BirligiWElSS NOTICES. SLIPPERY PAVEMENTS. Pavements all ice some people keep, Nor ashes on them Spread, And travelers thereon must creep With danger and with dread. For, if you save your limbs and nose, There may be some other vexing woes Result from such a fall; The seams in pants none can insure 'Unless you do that kind secure That comes from Tower Hall! GENTS', YOUTHS' AND BOYS' CLOTHING. TOWER HALL, No. 518 Market Street, BENNETT & CO. Nfir Prices greatly reduced ii) suit the tines. gam Goods sold at tower prices than for several rs. UNIVERSAL SUFFRAGE. In Washington there is a row Upon the right of suffrage now, And many public men contend, To all we should that right extend, To black or white thick-lipped or thin, Whatever be the shade of skin. In what this question may result, To tell is very difficult. There is a stifferage we allow, Which never will create a row; We suffer white, or black, or yellow, If he is but an honest fellow, Come he from near or from afar, To buy his raiment from the "STAR." STAR CLOTHING EMPORIUM, • LOW PRICES AND 'FASHIONABLE GOODS, 609 CR/STNIIT. STREET, ABOVE SDITII. PERRY dr. CO STEINWAY & SONS' PIANOS IMAre now acknowledged the best in• straments in BMWS as well as America. They are used in public and private, by the greatest artists living in Europe, by Von Bulow, Dreyschock. Liszt, Jaell, and others; in this Country by yin% r4ason, Wollßohn, etc, For sale only by BLASSUS BROS., deli 5t w tf 1006 Chestnut street. ' - • EVENING BULLETIN. - FRIDAY, JANUARY 19, 1866 TIVE PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD. In the important case now pending be fore Justice Read, between the Phila delphia and Erie and Atlantic and Great Western Railroad Companies,l an at tack,having'no relation whatever to the legal questions involved, was made by our new-found friends from over the water upon the policy of the Penn sylvania Railroad Company, charging its management with discriminating in the traffic over their road in favor of New York and against Philadelphia. From the fact that its President and every member of the Board of Directors but one, we believe, are residents of the city, and among our most active and re liable business men, the public might well have supposed that in them they were resting upon a solid and secure footing, instead of a volcano, as alleged. However, the alacrity and vim with Tihich this charge was met, convince us that if their continued and unwavering policy of fostering thetrade and interests of Philadelphia and Pennsylvania beyond that of New York were doubted, now was the time and opportunity to set the public mind right. Affidavits were read from their own officers and the Presidents and officers of western railroads, showing that now and for many years past, the difference on freight in favor of Philadelphia and against New York was from $4.50 per ton on first class to $1 per ton on fourth class, and upon passengers from $2 to $2.50; that to maintain this policy, the Company lost nearly half a million dol lars in their successful struggle with the New York roads in 1859, and the geo graphical advantage of Philadelphia over New York was thus secured and has since been conceded. But whether the Pennsylvania Railroad could main_ tain this advantage for Philadelphia if the "great through route to New York" be built by the British capital of our new friends, we must leave for our readers to think about and discuss. In their Cata wissa lease they say the distance of the "great through route to New York" will be one hundred miles shorter than its present route via Salamanca and the New York and Erie Railroad, and as -a matter of course, in any struggle in the future to preserve the natural advantages of Philadelphia, New York, by the as sistance of our new friends, will have gained just so much. Whether the stockholders of the Penn sylvania Railroad would be willing to enter into another contest with their former advantage in distance thus re duced, we know not. Thus far in the , history of this road their spirit, enter prise and attachment to Peonsylvania and Philadelphia interests