The press. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1857-1880, August 23, 1864, Image 4

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    801 W OF A NESS.
There was once a nest In a hollow,
Down in the 111089019 and knot-grass pressed,
Solt and warm, and full to the brim;
*etches leaned over it purple and dim,
With buttercup buds to follow.
pray you hear my song of a nest,
For it is not long; -
'You shall never light in a summer quatit
The bushes among—
:Shall never light on a prouder Bitter s
A fairer nestful, nor ever know
A softer sound than their tender twitter
That wind-like did come and go.
/had nnestrul ones of my own—
Ali, happy, happy 1!
Right dearly .i. loved them; but when they were
grown,
They spread out their wings to fly
Oh I one after another they flew away
Far up to the heavenly blue-.
To the better country,the upper day—
And I wish I was going too. •
JeAN INGZIOW.
SOT GUILTY-A STOUT OF BELL LIFE.
One day, a good many years ago, a
young woman knocked at the door of a
little - cottage in the suburbs of the town of
Newcastle-upon-Tyne. The knock was im
rnediately answered by the opening of the
door from Within. An aged woman, neat
ly dressed, and who had evidently risen
from her wheel, was the sole inmate of the
Dttle cot. ,
"Bless your heart, girl," said the dame,
es s he entered with her visitor' and sat
down to the wheel again, "there must be
something particular about you to-day, for
you did not use to knock."
"I was afraid some one might be with
you, mother," saicrthe girl, who had taken
a seat opposite the spinner.
"And though a neighbor had been
]sere,"" repeated the dame, "this surely
wouldn't have frightened you away. But
the truth is, you have got something . to
flay to me, Catherine," continued the
speaker, kindly ; "out with it, my dear,
and depend upon the best counsel that old
Ba unalf can give."
The young woman blushed, and did not
Immediately speak.
"Has William Hutton asked you to be
Ids wife ?"' said the dame, who easily and
rightly anticipated the matter that was in
the mind of her youthful visitor.
" He has, mother," was the reply.
The old woman began to birr earnestly
at the wheel.
"oWell, my dear," said she, after a short
pause, "is not this but what you have long
expected—aye, and wished ? He has your
:heart ; and so, I suppose, it needs no witch
to tell what would be the end on't."
This might all be very true, but there was
13°m:thing upon Catherine's mind which
struggled to be out, and out it came.
" Dear Hannah," said she, seating her
self close by the dame, and taking hold of
her hand, "you have beat a kind friend—
s parent—to me, since my own poor mother
died, and Lhave .no one else to look to for
advice but yourself. I have not given Wil
liam an answer, and would not till I had
lepoken to you; especially as something
8s you once said—"
" What did I say, Catherine ?" inter
rupted the old woman : "nothing against
the man you love,,surely. He is from all I
liave seen and heard, kind-hearted, indus
trious and every way well behaved."
"Yes, Hannah," replied the young wo
roan ; " but you once said, after - I had
,brought him once or twice to see you, that
you did not like those—thole sorts of low
Ills that sometimes fall upon him even in
company. I have often noticed them since,
Ilannah," continued Catherine with a sigh.
" Plague on my old thoughtless tongue
for saying any such thing to vex-you, my
dear child. Heed not so careless a speech, '
Catherine. Ile was a soldier, you know,
a good many years .go—before he was
iwenty—and fought for his country. He
enay have seen sights then that make him
grave to think upon, without the least
cause for blaming hinstelf. But, whatever
it may be, I meant not, Catherine, that you
should take such a passing word to heart.
IThe has some little cares, you will easily
soothe them and make him happy."
As the worthy dame spoke, her visitor's
brow cleared, and, after some further con
yersation, Catherine left the cottage, light
ened at heart with the thought that her
old friend approved of her following the
course to which her inclination led her.
Catherine Smith was indeed well entitled
to pay respect to the counsels of Hannah.
'The latter had never been married, and
spent - the greater part of her life in the
service of a wealthy family at Morpeth.
When she was there, the widowed mother
Hof Catherine had died- in Newcastle, and
on learning of the circumstances, Hannah,
.though a friend merely, and no relation,
bad sent for the orphan girl, then about
ten years of age,
and had taken care of
iher till she grew fit to maintain herself by
;service. •
At finding herself unable to continue a
working life longer, Hannah had retired
to Netveastle, her native place, where she
lived in humble comfort on the earnings
of her long career of servitude. Catherine
came back with her to Newcastle, and
rnediately went into service there.
Hannah and Catherine had, been two
years in these respective situations when
the dialogue which had been recorded took
place.
On the succeeding expiration of her term
bf service Catherine was married to the
young man iv ho.se name has been stated, as
being William Hutton. He was a tanner
,by trade, and bore, as Hannah had said, an
excellent character.
The first visit paid by the new married
Couple was to the -cottage of the old wo
auan, who gazed on - them with maternal
pride, thinking she had never seen so hand
some a pair.
I.'he few years spent in the 'army had
given to his naturally good figure an erect
3nanliness, which looked as well in one of
big sex as the slight, graceful figure, and
the fair, ingenuous countenance of Cathe
rine was calculated to adorn one of wo
knanlOnd. Something of this kinciwas in
the thoughts of old Hannah when Cathe
rine and her husband visited the dame's
„little dwelling
Many a future visit was paid by the same
parties to Hannah, and on each successive
occasion the old- woman looked narrowly,
though as unobtrusively as possible, into
the state of the young wife's feelings with
a motherly anxiety to know if she was
happy. For, though Hannah--seeing Ca
therine's affections to be deeply engaged—
,lad made light of her own early remarks
*Ton the strange and most unpleasant
gloom occasionally if not frequently ob
aervable in the manner of William Hutton,
The old woman had never been able to rid
her own mind altogether from misgivings
tpon the subject. For many Months after
Catherine's marriage, however, Hannah
could discover nothing but unalloyed hap
piness in the air and coaversation of the
youthful wife. But at. length Hannah's
anxious eye did perceive something like a
change. Catherine seemed sometimes to
fall, when visiting the cottage,-,into fits of
abstraction, not unlike those 'which had
been observed in her husband.' The aged
dame felt greatly distressed at the thought
of her dear Catherine being unhappy, but
for a long time held her peace upon the
subject, trusting that the cloud might be a
temporary one, and would disappear.
It was not so, unfortunately, though
in their manner to each "other when
together nothing but the most cordial at-
tendon was observable. Catherine; when
she came alone to see Hannah, always
seemed a prey to some uneasiness which'
all her efforts could not conceal from her
old friend. Even when she became for
the first time a mother, and with all the
beautiful pride of a young mother's love,
presented her babe to Hannah, the latter
could see signs of a secret grief imprinted
on Catherine's brow. Hoping by her
counsels to bring relief, Hannah at last
took an opportunity to tell the young wife
'what she had observed and sought her
confidence. At first Catherine stammered
forth a hurried assurance that she was per
fectly happy, and, in a few seconds, belied
her NVOTdB by bursting into tears, and
owning that she was very unhappy.
" But I cannot, Honah," she exclaimed,
1 ' I cannot tell the ctiMe—not even-to you I"
"Don't say so, my poor Catherine," re
plied Hannah ; " it is not curiosity that bids
Inc interfere."
" Oh, no ! Hannah," replied the young
wife, "I know you speak from love 'to
vie.
"Well, then," continued the dame,"open
your hearf to me."
Catherine was silent.
"Is your husband harsh ? asked Ran
rah.
"No, no 1" cried the wife; "man could
-not be kinder to woman than he is to me."
"Perhaps he indulges in drink—in pri-
Wate—lt
• " Hannah, you mistake altogether," was
Catherine's reply; "my•husband is as free
from-all such faults as . ever man was."
" My dear child," almost smiling as the
sdea entered her head, " you are not sus•pi,
cious—not jealous."
"I have never had a moment's cause,
Mannah," answered Catherine. " No, my
griefs are not or that nature. He is one of
the best and dearest of -husbands."
Old Hannah was puzzled ,by these re
plioi,,as much as she was distressed by the
310 w -open avowal• of Catherine's having
some bidden case of sorrow; but seeing
that her young friend. could not make up
her mind to a disclosure at the time, the
aged daihe gave irp her inquiries, and told
Catherine to think seriously of the pro.
priety of confiding all to her.
Hannah conceived that on mature con
**ration. Oathaizie Wald 00413) '49 uw
conclusion of seeking counsel at the cot
tae.
She was not wrong. In a few days after
their conversation, the young wife came
to visit Hannah again, and after a little
absent and embarassed talk, entered upon
the subject which was uppermost in the
minds of both.
"Hannah," said Catherine, " I fear you
'can serve me nothing—l fear no Hying be
ing can serve me. Oh, Hannah l good as
my husband appears to be—good as he is—
there is some dreadful 'weight pressing
upon his mind which destroys his peace
and mine too. Alas I the gloomy fits which
you and I noticed in him, are not without
cause, I fear."
Catherine wept in silence and con
tinued :
"All that I know of this cause arises from
his expressions—his dreadful expressions—
while he is sleeping by my side, Hannah,
he speaks in broken language of murder—
of having committed a murder ! He mut
ters about. the streaming blood that his
band drew from the 'innocent victim
Alas I I have heard enough to know that
be speaks of a young woman, Oh, Han
nah, perhaps a woman deceived and killed
by him !"
As Catherine said this she shuddered,
and buried her face in that of the babe
which she carried in her arms.
Hannah was shocked to hear of this, but
her good sense led her at once to suggest,
for the comfort of the poor wife, that it was
perfectly possible for her husband to im
agine himself a murderer in his sleep, and
speak of it, 'without the slightest reality in
the whole affair.
"Ah, Hannah," said Catherine ) sadly,
"these dreadful sayings are not the result
of one nightmare slumber. They occur
often—too often. Besides, when I first
heard him mutter in his sleep of these
horrible things, I mentioned the matter to
him in the morning at our breakfast, and
laughed at it; but he grew much agitated,
and tellinc , me to pay no attention to such
things, as c he sometimes talked nonsense
he knew in his sleep, he rose and went
away, leaving hiS meal unfinished—indeed,
searnely touched. lam sure he does not
kno* how often he speaks in his sleep,. for
I have never mentioned the subject again—
though my rest is destroyed by it. And
then his fits of sadness at ordinary mo
ments ! Hannah ! Hannah I there is some
mystery under it ! Yet," continued the
poor young wife, "he is so griod—kind----
so dutiful to God and to man. He has too
mach tenderness and feeling to harm a fly!
Hannah, what am I to think or to do, for I ,
am *retched at present ?"
It was long ere the old dame replied to
this question. She mused deeply on what
had been told to her, and 'in the end said to
Catherine:
"My poor bill , I cannot believe that
Williem is guilty of what these' circum
stances lay seemingly at his door. But if
the worst be true, it is better for you to
know it, than to be in this killing suspense
forever. Go .and gain his confidence,
Catherine ; tell him all that has come to
your ear, and say that you do so by my
advice."
Hannah continued to use persuasions of
the. same kind for some time longer, and at
length sent Catherine home , firmly re
solved to follow the counsel given to hoc.
On. the following day Catherine once
more presented herself at the 'abode of
Hannah, and as soon as she had entered
exclaimed :
"Dear mother, I have told him all I He
will be here soon to explain everything to
us both."
The old woman did not exactly compre
hend this. "Has - he not," said she,
"given an explanation then to you ?"
No, Hannah," said Catherine, "but,
oh ! he is not guilty. 'When I had spoken
to him as .you desired me, he was silent
for a long time, and 'he then took me in
his arms, Hannah, and kissed me, saying,
"My darling Catherine, I ought to have
confided in you long before. I have been
unfortunate, but not guilty. Go to kind
Hannah's, and I will soon follow you and
set your mind at ease, as far as ft can be
done Had I known how much you have
been suffering, I would have done this long
before.
" These were his words, Hannah. Oh,
he may be unfortunate."
Hannah and Catherine said little more
to each other until the husband of the latter
came to the cottage. William sat down
• gravely by his wife, mild commenced to
tell his story:
"The reason of the unhappy exclama
tiOns in sleep," said he, " which have
weighed so much upon your mind, my dear
Catherine, may lie very soon told. They
arose from a circumstance which has much
embittered my own Peace, but which, I
hope, is to be regarded as a sad,ealamity,
rather than a crime. • When Pentered the
army, which I did at the age of nineteen,
the recruiting party to which I. attached
myielf was sent to Scotland, where we
remained for a few months, being ordered
again to England, in order to be transported
to the continent. One unhappy morning,
as we were passing out of a town where
we bad rested on our march southward,
my companions and I chanced to see a
girl, apparently about fifteen years of age,
washing clothes in a tub. Being then the
most light-hearted among the light-hearted
I took up a large stone, With the intention
of splashing the water against the -girl.
She stooped hastily, and, shocking to tell,
when I threw the stone, it struck her on
the head, and she fell to the ground, with,
I fear, her skull fractured. Stupefied by
what I had done, I stood gazing at the
stream of blood gushing from my poor vic
tim's head, when my companions, observ
ing that no one had seen us (for itwas then
early in the mowing). hurried me off. We
were not pursued, and were in a few weeks
on the continent, but the image of that
bleeding girl followed me everywhere; and
since I came home, have never dared to
inquire into the result, lest suspicion should
he, excited, and I should stiffer for murder !
For I fear, from the dreadful nature of the
blow, that the death bf the poor creature
lies at my door l"
While Hutton was relating this story, he
had turned his eyes to the window; but
what was his astonishment, as he was con
cluding, to hear old Hannah cry aloud
" Thank God'!" while his wife burst into a
hysterical passion of tears and smiles, and
threw herself into his arms.
