The Troubles uv Kanßas. ... - . [Fromtii*.NewYortLftrau.flfFjidfty.] —A of.:the Nsw Tork Tii«j '..,V.A88Aw,. Mo,v Thoif4»y, NoT. 22.-*-A mUB WfU«i ; Xtoalilwir* Tins omrriftd the State,! me PUp%WM; h^d--here to-day foe the parpoee of olote between! to w, U neeamary, rTTTSiT>:».n l itp ino ol our prothergon the border. Kesolo- tions WereJiißjrf uooiig tliem the following: , . justly claim the hppor of oaring tins oneSiate/fcr, - ■ Seifilvtil,\Xh%t‘n9 do ,not desire in any way io tht-lottle Gianif‘Tbe:oenve«svrPs conducted by . ™»*M» with Kansas Territory or it* oitisenr, ‘ that paper withuignai ability,- and In ei.Loula «j. - u **iI.STJSH; We.owe to theeftweus of our own State a doty omAad ootall hopesof the BretkttrWgemen,; -^ n4 , ef'midnlgbt aisaalns, ■ Wko-Tjntjpd bttf «0B rotai put of tb» Ja.WO'rotaa our; |: wUoh to pdeofm. •ity oaat on election-d »y • Llneoln’l rot* in i the! ]‘' vAHo/ued,- ixnat inouroplnlon the President Stata-doaa-ootreiebtho ungolne hakiulatioiucr Jf «'>» Wi* "Mb deoldei and pronifct“• W» friendiiVtft. latwaia*gave'fim s handsomerat-! wiMWy of'tbe time? do"- jorlty, bat in the niral districts, where the system! mands.andthstft lathe doty of the Governor of of viva-voce voting prevails, the Republicans; Missouri at.onoe to aend men and arms along onr thetear of penoßai TtoUaoe.i JBeery inikn’a vote. . o ?yJtrottn{ oommitteei,were appointed, when the is known at onoe to tbe community, and in some of meeting adjourned until next Saturday, the, slavery ’strongholds l even of this liberalised! ’The ftllowinghahdbiina nbwolrouloting through •State a-'ride on a rail would be pretty sure to re-j the country: WurdVknown adherent of tho'fail-splitter., 'Still! our Repuhlleen friends hard ho Pause toco® plain ofMissouri. In 185 ft not e singlevote was given la the State for Fr&mont,- and now, St ' Louissione !girea Llneolu 8,945, while in the. "Stateevery oonnty adds its quota to bring, the Bepnblioan ofMUsourlup to nearly 20,000. > ! v —iteisrs.Qeorgo Brown ana Clemo. of TotontoJ ere'the luckiest men of the year, if we may credit the; statement of the Galt lltfontitr. That paper says that Mr. Olemo, a young ohemiet, discovered, about a year and a half ago, a chemieal by Which itraw/pah ba'eouyerted into pulp, and made arailaJ ble form'akingprlntlng paper. After vainly trying Id get paper manhfaeturers tomaka use of. his dis; . ooTery. Mr. Brown, waa Informed of it, and being 'eonvihPed of its immense value, became a and patented it in England, France, the United States, and Canada. ' Mr. 'Brown has recently visited New York about the matter. He waa met there by w number of American ospitalis te—proml nent ambng wham was Cyrus W. Field, of Atlantia telegraph notoriety—and it is said an arrangement 'aU been effected by whioh Meats. Brown A Clemo are to reeelvo some eight hundred thousand dollars.; The statement is quite current in Toronto, end hat oauaed e most lively sensation York Tablet says: “ The Kev. John 'Smyth, pastor of Fhtllpshnrg, New jersey, died of consumption at St. Vlnoent’s Hospital, in this olty, on Monday, November 12,’ in tho 29th year of SIS ege. The reverend deceased was a native , of Inland, a graduate of All Hallows College, and j was ordained by the most Bov. Arohbiihop Cullen,’ of Dublin, about three years ago, for the diooese of Newark, if e was stationed at Paterson, New', Jersey, : u ass!staut, until lest •pring._w.hen he.wcs. ■eat to PblUpebarg to take charge oft the mission then. ~*He had eomrnsneed-the erection of a new ebumh, full of high hopes and' aspirations, but the angel of death passed over him, and that irretriev able disease, consumption, claimed, him as one of ita;maoy. vietlmi . Ho has been taken away In the prime of ltfc,” i .-—An integraph collection in New York oontains a not# gfvetf by General Herrison beforethe. yesr 1800, and a letter written by him in reference to. .tbe pajrmest of the note nearly half a century later. About the time of General Harrison’a blto-; Con to tho Presidency, in 1840, the person wbo then held’the note wrote to him, requesting pay ment. He replied that he supposed the note had bean paid long before, bnt stated that, if the hold*, or would satisfy his New York banker that this was not the case, it should be paid at once. —An American physician has disturbed the gravity, of that learned body of aavans, the Frenoh Academy of Boienoes. He had announoed himself as a competitor for tho Breant prise, having disco- PERSONAXjANIX BOLITIOAL. T«r»d a oeritin remedy for tire chol.re. When required by theAc.demy, whloh decide. the com paretiye claim. of the yarlou. oompetttora, end ewerda the priae, to deaoribe hla pretended care,’ hedeoUnod, alleging that it aru an important eaj oret, and if revealed to the pohllo would «oon he-' eonie a pnbllo matter. Hi.reply, we are told by thh paria joumnlf) provoked" a general hilarity” among the eedate academicians. . —Fereon.who bare Bent lettera containing mo .maytofrankfort and. ite Immediate yioihity, Bava „ xfo, Wnrtemberg, Baden,; and' BtritMtUhd,'hrhich ■ line not . reaehed ' their deatihation, are reqneated te' ate.d to Bir. Sehneider, invettigating jiidgei at Yni)tfort, the number and theqontentfof aaoh lettjrt,' and the Aetna. of the addtMaed and of the senders, aa an oSeer of the Thorn end Tania poat ofieeha. beendeteoted in embroiling. - —For many yenra Brannmniler, a naturalist of Braen, Germany, has been engaged in forming a' collection of meteorio atones. The diffioaltyof obtaining authenOdated fragments of aerolite, may be imagined when it la known thaihi. cabi net, the iarjgeat collection hitherto made, cob-. tain, apeoimcna .from only twehty-nino different looalitica. The entire eoUecUon haa jdat been .old to the Society oT Uatnral HUtory of Oalontta. —Mr,/Wlgfall,of Texas, aiatea that ho has in fortaatioa to the effeetthet all tha Southern Bena tori, except thoee from South Carolina, will bo in fhair seats .at the approaching session. Mr. Toombt bar neither resigned conditionally, nor prospectively, and conid not be persuaded ~to do so, notwithstanding all his Mexican pronuncia- mien toe: He was quite as fierce toTßM.after abandoning .General Taylor’s Admini*tratum,.hut dubridedvery oonvenianUy. . V>4“ Joa” write* from Washington: “ Thera are eoasecircaantawes which favor the ides that the panto will he temporary. / The aaeunt of imports is small,'While that,ofexports is of unpar alleled Magnitude. Specie will no doubt flow beck Into the country from Europe while the present largeUxoeas of exports£eonUnues.” \ Barron, Secretary of Legation.at Lisboa, w#« bftthing near Cintra, on thy coast of Portugal, when he swam out too far to tea. On his return, *he fide running hard against'him, he.eouldsot land, - The American Minister, hearing him cry* .'fgfr'fc'elp, dashed into the sea with his clothes on, and reMoed him from drowning. —M. De Tocqueville, in his “Democracy in America,” written more, than a quarter of a'cen tury ago, in alluding to the faet that cheapness Is thelawofoymmesefj.said, “Even if the South of the Union were to become independent of the; Horth, it would still require the services of those States.” , A communication,over thesignatureof'Many Merchants,” appaars In the Charleston Mtriury, by whloh it appears that the trade of Charleston hie been laboring-under a money pressure for three man the pnbrtcT the present tronblee. The eisee b alleged to be either overtrading or mb management of the bneks. ■—BxPresideat Van Boren b at preaent In Hew York on a visit to hb ion, “ PrfnotJohn,” at the reiMenee of the latter, tit Fourth avsnos., The Sage ofKlnderhook, accompanied by the Prince, visited aome of the lair const* yesterday, and ex changed oourtesiee wlthaaveral of Mi acquaint anode.- He b looking ■ halo and healthy, and aa yetag-as whenwesaw him ten years ego. ' —Charles Kaekay bar jest published a oolleoUon of ths’jMobltd Ballads of BeotUnd, with an Intro doetlow aid notee. The ground has hithsrtobeeu jMaaUwndaa pretty thoroughly sxplortd by Hogg Uhls shbrtaining volume of “ Jaeobite Belioa ;” - bnl Hr., Ifackay, wa are issnred, baa surpass*! him ; for be hainot only work*d[ orer the oM ma terial In’ a better manner than the Shepherd, bat baSgathered much that b near and fatereetisg. .Henry 'Peek', the seoondenginesrof the Hex ioaa iteamabip Constitution, lorineriy the Indi anola,andpaeeenger by the Tennessee, homeward boand from Vera Crm, died on beard the letter vessel on tbo paissge np the river to Hew Orleans, on the 11th lnit. Hb dbeue wee consumption. ' Tho watchman of the liomlsville, New Alba ny aadChlcsgo railway bridge, near Crawfordi vllle, while returning from escorting a man over the bridge, fell into a rarlno BO feet deep and was kttledt * . —Charge Washington’s fate (according to “ Af temna Ward ”) was “not to her any public man of tho present day resemble' him to any aUrmin ax tint’’ • - —Mrs. Fremont's health has net been improred at her mountain home. She has been obliged to raaeve',to' a residence near San Francisco, where there are more comforts of civilisation. t -is about to embark for Brasil, lathe PasiSo Company’s steamer St, Louis, which , Trttfjteg at Bio on her way to the Paeißo. sOatolina lithe only Southern State . dMKlma sa anaory of her own. lt has been in operation some years/sud-turns out good work. . -rC. B-Bhatt, of South Carolina, bnt eonneoted wltb theHtbrier-Bepartracnt, in Washington, ids tendered Us resignation, ’ Jolss Janln, the famous French crltio, h«s iaventad a new oath. One of his recent Terlews oomttencu with the ejaculation, “ By aaribaldi.’’ •- Ixcibxsts prj'BWinkwßAm*.—During ' tks batdadf the 'fakufoib in Chine, a body of nlaaty Yartar hereemen dashed suddenly forward to take » butte ry of Captain gUrling’a In dank, iwhfak'.wa* annoying them greatly. Thare were sfiytweotylvu Sikh borsssnp to enneee them, Ml withoet waiting to eoMt,tbaodd£ Key'muted, at the enemy, and for, the- drst time slkhand TerSr msTln bettle.' One of the rejj Ws spear throngh the body of a TarUr horse maa, the bead entaring the breast and maing out of hie back. The Spear broke In the middle, and the Tartar MI toth. gronndepltied. The Tartan: /ded aHer a tgbt of a little more than a mlbqte. . A jams* oHesr aad an artilleryman being wounded edmestin the same moment,! boy of Ifteen, named; jnSS»(W,> rushed Into the WtrdeWas Bre, and oooily dfesssd the wounds of thrajmee/ rpeelvttg »>an Uhb own arm while ..ypMUuur j£jstouatio» Wxstwabd. The, ,fptfnVle<cTdan.) E&pottiir kepir “Hover, at ■,-S#9P TbM elitlll llii linjniilj Ilf the oldest Inhabit siv lus SO grest * rids of emigration been wit-, *•"'* ** to rffibkwestward'Ithrough 1 through this town. Tb»T WWi^yfiWnb,. l ;ftom Nfrrth CsroUns,; beg wrsn|Simbßat(,’ and' Ure.bound, Mine for torthtlwsd jaw whaipit'Om; eww eewe»smt Stole hmremnt TO ARMS! Onr state, baa been invadS, Snd'our iriends mur dered; bra band of Abolitioniaia from Kansas. Under the leedoiMoataamery. Fort Scott has been taken bv 'tbejA* CoD II "M been broken up. and some at .the otadd Jnrv and oitixena murdered. Missouri is )re*tetisd. u A military company la to be formed on BapoNay’next. ahd let tbs‘people oorae m en masse, Cor ©pantry Uin dangers Rally* rally 1 Let us prepare to defend out homes. t-. JAME« ATEINftON, Committee. ■Cola Roberts, of Vernon, passed Ooeola yester day as a messenger to tho.QoTernor for aid. (t.was xomoyed on the'etreets to-day, but since denied, that Ralls’mills, in Vernon connty, had been burned by Montgomory. ! deolares that, he intends carrying on the war on til he frees every negro in Southwest Missouri. Largo quantities of ' gnus, revolvers, cutlasses,: and other, war implements* have'been shipped to Kansas as “food for the suffering*” They were sent from the'East.