THE DAILY EVEfllKQ TICLKQRAPH IIILADELrillA, MONDAY, JANUARY 17, -1870. " i t ..;. a It I. I'll t tre m ; . !!-.? . tj-'.S :, IK arS.v ... tt; ot i tO; 'nil 1 CKAHESrC AT1I3. T, L it Life, D Hi "Tru6 Story" ot Hei one Up in tb Btowe Style. Tbia tb clever production of nn anony mous English mugaine writer, who has neiced the oocasion of the Hyron-Stowe Boan dal to exercise his power of satire, to display his knowledge of fchakenpeare, and to show " hill wit, by torturing the words of ihe great r. poet Into nelf-aoousationa of secret crime. It -.- baf alway been supposed that the 'domestio nt "Wiltiam Shftkeirooare ' and Anne Hathaway were of the ploasantesit iert; and whether or not the reader of tnis otvcnure re- - . j . . 1 a i main- of ' that ; opinion, iney wi ;cenaiuij smile at the plausibility of the author's theory to the contrary, i- It ifl amusing aa ft literary C". curiosity, and the critical reader will find in . it enough merit to condone for the erroneous T. imputation as to the motives of the author of tho'Trae Story of Lord and Lady Byron." ' Although it cannot be denied that! the im proved taste and higher .moral sense of the ' ? ' more educated classes, both in .England and America, have completely driven the plays of ' ' William Bhakenpeare from the stage, yet this advance is unfortunately more than counter- balanced by the enormous increase of cheap litiona of his works, daily taming from a .corrupt and venal press; thus bringing the nnreilectiBg populace and guileless youth of both countries again nnder the power of that brilliant and seductive genius, from vfhich it was hoped they bad escaped. ' . ; In order still further to ensnare and allure, the thoughtless, these cheap editions are too often garnished with biographical notices of the author's life, described in garish and at tractive language; and the editors (of these dangerous works, not content with ' exulting to the skies a genius only too likely to en chant and enthral the unwary, endeavor to blind the judgment of the unthinking reader bytmblushingly repeating as truth the ful some ' adulation" lavished upon Mr. Shake speare by the boon companions of the tavern wherein he was accustomed to seek (oblivion of the dark thoughts by which his jsoul was haunted, in the wildest excesses of imadden ing intoxication, ; v i . " J . Thus it is tipon the authority of his fellow rioters that we' are . repeatedly told that he was a -, "dcntie spirit, from whose pen 1 Large streams of honey and sweet nectar flow.'' i -' -"The man whom Nature's self had made Te moeK herself, ana thud id inmate i , . , With kingly counter, uudor nilmlc shad. Our pleasant Willy. I Truth to imitate we shall presently' see wit(h fell intent. Again, it has been sauL "A gentler Bnepherd nowhere may be found." 5 Such is the magio of genius, even when the " life of its posseasor ia known to have been one of lewd and unhallowed riot, that it is a ' fact that the poet's personality, fatel andhap- piness have had an 'interest for the whole civilized world, which we will venture to say was tinparallelled. . It is within, the writer's recol lection how, in the obscure mountain town where she spent her early days, the life of William Shakespeare had penetrated, and the belief in the gentleness of "fancy's child" was s universal. . t 1 ? J ' All this while it does not appear to occur to the thousands of unreflecting readers that they are listening merely to the story of his fellow-mummers, and that the one witness whose evidence would be best worth having lias never spoken at all. Nay, morej this wit ness, this unhappy but devoted wife, who was h being possessed of an almost supernatural power of moral divination, and a grasp of th very highest and most comprehensive things, that made her lightest opinions singularly : impressive, has been assumed to have been unworthy of her- accomplished husband; and the artless Mr. Moore, in Ms life of the lately-unmasked demon,; Lord Byton, thus alludes to this angelic (- woman: By whatever austerity of temper 1 or habits the poets Dante and Milton may have drawn npon themselves such a fate, it might be expeoted that the 'gentle Shakespeare' (would have stood exempt from the common calamity of his 1 brethren. But amongst the very few facts of his life that have been transmitted to ns,there is none more clearly proved than the unhappiness of his marriage.". . : ! It was of this one witness, whose faithful lips were sealed by affection, and of her terri ble existence while her husband was rioting .in London, shut up in the lonely country home made hideous to her by her knowledge of the dark and guilty secret hidden within its walls, that the poet was evidently thinking when he wrote the awful lines: "But that I am forbid ' 11 To tell the er4ts of my prison house, J,,' I conld a tale unfold, wUoie MgUtent word . , Would harrow up my soul;" . " . but she remained silent, even to her own pa rents, ' whose feelings she magnanimously spared. ... -j . - The veil which has hitherto covered this dork history may now be withdrawn. The time has come when the truth may be told. All the aotora in the scene have long disap peared from the stage of mortal existence, and passed, let us have faith to hepe, into a world where they would desire to expiate their faults by instituting did not the lapse of time unfortunately render all soientiuo inves tigation useless a coroner's inquest vpon tht remains which, several centuries . earlier, would have been found beneath a 1 certain crab and a certain mulberry tree, in the