Daily evening bulletin. (Philadelphia, Pa.) 1856-1870, February 23, 1864, Image 4

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    BUBIINESB NOTICES-
IT CURES applied cxter-
Badwoy’s. Re^yK® 1 ™ 1 ' aum atoncrn there is no
2?}’y fulfills its mission of reUev
-f^epa^ento^aiUndO^g
.‘-'SiSS^SSfif: NewYork
Ahigbly respectable lady of the city °f New orlt
while nailing down some carpets, nui:i E ™,
Carpet lack’ in Her knee and shifted the pan. For
*wo years she was laid np a cripple, |P e “ t r Sfi?JuT
if TWO THOUSAND DOLLARS WITHOOf
DERIVING- ANY BENEFIT. She was advised
5v a nurse to use Radway ’ s Ready Relief ,*hearst
application gave her ease, one week *i
perfect-oure. Had this lady tried Uie Ready Relmf
when the iniurv happened, she would have escapea,
ftepainfnl sufferings of two years- duration, and
saved two thousand dollars. Bear in mind, that
Sad way’s Ready Relief will prove its marvelous
Jfflcacv at once, in all cases where pain is experi
enced, whether Rheumatism, Lumbago, Gout,
Neuralgia, Burns, Scalds, Brtuseß, Wounds, or
SiiuThma, Dysentery, Diphtheria, Influenza, Sore
Throat. Boarseness, Colds. Let those who suffer
i. it price 25 cts. per bottle.
iir Rad wav’s Medicines are sold by Druggists
everywhere. 1 RADWAY & CO.,
sverywneie. Malden Lane, New York.
SQUARE, UPRIGHT AND GRANDS.
MOST CELEBRATED AND POPULAR, ALL
OVER THE WORLD, AT
r. blasiusbros., ggaa-ji
1005 Chestnut street. 119 111
"HAIR DYE! HAIR DYE!! HAIR
DYE! 'I—BATCHELOR’S celebrated HAIR
DYE Vs’the test in the World. The only Harmless,
True and Reliable Dye known. This splendid Hair
Dye is perfect—changes Red, Busty or Grey Hair,
Distantly to a Glossy Black or Natural Brown, with
out injuring ihe Hair or Staining the skin, leaving
the hair soft and beautiful; imparts fresh vitality,
frequently restoring its pristine color, and rectifies
the ill effects of bad Dyes. The genuine is signed
William A. Batoheloh, all others are mere imi
tations, and should he avoided. Sold by all Drug
gists, Ac. FACTORY—BI BARCLAY street, N.
Y. Batchelor’s New Toilet Cream for dressing
the Bair. ■
OF THE AGE.JN PIANOS'
MEYER’ S Improved Overstrung pianos, ac
knowledged by the leading artists, and endorsed
by the Musical public, to be the finest Pianos in
America.
Tbe attention of tbe Musical public is called to
ibese recent great improvements in Piano Fortes.
By a new method of construction, the greatest
possible volume of tone has been obtained, without
any of the sweetness and brilliancy for which
these Pianos ars so celebrated, being lost, and
Which, with an Improved Touch and,Action reu
dtr them Unequaled.
These Instruments received the Prize Medal at
the World’s Pair, held in London, as well as the
Highest Awards over all competitors, from the
Irst pairs and Institutes in this Country. Ware
rooms, 722 Arch street below Eighth, Philada.
LEHIGH LOCUST MOUNTAIN AND
Black Heath, white Ash Coax, carefully
■elected and prepared for family nee, free from
Mate and dust, delivered promptly and warranted
to give full satisfaction, at prices as low as tbe
lowest for a good article. Lump Coax for fonnd
jies, and Chestnut Coax for steam purposes, at
wholesale prices. An assortment of Hickohv,
Oak and Pine Wood, kept constantly on hand.
Also, an excellent article of Blaokbhith’s Coax,
delivered free of carting to any part of the city. A
trial of this coal will secure your custom. Send
youE orders to THOMAS E. CAHILL,
Offices, 325 Walnut street.
Lombard street.
Worth Pennsylvania Bailroad and Master street.
Pine street wbarf, Schuylkill.
THE COLD SPRING- ICE COMPANY.
Offices and Depots as above.
Wagons run in all tbe paved limits of tbe Con
solidated City and in tbe Twenty-fourth Ward.
jriBBBB ALBRECHT. RIKES &
fiffifipßpaM SCHMIDT, beg leave to. announce
usf IP **' that their Manufactory of First-Class
Piano Fortes 16 now in full operation. The general
■atlsiaction their many Pianos, sold already, meet
With, by competent judges, enables them to assert
confidently that their Piano Fertes are not sur
passed by any manufactured iu the United States.
They respectfully invite the musical public to
ft&d examine their instruments, at the Sales Boom,
Ho. 46 North Third street. Full guarantee given*
and prices moderate.
DR. SWEET’S INFALLIBLE LINI
MENT cares Headache immediately and was
never known to fail. J ,
STEOK&CO.’S
MASON
HAMLIN’S
CABINET
STECK & 00."’ S
ORGANS.
J. E. GOT
Seventh
•Yeningbdlletin
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1864,
tee National übioit conventioit.
The National Union Committee, at a meet
ing held in Washington city, has determined
at the National Convention, to nominate
•andidates for the Presidency and Vice Pre
mdency, shall assemble at Baltimore on
Tuesday, a the 7th of June. Although we
should have preferred an earlier day, this .
Will be soon enough for all practical pur
poses. The loyal people of all the States
should now begin deliberately to prepare for
his important convention. , The best men
S ould be chosen as delegates; men of intel
lect, education and high character. No
mere politicians or office-holders should be
ehosen. On the contrary, it should be the
endeavor of every constituency to select
e egates who are not politicians or office-'
o ers , so that this convention, prelimi
inWhkt ° f the most important elections
f. our history, maybe composed of pure
disinterested and unsuspected men '
We believe that if the wishes 'of nine
tcnt.l!® of ’ the lo 7 al people of this country
eouid be fairly expressed, President Lincoln
would be renominated without any show of
opposition worth speaking of. To secure
such an exoression Af , secur c
should be the li' f . the P°P ular opinion
snould be the endeavor m selecting delegates
to the National Convention. The lute
conventions, in the first place, should be
composed of able, honest, and patriotic
If the lnte higent, disinterested
and upright portion of the community
neglect to do their part of the work in
the selection of delegates, it will be done
by the corrupt and the intriguing, and
the convention will not fairly repre
sent the wishes of the people. Already there
arc cliques at work trying to forestall public
sentiment and to create distrust in the Pre
nretendW , hi ® P° lie 7- Insidious reports,
ton deSpatches from Washing
kin*
in; certain journals, some o°f
been and still are larce t-pp* • kjch : have
bounty of the"administra.tipn Ple The ° f
must be put upon their guard againsUhS
tncks of the unprincipled and intn<fo in ®
Let them judge the President by his own
words and deeds, and not by the stories cir
; culated for political effect. But they must
also take a direct and active interest in the
work of choosing delegates to the Baltimore
convention. If they do this, then the con- j
vention will be composed of the right kind
of material; and there will be no pretence of
opposition to the nomination of Mr. Lincoln,
whose re-election we regard as of vital im
portance to the country.
WHAT THIRTY-TWO YEARS HAVE BROUGHT
Our attention has been directed, at an op
portune time, to a report published' in the
local newspapers on the occasion of the
great centennial anniversary celebration of
the birth-day of Washington, which took
place in this city thirty-two years ago, and
the wide contrast that is exhibited between
tile details of this - celebration and of that
which was observed yesterday, gives us an
idea of the changes which a quarter of a
century ha^-wrought. Philadelphia was not
a great, compact, consolidated city in 1832.
We' are reminded of this fact by the reporter
of that period, mentioning the ; presence in
the line of the great parade, of the “citizens
of Southwark,” the “citizens of Northern
Liberties,” and so on through all the sepa
rate and independent .municipalities which
then formed Philadelphia. Consolidation
took place in 1854, and so radical has been
the change wrought by it that we have al
most forgotten that'there ever were any.di
visions of our local territory, except such as
were defined by; wards bearing distinctive
numerical appellations. In fact, there qje
comparatively few persons now who can tch
from memory what the bounds of the old
defunct “districts” were.