~ Unless the Presi dent sends out troops to'take and hang Montgome ry and his men, we may expect for many months a reign of terror on the border. • Liavxh WORTH, K. T., Thursday, Nor. 22. ' Tn view of the present state of affairs iu South-. ern Kansas, >a call has been-issued for a public meeting to sustain (WMedary in enforcing law; and order in th 4 Territory., ; The call is signed by a number of nromment cltlionSj'.who have hereto fore. acted with, the .Pree-Stata and Republican 'parties'.' % * ' KamsasCitt, Thursday,. Noy. 22 —Br. Massey, of Port Scott, arrived hero this evening. He left Port Scott o,t Tuesday last. The rumors of the burning of the, town on Monday night are incor rect; He. con&rnjs the accounts of the murder of fire men, and-the capture of others, who have pro bably met the same fate. Capi Montgomery, and his gang of Jay-hawkers are well armed with* Bharpa r rifles and navy re volvers. They have Plundered the town of Paris, and arrested many of-its citizens. The people have petitioned 1 the Secretary of tho Territory, in the absence Of Gov; Medary, to come to their uitatanee with Federal troops. GENERAL NEWS. The Engliih cotton spinners have made an Imincnac amouut of money dnrlag the past jeac. and >at the latest .dates from the mjnufkotatfog dlmrfoU,at tbebegianlng of November,' were still working oa orders at high prioro, whloh called for tbtr utmost capacity of their machinery, and were demanding for new contracts -aid a pound advance bn yams' and olotha, to oovor the rise in cotton. The late pnrobases of ootton at Liverpool had been made by .peculator., and the manufacturers hold a r:uoh larger stook than Usual at this season, hav ing taken advantageof. the. depressed state of the ootton market for. eome montire previous, while the price in England was helow that ruling in our cot ton ports, and at tha same time the spinners were full ofmoney from the great profitableness of their trade.' The Boot ahd Shoe Bcsihebs.—The Bos ton Courier egy. : “ The mannfsotnrers of boils -and thoee at-Lynn, Marblehead,-Natick, and other large mumlacturing towns, are doing scarcely anything at tha present- time ; bnt Ibis, they say, is not owing. Jo tha. Southern movement,or the panto in tha money market, because, oompared with the put two or three years, business !• hot unusually dull for this eeuon of tbeyear. About the usual number of bands have been discharged at thesb place, daring thamonth for want of work, buUt isexpectcd that they will find plenty to do in January, when than ii generally a revival in this buslntsa.” • SiEODtAU OABE.--John Noland, of St. Louis', lost his eyesight a few days ago under somo what singular ofroumitanoes. He felt nothing pe oullar about hia eyes on retiring for the night, but on awaking the next morning, ho found that one of hls eyes had aotually oollapsed, and. protruded from the jackets, so that ha eould not close his eye lid*. ' TWO olrthree nights afterwards a similar oo cure.nee happened to hie remaining eye, and he wu thus made perfectly blind.. He was a dray man, and the physicians state that the loss of his eyesight wag ejnsed by over exertion and strain ing of the nsrrooi system. '; TJsFoaTcnATE Rincohtee.—A difficulty oc curred 1» this place on the day of election, says the Dalton (Ba.) Tinus of tha Bth, between Col. Jesse A. Glenn .and l'r. R. G. \V. Meffett. ln which tho latter, wu seriously, if not, mortally, wounded in the abdomen by a pistol shot. Col. Glenn imme diately after,the eaa Occurrence surrendered him self to the sheriff, and was examlUed before a oom mittlng court the day following, and bound over in the’ sum. of^s2,ooo to make hit appearanoe at the next term of roe Superior Court for thif oounty.' . The Hochester Union of Tuesday saya : “ A very valuable fugitive slave, belonging to a Georgian; passed through thiaolty. to Canada, on , Wednesday night,. Hit muter took hit servant to BaUlmoro, on business, a few days previous. The stave was a book-keeper: and confidential olork. Hfo muter shut himup securely every night; but the darkey one evening sugguted that he hed one more bill to ,settle, whereapon.the muter told him io go end close It up. The eiave went straight to th* Philadelphia boat and asked employment. He exhibited free' (forged) papers, -and hired but as a stoker.' Arriving it Philadelphia, he eiaited for Canada, where he now is.” JjißXii CAsit.—The Circuit Court of Friuce George's coonty, Md., has boon occupied for seve ral days in trying a cue of tho Rev. Harvey Stan ley, an Episcopal olergyman, versus Marons Bn Vai, for libel alleged to be contained in a psm pblet published by defendant in 1859. The plain- Uffljys his damages at $5,000, and the defendant pleads jostifieation. Thirty-eight witnesses, are summoned in the ease. The defendant appears in proper perron; and oondnets his own otee. Seve ral witnesses from Baltimore, it is said, are yet lo ha celled to testily in the oase. The Liverpool Times sayai “Tho cotton manufacture la becoming the neatest power in England—perhaps the world. Into men engaged in it an miking fortunes almost by*a leap. In wealth they far exeeed' the,old feudal aristooraoy. and every estate nowadays whioh finds its way Into. tho market is sneiehod up eagerly by some parvtnn ootton. spinner, tha length of whose purse gou a great way to atone for the brevity of hU.peaigree"' * - Ehiobation moss Ibeland.—Tho Western (Ireland) Star alleges that tne exodus still con tinues: ‘‘.Even at this lale period of the season tho •xodui It scarcely a whit abated. The rush is still outward, and America seems .to be the chief desti nation of thoee leaving , the country. Tho stream of ’emigration via Liverpool etiil continues to flow almost ea rapidly u in June or July.” Us. M. A. Zab*isk«,of Mew York, lias arrived in Dublin to'meke arrangement!, it is un derstood, for the transmission toand from Amerloa and England and Inland of fuller and -more com plete telegraphic summaries -of intelligenoe than are underthepreaeat system furnished. lie has on this mission already Till ted the principal sea ports of Ireland and England.—TV. i. Tablet. Population op Mississippi. — The Afim's eippian of tha 6th instant publishes full census retains from all except three counties in the State. These show ah increase of 187,189 over their po flotation in .1860 ' The- oounties Yet to be heard roni' will show a total increase of about 200,000, or again orer the population in 1860-(806,626)0f about 33 per cent. , A WHIT* WOHAH deserted her husband and four children, in Beeper Creek, Hd.,on Friday lest, in company with a huge negro, belonging to Mr.Wlttmer, She took the eara at Bageratown, m route for Canada, and bought a ticket for her paramour ae her elape. .Being arrested in Phila delphia, the' lady was remanded to her friends, but the gentleman was sent farther South. Grass is the most profitable crop In Texas. Thousands of beeves are driven from the prairies as far North as Chicago, and then slaughtered and paoked, or shipped to New York, The increase of railroad facilities will enable the Texas drover to drive the stall-fed beeves to the Northwest out of the New Orleans market. Tin. Expects or the Ceisis.—lt is stated in the New York papers that an involos of 1,600 tons railroad iron, Intended for a road in North Oarblinn, and which had been forwarded as far as Hampton Beads, has been ordered to be'returnod to New York, the shippers refusing to take the pay for the same in .Southenr fuads. . What sort of funds worartfused is pot stated. Lphoh liAw nr Savannah—On Saturday night, J.'K Blyler was taken irom a barber shop In Savannah, Georgia, by some parties in disguieo, and treated to a coat of tar and cotton. Ho. was suspected of Abolitionism. Ths-Bevannah papers, however, earnestly denounce the outrage. ■ Consumption op Yapek.—At tho beginning of the present oentury, the consumption of paper in'blreat Britain was 2.28 lbs. per head of the population. In 1821 lt'wae'2.49 Ids. per head; in ‘1861; 3.60 lbs.; in 1851, 6:48 lbs.; in 1869, it had risen .to 6.80 lbs. per head of the total population. The State ; Liquor Commissioners’ report showshow much liquor the following agents In Massachusetts have bought: Lawrence, $3,063.64; Lowell, 22,000.61; Ljnn, $2,556.98; Bast Bridge water, 1 $1,888.16; Dorchester, $12.96; Dedham, $841.38. . . A'loukq man, named Thomas Egan, twenty years old, a weaver in Manchester, N. U., com mitted suicide, by taking laudanum, on Friday of last wask7"A”day or two after, Mary Gninnoy, of the lame place, about-the came age, tried to drown herself, but wasieseued. Two Lawyers Killed.— Henry K. Riddick and Adrian Bhider.two prominent lawyers of Cof feeville, Mississippi, had a street affray, a few days ago, whloh resulted in the instant death of the for mer, wherenpen a brother of the unfortunate man seisod a pistol and shot Snider dead. SmAWBEBEtEIS IN NOVEMBER IN VERMONT.— The Burlingame (Vt.) Free Pressj referring to the 6ne weather prevailing in that localUp, acknow ledges the receipt of plump ripo strawberries, pluoKed in an open field on Friday of last week. . A post-ofeice bao was taken from tho cars, between Dobnqne, lowa, and Sandoval, on Mon day last, containing valuable correspondence, and contents. Some boys found it under a bridge, with the contents abstracted. • Fatal Accident.—Henry Tylor, an orphan 13 years old, in ihe employ of Mayor Brsgg, of Warrenton, Va., was 'killed on Sunday week while playing with a gun. The explosion of the piece oaueed instant death. ADoEHST Convicted. —Thomas ArmstroDg hpa been eonvioted in Alabsma of sending a chal lenge U fight a duel. Tha penalty is two years in tjhejpenltanlliry. - A new trial, however, has been AN apple tree in Norwich, Conn., which haa had neither bud, blo«Jom, nor fruit, all sum mer, la now lb full bloom. Tdk.Metajgecrop of Texas Is five hundred pMndipiekod ootton, thirty bmhsli Indian corn, of Shin* hilndrM btwhelfpotttow per acre. . 