are proved by the sacrifice to secure the trade, and in - works of extension and improvement to increase and accommodate it. While Sir Morton Peto promises to our new friends a divi-ion of all the earnings of the Atlantic and Great Western's great through route to New York, in dividends, every d oil ir of the earnings of the Pennsylvania Rail road, beyond a moderate dividend, has been expended in promoting the in terests of the commonwealth and the city of Philadelphia, and every other city, village and hamlet on its line. THE sLysn DEPART.HENT. We are going through our annual dis pensation of slush, brine and mud at the hands of our friends, the railway com panies. Since the careful scientific in vestigation given to this interesting sub ject a few years ago by these public benefactors, the merits of this excellent though somewhat nasty compound'have been fully recognized. We hear rumors of a new branch of the City Government to be established Which will be called the Slush Department. It is to consist of a Chief Commissioner of Slush; with several assistants, nominated by the Board of Railway Presidents, and to re tain their offices during bad behaviour. Their salaries are to be liberal, and no questions asked. The duties of the De partment will be to extend the benefits of Slush to the pedestrians of the city. It has been ascertained to the satisfac tion of our savants that Slush is a bless ing. It preserves leather. It improves the health. It bleaches the stockings and skirts of the ladies. It beautifies the person generally. It is an advantage to the streets themselves. And it is a great economy to the railway companies. Therefore let us have Slush. The Slush Department will establish extensive Slush Works at a convenient„ point, probably just . above Fairmonne Dam. There the compound will ibe manufactured in large quantities of the best materials. , The city carts (if they should ever resume their former occupa tion) will haul the accumulated raw ma terial from the streets and lanes of the city to the Slush Works, and will bring the manufactured article to our doors without charge to the citizens. In dis tributing 'the Slush, preference will be given to the most crowded thorough fares, and in these the minimum depth of three inches,has been fixed, as essen tial to the public health and comfort. The police are to be charged with the duty of preserving the public Slush and especially of keeping the crossings well covered. Their long familiarity with this duty, which they have cheerfully added to their other numerous tasks for many winters past, gives them a pecu liar fitness for this responsible office. This triumph of a scientific Slush over the old and stupid prejudices of our too conservative city, we regard as the har binger of a new and better state of things. It shows that we are no longer to be bound down to those effete notions of a primitive and therefore ignorant condition, when everything had to be sacrificed to sparrow-minded notions of an imaginary cleanliness and a super stitious hygiene. William Penn and the bigoted people who surrounded him are responsible for the slow progress Philadelphia has made in the rage of American cities. So long as the city was well-governed, well-lighted, well watered,well-policed, they seem to have imagined that there was nothing to be desired. To sweep the public streets was regarded as a virtue,and there is still existing a traditional rhyme which shows the hopeless stolidity of the race of men whose reign is pow, we rejoice to say, to be superseded forever, by the Board of Presidents and the Slush Depart ment. The rhyme ran thus: "The rain rains and the %villas blow 01(1 Friends to meeting go: And if the streets be tilled with now"— perhaps our readers think they sprinkled the streets with salt and mud. Not at all. The distich ends: "They sweep thou' way with a hesom." Our new Slush Department can hardly be called an experiment. We have had its merits thoroughly tested in advance, ptactically by the railway companies, and scientifically by the wise men and philosophers of our city. Slush is a fixed