The press. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1857-1880, July 11, 1861, Image 4

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    Important from Franco.
TR• soornaam CIIIIIISSIONIRS TENORS A CROWN
TO oria or TIM DON AAAAAA S—WRT RR. BON
LINGANN HAS NOT RIIII.ORSD VIL.NSA.
[Correspondence of the New York Times.]
nate, Tuesday. June 25, 1851.
I have jilt been informed that the agents of
the Southern Confederaoy at Paris have formally
made a proposition in writing to young Captain
Bonaparte, formerly of Baltimore, to acoept the
position of Military Dictator of the Southern Con
federaoy, with a orown at his disposal whenever
he may deem it necessary to assume the dignity.
If anything were wanting to prove the moral and
political degradation into whiob the politicians of
the Blare States have fallen, surely this last effirt
furnishes the coup de grace When any considers
ble seation of a great country has fallen as low as
this in the scale of morality, a little of the purify
ing inflaence of the sword, Independent of any
tit:wilt:in of secession or slavery, wilt do no harm
Portnnately for him Captain Bonaparte ( is well
as his grandmother, Madam Patterson Bonaparte)
goes for the Union, and the Captain refused the
nnolean and unnatural proposition in the most do.
oided way. •
. The trial of the Patterson family against the
Bonaparte family came on again yesterday in the
Imperial Court, on the appeal of the Baltimore
family from the decision of the lower scarf, which
was against them, and the case will probably be
deeded fer the second time this evening. The
plea of M Berryer, yesterday, in favor of the
American family was a magnificent legal effort,
and would have carried any ease not prejudged by
extraneous causes ; bat the judgment of the lower
edurt will most probably be confirmed, and then
the plaintiffs will carry the oaae to the Court of
A.Cimattlaa—the high Court et Appeals. It is in
''this court, In fact, that they plane the greatest,
hope, sines from its position as the last court of
resort, It is supposed to be abed utely beyond the
infernos of politioal or other outside motives et
Bottrop.
Hon- Cassius M Clay writes from St Peters•
bn'g that he has not seen the Emperor yet, on ao
count of his absence from town, but that the Go
vernment and people sympathized strongly with
the North in the present straggle in America, and
would be glad to see the rebellion put down.
Mr. Harvey, the new minister to Portugal, and
whose fidelity •-to the Union is, I see, called in
question In the United States, lett Paris two days
ago for Lisbon, and before the news in question
arrived here. It is to be -hoped that, for many
reasons, he will hear of these reports before ar
riving at his destination.
I see a statement made in your Washington cor
respondence, to the effect that Mr Tortingame,
our new minister to Austria, was stopped at Paris,
. on his way to Vienna, by news that be would not
be received by the Emperor Francis Joseph, on ao
count of the active part be took in Congress in fa
vor• of Italian independence It is tree that Mr_
Borlingame stopped in Paris longer than be. in
_landed to on this account, and the following are the
:` , flots in the oase :
It appears that the Austrian °berg; at Wash
ington, M Ruthenian ' always anxious of showing
his zeal in the protect ion of the interests of his Go
verement, wrote home ne soon as Mr
.Barlirg une
• was appointed, to give the Austrian Cabinet a his.
'tory of the new minister's political eats in oonneo•
tion with the quarrel between Italy and Austria
When Mr. Burlingame arrived, therefore, at
Paris, he was met by a request coming from the
Prince Metternioh, Austrian ambassador at Paris,
addressed through the- American lega.tion here,
that he would delay for a short time his arrival at
Vienna, in order that the way might be made olear
tor hie reception by the Emperor.
This request was made in the most kindly way,
.and with the view of rendering Mr. Barlingame's
reception and residence at the Austrian Court as
agreeable as possible. The polite manner in
whioh the request was made induced Mr. Bar
- ' . lingeme to consult his diplomatic colleagues then
•• at Parie—blessrs. Dayton, Marsh, Sanford, and
others—all -of whom advised him to respond to
this request in the spirit in which it was made.
Mr. Barlingame oonourred in this view' of hie
duty, sod welted a certain length of time in order
to see what course the Austrian Government was
going to adopt in regard to him ; when, at length,
growing impatient at the delay, he, a few days
ago, signified his intention of starting at once to
drmand his reception.
-Prince Metternich, having been Informed of
this by the American legation here, again pressed
upon Mr. Burlingame for a little longer delay,
reiterating the desire that Ma reception might be
rendered as acceptable as possible,
and hoping
that nothing should occur to disturb the good re•
lations now existing between the two countries.
But Mr. Burlingame, feeling that be had waited
quite as long a time as could be reasonably ex•
peoted of him, thought it due to his own dignity
and that of his Government not to wait any longer,
sod he accordingly left yesterday for Vienna. in
tending, however, to pass through Switzerland on
the route, and thus consume a week between Paris
and Vienna.
Mr. Burlingame very properly denies the right
of the Austrian Government to inquire' into hie
political sots antecedent to the date of his present
appointment; and while he would willingly joie
issue with them on that point. and stands ready to
demand, without a word of explanation, his resep
lion or rejection, yet be thonat it right to defer to
the polite request of the Prince Metternich, and
accord the necessary time for consideration. Be
has that satisfied every reasonable exigency, be
ha. avoided introducing any new complication.
and he can and will now demand his reception by
the Austrian court purely on the merits of the
case, without explanation or further concession of
any kind.
This is not the first time Mr. Burlingame has
•Man called to account for a fearless utterance of
liberal doctrines. When he stood up in the house
...of Representatives, and denounced the despotism.
•: of slavery, he was singled out by the chivalry as
:'s man to be made an example of, and was ohal.
longed 'to mortal combat ; but that time the chi
vairy found they had waked up the wrong man.
again, when he stands np In the same House
• ' and pleads the cause of struggling Italy against
despotic Austria ; when he asks, as an aot of jus
tice, that free America should give enoonrage•
meet to the noble of irta of the patriots of Italy,
he is met with the scowls and displeasure of
Austria.
Mr. Burlingame, however, will not be rejected ;
he; ban been careful, sines, hie appointment as
minister, to ormmit no sot that could be offensive
to . the Austrian Government, and he does not ad.
mit . their right to take exceptions to language
used in- debate in the counoils - of -his Country, prior
to that time, and on a question which did!. not di.
reedy concern Austria In introdnoing a - hUI for
elevating Sardinia to a higher rank in the diplo
matic wale, be was doing a palpable act of- justice
to that Power, and in its advocacy was only per
forming the ordinary duty of any legislator to his
country. But, if In the debate he epoke words of
harshness towards Austria, they applied to the re
tattoos between that Power and Italy, and should
.'not be made to set prrjadicially to the United
States, or to Mr. Butlicgame'e relations as repro.
tentative at the Court of Austria So far as re
gelds his own feelings and those of his Government
towards Austria, there is nothing to which the lat.
ter could take exception.
Under any oironmetances, Mr Burlingame will,
hchaps remain but a short time abroad. Ills
art is'in the great struggle for the preservation
of the Uaion, and he feels like moat men who have
been mixed tip in the events of the day, that his
placate at home in the ranks of the army.
In this connection it would be proper to state
that for the last year or two all American travel.
lets whom we have seen Concur in their testimony'
in favor of the superior politeness of Austrian till
olals over the officials of other parts of Germany.
The change fn this particalar is most remarkable,
.. and on account of the military precision, and yet
polite and regular administration of police regula
tions, Auatria has:become,at least for Englishmen
'and Americans, the most agreeable country to
travel in, on the continent.
A yociag French lady has just arrived in Paris
from Nashville, Tennessee, from which piece she
was driven by the Seceesionists. The lady. who is
a highly accomplished acid interest - ng person, hes
lived in NashvWe many years as teacher in Wee--
min/ay, and has not mingled in any way in the po
litics of a country to which she was a stranger.
Lately, however, in a letter to a lady acquaintance .
at New York, ;those name, on account of her hue
• band's petition, is a terror to beceetionists in ge
neral, she described in no very agreeable colors
the reldiers that were leaving for the army of Jeff.
Davis. This letter was opened in the Nashville
. post office, its contents were read and voted tree
son to the Commonwealth of Tennessee, and acorn.
mittee at once waited upon Mademoiselle C , and
gave her the usual twenty four hones' notice to quit
the State She is now in Paris, and. gives het
French acquaintanoes a not very brilliant account
of. Tennessee civilisation or Tennessee chivalry ;
and when one reflects that the oause of disunion
rtquires such measures as these for its gaiety, the
whole fabric of the Slave Confederacy mutt hang
upon a brittle thread indeed. _
The French Army under the New
Army Bill.
NAPOLEON'S SOLUTION OF A MONT IMPORTANT MI
LITARY PROBLSM—ROW TO KNEP SIX RUNDELZD
THODSAILD SOLDIERS OUT Or A POPULAT/ON OP
'MISTY MILLIONS, AND NOT - DERANGE MARC
PAOTURRS OR AGRICULTURE
c,From the London Army and fiairr Gazette.]
Onr Paris correspondence has kept us informed
of the various changes which have lately been
brought about in the Prenoh army_ To the casual
observer the augmentation of the forces in Prance
Is not very apparent The oontingent was formerly
80 000—it is now 100,000, and there the matter
ends. We think it our duty to expose, as cleirly
as possible, the new military constitution of our
neighbor and show all the strength Prance will
acquire in adopting the " projet de loi" with re•
!arenas to her army of reserve. Many war mi
piston, snob as Gonvion St Cyr and Marshal
Fo tit, tried to the problem of taking away
from agriculture and commerce a sufficient number
of men to form a second army without seriously
damaging the interests of the country,. They ar
rived, however, at no feasible prtject, and to thews
who rule to-day is due the credit of solving a d f 6.
Daley from which their predecessors tufted away
In despair.
ifranoe has now commeneed the formation of her
new army. General Allard, who brought in the
bill In the beginning of May, in laying it on the
table, told the Chamber that it had been discovered
that the old eystern (the system which sent out ar
mies to the Crimea and to Italy) did not respond
to the wants of the country. That, now that events
marched with such rapidity. it was necessary for
the safety and honor of the Empire that it should
maintain a minimum effective of 600 000. It was
to obtain this result that the Government proposed
the formation of the army of reserve, and the sanc
tion of the Chamber that the military force was
never to descend lower than a certain figure. It
was in vain that the opposition complained of the
drain upon the country, pointed out that the .Em
parer himself had declared for a non-intervention
polioy, and that Prance 'was at peace with her
neighbors. The Government carried the day;by
an immense majority.
It has been the practice for several years past
for Frame to call upon the population for 100,000
conscripts These were divided into two portions ;
the first portion was drafted into different regi
ments to take the pleoe of men who bad served
their time, or snob pert of their time as Government
might require; the second portion of the oontin-i
gent went on its way rejoicing, only to be called
up for service, in case of need. It is with this lat
ter 60 000 men a year that the Government ire
constituting a permanent army of reserve. These
men are to remain in the service MOTOR years The
first year they are to be nailed out for - three
,monAlis; the second year for two months,;; and the
thied year for ens month, and.after that ther,will
be only oalled for taspeotion'twioe a year,:unlinia
hostilities should break out • The second portion
of the oontiegent for 1859 have already beetroot
for thretamoottts' drill • so to six years' time; When
their term of service has eipired, and six more lots
of 60,000 have passed through the hands 'of the
drill eergeant, the army of reserve; minus its de
dentinal, will have reached the respectable flgure;of
350 000 men, all having received each an amount of
military instruction as will enable them either, to
become amalguaeted with or take theiplaoe of vs
sian battaLlons......l.;• ttt
The oonsoription list 11/10W11 an average of 300,009
young men, in their twentieth year. Now, if sub
year 100.000 are taken for the army, some to fill
up vacancies caused by various causes, and others
merely for the reserve, it results that in a given
number of years a third part of the able-bodied
population or France wilt either have served or b e
ritually serving as soldiers. In MOO the effective
of the army was officially, stated as 826,482, and
when Frame is not satisfied with this force, when
she says that it does not answer hot purposes, we
may well be forgiven for asking ourselves what
are her intentions.
In another column will be found a summary of
the debate to which we have alluded above. It
will be seen that not only have the Government
ratted the contingent, but they have also raised the
exoneration tax. General Allard says the con
tingent is raised partly on account of the increased
population ; yet, in speaking of the exoneration
tax, he says that labor is so imame .that farmers
make every possible swift° to keep their sons at
home, and that the augmentation of the tax has
not diminished the number of exonerations—a fact
which proves the flourishing condition of the coun
try. Franco, then, without colonies, and with an
inoreasing population, suffers' from a scarcity of
labor. The opposition may well doubt if France
will long stand this drain on her industry, and are
right in demanding, not an ideal, but a common
sense policy,
The army of Franoe on a war-footing was former
ly 700,000 men, and was not them diffioult of aug
mentation. Every year now this formidable force
Will be getting more formidable that age
of steel is attained when every third. able bodied
man will be At to fall into the ranks and handle a
bayonet.
GENERAL NEWS.
SINGULAR CASE or SAVING Ll7l.—At tho
foot of Jay street, New York, tin Tuesday forenoon.
the captain of a oanai barge was lying on the deck
of his vessel reading a newspaper, when be heard
a sudden plunge in the water. _He looked around,
and there beheld his little daughter straggling on
the surface. Her hoops haying been Inflated in
falling, she was
: prevented from sinking. Her
father at once sprang into the water, and no sooner
had he got hold of the objeot of his effort than he
salt something grasping, hie legs. This proved to
hi the infant child which the little girl had been
carrying about on deck when she overbalanced and
fell Patrolman Standish, of - the railroad and
steamboat squad, was on hand, and promptly as
sisted all three in getting ashore again .
