feimtrj tMctjwjrfi Is published every afternoon Sundays excepted) at No. 108 8. Ihird street. Price, Three OerU Per Copy (Double Sheet), or Eighteen Cent Ter Week, payable to the Carrier, and mailed to Subscribers out of the city at Nine Dollars Per Annum ; One Dollar and Fifty Cents for Two Months, invariably in advance for the period ordered. Jo insure the Insertion -of Advertisements in all of our Editions, they must be forwarded to our office not later than 10 o'clock each Morning. MONDAY, Al'EIL 16. 1866. The Dealing Massacre. TnE excitement In the public mind caused by the slaughter of the Dkaking family, Is cot likely to subside for some time. Little moie can be learned about this afla r than has already been disclosed, and yet the feelings of this community will continue to be exer cised for an indefinite period by the almost incredible atrociousness of the massacre. It u especially singular in two respects first, the appareHt disproportlonateness of the mo tive to the magnitude of the crime; and second, the fiendish ferocity which shed more blood than was necessary to hide the guilt ol the murderer. What could have induced the nssasa in to take a baby from its cradle and knock its brains out? Not any dasign to da stroy a witness who mi?ht lead to the detection cf the criminal, because a child of that- . ace could give no evidence worth guard ing against: Why, then, did G anther or Proiibt, kill the baby? It is sug gested that, having murdered all those on whom it could depend for support the mother, the father, the brothers and sis ters the infant was literally brained to kep it from sufleringll This U a theory hardly reconcilable with the diabolical ruthlessness . of a demon who had taken the lives of seven other persons, for the sake of obtaining an , uncertain amount of money. What sum Gantheb, or Pbobst, really got is not i known and may never be discovered. His own story is that he received but three dol lars I lie says, moreover, that he killed but ', one of the eight victims, and that an alleged . ' accomplice killed the rest and took all the plunder except the paltry pittance which Gantdeb confesses that he received. Sup posing this to be true, what a fearful com mentary there is In the fact that a man has ,r murdered a fellow-creature for three dollars! I It shows at what a cheap price some persons can hold human life. ' The murderer expected to get more, no doubt. But is it not terrible to reflect that there are devils incarnate in the shape of men, who can murder a whole t household of eight per-ons for an uncertain, and In all probability very small, amount of money? . - But there is something much more terrible still in the reflection that there may be hun dreds of G anthers or Probsts in our midst. We may unconsciously brush against them In our daily walks, and have no suspicion of their presence. It is idle to talk about the impor tation of criminals from foreign lands, and the demoralizing effects of service in the army during our war. Crime is the growth of all climes and soils, and flourishes in peace as well as ia . seasons of military strife and slaughter. It Is probable that Mr. Dkabikg never would have employed in his service, in a remote and un guarded quarter of the suburbs, a "person whom he regarded as capable of murder. It is also true that the villlan who slew him and his family walked the streets and played cards in the public houses of this city for several days after the assassination, without being suspected by those with whom he associated. All this goa3 to show that the criminal disposition or capa city exists in every community like ours to an incalculable extent, and that there may : for all we know, be hundreds of undeveloped murderers passing us in the highways and facing us in public resorts without our being 4n tha least degree sensible of their existence. Philosophers may speculate as they please about the moral nature and the practical motives of crime. Their general conclusions maybe altogether right. But philosophical theories on the subject will never enable us to distinguish a murderer until he has be trayed his