i THE DAILY" EVENING TELEGRAPH PHILADELPHIA, MONDAY, JANUARY 3, 1870. srzzizT or tzzs muss. Cdltorlnl Oplnlonn of the Lending Journal. I'poit Orrent Tplcai!m piled Krerv UT far the Krenlaa Telegraph. THE UNION 1 LE VUT'K CLUB AND MR. STANTON. From the N. V, Time. The honors paid by the Union League Club on Thursday evoniug to the great War tJeoretary formed a becoming and well-merited tribute to one to whom not only the "Union League" but the Union its If owed so much. The practical and generous form which the feeling of the club took when it resolved, in accordance with Mr. A. T. Stewart's report, that it would support heartily the moYoment for the Stanton fund, 'not only as an ex pression of gratitude, but also as an example which will encourage a fearluss, nnsolflsh, honest and patriotic discharge of the pnblio duty," was worthy of the association and of the patriot whose memory they revere. Stanton was a type, a representative man, of that vast "League" of loyal men who, in their devotion to the Union, resolved that, come what would, "government of the pooplo, . by the people, and lor the people, should not perish from the earth." He gave to the Union all that any man ever gave to it time, for tune, energy, and life itself. Whatever honors are due to thoso who periled all for the country, are due to Stanten; whatever ro jnembrance aud roturn should follow, after life's struggle is over, to those whom the pa triot holds dear, should come to the family of Stanton. It is, perhaps, a sad commentary on Ameri can public life in general, that we instinc tively honor with regards so distinguished an officer whose highest vraise is that ne was upright and disinterested in publio affairs; that we speak of his career as a kind of marvel. Is it so in all countries ? Is publio life everywhere a career of plundering and recklessness, and is it so strange a pneno. menon that we must make wondering men' tion of it, when a man controls billions in a few Tears, and vet is se exact a steward that he dies poor ? Whatever be the truth else where, and whatever be the reflection it sug gests, the careers of men like Stanton and ltawlins f.re impressive and honorable. "In the ace in which we live," said the Nestor among poets, Mr. Iryant, "a mercenary, venal, self-seeking ago, when publio men seek to win popular favor by the lowest arts, and enrich themselves bv the basest means, this is a shining example." We are so accus tomed to the jocular, hnlf-excusatory phrases with which public dishonesty Is cloaked we are so habituated to the spectacle of men coins into places of honor and trust compura tively poor, and coming frcin them loaded with wealth that the fact of two successive Secretaries in the War Office places most auspicious for illicit bargaining and money setting leaving their families dependent on the public, after lives of econoiuy, strikes as with a kind of amazement. But it is a happy reflection that disinter estedness in 'public service does not go unre warded among the American people; in this respect, at least, "Republics are not un grateful." And what comparison is to be made between that honorable income, made up by the spontaneous gratitude of the fellow countrymen cat one who has died in the na tion's service, and the accumulated pilferings fcnd plundering of the dishonest publio ser- rant, wherewith he and his kin Haunt their brazen dishonesty in publio places '( . Such was the tenor of some of the speeches on Thursday evoning. And tho eloquent tri butes then made to btanton s self-sacnlice. indifference to personal interest, nobility of character, generosity, resolution, sagacity, courage, energv, power of will, power of work, and spotless, exalted t all-conquering patriotism, were well deserved. we may bolieve with Mr. Bryant that Secretary btan ton "never thought of gaining anything for himself by any office which he held neither popular favor nor lame nor fortune, lie thought only of serving his country." With Dr. Bellows we may declare that the Union League Club and the whole nation owo "re verence and cratitudo for the great and glori ous services, the true patriotism, the tempted and tried' vet spotless publio character of Edwin M. Stanton." With Br. Thompson. we may describe his zeal as that which sought to "drive out with a scourge the profaners of the publio temple, and overturn the tables of the money changers. With uenerai van Buren, we may declare that Stanton "acccom- pliuhed a greater work than fell to the lot of I'itt or Cainot, or any other War Minister of history. Above and beyond all this, it is evident that all honors paid to Stanton are incentives to publio virtue. They are counter-agents to the loose publio official morality of the time; they instruct and inform all our youth that there is something better in public life than self-seeking and pelf, and that the sterner and rarer virtues are still not without honor and reward in our day and generation even as in tho day and generation of the fathoms. 