A 10144.11 Y company, styled cc Chester
County - Grays," has jueC been formed in Parkes.
burg, Pa 'They were inspected on the sth inst.,
and attached to the First Brigade, Third Division,
P V. The election for• officers resulted as fol
lows for captain, Win B McCoy (formerly lieu
tenant of the First Regiment, First Division, of
Infantry, of Poiladelphia county) ; for first lieute
nant, Thomas H. Parke; second lieutenant, John
Armstrong.. The company Is composed principally
of young men in the 'vigor of health, and men of
oharaoter and principle, not mere holiday soldiers,
but those who rally to their country's rescue In
the dine of Its peril
•
HIGH LIFE.--15iadrid,th0 capital of Spain, is
the highest of the European esoltals; 22 000 people
dwell at the elevation of 22 000 feet, on a nak-d
detain plain, chilled by a biting breeze nine months
of the year; and are baked the remaining three. The
highest permanent re•ideeoe in Europe ie in the
pass of Santa Maria-9272 feet. In the Andes of
South America, where a tropieal temperature
prevails, . man dwells much more aloft than, in .
Europe: .Potosi, the highest city on the globe. on
the celebrated metalliferous mountain, is 13,350
feet Owe the Bea, and a poet-hone at Rumlltisue
Is 15 540 feet, whloh is but a trifle below the peek
of Mount Elan°, where mortal never staid more
than two hours.
Ona dates from Caracas, Venezuela, are to
Jane 15 There was some prospect of peace. Gen.
Parr and staff, accompanied by the Archbishop of
Caraose and an escort of five hundred men, pro
oeeded on a striotly peaoirenission to the valleys of
&rave, and held interviews with several chiefs of
the anti-Gdvernment faotione, or Federate, as they
are called there. A. temporary oessation of hostili
ties was promised until other chiefs in the eastern
provinces and their friends in Cnracoa could be
oomonnioated with, and the basis of a peace Con
vention established. So far the services of Gen
Nee have been those no other man could have
rendered to that distracted country.
M. GilatiAn, an Englishman recently re
turned horn the East, in a report to the Royal &d
-ado Society, gives an account of five ancient cities,
deserted ,and forgotten ' which have been discovered
in the Great Desert beyond the Jordan.' They
were found as perfect as if the inhabitants had jest
left them, the houses retaining their massive atone
doors.. In one of the cities ire large building like
a castle,•bnilt of white stone, beautifully cat. Far !
char eastward- other places were found, where
every stone had inscriVone in an nnknowncha
'rector, resembling Gres
A CHILD POlSoltED.—Eliza Sophia Fischer,
child about four Menthe old, was poisoned on
Senday last, in New York, by haying a morphine
powder administered to her - in mistake for other
medicine. The case was investigated by Coroner
&Wittier, when it• appeared in evidenoe that the
powders intended for deceased stood on a table
near the morphine powders, and the servant girl,
Mary Jets, being 'requested .to mix a powder for
the child, went to the wrong box and administers
some of the morphine. Deoeased died in a few
hours afterward The jary. was of opinion that
the powder was administered purely by mistake,
and rendered a verdict io that effect.
TO PB.EVENT FLUB FROM. TEAK: NO "lIORIMS.-
Take two or three small handfuls of walnut leaves,
upon which pour two or.three quarts of soft cold
water; let it initiate one night, and pour the whole
next morning into's kettle, and let it boil for, fif
teen minutes. When cold it will be lit for use. No
more is required than to wet a sponge, and' before
the horse goes out of the stable, let •those parts
which are most irritated be smeared over with the
liquor.
AN ANTI-TOBACCO organization is new form-
ing throughout France, and the men that' gtve
tone to society there belong to it, such as physi . .
clans, lawyers, aliment', aosaemioiaus, State court.
eillora—all resolved to wage unceasing warfare on
that enemy to the health and pocket of man—the
weed. If these reformers curtail its consumption,
the result will be speedily felt in the public reve.
nue, for the annual income' Item that source alone
comes very near $40.000,000. •
Pommum loieCasam.—The Roman Ca
tholic Sabbath Behool, of Taunton, had a picnic
on Thursday, at 'Myriokville; and quite a number
who ate lee oream have since shown symptoms like
those exhibited by perilous poiaoned with amanita.
One physician has visited ten of these pilferers in
one house. - They have all been taken with vomit
ing, and 'with many there has been a swelling of
the face such 118 would lAie likely •o reenit from the
action of arsenic —Fall River Near.
-IT is very well known that railroad eon
duotors, when the train stops at a station, seldom
call oat the name of the station, and when they do
they' rarely pronounce it so th at it can be under
stood To remedy this, on the Edinburgh and
Glasgow Railroad, at every station,' they, hare a
starling or parrot trained, so that, whenever a
train. stops, it commences calling out the name,
'and continues to scream it'out untilthe train starts,
BEAR-SILLRES•FOR THE SOUTHERN A.RMY.—
Capt : bioOtea, formerly of South Carolina, ie now
raising a force of two hundred men in the wilds of
Arkansas, for the purpose of j Aping Ban. fdoCul
looh's Rangers. One cf the conditions of their en
iistment is, that each recruit shall be a single man.
Another condition is, that no man shall be admit
ted • into the company who oannot prove, by disin
terested wirnespif,thathe has killed his bear with
his knife:: : • •
MartrwriE has discovered, in the reins of
Memphis, a list of etzty.three Egyptian Ringo, en
graved on limestone. The Paris Library and the
British Museum have einillar tables, but they are
not nearly so :complete as ibis, which is to be
plowed In the new 'mneettm in Egypt. This tablet,
it is supposed, will settle the eigyptian dynaatiee
of the ante-pyramidal period.
A W.asinistrropi letter writer states that Mr.'
Breokentfoge was observed to. turn. deadly pale'
when the galleries in the House of Representative/
resounded with applause for Mr. Grow's speeoh'on
the /fourth' The music of the Union must have
Ailed his disloyal heart with terror
RECEIV/E0 THEIR PAY.--MoBh .of the Sot.
diets in and about Baltimore have been paid off
they reoeivcd, their harl-oarned money in gold,
and, as a general thing, they forwarded their few
dollars to mothers and fathere,.to whom, in' these
dull times, the money will prove a_great bleating.-
Tee MILITAnY BOARD of Arkansas, in their
proclamation calling for ten thoueand men, say.
that cult company must arm itself with " the
tonal weapons of the country," (Aakaneas tooth
picks are the usual weapons in that fitate,) and
furnish its own tent/ and camp equipments. -
A °mammal' who mingled:with the rebel
Soldiers in their retreat from Booneville, Mo., Jaye
that the air was all alive with °urine on the In
competency and poltroonery of the Governor, and
on ..their own.: folly .in being.taken in by-such a
oowardly trickster. ,
FATAL ACCIDENT.—MIB2I Annie Millaway,
daughter of Mr. Joseph Mitlaway, of Kent county,
Delaware, about eighteen yearsof age, Was thrown
from a home, a few days ago, and was so seriously
injured that she died in three or four hours after
wards.
A LADY In Rochester sent a dress to a dyer,
with instructions to dye it same colors that would
not run. The patriotic dyer returned the dress
covered all over with the colors of the American
, .
Tax remainworTforttee Mann were taken to
Providenoe lastAppk p .and interred on Sunday in
the North blitzing ground. The services, con.
duoted by Rev: Dz..:Thdllt, tliiikra - Ate;jiiire strictly
private.
Ir is estimated that the tunnel through the
Alps, at Mount ,Cen Pus, will be completed in
ab nt six years. • The Madame cn the Italian aide
out rather more than eight feet per day to a width
of about ten feet.
5 . , ,4,TR10g Donal, st;ly s onng man; nineteen
years of age, died on Tuesday, at the New York
Hospital, from the effeote of a pietol•shot wound
in the aide, inflioted onthe . evening of the 4th in
stant, by Wm. Alty, s' lad.
Nor aware of tho blockade, Capt. Jdhneon,
of the German bark hilord, attempted, a few weeks
' 11130e,"fo enter Charleston, and' ',sallied into. This
so frightened. him-that he never recovered the
'ithisok,and'died a week after the Occurrence..
Euswoira's death was as much, deplored
in California as in the Eastern States. On receipt
of tke news at Baoramento, the Bags were placed
'at half-mast, aid the fire compan i es resolved to
wear a mourning badge for thirty days.
Gov. Bucznioulit, of Connecticut, started
for Wathington-on•Monday, to attend s meeting of
the Ezeootivoo of all the loyal !States, which will
be held these this week.
. .
11l
THD ekister, of a late date; states
that more than lour millions of specie has been
withdrawn from the city banks ,of Alabama, and
has been bitried. ' -"'
A- - -
Kari 'visa hung as a horse-thiAg at Helena,.
Arliarisas,-on --fiaturday,-30th-alt:- -Re and ivs
oompanions were traoked trid overtaken by blood-
Tag Virginia State Convention has passed
an sot Niyi,h_tg the oedete of . She Virginia _Military
Intitittife twenty idollerifikititoritti forioitruotiose
as drill masters at the camp of instruotion.
A COMPANY, with a capital of $50,000,
been 'estabitshed at Sitim r , Mits., for the mane.
facture of type-setting machines.
Tna Secessionists bave already taken fifty
one Mips, the value of wlttiott, wjy3 ()Amami, mast
be at least $3,001),000.'
Tam principal employment of rebel corn
, Milonden77Treating _and4 6
/ 66 4tl Vg• ~ { ,
_•
i 'IMO:4(AB - ' MC . Closaw, ibilifoi' of - the' 'Huron
((Meade) Ssgnal, died a few days since..
Tax nationi most qlependod npourtb7.: the
1 Ronk—its own Doterminotton.
OFFICIAL.
pRZ 6, O O7 ILS FOR ARMY BAWAGE CEPHAL PILLS
QUARTIIner Wsayautint Orirtezi
AsoToN. June 21. lael.
Proposals are invited for the furnishing of Army Bag
care Wagons
Proving., shrinid state the primer at which then oar, be . •
furnished at the plithesof manufacture, or at Pew York,
Philadelphia, Baltimore. Washington, or Cincinnati. •
alipreferred by the bidders.
The an mber which can be wide by any bidder within 't
one mouth alter receipt of the order. also the number
which he can deliver within one week.
The Wagons must exaa.ly conform to the following
speoifiettuors. and to the established petterna.
P ix-mum (covered! wagons, of the 146 and desarie
two as follows. to wit:
The front wheels to be those feet ten inches high,
hub. ten Inches in diameter, and fourteen end a gear-,
ter inches long ; hind wheels tour feet ten inch • e M. h.
hubs t en and a quarter inches in diameter, and teurtnett
and a quarter inches long ; tellies two and a half inches
wide and two •and three-quarter inches deept
eget iron pipe boxes twelve inches lout. two and a half
'oche' at the large end and one and seven-eighths inch
at small end the two anti a half inches wide b• five
eighths of an inch 'teat. fastened wi h one sores bolt
and ant In each faille ; hubs med.:of gum the spokes
and•fellie of the best white oat, free from defeete ; each
wheel to haves sand band and linchpin band two and
three-quarter inches wide, of No - 8 band iron, and two
driving hands—thuteide band one end a garter inch
by one quarter inch thee, inside band one inch hr
three-sixteenths ineh think; the hind wheels to be
mode and boxim so that they will measure from the in •
side of the the to the large end et the hox six and a half
inches, an'i front wheels wig and one-eighth tiohos in a
"parallel line. end each axle to be three feet eleven end
three-eighth inches from the onside of one shoulder
:washer to the outside of the o' her, en as to have the
;Wagons all to tooth five -feet from °entre to centre of
the wheels. Axletrees to be made of the best quality
'refined A merioan iron, two and a half inches square
at the sheulder. taper ng down to one and a half limb in
the middle, with a seven-eighths inch king-b tit hole in
.etch exletree; wath.m and linohpina for each axletree;
size of linchpins one inch wine. th-ee-eighths ofan roo k
think. with a hole in each end ; a wooden week tour and
;three-quarter inohes wide and fnurtnoties deep fee,
tened inibstanlially to the axletree entholips on the ends
s and with two bolts, mg wanes from the middle. and.
fastened to the boun ds and bolster, (the• bolster to be
four feet 'Eye Inches long, live ipohes wide. and
three and a half inches deep.) with tour half-inch
bolts.
• The tongue to be ten feet eight inehUs limit, four
inches wide, and three Inches thick at-front end of the
hounds, and two and a quarter inches vr,de by two and
three-quarter inches deep at the front end. and so Pr
ranged as to lift up, the front end of It to hang within
two feet of the ground when the wagon is standing at
rest on a level surface.
The front, hounds. to be six feet two 'inches long,
three ineheithiek. and four inehee wide over axletree,
and to rat inthat width-to the.banit end of the tongue;-
laws of the hounds ogie foot eight inches long and three
inches square at the trout end. with a crate of iron two
and a half mattes' wide by three menthe of an inch
'think, fastened on top of the hounds over the bank'end
of the torsos with one half-inch screw bolt in each
end, and a plats of iron of the same size turned up at
each' end one, and, a half inches too amp the -front
bounds together, and fastened on the under aide. end et
trout end of hounds ; with half inch screw bolt through
each hound, a seven-eighth' inch bolt through tongue
and hounds In the centre of pops Insecure the .thugne
in the hounds ; a plate of iron three inches wide. one
quarter inch thick and one-foot eight-inches lour,
secured on the inside ofinwe of hounds with two rive •••
and a plate of came dimensions on each side of the
tongue. where the wage's and hounds run together,
scoured in like manner; a etyma of seven -r h ths of an •
inch round iron to extend from under the front axle
tree. and take two bolts in fropt part. of the bow de;
'same home threw-quarters of en inch round to continue
to the back part of the honor's, end to be f.stened with
two bolus, one near the book end of the hounds. and
one through the ender and. hound.; a brace over front
bolster one and a half inch side. one-quarter of an ineb
think with a bolt in etch end to Naten it to the hounds;
the opening he•we.n the jaws of the hounds. to teceive
the tongue, four and tbre —quarter in hes to front, and
four and &half inches at - he byes pert of the jaws.
a he hind hounds four feet two mattes long, two and
three quarter inches th oh, ti.:d three inches...lde ; Jaws
one foot long where the. clasp 'the coupling pole ; the
oolsterlour feet fi ye' inohes long and five inches wide
b. three inches deep.• with steal y Iron two and n half
inches wide by 01.0 half inch think turned lip two and
-a-half inches and' fastened on • act) end with three
rivets; the bolster stooks and hounds tb be aseered with
four hal- screw bees, and one ha,f-inich sorew bolt
through the coupling pole.
