- • ' , • 6 N roziOlokt. DEREBLICAN NONIVIATINIM CORTES.. TIONS. The Republican Nominating Conventions concluded their laborslduring veSterdity, after . • noon and last evening. The following was the result of the balloting : Nuertff. ISt fin'lot. 2d Ballo,: Wino B. Leeds . . ...... ......... :110 17" H. B. Bingham. 83 • 12 9 T. F. Walton ..... ...... ,58 Joseph „Moore 11 , J. R. Massey 2O • 13 C. Ef. Harkness... .•.... • ....... 13 , B. L. Berry 10 William R. Leeds was declared the nominee. After the first ballot Messrs. Walton, Berry, Moore and liarkness withdrew. Register of Wills. 1234 5 6 7 8 W. M. Bunn, - 72 80 93 99 85 92 113 151 Win. Moran, - 42 45 43 42 45 44 43 W. Y.Campbell,7s • 69 74 77 73 - 75 80 93 J. A. Bonham, -45 39 41 42 47 39 -- Charles Dixey, 10 9 William Smith, 24 21 16 Gideon Clark, 41 42 43 43' 45 47 5.3 49 Win. M. Bunn was declared the nominee. Clerk of Orphans' Court.' Ist. 2d. 3d. Thomas B. Reeves 22 10 • . Richard M. Batturs ...... . - Robert Betbell 1 David Cramer 59 67 67 Edward S. McGlue 73 78 60 Jos. C. Tittermary ..119 134 141 Bertles ....... 1 Mr. Tittermary, having received a majority of the whole number of votes, was declared the nominee. City Commissioner. 12.34 5 6 7 8 Jab. Bain, 56 67 74 •71 83 80 86 108 H. C. Williams, 18 9 Samuel Clift, 16 13 17— G. W. Shultz, 38 46 47 . 51 46 54 71 102 G. W. Curry, 36 =33 33 32 39 36 -- Thos. Dutton, 19 19 20 22 10 John Brady, 7 1 E. J. Spangler, 108 Frank Logo, 24 27 27 21 G. W. Boyer, 42 41 41 49 46 44 56, The eighth ballot was not announced officially. It was not taken until between one and two o'clock this morning, and before the result could be stated thNelegates all rushed for the door. Judicial. ' JUDGES OF TIIE COMMON' PLEAS. E. M. Paxson, . . . . . 252 Thos. K. Finletter, . . . . . 160 W. H. Ruddiman, . • . . 127 - - Samuel C, Perkins, . Geo. G. Bisphain, . . . . 6 Edgar E. Petit,. . • . . - - E. M. Paxson;Esq., and T. K. Finletter, Esq., were declared nominated. Judge of the District Court. —Ballots,- Ist. 2d. 3d. James Lynd 97 42 114 Charlos Lex- 49 46 53 -Henry T. Klng 21 6 ---- W. L. Dennis...- 19 2 -- James T. Mitchell 39 22 -- Amos Briggs 56 52 39 -- -Horatio "Hubbell . enry E. Wallace John Dohnan. 6 2 Mr. Lynd having received a majority of all the votes cast, was declared nominated, and on motion it was made unanimous. • .-,-The -Nomination& R. Leeds. Receiver .of Taxes—Robt. H. Beatty. 'Register of Wills --Wm. M. Buun. Clerk of OrphanN' Court—Joseph C. Titter marv. ' City Commissioner—James Bain. Judges—Common Pleas—E. M. Paxson, Tinletter. Distriet—Court--James Lynd.. Congress—Fh st District—Benj. Second -- DiStrict=:Chas: - O'Neill, John V. Creely. Third District—Leonard Myers. Fourth District—Win. D. Kelley. Legislature—Senator—Third District—Benj. W. Thomas, Re2».esentalive:N.—First District—S. Samuel P. Thompson ; Second District—Wm. Steven son; ThirdDistrict—Wm. Kelly; Fourth Dis trict—Wm. Elliott ; Fifth District—Wm. Duffy :iixth District—Charles Kleckner; Seventh District—Robert Johnston; Eighth District— Wm. L. Marshall ; Ninth District—Wm. Porter,; Tenth District—Jas. E. Reyburn ; Eleventh District —Samuel Hagar; Twelfth District—John Lamon ; Thirteenth District-- John Dumbell; Fourteenth District—John Clouds; Fifteenth District—Adam Albright.; Sixteenth District—Wm. F. Smith; Seven teenth District—Watson Comly ; Eighteenth District—James Miller. Wnrd Nominations Secoial IVarci.—Common Council—Andrew liergesheimer ' James E. Eaton and Joseph M. Schooley. School Directora—Thomas Nesbit, -- • - IL A. \Vevil, M. D., E. S. ROstreake and Davis Moore. Constable—James Siemeis. Third intrd.—Convention adjourned. Fourth Ward.—Convention adjourned. Ward.---Adjciurned till Tuesday nex Si:rth Ward.—Common Council—Col. Peter Sides. School Directors—Wm. H. Wakefield, Willet Cooms and Wrn. A. Hunter. Serenth Ward.—Common School DirectorS—Hobert Greif., John Bair and W tn. Lynn. ,Kighth Ward.—Common Council—George Schaller. School Directors--Wesley Hartman, A. B. Waters. 'Theodore Barrett and Joseph J. Bisban. Ninth ll'ard.--C(Anuirin Council—Walter Allison. School Directors—A. J. Bair, Wm. Simpson, l. J. Buchey. Constable—J. Urian. Tenth Word.—Select Cotincil—William B. Hanna. Common Council—George W. Hall, Alexander Omeusett.r. School Directors-7.. F. M. Pfouts, George Yon nail, Adam Mat singer, John E. l'ole. Eleventh IlTard.--School Director—Henry Arbuckle. Adjourned for the present. Tifflfth Ward.—Seleet Council—Wm. E. Littleton. Common Council—Joseph jEd ward. Convention adjourned to meet at call o chairman. Thirteenth lnod.—Gommon Couuch—R. J. Walker. School Directors—Samuel Allen, John V. Green, Henry F. Hays. Constables —John J. Miller, Joseph E. Shaw. Fourteenth II "ara.—Select Council—Robert Domiing. Common Council—W. Fisbci Mitchell. School Directors—John Hoff, Wm B. Webb,- James W. Nicholls. Fifteenth Ward.— Common Council IleniT Huhn, Egbert Nichols and Josepl Charleton School Directors—Charles Brown Joseph L. Cavell ' Jonathan Moore,Enon Thu ris and henry Macallister. Sixteenth Ward.—Adjourned without nomi rating a ticket. ,'sereitfeeiith Ward.—Common Council I<ennedy. Brown. School Directors—llarr son Snyder, William J. Roney, Victor .M.a. shall. . Efillittenth Ward. —Coinnion Council—Jos. Mershon. School Directors—Wm. Taxis,Johu Sidebothatn, David Chine, James Wollington, James Fort and Joseph H. 'Black. Constable—, L. Derr. , Nineteenth 1.1 qra.—tielect Council—Wm. F. Miller. Common Council—Samuel A. Mil ler, Daniel Curry, Thomas B. M. Twentieth lliord..- . —Com mon Council—Win. S. Allen,,Grem Weidner, Geo. Dorian, Jaines Dingey. School Dlrectors 7 -Wui. 11. thick, Wm. Griffiths, Simon Shugart, Win. it tirlaizer, Wm. Buckley;-.1•: 11. yearsley, Dr. Jim. i NS- Constable- 7 -Wm. Royal. t '=%~'l - -: Y Twenty-second grard---Select Council—Jas. P. Gates. Common Council—Louis :!Wagner., Twehty-sittli Tfrard:Seleet,Col.llo.llJaiXlOT Evans. Common Council=John McConnell, "Win.'Bradley. - Constable—John Laird, Win: Looderback. School Directors D.' Tailor, J. Huhn, J. Reed. Twenty-Eighth Ward.—Common Council, W. J. I'. White. , CITY BULLETILY. —Oomplaint having been made at the : Central Station that an-insane man, named John Her r?ges, aged about 30 years, was kept confined in a small --room, at the - _northeast_ corder_ of Fourth and Lombard streets, 'a detective visited the place , yesterdaY. The house at Fourth and Lombard streets is owned, it is said, by Joseph Herriges, a brother of the in sane man, and who keeps a cigar store. The detectiVe ound John Herriges in a small bed room, about' S by 10 feet, without clothing, ex., cept a loose sack or frock of coarse linen. The room was in a most filthy condition, the walls and floor being covered with dirt. The insane man. was also very dirty, and presented •' a most - wretched • appear wire. The officer took- him • and his brother to the Central Station, where a hearing was bad before Alderman Kerr. It was' stated by some of the parties present that John had been confined in the room where he was found for'the past ten or fifteen years. The brother, Joseph, said that be had taken care of him for several years hut could- not tell the ,exact number of years, and that . his • brother's' In sanity" was caused by a -- fall.' - John - , is very.: quiet, ob,eying. promptly - all - orders given him. Dr.s. Edward Mayers and T. S. Betts, who, were present, pronounced John insane,.and the .Alderman ordered him to. be removed to the Almshouse. Joseph, his brother, was held iu $5,000 bail to answer the charge of Main taining'a'nuisancC, and. cruelty to his brother:. —Last evening;.at the Academy of Music, hefore---a -large -and-appreciative- audience,_ a _ grand exhibition drill. took place. The enter-: taininent was given by the Montgomery Light Guard, of Boston and Company A, Fourth Regiment N. G., ofPennsylvania. The manceu vres Of both companies, consisting - of`company movements' and the manual of arms, loading and firing, &c., were warmly applauded. After the exhibition of-Company A, Richard Ludlow, Esq.,. in ii-tew well-timed remarks on the. value of - a well-organized and trained military force, presented a medal from Major-Tobias to Captain John _W. Ryan, of Company A, for_ his great proficiency in drill, and also other medals to several members of the regiment for their ability in recruiting. Captain- Ryan re ceived the medals in a brief and appropriate speeclf. He deplored the want of-support-given our Philadelphia volunteers,"and as an instance' 'of the Want of sympathy and appreciation by many citizens. instanced the hard Ships several of his men endtired in order to get time to per k)] m their military duties. Two of his com pttny, be said, had been-informed -by -their employer that they might turn out to receive he Boston Company, but if they did there should be no more work for them. - Another, ti ho bad served several years - as appkentice, and 11:A recently attained his majority and became journeyman, was summarily dismissed for parading. He-said the_volunteers_received iio tu.couraeement, and deplored it as sadly inter- Ici ing with the efficiency of the militia. • NEW JERSEY BIATTEM. I)EAD INFANT FouND.:—Yesterday morn the body of a dead infant, newly born, was ind in a sink, where it-had been thrown, in rear of a house on Front street, neat. roper's Point. The Coroner took charge of , and will give the affair a full investigation,as ;s generally believed that it is a ease of in it tie ide. The mother of the child has been this country only about four months. SETUOUS ACCIDENT.-A serious and pro hly fatal accident occurred in Camden yes day. A man named-Josiah \rennet, residing the corner of Morris and William streets, on ope!. Hill, while working with . a, loaded 'olver, exploded the charge and the entire N.nteuts took effect in his side, the ball passing into his body in the region of the heart. Medi cal aid was immediately summoned, but all efforts to extract the bullet have proved una vailing. This morning the wounded man is very low, and it is not thought that be will recover. TAKEN TO THE HOSPITAL.—Patrick Mc Laughlin and Catharine Murphy, the man and woman who were struck by the railroad train at the Fish House, on Tuesday night, and se verely injured, were conveyed to the Pennsyl vania Hospital yesterday. RUNAWAYS.—Three runaway's and smash ups occurred in Camden yesterday, but nobody as hurt. EXCUESIOIT.—The7I3roaCiway M. E. Church ent to Union Grove, on an excursion, this morning. FACTS Alin FANCII74. —Why should your elder brother be good for cows? Because he's past your age. —A New York family has tried twenty cooks in a month. —The Methodists have started a mission in Salt Lake City. —Ex•Senator Grimes will not return from Europe till next fall. —Senator Cattell's health has much im roved lately, we are glad to hear. -There are said to be clerical intelligence trees in London, where clergymen advertise .leinselves for vacant places. —Mrs. Stowe is responsible for the fact that party of Milwaukee ladies have formed a lass for thp study of Lord Byron's works. —An Elegant Gold-mounted Set of False ',!eth" is the prize in a raffle at a ladieS' fair n Toledo, Ohio. —A Cincinnati chambermaid sold her hair or SUM to raise funds for a drunk,and brought tp in the station-house,not handsome,but very 1;41)1)9. —A queer temperance pledge was once cir culated in llussia. It bound the siguers - to - abL stain from brandy—till brandy should be better and tolerably cheap ! --An assistant. marshal, in taking the census o Louisville, asked a colored woman what , ersonal property she possessed, and received he sober reply, " Nothing btit dese three ,ere, an' they ain't wuth much." —The magnificent white satin " cope" worn hy Father Morrill, of St. Albans Ritualistic chapel, New York, is made of the wedding druSS of one of the ladies of the parish, who bus also donated costly jewels to the church. —At the Wesleyan missionary meeting in London Mr. Cox, from China, said : " all . . roamings as missionary and colporteur have never yet visited a place but I have found that the Roman Catholic priesthood had been there before me." - —Ambrose Henderson, a colored legislator of Mississippi, has set au example for the ex rebels which may not yet be too late for good. Hellas written Goyernor Alcorn an earnest appeal for his former master's appointment as one of the State ;Justices. —The Hartford city government atdts per mission of the Legislature to appropriate $lO,, (00 for the purpose of-erecting a monument to the Memory of Dr. Horace - Wells, the dis coverer of anaesthetics. equal .anoint 1011 be asked of the State, and a large amount is expected'from private sources. - =General Hawley delivered an address ou decoration day in Charlestown, Massachu setts, which is described by the Boston JOUr al; having been very touching: Among -others Who—were moved to tears by some passages was rblady, aceOrnpauied - by a little boy who could not appreciate it. Pained to see his mother weep, he whispered, " Please, !nether, don't. cry—it's somebody's else folks Lee's talk nig about." . :.,..'. ::: . ? 0.:: : ,,...•:'-1, - : i::',_, : .:, : . - :..;:::...,..,,L...,: : ., : i..-• . •: . .,....;:.., i).•iiit.:46...-ift.i.A..ii.:...07-.--.0*.M011..1,1;,:it.4.1'.g...ft5:;.•it#0.-*04.-t::'.i'::iii.)::•'o.-j.-fi.'..'iBlo.. MEM TUE MAIM EWA IF, WIF I VELIIV ON BEECHE S ,From,the Saturday's comments on 13eecher's _ • • Sermons we extract: - - • In the matter of style Mr. Beecher finds it necessary to supply his patrons with a certain amount of p"o+SMS, in prose # " to one Of Which,' Mr. Abbott is kind enough to call our special attention in his introductorY note: We -extract' a stanza : "A plow is coming from the far end of a long held, and a daisy stands podding, and fall of dew-dimples. . That furrow is sure to strike the daisy. It casts its shadow as gaily, and exhales its gentle breath as freely, and stands as simple, 'and radia6t; and _expectant as ever ; and yet that crushing 'furrow, which is turning and turning others i is - ?drawing - near and in , a moment it whirls the heedless tioiver with sudden reversal under the 'sod." It may be possible, for aught we know, for a daisy full of dew-dimples, which• is rddiant and has a way of gaily casting its shadow, to be both expectant and heedless at the same time; but we should not, till this passage met our eyes, have iinagined it pdssible for any man with the most elementary ideas of the de cencies of ministerial teaching to 'associate in coherent gabble like this With the thought of the Holy Sepulchre. We had marked for quo tation another passage, illustrating far snore painfully Mr. Beecher's inability to appreciate the reverence for sacred things which is an in- stinct of every, educated mind. It is taken from a sermon on the Divinity of Christ, and it begins thus: "Let me place another case before you for judgment. A maiden, the daughter of a ,prince, , has wan dered frpm her father's house, and has lapsed from virtue, seeking pleasure in ways every year more degrading. A noble, :Youth appears among her gross companions, not Co partake in their orgies, but with a gentle grace,' &c.—but We do not like to pursue the ['potation. The preacher's extraordiniuy and ingrained talent for blundering when he tries to get hold of du illustration may be shown quite as well iu a far less objectionable extract: 'cA warrior," we learn—and our teacher was the great prophet of the Federal armies in the war, .so he knows all about moderd fighting— " walking through 'Ws mag,azine,_ says,. I am going out to battle, and I will se lect the weapons on.'_ which I will rely. He passes by his bow and arrows, and says, I do not intend to 'rely on them for the fighting of this battle. He comes to the de partment of his old-fashioned armor, and sees swords, and spears, and things like these, and says, They were good in their • way and time, but 1 do not intend to rely upon them either. When he gets to the place where he keeps the best instruments of :modern warfare,-he-says, Llere_are the _things that .I mean to depend upon." Does Mr. Beecher imagine that any one of his hearers, male or female, could be enlightened -or benefited in-the% faintest pos sible degree by a wordy jumble of Wardour Street and Woolwich Arsenal like this i Can he conceive any' warrior" not in a nightfriare saying or doing anything of the sort . ? Another sermon conveys the .author's senti tnents "mr the Decadence of Christianity," which -be seems to consider an, accomplished fact, and of which the Barnumized pulpit : of Brooklyn certainly affords rather awkward evidence. Among the maxims which he lays down We read - tifat - " - the - power - of -s ehrist—goes back' of (s-ic) all originating and formative powers to their very source." Perhaps the - seat-holders may have possessed a key,to this somewhat obscure language, by the help of the parable which accompanies it:—" A man says, I own all the water that has been brought into Brooklyn, and distributed through the-mains in the city-. Ab, says-another man, I own' more than that; I own Ridgewood reservoir, whence you get it all. Ab, sayi a third, I own more than that; I own all the land from which the water comes that fills Ridgewood reservoir." Thus far the interlocutors seem merely to be bent on capping- one big Yankee- lie _with another, keeping still within the compass of . • conceivable fact; when a fourth man comes in and says that be"owns all the clouds." Then one_ man_more__steps,in awl _says, I own more that; I own that constitution of nature by which water is formed in the air,and by which it rains doWn." And of this last boaster, this professor of lying in arcelsi., the preacher gravely asks, "Has he not got behind and beyond them all ? Is not all that they own comprehended in that great, comprehensive; or ganizing fact?" "And so" it pleases Mr. Beecher to go on to apply the moral to " the )ower of Christ." Mr. Abbott explains in his Introduction that "there is perhaps no man of ancient or modern times whose preaching is so diverse in manner as that of Mr. Beecher." We sincerely hope there is not, and that no future preacher may arise to confuse ate precious and the vile by sowing "diverse" kinds of seed together after Mr. Beecher's "manner." Perhaps one of the' worst specimens of this degraded style is to be found in a sermon on "the gentleneas of God," which 311.. Abbott appears to regard with spe cial favor, as he places it nearly at the begin ning of the volume. In reference to this amazing composition,we should be sorry exactly to address the author with the Quaker's re monstrance, "Friend, I do not understand thee. First thou tellest me a lie, and then thou askest me a question:" - Certainly we do hot understand Mr. Beecher. Certainly, too, he asks us a great many questions; as to the test, our readers may judge: "Sometimes in dark caves men have gone to the edge of unspeaking precipices, and, won dering what was the depth, have cast down fragments of rock, and listened for the report of their fall, that they might judge how deep that blackness was, and listening—still listen ing—no sound returns; no sudden plash, no. clinking stroke, as of .rock against rock; noth ing but silence, utter silence. And so I• stand upon the precipice of life." ThiS is very fine, and Brooklyn Church is perhaps a very dark cave for Mr. Beecher to stand in ; but the only authority for the facts as recorded by him so far as our reading goes— and that . is not exactly in accordance with his description—is in the life of Yatnen : And he fell, and he fell, to the regions of hell, Nine centuries bounced he from cavern to rock, And his head, as be tumbled, went nickety nock, Like a pebble in Carisbrooke well. We believe, however, that the Rejected Ad dresses were not composed for delivery in the pulpit. We will not go so far as to deny that some cave-dwellers in the far-oll' past may have done perhaps what Mr. Beecher says they did, but if in this -he is .not "telling us a .lie," what shall we say to the following?— " Man is the chief monster that the earth ever bred." If our recollections of. Aldrich do not fail us,this is a" complex.proposition" in logic; and, in fact, it combines the two assertions— first, that man was bred by the earth, and next, that he is the chief monster of all monsters so generated. Another logically complex propo sition, • which we happen to remember, but which Mr. Beecher evidently does _not, asserts that." God created man in his own image." It is true that "they didn't know -nverything.. _dew n in 'fluke" ; but, if 22/11.. Beecher . intends: to maintain the position which he has taken op, he must be - Prepared for a harder fight with • both the scientific - and the religious worlds than we should ourselves care single-handed to un dertake.' The "human race," we had learnt from a 'sentence •imtnediately preceding, is in deed " vermicular;" and therefore cannot come into comparison with monsters of a grander type.. Mr,. Beecher does not deny that the San- Hans and their like may have been created by God ; all that he asserts is, that the " vermicu lar race" is the result of spontaneous generation, and that man is a chiefer monster . . tr., than any otber,Which - :11 - known to the Poly teoinie Listittitiod.Orto Professor Tyndall. This "vermicular" doctrine is. introduced by Mv. Beecher hi connexion. with one of the`many questions wbie,b-,: Jt,lpidases. _. ,to Ask his bearers; and if those on the 'page now open !Afore us are to be taken as a specimen of his oi!dibtul.rtiletbod,.we bhould say ag a Win" pOund of obscurity and nastiness the Brooklyn Church Catechism must go a long way ahead of all. other ecclesiastical formilLaries extatit. " Did ''yon ever" (one has heard that phrase before, somewhere), "of a hot afternoon, witness the antest of innumerable worms over a carrion carcass?" 'Not if we knew it, we should say; but Mr. Beecher seems-to have One so_freqn_ently_, and to 'have considerably enjoyed it. " How should you feel," he goes on to inquire, if you went into. tbe nursery and found the catechoking the baby P—we beg pardon of Mr. Beecher—" if you were to enter the room where - your child was lying, and find upon it a stealthy cat, stationed at the portal of life, and stopping its very breath?" There is no time given us to realize the ap palling domestic -picture; the inquiry is in stantly followed by another :—" low should you feel Were you to find upon your child a vampire that bad ,fastened into its flesh tits bloodsiic,king bill, and - was — fast - consuming - its vitality P"_, We should feel, we believe, that the "chitMera bombitans in vacuo, comedens .secundas intentions" was very much'the.tti sae sort of phenomenon, and had aboutas much to:do with it the gentleness of God" Of which Mr. Beecher imagines himself to be speaking. A preacher' who conceives it to be within the Emile - of reverence—to say nothing of common decency—to describe Our Lord as " a sublime .Radical" may naturally consider it in equally good taste to call God "the arch-thunderer of eternity,"." who is independent of all other, beings and who can rub Allem out easier than I can rub out the colors from the butterfly's wing." It is not easy, to bring oneself into exactly the same frFne of mind ; and perhaps, if we were more en rapport with the author,which _at_ this moment we are not especially desirous of becoming—we should be able to attach some rational meaning to what he chooses to write about the "sensitiveness of God." "God's sensibility is - exceedingly acute." - We are ac customed to connect fineness and acuteness of feeling with delicacy and subtleness of organi zation; and we are apt to think that, as God is a being so vast that latitude is infinity and his longitude is eternity, he must be compa.ratively insensitive—less sensitive than men are. But he is more sensitive than men can possibly be. Sensitiveness is a peculiarity of his na- Lure." It is perhaps possible that a man not yet actually in a lunatic asylum may be "apt to ;.pink" In the strain of half-blasphemy, half- raving - nonsense - - which - Mr.—Beecher - assumes as the ordinary course of religious thought. We cannot answer for the results. which a eourSe — or• - a - sticcession - of- - courses, - of = the 13roodyn sermons might bring about in an in lellect _of not _very_stable__.equilibrium_;__.a._de sPription of God-as-"insensitive" or `.'sensitive" ould be a niere,matter of chanee. For some tirne past the dead'walls of Lon haVe been disfigured with the - presentment I a hideous negro head; grinning a .vacuous in at the spectator through a pair of mon 'roils red lips. This offensive advertisement tofesses to represent "America as it is." For companion picture;-just-as-sensational-in-its % ay, and just as true as a representation. of. • America as it is" in the highest range of hii nun life and tbought;vve .refer our.readers to Ir.-Lyman Abbiatt's edition of Mr. Henry Vard Deether's serm'ms. , BOARDING.. ,—,94 CHESTNUT STREET—PERNIA 1. neat or Transient Boarding. jell 6t* :\ FAMILY OF 3 OR 4 CAN BE AC -- commodated with board at a pleasant farm-howe iihin one hour's ride of the city ; couvenient to a rail road station. Address • W. P. LIVEZEY, Plymouth bleating P. 0., jell , tu th . Montsomery-Connty,-I'a. SIEDICAL TOB C.-BAKER.--&--CO.'S PURE .COD- Liver 011,genaine and perfectly sweet and palata bre. - 11.t.commemle'd by the befit phYsidians In the land. Established IMO. Citrate Magneida, Alcohol, Powdered Opium, pound bottles.. 'Wholesale agency for the celebrated nigh Rock Con ress Water. JOHN C. BAKER ez CO. Ma Market street: Philadelphia inISCEIL - /rNEO. Curing, Packing and Smoking Establishment JOHN BOWER di CO., Curers of Superior Sugar-Cured Hams Beef and Tonque.s, and Provisions Generally, S. W. Cor. Twenty-Fourth and Brown Stn. nn 24-in di pm: FOR SALE. YARNS FOR SALE. Cotton and Worked Yarns, all numbers. Cotton Yarns, one, two, three or four ply, on Cone, on beams and in skeins. Also, Chain and batinot Warps,Cotton and Wool Waste. GEO. F. MAIM, Commindon Merchant. 67 KILBY Street, Boston, Mass. m 1125 3m5 "'POLISHING POWDER. THE BEST for cleansing Silver and Plated Ware, Jewelry,etc., ver manufactured.. FARR A BROTHER, mhl tfry 324 Chestnut street, below Fourth. IPOR SALE CHEAP—A LARGE WAL -1: NUT Counting-house Desk. Address "H. 112,," 'BULLETIN OFFICE. ruy24l-§ BUSINESS CARDS. EDWIN H. HITLER & CO., Cordage Manufacturers and Dealers In Hemp, 2:1 N. Water Street and 22 N. Delaware Avenue PHILADELPHIA. EDWIN R. PITLEIti , ' CONRAD E. CLOTHIER MICHAEL WEAVER. GEO. It. S. UIILER. WEAVER & 00., Rope and Twine Manufacturers and Dealers in hemp and Ship Chandler it , North WATER. 28 North WHARVES. n. P. at C. R. TAYLOR, Perfumery and Toilet Soaps, 641 and 643 North Ninth street Established 1521. 13. FLANAGAN dz SON, dOIISE AND SERF TUMBRILS, No. 129 Walnut Street. lyi I OSEPH WALTON tic CO., CABINET MAKERS, NO. OS WALNUT STREET. Manufacturers of fine furniture and of medium priced furniture of superior quality. GOODS ON HAND AND MADE TO ORDER, Counters. Desk-work, • Scc,, for Banks, °Oleos and stores, made to order. Josr d PH WA LTON, ,JOB. W. LIPPINCOTT. fel-ly§ JOSEPH L. SCOTT. JAMES L. WILSON, HOUSE PAINTER, 518 SOUTH NINTH STREET, Residence-522 South Ninth street. ap3o ly 4pg HENRY BELLLI;PPI., CARPENTER AND BUILDER, NO.-1024 SA.NSOMSTREET,.----- jolo.lyro . PHILADELPHIA. ,` 1 - 7 B. WIGHT, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Commissioner of Deeds for tho State of Pennsylvania I Illinois. 06 !audition street, No. 11, Chicago;lllinois. 1K OF EVERY BAIL. DUO. vv width, from 22 inches to 76 inches wide,all'numbere Tent and Awning- Duck, 'Paper-maker's FeltircM Bail Twine, &o. JOHN W. EVBRBIAB,, j a 26 No. 103 Ohurcb street.pity Stores. PIRITS -7 TURPENTINE 7 , ,TARND ROSIN;--;91 barrolff Sorrito - Ttilme —A tine;lll - do. - Wil-. mington, N. 0., Tar, 920 do. I'alo and No. 1 Rosin, 963 do. No. 2 Rosin, landing from steamship Pioneer. 146 barrels No 2 Rosin, landing from steamship Prome theus. For sale by RDW. 11. ROWLEY, 16 tioutlt Erma street. Imanwavmomm=sumummol AA CADEMY- OFi. , ,Leased b 1 tha Ezeativo Conunitiee, for the . . ABE ;• TESTI/OWN lA.L _ A IIBEET CASSEL:Cr... „. , ~ ... THURSDA,Y . N . I.OIa, 'lane 16, AN,. CV' THE 'ABEL EVENT at if cOMPLIMENTARY TERTI lAL TENDERED BY HIS FRIE AND THE DIIAJKATIC PROFESSION, mit: pwrlca neon which occasion will be rendered IL Drinaley Sheri dan's most effective and popular comedy, the sonotwrott SUANAAir• TIM • SCHOOL " ' SCANDAL, \Vlach:wilt be given *lnt the principal charactora ar ranged RR follows, all the artists hltvinK KINDLY AND CHEERFIIMAY VOLUNTEERED'.- Illias-Josio Orton AR: , • Lady Teazle:' Mrs. E: N. Thayer as ' t.ady Sneerwell Mr.-Ge0,11,-Grllliths as Peter-Tettzle_ Mr. T. A: Beckett as 'lir Oliver Surrace Mr. J. 'F. Canicula,' ' ' Charles Surface Ni.' Adam Evorly as Joseph Surface Ali,. Robert Craig as • Crabtree Mr. C. A . McManus as Sir Benj. Backbite W.'W . Moreland as • Careless °therei - tractors by Messrs. Thos. Hampton ( his first appearancoin thiscity), John Alatthews, T. M. 'Meagher, D. L. Reed; W. Osborne, J. Worth, T. O. Collins, Geo. Colland ' • TO ALL OF WHOM • lee Executive Committee herein * desire' to , convey their thanks and publicly testify to the cordiality they have evinced in the movement towards Mr. ABEL'S BENE FIT, many of them unhesitatingly occupying'. on -this occasion, places in the entertainment subordinate to these belonging to -and accupled by , them-,regularly.in their profession. TDB ORGIIESTRA will compare favorably with those EMPLOYED IN GRAND OPERA, and will be committed of CARNFTILLY SELECTED SOLOISTS. And efficient supporters, who will be under the direc tion of the celebratele =pettier, arranger and chef d'or chestra,' J. W. JOST. .. . . For particulars of the musical portion of the entertain ment, elm small bilis. Admission One Dollar NO EXTRA (MARGE FUR SECURING SEATS. Seats may be obtained at the-,Acattemr of Music, and at Turner's Book Stnre,BoB Chestnut street. BOX BOOK-NOW OPEN.:. The doors will be opened at 7.16 ; begin at 8. iel:i-tf§ 'WALNUT STREET THEATRE. -vir THIS (THURSDAY) EVENING...Iune IG,• THIRD AND LAST WEEK OF- Mr. :JOSEPH JEFFERSON, • WHO WILItzAPPEAR••• • in his exquisitely beautiful Impersonation of ' RIP VAN WINKLE, inrDion Bonoicanlt's great drama. entitletl RIP VAN WINKLE' . OR THE SLEEP OF. TWENTY YEARS. RIP VAN . WINKLE JOSEPH JEFFERSON MATINEE ON SATURDAY AFTERNOON. at 2. JOHN DREW'S ARCH STREET _ULTIMA THE. POSITIVELY LAST THREE NIGHTS OF Thu original and world•farnous - BRYANT'S MINSTRELS. ENTIRE CHANGE OF-PROGRAMME. . New Songs ! Now Acts • Everything New' SIIOO FLY 1 SHOO: FLY ! ILL TII.O BAD DOER. • - - • LEW-SIMMONS, - - TIM Philadtlpbbt Favorite, will APPEAR . FOR . _ • - MR. DAN BRYANT'S . BENEFIT, at tiv. ARCH STREET THEATRE. FRIDAY EVENING, dune 17, DAN BRYANT'S BENEFIT. TAUPREZ BENEDICT'S I." HOUSE, Seventh Street. below ifreh . For a tame prison,conimenein M'LLE. 3IAIIIE ZOE, and het New Tork Cnniriny. In the beautiful Military Drama, - - THE-FBENCII-BP-Y- - Mlle. Zoe tool Mr. W. .t.. lemine. In the great • BROADaWOBD COMBAT.. ZOE MATINEE, -11 - ; SVITTITIFIA .al 2.30 - T. . • - ----~_.FOB ~AY.~. -_~ E L RARE CHANCE rYO BUY OR RENT ELEGANT COUNTRY RESIDENCE. - FOR''S - A - VE'oll"TO'REN'T:=Wiriii - fit - aCkffdirlisigiAd he the handsomest Country Seat, in regard to natural beauty and location, in Amerir - i, situated on the Old York road and County Line, Che 11111 S t• adjoiniug City ]line Station. N. P. 11. R., 131 minutes' ride frolu Philadelphia. comprising acres of highly improved land, covered with beautiful old Oak, Elm, Chestnut and' other deciduous trees ; also. handsome Lawn. carefully planted With beautiful 'grouped EvArgreens, diversified Leith stream of water. woods mid rolling grounds, till perfect order. The Mansion. 4 couspicitonslY Placed on— et.VOMllll4ling natural terrace, with a tine foreground of park surface 'while. It is a handsome; substantlally built, pointed-stone Residence: with Slantard roof.' con taining 27 . ennuis, besides three liath-roonts, butler pan try, nurseries, store-rooms, closets, &c. Is finished thronghout with hard wools, oiled; plate glass in all whitlows, Imported mantels and open grates In all rooms ;i. also heated by' 5t , 11 , 111. Large laundry. pro vision vault, ice lionso, with water and gas works at tached. Also. handsome Stabling for 25 head of Horses sod Cattle, Giirdener e Cottage, Porter's-Lodge,.and - necessary outbuildings. There is also Ft largo variety of fruit. berries. vegetable gurdeu, hot-beds and overyt lug to make it a home. _R. A) ODD L otigV . s tit tit t s BROWN STONE RESIDENCE FOR SALE, No. 1922 ARCH •STREET. Elegant Brown. Stone Residence, three stories an Dianuard roof very commodious furnished with every modern convenience, and built In a very imrior and substantial manner Lot 26 feet front by 150 feet deep to Cuthbert street, on which is erected a handsome brick Stable and Coach House. J. M. GUMMY k SONS, 73.3 WALNUT Street, ruh2.s tf rpl 112 For Sale. or to Rent. A very neat and desirable Residence,. it ft 3 k A Fran ford Road, bel. Allegheny v. Lot 50 feet front by 300 feet deep, with Stabling. Beautiful Lawn and Shrubbery. Will be sold on ac• ommodating ternie, or rented to a good tenant. LUKENS 4117 MONTGOMERY, 1033 BEACH Street, 18th Ward. je9 to ih 8t - . dr-4 Is ORSirt — GirrOCClfistft,AN ELEGANT COUNTRY SEAT, • :"L.li Acres, near the city. Ten minutes' Walk from eta lion. House large and -handsome • all necessary out buildings ; beautiful ,grounas. Will be sold VERY LOW. ON EASY TERMS, or exchanged for improved City Property. Address "'A. T. S., Box 2,751. - P. 0."- jeB,lot.,§ rt -- FUR SALE— • The medium-sized four-story (Mansard-roof.) brown-stone Residence, No. 2021 Walnut street. replete with every conrenience, and in perfect order through out. CLARK A: ETTING, je-tu th 560 711 Walnut street. E; EIsI . FOR SALE OR ET—THE HAND f. POMO three-story brick Residence with three-story double buck buildings ; Hitoute, No. 2122 Vine street; has every modern convenience and imerov,anent. Im mediate possession given. J. M. GUMMY At SUNS, 733 Walnut street. FOIE,, BALE—THE DESIRABLE tZ c ,toryDveiling, with three-story buck build logs No. 2225 Spruce street. With all modern improve ments. lmmediate possession. Terms easy. A leo other Properties on West Spruce street.: Apply to DOPPLICK. k J ORDAN, '433 Walnut street. . , . eNEW . BROWN STONE HOUSES, NOS. 7920,2004 AND Z/10 SPRUCE STREET FORSALE. SALE. FINISHED IN WALNUT IN THE MOST SUPERIOR • MANNER. AND WITH EVERY 'MODERN CONVENIENCE. E. B. WARREN, 2013 SPRUCE STREET. APPLY BETWEEN 2 AND 4 O'CLOCK P. AI. mh2.stf fp, FOR BALE—GREEN STREET—THE hand Some residence. marble, fleet story ; 20 foot trout, with side yard. and lot 197 feet deep through to Brandywine street. N 0.1518. WEST LOGAN Still ARE .— , 170. 246—Four-story brown stone raddence ' with three story (Inutile back buildings. lot 21 feet front by 141 feet deep, ' N 0.1021 CLINTON STREET—Three-story dwelling, with three-story double back buildings. Lot 20x115 foot to a street. CHESTNUT STREET—Haadseme four.story rest• deuce, with largo three-story back buildings. Lot 26 feet front by 235 feet deep, .to Sansom street. Situate west of Eighteenth street, ARCH STREET—IIRmIsome four-story brick rest depee, 22 feet trent, with every 'convenience.. N. W. corner Twentieth street. ARCH STREET—Handsome modern four-story brick .residenceiwith - three-story doubletnek bulliiings Extra conveniences 00(1 in perfect order. West'of Eighteenth street, south side. J. M. .GUAIDIEY & SONS, 733 Walnut street. FOR .PALE.,-THE NEW THREE- Story Brick Residence, No. 137 North Nineteenth street, with three-story back buildings, containing 'all the mrdern improvements.,' Inquire of T. A; McCLEL LAND, No. 12;9 Chestnut street, jets at§ rA TOR BALE—FOUR-STORY BRICK EiDwelling with back buildings, and overy modern convenience satiate NO, 1711 Filbert kitreet ;lot feet front by 117' feet deep to '4O feet wide street. J. M. tIUMMEY & SONS, 733 Walnut street. .13UtatTESSLOPPORTE,NITY:— WE 11 d have for eale, on easy tonna, fifteen minutes froth the city, on the Germantown Railroad, au Magna Reek donee, beautifully and - completely fitted out-with, all modern conveniences. It lane been occupied forlwo years non boarding-house and hoe it good winterand aununer patronage. J. .111.. GUNMEN At. 801 , 18.7.33 Walnut area. VOR SALE, VERY'. DESIRABLE Lots. on D,ny's lane, Germantoy'n. DIeLEAN SCOTT, 222 S. 'Fourth Arent. Jelslef pt A 3t*' TAESIBABLE • BUILDING ,LGA spruce, area, for into :( No: 2102 :22 feet front by 180 foot deep to It etroet. Forty.firet street, below Pintiel handsome lot,oo feet front-by-160.foet 111EY h HI/M.733 Walnut etreet.. • . •• . QIIBATEING 1 Etilv.:=T EN RA MES Li Emilia' Sheathing Felt, for Role by FETEII Willawr et SON 6,116 Walnut Wool. . -; ' ' :':l,' ' ? VO ' i;ell 4-. , '' , ' • i t ho New Five-tiory Stol4, '-' • if . . 'X ! .18 South' Sixth Street and No. 9 Dees. tar Street. ~ Will rent the whole q eop_r_tra_te_flooreorith or without , SttluuTower. ; .. • • . r TREOPOIt& DIEIGIARGEiti • 1 D2 l -Hi ' ' ' ~' -- , No. 20 South diith Street - TO BENT—A PLEASANT HOUSE, beautifully 'diadem', with Lawn and Stabling* A etruortlrpf•ttibreity;-orfNew:Seennd-.Btreet-roadi,/i— -mi e trona' Green' Lane etatithi. , E. - BOARDMAN,' 01 ay, Twenty•second Ward.. • i 0 14411 a m ceTO ItENT .OR 'SELL A WELL furn Mod eight-roonied Rouse, neighborhood nty-ilrst and Spruce. Newly papered, painted and furnished. Iu perfect order.., Possession of.. July or Au guntr,-Address W.V., E. this ofllCEt.' tilt nit* O _LET —A _DESIRABL i• •I DENOE, with all the modern convenience'', on 'Locust avenue, near Willow, avenue, Germantown; three minutes' walk.from Uhurchiette Station. a Imam dinte possemion. Apply to SCOTT & DAY, ,ifdttl tit 06V . .88 North Third street. FOR: RENT. NOltTrt BROAD Bra' Street (1304): marble' front; modern residence; above,Thempson street, in • the best square on Broad street; pavement. Lot 25x14.3.' All .modern' colivenlences; large, light rooms; low -rent. FRED; SYLVESTER, NS South Fourth street „jell tf§ TO LET--,THE GRANITE STORE, -• N0. , 727 OIVESTNNT street' ' • New occupied by the underslgnell as a Wholesale and BMA Drvilooda Mune Flitures-hortiale, 111174 FOR RENT —l O URN ISHEIS7:- FOR Eti four months or a yeaNa, handsome Residence with every convenience, large lot of ground, and surrounded by old trees pitmen nn Walnut street, Went Philadel phia. GUMMY d : SON d, 7A3 Walnut street. : CHESTNUT STREET•oeOR RENT— MEI MA two Stores, Nos. )023 And 10211esOheetnnt street. trnmedintrly in front of the Academy of .Fine .Arte. J. Ali 01. 1 AIDIEY & SONS, 739. Wainntstreet. firt - WEST PHILAD ELF H(A HAND /Ea some modern. cottage, with, every convenience. ,and large lot of ground, southwest corner of Pine and Forty-first streets., J. GONNE Y SONS, N 0.733 Walnut street.- , . ItIONT--LARGF 4 -DOUBLM • IE4 Store PropPrtv, southwest . cor. Ittxrket and Sixth tittexta. .1. M. (TUAYSTEY SONS', 733 Walnut st. • TO RENT—A HANDSOME FUR spa Nisnr,to Country Iteeldeneo, with 4 acres of ground,-Altmheim street; Cretmantown, - -thromminutos'— wall: from Knyne Station. All kinds frtiit. - fine lawn. stable, for horses and cows, with all and every improve ment. Apply to COITUCK ,ft JORDAN, 433 Walnut street.. . TO, BENT-ROOMS OT ALL - SIZES, well lighted, hut titbit, for ligbt manufacturing bn al neag, in build ing.No. 712 Oheatunt , strent. J. W.' GUM- , DIEY & 80N8,,/:+3 Walnut street. itgi FOR RENT.— HANDSOME COUN- Ra try place. with aOyeral acres of land. on Old York oad, Oro mlrantes' walk from Oak. Labe station. oa the tiorth•Perinarivania Railroad, • • - FU RNISHED. COUNTRY NEAT. *Rhin two- rain-' n tes• walk from finverford stat ion. on the Ponnartrents Central Railroad. .1. GUIIMEY & SONS, 733 Val nut street. FOR ItENT,-.THE HANDSOME 112.10ur-atory property, No: 23 Eminth Eighth street, corner of Jayne, and firat above "stunt street. J . M. GUMNEY d - . SONS,T33 alnut street. OPERA *R. TO LET BECONDMORY FRONT am- 800mi.514 - Chretnnt street. aliout x foot.' idoltablo for an office or light jals tf rt YARN & BROTHZUP in FOR It ENT—TfiE VE DESIRA- Sta BLE font storybrick Srtu , . in Mate No. fn Mar ket street.. J. M. 111101 EV S b01i5,N0..733 Walnut _ 11 1 13 TO RENT:- .1" UIt:NISRED -- Olt farnished—rt handsome doubleltysidemea, with ox trn contemiences. situate ou Forty-Orst, below - Prior, West Philadelphia. Lot. with choice shrubbery: J. 11.1UddhlEY & SONS, Lti Walnut stntet. meU R.E 23 T,- THE. .SEC,OND-STORY Rooms, - or - DM:es, -of No. 42 South Third stroot. Inquire on first floor. s to th tl§ .4)P. FUR. E.I3. , TAYLOR. r* k G ELL A ! A. 1t.441....-1741 tr.i JiE . °Alto; Port; .trok, oppii.dto • Minsten street, CAPE MAY CITY. N. J. 'Rorer by. Rqr•cial permission to: E. C. Knight, Wi I'ott.. Mntthow W Baird and John C. Bul l At, E 914., of Philinlolphla; fionorat Minn. J Sewell. J cake, Eba.._er Cape NAY. 7.i 8.---Iharticultu: attention, givon to thore y3 n t t o l i nf ie f A: _cottages. c. lu REESE & M cCOLLIIM, REAL ESTATE AGENTS. 011fcc,Jackson Itreset, opposite Mention strriet, Oaps island, N. J. Real Estate bought and sold. Perooolll desirous of rantkig cottage" during the season or addruse as above, I:Wrpectfrill77 refer to Obeli. A. Rob icsm,MinfY Bum= Francis Mcllvein, Augustu Merino John Dasis t vi W. K'- Jnyenni. fa - ----- .1' EC AL — NOT I C Es. u. OFFICE OF THE SC L HUYKILL N VIGATI ON COMPAN Y. 417 WALNUT Street . PHIL.% trr.Lrit A . Ma, 25, WO. NOTICE.is herebulytrthat_g_•doeyfairOetteralilttet:- Ing of theidockholders and loanholders of this Com witty will be held nt thin °Sire on MONDAY, the 3/th day of June. 1670. at II o'clock A. M., for the parer. of con sidering a proposition to lease the works. franchise 4 and property of the Schuylkill Navigation Company to the Philadelphia and Reading Railroad Company. By order of the Managers. my 26 th s to tje2o§ F. FRALEY, President. rc?OFFICE OF THE AMYGDALOID MINING COMPANY OF LAKE SUPERIOR, NO. 32.1 WALNUT STREET. PHILADELPHIA. June 401.1370. Notice in hereby given that all stock of the Antygdalall Mining Company of Lake Superior,m which instalment* are due and unpaid, Is hereby declared forfeited, and will be told at public auction. on WEDN ESD AY, July 601,1870, at 12 o'clock, AL, at the office of the Secretary of the corporation, according to the Charter and By Uwe , unless previously redeemed. By order of the Directora. M. H. HOFFMAN. jet tjy6 § Treasurer. The Company claims the right to bid on nab! stork. _ Er.. THE REV. WM. M. D. RYAN, formerly of this city. will preach in the Redding M. E. Church on next bluiday at RP. A. 31. and d P. M. Family gathering at 3i: P.M. 3015 4t* NEI M AN'S NEW FIRST-CLASS DINING AND ICE CREAM SALOONS, 1018 SPRING GARDEN street. Meals at HANDSO ME h ODG f NG o HmOaMuS bread FOR GENTLEMEN, either with full or partial Board ,DIVIDEND - NOTICES. .1)- - PENITSYL,VANIA RAILROAD COM: tkr7 PANIC. TREASURER'S DEPARTMENT. Ilin.Auxtuu.tt 4 .,Pa 42 May 3, WO: NOTICE TO STOCK'''. LIMBS. The Beard of Directors have this day declared a semi annual dividend of Five Per Cent. on the Capital Stock of the Company, clear of National and State taxes, payable in cash on and after May 30,1870. Blank Powers of Attorney for collecting Dividends can be had at the Office of the Company, No. 238 South THIRD street. The Office will be opened at 8 A. 31. and closed at 3 P. Id. from May 30th to June 3d, for the payment of Divi dends, and after that date from 9 A. 31.. to 3 P. M. THOMAS T: FlItTll. rny4 Wirtz§ Treztattrer. BUILDING AND HOUSEKEEPING HARDWARE. Machinists, Carpenters and other. Me. ebonies! Tools. Hinges Screws, Locks, Knives and Forks, Spoons, Coffee Mills, do., Stocks and Dies. Plug and Taper Taps, Universal and Scroll Chucks, Planes in , great variety. All to be had at the Lowest Possible Prices At the CHEAP-FOR-CASH Hard. ware Store of J. B. SHANNON', • No. 1009 Market Street, dag.tf ROBERT H. LABBERTON'S YOUNG LADIEEV_ACADEBIY, '3B uncl3ll.l South fINTEENTRAtreet, Next teem commencee September 19th. tel 3 4m. H. Y. LAUDERBACH'S CLASSICAL, SCIENTIFIC AND COMMERCIAL . . ACADEBIY, , 2 ASSEMBLY BUILDINGS., No. 1036:.TENTH' Street. A Primary, Elementary , and Pinitilling School. • Circularo at Mr. Wurburton'B, No. 43U Oheataut otreq, niy9 tf§ „ rNSTIOJOTIOI.I . I3 GIVEN IN LATIN, Greek, French nud. German: by .T.OFRDENS, • 1016 Mount Vernon street: ' ' ~n13,184xn =ma, P:. BONDI - NELL:62V; TEAOSER Sin_gt_ng. Frlvate 1Q OriN and O'hummi: :Beeldenoit B. Thirteenth otroet. • an2s.tiirt .. f aisTirlNG. - tc „ s VE,A,I" .r - 1 . p r oak CoMPA Ili 1- c2P P '" Pu ll i il 25o g ito. (T. 140, i s I p t :.: l o).. w i t b aß B o : 3 O ni f , : t .c Arzer w. . 6 - F tin or - :pp,r 12 ,14 ' t: 9:. 1 0 cu a l w o ; COST • "AD' elt,ourttir-SUrfraila myl2 th e to 1m Op ItICKEYBIIIAItP & CO., N0.72T Chestnut street •_A:RDW - MtET&C. CATiori: EZ3KOME THE rows'. CAR SERVICE. flow the Malls are Carried. To but few people is the.fact, knawn,„that on the . principal railroads of , 'Our e entlntry . ,l . oVer. *and - back, - both night and• day, - a 'on wheels helps to constitute their express , trains, intrimettre , i'rapidltrans4iof ', : laters! lietweenci "onriferveli and friecide—a*`saving in time, amounting ,to at least three or four days be tween . the ientlis'.of our contitherit, nut letters now not resting a moment In their travels. ,Each_of. theskpo.stal,cars hasits head elerlt.,, , 'equal in authcifity to our postmasters, and he • 'alsaltaslibititSSlstalits, Vat34ng in riffiribee with the importance of the route; their .dutieS amounting to hard work and plenty of it, as we shallendeayorto make clear. To: illustrate we wilhfolloW, says the Cecil 'll'hig, the roit tine-of-a--rouml-ttip-of-a-night,,line-Tposta ear traveling tiverT , the road before 'Min Aborsi tween )Vasljipgton, , and. 'New York, distance 246 Miles, tanning time' nine; hours, leaving New York at 9.30.1'. M. They have an accu mulation of mail from remote sections, East, West and North; and South - points • adjacent, transmitted to the car in one huge four-horse wagon, and_ another_dra.wn by . two-horses —weighing from six to ten tons, according to the day, and varying:arcuntstances, measitring about 1,200 cribiefeet, and numbering some ortyldekeiricaiches,itinl eighty'einvas sacks • occasionally a dozen or more ',cases. .Immedi ately on the arrival'of the tirit wagon at the car a busy scene is inaugurated, separating and stowing away the through bags - m their several compartments...; , 4).(ter.this labor-. is performed. the'ci matter addressed "'Postal - Car "is opened first, the pouches. varying from fifteen to twenty in number, and abentt the Same number of can' , vas sacks, containing only newspapers-and per 4 iodicals. this they find employment almost .... Philadelphia __where ~ *.another,..."..twoi horse wagon-load' , is .awaiting .them, which i 4 taken in before leaving the,depot, „while a mail ntunbeting_Tscime twent.Y..pouches is'. throw d out. Such matter as had accumulated at the NeW - Yorktiflice; in the - interim between' the. regular Philadelphia and Washington • postal _ car - mails ; - and in - addition such additional mat ter .as may have* been collected on the car. Chester. is • soon reached, and as we rush through, pouches are put off at 'the-depot, that the - good people may hare their letters early in the mewing. Soon again-, - the. Whistle: is blown for Wilmington, Del:, at WWI); place mails are exchanged. Again, at Baltimore is put off a huge wagon-load; - and one received: During these busy hours letters are handled that. haveleeKte,,frori:the several Eastern Mikes, the fientiers - West,tibUred into` them at New York, Philadelphia aud _Baltimore ;..and the dome of the Capitol looms in sight all has bean properly assorted, arranged, and is secure. As soon as the train stops at the depot at Wash ington, a few second.: sullies to turn out, at one door; and pile- cm its-proper wagon, -thecity mails, with which a clerk is despatched to the office. On two other wagons are loaded the mails - fot the Oratige - and Alexafidila the beginning of the great -Southwest -route, -carry ing-mailto the urger-remote part.of Texas ; and to-the 7 Potomac =Postal Car Route, such matter-as should be "-scattered along the sea board, to the extreme end of Florida; each iu charge of a.detailed'clerk, to - secure a proper delivery and receipt at the respective railroad depots and steamboat landings - _railroad depots the trip severity pouches have been opened and contents handle.d,lrom_whiett four t..0 - :fifeTthousand - letters have - been made - up, and frord fifteen to twenty sacks of newspapers. Bound north -from Washington, the train does not leave until fi P. M. The first load of mail is:despatched from the office at 5 o'clock; thirs - early,Aliarthe Wmern matter to be left .at _l3altimore bt_ls.`gt 9.1 - of the southern con necting mails, from the Orange Agent and Potomac Postal Clerk, before reaching that point. As the aggregate of the mails has run up to one hundred ponches,it may be imagined that thefour hours before train-leaVing, and the one and a quarter hoitrs' running to -Balti more, afibrd • barely time to accomplish this work. In case the matter should be too heavy to get through, the letters carried by are put in a pouch -labelled "Exchange," which is left at -Wilmington,- Del., for-the- .ouch-bound train, arriving a few minutes after our de parture from the depot., and so-arrive in Balti more in time the -following morning to make the desired connections. At Baltimore, Wil mington, and Philadelphia mails are ex changed. Mails are left at Elizabeth, N. J., for that place, Easton, Pa., and the New Jer sey Central Railroad Agent. At Newark, N. J., several pouches for that place, others for the New Jersey Railroad Agent over the Mor ris and Essex Railroad. At Jersey City a pouch' is delivered to a messenger, and by one wagon a mail to the Hudson River Rail road and New York ' Central Railroad as far west as Detroit, Michigan, and Canada. In another wagon is despatched a mail to the New Haven depot to the Boston Postal Clerks, including matter for the Eastern States and the eastern section of the Dominion of Canada; and also the mails for the Harlem Railroad Agent. Then, by the New York office wagon, huge pouches of city letters and sacks of news papers; pouches foi the Long Island Agent and Erie Postal Clerks, Brooklyn, New York and other routes, not leaving until later in the day, or until the next evening, made up in distribu tion pouches. In accomplishing this, from , fifteen to twenty thousand New York city -letters have been handled, and separately as many more for the distribution; which has re- Rnired constant . application from the beginning thringhout the foutteen hours. The force on the day line consists of two men, :with a helper between Baltimore and Washington. The service differs from the night line between these two points, inasmuch as a way service is performed, although on an express train,- by means of a catcher, an iron two tined fork that swings. out front fastenings on the side of the car, catching the pouch in - its crotch from a crane it has been hung on, as the train rushes by. There Is a difference in the amount of labor between the lines 'on this Mail in favor of day line, but the difference is - diminishing. " 'Since the restriction of the service in the South the mails have been rapidly increasing, and to our Postoflice Department, which has provided us with such an admirable system, the, public are greatly indebted. ' For the proper carrying out of that system . clerks of more than ordinary intelligence and inforination are required. It is necessary for them to know the location of several thousand post-offices, in addition to which they are con stantly exposed to danger. Not one in a thou sand knows anything of the small body of cleits who run these postal cars, and by whose energy and efficiency and unflagging efforts the piles of mail are distributed and despatched to their proper destination. A great difficulty complained or by the postal Car clerks the neglect of parties directing mail niatterand especially is this neglect at - tribulable to publishers of newspapers or their mailing clerki—in not putting the name of the county in which the post-office is located, on - the packages. This omission often subjects the clerks to the necessity of searching the post- Office record, and thus consumes their valuable time, every moment of which is precious.— . Valli more American.. —Oscar Cespedes, the son of the leader of the Cuban rebellion, who was captured by the Spanish troops and executed on May 30, had; dust been married ton, Cuban lady of seven teen, who was also captured. It is said that the Spaniards do not treat her as his widow, but consider the marriage as of no binding ef fect. A He intacklanAe-am-ran away with him AS he was going to his wife's funeral. and be lrbruiseti t ai was so HEAL ESTATE SALEM IR , . REA L-RSTATE--JANIESAv,-. TOitY - ,, SALIPt.v , 4AIWEB". Jo lit man. Anctlonenr.-Valtiable Lot, 12 acres, Paee- A. Freeman, filictiorkepr,-.15, AA roe of ,Yeluable yunk road, west of BroadMreet, First Ward, On Wed-, : 1 esulotr Mind, near Point Itteestb.`"42tiVddneeday4.Tune Inesday, .1,64/11 22; 1870, at . ,12 noon, will be sold; --2:241; .48711, 1 : at 12 o'clock, Imone-Will he , Mild , at • :public At public Sale, at the Philiedelp . 2llo Exchange, the Alde r serlthout. reserve,, at, then Philadelphia ,Exottange, "lowing deseribed real' estate Alt that valuable lot: the Tellowfilk described real estate : .All theit•oertain situate In the First Whrd,beginning at a poet by the tilde; ! tract or piece of meadow land,with the - willotts of Pansy ink road, being a corner of 'Bind late of Theo-' near Point Breese liotebsitttate in lute Passynnk time ,dpreplcOarahen ;thence by the -name land north 10 feet - mop, nowTWCIGY - AiXth Ward of the city, beginning in Tweet to &Point: 119 - 4110Mindlo of 'Jadkiton,. street , thence - "the middle ora ditch' On' tho'litie orland - new of Of went alon the middle of Jackson street to a point at the : . - Clement! Ewing; and l corner - - of land- now orate of, intersection of Jackson street and Bland street (a 30 et. p aji l pl LgteerAy• ,the n ce b y o w Am id l an d ,s . 433 withbeteththencenorth (+gong 'the middle of Bland 'deg., Ef , l9'pereteri rind , '7 linkslo the middle Of a ditch; street tea point - 191 feet 6 iticthes Vitali - ofSnyder oven tot ; thence by land in the care of John HAI oWell; ESN., 24. thence west 66 feet, thence north 92 feat more or lees ; 34 - dog- W. 4/..perebee and Iftlinke to a atake fora corner; thence wed 66 feet to the middle of Baton street Oleothenco.hy the remaining land of Susanriah,Sheller, N. /3040tAiltl ee West); licence north along . the: middle or 88 deg.,W .19 orchee nnd 10 links" -to the' middle - of a - Baton etrect to the middle of Snyder street; thence "; ditch; atablieetinehy limd - of - Daniel tliafferty;'flackieg.4 -west- along SnYder /street tots; paint at thdiltitersectlon' ,r,..41,..-perchea, and. 10 links. to the place •of beginnlitg; Of 'Snyder ' Stteet' and Twentieth street; thence, tont - tuning 5 Carp ore or less (being the same tract which north along ~ the middleg .of Twentieth Hoy 'Pealing.; by - Indenture ' dated March 4th, 1848, street 204 feet. nuire or lose thence W. 9l'feet 3 incites ; g ranted/and convoyed Unto George Milner in fee,/ thence N. 64 feet; thence E. 91 feet 3 inches to a point .. . Ole cr.oralLincumbrance. . • , the middle of Twentieth street ; thence N. tilong Twen - 4Eir - Sale peremptory. - - - - Gelb street 93 feet to a point in the middle of McKean • e )Oulo'be polder , the time! etreet ; thence N. 76 deg: 6 min. west along McKean, JAMES. A. PERMIAN,' Auctioneer. street to the middle of a4O feet wide street, called Yale je2 gl6 - • . • -No. 122 Walunt.atreet . - street( o bicts-extends-ttortliwardvand-parallebwith-anal" , - -- thedhiterice - of 138 feet 6 inciters W. from the went Bide of Twentieth street),and extending thence along the middle of Yalo street N. 13 deg. 09 min. E, 266 feet ;- thence by ground of Henry Y. Smith 5.76 [leg. 5 min. E. 166 feet 6 inches to a point on Twentieth Street; thence in a line of land Into of John N. 2 deg. W • 21 d feet 4 Inches to a-corner of land nOw; or bite of .JOllll . house ; thence by theeame 5.74 deg, IV 35 6.loGis perches to a poet ; thence by land late of Joshua. Paincoaat . S. 13 deg.R. 8914 perches to a post by PassYlink road.; thenee rlcy-stild road N. 81 deg. E; 19 perches to the - place of be ginning ; containing abbot' 12 acrelb the exact aitiount to he eficertainedby survey, - . Oa" The above is It very valuable let-it wilt have.fronts on Twentieth street, Twent y -first street, Snyder SOW and Jarkson street,.whew those iitg.ttn nreapened. ire,, ore of good quality ha, been discovered, and it is supposed Mere -are-larp_depv , it-s-on en- ;oses_part.s_othe• 514)0 to . be paid at Gum of 'sale JAMES A. FREEMAN', Auctioneer, jeg 16 • • • 5t0re, , 422 walnut street, ORPHANS' COURT SALE.—ESTATE Sad of Jacob Sink, deceased,--latnee A. Freeman, Auctioneer. 19 Acres and Improvement's, Greenwich ..littand road: 'First IVard. Under authority •of the Orphans' Court for the City and County of Philatiel ph in, on Wednesday, June 224, 1870, at 12 o'clock, noon, will he sold at public gale, at 'the Philadelphia Ex change, the following. described real estate, late the property of Jacob. Sin/F. ileceaeed; All: that certain lot or piece- of meadow ground (coin* polled of four contiguous lote),with the dwelling-houses, barn and other improvements thereon erected, situate on Grtettnich Istiand, In the First Ward of the city begin ning at a Make in the toiddle.or-41 WO perch wide lane leading from the 7118{11 Ore4lll{V{S.ll jeolaind road, a corner of this arid land late of Sheer and Biouseman, thence along, t 110 mpi die of the ditch dividing this-froth-Sheer and 1191.1ieniau 'eland, - 14 20 deg . :W.67Z perches - to - the middle of 11 ollunder'e creek: thence down the middle of of the ;aid creek N. 77 that...E. 20 perches; thence" N.' fel deg..E.M5 perches tea line in . the "utiddie or the ditch ; thence along the middle Of the said (limn dividing tide partly 'from lend late of John David Seckel, deceased, and rattly of George Blight .t.1:1114' deg. E. 113.2 perches to a stake; therm,, by the middle of_ a ditch divliing this from asiclißlight's land. S.BB hitcher Wc.4 perches from stake; thence extending by a ividing thPi field Blight's land N. 41 , c deg. W. 43.9 perches to the mid- UM of the aforesaid lane, and thenetc along the 78111 1 11 e of the same N;91,44,11eg. W. ; 6.7 perches to the place of beginning. Containing 19 -acres arat2B-perehes, Being the same premises which Richard PC11.9. 8811 Sarah his wife, by indenture, dated the 28th day of November. 1837,11811 recorded in Deed Book, S. 11. F., No. 21. p. 229 grautesql and conveyed unto the said Jacob Slick in, lint. Together with the common nee and privilege of Ihe raid two perch wide lane, • oa' 821t1 to be paid ar time ef sale, • • Ily the CorlW - JOSEPb - MICGA ror. Clerk O. MARY .A NN SINK. 'Administrattix JAMES A; FREEMAN. Auctioneer,` 3e29 16 Store 422 NV:. hint tweet inORPHANS' COURT SALE.-ESTATY of David Thompson. deceased.—Janes A. Free- . 11:11111 A UC-tiOTter...-UU4' . l" authority of the Orphane Court for the city and county of Philadelphia. on Wedneeday, June 22, Prie r at )2 o'clock, noon. trill - be cold at public rale at the -Philadelphia Ekchange: the following dee. ribed real estate. -late the property of Doeed 7horepi on, decetwerl : Building lot, Dicklu,ou etreet. axat of Second street. . 2iu.T 4il that lot of ' grotied - ."eifinthid --- on Ride of Dickineeti Street., at the xlibtauce of 67 feet 7 lie. cites ar ectward from the we .t eide of Second -street: in the . First Ward of the city; eontaining in _front on Dickiu m een rier, feat, and ext€.ling h. depth mouthwanl be tween parallel iillUatsiglit.anifes with Dickineonetraet rio the east line thereof ;46 feet ri aud oh the - ‘e - 64i line thereof 98 feet. Cleaktif findiaalitance. I!o.2.—Rueineee Stand—Feed Store end Dwelling; S. W. corner of Second and Dickinson efreetc All that certain lot of ground, with the it-story brick mensuage thereon. everted-eau:an at - the eouthweet corner of Second and Dickineorretreete. Jo the Firet Ward of- the city; containing in front Olt Second street 16 feet, and extending in depth %seen; and 111011 g DiekilliOn Street 67 _feet Undies. ,tAear of incondirance. -The above has lcag bran..lraul_aattAlterand feed More, . and isairelt-e,aabltAherl ~ .utnegg stand. The tinware meats eimeist og a large 3.3tory brick store and dwelling, with2-sloe-yb , id bark buildlner. Hag sar, bath, ranee, hot and add wafer . Papered and Painted throughout. - trig - ylOO to be paid on each at time of sale. Immo. diate posseysion git en the purchaser -1 By the Court. - JOSEPH MEGARY. Clerk 0. C. . -- ROBlal3T PATTRItsON--Administraton . SA A. PRE/L a MA 2 N ku nUt etion ire eer. . rORPHAIS' CULT SALE.-ESTATE r os of William Beach, ilec'tl.—Junies A. Freeman, A C tioneer.—Valuable Curry Comb ;Manufactory, south west corner Iltuicock and York streets. finder authority of the Orphans' Court for the tits and county of Philx• del phia, on.. Wednesday , June :V01,1570, at 12 o'clock. ni will be sold at nubile sale, without reserve, at the Philadelphia Exchange, the following described real caws. lain the property of William Beach, decd.: All that certain lot 01 ground, with the large . 23i-story b rick. curt y-cOniti in atinfactory-themon . erected, situate. tun west side ot Hancock street, and south aide of York street, in the Nineteenth Ward of said city; con taining in front on Pancock street 73 feet. and in depth viA. log feet tc . . Perry street. Sale absolute, &ton to he paid at the t u ne of sale, By the Court. JOSEPH :if EGARY, Clerk C.C. ANNA. MARIA BEACH, Administradrix. Stoat .Fiittires, Engine,Tools. Machinery, innit finitely before the sale of the real estate, will be sold in one lot,the good-will and entire fixture of the curry-comb manufactory , comprising the engine, 2.5 machine dies and tools for manufacturing combs: machine dies and tools for manufacturing pane ; benches and pots for blacking combs:3 steves,fire-proof, desk ~ac.ale, lot patterns for niaehine pans. combs and ineatmants, carpenter's bench, Vices and tools, sheet iron, unfinished work, dies, grates, curry &c. BY order of the Administratrix. 117 - SSI,OOO to be paid at time of sale. Sale absolute. JAMES A. FREEMAN, Auctioneer. je2 9 16 store 422 Walnut street PUBLIC BALE BY ORDER OF the Social Mechanics Beneficial Association. No. I—Janice .k. Freeman, A uctioneer .—Three-stury Brown Stone property known as the Mechanics' Hall, 'Nos. 134 and no North Third street, between. Buttonwood and Green streets, lot 36x108 feet. On Wednesday morning, June 22, KO, at 12 o'clock, will be sold at public sale at the Philadelphia Exchange, the following described real estate, the property of the Social Mechanics' Beneficial Association, NQ. 1 : All that certain lot of around with the three-story brown atone building thereon erected. situate on the west side of Third street, (Nos. 634 and 5361, beginning at the distance of 299 feet? inches north of Buttonwood street, in the Twelfth Ward of the city ; containing in front on said Third street 36 feet, and ex tending In depth weetward 103 feet. Subject to tw o . ground rents each of $721 silver) per annum. air The above is a fine building to eth ornamental brown stone front. large basement. On the first floor is large saloon with bar, 4 - r.. and separate entrants at the side, iced, trade stairway to the stories above. The second-stony is arranged for singing societies, and the thirebstoty es thrown into a spar-Alas bat/ room, with gallery, handsome chandeliers, dressing-rooms, bar and conven iences Bra ' ter tanks in let—water (*sets. Lamp in front, balccmt. #C. 'As now arranged it yields a good revenue m , and be g most substantially built, could he altered into tine stores or a manufactory at but little expense. 4t500 to be paid at time of cafe. immediate possession given the purchaser. JAMES A. FREEMAN, Auctioneer, RI 9 16 Store,422 Walnut street. lin ORPHANS' COURT SALE.—ESTATE NNW' of John Lamson Perkins, deceased.,Jatnes A. Freeman, Auctioneer.—Moderu three-story Brick Dwelling. No. 1412 Ellsworth street. Under authority of the Or pilaus' Court for the city and county of Phila delphia, on Wednesday, Juno 22, 1870, at 12 o'clock.noon, will be sold at pnblic sale. at the Philadelphia Exchange, the rollicsing described real estate, lute the property of .Tohn Lamson Perkins, deceased. • All that certain three story brick niessuage with the two-story brick back buildings and the lot of ground on which it is erected, situate on the south side, of 'Mimi orth street, at the dis tance of 76, feet inches eastward from Fifteenth street,. in the Twenty , sixth Ward of the city ; containing in front On-Ellsis belt - street 17 fort, and - extending in 'depth of that width on- the- vast line thereof 83 feet ore inches, and on the west litre thereof 84 feet 534 inshes - to a 4 feet 6 inches wide alley, and with the privilege of said alley. Subject to a mortgage of (52.Mt1. soV . The 'above is 'a genteel' three story brick dieelling with tiro-story brick back buildings, has saloon-p2r;or, dining•rvom and A lichen on first door, marble manse '.. , barb, ranlee. hot and rad tearer, erirote stairway, gas and every t h e Immediate p.co By the Court, JOSEPH MEGAItY. Clerk 0. C. CHARLES HENRY HART, Attorney. JAMES A. FREEMAN, Auctioneer, je2 9 16 ' Store 422 Walnut street. ORPHANS' COURT SALE,—ESTATE, of Georglaria Fool, deceased.—James A. Freeman, Auctioneer. Two-story Brick House, Winton street, vast of Tenth street, First Ward. Under authority of the Orphans' Court for the City and County of Philadelphia, on WednesdayOnne 22d,4870, at 12o'clock, noon, Will be sold, at public sale, at the Philadelphia Exchange, the following described real eatate, latp the property of Georgiona Pool, deft:well: All that certain lot of ground with the two-story brick messuage thero. on erected. situate en the north aide of Winton street ( No. 947), between Ninth and Tenth streets, and below Mifflin street. at'The distance offs 7 feet eastward from Tenth street, in the First Ward of the city containing in trout on Winton street 14 feet, and extending In depth of that width 40 feet, to a four-feet wide alley. To. nether with the free use and privilege of the said alloy. Subject to 636 ground rent per annum, and a mortgage of NM 67. Orr 8100 to be paid at time of sale. By the Court, JOSEPH Id EGARY, Clerk 0. 0. JAMES A. FREEMAN, Auctioneer, Store, 422 Walnut street. Oft,lllA NS' CO VILT SALE.—ESTATE of Thomas N. Penrose, deceased.—Well Secured Ground Rent of $3B per annum, payable in silver.— Under authority of the Orpliatta' Court for the City and-County of Philadelphia, on Wednesday. Juno 22,' 1870, at 12 o'clock, noon, ivill lib 'Sad' fit Pibli - Oklike, at the Philadelphia Exchange, thel following described real estate, late the, property of Thomas N. Penrose. de•- ceased fiat certain yearlySund rent of s3u, payable in: awful silver . money — Quittg out of nod chargeable upon all that certain lot of Br' tend with the 3-story brick inesstiago thereon erected, situate on Gie south side of Citron street, at of 101 foot .54 Inches westward from — lbo Vest Side of Twelfth street, in the Fourteenth Ward of the pity; containing in front on Citron street 13 feet 8 inches, and - in - apt h•ili feet. • $lOO to bo paid at time of intlo. • • ' Ey tho Court, • JOSEPH Attakity, Olerk 0. C. NORWOOD PENROSE, Executoi. /Moro, WalTiTitTli ree-CT• nG aven PHit'ADTAJPAI A E'V.E.N liklG BUL.LETIN, Tl-IUPSDAY,JU.NE 16, 1870. ERZ TI a man, A uctioneer.—Three.story brick Bakery , and bwelling, No. 1815 Coates street, :Nati* brick stable. on. Olive street' Wednenday,jtme 22,1870, at 12 o'clock, noon, will be. , aold fttsbuolle axle, at - the Philadelphia .Exehange, the, following described Real Estate:All that'yery desirable three-story' brick store and' dwel :ling,'with double three-story back buildinas and the lot of ground on. Which„thoy are erected. situate on the . - north side of Coates area, between Eighteenth and Ninetdenth streets (No. 1815), ill the rirtetnth Ward of the city, containing in front on Coates street 17 feet, and in depth of that width 100:feet to Olive street, on which frown a two .story brick stable. • • . , , , Or' 77ze above an established' bakery mf confectionery , has private entrance, store, dining-room, kitchen; sum mer kitchen: on first finor gas, „bath, range, hot' and cold. 4 teu 4 g,..gozably 2nantels, chandeliers, private stairmax t Baitinthre heater in dining. room,heattng back bueldmg: portable' heater in. , cellar, heating front buitding, bake-, ove n Op ba.,epient, sax° may remain on mortgage: May be explained any time.. , Immediate missession givenAho purc'haser.. eta' tobe , paid at the time of • - • JAMES A. FREEMAN, Auctioneer, Store, 422 Walnut street. FO rt - 001591740 - N. Steamship Line Direct. RONAN, SAXON NORMAN; ARIES. SeiliegWednesdafand Saturday .•. BAUM - POW. ;-- .11 , 1*m :Pine fit. Wharf..Phlla., at.. 10 NON., " • Lome Wharf, Boston... at -.3 P. M. These Steamships sail punctually: - "Ft : eight received every_day. Freight toivardod to att'Ottlf4 in;Nop, Ensland. • For freight' or Pa:Otago (sup/nor acconz modatyns) ply to 'HENRY WINSOR & CO.. 338 SOUTH - DELAWARE AVENUE. HILADELPHIA' AND SOUTHERN P • MAIL STEAMSHIP COMPANY'S REGULAR SEMI-MONTHLY LINE TO NEW .011LEANS t LA. The Y.AZOO will sail FOR NEW ORLEANS, direct, on Thursday ne 18th, at 8 A. M. • - Tho ACHILLES will nail FROM. NEW ORLEANS, via HAVANA, on - • • ; THROUGH BILLS OF LADING at aa low :rates tut' by any other route giveir tri , •3IOIII,LE:GALYESTON: 'INDIANOLA; LAN'ACCA and BRAZOS,. and to nil - points on the MISSISSIPPI. between NEW ORLEANS and ST. LOUIS.. . RED RIVER FREIGHTS RE SHIPPED at Now Orleans without Charge of commis- WEEKLY LINE TO SAVANNAH, G.A. __ The TONAWANDA will sail FOR SAVANNAH on Saturday:3 line' 18th, at 8 A , . „The .W.Y.OMING :trill sail .FROM SAVANNAH on . Saturda y,Jv no 18th THROUGH BILLS OF LADING given to nit the principal towns in GEORGIA, A LABA MA , FLORIDA; lIIISSISSIPPI,LOUISIANA,:ARKANSAS and: TF.N NESS,EE, iis tonnectian With the Central — Railroad - of .Georgia,Atiantic and ,Gulf Railroad and Florida steam• "errs, - at as low rate as by competing lines. SEMI-MONTHLY LINE TO WILMINGTON. N. 0. The PIONEER will sail FOR WILMINGTON on SATTURDAY. June 18th—returning, will leave Wil mington, SATURDAY, June 25th. Connects with the - Cape Fear River. Steamboat Com pany, the Wilmington and Weldon and-North Carolina Itailroadx..and the. Wilmington and . Manchester Rail road toallinterior points. Freights for COLUMBIA. S. C.. and A ITGUSTA,Ga.. taken via WILMINGTON at as low rates as by any other TiAlte. Insurance effected wheliregriested by Shippers. Bills -of Lading signexl at Queen Street Wharf on or before day of sailing. JAMES. General Agent, my 31411; • No. 1.30 South Third street. PHILADELPHIA, RICHMOND ' *ND NORFOLK STEAMSHIP LINE. THROUGH FREICHIT AIR LINE TO THE.SOUTE . AND INCREASED FAUILITIES AND REDUCED Rlcitdi FOR STEAMERS LEAVE EVERY - WEDNESDAY and SATURDAY at 12 o'clk, Noon, from FIRST WHARF, above MARKET Street. RF.TU RHINO , LEAVE 'RICHMOND MONDAYS and TBURSDAYS, and NORFOLK TUESDAYS and SATURDAYS. • tar No Bills_oL.Lading signed' after 12 o'clock on Sailing Day. THROUGH RATES to all points in North and South Carolina via Seaboard Air-Lino Railroad, connecting at -Portamentb, and to Lynchburg, Va., Tennessee and the West via. Virginia and .Tenneasee Air:Line and Rich. mond and Danville Railroad. Freight HANDLED.BUT ONCE,s,n - d - ta en at LOWER RATES THAN ANY OTHER LINE. No charge for commission, drayage, or any expatiator transfer Steamships insure at lowest rates. Freight received DAILY. State-room - accommodations for passengers. - WILLIAM P OLYDE A CO No. 12 South Wharres and Pier No. 1 North Wharves W. P. PORTER, Agent atßichmond and City Point, T. P. CROWELL & CO.. Agents at Norfolk VOR ' NEW YORK VIA DELAWARE I• AND RARITAN CANAL. EXPRESS STEAMBOAT COMPANY. The CHEAPEST and QUICKEST water communica tion between Philadelphia and New York. Steamers leave daily from First Wharf below MAR KET street, Philadelphia, and foot of WALL street, New York. THROUGH IN TWENTY-FOUR HOURS. Goqds forwarded by all the Lines running out of New Yorkl,North, East or West, free of commission. Fisighte received Daily ano forwarded on accommoda ting terms. WM. P. CLYDE & 00., Agents, 12 South Delaware Avenue. JAS. HAND, Agent, 119 Wall Street, New York. EW EXPRESS LINE TO ALEXAN. dria, Georgetown and Wastdngton, D. 0., via Ches. peake and Delaware Canal, with connections at Alex. andria from the most direct route for Lynchburg, Bris tol, Knoxville, Nashville, Dalton and the Southwest, Steamers leave regularly from the first wharf obey Irtarket street, every Saturday at noon. Freight received daily. WM. P. CLYDE & ock., No. 12 South Wharvs d Pier 1 North Wharves, HYDE & TYLER, Ag e n tsat Georgetown. M. ELDRIDGE & 00., Agents at Alexandria. Ye DELAWARE AND . CHESA.PEAECE STEAM TOW-BOAT DOMPANY.—Barges towed between Philadelphia, Baltimore, Havre de (]race, Del aware City and intermediate points. WM. P. CLYDE Sc CO.' Agents; Capt. JOHN LAUGHLIN. Bnp't Office, 12 South Wharves, Phila delphia. • brill tf § _ VOR NEW YORK, 'VIA DELAWARE AND RARITAN CANAL. SWIFTSURE TRANSPORTATION COMPANY. DISPATCH AND SWIFTSIME LINES, Leaving daily at 12 and 5 P. 51. The steam propellers of this Comps.ny will commence loading on the Bth of March. Through in twenty-four hours. • Goods forwarded to any point free of 00111113118/310118. Freights taken on accommodating terms. Apply to WM. 51. BAIR'D & CO., Agents, mht-tf 132 South Delaware avenue. NORTH PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD —Freight DepartMent.—Notice to Shippers.—By arrangements recently perfected, this Company is en abled to offer unusual despatch in the transportation of freight from Philadelphia to all points, of the Lehigh, Mahanoy, Wyoming lied Susquehanna Valleys, and on the Catawiesa and Erie Railways. Particular attention is acted to the.new line through the - Susquehanna Valley, opening up the , Northeastern portion of the State to. Philadelphia, embracing the towns of Towanda, Athens, Waverly, and the counties of Bradford, Wyoming and Susquehanna. It also of fers a short and speedyjoute to Buffalo and Rochester, Interior anffEnuthern New York, and all points in the Northwest rind Southwest and on the Great Lakes. Merchandise delivered at the Through Freight Depot, corner of Front and Noble streets, before 5 P. M., hi dia• tributed by Fast Freight Trains throughout the bo high , 81 alianoy ," Wyoming and Susquehanna Valley s early next day, and delivered at Rochester and Buffalo within forty-eight hours from date of shipment. [Particulars in regard to Buffalo, Rochester, interior New York and Western Freight may be obtained at the office. No. 811 Chestnut street. L. C. KINSLER, Agent of P. W. & E. Lino.] • D. S. GRAFLY, Through Freight Agent, Front and Noble streets, ELLIS CLARK, • mylo General Agente N. P. R. It. Co. ESTATE OF MARGARET TRACY, deceased. Letters testamentary upon the estate of MARGARET. TRACY, deemed, have boon granted to the undersigned. All persona indebted to the said estate are requested to mako payment. and those having deims to present thetn to JOHN R. KENNELLY, Executor, No, 235 Queen street, or to his Attorney, R. SHARKEY, No; filp Waittut street. Jet th 6t,* TN THE ORPHANS' COURT City and County of Philadelphia.—Estate of MANUEL ANTONIO LORENCO, deceased. The Auditor appointed by the Court to audit, settle and ad just the iffieount of MARY A. LORENCO, Admiaistra.‘ trix of timestate of MANUEL ANTONIO LORENCO, 'deceased, and to report distribution of the balance in the bands of the accountant, will meet the parties in terested. for the purse of his appointment, on WEDNESDAY, June d, 1870; at 3i6 . o'clock P. 51., at the office of .10SEP I ABRAMS; Esq., N. 607 Race street. in the city of Philadelphia. Jell to th HOB SEM ANSH IP. —THE PHILA. DELPIIIA RIDING SCHOOL,No. 3.338 ,Mar• et street, is open daily for 'Ladies and Gentlemen. _lt is the largest, best lighted and' heated establishment in the city. , ..The horses are•thoronghly_ broken for the most timid,. An Afternoon Class for Young Ladies at• tending sdbool, Illonday, Wednesday_and FridayS, and an Evening Class for Gentlemen. Norm' thoroughly trained for the saddle. horses taken to livery. Hand% some carriages to hire. Storage for wrigons and sleighs', SETH ORAIGE, Proprietor r,;UismRMIIN fiIs;GUIDE: LEGAL NOTICES. fl SMITCTIONS-. ME= tab , „JeC) MEEM—CIALDILIMI AND d PRILADELPIf in AND gEXT4I.IB 11AALBOAV130111PAIIIII3 alp 13. 'from Philadelphia to Noiv Xoritand we' ) daces, r Writ' nut s t wharf. ' •••• - • At 6.30 A. DI. Accommodation and 2 P.-Id. Express. via 4.lamdetV and-Amboykand at 8 A.M . , . Express Mal Land, ' 3.30 I'. M., Accoruniodation via. Camden and Jersey! City. At 6 P. M. for Amboy and intermediate stations. At 6.30 A. 2 and3.3o P. M., for Freehold. M.. At 2.00 P. 31. far Lone Branch and Points on New Jersey Southern - Railroad. - At 8 and 10A.M.„12M,2,3.30 and 6.00. P. M.,for Trenton. &t 6.30,8 and 10A,M,, WM42,3,30,5; 0, Sand 11.30 P. M., for , Berdentnwel.Florence,Burlinston4leverly and De lancd'and IVirdrtOn.' _ At 6... V and 10 A.111.,12 3,30;5, 6,8n11'61130 P.M. for_ Edgewater, Riverside, Riverton and Palmyra. At 6.30 and 10 A. 31.. 12 M., 5,6, Band 11.30 P. M. for 11.80 Lite lassies from • foot. of Market'street by npr ferry. From Kensington epot: At 7.30 A. M., 2.33, 350 and 6.00 P. M. for Trenton and • Bristol. And at 10.45 A. M. and G.P. M. tor Bristol. At 7.30 A.M., 2.30, and 6 P. M. for Morrisville and Tully - At7.30 and - 10:45 - A7111.2.30,7trandit - P , Mrfor - Elebenck's, - Eddlnuton, Cornwelle, T orresdalo and Elohnesburg Junction, At 7 A. 31 .J 2.33.6.15 and 7.30 M. for Bristleton,Dolmes burg and liolmesburg Juncti P. on._ At find /13.45 80,, 3:40,, 5.15, 6 'and '7.30, P. M. for Tacony Wissinoming, Bildesburg and Yrankford. From Viest Philadelphia Depot TM Connecting 'Maws): At 7.00 and 9.30 A. M., 12.45. 6.45, and 12 P. M. New York Express Line s and at 11.30 I'. M. Emigrant Line, - via Jersey CitY. ,‘ •• , At 7.00 And 9.30 . A. 31.. 12.45, 6.45, and 12 P. M. for Trenton and Bristol. At 12 P.M.( Night) for biorriivil I e,T al lytown , Schenck's, Eddington, Cornwell _,s Torresdale A Holmosbnr Tuuctioii - TeednY. Missinoming, Bridesharg and Frankford. Sunday Lines leave at 12 11l (Noon.), 6.43 P. M., and ' 12-Night: . . _ For Lines leaving Kensington Depot, take the oars on._ Thltd or Fifth Meets, at Chestnut, at half an hour be fore departure. The Cars of, Market Street Railway run' direct to West PhijailalphiaDOZOt-,Dhestnut and Walnut within ono square. liELYlDang DELAWARE RAILROAD LINES from Kensington Depot. At 7.30 A. for Niagara Falle, Buffalo, Dunkirk, „Elmira, „I.l.thaca, Owego, . Rochester, Ringhampton Oswego, - byracuse, Great Bend, Montrose; Wilkesbarre, Schoeley's 'Mountain. &c. At 730 A . Id. and 3.30- P. AL for Scranton, Strands burg, Water. Gap,, Belvidere, Easton, Lam bertville Flemington- /kg. The 3,30 P. M. Line con nects direct.withFae, , trala -laming Easton for Mauch Chunk - _.• • Ata P. Al . from RensingtonDepot,for Lambertville and intermediate Stations. CAMDEN AND BURLINGTON CO., AND PEMBER TON AND DIGHTTOW.N RAILROADS, from Mar ket street Ferry (Upper-Side.) At and ID A. A1..1,2,153.30,5 &GM P.M.,and on Thurs.• day-and Saturday, nights at 11.30 P. X for Merchants - ville,Mooreattint, Hartford;iMaisonville, - Hainsport and Blount Holly. • for Lumberton A. M,; 2.16 and 6,30 P. M. for Lumberton and Med *At 7 and 10 A 21.; 1, 3-30 & b P.- M., for Smithville, EWADSV ilte.Vlncentown,Birmingham and Pemberton.. At 7 and 10 A. m. and and 3 X., for, Lewistown, Wrightstown, Cookstown Now Egypt and Horners town. At 7A. M.. and 3.30 Y. M. for Cream Ridge, Imlays- Own - . Sharon and Ilightstown. ,• • Fifty pawl& of Baggage only allowed each Passenger. Passengers are prohibited from taking anything as bag . gage but their wearing apparel: All baggage over fifty , pounds to be paid for extra. The Company limit their responsibility for baggage to' One Dollar per pound, and will not be liable for-any amount beyond SUB, ex cept by special contract.. • . Ticgeta sold and Baggage cltcked direct throogh to Boston, Worcester, Springfield, Hartford, New Raven Previdente, - ,Nutyllol.l. ' Albany, Troy,Saratogai Utica, Rome, Syractuse Emhester, Buffalo, Niagara Falls and Suspension Bridge. • - • An additional Ticket Office is located at No: 828 Chest nut street, where tickets to New York, and all bluer tarn- points North and East, may be procured. Persons purchasing Tickets at this Office can have their bag gage checked from-residences or hotel to destination,by Union Triumfer,Bagga,ge Express. Lines from New York for Philadelphia wil/leave from foot of Cortland atreet at 7 A •111.,1 and 4 P. M. via Jersey City and Camden. At 8.30 and 9.30 A. Id., 12.39, to and 7 P.M. and at 12 Night, via Jersey City and West From Pier NO. I,N. River, at 8.30 A. 31. Accommoda tion and 2 P. Id. Express. via Amboy and Camden. June 16th. 1870. , WM. 11. GATZM_ER. Agent, N.OIiTITPE7.3NSYLVANIA RAILROAD. —The .short middle route to the Lehigh and Wy oming Valleys, Northern Pennsylvania, Southern and Interior New York, Rochester. Buffalo, Niagara Falls. 'the Great Lakes and the Dominion' of Canada. SUMMER ARRANGEMENTS. " Sixteen Deily Trains leave Passenger Depot, corner of Becks and American streets (Sundays excepted?, as follows : 7 A. 31., Accommodation for Fort Washington and in termediate points: - - 7.95 A. M., Fast Line for Bethlehem and principal stations on main line or Noth , Pennsylvania-Railro4d, - connecting at Bethlehem with the Lehigh Valley Rail road for Easton.Allentown,Mauch Chnuk,BlahanoY City, Williamsport,Wilkesbarre, Pittston, Towanda and Wa verly, connecting at Waverly with the ERIE RAIL WAY for Niagara 'Falls, Buffalo, Rochester; Cleveland, Corry,Cbicago,-Sail Francisco, and all points in the, Great IA est.. • 8.25 A. M., Accommodation for' Doylestown, stopping at all intermediate stations. Passengers for Willow Grove, Hatborough, &c., by this train, take stage at . Old York Road. 9.45 A.M., Lehigh and Susquehanna Express, for Beth 'them Allentewn Mauch Chunk, Williamsport, White Haven,Wilmesharre.Pittstom Scranton, Carbondalea la Lehigh and Susquehanna Railroad, and Allen tew n,Easton. Hacli ettsumirn,:and paints ou New Jersey Central Railroad and Morns and Essox Railroad to New York. via Lehigh Valley Railroad. 11 A. 31.; Accommodation for Fort Washington, stop ping at intermediate stations. 1.15. 3.30 and Lehigh : Valley-mmodati torto Abington. At 1.45 P.M., Express Bethlehem', Easton: Allentown, Manch Chunk, Hazleton, Mahanoy City, White Haven, Wilkesbarre, Pittston, and the 31thanoy Wyoming coal regions. • - At' 2.30 P. - 31.; Accommodation - for - Doylestown, -Eton ping at all intermediatel stations. At 3.20 P. 31., Bethlehem Accommodation for Bethle hem. Easton:Allentown and Coplay, via Lehigh Valley Railroad, and Easton, Allentown and Manch Chunk, via Lehigh and Susquehanna Railroad. At 4.15 P. M., Accommodation for Doylestown, stop ping at all intermediate stations. At 6 P. M., Accommodation for Bethlehem, connecting with Lehigh Valley Evening Train for Easton, Allen own and Mauch Chunk. At 610 P.: AL, Accommodation for Lansdale, stoppip at all intermediate stations. At 8 and 11.30 P. M., Accommodation for Fort Wash ington and intermediate stations. Trains arrive in Philadelphia from Bethlehem at 855 ; 10.35 A. M. 2.15, 5.05 and 8.25 R. N., making direct con nection with Lehigh Valley or Lehigh and SUFlQuehatina trains from Easton, Scranton, Wilkesbarre ' Williams port, Mahanoy City, Hazleton. Buffalo, and the West. From Doylestown at 8.25 A. 111., 4.40 and 7.05 P. M. From Lansdale at 7.30 A. M. From Fort Washington at 9.20, 11.20 A. M., andl.lo 9.45 P.: 31. From Abington at 2.35,4.55 and 6.45 P. M. ON MUNDANEI. Philadelphia for Bethlehem at 930 A. M. do. do. Doylestown at 2,P. M. do.: do. Fort Washington at 8.30 A. M. and Bethlehem for Philadelphia at 4 P. M. Doylestown for do. at 6.30 A . 31. Fort Washington do. at 9'30 A. M. and 8.10 P. M. The Fifth and• Sixth Streets, and Second and. Third Streets lines of City Passenger Cars ran directly to and from the Depot. The Union line runs within a short distance of the Depot. Tickets for Buffalo, _ Niagara Falls, Southern and Western New York and the West, may be secured at the office, No. 811 Chestnut street. Tickets sold and baggage e checked through to priurj pal points at 31ann North Pennsylvania Baggage Ex press office, No. 105 South Fifth street. . ELLIS CLARK, General Agent. WEST CHESTER AND- PHILADEL V V PHIA RAILROAD COMPANY. On and after. MONDAY, Aprili, 1870, trains will leave the Depot, THIRTY-I'IMT and CHESTNUT, as fol lows : FROM. PHILADELPHIA. 0.45 A. M. for B C. Junction stops at all stations. 7.15 A. M. for West Chester, stops at all stations west of 'Media (except Greenwood), connecting at B. C. Junc tion for Oxford, Kennett, Port Deposit,and all station, on the P. and B. C. R. R. 9.40 A. M. for West Chester stops at allstations. 11.50 A H. for B. 0. Junction stops at all stations. 2.30 P.1)1. for West Chester stops at all stations. 4.16 P, 31, for B. C. Jumtion stops at all stations. 4.45 P. N. for West Chester stops at all stations west o Medta (except Greenwood), connecting at B. 0. June lion for Oxford,Konnott,Rort Deposit,and all station , on the P. &B. C. R. It. 5.30 P. M. for B. C. Junction. This train commence running ors and after ,June let; lop; stopping at al 6.55 P. 111. for, West Chester stops at all stations. 11.30 P. 31. for West Chester stops at all stations. FOR PHILADELPHIA. 5.25 A. M. from B.C. Junction stops at all stations. 6.30 A. St. from West Chester stops at all stations. 7.40 A. 11.'frons West Chester stops at all stations be . tweet W. O. and Media (except Greenwood), connect ing at.R. 0..1 unction for Oxford, Kennett, Port De posit, and all stations on the P. & D. U. It. R. 8.15 A. 11l . from B. C. Julictinn stops Mall stations. 10,00 'A . 31. from West (Misfiles steps at all stations. 1.05 P: M. from B. C. Junction stops at all stations. 1.65 P.M. from West Chester stops at all stations. 4.55 P. N. front,NV'est Chester stops at all stations, cot, netting at 31.11 Junction for Oxford, Kennett, Poi Deposit, and all stations on th. P. & B. O. R. R. • 6.561'. M-. from West Chester stop'i atall stations, coo fleeting at B, C. Junction with P. -& B. C. R. R. 9.00 P. M. from B. C. Junction. This train commence running on and after Juno Ist, /870, stopping at al stations. ON SUNDAYS. 8.05 A.M. for West Chester stops at all stations,connect in at. B. C. Junction with P. & B. C. R. R. 2.30 P. M. for 'West Chester stops at all stations. 7.30 A. M. from West Chester stops at all stations. 4.50 P. M.. from West Cheese stops at ail stations, con netting at B. C. Junction with P.&B.C. R. R. W. C. WHEELR, Sufforintendent. CAMDEN AND ATLANTIC RAILROAD Cif AMIE OF 1300168. OP and after MOND 0 Y ,May 16th, 1870, trains will, leave Vino Street Ferry as follow: FOR ATLANTIC CITY. ' 8.00 A, M. Mail Freight, wills Passenger Car 9.15 A. 31 Atlantic Accommodation 45 P.M. - • RETURNING-LEAVE ATLANTIC, Mall 4.1)0 P. M Freight - 3.30 A, NI, Atlantic Accommodation • 6.06 A. 31 • . • LOCAL TRAINS LEAV For Ilatidonlield.....lo.ls A. M.', 2.00 P.. 51. and 0.00 P. ll' For Atco dud Intermediate Stat utes, 10.15 A'.: It ;and 6.00 P, 31 • . RETLTRNING-Lill A VT4Hnddonlield 7.15 A. SL, (.00 P. M. and 3,15 P. M Atco • 6.22 A. M. and 12.12 Noon • ON SUNDAYS. Leave Vino Street Ferry ' 8.00 A .31. Leave A fluidic City • at 4.00 P. 51, The Union Transfer Company ,N 0. sai Chestnut street. Conthiesititl liolel, will call for and chock baggage to destination. Tickets; also on sale. A ildt itional ticket offices Intro been located at No 82, 1 ,Cliestnnt street (Continental Hotel), tin norket. unreel,D. 11. MUNDY, .kgotit WEIS • TRAVELERS , GUIDE LK% RAILROAD..,-. . GMAT ILTrank Line from rnnauelptila tolthe interior of PannayrtaaittqlhalightlylkilTithasonehanna, Clamber ' Il tr Win'lnOS Valleys , thin North, Northwest • and h Eiyg g viingeMOnt (grasßanV h r Trains, Ma 11), 1 , t e Corritaint - Hetet, irtaanth stand , Cello* il , streeti,Philadeiplilar at , the fallen/Iring 41 11 1ra iiNit Gib idOD 'h ‘ 0 TM A ot.--A11.313 fig ,ion .finadinifsi all • in rinediate Stations, nit Allentown. ReturrilVoirteaßeadiray at g.SS P,' arriving in Pbilader at 9.25 molt 51 8K111E85.-41 8.15 A. M. for Beading Lebanon filairiaburg, Pottrrsille, Pine Grove,Tantagua, litinbtioga Williamsport, Eimira Bochestor, Niagara Fang ptinaloi,V±likesbarre, PiUston, York. (imitate. Obaltlibribprg,N' aerstown. The r. 30 A. M.train connects at Reading with the East - Painaylvantis Railroad trains forAllentownotef.,and the -8.15 M. trainvonnects with the Lebanon Valley train for Harriabnr_g, &c.; at Port Clinton , with Catawiesa 8.. B. trains forWilliamsport, Lock Haven. Elmira, Jrc.• at Harriabtirg with Northern Central; Cumberland Val ley. and Schuylkill and, Stisgnehanna trains for North timberland, Williatruiport. York, Chapati rsburg,Pin e grove dx. AF. ERNOON EXPRESS..-Leaves Philadelphia at 8.80 P. M. f Oolnmfatorlissaeling, Pottsville, Harrisburg, sr.c. con -nectitit-with Readingand-tledurublallailroad_trainafor_ POTTSTOWN, ACCOMMODATION.---Leaves Potts town at 625 A . 51., stopping at the intermediate stat loos; arrives in Philadelphia at 3.40 A. M. Returning leaves Philadelphia at 4 P.M:arriVes in PottstOwn at 6.15 P.M, READING AND POTTSVILLE AIIOOI6.IIIODA TION.--Leave Pottsville at SAO A. and 4.20 P. 81., and Beading at 7.30 A. M. and 6 3 5 P. M stoPg pin_at all way stations; arrive in Philadelphia at 10.24 A. Si. and 9.25 P. M. _ P.eturning, leaves Philadelphia at 5.15 P. M. arrives in Reading at 7.55 P. M., and at Pottsville at 9.40 P. M. MORNING EXPRESIL-Trains`for Philadelphia leave Harrisbnmat 6.10 A M., and Pottsville at 9.00 A. 51., arriving in Philadelphia at 1,00 P. M. Afternoon Exprese trains leave Harrisburg at 220 P.lll ~and Potts villa at 2 . 00 P. M.; arriving at Philadelphia at 7.00 HaiiiiiblififlienWritionleaves - Iteading - at 735- A7 ~ and Harrisburg at 4.10 P. 51. Connecting at Read ing with Afternoon Accommodation south at 6.35 P. M., arriving la Philadelphia at 9.25 P.M: Market train, with a Passenger car attached, loaves Philadelphia M 12.30 noon for Reading - and -all Way Stations; leaves Pottatille at 5.40 A. M., connecting at Beading with accommodation train for Philadalnhia and all Way Stations, • • AU Um above trains ran daily, Sundays excepted. Sunday trains leave Pottsville at 8 A. M., and plata delpbia at 3.15 P. M.; leave Philadelphia for Beading at s.ott A. 51.. returning from Reading at 4.25 P. Si. - CHESTER VALLEY RAILROAD.-Passengers for . Downingtown and intermediate poEnta take the 7.30 & M., 12.. W and 4.00 P. M. trains from Philadelphia,retuni. trig from Downingtown a 16.20 A. M.. 12.45 and 5.15 P.M PERK lOMEN RAILBOAD.-Passengers for Schwenks. villa take 7.30 A.M.,12 30 and 4.00 P.M. trains for Phila delphia, returning from Schwenkaville at 8.05 A. M., 12.45 noon, 4.15 P. 111 Stage lines for various points In Perkiomen Valley Connect with trains at Oollegaville and Schwenkaville. COLEBROOKDALE ItATLBOAD.-Pasoengers for Mt. Pleasant and intermediate points take the 7.30 A. M. and 4.00 P. M. trains from Philadelphia; returning from Mt. Pleasant at 7.00 and 11.25 A. DI, • NEW YORK EXPRESS FOR PITTSBURGH AND .THE WEST.---Leaves New York at 9.00 A. M. and 5.00 P. M., passing Reading at 1.45 and ".10.05 P.M. and connects at Harrisburg with Peitylvanits and Northern Central Railroad E xpresa Trains for Pitts burgh. Chicago, Williamsport, Elmira. Baltimore, .20. Returning, Express Train leaves Harrisburg on arrival ofPannsylvania - Express from Pittsburgh, at 5.35 A. 111. and 6.00 A. M., passing Reading at 7.23 A. M. and 10.40 A. M., arriving at New York at 12.05 noon and 3.15 P. M. Sleeping Cars accompany these trains through between Jersey City and Pittsburgh. without change. Mail train for New York leaves Harrisburg at 8.10 A. M. and 220 P. 51. Mail train for Harrisburg leaves New York at 12 Noon. SCHUYLKILL VALLEY RAILROAD-Trains leave Pottsville at 6.30 and 1.30 A.M. and 620 P.M.. returning from Tamaqua at e.ss A.M.. and 2.15 and 4.50 P. M. SCHUYLKILL AND SUSQUEHANNA RAILROAD -Trains leave Auburn at 8.55 A. M. for Pinegrove and Harrisburg, and at 12.05 noon for P grove, Tremont and Brookaide: returning from Har risburg at 3.40 P AI; from Brookaido at 3.45 P. hi. end from Tremont at 6.25 A.M.and 5.05 P.M. TICKETS.-Through first-class tickets and migrant tickets; to all the principal points in the North and -West and Canada. Excuraion Tickets from Philadelphia to Reading and Intermediate Stations good for day only, are sold by Morning Accommodation, Market Train...Reading_ and Pottstown Accommodation Trains atreduced rates , . Excursion Tickets to Philadolphia, good for day only, are sold at Pottsville and Intermediate Stations by Read ng and pottsville and Pottetovrn Accommodation Trains at rednced rates. The following tickets are obtainable only at the Office of 8. Bradford, Treasurer, No. 227 South Fourth street Philadelphia, or of G. A. Moons, General Snperinten dent, Reading. Commutation Ticketa,at 20 per cent: discount. between any poiata desired. for famillas and firms. Mileage Ticketa.goodfor 2,000 miles,between all points at $47 00 each for families awl firms. Season Tickets, for one, two.three, ex, nine or twelve month+, for holders only, to all volute. at reduced rates. Clergymen residing on the line of the road; Will be fur nished With cards, entitling themselves and Wires to tickets et half fare Excursion Tickets from Philadelphia to principal sta. Hone, good , for Saturday, Sunday and Monday, at re duced fare, to be had only at the Ticket Office, at Thir teenth and Callnwhill streets. FREIGHT..-Goods of all descriptions forwarded to all the above points from the Company's New Freight Depot, Broad and Willow streeta. - - Freight Trains leave Philadelphia daily at 4.35 12.30 noon, 5.00 and 735 P. M., for Reading, pa Leba ints be non, Harrisburg. Pottsville, Port Clinton, and all yond. Mails close at the Philadelphia Postoffice for all places on the road and its branches at 5 A. 51., and for the prin... cipal Stations only at 2.15 P. M. BAGGAGE. Dungan'a Express will collect Baggage tor all trains leaving Philadelphia Depot. Orders can be left at No. 225_ Soup Fotirth street, or at the Depot, Thirteenth and ill streets. PHILADELPHIA, WILMINGTON AND. BALTIMORE RAELROADTIME TABLE. Com.; mencing MONDAY, June 6th, 1870. Trains will leave Depot, corner Broad and Waahington aventte,qui lowa WAY MAIL TWIN at 8.50 A. lifoStindaytiexcePteg), - for Baltimore , stopping at all Re gul ar Stations. Con necting with' Delaware Railroad Line at Clayton with Smyrna Branch Railroad and Maryland and Delaware R.R..at Barrington with Junction and Breakwater R.B. at Seaford with Dorchester and Delaware Railroad, at Delmar with Eastern Shore Railroad and at Salisbury with WICUMICEL and Pocornoke Railroad. EXPRESS TRAIN at 11.45 M. (Sundays excepted', for Baltimore -and Washington, stopping at Wilmington, Perryville and Havre de Grace. Connects at Wilming ton with train for New Castle. EXPRESS TRAIN at 4.00 P. M. (Stinda3rii 'excepted), for Baltiniore and Washington stopping at' Chester, .Thtirlow, Linwood, Claymont, Wilmington, Newport, Stanton, Newark, Elkton, North East, Charlestown, Perry - villa, Havre de Grace, Aberdeen, Perryman's, Ildg_ewood Maolia Chase's and Stammer's Run.. NIGHTEXPRESS at 11.30 P. M. (daily for Baltimore and Washington. stopping at Chester, Lin. wood, Clamant, Wilmington, Newark, Elkton North East, Perryville, Havre de Grace. Perryman 's and Mag nolia. Passengers for Fortress Monroe and Norfolk will take the 11.45 A. WILMINGTON TRAlNS.—Stopping at all Stations between Philadelphia and Wilmington. Leave PHILADELPHIA at 11.00 A. M. 2.30,5.00 and 7.00 P. M. The 4..00 P. M. train connects with Delaware Railroad for Harrinirton and intermediate stations. Leave WILMINGTON 6.46 and 8.10 A. M., 2.00, 4.00 and 7.16 P. M. The 8.10 A. M. train will not stop between Chester and Philadelphia. The 7.15 P. M. train from Wilmington nine dally;allotherAccommodationTraini Sundays excepted. • _ Marie leaving WILMINGTON at 6.45 A. M. and 4.00 P. M. will connect at Lamokin Junction with the 7.00 A.M. and 430 P.' M. trains for Baltimore Central R. R. From BALTIMORE to PiLLAD.ELPILIA.—Leaves Baltimore 7.26. A. M . Wa_y. ail. 9.00 .4. EL., Express. 2.56 P. M. Express. 725 P ~__Express. , SUNDAY TRAIN FROM BALTIMORJS.—Leaves BALTIMORE at 1.25 P. M. Stopping at Magnolia, Per ryman's, Aberdeen, Havre-de-Grace,Perryville,Charles. town, North-East; Elkton Newark, Stanton, Newport, Wilmington Claymont, Linwood and Cheater. - Through tickets to all points West, South. and South. west may be procured at the ticket office, 628 Chestnut street, under Continental Hotel, where also State Rooms end Berths in Sleeping Care can bo secured during the lay. Persons purchasing tickets at thin office can have baggage checked at, their residance by tire Union Trans. ter company. H. F. KENNEY. Butirt. PHILADELPHIA AND BALTIMORE CENTRAL RAILRO AD. CHANGE OF 'HOURS. On and after MONDAY, April 4, 1570, trains will run is follows : • • ' LEAVE PHILADELPHIA, from depot of P. W. B. R. R., corner Broad street and Washington avenue, For PORT DEPOSIT, at 7 A. M. and 4.30 P. H. For OXFORD, at 7 A, M. 4.30 P. M., and 7 P. M. • For (lIIADP'S FORD AND CHESTER CREEK R. R., at 7 A. M., 10 A. M., 2.10 P. M., 4.30 P. M., and 7 rain leaving Philadelphia at 7 A, M. conneete Port Deposit with train for. Baltimore Trains leaving Philadelphia at 10 'A. M. and 4.30 P. H., leaving Oxford at 6.05 A. M., and leaving Port De• posit at 925 A. 51. connect at Chadd's Ford Junction with the Wilmingion and Reading_Railroad. TRAINS FOR PHILADELPHIA leave Port Deposit it 9.25 A. M. and 4.25 P. BE on arrival of trains from Baltimore. OX F ItRD 06. 0 5 A.-M., 10.35 A. M. and 15.30 P. M. (111 ADD'S FORD at 7.26 A. M., 12.00 M., 1.30 P. M., 1.45 P. AI . and 6.49 P. M. On SUNDAYS leave Philadelphia for West Grove and intermediate stations at 8.00 A. M. Returning leave West GrJv at 3.55 P. M. Paesengera are allowed to take wearing apparel oub -,s baggage, and the Company will not be responsible for •in anionnt exceeding one hundred dollars, unless a peel& Contract is made for the same. HENRY WOOD, General Superintendent, JERSEY ILAALROADS COMMENCING WEDNESDAY, June 1,1870. Leave Philadelphia, soot of Market street (Upper Ferry ) at am A. M., Mail, for Cape May,Bridgetort,Salem, XIII. rills. Vint land, Swedesbero and, intermediate stations. 11.45 A. M. -Woodbury Accommodation. 3.15 P. 'M., Mail for Cape Iday, Millyllle, Vineland ual way stations below Glassboro. 3.30 P. M., Passenger, for Bridgeton, Salem, Swedes `mro, and all intermediate stations, 5.45 P. M.. Accommodation. Woodbufy, Glassboro, Uhiyton, Swedeaboro and way stations. Commutation tickets at reduced rates between Phila delphia and all stations. Cape May Season Tickets good for four months from date of purchase, 850.000. Annual tickets, 4100. Freight train leaves Camden ciailp, at 12.00 o'clock, • • 110011. Freight received in. Phlledelphia at second covered wharf below Walnut etreet, Freight delivered nt.N0.228 IL Delaware ovanue.. WILLIAM J:SHlMMLllj.thiverhitenderit. - -- 151ASTFR—EIGRT,fllsTE----, NOICTEL 1: PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD, to Wilkosbarre, Mahanoy City, Mount.Oarmelt Centralia. and all points on Lehigh Talley Railroad and its branches. By new arrangements, perfected this day' this road is enabled to givo increased despatch to mere andlse con signed to the above-flannel points. Goods delivered at the Through Freight Depot, • • ' S. B. col-. Front and voble streets, Before 5 P. bi., will reach Wilkesbrerro, Darmel. Dlahanoy City, and the Other stationss in Idahanoy and WYonaind,vailey abater° A , ucceedirfg dy. BUIS WAHL ASenti fltA "ELERS' GUIDE - N r . ":4 - Nii - 'I . 7I7i2LitAITOWN RAILROAD " T1.11.1D TABLE. ,011.10.41e4.110, , %11N11AY.4111t1 6, 1870. FOR. G4RMANTOWN . • • i'e"94lA-144417•11tHIA•40l; 9 , 05,-11 L 12, 9.00 1013. i -• 2, 13 4, 60, 5%, 8, 534, 7,8 r , ' . ... Leave GEB.M.A":I4TOWWeI - 8.66,.735. 8, AI:00."12. A M:' - '-'l, 2,"3; - '4.00; 43./;" 5:534V 1 0fii - 1 : 9.00, 1011 P, M 119 r 21(.4.20' . Thiiii:and3tccind 5Vr. UP Trains , will not stop on the Germantown. Branch. ON SUNDAYS. • . Leave PHILADELPHIA at 94 . ;•A ". 'M. '2, 4.05 7, and 10%, P. M. , Leave GERMANTOWN at all ; 1 A. M. 1,3, 6, and CIIESTNUTIITLI: RAILROAD. .1 ,7 - Leave - PHILADELPHIA. ,7, 9.00,and 1.1 M. , Leave CLIESTNH'P 111LL1.10.8, 9.40; and 11.40, A.M. 1.40,3,414 5;40,6:40, 8.40; and 16.40. , • ; r •013 SUNDAYS. • __ Leave PAIL,ADELPITIA at 9%, .A.ll- 2, and 7;P: M. Leave CHESTNUT HILL nt7.50, A. M. 12.40, 6330 and •--•- • , - p a s sen g e p,i taking the 4,55,9 A.lll. and 6.30 r.nr:: from •Germartioion,wit/ make close connections with Trairis orffito_Yorkatititersecti FOR CONSHOHOCKEN AND .NORRISTOWN Lenve.PIIILADELPHIA 6.7% 9, and 11.05, A. 5/.1%, 3, , 5%, 10 and 11%, '; '.. DI. Leave NORRISTOWN 5%, 5.257,7%48.50, 'and 11,A. M.' 134,3,434,6%, 8, and 9%, P. DI. • ON SUNDAYS. Leave PHILADELPTIIA at 9, A. 31. 231, 4, and,7%, Leave NORRISTOWN, at 7, A. M. 1, s%,',"and 9, P. 111. _ FOR MAN AYUNK Leave Philadelphia : 0,7%. 9 and 11,05 AA. 51. : 1%, 3` 5,5%, 63-4,8.05, 10 and P. DI. Leave Manayunk ; 6, 6.65,7%, 8.10,9.20 and 1136 A. 111.; 2 0%0,6%, 8% and 10 P. Tit. ON: SUNDAYS. Leave Philadelphia: A. M., 555,4 and 7.54 -P. Leave Manaynnk •. 755 A. M.,154,63. - 1 and 955 P. M.; PLYMOUTH RAILROAD. -- LOVEsPhiladoinblar Leave Plymouth : 094 A. M. • The 73.1 A. M. Tram from Norristown. witt not stop at Mdgee's, Potts? Landing, Domino or Schur's Lane. The SP. M. Train from Philadelphia will stop may at School Lgne, Wissethiekon,Managunk, Green Tree , and Culotta- Frump:Mg taking , the 7.00, 9.05 A, ; lei and 03ii P.lll, Trains from Ninth and Green atrEets-will make close connections with the Trains for New York at Iretnrsec- The 05f AM, and 5 P. M. Trains from New York con nect with the. 1.00 and B.OOP. Trains from Getman town to Ninth and Green streets. •. W. • - • • IL. WILSOI4, • • , General Superintendent. 131111 ENktt3YLVANIA' VENTRAL ROAD.—After ''B P. M., -SUNDAE.'.Time."..l2th, 1.870. The trains of. the Pennsylvania Central Railroad leave the Depot,at Thirty-first and Market streets which is reached directly by the cars of tho Market Street Pas senger Railway, the last ear connectingiwith each train leaving-Front and Market-street thirty, Aninutes .before• its departure. Those of the 'Chestnut and Nalnat Streets Railway run within one square of the Doptit: • Sleeping Car j'ickets'eart be had op , .application at the Ticket. Office, Northwest corner of &nth and ; Chestnut streets. and at the Depot. Agents of the Union Transfer Comp any for and deliver Baggage at the Depot. Orders leftat N 0.901 Chestnut street, No. 116 Market street, will receive at. tention TRAINS LEAVE DEPOT VIZ Mail Tram...-..... at 8.00 A'.lll. Paoli Accom . • 12.60, pad'7,lo P M. Fast Line. ' - at'l23o P.M. Erie Express. • at 11.013 k. M. Harrisburg Accom. .. . ... . ... at 2.30 P.M. Lancaster Accom at. 4.10 P. M. Parksbnrg Train. - at 5.30 P, M, Chfcinnati Express • at 8.00 P. M. Erie Mail and Pittsburgh 10.30 P.M. War, Paseeuger . . ... 1 at 11.50 P Erie Nail, leaves daily, except Sunday, running on. Saturday night to Williamsport only: On Sunday bight passengers will leave Philadelphia at 8 o'clook. Pittsburgh Express leaving on Saturday night runs only to Harrisburg. Cindinnati Express leaves daily. - All - other train. daily,except Sunday. . , The Western a...coma:iodation' Train runs daily, except Sunday. For this train -tickets must be . procured and baggage delivered by 5.00 P. M. at 116 Market street. Sunday Train No. I 7 leaves Philadelphia RAO A.. 31.: arrives at Paoli 9.40 A. It. Sunday, Train No. :2 leavei Philadelphia at 6.40-P___lll.; arrives at-Paoli 7,40 P. - _ Sunday Train No.l leaves Paoli at 6.50 A. M.Varrlies at Philadelphia at 8.10 A. M. Sunday Train No. 2 leases Paoli at 4.60 P. M.; nrriv es at Philadelphia at 6.10 . M.. • TRAINS ARRIVE AT DEPOT.' VIE • Oinclinnatt - Express .. . . ..... . .... . ..... 3.10 A.M. Philadelphia E*press........ .... . ..... N. Erie Mali at 8.30 A: X. Paoli Accithodation at 8.20 A.M. and 6.40 P. M Parksbnrg Train 9,004. M. Buffalo - Express. _ • atO,36"A. , I. Fast Line_ • tit 9.364 g . , Lancaster Train.. ... . .... .... . ... 11.65 A.M. Erie Express. .. . .... . ....,at 15.i1P. M. Lock Haven and ElMiraExpreas. ,at .P..M— Pacifie Expretai at 12 P. M. Harrisburg Accoannodation.4l:., - - - .. ..... ... 9.40 P.M. For further information. apply L . ° • - • JONSI F. VAHLEER, Agent,tyikeetntit street FRANCIS FUNS Ticket Agent , Tickegent, us Market street: if. WA.LLACE, Ticket ; Ageot atthe Depot. The PennaylVania - liallroad Comiffn.Y . Will not _'any risk for Bag,tage;except fdr wearing appatfl, and - their responsibility to One iitindred Itollara in valte. MI Bagaage exceeding that amonnt value:will bo at;the risk oi,tlin owner, unless taken 1 1 7 special con tract. • • A. .1 . AIiSATT, -• °metal Snperintendent.Altoona. Pa. ILILADELPHIA' AND ERIE RAIL BOAD--SUMMER TIME TABLE. • On and after MONDAY,May 30, 1870; Alm Trains on the Philadelphierand,Brieß , ailroad will run as follows' from Pennsylvania Banrotid - Depot, West Philadelphia - WESTWARD.' - ji Mail Train leaves Philadelphia. ' 10.20 P. m. Williamsport..._..... ...... 8.00 A.M. " "- arrives at-Erie.. . 740 P. M.. Erie Exprees leaves Philadelphia 10.60 A. M. Williamsport 8.15 P. M. " " arrives nt Erie 7.25 A. ........ 7.501LM, " Williamsport- .6.00 P. M. " arrives at Lock Haven ' 7.20 P. 61. Bald Eagle Mail leaves Williamsport 1.30 P. M, " arrives attFek Raven 2.45 P. M. EASTWARD. • • Mail Train leaves Erie • ....... 8.59 A. M. " " " Willitunsport 1,1, arrives at Philadaphia. ' ' 6.20 A. 91. Erie Express leaves Erie..z. • .... . 9 , 0 0 k% M. " . Williamsport- „. 8.14 A. M. " " `arrives at Philadelphia M. Elmira Mail leave& Williamsport " arrives at Philadelphia. 9.50 P.M. Buffalo Express leaves Williamsport. 12.2 s A AIL • 1 11 " Harrisburg' • ' 5.20 A. M. " 1, arrives at Philadelphia • 9.25 A. M. Bald Eagle Mail leaves . Lock _Pavan ' 11,35 A arrives at Williamsport.- 12,60 'P. 111. hold Eagl3Express leaves' Lock Haven :9.35 P. 31. arrives at Williarrieport,lo.so.P.3l. Express,Mail and Accommodation, east and .west, connects at Corry and alt vest hound trains, and Mail and Accommodation cast at Try ineton with DD . creek and Allegheny River Railroad. . WM. A-BALDWIN. General Superintendent. , MBER. MAULS, BROTHER & CO., 2500 South, Street. Qty A PATTERN 'BrAitrits. 1870 Jul v. PATTERN PULHEILEIr OHOIOII SELNOTION or 11,101.1 GAN COBS PINE FOB PATTERNS. - 167 0 ItL IT G L is m It.A A . FLOORING. 1870 CAROLINA . , VIRGINIA FLOORING. DELAWARE FLOORING' ASH FLOORING„ WALNUT FLOORING: 1.87 PolturS . lB7o. RALL , PLANK. • RAIL PLANK. 18 70 VV ALI: OT BOARDS ANDi R 76 • - 'WALNUT 13 . 0AVA R AND WALNUT BOARDS. WALNUT PLANK_ ABBORTED FOR OABINET MAKERS, BUILDERS, &O. 1870 uNDarßiggc:Eßir 1870 UNDERTAKERS' LUMBER. RED•OEDAR. WALNUT AND PINE. . IQQ 870 B. " ASONED • POPLAR. 1.870. SEASONED OIIEBY. ASTI. WHITE OAK PLANK AND BOARDS. lITOKORY. 187 O. u"aB L AVA H. , i a 's v i r L i r 4 ,f3 NG lB7o * NORWAY SCANTLING. I.B7O."WirEAANNDg L00K.1870 LARGE oTOA I6 . °°K. - 1870. °V, 3 ,1 - 11 8 4,Wa1,'P,.' 1870. OYPIOGOS SAINGLEs. LAEup ASSORTMENT. FOR SALE LOW. 14.870 PLASTERING LATH. 14370. PLASTERING LATH., LATH. SIAVIX BROTH ER a VO. WOO B VTR STRELT. 4ELLOW PINEIiGrAZBER.--ORD/016 1 for cargoes of every deiscription 13amd Lumber exe cuted et short uotlctuality subject to tneDeotton Apply to EDW. H. ROWLEY .16 South Miami". CiJTLERY . D UID (I.E S' AND W 06%10 tiOlAti' PtinEET 'KNIVES, PEARL and STAG': HAN DLES of beautiful finishr , RODGERS' and WADE Sc BUTCRER'Soind the CELEBRATED Lzeouvroar RAZOR SCISSORS IN OASES of the Sneat Razors, Knires, Scissor; and Table Cutlery ground and , nollitheth__EA 1,17 STRU ENTS.uf tbu mod, improvodi .construction to Reeler Pi7ISINDEd Cutler end Surdeallnstrumont Maker, DS Tooth tame' bet w Chestnut. GAS FIXTURES. G • • FIXTUUES.-111116KEY, 11IERRILL k 11TACHARA,No. 718 Cinema 11 tract, manu facturers of Gae Fixtures, Lampe, 6c0., arc.l would can l, the ga•ntion of the public to their large and elegant CUP e ortinunt of Gas Chandeliers, Peudantat Brackets,' ho. . Thr.y . nik , n Introduce On pipes into dwelling!! and public hulk woe. and'attend to extending. altering and repair /41 sus pipte. Ail work warranted. • - •
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