SENATOR DOUGLAS ON THE WAR. TREASON MUST BE CRUSHED Speech to the Illinois Legislature. Senator Douglas was publicly received by the Illinois Legislature on the 25th ultimo, and made a patriotic speech, urging immediate action in support of the Government. He said: I am not insensible to the patriotic motives which prompted you to do me the honor to invite me to address you on this occasion upon the mo mentous balm now promoted of the condition of our country. With a heart filled with sadness and gr i e f, I com ply with your request. Bur the first time mace the adoption of the Fede ral Constitution, a wide-spread conspiracy exists to destroy the best Government the sun of Heaven ever shed its rays upon. [Applause.] Hostile ar mies are now marching upon the Federal capital, with a view of planting a revolutionary flag upon Re dome, seizing the national archives, taking cap tive the President elected by the hands of the peo ple, in the hands of Secessionists and Disunionist's. A war of aggression and of extermination is being waged against the Government established by our fathers. The boast has gone forth by the Secretary of War of this revolutionary Government, that on the first day of May the revolutionary flag shall float from the walls of the Capitol at Washington, and that, on the fourth day of July, the revolution ary army shall hold possession of the Hall of In dependence. The simple question presented to us is whether we will wait for the enemy to carry out this boast of snaking war upon our soil, er whether we will rush as one man to the defence of the Govern ment and its capital, to defend it from the hands of all assailants who have threatened it? [Great applause.] Already the piratical flag has been unfurled against the commerce of the United States. Letters of marque have been lamed, ap pealing to the pirates of the world to assemble under that revolutionary flag, and commit depre dations on the commerce (tarried on under the stars and stripes. Hostile batteries have been planted upon its fortresses; custom honees have already been established; and we are required now to pay tribute and taxes without having a voice in making the laws imposing them, or hav ing a share in the distribution of them after they have been oolleoted. The question is whether tbie war of aggression shall proceed, and we remain with folded arms, inactive spectators, or whether we shall meet the aggressors at the threshold and turn back the tide? So long as there woe a hereof peaceful solution, I prayed and implored for compromise. I can ap peal to my countrymen with confidence, that I have spared no effort, omitted no opportunity, to adopt a peaceful solution of all these troubles, and thus restore peace, happiness, and fraternity to this conntiy_ When all propositions of mums fail, there is but one course left to the patriot, and that is to rally under that flag which has waved over the Capitol from the days of Washington, and around the Government established by 'Washing- ' ton, Jefferson, Hamilton, and their compeers. [Great cheering.] Wbat is the alleged cause for able invasion of the rights and authority of the Government of the United States? The cause alleged is, that the in stitutions of the Southern States are not safe under the Federal Government. What evidence hats been presented that they are insecure? I appeal to every man within the sound of my voice to tell me at what period, from the time that Waahing ten was inaugurated down to this hour, have the rights of the Southern States, the rights of the slaveholdera, been more secure than they are at this time ? When, in the whole history of this Government, have they stood on so firm a basic? For the first time in the history of this republic there is no restriction by act of Concretss upon the institution of slavery anywhere within the limits of the United States. Then ' it cannot be the territorial question that has given them cause. When was the ingitiviseelave law executed with more fidelity than since the in auguration of the present incumbent of the Presi dential office? [Much applause.] Let the people of Chicago speak and tell us when were the laws of the land executed with as much firmness and fidelity, so far as fugitive slaves are concerned, as they are now. Can any mast tell me of any ono act of aggression that has been committed or at tempted since the last Presidential election that justifies this disruption of the Federal Union? I ask you to reflect, and then point out any one act that has been done, any one duty that has been omitted to be done, of which any one of these Die unionizes can justly complain. Yet we are told, simply because one party has succeeded in a Pre sidential election, therefore they choose to con older that their liberties are not safe, and, there fore, they will break up the Government. I had supposed that it was a cardinal and funda mental prineiple of our system of Government that the decision of thepeople at the ballot-box, with out a fraud, according to the forms of the Consti tution, was to command the explicit obedience of every good citizen. [Loud applause J If their defeat at a Presidential election is to justify the minority, or any portion of the minority, in rais ing the traitorous hand of rebellion against the constituted authorities, you will find the future history of the United States written in the history of Mexico. According to my reading of Mexican history, there never has been one Presidential term from the time of the revolution of 1820 down to the day when the candidate eleoted by the peo ple ever served his four years. In every instance, either the defeated candidate has seized upon the Presidential chair by the use of the bayonet, or he has turned out the duly-elected candidate be fore his term expired. Are we to inaugurate this Mexican system in the United States of America ? [No, never.] Suppose the case to be reversed Suppose the Diannion candidate had been elected by any means—l care not what, if by any means in accordance with the forms of the Constitution— at the last Presidential election. Then, sup pose the Republicans had raised a rebel lion against his authority. In that ease you would have found Me tendering my best efforts and energies to John C. Breokinridge to put down the Republican rebels. [Tremendous applause.] And if you had attempted such a rebellion, I would have called forth all the power and energies of this country to have crushed you out. [Con tinued applause.] The first duty of an American citizen, or of a citizen of any constitutional Government, is obe dience to the Constitution and laws of his country. [Applause ] 1 have no apprehension that any man in Illinois or beyond the limits of our own beloved State will misconstrue or misunderstand my motive. So far as any of the partisan questions are con cerned,'" stand in equal, eternal, and undying op position to the Republicans and the Secessionista. [Applause ] You all know that lam "a good par tisan fighter in partisan times. [Laughter and cheers.] And you will find me equally as good a patriot when the country is in danger. [Cheers.] New, permit me to say to the assembled Repre sentatives and Senators of my good old State, com posed of men of both political parties, in my opinion it is your ditty :to lay aside your party creeds and party platforms; to lay aside your party organiza tions and partisan appeals ; to forget that you were divided until you have rescued the Government and the country from their 'assailants. Then re same your partisan positions, according to your wiahoi. (Applause.] Give me a country first, that my children may live in peace; then will we have a theatre for our party organizations to ope rate upon. We are called upon to fold our arms allow the national capital to be seized by a mi litary force under a foreign, revoluticnary flag; to see the archives of the Government in the hands of a people who affect to despise the flag and Govern ment of the United States. lam unwilling to fly from the Federal Capitol. It has been my daily avocation, six months in the year, for eighteen years, to walk into that marble building, and from its portico to survey a country at the north and that lying south of the Potomac. I believe I may with oonfidenoe appeal to the people of every sec tion of the country to bear testimony that I have been as thoroughly national as tray man that has lived in my day. [Applause.] And I believe if I should make an appeal to the people of Illinois, or of the Northern States, to their impartial verdict, they would say that whatever errors I have committed have been in leaning too far to the Southern section of the Union against my own. [Applause..] I think I can appeal to friend and foe—l. use it in a political sense, and I trust use the word foe in a past sense [Much applause.] I can appeal to them with confidence that I have never pandered to the prejudice or passion of my edition against the minority section of this Union • and I will say to you now, with all frankness and in all sincerity, that I will never sanction nor ac quiesce in any warfare whatever upon the consti tutional rights or domestic institutions of the peo ple of the Southern States. [Applause.] Chi the contrary, it there was an attempt to invade there rights, to stir up Untie insurrection among their people, I would rush to their rescue and interpose, with whatever of strength I might possess, to de fend them from each a calamity. [Applause.] While I will never invade them, while I will never fail to defend and protect their rights to the fall extent that a fair and liberal construction of the Constitution can give thew, they must diatinotly understand I wilt never acquiesce in this invasion of our constitutional rights. It 15 a crime against the inalienable and inde feasible right of every American citizen to attempt to destroy the Government under which we were born. It is a crime against constitutional freedom and the hopes of the friends of freedom throughout the wide world to attempt to blot out the United States from the map of Christendom. Yet this at tempt le now being made. The Government of our Wham is to be overthrown and destroyed ! The capital that bears the name of the lather of his Country is to be bombarded and levelled to the earth among the rubbish and dust of things that are past ! The records of your Government are to be scattered to the four winds of heaven. The constituted authorities, placed there by the same high authority that placed Washington, and Jef ferson, and Madison, and Jackson in the chair, are to be captured and carried off, to become a byword and a scorn to the nations of the world. [Never ! Never!] YOU may think that I am drawing a picture that is overwrought, and not describing a feet. No man who 'pent the last week in the oily of Wash iogton will believe that I have done justice to it. Yon have all the elements of the Preach rerVolis= ikon surrounding the capital now, and threatening it with its tremors. Not only is its eonstitntional Governmentto be stricken down ; not only is our deg to be blotted out, but the very foundations of social order are to be undermined and destroyed ; the demon of destruction is to be let loose over the face of the land, a reign of- terror and mob•law to prevail in each section of the Union, and the man who dares to plead for the cause of jostle, and moderation in either settlien, is to be marked down as a traitor to his section. If this state of things is allowed to go on, how long before you will have the &Onetime in active operation? appeal to 700, my