'WnxonoHET U. Sxaixuot, residing near Wartonton, N 0., wu ktl'iid on the 12th Instant by tfcaaMldontal oxplodonofn pbtol. November . a, ■ Jfeo. , IMPORTATION S. [Reported for the Press.] WILMINGTON. NC-Sohr Coemine. Wllletts-Stl hois roein Kates & Poster; ISO do j£ F West; ■ 17 bales ootton Cochran & Russell;' IS'doyarn Hay A MoDevitt; 14 do Sheetiej Tinsley A Knslish; 14,661 feet 8 8 timber Baker A Folsom. . h-rony Boardman, Crooker—4oo,ooo latli. 75.000 plokets Gttsklll A Gaisin. CALAIS—Sohr Ontario, Hannah—C6s.o3o laths Gukill ic uftivin. rHILADELPRIA BOARD OF TRADE. F. R. COPE. I “ RR^ARlfwooi)^ 8 " I CoMMITTEK ov THK Month. LETTER BAGS At tht Merchants* Exchange, Philadelphia. 3{»* Wyoming, Burton——,....Liverpool,soon Mazeppa, Week*—— WOA, *oon 3hip Vfotor. Ke11er.......... —... .. .Benicia, soon Bhip Viotona Reed. Preble .Liverpool* soon Ship Hcrtensia, Atkin* Liverpool, soon Bars Elf, Pinokner. *oon Bark American, Christian . Barbadoes, soon Bark Alnah, Neyin*——.Trinidad de Cuba, soon Hark Heotor, Weisier. London, soon Bog Nord Horn, Va* Lenwen -.-.—Cork, soon Brig Ella Reed, Davis-...-....—5t Jago de Cuba, soon Brig Delhi. „...... —..Havana,soon Sohr Velma, Sugett —— ..Aapinwall.soon MARINIS INTELLIGENCE. FORT OF PHILADELPHIA, Nor. 84. 1860, §UN RISES —.7 14-BUN SETS 446 LIQH WATER HTT.n c ARRJ VED- Steamahip Delaware. CaDnon.l9 hours from N York, with mdae and -panenger* to Jas Ailderdloe. Pasied below the Middle two lumber-loaded bnga; bark Ann Elizabeth, from Havana, and brig Mary E Milliken. from Cardenw, off Reedy Island; two brigs OffWilmlne ton.ADd an English sohr offMaroua Hook. 6 Bohr Coernlne, Willetts. B days from Wilmington, N C, with naval stores to Baker k Folsom. Bohr Danmng Wave, Bennett. 8 days from Calais, with 1,000,600 laths to Knight k Bell. vaiais, Sohr Jonathan Cone, Mehaffer, 4 days from Haddam, Conn, with stone to captain. * Bohr Chief, Obamplin, 4 days from Norwioh, with mdse to Wain, Learning k Co. w®umb a :?fo« a A n^ r ,°J;)i 0r ' 8 ftom Mai “- w?l°h h mdM; 0 o'!?. r> A F 6 e o‘ ~rey' 5 d “ fa from Bohr Anna B Hayes, Robinson, 6 days from N York, with cement to French, Riohards k Co. Sohr Casper Heft.Bho«,4 d*ys from James River, with lumber to 8 Bolton k Co. Sohr J R IMater, Gandy, from Boston, in ballast to L Rnthermel k Co. Sohr S, F, Bolliday, Seaman, from Providenoe, in bal last to Noble. Hammett k Caldwell. Bote BVW Simmons, Godfrey, from Boston, m bal last to Noble, Hammett k Caldwell. , Bohr Hannah Willetts, Cramer, from Warehain, in ballast to Readme RR Co. Sohr Woodruff Sims, Mason, from Boston, in ballast to Baum. Ogle k Co. Sohr Diamond State, Soaper. 2 diys from Laurel, Del, with corn to Jas L Bewley k Co. Sohr Stmuei. Croft. Arrants. 2 days from Chesapeake City, with gram to Christian k Curran. Sohr Pennsylvania, Monsel, from Providonoe, Steams Mar., NiohoU, 24 hour, from New York, with mdse to W M Baird k Co. SteamerP TJHtotttt. Sidell. 24 hours from New York, with mdse to Wm M Baird k Co, CLEARED. Brig W Crawford, Falker.Rookport, RR Corson kCo Sohr Halatia.(Br) Bftrbarle.St John, NB.Twells k Co Bohr Pequoanook, Barnes, Savannah, A Heron, Jr. c Co. Sohr Restless, Sanders, Mobile. Repplier k Bro. Pobr J R Plater. Gandy, Boston. L Rothermel k Co Sohr 8 F, Golliday, Seaman, Boston, Noble, Hammett t Caldwell. Sohr B V W Simmons, Godfrey, Balora, N Sturtevant c Co. Hannah WilletU, Cramer, Fall Rivor, Hooding Sohr Woodruff Sims, Mason, Boston. Baum, Ogle k Co Rohr G P Taylor, Thomas. Great Egg Harnor. captain. Steamer Farmer, Fultge, Baltimore. A Groves, Jr. (Correspondence of the Philadelphia, Exchange.) „ . _ v „ LEWEB.fIeI. Mov J 3 The Br sour Maria Isabella, before retorted on the point of Cape Benlopen, was sot off yesterday at high water, by Meisrs Burton, Manil fc Co, witoout disturb ing the oarso. Shq w»H proceed to Philadelphia. The bark Ann Elizabeth, from Havana, and brut Mary E MUliken, from Caidenas, remain at the Breakwater, Wind northwest. Yours, &o, BT TBLRGRAFB. (Correspondence of The Press.) Boston. Nov 33. . The sohr Ottermsn, ofSearsporl, capsized this morn ing, having been run into by the steamer W Sanford. Tne crew was saved. Correspondence of The Press.) * HAVRE pE GRACE. Nov. 23,18C0. Ihe, Kingston left with S boats, laden and oonairned M follows: iJiuMbMo, wheat and olo.er.eed to Humnhraje, Hoffman & Wmhti True American, lumber to Nororoe A Sheet.; De pwere, do to 8 Bolton at Co; North Ame noi.dovoGillineham* Garmon; Bamnel Cri.t.dolo Darby; P Ford, lumber aud stave, to H Croiker A Co: John Wister, Jtt J Link, and Msror Bowman, coal to Delaware City. OL , A «w,. memoranda: Bhft» Arey, Wilson, cleared at Baltimore 22dinst for San Franolsoo. , Bark Bo* Eagle, Kenny, hence, was at Havana 18th tnst, nnoertain „ Barks P 0 Alexander. Colcord. and 8 W Holbrook. Small, for New York, sailed from Havana 18th mst. Bark Pathfinder, Parker, from Galveston for N York, was spoken 16th inst. lat 29 20, long 60 80. Brigs Hudson«Griffia t and Sabao,Carver, hence, ar rived at Boston 22d Inst. Bohr Ann PloltreU, Elzey, hence, arrived at Norfolk lit inst. . Sohrs Edwin E Reed, Chipman. and Mary E Smith. Smith, hence, arrived at Boston 22d inst, r P*PI lipturgis, Norris, olearod at Boston 22d inst for Finiaaelpnia. H^?eGr»ue ra Md PhlHiP “' a ‘ D " htoa , 2l,t ln<t - fro “ .Bohrhauo Morse, from Vienna. Md, at Nowburyport tuoket 2ltlih$ IOWnm *' H l * 1 "’ h °noo, arrived at Paw- Sohr Snaan Baker, Gookin. hence, and W H Mitohell. from De.aware City, at Portland 21st tnst. Bohr. B A Taylor, Dukes, Almon Bacon, Arnold, and Hnnt.r.Rankctt. hence, arrived at Providence 21st inst, „, s .°!‘ r .. Sl !' ow n F l ,“ l l, <l 1 Wearer, "ailed from Providence 21st inst. for Philadelphia. Bohr Julia Anna, Hardme, olearod at Baltimore 21d Inst, for Boston. INSURANCE COMPANIES. »j«he enterprise INSURANCE COMPAW OF PHILADELPHA, (FIRE INSURANCE EXCLUSIVELY.) COMPANY’S BUILDING, S. IV. CORNER FOURTH AND WALNUT STREETS, DIRECTORS: F. Ratcuvobd Starr, Mordecai L. Dawson. William McKee, Gso. H. Stuart, Nalbbo Frazier, . ; John h. Bbown, John M. Atxvood, ’ • H.'A. Fahnestock, Bbni.T.Trkdick, , ANDRRWD.Casu, Hbnuy Wharton, J.l>, Errlvorb. BATCHFORD BTaRR, President. CHARLES W. COXE, Secretary. felg4 PIHE INSURANCE RELIANCE COMPANY OF ON BUILDINGS, LUBITEpoRFEftpETUAL, MER CHANDISB. FU r RNiArE. tc. IN TOvtf}* 11 OFFICE, NO. 308 WALNUT BTKEET. CAPITAL, 9330,910. ASSETS, 9303,308 00 Invested os follows, viz: First Mortgages on Improved City Property, -worth double the amount— 8155,600 00 Ground Kent, first olius. ... 2 462 eo City of Philadelphia 9 per cant. Loan- 90,000 00 Pennsylvania Railroad Co’a. 6 per cent. 2d . Mortgage Loan (SSp.WO). 27\900 00 Allegheny co. 6 per. ot. (Penn’s R. R.) Loan 10.000 00 Collateral Loans, well secured— 3,£00 00 Huntingdon and Broad Top R, R. and O. Co., iLoan---.—4,000 00 The Reliance Mutual Insurance Co. Stook... 24,350 00 The Cdtinty Fire Insurance Co. 5t00k...1.050 00 The .Delaware M, 8. insurance Co. 8t00k.... 700 00 Pennsylvania Railroad Co. Stook. —, 4,000 00 p - * ~ Commercial Bank 8 t00k,—... .—.—. Mophaoior-RKikStook.-—...--- union M. Insurance C0.00npt(5380)...., Bull HeceivaUl*....... .. _. Book Accounts, aoorued interest, &o Cash on hand and in hands of Agents.—, DIRECTORS. CLEM TINGLEY, BAM UEL BIBFHAM, WM K. THOMPSON, BOBERT STEEN. frederTok brown, william Myssisß, CO«NEL'»BTKVKNBON, BENJ. W.TINGLhY, JOHN it. WORRELL, MARSHALL HILL, H. L. CA RBON, Z. LOTHHOP. ROBERT THLAND,- OHAHLEB LKLAND, FREDERICK LENNIG, JACOB T. BUNTING, CHARLES 8. WOOD. SMITH BOWEN, JAMES 8. WOODWARD. JOHN BIBSEL, Pittsburg, „ . CLEM TINGLEY, President. B. ftl. HINOHMAN, Seoretary. polfl-2m TkELAWARE MUTUAL SAFETY IN- U SUHAHOE gOMgA^HIL^ELPHIA. The following Statement of tho affairs of the Com pany is published in conformity with a provision of its Charter: PREMIUMS Received from Nov. 1,1859, to October 81,1860. On marine and inland risks- $848,816 96 On fire risks..— .. 118,358 78 $467,184 69 264,837 S 3 Premiums on polioios not marked off,flov.l,18&~ PREMIUMS Marked off as earned, from Wov. 1,1859, to Oot. SI, 1850. On marine and inland risks :S3M 937 19 On fire risks 116,212 fil Interest, salvages, &c.» during same period..-^.. LOBSEB, EXPENSES, &c., Darin? the year as above* Marine and inland navigation 1055e5....... - ~~ . ~$802,018 09 Fire losses 63,605 01 Return premiums.—. ... 42,295 00 Re-insuranoes— 21,61107 Agenoy charges, aco.--.-~ 28,660 29 Donations to steam fire oompaniesi advertising, taxes, t 0.11,697 71 Expenses, salaries, rent, &o,~— 20,487 48 5383,170 66 Surplus,—..—.., ASSETS OF THE COMPANY, u November 1, 1860. United States five oent. loan SXOQAQO 00 115,000 United States six cent. Treasury -Notes,(withftoorued interest).... 119,463 84 100,000 Pennsylvania State five cent. loan. . _ „...... 95.070 on 21,000 do. do. six do. do. 21,946 00 133 mo Philadelphia City six oent. Loan. 125,203 37 30,000 Tennessee State five cent loan.. 24,000 00 60 000 Pennsylvania Railroad 2d mortgage six w oent. bonds.—...... 45,000 00 15.000 300 shares, stock Germantown Gas Company, interest and pnnoipal guaranteed by the City of Phila delphia— 15,500 00 3,000 100 shares Pennsylvania Railroad 6,000100 Pennsylvania icaTu 3,900 00 1,200 80 shares pfuMeiphin Icelibatand 900 °° Steam Tug Company 2*200 GO 250 5 shares Philadelphia and Havre de * „ G , rao ® Steam Tow-boat Company. 350 00 200 2 shares Philadelphia Exchange Company 125 00 1,000 2shares Continental Hotel Co..—» 600 00 5566,700S 566,700 par. .Cost $547,335.34. Market va1.8654,356 71 ills receivable, for insurances made 171,386 42 Ronds and mortgages.. 54.6C0 00 Real estate— * 61,863 3d Balanoesdue at Agencies—Premiums on Ma rine Tolioies. interest, and other debts due the Company-—,—., — 61,566 02 Scrip and stock of sundry Insurance and other Companies*— — . 2,62660 Cash on hand-in banks—.s2B,673 ia in drawer—— 485 85 „ 8904.907 81 , Novembers, iB6O. The Board of JDireotorfl have this day deolared a Cash Dividend ofTEN PER C£N T. on the Capital Stock, and SIX PER. CENT, interest on the borip of the Company, payable on and after the Ist proximo. They have also deolared a Scrip Dividend of TWEN TY-FIVK PER CENT, on the Earned Premiums for the year ending October. 31. iB6O. Certificates for whioh will do issued to the parties entitled to the 4ame on and after the first o( Deoerabor next. IST No certificates of profits issued under 825. DIRECTORS. William Martin# Samxi«l E. Stokes, Edmund A. Souuer, J. F, Pemston, TheopUihw, Fauhling, Henry Sioan, John H. Penrose, Edward Darlington, Jehu O/Davis, H. Jonesßrooke, James Traquair, - Spencer Sl’llvoine, William Eyre, Jr., Thomas C. Hand, Jamee C, Hand, Robert Burton, William C.'Ludwig, Jaoob P. Jones, . Joseph H. Seal, James B. McFarland, Dr.R» M.Huston, Joshuar. Eyre, George O. Leipey, John B. Bemple, Pittsbs, Hugn Craig. D.T, Morgan, ** Charles Kelly, A. B. Berger, **' - - ' WILLIAM MARTIN, president. „„„„„ , C. HAND, Vice President. —HKNjtY_LYTjnjßrg.jisoretarr. 