SPIRIT OF TEE PRESS. pros coBBBPt rorioB compllkd btibt DAT FOB TH1 IVBl-IrNJ TKLKORjLTM. , Tim I'ab.iiet. From the X. Y. T.mes. . We regret to flui that we wounded tue geDBlbilitles of onr frtand of the rWotiM bj ilia bit of wbat we deem art harmless badinage in regard to the C.b.ut, ihe other da. We did not thiuk it possible ha ooalrt be olTendad by it, as he bad not 8eu.ed to be bj the umoU more elaborate, and )e evident, badinage of vSs In .boat his .oli as Minister to lit.,- "cheapness of tue wit, w Imputation of "di.courty." Meantime we know of no better F-rvice we can render, by way of atonement, tbsn to give currency to the Tribune's aesurance: The Tivxes tuny as well now slate the won. "lines, nor evlncee Purpose o decline, , an office or nominal lou wWiiWJJ gee n lea- Say oovioud S?y necei-ity lor clttoliitlug at all." That is quite true, and possibly it is that. nd that alone, which has generally saved him the necessity of declining at all. But we presume His his well-understood willing ness to aoof pt the office (auu possibly it was that alODe) which has led to his name being fo generally connected with the position of Postmaster-General. But on the strength of the Tribune's rather petulant protest, we feel quite at liberty to withdraw it from the Jooose programme we ventured to publish two or three days ago. Any other one of the gentle men mentioned can hare his nme withdrawn on application; but we advise them to do, as Mr. n. ureeiey lias not aone wan uu tuey Are appointed before they deoline. The Senate and the Debt. From the N. Y. Times. The country is so accustomed to the slow movements and prooradtinaiing habits of the Senate when practical reforms are te be achieved, that the failure thus far to touch the bill prohibiting auy inorease of the gold bearing debt exoues no surprise. It is a simple and obviously beneficial measure, in volving no difficulty of theory or practice, and ought to be disposed of without dela". But the Senatorial laahiou of talking every thing to death may defeat even this bill. It still lingers in the Finauce Committee, where its fate is further Jeopardized by conflict with the prearranged plans of Mr. Sherman. There is nothing half so dangerous as a pet financial theory. And as Mr. Sherman would cure flnanolal ills by increasing the most oppressive form of the debt as a result of putting green backs out of the way, it is perhaps natural that he should wish to smother a bill which assumes that that debt is sufficiently large already, and aims at preventing its inorease. But Mr. Sherman's partiality fer his hobby, though it may explain, will not excuse, the Suppression of one of the most uaetul mea sures of the session. The positions assumed respectively by the House and Senate on fiuaacial questions differ somewhat from those with which public opinion has commonly associated them. The House has been suspected of heresies; the Senate has reioiord in a reputation for ortao doxy. The events of the present session have altered the relation. The House has proved tself desirous of strengthening the pub'.lo credit, and by a series of acts has contributed to the marked increase of confidence whioh is revealed in the rapid rise of our securities abroad. The bill to which we have referred as slumbering in the Senate committee is one of these, and by no means tun least important, The Senate, meanwhile, indulges its fondness for debate by nursing Mr. Sherman's scheme for increasing the debt, the enactment of which would neutralize all the good elleoted by the judicious aotion of the House. The promise of Mr. She-man to push for ward Mr. Schenck's Publio Credit and Coin Payment bill is good as far as it goes. But if he would do his whole duty to the public credit, he will not let the session close without finishing the effective means devised by the House for stopping the growth of the gold- nonet aeou General Grant and the Internal Keyenne Uureau. From the N. T. World, It may possibly be that Mr. Rollins, after a dozen feints in that direotlon, will aotually go out of offioe on the incoming of the new ad ministration. The belief that he may do so is strengthened by the statement that he has made an engagement with Jay Cooke te take the Boston agenoy for one of that gentleman's finas"l cohemes which has reoeived the favor 6i Congress, and also by the fact that he oannot decently retain the post longer than the fourth of next month. When he does go out one of the most important offioes under the ! Government will beoome vacant, and Qcneral Grant should realize the full measure of the responsibility which will rest upon him in filling it. President Johnson has been repeatedly aocued by radioal journals With having boen the sole cause of the deep demoralization which has marked the whole revenue service sinoe he suoceeded to, the Presidential chair; but little has been said as to the Senate's agenoy in the matter. - The simple truth is, neither the President nor the benate have realized that the Revenue Bureau is a great trust. Ap pointments of assessors and collectors have been made from political considerations alone, and the natural oonsequenoe has been that places of great importance and power have been filled by incapacity and rasoality, effectively protected in the perpetration of wrong by the Tenure of-Office bill. Instead of these posts being filled for reasons of fitness, they have been filled for political reasons. Some of the outrages oommltttd npon the people by the Senate through these appointments are already well known to many in the community. The oases, however, of the five Republicans hold ing internal revenue pouts whom the Presi dent was absolutely compelled to suspend under the Teuure-of-Offioe act may not be so widely known as they deserve to be. Although the Senate was perfectly aware that the course of the Executive in this matter was in compliance with tho recommendation of Mr. Rollins, and that tbt latter official had withstood all pressure and allowed the five to co unchecked as loDg as the looal publio sentiment would possibly permit, that tody firmly refused to confirm a single one of the suspensions, and never did do so. Of the five, one died before legal action against him was consummated; they were convicted of offldUl corruption and imprisoned; and the rtm one, Collector James, of Riohmoni notoriety, was aotually restored to office by the Senate with the proofs of his crime be fore its faoe, and in face of the report against him, made by its own Flnanoe. Committee; and it U likely that he would have been in the offioe to this day but for the developments in a case tried in the adjoining district whioh fastened guilt firmly upon him. This is but one ont of many oases that could be quoted to liiuavrave uie manner in wuioa these import THE DAlin EVENING TELEGRAPH PHILADELPHIA, MONDAY, MARCH 1, 18G9. ant places have Veen nsed with ntterdlsre-l gardfor the interests of honest oitliena or the I extent to whioh they might be Jeopardized and injured. In the teleotion of a candidate for the In ternal Revenue Commiaeionership, General Grant must exjeot an immense pressure on the part of the "whlf ky ring." JSrery influ ence, of coarse, will be brought to bear, and every expedient resorted to which human in genuity can suggest, by those whose interest it is to seonre a man for the place who will lend himself, either direotly or indireetly, to their designs. The ring are perfeotly wU aware that, with a competent and upright man in the office, the frauds in whisky, which are going on to this day in the open market and under the very none of the officials, wonld be broken np. It is idle to talk of Mr. Rol lins' probity or capacity while his bureau is in the condition it is a condition of disorgani sation and demoralization, not to say corrup tion. It Is not much to his credit that he has permitted his whole office to be run by a clique who Lave recklessly trifled with the national interests. If he had been mentally fit for the post he has so long disgraced and eo stubbornly held in defiance