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JEW. YORK HERALD, SUNDAY, AUGUST 6, : 1865;\ F 2 artistic display given by two hundred young misses, wh 8 few older ones, in Meadville, It was @ grand floral festival, with a variety of songs, choruses, duets, tab- Jeux, &¢., by the Meadville Floral Choir, under the direction of Mr. BR. W. Seager, late of. 8t. Paul, Minn, with Miss Susie Holt as organist, ‘The Floral Queen was represented by Miss Ida Brown, and 9 very pretty queen she made, amply beautiful to reign in Flora’s dominions OILDOM read THE Lave! EXCITEMENT. " of > Jamestown, arrived here a Gage bao, Sod otter sick ‘ag well as in Petrolia, A number of the Petroll! were re- VY INVESTMENTS ing ia vain for . the | presented by young members of families that have won HEA . Moore the "s was ined | riches and was Mise quarters at the ‘House. Governor had come renown from oil. Among these Eiaamar Si geuedaiee sin: | tepeeenne = “meee meee ~ er personations, benefit of health, oma. Will There be Another Grand | firm ertue Gebers CRIT: | You an and veryetcs'n tr ol mgmeneinion came Swindle and Crash? loves given by the ladle of tual a eB House. | that a year’s time has made ® marked difference in the In the evening ue was serouaded frst by a glee club of | DAbite, pursuits, tastes, and ambition of those whose colored ind next Dy s club of white v sudden wealth set half of them, and nearly balf of the Gondition of Oil Wells and | soresnecw ster tee fre cal end made gute x prety | TO Cf mankind, easly crasy lee ian | welve BA | pos came cut Atle eterred to ble sary experince rth | months ince, Vulgarity bas given place to ferritory. of — A i then Snes oe rig 2 Land Tespectability, ostentation to modesty, dissipa- peace, the freedom of the slave, and the glorious future pony facto e's eee pas fae 4 calls Tor Gener! Harvey, but that gentleman Sy costly fétes, pie ee bya determina. TITUSVILLE REVISITED. | tory ateoied by ais vil to Fiiiole, ‘Daria the oven” tion to merit by worth, instead. of wealth, good manners eoree bby the leading spirit of Young america ‘in Titus. | '08tead of boorishness, and a decent respect for the con- ville—! = E. H. Crittenden—e relative of the departed | ventionalities of life, than positions in society which mere patriot of Kentucky. riches suddenly acquired cannot attain. Hence we find Improved and City-like Appearance | ya sre igcarminirceiaereay recta sti going | YOURE tisees coming from fashionable boarding. schoole and Manners. Se Pee Sai: ek 2 an, sere nasning bogus os with all that polish and grace which are the peculiar Pomel mostly aadevelopeas ae taavi sti ‘lavest: charms of American ladies in polite circles, and hence it . should do so with caution, for there ‘be another | '8that, mortified by the examplo of one unfortunate ‘even succeeding the revi ‘The arrest | scion of the mewly founded arist whose reckless- HAPPY RELIGIOUS REVIVAL, | sf avinding ol men inthe Eon borhoda whcloome | nova, oxtmragnace and noloroar devacchory, Drought themeelves into ridicule, cast off fret one piece of ex- travagance—¢even (o selling their gold watches and gold RELIGIOUS. chaing—then another, and nally, divorcing themselves There isa and 5 5 Ob POOYISM VERSUS YOUNG AMERICA, feeling in Tit fe. The an aren all tonne from all ambition to excel in the fippancy amd glare of tL ly the First Presby and the nth City life, retire to their good old homes—one taking : the one ‘a ene Pas agg roo ged bride therefrom, another building a church at a cost of New York Styles and Howses | presented to the church by Dr. Wm. M. Jennings, of this | *!sty thousand dollars, and others devoting their capital, : G | pes and is certainly a fine looenmens | for Ihave heard | talent and energies to the development of the hidden fe- All the Go. ba luring ae ry m a “ wind ipeied sources of other parts of the country, as well as enlisting in See in Titusville for three ‘years; is | Works of charity and of goodness. Ihave conversed & g 3 H resided ber of the church,-and' is doing an exten- | with some gentlemen worth over two millions, honestly Xmproved Fastes of the In- | To, business in shipping petroleum, being thoroughly | obtained, who aver that the career of Johnny Stecle was hal | soe church has recently ived large additions to | Providential one for them, for by his example, like bitants, ite pembere, mene Of that persuasion having lately | George Barnwell, ‘they learned to shun his fate,’ and come to Tit ~~ pape are now honored and respected as good and substantial ‘ Aword more —— whe rire Presbyterian church, in | members of society, A number of these men have pur- MOTHING BUT THE BEST IN DEMAND, which 80 Eastern a people take an interest. The | chased fine farms in the West, built substantial houses, edifice has been fi It is situated on Franklin and avoid city life as they would a pestilence. Again a number have taken a Lake city as their home, and have constructed a splendid row of residences, which might be termed the Petroleum Colonnade, Others have gore to Gtreet, near the centre of the town. The exterior is not 80 attractive as the interior, in which about five hundred pers are capable of beimg seated. The wood work throughout is finished im imitation of oak, the windows are of stained glass, and the walls and ceiling Cash Receipts of One New York House bani eaaah i ‘debt. | Europe, not for fear of arrest for swindling, but for the Thirty Thousand Dollars Per Week. The ried Sreeytiteaets Ee oye purpose of spending a little of their surplus cash. on INRABITANTS AND HOW THEY IMPROVE 250 EPFRCT OF THE ARREST OP PETROLEUM SWINDLERS, PLACE. Bey aio] i the an in aan agus petrol com It is queer, but it is a fact, that in most cases in gett fata Com: panies, you would be struck with the et it bas had &.New Hotel on the European Plan— iaee ie eee Font ing aniiagee ase waldeniy poten Tpon the honest men who have realized large fortunes from the fever of speculation that lately existed. I have heard some of them say they would rather be a jay man with a good name than arich one without one. ey cordially endorse course of the Herat in ex- Seeing the frauds of the sharks in the Petroleum Ex- change and the swindlers out of it. They consider that residents are the last to contribute toward public im- proyements. It is true they put up handsome and sub- stantial buildings, particularly for king and business purposes; but inthe one case they do a splendid busi- ness in discounting notes, and in the other another bag did business by goecrapme | exorbitant rents. A New Theatre—A Plank Road to the New Oil Dorado, Sie one family, the wealthiest in this place, who, among | much of the want of success in some of the companics other’ estate, that have had good landed interests is to be attributed The Metropolitan Well and Zow eonaethe rintinalshicoastiines et Sates eae to the