"My dear husband," cried she, as soon
as her voice found utterance, "that town
was Morpeth?"
"It was."
"Dear William," the wife then cried, "I
am that girl !"
"You, Catherine' cried the enraptured
husband, as he pressed her to his bosom.
"Yes," said old Hannah, from whose
eyes tears of joy were fast dropping, "the
girl whom yon unfortunately struck, was
she who is now the wife of your bosom ;
but your fears have magnified the blow.
Catherine was found by myself soon after
the accident, and though she lost a little
blood, and was stunned for a time, she
soon got round again. Praised be Heaven
for bringing about this blessed explana
tion !"
"Amen," responded Catherine and her
husband.
Peace and happiness, as much as usually
fall to the happiest mortals, wore the lot
of Catherine and her husband from this
tine forward, their great 'source of inquie
tide being thus taken' away. The' wife
even loved her husband the more from the
discovery that the circumstances which
had caused her distress were but a proof of
his extreme tenderness of heart and con
science, and William was attached the
more strongly to Catherine, after finding
her to be the person whom he had unwit
tingly injured. A new tie, as it were, had
been formed between them.
Strange as this history may appear, it is
true.
Presence of Mind.
There is nothing like having one's wits
about one in the hour of peril, to which
end it is above all things necessary that
people should' cultivate habit of keeping
themselves cool and facing small evils
steadily. Some years ago a lady, bathing
on the coast of Cornwall, got out of her
depth and was carried out by the tide. The
people on the shore were in a flutter, and
did nothing to save her ; but she hesself
knew that she could float, and so she threw
herself on her back, determined to utilize
her sole power to its utmost. A young
shipwright hearing what had happened,
and a strong swimmer, came down to the
beach, stripped, and began to swim after
her. After swimming upwards of a mile
he came near her, but before touching her
he asked if she had presence of mind
enough to do precisely what he told her to
do, and promised that, on that condition,
he would do his best to save her. She
gave her promise, and the carpenter came
close to her, told her to place her hands
upon his hips, which she did, and then
swam back with her towards the shore.
Both these people had their wits about
them, and both were saved.
- The Birmingham Daily Post records an
instance of coolness equally happy, though
different in circumstance : A canal boat at
Wolverhampton was capsized recently,
having in, the cabin the captain's wife and
three children. To all appearance their
death ivas "certain; when a boat-builder,
seeing what had occurred, ran into the
water and leaped on the bottom of the
boat, at the, same time sending a-friend for
his axe. As soon as he got it he placed his
ear close to the side of the boat, and, ascer
taining where the woman and children
wore, set to work to cut tltrou,ol the time
berg of three-inch oak, and in ten minutes
made an opening through which a tiny
band immediately grasped the broken tim
bers. As the hole increased in size more
hands were held up, till at last the hole
was wide enough to admit the egress of the
baby ten mouths old. In twenty minutes
from the occurring of the accident children.
and mother were all rescued. The process
of delivery was simple, but no one thought
of it except the man who had his wits about
him.—English paper.
Twit Aii6BION 01 TRH , Faxtasr.—The mission of
the Fenian Brotherhood it thus clearly and concise.
ly stated in The Fenian Spirit, the DOW organ of the
organization which has just been established In this
city :
"It neither seeks to create a new monarchy nor a
new republic. Its gospel deniands the restoration
of an oppressed nation's rights and the missionaries
ot•that gospel preach the text in the highways and
byways of this American 'continent. , In the Conte
, derate, as well as in the Federal army, the Fenians
who struggle and die on the battle-field, as lemon,'
are apostles of that sublime creed, 'the restoration of
Ireland's Nationality. , They exclaim loud enough
for the strong hearts still dwelling in the land of
their fathers to hear, that Ireland as a nation shall
not die—neither by forced emigration nor by Eng
lish misrule. They utter an armed protest against
the legislative murder of the Irish nation. They
hold out their hands with bounteolis offers of that
assistance which is most required when the hoar
,onus; they have strength because they are UttiTßO.
They are not the tools of any political faction la
this or any other country, They are at no indivi-'
dual% beck ; they seek the election of no man to
einem but rather eutploloua of those in their midst
who would sock or accept one. Their national
creed le plain; it simply means that Ireland shall
not pass away, but remain for all lime as a nation—
controlling, directing, and guarding the weal of her
people. It says, in language plain and bold enough
ior foes and friends to comprehend, that perpetual
submission to English dominion in Ireland Is incom
patible with Irish nature. It means chat if this do
minion cannot be uprooted from Irish soil withont
the effusion of blood, then each Irish heart will be. -
come a fountain."
DRAXATID AND MITSICAT.
In speaking of Mrs. Siddons Miss Wynn, in her
"Diary of a Lady of Quality," is rather critical :
" Mrs. Siddons in her prime is certainly a bright
recollection, but I did not feel for her acting quite
the enthusiasm that most people profess. It was
too artificial for my taste ; her attitudes were fine
and graceful, but they:alums pained to me the re
sult of study ;,:.not HO Mtn (s''Nell, trho always
was graceful, merely tiecause ; she could not help
it, because it was linPossible to throw those
beautifully formed limbsi l / 4 and especially that
neck, Into any position that'was not beautiful. A
the same time must say, in . Isabel and in Jane
Shore, Miss O'Neil'struck me as very Inferior in:
deed. to Mrs. Slddons. She, never excited that
deep thrill of horror which made my blood tingle
at•my fingerst end. I was melancholy; and that
was all. Miss O'Neil had sense enough to refuse
the character of Lady Macbeth, ooneciens
that her • powers were Inadequate to it. I
never saw Mrs. Siddone 'with a good Mac
beth; for Hem hie I never reckoned tolerable; nor
did I feel I knew what the character was until
I heard Mrs. Siddons read the play. Certainly in
that reading, some'speeches of Macbeth's, and al- -
.nlost the whole of the *itches' were the parts that
struck MO moat, Probably Lady Macbeth, howeier
excellent, had by frequent repetition lost some of
her power; certainly (I felt) In that part Mrs. Sid
dons eduld no longer surprise me. Yet she did
though. •• I looked with impatience for the grand
sleepwalking scene, and thought . I would take
advantage of my position, which was very near
her, to watch the tine, fixed glassy glare
which she contrived to give her eyes. Alas! that
was quite gone; whether the diminution of the
natural fire of the eye presented this .effect, or
• whether the rausMes were grown less flexible from
age and want of constant practice, . I know not, but
I feel quite certain of the fact. It struck me when
I saw her once more, in one of her frequent reap
pearances, act Lady Macbeth on the opera stage.
Then my pleasure In seeing her was inereased by
my delight In watching the effect she produced on
the very eloquent though plain oounterianoe of Ma
dame de Steel, who sat in the stage•box, literally
wrapped up in the performance." •
A correspondent of the Springfield (Maas.) Re
pablicon discourses as follows of church music in
Boston: «The musical committees of the churches
are busy in reorganizing their choirs for the coming
year. Music in most churches is a co-ordinate band
of public worship, and the musical director is al pa
tent in his sphere seethe preaeher is In his. A sort
of musical necessity has long since determined what
stanzas of a hymn to sing or omit, in defiance of the
preacher's direction. The present tendenoyin most
of the churches is toward music which resembles
the . opera as nearly as possible. The congregations
like and, indeed, require this. A few years ago,
the hymn A charge to keep 'I have,' was sung to
a tune adapted with lint slight alteration from a
popular polka. Yesterday I heard a hymn sung to
an exquisitely plaintive tune founded upon the
King of Thuile song In Faust. Who was the worse I
Good singing compensates much for poor preach
ing; and good singing, as at present understood,
implies a arstalass organist and four solo per
formers. It is by•no means necessary that the mu
sical committee of a church should be able to distin
guish one tune from another. They should be busi
ness men with liberal notion's. It Is a question of
expense and business skill with which they have to
deal. The beet way for them to do is to 'select a
musical director of reputation, and put the whole
matter into his hands. Twenty-live hundred or
three thousand dollars a year Is not an extravagant
allowance for this purpose:a ,
—Mr. O. Jerome Hopkins, On his late visit to
Batton, was her ored by an invitation to try the
Great Music Hall organ, which all the world knows
is kept as carefully out the sight.of sacrilegious
eyes as a young girl's first love letter. Mr. Hop
kins played only in private, but is expected to give
some pUblic performances there later in the season.
The Davenport Brothers, who created such a
Sensation with their " Mystery of Spiritualism" In
this city a short time ago, sailed in the steamer yes
terday for Liverpool. They are going to ;England
and the continent to waken the folks up with their
peculiar rapping! and tambourine mantenvres.
They are to -be under the management of Harry
Palmer, who is calculated, if anillltidy is, to serum,
tionize the slow coaches across the water.
The London Times is opposed to Grisi's return
to the lyric stage any more. Tier enthusiastic re
ception (when she appeared recently on benefit
performiuce) has inspired her to try another fare
well tour, but the Times , critic says : -"It should
satisfy madame Grist that the reception she expari•
wised was scarcely less enthusiastic than that ac
corded to her illustriourstoinpatriot (Garibaldi), and
now she should fix upon a Caprera, and remain
there quietly, lest she should (by accident) stumble
upon an Aspromonte."
The piece of music composed by Rossini on the
day of lileyerbeer's funeral is entitled "Atielque
llesures Funebres a mon patters- ami Giacomo
Illeyerbeer.-8 May, 1884, 8 o'clock A. "hf.—Gioac
chino Rossini... , It ie. described as a chorus in four
parts, the large rhythm of which is indicated simply
by blows struck =f i equal time on muffled kettle
drums. The theme is solemn and of a melancholy
character, eh(' seeme to have been stiggested under
the Inspiration .of deep emotion.
Ullman has reorganized for the coming season
his concert troupe, so :as to Include Carlotta- Patti;
Jaell, the pianist; Vieuxtemps, the violinist; Steil
fens, violoncellist; Ferrari, baritone; Visier, the
horn-player; and Godefroid, the harpist. All these
artists will appear in a series of concerts at Berlin
next Winter, •
Arrival and Balling of (Mean Steamers.
TO -ARRIVE.
.. .
REM FROM: FOR .. . DATE
Teuton' .a ... .. —Boutbanipton.Now York ' Arm 6
City of LinieriCk.Liverpool New York Ant. 6
Etna. - Elyerpool••••• New York Aug. 10
China Liverpool.... New Y0rk....--Aug. 13
C+ermaniw • Rontbamptou -Now 10rk.......Aug. 23
TO DEPART.
Northern Light.NeW York Aspinwall........Ang 23
Creole ...... .. ... New York...•. New 0r1ean5......aug 24
Persia New York Liverpool Aug 21
hangs.— ' New York......Breaten Aug 2/
Britarnia ' New York " Glasgow.• .. ........ 27
C. of Baltiwore.New York. ....Liverpool dug 27
Golden Rule.. —New York San Juan. 111,7—Ang 27
Brio Eew York "...Liverpool Aug 21
icoarioke New York Ravage Aug 29
Liberty 27,w York.. •• •iliVritilk Aug 3L
Aide Bosfrn ' ...Liverpool tag 31
Nedar.... . .... ..New York Liverpool Aug 31.
Not th Etar...• • afew York Atipi.nwatl.... —Sept. 3
. . '
PHILADELPHIA BOARD OF' TRADE.
JAMBS M/LLIESN,
ANDREW WHBELER, Committee of the Month.
F.D. Y. TowNano,
.MARINE INTELLIGENCE.
PORT OF P.HII , 4I4tELPIIIB:,'Aug. 22,1864
Suultises..s 21 Sun Seta.,9, 8 Hlgh Watur..s 12
ARRAYED.
Steamship Saxon, Matthews, 42 hours from Bos
ton, with radio and passengeituto Henry Winsor
CO-
Bark Winslow, Yorke, 73 days from Nevessa,wlth
guano and to wood to order. •
Brig Herald. Davis, 3 days -from New York, with
salt to Kerr & Bro.
4 Brig Beery Leeds, Smith, . 9 days from Rockland,
with Ice to captain.
Sniff Rescue. Relly,-2 days from Providence, with
mdse to Crowell & Collfos.- •
Schr D & E Kelley, Kelley, 6 days from Boston,
In ballast to Qulntard & Ward.
Sohr Elizabeth, Lincoln 4 days from Province
town, with masa to Geo B kerfoot.
Solar J Al Flanagan, Cain, 7 days from Boston,
with ice to captain.
Schr Alligator, Wooster, 3 days from New York,
In ballaetto captain.
.Schr R G Whllden, Simpson, 4 dajs from Provi
der/NO.li ballast, Noble, Caldwell, & Co.
Sehr Pequonnock, Barnes, 5 days from Boston,
with ice to Cold Spring Ice and Coal Co.
Steamer National, prose,24 hours 9rom New
York, with mdze to W P Clyde..
Steamer Concord, Norman, 24 hours from New
York, with mdze to Wm al Baird & Co.
SVr Fannie, Penton, 24 hours from Now York,
with mdze to W Baird dr Co.
Steamer Manhattan, Byther, 6 hours from
Cape May, with 275 passengers to captain.
Barks Adelaide, for S W Pass, and Wm Van
Name, for Tampa Bay, were at anchor at Fourteen
Feetßank. Below the Ledge Light passed a deep
ly. loaded bark and six brigs, coming up. LWOW
Bombay Hook saw brig 0 0 Clary coming up.
CLEARED.
Steamship Geo Leary, Deming, Fort Monroe.
Brig Mazatlan, Maddocks,Glace Bay.
Bohr Minnie Miller, Leland; Hampton Roads.
Schr Fair Dealer, Coombs, pastime, Me.
