(Prom the Penn Monthly for Auszt.t:3 )11.31 l I LL L. 111( SAMUEL W. larrvrELD. Slower of renown, behind whose ,bannered splendor strode the great host exultant to the ftay 'Thine are the legends—brave, perchance, or tender— Filled with the romance of 4an elder day. lilies of France: ..whose stainless bosoms - shiver Over the field where armed men go down; ;Strewn are ye all, as by some lavish giver, --Broadcast on robes to him who wears the Scentless, and Stately as the • warrior maiden Boni in old time—too grand to bell queen— Thoughts come with thee of her Whose soul was laden, Etrildng and striving where' her king was seen.: - Dwell thon.with her, serene, to:futUre ages, 'liken• at last froth banners of thy land, "W 14re no, renown is as those purer pages Written by nien who wrought- with cleaner baud. aul — of — Orleans'. — and — irly; -- even — fairer — , .Lasting through years which briug the truth to light, Te shall'abide more lovely than the wearer; Under' Nqiime robes the heart is black as night. ' WELL LA.DiE t IS I.NVADE THE CLUBS. 'We have little - doubt, says an aristocratic-Lon donjournal, that our clubs are destined to re form, like other institutions tar more venerable, .vet to all seeming they - are the most conserva tive of corporations. They are beyond the reach of -pressure from without, and Within their universal -motto is " inti - vere." Old _ones go on and new ones are established on tb e 'saw e - constitutional pi neiplesi'the Utmost 'latitude Of liberalism only tolerates an easier admission of the male friends of members. But what we hope to see, and what, as tar as lay in our power. we should desire to precipitate, ;would be the unsexing up to a certain point of these ; no . nastic .. inaitutions. We are _not reckless revolutionizers. We have little sym pathy with the petticoated preachers of woman's rights, although we think they could -make a better case for admission to the clubs than the cabint. - - Thigallant-aSmay be the admisSion,. We should slink timidly away from our present , snug haunts, were the bow windoWs flaunting with the fair forms which would be certain to affect these conspicious nooks of the buildings, and charitably make themselves and their dresses the joys of the passer by. We should object': to the • hall porter being Inuit up . among parcers and bandboxes; to having to wait for our cards and letters while he re ceived more last words from ladies agitated over the non-arrival of the fruits of a. day's shopping._ We should object to know that the luxurious easy-chair we reposed in was at the mercy of any member who shoidd cast ex pressive glances at it and us; and we should hate to find the snug corners of the quiet li brary appropriated by cheerful groups sipping their ,five o'clock tea. it would become out rageously impossible to maintain the law of silence in the writing room, while the:con-. sumption _of letterpaper_would involve a.inate7 _ - vial advan - ceitithe rate of -- sTibscription. Yot- - withstanding kthe precedents' lately established by the acts of the Government, we should have scruples as 'to the- -tampering - with vested in tereets, and should feel a delicacy in Pertie . - - Arating What would be Morally a' - Murder.' imagine the. feelings of a gynophobist of • means, grown gray in club life, although still personable -and vigorous, who should see the doors of his sanctuary throWn open to the la dies by legal majority, in general meeting ! He has - hated - womankind - with - an - ever-deepening intensity since the days when he shunned them as a youngpan from constitutional incompati bility of tastes.He bas been accustomed to snarl at them since from the corridors of his den, like a venerable hyaena; to regard them as evil spirits and social' curses - bappilyisxcluded - from his Eden - by - its swing doors - and --- liveried - Cer- - berus. - 11` - they came in he must go - out ; and; exiled at his time of life, and with his inveteracy of habits, from all that had become dear to him, he could look forward to nothing but speedy dissolution. Or picture the sentiments of a husband when the wife of his bosom in ' aimed, as she naturally would, on being put up for ballot, and acquiring the right of following him everywhere with a perpetual surveillance. He might black-ball her personally, and he pro bably would ; but it would be awkward caball ing with his acquaintances for her exclusion; and if, she were accomplished and attractive, her canvass would most likely be successful in spite.of him. As for young ladies on their pro- motion, we presume any one, except the ad- Irvanced advocates of the rights of woman, would aee diflienijies in the way of their ad zdibsioti. That which makes a man eligible for a club is by no means that which makes him eligible for a beauty ; in fact the brightest ornaments of St. James's street and Pall-mall are frequently men of worse than modest • - Mans, who labor at nothing 'but sow ing wild oats. if matrons advanced in years went to clubs at all, they would naturally wish to take their ease there. .They would ob ject to finding the evils of chaperonage inten sified, to having to whip in a babbling pack of daughters who went skirting by the corridors and side rooms. To be sure, in the best clubs, ladies proposed in the books at the age of twenty-one would probably be proposed for, in the more feminine acceptation of the word, in the five or ten years that must elapse before they came up for ballot. All of them would have made approaches toward a certain age, and the more seductive probably enter as re latively demure matrons. Still the more ma ture sirens would he none the less dangerous, and all the more determined. . Thetf . opporto.r nities would he endless, and youth, in the hey day of passion or the inaninity of idleness, would he always stumbling into their pitfalls. They would be lounging into the deserted bil liard rooms after breakfast, laying themselves out for tote-a4ete lessons undisturbed by any one but casual waiters. They would he drop ping into the dininn - roomsroos after lunch for their eups of tea as solitary youths for their glasses of sherry.. In the bright hours of the after noon, when the gay world is abroad, they would be found iu the smoking-room misogynically toying with cigarettes and dallying with La .ifotle and L 'Pallet, ready to cast those journals aside and glide into whispered eouver, sations when opportunity offered. We do. not follow them into the drawing-room after din ner, although doubtless drawing-rooms would become the grand feature in the new establish ments, and tortured grand pianos and duets sung out of time would be apt to make even ing hideous. lu these more formal gatherings of the sexes so many amateur spies would be watching the huntress of men that it would be in vain to spread her toils, and birds too wary to be caught with chaff themselves would even use the chaff to scare away the young ones: Still, __until_woutans- rights shall have become prescriptive; until she shall have spii.itualized , • elLintoibe,..retinedsoperiority-she-ClaimiiL unguarded intercourse might prove fatal alike to masculine tranquillity of habits and feminine peace of mind. Thoughtless flirtation might --lead-on-to reckless marriage.- Those who be gan by paying club subscriptions would end by receiving parish aid, and belles and exquisites would pasavtlirough the spacious swing doors into the unions. 7 —The l'etereburg Index has an article on the decline of duelling ,in Virginia, which con cludes as follows: "_Upon-=the-whole e in its old age it bad. beconie a IlUitlaMOC and - a bore. Let us take off our hats to the old thing for the last time. and bury him decently out of our sight." • . lIIME!C==== [From the Nation] [SONE OF THE emueiss OF THE WAR. In his_ " idee Ni . poleonienne" Lottis.Napo leon qu otes ;from his favorite history,' ; of the irst,,hanpire, Bignon's,the following: •: Ohe' day . people will ask; W hy did Napoleon . , In the , last six years of his reign, show Idinselt so Ott ' less towards Prussia? The reason is: •-Prussia was the "pow harmed :him: inost; - for she ,compelled'hinilo light and - destroy her;: while 'his 'desire was to extend, to strengthen, and.to . .aggrandize_ber." We do not know whether the author.Of The "'dee Napoleonienne," who has now with so much vehemence drawn the sword against Prussia—old,-infirm; and gene rally passionless as he is—has either the desire or the ability to treat her pitileSsly and to de stroy her; 1)ot- 7 -granting I3ignou's view to be correct—we cannot fail to notice the analogy between the Prussian wars of the two imperial reigns arising from the fact that Napoleon too, sees himself compelled to fight Prussia after some endeavors " to extend, to strengthen, and to aggrandize her." • IThe object of Napoleon I. in giving Hanover to:Prussia, after Austerlitz; was, as 13i4uon cx pressed it, "to ensure, by her aid, the iinno bilit of Russia• and Austria to !rive to the Continental system an irresisti e . eve opulent, and thus to • force Faigland to make peace.", Besides, Napoleon received some territorial compensation fof what he took from the of England and gave to Prussia. The'object of N apoleon ILL in conspirina b with Bismarck for the aggrandizement of Prussia—by the absorrtion, - arhoug - other . . territories,- of the same Hanover, as chiefly required for her con solidation—was to bring about a final disrup tion of Germany, which would render her powerless to resist the natural expansion of France—as the French call Cisrheuan con queStswhether at the expense of -Belgium or of. Prussia herself, should a protracted war have crippled: her resources equally with. those Of Austria. And, low though our opinion be of the unselfishness of the living Napoleon, we • cannot refrain from acknowledging that his in tentions concerning Prussia were more sincere than those of the great conqueror. For the latter aimed at universal empire over Europe, and could therefore tolerate no respectablepower • besides his own, while the formerjwould- be fully 'satisfied to be acknowledged mightiest among.the mighty. Prussicompelled Napoleon I. to fighther by reftising 'to be. his abject slave. `She has compelled Napoleon 111. to fight her by her vic tory at Sadowa. This victory by its sudden ness has ilustrated the schemes of French ex pansion; and made Prussia almost the equal of France in power. It has eclipsed Sevastopol, Magenta, and Solferino—which were the dearly bought compensations in gloire for endless sac rifices of liberty—and partly effiaced even the remembrances of Jena and Wagram. it has aroused the. vanity-of the French to a degree which makes theth both restless and restive. The - trophies of Miltiades will not alloW-Thena- - mistocles to sleep; from the day of SadoWa France has enjoyed no rest. She has actually begun to doubt -whether she is after all la, grande nation. A great revolution an.d great' victories long ago procured her that glorious title ; she sees it now rapidly becoming vain glorious merely. She must have new victories or else a - new revolution'. Napoleon has not. heen-slow-in--tomprehending the chafiged-sitiia=: 'lion, the changed temper