vnutig telegraph I' 1' Ki.l S II Kl' KVKHV rTKKNOON AT '111 K F VF.Nf! TF.I.KORAPII BULUMM4. M). 108 P. TinuU 8TRRKT. PIHLADKLI'HIA. Tut t'vwr in tbrfecenit er copy (rtoubfr ttHtt); or iUi. t i, tvnlt jn'T rfJc, payalile to the carrier by '..(. prwd. Th mihurriptUm price by mail in A. tori ier annum, or On Dollar and Fifty fVM for ,no numtfi, invariably in ad twno or the ordered. FRIDAY, MARCH 4, 1S70. O0LD ll.lj. A pKJtPATCH Announces that a further decline in gold hait taken pUoa in New York this morning, the price reaching ll"", or tho lowest point since the battle of Bull linn. The seoond Bull Run, fought in 1KG2, must Le referred to here, as the suHpennion of Bpeoie payments did not oconr until that year. The disastrous defeat of the raw levios Commanded by General McDowell at the Opening of the conflict did not exert any im mediate influonoe upon the money market, and it required a succession of adverse military operations as well as enor mous expenditures to create a premium on gold. The nation is now restoring her credit more rapidly than it ever declined, and if the gold gamblers get a few more such blows as they have recently received, their vocation will soon be ended. The large a mount of surplus revenue received by the National Government, the steady purchase of bonds and sales of gold by Secretary Bout well, the apparent indisposition of Con gress to make extravagant appropria tions, and the reported diminution in the exports of bullion all unite to reduce tho premium on gold, and hasten the era when specie payments can be safely and perma nently resumed. Whether the present down ward tendency of gold will be steadily main tained or not is a matter of comparatively small moment. Confidence in the public credit is so thoroughly re-establiuhed that nothing but a disastrous change of policy can again inspire sensible people with a distrust of .the pecuniary ability and honesty of this great nation. TEE GAM LER'S FRIEND. The consideration of the bill for the sup pression of gambling was urged yesterday in the State House of Representatives by Mr. Beans, of Bucks, who called the attention of the House to the article published in Tub Evening Teleobafh some weeks ago, in Vthioh the names of some of the principal gamblers of Philadelphia and the location of their establishments were given. Mr. Samuel Josephs promptly took the floor in defense of the polioy dealers and gamblers, and in argu ing against the consideration of the bill, he exclaimed plaintively that only that morning he had privately informed the member from Bucks that the polioy dealers and gamblers of Philadelphia had never been poorer than now. We can imagine the emotions of the gentle Josephs at the idea of passing any law to break up the business of his friends, the professors of faro and keno, in their pre sent impoverished condition. According to all the rules of the "fancy," it is not the fair thing to hit a man when he is down; and ac cording to Josephs it would be too bad, really too bad, to place the gamblers under any further disabilities, after they had been so cruelly treated by a newspaper in the pub lication of their names, plaoes of business, and methods of depleting the pockets of their victims. The sacred privacy of their voca tion had been invaded, and all the world hal been informed exactly who and what they were, and was not that punishment enough, thinks Josephs? The House evidently thought so, and, in commiseration of tho wounded sensibilities of Josephs, who had not been a le to impress the hard heart of Beans, of Bucks, in the morning, it refused to con bider the bill for the present. This gives the gamblers and policy dealers another chance to convinoe our immaculate Legislature of tho injuatioe of the persecutions under which they suffer. But if they are as poor as Jo sephs represents them to be, they will have but a slim chance at Harrisburg this winter. The average Pennsylvania legislator is not otherwise than virtuous, unless his sins are well covered up by Uncle Sam's promises to pay, and it will go hard with Mr. Josephs' friends if they are reduced in circumstances