Seta* T L White, Davis, East Cambridge.
Schr S R Jameson, Jameson, New Bedford.
Schr ,W R Geun, Parker, Boston.
Schr Charter Oak. , Baker,' Boston.
Schr Wm 0 Carroll , ' Mathis,' Fall River.
Schr R G Whilden, Simpson, Providence.
Schr D & E Boston.
Schr PoBY Price, Risley, Boston.
Schr John Randolph,-ADsrtin,.Borton,
Seim E W Perry, RisleY, Newport.-
Schr.l J Spencer, Fleming., illatanzaS.
Schr Diadem, Black, Portland.
Schr F Edwards, Babcook, Providence.
Schr Aderaide, Crovrell,.Providence.
Bohr L & R Smith, Smith, , Providence.
Schr F. & L Oordery, Grace, Beaufort.
Schr-E Lit Wales, 110timani:Hamptort
s S S t o ch : T h r r ia L W a t re t. R tip , a w l- R ip. ao h erie a u n ,n , l3. l: a t ew E ,y , wo A ra: lec hin san gto dri rk iE .
Schr Jonas Sparks. Inman, Fortress Monroe.
St,r Coo/1K Banimore.
CHILDREN'S CARRIAGES.—
AMAX & eon. iiamaketur v i; 1.50 Does
isteeto below Woad. 64-40.
THE PRESS. - PHILADELPHIA, TUESDAY, AUGUST 23; 1864.
------ -
THE HANNAH MORE AC A DEMY,
-L• WILKINOTOIe. Delaware.
The Fall Session will commence MONDSY. SEP cast.
BBR L 41.1864. Pc.t. particulars. apply to the Price ode,
. OHAELUTTh and ISABELLA 0 IiTMSBAW.
&Milo EDI FITH and WEST btreels.
RES. E. HALL'S 'IITB IT I TR, ton
YOUNG LADIES (with Primary and Secondary
deyartmente attached), S. E. corner of DILLWYN end
GREENStteeta. The duties of this institution will he
renamed on MONDAY, September 6, an2l ISt*
JIANTUA. FEMALE SEMINARY
THIRTY. FIFTH and BARING Streets, West Pin!
ivieiphia. This Institution will mien next term OR
TA °RED sy, first day of bEPTRIIBER. • •
an22-9e Rev. Joint 11100R8. Principal.
MISS HOOPES WILL REOPEN HER
BOARDING and DAY scfroot, fnr Young twits!.
at 1409 LOONY Street, on WEGNISDAY, th. 14th
September.
aa22-1m
GE MA NT OWN FEMALE BENI-
N-A NARY, GREEN Street, south of Walnut lane, will
reopen WEDNE.F.DAY.•Sept. 7th.
Circulars, setting forth the Course of Instruction, &a..
&a.. &c., may be obtained at the tietninerv.
Prof. WALTER. FORTS3CGE,_A
amiht .
, .
CHESTER VALLEY ACADEMY FOB
Tona Ladles and Gentlemen TAYLOR. pen Math
month (Foe_ptember)6th, VS 4. J. E Priest
pa). COATESVILLB. Cbeftereonnty. Ps. en3o.lm*
RELICT SCHOOL FOR. GIRLS, 1030
SPRIN 'GARDEN Street, win be reopened SOL
Iftb. Can2o-.111t9 It Y. KMCling, Prissiest.
OSEIDENSTICKEWS CLASSIC A L
•• lIIRTITUTE. 127 N. TENTII Street, will r,.
MNDAY, Bet. F renchli English branches. Lashi,ategki..
German. and taught. Call for a Cluradar.
tau2Olin•
BUSINESS EDUCATION —IF 0U NG
Men prepare DEN ' S C OMMERCI ALuse aad business
life at CRiTTEN COLLEGE, 6311
CRESTIMT Street. corner of Feventh.
Practical instruction in Book-Keeping. in all its
branches; Penmanship, plain and ornamental; Kerma..
tile Cniculations. &c.
Telegraphing by Sound and on Paper taught by one
of the beer of practical Operators.
Students instructed separately r and received at any
time. Diplomas, with the Seal of the Institution at
tached, awarded on graduating. Catalogues containing
particulars furnished gratis on OMPUCatiOn.
CU] STNITT-BTRIEBT FEMA.LE S EMI-
lea RY. —Mies Bonney and Kies Dillaye wilt re
open their Boarding end 'Day. School at No. 1015
(3156T11UT Street, WBONNCDAY, September 11th.
Partice i arc (rem circulars.
et.HE GA RY INSTITUTE.—ENGLISH
'Li AND FREIICH BOARDING AND DAY SCHOOL
FOR YOUNG tADIES (1527 and (529 iPacreE St..
Philadelphia). will reopen on TOINDAY. September
510th. Lettere to the above addrese will receive prompt
attention. Personal application can be made atter &a
otoPPID, 1S81:, to MADAME D'HIRVILLB.
aul7-he Principal.
SCHOOL AND I:IIINDE.,RGARTEN A
Ninth and BD•ini Garden will be RISOPENE r D
September 12th, at 1914 al teicirP 17E4pr ON Streak'.
GERTRUDE - Vt. FULTON.,
11ARRIET B. DARLINGTON.
BUSY E. SPEAKMAN.
WOODLAND BNMINARY, 9. WOOD
LAND TERRACE, WEST PRILADELPEITA-
Rey. R/Lfiß Y BEEVES, A. 111., Principal, (late of the
Cbambersbarg Seminary) Session opens September
14th. A Day and Boarding School for Young Ladies.
MrPerieneed Teachers; instruction solid. doles , . and
thoreugb. Ctrealars sent on application. anl64f
TT OLMESBURG SEMINARY FOR
-11-a- YOUNG LADIES will be reopened on TUESDAY;
Sept. 8. For CIRCULARS, containing reference°. &a.
adrdreas the Misses CHAPMAN, Principals, Hoimeabcirg
P. 0., Philadelphia City. aril&
THE MISSES CASEY & MRS. BEEBE'S
•-••• ENGLISH and FRINCH BOARDING and DAY
SCHOOL, No. 1103 wmakitrr Street, will ill OM
on WEDNESDAY, the 14th of September.• an4-2m
PRIVATE SCHOOL FOR BOYS, N. E.
corner of CHESTNUT and EIGHTEENTH Streets.
will 'mien on MONDAY. September 6th. L. HAR
ROWS. Jl4O. G. R. McELROY. Principals
PHILADELPHIA COLLEGIATE IN
STITDTE FOR YOUNG LADIES,
E.
WO ARCH
Street. Rey. CRAB. A sairra, D. D., E. CLARENCE
SIIITR, A. M., Principals.
Ninth Year. Three Departments: Primary, Aeade
min, and Collegisle. Full college course in Clasetes,
Mathematics, higher English, and Natural Selena«, for
those who graduate. Modern Languages, Musts, Paint.
tug, and Elocution by the beet mentera. For circulars.,
apply at IRRO CRIISTRUT Street, or addrees Box Rill
P. 0., Philadelphia.
The xt section comment. on Monday, Septem
ber 19th.neap20-6m*
A NDALIFRIA INSTITUTE--A. HOME
BO4RDINO-SOBOOL FOE BOYS, at Andalusia.
12 miles from Philadelphia.
H. I'. WELLS. A. sf, Rector.
REP]laßlfekS. —Et. Rev. Alonzo Potter, 1).10., LL.D.,
and Et. Rev. Wm. B. Stevens, D. D.
MILITARY COLLEGE, ALLEN
TOWN. Pews* , within three honra' ride of Phi
ladelphia; chartered by the State provided with Spa
cious grounds and s buildings, an/ opened in May teat
with over ne hundred moils. Commences its next see.
lion Septomber 6tb. For circulars, address Rey. N. L.
11OFFORD, A. If., President. • anlo-110.
P ENNSYLVANIA MILITARY ACADEMY, AT WEST CHESTER.
The duties of this institution will bo rammed oa
THURSDAY, September Ist. at 4 o'clock P. M.
Circulars containing full information , may be ob..
tabled of JAMES H. ORES, Eau.. No. '8516 CHEST.
NUT Street, or of COL. THEODOR& HYATT.
sub-]m President Penna. Military. Academy.
VEM.A.LE COLLEGE, BORDENTOWN,
-A- N. J.—This Institution in pleasantly located on the
Delaware River, about thirty miles by railroad from
Philadelphia. ditorongh instruction la given in the
common and higher branches of English, and superior
advantages are furnished in the Ancient and. Modern
Languages, Drawing. Painting in all Its branches,
Vocal and Instrumental MUllitt. For Catalognes, ad
dress Ray. JOHE H. BRAKELBY, A. Alt..
au4-6w. President.
MISS MARY E THROPP WILL RE
OPEN her ENGLISH and FRENCH BOARDING
and DAY SCHOOL for YOUNG LADISS, at No. 18411
CHESTNUT Strest, Philadelphia, on the 12th of Se
tember. For eireoh,re, until the ht of September, ad
dress Mies THROPP, Valley Forge. Pa en 3-6•
GLX.4WCIOD • ACADEMY t DELA
WARE WATER OAP, MONIKOE CO., P.
The fall session of the above ..intaltntlon wil °m
anners on the 12th of the 9th month (September). For
particulars apply to EIAhIIIEL ALSO p ,
Principal.
j7304m Delaware Water Oap. Monroe co.. Pa..
FRIENDS' SCHOOL FOR GIRLS A. 1415
SMALL BOYS, on Seheal lake,Germantown, wlli
reopen on the 6th of Dth month. The tumal branches. of
an S. nalfeb education will be taught, and we feel war.
ranted in believing that the competency of the teacher,
Deborah B. Smith, will make it desirable to parents to
Datroutte the echool. jrl6-tf
VLA:GE GREEN 11EMINARY.—MI
ir;ITeRY .13ciaRDING SCHOOL, 4 miles beyond ate
dia. midi% miles from Glen Biddle, on the West Chao
ter Railroad. Thorough corms in Mathematics. Natu
ral Sciences, Langaages, and Englieb. Prer . tlea l ise
none In Surveying and Civil Engineering n libr ari
and apparatus. Number of pupils limited. Begins Sept.
let Pupils have benefits of a tome. Raters to John C.
Capp & Son. ZS South Third Street; Thee. J. Clayton,
Esq., Fifth and Prune; Jolui H. Diehl. MO Walnut.
Addles. Hey. J. HENRY BART O_ .E A. IL,
J72E-9m VILLAGE GREEN. Penna.,
rITHE WEST CHESTER ACADEMY
APD gfILITABY INSTITUTE.
The scholasticyear of ten monthe eommeness on the
Iry TUESDAY, e eth of September next, and clams
on the let of July following.
Boye and young men prepared for College or BCUIIII4IIOII
in its various requirements.
The modern lanitmagee are taught by runtime retriattret
Teachers, who have no connection with any other
schooL
Por oataloroos and tall Worm/Mon apply to
Wht. F. VirIXF.S., A M.,
Principal;
or, S. BUNTER WOERALL, hf, Ph. D.
Associate Principal,
WEST CHRATBR. Nana.
Wrr EST GROVE BOARDING SCHOOL
FOR GIRLS, CRESTS/1. COUNTY, PA., THOMAS
P. COWARD. Principal. —The 22d semi-annual eleildell
of this Institution will commence on the SECOND
DAY, the 7th or Eleventh month next. The situation Is
pleasant au d healthful, near West Grove Station, on Balt.
Confront. R. The course or tastraction is thorough and
extensive, inclnling Latin, French, Drawing, Book
keelgnlti and Telegraphing. For circulars, &c . address
the Principal; as above. aria ch2in
WILL BE OPEItED MONDAY, 813P
TBITEIBR. Mh. a n d
at 1928 MP. VARNON
Street.a BOA_RDING and DAT SCIJOOL forYoang La
dies, in which will be afforded a thorough column of in
struction to the Elementary and also the b gher branch
es of Mathematic/4 Soleness, L6l/1111/OZOP. Select Lltera•
M
tore, and Musts. rs. R. & WATSON.
Mies $ R. WATSON,
Principals.
au9-tustso
WOODBIIRY SEMINARY, WOOD.
BIIRT. N. J. nine miles from Philadelphia. and
esey of aeons. A 'limited amber of Pupils of both
...ass received thin the reality of the Principal. The
course of instruction includes a thorough ENGLISH
AND CLASSICAL EDWATION. wish Modern Lan
guages, Music, Drawing, and .Painting, by the best
masters. The Fall Term commences MONDAY. Sept.
6th. References given and required.
For circulars, address
au2o stutlifit* CHAS. H. BROW or. A. it. Principal.
T t ROAD. STREET ACADEMY . FOR
BOYS, 337 South BROAD filtreat, B. ROTH, A.
, Principal: Duties renamed on MONDAY. t3ept
Mt New Catalogues now ready, and may be had at
Id mgrs. (McCord's, under the Continental Rotol; at Yr.
Boyt'a, Tenth and Chestnut etreete. and at the princi
pal Boeketoren anlB theta9t•
17 4 R CILDOWN BOARDING SCHOOL
FOR GIRLS. Brelldown„ Chester County, Penna.
The winter term will commence 10th mo. 10th, 1864.
