c My nrln-A Trn Blory. IT TBI AtTFOB OT "JOB HALIFAX, OBHTLEMAU." 1 Vrinw a little maid as sweet A? any Vrw year.' old child you'll meet la niDBion grand or Tillage street, However charming they may be; Fbe'll never know of this ia verse When I her simple tate rehearse A cottage girl, made b&by-narse Unto another baby. Till then how oonstant she at school t ller tiny hands of work how full ! And never careless, never dull, 4s little scholars may b. Her absence questioned, with cheek red And gentle lifting of the head, 'Jla'am, I could not be spared," she said; "I had to mind my baby. JJtr baby, oft along the lane Mie'd carry it with such sweet patu Pa summer holidays full fain To let both work and play be. T3ut, at the Bthool hour told to start, Fhe'd turn with sad, divided heart 'Iwixt scholar's wish and mother's part, 'I cannot leave my baby 1 " One day r.t school came minors dire "Lizzie haa fallen in the fire 1" And oil in haste I went to inquire, "With anxious fear o'orllowing: For jester afternoon at prayer My little Lizzie's lace did wear The look how comes it, whence or where ? Of children who &xn gouty. And almost as if bound for llight To say new prayers in angel's sight, Poor Lizzie lay so wan, so white, Ho sadly idle seeming: Her active hands now Lelple33 bound, Her Tvild eyes wandering vaguely round, As up she started at each sound, Or slept, and moaned in dreaming. Her mother gave the piteous tale; Iow that child's courage did not fail, Or else poor baby" She stopped, pale, And Bhed tears without number; Then told how at the lircside warm, Lizzie, with baby on her arm, Slipped threw him from her safe from harm, Then fell Here in her slumber. Lizzie shrieked, "Take him I" aud upt03sed ller poor burnt hands, and seemed half lost, Until a smile her features crossed As sweet as angels' may be. "Yes, ma'am" she said in feeble tone, "I'm ill, I kuow" she hushed a moan "Eut" here her look a queen might own "Hut, ma'am, I saved my baby 1" Our Yvun'i Folks. NOBLE CRIMINALS. Xlic Sliirloy Fnmtl.vN i'ont rllmtious to JiKiU'iai l.itcviiturc. The Shirley family, in the possession of the earldom ot terrors, ami yst folates 1u Leices tershire and gtuubruYnire, tiae made consider Sible contributions to judicial literature. The trial ot Lawtvuce buirley, the fourth carl, for the murder of his steward, Johnson, is one of I ho ugliest cases in the uly literature of murder. Jlyowu impression is that Lord Fer rers was mad; but though the pica of insanity is often bo successful, vet if a nobleman commits a murder, he U a. very unlikely kind of criminal to derive any benefit from it. He appears, like so many other criminals, to have worked himself habitually into tits of passion in which he was hardly sane. Passion, ottcner than anything else, causes murder, and iu many more cases it causes death through pome sudden access of il'uease. In this case Lord Ferrers declared that he bore poor Johnson no malice, and did not kuow what he was doin;'. He h it lariie legacies., never paid, to the chil dren of his victim, uuel also made Compensation to other persons whom he had injured in tits of passion. The kins refused to commute his sentence, but he had the poor satisfaction of going to Tyburn in his own landau, and being hunK by a silken rope. His widow became Duchess of Arfrylc. Ho was the great-great uncle of the present lord, aud it has been stated that a gibbet has been erected inChnrtley Wood for the purpose of hauling him in elh?y. A much more pleasing reminiscence of the family of Ferreis is preserved in Mr. T. li. Potter's "Walks Rouud Loughborough," and by Sir Bernard Uurkc, ot which wc give a resume: "The seventh Earl Ferrers inherited some of that ecceutriicity of his family which in the case of one of his line had h-d to such sad re sults. Disliking the splendid seat of Staunton Harold, probably from the paiuful associations connected jiiih it, he erected mansions ou other portions of his large estates. Kakedalo Hall wasote of these, Ratcliff Hall was another. He had quarrelled with his only son, the ami able ana accomplished Lord Tarn worth, and the lRtter had died without any reconciliation haviDg taken place. One morninjr a wooiiu of plebeian appearance came to the hall, and at lirtt requested, aud then, beiiiir refused, de manded an audience of his lordship. She was t:t last ushered iuto the study, and she led by the hand a little cirl of three years old, tor whose support, as the grandchild ot the Earl, the supplicantly pleaded for some assistance, She looked down on the child, aud, relaxing and relenting, said, 'Ay, you have Tain worth's eyes.' This likeness to Lord Turn worth, the little one's innocent prattle, and perhaps some compunc tious feelings lor his late coldness to his sou, made a strong impression on the Earl's heart. He took fie child ou his knee; his stern heart was sot'tt'TiPd. and from that moment he formed the resolution of adopting her. Duriu? his lifetime she never left him. but became the solace of his declining yeuis. He bestowed