1 - - ■ nol7-1 tn EXPRESS COMPANIES; • fSSS rr niiifiiir 1 , i THE ADAMS EXPRESS Mrjr»fa.Wrwia, jSoio?S! 'andSpekrisTeUtaer by its own l . Lines or rn connection ' 9tl9tal£n*isiucJtht. rflHB AMALGAMATION OF LAN- A GUAGEfI.— I There Is a growing tendency in this age to appropriate the most expressive words of other languages, and after a while to incorporate them into our own; thus the word Cephalio, which is from the Greek, Signifying “for the 1 head, 1 ' is now becoming popularized in connection with Mr. Spalding’s great headache remedy, but it will soon he used in a more general way, and. the word Cephalio will become as common as Electrotype and many others whose dis tinction as foreign words-has been worn away by oommoa usage, until they seem ” native and to the manor born.” Hi ’ad’n orrible ’eadaohe this hafternoon, hand I stopped Into the hapotheoary’s, hand says hi to the mau, “ Can you lieose meo? an’eadaoh*?” “Does It haohe ’ard?”sdys ’e. “Hexosedingly,” eayshi, hand upon that ’egdve me a Cephalio Pill, hand ’pon me ’onor it cured mo so quiok thatl’ardly realized Pad ’ad an ’eadaohe. Hbadachr is the favorite sign by whioh nature makes known any deviation whatever from the natural stato of the brain, and, viewed in this light, it may be looked on as a safeguard intended to give notice of dis ease whioh might otherwise escape attention, till too late to be remedied; and its indications should never be negleoted. Heodaohes may be classified under two names, viz: Symptomatic and Idiopathio. Symptomatio Headache is exceedingly common, and is the precursor of a great variety of diseases, among whioh are Apo plexy. Gout, Rheumatism, and all febrile diseases. In its nervous form it is sympathetic of disease of the stomach, constituting sick headache, of hepatio disease constituting bilious headache, of worms, constipation, and other disorders of the bowels, as well as renal and uterine affeotions. Diseases of the heart are very fre quently attended with heodaohes; anemia and plethora are also affections whioh frequently occasion head oohe. Idiopathio headache Is also very common, being usually distinguished by the name of nervous headache, Bometlmee ooming.on suddenly in a state of appa rently sound health, and prostrating at once the mental and physical energies, and in ether mstancesit comes on slowly, heralded by depression of spirits or aoerfcity of temper. In most instanoee the paiir is in the front of the head, over one or both eyds, and sometimes pro voking vomiting; under this olaas may also be named Neuralgia. For the treatment of either olaesof headaobe the Ce phalic Pills have been found a sure and safe remedy, relieving the most acute pains In a few minutes, and, by its subtle power, eradicating the diseases of whioh headache is the unerring index. Bridget.—Missus vranCa you to send her a box of Ce phalio G’ue; no, & bottle of Prepared Pills—but I’m thinking that’s not just it nalther; but perhaps ye’ll bo afther knowing what it is. Ye see she’s nigh dead and gone with the Biok Hesdaohe, and wants some more of that same as relaived her before. Druggist.—' You must mean Spalding’s Cephalio Pills. Bridget.— Ooh! sure now and you’ve sed it, Here’s the quarther, and giv me the Pills, and don’t be all day about it, aither. N. W. HICKMAN. Constipation or Costivencsst No one of the “ many ills flesh is heir to ” is so pre valent, so little understood, aud so much negleoted as Costiveness, often originating in carelessness, or se dentary habits. It is regarded as a alight disorder, of too little cctasequence to exoite anxiety, while in reali ty it Is the praouraor and companion Of many of the most fatal and dangerous diseases, and unless early eradicated, it will bring the sufferer to an untimely grave. Among tho lighter evils of whioh Costiveness U tho usual attendant are Headaohe, Colic, Rheuma tism, Foul Breath, Piles, aud others of like nature, while a long tram of frightful diseases, such as Malig nant Fevers, Abccsses, Dysentery, : Diarrhoea, Dyspep sia, Apoplexy, Epilepsy, Paralysis, Hysteria, Hypo ohondriasis, Melancholy, and Insanity, first indicate their presenoe in the system by this alarming symptom. Not unfrequently the diseases named originate m Con stipation, but take on an independent existence unless the cause is eradicated in an early stage. From all these considerations, it follows that the disorder should receive immediate attention Whenever it oeours. and no person should negleot to get a box of Cephalio Pills on the first appesranoe of the complaint, as their time ly use will expel the insidious approaches of disease, and destroy this dangerous fee to human life. Physician.— Well, Mrs. Jones, how is that headaohe i Mrs Jones.— Gone l Doctor, alt gone l the pill you sent cured me in just twenty minutes, and Iwish you would send me more, so that 1 can have them handy. PAv<ician,—Youoan get them at anylDruggitt’s. Cal forCephaUo'Pills. I find they never fall, and I reoom* mend them in alloases of Headache. t Mrs. Jones.—l shall send for a box direotly, and shall tell all my suffering friends, for they are areal blessing, Twentt Millions of Dollars sated.—Mr. Spald ing has sold two millions of bottles of hi* oelebpated Prepared Glue, and it is estimated that each bottle saves at least ten dollora’worth of broken,fhrnilnre, thus making an aggregate of twenty millions bf dollars reclaimed from total loss !by this valuable invention' Having made his Glue a household word, he noyr pro poses to do the world still greater eervlo* by curing, all the aching heads with his Cephalio Pills, and if they are as good as bis Glue, Headaohes will soon vanish away Uke snow in July. Oyxa sxcitxmknt, and the mental oare and anx iety inoident to dose attention to business or study* are among the numerous onuses of Nervous Hea4*obe. The disordered state of mind and body inoident to this dis tressing ooraplaint, is a fatal blow to all energy and am bition. Bofferers by this disorder oan always obtain speedy relief from these distressing attaoks by using onoof theOephatio PiUs whenever the symptoms ap pear. It quiets the overtasked brain* and soothesthe strained and jam ns nerves, and relaxes the tension of the atomaoh whtoh always accompanies and aggravates the disordered condition of the brain. Fact wobtii knowing.-- Spalding’s Cephalic PiUs are a certain cure for Side Headache* Bilious Hoad aohe* Nervous Headache* Costiveness, and General Debility, 6,135 01 2.813 60 300 00 16,297 18 6 316 63 11,386 16 @303,608 96 G&bat Discovert.—Among the most important of all the great jnedioal discoveries of this ago may bp considered the system of vaooination for protection from Small Pox, the Cephalic Pill for relief of Head aobe, and the use of Q,mnine for the prevention of Fevers, either of whioh is a sure apeoifio, whose bene fits will be expenenoed by suffering humanity long after their discoverers are forgotten. AT* Did you ever have the Sick Headache } Do you remember the throbbing temples, the fevered brow, the loathing-and disgust at the sight of food? How.totally unfit you were for pleasure, conversation, or study# One of the Cephalio Pills would have relieved you from all the suffering whioh you then expenenoed. For this and other purposes you should always have a box of them on hand to uso as occasion iciuirea. ■3.71,199 70 CEPHALIC PILLS CEPHALIC PILLS. CEPHALIC PILLS, CURE ALL KINDS OP HEADACHE! By the use ofthese Pills the periodical attacks of Ner vous or Si'cfc Headaths may be prevented : and if taken at the commencement of an attaok immediate relief from pain and sickness w ; ll be obtained. ✓ \ They seldom fail in removing the Nausea and Head ache to whioh females are so subject. They act gontlv on the bowels, removing Costiveness For. Literary Men, Students, Delicate Females, and all persons of sedentary habits , they are valuable as a Laxative, improving the appetite, giving tone and vigor to the digestive organs, and restoring the natural elas-' tioity and strength to the whole system. The CEPHALIC FILLS are the result of long investi gation and oarefully oonduoted experiments, having been in use many years, during whioh time they have prevented and relieved a vast amount of pain and suffering from Headache, whether originating in tbo nervous system or from a deranged state of the sto mach. They are entirely vegetable in their oompoeltion, and may be taken at all times with perfect safety without making any ohange of diet, and the absence a f any disa greeable taste renders it easy to administer them to children. BEWARE OF COUNTERFEITS! The genuine have five signatures of Henry O. Spalding on eaoh Box. Sold by Druggists and all other Dealers in Medicines# A Box will be sontby mail prepaid on receipt of the PRICE, 35 CENTS. All orders should he addressed to HENRY O. BPALMNG-, or i.» <8 CEDAR STREET, NEW YORK, JtfISCELJIiANICpiIS, ’ardly Realized. A Real Illessing* CURE SIOIC IIEADAOHK! CURE NERVOUS HEADACHE! MEDICINAL. OYSrfSFSIA REMEDY Dr. DARIUS HAM’S AROMATIC INVIGORATING SPIRIT, , l as J jeen vsi 'l bit thi public for siz years /tis recommended to Cur* \iri£ti£tkl n a?*' Colic ,1 & * ffi* I *Bt<mach, or Pains t« the ■°rvfJ Drowt%ness s Kidney Low Spirits * Delirium , j Trunins, Intemperance, IT INVISORATSS, BUT WILI, -NOT o9r SPUPRPY. As a Mediome It is quick "&nd‘effectual. ourinr the fna »«?!,5mS5Sf. »m«nt«of the Atomaoh and Bowol. It will instantly revive the most melancholy and , Swsfh'sfc®« , s;.‘s , ASjo? eak ’ Mivow> . * ni SSffiS?lSSSaßW^s^M ,^^ _ „ _WHAT IT WILL do. PoBK—One wine gloss fall as often as neoeurary. One dose will remove all Bad Spirits. rj One doss will oure Heart-burn. Three doses will onre Indigestion. One dose wdl give you a. Good. Appitite, One dose will stop the distressing pains of DTeDonsia One dose will remove the distressing and disasKeobfe effeotsof Wind or Fiittuienoe, and m soon as the stomach rooeives the Invigpratinr Spirit, th« distress ing load and all painful feelings will be removed. One dose will remove too most distressing n&ins nf CoUo, either in the stomach or bowels. * pam * 01 Persons wno are seriously afflicted vpth any Kidney Complaints are assured or speedy Tolief by a dose or two* and a radical cure by the use of one or two bottles. „ L NIGHTLY DISSIPATION. Persons who, from dissipating too muoh over night, and feel the evil effeoto oi poisonous liquors, m violent headaohes. sickness at stomach; weakness, giddiness, &o„ will find one dose sfiil t emove all bad feelings. Ladies of weak and.siokly-constitutions should take ;ho Invigorating Spirit three times a day; it will make ;hem strong, healthy, and hapiy* remove all obstruc tions and from thA menstrual organs, and restore the bloom of health and beauty to the careworn fooe. . Daring prognanoy it will bo found an invalnable medi -ol9?i^l,6moV® ptwgreenbls sensations at the stomach. All the proprietor asks is a trial, and to induce this, he has put up the Invigorating Spirit in pint buttles at SOtoents, quarts 91. General Depot, 4S WATER Street, New York, DYOTT & CO, 232 North SECOND Street • , _ , wholesale Agents in Philadelphia, And for sale by JOHN H. EaTON* 23 N. EIGHTH Street, and all Druggists ie7-tnsnilr OAK ORCHARD ACID SPRINGS. 