of the popular condemnation of his conduct, the whisky and tobaoco frauds throughout the country would never have thriven as tbey have done; that Is, assnming him to really be what his friends claim that he is thoroughly honest. He wonld have purified his aureau, broken np the pernioions set of understrappers who have worked the office business in their own interest, and displaced some individuals who are strongly suspeoted of corruption. General Grant should understand, in making a choice for the place, that simple honesty alone is not sufficient. What is wanted is combined integrity and ability ability of a high order; and until the post is thus filled, there will be no improvement over the pre sent order of things. At this hour, illicit whisky Hoods the market, even under the low rate 01 tax, wnich it was confidently and rea sonably expected would insure honest pay ment upon the whole dutiable nroduotion. With energy, determination, and ability at the head of this bureau, there would be no such condition of things. Let General Grant put an honest and eapable man in Rollins place, and the country will soon perceive the difference between the results of an efficient and inefficient administration. Muilins. From the N. Y. World. Will the Honorable Muilins, of Tennessee, have the goodness to let the Angel Gabriel alone I In a general way, we have no parti cular objection to Muilins. He is to the ave rage stupidity and monotonousnesa of the average radical member of Congress in this country wbat the late Colonel Sibthorp so long was to the average stupidity ana monoto- nousness of the average lory member ot rarlla ment in Great Britain. Muilins oheers as, and. as we are clad to believe, without inebri ating himself. Muilins sober is more muddled and more amusing than nine in ten ot his colleagues would be drank. Mallins on mules, lor example, on triaay enwrtainea the House and the country very agreeably; and the gifts of Muilins, in the oharaoter of "Mark Antony" pronouncing luneral orations, have heretofore received in these columns n stinted praise or inadequate exposition. It would really gratify ns to have Muilins both praise and bury the vast majority of his fellow-members. Bat we decidedly objeot to the interference of Muilins wich the Angel Gabriel. In one of his "obsequious" ora tions, the other day delivered, Muilins alluded to the trumpet of Gabriel as a "catastrophe," and now in a financial speech he turns the Archangel into an artilleryman, and declares that certain things will not be achieved until "Gabriel snaps his resurreotion gun !" We pray Muilins to understand, onoe for all, tb.it the Angel Gabriel is no radioal. His "trum pet" is a trumpet not of self-praise but of judgment; and, instead of cannonading the universe, the Angel's chief connection with our poor human hiBtory has been to anuouuoe the coming upon earth of the Prince of Peace. We do not require of Muilins either discourse of reason or actions of wisdom. But we pro test, in the name of piety and decorum, against his irreverent and ignorant misrepre sentation of anything more saored than the "trooly loil" sentiment of Eastern Tennessee. recovery of the Scond Cuba Cable. From Hit jr. J. Herald, It will be remembered by our readers that the attempt of the International Ooean Tele graph Company to lay a seoond cable between Key west ana Havana lauea last year irom the drifting too far to the eastward of the steamer Narva while laying it, and the conse quent necessity of dropping some miles from the shore the end that was to have been landed in Cuba. The one was buoyed, but the buoy-rope broke one hundred and twenty five fathoms below the surfaoe, and henoe the necessity for grappling for the cable In the same manner tfcat the Great Eastern grappled for the first Atlantio cable. The work to recover the Cuba oable was performed under very diflerent clrcumstancB from that of re covering the Atlantio cable. The latter lay at a depth of one thousand nine hundred and eighty fathoms, on a level -bottom, under still water; while the Cuba cable was lost at a depth of eight hundred fathoms, on an uneven bottom, and with a vast volume of water driving over it at an average rate of four miles an uour. Preparations for the work were made by placing on the steamer New England ma chinery similar to that used for recovering the lost Atlantic oable on board theUreat Kastern. Owing to the strength of the current, the grap pling ropes were required to be unusually 1 strong. They consisted of sixteen steel wires, each enoased in Mabilla hemp, and laid np in strands of four each. This rope was divided into lengths of two hundred fathoms, with shackles and swivels between each. The point where the cable was found was passed over with the grapples six times, and thrice the cable was oaught. On the first oooasion the cable parted, through some fault in the machinery, and the second time it parted at a splice, a heavy Bea running. On the 15th of February it was caught again and su joessfully raised and landed, and now we have a donble cable to Cuba as we have to Europe. The operations were performed under the personal supervision of General William .P. fmith, President of the International Telegraph Company, and Sir Charles Bright, Eoglneer-in- chiei of the company. This event is another assurance of the practicability of handling ocean cables and laying them, and will oou duoe to strengthen the scieuoe of ocean tele graphy. , John Bright on Ocean Penny Postage. From the If. T. Herald. , At a banquet of the Associated Chambers of Commerce held the other evening ia London, John Bright made a characteristic speech, and urged, we are told, the importance and neces sity of adopting the system of ooean penny postage. There is no publio man living now in England whose name Is so extensively and honorably associated with reform as John Blight. Since 1832 up until the present time there has been no reform movement in Great EiitaJn to the success of whioh he has not largely contributed. Mr. Bright is the very man to take np the questieo of cheap ooeaa postage, it is one of those improvements I wMch to prove successful renui. nnU ih. I xl.no.c Man.!, Tk.. J , I for a change. There is but one argument j n iiujra are riDe that can be uped against ocean rmnnv unit. age that it will not pay. This, however, is au argument mat bai no solid f.nm.iiiinn t est upon. All the fao'g are analnnt it. It i a truth whioh cannot be gainsaid, that lu pro- I'uruuu as uauuoai aua lDiernaiiooal postage Las been cbeapeued. no has it bnnnm .or. viceable and so has it proved remnnurativu The ties whioh now bind Great Britain to tb United States are so numerous and so atrnnv ibat facilities for the communication of thought and ft-frling, not to speak of more substantial interchangfB, for the present cannot be suffi ciently multiplied. A two cent postage be tween this country and Great Britain would be immediately fol'ow.d by a similar arrange ment between this country and Germany. The arrangement would be a gain to all oonoerned. it wonia be a special gain to the United States, for which reason we hope, not merelv that Mr. Bright will keen no the fire, but that it win be warmly responded to on this Bid The tbiBg has but to be started to prove a success. An Impudent Politician. From lh If. Y. Herald. Air. wcuiure wants unerai urant to ap point to his Cabinet from Pennsylvania some man who will keep the Repnblioan party in that State together who will vitalize it, and make it "pulsate." This is the true political argument, and what these words as used by politicians mean can be understood when people understand MoClure. MoClure some months ago went out to the Indian country, and there saw how things ooald ba done in the way of a big job. His eyes were opened be was excited. He must get that thing in his bands somehow. Curtin is McClure's man. McClure pulls the wires that move Curtin in the eyes of the publio, just as Thurlow Weed has pulled the wires for many political pup pets from this state. Aloulnre's plan, then, was