Tenor, $7O per session of twenty weeke, for English
branches and Languages. Drawing or Painting,s.lt
Mnetc. *lO. Circulars can be obtained of S. DAR
LINGTOK, 133 South FOURTH Street, or of the
Principal, RICHARD DARLINGTON, sr., Sraildown,
Chester co.. Pa. sal:4•atathlat
BRISTOL BOARDING SCHOOL FOR
GIRLS will reopen on the first Second-day 111 al*
Meth *loath. For circulars apply to
liseS-tithe-260 RUTH ANNA PRILICR, Pried! .
f1" 31 41AVJ: 1 i10 4 1
CABINET FIIBBITURA AND B o
LLaILD ?ABLE& -7 . . •
MOORE db CAMPION,
No. 5161. SOUTH SICOND STREET,
In connection with their extensive Cabinet bneinsas,
fps nowtmanufacturins a superior article of
13ILLIARD TABLES • .
tad have now on hand a full supply, finished with the
NOONE & CAMPION'S IMPRONBD CUSHIONS,
Mitch are pronounced by all who have used them to
5e superior to all others. Poe the quality and Ante& of
these Tables, the manufacturers refer to their numerous
Wrong throughout the union, who are familiar with
be character of their wort . aplil•thri
NWNEW SMOKED AND SPICED BAL.
mom.
JUR received.
ALBERT C. ROBERTS,
Dealer in fine Oroandea:
'Corner.ILIVENTH and VDMI
ARCHER & REEVES,
WHOLEFALE GROCERS,'
No. 4 $ North.WATBB Street, and
No. 46 North .1/MAWARB Avenue,
Offer for sale. at the Lowest Market Prices, s larity
stock of
SUGALIt, . MOLASSES. COYPU,
TRAIL Stqcss, TOBAGO°.
And Grooerise generally, wsfallY ealected for the
*pantry trade.
Sole Agents for the products of FITHIAN A POGUE'I
Wendy. Frail Canning Factory at Bridgeton, B. J.
arar•-em
MACKEREL , HERRING, SHAD, &,
- '2,600 W M
s. aas. Nos. 1,2, and 3 Mackereldato.
moot fat gab in assorted packages.
Her2,ooo bbls. Raw lastport, Fortu Bay, and Halifax
ring.
1600 boxes Lubeti. Healed, and No. 1 Herring.
150 'tibia new Mess Shad. •
SO boxes Herkimer county Chew, dm., •
In store and for sale by MURPHY & $OOl2B,
No. IV NORTH WHARVRH.
LATOUR'S OLIVE OIL.-400 RAS
kets fresh Latonr's Olive Ott. In lots to salt she
Purchaser, for sale by BRODEd Ulf%
an2o-tf . 107 &kith WATER Btreet.
LCirNOW BIS ' CELE.
- 11 -4
bated Ssurre on band as d for Pale br
RHODES a WILLTANS, '
107 South WATER esat.
aREENORLE WALNUTS.-100
‘-)1
1'14" areead"WalltiCiDEPErkalroltintraul
-107 South. WATER Streo.
CORN STARCH.— 400 BOXES •Os
wego and Totuxea'a Core Starch; also,GO boxes Mai
sano. for sale by RHODES lcWtLLid,ll,
an2o4f 107 South WATER Streit.
PITY YOUR MATCHES. BEFORE
September lit ;200 pose for all;1 4 7 a
Etr
11414941 144 tivith Taa k.
EDUCATIONAL.
GROCERIES.
NEW NO. 1 ELLONEREL,
RAILROAD LINE&
,P=MYTIVAZUIt
.01INTRAL • RAILBOATA
• . .
TROATsmaggna. To prrroainto ass Km= DOW
' '
• BLE•TBACH.
THE SHORT ROUTE To-Tnivwspr
?nine leave the Depot at ILIVIATH sag 111114:11
treats. as follows;
nail Train at. -A. N.
?set Line yg
• Through Brunei at....
Parkes burg Train. Not 1.
Parketsbarg Train, No. I, at. •.. LOO P. M.
Harrisburg_ Accommodation Train LE) r. M,
Lancaster Train at 4.00 P. M
Paoli. Accommodation Train. (lwatitiiiest
Philadelphia) 6.00 P. M.
The Through Exprese Train ruse daily.-All the otitis.
traint daily, ex cept Sunday.
FOR PITTSBURG AHD THE WEST,
The Mail Train, Feat Line, and Through lacyresa eon
neat at Pittsburg with through tralns on all the divan-
Ins roads from that point, North to the Lakes, West to
the Hisalasippl and Miesoari Rivera, and South and
Southwes INDIANA ts eneeesible by Railroad.
BRANCH RAILROAD.
The Through Exprees connects at :Blairsville Inter
section with a train on this road for Elairsville. Ini
tial)", are,
ESENSBIIEO Barma n SSON BRANCH .11.111,110 AD.
The Throug Train connects at Cresson at
10.40 A. H. with a train on this road for Eltensbrus. •
train also leaves °reason tor Ebensbarg at 8. 46 P. IL
HOLLIDAYSBURG BRANCH RAILROAD
The Mail Train and Through Express connect at Al
krona with trains for Rollidayaburg at 7.611 P. M. sad
40 A. M.
EONS AND CLEARFIELD BRANCH RAILROAD.
The Through Express Train connects at Tyrone with
trains for andy Ridge, Phillipsburg, Port Matilda.
Milesburg, and Bellefonte.
HUNTINGDON AND BROAD-TOP RAILROAD.
The Through Express Train commons at Hantingdon
With a train for Hopewell and Bloody Ran to 6.66 A. A.
NORTHERN CENTRAL AND PH/LADIELPRIA Ant
gala RAILROADS.
log- Sinszunr WILLIAMSPORT, 40011 C HAVEN, And all
points on the Philadelphia and iris Railroad, and Rle
was, NOcIfESTRII, BE RTALO AND NIAGARA FALLk
Passengers taking tha Train, dally S A. N., ant
the Through Express, at 10.80 P. XL , (except Etna.
dais). E 0 directly through withont change of ears bso
Mean Phllade/phla and Williamsport
For YORE, HANOVER, and ORTTTERI73O. the
trains leaving at 7.21 A. M. and 2.3)P. H., donned M
Columbia with trains on the Northern Central Railroad.
CUMBERLAND' VALLEY RAILROAD.
The Dail Train and Through Express connect at Rat ,
risbure,with trains for Carlisle, Chambersbrurg, and Ha.
gerstosa
WAYNESBURG BRANCH RAILROAD.
The trains leaving at 7.26 A. M. and 2.90 P. M. abased
at Dovrnington With trains on this road for Waxman -
Inirg and all interinediate stations.
HANN'S BAGGAGE ERPRISS.
An Agent of this reliable Express Company win wig
through each train before reaching the depot, and take
np_checks and deliver baggage to any part Of the gni_
For farther information. apply at the Passenger ke,
eon S. R. -corner of ELEVENTH and MARKET Streeta.
JAMES COWDSK, Tleket Ale At.
WESTERN EMIGRATION.
An ]immigrant Accommodation Train leaves No.
1100/r atreet daily (Sundays excepted ), at 4 o ' clock P.D. MB
PDX' inform.iition_apply
i th r
/RANCOR 7 FC, litpr D an oo t M ok it„
.PREIGHTS.
8 7 this route freights of all deasr.btions 'az be for.
Warded to and from any point on the Railroads of Ohio,
Kentucky, Indiana, Illinois, Wisconsin, lowa, or DM
gqpnyt, rerilroaddirect, or to any port on the =VIER'
104 rivers of the West, by steamers from Pittsburg.
Eor freight contracts or gripping direstions. apply '
S. B. ffllloB7o/4. Jr.. Philadelphia.
EPOCH LEWIS,
:MOW . Bugarintondant. Altoona. Pa.
1864. NEW Y ORK 1864.
• mini CAMDEN AND ; AMBOY - Arm PHILIDELPHIA
AND TRENTON RAILROAD COMPANY'S
LINES, FROM PHILADBLPIII/1 TO
MEW YORK AND WAY PLUMB.
wi r taz tog WALlitrT-81111V WEARY
a MAYS Ad F OLLOWS—Yiht
P
Al A. , via Camden and Amboy, C. and A. A s
ala
sommodation • -.83 X
At A. /1., Vitt Camden and JOlllOl OUT, Wrath/
• • .... .• • •• • • • •-•
At l ed M., via Camden an d . Jers e y (3lty, fd Clio t 11um
Ticket •
At 12 N., via Camden and Amboy, C. and A. Ae
commodation .—. I id
At 2 P. N. , via Camden and Amboy, O. and
grew
AS l P. N., via Camden and Amboy, Acsonmoda. 2 W
bon, (Freight and Passenger) ....... I if
At 6F. 111, via Camden and Amboy Accommoda
tion, (Freight and Passenger)--let glue robot,. INi
Do. do. 3d lase do.
At 9M P. 11. via Camden and Amboy Accommoda
tion, (Freight and Passenger—let glass Ticket...
Do. do 241 lase do, 1
For Manch Clinnk, Allentown, Bethlehem, Beichlthla
Zaston, Lambertvi lle, Flemington, he., at '3.30 P. /L
For Lambertville, and interme diate stations, at
F. if
For Mount Holly, lwansville, and Pemberton, at 4 A.
111._, 2, and 6 P. M.
For Freehold at 6A. M. and 7f P. M.
For Palmyra, Riverton, Delano°, Beverly. littrliag.
10n, Florence, Bordentown, ,at 6 A., M. 1.
11.10, k and Y. N. The 3. 30 and P. IL lines ran , di-
Fut through to Trenton.
For Palmyra, Riverton, Dolan.", Beverly, and Bor.
Ilneon, at 7 F.,M.
Steamboat Trenton, for Bristol, Burlington, Beverly.
Torresdale, and Tacony, at 9.M A. M. and 3 MP N.
LINES PROM KENSINGTON DEPOT WILL LEAVE
AS FOLLOWS;
At 4 A. X (Night), via Kanston and New York.
Washington and New Y0rk.......... al
At ILI6 A. IL. via Kensington and Jersey City,
AM) P. . reea .
. Kensinigien and Jersey City. Eh- ao°
press • ..... I 00
At 6.46 P. M.. via Kensington and Jam, City,
Washington and New York Express 3 Of
Sunday Lines leave at 4 A. M. and 6.46 P. M.
For Water Gap, Strondeburg Scranton. Wilkesbarra.
Montrose Great Bend, Manch Chunk, Allentown, Beth
lehem, Belvidere_ , Easton, Lambertville, Pie
Be.. at 7.16 a. M. This line c onnote with ' gra
Leaving' Easton for Mauch Chun at 3 30 1' N
For Lambertville and intermediate elation., at 6P. EL
For Bristol, Trenton, are., at T. 16 and 11.76 A.-X., and
P. M.
For Holmeeburg, Taeony, Wited - noming, Brideabarg.
find Frs.nkford, at 9 A, M. , 6, 6.46, and 8 I'. It
•141- For New York and Way Lines leaving Homing.
ton Depot, take the cars on Fifth street, above Waisted,
half an hour before departure. The ears rue into the
D D epot,
epok and on the arrival of auk train run from th e
Fifty pounds of Baggage only allowed each uesengi.
Passengers are prohibited from taking anything a. -
gage but their westing apparel. an baggage over if
pounds to be paid for extra. The Company limit the
responsibility for baggage to One Dollar per yoound, and
will not be liable for any amount beyond 9100. • 14 4$'
by special contract.
Graham's Baggage Repress will well for and deliver
Uggage at the Depots: Orden! to be left at No. 3 Wal.
Aug.
nut street.
1864. WILLIAM H. GATEMEN, 'Agent 8,
LIMBS FROM NEW YORK POE PHILADILPHLA.
WILL Lavas PROM TID Poo? OP o :emsmulw s=sl'.
At 12 M. sad 4 P. via Jersey City and dela.
At 7 and /0 A. IL , and 6 P. IC , and 12 (Eighth via Jer
sey City and Kensington.
Prom the foot of Barclay street at 6 A. AL and IP. /1.•
via Amboy and Camden.
From Pfer pas s enger,) h river, at n m.. and P. X. ,
(freight and Amboy and Camden. Jad
aptimprHILADELPHLt,
MORE RAILROAD.
LMUTGTOA. AND BALTI-
TIME TABLE.
On and after MONDAY, Altruist 180, 1616. rissenfav
Trains leave Philadelphia for
Baltimore at 4.30, (Express, Mondays excepted.) 8.06
A. M., 12 M. 2.30 and 10.30 P. M.
Chester at 8.06, 11.16 A. Y. , L 80, 2.30. 4.30, a and U
P. M.
Wilmington at 430 (Mondays excepted,) 8.06, Mil
A. M., 1:31, 2.30, 4.31i6„10.30. and I.ll'_, M.
New Culla at 8.06 M. and 4.30 P. A.
Dover at 8.06 A M. and 4.30 PAN,
Milford at 8. 06 A. I!
Salisbury at 8.06 A. X.
TRAINS POE PHILADELPHIA LEAVE
Baltimore. at 8.46, 9.40 A. M., (Express.) LlO. 6.liamt
10.26 P. M.
Wilmington at 1.48, 6.46. DA. IL: 12.11, L 1.46, 4.
2.33. 7 and 9.10 P. M
Salisbury at 11.66 A. K.
Milford at 2.46 P. ar.
Dover at 6.30 A. M. and 4.16 P. M.
Chester s et 7a6
.34 AAMn, d 1 0,27.79 P.
RI
440, 1, 7.66 sat
2.40 P. M.
Leave Baltimore for Salisbury and intermediate sta..
Mous at 10.26 P. M.
. • .
Leave Baltimore for Dover and intermediate stations
at 1.10 P. M
TRAINS POR BALTIMORE
Leave Cheater , at 8 40 A_ 11., 905 M.
P. M.
Leave Wilmington at 5.80, 9.76 A. M., 9.40 and 11.40
Freight Train with Passenger Car attached will leave
Wilmington for Perryville and intermediate ydaeino, at
7.46 P. M.
tIUTEI. •••••
From Philadelphia to Balaimore only at 4.30 A. M.
and 10.33 P. M.