The coupling pole nine feet eight inches long. three
inches deep• and four and a half inches wide at front
end, and ' two and three , cinarter inches wide at beak
I end ; distance from the centre of king bolt bole to tile
centre of the beak axletree six feet one inch and from
the centre of Iti• g bolt bole to the cootie of the mortice
in the hind ender the vole eight feet nine inane.; ' nig
bolt one and a quarter inehes diameter, of best refined
iron, drawn down to seven-eighths of an inoh where it
ceases through the glen ax etree iron plate six inches
long three inches wide, ant one-eighth of an inch thick
on the doubletree and tongue where they rub together;
iron plate one and a hall by one-quarter of an melt on
the slid ng bar, fastened at each end by.a s •rew bolt
through the hounds; rt-ont bolster to have plates above
and -below eleven mohes long. three and a half inches
wide. and three-eighths of an inch th air. corners
drawn' out and turned down on the aides of the
' bsliter. with a nail in each corner, and four coun
tersunk nails on top.. two bands on the hind hound,.
two and two and a half itches wide, of No. 1. band
, iron;'the rub plate on the ciouplingymle to be eight
inches long cite and three-quarters inches wide. and
- one quarter of an inch thick. Donbletree three feet
lest ten inches long. aingletree two hiet eigh inches
long, all well made of hickory, with an iron nag and
clip at each end; the centre clip to be well secured ; lead
bar and streteher to - be three feet two inches long, two
and a quarter inches wide, and one and a quarter inch
thick i ead ba s. etrercheni, and eingletiees for six
mule team; the two sineletrees for the iead mules to
have hooks in the middle to hook to the end of the fifth
the wheel and 'middle tints with open rings to
attanti them to the doubletree and lead bar..
The fifth ahem in be 'ten feet long to the fork; the
fork one: loot ten inches long, with the stretcher at
tached to spread the forks apart ; the links of th e don
'.bletree. stay and tongue chains. ihreethegothe of an
inch in diameter ; 'be forked' chain seven - sixteen th
inch in di meter ; the firth chain to he seven-text- enth
inch diameter to the fork ; the fork to be five-sixteenth
inch diameter ; the links of these and of the look chain'
to be vat more than two and a quarter ohms long
The body to be straight, three feet- six inches wide,
two feet deep , ten feet 1 ng at the b.tttom, and ten feet
six inches at the top; eloping equally at each end all in
the clear-or inside •, the *bed pieces:habit' two arc & half
inches w.de and three inches deep ; -front pieoes two
inches deep by twe and i t half inches wide; tall piece
two and n half inches w the and three - inches deep ; and
four tuella.* deep in the rivddl• to rest on the coupling
pole ; top rail one and a half thick lone and
seven•eightb inch wide •; lower rails one in n thick by
pea and seven eighth inch wide r three eta sand one
taglin trout, with a seat • on style lenges to close it up
-as high 'es the sides ; a box three feet fonrinotiee long
the bottom five Inches wide front side. nine and a half
inches deep• and eight and a half inch sat the top in
parallel line to the Doily all in the 'cigar to be sub
staptially fastened to the front end' of '
the body ,
to have en iron. strap passing round each end, se
, oured to the head piece and front rail by a rivet in
. each end of it' pumas through them, the lid' to be
fastened to the front rail with two rood et sphinges, a
strap of-five-eighth Iron around the box a calf, nab from
the tie edge; and two straps- same size on the lid.near
tee front , edge. to prevent the mules from eating the
boxes ; to have &joint 'hese fastened to the middle of
the lid, with a good wooden meet on the inside astral;
of iron on the centre of the box with a staple p axing
through It. to fasten the lid to: eight sou e and two
rails on each side ; one barer fastened to the 'body,
' six inches deep and tour inches wide at king belt hole;
iron rod in front and centre , of eleven sixteenths of a n
inch round iron. with a head on the top of rail and nut
on lower end; iron rod and brace behind with shoulders
.on toe of tail piece. and note on the under side. and a
nut on top of rail ; a gi ate two and a: half inehes wide.
lof No 10 nand iron- on tail piece. across the noey ; two
mortices in tail pier* and hued bar ewe
_and a qnarter
'adieu wide and one icon thick - to receive pieces three
feet four inches long, to be used -es harness tieaters;
four rivets tbrough each side rod. and - two rivets
tnroogh each front stud. to secure the lining boards. to
be of 'he best quality iron. and riveted on a good bar ;
One 'rivet through each end of the rails . ;_floor
fiseektshths of an inch oak board.' sloes five;;
retghtbe of an inch white rine, tail ward three-quar
tete of irked Mick; of White pine, to be well cleated
with live oak cleat, riveted at each end .through th e
'tail- board ; an iron plus . three feet eight inches long.
.two and a quarter imichea wiae. and three-eighths of an
inch think on the n der side of the bed piece, toextend
from the hind end of the body to.eight inches in front
of the hind Dolmens. to be faoteued , by toe rod at the
end of the body- by the Lateral rod and two three"
eighths of an mob screw bolts • one at the forward end
of the plate, and the other about emu-distant oetween
it end the lateral rod. . .A half. inch round tron.tod or
bolt to peas diagoeally through the rails, between the
two hind studs to and thtonett the bed pleae and plate
under it. with a good head on the top and nut and screw
et the bottom. to be at the top one foot six inches from
i .input
Uu ro l d. bo rPilo n n d o jta t ill i tt e b ar:nets in
w ches
f On o ti n
quarter of an inch think around • the .bed pieo-. the cen
tre Colt to whion be.• exit •ohetn . ie. attaohed passing
through it, to extend seven inches an the inside of the
body. the ends, top. and b :nom In be secured by two
three-s getha' inch screw bolts. the middle bar at the
ends to be flush 'with the bed pthoe on the lower side.
two look- chains secured to the centre bolt of the hod).
one end eleven inches, I he oteer two feet six inch- a long.
to be of thee - eight hs of an inch round non; feed
trcnih to be four feet six male s long from out to out.
the bottom sod ends of oak, the .idea of yellow pine,
to be eight inches wide at bottom, twelve inches *Act
at top. and eight and a half inches deep all in the clear,
well ironed,er th a band of hoop - iron - around the top,
one around. each end and three between the elide,
et-gong acd imitable irons to fasten' them on the tongue
when feeding ; good at sag chains to be atteithee to the
top ratio ) the body. secured by a ,staple with a hook to
attach tt to the trough. Six bows of good:-ash. two
• in , hes wide and one. half inch thick : .withthree staples
to confine the ridge sole to its ptegie ; 'wit authl.s on
the body. to ISOOLLIO each end of the b ; one ridge
polo twelve lest long, one and three-quarters Inoh:wide
by five-eighths of an inch thick ; thefoover to be of the
first: quality cotton dunk. Po. —. fifteen feet long and
roeul eight ) aches r
a gt 9 aTi d b'ens manner.
OMB end to (dose acct both ends;
t so rings on each run
°filth body ; to nose and secure the ends of the cover;
etapie •in .the lower mil, near the second rend from
each end, to fasten the 'side cords.- The outside of the
:body and feed trongn to have two. sand goats of white
lead, colored to a bine tint the inside 01 them to have
:two cents of venetian red petals the limn ng gear and
wheels to have two good 00611 of vignette', red darkened
ot atohooolate color; thathab arid fel-tea to be well
eitolied, instead of painted, if reqni d.
A- tar-pot, au -extra king bat, and two extra single
trees to be furnished with each wagon, the king ;bolt
and 'themes, laminar in all . respects to those belong
utitiNt'side of - the body of the wagon to be marked U.
8.. and numbered an direoted all otner p arts to be tit
tered U. N.; the cover. feed - box. bolte. ItnehpiricAtir-,
pot , and harness bearers for each wagon tone pet an
in a strong bo.g, (cooperee) and the contents marked
Itlerrem • : ' ' . • •
• • It: is for be distinctly understood that the wto gong Pow
to be so eonstruated that the eeveral•piirts of eipy:Oult
wagon w tt agree and ezahti, 5i those of any.oltieg. so
as to require no num , eriug or arranglng'forputtung
tether, and all theinzaienalabsed tneir oosstruetton
to be of toe' beat quality r ail the Wepti , thOretighly sea—
soned. and the-work to all its 'parte faithfully' executed
in Ole best workmantikermanner. • '
• The work :may be. Inepeoted from time to . time as it
progresses by an officer or agent of the Quartermaster's
.I)epartment. and tone of it • all be painted anti) it
shall have been lime/nod and apSyCived by said officer
or , asetitveuttiorised .- to inane-it' It. • W hen - finiehedi
painted. and mmep.ed by an officer. or agent. af the
Quartermaster's Depart] ant, and delivered as herein
agreed. they shall be paid for. M. C. MelQ_d.
2a-tf Quartermaster General U.
LEGAL.
LETTERS TESTAMENTARY TO THE
:ESTATE of JOHN Fr. WHEELER. :dedeased;
late (toner, Third and Lombard streets. having been
Granted to the undersigned. all persons Indebted to said .
Estate are requested to make payment, and all persons
baying clams are requested to Pr•sent then, to
CHA•RLYS WA N NU T
407 WALNUT Street. •
JOHN OASESIN.
313 ONION Street.
NORMAN B. WHEELKR, irho oontlnnee the Oro=
oary and
,T ea Burinato, southwoot corner °Ming])
and LOMA R.D .-treats, is duly autttonzed to Troerao
payment of uebtu due said Estate, and amounts molest
It may be left withlim.
Junef I. 11301. ' io6-mthLtt
Vti .0.11';.13106.T0N SOUTH, --DB
eF, -1.-• • ;'• • •
toOTICe. hereby.given, that letters Of adminlstra-,
tion on the estate of BliaTON NMtTd. law of, the
city of Philadelphia, dense/ed. have been granted to
the undersigned • all persons: therefore; haying chime
or demands against the said estate. are requested to
mese them known to the administrator without delay.
P. FXAZER.BlldlTllAdrninistrat or, A,
Je73-thBt • . West Chester, Pa.
E STATE OF SAMUEL. A. hPARKEq:
Letters testarnentmy o. t. a; to this. estate bave.beep
granted br the Register of W ills to the undersigned.'
All homes indebted to or having claims .agaisst, said '
estate, will present the b eri . 41 , 06(1 . 615X
S. T. A.,
lie. 709 . 9raLlila Street.
iese-th 6t
ESTATE OF GEORGE BARTON. - de
oessed.—Letteni Testamentary upon the Estate of
Or 08 t 1 BARTON. deceased. having hewn 'granted
by the Register of Wills to the undersigned, all persons
indebted thereto will please make p •yment, and those
having olaims or demands against the said Estate are
requested to make known the same. withoutdelay, to
MARY M Be itTOry,
111. a ROUTE' Street,
Or to.ber Attorney, / EDWD: "LESLEY .
jr4 thet7 . • . '9I9Boutb•FOUR.III.
• . . .
IN THR • ORPHANS' 00IIRT OF VAN&
TER COU
'Estate of JANE. PAWBOI4. late of the .township.ot.
&Witt:airy. in the nonntiOf Chester; and dints o 1 Etta&r:.
folsattia 'dated - • • •
Le hereby giNien .6 all persons interested 'in'
the Estate of the JAf4 WAVVeitirg; dee'd:'• and
atso in the Estate of MAROAREr . It&WSLIN, sister'
0• the said Jtite: at d of the same township. dated. Urit
the undersigned bhs peen appointed by es.d i'enrt An
'ditttr to report glen bluff)* of the b man oe ion) In the
hones of MARIS- BUNFORti, Executor, &0., of 7 usid
Jszt E DAWSON, dated CI and •am,tngst the parties
entitled to the same, and that he will Meet the mud par
ties at hie in the borough of West Chester, and
°minty , itforeset d, oo the twelfth day of JULY, A. D.'
1861, at 10 o'clock A. M. P •
Js •
.•• Eilita ER' S.MITCI,
. 01 ; V. & iv 4.11 . . Auditor.
COTTON ISALL, Li°di: and °Arafat,
of ail ambits and biazds. . .
Pals Rack Awnitts wwillg i fif all 4osarirtioni• fda
ireAls: InurW'ruzurs. an 4 wcisoiapcyroxii:li"
, tiost st P lirin,.. l tar 2 r
n l iti it g.. 11 1. 1t•
-.- - 7 -- - 301 . 11 ( ""
W. .EVI3EIOIIII .k. CO..
i£m Mgr , --. '-' '' ' - • /034011eg'iSer. .
e •kavico e' "hit,
2.: 476I:44a;"4II rAMVAra c ,VAIMIY7I, 4 "
10709 ficratllFYOßriauest.
THE I PRlthil-Pitha l ablEUlTEA; tithISDAY, JULY 1 1.9. tale
NERVOUS HEADACHE.
• By tle use of thew mut the periodical Attlee. of Net , :
eort er Site Hisdases may be presented ; and if token
at the oommenoement of an attack immediate relief
from pain and sickness will be obtained.
21zoty seldom faillin removint the lYssissis slut Hill&
pais to which females are *0 eubleot. ,
They ant gently on the bowels. removing C•sttessiess,
For Literary Me*, Srstisars, Delicate Females, and
all persons of sedentary habits, they are valuable as ■
Laxative, improving the appetite, giving remind vigor
to the digests. organs, end restoring the natural els.-
(lofty and strength of the wnole system.
The 01SPHAIde NW! are the result of long Investi
gation and carefully onnduoted experiments, having
oven in use marl! ream, detlng whioh 11M 19 theY have
prevented and relieved a vast amount of pain and
suffering from Headache, whether originating In tee
surveys, system or from a deranged stets of tke sr.•.