greut pains on her education, aud by his will ap pointed Mr. Chinks liod'roy Muudy, of liurtou Hall, her sole guardian, with an allowance of three tliouiud pounds a year for her mainte nance during miuoritv, and bequeathed her the beautiful manors ot Rakedale, KatelilT, etc., with a large amount of personal property. "Miss Shirley, as she was ulwavs called, was removed to Burton Hail; for she hi t been en tirely separated from her ruothor, who had mar ried an humble Innkeeper of Lyston, receiving a small anuuity, ou condition that she should not have any intercourse with her daughter. "One day tho mother was brought in by one of the domestics us n visitor; the young ladies pursued their drawing, none of them being at all couccious of any relationship between them selves and the rustic strunjiy. A picture or two nuu been ucscribia, but the woman s eye couiu not oe inverted; sue oniy saw uer daugh ter, aud in her overpowering emotion threw herself on her daughter's ueek, The scene need not be described further. There was a stipulation in the will of the late Eurl, that Miss Shirley should spend three months of every year upon the Continent. During a sojourn in I inly shu was introduced to the young Puko de Bxrzn, to whom she was afterwards united. "The little girl whom I first introduced to the reader in the character of au bumble punuliant at the door of Rakennle Is now the Duchess de Sforza, wife of oue of the must distinguished men in Europe, and owner of Rakednle Hall itself, and the tine estates that surround It. The Duke and Duchess reside ou tho Duke's ances tral homo in Koaiagua. They rarely visit Enelnnd. "Three or four years ago, a stranger aud his wife were observed sketching, tor several uays in succession, the remarkable ancieut manor house of the Khii levs. culled Rakedale Old Hall. "Even the children of tho village learned to love the strangers for their gentle manners, and sun more, perhaps, for tho presents tnai were bestowed nnon them: and there was a universal S'oom in the village, when 'the artist and his wife announced that they would not return again.' The morning alter their departure a letter wu n-cpiup.l i thp nnnrfnn farmer. conveying grateful' tliauks to the inhabitants for their kind and hospitable atteutious, and ruL-iuaiui; cupck tor a nandsome sum rorais tributiou among tuu cottagers and their children.' Ihe letter Cedrojtd the incognito, THE DAILY E The artist and his wife were tho Duke and Duchtes de Kforza. In the summer of lncl. an ntinuary, rambling in North Leicestershire, was Induced to visit this secluded hamlet, a few miles cast of Melton Mowbray. He htd been attracted to this ipot by the lame of tho old Hall as a remarkably fine specimen of Jacobean architecture. He was descendlnir the hill that overhangs the village, when groups of well dressed rustics met his eye. The word 'Welcome,' too, allixed in flower on an arch that spanned the entrance to tho Hall, gave sign of rejoiciug. What holiday arc you celebrating V said my antiquarian friend to the civil rustio who opened the gate. 'It's the visit of the Duchess,' was the reply; 'and there she comes,' said he, pointing to a carriage descending the hill. "A loud shout proceeded from the rustics, and the two bells of the little chapel adjoining the Hall at once began to jinclo tho beat peal the dual could produce. The carriage entered tho Hall gates, and a lady of middle age was handed out by a soldier 'ike young man who accompanied her. With bare heads the farmers and laborers made their best bows to the Duchess and her sen." The lasi judicial appearance made by any of the Shirley family was that famous breach of promise of marriage case brought by Miss Mary Elizabeth Smith against Washington, Earl Fer rers. There was a great deal ot mystery about this ense; and although the plaintiff's case en tirely broke down, nnd the Solicitor-General (Sir Fitzroy Kelly) elected to be nonsuited, yet many facts were ielt uuexplaino.l. The plaintiff nltenvaids published a pamphlet on the subject, which, in the eyes ol her Iriends, would make considerable excuses for her couduct. On the very r.iuht before the trial came on she was pressed by the Solicitor General and her other counsel in the strongest way, and she was told that if she had any sort of reservation or decep tion ou her mind it would certainly be detected, iad she would at once lose her cause; and she was told that the abandonment of proceedings would be infinitely les painful than the conse quent degradation. Still she peisevered, and Li r fiLmls supported her with their lull ere deuce. There U no doubt that she and Lord Ferrers had known each other when boy aud jiirl in the eiunc Milage. After they had been separated for years, Lord Ferrers received an anonymous letter, advising him to go to a ball nt Tain worth: "There will, to my knowledge, be a young lady.nt the ball whom I wish you to see and dance with. She is very beautiful, has dark hair and eyes in short, she is haughty and graceful as a Spaniard, tall and majestic