From Philadelphia to WiLealaaton at 4.30 A. IL, 10.M0
and 11 P. M.
.
Prom Wilmington to Philadelphia at LdB A. IL and
7 P. K.
Only at 10.26 P. K. from Baltimore to Philadelphia.
and . B. 7. Frairarr. Bnp't.
agiMORERE 1864.
PHILADELPHIA AND ERIE RAIL
/LOAD.—This great line traverses the Northern and
Northwest counties of Pennsylvania to the ally of Erie.
On Lake Erik
It has been leased by the PENNSYLVANIA RAIL,
ROAD COMPANY, and tinder their movies* is being
rapidly opened throughout its entire length.
It is now in use for Peseenger and Freight bummer
from Harrisburg to Et. Mary's (216 miles), on the East
ern Division, and from Shelleld. to Erie ( 78 miles). OR
the Western Division.
TIME OP PAPPEPOIR Minli AT PISALDZIPICA.
Leave Westward.
NMI • 7.M A. M.
UTress Train —.10,10 P. K.
Cars run through without ehAage both ways on thews
trains ifttween Philadelphia and Look Raven, and be
tween Baltimore and Lock Haven.
Elegant Sleeping Care on Express Trains both Wart
between Williamsport and Baltimore, end Williams.
port and Philadelphia.
For information respecting Pitmans./ badness apply
at the S. B. corner ELEVENTH and MARKET Streets.
And for Freight business of the Comm. r iilarcata
B. B. KINGSTON. Jr. corner and
RABBIT Streets, Philadelphia.
.7. W. REYNOLDS, Erie.
J. If. DRILL. Agent N. O. R. Z Baltimore.
H. H. HOUSTON.
General Freight Arent P
IS
r. llbtrprhiladelphia.
LE.
*sacral Ticket Agent Philadelphia.
JOSEPH D. Purrs.
General Wenger, WiIIIAMIKTIL
agrummig NORTH PENN
SYLVANIA RAILRO AD
For:BETRLEBBIg. SYLV AN IA
cnumr.
EASTON, WILLIAMSPORT. WILRESB&BB.E, Re.
SIMMER. ARRANGEMENT.
Passenger Trains leave the new Depot,THIRD Street,
above Thompson street, daily (Sundays exempted), as
follows:
At 7 A. M. (Exureas) for Bethlehem, Allentown.
Mauch Chunk, Easleton, WillisimePOrt,
bane, ac.
At 9,45 P. M. (Express) for Bethlehem, Easton, Re.
At 5.16 P. M. for Bethlehem. Allentown. Mauch
Chunk.
For Doylestown at 9.15 A. M., 9 P. M. and 4.16 P. M.
For FortWashlngton at 10.15 A M. and 11 P. IL
For Lansdale at 6 16 P. M.
White ears of the Second and Third. streets Line Oily
Passenger run directly to the new Depot.
TRAINS FOR PHILADELPHIA.
Leave Bethlehem at 6.60 A. M. , 9.90 A. M.. and 6.07
P. M.
Leave Doylestown at 6.40 A. M... 1146 P. M., and 7P.
/ASV/ Lansdale at 6 A. M.
Leave Fort Washington at 11.76 A. X. and F. x.
OR SUNDAYS.
Plaladelbla for Bethlehem as 9 A. M.
PlalladelOnbla for Doylestown at 3 P. M.
I:=n fi r
r PhUad e r i lg a iia itt 4 1 0 21)1 : M.
IB IELLIS WAHL Ai
1 8 64 . OAMDB N AND' AT- 1 864.
AXTIC RAILROAD-
- - ----- •
ELllfll}lll ARRANGEMENT—THROUGH IM two
HOURS
FOUR TRAINS DAILY TO ATLANTIO orri. •
On and after MONDAY.. July 4th. traitut will leave
VINE- Street Ferry as follows:
Mall .
7.10
Freight,.with passenger car attached........... 9.15 A.M.
Nzpresa (through in two hours) 2.00 P. K.
Atlantic Accommodation 4.15 P.M.
Junction Accommodation' " ...;;.,.,, 5.80 P. IL
RETURN IN 0, leaves ANNA,:
Atlantic Acc0nani0dati0tt.”...•4.....4........ 5.4 d
Express ..••iez.::«see.e.... 9.08 A.
Mail
Freight A. M.
.48 P. /L
Junction ACOOMmOdation • 6.23 A. EL
Fare to Atlantic, $2. Hound-trip Tickets, (good only
for the day and train on which they are lesuadjs3.
EXTRA 'HADDONFIELD TRAINS
Leave Vine street at 10.16 A. M. *and 1 P. It
Leave Haddonlield at 11.96 A.' M. and 2.4/5 F.M.
ON SUNDAYS,
Mail Train for Atlantic leaves Vine street at 7.30 A. M.
Leave, Atlantic at 4.48 P. K.
ie3o-teel JNO. EL.-BRYANT. Arent.
ima t ioßgf WEST JERSEY
RAILROAD LINES.
COMMENCING MONDAY, JUNE 20, 1864. from WAL.
FRPT•STRIET PINE.
O 0 BUY.
At 6 And 10 A.M. A F
nd R
4.80 A P. PE
91.
4 , For Salem and Bridgeton at 9 A.M. and 4 P. M.
For Glassboro at 6,9, and 10 A. 11. and 4 and 4-60P.M.
For Woodba: y, Gloucester, 80. ,a t 6 and A. "L s u
H., and 4 and 6 P. M
RETURNING TRAINS.
Leave Cate May at 6 and 11 45 A.. N.. and 5.10 P. M.
Leave MillvlUe at 7.40 A. M. and 1 52 and 6.60 P. M.
Leave Salem at 6 AL IC and 1.19 P. M.
Lenve.Bridget on at 6:15 A. Y. and LSO P.N.
Leave GlaatiWro it 7.10 and 8 96 A.M., and 2.38,3. aid
7:60 P.M. - -
LOS'S Woodbury at 7, 7.40. and 8.84 A. Y. . and 160.
8.79, 6.05, and 8 12 P. M.
The WEST JERSEY EXPRESS COMPANY, Ole* 16
WALNUT Street, will call for and deliver Baggage, and
attend to, all. the tumql, branotios of Es press businean.
• Heavy ortielestiOmin by. 6 A.' Y. line•only,' and most be
sent to the Mace the evening prevlonn. Perishable
articles by this line mnst be seat before 564 . A. H.
Aocia.lroaaaangar accomnion each train
lowg J. VA& pa
Supcalateattak.
RAILROAD L ENE&
WEST JERSEY
R AILR OAD LINES FROM
WALNUT-STREET PIER.-.
Extra EXPkexe train to Cape May on SATURDAYS at
5.36 P. M.. Morninn MONDAY'S at A. M.
THROUGH IN THREE HOURS.
FARE Eq.
- 'IIXTTESION TICKETS, good to return In any trite
on MONDAYS. $4.
Return tickets will be good for EL on account of pas.
sage from Cap. Ma an day within two weeks, Ir pro
s ted to the TICKET CLERK at the office.
T n hese trains will not lake any way paseengere, nor
stop except to take In wood and water.
Regular trains leave daily, except Sundays, as fol
lows:
From Phllsdelpbs. at 5 A. M., 10 A. 4.30 P. AL
From Cape Nay at 6 A AL , 11.46 A AI, 5 10 I'. Al.
pansengers baying baggage are particularly requested
to have it ready fur checking at an early hour.
J. VAN RENSSELAER,
Superintendent.
aal9• is tf
BOA-0, VIA. MEDIA.
SUMMER ABRaNGEMENT—CHANOB OF DXPOT.
On and atter MONDAY, May RI, 1104, the trains win
leave Philadelphia, from Depot corner of THIRTY.
FIRST and MARKST Streets Meet Philadelphia), at
and 11.06 A.M. and at• 2 SO, 446, and 7 P. M. Leavt
West Cheater at 6.20, 7.46. and 11 A. M., and at 2 and
P. K.
On Sundays, leave Philadelphia at 8.3) A. M. and LK
P. M. Leave West Cheater at A.M. and 6P. M.
The trains leaving Philadelhia at B.OP A. M. and 4.4 f
P.M., and West Cheater at 7. 46 A. N. affd 6P. M., ems
neat with Mane on the P. and B C. B. for Oxford MI
intermediate points. HENRY WOOD,
apt . General Superintendent.
ajoinik RARITAN *-AND
DELAWARE BAY RAILROAD
—T Long n Bed Branc
Banh, Makin, Manchester, Tom's River.
Bar, k ,
On and after MOlifIal &c " august Ist, Trains will leave
CAMDEN, for LOBO BIIASCH, at El A. AC Behind=
will leave Long_Branch at 12. 46
THROTIOHIST FOUR HOURS DIRECT BY RAIL.
A Freight Train, with passenger car attached. will
start for Stations on the main line daily, from CAM
DEN (Sundays excepted), at 9.30 A. M.
Stages connect at Woodmansie and Manchester for
Barnegat and Tom's River.
Stages will also connect at Farmingdale, for Point
Pleasant, Sultan Village, Blue Ball, and Our House
Tern.
or further Information apply to Comintn'Y's Agent ,
L. B. COLE, at Cooper's Point, Camden.
WM. F. GRIFFITTS,
General Gape/intendant.
lappallMLNEW RAILROAD
1/1111011TEL—PRILADRL.
PHIA TO BROORLYN—THROUGH PTV'S HOURS.
FARE TWO DOLLARS—EXCURSION TICKETS
TRIM DOLLARS-000D FOR TITBSB !MTS.
On and after MONDAY, Anynet 1. 188-1, trains will
leave foot of VINE Street. aPhiladelphis, EVERY
MORNING, at 8 o'elbek, Sundays excepted, thence by
Camden. and Atlantic and Raritan and Delaware Bay
Railroads to Port Monmouth, and by the commodlona
steamer Jesse Hoyt, to foot of Atlantic street, Brooklyn.
Returning, leave Atlantic-street wharf every day, Sun
days excepted, at D. A. M.
Travellers to the city of New York are notteed not to
apply for passage by ibis line, the State of New Jere.,
baring =tad to: the Camden and Amboy monopoly
the elm naive- -prividegs.cd carrying passengers and
irelght eon - thrsities Of Philadelphia and New
York. • • 'NT, F. GRIFFITTS,
.15 , 3C-tf General Superintendent.
asussuggE PHILADBLPHIA
AND ELMIRA R. R. LINE.
1864. EYEING AND RUMMER ARRANGE• 1864.
MINT.
•-• .
For WILLIAMSPORT. SCRANTON. ELMIRA, Balk
HALO. NIAGARA FALLS, CLEVELAND. TOLEDO
CHICAGO, DETROIT, MILWAUKEE, CINCINNATI,
BT. LOOlB, and all points in the West and North meet.
Passenger Trains leave .Depot of Philadelphia and
Reading Railroad. corner BROAD and CALLOWHILL
Streets, at 8.16 A. R. and 3.30 P. 8., daily, except Sun
days.
QUICKEST ROUTE from Philadelphia to points In
Northern and Western Pennsylvania. Western New
York, Ike., As.
For fart h er Information apply at the aim N.,W;
corner SIXTH and CHESTNUT Streets.
N. VAN HORN, Ticket. Agent.
JORN S. HILLIS, General Agent,
TRIBUNATE and CALLOWHILL
ategskir IsIEW RAILROAD
LINE 8011TH.
PHILADELPHIA TO BROOKLYN.
THROUGH 1N FIVE BOORS.
YARN a EXOORNION TICKETS 33, GOOD YOE
THREE DAYS.
On and atter MONDAY, AUGUST 1, 1834, trains will
leave foot of Vine street, Philadelphia, every morning
at B A. M., Sundays excepted, thence by Camden and
Atlantic, and Raritan and . Delaware Bar Railroads to
Port Monmouth, and by the comuiddions steamer Jesse
Moyt to foot of Atlantic etreet,,Brooki yn Returning,
leave Atlantic-street Wharf every day. Mo ndays except
ad. 011 A. N.
. .
Trevellers to the city of New York are notified
not to apply for passage by !Mx line, the State. of New
Jersey having granted to the. Camden and Amboy mo
jtopoly the exeinelve privilege of carrying' passenger*
god freight between tbs oitiee of Philadelphia and New
York. aut-tf
EXPRESS COMPANIES.
iff"TEE ADAMS=-
RIMS COMPANY, Office Effie
CHESTNUT *teat, forwards Parcels, Packages, Mb
Shanotn, Bank Notes, and Specie, either by its oirt
Rae. or in connection with other Express COMMA'S*
&Who principal Towns and Cities In the itlinitcni
E. S. ANDFORD.
MR • General SoSperintendent.
FOB SALE AND TO LET.
A RARE CHANCE I—" THE REPUB.
+ALLMAN AND DEMOCRAT." PUBLIEIRID IN WM
MASTER CHESTER COUNTY PENNA. •
FOR SALE.—The death of Ge orge W. rearms; les
proprietor of this paper, makes it aecessary•to disponi"
of the establishment, In the hands of a loyal. earnest,
and enterprising profi t a b le : long-eatablished journal
`extensively in a county of seventy - four thousand in.
habitants. and in a Congressional and Senatorial Dta
ltrict of one hundred and five thouriand,prominent 107
wealth and intelligenoe, and where the Union party al
U last election had a majority of over roar thousand
Votes, and with a constantly incregatns popularity and
patronage, it requires nothing but indicions mania
went to mate it &lucrative investment.