of France. And where revolution or war. is the alternative, be Cannot hesitate in his choice. While playing- : or struggling with an incipient revolution, he -has • prepared for war—and. -Europe will be - drenched in blood. It is idle to speculate how far, in throwing down the gaimtlet to the rival of France, he is actuated -by motives of per sonal interest, looking to the_pre.servation of his dynasty, and how far by feelings inspired by the - interests_of the nation whose ruler he is. Whether equally imperative or not, regard for the safety of his throue„ and regard for, " the honor of France" command him to fight; Among the personal considerations looking to the preservation of both throne and fame, -we-may--mention--the- advantage --so-obvious , under_ the_actual-eircumstanees-oe-the-Seeontl- Empire, of _. bleaking by .a powerful___series .of - warlike deeds the chain of historical remem brances now uppermost in the mind of the French people. The seventeen or eighteen years of the personal rule of Napoleon, be ginning with the coup d'itat of December 2, 1851, form a connected period of usurpation and by poet isy, preceded by three years of wire- , wire pulling and presidential betrayal of trust. This period that which the generation that knew the reign of Louis Philippe and the Revolution of IS4S is constantly contemplating and medi tating about as the worst part of their country's history in this century ; as a long-stretched in" glorious present to which the late imperial concessions, crowned by a Plebi.scitunt of • a strangely dubious character, seem to form a continuation rather than a concluding and re conciling epilogue. Nothing would be more apt to impress upon the recent constitutional change in France the character of such an epi logue than the suddenly following opening of a new series of events, sufficiently dramatic and heroically tragic to strike the imagination of the people with the idea of entirely novel, grand performances, with the impression of a new era opening in the history of their country. Should speedy victory perch upon the imperial eagles, the new era would be hailed, as such, with all the raptatte .of national vanity ; should a long - War With varying success ensue, the multiplicity and intensity of the new impres. sions would the more easily cast the late past into comparative oblivion. In either case, Napoleon would appear in the new light of a champion of France in a grand contest with an envied rival. Nor have the provocations to hostilityy, on the part of Prussia, been slight in the eyes of Napoleon. Not only has she dared to conquer beyond all measure compatible _-with " the honor of France;" not only has she used and abused her victory exclusively for her own benefit, and without any regard to the claims and remonstrances of the monarch who at first aided her by his council and connivance; but she has also crossed and battled some of his most favorite schemes in au almost atrocious way, It was be who proclaimed himself the protector and regenerator of the decayed Latin race, from the Pontes to the Pacific. It was he who brought about the union of .Moldavia and Wallachia in the shape of an all but lode pendent Roumania. It 'was he who worked ith Cavour and fought with Garibaldi foe the freedom of Italy, " from the Alps to the Adriatic." It was he who encour aged O'Donnell to revive the ancient glory of Spain on the soil of the Moors, and to restore her sway in the Antilles. It was he who erec ted and defended, as a shield of the Latin race against the Anglo-Saxon, the imperial throne of Maximilian in Mexico. Surely it was a great dream, this universal Latin protectorate of France. And how has it vanished? Ex cepting Mexico, where it ended in a tragedy, Prussia has turned it Into a mockery every where. She has placed a prince of her royal house, Charles of Hohenzollern, on the throne efßouniania... She has conquered—at SadOwa __.4.;theLltaban:quadrilaterat:oG resses, whiclt bets arming in 1e39 prevented Napoleon from assaulting, and has surrendered it and Venice to Italy—through his own bands. And now. -slie-has-arrahged- to set- another -- Hohenzollern prince on the. throne even of Spain. Are not ' an these provocations put together too destruc tive of the prestige, too insulting to the pride of Napoleon Co be submitted to calmly, to tie borne without an • attempt at revenge? We presume they have weighed heavily in the scales in which the Emperor of the French lately weighed Peace and war. ---(3hoplii throw ' ato - nes at a farmor- newt Cunnoinsville, 0. He doesn't like it, but th rieom to. PHILADELPHIA EVENING P•IJLLETTN,FRIDAY, AUGUST 5, 1870. cluirauts EPITAPHS ON Cf OVIr ASO we r cill-11AKERS. "Men do not laugh over new-made gray*" Yet one cannot repress a smileover scone Of the CLEtta' s OFFICE, ) epitaphs which are to he found in the old church- In accord Plll ance - withLADELPHIA, July 8, 1870: a resolution adopted by yards. of England. • • the Common Councilorthe City of Philadel- Joking epitaphs, like the joking SerMons,once oda - on Thursday, the 7th day of July, 1870, Of.tolerably frequent occurrence, are nOWso ea- • the annexed bill, entitled' " An Ordinance to thiely out of voo . ue that we insert these curious Create a Loan for a House of Correction," is specimens for the amlisement oFotirreaders. hereby published for inulic information. • ' ECKSTEIN The following appears in the uktehtfrebyttrd at . . • Clerk of Common Council. Axliridge Somerset N 'ORDINANCE TO - CREATE A LOAN_ _ "Bilbie thy 11 FOE A 110 IIITSE OF CORRECTION. oveme.t.ts keep in play SECTION 1. The select and Common Coun- For thirty 'years'or More," ' cils of the 'City" of Philadelphia do ordaiM We my, • , That the Mayorof philadelphia he and he Is hereby .authorized to hbrrow, at not lass than par,on the credit of the city,from timeto time, for a 11 onse of Correction, flire hundred thou sand dollars, for which interest, not to exceed the rate of six.per cent.. per antrum, shall be paid half yearly on the first days_of_Jminar.y_ and J uly,ai the office of the City TreaSurer. The principal of said loan shall be payable and paid at the expiration of thirty years from the (late of the same, and not before, without thadini sent of the holders thereof; ' and the certifi cates therefor, In the usual form of the certiti- • cates of city loan, shall be issued in such amounts as the lenders may rap:fire but not for any fractional part of ono hundred dollars, or, if it be required, in amounts of five hun dred or one: thousand_dellam÷_and _it-shaf be - expressed in said certificates that the loan therein mentioned and the interest thereof are dyable free from all taxes. bEtc. t. W believer any loan shall be made by virtue thereof, there shall be, by force of this- ordinance,- annually- appropriated- out of the income of the corporate estates and from the sum raised by taxation a sum sufficient to pay the interest on said certificates ; and the further sum of three-tenths of one per centum on the par value of such certificates so issued, shall he appropriated quarterly _ out of said-in come and taxes to a sinking - fund; which fund and its accumulations are hereby especially pledged : fur the redemption and.payment of. said certificates. ( _ • Thy Balance or thy M ain spri tip' broken, •• —•- ,And all thy 'movements • 'C'easein work." John Bilbie, clockmaker, who died :Sept. 13th, 1167. At Hodham, Dumli•eeshire, is auother.one, clod:maker : -Here lyes a man, who all his mortal life Past mending clucks, tait could:11ot mend his The lariim of his bill w ne'er sae shrill As was her tongue, aye( lacking like a mill, But now he's lane—o whether name can tell— I hope beyond the sound, 'NEally's bell." At Lydford,in Devonshire,is the following on a 'watchmaker: ~ , H ere lies in a horizontal position, the outside case of George Ron thigh, watchmaker; Whose abilities in that line were an honor to his profession.. Integrity-was the nnnspring, apd , prndence the regulaair of all the aetioas of his life: Humane, generous and liberal, his and ,naver hopped 'till hti . had relieVed . disititita: • So nicely regulated were his , niotenients, except when set ageing by people WEL) did not know his key; Even then he was easily set right again. Be had the art of disposing of-his time so well, .Thathi.slours.glided.away in one..dontinuall..H round of pleasure and delight, - Till an unlucky moment put a period to his Bo departed this life November 14th, 1802,i • • Agca 54' years, wound up In the hope of beimg. taken in hand by his ..11alecr ; And of being thorougbly cleaned, repaired and tet a tiei:tylor the world to come." Beneath an old oak tree, in an obscure corner of litte::eier Uharchyard, is the fol lowin,"b curious epitaph, written on a slab Irch covers the rema'ns of a once cele brated watchmakL (who was fond of good ale): "Here lies one who strove to equal time! A task too haia, each power too sublime: limo stoppi d la , s ruotton,o'erthrew his balance wl,t.cl; Wore off his pivots, though made of hardened steel; Broke all his springs, the verge of life 'de cay ed, And now he is as though he'd ne'er been made. Notfor wart of oiling—that he tried, tliat hcd done—why then he .ne'er had dicd." At Shrewsbury Churchyard is the following epitaph on a waLi Utuaker: Z by movements, Isaac, keep in, play, iliy n, noels of life felt no decay For tifty•years at least; Till by some sudden secret stroke,. - The balance of the mainspring broke, And all thy movements ceased." . The following story is told of a. poor watch maker's trick to obtain employment : Tie set tled at a populous country town : where he wls unknown, and bad no trade. Ile Contrived when the church-door was'opened daily,to send up his son to the church-tower unseen, to alter - This the lad was-enabled to do, and -a&every-one-swate-by-the--eburch-c-loek,-alt--th: watches in are neighborhood were repeatedly found to be wrong, consequently the owners of them sent them to the new-corner to be repaired and set right. , By the way, we may add a few particulars re ' lating to watch papers, as they were called, but were as often of silk, velvet and muslin, printed or worked with the needle, as of the material whence they derive their name. These papers were used in the outer cases of the large, old fasLoned watches, before the introduction of the present compact form of such instruments, and were decorated with verses and devices as tokens of love or friendship. The papers were frequently very neatly cut, with elaborate designs, sometimes spreading over the whole field, while at others a circle or oval was left iu the centre, on which was painted a /Maio tui e. One old paper bad these lines engraved upon "Content thy selfe withe thine estate, .And henthe no poore might from thy gate; For why, Ili:, council 1 thee give, To learn to dye and dye to lyve." In another, the following lines were so regu lated as to be printed in a circle, without a break : "Time is—the present moments well employ; Time war —is past—thou ean'st not it enjoy ; Time tuture is not, and may never be, Time present—is the only time for thee." In old silver watches were these printed Ines: A watchmaker, named Adams, who prac tikid his craft early in •the present century at Church street, 'Hackney, was fond of putting soaps of poetry in the outer cases of watches sent to hint for repair. One of•his effusions was as follows : "To-morrow, yes, to-morrow ! you'll repent A train of years iu vice and folly spent. To-morrow.comes—no perpetual sorrow Appears therein, ter still it is to-morrow. At length to-morrow such a habit gains, hat you'll forget the time that Heaven or dains, you'll believe that day too soon will be - When more to-morrows 'you're denied to see." Watchstands came into use about the mid dle of the seventeenth century, but their his tory is very uncertain. Some of the earliest watchstands represented Time, from whose finger the watch suspended. Others were in the shape of horses, camels and elephants,with panniers, vases and temples on their backs; and others of a more common description were in the shape of chitreluls . ..and :castles,: with the wet eh-fake:alineuuiigiin- the turret and over - the gatewaY. _Miring the last century ladies ex ercised their ingenuity in making - watch st ands of rockwork formed of bits of Spa Galena-and-col ore& gl ass,- garnished - with green moss, or shells and sea-weed; or of card board besprinkled with glitterinr , 's frostings, and decorated with cut, folded and twisted palm, and gold and silver foil and spangles.—The jeweller. --Those people who sit in lofty hotel win dows and -tall-asleep are dying oil with great rapidity out West. -- —A New 1 1 :nglantliboy lefithis neseby veer leg into a trout pond. Fish are ravenous this season. 232221125=2 existence "Onward— Perpetually moving There faithful hands are proving How swift the hours steal by : The monitory pulse-like beating Is oftentimes methinks repeating, • - swift the hours do fly !' Ready, be ready, perhaps before These hands have made One revolution more, Life's spring is snapt, Yuu die." err*, ORDINANCES, RESOLUTION TO PUBLISH A LOAN BILL. Resolved, That the Clerk of Common Coun cil be authorized to publish in two daily news papers of this city daily for four weeks, the ordinance presented to the Common -- Council on Thursday, July 7, 1870, entitled " An ordi nance to create a loan for a House of Correc tion ;" and the said Clerk, at the stated meet ing of Councils after the expiration of four ;weeks from the'first day 'of, said': patiligation,. shall present to this Council one of each of said newspapers for every day in which the same shall have been made. jyo 24t§ NEW PUBLI CATiONiS QONDAY SCH OL SUP ERINTEN. NJ dents get Prof. Liam's admirable address. "How to Si lect a Library,' at the Sabbath School Emporium, 608 Arch street, - Philadelphia. IMPORTANT TO BV S LNESS MEN. THE " CAPE MAY DAILY WAVE," For the Stunmer of 1870 The_pnblication of the Sixth Volume of the "DAILY W A YE" will be commenced on or about July let, and will beton - tinned until September lat. It willpres , nt each day accnrate and fall reports of the Hotel Arrivals and Local Events of this fashlonablv reffort, and.wlll be a paper not surpaened bY any.ln the State. Business men will find the "DAILY. WAVE" a most advantaumus medium for advertising; the rates for which are as follows ~..One inch space, $lO for the season. Each subsequent inch, ss'for the season. On the first page, $2 per inch In addition to the above rates. - _Addressi - - - - O. B. MAGRATH, Editor. 31. A GRATH it GABEETSOISI, Publishers. • ia2041 auME . . THE NEW YORK STANDARD, PUBLISHED By JOHN RUSSELL YOUNG, aLPARK_R_OW,.NEW. YORK, Containing full and accurate Telegraphic News and Correspondence from all parts of the world. TWO CENTS per single copy, or Sic Dollars per annum. For sale at TREN WITH'S BAZAAR 614 , Chestnut street. CENTRAL NEWS AGENCY, 505 Chest nut street. ASSOCIATED NEWS COMPANY, 16 South Seventh street. CALLENP Elt, Third and Walnut streets W INCH, 805 Chestnut street. BOWEN, corner Third and Dock streets. And other Philadelphia News Dealers. Advertisements received at the office of the MORNING POST. mvai tut EDUCATIOI4. ROBERT H. LABBERTON'S YOUNG LADIES' ACADEMY, 3.18 end 340 South FIFTEENTH direct. Next term commences September 19th. jet 3 H. Y. LAUDERBACH'S CLASSICAL, SCIENTIFIC AND COMMERCIAL ACADEMY. I • ASSEMBLY BUILDINGS, No. NS. TENTH Street. A Primary, Elementary and Finishing Circulars at Mr. Warburton% No. all Llbostnut street. my 9 (113 EG ARAY INSTITUTE, ENGLISH and F BENCH , for young Ladles and Id WWII, board ing and day pupils, NOB. 1527 and 1529 Spruce street, Philadelphia. Pa., will REOPEN ON TUESDAY. Soptemher 20. French is the language of tho family, and inconstantly spoken iu the Institute. jelg-th a tu-tim§ MADAME D'EFEBVIW.Y. Principal COLLEGIATE INSTITUTE FOR young Indica, Poughkeepsie, New York.—Estralo belied n 1819. Facellent opportunities for a complete English education. Aocient and modern languages. art. music, elocution ard gymnastics thoroughly taught. AIso,VASSAR COLLEGE PREPARATORY SCHOOL, Sy:ecat course . of study furnished. by President mond. Scholastic year begins Sept. 12, 1870. For Cata logue tuldress the Principals, GEO. W. COOK, A. 14., and MARY B. JOHN tioN. . jy2o-Im§ ipoiv.plviEw MILITARY ACADEMY, JAt_ mr ,_,EOl,lGERE . pySp+l,. N. Y. oTIB BISBEiC, • A' A wide-awake, thorough-going School for boys wish• ing to be trained for Business, for College, or for Wost Point, or the Naval Academy. j) lti3tit§ 11Q1811OPTI-1 ORPE. • A ( burch School, for Young Ladles. The third year commences September 14,1870. For Circular and further information address the Principal, MISS F. I. WALSH, jyl4 Mt§ ' Bisbopthorpo, Bethlehem, Pa. BUSINESS - CARDS. J OSEPH WALTON & C 0.,. (JABINET MAKERS, NO. 413 WALNUT STREET. Manufacturers of fine furniture and of medium pilule furniture of superior quality.. GOODS ON HAND AND MADE TO ORDER. Counters, Desk-work, &c., 'for Banks, Offices ant Stores, made to order. JOBE rll VV A LTOM, IJOS. VV. LIPPINCOTT. JOSEPH L. SCOTT. JAMES L WILSON, HOUSE PAINTER, 518 SOUTH NINTH STREET, Residence-522 South Ninth street. ap3o ly HENRY PE ILLIPPI, jor CARPENTER, AND BUILDER;- NO. ur24 SANS(M STRFAT ) jelo-Iyrp E. B. WIGHT, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Ajoultolosioner of Deeds for the !Rate of Pennsylvania Mimic 96 Madison street, No. 11, Oldongo, Illinois. C 0 Tir ON SAIL . DUCK OF EVICR! width,—from 22 inchee-to 72 Inohodoldo, all number? Tout end Awning Duck, Parer-maker's Felting, San TWirte, &O. JOHN W. EVEHHA, . No. 103 Choral"' etreot Oltv Storni QIE:UPPING ROSIN.-1,0(10 BARRELS NO. 2 and Stroiniql Itnniu, suitablo for teornign MD 121111ti tor sale by IflW .11. -- ROWLEY,Ia South "trout Otto R --- AGS.-2 BALER RAGS NOW LAND from otenmer Planner, from Wilmington, N. e„ Anil for Palo by COURRAN, RUSSELL & UO., 111 Obeatnut. ear:et, . 11, 4 tDroW ARE. 474, • • BUILDING AND uousEIFEEriNg BARDWAIM:' , • Hechhdeb, • ~; Carpenters and, other Me. , . ~': ~ 1 ,: o ankxo T001e.. , • ..• i „to, 13crelieL ks, Entree and Tdrks. limns Copt e milli, 404 ntoc e and Dies. Plan and Taper UPI. Droversal and Scroll (Mucks, Planes In great variety. Alt to - be bad atop Lowest Possible Prices At .the .CHEAP•FORADABIN Hard• ,4 ware Store of , J. 13.. SHANNON.__ No. 1009 Market 'Street. 911-0 _ ,J Oi intefir and nierbearitittil denigna,And all biter Slate %void( on band or made to nrdcr. • AlFo, I'EACII BOTTOM ItOOVING SbATES. Foetory and Saleorooto, SIXTFENTII and °ALLOW. HILL Stroots. . WILSON ds OVATE:RS AND STOv eN. PAN COAST & IVIAULE THIRD AND PEAR STREETS, Plain and Galvanized WROUGHT AND CAST IRON PIPE For Gas, Steam and Water. FITTINGS, BRASS WORK, TOOLS, BOILER TUBES. Pipe of all Sizeitiit and Fitted to Order. . . Ha+lng sold HENRY B. PANOOAST and FRANC/18 I. MA ULE tgetitlenimi in our emploi. for several years past) the Stock,Ouod Will and Fixtures of our RETAIL ESTABLISHMENT, located at the corner of TIMID and PEAR streets, In this city, that brauch.of our busi ness, together with that of FIXATING and VENTILA• TING PUBLIC and PRIVATE BUILDINGS, both by STEAM and - HOT WATER,_ in all its varlonx dy tem , will be carried ou under the firm name of PANCOAST & MAULE, at the old eland, cud we re+ commend them to thortrado and buvluess public as being entirely competent to perform all work of that character. 'MORRIS, TASKER & CO. PHILADELPHIA, Jai:1.22,1E70. mhl2•lf RAND, PERKINS 124 North Sixth St., LAND DESLERS IV TFiS _ .I,IOBT APPROVED Brick-Set and Portable Heaters. A largo assortment of FLAT TOP, SIDE AND TOP OVEN RANGES, for heating additional roomL Rath Bollerii. geguiters. Venallatotirs,,Ske. Bend for Circular" MBE AMERICAN STOVE AND HOL- L COMPANY, PHILADELPHIA, IRON FOUNDERS, (Successors to North, Chase & North, Sharpe & Thom son, and Edgar L. Thon3son,) Mitpufacturent of STOVES, HEATERS, THOMSON'S LONI.ON KITCHKNER. EHAME,LED AND TON HOLLOW WARE. FOUNDRY. Second and Main Streets. OFFICE. 209 North Second Street. FRANKLIN LAWRENCE, Superintendent. .lIIDRUND B. SMITH, Treasurer. JNO. EDGAR THOMSON, President. JAMES HOEY, \General Manager THOM .A. 13 S. DIXON ifc 80ktb, 1510. MU ORESTNLIT Street, Philada., Oppoint. Uannfanited tnt at Mint. Mcere of LoVt ROWN, PARLOR, ORABIRETt, ' Off FlOlO, And other ORATES, for Anthracite, Rittnninone and Wood TLT WARM-AIR MA FURNAOES Buildings For Warming Pain e and Private REOISTERS, VENTILATORS, OHIBINtIDOAPS, 000 K lAG-RANGES, BATH-BOTLERS WHOLESALE and RETAIL GENTS' FTJRNISIIING-G00D23. PATENT SHOULDER SEAM - SHIRT MANUFAOTORY. Orders for these celebrated Shirts supplied promptly brief notice. Gentlemen's Furnishing Goods, Of late styles in full variety. WINCHESTER & CO. 7 06 CIIE'STNUT. fol-ta th ty VAINTING. SAXON GREEN Is Brighter, will not Fade, costs less than any other, be cause it will Paint twtro as much surface. SOLD BY•ALL DEALERS IN A. I IN - 'T . J. H. WEEKS & CO , Manufacturers, 122 N. Fourth Ntreet, Philadelphia. jy23 th tu 3m DEA TISTRY. Tki JET Y Y MARS' ACTIVE PRA°- . TICE.—Dr. FINE, No. 219 Vino stroot, below Third, inserts the handsomest Tooth in the city, at prices to suit all. Teeth Plugged, Teeth Repaired, Exchanged, or Itenuelelled to snit. Gas and Ether. No pain in extracting. Office tioure. 8 to 5. toll2B-e,rn,tu6m4 w9PAL DEN TA LL.I.N A. A a CiPifal.O.H article for cleaning the Teeth,deetroying animalcule deb infest them, giving tone to the gnme and leaving a feeling of fragrance and perfect cleanliness in the month. It may be used daily, and will be found to strengthen weak and bleeding gums, while the arms and detersivenese will recommend it to every ono. Be ing composed with the assistance of the. Dentist, Physl• clans and blicroscopiet, it is confidently offered as a reliable substitute for the uncertain washes formerly In vogue. • Eminent Dentists, acquainted with the constituents of the Dentallina, advocate its nee; it contains' nothing to prevent its unrestrained employment. Made only by JAMES T. SHINN, A pothecarY-2 Bred and Spruce street,. For sale by Druggists generally, and Fred. Browne, D. L. dtackhonse, Haseard at Go., . Robert 0. Davis, (J. It, Kenny, Geo. G. Bower, Isaac H. Kay, Chas. Shivers, O.H. Needles, B. M. McOolin, T. J. Husband, ' R. 0. Bunning, timbroge_t•imith, • , Chas. H. Eberle, Edward. Parrish James N. Marks, . Win. B. Webb . R. Bringhtirstlt Co., James L. Biepham, . - Dyott & 00., _. Hughes at Combo, • B. 0. Blair's Ronne ' HenrY A. Bower. Wirth R Bro. QIIEA.THING — FELT:=TEN - FEtADIES io Frig) bib • Shoothing - Felt,• for sale , by PETEE WR I (MT & KIN .118 Walnut street. ~ OBIN.-4157 BARRELS ROSIN NOW it lauding from steamer " Pioneer," from o.,and for irate by COCHRAN, RUSSELL & (JO., ITI fltreet. 811111 . 111 TURPENTINE, TAR AND puß N .-91 barrels Spirits Trirpentine,lll do. Wil minaton, N. C., Tar, 020 do. Pale and 1 Rosin, 363d0. )40. 2 napin; landing Prom 'steamship Pioneer. 140 barrels lip - 2 =Rosin,-lending from steamship Prome theus. ror sale by EDW. 11. ROWLEY, 10 South Front street CALK. -FOR SALE, 180 TONS OW ()balk, .A float. Apply to WORKMAN 600., • 123 Walnut atr '4l ()la I3€l S 00N. Steart f iship Lino - Direct. ROMAN, SAXON; NOILIIAN, Wadneaday and Saturday FROM EAOII PORT. Pilie St. Wharf. Phila., at 10 AL. 711 r..--. totat'VVlbart, Boman. - lit 3 Theee Steatabhlps Ball. punctually,—Fr.:isht-rcce:ved- - every daY; Yruinht forwarded to all Points in New Enciand. For freight or passage (superior acconlynolattonii) ap;. ply to_ lA AI T N .1 NAIL BTICAYIttt3JP (vSiPANY'F.; itEUIPAR.- sYMII-MONTH UNE TO NEW ORLIIIANn, LA. The V A ZOO will sail pqn NEW OILLEANB,IdIrgcti.I., on Thuraday, AugnetAth , et 8' The YAZOO v 11l - vats FROM NEW ORLEA-NS,• via HAVANA. en Wedneaday, A ngied 3d. Tlf ROUGH -BILLS OP LA PP 11 , 4 i at oil low_ •ratep by any mbar routttiven to MOBILE.tiIt.tiIrEBTO NI • INIIJANOLA: LAV : _ g A -CCA and BRAZOS, end to ad • 'points on the MISSIBST P PL. between NEW OItLEAN ~tal I.T. LOUIS, lIED FRNIGB-TB - at Now Orleans without charge of corumia alone. WP.ERLY LINE TO BAVANN if , G.A. The WYOMING will said 'NOR SAVANNAH on Saturday, A tweet nt 8 A.M. The TO . NANVANBA will sail FROM SAVANNA'''. on. i rd v,A - eznare troll RILLS OF LADING given to' all ti, pr , nclpal towns In GEORGIA, A LA lIA MA , - BLOItt DA 31.1:-.8I.St• I PIM, LOUIISIA_NA,AILKANBARAttid—TEN. N P.SSEE, in connection with tier; Tent rat Railroad of GeorgimAtinnt le and Gulf Railroad and Florida steam- , , q•+3, at as low rate as by competing ilnea. LINIK TO %MA NTGTON, N. 0; The PIONETsiLt will it FOR WII.BIINGTON on Wednesday, A nowt. 3, 6 P. 81,--returnintz, will leave ilruingtion,Tnesday, -- Augunt 6. Connects u ith the Cape Near Riv , r 1 4 tearnboat o , tm, the N ihnh , glosi and Weldon and North Canino& 'Railroads. and the 'Wilmington and Blanchester Rail road to all interior points. Freialitt. for CI 01.111 A,S. C. and AUGUSTA ,oa., When WiL3ilbiGTON at as low rates us, by any other route. Inanranee effected when requested by Shippers'. Dille. of Lading signed at Queen Street- harfon or before day of sailing, WM. L. JAMES. General Agent. thy3l4l§ . ,- N0..120 South Third atraet, - pHIL AD ELPH lik RICH M ONDAND NORFOLK STEAMSHIP LINE, THROUGH. FREIGHT AIR LINE TO THE BOUTS INCREASED FiCILINI DiSh' ENT) REDUCED RATES FOlt 1870. - STEAMERS LEAVE EVEitY WEDNESDAY foul SATURDAY ,arb2 &elk, Noon,from Ft HST wasnY. above MARKET Street. . _ RETURNING. - LEAVE - 1(1011 - MOKO -- FdONDA V 8 and THURSDAYS, aftd NORFOLK. TUESDAYS and SATURDAYS. /relic Bills Or Lading signed niter 12 o'clock on. Sailing Day. THROUGH RATES to all points in North and Routh' Carolina via Seaboard Air-Line Itallrotut, connecting at Portsmouth. and to Lynchburg, Va., Tennessee and the West via Virginia and Tennesaea Air-Lino and Rich mond and Dant ill,o Railroad. Freht HANDLED BUT ONCE.and taken Si LOWER BATES THAN ANY OTHER LINE. . No charge for cow:M.4'lton. drayage, or any °sperm for ranger,. Stearnahlys Insure it lowest rates FrP'chi rtv.eivwf DAILY. fitate-room acconnnedet lo for passenge rs. WlLL ne lAYI P. CLYDE & CO. -No, 17 death - Wharves and - Pier No. I North W hareee, W. P. PORTER, Agent atllichmond and City Point. T. P. CROWELL 6 00.. Azents at Norfolk FoR NEW YORK VIA DELAWARE elan ItAitITAN CANAL. EXPRESS STFA M BOAT COMPANY. The CH EA PEST and QUICK EST wat"r communica tion between Philadelphia um! Now York. Steamers leave daily from First Wharf below M AR ET street, Philadelphia, and foot of WALL street, New Seth . THROUGH IN TWENTY-VOCE HOURS. Goods forwanied by all the Lines rutin:fog out of New York North, East or Weat, free of comminAion. Freights received rally um forwarded on accommoda ting terms. Wal. P. CLYDE et CO., et genta, 12 South Delaware Avenue. JAB. HAND,.Agent..ll9.Wall ntreet..New_York. & CO., "MEW ILICPREtyit LINE. TO Et.IisEX.A.N. 11 &l a, Georgetown ind Washington. D. 0., Till Ches apeake and Delaware Canal, with connections at Alex andria from the most direct route for Lynchburg, Brts tot, Knoxville, Nashville, Dalton and the. Southwest, Steamer/ leave regularly from the first wharf Azov 1 .4„ Market street, eve Saturday at noon. freight received Whf M. P. tiLYDE & 00., No. 19 Booth W n and Pier 1 North Wharves. HYDE & TYLER, gents at Georgetown. id. ELM:LIDOS & CO.. Agents at Alexandria, Va TIELAWARE AND - CHESAPEAKE _LI STEAM TOW-BOAT COMPANY.---Bargee towed t. tavern Philadelphia, Baltimore, Barre 4e . Grace, Del aware City And intermediate "points. WM. P. CLYDE & CO. A ttetita ; Capt. JOffN LAI"On Ll2l fitip't Office, II South Wharves, Phila. delphia. apti ti 4 myl2 th s txtlyj WOE. NEW YORK_, VIA DELAWAIIJECI AND RARITAN ()ANAL. SWIFTSURE TRANSPORTATION' - 'COMPANY. DISPATCH AND SWI FTSIP RE LINES, Leavingdally at 12 and 5 P. 51. The steam propellers of this Company will commetio loading on the Bth of March. Through in twenty-tour hours. __Goode forwarded to any paint free of commissions. Freights taken on accommodating terms. Apply to 81._IsA 1R k CV., Agents, mli4.t.f '1.12 South D Delaware avenue. ORTIT I'ENNSYI,VAN I A RAILROAD • ..L.l —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, .11abanoy, Wyoming ar.d Susquehanna Vallers, and on the Critawissa and Erie Railways. Particular attention is sated to the new line through the Susquehanna Valley, opening up the Northeastern portion of the State to Philadelphia, embracing tho towns of Towanda, Athens,Waverly. and the coalition of Bradford, W y "ming and Susquehanna. It also of fers notion and speedy route to Buffalo and Rochtsiter, interior and Southern New York, and all points in the Northwest and Southwest and on the Great Lakes. Merchandise delivered at the Through Freight Depot, corner of Front and Noble streets, before 6P. H. is dis tributed by Fast Freight Trains - throughout the be lay') , Idahanoy , Wyoming and Susquehanna Valleys early next day, and delivered at Rochester and Buffalo within forty-eight hours from date of shipment. [Particulars in regard to Buffalo, Rochester, interior Now York and Western 'Freight may be obtained at the office. No. 811 Chestnut street. L .Ci. KINSLER, Agora' of P. W, & E. Line.) D. S. GRAYLY, Through Freight Agent, Front and Noble streets, ELLIS CLARK., General Agent N. P. R_B. I.IELVINGL HOUSE. FIRST-CLASS HOTEL. EUROPEAN _A PLAN. , Location unsurpasiod, beingnear Raton Wallack'e Theatre, and A. T. Btewart's new' (n -town store. BROADWAY AND TWELFTH BT.. NEW YORE. G. P. LIALILLOW, Proprietor. its P ar.9mßl Security from Loma by Burglary, Rob bery, Fire or Accident. THE FIDELITY INSURANCE, TROST AND SAFE DEPOSIT COMPANY, NEW MARBLE FIRE-PROOF BUILDING,. Capita/ subscribed, $1,000,600; paid,. $550,000. COUPON BONDS, STOCKS; SECURITIES,FAIIIILY PLATE, COIL DEEDS and VALUABLES of every% de,cription received for safe-keoplug, under guarantee, at very moderate rates. The Company also rent SAFES 'INSIDE THEIR. BUBOLA R•PI100 F VAULTS, at prices. varying from elf. to e 75 a year, accordiug to size. An extra bizo for Corporations and Bankers. Rooms and desks adjoming • vaults provided•for Safe Renters. DEPOSAITS OF MONEY RECEIVED ON INTER EST, at three per cent., payably by check ;without no tice, and al four per cont., payable by check, on ten day& notice. TRAVELERS' LETTERS ON CREDIT furnished, available in all parts of Europe. INCObIE COLLECTED and romitted for one tier ct. Tho Company act as EXECUTORS. :ADMINISTRA TORS and GUARDIANS, and RECEIVE and EXE CUTE TRUSTS of every oitscription, [torn the Courts, corporations and individuals. N. B. BROWNE, President. G. 11. CLARK, Vice President. ROBERT PATTER9oN, Seew.tary and Treasurer DIRECTORS. Alexander Henry, Stephen A. Caldwell, George F. Tyler,' Henry Gibson, J. Gillingham FOU, Ott McKean. _ . N. B. Browne, , Clarence H. Clark, . John Welsh, Charles Nacaloster, Edward W. Clark,. Henry Pra myl4stnthly Celebrated Patent Sofa Bedstead' is now being manufactured and sold in largo numbers, .. both in FDA hi On and ,11NG . 1,,A,N D. Can bp had only at the Wairertgana of the undersigned. This more of Fur niture is in the form of a handsome PA IMOD SOFA, Yetis one minute it cart he extended into, a beautiful FItEls1(.11, DEPtiTEAD, with springs. hair 'mattresses complete. It has every convenience for holding the bed clothes, is easily managed, and it is imlioasiblo for it to get out or order. 'rho use of props or hinged feet to, support,the mattress when extOntied,. or repea t to regu late it, are entit cly done away with, as they are all very nrinfe and liable to get out of repair. The BEDSTDAD i is formed by einirly turning out the elide, or closing theniwben the ED I A is wanted. They ai o, ip comfort,... convenience and' appeargnee, far superior to and'coat no • I l l i n?l 'V ad ß e ll ip'llitt more than a good l.olloge. , • D Stree t , A woialimi,pamtolosnoitsyshositiccietoody. mylti th to am; SHIPPER/4 9 - GITID.E. WINSOIL A CO., 3:18 SOUTH DELAWARE AVENUE. POT Er,S. SAFE DEPOSITS. OF PEIMADELPHYA, IN THEM Nom. 329-3311-41hextnut ritireet., SOFA II4OV.E.IEV:S ARIES. tELE , RAPIIitI •Ti -New York;. State ftepiiblfean' CoLven lion will meet at Saratoga on September 7th. Tme, man who was injured byf,the explosion at Fortress Monroe died lesterday, making the fifth victim. - 'FURTHER returns of the local elections in .Kentucky indicate the success generally of the Democratic tickets. _TUE _Republican_Convention_or. the•_Thith. Ohio District renominated Gen. R. C. Schenck ibr Congress yesterday. LADY TRORIE, the famous trotting mare, /net with an accident at Rochester yesterday, which will probably end her turf career. IN the Senate of Michigan, on Wednesday, a resolution for the payment of bonds issued to xailroad companies was defeated. 'Tim Treasurer of Dodge County, Nebraska, yesterday advertised for sale, to pay delinquent taxes, all the Union Pacific lands in that 'county. A MEETING of Frenchmen in St. Louis, last night, expressed ay nipathy for their countrymen in the war with Prussia, and appointed a com mittee.to raise funds. Duitro - tire - 1 - 1. - mcrntbs - ending - May - 3 - Istott imports exceeded our exports by $8,225 : 529. During the-same period.of _tbe previouslear, the excess of imports was $845,055,499. TIM Columbus Woolen Factory's mills were burned early yesterday morning., Loss,s4o,ooo. A man named Mark Newman was killed by falling,walls. . • Tim. Conservative Central Committee of Virginialay.e issued an, address recommend ing that the Congressional nomina.tions be postponed until after the State is redis tricted. • Tim State Temperance Convention of Michigan met on Thursday and nominated a State ticket.: Resolutions: : were -adopted, fa voring the gradual payment of the National debt. • JUDGE E. T. Rice: was nominated for Con gress by the. Democratic Convention of the .fentli Illinois District on.. Wednesday... The district is now represented by Albert . Burr, - G DemOcrat. • TILE North Carolina election took place yesterday. No returns have. been received. At Raleigh,. Barris, the colOred candidate for Cong,iess;- :Was. - knocked, down by au Englishman \Omni be called,." a European Convict" Tics Republican Convention of the Eighth Illinois District nominated Colonel Jonathan Aleriam . for Congress on the IS6th ballot, on Wednetday afternoon Shelby 3r. Cullom, Republican, is tha present representative. T HE. Baltimore papers of yesterday report an over-issue of stock of the Parkersburg branch of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Company. John L, Crawford, Secretary, is involved, and has resigned his Office. The amount of over issue is estimated at $300,000. Waatihigton yesterday ex-Congressman Joseph Segar, of Virginia, assaulted ex-Con gressman Lincoln; of New York, beating him severely with a cane: Segar was held in $5 / 000 •bail. The provocation was alleged calumnious .statements by Lincoln in reference to a railroad niattdr. AT Jackson, ,MiSsissippi, on Wednesday night, A.-T..3lorgan, a white Senator of-Mis sissippi, was married to. 3liss.„ Carrie, Highgate, a colored , lady. - Morgan IS a lawyer, and was formerly Colonel of a Michigtin regiment. 'A'r louisvWe,Mt IVednesday night, :fatness W. Breen 'Went into the office of W. A. San dik, and attempted to shoot the latter. •tsandik diets a pistol and fired at Breen, wounding him in ,;the head- and-botly, it is thought fa tally. The clause of the attack is not known. and Breen, It is said, was a stranger to THE WAR. „ I.oNnoN, August 4.—{:Siitti to the New York Trittuite.]—The corrpondeut of the Ti.;biie telegraphs from the PruSsian head quarters as follows : The CroWn Prince's army has stormed _Weissenburg. _,Tha troops of the and lith .yrusMan Army Corps, reinforced by the 2d Bavarian Corps, engaged 'General Donay's division of blac.slahon's corps. French were driven off 'he field, and the ,prus sinus now occupy the French camp. Several 'hundred French soldiers were captured. - The Prussian loss was considerable. No move ments are announced from the army of the Lower Rhine. The affair at Saarbnick is regarded here as 'wholly . unimportant. The Prussians - tit no time contemplated bolding that town in-force. The 'Tribune' s correspondent at , Coblentz, writing on Tuesday, says : The Prussians are In much' greater force on the banl, of the Saar and Moselle than is generally snpposed, and hence they do not Intend to fall back on May ence or-Manhelm but will hold the French in -check from Sierck to Lauterburg: One proof' -is-that long trains of provision-wagons stretch from here to Troves, and the ambulance trains with them are in much too great force for a mere affair of ontposts. . 'Moreover, the.large square here—the " Coblentz Platz"—is covered with. peasants' wagons, laden with bread and biscuit, all rpovin,g west. Treves is now the headquarters of the Eighth Army Corps. Tbe'Prussian wagon and am oulance service is more perfectly organized,- and their horses are. in better condition than those of the French. The soldiers are in admirable spirits. Their enthusiasm is less noisy than that of the enemy, but their quiet confidence is far preferable to .such effervescences as I recently witnessed on the other side. COblentz Is full of landwehr;there being but few troops of the line there. The fortifications are being rapidly strengthened and trees' are being -felled' in readiness for an attack. All comrefulding point about the great fortress, the occupatiOn- of .'which wouldrender it inde fensible against modern artillery, are now strongly fortified, and earthworks are rapidly -being constructed towards the French side. The correspondent at • Cologne writes on Tuesday - that troops are passing steadily through that city going southward, all in ex cellent condition, each corps with provisions for six weeks: . , No enthusiasm surpasses that of the South 43eiMan regiments, 'many of which have pe titioned to form part of the advance guard. Etti'lNKFoirr, August-1.--4t is still generally believed that a great battle will be fought near 31asence. The number of men massed be tween Mayehce and the front is enormous. 'rife citizens of Frankfort who t were sup posed to be hoStile to.the Prussian rule show _lavish hospitality to the troops; and .if they do not love the Prussians, they at leaSt detest !the 'French. This war, instead of detaching Frankfort from. Prussia, r has , developel sincere attachment,to.the Patherland.f: .The Prussian batteries passing through here are observed much to be nch lihter and more ser viceable than in 180. German officers be aleve the Prussians will bring iutd the field a gun superior to Napoleon's pet artfflery, and ihe_Fmneh mitrailleuse will find its'=mEttch: OA-lii.S,l!ti iE;: york'fkraid.l—LateSt t The Prussian victory at Weissenbnrg was decisive.. -The troops en :gagtid were two regiments'of the lith and 11th Aimyreorp.s and the 241 .- 'Army CorPs, •of Bavaria, led by the CroWn Prince in person. The 'Preneh force copsistek:of general Do nay'sAivision of MaeMahoifil"'corps. Weissen burg and Geishill, in the rear of that town, +eia eiliTied by storm et thr point,of the, bayo net, after an obstinate resistance. The general who commanded the French in 11;e:absetiee - or - Ponay - was .with two 4,lllects of his staff. 'I lie Mooch encainpment,,one piece of artil lery, and live hundred wounded prisoners, in- `: ~ x ~;,. MEZENZ'.,=Ni The Co/oat/lit/wine/ says an agent of Prince Chatles, or Roumania, in Paris;:took - an - active' part in procuring the renunciation of the • chrone of Spain by his brother, Prince Leopold. The Berlin government; irritated at the- con- duct of this agent, has demanded his dismis sal : but Prince.. Charles refoces to yield to the demand. ite buried for the Philadelphia Bventtut BONAIRE—Brig Herint-s; Lees-19u0 bbig snit fn hulk John Indlett & CO WILMINGTON, liC.—Steamer Mary Sandford , Chad wiek—Mll LIN rnein 27 do erode turpentine E H How ley: 49^0 feet yellow blue flooring, Mout/1.1 heart e)prees gliiropes 9)00 30.ineh de Parteroon & Lippincott. GEORGEIO%VN , SC.-1311g Nellie Move,Merriman —I LOW feet lumber Norcross A: Sheets; 25 tone yhospht,to order. - . - • - . . Virginia ..........,_ ...... nacre... New York. July 19 . t. oltinibia • Gliwow...New York icily 23 ( By of i_ork-....-Liverpool...New York_ July 2S Tarifa Li verpool...New.York via B 'July 26 , Palmyra _.., Liverpool... New York _ July 26 ' The Queen Liverpool... New 'York _ .......... ....July 27 1 loaho --..... ....... .Liverpool... New York. July 27 • Britannia Glasgow... New York July 27 C. of Brooklyn-Liverpool...New York July 26 ! City of .2tlerida..;Yera Cruz...N Y via Havana...... July, 29' Bt. Laurent Brest... New York July' :10 . ni opa Glasgow-New York luly 3o • Lino. Liverpool-lie* York July 30 .0. of Bailtimore_Liverpool ...NeW York via 11 July 30 TO DE PAML. . Wyoming Ph il adeluhla...Savannali tug. 6 1 tab ... .... ...-: .... .New York...Livernool--: • kiig. 6 Ville ..Ie iaris.....New York.., Havre tug. 6 Cortai New York. .New-Orleans • tug. 6 CB) of London' .New York...LivStniol_ tug. 6 Australia _ ..... ...New Yosk.„l.lla.i.goW..- ..........Aug. 6 Etna.-- .. . ... -__Now York.A.lverpool via if ' Aug. 9 France New York... Liverpool Aug 10 .31in nesotit` .- ....New York...Liverpoo k ug . 10 Z"i.i , lllifill . New York"...Glas.gow • t nil. 10 the LirMatted Tbr ste State a amer; det ignAted by an asterisk (''' ) carry Mafia. I39ARD OF TRADE. Tilos. )01). • c IMSTIAN ELOP.F.MAY, 6.107.111 LY 00:11SIITTIIR THUS. C. RAND, TriiitTr irk riiiiiiiciiiifinA--Aratl4T A. guri BlsEs, L I I BUN BETS, 6 391 HIGH WATER. 8 19 7 • ALAI V 114) itIik,TERIJAI StearneiFrodite, Fenton. Yt hours from New York with incise to W M Baird JI• Co. Brig Bertuts,Ltes.ls days from Bonaire , with salt to John Dall”tt Co. Loft in port July 23. bark Clara Eaton, Merriman. loading, to salt for.Lioltm.s'llolo and Breakwater for order 4. r • ' • • Schr fluttio - Dow, Sheiirer,s days froth Loectivillo,NC with Inds!) to C flaslum do Cu . . . tsehr l'aielalia; Campbell, I day from Leipsic, grain to JO5 E Palmer. . Sehr John Whitby, Henderson, 1 day from Port Penn Del. with grain to Christian At Co. Sehr Clayton A: Lowber, Jaehson, I day from Smyrna, Del. wit)] grain to Jas Davaey S Co. Del.l) 11 31erriman.Tracpy, I (lay from Indian River, Del. with grain to JaS Betyley ',{t, Co. AT QUARA.NTINE. Barks Sancho Pllll4ll. from Sagua: Warren White, from Havana; schreora Etta. from • OLRAI2IOI.O ;YESTLRDAY. Steamer Fatilm. Freeman, New York, John F 0111. Bteanier J 8 Shriver. Iler, Baltimore A Groves, Jr. Bchr Louisa Crockett, Flanders, Boston, Atidenried, Norton, 3: Co, - Seta A It Wallace. Ward, Richmond, David Cooper. Schr W S Tkomlloson , Raynor, Washington, Schr Buckeye, Gibbon. Salem, N.J. W ENT TO SEA. Bark Eureka, hence for Bamburg, and brig Courier, do for Genoa, went to sea yesterday afternoon. HAVRE HE GRAPH, Aug. 4. The following boats loft this morning In tow, laden and consigned as follows: Carrie and Ram: Willey, with grain to Hoffman it Kennedy; Middleton, Orlando and Yankee *.py, lumber to Taylor Sc Botts; Media, poplar wood to Manayuult. . . Ship Asia (NG), Stecltman, from 'Hamburg 23th Dirty for ibis port, Was spoken 2d 'hist. by a Now York pilot boat . Ship Car 4 (Br), Carey sailed from Calcutta 23d ult. for New York Mesmer Aries, Wiley, clearod nt Boston 3d Instant for this nort a eainer Zodiac, lithos, fiaut New Orleans 25th alt. at . . . . . --- titeamer - J . antea - "B Grerr — Paco — ltehritent — Riehmend - 2d7 instant - • Steamer Leip7lg (NO ,Jaeger,from Bremen yin South ampton tor Baltimore, at Baltimore yesterday. R Steamer Lafayette, ossini, from New York 2.3 d ult. at Brest 9d Inst. torllayre. - Balk BIL 'Duvall Or). Cook, fromLOCI for, this port, was spoken 2d inst. 25 miles BB of Barnegat., ,,,, - • _Bark 11 D Broolnan, Savin, - salfed from Gallo lith ult. for this port. Bark Baring, 111aDmialiIi hones; rtunaided at flarana -4.lotli.ult. ono. • r . ' r Burk Win Van Name, Craig, was loading at Malaga 15th ult. for Now York. Bark Thomaaf 40, Sisendsen, at Havana 30th ultimo Bark L T IStOeltOr,'„Ttlbber, at •If avian '3olh ult. for north of Hatteras. • - Bark A Um.: Erlcltson , , frons,LtnplorilOtil,fune for this port. was:spot:on lst inat. &At:1111as oust of Sandy Hook. tt Brig Messogglero" Aphbroanire, hence at Gib-, raltar 12th-ult=nbt na before. 'trig. Lima, Hill, hence for Bruustrick,Cia .1V34 spoken nit nit. off Cape Homain. eludiiig many Tureos, fell into the hands of the Prussians. , On the German aide Genenil Kirchbocb was' wounded. The Grenadier Guards* and 50th - Regiment suffered severely. • • August 4,l.3o — P;'M. , :—There; was bard lighting at We issen burg Yesteidafata to-day. The Prussians - adValiced 'between Weissenburg and auterburg, ten miles into, French territory, driving the. : advanced.,postsi of_the_enerny,_aud destroying miles of the. railJ, road between Lauterburg.and Straaburg,alongi which it. Is supposed McMahon was preparing to, advance. Thd French loss was heavy, in-: eluding many prisoners. There are at piatesent in. Saarbruck, or just: outside' of the place, 3,000 men or, more, the. 4tith. Regiment, with sixteen,guns, and within: a short distance the 9th llussars and 09th Re-. gimeut of the line, with thitty, guni. The par Regiment, which was to have come here to-:• day, advanced nearly to . Saarbruck, and then turned in another direction, their destination being unknown. General Von Goben made his appearance' here yesterday and remained for a short time.; The present commanderis" Gen. Vou Grteze nau. B Eftm-N r -August— 1. The—Prussian-goner; merit furnishes the' 'following account, Mitre in detail, of the affair at Saarbruck.: "_A feeble garrison held Saarbruck until the Fr :act' de ployed and advanced in three columns, and the Prussians then retired to a position north of the town to obsei ye the enemy. Spite of the free, use by the French of the mitrailleuse, artillery, and chassepots, our loss was only two officers and seventy wen. The luss of the French ap peared Lobe more serious.• Our. troops were admirably cool." BERLIN, Aug. 4.—A Prussian reserve a. 100,600 men is encamped-in front of, Berlin.. 'Forage is scarce in the Rhine provinces, and the Prussian horses are sufliding, severely. • CoriEsitnogk; Augu.st'4.:— . -The Dania; gOV-' ernmeut is struggling hard to preserve, neu trality, but the popular excitement is intense, and perhaps ungovernable. The sympathy, fur France .among all classes is very marked. 'WON, August 4.—The Gazette .of this city officially ,puhl isl les the : (locree _of nentrality on, the part of Portugal in the Franco-Prussian tti ar. l'EsTfr, August 4.—The Diet of Hungary yrsterday emphatically declared in favor of AubLlian. neutrality. in.. 'the Franco-PrUssiaa viar. SlRM;l3tirto, AngUst .4.—(Special to the New York lierald.)—Yesierday, after the Council of War, 31arshal MacMahon, with his chief of staff, General Coulson, surveyed the Rhine -from-- Kiehl— bridge- upwards. They visited Brumutb, twenty miles north of here,• where. the cavalry division and part of his first division of in fantry are encamped. From these - movements it is conjectured that MacMahon. ‘vith the African army, is about to Noss the Rhine and da.sh rapidly by way of Carlsruhe and Heidelberg toFrankfort that thenee endeavor :to cut the railroad communicating between Berlin. and the Rhine.. It is believed be will leave Mayence on his-left,: while the - main army pushes . on through the Lower Rhine provinces to Mayence and Cob--: lentz. The forward movement, it is rumored, is fixed for Saturday. It, is _reported that. the': Yt ussians _are_ gathered:in force the.south,_ and that - the Baden force is in the Black Forest. august 4.-1116: :Empress came to; the 1 nileries to-day, and presided at a council of Ministers; The I:lailoissaYs the Emperor' will issue a decree making_ the "Marseillaise") hi iic'efOrth the nationiii:air of Fra nee: .thtring the fight at Saar -Louis' it: was played by the French bands. The French hospital service! 'Jaye twenty-four thousand beds ready for the IMFOSTATIO S- ~ " novkatishil,b O oczAbi KIELBIERS., 1 TO ARRIVE SHIPS moss foa DATE. MARIN F.„ .13,U LLETIA. MEMORANDA p.HILADEtifwa„ , •EyENTNG S.U.LIATIN, 'FfiIDAV.A.,vGLIST- '6;18 ; 701' I H , .BrigJobn Welsh,' Jr, Yam Low, hence l'or Sagas, was spoken Ist Met. off -Hatteras.- , nollrram bur Rowe, Boy, at If Orfolk 2d.inat. from Wil mington. .; Seim Minnie Monte, Parsons, Bailed from Alexandria Sd toet. for New Hoven, &lir Samuel R Sharp, Sharp. cleared at Baltimore 3d instAor this port. Behr k.unnysitle. Parsons, sailed from Richmond inst. tor this_ port via lower James river. . A Schr A I,l.l l wards, Hinson. sailed from Richmond inst. for this port. ' ' l g '_l • Sabra Wm Walton, Bunter; tirean Wave. Bryant; .1 Battertbaaf ta, Khalif). awl L Baloy, Russell, I.lollCel at Boston 3d Inst. ' bchr A Intira Weoley, hence at Gloucester 24 inst. —Schrs-Blaristte.- titeelmanT - 11teelman . rAilr - BAlortmmr - Brewers; Gov Burton, Ludlam; Althea. So Ith, and Jno Stocithern. Price, arrived .at Georgetown, DC. 24 tut— 'the Steelman cleared nanfnlorliontoff. . _ . . . . ... . port . A. Schri Bolden Engle. Howes. for thia and bt hlcGahan, Cull, for tiowbern °hared st ' °Beaton 34 inst. t3chr Trade Wind, hence for Portamenth, at Holmes' 110103 d inst. Bailed. all 'mein excepllnir same J B Vandueen, Aroandaillary'Price.Frolic and Trade Wind. PURE WHEAT WHISKY T. J. MARTIN & CO., . KEYSTONE DISTILLERY, NORTHWEST OORNER OF. Twelfth and Washington Streets. slroitE, • N 6. 150 - North 'Front 'Street 1 . PHILADELPHIA, PA. To whom lt matrionmm : MI the leading medical authorities recognize the value of diffusive stimulants. • liumerons ambient physicians and surgeons might be named who ha re, advocated their, employment in the treatment of large - close of dis orders. flo Dispensary is considered compiete withont, them. Thi r-are. prescribed in, all Public and. private liospitals4 ud administered by all bedside practitioners. But the difficulty has been to obtain Alcoholic Liquors Pure. The pungent,aroma of the bagel oft and biting acids pre,ent in ail of them can be scented as,the glass is raised to the lips.. Ths . nauseons flavor of those active poisons is perceptible to ihe palaie, and a burning Sen sation in the stomach attests their 'existence when the noxious draught has gone down. "Paralysis, tdiocyJn sanity and death are the pernicious fruits of such pota tions. leelimi science' Rake for a yore stimulant to use ais specific, which, while it diffuses itself through the ya• tem more rapidly than any other known agent e brought into direct and active contact with the seat of disease, It is the property of the stimulant to diffuse and by the aid of its peculiar nutritious component parts to invigorate, regulate. counteract and restore, and it by the happy- union of- the principle of activity with tla principles of invigoration and restoration that enables To accomplish beneficial results. flaying great experience in the distilling of Whiskies, and the largest and best equipped establishment of its kind in the country, supplied with the latest Improve ments in apparatus for cleansir g Whisky of fusel oil and tier impurnie by strict persbnal supervision the roprietors of Keystone Wheat Whisky Are enabled to offer a • Pure Whisky Dbtilled from WHEAT, ,and, being made from - the grain , posebsses atl ibr •fiutsitious Qualities, and can - be relied upon id 'be Fancily' a 9 represented, having been examined _thoroughly _ by, the leading' nuli mai chemists of this city, whose certificates of its .purity and fitneza for_medicatpurpaies.are appended._ e invite examination. and any who would convince, themselves we ask &rigid analysis. '.- T. J. MARTIN &CO. N. 13.—Notice that the caps and cork are branded-, With Ocir oifine. to prev.:int counterfeiting, - For sale bS all respectable Druggists: , 1 Friceper,hnttle; 81' Orders seat to No. 150.19 f: FRONT , et reef .. Wllrrfiee - lye prompt attention. CIaWICAt is ABORAikilt 4, NOB 108 and 112 Arch et. Putt.AnELienik, March 19, 1870. Ahem,. Martin 6. Phttactelphia. Pa. Gentlernen:lhave made a careful examination of the Keystone Pure Wheat Whisky, and found it to be a per itymjy pure audentirely free:froth fusel oil and other injurious fallltatUlCe94- Ite panty, and-itispleastint and agreeable flavor, render it particularly valuable for medicinal purposes. Yours truly, F. A. GENTII.. Onl 3tlcAL LABORATOriv, - * 70.134 Walnut street March 17, 1570. llies.rs. T. J. Martin .r Co., Philadelphia, Pa. • Gentlemen :—The sample. of Kelatone Pure Wheat 1.-Vhish submitted to me-fo -analyeis,l-find-to.bopetre, and, as such, I highly recommend itifor medicinal pur poses. Alkapc , ctitaly, etc ~ . • - W..:II...IIRUCKNER. Analyt and Consult. Cham m ist. Cyry:micAL LABORATORY, N0:417 Walllit..etTOOt, PFI iaturiur. April,, ISM. IVlesArs. T, J. Martin ey Co., Philadephia, Pa. Gentlemen -- I have made R.TI analysis of the sample of Keystone Pure WhiskY,eetr by you for examination, and find it entirely free from fusel oil or any other dole teriona matters, and I consider it applicable to any use for which pure whisky may he desired. Respectfully, 011 AS. M. CRESSON. Fold Wholesale by FRENCH. RICH. ARDS & CO.. N. W. corner TENTH and NIA BRET streets. ion erStE •, • MAULE,' BROTHER & CO., 2500 South Street. 1.870. PATTERN MAKERS. I:Qr7/1 P MAKERS. ke I th CROWE SELECTION MIONOIGAAITRRPNE Qty ELgeDAA- FLOORING. 1870 CAROLINA FLOORING . . VIRGINIA FLOORING. DELAWARE FLOORING' ASH FLOORING. WALNUT FLOORING. • I.B7O.FLE?IgEDi tT T 4 P II 3 O ° A.B A A D . 8 1870, EAU. Pb4NIS,. RAIL MANN, 1870.wA - L' , u7r2,l%lß"AllDlB7o. _ WALNUT BOARDS AND 1 - 110.43 E. WALNUT BOARDS. WALNUT PLANK.. ASSORTED FOR; CABINET MAKERS, _BUILDERS, &O. 1870. UNDERTAKERS' • 1870 LUMBER. UNDERTAKERS' LUMBER. • RED OEDAR.-• • • • •- WALNUT AND PINE. 1870 SEASONED POPLAR. 1870 . SKASONED CHERRY. . AsH; WHITE OAK PLANK AND BOARDS. oKoRY . • 1870.°AR NORWAY SCAN TL ING. L lB7O. NORWAY 80ANTLING. - I.B7O."IIFRIVEALT 114 4 1,LC.'1870 LABOR STOOK.- • • 1.870. C T3 1 22/ I .ll S aiLl t al i t. B. 1870 OYPNESS BILIANGLES. . • LARGE ASSORTMENT. FOR SALE'LOW. 1870. PLpt,tlPrairleL'.&ET.H . 1870. YELLOW PINE L I cI3ER.-4./EDERE , for cargoes of every description Sawed Lumber axe ,ated at short notico—quality subject to Inspection Apply to EDW H. ROWLEY .16 South Wharves. q\- 7ri , PHILADELPHIA RID IN G Z.C2:3:: School and Livery Staple, No. 33.33 14.-I.IIK .creel; .will remain open all Summer. HAudsowe Clarence Cm tinges, Horses and Vehicles and Saddle o rims to hire. florses trained for the Saddle. Horses taken to Livery. Storage for 'Wagons and Sleiglis.F SHTl4.olalol,Prontietor. MASON .131N1is, 701 IN • TION to thoir stook of ; and Le4tst jqOnittatn Cool, which, with von by us, wo think can. not be ' excelled by any other Coal. Oftico,,Franklin instituto Building, No. 15 S. Seventh alroot., BMUS EMEAFIT; Arch - Ptreet Wharf , finhuvikill RO ESSOR JOHN - BUCHANAN, 'M. D. • P• can be consulted personally or by letter in all died eases, Patients can rely upon a safe, speedy , ' and par..) manent cure, as the Professor .prepares and: furnishes; now, scientific and positive , retnediee specially adapted tq Moments of Ma patient.' iPrivate offices , tio °College! Building, No. 514 PLATE. strait Bffice bouti from A. • EL to VP:I4 ' . 1° ROr7AND—COTTON. ,- LOASKS . RICE, Bales Cotton now from Steamer "Vona.' wanda" from Savannah:Va., and for sale l y COUR. II LL k 00,, Ui Obentnut duet. _ WINES. Distilled from the Grain . BY LIJIVIBEtt - 7. • • LATH.. NIAIILE BROTHERA CO., 2500, 00IIT4 STREXT INSTRUCTIONS. -COAL AND,WCW ERNONA INftVRA the Liverpool te Lona'or; and 'Gig& Ins. Co. if Assets Gold, 8 1 8,4.00,000 Da~~, ecetpts, - • Premiums inilB6o, $5,884,000 Losses in 1869, = $3,219,6(30 No. 6 Merchants' Exchange, INSURANCE COMPANY - or , NORTH AHERILVA. Fire, Marine and Inland Insurance. INCORPORATED 1744. °DARTER PERPETUAL. CAPITAL, . . 8500000 ASISETS July 15t,1870 - . 02.917,90 0 07 Losses paid sines organism. Hon, . . . . . . 824,000,000 Receipts of Premiums,ls69, 81,991,837 45' Interest from Investments, Losses paid, 1869, • . STATEMENT OF THE ASSETS. • Find Mortgage on Olty Property. . . RfT70,450 00 United States Gorortameut and 9 11 /0 . i . 1 706 43 1 4. • ' Bonds and Stocks 1100,05250, Cash in Bank and In hands of Bankers---. .287,317 63 1 Loans on Collateral Security 69,733 74; Notes Beceirable' mostly • Marine Pre- • ,miums. 298,406 43' . Premiums in course of transmission and in hands of Agents 122,138 89, Scorned Interest, no-insurance, Am 39,256 31 Unsettled Marine Premiums.— . 103,601 67 , Beat Estate,. Office , of. Company — , Philadel- DIM .... ..—..-.- .......... -....—... „50;000 00 Total Assets July let, 188 0, DIREI TOMS. e 2,917,906 G 7 Arthur 0. Coffin, Francis B. Cope, Samuel W. Jones, Edward H. Trotter, John A. 8r0wn,. . . • • Edward 8, Clarke, Charles Taylor, . T. Charlton Henry, -, Ambrose White, Alfred D. Jessup, William Welsh, . Louis C. Madeira, 8. Morris Waln, - Chas. W. Cushman, - John Mogen, . Clement A. Griscome William Brockle. Geo. L. Harrison, ARTHUR U. — COFFIN, President. CHARLES PLATT,Tice Pree't. 11147THIAS MARIS, Secretary. C. H. REEVES, Aas't Secretary, . Certificates of. Marine 'neurotic° fumed (when .de aired ), payable at the Counting House of Memo. Brown, Shipley (1( Co., London. DELAWARE INKY . 11 SAFETY IN. HANCE , COMPANY, incorporated -by the Logisla latnre of Penneyhanfa, 1e33. • flice,B, E. corner of THIRD and WALNUT streeta MARINE Pbfl I delphla. NSURANCES • On.Vessele, Cargo and irreight to all parte or the world, ENLAND INSURANCES On good!! by river, canal. lake and land earring to all • parte of the Union. FIRE INSURANCES - On blerehandise genefally on Stores, 'Dwellings, UOU.SOB. ASSETS OF THE COMPANY - - Novernner 1. 18ss. 11200,000 United Stott!!!Five Per Ceuta Loan, ten-forties... . .., . . , 4l°° . 1216 a NOM United . States . - Six.', dent.. • Loan ( lawful money) 107,750 CI 60,000 United -Stamm' Per - Cont.- • •-•-• - - Loan, IEBI 60,000 01 ---200,000- State -of- -Pennsylvania. Six- Per - - - Cent. Loam 40440 Olt 200,000 City of Philadelphia Six Per • ' Cent-Loan (exempt from tax)....' 200,925 • law State of New - JersaySix Per' Cent. L0an.,.102,000.12 20,000 Pennsylvania Railroad ... First Mortgage Six Per Cent. Bond.— 19,450 0: 26,000 Pennsylvania Railroad - Second Mortgage Sir Per Cent. Bonds... 23,500 26 20,000 Western Pennsylvania Railroad Mortgage Six Per Cent Bonds (Pennsylvanitt Railroad guar. . . Emcee)... . ........ ... •-• OP° ft 80,000 state of Ifenne'seee Vire Yer Cent. L0an...........- 15,040 - 01 7,000 State of Tennessee Six Per Cent. ' Loan .. ... -...- . - ..... . 4,270 Of 12,500 Pennsylvania Railroad Com pany, ZA) shares stock 14,5100 - IWO - North -- Pennsylvania - Railroad -- Company,. 100 shares stock • /0,000 Piiilird - elptua — ntfili - Soutlierti - MMI - Steamship Company, 30 shares 7,500 Ot• 248,900 Loans on Bond and Mortgage, first liens on City Properties 246,900 C - 411=1,400 Par. Cost, 81.215422 Market value, 81,255,270 01 V. Real Estate Bills Receivable for Insurance made Balances due at Jigencies.-Pre miums on Marine Policies Ac crued Interest and other debts due the Company 12 Stock. Scrip, &c.. of sundry Cor porations, 84,708. Estimated • value.-- 2,140 Cash in Dank. $163318 88 Cash 972 28 169,291 14 DIREOTORIsr - SaninellE. Stokes, William G. Boulton, Edward Darlington, H. Jones Brooke, Edward Lafonrcade, Jacob Riegel, Jacob P. Jones, James B. M'Farland, Joshua P. Byre, Spencer 1111'llvain, H. Frank Robinson, J . Brkieniple, Pittaburg, A .B. Berger, I) T. , rMarn. LS 0. HARD, President. J. DAVIS,Vice President. :rotary. .. SecrotarY. den Thomas O. Band, John 0. Davis, Edmund E. Bonder, cheophiltus Paulding, lames Traquair, Henry Sloan, Henry 0. Dallott, Jr., James C. Nand, William 0. Ludwig, Joseph H. Seal, Hugh Craig, Tenn D. 'laYlor, George W. Ite . rnadou, William 0. HonstonA THOMA • JOHN lIHNEY:TALBIIHN, Sec HENBItBALL, Amistan TIHE RELIBNGE INSURANCE 00/11 L PANT, OF. PHILADELPHIA. Inc9r" "o l li n icZ l i t io. SOB Walnut Perp etual. CAPITAL e 300,000. • - immres againstioss - or - demage - brrlßEcon - Honses itores and other. Buildings, limited or perpetual, and oz Furniture, Good's, Wares and Merchandise in town , in , onntr. 3 LOBBEB PROMPTLY ADTIIBI 71D AND PAID. vuuTti,lsf7cetirtie - r1,1869 - Invested in the following Securities, vr g . : First Mortgages on testy Property, well se cure 4 • $169,100 IX —..— ,___ United States Government Loses.. 82,000 Of Philadelphia City 6 Por Cont. Loans 76,000 OE Warrant; 0,035 it Pennsylvania '63000,000 8 Per Cent Loan 50,000 Of Pennsylvania Railroad Bonds i First Idortgege, goat 01 rhanden and Amboy Railroad Company's 6 Per Cent. Loan-- ' 11,000 Ot finntinrion and Broad Top 7 Per Cont. Dlort -4980 Ot '3ounty Fire Insurance - Company's Stock. 1, , 060 01 Mechanics' Bank Stock.4,ooo 01 Jommercial Bank of Pennsylvania Stook. ' 10,000 0 1 : Union,lllutual Insurance Company 's.Stooli. 190 01 Reliance ,:lnenrance Company of Philadelphia , Stock 5,200,0 E Cash in Bank and on band 15,316 7/ Worth at Par Worth at present market prices. $409,696 6S DIRECTORS. Thomas 0: Hill, , Thomas H. Moore, William Musser, Samuel Castner, • Samuel Bispham, James T. Young, IL L. Carson, • Isaac P. Baker, Wm. Stevenson, Christian J. Hoffman, • Beni. W. Tingley, Samuel B. lhoroae, Edward Sher.' THOMAS 0.1111,11, Preeident; Onsm3, secretary. • _ PIIII4DELPIIIA. December 23, IBM )111,411 II Aid ERICANIFIRE INSURANCE COM. PANT, incorporated 1810.—Charter perpetual. No. 310 WALNUT street, above , Third, Philadelphia Haring a large pail-np Capital Stook awl Surplus in vested in sound and available:Seotirities, continue tc insure on dwellings, stores, Intititure, merchandise. vessels in port, and their cargOgti, and other . personal property. All losses liberally and Piromptlradmatad. DLEIZOTOII,, _ Thomas B. Marts, Edmund GI. Dritilti, John Welsh, ' ' Charles W. Poultney, Patrick Brady,. Lintel Morris, John T. Lewin , John P. Wathorill, . Pant. THOMAS B. MAW • President, Mara* 0;0 Lwow). Booretarv.. . rpß E'" PENNSYLVANIA FIRE INSU • J. RANCE COMPANY. . Incorporated lar,Charter. Perpetual— No 610 WALNUT. street; opposite Independence .1 This Conspany - , - favorably - known to the community for - over forty years, continuos to insure ngainst loss or damage by tiro on Public or Private Roildings, either permanently or for a limited time. Also on Ettrulture -, Stocks of Goods and blerohandise generally , on liberal!'terms. - Ito Capital, together with a large Rondos Fund, 101 invested" in the most Garda manner, which enables them, to offer to the insured an undoubted security in the case of loss. DIREV TOPS or . ' 1 Thenina'Sinith s _ Henn - 1010 i, -- PHillinghrun Fen, Daniel Haddock, Jr., A.:Homly. :L. SMITH, Jr., Pre9ideut. s &oratory,. De' niol Smith, Jr., L i no Iluzlehurst, rri f i ' omas Robins, John DeTeretlit DANIE viLLI 111. G. (ROWEL] 1829UHARTER PERPETUAL 1870 i rri:4ll:rTiki.th . FIRE rtsußAtio - 4 OPM:PANY ;,,, „ OF PILIELADIMETRA. OFFICE-435 ;and 437. Chestnut St. 20,000 Capital poo.ooo Accrued Surplus and Premiumss42l/070 , 0100111 Z F O / 14 :10, ' LikiEIES'PAIDIN • $810,000. 4 0144.908 42, Losepps PAID imager 18,29 OVER 00000. rPenotaalind Temporary Policies on Liberal Terme, The Company also issues upon the Rents of all, kinds of fintidings,Gronnd Bents and /Sort es. , The " FRANKLIN " linen° DISPUTEDguag Philadelphia. .... A. FIRE ASSOCIATION 4 :"..' •.4 - '._ PHILADELPHIA. ' - _ . -- InOOrpostated llliareh, 1375. Imo. Offioe---No: 84. North Fifth Street. MOURN BUILDII4III3, 'HOUSEHOLD YIIBNITURN. AND AINBAMANDISE GENERALLY FROM LOSS BY FIRE. (In tho city of Philadelphia only.) Assets January' ls / 870 s , • 04,572 732 2,5. TRUSTEES: E l William H. Hamilton, • Oboriall P. Bower, • John (Jarrow, . . . Peter . Williamson' Ck3orge I. Young, Jesse Lightfoot, . Joseph R. Lyndon, Robert Shoemaker Levi P. Coats, Peter Armbruster, Samuel Sparhawk, M. H. Dickin son, Joseph . Schell. WM. H. HAMILTON, Preaidanti SAMUEL SPARHAWK, 'floe President. WM. T. BUTLER. Setretarr. - 114,496 74 $2,106,534 19 81,045,a5e INSURANCE CO NIPANY OF NORTH AMERICA. Fire, Marine and Inland Insurance. Incorporated 1794. Charter Perpetual. Capital $500,000i Assets,July Ist, • 1870 $2,917,906 071 Los,ses Paid Since Organic' zation, - - 824,000,000 Receipts of Preinim, l 69, $1,901,837 , 45 Interest from InvestMents, 1869, . . Losses_paid, 186% First - IA tyrtgage=on - Ellits ,- Pro_pti Ly.. - $17(331 - 50 - 00 United. Statea-rOcmerntnent -- and - other Loans, Bonds and 5t0ck5.1,306,052 50 Cash in Bank and in hands of Bankers 187,367 63 Loans on Coliateral Security....... 60,733 74 Notes Receivable, mostly Marine Premiums Premiums in course of tranQmis- 56,000 a 313,700 71 sion and in bands of Agents.... 122,138 89 Accrued Interest, Re-insurance,&c 39,255 31 Unsettled Marine Premiums.— . 103,501 57 Real Estate, Office of Company.... 30,000 00 Total Assets July 1,1870, - $2,917.906 07 e1,&52,100 04 ARTHUR. G. COFFIN, SAMUEL W. JONES, JOHN' A. BROWN, CHAS. TAYLOR, AMBROSE WHITE' WM. WELSH, S..MORRIb WALN. JOHN MASON, GEO. L.HARRISON, MATTHIAS MARIS, Secretary. C. H. REEVES,Assistant Secretary. Certificates of .Marine Insurance issued (wben desired), payable at the pound ug Etouse of Messrs. Brown, Shipley & Co.; London. fol 6 th lam /y , MM=ll mHE COUNTY FTRE INEiintiiNCE COW PANY.—Office, N0..110 South' ninth' street, below Chestnut., , i _ "The Fire Intmrarbbe CoMpanY of the County of Phila. delphia. ,, Incorporated by the Legis/ato re of Pennsylva• t Ha i n 183 9 , for indemnitY against loss or damage by file, exclusively. , CHARTER •PERPETUAL. This old and reliable •institution, with ample capita) , 1 .nd contingen t fund carefully invdsted,, continues to in itLre build ings, furniture merchandise ,: d m., either per 'patiently or or a limit time, against lose or damn. by tiro, at the lowest rate consistent with the absolato safety of its customers. Lessee adjusted and paid with all possible deePatch. PLREOTORS: Chas. J. Sutter, Andrew H. Miller, Henry Bndd, . , James N. Stone, , John Horn, Edwin L. Restart', Joseph Moore, •, : ~, ' Robert V. Massey, Jr. • Meek° Murk Devine. George , CHAIM El J. SUTTER,Tresident. HENRY BUDD. Vicp President. BENJAMIN N. HOECHLEY. Secretary and Trottel:iv ~ CHARTER PERPETUAL. • . ' ASSETS 5200,000. MUTUAL FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY OF ORB. ..8(1)1,672 0 Take Risks in Philadelphia; Montgomery and Bucks counties, on the most favorable terms, upon Dwellings, Barns Merchandise , Furniture and Farming 'mete. ruentS: including Hay, Grain, Straw, Sic., Ato. DIREGTORS. . • Nicholas Rittenhouse, Nathan Jones, James F. Langstroth, Chas. Welsh, JOho oh Boucher, StokChas. 111111 plan, ee. • CR ROBERTS, President. ',stars , and Treasurer. - • Assistant Secretary. UNITED. FIREMEN'S INSITRANSH COMPANY OF PHILADELPHIA, . , __Thiaeomnany takes riski at the lOwest rates consistent with.safety, and confines its business exclusively to 1 1 FINN, INSIIRANOF IN THE CITY Or PHILADIar PHIA. OFFICE-Ago. Pa Arch 'treat, Fourth National Hank 13111644 D imporolll3 ,, • • I T o b hu m oitasiveJ.tldartin, Henry W. Brenner. Alberto(' King, Win . Ro h n , floury Burnet, James M anon; Jtun" Wood/ - (J harlos a udge GiellnP ., 110 r Mkt - James Jonner. .l l-5 n . Albert T, Hickson, Limp alunigea, Albert O. Hob erlei am D r i gnin Fitzpatrie , • ' '•• / • • 00NRAD MANDRESB; Pivilderd: WOK. A, Sown, Troth WIC H. Fatal, Ipmer. - . - Spencer Roberts, . :.• John Stallman, Albert Ashmeadt • Joseph Bandoborry. Wm. Aohmead, DI. D., Abram 'Rex, Ohm , SP ENC II II CHAS. R. STOKES,Socr INSURANCE Assets .on a:airaistilr 52;425,131. 61. _ DIRECTORS. Alfred G. Baker, " Alfred Fitter, Samuel G,rant,' Thomas Sparks; Geo. W. Richards, :Wm. S. Grant, Isaac Lea, -- Thomas B. Ellis, George Vales, •_ Gustavus S. Benson. ALFRED G. BARER, President. GEORGE FALESalce_Preeddcmt.__ , JAI3 - 14731eALLISTEIC SeCietary. - • THEODORE K. BEGB J, Asaistant Secretary. fe7 tde3li STATEMENT. _OEM E ASSETS._ DIRECTORS. FRANCIS R: COPE. EDW. H. TROTTER, EDW. S. CLARKE, T. CHARLTON BENET'', ALFEED,D. JESSUP, 'LOUIS C. MADEIRA., ! CHAS. W: CUSHMAN. CLEMENT A. GRISCOM,; WM. BROOKIE. ARTHUR;:G. COFFIN; CHARLES PLATT, TICE-PRESIDENT. AL&NTOWN, OFFIOIp 'NO. 4829 MAIN STRIINT, F A Eri r i 1 1 3RESTNUT 8 °EI. COMPANY, 116 ' INCORPORATED IS ,',, CHARTER PERVIMVAIfiI CAPITAL_, O_ 2OO P. - FIRE INSURANCE , inikunlifilsVEL,T..„ l .' Insures against Lose or Pamago by F i re, ° WY gval ... .... -, -, Detual or Terrifror4 ,l 7, ?pl!oisql. -, arllinrdaiw , • • Obarles Richardson, , Robort,Pearoe, Wm. H. Ithawn. • , John Amster§ Jr.* William 01..tisyrerr, Edward H. °roe. , . John F. smith, : - • onarleabinkeiN, 1 . Nathan Hines. __John W. E verrnana_ gleorgr Ort ATTlFeat • _7_ , Mordeoi4l3nigh,V , ..; t kltLEs CiHARDBO, Prmarer4 . ... Th. ,,,, ..,,, .MAbigket a k , Vl3Zi etarir m-Pria . as i t i p __""..." "''' •. ____ TEFFEBI3OI4 PIE INS VIS,H.MOO . War tJPANY of Philadelphia.--illkoe.Nd. Il North Wei street, near Market street. , _ . •L, „ Incorporated by the Legislature 'of• P4mnsylvaitn. Charter perpetual. Capital and Assets 8160,000. Mats Insurance against Loss or damage . by Fire on Palk, MI Private Braidings, Furniture, Stocks, Goode and M. - ohandise, on favorable terms,i. RO• Wm. McDaniel, DIRE Tu ' Mdword•PlMe7er Israel Peterson, • Frederick Ladne r .. John F. Belaterlin , Adam J. Glassy, Henry Troenmor, Henry Delany, Jacob Schandem, • John Elliott ' Frederick Doll, I Samuel Miller,• Emerge E. f e rr,,,, William D_. Gardner. ,' , WILLIAM, MoDANIEL, President, ISRAEL PETERSON. Vice Presiding, - . PREILF I. Cbtanuai. Secretary and Treasurer. IFI. ' ' •: i : ~I ' I . t I • •. • • --0 : fIA I RTEIII • ZRPIPTUAL Office No. 811 WALletiT,Street, Above Third, Philada, Will insure egainet Lose or Denluirs;PF Fire en Baal' trigs, either perpeteally or for a limmd time, Housepold Furniture and. Merchandise general,.' • • Also, Marine. Insurance on Venial, °envois NA Freights. Inland Insurance to all part! of the Union: LBEOTOBEI. ( 11 William Esher I ' l 'Loris Audeirtied, '' ) ,Wm. M. Baird: , • John getollew. ~ • • John B. Blackisten,` ' J. F. Ballitt, W_ illiam li. Deant• Joh* 8., Heel ) , , i.' Peter Sieger, Ilamnel yy. p, o ga sz i sli c WILLIAM Saltß,Ftieddent: , ---,,_ _ WILLIAM F. DMAn, • Vice Franatai i W . M. SurreSsaretarr. , , liii to eh Ifr BOMAR BIRCH & BON,' A.ITOTIIN HERB AND (10M111.18810N IirtERCHANTR,. , No. 1110 CHESTNUT street, Rear entrance No:1101 Ransom striver.' " Household Furniture of ovary closet-19450t received . , Sales of iFurniture at 'Rowe Ling. attended to ou. the! - most veasonabie terms. • IIIIPORTANT SALE OF SEVEN HA NISOME`UOTTAGES AND 22 COTTAGE SITES, - AT CAPE MAY, N. ;J: ON SATURDAY EVENING. August 6, at t o'clock at the Stockton Hotel, 031;14 MAW WILL BE SOLD, At Public Sale. Seven handsome Double Two-story Cottages, Willa Mansard Roofs, containing from 9 to .L roomsebrAlt:of the best materials and workmanship, and located most advantageously In relation to the sea shore. A t same Hite will be Sold 22 lots of 'grOuittl.dealrahli located for Cottages, on Grant street, Wood sltset ant For further partiCulaiS apply to the Auctioneers, 1110 Chestnut street, Philadelphia, ' • • Or. 11. B. bWAIN, Caps Mars N. • • : FREE RAIL .110 CD EXCITES - WK.. SECOND GREAT AUCTION• SALE OFTHOSE BEAUTIFUL BUILDING ttOTS. IN THE NEW _ TOWN OF HORTON.- on _the_ _West Cheater...RAlL, road. nine mile), fhim Philadelphia, ON_fillas DAY AFTERNOON. AUG. 8, 1870, , • AT 218 O'CLOCK, UN THE' PREMISES, Persons wishingto procure cheap and,Pleatiaot Hometa should not fsil to attend. fist ORTON is beautifully loCated in the centre of a most delightful, healthy and densely populated :country, within thirty minutes of Philadelphia* by hourly trhine on the Weld, Chester Railroad.- and wilt secure to reit dents the advantage of attending to business in the city aid the benefits of plum air and country brume., , - These beautiful Bull , ing Sites (generally-28 by 120 tw it° feet), are centrally .It, cated .Imns ediately. at the depot, and present a rare chance for good investment or, cherip. nod pleasant honica. Each t Lot pnup at audio:oilman be sold without regard,to price.. . . Title perfect. .Torms, One. third'cash, balance'dn one Year, with six per cent. interest. secured, hr lion on the , praperty sold, or ell cash. if purchaser prefers it.' :TOR. - Dollars casts as part of cash payment 'to ho paid - on;ety.it - Lot when sold. -Deeds free of eXpenSe to' purchuatuls: - • A FREE EXCURSION TRAIIN,' c,"-: •• ' will leave the West Chester Depot, Thirty:Shit and Cite-Stant streetsott two.o'clock. precisely on the,dety. Of Pale, and convey grown pets - one Walesand gentlemen) to, ' and from .the aale, free. of dna hie, .8 topping, at -Angor, Kelleyvillo . sad Clinton, returniat the,sanatc.alteeneetty l ' No one undertwenty-one , years allowed on thdtraht. ........FREE: BOTH WAYS—..._ NO TiCRJETS REQUIRED. 112IINT.T.NGI, IhrßlibitOW & 00.; • '"ADO - .- N0a..232 and 234 Margot stroot. oo T TON] 11111 rn 8; - _- ESALE,OF 2,OOO,CASES BOOTS, 8140E5,-11ROCIANti, - - ON TUESDAY- MOTININa Atfaust g. at 10 o'clock. on four month Q' crodit 114,690 74 82,106,434 19 FIRST FALL RALE OF BRITISH,FRENOH, GER MAN AND DOMESTIC DRY GOODS, ON. THURSDAY MORNING. A ugn.t-11It-19 -o'clodcz-on -four months? tredlt. N. 11.--Pnrtioulars boreafter.-- ''• $1,035386. 84 OPENING FALL RALF OF OAAPPITINGS. OIL • .cLOTIIFI, . - ON - FRIDAY - MORNING; Augustl2 . o 4_ o'elock,on lone mouths! ereilltolthout wit Neer s legrain: Venetian, Items, Cottage an Bag Carvetings,- Oil, Glottis, Rtigs i Ae, Also, One largo Table., with drawers. Also, Cuunting-rooni Desk & SONS, ATTOTIONIMIIIy _ Nos. 1.19 an d 141BotatollP013BT.11 stmt. BALES dirraroffil KT Public sales at the Philadelphia /ilaetnsalle, oriel TURSIa&Yost 1 2 o'clock. • lEir Furniture sales; et the Auction Store Spiny THURSDAY. • • • • ET' Sales at Residence's receive especial attention • . 298,406 43 • Sale No. 413 Arch street. OFFICE TABLES, DESKS, COUNTERS, FIRE PROOF , SAFE, SHELVING, Sc. ON MONDAY MORNING, . August 8.410 o'clock, at No.' 413 Arch `street will bo ' sold, the Fixtures of Store, comprising7Pffice Tables ; Desks: large lot of Counters and Shelving; Flre-Ptoof Safe_; Wheelbarrow four-wheeled ,Truck, Sc. . Mayhe exemtned on the morning of sale at tl o'clock. .V lb' itz EIAtiVEY, AUOTIONEKRB, • (Formerly With M Thompe do Sonia, Store Nos. 48 and 80 North Sixth street. Kir Sales at Residences receive particular atteutiett, lir: Sales at the Store every Tuesday. , SUMBIER 0F;,1970. . NOTKIE.—We 'continue our ftitnlar , Sato Pura i taro t ac... at our net iOl3 Rooms, every TURSDAI MORN ING during, the Summer - Persons having Furniture to clispose'of pleaso.notlcs the above. rp L. ASHBREDGE & CO., ACTOTION 1. SIMS. N 0.606 11ARKET strebt.above Fifth.s, TAMES A. TREEMAN; AUCTIONEE% No. 42.3 WalroitatrpoL • , . PRESIDENT. MARTIN BROTHERS, AITOTIGNEERS, No. 04 ,CHESTNUT street, Aboyo - poventh, T A. MGCLELLA.ND ACU.C.19N.E11.4 1219 OffESTNIRE Ntreeti Personal attention given to , Silica of hicitleltobil Furniture at Dwellings. • • • • lir Public Salta of Fiarkitnte pk tho Italcflun 1219 Chestnut stroot, ovory Monday MO Titurada *Er Foripartioulars aeo Public I,edgep. ' iltir N. B.—A superior class OK Furnitnve . at , Sale. ' ;,' rpHE PRIN CIPAL MONEY REITABLII3II , 1. MEN T, S. E, corner of SIXTD and RACE streets. Money advanced on Morehandiele generallyWateheis, Jewelry, Diamonds, Gold and Silver Plate, tuad da,ttll articles of vidne,'Cor tiny length df timdred bn.l • '- WATCHES .AND JIf,WELEN AT, , PR ATE S&LS Fine Gold Minting Casd, Double 'II Dom and • Ofti Face English, American Mid Swiss Patent ,hever Watches ; Pine Gold' Hunting Case and Open Faco Le ine Watches; Fine Gold Duplex and other ;Vetches; Nine Silver Hunting Case and Open Paco English, Ame rican and Swiss Patent Lever and Repine - , Watchiss"; Double Case English Quartier,and other Watches ;• La dies' Fancy NS otchos, Dlaur In nd,, ,Breastpins, Floc Rings, Ear hinge, Stnds, &c, Pine Gold ains, M. lions, Bracelets, Scarf Pins, Breastpins, Finger B, e Pencil Cases, and Jewelry generally. - FOR BALE—A large and valuable: Fire proofs suitable for a Jeweller ; cost $6BO. • Alto, several Lots in South Camden* Fifth .Andl Meat um arse% • ,; , , , BARRI - TT 4CO. AUCTIONRIFRA •, CASH AUCTION HOUSE:, No. 230 MARKET fitreAt. enrnet of BMI street r IVIERRIM &SONG 1.1.1. SOUTHWARK FOUNDRY, • 430 WASHINGTON Avenue, Philadelphia, 111ANUFACTIJRIP l, 3TriAkl. ENG INES—high , and Low. Prosstirettiorinen• tal, Vertical, Beam, Oscillating, Blast an Cornish Pum_ping. BOILER isiplinder, Flue, • Tabulat',&o:' ' - - STE.A3I, HADlMERb—Natimpth ,emdDavy sqleat ctil all , • OASTIN GS—Loam, Dry and Or.eoll Sand, Brast,,4lo; ROOFS—Iron Frames, for covering with Slate or iron. I TANKS—Of Cast or.'Wrought rian;for refineries, wets& GAS DIACHINEILY-;.Siteh an RefOrtS, Bond! o,,O2ditilln_i Holders and Frames, Purifiers, Volta. i9 Ol Id 4l Barrows ValveitGOvornbre, &O. ' ' • .SUGAII-VOHLNER,Y—Such as ,Vansitim„Pans Awl Pumps',efeemo n t • Bono Black Filters,' Burner'. Washers and Elqyat ' or t i• Bag Filters, ,Sugar tunkliona Black - Care 'dtc. - --z----.---'- Sole.reannfacturein of thefollowing tipsinalties: ; LC - In Philadelphia and vicinity ,of William Wright's Patent Variablellut.off Steam Engine: In the United States, of Weston 's Patent Self-center. ing arid Self-balancing Centrifugal Sugar-dralnlngtht. --cie - - Glass Bißartott's improvement'On'Alplnwelt Woobreeil Centrifugal. ~ Bartol's Patent Wrought-Iron Retort Lid. — Stsahanie Drill Grinding Ittet. , I • Contractors for the dosign, erection and fitting tip of nos tineriesfor working Sugar or Molasses. , PPER flO KETTiaI ‘,./' Sheathing, Brazier's oopperiiplit,, °IN tad Ingot Copper, constantly: , !oMhOod - ana ( lar MINS! WiNSOR 00.• N 0.332 Scutt. Wharves. • SPIRITS • TURPUNTIN!, .13,0 ALL AND TAII.-3. 8 .1 bids. Spirits Turpqntine.• t 142 lAN, new Virginia Eosin; 207 tails: No. 2 Rdmin; bblii. " Wil mington" Tar, lninling from - 8.13. " Pioneer," and fur 01110 by E. 11, BOY LEIC ItfßoutLlratetrQOii EAU ktrargAtver. AUCTION' , ISAJLE MACIII N . ER Y lit6N '•fitC.,' I