mismanagement of the affairs of the companies, It Gets Al ig. i and vegetable stand to be attached tothe bank building who have made officers of men who knew nothing about their business, and who sent inexperienced agente into the territory to develop the lands, and exhausted the workit ae by pay! unnecessarily extravagant but the room is wanted for the convenience of: prices for labor and material, to say nothing of what was ans, and if the owners are too parsimonious to give it to | ¢xpended in champagne and other luxuries, This is the town for the improvement of the sidewalk the town | What the practical oil men say. They also express the should buy it, and erect a monument upon it with a guit- } belief that’ the petroleum excitement, occurring at the able inecription, faea det a weasel interference Jo bebe if of ‘TITUSVLLE foreign exchange, ab- pe ey sg Bo sorbing a ‘vast amount scalearentepnten ke atacorner where there is more — than at any point in the . ‘They get a oo rent ewe which is a three-cornered one, like the sat Gr poder RICH DISCOVERIES ON BENNEHOFF RUN, &o., &., &e. Our Titusville Correspon: e0 There is a strong movement on foot in Titusville to ‘all street and such precincts i Tirvsvnis, Pa, July 28, 1868, | CFect.a new county ont of parte of Crawford, Venango bso dager me Pcp A fim edi and Warren, an Titusville the county seat. Titusville bas heretofore been a sort of short, reducing its volume by hund! walldower, Voge. hancing ‘tating in a remote corner of Crawford county. But that in regard to of course en! its value by preventing the natural “So the traveller who visited Titusvillo Jast year and effects of its enormous expansion. ‘emjoyea all ite Taxuries of bad hotels, bad streets, un- dogus company swindlers, unrighteous specu | Wes when she was of no particular — Noweastle ig noted for its coal, its iron, iron found! ‘and saw nordic and selfishness cropping out, Ure centie a6 2 lenge aauouaniof wealth abe tects bes eat rolling malls, and will become famous for fa ehurohck copper nuggets in Colorado, at nearly every corner, | and is putting on metropolitan airs Sopamtslee "oe choes oleht ieuosas Oktay ee be Interested, not to say astonished, were be t0 | aisssvie ig right, and will, accomplish her purpose xf | Campbellite, is being constructed at a cost artsixty thou- ‘Tetarn Here ‘at this period. We now find comfortable, | the oll fogies do not go back on her. You should see | sand dollars, the bulk of which is borne by the Fhillips Got to say, in at least one case, elegant, hotels; spring | the cavalcade of ladies on's pleasant evening, in their a oun’ the oc beni sida ee | a lean beds and clean towel, clean servants, | ee tiie creep ahead soc as isiagperte or usin | wrovghe ere ™ from “Lake Superior for, blastn ‘tnd a highly fmproved class of guests, an immensely im- | and gentlemen that leaves the Bush House every PP arn nte et” Reweaas evening. You should Behold the black volvet dresses, taken poh other cities for (proved condition of streets and sidewalks, and a much mal gas. Most of the latter kind of coal, however, [Aigher tone in. all matters of progress, whether it be in | ‘he smiling fhces, the sccomplished chevallers, the | Coos ‘afew miles below Newoastle, The fine horses, and all those things. You should see | Newoastie ooal is bituminous, and is found in immense to finance; religion, honesty, sociability, trade, | the ladies of Titusville promenade in front of the or any other element of civilization. The | You should attend the churches upon a Sunday. See the quantities in tho vicinity. Within a circuit of ten miles of Mitusville has greatiy increased within’ @ few | fF and commotion constantly going on in the principal | oF% is worth now, at the sleote these dollars ead & tel? streets, See the amount of business daily transacted. ‘and the demand is altogether for the best style | You should visit the New York or St, Ni ale vaults; Pee he, Veet pee epee as ole dollars. goods. One New York house, the largest in the | where everything is conducted upon an salarged as je or a we Panltel ne atoh: | Bas thirty thou. | elegant Now York plan. You to the theatre ous for the quality of its ‘Coal, w Haight, Hutchings & Co,’s—averages thirty thou- | °f0) Eisler, Evang, and Dick Stephens, and ali the | sid to be the only coal in this vicinity which can be dollars cash receipts per week, to say nothing’of | rest, You should go Into Coit’s cosy and recherehé Uittle | worked raw in the smelting furnace. | Hearing reports ‘credit trade to responsible parties, The Pennsyl- 1m. ea fish or bird game dinner prepared my Jn gem ey a, re that it fvanis law jn regard to indebtednese—etjgmatized as the | {he venerable Dr. Davis. | Mest partios from New York, phar Heo By Be abel : Boston, C Cleveland, and elsewhere. thas a wel been sunk, which produced about ten Munder-garment:law”—facilitates:in remarkable de- | jively hum of speculation’ ‘Road the barrels per, day. Ol had also been found s few miles gree the cofféction of debts in this State, = sce btn and ee ne oo coal than oil, and, if rly sites bey camamads } Anew theatre is in progress of construction by Mr. J. a Bliss, opposite Mr. E. H. Crittenden’s large.new hotel @m the European plan, in which parties ip Boston con- with the Tremont House are reported to have ‘an interest: But before 1 report other tmprove- much higher price. understand that a New York pe- troleum company has a interest in these lands. If 80, and the land is held in fee, their capital could better be employed in Lateef coal, of a valuable quality, than in boring for oil, w! they may never find. and understood these, and pase other things same line, to satisfy yourself that Titusville is putting on and metropolitan airs, and is eminently enti- tled to be the chief city of a new county in Western Pennsylvania. Meadville, of course, is opposed to it, but Returning to Newcastle, I will merely state that it has " Meadville is inclined to be lazy as well as jealous, and if ments and draw a further contrast of Titusville as it was | it bad not been for the enterprise of the Atlantic and | pbree penthubers, never Retele ive, Leslie boing the Great Western Railroad she would for many years have maintained only her ancient and patriarchal supremacy over the towns in this region. TITUSVILLE GREVITIES. Although “old wine needs no busb,’’ it is certain that the Bush House in Titusville needs old wine, Evelyn Evans, of land theatre, is to take the the Clevel new Titusville theatre, which is to be 362130 feet, and to many offered for sale in seat 1,500 to 1,800 oe. Titusville, and some locwbere from whieb parties desire to be released. ‘and as it is, let me consider the Gfershadowing interest Bf this as of all other points in the oll regions, ‘TRE OIL WELLS ABOUT TITUSVILLE. _g Just behind the House is \what is called the a well, by Simeoth.Leland, of the corra Hotel, Now York, and ofbers, The well sunk for the purpose of testing the value of a new ‘machine, and not with the expectation of sinking ‘any place, it has ty Of it. Itiee little Pittsburg on that account. itrnte all appear to be thriving, ont and sober, and the ladies fair and winsome. jew York houses abound, although the tastes of the people rather affect the Philadelphia style. Two gentle. men conné with one of the lai New York houses—Jaffrey & Co.—are now here, one having been quite sick with bilious fever for some weeks, but iz now For the rst time since I left New York 1 have heard {ics discussed. It There are a 7 ti Tt was on question of negro guf- But oi] was struck at a depth of about/four hundred rel 4 fad ry foe wo te boring apart ge out of orer | «2s Sherman, Rag a ey acum Besant elton ct cnen esha fers fad che werk fr the preeent wupended, with theo a8 | days to oocuny his wow pla reidence in leveland ” | Wom of fo Banaso 404 General Sherman ‘ith segura em informed by Major the Moore House, run- ore is a demand for a lager wery in I to thi t is, aid bim to found iblic ii ‘ut qrer the eonduotor or driving pipe, I collected Ginx be sipped ees Coan a ee argent | South Amerow ‘mong he valleys and gold moalalas of & Vial of the oil as it flowed from the well toto a barrel On Vultee & 'a St. Nicholas vaults | *#e magnificen: Amazon. Just outside, ‘The semi machine, on an improved | there were representatives from the following Staten. | SUEFERT AOGE CREEK iin, me. or. owoovenna rasne, ia to be immediately put to workg and Mr. Miler, | California, meets, Meow Jerse ions end a Balt fo and 8 fetes tana 0 int igs | Kee, ms am ch fee Ses | tre ee arrived here for the purpose 4f getting tk thogpugnly | jering of the oll nabobs of ia. The St, Prey Ay 4 — danomber of ie machisa hove been soared | ieohs re pis have reached as bighas two Dundred J ite ame might strike any one with Pithole creek. (Old whale olf caske are eald to be tho beet thing to sb mentioned About twenty feet distant from tbe Metropolitan well Guin ia. Robbins’ new hermettcal barre ts com | stocks -igpery Rok creek. | T shoehd {the ails well, lowing occasionally, and pumping ov | 128 in vogue. 1: le frequently ween among the casks sh | Save would bo Slippery ™ Sock * creek ‘mew double action principle, the invention Of Mr. A. } Some of tho New York houses in Titusville do not wish | Matter. It la not always well Garver, of Little Fails, N. ¥., a machine that bas already | their receipts to be reported, fearing compotition, It | Mame nor by thelr appearance, been successfully tested on the Ellenville, Bina, Cham } Seem#as if the business would be increased thereby. Me, ano approached bye. good ie io! tT wi pion, Tideout and other wells, It 18 vory highly spoken } make a purchase, ‘and tho grecnbacks fly forth like leaves within Tn 3 hen you come to the rar Ot by all who bave aged it . The Mille well is sunk four/| Manama wind a anere ito | indications oil torritory. You strike the creek Dundred and seventy feet, and making @ good show of | ,.1, pent Te Geeka dutices cateet there pene | 2 place call Armetrong’e ford, and you immediate! Oi] at its present fg, which will compensate the owners of somne of the fom ths, Gidianitg, $Ost horse, Ando ii, hanp ‘The of} wella.on Wateon Gate, adjacent to Titusville, Bags to pay Titusville a visit. his foothold, the a a under the surface being as slip- as as if Al as a general thing, Titusville deserves the May de enumerated as follows:—Firet in importance is ene 2 ‘ambong the most ¢irtous places in Oldom, ory as mT 4 egy an coveres wana cont et the United States (or U. &. Grant) well, pumping sizty gee little jokers and the big gambling managers have, | eee A a bet + sor! of he pot ne, (et barrels per day. Adjoining this is the Contioental woll, |. imitating the example of the w: places, made their | {ote miles longeand rises in, Butler county, from pearance. do not i '—not boar [Ghat bes produced one beadred verrels, but sow pumps Aotsacs sa you oil tnd cl poy cline ve Brooeesy,. sources Cok owe § in Venango county, and empties into ‘thirty-five to forty. the immediate vicinity are the Conneq! ig, wit h whose waters it mingles until MORE ABOUT PITHOLE. Dooated the Ingersoll, Old Abe, Palmer and Kates welle, | | ‘There are reports of fresh wells being struck on Pit- | HiJy Nowentic’ no DeNvet oreuk about Kea miles @ach producing from fifteen to twenty-dve barrels per el Gree eye Soy ee mite in entent oe Crossing 8 ford, you land upon property Gay. Just across Oil creok, and within thirty rode are the | mile s below the United — well, is being asareloned by ome pg ’ oaey fae 18, RL ry Oceanic wells, Noe. 1 and 2, which are producing twenty- | the Phillipe Petroleum Company of New York. Six OF | interest, he having married a Chew. Mason visited the five to thirty barrels cach; also the Ladies’ well—eo | ht wells are going down. perty a few years ago—in 1860—to look after tho in- REMARKABLE STRIRES. Benneboff run bas suddenly grown into considerable Portete of his Fatally, who had become a portion of the @amed in consequence of it having once been the pro- Chow heirs. He probably thought it ly bo erty of four ladies, it now belonging toalady in New | im} nce. The run empties into Oilcreek, near Pe- | sony Zork, This well ie now pumping about twenty-five bare trleum oy ag» Pal dioton wotis oan i haw od ‘Tho first derrick and engine you see belong to a well Tels. On the Watson flats, wor down, aro the Doubl®) ali the developmonts have been made since tho 22d of ba Lye by M.. ta nthend y gp Beg Wells, the joint production of which is eighty barrels, Mleo Raiguel’s Augusta well, which is ono of tho best March last. Among the fowing wells may be enumerated the Lady Seren me first struck, which flows one hun- dred barrels; the Getty well dows two hundred and fifty and Gfty feet deep and is to be sunk to nine hundred. There is not much appearance of oi! at present, Here, if ely to canse you qotls on the fat, pumping seventy-five to eighty barrels ing; the 3 w BS Ne rade nae y Ag SB Der dap. ale tbe Ring, Onecice ead Chemie ene | rede ite Sorel, and tise Taproviag "Tosco | 1.0%, 2% arllgee founale ME, Bay, bo bad mosted at fifteen to twronty barrels exch, and the Lew | eee i ete a tt oe property. bans lareety ia, | he, wae to us. He sald be woulg invite us to dine If he Wrigley well, which already makes ano show of oll, | creased in value Those who woul Capo ron OLE erty ee Teds ETE oa grit operations proceeding rapidly. of four miles from Petroleum Centre duould vist those | Untersigned bed Jee then an appetite thas would be suited ©n the flats lower down, eay one mile and a half, is tho | BOW Wells on Bennehom | ing," be replied, except somo ham, fresh eggs, good Droperty of the Origioal O11 Company, near the original | tying between BentehoM run and OM crock, and ad. J Dread, fram Punter ond somes" als OF 8 mans mouth Drake wolla On this property thirteen wells are going Joinlag ‘the Washington McClintock farm, ia thé Steven. | ¥% juxuries—ours fairly sim- 00 farm of one hundred and acres. This farm lies within a few rode of the Lady Harmon and the other large wells on Bennehof run. Landon the Stevenson farm has been leased at $600 per acre and half the oil. The demand for these leases is (SLs ‘ns it is be. @own; three have struck oil, and are producing from Aftoon to twenty-five barrels per day, There are also on the Guile Farm, East Branch, or Pine Crook, the Wenango and Keplor wells, producing from eight to mered. After a wholesome and hearty meal, we —— march along the in of the, creek, throug! Driare brambles, bushes, stumps, and over hay 7 Bene | unt! we reached comesof the other wells, are five, in 8 large interest, e same company also have an in- torest in Pi whore th fo wells near to United Bang wep” NPE More News from Otldom=Another O11 Re» glon—Slippery Rock Cre ited, doy QUB MRYGASTLE (PA.) CORRESTONDENOE, 7 » Newoasrns, Pa, July 26, 1868, ' & Meadville Plovad Dieplay—A Millionaire's Final Wind- eved il te in the oll region, | 2, 0m this part of the property, four of which aro goin; fAtveen barrois each. Thero aro several more pumping | thle mvorerty’ im umer the management of the Coens doin, fed doe bs et puiptg ce Tat Mar wit ferelis, producing fivo to cight barrels, It is claimed that | Oil Company, of Philadelphia, in. which those veteran twenty ta re ay Tr tas puraped Yor th ~ ~ Mere are more good pumping wells on the Watson fata | 824 successful oil operators, the Phillips Brothers, have | Yithout intern on Bight ‘and Ray, the wook: Trabout fifteen barrels per day. This ofits or oe quality. _Iteelle at the well for twenty-five per ‘The: now, I should from is dred to thoueabt barfelo tn. the: varlous taake It 1s hauled to Newcastle at two end a half pera ~) ia ‘han ve any other locality in this vicinity. Two wells moar by are boing sunk to s great depth—from twelve to fourteen hundred feot—for the purpose of settling a molentific question~the existence of the third sand rock An this vicinity, which, in genoral, is the last penetrated Sa boring for oll, Tho failure to reach tho third sand Pock here has tended to reduce the value of lands for Putsburg be rey ral me weil le't ‘ne pro Smith & oouine, of ae and Is su Mr, Lefferts, a cousin of our Marshall ate A) te this well, on the other side of a get able Oil Appearances and Developments, dc, Aaah pvouing 3 bad the nisamure of ationding very in the water. Sho stesm and ip Ayo minutes the il purposem To-day there isa report that the coveted A Warning Profited by Othera—Old Oi Princes | cree of Phil are of sand rock has been reached by ono of the deep a ertatinatanada on he deine woll, aa yi Jat indeatfons, & widepth of one thousand threo hundred foot. | irhey areet a Church at a Cont of Siety Thoweand Dov. | Goorneen, of New Lore, i saperaieagiog © well on the. ‘Wells in this locality havo the advantago of producing Nare—They Buy Handeome Farme—They Devote Them: | at about five hundred feet—a couple of quarts haying Pessina And of boing 80 near tho railroad dopot as to | selves to Works of Charity—New York Houses‘in New. SS ere It Is to bo sunk deopor. cont of a spat ‘and the oil therefore 4 Bich tn indian wel), below, I did not ‘but r rth $6 twice as muGh a6 that procured op | SaMle—Sharon and Ite Coal Fielde—No Oil, bu are very favorable, Along the areek you , a oo Coal— Politicg-A Republic for the Negro on the Ama- fn fin' peee eon maeaes eee te inte In Ti aa OTE FOR TION, an, anore | 2m—iippery Hock Creek—Romantio SeoneryeRemari | Yo4 cam peurcely turn atone of any slag from bene been excitement about Pitho!e, and the exod¢a naa been vary sonaiderabia She dipiance, Dig s hole @ foot deop near the brink of stags of Abas tg wabes. a ‘ i E i £ fi i | i surface oozings when attended to. MOgenous population these surface it is & whether you | of white from the extreifie North to gan obiaa supply that will Mera you, undertaking from the Atlantio to tte Pacidoms resujt sega tad pon be solved a thee iment Ifyou ikon attempted to how aso neliuae hope ~ a8 ‘hopeless are of an enterprising turs, ad ve of money, | tyrannical. - =. you may venture on the speculation, rwise it isdan- | “One word in regard to the Southern negro to meddle with it. A number of capitalists may Pecnaand ha Coney) Com, President Lincoln had a sim- weet at amall individual risk; but ly or in couples | ilar idea when he advocated the Chiriqui settlement. it te not worth while to try it, ‘The Phillips Brothers aro | The weak place in the fa that it the white coveloping ae Laney Salt oun oF wae. ite they pom are for laad erever he can os at) have successful make > if unsuc- laced the reservations, some Ceseful, none but ihemasives will be the Still to be found in the State of New York. But whet has become of the Indians? To settle the negroes perma- nently ip the South youmust make them strong enough to protect themselves against you, if you would save them from the fate of the Indians. Recent ovents have Proved that you cannot do this if you would, and you ought not if you could. General Cox’s idea is to save the Regro from the white man—to relieve him from a com- polition in which he must ‘go to the wall.’ | To do this, owever, he must be where the white man can- not follgw him; and of all the places that have yet been Suggested Africa is the only one that meets all the condi- tions of the case, and to this circumstances will ultimate- ly as surely transport the entire race ag that one day fol- lows another. The importance of tho questions involved, the distin- guished position now and heretofore occupied by Gen- eral Cox, and the natural desire to place the society, whose chief offcor Tam, correctly before the publie like- H4 to be affected by General Cox's lettor, will account for the length of the present communication. The subject ieee Wy Tals of mater thas it is ess to tnmpous ible to without incurring the charge of unneces- sary prolixity, Very Tespecifully, &e., INO. HB. LATROBE, President of the American Colonization Society, St, Nichotas Horer, August 3, 1865. eee AMERICAN COLONIZATION SOCIETY. TO THE EDITOR OF THE HERALD. I see under the head of “Ohio Politics,” extracts from a letter from General Cox in reply to a com- mittee from a Union association at Oberlin, whoso object was to elicit from the ral, as a Union candidate for Governor, more definite replies than tho committee believed had been given in regard to some of the phases of what is known, now-a-days, as the negro question. Without the advantage of General Cox’s letter in full before me Iam obliged to rely on the extracts referred to, and among them I find the following:— As foreign colonization is hopeless as well as tyran- et I wi to @. le Faces on the 801 where thatnen ae “White the races from Europe have amalgamated in this country, the African race will not, ‘and its salvation or its destruction will be worked out in its Mnal isolation. There can be no political unity, but rather a strifo for the mastery, in which one or the other would go tothe wall. It would be immediate, He sees pe ee flores the feebler race would he peless subjugation or utterly destroy He su, sotting con tel in the gin, Alabama wad Florida, States of South Carolina, n In a state of depend- 0. of the Street Cleaning. It is noticeable that the streets of the city at the pres- ent time are unusually clean, as a general rule, notwith- ‘Standing all the allegations to the contrary. At this sea- son of tho year, when there isa larger amount of vege- table refuse matter than usual to be removed, it is impos- sible, even with the utmost vigilance and industry, to keep every street as clean as could be desired at all times. It is protty generally known, however, that the streets of the city were rarely ever in bet! condition than they are at the present time. The contractors have in all seven hundred men employed at present, and two hundred and eighty carts, which is above the necessary complement. They claim that they do more than even the contract requires, and have more carts in their service than the number absolutely necessary to do the work, The new machinery of their office 18 algo com- ing into play with effect, the organization of their forces ing only now about fully completed. The prospects are that the streets of the city will be in a satisfactory condi- tion, 80 far as cleanliness is concerned, as long as the pre- sent contract lasts. The opposition from outside parties, and the difficyjties arising out of it, including men for- merly employed in street cleaning, are dying out, and the brooms are now allowed to operate freely and effec- tively throughout the city. Surely clean streets are de- sirable and valuable, aud the contractors should therefore get full credit for having accomplished so much, con- sidering the almost insurmountable difficulties by which they were at first surrounded. Let them go on. and there organizing the fr ance, analogous to that of the Western The general viow here taken of the relations of the white and negro races of the United States, expressed in & political canvass by a candidate for popular favor, will probably attract more attention than when proclaimed, as it bas been, for the last twenty years at least, by the colonizationists in their oft-repeated dogma, that ‘two races which cannot amalgamate by intermarriage can only exist in the same land as master and slave, or cparseece and oppressed.’’ One alternative as regards the United States being now out of the question, the adoption of the others bs silences Cox may be taken as evidence that colonizationists, instead of being philanthropists,” may have been statesmen too, and may explain the connection of Clay, and Madison, and Mar- at, and Fillmore, with the American Colonization ety. But, while the soundness of General Cox’s view in this particular is fully and cordially admitted, it is accom. Panied with an assumption which seems, when made by 80 prominent a man, to require a notica which it would not perhaps otherwise receive. A random statement in general convereation, uttered inadvertently, a carelessly written paragraph in a newspaper, whose author has not taken the trouble to inform himself, can do little mischief and needs no comment; but a candidate in these times for the Chief ban epee of the State of Ohio, dealing with a subject of the extremest delicacy and t ini. Portance, is to be presumed, whatever the actual fact may be, to have verified prety. statement, and we'ghed every word of such a letter as that in question; and when he says, if not misquoted, that ‘ forcign colonization is hopeless as well as tyrannical,” many people will natu- rally believe that he knows what foreign colonization, now nearly balf a century old, is, and is prepared to prove his assertion in regard to it. Believing, how. ever, that General Cox may not understand either the plan of African colonization, its principles, its aim or its resulta, and that what he has said {s cal- culated to do injury to the society of which, mm some de- gree, I am the official representative, 1 have thought it my duty to publish the present letter, taking it for granted that General Cox, when he speaks of foreigu col- onization, means African colonization. Inverting General Cox’s order, let us see, first, if Afri- can colonization is t; nical, General Cox evidently suppoees that it involves the forcible removal of the negroes from the United States, otherwise the word “tyrannical’’ would not have been used by him. This is @ great orror. The constitution of the society, its funda- A Woman Cannot be Arrested for Con- version of Property. SUPERIOR COURT—SPRCIAL TERM. Before Judge Garvin. John McGuckean vs, Augusta Moore.—In the month of March last tho plaintiff deposited $4,500 with the defendant for safe keeping. Some time afterwards, when hoe demanded his money back, she refused to com- ply with the request, whereupon McGuckean obtained an ener a arrest againsfher, aud she was arrested by the Sheriff. The lady’s counsel now moves to set aside the order of arrest, on the ground that, under our statutes, a female cannot be arrested in acivil action, except for a wilful injury to person, character or property ; tog the mere detention or conversion of money is no wifful injury to it. He contended that the two things are, in their naturo, entirely diferent, and the distinction between them is clearly stated in the very section which adthorizes an arrest generally; and, that a femalo can be arrested only for injunng , Dot for taking, detaining or con- verting it; and, even then, it is not for every injury done to it, ‘but only for ‘“wilfal” or wanton.and malicious injury; and may We done tothe mental law, speaks of the removal of the free poople of |!" , although an i! 4 « Ret i plaintiff by withholding from hii Sis yy, yet that color, ‘with their own consent,” to Africa, Practically, | [very uiferent from to injury to the property itself, as the society addresses itseff to the negro thus:—‘‘So long as you cap remain in America in comfort—so long as you ne coor with the future ae bg paging holds out for your descendants, remain here. It is not every one of he that is fit to go to Africa to endure the privations and toil of pioncers. You bad better remain and die where you are. But, if you see that the war of races will leave you no alternatives save exti jon or removal—if you believe what such men as eral Cox, practical contemplated by the statute. ‘The Court took this view of the law, and vacated the order of arrest and discharged the defendant. Monument to Gengral