Persons contemplating a Purchase should mats that
fait known at once, as it Is desirable to soli at lihr
sairlisat day. JOHN T. WORTHINGTON,
. • _ Administrator of. George W. Pearce, deti'd•
WEIST Ogisavne.. Pa.. WV 11. MA myl9••thnta K
VOR SAL E-ONE OORLI-SS 12-
Rom Power Steam Englite.in complete order, only
been in nee two months. Apply to CHAS. LSNNIO.
enll-tb+tnfic• IL•d South FRONT Street.
TO LET-THE BBC° ,1 4 ID THIRD, AND
-a- 'ninth Floors at 135 111,1VM' Btreet,,thro b r
Chnralb alley.
it'- ; O ::1` A"
to DAVID c r af . *Mirk. Die ,ant-3a
de .. TO. R.E.IIT-.ONE OF . THE MOST
MIR eligible four-story STORM' on MARKET Street,
between Third amenaixth "treats. north side, now occu
pied as a dry_guode hooey, with an unexpired team
d dress •• B. H., " Box 2,86 Poet
Post Office. an 22-21.
de FOR SALE OR • RENT—A NEAT
•wW.- DWELLING, In a healthy situation, with a. lama
Garden, and well Aread t baring ten rooms. large Pi
azza, North and West; aikuund on Thirty-firth street,
Mac Inc. Inquire of R. Mr; o.atrm. No. 222 Nortb
TR/ETES/ITU btreet • • . . an 22-24.
O_FACTORY PROPERTY FOR SAL 3
ant—Situate N. W. corner of Frankford road agd Norris
street. Lot 10 feet on Fraakford road and 414 feet es
Norris street.
Siethrne.stm7 Brick Dwellings on - Prankford_
One four-story Brick Factory Bntlding , 83 by 43 feet,
on Norris street-with two-story heck attuned, 23 by Of
feet, containing cotton machinery. engine , and boilers.
For farther information apply at northeast corner of
SEVENTH and SPRUCE Stmts.
de LARGE' AND VALUABLE PRO.
•= II PEITT FOB SALE —The very large and comma
diens LOT and BUILDING, No. 3013 CHBRBY etreti
near the contra of business. containing 60 feet ea Chem
etreet, depth Be feet. being 7 beet wide on the rear el
the lot, and at that width opening teaDa2a sorting'
leading to Cherry rtreet. Ita ad van time
SIZE AND POSITION
are rarely met With.
Apply at the oftloi, at Gillet Church Ifeeptt,
.jeL3-3m. - • N0.•220 WALNUT Street.
ink FOR BALE—VALUABLE AND
...A— :well-improved FARAL 95
N.
nicely • near Poit Wainington . Statidn. N. P. R R.. twelve
=lles out; large and convenient atone buildings: ilna
alfaly to R. PETPT,,
323 WALNUT Street.
Ai TO. • : CHANGE-V A L A.•B L
Delaware front FARM, 217aores; railroad snitloa
on the memlses,. and one-nalf toile from steamboal
landing. near Bordentosrn, N. J. Good elaas of build.
legs of every deseription; line fruits, In their varieties;
dab pond: bath; ris aslant water thronq the Dismal*.
Call and examine Reenter of Farms,
attlii E. PETTIT, 323 W LIRIT Si
FOR BALE, MUCH BELOW ITS
Ma RBA VALUE A two-and -a. It al f story Italian
COTTAOR, near Darby. with 12 acres of Land, adorned
with a large number of Shade Trees, and also a great
♦arlety of Fruit Trees in bearing. Stabling, Ice-house,
and everything complete to make it a meet d.strable
country seat.. B. F. GLRNN,
auXla • • DM South FOURTH Street
MEDICAL.
TARRANT'BEFFERVESCENT
SELTZER APERIENT
• 18 THI
BEET REMEDY KNOWN •
POR ALL
BILIOUS COMPLAINTS, BICH HEADACHE, COETTITS
NESS, INDIGESTION. HEART BURN. SOUR
STOMACH SEA-SICKNEM3, &c. Re.
Dr. JAMES R. CHILTON, the Great Chembet, saint
" I know its composition. and have no doubt 3 will
prove most beneficial in those complaints for which it Is
recommended. "
Dr. THOMAS BOYD says ; • " I strongly ooranteaa
to the notice of the public."
Dr. EDWARD O. LUDLOW says; •• I can with eon-
Edens* recommend lc. "
Dr. GEORGE T. DEXTER says: "In Plataloney.
Heart-burn, Costiveness, Sick Headache, , Etc.. the
SELTZER APERIENT in ray Lunde bail proved Indeed
a valuable remedy. "
l'or other teetlroorklals see.pamDblet with each bottle.
.ifetaintacturod only • TAIMINT k CO..
278 ORESIM7CH Street, New York.
Aa- FOR SAM BY ALL DRUGGISTS. my 7.4. tual
'RLECTRICITY.-WHAT IS LIFE
. 4 - 4 WITHOUT HEALTH f—Dre. BARTHOLOMEW &
ALLEN, Medical Electricians, havingremoved their
°Mee from Korth Tenth street to No, 154 North
ELEVENTH Street, below Rate, will still treat and cure
all cur Ole di. •seay s, whether Acute or Chronic, without
shocksfigiduf'ory inconvemezice, by the use of ELEC
TRICITY, in its modifications sad Hcmcsopathie Medi
cines.
ConeumPtion, glut ttnd 11 . • Inguezma and Catairla,
cond staged'. Genend•Debility.
Paralysis. . Diseases of the Liver or
Neuralgia: Kidneys.
Fever and - Ague- • Diabetes.
Cone ion. Prolapsus Uteri (Palling of
the wont b).
Humorrb 61de. or 'Piles.
Bronch
•
Rheuml
tie. atism. Spinal Disease.
Deafness.
Testimonials at the aloe, 164 North Eleventh street.
Oise hours, 9 A. M. to EiP,, M
DRS. BARTHOLOMEW & ALLEN,
Medical Electricians,
'orth ELEVENTH Street.
'TAYLOR'S ARNICA OIL OR EMBRO
CATION never Odle to Imre Rhenmatism,Nenralida.
Spratne, Frosted Feet,Chapped Hande,and all Skin Dis
asset. Price 25. ,and wholesale and retail byR. B. TAY
LOR, Druergiet, TENTH and CALLOWHILL. mh6-61*.
ALL PER SONS AFFLICTED WITH
DYSENTERY, DIARRHEA, CHOLERA MORBETE,
or other disorders of the Bowels. should obtain a bottle
of DR. NAIRLABIB'S VEGETABLE CURATIVE, as it
has never been known to fall Babe No. 1131. CATHA
RINE Street, NSllsdeltalls- sal3 etuthlSt
AT D I Cl.ll A L COD-LIVER OIL.-
are
JOHN
reseal. BAKER & CO . RKBT Street.
APO iIIOW. Tillg their aupplles fre sh front the fish.
sees'.
.
The superiority of their Oil, in every respect, has
gained for i ma r ket.tation and sale beyond an 7 other
brand in the To maintain it they are deter
mined to supply an article that may be entirely relied
on for freshness and purity. See testimonials of Pro
fessors of Medical Colleges. aall-thstn-tf
DENSERVO.
A most erectly* and delightful mrparatton
FOR THE TEETH AND GUAVA
Highly recommended by the most eminent Donlan
and Dentists.
It is the result of a tnorough course of scientific soon.
riments, extending through a period of nearly thirty
years.
To a great extent La Irral7 CABO, and entirely Is many.
IT WILL PREVENT DECAY OP TEETH. It will also
STRENGTHEN WEAR GUNS. KEEP THE THEM
BEAUTIFULLY CLEAN AND THE BREATH BW/UPZ
See circulars. Price Prepared solely hi
8. T. SALE, H. D. DENTIST,
1113 CHESTNUT Bt., F hiladelPhia, Pa.
Tor sale by Druggists.
lell-fins
BRASS STENCIL ALPIETI3.
M. J. assrcaLF a 800 J.
101 UNION STUMM. BOSTOII, - KASS.. •
The only manniactnreas in the United States of sreen
Alphabets and Figural, to any great extent or to Ws"
carietx, Sold at arholeeele at the 'Louie* SI N rioae.
Also.-the beet of INDELIBLII STENCIL INK, eery
cheap. Stencil Diatand all kinda of Steven Stook. I.
aninis at orders trrnantely attandm tiTYI-Sr
MRS. JAMES BETTS' CELEBRATED
1 3 1 1PPORTIR8 /Oh LADIIB—
only annortere tinder eminent medical patra
Ladies and 1.1114._ue are respectfully reurteeted to
only on Yrs. It her residence. 1039 W
Street. Phila. (to 'Vold counterfeits. ) Thirty thOWcang
Invalids hiVe NON: advised bytheirphyttalcis tit SW
ntarat
t Ng
militates. Thom only ate mine bearing the Mated
ewes cop yrt ght labtla on trie rm bow. and strA is a
gip ea in immortal. With testimonials.. onie.
TIMTED STATES EASTERN Dlfa•
1 TRICT OF PENNSYLV J ANIA. -- Sor.
THE PRESIDENT OP THE UNITED STATES, TO TUN
MARSHAL or THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF PSLIN
SYLVANIA.—Oannyr 50:-
WHEREAS The District Court of the United Stelae
in and (or the Ea.tern District of Pennsylvania, rightly
and duly proceeding on a Libel, tiled in th e IMMO' of the
United States of America. hash decreed all persons. in
general who have, or pretend to hard. any right, title.
or interest in the sloop bARAR MARY. whereof
le mister, her tackle, apparel, and furniture, and
the cargo now or lately laden on board thereof. cap;
tared by the United btates steamer " Norfolk Packet,
under command of George W. Wood, Acting Et edge
of the Navy of the United States, to be monished.
cited, and called to judgmt tit, at the time and place un
derwritten, and to the erect hereafter expressed (jus
tice so . requiring). Yon are therefore charged and
strictly enjoined and commended. that you omit not,
but that by publishing these pre teats In at least two of
the dully newspapers printed and published in the city
of Philadelphia, and in the Legal Ndelligeneer, you
do monish and cite, or cause to be monished and cited,
peremptorily, all persons in general who have, or pre
tend to have, any right, title. or interest in the said
stoop SARAH MARY, her tackle, apparel, and fa -
niture, and the cargo stow or lately laden on hoard
thereof, to appear before the Lkinorable JOHN
CAD WALA DER, the Judge of the said Court, at the
District Court room, in the city of Philadelphia, on
the TWEN MTH day after publication of these pro
se-lAN if it he a court day, or else on the neat court day
following, between the usual hours of hearing canes,
then and there to show. or allege. in due form of law a
reasonable and lawful excuse ) f any they have, w hy
the said sloop SARAH MARY. tier tackle, appa
rel, and furniture, and the cargo now or lately
laden on „hoard thereof, should not be pronounc-id
to belong, at the time of the capture of the same,
to the enemies of the United States, and as goods
of their enetnie s or otherwise, liable and subject to coo
dembatlon, to be adjudged and condemned as good and
lawful prizes; and farther to do and receive to this be
half as to justice shall appertain. And that you duly
Intimate, or cause to be intimated, unto all parsons
aforesaid, generally (to whom by the tenor of these pre
sents It is also Intimated), that if they eh all- not appear
at the time and place . above mentioned, or appear and
Shall nut show a reasonable and lawful cause to the
Contrary, then said District Court doth intend and will
proceed to adjudication on the said capture, and may pro
nounce that. theßaid sloop SARAH MARY and cargo did
belong, at the time of the capture of the same,to the ene
mies of the United States of America, and as goods of
their enemies, or otherwise, liable and subject to con
fiscation and condemnation, to be adjudged and con
demned as lawful -prise. the absence or rather contu
macy of the persons encited and intimated in anywise
notwithstanding, and that you duly certify to the said
District Court what yon shall do in the prozniaas, to
gether with these presents.
Witness the Honorable JOHN CAD WAL ADE% jndge
of th , said court, at Philadelphia, thiseighteenth day of
AUGUST, .A• D. ISat, and If the eighty-ninth year of
the independence of the said States.
an2ll 3t 0. E. FOX. Clerk DistriatCourt.
TTNITED STATES, EASTERN
DIS
TRICT OF PENNE,YLVANIA. —Sox.
THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES, TO THE
MARSHAL OF TOE EASTERN DISTB/CT OF PENN
SYLVANIA. —Gummier; :
HEREAS, The District Court of the United States
In and for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, rightly
and dilly proceeding one Libel, filed in the name of the
j United Suttee of America, bath decreed all persons in
j general who have, or pretend to have,any right, title,
or interest in the sloop HOPE, whereof is
I Master , her tackle, apparel anti furniteroome cargo
laden on board thereof, captured by the JP
I Steamer Lodona," under command of Acting Vo
-1 hotter Li, utenant George E. Welch, to be in i•
i mashed, cited, and called to jodgment,at the time and
place underwritten, and to the effect hereafter expressed,
(justice so requiring.) You are therefore charged and
amictly enjoined and commanded, that von omit not,
I tot that by publishing these presents in at least two of
Ithe daily newspapers prince and published in the city
of Philadelphia, and in the Legal hiteilipencer, you do
/monist' and cite. or cause to be m nished and sited, po
i remptorily, all persons in general who have, or pretend
I to have any right, title, or interest in the said stoop
I HOPE, her tackle, apparel, and furniture, and the
I cargo laden on board thereof. to appear before
bethe Honorable JOHN CAD WALADth Judge of
said Court, at the District Court r oom ,i n the city of
Philadelphia, on the twentieth day after poolication of
these protente„ if it be a court day, or aide on the nett
court day following, between the usual hours of Hearing
causer, then and there to show, or allege, in due form
of law, a reasonable and lawful execute, if any the,
have, why the said sloop HOPE, h,.r tacitle. apparel,
and furniture, and the canto laden Da board thereof,
should not be pronounced to beioug,at the timeof the cap
' tut eof the same, to the enemies of the United Slates,
and. as goods of their enemies or otherwise, liable and
subject to condemnation, to be adjudged and condemned
as good and lawful prizes; and further to do and re
ceive in this behalf as to justice shall appertain. And
that you duly intimate, or cause to be intimlted, unto
all porton§ aforesaid, gent rally (to whom by the tenor
of these precen to tt is also intimated), that If they shall
not appear at toe time and place above mentioned, or
appear and shall not shows reasonable and lawful cane.
to the contrary, th en said District Court cloth intend
and will proceed to adjudication on the said capture.
and may pronounce that the said sloop HOPE, her
tackle, apparel, and fornitute, and the eargJ laden
on board thereof, did belong, at the time of the cap
ture of the ram-, to the anent lee of the United States of
America,and as gord e of their enemies, or otherwise,lia
hie and subject to confiscation and coudemustion.to be
adjudged and condemned as lawful prize. theabeence or
rather cr ntumacy of the persons so cited and Intimated
in anywise nommthstandiag, and that you duly certify
to the said Dbmict Court what you shall do in the pre
misas, together with these presents.
Witness the Honorable JOHN CAD WALADER, Judge
of the mod Court, at Philadelphia, tots twenty-second
day of ATIGUeT, A. D. Del, and in the eighty-ninth
year of the independence of the said United States
a 023-14 0. R. FOX, Clerk District uourt.
UVITED STATES, ESSTERN DIS
TRICT OF PENNSTLVAIILL—Ser.
THE PRIBIDENT OF TBB lINITBD sTATEs, TO THE
MARSHAL OF THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF PBXDf-
SYLVANTA —n
-RJUITING
IWHEREAS, The District Court of the United States In
and for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, rightly
end duly proceeding on a Libel, tiled in the name of the
United States of America, bath decreed all persons In
general who have, or pretend to have, any right, stle.or
interest in two htindredtuid thin - y.Bre bale. and twelve
bags of cotton, raptured by the United state* steamer
Eeseione State, a vessel-of-war of the United State..
under command of Pierce Crosby, itoormander, to be
monished, cited. and called to judgment. at the time
and place underwritten, and to the effect hereafter ex.
nressed,(imillee go reopiring ) Yon are therefore ',barged
and strictly enjoined and commanded, that toe omit
not. but that by publishing these presents in at least
two of the 'daily newspapers printed and published
In the City of Philadelphia, and in the Legal In
lelligeticer, you do monish and cite ' or cause to be
monlehed and cited, peremptorily , allPeflions In gene
ral who have, or pretend to have, any right, title , or
interest in the said two hundred and thirty-Ave
bales and twelve bags of cotton, to appear before
the Honorable JOHN CAD WALADER, the Judea
of the said Court, AT the District Court room, in the City
of Philadelphia, on the twentieth day after publication
of thee, presents, it It be a court day, or else on the next
court day followine, between the venal hours of
hearing causes, then and there to show, or allege,
in due form of law, a reasonable and lawful ex
cuse. if any they have, why the said two hundred
and thirty-fly° balm and twelve bags of cotton
should not bepronounced to belong, at the time of
the capture of the game, to the enemies of the United
States, and as goods of their enemies or otherwise,
liable and subject to condemnation, to be adjudged
and condemned as good and lawful prises; and far
ther to do and 'receive in this behalf as to justice
shell appertain. And that you dilly intimate, or main
to be intimated, unto all persons aforesaid, generally.
(to whom by the tenor of these presents it isalso.inti..
mated, ) that Whey shall: not appear at the time and
place above mentioned, or appear and shall not show a
reaionable and lawful (mufti to the contrary, then said
District O. tut doth intend and will proceed to adjudica
tion on the said earitzure, and may prenonnee that
the said two hundred and thirty , five bales and
twelve bags of cotton did belong, at the time of the
capture bf the same, - to the enemies of the United
States of America, and as goods of their enemies, or
otherwise, liable and subject to centimes - ton and con
demnation, to be adjudged and condemned as lawful
prize, the absence or rather contumacy of the persona
andted and it Omitted in any wise notwithstanding,
that you duly centre to the said District Court
what you shall do in the promisee, together with these
presents.
Witness the Honorable JOHN CADWALADER. Judge
of the said Court, at Philadelphia, this twenty-second
day of AUGUST, A. D. 1864, and in the eighty-ninth
year of the independence of the said United States.
au23 St G. R. FOX. Clerk Diatnet Court.
LETTERS TESTAMENTARY ON
,te Estate of BENJAMIN KELLER, deceased.
having.been granted to the undersigned, all persons In
debted to the said E%tate are requested to make nay-
Merit, and those having claims to present them without
delai
me,- M .
A / R i 7
A KgELdERN,
. 3217 WALNUT St.
C=:EMI
OFF
ICE OF ARMY CLOTHING AND
EQUIPAGE. corner TWELFTErand GIRARD Sts..
SEALED PROPOSrLLwiI eA e A eiv n ed k at9hhi
e 1 offi
ce
nntli 12 o'clock IS. on FRIDAY. the 26th inst„ for sun
plying the SCRUYLKILL ARSENAL with the -follow
ing articles •
DA/K-BLUE COAT CLOTH, 8-4 or 6 4 wide, for-Uni
form Coate. army standard.
WOOLEN BLANKETS, army standard, to weigh Ave
• pounde, and measu o 9 7 feet t• 5 feet 6 inches.
(with the letters II 8., in black. 4 Mabee
long. in the centre.)
SMELTER TENTS, army standard. of linen or cotton;
if cotton, to weigh not lees than 7 0111004 to
the. yard of 3836 inches wide; if linen, to
weigh not lase than 8 ounces to the yard of
UR inches wide. Samples of at least one
yard of the material proposed to be furnished
mud be submitted with the proposal,
DARN-BLUE THREAD. No- SO.
WATER. PROOF BLANKETS, for Infantry, anti* Per
cha or vulcanized indla rubber.
PONCBOS for Cavalry. elute percna or vulcanized India
robber.
Samples of the water proof blankets for infantry and
poaches for cavalry PrOPosed to be &relished must ac
company the propoiai.
Army standard sample. ofl'he dark-blue coat cloth.
woolen blankets, shelter tents, and dark-blue thread,
can be seen at this ofilce, to which deliveries must
aerially crniferm.
Bach bid most be guaranteed by two responsible per
sona, whose signatures must be appended to the gua
rantee. and certified 10 as beturgood and sufficient se
curity for the amount involved by some pablicfruic.
Winery of the United States .
Bids front defaulting contraciors, and these that do
notftafte comply with the requirements of this adver
tisement, will not be considered.
Blank forms for proposals, embracing thl tarots of the
guarantee required on each bid, can be had on applica
tion at thin °fate. and none others which do not em
brace this guarantee will he considered, nor will any
rottrt,,,,,izlivilviver cin !..,
atz not atrtstly •onform
Bide ZOWti he endorse e d "Propoishis for Army Sup
plies." stating the particular erticleWild for.
H. 0508141a14
Ass. Quartermaster Orators.' 8. A.
ARMY CLOTHING AND EQUIPAGE
OFFICE. CineigsAYY, 0.. Augmet 16, IMI4,
PROPObALS are Invited by the undersigned until
THURSDAY. Augart 25th, lied, at 2 o'clock P. M.. for
furnishing this Department (by contract) with..
ARMY SHlRTS—gray flortheit
Aceopllng to the sample which 'may he-Seel at the
Office of Clothing and Equipage in this city.
TO be delivered free of charge, at the D. El, Inspection
Warehou.e in this city, in good new packages. with the
name or the party fru nishing, the, kind_sen4lanantity of
goods eistixictly marked on each article earl ppekrine.
Parties offering goods mnst distinittpaisse Di their
bids the quantity the, Propose to furnish:the-Priee,and
time of delivery.
Samples when submitted, must be marked and mutt
bared to correspond with the proposal; and the parties
thereto must guarantee that the goods abati be.inevery
b
respect, equal d. thereto, otherwise the propoaalwill not cosidere
A guarantee, signed by two responsilble persona, must
accompany each bid, gnaranteeing that the bidder win
supply the articles awarded to him under hie pro
Bids will be opened on Thursday, Attrast 26, ,
o'clock P. ,at this case. and bidders are requested
to be present.
Awards will be made on Friday, August 26. 1E64.- •
Bonds will be required that the contract will be filth.
fully fratiled.
Telegrams relating to proposals will not be noticed
Blank forms of Prvolials. Contracts. and Bonds may
be obtained at this office.
The right to reject any bid deemed Unreasonable fare-.
served.
By order of Col. TROXIS &WORDS. A. Q.
au.lB-6t a C a pta in
and uvro
Q.rt,
Y.
OFFICE DEPOT COMMISSARY OP
SUBSISTRNOR
WAggivoroir, D. C., August 16.1814.
PROPOS a.LB FOR FLOUR.
SEALED PROPOSALS are Invited
.until AUGUST 2544
at 12 N., for furnishing the_Sablostence Department
with
TWO THOUSAND (2,000) BA.RRELB OF FLOUR.
The proposals will be for what is known at Ulla Depot
as Nos. 1,2, and 3, and Ws will be entertained for any
qnantityless than the whole.. .
Bids mast be in duplicate, and for each g rade on sena.
rate sheets of paper.
.1
The delivery of the Floor to commence withla five
days from the oilening of the bids. and in each quanti
ties, daily, as the Government may direct; delivered at
the Government warehouse in Georgetown, et the
Wharves or railroad depot in Washington, D. C.
The delivery of all Plow awarded to be completed
within twenty days from the opening of the bids.
Payment will - be made in certificates of indebtednees.
or such other funds as =the Government may have for
disbursement. •
The•IIRTJ al • Go?fernment . --L insPection will be made just
before the Flour ie received, and none will be accepted
which-la not fresh ground,ead made from Wkeatirrotuni
in tbe•vicinity where mannfachtued. tinless of a very
au g r ello q iir 'al i L o tr be delivered in new oak barrels, head.
lined., .
...
bidderth of allegiance must accompany the bid of each
who has not the oath on file in this office. and AO
bid will be entertained, from parties who have pre.
vionsly failed to comply with their bids, or front bid.
dent not present to respond.
&ET 011130 m
Government reserves the right to .reiect SAY bid for
G s
Bide to be:addressed to the undersigned, at No. %.93
treet, endorsed Proposals for Plonr.-".
. GR.TifS 87.„
anlB lit - ' ' CSlgain and C. 8. V.
(AILEZ.N O 1 BEAUTY.
• WRITS VIRGIN WAX ON
A new TIMOR COSMETIC. for bsantff.yinx.p
ing.ten-
and pressreiss the complexion. It is thorned Won
dock." compound of Om. and nem is 111Vidablir Casa;
powder, magnesia. - bismuth. nor tale inns eomposition•
its It being' composed entirely of note Virgin, Wax; home
bntraoraiary , ocullities for presereins Um skin, mak..
in it soft, smooth, fair, and transpareat, le makes Alm
old appear Toone. the liomay handsmnp, thejtandsome .
more besattful and the vaestbwatlftsl ovine.
i 1 fa
Lik a en ooldn,...l.4draosed onimbMVONTeX9o..i'lradn--
ers; South &Mt. ONO doors above' Omit.
ant and 133 Bantlx‘3373lllll Street. above wow.
4ekkaik
'LEGAL•
AUCTION SALIVA,
VIIRNEBB BRUTLEY & co .
A NO. 815 CHESTNUT and 6114 AV
pun FALL 5,4G6 oF DRY Gni . c... ‘ *
ON TO
M o.k Y .
Ahornet 00. at 10 o'clock. on 4 conntllw tu. ..
ncant Brittf.b, German, Statotir. p r 4 ,6 .1. t
TWIGS' WIG depie gouda. • • ti,:.
A. 8 . ,4, es mfp be arranges! tor li t ,".
vim catalogues early se mundbi ni rale, -.4,
- --
1 . 01114,8. MYERS it Co., AUc,r
No' WB, Noe. filaa and REE WARES? g tre4, l , k4
LARGE POSITIVE PALE OP BOOTS
GOODS, TRAVELLING DA.GIt Ei ,4/
A CARD.-We invite the early attient;es:, yi
- sere to the large and vslitableaseentoest,r,,! . ~ou
and brogans, travelling' beg; stint of so"
bridals POrnplea of 1,100 pseltsees, form or
fresh &sew-talent, to be peresoptonty s ,id b
on
cel l o p r ecise ly. mont e s crei t, commencing rats
ten•
LARGE POSITIVE SALE OF 1109 PAPR,
BOOT*, SHOES, TRAVELLI&O ,
THIS SIOttIVING. • nr. •
August 2341, at 10 o'clock. will Ds sold b r
witnont reservs. on four months , cr e di,.
packages of boots, sloes. brogans,
morals, gum shoes. travelling bus s : 1 .
city and Eastern manufacture, embracing
prime assortment of desirable artic'es for Is.. -4 %
and children. Samples with catalog ues
Ind of sale. r't
NOTICE--01}R SALE OF .1.100 S. PACE/110s i t
SHOWS. /EMI GOODS . IRA Vki.LING D i e . 411
THIS MOILNINO 'Nk,
AnornEt 73, w ill comprlee in part:
—mums men's 21 inch grain cavalry . bo o t,
—cases lIIPD'is and boys' bailed boom :
boo__Tt:eftae...7s zanr:i:.a.bobond3.yeb:::"aahndtdhyioyenkot:ll:B:6"7.calti,fkaipnalz
elk
lane.
ik•
~,,, nt.it'a ,
boys'. and V.nt". calf gatil m
cases men's, boys'. and youths' calf cad k
morals. . . . .. .