'TENNSYLYANIA DUTCH." From Uie A". Y. Ibtfion. It is an acknowledged fact that children of German immigrants cease to speak German properly if left to theaiselves, or to the mere practice afforded in the intercourse with their parents, and that the second generation. under the same conditions,, almost wholly loses, if not the knowledge, at least the faculty of speaking the native tongue of their grand parents. The language hardly forms even a connecting link between the different decades of immigration. In 181!) the Ger mans of Philadelphia, then the mcst Gorman ' city of this country, were no longer able to keep the records of their "society" in Ger man, immigration having oil but ceased in consequonoo of the great continental wars. In New York, where immigration was smaller still, the Germans were in 1711 1 already un able to write uerman. A child born here naturally receives impressions from its sur roundings only. The air it breatheSj the lan guage it hears, the commonwealth in which . it grows up in short, all its relations to the outside world, are American. What a child hours about Germany from its parents, and wnai it aiterwarda learns from books about it, are acquirements, ideas, and conceptions, but no living views, no immanent reality. Thus America, to those born here, is the native country, the home; Germany, naturally well- nign as loreign as any otner European couutry . The exceptions to tho rule that the grand children of immigrated Germans never speak German' are to bo found only in families of a higher culture or iu some out-ot-tUe-way rural aismcts. 'f he process of forgetting the mo- - tner tongue and aoiinirluir the new is con stantly going on, and will continue as long as r immigration lantn. jt jg the same with the descendants of uU other uliong who come here; but it is luont conspicuous in the case of the Germans on account of their larger niimbors.j t' If immigration from Germany were to cease; which it is far from doing at. present--we should see but few German papors published in this country, while tho Germans iu politi cal or in social life would as little form a sepa- I rate class as they now do in business. , The maionty of Uernian-born citizens, buwever, have a vague notion that they can . bttijr mis liieviwii-iie ienutm-jr ut uaving uo children taught the German language, and hence their arxiety to get instruction in German introduced into the public schools. But, just as one may learn a foreign language without denationalizing himself, so he may adhere to the language of his fore fathers without denationalizing nimseii. ine Pennsylvania German native-born fanners were, at the time ol tne native American movement, tho most pronounced Know Nothings, and many or them are still so, at every "German" settling among them soon finds out; and yet they not only speak a German dialect, mixed with words German ized from the English, but this, their ordinary language, is also spoken by tnoir lenow-ciu-zens and neighbors of Celtic, Anglo-Saxon, and African descent. Indeed, the writer of tkese lines Las seldom been more surprised and at the same time moved to neaity laughter than at being addressed by a venerable negro in a Pennsylvania vil lage in the most approved Pennsylvania-German dialect, and with all the nuances with which that dialect is spoken by immigrants from the Palatinate or their descendants in Pennsylvania, this very day, to the sixth generation. The idea of an African acquiring, not the German language, but a dialect of it, and that thoroughly connecting, by tne as sociation of ideas, African barbarism with the particularism of a small German territory seemed at hrst highly ludicrous, it was con trary to all experience in regard to the capacity of that race to acquire foreign idioms, while it proved, besides, the tenacity with which the dialect has taken root in that section, and thus outlived the language itself the "Hochdeutseh or High German origi nally spoken by German immigrants and lost bv the second generation. The importance ot dialects nas at times been undervalued by scholars; but it is now perceived that they are the roots out of which , 1- 1 L a language grows, ana irom wmcu it con stantly draws new nourishment. From them only arises the language of letters, or, as Max Muller expresses it, tne "iioonspracne. Jacob Grimm, in his history of language compares them to a comfortable mormng- cown. in which you feel at ease, but in which you do not venture to go out. In them the greatest wealth ot a language lies niddon, ana it may be conceded that for the German they have been of more importance than for other languages on account of tho greater number of tribes composing the nationality. Gram mars of Low-German as well as High-Gorman dialects have of late been published in tier manv, and the success which works writ ten in dialects have met with there shows a strong scientific and popu lar movement in