They are entirely vegetable in their aoMPotitiOn, ant
Mir be taken at all:tames with perfect safetiiritheet
nuking any chance of diet, mid lA. absimes co , fosy etiso_
trtiabis wit roster: it tatty to aihtitststar tarn to
. , .. • .
?k. genuine lave Ire eignataree of loam Q. spalAils
in each Box.
Soli bi Druggists end slbother Donlon in Malleindli
A Bin rnU , bS Mt by. intfi r oollol . lll4 Sin rinaiii N till
AU anion skald w a.ddsamsel
E1 . EN1417 0. BPAIk IMM:4.
ORIPE3AL.IC3'
Waip I . loAVntal I,mi WZO nyrim FlOll
wrrunct
AND BUBB 'Citir
spEEDIr
TaIUZ
4$ taut Trirtisaantais ars rataliettut by Mr. 0/11.1b
thav Alford rutqaurionable proof 'al tilyColt• .
114 y V' this truly, srinitiAt dittrosry,
Conn., Feb. g, IDIEL
hls.ll-aimptes. . . •
I hare tifit'ioar'elephalie and I like thew se
well that I wantyoliteland me two dollars worth more,
Part of these swe or the neighbors, to whom I gave $
few of the first hoz got from you.
feud the rills by mail, arid oblige
Your ob't Earreht;
JAhl.Ei KENNEDY.
iimastief:
•
A5.T41=411=7:::41:1,T be= or Yr% °et=
_::.• .. , 7*.xenviraerfulA.r!TA 13701LIOVBS.
. ... • _ _ -
171101 CrIIIit.XYWIMISDOII 001117, ra.,l
..nunsary 11,11 NIL s
grALDINd.
leo will ileums send me two boxes it yostl triwikalls
Pm". Ilene tkent initnedigtoly.
-- y
14.oznisCady owns
nto.7
7.11.—1 AIMS 764“1/114i 01111 bll/1 8,/ Wkig /Asir
tugs tosstinst. •
BALL3I VsAnon, Oluo, Jan. 113,1 1.
6141.1:111(11, Esq. ' .
reams find meowed twenty- fi ve emits, (or which mini
vai smother Do* of MIT Cephaho :View art truly
the lestl'ins I Axes tett' trial. • • '
• Direst A. ;STOVES., P. 1.,
Belle Vernon. Wyandet
BIVIRLY, Mass., Do.. la. INCI.
O,IIp4LIDIIIO,
I Wish.for some eavoulars or lerge show bills, to bring
your Oephaho Pills more particularly toefore myosin
tamers. If TOY have anything of the kind please send
mOne. .
e of my monomers. who is =admit. to severe Rick
Boasludo. (usually lasting two day.,) wen cured of
altos/ is 111114 Sour by pour Pills, which I sent
iesveotraliT Taira, • •• .
- • W. B. 1n5X316.•
T C. SPALDIXO,
1 . 112 / 4 0. 48 Cedar at__,. N. Y.
D
. . 1.1.1 t ant:
Lnelosed find
. twe,nbr-fi t ve mint", 38, - ) for trkielt sent
box 9f " Geenano rill,. Bend to address, of Key. Wyo.
C. Fil ler Aerneld•bnix. Franklin Co..._Ohio.
Your Pill is len* Nee *charm—cure Hoadaerhe iiisest
instaistey. - ' : i
- - • *rely loin, . 1 , •
wat.a.nimiti
•
illllOlll e. •
AIMMau 1 sent to you for a box of Ce_phalte Pills .
for the ewe o fthe Herron' Headache and ittveness.
.andresetved the same, and they had se reed on edit
:W i re Abstresit to send for sters. - • •
send by return mad. DIA.WHEEL reet to • •
• 46
Youilaatl, KM.
Yrssis gh4 If erf,olk. rd,
Sipkills Fills sactomplisk obloot for.witsk tlis7
vire made, six.: Cure of tiseslaoho in all its foram
Prom the EXIIIPVLOUT.
.
Wirer have been tested in more than a Oman! easeei
with entire snooeee.
ifotw taa Dortecrat, 5t.,07,314, Mims,
If • -
yottaa;.ot have bean troubled with the headache
, 11 4 11 d ftfritAeXt-' (Cephalic .oth at , yoi =my haloth ra Uroll4o o f an attack.
~94 , ,Ne.:7:11, 11 , e et rite Adetrtitt , Previdest4, it. ;
Cephalio Pills are said to be a remarkably sires-
Yee remedy for.tho headnalts, and one of the very beat
arrtbst very frequent oomnlaint whiok has ever been.
WOW to Wasting 'R. R. Gsgretta, Miter', IV, -
We heartily endorse Mr. Spalding, sad kis
Iliptislio Pills. -
Prim rat %mamas Tit Mil Star, Kanawha, P.
We are wire that perliOtt =flaring with the ►aadswhy
who try them, will stick to them.
Ikon% ski Smarr% Pate Roddy. New Orleans, Ls.
Try them ! you that are afflicted. and we are sure that
your testimony me be added to the already namerou
hat that has twelve benefits that nO other mediates
san produos.
/Voile As .S - GL•mienewesetat.
The immense demend for the' *allele (Cephalic FUJI
Is rapidly moreesillt.
/rens Ski Gault*, Deeming, Ines. •
Mr. Ilyalding world not Gourmet nix name witk an ar
Lola he did not bow" to omega real merit.
' lcress the Advertiser, Previdesee, a.l.
The testimony in their favor is litmus, trots tkii nes
tospeotable quarters. "' ' •
*rot th 4 Daily Naos, Notopert, A.l.
MN sre takint the r of adl
"rem lea Itoetourcial l!olUttos. SNIM, ju,.
MIN M be vary ellorboloat for the headache,
hineg the Cenisifterelal Ofisrlitsatt. 0
gown' kumentt7 can now be rebeweiL
11.".11111149 14ttis ai arAhmutol 191EITAW
will save Urn tines tilt... • :MI
sAvz MOS PIECEII:
LC0110MY: •- - DISPAYCJI , •
ST" A IN Ytact EILVZIi ;
Ja Bootee:its trill happen, even la well-redniated
facilites, it is very desirable to have Pores *heap and
convenient was for reeeinng Feernitere;Toys, Crocke
ry, 13 •
EpALDING'II PR.EPLRE.D OLITE
_
mee t" ou NU h me! 'opiates, aid 'no .aonaehold sari
afford to do without alwors ready, and ot, to
the atraktax Wind . •
:,. arBEFL64.If4.EITICAT aaa HOWSE."
-• X. 11.—A. Briaith seoemeatityra h'bettle. ,P*s
, . Addreaa, •
r?pppiplf:
seVEDAA ETIEEIf, NEW MLA.
cAllylo/1.
As sertain inennoleled-.1400a1l are attempting ti
palm off on the awasPlNlthfeblie , imitatiora of 191
PRZFAILIED . GL NE. I ileopfteielipea eolsone ex- .
amine, before naisibegluirsjorteme W the MI new.,
- 117.041:114111-7'bUfAilailltb4M, , Bit ;
is as Oh Muds wrimpOr i aD 'Wm are inriAdLIAL
esuraCkali 2,11-12
ieDI~IIf~►L;
SICK HEADACHE.
0178.3 ALL HINDS OP
HEADACHE I
aiiITARE Of 001TDITNETZITH
3@RIOE„,-W5 OEPTTk.
45 USDA/ IVRNET. NNW YOD.IL
TIE FOILLOWIN
. 4 11 ENDOXIZMEiris OF
[_ta.~w'i~is(CsrZ
HEADAOME,
TRA c •
WAYXI7OII. Pi.. Fol. I,
t=nwssutaa, Pluvrzart Go., OhIli.;
Jantary 1, IMI.
Trarsairri Max., Jai. 11, 111111.
SPALDING'S ?PAPA/USD OLLIE t
BPMXII(G'S Mar/01ED, ,GLITS I
SPALDING'S PREPARED. iLuz I.
lIIOURANCE CONIPAIMIIB.
T4E BLELLALNOE
MUTUAL INWOI 00111PARI,
ow •lIILADZLTIQL.
onneE, N.. Dss WALNUT
Rings against 1.058 . OR DAMAGE BY PIIII3. ea
• , Remiss, Stores, and other buildings, lissitsd
er p erpetual and and on Furniture.
woodii, WEITel > and Mar
s andise. in r7 town or
01/le.
•Azi ciirotk. Am o mo o0 —
.& 'fl son,i4o M. Is invested as follows, vis:
In first mortgages on elt7 property. wortk
double the amount.—.;. 'lama 00
Pennsylvania Railroad Co.'s 0 per °ant first
mortgage loan, at par— -- 5,00 00
Pennsylvania Railroad Co.'s 6 por pont. se
cond mortgage toed, (180.0001.--.. ' ' tr,soo 00
Huntingdon and Broad Top Railroad and
Canal Co.'s mortgage loan— --4,000 00
Oround rent, fait-olass— _ —_ " 2,461 DO
it:linters! loans Well Bemired— • 2,000 00
J of Philadeephla 6 per oent. loan—,—. 80,000 00
llegheny County 0 per cent. Pa. JUL loan— 10,000 OD
mmarnal Bout Moak— —.— .—.. 0,130 01
eetutnits' Rank stook— 2,811 60
Pennsylvania
8 411.7:11 i iiTgrIZAinmrz 01123 Po
tine County Fire .Inerarance Co.'s stook— 1,050 00
iDa Delaware M. B.'lnsuranoe Co.'s stook— 700 00
DICIp Mutual iIISILIIIII6II CO.'s amigo-- 600 00
ills reoeivable— . 14.500 ft
k accounts, aoorued interest. &o—.—. 7,104 55
Cask on hand— —.—..--,--_. 11,844 81
ta1.7.143 04
Mutua tm l PrhiciPle, combined with the seourity of
%swot Capi, entitles the infrared to rartimpate In
the pycfits of the Company, without liability for locus.
tosses promptly adjusted and paid.
DIILLCTOEN:
1
them liiigler, Simnel Bisphaisi ..
William R. Thompson, Robert Steen ,
Frederick Drown, ' William Munger.
William Scavenger., Beni. W. Tingley.
Jobs R. Worrell, 'Ma h all Hill,
6. L. Carson , J. Johrtztnerown,
Robert Toland , Charles land.
6. D. Roxiiagarten, Jacob T. ton,
Mimics a. Wood, - Smith Dcrwen i
James 8. Woodward, ' Jolirt Bissell. ritigitontg,
OLE TINGLEY, firese4ent.
B. M. lllNCHalitlf. Secretary. • . .• - -
Febrcarr 16. IBM
THE EII)72IEPEDEi r B
IDlStrnatitiOkT. - CIODIPANV
OP - .FRAILDAILPEA.
(FIRE rannitArtimemarclVELY.l.
fOMPANT'SBWILD.IIYEI, S. W. 60.8.N;5l
YOURTEI AND WALNUT STREETS.
DIJLECTO 11t13:
F. ZATCII7O2I3 /STASI. MOILDICAI DA.3761 , 301•
WILLIAM McKim, 1910. H. 821FAII7f.
SALIIRO.PIAZIIII. 9 JOHN BROWN*
Jowl RWOOD. , •B. A. FAltitgivroai, • •
Ehm7. T. RDICL, Artun_*w D. CAIIK. •
EINUT WICCH.TrIN. J. L. trumoss,
dent.
ONAXLNIS S W I ! . C RA OX.F. 7° . " I3egerr• ARL
Pr"' lull .
Ip.ENN DiTITUAL LIB'S 115810119.N0N
DOMPANY
. • Ito. 1121.04FSTNEY Street, Philadelphia. .
ZR rAL.
ALI. ERE PROFITS DIVIDED AMODIO *RE IN
SURED.
Insure Urea for short terms or' for the whole term of
Life; grant luinuities and Endowments; purohase Life
Interests in heal Estate, and make all coatroom de
pending on the oontinrenoleo of life.
They sot as Executors, Administrators. Asaigneox.
Tristeee,and Guardians.
. ASSETS OF THE COMPANY, Januars L DEL
Mortgagee, ground rents, real estate— • 8M11,901
United sta l es stook,. Treemuy notes, loans
of State of Pennsylvania, oity of Phila
delphia, ego—... • .- 208,795 St
Premium notes, loin. on collateral", - ISTPI
reonsylyania. North Pennsylvania Rail- . •
roads. and County stx per cent. bonds 106,802 50
Bank, insurance, railroad, canal 'toots, !to. 97,647
Cash on hand. agents'. balances, are.__ 38,306 14
31.71128
p4I.3rEL MTLLER,fretngen'
JOE W. HOirfiroP. E. BTQICI2I. Viol) .eraindenl"
Secretary. nsh22-tr
IRMA W AKE MUTUAL faISTY IN.
eintkricis cOmpA.NY. PHILADELPHIA.
bteerperete4 by the Legtalataro of renneytvatio.l6ll.
Who 111. E. swim of THIRD end :WOUlNfifAlio•th
PHILADELPHIA. ' .
v IKE LIIIVILAXOIe.
Oa
Cargo, - Tian earls of the Went
• - Jrl ' -
I BAND 1205iiti.3(CMi
Os Onto ItiYere, Canals, ~Lakaa__, Ant Last ear
nage,. to all 'parts or the roma.
FILE .Irtarle.R.AlltOElS
ti Ketekanties generally. On (Swes. Dacus),
AZIE7IS OF THIS OORIPAII
November 1, NM.