vici nity of Stratford-upon-Avon. From the height at which he might have been happy as a most successful dramatiut, and the husband of an almost divine woman, Mr. Shakespeare fell into the depths of Beoret criminal homicide, assisted,- in the latter part of his career, by a blood relation discovery must nave been utter rum ana expulsion from civilized society. t From, henceforth this guilty, (damning t secret became tne ruling lorce ot His lite . holding him with a morbid fascination, yet filling him with remorse and anguish and in Bane dreadof detection. . His various friends, seeing that he was wretched, pressed mar riage upon him. . ' t in an hour of reckless desperation, he pro- osed to Anne Hathaway. The world well . aows that , Mr. Shakespeare had the gift of i expression, and will not be surprised that he wrote a very beautiful letter. It ran thus: "To the celestial, my soul's idol, the most beatified Anne Hathaway. In her excellent white bosom, these: "Doubt that the stars are fire.- uoubt that tne sun aota movt r " Doubt truth to be a liar, j But never doubt I love. O dear Anne, I am ill at those numbers;, I have not art to reckon my groans; but that I love thee best, O! most best, believe it. Thine ever, most dear lady, while this machine is to him. - Wilijam Shakespeare." The woman who hadalready learned to love fcira foil t once Into the nre. Ttct answer was a frank, onUipokon avowal of het love for him giving fcerself to him heart and hand. The tresure 'of affection he bad secured was like a vision of a lost heaven to a soul in boll. But he could follow his own maxim, he could ! ; "Look like the Innocf nt flower, : Pot t the serpent nntler It.'' ! Before the world, therefore, and to his in timates, he was the sucoessfnl fiance, con scious all the while of the deadly eocret that lay cold at the bottom of his heart. ' Not all at once did the full knowledge of the dreadful reality into which she had en tered come upon the young wife. Shs kn0 vaguely, from the wild avowal of the first hours of their marriage, that there was a dreadful socret of guilt; that Mr. Shako spearo's Soul was torn with agonies of re morse. In one of her moonlight walks near the crab-tree, which, from Mr. Shakespeare's being so i frequently seen near,,-it, tradition, .though naans picious of the dreadful truth has connected with his name, there came an hour of revela tion n hour when, in a manner which left no kind of room for doubt, she beheld her J husband interring tne corpse oi one oi inose unfortunate minor playwrights, whom he had a morbid passion for destroying, after purloin ing the plots of their inferior dramas, which his genius then rendered immortal, and saw the full depth of the abyss of infamy ahich her marriage was expected to oover, and un derstood that she was expected to be the Tloak and the accomplice of this villany. It was to their lonely country house in Warwick shire that the victims were one by one enticed by him, when he returned there from the wild orgies of his tavern life in London; and there can be no doubt that a dark suspioion of the dreadful truth had flashed across the mind of the unhappy liobert Qreene, when he wrote his dying exhortation to his friends, warning them against the "painted monsters of whom Shakespeare's troop was composed: "Yes, trust them not; for there is among them an upstart crow, ' beautified with our feathers, that with his tiger's heart wrapped in a player's hide,", eto; and even Dr. Johnson, though he oppeara to have been too careless or too obtuse to penetrate farther into the mystery, admits that "he lied to London from the terror of a criminal prosecution.", The hasty marriage of a youth scaroely Bineteen with a woman of twenty-six is thus explained. He required an accomplice, a cloak; a gentle, uncomplaining wife to dwell in retirement in the lonely country house this London roisterer was compelled to maintain at a distance from the scene of his dramatio triumphs. -- ' We have said that the young wife now be held the full depths of the infamy her mar riage was to cover. It was then that he bade her in his own forcible and terrible words: ' "look thou flown Into thlB den And see a fearful sight of blood and death. , All on a heap like to a slaughtered lamb 1 in this deteated, dark, blood-drinking pit, , . . this fell devouring receptacle As hateful as OocytiiB' mlaty month. Look for thy reward i ' Among the nettles at the elder tree 1 Which overhangs the mouth of this same pit" The evidences of an agonized conscience are so thickly strewn throughout his works, that we might almost quote at random: "I. as his hant That should atralnst his murderer shut the door, Mot bear the knife myself." t ' -"Oh. niT offense Is rank. It smells to Heaven. It hath the primal eldest curse upon 1L " i "Now doth he feel '' His secret murder sticking on his hands." ; - . . , i "Better be the dead Whom we, to gain our peace, have sent to peace.". '.' "And all onr yesterdays, Have lighted fools to dusty death." "What If this cursed hand Were thicker than Itself with brother's blood." . oh, wretched state, j Oh, bosom black as death," eta etc. j Any one who reads the tragedies of -1ftc- beth, ' Hamlet, 2 "ilu$ Andronicus, eto.j with uus story in nis mind, will see that it is true Many women would ' have been utterly crushed by such' a disclosure: some would have fled from him immediately, and exposed and denounced tne crime. Mrs. Knakespeare did neither. , She would neither leave her nusband nor betray nun; nor would she for one moment justify his sin; and