fact. It is more: it is an institu tion. Of course our citizens will be reasonable enough to allow a short time to get the details of the new Department into working order, but the subject is so perfectly understood that we think we can promise that before the present win ter is over, every street of the city shall be knee deep with the precious compound and every crossing where a policeman can be spared to guard it, impassible. PENNSYLVANIA COAL LANDS. The Barclay coal mountain lies al most fifteen miles south of Towanda, Bradford county, and contains over twenty thousand acres of land. In 1854 the whole property was purchased by a resident of Towanda, and two Philadel phians, for $BO,OOO. The property be longed to the Barclay estate in England. Soon after this purchase, an undivided half of the property was sold for 3100,- 000 on twelve months credit. Another sale of 2,000 acres containing about half the coal land, was made to the Barclay Coal Company of Philadelphia, fors2oo,- 000 in stock. The remainder of the property was then put into a company called the Schrader Land Company, who, in December, 1864, sold 1100 acres of it for 8150,000, part payable in cash, and part in a mortgage on the property, to the Towanda Coal Company. In June last the balance of their purchase was,. old for 8::200,000, which has since all been paid. The Barclay Coal Company has com pleted a tail:oad, running from their mines to the North Branch canal, at Towanda. The other companies, will transport their coal over this road, which is about fifteen miles long. ,It is estimated ihar, about $2C0,000 will be required to develop the latter property fully, and bring their coal into' use. Adjoining the Barclay Mountain, the Fall Creek Company, of New York, own some land, which they are develop ing. The coal in this region is bitumi nous, and of excellent quality. Only fifteen years ago, all the above property could have , been purchased fo: $2O - or about one dollar per acre. * As Pennsylvania possesses more than four times as much coal land as all Great Britain, the above statement feebly fore shadows the future value of the rich miieral treasures of the State, 'upon which seven States almost entirely de pend for their supply of coal. If we add to this her iron, lumber and petroleum, what a contemptible figure the self-styled Empire State presents. Even at the present period, our coal trade is over seventeen millions of tons, which, at seven dollars per ton, amounts to ONE HUNDRED AND NINETEEN MILLIONS of 'dollars, as the value of the product of 1865. 'Such facts show the vast, importance of the hiciden treasure of the Keystone State, from her geographical position. THE ATLANTIC MONTHLY for February opens with a tolerably fair statement con cerning "Englishtlpinion on the Ameriean War," by W. M. Rossetti, an Englishman. A new and promising tale, called', "The Freedman's Story," by William Parker, is begun, and the stories by Donald G. Mitch ell and Charles Readevse eontinued. There is also a clover, sketch called "A Landscape Painter," by Henry James, Jr. The deconcl part of Mr. Hawthorne's Note-Book' consists of a delightful diaiy of a sojourn in laine THE DAILY EVENING BULLETIN : P in 1837. There is a short paper , on "The Origin of the Gypsies," by G. W. Hosmer, and one quite in the vein of Thackeray, by Charles James Sprague, called "Court- Cards." Mrs. Stowe's °Chimney corner" contains, as usual, a good lesson for house keepers. "Tii ree Menths among the Recon structionists," by Sidney Andrews, gives a not very encouraging picture of the "Union ism" of the people of North Carolina, South Carolina and Georgia. There is a charming poem by Whittier, called "Two Pictures," and a poor:, one by James Freeman Clarke, called "Riviera di Ponente," in which at the end of nearly every verse, the barbarism is committed of making "Riviera" rhyme with "rarer," "fairer," "sharer," in one case with "care," in another with "air are," and in another With "declare are." The-literary notices are written with unusual care and good judgment. The 'Tiser says that a Fenian Circle with two