81011400 Vatted States five tv cent. lawk--. lOugrai GO
111,090 Waited States six IF cent/hoses-TY
Plates, ( with acoraed• interest ) — • 112,136 13-1
160.000 Pennsylvania State Sys Cr send,
MAIO IM
11,000 • do. do. SiX • do. do. 91.446 00
MON rhiladelskia Olty i si m xeent. Lean. IM,Sta
10.000 Tennessee State five cent. loan— 24,000 00
60,000 P Wawa Rai 3d mutters
• Mx oemit. bonds 434100 OD
11,000100 shares. stook. Gertosotovro Gas
Company', intermit and ktinoixal
aranteed hr the City of MM.-
isxto
Coo 100 arts Pennsylvania .Itaih-oad
Company_ 1400 00
1,000 100 shards north Pennsylvania
road Company SOO 00
1,3r0 W shares Philadelphia Ise Boat aid
Steam Ts; CopmpnY
lOS I shares Philadelphia and Havre-do-
1,100 00
time /Steam To boat 001011214113% no 00
100 2 shares Philadelphia Exchange
Cmpany In
1,003 9 shares Continentalotel H SO) 0 00 0
BMX, par. Cost 0243.235.114. Market vai.8104.3116 71
Bills nameable, for Insurances made 171.206 tl
Beads and 04,600 00-
Leal estate....-- ' SLEW U
Balanoao doe at .Agenoice—Premisrair on Ma-
rine Policies. interest. and other debts /as
Sap Company ' ELM C 2
Mena rml 'tusk of sentry Inmaranee and
ether Veassaniee 14101 00
Weak ea haze—in basks .428,071 21
le eraver— 486 DI
=JOB 11
D'IJirECV/7/.2.
WILILext Sikytiae ldtvar n, e •• - • Mittel t;Calcalt•
Tk Piautz.44, eegitilts P solidr, • .F. Po R.
Renzi Sloan,
John N. Penrome. Biward, Qarlimstea.
John O. Thng, • Al. Jer.esßreekr..,
Jute" Traqueir. flpenoer Mei:reins,
William Eyre, ' Titeraaa O. Rand,
lases O. Rani, Vobsrlßerren. -
1 7filtieze logOwig. Jasob F Imre,
jegagh N. nue, Ja.zoa M•Farhind.,
JOT. A. X. Wesien, ' Jodie* F. Byre,
EHrorro O. Miner, Jahn Jl. Bereele, FittetOg.
Rest Orals . . Nor can,
ekarian Kiktlir , • ' L. B. Berger,
• WilkilAM 2.I.ekTLIY, President.
TROff. G. NAND. Woe Preaident t
AMWAY I.lrlßilgri. nooretaro. n0174/
. .
INEIIINANOE EXCLUSIVELY.—
riVE PErrnismvANlA FIRE - IBIBUBANCE
NOMPANY—oorsicrated -UM—CHARTER PERPF.-
T1111.1,—No; 610 WATAiry trtet, oSPositeindoPolle,
This. Company, favorably known to the oommuniel : .
for thirty - six years, continues to msnre twainst toss or
damage by Fire c on tblio or omega littlkhys. either
immanently or for a milled time. ..Also. on nrnltare,
'amok* of Goods or rohandtse. generally , on liberal
'heir Capital, together 'with' a tarsi Elnrples Fund is
invested In the meat <waren& manner, which enables
than to offer to. We innred an undeibted security
;the east) of loss.
- • irLIMSOIII. •
Isaac lmaathein Patterson,Haslehurst, ,
— ..ttiuntin•Caparbell, Thomas Robin!,
Alexander Benson, : 10eauel dinith,
• • •Wllllant./donnas John Bovorevx,
JONAT aIQ PATYE!WON, President.
WiLLl.tat G. Cnoww.x.;Bearetarri..
, •
- Ili 8 - Cr RA N 0 WOO 31",A.1\11 OF THE
..A- STATE OF pErniSYLVABLIRE 'AISD 411 -
ler y~.‘11,4151-EANCE—likek-S—AXD•:‘,ILIORSJIIIZ
Arirtered in 1114-oanital slin,Soo-Lfsbil; isi, intik
... ei saisms 77.
, "-A invistag in count and avallabls, aiicartnea—an-
Dna. •to Inman an Veatale ant Cavcoos, llaildinks t ,
Iltsoka of Aterekandts• &c. on beral tondo. -
• .
...,. 9.6l)idtfo
bc•ry D....,. morrand. '' • -*aerie D. Staani • '
can Vein', -. ' 2 Zawcal Grant, Jr., • •
ries Maaalester, . Weblaa 39raz_npr e
William ,S. Eisilk, , ... Wkonuus B. Wattcon.. ,
• JrAuj D. Xadd, ,• ,' A wry c - Irt.enzaa, -
'William -L.' - WAS/. , . •Ckarlaa 11. .h.scrLv.. . ~..•
Our a. Damon,
11 •
7.211.. -D. XNERS.SXD: l'reziicit.
1 1 PIALIAM. It.A.R.rd. Weere*r.'_ . td-tf
•WIRS iIiSURABOM.-4;KINOLIANWS'.
_ .
f/4881t4PICE COMPANY or Pialadelebik,
138 'North SIXTIUStreet, below Raoe.:Unrare Build
ings liooda, and - I”prohandise senentlly - frorn , leei er
damage by Fire.: The eomPanY guarantee to ad.ntet
lowa promptly, ant %Sterol:7 kola to merit tk• patren
age if the public . „
•• Pr-anapest!:
"Email= Kerma, lobar* Flantnan,
C*Vrer• " - Atiohael alotieoy,
rceji. Donglutity. -.Edward MaGlovern
Jams* Marian, . Thomas B. MsCornibolt.
Samos Darem, . Jonn-liremley, •
Matthew 111pAlser, Franous:Falla,
Bernard 'itaUertie John Caata,t,
Thomas. Remptall. • • . Bernard R. Elnloopear.:
Thomas . Mark* Clare,
FrantisDtetlianne ' • •11110hael CaluU, • '
• • • F t ACIB C00Y1213, !random.'
REJLIIAXB RAFF . gooretarT.. , -.
oanD-1y
A4IkIERIOAN FLEE 'NM:Li:NIUE:CO:,
- INCOIPORATED
No. 310 A 1, 2 11117 Street, above Third, Philadelphia,
May= a large paid-ap Capital Otook and Sunday,
tem anted in sound and available IleenritiesLoorainces to
wawa or. Dwellings Stores, Pernitare, Merobandise,
'Vessels in port 'and' their oarcosa; and other personal
imperty. aillosses liberally and promptly adjusted..
niszevose.
Taos, B. Maria, • John 7. - I.,etrot
John Weis ,h • lames B. Cantibeil.
Ismael c. Morton, Edmund o_, Du
- Pasnek Brady, ' Chaa..W. Poultney.'
.• . • , lirset Morris. -
THOMAS-IL MMUS, Preindent.j
ahnIULT C. B. CRAWFORD:Secretary.- • fen-t 1
A NTHEACITZ-: INBITBA.NOB- 41XMLPA.- .
.43k . Ny.-=katkoritiil CANA& giOO,9O.43IICAZTEI
-. ,
2.KR_PETIFAJ,,_
'llirei Intwimis Mitzi
Oil oe RD. 111 WALLOWS I, mg.
Fronk Atreet, Phillkileirtilli; - .. .. .
Itkix Ovaitiqty will twin am= losi S r ' daintli by
Flre, en ,Suing I,P 80 Mirllandiiie (MIA ,
,1 . en - Vestels4.llsnrfga' , aml
Flingl iii h, all'
j r4tr 4t . Oka y/Ju an.
- ' ,-;• ''' --,-
' rNo piiii•r: : ... . ..: _ limit iiiiiiicia.
i&mittker, L • hal m etahars. ,
J. Alidenriot, , Salty K. .1313.1witirit. -
VII ?earwax, ' Wm. F. Than,
star Inner.. .-_ . - - . 2 _ , - ,-, 4. ,
- - le r to.. F.S7IA H T, ifs:ldeal,
• , ...., ' 111.Y.DILUI. Tioa Prodigal,
W. M. SWUM leirstary. ~ . as.B-t1
VAOHANGE INERJR.A.NOS 00ZdPANY
—040•Ile. 409 WALNUT Street.
pniz• E145113..A.NCE on - Houses and Merchandise
lis - sinilly. 'on 'favorable tenon. sinker Nraikri sr set
aißon%
me
"* •trQeinnoe, Th arles : Tr u w sk s . •
VI•
and ja. Itoberts, ' ' /antes 1:1141e,
mimed L. redlon "JOitirtft 7. Owen,
Isiben C. in
Griffiths;
• ri
•••JoiMlN ß lica:4liieh'
slingkin ows. . • •••.,
pIiT.LAD.ELPRIA T. RRA -0 0 T
WOR_SS 4
o n,. an d *are jtoonis,lo I 0 SlibidTri lIT , ~
Ornamental Oluroney Tope. • ,
• Giardini Varies and &steam
. • Eno/made Flooring
Arehlteetnrai Qrnatuentsr,
Ventilating arid Smoke Flee..
!ridge Tile and Sanitary Wan
/team-pressed Drain Pipe,
Winter ripe, warranted to atant
' * pressure,oheap rind durable.
Trade supplied on liberal terms._
il i lastrataa Catalogues sent by
ail en apellegglent brlatta i li z i t
IMO",
01.111 914. WOW liAro.t.
.
AOKIMIEW'
LTA_ Kopf. tr. 4.-14100 bbisidloan rdonaglitalladak•
Grsi, large. median. and mall, in mono" pooksees"
of choice Tate-aaagai fat bob.
,Loon biol.. New HAUL:. nduitiort. aaA latirndogXeg-'
E n holoe qualities. - • •
•
en tratin new noaled Earring*.
bo ea only argi& new No.l Herring
• ,
'LW F i lie4 Magwletatf i riara. ; , „ •
• • 59 Mtn. nsw I' EC,1 11"1
)nomy Maas 1564.
' X bbln. new Halifax Salmon. • • • . •
„IMO Qainbla Grand Bank CkNiflak. .„„ .
Goo banes orlamork4anty Obooso.
In dare Had acting, for Ws by_
11111/..PH_Y_kIrOONII
one f107146. 0 mRT1.1 .yl[ll,olll vige.
Tun RAO . XIV*/
from Livnipoot, jgazdsr. Wesv•i;
prePlirktioni
NI ratrantt 14 Tara, jsrup
z is Extract yonoyami, in 1 r 49.
-59 Extract Iladonnat, WI a Jars., :•,'
larpla Ontnai Tan:magi, tri 1 sh Jars,
50 In %Ri Ookttuol
jogi Sig Enogi: to . t" In 1 . , Wm's.
NO im Po • •
MiTdrlWL.ll2.atiirid, aC . BRoTitEIt; •
400 tit?' sad 49 North SECOND atreat.
1318T , QUALII;T: , R000q,ffi4T:jlag
B VT 69III ZAMFT icrose:4lsl
RAILROAD LINER
IP/ PHILAVELPHIA
AND RE c Ni lta lßSO RAILROA.P.
rii:1810161 Ft TRAINS for P
M LR,M READ
-o_, rugl DIANRISGUAG, on and a r ay26, 1561:
VIANING Lir ES, DAILY., ilikindaya exoepted,L -
LenTe New Depot, corner gi BROAD and CALLOW
RILL Eltreets, , PELLA') FRIA, (Passenger en
trances on Thirteenth and on Callowhill /treate at 8
A.M. connecting at ffezriaburg with the PENN'rYL
VAN A RAI Llit/ A D I r.trami t _running to rats
brag the.COM BERLAND VALLEY 1.061'. M. train
running to Charnbersburg, Carlisle, and the
NORTHERN CENTRAL' RAILROAD 1 P. M. train
ruining to Sunbury, Re.
AFTERNOON LINE&
Leave New Depot corner of BRO AD and CALLOW
DILL Streets. PHILADELPHIA. (Passenger en
tr"o4B on Thirteenth. and on Callowhill streets.) for
POTTSVILLE and . . HA RRIBBURG, at Al.B P. M..
11AILY,connecting-at Harrusb with the Northern
entral Radrond for 81200111-9 Elmira,
for READI I4 G only, at 6 1 1 . M.. DAILY, (Sunders
excepted.'
DISTANCES VIA FRILADELPRI.A. AND READ
, INO RAILROAD.
PAOIe Pal Linxtrutx.
To Phocnixville—.— 215
Read ing---, —69 Philadelphia and Reading
Lebanon—.— - 66 and Lebanon . Valley R. R.
Harrisburg— 112
Dauphin—. --IN
Al,llerebu
Troverton .I . uncitionla3
•Northamberland..-17t
Milton -..-
DILIETY
WrhatonpOlt -.208
Jersey
•
Williamsport and Elmira
Elmira-- 167 Railroad.
The 8 A. M. and LIS P. M. trains connect ditily__t Port
wfttn,slAr ß e s p . x:efi t teklath the CATA.4 I ISSA..
close connections with ' lines to Magillin-1;g, waging
theLWeat and Fouthwest.
IIE POT IN PHILADELPHIA: Corner of BROAD
and CALLOWRILL Streets:
• • W. IL MoILRENNEY. Secretary.
Mar U. 1261. mr3o-tf
ligiggswag SUMMER ARRANGE
-IIN - Pill I , ADF.LPHIA.
GERMANTOWN, AND NORRISTOWN RAILROAD.
On and alter Monday, May 13, 186 L
• FOR .GERMANTOWN.
Leave Philadelphia 6,7, 8,9, 10, 11, 11 A. M., 1,1, 3.
8.86.4, 9.6, 6E., 7,8, 9, 10 M, and 1134 P. M.
• Leave Germantown, 6, 734. 8, 8 10, 9, 10.11, 12 A. M..
1, 3,3, 4.6, 6, Mi, 73.68, 9, 1034 P. M.
The 8.10 A. M. and 8 . 2{6 P. M. Train' atop at German
town only.
ON SUNDAYS.
Leave Philadelphia, 9.06 A. M.. 236,3 M, 8. 7M, and /Mt
P. M.
LOOM) Gemantown, 840 A M., 1
14, 636, and P. M.
CHESTNUT RILL RAILROAD.
Leave Philadelphia, 6, 8,10, /2 A. M.. 3, 3.36, 4,6, 8.9,
and 1066 P M.
Leave Chestnut Bill, 7.10, 8.840, 940,1140 A. M.. 140,
BSC 5.40, 7.10. 8:40. and 10.10 P. M.
The 8 A. M. and 3.36 P. M. will make no atop , on the
Germantown road. - -
. . .
ON 51:1 1 1PAI 6.
Leave Philadelphia, 9.06 A. M.. 2%, 6, and 71( P. M.
Leave Obeistant 7.60 A. M., 12.40. 6.10, and 9.10
P. FOR DONSTIOMOCREIi AND NORRISTOWN.
Leave Philadelphia, ase 7%, 9.06. 11.66 A. 16., 1.06,
8.06. 43i. kx, 8. and 111( P. 1? !.
Leave VOITLetOWII, 6,7, 8,05, 9,11 A. Sl., 134, 06. 6%,
and 936 P. M.
• ON SYNDAYS.
Leave
N Philadelphia, 9A. M.. 1 and P. M.
Leave orrunown, 7%MAN A. M.,1 and
_6 P. M.
• • FOR AY
Leave .Philadelebia • 6.60; 7% U
9.0 K 6, 11.06 A.' M.,1.05,
2 .0 1 , &WWI, exj, '01.3 Dt P. M.
Leave anaLunk, pc. 7 11% A. M.. 3,3%,
6,7. and 10 P. ,
• ON SUNDAYS.
Leave Philadelphia. 9 a.4..11 6, and 7% P. M.
Leave Maneyunk. 73( A. M:, 1%, 6%, and D P. M.
- 11. K. smiTH,,
_Gageral Saperintendent,
Depot. NINTH and . 911REN Streets.
T UB PENNSYLVANIA' OENTKAL
goo MlLEl3 m.a #oll ° Bit TEACH. .
1861., 1861•
'IRE CAPACITY Cy TnIS ROID 161 nOW EQUAL
_T ANY I.N THE COUNTY.
" THREE THROUGH PASSENGER TRAINS
BETW EEN PHILADELPHIA AND 1"1.5.8URG.
Connecting direct at Philadelphia with Through Trains
from Boston, New York. end allpoiate East, and in the'
- Union Depot at Pittsburg wird Through Trains to and
from all pointy in too West, northwest. arid Southwest
—thee furnishing facilities for the transportation of
Passengers unnamed for speed and comfort by any
other route.
Express and Feat Lines ram through to Pit tsburg,
without change of Can or Conductors. A ll Through
Passenger Trams provided with Lonstiridge's Patent
B rake—speed under perfect control of the engineer.
thus adding much to the safety of travellers.
Smoking Cars areaLtriehed to each Train ; Wood
rpg's SlitepiuSuis to .litiiirthe and Fast Trains. The
EXP REM RUNS DA Y: Mail and Fast Lines, Sun
/lays exoe
T _pted.
Mail rain leaves Philadelphia. at TM A. M.
Feat Line " " 11 20 A. M.
Express Train leaves " 10.16 P. M.
WAY TRAINS LEAVE AS FOLLOWS:
• itirrisburg Accommodation, via Columbia, 2.20 P. M.
()lumina " 4.00 P. M.
• artesburg " at 6.40 P. M.
West Cheater " :to 1. at 8.15 A. M.
No. 1. at 12.00 P. M.
West Chester Passengers will take the West Chester
Noe. 1 and 2 Harrisburg accommodation and Columbia
Trains,
Passengers for SunburyWilliamsport, Elmira, Baf
fele, Niagara Falls, and 'intermediate
_points, leaving
Philadelphia at 7.30 A.M. and 2.30 P. 21., go directly
through.'
Tieteta Westward may be obtained at the *Moen of
the Company in Philadelphia, New York, Boston, or
Baltimore ; and Tickets Eastward at any of the impor
tut Railroad Offices in the West; also on board any of
the regular Line ,of Steamers on the Illimnssippi or Ohio
rivers.
111111 r rare always as low, and time ea gun. as by any
other Route, •
For further inforniation apply, of the Passenger Sta
tion, Southeast corner of Eleventh and Market streets.
The completion of the W estern connections of the
Penrgylvaniaßailroad to Ccago, make thin the
DIE ECT LINE B.ETWEEri THE EAST AND TILE
GREAT WEST.
The connection of treats by the Railroad Bridge at
Pittsburg, avoiding all drayage or ferriage of Freight,
together with the saving of time. are advantage, readi
ly appreciated by Shippers of Freight, and the Trave
ller Public.
Merchants and Shippers entrusting the transporta
tion of their Freight to this Company, clan rely with
cion.kdenee on its spee_dy transit.
THE RATES OF FREIGHT to and from any point
it the West by the Pennsylvania Railroad ars at all
risus as favorable as are-644,ga by other .Railroad
C 7i l t ra g ".
verticality to mark packages " via Pennsyl
vania Railroad.'
For Freleht Om:Art.oU or Shipping Directions, apply
to, or addreu either of the following Agents of the
Company
D. A. Stewart, Pittsburg: '
)1. 3. Pieroe & Co., Zane/mile. O. J. 72 Johnion, Rip
ley, 0.; 12, McNeely, Maysvi ll e, Ry. • Ormsby . & Crop
per, Portiquouth l , 0.: Paddock, ac go.. Jeffersonville,
Indiana ; H. W. Brown & Cul nnati. o.;_athern
4 Ribbon, Citionmett, 0.; 8.. C, Meldnim, Madison,
Ind.. Jog. E. Moore, Louisville, Iy. • P. O. &
Go., Evansvill PI
e, mud:; . W. Grah am & Co., Cairo,
111. R. F. Sass, 43heler & Glass, St. Louis. Mo. - John
R. .atarris, Mt/fills. Tenn.. Hama & Runt, 'Mem
fchie,' 'Senn.; Ike & t 0 ,., ?Clones°, i ll . ;W.H. H.
atcZaAl, Alton; ;or to reight Agents of Railroads
eient points in the est.
S. 11. gIAtGaTON, Jr,, Philadelphia. • _
MAGRAW & ROOns, M. North street Baltimore.
LEECH & Co.. 1 Astor ouse, or 1 8 it.. N.Y
LEECH & CO. o.77'State street, Boston.
R. li. HOUSTON, Gen'l Freight Agent, Phila.
L..I..._HOUPS", Can't Tiaket Agent, Phila.
E. LEWIS. Heal Suet Altoona. Pa..:mad-17
...-
186L3 T MIKAIa. 1861.
".iMI,EFt
I O A qEMENI. m i t Ne y_9_IItWANEII.
Mr
WO - M.P II X Ofi .11.44. L D si el
BU{ FOm .V.HILADELENUIL. W
O.RY Alta WAy P.1.40.ag, '
PAIL( WALLINIVV-OT, VIIV,EIf ANL M 6311167071 intrcl
• WILV.A...AA:VE AZ 11114.0W13, VIZ :
At 6 A. M., via esui ,lot DOT, ;.. 1 . Ae
orAteedatten
X
At 0 A. -31,3a.2 Dfitattiai JeraeyCitT, (N. J.)
• Aeeemetetlailea ' " 3*
A((8 4.. M.; via Otandrziond Jersey 2517, tieralag •
3 •
of
-----
At 11.3 . .; A. M., vie; - .2.onata•tea .orA Jersey 0117.
Wesmnt Expreze... - 3 00
At 13X via.oamilea ant. Amboy Aso:ornate
datiea I 20
At i P.' 12.01apaniden and Amber, ' 0. and A. A -
press X
At 430 P.M:, era Xemilligton and Jersey Oity,BV2- •
tug Eks_rese.—:__•. OD
At dYi via IFerminateM . and Jerau City , Id
031aulttelret- AM -. • • • X
- MP. ~ via Oxman and - Isruy (Pity, Evening'
*ailDO
Sara 31341/..itt., Widen -sad, „Tamar. Cit;r4loatk-
At B P. sj.., via Camden aniAxbo_vi-t.exammode.-
f 70
.Dtva i (2 algid Dad Paeaengerlat Blur 710 m- 3 X
. • do. Id MUM Tioket- I X
Vka IP Pt Mail &interim daily. Ike 111[ P M, Beek
ern Mail, Satxrdars szetvult.
Fer. Belvidere, ,Ifdarten, Aambertvilla, FlesaintX2,
as., at 7.10 A. M. and 434 P. M. front Keneinoton.
For Water maa,Eltreadaberg, Meranton, WllkoOkurts,
ACIATOBO, *mat tient, trtiritie A. fd from Yenamiten,
.via Delaware, Litekawaama and-western A. R.
For Maiteh Chmak, AlientOwn, and Bethlekem at 410
A. M. and Xf P.M. from liren.rLagten Beet' (tka
. .A.• Of, Imp- tannest' - oath .train leaving Emden at 1.00
PFar Id.) •
ff.eunt Melly, aid and D'A. 7d, 3 *lnd 04P. 1 1 ! .
For Freaked. at ~ A. M. and 21 ; . M.
• - WAY JUNS.
'Far Bestir", trrenten, ece., at me A. M. {}L and 02(
P. M. from JEtomingion, and 1.15 F. M. fr o nt wainet
street wharf.
.
. .
FerialmYra., Riverton, - Delano,. Neverly, Burling ,
ten it. Flereneo, llerdettown, se., at D'ef. 1, S, 43i, ant 5
Steamboat Trenton, for Bordentown and inormedtate
plaoesi L at 1 3 4 P. M. from Walnnt-etraet wha rf.
tair for flew York and We, lanai leaving Kensington
spot, take the Gam on Fifth street. above Walnut.
lf an hoer NAT departure. The oars run Into the
depot, and on via of each train, run from the depot.
Fiftiannuo Baggageonly, allowed each Passim
h'er. agent are pnAUtuted from taking anything es
gage bat their wearing apparel. All baggage over
pounds to be paid for extra. The Company limit
• r reepounbtlity for baggage to ()no Dollar per wane.
and will not be liable for any amount beyond 8790. ex
semi by special *entrain.
mbr 'WM. N. 41AWZMES.. Agent.
. . _ . • •
11114
N PENNSYL
VANIA,RAILROAD. -
FOR BM DOYLESTOW VON
• oaurix, HAZLETbri. .fi , w4Tort E C KL ET.
WILKESBAREb . ,_ ico.•
• IMRE.% THROUGH TRAINS.
.On and. atter
_MONDAY. MAY. MAN), Famenzer
Trainewill leave FROII7 and wiLLOW Streets, Phila
delphia. daily, (Sindeye eemebted). as follows:
At 6.40 A. .M.,(Laterees),
_for Bethlehem. Allentown.
Zdsooh Chap*. 14.21etonWilkes tIT barre. ags.
At 2.161'. lamasfor Bethlehem, Ruston, dce.
This train reao Eas ton at. M. and makes alone
NIIIIIMit/011 With SW Jesse? Central for New Yokk.
At 1.14 M., for Botiaskoro, Anal:team smolt
Munk. &a.
At/ A.M. and II P. M. : ler Doylestown. •
4110.33 A. M. and 3.46 I'. M. for Fort Waatungton.
e 6.4(1 A. 34. Kamm train makes clod e oonneotion
erl the Lehigh Valley Railroad at Bethlehem. being
the shortest slid moat dogmata' route to Wilkesbarre,
end to all pointa in the lehigh_coal region,
- Tit A. 1.313 F.Ol PXI3,A_DISLFB.I4. .
Agave Bothlehom et 1.10. A. M., 1.18 A. M.. and 6.33
M,
leave Doylestown et 148 A. M. and 4.15 P. St.
.s.eare Fort Weanington at 6.60 A. M. and LSO P. M.
ON : - :31 , 31DAY13,-Palhadelyltia for Bethlehem at 8
M.
A t o tiladelphia ter D . at 3P. M.
arfor " elythla At 640 A. Pd.
m for P l elphm at 6.P M.
Fare to athielaela-S1 60 1 1 :ttre to 4 . auoh Ottitnk,Bl3 60
Fare to Eaaton-....- I'6o 'Fare to ittegbarre- 450
dhrott4Votets_muat procured at the Ticket
oat, at L Ois Street, yor BERTA Street, In order
to seenre the above rates of rare.
All Pa/monger Trains (leapt Sunda_y Train") oontest
at Berk. Street with nh and Iturth- streets, ant
Second end Third- street s amsenter Railroads, twenb
wunntes after leaving Yr i ew Street.
RLLIS OLARI. Agent.
. . .
; ~... • . --.. , WRING ARBANUE
BMNTi-CLADELPRIA.
IranelPt li I BAL7CO RALLIOAD.
- • On and itraIONDA AP L 15,1fida
PiaIiENGER 71 3 LEA PHIL &DE MIA:
• For - Baidmore at ./. 11 A. m.,.11.31 A. IC, ( real),
and 10.fd P.M,—
__ _ •
For Chatter at O.UI A. M. 2LP/4.M" dad EMMA
P. M.
Pots WlMiiiidton at Lll A.,111., . Mil A. 111.9 Lli ilk
1041 .AL
Carus ,
. or New at Lill A. WU and LH P. 11.
or kri_serdtt 5.111 A. Pd. and CM P. M.
er Miford'i BM A. M.
._ or Boate l M il e /MA. M.
t
2411 POE PEILADELPICIA
loran" Sal ere at LIP A. it. (Express), MI A. It.,
and 4.43 P. M.
1.41 -1 Vrthainstan at 6.10 and LID A. PL. 1.143 end,
•-- ay. Natoli:nary at' 40 P.M.. . P.
*aro Milford at 4 P. M.
are lOVOI at 0.24 A. M. and 0.10 P.M._
k
Mare Mew Castle at LIS A. M.,7.11r. AL
Immo Chester at 9.40 A.M. , 9.40, IX and 6M Pisa.
Paesesßaltimor• forBB al ing-17 and DelaWardi -
road at dab A.M. • -
- TPULINS FOE BALTIMORE:
- heave Chester at 8.45 A. 11, 1 2. 01 and 11.10 P.M. -
Aim,* Witains ton at est A. it.. 11 1 / 1 P. M. and 11
,A,, pt
r - arAkltlitur TRAM with Peozencor Ur attooled.
-....- - will ran as follows
Sjimigtoo pkiiadolphia for Ponyvillo and ittormediato
slaw at ami P. M. •
leave Waren:Asa for PerrYtti• and latorsiollato
plums at 7.15 P. M.
• Leave Wilmirn for Philadelptua and interme
diate sitiosit at il .141. _
at titaso o HaVr t e 6 Liirae . e far Baltimore sad uitermodi
•Leartrtat: A l ltimore for Eivre-de-Graoe and In termati
ato stations at IP. M. 'z
- • • -' ' 0/4 111111 - DAY4I:
B . o C4 e il itv e r T il3 ,4 B l74 an it ill wi'll fa nin ay on' retuhalll27l,l further
ILD
-I.l;aviat Philadelphia for Baltimore and Wnehiniton
at /LSO A.Z. and MOO P. M.,
_and
E.4a
Loari P; ne Baltimore for Philadelphia at Lie A. M. and.
K
sole I, M. FE141019. Prioddent.
a
.., ,_. EVANS .1 WATSON'S
SAT.AmA tiDSR adrES.
SO C:it i lV&l i hrigiltlllll‘.
k arts•liirtiotr iii iii arwmarr
FIIENNSS, =INLET, & 00.;
Na 499 MAWS, WREST.
IV T. PANOOAt3T, AIIOTIONERE, Sato
J. • assns to R . •Inatt. Jr.. 431 nwpoireNrarw
EISILLP FORD 1t 00.,.AUOTIONIEBB,
- Tim 630 KAMM Streetand 6111 IatIFOIL St
. .
• • T
• PENN RTEADI ENGINE AND.
•
BOILER WORREI.—NEAFIR h LEVY,
4 .-
AC Pi rAL AN ri TREoRETICAL F.Ro(NERRB_,
ADRINIBTO. BOILv.RiktatKERB,BLACKBmITBs,
slid FOUNDERS, .having. for Men, years. been in
sneeenarul operation, and been exolusively Aniseed In
Mold ng and repairing Marine and River hitting's. high
and low nretillure. Iron 11 , 1rits, Water Tanks, propeirgfa,
he. ho.. respectfully offer their services to the DulPie,
as being fully prepared to contract fur brims, of all
sizes. Marine, River, and Stationary. li.vihg sets of
patterns of different sizes, see prepared to execute or
ders with quick despatch- Every drsoript-on of Pattern
making made at the shortest notice. High and Low
Pressure, Flue, Tubular. and Cylinder Boilers, of the
best Penney'vania charcoal iron Forglngs, of all sizes
and kinds; Irop and Brass Castings, of all descriptions;
Roll Tinning. Screw Cutting. and all other work con
nected with the above business, • - •
D r awings and Rpecifications for all work done at their
establishment, free of charge. and work guarantied.
The subscribers have ample wharf-does room for re
pairs of boats. where. the) Dan lie in perfect safety.
.and are provided with shears, btooke, tallz, ha., Ac.,
for raising heavy or light weights.* •
. • J COB C. NIcAPIR.
- JOHN P. LEVY.
BEACH. and PALMER Streets._
Northern Croden. tred
Rail
Bunbray and Erie LB:
J. VA.IIGII.OI MEERICE, JOUR E. COPE.
WILLIS/et E. MERRICK, BARTLEY MERRICE.
QOUTHWAILK. FOUNDRY,
0 , 2 FIFTH A.ND WASHINGTON STREETS,
PULLADELPIILI.• ' • •
MERRICK & suNR
ENGINEERS AND MACHINISTS,:
Manufacture Bleb and Low Pressure ilteaur Engines,
for lard. river. and marine service., • .
Boilers. Gasometers. Tanks, iron Boats, ko.; Cast
ings of all kinds, either Iron or brass. •
Iron Frame Roofs for Gas Works, Workshops, Rail
road titstaons,..to.
Retorts and Gas Machinery of the latest and most
improved construction.
Every desoription of Plantation Maohinery, sunk air
Sugar, daw, and Grist Mills. Vacuum Pans. open
Steam Trains, Detonators, Filters, Pumping Engines.
ko.
cola a gent. for N. Rillicaz's Patent Sugar Boiling
Nesmyth's Patent Steam Hammer and &S
-pIDA&Il k Wbraining
Machine.
'a Patent Centrifugal Sugar raining
Machine. auS-y
POINT PLEA.MANT FOUNDRY, No. 951
Bt.:At:a Street:Keneinston: Pheadetphia.—Vir
LIAM H. TIERS info-ms hie (Mends that. having pur
chased the en• ire stook of eatierne attne above Foun
dry. he 'a 110111, prepared to ream a orders for. Rolling.
Gnat. and Saw-Mill Crusting& Soap. Cbemioal, and
Rouse Work. Gearing. Castings m- de •from Rever
beratory or Cupola Furnaces, in dry o ee sand: or _
loam. , .
SAL IM BY Aucrofg
MACHINERY AND IRON.
MEDICINAL.
•
.DYSPEIIItiIA • REMEDY- •
DAILITS ILAN'S •
AXOBLATIC MVIGOBATENIS SMUT
n Medicine Ms bone sod by :As rabid: for sex Years
wish damsels, favor. It recomincedid to Cara
Dy_srepaia, Nere swam, Pfeari-Bara, Cale
Paws,
fame, Wind in rits Sicenaca,.er Fahss .
Ike
Berosis; Headseke, Drowsiness, Xidday
slastykidass, Low Spirits, Dsliriwird
. . Trsiestas, /atomperesed, '
Ie al,Thearavois, EXIIILAJULTES, Ismaoitsrirs, xis
WILL HOT 7.liTOZlce..es Ok , dvV.PUT.
.es a Medicine it Is quick and effectual, caring. the
111.011tNrgravated murex of D yroelislaiffldney Cellitir o oste,
and all other derangements of the atom:ton and web,
In a speedy manner. - -
It, will. Instantly revive the most melancholy and
drooping spirits, and restore the weak, nervous, and
eicody to health, strength and vigor.
i , •
• 'Person' who, from the niudloimia use oil/quer*, have
become dejected, and their nervous systems shattered.
sonatitutomi broken down, and scibet to that horrible
curse to humanity, the DaLrarrie Will, al
most immediately, feel the happy and healthy in./kW
rating ettioacy or Dr. Ham's Invaorating Soint.
• WHAT IT WILL DO. •
Toss.—One wine glass full ea often ae ZleileiSir/
One dose will remove all Bad Spirits.
One dose will cure Heart-burn.
Three doses will cure Indigestion.
One dose will give you a Hood Appetite.
One dose will stop the distressing pains of Diatieveia
One dose Will remove the distressing and disagreeable
effects of Wind or Flatuienoe: aria as soon as the
stomach receives the Invigorating Spirit, the distress
ins load and all painful feelings will be removed.
One dose will remove the most distressing pain.
Colic. either in the stomach or bowels.
A few doses will remove all obstntotions In the lidney,
Bladder. or Urinary Organs.
Persona who are seriously afflicted with any Xidni”
Complaints Are assured of speedy relief by a dose OT
two. and a radical care by the use of one or two bottles.
NIGHTLY DISSIPATION.
Persont who, from dissipating too much over night.
and feel the evil effects or poisonous liquors, in violent
headaches. siclmoss at stomach, weakness, giddiness,
&0., will find one dose•willr move all bad feelings.
Ladies of weak and sickly constitutions should take •
the Invigorating Spirit three times a day ; it will make
them strong, healthy 7 and ham y, remove all obatrno
tons and irregulanties from the menstrual organ., and
l i
are.
restore the bloom of health and beauty to the oareworn
During pregnancy it will be found an invaluable medi
eine to remove disagreeable sensation, at the stomach.
All the proprietor asks is a trial, and to induce this, he
has put up the Irivniionamizes Spieiv In prat battles at
oenta, quarts
• •
General Depot, 415 WATER. Street, New York.
IWO'IT & CO_ 839 North SECOND Street,
Wholma.le Agets in Phikidelphia.
And, for sale be JOHN H. E A TON AI ft._E76HTlit
Strealiand all Drirrierai. • : . leff-tliststv
PROPYLAMWE,
• New Remedy for
. .
aiLEUMAII.S .
During the'lwatnow we have introduced to the no
tice of the medical proftweioa of this country the Purr
aystalizad atiorids of Propytawsins, as IS
REMEDY FOR RERUMATIBM
. .
end Paving received front many sonroes, both from
Mimi= of the highest standing and from patients, the
NOSS FLATTERING TESTIMONIALS
Of its real value in the treatment of this .painful and
obstnate.disesse, we are minced topresent it to the
pnblio in a form READY FOR llagdearlATE UBE,
wide& we hope will commend itself to those -who are
suffering with tots afflicting complaint. and to the me
dical prtustitioner who may feel disposed to test the
powers of this valuable remedy.
ELIXIR PROPYLAMIPIE. in the form above spo
ken of, has reoently been extensively experimented
with in the
.PENDISYLVANIA HOSPITAL,
and with MA REF D SUCCESS rem will appear from Bus
published aocounta in the Mellon' journals.
Writ to carefnii7 put up ready for immediate nap,
with full directions. and can be obtained from all the
druggists at 76 centa_per bottle, and at wholesale of
K
BULLOC'S CRENSHAW,
Drastista and Manufacturing Ohm:rusts.
Philadelphia.
.1 R. FROM MR:. GEO.. L. 011.61.
Aims for Dr. SCHENCK'S Medicines in Middle
town, Fe.
• MIDDLETOWN. Dauphin Co., Pa.. June 27, Mt.
Dlt• J H fiCH t NCH, Ph , utdeaphia, Pa.
• DEAR eta : Herewith keend •you a certificate of one
o f
our most rerpedtable citizens, who has neon mug
ier medioi,ne. and le Y•ow ree ored TO health. I think
its publication would effect the sales in this neighbor
hood. If yon nee proper to me it, do no, or direct um
to.
Mr. Ramsey itt an old,reliable• well-respected and in
fluential OinZolll.. Hie word „would not bo doubted by
any one who knows him. ap t at •preartnt le the Chief
&reaps of the town. Mr. gm himself a good
advertisement,' as he epos a for and recommends it
more highly ' hen the csertificateydentions.
1011111 truly, Gt.°. L. .CROLL.
MIDDLETOWN. 'Dauphin Co., Pa., June JO, labl.
MR. GEO. L. DROLL. Agent.
DRAB tent t In m 7 reoeni. ttlnesa, which was from
miner ed cold on MT breast and lunge. and which was
in a fat* way of hurrying ma. ro my grave. I wee so
much affectoid by the seventy of the eon,. h that 1 could
not he doWI2 or obtain an rest, and this o Intoned for
two weeks.- When I heard of Dr. Sohenok's Polmobio
and Bea Weed Tonto. I immediately oommenoed the
use of them, and after using two or•thiree bottles of
ByTap. I uott.nd a pa , oeptibia change. :the oougb was
much easier, and I could rest much better. After using
two bottles of ionic and ten of eyrnp, I have beenre
stored to health. which ensbles - ate to say I have Dill
confidence in As efficacy if taken in time, and most nor
recommeno its use to the affinsted.
Atespectfully yours,
E. J. ILesfifiNEY.
JAMES BETTS' OELEBBATED
L T A. SUPPORTERS FOR LAMES, and the only Buy
wirtera under eminent medical patronage. • Lade
y and
- physicians are respectfully redueete to call o on
Mrs. Betts, at her residence , 1039 WALK greet,
Philadelphia, (to avoid oonnterfeits.) Thirty thousand
lnealide have been advises by their physicians to use
.ler ap.pliances. Those only are genuine bearing the
United States copyright, labels on the box, and signa
tures,. and also on Ike Suorkortlers, with testimonials
• eets-tetkase • • •
RAILROAD LINES.
WEST CHESTER
RAILROAD TRAINS vla
PENIThYLVAN RAU. uAiL leave &avec, corner
ELEVENTH and MARK atreets, at &LS A. M., 12
noon, 213 P. M., and I P. M.
On Sunday. leave Philadelphia at 7.30 A. Id, and
West Chester at 4 P. M. }y3o-ti
WEST CUESTER
iciailtillMPEAND PHILADELPHIA
R.AILROAD, •
VIA MEDIA.
SUMMER AHRANG.:MENT.
On and alter_ MONDAY, June 3. UM, the trains
leave phi I LADEL,PRIA, from the Depot, N. E. corner
of EIGHTEENTH and MARKET abash' at 7.45 ano
10.30 A. M. and 2, 4.15, 6.30, and 10 P. W.,and will
leave the Station, ebrner, of TN RTY- Inn and
MARKET. EltTeets, ( West Phtladelphilk) at •11.00 and.
10.65 A. M., and 2.1 b. 4.30 6.45 =lllO 15 P. M.
ONII32IDA.YIS.
Id
Leave PHIL ADELP P IMA at SA. M. and 3P. M.
Leave vvEsT CHESTER eta A M. and SP. M.
Leave
leaving Philadelptua and West Cheater at 7.45
A. M. and 4./5 P. M. oonneot at Pennelton wish Trains
on the Philadelphia and Baltimore Central Railroad
tor olford and intermediate points.
HENRY WOOD,
General h aperintendent.
IVOTIOR.---CAEMSTZII;
' VALLIMAILICIAD.—FAS
SENGEIL INS FOR DOWritallaOWN AND IN
TERN/EDI/LIZ IMMONIS.—On sad At
1860, the Passenger Trains. for DOWRIROTOWN
will start from the new Passenger Depot' of the Phila
delphia end Reading Railroad Company, oorner of
BROAD and CALIAWIUIai Btreets, (Demeanor en
trance on Callowhllla
MORNINO 'MAIN far Doevistitown leaves at &GO
A A,F7t4(OO2I , IPRAIIit fer
s.acif
RlAtlA' l (flundaye excepted).
.By order of the Board .of Managers of the, ti ai*
his and Reading Railroad Company.
axe W. R.
i l
• ,- • ..,.... .
-, Immo PLITLADELPFITA: AND
RRARINO R
AILROAD CO.,
( ince XII South Fourth street.) - _ ,
PRILAMSLPILILLy April w, Wit.
SEASON TICKETS.
On and altar May.t. 113$1,season dated* will be burned
by tlui company for the periods of three, Mx, note, and
twelve months, not transferable.
Season , sohool-tickets may also be had at All per cent.
These tuikete will be sold by the Treasurer at Nti:t 2.7
South FOURTH Street. where any fartherinfornuttion
can be obtained. . R. AB AO - 1 7 01AD, -
401/IMMIL • RODTB.--
PRIAADEITRIA AND'EA
-WRALL-ROAD.
C - g4T•• "7.011 TX -ti Dissatai, Clatwolaaa, ika:-
part, _Wrlkesbarre.,l3orauton, Dazierike, Mani Wil
lierviverteroi: Ramon. Uanton. Bleurs: Male,
iagara . alit ; Aoatiere.er, elovelanCiDetros Waled',
Okblage. Miair, Kowalski''' , and an voikta ertk am
it oaserieir trafa• will l ea 's* tits nail/ D'ai
t i . ast Of the .Pki
einkraAsed 'Xoalins Railroad,' earner 'BROAD and
ALAow,vld. Weida, cransenger entrant* on OM
lewhill greet,/ daily' (flandara:okooptaii).4 far aboro
woust% m fon
lc
RieufF7 ''''',..,.: '-- • - ovws N 34...
WhoB.llP A. FL • train connects at itgainti for Wilkie
tarot it .r e t_thion. Scranton, and all Mateyo on the
&du W ARRA. AND 731.0M5.131110 ..I A rf4=
Rho a wa trams Make direct conneotions at
with the tritium of 11110 Nor Yorker's' Erie, eitneurdaigna
avV.Pflac k sina•Falfs. and Baffelosliwir York and Brio, ana
MOW Yor Central _Railroad', Von ail Points Monk and
Wjat.'and . titsr Ciussidaa. - - - ' • - •
• BUtaco ' s b.sakou to Elmira; - *Rale. aka itasseintaion
Shiloh and:Aß fuer:nodtato nointa-_-- _ ..
4 Rieke* swab* 14rossAnd at the rhilaggliskla and M
atra illairCiaittlx ielMakt ,
te n Moe orthwest corner of
111X7,1 and UR : ,k.: EN dry Mx& dat ?arm
14 r. V.MAIT: Wins FRAI I VI TRAM
____.•
Istisvo V'' niu :..tlelnltis and Banding Pevati BrovA ant
millwki itie ' r wisps' - (Hands le "411.101Mtilii, for all
paints set au - Perth, at aE; ill.
Freigata wad. - l» r dotty/not - 'Wore I P.A. to Man
thf i r r . :entx Ma ;Aloe der, ~.
• .--rmsor illargiattant vslhAt o Freight Brix.'
1 VERVilikt Hand Li or to - - •
- R. Y. rail". Agent.-
a5,....rtit, 7 "7: s.ra. ' l6 ,r, &limit
L astal 147.1thlriXtr$1.,trettel:n
xxruEss compAitatit:'
-
Alta Lupus's
co ., 0 10 c. 3 20 cingsvicww ktrioin;.
limn els, raitkagsa.fsavvitandisio, ilatitiistioa,
and ilimatio, - -try Ltz rk sarmiror a estmastift
with otkiir Moran mortPstuvi, to CI .4u ortzairst
omits saki "Also of tin liuts4 Swan. -
I.t xyst r..*- -
• - •
1 000 000 -1117-101 A _GIGARS.-LA
y - - t . , - °lade ainortineito 'ZialiPrillizig
some of the ilium eslisbtated brandit ukthelfairemenisr
kat. IVA Haar% CatisaasPlerdad llNtiv,"
.0400 rre..l**V.kp A i , itcy l , 4 etrysl
anc_Gar a 0 igireittor. a enAu_kam 1. *I
Vizt"'"'"`
. WIZOSLOr.
14•• 1 - (r)' . 'it Stmt.
5-A1:1113sY AIUCTION.
THOMAS I 80N8,
• Nos. 139 and 1411onth FOIIKTR arrest,
• (Formerly me i rred raj
•
PUBLIC !SA F 7! REAL EBTATE AND
AT TEE EXC &ming • EVERY TURBDY ir
o'clock, coon, dnrmg th e ,bnriness senaon. ip fo r a l 3
Aligns loci, occasional salsa.
harea TATE AT PVATE aAL,E.
etip- ea. IaTAO atilollllt of real estate At pri,Ac,
stOo• including evert description of city and eft„7,l
property.
Printed Hata mar lat had at the anon°. -77
BALE OF SurEmuit b: r u Eta rr o RE, p
• FRENne- PLAT ' MIRRORS el 011/Ort At ilNg
Aft 0 FORT ttil. ELUO.ENT TAYET AND BR i-
BE' R CA R P T 8 6te. Us.
CAR D.—Oar sale this morning, at the Alpo,
Rune will comprise. beeidee 600 lota di exeivis m ....-en
hand furniture. mahogany plane tomes, is ne i r.l:
plate mirrorscrurninr-lwhe. beds and beddier o—
and abieswaro. Brussels and othei thermic ds,. a r „ .4
an attractive simartmeet, worthr the attenti on .'nd
diea and others desirous of purehesinr. oil,.
sir - Catalogues now read! and the artiolee in t
for examination. tit
Sale at Nos. 119 and In Pond! Pout): Street.
SUP ESIOR F UAW. TU RE, FRENCII-PL.T,,,
NOR'. PIANO. FORTES. BEDS AND DEDDIir
BRUSSELS AND OT ff ER GA RPETS, A t . G.
This Morning.
At 9 o'olook. at rhe furni t u r eore. an aere,,,, t. „
Ergoellent sessind-hand elegant Diane fritt4
fine mirrors. carnets. beds and toddinir, As. from fstc
lees declining houeskeerong, removed to the etore
ocmcentenoe of sale.
Also. three ancenor sewing maistnnee.
Sale No. 1311 Chestnut Street.
SUPERIOR FUAEIiIIit
pi AN% MISSu
/se. es
CAILPKTR,
On Fnilar Morniu K .
I2th inst., at 10 o'oloot. at No. t 341 Chetieut
the superior firm lore, piano-forts by Gate & co t, t.
French plate pier mirror, Ifretseis earpets &s. 4 tt ,
liar May be exanuneil at B o'oloot on the itierz i _ u
the sale.
M ;"JSICS' NATBANS, A UOT 10 N E gi t
LUIL AND COMMISSION
Darner of BLXTII and Rect.'. streets.
AT PRIVATE BALE
AT TO IST 'IRE TIME&
The following artmlee will be sold for lees tt
the =nal Belling' price : ui f
ine gold hunting mule. donb'e case, and double.re,
tom Engnsh patent lever watches. of themes. epprov
atul best making ;.fine gold double. time t Li th o , „,
lever watches ; independent wooed' lev-r testa ! "
'fine gold hunting-case and open-face elleapem eat te r ;
and lepine watches; _horizontal and duplex weed sr
silver huntme-osee, doubt gee. and oubl,b r t ," •
vnglish patent lever escapement lever, p od ost
watches, of the most approved and best inap oi !'„ .. P'ss
bie ease and open face silver watehes ; 'doer
uscga r
silver gnertier ana ngle• (Mee watches; fine gold
neck. fon, and guard chains; diamond 611str rin $
bread- pins ; beta el floe goldiew•lm ; raid trr e a A
-ear rings. finger-rings, bl1143.318;11, pencf•nasm,
and j e welry of - elver, description; guns, pinole
instruments, piano-fortes, and articles penemh c. •
'MONEY TO LOAN.
adYnnoed liberally, for any length o f r ,
agreed upon, on gold and ewer plate, doo,oi,r.
w a t c he s , jewelry, fogrimg•pieces. mammal ingtrameoe,
err gown, olothinx, grooenet, haniware, cuntri. fo r
R a ma . bedding, tenor articles, and on all tirllol4-0;
CONSIGNMENIA AND CUT-DOOR BALE! 30L1-
LICIT RD.
Liberal r h 841rM20151119/Ide on all artioles columned
for sale. arsons attention riven to all aut_dpor
leriZtATFel . K & BROB., Apo.
.1.7. s
• TIONBERB, 804.CHEBTNUr at, above 112
• BAWD EVERY EVENING,
At 7 o'clock of books, etationerv, and fan t
stchAll. jewelry. cloaks. sliver plated were cy
raa, ask
painting', musical ins ruments, &a r 7.
Also. Hosiery, cry gOOda k boots and aims , and Der
tillai.diso of every deaoription.
DAY BALhti every Mondas, 'Wednesday, end Fri
day, at ID o'clock .M.
PRIVATE SALES.
A t private sale. several large consignments of vatohe s
and jewelry, books, s: ationery. BilVeli. pkted ware rte.
MT), fancy goods, &0.. to which is solietted the titled
tion or City and °wintry m•rottanut and 2there.
.Consizznents solicited for ali kuids at imirst u d w,
for either public or private sates,
W Litioral cash advances made on oomurtnenta
„tut-door sales promptly attended to
ii tem WEEKLY OOMMUNICATION
BY STEAM BETWEEN NEW yO3l
calling at QUEENSTOWN ill*
land.) to land and embark pi:mongers and degyatagg,
The - Liverpool, New York, and Philadalphia Beim
ship campany'a splendid Clyde-built iron acres stems
ships, are intended to sail as follows:
FROM NEW YORK FOR LIVERPOOL.
ETPSaturday, Jelyll
ED' BURGH BURGH limurdny, July If
CITY OF WASHIINOTON, Words/. hi) IT
And eVeli t iSaTuruay throagliont me Tear, from h.lat
No. 44 A.
RATES OF PASSAGE
THROUGH FROM PHILADELPRIL
Cabin, to Queenstown, or Liverpool.—
Do. to London, via Liverpool_
Steerage to Queenstown, or Liverpooi_—__
Po. to London. —...
o. .Return tickets. available for its months,
from Liverpool..
14
Passengers forwarded to Havre, Plins,'Hanthry,
Bremen, and Antwerp, at through rates.
Ceitifieates of passage issued from Liverpool t o Nay
York _
Isl
Certificates of Runge loomed fromQueenatomi to
New York—. -
These steame rs have superior aceommodatmai for
Panel/term. are conetrnoted with watertight oomPait
mange, and carry experienced Surgeons.
For freight, or postage, apply at the office of the
MITT JOBB G. DALE, Agent,
111 Walnut str_
_oat, Patladelplua
in Liverpool, to WM. ID MAN
Tower Baildiitga
In Illasiow, to WM, limo,
aPS-tf 13 Dixon street
TIIB BRITD3II AND NORTH
--
AMERIOAX ROYAL MALI
17.0 X NEW TOME !O 7.1•212001.
Chief csbin Femme-- 1130 1
sactond Cam Paiute— — td
Y&OK BOSTON TO LIVIIPOOL.
Chief Cabin Yivijace— /111
Reoalf
The ships from new York mallet Cork Harbor,
The ehtpa from Bolton Gall at Ita ILfax and Cork Tar-
Derr_—. _ . _ .__ _ _
pE,ltElA,Cest..Tudkins. AFRICA, Cast. Shim=
A_RABIA, Capt. J. atone. CANADA ,Cotot. J. Leitch.
ASIA Capt. E.G. Lott. AMERICA, Capt. Rod ey.
AIiSIRA_LASIAN, NIAGIAILA L Capt. Mood's.
Csp,t Cook. EUROPA, Cept, Anders:l-
SCOTLA, mow tauldins.)
These vowels carry a clear white liaat mast-heal
Shann ' cl b lear : es N. r fort, ft Wedelidity, Jab. 3.
KUROPA, Anderson, ' Boston. SCedsesday, Jay 1.
/3.1t151 8. Judinns, " N. York. Wednesday, Jul, 11.
d-RNA- 13 R- Moodie, " Boston. Wsrfaesflu.. Jct, I.
ASIA. Lott, " N. York, Wednesday, July N.
AISABIA, titone, " Borten, Wedgesdar, Au. 7.
Berths not secured until raid for.
In oxeonetioed Surgeon oa toard.
The owners of these rbißs will tat be accuantehle to
Uolct, Silver, Bullion, Spews, Jewelry, Precious Monet
or Metals, unless bills of lading arc Ilfltjttleiti3T, sat
the seine thereof therein eiptesso6 Tot tre,tht
ntusage, apply to E. CININARIL.
astuil-tf d Bowling Omen, Nov 'ha.
"THE PRESS"
JOB PRINTING
ESTABLISHMENT
NO. 417
01-IESTNUT STREET.
PRILJDELPHIA
The attention of the Business Community
is respectfully invited to the New Beek. and
Job Printing Office of " Tag Pam," which
has been fitted up with New Material, is the
most 'complete manner, and is noir prepare/
to execute, in a satisfactory style, every va
riety of Printing
BOORS,
PAMPHLETS ,
CARDS,
I==rl
CHECKS,
NOTES,
13Tr.TS OF LADING,
BILL HEAD S
T. - FITTER tTEADINGS,
P.APER BOORS,
vs CERTIFICATES ,
:DEEDS,
BONDS,
B.SZI, TICKETS 41PD PROGIMEKESO
possms,
BILLS.
PI6SOAMILES' , D A„gELE,
42RveelEri C.. wr e n ETC
. -
Goldßronze, end colored Printing Elo
entail in a Superior Manner
•
IrLdNUF.aCTURERS,
CH;INICS, LAWYERS, JUCTION-
EBBS, PUBLIC OFFICERS,
AMC'S; RAILROAP
' I2ND .LIVSUR4NCE
Will be supplied with any description
gp4b rpqr_drtild,'st short notice and on 01°
meal reasonable terms. mss!
81:11Priff
BOOK
AND
CIRCULAR S,
DRAFTS,
RECEIPTS.
MORTGAGE S,
COMP.IINMS,