as a Circassian, beautiful as nu Italian; I can say no more." Four letters in this strain wero produced in court. Sir Frederick Thcsiger, in the course of line of his most adroit aud successful cross examinations, showed through the young lady's mother that these letters must have been written by her daughter, the plaiutiiT. On thi3 point it was that her case broke down. It was also suggested by Sir Frederick that the love letters purporting to be Lord Ferrers', but which by no possibility could be his, weic forged by the pluiutiil. In her pamphlet Miss Snith acknowledged that tiice four silly romantic lelleis were written by her, with a view ol bringing abr.ut a renewal ot old acquain tance, lrat she altogether denies tn:it her con fession ot this lact involves the i ejection of her case. It is a lact worth mentioning, that her leading counsel, the Solu-itor.f ienenil, was absent alinot eat i rily during the progress of the cause. Missbiuith declares that if the individual whom she repeatedly met an. 1 there was soruo conDrmatory tideinc of this statement wa3 tot Lord Ferrers, there w 113 some oue who was like him, aud v, ho assumed his name. H is, of com se, possible that some personation of this kind might hae been dice ted. It was made clearer than sunlkl.t that Lord Ferrers had run the chance ot being ma le tho victim of a con spiracy. Possibly sue may have been made tho dupe of some designing person acquainted with the previous circumstances and her romantic disposition. rcrua.s, also, at an nge when the judgment is unripe, and the temperament less governed, she may have been influenced by passion and ambition, and that abnormal cun ning which under such circumstances is often developed in Ihe young. Let us hopo that iu cither case the evrorj of youth were atoned lor by a iisclul and well-balanced life. At auy rate, this remarkab.e tnal ioruis a curious chapter in family history, and the vicissitudes of the cause give us some 6ingul.tr illustrations ot Luck. London Society. m'EKESmtl MAN USCK1PTS. A correspondent writes to the Sew York Eve ning Fosl as follows: In one of the old mansions of rural Chelsea, which tradition says was the home of feirThomas More, the warm friend of Erasmus, and author of the political lonifiuceof Utopia, there dwelt in 1(121 Sir John Unnvers, a prominent member ol the Virginia Company , who had married tlic gentle and comely widow Herbert, ulreaay the mother of ten childien, of whom were (Jeorge, the holy poet, mid Edward, the philosophical Deist. Soon afterwards King James began to scheme for the iliKniittiitn nt llm Viririnlu PAm-mn which was odious, because its prominent mem bers believed in ireedom of debate, and In the submission of a minority to the will of a ma- of its secretaries, Edward Collingwood, hurried ..... r .i l 2 t. i . i. . noui xj'jiiuuu, uuu iuiu iduvi'is mat vuree mer chants of that city had visited him and en- ueavurcu 10 ooiaiu papers ana lutormatiou which might be used against the corporation. records, he supestecl that exact copies be ini- a man ot loose me, but a fair and ready writer, a clerk of Collingwood, was secured by Danvers to aid in this work, aud was locked up in the chamber where be wrote, so that he might not be tempted to divulge the secret. After the transactions were copied on folio paper, to prevent interpolation, each page care lully compared with the originals by Colling wood and then sab-cribjd "Com. Collingwood," Dauvers took them to the : resident ""of the company, who was Shakespeare's Irlend, Henry Wriolneely, Earl of Southampton. The Earl was highly gratified iu the nossession of a duplicate copy of the company's transactions, and expressed it by throwing his arms around the neck ol Sir John, ami then turning to Ms brother, said: "Let them be kept ut iny house at Litchfield; they are the evidences of my honor, and 1 value ;hem niuiu than the evi dences ot my laudc." During the same jear Southampton died; and Thomas, his son, was heir and successor to tho title, and became Lord Hiiih Treasurer of England and lived until 1C.G7. Shortly after his death William H.vrd of Virginia, the father of Hon. William IS id of Westover, purchased tho manuscript rec ids trom the executors of the earl lor sixty guinea. Lev. William S;ub, who became President of the William aud Mary C IIege, while living at Vaiina, on James river, the old eettleineut of Sir Thorna Dale, belter known since the civil war as Dutch Of p, obtained these lecords from the Byrd Horary w . Westover; aiduiontof tue material of his History ot Virginia, completed in 1710, was dr iwn ".herefrom. Ktith's bro'.her-in-lttw, Peyton Randolph, became the t;rt 1'iesideut of the Continental Conprets, nnd while visiting a friend at his seat near Fhiladelnuia, in Oc'ober, 1775, suddenly died. When bis library was sold it was pur chased by Thomas Jeil'eron, and among the books were the mauuscript records ot tie London Company, that had been used by Stlth in the preparation of his history of Virginia. The Cni'ed Stat s having purchased the books of l'lesident Jetleison, these manuscripts ate now preserved in the library ol Congress. They are bound in two volume", and contain the company's transactions Irom April '28, 1019, until June 7, 1124. The first volume contains 304 pngep, and concludes with this statement: "Memoranda that wee, Edward Waterhouse and Edward Colbngwood. secretaries for the companies lor Virginia and the Burner Islands, have exundued and compared the Dooke going before, embracing one hundred seventy-tevea leaves from Page 1 to Page 354, with the oiiginall liooke of Conns itself. And doe flude this Dooke to be a true and perfect copm of the said origiuall ("otirle IJooke, saving that there is wanting iu the copie, of Court on the 20th May, l(2t), ai d tbe beginning of tho Quarter Court V.k.intt.l. V.....a . H r A fill ,d 1 W. V.t AlltAM.) Ihj. copie doth truly agree with the originall itself. "And to every page I, Edward Collingwood, J KG TELEG It APII PHILADELPHIA, THURSDAY, have eett ffiy hand, and bo: ii of ns do hereby testlfle as above thnt it U a true copie. "Januury 28. 1023 (1824). "Edward Watbrhousb, Secret. "Edward Colmnqwoob, Secret." The second volume contalus three hundred and eighty-seven pages, and is concluded with the following note: "Alemorand. That Mr. Edward Collingwood, secretary of tbe corapnny for Virginia, and Thomas Collett, of the Middle Temple, gontlc mcu, have perused, compared and examined this present book, "beginning att page 1, utt a Preparative Court held for Virginia the 20lh of May, 1G22, and ending at this present page 387 at a 1'reporative Court held the 7th ot June, 1C24. And we doe fludo that this coppic doth periectlie agree with the ornjInaU books of the Cnnrt belontrlnir In f ho rnnmnnn .. oil ti, save that in pace 371, the graunt of 800 acres to Mr. Maurice Uetkley is not entered, and save that in page 360, wo wanted the Lord's letter to Mr. Deputv Ferrar, so that wo could not com pare lit, in which respect I, Edward Colling wood, have not sett my hand to thoo threo pages, but to all the rest 1 have sett my baud severally to each in confirmation, that they agree truly with tho originalls. And iu witness and confirmation that this booko is a true coppy of the Tirginla Courts, wee have hereunder joiLtly sett our hands the luthdny of Juuc, Vtti. "Thomas Collett. , "Edward Coi.mnowood." Judgment against the Virgtuia Company had been pronounced only threo days before the last noto nils written hi Ihoi' T .r.t.i m.i.,r Justice Ley called by John Milton tho "old mnu uiuqueui," in a sounei to tnc Judges daughter, "honour'd Margaret." The Eurl of Stratford, writing on June 17th to a kinsman, rejoiced in the downfall of the great democratic corporation, the "nursery of a se ditious Parliament." His words were as follows: "Yesterday Virginia patent was overthrown at the King's Leneh, so an end of that planta tion's savings. Melhinks I imagine the Qiat r nity before this have had a meeting of comfort and consolation, stirring up each other to bear it courageously, and Sir Edwin Sandys in the midst of them, eadly sighing fotth, Oh ! the burden of Virginia." By order of the King the original records were delivered to the privy couucil, and were cither destroyed or lost during the trouble of the Cromwellian era, or burned up in the great fire of Loudon, which consumed so many important documents, aud therctoro these exact tran- ECrlDtS. HOW TlenTlv twn lllinrlrn.l .mil ttllrt ..no-., old, are doubly valuable. E D.N. TUE "ALMANAC U U0T1IA." From the rail Mall Gazette. There are few among the signs of the new year of which we welcome tho appearauce on our library table with more of calm satisfaction than our old friend, at once polite and instruc tive, the Almanack de Go'ha. There is in its pages a combination of gentility with useful knowledge such as we meet with in the converse of a well-informed foreign nobleman of Irreproachable pedigree. If the Peerage is justly denominated the British snob's Bible, the Almanack dc Cotha may pass as the manual of devotion for the continental variety of tho same specks. It lies before us now, in its clean and sobur covering, tainting the year 1869 with its accustomed "Avis aux amateurs et protecteurs de l'Almanach de Oot'naj" printed with the utn.ost economy of space, yet swollen, as its editors inform us, trom less than 300 pages in 1&1C to Bcatly 1100 by constantly increasing press of matter. Its frontispiece greets us with the lovely "sympathetic" face of Mario Grande Duchesse de Kussie, the same who inte rested us all iu this country live vears aso bv the charm ot her childish tigure and the iiiigu- uiruy oi uer name, us me rnucess JJagmar, sister of our Princess of Wales, we little cuess ingtheu that the light of those gentle eves was io uenu in gi.icioua sovereignly on minions of ugiy Muscovites, uannucics, ana iinns. The subdivisions loilow in regular order, almanac, genealogical tables, and "Annuaire Dmloma. tique;" but it is an ominous sign of the times that this last section has bv decrees usurneil on the rest until it lorms b? far tho larger part of vue comeuis, mowing now statistics, and com mcrcial returns, and details of tho Dublic ser. vice, have encroached In the popular mind on the province of roval and aristocratic bfi. It is amusing to observe tho dexterity with which the compilers of this universal favorite have adapted it from time to time to the chang ing exigencies of its leaders. It professes to have attained its hundred and sixth year. But the earliest volume which wo happen to have steu ib that for 17t8: just before the landmarks of the old world began to be obliterated by the revolutionary deluge. Its moderate bulk was then swelled by teutimeuttd anecdotes, travel lers' ttories, lucts iu natural history, and .the like; the pages of its diary are diversified with neat little steel engravings, in the manner of Chodowicski, representing scenes in the popular novel uaroiine von Liitcnieiu." tiguty pages contain tbe account of about three huudred "pncely lumilies;'' that is, sovereign or quasi sovereign, tor the Holy Roman Empire as yet fubsisted m all its groteequer variety, and its high feudatories, counts and barous, bisnops, abbots, and two or threo abbesses, figure by the side of emperors and kings. The statistical part Is compiled according to the best available knowledge of the time. Europe had then about ICO.000,000 of inhabitants; our almanac for 1H00 gives it 2tO,00O,0U0. In military force Prussia ranked already next to Russia aud Austria, having the extraordinary relative number of 200,000 soldiers with only 6,000,000 of people. A table of the population of the principal European cities in 17H8 shows that almost all ol them, iu the busy ami com mercial parts, have doubled and trebled in numbers since that time; a few iu the South have remained nearly stationary; two only Amsterdam aud Veuicc whose glory is iu the past, have actually diminished. The almanac lor 18011 enumerates the nnraei and pedigrees ot thirty. eight Europeau sove reigns only, tho list becoming almost every year "beautilully less," and containing even now one, that ol the Queen of Spain, which is re tained rather in a courtly spirit than iu tint 0f hard reality. Short as it is, ih.- catalogue still comprehends a variety extending from the gigantic to Ihe iuiinitely suiull, Iroiu the Czar ol Russia, with his fifty councillors of state and army of fifty divisions, down to Lichteiiitein, and ReuB:--Scblciz aijd KeiibS-Greiz, and Monaco, with his uid s-de-camp aim oue "daino du pulais." The moimrchs of this geoeratiou do not seem to be a very long lived race. Only nine are above sixty jeais old; ouly live have reigned thiriy years. Tho princely " non-sovereign" families-In early volumes tanked with sovereign now lorm a class apart. The diguity of prince, entitling its owner to the privilege of a red bat aud a paragraph in the Ainmuacti de Ouilia, is now ravin r an anomalous compound of times past and preseut. Tho Prince Furst, 'foremost'' was once, us we have seen, a sovereign iu his own dominions, saving only his feudal alle giance lo the paramount power, the empire. But after the empire had been quietly dissolved, sixty ytars ago, the rigut to confer ihe princely title was usurped, with the consent of tho German Confederation, by sovereigns who themtelves had previously been feudatories only. 'Ihe list, therefore, as it at present stands, exhibits a very miscellttueou assemblage, Irom Italian and German families which once com manded Slates and armies, and whose origiu is lost in the nlpht of early time Croy, Robau, Furatenberg, Colcnna, Orsiui down to the latest products ot the revolutionary wars Murat, Blueher, Hullo. It comprises some French, Dutch, Hungarian, and Polish families also. But those aristocracies which never had connec tion with Germauy those of tho northern countries, Spain, England and the graud old nobility of Venice -furnish no coutigent to the well-horn regiment ot the Almanack de Qolha. Some forty princely families are classed apart as ci-devant sovereigu, those of princes "mediatized" after the fall of the German fmpire, to which the title of Serene Highness Durcltlaught, more properly "transparency" was graciously vouchfated by the authority of li llirmin Hint in 1&91 Tho tint of Counts with the title "Erlaucht" Miin.irinn.i fntiown that of Princes: and then follows tho really valuable portion of our courtly almanac, the "Annuaire Diplom. tlque," comprising not only an abridged court calendar ot every State, with the names of all Its pilnclpal oilicers, but also a mass of statisti cal information respecting them. It Is a slnpnlar testimony to the cosmopolite tendencies of the age that our almanac tor this year com prehends not only all the America republics, small and great, and tho black commonwealths ofllayti and Liberia, but also the empires of Persia, China, and Jnpau, with the last accounts of tho pending controversies between the Micado aud the Talcoun, aud tho hundred and ninety-six "prince-vassals" with their incomes of $2 13,000.000, and their military forces, and the national Imports ana exports, computed with a wonderful assumption of accuracy. Omniscience is, porhaps, the foible of the A'manach de Qotha, as it was said to be of tbe great Cambridge luminary, Dr. Whewell. But It is fair to add that its compilers have at alt events habitually shown singular industry in compiling their names aud figures from the very latest nutnontics, wnerever trustworiuy authoiities can really be found. SHIPPING. jjrffff LORILLARD'S STEAMSHIP LK1B FOR NEW YORK. Balling Tuesdays, Thursdays, and Saturdays at noon. The winter rates at which freight Is nov taken i 20 cents per luO pounds, gross, s cents per foot, oi 2 cents per gallon, ship's option. The Line Is now prepared to contract for spring rales lower than by any other loute, coamoaelng on Match 13, 18 JD. Advance charges cashed ai ollice on Pier. Freight leceived at all tla.es on cuvarea wharf. JOJXN F. OUL, 8 18 6m Tier 19 Nurlh Wharves. N, 11. Ultra ratei ou small packages Irou, metals, etc. Villi T.lVPiii'iMir. avti fiTTfuvoi aiu appuinled lo sail as IuIIuwh: CITY OF AJSI VVKICP, balurday, January 3. KAMUAltUO, 'i'ueaUay, January i6. CITY OF UJBiUOH. tuiurday, J aury 80. CITY OF BALT1MOKK, baluraay, February 6, CITY OF COiiK, Tuesday, February . and each succeeding Saturday and alternate Tuesday, ai 1 1. M.. Irom 1'ler 45. Norm Klver. .v. iun.iiMiuuiKU IjIuh m m.ii urf.., KA'liUd OF rAbSAUK bv inn mail btbamkh 6AIL.INU KVKBY (IATUUUAY, Payable In Gold. t'uvikble Iu Currency. FIIUiT CAB1N..... tlUOISTitltliAUK 5.14 to .Loudon lo,'. I iu ixmdou.. 4'J to Fans Ill I 10 Farm 47 PASS At. 1 BY TJ1K TU-KSUAY BIKAMLa VIA Hi UJfAX. HIST CAilW, 6TKIKA9I, Payable In Uold. Payable Iu Currency. Liverpool- J90 1 Liverpool Jiall:ux...M W Halifax 1 k. I . . t . . xt l 1 l i.. ivt l. hT Urn. Ufa I 11 I IV Urc..... Ul.,UmL.r I W PasueuhtrB alsn forwarded lo Havre, Uambuig, lire men. i.L(!.. At r..flni!pd rates. Tickeis can be buuybt here by peraous sending; for their ifliiniis. at ruuderate rates. For lurtlier lnfuruiaUou apply at the Company's unices, JOHN O. DALE, Agent, No. 15 BR JA DW AY, N. Y Or to O'DUffJNJiH it FAULii, AKenUj, Ko. 411 CHKisN CJT blrett. Pnllacelpbla. w.Tf,:-( FlilLAl)J!;j-,l'tiXA, 1UCHMOND iiica. AJNi UlttUllw BlliAJUISlllF LliNJ-;, llil..OUSil FllJllOAlT A1K LINJfi TO TliB E V KR V H Al'LKDAV. At noon, from FiliaT uaaUj' above MAUK.,'i Street. TiiliOkeU itATKS and THKOUOH KliCiim-xl, lo all poluut In Noun auu ISuuin Carolina, via sea board Air Llue Kallroad, connectlug al PurUiauuia and to Lyucuburg, Va.,Teunusoe, aud tue We.it, via Vlrgiuia aud 'leuuessee Air Line aud Blciimoud and Danville Kallroad. FreUbt JiANJUiiEO BUT ONCE, and taken at LOW Fit KA'ilttt lllAN ANY OTlilSIt LlAjC. Tbe regularity, safety, aud cheapness of ibis roa; commeuu it to tue puuiiu as tue wont aeuuable me d.Din for carrying every duacriptiou ol iri.zut. No chargd lul uumiuuislou, drayage, tr auy 6Xpnss OJ iranuier. bit RUiBbius Insured at lowest rate, t iught received dally. WILLIAM P. CLYDK 4 CO., No. 14 Nurtii and HoulU WHAIt Vil. W. P. POHTis4i, Agent at iiichmoad and City T. P. CltOWELL A CO.. Agents at Norfolk. I U St-r:-. NEW KXPKES3 LINE TO ALEX JifciiAtiMaandrla, Ueorgetown, aud Waohiugtoa ai. c, via Cliesapeakc aud Delaware Caual, with con nections at Alexandria from tbe most direct rout lor .L, ncnourg, .Bristol, Ji.ncxvme, Nasnvuie, Daltoj aud tbe tSoutbwest. bleamers leave regularly every Saturday at noon rroui me urti wnart awa aiaraet street. Freight received daily. WM p clyDK . CO., No, 14 North and Houtn Wti&rves, J. B. DAVIDSON. Agent at Georgetown. M. KLDlilLiUK A Co., Agents at Alexandria, Vlr giaia. - o i rf f -T-, 1N0IICE.-F01i KEW YORK, VIA WlltliTi II T AAA ABU XVAltlTAN CANAJj M.Xtliii.ha bTKAMBOAT COMPANY. f-n.V, .1 . i iir, i, a lmo Tha kl,luiit Mwiii.llu.u it. ia II. . . rr Auu. u.ai wuaii uciuw iunriiub street. TilKOUUH IN !M JdUUKS. Good orwarded by all tbe Hues going ont of York, North, Fant, and West, free ot commission, t relguts received at our usual low rates. WILLIAM P. CLYDK & CO., Agento. ..r.n. J"- WHAJblVJfiS. Philadelphia, wauito Aiaiiu, AKUUh WJ No. Htf WAI.L bireet. corner of Beith, New York rPlA FOUKEWYOKKSWIFr-SUBl iarih'wiii awTrniirirnrtntlnn JompDy Deapatoli fA 1 . 11 SlilllLmira 1 .1 It iH tla nalauiava un I . . .. 12 M. and 6 P, M connecting wlla aU Northern ana astern lines, For trelgbt, whlcb will be taken on accommodatlna lenus, apply 10 WILLIAM M. BA1KD & CO., 1 li Mo. las B. DKLAWAKK AveuiU, MEDIGAL. BIIEUMATI8M, Warranted Fcrmanenllj Curca. Warranted Permanently Cured. Wltliont Injurj to LUc System. Without Iodide, Potassla, or Colclilcum Uy Ubiiig lunurdly Only Dn. FITLER'8 liltEAT ltUEUMATIC EEXEDY, For Rheumatism and Neuralgia in aU its forms. The only standard, reliable, positive, lofalllbl per. nianent cure ever discovered. It U warranted to con tain nothiug hurtful or Injurious to tbe system. WA11K ANTKD TO COKE OR MOSEY RKFUNDRD WAllllANTtDTOCCKKOK HONKY RF.FDNDFJ) Thousands of Philadelphia relereucea of cures. Pre pared at No. 2'J SOUTH rOUKTII STIIEET, 822ltnthtl BKLOW MARKET. STOVES, RANGES, ETC. UOT1CE.-T11E UNDERSIGNED f:,3? would call tne attention of me publlo to bis Rf'jX MiW touLLJvN KAULlt FURNACK wi This is an entirely new heater. It Is so con structed as lo at once couimeud lliell togeueral favor, being a Cbrubluailon of wrought ai d caat Iron. It Is Very simple In lis construction, aiid Is perfectly air tight; seif-tleauliig. bavlngtuo l lpes or drums to be taken out aud cleaned. It Is so arranged wltu oprlglit flues as lo produce a larger amount of beat from tue same weight ot coal man auy furuace now In use, Tbe bygioiuetla condition ot tne air as produced by my new arrai geruent ot evaporation win at once de lijunt Irate thai It Is tbe ouly Hot Air Furuace that will produce a ptretutly beanby atmosphere. Tiionelu wantol a complete Heatlug Apparatus Would do well to call and examine tbeUoldeu Kagle, CUAHLM WILLI AMri, NOS. 1162 aud UM MARK S.T Mlreol. . Philadelphia. A large assortment ot Cooking Ranges, Fire-board Btoves, Low Down Crates, Ventilators, etc, always OO band, N. B.---Jobbing of all kinds promptly done. 8 inj THfYM PKf ItJ'H I.fTNlliV K-tTriri?Mcir. or KUKOPFAN KAHUK, fwr families, hotels, or public Institutions, iu TWFNTY DIFFKH- -a- j au, i uiwueipnu Ranies. Hot-Air Furuaees, Portable Heaters. Low-down Urates, Flreboard Bloves, Rath Boilers, Blew-hole piates,.Holiers, Cooking btoves, etc,, wholesale aud retail, hy the manufacturers, BHARPK A THOMPSON, 11 SSwtoCm No. 2cd n. BKCOND Utreet. JANUARY 21, 18C9. FINANCIAL. TUB mmi pacific BAILIIOAD COMPANY OFFEB A L1MI1F.D AMOUNT OF THIS Lit First Mortgage Bonds AT PAR. Muc Hundred ami Sixty Allies Of the line West fromOmaha are nov completed, and the work is going on through tho Winter. As the dis tance between the finished portion of the Union and Central Pactlio Railroads Is now less than 400 miles, and both Companies are pushing forward tbe work with great energy, employing over 30.0C0 men, there can be no doubt that the whoio Grand Llue to the PaciHc Will ljcOpeu forltuMnrss In 111 Summer or iso'J. The regular Government Comrnlsslouors have pro nounced the Union Paclilo Railroad to be FIRST CLASS In every respect, and the Special Commission appointed by the President saya: "Taken as a whole, TH K UNION PACIFIC R 1IL- ROAD HAS BEEN WELL CONSTRUCTED. AND THE GENERAL ROUTE FJll THE LINE EX CEEDINGLY WELL SELECTED. The energy and perseverance with which the work has been urged forward and the rapluity with which it has been executed are wltboul parallel In history, and In gran deur and magnitude of undertaking It hat never been equalled." The report coneludes by saylDg that "the conn try has reason to con gratulate Itself that this great work of national Im portance Is so rapidly approaching cumpleilon under such favorable auspices." The Company now have in use 137 locomotives and nearly Sooucars of all descrip tions. A large additional equipment Is ordered to be ready In the Spring. The grading la nearly completed, aad ties distributed lor i:o iulle. In advance ot the western end of tbe track. Fully 120 aiiles of Iron lor new track are now delivered west of the Missouri River, and 90 miles mere are ci route. Tho total ex penditures for coustmcilon purposes In advauce of the completed portion of tha roxd Is not less than eight million dollars Resides a donation irom the Government of 12.50J acres of land per mile, tho Comnauy Is eu'ltledto a subsidy In U. S. Bonds on Us Hue a'l completed and accepted, at the average rale of ab ml -t,uOJ per mile, according to the dltlkul'.lea encountered, for which the Government takes a Becond lieu as security. The Company has already received iJ4.0"8,oi.O of this subbldy, being In full on the 940 miles that have bueu examined by the United btates Conim'salouurd. UoYcrnment Aid Security or the Bonds. By Us charter, the Company Is permitted to Issue Its own FIRtiT MORfUAUE BONDS to tbe same amount as the Uovernment Bonds, ami no more. These Bonds are a First Mortgage upon the whole road and all Its equipments. Such a mortgage npon what, for a loDg time, will bathe only railroad con necting the Atlantic and PaclUo Htates, takes the highest rank as a safe security. The earnings from the way or local business for the year ending Juno 30, 18G8, on m average of 472 miles, were over FOUR MILLION EOLLA.RS. which, alter paying all ex penses, were much more than saUlcleut to cover al Interest liability upon that distance, and the earn logs lor the last live months have been 42.3s6.870. They would have been greater if the road bad not been taxed to lis utmost capacity to transport Its own material for construction. The Income from the great passenger travel, the China freights, and the supplies for the new Rocky Mountain States and Ter ritories, must be ample for all interest and other lia bilities. No political action can reduce the rate of interest. It most remain for thirty years six per ctnt. jitr annum in uold, now equal to between eight and nine per cent. In currency. The principal is then payable In gold. It a bond with such guarantees were issued by the Government, Its market price would not be less than from 20 to 23 per cent, premium. As these bondstare Issued under Uovernment authority -and supervision, npon what is very largely a Gov- ernment work, they must ultimately approach Gov ernment prices, The price for the present li PAR, Subscriptions will be received in Philadelphia by DE HAVEN & BRO., No. 40 S. THIRD Street. WM. PAINTER & CO., No. 36 S. THIRD Street, And In New York AT Till: COJIPANXV OFFICE. NO. 20 NAB3AU Street, AND BV JOUN J, CISCO A SON, BANKEB8, NO. 59 WALL Street, And by the Company'! advertised Agents through oat the United Stales, Bonds sent free, but parties snbicriblng through local agents wilt look to them for their safe delivery A NEW PAMPHLET AND MAP WAS ISSUED OCTOBER 1, containing a repjrt or the progress of tbe work to that date, and a more complete state ment In relation lo the value of the bonds than can be given In an advertisement, which will be sent free on app lcatloa at the Company's odlces, or to any of the advertised ageuto. JOHN J. CISCO, TREASURER, NEW YORK, 1 2 that u Jan. 1.1W9. IS T I-WI N D O W RATTLER. For IMvclliinjs, Cars, riteaiuboats, Etc, rrevents Rattling and Shaking of tho Win dows by the win a or other causes, tifjuteus mo nibh, pieveula the wind aud dubt from entering, easily attuched, and retiuirea but a Blntile glance to judge of Its merit!. Call ou liie Ueneral Agent, C. P. ROSE Ko. 727 JAYiNE Street, Between Market and Chesnut, 12 11 fmw3rn iladelpnia. DB. KISKELIN, AFTEB A RESIDENC1 nd.1P.TcUce 01 thirty years at the Northwest corner of Third aud Union atreets, baa lately re oved to HMiih ELKVBNTH blreet, between MAR. KFT nd CHFfcIN UT. His superiority In the prompt and perfect onre ol 11 recent, clironlo, local, and constitutional aaeo tlens ol a special tature, Is proverbial. Diseases of the skin, appearing In hnndred dif ferent forms, totally eradicated; mental and physical weakness, and all nervous debilities scleutlucall and successfully treated. OHioe hours from I A, M op,m WIRE GUARDS, FOB ITOBE FRONTS, AITLVHSI, FAC TOBIEM, ETC. FatentWlre Ralllng'Iron Bedsteads, Ornament Wire Work, Paper Makers' Wires, and every yarlot Of Wire Woiki wanofaotnrf d by W. WALUr.lt A HONS BWl MO. 11 North. BIXTU ! INANCIAL. Union Pacific Railroad, L AKE SOW SELL I Mi The First Mortgage Gold In tcrcst Bonds OF THIS COMPANY AT PAR AISD INTEREST, At irlilcli rate the holder of fcOVERJf. MEM SECUKITIES can nuke a profit" able cxcliance COUl'lttS due Jamtarjl CASHED, or bought at full rates for UoM. WH. MIETEa GO., UAflKEKS AM) DEALERS LN KOVEUM. KEM SECUKITIES, tic. 30 South THIRD Street, t PHILADELPHIA. u p OF N DKIOK PACIFIC RAILROAD, CENTRAL PACIFIC RAILROAD 5-20s and 1881s DUE JANUARY 1, AND GOLD, W A N T E D. Dealers In Uoyernment Securities, No. 40 S0UTI1 TIIIKD STREET, 2 PHILADELPHIA. STERLING & WILDMAfi. BANKEHS AND BKOKERa, No. 110 Sontli TUIRD Street, AGENTS FOR SALE OF First Mortgage Bonds of Rockforcl, oe? Island, and St. Louis Kallroad, Interest HEVBN PER CENT., clear ot a'l taxi payable In GOLD August and February, for sala Ulii and accrued Interest in currency, Also First Mortgage Bonds or the Danyille Uazlcton, and Wilkcsbarre Railroad Interest SEVEN PER CENT., CLEAR OF ALL TAXES, payable April ana October, for sale at 80 and accrued Interest Pamphlets with maps, reports, and full Information of tneae roads always on hand for distribution. SEALERS in Uovernment Bonds, Gold, Silver Coupons, etc. bTOCKS of all kinds bonght and sold on commit. alon In New York and Philadelphia. 11 a tutus RANKING HOUSE OF os. 112 and 114 South TIILUD Street, PHILADELPHIA. Dealers In all Government Securities. Old 6-20s anted in Exchange for KeTTs A Liberal Difl'erence allowed. Compound Interest Aotes Wanted Interest Allowed on Deposits. colIlUctioas made, btocks bought and sold On Commlsiilon. special business accommodations reserved for ladles. We will renalvft annllrnMnnn tar Pnllnlna nf T.lf iDsuranceln theNaunnal Life Insnrai.ee Company of the United Biaies. Full Information Klven at oul i ttlce. 113m Dealers In United States Bonds, and Mei hers of Stock and Hold Exchange, Receive Accounts of Banks and Bankers on Liberal Terms, ISSUE BILLS OF EXCHANGE ON C. J. IIAMBIiO & BON, LONDON B. MKTZLER, S. SOUN & CO., FRANKFORT JAMES W. TUCKER & CO.. PARIS Ami Other ir'rWipal Cities, and Letters at Credit Available Throughout Europe. DAVIS & CO., Ko. 18 South THIRD Street, PHILADELPHIA. GLENMNING DAVIS & AMORT No. 3 NASSAU St., New York, BAA KllIS AM) BKOKLKS. Direct telegraphic coromnnlrntlnn hi. the New York Stock Boards from thn i iiiiauf lpum viiicc. 12 a 3Oj7 REMOVED TO hKL0W IUSaTEADcBoTE3 NO. 1317 CHKMNUT nr.. abnve TliiRTEENTW PHILADELPHIA. lultENTH' Mnnfn PiihlluViA.ii un.i i,.., . " . - u jjcaiurs in Musical Mnr. JOUN IdAHMH WHOLESALE AND HiJL AGENT THE BE8T UOLD AND 8ILVEK WATPHM , Nal817CHK"NllVHT.ul 128 intb. 2m ii TU mJSc blfORB,