at the present moment. EXIT POUTER. The New York Sun of yesterday says: "There U hope for tbat ancient mariner, Rear Admiral Rolieaon. We learn on undoubted authority that the bead of the Mavj Department Is wearj of surfing as a stopper to a bottle of vry gaHeoua Porter, lift liat resolved to cut the strings which have hitherto so ignomlnlttUBly bound him and assert hinuelf. In short, Porter Is to be shipped off forth with. Inatead of Inditing manifestoes on naval eti quette and rigging out our mariners like so many mountebanks, lie la to return to his proper place on the quarter-deck. No doubt the change will be a diaagreeattie one to no important a personage as Admiral Porter esteems himself; but a breath of the brine and a taste or the tar-bucket will do wonders In taking the conceit out of him. Under the luxuri ous anrt euervatlng oilieiul life of Washington a very tolerable sailor was fast becoming a mere salt-water Turveydrop. A turn among the seal lluherlos of Alaska will afford a wiioietiouiu change and a wel come relief to the country." This is almost too good to be true, and yet it would be a matter for sincere congratula tion if Secretary Robeson would take the management of the Navy Department into his own hands and be Secretary in fact as well as in name. There is no doubt of one fact, and hat is that the department of which Mr. Robeson is nominally the chief is most un popular. For this unpopularity Vice-Admiral Porter is very largely, if not entirely, to blame, if for no other reason than that he is attached to the department in a capacity unauthorized by law, and which gives him an authority and influence that he ought not to wield without some corresponding responsi bility. Both in and out of the naval service it is thought by those who are best' able to judge of the matter that the interests of the country and of the navy can best be served by having a civilian (lie bond of the depart nent. . The (biffs of bureaus are oxporieuoed officers, and they are the proper advisers of the Secre tary in matters upon whioh his own know ledge may bo doflcient, and they have beon found by all previous Secretaries to be amply sufficient for tho proper and efflolont adminis tration of all the affairs of the navy. For an officor to be stationed at the department as prompter to the Secretary and general f aoto tum is somothing entirely unprecodontel, and tho evil of snch an innovation has been sufficiently proved during the year that the present administration has been in power. No sooner had President Grant been inaugu rated than Vice-Admiral Porter managod to establish himself at the Navy Department, for the nominal purpose of instructing the new Secretary in his duties. One of his first aots was to start afresh the old quarrel be tween the line and staff, and ever since ho has been in power there has been contention and trouble. Poor Mr. Borie soon got very sick of the job, and proceeded to get himsolf out of the difficulty by resigning. When Mr. Robeson was Appointed, it was thought by all who knew him that Porter would very speedily receive marching orders. Mr. Robeson was reputed to have ability and pluok, and his friends asserted confidently that he would be the Inst man to submit to impertinent inter ference in the duties of his ofiioe from any body. Thero was niuoh disappointment, therefore, when Porter ' did not reoeive his dismissal, and as the troubles of the navy continued, the Secretary was forced, justly or unjustly, to share the unpopularity of the Vice-Admiral. He is the responsible party, and Porter's schemes are carried out in his name. It is difficult to conceive how a man of spirit can submit to appear before the country in such an anomalous position as this; and even if Socretary Robeson should commit mistakes, the country will be much more ready to forgive them if they are merely his own errors of judgment than if there is a suspicion that they are the result of bad counsel from those who have no right to dic tate or even advise with regard to the ad ministration of his ofllce. It will be a good thing, therefore, if Porter is ordered off without further delay. He has done harm enough already for any one man, and it is time that Socretary Robeson should retrieve his credit and show whether he really has the ability to run the Navy Department in a satis factory manner on his own hook, and without allowing himself to be made tho tool of a ring of officers who are seeking to manage the naval service exclusively in their own interest. ANOTHER CHECK TO THE INDE PENDENCE SQUARE PROJECT. Tub contract made by the Building Commis sion with Mr. McNikols for the excavation of a cellar on the Walnut street front was pre sented to City Councils for approval yester day. It encountered earnest opposition in both branches, but the friends of the Inde pendence Square projeot mustered a working majority in the Select branch, while in the Common Council a motion to indefinitely postpone the ordinance approving the con tract was passed by a vote of 19 yeas to IS nays. Another breathing spell is thus gained by the opponents of a measure that is exceed ingly unpopular with a large proportion of the citizens of Philadelphia, and they should improve the opportunity by using promptly every honorable and just means to arrest the proceedings of the Build ing Commission. That body acts in exceed ingly bad taste, if not in clear violation of law, by awarding contracts and attempting to incur enormous expenditures in advance of an appropriation by Councils. The most ra tional explanation of its precipitate pro ceedings is to be found in its well-grounded fear that the sober second thought of the peo ple will condemn the proposed desecration of Independence Square, and scatter to the winds the commission which is so exceedingly anxious to consummate this outrage. The people demand a vote on this question. It would be the height of injustice to commit them against their will to the expenditure of a vast sum of money for buildings upon a site which cannot be legally used for the intended purpose, which is deemed unlit by many thousands of tax-payers, even if public convenience alone is con sulted, and which the city is bound, alike by legal requirements and associations which should bo doomed sacred by every true American, to maintain as a green walk- for ever. The centennial of the Declaration of Inde pendence is rapidly approaching. Councils and the Legislature have invited here, on that occasion, the representatives of the industrial interests of our own country and all other parts of the civilized world. If, as may be reasonably anticipated, hundreds of thou sands of strangers are attracted to our vicinity then, Independence Square will pre sent a mortifying spectacle if Councils poimit it to be cut up with excava tions and covered with building materials. Myriads of visitors will ask, Had Philadel phia no other spot to devote to her oourts and public offices ? Could she not afford to maintain agreeable and appropriate surround ings, for the brief period of a century, for the most sacred spot, in the eyes of the lovers of human liberty, in the whole world ? Had she neither the sense nor the feeling to gratify a proper desire for improvement without committing a shameless act of dese cration ? Mr. Vambeuy has written two more articles In the Allgemeine Zeitung on the Russian expedition to Khiva, and repeats his general statements concern ing Russian policy in Asia, lie says It Is quite natu ralthat the Russian press should not share his opinions ; but he cannot change them, both on ac count of his personal knowledge of the country where the conquests are going on, and ot his Inti mate acquaintance with the Intentions of the Rus sian Government in that quarter. The creation of a commercial route from the Bav of Krasnovodsk to the Aral Sea la, according to Mr. Vambery, a mere pretext, as the steppes to be crossed are destitute of drinkable water, and oanuot be traversed during the whole of the summer season. If the Russian Uoverauieut has chosen this route, it is exclusively with a view to conquer Khiva. Mr. Vambery thinks it It by no means tho Intention of lunula to acquire a market In Central Asia, for it already has one, and the small khitnat of Klilra, lying quite out of the way, would not Interfere at all with tho trade' of IIijrrIs. Prom what ho has road in tho Russian lHK rs,and from his own observations on the spot, M Vambery feels convinced that Kussla'i Dual aim U the subjection of Afghanistan. PiMitrr.AR MiRKiAfins Tho following pararra.pl from tho North Devon Journal of November 1, tt, is worth repeating: "A Novel Scene, A wcxldlut; took fiilaee at Ht. Marylebono, which was particularly lnteroHtlng on account of its no velty. Tho happy couple (Mr. AITrod Thomas Max well and Mis Iloslna Paxton) are both doaf and dumb, and the ceremony was performed in tho linger and sign language by tho Rev. Samuel Smith, Chaplain of tho Association In Aid of the D-af and Pumb. We believe that this is tho first time In this country that dactylogy and pantomime have been brought Into use on such an occasion. Seve ral of the members nf Mr. Smith's deaf and dumb congregation were present, to wltneas the ceremony." 'Singular as this man-Inge ceremony may appear. a much moro remarkuble scene of this kind occurred some two or three oonturles since In my own native county, of which, perhaps, some of your reailors may be able to supply further details in the interest ing columns of N. and Q. In the marriage register of the i.arlsh of St. Martin Iicester Is an entry of the names of Thomas Tilscy and Ursula Russoll, the first of whom being 'dcafe and dumbe,' It was agreed by the Bishop, Mayor, and other gentlemen or the town that certain signs and actions of the bridegroom should be admitted Instead of the usual words enjoined by the Protestants' marriage cere mony. 'First (says Britton In bis 'Beauties of Eng land and Wales,' volume 9, page 857, probably qu ting the parochial record) he ombraced her with his arms and took her by the handc, and put a rings upon her Anger, and lalde his hande upon his hearte and upon her hoarte, and hclde up his handes to wards heaven, and to show tils continuance to dwell with her to his lyvo's ende, he did It by closing of his eyes with his hande and dlgglngo out the earthe with bis feete, and pulllnge as though he would rlnge a bell, with diverse outhor signs approved.' "I shall be glad to hear of any similar oustoms having been practised at the nuptial ceremony in other part of the United Kingdom. 'Barnstaple. Oeorob Lindsrt." Tiik I'all Hall Gazette comments as follows on the visit of Prince Arthur to President Grant: We learn from the New York Herald that when Prince Arthur visited the President and Mr.', (irant the Presldont himself made no extri embellishment of his ward robe, "lie wore a f rook-coat, vest, and pantaloons of plain black, snch as he usually wears in his ofllce, and had the appearance of one who had Just left his labor for a moment to interchange passing civili ties." Mrs. Grant "wore a plain black silk.'' The Prince "was attired In a black frock-coat, grey cash mere pantaloons, and patent leather shoos. He wore his coat closely buttoned. Upon an immacu late shirt bosom he displayed several diamond studs, and around hU neck a brown silk scarf, lie had, however, more clothes outside the room, for when he left the room he was HHsisted Into his overcoat by the President's valet." When the visit was over the President returned to Ids oillce, and resumed his duties as If nothing had happened; and, lndeol, if we except the eplsudd of the overcoat, uothlng had h.i peucd but how gratifying all this must be to everybody (especially to the Daily Telegraph) I can we imagine the possibility of any serious disagree ment arising between two nations when the valet of the President of one helps a Prince of the blood royal of the other Into his overcoat T Never did valet perform a nobler mission than that republican Jennies when ho thus assisted a Prince never did Prince honor himself more than In thus gracefully accepting such assistance. If the two, the Prince and the valet, could have looked beyond the myste rious dim which Rhrouds our limited vision, they would have seen the Angel of Peace smiling through tears of Joy at the scene in the President's vestibule a struggle, but not between husbands and fathers and brothers in oceans of blood diluted with the tears of the widow and the orphan. Only a struggle to got Into an overcoat, one party playfully assisting the other; first the right arm, then the left. It Is over now; but the buttons of tliit overcoat have linked two mighty nations together, and who will dare to unstitch those links of love forged by the President's valet and our own Arthur? The French Cour dk Cassation has Just had a singular affair under its consideration. It seems that last year tire Poocureur-Imperial of St. Omer called upon three master carpenters to furnish the necessary workmen to construct the scaffold for an execution. They one and all refused his request, whereupon a report was drawn up by the commis sary of police, and the rebellious carpenters were in due course cited belore the tribunal of police of St. Omer for an infraction of an old law of the First Republic, which empowers the proper legal ofllceri to command the services of workmen in so far as these may bo essential for executing the decrees of justice. The tribunal dismissed the complaint, whereupon the Procureur-Impcrlal appealed to the Court of Doual, which confirmed the decision already given. No other resource was now left ex cept to invoke the aid or the Cour de Cassation, and to that body the Procureur-lmpcrial now ad dressed hlmseir. The Supreme Court, however, re jected his application, on tho ground first, that a report or a commissary of police Is not sunlclcn evidence of a fact Involving an infraction of the law; and, seoondly, that there was no direct re fusal on the part of the master carpenters to give their individual assistance towards the construction of the work in question, but only to provide work men for it a piece of leal hairsplitting due to the liberal ideas lately come Tub Tkeascht Dki-autmknt annually uses many thousand envelopes of a peculiar greenish tint, which are rarely seen outside of Government orilces. No one, on examining them, would snspect of what they were manufactured. They are strong, smooth, and business-like in appearance, and have the letter T stamped through the fibre. Old greenbacks form the material of which they are made. The Treasury Department saves up all the bits and remnants of paper used in the manufacture of our currency, with old stamps and bills and all the mutilated green backs that have come back to it, and, Instead of de stroying this mass of rubbish as was formerly done, tho department turns it over to the paper makers, who return it in the shape of serviceable envelopes. Many dollars are annually saved to the Government by this means. These envelopes are used exten sively in the Custom Houses, the Post Oillce, Sab Treasury, and other Government offices. A train composed of all the locomotives and rail way carriages in Europe would reach from St, Petersburg to Paris, and would contain 400,000 pas senger carriages and 600,000 luggage vans. The railways of Europe are carried over 62,000 large and small bridges, and go through 84 miles of tunnel ; 150,000,000 cwt. of iron has been used for the rails, and 90,000,000 cwt of coals is required yearly to feed the engines. The network of European railways represents a length of 70,718 miles; 18,000 locomo tives are employed on It, and the distance these travel during the year Is 0,000,000miles. j NEW PUBLICATIONS. LL Till N 13 XV HOOKS FOR BALK AT WHOLESALE PRICKS BY rOHTEH Ac COATJK8, Publishers and BookssUore, No. ClIESrVUT Street. Our New and Elegant AllT fljtJXIiKY I now open with ths finest collection of PAINTINGS Oil ROM OS and UNQKAVlNUb in the city. 8mw SPEOIAL. NOTICES. firiS" ; : ROYS' CLOTRINC., UOT8' CLOTHING, BJirs Cuorntxa, niYi' ul.op.iin' , ar .IOIIJN WANAMAKK SIS and &tO Chesnnt Nireet. EVERT VARIETY OF TOUTnS' WEAR, MADE IN niQIIE)r STYLE, AND OF THE FINK3T GOODS. XUrijf- ACADEMY OF FINE A it T 8, KO. 11133 0HF.8SUT BTRRFT. SURRIDAN'S RIDF, GREAT NATIONAL WORK OK ART. T. KC'OUANAN READ'S LIFKSIZK PAINTING or SIIKKIDAN S RIDE, NOW ON EXHIBITION. Admission 33 0ol. Including the entire collection of the Academy. OHROMOS of the above celebrated paintin, in lize SVa?t inches, $10. i J Opgn from JLM. oP. M and from 7 V to 10 P. M. B&y- l 1C U O'W x 1: A II 12 It It V . , t TOOTHWAnfl It is the mntt pleaunt, oheapeftt and best (Inntriflce citant. Warranted Ire from iejuriou Ingredients. It Preserves and VS hi tone toe Teoth! Invigorate and Soothe, the Damn! Furinoi and Perfnnies the Kreath! Prevent. A ecu ran la lion of Tartar! (Ileaneea and PuriHea Arti total Teeth! In a huperior Article for Children! Sold by all drugginte and dentists. A. M WILSON. Dm uRiet, Proprietor, 39 10m Oor. NINTH AND KILBKKT bt Piiilsdolplila. jkw- AN ADJOURNED MEETING OF TITE OITIKNS' ASSOCIATION, opposed to erootlnr Puhlio Ktnldinfte on Independence Siiaare, will be bejel at the Hall. . W. corner or MAUKKI' ano MKR1UUK. Streets, on FRIDAY KVHMSV.. 4th init.. at o'clock. A. K. PAUL, President. STFI'Baw B. Pom.TKRrn, Secretary, It BgS- NOTICE. CAMDEN AND PIIILADEL- PHIA STKAMBOAT I'KRRY COMPANY. An election for Directore of t- e above Company will he held at the Oftioe of the Company, foot of t'KOKKAL Street, Camden, on SATURDAY, the 24th of March instant, be tween the hours of 1- and 2 o'clock P. M. 84 11 lMifMt W. H. (iATZMKR, Treasurer. jfigr CORN EXCHANGE NATIONAL BANK. Philadelphia, March 1. IR70. The Board of Directors this day arantad to J. W. TOR RKY, Vice Prohident of the Bank, asborr furlough, on acoount of ill health, and have appointed DELL NOULIT, Jr., Esq., acting Vice Proaident in the interim. 85 3t H. P. BCHKTKY. Cashier. $gg- HEADQUARTERS FOR EXTRACTING Teeth with fresh Nitrous-Oxide Gas. Absolutely no pain. Dr. V. R. THOMAS, formerly operator at the Colton Dental Rooma, devote, hie entire practice to the ainlesa extraction of teeth. Office, No. HU WALNUT tract. I OUOTHINQ. Helpful Hints forward Times. Be sure to get the worth of your money When you boy your clothes. BUY AT ROCKHILL 4 WILSON'S. Be sure to get exactly the style of Cloches that are becoming to you. BUY AT ROCKHILL & WILSON'S. Be sure to see that yonr Clothes fit you snugly. BUY AT BOCK HILL ft WILSON'S. Be sure to see that the material is good. BUY AT ROCKHILL & WILSON'S. Be sure to get durable Clothes. BUY AT ROCKntLL & WILSON'S. Be sure that yon get them cheap enough. BUY AT ROCKHILL A WILSON'S. ROCKHILL & WILSON OfTer people The worth of their money, The style they want, The elegance of fit, The excellence of material, The durability of the Garments, AND THE CHEAP ENOJGH PRICE. ROCKHILL & WILSON. GREAT 1M0WN HALL, 603 and 605 CHESNTJT Street, ' PHILADELPHIA. Q A R C A I N 8 I N CLOTHING. GOOD BUSINESS SUITS $14, were 118 " 16 20 lis faa OVERCOATS $18 " $18 EVANS & LEACH, No. 628 MARKET STREET, , 18 30 2uurp PHILADELPHIA. FOR SALE. FOR SALE. AT CBEjSn'UT IIILL. A ''A verv denirahla HnHiiinnnA. nrutr do nut and churches. faiior. oininar room. Iihi-Arv. and two kitchens, nine bai- roomi, bath-room, drtiuinje-roomi, water-vltwew, and large Biore-rooiuB, pant nun, arc, lint anu com waver, gaa, iur nace, tc. Tenua U suit purchaser- ,A-pE1.VVTrr.n, 89 wfm 12t , No. 418 WALNUTfltreet. TO RENT. M TO LET THE STORE PROPERTY NO. 733 Ohe.not street, twenty fire feet boat, on boa dred and fort j Dre feet deep to Bennett street. Back buildings Br, stories high. Possession Maj L W0. Ad drew THOMAS S. FLETCHER, , U lutf Pelaneo. W. J. m- H'"V T rum wn-wrwm nHDIFT? QTAD V TTT"1IT Maw ixi 111C iiiimcroiwin uvi Dwelling, Ho. 665 North Twelfth street, abore aoe. Three atory doable back buildings, with all modern conveniences complete. Kent, ttOUU. Inquire on premises. 1 U7M FOR RENTA LARGE STORE AND "il DwHlllnff. Nn ins nidn avenue, newly fitted no wilh all modern oonvenieaoos. Apply is 10. PKIOK, No. 64 N. BKV KKTH Brreet. IS U OFFICES VERY DESIRABLE COMMUNI cation nftioea, aeoond floor of No. 427 Walnut atroet, to rent. S. KINGbTON McOAY. 826t CUTLERY, ETO. JODGERS fc WOSTENHOLM'S POCKET KNIVES, Pearl eat Biac handles, and beautiful finish; Rodger.', and Wade Butcher's Rason, and the cele brated Leooultre Raeori ladies' Scissors, in eases, of the finest qoalltr; Rodgers Table Cutlery, Carvers and Fork, Rasor Strops, Cork Screws, Eto. Ear instrument, to assist the hsarina, of Ui most approved construction, at P. MADEIRA'S, Ik) He. lit TENTH Stieet, below Ohesnnt. Ol'EN A MAftDSOFilE DISPLAY or SPRING IV SILKS, DRESS HOMER, COLL ' , i Nos. 1412 and 1414 l S8 mw f3t 8EWINQ MAOHINE8. WHEELER & WIL8OIT8 LOOK-STITOH Family Sewing Itlachine. OVER 42&.000 HOW IN USB. EXAMINE IT BEFORE BUYING ANT OTHER, Sold oh Lease Plaa $10 Per Month, ii:terson sc caupextub, GENERAL AGENTS, Wo. 91 VUESNsUT Htreet, Sfmwi PHILADELPHIA. REMOVAL. THE PARHAM SEWING MACHINE CO. HAVE jlz e ii o a" is r FROM No. 704 CIIE8NUT 8t, TO THEIR MANUFACTORY, JS4, 25 and 538 SOUTH FIFTH STREET, Where all orders for their CELEBRATED MA CHINES will hereafter be addressed, and where a large assortment of them will be kept oa hand and disposed of at 12 23 lit Wholesale and He tail, ON THE MOST FAVOR ABLE TEEMS. OARPETINOS, ETO. 1870 llE1AIL DEPARTMENT. JgjQ IMALLUM, CREASE & SLOAN, IMPORTERS AND DEALERS IN CARPETING S, Warehouse, No. 509 CHESNUT St. j Spring Importations. NEW AND ELEGANT DESIGNS AT Greatly Reduced Prices. 1000 PIECES ENGLISH BRUSSELS, 1000 PIECES CROSSLEY TAPESTRIES. Most of the above are of extra quality, new styles, private patterns and designs expressly for our trade. Canton Matting, English Oil Cloths, Cocoa Mattings. McCALLUM, CREASE & SLOAN. No. 509 CHESNUT Street, 8 2 wfmSm PHILADELPHIA. WANT8. yy ANTED BY A SINGLE GENTLEMAN Two (2) FURNISHED ROOMS, without Board (except Breakfast), within fifteen minutes walk ot Thirteenth and Ohesnut streets. Address, girlug Reference, fl 26 "H. E. J.," this office. fTV w FOR NEW YORK, f$f?rr via Delaware and Raritan Canal. ssawiSVirTSUBE TRANSPORTATION COMPANY. DESPATCH AN1 8WIKT8URK LINES Leaving dailf at 13 M. and i P. M. The Steam 1'iop.llers of this company will oommeuoa loading on th. 8th ol Maroh. Tureugh in tw.nty foor hours. Ovods forwarded to aur point tree of commissions. Freight taken on aooouuuodatiug terms, Aupljrto WILI,AM M. BAIRD A OO., Agents, 4 tin. Ui South DELAWARE Arouue. TO - TAnL', O V IS rV I Il2S GOODS, Etc. AD AY & CO., t CHESNUT STREET, PHILADELPHIA. DRY GOODS. LINEN STORE, No. 820 ARCH STREET AND No. I ISO CHESNUT Street. Spring Importations. IMMENSE STOCK O? LINEN GOODS, . WHITE GOODS, and HOUSE-FURNISHING GOODS. PRICES DOWN 8tlmwfj TO PRESENT GOLD RATE. Ja W. PROCTOR & CO. SrKCIAL noTici?. coNTirauATiorj or sald. Balance f Htstrk ifmnJnlns; en finnd, will be eld eU Ketall. The whele of the Klerk le now oa the flint floor. Krai liar- unlna may be expected. HTOBK NOW OPEN. BimlncM UeriMs Mirrors, about 70 Walnut Frame, with Ula.ar.ln for hnnclnsT In Ho tels, and many article, suitable lor Cloak mannfaetarrnt. W ax Figure., Kte. U 13tf MRS. R. DILLON, NO. 833 AND 831 SOUTH Street, has a largo sssortment of Bo. Millinery for Ladies and Mioses, Rihtwns, Hatinn, Hilks, Velvets and Velveteens, Orspes, Feathers, Flowers, Frames, Saah Ribbons, Ornaments, Mourning MUUnsiy. Onus. Veils, eto. 4f THE. FINE ARTS. THE NINE MUSES" Have Been Retained on Exhibition AT EAR LETS' GALLERIES, No. 816 CHESNUT STREET, 88 ISt FOR A FEW DAYS LONGER. C. F. H A 8E LTINE'8 GnllorteM of the Art, No. 1125 CHESNUT STREET. TIIK AUTOTYPES AND LANDSCAPES II turpi HAW ARRIVED. WATOHES. 1124 CHESNUT STREET. American. Swiss and English WATCHES AT CLARK & BIDDLE'S, Special Agente in Philadflp7ua for AMERICAN WATCHES, Made br E. Howard & Co., Boston. t 13 vrfm GENUINE OROIDE GOLD AND SILVER WATCHES, 20, 35. C$L Ws are now sslllns; our Watches at retail for (iJ wholesale price., $12 and upwards, all in hunting tViial cases. ttenlUmeu's snd ladies' sizes, warranted auod timers as the beet.ooetina ten timet aamuoh. OHAlftH ANU JKVVjlLHY. Bend (or circular, uoods sent O. O. D. On.tomers can examine before paying, br paf inf express I charges each wsy. I JAMES GERARD & CO., No. 85 NASSAU STREET (UP STAIRS), I S!mwf5 NEW YORK. 5un nnn T0 LOAN AT pAR mort- rJpiUaVUU O AUK of cits property In sums of not loss than 1)15000 euoti. H. KINGSTON MoCAV, No. 4 walnut btreot. Si3t ONE DOLLAR GOODS FOR 95 CENTS) LOUftaU llXON,8.N.U8.KUGUTU6trek
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