Daily evening bulletin. (Philadelphia, Pa.) 1856-1870, August 20, 1870, Image 4

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    A. HEBREW CHURCH. SCHISM.
enstoins of the Fathers Set Aside—An
Unorthodox Chnzan. and a 1111xed
Ch°lr.—Application for an Injunction.
• [From the Baltimore American, aus.ts.)
In the Circuit Court for Baltiniore city,
Judge Pinkuey, there was filed by William F.
'rick- -- 1 - srpreourrsel-foc_o ns p lairians
jamin Himmelreich (President)i . Joel Seliger
(Vice President), Joseph M. Schotithal(Trea
surer), and 'Levi Baer, Jacob Rise, Moses
Rosenthal, Moses Keyser, Jacob. Greenbaum,
Henry Neusbaum (electors), of said congrega
tion, a bill for au injunction, &c. ; The bill is
.quite lengthy and recites the fact of the congre
gation having been incorporated under the title
of "The Electors of the Baltimore Hebrew
Congregation," by an act of General As
sembly, at the - December session, 1529,
that by a supplement to said act of incor
poration, passed December . session,
1851, the number of electors, then
five in number, was increased to nine, and that
the male members over twenty-one years, or a
majority of them, should ordain and establish
such by-laws and ordinances as were necessary
for regulating the spiritual and temporal
concerns of said congregation, and for govern
-ing: the- proceedings of_said electors ;_provided,
however, that no alteration - shonld be Made in
the mode and form of worship, and in the rites
and ceremonies then used in said congregation,
except with the assent of two-thirds of the
ineinbers - in 'attendance at a"regularlY Allied
meeting of the congregation. By the conitittt
tionof said religious corporation, duly adopted,
it was provided that its officers should consist
• of ar'Presiderif - Vice. President,-Tretustirer; -and
six electors, which offiCers should, together,
making nine, form a' Board of Managers, to ,
:whom' the' management of the affairs of , the
congregation should , be intrristed,' and`who
should be charged with the duty of seeing that
the pro Visions of the said constitution and of
such by-laws as should be adopted by said
Board, and approved by the 'congregation,
should be observed.
THE "CHAZAU" AND THE "SHAMES."
It was farther provided by said teonstitation .
--- th - it - the - S - Rrettiry; -- the - Chazau - (or - Reader - of -,
the.SerVice), the Shames (or Sexton); and all
Other.: salaried .'officers of the'. eongregatiOn,
should be elected at the regular quarterly - meet-
July,andshoild enter upon their respeCt
ivc.dutiez. on, the Ist day of October is each and
every year. It was further declared bythe said
constittition,under the article thereof.regulating
the'' form of worship, that the fixed prayers
should always be read in the Hebrew language,
-; according to_the customs of the orthodox Ger
man Jews, and it - *as furthermore provided
that the said constitution shotild nover be
changed or amended, eieept by proceedings un
der which proPoSed alterations or amendments
were regularly submitted to a meeting of the
congregation convened for the purpose, and
adopted bY , a vote of three-fourths of the mem
bers-preSentat:such meeting. The bill enu
merates the officers of the congregation (as
designated above), and states that complain
ants-are regialar meinbers of said congregation
and'cerpoiation, many of them . haVing been
- connectedtherewith sinee,its orgauization,_ancL
all raf ..them being .deeply concerned in main
taining the ancient and 'orthodox character of
the doctrines, services, rites and ceremonies of
their church. The complainants state that of
late, however, . innovations in. doctrines and
rites have been introduced, or sought to be -
introduced, into the services of said synagogue,
(Lloyd street), in violation of the.feeliegs and
• against the wishes, - Votes and - protests of com
plainants. And of some of these,'
; the bill
states, the complainants have a right to 'com
plain, as being not only in opposition to their
views of what is :right and, orthodox, but in
direct and flagrant violation of the fundamental
laWs and charter by which the proceedings of
said ,religious--corporation are, as aforesaid,
limited. and regulated. In the first place, the
complainants insist and charge that the provi
sions contained in the constitution of their
corporation, for an annual election of their
Chazau or Recorder,.being intended as a salu
tary restraint upon the exercise of any new or
doubtful functions, or the introduction of
any heterodox doctrines or ceremo
nies, is vitally important and es
sential as part of the fundamental law of the
said religious corporation. Nevertheless,
while the said provision for an annual election
was in full force and unaltered, a majority of
the members of the said congregation present
at the July meeting of the year 1869 did pro
ceed, in opposition to the expressed wishes and
protests of your complainants and others of
said members, to elect Abraham. Hoffman the
Chazau of said church or congregation for a
term of five years instead of one year, and at
the July meeting of the present year, 1870,
when of right an annual election should have
been held for such officer, to serve for one
year from the Ist day of October next, no
election was held, and it is claimed by the
officers of said corporation that the election
held in July, 1809, is valid and sufficient to
constitute the said Hoffman the lawful Chazau
of said congregation for the term of five years
from the, Ist of October, 1869, without re- .
' FEMALES NOT TO SING IN THE CHOIR.
In the second place, according to the custL
of the orthodox German Jews from time im-
Memorial, it MIS not been allowed that females
should take part'in theTites and ceremonies of
the ;church by singing in a choir) with males,
and no such mixed choir bath hitherto existed,
been permitted or organized in the church
aforesaid, of which complainants are members.
The bill further states that in violation of the
constitution and in contravention of the sup
plemental act of Assembly, a bare majority of
the members in attendance at a meeting of the
congregation lately held, not, constituting. even.
a majority of the entire body of the members - "
of 'said congregation, did by a vote determine
to organize and use in the ceremonies of the
said church, a choir of mixed male and female
voices, and such a choir is now organized,
'and the officers of the congregation have given
their assent to the introduction and use of the
said choir in the services. The complainants
insist and charge that this innovation is an in
fraction in an essential particular of the doc
trines and traditions of their church, which
prohibit females from taking such part in its
rites and ceremonies, and as such it is an un
authorized and unlawful alteration and cor
ruption, sought to be introduced into the pre
sent form of worship,. rites and ceremonies of
their Church. In the third place (tire bill
states) the said Chazau, who has been unlaw
fully elected, as aforesaid, for a terns of live
years, and who, by virtue of his office, is au
thorized occasionally by the President to de
liver addresses before the congregation, hits not
only from time to time in said addresses
preached doctrines which are not in accordance
with the doctrines and traditions of the Ortho
dox German Jews, bet be has also from time
to time introduced important and unauthorized
changes in the ancient torus of worship by the
omission of certain-esseutialparts of the service.
and thenArlition of others not cestomary 0y..a1 7 :
• `'.lovable; and has finis taken upon himselflo
dowhat can _only
be lawfully done by a regu
far vote of the members of the congregation, in
accordance with the charter and constitution
thereof.
THE BOARS) 311 !ST AN•SERT AuTnortrn
The complainants state that inasmuch as the
Board of Managers of said corporation are . ex
pressly charged with the duty of seeing that the
provisions of its constitution and by-laws and
ordinances shall be strictly observed, the said
Board is. recreant in the performance of its
duties in allowing the said election of Chazau
for a ternibf five years from the Ist of October,
1869, and in permitting the organization and
authorizing the introduction and use of the, said
mixed choir in the church ; and also in allow-
ing the said Chazau to preach unsound doe
tines, and to make unauthorized alterations in
the form of worship. After referring to the
:flithority.of theSotirt in the matter, the coin
; iainants pray that, the above-named electors,
managers be enjoined and Pro-.
I,:bited from allowing said Abraham Iloflinan
officiate as the Chazau of said congregation
hall be lawfully re-elected to hold said office
Vier that day; and also from allowing the Use
,t' a mixed choir of males and females 'in the
eligious services in the said church; and also
i't'em allowing any labridgment in, or addition
to the ancient and well-established form of,
worship, rites and ceremonies in the said
vßurch until lately always in, use, according to
he customs of the orthodox German 'Jews.
There has been no . appearance of counsel for
ihe defendants yet. Judge Pniliney has di- .
rected that upon their being served with the
usually required notice, the case should be set
down for a hearing on the IStb of Septem
ber.
THE ARCHBISHOP OF CANTERBURY
• ON RITUALISM
He Regards it as an Evil.
The Archbishop of Canterbury has addressed
a letter to the Chairmen of - the Portsmouth
branch of the Church Association, in answer
to a memorial forwarded to him; signed by
upwards of 2,000 lay and clerical members of
the United .Church of England and. Ireland.
The memorialisteComPlain. of the adoption, by
a party within the Church, of doctrines and
practices alien to the purity of the reformed
faith,-and-express their "_indignant sorrow and
surprise at , the supineness and apathy that
have prevailed for se long a period on the part
of their ecclesiastical rulers." The Primate
writes' under' date of , Aug. 3 :.
" I am not surprised that many members of
the Church of-Englandshould feel indignant
at practices and doctrines which have in some
plaCes sprung up during the last twenty-years,
having a manifest tendency to assimilate the
- worship and teaching of our pure, Scriptural
and Reformed Church to the system of the
-Church-of-Rome— -But_Leannot_in any_ way_
agree with you in the belief that this evil is owing
to sqpineness and apathy on the part of the
Bishops. •You'must be well aware that 'the,
beneficed clergS_Of the Church of England ere
. not, like the priests of some portions of the
Church of Rome, dependent for their position
on the arbitrary will of their Bishops, nor, like
some Dissenting ministers, liable to be removed
by a vote of their congregations, or of the
heads of their community. I, for my parts
whatever disadvantages - may follow from this
freedom of the clergy, rejoice that it is secured
to them, and that no clergyman of the Church
of England can be removed until he has had a
fair and open trial before a competent tribunal,
in which his violation of the law of the Church
has been legally proved. I agree with what'
I presume is your wish, that the
points at issue might, as the Ritual
Commission has suggested, be decided in some
less expensive and more expeditious manner,
and I have always expressed my readiness to
assist in improving our legislation in this diree
tkin. But 1 cannot attribute blame to those
\A ho, while the Legislature has shown no dis
position to intrust the Bishops, with great
authority, have thought it their duty, however
such their patience has been tried, always to
:a-according-to-law, and not to seek some
bitrary mode. of _ crushing . those whose
they disapprove, when such power is
not conferred upon them either by the Church
r the law of the land. In the midst of the
anxieties of a-disquietednge and the rancor-of
arties, I look, in common with my brethren
of the Episcopate, to the Great Head of the
t :Much to aid us, in His own good time, in our
faithful endeavors to maintain Ills honor ; and
I feel sure that by His bles,sing the truly Scrip
t ural character of our Reformed Church, as set
forth iii our formularies, will at last be vindi
cated, and bur Church, retaining its hold on the
affections of this great people, will preserve its
acknowledged position as the exponent of an
enlightened Christianity, laboring to prothote
ueation, boldly rebuking vice, and standing
rth as the bulwark at once against supersti
in and infidelity."
HE TRUE STORY OF THE HttRSEIL
LAISE.
The London Daily News claims that the
true origin of the " blarseillaise" is as follows:,
" One day in the last week of April, 1792, a
certain dinner party was given by the Mayor
of Strasbourg, Monsieur Dietrich. The great
War, which was to last three-and-twenty years,
and to cost the world millions of men and
hundreds of millions of money bad been pro
claimed a few days before. All hearts in
France were beating with hope or anger as
they are beating now, and the talk at this
eventful banquet was all of the war and its
prospects, as it may be now. Where,' it was
arked,' is a Tyrtieus who will give words to
the enthusiasm of the people ?"Their Tyrt,etts
was among them—a young officer of engi
neers, thirty-two years of age, called Rouget de
Lisle, musician and poet, as well as soldier.
At the close of the evening he went home
a!dtated and unable to sleep. Taking his violin,
he improvised the first verse and the air of the
loblest national war song that has ever been
written. Ile Worked at it thewhole night long,
and in the morning he took it, finished, to his
lends. The Mayor's niece, Mlle. Dietrich, to
\\ horn lie first showed it, instantly sent for all
guests of the preceding day, and played it
o them. It was welcomed with delight.
•.‘pies were made and circulated among the
ii.ilitary bands of Strasbourg, and the ragged
d half-starved troops marched to the frontier
t„ this music of the new hymn. It was called
le Chant de l'Arrn ee du Rhin.
: " Published:in *a little. Strasbourg - .paper of
v Web Dietrich was proprietor, by degrees it
more widely knoWn, But it had no real
i ..,pularity till it was adopted among the troops
.1 Marseilles, and shouted all the way from
at city to Paris, by that, grim and ferocious
nod of six hundred, who knew how to die,'
:tud were led by Barbaroux. The astonished
a rs of the Parisians heard then for the first
ante, from the hoarse throats of their fierce
-.tors, the terrible words, /thous! enfans de
patrie."lhey called it first the des
:darseillaise,' and subsequently the Marseil
,• It is noteworthy that the author was put
: prison and deprived or his military rank
1 . refusing his adhesion to the changes brought
..tout by the 10th of August, when these men
• i‘ ho knew how to die,' did die, shot down by
Swiss, and shouting his own words. Ile
d supplied the torch • to fuel, which, when
,ndled, came near upon constuning himself as
%, ell as the banded kings' across the frontier.
1,,,t Robespierre fell, and the poet got out of
singing another hymn, composed in his
e 11. It is hardly given, ' however, to
man to touch more than once
die deepest heart of a nation; and the
songs of Rouget del:Asia are now forgot
ten. lie„ rejOilled the army, waswonoded it
( and::•_ohltged'lo7tetirefrOM
military service. At Paris he lived for six
and-forty years.loimer, a calm and blamele;ss
existence, unmarried, fecund in poetry, music
and memoirs, with no troubles except to make
both etidS meet; a calm, unambitious man,
who bad no desire to obtrude himself. From
the successive governMents lie got but sc,itity.
recognition, receiving little till Louis Philippe,
in 1 u iO, ,gave him a pension of three thousand
five hundred francs, with the Cross of the Le
gion of Honor. And-When,he tiled, 180,
he did not leave enough behind him to defray
the expenses of his own funeral. Ills other
works are pretty well forgotten, but the 'Mar
seillaise' remains the one expression, in words_
and music, of the indignation and fury with
YHILADELPHIA 4VENING BULLETIN, SATURDAY, AUGUST 20, 1870.
which Fiance went to war hi: 1792; of the
wild holies and wilder dreams of the Great
Revolution; and of the noble frenzy with
•Which a great people rose to assert thems3lves,
and to beaten that Reign of Universal Brother
hciod and Equality, the advent of which is yet
looke.d for by thousands. :• •
"The old associations of the: song, then,
-ate=ofdreamsandideas for which men blight well
die. But in giving it back to the people, the
Emperor strips it of its surroundings of arri
cades and general overthrow. It will be no
mere what it has been. Already the Parisians,
• who a fortnight ago were sinning it all day and
all night, are weary of it. Their, grandfathers
never wearied of it. It may once more lead
Wit troops to victory on the Rhine; but it will
miver more bear its old power to stir the blood
of Frenchmen. Blown about in the trumpets it
may be the herald of great triumphs, but its
former influence will be gone; and with new
associations and new memories, it will no more
serve for the shouts of the red-capped republi
cans, and the war battle of maddened students
titing from the barricades of Paris.
g , The very words are out of date. What do
these lines mean now ? •
•
"' Que vent cette horde d'esclaves,
De traitres, de Rois conjues ?