their favor. Nor can we wonder that it be so. Fritz Keuter, the Low-German poot, owes his success not less to the poetical merit and unsurpassed humor of his works than to the happy idea ot writing them in a dialect. At hrst it might seem as if readers not yet acquainted with it might be repulsed rather than attracted, most of them being obligod to take pains to read it; bnt Germans are apt to overlook that dim culty for the enjoyment they find in being reminded of "home." As to the vitality of dialects, it may be mentioned that in the pro vinces of Alsace and Lorruine, wrested from Germnny by France centuries ago, the Alsa tian-German dialect is still tho language of the peasants, and that only recently have the inhabitants of the latter province petitioned the Emperor to have the German language introduced into the pt' V.? schools. AN ATOM OF CUBAN SENSE. From the X. Y. World. "The next thing done was to purchase a small cnooner, and place on board a small cargo of anas. A lame vessel and cargo were not risked, for the Junta believed that, though Secretary Fish said they coiuu snip mem, sua collector unnueu sum ne would clear the vessel, the United States Marshal would nut permit her departure. "Marshal liariow was invited to go on noara ine schooner. The Marshal examined the ship's papers, found them 'all right,' and saw ne had no obstacle to niace In the way. At 4 P. M. the schooner, the Maria, Captain lingaru, sailed for Cuba with 1200 muskets, ana a uuo proportion oi cartriuge auu other munitions. 'The Government was duly informed of what was going on last evening. The State Department tele graphed that If all was regular as represented, no hindrance conld be placed Tu the way. "This is all the Cuban ask. The; need no more." X.Y.Hun. We publish the above statement,' not be cause we have reason to believe it truthful, but because it displays the folly which has thus far marked the conduct of the Cubans. The organ of the Junta in this city now de clares that the permission of this Govern ment to purchase in and ship from its ports arms and munitions of war, as a commercial transaction, "is all the Cubans ask." This permission they ha7 always had, but the fact seems never to have dawned upon the fatuous managers of the canse of Cespodos till now. Traffic and commerce in warlike materials are not forbidden to its citizonp by a neutral government during a foreign war, for war iw the only promoter of such traffic and com merce. No more are venders of arms and powder in tho United States bound to inquire of a customer from Cuba, seeking such contraband of war, what relation tho latter boars to tho legal authority of the island Outsiders can not only sell such urticles to insurrectionists in another country, but cau transport the same on the high seas, subject only to tho bellige rent right of capture. Thiswith a brief ex ception in lHijii, has been the law of this country, from the famous declaration of the first Secretary of State, Mr. Jefferson, in 17!3, to Mr. Ternant, tho French Minister, that "our citizens havo always been free to make, vend, and export arms," down to the declara tion of the last Secretary of State, Mr. Fish, early in the summer of 1 !'.), to members of the Cuban Junta, that they could buy in this country as much munition of war as they pleased, and that the Government itself would sell to them. This rule of neutral right and duty was distinctly announced by this Gov ernnrent during the Crimoan war, by tho an nual message of tho l'resident to the Con gress of 1855. The only exception to this rule was . made by this Goveruient fduring the "Fatriot War" in Canada, in 18:18 (See Vol. V., Statutes at Large, p. 212) when our customs officers were required to seize an arms or munitions of war about to pass the frontier.for any place within any foreign State or colony "conter minous with the I nite l States. isut this . law cf 1K1S8 was limited to a life of two years, and was cureful to provide that nothing in it should "extoud to or Interfere with any trade in arms or munitions of war, conducted in vessels by sea, vita any loreign port or place -whatsoever, or with any other trade , which might have been lawfully carried on, before the pasuaga of this act, uuder the Uw of nations and the provisions of the act hereby ; emended . Nobody now disputes that trade in contra-i tnil, within the territory of the latter, is law ful both by municipal and international law Our merchants may soil, and the Cuban Junta can buy, to the content of thoir hearts and the extent of their purses. If the Junta had looked among the decisions of tho Supreme Court of the United State, they wonld have soon the declaration of that tribunal, that "there is nothing in our laws or iu the law of nations that forbids our citi zens from Bending armed vessels, as well as munitions of war, to foreign ports for sale. It is a commercial adventure which no nation is bound to prohibit, and which only exposes