character in act. There are flow ers in the ground that will soon come up to the surface under the kindly influence of the spring sunshine and rains. There are, also', In the same soil, rank and poisonous weeds, that will spring up to choke and blast them. So it is with human society. The tares come up with the wheat. They are intermingled in seeming confusion, and yet with this dif ference, that while the farmer can tell the oul grass from the true, the civil law must regard all men as innocent until they have exhibited their real character in their lives. And here lies one' great difficulty in the economy of human society. A community must harbor devils like Gantheb, without the right to denounce and proscribe them; before they have committed the crimes which .place them in prison or swing them from a gibbet. Under this necessity we must be con- trnt to dwell with all the resignation that phi losophy can afford us; and yet there Is a sense, of self-defense which, In any society in which, crime is, for a season, abundant and un checked, not only impels but Justifies every ', c'tizen to go armed for his personal protec-j ition. Lynch law, which was threatened J;agalnst Gawtheb, is to be deprecated. But ; when it is discovered that fiends like Gan i theb prowl in our midst without detection until they have murdered whole families, a natural sense of self protection will prompt every bead of a household to keep himself fully prepared to defend himself and family Jrom dangers and calamities which the law of society can only avenge, but never Indemnify. THE' DAILY EVENING TELEGRAM!' rniLADELl'mA,' MONDAY, ' The Pacific Rallroid ImporUnoe of a Proper Location oi the Ilond. , ' Post Kilkt, kansas, may be assumed as the present terminus of the westward exteaslou' of the railroad system of the eastern portion of the United States. A glance at the map will show that Ph'ladplphla, Cincinnati, St. Louis, Denver, and San Francisco He almost in a direct east and west, line, stretching from the Atlantic Ocean to the Pacific. Fort Riley, moreover, is nearly in the exact geographical centre of the United States. All the considerations of economy, of pub lic utility, of the rapid transportation of com merce, and the quick transit of passengers, require that in the construction of. the Pa cific Railroad, from tbU point onward, the most direct line possible shall be chosen. Any unnecessary' deviation from , that line must entail an unjust burden upon the commerce of the world. Unfortunately, when the ori ginal Pacific Railroad act passed Congress, the geography of the inferior of our country was but Imperfectly understood. As a natu ral consequence, It was then Buppoiod that the only practicable, passes through the Rocky Mountains were those in Use by over land travellers and em'grants to the Pacific coast. Accordingly, the initial point of the Pacific Railroad was fixed with refereneo to its location through the South Pass. Colo rado at that time had but just began to attract public attention its settlements were few and small, and its development was j as yet quite insignificant. i By again recurring to the map, it will be seen what an immense increase of distance will be entailed upon the Pacific Rxllnnd if the old South Pass route Is adhered to. ' Fort Riley, the present western terminua of i the Union Pacific Railroad, Eastern Division, is in latitude 39 deg. north. Now, move along west to South Pass, and it will be found to be in latitude 42 deg. north, or Srdsg. north of Fort Riley. Pass on now to San Francisco, and it will be found to be in lati tude 87i north; or five degrees south of South Pass. There is, therefore, a direct loss -of 7 dcg. of latitude entailed upon the road $y taking this route. In actual practice this loss would doubtless bo found to crowd cUwoly upon one thousand miles Tf Bridger's Pass, about 1 deg. souih of South Pass, be taken instead of the latter, a similar, though not bo enormous, loss would be incurred. j Of course, if these were the only practicable passes to be found through the mountains, that fact would be decisive of the whole ques tion ; but such is not