The press. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1857-1880, October 24, 1857, Image 4

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' T$E .PULPIT. '`
VOCTIRA NE or VIE 'RESURRECTION'
fOr ThoPtese.J
his
.Watt the subjoet of a discourse Preached,
epecial. request, is the, geatetstreet Presbyterian
on Sabbetb,cr,eaing, the 4th instent,
the pastor; Rev. DUPP4II.II—
a'prolude to, the dootrino abut to be dis-
i.uosued,:74r.,Pirsro46 road the portion of Scrip-,
titre contatiroa in the fifteenth 'chapter of St:
lett#,,tp the Corintbittno, from the twelfth
itr i.liiiltt , ettly-siztlt.verse inclusive. The speeint
. . ,
pyst,e(geripture upon which tho discourse was
be found in the latter clause of tho,
,verse of 'the . twenty *Nadi' chapter of
• "There shall be a resurrection. of the dead, bath
:of the just and unput,"
speaker remarked, in opening, that his at
tention had , been drawn to this subject at this time
by to iarietY . of oirounuancses, which it was need!
Um - to detail. 'Upon the importance of this doe 4
trine, he, as a minister of the Ceopel, need hardly
as it might justly be said to constitute UM
-Chief article and basis of our faith; it was indeed
our: great. consolatioti and hope. Pre-eminently
had- this doctrine been dear to the primitivn
Christians; yet he was sorry to and that the great
doctrine of the reaurreotion of the hody was: in
many instances being too slightly regarded by prod
femora of Christianity. But the other day, a good
Christian bad remarked to him in reference to thig
subjeot, that ‘.‘ the body was a minor matter ;' ,- and
,be; for one, felt ithisdutyto revive ita imortmiao;
It had been' the hope that the dotty mould one Jai),
spring' forth pure from the tomb; that sustained
the martyr in the, darkest hour of his person Bona!
The Apostles had laid great stress upon this deed
trine: ' It was true, when Peal preached it ni
Atheds, the philosophers received it with monkery,
and while they-were unable to disprove its troth;
they used every means; as they supposed, to rendet
it impossible by dootroying, the bodies of their do'
, I
'ceased in divers ways. - • •
- The presentation, of this &Chino V had elver!
`been attended, with great power upon the eoni
science of zuenl,daven greater than the iMmortality:
of the 504.1 'Talk to a man of his soul, and 14,
heard--you , as if yon, were conversing with hiM
about a stranger,;, bat let. it, be concerning his out),
ward being, and he is far more likely , to apply it td
l
himself. We had the evidence of 'the MisSionariesi
io preie that the enunciation the resurrection
of the body caused the wildest emotions seating poi
-heathens, even when 'every other appeal 'maned to t s
be made in vain. He was prepared to admit that)
in very many reveals we' were prone to thinltiooi
ranoh . of this initarard, perishable tenerieni oft
clan but as bodies that were designed again to
,rise from the dead, we did not think.enongh of
'them.
!hat, then, was the doctrine of the Resurrection?!
''eras the fiat of a series of ,questione he should ask
and.answer in this, and the discourses whieh• wore!
to follow , open 'The same subject—i. e., Whatiwai
true and 'formal " statemantef it? Ac n general!
statement, the text wn sufficient; literally ron-1
dered,, however, -the' word resurrection signified!
to stand up, as controdistiriguhthed freak the pros
trate p4alioit :of the body in the tomb, and had'{
:hence -I;een need to signify4ho renewal of life', or!
the rising up of something that had fallen dowit—
not the uprising of a' different body, for ribthing
Could be said to" rise again that had never rayon
do‘lin.„Xtits doctrine, was, hence, that the actual
body in which. we now exist is again to be united
with the soul that now inhabits st.
sentence maybe' said to be the gist and
pith of Mr.. Duffield's view of this momentous
sabjeotT :
In the' serditcl place, it would be interesting to
.jnqatriirbether this was a doctrine of, reason, or
of revelation only. In the first place, we idea
that this had not been a" doctrine of the
Greeks; they had held the belief 'in the immor
tality:Op the Seel,but not in the resurrection of the
body, and iS had bion.this dread of eternal mortal
annihilation that bad induced among the ancients
theoustorciof embalming the bodies of their dead.
Thotititli.was, reason alone was inadequate to the
conception of this inspiring truth. •
It wase, lesson that no man could draw from any
exhibitiOns or'plienomener in the natural world.
It had been oft attempted, he knOw, but there was
a flaw in the simile. ,
Tatittuttratiorl Voquently employed' of tim re
wisialof spring Rae very 'good and beautiful, so
far aa it weat,lnit the analogy failed in ono very
imPortant : That; the 'shrubbery which
decayed; in autumn, and which again came forth
in Spring, was not dead, but hail merely iitspendert
its life functions. In order to make this analogy
perfect, it mould be necessary for us to Pack •up
the plant by, the roots, burn ; them to ashes, and
scatter them to the Windi; yol his ,hearers need
Met be informed that were this course universally
adoptodivith the vegetable .Itlngdom the genial
influences, of the vernal sun would return to us in
ran; Thia doctrine was hence not one of natural
refigion; but pdrely of revelation ;'and 'inasmuch
teason had not discovered it, it was not for-the
caprices of man to niter - or amend it.
[This was a tine touch, well put in by the spelt
ker, angwe art; free to admit, clinched his posi
tion's° handsomely sa to cause a slight tottering of
our own doubts respecting the vartietilur Construe
tion•of•that portion of revelation.]
UpOri:the exact antiquity of this revelation there
were seine differences of opinion.,
Jos had evidently embraced this doctrine in its
Silken whek_he.deolared, "I knoli-tlitirmP
deemer liveth, and that lie shall stand•itt theiat
ter day, upon the:mutt:l : And though after my
skin worms dostrOy ;this body, yet in my flesh shall
son (bd.!' tellienno)cpresaions of Jon wore indeed
wondetifnlVOniftoant.
'Many, snore 'passages of Scripture were road to
illustratothe existence of this hope in the minds of
other .*red riviitera. Some critics had affirmed
that foists was the first sacred writer to whom this
'doetrinShMeld be traced. The, remarks of Ezekiel
respecting the, " shaking of, the dry bones in the
that Were , again brought together and
clothed withtleshoras also regarded by the speaker
as pointing to the general rosorrecticn of the body
Willi kat day. The name might also be said of
the declaration of Baslizt, that "-those that sleep
in the dint shall awake„; ;some ; to everlasting life,
andsome to everlasting shame.!! In Christ's time,
this doctrine was held by, the Pharisees, and in
deed by:the' Jews gerierallV—tbe' Stichteees alone
disputing it. •
TIM th•st avowal of this doctrine by the Saviour
we foist& recorded In -the fifth of Jona', in the
words For -ss e the Pother raiseth up tluidead,
and iiniokeneth them ; even so the Bon quickenith
whom he will." And again : " Marvel not it this ;
for the lioings - onining in the whisk all - ilia are in
the graves shall hear his voice, and Thall come
101110! ,Tlie maryeW hero alluded ,to 'was the
heeling Pf:an iMpatent man ef-thirliokht 'Years'
standing, bit Whiehi miracle: was evidently tea
siderediniselapirable to that which should one dAy
be performed upon our mottel ' bodies, virtually
enduing them with immortality. , 1 , t
.1
The spe4er, hero offered several slim:dative sug
gestions respecting the probable motives of the Sa
viour in speaking , thus to his , hystanders on that
occasion. The great leotthat" . " the time was 'com
ing, in which all that ere in their graves shall hear
his voice," was evidontly, upon Christ's own ad
inhabit, the Marie :of the universO. The reser-
Motion with Him was no Secondary , rtffairJ—it was
a cardinal point in tho Gospel plan ;'and in fact to
rob us of this would be to deprive us of the Gospel
But whitlkift.rweie,t.to to look fei . the avidenom of
the fullitment of this Scriptural promise? Was it
to the post that Enoch and Elijah' hid been taken
in their bodies to heaven? or that Christ - bad
raised tho widow's Son, the daughter of Jairus,
and Lazarus trom the desd? •,110, neither of these,
nor all of them combined, but to Oinures own nu-
SURUZO2IOII, were. we to 'look • for the groat and
crowning .eyldenr,,e, of the truth of 'this doctrine.
"If the resurrection is not tine, then ie not Christ
raised," was the Gospel statement.
It then, Christ had arisen from the dead *ord.
Ing to b own palliation, and 'nt the some time
declared} that at the laot 4 414 Itemould anise, up
all, what more complete evidence could we ask in
proof of the general resurrection? '
.This" dootrine wag avowedly the most inexplica
ble-of all doctrines, but the proofs of its truthful
utessnere certainty correspondingly Brent.
ie the third plots{ the design of the retnrree•
Lion was briefly &moldered by the` speaker.. It was
possible_ that this general uprising of our decom
posed bo dies was intended as a grand, final, dis
tinguishing eihibition Of 42tod'a power . ; or , again,
might be designed to perpetuate the human
Mae in this immortal way, as, without this reser
reetion, a ,linkof its perpetuity must necessarily
be broken; .or it might be designed merely to
make the ImMortality of 'man doubly perfect.
in - tins heathen system, already referred to, the
body wee left entirely out of the question, but the
jrnmPria, litr,Whleli had been, brought ,to light by
Jesse Christ was oomplete, and prdvided for the,
material as well as the spiritual man. ifisisas,
indeed a:doctrine that shouted:venni(' 'lvan THE
ORAVN
Another design
of Omnipotence in the general
resurrection might be to bring the entire man he-
fore the judgment seat of Ohrist, thus verifying I
the enunciation, that "There shall be a 'resurrec
tion of the dead, both of the just and the' unjust."
In view set all this, then, the doctrine of the re.
surreetieneheuld not be with us a bare admission,
but &firm, soul-thrilling nobly, We should re
gard these bodies in death as seed sown in corrup
tion,- to be 'raised in ineorrnption ; sown in dis-
Iskor, - te be raised in glory ; sown in weakness, to
be raised hi-444er; sown a natural body, to be
:imaged bod,Y, even as it is written, " The
first., inFi Adan!... was Made a living soul; the last
,A4Kii::swAs made a quickening spirit."
; li6 speaker closed by Beyfeg that tho doctrine
;4?fAt9esurrection was a 'glorious doctrine, and,
,*die time, would Its filtitteent.
• °tilos son:eons are to follow upon the seine sub
.' 'itoti4,44ounild the succeeding ones prove as able
res pgarthe first—of *rich the above is
"orreaseksketelp-rtbey oanaot fall to secure a
•ck . i..,lo7,opAtiOtteadattee. _ - . -
puorpsALt FOR ''INDIAN GOODS.
11.,,. , cia i, ,,e 73 1 1P,911r101NT OP 11111 /NPITIOII,_
011104 Affaire, October lb, Itibt.
•-• SPALSO PROPOSALS; endorsed ' Rroposats for In-,
dian Goode,'" [chisel; 2,8, or 4, u the ease may be.),
Will be received at the Office of Indian Affaire, Wash-I
in ton city. until ten o'clock A. ld.on Saturday, the
14th 'day of NOveniber next, for furnishing goode for.
the Indian department for fulfilling treaty stipula tion'
with varioue Indian tribes, and for other In per.:
penes, an follows :
Ouse NO.I.
Mackinac Blanktis, (Moths, and Dry goods.
3,000 pairs 3.polut white Mackinac blankets, to nioaanrci
60 by 12 inches, and weigh 8 pounds.
3,000 pairs2N , point.whltellisOkinscblakets, to measure,
54 by 66 inches, and weigh 0 pounds
1,500 pare 2-point white Mackinac blankets, to measure
42 by he Inches, and weigh 64 pounds.
1,500 pairs 11 , point white Mackinac blankets, to rues-
- sure 56 by 60 hulas, and weigh 41( pounds. '
1,600 palm 1-paint white Mackinac blankets, to measure!
32 by 46 lichee, and Weigh 84 pounds.
300 pairs 3-polnt Scarlet litackinno blankets, to men-'
inire 00 by 72 inches; and weigh 8 pounds.
400 pairs 24-point'ecarlet Mackinac blankets, to met" '
sure 54 by 66 Inchon, and weigh 6 pounds.
200 pairs 84 point' green Mackinac blankets, to men.,
an 66 by 84 Inches, Old *sigh 10 pounds. '
400 palm tt,point green Maeldnic blankets, to, measure;
60 by 72 inches, sad weigh 8 pound..
400 pairs 24. point green Mackinac blankets, to mea
sure 54 by 66 inches, and 14146'6 pounds.
200 pairs 34-point indigo blue Masking. blankets, to
measure 80 by' 84 Inchon, and weigh n pounds,
200 pairs 3-point indigo blue Mackinac blankets, to'
measure 60 by 72 inches, and weigh pounds.. 1
300 pairs .2,4,point iodide blue Mackinac blankets, to )
measure 64 by 00 inches, and weigh 0 pounds
200 pairs 34 , point tiontinelle blue Mackinac, blankets, !
• to measure 66 by 84 inches and weigh 10
pounds.
MO pale% 3-point Gentinells blue Mackinac blankets
to measure 60 by 72 inches, and weigh 8 poilude)
, 350 pairs 21( point ilentinelle bltiefifackinac blankets,"
to measure 54 by 60 inches , and weigh 6 pounds!