head• centres is a geometrical paradox. .We find in therßoston Herald the follow ing anecdote of certain liberal church officers: "About four months ago Mr. Lewis Fisher, a fresco painter, while en gaged'in his occupation on the ceiling of a church in Chelsea, accidentally fell from a staging to the pews beneath, a distance of twenty-five feet, breaking several of his ribs and receiving serious internal injuries Which will disable him for life, and from which he is now, confined to his house. A Jew weeks since the unfortunate man had a bill presented to•him by the trustees of the church for repairing the paws on which he fell, amounting to the sum of $7 60, and he paid it!" What meanness! The skinflints might at least have tried to get the poor fellow some pew-pills. In London any person under sixteen is prohibited from driving any sort of vehicle, and any person under fourteen from having temporary charge of any horse in the street. We should think that such weehickts, as perambulators and velocipedes might be trusted to drivers of more tender years. A woman in New York cut her throat twice and then jumped overboard in a vain attempt at suicide, and was then sent to the hospital. Quite unnecessary toexplain that such an attempt was "a vein one." One of our exchanges praises an egg, which it says was "laid on our table," by Rev. Mr. Smith. Mr. Smith seems to be a layman as well as a minister. What is that process by which twenty women, assembled in oue room, can be made equally handsome at the same moment? Putting out the light. Secretary Welles is so proud of his original Raphael, that he has summoned a party of professional gentlemen to decide how it shall be hung. Edward Ketchum has been put to shoe making at Sing Sing. He wanted to go into toe 1% easing shop, but the warden said he did not like his style of checks. A Washington despatch says it is doubtful if the Ways and Means Committee will tigrt eto the foreign loan clause in the loan bill. Quite right. We don't want any foreign claws in our money matters. Why did the priests starve to death in Jupiter's temple at Dodona? Because it was a temple of Ammon. We depart from our usual rule to remark t tliat it was a tem ple of Famine also. Public Sales Real £,date and Stocks. Ilmsra. Thomas dt Sons' sale on Tuesday next A-11.1 Intsode a number of desirable Estates. Alm &auks. tale o the premises on Lioaday,22d inst„ 31S satuia 1 nt y tir , t street Pamphlet catalogues to-morrow, Catalogues Cow Moir g f,ul descriptions or James A. Fr. ems n's sale. neat Vs ectn.sday, tray oe obtained at the Auction Store. JOEiN CRUMP. BULLDER. rat o-11T.N UT eTREET Mechanics of every branch required for iiousebnild ing and fitting promptly furnished. Ja&fim• 11.13:1.1-t , CP! Heads down :: Lislocatel ants. 1.1 fractured limbs, cracked skulls, strained and sure umseles, fregt:entl) result from slips upon Icy pave ments, and uoght be prevented by weartnc. Creepers up )(Mr sines. of which we have several stylestor sale. TkUM©N S .hIiAW. No. ss3 iF.ight Thirty five) Elarket street. below Ninth. SILVER PLATED. Brass and Iron Door Bolts and Door Chains. lur sale by 1 - 11.13 51A AW. N., ESS (Eight '1 him .tive) Al ark et stria', below Main. AN KW AISTICLE FOR s ACH 'the Paten' zspraig :Scissors :.I.lcl liulf. c.tuotued, lor sa e with Sewlng Macblue uiterg, Tweezers Kull v.• Drivers. by TPA , HAN \V,NO. 1,55 (Eignl Thirty tire) Market street, below Muth. USICAL 80X.14, In bandwlebe cases, playing from 111 two to twelve choice melodies, for sale by FARR 4 BROTHER, Importers, No. its Chestnut street. below Fourtha ARKING WITH INDELIBLE INK. Embroider ing, Braiding, Stamping, Ste. IL A. 'TORREY, Imo Filbert street. Tfir 001' SKIRT 11.1.1%1JFACTORY.— Hoop Slava 1.1 tredy-msde and made to order; warranted of he brat materials. Also, Skirts repaired. ants. E. BAYLEY. cc2B3tnd 812 Vine street, above .Eightli. ITCH. ITCH, SCRATt'H NO MORE.— ' -TETTER" "11V1 - 1 - .Dr. Surly-nes Ointment. "Th: it - Tit." "11(.11" Dr..strayns s Ointment. 