'These Springs are situated in the valley of the Oak Orchard Creek, Inthe townof Alabama, Genesee co., N.Y., eight miles south of the village of Medina, on the Erie Canal, and fourteen miles from Batavia. /tBT The pnnoipal Acid Springs are throe in number, besides these there are mx others. They are all locatei within a circuit of about fifty rods. The roedioina qualities?! the waters are fullyahown in the aubjomod testimonials. They ooatam a very large amonntof Sul phur, Sulphuric Acid, Sulphate of Lime, and Proto- Sulphate of Iron. The great raedioinal virtues ponsess edby those waters depend very largely upon the pre sence, insuoh unusual quantities, of these onrative substances. Hundreds of oases of disease, ospeoially those result ing from the sorofulous diathesis, have been ourodby their use. tor in akin in confirmed leprosy—tho waters have been signally suooossful, . Opinions of medical and scientific gentlemen are given in the.oiroolars. lhe following eminent gentlemen speak m strong terms of the medicinal value of these waters j Prof. Emmons, T.Romeyn Beck, hi. D„ of Albany; Jas. MoNaughton, M. D., of Albany; Edward Spring, M. D» of New York; Dr. A, Campbell, rtf Pitts field, Mass, s ur. J. S. Shuler, of Lookport, N. YJ They reoommend the waters confidently* Dr, Sprxnstehrs to a case of chronic diarrhoea of several years * ifaatfini, which was cured by the use of the water. Dr. Beck says, I am satisfied that these waters are highly valuable as raedioinal agents.” Dr. Campbe says,* r Theymustbe highly beneficial for all ohromo diseases of the stomach and bowels. Dr.S.P. Whitereadauaperon the.subject of these Waters, before the Academy of Physicians, in tho city of New York, in whioh he states that the Waters pos sess decidedly tonic, refrigerant, and astringent proper ties; and that the olass of diseases to whioh they are m.ore particularly adapted, are ohronio affeotiom of the digestive and urinary organs, and sqme of the cutane ous diseases; chronic dyspepsia; chronic diarrhaal; chroniedysentery t chronic diuresis; chronic cystitis ; diabetes ; oases of passive hemorrhage, suoh as Purpu ra hemorrhagica, and theoolUqUative sweats of Heotio Fever. The Water may also be often used with ad vantage, he says, in oases of low typhoid fevers , m onvalescencefrom vrotraeted fevers, to exoite the ap petite and promote digestion; m diarrhceaa, particularly 'suoh as are dependent on a relaxed or ulcerated state ofthemuoous membrane of the’intestines,* In caiou lous affeotionp, or luhtasis, attended with plioaphatio sediments, it is the suitable remedy, being preferable to muriatic acid, os being more solvent and less apt by continued use to disorder the stomach, in:' ebrile dis eases, it.oan be used properly diluted, as a refrigerant to diminish thirstandpreternatural heat, in skin dis eases— in those forms of dyspepsia connected with an alkaline condition of the etomahh, as in Pyrosis,or wa ter-brash, it will prove better than hydroohlorio aoid. In casesof Colicajnetonum,aad other injurious con sequences arising from the action of lead, this water will prove, to be aiV admirable antidote. In chronic pharynsitis.larvngUts, chronic mucous catarrh, and fcumta asthma, chronic ophthalmia (externally) as a gargle in ulcerated sore throats, m case* of sali vation, and m Uucorrhta and gleet also iujn/«5. , When taken internally, a wine-glaalful of the Water, diluted, taken three times a day, is sufficient for an adult. Other testimonials from physicians, and other re spectable individuals, may oeseon on application to tne Agent, Dealerssupphod on liberal terms. No Water genuine unless procured from H. W. BOSTWICK, Sole Agent, No. 574 BROADWAY, For Sale at the following Agenoles: ' „ FREDERICK BROWN’S Drug and Chemical Store, Northeast corner of FIFTH and CHESTNUT Streets. Also for sale at FREDERICK BROWN. Jr.’s, Drag Store, Continental Hotel, corner or NINTH and CHESTNUT Btreets, Philadelphia. The Trade supplied at Wholesale Prices. nul2-gwly HI UTTER’S COUGH SYRUP. F. BROWN. COPY-BIGHT BKCUfIBD. Prepared only from the Original Presonption of the late PROFEBBOR MUTTER. AT FREDERICK BROWN’S. Northeaatcornerof FIFTH and CHESTNUT Streets, . „ . Philadelphia This Remedy is a safe and simple preparation from the reoipt of the late distinguished Professor Muttke, with whom it was a favorite prescription. That he used it in his extensive praotice, insures to the timid a oertaln proof of its puro and Innoxious elements, and to those who know his character for skill and careful attention to presonbe only suoh remedial agents as should secure restoration without producing subsequent pvii, it wilt bewelcomed a? a real good. Under the guidanoe of a Physician, (to whom its combination will unhesitatingly be made known,) it will always be found very beneficial, and m oases where a medioal adviser is notat hand, it may be used with safety, according to the directions, in all cases ot short or long duratipn. And far sole also at FREDERICK BROWN, Jr.’s. DRUG AND CHEMICAL STORE. - - 1 CONTINENTAL HOTEL. Corner©!-NINTH and 6HEBTNUT Streets; Phila., And by all respeotablo Druggists throughout the United States. nolO-stuthlm MRS. JAMES BETTS' CELEBRATED UA SUPPORTERS FOR LADIES, and the only Sup porters under eminent medioal patronage. Ladies and physicians are respectfully requested to oall only on Mrs. Betts, at herresidenoe, 1039 WALNUT Street, Philadelphia, (to avoid counterfeits.) Thirty thousano Invalids have been advisea by their physicians to use her appliances. Those only are gonulne bearing the Un>ted States copyright, labels on the box, and signa tures. and also on the Supporters, with testimonials, oold-tuth&atf SAFES. PATENT WR'iUGHT AND CHILLED IRON FIRE AND BURGLAR-PROOF SAFE. AND COMBINA TION BANK LOCKS, VAULT .DOORS, &o. The time has arrived when Bankers, Merchants, and business men begin to foel not only the importance but theneoßMitj of having a thoroughly lire and burglar proof&ue. , That the sheet-iron or common safe has been muoh improved as a fire-proof smoe its first mtrodudtion, and that it will preserve the written matter, under favota able circumstances. is admitted; bot that it still has se rious defects must.be conceded. Its liability to be crushed by ttjo fall of'walls, timbers* fro., or bilts own fall: its inability to prevent the oonatantevaporation of the moisture from the filling, os it is scarcely possible to make or keep the vapor ohamber water-tight in so frail a structure; also, its entire inability to retain the steam or vapor dupng tho fire!; its rapid deterioration by rust ana otherwise, and its entire insecurity against burgla ry, will hardly be denied. It is claimed that all these defects are remedied in the above wrought and chilled iron safe and look, and the obieot of this article is. not only to show this fact, but the whv and the wherefore, lo do this nnderstondingly, a short synopsis of the structure will be first presented, of this as well as of the sheet-iron safe, premising that the two prinoiples com prise all the popular safes now in use. Further, that the vapor principle is the onlySone now relied upon to make the safe fire-proof, by all safe-makers having any celebrity, consequently, all now put in a oomposi tion-ohamber for this obieot. STRUCTURE OF CHILLED-IRON SAFES DE SCfUUIip. The base or bodr of this safe is a box made of bars of brought iron. H to U of an'inch thigk, by 134 to 2H inches wide, crossing each other at neat angles, and placed npar eaoh other, forming a compact network; about X inch holes are drilled near eaoh other through these oars, and oounter sunk; oast iron is run between these bars and into the holes, and over the outer sur face, making the whole thickness Hi to 2 inches of solid iron, without joints; the wroiUht-iron (rug thoroughly ohilfing the cast iron, and making it unll nroof, while the, two irons are so strongly tied os not to be separated or broken bv any ordinary power. STRUCTURE OF SHEET-IRON SAFES DE SCRIBED. The sheet-iron safe is made of sheet-iron plates, from one-sixteenth to one twelfth of an inoh thick, banded round the outer edge with light bar iron, the larger safes having,a bpnd cores* the centre. . This constitutes; the whole iron work, adding the door flanges ana book plate and the doOr-way or front flanges; except in some oases a thin plate of hardened steel is plaoed inside, and this lsoalled aburglar-proof safe. An has been mentioned, eaoh of the above Safes have composition chambers, or, more praotioally, vapor ohambors, as vapor is found aboslutely necessary to act upon the iron flanges that surround the composition phutnb?r*QTthp'heat would be these flanges to the interior, though the composition be ever so good a non-conduotor, os iron U a free con ductor of heat, and vapor is the only preventive. It must be admitted that the best material for this cham ber is that wbioh is the greatest absorbent,and will not oaka or beoome hard. Lime may be conceded to be that article, as most of the Safe -makers nse a compo sition having lime for a constituent, and this is the only rehanoe for the production of vapor; but as lime is light, it Is lathe sheet-iron safe adulterated with fire Olay, or some heavy substance, to give them weight and solidity, . The Chilled Iron Safe has both in the outerstruoture, consequently the'ohamber is filled with lime unadultera ted, producing much fttore vapor .than the composition used by sheet-iron makers, and while the sheet-iron Safe is warping and twisting at every joint, when heat ed allowing the vapor to escape, the oliilled lrojinw no outer joints, and the thickness of irba prevents the springing of tho joints, consequently the vapor cannot escape. And hero lies the great advantage this Safe hast as a fire proof) over the sheet iron, but it has other important,advantages. The structure shows that it cagnot be affeotea by the failing of Walls, timbers, &o.» ?r its own fall; that there is no ohanee for deterioration rom raster otherwise; that in case of fire its shape is not aireoted: that if it m chppkefl by water, or other pause, the oneok oan only reach to the wrought iron bare, consequently the Safe is not injured for use: that the steam or vapor is mainly kept in the vapor cham ber, and does not destroy tj\e bindings to books, or so injure tho paper as to require copying, theroby saving this trouble, as well as the expense of a new Safe. .As to Burglary, the struoture shows this Pale to be drill-proof ail over the surface, and, with Lillie's