hence eame thirty-two years of convulsive struggle, in which sometimes for a time the good angel appeared to gain ground, and then, the evil one returned with sevenfold vehemence. ' " His eldest daughter, Susanna, for whom his preference is so plainly shown in his will, became the partner of his guilt. Mr. Shake speare argued his case with her, 1 with his noble wife, and with himself, with . all the sophistries of his powerful mind: ' " " "Do what you will, to you It doth belong ; Yourself to pardon of self-doing crime." ' 8 " Tis better to be vile, than vile esteemed." . "J will atqvaintance ttranylt, and look strange." ;' "No more be grieved at that which thou.hast done . Roses have thorns, and silver fountains mud ; Cloud and eclipses stain both moon and sun, , And loathsome canker Uvea In sweeteBt bud. All men make faults, and even I in this, , . . f :.. Authorizing thy trespass with compare. Myself corrupting, salving thy amiss, Excusing thy sins more than thy sins are." ' These devilish sophistries, though unable to shake his lofty-minded wife, were ruinous to the unfortunate child of sin, born with a curse upon her, over whose wayward nature Airs, bbakespeare watched with a mother s tenderness; though the task was a difficult one, from the strange, abnormal propensity to murder inherited by the object of her cares, liut tnongu lie could tnus warp this young soul, his divine wife followed him through all his sophistical reasonings with keener reason. She besought and implored mm in uie name oi nis better nature and by all the glorious things he was capable of being and doing; and she had just power enough to convulse and agonize, but not power enough to Buuaue. ...... ' ,i These thirty-two years, during which Mrs. Shakespeare was. struggling to bring her husband back to his better self, were a series of passionate convulsions. Towards the last she and her husband saw less and less of each other, and he came more decidedly under evu lnnuences, anu seemed to acquire a sort oi nnirea to ner. "If ere I loved her, all that love Is gone; My heart to her but as In guest-wise sojourned." j He had tried his strength with her fullv: he had attempted to confuse her sense of right and wrong, and bring her into the ranks of tnose convenient women who regard mar. riage as a sort of friendly alliance to cover murder on both sides." When her husband described. to her the Continental cities where midnight assassinations were habitual things. and the dark marrhtaes in which complaisant couples mutually agreed to form the cloak for each other's murders, and gave her to under stand that in this way alone could she have a peaoeful and friendly life with him, the simply Bald, "Master Shakespeare, I am too truly tby mend to do tnis. Mr. Shakespeare's treatment of his wife during the sensitive periods that preceded the births of her three children was always marked by paroxysms or unmanly brutality, for which the only postiible chnrity on her Edit was the BU(ipoHition of insanity. He imself alludes to it, with his usual snpWu try, where he speaks of "his eye in a fine frenzy rolling." Howe aheds a significant light on these periods.' by telling nn that about tnotte time tShnkespeare was drunk day after day w ith lien Jonson, Marlowe, etc. A day or two after tho birth ; of her first child, Susanna, Mr. Hhakenpeare came suddenly into Mm. Shakespeare's room, and told her that her mother, good Mistress Hathaway, was dead. A day or two after the birth of the second child, Hamnet, he came with Mill greater suddenness into her room, and told her that her father, the vene rable Master Hathaway, was dead; and a day or two after the. birth of the third child, Ju dith, he came with greater suddenness than ever into the chamber, and harrowed her feel- mgH by announcing the death of worthy Mas ter John a Combe. , Never has more divine strength of love ex isted in a woman. Her conduct in these try ing circumstances displays the breadth of Mrs. Shakespeare s mind, and, above all, her cleat divining, moral discrimination; never mistaking wrong for right in the slightest degree; fully alive to the criminality of Mr. Shakespeare and his guilty daughter's murl derous proceedings; yet with a mercifulness tbat made allowance for every weakness and pitied every sin. ' On one occasion, after their removal to Kew Place, sue came npon him. Bitting with the partner of his guilt,, beneath tne fatal mulberry tree. Bne went' up to them, and he, looking down upon the grave among the nettles, with a sarcastic smile, said: wnen will tnose tnree down tnere meet us again " , j ; ; bhe answered, "JSot in Heaven, I fear." 1 During all this trial, atrange to say. her be lief that the good in Mr. Shakespeare would finally conquer, remained unshaken. " She forgave him even the cruelty with which he strove to moke her ridiculous in the eyes of the world, - by his constant allusions to her being older than himself, and his false and unmanly attacks npon her disposition: "Too old, by Heaven ! still let the woman take -An elder than herself." . ; : . , ; "Crabbed age and youth cannot live together." "Age, I do abhor thee t ; Age, 1 do defy thee." ' r "O spite I too old to be engaged to young!" ' " "Curster than she i why, 'tis Impossible!" "As old as Sibyl, and as curst and shrewd r As Socrates' Xantippe, or a worse.", ' All these and more ribald and unmanly in sults and obscenity fell at her pitying feet unheeded. It has been thought by some friends who have read the proof-sheets of the foregoing pages, mat uie aumor suouia give more spe citically her authority for these statements. The great-great-grandmother of the present writer was one of those pilgrim mothers, de voted companion oi certain less widely known but surely not less deserving pilgrim fathers. who were despatched at the expense of an effete mother country to assist in colonizing me uTiiiBu possessions oi tne American con tinent. The writer's venerable ancestor and namesake, Mistress H B. Cherstow, had occasion, before quitting her native land, to visit Warwickshire, and the circumstances which led her there at that time originated a friendship and correspondence with Mistress bhokespeare, wnich was always regarded as one oi tne greatest acquisitions of that visit. bhe tnere received a letter from Mrs. Shake speare, indicating that she wished to have Borne private, confidential eommunication npon important' subjects, and inviting her for that purpose to spend a day with her at her country-seat near btratford. ' " i Mrs. II B. Cherstow went, and spent a day with 'Mrs.' Shakespeare -alone, j and the object of the invitation was explained to her. Mrs. Shakespeare was in such a state of health that her physician, worthy Dr. Hall (the hus band of the - abnormal offspring "born in .bitterness and nurtured in convulsion"), had warned her that she had very little; time to live. . She was engaged in. those duties and retrospections, which every thoughtful person finJLa necessary when coming deliberately and wnn open eyes to tne boundaries of this mortal life, . " t . - I At that period some cheap performances of Mr. Shakespeare's plays at the Globe Theatre were in contemplation, intended to bring his works efore the eyes of the masseg. Under these circumstances, some of Mrs Shakes- Eeare'e friends had proposed , the question to er' whether she had not a reroimbiUtu to jsocicty for the truth; whether she 'did right to., aiipw tnose dramas to gain influence over the popular mind, by giving a silent consent to wnat she knew to be utter falsehoods, - i . Mrs. " Shakespeare's whole life had been passed in the most heroio self-abnegation and self -sacrifice, and she had now to consider whether one more aot of self-denial was not required Of her before leaving this world namely, to declare the absolute truth, no AA A J A - matter at wnai expense to ner feelings. . ' For this reason it was her desire to recount the whole history to a person wholly out of the sphere of theatrical or local 'feelings, which might be supposed to influence those belonging to the county, or to the profession in life in which the events really happened; in order that he might she helped by such a person's views in making up an opinion as to her own duty. ; .... The interview had almost the solemnity of a aeatn-bed avowal. Airs, bna&espeare stated the facts which have beea embodied above. and gave to the writer's revered ancestor- the first o bear the henceforth immortal name of H B. Cherstow a brief memo randum ' of the whole, with the dates affixed The words and actions of Mrs. Shakespeare during the last part of her life seemed more like those of a blessed being, detached from earth, than those of an ordinary mortal. What impressed Mrs. H B. Cherstow more strongly than anything else, was Mrs. Shakespeare's conviction that - Mr. Shake speare was -now a redeemed spirit,' and that he looked back with shame and regret on tho immense destruction of human life of whioh he had been guilty; and that, if he ' could speak or act in the case, he would desire to prohibit the representation of ' those danger ous dramas, the seductive poetry of which ha had made the vehicle ef his morbid love of slaughter, and unworthy passion for bury ing his fellow-playwrights beneath, the mul berry tree. Mrs. Shakespeare's etrongly philosophical mind had become ' satisfied that Mr. Shake speare . was one of those unfortunately con stituted persons in whom the balance - of .na ture is bo critically hung that it is always in danger of dipping towards insanity,; and that in certain periods of his life he was bo far nnder the influence of mental disorder as not to be fully responsible for his actions. She went over, with a brief and clear analy sis, the history of his whole lif e as she had thought it out in the lonely musings of her widowhood. She went through the , uiisuian-i sgement of his infancy how he was allowed to mnle and puke in his nurse's arms; of his neglected childhood, whining, and creeping like snail unwillingly to school; yet so 1 preco cious in deceit, as when there to show a Shining morning face. Sh sketched boldly and cleariy the mixture of ferocity and hypo criny characterizing the 'nterral life of the youth in his father's slanght? r-honne, where, as oui auisrey tuil.i us. "he exercised his father's trade, and whoa he killed a calf Would do it in high style, and make a speeoh." She dwelt on the accoant given by Davis of his being "much given to all nnluckiness in stealing venison and rabbits, and showed how habits which, with less susceptible mr ana coarser Btrengtn or nature, were tolerable for his companions, were deadly to him; unhinging his nervous system, which Bhe considered might have beon Bllll further unhinged, when Sir Luey, whose venison he stole, "often had him whipped, and some times imprisoned," and she recalled to the listener's mind how the same chron ioler adds, "but his revenue was treat " quoting his own terrible description of the state of mind to whioh he had gradually been brought by unrestrained indulgence in every description of criminality and excess: Art thou not sorry for these heinous deads 1 " "Aaron. , - Ay, that I had not done a thousand more, Even now I curse the day (and yst I think Few come within the compaxs of my curse) Wherein I did not some notorious ill : At kill a man or, tlx atvite hie dath,n Mrs. II B. Cherstow was so impressed and excited by the whole scene and the recital, that she beggd for two or three days to delibe rate before forming an opinion. She took the memorandum with her to London, and gave a day or two to the consideration of the sub ject.. She wrote to Mrs. Shakespeare that while this act of consideration for the morals of the people of England did seem to be called for, yet if these dreadful disclosures were published during the lifetime of Mistress Kn.annnV, Hll 1 1 J "uo" i vol uurtunuttf ui roittiioiis, some steps might probably be taken to vindi cate ner reputation and Mr. Shakespeare a memory: but that by waiting until they should all have been called to their account, there would be no possibility of refutine the charces contained in the memorandum, whioh would thus become a document of considerable marketable value. . . ; , There is no doubt that the present writer's venerable ancestor was inflnencedjin making these remarks by that prudent forethought for the worldly advancement of her family which regulated her course' through life, and has caused her memory to be gratefully re vered by whole generations of Cherstows: she probably foresaw that, if published at a fitting moment, these dreadful disclosures might bo made instrumental, under Providence, in pro viding meat for those infant blossoms of the Cherstow family she was about to conduct to Amanon , f - After the death of the first H B.' Cher stow, her descendants sought eagerly among her papers for the important memorandum in question; but failed to discover it, and, in deed, it had long been supposed to be irrevo cably lost or destroyed, when the providential fall (through dry rot) of the house inhabited by the first generation of Cherstows brought me missing aocument to lignc, wnen it was at once appropriated by the present writer, as an invaluable means of doing justice to the memory of one whom she considers the most remarkable woman the ; sixteenth century has produced. No ". inch . memoir has appeared on the part of her friends., and Mr. Shakespeare's editors have the ear of the public; sowing far and wide those poison- -4r : . i.r i , wub cuuuuui ui 111a genius, wmcu are eagerly gathered up and read by an undis criminating community. . . - ( ' However, Anne Hathaway Shakespeare has an American name, and an American exist ence, and reverence for pure womanhood is, we think, proved, by these pages, to be an American characteristic; and, what 'is even more to the point, there can be little doubt of the profit likely to aocrue to one specimen of pure American. womanhood through their publication by, it is hoped, a not unworthy descendant ot tne original n is. Cherstow. LUMBER. 1870 SPRUCE JOIST. BPKTJCB JOIST. HEMLOCK. HEMLOCK. 11870 1870 SEASONED CLEAR PINK, H Q'TA 8 BASONED CLEAR PINB. i 10 I U CHOICE PATTERN PINK. SPANISH CEDAR, FOR PATTERNS. RED CEDAR. -g Drft FLORIDA FLOORING. 10 i J FLORIDA FLOORING. 1870 CAROLINA FLOORING. VIRGINIA FLOORING. DELAWARE FLOOIUNG. ASH FLOORING. WALNUT FLOOIUNG. t FLORIDA STEP ROATm.1 m.7 RAIL. PirK. - - 1 CTlt WALNUT BOARDS AND PLANK. H Q 10 i U WALNUT BOARDS AND PLANS-10 i U . WALNUT BOARDS. WALNUT PLANK. 1870 . . .. 1870 UNDERTAKERS' LUMBER. ; 1 Q rj( UNDERTAKERS' LUMBER, 10 IV RED CEDAR. r . . " WALNUT AND PPTB. ' ' ' SEASONED POPLAR, SEASONED CHERRY. 1870 ASH. WHITE OAK PLANK AND BOARDS. ' HICKORY. ..... ' ... 1 CTrt CIGAR BOX MAKERS' ; -g own 10 I U CIGAR BOX MAKEKM' ' ! 10 I U SPANISH CEDAR BOX BOARDS, -FOR BALE LOW. . 1870' CAROLINA SCANTLING, t -t Q w? CAROLINA H. T. 8ILL8. I 10 I U NORWAY SCANTLING. ' 1QTA CEDAR SHINGLES. ; Of?A 10 4 U - CYPKEN8 SHINGLES. i LO ( U . -u . MAULE, BROTHER ft COT, 1H No. geoo SOUTH Street UNITED STATES BUILDERS' MILL- : ; FIFTEENTH STREET, BELOW MARKET, ESLEK c & . BSOTHES, Proyrietori. WOOD MOULDINGS, - ; -.;. , ' , BRACKETS, ETO. BALUSTERS AND TURNING WORK. ' A Large Stock always on hand. P U era llAJfEL ! PLANK, ALL THICKNESSES. X 1 COMMON PLANK. ALL THICKNESSES. . lndSlUK KBNfJK HOARDS. "WH1TK PINK FI-OOKING Rp A KD8. - TFLLOW AND RAP PINK iLOOULNUh, ljand 41g -Bl UUtE JOIST. ALLBIZC 8. 7 , IJKMT.OCK JOIST, ALL BTZKlt , PLAKTfcRINCJ LATH A hPKDIAI.TT. Together with a gouernl MaorUnent of Building LnmbM lor sale law tut smSi. T. W. KMAL'IZ, 11 6m FTFTKEKTH ud STILKttfttreeta. UMBKR UNDER t :.: ALWAYS DRY. , .O V s ; Walnut, White Pine,' Yellow Pine, Spruce, Hem locfc, Slilngles, etc, always on hand at low rates. !.-,,; . , WATSON GILLLNQHAM, ' nt No. nt RICHMOND Street, 18th ward. What ia nicer for a CbrUtniM present than On : SINGING CANARY and a BEAUTIFUL 0AQE t Cheaper than toy place in the citf. , No. 14 North SIXTH Street. 13 18 la ' Odd FeUowe' Hail. W, A. IIEKKT. ' TOHN TARNUM A CO., COMMISSION MEKJ CJ chante and Mannfaelarere of Ooneetosa TiokWi et4k Jie.kCUiCbNUTbtjrwtt,PhUa4lilU . HmlaA SHIPPINO. -s LOKILLARD'S STEAMSHIP V U1R FOR ' NBW;;,YO.I. SAILING ON TUFRDAY8, " THURSDAYS, AND SATURDAYS, AT NOON. . On and after December li, the ralee will be 95 eesta oar 100 lb., 10 eente per foot, or S eenta per gallon, abip'a ptlon, Advance chariree eaahed at offloe on pier. Freight received at all Untea on sorered wharf. JOHN F. OltT., Tier If) NORTH WHARVES. 1. B. Vitra rate on email package iron, metal, etc at. 8PK.OIAL HOTIOB.-On and after the I5th of March the rate b thla line will be rednoed to 10 cents per lofl ids., e eesta per it. or 1 cent per gal)., ahip'a option- S I tta . k . ffhn' T nrvnnnnf ivtt ; SV J 1 v Jit lb A V ' U All 17 T -'- - 4JJ9lJ,rr:N8TOWN.-Innien Una of Mail . ' L Jstnlr appointed to tail a iol- jr oi liroolljn. HattiTday, Jan. S3, 9 A. M. City of Bnetnn, Tin HaDfai, Tumrinr, Jan. 3S, U Noon. ' ' C'H.fof Antwerp, Raturdar, Jn. ae, at 1 P. M., tltr of London, Cat.orriar. Fen. ft, at, 8 A. M. ... Ktna, ria ilr Jifar. Tueedar. Feb. R, et 11 A. M. ' And each anccAenln K.tiirHn..ml i . ifnuj,. from Pier 4b, North Ihver. . . KATKH UF FA No A UK. ,. yv nre matv htkajiui aaiuNn itvp.nT hatttrtuy. ' Payable ia Gold. Payable In tlurrenor. FIR8T OABIM......$1(10 STKhKAMK To I,ondon li I To Iondon 40 To Pari US To Pane 7 itMUMtU b 1J1S ItJUUlAX BTEAMIR, VIA HALIFAX, rimer CAHIN. RTKKnAUft. Payable in Gold. ' Parable in Ciuxrenoy. I.iTernool... I I.lerjool $1 Halilai....... 30 Halifax 15 8t. Jobn'a,N. F., , 8t. John'a, N. F., br Branch Steamer. . . . br Branch BUamer... .( w Faeaenaore alao forwaadfld to Uarre, Hamburg, Bremen, to., at. redncod rate. . Tjckete can be iHiusht here at moderate rate br pron Wixninc to send for their fnor.de. ONLY DIRECT LINE to FRANCE THE GF.NKRAT. TKAMUJTUWpm pL -i, COMPANY'S MAM, HTKAMSHIP8 S'tSjLli;l1 KEW AND HAVRE, OALHNU AT l)KF.Dr. . The splendid new reaeel on this favorite rmit for the Continent will sail from Pier No. 60, North river. ver Saturday. . p"IOR OF PASSAGE in gold (Incmdlita wmn), uuirflT rtn ttirnn irstUabln $140 Second Cabin... i..,.,.. $86 TO PARIS, V ' (Including railway tickets, furnlahed on board.) . First Cabin $146 I Second Cabin... i.....t38 These steamers do not carry steerage passongers. Medical attendance free of charge. " American travellers going to or returning from tho eon tinentof Europe, by taking the steamers of this line avoid Unnecessary risk from transit by English railway and crossing the channel, besides saving time, trouble, and ex pense. GKOBGR MA0KF.N7.IR, Agnnt, J ' , , No. 68 BROADWAY. New York. For passage in Philadelphia, apply at Adams Krpreaa Company, to " H. U LEAF. im 1 ' ' No. 830 CHESNUT Btreel, w ' PHIL ADELP1TT A . mrTTM-nvn i4ri"5V..rS5'''"T4I link to KVKHY HATIIHI11V At noon, Street. from FIKbT WHARF above! MARKET THROUGH RATES ta all nnlnta l V.h a .v. Carolina via Seaboard Air Line Hailmad, connecting at y "-V,' . , " 'ennessoe, and the V,et. ,,yir1i,,,t Di l eunesaee Air Line and Uiehmond aad Danvill Knilroad. , Fre'rht H AN I1,K BUT NOF. and taken at LOWER RATKS THAN ANY OTHKB lnk. , tt The regularity, aafety.and cheannnaa nf thla innU ,m.. mend it to tb public as the moat dottirabl medium to carrying every deeuription of freight. , No charge for commission, dray age, or any expense ot Hteamsbips insured at the lowest rate. . Freight received flaily. WILLIAM P. CLYDE OO , No, 12 8. WHARVES and Fieri N. WHARVES. W. P. FORTKR. Agent at Richmond and Cvty Point. T. P. OROWKLL A CO.. Agent at Norfolk i AND Tun Screw Btkahkiu of trk Nh,tr Ua.i.man 1 jaVI) run regularly between New York, Bre- men, ana-.rjoniaamnion, carrying ine United State, Eng. hrh.and Continental mail. . ' ' i FHOM BRKMKN ..ETERY SATURDAY FROM bOUTHAMPTON V.. .EVERY TUESDAY FROM NEW YORK , EVERY SATURDAY Frictqf Jtmagifrom Ame Ynrklo Bremen, London, Havre, w 1 and Boutkatrtptrns - f First Cabin, $120) Second Cabin, $73; Steerage, $30, Gold, Vrom Bremen to iVu l'oHo . First Cabin, 8130 ; Bocond Cabib, 873 ; Steerage, $40, Gold.' These vessels take Freight to London and Hull, for which through bille of lading are signed. t ' An experienced surgeon is attached to each VosseL . .1 All letters must pass through the Poet CMIice, No Bille ot Lading but those of the Compiny will be signed. Bill of Lading will positively not b delivered before good are cleared at the Custom House. .,, Hpeciu taien to Havre, Southampton, and Bremen at the lowest ratoki. For freight or passage apply to J... ; ,rr ; , - . - OELRICHS A CO., 1 17t ' ' - ' No. 08 BKOAD Street, N.Y. . NEW EXPRESS LINE TO 1 Alexandria, Georgetown, and Washington, D. C.. via Gbsnioake and Delawara flam, .;h connections at Alexandria from the most direct route for Ljnchburg, Bristol, EnoxvUle, NaahvlUe, Dalton, and too Southwest. , ri teamen leave rognisrry every Saturday at noon from the first wharf above Market sUeet. t Hreigbt received daily. 'n : .. , . . - WI 'ILLIAM P. CLYDK A OO." ' No. 14 North and Knut.ti ihwvAa HVDW TYLER, Agents, at Georgetown; M, KLUR1DGK A CO., AgenU at Alexandria. . 4lt l i NOTICE. FOR NEW YORK. VIA W?T Delaware and RariUn Canal. 8WIFTSURB jiV TRA NSPORTATION mud PA N r .nut ATUli AND SWIFTBUBK LINE. .. - , The business of these lines will be Teenmed na anil the Hth of Mnroh. For freights, which will b taken on accommodating terms, apply to . , W. M. BAIRD CO., .. 8 8.- No. 132 South Wharves. FROM CHARLESTON TO FI-ORIDA, VIA SAVANNAH, TRI. a WKKKLY LINK. . . B-I. The followiuar atoamera will 1 !. . i.i leaton for Florida, via Savannah, three time a week, after arrival of the New York steamships and t ho North eustevn Railroad train : PILOT BOY (Inland Route), every SUNDAY HORN JNO at 8 o'olook. , DICTATOR, every TTJESnAY EVENING at 8 o'clock. CITY POLNT, every FRIDAY RVENINU at 8 o'olook. Through tickets to be bad of all Charleston and Savan. nah btetmahip Line Agencies in New York. J. D. AIKEN A CO.. : ' i 1 ' , Agent at-f.'harlestoh. U. O. UU1A.MAK1XN A CO., 14 . ) Agents at Havannah. ,FOR 8T. THOMAS AND RR4- ZIL.-UNITE08TATKH AND BRAZIL r-r.TillJjf MAIL BTKa-MhHIP COMPANY. 7 W..- iZM Heirular Mail Hteamara aAilinv nn Dim fi4u of ovcry month , MKKKIMAOf, Captain Wier. " I . HOD IH AMKKIUA, Captain R. I Tinklopaugh. KOK'l U AMKRJCA, CapUin O. U. Blooniu. These aplnndid steamers sail on schedule time, and call at fit. Thomas, Para, Pernambuoo, liahia, and Rio da Janeiro, going and returning, lor engagements of freight or passage npply to WM. R. UAKKISON, Agent, 14 No. 8 BQWLINO CRK1CN. New York FOR NEW ORLEANS DIRECT. mtnMwuii. r.tsri.' Btoiimshilis of this Line will lnava Pier 8rJi'-i7-; No. i, NoiUi Rivor, at 8 o'clock P. M. on DA'i UHllAYH. J . ihukuk WAbHinuruii. Oogar. ' . MARIPOSA, Keiuhle. f '. Freight taken fur St. Louis, Mobil, and Galveston at through ratea. Cabin passage. t!. it ui iiaasag (Unit ant cecoud cluns) or freight apply to H. B. CKO.MWKLa CO., , .14 No. bo WK.ST Btreot. ' , 5 U. 8. MAIL TO HAVANA 5"-FN"S ATLANTIC MAIL STEAMSHIP-CO, A'. JiL ?.f ailin reirulariy KVKRY TllK.sriAY TM'ii3 H o'clock P. M.. lireciaHiv. f nun Pin. K 4 A ui ill hivur. AH'ltO CASTLE, Captain R. Adam. fi . COLUMBIA; Captain K. Van Sice, KAOLK, Captaiu M. R. Orebue. For freight or piunage apply to ' K . Wlir KLER, Jn . PreHldnnt. 1 4 No. 6J10WL1NU UKK1.N, New York. c O K N E X C II A 'N G B BAOMAWUKAOTORT, I ... . N. E. oorear of UARKKT and WATER Street. Philadelphia. DEALER IN BAOH AND BAGGING ' Of every description, for Grain, Flour, bait, boper-I'luwohaU of Llm, Boa Dust, Kto. . . . . large and small GUNNY IIAGH constantly on hand. tot Also. WOOL BAOH. - I. I. rot. , afniHOiv, 1 AH X PI ate noJIAHOM U smi'i iya a nn vommihmon mbhohaxt No. COKNTIH8 bUP, New York. rio, 18 PUI 1 11 rv nmn, k i. , uiiaueiyojaa No. 48 W. PKA1T (itraet, Baltimore, SAMUEL SMITH. & CO., No. 4 8. B EVENT fitnwt, b'IKAM ANU GAS HTTKH8 Al PLU M 11 liitfl. Tub, JTltUiigs an4 lira Work onaUa oa head. ... A li work promptly attended to. OaivajiiJ Xiib lot (uualexy I oHlfujTiJahad. H m for further nartionlare aDnlr at the rinrniun,', nfl.u JOHN O. DALtt, Agent. No. 16 BROADWAY .N. Y. or.t? O'DONNKLLAKAULK.Aeint; " 4 5 'Wo. m OHK8N UT Street. Philadelphia. udpk : NORTH GERMAN LLOYD 'SbX STEAM BETWEEN NEW YORK A vkzTZtillsjl? BRKMKN. VIA SOUTHAMP'I'OM We are prarad to ship every dasoripOon of Fretghtt Philadelphia, New York, Wihaiington, and intermedia) point with promptnee anddeauatoo. (Janal Beataaa 6usaa-twa ionuaiuid a4 Ui boriuat aotiea. PROPOSALS. R(rOHAI FOR ETA M TED ENVELOIT'J Post OFrrcs DRPAw-rvgrn v, : .i?n,T.ot I' ri'aieii i ninucsm win tc n-iyi nnul R I on Uf 1at (lay Of MARCH. 1S70. for furnlahi., thft "Htnmpprf Kuvekipps" and "Nswiptiper VI pom-' which t.hlg Dopttrtirrent may require d3 a period oi lour years, commeucuig 1st of 18V0, VhS. , BTAM1 JEU li,-S.I.Cl'KM. No. 1. Kote size, i-i br 4 ruches, of paper. . ' no. s.ordlnrv letter SI7,e, S 1-10 by menpf, or white, huir. . canArr. or r.r4 coioreu jiaper, or In such proportion of eithi mv be r'fiuirert. No. 8. Full letter aire fnnimmmoft on flan Tlrcnlam): 8v by 6,v ln:h, of the amo cohu xo. , aim unuer a like condition aa to the pr tlon of men. No. 4. Fnll letter 1r,i. tu hT rv inobwi nf J w. .. X-.. A .. ., .. 1 ' . ... ' .. . ' i . , uuuci a uko coudition as U prtiporHOH oi turn. , , No. 6. Extra letter line (angrimmett an Ann clrcnlan)), 8f by 6i Inches, of same colors as !, nnd under a like condition aa to the proporti eneh. No. 6. Extra letter li. 8.V by 6 V Inches, of A colors h no. , ana nr.aer a UKO condition it. proportion of eAch. ... , No. T. OOlelal ilze, 8', by 8;f tncfird, of I color a No. 8, n; under a lite condition as t proportion or each. N i No. 8. Extra official M7.n. 41- br inohe' game colors an No. a, and uuilor a like oundltlo to tne proportion or cnm. . NKWSPAPRK WRAPPERS. - M by 9M Inches, of butt or mnnilla pnper. Aa tne aoovo eavmopen and wrapper, to be bonKCd with postage RUintiH of kucIi tlmioinluiit styles, and colors, and to War such printing on im c, nini hi im niiuio in lire mom tiioroun mftl of paper of approved quality, manufactured simm lortlie purpose, with such water marks or othe vices to prevent Imitation aa the Postmaster-Ucii niBT direct. The envelopes to be thoronehly and perfl uinnicii, niv guniuung on me nap or eiicn (ex i or circular) to no put on not less man nan an In width the entire length. Tho wrannrtu t gummed not les than three-fourths of an lud wltith aoroos the end. All envelopes and wrappers rnnst be bsndef pareeia oi vweniy-nve, ann packed - in sli paHteboard or straw boxes, each to contain not man two minnred and titty or the letter or i letter str.e, and one hundred each of the ciai or extra onicini size, separately. The c paiter wrappers to be packed in boxes -to coi not less than two hundred anal llftv each. boxes are to be wrapped and Bcoled, or sew mwieiien in strong: nianuia paper, so as to bear transportation by mail for delivei postmasterar wnen two tnotisand or more e lopes are required to till the order of a posting hio sirnw . or pttBieuouru noxes coiiuiining ino DiiiH De pacKeu in strong woouen c well " Btrsnned with h non-Iron, and . ojt,Iru but when less than two thousand, are requi prupi r laocis oi u miction, to do lurnuuieti o. agent of tho Department, must be placed npon i packscre by the contractor. Wooden ease. tainlng envelopes or wrappers to be transpr by water routes, must be provided with eultl water-proohng. The whole to be done u the inspection, and .direction of an agent or Department, - - The envelopes and wraoners mcst ba' f urnls and delivered with all reasonable despatch, comjl in an respects, reauy lor use, anu in sucn quaul as may be required to fill the daily orders of i innHicr ; tne deliveries to ne made eitner at tne Oiilce Department, Washington, D. C, or at. ottlce of an agent duly authorised to lnHnect an. Oulv. t ll 11 ...111... . 1 . lu.A .1 1 ntlun.v ... I . n option of the Pontmastr-Oeneral, and thecoK' delivering as wen as an expense oi packiug, dressing, labeling, and water-proofing, to be pal' tho euutractor. Hldders are notified that the Department will quire, as a condition of the contract .that the velopesand wrappers shall be manufactured stored in such manner as to ensnre security ara loss Dy lire or tneit. . 'i lie nianniactory must at times be subject to the Inspection of an agent of Department, who will require the stipulations of contract to be faithfully observed. The dies for embossing the postage stamps on envelopes and wrappers are to be executed to sausiaciion or tne x'ostmaster-oenerai. in the style, and they are to be provided, renewed, kept In order at the expense of the contractor, department reserves the right of reanhing new for any stamps, or denominations of stamps not i usea, ana any cuauses oi uiea or. poiors snail vnilfln without. ATtr t-liartrn. Specimens of the stamped envelopes' "and wb pcrs now in use may De seen at any or tno pnnc UB, VIUWD. UUV IUCRD BUIUIiUB W UU1 liV IR)l garded as the style and quality fixed by the dep; meutas a standard for the now contract; bldi are therefore invited to submit Bamplesof ot anu uuicreni qualities ana sryies, including paper proposed aa well as tho manufactured velopes, wrappersand boxes, and make their a u.i.uiuiiutiji. Tlie contract will be awarded to the bidder wh proposal, although it be not the lowest, is i . sidered most advantageous to the ' Departm . taking Into account the prices, quality ot the a pies, workiuansinp, anu tne suniciency ability of the bidder to manufacture and deliver envelopes auu wrappers in accordance1 with terms of thla advertisement: and no proposal be considered unless accompanied by a sulllclJ and satisfactory guarantee Tho Postmaster-Oi ' ral also reserves the right to reject any and all lv if In bis Judgment the interests of the Goveraif. reoulre It i . .. . 1 Before closing a contract the successful blil may be required, to prepare new tiles, and sub impressions tnereoi. miis thk of tub pkbkknti MAY OK MAY NOT BK COKTINUBU. ' v ' 'ft Bonds, with approved and sufficient sureties the stiui of S'AiOiUOO, will be required for the fall performance of the contract, as required by seventeenth section of the act of Congress, appro! the roth of August, IM9, and payments under A contract will ne made quarterly,, after proper justnieiit oi accounts. . . . n . ., . The Postmaster-General reserves to' himself right to annul the contract whenever the same any part inereor, is onerea lor saie ior me puri'l of speculation ; and nnder no circumstances ws t.raiiufAl- nf tliu ftnnlru.t. Iij. allnwfl or Bnn,M,W. to any party who shall be, lu the opinion of'l Postmas-cr-Ueneral, less able to fulfill the coif tlons thereof than the original contractor. '( right Is also reserved to annul the contract fol failure to perform lalthfully any of lis stipulate 'l ne numner oi envelopes oi auierent sues, am; Wrappers lesued topostmasiers during the fiscal ended June SO, 1809, was as follows, vix. t . No. 1. Note size 1.114,000. , r No. 8. Ordinary lettor . sle; (not hereto.' U8( d). No 8. Full letter size, (ungnmined, for circulij ,100,UUU. ' ... I i No. . yull letter Bfae 0T,86T,600. : - . , . No. 6. Jxua letter size, (uuguiuiued, for clronl 843,0110. . No. . Kxtra letter size 4.204,bO0 ' No. T. Official stue 404,000. - No. 8. ixua onlclal Blue 1T0O. . . Wrappers .6ue.2o0. Rids should be sectircly enveloped and sea marked "Proposals for btjniped Kuvclopes Wrappers," ami addresacd to the Third AssM. Pcsuua8ter(ifcueral, Post Office Department, W lcgtou, JJ. C. . ., . JOHN A. J. CRE8WELL. llleodtMl v Postmaster General PROPOSALS FOR PL'ECHAfiB. OF RIFL CANJSO.W, KTC "i- " ' ' bukkatj of ordhakcb, v : ' ' Navy Depautmknt. Washinoton Citv, January 4, lsja i - Bralcd Proposals lor the purchase of 80-pouu1 and u-pounuer rarron Kinea, wmi uarriaires, M piemetts, ani rrojeciiie. now on nana in tne Yards at l'ortsmouth, N. H. ; Roston, New Yo Philadelphia, Washington, anu xsonoix, will be eelved at this Bureau until l'i o'clock noon, Janm m itTii in the segregate there are about S90 Cans, 854 f ; rlhges, and DC.1&7 lVojectll. g. Bchedulea in dew,, the at tides at each yard will he furnished, on api 'caMon to this Bureau. - ' Bidders will state the number of gnns, carrlaw Implemeiits, and projectiles they desire to purcli.i at each yard separately, snecliTlng the calibre Kim, kind of carriage, whether broadside or plv and the kind oi projectiles. The gnus, etc., wfll be delivered at the rcsp tlve navy yards, and must be removed by the p' chaser or purchasers within ten days after the ; ceptanco of his or their bid. But no deliveries v; shall have deposited with the paymaster of the my yard the full amount of the purchase money in enj case. A Many of the (tuns are new, and all are servl f able. Bidders will therefore offer accordingly. J offer for these articles as old lion or wood wiik considered. I The Bureau reserves tho rljrht to reluct anv or I Lids which it may not consider to tho Intereai of ll uovcriimeill n u;eru IToposais should bo endorsed on the envolo "Proposals for Purchase of Killed Cannon, etc," .A. LLDLOW CASE. 18ws7t Chief of Bureau. OILS, No. 133 &. BKCOND Itnos, 11 It 3m