Natnamet Lyox,—An organi- zation called the ‘‘Lyon Association” Has been formed in &t. Louis, the of which, as stated in their consti- tution, are ‘to cherish and perpetuate the kind and Men, brave and true men, statesmen, who know littlc | mutual relations existing among all officers and soldiers or nothing about colonization as mere philanthropists, | who joined the first military organization ip Missouri, say upon the subject—if you believe that yours, as ‘the | under the command of the brave, noble and patriotic feebler race, must be reduced to Nathaniel Lyon, in the year 1861, for the pu! rpore of pre- ‘ 1 the State against secession and arm ‘ebellion, uf destroyed" —if you want, Frock 9 ir home, to seek one where the to render assistance and material ald to the widows and ww you, then goto Africa, Judge, however, for your- | orphans of the officers and soldiers of this association selves. Act on your own convictions. We believe | who have been killed or disabled in the warfor the General Cox’s views in this regard are statesmanlike— | Union, to celebrate the anniversary of the battle of Wil- ‘son's creek in a fit and becoming manner as one of the most bloody and brilliant battles, for the numbers en- gaged, that hae occurred during the war, and to erect a suitable monument to the memory of General Lyon on the battle ground of Wilson's creek.'’ A large and on- thusiastic meeting was held on Saturday evening last to perfect the organization. The vamos of all the officers and men who participated in the battle of Wilson’s creek are to be engraved upon the monument. a MARRIAGES AND DEATHS Teg: that be sees further into futurity than you do— that he sees now what colonizationists saw forty and more years ago—and were we negrocs, we would avail ourselves of the aid of tho Colonization Society and emigrate to-morrow; but jt is your business, not ours. ‘True, we think the day against ‘the coming of which we have providing in the founding of Liberia has come—and General Cox thinks so, too—and that, if you do not sce it now, circumstances will make you see it goon; but until you do see it stay where Zo are, and we will help to make you ascomfortable as humanity re- quires we should do.’ Now, the whole aim and scope of colonization is em- braced in above, and if there is anything of tyranny in it, itis, at all events, difficult to say where it is. The oat oreane im the case ts the tyranny of clroum- stances. It is the tyranny that grows out of (be foreign immigration and the catural locrease of our mag pn le have now a population of some thirty-five or thirty-six ‘millions or more. At the close of the present century our Population, according to tbe ratio of Increase shown by our eighth decennial census, will be one hundred millions; in a lifetime seventy years from to-day !t will be two hundred millions. Those calc: tions, long since made by the colonizationiste, were adopted by President Lincoln in one of bis messages Congress, on the authority, no doubt, of the distinguis! ed Superintendent of the Census, Dr. Kennedy. While this great increase of population takes place our territory does not increase. Stop this increase, stop the foreign immigration, aud the negro in America may havea fu- tare that shall be no worse thao bis present. Until then, however, regard African colonization oot asa tyranny, but asa mighty and statesmanlike charity, whose sul Jects count by millions, and whose result will be tho building up of Civilized nations and (he enlighteament and Christian'!zati f a continent, In the next place, General Cox is made to say ‘‘as for- eign colonization is bopelese, as well as tyranuical,” &o., C., &C. be Now, if it is hopeless, it cannot well bo tyrannical, What |s meant, it is presumed, is, that if it were oot hopeless tt would be tyrannical, has been shown it (9 aot tyrannical, but tho re. verse, This, of course, is oo the assumption that it is Married. Seaver—BanoeR.—On Thursday, August 3, by the Rev. Alfred Putnam, at the residence of the bride's father, Avexaypen H. Seaver to Anum L., daughter of Daniel D. Badger, Esq, all of Brooklyn. Nogards, Died. ARNOLD.—On Friday, August 4, at eleven o'clock P. M., Davin J. Paxton, infant son of yobo and Belen Arnold, aged 7 months. Hush! He sleeps. Funeral at half-past nine o'clock, this (Sundsy) mora- ing, from 636 Ninth avenue, jarrow. —On Lea Euiza, widow of Dr. Will bor age. ‘The relatives and friends of the family are respectfully invited to attend the funeral, from her late rosdence, No, 173 — atroet, Jersey Clty, on Monday afternoon, at three o'clock, without further Invitation, Bracy. —Wriuam Boaor, aged 20 years. The friends of the family are respectfully invited to attend the funeral, from hie late residence, No. 167 Washington street, on Monday afternoon, at u ‘clock. . Campan.—At South Berge N. J, on Friday, August 4, Freveuce Lewis, son of jost A. and Fannie Campeo, Campeo, a 4 woeks. The relatives and friends of the family aro roepectfully invited to attend the funoral this (Sunday) afternoon, at four o'clock, from the residence of Lewis J. Bridgman, Eeq, Emmery street, between Monteceilo and Gergen Auguat 6, at Jersey Cit: rn) ‘Barrow, fo tl yes °F not hopeless, but that it presente practicable pian of re- | avenues. moving (Ge negro race the United States to Africa. Curry. —On Saturday, Auguet 6, Rosaxwa, tho beloved General Cox does not think so, add guggeste a vast nogro jary Ourry, aged 16 mouths and 17 bs] of Edward ead aye. Tho friends and relatives of the family are respectfully fnvited to attend the funeral, from the residence of ter ots, 821 First avenue, corner of F:fteesih sires, this Sunday) afternoon at one o'clock. Conti. —At Newark, N. J., on Friday, Acgust 4, from Injuries received on the Morrie and Essex Railroad on the 2d instant, Davin Stcnoss, second son of Morgao L. and Sylvia M Corts, Sr 11 years, { mouths ead ? dave. reservation in South Carolina, Georgia, Alabama and Florida, about which 9 word or two preeentiy—sueh a reservation as the Indians cow bave weet of the Missis- sippi. Batt African colonization hoy ? It ts, uaques- tionably, hopeless if it is to di for success on the pe- cuniary contributious of the United States, tbe States, or individuais—utterly, absolutely hopeless; and if there ‘are the agencies to bring It about which General Cox had io view, he ts fonabl: bt ber right. The relatives and friends of the famiiy are reepectfully Such aid may olf tho machinery—; Invited to attend the funeral, from coo David ‘barsb thunder,” but the mach: B Sturges, 347 High strest, oo Mon three o'olock Carriagoe will be to street depot on the arrival of the two New York. Interment tp Mount Pieasans Ye! Coane, —On Saturday, August 6, Jos Basay Ocarty, only child of Charles and Eltaabeth Cornet, acd grand ton of Simon Smith, aged 10 months. The friends and acquaintances of the fam!!y are re fone invited to attend the funerai, from dence of bis parents, No. 227 East Tweaty-Gray etreet, this (Sunday) afternoon, at one o'clock. Dovonsrty ~On Saturday, August 6, Dosorwy Deron. vt Rol of Dudley Dougherty, aged 75 yearsacd 6 ton! Hor friende and those of ber sone-tn-law, Renry Mar shall and Patrick McElroy, aud thor er ‘ele eon, Daniel J. Doughorty, are respectful) vied to attend the funeral, from the residence of Berry Marehati, 122 Fifth street, on Monday afternoon, at fourc'ciock. The remains will be interred in St Patrick's Cometery, coruer Prince and Mulberry streets. e Daartow.—The officers of the army, navy and marine corpe vited to attend the of the late Captain Pencivat Daarton, United States Navy, from St Joho's church, Washington, D. C. Monday, August? The procession will leave the At five o'clock tp the af- ot Maen and proceed to Oak Hill Cemetery, Georgetown, ‘De Gaamg.—At Sharon Socings, on Friday, August 4, A. 3, Brookes Ds Ganmo, in the 22d year of bis age, tion i created by circumstance: circumstances such es the fore! natural increase of our peopl alluded to, and which will pi rica just such ap emigration as gow takes place between Europe and the United States—@ voluntary, velf-paying emigration, where the motive te that desire to better one's condition which 1g a characteriatio of all civilized humanity, white or black—an emigration which will free the country In time from every wegro tn it, and make them as rare in our cities as (hey are in the London and is of to-day. Ppicalsaies is mot hepeiens then. Circumstances bi made it a necessit hy, General Cox admits t whole theory !n this connection, when he proposes to create bis Southern reservation not only forthe “freqamon," but for the negroes of other descriptions, inasmuch as he refers to causes in active operation which will, sooner or Iatter, drive all to the South. There is nothing Hew in African colonization. It is ke all the colonizations that have preceded it, and which have depended Jor their success upon the attrac. tions of the new bome, or the repulsions of the old one, of upon both combined. Both causes are in combina. ion in regard to African colonization. The American ofontentisn Society, with its limited means, bas dono all that it ever proposed todo, It bas establ @ nogro nation on the west coast of Africa, capable of self-defence, self-support and self-increaee, and having within it all the elemonts of an honorable pationality, with food 8 Due notice will bo given of the funeral. faithfully executed, with a _ of Dba L anager His) Augeat ‘sou marty “8 66 after with a a ears, & native ol parish of erry, Coun! roue, c forelgn’ trade Fa ily developing. Liberia, t Tretana. ms é ’ as Saabintied as been acknowledged as an independent on 18 y the way of makin on woth negroes of the United States attractive. " ircumstances, and for commerce, such remains for circu: NB ~s ‘Tho relatives andfriends of the family are invited t attend the funeral, on thia (Sunday) afternoon, at lock, from his Iate residence, 374 Kast Fourth street. =—In ine Friday, August 4, Miss Avva , daughter of late James aud Aun Deery, in thi or ‘The friends of the ‘Fesity are respectfully invited to 0 0 be necessary to mect vast con- ffneat thee is yet to be suppliod with the manufactures | attend the funeral, this (Sanday) afternoon at two o'clock, of civil i) _ td spor ye and eee haa woe tn Plochiog, ta. and . jo the reapect. LLis.—On Sate ugust 6, {n Flushing, 1. 1, Brio repulsone of the Se a a oe gee | Amcenas Ricctps, ‘ton or oma and Margarot Ellis, Chat oe yet a ®@ | of Now Yor! year an laye. word fand if it should be thought that ‘mpoustbte resulta | The funeral will take place in Flushing on Monday. fare béro anti it is sufficient to state that the Euro- | Fanuty.—On Friday morning, August 4, Evizanern, Immigration of the last twenty years exceods in | the boloved wife of Jobn Forley, parish of Drumlane, Eematere whole negro population of the United | county Cavan, Ireland, aged 63 years. ‘slaves and freo; and to add, what must be con- The friends and acquaintances of the family are re- Oaae iat ‘hove ihe irishman hag one inducement to | spectfally invited to attgnd the funeral, from bor late leave Ireland, the negro has ten to leave the | residence 236 Wost Thirty-geyenth street, this (Sunday) Gortainty of that future which Gonerel Pro- | nfternoon, at two o'elgek. Giote for them if they remain here. Feopenwrre.—On Saturday, August 6, Lava Mantua ‘True, the population of Liberia—amigrante from the | Frovenvwirs, youngest cbild of Helena Catharine Rebecca States and their descen joes not exceed | Fodderwitz, ear, 9 months an lays. apintte thousand or fourteen thousand souls; but The relatives and Yrieuts of the family are respectfully invited to attend the funoral, thie (Sunday) afternoon at or wth been one of of ite hag ite @ (Wo residence of her mother, No, 64 the ‘ ; Bor will its growth yp more rapid sppodily. Hie not devirable tbat It thould b aaa vaine pai ie ital aro numerous Mt by howe ties in the Unit Ree’ eteerous aad suyag, and, Who, though desoeuses foun p [relay aaa pS, BAD ‘aabusllz comms Dn Friday, August 4, Bria Jam, dangh tor of tl te James avd Klizabeth Fullerton, ‘Tho relalives aud fxlogda of hag Saumily ase rospgotlwliy inv! residence, No. 82 ay rem at two oretock, peeciaaly. Lastaram—On Friday, August 4, Casrar, son of Ji miata en a Elizabeth Fo the Rage ra '@ friends or the family are invited to attend the fae neral, at y ret _ ‘ o'clock this (Sunday) afternoon, at No. 6@ Govaa.—In Jersey City, on Friday, Ai 4, Harry, Zoungest child of Isaac gad Josephine “Gough! aged The funeral will take place from the residence of hig Parents, 300 Sout Oelock this (Gandsy) eae Jersey City, at nine Em Qies.—Suddenly, on Frida} Lanna. Caancoce daughter of ona Fund po oo wife of John Gica, aged 19 years and 3 @ friends and relatives are ii ral, from the residence of her husbaod. 200d arcane, this (Sunday) forenoon, at half-past uine o’clook. Fi gg —Suddenly, ( ee morning, August, INAND HOLLANDE, 8 Notice he 2 on Monday. Lica angt Keir. —. imerick, on Tuesda: Woe Pax Reet, of wer York, Ses ee eee memory will long live in the minds of hi who had the pleasure. of him. ide went on® tour to his native Jand; but Prov’ that he should never return to the land of bis adoption. . PB. N. B.—Due notice will be given when bis ee here, Ketzerp.—On August 4, Fravces Davisow youngest daughter of 1 and ‘Josephine Kellerd, aged 1 year, 4 months and 13 days. ‘The remains will be interred in eb re Hill Cemetery, Pa ae Base, = ust 5, Erastus Harwoop, child o us an ands mothe, jizabeth Lent, aged 2 years e relatives and friends of the famil; invited to attend the funeral serv! strom aemees residence of his parents, Eighty-third street, betweem Fourth and Find avenues, this (Sunday) afternoon, at half-past five ck. The remains will be taker water Station Moncey. for rbd eerie ng AwWLeR.—Suddenly, on Saturday, Al 5, a Lawzsr, of ship Caravan, A the veel Tho funeral will take place from his late residence, No, 8 Sanus street, gn Mon y afternoon, at two o'clock. Langy.—On urday, August 5, Maria, daughter James and Anne Lahey,'in the 224'yeer of hon age. val The friends and relatives of the family are reepectfullf invited to attend the tuneral, from her late resid be Non anna Street, on Monday afternoon, song o'clock. Lavenuy.—In Brooklyn, on Wednesday, August after a short illness, Wittiaw Lavcuum, aged 40 years, native of county Tyrone, Ireland. The rolatives and friends of the family are respectful! invited to attend the funeral, this (Sunday) afternoon, two o'clock, from his late residence, corner of Myrtle avenue and Navy strect, Brooklyn. California and’ Belfast papers please copy. Lsmp.—On Friday, August 4, ANN Lamp, @ native of county Monaghan, parish of Tyholland, Ireland. Her remains will be taken’ to Calvary Cemetery, thig (Sunday) afternoon, at two o'clock, from No. 169 West Twenty-eighth street, Lamn,—On Friday evening, August 4, Mary Ayn, the beloved wife of Lawrence Lamb, a native of Newtowne forbes, county ang Ireland, 38 years. The friends of the family. and those of her brothers James and Joseph Reynolds, are reapectfully invited to attend the funeral, this (Sunday) afternoon, at on@ ane from the resideuce of her husband, 281 Mulberry Street. Lesure.—On Friday evening, August 4, after a sh illness, Mr, APrumrom 1. Lasune, aged 61 years pa The relatives and friends of the famiby are 0. 136 East Owsy Manni, requested to attend the funeral, this (Sun at three o’clock, without further invitati dence of his son-in-law, Mr. John Lowry, van ~ On Friday, August 4, anwum,—On Friday, Au; cnt son of Mary and Edward Marrio, decoased, in the 190 year of his age, The friends and relatives of the family are respectful, invited to attend the funeral, thia (Sanday) afternoon, rd el henge from his late residence, 224 Nineteentls Btreet. Munray.—On Saturday, August 5, after @ il. ness, WaLter McLrop, Tofant son of Mary vaenaghe John McLeod Murphy. . The funeral will take place from the residence of hig | patter a street, near Second avenue, Hartem, om «* londay afternoon, at two o'clock. The friends of the family are respectfully invited to attend. McLovoutin.—The funeral of the late Rev. Francis P. McLovanuw will take place at the Church of the As- oe in Brooklyn, on Monday morning, at tem o'clock, The friends of the deceased, and the reverend clergy are invited to attend. Pererson.—Hanz Purernsow, aged 31 Phere and 9 months, member of Pilgrim L 0. 0. F. His fellow members and members in good stan oe the order in general are invited to the funeral, thie (Sune day) afternoon, at two o’clock, from his late residence, No. 6 Rector street. By order. . Jas neg te mete beet A @. —At West Farms, on Saturday, August 6, daughter of Theodore O. and Josephine Peets, tged at months and 2 days. j The relatives and friends are respectfully invited to tend the funeral, from the residence of her thie (Sunday) afternoon, at five o'clock. Payer,—At Huguenot Springs, N. Y., on Friday evens tng, August 4, Grorcie Lovee, only child of George an@ Albertine Pryer, aged 1 year, 1 month and 16 days. The friends of the family are invited to attend the fue neral, from the residence of her parents, No. 456 Sevy enth avenue, on Monday afternoon, at threo o'clock. Prruan.—On Fri ing, Auguat 4, Eowin Auaset, young son of Thomas Bat lien Hitman, aged othe. aitend the funeral, from No. this (Sunday) morning, at balf-past nine o'clock. Srexcer.—In Brooklyn, on Thursday morning, Ads gust 3, after @ sbort illness, Joun A, CBR, aged 43 years. The reiatives and friends of the family, and the mems bers of the Hat Finishers’ Association, are respectfully ine vited to attend the funerah, from his late residence No. 6 Graham etreot, betwee: ing and Myrtle avenues Brooklyn, this (Sucda: oon, at two o'clock. Saxtox,—Oo Tu morning, August 1, Harne Ly Saxton, niece of the late ‘Arcest Pink, of this cify, § —On Thursday, August 3, Rg, of the late Peleg and Mary §mitb. je relatives and friends of the ily are ited to attend the funeral, cn Monda) rane If-paee (dar neni from ber late residence, 66 Montague street, rooklya. Scuovisr.—Mart L, yesngen oe of Ieaae 8. me Emily J. Schuyler, aged 4 years, 11 months and gD a 19 frieuds of tho family are respectfully invited t@ alteod tho funeral, on Monday afternoon, at two o’clocity from ber late tendenee, 05 South First street, Brooklyn, Seaver. —io Piermont, N. ¥., on Saturday, Garracos, aged 4 months and 11 days, onl; Macghver T end Jane 6. Seaver, ere 3 ' ‘The friends of the family are fally invited ta tie West, Houston street, pk Bagge an inte, a —uadenly, oo Thu a \oguet Wren 8, talent aod.cl Pregorick B, ans Betale Taylor, aged 9 month: 3. The (riends of the family are favited to attend the funeral, from (te residence of his uncie, W. B. Maylor, Olieice svenue, wear Myrtie, Brookiyo, this (Sunday) ee bree a3 p' Co} Rent’piace, Sam. E AMBYT aco of Gustavus J. & noie Thebecd, ef cholera icfantum, aged @ mos! Taroeuawe —On' Saturday, Acguet 9, Rom, twis decchien of D @ and Anos Teedemano, aged 1) monibe ao iJ The friecde of the family are reepectfully invited to attend the funeral, on Monday afternocn, at two o'clock, from the residence of ber parents, No. 40 South For sireet, Williamaburg. TrstRam.—The friends and acquaintances of THO! TRAM and brother are invited to attend the funerad # church, Jar reoon, at two o'clock, withou On Wednesday evening, August 3, OMame f Richard Vaughan. 08 and friends of the family are respectfully invited to attend the funeral, this (Sunday) afternoon, at three o'clock, from All Saints’ church, corner of Henry and Scammell streets, without further invitation. Waerenveit.—On Saturday, Avguet 6, ‘TRLVELT, aged 18 years. ‘ Tho friends and relatives of the family are ihvited ta morning, at ‘eleven ‘0. 17 Macy eld at the Et io on Thureda: ate residence, jee will be church at o1 streets gliah Neighe 2. borhood LOAN OFFIC “wn : Pad i mAb ahnnnnnnae, DVANCES MADE | ON WATCHES, pe} Jewolry, Dry Gi 4 Personal P Alpers, JACKROD: ALL Grand etsgph YO wost of Broadway. 69 WILLIAM 8TRE! D4 Jewelery, ‘bow old Gold and Silver rticles of te, fe. At 62 William street shan is paid by apy ‘other oftice, be POR DR. LANDI® PRIVATR ae Bi AOL Phiadetphins IBRAL GRANT—PORTRA! graphy. —The September num! Journal Wil contain inte: matter on ethnology, ology, hytogn omy, paychology, &o, Advertisements #) bo weit ia velo re ule inn Pa we the YOWLER® FURNITURE. Bs ia I en SORTMENT ig Chamber, Re, and Parlor Bed, with » Bloecker street. Factory co 7} AURNITURR, CARPETS, BEDDING, MIRROR: I by Ht Neltone sultn, Ravogaton "he BNDALL & SCOTT'S, 209 and, 211 Hudson of Cane) ‘ehamanh Jai Bi nM