3,sooyards fanny list blue cloth
2,000 , black cloth
600 " ' " green cloth
4,500 " graylist blue cloth
3,500 " saved ti blue e(otb
3,000 scarlet cloth
1,000 " it " green cloth
1, , 00 pounds worsted yarn, 3 folds
100 dozen cotton flag handkerchiefs
,100 " ,Madras
250 'fancy cotton , "
50 ,1 4 black silk "
50 " 8-4 cotton shawls
100 " 6.4
100 " 4-4
60 " woollen Anode
1,000 patinae linen thread
76 " mewing Bilk
600 pieces ribands
160 gross worsted gartering
76 pieces silk handkerchiefs
36,0:0 yards calico
28,000 Merrimac calico
16,000 " blue •
16,060 " white
5,000 Georgia stripes '
3,000 blue, denina
3,000' rr cottonado
15,000 " bed ticking
2,000 RentUcky jeans
3;600 " sstinets
10,000 ," plaid linser,
••rOOO "g , • bleached shirting
20,000 'dordestio shirting, (unbleached)
?AOOO ' •tr sheeting,
10,000 checks, stripes and plaids
200 dozen woollen socks
-2,500 yards flannels, astiorldd.
1,000 pounds cotton thread
600 dozen spool cotton
- 300 poun ds best ()hitless 'septillion
600' " Amerietn
1,500 ' " brown gluing twintv,..No. 80
1,000 If , Cotton 'moire
2,100 Daniel shirts "
2,400 calico '
" 110 dozen Canadian belts.
°LASS N 0.2. •
Ready-Made Clothing.
200 frock coats, indigo blue broad cloth
200 pantaloons, "
200 vests, • •
' 100 frock coats, " .heavy twilled
100 pantaloons, "
rr
100 vests, sc
100 Mackinac indigo blue blanket motes '
100 black Casinet overcoats, (No. 1)
100 sheep's gray cloth overcoats. '
100 • coats
100 " pantaloons
100 black cloth coats
100 pantaloons •
100 " vests
200 blue satinet coats
2gb It pantaloons
200 " vests'
200 cadet cloth coats
200 ' psztalools -
200 . - vests.
. ,
• CLASS NO. 3.
Hardware, Agricultural Implements, and Axes.
0,000 pounds brass kettles
1,000 tin kettles, (6 sizes) .
200 nests Japanned kettles, 8 In a nest
60 dozen 10-quart tin pane
75 6 .1 44
75 4
100 ti 2 rc
300 butcher knives
200 " scalping
26 31 gun flints
60 gross gun worms
, 160 squaw awls
125 " fish hookd, assorted
300 dozen fish lines
350 gross needles
150 dozen coarse tooth combs
160 " One
150 , s scissors
15 bash scythes
16 grass 0
16 grain ."
10 adzes
30 grubbing hoes
,
00 " treading "
100 pairs homes
200 trace chains
100 log chains
, 800 drawing knives, 10 and 12 inches in length
i
250 angers , n equal proportions of IX, 1, X, and
x-inch •
200 hand saws
30 cross-cut saws, 7 foot in length
55, 41 6 r. , 44
50 dozen hand-saw files -
10 '• eras/Foot saw files
10 wood rasps
260 quarters socket chisels, %, 1, and 2 inch
, 70 planes fore and jack
26,dozen shovels
25 spades
000 camp kettles, (8 111‘05)
3,000 short handled frying pans
100 dozen biotin spoons
200 - iron table spoons
200 " tin cups
16 , f• scythe spathe
25 axes, to weigh from 4); to 5.1( pounds
100 half sees, to weigh 3% pounds
70 hatchets, to weigh 1X pound
15 broad.axes, ordinary size , •
60 zinc mirrors -
75 fire steels
oLAiat tic,. 4.
Northwest Guns.
1,000 northwest guns, flint lock'
210 " Krcusalon look
Proposals will be received, for the delivery of mid
anode at Boston, New York, Philadelphia, Baltimore,
New Orleans, St. Louis, Memphis; of Cincinnati ; but In
ansidering the bids, the teat of the transportation of
the unto to ,their respective destinations from the
places proposed to bo delivered will form en element in
deriding upon the prophets.
The rgglit will be reserved to require a greater or lees
quantity of any of the articles named than that specified
in the above sehedul ,e also any others of a different
description that may be needed,• at the lowest market
prices.
Goode of American manufacture, of, the required
mid quality, will be preferred; but as the samples
of blankets and cloths are foreign fabrics, it will be he
cessary,'ln proposing a domestic artiole of either' of
those kinds, that a sample thereof phial accompany the
bid.
The articles to be furnished ` iuudt, in all respects,
conform to and be equal with the wimples recently se
lected, which may be seen at this °Mee. They will bo
rigidly inspected:and compared with th6se samples by
an agent or agent,' appointed for that purpose. Ouch as
may be unequal thereto in any particular will be re
jected ; in which case the contractor will be bound to
furnish others of the required kind or quality within
three days ;. if that bo not done, they will be, pay
ehaited at Ins expense.: 'Payment will be made for the
goods recelyed.',Oit invoices - thereof, =titled by tt[i '
neat Or impute appointed to inspect them. '
It will be understood that all bids for furnishing the
goals above apecified may be' rejected at the option of
the Department, particoloripit made by one who Is not'
known an a manufacturer - of, or regular dealer In, the
article proposed to be furnished ; which fact, or the re
verse' most be distinctly stated , in the bide offered; and
that the bids of all persons who may have failed to
comply with the conditions of any contracts they may
have previously entered into with the ,United Stites
shall. at the option of the Tepartment; be ire]ected, In
accordance with the letterandephit of a joint resoluthiu
of Congrooe relative, ,to, bide for. , provielons, clothing,
eco, for the use of the navy, approved 27th March, 1654.
Bonds will be required, in the amount of the bid, for
the faithful per.ormance of the contract*, with two or
more sureties!, whose sufficiency must be certified by
United States Judge or district attorney.
Tho proposals meet embrace the: articles, with the
quantities thereof, an they aro arranged in the foregoing
schedule, with the prim' annexed to each, in dollars
and cents, at which they will bo furnished, and the
amounts must .be carried out :end footed up for each
clime. They should 'be submitted with the following
hee ‘‘ ding;
I [or we] hereby propose to furnish for the service
of the Indiandepartment, and according to the terms
of Ito advertisement therefor. dated October 16th, 1857,
rho following articles, at the prices thereto affixed,
[here invert the list according to the class or C 1666161
proposed for,] deliverable in the city of [Boston . , New
York, Philadelphia, Baltimore, New Orleans, St. Loins,
Momphim, or Cincinnati, tie the case may be,) by the
first day of April next, or Manch time or times during
the year 1859 u may he ordered by the Cominiseleuer
otlnditin Affairs; end. ler ,we) ,w1)1 also furnish.
at the same prices,ouch additional quantities of the
same Mode end qualitice of goods, and at the lowest
market prima, ouch other articles of a different descrip,
ties an may bo required for the service of the Indian
department during the year - Is6B4cliverable as a above
stated; and If thie proposal : be accepted , [hero Insert
the worths, 'ln whole or in pert; If more than onectints
be proposed for,) I [or we] will, within twenty' deli
therealter4 execute a contract accordingly, and give
eoeurity, satisfactory to the Courmiestoner of Indian
A ffaire, for the faithful performance of' the ' aame."
[hero insert whether the party proposing is or , is not a
lointifacturer or regular dealer In the articte'proposed:
to be furutitiod,l " " „
Nub proposal must also be accompanied agniran.`
tee, in the following form, to be signed by'twoor more
responsible persons; whose sufficiency must be tertified
by one or more persona, personally or °Moistly, known'
to the department: • r
,• 1 for we] hereby guaranty that the above bidder,
[or bidden,] If a contract aball tie awarded to him, [or
according Noble [or their] foregoing bid or pro)
pout, will execute 6 contract, and give security for the'
performance thereof, as prescribed to the edvertilement•
for proposals for Indian micas, dated October' 16, PAT ,•
add I [or we] agree to payOny and all damaged or 1611106
t which the United Staten qr the Indians may suffer by
reason of failure to to do on the part of,the said bidder,
[or bidders,"). '
No propose( will be considered that deed not strictly
;conform to the terms and direction, of this advertise
By Order of the Secretary of the Interior:
OMARLSB MIX,
oe2 2-thatu tnovl4' Aeting Com m
!D OP R T LS FOR F
LIURNISHINGRINTINO. THE
PAPRR lIBC P
,OSSIOS SOFBRIMIIIiDIiNT OF TOM POSI•10 kOINTINO, •
Washington, Oetobor let, ISO.
IN PUTifiIiANOD of the provisions of the Act to
provide for executing the public printing,” Pee., op.
proved August 20, 1802, sealed proposals will be received
at this office, in The Capitol, until the first klonday 11th
lay) of December mat, at twelve o'clock it., for tur.
nishing the paper that may be required for the public
printing for the year ending on the first day of Deceno.
her, MS.
The subjoined Het speciftee OF nearly as can be smear.
' tallied, the quantity, quality, and description of each
kind of paper that willbe required:
CLAIM 1.
.10>080 resins fine printing paper,' uneetendored, toy
numenre 24 by 88 Inchon, and to weigh forty-five pounds
to the ream of 480 sheets.
OLAEIII _
4,1 M reams flue printing paper, alenderodl, to measure
24 by as limbos, and to weigh fifty-six youndi to tho
loam of 480 sheets,
MASS 111.. •
60313° real " 00 P er1100 shed and calondered printlog
paper, to measure 24 by 88 Wettes t and to weigh. Afty-i
two pounds to the ream of 480 sheets.
• CLASS Ir.
300 r:T n ll e glaZ;lo b hag i age t d . ayad Wondered itiotlog
e r qht pounds to tho roteni of 440 liii"enti.to weig h
1,000 ream siguirflue sited and eslendered map
riper. of each' clog ae may be required, correeponding
in weight with paper measuring 19 by 2,4 ,inehea, an
we i ghing twenty pounds pee ream of 480 sheets. t
ohaaa vt. .
200 reams ouporOob' plate paptirAcahinderea or um.
Wondered, Sammy be required,) 19 by 21 inches, and of
ouch weight per roam as may be required.
The fibre of the'paper of 'ouch of the above classes to ,
be of linen arid cotton, free from all adulteration witbi
mineral or other substances, of a fair whiteness, and
put up in quires of twentv.four sheets each, anti 111:
bundles of two reams each, each ream to contain 480
perfect sheets. Uniformity in color, thickness, and
weight will be required.; and no bundle (exclusive of
wrapper!) varying over or under five per mt. from Diet
Standard weight will be received, and the groan weight
will, in all cases, be required, killing of various thick.'
Imam' in the same bundle to make up the weight will
be considered a violation of the contract.
MAIM Th.
No 1-1 60(1 rooms quarto post writing paper
0. 2-2,000 roams atcap writing paper ;
No. 3-500 reams demi writing papar ;
No. 4-3,000 reams folio post writing paper;
No. 5-600 reason medium writing paper;
No. 6--50 reams royal writing PoPor
No. 7-0 reams super-royal paper;
No. 8-50 reams imperial writing paper;
No. 0-100 reams colored medimo (assorted.)
CLASS VIII.
No.'l-6,000 reams writing paper, l 9 by 26 inches, to
weigh twenty-eight pounds per ream.
No. 2-1,600 ream writing paper, 10 by 26 inches, to
weigh twenty4hree pounds per ream.
No. 3-3,100 reams writing paper, 18 by 26 Inchon, to
weigh twenty-six pounds per ream.
No. 4-100 reams writing paper, 78 by 27:Incheil, to
weigh twenty-four pounds per ream.
No. 6--34.0 reams writing paper, 18 by 18 Inches, to
weigh twenty-two pounds por ream.
No 6-.400 reams writing paper, 12 by 18 inches, to
weigh twelve pounds per ream.
All the papers designated in classes 7 and 8 are to be
of the best materials, free from adulteration, and finished
in the beet manner. The papers In class 7 are to be
white or blue, of the regular standard alms of the roe
pective kinds, and of such weights ae may be required
by this office I those in class 8 are to be white, and of
the sizes and weight specified In the schedule.
The right to reserved of ordering a greater or lees
quantity of each and every Mod contracted for, at such
times and in such quantities se the public service may
require.
Bitch class will beinmaldered separately, and be suit{
Ject to a separate contract ; but bidders may offer for ono
or more of the classes in the name proposal; and the,
privilege is reserved of requiring a bidder who may have
more than ono class assigned him to take all such
classes or forfeit his right to any claim
Samlee (not less than one quire) of each kind of pa -I
per bidfor, and but one sample of earls kind, must se.:
company eseh bid ; and, lit m asses 7 and 8, be numbered
to correspond with the number of the paper proposed for
in that schedule ; and, In the first Wit classes, to ho
properly designated on the sample, or It will not be con
sidered. Allpreposide and samples must be transmitted:
to this office frog of postego or other expense.
Bach proposal must be signed by the individual or firm
making it, and must Sicify
,the price por pound (and
but rine price for each of every kind of paper contained'
in the clans proposed for.
AII the paper in the several classes must bo delivered
at such place or pliieee as may be designated in Washing-,
ton City, in good order, free of all and every extra charge
or expenae, and subject to the Inspection count, weight;
and measurement of the Superintendent , and be In all'
respects satisfactory.
Blank forms for proposals :will be, fundehed at this
office to persons applying for them; arid none will be
taken Into consideration unless eubstantially agreeing
Therewith.
Bonds, with approved securities, Will, be required p
and the supplying of an inferior article in any of the!
classes, or a failure to aupply the quentitY required at
any time will be coueldered a violation of the contract. ,
Hach bidder is required , to furulah with hie proposals'
satisfactory evidence of ability to execute them
and proposali u.naccompauled by ouch evidence will ho.
'rejected.
The proposals will be opened in the manner required
by law, ,5 orf,the first Tuesday after the drat Monday in
December , ' neat, 18th,) "at ton o'clock A. If., at tho',
Mike of the' Superintendent.
Proposals will be addressed to the ," thiperinteudent'
of the Public' Printing, Capitol of the United States.
IVashington,' , and endorsed Proposals for Supplying
Paper." A. G. SHAMAN, '
003 s St Superintendent or Public Printing.
PROPOSALS FOR ERECTING MARINE'
1 BARRACKS AT PRNSACOLA. PLORIDA.
NAlrt llaeeeraaar
Washington, September 1 21,1857.
SEALED PROPOSALS, endoroed 4, Proposals for build
ing Marine Barricke at Pensacola, Florida," will be re-,
ceived at thin department until the Bth day of Novem
ber, 1857, at 8 o'clock P. M., for the construction of
the Marine Barracks authorized to be erected at Penn. ,
echo, Florida, according to the plane and specifications,
prepared by the direction of the Navy Department,:
topic' of which may be soon at the otlicea of the com
mandants of the Navy-yards at Portsmouth,New
Ifamp
shire, Boston,. New, York, Philadelphia, • Norfolk, and
Pensacola, and at the Navy Department
The proposals meet be for furnishing all the mate
rials and completing the work in a manner satisfactory
to the person who may be appointed by the Navy De-,
pertinent to auperintend the same ; and the department •
reserves the right to reject or accept any of the propo-
Rale herein invited ; when it deems the Interest or the
Culled States requires it.
Ninety per cent, of the amount Of Work done and the
materials delivered *ill he, paid for from time to time,
an the work progresses, upon estimates made and certi
fied to by the superintendent on the part of the United
States, and ten per cent, retained until the completion
of the contract and acceptance of the work by the
said superintendent and department, and be forfeited in
the event of non-fulillnient of the contract; provided
that no bill shall be made for en amount less than are
thousand dollars. '
Each proposed rend be atcompanied by a written goal
antee, tripled by two responsible persons,icertified to be
so by, a navy agent; post-Master, district edge, or some
other officer of the ' United' States) in t e sum of five
thousand dollars, that the bidder will, when required,
it Ida proposal be accepted, enter fete a contract and
bond with proper and sufficient security for HA faithful
parforMaliCa.
Bidders are invited to examine the plane and specifi-
Lefton% at the offices herein-before mentioned.
The proposals most be Reeled and addressed to thin
department, and plainly endorsed "Proposals for build
lug Marine liarracks at Pensacola, Florida,"
The bidder only whom offer may be accepted will be
notified, and the 'contract will be forwarded. as soon
thereafter as practicable, which he will be required to
okeoute within ton dart after itareeeipt at the postonice
numed by him. • •
AII the above work is to ho completed in all respeota
according to the plena and specifications within twelve
months from and after the date of the contract.
' ISAAC TOUWtY,
so2lttui-tN6 Secretary of the navy.
pROPOSALS FOR RATIONS FOR' 1853
QUARTNIMASTIM'S °MOM MARI nt CORPS,
Washington, October 10, 1657.
lEPARATE SEALED PROPOSALS wilt be received
at the office until TUESDAY, the 10th of November
imat, at 3 o'clock P. M., for furnishing Rations to the
Milted States Marino Corps, at. the following stations,
for the,year 180, via
Charlestown, Massachusetts;
Portsmouth., New Hampshire ;
Brooklyn. hand New. York ;
Philadelphia, Peremylvanis •
Gosport, near Norfolk, Virginia;
. Warrington, Florida.' and ,
Washington,
.Districi, of Columbia.
1 1 ' Each ration ,to COPIA Pr one pound and a quarter of
Creel, beef, or throaquarters of, a pound of mess pork;
eighteen ounces of bread, niade of beat superfine Sour,
or bast superfine Sour, at the option of the Government;
and at tho rate of six' pounds, of goal coffee, twelve
pounds of best New Orleans sugar, eight quarts of best
white beano, tour guar* of vinegar, two quarbt of salt,
four, pounds of good bard brown soap, and onmaud-a
half pounds of gtiod hard dipped tallow *Mew, to one
hundred rations.
The beef required shall be delivered on the order of
the commanding officer of each station, either in bulk
or by the single ration, • and shall consist of the best
awl 'swat choice pieces of the carcass; the pork to be
No. l prhoe 'mess pork, and the !groceries to bo of the
best quality or binds named All eubjeet to Inspection.
No bid will be entertained unless actompanied by the
names of two sureties known to this office, or certified
to by some official person. To be endorsed " Proposals
for Nations for '1840," and 'addressed to the Quarter.
master of the Marble Corps, Washlmilho s D. 0 .
" D. T. HUTIIIiIIbAND, •
Quartermaster'.
The paper publishing this advertisement will send
the paper containing the first insertion to this office for
examination, accompanied by a duplicate account of the
expense, at thS rate Or 76 cents for 300 ems first Inser
tion, etaSN' cents per 300 ems for all subsequent in
sertions. • • '• •.• • • •
National Intelligencer, Star; and Staten, Wash
ington, D. 0.; Argue, Portland, Mo.; Patriot, Concord,
N. U.; Dazette , Portsmouth, N. II.; Pont and Courier,
Bunton, MM. ' Bridgeport Farmer, Coon.; Daily NOtra
and Atlas, N.Y.; Eagle, Brooklyn, N. Y.; Argue. Penn
sylvanian, and Press, Philadelphia, Penn.; Patribt,
Harrisburg; Polon.; Republican, lid!Hamm, Nd:; States
man and Argus, Norfolk, Va.; , Democrat, Pensacola,
Fla.; Courier and Orleanian, New Orleans La ; sill
publish The klitive throb times per week, until 101 h No
vember.
• t
on 18-ta Co and sat t Nov 10
11)ROPOS.A.L3, FQR ERECTING THE
CUSTOM 'BOWIE, ko., at Perth Amboy, New
Jersey.
TasSIMRY DIPLRYXIIXT,
Weenixoron, September 21st, 1857.
kk PROPQSALS will be received at thie Departmout until
the 25th day of November, A. D. 1857, at 12 o'clock,
noon, for the construction of the Custom Musa, Pont
'Office, and Court Items, authorised to be erected at
Milan AktlloY, Now, Joreey, according to the plans
epecificatiene prepared at this Department; said
_!proposals to be hither for the wholobuilding, or noparate
for the different Mode Of work; bills of parcels must in
(every case accompany cook bid, with the amount of each'
kind a work, and the total amount carried out ; the
.Department reserving the right to reject or 'accept the
jpropronals hereby Invited, or any part thereof, when It
deems the tutored of the United States require it; the
:Department alse'reserres the right to exclude the hide
'of any person or persons whom there in just CAM° to
,believe will not faithfully perform the coutracta, or
iwllioh they have 'attenipta to obtidis by indirection;
;and all bids when there shall be parties in interest who
do not join in the bids, and all bids that upon
itide are below a fair price for the work. '
Didii will not be received In gross, and no contract trill
be awarded to a bidder unless details are furnished the
;Department of the Floes of ttio'difforent kinds of work'
'and materials, which shall be subject to the revision '
;of the Department, so that It may adopt the whole or
.part of, the bid, as the intend of the United States
tuarrequire. • , -
I Ninety per cent: of, the amount of work done,and ,
i niateriata delivered according to contract price said ,
Amount to be Itecertained by an' °etiolate of au agent of
lthe Department appointed for that. purpose,) will be
mad from timo to ,time tut the work progresses, mid ten
pee cent. retained until the completion of the coutract, ,
end the acceptance !of the:work, &c., by the:agent'
aforesaid, and be forfeited in the event of non.fulfliment,
of contract: • ,
tteatbe awarded only to minder-builders and.
°thanks ;and the assignment thereof, except by con.
eat of the Secretary of the Treasury, will be a forfeit
pro of the same;,! ,
Each proposal rand be accompanied by a written guar.
doe; signed by two responsible perfume (certified to be
po by the United Mates Matelot Judge, or Attorney of
the said Dintrict), lo the cute' ,of g 5.060 for the whole
,week, - or of a proportionate amount if any part, that
the bidder will, when required, If his proposal be
accepted, enter into a contract and bond, with proper
and suilliclent securities for Ito faithful performance.
Verne of hood and Certificate required will be fur
picked on application to the Department. ' •
Plans, epecitications, and working drawings will be
eadly ou the Ist of November, when they can be had on
application to the Department.
I No bid Will be considered unless it fully complies,
in all ill detaili, with the requirements of this adver
tisement.
I The proposals ;most be, sent to thin Department, ad
'droned to the Secretary of the Treasury, and pleb:lly
6ndoraed ~P IIOPOSXL4 DA TIM PERTH. AMBOY
PUST011,1101:18k1, , ' and will he opened at one o'clock;
of the hut day named for.recolvlng the same.
; . 40W141,1, 001i113,"
24-th slato-tooll fieerotary of the Treasury.
!PROPOSALS FOR BOFFIA.I§I, •
QuAsTsgmAsTsies °tog Areenti 00iPS,
Woe legteo, Oct. 10, 1867.
SEALED PROPOSALS will be 2 'reeeived at this office
until 8 &Clock, p. in:, on Friday, the 18th of November,
1867, for supplying the merlon corps with the following
articles during the fiscal year ending 80th Jane, 1858,
vie
600 to 800 uniform caps, complete.
1,000 to 2,000 marine pompoons . ,
1,000 to 2,000 patent-leather stoc ks, I
600 to 800 privates' uniform coats, complete, o 1
navy blue cloth, Indigo dye—to: be
' chernically tested.
60 to 100 serpents , . unifoirn eoats, (same as'
Multi.) •
60 to 100 musiciapa',costs, ecarlet cloth, cochineal,
dye—to be chemically tested.
100 to' 200'ptirs non-commissioned officers , open'
rotten:
600 to 800 pairs bruit centre straps. ,
80 to 60 red worstokl rashes.
1,000 to 2,000 pairs linen overalls.
1,000 to 2,000 linen shirts.
2) 93 0 to 8 , 000 Pain btogette, , h/oe. kto 11. ,
500 to 80J marine blankets, (gray,)
6W to , 800 knapsacks.
2,¢00 to 5,000 pelts woollen socks.
, 600 to Imo marine fatigue cape, the cloth to bo navy,
, ,blue, , indigo dye, and chemically'
tented.
to to' 800 fatigue frocks.
1,000 to I,6oooannel shirts.
600 to 1,000 padre woollen oversits, blue kersey.
600 to 1,000 woollen Jackets, do.
goo to I batch or great coats, d o ,
600 tol,l n pairs Canton flannel drawers.
86 to' 60 minlelans , jackets, starlet cloth, coolll='
neat dye—to be chemically tested.
Samples of the above articles, may be peen on op oi,
Whin at this office,' of tho office of the assistant
•
geurterunuitcr merino curpi, IS9 Spruce street, Pli.lla
dolphin.
I i is to be understood that the accepted bidder is to
take all =aerial used for manufacturing coats, overalls,
& e nu bend at the time of °uteri.; into , contract,. at
the contract prices thereof.
hide re q uir e d ceived tor the whole or In parte for the
articles, and tt inust be elpllcitly understood
that n crlitcal inspection will be given all articles fur
nished an to fit and quality, Cod that artlelom whlek do
not come up to the sample will be rejected and thrown
upon the hands Of the contractor.
The quartermaster reaervos to Monett' the right to
Increase or diminish the quentity named above, ac the
exigencies or interests of the service may demand.
Pi °posts to be addressed to the "Quartermaster of the
Marine Corps," Washington, D. 11., and endorsed "Pro
posals for Supplies."
The papers publishing this advertisement will seed
the paper containing the first inaortion to this °face for
examination, acoompauled by a duplicate account of the
eapanite—at the rate of 75 cents for 800 ama first timer-
Ma and £I7N orate per 900 owe for pH aubsequent in
sortions. Ileill•stutlitNov73
ehipptitg.
SAVANNAH STEAMSHIP LINE
. STEAMSHIPS
'
STATE OF UEOEGIA
AND .
KEYSTONE STATE.
In consequence of the depressed state of trede t the
above ships will be withdrawn for the present.
October 18th. A. HERON Jr
11 - 4 1 ARE REDUCED
AND lIAVILN.—The
TO SOUTHAMPTON
, agnincent ateamshiplaN.
, a, commander, 5,268 tons,
DERMA', Ildward liiggin.
will mil
Frain New York for South- From Southampton and
amptou and llavre. Ilavre for Now York.
Saturday Oct. 24 Saturday Nov. 14
Saturday Dee. 6 Saturday Den. tii
Price of Passage—First cabin, POO; sewed cabin,
160 Specie delivered lu London and Paris. For froiglit
or passage apply to D. TORRANCE, Agent„'
No. 5 Dowlhig Croon, New York.
Letters for England and Europe, pre.paid, 26 tante
each half ounce, (byouclosure of postage stamps If from
other cities) will he received at No. 6 Bowling-green;
New York, up to 1134 o'clock on the morning of Nil,
log. ' (MIMI" L
GREAT REDUCTION IN FARE TO EU;
ROPE.
Virst Cabin 880 I Second Cabin "
In the first-clue paddle-wheal steamship ADRIRI,,
2.0/0 tons, 0. D, LUDLOW, Commander, and NOSTII
STAR, 2.600 tons, P. E. DirltYllE, to sail from pier No;
8 North River, at noon precisely, carrying the UNITED
STATES MAILS, vie:
Loavo N. York for
Southampton, Bremen for Southampton ,
vro and Bream. Southamptonfor Now Yolk, ,
Ariel, Saturday, Oct. 81. Wededay,
N. Sat'y, Oct. 81. Saturday, N0v.28. WedahPy, Deo, 80
Them steamers touch at HAVRE. Specie delivered:
in Lotion and Patin, Yor passago and' freight, apply
to D. TORRANCE, Agent, No. 6 Bowling Green, New:
York,' 0c,1041 '
lOR LIVERPOOL—SATURDAY, 17th;
Ootober.—The packet ship NONPARRIL, (OW,
tous).llaptain Bitola, will sail as above.
.2 1 ,
Cabin passage '
&mut Oablis .
Bteerago 18
Hewed cabin and steerage passengers Senna with pre-;
'Wows according to the American passenger act.
era- Apply to • TllOB. RIOUAUDSON & 00.
I: 4 10R ENGLAND AND FRANCE, 1857:-'
New York and Havre Steamahip Oompany.—Yhe:
United Ram Mall Steamships AKAQO, 2,601 tone,:
David Linea, commander, and YULTON, 2,608 Mos,
James A. Walton, commander, will leave New York,
Uwe and Southampton, for the years 1861 and 68, on
the followling days:
I.NAVN N
•
1857.
filltou,Setutday, Aug. 22
Arngo, do. Sept. 121
Fultou, do. Oct. 17
Arago, do. Nov. 14
PUltou, dd. Doc. 12
1888.
At m°, Saturday, Jan.' 9
Fulton, do. Feb. 6
Arno, do. Mardi 6
Fulton, do. April d'
Arago, do May 1
Fulton, do. May 29
Lima notrrnanreon.
1857.
Arago, Wednesday, Aug. 28
Fulton, do. , itepa.2.3
Arago, do. Oct. 21
Walton, do. Nor. 18
Arago, do. Leo. ld
1848.
Walton, do. Jan. 12 Fulton, do. Jan. 13,
Arno, do. Yob. 9 Arago, do. Feb, 10'
rotten, do. Marob 9 Walton, do. Mar, 10,
Arago, do. April d Aram do. , Apra 'I I
Walton, do. May 4 , Fulton, do. May 6
Arago do. June 1 Arago, do, June 2
Fulton, do. June 29 Walton, do. Juan 30;
POlOl Or POMO%
Wan
1857.
Amigo, Tuouday, Aug. 85
Button. , do. 0814. t.,1
Arno, do. Oct. 20
Patton, do. Noy. 17
Arago t do. Deo. 12
1858.
From Now York to Southampton or nine—lint
Cabin, $l3O ; &toad OW% $75.
6 r 01.1) Baure or Southampton to New York—lint
Cabin, 800 frau; Second Oabin, 600 franca. -
Por froight or pot age apply to
MORTIMER LIYINtIsTON, Agent, T Broadway.
. IV ILLIAM IRMO, " Barre.
OROSKEY & CO., " Southlon.
A MERIOAN EUROPEAN
EXPRESS AAR 1515.- " Part*.
mow{ 00. atts
IIIHE NEW YORK AND LIVERPOOL
JL UNITED STATER MAIL STEAMERS.—The Ships
corm oniug thin Line are
The ATLANTIC, Capt. Oliver Eldridge:
The DALTIO, Capt. Joseph Comstock.
The ADRIATIC, Capt. James Went.
fTheee ships bare been built by contract, expressly for
tiovornment service; every care has been taken in their
construction, as also in their engines, to ensure strength
and 'Teed, and their oteommodstiouo for pansangere are
unequalled for elegance and comfort.
Price of poooksro from New York to Liverpool, in liret
cabin, $130; in second do., $7O; from Liverpool to• New
York, 30 and 20 guineas. No bertha aerated tlalem paid
for. The Alpe of this line hare Improved water tight
balk beads.
PROPOSED DATES OP SAILING.
I
/HOU NNW YORK, PROM L11(.10001.,
Saturday, June 20, ' 1857 Wednesday, Juue24, 1857
Saturday, July 4, 1857 Wednesday, July 8, 1867
Saturday, July 18, 1807 Wedneaday, July '22, 1867
Saturday, Aug. 1, 1807 Weduesday, Aug. 6, 1857
Potorday, Aux. 16, 1857 Wednesday, Aug. 12, 1857
Rat utday, Sept. 12, 1857 Wedueaday, Sept. 2, 1867
Saturday, Sept. 26,' 1867 Wednesday, Supt. 80, 1867
Saturday, Oct. 10, 1867 Weduesday, Oct. 14, 1857
Saturday; Oct. 24 1857 Woditetulay, Oct. 28, 1857
Sattirday;'Nuv. 7, 1857 IVedueaday, Nsv. 11, 1867
Saturday, Nov. 21, 1867 Wednesday, N0v.28, 1867
Saturday, Doe. 6, 1867 Wednesday, Dee. 9, MI
Wo4uvedsh Dec. 22, 1817
Vor haled or pe.senure, apply to
INWARD K. COLLINS, No. 68 Well atroat, N. Y.
'MOWN, 8111PLNY A (10., Llverpoot.
8114P114114.11.2NNARD A 00., 87 Auso9 Friw,
London,
B, li. WAlNlyn t torise& Ctl., Perla.
The owners of these ships will not be accountable for
gold, silver, bullion,apecie, Jewelry,pr solace atones or
tuoLart; Willa or 'Mingo ned therefor, and
the 'stile thereof expressed therein adf-tf
itlinea anb ii:innaro:
pORT,WINE.—in bond and ontitlod to du
x. bantam OA 'casks St. Joesphla Pure Juice Port
Wine, in qre. and eighths,
To panehoona John Ramsay Inlay Malt Scotoh.Whtir
key, 2 vitro old
llifty pipes Anchor Gin.
Marott, Martel, Bouvet, and J. J Dopey Brandies, al
of which I otrer to the trade at reduced prima.
JO5. P. TOBIAB,
suiT-Smog BR and 90 B. Front Ht—below Walnut.
A TAIXANDER V.IIOLMES, WINE AND
LIQUOR f3TORR, No. 220, Routhaut Garner o
01 , 10IttIN sad BOUTII Streets.
I. LEWIS, IMPORTER AND DEALER
• IN FINN WINKS, LIQUORS, CIGARIi t Ao., 21 ,
South FIFTH Street, Philadelphia.
BRANDIES.=—, Pinot, Onatillon & Co., Ma-
Tett teoo., and other brands or Oorruscs or various
vintages, he half pipes and quarter casks ; Fellevoisln
Rochelle Brandlea, pale and dark, in half pipes, quarter
casks and one-eighth casks, all in Custom Hausa stores,
imported and, for sale by
HENRY BOHLEN & CIO.,
, as 0 ROC 221 awl pa South Fourth street,
irIITHMAR & BUTZ, PORTER, ALE
II'AND LAGER Min BREWERY, NO. 520 (not
tio.9”) North TUUU) Street, Phils.delphla:-81AppIng
orders promptly atteuded to aul.tf
HO7IIESTEAD FOR $2,001 LAND MS
.I%MUTTON!! MANOR FOR P0011141.Etil!
The Northwestern Mutual Land Bement Aeseclation
will make a graud distribution of $lO,OOO worth of real
'estate mid mope to its members. The number of mem
hers is limited to 16,000. $2.00 cud five letter stamps
per membership, or a share. Any individual sending
$lO and the stamps, shall bo entitled to mix shares; or
, any person sending $lO with six names with I headdress
of each, carefully written, shall be entitled teals shares.
The following is the real estate to be distributed :
.No. 1. An improved farm of 30 acres in Cooke
j Co., Illinois, slued at $3,000
.No. 2. An Improved farm of 160 acres in White
, sides Co., Illinele, valued at
!No. 3. An improved farm of 160 acres In White
sides Co., Illinois, valued at
iNo, 4. An excellent private reeldenee lo Dubuque,
lowa, valued at - 3,000
No. 6. 160 acne supetiot farm land In Cooke Co.,
Illinois, valued at • ' 2,000
N 0.6. 160 sates well pine timbered In Wanpacce
! Co., Wisomisin, valued at 2,000
N 0... A good lot and cottage residence In Obi.
oago, Illiuols; valued at 2,000
, No: 8. 160 acres superior land in Whltealdes Us.,
Illinois, valued at 1.000
No, 9. 160 acres good land In Chippewa). Co.,
Wieconein, valued at •060
10. 164 acres good land In Chippewa, 00.,
Wisconsin, valued at 900,
No. 11. 160 acres good land in Oblinteiroly ,
, Wieconnin, valued at
No. 12 100 acre, good land In Dunn MD.
consio, valued at 800
No. 13 . 80 coves goad land In Marshall Co,,lowa,
valued at „ , 600
No. 14. $0 acres good land In Mardian Co , lowa ,
valued at 000
No. 16. 80 acres good Walla Ideraliall On;, lowa,
valued at 600
No. 111, 40 fierce good 414 In Idefettall Uo;,,lotee,
valeeclat ' . 800
No. 37. AO tool goisd land In Lino 00., lowa, rsl
vOd et 800
40 acres good land In Lion 00., lowa, yal
i ued at ' 800
No. 10. • '4O acres good land In Linn Co., lowa, val=
}red at ~ „ 880
No. 2.6. One bidlding lot in Dubuque, lowa, val.
lied at 900
21. One building lot In Marling, Illinois,
valued*"' , 800
No. 22. One 'building lot In Oterllng,
valued at, 000
No. 23! One building lot in Sterling, Illinola;
800 valued at '
180,24: 40 acres farm land in grant Co.,
sin, raked at ' ' ' 800
No: 20. , 40 Scree farm land In Greet Op., WraeonT '
ohs, valued at • BOO
os. go, 40 tort, land In OrentOo , Wisconsin,
'valued at 0 1210
N 0.27. 40 sores land In Omit Ce., Mammal% ,
valued at •t • , I , 240
No. 24. 40 acres land In Crawford 00., Wisconsin,
valued at 200
No. 29. 40 acres land in Crawford Co., Wisamein,
valued at 200
o. 30. 40 acres land In Oromfordoo., TV iscousln,
valued at 200
N 0.31, 40 sores land In Moutoe Co., Wisconsin,
valued et 200
No. 92. 40 acres laud In Monine Co .,
valued at 200
No. 33. 40 acres land In Jackson Co., Wieconaln i
• valued at 200
No. 84. 40 sores land in Jackson (10., Wistansia,'
valued at 400
No. 35. 40 acres land In Dad Ass Co., Wisconsin,
valued at 160
No. 36. 40 sores land in Dad Axe 00., Wisconsin,
valued at 160
No. 27. 40 acres laud In Dad Age 00., Wisconaln,
valued at 100
No. 88. Ono lot In Button, Illinois, valued at 160
No. 89. One lot in Fulton, Illinois, valued at 100
No. 40. One lot In Balton, Illinois, valued at 100
The distribution will be conducted fairly and honor
ably. The names and address of stockholders shall be
written on as many small cards as they have shares,
and the whole placed in a box, and the first name taken
out shall be entitled to the Improved farm No. I; In the
above Hat, and the next taken out will be entitled id
No. 2, cud so on until the 40 items of real estate are all
distributed Then to each of the remaining 14,900
stockholders will be sent a cheap map of a Western
fiats or Territery. A full moonlit of the dietribution
will be forwarded in a printed circular, to each membbr
of the Association, with the natues'aud address of such
as may receive the real estate--td whom also the deeds
.will be Bent and immediate possession given. Each an.
plication must to accompanied with s2.oo,and nee letter
etanimi. Address LINDELL, JON/18 00 .1
au-18 Chicago; Illinola.
41,00 A V RANGE .—SOLUBY, (MALI
Wlua &lit% 1102 icosoompac saut-sia
AirmiDAY, ocTonga 249 18,17.
- „
2240 LBS. IS A ON.—BUYERS
'l' and common
M O W are Invited to examine our
stock of "LSO LOCUST MOUNTAIN BLACK
'LEATH COAL," Our Coal to selactOd elpreelly for
family use; Wag carefully screened, we will warrant It
(roe from elate and duet. "We Bell 0 440 lbs.," being
" 240 lbe. more" than sold by ratallSealere, at "25 realm
less per ton.l ,
Alio, on head a full supply of "BROAD TOP BITtl.
lIINOUB COAL" for Steamllenoralluif , Blu kinulthing,
and solling . mlll purposoc„ Thla Coal cannot be ex.
celled.
YAM', lINOAD and VINN-alg Alga, "2240 LBS. IS
A TON. feelLStn) LEIGHTON k 00
OA la 00A1, I COAL I—TAGGART's
ONLNBRATED BPRINO MOUNTAIN LNIIIMI
00AL.
J. &R.DARTER'SOREENWOOD,TAMAQUROOAL
GEORGE W. SNYDER'S PINE FOREST 0011UYI,
KILL IJOAL.
RANDALL, & MEREDITII
Haye for side, and are onnetantly Tenet's* from
above celebrated Collieries,
- -----
COAL OF ALL SIZES.
There Is no Coal ruined anywhere, equal la quid*
those and a trial will convince any oue of their great
'superiority. Our Coal is very carefully screened at oar
yards, and we will warrant it perfectly free from elate,
dust and all impurities. Our PalollB treat LOW as thol
visity Loyvv.Nr.
Order% le ft at our Offloa, No. .161 8011111 /DONT
stroat, above NVolout.
()Mora left et our Yard, OALLOWIIILL street, bolos
BROAD Street.
Orders left at oar Wharf, WATER 'treat, above OAI. WWIIII.I.—or sent to either place per Despatch Poet,
will receive prompt atteution.
Purobseers for Family use will do well to call and ex
amine our ()pal before purchasing elsewhere. au4-tf
80111tYLKILL AND LEHIGH COAL.—
I am daily receiving, at my yard, the beet quality o.
'SCHUYLKILL AND LNHIGII COAL. My customers,
and all others who may favor me with their orders, may
rely getting Coal that will be satisfactory to them.
No Inferior Coal kept at this establishment to
offer at LOW PRIORS.
ALEXANDER CONVERT,
aul-tf N. E. corner of Broad and Cherry Sta.
LMICH AND SCHUYLKILL COAL.-
DALY, PORTER fic CO., COAL DEALERS, No.
S2l PRIME Street, above Eighth, keep constantly on
hand, at the Very lowest ratea, a full supply of Lehigh
and Schuylkill Coal. an 2-On
.lIMBER AND COAL.—MONTGOMERY
& NBALL having connected the Coal wits the
Lumber business, inform their friends that they have
node contracts (or a supply of the beet quslibes of
Lehigh and Schuylkill Ooal, and are now ready to re
ceive orders,Twelfth and Prime streets. Orders may
be loft with Mr. 8. KU,PATRIOK, No. 13 8. FIFTH
street, or with Mr. WM. D. MULL, corner PINK am!
WATNR streets'.
Chugs anb iltbetnitala
LIRE DER lIDK BROWN,--OHEMIST
AND DRUGGIEST, nortak•east corner YIBTII and
CIIIIPTNUT Streets, Philadelphia, sole Manufacturer
of DROWN , I3 VSSENON •OP JAM/10A MINIM,.
which le recognised and prescribed by the Medical Fa
culty, add has' become the Standard FAMILY MIMI
OIN it of the Milted States.
,
, This limeace in a preparation of minimal etoellebee.
During the Bummer months, so tastily Or traveller
should be without it,. In relaxation of the bowels, In
nausea, and particularly in sea sickness, it is en satire
and Aare, as *ell as a pleuaut and efficient remedy.
oA.l3TlON.—Persona desiring an article that can be
relied upon, prepared solely from pure JAMAIOA GIN-,
GDR, should be particular to ask for " Brown's Ea
ounce of Jamaica Ginger," which is warranted to be
what It in represented, and Is prepared only by FRED'S
RICK 'mown, and for male at his Drug and Chemical
Store, north - east corner of PIPTII and OIIIDITNUT
Streets, Philadelphia; and by all the respectable Drug.
este and Apothecaries In the s, Staten. • anl-Sru
Sire proof gores
i, ~
A large assortment of
EVANS & WATSON'S
,
PILILADEI.PMIA MANUFACTURED
SALAMANDER SAFES,
- VAULT DOORS,
BANE LOONS, For Banks and Stores.
Equal to any now In nee.
IRON DOORS, SHUTTERS, &0.,
Uu as good tams as any other establishment in the
United States, by
EVANS & WATSON,
No. 28 South FOURTH street,
i
PLEASE GIVE US A OALL. Philadelpha.
aul3-111
forum
MACGREGOR HOT—AIR FURNACES.
Sold by 42111ADWIOK & BRO., 01100 ND Street,
Bret door *howl Ram auglll,9moa
IMPORTANT IMPROVEMENT
NEW GAS,OONSUMINCI YOUNAOII
CHILSON'S NEW CONE FURNACE,
son having Dem put to the moat severe teat, during
the two Oobn 1117411 W oe ISM AND IttT , boo proved to
be the most powerful heater Os the teeritl, roving from
to X the fuel over any of the best formes now In use,
TURNS Puswdors aro constraoted with a nut Iron ash
pit, and a broad, shallow pan-shaped fire pot, lined
with linobriek or Iron staves, The fire pot Is surmount
ed with
A SERIES OP CONES, ok TAPERING RADIATORS;
large and broad at their base, but tapering to small spar
murex at the top, and uniting with the Ranier chamber,
through which the hoot and smoke pass to the flue.
Tux wools products of combustion in the form of
sotoie and oases, are anepended directly over the fire
,
Orolvisin or coMpressed into the tapering thinsit and
OONTINOLLLY EXPOOND to the direct union of the rays
of beat and light from the tire.
This heat end light is brought to a soave 1 nos
Coca, riot matte the
COLLECTION OP THE SUN'S RAYS,
to it focal point through an ordinary lens, causing the
smoke An° cases to booome intensely heated and tho
roughly consume°, by this operation the sooce AND
00010 are KANN IQUALLY Ai/MAI/LI with the COIL
Ifilol./ fur hosting purposes, while,ln other furnaces,
lila U &Reign Ora term Warden IN THIS outsuily.
All persons desirous of obtaining the boat and
MOST EOONOIIIOAL HEATING APPARATUS,
should not fail, to examine the New OAS OONEIONINO
WAY VONNAOII before purchasing any other. The at
tontine of arch itects and builders is particularly re
quested. , ARNOLD I WILSON,
Oinceessors to S. A. Usrrison,>
No. 624 WALNUT Street,
ant-if Opposite Independence squar .
Humber
LUMBER I LUMBER I=Tht subscribtar,
who heifor iieveral years occupied the premises at
filoan'a Filing kilt Kenslngtoo, has removed to
COATES tXtr adjoining the Phosuld
Planing Mill, oh 'Delmar@ lunette where he intends
keeping a largenesprtinent of carotin* and other [Wr
ing boards, steps, risers, shelving, ceiling, fencing and
seatTeld bafx[dtt, thoroughly inmeened an d well Worked.
For sole at the lowest cash prices. Pnrehaeari are in
vited to mill end orinalne for theiuselvea, midi every ef
fort will be Medi to give setiefeetiou. Orders received
and /applied at the shorteet notioe for all kinds and
sites or S'ohthem Yellow pine, Timber and }Mantling.
go-tr
OLIAL'IItEI TNO T I 0 E—T H E
U PENNSYLVANIA. RAILROAD 'COMPANY are
now prepare 4 tolreceire awl forward FRERIRT between
Philadelphia, Laucaateri awl Columbia, at the followlog
rates per hundred pounds:
BETWEEN PHILA. AND COLUMBIA.
First Clue. Beeous Olean. Thlra Clara. Fourth Clare.
22 ete. • .; MI eta lOcte. 14 ete.
Floor, 18 eta, per barrel.
Pig metal, • 10 eta per 100 pounds,
BETWEEN PIIILA. AND LANCASTER.
First Clare, Sosond Clam. Third Citee. Fourth Clam.
Wets: lI eta.. 10 rte. • 13 eta
Flour, 25 eta. per barrel.
Plg• /total, 10 eta. per 100 pound/.
ARTICLES OF FIRST CLABS.
Booke, ' • Yresh Pleb,
Boots sea shoo, Nuts 'unapt,
Cedar and Wooden Ware , Porter and Ale In
Dry Goode • • •'• • Poultry lo coops,
F.gge, ' • 4 ' Pork, (treali,)
Furuiture,' , ~" ' (dreseed,)
Yeattiere, Wrapping Paper.
ARTIOLRS OP 20 CLAN.
Apple!, ' ' ' /dolmen,
Cheese, Melon., • •
Clover and Grua Beet, Oils in cooks or bairels,
Crockery, Paper in bore'',
eandlen, Pasteboard,
Cooke or Barrels, (empty,) Peaches (dried,)
Orocerles, Printinipaper,
(lune and Miles,' Paper Hangings,
Herring In
. boxes endless", Quoennware,
Hardware, Beget Potatoes,
Mope, Tobacco 4 'sales,
Iron, hoop,hiirehaet, Tea,
Leather, Type,
Liquor In woody ' Tallow,
Marble Blabs and Marble Turpentine, (apts.!)
Monuments, . Val
• ARTICLES OF an CLAW.
Alcohol, • Potatoes,
Coffee, • " Turnips,'
111,100, (greend Vinegar
Lard, • White egad,
Oysters &Clams, (In shell) Wlnflow Glass,
Tobacco, (manufactured)
.A(LTIOLFS OP ern CLASS.
Oaldah, RONirl, •
Cott4ll, , • • Balt,
Flab, gaited, Tobacco, (leaf,)
ntlit of sit kinds,
Mlle and Spikes, Tar,
Pitch, Whiskey,
Planter.
(rr• Per further Information apply to
• . it. J. RIMER, Freight Agent, Phila.
S. hi 'llOlOl4, Freight Ageut Colum bia.
ante) LIYMRIi, Frelglit Agent, Lanoister.
1111010 E t FAIN LAN - LIS - SALE .--
‘," LIP_NQISkIENTRAIMAIGROAD
tenets prePared tbitelrabont'l,Nril„ooo 'sores of ebOlee
Varthing !nude, in traits of 40 verde and novelle, on
long creclite. end at low rates of interest:' '
Thew lands were granted by the Clovernment to aid
'in the construction of this Road, and are among the
richest and most fertile in the world. They extend
from North-East and North-West, through the middle
'of the State to the extreme south, and Include every
varlettor elliliate end productions found between those
;wallets of IstiMde,,, The Northern portion thinly
prairie, I demi! hied Itlth One ginvee, and In the Middle
end Southern peetions timber predominates, alternating
with beautiful Insides and opening*. •
. The climate le niore,lnialthy, mild and equable, than
'pay other par t pt the egrintry 7 —the'alr In pure and bra
cing,' while tiring **reales' and epringe of excellent
'water abound:_ •
BitIIMIIIOUISfoaI le extensively mined, and euppliee a
Chgnpt and .desirable feel, beteg forniobed at many
ibitite at >; per ton—and wood can be had at the
name rate per cord,
! Buildlug Storm of exeellent quality also &boned',
I which, caw be Remixed for little more than the expense
of transportaklbn,
The greet feetillty of these lands, which are a bile%
' club mould, from two to live feet deep, and gently roll
',Mg; their coetiguity tp this, road, by which every that
dB, is furnished for travel and transportation to the
principal, inarkete North ,, }hod, West, end the
!aeronomy with whlit they can be cultivated, render
(them the molt vain ble inveatibent, that can be found,
And present the Mos favorable opportunity for pereone
et industrieue hablto and small maims to acquire a sow.
fortable Independence In a few years.
ChicagO Is now thfgreatest grain market In the world;
and the facility and economy with which the products
of them lauds can be %reimported to that market, make
;thorn much more-profitedile, at the pekoe asked, thou
,those more remote at government .reiti,e, as the addi
itlonsl coot of treneportetion to a perpetual tax on the
latter, which must be borne by the producer, In the re
duced price be recelvee for his grain, &e,
The title Is perfect—end when the Buil payments are
!made deeds are executed by the trustees appointed by
the Sate, and in whom the title ht *este% to that put
chasers, which convey to them absolute titles in fee aim
,
pie, free and clear of ewer' Ineumbeance, lien or 'inert
' Igi Ce prim% are from le to la t interest only it per et.
.Twenty per ct, will be deducted from the price for mob.
Those whit purchase on long credit, give notes payable
in rev, three, four, live and 'ell) - eare after date, and are
required to improve one•teeth annually for live yearn,
so as to have one : half the land under cultivation at the
end of that time. '
Competent serveyors will accompany those who wleh
to examine these Lands, tree of charge, and aid them in
',making selections.
The Lands remaining unsold are as Halt and valuable
ea Wee which have been dinposed of.
SECTIONAL MAPS
,Will be sent to a nyy one who will orioles* fifty tenth in
vantage atatupe, and books or pamphlet' containing no
'merous Instances of shiceesfni farming, signed by re
epectable and well known ferment living in the neigh
borhood of the Iteilroed Lande,,throughout the State--
'elm The cost ifl fencing, price of cattle, expense of bar
etc.,—ei any ether information=
will be cheerfellyglven on application, either peroonally
j or by letter, lo;hinglleh, Wrench, or _Gorman, addressed
JOHN WILBON.
Lirld Oothiehisieher of the 'Central It. 13: Co.
•
• OBloot In 111loois Olotril Railroad pepot , , Iliblaiogo, 11
Roots. - ' aw
Ciauinge innbe
iIAVING FUND—FIVE PER CENT. IN
KY THREST—NATIONA 14 SAFETY TRUST COM
PANY—WALNUT liTntarr, 13OUTII-WEST CORN ER
OF THIRD, PIIILADELPUIA.
/ 111 0011POILMID HT TRH STITH 07 PIIIIISTLYOIII.
honey Ix received in Any mem o large or mei, and in
teract paid trout the day of *elm% to the day of with
drawn'.
The ogle. Is open every day from °Wont In the
morning till 7 o'clock In the evening, *id oa Monday
and Thursday evenings till 9 o'clock.
HON. II&NRY L lINNNXR, President,
lIONMHT •Vtoe President.
Wie. J. Ryan, Fineratary.
D 111107011:
Hon. Henry L. Benner, 0. Landreth Ittunis,
11.4.1 ward L. Carter, F. Carroll Brewster,
Hobert Selfridge, Joseph B Barry,
Sunt. K. debtou, Henry L. Churchmen,
James B. Smith, Frannie Lee.
This Company consnes Ito bantams entirely to the
receiving or money on interest. The inveetmente,
amounting to over
•
ONX MILLION AND A MALT OY DOLLARS,
are rude in conformity with the provisions or our
°barter, In lIIKAL RSTATE SIORTOAURS, GROUND
DINTS, end such Mat class securities u will always in.
oursperfect Warily to the depoeltere, end which can
oe% NO to glee pen:mummy and stability to this Insti
tution,
`IX PENNY SAVINGS FUND, Corner of
YIPTH and WALNUT Streets. Open daily, from
II to S, and on Tuesday and Friday Evenings, until
o'clock. Large or small Roma rerel red, and paid with.
out notice, with BM PER CENT. INTEREST, by
cheek or otherwise. JOHN THOMSON, Presq.
VIOLA PASSIDENTN
THOS. T. TASKER, EDWIN M. LEWIS.
SIONATARY AND TRIANUIDIX,
WM. T. ELBERT.
sanaTuss,
Wm. 0. Ludwig,
D.C. Levy,
Charles E. Liz,
A. bliakey,
Israel W. Morris, Jr.,
Wm. Neal,
Thos. Neilson,
Thomas S. Reed, M. D.
James Russell,
Thee. P Sparhawk,
Oscar Thompson,
Peter Williamson,
Isase S. Waterman,
Camden T. 'Parkes.
oho B. Austin,
John E. Addieks,
Manson Alter,
M. W. Baldwin,
William Clark,
Ephraim Clark, Jr.,
Charles B. Oarstairs,
Robert Clark,
A. J. Drexel
Charles Dotilh,
Win. B. Boater,
Benjamin tierhard,
John Jordan, Jr.,
Lowl. Lewis, Jr.,
anl-3m
IVO. 88 (241) ' DOOK STREET. FIVE
PER CENT. OTATE BAVINGB PIIND.
Ivo. 83 (241) DOCK STREET. FIVE
L PER CENT. STATE SAVINGS FUND.
IVO. 83 (241) DOCK STREET. FIVE
PER CENT. STATE SAVINGS PUND.
NO. 88 (241) DOCK STREET. PPIE
PER CENT. STATE SAVINGS PUND. aul-ly
Illatikern onto iron
IM=EMM
SOUTHWARK FOUNDRY,
FrilLl AND WASHINGTON BTRIIIIIO,
rattenatnzia.
MERRICK & SONS,
NNOINEHRS AND MACHINISTS,
manufacture High and Low Pressure Steam lingluse, for
Land, River, and Marine service.
Boilers Gasometers Tanks, Iron Bata, &0., Out
ings of all kinds, eithe r' Iron or Brass.
Iron /ram. roofs for (ha Works, Workshops, Railroad
Stations, &e.
Retorts and Gas Maehinery of the latest and most
Improved conatruction.
Votary description of Plantation machinery, such as
Sugar, Paw, and Grist Mills, Vacuum Pans, Open Steam
Trains, Defecators, 'intent, Pumping Engines, &a.
Sole Agents for N. Rillieux'a Patent Sugar Boiling
Apparatus; Naamyth's Pateat Steam hammer, J. P.
ow
14.' Patent Valve Motion for Blast Machinery and
Steam Pumps.
Superintendent—ll. H. BARTOL
RICHARD NORRIS & SON, LOCOMO
TIVE
' STEAM ENGINE BUILDERS,
ONVANTNINTU STREET, %MILTON, PADWINW AND
MING BARDEN STREETS,
PHILADELPHIA.
ELOCOMOTIVEngaged exelnalvely In
STE the
AM manuf
ENGINES.
lfannfacture to order Locomotives. of any arrange
ment, weight or capacity ? for the use of Wood or Coke,
Or Rttummies Coal in its trade Volt, or
ANTHRACITE COAL,
WITHOUT IMITTIOO 8110101, GAB 01 PIAN.
In design, material and workmanship, the Locomo
then produced at these Works are equal to, and not ex
celled by any. The materials used in construction are
made on the spot, and insure the beat quality and most
reliable stock. The large extent of Shops, and Com
plete Equipment of Afackinery and Tools, enable
thorn to exeoate the
F:ST OF IVOR% WITH 111 , 11:4T D.RoPArcH,
OP ANY AURANORMPAT REPOIURD.
MULLED OAR WHEELS, LIAII9.IIIRRD
With Forging. of soy oho or form '
IRON AND BRASS CASTINGS,
And IdAOHINY WORK morally.
RIOEIARD NORMS
laul-ty
1:1111111RY LATIMISK NORRIS
. L 'PENN STEAM ENGINE AND BOIL
xII WORKS.
REANEY, NEAFIE & CO.,
PRACTICAL AND THEORETICAL ENQUIRERS,
MACHINISTS, BOILER-MAKERS, BLACK
SMITHS AND POUNDERS.
Having for many years been in successful operation,
and been exclusively engaged In building and repairing
Marine and River Engines, high and low pressure, Iron
Beets, Water Tanks, Propellers, &a., reapectfully
Offer their services to the public, aa being fully prepared i
to contract for Engines of all sues, Marine, Rver, and
fltationary. Having nets of patterns of different sizes,
are prepared to execute orders with quick despatch.
Every description of Pattern-makiwg made at the
ahorteat notice High and Low Preamre, Plus, Tabu
lar and Cylinder Boilers of th e best Pennsylvania char
coal iron Pinging, of ' all sites and kinds. ' Iron and
Braes Outings of all descriptions; Roll Turning, Bcrow
Cutting, and all other work connected with the above
business.
Drawings and specifications for all work done at their
establishment free of charge and work guaranteed.
The subscribers have ample wharf dock room for re
pails of boats, where they con lay in perfect safety, and
are provided with shears, blocks, falls, &O , , for
raising heavy or light weights:. . . .
THOMAS 11SLIMY,
JACOB G. REAM,
JOHN P. LEVY,
sttl-y BEACH and PALMER Streets, Kensington
H ANDY & MORRIS
MAN UPAOTURIES OP
CUMBERLAND WROUGHT IRON TUBES
NOR 4/18, WITAM Olt WATER
ALSO,
GENERAL IRON COMMISSION MERCHT'S
Wirohouse 8. N. oorner PRONT &ad WALNUT.
sol.llm
Illebichics
i.ELMBOLD's GENUINE PREPARA
TION, Xxtreet Bodin, for all Diseasee of the Bled.
dor, Kidneys, gravel, Dropsy , Nervous and Debilitated
Sufferer*.
][_TELMBOLD'H GENUINE PREPARA
TION, Extract Bucher, removes all the symptone,
among which will be found Indisposition to exertlan,
Loss of Power, Loss of Memory, Difficulty of Breathing,
General Woakneas, Narver of Disease, Weak Nerves,
Trembling, Dreadful Ilorror of Death, Night Sweats,
Cold Feet, Wakefulness, Dimness of Vision, Languor,
Universal Lassitude of the Muscular System, often cue,
1•1011)1 Appetite or Dyspeptic Symptoms, Hot Hands,
Flushinge of the Body, Dryness of the Skin, Pallid
Countenance, Euoll,llooll on the Fame, Palos in the Back,
U1M01“01111 of the Bye Lids, frequently Blacklipota eying
before the Eyee, with temporary Suffusion, Loin of Sight.
If thee° symptens are allowed to go on, which this me
dicine invariably remoras, noon follow Fatuity Lad NO-
Fits.
IF YOU ARE SUFFERING WITH ANY
of the above distreasiog ailments, use HELM
11OLD11 PREPARATION 8, Try them, and be convinced
of their effieley.
lIELMBOLD's GENUINE PREPARA
RATION, Extract Buchu,
"(lire health and vigor to the frame,
And bloom to the pallid cheek !"
And are so plcuutant In their teats, that patlenta be
come road of them.
. 11 .1 1LM :1111 B° Nat L e D e.: 9 tHu il eh E u 1 1 1 8 13 0e IN oe ll erwh P eI R m E hrg evul A en:
cos which will bo produced to show that they do great
good to all who honor them with a trial. Evidence open
for tho Inspection of all.
IFTELMEOLD'o GENUINE ritEPARA
.II TION, Extract Bnclitt.—Price $1 per Bottle, de
livered to any addrens. Depot, El South TENTII street,
Amembly Building, below CHESTNUT street, Philadel
phia.
Address !attars, H. T. HELSIDOLD, 52 South TENTH
atreet, below CHESTNUT, Philadelphia.
Sold by Draggleta and Healey, everywhere. Beware
of Counterfeits. ata7.4131*
MAROHANT'n
ORISTALOORAPHS,
Olt PUOTOORA.PIIIO MINIATURES IN OIL,
N. N. corner of EIOLITU. and LOCUST.
The above pictures differ essentially tram anything
over before offered to the publie. Their softneee, aad
truth of color and outline, extraonlinary minuteness
and accuracy of detail, insure, of necessity, the greatest
fidelity of reaomblanco ; while the savorily of the or
deal to which they aro exposed in manipulation equally
aettlati the queation of .theirpermauence. These fasts
enable the subscriber to offer them, with the greatest
satisfaction and confidence , le4 the public and to hie
friends.
They Mt seenrod by letters patent toi end can be bed
ONLY of,R. D. MARCHANT.
Portraits of the cabinet, and life 'lse on canvas
as heretofore. , ea 184 m
ÜBL IC LAMPS.—THE PUBLIC IS
respectfully luform ed that Offices have been opened
by the District Superintendents of Public Lighting, at
which citizens are requested to give information respect
log accident' which tuay happen to the Public Lampt; or
of any failure In lighting or extinguishing them at the
FrOperl time' qv 'if not properly cleaned and In -good
lighting condition. The flooka will be kept by Joseph'
11ai1y,240. 612 Queen street, Third Ward; OharlesOarty,
No. 18 South Seventh street, Ninth Want; Dimes O.
Kirk, No, 1439 Hutchinson street, Twentieth Ward; M.
W. Deshong, No. 2231 Costes meet, Fifteenth Ward;
Thos.V. Ilowiby, Oita Office, Twenty•Wourth Ward, (West
Plilladelphia;) hl H. lii'Vadden, One Oillee, Twenty.
Second Word, ( Germantown ;) \Vol. N. Market, One
Mot Tweuty•Third Ward (FrankfOrd,) and at the
fine dale. in !Juvenal street, below Market.
By order of the Trustees of„ thp Philadelphia Qui
Works. A. J . KITE,
oel-6m Superintendent of Distribution.
,pITILADELPHIA TYPE FOUNDRY
,. W. Car. THIRD and OHRERMT Sta.
L. P.KLOLIZE & &ON, 'thankful for the liberal pa
' teenage heretofore accorded to their Establishment,
acid desirous to merit its continuance would announce
to relish:Ant and Pub'Kahan t that their new EPEOIMXII
'BOOK is now ready, and hem their increased facilities,
are now tirtkpared, to runtish every thing necessary in a
'complete Printing', Establishment, at the shortest, no
tice. Theft' long practical experience in the business,
and the fent of their, personal ,enporintendence of, the
manufacturing depot went , justifies them iu &starting
that they cart famish a more durable and better 'tin.
lobed article than their cotetuporaties•
Those; therefore, who desire Printing Materials',
would do well to apply to them previous to purchasing
elsewhere. •
' Old typo taken at 9 out!' pei pound, In exchange for
now at specluion prince. aut.*
' 1 , ii: V Al ll B.--10.041)0--PIDATER, 1 A
E "rile Per Hour:
... a ss'
. n. Prang tka Sta. ow 11.044 if M. 0. 4 . ..e. IP R.. — A
D ItYllaaltlphia 4 ,, 1. ma ,at ta. has . .It 1 ,
Via wa
tt Itartaali .4. CI. II& 1.... B
2 Pr ." l" d 6,610* * • Pn.b.C.hmat ..a. B
T. ri.....a
0w - Cit the any bad 431 a —f? Prim small n,.,.1,
D
Cor. Library, POURTIRE AT. below Cbeetant.
CHEAP SUMMER FUEL.—GAS COKE,
of exCelleut quality, basold at the PIIILADKLPIII4
IandWORKS for the reduced price of five cents e bushel,.
may be obtained In Large or small quantity by lip!
plying at th e lies Office, No. 20 Booth RiliVßtint
Street, ' •
I To Piirehasers by Wholesale, it hi sold at the works,
in Pirrit Ward, by the ton, at a price equivalent to An
!threcite a t 52,50 per ton. ,
(iigued,) Y. 0. ORKSSON
(Ise WORI3, Aug. 20 , ' M I . aay_ty
COAOH, ENGINE AND HOTEL LAMP
factory of E. S 9 lISSIIERB, N 0.109 (late 49) South
;EIGHTH, below Chestnut street hu become a saving
6i) per cent. .to our. tOI.IIBLET WESTERN
'SISECEVANTS, dod tag* 6 doorsill° pr baring their
:old Carriage Lumps pow allosi•V *MI bottomed,'
loot mit 11 "oat to fl veto. " wan 17
Insurance Orompattico.
lIowARD VIRE AND MARIN E IN.
lI II 4NCE I ' O ;II . 3NY-091re No 413 WALI4IIII
titreot, Pbtladelobl a 'rho fellowo o , Matt...rot of the
affairs of the conteatty le puolta4 e d in eaufortaily WWI
PTUVISiaII of iii charter .
rk11111051.1 RECNIVCI.I knoll It OII6T f , W: 6 .l° 113 ".?
Flee premium,. 31, Ka. 338.7.3) bl
111arine premium. 217.793 62
retivetuel premiums 234 00
---
TO:011010001 premiums Laken. 33.16,747 43
?issued Ore premiums 2:072 be.
premiums ... 755 Uif.. 41-1;0,073 54
Deduct rutuns preustunvt
Net earned
Markle Itmel paid 1193,885 I's
Ylre lessen paid.... 8,031 11
Salvage re.
eeived... $760 67
inteneat re
ceived...l,36l 57
1t a - Inater
anee 2,911 62 —8,083 66 93,833 70
Expenses for commissions to
agents, abatements In lieu of
scrip, salaries, office rent,
furoithing eaten, books, sta
tionery, he
Profit and lose
Carl' on band 1831116.
912,515 89
Mita rtvelvable 119,267 (c,
bonds and inuctgagesl6sooo 00
Stock. 292160 00
Stuck not,. 142,900 00
Dun by &gout* and
others 22,312 93
DIRECTORS.
P. M. Potts, Win It Leeeb,
C. E. Spaugler, K T Keum I,
Abraham Rex, ii H Hoodoo,
Wm. IL Woods, Joe. R. Wither",
Cleorge Howell, Abraham P. Eyre,
J Edgar Thomson, W. Raiguel,
0 a Sower, Charles P. Norton,
John W. Sexton, John U. Leviers,
Herman Haupt, James E Stiles,
Nathan R. Pone, II U. sblllingford ,
,
PERCIVAL M. POTTS, President. ,
O. E. SPlllOl.lli, Vice President.
W. 11. WOODS, Secretary.
~,,e22 R. T. $111311., TISLID7OI.
l I IIRS INSDRANOE.• ___l.
_____
SPRING GARDEN FIRE INSURANCE CON
PANT.
CAPITAL $120,000, PAID IN CASH,
AND SECURELY INVESTED,
OFFICE, N. W. CORNER OW Sinn AND WOOD
STS SPRING GARDENS.
OLIARTXR PEEPET 1J AL.
LOSSES PROMPTLY PAID.
DIRECTORS.
John 11. Dobnart, Henry M. Phil a,
David WoMpper, Lewis Rhinos&
Borijamin Davis, John Landeli,
John Evan% Jr Charles Field,
Auley M. Park, Wilibun R. Woo . t
James Darnell, John B. atevenson, 1
Jacob S. Mintzer., Corwin Stoddard,
Henri Homer, Thoa. D. Tillinghast,
Ql=l=l3
George X. Childs,
JOHN H. DOHNEHT, President. ,
L ICHUMHHALH„ Secretary. s.ept 21—ly
N"TIINE INSURANCE COMPANY .-
0171.011 414 WALNUT St , Pranklin Buildings.
FIRE AND AfARINE IN.WRANQR.
CAPITAL $lOO,OOO, WITH PRIVILSON To INCHBASSI
TO 600,000.
This Company Is now fully organ red, and prepared tcl
man all kinds of Inm:trance against iota or damage by
Piro and Marine Perlis at etirrout rata,.
UlllOlO9.
11. 0. LAUGHLIN, President.
RICHAND SIIIKLI/S, Viol President.
ORO. SCOTT, Secretary
DIRSOfGIiS.
R. 0. Laughlin,
D. Sharwood,
Wm. Osborne,
Richard Shields,
T. P. Showell,
1111 E QUAKER CITY INSURANCE
COMPANY, Office No. 408 (lat. 9d ) WALNUT Bt.
Capital and Surplus, ,2450,003.
This Company continue' to make Inserane• %Nosh
Mao or damage by Yire and the Perils of the Boa, bland !
Navigation and Transportation at current rata*.
OYFICEAS.
President-41E0, H. HART
Vice President—S. P. ROM.
Beeretary and Treasurer—H. R. COGGSHALL.
AJohtant Secretary--9 U BUTLER.
ROTORS.
fleorge 11. Hart,
E P. hose, .
A. U. U►ttell,
Joseph Edwards,
John G. Dale,
Hon. Henry M. Huller,
Yoder B. Perklne,
John H. Chambers,
AU 8-1 Y
lIIILADELPIIIA FIRE AND LIFE IN- .
SURANON COMPANY, Incorporated by the State
of Penneylrani* in 1444, are no. established in their
NNW 0551011 , Na. 433 CHESTNUT Street, when ther
ere prepared to make ALL KINDS OF INSORANtIY,'
from LOSS BY FIRE, on property of every description,'
In Town or Country, including PUBLIC BUILDINGS I
,
DWELLINGS STORES, WARRHOOSES, FACTORIES
end MANUFACTORIES, WORKSHOPS, VESSELS, Ac
Also, MESOHANDIZE of all kinds t STOCKS OF
GOODS, Stocks of COUNTRY STOLES, Goads on'
STORAGE or in BOND, STOCKS and TOOLS of AR
TI 510ERS and MECHANICS; FIIRNITURR, JEW
ELRY, FIXTURES, Ac., Am,. /Se., kn., at moderate
WAS of premium, and for any period of time.
This oompony refer to their put career as an ample
guarantee for the PHOPIPT SETTLEMENT of all their
LOSSES. There are at thin time no unsettled claims
against them. ROBERT P. XING, Preen.
M. W. BALDWIN, Vito Pfeil.
VOMIIOIB BLAOI3I72XIr, Beo,y.
I
INSURANCE AND TRUST CON
PANY.—The PENN lIIUTtin LIPS INBURANCK
COMPANY, tioutheaat Corner of TRIED and DOOK
Streets. Capita 1,1612,723 03.
IKBIJAK3 LIVES for abort tarots, or for the Whole
term of life—grants enmities and endcormenta—per
cheese life on intareete in Reel Ratate, and makes all
contracts depending on the oontingeneies of Life.
They sot aa Kaeontore, Administrators, Assignees,
Trustees and 11mM:tn.
MONEY SISONIVID ON DEPOSIT In any amoaut--
Piro Per Cent. Interest allowed from data of deposit,
pay able back on demand without none*.
ABBB2B OP TIM COMPANY, January let, 180 T.
Loans of the State of Penns triads, Phila
delphia Oity, Pena'aCamden
and Amboy Railroad, and other Loans 3170,885 38
Bonds, Mortgages and, Rea Palate . , 117,181 19
Stooks to Banks, Insurance, Oaa. and Ran
toul Companies 81,729 08
Premium Notes and Loma on Vollaterals .. . .. 193,892 01
Cash In Bank, doe from Agents, Inter
est, ice 88,7121 47
atiarantall Capital, Subscription Notts 100,000 00
E7ll 03
DANIEL L. MILLER, PreaMeat. ,.=
HAMITEL E. 3TOEMII, Vice Prea't.
JOUN W. WORNOZ.Beaetare. aol-le
ARCTIC, FIRE INSIJRANCE CONPA
NT, NEW YOBX.—Oftles, Not) street, ad
joining the Mechanics' Bank—Cash Capital, $250,000,
with a surplus. This Company Insure Buildings, bier
chandiu, Furniture, Vessels in port and their Cargoes,
and other property , against Lou or Damage by Pica and
the Risks of Inland Navigation.
DIRECTORS.
Joshua L. Pope,
Rena B. Graves,
Henry Davis,
at
Theo. Polhemus; jr.
Nihau E. Morgan,
Abu B. Tan Nest,
William A. Cary,
Thomas S. Nelson,
James W. Phillips,
Charles A. Miley,
Edward Marken,
Wm. R. fibepanl,
Charles L, Frost,
Lothrop L. Purges,
William R. Fosdick,
Rutery Thayer,
Geo. Weatfeldt,
Zalmon Taylor,
Remy E. Blossom.
Henry Grinnell,
Caleb Barstow,
floury 0. Brewer,
Edmund Fanfold,
Hanson K. Corning,
Ogden Haggerty,
Thomas Henson,
John H. Earle,
Albert Ward,
Mottles Easton,
Louis Lorut,
Baronet o.oUdden,
Steph. Oambreleng,
Thomas Scott,
John Ward,
Henry E. Bogert,*
Polar F.des,
Benjamin H. Yield,
A. It. Frotbinghanti
Thom. Y. Yonngi,
•
ALBERT WARD, President.
111fHAID A. CALVET, Secretary. an.lo-ly
MANUFACTURERS' INSURANCE
COMPANY.—Charter Perpetual. Granted by
the State of Ponneytranta. Capital, $600,000. ➢tre y
Marine, and Inland Traneportation.
Aaron £l. Lippincott, Charles Vide,
Wm. A. Rhodes, AVred Weeks,
Charles J. Yield, , Jesnes P. Smyth,
Win. B. Thorned, J. Rinaldo Sank,
Wm. Neal, Jelin P. Simone,
AARON O. LIPPINCOTT, President,
WM A. RHODES, Vice President,
ALFRED WEEKS, Secretary.
J W. INASTISN, Surveyor.
This Oorupany was organized with a csah eepltal, and
the Directors hare determined to adapt the business to
its available resources—to observe prudence in conduct
ing its Weirs, with a prompt adjustment of losses.
Office No. 1 6 Merchants' Exchange, Philadelphia.
sat-dly
/VILE MERCANTILE MUTUAL
RANOR COMPANY OF PIIILADRLPIIIA.—OttIee
No 72.1 WALNUT Street, oppitite the Exchange. MA
RINAI RISKS on Veande, Cargoes, and Iheighte. IN
LAND TRANSPORTATION USA per lantroado,
Canals ; Banta, end other terriers.
ALL Tllll PROFITS divided annually among the /s
-awed, sad ample security In elms of
ltilwarl Marcia Mlle*,
John M. Odanhalmer,
fashion WlDisunion,
Samuel J. Sharpies,
Luau Jean.,
Hoary Froaut,
Edward 11. Jame*,
Vk Mid= L. Springs,
Franklin O. Johns,
Daniel Ltaddoelc, Jr.,
Illiam Taylor,
James Murphy,
Wm. Y. Smith,
A J. Aiitelo,
Samuel L 4
EDWARD HA
ALFRED WA.
Joni O. , Seer
CHARTER OAK FIRE AND MARINE
INSURANCE COMPANY or HARTFORD, CONN.
Cut, Capital $300,0N) Loaves in PhNadelphis and
vicinity adjusted at the Ph ilade/phia Office.
RI leave we refer to
D. S. Brawn & Co., Phila. I Hon. Joel June., Phila.
Chaffee', stout & Co., " Ron. Rufus Choate, Boston
Hacker, tea & Co , " 1100. Z. El Williams, Hart'd
We have facilities for p acing any amount of loin
rune in the moat reliable Companies.
PHILADELPHIA ON_NRR.4L INSURANCE
AGENCY, No. 4.18 Odd No. 1
HOMPSON 45)
CH
OSTNUD, T ST.
T & RO
Agents,
500 AGENTS WANTED.—A HOME
STEAD POR. $lO !—ThirdDivision.—s3lo.ooo
worth of Parma and Building Lots, in the gold region
of Culpeper county, Virginia, to be divided amongst
%1
10, subscribers, on the 7th of December, 1857. Bob
seriptlout only ten dollars down, or fifteen dollars, one
halt down, the rest on delivery of the deed. Every
subscriber will get a Building Lot or a Parm, ranging in
• value from $lO to $25,000. These farms and lots are
sold eo cheap to mdse* settlements, 11; antficient number
, being reserved, the Increase In the value of which will
compensate for the apparent low price now asked.
'wads at 1,&50 lots imd fume are already sold, and a
company of settlers called the " Itappahannock Pioneer
Association" la pow forming and will soon commence a
settlement. Ample security will be given for the faith
gut rformance of contracts and prep:lieu, Nearly
4501 I auss of land In different parte of Virginia, new
at command, and will be sold to settlers at from $1 up to
;*3OO per acre. Nat:estimable titles will in all cases
;be given. Wood-cutters, coopers, farmers, &e.. are
teamed, and live hundred Agents to obtain subscribers,
;to whom the moat liberal inducements will be given.
me agents write that they are making $2OO per moo
For full particulars, eubscriptions, spacial &e ap
to • E. BALIDE ' E,
au'.2l-tf Port Royal, Caroline count On.
BALE ROPE.—Buyers are invited to call
.ILP and examine our Manila Bale Rope, whicti we tan
cam, sell as low as American, and warrant it superior In
strantb and durability.
WIAVIR, Immo, h co., •
ant' llo.2l4l,')Vatir id. tea WI. Whams.'
1101,916 86
60,38667
63 40-141,'283-7
*24,015
8764,095 84
°torte 1410etur,
W. Btoteeboxy,
R. M. Curtile,
0.0. Butler,
Geo. Scott. [attl9-y
It. W. Dailey,
Charles, G. Imlay,
Wm. D. Demi., Jr.,
J. L. l'octwroy,
Andrew einunbers,
H.B Cowbell,
Baninel :ewe, U. D.,
A. Y. Obeewbrough.
=NZ=
D1111101 . 0)18
OSS.
Thomas T. Butcher,
Algernon R. Aaltbarnar,
Alfred VasaHi,
Thorosa 8. Poster,
(tuataras Xngliti,
Jamas 11. Stroup,
Alfred 81149,
•. O. Cattail,
Moults 8. Quitting,
Samuel Hobimon,
John O. Wager,
John P. Stainer
Henry Uremia:
Wm J Omar,
rentaborg.
KRIS HILES, Prealdant
' ITT, Vice Preaidaot.
aul-ly
illauto.
taailtaabi
po WESTERN TRAVELLERS.
SPRING AND STOIWRIS AILIANOWIERNTS.
NORTHERN CENTRAL RAILWAY.
TWO DAILY TRAINS PROM DALTIMOILN TO
I'ITTSBUNCiII AND tar WE T._
On sod alter June Dl, VOL TWO DAILY TRAINS
w.O leave cert Watioa lee Taltidiargii sad all West
rn and, tk.atit oc Northwatara cities
TIR AWLS ISO WAIL TRAIN
Letve• Lattimore daily (iaselay eaceptaKt) at $ U A.
11. connettiuz w ith the Kai t ?rata ere. the D
tyl ra nu Railroad, and arriving is Pittabargh at 1.91
A SI
TIM rn.RNOON laming TJUIN
eleatlt4) aS s r•
1.,t. II ur.i.trt
'fa is lii lir k TWAIN
Lauivrii lialtimore Y.V IKKY NIGHT at le P. IL-. Om
eetiiie • ith the I.4yhtuiet Express over the Penseyt
tts,‘ 11_0 lor
•arritioj, at / ki
k,- thr,a trciril r uzl,l elnaely at Pit
•ith tesarte c.rer the P.l/0,.70. Pat Ksyse t =
rMI "dee kn , !re.s./, vol a. No:tetra, Southern and
'Writ •rlltf Mae, r.1.U.11.
Pao:wager. .br Chicago, Leek letzsd, Daheliag
ton, lowa City. ililourikee, Datongne. 9t Pura, Wadi
u, stet other leatho 4 rtt.ra ge the Northwest, will VITO
0,.• h witurd mite Of :rani aril See hears TIM Y•/00, Irak
fuer Irslebengea of can, by taking this mute.
Passengers ter Cleve/and. Mainittsky, Toledo, ara
p by this mote, sail the time u aseepatUssi i
brine 113 miles shorter than by any rah...pate.
jr,f" Passengers for St. Louie, lalishaputie. Tarn
Haute, Cairo, ..d all point. GU the Lower sad Upper
Ilvisissippi, make less changes of min, and arrive la ad
wince of anyotber route; and to eilaseinn.ti,CONtatlU,
(ryytou, Louieyille , and other prominent cities, a. quick
so by any aberrant..
111 Weitera Bagger MMHG THROUGH sad
nsdled aria cars.
IFO R TAX' NO STK
The 8 IS A.M. connects closet y witk Exprikai Train,
o. er the Dauphin toed fur d fur lliamsport,
lochester, Buffalo, Niagara Valle, and Caro.* tbas
Ming the most direct railway rout. to Northuesters
Pennsylvania and Western New Tort. Passengers will
thel this the shortest, cheapest, t most expeditious
route tn. Nilicsra halal and Canada.
Through Ticket* are issued to Philadelpitia six 00-
Weans lad Lancaster by all the trains at MS each, each
train haw los mire coaliectinos Passengers' by this
route ovoid trewelied Images, sal all the loacw,weviarscs
of ferrying , sates the Susquehanna lire?.
Paw ugers for ilaborer, Manchester, Gettysburg Im
tiaburg, Carlisle, Chambershorg, go by its trains at
15 A.M.,stal3P- M.
The Care on W thia ElT road MlN make one triSTER BRANCH. •
per da
ins with the train at 3 P. M. p y, waned
•• • .
Tor THROUGH TICKETS and farther information,
apply at the Ticket Office, Calvert Station„ X. E. earlier
or Calvert and Franklin streets.
sep-tt - O. C. ADBItON, Bark
BALI ROADo—THE
1. GREAT CENTRAL RGUTP., mammal:kg the At
untie Cities with Western, North- wtsterm and South
western States, by a continuous Railway direst. Thie
Road also connects at Pittabargh with daily thus
steamers to oil points on the Nesters Rivers, and
cievelatid. and Sandusky with Steamers to all ports ow
the Ninth-western Lakes; casbov_g th• most DIR&CT,
CGRAPEST and RitLIABLR BOuTR by which !eldest
coo he forward.' to and from the GREAT WEST.
RATES DETICIERN PHILADELPHIA AND PITTA
BURGH.
51157 CLA93—Boots, Shoe. , Hate, and
Caps, Book., Vey Goods, (in boxes
hales and trunks), Drugs, (la halve
and bales) /anthem, Pars. ke 13e. - er 100 It
Saceon Cosa--Domestic Sheeting,
Shirting and Ticking, (la coiginal
bales), Drugs (La maim), Hardware,
Leather, (in roll, or boxes), Wool,
and .9beepPelts,Raatward, & e ke per /00 k
Tillao CLass—Anyly, Steel, Ch a i n . ,
(in casks), Hemp, Hama and Pork,
Salted. (loam or in sack,.), Tobacco,
mandacttuect,(exceplCigara or mat
&e., Ac
.boe., per 100 RI
/owl= Masa—Wee, Fish, Bacon,
Beef, and Pork, (in asks or boxes
eastward), LaMi mallard Oil, Nails,
Sods Ash, German Clay, Tar, Pitch,
Rosie, ice Me. pee 'OO lb
Itotia-75c. per thl., mail further notice.
a tiStu---35c. per I® lbs., until further notice.
to shipping Goods from any point East of Phlladal
plda, beWiscular tonal/. pang*" via Pewzighword
Railroad." All Goods consigned to the Agents of this
Raid, at Philadelphia, or Pittabargb, wCI ha forwarded
without deteution.
Vitt f UHT Wormley& CO. lidemphia,
Tran.; R. P. Sass & Co., St. Louis, no.; J. B. Mitchell
Soo, Br...villa, Ind.; Dam easel, Roll it Murdock,
and Carpenter & Jewett, Lonimille, Ky.; R. C. Mel
drum, Madison, lad.; 11. W. &rows & Co., and Irwin
A Co., etneitanati ; N. W. Itlraharta 4 CO., Lit/OTC/0,
Ohio; Leech & Co., No. bl Kilby street, &ottani Leech
a Co , No. 2 Astor House, Now Tort No. 1 at.
and No. 8 Battery Placa, New Yor k; J. flueeds-r,
Philadelphia ; Magraw & Herons, &animate; D. A
SW:art, Pittnborgh..
H. H. HOUSTON,
Gabe& Freight Agent, Philadelphia
H. J. LOMBARRT,
Paparlotanilent, Altoona, Pa.
NEW YORE LINES.-THE CAMDEN
.1. AND AMBOY RAILROAD AND PUILADKLPWLI
AND TRENTON RAILROAD COMPANY'S LINRS,
FROM PHILADILPULA TO NM YORK, AND WA
Lease is follows ° via: Pal/
m
At 1 A. M., fro Kensington Depot, via Jersey
City, Mail 22
At 8 A. 11 , via Camden and Jersey City, Key 3er-
Fey Accommodation
At rl A. M., via Camden sal Amboy, Amommoda
tion„.._ 2
At i A,visCionden and J erMy City, Morning
Alai!
At 10 A. M., by steamboat Trenton, els Tammy
and Jersey City, Morning Express 3
At '2 P. M., ria Camden And Amboy, C. and A. Els-
pram 3
At 5 P. 11. Till Camden and Jersey City, Evening
MALL 3
At 3 P. M. ' via Camden and Amboy, Accommoda
tion, lot Clan 2
At 3P. Idvia Camden and Amboy, Accommoda
tion, Ind Clue. I
At 8 P. M. ' ria Camden and Amboy, AMISIZIKtiIi
. tson, litClitas 2
At dP. M. via Camden and Amboy, Accommoda
tion, 2.1 cam I
The 6 P. M. line nutt daily, alt ethers Bands,' •
molded.
tlipross Lines stop at the principal stations only
Yor Belvidere Futon, Flemington, to ,at 6
aml A F. M., from Walnut street .beef.
ror Water Gap, Stroudsburg, &canton, Wittasbair
Moutrase, Great Bead, Au., at 6 A. M., .ia Deists's .
Lackawanna at Western Rai I r oad ,
For Freehold, at d A. M. and 2 P. M.
For &fount Holly at TA. 1.1., yes 3X, 3 and to P. M.
WAY LINE
•--
For Bristol, Trenton, &e., at zg and 4 P. M.
WAY LlNit
Par Palmyra, Rantooras,Beeerti,Barlbsyton, Borders
eno .ke., at 3 P. M.
Steamboat RICHARD BPOOKTON for Burlington and
Bristol at SI( A. 81 . and for Bordentown and interme
diate places at 23i P N -
Steamboat TB.S.NIt.Y (or Taeany at 10 and 11% A
and 4 P. and for Burlington and Bristol at 4 P.
All lines, except 1 A. M., lean Wass/ Rea
wharf.
MrNifty pounds of baggage only allowed esek pas-
Parsossere are prohibited from taking arty
thing an baggage but their ambit apparel. AU big
gage orer Afty pounds to be paid for extra. The Corn
psoy bruit their responsibility for baggage to one dollar
per pound, and will not be liable for Eby amount be
yowl $lOO, except by special contract.
WU. M. CATERER, Agee%
C. A A. R. R. 00
R. B. MORRELL, Ageat
Phila.. Tr. R. R. Co
CIIANGE OF HOURS.-P HILA DE h.
PIMA, WILMINGTON AND HALTING/RN BAIL
ROAD.
On and alter Thursday, July St,
PASSENGER TRAINS LICAYE PHILADELPHIA
Yor Baltimore at 8 A. H., 1 P. K., (Exprahrl,) and
P. H.
War Wilmington at 8 A. M., 1, 415 and 11 P. K.
For New Castle at 8 A. M., 1 and 4.15 P.N.
For Middletown .8 8 A. H. and 4.15 P. M.
For Dover st 8 A. M. and 4.15 P. M.
Yer Seaford at 8 A. H. sad 415 P. M.
TRAINS FOR PIIILADELPRIA
M2Ml=M=l
Lento Wilmington at 0 60 and 11.66 A. L, and 2 22
and 9.65 P. H.
Leave Maw Cutle at 6.74 and II.IM A. M., awl 9.06
P. M.
Lowe Middletown at 10 OD A. M. and 8.06 P. M.
Leave Dover at 8.60 A.M. and 7 P. M.
Leave Bestort at 7.00 A. M, and 400 P. M.
TRAINS TOR BALTIMORE
Leave Wilmington at 915 A. 11, S P. M. and 1911
A. M.
SUNDAYS only at 11 P. M. from Philadelphia to
Baltimore,
do. do ,
IMR3Z6=I
BALTIMORE AND HAVRE DE GRACE ACCOM3KI
DATION TRAIN
Leaves RIOTS de Grace at 6.60 A.
Loaves Baltimore at 4.00 P. M.
Freight Train, with Passesger Car attached, will row
to follows :
Leave Philadelphia for Perryville and intermediate
places at 6.00 P. M.
Leave Wilmington for do. do. 8.00 P. M.
Leave Wilmington far Philadelphia at 6.00 P. M.
Imlay 8. M. FELTON, President.
QPRING ARRANGEMENT.-PENN
SYLVANIA CNNTRAL RAILHOAD.—Banning In
direct connection with the
I'ITT3BURCIII, PORT WAYNR AND CHICAGO RAIL
Yor Oiseinnial,
fit. Louis,
Lonienlle New Orleans, Bt. Pauli,
Indianapolis, Cleveland, Kansas
T .
'Terre Rants, Chieag?, Naluar.6.
In advance of other roCitee out of Philadelpbta.
Pnrmizg dose tomutliqa %rib% all As Grew Trete
rra Kailroadt.
Taßovon TRAINS
I Leave Philadelphia, for Pittsburgh and western cities,
`from the Pennsylvania Railroad Paserager /Dalian;
,ouch-east canter of aILRVENTII ant IA V. LT streets,
(entrance on Eleventh street,) u follows :
Mall Train at I—, A. X.
! Past I.lne at 12 11, P. M.
Rapist. Mail at ll 130, Night.
' Columbia R. R. Line leaves for Marrisbueg at 2 .10, P.
Lancaster )Accommodation,) at 4.3 D, P. M.
The Express Mall run. dells , the other Unica, Sun
days excepted.
Vor farther partienlars see liand.bills, at the different
'starting-points Passengers from the West will tlnd this
'the 'hottest and most expeditious route torbiladelphla,
Baltimore, New York or Poston. -
ittOMAS MOOSE, Agent.,
Piasenger Mae Penneylaw:S.4 Railroad Co.
Philadelphia, February, ISM.
NOETII PENNSYLVANIA II A IT,HOAI).
FALL ARRANGRMYST.
FOl
BETULEHENLALLENTOWN,MAPPIICHUNE,BAS.
TON, DESTLESTON,
On and after Monday, October 5, 186?, th e trains on
this road will leave Philadelphia
For Bethlehem, (Express,) at 8 A. 11.
For Bethlehem, Reston, Allentown and Hanel Chunk,
(Express) at 2 15 P. M.
Passengers for Beaton by 416 P. X. train take stages
at Iron Hill station.
For Doylestown, (Accommodation,) at 5 P. M.
For Gwynedd. do. sl 9 A. M.
TRAINS FOR PHILADELPHIA.
Leave Bethelein (Fatiress,) at 9.15 A.M., anal,* P.
'5l , tionneeting with L. V. R. R. trains, and arrive in
Philadelphia at 12 10 11. and 6 P. M.
Leave Doylestown, (A reernmOdatien) at 615 1. M.
Leave Gwynedd, do agP.M.
Accommaltaion trains rem daily; other trains daily,
2u.udaye excepted.
race to Doy leetatrr
Bethlehem
Pare to Mauch Chunk
art 5
so ete
• . use
imus*CLA,u, ett.
-furniture
B. KITE k. Co.
Le FURNITURE, BEDDING, he..
No 413 (Lute Pa) WALNUT st
A um cad superior style of Spring Beds Philadelphia.
LYDIA B. KIM JOSIPE WALTOI
suEl Sus
Cot4ing
Sll AR PE'S MEN'S AND BOYS'
CLOTHING, ItS North TOUR= Ettrest, 'Ahrens
' Ar c hc and Raw. sea-1y
1111 , 0 ADAMS EXPRESS CO. OFFICE,
520 CHESTNUT STREET, foreard ' e TERCELS,
PAOKEHRE,• WIRCHANDILE RANH NOTES and
SPECIE, either by its own LINES, er in connection
with other EXPRESS COUPE KIM, to all the principal
TOWER and 0121 ES of the United Sb.tra.
E. S. SARDEOEI .
Gamma! Superintendent
:pp ITS SI A AND AMERICAN TARRED
%EL OORDAOIE-4 superior article, rosourattar•
sad for solo by WILVBB., PPTLYH 8 00.,
aa 8-tr Bs. 98 N. Water st., a n whom&
lowa City,