7-There is only one_king.no.w against France,
there are no more slaves and no traitors—as yet.
In the revival of the song we see its death, for
though music will not die the power will be gone
out Of it, and it will henceforth rest,ron another
basis than its old one of Liberty; Equality and
Ftaternity. For the soldiers of the new army
of the •lihine to sing this song is as if an old
litany of a suppressed and glorions worship
were revived - to be sung before a•-'new--idol.
The Marseillaise ' can :never be the song of
Imperialism. The Tyrk - eus of ' that patty is
'et to seek."
If Prussia Is Deleated...lVhat Then?
(From the Paris Temps of August 5.1
As to the - issue of the war, - the: adviser of
King William looks forward to it with the
utmost calmness—not that he affects any arro
gant confidence in the military results, hat the
political consequences appear to him to present
little danger to his cause, even on . the supposi
tion of a striking defeat. "If Prussia lavicto
liens" he'says,,"she would not only achieve
German unity to her' - oWii adVantage,b - ut'She
would retake, if she thought fit, Lorraine and
Alsace ; she would have in France only a
neighbor lessened in tenitory and lowered with
out the hope of recovery, subject to a political
crisis, of which it will require ten Or twenty
years before it will be over; she remains incon
testably-in--possession _of the first rank among
the Powers of Western Europe. Should Prus
sia, on the other hand, be beaten, what has sloe
to lose? At the very worst the boundary of
the Rhine. In point of fact her .territorial in
tegrity is not interfered with; her power of
expansion as representativeS, Of the Ger
titanic idea remains what it was before ;
her internal constitution rests intact;
her power and her military renown
Will be shaken for a time, it is true, but she will
remain in full possession of all the elements
necessary for her recovery. For Prussia, in a
word, defeat means simply - loss - - Tif -- tinie;
for France it would be equivalent to
ruin. The first risks at the most to see her
resent compromised and her advance delayed,
voile the second plays her future' and her po
ition in the world. •So reasons Bismarck,
and it is from such arguments that he derives,
die serenity of mind of to-day, just as it caused
1 for four -years to brave us - unceasingly. He
piques himself on the_ fact that he led us where
, rird-how he - pleased. He has the cnnvietipn.
!bat he has, on his part, secured all the advan
tages on his side before beginning the game,
and he thinks - himself at least - certain that he
will not lose even if he does not succeed in win
ning. The calculation is worthy of the pro
found politician who prepared and made the
Prussia of 1866 ; but M. Bismarck has already
es perienced a first surprise in seeing France ac
claim the war, and Ler people range themselves
around their government instead of separating
from it. PerhapS this is not the only Miscal
culation that this result of the enterprise may
entail upon him, in spite of his confidence that
he has foreseen everything.
—Nelson J. Gordon, colored, had a hearing
at the Central Station, yesterday, charged with
assaulting Samuel C. Woodyard, also colored,
with a razor, and cutting him badly about the
bands and face. The difficulty, it appears,
originated about Woodyard's wife, to whom
Gordon bad been paying his addresses in the
absence of the husband. Upon his return
FRANCE.
CITY BULLETIN.
Woodyard received a note from Gordon,
stating that he and Woodyard's wife loved
each other, and also that he had been informed
of a separation between Woodyard and his
wife. Receiving no answer to this, Gordon
went to Woodyard's house, on Lombard street,
near Broad, and, after some-words on both
! , ides, made the assault with the razor, inflict
ing several gashes On Woodyard's arm. Gor
don waived a hearing, and was admitted to
F.- - 2,006 bail.
—A fire broke out in the cornice of a three-
tory brick building, 2505 Fraukford avenue,
iccupied by Thomas Mks , and Jacob stroubel,
ibout two o'clock yesterday afternoon. The
oft and roof were destroyed, as well as the
uof of a bonsei No. 250'7, adjoiniiig. occupied
by Owen,Begley and Patrick Connor. The
buildings are owned by the Reading Railroad
Company. The dames reached the lofts of
-everal adjoining houses in the row, but were
extinguished before much damage was done.
he buildings are near the Reading Railroad,
and it is supposed that the flames originated
Irvin sparks froth a locomotive.
—Capt. John V. Creely, who claims to have
he'en *initiated for Congress by the Reptib: ,
lican Convention' of the Second district, is not
satisfied with the :unanimous decision of the
epublican City Executive Committee in favor
t Hon. ChaS. O'Neill, and has referred the
matter to the State Central Committee. That
hody has referred the subject to a sub-committee
to take testimony.
—Elwood Hickson, aged fourteen years, re
siding at No. 1704 Brown street, was run over
by a wagon, about eight o'clock, last evening,
at Seventeenth and Brown streets, and hail his
I. arm badly crushed, and was also injured
shout the head.
—A match game of base-ball was played yes
terday between the Mutuals, of New Yolk, and
the Keystones, of this city, on the grounds , at
Seventeenth street and Columbia avenue. It
was won by the Mutuals, the score being 34
to S.
-A carpenter named Michael (*Melly, ell'.
gaged in working on a gram elevator at No,
eWS Market street, fell from a height of 20
feet, and sustained serious internal injuries,
yesterday afternoon. He was taken to St.
oseph's Hospital. , .
•, •
—oeorge . Moiagoinery, aged eight year ,
whose parents reside. at No. 511 Jelterskgin
• Street - waS: yesterday:d.rowneit while bathing_
in a pond back. , 91' the KenSingten basin. : •
NEW JERSEY MATTERS.
CA.NIDEN CITY ,I.3osns.—Captain Samuel
Hat 4 ,, the Treasurer . of Caniden Uity,bas paid,
singe the Ist of July last, $7,55ti 01 in gold
.and its equivalent on account of city bonds is
sued prior to 1862, and the interest accruing
thereon.
AritutsTED.--Yesterday afternoon a man
giving bis name as C 11. Smith, alias C.
Crothers; ,was taken into custody at No. 1010
Cooper street, Camden, on a charge of having
robbed a firm in Lawrence, MassacbusettS of
a lot of goods. Ile Is held for a requisition
from the authorities of Unit State; •
ATLANTIC Orry.—Tho present season in
Atlantic City has given renewed inspiration to
the permanent residents there, and the hun
dreds who own, property in various, parts of the
city feel strong encouragement to go forward
this fall and winter with additional improve
ments of a very important characte.r. Visitors
and sojourners for the summer have also been'
delighted, and it is the general impression that
by the opening—of-another-season-Pally-one
hundred new buildings, mostly private cottages,
wilt be' up and ready ' for occupancy; Other
improvements of a corresponding character wilt
also be made, such as graveling and draining
the streets, planting shade-trees, and beautify
ing gardens. The easy and pleasant facilities
for reaching the city by the various trains sup
plied by the railroad company, constitute
another advantage which will advance' these
improvements. In short, Atlantic City has now
received an impetus in growth and arrived at a
point in its history which warrant no retrogres
sion. Its future is bright and its progress
assured.
CAMDEN CITY TAXES. —Persona who have
been assessed the present year in Camden
should not forget that the Board of COMMlS
sioners, in cases of unjust \ taxation,meet on the
20th of September to hear and determine upon
camplaints.,Those wlf.o do not
. get anything
taken off their assessments at that time Will
have no other remedy, and all bills remaining
unpaid after the 20th of October following will
be placed in the hands of a Justice of the
Peace for collection; with costs.
111G111V417 ROBBERY.-A day or two since,
as a man named Christopher Krantz was pass
ing along the Moorestown turnpike, he was
assailed Uy two Wien, kdotked -- him - down .
and robbed ^him of : some money and ..other
articles. They were arrested, and committed
by Justice. Llenry., ,They crave their 'names as
Pollen and Binns.
ADIUSEMEDI'rb.
rILIPREZ & BENEDICT'S OPERA
L./ NOUSE, SowenthStreet,below arch.
THE INFANT SAPPHO
THIS EVENING.
EW ELEVENTH ST: OPERA:HOU - SW/
Eleventh Street, aboveChestuut.
- THE FAMILY RESORT.
Established 1862. •
• CARNCROSS R DIXEY'S .
CARNCROSS fi 1/12I.EY'S -• •
• MINSTRELS.
The Great Star Troupe of the World;
GRAND
NDA OPENIN
AUG. G NIGHT,
MOY, 22d.
Presenting the FINEST TROUPE OF ARTISTS In
ausnee. 3. L. CARHCROSS, Manager.
It. F. SIIIIPSON, Treasurer. aulB3l§
PROPOSAL.
TA EPARTMENT OF HIGHWAYS.
J OFFICE—No. 104 SOUTH FIFTH
STREET.
PIIILADELPHIA, August 17, 1870
NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS.
SEALED - PROPOSALS will be received at
los office of the Chief Commissioner of High
ways until 11 o'clock, A. M., on MONDAY,
•.:•Ifl inst., for the construction of a Sewer on
he east side of Ninth street, from Coates street
to the south line of Wallace street,With a clear •
:aside diameter of three feet, with such man
toles as may he directed by the Chief Engineer
and Surveyor,' The-understanding to bo that
'he Sewers herein advertised are to be corn
pet ed on or before the 111 st day of October,lB7o.
A nil the Contractor shall take bills prepared
::f2toinst the property fronting,onsaid Sewer to
the amount of one dollar and fifty cents for each
lineal foot of front on eath'side - of the street as
o much cash paid; the balance, as limited by
ordinance, to be paid by the City ; . and the
_Lontractor_ will be requited to keep the street
:nut sewer in good order for three years after
the fewer is finished.
When the street is occupied by a city pas
-enger railroad track, the sewer shall be con
structed along side of - said track in such man
; , r as not to obstruct or interfere with the safe
passage of the cars thereon ; and no claim for
eruuneration shall be paid the contractor by
the company using said track, as specified in
Act of Assembly approved May Bth, 1866.
Each Proposal will he accompanied by a
certificate that a Bond has been tiled in the
Law Department. as directed by Ordinance of
May 25th, 1860, If the Lowest Bidder shall
not execute a contract within five days after
!he work is awarded, he will be deemed as de
clining, and will be held liable on his bond for
the difference between his bid and the next
lowest bidder. Specifications may be had at
the Department pf SurVess, which will be
strictly adhered to. The Department of
Highways reserves the right to reject all bids
not deemed satisfactory.
All bidders may be present at the time and
place of opening the said proposals. No allow
ance will be made for rock excavation, except
by special contract.
MAHLON H. DICKINSON,
aulB-3tol. Chief Commissioner of Highways.
DRuPOSALS ItOR MAC HINER Y,
Y
BEATING AND FIRE EXTINGUISH
ING APPARATUS.
Sealed proposals will be received at the office
of the Superintendent until 12 M. of the
TWELFTH DAY OF SEPTEMBER, 1870,
for furnishing and erecting the machinery re
quisite in the United States Appraisers'
Stores, Philadelphia, for loading, unloading
and elevating of goods ; for heating of the
building by steam, and for fire extinguishing
apparatus; all to be made in accordance with
the. plans and specifications and the terms of
this advertisement. All of the material and
workmanship will require to be of the very
best description of the kinds specified, be put
up to the entire satisfaction of the Superin
tendent and as directed by him, and will not
to accepted until tested by actual use and
:mind satisfactory and efficient in their work
„fig,
_Everything necessary to put them in
aunplete working order will be required to be
urnished by the contractor, whether men
oned in the specifications and shown en the
dims or not.
Proposals will be made for the entire work
specified, to be completed on or before the
st day of December, 1870.
The department reserves the right ;to reject
Aix or all of the bids if it be deemed. for the
ntereSt . .ollthe Government to do so, and any..
hid that does not confOrm in every respect to
I Ito requirements of this advertisement will
bot be considered. Plans, specifications and
I firms of proposals may be procured au appli•
ation to tins office.
All proposals will require to be made on the
printed form, and be accompanied by the bond
f two responsible persons, in the sum of five
thousand dollars, that the bidder will accept
and perform the contract, if awarded to him.
';lie. bond must be approved by the Trnited
States District Judge or Clerk of the United
States Court of the district in which the bidder
iTsides.
Payments will be made monthly- upon the
i , st heat es of the Superintendent, deducting
ten per cent. until the final completion of the
contract.
Proposals must be enclosed in a sealed en
yelope, addressed to the Superintendent, and
indorsed "Proposals for Machinery, Heating
nd Fire Extinguishing Apparatus.
CHARLES S. CLOSE,
Supt. App. Stores,
No. 219 Lodgo street,
Philadelphia, Pa.
mill :0
SOFA: BEI).
1 - 10 - VlErt 9 S
Celebrated Patent '.Sofa Bedstead
• z
Ia now Lying manufactured and aid& in largo numbers,
both in FRANCE and ENGLAND.' Can be ltad only at
the Wareroonis of the uudoirsigued. Tide piece of Fur
tu re is in the form handsome . PARLOR SOFA,
yet in one minute it can bo extended into a beautiful
FRENCH BEDSTEAD, with springs, hair mattresses
Complete. It has every convenience for holding the
bed clothes, rai
easily madad acid, it 16 impossible for it
to get Out of order. The use of props or hinged feet to
support the mattress when extended, Or ropes to regu
late it, aro entirely dope (witty with, us they aro all very
unsafe and liable to got out of repair. Thu BEDSTEAD
is fortned by simply turning out the ends, or closing
them when the SOFA is wanted. They tklc2,lu comfort,
convenience and appearance, far superior to and coat no
more than a good Lounge.
Au examinatimriB solicited.
H. F. HOVER,
No. - 230 South SECOND Street, Philadelphia
to 61110 •
COT'.UO .-45 BALES COTTON NOW
landing from steamer Wyoming, from Bar aortal',
and for polo by 00011Rfili, ItUbSELIYA Co
Cbootuut Fitt cot.
WEST ARCH ST. RESIDENCE. E L
Tho house No. 1624 ARCH Fittoot, 22 foot front, with
unusually deep back Buildings, and with a Bido Yard of
18 feet. APPIY td . •
D.. T. PRATT, 108 S. Fourth St.
null f e w
Desirable-largelot-of-Ground_with Brlaic.
Factory,
S. W. coiner . Second and Iluntingdon Street
ot 250 feet on Second street by 273 feet 8 Incites
on'lluntingdon street. Possession at onto. Will be
sold on ill °rabic terms.
LUKENS & MONTGOMERY,
1039 BEACH Street, above LAUREL.
tiul7 w 12t*
FOR SALE.—TIIE ELEGANT NEW
Ida marble front Dwelling, No. 2010 Chestnut street.
ti Oh Maimard roof., designed and finished with all tho
modern architectural iniprovemont+. Open from 10 A.
N. to S I'. Dl. Will be sold on forms and price to
suit. Apply to FOX & BUNK ART. =I South Fifth
street. aulB Dt`
F 0 11 SA LE —THE MEDIUM
KU sized four-story (Mansard roof) brown stone
residence, No. 2021 Walnut street, with all the modern
ccnvenieuces and in perfect order, and at a moderate
price.
CLARK do ETTINC,
711 Walnut street.
alllO-wl m
ff - M FOR SALE, OR EXCHANGE FOR,
City Property, a very desirable modlum•nized Itesb
deuce. with a large and improved lot • twenty minutes
from-the City-on-the Gennuntown_ll.
J. M. GUMMET k SONS,
auB•ni w f26t§ 733 Walnut street.
lIARCH STREET.-FOR SALE—A
Handsome !Roden Residence, '22 feet front, with
extra conveniences; end lot 150 feet deep toa street; situ
ate on the south side of Arch street, above Fifteenth.
J. N. OURIMRY St SONS, 733 Walnut street.
CI FUR SALE.—PINE STREET (1809)
MoJern Residence, four-story brick, three•etery
back buildings, two bath: rooms, water closuta, and all
other conveniences. Lot runs through to Rearsl4
street. Teruolto suit.":YRRD. SYLVESTER,2O4 South
Fourth. je22
S s
GERAIANTOWN—FOR ALE A.
wrd handsome country seat, containing over two acres
of laud, neinted btono residence, with ettery, city con
venience ; stone stable and carriage.house, and grounds
improved with drives, walks, shade and choice-shrub
bery, situate on a turnpike road, within five minutes'
walk from a station on the Germantown Railroad. J.
111. GUMMEY & SONS, 7a3 Walnut street.
•
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY: WEi
AUL have for sale, on easy terms, fifteen minutes. from
the city, on the Germantown Railroad, an Elegant Resi
dence, beautifully itnd completely fitted out with all
modern conveniences.
It has been occupied for two years as a boarding.house,
arerniverageell winter - and summer - patronage. - J. M.
I GlEildblEY & SONS. 733 Walnut street:
111 GERMANTOWN—FOR SALE
—IWo new pointed atone cottages, with
every city . conVenienceand well built, filtuato
within five minutes' walk from Chiirchl.atio Station;
on the Germantown Railroad ; WON/ each. J. GUM
DIE SONS, No. 733 Walnut erect.
fel N UR SALE—THE 3-BTO Y BRICK
residence with 3-atory double hack buildings and
every convenience. No. 813 Lombard street. J. M.
L SONS. No. 733 Walnut rarest.
tre FOR SAL E—F 0 UR-STORY BRICK
=tut Dwelling. with three-atory double bael:
situate on Pino atreet;east of Eighteenth ; has every
modern convenience and improvement. Lot 18 feet front
by 135 feet deep. J. DI. G179191E3( EL ON'S, 733 Walnut
titreet.
FOR SALE—THE DESIRABLE
J Three-story Dwelling, with three-story back build
ings, No. =2S Spruce street. With all modern improve
tactile. Trainedlate possossion. Terms easy. Also other
properties ou \Vest Spruce street. Apply to COPP UCK
& JORDAN, 433 Walnut street.
fffl FOR SALE-GREEN STREET--
EaThu handsome - residence, marble. first story; 30
G-et front, with bide yard. and lot 197 foot doeo through
to Brandywine street I li o. 1515.
No. 1021 CLINTON STIMET—Threo-story &rolling,
with tbree•story double back buildings. Lot 20x:1-15 foot
tun street.
91'11 EST !Silt - STREET ,- - - TfandSeme feiur-sterr EM
11, 1 nce with large three,story back buildings. Lot 2
feet front by Zis feet deep. to Sallee= street. Situate
.rot of Eighteenth street.
'WEST LOG.AN SQUARE.—FOR SALE—The
handsome four-story brown stone restdence.2.9 feet front.
end haying three.story S double back buildings; situate
.60. 296 West I , ognn tare, rwrfect order.'
N. GITNNEY q & SONS.. 133 Walnut street.
011- NEW BROWN —STONE -- HOUSER,
rea NOS. .1.0(16 AND DllO SPRUCE STREET
LSO, NO_ . 2116 . L T STREET, FOR
-ALE. , FINISHED *TN WALNUT IN THE 1110 ST
SUPERIOR MANNER. AND WITEI EVERY
MODERN CONVENIENCE. E. B. W AREEN, 2613
•Pltt. - CE STREET. APPLY BETWEEN 2 AND 4
o'cLOCK P. M. mhZtt
— FOR SALE OR RENT—TfIE HAND
sonie three-story brick Residence with thri, - “st.iry
.;..nble back buildings; situate, No. '2122 Vine street;
Les every modem convenience and improvement. Ita•
poBseesion given. J. M. GOIMEY. Jr. SONS,
; Walnut street.
_
AVIA" PROPERTY.—FOR SALE—A
Wharf Property, havtug Pier 70 feet
wale. with Pocks 30 feet wile on each std., Rituuto on
bnylk ill, near Penna. Central Railroad bridge. J. M.
MMEY 8 SONS, 733 Walnut fitreet.
\ITEST - PHI LAD ELI' lA—V , EIt-Y
% V di-eirable Building Lot for nalc—Forty•flrst ettoet
low Pine. GO by It'io feet. Only unimproved lot in the
I J. G 1711,1111 EV R 50n..733 Walnut gtreet.
\ V EST
SPRUCE
Etl3;fleolEinTd.—NoF 0 ,1 1 0 % S s A pr L u r
7.2 feet front by 1M feet deep to a street. J. 517
("NMEY & SONS. 733 Walnut street.
TO RENT.
TO LET
The New Five-Story Store,
f% o. 18 South Sixth Street and No. 9 Dees
tur Street.
%% SI rent the whole or se orate Coors. with or withon
st.•nm Power. THEODORE DIEGARGER.
ordl:tf§ No. 20 South sixth Street.
frli WEST PHLL AD ELPH lA.—F URN
ished Cottage to rent or for sale .—The subscri•
r, going on foreign service by the first of September,
lens for rent the completely furnished cottage, S. E.
flier of Forty•fourth and Spruce streets, for two or
roe years. Rent, 8125 per month. Or, will sell lion.le
el furniture for e 13,000 clear. Apply on the premises
Captain JOHN GUEST.
United States Navy.
i nl9 3t"
FURNISHED HOUSE AND
it_a_grounds,corner Stenton avenue and Fisher's Laue,
I.,.tmantown, within two Illiontes' walk of the Railroad
tation, to rent for one year, froth October I. Home
;th all modern convenienees,with stable. large garden,
p,tsturalot, ,kc. Address WM. M. ELLICOTT, Ja., No.
t ,LeO Market street. atil3-th s to-r2t'
r' TO RENT—A LARGE RESIDENCE
.1:11' 11 in West Philadelphia, containing 13 rooms, with
”‘. bath, hot and cold water: Horse Stable, with live
Carriage-hots e. Cow Stable, with pasture for
cows; Vegetable and Flower Gard on. Shaded Lawn:
„t-tones hon,,e attached to hack building. Will he
Ted for one or more years. Location Forty-ilfth and
cbeatnut.stroets, entrance on Market, etreet. Apply
I . 'C. NOWELL, N. E. corner Fourth and Nitrket
itol6.6ti
f‘77.! TO RENT, FURNISHED,—TH E DE
.„
sirnble thrt , g , 'story Dwelling, No. 490 South Ninth
o eet, with all and every convenience. Possession on
, ..bout t4,ptember lot.
Iso, a tine furnished Dwelling on West Arch 'street
improvements. Immediate possession. Apply to
[TUCK & JORDAN, 433 Walnut street.
el FOR REN T—THREE LARGE
well-110ted Room. Iti - tbe tipper - portion of
mild—
_ situate - b. W. corner of Clie‘itnut titid Enveuth
suitable for manutactitringi will be rented sopa
or together, J. I. GUMMI & SONS, 733 Walnut
FOR RENT.- HANDSOME COUN
fi.a_ try place. with several acres of land, on Old York
r ui five minutes' walk from Oak Lane elation, on the
rti Pennsylvania Railroad.
FURNISHED COUNTRY SEAT, within two •min•
k walk from Havorford station, on the Pennsylvania
viral Railroad. J. M. GUMMY St SONS, 733 Wel
stroot.
OR RENT—LARGE DOUBLE
Store Property, southwest cor. Market and Sixth
J N. G1.'24111E17 & SONS, 733 Walnut st.
1 70 TO LET SECOND-STORY FRONT
Room, 324 Chestnut street, about 2AO x 23 feet.]
•,uitable for an office or light business,
tf FARR & BROVIEW
1 TO RENT—ROOMS OF ALL SIZES
,'•• well liglitedood table for light munufacturing_busi
bo , s, in building No. 712 Ohestnut street. J: M,QUR
' ' EY 3r. SONS, /33 Walnut street,
OR RENT—THE VERY DES TRA
BLE four story brick Store. situate No. 322 Mar
~t street. J. M. GUDIMEI; 09N§; No. 733 Watull
•
rilo CII.IMISTS-TO ILENT.-A SMALL
Laboratory, (Mod up fur an Analytical Clvin isl with
I i xtures, ,to., near Fourth and Walnut ids.
tt hie is a good chimes for a young than to start bileipess.
GAILDINER,
N 0.112 South Fourthirt.
CIFFICEB TO RENT, I UNISLIED AND
N-7 unfurnished.
an 18,4 - • - • A) 11 So ff it t voufai ..t.
eIREESI EST#T.III
°Rice, Jaekeon atrdet, - oppoolte Manakin street, OW
Island, N. J. Real Rotate bought and Old: 'Tempt
desirous of renting cottages during the salmon will apply
pr address as above,
nil 18.3t '
Respectfully refer to 011a11.A. Rubloam,Henry Btunm
Francis Mullvain, •Augustu Morino John Davis a.
W. Mt. Javezial • fOB-tfi
SIG. P: ,HONDINELLA, TEACHER , 0
Singing: Privato towns and. classes . Roadenco
o 8 Thirteenth street .. •
1. 600 t A )ovVy 111;e8dTup93En4oTwHopAenv,:oIrN?,,,pp.g.I.Not.
families or iiinglo goutlerneu ; Moo table board. attEitf§
MUSICAL:;
BOAItDIN.
/4 WANTED TO PURCHASE, ta
A MEDIUM-SIZED HOUSE,
racing North, between EIGHTH and BROAD and
CHESTNUT and PINE Streets.
Address, with terms and location,
HOTELS.
IRVINE- HOUSE.
A FIRST-CLASS HOTEL. EUBQPEAN
lA. PLAN. Location unsurpaesed,balngnear 1:1111011
none, Wallack ' s Theatre , and A. T. Btawatt's now
n-townstore. •
OADWAY AND TWELFTH BT.. NEW YORK.
G. P. HARLOW, Proprietor.
le4 ew3ms
',PARTNERSHIPS.
91.111.) , F1RM OF CORNELIUS &RAKER
haying been d lssolved, the undersigned have formed
a copartnership under the name of BAKER, ARNOLD
CO.. for the manufacture and sale of gas fixtures.
Manufactory B. W. corner Twelfth uud Brown streets.
tAalesroonm at the old stand. No. 710 Chestnut street
• .WIIIDIAM 0: BAKER.
• . CBAWBOIW - ARNOW,
IWBERT C. BAKER.
--
Pint•AngLrina,July 1, WO
E W r - P tTUL LCA'ITONS-
QUNDAY SCHOOLS GET THE BEST
10 LIBRARY BOOKS from TIFIRTY•SEVEN dif
ferent Put,Rebore, of J. C. GARBO:ICES er CO., No. 60i3
Are!, street, rliiltidelphiu.
ELL'S POPULAR ENCYCLOPEDIA
L. COLANGE, LL. D., Editor.
Tho DEST,LATESTandOREAPESToyer published;
ie net only a COMPLETE ENCYCLOPEDIA. 'written
Since tho titlesence the only one giving any account of
the late band tboeo who fought thero,but it is also a
COMPLETE LEXICON
A GAZETTEER OF TUE WORLD, • •'
A BIOGRAPHICAL DICTIONARY,
A BIBLICAL DICTIONARY,
A LEGAL DIO fIONARY,
A MEDICAL DICTIONARY,
And the only book containing all these subjects, .Tha
more than 2,000 ILLUSTRATIONS. on every variety of
subject, alone' will coot over 810.000. No other work Ls
su fully_anctso_welLillustrated—
VIEWS OF CITIES, PUBLIC BUILDINGS, PLANTS,
ANIMALS, ItIACII INEILY,IIBEAT HEN
AND' WOM EN , Arc: &c.
Total Cost, bound, to Subscribers only $27^50. a B ftTing
of more than 6 , 100 over other elirnilea works.
A CV cent specimen number, containing 40 pago4, will
be 'Wilt tree for 10 cents.' A gents and rantawrx wanted.
void only by subscription.
NOTICE.
The First volume of ZELL'S ENCYCLOPEDIA le
now complete and !Mond. Subscriptions taken either
for bound volumes or in numbers. Parties thinking of
subscribing had better send in their names at enc. , , as
the price of the work will unquestionably ho advanced
to non-subscribers.
T. ELLWOOD ZELL, Publisher,
'No. 17 and 19 S. Sixth St., Phila.
No. 5 BEEK MA N titreM, New York.
Nu. P 9 W. RANDOLPH Street, Chicago
t6tt
IMPORTANT TO BUSINESS MEN.
THE
CAPE MAY DAILY WAVE,"
For the Summer of 1870
The pnblicatioU of the Sixth Volume of the "DAILY
'WA wilLhe commenced on or - about July let, and
will be continued until SiqWeinte.r
present eachday ac. Orate and full reports of
the Hotel Arrivals and Local Events of this fashionable
resort, and will be a paper nut dhrpirine.d.by any to the
Statesi
Business men will find the "BA I LS' WAVE" a most
advantageous tueslinta for advertising, the rates for
which are as follows ;
One inch space. for the season.
Each subsequent for the season.
On the first page, F„t2 per inch In addition to the above
rates. Address,
C. 5: MAGRATII, Editor
31A GRATH & GARRETSON , Publi9hera.
- e2h-t1 Ti3lj
THE
NEW YORK STANDARD.
PUBLISHED BY
JOHN RUSSELL YOUNG,
NO. 34 PARK ROW, NEW YORK,
Containing frill and accurate Telegraphic
News and Correspondence from all parts of
the world. TWO CENTS per single copy, or
Six Dollars per annum. For sale at
TEEN WITH'S BAZAAR 614 , Chestnut
street.
- - -
CENTRAL NEWS AGENCY, 505 Chest
nut street.
ASSOCIATED NEWS COMPANY, 16
South Seventh street.
CALLENDER, Third and Walnut streets
• WINCH, 505 Chestnut street.
BOWED, corner Third and Dock streets.
And other Philadelphia News Dealers. •
Advertisements redeived at the &lice of the
MORNING POST.
flirts
USIDIESS CARDS.
J OSEPH WALTON & CO.;
CABINET MAKERS,
NO. 413 WALNUT STREET.
Manufacturers of tine furulturo and of medium laced
furuiture of superior quality.
GOODS ON HAND AND MADE TO ORDER,
Counters, _Desk•work, &c., for Banks, Oillces and
Stores, made to order.
JOSE PH WALTON,
POS. W. LIPPINCOTT,
fel-10 JOSEPH L. SCOTT
TAMES L WILSON,
ROUSE PAINTER,
51S SOUTH NINTH STREET,
Reslilence7-522 South Ninth street. .ati3o 17 4p
565—k: W.ll3ll.Tj' .
ATTOR/419Y-ATAAW, • .
tloeirrilssioner of Doede i f i gl o e i t t 3 1 tote of Fennsylventi I
96 Madison street. No. 11, Chic:ago, Illinois. strltrfi
HENRY I'HILLIPP I ,
CARPENTER AND BUILDER,
NO. 1024
PHILADELPHIA NSOM STREET,
PHIL,
010.1yrp
g 1 0 T 0 Nil 13
inch 11, DIJOK OF EVERY
%.)._ width, from 22 sto 78 inches wide,usl numbers
Tout and Awning Duck, Popor-makor's Felting., Ball
Twiao, &c, JOHN W. EVERINIAN,
Jeff No. 103 Church street City Mores.
HITE CASTILE SOAP—" CONTI"-
200 boxes now landing from barb Lorenua, from
Leghorn, and for sale by
- ROBERT SHOEMAKER & CO., Importers,
cor. Fourth and Race streetc
vV E. 0 I L. , --GENUINE TUSCAN
J Olive Oil in stone jars and flasks, landing from
bark Lorenna, from Leghorn, and for gale by
ROBERT , SHOEMAKER & CO., Importers,
' N. E. car, F ourth and Race streets._-DBURARB ROOT, OF EXTRA , SUPF”
jou nor quality, Gentian Root, Curb. Ammonia, just
received; per Indefatigable, from Loudon, and for Halo
by, ladtpatT SHOEM AKER & CO., Importers.
N. E. corner Fourth and Blum streets„.
CUTRIC ACID :-20 Kid(sF CITRIC
Allan's " Wino of Colchicum, from frosh
root; alsofrom tho,,leed. Buccus Oonium," Altered.
For.tttP•by
itOBEIVI . SHOEMAKER dr CO.,' 'lMPorfore, •
• ; r - • nor. Fourth tunlr Ai uo•Btre9fq
-------
Clll., OF AL.MOIDS,—" ALLEN'S" GE 2 4 -
kl utno Oil of Almonds, essential and guest. lion,
i.Allon's" libttraets of AcoOlte, Pelludous., o llyosciarol, Taraxicum, &0.. just received in 11toro, per
Xudefatigable, from London ,11[1(1 for Sale by' ....-.
11011ERT 18110101A.KElt & (JO.,
Importing Druggists,
IC E. corner Fourth au d itace stroota.
CIRADUATED
'. Graduated Measures, warranted correct. Genuine
" Wedgwood" Mortara. Just received from Loudon
per steamer Bollopa, and for sale by_ sp
ROBERT SHOEMAKER de 00.,
N. E.. cor. Fourth and Race streets.
I)
-----:---L-- trT,]EttTGGIF 3 iii-i i:3 n l3lllls l3o:o4lm it b l: s E ;l3 l lt7h 643 4 ll: M AP irro a r;
' weez ath owit; ls ' Mi r ,l44o d a,li ati o d rli s S oi c t os t ab. , b l3 g_g 4 t l d l s n u e v tru is i
month ' g OO i ar 13 I en &o. all at " Viral
40asoil, Glass and Metal yr qa 4 ,.
BA° w Dna; .eIIitOTIIBIL
Hands' , prtoOd. 23 South Eighth street.
tipb-tf
OftllG - m.
RELIGIOUS INTELLIGENCE.
Local and General,,,
THE Presbyterian Synod of Vi±ghiia enter
tains the view that the Southern General AB
- acted unwisely, in refusing to appoint
a Committee of Conference with the Northern
Presbyterians. •
OUT of the four nominees presented by the
Provincial Synod, the. Unity's Elder's Confer
ence has selected by lot Edmund De Schwei
nita and Amadeus A. Reinke as Bishops of the
Moravian Church.
--Tun Itevi-Villittin-Newtotilate of Gambier, -
Ohio,.brother of Rev. Dr. Itithard Newton,
has been called to the rectorship of the Church
of the Nativity (Episcopal), corner of Elev
enth and Moupt;Vernon.streets.
ITNrir.'very 'lately the'Jews have refused to
become artistsizr painting and statuary, feel
ing that they were , prohibited--by. the com
mand which forbids the making of any graven
image—this command having been interpreted
hterniiy.
Fonxv-oign Episcopal clergymen died in the
United States (luring the year ending Novem
ber, 1869. The oldest was eighty-three years
of age, and the youngest twenty-seven, being,
with one exception, the only one under fifty
six years of:
Titt first 31ethodist church in America was
built on :John street; ;New York, in the year
1768., Since that time it has been twice torn
down and rebuilt. The old clock, sent over as
a present by Mr. Wesley, nearly one hundred
years ago, still bangs on the wall, and is a per:
feettinickeeper.
Trtr. Bev; George P.'Hays has ace Opted the .
Presidency of Washington arid jetlerson Col
lege, Pa., to which he has just been elected.
Thispost has been vacant for' Some -time, but
its duties have been discharged by ; Bev. Dr.
Brownson, pastor of the First Presbyterian
Church, 'Washington, Pa. .
Tut:followingia committee an the re
_liellund for disabled ministers and the widows
and orphans of deCeased ministers of the Pres
byterian ellufeti Bet. 'AleXander
chairman.; Bev, -Herrick ., Johnson, - D. I).;
Samuel Hood; Esq . :, ;John - C. Farr, Esq.; Rev,
Ge 6 Hail, DD.', Secretary;' Rev'. Chas. Brown,
D.D., treasurer.
A meeting in behalf of the Philadel
phia Tract and Mission Society will be held in
the Trinity Presbyterian Church, Frankford
road and Cambria street, to-morrow morning
- at 103- o'clock. Several addresses will be made.
Also on Wednesday evening next, :4th
at 71 o'clock, it' the Presbcterian Church, Go
inufbia avenue and Franklin street.
THE will of Anna McAnall, recently ad
mitted to probate, devises 'the whole of- her
property, amounting to $6,p00, to.llannahH.
Itii.irrlsOn &Ming her natural life, and provides
that a', her, death it shall go to the _pastor of
Trinity Protestant Episcopal Chapel, in the
Eighth Ward, as a fund, the income and inte
rest of which shall be used for the relief of
poor and aged Women.
ON Friday la.t a solemn reception took
place at tie Convent of - the.ThiritOrder of St.
Francis, No. Winced street. Eighteen young
ladies received the habit of the Order of St.
Francis from Rev. A. M. Grundner, 0. S., B.
V. M., the Superior of the whole Community:
He was a-Lbisted by Rev. Peter Frisch bier, C.
S. S. IL The Sistersi of this Order have charge
St."Mary"S Hospital, Fra.nkford road and
Palmer i treets.
btail NO the progress of the disCii;sion 'on
the infallibility of the Pope - in the Council at
Rome, the Bishop of Savannah, Georgia, ve
hemently assailed the dogma, declaring that
the bishops who voted initS faVor would be
guilty of sacrilege, Thin_ ranted a great_ clamor,
and he was called on to retract the expremion.
Be refused to comply, saving that he was en
titled to express his conscientious conviction,
adding that he was a citizen of a country
where every opinion was free,and that,trained
in.freedom, he would preserve his independ
ence even in the (Ecumenical Council.
THE Moravian in this country are divided
into two, provinces, one in the Northern, the
'other In the Southern States. The statistic.4 . of
the N orthern province, recently published,
show that there are 52 churches, having 5070
communicants, 992 non-commumcauts, 3,1310
children, and ,494 Sunday school scholars.
The largest church—that at Bethlehem, Pa.
has 1,012 communicants, and at Hope, hid.,
Nazareth, Pa., and Philadelphia, there are
churches with between 250 and 300 members
each. Their ministers number 43. The south
ern province is touch smaller, having 1,050
communicants, and 635 children and other
members.
E will of Miss Martha Isabella Keate, ad
mitted to probate on the 15th, contains the fol
lowing bequests : To the Penn Asylum for In
digent 'Widows and Single Women, 20 snares
of stock of the Philadelphia, Germantown and
Norristown Railroad Company, and 12 shams
of the Kensington National Bank ; •Zi..500 to
Trinity Protestant Episcopal Church, to be
expended in the purchase of hooks for the Fe
male Sunday school, and : - 5500, the interest of
which is to be paid to the Dorcas Society, the
amount being invested in city loans. The will
further provides that at the death of the testa
trix's sister the Interest on all her shares of
stock in the 'Lehigh Valley Railroad COm
pany go to the use of the Old Man's Home of
thus city.
THE following are Bishop Stevens's appoint
ments for the Diocese of the Protestant Epis
copal Church of Pennsylvania: August—Sun
day, :Bth, Eckley and Drifton. September—
Thursday, let, Towanda; Sunday, 4th, Ash
land and Centralia; Tuesday, 6th, meet En
dowment Fund Committee Vilkesbarre ;
Thursday, Bth, Danville ; Sunday, 11th, Mon
, trose, New Milford and Great Bend ; Friday,
16th, Carbondale ; Sunday, 18th, Pleasant
Mount and Honesdale; Sunday, 25th, Church
of the Redeemer, Lower Merion, and St.
John's, Lower Merlon; Friday, 30th, Coates
ville. October-Sunday, 2d, Christ Ohara,
Leacoek, and St. • John's; Pequea ; Monday,
3d, St. Thomas's, Morgantown; Sunday, 9th,
Church of. the Messiah, Port Richmond;
Wednesday, 12th, Ordination, Williamsport;
Thursday, 13th, Montoursville ; Sunday, kith,
St. James's, Lancaster, and St. John's, Lan
caster; Sunday, 23d, A. M., Bishop's Church,
Spring-Garden - street, Philadelphia ; P. M:,
St. James the Less ; Monday, 24th, Meeting
• of the Board of Missions, New York.
THE new Episcopal Church of the Holy
Apostles, located at the southeast corner of
Twenty-first and Christian streets,now nearly
completed, will be an ornament to that por
tion of the city. The rector of the parish is
the Bey. Chas. D. Cooper, late of St. Philip's
Church, Vine street,. below Eighth. - The bni
lag is of Trenton brown stone, with Cleveland
and Seneca stone trimmings, in the Norman
style of architecture. The roof is of slate,with
a metal coin bing,and each gable is surmounted
by a wrought-iron cross bearing the monogram
I. H. S. In the interior the roof is open to the
point, exposing the rafters and girders, which
are of yellow pine, chanfered and stained.
Around three sides of the church are spacious
galleries, supported by heavy timber brackets.
The chancel is apsidal in. shape, having five
sides, and is reached by four broad steps,rising
from the nave. The building has nine win
dows, of various sizes and shapes. On the
east side of the chancel the organ will be
placed, and on the opposite side is the robing
or vestry room, which has a separate entrance
from Twenty-first street. The pews are of
white pine, with walnut rails and butternut
ends. It is expected that the building will be
ready for occupancy about the middle of Sep
tember. •
THE first quarterly report of the city mission,
under the auspices of the Protestant Episcopal
Church, and under the direction of the bishop
and his assistant, has been recently made out.
As organized, the working - force consists of
one superintendent, with three clerical and
three lay assistants. There are sixteen ail,
'ions_ at which services- are . 'held - at'stated
times. The summary or workdene than May:
I toJuly . 28 is• as, fcalo Ws The_thi ss io x ,
40 destitute fanfilies-; of 'these' 7 were
strangers in the eity,l6-Were sick admisialieteil,
3 womendeserted,by their hus i t% s, 4 out of
employment, others aged end' le, &c. The
number of children in these - amilies is over 50.
Amount of relief furnished; $74 69, The mis
sion has made 1,143 visits to families and eases
needy and requiring sympathy. Services, ser
_mons and addresses, 130. Baptisms, 18 ; mar- , 1
riages, 23 ; - Tunerals, 30; communion adminis-
tered 3 times: About 30 applications for ilitua
tons have been made to the office; and places
supplied in several insianceS. Ablaut 2,500 of
ficial circulars have been distributed.: 15,000
notieea of services in suburban churches have
been distributed in as many . tamilies: Tba
mission has presented alountam.to the Phila
delphia Fountain Society iiir-ttuse of the
pbor in Bedford street..
. _
'Firth of *or Lb.
• We have'
,frequently had occasion to report
cases of Mirage oCcining'in the Firth of Forth,
but the most extraordinary instance which can
he remembered occurred on Friday afternoon.
The day was very . hot and sultry, and nein
was a peculiarity about the atmosphere which
is:seldom = observed-in-this-nountry.—About
midday a thin, dear and transparent kind of
vapor; through which the surrounding objects
'began to make their appearante in the most
fantastic and grotesque shapes imaginable, set- -
tied over thei sea. :•Thn phantasmagoria were
principally confined to the mouth of the firth;
but atone time they embraced the whole of
the Fife coast as far as the .eye could •reach,
town, village and hamlet being depicted high
upon the horizon with remarkable distinetness.
Though the whole coast seethed atleast half
way up, the horizon, the appearances pre
sented ;bY the towns
~ were.. very iii4refit,
some of • having the houses inverted,
while otlr,rs appeared in the natural position.
The Ba s Bock; the Isle of. May, and the rocks
aro Dunbar harbor, however, attracted
ost attention, both from their proximity and
from the extraordinary foring which they as
sumed. The Bits, which at one time seemed
to - lie - Bar npon - the - seaomddenly shot - up into - a -
tall spiral column, apparently ten times its
usual Night, surrounded by battlements rising
tier on tier, and presenting a most imposing
spectacle.- As usual, however, the most fan
tastic appearances were presented by the May,
which, in the coursenf the afternoon, under
went an almost innumerable series.of_phatitas-
magoric transformations. '• At qne_tinie_ it was:
apparently as round as a circle, at another
seemingly drawn out for Miles against the. ho
rizon ; now flat upon the water, their rising,
t9,ten times..its -.usual height occasionally
portions appeared to break off and sail away,
then to return and unite again—all •
withiralie space of a few minutes. Vessels iir
the offing appeared double—one on the water
and another inverted in the air: and in one in
stance three figuret of one vessel were dis-7
tinetly visible—one' inverted, another on the
sea, and a third.in its natural position. between__
the two. The fishing boats proceeding to sea
in the evening underwent the same transfortn
ations when only a few;yards off the shore, the
double appearanee' being'. distinctly visible
'within a certain distance. The rocks the
harbor also seemed_ to play__ fantaStie tricks,
opening and shutting, rising and falling, with
apparent regularity. These - extraordinary il
lusions lasted from midday till nightfall, and
excited great interest among the inhabitants : of
Dunbar, numbers - of whom - collected in the
Castle Park and at the harbor for the purpoise
of witnessing the phenomena.—Ediiibuqiii
Scotian nun. _
LEGAL NOTICES.
N' YlTEiißif.ic.N
FS' COURT FOIL TFIE
ICity and County of Philadelphia —Estate of SAMUEL
11. BARI:LOTT, deo . d.—The Auditor tippolnu.d by the
Court to audit. settle oud adjust the account of
JOr , HUA 11. BIORRIS, Executor of SAMUEL
BAHROTT.(decea.sed, and to report distribution
of the balancein_the hands of the ascountant.alll niOet
the ?males interested, for the purpose of his appoint
ment, on WEDNESDAY, August 31.4. Wit, at , 11
o'clock A. M.. at hie office, No. 709 Walnut iitreet;iia
the - cite
J.SERGEAN-T PRICE,
s to ihtt.s -Auditor.
N THE ORPHANS' COURT FOR THE
.1 CITY AND COUI.TY . :OI , PHILADELPHIA.—
Estate of SUSANNA MORRIS. dec'e The Auditor tip•
points bl' the Court to audit. settle and adJust the final
account of ANTHONY P.' MODELS, surviving Ex.,4u
tor of ISA AO W. MOlllll5. who was surviving Eitei:u
tor of SUSANNA MORRIS - , deceased, and - to report
distribution of tho balance in the hands of the aCCOIIIJI -
ant, will meet .the parti , ai interested tor the Purnaeal of
his appointment, on TUESDAY. •-.August 30tb. 1470.
at 11 o'clock. A. M.. n 7 his office, No. 709 Walnut
Street. In the City of Phiradelplika.
J. SERGF.ANT.DRICII.
au2o Ott ,thLt§
"L -1 C
STATE OF REBECA — PEK Ltsr,
_
IMco-am...(1.-1.0.ter6 of Administration on the al,oce
Estate haling been granted to the undersigned. 1.11
persons Indebted to eaol Estate are r..-ottesmsi to I12):e
payment. and those baying claims on the same to GEU.
J. HAMILTON. Administrator, lOW Marlborough
etrto , t, Eighteenth Ward. nut)-s et°
ESTATE OF ANI% 1E O. JE,'NKISS,
lute of St. Louis, Mo., deceased.—Lett , -ra of ad
ministration on the abo‘ o estate having been granted
to `• 'lite Philadelphia Trust. Safe Deposit and .In
suranCe Ccrtpait) . Il per,..me irobsltted to said estate
are requeatiAl kl tuu7 payinent - ,ii. - 11 , too, a liathig claims
to pret.ent them at the office of the said Comnan.Y.
el Chestnut street LEWIS R. ABIII.IUILST,,
President.
ESTATE OF ELIZABETH B. CAROCL,
R
late of St. Louis, Deceased.—Letters of Administra
tion, on the above Estate having been granted to " The
Philadelphia Trust, Safe Poposit and Insurance Com
pany,•• all person's indebted to the said Estate aye'r,,-
finest.' to make payment, and .thnse haring elaimi to
present them at the office of the said Company, No `s2l
Chestnut street. • LEWIS E. ASLUIUReiT,4
jy SO-6611' Presider t.
ESTATE OF LEVIN ALLEN, DEC'D.—
Lettere of Administration having been granted to
the Undersigned, persons indebted to said estate are' re
quested to make pas ment. and those haring claims w ill
present them to ISAIAH 0. WEARS, Administrator,
514 Poplar street. jyl6 e 3 6t"
ESTATE OF , ED M END G. BOOZ,
Deceased.—Letters of Administration upon ;the
Estate of EDMUND G. BOOZ, deeeas:el, having been
granted t i o the undersigned, all persons 'indebted to the
said estate are requested to make payment, and titoso
haring clairits to present then, to
W. A. BABBITT, 230 Market street,
13. L. LANGSTROTIL 130 Walnut street,;
Administrators:
B. L. TEMPLE, 132 Routh Sixth street, i
an3lt&s ti Counsel for Administrators.
VSTATE OF "WILLIAM C. CAMPBELL,
dec'eased.—Letters of Administration haring been
granted to the undersigned on the above estate, allper
sons indebted to the same will make payment, hod
those having claims will present them to
ISABELLA CAMPBELL;
Administratrix,
or to her Attorney, J. B. THAYEB, No. 725 Walnut
street. Phila. ty26 tuat;
ESTATE OF ELIZABETH VANDE
()RIFT, dereased.—Letters of administration upon
the Estate of ELIZABETH VANDEGBIFT, :de
ceased having been granted to the undersigded,
all persons indebted to said estate are requested to make
payment, and those bar ing claims against• the .same. to
present them to HERBERT VANDEGRIFT. No. 1216
heath Fifteenth street. Administrator; Or tp his Attor
ney. WM. W. JUVENAL. 426 Library street. aul9-nit
pROCERIES, LIQUORS. &C.
Curing, Packing and Smoking Establishment
JOHN BOWER & CO.. ,
Curers of Superior Sugar .- Cured Hann
Beg f and Tongues, and' Provisions Generally,
B. W. Cor. Twenty.ronrth and Brown Mts.
InT24-th th 145mF
NEwMACKERtL, SALMON AND
Shad In kilts. put up expressly for families. at
COUSTY'S East End Grocery, No. 118 South Second
street, below Chestnut.
NEW GREEN GINGER, PICKLED
Limes, Pickled Lambe' -Tonpies, Spiced Oysters
end Clams. at COUSTY'S East End Grocery, No. 11S
South Second street. below Chestnut.
MABLE CLARETS FOR $4 00 PER CASE
of ono dozen bottles, nn , in store and for hale at
COUSTY'S East End Grocery, No. 118 South Second
streot,below Chestnut.
NEW CANNED GOODS, GREEN PEA - 8,
Asparagus, Tomatoes, &c., ore arriving. Families
wishing same now is the time to buy choap,at COUSTY'S
tact End Grocery, No. 118 South Second street, below
Chestnut.
$3.00 ER D F ( r ) e Z n r.P R
White O tiGinEllUlNfi::
cases, very choiceim ported Quality, , at ()GUSTY'S k i ll n te e rlin il 4
Grocery, No. ns Bout Second etreet,below Chestnut.
TITST RECEIVED AND IN STORE 1;000
El cases of Champagne, sparkling Catawba and Call.
fornin Wines, Port,Madeira, Sherry, Jamaica and Santa
()rut Ram, fine old Brandies and Whiskled, Wholesale
and Retail. P. J. JORDAN, 220 Pear street 4
Below Third and Walnut streent, and above Dock
street. de7, tf
T ORDAN'S CELEBRATED-P ÜBE TOl4lO .
Ale for Invalids, family use, etc. , •
--The-subecriber le now furnished with his full • Winter
- supply of - his highly nutritious Mid" WOU‘kriOwn ' boverz
age. Its wide-spread and increasing - nee, by order of
physicians, for invalids use - of families, &d., commedd it
to the attention of all consumers who want a strictly
pure article; prepared from the best materials, and DO
up in the most careful manner for home use or transpor
tation. Orders by mail or otherwise promja•st i rlied.
No. 2213 Pear street
del
,below Third and Walnut streets
GAB FIXTURES
QAS FIXTURES.-MISJIEY,
& THAOKARA, No. 718 Qhestnnt street,•mann•
factures of Gas Fixtures, Lamps, to., go. would .cal
the attention of the public to their large and elegant as•,
sortment of One Chandeliers, Pendanis, Brackets,, go.
They_also introduce gas . pipes Into dwellings and viblin
buildings. and attend to extending, altering and repair
ng gas pipes. All work warranted,
PHILADELPH A E V Eli 1N G BULLETIN ; SATIJT DAY, AUGUST 20; 1870
WEST JERSEY RAILROAD.
CoannienClns Thursday, . June 30, 1870.
Leave Philadelphia, foot of Market Street (Upper
Ferry) at
8.00 Ac 61 Mail for Bridgeton, Salem, Vineland, Mill
ville, Swedenboro,and intermediate Stations.
9.00 A. M. Mail and Express for Cape May.
11.45 A.M. Woodbury Jtecommodatien. - -
836. P. M. Accommodation for Cape May, Millville,
Vineland and Way Stations below Glass
-3.30 P. N. Passengers for Bridgeton, Salem, Swedes
- Nao and all Intermediate Stations.
4.00 P. M. Fast Express, for Cape May only.
6 45 P. 111. Passenger for Swedesboro and Clayton; stop
ping at all stations on signal.
Sunday Alai] Train leaves Philadelphia at 7.15 A. M.
returning leave' Cape May at 5.10 P. M.
Commutation tickets at reduced rates between Phila
delphia and all stations.
Cape May Season Tickets good for four months from
date of purchase, 6.60.00, Annual tickets, .100.
Freight train !oyes Pizadett daily, at 9.20 A. M., stop
ping at all stations between Glassboro and Cape May;
and. 12.00 o'clock, noon, for Swedeshoro, Salem and
Bridgeton.
Freight received inP - Philadelphia, at Second Covered
Wharf below Walnut street.
Freight delivery at-N0.228 South Delaware avenue.
WM. J. SEWELL, Superintendent.
F" OAMDICit
AND RAILR OA Dd PHILADELPHIA MIR
TRZNTON 00ALPANY'S_ LINES, from
Philadolphfalo Now York, and way places, from Wal
nut street wharf.
At 0.30 A. M. Accommodation and 2 P. M. Expragn, via
Camden and Amboy, and at 8 A.M. Exprees
3.30 I'. M., Accommodation via Camden and JoracY
City. •
VIA NEW JERSEY' SOUTUERN RAILROAD.
At 7 A. M. and 3.30 P. M. for Now York, Long Branch
and intermediate places.
--
At 6 P. 31. for Amboy and intermedisite statione.
At 6.30 A. 111.: 2 and 3.3/ P. M for Freehold.
At 8 and 10 A .31,12 31,2,3.30 and 5.00 Plea.,for Trenton
At 6.30,8 and 10 A.M.,12 M., 2,8.30,5, 6, 8 and 11.30P.M.,
for. Borden town ,Florence,B arlinsion,Boverly and De•
lane* and Riverton, • • • '' '
At 6.30 and 10 A "3.30, 51 6,13 and 1140 P.M. for
Zd,r,ewater, Riverside, ftivertim, and Palmyra. At 6.30 and - A
JO:111W 12X.; 5;6 1 8' Mid' 11:30 - M . : for
Fish House. .• •
ear Tho 11.31• P. DI. Line ,leaves from. Market Street
Ferry (upper e1i14.4 • •
From Kensington Depot: •
At 7.30 A. DI., 1.30, 3 . 31 and 5.00 P. Pd. for Trenton. and
Bristol. And at 10.45 A: 11: and 6P: M. foi Bristol.
At 7.30 A.M., 2.30, mid if P. 21: for Morrisvllle and Trail.
At 1.90 and 10.45 A. 11:, 2.50; 5 and 61%M. for Bchemck's,
• Eddington,Cornwelle, otrrsdalo and lloimesburg
'Junction.
At 7 A.lll .; 1230, 6.'15 and 7.50 P.M. for BnEtleton ,rfolmee
burg and Dolineeburg Junction.
At 7 and 10,45 A. M.,1230, 230, 535, 6 and 7.30 P. 65.
for Tawny, Wiesinoming, Brideaburg and Frankfonl.
From Wert Philadelphia Depot via Connecting Railway:
At 7.00 and 9.30 A. M., 12.45,6.45, and 12 P. M.-Mow
— :York Express Lines and at 11.30 P. M. Emigrant - Line,
via JejiliCY City.
At 7.00 'and 9.30 A. M., 12.45, 6.45, and 12 P. M. for
Trenton and Bristol.
M 12 P.M.( Nlght)for Motrieville,742llytown,l3chetick's
Eddingtotk, Co rnwollai J'orzesdale, nolatesbnr:4
Junctidn, Tawny. fin - morning, Brldesburg an. l
Pranktord.
Sunday Lines leave at 9:A A. 51. and 6.45 P. M., and
12 Night
For Lines leaying Rensinnten 7 3 lipbt, take the care on
Third or Fifth streeta, e t Chestnut, at half an hour be.
fore departure. The Care of Market Street Railway run
direct to West Philadelphia Depot, Chestnut and Walnut
within WM aguars.
BELVIDRRE DELAWARE RAILROAD LINZ
from-Kensington-Depot:
At 7.30 A.. 51., for Niagara Falls, Buffalo, Dunkirk,
Elmira, Ithaca, Owego, Rochester, Binghampton
Oswego, Syracuse, Great. Bend, Montrose, Wilkesbage,
Schooley's Mountain. sc.
At 7.30 A. M. and 3.33 P. M. for Scranton, Strouds
burg, Water Gap, Belvidere, Easton, Lam
bertville. Flemingtoa, Sic. The 320 P. M. Line con
nects direct with the train leaving Easton foridaucb.
17hunk lalenfownßethleffem,
At 5 P. DI. for Lambertville and intermediate Stations.
CAMDEN AND BUBLINuTuN CU., AND PEMBEJI
TON AND INGBTSTOWN 'RAILROAD C0.'13
LINES. from Market Street Ferry/upper side.)
Wl"The 7. A. M. and 3.30 P, M. Lines leave from
Walnut Street Wharf.
At 7 and 9 A :34.,1, 2.15,3.30,5 .4830 P.M-.,and on Thurs
day and Saturday nights at 11.30 P. M. for Murcharits
ville,Moorestown, Hartford, Itlasonville, Hainaport
...and....unt Hon)
At 7 - A. M., 2.l3and for Lumbertonn - and Med
ford,
At 7 and 9 A lit, 1, 3-30 kb P. M., for Smithville
Ewansville,Vincentown,Birmingham and Pemberton
At 7 A. M. and 1 and 3.30 P. M., for Lewistown,
Wrightstown, - Cookstown, New Egypt and Horners
town .
At 7A. M.. 1 and 330 P.M. for Cream Badgo, Imlays-
Le - vim . Sharon and Hightstown.
Fifty posinds of Baggage onlyallowed 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 liinit their
responsibility for baggage to One Dollar per pound,
and will not be liable fur any amount beyond 8100, ox.
cept by special contract.
An additional Ticket Office is located at N 0.828 Chest
nut street, where tickets to New York, and all imper
taut points North and East, may be procured. Persons
purchasing Tickets at this Office can have their bag
gage check.ed from residences or hotel to destination ,by
Union Transfer Baggage Express.
Lines from New York for Philadelphia will leave from
foot of Cortland street at 7 A M. - ,land 4 P. M.,viaJersey
City and Camden. At 8.30 and 9.30 A. 31., 12 .30 . 5
and 7 P.M. and at 12 Night, via Jersey City and West
Philadelphia.
From Pier No. 1, N. River, at 8.30 A. M. Accommoda.
tion and 2 P. M. Express, via Amboy and Camden.
August]. 1870. WM. H. GATZBIER. Agent.
.PHILADELPHIA, WILMINGTONAND
BALTIMORE- BA ILROAD—TIME TABLE. Com
mencing MONDAY, June 6th, IMO, Trains will leave
Depot, corner Broad and Washington avenue, as fol•
Iowa: . .
WAY MAIL TRAIN at &SO A. M. (Sundays excepted),
for Baltimore, stopping at all Regular Stations. Coll
necting with Delaware Railroad Line at Clayton with
Smyrna Branch Railroad and Maryland and Delaware
R.P...iit Barrington with Junction and Breakwater R.R.,
at. Seaford with Dorchester and Delaware Railroad, at
Delmar - with Eastern Shore Railroad and at Salisbury
with WiCtlllliCß and Pocomoke Railroad.
-.•
Ex PIIEBS TRA . .( s un d ays excepted l, for
Baltimore and Washington, stopping at Wilmington,
Berryville and Havre de Grace. Connects at Wilming•
ton with train for New Castle.
- - -
EXPRESS TRAIN ati.Co P. ?I.( Sundays excepted),
for Baltimore and Washington,atoppine at Chester,
Thnrlow, Linwood Claymont, o
n, Newport,
Stanton, Newark, Elkton, North Eaa , Charlestown,
Perryville, Havre de Grace, „Aberdeen, Perryman's,
Edgewood Maenolia, Chase's and Stemmer's Bun.
NIGHTEXPRESS at 11.30 P. M. (dally; for Baltimore
and Washington. stopping at Chester, Lin
wood, Claymont, Wilmington, Newark, Elkton, North
East, Perryville, Havre de Grace. Perryman's and ffag.
nolia.
Passengers for Fortress Monroe and Norfolk will take
the 11.45 A. M. Train.
.
WILMINGTON TRAlNS.—Stopping at all Stations
between Philadelphia and Wilmington.
Leave PHILADELPHIA at 11.00 A. M. 11.60, 5.00 and
7.00 P. M. The 0.00 P. M. train conneots with Delaware
Railroad for Herrington and intermediate stations.
Leave WILMINGTON 6.45 and 8.10 A. M., 2.00, 4.00 and
7.15 P. M. The 8.10 A. M. train will not atop between
Cheater and Philadelphia, The 7.15 P. M. train from
Wilmington runs ftily;allotherAccommodation Trains
Sundays excepted.
Trains leaving WILMINGTON at 6.45 A. M. and 4.00
P. M. will connect at Lamokin Junction with the 7.00
A.M. and 420 P. M. trains for Baltimore Central R. R.
From BALTIMORE to PHILADELPHIA.—Leaves
Baltimore 7.25 A. M. Way Mail. LOU A. M., Express.
225 P. 51., Express. 7.25 P.M., Express.
SUNDAY TRAIN FROM BAETIMORE.—Leaves
BALTIMORE at 7.25 P. M. Stopping at Magnolia,Per
rYinan 'a, Aberdeen,Davre-de-Grace,Perryville,Charles
town, North-East, Elkton, Newark: Stanton, Newport,
Wilmington, Claymont:Linwood and Chester.
Through tickets to all points West, South, and Sonth•
west may be procured at the ticket office; 828 Chestnut
street, under Continental Hotel, where also State Rooms
and Bertha in Sleeping, Cars can be secured during the
day. Persona purchasing tickets at thil office can have
baggage checked at their residence by the Union Trans
fer Company. 11. F. KENNEY, Seel.
PENNSYLVANIA CENTRAL RAIL
ROAD.—After 8 P. Ill.; SUNDAY, July 10th,
1870. The trains of the Pennsylvania Central Railroad
leave the Depot,at Thirty-first and Market streets ,which
is reached directly by the cars of the Market Street Pas
senger Railway, the last car connecting with each train
leaving Front and Market street thirty minutes before
its departure. Those of the Chestnut and Walnut
Streets Railway run within ono square of the Depot.
Sleeping Car Tickets can bo had on application at the
Ticket Office, Northwest corner of ninth and Chestnut
streets, and at the Depot.
Agents of the Union Transfer Company will call tot
and deliver Baggage at the Depot. Orders lett at No. 901
Chestnut street, No. 118 Market stroot, will receive at•
tendon
TRAINS LEAVE DEPOT, VIZ.:
Mail Train at 8.00 A, M.
Paoli Accom. 10 A. DI. and 12.00, and 7.10 P. M.
Fast Line at 12.30 P. M.
Erie E xpresa at 11.00 A. M.
Harrisburg Accom at 2.30 P. N.
Lancaster Accom at 4.10 P.lll.
Parkeburg'Ltain at 5.30 P. M
Cifitinnati Express —.. at 8.00 P.
Erie Nail and Pittsburgh Express at 10.30 P. M.
Way Passenger at 11.30 P 01.
Erie Mail leaves daily, except Sunday running on
Saturday night to Williamsport only. On Sunday night
passengers will leave Philadelphia at 8 o'clock.
Pittsburgh Express leaving on Saturday night runs
only to Harrisburg.
Cincinnati Express loaves daily. All other trains
daily,except Sunday.
The Western Accommodation Train runs daily, except
Sunday. For this train tickets must bo procured and
baggage delivered by 5.00 P. M.. at 118 Market street.
Sunday Train No. I leaves Philadelphia 8.40 A. M.;
arrives at Paoli 9.40 A. M. Sunday Train No. 2 leaves
Philadelphia at 6.40 P. M.; arrives at Paoli 7.40 P. M.
Sunday Train No. 1 leaves Paoli at 8.50 A. 01.; arrives
at Philadelphia at 8.10 A. M. Sunday Train No. 2
leaves Paoli at 4.10 P. M.; arrives at Philadelphia at 6.10
- - TRAINS ARRIVE AT DEPOT: VIZ :
Cincinnati purees at 310 A. M.,
Philadelßhia ErxtrOss ' 6,30 A;M:
. „
tile Mail ' ' - - ' - 4"......... -- . - aid:ie . XI - M.
Paoli Accommodation at 9.244 A. M. and 3.30,6.40 P. M
Parksburg Train at 9.00 A - , M.
Buffalo Express bt9.36 A. M.
Fast Line at 9.35 A. M
Lancaster Train - at 11.65 A. M.
Erie Express. of 5.40 P.M.
Look Haven and Elmira Express .... . .... .....,.at 0.40 P. M.
Pacific Express.. at 13.20 P. M.
Garrleburg Accommodation at 0.40 P. M.
For further information, apply to
. 1. 0/IN F. VANLICEIt t Jn., Ticket Agent, 901 Oheetnn
street.. .. ,
FRANCIS FII_NIC._, Ticket Agent, 116 Market 'treat.
!,-HAM UAL G o-- WA.LLAQE, Ticket Agent at the Depot.
TlioPenneylvania Railroad Company - Will not 1188111110
any risk for Daggage, exempt for wearing apparel, and
'limit ktie_ir-reepenaibilityl to Ono Hundred Dollars in
Maine.- Airßaggagerexteeding that amotint in v WU° will
be at the rtilit of the owner; nnloes taken by special con.
tract. • • ' • • A. J. OASHATTi
General Superintendent, Altoona', Pa.
TRAVELEff S' GUIDE.
SUMMER ARRANGEMENTS.
fICA "ELEREP GUIDE a
.Junction of the Great Lakes and the
Great River ACcomplished
The Lake Superior & Mississippi R. R.
OPEN FOR TRAVEL.
Grand_Pleasure Route
FILOM
ERIE, CLEVELAND AND DETROIT
TO
DULUTH AND ST. PAUL, -
PASSING THROUGH
Lakes Huron and Superior,
AND OVER THE
Lake Superior and Mississippi R. R.
Trains new min daily between DI7LIITEr and ST.
PAUL (Itr, miles), passing the 'magnificent scenery of
theIiALLES OF THE ST. I,OUIS RIVER and other
polite of interest by daylight ; connecting at St. Paul
with the arieus railways diverging from that point and
with daily steamers on the Misvissippi River.
anti th s in et;
N
ORTH A:
PENNSYLVANIRAILROAD.
N—e rt middle route to the Lehigh and
and
ing Vall ey s
Interior New York, Rochester, Buffalo, Niagara Falls,
the Great Lakes and the Dominion of Canada.
SUMMER ARRANGEMENTS.
Sixteen Daily Trains leave Passenger Depot. corner of
Berke and American streets (Sundays oxcepted), as
follows:
7 A. M. Accommodation for Fort 'Washington and in
tennediat:e points.
7.36 A. N., Fast Line - for - Bethlehem and principal
:stations on main line of North - PennsylvaniaTlilroad,
connecting at Bethlehem with the Lehigh Valley Rail
road for-Easton Allentowii,Mauch Chunk,ltlalianoy City,
WilliarnAport,Willtesharre, Pittston, Towanda and Wa ,
verly, connecting at. Waved
f ly with the ERIE RAIL
WAY for Niagara Faliicßu aio, Rochester, Cleveland,
Corry, Chicago,' San Francisco, • and 'all neints` In the
Great Wert.
8.25 A. N.. Accommodation for 'Doylestown, stopping
at all Intermediate stations. Passengers for-Willow
Grove, II atl,rough, itc.; by this train, take stage at Old
York Road.
9,45 A.M., Lehigh and Susquehanna Express, for Beth
lehem, Allentown, Mauch Chunk, Williamsport, White
Haven, Wilkesbarre,Pittston. Scranton, Carbondale „te a
'Lehigh and Sii,inehanna Railroad, and Allen
town, Easton, Il ackettstown, and points on Now Jersey
Central Railroad and Morris and Essex Railroad to.
New Yt,rk, via-Lehigh-Valley-Railroad:
11 A. Accommodation for Fort Washington, atop
pine at 'intermediate stations.
J.P.i 3.30 and 5.20 P. N.. Accommodation to Abington.
-At 1.45 P. M., LehiglrValley - Express tor - Bothichem,
Eaeton. Allentown, Manch Chunk, Ilazletorr, - MahnuoY
City, White Haven, Wlikesharre, Pittston, and the
Nahanoy Wyoming coal regions.
At 2.30 P. 91., Accommodation for Doylestimi, stop
ping all intermediate stations.
At 3.20 P. M. 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. N., Accommodation - for Doylestown, stop'
ping at all intermediate stations.
A 1.5 Pt 61.; Accommodation for Bethlehem, connecting
with Lehigh Valley Evening Train for Euston, Allen
own and Manch Chunk.
A t 5.20 P. M.. Accommodation for Lansdale, stopping
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 8.55,
10.35 A .2.15, 5.05 and 8.25 P. 151 riu*ing dlrectcom
- nett ion with rill fel Talley, or Lehigh and Busquehatina
trains from Easton, - Stralifoia, Wilkeebarre,
Wiliiame
port, AI chancy City, Hazleton. Buffalo, and the West.
From Doylestown at 8.25 A. M.,4:40 and 7.05 P. M.
From Lansdale at 7.30 A. M.
From Fort Washington at 9.20, 11.20 A. M., and 3.10
9.45 P. 81.
From Abington at 2.35,4.55 and 6,45 P. Si.
ON SUNDAYS.
Philatelpliu for Bethlehem at 930 A .
do.. do_ Doylestown.a42 P. M.
do. do. Fort Washington at 8.30 A. M. and
7 P. M.
Bethlehem for Philadelphia at 4 P, M.
Doyleeto,u for do. at 6.30 A. M.
Fort WrAingtori do. at 9'.30 A. M. and 8.10
P.M.
The Fifth and Sixth Streets and Second and Third
Streete hues of fifty Passenger ('ere run directly to and
from the Depot. The Union line runs within a short
dii•tance of the Depot.
Tickets for Buffalo, Niagara Falls, Southern and
Western New York and the West, may be secured at
the office, No. fill Chestnut street.
Tickets sold and baggage checked through to princi•
pal points at rilann's North Pennsylvania Baggage Ex
press office, No. 155 South Fifth street.
ELLIS CLARE. General Agent. .
PHILADELPHIA, GE RM A NIT 0
_l_ AND NORRIBTOWN RAILROAD TIME
TABLE. °nand after MONDAY, July 18, 1870,
FOll GERMANTOWN.
Leave PHILADELPHIA 6,7, 8. 9.05, 10,.11, 12,
A. M. 1.00, 2,2%, 3%, 3%; 4, 434,5,05, 5%, 6, q 3.;, 7,8,
0.00, 10.05, 11, 12 P. 81.
Leave GERMANTOWN 6, 6.55, 736, 8, 8.20, 9, 10,
11.00. 12, A. M. 1,2, 3,33 i, 4.00, 4%, 5, 535, 6, 635, 7,8,
900, 10, 11, P. M.
118," The 8.20 Down Train, and 2%, 31i and 53 Up
Trains will not stop on the Germantown Branch,.
ON SUN'DAYS.
Leave PHILADELPHIA at 934, A. H. 2, 4.05 min.,
7, and 103, P. M.
Leave CERMANTCWN at 834', A. M. 1,3, 6, and
914, P. 31.
CHESTNUT HILL RAILROAD.
Leave PHILADELPHIA 6,9, 10, and 12, A. M. 2,
394,53,7, 9.00 and 11, P.M.
Leave CHESTNUT HILL 7.10,8, 9.40, and 11.40, A. M
1.40,3,40,5.40,6.40, 8.40, and 10.40, P. M.
ON SUNDAYS.
Lead PHILADELPHIA at-9.4, A. 31. 2, and 7,P. 31.
Leave CHESTNUT HILL ae7.60, A. 31. 12.40,5.10, and
9.25, .M.
Passengers taking the 6.55,9 A.M. and 6.30 P.M. Trains
from Germantown, will make close connections untie
Trains for New York at Intersection Station.
FOR CONSHOHOCKEN AND NORRISTOWN
Leave PHILADELPHIA 6, 71' 9, and. 11.05, A. M. 134.
3, 43 4 , 5, 514, 63:4,8.05, 10 and 1114 71'. 31.
Leave NORRISTOWN 534, 6.25, 7,73, 8.50, and 11, A.
31. 114, 3, 4.34,64, 8, and 9%, I' , M.
ON SUNDAYS.
Leaie PHILAPELPHIA at 9, A. M. " 234, 4; and 734,
P. 51 . I
Leave NORR . ISTOWN,at 7, A. M. 1, 5 , and 9, P. 31.
FOR MAN AYUNK
Leave Philadelphia : 6, 7.3 4 , 9 and 11.05 A. 31.114,3' :
434, 5,5/4, 634,8.05, 10 and 11', P. 111.
Leave Manayunk : 6, 6.55;734, 8.10, 920 and 1134 A. 31.;
2,334,5, tiX, 854 and 10 P. 31.
ON SUNDAYS
Leave PhlladelteliC: 9 . X. - 511,216 . , I and 736 P. M.
Leave Manaytmk • 734 A. M. IRe ahi and 9, 4 6 P. M.
PLY MO CYU RAILROAD.
Leave Philadelphia : SP. M.
Leave Plymouth: 634 A. M.
The T 34 A.. 51. Train Iron Norristown will 7101 stop at
Magee's, Potts' Landing, Domino or Schur's Lane. The
5 P. M. Train from Philadelphia will stop only at School
Lane, Wissakiekon,Manayunk, Green Tree and Consho
hocken.
Passengers taking the 7.00, 9.05 A. M. and 6t6 P.M,
Trains from Ninth and Green streets will make close
connections with the Trains for New York - at Intersec
tion Station.
The 9% A.M. and 5 P. M. Trains from Now York con
nect with the 1.00 and 8.00 P. M. Trains from German
town to Ninth and Green streets.
CADMEN AND. ATLANTIC RAIL
ROAD. 'SHORTEST ROUTE TO THE SEA•
SHORE. Through In l'i hours. Five trains daily to
Atlantic City.
On and after Saturday, July 2d, 1870, trains will leave
Vine street ferry, as follows:
Special Excursion( when engaged) 6.15 A. Al
Mail 8.00 A. Al
Freight (with passenger car) .9.46 A. 111
E)tprnati(through in lg. hours)... , ' . 9.30 P. N
Atlantic Accommodation 4.145 P. N
RETURNING, LEAVE ATLANTIC,
S Special Excursion 5:35 P. M
Nail 4 3.5 P. Al
Freight (with passenger-car)
11.54) A. 51
Express (through in 131.1iours)
7.24 A. 31
Atlantic Accommodation 6.06 A. N
An Extra Express train ( through in 131 hours) will
leave Vine Street Ferry every Saturday at 2.00 P. M.
Returning, leave Atlantic City, Monday, at 9.40 A. 51
LOCAL TRAINS LEAVE
For Haddonfield at 10.L5 A. M., 2.00 P. M. anti 6.00 I'
Al.
For Atco and intermediate Stations at 10.15 A. M. am;
6.00 M.
Returning leavo Haddonfield at 7.15 A. M., 1 P. M
and 3 P. M.
A tco at 6.22 A. M. and 12.16 noon.
ON SUNDAYS.
Leave Vine Street Il'e — rii:Vt - 8 - lic.11;
Leave Atlantic City at 4.35 P. M.
The MGI) Transfer Co., No. 828 Chestnut street (Con
tinental otel) and 116 Market street, willcall for hag
gage a nd check to destination.
Additional ticket offices have been located at N 0.132:
Chestnut street and 116 Market street for the solo of
through tickets only.
Passengers aro allowed to take wearing apparel onl)
as baggage, and the Company will not be responsibh
for an amount exceeding ono hundred dollars unless
special contract is made for the same.
I). H. MUNDY, Agent:
PHILADELPHIA AND BALTIMORE
CENTRAL RAILROAD._
• ' CHANGI OF HOURS.
On and after MONDAY, April 4,1870, trains will nu
its follows
LEAVE * PHILADELPHIA, from depot of P. W. d
B. It. R., corner Broad street and Washington avenue
For PORTDEPOSIT, at 7-A-. Shand 4.30 - P. M. - -
For OXFORD, at 7 A. M..4•.30 P. M . .. and 7 P .111.
For CHAMPS FORD AND CHESTER CREEk
11,-. at-I-A - via., 10-A 24. P .-M...4.30 - P:31. - .Tand
Train leaving -Philadelphia at- 7 A. M. connects at
Port Deposit with train for Baltimore
Trains leaving Philadelphia at 10 A. M. and 4.30 P.
M., leaving Oxford at 6.05 A. 31, and leaving. Port De•
posit at 9 25 A. 31:, connect at Chadd's Ford Junction
with tho Wilmington and Reading Railroad. ---
TRAINS FOR PHILADELPHIA leave Port Deposit
at 9.25 A. M. and 4.25. P. M. on arrival of trains from
Baltimore.
OXFORD at 6.05 A. M., 10.35 A. M. and 5.30 P. M.
CIIADD'S FORD at 7.26 A. ret., 12.00 AL, 1.30 P. M.,
4.45 P. 31. and 6.49 P. M.
On SUNDAYS leave Philadelphia for West Grove and
interwdlate stations at 8,00 A. M. Returning leave
West Grave at 3.55 P. M. •
Passengers Are allowed to take ' wearing apparel onl3,
as baggage, and the Company will not ho responsible foi
an amount exceeding ono hundred, d011ar . .., unless _a
special contract is made for the samo. '
• HENRY' WOOD. General Superintendent,
W. S. WILSON,
General Superintendent,
TRAVELERS' GUIDE'
- -
EADINO RAILROAD. -- GREAT
JAI/Prank Line from Philadelphia to !the Interior of
Pennsylvania, the Schuylkill, Susquehanna, Comber
land and Wyoming Valleys, the North, Northwest and
the Canadas, Spring Arrangement of Passenger Trains,
May 16. 1870 leaving the Company's Depot, Thirteenth
and Ofillowhill streets, Philadelphia, at the following
I boars:
MORNING ACCOMMO,DATION.-At 7.30 A. M for
Reading and all interidediate Stations, and Allentown.
Returning, leaves Beading at 6.35 p. arriving in
Philadelphia at 9.25 P. M.
MORNING EXPRESS.--At & 15 A. M. for Reading
Lebanon, Harrisburg, Pottsville, Pine Grove,Tamagna,
Sunbury, Williamspprt, Elmira, Rochester,_ iliagara
Palls; Br i ffalb; Wilkesbarr-o Pittston, York. Car li sle,
Chambershurg, Hagerstown: AC. . • •
The 7.30 AM train connects at Reading with the East
Pennsylvania Railroad trains for Allentown,,to.,and the
8.15 A. M. train connects with the Lebanon Valley train :
for Harrishrurgz, &a.; at Port Clinton with Catawissa jt
R. trains for. Williamsport; Lock Haven, Elmira, &a.; at
Harrisburg with Northern Central, Cumberland Val-,
ley.and Schuylkill and Susquehanna trains for North
umberland, Williamsport. York, Chamb
s
gr gir e triENOON EXPRESS.-Leaves P hiladelphia 'at
5.30 P. 31. for Beading, Pottsville, Harrisburg Ac.,
netting with Reading and Columbia Railroad trains for
Columbia, Ac.
POTTSTOWN . ACCOMMODATION.:.-Leaves Potts
town at 6.25 A. kl., : stopping at the intermediate etatior s;
arrives in Philadelphia at 8.40 A. M. Returning: Wades
.Philadelphia at 4 P.M.;arrives in Pottstown at 6.15 P.M,
READING AND POTTSVILLE ACCOMMODA
TION.-Leave Pottsville at 5.40 A. 31.. and '4.20 P. 3i. ,
and Reading at 7,30 A. AI. and 6.35 P. M , stopping at ,
wuy stations; arrive in Philadelphia at 10.20 A. M, and
9,25 T. M.
Returning, leaves Philadelphia at 5.15 P. 3L arrives
in Reading at 7.65 P. M. and at Pottsville at 9.40 P. M.
MORNING EXPRESS.-Trains for Philadelphia
leave. Harrisburg at 8.10 A M., and Pottsville at 9.00 A.
31., arriving in Philadelhia at 1.00 P. M. Afternoon
Express trains leave Harri sburg at 2.30 P.M'..nnd Potts
ville at 950 P. M.:- • arriving at Philadelphia at 7,00
Harrisburg Accommodation leaves Reading at 7.15 A.
MI., and Harrisburg at 4.10 P. M. Connecting at Bead
ing with Afternoon Accommodation south at 6.35 P. M.,
arriving in Philadelphia at 9.25 P. M.
Market train, with a Passenger car attached, leaves
Philadelphia at 12.30 noon for. Beading and all Way
Stations; leaves Pottsville at 5,40 A. M. connecting at
Reading With accommodation train for Philadelphia and
all Way fitations .
All the above trains run daily, Sundays excepted. •
-Sunday trilling leave-Petbrville at 8 A. hr., and Phila
delphia at 3.16 P. M.; leave Philadelphia for Reading at
-8.00 A. M.. returning [rom Reading at 4.25 P. M: - These"
trains connect both ways with Sunday trains on Per
kiembn and Colehrookdale Railroad.
CHESTER VALLEY RAILROAD.-Paasengers for
Downingtown and interramliate points take the 7;30 A
'M. 12AI and 4.40 P. M. trains from Philadelphia,return
log frinn Downingtown at 6.20 A. 51. - . 12.45 and 5.15 PM'
PRRIIIOMENzitAILROAD.-Passengera for Schwenks-.
vlllgtake.7.3o A. 31.,• 12,30 and 5.15 P.M, trains for Phila.-
delphia - returning from Schwenkerville at 6.45 and
8.05 A. M., 12.45 noon, 415 P. M. Stage lines for various
points in, Perkiomon Valley connect -with trains at
Collegeville and Schwenksville.
COLEBROOKDALP., RAILROAD.-Passengors for
Mt. Pleasant and intermediate points take the 7.30 A. M.:
and 4.00 P. M. trains from Philadedphia; 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 Pennsylvania
and Northern Central Railrolid Express Traina for Pitts
burgh, Chicago, Williamsport, Elmira. Baltimore; dm.
. Returning,Expreas Tramleavets Harrisburg on arrival
of Pennsylvania Express from Pittsburgh, at 5.35 A. hi,
and 8.50 A. 51., passing Reading at 7.23 A. M. and 10.40 -
A. 11.,urriving at New York at 12.05 noon and 3.50 P. M.
Sleeping Cars accompany these trains through between
Jersey City and Pittsburgh, without change.
Mail train for Now York ]eaves Harrisburg at 8.10 A.
Si; and - 2.50 P. M. Mall train for Harrisburg leaves Now
York at 12 Noon.
SCHUYLKILL VALLEY RAILROAD-Trains leave
Pottsville at 6.30 and 11.30 A.M. and 6.50 P.M.. returning
from Tamaqua at 855 A-. M.. and 2.15 end 4.50 P. M.
SCHUYLKILL AND SUSQUEHANNA RAILROAD
-Trains leave Auburn at 4.55 A. M. for Pinegrove
and Harrisburg, and at 12.05 noon for Pn e
grove, Tremont and Brookside; returning from Har
risburg at 8.40 P 31; from Brookside at 3.45 P. M. and
from Tremont ate.= A.M.and 5.05 P.M.
TICKETS.-Through first-class tickets and emigrant.
tickets to all the principal points in the North and West
and Canada: - .
. . _
Excursion Tickets from Philadelphia to Reading and
Intermediate Stations, good for day only, are sold by
Morning Accommodation, Market train , Reading and
Pottstown Accommodation Trains at reduced rates.
Excursion Tickets to Philadelphia, good for day ohly.
are eold at Potter ille and Intermediate Stations byltead
rig and Pottsville and Pottstown. Accommodation
Trains at reduced rates.
The following tickets are obtainable only at the Office
of S..llradford, Treasurer, N 0.227. South. Fourth street
Philadelphia, or of G. A. Nicolls, General Superinten
dent, Beading.• .
Commutation Tickets,at 26 per cent. disconnt.between
any
_Pointe desired, for families and firms.
Mileage Tickets, good for 2,909 milee,betweon all points
at $47 00 each for families and firms. .
Season Tickets, for one, two,three..six, nine or twelve.
Months, for holders only, to all points, at reduced rates.
Clergymen residing on the line of the road will be fur
nished with cards, entitling themselves arid wives, to
tickets at half fare . •
. . . .
Excursion Tickets from Philadelphia to principal sta
tions, good tor.- Saturday, Sunday and Monday, at ro
duced fare, to be had only at the Ticket Office, at This•
teenth and Callawhill 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 4.85 A. M.,
12.30 noon, 6.00 and 715 -P. 31.. for Beading, Lebanon,
Harrisburg, Pottsville, Port Clinton, and all points be
yond.
Mails close at the Philadelphia Poet-office for all places
on the road and its branches at 5. A. 31.,and for the prin
cipal Stations only at 2.16 P. M.
BAGGAGE.
Dungan's Express will collect Baggage for all trains
leaving Philadelphia Depot. Orders can be left at No.
226 douth Fourth street, or at the Depot, Thirteenth and
Callowhill streets.
TXTEST -DDENTER ' AND - PHILADEL
V V PHI& %%FAD comPANY: -
On and after MC "AY, April 4, 1870, trains will leave
the Depot, THIB Y-FIRST and CHESTNUT, as fol
town :
FROM PHILADELPHIA.
6.45 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 Doposit,and all stations
on the P. and B. C. R. R.
9.40 A: M. for West Chester stops at all stations.
11.50 A. M. for B. 0. Junction stops at all stations,
2.30 P. M. for West Cheater stops at all stations.
4.15 P, M. for B. C. Junction stops at all stations.
4.45 P. M. for West Chester stops at all stations west of
Dledtit (except Greenwood), connecting at B. C. Junc
tion for Oxford,Kennett,Port Doposit,and all stations
on the P. A B. 0. R. It.
5.30 P. M. for B. C. Junction. This train commences
running on and after June Ist, 1370, stopping at all
stations.
6.55 P. M. for West Chester stops at all stations.
FOB PHIL er DE
11.30 P. M. for West Chst stops at
IA all .
stations.
A
5.25 A. M. from B. C. Junction stops at all stations.
6.30 A. M. from West Chester stops at all stations.
7.40 A. 511. from West Chester stops at all stations be
tween W. C. and Media (except Greenwood) connect
ing at B. C. Junction for Oxford, Kennett, Port De
posit, and all stations on the P. & B. C. R. R.
2.15 A. DI. from B. C. Junction stops at all stations.
10.00 A. M. from West Chester stops at all stations.
1.05 P. M. from B. C. Junction stops at all stations.
1.511 P. M. from West Chester, stops at all stations.
4.55 P. M. from Went Chester stops at all stations, con
necting at B.C.Junction for - Oxford, Bennett, Port
Deposit, and all stations on the P. A B. C.H. R.
6.55 P. M. from West Chester stops at all stations, con
necting at B. C. Junction with.P. 36 B. O. R. B.
9.00 P. M. from B. C. Junction. This train commences
running on and after. June Ist, 1870, stopping at all
stations.
ON SUNDAYS.
- -
8.03 A. M. for West Chester stops at all stations,connect
ing at B. C. Junction, with P. & B. C. B. B.
2.30 P. M. for 'West Chester stops at all stations.
7.30 A. M. from West Cheater stops at all stations.
4.50 P.M. from West Chester stops at all stations, con
fleeting at B. C. Junction with - P. &B.C. B. R.
W. C. WHEELER. Superintend-ant.
PHELADELPIEL9. AND ERIE BAIL.
ROAD-SUMMER TIME TABLE.
On and after MONDAY May 30, 1870, the Traine on
the Philadelphia and Erie Railroad will run as follows
from Pennsylvania Railroad Depot, West Philadelphia :
WESTWARD.
Elan Train leaves Philadelphia
66 16 " 10726 . P. M.
Williamsport
8.00 A. M.
" " arrives at Erie 7.40 P. M.
Erie Express leaves Philadelphia.......-...... 10.60 A. D.
-Williamsport • - ' 8.15 P. M.
" " arrives at Erie. 7.25 A. M.
Elmira Mail leaves Philadelphia. 7.60 A. 31.
,i i,, " • Williamsport. COO P. M.
" " arrives at Lock Haven 7.20 P. N.
Bald Eagle Mail leaves Willhunsport 1.30 P. 31,
" " arrives at Lrck Haven 2.45 P. Id,
EASTWARD.
Ilan Train leaves Erie 8.50 A. M.
" " " Williamsport... 9.25 P.M,
." 1 arrives at Philadelphia. 6.20 A. M.
Erie Express leaves Erie
16 61 " Williamsport 8.15
P. M
8.15 A. 111
" " arrives at Philadelphia 5.30 P. M.
Elmira Mail leaves Williamsport 9.46 A. M
" " arrives at Philadelphia 9.60 P. M,
Buffalo Express leaves Williamsport 12.25 A. 31,
• " Harrisburg 5.20'A, M.
ii " arrives at Philadelphia 9.25 A. M.
Bald Eagle Mail leaves Lock Haven 11.35 A, M.
' arrives nt Williamsport 12.50 P. 31,
Bald Eagle Exprese leaves Lock Haven ..... .... 9.35 P. M . ,
44 44 arrives at Williamsport, 10.50 P. M.
'
Exprrss blail and Accommodation, east. and west,
connects at Corry and all west bound trains, and Mail
and Accommodation east at Irvineton with Oil Creek
and All_e_gbeny River Railroad.
Wilt. A. BALDW IN. General Superintendent.
FAST FILRIGHT LINE, VIA NORTH
PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD, to Wilkeebarre,
fdabanoy City, Mount Carmel, Centralia, and all point.
on Lehigh Valley Railroad and its branches.
By new arrangements, perfeotod this day, this road is
enabled to give increased despatch to merchandise coo
signed to the above-naraed points.
Hoods delivered at the Through Freight Depot,
' cor. Front and Noble streets
Before 5 P. M., will reach Wilkosbarre, Mount Carmel
sfabanoy Cityi and the other stations in Dinhanoy and
Wyoming vallev obeyers the erioceediUg day.
• • •• - • lIILLTE; CILA.IIH• Arent.
VIITLERIt
ROD GEl3' • AND WOSTENEOLM'S
POCKET KNIVES, PEARL and STAG HAN
DLES of beautiful tinishr RODGERS' and WADE &
BUTCHER'S, and the ORLEBRATRD - LECOULTER
RAZOR SCHSSORSIN OASES of tho driest duality,
Razors Knives Scissors and Tab lo Cutlery, ground and
polished,EAß INSTRUMENTS of the most approved
construction to assist the Learir at P. MADEIRA'S,
Cutler and Surgical Inettiumont faker , 116 Tenth etre&
bel wChestnut. , . mrltf
PERSONAL.
PROFESSOR JOHN BUCHANAN, M. D.
can be consulted personally or by letter in all dig
°two. Patients can reinupon a safe, speedy, and per
manent cure, as the - Professor prepares and. furnbthee
new, scientific and positive remedies specially adapted
.to the wants of the patient. Private omcee in - College
Building, No. 014 MN street. Office hours from
p9(l
0d.t09P.91, 9
lyA
SKIPPERS'
T70...EL 130STO
-Steamship Line. Direct.
, . .
ROMAN, ',SAXON, NORMAN, ARIES.
Sailing Wednesday and Saturday
FROMEACH PORT,'
From Pine Rt. Wharf, Phila., at 10 A.M.
" Long Wharf, Boston., - at' '3 P. H.
These Stetunabipa sail punctually i - : .oeigAt received
— evert, day.
Freight forwarded to cal Points in New .rnkiand.
For freight'or passage (superior accommodations) ap
ply to
Insurance effected at 3 - .; of I per cent, Y at - the office, .
HENR WINNO & CO. )
838 SOUTH DELAWAR W E
AVENUE.
PHILADELPHIA AND SOUTHERN
MAIL STEAMSHIP COMPANY'S RFiGULAB
SEMI-MONTHLY LINE TO NEW ORLEANS, LA.
The YAZOO will sail FOR NEW ORLEANS.
direct, on Tuesday, An gust 23.1, at 8 A.M.
The HERCULES will sail FROM NEW ORLEANS.
direct --
on August.
THROUGH - BILLS OF LADING at as low rates as
by any other route given to MOBILE,GAAXESTON,
INDIANOLA, LAVACCA and, BRAZOS, and to all
points on the MISSISSIPPI. between NEW ORLEANS
and ST. LOUIS. RED RIVER, FREIGHTS RE
SHIPPED at New Orleans without charge of commis
sions.
WEEKLY LINE TO SAVANNAH, GA.
The WYOMING will sail FOB SAVANNAH on
Saturday, Anainst 20, at BA. M.
The TONAWANDA. will sail IROII SAVANNAH on
Saturday, August 20.
THROUGH BILLS OF LADING given to! all the
principal towns in GEORGIA, ALABAMA, FLORIDA,
M ItISIt,SIPPI, LOUISIANA,- ARKANSAS and TEN
NESSEE, in connection with the Central Railroad of
Georgia.Atiantic and Gulf Bailroad and Florida steam
ers, at as low rate as by competing lines. •
SEMI-MONTHLY LINE TO WILMINGTON, IN. O.
The PIONEER will sail FOR WILMINGTON on
Wednesday, August IT, 6 P. 31.`—returning. will leave
Wilruington,Wedneaday, August 24.
Connects with the Cape Fear River Steamboat Com
pany, the Wilmington and Weldon and North Carolina
Railroads, and the -Wilmington and ichester ßall
road, to all interior points.
Freights for ' COLUMBIA, S.C. and AUGUSTA,Ga.,
taken via WILMINGTON at tis low rates as by any
other route.
Insurance effected when requested by Shippers. Bills
of Lading signed at Queen Street Whart on or before day
of sailing.
WM. L. JAMES. General Agent,
- my3l-tf§ No. 130 South Third street.
__------ •
ELPHIA RICHAIOND AND
NORFOLK STEAMSHIP LINE., • •
THROUGH FREIGHT -AIR LINE ,TO THE sorra
AND WEST.
INCREASED FACILITIES AND REDUCED RATES
• FOR 1870— • •
STEAMERS LEAVE EVERY WEDNESDAY. • and
•
SATURDAY at 12 &clic; Noon, from FIRST' WHARF,
above MARKET Street. •.• •' • -
RETURNING, LEAVE RICHMOND M.ONDAYS and
THURSDAYS, and NORFOLK TUESDAY§ and
''SATURDAYS.
ItGr'No Bills of Lading signed after 12 o'clock on
Sailing Day. - •L.
- THROUGH -RATES to all noints in torth - and South
Carolina via Seaboard Air• Line Railroad, connecting at
Portsmouth, and to Lynchburg, Va., Tennessee and the
West via Virginia and Tennessee Air-Line and /Doh•
mend and Danville Railroads' - -
Freight HANDLED BUT ONCIDand taken at LOWER
RATES THAN ANY OTHER LINE. . •
Nu charge for commission, drayage , or any oxpense for
transfer.
Eitearnehipa frame at lowest rates. •
Freight received DAILY.
state-room accommodations for paseengers.
WILLIAM P. CLYDIII & 00.
No. I 2 South Wharves and. Pler No. I North Wharvev,
W. P. PORTEIC, Agent atßlchinond and OityPolnt.
T. P. CILOWELL & CO.. Agents at Norfolk
FOR NEW YORK 'VIA_ DELAWARE
AND RA - RITAN ()ANAL.
EXPRESS STEAMBOAT COMPANY. •
ThuCHEAPEST and QUICKEST water communica
tion between Philadelphia and Now York.
Steamers leave daily from First Wharf below MAR
KET street, Philadelphia, and foot 'of WALL street,
New York.
-
GoodsRDUGIN TWENTY-FOUD HOURS.'
forwarded by all the Lines running out of New
York North, East or West, free of commission. •
Freights received Daily and forwarded on accommoda
ting terms:
-
WD L P. CLYDE 8.• CO., Agents,
- - 12 South Delaware Avenue.`.
JAS. ITAND, - Agent;ll9 Wall Street, New York..
NEW - EXPRESS LINE TO .ALEVAN.
dria, Georgetown and Washington, H. 0., via Ches
apeake and DelawarS Canal, with connectione at Alex
andria from the moat direct route for Lynchburg, 'Bris
tol, Knoxville, Nashville, Dalton and the Southwest;
Steamers leave regularly from the first...wharf abov
Market street; every Saturday at noon. • •
'Freight received daily. --W M. P. OLYDEr & 00.,
No. 12 South Wharves and Pier 1 North Wharves.
' HYDE & TYLER, Agents at_ Georgetown ~.
aI:ELDRIDGE - 4% CO., Agents at Alexandria, Va
DELAWARE AND . . CHESAP EAKE STEAM. TOW-BOAT COMPANY,—Barges towed
between Philadelphia altinaore, Havre do Graco;Del
aware City and intermediate points. -
WM. P. CLYDE ..A CO.' -Agente4--- Capt. JGHN
LAUGHLIN Sup't Office, 12 South Wharvea, Phila
delphia. apil tf §
FOR NEW. YORIC, DTP.T. A WARE
AND RARITAN CANAL.
SWIFTSURE TRANSPORTATION COMPANY,
DISPATCH AND SWIFTSURE LINES,
The steam p
L rope eavi llengre daiofly
thi at s
12
Company will COMMen O
loading on the Bth of March.
!Through in twenty-four hours.
Goode forwarded to anylpoint freaotcommiesions. -
Freights taken on accommodating terms.
Apply to WM. BAIRD - Ai co.; - Agents,
132 South Delaware avenue.
WORTH PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD
111 —Freight Department,—Notice to Bhippers.—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 and Susquehanna Valleys, mid on
the Catawissa and Erie Railways.
Particular attention is asked 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 Susquehantia. It also of
fers ashort and speedy route to Buffalo and Rochester,
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 5 P. AL, is dis
tributed by Fast Freight Trains throughout the Le
high, Mahanoy, 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.C. KINSLER, Agent
of P. W. 8: E. Lino.]
D. B. GRAPLY,
Through Freight Agent, Front and Noble streets.
ELLIS MARK,
General Agent N. P. R. B. Co.
LIU
MAULE, BROTHER & C 0.,,
2500 South Street.
1870. P A P I ZIS I ETN gt A I
r B
:S R , 1.870
CHOIOI3 13 ( gracorroN
fiIIOBIGAN 00IIK PIRA
FOR PATTERNS.
1870!FLORIDA y r MIRING. 1870
- OAROLINA •
VIRGINIA FLOORING.
DF,Lta i A r ialr o lfightlNG'•
WALNUT FLOORING.
187VFLORIDA STEP BOARDS. IB,IO.
s FLORIDA STEP BOARDS.
• BAIL PLANE.-
VAIL PLADK:
1870 wAIJI"`7PiTie" ANDIB7O•
* WALNUT BOARDS AND PLANE,
WALNUT BOARDS.
WALNUT PLANK.
ASSORTED
FORT
CABINET MAKERS,
BUILDERS. AS.
1870. r uNDP,MiIf. - ER B ' ' 1870.
UNDERTAKERS' LUMBER.
RED CEDAR.
WALNUT AND PINE.
1870. 8 % 8 12111 Curket: 1870.
ASH.
WHITE OAK
HIOKOBY. PLANK AND BOARDS.
1870.' 1 '020A 11 3 e. .M7MG . 1870
NORWAY SCANTLING,
AND
HEINC9B7O
LARGE TOOK,
--
CEDAR SHINGLES.
OEDAII. SHINGLES.
MINIM SHINGLES.
LARGE .ASSORHISIDNT.
FOR SALE LOW.
1870.
1870. PLAZABfiIei,IATH . 1870.
104 L TH
witormle a uo,
00(1130E1TH• STIMAT.
ATELLOW 1)0111 LUNA I Boma
JL- for cargoes tif evOry depdriptlOn tatiotqllti*ber ex*.
°cited - at - short notloo—Quallty rablett Mrsoottoa
Aooly to ZDW 4 EL UOWLET.I6 Smith Wbarves.
MANTELS, &C.
Factbry untSuVorliZslTt3:
HILL Streets.
arB-rarrs
SEA - ISLAND - COTTON.-20--BALES OF
Bea leland Cotton in attire and for sale by 00011.
BAN, RUSSELL S, CO., 111 Chestnut rtycet
1870.
/If -A,1%-t-ii