the fact Nature herself seems to have made provision for the build ing of this creat railroad upon the most direct route. In 1861 Lieutenant Bebthoud made a thorough survey and exploration or the country lying between Denver, and Salt Lakje. He discovered a perfectly , feasible pass through the Rocky Mountains, forty-eight' miles west of Denver, and also passes through the Park and Wastach Mountains,' opening out directly into the basin pf Great Salt Lake Speaking of this country. Lieutenant Beb thoud says that he found the country lying between the 105th parallel of West longitude and Great Salt Lake, and between parallels of 89 and 43 North latitude, far superior to any of the country north or south of it, by either the South Pass, Bridger's Pass, or Coochatope Pass routes, abounding with coal and timber, with many fertile valleys, etc. ' Berthoud's vPass was afterwards carefully surveyed by the isurveyor-Genoral of Colorado Territory, and is now the route universally favored by the people of that Territory. . From Fort Riley to Denver there is a most direct and feasible route. For two-thirds of the distance it follows the Smoky Hill fork of the Kansas river, along a beautiful and fertile valley abounding in coal, iron, gypsum, and salt, and already settled to a considerable extent. ' ' 1 here Is, then, a perfectly feasible, plain, and direct railroad route from Fort Riley west to Denver, and thence to the basin of Great Salt Lake. There are other powerful considerations which urge this route instead of the South Puss or Bridger's Pass routes. One is the superior mildness of the climate. Practical men bave long foreseen that one of the greatest difficulties to be overcome in tho successful operation of 1 the Pacific Railroad, after it shall have been built, will be the ex- extreme rigor of the climate through the elevated mountain ranges of the interior.. When the thermometer marks much below zero there Is almost an end to railroad opera tions. Water-tanks freeze .up, rails become brittle, workmen are frost-bitten, and the whole business is prosecuted with the great est difficulty. What shall we say, then, to twenty and thirty degrees below zero, ex tremes frequently reached at Forts Kearney and Laramie, and other points along the northern route ? On the contrary, by the Smoky Hill, Den ver, and Berthoud's Pass route, the road will keep constantly below the 40th parallel of North latitude, and no more serious difficulty need be apprehended in operating it than is encountered in the operation of the Pennsyl-j vania Central. Again, if the old Northern route is adhered to, both Colorado and New Mexico will ba left off to one side, and deprived of the bene fits of this great work. This would be un just to the people of those Territories, as well as prejudicial to one of the great ends to be accomplished by the building of the road, namely, the development of the country through which it passes. By the South Pass route there Is nothing to be developed until you reach the Salt Lake basin. By the Den ver route, however, the vast mineral wealth of Colorado would be at once opened to the industry and enterprise of the country. The increased product of gold would Immediately contribute to restoring the finances to a healthy condition, andtobuVVdlng up the com merce of the nation. " " By the Smoky mil and Denver route, the people of New Mexico would be placed within a comparatively short distance from the road, and touch of the,trade of Arizona,' as well as of the northern provinces of Mexico, would find its outlet In this direction. ' ' I ' ' There are other important considerations Which might be urged lu favor of this rotey but which the 11m ts of . an artlclo like this forbid our dwelling upon. The arguments of directness, feasibility, climatic superiority, and the development of the country, ought to be convincing, however, with every unprejudiced mind. A great national work of this kind, the most stupendous ever undertaken by any people, ouffht to bo prosecuted in accordance with the widest, most liberal, and most com prehensive views ol our country and Its des tiny. It is a work destinod for all time, and tor the commerce of hundreds of millions' of people Futurity should not have occasion to reproach us for blunders and Incompe tency, especially upon those points whore !we already bavo sufficient light for Intelligent and right action . Another Whistle lrom the "Mountain Partridge." That strange combination of the Rock 'of Gibraltar, the frigate Cumberland, and the "Mountain Partridge," know to men as Scovel, bos once more spoken through the mouth of one of his admirers. Like the gods of old, it seems as though it was necessary, to add force to the revelation, that the medium be thrown ( into convulsions, like those of the Pthoness; and Judging1 frOm the entirely incoherent style of Oeobge R. IIalsted's letter, the fit must have been severe . ' Let it be remembered that Geoboe does not spoak for himself, but only furnishes such letters as are placed in hU hands by the illustrious Camden Senator, and the fact that the conscience of Scovel is far from easy will be apparent. A man who , is' at peace with himself will hardly take the trouble 'to fill column after column of tho newspapers to make himself : tight with his enemies. ' A public servant whoso conscience tells him be is right can Indeed defy the world, the flesh, and the devil, and will find it unnecessary to hire a band in order to have an opportunity to say so. j But as we have ever desired to do justice to the President of tho Senate in all that we have said, we will republish that part of Mr. Dalsted's letter which relates to the choice of a United States Senator. .That gentleman, in a communication addressed to the Xewark Daily Advertiser, say's :- ' ' 1 I 'After storm comes a calm, as well on the political arena as at sea. Having been present at rreutou, I was cognizant of the unjust impu tation cast upon Hon. J. it Scovel ot Insin cerity in his oilers to so into joint meeting it 1 Mr. Cattell was withdrawn, and . take any one of certain named candidates, or even to extend the list. The tollowlng is a copy ot a letter iu the hands of ex-Governor Newell, which speaks iorttbeti: ".tath of New Jsbbbt, Sewatb Cwimbbr, April 6, 1866. lion. William A. Newkll Oer Sir :Havrnp learned that u proportion has boon (lis ouared, tT which Mr. ;attell mould give war to ym tor United State Senator, I cliuertnily add your name to the list of men lor wlioiu 1 will gladly go lii to joint meouiiir. . . "'Let tlie oauens name you. and thero will be no difi.eulty in the way of i our election on mv part. 'Respectfully, your oliediout Bervant, " 'James 41. scovel.' ", As this is being republished in all the vari ous pro-ScovEL journals as a conclusive de fense, we give place to it here. Now what new thing is told us in this assertion?, We never doubted Mr. Scovel's declaration, that, should be be allowed to choose the cn didate, he would support his own nominee. It was not that he would not vote for a Re publican, but desired to aid , the ' elec tion of a Democrat, that we have censured him for. It was that he took unfair advan tage ol accidental power; that he took an opportunity, when he had the party under his control, to endeavor to rule the party. That he changed from a servant to a master, from a master into a commander. That he acted in a manner, when the helplessness of his con stituents and brother legislators was known, which he would not have dared to have done had they been safe beyond his control. Thai;, in fact, he played a port which no gentleman of honor would consent to do, and car ried his personal spleen far beyond tho limits of propriety, decency, and Justice; that he sold tho Union party to his own pri vate feelings ; that he saciiAced the victory we gained last autumn to his enmity ; that he disgraced himself, and teraporily ruined the party; and all the IIalsteds in tho world cannot make an honorable, or even a respect able man out of James M. Scovel. Talk about deceased ducks ! there is no fowl so utterly dead as the "Mountain Partridge.'' Wo predict that the shnllow Senator, whom popu lar fayor has raised abovc.hls worth, who, like a little wanton boy, has ventured far beyond his depth, will never more raise above the, crowd and gain an office. No more will the. partridge soar away to its mountain homo aud escape its pursuers by taking refuge In the caves of some lofty elevation. No more will tho Rock of Gibraltar have its head lis up by the sun of popular favor. No more will the Cumberland Are its cannon, and be victo rious even in defeat. Tho inventive genius of no man will be able to raise the wreck, The original frigate, after four years' silence beneath the waves, bos once more appeared But never will the human personation of ai its grandeur appear again in public life lie will no longer have the opportunity ta sell his constituents, porlure his word, and deceive his party. , , .. ."Othello's oco upntion's gone." The slur he endeavored to c ast upon Ilon A. G. Cattell will return upon hlmselii He cannot Injure that gentleman by crying "Shoddy," and Insinuating that he made his wealth by something else than honest labor and business tact. Already, all tho people .who bave rdad the libel have said : "111 be hanged. If some eternal villain. Some buey and insinuntlnir rogue, Some coerine, rozenlnsr slave, to gel some office, Have not devised thU slander.' ; But enough for James. He Is well known; his principles are ; known; his falsity Is known. Tho people all can Judge how of his worth ; and as his mask is torn off, we leave him to their judgment and his own conscience. No IlALBTEDcan clear his1 name ; he has do refuge from his disgrace; and in October next the Union party, without his aid, will do what with his help they could have done two weeks ago. Th Graxd I.odob o Virginia, I. O. or O. J lnis body ia now in boh-ion at Jtictimond. In fol lowing off cera weri e'eotod on ThurcdaTi CTrand Matter, H. O. Darldnon, lio 138. Uxinc ton Deputy Grand Maator, K. U. Folknn, Ko. IH, Lyrchburg. Urand Warden, Geortre W. Damn, o. 67. Danri'lo. Grand Secretary. W J. Kiddie. No. IJ. Richmond. Grand Treasurer, John W. Fergun. aon, No. 12 Richmond. Grand Chaplain, J. B. ltloni. No 8 retemhnrr Grand Keprwwnturive to the Grand Lodge of the United StaU. K. U. Fit, nngh, No 98, Richmond. Grand Conductor, J. T. Redman, Ko. S. Norlolk. Grand Marshal. R. R. rrrntiva. Ko. 78, Char'otteavilie. Grand Guardian, Alexander Grant, No 4, Kiolimond. Grand Herald. John B. tyhaner, No 17, Lynchburg. Rbpobted Death of Olb Bull, ths Curat Violinist. The Montieal Gasett of the 11th instant nays: "We learn by a telegram from Quebec that Ole Bull, the celebrated violinist, died in that city yesterday morning." Coal in Russia. Late reports show that twee coal-fields exist in the Ural district in Russia. Tbcre are also immense- coal-traio In the Mob cow district, covering! an area of one hundred and twenty thousand square miles, and In the Don. Besides these, coal has been discovered In the Caucasus, Crimea. Slmbrisk, EkatarinoftKi, and the steppes of the Kherson, in the govern ment of Kief, and in Poland. ' CniNBsa Burnous. A bridge over tho Ava lanche river, Cochin-China, erected eighteen months a-, fell in on the 26th of December for a length of one hundred feet, without anv ap parent cause. On a subsequent examination the piles were round to have been 'completely eaten through by worro. The Government haa in coneeqnenee resolved in future to construct the brldees in that country only on iron pillars or columns of masonry. . j Fibb at Charleston. 4, Are at Charleston, 8. C,,. on the 6th inst, consumed seven buildings on King afreet belonging to the estate of John Robb, and were insured for $27,000. Amonsrthe occupants weie G. A. Howard, furniture nore; Miss Doyle, milliner; A. Zoller, Robinson & Nelson, and J. M. Mehrtens, shoe stores j and It. Carnighan and Mrs. A. Jliddleton, milliners, besides the storea of W. J. Trim and others. Total loss about $00,000, and the Insurance $52,000. V ' , I A Reapfbabancb. A YVaerloo soldier, who was .supposed to have fallen in the battle, and, accordingly, for tiity ears had his name .in scribed amone the heroes of that, action, has suddenly risen from the dead. It aonears that one William Wust, a private in the Nassau force then attached to the English army, disap peared in the battle, and, naturally enough, was numbered among the dead. Very recently, how ever, the identical individual has returned from America, whither he had emigrated, if not in the moment when . the battle began, at least before it was over, and his regiment mustered. At his own request his name has been erased from the monument at Wieebadan, wheie it had figured for half a century among the victims or the Nas sau contingent. ' .. , i This is a personal in vitation to the reader to ex amine our new etfle of ', BPR1NG CLOTHING. ' CuMlmere Salt mraie. and Black Fultfl for liner Haft, ail pneps up to S75 WANAMAKER ft BilOWS, OAK HALL. SOBTHkABT OObNKB eiXXU and MAKK.EX Sta. M 0 H H H 3 M O t Willcox & Gibbs Sewing Machine Co Ko. 720 CQEftNUT STREET, Philadelphia.' co I 5 9 K- trl t a H 3 5 S x a co (A E E2 w SPECIAL NOTICES. See the Scti-nd Pagt fur additional Special Notici. rSST- LIFE IN SPANTSn AMERICA. THE G2-? recond 'ec ore of the eoutse will be de livered In CMOJ M.K. ClllUfH, VOCBI'H Street, below Arch, by Kv. O. D CABKOW. to-morrow even ing at quarter to 8 o'clock, fciublect EnKlUh aud KpanU-liAmerioan Manners and Ciutoma Contrasted." Iroiesor JAAI M. H.M1TH will perforin a Voluntary on the nrwornan. Tickets SO cents, at tbe dnor or at PKHKINFIJi E 111UU1KS', Ho. 6tf M. FOUKTU Mirect. L1' I M USICAL SOIREE, ! EYEBY EVE NINO, AT TBI CIIY CHESS AND HEADING ROOMS, So 1234 CHFSNDT htreet, Philadelphia. C4 16 lm ' (IIOVER & BAKER'S FIRST PREMIUM ELASTIC 8TITCII AND LOCK STITCH SEWING MACHINES, with latest im provements, No. 730 Chesnut street .Philadelphia; No. 17 Market street, Harrlsburg. 2 1 3mp "ov GOLD AND SILVER WATCIIE3, DIA- fT'vmonda, and Pearl Jewelry, at greatly rwduoed iiPric. t. w. daily, cuknux ut, im it c4 pa a- ' ' s e ' a 6 E 00 APUIL ' 16, '1800. REDUCTION IN TRICE OF TBI AMERICAN WATClIFiS, MADE AT WALTUAM, MAUSA CUUSBTTS. In consequence of tha recent great decline In (old and etiver and all materials used ta the manufacture or ovr Rood! and In anticipation of a ttiU farther decline we hare reduced our price to as low a point ai tho can be placed WITH GOLD AT PAR, Bo that no one used healta'e ta bur a watch now from the expectation that it will be cheaper at aome future time The teat of ten years, and the manufacture and tale of MORE THAN 200,000 WATCHES, Hare at Ten our productions the very hhjhest rank among timekeeper. Commencing with the determination to mske only thoroughly cacellent watches, our business has steadily increased ai tha publio beoante acquainted with their Tame, until tor months togetksr we have ben unable to sapply the demand. We bar repeatedly enlarged our factory buildings nml they now corer over thre'e acres ot ground, and give accommodation to more than eight hundred workmen. We are fully JuaUfled in atatlng that we now snake MOBK THAN ONE-HALF OF ALL THU WATCHES SOLD IN THE UNITED STATES. The different grade are distinguished by the following trade-mans engraved on tha plate i L "American Watch Co.." Waltham, Ma. 5. "A ppleton, Tracy A Co.," Waltham, Mass. I. "P. 8. Bartlett," Waltham, Mais. 4. "Wm-Ellery" 8. OUR LADIES' WATCH ot first quality ia named ' "Appleton, Tracy A Co.." Waltham. Mass. 6. Our next quality of Ladle' Watoh, It named "P S. Bartlett," Waltham, Unas. These watches are furnished In a great variety of tlita and styles ol easea. The i merican Watch Company, of Waltham. JUast.' antborlzea nt to state that wlthoat distlnctloa of trade marks or price, ALL THE PRODUCTS OF T1IEW FACTORY ARE FULLY WARRANTED To be the beat time-keeper of their das err made hi thta or any otner country. Barer thoald remember thsUunllke the guarantee of a foreign maker, who can nerer be reached, this warranted it good at all time agalnat the Company or their agents, and that it, after the most thorough trial, any watch should prove de. fective in any particular, it may always be exchanged for another. .1 , f A the American Watches male at Waltham are for sale by dealer severally throughout the country, we do not solicit orders for tingle watohet. T I CAUTION. The high reputation of our watches having caused them to be extensively counterfeited by foreign maker and sold in this country as genuine, the publio are cau tioned to buy only ot respectable dealers. All person telling counterlelia wdl be exposed and proseouted. ' - KOBJ3INS & APPLETON. AGENTS FOR THE AMEBIC AX WATCH COMPAVY, '16 6trp No. 18a BBOADWAl.N.T. JUE NEW M AG A Z I N E. NOW BEADY, AND EOU SALE BY ALL NEWS DEALER, ' ; 1 ... T II E GALAXY; I , - r " i An Illustrated Magazine, PUBLISHED FORTNIGB1LY, PRICE, 95 CENTS. CONTENTS: I.-TBE CLAVE RINOS. By Anthony Trollops. (With an lllnstTatton). Chapter I. Julia Brabazon. Chapter II HariT Clavering Chooses hi Profession. Chapter III.- Lord Ongir. IL GIANTS, L WARES, A I'D FAIRIES. Ill -CHILDE HAROLD. IV. A CHAPTER FROM A NOBLE LIFE. V.-ARCBIE LOVELL. By Mr. Edward, Chapter I. A Vampire Brooa. . Chapter It. The Honorable Frederick Lovell. Chapter 111. Brune Aux Yeux Bleu. VI.-BPBIKO-186S. (With an Illustration by Darley.) VII. A WINTEB WITH THE AMERICAN PERI PATETICS. VIII.-JOHN BYLAND'S WIFE. IX.-NEBCLJSi- Privote Theatrical. The Rebuilding of Parts. Quaker Dress. New Parisian Styles In L adlet Boots. The Glove Trade. The World's Fair Building. The Prince Imperial. The opening illustration, by Mr. Darley, 1 one of the best from the pencil ot that artist. The other full-page Illustration it copied from a design by a dlstinaulchod English artist Both of these Illustrations are hand somely printed on tinted paper. FOB BALE BY ALL NEWdDEALERS. The American News Company, No. 119 and 121 NASSAU Street. New York, 16 3irp GENERAL AOESTS. ROBERT SHOEMAKER & CO., WHOLESALE DRUGGISTS, MANUFACTURER, IMFORTERS, AND DEALERS IN Paints, Varnishes and Oils, No. 201 NORTH FOURTH STREET, 416 3m N. E. CORNER OF RACE. (ROVER&BAKER'S IMPROVED SHUTTLE OB " LOCK" STITCH SEW1NQ MACHINES. No. 1 aud No. 9 for Tailors, 8hoe maker, Saddlers, etc. No. 730 Chesnut street Philadelphia; No. 17 Market street. Harrisburu SPRING. S&Iff uv CHESNUT 8T III v WILLIAM D. ROGERS, j COACH AND LIGHT CARRIAGE BUILDER, j Nos. 1009 and 1011 CHESNTJT Street, PHILADELPHIA. aWJmt EDVJII1 HALL & CO Ko. 28 SOITII SECOND STREET, WILL OPEN TO-DAY . ; ; 1 i AN INVOICE 08" JAi 8UTERIOR QUALITY BLACK SILES For Cloaks, Mantles, ana Drcsscs, (41tM AT SEDUCED PRICES. A. s. ROBIISTSOISPS SECOND ' Largo Sato ot Splendid OIL PAINTINGS, f In Elegant Ornamental Gold Gilt Frames WILL TAKE PLACE AT "a. No. OlO CHESNUT Street, ON Wednesday and Thursday Evenings, APRIL 18 and in, AT 7 O'CLOCK. I ' The publio are respectfully Inrited to visit his Gai leries, where tbe rain ting are upon ' EXHIBITION, FREE, DAY AND EVENING UNTIL 10 O'CLOCK; B. SCOTT, 410 AUCTIONKKB. gIMON COLTON & CLARKE. We offer (or sale upward of ONE HUNDRED CASKS FINE TABLE SHERRY WINE, (20 gallon in each cask). This wine If eonsldered VERT FINE, and la sold at very smalt adranoa on tbe oost at Importation. . Also, SEVENTY-FIVE CASES of SALAD OIL, Oar own Importation, ordered of the best quality, with. (Jut regard to oost, for sale by the case at wholesale prices. ALSO, . HEIDSIECK & CO. CHAMPAGNE. At the Importer's price in Kew York, In any 'quantity Also, WIDOW CLIQTJOT, MOET k CHASDOX'S. JULES Ml'MM'S, SPARKLING KHINE. HOCKS, BTJBGUNDY, BAUTERNE, CINCISHATI. CA TAWBA, and CALIFORNIA WINES. GENUINE FRENCH LIQUEURS AND CORDIALS. a . Also, 400 Cases FINK TABLE CLARET, Oar own Importation and Bottling, for sale at whole sale prices. All these Wines are warranted genuine 'and pure. - SIMON COLTON & CLARKE, 4 14 6t 4pj 8. W. cor. BROAD and WALNUT. DEDDIKO FEATHER WAREHOUSE, lt.JH I II NtKfcET, BBLOW AKCH. Feat tern Beds, Bolsters. Pil ln laattreHsea or a 1 klnust BluDkets, C'omiortables C'oun ittrranes, whle and colored) hiring Beds: fprliiD Cotai Iroa BrtiMead.) Cushions, and all ot! er articles lu the Una ol busi ness. amos nir.r.BORV, So 44 onh TENTH Htreot. Below Arch. Jr., gPBDiG FASHIONS FOR CHILDREN". M. SHOEMAKER & CO., Nos. 4 and 6 North EIGHTH Street, AB SOW OPENING A SPLENDID ASSORTMENT OF CHILDREN'S CLOTHING, IN THE LATEST PABIS STYLES, Unsurpassed for elegance of a orkmanahip and material. CI 26 mwMm4j The publio are lav lied to call and examine. ;