The various trades walked and worked in
the great procession of 1832, and the. enu
meration of the different descriptions of
handicrafts-men furnishes us with a clue to
the improvements that have been made in
the arts within thirty-two years. There
were cordwainers and tailors, and masons
and carpenters 7 and boat-builders and
: weavers—trades that have been
almost ever since “Adam delved and Eve
span;” but we look in vain for the'locomo
tive builder, the worker upon iron-clad
ships, the maker of “last fast” printing
presses, the fabricator of reaping and mow
ing machines, the manipulator of the mag
netic telegraph, the constructor of railways
and cars, the maker of rifled guns and re
volving pistols, the photographer, or the
representatives of the many branches of
business growing out, of that wondrous art.
Upon that day we find, too, that the fire
department of the city made their first gen
eral parade (they have had a good many
since); but we find there no notice of the
presence, in the line of the procession, of a
steam fire engine. In 1832 Philadelphia
contained scarcely a single marble-fronted
storehouse, and there was not a solitary'
building in the city which had an entire
granite front; the streets were dimly lighted
at night with dingy oil lamps, and they
continued to be so lighted until three years
afterwards. The wealthiest citizen of that
time could not boast as handsome a chan
delier,or illuminate his parlor with as bright
a light, as a thrifty journeyman mechanic
can enjoy in 1864.
. The principal business thoroughfare of
the town was encumbered with a long range
of shambles in 1832, and the magnificent
market-houses of the present day were not
dreamed of. ~ Locomotives were unknown;
the trade between the city and the great
West was carried on by means of lumbering
Conestoga wagons, and passengers could
reach Pittsburgh by stage,in three days, by
traveling day and night, with the aid of an
occasional a bit of canal. Thfc
stage lines for the North, South and West
started, in those days, from “Jim” Ree
side’s two-storied frame stage-office in
Third street, above Chestnut, and foot pads
robbed the great. Western mall, and tied the
passengers to trees, on the Ridge road, this
side of where Girard College now stands,
just as they might have done on Hounslow
Heath a hundred years earlier. In 1832
there was not an inch of magnetic tele
graph in existence, and not only were city
/ailways unknown, but the day of the now
obsolete omnibuses had not yet dawned. The
first Philadelphia omnibus did not astonish
the good people of the town, as an exhibi
tion of daring enterprise, until 1833, a year
later. In" 1832 the latest news was received
by stage and stc;unbi at. Steam was
scarcely heard of in connection with loco
motion, and it was entirely unknown in its
application to the running of a printing
machine; and a cylinder press, that would
turn off its tens of thousands of impressions
an hour, was not thought of in the wildest
dreams of the newspaper people of that
day. ■ \
* PIANOS.
PIANOS.
id Cheßtnnt.
The names of the prominent citizens who
took an active part in the great centennial,
celebration are as .strange to the cars of foe;
present generation of Philadelphians, as the!
mechanical and scientific advances of the
present time would have sounded U the
people of .1832,c0u1d they have been named"
to them. We find that Col. Clement C.
Biddle was Chief Marshal of the civic por
tion of the procession, and ; although we
discover, among the Marshals such familiar
names as John Swift, Josiah Randall, and
James Harper, the majority-of the names
would sound strangely to the ears of mo
aern Philadelphians.
The concluding ceremonies of the day
embraced, the reading, in Independence
u w?; Washington’s Farewell Address,
venrp \ **■ awle ’ s, l-> a most worthy
pS fo Te ° f thG old time lawyers of
Philadelphia, and. a prayer, by Bishop
i, e, a. name that will be remembered and
venerated while earnest piety, purity of
of character and true patriot
ism win their way to men’s respect and
esteem.
The political bearings of the display, yes
terday, were quite as significant as the
material changes which thirty-two years
have wrought.. At the very time'
f-p 1 loyal andy patriotic people:
o Philadelphia were doing special homage
to the memory of the great American whose
.TUj&Sx/a r, FTbRUARY 2-j, I^4
FORTH.
ashes rest on the banks of the Potomac, de
generate men of bis own section were plan
ning the destruction of the nation which he
had founded. At that very period the Cal
houn - Nullification - Secession - School first
dared publicly to show its head in South
Carolina, and the poisonous seeds that were
then planted, budded and blossomed under
the encouragement of mean Northern dema
gogues and renegades. The procession of
yesterday represented the martial spirit of
i-the generation which has in hand the great
work of substantially perpetuating the glo
rious memory of 'Washington, by battling
for the great principles of Freedom and
Union, of which he was the most illustrious
advocate, and by preserving the nation
which he founded from-the fratricidal
hands of men who become blind
despots through their unreasoning devotion
to the system of human bondage. Great as
are the change'&=gplitical, mechanical and
scientific—which halve taken place since
1832, we are persuaded that 1896 will find
the city, and the country at large, as far
ahead of their present condition, as the
latter is ahead of the days of the centennary
of Washington.. - N
THE GREAT CENTRAL FAIR.
Chicago, Cincinnati, Boston, each in
turn, have had their great Sanitary'Fair,
the last always more successful than its
predecessor. And now New York is strain
ing every nerve to outdo all. There must
needs be a climax in this ascending scale.
Why shall not Pennsylvania come in to cap
the climax? We are a little slow, we
Pennsylvanians, to take up with a new
idea; but let us become inoculated, and
Pennsylvania yields to no State—Philadel
phiayields to no city, the palm for energy,
for philanthrophy, for generosity. We can
even excel New York, with all her boasted
wealth, if we only set about it, and intend
to do it.
The great “Central Fair” is. already
christened with a name. The time is fixed
for June, and the loyal gentlemen in our
community are beginning to get the ma
chinery in working order. A meeting of
our citizens will very shortly be called to
co-operate with them. Let every lover of
mankind, let every one who cares to as
suage the sorrows that are flooding our
land; come up to this work. Those who
have money or the equivalent of money will
give of their store. Those who have time
and energy' will give labor; those who have
brains will give us their brain-work. And
in this last we must not allow even the
Yankees to excel us—in brains —in talents.
We have artists—let them give us of their
art. Already' our talented fellow-citizen,
Mr. Hamilton, has promised to paint, for
the Fair, a view of Niagara Falls. We
have amateur and professional musicians;
we have dramatic taste and execution;
we have fine readers. Now this Fair
will give scope for vail. Besides every
conceivable thing on sale, restaurant,
postoffice, and all the usual addenda of fairs,
there will be rooms devoted to amusements,
concerts, readings, tableaux, drama, besides
galleries of fine arts and curiosities, and in
deed, everything that our intelligent people
can devise and carry out. One of the last
propositions (made by a child) is to have a
children’s where things can be
lor sale for children, and where suitable en
tertainments will be provided them at a low
price of admittance. ■ Sunday schools, day
schools, and all children are invited, to work
for and devise plans for the children's de
partment.
Let every one who reads this resolve
what he or she can give or do. A farmer in
Delaware (and by the way our good neigh
bors, Delaware and New Jersey,are invited
to join hands with us in this work of mercy)
at the first hint of a fair,provided a plough;
an iron-master, Pennsylvania, some
boiler plate iron, and an artist, a picture.
There is nothing made by human skill, or
taken from the face of God’s earth, that
will not be acceptable.
It is scarcely necessary to add one word
as motive for this etfort. Probably there is
no one who doubts that the coming spring
and summer will be the bloodiestt, he most
terrible of the war. While we shudder in
thinking of it, let us prepare the oil and the
wine to bind up the wounds of our stricken
country.
VEBY LABGE SALE OF BEAL ESTATE.
The intention 01 our readers is Invited to the
very la- K e list ot real estate, Dwellings, Farm
and Building I.ots, lo be sold by order ol’ Execu
tor!, Trustees and under orders Jrmn the Orphans'
Court, at the Exchange, to-morrow week, bv
Jamls A, Freeman. Auctioneer. There are in
vcry ellpiblß property, suitable for
manufacturing run cost's, with machintru. en
gine, ,tre., coitplete, at Morristown, a number of
around rents, v ery desirable Walnut and
_.Spbcce street Residences, s-vernl largo pieces
of gre end, suitable for Jactories: a larnellrcofrl
on the .Schuglkil, with machiue’ry and iZr ng
, vaults complete—altogether malting one of the
largest tales held this season.
„ PXTBA LABGE SALE Ist MARCH.—ELE
RESIDENCES. HANDSOjIE DWEL
LINGS; .IRREDEEMABLE GROUND RENTS,
FARM, euUNTRY SEAT, Business Proper-
I, ’ ItoOdJng Lots, Ate., by order of Orphans’
Court, Executors and others. 1
fteml" ieC TAOmas **•' Sons ' ■ advertisements, Auction
EXECUTOR'S PEREMPTORY SALE, 12
At-REt*, GERMANTOWN, near the Depot. See
Jast pare to-day’s Bulletin. c
CARTES -BE VISITE are the most, popular
styles of Likenesses, and B. F. REItVLER.
executes them in splendid manner, at his New
Gallery, oaf ARC FI street.
FISH KETTLES and a general assortment of
other cooking vessels and Hardware at thit.
MAN & SHAW’S, No., 835 'Eight Thlrty.flve)
Market street, below Ninth. y '
Photographs, of life-size, oil
UOLOKED, are much sunerior to anv oth-r
style Portraits. B. F. KEIMER executed them
in unsurpassed style, at his Gallery, oe\ AROH
STAIR RODS of vanons lengths and breadths
and Stair Rod Eyes, Buttons and Bands • for
Bale by TRUMAN & SHAW, No. 835 ,Eight
Tbirty-flys! Market street, below Ninth/ g
/TET TOUR CARTES DE VISITeTap hft
U MEE'S, SECOND Btreet, above Green-in
execution and finish-nnsurpassed by anv made
Clear, distinct, acenrate and pleasing styles” 1^6 '
OPERA GLASSES AND OFFIOERsTfiELD
Glasses, Microscopes lor Physicians and kifu
dents. ' A very large Assortment for sluTbv S ’
. „„ . JAMES W. QUEEN A tin
feaa-lm-rp} 931 Chestqgt sSe^t:
B E ffis F s2i E g ?n,^f6o^ss flrom
***** -
GiTiZEEfS’ v BOUNTY FUm
The Treasurers of the First, Second, Eighth,
Fourteenth and Twer.tyisecond Wards, are re
quested to call this week, with their Vouchers of
AppUntment, and receive Checks tor quotas of
men - , WM..VEITOH,
t — , . Paymaster, *c.,
„ r , i. . No. 272 South THIRD Street.
Fiula. Feb. 23, IEC4. it*
A MEETING TO AVOID THE
DRAFT.,
An adjourned meeting of the citizens of the
TENTH WABD. ,
Will be held on TUESDAY EVENING next,
February 23d, at 8 o’clock, in the
LECTURE ROOM
Of the Baptist Church, N. W. corner of Broad
and Arch Street^.
SWAII citizens of the Ward in favor of contri
buting ’o avoid the Draftare earnestly requested to
be present. . fe22-2ts
OPENING OF SPRING AND SUM
MER Sdress GOODS.
J. M. HAFLEIGH,
902 CHESTSUT ST.,
Will open TUESDAY, Feb. 23d, a large and well
selected stock of New Spring and Sommer
DRESS GOODS,
SHAWLS, LACES, EMBROIDERIES and
SILKS, to which he respectfully invites the at
tention of his customers and retail buyers. fe2o-sts
PATENT HINGE-BACK
PHOTOGRAPH ALBUMS.
.The most in destructible Album made.
It lies open perfectly fiat without injury or strain
to the Bo» k.
For sale by Photographers and Booksellers.
ALTEMIS *fc CO.,
N. W. CORNER FOURTH AND RACE,
feSO-lm} Entrance On RACE Street.
WOOL.
J*
Choice Penna. and Ohio Fleece,
Lot* Arriving Daily.
FOR IMMEDIATE SALE.
<•
Alex. Whilldin & Sons,
Nos. 20 and 22 South Front Street,
feiO-li tt Philadelphia
JOHN C. ARRISON,
Nos. 1 and 3 North Sixth Street,
MANUFACTURER OF
The Improved Pattern Shirt,
FIRST OUT BY J. BURK MOOBB,
Wan anted to Fit and Give Satisfaction
ALSO
Importer, and Manufacturer of
GENTLEMEN’S
FURNISHING GOODS
N. B.—All articles made in a superior manner
by hand and from the best materials. oc6-f»m
WILLIAM MONELL vs. ISABELLA VIR.
GINIA MONELL. —Court of Common
Pleas, December Term, 1803: No. 2. In divorce
And now. February 20, If-fil, the report of the
Examiner hnving been tiled on motion of Daniel
Dougherty, attorney for libellant, rule grantedou
respondent to show cause why a divorce from the
bonds ot matrimony should not be decreed—re
turnable Saturday March sth, 18rt4.
ISABELLA V IRGINIA MONELL respon
dent—Please take notice of above rnle.
DANIEL DOUGHERTY,
Att’y for Libellant.
ft 23, tn. w, 4t*
March magazines; ;
Atlantic, 20 cents; . Continents], 20 cents;
Godey, 20 cents; Lady’s Friend, 15 cents:
Service Magazine, 40 cents.
1e23-2t* PITCHER’S, 80$ Chestnut street.
RIAL ISLAUK LLAMA OK MOHAIR LACE
FOINTES.-GEO. W. VO3EL, No. IUHi
CHESTNUT street, opened this morning his entire
importation of Black Llama or Mohair Lace
Pcimes Shawls). The assortment is large, com
prising the manufacturers entire collection of
resigns from the lowest cost to finest. An exami
nation will give the buyers the choice of every
thing in this line mantifactnred. 1«22-titrp*
PLAIN BLACK SHETLAND SHAWLS.—
GEO. W. VOGEL, No. 1(16 CHESTNUT
street, has just received an invoice of All Black
Shetland Scawls, fine wool and handsome pat
terns. Also, a Fresh invoice of All White Shet
land Shawls, including some of the finest ever
imported. Also, a few Sample Shawls, in Bright
Colors, something entirely now, suitible for the
evenii g, Sea Side. &e. fe22-6trp*
bPECTACLES TO SUIT ALL SIGHTS.
Artificial tinman eyes inserted without pain.
JAMES W. QUEEN & CO.,
Opticians,
fe22-lm-rp} 921 Chestnut street,
HARVEY THOMAS,
STOCK BROKER,
No. 312 WALNUT Street,
Philadelphia.
Stocks and Loans bought and sold on commission,
- at the Board ofJßrokers.
Partlcnlax attention given to U. S. Government
Loans. ia9-3mrps
PUKE MEDICINAL COD LIVER OIL—THE
STANDARD OF EXCELLENCE The
undersigned, having an experience of fifteen years
in the facture of Cod Liver Oil, has recently, at a
large cost, greatly improved the process of pro
curing it, and now offers to the public a prepara
tion that for nndeviating purity, uniform fresh
ness and superiority of preparation is unmatched.
These results are maintained by the personal
supervision of the proprietor, whose efforts have
at once made this Oil the standard of excellence.
Physicians and others looking to the attainment
of the greatest medicinal efficacy in the ■ shortest
time, and thereby obviating indigestion and nausea
in the patient, can secure their purpose by the ad
ministration of my Oil.
CHARLES W. NOLEN,
No. 154 North Third street.
Sold also by Messrs: JOHN WYETH *
BROTHER, Apothecaries, at their store, No. 1413
Walnut street, above Broad, and by Druggists
generally.
The Co-partnership existing between JOHN O.
BAKER and CHARLES W. NOLEN, under the
firm name of JOHN C. BAKER Ac CO., was
dissolved on the 6th of July, 1863, the business
being continued by tbe /undersigned at the old
stand, No. 134 North THIRD street.
del7-th,sa,tu,3ms CHARLES W. NOLEN.
Mathematical drafting instru
ments,/ Ohesterman’s metallic and steel
tape-measures. For sale by JAMES W. QUEEN
& CO., 924 CHESTNUT street, Priced and illus
trated catalogues grfcUs, fe22-lm-rjp}
Vi- 51 ' '7.
8; - \
Fourth and Arch r
ARE OPENING FOR SPRING, ’64,
WO pcs, $1 Fancy Silks,
50 “ India “ $l,
ISO “ Good Black "
200 “ Ordered Plain “
Brown Silks $6, $5. $4 per yd,
Black Silks $6, 5,4, 3,2; 1,
Moire Antiques, all colors,
Magnificent Grenadines,
Organdies,
Richest Chintzes and Percales,
Spring Shawls.
New Household Staple Goods,
3e20-sa tn tli «t 6
FIFTEENTH WARD!
THE LAST OPPORTUNITY !!!
An adjourned meeting of the Citizens of the FIF
TEENTH WARD, will be held at the
BAPTIST CHAPEL,
Eighteenth , and Spring Garden,
On Tnesday Evening, 23d instant.
AT e O’CLOCK.
The Citizens of this Ward liable to the Draft are
earnestly admonished that the meeting on TUES
DAY will be the EAST opportunity left them to
come forward, and by a proportionate contribu
tion, from each person interested, free themselves
and their families from the anxiety and trouble
which are sure to follow their continued apathy
and neglect.
More than Sixteen Thousand Dollars have been
contributed by about five hundred persons, (many
of whom are not liable,) and about Ten Thousand
Dollars more will fill the anota. The MEN are
ready, the MONEY ONLY is wanted.
Will the Two Thousand or more, who have done
nothing Worth mentioning, remain idle, and de
pend npon the generosity and industry of their
more energetic and patriotic neighbors 1
Many who hesitate now, about giving live or ten
dollars, which a little economy would in a few
weeks make good to them, will bitterly regret
their parsimony and folly when it is tco late.
let every one in the Ward'liable to the Draft be
present at the meeUng. Let every man -yho is in
terested, resolve not only to come himself; bntalso
to bring his neighbors and friends alsng with him,
and it can be demonstrated to their entire satisfac
tion that a comparatively trifling sum from each
will insure them against any further anxiety on
acconnt of the impending conscription.
WM. MANN, President.
J. B. NICHOLSON,
A. J. LECHLER,
O. A. HOFFMAN, Secretary^
& No. I<3
ft ! T'
/y SOUTH TfflHD ST., V,
#BAMERS&BMERS,m
$ *
SPECIE, STOCKS,
Quartermasters’ Vouchers and Cheeks,
AND AT.T,
GOVEBNMEST SECURITIES t
BOUGHT AND"SOLD, oo
WANTED. <
A lew ERIE CITY and COUNTY B&NDS.
ERIE CANAL BONDS of Erie, Pechsylvania.
Also—SlO.OCfl North Branch CANAL BONDS,
for which the highest price will be p,id by
O. B. WEIGHT & CO.,
142 South Third Street*
fe2o-12t§ Opposite the Exchange.
CLARKfcON & CO.,
BARKERS,
No. 121 SOUTH THIRD STREET,
PHIL & BELPHIA.
Government Securities of all Issue:.
PURCHASED AND FOR SALE.
Stocks, Bonds and €rold,
BOUGHT AND SOLD ON COMMISSION.
Interest Allowed on Deposits.
PROMPTLY MADE.
fe4*lm rps
Removal.
JOHN C. BAKER has removed from 154 North
Third, street to 718 MARKET street. Portion
lar attention "will be given to the manufacturing
and bottling of his celebrated Cod Liver Oil.
jQhn C. Baker & Co. * s Medicinal Cod Liver Oil
has for many years had a reputation for genuiue
ness, freshness purity and sweetness, which has
made the demand universal. In this house, 718
Market street, the facilities for obtaining, manu
facturing and bottling increased, and
is all done under the most careful supervision of
tbe original aud sole proprietor. This brand of
Oil hast therefore! advantages over all others, and
reco Wholesale Druggist,
ja2B-tfc, s, tu No. 718 Market street.
TFAPERAND ENVELOPES—
jf The best and cheapest in the City.
For sale by
DUXBURY & QLENN,
No. 37 North Sixth street.
Merchants, Bankers, Lawyers, Military Offi
cerevand aU others, should call before purchasing
elsewhere. . ia27-lrarp*
George j. boyd,
STOCK & EXCHANGE BROKER,
No. 18 South Third street.
Stocks and Loans bought and sold on Commis
sion, at the Board of Brokers.
Government Securities, Specie andUnonrrent
monby bought and sold. U. S. 5-20 Year Loai.
furnished at par - .u024-.3mrpl
HOOP SKIRT ' MANUFACTORY -Hoop
Skirts ready-made and made to order; war
ranted of the best materials. Also, Skirts repaired.
MRS. E. BAYLEY,
fel7-tf 812 Vine street, above Eighth.
■YXTORSTED YARN.—Nos. .12 and 36 of supe-
fc WEtts J
5 Busies Elliptic Skirts ”
/ J. M. HAFLEIGH,
• 002 Chestnut Street,
Will Offer for sale on TUESDAY, February 23d,.
J. W. BRADLEY S
New Patent Duplex Elliptic Hoop
Skiit,
An entirely new article which win meet all ob
actions in regard to pliability and conviction.
REMOVAL.
•f ’ - - ■
ALEX ANDER WHILLDIN & SONS,
Have Removed to
20 and 22 South Front Street,
AND
2't and 23 Letitia Street,
Philadelphia;
Where, from large and desirable stocks of WOOI,
and WOOLEN YARNS, COTTONS and COT
TON YARNS, they will be pleased to serve all
customers. fe2o-l2t|
COTTON YARNS.
ZABRISKIES,
BEATHCOTE,
RIDDLES,
PONDS,
BELVIDEBE MFG. CO.,
GLASGOW CO.,
HENRY CLAY MILLS,
OAKMAN ’3, J. BANCROFT.
And Various Other Pint-Class Hakes,
NOS. 6 TO 40.
IN warps; bundle and cop.
FOR SALE BY
ALEX. WHILLDIN & SONS,
Nos. 20 and 22,50. Front st."
fe2o-.i2t§ Philadelphia.
BESSON & SOJN,
Hare commenced receiving their
SPRING AND SUMMER STOCK
OF
MOUBNING GOODS,
•- nd have now in store:
Jiack Byzantines, English. -Bombazines,
“ Florentines, French Bombazines,
“ Barege Hernani, Sommer Bombazines.
** Crape Maretz, Ohaly, —-
“ Bareges, Moosselines,
SilkQrenadines, Tamises,
Black and Black and White Foolards, &c.
MOURNING STORE,
Wo. 918 Chestnut Street,
BANKERS.
Exchange on England, France aid
Germany,
7 3-10—5-20 Loan and Coupon?*
CERTIFICATES INDEBTEDNESS,
ttUAETERMASTKR’B
CHECKS AND VOUCHERS,
American and Foreign Gold,
STOCKS AND LOANS,
BOUGHT AND SOLD.
bv Mail attended to. d3-iy
MR. CHARLES PAGE,
Favorably known for the last twenty years
Pi incipal Designer of
GAS FIXTURES
FOR
MFSSRS CORNELIUS & BAKER,
is this cay admitted a partner inourlirm..
We will continue the sale and manufacture ot«
GAS FIXTURES, ,
Under the Arm name of
van kirk & co.
MANUFACTORY AT FRANKFORD.
SALESROOMS,
912 ARCH STREET,
. Feb. 1. IS6I. _ _ felD-th sa tn-2ms
/ROUGHS. COLDS, CONSUMPTION.
-Ul COUGHS, COLDS, CONSUMPTION.
COUGHS, COLDS, CONSUMPTION.
COUGHS, COLDS, CONSUMPTION.
COUGhS. COLDS, CONSUMPTION.
DR. SWAYNE’S COMPOUND SYRUP WILD'
CHERRY,’
DR. SWAYNE’S COMPOUND SYRUP WILD
CHEERY, • "
DR. SWAYNE’ S COM POU ND SYRUP WILD
• CHERRY,
DR. SWAYNE’S COMPOUND SYRUP WILD
j - CHERRY,
©R. SWAYNE’S COMPOUND SYRUP WILD"
- CHERRY,
CURES ALL.COMPLAINTS
CUKES ALL COMPLAINTS
CURES ALL COMPLAINTS
CURES ALL COMPLAINTS
' CURES'.ALL COMPLAINTS
OF THE THROAT, BREAST AND LUNGS*.,
OF THE THROAT, BREAST AND LUNGS.
OF THE THROAT,. BREAaT AND LUNGS.
OF THE THROAT, BREAST AND LUNGS.'
OF THE THROAT, BREAST AND LUNGS.
A trial of many years has proved to the world,
that this remedy ’is more efficacious than any
hitherto known to mankind. Fcr Bronchitis, Sore
Throat, Afthma, it is a sovereign remedy. For
the weak and debilitated) it acts as a strengthening ,
alterative. Prepared only by X
DR. SWAYNE * SON, > X
■ 330 North Sixth street, Philadelphia; '
. Bold by dealers every where. ja2o-tn, thjSh-ly.-