cele brated Bank Look attached, which Isdrill, sledge, and powder proof, it will be seen that it is thoroughly bur glar proof—while tho structure of the sheet iron Safe shows (that the crowbar, axe, oold-ohisel, or drill can penetrate it in a few moments, without muoh noisoor disturbance. The following late severe test in one or the many of a similar character now in my possession, and published n my genera! ciroular, fully demonstrating tho advan ces olaimod for this SnfQ: _ _ Ghbrn Bay, Wisconsin, July 25,2600. Fbanx E, Hows, Esq , Agent of Lillie’s Safes: My warehouse was burned on the morning of the 17th inst., and you may Judge of the oharaoteyof the fire when I tell you that fifty barrels of wbifky stoojl within eight feet ot one of your large sige No. 4 Sates, making an awful, heat, whiohyour Safe passed through, ana, to the astonishment of all, preserved everything, money, books, and papers, in a perfect state., Signed, Gkq H. lUywgou. M. C. SADLER. General Agent, _ . Tl 5 CHESTNUT Street, se2o-tlisS3t under Masonio Hall. COPARTNERSHIP NOTICES. TUURPHY-WHimE IRON BRIDGE. AfX STONE. QUIGLEY, & BURTON, No. 333 Walnut htrket, „ PHILADELPHIA, Beg leavo to inform Railroad Companies, and others interested in bridge oonetruotion, that they have formed aconneotion in business with JOHN w. MURPHY, Civil Engineer, (author and inventor of tbe above wefl koownptan of iron bridge.) and are prepared to execute orders, Horn any part of the country; from lus designs andpersonal Superintendence. All letters relating to plans and estimates should be addressed to JOHN W. N.URPH Y, nivjl Engineer. nolS-«m For STONE; QUIGLEY, & ift/RTON. LOST. LOST.- J. F.PENISTON’S NOTE', dated October Bl>t, 18®, at nuioty dap, for Throa Thou sand Dollaia.drawnto my order, and endorsed “Riph’d M. Lea:” alto, “William Lea, per Rioh’d M». Lea, Att’y.” All persons are cautioned against negotiating the.ame,a.paymenthoct»»n lea, " _no!S-23t‘ 32 a BOUTH WHARVES, ; T OST . OR MISLAID Certificate of; "Btook No, 2JO, for 12 auaroa In the New York Mid dle Coal Field Railroad, and Goal LorapanT, and would hereby giro notice that X have made application for oerufieate m lieu tW. EJ)WABJ) RAH.ROAD LINES. WILMINGTON, AND BALTIMORE RAILROAD. _ On and after MONDAY? NOVEMBER 28.1860. PASSENGER TRAINS LEAVE PHILADELPHIA: . For Baltimore at 8.15 A. M., 12 noon (Express), and 10.60 P.M. * 1 v pPor Chester at 8.15 A. M., 13 noon, 1.16,4.15,6, and 10 JO nt 8,15 A ' M " u *nd For New Castle at 8.15 A. M., 5.16 and 8 P. M. For Middletown at 8.16 A. M. and 4.15 P. M. For Dover at 8.16 A. M. and 4.16 P. M. fy Haninrton at 8.16 A, Al. and 4.15 P. M. SatSfdaMatiupiy.) * Thuredaye, and A ‘ Watoeedaya, PndaM at 4 r i6 a p B M 1 - on^ajrB » Wednesday*, and For Salisbury at 8.15 A. M. Trasna.tB.lS A« M. yrtH oonneot at Seaford on l*ues foli 8 ' J,huM£,ayo » and Satur daja with steamboat to Nor °, 1 TRAINS FOR PHIL, DELPHIA* akimore at 8.80 A, M. (Express), 10.15 A.M., ftnd e B a »V'M lminSton &t 7 * 30,9> Bu<l »•» A. M., 145,4, Leave Salisbury at 1.50 P, M. at 7 2b V A , M*) OJM(p,M 0 JM ( p , M da! "’'^l‘“ rSdaT, ’ atUl Saiurda V» 4°.”'?»d!‘ dayo ' T!lur * da ”. «»1 S>tar teave Milford (Monday., ■Wednesdays, and Friday. at 7.60 A. All) 4*. Ale Leave Harrington at 8.15 A. M. and 4.25 P. M, Leave Hover at 0.06 A. M. and 5.25 P. M. Leave Middletown at 10 06 A/M. and 6.40 P. M. Leave Hew Castle at 8.35 and 11 A. M., 7.35 P. M. Leave Chester at 8.20 and 9.40 A. M., 12.04, 3.22. 4.45. and 9 P. At * ’ Leave Baltimore for Salisbury and Delaware Railroad at 10.16 A. A 3, and 5.10 P. M. TRAINS FOR BALTIMORE: Leave Ch o eter*aV&4£ A* AL 28 and *1 i3OP. M. A L^ ve at 9.26 A. M„ 12 66 J». M<» and 13 FREIGHT TRAlN,_with_PflSßenger Car attached, T , .willrunas’followi' : plaoos St P s h p?M! Phla for i ' arrjvlll6 M 4 intermediate plmmitgp*Si“ ,<m for Ferrrv ‘ ll * intermediate for and intermedl- ON SUNDAYS: Only at 10.60. P. M. from Philadelphia to Baltimore Only at 6.10 P. M. from Baltimore to Philadelphia?* B. fti. FELTON, President. 1860. 1860. , TALL ARRANGEMENT. NEW YORK LINES. a 3EP,, CAMDBN AND AMBOY AND PHILA DELPHIA AND TRENTON RAILROAD CO.»S LINES FROM PHILADELPHIA TO NEW YORK AND WAY PLACES, PROM WALNUT-ST. WHARF ANI) KENSINGTON DEPOT. WILL LEAVE AS FOLLOWS, VIZ : , AtO A. M.» via Camden and Amboy, C.and A.Ao? ABE ’ oommodaiion 82 25 At 6 a. M., via Camden and Jersey City, (N. J.j Accommodation.. . 225 At 9 A. M., via Camden and Jersey City, Morning * Mail.-. S ft) At 11 A.M.. by Steamboat, via Tncony and Jersey .City. Western Pxpress...... _ 300 A , » P. M.. via Camdon and Amboy Accommo dation. 2 25 At 2 P. AI., via Camden and Amboy, C. andA.isx presa.——. , ~,,, 300 At4>* P. M., via Kensington and Jersey City, Eve-* nine Express..- . . 300 At4J4 KM.,via Kensington and Jersey City,2d ClassTioket. 2 25 AtCP.M., via Camden aud Jersoy City, Evening’ Mall 3 qq At 11 P. M., via Camden and Jersey City, Southern Mail. . ... . 225 At 5 P. M., via Camden and Amboy, Acoommoda-* uon, (Freight and Passenger;—lst Class Ticket.. 225 m B°' n ...'l o - . ~ 2d ClassTioket- 160 daily. The 11 PM,South ern Mail, Saturdays excepted. For B.lvidare, Ksitcn, Lsrnbsrlville, Flaminxton, to For Water Gap, Stroudsbarg, Scranton, Wilkoibarre, Bend, A0.,7.10 a/m, from Kensington, Delaware, Lackawanna and Western R. R. . For Mauoh Chunk, Allentown, and Bethlehem at 7,10 A. M. from Kensington Dopot, and 2J* P. M. from Wal nut street wharf. „ .. For Mount Holly, »t«jml 9 A. M„ 3 and 4X r. M For Freehold, at» A. M„ and 3Pi M. „ TIJ ~ „ WAY LINKS. For Bristol. Trenton, ko„ at 7.10 A. M.,4«andßK whSrf aeneinjton, and 3)4 P. M. Irora Walmit . For Palmyra, Riverton, Delanoo, Beverly, Burllng- Bordentowp, &o„ at 12K, 1,3, and 4X Bteambont Trenton for Tnoony, at 11 A. M, and I "f. i i. orli .". nto^ n and mtermediato places at 3)4 P. M. Fifty Found, of Baggage, only. allowed eaoh Passen ,er. Passengers are prohibited from taklnganything as v ?f r ) ns apparel. All ba,gate over Sffy pounds to hi paid for extra. The Company limit their responsibility for'baggage to One Dollar per pound, and will not be liable for any amount beyond 8100, ex cept l.r special contract, * uoia • ■ WM. H. OATZMEB, Agent. , t , FOR GERMANTOWN. ’ Leave Philadelphia, 6,7.8,9, JO. 11, and 12 A. M., 1.2. 2,3 H, 4,6. MS, 6, f, 8,9,1035. and lltf P, M. Leave Germantown, 6,7, 7H, 8. B>j. 9. 10, II and 12 A. M„ 1,2,3,4,6,8, fitf. 7.8- 9,'and WP. k. „ T.U-, , , °N BUNDAYS, Leave Philadelphia, 9.06 mm. A. M., 2,7, and 10>f 9J£ F M Germantown, 8.10 min. A. M„ I.ZO min., 6, and T * 11 CHESTNUT HILL RAILROAD. Leave Philadelphia, 6, 8,10, and 13 A. M., 2, 4,6, 8, and 10,3$ P. M. „ Leave Chestnut Hill, 7, 10, 735, 8.40, and 9,40, and 11.40 A. M,, 1.40,3,40.6.10. and 8.40 f». M. ON SUNDAYS. Leave Philadelphia, 9.05 A. M.,2.nnd7P.M. Leave Chestnut Hill, 7.60 min, A. M., 12 60, 5.40, and 9.10 mm. P. M« FOR CONSHOHOCKEN AND NORRISTOWN. iMasiaswisr js- JW 5 ' a,id 1105 n,m'A'M andoF jJ orrlsu ‘ W - n ’ 0. ' > O'*. 9. and 11 A. M„ l)f, 4 “ ‘‘ , ON SUNDAYS. Leave Philadelphia, 9 A>Mand3 P, M., for Norris town. Leave Norristown, 7js A M. and fi P. M. . „ „ FORIIANAYUNK. Leave Philadelphia, 660, 7K, 9.05, and 11.05 A.M.. 1.05.2.05,3.05,4 H, 6.66. 8.03. ' Leave Manayunk, 0«,7>i,8.35,9«,11>4 A.M.,2,3>5, s,6)a,and9>S P. M. ON BUNDAYB. Leave Philadelphia- 9 A. M„ 3. and 7 P. M. Leave Manayunki 72$_A.M ,6and 8 P. M. , n .j. B^*A^\Jfiv^,ei !l ara lSaperinteDdent. nolO-tf DEPOT, NINTH and QREKN Streets. Philadelphia ANn abasing rail- AOAD.~PASBr.NGEA TRAINS for POTTSVILLK. READING, and HARRISBURG* on end after Nov, 6th * iB6O. MOANING LINES, P AIL Y. (Sundays exoepted.) , Leave New Depot, corner of BROAD and CALLOW on Thirteenth and pn Callow hill streets.) at 8 A. M., qonneotine at Harrisburg with the PENNSYLVANIA KAILRLAD, t P. M. irsinTuncing to Pittsburg; the CUMBERLAND VALLEYI.w P.AfTtnin nmnmrto T ?&tll B i e ,t At?* L and the NORTH bAN CENTRAL RAILROAD IP. M. train, running to Sun* “ rI ’ AFTERNOON LINES. Leave New Depot, corner of BROAD and CALLOW HILL.StTeete, Passenger entrance! on Thirteenth and on Coltowhill streets,) for POTTB - and HARRISBURG, atS.SMP. M., DAILY,'for READING only, at 4AOP, M»» DAILY, (Sundays ex* D&TANOES VIA PHILADELPHIA AND READING „ „ RAILROAD, From Philadelphia, Miles, To Phcemxville . „ 28' Reading—..,.— 68 Lebanon....... 86 Harrisburg..— 112. Dauphin. — 124 Millersbur*..— .►...142 Trevorton Junotion-168 Banbury 169 Northumberland 171 & b ."' c .:rrrr:& a Munpy „ 197 Williamsport. 209 Jersey Shore ~.2Zl LookH&von —. .236 Ralston- .....,',,....833) Wim nM. d E,mira _The 8 A. M., and 3.30 p. M. train connefat daily at Port Clinton, (Sundays'excepted,) with the OATA WIBBA, WILLIAMSPORT, and BRIE RAILROAD, making dose connections with lines to Niagara Falls, Canad*jthe Weit andSputhwest, DEPOT IN PHILADELPHIA: Corner of BROAD and GALLO WHILL Streets. aptt-tf W. H. McILHENNBY, Secretary .Philadelphiaand Reading add Lebanon Valley Jt.Jl. yXZj o fr aYL ' THREE THROUGH TRAINS. _On and after MONDAY, July 2d, 1860, Paatenrer Trains will leave FRONT and WILLOW Streets, Phi ladelphia, DAlLY,(SundaTsexcepted.)as follows: _At 8,80 'A. M. (Exp was), Jor Bethlehem. Allentown, Mauoh Chunk, Haxfetott, - Wilkesbarre, Williamsport, Ac. ’■ AtlAOP.M.(Express), fpr Bethlehem, Easton, Ac. This tram reaches Easton at 5.50 P. W., and makes olose connection with New Jersey Central for New kork. • * MS P. M. for Bethlehem, Allentown, Mauoh Chunk, Ao. . At 0 A. M. and 4 P. P> for Boileotown. At 10.20 A, M. and 2JO P. M. for Fort Washing ton. The 6.80 A. M. Express Train makes close connection with the Lehigh Valley Railroad at Bethlehem, being the shortest and most desirable route to Wilkesbarre. and to &U points in the Lehtg b Coal Region. . • TRAINS FOR PHILADELPHIA: Bethlehem at 5.M A, M., 9.20 A. M, and 5.22 P. Leave Doylestown at 7JO A. M and 4.15 P. M. Leave Fort Washing M, and 2.15 P. M. Philadelphia for Bethlehem at aV. M. Philadelphia, for Doylestown, at 9 P. M, Doylestown for Philadelphia at 0.40 A. M. Bethlehem for Philadelphia at 6.00 P. M* Fare to Bethlohem~.9l oO|FaretoMauohOhunk.92 6O Fare to Easton- I'WlFare to Doylestown-. 