the persons engaged in it to the penalty of confiscation." But, while such commercial transactions are permitted, our municipal law as poremp torily forbids any person to provide or pro pare the means for "any military expedition or enterprise" to be carried on from our terri tory against a foreign power with which we are at peace. The exportation of arms, ac companied by men enlisted here, eitner to De used in the foreign country or to protect the arms from capture in foreign waters, is de nounced both by the statute of this country and that of England. The Catharine Whiting was libelled by the District' Attorney, as that officer informed the publio at the time, not "solely on the ground that she was about to carry arms to the Cuban insurgents" as cargo, but because she was furnished and fitted eut as part of "a military expedition" consisting of aims and enlisted men. OPENING BEADING BOOMS ON SUNDAY From the If. Y. Sun. The Young Men's Christian Association is a benevolent institution, having for its object the providing of rational and harmless amuse ment lor tne young men oi tne city, uuumg them proper boarding houses and employ ment, and in other ways looking after their moral and social welfare. It has just been enabled, by the liberality of its patrons, to complete a commodious ana magninoent club house on tho corner of Fourth avenue and Twenty-third street, containing a lecture room, where very nice concerts are given every week at a low price, and a reading room well supplied with the periodical litera ture of the day. The obvious use oi tne building and appurtenances is to afford a comfortable and attractive place of resort for voung men, which will m some measure oounteract the temptations of barrooms and tleatres, and the still more objectionable places with which the city abounds. The Mercantile Library Association is an other institution of the same benevolent char acter as the Young Men's Christian Associa tion. It. however, confines itself more strictly to furnishing young men with intel lectual entertainment. It has nn ample library and a well-supplied reading-room, and every winter classes are foru.ed for the in struction of its members at moderate charges in the languages and practical sciences. To aid it in its work a corporation called the Clinton Hall Association, composed of a num ber of our leading merchants and philanthro pists, purchased some years ago the building in Astor place, no r knoirn as Clinton Hall, and gave the Library Association a lease of it at a low rent. This Association is still in the occupation of the building, and naturally cherishes feelings of gratitude and respect towards the corporation that owns it. The reading-rooms of both these institu tions tho Young Men's Christian Association and the Mercantile Library Association are closed on Sunday. On that day the thousands of young men who, during the rest of the week, are hospitably admitted to the rooms, are bolted and barred out, and driven to Beek refuge vlterever else they may find it. A movement is on foot to change this practice, and open these reading-rooms on Sundays, and we sincerely hope it may sucoeod. In the case of tho loungMens Christian Association, we presume nothing more than a vote of a majority of its members is neces sary to secure the needed reform; and that this will soon be given, there is no reason to doubt. In that of the Mercantile Library Association, the members have already voted overwhelmingly in favor of the measure, but their officers desire, out of courtesy to the Clinton Hall Association, to which they ore so much indebted, to secure also the consent of that I odv- The mattor was laid before the Clinton Hall Trustees last spring, bnt thus far they have taken no definite action upon it. It has been referred by them to a Special Committee, and that committee has not yet reported. The ' chief objection made by those who oppose opening these rooms on Sunday is probably the supposition on their part that in some way it will conflict with the proper observance of the day required by the fourth commandment. It is thought that the practice would involve servile labor on the part of the persons in charge, which ought not to be exacted of them on the Sabbath. Besides this, there may also be a lurking fear lett the attractions of books and newspapers may prove superior to those of the pulpit, and that yonng men may prefer going to the reading-room to going to church. Of course no argument will be of avail with persons so bigoted as to take this narrow view of Christian duty. Men who can draw a distinction between the labors of a sexton and those of a reading-room keeper, or ho can see a worse crime in reading a magazine or a newspaner in publio than in doing the same thing in private, or who suppose that young men will go to church from any other reason than beoause they like to, are not worth arguing with. The young men who want to have the two read ing-rooms we