to make Curtin Secretary of the Interior, and through him as suoh Secretary to get possession of the Iudians. this is the whole of it. This is what his oonoern for the "Re pnblioan party" means, and this is the be ginning, the middle, and the end of all that he bad in view in his lndeoorous assault on the President-elect. Emigration to Ibe South. From the Xf. Y. Tribune. We receive almost every day inquiries about Southern lands from Notlhern farmers who want to emigrate. It is impossible fur us to advise all these correspondents as to particular localities, for a oountry that would suit one would not suit all. We are glad to perceive that the Southern railroad oompanles have oombined to facilitate the diffusion of information respecting these millions of rioh acres which await thi hand of industry, and to diffuse it, too, in the only way whioh can be of much practical use, namely, by enabling farmers to go ud spy ont the land for them selves. A convention of officers, representing between thirty and forty roads, met in At lanta on the 4th of January, and adopted a system ot excursion tickets, at greatly re dnced rates, fer aotual settlers or for persons who wibh to examine the oountry with a view to settlement or investment. There is a vast extent of oountry between the Potomac, Ohio, and Mississippi rivers wbere s Killed labor is badly wanted, land cheap, and nature prodigal of her gifts to those who have the industry to gatner tbem. ine regeneration of this region we believe is to be effected by the sturdy farmers of the North. But it has been difficult for tbem to select nomes in me South. The distances are grea', and fares ou the Southern roads are very high. . This new arrangement will remove the difficulty . Holders of exoursion ceriinoaies win do tasen at the rate of two cents a mile over any of the thirty-odd roads which have joined in the agreement, and aotual settlers at the rate of one cent a mile. A great numoer oi leading sissippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, Vir ginia, and ueorgia win aeauoi one-mira irom their usual chargeB in favor of the same per sons. MoBt of the roads in question are in the Southwest, forming a oomplete network from Louisville to New Orleans, Mobile, and Charleston; but there are some also ia Vir ginia and North Carolina. Fuller oartioulars as to roads and distances, and the conditions on which exoursion cer tificates are granted, oan be obtained of G. M. Ilnutineton. No. 229 Broadway, Hew York. The arrangement is to remain in force until the 1st of Jnly. Advising General Grant. From the If. Y. Tribune. It has not seemed to us advisable to proffer any counsel whatever to the President-elect as to the formation of his Cabinet. We have Eeveral excellent reasons for his retioenoe, only one of which need be mentioned this, namely, that he has not asked our advioe in the premises. The others may or may not be equally good, but it cannot be necessary to adduce them. For, while we do not question the right of any citizen to volunteer suggestions in the premises, and would by no means incite the President to disregard and defy the wishes of his friends, we do insist that his own personal judgment and wishes should have very great weight in the selection of those high forno tionaries who are to be his confidential oflioial advisers, probably thronghont his term of service. Tbey are to be bis familiar daily BHRoclates. his intimate, trusted counsellors; be must rely implicitly on tneir integrity ana fidelity; he must, to a great extent, see through tneir eyes, remove ana appoint on the strength of their recommendations, ana be honored or disgraced in the publio estima tion as tbey shall do well or ill. It may be too -much to call them his personal or civil taff; yet it is simple truth to say that they stand to him in a confidential relation of in timacy and trust which imperatively demands that they shall be emphatically the men of bis choice, and not imposed upon him by poli tical combinations or personal pressure. The