countrymen—men of all parties—not to allow your passions to get the bet ter of your judgments. Do not allow your-ven geance upon the authors of this great iniquity to lead you into rash, and cruel, and dm/irate nuts upon these who may diirer with you in opinion. Let the spirit of moderation and of justice prevail. You cannot expect within so few weeks after an excited political canvass that every man Can rise to the level of forgetting his partisan prejudices and sacrifice everything upon the altar of his Donn . try - but allow me to say to you whom I have op posed and warred against with an energy you win respect, allow me to say to you, you will not be tree to your country if you ever attempt to manu facture partisan capital out of the miseries of your country. [Much applause.] When calling upon Democrat!' to rally to the tented field, leaving wife, child, father, and mother behind them to rush to the rescue of the President that you elected, do not make war upon them and try to manufacture partisan capital out of a struggle In which they on engaged from the holiest and parent of motives. [Renewed applause. j Then I appeal to you, my own Democratic mends—thaws men that have never failed to rally . under the glorious banner of the country, when ever an enemy at home or abroad has dared to as sail it—ta yen who ,I believe to be the permit pa triots that ever lived—do not allow the mortilor tion, growing out of a defeat in a partisan strug gle, and the elevation of a party to power that we firmly believed to be dangerous to the eountry— do not let that convertyen from patriots into traitors to ”ur native land. [Long-continued applause.] Whenever onr Government is assailed —when hostile armies are marching under rude and odious banners against the Government of our country, the shortest way to peace is the most stu pendous and unanimous preparation for war. [Tre mendens applause.] The greater the unanimity the lees blood will be shed. Med applause.] The more prompt and energetic the movement, end the more important it is in numbers, the shorter will be the struggle. Every friend of freedom, every champion and advocate of constitutional liberty through out the land must feel that this cause is his own, and that there is and should be nothing that ought to be disagreeable or humilia ting to man who have differed in times of pollee on every question that could divide fellow-men, to rally in union in defence of the country, and against all assailants. While all the States of this Union, and every citizen of every State has a priceless legacy dependent upon the success of our efforts to maintain this Government, we in the great Valley of the Missisluppi have peculiar in terests and inducements to the straggle. What is the attempt now being made? Seven States of this Union chose to declare that they will no longer obey the behest of the United States, that they will withdraw from the Government of our fathers, that they will dissolve, without our consent, the bonds that hare united us together. But, not con tent with that, they proceed to invade andobstruot our dearest and most inalienable rights secured by the Constitution. One of their , first sots Is to es• tablish a battery of Gannon upon the banks of the Mississippi, on the dividing line between the States of Mississippi and Tennessee, and require °you steamer that passes down the river to come to un der a gun, to receive a custom-house officer on board, to prescribe where the boat may land, and upon what terms it may put out a barrel of Sour or a oaak of bacon—upon the river and upon the borders of these State. to out off our freedom of trade. We are called upon to sanction this polio , . Be fore consenting to their right to commit such acts, I implore you to consider that the tome prinoiple which will allow the Cotton States to exclude us from the ports of the Gulf, would authorize the New-England States and New York and Pennsyl vania to exclude us from the Atlantic, and the Pa eifie States to exelnde ne from the ports of that ocean. Whenever you sanction this doctrine of Seeession, you authorise the States bordering upon the Atlantic and Pacific oceans to withdraw from us, form alliances among themselves, and exclude us from the markets of the world and from crow mnitioation with all the rest of Christendom. Not only this, but there follows a tariff on Imports, levying of taxes upon every pound of tee, and cof fee, and sugar, and every yard of cloth-that we may import for our consumption ; the levying, too, of an export duty upon every bushel of corn and every pound of meat we may choose to send to the markets of the world to pay for our imports. Bear in mind that these very Cotton Staten ' who in former times have been so boisterous in their demands for free trade, have among their first eats established an export duty en cotton for the first time in American history. It is a historical foot, well known to every man who has read the debates of the Convention which framed the Constitution, that the Southern States refused to become parties to the Constitution unless there was an express provision in the Constitution prohibiting Congress to levy an export duty on any product of the earth. No sooner have those Cotton States needed than an expert duty Is levied; and if they will levy it on their cotton, do you not think they will levy it on our pork, and our beef, and our corn, and our wheat, and onrsnanufaetured articles, and all we have to sell? Then what is the proposition? It is to enable the tier ef States bordering on the Atlantic and the Pacific, and on the Gulf, surrounding us on all sides, to withdraw from our Union, form alliance among themeelves, and then levy ta xes on ins with out our consent, and collect revenue without giving us any just proportion or part of all the amount collected. Can we submit to taxation without re presentation? [Several voices—" No !"] Can we permit nations foreign to us to collect revenues off our products—the fruits of our industry? I ask the citizens of Illinois; I ask every citizen in the great basin between the Rooky Mountains and the Alleghenies; in the valleys of the Ohio, Missis sippi, and Missouri, to toll me whether he is ever willing to sanction a line of policy that may iso late ne from the markets of the world, and make us dependent provinces upon powers that thus oboes* to isolate ns ? [Many voices—" No !" and Never !"] I warn you, my countrymen, whenever youler• mit this to be done in the Southern States, New York will very soon follow their example. New York, that great port, where two-thirds of all our revenue is collected, and whence two-thirds of our goods are exported, will not long be able to resist the temptation of taxing fifteen millions of people in the great West when she can monopolize the re sources and release her own people thereby from any taxation whatsoever. Hence I say to yon, my countrymen, from the best consideration I have been able to give to this subject, after the most mature reflection and thorough investigation, I have arrived at the conclusion that, come what may, war, if it must be, although I deplore it as a great calamity, yet, come what may, the people of the Mississippi Valley Gan never consent to be excluded frem free access to the ports of the At lantic, the Pacific., and the Gulf of Mexico. [Great applause ] Hence, I repeat that I am not prepared to take up arms, or to sanction a policy of our Government to take arms, to make war upon the rights of the Southern States; upon their institutions; upon their rights of persons or property; but, on the contrary, would rush to their defence and protest them from assault; bat, while that is the ease, I will never cease to urge my countrymen to take arms to fight to the death in defence of our inde feasible rights. [Loud applannej Hence, if a war does come, it is a war of self-defenee on our part It is a war in defence of our own jut rights ; in defame of the Government which we have in herited as a priceless legacy from our patriotic fa thers ; in defence of those great rights of freedom of trade, commerce, triutult, and intercourse from the centre to the circumference of our great conti nent These are rights we must struggle for and never Surrender. _ I have struggled almost against hepe to avert the calamities of war, and to effect a reunion and rooonciliation with our brethren in the South. I yet hope it may be done, but I am not able to point out to you how it may be. Nothing' short of Providence can reveal to us the issue of this great struggle. Illeody—ealamitons--I fear it will be. May we so conduct it, if a collision must come, that we will stand justified in the eyes of Him who knows our hearta, and who will justify our every sot. We must not yield to resentments, nor to the spirit of vengeance, much less to the desire for conquest or ambition. I see no path of ambition open in a bloody struggle for triumphs over my eountrypien. There is no path of ambition open for me in a divided country. Renee, whatever we may do must be the result of duty, of oouriation i of patriotic duty —the duty we owe to ourselves, to our posterity, and to the friends of constitutional liberty and self-government throughout the world. [Loud.ap planes ] My friends, I can say no more. To discuss these topics is the most painful duty of my life. It is with a sad heart—with a grief that I have never before experieneed—tkat I have to contain.- plate this fearful struggle ; but I believe in my conscience that it is a duty we owe to oureelvem and our children, and our God, to protect this Go vernment and that flag from every assailant, be he whom he may. [Tremendous and prolonged ap plause.] AFFAIRS IN THE SOUTH. Newspaper Facts and Rumors. IkIPORTAXT neoz mormeoinnw The Mobile Advertiser, of Wednesday morning, has the following despatches from Montgomery : Mow:amour, April 22.