•tai •
—canoe women's, misses', and children*, .
kip heeled boots.r...r, v .
w w b00 0 0m m t i::: :
iini mi p a s43,B ses' .. .
amindd
c c h li i il ta d r ra tan : :
~,,;
. 4. ,
ki_ T h :rw.. :„leds
and enamelled boots ^ 0,3,,, ,
—ca.vs women's, - mle6es', and child ren Are _
i ..1, ,
morals. &C
_...„,,... es maws, home and youths' brogan,.
. —cases women's an d misses' nailed b 0.0..
Ale°, a fttil•assortment of ladies' and miewe',..
city -made worn . army goods. &c.
N. B.—The above will emhrsee a prinks and
assortment well worthy the attention of hi ..r, .._ 4
for examination early on the morning of an j„ . oa,
LABOR PEREMPTORY SALR OP Slganeg 4x
AMERICAN DRY GOODS.
We will bold a lax& sale of Drilla'', Herman. P r e
credit, American dry roods. by catalogue, on p t , ' 4 4
Cl4 l ,
credit, and part for cash,
ON THURSDAY MORNING,
August 2Atb, commencing at precisely le o'clock,
prising
550 PACKA4ES AND LOW;
of Brltieh, German, French, India. and Autetliip
f
goods, embracing a large, full, and resh ii,,, t r
woolen, worsted. linen, cotton, and gsids.
and count, y sales. u
4n 4t
• N. B —Samples of the same will be
the far .2.
amination with mistletoes. early on ths morning At - ...
Sala, when dealers And itto th eir intere s t to r
ip;
LARGE SALE OF FOREIGN AND DOMRSTICs4
GOODS.
Included in our sale or Foreign and Dent.stie p T
Goods, on TBIIRSDAY, ensostBs,wiltbefoundit tr
the following desirable articles—via:
bales Cl wc flanels.
bales heavy b row n drills.
bales Ethan Allen and .Lancaster sheeting's
cases it and 4 4 bleached wading
execs brown sod bleached Canton gannets.
cases Hartford and Calm. denims.
cases heavy corset jeans.
Winne colored cambric.. and paper mains
- cages Manchester gingbams.
cases indigo. blue tick logs.
cases Rob Roy cloidyngs.
caws miner's rbild flatinels.
ewes super RentnekTitalll3.
ail-wool tweedy
cases °Deloa and geld-mixed CtulanlerOn.
aces plain and printed .ati netts.
' NOTICE TO _ CLO TRIRR ,— LARriIIeALF, OF TAU%
!K ODDS'
Also, on THURSDAY augt SO.
pieces Belgian broad cloth.
pieces heavy 'velours.
pieces Caaton end President beavers.
pieces Raininiatix and M.scom beavers.
pieces Whitney and pilot beavers.
pieces Aatrschan confiner , .
pledge Belgian tricots and seal skins.
pieces silk and wool desalinates.
pieces Devonshire and Melton c o mi ng ..
pieces dark-mixed repellents.
pieces eap and cloak c.otha.
yam. AC.
pieces m o hair, /Wises, vestings, paddingi.m.
A RM.birts dress
mid drawers, goods, white goods. tfavaltin e da nk
armya hosiery, cravats. tiei. am %
silk, skirts, notions. At.
Also. linen goods, linen cambric handkerchief,
POSITIVE SALE OF CARPSTINGS, &c.,
ON FRIDAY MORNINO,
Angut 28, at precisely 11 o'clock, will be sold by eats,
logae.'ou four months' credit, an.e.Aortmeat Yvar. ;
One and line ingrain, venitian, hemp , eottarp, 4
carpetinge, which may be examined early on th ein Z 7.
big of sale.
ANCOAST-WARNOCK, AUG
T/ONESZEI. 940 MARKET Street.
LARGE POSITIVE FALL S&Ls OF AMERIr,',LS
IMPORTED DRY GOODS, MiLMNE , ty Gook
HOOP SKIRTS, STOCK OF 000DS. Ac ., Sc., dy
bj estalcigne.
ON WEDNESDAY,
Animist 24, 1884, commencing at 10 o'clock preen 4
rirc lorrlsing about 000 10t s seasonable and desind4
P HILIP FORD & CO., AUCTIONEIN
525 MAYULIN and MIX 00/11101ECB Soma
yosiTryy SALE oy i 250CAORSBOCrrS Armsaoy.
ON THURSDAY MORNING.
Anent 25. commencing at 10 o'clock pratl4,lli
Will Bell by catalogue, for cash , about 1,2:0C4W4
shoes, brogans , balmorale , gaiters, and army imods,
prime, froth stock, to which we legit* the MIT easy lion of buyers. . . .
BY HENRY. P. WOLBERT,
AIIe'FIONBER,
N o , NON NARKS" Street, South Bidoosboye Emotil
Sales of Dry Goode Trimmings , Trimmings, Notions, &.., ' y
MONDAY, WEDNESDAY, and FRIDAY Maniacs*
=anoint st 10 o'clock.
DRY GOODS, HOSIERY. )3 DRYS., SKIRTS, Sri-
PENDERIs, SATINETS, MERINO ANL WO,.
S.ll/EIS AND DEA WBES, SHOLS. he.
ON WEDNESDAY MORNING.
•
August 24th. commenetng at lo o'clock, will be ql
from the shelves to lots to salt the retail trade,
table assortment of goods.
MTHOMAS &.ONS L
AAA -4. Roc 139-aad 19111feath FOURTH &rook
FALL SALE STOCKS AHD HEAL ESTATE
CARD.- Oar Etat Fall Sale, (IF ii - Septscric.)
comprise every deocripiloa of Real lintato &ad lot
alias-Bank and other Stocka. Handbills part reads.
Sale Noe. VD and .111 South Fourth street.
SUPERIOR FORD/TITHE. ROSE WOOD PIAIB,
FIN It CARFRTS, &e.
ON THURSDAY /HORNING.
At 9 o'clock. at the auction StJre, the saperior rani.
tore, rosewood piano by. Grokaum, grand adieu Piom
large peinoßl ease, line earpeto; 0 c.
Sale No. 1339 Sprum ;drool
SUPERIOR. FURNITURE TAPESTRY CARPETS kL
ON MONDAY MORNLNO.
99th inst., at to o'clock. at /in. ISM Spruce erect, de
hontahuld and kitchen furniture, tapectry, iDgt , ll2 and
Venetian carpets, finattreaaes, atc.
male.
May be azazolabodod So'elook on the morning of tat '
R SCOTT &
STSW N A Rr AUARCTTS.I OSN
622 C M EST A T, C OeMWOII S,MKOL
and •
MACHINERY AND
PENN STEAM ENGIN]
AND BOILER WORES.--N EA FIE at
CHANTSTALALDTMAKETSC. B L L E KSH 3lS riid• Mt;
a "
POUNDERS. having for many years beset in euetfal
operation, fa nd been excinsivelyc o gaged in ba i tdi raid
repairing Marine and River Engtnee, high and low prey
sure, hop Boilers Water 'rooks; Propellors, Ae..
respectfully offer their services to the public, as boil[
fnl preparetto contract for engines of all )1,
rine /Liver, and Stationary 4
; having Bete of pattern;
different sizes, are prepared to execute orders aiii
quirk de4patch. Every description of pattern-triskai
made at tae shortest notice. , High and Low Pra. , /n ,
Fine, Tubular, and Cylinder Boilers, of the best Proa
wilvania charcoal iron, Fordings, Of all sizes and Saida
Iron and • Elms Castings, of all, descriptions: . 11 * -
Turning, Screw Cot.ing, and all other work coon , twa
with the above business.
Drawing/ and ePeeigattions for all. work done 5: its
establishment free of charge, and wort guarani -*d
The eubscribers have ample wharf-dock room t.'" -
pairs of boats, wberethey elm lie in perfect eafeti.vit
are provided with sheen', blocks, falls, dtc.. Ac., Iu
raking heavy or light weights.
JACOB C. NBA.FIII,
JOHN P.LgVY,
BEACH and PALMA-It litreent.
7. vairOHAN MERRICK,. ' ' WILLIAM M. YERRICI.
/OHS COPra..
SOUTHWARK FOUNDRY.
FIFTH AND WASHINGTON STREETS.
pan-tor:Ulna.
MERRICK & RONR,
ENGINEERS AND MACEILNISI'S,
Manufacture Bich and Low Pre.eure Steam Engines. fa
Land, river, and marine service.
Boilers, Gasometers, Tanks, Iron Boats, Ec. Cul
la us tidal! kinds either iron or brass.
Iron-train, ROots for Gas Work a, Workshops. Rail'
road Stations. &c.
Retorts and Gas Machineryof the latest and most the
proved construction.
Every deseriprlOn of Plantation Machinery, ench
Sugar, Saw, and Grid Mills, Vacuum ran% (H 2
Steam Trains, Defecators, 14 Iters,Prim_ping Ebel
Foie silent, for N. EPlienz's Patent Sugar- Boi I Ia i At-
Mattis. Nesmy`h a Patent Steam Hammer , and A - P l°.
wall Wolsey'a Patent Centrifugal bug au- Dr .. '"
Lachine.
soli.tf
ORR,It CO , STEAM Eg.
GIRL BUILDERS Iron Po - under:. and Gen -91
Nsielialete and. Boiler' Makers, 0.1 ,1 19 CaLL'W•
BILL Street, hia I•biladelp .
- • fee.).;;
surrputo.
inkSTEAM WEEKLY TO Ll'
TERPOOL. touching at QITESESTOWY.
Work Harbor-I The well-known -steame rs or th e 11.
Tor Pool, New York,and "Philadelphi a Eitearoshil Col °
sarA. af ) e p hileAti li tsa
..
.....
.............A..,
Aug ri.
ETNA . ----sexy - RD/A: s , p: 1
13)111131131a II - --SATURDAY. 9-qu :;•
and every succeeding Saturday at Com from Pw Mr
forth River.
RATES Or PASSAGE:
A r al
tbLe In Gold, or ita eaniralent in Currency. -
CABLE SSD OS STEERAGE
_.... ... ... .0 'tt;
. 1
do to L0nd0n....... 86 OD do toi.onc . on- 34 ~.,
do to Paris -.—96 CO do to Pints . 13 '...
do to Hambuig -•90 00 do to Barnhart I : ~•!,
Passengers also forward to Havre, Bremen, ....'
. 2 r., 42 1 , 34 UtwrP, 40., at equally low rates.
. 9,,ro 'ac t cen._.orerPool or Queenstown:
tat Cabin. VA
XB6, Sue- -' .eteerage from . Liverpool and Qaewton.
Those who wish.to send for their friends cad bar
tickets' here at these 'JOWL
Mo r
Fo further information apply at the Ckne W
let - lt. el
ss- JOHN C. DALE, AreA. , l
111 WALNUT' Street. Philade.rici±:_.
Aga
p`ll BOSTON AND PHILAD3...bn
ladelphia, fr
ort
PHII STIAAIiffEP
na fa UNE, minas
bove t from
on...WM/DAYS, trost erkarf a i
rei arid Long Wharf, Boston.
Th.
r e iltpracirt: capt.b. Balm. win if
'Yon. P alp for Boston SaterdaY,
PIV /0 A- and liteamobip BATON, CaPt Ma 4 / 1 4 22
ont Beek,' for Philadelphia on wane dal, at
These noir and substsaihil steauuthiso lasts regdg
Ilse, sailing truss sash port 'inmate/ills on liantrdnYt
enlesareases omen% at ons-halt the premium oho°
the Towels. •
'With% taken at fib fete:
OldlaVers on **Meted iti seat Nip Mioseilits ud "
Of uadialt with their geode.
lair n .mange
Etw x rix gin* seo r lasl
i" ...-
ap'L--„
=..SI Smth W
WRRa G. s
COAL,
0A L SUGAR LOAF, 13Reir '
MA/Wit *aid Spring Iro W 311.0411 Co"
A d it
, • t Locust lionntatn, from Schnylkill; ProP 3l—
us e .: pikret, Br. W. „muff
•d. wUZOW 0111oe. No. 112 800,th SEGOS
aoor.ti
J. WALTON At
41 THOMSON'S LONDON OT C*
BARB, OR XIIROPAAN RANO& for tandlle_
hoteLk_or public Inatitntionn ix TWENTY
VERENT KEE& pitudebonta Rangl
Rot-air Fronzaak Portable Resters, Lowdown Omar.
Irireboaril banes. MIA banes. PlatelAT by
ars, Cooking Stoves. et ittiolasale and re."
Rot xnannfaetororn iwinsr
TROMSO
Anta-tailkoom - 1 1 111 Ar t. ElEcobro std
WRITTMEMD&AND VERBAL 11 ,
* r ak NiMONS of Charaotor OonENtotirador
raLp_htng"it.'manapzatto. A .4 TV;
i n of Czu.tARREN. aoagioNoß.o
- soli
lad *WU* Iff , JOHN L
ftronolodot aoalloo wi to ti
No. SS EL TBoTtouript .a bo.. nh•
GRAMM KIDRIXTON,
iuMinAlm WILLOW
TROM TL
CROW
i f } ~ ~n t ~
CAM) AND FANOY:7OB PEINTIN t s,
. _
AUFWALifit ildWinr& m & roulag