have mentioned opened on Sunday are in the majojity, and they will persevere in the effort until they succeed. If their elders will not consent, they must be overruled, and if the officers whom they have heretofore elected will not comply with their wishes, others must be elected who will It is about time that antiquated prejudice gave way to enlightened sense. THE YEAlt'S WORK. from the X. Y. Tribune. The year has witnessed the completion 01 some of the greatest worKs oi the century, and carried the world forward with grander strides in the pathway of material progress than any other single year in the recollection of the present generation. It has rarely been given to any one man to witness- the realiza tion of t wo schemes so important to the pros perity of all civilized nations as the opening of a canal through the desert and a railway across a whole continent; but that these great events should have been crowded into one hhort year iu indeed a remarkable and signifi cant circumstance. The French engineer, with a rare fombiiiation of enthusiasm and: !iutience, has succeeded in carrying out a pro ect as old as the afjes of the l'haraohs. In this fust land of ours a project that is worth1 arivtliii'fl i never vuiTored to grow old: and men had scarcely begun to, talk about cross Jng the vninbnbitei-1 plains -and mountains; wiih three thousand miles of iron rail befort the pkk and thMshuvel.nomuiouoedcleariiig tht way, and years lit fore the most sanguine dream -J ed of st-tiug the end. the work was ftnlshodi Thus by two wonderful achievements of ongi neciiin the distant Kant is at tho same mo- ihent brought next door to America and next ! door to Europo; the old curronts of trade are changed; and with tho change commerce prospers and life is folt in desert and deoayed countries. These are the chief labors which have been crowned during tho year 1H(!!). Others hardly less important have boon planned out or be gun, as a ranee cut through the sands or Suez, so America is preparing to, cut through the forests and mountains of Darien, aud open a new ocean route which will be easier, safer, and more practically useful than the dangerous path from the Mediterranean to the Arabian sea. The year 1870 will doubtless witness the beginning of this work, and a date by no moans distant may be set for the celebration of its close. By that time perhaps all our Western wildernesses will be crossed by the locomotive and dotted with settle ments; and great American steamship lines will be ready to take their freight at the At lantic and Pacific ports, and pass through the new channel which will bo opened between the two oceans. If few great political changes have marked the year, the principles of political justioe nave made cneering progress in nearly all the great countries of the world, while no coun tries can be said to have gone backward. In Great Britain and France especially the rights of the people have been more fully recog nized, and the despotism of centralized power and privileged castes has been rudely shaken. At home we have made some stops towards the realization of the American ideal of equal rights for oil, and have been choored by a steady improvement in the faithful adminis tration of our laws and the regulation of our finances. We have presented to the world a noble spectacle of a people rising with un broken energies from a devastating war, and by hard work, economy, Intelligence, and the honest rule of a good President, repairing with unparalleled rapidity the ravages of four years ot connict. we, at all events, have abundant reason to look back upon 180!) with gratitude and satisfaction. May the reoord ot the ycor now begun prove equally bright I NATIONAL HOODWINKING. From the If. Y. Tribune. untortunate is the Amenoan newspaper wim n merits tne fatal praise of the .London limes. On the other hand, that organ of what a distinguished Englishman has well named British Philistinism has reason to re joice and be exceeding glad whenever it finds an American to its mind. Such a coinci dence is opt to be that of the spider and the fly. We take nothing from the proper credit of a newspaper which is formidable on its own side of the water. It is the representa tive or the worldly wisdom and the worldly folly of a great metropolis and empire; it is the most compact establishment known in current literature of that high order of intel lectual vice whose business it is to work into daily history the cowardice of the hour. Mr. Bright and Mr. Cobden have described it with equal felicity. Too calculating a student of expediency to delude itself with the notion that it' possesses a conscience, its science is to tell how the wind blows, if such a news paper is stupid, it is most elaborately so; if it is wrong, the chances are that it is altogether wrong root, stem, and branch. Accordingly, at this moment, the Timts cherishes the absurd expediency of mistaking tne temper ot tno American Government and people, lliut temper is neither trivial nor menial, and is most ably, amicably, earnestly set forth in the letter of Secretary Fish. By this letter the Times is advised that the United States, while sincerely desiring to approach the negotiation of the settlement of their claims with an effort to set this vexed ques tion at rest, tuny realize the nature and ex tent of those claims, and await a proposition to open their negotiation rather than beg for one. There is probably nothing so well as sured in the American mind as, first, that we have proper cause of complaint; and 2d, that we can afford to wait. Our grievances, like their guarantees, have only to grow, not with any help of ours, but merely through English neglect. We repeat these truths with emphasis in order that the nrm taith of the people in their diplomatic cause shall not be misrepre sented or misunderstood. Especially and indignantly do we repudiate the nnworthy and un-American plea made by one of our journals to the English Government for the reopening of negotiations at Washington. Our people, remarks this authority, "would have no cause for suspecting that their agent had been hoodwinked if the arrangements were discussed and settled at their own doors. Though it is common for all peoples, French as well as English, and English as well as American, to suspect that their agents may be overreached, we believe that no nation has ever erected its suspioion into a positive plea for being indulged by some other nation anxious to outwit it. The petition to have our people humored be cause their representatives are not wise, or those whom they represent are foolishly sus ceptible, would sound better in London than here, bnt would in neither place be sensible. When England concedes to us it will be with an indubitable recognition of equality in every point of view, and for her own advantage as well as ours. It will be with av wholesome sense of what is due to a nation which has fought and conquered those causes which pro duced the Alabama claims, and whose cause is too sufelv invested to be put in jeopardy by a quarrel. BILVER WARE, ETO. SOLID SILVER WARE. USEIUL AND VALUABLE PRESENTS TO WIFE, FAMILY, OR FKIENOS, WM, WILSON & SON'S own make. I Old Stand, Cor. Fifth and Cherry Sts.J laieimrp Also, A TJo. PniLAOELPIIlA. 1 riated Ware, DRUQ8, PAINTS, WO. JJOBBBT, BBOEMAKSB A at).; Corner FOURTH and RACE 8ta.! i ' PHILADELPHIA. . . , I WHOLESALE DRUCCISTt, . . , Importer and Manofacturriri of . White Lead and Colored Paiiita, Putt' . .'. .' Varniibea, Etc", . , " . ,. AtiGiNTti 1HH THK QSLKHKATED ' F H E N O M UNO PAINTI. Dealers tot Custu and rxiusuineri .applied at towunt priota mt WINE8 AND LIQUORS. HER MAJESTY CHAMPAGNE. DuriTcri dL liUsson. oik QftTTTir lrixWT kTUIMi'T I I 215 SOUTH FB0NT STllEliiT. . THE ATTENTION OF THE TKADK 18 solicited to the following rrrr Choice Wine, etc., for !!. . siRBObTii rKonr btrkft. 1111 AMPAfiNKH.- Asnnt for hpr Mitientr. Poo d lMontobelln, Carte Bloun, Carte Hlnnrli, mi J Olnrlp rtllr nvnna ID r-HKOlll.t mm vin imiwrim, jTi.rvirc n,n Co.. of Alim-noe. tSDnrklim Mwwllo od KrllNK VINKh. HH ! KH1KS. K. hailoinh. Amontillado, 'fopas. Val MiiihiKkN f nn in inn. rsmim Minn kkhtt. letta, l'aleanil (iolrien jtar, 1.1 ova, oto. CI AHK1S. Prtunia Aine A Cle Montierrand and Bor- 1 ' 1 k w 1 M vmnn va hn kmi. v & b u. mn ljrnwn. dentii, Cir't and Nnutotne Mine f II N ' M Mln, Nwnn - IlKANDllUS. llennesaey, Ulara, uupuy a uo. Tanmu vintage. nAKHTAlllH A McGAUIj, Hoa. US wajlhut ana n unn . Dtreeta. Importer of BRANDIK8, WINKS, GIN, OLIVK OIL, F.TO., AND COMMISSION MERCHANTS For the aale of PURK OLD RYE, WUKAT, AND BOURBON WHIS- OAKSTATKS' OLIVK OIL AN INVOICE v of the aboTe for aale by 8 2R2p5 Noa. 196 WALNUT and HI OKANtTK Hta. QENT.'S FURNISHING OOOD8. DAT BNT SllOULDER-BBAM BHIET MANUFACTORY, AND GENTLEMEN'S FURNISHING STORE. PERFECTLY FITTING SHIRTS AND DRAWER' made from measurement at verv short notloe. All other articles of UlkNTLKMJkN'S DUES GOODS In full variety. wintiiHni BK as ju., Ill No. 7Q CUBrtNUT 8treet IKY OU f 2 25 SHIRT, TRY OCR ta-80 BHIRT. TRY OUR 2 7e 8UIRT. TRY OUR $3 00 SHIRT. TRY OCR BOYS' SHIRTS. Thoy are the oheapeat and best fitting SHIRTS told. On trial will nuke yon our customer. T. L. JACOBS & CO., 11 17 2m rp No. 1236 OH ESNUT Street 11 M I) A Y 1 K 12 S 13 1 T S roa GENTLEMEN. J. W. SCOTT & CO., No, 814 CUES NUT Street, Philadelphia, a 6 875rp oar doors below Continental Hotel, PRESENTS FOR THE HOLIDAYS. A FULL ASSORTMENT OF . Gentlemen's Mourning Wrappers. GENTS' FURNISHING STORE, MRS. 8. A. V.RANSON. No. 140 booth EIUUTH Street. Wrappers made to order. M 7 tnthalm FURNITURE. RICHMOND & CO., FIRST-CLASS FURNITURE W AREROOMS, No. 45 SOUTH SECOND STREET, EAST SIDE. ABOVE OHESNUT, 11 6 U PHILADELPHIA. JJITTTON ak IHcCOIVEL.! FURNITURE WAKKKOUHS, No. 800 MARKET STREET. PARLOR, DINING-ROOM, and CHAMBER FUR. NITURK, the Lateet Style, and beat Manufacture. , Also, FEATHER