—The Cabinet had a Eamon of several hours to-day, in which the Tow tion of active co-operation with the Border Slates was the itu loot of prolonged consideration. It was decided to co-operate fully with the Border States, and support ell of them in any conflict that may arise between them and the North in effecting their independence. Twelve thousand men, In addition to the thirty. twe thousand lately called for by the Government, will be accepted for the provisional army. One regiment additional, and probably a second, will be accepted from Alabama, North Carolina, Toilsome and Kentucky. The railroad company here is making proper*. tioni for the transport of troops northward. The Confederate °Moors are ordered to report promptly to headquarters. TEE EMBARGO AT GAIMCISTOIf The following despatch from the Secretary of the Treasury at Montgomery to the Collector of the port of New Orleans, has been handed to the N. 0. Delta for publication MONTGORMILY, April 24, 1861. F. H. HATCH : i lbo Government is informed that an embargo has been laid on vestals and merchan dise in Galveston by some local authority. The . General Government alone has power over the subjeot of an embargo, and it totally disapproves of any obstruction to commerce in our ports. Send this despatch to the collector at Galveston, and re quest him to publish it. A letter is sent to him by mail to-day. This by order of the Government. C. G. Mrankncesit, Secretary of Treasury. A rIiOGLISIATION OF GOV: LITCIEZII.. The Washington Star, of Friday, says: " tiov. Letoher, in a regent proolamation, has forbidden the seizure of private property in the name of the cause in which Virginia hos been so Suddenly plunged into difficulties and danger., oommandod the immediate restoration of that which hoe been thus seised, and forbidden the molestation of quiet citizens of Union sentiments; indignantly de claring that Virginia's fair fame shall not be thus foully blurred. HOW VIZOISIA WAS " POSCID Orr." The Penned& eorrerpon dent of the Savannah Republican makes the following reference to the feeling with which the intelligenoe of Virginia's secession was received at the former Delta : ti This news oreated very little exoitement here and dill Ito enthseleonk. The Old Dominion had no ohOiee in the matter. fibs was Simply forced out. Sti 1, we had better have her with ne than against at" TIES Drinnuow PROGIUM The Mobile Tribune says : Should Virginia in vite President Davis, be wilt vacate his seat at Montgomery, the Vice President will assume his (the President's) duties, and the President will make Richmond his headquarters within ten days. General Beaaregard will be second in command. Senora' Bragg min take eye of Penessols. This is stated by authority. A PIM MUIR. Roger A. Pryor lately made a epeeoh at Mont gomery, Ma., in whioh he said : " In taking leave of you, I °enact forget the neighbors and townsmen of that eminent man--the Patrick Henry of this revolntion—William L. Yancey, between whom and myself en ancient fend existed. lam now happy, m his absence, to say I bury it in oblivion, and lay at his teat the tribute of my gratitude, homage, and admira tion." A CONPIABION John Forsyth, In a merit epees* at Mobile, said the Confederate aomminioners to Washington nte °ceded perfeotly.hi - thill graft object, viz.: " To gain tin. for perteoting our (the :South) militar y operations, and rendering ourselves invineible. ' AN MINN. The fisathern papers are rejoiohlg over the sugary that nevem shots hit the flag-staff ot Fort thullrert but the eighth brought it down so seven lita_tes 'tuella, and Virginia makes the elth• very good, bat 'Virginia hasn't yet joined the Confederate States. PRIX 'fresco. ; - Squire Nichols Ina hung op t h e li no o f the mom. Id s and LbalivWo itattroaa, on Thursday loot, for oepreidugnentiluente unfavorable to the South. [From the Bandar Morning Chronicle.] The American Union. Itaintimr The starry flag The Revolution of 1776 The affronting of the p e opt e The oonfid once of the nations The payment of the pnblio debt The honest Administration of Government The execution of the laws of Congr e se An army and navy everywhere honored A volunteer army paid by the people themeelvee CONST/TIITION OF THE UNITED STATES The Southern Confederacy. ARISTOCRACY! REBELLION! ROBBERY The Rattlesnake and Pelican banner Bnepioion and opr ita a row of the People Contempt for the Revolution of 1776 Crushing debts on ALL the States Inability to pay simple interest Violailen of Oaths and of Laws Army of Officers and no Navy Volunteers and no pay Texas and terror REPUDIATION. PRILADELPRIA BOARD OP TRADE. WM. D. REEHMLE, 11% 8 E . COMMIT RE OH 71111 MONTH LETTER BAGS At the Merchants' Exchange, Philadelphia. Ship Tonawanda , halve— --.. Liverpool, May 1 Hatp Daphne, Hevener—. Landon soon Ship Westmoreland. Deem --Liverpool, soo n e hip Garibaldi. Emery— .--81 Paul di Loando; soon Bhip Calliope, Gondwin-------.L.Liverpool. soon Bbap liortansia. &kips —.Liverpool. soon Bars David Lapels,. —.Cardiff. soon Bark Joseph Maxwell, Davis .Laguayra, soon Brie 0 O'Brien4 Damon—.—Buenos Ayres. soon Bohr Geo J Jones Crowell --Demerara. soon MARINA DITELLMENCE. PORT OF PHILARRLPHIA, May 2, 1861. BUN RIMEIS .5 --iSUN HIGH 55 ARRIVED. Bark Martha Anna, Chase, 7 days from Cardenas, with, mileages to Stewart, Carson & Co. ling Ise., Williams. 15 days from Trinidad de Cuba. with sugar and molasses to Stewort, Carson & Co. 26thuit. off Charleston..missed ship Lizzie Moses. bound fi 1 Bohr Hickman. Diokerson, S days from Dew York, in ballast to 11 kith:tea & Co . Bohr Annie Virden. Chimbers, 1 day from Lewes, Del. with corn to .7 L Bewley & Co. • Bohr Clayton & Limber. Jackson, 1 day from Bourns. Del, with corn to Jas & Co. Bohr A B Russell , S Duffed, 1 day from Lewes, Del, with grain to Jas I, Bewley & Co. Bohr G A Hayden. mith, 3 days from New York. with mdite to David Cooper, Bohr G B Alien, Ray, S days from New York, with mdse to E A Bonder & Co. Bohr Sarah L Freeman, 3 days from New York, With incise to captain. Behr Jonathan Cone. Mehaffer, 6 darn from Haddam. Conn, with stone to captain. Bohr Mary Haley. Haien from Charleston. in ballast to Blakiston & Co. Behr Ma:, Patterson Godfrey. from Batton. in bal last to L Amlenried St. do. Behr It W Godfrey. Weeks, from New York, in bal last to iilakiston el Co._ Bohr Mary Natt Richards, from New London, in hal but to Bialriston O°. Bahr Boston. B rower, from New Bedford, in ballast. to JR White & Co. Behr-Mary Tice Tine. from Providence. in ballast to Binniokson & Clover. CLEARED. I • Steamship Kenn bee. Sanford, N York, .1 Allderdice. Bark .1 Godfrey, Clark, Cork and a market, Workman & Ca Bark Amy. Hammond. Londonderry. Peter Wright & Sons. • Bohr Target, Ba i ts. Buenos Ayres. Ratter Patteson Bohr Mary Pat mon, Godfrey, Boston, L Audenried Behr Mary Haley, Haley, Boston. Blakiston & Co. Bohr Brittain Conk. Decker, Westerly, do Bohr H W Godfr Weeks. Baugui, do 'Bohr Mary chards, Hew London. do Bohr Maur Tic e, Tioe, ProVidonhe, SIM/10MM & Glover. Bohr Boston. BraWer, Providence. I It White & Co: Bohr Hickman, Dickerson. Providence. Mines & Co. Bohr C Loeser, Laws, Salem. E R Sawyer & Co. Bohr Jas Neilsont Burt, Taunton, Twelle & Co.. (correspondenoe of the Philadelphia Exchange.) LEWES. Del.. April 30-9 A M. The ship Tiotorla Reed. from London for New York. is the only vessel at the Breakwater. The ship Fawn. which has been Waiting • here several days, seeking freight, left yesterday for 8t John NB. A large stun and a bark are novi coming in. Tours, Ito.N. W. RICKMAN. (Corimonden — ce of the Frees.) READItsG. April The folliwing boats from the Union Canal, passed into the Schuylkill Canal to-day, bound .to phis. viz; • Alert, Winnebago and Constitution. grain to Rum- Phrers. Roffman 4 Wnght; Lightner & Rupp. do to captain; Witman Conrad, do to Joseph Beyfert; mares, do to Moreton Barnes; ?erott & Bro. do to Ps- Ton .A Bro Mary Run and I) A Albright. lumber to J H Deyshor; Amelia St Wen, do to Peter Tinsman. PORIF PHILADELPHIA. List of Foreign id Coastwise Arrivals at the Port of Philadelphia for th. month of April, 3E61: Shins— Brass --. Barks....._ —.lll Schooners— _... Total— ....... 64 coaSTwrsY Ships 1 11 --58 S —lO I Steamers 144 Bnas_. .Y.. ...... 4 8arge5......... —... —. .4i5 Schooners --CS I Boats.— —. EMEIIIORANDA_, Steamship Niacatit. Moodie. for Liverpool, via Hali fax, sailed from Doston_yesterday. Steamship Columbia, Leitch, sailed from Boston yei terday for tralway4 Ship Beatrice. Rogers, fans Singapore for London, was spoken 23d ib tch Ist 28 34 N. long 4010. Bohr vapor, Di War, from Richmond was disohg at Rio de Janeiro XL rch 24. Sobr. Wm Bement, Stannard, hence, arrived at New Raven 29th nit. Naha Woodruff Sims. Mason, from Boston for Phila delphia; Gilbert Green, Weaver. from Lynn for do. and Monterey, Craig, from Gloucester for Delaware City, nailed front Aewport 29th Bohr Marietta, Smith. from Delaware City for Nor wioh, at NOW London tEtth ult. Seim Itt Marcy, Davis, hence, arrived at Fall River 29th ult. Sohr Thos Patin., Hackett, at New London 29th nit, from Delaware Cigy, Bahr North Paolho. Mercy, sailed from Providence Nth last. for Philadelphia. Sob= Sallie J Aiken, Godfrey S ophia Godfrey, Rus sell, N B Thompson, tlonever,T bake Bonn. and A Cordery, Grace, tor Philadelphia, and S " B. Williams, Small, for Woodbridge. NJ, oteared at Boston aam tut. iLii.Drols LARD. HOMES FOR THE IN DESTRIOIIS, 1 IN THZ SARDEA STATE OF WE WEST. THE ILLINOIS tENT ---- RAL RAII•ROAD COMPANY nave ferns* 1,200,000 ACRES 07 RICH FARMING LANDS IN TRACTS OF 4ORTY ACRES AND UPWARD, ox LONG CREDIT AND AT LOW PRICES. AEC/lAN/CS, FARMERK, AND WORKING MEN The attention tit the enterprising and 'industrious portion of the community le directed to the following statements and liberal inducements offered them by , the ILLINOIS CENTRAL RAILROAD COMPANY, Which, as they will perceive, win enable them, by prover energy, perseverance, and industry, to provide. comfortable and permanent homes for themselves and families, with, ooroparatively speaking, eau little capi tal LIDS OF .thiarons: . No State in the valley of the himsimpps Wein eo mat an inducement to the settler as the State of ilh nois. There is no portion of the world where all of the conditions of olimate and soils° admirably combine to produce those two great staples, corn and wheat, as the prairies of Illinois. RIM ROLLING PRAIRIE LANDS. The deep rich loam of the prairies Id cultivated with nob wonderful !agility that the fanners of the East. em and Middle States are manna to Winos m great numbers. The area of Illinois is about equal to that of England, and the soil is so rich that it will support twenty' milling of Penh*. EASTERN AND SOUTHERN MARKETS, These lands are contiguous to a railroad seven hun dred miles in length, which connects with other roads and navigable lakes and livers, thus afordmg an Un broken tionununioation with the Eastern. and Southern markets. APPLICATION OP CAPITAL. Thus far capital and labor have been applied to de veloping the soil; the great resources of the State in coal and iron are almost untouched. The invariable rule that the mechanic arts flonsieh best where food and fuel are cheapest, will follow at an early day in U-. limits, and in the nurse ofiho next ten years the nate. ral lawn and necessities of the ease warrant the belief that at least fiy...hundred thousand people will be en gaged in the State of Illinois in the 'various manufac turing employmenti: RAILROAD SYSTEM OF ILLINOIS. Over •100.OG)A00 of meets Amite' have Malt ex= fended on the railroad sr stem of Illinois. Ineeniorth as Part of the inoome from several of these mod:2011M a valuable public fond in larubi:go to diminish the State am - intim, the taxes are light, and must consequently every day deorease. THE STATE DEBT, The latata debt IS only 11/0,106,3911 14, and within the but three years has Ibsen reduoed 83,969,746 6dl; and we may reasonably expect thatin ten years it will be come SUMO.. PRESENT POPULATION. The State is rapidly 61Raw ua with rozwiatiell 4 WON 'preens baying been added autoe Thad. making the pre sent populationl,7l9.496—a ratio of lel per omit. in ten yeen AGRICULTURAL PRODIJOTIL The usitaultural products'of Miaow are greater than those of any other State. The produsts sent out dos ing the pest year exceeded 1.600,0011 tons. The wheat °rot* of MO approaches 'UMW= 'bushels, while the corn orop yields not less than 110,000,000 bushels FERTILITY OF ROIL. Nowhere can the industrious armor severe midi 114- mm:time resultu for hie labor as upon these prairie sone, they being composed of a deep, nob loam, the fertility of which is uneurpassed by any on the globe. - TO ACTUAL CULTIVATORS. Since Mie the Company have sold 1,300.000 acres. They nit liats , to astral cultivators, and every contract contains aw agreomont to culterome. 21114 road harken constructed &trough thole bawds at an 12711 tie of :$30,- 000,000. 1101860, the population of the farty-sine calm- Oils ATMS* which it Pant/ was owls' 336,695, since Wien 4T1,1N1 have been added, asking Ski whote scam. Lotion ait,e9l—a gain of 145 per cent. EVIDENCES OF PROSPERITY. As an evidence of the thrift of the people, it may be stated Unit 600,030 tons of freight, including 8.60041 E bushels of train and 260.000 barrels of flour, were for- . warded over the line last year. EDUCATION. Mecheinice end workingmen will find the free-school system encouraged by the State and endowed with a large revenue for the support of schools. Their chil dren can live in sight of the church and rehool house. and grow no with the rproimerity of the leading State in the Great Water% ElVii}iie. PRICES AND TERM OF PAYMENT. The prices of these lands vary from 3t to $2l Per acre, according to location. quality. itc. Pint-clan farming lands sell for about Ole or $l2 per acre; and the relative expense of imbduing vivaria land, as sem pared with wood land, is in the ratio of one to ten in fit vor of the former. The terms of wile for the bulk of these landirwill be ONE YEAR'S INTEREST IN ADVANCE. at six per cent. per annum, and six interest notes at six per wet, mat& reateetively in one, We, three, f o u r five, and six years from date of sale: and four note; for principal, payable in four, five, six, and s e ven Years from date of sale ; the contract stipula ting that one-tenth of the tract purchased shall be fenced and cultivated, each and every year for eve Years from the date of sale, so that at the end of live Years one-ltalf shall• be fenced and under cultivation. TWENTY PER CENT. WLI,II. BE DEDUCTED from the valuation for rush, except the same should be at six damn; per acre, when the cash price will be five dam. ' Palo oblate demorlphys of ilia hinds, soil. olunata. Product:lona. prices. and Wm' of payment Ann be had on application to J. W. FOSTER, Land Commissioner, Illinois Central itailloadi Micas*, Illinois. Rap tha mina al tha tame. villa/ea./Lad gaps eta shad apoi the llitawti Central Railroad. sae "ipages - 11S. IW. and 199 APpleton'a Rallway Gaide,fal-tatltalho THE PRESS.-- , PHILADELPHLI, THURSDAY, MAY 2, 1861. CEPHALIO PILALIS -810 K HEADACHE, NERVOUS HEADAC3I4V. • •By the age ()Ithaca Yiie the periodioal attach of Nor vow or Sick Headache may be prevented; and if taken at the commencement of an attack immediate relief from cam and eloknow will be obtained. They ladders' IhiLin removing the News.% OWE a k - 4 . seAd to Which females are so enbjeot. - liter sot gently' on the bowels; removing Coattaissese. For • Literary Men, Students, Delicate Females, and an persons of sedentary habits, they are Tainahle as a Laxative, improving the appetite, giving Moe and vigor to the digestive organs, and restoring the natural else ficiti and strength of the WllOl.O IMAM. Who CEPHALIC PILLS are the remit of long investi gation and cerchilly conducted experiments, having' wen in use many ►een, during which time they have prevented and relieved a vast amount of vain and suffering - from Ifeadaohe, 'whether original= in the igers ,ol l4B system or from a deranged state of the sto mock. They are entirely vegetable in their oompogition. and may be taken at all tines With rerraor Wary without making any change and the absence of any disa— greeable taste rnubors it wag is athatviiiter th.ai is Widnes. BZWASE or 001INTiRITIT8 The genuine NM) Ave itiftliMeren of /km 0. Spaldnii on oeoh 501 A br Druggurte wad oh other Peelers: in Medicine*. A Rix Intl lid *Out b 7 magi pronald on rioeirt of tho PRICE. Q 5 CENTS. All order' should ha arldrafeed HENRY SPALDING; 419 CEDAR ISTRXET, NEW YOKE I TII FOLLOWII4O INDORSEMENTS OF O.F.PHALIO F1LL.1.4 WILL OONVIRCE ALL WRO 'SUFFER FROM HEADACHE„ SPEEDT AND SURE CURE WITHIN As . shims rsalif7sofliffill Off lllSZOitElifd by MT. BrflAD [Nes they afford lesequestioaahla proof of the Of. coop of this truly sciettifto discovery. MR. SPALIANG. Alteenvltti, Conn., Feb: 6. ESL rit 1 hags tried y a our Cephalic Pills, and I like them so well that Itrant yonto send me two dollars Worth more. Part of these are for the nelkhbere.- to whom I gave a few of the trot box i got from you. bend the Fine by mai. and oblige • Yonr obit Servant. JANES KENNEDY. rtaviaponm Pa., Feb. 6, 1801. MR. elPaninno. sin • I wish you to med me one more box of your Cephalie / Aar* remora a eftwat deal of benefit from Mom. Youraspmeottpat Ann STOIKHOIME. eiltirta CaIISL. HIINTIIINVDON COUNTY, Mit Unitary 28,1861. H. O. SPALDING. 3nr.: You Will ploOlo rand mitwo balm of your esoholis Pine. Bona them immediately'. Respectfully you mioNg. P. S.—/haros nesstrod weer box of your Pills. and find Minn sxcottent. BiLLit VERZIon, Ohl* up. Li Idel EL,C. Esq. PleaSe find enslaved twentr-five cents, for which send nie another box of your Cephalic rills.% 27‘se ars tenZir the but PilaS I hay/ seer trud. MINA Belie Ve A rn . o ST xi, O W VF. as ß d i o M.',` Belie 811921112, Mao., Dao.ll, 2880, B. C. ON/AIMING. ESQ. I weili for some circulars or large show bills, to brine your Cephalio Pips more particularly before aus tamed!. lf you have anything of the kind please sand. Ore of my eutomera t who-is aakiatit to severe Siok Headache, flimsily lasting two cloyed was cured of as attack is ono Jkowr by year Pills,•whieh I sent her, Remeotfully yours. W. B. WILKES. RIBTROLDSBUNG 7 INAltuarg Co., Ohicht January a,1861. Hint U. EIPLLDINfi No. 48 Cedars t,, iki. Y. Dian SIR: Ineloeed And _twenty-We cents, (MO for winch mod box of " Cepnano Pine. Send to addzrose of Rev. win. O. iller Reynoldeburs, Franklin Co.. Ohio. ,Year Pills 'pork Mt a charm—GUM Malachi; a lmost nesnantar. Trnly yours, WM. C. FILLER. Submit,. • file Not long knee lent to 'vie for lib= of Cephaho Pills for the owe of:the .Wervons Headache and.ilvenent, and received the same, and rho had so good as Street that /was foodaesd to soul JJ or Mors. Please send by return mail. Diroot to A. R. A WHEELE. Ypsilanti, leek. Prow Ma .s.zamtiser, Noll oh", is.- - Cleptuthe Phis ettoontolteh the ototeet fcv whit% theY Were made. Ins.: !Imre of heethushe &U to forum Pivot the Szensiner, Norfork, 94. They have been teemed In more then a thoneand eeee.. with entire enema& Ekon the Democrats St. Cloud, MIX, If you are. or have beau troubled with the headache, loud for a box. fOaphalio Do that you may have them in mule of an attack. The Cephaliollß are said to lie remarkably very be e for the headeohtti_and one of the very beat ferthat very. frequent complaint winch has ever been dineoverea. .Fkotte the Wester* R. B. Gazette, Chime, 111. W e he ar tily endonie Kr. apaldiroc, and hie nnrivaned Oephaho /Vow the Leusawka Valley Star, Howse/ha, Va, We are mire that poisons suffering with the headache, who try there, will stick to them. ,Froas fAg Soul/ism Pith Batters'/Your flrhass,./As. Try think ! Ton that sae &filleted. and we are ante that your testimony ode be added to the ilitelidY nanorreus fist that hag received benefits that mother =dime eau produce. . : - Fr . am Ms St. Louis Democrat. The traumas. demand for the artiole (Cookollo inoteating. From tho fiazstta,.Doviosport, /Own. Mr.:Spalding would not oonnoothis name with an ar twit' hr did not know to toads, real merit. Mont fa( Advertiser. Proviclascs, R. I. The teirtimenis in their favor is strong, from the inert respectable quarters. Awe tAs Daiir Now. Newsom S.l. Caphalle PILL are tildes the else* (dell hie& ikon sAI COMMllfdai Beiietss, Banos. Masi, Said to be eery efficacious for the beadeelte. Prom big Commercial, Ciacimeari, thaffering humanity cam now be relieved, Sir A Mule bottle of SPALDING'S PREPARED *LITE will mire ten Dam their met SPALDING'S ?SMARMY) GLUE! SPALDING'S PREPARED GLUE! SPALDING'S PREPARED GLUE ! • RAVE THE PIECED! ECONOMY! DISPATCH' or , . A STITCH tit Timm Sam ttinic:"Ell As accidents will happen, even in well-regulated families, it Se vely desirable VO have aoine cheat and convenient way for repairing Furniture. Toys, Crooke- TY. *A. 'SPALDING'S PREPARED GLUE meets all iamb ennetsenoles, and no household oan afford to dowithout It. It ls always ready. and up to the stiokins point. " USEFUL IN EVERY ROUSE." R. B.—A Dumb accompanies each bottle. Price. mr• coup. Addreu. • HENRY O. SPALDING. NO. 48 CEDAR. STREET, NEW YORK An certain eminnelpled: persona tire attempting to palm orotiglie ungummothur anblio. imitations of rar PREPABBD_GLI7E, Y Motile routine all persona to ex maim before pnrebsidng. and see WM the full name. it ITALDI4IOII ITSPARIED 6ffitiz."wit , li aa SiWonsala inailart an Atom are milieu MEDICINAL. CURB ALL KINDS Olf HEA DAOH.E SPALDING'S TRA 111318, Yramiutri, 1861 041.U71014. INSURANCE COMPANIRS. THE RELIANCE MUTUAL INSURANCE COMPANY, 07 PHILADELPHIA, OFFICE) No. 308 WALNUT 37REZT, Insures against LOSS Olt DAMAGE BY FIRE, on Rouses. Stores, and other buildings, limited or Tr i nt onit, and, o A , l n iF.,,,, , Tpre, eAndise. in town or . country. CASK CAPITAL, 07314 1 5, 00—ASSETS $317,101 04. Whi c h is investe d 68 1 . 01101114 vie: In Silt mortgagee on oity property, w or th double the amount_..--.;. 6162400 IX, Pennsylvania Railroad Co.'s 6 per cent. first mortgu p loan, at par 5,000 00 Pennsylvania Railroad Co.'s per oent. se cond mortgage load 4 3 0001 g l op pp Iluatingdon And Brom - .top Railroad and Canal Co.'s mortgage loan 00 Oronnd rent, first-ohm.— 2,469 60 Collateral loam, welt secured 00 City of Philadelphia 6 per cent. loan— -... 50,000 00 Allegheny:County 5 per oent. Pa. RR. loan- 10,000 00 commereial Bank stook— --. 6,15601 Prleettslllol4 7 Bank etook.--- 9,81950 Penngivania Railroad Co.'s stock— 4,1,00 Oa The Reliance Mum6.96os& Insurance Co.'.Co.'s stook .SSO 00 The C•oucity Fire Ineuranoe'Co.'s stock ' 1,060 op The Delaware M.O. Illetllanee Co. a stook_ 700 00 Union Mutual 11161RaRee CO.'e corm----- 680 00 Bille reoeivable . 14,509 74 Book amounts, accrued intereet, 7,104 65 Cmh on hand— -- 11,544 64 -- $317,142 04 The Mutual principle, combined with tbe neoruity of &Stook Capital, entitles the insured, to participate in the 'mutts of the Company. without Bahl lit, for losses. Lames promptly admsted and paid, Magotoas: Clem Tingley, Samuel Biephain, William it,•thompson, Robert Steen, Frederick 1111:1W0 • William Musser, William Stevenson, Beni. W. Tingle], John R. Worrell. Marshall Bill. • H. L. Carton, J. Johnson Brown, Robert Toland, I Charles Leland. -. G. D. Rosemarten, Jacob T. Bunting, charism C . Wood, Smith Bowen, James S. W oodward, John Bissell, Pittsburg. CLEM TINGLEY, President. B. M. RINCRMAN, Secretary. February 16, 1861. FirEM EicTERPRISE INSURANCE COMPANY OF PRILADELPILL (FIRE INSURANCE EXCLUSIVELY.) COMPANY'S BUILDING. S. W. CORNEA _FOURTH AND WALNUT STREETE. DIRECTORS: F. JUTCH/ORD STARE, MORDECAI L. DAWSON, WILLIAM MCBEE. BEO• H. STUART. DIALER° F.R.A.zura, Jowl H. BROWN, JOHN M. ATwooD. A. FAHIIRATOCE, BEET. T. TREMOR. . ANDREW D. CACH, Ratner WEIANTON, J. L. EILAINGETt• F. RATCHFORD STARR, Premident. CHARLES W. COKE. Sectretary. fell PENN MUTUAL LIFE 'INSURANCE COMPANY No. 921 H c A li an 1 1 .1 ;g 8 A7Z et t P d l i i r al " . ALL :NE PROFIT 4 aMON G THE IN- BORED. 'mum Lives for snort terms or for the whole term of life ; grant Annuities and Endowments; purchase Life Interests in Real Estate ; and make au contracts de pending on the contingencies of life. They sot as Exeoutors. Administrators, Aesignees, Trustees, and Guardians. ASSETS OP THE COMPANY, January 1.1851. Mortgages, ground rents, real notate- .415:12,981 97 United Staeee stocks, Treasury notes, loans of State of Pennsylvania, city of Plebs delpbia, 268,785 Si Premium mites, loan, on collaterals, 637,694 68 Pennsylvania. North Pennsylvania Rail roada, and County six per cont. bowie 106,110: 00 Bug, ineuranoo. rallroad. Gan] smoke, ko. 97,647 40 Cash on band, agents' balances, km., d0,.---.-. 38,203 14 DLOn,I2B 02 DANIEL L. MILLER, President. BANFUEL E. STOKER. Moe President. JOHN W. RUM NO It. Secretary. ioh22-tf riBLAWARE MUTUAL SAFETY TN 1.." SURANCE COMPANY, PHILADELPHIA. Ineorporated by the Legislature of Pewterlvatua, Moe 8. E. sorter of THIRD and WALNUT streets, PIIIL4DELPHI4. MARINE IfiIYURANCE, On Vanelel ge r im ia. To all parte of the Woad. I LAND INSUgANCEB floods by Rivera. Canale, Lakes. and Land CST nagea. to all parte of the Union. FIRE loinißdlaLifla Oti Merobandige leperally. On Stores, Dwelling Rower. &o. ASSETS OF THE COMPANY, • November 1,1860. 13100,1310 United States five 40 cent. loan- -.11110).000 00 111,000 United States six 1, cent, Treastu7 Notes, (with accrued interent)-- 119„405 SI 100,000 Pennsylvania State Eve t 7 can' loan. $6470 00 11,00 D do. do. six do. do. 21,00 00 1,03,060 Philadelphia. City ail cent. Loan. 122.103 37 30,000 Tenneeeee State Eve cent. loan_ 24,000 00 00.000 Pennsylvania Railro 24-mortgage snot. honda- . • 0,000 00 11,000 SOO shame. stook Germantown Gas Company, interest and principal guaranteed by the City of Phila delphia 11,300 00 CAW 100 shares Pennsylvania Railroad Companyt.--. 1400 00 MO 100 shares North Penner road Company-. _ P3O 00 1,300 SO Shares Philadelphia Ice B o at Steam Tux Geranium.l,loooo 313) abuse Pliadellohis anliffiVie7tre: Grace Steam Tow-boat Company. 380 00 CO 2 shares Philadelphia Exchange • Company-- 1,000 3 'hares Cont i nenta l C 0..-- 600 00 8536,700 par. • Cost 5E47.036.84. Market v 914664.656 71 Mlle receivable., for rasurancon 171.505 42 Bonds and mom:aces._ --- 34,600 00 Real estate—. 61,380 30 Balances dm" atAgenotea-Premiumeou Ma rine Policies. interest. and other debts dne the Company— _* _ 51,800 op Berm and stook of condry Insuraiies and other Companies Cash on !sand-tri - —..673,073 16 In dra - orer—, 463 36 XB,lOB a 400//0111 DIRECTORS. Walloon Martin, Rammel E. iftoker. Edmund A. Sonde!, J. F. Ponizton, Theop_hibis Paulding , Henry Sloan. John R. Penrose, Edward Darlington John C. David, H. Joneußreohog Jareee 7..raquair- Spenoor lit'll - reumet WOham re. Jr., C. "inornacC. Hand, James C. Ad, Robert Burton, William C. Ludwig. Jacob P. loner, Joeeph H. Beal , Amex B. M!Farland, Dr; R. M. Easton, Jordair, P. Eire, George C. Leiner, „log gi. Semple, NMI?: Hub Craig, - D. T. Morgan, " Charles Kelly, A. 13. Barer. WILLIAM MARTIN, President. N 13.08. C. RAPID. Vice President, REHILP .LYLBURPT. Secretary. ' - tell -ti FT •vl INBIIRANOE EX0L136.1.11.81X.- THE- PENNSYLVANIA FIRE INSURANCE COldPANY—lnemorated 185S—CRARTER TUAL—No: 510 WALNUT street, opposite Independ ence &mare. This Company, favorably known to the community for thirty-snit years, continues to insure against loss or demise by Fire, on public or private Builninge, either permanently or for a limited time. Also. on Furniture. stocks of Goode or Merehandise generally, on liberal terms ; Their Capital. together with a large Surplus Fund, is invested in the most (Rueful manner. which enables them to offer to the insured an undoubted security in the case of loss. DIRECTORS. Jonathan Patterson, Ingo Hailehuret, Glaintin Campbell. Thomas Robins, Alexander Benson, Daniel Smith, Jr., William filerltalie', John Bevereux, Thomas Smith. JONATRAN'PATTERSON, President. BRATON SMITH. Secretary. apt-ly_ IN 13131PA.0 E. 0 0 2.4 PANY OF THE STATE OF 'ZI PENNSYLVANIA—FIRE AND MA RINE INBI/W.IOE Nu& AND S EXCHANGE BUILDING& Chartered in Int—Capilal sloo,ooo—Feb.l. oaek value, 4438a9f All ',wafted in found end evnasble seountion—oon 14140 to ittgiuo toti Vogel. and Cargoes, Blinding's , stooks urrezaramit.e, ire,. on liberal terms. DIAEUXORG. Henri D. 'Bherrerd, George B. Stuart, &mon Toby ' elanluel Grant, Jr., Varles rdasalester. Tobias Wagner William S. Igmiths Thomas B. Wa6on. Minß. Bud 4, N 01217 G. Premium:. William R. ite, Charles& Lasts. OGOIO Carivn. 'REPIR D. SHEARER.% President. WILLIAM RARPE Secretary. ise-tf FIRE'. 'INSURANCE. - MECHANICS' INSURANCE COMPANY of Philadelphia . No. ISS North OIXTB Street, below Race. mama Build ings, 0004, end Moro.handiso Venerally from lone or damage by Fire. The company guarantee to admet all leases prompuy, and thereby hope to merit the patron age of the pnblie. staseyeas. liVulism - hfortan. Robert Flamm, Franam Cooper, Miohael Ilioweor, lore L. Dougherty, Edward Mogovern, James Menai, Thomas B. MeCormlek, ames Dorcas, John Bromley, Mattheir - MoAleer, Francis Falls, Aernard Rarfert7_ John Cassady, Thomas J. Hemp h il l, Bernard H. Hulseman, Thomas Fisher, Merles Clare, Pamela Mahlamia, _ __ Mahal,' Cahill. Priaitelit COOPE.R, President. RRR.NARD JILLPPRRTY, Secretary. carry AhiERIOAN FIRE INSURANCE 00., PETUAI& INCORPORATED 1810 CHARTER PER- No.__ -- 310 WALNUT Street. above Third. Philadelphia. Ravin g a large paid-up, Capital 15tpok and fMrphln, invented in sound and available Seountien,.eontinuns to insure on Dwellings, Stumm, Pundture. Blerchandnia, Vessels in port and their cargoes. and otheypernonal property. Allloasen liberally and promptly adjusted. minenvons. Thos. R. marls. John T. Lewis, John Welsh, James R. Campbell, Samuel C. Horton, Edmund...G. Dutilh, Patrick Brady, Chas. W. Poultney, bawd . THOSIAS R. MARIS, President. ALBERT C. S. CRAWFORD. Seoretary. fenn-tf 151X0RANGE INSURANCE COMPANY -ELA —Office No. 409 "Gris.LNUT Street. - FIRE lIII3URA/IVE on Houses and Merchandise generally, on favorable terms, either limited or per petual. DIRECTORS: Jeremiah Bonsai', Thomas Marsh, J o hn Q. Ginned°, Charles Thompson, Edward, D. Roberti, Jame' T. Hale, amuel L. Smedley, Joshua T. Owen, Reuben C, Hale John J. Griffiths. JeRF:MIAH BONSALL, President. JOHN Q. DINRODo, Viso President j RICHARD GPI. Secretary. Jam SAYING FUNDS. "A little, but often, Site the Puree." VRANICLIN SAVING FUND, No. 138 Routh FOURTH Street, between Chestput and Walnut, Philedelehia, part all deposits on demand. Depositors , money secured by Government, State, and City Loans, Ground Rents, Mort gagee. &a. This Company deems safety better than large profit', oonsennently will run no rink with depo sitors' money, but have it at all times ready to return. with 5 per cent. interest, to the owner, as they haws always done. This Company never sespended, Females, married or single, and Minors, can deposit in their own right, an d deposits can be withdrawn ONLY by their consent. Charter rmrpetual. Incorporated by the Rtste of Penpaylvania, with authority to receive ra fria m A t if i D M A wtees lt e IIittrEhOSIVED, Ortoo creen daily, tram Sto s o'clock, and on Wednesday. evening until 8 o'clock. DIRECTO.RIL Jacob Bt.Shannon. are* Cadwallader, Jobe shin tter, orate Russell, lraohi W. Wean, Charles Laming, earfah Comfort. leer, Nehstrs, wholes Rittenhouse. Nathan Smedley, Joe. H. Batterthwaite, Jones Yerkea, John Alex der. JACOB B. 811MtNON, Provident. Crises cALDWALLADEIt. Treaeurer. 111 4 & 4 7 . • " A Dollar saved is twigs earned." IVRITINGt AND LEDGER PAPERS.- We have now on hand. and are nianafaciturips to order, at the Mount Holly Paper Mills, every de scription ed WRITING AND LEDGER PAPERS, which' for color and quality, are not excelled by any other Mill in the United States, We would call attention to a new article of Paper manufactured Dr us, and now for gale, called Easiness Letter, which has beenaotten a objectet the wants of business men and others, whoto Commercial Dote as being too narrow, and do not wish to nee part of wood Letter sheet. This overcomes both the above objections ; is a per fect sheet, pare wove ; plate finish ; ruled on one inde ; stamped centre near the toe; made from neat stma terial. free front adulteration, and put up in boxes, convenient for new We shun have a paper called Bank Letter, similar to the above, except It title but half the number of lines on, so as to allows pnnted blank or heading Above. ICEMPTON & MULLIN, Moot Roily Springs, Cumberland Co., P The above !finer* Oen be Mid of Mess B. L MOOTS' And MBOARGER BROTHERS, Hoc 3 and 6 DECASKuR street. ennedm 1 ..ARD.--125iiercts extra .i.ted . Lard,,for A 4 sale* C. C. BADLER & `CO., 103 ARM Street, Woad door &boo... Front. arl7-14 ' I INN!. THE PENNSYLVANIA CENTRAL RAILROAD, 900 MILEA DOUBLE TRACK. 1861. anamon '1861. , THE CAPACITY OF THIS ROAD IS NOW EQUAL TO ANY IN THE COUNTRY. THREE THROUGH. PASSENGER TR.AINS PETW NKR PHILADELPHIA AND PITTSBURG. I uonneoting direct at Philadelphia with Through Trains ' from Boston, New York. and all_poiata Rut, and in the M Through Milan Depot at rittebnin with rough Trams to and from all points 111 tfn Weet, Northwest. and Southwest —thus furulehmg faoilities for the transportation 01 Paseengere unsurpassed for speed and comfort by any other route. Express and Fast Linea run through to Pittsburg, without Change of Cars or Conductors. All _Through passenger Trains provided with LOUghridge'm Patent Brake—speed wider perfect control of the engineer, thus adding much to the safety of travellers. Smoking ,Care are attached to each Trail i WOOd n ._ - intro Uteepule RUNS DAILY: m and Fast Trains. ne EX PR ERB RUNS Mail and Putt Lines, Sun days excepted. Mail Train leaves Philadelphia at 7.90 A. M. Fast Line 11.45 A. 111. .xpreee Train leaves 10.45 P. M. WAY TRAINS LEAVE AS FOLLOWB : _ Harrisburg 7Accominoitaren — , vii - GGlninln - a; 3730 P. M. Columbia 4.00 P. M. Pargesourg " at s.so P, M. West Cheater No 1. at SA A. M. No. 2, at 13 30 F. M. West Chester Passengers will take the West Chester Nos. 1 and 2 and Columbia Trains. Passengers for Sunbury . , Williamsport, Elmira. Buf falo, - Niagara Falls, and intermediate points,rine Philadelphia at 7.30 A.M. and 2.30 P. go Tacitly through. Tiogets Westward may be obtained at the offices of the Company in Philadelphia. New York. Boston. or Baltimore r and Ttokela Eastward at any of the impor tant Railroad Office Steamers We thelso op board any of the regular Line of onMississippi or Ohio rivers Sir Fare always as low, and time as quick, au by any other Route. or further information apply at the 'Passenger Sta tion..g.Outheast corner of Eleventh and Market streets. The oon;pletion of the Western connections of the Pennsylvania Sailroad to Chicago, make this the DiaßoT 4VITWEEN THE EAST AND THE - 4;',.R.BAT WEST. The connection 13g tranks by the Railroad Britlke at l'ittsburg, avoiding ail A ferriage of Freight o . r are advantag e together with the savings,: -IF an d yh a e T r s r a ad oa r ly appreoiated by Shippers ...IL -- bug merehenp. an d 5h,,,[50s entry the tranrporta tion of their Freight to this can rely with confidence oh its speedy t y lia lov itet amn i T t i . a to ka an il d roa i -In u. - a re n . y , fr in iat T t li ne E W l L A t l b .. V i th U e F Fe ll irs all ad times as favorable as are eitarged by of et ju.. Companies. Sir Be particular to mark packages *if; Fenhees rams Rallroad." . _ I . . . . . Por Freight Contracts or Shipping Dirooriona, tiffit to. or address either of the following Agents of the Company: P. A. Stewart, Pittsburg: R. 8. Pierce & Co., Zanesville. O. .1. J. Johnson, Rip ley, 0.; R. MeNeeiv, , Maysville, 1&. ; Ormsby & Crop- Per, Portsmouth o. ; Paddock & Co., Jeffersonville, Indiana ; R. W. Brown & Co., Cincinnati. o.i_Athetti Hibbert t _Cinoinnati j U .; R. C. Meldruni, Madison, L/13. , Joe , .ti r . Moore, .t.onisvilln, Hy. P. o'ituleY Co., - Evansville, Ind.; N. W. Graham & Co., Cairo, Ill.; R. F. Sass, Shaler & Glass. St. Louis. Mo.; John li. Harris, Nashville, Tenn. ; Warns & Hunt, Mem phis, 'lean. ; Clarke &Co., - Chicago, 111. ; W. 11. R. Koonts, Alton, Ill.; or to Freight Agents of Railroads at different points in the West. 5.11. XI et iitiTON_,_ Jr ,Philadelphia. MAGRAW KOONS'. SO North street, Baltimore, Leßca & Co.. 1 Astor lionise, or I 8. Wilbam at., N. Y LEECH ic CO. No 77 State street. Boston. tr. B. HOUSTON, Gen'l Freight Agent, nits. L. L. }IQ FT, Gang Ticket Agent, .Phihs. E. LEWIS, Gen'l Snp't Altdons, isS-li 1861.. Mgaiwiti- 1861. aNt ßwc .. 