administration will be known In his tory as hi"; be most and will be Judged and measured by its success or failure; and poa teiity will not admit as valid the plea in his behalf "lie would have snooeeded had be been surrounded by the right men;" for the ready, unanswerable retort will be "It was bis duty as well as his privilege to be thus surroundwd; be had no moral right to sur- loond binmelf with others; and if he suc cumbed to dictation and aooepted as beads of departments men whom he did not deem fit test for such crave resnonsibilities. be there in proved himself uufit for his own high posi iion." ! In saying this, we indicate no opinion on our part that those whom the ne w President may call into his oounolla are abler or worthier than others whom his choice will exclude, but only that his personal preference is entitled t jieouliar and even paramount weight in the choloe of Cabinet offiwrs. The wolf bounty 1n Minnesota has ben reauoea irom f iu to I J per bead. FINANCIAL. TT n ' .G n '1 J i miHTl KHP.iTiP. rVH.l mail. W UiUli A. 1040 MILES NOW COMPLETED. The First Mortgage Bonds, HAYINU 30 TEA. KS TO HUX, Frincipal and Interest Tayable in Gold, WE ABE KO'W SELLING AT PAR A1SD INTEREST, Or exchanging for GOVERNMENT SECURI TIES on the following terms: For 11000 1831s, we pay a difference of S13I17 $1000 1862s, we pay a difference of..... . 141 62 flOOO 1864s, we pay a difference of....... 107 -U2 S1000 1865s, Nv., we pay a dlff. or 121-68 $1000 10-40s, we pay a difference of... 90 42 $1010 1865s, July, wepayaillfferenee of 100 43 $1000 1867s. July, we;wy adlfferenceof W117 1000 ltS68s, July, we pay adlfferenceof 10117 Or In nreBortlon. as the market for Govern ment Securities may fluctuate. WI. FAINTER & CO., BANKERS ASD DEALERS IN ttOYKltfi. KEKT3, HOLD, ETC, flo. 30 Gouth THIRD Street. 819 PHILADELPHIA, UNION PACIFIC BAILB0AD FIRST MORTGAGE 30 YEARS SIX PER CENT. GOLD BORJDS, FOR SALE AT PAR AND ACCRUED INTEREST. DEALERS IN GOVERNMENT SECURITIES, GOLD, ETC., No. 40 South -THIRD Street, ti u PHILADELPHIA. PHILADi AND BEADING BR. 6s, FREE FROM ALL TAXES. A small amount for sale low by DREXEL & CO., No. 34 South THIRD Street, J 12 Iw PHILADELPHIA LEDYARD & BARLOW Have Keinorcd tneir LAW AND COLLECTION OFFICE TD No. 10 South THIRD Street, PHILADELPHIA, And Will continue to give careful attention to collecting and securing CL VIM.S througnoul the United States, Urltisa Provinces, smd Ku rope. i ! Bight Drafts and Maturing Paper collected at Bankers'. ' ' 128 6m pm 8. PETERSON & CO., Stock and Exchange Brokers, No. 30 South. THIRD Street, 'members of the New Torr and Pjilladel phla Stock and Uold Boards. STOCKS, BONDS, Ete'., bought and sold on oomsaUtfuon only at either otty. 126? FINANCIAL. C3 A NKINC H or JayCooke&O)- Nob. 112 and Hi South THIRD Street, FHrULDKLPniX Dealers In all Government Securities. Old 5-208 Wanted In Exchange Tor New A Liberal Difference allowed. Compound Interest Notes Wanted. Interest Allowed on Deposits. COLLECTION 8 kLA.DK. STOCKS bonsnt ana soil on Commission. RiMrij hnnlnnra aocoiDDiodations roaervea for ladle. We wUl receive applications for Policies of LU Insurance in the National Lir. insurance Company of the TJnltea States, Fall information riven at oar Offioai mm GLEHMMG, MIS & CO, No. 48 South THIRD Street, PHILADELPHIA. GLENMME, DAYIS & AMORY, No. 3 NASSAU St., New York, BANKERS AND BROKERS. Direct telegraphic communication with the New York Stock Hoards from ine Philadelphia Office. u BKJamisok&Co. 8UCCE880H3 TO P. F. KELLY & O O., BANKERS AMD DEALERS IS Gold, Silver, ail GoveniMt At Closest Market Hates. N. W. Corner THIRD and CIIESNUT Sta. Bpeclal attention given to COMMISSION ORDERS In New York and Philadelphia Stocks Boards, etc etc. 2 11 8m Dealers In United States Bonds, and Men. ners or mock ana uoia xcnan-e. Receive Accounts of Itanks and Hankers on Liberal Terms. ISSUE BILLS OF EXCllANUE 03 C. J. HAMBKO & SON. LONDON, B. MBTZLER, 8. 80HN & CO., FRANKFORT JAMES W. TDCKER & CO.. PARIS, And Other frincipal Cities, and Letters of tf edit Available Throughout Europe. BRANDY, WHISKY, WINE, ETC. QAR6TAIR8 & McOALL, Rob. 128 WALNUT and 21 KRANITE Sts D1POBTKBS OT Brandies, Wines, Gin, Oil re Oil, Etc. Et. WHOLESALE DEALERS I2T PURE EYE WHISKIES, IN BOND AND TAX PAID. 4 U ILL I AM GROVES, No. S38 SANSOH Street, AGENT TOR YE AT MAN & G BAH Alt 'S 2 221m PUKE CINCINNATI CATAWBA WINES. DRUGS, PAINTS, ETC. ROBERT SHOEMAKER & CO., N. E. Corner or FOURTH and BACK Sts PHILADELPHIA, WHOLESALE DRUGGISTS. IMPORTERS AND MAN UPAOTURERa OM White Lead and Colored Paints. Putt Yarnisnes, Etc AGJDNTS FOB THB CELEBRATED FKENCU ZINC PAINTS. DKSLERa AND UORQCMERB LOW JUST PRICES POR CAiOl. SUPPLIED At PROVISIONS, ETC. JiItlIAEL MEAGHER & CO., o. 223 South SIXTEENTH Street, WHOLESALE AMD RETAIL DEALERS IB PBOVJIIIOHN, ioh rAaiiiY trttis. TEIIBAI'ISN l PtB DOZEN, 8 GROCERIES, ETC. JpHESII FRUIT IN CANS. PEACHES, PINKAPPLtS. ETC., ORBEN CORN, TOMATOES. PBENCH PEAS, MUSHROOMS. AbPARAGUa ETC. E10. ALBERT C. BOBEBW, Dealer in Fin. Groceries U7rj 1 Cor. ELEVENTH and VISE Street, JEWELRY, SILVERWARE, ETCL ESTABLISHED 1023. J WATCH P. JEWELRY, CLOCKS, biLVERWARE, and 1 Q. TF. RUSSELL, No. 552 NORTH 81XTU STREET, iwt PHILADELPHIA. SHIPPING. O U 8 a$$2L CHARLESTON, 8. C. The South and Southwest FAST FREIGHT LINE. EVERT 1HCBDAT. The Steamb!s PROMKTHBrs. Cantata Gray, J. W. KVJl.lt MAO, u.pMkiu vauoa, -WILL PORM BtQULAH WlfcKLT LIMB. The steamship J. W. KVKRMAN will (alio IHUKaDAY, February 25, at 4 P. M. through bills of lading given U connection with S. C. K. R. to pouts la tb Month and Hoathwett. Insurance at lowest rat s. Bates of freight a lew as by any other toute. Tor freight apply to Itllf DOCK ETREKT WHARF. LORILLAED'tJ 8TKAM3UIP LIN I FOR NEW YORK. Balling Tuesdays, Thnrsdayl, and Saturdays at noon. The winter rate at which Ifrelgbt Is bo taken Is 80 oenta per lot) pounds, grow, Scents par root, or S cents per gallon, ship's option The Lin, la now prepared to contract lor spring rates lower than by any other tome, commencing on Match IS, 1869, Advance chargt oftbed at oiiiue on Pier, freight tecelved at aU tiuiea on covered wharf. JOHN r. OKI 2 2! ly Pier I North Wharves. U, B. intra ratfi on small psckages Iron, metals, etc. ettn4 rva i-ivEarooL and quklss X&kkmZ TUWii. luuiau Line nl Mull Mi.n.ua mic .tainted U sail aa loiiom: CITV Ofc XXIlW lUivtaL, haiurday, Feb. 20, lf.K, K1INA, via JiiN, uubiiay, eo. U. li noon. Ul l V OP AN i W tap, baiuraay, t'va. 27, 1 P. ht CITY OP lAiMMi.M. Baiurday, at.r. , 11 oooa KaISUo roo.vi Jiailtax, XutMitay, lUar , 1P.M. KtlT OP JUALrlMt'KJj:, baiuraay, Mr.ls, 1 P. at. and eacn suuuetMimg eaiura aua alternate iumUm. at 1 P, St., rroui Pier 46, JNortu KlVer. HAi JU3 U rAMK BY TBI "U UTMAXMM Payable In Uuld. PavaDle In Currency. FlEfcT OAUJN......100STEJ!;HAUC... to ionuou..M...M... l"A to Luuaon .....,. to to Paris................ U til to Pari...,. if raMAim by mi TciesuAV stXamkh via Bi luraju JT1J10T UAUia, .TJUCMAVS, Pav anla In Uold. Pay a tilt, in Uuranav. LI Vrpool....-...40 1 LlT.nm.,1 Hallix....... ........... 20 tlalliax .... 1 Bi. Juuu's. N. P....-l a. John's. N. P. bv Rranch MUutitir I 1 iV Rrannh MLA&niMr PaaMtugers a loo tvrw ard.u to Harra, Hamburg, .Bra. Ticket, can be buuui her by parsons tending fo . their irleuds, at moderate rates. or furUiec Information apply at tht Oompanjr't OlJloea, JOHN O. DALE. Ant, No. 16 BROADWAY, W. Y. Or to O'IkiaNELI A PAUliK. Ageuui, No. 411 CHEJ3N UT Btra, Pmiadelpula. OSL.r DiKKCI LINE 10 FRANCE!.'. ujERAL TRANSATLANTIC COMPANY'S AND ilAVRAi, CALldNG I RKEdT. The suleuilid Lew vuaaniaou iiiin tvnriL r.mu fna Uie Cuutlueut will sail ttuia Pier No. 60 Norm river. as IuiIuwb: ' or. LaUKilNT........... Brocande.....8nturdaT.Oot. I P h. KaI it hi w.w..UuuliiiueM.jnuttay. Oak. ti PRICE OP PASSAGE In gold (inoludlng wlue). lu sniAt yja am. VftH, First Cabin 14U eeooud Cabin. (Including railway tickets, furnished on board) Flr.icabin...........Si4D beoouO cabin Tuehe .itajueis au tot carry aieeiag. paaaeugera aiedicl attenuate nee 01 charge, American travellers going to or returning from -the coiitinmt ol Aurope. by taking the steamers of this ud. avoid uuutceaeary risks irotn trau.it oy English railways aud crooning the Channel, besides saving time, trouble, and expense. uaorue Mackenzie, Agent, No. 6 Bit o AX W A ', Mew 1" oik. For passage In Philadelphia, apV'T Adams. EzpreasCofupuliy, to 11. L. LEAP, 17 No. 820 CHKMNUT Street. iu tra.t3.ta. PHlLAUfiLriilA. iUCflllOfiiD , ANi ISKjHiuUL STEAMSHIP LINK. H PHJUUHT AIR LINE TO THE k..l.'l U .11. UVBT W EVJvKV SATURDAY, At noon, from PiRtt'f WHARF above MARKET DtdTGGe). THROUGH RATES and THROUGH UErtirrm to all poln is in North ana South Carolina, via Bea board lr Line Raiiroad. conneoiiav at tiru....,.'vn and te .Lyncbonrtf, Va., 'lennoaaee, and the West, via VUgluia aud T'euuaasee Air Line And Richmond And DanvUle RailruaU, irelkDl HaKIilED BUT ONCE, and taken at IjOV er Rates than any other uk& Thereaularlty.ttaleiy.aud cheapness of this ronte oommeudltto the puoilc as the most debirabie ma. dluiu lor carrying every description ot freight. No charge for oouuuisslon, drayage, or any expense Of trauaier. Steamahlpa lnsaied at lowest ratea. , Freight received uaily. W ILLIAM P. CLYDE A OO,, ' No. 14 North and Souih WHARVES. W. P. PORTER, Agent at Rlolimond and Utr Point. T. P. CROWEIX A CO.. Agents at Norfolk. U Ki.W EXtiiUm L1JMN TO .andrla, Ueorgetcwn. and Wulunmia Xj. u., via Chesapeake and Delaware Canal, with 00 iv. uectlons at Alexanurla irom the uioat direct rontg lor Lynchborg, Rriaul, Enoxvllle, Nashville, Dalton and the Southwest, Steamers leave resalarly every SatnrdAr at bom from the first wharf aoue Market street, Freight received OaUy. r Wit. P. CLYDE A CO., No, 14 North and South Wharves, i. B. DAVIDbON, Agent at Oeorgetown, M. ELDRILUE A Co., Agents at Alexandria, VIr. ginla. 41 tttffc NOUCE.-F0B NEW YOBK, VIA sykIELAWARE AND RAR1TAN CANAL, AAPRAtoS STEAMBOAT COMPANi The Steam Propellers 0 this line leave DAILY from first wbarf below Market street, THKOUUH IN 24 HOURS, ' Ooodg forwarded by all the lines going Out Of York. North, East, and West, free of couimlsalun. Freights received at our naual low ratt. WiLIXAM P. CDYDE fc CO., Agent. t . .j . No. 14 S. WHARVES, Philadelphia, JAMES HAND, Agent, tot No. 119 WALL Street, corner ef 80. (fa, New York PeVTCIlh FOB HEW YORK SWIFI-8UR1 atejWr.iif'1V"-i"',-''" Company Despatck ai.u bwlit-sure Lines, via Delaware and Raritaa Canal, on and after the lth of March, leaving dally at -12 M. and 1 P, M connecting with all Northersi fug Eastern lines, For freight, which will be taken 00 accommodating terms, apply tO WILLIAM M. BAJKl) dt CO., , 1U No. las B. DELAWARE A venae. CLOTHS, CASSIMERES, ETC. QOATING8I COATINGS V J A 111 E 8 & LEE, MO. 11 MOUTH SECOND STliEET, '. Siyn of the Golden Lamb, ABE HOW Bfct EITIN NEW aTTA.ES OF FiXL AND WINTER COlTlNttS, ' TO WHICH THET INVITH TUB AlTTElf.' TION OP T II It THA Dfd A1BOTH KlUa, AT VBOLfMLB ASJI1 HKTAILm KXm PATENTS. OFFICE FOR PEOCURlKG PATENT EVJ-Itt-Sl JiCLLJJlRbiS, ' . No. 119 South roUKTU St, rulladelpiila,' AND MARBLE BUILDINGS, . No. 40 SEVENTH Bireel, oppo.lt V. 8. Patent Olllcn. Washlrgtna. D. O. , 11. HO WtON, tto.lcuorot Patents. 1 C. HUWBOA, Atloroes nj,r. Jn,nJ.nn!c,,1'- ' addresst-d to me Prlncle O01o. Pnlladelpnia. w iw PATENT N. WlEDEHNlIKItl & J4.. r-Ol lOiTORa tW PATENTS JOOCBFbMJ t MKKKT, PHILADELPHIA. -40 7 I'M feUlKM'. WAsmNQTON, P.O. S IS Itn MEDICAL, ; ' piLts wi msaiouuiiojuiL tumoiw. All klndtr perltotiy and permanently cured, with out pain, danger, caustics, or Instruments, by, W. A. McCANJjLCcjs M. D, No. iUJitt BPRi.M GARDEN Street. We can refer you to over thousand of the U'.tclizeui of Paiiadelphla cured... Jriefort nee given at our oUlt-a,. , IH lai 4 T-w DR.F. GIUAUD, VETEftrtABY 8UR ,TJ "V OEON, tii-aia all disease, of hnrsua and cat. ti., and all surgical optrallons, witti eillolent ch'JJi ruodalloDs for bcrs at bis InHruiary. No. MARSHALL Street, above Poplax. m
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers