowli; seeming passivity:, Instead of the outbursts incident to inert minds being excited front without, we believe them to he simply the natural issue of long brooding, that has gisen proportious and solidity to sonic slight injury or fancied is song which would have taken no bold on an active occupied mind, or been re sented' on the spot, but which has . swelled here' s into a :huge unendurable gri v- once, urging to intemperate speech and spas modic action. Brooders of the ideal sort; by , mere contemplating, turning, mumbling and fumbling a subject, whether it be a wrong,' or a longing, or a secret, increase, the volume and weight of the thing brooded over, and change its proportions, without any extraneous aid from altered conditions and circamstariceS. Time, which to active minds abates the force of events as they sucsessively recede into the past, aggravates, and in aggrandizing perverts, them in the brooding temperament. A trouble, a piece of 111-usage. a passion, a grudge, a misty speculation, a fancied discovery in science, an act of liberality, grows by incubation, and as it grows drifts without conscious will and ' in tention into a new phase more agreeable to the brooder's inclination. No matter holds its identity in this process; fact is for ever being disorganized. After brooding for years over irritating circumstances, men will assert in good faith the exact contrary of facts which they themselves were eagerly instrumental In bringing about. Nor for this need their life necessarily be recluse or inactive ; though, from the larger dimensions which all personal matters assume in passive as compared with active life, we associate brooding with retired habits. Many a mind has a brooding corner which seems to passing acquaintance occupied and even absorbed In common and general interests. Brooding is almost of necessity the relax'- Lion of solitude. We doubt, indeed, if solitude is endurable without this at once stimulant and opiate of the faculties. Jeremy Taylor says of the devotions of solitaries, "They suffer they know not what and, call it what they please quoting that saying of Anthony the Hermit, "That is not a perfect prayer in which the vo tary understands either himself or the prayer" —a condition of the intellect which throws light :On the expansionOt old dogma andthe birth of new, of which we tsar so mash. The eremite thought be was defining contemplation s but We seem to recognize the essential property of brooding, which is that it issues, without as signable reason or apparent processes, and .sud denly, even to itself, in new developments. Disappointment in love is _a very frequent promoter of this condition, and is among the most excusable of all; for the lover by pre scriptive right broods, and the habit is con tracted prior to the injury which turns it into so bitter an indulgence. It often nee& an heroic effort to shake off the moody influences which follow upon the reversal of legitimate hopes. Yet the brooding victim, as it is talle'd, of disappointed affections may be an object of pity, but certainly not of respect, or even sympathy. The strange habits which persons in this mate fall into are indicatiouS of selfishness. They 'are indulging themselves in hidulging a- habit: They might by an effort shake oil' We weight which makes them an incubus on all abmut them. They could, if they " wotild„ dispel the cloud which casts a gloom on many family circles, Men are not so apt to, brood e over these matters as women, or, when they do, they are solitary in their sullenness; but how often do we hear of a sister, who, on the failure of 'a love-affair, separates . , herself from the general home Interests, cares for nobody, and Idoks, perhaps, perir►anently Into helpless ness and cold, inaccessible despondency. Nor . is the depth of the gloom any indication of the strength of the previous affection ; It is not even a sign of constancy; the blow rankles, not because of the sufferer's acute sensitive- mess, but simply because some weak part of thoooral system' has been struck. BO the wrong that sets people brooding need not be of man's doing., Social disadvantages Or, some personal defect may boa finitful source of it, whereiwide or ambition '.nitt.gustalried by concurrent energy of will. "" Anything that makes, a , man, different . from othent either stimulates or depresses, and trilling flaw marring an otherwise perfect "or dlithignished foirmand physiognomy is , seen to settle on the consciousness as a perpetual presence. There have been magnificent eyes, glorious in .form and color and full of intelligence, which have contracted a, permanently averted downcast babtt from 'brooding over a slight immaterial defect in finely-formed features . till . it was mag nified Into iii enormity. Not; however, that brooding even over a wronir. is necessarily painful. 'A 'very " small grievance paralyzes some minds till its contemplation is about the strongest pleasure they can .. bear. They can not get beyond it ;. it la the boundary of their view. By long, habit the mind sinks into it at every'olOnlent pf,leisure,.. as the; body sinks into its accustomed easy chair, which is easy , tbrongh' The flict, of ,buman 'wearinesS. It is rot. The ,essential: finality Of; brooding is its in definitt nes 5. ...6.:lsiVe bou;lit works towards a cot elusion, 71111 i conclusion iMplies,progreas— the prscess'of passing ins. The 'brooder never concludes, and doee not even affect any practi -01 purpose. He 'WOid,.not know where he Was, arWhat to take iolkilgett,tek Shift iris ground for...:6Ximpto; 4140* efferisfied . 'Wrong `'prititcs W'palitablet.'deldsl6l . 4 .- bi some long-suspected neighbor from an enemy turns into a benefactor. l3rooders dd not want these violent changes; they are lost without the. old tale of offences tof i retise upon and turn over and Phi aile,,,to is !;116 . 4: v iinetiore,,thit# the gi'ubject Wadi °lie of the on which the brooder lives; it grows to be his universal apologist, his excuse for all short, comings, for negleotedypporttinities, for failure generally. It' is its resource, his fancy, his' society, his confidant, his prospect for tho future, his memo .7 ‘ of tpe par Ilene°, we never re g4r4fie n Nito bio 'da on alatge scale atan 'objeeti whate'oet , - hid-Seedling condition. lie has a screen from the miseries of life, something that stands between hits and the too staring and abrupt proximity of mis ifortunerapitifie_yawneas of calamity. 'a' solitary' ,mterchie;- ) peoyic ponatantly brOod , , In -couples. Beyond this limit we imagine it to be impos sible to continue in the required suspense from action and conclusion. A third party inter poses fresh conditions, and reduces the Matter_ into discuSainti; 'Or itcrinfitlation, or .platuling or gossip, or detraction. Three people Can't stand still, can't help making some way ; if not, there is conscious disunion; they must follow, or lead, or part company.- , Bat ; are convinced, 'do continue telmep in thesaine' charmed round, to emit aloud the same result, less ni wings, to say over and over again the same identical words which end day after day in the lsaison,stfispension of 7 arty ' tArceltipion. Where two persons—sister, or husband 'and , wife, or mother and daughter—live together, and set their neighbors wondering what iu Abe . iworld, they. 7 ,firtd . "(to. : d 0 „ ..,,, if r they do not go 'into' *society; nor' entertain friends, nor work, nor play, nor write, nor travel, and yet maintain a cheerful air, they probably brood. We ,know,-they7o if Wc detect some joint gradull'cb.i.nde Aiithetr view of facts which have themselves undergone no change. If 'we see joint opinion strengthen, And antipathioa „opin „-force 4 .withoutadequate re`Man, irthelf eAtlitiiite , °f,pe?rSons gr6ws defined and exaggerated without new means of judging, then we may be sure it is through a process Of social rumination , of, which tinconse lona; igunratiCnt, ail elunge, and supposing themselves to be only repeating 'foregoile conclusions. "We hale talked eye; it hours, and ,hours and , !littiars..." slat& 611Vof tneSt ti.trint bnkiders, 'and yet we can't make anything Of it." But an antipathy had grown up and a strength of censure of which there was not the consciousness` s'ilnicconii4 of , neighbors are an evident subject of brooiliti t z, but there are pleasanter and more inexhaiisCi ble subjects still, the consideration of which -plight'spiv,. - us 'Avorl4. -or pity for- persons whose lives are externally dull and uneventful. Money is a never-ending motive for rumina ting, as well as for •external material specula !tionr- What rtionV iwill_do7.llolY Tar. it tvill:go;. what hills it must, pay,"where the next supply is likely to come from, and when, and what it will amount to at such a time, is a diversion that sever. fails wifere' once the ,ba ti lt-thas set, in, unProdiictive though it be, and' ending in nothing. When the question of investments is added, when increasing hoards are to be lodged, and houses and lands witii• all their contingencies pass in a 'pharitisinagOrie re view, we need no longer wonder how long, ' uneventful hours are passed. If our readers are to, be brooders as all. we can only wish them such comfortable subjects for their musings. !SHIPPERS' lila& 110HILADELPHIA_ RICHMOND AND ' NORFOLK STEAMSHIP LINE. THROUGH FREIGHT AIR • LINE TO THE SOUTH AND WEST. INCREASED FACILITIES AND REDUCED RATES FOR 1870. STEAMERS LEAVE EVERY WEDNESDAY. and BATURDAY j at 12 o clk, Noon, from FIRST WHARF, above MA RhET Street. RETURNING, LEA YE RICHMOND TUESDAYS and FRIDAYS, and NORFOLK WEDNESDAYS and SATURDAYS. lifirNo Rills of Lading signed after It o'clock on Failing Day,_ THROUGH RATES to all points in North and Sonth Carolina via Seaboard Air-Line Railroad, connecting at Portsmouth, and. to Lynehbnrg, Va.. Tonneasee an&th• Went via Virginia and Tenneanoe Air-Line and Rich mond and Danville Railroad. Freight HANDLED BUT ONUE_And taken at LOWER RATES THAN ANY OTHER LINZ. EEZZ=;=2= Sieguruiliips Insure at lowest rater. Freight received DAILY. State-room accommodations for passengers. . WILLIAM P. 0L21142 No. I 2 South Wharves and Pier No. I North Wharves. W. P. PORTE% Agent atltichmond and City Point. T. P. CROWELL & CO., Agents at Norfolk PHILADELPHIA AND SOUTHERN MAIL STEAMSHIP COMPANY'S REGULAR LINES FROM QUEEN STREET WHARF. Tho YAZOO will sail for NEW ORLEANS, v 1 Rayons...on Saturday. March 5. at 8 A. M. The JUNIATA will sail from NEW ORLEANS, Via HAVANA, on—. The W.YOMING will sail for SAVANNAH on Saturday, March 5. at 8 o'clock A. M. The TONAWANDA will mall from SAVANNAH on Saturday, March 6. The PIONEER will sail for WELIIIINSTOIi, N. 0.,0n Tuesday, March 8, at BA. M. . Through billwof lading eigned, and paasage ticket. .old to all Dointa South apd-Weat. BILLS of LADING SIGNED at QtrEEN BT. WHARF. For freight or paa~e,' aPPI to WILLIAMJ ES, General At,- M l3O South Third Agenrea. VOR BOSTON. 1: DIRECT, SAILING Wednesday FROhI PINE STREET • AND LONG WH FROM PHILADELPHIA 19 A. M. 3Y. MI SAXON,Wednesday,Mar. 2 ARIES, Wednesday, Mar. 2 NORMAN, Saturday," 5 ROBAX,RattirdaYs "6 ARIES, AN ednesday 9SAXON, Wednesday, " 9 ROM AN,Saturday " 12INORMAN, Saturday," 12 SAXON, Wednesda'y " 16 ARIES, Wednesday, " 16 NORMAN, Saturday," 191ROMAN,_Satnrday " 19 ABIES, Wednesday, " 23 BAXON,Wednesdai, " ROMAN, Saturisiy, " 26 NORMAN, Saturday" 26 SAXON , Wednesday " 30IARIES, Wednesday, " 30 These Steamships sail pnnctnally. Freight received every day. Freight forwarded to all points in New England. For Freight or • Passage (apperlor accommodations) applyto HENRY WINSOR di C., UR South Oslaware avenue. irW EXPRESS LINE TO ALEXAI drift. Georgetown and Washington, H. 0., via Cites Nike and Delaware Canal, with. connections at Alex andrte from the most direct route for Lynchburg, Brie tol, Knoxville, Nashville, Dalton and the Southwest. Steamers leave regularly from the first wharf ahoy Market street, every Saturday at noon. Freight received daily. W. P. CLYDE & CO., N 0.13 South Wharves and Pier 1 North. Wharves. HYDE & TYLER, Agenta at Georgetown. M. ELDEIDGE & 00., Agents at Alexandria. Vs "ATOTIOE—FOR NEW • YORK, VIA DEU VI aware and Raritan .Canal—Bwittsure Transports Lion Company—Toespatch and Bwifteure Lines. Thr business by these Lines will be resumed on and after•. the Bth of March, For Freight, which will be taker on accommodating terms, apply to WM. M. BAIRD a., 00., 113 South Wharves. NOTICE.-FUR '"NEW YORK, VIA DEL AWARE AN TRANSPORTATION WIFTSTIRE COMPANY. DESPATCH AND SWIFT/111 - BR LINES. The businees of these lines will be rearm ed on and eke the 19th of March. For freight which will be taken o accortimedi!ting termsraPPly to wm_ t _BAIRD A CO., : • • No. MB Month Wharves. CONSIGNEES' NOTICES. NOTIVE—THE BRIG f , ANNIS BATCH , ELDER from Portland, Mo., is now discharging at Mead Ailey Wharf. Consignees will please attend to the reception of their goods. WORKMAN al CO., Con. signees. 123 WalnutstrApt - - deb! tf CAUTION TV AIITIO N.—ALL PERSONS •ARg hereby cautioned against harboring or , truatins any of tho crew of the British brig" Estelle," Dela); tower. from Rotterdam. at; no debts of their contract. Ma will bo paid by (laptain or Consigneoa. WORKMAN & CA.. Consignees. del! tf FIXTUREST fIAB FIXTUREI3.--Itt MILEY, MERRILL Njt a THAOICARa, No. 718 Chestnut street, etannfao tnrere of Gas Plictures, T..ernps,gte.; would call the attentionof the pedalo to their large and elegant assort moot of Gag chandelier,. Pendants. Bvseketc go. The/ also Introduce gee pipes Into dwellings and public hi:lin ing', and attend to eking, altering and repairing gap .gloss. All stork w _ . _ NI 176 BALES COTTON. IN coormANORUBSXLI4 slitonrcehamndtTitiftoltisealete. DISH OIL.-450 ,BARRELS . LIWIT-COL I! bred meet Fieh (rn, low-priced, foe ewe by BMA, BOWLICY, JO Poutb Prat Went. TtlE 04ILY, GVI TG liiiLL:ETIN—PfIITADELPiII A, M INOAY, FEBRU,Art 2s 1870 STEAMSHIP LIMO : OM KAOH POET EVICBT Saturday. . : PBILADBLPHIA. ABE', BOSTON. FROM .1106 TON. TRAVELERS ° GUIDE • - Itzß A D IN G RAILROAD. - GREAT, . rut Line 'from Phllad4l3rdik Wi'i'thelniarier of en Slyly nlai le Schuylkill"; mean, Ign ~Clattiberx and and Wyomi g Valley'a, thellibith, NOrtitWad ,4l3 .F , T o te c enadtuff Winter ArraegoOentef palmed, Trainee Cora). 1849. leavinglas.conneanyhe,Deptit,Thirteilinth and Uallowhill 'treats, Philadelphia, at the followin6 hours: MORNING ACCOMMODATION.-AV/AO A. M fcif Beading and all Intermediate Stations, and Allentown' Returning, leaves Reading at 6.36. P. M.. arriving f Philadelphia at 9,26 P. M. MORNING EXPRESS.-At 8. 15 A. M. for Beadle Lebanon, Harrisburg, Pottsville, Pine Grove,TanulOha i i Sunbury, Williamsport, Elmira, Rochester Major Falls, Bu ff alo, Wilkesharre, Pittston, York . Carlisle: Okairbersburg Hagerstown, Ac. a l The 7.30 M. A. , train connects at Reading with the Z Pennsylvania Railroad trains for Allentown,ite.,and th 8.16 A. M. train connects with the Lebanon Valley tral for Harrisburg, lie.; at Port Clinton with Catawissa R. E. trains for WAlliamsport, Lock Haven. Elmira, itc.; at Ilairisburg with Northern Central, Cumberland Vali ley. and Schuylkill and Susluehasina trains for Northi umber and Willi York, York, Ohamberskurg,Pinef o c. ._.,,, IP v* • , .1 A RIGOR ii 1 XP Efiftr-Leaves Philadelphia ai vt i 330 ... ..forilleadl g, ottirville, Harrisburg, /to., coni fleeting with Reading and Columbia Railroad trains fo 001nmbla,iire. POTTSTOWN AVCOMMODATION.--Leaves Potts, town at 6.45 A. id . t stopping at the intermediate statioz w ii arrives In Philadelphia at 9.10 A. M. Returning tear ..PlilladelahhkajitE.M.virrlvea in Pottstown at 6.16 P. i ~ ".ItEADINO • &ND: , POTTSVILLE , AOCOMMODA I TION.-Leaves Pottsville at 6.40 A. M., and Reading at • 7,30 ai...* ki, 0 • ito ppiD g. , 14t *Away sta tion, ; arrives in Phila. ' delphla' at 20 A, - M. , - ' . - , Returning, leaves Philadelphia at 4.46 P. M.; arrives . in Reading at 7.40 P. M., and at Pottsville at 9.30 P. M. Trains for Philadelphia leave Harrisburg at ELIO Ai M,, and Pottsville at 9.00 A. M.,arriving in Philadelphia at 1.00 P. M. Afternoon trains leave Harrisburg at 2.04 , P. 1d,./sndpottsville at 2.46 P. M.; arriving at Phila. delphia at 6.46 PI M' , - , , . s • Harrisburg Accommodation !eaves Reading at 7.1$ A. EL and Harrisburg at 4.10 P. M. Connecting at Read./ fug with Afternoon Accommodation south at 6.36 P. 141., arriving in Philadelphia at 9.25 P. M. Market train, with a Passenger car attached leaves Philadelphia at 12.30 noon for Pottsvi ll e ,and : all Way Stations;leabeir POthrrille At 5,40 A.. M. connecting . at Reading with accommodation train for Philadelphia and all Way Station; AU the above trains run daily, Sundays excepted. Sunday trains leave Pottsville at 8 A. Id., and Phila delphia at 3.16 P. M,; leave Philadelphia for Beading at 8.00.. A . dl.. returning from ~11ing.itt, 4.26 P. M. - CHESTER - VALLEY:RAMEOAD.-Patatesigers for Downingtown and intermediate points take the 7.30 A. 31., 12.30 and 4.00 P. M. trains from Philadelphia ' return. the from Downingtown at 5.30 A. 31.. 12.45 and 5.15 P.M Y PERRIOMEN RAlLROAD:Passengers for Schwenk& villa take. 720 A.M. I ykin and 4.00 P.M. trains for Phila. delphia, , rethiming f • , rulilchwenktrrille at 8.06 A. 111,, 12.45 noon, 4.15 P. 31. ?stage lines for various points in Perkiomen Valley connect with trains at Collegeville and Sehwenksville. . . COLEBBOOKDALE RAlLBOAD.—Patosengera for Mt. Platiall i atid interim `ate points take thel.:3o A. M, and 4.00 P. .Arratrta frinto6ll4.ol,al id p;ttlturaiug from Mt. Plea pan at 100 atinl.Z A. M. NEW YORK EXPRESS FOR PITTSBURGH AND THE WEST.—Leaves New Yofk at 9.00 A. M. and 5.00 P. N., passing Heading at 1.45 and 10.05 P.M., and connects at Harrisburg with Pennsylvania : and NortheratlentraiNallroad Express Trains for Pitts. burgh, Chicago, WillhanapOrt , Elmira, Baltimore. &c. Returning, Express Train Harrisburg on arrival of Pennsylvania - Express from Plttaburfih, at 5.35 A. M. and 12.2 u noon, 'musing Beading at 7.23 A. M. and 2.05 P. N., arriving at New York at 12.05 noon and 6...t5 P. M. Sleeping. Cara accompany tkese trains through between 'Jersey My end -Pittsburgh. without "change. , Nail train for New York leaves Harrisburg at 8.10 A M. and 2.05 P. M. Mail train for Harrisburg leaves New York at 12 Noon. . . SCHUYLKILL VALLEY RAILROAD—Trains leave Potter ine at 630 and 11.:1/ A.M. and 640 P.M...returning . from Tamaqua, ut 11-'4 A. N.. and 2.15 and 440 P. M. SCHUYLKILL AND SUSQUEHANNA RAILROAD —Trains leave Auburn at +345 A. M. for Pinegrovo and Harrieburg, and at 12.10 noon for Pine-, grove, Tremont 'and Prookaide• returning 'from Flat: rieburg at 3.40 P. Al: from Bronizaide at 4.00 P. M. and' from Trelnont Id 7.15 A .14. and 5.0P.M. , • TICK ETS .—Through first-citiee tickOts and emigrant tickets to all the principal points in the North and Weet and Canada. ' Rxcursion Tickets from Philadelphia to Beading and Intermediate Station good for day only, are sold by Morning Accommodation, Market Train, Reading and Pottstown Accommodation Trains at reduced rates. Excursion Tickets to Philadelphia, good for day only. , are mid at Reading and Intermediate Stations by Read ing and Pottstown Accommodation Trains at reduced rater. Tie following tickets are obtainable only at the Office of S. Bradford, 'Treasurer, No. 227 South Fourth street Philadelphia, or of G. A. Nlcolls, General Superinten dent, Beading. • Commutation Tickets,at 25 per cent. discount, between any Points desired, for families and firms. Mileage Tickets, good for 2,000 miles,between all points at eta 50 each for families and Arms. 'Season Tickets, for three, six, nine or twelve months, for holders only to all points, at reduced rates. Clergymen residing on the line or the road will be fur nished with cards, entitling themselves and wives ticksst alf-fare Klearcion et Tickets frtinsrbiladelphia to N:itittipal sta lions, good for Saturday, Sway and 'Mond a y, at re. duced fare, to be had only at the Ticket Office, at Thir.' teenth and Callowhill streets. . . YREIGHT.—Goode of all descriptions forwarded to all the above points from_ the Cpriapany's -New Freight Depot, Brosd and Willow streets... ) Freight Trains leave Philadelphia_dallY at 5:215 A. M., 12.90 noon, 5.00 and 7.15 P. M.. for Bmding, Lebanon, Harrisburg, Pottsville, Port Clinton, and all points be yond. Mailitclose at the P biladelphLa Post-office for all planes on the road and its branches at 6 A. IL'eand for the prin cipal Stations 01117 at 235 P. M BAGGGE. Dungan'a Express will collect Baggage for all trains leaving PlPiladeJphia Depot. Orders can be left at No =Booth Fourth street , or at the Depot, Thirteenth and Weill' street.. OR NEW YORIL—THE CAMDEN AND R A IL ROA Dd PRELADIELPNIA AND F OB NTON COMPANY'S LUMN, from Philadelphia to New York, aud war 11acego from Wal nut street wharf. ' • - Pas.. At 630 A. M., via oa.mden and Amboy , Aecom. /2 211 At BA. M. via Camden and Jersey Olik Ex. Men, 300 At 2.00 P. Di ~ via Camden and Amboy :wen, 000 At 6 P. M. for Amboy and intermediate statiorui. At 6.30 and 8 A. M., and .2 P. M., for Freehold. At 2.00 P. M. for Long Branch and Points on R. & D. B. R. R. At 8 and 10 A.M., is 2,4.1g1 and 4.30 P. 21.,f0r Trenton. At 6.30,8 and 10 A.M., 12 M.,23.30,4.30,6, 7 and 11.30 P. M., for Bordentown,Florence,Burlinoton,Beverly and De lanco. At 6.30 and 10 A.M.,12 M., 3.30,4.22,1,7 and 11.30 P.M. for gdgewater, Silverside, Riverten, (Palmyra and Fish House, A .M. and 2P. M.. for Riverton. Air The 11.30 P. 31.. Line leaves from foot of Market street by voter. ferry. From liensingtorilioPt: At 7341 A. M. 2.30, 3.20 and 6 P. M. for Trenton and Bristol. And at 10.45 A. M. and 6 P. M. for Bristol. At 7.30 A. M., 2.30 and 6 P. M. for Morrisville and Tully town. At 730 and 10.45 A. M.,2.30, 5 and il P. M. for Schenck's and Edduutton. . At 720 and 10.45 A. M., 2.30, 4, 5 and t P.M.' for Corn wells, Torresdale, Holmesburg,Tacony,Wissinornin g , Brideebnrg and• Frankford and 8.30 P.M. for Ranee ' burg and Intermediate Stations. • From West Philadelphia Depots:at Connecting Railway . At 7, 9.30 and 11 A. M 1.20, 4,•6.45, and 12 P. M. • New York Express Line,via Jersey City 2.5 At /1.30 P.M. Emigrant Line. ....... . .... ... 2Si .At 7,9.30 and 11 A.M - ,1.20,4,6.45,and 12P.M.for Trenton. At 7, 9.30 and 11 A. M., 4, 6.45 and 12 P. M., for Bristol. At =P.M.( Night)for llorrisv ille,Tullytown, Schenck's, EddingtonlOontweils, .Torresdale,-Holmesburg, cony, Wiss i noming, Brideeborg and Frankford. The9.3o A. M. and and 12 P. M. Lines run daily. All others, Sundays excepted. For Lines leaving Kensington-Depot, take the care on Third or Fifth streeta, at Chestnut, at half an hour be fore departure. The Care of Market Street Railw ay run direct to West Philadelphia Depot,Ohestnut and Walnut within one square. On Sundays, the Market Street Can will run to connect with the 9.30 A. M., 6.45 and 12 P. M. lines BELVIDERE DELAWARE RAILROAD LINES from Kensingtort Depot., ' • At 730 M., for Niagara Falls, Buffalo, Dunkirk, Itheta, Owego, .. Rochester,' Binghampton Oswego', Syracuse, Great Bend, Montrose, Wilkesbarre, Scranton, Stroudsburg, Water Gap, Schooley'e Moan- • tain. &c. At 7.30 A. Itand 3.30„P.7d..f0r Belvidae,Eliston, Lam bertville Flemington, &c. The 3.30 P. 31. Line con nests direct with the train leaving Easton for Mauch Chunk Allentown Bethlehem, &c. At 14 A. M. from test Philadelphia Depot, and 5 P. M. from Kensington Depot,for Lambertville and interme diate Stations. • • CAMDEN 'AND ND BURLINGTON CO.CO, A ND REMBER-; TON AND 111 GIITSTOWN RAIL ROADS, from Mar ket street Ferry (l)nter Side.) At 7 and 10 A. M.,1, 2.15,3,30, 5 & 6.30 P.M.,and on Thurs day and Saturday nntlittl at 11.30 P.M for Merchants ville,Moorestowui' Hartford, Masonville, • Hainsport and Mount Holly. At 7 A. M.,.2.15 and 630 P. M. for Lamherton and bled-. ford. • . • • • At 7 and 10 A M., 1, 3-30 &b P. M., for Smithville, Ewansville,Vincentown,Birminghani and Pemberton. At KI A. M. fora Lewistown, Wrightinown, Cookstown, , New Egypt and Horners town. At 7 A. M..,1,,and 3.90 P.M. for Lewistown, Wright,-; town, Cdokstown, New Egypt, Hornerstown, Cream' Ridge, Imlay/down. Sharon and Ilightstown. Fifty pomade of Baggage only allowed each Passenger.' Passengers aro prohibited from taking ankthing as bag gage but their wearing apparel. All baggage over fifty pounds to be paid for.extra. The Company . limit their rewnsibility for baggage to. One D ollar : per , and will not be liable for any, amount' beyond $ o alit by special contrast. Tickets sold and Baggage checked direct through to Boston, Worcester, Springfield, Hartford, New Haven Providence Newport , A Utica, Rome, Syrt:cuse Rocheeter, Buffalo, Niagara - Ikb and' Suspension Beller,. ; • An additional Ticket °Mee is located at N 0.828 Chest. nut skeet, where tickets to New York, - • and all imper-, taut points North and heat, may be procured. Portions, pn.rehasing Tickets. at 'this Offiteican have their bag gage checked from raddences or hotel to destination ,by Union Transfer Baggage Express. Linea from New York. for Vhiladelphia leave from foot of Cortland street at 1.00 . and 4.00 'P. M., viaJerser Oily and Camden:: At 8.50 end 10 A .M.,12.3),i_5, 6 and 9 P.M., and at 12 Night, via Jersey City and West Phila delphia. From Pier No. I, N. River, at 6.30 A. M. Accommoda tion and 2P. M. Exriress i _vits Amboy and Camden. • Deo. 22, 1860. —.WEL GATZMER agent. ' IM u5 , T.J.E1187,17 ,R , .A.II,ROAD S. y FAIL AND WINTER' ARRANGEMENT. COMMENCING TUESDAY,BEPT. Mat, Leave Philadelphia, Foot' of Market street (Uppel • Ferry) at 8.15 A. M., Mail, for Bridgeton, Salem, Millville,Vine land , Swedeshero and all intermediate stations. • 3.15 P. M. Mail,f for Cape May*Millville, Vineland and way etationo below Glassboro. • 310 Passe n ger; for Bridgeton,.Saltnn, Swedes barn, an d all intermediate stations. 5.80 P. 11:. Woodintry, Glamboro stud Clayton accom- ' modation. • • . EXTRA TRAIN FOR OAP; MAY. (Saturdays 0n1y.!. . Leave Philadelrada,B.ls X. M.' • . Leav f‘ Cape May,l.loT. M. • ; Freight train for all statiolis leave* Camden daily, at 12.00 o'clock, noon.. , • • "Ivied received in Philadelphia' lie SecOnd coveted wharf telow Walnut street. '. Freight delivered at No 28 S. Delawscesvedue. Cionunutatlon ticket', at redsoed rates; between Phila.' , dedpbla and all stations.: . • wIIALIAJW,J.ISZW/11400wIntezalewt. ritAvEL4ics , Gt iDEIi • ' Vintfit PEri-NTriTiitAtratov:r. .I.‘ —THE SHORT MIDDLE ROUTE to the Lehigh. ' and Wyoming Valley ' Northern Pen can't van la Southern and Interior New _York, Rochester ,; -Buffal o Megan, Falls; the Great Lakes and the Dominion_of danada. WINTER ARRANGEMENTS. ' TARES EFFECT, Novemlier 22(1,1869. 14 DAILY TRAINS leave Passenger Depot; corner of Berke. and Americas streets ( Sundays e2cfrp"""" —.l facies: I • 7,30 A- M. Accommodation for Port , • At 8 A. AL— ) Rl orning Egerton, for Bethlehem and Principal Stations on Main lino of. North , Penngyivanie Railroad, connecting at Bethlehem with Lehigh Faller ltailtoad,for Allentown, Mauch Chunk. Mahanor City, Wilkesharre, Pittston, Towanda and Waverly; neneec . ring at Waverly with ERIE 'RAILWAY for Niagara Palle, Buffalo, Rochester, Cleveland, Chicago, San irrandiscii, and all points in tho Great West: At 8.46 A. M. — Accommodation for Doylestown, liter grins at all intermediate Stations. Passengers for Mtn.. low.Grovo,lLithoro , and Hartsville,' by this train, take nii t ? it Old York Hood. • ... . A. M. (Exprestil_. for Bethlehetti, Alientown, Mauch Chunk White. Haven • Wilkesbarre, Pittston, Scrti l iten and Carbondale via Lehigh and Susquehanna Bad cod, and Allentown, Easton, blackettatown, and Poln on New Jersey Central Railroad and Morris and &hex Railroad to Now York via Lehigh Valleyßailroad. At 10.45 A. M.—Accommodation for Yort• Washington, stopping at intermediate Stations. , 1.16, 6..20 and 8 P.M .—Accommodation to A b i ng t on. n. • , At 1,45 P. M.—Lehigh Valley Express for Bethlehem, Easton, Allentown, 'death Chunk, Hazleton, White • Haven Wilkesbarre, Pittston, Scranton, and wteltang Coal degione, • • 2,46 P. m.—Accommottation for Doylestown, stop. pingat all intermediate stations. • . 4.16 P. M.—Accommodation for Doylesto ma, stop. ping at all intermediate stations. At 640 P. M .-- Through for Bethlehem, connecting at llethlebein with Lehigh ' Valley Evening Train for Easton. Allentown, Mauch Chunk. At 6 . 2o .P.M. — Accommodation for Lansdale, stopping at all inter mediate stations. At .U.BO P. Yd.—Accommodation for Fort W . THALNE ARRIVE IN PIIILADICIAPIIV .4"" . From Bethlehem at 9A. M. 2.16, 4:40 and 8.26 P.'112. 2.16 P . M., 4.40 P. M. and 8.25 P. M. Trains make direct connection with Lehigh Valley or Lehigh and Susque hanna trains from Easton, Scranton. Wilkcsbarre, MA hancry City and Hazleton. FrotoTioylenown at 8.86 A.81.,4.30 P.M.and 7.06 P.M Front Lansdale at 710 A.M. From Fort Waahington at 9,26 and 10.315 A, M. and 3.10 P.M: ON SUNDAYS. .. .. Rhibuielphia for Bethlehem at 930 A.M. ..' Phitadelphis for Doylestown at 2.00 P. M. - Doylestown for Philadelphia at 7.00 A. M.' Bethlehem for Philadelphia at 4.00 P. M, Fifth and Sixth Streets and Second and Third Streets Lira aof City Passenger cars run directly to and from the Depot, Union Line run' within a Short distance of the Depot. Tickets !unlit be procured at the. Ticket Office, in order to secure the lowest rates of fare. ; ELLIS CLARK, Agent. Tickets sold and Baggage checked through to_princi *pal points, at Mann ' s North Penn. Baggage 'Alines ofilc,h , No. 105 South Fifth street . • , . pgallcr _ISYLVANIA. CENTRAL RAIL ROAD.--After 8, P. M., SUNDAY "November lith. 1869, The•tralms of the - Pennsylvania Central Railroad' leave the Depot,at Thirty-Brat and Market atreete,which 'smashed directly by the cars of the Market Street Pas senger Railway, the !sat car connecting with each train leaving Front and Market street thirty minutes before its departure. Those of the ' Chestnut and' Walnut Streets Railway run within one Beldam of the Depot. Sleeping Car Tickets can be had on application at the 'Ticket Ollce4gorthwest corner of Bluth and:Chestnut streets. and at the Deport- Agents of the Union Transfer Company will call for anddeliver Baggage at the Depot. Orders lit at N 0.901 Chestnut etre:et, No. lid Market street, will receive at, tention TRAINS LEAVE DEPOT, VIZ.: Meil Train......_____ _ at 8.00 A. M. Paoli Accom at 10. Xi A.M., 1.10, and 610 P. M. Fast Line. at 11.50 A. M. Erie Express. .......»....:_.._.... .......:............._atll.so A. M. Harrisburg Accorn at 2.30 P. M. Lancaster A ccom at 4.10 P. M. Parkebnrg Train at 530 P. 51, Cincinnati Express. - at 8.00 P. M. Erie Midland Pittsburgh Express.:-.,...-/ ~.at , 9.45 P. M. Accommodation. at 12.11 A 51. Pacific Express .. . ... at 12.00 night. Erie Mail leaves' daily, except Sunday running on Saturday night to Williamsport only. On Sunday night passengers will leave Philadelphia at 8 o'clock. Pacific Express leaves daily, • Cincinnati Ex press daily, except Satuidly. All other trains daily, except Sunday. The Western A .commodation Train runs daily, except Sunday. For this train tickets must be procured and baggage delivered by 5.00 P. 31.. at 116 Market street. , TRAINS ARRIVE ,AT DEPOT, VIZ : Cincinnati Express.— --- ....... ................at 310 A. M. Philadelphia Express------- • at 6.30 A. M. Erie__at 6.30 A. M. Paoli Accommodationat 8.20 A. Al, and 3.40 &tile P. M Parksburg Train... at 9.10 A. M. , Fast Line,....-__....-....at 9.40 A. la Lancaster Train....._.........at 12.35 P. M. Southern Erie Ezprca d Expre'es.7.7....-..:. ......... ........at T.OQrP. M. Lock Haven and Elmira_ 7.00 P. M. Pacific Express....---- . at 4.25 P. M. liarriaburgAccommodalion... ... . ....... 9.60 P. M. • for further information, spily to JOHN F. VANLIER, JR.,. cket Agent,9olCheetntit street. FRANCIS FUNK, Ticket Agent, 116 Market street, • SAMUEL H. WALLACE, Ticket Agent at the Depot. The Pennsylvania Railroad Company will not assume any risk for Baggage, except for wearing apparel, and limit their responsibility to One Hundred Dollars in value. All B exceeding that mount hirable will be at the risk of the owner, unless taken by slal con tract. EDWARD H. WILLIAMS, • ileilarl4 Superintendent. Altoona, P 14,,.. a :IS .10 la •: t , A` 1 4 BALTIMORE BAIGNOAD—YI= TABLE. Com mencing MONDAY, May 10 th,186g. Trains will loom Depot, corner Broad and Washington avenue, aa fol low WAY MAIL TRAIN at 5.30 mg Alilandays excepted), for Baltimore, stopping at all Regul ar Station/. CM nect with Denman, Itailro at Wilmington for Crisfield and Intermediate Stations. EXPRESS TRAIN at 12.00 M. (Sundays exoepted for Baltimore and Washington, stopping at Wilmington, Perryville and Havre de Gr ace. Cionnacts at Wilming ton with train for-New Castle. . . EXPRESS TRAIN at 400 P. N. (llandara excepted), for Baltimore and Washington; atopyt at Cheater, Thurlow, Linwood Claymont, Wihni n, Newport, Stanton, - Newark ,-- Elkton, North E , Charlestown, Perryville Havre de Grace, Aberdeen, r Perrrman's, Edvwood; Ma Chase's and Stemmer 'e Bun. EIGHT EXPRESS at 11.30 P. N. (daily) for Baltimore and Washington,_etopping at Cheater, ThrulowLin wood, Claymont, Wilmington, Newark , Elkton NorthJ East, Perryville, Havre de Grace, Perryman'. and Mag nolia. Passengers for Portrees Monroe and Norfolk will take the 12.00 N. Train. WILMINGTON TRAINS.--Stopping at all Station@ between Philadelphia and Wilmington. Leave PHILADELPHL3. at 11.00 A. M. 192111,5.00 and 7.00 P. M. The 0.00 P. M. train connects with Delaware Railroad for Harrington and intermediate stations. Leave WILMINGTON 6.30 and 8.10 A. M.,130, 415 and 7.00 P. M. The 8.10 A. M. train will not stop between Chester and Philadelphia. The 7.00 P. H. train from Wilmington runs claily;allotherAccommodationTraine Sundays excepted. Trains leaving WILMINGTON at 6.30 A. M. and 4.13 P. M. will connect at Lamokin Junction with the 7.00 A.M. and 4.30 P. M. trains for Baltimore Central R.B. From BALTIMORE to PHI ADELPHIA.—Leaves Baltimore 725 A. H. Way Mail. 9.35 A. M., Express. 2.3 S P.M., Express. 7.75 P.M. Express. SUNDAY TRAIN FROM ' BALTIMORE.—Leaves BALTIMORE at 1.25 P. M. Stopping at lllnolia,Per ryinan's, Aberdeen, Havrede-Grace,Perryvifie,Charles toun, North-East, Elkton Newark, Stanton, Newport, Wilmington Claymont , Linwood and Chester. Through tickets to all point Weet, South, and South west may be procured at the ticket o ffi ce, Ein Chestnut street, under Continental Hotel, where also State Rooms and Berths in Sleeping Cars can be secured during the day. Persons purchasing tickets at this office can have baggage'checked at their residence by the Union Trans fer Company. H. F. KENNEY, Sup't. pH ILADELPHIA., GERMANTOWN 11 AND NORRISTOWN RAILROAD TIME TA FILE.—On and after Monday, Nov. =d, 1869, and until further notice: FOR GERMANTOWN . - • Leave Philadelibia-0,7,8, 9.06, 10, 11,12 A. hi., _l, 5.15,3X,4.05,4.85,5,5%, 8,6%, 7,8, 9.M. 10, 1/ 02 P. M. Leave Germantown-6 6.55, 7.4 , 1,8, 8.20, 9,10,10 . 50,19 A 111 1.2,9.8.80,1'(,6 , 5%, 6, 6%, 7,8, 9, 10, 11, P. M. The 8.2) down-train , and tho and 6% up train, will not atop on the Germantown Branch. ON SUNDAYS. Leave Philadelphia-9,1 A. AL, 2, 4.06 minute/I,T and 10% P. M. Leave Gennaatown--836 A. M 4 .; 1 . 6 . , 6 and 934 P. M: UIIEBTIQUT~HILL ~_~I:ROAD, Leave Philadelphia-6,8, /0, u A.M.; 2,31 i, 6X ,7, 920 and 11 P. M. Leave Chestnut minutes 8,2.40, and 11.40 A M.; 1.0,340,5.40,6.40, B. SUNDAYS4O and 10.40'P. M. ON . Leave Philadelphia;-9.15 minutes A. 111.• ' 2 and 7P. M. Leave Chestnut Hill-7.50 minutes A. M. ;; 12.40, SAO aud 9.25 minntes P. M. FOR CONSHOHOCKEN AND NORRISTOWN. Leave Philadelphia-6.7%, 9,11.05, A. M.; 1.%,3,4, 434, 5%, 615,8.05, 10.05 and 11% P. M. Leave Norristown-6.40,6.25, 7,7%, 8.60,11 A. M.; 1%, 3,4%, 6.15, 8 and 9% P. M. • air The 7M A.M. Tref nix from Norristown will not stop at Iklogevee, Potts' Landing, Pontinn nr Schur Lane. The 4P. M. Train from Philadelphia will stop only . at School Lane,lllanikyunk and Conshohocken. , ON . SUNDAYS. Leave Philadelphia-9 A. M. 94,4 and 7.15 P. M. Leave Norristown-7 A. M.; Y 1,5% and 9P M. FOR, itIANAUNK. Leave Philadelphise-4,7%,9 5%,5.15,8.05, 10.06 and 1135 P.M. Leave Manayunk-6.10,6.65,1%, 8.10,9.20,11% A. M.; 5%446%, b. 50 and 10 P. M.,' ON SUNDAYS. Leave Philadelphia-9 A. M.; 2%, 4 and 7.15 P. M. Leave Mariartnk-7% _ H A A. M.,• 1%, and 9% P. M. PLYMOUT R. R. Leave Philadelphia, 7% A. M., 4% P. M. Leave Pitmouth, 5% A. M., 4% P. M. W. S. WILSON ' , General Superintendent, • Depot, Ninth and Green streets. - DRILADELPHIA. AND ERIE RAIL .I .1 ROAD—WINTER TIME TABLE. On and , after Iidi)NDAT, Nov. 15, 1869, the, Trains on the Philadelphia and Erie . Railroad will run as follows from Pennsylvania Railroad Depot, West Philadelphia : leaves WESTWARD. Mail Train l Philadelphia. 9.35 P. M. , Willianisport ' 7.40 A. M. as a ' arrived at Erie-- 8.20 P. M. Erie EXPrees leaves Philadelphia. 11.40 A. M. Williamsport 9.00 P. M. aa 44 arrives at Erie. 10.00 A. M.' Elmira Mail leaves Philadelphia. 7.50 A. M. " " Williamsport. 6.00 P. M. „r " ' , Trivets at Loc Haven 7.20 r. M. EASTWARD. Mail Train leaves ET- * 41 a, w 1 i rt 8.40 A.ll. 9.25 P.M. " " arrives atPhil i niaii. 5.20 A. M. Erie Express leaves Erie ..... 16 44 4.00 P. 21. " Williamsport- 3.30 A. M 44 li arrives at Ildladeptda 12.45 P. M. Moira Mail leaves Lotk Haven , " Williamaport. 8.00 A. M. 9.45 A. M. .. .. arrives at Thiladelpula` 6.50 P. M. Bittralo 7ififetie Ilaves Williamsport 12-25 A. hi: • .. 4, ~ r.i ' . Harrisburg ....,........iio A.111.' rr ' %, I" , 'i' arrives at Philadeiphia... .. . . .25 A. M. *alines earit tonnects at Cony. Mall east orltY and Irvineton. Buyers west at irvineton with trains on Oil creek and Alleabenv River 'Railroad. szmuip . Jr: ,, TYLBH; general,Superiniende ,•^7ltA VELEM' GUIDE" a) EST ' CHESTER AND P ELEGADEL. • r PHIA RA /LROADe:-Winter Arrangement-0b and after 'MONDAY, OCt. 4, 1860, Trains 'will lea ail follows; .• . • V. B Leave Philadelphia , from New Benet Thirtt -first and Chestriti streets. 7.46 A. M. 11.00 A. M 220 P. M 4.11 P. It., 4.40 P. 11146.16. P. M. 11.30 P. M. " ' Leave West Chester, from Depot, on Bast Market street,6.26 A, 116 , 8.00 'A 7,46 A. M 10.46 M.,1.64 r.-11.,0p0P M L 6.55 P.ll, • • Trtuttleaving w tut Chester at 8.00 A. 14. will stop at B.C. Junction, Lena', Glep Biddle and Media: leaving Philadelphia at 4AO P. M.:, will stop at Media, Glen 'Biddle; Donal ' and D. Junction. Passengers to or from stations between West Chester and B. O. Junction tl* ;ft I rasvi e r i t a7 i an d Ca L attachedtdtpeo;lig at c. junction; midgoing West, Tassengers for Stations above B. C. junction , take train lextvin_g Philadel oa at 4,40 and will change cars at B. O. Juno Thellepcit ht Philadelphia is reaclu3d directly by' the Chestnut and Walnut street cars. Those of the Market street line run within anon:mare. The cars of both lines connect with each train tipon its arrival. ON SIINDAYIS.—Leave Philadelphia for West Chester at 8.80 A. M. and 2.00 P. M. Leave West Cheater Ant Philadelphia at 7.66 A. M. and 4.00 P.M. Sir' Passengers are allowed to take Wearing Apparel only, as Baggage, and the Company will not in any case be responsible for an amount exceeding one hundreddol. tars, unless • special contract be made for the same. WILLIAM C. WHEELER.' . • - General Superintendent. fIAMDEN AND ATL RALI.e. ROAD.---011ANGE OP HOURS—WINTER Altt RANGEMENT. Go and after MONDAY, Nov.l, 1869, trains will leave Vine street ferry al folloWeitrlfi • Mail and ...... .. .. B.OOA. MI Atlantic Accommodation ' 3.45 P. M. Junction Accommodation to Atco and Inter " mediate stations. 13-1 V P. kL _ • RETURNING, L EAVE, ATLANTIC. Mail and Freight 1.40 P.M, Atlantic Accommodation ' • 6.05 A. M. Junction Accommodation for .8.12 A. M. Haddonfield Accommodation trains leave _ Vine Street Ferry 10.15 A.M. and 2.00 P.lll, Haddonfield...-. . 1.00 P. M. and 3.15 P. IL EXTRA TRAt -FOR ATLANTIC CITY. ,SAT BDAYS ONLY). On and after February sth, an extra train wartin EVERY SATURDAY, in advance of the Mail Train: Leaving Philadelphia at B.OOA. M. Leave A Omni° at .340 P. M. Allowing persons nearly viva hourg on the beach. • DAVID IL MUNDY. Agent. PILADELYBIA AND BALTIMORE 'CENTRAL RA ILIIO AD COMPANY. WINTER ARRANGEMENT. On and after MONDAy, Nov. Ist., 1869, Trains will leave as follows, stopping at all Stations on Philadel phia, Baltimore Central and Chester Creek Railroads: Leave PHILADELPHIA for PORT DEPOSIT from Depot of Philadelphia, Wilmington, and Baltimore Railroad Company, corner Broad and Washington avenue, at 7110 A. M. and 4.30 P. id. A Freight Train, with Passenger car attached,wlll leave Philadelphia for Oxford at 290 P. M. Leave' PHILADELPHIA for all Stations on Wilming ton and Beading Rrilroadn at 4.30 P. M. Leave PORT. DEPOSIT for PHILADELPHIA at 5110 A. M., 9.25 A. M., and 2.25 P. M. On Satuniay the 2.25 train will leave at 4.30 P. M. Passengers are allowed to take wearing apparel only as baggage, and the Contently will not be responsible for an amount lexceeding one hundred dollars, unless special contract is made for the same. • • !HENRY WOOD, General Superintendent. rAST FREIGHT LINE, VIA NORTH, PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD, to Wilkesbarre. abanoy City, Mount Carmel, Centralia, and all points On Lehigh Valley Railroad and its branches. By new arrangements, perfected this day, this road is enabled to give increased despatch . to merchandise con signed to the above-named points. Goods delivered at the Throug h Freight Depot, S. E. conront and Noble streets ' Before 5 P. M. will reach Wilkesbarre, Mount Cannel, Mahanoy City, and the other etAtione u Mahoney and Wyoming vallervabefore A. M. the encceeof n - g da y WLhiBCLARR• Asnt. MEDICAL Ayer's Cherry Pectoral, For Diseases of the Throat and Lungs, stioh as Coughs, Colds, Whooping Cough, Bronchitis, Asthma, and Consumption. • Probably never before in the whole history of medicine, has anything won so widely and so deeply upon the confidence of mankind, as this excellent remedy for pulmonary-complaints. Through along series of years, and among most of the races of men it has risen higher and higher in their estima tion, as it has become better known. Its uniiiirm character and power to cure the various affections of the lungs and throat, have made it known as a re liable protector against them. 'Whilo adapted- to milder forms of disease and to young children, It is at the same time the most effectual remedy that can be given for incipient consumption, and the dan gerous affections of thethroatand lungs. As a pro vision against sudden attacks of Croup, it should be kept on hand, in every family, and •indeed as all are sometimes 'subject to colds and coughs, all should be provided with this antidote for them. Although settled • Consumption As thought in curable, still great numbers of eases where the dis ease seemed settled, have been completely cured, and the patient restored to sound health by the Cherry Pectoral. So complete is its master/ over the disorders of the Lungs and Throat, that the most obstinate of them yield to it. When noth fag' else could reach them under the Cherry Pec toral they subside and disappear. Singers and .Pubtio Speakers find great pra tection from it. Asthma is always relieved and often wholly cured by it. Bronchitis Is generally cured by faking the Cherry Pectoral to small and frequent doses. So generally are its virtues known that we need not publish the certificates of them here, or do more than maintaine assu d. re the public that its qualities are fully • Ayer's Api.e Cure, For Fever and Ague Intermittent Fever, Chill Fever, Remittent Fever, Dumb Ague, Periodical or Bilious Fever, &c., and indeed all the affections which arise from malarious, marsh, or miasmatic, poisons. As its name implies, it does Cure, and does not fail. Containing neither Arsenic, Quinine, Bismuth, Zinc, nor any other mineral or poisonous substance whatever, it In nowise injures any patient. The number and importance of Its cures in the ague dis tricts, are literally beyond account. and we believe without a parallel in the history oftgue medicine. Our . pride is gratified by the acknowledgments we receive of the relied cures effected hi obstinate cases, and where other remedies had wholly failed. tjnacelilnated persons, either resident in, or travelling through miasmatic localities, will be pro tected by taking the. AGUE CURE daily. For Liam. Complaintß, arising from torpidity of the Liver, it is an excellent remedy, stimulating the Liver into healthy activitv. For Bilious Disorders and Liver Complaints, it is an excellent remedy, producing many truly re markable cures, where other medicines had failed. Prepared by Du. J. C. AYEIt Sa Co., Practical and Analytical Chemists, Lowell, Mass., Wad sohl all round the world. PRICE, $l.OO PER VOT-TLE• At wholesale byJ M. MARIS A 400—Philadelphfc 119-tu th a 4m OPAL DENTALLIN A i3UPEItIvI3 artiele for cleaning the Teoth,deetroying animalcule which infeet them, giving tone to the gums and leaving a feeling of fragrance and perfect cleanliness in the mouth. it may be need daily, and will be found tc strengthen weak and bleeding gums, while the aroma and detereivenees will recommend it to every one. Be. ing composed with the aeeietance of the Dentist, ?byel chins and Microecopiet, it Is confidently offered as a reliable substitute for the uncertain washes formerly in vogue. Eminent Dentists t acquainted with the constituents' of the Dentaltina . advocate its use; it contains nothing to prevent its unrestrained employment. Rade only by JAMES T. SHINN, Apothecat7, Broad and Spruce °treats " rally,and D. L. Stackhonse, Robert C. Davis, Geo. C. Bower, Chas. Shivers, S. M. Mc:Colin, S. C. Bunting, Chas. B. Eberle, James N. Marks, E. Bringhurst t Co., • Dyott k Co., R. C. Blair's Sons, IWyeth &Bro. For sale by Druggists gene Fred. Browne, Hastsard dt Co., C. B. Keeny, Isaac H. Kay, 0. H. Needles!, T. J. Husband, Ambrose Smith, Edward Parrish, Wm. B. Wobb, James L. Blenheim, Hughes & Combo, Henry A. Bower. THE WONDERS ACCOMPLISHED 1. through the agency of the genuine Cod-Liver. Oil in Scrofula, Bronchitis, Chronic Cough, Asthma; and even Consumption, almost surpass being. In Joni: C. BAKER 4C Co.'s " Pure Medicinal Cod-Liver Oil" eac h bottle of which is accompanied by medical guaran-: tees of the highest order—the pnblic hare the best brand of the preparation known to the scientific world. JOHN C. BAK KB 6c CO., N 0.718 Market street, Philp.- delpbia, Peon. IlfW" For sale by all thug • {stn. - fe7 HEATERS AND STOVES. TH 0 M S 0 N'S LONDON 'MOH oner, or European Ranges, for families, hotels or public institutions, in twenty different sizes, Also, Philadelphia Ranges, Hot Mr Tprnaces,' Portable Heston, Low down Grates, Fireboard Stoves Bath Boilers, Stew•hole Plates Broilers. Oookini Stoves, etc., wholesale and retail 14 the manufacturers, SHAH E dr. THOMSON, nallim w f draii No. 709. North Second street. THOMAS S. DIXON & SONS, • Late Andrews & Dizon No. MU CHESTNUT Street, Philads.. OPposito United States Mint. .--,, snataoturers of LOW DOWN, PARLOR, • ' CHAMBER, OFTIOR, And other GRATES, . For Anthracite, Bituminous and Wood Fir ; WARM-AIIURNACES, • /or Warming Milo and Private Bedidings. BEHIBT/BB,ITINTILATORIN • 011BM Z BE , CAPB -BOOO E WH BA B N LB sBaARHTMES. PlCE;;:lartalilareritltOrtiCA — ltiCE 3V In etpro.and fpr tato by ('O9 t URAN, RUSSELL& 00.011()Leatuia$ btrott. FINANCIAL. J. W. GILBOUGU & Co., BANKERS. ) 42'SOUTH THIRD STREET, Negotiate Loans, Buy and Bel Government and other re- liable Securities. ja3lm w fly§ BANKING HOUSE OOKE& . /12 and 114, So. ST. PIELTLAVA .131 A.T.AERS IN ALL GOVERNMENT SECURITIES. We will receiveaffiplications for Policies of Life Insurance in the new National. Life In. surance Company of the United States. Pull information given at our office.. 5-20'S AND 1881'S Bought, Sold mid Exchanged on most liberal terms. ' GOLD , Bought and Sold at Market Bates. COUPONS CASHED. PACIFIC RAILROAD BONDS Bought and Sold. S r r O K.•s Sought and Sold on Commission * Only. Accounts received and Interest allowed on dallybalances subject to cheek at sight. , ••\, .1 N u titec A . 40 south Third St., Wit PHILADELPHIA. D. C. 'WHARTON SMITH & CO., BARKERS AND BROKERS, No. 121 S. THIRD STREET. SUCCESSORS TO SMITH, RANDOLPH & CO. Every department of Banking business shall receive prompt attention, as heretofore. quotations of Etocks, Gold and Governments constantly received from our friends, E. D. RANDOLPH as CO., New York, bl'our PRIVATE WIRE. 3017 PERFITMERY. Murray Lanmant Florida Water, The most celebrated and most delightful of all per. fumes, for use on the hand kerchief, at the toilet, and in the bath, tor sale by all Druggists and Perfumers. Ja2l:Lrn w 4m LEGAL NOTICES. rN THE ORPHANS' COURT FOR THE City and County of Philadelphia.—Estate of WIL LIAM PRICE, deceased.—The Auditor appointed by the Court to audit, settle and adinet the account of MARY SWIFT late PRICE) and .1.11. NEVINS. Ex ecutors of the last will of WILLIAM PRICE, deceased, and to report distribution of the balance in the hands of the accountants, will meet the parties interested for the purposes of his appointment, on-WED NESDAY, March 9th , 1870, at 4 o clock P. M. at his office, No. 10 Law linilding,s.32 Walnut street', in the oily of Philadelphia. . fe2s-fm U THE ORPHANS' COURT FOR THE L City and County of Philadelphia.—Estate of MARY ANN CLECKNER, dsewased.—The Auditor appointed by the Co in to audit, Settle and adjust the account of PETER GRANS: Executor of the last will and testament of MARY ANN CLECKNER, deceased, and to report distribution of the balance in the hands of the accountant will meet the parties interested, for the purpose of his appointment, on THURSDAY, March 10,1870, at Ali o'clock P. M., at his office, No. tO7 Race street, in the city of Philadelphia. fe26 c to th JOS. ABRAMS, Auditor. IrN THE COURT OP COMMON PLEAS 1 for the City and County of Philadelphia.—LYDlA A. AUSTIN, by her next friend, ke. vs. CHARLES AISTIN. Sept, T., 1869. No. 42. In'Divorce. To CHARLES AUSTIN, Respondent Please take notice that the Court has granted a rule upon you to dhow cause why &divorce, a etneu/o ntatronoati should not be decreed in the above case, returnable to SATUR DAY, ldarch bib, KO. JOHN SIIAILLCROSS, fe26 26 28 inbl 4t* Attorney for Libellant. TN THE ORPHANS' COURT FOR THE City and County of Philadelphla,—Betate of MICHAEL McCLOSK EY, deceased. The Auditor ap pointed by the Court to audit, .settle and adjust the first account of T, ABBOTT WOOD and WILLIAM 11. MARTIN. Executors of the last will and testament of the said deceased, and to report distribution of the balance in the hands of the accountants, will meet the parties interested for the purpose of his. appointment, on TUESDAY, March bth, A.D. WO, at, 11 o'clock A. M., at hie office at the S. B. corner of Walaut m 18131,1% streets 2d story), in the city of Philadelphia. fe2i the to st,'" GEO.JUNKIN Auditor: Ili THE ORPHANS' :COURT " FOR. 1. the City and County of Philadelphia.-4 Estate of ENOCH W. CLARK, decs.l.—The Auditor 'appointed by the Court to undit, settle. and adjust theaccount of SABAH C. ChAlt.K.. EDWARD. W. , CLARK. and JAY COOK E • Executors of the het Will awl Testa ment of ENOCH W. CLARK, deceased- will meet the parties interested , for the purip_oso of his appointment, on MONDAY, the:7th day of March', ls7o, at ll o'clock A at his oniCO, No. 823 Walnut street, in the city of Philadelphia. ' EDWARD HOPPER. li'i..t.r.ttAny=l/470. 160 th 501 Auditor. CUTLEIVY plc() DG BR El, iiiiND W041131•0101•M'S r KEIT iFINIF,r ERARL and STAG. HAN- Sof beautiful, sin; RODGERS' and WAI)/lb lITORER'S,anit t n'OBLEIVRATED LECOULTRI RAZOR. OGURIORi3 IN DAEES .of the linest civility. Razors. Ilatree, Scissors and Table Outlem Efouod and polished. IliAll /NSTRDMICNTS orthernost a t rured oonstructton to assist the hearing, at P. MAD MA'Et Cutler and lturcioal Instrument IlakOr.lll Ten eve& below,Obeitouts • wire' ,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers