FOREIGN CORRESPONDENCE L1?1 TI:It Fftpffi PARIS • feerrefrondepce of Abe l'bita. Evehtig tjelleite.l ~ l'Ams, Fr iday,tMaS93.4l47o.WO tioiykiioot ' nin all that the Goveren‘and the ifailiteeltrioht all that is known ; all, *nifty perhaps be said,'' that can be known spearing i..the conspiracy , 'which had fife:, IteOistt:tbd - o*llaalaaog la fsi the In-yeroril Mhollivier hai'done well, bbth as the Minister of Justice and as the leader of i the Cabinet and representative of the imperial speliey; in - satisfying frankly-an - ri - at''aince - the hnpatience-and-turiosity of -, the, public on the *Stied, ' and • 'laying befdre It, ''till" the disetiVeries • which":' 'bate ' — lieett; i - Made. - • This - was the only way to disarm- suspicion • and convince people, as far as could be done, : :that the ePportuneness with Which ; the plbt . led bad come in aid of the rqbiscite proceet Notes II ' ist oriel's, tieog rut phitall, Ar.;rilorill frOm 'nerrnanteuvres either of the police or the Li, rat stud Mineral—a ew iron' World, adratiiifiaiii; . bllr lr .as - simply:: - thehresult - nth Railroads, ctii3. . __ . - r - ,, - ---- rhilaill riii 1. I Wiliam - 1 t V retloonaeltco 01 Ur 0 :1:/ ft ), tin 10S . eirtearistances as they arose.: No oriecan read, • • C.. .I. thit k, the letter addressed by the Minister Cumberland Valley I include not only the of Justice. to the Emperor, .wbieli appeared Miley . pro Per, but all that country between the in the official' journal of yesterday- morn i Susquehanna river, and the Blue .Mountains or ing, • ' and the report on the case Kittatinny. There does not exist in any part by tillstills actine law officer of the crown, which , of our,grand old Commonwealth a section so iollons • it, - -without - beiug convinced „: that ' ' wonderiutly -fertile iu-agricultural resources, so after perusink these doctinieds, he is in fact ; rich in mineral Wealth, so beautiful in natural in posseSsion of all the material elements Of the i scenery, or so hallowed by sacred memories, as transaction. The letter of M. 011ivier affirms Ithe geographical triangle or pyramid formed that there is a party in France whose object is • 111.013 the map of Pennsylvania by the counties of Cumberland, Franklin, Adams and York, simply revolution, and who will not stop short That lemons" botiridary 'of ante belltan tidies of -:•tsiassination, if needful, in order to whom- —Mason and Dixon's line—forms its base and Tifisli their purpOse. ,And this affirmation of 'separates it partially from the State of Nla.ry thre-"-T-Miiiiterh-thehhiereart--01-theroeureur--littl,--while-OlthMether_Giunberlatid forms the (ii.'nerale, and the facts and doeuments apex. The River Susquehanna; washes its eastern border, and on the west ,the Blue _ set forth in it, fully bean out M. I Mountains (or Kittatinny) separate it, from the: - 1 llivier-moreceran-sa_y_s,thahrthe party itt-ffile-sh- cou-ntie-s-of Perx,y, Ilmitingden and Fulton. ' , tion, so far from being appeased or propitiated On the•other side of this imaginary line—of ~...by_the_conce.ssions which have been made and I Masonnal. and Dixon—there is another natural the liberties which have been -granted, is only pyrad or trrahr o ale in Marylaud; in f o rmed by . the._ waters of the Chesapeake and 1 otoae,which exasperated by them. And this statement also when joined together at the base with that of is equally borne out by the revelations which Perpiss hnna, forms a geographical square,___ follow. The revolutionary party is exaspe- around and `within whose borders cluster the rated bythe reforms which have been accom saddest -and- most glorious- of memories. -Within it are the cities of Baltimore,' Aunapo- • plislied; for two : reasons : First, because those - .polls, andthe. natioual • capital of Witshinatort. reforms ' have • greatly _tended to disarm _ e Ilere, too, are the historic towns of Carlisle, the passions upon which they are aecus- Yolk and Chambersburg. Here, one finds • Awned- -to -resort .. and ...t0... depend , for ,the, battle-stairied fields of Harper's Ferry, ce snes-STandhsecondlyi-beeause--the-samti--re-- _Bali'shilluti, Slieppardstowe l Sharpsu t rg, a h n i d; forms have demonstrated the impotence and besides a host of ethers of c ess note, he - ric fields of Antietam and aettysb urg. insignificance of the party in question. It is Within this halloaed square, bounded by - ituposible to peruse the_ official statement _.of_ the waters. of the Susquehanaa, the Chesil the late discoveries without being impressed - 1 peake, the Potomac and the Blue Mountains, --withrthe-tonvietion-the-main-origin of the where grand armies of Americans met iu mortal combat iii larger force than those which • conspiracy dgainsithe Emperor's life was ex rendered the fame of rprrleon immortal, are asperation on the part of Flourens and others , memories enough to the victors and vanquished --at findin,gthemselves completely baffled and totender it the Mecca of the nation. Hands beaten at all points, and driven out of the that held the glittering steeralting the - hues --sto - nntry,-not only_ with.defeat_and_ignomiiiy„ of Gettysburg now direct the plowshare over bet, what they can still less abide patiently, the peaheful fieldS, and the survivors of Those who fought and died on the battlefields of with,ridicrile,...l. .doubt, very much whether Pennsylvania and Maryland are now joining whit is billed the complot - de hands. in the pursuits of industry.. Diagonally -:-- Ferrier_hadany.very realexistence or any very throng") the middle of this Pennsylvania pyra definite- deg& in view—at least as - regards the - - mid,-in • a -northeasterly-and southwesterly. - di, Emperor's life. But when the cations occa erection, runs - the South Mountain rendered - forever.famous on the field of. GettyLburg„and skins for -making popular demonstrations_whieh. which, when it crosses the lhatomile--- °mimed at the close of the last year and the Harper's - Ferry, becomes the equally - opening of the present, aided and aggravated famous. Blue Ridge, from . whose mountain as they had so unexpectedly been by the event I fastnesses that thunderbolt of war, Stonewall at Auteuil and the funeral of Victor Noir at Jackson, so often , swooped doWn upon our - astonished legions. The Cumberland Valley Veuilly—when all these had, so to speak, I c Pennsylvania is . 1 indeed but a continuation of - -ended in -smoke,- or Only-risen to a climax of the great Valley of the Shenandoah—" The the burlesque by the raid -on the Daughter of the Stars "of the poetical Indian • stage guns- at- Belleville . _ and the igno-legendry. Of its beauties and wonders I sing. - - ' ions : flight of the chief actor in that 'Equally beautrful are its ridges and valleys, nor does the great limestone formation which gives never-to-be-forgotten melodrama—their exat fertility to the latter vary hi its properties su s pemtion knew no bounds. Smarting under more than do the silicious `rocks which rise up the pangs of defeat and ridicule and shame, from beneath them and giVe their sharp out such men as Beaury and Flourens met in line to the crest of the Blue Ridge or South London, and determined to try a last and i Mountains. Not only its broad valleys, but even the undulating sides,to the very su m- , - I __ de _rate retrieve their misadven- _ mit of its hills, are made to pay tribute to the tures. We have .no chance of overthrowing auve h - .r_ nturouslitisb - anduran; — TheSe-liinestone__, the Emperor, they said ; let _us_try. and kill.the rocks are covered by au_ excellent soil, suscep- Vmperor. I have little doubt that the entire i tible of great amelioration by the addition history of the plot is almost summed up in the of 1111)(3 derived from binning the rock. above three lines. Flourens raised a The most improved agricultural regions of , the United States are to be found within the little money and per suaded Beaury, ' limits of the formation now before us. Infr a needy, desperate, and almost starv- , mense crops of wheat, Indian corn, rye, oats, ing man, to risk the chances of going ' flax, bay, tobacco and dairy products yield over to Paris to carry out the design. ' uu abundant ttb i b i csl,l,eisi grist mills. t b Theer amid forests or st ethla remployment, esbits mountains—tl . That he ever had any real prospect of success tode Plue, *list, cherry, oak, ash, I hardly believe. It is evident that his steps chestnut—furnish food enough for the estab -were dogged from the first, and that the police, , lishment of saw-mills, though but few are to if they chose, might have waited until they ar- be found in this region . ; while beneath the flowering shrubs and wild rested him, and such confederates as he mighthoneysuckle that have associated with him in the enterprise, cover its mountain ridges are inexhaustible re have of magnetic iron ores, and conve with the bombs on their persons, ready to be Merely near them valuable beds of hematite thrown. But the plot was ripe for discovery on ores. This ore is almost invariably subordi- Friday last without running further risk by nate to the limestone, lying in a highly ferrugi - delay, and It -- Lagmnge accordingly waited nous loam,_eillutr_in fissuresbetwehhthe strata __ quietly for Beaury at the corner or resting over the uneven surface of the '. for mation. The ore is of the hematite family, of of .Rue des Moulins, and ad- every possible variety and of a quality dressing him. fraternally by his Christian name nowhere surpassed. When it has a columnar of " Camille," carried him off to prison. The stalaetitic structure it is known under, the official narrative of the Procureur Gthihie is name of pipe ore, which, along the slopes of the Valley of the Yellow Breeches, is found in nothing more than a development of the facts abundant quantities. This variety is in great thus briefly stated above. It shows us, besides, request, as it usually yields a superior iron, and that there was a small band of demagogues en- is profitably smelted, from Lhe readiness with _ deavoring to work, but, apparently with only which its reduction is effected, owing to hits indifferent success, upon the feeling of the open atracture' These ores generally produce laboring population of the Faubourg, and stir at n t least 60 per cent. metallic iron. As the is eflected by charcoal, and the foreign them up to open sedition. There wits some at- ingredients in the ore are chiefly alumina atilt tempt at organization and providing arms. silica, we can readily ilecount for the exalted But all thiS ' died away Willi ' the ' reputation of the iron Manufactured in - such complete • failure of the attempted rip- furnaces as the works of C. W. & I). V. Ahl, rising, after the arrest of Rochefort i in Feb- located at Boiling Springs, four miles south of Carlisle.- ruary last, and of which the report, somewhat That all this family of ores should oceompany unnecessarily, repeats the details, amid (I think) so exclusively the limestone,being rarely or never 1 magnifies the proportions. But there is among the slates, is not a jittle singular. These scarcely any trace, previously to that period, of beds of hematite occur hi depressions in projects of assassination. The idea rose after- , .the itiv i b i i i i n is es b t f o t n i e le s of m th e is ro r e t k u s ige, , 'I heaynadre rresometimes . frequently wands, as I have said, from the exasperation of extraordinary extent, and the . actual depth and shame of complete defeat. "1., went to Lo ohi •h. they reach, and their real natureditive . Londbri," Beaury says; we are told in his de- ' never been frilly explained. -Cel.-Z.-P. Boyer, elarations, "where I found Flourens, and of Pottsville, has recently opened a valuable became very thick with him. 1 told bed of brown hematite, at the old Mount Holly Company Forge, six mines from Carlisle, him- of -- my • project of twitting an •on the South Mountain Railroad. He first ' attempt upon the life of the Emperor, opened a number of holes, varyina b in depth and he encouraged me in my resolution." from 16 to 42 feet, over a space ten -acres in The proof of both the latter statements and of extent, without going through the `vein in the complicity of Flourens is contained in the l o uny r the case. extent Having ric s h a i t i i „ s e " s e s d o l f lima th tl e f letter of the latter,, found on Beaury when ar- ' ore, lie has opened a breast 35 feet in width, rested, and signed "Gustave." It is far more and through an open cut about, nine compromising than if it had been, as at first - hunched feet long he can drive supposed, longer and more detailed. It is his mine, and haul the ore over a written Willi caution, and yet cannot be raisin_ . on railroad t to t the washer, and load it Hauling, throug e li large terpreted: " There is not a mement to' loSe';', '•Pock t ets ' b ea u m il, directly y over the railway - track. _ : • rhos/nee ay. brtiret." (.the Emperor) "_will be In ah_few weeks :this- mine__ will_ commence ;- gbing to the country, and all will _be' put off. operations, and one hundred tons a day can-be But be sure to succeed -- Noth inaprudeneeh _._ abiPped without 4:1111cOlty. , . , _. 1, Don't fail. Alt depends Once• - on you. mote Together with_ the -magnetic ores, these ' hematite beds furnish the supplies for a very - . AS I said to you liere,.yeu ought.to. succeed, 'or large proportion of all the iron manufacture-in-- xi - eyer to have wade the attempt." What . the United States, and the numerous bodies of , can such language mean but one thing? The them still untouched are a provision thr still , „letter, ',coupled with the proo f o f m o ne y larger demands for generations to coins. Tire - tratuunitted and other facts, seems damning value of these ore beds can hardly be over ' ' of the eridenCe guilt and complicity of Min estimated, when considered in connection with , ' the lor t f theirt f f long eaten o range no far ruin the • - am, ' Beaury.' Bays in' his declaration that, he seacoast, and the enoimous supplies of mineral "intended to disguise himself as a soldier, in, order to approach the Emperor arid use his ra volvei,"/IWliittalben, wasllie use of ilmtipMbs?. - Terhaiic chiefly to spread dismay anti klistr4o::' s tion ofei several points obee, the i rariment, of the assassieittiod,' - tha "resign MustAisie s been Thrown :to or sitiTected by, a considerabla •rmmber; but the chief aCtors ivould, t seem to have beeir•fetvi • , ' t i lie aYresfs ' ceritinite;" but in'aiters have calmed doWn again — greatly. The prospects of the Plibiscite become, I think, more secure ..every" day.— .There will, in all probability,.be.a, large affirmative vote ; though it will doubtless be given in a modified sense, and must be nu ,derstood•as applying. mainly to a confirmation of the" liberal reforms " which have been ac THE ellB11 . 111ERLiVill) VALLEY. 'PRILADELPILIA_EKENING_CQUETIN , TAIJESDAY, MAY 19, 1870 cr al that can be co_nveniteitly lirengh to,e*ict:t tl eir reduction eter .the` • Tennsyltaillesittild': Beading Railroad:'' They • are IndeetV,iitaie "ialuable than the gold mines of California': , , • What - isinorneeded in- this-regkiiiis- intellh-:- Bence and capital to develop the onoitueits Wealth bidden in its mountain-slopes t i. have heretofore been concept4Otivellbi+Mieie • agricultural riches, bitt • Wtiiiiltliey the beneficial diect of the • Opening of railroad hicilities into the South,,Mountain-they..:eotn mence to feel a. first iigeregtatt• 'fitither dgr velopment of their 'these ores already enumerated, find trace's Of sulphuret of copper (blue vitriol of commerce), real and yellow cc ir an rome ores, a inn earth and copperas ores, porcelany\earth, clay for stone:-ware, common 'pottery, glazdd `wale and.:tire-bricks; also,- r epsom salte,•sbell marl, lime, manganese and valuable marbles. • The variegated conglomerate which goes under • the name of • Potoiriac 'marble, from the .fact that some •of it'' oil the Potomac has been . 'made :use of as , an ornamental marble for the columns in the . ' old capitol .at Washington, comes from . this • range: of--stratitt---The-red—saudstone.belt...ot. Connecticut is only an interrupted prolonga tion of Ibis very extensive, red shale and sand-_ stone group or strata. flare, as in Connecti cut, these strata are intersected by long ridges . uf trap, the principal masses of the rock in this country; and_what is not a little reinarks. - . ble nearly all the localities of ciipper ore within this tract are adjacent to these outbursts of trap rock. 'What this-region itie.ds now is more railroad facilities to bring its mineral wealth into a profitable market. When that is done, capital will flow toward it as naturally as a duck takes to water,and the prices of its land' u ill go up, as sites are needed for manufactur ing establishments and buildings for the me- Ambled population which be attracted towards it. Blast furnaces and rolling taut future the Cumberland Valley will be gridironed .all over with railroads,as the Schuyl kill Valley is to-day. I had. intended giving -you-some-fieseription-of-the -interesting_local ties mound the region of Carlisle, the 'natural phenomenon of Boiling Springs, the mills of Palierfown, bas will reserve it for a fri- • ture letter. . J. T. Q. Peace to the fent liegion—The Strike .und the. n hiladelphitt Conk Company-- Au llight-Ilfotir_ nevem etri;—A no Akar er AlirArooriiies—;Swelletes and Sam - Coreeeponilence of the Philada. Evening Bulletin.] PoyrsviLLE, May 18, 1870.-,-The region is peace - Coal ---- operations - are = almost - entirely suspended. Everything is Consequently dull, and it is a very bad time for newspaper cor respondents. , - All of the firms, seventy-six in number who pledged - themselves - to abide by-the-resolutions of - Marehlstb, - are - Still - holding - eut; -- excePt - the Philadelphia Coal Company, "which is" Gen. _Henry L. Cake, M. Cs froth this_district. This Company belted two weeks age, and started -two-collieries, causing-a-howl among Ahe_other_ operators, and resulting in a very lively meet ing on. ThurSday, May 12,.which was attended by nearly all the principal coal_men of this re _ gion,who were unanimous in their resolution to stand and in expressing - their ihdigna- - tion at tice conduct-of the said . -.Philadelphia Coal Company. Since then thera'has been no new excitement. Operators and operatives are, waiting patiently for a new move on the part of one-or the other. Even the Shamokin re gion. which bad continued to work to a great extent during the early part-of the .suspensiOn, is silent now,onl-y three collieries being at work there, and these shipping West, over the Northern Central road; either - wholly - or --in part. The only lively place in the county seems to be the Colorado colliery .of' the Philadelphia Coal Company, which is ast gaining a reputa tion as a very unhealthy place for inside super intendents. Clark, the last one, was mur dered a few weeks ago ; and on Saturday night last, tiie house of Mr. Oliver, the present incumbent, was fired into, two balls lodging in the wall just above the bed in which he was reposing at the time.. I have not learned - Wliethei-the-noise_wakelltini_up or not. Ilte various branches of the Workingmen's Benevolent Association are now voting on the question of making eight hours a legal day's woik—legal according to the laws of the W. B. A., I mean ; 1 for it makes precious little dif ference to them what the Pennsylvania Legis lature may say on the subject: The cOmmittee appointed to count the votes will meet at' Tamaqua on the 20th, and if the result is in favor of the eight-hour movement, the usual method will be adopted to enforce it : c., general suspension will take place, throughout the entire anthracite region on the first of June. This will tend to bring matters to a focus one way - or the other. To change the - subject. It will - be remem bered that one of Brooklyn's representative men, named Voorhies, was brutally murdered a few months ago. His murderer was tried, acquitted on the ground of insanity, and the allitirwas - forgottn -by--everybody buta - certain - i Massachusetts newspaper, which, after, appar- I - curly, several months of hard work, has dis covered that the murderer is William - Cr. Chambers, formerly of Company K, Twenty ninth Massachusetts Volunteers, who, after, trying vigorously to have Col. Peirce ' of that regiment, court-martialed, and being aided and abetted therein hy Lieut.-Col. Barnes, of the same regiment, finally deserted, was supposed to be in Philadelphia, until he "turned up as a tutu- . tlerer in New York," and being acquitted on tIM plea of insanity, was promptly Corn milted by Judge Barnard to the State Lunatic Asylum at, Utica, " where, behind his bars; he has a chance to sigh for the accommodations of the State "'risen:" This may be so; but if it is, the " bars" of the Utica. Insane AsyluM should be attended to-at once,-as they were wide enough to permit the escape of the sub ject of the above sketch, who has been residing in this place for the last six months, and who, this morning, went befOre..a magistrate and made oath that he was not a murderer and Lad not committed any of the other indiscre tions with which he was charged. Ile forti fied his nflidavit by producing a letter from Licut.-Col. Barnes, now in the Boston Custom, flume, and wiathfully avowed his determina don to declare war against the Massachusetts newspaper " right away." _We shall probably bear of another newspaper libel suit in that neighborhood before a great while. • ' Since the daya of ililsop,it has been conceded that "one swalloW does not make a summer ;" but Niben they come two thousand strong, as they did last evening, I should think even ./Esop would be convinced. It was- their first appearance for this season, and was hailed as a good omen; albeit, the weather at the time was anything ' but summery;. the straw hats and linen coats of the day before, when the ther mometer was well up in the eighties, having given place to a demand for overcoats and fires,_ which is still brisk. These-swallows are strict Episcopalians arkrexernplitry-elitifeli - -:goers, and their behavior; last ,waa aceordante with . their habits' in pievions seasons--=when, -every evening; after supper, they assembled in. the vicinity, of the Episcopal church, and after circling round in the air, above the church, tintil rqll-call was completed, and the last strag gler had answered to his name, they would make a suddeii - dart for one of the . ehunneys, and. pour in a steady,: black strewn : down its • threat, until all were safely housed,,tobe seen no more.tnitilnext morning. LETTER, FROM POTTSVILLE. pmyr cdk Arsraelits,ndirel "Lotbair "is in the hands of all reading people. It is very admirably .writtfn;but.sicltens one at last_with its_ total absence of belief, or enthusiasm, or partilrii.; "Wolind'the glittering statesman going up , ;tltl down in the world,' interviewing the phil pide Christian " l'araclete" in the orient, dand ling tho., tender: enthusiast "Lothair" (who , `means the , Marquis of Bute) with in appirehe , ‘. 53 pathy in London ; stating the Romantst argument, impartially with that ingenious 131ottgram - --"-Grandison.." (who means—Man— ;Ding) iii Rome; or giving its fascinating side in Lady Si: Jerome ' (who means the Duchess of Norfol - k); talking —realism - with - the artist ft Plicebits," arid Garibaldisio' the AS riean ,4 ; and with the, English e • Mrs.. - Putney .tile g;" ' and in each of these ' revelations seems so e'arnest;go-faithiltbsd YPrisein blable, that' we tinTagine for a , mothent , he does trb - etroverdif so. clearly. But as ,haparts froni each we gee the old cynical eharity,tlro cheap stiperidrity, of a Politician who lias been all his' life using the profcnind•opinions of, different classes as'agen cies--to-'shiltify - and - neutralize 'each -other. Notbit4, 'can, be abler than tho balance he giVets to- the-several religions, Judaism 'included, ,as they enter into his descriptions one after another; nothing more sardonic than the airi ness with which he escapes from`each and all to some grand' dinner-party, with plenty of opulent loids and ridiculous la.dies, as the final highest good. One thing, however, he does cling to and hold faith in; it is his own old inmossibleTbillliiiicb - o - ilf-iFfolie - alia • beatfty out of the Keepsake§ and Annuals and Shakes peare galleries. His love for tawdry art of the-barbaric-order-is-revealed-in-his-delineation —pure die and nothing better—of Theodora. She appears, in. her Greek.•profile_ and _Mrs. Hominy forehead-Ornament, wherever the situation wants thickening '; and finally changes the whole drift of the story by revealing herself after death, IlarFjson Ainsworth-wisc; among the-ruins. . When he allowa. -himself; the plea-. sure ofsuch &lapse lutoibathos as this—;-unless indeed be 1,,e hingliing at you all the while ; it, is impossible to tell—Disraeli suddenly and dis tinctlyreveals himself once for -all as the-pinch- - beck Jew, standing . tieclaimint — TJ'4lfla — Eur9pe arts and-Asia's jeweled bands ". in a modern drawing-room.—The American edition is pub lished as-a cheap pamphlet by Appleton & Co. The t(.nic influence of a fresh, bright, girlish existence; Mb:hardly ilelineahle freaks Of young character as seen — in - hoar - ding : school and family. life,. forms the charm of "Marian Berkley,". perhaps the" nearest rival of "The-Old-Fashioned Girl" that has ap -peared.----Pnblished by -- Loring. .• • The Engineering - find Mining .journal, April part; is received: 'rliis - is a large folio monthly: of` 04 pages, illustrated,- composed of the assem bled weekly parts. : - It is calculated—to be- of great use to the mechanician and_ civil enai neer. ," - Published Weston & Co., New Pundeinello, for May 28, has- seteral digs with the graver directed against - the journal ists, such as Dana, who "slimes for all," and Greeley, who gets up his foul linen with • his celebrated saponifier, "U-]ye."- The .nurnber is a little drowsy,. and "Matador" finds,no the .atrieal loernan worthy of his dart ART ITEMS. —The sale of paintings, studies, &c.,on exhi bition at. the Somerville Art Gallery, 82 Fifth avenue, N. T. advertis6d in theßuLLETur,was concluded last Tuesday evening. A painting of flowers, by Stolk, was sold for $00; '"Swiss Interior," by Kuidder, $180; 44Fortune•,Tell ing," by Erdman, $475,; "Lady and Flowori," by Flassan, of Paris, $775T; --44 7ExtiemeS - Meet --- by Dana, $1,225 ; "King Janies IV. of Scot land meeting the Outlaws at Pennmnscore," by Joy, of London, $725. This picture repre sents a scene .described in the ", Ballad of the Outlaw Murray," in Scott's "Border Min strelsy," as taking place about the end of the fifteenth century, when - the English were in possession of a large part of the Scottish fron tier, and the rest was in so lawless a state as hardly to ,acknowledge any superior. James IV. had particblar reasons , for desiring that Ettliek. Forest, which formed part of • the jointure lands of Margaret, his queen, should be kept in a stateiol tranquillity; the occupancy of which by the border clans led to confusion of rights and claims, and the kings of Scotland were often obliged to compromise such matters with their rebellious subjects. "The labdis are mine," the outlaw said ; Christentie." STJMMER• RESORTS. Cc•ngrest CAPE MAY, N. J., Opens, Juno Ist.Oses, October lot TF113113-6'3 00 per day Juno and September. 84 00 per day July and August. The new lying is now completed. ?dark and Simon Hassleek; full Military sand and Or chestra of 20 pieces. Applications for Rooms, addfoss . J. F. CAKE, Proprietor. apl6 19 22 26 20 tt cod taul69 . • • PROSPECT TERR A.O E, Vreeland, Manta ry County, Pa. • This delightful BUMMER RESIDENCE will be open for the reeeption of-guests on and after June 1. For Circulars, Terms, tic, apply to JAMES MILNER CO, 439 MARKET Street, Phila., or to the proprietor, James Palmer, Collegeville 0., Pa, In .1010 th 6 2rn6 sciF - A7. -- 13 - ED iI4Z)V3EI,'S Celeb . ratod: Patent Bedstead is now heing manufactured end sold large - nmohors, both in Pita N Cht.and ENO bAND. • Can he had only at the Warerooms of the undersigned. This pleee of Fur niture is in the form am handsome . PA RIJOit. SOFA, yra in one minute it can. be extended into a beautiful BEDSTEAD,with springs. hair Mattresses complete. Jt has every convenience for' holding the bed clothes, Is easily managed; and it is impossible for it to get out of order. The not of 'props or hinged feet to support tho mattress when extracted, or ro mot .to.rmn late it, ere entirely done away with, as they are all very unsafe and liable to get out or repair. • The BEDSTEAD turning Out the ends, or closing le formed by FdloM7 them when the HOI A Is wantati. Th,y are, in comfort, raw/enigma and appearance, far superior to andcost no Moro than good Lounge. An examination is solicited. H. F. 'ROVER, • . , • No: 2.30 South SECOND Street, l'itilinklphia inyl9 lb to Om§ ww.r. FARSON'S - -- . - 111PROVEDTPA . TENT - SOPA -- BED - . - . , makes - a handOome 'Sofa- and comfortable - Bob, with Springillattnies ethic-hod; Those -wishing to economize room call and \ examine them at the extenelyn find-class Furniture Warerooms of • -Farsonlik_Son,.No. secgn'd Street., P ARSON'S PATIENT EXTENSION TARLE AbTBNING. Every' table should have Oven on.' 'They held the !eaves firmly together: when pulled abort the room. • 'mhl7 Sm§ EA :ISLAND BALES OP ' , Sea 'bland Cotton in ritoro and for pale ,by (10011- ItAN, BIJI3IikIIIAL 00.;1/ 1 GlievinUt eiroot. CITY ORDINANCES. A I..611)1N ANCE TO MAKE — "AN AP propriation for Election purposes, and for Printing for the Shpreme Court. Eite'l lON 1. Theitelect and Common Conn citssor,:thij,sity—or-Philatlelphia- do; • ordainw ?Ali at- t h 6' tbodatted dus hull-r' . zandl liftVerie dollars and tWenty-Ilite 44ents!lie and the 'Same itherehy amirnitriatld ifie,foilowinPurposeSj• vlzl • - ;, f r l t• 1 It Via the spay et canvassers 3 thirty ..ibrv,etbousttraLte'venltontlreti and'eightY . lu item 2. For stationery, blanks, printing, flank-hooks for canvassers, five thousand two hundred and eighty-three dollars and seventy ...llve.cents, laskpren. visos in - the 'ordinance, making an appropria tion to the City Commissioners for the year 18'10, sball apply to the above items, except as Z.tothe.titottxd:ativertitslngfor , pro p osal4. Whi shall.he fix etll)v thqsaiti Commisrlioners. t.-It4int;3. l POrlifintinglor.lbeStipretneCourt,' ~•81)q-11- V e'n;d011tirs:ti. t , itciet isiiiittiiii`for the Fnpromi Court,. for the year,lB69, twenty dollars and fifty cents; AO the warrants shall lie.drawn,by the City Commissioners f in..conforinity.with existing Ordinances.. ' • •. T, • • . ECT lON - 2. Thatthe:City Controller is hereby - aut liorizeditrfran'sfer:fliti WM. 01 .- 141 t lionsand dollars from item 48 in the appropriation to the: Ct vorni)si on ers, for the expenses of the year; 1570, to item I of this ordinance. 1 LOUIS!WAONER, President of Common Council. TEST—JOBI s i ECKSTEIN, Clerk.of..Conimon _ MIJ „NV . curs EL L, • ' ' President of Select Council. Approved this seventeenth day of May,• . ' Anno DOinini one thousand eight hundred and severity (A. 1): 18704 : . DANIEL FOX, lt ' ' Mayor 'Of Philadelphia. t 01,0'110N" TO "AUT 101:1ZE THE trnniwaying of , Beckwith and other streets. Rouirul ~ By the Select. and Common Coun cils of the City of rhilatlelphia,, That the 7 - thief - Cottrmirsiontrof - JtighWayst — bit --- anthis , hereby authorized and directed to repave Beckwith street. trout Fitzwater to Catharine street, in the Third - Ward ; Dlittol' , Street, - AlLa_dishince of two hundred and seventy feet north of Heed street, in the First - Ward ; - n - a= mita ge sirea, front Green to Coates street, in . the .I'w!-1011 Ward; ~.lielley anti Boyer streets; in the nth' WafiL Said repaving - WU ilo tie with tramway stones in the tracks of the wheels, and if the partway is wider than ne cessary fur a single track, he is authorized to .reduce to the proper width by, taking an equal -quantity:from each side. .Irorided, That the Chief Ceunui.riuuer of. IlighWaya invite pro . porals Itir the same, to be opened in the pres- Curie of the*Comniittec Of highways, and the ." contract shall be awarded to the lowest and best ho shall give ample security to keep the saint• tit repair for three years,which j aCt'rst HENRI" HUHN, Prilident of Common Council pro tern .I),Trusi —A 1 il; A It A Dl STEWART, • - At-54 , 1:tY.11, 4 1. , .1• 1 , 44 . 4;01 , 11111011 (!mitt#4l.- - --- . SA 111TFT— W. CATTELL, HENS N LIU-lIN, I President of 'Select Council. President of Common Council pro tern. I Approved thiq si vr-iiti.r Mkt d4y of IlaY,' .ATTEST—A BRA.II AM STEWART, - I Anno Domini • -vac- thousand -eight -him-- Assistant Clerk of Common Council. tired and severity tA. 1). Ineh SAMUEL W. CATTELL, DA N 1 RD 3rl. FOX. __Prehille,ut of Select Commit. I lt Mayor of Philadelnhia. _,..... Approved this seventeenth day of Sfav, -1-) ~•,• (i.j; I ,-,.„ 0 „,:,,, I C, LA y WA TER .p 1 I .E Amoy Domini one "flitiosatareighT" hittidriA n, ot , ATino -,,A street — . 10 - 4 - weeti -- Norris - anil and seventy (A.D. Itiit.) - t paol.hin streets. Ninetesnth Ward. . .- • - -- DANIEL- Phil FOX( 1 Reii:f te Seb 0 and Comon Con lt • 1 "Y" tit . idel - Phia• • I cils el tliC C .- it h ofy r Philatteinhia, m Thai the n- DESOLUTION OF INSTRUCTION 'DP i Chief -Engineer of the Water Department be V - the-Chief-Cormniftsioner-of,Mighways. : direet).d.ta.Lay_water-pipe on•Ahrtond _street,_ Resoival, By the Select and Common Coon- i -between North( at kt Disliphin streets. in the cils of the City of Philadelphia, That tho : Nineteenth Ward. a HENRY HUHN. • Chief - Commissioner-of-Ifighways , -be-and is Pri_'_sitlerit of Coannon Council pro tem. hereby instructed to notify in writing the I. Aprf: , :T—A BR Ali ANI SI'EWART, • Irlestonville, Mantua and lt'airmoont -- Passem ; Assistant -Clerk of Common COUTICiI. er-RailwayCompany to.repair forthwith the ; . . SA fdliEb W. CATTEL L, ffollowing streets, to wit: Twentieth-street,l.. - President - of Scher(,ounce(,ounc(,ounc e}. from Callowhill to Spring - Garden street;. Bid- I Approved this ;seventeenth 'day of ...May, tile_strect,_from_T_w_enty-fifth_street to . Callow- I Anno .Domini one thousand eight hundred bill street ; Twenty-fifth •).m.eet, from -Biddle 1 and - seventy - GA. D. 1 - $70): -- . to . Spring Garden street.tAnd in eaSO the said , . DARTED If. PDX, streets are'notrepaired Within the time litultod i It . Mayor of Philadelphia ... by law the. Chief Commissioner of Highways is hereby aothoriz.ed to repair the same, and the City Solicitor is hereby authorized to pro- ceed against said , Compnuy to recover all penalties._ineorred by them aud the cost of said work LOUIS WAGNER, Presideutof CoMinou Council. ATTEST-JOHN ECKSTEIN, Clerk : of Common Council. SAMAIEL GATT ELL. President of Scleet Council Approved this seventeenth- day of May A nno Domini one thousand eight hundred and seventy (A. D. 1870).- - DANIEL M. FOX, It Mayor of Philadelphia. ESOLUTION TO AUTHORIZE , THE avin_ of Nineteenth street ainl Darien street. - li t sobted, By the Select and common Coun cils of the City of Philadelphia. That the Departme4 of Highways he and is hereby authorized 'and directed to enter into a con tract with a competent paver or pavers, who shall be selected by a majority of the owners or property fronting on - Nineteenth street, from Federal to Wharten street, paving of In tersections not to exceed three hundred and thirteen dollars. Darien street,. from Jeffer son street to Columbia avenue, paving inter sections not to exceed sixty-seven dollars and fifty cents for the . paving thereof; the con ditions of which contract Wall be_ that the Contractor or contractors shall collect the cost of said paving from the property-owners re spectively fronting on said streets, and shall also enter into au obligation with the city to keep said streets in good 'condition for three years after the paving is finished. • LOUIS WAGNER, President of Commottlatifincil,_ ATTEST-JOHN BURSTEIN, Clerk of Common Council, ' C ATT EL L, • President of Select Council: _Approved this seventeenth-day of May, Au nt) Domini one thousand eight hundred and seventy (A. D. 1870). DANIEL M. FOX, It Mayor of-Philadelphia. A N ORDINANCE TO MAKE AN AP propriationn for an iron railing in front of Morris School House and macadamizing Bringhurst street. BEcTION 1. The Select and Common Coun cils of the City of Philadelphia do ordain, That the sum of six hundred mid fifteen dollars be and the same is hereby appropriated for the following Purposes, _ • e. ' For an - iron=- railing in: front of Morris School House, thie hundred dollars. Item 2:- For macadamizing Bringhurst street, opposite to the Bringhurst Street School; 'Twenty-second Ward, one hundred and fifteen dollars.y Provided, The said sum of six_hundred:and fifteen dollars ti .be taken from Item 400 of the annual appropriation to the COntrollers of Public Schools, for the year 1870. And warrants shall bc• drawn by the Board of Controllers of Public Schools, in conformity with existing ordinances. • - , LOUIS-WAGNER, President of Common Council. ATTEsT—JOHN ECKSTEIN, •• clerk of Common Council. SAMUEL W. C ATTE LL, President of Select Connell. Approved this seventeenth day of May, Anno Denim' One ihouSatid eight :hundred and 'seventy (A. D. 1870): • DANIEL M. FOX, It.• Mayor of`Philadelphia. • pp ESOLUTION , TO CHANGE - THE IV place of voting in the Nineteenth Division of the Twentieth Ward. 11 rBolved, By the Select and Common Conn eils of the City of Philadelphia. That hereafter the place of voting in the Nineteenth Division of the Twentieth Ward shall be held. at the' .house of H. Ben], Northwest corner of Tenth and Hart - streets ; the former-place 'being -no longer available for that, purpose. HENRY HUHN, President of Cornmon_Council pro tent:, Avrms , r.—ABRAHAM STEWART, Assistant Clerk of Common Council. SAMUEL W. CATTELL, - President'of Soled Ctuned. Approved this seventeenth .day of MaY: Anne Domini one, 'thousand eighV hundred 'and seventy Pk:D.lB7O). - trtiistnti. Id. FOX. if - • 'Mayor of Pbfladelnhia.-. CITY ORDINANCES. ---- ----'---------- 1 101 Et3OLTITION TO AUTHORIZE-THE • IL erading of Darien, Hare aud Thirty-first Re.colved,! By , thO.Select and Common Co -- of, 'the - -; Citt,f - -1 4 1 (iladelphiti -- ; - "Thititlini -- , Dew !linen t- of HigilWayli be and Is hereby Orithorized laud directed to grade Darien • . - btreet, iron Jefferson street to Columbia ave. , , hue, at a. cost not exceeding four hundred and f ton dollanf and fifty • cents ; Hare street, from "*Twenty , ditth.street to Taney street, at 'accost , 4, not exceeding twelve hundred and thirty- -.' t seven and fifty cents; Thirty-lirst street, from i( Oahford street to (4 ray's Ferry road, at a cost not exceeding four hundred and fourteen del- .i ..Jars. "Said streets Indio, graded:tn,the-.estaii . fished grade of the city, ' - ' __*,•'' • 411;Psfay XV,YiN,,f, . ' President' of Conlin orf Counbilpro tbrn. AT'Esr —A-BRAII AM, STE WAR.T,..... ... . . .Assistant O'er's of Cominon Council..__ . " " ' •, * SAM I.IEL 'W. (ATTELL, ' President of. Select Council. -Approved this seventeenth (lay of May, . Anna Domini ,one, thousand, eight linntired and screnty - tA.Ti:167•0.),, , • ~ , ' - , , •,•, - ' : DANIEL M, FOX ; ' • It '' . , ' Mayorof Philadelphia. .. ~ , , ___ - 1 - i - EgOfUTION TO *AUTHORIZE. TUE _ - IVing r CPUTiivenn • and W I - iqadi . J . ( ( . . L' 'lc" *reef: • . - . • , ~ • ~,. itomie(ii, By the Select and Common Coun cils of the City or Phi!alh.lphiti; That the Chief Commis:- loner of ..Ifiglin nys he and he lit , hereby amhorized and directed - to notify the owners of property 'through and •over , which Paoli 'avenue,-froni-Ifitige avenue AO-Wash ingtou street, Wool street, from Levering street to Grape entree "I in the Twenty-first Ward,rhall pasm,that al the expiratido of three months atom raid notice the'. said, Streets_ will be required for public use, • , , : 11 EN RY HUHN, President of ,Common Council, pro tem. ATTEST—JOHN ECKSTEIN; Clerk'of Common Council: • SAMUEL W. CATTELL, • Pre , idenrof Select Council. Approved Mk seventeenth day of May, Alf 110 DO/1146 ...lie thousand eight hundred. and seventy (A. 1.). Is; o), DANIEL M. FOX, It Mayor of Philinfehilda: * * . - )L tit 11A V.1"40 , ..! , ;---TO C If A-NO-1(1-- ----TH Itl 1 11, place ofV0014! ill the Twelfth division of the 'r enty•fourth Ward, . . . - 1 - Re.v.oir. .4.,- Ity-the.Selert. and-Common -douii- • ens olthe City of Plidadeiphia, That , here- • atter the place of Toting in the Twelfth divi &lon of the Tii enti.tont tit • Ward &hall be at the 'home of Matt flew Davis, 'Brooklyn street, east &hie, south. of Enilline - street, the pro prietor ortirc ibriner placp - of voting - reftrong to allovr Ms place to I,e irsed s lur 'election-low poses, fIROPOSALS. 1U t (.0 R .TACoP Ih AND BUILDERS.— .11. SEA LED - PROI - VSALS, indorsed "-Pro posals for building a public sch66l-liouse in • thQ Twenty-tiret will be received by the •undereigned-•at the ottieo,•B.• E. corner of SIX - 11 - 1 and ADELPII I vtreebc, until TUES DAY May :il, 1870, 10.12 o'clock M.., for build ing_a_public.sebool•liouee on it lot of ground situato 11 - oxborough; - the Twenty-tirst Ward. Said Reboot bowie. to be built in accordance with the plans of L. 11. Ester, Superintendent of School 'Building,. to be seen at the lattice of the Controllers of Public Schools. No Lids will be considered unless accoin leinied by-a cert Mean- frond the City Solicitor that the provisions of an ordinance anproved slay 1i:), r.txt; hul e_ • . The cent raet will be awarded only' to. known aastor builders. By order of the Ce‘tninittee on Pronertv, 11. W. 'l-lALLIWhLI:, myls 21 24 2s ;',l - Secretary. - • . mo coNTEAcTo RS AND BUILDERS.— 6.EALED PRUPOSA LS. indorsed " Pro posals fur building a Publiii &hoot-bin/140 in the Fitt Ward," Will be : received by the un dersigned, at the office, southeast corner of SIXI H and ADELPHI streets, until TUES DAY. 31 ay 31. Isith at twelve o'clock M., for building a public school-house oti a lot of round situate on the corner' of "Seventh and Dickerson streets, in the First Ward. Said school-house to he built in accordance with the plans of L. H. Esler, Superintendent of School Buildings, to•be Seen at the office of the Conti i iii Tti Or Public Schools. • • No bids ,will be considered unless accom panied by it certificate from. the City Solicitor thritilfe - provisi oterof-an-o rdinance-approved- May 25, 1810, have been Complied with. The contract will be awarded_only to known master builders: By order Of the Cominittee on Pro . perty, H. W. HALLIWELL, znyl 8212428 31 ' Seeretary T u ikLC.H.III•LLIS 41,.N BUILDERS, plans and specifications for the construction of a relict. :Antion-heave, to be erected upon the site Of the present station-house, in the Fifth ..Police District, on 'Fifteenth street, ahoy'. Locust- Street . , in the city of Philadel phia, are 'hereby reonested and invited 'from some coMpetent architects; to besubmitted to the Committee on _Police of Councils on or before 'SI outlay, Afhy 23,1870. The several Wails and speciticationg will be duly considered ' -,Committee, and if any one of tht number shall be selected and aoopted by the said Committee, and approved. by Comicils., it will he paid forlitit for those not , seleCted no compensation is to, he given. Any infot mutiou as 4o ditnensions or-parti culars will he furbished upon ,apPlicatton to St. Clair A. Mulholland, Chief of. Police, at the office of the Mayor. ~; ' Such plans, and specilicationS may be left; "with or mailed to the .nutlersiginid,, at his °Dice, Ô. 219 Dock street. HENRY WHIN, Chairman. ConimitMe on Police. TRILADA., May 12,1870. myl. , s ttith ft SCELLA NEO U Savery 's Patent Combined Dining-Room: Water Coolers and .B.lfrigerator. It boi lig made of, Cast Iron, Porce ------- --.- i n a o i t n li i n' i p l i l t u r fi en i fi n pli ‘ ! V il a s t a l iN t tA Ti fit " o t ol 41 ') (7i . • # l lll 111 to to t.% 610115, fruit „t c . , I - Plcanc call and oxiithino; -. • ' • _ r:. -7 - - - - - - • , , • • , JACOB F. HAND, Jr . ' t .9 .. . , • , , . - ' Retail nop 0t,'620o t,'620 MAMK.W.L` Street,. EMM • FO'H YA R N S - F0 R. • Catton and lyoroto 1 Yartio','lllt Colton; y o roi, oaa. tiNii;•tlirOo oef6iit 'SijY.; do - pai: t ow to skidoo. -'Alao, Chain an 6ittlaolytlFp6, Cotton. owl Wool GI 41. r. .14411.1 L, 4' le s slo4ll4ereliittit. 67 IC I L1CYL1:36i006,111140 . /10 Made. r i 2.16 Om§ G PO WGRA or cleansing Silver emit Pletod, Ware, Jewelri,etr.” . vi r manufactured. j eAka th • Bn o trus 824 Uheetr.tit atreet, below Fourth. mh tfrp 1 4 1 01 i SALE CHEAP--A* 'LARGE WAL j;ro:lgn-11tqo 11 . Addre,,'` A 1..," 4 rny2,tl§ f ~ s'44r Ww e 'f^~+K M9 ~~%'l~~kY.fir~lb „ ~'VlN'MsarYiin'.w~.S~Jwvur.~{~. TWLE6IIIAPINIO IS1DRIBL&BT. ;Ist a.13..-rox of an .unusually ;virulent typo is laging,ln Paris I _ OuTitatias- by --brigands4re-reported - from Naples and Sardinia: ' • 'rift& London Board er Trade refuse to reverse their judgment in. Captain Eyre's case. 'Mr, West Virginia, Democratic Convention will meet on. Jame Bth. 4 • j ELIA lifAl LITTELL, fOUTIder of Littell'a Liv ing Age, died on ,Motiday, in Brooklyn, aged, seventy-eight. Al Columbia:, Pai, yesterday, ,James Ben nett was run over 'by the' cars and instantif . WIL6ON refrux,. Initired by the recent Mis souri' .11ailroad 'disaster, has brought suit against the Company for ten thousaild dollars damages.- ' THE tournament for the chariapion ship of the Pacific Coast, at San 'Francisco, ended on Tuesday night,Jose.ph Little being the the winner. TIIE President has directed that Canadian vessels, not carrying troops or inunitions . of war, be allowed to pass through the .Battlt Ste. Mario - - - -• Ensinikin WV4T, * an oil man, living alone near _Weston, West Va., was robbed and' mur dered a few days since, his body being left in a field. The murdererls unknown. A CLEVELAND despatch states that .at a re cent Meeting of the Pacific and Atlantic Tele graph Company, it was resolved "that no divi dend he declaredat the present time." AT St. Paul, Minn., on Tuesday Qvening, Mrs. Elizabeth Hatch shot Miss Lizzie Bush, inflicting a fatal wound. Jealousy was the eauSe::"TheY Were Watien of ilPreptite. AT Witiona,-111:, on Tuesday night, the-111'- 110113 Cential Railroad depot and freight house, raltrelevator-and-the p‘itteip,4l block of the town wene all destroyed by lire. _ Dn. BAun, _of Georgia, recently - appointed Governor of Idaho, is on his way to Washing . 4 ;etrgia debpatch reports that hi aril resign and return to Georgia to oppose the But tock party. I.N the Methodist Protestant Conference at Baltimore, yesterday, fraternal addresses were made by delegat6 from the Southern M. E. Conference, to which the President replied in a similar spirit. GENERAL- WooD has -taken charge of- the Eansas- Pacific Railroad Tr. , :qu. Wallace lien vet. lie has four companies Of a civalry and -three or infantry, besides the garr . isons at Forts 'allace, Lyons and . Reytiolds, W. protect the 1 . 054. - - - 'l'm E Finance Committee of the Massachu setts Legislature has reported against State aid to the Boston, Hartford and Erie Railroad Cotiipahy, as "the road_jiin a hopeless condi tion, and the only way 'out of ita difficulties is through bankruptcy:' . , Two laborerii were killed and. eight blared by the disaster on the Delaware, Lackawanna and Western 144r9a4 b4tnehat Meade's Bastn. _ N.. J., 611 Tfieti,day. One of the injured died yesterday., .Inotlier laborer is still buried under the debri:f. YESTERDAY the Corps Legislatif counted the vote on the i'libiscittnn. The result was rwiyed_with._enthusiasm,by...both centres and the. "right." Au interpellation was sub- - ridded by: Jules „ • - I - EsTitunAy. - a Committee itt4lted the l'rest; dent to attend the Fiftecuth,Amendment cele bration. in Baltimore to-day, The President did not Aeiline the invitatitin - , but said he feared public duties would not permit lids at; tendance. _ . A SALT LAKE despatch says that duriug,a recess of Chief Justice •Ncison's - Court on 'Tuesday, the Mormon authorities closed the - house against-him—and the•ljnited States Mar shal, refusing to allow .:t continuance- of the sitting. After some' consultation, however, they gave the Court possession of the hall. OFFret.m. reports from Idaho state that the Indians_there_are_generally_.engliged Mg, and good crops are expected. Outside of the reservations the Indians have frequent difficulties with the whites, but nothing serious is feared. In Southern Kansas and the Indian Territory the small-pox is prevalent. A PAIrrY of whites, while on 'apleasare trip to the Falls of the Yellowstone river, in 31on anarhati-their vock qolen_one-night-b-m• They pursued the Indians, who, in Indiaus attempting •to cross the Yellowstone; were swept down the stream by the current and carried over the Falls. All, of coarse, perished. IN the Southern Methodist Episcopal Con- ft - Tepee, yesterday, a report was adopted con tinuing the present system of Missions, with the exception of having only one Board of Five _Managers, to be appointed by the Bishops. A message from the Methodist Protestant Confer ence at Baltimore, proposing union, was re ferred to a committee of tire. AT the. prorogation of the Newfoundland Assembly, Governor Hill expressed regret at the non-acceptance by Newfoundland of the terms of confederation. He Said the Home “overnment was 'anxious for the union as advantageous both to the colony' and to Canada;_tlatthepresent—walits-of-41m-Com munity should be studied, and they should not grasp at-some ideal perfection. • IT is repOrted - that - Baron Von Beust, Prime Minister of Austria, and Count Ordropy, the 'Hungarian Premier, have agreed to forbid the proMulgation of any decree made by the (Ecu menical Council declaring the infallibility of the Pope. It is again asserted that the Austrian Bishops will vote with practical unanimity against the dogma. • • A Dmioctivric manifesto has been issued in Vienna, signed by eminent members of the eiclaratli. It urges the conciliation of nit tionalities,and various liberal reforms in the laws .and administration. Forty-rirsi Congress...aSeeond Session. In the United States Senate, yesterday, the bill to enforce the Fifteenth Amendment was discussed. Mr. Cragin spoke at an evening ses sion in advocacy of the bill to prevent polygamy in Utah. • The House of Reprepentatives passed the Na val Appropriation bill. During the debate en titebilli Hon., Charles O'Neill made a defence of the Navy Department as carried on during the administrations of ex-Secretary Borie and Secretary Robeson. He repelled the charges made that Admiral Porter had been or was now the actual Secretary, and while doing ample credit to the ability of that gallant officer,he said that in every administration of the Department there were always .distin b ouished naval officers detailed there, as, for instance,Under Secretary Welles, Captain Fox and other distinguished - naval oilicers were at the head of the Bureaus, just as now: We find them. He also showed - die necessity at all times of these sub-divisions of labor there, and that the service demanded' the presence in the D *dame nt of distinguished officers, who knew by experience the wants in detail of the navy/ • He also refuted the allega tion. that the immense expenditures in the navy during the , late , had not' .produce.d . 6mniensurate sults, and. illii§trated:h r is aeon inept--by-:quoting—the great - servides"Of -- sindr officers as Admirals Farragtit and Perter, whci, with-their.ileetsi destroyed tlm,3trongholds of the rebels on the seaboard. , OftTATI 0 N - - - Reported for the Philadelphia Evening Bulletin: SAVANNAH—Steamship Centipede, Doughty-6 emp kegs Chas Engel; 34 bales cotton R Patterson & Co• 91 du 20 casks rice Cochinn, Russell .2 Co• 6 bales cotton Jessup & klobre; 25 do S L Bush. Jr• 20 boxos peas II G "Ives; lot loess iron E Samuel; 30 bales dottowilantiol ph Jenks; 6 crass beam! 9 bye vegetables Maug dc. Het. Nvikr; 17 bales yarn .1 Woodward & Sons; 19 do 91 do domestics-119 do cotton Clagborn, Herring & Co; 1 horse ,Jlr .1 S blontmollin; 159 Wee cotton W rreolmid, BOoton; 125 do 8 olio rico; order; tot Oundry - ,pkgo vorluno counigobos. r 11110TV/1111511114 4 01r 1 .!E •• STACILIELEIRS. " ~.,, t , TO,A11411„A. .., ~,'d ~, . 8111P5 ;.* k r 14`).:.1. 0/12251K ail Y FPRIv: ii.:: k 1 MVPs. ; Smidt . ' Bretnew....New. York Aprll_26 "Bellona ' Lonuon...Neer York n.pill 29 - C,i of iNew;Ydrkildvernool...L.New . Yorlv4;..:.—.......A.gril 30 Britannia... • Glasgow,,Near,York-e t ....., ,, ,- r mar 5 /Mina hiar c . . ... . . .....,Havre.: N. oW 16r1c. May 4 11tvinen.:1.1.,;..1.:..8rer3ieti.;.Nir16.1...:L.L...;.i.nay .5 EProlat. —...ohourp‘v....New nrk. May 6 Allemannia. Havre...New 0rk....... ........... 51ay 7 1,5111 014, ;..,....... .:...../roset,...No_w York,- May 7 Berlin . '' Porithrunntoh::.Baltltnore • . , , 7 0/ of Baltirnore-Liverpool...New York via 11 - May . 7 The (4.neen...44:...LiverrionLaieWlYOrli.-... .. ; . .......May 7 Alell2o- Liverpool... New York via 11 May 10 Ilainvia Liverpool-:Now York M ty to 111ain liouthalpton...New York 314 y 10 . ' a DIIIPAHIi , -, • Pioneer.........:Phllade phla...Wihnington ' May 20 Tonawand4.:.Thlla4elphra...Pavannab . slay 21 H, Chauncey .i..:.New , v0rk...1( eninwad . May 21 Bellona New Ycrk...l, , ,ndon May 21 Myer London., - .Novr York...L)yerpool May 21 Donau' New York...llrernen May 21 Columbia • Now York...Glaaaow May 21 Marathon.: New Yr:lrk—Liverpool' " . nay 21 So uthA tnertea*-Now York... Rio Janeiro. to. May 23 par The aterimera der.ignated by an Aeteriek ( •)earry the United Slates Blatit. ,- BOARD OF TRADE. m oN_ OLT _ o ONSKITTIOL T_G.GILLESPIE, MARINE BELLET,IIOI.. POET OF PHILADELPHIA-MAv J. Burt lO8i8:4 511 SUN Bir-rx:T79-iritiaiWi;riii:s-29 ARRIVED YEBTERPAI . Mesmer Fannin, Fenton, 24 Lours from New York. with mdse to W 31 Baird it Co. btemner S If Phelps, Brown; 24 hours from . .Navr , York, with Indef., to W 61 Baird & Co. bummer Tummy, Nichols, 24 hours from - New York, with rods. to AV 31 Baird lc(!o. Bark Chief, Harding, 6 days from Boston, in ballast to Workman & Co. bar N s 11 Gould. Crowell, 6 days from Boston, with Hulse to Mershon Sc Cloud. , hchr 01 , s e, JemisNon. Jenneson, 3 days from tondipt, mdse.t d: Cloud. ?Ndtr Mary, di Candi ne. Fowler, 2 days from Leipsie, Eel. with grain to E Palmer. CLEARED YESTERDAY. Stremler liereuleff, Ketcham, Aquila Creek, Va. Jahn S grimmer A tic!, Wiley. Bnuton. Winaor &Co rd touner Norfolk. Platt, Itlehmond and Norfolk, Wm P Clyde St Co. ! Q Jr.fit. W Whi Baltimore . A Grovos. Jr hark Sam Shavpard, Evans, Cienfuegos, Geo G Carson LEWES. DEL... May 18. The tug America left for New York,' with the ecuw to tuw . . ar Iztt PM. In the hArhor—Brigs Criedllan and Minnie 31iller, frptrLPltiladeaphia_tar_Salem.. bria_Kirdius,frym = Philadelphia; Ftiltii Jane' DlcOarrhy and Ida L. from Plidadelpnia for Boston; S Dyer and bbie. from- Philadelphia for .Porir•month, N 11; Sea Bird and Ville Jobnonn. for Neer Yorlc; Smut, Itren, and Sarah Wood. frem - Philadelphia. hound E; the New York pilot boats Fll 1. ti /.. and Ia tic. and /5 schooners unknown. Wind SE and light... Thermometer (q. , • : HAVRE IA GRACE. bley 18. The following boats left this morning In' tow, laden and enroigned as follows: _ Cull lteher, lumber-to- 'Watson )1i4.1(40.?-dr: Soni- Col I) . fam do t, -Clouts l Co:-C911:111riger.slo to 11 - Croettei , & Co; Sinnle ttrt•Erntly. do to Puttonmo ivPitnott; Fruits - BO COelter:clo nilBl.ll II C Trump. lo to.D Trump R Son. ME3IOIIANDA. ' , 111) Cati no. S9fivnn. twine at: Aritirerp Igth 'trod. SI;i1L11 4- y_uaril..-14•1Jelcan, 7 -olitart40.1„-flowt-17tti-init for Fan Fr.ucitro. . . Ethritru Hyman. Brooks, from Callao, nt For 3lonroo nth inst. for order*. teunier J4nicx S Green, race. hence at - Richmond 17th Instant • -Steamer George Cromwell. Clapp. from New York for Ne ,, ()deans. at ,tt Krona 17th lust—not at before_ Steamer:it Bormela. troth Homburg; Cuba and Erfil, trete Literpool.at New York yeAterdny. Stentntr Geo Vrte-bingtOn. Gager: from. New Orleans b.r.N , ew.York.-nt 11ft Yli na - --PM-Irittrinerz • Bark Edwin. Flinn, cleared at iinvauliall 17th inst. for Aysm . ^ • Bark Carron (Br/. from 3fon ter idc a. at Fort Monroe 17th trot. for ordere. Brie Ilanlita:Thifiart; hence for .linvena, woe at the yeeterday ruerning. brig Denman. Kennard, cleared at New York 17th fwd. for Sal - aurall.h. it tsr serallA.L_Slnantone,iOi , Kew He - Ifni 4ow HairPn . .,Scla.S - Et Wheeler. Lloyd, cleared at' Baltimore' 17th iII 4 for float An. Fehr Joint 11. Perry elley hence at flew Bedford. Irth i t.r i t7 - Schr Maria Fleming. hence at Norwich lith inst. ~.t-chr 31,W Magee* aallattirMil - .Richmond, 3fe. prior to it ivil7at. for Savannah; , Schr John B A tmtin arrire.i nt }tat it !Jai inat V tn.; INI - A—Vildt Trap ghosl. in -Chf. ,, apezke i3ay, be. town months of York and Rappahannock. rivors t Kilda —Official nut'ce is hereby given, that the erection a a screw halal - 14race. to take, the piece of the light aaasal now marking . the Wolf Trap Shoal, between-the mouths of.the York and - Atappaltanuock'rirers, is about to Le commanarii. • - a,teri or vessels -and pilots are warned to keep clear of tlal work, the position of which will be indicated by a light -veesel moored close to it to the eastward. and Olowlng it red lignt to distinguish it from the Wolf Trap light-reesel.-whkh shows-a white light. - • - It will he well for pilots and other.; to note - that - the proposed screw pile lighthouse will stand within half a auto et the ext.:rime eaMern, edge of_tbo feet water mewl tideAtetant about one nuie .vrcat from Wolf Trap liglibreasel. and that vessels must keep - to the eastward of it. giving it a berth of at tenet one-half a mile. Dna notice will he glean ot the 'completion of the work and its ch‘tretteriaticer• _ - _ By order of the Lighthouse Board. W. 11. SiIUBRICK. Chairman: T re.aialry Department. 0111ce Lighthouse Board. Wiod,lngton.lit. May 9.1F70. INSURANCE, THE RELIANCE MI3ITRANCE cola PAITY OF PHILADELPHIA. Incorporated in ISO : -01!nrtTr Perpetual. Office N 0.308 Walnut street, dAPIVA esco„cao Inenree against loss or damage by FIRE, on Houses Stores and other Bnildinge, limited or perpetual, and or Furniture, Goods, Wares and Merchandise in town of tonntry, LOSSES PROMPTLY ADJUSTED AND PAID. twiets, December Invested in the following Securities, viTl. First Mortgagee on City Property, well se - cured-.....-. —m a amo United. States Government 82,000 Philadelphia City 6 Per Cent. 76,000 Of Warrants 6,03.5 7r Pennsylvania 8 3,000,000 6 Per. Cent L0an........ 30,0136 Oi Pennsylvania Railroad Bonds First Mortgage am° of Camden'and Amboy Railroad Company's 6' Per Cent. Loan- .... . .... - .. . 6,000 IX Huntingdon and firOini Vop - 7 i . Mort gage Bonds• i,%0 a County Fire Tosurince Company's Stock . 1,050 4.1( Mechanics' Hatk..... . . .... 4,0000( Commercial Bank of Pennsylvania . ...... 10,000 01 onion Mutual Insurance Company's Stock. 190 IX Reliance Insurance Company of Philadelphia - Stock 3,200 Of Cash in Bank and on / 14 / 6 71 Worth at Pax ___.13401472 C. is4iitet yl DIBBC Thomas 0.11111, William Musser, Samuel Bispham, • .L. Batson,' . Win. Stevenson, Benj. W. Tingley, Edwart THOI _ . Worth at pro3en WM. OrIDSB. Becretary. PHILADELPHIA. December ANT /R A T.E INSUILANWO (10A1.• ti PANY.-01IARTER PERPETUAL. Office, No. 311 W ALNUT Street, above Third, Philads Will insure against Loss or Damage by Fire on Build Ingo, either perpetstilly or for a limited time, Household Furniture and Merchandise generally. Also, Marine Insurance on Vessels, Cargoes and Freights. Inland Insurance to all parts of the Union. DIRECTORS , William Esher, Lewis Audonried, Wm. M. Baird; John Ketcham, John R. Blackision,.J. E. Baum 'William F. Dean, John B. Peter Sieger, Samuel H. Bothermel. WILLIAM SHER, President. WILLIAM F. DEAN, Vice President. Wm. Id. BatiTuSeeretary. tan to ths tf UNITED FIREMEN'S INTSIIILANOI COMPANY OF PHILADELPHIA. This Company takes risks atthe lowest rates consistent with safety, and confines its business exclusively to FIRE INSURANCE IN THEPHIA CITY PH.ILADED OFFICE—No. 723 Arch street, Fourth National B an k DIRECTORS. Thomas J. Martin, Henry W. Brenner, John Hirst, Albertan King, Wm. A. Bolin, Henry Bumm, James Pi ongan, James Wood William Glenn, Charles Judge, James Jenner, ' • J. Henry Askin, Alexander T. Dickson,' ' Ilneh Mulligan Albert O. Boberte,_ Philip Fitzpatrick, J ((ea'. Dillon. CONRAD B. ANDRESS, President. WM. A. BOLIII. Treas. Wm: H. Faenn. Beer. AMERICAN FIRE .ENSURA_NO.IO COM. PANY, incornoratedlBlo.--Oharter porpetnal. No. 910 WALNUT street, above Third, Philadelphia - Raving a largo pall-up Capital Steck and Surplus in vested in sound and available Securities, continue tt insure on dwellings, stores, furniture, merchandise vessels in port, and their cargoes, and other "arsons') property. .dll losses liberally and ptemptly a d jua cw. DIRECTORS. , Thomas R. Maris, lildmurld 0. Dalin', /dm Welsh, , Charles W. Poultney, Patrick Brady, Israel Morris, , John T. Lewis, John P. Wetherrn, William . Paul. ' ' ' Ataisy iIICiMAB DIABIB. Proaldent, u Amy 011.11. Eleozetory.— --• 10.4111 E INSURANCIIIOOMPANYp NO. 809 CHESTNUT STREET. INCORPORATED Me. CHARTER :PEIIPEITULL CApITAL, QZIO, C OOO. FIRE INSURANCE EXLUSIVELY. [unman against Lon or Damage by Fire, either _by petnal or TemporaryPolicies,l. lint Tone. Charles Richardson, Robert Pearce, Wm. H. Rhawn, John Keeslerf Jr., William M. Seytert, 'Edward B. Orne, • John F. Smith, , Mark% Stokes, , • Nathan Uttlea. , Sohn Even:dan s A West. Mordecai Busby* e°rge A . ca.A.BLE ICHAIIDSON,Prinident. WM. Et. HAWN. Vica-Proabiettt. LIALIAMB BLANCHARD.RoOntary. spl • • • • • - • ' • 'EV U,A4O-AT It.SY ( IT' 1816 cicari at MIECEI --...--.809.696 Thomas H. Moore, 'Samuel Costner, Janos T. Young,, . Isaac F.--Baker,- Christian J. Holtman, Samuel B. Thomas, 11 Biter. HtlAB (1 HILL, Preeldtmt. 22,1859. jal-tu the tf . ' , 1' INSURANCE. 1 29 ~.--;-,-t- 11 1"tr gP, P P IP , UAL 'IB7O 3 .F I I4)X.W/Cti-ii - N= I-- - FIRE INSITEMITt ,COMPANT i . or EIIII.AbEI4IIIIA., , , , OFFICE--435 and 437. Chestnut St. ) ItSl3oth on January' .1. 1E370. ni825,731 .$ uir 400.000 A9crued Barplart4 rreminnno - 9,4z5031 INCOME FOlllB7O, .LOSI3EB Plllll IN, 1 $8.110.000. iti144;904' LOSSES PArrit SINCE 1829'0VE11 $5,500,000. . , . Perpetual end Temporary Policies on Liberal Terme The Company also 'fiance policies upon the Rents of all kinds of Buildings, G round Dente and Mortgagee. The " has no DISPUTED CLAIM. 1 . S. • Alfred G. Baker, DLREOT OR Alfred Fitler, Samuel Grant, Thomas Spark, Geo. W. Richards, - Wm. 8. Grant, , /sum Lea, Thomas ts, Ellis, George Fates, Gustavus 8. Benson. ALFRE G. BAKER, President. GEORGE 'PALES, Vice President, -.IAB. W. kfcALLIBTER, Secretary. TfIEODORE M. REGER, Assistant Secretary. fe7 tdeSl4 ' • .I'N'SiTRA NCE COMPANY NORTH - AMERICA; Vire, Marine and .Inland Insurance. INCORPORATED 1784. CHARTER tERPETUAL. . CAPITAL,.,_. • • - • • 8300,000 Apt,'lati January Ist, 1870. -• • 82.783,581 Losses' paid since organize. lion; ' • . , . . 823,000,000 ttecelptsof PretoJunin, 1869, 84991,817 45 loterest from Investments, .1869, • • 114,6941 74- — Goaseirtrarieri - Isaw --- = STATEMENT OF .THE ASSETS. First Mortgage on City Property . 8766,450 00 finlted*Statfsi Government and other Loan Bonds. 1a22,346 00 Railroad Bank and Canal Stocks. .55,21.8 00 Cash in Dank and office.....— 247,6 W 00 Lbans on Collateral Security 32,53 00 Nbtes Receivable; mostly Marino Pre tniums • _ A CCllled Interest Fiero inms in course of transmission Ithsettied ffiatine" Prernimes..- Beal F.:state, Office of . Company,'Philadel- --E'ranels-H.-Cope, .i2.TORS.• _Althur H_Co lilia,=--- - : -Wstunned . - Jones, - - Edward H. Trotter, John A. Brown,, Edward 8. Clarke, Charles Taylor, T. Chariton Henry,, An-throes White, . - Alfred IL Jeamp, William Widah, - Louis C. Madeira. 4 .. Morrie Wain.' Chas. W. Cushman, I John Mason, . Clement A. Grissom, Geo. L. Harrison, William Brotkie, • , ARTHUR G. COUSIN, President. CHARLES BLATT,Tice Prea't. --RAJ - 1111AS 3/a itlB, Secretary.— -----------,----- 7 C. 11. R Ening. Ass't BccretayYr. .. _ , ,_ ._ , ... . _, _ __ , _ _ •--- Cerilflcatcq of Marine Insurance issued ( wben de. sited), payable at the Counting: llouso- of -Messrs Btowri7tihinley*.CO., London.. .ASSACLITIAII—_ - t* , ' - A op ° - PHILADELPHIA. • 1,,.):r - Incorporated March, 27, - 1821 i. - Officte;;i - ;-No. 34 Notth Fifth Stie6C: INSURE . BUILDINGS,: HOUSEHOLD - YIIRNITIIRI AND IdERUHANDIRE GENERALLY YRORI LOSS BY FIRE. In the city of Philadelphia oniy.t Assert - p - ci-antrary-1 - , - 1 - t-370 1,5 '72 ,P 7 , TRUSTEES: :William Hamilton. Charles P. Bower. -- John Carrow, Peter. Williamson, Gorge I. Young, - - Jesse Lightfoot, Joseph . R. Lyndon,' -Robert Shoemaker Levi P. Coats; • - Peter Armbruster, :,Bainattel Platt aWk_, - Dickinson, - josepli E. Schell. WM. 11.- HAMILTON. President, SAMUEL SPARHAWN., Vice President, ;WM. T, - ,l3llTLER,Secrotary. DELAWARE MUTUAL SAY-ETY-INSU RANCE COMPANY, incorporated by the Legisla• 'attire of Pennsylvania, 1635.- nice, B.E. corner of TITIVD nnd WALNUT streets Philadelphia. MARINE INSURANCES On Vessels, Cargo and Freight to all parts of the world INLAND INSURANCES On goods by river, canal. lake and land carriag to all Darts of the Union. FIRE INSURANCES On Merchandise genefally on Stores, Dwellings, /louses, &c. 45_0.MS orixErs comPAziy 17E — mernoer 1, RM. • 8200,000 Baited States Five Per Cent. Loan, ten-forties- X 6,000 a 100,000 United. States Six • Per Cent. 'Loan (lawful money)... -. . 107,750 0( 60,000 United Staves Six Per . 6 .. a. , no ISSI. . - ~ . . 60030 Of 200,000 State of Pennsylvania - Aix ... Per • • Cent. L0an........._ .. .. ~..... -. 213.950 0( ,i .bOOOO City of Phildelphia Cent Loan.( a exempt from tax).- 3 , 11,11250( i 100,000 State of New Jersey Six Per Cent. Loan .....--- , . .. 102.000 Ot • i 20,000 Pennsylvania Railroad —..— First Mortgage 51x Per Cent. Bonds... 19,450 Of i 25,000 Pennsylvania Railroad, Second • Mortgage Six Per Cent. Bonds... 23,42500 25,000 Western Pennsylvania ,Railroad Mortgage Six Per. Cent Bonds (Pennsylvania Railroad guar } anteek. —. -.-.. - 20,000 01 , 30,000 State of Tennestanc . Five Per Cent. Loan. 15,000 0( 7,000 State of Tennessee Six Per Cent. Loan ~..—....... —. 4,270 Of i 12,500 Pennsylvania .11tailroad Com 7 pany, 250 shares stock 14,000 01 i 5,000 North Pennsylvania Railroad -Company,--100-eitares stockT.i. .-- 3,900 - 0 10,000 Philadelphia and Southern .Mail Steamship Company, SO shares ' ••• stock. , 7#o 0( •- 246,900 Loans on Bond :and , ,Mortgagee :- , - first liens on City Properties ' 256.900 0( Market value, 81,2550270 0( Cost. $1,21,5,6= 27. Real Estate • ' 30,000 (X -... Rills Receivable for Insurance made 323,700 71 Balances duo at Agencies-Pre miums on Marine Policies. Ac crued Interest and other debts dne the Company 66,097 91 Stock, Scrip, lie- of sundry Cor porations, 84,706 . Estimated valne—' • - 2,740 20 Cash in 8ank............-3168,31588 Oath in Drawer 972 26 ,$1=1.400 Par. DIRECTORS. Thomas O. Hand, Saninel E. Stokes, hylin C. Davis, William G. Iloultou, Edmund E. Sonder Edward Darlington, theophilns Paulding, H. Jones Brooke, James Ttaquair, Edward Lafonrcade, Henry Sloan Jacob Riegel, Henry 0. Dailett, Tr., ' Jacob P. Jones, James O. 'Hand, • • James B. bi'learland 1 William O. Ludwig, . Joshua P. Eyre Joseph H. Seal, Spencer 'llvain, Hugh Craig,' T. B. Semple, ritishUrg. John D. Taylor, A :a . Berger, 14 George W. Bernadeu, DT. Morgan, " William O. Hon at°n THOMAB 0. HAND, President. • JOHN 0. DAVIS, Vice President. HENRY LYLBURN, Secretary. HENRY BALL, Assistant Secretary 9IHE COUNTY FIRE INSURANCE COM ± • PANY.-oMce, No:118 South Fourth , street, below Chestnut. , 'The rire - Insuranee Company of the °Minty of Phila. Incorporated by the Legislarore of Ponneylva• oia insigsg, for indemnity against loss or damage by lire, exclusively. CHARTER PERPETUAL. This old and reliable institution, with ample capital Ind contingent fund carefally invested, continnes to M auro buildings, furniture, merchandise, &0., either per • outneutly or for a limited time against loss or damage by are, at the lowest rates consistent with the absolute safety of its customers. Losses adjusted and cold with all possible despatch. J. DREG EO 011 S: Mae. Butter, Andrew H. Miller, Henry Bndd, • ..James N. fiton John Horn, Edwin L. Reakirt, Joseph MoOrth 'Robert V. Massey, Jr. George Necks,' Mark Devine. OHARL BJ. SUTTER, President. - , • - HENRY RUDD. Vice President. BENJAMIN F. HOEOLLEY. Bocretary and Treasur JEFFERSON FIRE INSITRA_NOE 0015 f, PANY 'of -PhUtuielphia.-0111ce, NO. 24 North--Fifth itreet, near Market street., Incorporated by the Legislattire of Pennsylvania. Charter perpetual. ()spite' and Assets.llll6s,o_oo. Make insurance egairust Less or damae by Fire On - Public or stock., Private Buildings, Furniture, Ckmds and Mere ,:handise; on favorable terms, , Dmir,OTOBBI . 'Edward P:lifoyer Israel Peterson, , Frederick Ladner Johu F . Delsterlbr , Adam J. Oltu3s, aenry Troomoot. Hour), Jacob W111'40,34 John Elliott, Frederick Doll, . ' Christian D. Frick, Samuel Stiller, George E. Fort, William D. ,Gardnar. • ~ 'WILLIAM MoDANIEI4 preehlreit. .1811A.EI, PETERSON'' icePreeidottl,' PHILIP N. 0014ns-tit BocretarY and Treasurer. 1 I 'URAN I CE CO VIP.AiY .T...,,... ...: ~ . H. NO.RT.IfIatjEttICA. Fire„ Marina and Inland Insurance. Ineorporatetll794. Charter Perpetual. Capital - Asixets, Jan. Ist, ! -$2,783;581- Losses Paid Since Organi - 823,000,000 zation, ttt ' o. 1. .ee,eipts of Premiums/69, $1,901,837 45 Interest from InTestmento, 18'69, . . tosses paid, 1869, rirstllortgage - on - City PrOperty..... $766,4Y) United States Government and other 8_ 2 ,1011.53AM i;o3s;ass' - Railroad, Bank and Canal Stocks, Cash in Bank and °Rice— ... Loans on Collateral Security. Notes Receivable, mostly Marine Premiums \ 321,944 Accrued Interest ' D 2,357 - Premi maiin course-of tranvmislion.. - 85,198 - T.T-TlSettlect MarirziPremiuths::..".....: - 100,900 Real Estate, Office of Company,Phila. 30,000 921.944 00 -204357-66 85,199 09 /00,9UU 00 M,oco 00 Total Askets.Jan.l, 1870, $2,783,541 52,783,Mil A lITH OE G. COFFIN, SANITEL W. JONES, JOHN A. BROWN, CPAS. TAYLOR, IBIWRE -WM. WELSH, • MORRIS WALK, JOBILMASON, GEO. L. HARBISON, MATTHIAS MARIS, Secretary. C.—H.. R EEV ES Assistant Secretary. Certificates of Marine Insurance issued (when desired), payable at the Counting Rouse of _liessrs. Brown, Shipley Sr. Co., London. Tel6th lam ly. the Liverpool London Assets Gold, 8 18,400,000 Daily Receipts, - $2O, 00 0 Premiums in 1869, $5,8 4, c.) 0 0 T,osses_in 86 9, N0..6 Merchants' Exchange, Philadelphia. THE PENNSYLITANIA — FUM — INgO" ' RANCE COMPANY. • —Theorloorated 1825—Charter Perpetual. No. 610 WALNUT street, opposite Independence Bonfire. This Company, favorably known to the community for over forty years, continues to insure against loss 01 damage by fire on Rabllc or Private Buildings, either permanently or for s timited time. Also on Furniture, tocks of Goods, and liferchandise generally, on liberal terms. Their Capital, together with a large Burpltui Fund, I, Invested in the moat careful manner, which enables them offer to the insured an undoubted'eecurity in the case (Aloes. • DIRECTORS. • John Deverenz Thomas Smith, Henry Lewis J. (Gillinghnm Fell; ddock,_Jr.- + SMITH, Ju., President. rotary. Daniel Smith, Jr., leitinder Benson, [Hasp Hatlehuset, —Thomas-Bobins, Daniel Ha DANIEL WM. G. CBOWELL,IIec Security from Logs by Burglary, Rob bery, Fire or Accident. THE FIDELITY INSURANCE, TRUST AND SAFE DEPOSIT COMPANY, NEW MARBLE FIRE-PROOF BUILDINQ, 169,291 14 Nos. 329 . .331 Chestnut Street. Capital subscribed, $1,000,000; paid, 51550,000. COUPON 'BONDS. STOCKS SECURITIES, - FAMTLY • PLA TE, COIN, 'DEEDS and VALUABLE, of every dA,eription received for safe-keeping, under guarantee, at very moderate rates. 81852,100 04 The Company .also rent BAWDS INSIDE THEIR BURGLAR-PROOF VAULTS, at prices varying. from ;5;15 to 475 a year, according to size. An extra size for Corporations and Bankers. Rooms and desks adjoining vaults provided for Safe Renters. DEPOSITS OF MONEY RECEIVED ON INTER EST, at three per cent., payably by , chock ;without no tice, and at four per cent., payable by check, on ten day s' notice. TRAVELERS' LETTERS OF CREDIT furnished, ayailable in all parte of Europe. INCOME COLLECTED and remitted for one or of The Companv act as EXECUTORS. AD MINISTR TORS and GUARDIANS, nod RECEIVE •un! EXE• CUTE TRUSTS of every description, front the Courts, corporations and individuals. . . N. B. BROWNE, President. C. IL CLARK, Vice President. ROBERT PATTERSON, Secretary and Treasurer DIRECTORS. Alexander Henry, Stephen A. Caldwell; George F.. Henry C Gibson, J. Gillingham Fell, .tdcKeun. N. B. Browne, , Clarence H. Clark; Jdlin Weleb. Cherlett Nacnteetar, Edward W. °lark; HenryPral nlyl4 tu tit ly BUILDING AND HOUSEKEEPING HARDWARE: Machinists,•• -Carpenters, and other Me. chanics' Tools. Htngem , ficrower - Locksv - )lttiven - and .Porks,-.spoons,- Coffee Mills, &a., Stocks and Dies: Plug and Taper Taps, Universal and Scroll Chucks, Planes in .groat varloty. A.ll to be, had at the lip:mast Possible Prices At the CHEAP-FOR-CASH Hard. ware Store of SHANNON, Nai-1009 Bitritet'Striietii' :liNUáAiiCJ. Or ' STATEMENT OF THE ASSETS. DIIIECTOUS. FRANC'S R COPE, EDW. H. TROTTER, 'EDW. 8. CLANKR, T. CHARLTON- MINIM - AL - FRED - D. - JESSUP; -- LOIII.4O.IUADEIR A,,.- -CTULEI. W. CUdIiMAN, OLENNNT A..QRISCOM WM. BROOME.. ARTHUR G. COFFIN, CHARLES PLATT, VI.VW,PRESIDENT. and Globe Ins. Co. 3, 2 1-9,006 SAFE DEPOSITS« OF PHILADELPHIA, 1111=19 HARDWARE, &C. TAMES A. FREEMEN'; AUCTIONEE.R . ,' ' ' 11,5.422 Wa'fiat street, • • . :".., . llikiiiaTe on .`WkDNESDAY, at .12, n'elock, noon at, th Rzchiinge,wlll include— ,• . • dt, .ti ART , square , grbuud, intersected by Taenty•second, Twenty third, entr4ourili, Twenty4lfth. r.etityrldxt Tirents - seientb, Cumberland and Huntingdon streets, Tirenty eighth, Ward, Underlaid • with a iarge deposit of %rick clay. _Full parilculare and plans at the store. Broca tors Abaolutt Serie. Estate of Abrahatti TIMMY, dsc r it Boa. 233,236 and 37 $.111.1.RD ST.aluablebnsinese Dopers ies..3 large fatlr•story brick office buildings, lie. low Walnut atreet, lot 54 , by,1511 feet, to Leyant. , atreet, 823.000 may remain. NO. MOS CRItItITIAN . STRlCET.—Two..thremstorY brick dwellings and jot. MGM feet to panty street. 'Orphans' Caters Sale: Estate of Jolus E. Donahue, de.' u 4tl. 'Ct. 621 VINE . STREIST.—Iifedern hree-etery brick residence, with back : buildings , , op 'peelte Franklin P quart,. Lotl7z9o feet. Three-quartersof the purchase money may, remain. • • • . NO. 718 S. BROAD STREET:=Tsro three-story - brick dwellings and lot, 17xby.fi 1 / 4 % feet. ,Orplians' Oeurt Bate. E:.tate of Etizabefh Finnegan, deceased. rdooli EET.—Three 3 story brick houses and lot 4i x4635' feet,eouth of Fitzwater and West of Junikar streets. Orphans' Court" Sale. Estate of Alan MsCar-' thtt. deceased. . THREE ACRES and IreProrenionti 'Blackwood town road, .111 t. Ephraim, near Gloucester, N, J. Mir Full particu/ars in catalogues, now ready at the Atte ticts Store. - • ' $500,000 ORPHANS' COURT SALE, on the Premises.--EW4te of GoWeil, Kolb dereasrd. Property, Wolter street, Germantown. d o Thursday afternoon, May. 26th. 1870, at 4 o'clock, on the premises, twill be sold: Stone House, Stable, Barn , and large lot SW by 2.15 feet,'Wister street formerty Coy's lane/ p near Main street, Germantown. ar of incunibranee. Salo PeremotorY ' • of o J R an n Gal S o ' wOyU, R dT S d A . S t one ahne ; pr am m e s dw — el E l s ngs Cresheim lane. Germantown. On Thtirsday afternoon._ y tl, - Irgeo:3 - o tt'clock, on tlfe premises, will be sold a two and a half .story atone two-story frame house, frame stable und int.. S 2. by J6O feet._ Oresheim lap e 041*ft:ter street, Kt; A iry. Clear of Imam bronco. Salt absolute. • TO Wheelwrights and Others. PEREMPTORY SALE, OF 50,000 FEET OF SF ASONED HICKORY, WRITE AND BLACK OAK LUMBEtt ON MONDAY MORNINO. May '2.3, at 10 o'clock, wilt be mad, at FIFTH street - and COLUBIB I A avenue, about 50,000 feet of well-seasened. hickory. White and Black - Oak Lumber, from half inch up. /3Qr Bale'peremptorY. 114,690 74 $2,106,5E3419 $1,035,386 84 -- 1 1 1 . 71 y 5a110:422 Walnut street. SUPERIWt LATHES iI.DnTOty.,I3,.PLA.TFORS.I BOALES:GR:iiiiitffinaV ON TUESDAY MORNING. May 24, at 10 o'clock, at the Auctlou Store, three I Fox Lathes. with Toole complete.. __m.gu - Grlinlirortil - , Scales - , Star - Sale peerruptory, on account of whem it may con, - ; . 1 - ;1.22;846 6.5,708 . .. . 247;620 . 3,2,558 31: ARTIN 13kt OT NI.BBI - A IAJTIO.N turdfx, N0.70-I CHESTNUT street. above Seventh • ---- -Administrator's Sale No. 826 North Sixth street. SUPERIOR HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE. -ON ERIDAYIIORNING. at 10 o'clock, nt No. 820 North Stith street,by catalogue, simerier Parlor, Chamber and Dining-Room Furnitnra, imperial and Ingrain carpets. One Feather Beds, &c.. - May he seen . at 8 - WC - kick morning of sale. • ' Sale at din Auction Rooms. • JrANDSOME WALN r T PARLOR. CITAISIRER AND LINING LOOM FURNITURE, FRENCLI. PLATE 111.111.ItORS, CARPETS. dtc.. • • IMPOR-T-ANT—SA-IE-OY-L-YJNE —s PURMTHRH AND UPHOLSTERY Preparatory to putting up a new front and otherwise improving htertore, -- Mr. JOHN M. GARDNER, , ' 1316 Chestnut street, will tin order to make room for these improvements), OFFER AT PUBI IC - SALE,_ ' ON MONDAY AIORNINU, • Bfny 23, at 10 o'clock, at his Warerooms, a selection of the - FINEST - ONBINET FURNITURE k UPII6LSTERY • ,• ever offered nt auction in The styles are the newest and choicest., The qualtly and finish cannot he excelled. -To-).erify these _fartnit_is_only-nocessary for parties in tending to :purchasoloxall. and e`xamine the Stock, THE ASSORTMENT , ' embraces Prawing Room .and Parlor Suits. with covet , ines of - the richest brocatelles t satins satin , damasks, 1 4TH bee, silks and terries; a variety of 'the most elabo --rate Chamber,l3lniritiloom: Library arid - flail - Suite AN OPPORTUNLTY PEESIDENT. presents itself in this sale to those desirous of purchasing the • HIGHEST ORDER OF CABINET WORK -AT--AUCTION PRICES. - - which may never occur again. The- _V und ture_wil be readyfor examination two days provious to sale, with catalogues., - - -- - ...Salo No. 1806 Coates Street. ELEGANT---EBON ROONV--SUIT T HANDSOME WALNUT. CHAMBER.FIMNITU RE,• FINE FRENCH' ;PLATE. MANTEL AND OVAL MIRRORS. HANDSOME ENHLLSH BRUSSELS CARPETS. SPRING MATRESSES, CUT GLASS ' WARE., FINE—PLATED. wAItE, kg. ON TUESDAY MORNING— May 24, at lit o'clock, at No. NM Coates street, by: catalogue, the entire handsome Household FurnitUre, &c. • May be seep early on the morning of salt, - Q,,COTT'S ART GALLERY AND AUCTION ►COMMISSION SALES BOOMS, B. SCOTT, a., Auctioneer. 1117 CHESTNUT street, • Girard Row:- Furniture Sales every... Tuesday and Friday morning, at 10 o'clock. ' Particular attention paid to out-door sales at mode. rate rates. .1029 tI GRAND SPRING SALE. OF FINE NEW AND SUPERIOR Ft tairr (17. E. BARLOW'S MANUFACTURE TRIUMPHANT. ‘ 51500 IMMENSE STOCK. $15,000. Three floors crowded with elegant goods. No COUN TRY make, but the best CITY manufacture, from makers of well-known reputation. TWO DAYS' SALE_ ON THURSDAY AND FRIDAY. May 19 and 20, at 10 A. M.and knob dayoxilb.be.._ Offered tit writhe sale, aFour WarerehmS, the largest and most elegant stock of tine 2 urniture ever offered at auction in this city. The variety is immense, and corn prises every new article in the Furniture Hue, and each and every article sold accompanied by written guar antee. This sale is made to supply the enormous de. 'nand for our goods, and is the last chance that will be offered to get good Furniture at your own price. Sale positive and wit' nut any reservation. Our en . tire building will be illuminated each evening till sale, and open for examination of stock, with catalogues. M. DEGENTIIER'S LAST SALE OF CELEBRATED FURNITURE. ON SATURDAY, May 21, at to o'clock, will be sold nt public sale, at I'lo9 Chestnut street, the remainder of Bit. Degenther's ele gant stock, without reservation or regard to cost. Tors Is positively Mr. Dogs-other's last sale, as he loaves for Europe in a few weeks, and must close his business at any sacrifice. Catalogues ready Friday P. M: STILL ANOTHER GREAT FURNITURE SALE. We have receivtd Instractions from Messrs. RIOEI MOLD 4 CO . of No. 4t, South Second street. owing to a dissolution of the long established firm, to offer at piiblig sale their enormous_ Lock of_fi .V.— no—Furnituroi amountina to t•Sar,lo - • . _ ON NVED.I4KEDAY and THURSDAY, NaY qsfind 26,ftt 10 c'e , ock A. 31.. each day. Particulars hereafter. We have also received adv leas from Mr. Frank Sheri dan. of - 614 Arch street, who is declining business. to sell his entire stock, at his Wererooms. of Mantel and Pier M irt ors.Gehl and Walnut Frames; Bouquet Tables, Paintings, Chromos and Engravings, framed in every style ; Photograph Frames, in all styles and sizes. Fire proof and Office Furniture will also be sold. Salo positive. • THOMAS BIRCH & SON, AUCTION EERS AND COMMISSION MERCHANTS, No. 1110 CHESTNUT street, Rear entrance No. 1107 Sansom street. Wambold Furniture of every description received on Consignment. Sales of Furniture at Dwellings attended to on the . most reaaoneble terms. SEVENTY! CONTINUATION SALE or A.. VALU ABLE COLLECTION OF COINS, CURIOSITIES, ACTOGRAPBS, ON THURSDAY AFTERNOON. At 33Y o'clock, at the auction store, No. 1115 Chestnut street, second story, a valuable collection of Coins, Au tographs. &c., being 11 portion of the collection of Prof. Alontrovllle W ilsoll ickeson. Catalogues now ready at the auction store. Sale at No.IIIO Chestnut street. HANDSOME WALNUT PARLOR AND LIBRARY 'SUITS. COVERED WITH BROCATELLE AND FINEST 'PLUSH .• ELEGANI OHAMBER.FURN). TUBE, OF .NEWEST 'DESIGNS; ROSEWOOD PIANO FORTES AND PARLOR ORGAN. MAN-' TEL, PIER AND CHAMBER (MASSES, NEW AND SECONDHAND VELVET. BRUSSELS 'AND INGRAIN CARPETS, HAIR MATRESSES. BOL STERS AND PILLOWS, ENGRAVINGS, CHINA, ON FRIDAY MORNING. At 9 o'clock, at thu auction store, No 1 . 110 Chestnut street, will bu sold, a large assortment Of handsome now Eocond luind Furniture and Carpets, for the Parlor, I ming Room, Library and Chamber. Also,Ritchan _ The Stock of Superior Furniture, manufactured by Mr. CARL G. MEI:UNGER, in the best manner, for private sales, comprising— Parlor suits, in plush and brocatello. Library suits, in silk reps. . Library suits, in leather. • Chamber suits, with Wardrobes. Centre Tatbles,with Tennestalewnd_Listien-marble tope. - - Welmit - ard - EliiiiiY - Caliinels • Spanish, Library leather Rocking Chairs. Cane.seat and leather covered Diningltoom Chairs. handsome Walnut Sideboards, Scc. • The Furniture elm be examined :On.: Thursday after noon, with catalogues. TRENTON STONE OHINAWANE., • At 11 o'clock, in the basement, will be sold, a large in voice of Trenton Stone China Ware, suitable for restau• Santsi lintels, boarding, h(niesi Arc. • , AIIOTION'a' ERB Nos'Aland 23 Market treat, cArnor of Bank • LADON . . §ALE- O F OPETINGS_,- 500 ROLLS • NVIII.TS,- - RED OillgOlt AND. FANDY CANTON .11ATTINGS,,Sco. ON ' FRIDAY MORNING. Ingrain,ppieces __ atl _ & V: b ! i ii oa - I`4l' i,n?LTßnp %,orpotinuo, vautou D alattluge, vit H em p. vw;hl:44 , - • LANGEIDALV ''FDDNOH AND OTIIRR DURO. "01114h D A R yfiii?z i liko, 14y. 23,,041Q ofclopkiou four toon!lFe 9r9111t, BAIIJ9yQF;2OOO ON C T lthilf . v . p 3 TB it i T 4 i n t r„, ITS, A:, ISI4 24, at , lo un flair montlitearedlt• AUCTION SALES. ON SATUROAVI4OANINO. May 21 ..'''.. • 1; '... A tici!co..zfi SAL 14.; THOMAS & BONS, AITUTIONSBELO. Noe. 13S1 and - 141 Hontn FOUR:PEI atnalg e ,• ALES CIFETOCAS aikap aspm, Public sales attain Plttladelldsta- Egnmenip TILVDAY,st 12 o'clock,. • • Yarn/tun was ail the AnOtiOniSteri Tlf(111 1 11/AY. SaINDISK4 4 IO,IIenCIIII rot:five, especial o,tbnyttlre •0: STOCKSLL(I.IOIB . ,_4o, ON'' TOESDA'Y • ni&Y 44, • Ai la o'clock noon. at the Philad e lu ludo- Iphia F l Epitange. 0101, • , - For account of whom it may concern-- 300 shires Oharloston.,-Audngt und•illattafahtstrWi Company. - • , pass's:lees' Bale. , , • ;3004 shires Pennsylvania and Calliernia Cold Milne Company. 1/0111aharelit onnnet eatlifnitig(la." , 2700 shares Story Centre Oil co. , 11601 shares New London Copper Mining_Co:2• ••" !eat* shares Brandywine and. Phil ' s Oil Co. ' , For. Othey.Ancomsts... - lee shave; Shamokin Valley and Pbtiwillteltailroad. 2ts shares Sear Mountain and Franklin. Railroad.. 600 °hares Union Mining Co. (go • ld an advert el 400 shares Clifton 011 CO, : 7 shares V. extern Market Co. • 5 eharce Weet Pnlladete.biajlantt, 00 chores First National Rank.. - 7 sharer Vtmtral Transportation Co.. • !' • • $lOOO Schaylkill Navigetion Boat and Oar Loan, RM.' • 4 sharee Phil'a aud Southenz Riff Eltesaisktp Oar 8/0400 Susquehanna Canal, 6 per cent. "r- 141- eharetreamdettand - Atlautio preferred. '. •'• . )7 - 1 50 shares Philadelphia Exchange Co. 10 Shares Horticultural Rail. 20 share,. Phlivel'a Petroleum 'Storage Go. /11001 bond Philad'a Pet' elm= Storage Go., interente 7.30 percent . ' •. • ;; ; 82000 let mortgage /' per • cent. bands; Coltirnbus swat : Indianapolis Gontra) RallWaY !scroo 2d mbrtintge 7 percent. , ilo -• do. ,dO thsf. Iwo income 7 jper cont bonds Columbus and. Indiana' ' • Central Itailway.Co. :„, . "?.. 2 chores (old) Philadelphia and, Southern ; Stoomihip Co.' ' REAL `ESTATE SALE, MAY 21, - '- • Will tholude-- Executors' Sale--Estate John ()Tozer, dee'd•=: / 2Ha NDSOME MODERN ItkIE•STORY BRICK itII.SIDENCES, Nos, 2(142 - Chestnut 'street: , .3 They have the modern conveniences. Same Estate-HANDSOME MODERN. THREE DRIVE' RESIDENUIC N0...4131 Spring Gardsoa' street. Has all the modern conveniencoe. Sale by Order of -IleirtEstAto •of Chrfidonher'. Simon, dee'd-LARGE LOT,. Jackson, etreet, east of TNV en ty-ni al, Twenty sixth Ward--164 feet front.' ".•'; • Sarno Estato-LARDE Lor,s. E. corner of_ Twenty, : ututh-ftral-.hsclao. ntr ate - - - 180 - foor - froisr -7 -' home Estate-LABOR LOT. S. W. corner otTwontir ninth and a 40 feet wtdo street-228 feet front. Some Estate-TW O.BTORY ! BRICK .. , :nyincrianwl Linnard street, east of Ninth . Emme Estate--DROCND REI I /Ta - 825 60 Yokr. I" , ' ' seme_Eatate-.IIA NDSOMR---STC.NE-Ilf A ' , IKON-and- - Olit•lmildings; et Olney on the' New Second street' turnpike s Twenty-eecond Wnrd=ll/00, foot front,32o.feet',,,, doe. • • : • ' - - Bamo - Estato;;COUNTRY PLACE-,STONE,DWEILL, G and 10 acres, 17 perches, Olney, a'wenty•secend Ward. Has fronts on three avenues--`valuabl 0 for hultd-,, log sites. dame Estate-VALUABLE BUILDING LOT, MAILS, Maple. and Linden, avenues, ,Oinoy,, Twenty second Ward, : • • • • • • Executors' Sale--Eetate of. Susanna Morris ' , dec'd•-• • BUSINESS LOCATION-TEIBEE-STORY - BUICK DVe.ELLIN 0, No. 211 Filbertet... • • - • ~ FRAME DWELLINGS. and LA RGE' LOT: Nod. and.36l3North Broad street, extendingthrough to, Oar. :t; ni at. t ONVII avenue • LARGE and VALUABLE LOT, Columbia avenue, wen of Broad street A-187, feet front. • ::211; 'STORY ; Ilwore - 61tireTcliiid - Tiemont arenne,:Norriatown,,Pa. , , • Peremptory Sale by' Order .of_Relre , -Eiitato of -John S cliwciss,decid-215•8T OR FRA 51E UW LING- i nn. 315 North , Fifth stroet, above Bro,wn, with a E . ,Cllpifle Stable the rear on Orchard it; •, - BI: SIN EBS ' STAND—THREE-STORY BRUM STORE and DWELLING and:BIiACKSMITH'SITOP',' 'W. corner of Sixth and .Manter streets 5G ifeet-front LARGE anti VALUABLE BUILDING, .kripirn its "LandelPa'llitohine Worka." No: 956 Beach streot.l.3lx--.; teen th Ward. . --- -111DERN-TBRE'E;STORY. BRltak RESIiiENOR7--.1 No. 1737 Nine street. OverloAkcLogitit finnan.. - - ?at/BERN - THREE:STORY MUCK RESIDENOR4''• N 0.823 North Ater enth street, ahoy c Brown. -" TIFREE-THREE T : BIIICK - DWELLINGS,'Noi. an - d 821 Inquirer atreet; in the rear of the above. , • NRRY- VALUABLE • BUSENESS' , STANTP-41190,1 1 'i• STOEY B 0W N -STONE §wpitE, 1 10.6.7.,N9r0t,T1 4 rk, strert. Arch r • • : THREE-STORY BKH:IIc.,I3TORP andpW.HAJLIAG,i, f 2116...Emera10 13. ' MANI/80211E 31.0HHRN - HERH - Ellat;, with-Stehle -.,-, and Coach Boum°, Wayne avenue and Seymour street, ' G e r man town, 2afaet front, 21 H feet deep--2 tronts...-5- ,, -7f• 1 : 1 . .EXeCtltOrle S.Lle—Estate of ' hire. N. C. Baehr'', dec'd— "'UHT 'VA TAIA TILE 3ifit sToi{x. Rules . i. DV Nat.:. No. 1624.(Thestnuf street—Ai by 150. feet. , TITRES-STORY BRIM') DWELLUIG,._:;..Ne.--1568,-.: Threw into.. Immediate-possession: - NAL UABLE.BUILDINCELOT of Haddonfield. Camden ,ounty„ New JorfteY. N TEEL FQl7g- slr ORY :BRICK ,BTORH—and- 2 ---- 11\VELLING, 18371ambard;etc , „ , , . . , t MISCELLANEOUS BOOKS' FROM, LIBRANFEEri. ON FIUDAY AFTERNOON. ay 20; at 4 o'clock.' - • • _ , _ _ , 1 - . Snle•on the Prmises. ' ' ... I VER . g . RM. G l ANTA.IOI.IETRY SEAT . 'MANSION. STABLE AND COACII , HOUSE, 25 ACRES, ' , Known as " BEECH WOOD' ,, , At the J 11 N KINTOWN - STATION t - •0n the North' Pennsylvania Railroa, RESIDENCE OF W. C. KENT, ESQ ON SATURDAY, ' ' .• . . May 21,1870, nt 4 o'clock P. IL, will bs sold at public sale, • ON THE PIIEMIBEs. Full particulars at the Auction Rooms.- , Trains leave depot of the North Pennsylvania Bail. rond for Jenkintown at 7.30, 895 and 10.45 A. X., 1.15, 3.30, 4.15, 5.20, 6.20,8.00 and 11.30 P. M. Snle No. 737 gamine strent.' NEAT HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE, French Plate Pier Mirror, Fine Velvot and Other Carpets. tec• .. ON MONDA Y MORNING.' hilly 23. at 10 o'clock, the superiorW.alnut Parlor.andi • _lo.fiting_Rocum_Furnitovn- olledAValnut=and-Mahogsny Chamber Furniture, fine French Plate Pier Mirror, fins Feather Beds and Curled Bair Alatreeses, China, Glass ware, Cooking Utensils, An. . ' Solo N o . 1338 Spruce street.' SUPERIOR FURNITURE, MIRRORS, VEIN= CARPETS, ON WEDNESDAY MORNING. June I, at IC o'clock, at N 0.1333 Spruce street, by Cata— logue, the entire Walnut and Mahounny Parlor , Dining, Room and Chamber. Furniture, Walnut Centre and Bouquet Tables, Extension Dining Table, CP ine, Maass end Plated Ware,French Plate Mantel blirrors,superlor Walnut Bookcase, fine Hair Mar t e g sies. Velvet, Brussels and other Carpets. Canton Mat n large. assortment. or excellent Kitchen Utensils, rtgerator. (cc. BY BARRITT &(30, - AUCTIONEERS, . CASH AUCTION HOUSE,: - • , • No.= MA RKP,T street. earner of Bank stri4. ON FErDAYMORNINC4 'biro , 20, commenting at ,0 , e10e1t..-we will sell So!) tota Dress Goode, Satinets, Jeans, Tweetie,lte% - • , Also, Rose and. Il Half : Hope, Towels, andkerchiefe, Ribbons Notione, • ' Also, Ready-made Clothing. ' : • . • ' Also, Linen Drills, Piques, &e. t — A - T - u - toL - E - u, --- AeKtcAtfcTiov - gna, L- 1219 CHESTNUT Street.- OW' Personal attention given to Sales of Household ?urnitnre at Dwellings. PublicEales of Furniture at the Auctiotatooma, 1219 Chestnut street, every Monday and Tnursday.. %Kir For particulars see Public. Ledger. - frir N. 11.—A superior class of Furniture at Private rp L. Aki.ELBRID ask, UO., A deTION— . NEM. No. ma MARK ET stroet.above Fifth. DAMS K. HARVEY, AUCTIONEEAK, (Formerly with M. Thomas .44 Song.) Store Nos. 48 and 80 North Sixth street. ' 11114" Sab-s at Residences receive particalar attention. In V" Sales at the Store every Tuesday. THE PRINCIPAL Ikl". ON:BY E*TAI3L/Sll ~_ • - • RENT, S. E-corner srxTu end RACE strode,— Money advanced on-Merchandise generaliy—Watches, Jewelry, Diamonds, Gold and Silver Plate, and on all articles of value, for any length of /lute agreed on. WATCHES AND JEWELRY AT P BLVATE SALE: Fine Gold Ranting Case, Waldo Bottord and Operi Face English,- American and Swiss Patent Lever Watches ; Fine Geld Hunting Chao and Open Face Le- FinelVatches ; Fine Gold Duplex and other Watches; ine Silver Bunting Case and. Open Face English, Arno- " - riven and Swiss Patent Lover and Lapino Watches; .Donble Case English Quartier and other Watches ; La-. dies' Fancyetches, Diamond Breastpins, 'Placer Rings, Ear Rings. Stride: SW. : Fine Gold Chains, Medal lions,Bracelets, Scarf Pins, Breastpins, Finger 'tinge, Pencil Cases, and J eveelry generally. FOR SALE—A large and valuable Fire-proof Cheat. suitable for a Jeweller ; cost e 650; Also, several Lots in South Camden, Fifth and Chest nnt streets. EDeeXTION. FLY. LAUDERBACH'S. 'CLASSICAL, SCIENTIFIC AND COMMERCIAL 'ACADEMY, • _ ASSEMBLY 'BUILDINGS, No, 168 S, TENTH Street. A Primary, Elementary and Finishing School. Circulars at Ur. Warburton's, No. 43e Chestnut street. ..my9 tf§ NSTIZEICTIONS GIVEN lii LATIN, Greek, French and Gertne,p,h9, YOE, J.OERDENS. 1,516 Mount-Vernrrn street: 111719-Im* Ea(MM rt 8 Alf ND 8 - COLLEGE, WEST kJ. Philadelphia. A lecture every MONDAY EVV NINO. SIG. P. RONDINFT,T,A, T.E..A.CHELE singing. Private (enemas and dames Besidenee 808 S. Thirteenth street.' - INSTATICTIONS ._II.OIiSEMANSILIP. DEL PHIA Intinsio.sclupoL L _No..TM I,,dat- et root , upon doily 'for' Ladies and' lientleznern It fm - thnle„rgent, best lighted and heated establishment the city, The Inirsec,exe_thoranghly___broken_for_Ahe__ moat ' An Atternoom /Mass for Young [oldies at, tending, school, Monday, Wednesday and Fridays. mut an 11/yelling *()ltuis for Gontlamon. Bone* tboroughlt trained for this saddle ,',: Horses , taken to livery.' itan - itorOaFfrriagall to tar. Storage for wagons and sleight,. • - . BETH Proprietor. /IE2I/4TRING FELT=-TEN-TEN ,-. § Enilfsh , BileatMng tbr solo by Mint ,uicitiz#,l39l,4a, waloßsoptreet. • ~, d+;<;r;. } a t <;;==' •,'•';''•.,-,.: - ,.. ,-, : . 7 , -,-t - : , '.!'4:.:c.:i•,`:;<' - .!", .3.',.;',.'i'i1!,: . :',5. : T?:T:.!,":=.', ,11