4lt ß a o_ va tErey. : _ n w.. OR3i LINES TIIE 7 OIRITENefriTIitoY ANIS - Ptria• DELPHIA AND RENzON RAILROAD coa IMES FROM PILI74ADELPHIA TO NEW YORK AND WAY PLAcEs. YROM WALNUT-IST. WHARF .krilj it/amml 1:11,707 W/LLI LaIAVE AB FOLLOVIT, VIZ; _ 71.235. At 6 A. M., via Camden and Amboy, C. and A. Ao oommodatien26 At 6 A. M., via Camden and Jersey City, (N. J.) Aeoommodation—.. 341 At BA. a via Camden and Jersey City, Morning Mall—-- - 666 At 11.16 A. M.. via tanningten and Jersay Car, Wentern Exerros. _.- ' 366 At 12% P. M., in Camden and Amboy ACOOTILMO dation--; —36 At 3 P. M., via Camden and Am - boy, C. and A. M oreno—. . 3 CO At 434 P. M., via Kennington and Jamey City, Eve ning Express.— 300 At 4K. P. M., via Kennington and Jamey City, Al —. CinnnTioket-- 116 At 6P. M., via Camden and Jersey City, Evening Mall—' . __-806 At 1134 31., via Camden and Jersey City, glouth ern Mail . 326 At 6 P. M., via Camden and Amboy, docommodar tion,(Fraight and Poosenger)-lat Clam Tioket_ 25 Do.- do. 2d Chum Ticket- 1 60 lithe 6PIA Mail Line run. daily. The 11;4 p St, Mouth ern Mail, gran/days excepted. For Belvidere, Keaton, Lambertville; Flemingkm, leo., at 7.10 A. M. from Kennington, and 234 P. AL from Walnut-street wharf. For Water eap,„Stroudabusg, Scranton, Wilkeabarre , Montrose, Great Bend, 6c0., 7.10 M. from Kennington, via Delaware. Lackawanna and Weatern For Mauoh Chunk, Allentown, and Bethlehem at 7.10 A. M. from Kennington Depot and 2/1 P. M. from Wal nut-street wharf ; (the 7 10 • M• line Connects with train leaving Eaton at 3.30 P.. 1 BiFor Mount Holly, at 6 and 8 A. M., 2 and 435 P, M. For Freehold. at 6 A. 110.-. and 2 P. M. WAY LINES. Fey BrirtokTrenton, sto.. at 7.10 A, M., 4.16 and 68C P. M. from Boronneoll, and 334 P, M. from Virslnut street wharf. For Palmyris,tiverton, Dolutech Beverir, Rarling ton Florence, Bordentown. &11., at 12K. 40f, and r. k. Steamboat Trenton, for Bordentown and intermediate Placer. at 2./i P. M. from Walnut-street wharf. SEir For New York, and Way Lines 161190 KM131 . 13111011 Depot, take the care on Fifth 'treat, above Wal nut half an hour before departure. The oars run into the de _pot, and on arrival of each train, run from the depot. Fifty Pounde of Baggage, only allowed each Passen ger. Passengers are prohibited from taking anything ag baggage but their wearing apparel. all baggage over fifty pomade to be paid for extra. The Company limit their responsibility for baggage to One Dollarner sauna, and will not be liable for arty amount beyond VOO, ex cept by !pedal contract.mh27 WM. H. SATZMEI. Agent. WINTER ARRANGE ANNAPPIR M EN T .—PRILADELPHIA. OERMANTOWN,AN NORRISTOWNRAILROAD. On and after MONDAY, NThov 12,1960. FOR GERMANTOWN. Leave Philadelphia, 6, 7 8,9, 10, 11 and 12 4. M., 1, r 4 1 ) I, 17.4, 4, 5_,. 53.4, 8,7, 8, 9 14, and 11 P. Id. Leave Uermantown,fl, 7, ni 8. 8 . 9 10, 11 and 12 A M., 1,2, 11. 4,6, 0, 6Nbr ii &Jinci E. k. fogIDAY , Lemma Philadelphia, 9.06 mm. A. M., 1,7, and NM P. Id. Leers Germantown. 8.10 am. A. M.. 1.10 min., I, and OK, P. M oriymarp in IL RAILROAD. Leave Philadelphia, 6,8, 10, and 111 A. M., 2,4, 6.8. end 10302. M. Leave Chestnut Rill, 7, 10, 755, 8.40, and 9,10, and 11.0 A. M., 1.40, 3.40,6.10, and 8.60 P. M. ON SNDAYS. Leave Philadelphia, 9.05 4.118., 2, and 72.08. A - Leave Chestnut Rill, 7.60 min. A. M.. 12 80. 5.10. and 9.76 min. P. M. FOR CONSHOROCRRN AND NORRISTOWN. Leave Philadelphia, I'M, 734, 905. and 11.05 run . A. Id., LW 345, ei, 5.66, and DX P. Al. Leave Nomstown, 6,7, 3.06, 9, and 11 A. M., 134,434, audit .1"...M. - • • • . :ON alatil<t. to Leave Plulatielphia, D A. M and 3 P. M., for Norris - Leave Norriatown,_TX AM. and 6 P.M. FOR MADIAYUNK. Leave Philadelphia, 6.50. 7,6„ . . 9.05, end 11.06 A. M., Los. 2.05, 2.05, 04, 6.65, 8.05,112( F . AL Leave Manavank. WC Poi, HAW. 0%. 1134 A. 14..1. 334, 0, 034. and 934 P. M. . . peeve Philacle kia.9 A . 9L, d, ..da.ftve Mamayunket...m. citt an an a lb lW 'M not.tf if b i R General 8 rm . PoT. mni/And HEWN Wiens IMO NORTH PENNSYL VANIA RAILROAD. FOR Bc,TiM P ' DOYLESTO w_ IiLAIJCH CHUNK, HAZLETON,__and , ECKLEY.• THREE THROUGH TRAINS.: On and after MONDAY. December 3,1860, Passenger Train swill leave FRONT and WILLOW Streets, Phila delphia, daily, (Sundays excepted) as follows At 6.30 A. f 4., (Rummel.. for Be thlehem, Allentown, Mauch Chunk. Hazleton, Wilk/samara, 41CO. At 2.43 P. M., (Express), for Bethlehem, Murton, ho. This train reaches Beaton at 6 P. M. and makes ohm connection with New Jamey Central for New ork. Ate P. M., for Bethlehem, Allentown, Manch Chunk. &o. At 9 A.M. and 4 P T• 1.., for Doylestown. At P, M., for Fort Washiaglion, The 6.50 A. M, Exprana tram makes olom connection with the Lehigh Valley Railroad at Bethlehem, being tho shortest and mold desirable route to Wilkesbarre, and to all points in the Lehigh coal region. TRAINB FOR PHILADELPHIA. Leave Bethkthem at 0.42 A. M., 9.13 A. /R., and LIS P M. Leave Doylestown at f.M A. M. and ILM P. M. • Leave Fort Washington at 6.41 A. 81. ON SDNDAYS.—Philadelphia for Fort Washington at AM . - ' Philadelphia for Doylestown at 4 P. M. Doylestown for Philadelphia at 7 A. M Fort Washington for Philadelphia at i . 6 P. M. pare to )3etivehem—Sl 601 Faro to Mauch Chunk,4l2 66 Fare to Banton 1 M Fare to Wilkesbarre— 4 80 'Through Tickets must be procured at the Ticket Offices, at WILLOW Street; or BEIM Street, in order to secure the above rates or fare. All Passenger Train (except Bunday Trains) connect at Berke Street with Fifth and truth-streets, and Second and Third-ptreeta Passenger Railroads, twenty minutes after leaving Willow Street. . ELLIS CLARK, Agent, ggitliggo - SPRING ARRANUE MENT.—PHILADEJJPELLAI WILMINGTON. AND BALTIMORE RAILROAD. thi owl after MONDAY, APRIL 15.18 en. PASSENGER. TBAllel3 PRILoiDELPIELa.: For Baltimore at SA A. M. / 1 - 111 A. M., (EzIP ), arFor M Chester at 8.15 A. M. 11131. M.. 4.15 and 10.00 P.M. For Wilmington at 8.15 A. M., 1185 A. M., 4.1$ and 10.50 P. M. For New Cantle at 5.111 A. M. and 4.16 F. M. For Dover at 8.11 A. M. and 4.15 P. M. For Milford at 8.14 A.M. For glaliaboxiilatA,, M. TA. , mxfaI7I,II4ADELPHIA Leave Baltimore at 5,15 A. M. (Havress.4 Mt A. M.• and 4.45 F. M. Leave Wilmington at BM and AID A. M., 1.20 and 8 P. M. Leave Salisbury at 1.40 P. M. Leave Milford at e P. M. Leave Dover at 0.88 A. M. and 8.20 P. M. Leave New Castle at &MI A.M., 222 P. M. Leave Cheater et 1.40 A. M. 9,40,1 . 97 and 8.40 P.M. Leave Baltimore for Salia lmry and Delaware Rail road at 8.15 A. M. TRAM FOR BALTIMORE: • Leave Cheater at 8.46 A.M., 12.06 and 11.20 P.M. .Loavo Wilmington at SW A. M., UM P. XL, and 12 A. M. PREIGRT TRAIN, with Paanenger Car attuned' will run as follows Leave Philadelittia for Perryville and intermadiate places at 5.80. p. id. Leave Wil=r4t4 . :..11 for Perryville and intermediate places at 7.29 /111. Leave winskinn for thilandelplua and Menne dist° place' at . Leave Havre -de. hoe for Baltimore and intermedi ate statione at 6 M. Leave Baltimore for Havre-de-Grave and intermedi ate stations at 8 P. Pd. • •UN SUNDAYII Only at 10.50: P. M. from Pcdelphia to Bal . tingern, Only at At P.M. from Ba ll ore to . FELTON. PrealdinL . nt .. 6 'TA . i - f -ILADELP ILLiIaLL.k A D. READINGIR ROAD—PASSBNGERTRAINa for POTTBV/READLNG, andIARRISBURa, on and afterdatieti • sd, 1881, • ' MORNING LINES, DAILY, tßundare edam' teat r. f. Leave New Depot, earner or BKOAD and OAniLltw- RILL Streets, PHlLADELPHlA,(Peaserrentreatea on Thirteenth and on Callownill atreets 'at4124_,M,..: toil fitsfinitt Ilaro l terf wi th the P.Fu,,Npiffalir the. OMTBERL/ND VALLEAL.OO Prnyi. M. train rausiele - . Chamberiburd, __Carib f ie Ay - .._' end the NORWURAN CENTRAL „RAILROAD I P. /111.,trams running to dun- Mu, ite, AFTERNOON LI N E!. _ _.___.-- Leave New D t oornari of BROAD and OALizAIM-. BILL Streeta,,P M,PRIAA Peasenger entswee on Thirteenth and on Callowhill stree__,ts .i for POTTS VILLE and DARRISBUREt, at 3.311. P. AL ,DIILY , for READING Min at a. P. M. 4 D a MY. (flu deall az oetrted.) DiadTANcEd writ pWY I`. A nELPIII/L AND =DINS RAILROAD. FROM PIitLADXLIIIIA. Miles. To Phceinsville—..— Oa Reading-:-.. is Philadelphia and Itimiling tahi1it01L4....... el and Lebanon Valley ILK, Trainars —....- -3 1 Z amid beald .—....---1241 „lta FriaTOrtaltHlLZlOtio—...n ...168 .....a orth bury runberland•—.l7l d!, tram ........... arra lte eon-- lie num—. ...—.......—„TT : illunnsport ---1011 ATlller_Shore—,.--3112 Look Amen --„XT, eaniton--. —LW Troy—. --sat Williamgmt and Rlinirs _nr • !Ribbed. The 8 A. M. and 8;80 P. AL train connect 11=18 at Port Clinton. Bunla_ye egriepted,l ghe vATA.. wygoA. WIL iIANSPORT.. and ERIE RAILROAD mating 01000 eminent en- enth lines to Niagara Palle: Canada, the-Weet an Etott est. DEPOT fre-plip ALIA: Corner of ROAD and CALLOW;w4L AD334 _ADLiggeILIIENNRY. se genarg _ . 4 " , D AIL I INLAND 'EIGHT LINE TO NOR FOLK ANB , Va., and to the amino- Del Cities and:Tovi,e. th the :fourth and Bouthweat. Goons sent to the' Depot, writer tilts:USD etreet and WASEINOTON Avenueoeill be forwarded navy. and at as low rates ea by any other line. H. F. KENNNy,- . Master of Transportatton P. W. & B. It: R;Vo. WEST HBEITAIR , eittAll. PERSIA. Capt. Judkins. tAFRICA, Cant. Shannon. ARABIA, Cast. J. Stone. CANADA, Ca t. Anderson. ASIA„ Capt._.V.,(l.Lott. AMERICA pt. McAuley AUSTRALASIAN, NIAGARA, apt. Moodie. Capt. E. M. Hookley. EUROPA, Capt. J. Cook. SCOTIA, I now building, ) These vessels aim a clear white light at mast- head green on .iarboard bow ; red on port bow . CANADA, leaVoo l4 l3oirton, Wednesday. Mail 3. AFRICA, (8 anion, ” . York, Wednesday, April 10. BUROFA, COOk, " Boston, Wedeeiday. April 17. PFRBIA Jed tins, " N. York, Wednesday, NIAGARA, Cloodie, " Boston. Wednesday, mar 1 . ASIR. Lott, " N. York. Wednesday. May 8. ARABIA, Stone. " _Boston, Wednesday, May IL AFRICA. Shannon. •• N. York. Wednesday , May 2s. Berths not seared until paid for. An experieneed Surgen on board: o The owners of these ships Je w elr y, be accountable for Gold, Silver, Bullion, Specie Precious Stones or Metals, unless bills of lading are signe4 therefor, and the value thereof therein expressed . For fre New kht or • Pa =tl "Ply sa - - - , • 4 Bowling Green. agui : ' FOR THE 13011TH.-01WILLES. TON AND SAVANNAH STEAMSHIPS. Bing for good, for points other than the cities of Charleston and -Savannah, must be accompanied with certified Invoicies. to insureprompt delivery. All goods not permitted immediately after the arrival of the steamers at Charleston and Savannah will be seatto the Cilattim- house stores, 'she Broanisnip STATE OF GEORGIA having_ been withdrawn for the present. the Steamship KEYSTONE STATE will run to both Savannah and Charleston, taking freights for both port at the same time, pro ceeding first to Savannah, and from thence to Charles ton, making a trip every two weeks, than making de liveries as frequently in Charleston min Savannah es when both Sta wets running. Passengers for Charleston will be ticketed through from Savannah to Cnarleston by Railroad. Fare to Savannah, >f 15 ; through to CharlesWn, 316. • FOR CHARE,IseTON AND SAVANN A H owing to the iffroulties at Charleston. the Steamship KEYSTONE D NE STATE, Capt. Marihman, has been with drawn for the present- Use notice of her selling will be given. Goods received every day, end Bills of Lading aligned at second wharf above Vine street. 'WWII/NCB. Freight and Inferen found large proportion of goods spippocl South will be to be lower by these Mons than by sailing Vessels. /111111111200 on all Railroad Freight Savannah unnecessary, farther than Charleston or the Railroad Companies taking all nuke from thee* point'. ••Philadelphia to New Orleans and intermediate points. Charleston and Savannah route, connec ting . steamer. for Florida., and with railroads for New Orleans and intermediate points, it:REAT 1101)1/0 - ,yrory IN FARE. by this route M to 40 per cent. cheaper than by the Inland Route, as will he seen by the following th E Me. Through tickets from Philadelphl l of a harleston and Savannah steamship *, !NOLO INS MEALS on the whole route, except from Chili eston and Savannah to Montgomery , To Sav annah ----4113 , au 00 harleston.— 16 00 Albany-- la OD Augusta-..._-- 000 MOntgOMMY SI 00 Macon-- PO Of Mobile M Atlanta— II 00 New Orleans-_... Is N. 8,-Passengers by this route connect with the in land Route in South Caroline and likeorgia, tray/due s by the same conveyances thence to New 0711111112. Ito Nile optisaingingned alter tha skip has sailed. No freight received on the da of alea. agents in Charieston, T. 13,.& . G.ll -• Savannah H , UTT &GA 'f. S. & Sav a nna UD, 'Charleeton, and EIMER & GAIAMEI,L.h. will attend to entering and for warding all goods oorisigned to their oare. NertkentAttalli isitroped. ar t impoi WEST ()HESTER ARO PHILADELP HIA RAILROAD, • lOW EA. SPRING 11.4BGEMBNT, On and after Monday. Marsh 11,18 n, tile trains inn kr ? ZN P. h. ,COB/P l / 1 11, from the Depot, aerth_eorner 2. magnmenl.b -and Madre* 'Krum. a LAD .M.. fi end 1.4, he and Lin reight Train, with soteeeneet oar attached, will leave West Philadelphia. at CI A. fd.. running as lar u the Baltimore OentrC Junction. On Budays, leave Flulndelo p ia: at 8 A.M. and IP. M.: leave Weateheetetat,7.3o A. .:.ead 4.30T..11L The craise leavtee-Philadel as 8 A. M. and • P.M. hunectxt ftronelton won trains on the rhilad_elphia and Baltimore Central Railroad. for Kennett oxford. Co., he. "Liszt Y WOOD. mall : Canons! IlsperintendenL Banbers sid Erie E. E. ..s, NOTICIL--4MOSTER, VALLEVT.A . ILROAD.---PAS- SkCNDER 1411Y8 R DOWNINOToint AND IN TERMEDIATE STATIONS.—On And siteg.tfor. ggh. WO, th e rageenger Train, for DOWNINUTOWN wi il mr s f ro m new roaseegeryerot Of the PAlitir• ;_Villa And Rendingßgairma vorapang. Garner o f ROAD end CALL,Ow HILL. Strung, (veasentet en tram& Callowddl4 MORNING Tice.'n (or Datruingtoere leeway et 8.00 A jtYRROOR TRAIN (or Downingtown leaves at Cal 1". 151, DAILY (Buiadsta eieenool: order of The board of -flifiageni of the Peiladel elgo and Roadies ILV.l road ail Ilsow •H. 11Y. »tam Marti SALES BY AUCTION. F URNESS, BRINLIY, No. ass MARY= STREET POSTPONEMENT. NOTIOE.—Our sale of fine y goods rolvertised for Tuesday and 1 7frodnoaday April s And ts postponed until further mottos. IN$• PANODAST. AUCTIONEER, Sue • oessor to B. float. Jr.. 431 CHESTNUT BS. POSITIVE SALE OF' 250 CASES STRAW 000113. his Morning. May MOSER, at 10 O'olook— The stook of 8 Manufacturing firm, conk/Ming of all grades and styles of choice new goods. Inoloded in sate will be found -100 oases latest and best shales English braid Coburg and fancy bonnets. 100 oases (alloy Boulevards, Eureka., end other fancy HMS, palm and willow hoods, men's and boys' hats, &o. SHERIFF'S BALE OF A STOOK OF• HOSIERY. TRIMMINGS, ko. on Friday Mornlnf• May .1,1851, at 10 o'oloolr. by order of Sheriff. a very large and attrice sibok of trimmings, laces. notions, melee womea •s l ,.a nd and ohildren' s hosiery and gloves, braids, tapes, 0., being nimaly trimming s t o r e ell selected stook of a retail Ho sieryand upHILIP FORD & 00., AIIOTIO No. 030 MARK= Ntreot nod &al MINOR Bt. yosai VIC BALEOF I.OOO BROGAIIB. CABEB BUOTB,BLIOES , AN D This hloming, &lay Id, at 10 .'olook precisely, will be sold, by rata logne- -1,000 oases Men's, boy.' and youths' calf. kin. and grain boots, calf. kip, and gram brogans, Congress gaiters, calf and Pat Le& Oxford tine, walking shoes, dm.; wo men'a, miaow!' and children's calf, kip. goat, morocco and kid beeledboots and 11109/1, gaiters, slippers, boa- Pins, &o.; also. a large and dealrabla aftesortment of firet-enuas city-made goods. Er (Londe open for examination, with catalogue., early on the morning of sale. FITZPATBIOS, (t. BROS., AU°- . i t iorinvizz, 604 OuErrNlll7 Strati. nAL.E.n ..syse,i r.v tsttlNQl. As 7 o'clock, of Books stationery and farm., soca. Watches, teWellrl, clocks, silve r plated ware. *ltil , rl Paintings, mnatosl matnsensenta. kn. • Also, Hosiery, dry goods, boots and shoes, and me r . idtpindise of_overy deaor_iption. • DAY BAbEll °rag monday, Wednesday, and En day at le o'clock A. PATE BALER. At prtrate sale aevorat large oonrignments of watches, irreiry, books, stationery, toPrer-slated waro, cutlery, sum goods , aro. To which is solicited the attention of city and country morohants and others. Consignments solicited of all kinds of merchandise for either publio or private sales. gkr - Liberal cash odyanoes made on oonsistanonts. %door salsa arometly attended to. NATIIANS A 110 Ti ONNZ 'IIIIdIISISION MERMAN 'Southeast Ar r i. 111/4/ 4 rd /LACE Btreena imnulr "t. - "ATE BALE. • tki P ATENT LEVER and Some of the eil t, manufactured, at half CHRO7IOIIIETE d leyiaa watches, the nitre' pricen, gel /6/01 - list', Swiss, and silver level arid feline hiSS, i bel t Jewelry of French watches, St sottonishinglr dig . mustoul in every desoription, yen/ 16*, gang. Id IS at ,half the struments, fi r st quality ot aypna are, and Importation price in cnantittes td (wit intense, various other knile of gooda. 'SPLENDID ft 7 OF DIAMONDS A'l" PRA I A), B Consisting of diamond and opal breastpin and WI rinse. Price one. Ocrt in Faris ISLAM A splendid single-atone diamond breast-On. only OLIO, ooet OUT DOOR SALEd Atlended to seivonLally by the Auctioneer. sited. Contigtonants of any and avoli ba A t of gisefili- OM MONEY TO 1.171/19 624,000 to loan, at the lowest ratei, on diamonds, watohes,lewelry. silver plate. dry goode, clothing, gro centre, altars, hardware, cutlery, pianos, mirrors, fur niture. bedding, and on goods of every desonption, in large or email amounts. from one dollar to thousands, for any longth of time agreed oh. sar The Oldest Established House in this city. Envate entrance on RACE, Street. Blllilitoell hours from 9A.M. to P. M. Hoerr CHARG ES O N LY P E ER positors CHARGES ONLY TWO CENT. Nor Adseanes of Moo and upwards at two per Gala. Advances of 4.100 sad upwards, at one per cent.. or short Imam MEDICINAL. DYSPEPSIA REMEDY. Dr. DADIIIII HAM'S AROMATIC INVIGORATING SPIRIT. This Medians has ban used by tits pitting Jot rix view.; with inersasing favor. It is rseotanteilded So Care Dvspsysics,_ IVirvoussesz. Hears-Dyne, Colts Pains. wind in the Stomach, or Pains in the Bettosls, Matlack*, in ache, Loss Spirits, pair -Ina intompsranti. IT OTIKELATIE, EXHILARATES. IN I 7IBOIITES, NTT WILL NOT INTOXICATE On STOYETY. Asa Medicine it is quick and effectual, curing the ace taggravated oases of DysperriaA Kidney Cornejo' na, and all other derangements of the sitormson and newels in n speedy manner. It will instantly revive the most melancholy and drooping spirits ; and restore the weak, nervous, and sickly to health, stresstli, and vigor. Persons who, from. the injudicious use of liquors, have beoome dejected, end their nervous systems shattered, tionatitstions broken down, and subject to that horrible curse to humanity, the Dinastruat TILIKENR, will, al• most innnediately,_ feel the happy and healthy Milta rating efficacy of Dr. Ham's Invigorating Spirit. WHAT IT WILL DO. Ifliors.—One wine glass fall as often as necessary. One date will remove all Bad Spirits, One dose will cure Heart- burn. . Three doses will ours Indigestion. • One does will give you a Good Appetite. • Offs dose will stop the dlebrealliric paha of Dyspepsia. One dose will removo_tue distressing ana disagreeable effects of Wind or Natutenos, and as boon as the stomach receives the Itivigorating B#irit, the distress ing loan and all painful feelings will be removed. One (Ices will remove the most distressing pains of Colic, either in the stomach or bowels. A few donee will remove all o betraotions In the Kidney, Bladder. or Urinary Organs. Persona rho are seriously atllioted with any Kidney Complaints are assured of speedy relief by is dose or two. and a radical cure by the use of one or two bottles. NIGHTLY DISSIPATION. Persons who, from dissipating too much over night. and feel the evil effects oz poisonous liquors. in violent headaches, sickness at stomach, weakness, giddiness, dto,,will find one dose will remove all bed feelings. Ladies of weak and sickly constitutions should take the Invigorating Spirit three times a day : it will make them strong, healthy, and hap) Y. remove all obstruo tons and irregularities from the menstrual organs, and restrestore the bloom of health and beauty to the careworn re Pregnancy it will be found an invaluable medi oine to remove disagreeable sensations at the stomach. All the proprietor asks is a trial, and to induce this, he has put up the Irtviecatartne SPIRIT in pint battles at incents, quarts 81. OEMNIII_ Depot, 45 WATER StresdaffeW York. DYOTTC.O. E 32 North SECOND Street, Wholesale Agents in Philadejphits, And for sale by JOHN H. EATON, Da N. EIGHTH Street. and all Drugs - Ma. Jel-thstulv SUIPP'ANG. WEEKLY - COMMUNICATION BV STEAM BETWEEN 'NEW _YORE 4FLItERPOOL, calling at QUEENSTOWN (Ire- MEd.) to land and embark nassengere and despatches. The Liverpool, New York,and P hiladelphia °team stip Company's Bp d lendtdplyr u bmit . iron MOW et:4ln d pm' MTV iitmrtoyTßT 10 ° E w tiVERPOOL. CITY OF WASHINGTON, Saturday. May 4 CITY OF MermaEmpEß, Saturday, May 11 CITY OF BALTIMORE, Satn.day, Ma Iti And every Saturday throughout the year, from P. ft No. 44 N. R. BATES OF PASSAGE THROUGH FROM PLIILADELFRIA. 1 Cabin, to Queenstown, or Liverpool . --- 75 Do. to London, via Liverpool —...._ —_ so Steerage to Queenstown, or LiverpooL. —— SO N. to London. —..-... AS Do. Return tickets, available for six months, ' from Liverpool. .... opp Passengers forwarded to Havre, Paris, Rignibiligi Bremen, and Antwerp, et thron,sll rates. ()situ:Wales of passage waned from Liverpool to New York— • ~. *4O Certificates of passage issued from Queenstown to New York_-..._. 850 These steamers have sup erior aricommod — ations for Passengers. are construete with watertight compart ments. and earn experienced Singenne,. For freight, or passage, vt at the orrice of the Cont i:4l2Y. 6l. DALE Agent. 111 W ut at reej,,r4ladelphia. In Liverpool. to WM. MAN, Tower Buildings. In Glasgow, to WM. INMAN. 13 Dixon street. i d= THE BRITISH AND NORTH AI ERICAIi ROYAL ALUM STEAM- I!= ° - snow NEW ion[ ?O LITIIPOOL. Chief Cabin Paseake--....—.. gaso Seoond Cabin Passage—. 7I PROM HORTON PO Ltiarcoor. — Chief Cabin Passage MIS Eleoone Cabin Passage— ' . do The shins from New York mall at Cork Union The ships from Boston call at Halifax and Cork Bar bor. sr.cCIAL NOTI #A.p62.OAD LINES. SAJ,ES BY AUCTION. MTi it, SON:, • Not. 139 and 141 annt - ,1 (Formerly Ilot. Kna 40.1 rr • -'• " 1, THE, NEAT MODERN RED I DENOR,I4, in._ Fifteenth Wet% Will Whew at Privet", f days. at a moderate pride. r" STOCKS AND REAL KisTA'rs. BALES AT TILE EXMLAelalf. EVERY' Utthe oir Eandbilis of each property leaped seeer VmtVl em i tl addition to which we pulnish, on the oaturditi te each ful l e thousand the ta talo in form, giving desoriptiuns of ell Wenn, t n sold On? following Tuesday . AL ESTATE AT PRIVATE SALE , eir have a largo amount Of reel estat e IL , " sale, including every description of city end ; o va , te property. Printed lute may he had et the a na i on tr! PRIVATE BALE REGIIZI'ER. r m• po- Real , estate entered on our prj7Ce sa te rerie , and advertised occasionally in our public Rale atiaL4r4. (of which one thousand copies are emit... 4 weeiti:i tree of (Marge. To Bakers. ho.—Sale corner Broad and Vine 1004.4 RIUTUst.E. TOOLS. BAK WAGONS, BREAD WIEST% !RON BREAD POB, &o. On Friday Morning. Pl CAL. at 10 o'mck, without reserve, at the tif Pelln BAKE FEY, southwest corner of Broad ffi Vine streets, a large amount of peritonea pr omtv aed eluding oee furniture. chest of teals, two fire-proof safes. complete Cracker and jrnie machine. Boland's Patent kneading machine, iri^ Full particulars in printed catalogue ' , no ;' TO CA PITALIBTS. ready, THE REAL ESTATE, southwest corne r o r E and Vine streets!. large lot 'and b uildineeiwill he r n ," 4 , on the:premises, on the same morning as the abev:—• • REAL ESTATE SALE—MAY 7, VALTIANIA: REM ENCIE AND Umiak: LOS Burlington. N. J.. fronting on titre Delawa:e fi i,, i ang. Wood street, and Year! et-three fro le - Bee the modern convemenoep. Terms, es w o _ . 1.... VALUABLE WHARF AND LARGE 1. 0 0 7 4: E 8 LL. lir , gion. In front, on Green Dank. or River belae,!l - feet front, and in depth 265 feet. Coal urge° ". a.o. '''''"ii Orjphanegourt Sale—Eritste of Ram. q u i,. deel THREE-BTORY BRICK ilwm(l.triti, El ei, - street, month of Morgan, with a frame dwellina it; rear. name Estate.—THßEE-STORY BRICK INO, east aide of Eleventh 'street, adjoining th e e b ot, with a two• story brink dwelling in Vie rear. Same lliatate.—PlVE THREB4STO KY gi c , DWELLINGS, north side of Quarry street. mit o f Third , etODfRN I RESIDENCE, No. 1121!Pmntlin street, 1 1-1 1 A I RDZW MODERN RESIDENCE, De &alt., Norristown, Montgomery county, pa, VERY VALUABLE FARM AND COUNT el, SEAT. over 103 acres of lend, fronting on th e r f; Delaware, seoond farm north of " Andaiusia inelat er a valuable Shad tFishery. It Is near two w eiroe y, landings, and directly omisite Cornwall station, Mr, ' ton Railroad. The fishery and farm rent for 81,0 e. etalualve of the mansion and lawn. SPECIAL. PERENlncatv SALE—MAY 7 7% O'CLOCK IN THE EVENING, Sy order 01 Assignee, On Timidity Evening, May 7. at 73: &cloak, without reaerve, the f o ll otr, prOPertiesi viz,: LlAND3rifilti RESIDENCE, No. 1528 Arch wester Fifteenth . __ Lot 26 feet front. Ittfee?, RANPSOME RESIDENCE. No. 1570 g ee , wee, , west nf Fifteenth. Jot 62 feet front. I THREIg-ISToRT B RiCK DVVELLING, No j u flitter street. south of Vine. BUILDING LOT AND STABLE, Perry stre et , gmh or B V U i II e. DINO LOTS, southwest miner of Weal Nwl Nteenth streets. 'IREE-ISTORY BRICK DWELLING, ;e s . 0 1:0 ,h Ts. treawest of Sixteenth. Wcfakp.., '-STORY BRICK DWELLING AND BTA BEEltBa. 'M Wood street. -nty Blue's. DWELLING, 110 1334 y itt teenth. .fit li zeit s e rm t ) , ORICK DWELLING, No. Sixteenth etreet._ '''_K DWELLING. enrih m , TIMES:4I'ORX -tr_eate of 17 by 73 feet. — °l PREttet t Mtr a ilrl l Fle v.r -I E , Li " , &mew., street. second house north of ell, 'a avenue, ACesb r COTTAGES, on Penney Wet, TARE E. STORY BRICK DWELLIti. "I(3 ' 0 1 =bs111 street. north Of Pearl, Lot 17 by 76 feet. BRICK DW ELLINQS AND CA RPENTS2.. Nos.2t2 and 224 Madison street between Mao. acd Vine strews. west of Wlevenji Lot 32 by 75 feet. TWO THREE-B'l'OAV BRICK DwELLiNGS, No. • 1117, 1119 and 1121 Division street, north of Oallowhill, end east of Tleelfttr street. LARGE AND VALUABLE LOT. corner of Thom e . son and Edgemont streets. Nineteenth ward, 172 or feet. BUILDING LOT, York &treat, Nineteenth Wlird,3l by 160 feet BUILDING LOT, Christian street, West of Twelfth, 18 by 100 feet. BUILDING LOTS, Everett Street, west Of Twelfth, south of Christian street, caoh lot 16 by 76 feet, IT The entire, sale will to absolute, to order if ig scene.. WWI" Null descriptions and particulars may be Del id handbil e, at the Auction Rooms. K?i;lU=M2==:ll DALE GF BUPEfUtIR FURNITURE, ELEGANT OHANDELIERE. FRENCH-PLATE MIRRORS, BElIa BEDDING. QU AN TITY AND WASS. WARE A LARGE QUANTITY OF UAHP•TS, HERRING FIRF,PEA,OF. EVANS & WATSON SAFE. &o. C ARll.—Our eale this rnornins. at the Auction store will comprise the largest assortment of furniture. &0., offered this eeetion eioneietine of !opener walnut parlor and chamber furniture, elegant gilt gar (Meadeliere, French-elate mirror, beds and beading. china see glassware. a large quantity of medallion velvet. tam. t: y, Brussels. imperial, insrain, and Venetian camels, ruperior Herring fire-proof, large iron safes, mede by Evans A; Watson, &0., forming _an attractive awn. ment, worthy the attention of 'MGM and others eeie• roue ofenrehesinr. NO" Catalogues nosy ready and the articles arranged for examination. Sale at Noe. 139 and 141 Siren Fourth Street SUPERIOR FURNITURE, FRENCE-PLATE RIX ROES, PIANO-FO TES. BRUBSEI,II CARPETS, This Morning, At 9 Oielook, at the Auction Store, en aNtenstent excellent second-hand furniture, Megant.piteeteries. Sne mirrors, carpets. eta., from families drowse& housekeeping, removed to the store for aonvemene, er sale. BALE_pr RARE. CURIOUB, AND INTERFBTING Doors_l2_, MANUSCRIPT/4. AUTOGRAPHS, EN aftlairiNol3, AND PAINTINGS, This Evening, May 3d, at !the Auotion Stole, Noe. 139 and Ut South 'Fourth street, a collection of rare. curious, sad interesting books, manuscripts. antograpta. fine en gravings and paintings. from the private Unary of s gentleman leaving the oft,. INT For particulars see catalogues, which toll be ready ore day previous. Bala No. Mt North MIRROR e. SUPERIOR FURNITURE. BRUSSELS CARPETS, &c. On Fnday /Morning. Mar ad, at ten o'olook, at 874 North Rith street. above Parboil street, The superior parlor, dining-room, and shattitay tarno tine, one French plate mantel mirror. hu e ' a m" °IMO, SuPenor aprinE mattreasam, and leathet nett, fin_e_plated tea set &c. afP May be examined with catalogue on the mnnfitt of the sale. at eitht o'otoek. Sale N FURNITUR E, rd street. 110USEROLD CARPETS, tc. CM Monday Tunica. 6th Mot.. at 10 Woken, at No. 9.35 Lombard Street, he low Tenth, the household and kitehen fareiture, car nets; &0., an family declining hansekeeldng. Ng" May be examined at 8 o'olook on the teeming of the sale. MACMN'BRY AND IRON. di& PENN STEAM 101461ta Gent LOILEtt WOB.K.S.—NEAFIr VP. PRACTIC&L All THEORETICAL krt4l/ 1 0 11, - MACHINIBTE,_ ILER-MAXERS. BLACK!, Re. and FourinEJus, WI mast ter•nl• 4 ° "I la 00.1111111. operation. and Ilet! e5101 , 1 , 11/My este,fr,.el building and repairing Mar ne and Flys: I.r.rinto.: , !ta and low pressure, Iron Banta, Water Tants..? rebodeft ka., eca L reaprotfnlly offer their serve Jes to riche nttlY Prepared to contract for Er:4lnel V' 6‘ sues. &rine, River, and fltan.,nary hewn' eau 6 paternn o, afferent Stile*. tile PrOpIATOO to emoOpei ot ters with quick despatch. emery tleseriPtles rattan Habil( made at the atoned entloe. Birk the LoT Pressure, Flue, Tnbular, and Cylinder Bennrs, of th e best Pennsylvania abuses! Iron. Perlin:sr, el 411111 w and kinds; iron and Simko Caat;3lS - 6, of 16 IL delviravi ; Ron 761 1)/kG &grew Cult:lnt", and a ll other trot. tel Rooted with the above blindness. Drawinta and se.;cificationa for a'B work deer et twat establishment, free of charge, and wi'z suamm.o. Tkn subsonbers have ample when' acet. ram for salts cc btets. where they can Re in L'Zuot mus e and are T , 'etridoll aitk ahem, Meeks, We. for rigid= ksavy et light welched. JACOB O. BEAelt Mid PALMY./ rarer 1. VAUGHAN MEREICIL, /3 EE E. COPT. WILLIAM 11, MERRICK. 1:1017LET NERSICS. SOUTHWARK FOUNDRY, FIFTH AND WASHINGTON riltkam. PHILADELPHIA. MERRICK di SONS, ENSINEEES AND MACHINISTS. asnsfaotere High and Low Pressers Steam norms• for land. river. and manse service. Boilers. Gasometers, Tants, Iron Boats, .to; Cart. Me of all kinds, either iron or blase. Iron Frame Roofs for time Works, Workshops. lan tstioneato. otoitig and ciOs Machinery of the latest and moo im proved construction. wlivery downy:a - ion or Plantation Machinery, once al Sugar, Baw, and Grist Mills, Vacuum Pane, Oven tea Trains. Defecators, Petneint huelete , Bole Agents for N. Rillienx's Patent Blear Boiling AYPearetne Nemo , th's Patent steam Rammer. and M • pinwall & Wolaer's Patent Centrifugal Sugar Draillilit Machine ast-f POINT PI:EA PANT FOUN - DAY, No. 961 BEACH Btreet t Lensicttim, Pliiladelphia. -1, ALIA M H. TIERS Mena. that, ;wink stu • hinged the entire stook ratterns at the aba•a roa ois7l: re r azi roaigadeagz i tt:l 4 ; lowa Work, l eer rin. OW% mill from UV , ' bersion7 sr manala Taranitaa. in drr or violin Pn•- • BUSINESS CARDS. BUSINESS MEN ARE ADVERTISING in the Best Newspapers of City and Countri st the Whose of JOY, COE, & CO., ADVERTISING AGENTS, F/FTIt end CHEaTNUT BTRZETS, Phtladelplns , TRIBUNE BUILDING, New York. ae/ 7 ti ALFRED D. BRIOK'S • UNITED BTATEB AND )31, PATEI/ TROP T or EAN ricE. No. 144 isOuTH FOURTH BTRkET. rateat Lame of U R .OBw P a H n L Europe coo be ob tamed !cystic apll-1111 JAMES M. SCIOVEL, ATTORNRY STR E ET , above rio. 113 PLUM STREET, above Front. Mh2l-1M• CANDSII. t. , H 0. II LLM A N, ATTORNEY-AT • LAW, JISRBEY CHOICE, Penrallytinia. Collections promptly made Clinton and Lamm; 001111131111. 11111/lIIM to Welter & %nab, Philadelphia ; J. S. games. Mee. Jamey Shore ; Mewing !lawmen k Co., Pallid& &Ladner, Ziegler, & Co„ Philada4 righinoth &CO Phifsda..i L A. Mackey, Look haven; Yard , Gl ar ;.! Ptinarta.i Thatcher & Woddrog. mild'. Howell Boa Mods, em -w, JOHN ELLIOTT, WINES and LIQUORS, Nos. 31T and 319 WALNUT Street, (hasempr d 'tore!. between Third and Fourth, north Ede.) nut dglphiss. N. 13.—Fine Old Whistles shrug on boa , (Rainbilatten in IBin.) 1830-11 pAWSON & NICHOLSON, BOOK BINDBRB t Aim 6 1S and ti:/1 MINOR. Street, Between Market and Chestnut streets. pAwso i t H . ILAPELPRIA. JAB. B. BICIOLIOII S/MUST & SONS, e IMPORTERSOF HAVASU 01/AU. No. 216 Eolith FROWN Street. ireeeimi ,laa r eguler I y sin]] assortment of deeirs" (I li eh they offer at low rates. for b „r era melt. Jelolr —.swam MUSPITY-WIIIPPLIC IRON BRIIKit. sT9IOI E. QVIGLE_ ,Y & BURTON. No. 333 WALNUT STREET. PRILATELPRIA, C 1 fears to inform Anifrond GomPeideci arse lorostad DivicetsonstrootiOn, that tiler see y a oonneotion m Oonseas with JOAN W. NRPF I • knownnfrineer. (author and inventor of the stave dell plan of iron bridge,/ end are pre,pared to Wool orders, from 507 part of the country, from degign sad POMOCIIII superintendence. All letters retrain, to plane end estimates shou:d be • addressed to „itittro - W. Blum% y, eirir dosios , r . un43) REP STONE-0 WO LEY, & MRS. JAMES BETTS' OELEBRAT • 1 aUPPORTERB FOR LADIES, and the only SUP: porters under eminent medical patronage. Lu lle"" Omoiling are respectfully reenasted to nail only on rs. Betts, at her rendorme, 1039 'MAYA LIT street , ilrruitglelybia, (to avoid nounterfeite,i Thirtg rheumatic 'raids bays been advises by their physiciallltel age _appliances. Those only are genuine bearing th° nilea atatea copyright. labels en the box. and circa' Intros. and also on the LIIIPPOrtIIIt. with Malawi:Mir soli-Whited _ C _ RAMPAGN F . —Ve. Oliqunt, Lallemand , IL , Dort Grave l; and tlitMe c i t tnle & Ctitie .a ba rArit i n'd 4 ' o4 I'l 4 al Atiant. PI. B.—Orders for the direot importation etiolo ppl i t h bare branda will be punntnalle Attended to. (111gE8E. 700 boxes fine HeTkolne, r CoantrCO, otomanroot, for We by qL-: t&DLER & CO" xO3 AIWA Unpin. reoosid or a oovo Front. 0r77•14