060 Through Tickets must be proouredatthe Ticket Of fices at WILLOW Street, or BERKS Street, in order to seonre the above rates of fare, 1 All Passenger Trains (except Sunday Trains) oonnect at Berks street with Fifth and. Sixth-streets and Second, and Third-street Passenger Railroads, 20mamtes after! leaving Willow street. jy3 ELLIS CLARK,fAgent. fSSsaa mt&Wm WEST OHESIER EOTT™-"® PHILADELPHIA VIA MEDIA. „ a r CHANGBOFHOURS. On and after Monday ,Bepteinbcrl7th 18©, tho trains will leave PHILADELPHIA, from the Depot, corner of Thirty-first and Market streets. West Philadelphia, at 7.45 and 10 A. M., and 2JO and 5 P.M. * * Leave WEBT CHESTER, from the Depot, on East Market Sttogt, at 7 and 10. U A. M.,and 1.45 and 5 P. Leave northeast oorner ofEighteenth and Market streets, at 8 A. M. and 2 P, Me Leavo West Chester, at 7.80 A. M., and 4.45 P. M. Trains leayirg Philadelphia, at 7 45 A. M. and 6 P,M., and on Wednesdays and Saturdays only, at 2.30 P. M., oonneot at Pennelton with the Philadelphia and Balti more Central Railroad, for Concord, Kennett, Avon dale, Elkview, &0.1 and for Oxford, via Stase.lromend of Traob, at 7.45 A. M, On Tuesday, Thursday, and Sa turday. the 7.45 A. M. train from Philadelphia will con nect with a line of stages, via Oxford and HopewoU, to Peach Bottom, m Lancaster county. ~ „ _ . Tho last Passenger Railway Oar will leavo Front and Market streets 8 5 minutes, and Eighth and Market streets 25 minutos before the starting time from the Depot, and will carry a flag to denote it. Office and waiting room, southeast corner of Eighth and Market streets, where passengers, purchasing tickets for West Cheater, will be furnished with a tioket ovor the Passenger Railway, HENRY WOOD, General Superintendent. The baggage oar will leave Eighteenth and Market streets one hour before the departure of the train from the West Philadelphia Depot. se!4-tf •- NOTICE.—CHESTER valley railroad-fab SENDER TRAINS FOR DOWNINGTOWN AND IN TERMEDIATE ISTATIONS.-Dn »n<i eßer Nov. sth. 1860, the Fuieniei Train* for DOWNINGTOWN vm itart from the r.6tr FMaoueer l)6pot of the Fhila delphie and Reidint Reilraw Conipanr. oorner of BROAD ind CALLOWHILD Straeu, (pwenfor en tranoes on CallowhiU. _ , , . _ MOHNIN* TRAIN ferßevninslewn, Jeeves »ts.«l TRAIN fer D.wuiott.wu, le.v.e ni I.MP.M, Bj order o?fheJlk)»rdoiMMi«f era ef the f hilAdtiokla Amfßeadt** « W r..,rv. fTSjumcpnWisrsH NEW TRI-WEEKLY PABBENGER NORFOXK AND PORTSMOUTH, VA. CHANGE. OF LOCATION for the reoeipt anddeli- V ()n Monday, October 15. Forwarders of Goods by this line will send to PRKNTZEL’S Ware house, under National Hall, 1224 MARKET Street. Entranoe for drays in the rear of tho building, from Thirteenth Street through Leipcrotreet, Mark Goods “Via Seaford, Del.” Pflseengora will take the 0.15 A. M. train at tho depot, oorner of Broad street and Washington avenue,' on Tuesdays, Thursdays, and BaturdaTS. ‘ Fare for first-class p&eseqgora, including on the' Seccmd-olwepasapnjjeTS, inoludiug meals pn tbp bo,at, F - KKNNEy ’ MMter i!. f |yTK r te<,. ryS b£brssss®srn WEST OUESTES fSSwSseSSSS trains via fennsylva- NIA ItA LROAD. leave depot, ooriior ELKMTH nd MARKET, ui ,33 A. Mi, I2J» F.M., endtP.M, Jy3o-tf - A PPLICATION WILL BE:made ,to A*. the,Legi*lalure pf Penmylvunm.atitjueit ■■■- eion, for »n aotto moprooratO, tU* aMeRIOAN EN-, nois-tja7*. WURJjfm BBINWEY A, 00., * tic.'*99 MARKET tTXESt SALE OF IMPORTED DRY GOODS. ... : . On Tuesday Morninx. credit* 27,8610 ° ol°ok, byoatalogue, on six months* guod. aolcaM * an(l lo ta ° r l an °J andataple Imported drr jattfesmslss and oatalocncs early on the inornin. o! SHERIFF>S WATOH^j .MM® jewelrr Bre-JlSf* “f” MtTfflnVShS^P.^Bxtlfrs's® Philip ford a 00., auctioneers Mo, *3O MARKET Striet, and »»j MINOR POSITIVE SALE OF 1,000 CASES BOOTS, snnvn BROGANS. AND GUM SHOES. * BHOEe * On Friday Morning, November 80, at 10 o’ckMkvreuiseir, t Will be sold, or catalogue, foroaeh, 1,000 cues men’*, boy’*, and youth*’ calf,tap, and cram boots, broiana. gaiters, and Oxford ties: women’s, intose*’. and chil dren’* goat, calf, and kid sewed and pegged boots and shoes,and gum-orer-shoes- Also, a fall assortment of oityvmade xooas. R7* Goods open for examination, with catalogue*, early on the morning of tale. - November 2d, a o no" 0 o n |^l, MOmi "* ' ■ eaie rrBneed for examinatl °a early on the morning of IV| & BROS., AUO- Soth* TIONEERS ’ 664 CHESTNUT Street, above SALES EVERY EVENING. At 7 oolook. of Books, stationery and fancy good*, watoheai Jewelry, oloeks, stiver plated ware, cutlery! paintings, musical mstruements, &o. A]»o, Hosiery, dr/ goods. boots and shoes, and mer chandise of every deaonption. BAY BAERS every Monday. Wednesday, and Fri day at 10 o'oiook A.Jtt. . , PRIVATE SALES. . At private sale several large consignments of watohes, jewelry, books, stationery, silver-plated ware, cutlery, fr.noy gooes, &c, To which is solicited the attention ol city and country raerohant* and other*. ConsignmenU solicited of Ml kinds of merchandise, forwither public pr private sales. »7 Liberal cash advances made on consignments. Out-door sales promptly attended to. MUSES NATHANS, AUCTIONEER viPn MM l B iP„ N c . MERCHANT, Boutheaet oorner Streets loan, at tlie on diamonds, watches, jewelry, silver p ate. dry goods, olothing, gro niinre, D6duing,aod«i goods or every description, in large or email amounts, from one dollar to thousands, for any lenuth of time Agreed on. * tsr The Oldest Eetablishod House in this city. tST Private entrance on RACK Street. 1 ter, Business hours from 9 A- M. to 9 P. M. Heavy insurance fc the benefit of depositors. CHARGES ONLY TWO PER CENT? . Advances of £lOO and upwards at iwoperoent. Advances or 3100 anil upward*, at one percent.,for short loans. „ ■ AT PRIVATE SALE. Some of the finest GOLD PATENT LEVER and CHRONOMETER WATOHES manufiiotirml, at half the usual selling price*, gold lever and lepine watohes, silver, lever amflepine watohes, English*, Swiss, and r reach watohes, at astonishingly low prices, jewelry of everydosonption* verylowtcuos*pistols, musical in struments, first quality of Havana cigars, at half the importation price, in quantities to suit purchasers, and various other kinds of goods. ... J OUTDOOR SALES Attended to personally Ly the Auctioneer. Consignments of any and ever/ kind of goods soli cited, MOSES. NATHANS, SFLENDID SET OF DIAMONDS AT PRIVATE • t BALE .Consisting of diamond and opal breaitpin and ear ring*. Pnoe36W. Cost in Paris 31,400. ORANKLIN SKYING FUND, Ko. on demand.. Desowtonj’mone, tKtni bv aoTormuont, 8w.»,g»4 «re»nf Rant., Mort- Corapur feta,, uf.tr b*ttn tkan lute profit., ooMMoßntlr will ran so ri>k sntk'doo dton’-Rumkr.ibut haven .tall time, rttdrto ntora. TriUr f per sent. interest, to thiToirior.u they lnto_xNr»r. ~on.. TbJi.DMQMtr.rMnoM SM# minrlM or «inzle>‘ and Mine™, oin s ihoirojDrteht, an4*aokOuonti «o DewttQdr.vaomitbrth*irconsent* " ' 1 Chartereorwtual. Inooroomted br tho Etta to or FemHylrame, mth authority to roooire mosor from tms tens and txtoulon. LARGE AMD SMALL SUMS RECEIVED. •DtSCTOJUL Jacob b. Shannon, ; Cm* Cadwaliader, £ LewurXrumbhasr, Henry Belacr, ?rsSSSSSS3K: . feSKT . JACoIuB. BfuH/i'fiSifc F ruiiut. Onv* CaswaLLAPim/ireasiger. aptt-r . ■ i ■ • ' CAVINQ FUND—FIVE PER CENT. IN IJTKREST.-NATIONAL fIAFETY TRUST COM- Ihilad oly !n vama, . - . * Money is received m any sum, large or small, and in- from tits day of d.poiit t. utt Bar ?f,iitj r ROBERT SELFRIDGE;VIuVrMiIMt WILIIAU J.HXSD,Scoretary, . ...v—?- - w _ ‘ . bntMTOXj: Cobsrt SMfridi.,- Fmwu LM. Sam«! K. Autaa, /omph Ysnaa, C.LaMrathMurm., Jama.L;Bwrf>niM«, ■ MooeruroMtridaatlparm,At»mMla diutr. . Th« tovMhn»nt.sni;m»de, ioiooafonnrte joitk Ut. promioo. or tho pSartor, In Real Eatata MoitoaM. Ground Rasta, and <mos firct-olau Moarlttw aa ■ffllfal van iruraro Mrfsot .aoouritr to.tkitdaMntomi and .hiohcatinotfail ton.a'pariaas.ur.ua atosUMi. tin. liutitution- ■ ufir CAVING FUND—UNITED STATES COMPANY, eornerTHIRD andCBECT- Large and. small euzne received. and paid book on dtf- r ’ m&ndwithontnotice,with. FlVp pKR CENT.iNTfe- REST iron the duTof defont to the dhr of witt dravaL , iJKAivTS for eale on England, Ireland, d ootlanv f^rid«n^ifepHKWK.CaA-wyOR» FOR THB SOUTH.—CHARLES , Heavy freight at an average of vivixzn per cent, bplow New York Steamship rates. „ for CHARLESTON. 8. c. The.U. 8. Mail Steamship KEYSTONE STATE, Captain Charles P. marshmanv will sail on Monday, N ov. 25, at 10 o’olook A. M. Through in 48 to 50 hours-only 40 hours at Sea, „ „ FOR. SAVANNAH. GA. The.U. S. Mail Btsamthip STATE OF GEORGIA, Captain John J, Garvin, will sail on Saturday, DeoQmber 1, at lOo’olock A. M. Through in 58 to 60 hours—only 48 hours at Sea. Sailing days changed irom.every BatUTdar to every five days. Goods received and Bills of Lading signed every day. Thesplenaed first-class side-wheel Steamships KEY STONE 8 SATE and STATE OF GEORGIA now run as above every ten days, thus forming a five-day oom mamoation with Charleston and Savannah, and the South and Southwest. At both Charleston and Savannah, these Ships oon neot with steamers for Florida, and with railroads, &0., for all plaoea in the Sooth and Southwest.’ «y . ,? INSURANCE Northern Central. Aailroad. Suubury and Erie R. R, Freight and insurance on aiargeproportion of Goods shipped South will be louml to be lower by these shins than by sailing vessels, the premium being one-half the rate. N, Insurance on all Railroad Freight is entirely unnecessary, farther than Charleston or Savannah, the Railroad Companies taking«all risks from these points. GREAT REDUCTION IN FARE. Fare by this route 25 to 40 per cent, cheaper than by tho inland Route, aa will be seen by the following sohedule. Through tickets from Philadelphia, via Charleston and Savannah steamships. INCLUDING MEALS on the whole rout% except from Charleston aud Savannah to Montgomery : VIA tUARLESTON. vrx SAVANNAH. To Charleston 915 CO To Sav&nntfli $l5 00 Augusta 17 00 Augusta.—l7oo Columbia 20 00 Mscon.~~ 20 00 Atlanta.-..-. 2100 Atlanta-.- 2100 Montgomery...., 26 00 Columbus 2100 M0bi1e........... 85 00 Albany 25 00 New Orleans...., 59 75 Montgomery 38 00 37 75 Mobile. 35 00 Knoxville.* 25 50 New Orleans 82 79 Memphis3lso Fare to Savannah, via Charleston——. - 16 00 „ ... Charleston, via Savannahs— ,--...15 00 No bills pfladmi signed after the ship has sailed. For freight or passage apply on board, at second wharf above Vine street • or to ALEX. UfeRON. Jr., A CO.. . . , No. 138 NORTH WHARVES. Agents m Charleston, T. 8. & T. G. BUDD. _ .Savannah, HOTTER & GaMMELL. For Florida from Charleston, steamer Carolina every Tuesday. , For Florida from Savannah, steamers St. Mary’s and St. John’s every Tuesdar and Saturday. THE BBITJSH AND NOBTH jsSassa.American royal mail steam- Chief Cabin Passage.—--.- —, $330 fieoond Cabin Passage.——... — ft VBOX BOITOIf TO LIV2BPPOL Chief Cabin Passage... ..... —. $llO . SeoondCabmPassage.. 60 The ships from New York call at Cork Harbor. The ships from Boston call at Halifax and Cork Har bor. PERSIA, Capt. Judkins. AFRICA, Capt. Shannon, ARABIA, CaDt. J. Stone. CAWADA, Capt. Lan*. ASIA, Capt. E. G. Lott. AMERICA, Capt. Moodie, AUSTRALASIAN, Capt. NlAGARA,CaptAndersoo K. M. Hoofcley. / EURO?A, Cap£. J.lettoh. SCOTIA* fnow building.) These vessels oorry a dear white light at mast-head; green on starboard bow: red on port bow. PERSIA, Judkins, leaves N. York,Wednesday, Nov. 91 CANADA, Anderson, “ Boston, Wednesday, Nov. 38 AFRICA, Bhannon, “ N. York, Wednesday, Dec. fl ARABIA, Stone, “ Boston, Wednesday, Deo. II ASIA. Lott,. “ N.Yorx, Wednesday, Dec. 19 Moodie, “ Boston, Wednesday, Deo. 26 PERSIA, Judkins, “ N. York, Wednesday, Jan. 2 CANADA. Anderson, “ Boston, Wednesday, Jan. 9 AUSTRALASIAN, 44 „ w Hockley, ‘ N. Tork, Wednesday. Jan 36 ARABIA,Stone. - ‘‘.Boston, Wednesday, Jan. 23 Berths not secured until paid for. An experienced Snrgeou on board. Tim own.