'TErl'Et." "T ETT KR" "ITCH" NEVER KNOWN "TETTER" - PT Car' "TE TT EX' "ITCH" TO FAIL "TErTT hat" "ITCH" - TET l'Elt" "ITCH" IN I:CHINO THIS - TE r rkat ., • "ITCH" "ITCH" TORILENTIN 1 "T.k.rrErt "lTCH" "Te:TrEllt" CH" coM . PLA I NT. "TE eTi.2.lt" "ITCH" PE PT Eft" Cures Itching Piles, Salt .Rheam Qr.ald Held, bk tu Diseases. "Swaynes" "All Healing" "Ointment" "Swayne's" "All-Healing" "Ointment." "Swayne's" "A.l-Healing" "Ointment." "Swayne's" "All-Healing" "Ointment" "Swayne's" "All-Healing" "Ointment." "Swayne's" "All-Healing" "Ointment." "Swayne's" "All-Healing" "Ointment." "Swayne's" ''All-Healing" "Ointment." "Swayne's" "All-Healing" "Ointment." A great variety of cases yield to the wonderful heal ing ploperties of this Ointment, even the most obstl t ate ann protracted in character, eruptions covering the wbole surface of the body. that put at defiance every other mode of treatment which the mind of man could invent. have been permanently cured. Price 50 cents a box. By mail 60 cents. _ . Over Su years have " Dr. .swayne's 31 - Mt-eines" been In constant use In all parts of the world and their !acres-- log popularity Is certainly proof of their great power to heal. _ _ _ _ . . Pr'Tared only by Dr. SWAYNE & SON, No. 330 N II street, above Vine, Philadelphia. ...old by the leading Druggists. JeetnAti,f- FrrLER, WEAVER W..• Manufacturers of MANILA AND TARRED CORDAGE. Cords, Twines, &c., No. 23 North Water Street, and No. 22 North Delawar Avenue, Philadelphia. EDWIN H. Frenun. Micnema Waaysat, Cozinan F. OLonnitn. TSAAC NATRANS, tctloneer and Money Broker, J. N. E. corner of Th and Spruce streets, only 0n,.. ma c r e e beal: the e n he r re e last L lo U rtl All 6'B . o cl ire 3 ; to loan in large or sma.l amounts, at the lowest ratai on Diamonds, Silver Plate, Watches. Jewelry, Cloth ing, and goods of every, description. Office hours froth A. M. till 7 P. AL FO RCH. dea.x tfro. COMMISSION JOHN FL TES. comliflßSlONEft FOR ALL THE STATES. NOTARY PUBLIC, PENSION AND PRIZE AGENT, '- No. =.4 DOCK street. PASSPORTS procureg, Acknowledgments, Deposi tions, Affidavits to Accounts, taken tor PENNSYL VANIA and all the States., Pensions, Bounty and Prize Money collected. deal imd WOE BALE.—To- Shippers, Grocers, Hotel-keepers 17 and others—A very superior lot of Champagne Cider, by the barrel or dozen. P, J. JORDAN, nog-rptf 220 Pear B reef, below Third and Walnut JJORDAN'SMELEE. • TED TONIC ALE.—The, truly healthful and • utrillons beverage, now In use by thousands—invalids and others—has established a character for quality of material and purity of mann whlch stands unrivaled. It Is recommended by physicians of this and other places. xyla a superior tonic, and requires but a trial to convince the most, akeptical of its great hssrit. To be had,' wholesale and etall, of P. I. JORD&DI. 220 Pear street. pt . ; GOLD AND SHAVER WATCHES OP OITE A,.• own Importation, reliable In gaallty and at 'l l k 1" prices . a ER MUM, in:Mortars, w 9! . tat Otreatnat street. below Pourtbl ' :•WITH . CALL attention to our cent assortment of superior PIANOS; which always have on hand, and offer them at very reasonable prices to purchasers. Best of references and PULL - GUARANTEE Invariably given by THE I:won PL9.1;10 lliAlsTOTAertritteto apex • • 1017 Walnut street: Facts and Fancies Real Estate Sale. and 21$ 101,...G.g, STREET. ILADELPHIA, FRIDAY, JANU NOW IN PRESS : A. lESIEL Gwv. LAD , S NEW GLOP LA COTERIE CARNIVAL. The Most Dashing Galop Written This Season. FOR SALE AND PUBLIRTIFD BY C. W. A, TRUMPLER, RISLEY'S jal9-6t/ 'CONTINENTAL NEWS EXCHANGE Ice ! lee ! lee ! fee ! lee! The Ice business heretofore mulled on by as, miler the name of the "MOLLERE ICE C 0.," will hereafter be known as the "Cold Spring Ice and Coal Co," We respectfully solicit from our friends and custo 'mere a continuance of their favors under the new ar rangement, and assure them that hereafter they will be supplied by the COLD SPRING ICE AND COAL CO., with Ice of the best quality, always at the lowest market rates and with regularity and promptness. WOLBERT & BROTHER. (INCORPORATED, APRIL, 1864.) Cold Spring Ice and Coal Co. 7 HOS. E. CP , Tilt , President, JOHN GOODYI4.B, Secretary. HENRY THOMAS, Superintendent. Wholesale and Retail dealers in and shippers of Ice and Coal. Boston Ice now being supplied daily in all paved Baits of the consolidated city, Twenty-fourth Ward, Rirtimond, 31antua and Germantown. Lehigh and bchuylk 111 Coal, Carefully selected for family use, and as low as the lowest for a firstrate article. Black smith's coal of excellent quality, hickory, oak and pine Wcod, and Kindling Wood. Depots— S. W. Cor. 'TWELFTH and WILLOW eta. NORTH PENNA. R. R. and MASTER Sta. TWENTY-FIFTH and LOMBARD Sta. RUSE STREET WHARF, Schuylkill N 0.435 Walnut Street. ja.3-am rpl VERY C (...)I+LLE, _SEW CROP. OOLONGTEA, fl 5o PER LB, Just received by THOMPSON BLACK & SON, BROAD AND CRESTNUT STS. no9-' rpf THE LATE .GRFAT FIRE ! Immense Bargains Offered! ROCKHILL&WILSON, PROPRIETORS OF THE Brown Stone Clothing Hall, NOS. 603 AND 605 CHESTNUT ST., Have their Stock of Goods GENTLEMEN AND YOUTHS Now Arranged and Ready for Sule, Astoundingly Low Prices, WITH A. VIEW TO CLOSING OUT THE GOODS Rezoned fron the Late Conflagration And of Preparing their SJE'ELIT.d 4Ur Sal° , Clll. ligaa1otwl$1102t11: 1 41113441 IS NOW UNDER WAY fOn the second Floor. Entrance on Chestnut Street. bum, COAL ! COAL BEST QUALITIES OF COAL AT LOWEST MARKET RATES, AT ALTER'S COAL :YARD, NIN - 271-1 BELOW .GIRARD AVENUE. AGrBRANOET OFFICE CORNER OF SIXTH AND SPRING GARDENI delOtapl-4p Ar rum:r GRAPES.—tOO kegs of these splendid white grapes in fine o tler landing and for evaelenubey JOS. B. ROl:Spat & CO.. log South Delaware a rIARACAS 0000 0 61.—Fil bags for sale. k byJOHN DALLETT /241 w Lout aired. 1e27 ARY 19, 1866. I al itfAINI m i FIRE INSURANCE CONPANY OF PHILADELPHIA. Capital, - - - $400,000 Assets, - - $2,506,851 96 Statement of the Assets of the Company on January Ist, 1866. Published in conformity with the provisions of the Sixth Section of the Act of Assembly of April sth, 1542: IVlcyrtga.g,es. On property valued at over $4,000,000; being First Mortgages on Real Estate in the City and County of Philadelphia, except p 4,459 08, In the neighboring counties, $1,917,399 47 Real Estate.. Purchased at Sheriff's Sales, under Mort gage Claims, viz: Eight houses and lot, S. W. corner Chest nut and Seventeenth Streets, A house and lot, north side of Spruce Street, west ofFleventh street. Two houses and lot, south side of Spruce street, nt ar Sixteenth street. Five houses and lots, Nos. 521,552,525,527 and 529 DiUwyn street. Hotel Sala lot, S. E. corner Chestnut and Beach streets. Five houses and lot. north side George street, west of Ashton street. f3even houses and lot, esot side Beach street, south ofChestnut street.. A house and lot, Fitzwater street, east of ninth street. 87 lots of ground on Rac.kley street ar.d, Quervelle avenue, Bristol. Two houses and lots. north side Filbert street, west of Eighth street. A house and lot, west side Bread Street, south of Race Street. A house and lot. south side Filbert Street, west of Sixteenth Street. A house and lot, east side Frankford Road, south of Auburn Street. A let of ground, south side Lombard Street, west of Twenty-third Street.. Two lots of ground, west side Twenty. third street. north of Meredith Street- L t of grc und, north side of Meredith Street, west of Twenty third street. iota', surveyed and valued at t.l.lo,lsti IS. Cost, 6101,747 65 Loans. Temporary Loans on Stocks as Collateral :tteunty (valued at 1171).4a5) ......... Stocks. 4.5,et0 z.s. Bonds, 146,t.00 C. S. 10-40 Registered Bonds. 476,C00 U. S. 5,.48 Year Registered Bonds. f 4.5,01.0 U. 5.5-3) Year Coupon Bonds. $32,700 Philadelphia City Loans, not taxable. f9.4:09, Pennsylvania State Six per cent. Loan. of May, 1661. flo.ovo North Penn. R. P,. Bands. pot) North Pennsylvania Railroad cou pon scrip. 4253 shares Penn. Railroad Company. 91 " Franklin File Insurance Co. " Bank of Kentucky. 17 " Northern Bank of Hy. 10.) " Union Bank of Tennessee. 13 " Insurance Company of the State of Pennsylvania. no " Southwark Railroad Co. 24 " Union Canal Company. 16 " Continental Motel Co. 5,;(15 U. S. 7.zsd Treasury Notes. ttlS5 Philadelphia City Warrants. Total Market value 4330,971 90 Cost - - $296,193 00 Rotes and Bills Receivable, 3,244 25 Revenue ? tams, 101 70 CASH on 2... 4 931 39 " in banns of Agents 6,599 70 Total Cash, - • 39,520 09 82.443,681 53 Real Estate. MARI:ET PRI(-1: Cost, as above 101,717 63 Advance in value, - 28,391 53 MARKET PRICE. Cost as above._ Advance in value, - 34,778 90 Total, - - - $2 506,851 96 Losses by roir-e. Losses Paid daring the year 1b65, - - - - $113,53110 By orCer of,the El vrd CHAS. N. BLiNCKER, Attest— Jas. W. McAllister, SECRETARY PRO. TEM DIRECTORS. CHAS. N. BANCKER, EDWARD C. DALE, TOBIAS WAGNER, GEO. PALES, SAMUEL GRANT, ALFRED FlT.L.fat, rGEO. W. RICHARDS, FRAf3. W. LEWIS, /ISAAC LItA, PETER McCALL. CHAS. N. BANCKER, President. EDWARD C. DALE, Vice President. AS. W. MeALLISTERISecretary pro. tern. Jal2S,m,w6tf PATENT WIRE WORK. FOR RAILINGS, STORE FRONTS, GUARDS. PARTITIONS, &c IRON BEDSTEADS AND WIRE WORK in variety, manufactured by M. WALB ER Sc SONS, jar -lm 4p NO. 11. NORTH SIXTH Street. FINE OPERA GLASSES. A VERY LARGE VARIETY JAMES W. QIIRPN & CO., de2ltf rp; khElH:~:~:y W ~~YQ:y Y: ~:N:N EDWARD P. KELLY, • TAILOR, 612 Chestnut St. COIit.PLETB ASSORTMENT OF Choice Goods At Reduced Prices for Cash. Pattern Coat and Clothes Not Paid for at Cost for Cash. 885,475 37 $330.971 ;hl PRESIDENT MARVIN'S PATENT ALUM AND DRY PLASTER FIRE AND BURGLAR 721 CHESTNUT STREET. Nearly Twenty-five years experience in the manu— facture and E ale of Safes in New York City, enables us to present to the public an article unrivaled in the mar ket, Our Safes are Preefrora dampness, and do not corrode the iron. Thoroughly fire-proof, and do not lose that quality. Furnished with the Deft Powder-Proof Lock. DWELLING HOUSE bA FES of ornamental styles for Slily. r Plate, Jewelry, &c. star Safes of other makers taken in exchange, Send for descriptive Circular. MARVIN & CO., 721 CHESTNUT STREET, (Masonic Hall.) Philadelphia, and sar, BROADWAY, N. Y. MEW SPRING AND SUMMER EOTJRNING GOODS, DAILY OPENING, BY BESSON & SON, MOURNING STORE, _ i n 4pp lB Chestnut Street. BLACK GROS DE RHrNES. BLACK FIGURED SILKS. BLACK CORDED SILKS. BLACK TAFFETTAr. BLACK GROS GRAINS. Bought low and will be sold at a small advance. J. C. STRAW BRIDGE & CO., N. W. Corner Eighth and Market 43th. ia)stf-,p MARKET 44 - a? NINTH. •e r ' lF e 41 4 371-2 CENT BLEACHED MUSLIN.. full yard wide and good quality. al cent yard wide good unbleached Snirting. 50 cents for Ng ill s‘mscilles and Wamsuttas. SE cents for New York Mills. au cents for 5-4 good °leached Sheetings. 24,000 YARDS MUSLINS, Including all the good makes. Bleached and 'Unbleached. Skirtings and Sheetings. Wholesale prices by the piece. Buy now before they get higher. CLOAKS AND CLOAICENDS. Reduced the prices. Assortment very good. *yen. coatings cheaper. Best 0.-ssimeres made. Good time to buy. SI 2 - k. TINS KIRTS s 50 for best Black and White Skirts. 50, tl; and 135 cent extra good Black Alpacas. al and 33 cents for Delaines. 17 fS and $lO Blankets. Quilts or every variety. LINEN GOODS. BARNSLEY TABLE DAMASK 12 and 11 25. FINE WIDE TABLE DAMASK $1 50 and t 2 00_ 100 DOZ. NAPKINS ATV. &s. RED BORDERED TOWELS and NAPKINS. SREETINGS and PILLOW CASE LINEN. BIRD'S EYE LINENS IN FINE QUA_LITIES.- J. C. STRAWBRIDGE & CO., N. W, Corner Eightl. and Market Ste> Jalslf rp EDWIN HALL & CO., 26 South Second St. 9. HAVE JrsT RECEIVED, Per Steamer, a case of their own ordering of 'BITE CAMBRIC SKIRTS,. WITH Goffered Ruffling and Other Styles. C rrir .N CMS., Wide Chintzes 31 Cents. Calicoes, Best Makes, 25 Cents. 10-4 Utica Sheetings. 10-4 Waltham Sheeting. 9-4 Pepperill Sheetings. New York Mills Williamsville, Wamsutta. 5-4 Pillow Muslins. 5 BALES 4-4 UNBLEACHED HUSLENS at 31 cents- J. C. STRAWBRIDGE & C 0.,. N. W. cor. Eighth and Market Sts. jals-t1 rp GEO. S. BEREIELE, ARCHITECT, 520 Walnut Street, specialty. Churches and Country Houses. .la6-Ins PRICES REDUCED ON 4.1. Ladles' Skating Hats. Ladies' Fur Trimmed Hoods. Gents' Fur Collars and Gloves Velvet Hats for Misses' and Children. THEO. H. M'OALLA, At Hie Old Established HAT AND CAP EMPORIUM, 804 Chestnut street®. ia2 rPI