BEDS and MATTRESSES, 10 mwfSm LOOKING CLASSES, ETO. E BTABLI8IIED 1 TU A. 8. ROBINSON, FRENCH PLATE LOOKING-GLASSES, ENGRAVINGS, BEAUTIFUL CHROMOB, PAINTINGS, Manufacturer of all kind of LOOKING-GLASS, PORTRAIT, AND PICTURE FRAMES, NO. 910 OHESNUT STREET, I ii Firth door above the Continental, PhflA, OURTAIN9 AND SHAPES. jf H. C A R R Y L Eas resumed the Curtain Business with his Sons at No; 723 CHESKUT STREET, Two doors above his Old St ind. CURTAIN I ECORATIONS, of the newest fabrics. ELKOANT GILT and ROSEWOOD COIIMWE3. TAfBKLH, BRING tS, WINDOW bllAUES, LACE rritTA iNS, from tho plainest to tho most elaoorute aud expiuHlve. RAILHOAD SUPPLIES. w. H. CARRY L & SONS, No. 723 OHESNUT STREET, 11 26 81 Two doors anore our Old Stand FLAVORINO EXTRACTS. ivii1 ji.:im;i:ii-v FLAVORING EXTRACT3 Are warranted equal to auj mad. VANIILA. . OKANOK. LUMUi. ,V.7ln - pTnkapple, um'F-k almonds, CI1NNAMUN. Prepared at Am Mill btTRor's Drupr Store, No. S North 8KOOND Street. I Potot for H L?1 PcK for BARl-OWB INDIGO BLUK, he best article eius i.imnee. no mwuuirv j PIANOS. ALUKKOHT, RIFKI'H A (SCHMIDT, M AMIlVArVl'ITItHhH flV FIR8T-i l. AS PIANO KOKTE8. Full gnarantee and iiiiMlrTste priuea. ' 8, . WAHMUXIMH, No. Bh ARCH Street. fT!T' '-PliinoB, rVt.10. Taylor A Parley's, also Oarhart a a:..4V,.....'. ......... ,... al nnwarda. W ll.l.l A Mil. ' I) i n ii n i. u i o .1111 w . ...... KIM HH(, Ro. KIIS a tvl II Direw ana rxrirniii ntreet. tL.r"J. T L.EOAL. NOTICES. IN T1IR COURT OF COMMON PLEAS FOU A THK t'OI'M e r'llll.AHii.i.rrii. , i i ii a h I Mil A hOIII KK. Iiv Ii. r uaAt Irion 1. eto.. vs. Vil.llAM 11 tglllKK. Deouu-but 1'erui, iH1. Ha In 1 InTiie. , ' ' i ii l iiiinu. W Hnntre. the resnendunt. 11 . ' i 1 rr v u will iilesse Uka uotjee that a rule has beep fnan'fd on at lliealMive eaae to sliv imusk, Ii any you i t', vliy a di i.roe a vinculo malil nun-i i-liould not be ilai therein, h turoable HA U'ltDAV, Jaouar) I, IKi .at llio'eliKk A. M., personal srviot tmviur li I on a c.i nt ol ur auaenv.. I U". AUFuurri, lii.uiwlt" Attorney fur hbcllaat. HIPPING. LOUILLARD8 STEAMSHIP liltIK FOR ikria 3V 13 W Y O H IC. 8A1UNO ON TtlKSDATS, THURSDAYS, AND SATURDAYS, AT NOOlf. On and a'ter lieoembar 1ft, ttarat4 will b lieoau pr () , l0 per loti or , oenU p option. Advance char cA"hrd at office on pier. FreUlLt received at all timtaon oovered wharf. JOHN r. OHT IMr l NflHTII YVII1UVU4 N. B.Fitra rata on email packages Iron, metal, eta. to. I M I ' FOR LIVERPOOL ANlt TFf OUKFN8TOWN -""" of m . li--ijT Ntoamoi are appointed to nail a (ol- w- low. enrol Washington, Rntnrrtar, January t, IKTa, t P.M. Citvofr.ewYork.rtAttinlHV.JfinaarvH.lt1 A. M m a 1 City of lUlt.imnrn, via Kalttax, TitcsHnj, Jan. iLli Noon. City of Bnt..n. Satnrtley, Jan. 1R, I P. M. City or Mroomyn, riattmlny, .Ian XI, M.M. Ann ei-C'h fttu-r-eetllnff K&ttirdav mnA jklttrntll TiimiIav from Pier 46, Koitb Hiver. ltIMt1IF t-ABKAllK. PT TU MAIt, KTKAMKB iUn.IMI KVrilT MTTTIirMY. 1'aviilile in Cold. I'av&Mn fn llnr.... FIRM VA KIN tlllO I RTK.KKAtiK .ti To I nndon ii'5 To lndon 44 To Parie lift To Parii 41 rAKKAtia. T TRK ItlUIIlI KTKAMKn, Via HALIFAX. KII1HT CAlllN. 8TKKRAI1K. Piv.Ma in ClolJ hnhU in Mverpool H Liverpool f Haliiax 2tl Haltt.i ta St. Jnlin'a, N. F - ( I Bt. .lohn'a. N. F., ) ny nranon Meamer....) ty Kranca Steamer....! . FUMHll.nl also fir- ri- fn o Havre, llimhnii. Itremon. eto , at ret-oced rite. 1 ii ki-t. can he bonrht here at moderate rate hv naranaa Frlf hina to aeud for their friends. lor further pnrtionlara apply at the Domrtanv'a Oflluoa. JOHN li. DALK, fnt. No. 1ft KROADWAV, N. yZ or to O'ltONNKI.I, A FAULK, Atr.nta. 4 ft TSo. 4iiTCH K8NUT Street, Philadelphia. ONLY DIRECT LINK to FRANCE THK r.FNRR.W. TR A NR ATF. a WTTfl KJrwrrj COMPANY'S MAII, 8TKAMSI11PH lr i rt KhN NKW YORK. AND UAV KK, UALtlNU AT UK y ST. The anlnndid new vessels nn this favorite mute for the Continent will euil from Pier No. 00, North river, every PRIOR OK PA8SAOR In gold (Including wine), TO bHFSr OR H AYR K, First Cabin $11 1 Nerond Cabin tiS if ra n. in, fTnoludina- railwav tirketm furnished on hoard 1 First Cabin $146 tieoond Cabin tU$ J bpae steamers do not oarry steerage pasaensera. Medical atttidauce free of charge. American tiavellers aoino- to or rt-turnino- from the eon. tinrntof Kurope, by taking the steamrrsol this line avoid unnecessary risks from tranHit by Kngiish railways and crowing, the channel, hewirif-s saving time, trouble, and ex pense. UWHHK MAUKKUII, Agent, Pin. til KKtlA MW 4. Y, Kew York. For pasange In Philadelphia, apply at Adams Kxpreaf utinpuuy, to h. u iMr, H. Ii. ia;$ No, 830 CHKSNU T Street. PHILADELPHIA, RICHMOND, ' r-lfr-'-iAM """fOLU rt TKAMMHIP LINK. rI'EJj I HROllfiH KRIMC.Iir AIR LINK TO JiCaVlBK WUUI'H AND VTKSF. K V r. iv i N a. TU KUAV , At noon, from 1IKST WHAKF ahnvnl M ABKKT Mrci't. THKOUC.H K Al BS to all Dolnta In Nnrth isit Rk Carolina via Hpubuard Air l ias Kailmail.oonueotin. at rortinoutri. aud to l.nubtiurir. Vs.. Lnn..... ami th West, via Virginia and Tenneasee Air Line and Ricbmood a.'d lisnville Hailrnscl. rrp i ht H AMU.f l mi ruin-, andtakaa at IJIhKk HVIKh THAN ANV Ol'UKK LIMK. mend It to ti.e public aa the moat desirable medium for carrying every desuription of freight. 'I re reirulantv. saimv. sod cbeVDns. of this ronta aim. ro t; large lur uuiuiuiriuu, urajrage, or anj .apensO OC transfer. MremnMps msnrea at in. lowest rate. Freight received Caily. WILLIAM P. OLTDW A OO , No. 12 WHARVKN and Pier 1 N. WHARVK8. W. V. PMRTKH. Agent at K ohruoort and Uitf Point. T. P. OKQWKLL A CO.. Agenie at Norlelk H mrs i, n&w ExruKss line to fjM(r'lJ7 Alexandria. Georgetown, and Washington, D. afiaaaaaoM' O., via Cbt-eapesae and Delaware Uanal, with cvuum nous at AiezaDOna irorr. tne most direct route for IjnihlinrK. Bristol. Knoinlle. Nashville. Ualton. uii Y,a houtbwfst. Meaniers leave ree-nlar Ir ever Raturrfa at hmhi fMim the first wharf above Market street. trembt received daily. ....... V1LLIAM p. oltdr a oo No. ii North and Smith wharves'. I1TPK A TYIJfR. Airenrs. at Guonratiiwn af. K.l DUIDGK A CO., Agents at Alexandria. 61 1 NOTICE. FOR NEW YORK. VIA PK.I.AWAKK and RARITAN uanal HXPHKMS hTK AM BOA r COMPANV. ii.el HK.AI'khT AND OUICKRNT water oonunonioa. tkm between Philadelphia and New York. hteiiniera leave daily from Unit wharf bolow Market ' atreot, t'hiladeliihia.and foot of Wall street, New York. Uoocls forwarded by all the llm a running out of New York, North, Kast, and West, free of ooiuiuiseinn. terms. W II. 1. 1 AM f. (;LYDK A CO., Agent. rreurbt received ana forwarded on acuominedatitut no. Ua. DICianaKK Avenue. Philadelphia. JAM KM HAND, Agent. 18 No. Hn WALL Street. New York. NOTICE FOR NEW YORK. VIA Delaware and Raritan Canal. SWIF I'SURH l TRANSPORTATION COMPANY DKH. k ItH AND BW lrT'M'KK LINK. The knaineasol these line, will be resumed on and after the Htb of March. Far freietita. which will he Lalran rua oeonuuodatinc teruia, apply to , . W. 01. HAIKU UU., 8 95 ' No. laa South W harvea. ENQINE8, MACHINERY, ETO. PENN STEAM ENGINE AND S3. vyTtnil.F.ll Wiiuu u -NKibiv a i truv "PRACTICAL AND TUKORKTIOA5, I KNUINKKRS. MACHINISTS. KOILKli. ii. fal.fi KT.IPVIIMITIIU mA a'lhlTairii.'ba I ; for many years been In successful operation, and been ex clusively engaged in Dunning and repairing Marine ana River Enginea, higb.and low preasnre. trun Hoilera, Water lanaa, rropeiiora, .to. .10., respectfully oner tueir ser vices to the public as being fully prepared to oontract for engines of all sties, Marine, River, aud Stationary; having eels of patterns of different sires, are prepared to eascutw order, with ouick despatch. Every deecriotion of nattara. making made at the shortest notioe. High and Ixiw prae aure r ine Tubular and Cylinder Hoilera of the beat Penn sylvania Luaroiml iron, rorgingaof aiiaizesand Kinila, Iron and Brs-fca Castings of all deacriptious. Roll Turning Strew Cutting, and all other work oonneoted with th above business. , Urswina. and SDnclfl cations for all work don. at the ertablisbment free of charge, and work guaranteed. The subscriber have ample wharf dock-room for repair, of boata, wbere tbey can he in perfect safety, and are pro vided with shears, blocks, falls, etc. etc., for raising heavy or light weight. OAiHnu.nmnit, JOHN P. LKVY, 81 BKAOH and PALMER Street. SOUTHWARK FOUNDRY, FIFTH AND WASHINGTON Streets. PniLADKLPITfA. M Eh KICK A SONS, ENGINEERS AND MACHINISTS. mauufacUire nigh and Low Pressure Sterna Engine, (or Land, Rivur, and Marlue Service. iioiier, uasometers, Tanks, iron Boats, eto. Castings ol all klmls, either Iron or Hra. Iron Frame Kotift for Oaa Work. WorkBhoDS. and Railroad Siationa, eta itetxiru ami tias Macniner? or the latest ana most Improved couHtruutiuu. Siifiar, Saw, and OrlBt Mills, Vaouura Pans, Oil Steam Trains, Defecators, Filters, Pumptug Kn- r.verv neaenptitin oi rmrnauuii tnttcuinorv, bum. giiK'n, etc. ooie AeeiitM tor r. cineux s ouirar nuuiiur Appa ratus, Ni-Bnijth 's Patent Steam Oauimer, and Anpln. wall A WooImoj's Patent Centrifugal Sugar Drain ing Machines 8o4 QIRARD TUDE WORKS. JOHN II. MUKPITY SC BROS. ilBBuranturora vf . Wr.uahl Ir.a Plp.( Kla . PUILADELPOIA, PA. . WORKS. rtVBNfV.TinjlI. and ILUKKT trsf. e OFKIOK, Ml ffa. 4 J North FIKTII HIr.t. FIRE AND BURGLAR PROOF 8AFE J. WATSON & BON, Of U. let. firm of EVANS it WATSON, FIUK AND BUKGLAIt-PKOOF , H A F E STOXIE, NO. 63 BOUT1I FOURTH STKEKT, ' t KK A lew doors shove Obeeoot St., Phllada Tlltlfs I llItlM !! iiiuisi:: A V bat U nicer for a Christmas present than flu. SINKING CANARY and a BKAUTIPUL 0AG Cheapur than any place In the city. No. Ui Noitu SIXTH Street, U jg tm Odd rellovra' Hall. - IV. A. 1IUXUY. CAMUF.L PMITII & CO., No. 4 8. 8RVENTH !S0f.V... tiTK-AM AND flA8 UTTKHS AND "H.IiiriHKrlS. Tube, Uttiujiaand itrana Work j onstaatly on bund. ... a a . AUeork promptly attended to. .,. 7alvunirud iul. for Cemetery I oU furnished. II 11 Sim M: "XT" Ml