™ of tlie» .IHM will not be eoootratablo for Gold, BiWor. Bullion. Hpsme, Jewelry, Preoioua Stone, orhletels, unleu hilla ot lading ere .lined therefor 10. J the value thereof therein exprewed. For freijhlor ps.- a«e, apply to . „ ' K OUNXRD. hd^l^^^^^^^^^AßowligySireei^NewYOrk. PORTLAND KERO3ENE OIL. „ In order to meet the constantly-increasing domand for tins justly . CELEBRATED OIL AS AN ILLUMINATOR, the company have now doubled their former capaci ty, and have the most exttnsive works_jor mana jracturing Oil Jrom Coal %n the Untlsd Staffs / and in order to insure for us a oonstont supply, adequate to the demand, they have positively mused to establish any new agenoies, or create My aew cutlets for it what ever. What we claim for this Oil is, ITS UNIFORMITY IN QUALITY AND SUPERI ORITY OVER ALL OTHER OILS. It is entirely free from the offensive odor peculiar to another Coal Oils in the market, and for brilliancy as a light, oleanhnesa, cheapness, end safety, (havinr no explosive properties;, is, we may confidently say, * THE ONLY OI V «ATWILL q GIVS Q/gffEKAL noother/ 61 " lt 1)0611 in U<HiU,c,cd cocßumenj wiU übo si-ffSfasKSsisH SE@.SBSS X ' , . QOMPAN Y’S LOWEST PRICE, orders addressed to u by mail or otherwise will meet with prompt attention. Z. LOCKE & CO., Sole Agents and Manufacturers of Aloohdl, Burning Fluid, and fins *ui. 0010-Sm No. 1010 MARKET sl.BhltiSelnma. ARDAMON SEED—For s»le' by WETH- BBOTHE R’ 4 * »»<> 49 «ffl- SJALT.PETRE—For Bale by WETHER. f^Nn L K(™« aM,HE * ,N ?’ - 47 and 49 north SE LUND street. ■ 1 j J ALEP—For sale by WETHEKILL & DROXHKR. «T end «9. W : SALES BY, AUCTION. SAVING FUNDS. “ A little, bat ©iton, fill* the Par**.” ** A Dollar *ared is twlta earned,” SHIPPING, ynOM NKW YOBS TO LIVERPOOL. KEROSENE OIL. SALES BY AUCTIQITi HI TBOMAS & SONS, “ «■«•* Not. ISO and 141 Soul FOURTH Strut. I Formerly No*. 07 aid MU siir.au, t if. n r. T l rone *? d ., Lo £ lt Haua. lUlhnU,'> i, I U /,r. M An . °I tha Suproma Co.rtt StoUi. TOtoSmsf" ana a lar.e. amount of ReM Eitiijitim- AT Tlff v4gU JIEAP ESTATE additioir to whioh w»pu%S.h^onth“S«S»??isyi*rt l 5 to aaob aato. os. tbomaad tlKglgalf wrra.emmr hj ll d.«inption. of »u tha VrOMSrS ba Mid on the followinr Tuatdaj. aromror w w . REAL EBTATE AT PRIVATE SALE. ■hg - Real estate entered on our private aale geuv,. and adyertißedoooasionany in oar public sale abstract* (of whioh IJW) copies are printed weekly,) froe . f enarge* SUPERIOR FRENCH PLATE MANTEL AND Pi HR MIRRORS. VELVET AND BRUmIIs * On Monday Morning, met., at 10 o’clock, by catalogue. at No. 73$ Sea- Md G?S^ ,eran f V.l.otand Bram.l. SvViS: Ch “l hoaoio?’ at a o’oiook on thomorninr of BTOOKB.JIONM. PEWS, *o Adm e iSi.frato’r> H no ®"',“ l ‘b. Exohan... jSSpswaaSi 000n 1 t I rrP r .. Mnto ° OP<,n nd *» Sl.G°O «K>h, AU.jh.nr pfttobur’! r ce ” t - 00u <’™ '»“<>«. Sl.OOO oaoh. otr of 1 .bar. Mero.ntil. Librarr Companr, ForeroptorrSal.,—Fair No Jt.,imddi« ,ui “oiito. ® o y Tr,nity ' Dr ' Viotoo «cto7i *em, r .t Df!« o ve; l i , r 3 ocTo r r! h ai ' !e * St - A " a ™''’* Uhoroh,Rav. cfWSiv-D^l^M? 3 ” “«*• St * »* A *> Ba]o—F°r account of whom it may oon- SUJJOO Allegheny County 6s. issued to the Pittibure and Connelaville Railroad. Coupons attaehaSTtf r£ qmred by the Board of Brokers. Bale absolute. 5 siiaroe American Academy of Music, with tickets,. 1 season ticket Aroh street Theatre. V ‘ TYRONE AND r \,OCKTfAv|!N e kAILHOAJ>. ‘ „ ... On Tuesday, • Nov.27th,lB|o,at 12 o’q!ocknoon,at the PhiiedelMila Exchange, will be sold, by order of TrostMw.mrar suatfeo of & decree of the Supreme Court of PemMl vania— . i’A 1 i t ]l2£‘ ta i e ' porirmal. of the Tnouadd Look Haven Raven Railroad Company. Teras—3s,ooo to be paid when the property is struck SA , aa,an6e cash, on the execution of the deed, within uv ua) 8. , VAt.UABLE PIUVATE LIBRARY. • .. .„ Tuesday and Wednesday Evening* 27 *B,"will be sola a valuablejmvata library, comprising standard and deairableSatbcnr*. on edition^. 1110 ’* 81111 * mmrp of UxemfiirrMadw ufed«s I Ki?Sf^ e ?s^ t " j SST Catalogues will lie ready and thw book* *mnr»d for examination two days previous to sale* ■ TWENTIETH REAL ESTATE BALE-NOV. 2T. Valuable COUNTRY 1 lo'Mre.. -with *l*.ut pomt.d-.ton. nl»n«ion, .tone .table, ami other 1 mo3.ni intpro«menß..ituate.aboHt one mile eut of York Road, and within i& miles of the Chelteeham vtation on the North Pennsylvania RailrcS snrroandcdby elegant country seats of J. &+Wjtn*lL i-owber. 8 F. Fisher, and Fred. Only one-third oaidi. •“’v.v'- PEREMPTORY SALE., VALUABLE WAfJfUT-*T. Also, the large and superior residence, No. ish Walnut street,.36 feet front, 2& feet deep, with stable ana ooatii house in the rear, on Saniom street. , - ' - XT Sal* aleolute. Only if cash. *> PEREMM«RJ 7 B^&EO^NT b |EBIDENCE. m l n°hee 250 feet m depth, with stable and Ti * 9 und«twS£"^S2 «7b T »1S BiUCK k xeou to.’. Bale-Eeuteof Jame. Hnbura. J - j -HANDSOMK MODERN RMIDEMCEriSTMd, «"«*.«« of E1.v.3, Mtoto. and. coach-house in the rear, LMfipeat BUSINESS STAND, northeast comer of Brood and Penn streets, occupied as a feed store, with manat stail|infTon». Lot®feet ' *“•* THREE-STORY BRICK DWELLING, No. PM If. above Postal- * ' BRICK DWELLING, adjoining above. GR6llTn- r k'ENTo”f“ffl. Ba,, *- IJIiIEDEEMABLt; eROUND-REMT la?d?T». G n »’fi?.^, E ?J«2Ss£4>^h t,ro aC "‘ ° f Sale at Nos. 139 and 141 RootA FOURTiy iiti *at: * - SUPERIOR RORS, PIANO-FORTEB. BRUSBEIjs AA « , , On Friday , At 9 o’oiook. at the Auetion Store, an oasorttfsak af excellent second-hand fhmiture, etafantpiun-joytaaf fine mirrors, carpets, etc. finsm junliei 4*eboiii housekeeping, removed to the store ToromnwSS^o^ STOVES, INDUSTfiIAIi STOVB . WOKKS william"O- NBMANa WHOLESALE AND BBT.ff. DEALRR - * STOVES, ■ ..Mo. 33 NORTH SECOND BTRRKT. . ofien the mo.t e.neot. oonveiuent, Ga.-bunuju Ceokinz ptove yet lanSmCT gtov a o°lri'nie r . h '" 1 ‘ Cal,h Q “ rb “ n '»»*‘ ao bt , an U. beet stSMh&gl houses, Ao., in the city. The attention of-RenaMu solicited. eelMtai d A STOVES! STOVE 8!! a JAMES SPEAB. o ?.Tn‘Sr** ,n •*«*»«“<• ««■«*» tmrSßn m.F 00 *I’* 1 ’* *“*•• aolr r V id^ JAsi£B SPEAR is the Patentee of the Tmyrarid aw .n/a B^y, iS&£«sss* ol “>» “* fw - M •* ** FhiffllfStr “ “• InTBntor of lkB «,i«- r th® above the Inventor vary jvitly otaJiu recoirebntto be nndentoodnut publio to be universally appreciated and nrnfiTTSit as £2£?iteW ,ol€ * ®*>« Sfitnsr%ki maiSKjSlf £! h>°»*„tnPf£ cxte ? d a cordial invitation to all pemat yL2SH?»ilc^ ov ?* to<J *^. oß< * examine for theneetVM»\ «h^^ a *Ti^ Ile k o .? x ' u?un ® have every-MtSSSI ohaa?ornot' W^etber mtendin * immediatelyto jgy- A QUAKER CITY GAS CON -3l "t CHarlebionkb. a I improvement ON SILVSR’B ol’Uiaflsakei City Gaa-Conaamins Parlor TAll iSXft»."* »tlglsVS£& A THE CELEBRATED ROYAL SSL COOKING STOVE 1. the but „d rSrt £££! ■n !5r h stov* in the market.. It ta mß# Arf*?, cither with or without gu-bunuai. fixtaras. and for sale by rfOBTB. cHigK.'S InSlX* ' Fcmnar J Warerooms, 209 North SECMID etreec. r oB-W' A THE FIERY STAR GAS-BHBN fin ¥ N S. A NI ! radiating parlor stottr Sr is the best and most economies] Heating >tovs Manufactured' and for sale by NORTH, CftSsSrS NORTH. Foundry Warerooms, 309 North.HKCofrS Street. . d»lb A OUR NEW GAS-BURNING BASS .Agrt STOVE is the nm*t economical Stove oftbe kind, and much step durable than the Gaa uurner* with a, sheet-iron base. Manufactured and lor sale by NORTH.' CHASE:. A NORTH. FoundS/waS: rooms. UQ9 North mV.COND Stress ..MS? 7 ifIACHIMEKy AND TBON, PENN STEAM ENGINE AND 3I«SS.BMU3* WO*KB.-HBAKK * LKTY, andi''OUfil) ivHS, hsvnnr, lor mini years* be*n”m asouuaftl operation* sad less eiolusiTelr eneaMds bnlldlnf and i?KUiiat JJariueand HiV.r fialiaeZYiS naieniiof different sices, aw prepared tq exMitp or der* with wok despatch. bverj description of fatten m&kms made at~tbe shortest notice. Hick sad-Low ■Preicnre*Fine,Tubalar, ud Cylinder Boilere.ofthe best Pennsylvania charcoal iron. Forzinzs, of au nice and kinds; Iron andßrassCastings, of adfdesoripUoas; Soil Tarmnc. Screw Catting, ana all other work oea neoted with the above business, Drawings and specifications for all work done at thou eitabhihinont, free or ohane, and work guarantied The subscribers have ample wharf dook room f paui of boats, where they can lie m perfect tafetw. and are provided with shears, blocks, SsH« rf itL. *«., fer raising hepvy er litU* rreicfats, _ , •- and PjtfaMJlA stream • MWTW. V. 2CJSVX!CX. It Vi*a*A* Nt<r i« SJOUTHWARK‘Fb§'fSfiY" O AaV WASHHYBYO» »V«ie*>*» iISHEIOK 4 ,BOHa, KWeiNESIUJ, AW) MAOBJNja*#, Mfnn-Jj ll l/5,.? 1 * 4 ,*B* Ld ” I'wwrats Siena Ksrln.. for -Land, iuV&r- Mann© nernoe. Bdilera, biMranttrt, Tanks, Hon Bonn, As.: Cuinu •f all ©nils, either Iron or IJmu. ’ f,V 3 « ' V * rk S ‘» M - «»“ Eftorti and 9m Machinery ®f tfe* mj4 «cml t* projMoonrtTMCiio iMißXiDfiracatoneFilterc,ftuapinc .Eniin®*,40. ■ . Sola AfoaU for «, HUaeni’* Pa»nt«affar~B<* ; rt*i» Ajcw&tu*: Waatytk’* Patent Hasa&ft *>*s2l p • *OINT PLEASANT FOUNOJiyTKo 95* Street, Kensmiton, Ph.itLfrlfaiji n w n MAM \H. TIKRS informs hja fn w JjtiMedlheentire jtook of l'aitftnSStthStbm^Mu* I—ASTROLOGY !—LOOR OUTI-Goao HEWS FOR ALLf~Th# never tailing Mill VAN BORN ]| the best ■ she isocMdi 22 ftnallctheishavefailed. AUirhoareintronbieial' jf bo been ehioTtuaalei deoeivcd by false cronuse*, yw r -/? r w?« k* *JL d comfort. In loos tfairffU 3t£ <r Sbe haa the secret of Trmningliiaaffeo fc.Qd*of the qppofcvtelex. Itistitle factwfaiebinduce* “U f :r ?&£T f *? nt tef g *9 try to imitate her, and eo»y fcftr advertisements. Sheshowsyou the likenessoTyoarfo tuoainfb, husband, or abwnt friend. It iswelJknOwo tothe public d; lirgethatahe is the firffAridoriiyper ■on.who can show the likeness in reahtyitM can*rive entire satisaation on all the concerns of life, ,wSi<)b can be tested and Moved by thou*anai,both married and single, who daily and e&rerW visit her, Com* one! eome au l to No. IBM LOMBARD Street* beWmenjini per and B-»«i ■ 1 nbtl^* PHILADELPQIA TERRA COTTA!*;-- NUPACTORY, SEVENTH and GERMaHTOW/h road and 1010 CHESTNUT Street, Vitrlltaa ftniin, and Water Pipe*. Ventilating Fines, Tint A [.y.ffije. ■Till Smoke Flues mad» or Terra Cotta, endof/■mJecieaiso, for every class of buildings, This ariietaia worthy attention of all parties patting ni hvildingk Tmtto site sewerage pipe* for city dravßHO* WMervfpes'VVr ranted to stand s severe pretense, we are now to odbtract vithoit'pe « corporations for tMtMtuwln, any quantity. We warrant opr rood* to twfmttfwoj) superior to wy other nude ur tee UxuS^Jmtaato« Europe, Ornamental Chimney - Woec -
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers