BUSINESS NOTICES. MAC WHOLTER'•S VOW. Hear what the sage Mac Wholter said, 'Should mush turn blue, and butter red, Should corner-loafers earn their bread • Without constraint, • ShoUld our fame-covered soldiers show Their backs unto a" foreign foe,— Or on the stage an actress go Devoid of paint, Should these great wonders happen all, I add would deal at Tower Hold ' Our stock of Clothing is,the largest 'and most complete in this city, surpassed by none in material, style and fit, and sold at prices guaranteed lower TO than the lo A 1 w .l est. WER N.., No. 518 Market Street, BENNETT & CO. LONG MOSS SPRING—BY L. D. 8A1030178., Long Moss Spring, with its violets blue, And ground-sparrows fluttering through the dew Of the soft green moss where you rested your feet, By the willowy alders bent fora seat. The little birds over the dewy boughs hopping, Down through the fragrance their sweetest notes dropping, ' And the laughing spring's bright waters flow, As it bubbled along a year e.„;ro, When it mirrored a form more bright and fair Than poet could picture on earth or air, And the bright vision promised to meet me same day, ' When the spring time had chased coming winter away. It would lighten my heart of its grief if I knew That the maiden of Long Moss Spring were true, But the spring may dry up or its waters fall. The green moss be scorched by the summer gale. I will fix my hopes, since it may be so, On the beautiful "Star" of Perry & Co., And deck myself in its rinestgear, To attract the maidens far and near And some dear angel for me may sing As sweet as the maiden of Long Moss Spring. lint even though such Should not be the case, I shall have the satisfaction of knowing that I have purchased a stylish suit of Clothes at a LOWER PRICE than I could possibly have obtained them for in any other estab lishment. —The "Star" being anxious to close out its stock of Winner Overcoats, has ,marked them so far below the actual cost that they would be a desirable investment for those who expect to purchase next winter. STAR CLOTHING EMPORIUM. LOW PRICES AND FASHIONABLE GOODS, see CHESTNUT STREET, SIGN OF THE "STAR.' PERRY & CO. /pmA. REDUCTION OF TWENTY PER CENT. ON THE REGULAR SCHEDULE PRICES. —Desiring to reduce our Janie stock of superior and higlSh ltyo finished seven octave Rosewood N Pianos, TNUT street, we haveconcluded to re ffer o hem at prices below the cost to manufacture. Persons de siring to purchase a first-class PIANO, at reduced rates, should avail themselves of this opportunity. SCHOMACRAR a CO., Warerooms No. 1021 Chestnut street. STEINWAY & SONS' PIANOS IMAre now acknowledged the best in-NM straraents in Europe as well as America. They are rased in public and private. by the greatest artists Ming 1n . n.rope, by 'VON EI:FLOWD aEY,CHOCH, LISZT, TAELL, and others; in this coounh7 by MILLS, 211.A.50N, WOLFSOHN, etc, For sale only by BLASITTS BROS., fell- tf 1006 Chestnut street im METMPS NEWLY IMPROVED CRE CENT SCALE OVERSTRUNG PIANOS, Ankfiowledged to be the best. London Prize Medal and Highest Awards in America received. MELO DEONS AND SECOND-HAND PIANOS Ja24 w.s.m 5m Warerooms,722 Arch st., below Bth. _ . 1 0CABINET ORGANS AND STECK & CO.'S PLANO FORTES. The only place where these nnri- Valed instruments can be had in J. PhE. GO iladelp U hia, Is at LD'S. Seventh and Chestnut. ta-stwtri ULIMMaMa WEDNESDAY. MARCH 7. 1866 EXTREMISTS In the President's recent message and speeches there is an idea thrown out, with much prominence, that is greatly to be regretted. We allude to Mr. John son's doctrine of extremists. The frequency with which the figure of "the other end of the line" has been used, of late, would seem to indicate that it has become a favorite theme of contempla. tion in the Presidentiarmind. It is a well-known prinCiple that the constant re-iteration of a proposition will often form it into a conviction, even although it was not originally believed by its own author,and wefear that the President may come seriously tobelieve that the "other end of the line" is really what he, in the carelessness or heat of off-hand speeches, has so often declared it to be. There can be no more dangerous error, none more threatening to the future of our country, than to assert that there is any class of American citizens, forming "the other end of the line," as opposite or parallel extremes to recognized and overt trai tors. 'We are, of course, aware that when Mr. Johnson ' charged Messrs. Sumner and Stevens with being traitors and assassins, and branded them as being the complement of Davis, Wigfall and Toombs, he did not mean what he said. The fact that these gentlemen were not immediately arrested and con signed to the Old Capitol, is sufficient proof that Mr. Johnson's language is to be taken, after the manner of Pickwick. But unfortunately. this idea of the Pre 'sident's will be taken up and re-echoed all over the South, as well as the North, and a new element of distrust and hos tility engendered that must bear very bitter fruit. We repeat that it is greatly to be regretted that the President should have started this fallacious idea. No one knows better than he that there is no class at the North corresponding with . the men who struck down the flag and rose in rebellion against a just and good government. No one knows better than he that the utterances of Sumner, Stevens and Banks (and he might have added Seward, and many more, to the list), were merely the expressions of their profound convictions that Slavery could not live in this country. And now that their prophecies have been fulfilled, it would be a most - ungracious office to stone the prophets because they have told us the truth. The distance between these men and the rebels of the South is as wide as it ever was between Mr. Lincoln and JeffersOn Davis, or between the Andiew Johnson of the United States Senate and the men whom he then desired to hang for treason. It is a most dangerous heresy to teach the rising generations of Ame rica that there is any crime like treason, or that there was a single • point of contact between the men who plotted and fought for the rebellion and the men whose intense love of their • 'country's honor and of human liberty `=-• may have expressed itself in the most radicalterras. There must be a circle of . Are- forever drawn around the crime of • the late rebellion, which shall forbid all idea of . there being any "other end to that line." . -- There is a strong tendency manifested by 4 Class of our pebple to obliterate all' distinctions growing out of the relations of treason to loyalty, and of secession to union. That there should be such a de sire on the part of traitors, whether North. or South, is very natural, but it should be left to them to expunge the recordi ofpe rebellion if they can. The men whorare now called "Extremists" and "Radicals" are the true Conserva tives, in many senses of the word. None of them, so far as we remember, have uttered such extreme and radical senti ments asthose eloquent and impassioned words with which Andrew Johnson de nounced traitors and . proclaimed their doom. It was his uncompromising Radicalism that made him the mark for rebel and copperhead malice. It was his Ex .remism that made Hiester Cly mer and his friends deny him the free dom of speech in Harrisburg. It was his Radicalism that rallied the whole North around him as to a chosen leader, and the people will not complain if the President will "fight it out on the same line," and instead of giving'a text to the ignorant and disaffected which they will distort into a condemnation of true and loyal men, give the country some prac tical evidence that even yet "treason is to be made odious." 'PRESIDEBT" OICULIEOXY. We have already expiessed our opinion of the bad management of the Fenian leaders, and every day's experience fur nishes new evidence of the' plentiful lack of wisdom possessed by these men. At the mass meeting held in front of Independence Hall last evening, Presi dent O'Mahony is reported to have spoken as follows: "There are now 300,000 Irishmen upon the Irish soil banded together in holy brother hood, ranged in companies, in regiments and in brigades, obeying their officers im plicitly in all things. They constitute an army in every respect, except that they are as yet but imperfectly supplied with arms and munitions of war. The organization is presided over by a central Executive, one, I believe of the most patriotic and devoted men of tile present day, James Stephens, [Cheers.] Under him is his Executive Council and his Military Council, the whole composed of veteran Irish-American offi cers, who have been for the past six months upon the Irish soil, organizing that Irish army and fitting and preparing it to do ef fective service against the enemy. "By their g - enius, and talent,and military experience and skill, the organization has I;reen pushed to the extreme limit. In Ire land there is nothing more to be done by our allied brothers. Their duty is done as far as men so situated could accomplish it. In England, also, the organization is widely spread. Fenian garrisons are planted through the crowded centres of English commerce and wealth, and also through the great centres of her political power,ready to attack the tyrant enemy as soon as we shall raise the green flag of our sires upon the Irish soil." [Cheers.] As the speaker wound up his address by declaring that Fenians never tell lies. we presume that he meant what he said, and that he was not merely talking for Buncombe or for the purpose of scaring the British lion. Assuming then that Mr. O'Mahony meant what he said, what sort of a figure does he cut? The Irish jails are said to be overflowing with Fenian prisoners,and if the British government need any evidence to aid in convicting them, the declaration of the acknowledged head of the Order in America•will be at hand to furnish this proof. Besides, it is generally believed that "Head Centre" Stephens is still in Ireland, and should he fall into the hands of the government,his injudicious friends on this side of the Atlantic will have furnished unmistakeable evidence of the part which he is taking in the revolutionary movement. Neither is it • the part of executive or military wisdom to proclaim to the world that there are three hundred thousand organized and drilled Fenians in Ireland, that they are officered by "veteran Irish-Americans," and that there are secret Fenian organi zations in all "the crowded centres of English commerce and wealth." Taking all these statements for fact, the wonder is, not that the British govern ment has suspended the writ of habeas corpus in Ireland, but that the writ was not suspended long since. Forewarned is to be forearmed, and the English will not be slow to avail themselves of the information given them by the talkative O'Mahony. If Ireland ever secures her independence, it must be under wiser and abler leaders thin she has had thus far•in the history of her revolutieniTy struggles. Within a day or Iwo James C. Van dyke,Esq.,formerly United District At torney in this city, under the adminis tration of James Buchanan, sant to pay a gas bill at the office in Seventh street. The payment of the bill was all well enough; but some treasonable and in solent remarks written upon the face of it by Mr. Van . Dyke were not all well enough, and so the clerk very properly refused to receipt the bill or to receive the money. This brought forth a tart note from Mr. Van Dyke, which ran in this wise, the words in italics having been underscored by the writer khim self: To the Receiving Cleric at the office of the Trustees of the Philadelphia Gas Works: I sent you this morning the amount or my gas bill furnished on the Ist inst. You re fused to receive it, as my messenger reports, because I had seen fit to designate the thirty cents per thousand feet tax as "on Abolition imposition upon white tabor, levitd by a Con gress of traitors upon the labor of white ?nen, to support a corrupt negro war against the sovereign rights of States and the people thereof." I now enclose the same amount ($26 15) in the shinplaster currency of the same Con-, gress of traitors. The bill you can have when you desire to become more familiar with the proper names of traitors' laws. If -you do not see fit to return a receipt for the amount enclosed, it is a matter of no im portance to me. Respectfully, your obedient servant, J:C. VAN DYKE ' 518 Walnut street. • Philadelphia, March 5, 1866. If .31r. Van Dyke was endeavoring to make a particularly fine display of a highly intensified style of Copperhead venom he has certainlyattained a most THE DAILY ErI,NINGi BULLETIN : PHILADELPHIA, VgIiDNESDAY, MARCH 7, 1866. distinguished success:. We like to see a man do thoroughly well whatever he undertakes to do, and Mr. Van Dyke, in the display of bitter and vindicative Copperheadism, has done all that could reasonably be asked of any man. ' He has done so well in fact that he has thrown some very prominent reptiles of the same brood completely in the shade, and even Mr. William B. Reed must look to his laurels or Van Dyke will strip them from his intellectual brow. •To be sure Mr. Reed did well, exceed ingly well, in a Copperhead point of view, by proposing the health of the "Stern Statesman" at a recent pow-wow at the Democratic club-house on Chest nut street. But Van Dyke has done tic) well that Reed "must do better" to keep up head in the school of treason. Some thing should be done without delay with the case of Mr. Van Dyke; he seems to need "reconstruetion" very badly, and his case might properly be handed over to the • "Committee of fifteen;" there might also be a special fitness under the peculiar cir cumstances, in a reference to a special "Committee on Gas." • A Mr. Thomas Stackpolb, late a steward at the White House, Washing ton, has published a card relative to the alleged disappearance of certain articles of furniture, &c., from the Presidential Mansion. Mr. Stackpole winds up his card with the following sagacious para graph : "I would only remark that whatever arti cles are missing from the White House must have been taken from thence either before or after my appointment." We presume that nobody will question this sage conclusion. If anything was taken it was unquestionably done before or after his appointment. Nobody sus pects that it was accomplished at the precise moment in which Steward Stackpole received his commission. Valuable Real Estate at Public Sale. Messrs. Thomas dz Sons' sale on Tueeday next will .mbrsce a number of valuable estates. by order of tb, Orphans' Court. including the valuable double resi uence and large garden, corner Sixteenth and Locust streets: estate of title minors; rpareetliate possession. Neat modern dwelling: valuab:e - ousiness stand , : ,mall dwellings; bulk lug lots, farms. &c. Se= anctior txdu u,n and pamphlet catalogues John B. Myers & Co.. Auctioneers. Nos. 32 and Market street. will hold on to-morrow, (Thor day Ai d Fr.day) an Immense sale of Dr) Li uotlt consisting of the st el: of Vass. Jame. s. Ern:. enrar• .f• Co., damaged at the late tire. Etusers wlll Lind mt, sale worthy of the'r nneivided attention, many of tb coods being but little Injured. JOHN CRUMP BUILDER. 1731 OrLFZATINITT BTRERT and 218 IhvG.E. STREET. Mechanics of every branch required fur nousebunc ng and fitting promptly furnished. ical-an• _ . ()EDI CE.L. PRICE..- superb specimen., all style, CL na ural and life-like Photograph Likenesses. WI. tatuf-d at B, F. lilt I BIER'S, at moderate cos:. Call a: ,24 Arch sti eel: secure the best, DETTER than a plstnl fur soaring bar :lam away. or .1) than sound lungs for bringlog ptople to be!p you. is a Watchma. 's Rattle, when sprung from your win den•. Ev.ry housekeeper shoula have oue in la', chamber to be ready for sucrt etnergenems. For _.le ny TRUMAN ct SHAW. No. a alight Thlrty-uvr) Market street, below Ninth. 'Oat ItEDI'CEIL—Lire size Photographs in. Oi 1 Colors. B. F. REIM superlors:yles Panful:, cdmirEd by all for rare accuracy and impressive ccio: ng. See specimens, 624,A7 ch street. WSTER Els IVES, }broilers. Stewing and Frying Panr. forisale at the Hardware r;tore of TRU MA ts: & SHAW, No. b 3.5 (Eight Tbirty-tivet Market street, below Ninth. PRICES REDUCED as styles Cortes d. Visite. now is the time to have them made. Cal: at REIMER'S Gallery, Second street, above Greeu. avoid delay: go early. EMERY AND SAND PAPER AND TRIPOLI POWDER, for sate at the Haraware store; 0 , TRI MAN et SHAW, No. r.l (Eight Thirty Svc! Market street below Ninth. aped. Itaror put in order. Corner Exchan to Place mid Dock street. 11, InnEILLE!...4 COUNTERPAN I*3. of grades and sizes, from recPnt Importations, AT REDUCED PRICE' . . CURWEN STODDART fi RR,'rH EP Nos. ISO, .is 2 and 454 North Second SCreet_ mbi•SQ above Willow. 1 ADDER COLORED PRINTS, AT REDUCED PRICES. CUPAVEN STODDART & BROTHER, Nos. 4W, 452 and 454 North Second street, mh7.3t Move BLEACHED AND BROWN ZAl7§LltisTofndi makes, AT REDUCED PRICES. RWEN STODDART ct BROTHER, Nos. 450 452 and 454 North Second street. mh.7 3tt above Willow. FANCY DRESS SILKS, from late auction Bales. AT REDUCED PRICES. CI:RWEN STODUART & BROTHER. Nos. 450, 452 and 454 NUrth Secor d street. above Willow 81.. A CR AN I , WHITE CH.t.l'E. SILKS, from a late ACCT lON NA LE, I. Ci•RW EN S'IOPPAItT & BROTHER, os. CA). 452 anu 454 Noah Second street. rub7.nt2; above Willow. 1) }t} •-s t;OODS OF SEASON ABLE STYLES, from 20 to 374, cents per yard, AT REDUCED PRICES. 'CURIA:EN STODD ART .5. BROTHER, Nos. 450, 452 and 424 North Second !tercet. roh7-31; above Willow. OURNINO rOOUS OF ALL ITINDs, Ol AT REDUCED PRICES upcv EN sTODDART & BROTHER Nos. 460, 452 and 454 North second atrPet, mb7 ,1 above Willow FLANNEIs OF ALL MAKES, AT REDUCED PRICES CURWF N STODDART dt BROTHER, Nos. 150, 432 and 454 North second street, rat37.3t7 above Wallow NV I:11TE MARSE, 3 ILL , 7 . 87 , 2 ,c and $l. 11 - I.IWEN STODI/A_RT e BROTHER, Nos. 4.50, 452 en° 454 North eeeond btrefq, mh7-3q abuve Willow BLACK DRESS SILKS, -- AT REDUCED PRIDES f 1 50,41 65. $1 75, f 07 and 4.1 ( BWEN STODDART & BRO . MEE, Nos. 455, 452 and 454 North Second street, mb7-3Q above Willow tiY, LOE oa (0, .NEWSPAPER ADVERTI§INO AND SUBSCRIPTION AGENCY For the Newspapers of the whole country. Northeast corner of FIFTH. and tpl7-Q.w.,120 CHESTNUT Streets. ENGLISH GRENADINES.—Just received, a ease of these desirable goods, cc hich are offered a s cents per yard, ralftlAq No. 9 South Ninth street. Arißll4ll WIT Embroraw 1.1(1. ing, Braiding, Stamping, dw. M. A.. TORREY, 1800 Filbert street. ISAAC H. HOBBS, ARCHITECT. 154 South FOURTH Street, Great Western Building, Room No. 5. fe2.3-Imrp. EE HARRISON BOTI.R.R, A SA7E STEAM T 801 (AM.—The attention of Manufacturers and others using Steam is confidently called to this new ..team Generator, as combining essential advantag,es in absolute safety from explosion, in cheapness of first cost and cost of repairs, in economy of fuel, facility of cleaning and transportation. &c., not possessed by any other boiler now in use. This boiler is formed of a coinbination of cast-iron hollow spheres, each sphere 8 inches external diameter, and of an Inch thick. These are held together by wrougat Iron bolts, with caps at the ends. Nearly one hundred of these Boilers are now in op eration, some of them in the best establishments in this city. For descriptive circulars or price. apply to JOSEPH HARRISON, JrHarrison Boiler Works , Gray's Ferry Road, adjoining the U. S. Arsenal, Philadel phia. fe2Bd,lmrp2. A CHEAP LOT OF BLACK LLAMA LACE A POINTER.—GEG W. VOGEL. No. 1018 Chestnut street, invites attention to a lot of Black Llama Lace Pointes, from $l5 to $lB, warranted Real Llama Lace, and much below their present value. mh2-6trps 'WINE MANTELTRENPH. CLOCKS.—A fresh Inl _a: or o6lear . Lotion of beautiful styles, warranted oorrect ma.E.rufsw,PEßS4 FARR & BROTHER. Importers, 324 Chestnut street, below Fourth. iv/MX% WEAVER & 00.. Manuftwitarere at MANILA AND TARRED CORDAGE. Cords, Twines, &c. No. hl North Water Btreet,and No. Oh North DIAIIV7III Avenue, Mlsdelphia. XPWasi 71, Phimut.x,.WAVV3ll4 map comp% A SAGACIOUS STACHPOLE. TTH E FAVORITE CLOTHING HQUSE of this City, is • WA&AMAXBR • & BROWN'S ropular Establishment . ; at B. E. corner SIXTH and MARKET STREETS. They have the best stock of Ready-Made Clothing, and a fine assortment of Piece Goods for Custom Work, and are satisfied Wish moderate prices. Pay thenr a visit for • our next Suit. HOWELL & BROTHERS, S. W. car. Ninth and Chestnut sts., Are Manufacturing their new styles of - Paper Hangings FOR SPRING, And Samples and Lots of New Goods are now coming in from their manufactory, which with a fresh Impor lion of French Designs are ready for the inspection of their customers. The increased facilities of their new and more ex_ tensive Fictory enables them to produce much hand • somer and finishedstyles. Imitation Fresco Designs FOR • Parlors, Entries, Ceilings, &0., PREPARED. . mta•w&sl Stgreoscopes, Stereosoopio Views, Opera Glasses, Spy Glasses, Thermometers, Mathematical Instruments, Magic Lanterns, &c., &c., Oc WM. Y. MALLISTER, (Flnablished 1796,) No. 72S Chestnut St. Immense Sale OF MANTEL AND PIER LOOKING GLASSES. From the Establishments of JOSHUA COWELAND. 5.3 South Fourth street, 6EO. C. REL . KAUFF, 929 Arch street. and E. NEW LAND & CO., 604 Arch street, TO BE SOLD AT PILTI3ILIC AT SCOTT'S ART GILLERY, No. 1020 Chestnut St. On Thursday Morning, MARCH tab, • .A.t 10 1-2 o'clock. SALE POSITIVE, B. SCOTT. Jr.. AUCTIONEER- To !Jur Patrons and the Public. On and after tbst date we stall t flex our Goods at u DISCOUNT Folly Equivalent to the Heavy Decline in Gold. Clark & 712 Chestnut street. PIITIADA., March sth. /SRL. mti3t 4.) O. C. KOPP. THE GREAT .1F1.11,E . ON THIRD ST, DAMAGED GOODS To be Sold at Auction. The immense mock of 'Menem JAMES, KENT, SAS% TEE PARTIALLY DAMAGED, a large portion, EFT LITTLE if any injured, will be Sold at Auction by Catalogue, fin Thursday and Friday, Mardi 8111 and 9th, BY JOHN B: MYERS & CO., No. 232 at d 234 Market Street. The stock consists of every description of Dry Goode, Notions. sc mbs-4t4rp I TC , L ET, SECOND SECOND AND THIRD FLOORS OF BROWN STONE ST*JRE, 135 North THIRD Street. Apply on the premises. •ritt3 :it Cir GI-CO 0 IDS SPRING STYLBS I EDWARD P. KELLY. TAILOR, 012 Chestnut St. GROVER & BAKER'S Filter PREMTITM ELASTIC STITCH AND LOOK STITCH SEWING MACHINES, With latest improvements, 780 CHENTNITT Street, Philadelphia. 3.7 MARKET Street, Harrisburg. jel.sm rp The genuine and well known Heidsieck & Co.'a Champagne for sale in large or email quantities, at the Importer's price in New York. Also, JITLIO3 krurave DRY VE,RZENAY and nuriatua, ROSE. MOST dr. CRANDON'S GREEN SEAL. n 'VERZENA.Y AND SILLERY. SIMON COLTON & CLARKE, resew w.f S. W. cor. BROAD and WALITUTSta„ .c.O 'CORSETS AND SKIRTS.—Just received,_ Du -44 plea Elliptic Sklrta,laust styles. Paris Trails, Earl y( , press Trails, and !Pride of tile World Aft • nallty Paris Werly corsets. A Mrs. STEEL'S, Cnestnnt at., above Thirteenth st., n • • side mh6-Ste • JORDAWB KanaßßATzn TONIC Al..ll— Th s truly healthful and nutritious beverage, now in use by thousands—invalids and others—has established a character ibr quality of material and Purity of mann, factre, 'which stands unrivaled. It is recommended tonic.blc of this and other plum as a. superior and requires but a trial to convince the most skeptical Of Ito great merit. To be had, wholesale and 5/I'. 1r itatiwi, =kVA ease s, CHAMP AGNES. OPENING. _ . MISSES THORNHILL & BURNS, (FoßlautLy WITH J. t. FLAFLEIGH,) Have Now Open AT L2OB Chestnut Street, A new and choice Stock of WHITE GOODS, Balmoral and Hoop Skirts, LADIES' Made-up Under Garments, &e., To which they Invite the all ention of the public. mhiw,th,s3t rpo #l.4it vc• gl? Fourth and Arch ARE OPENING OPMCFNG TO-DAY FOR Sl—'ll,l — NoUr 5A.1.,E3 9 FASHIONABLE WEW NOVELTIES IN DBESS GOODS, NEW STYLES SPRING BRAWLS. NEW TRAVELING DRESS GOODS, FINE STOCK OF NEW GOODS, MAGNIFICENT FOULARDS, SPLENDID BLACK SILKS. MOURNING GOODS a J. 31[. 1-IA_Y`LAIEIGTI, 902 CHESTNUT STREET, EAS NOW OPEN, A large assortment of superior Black Silks, Grenadines, De Laines, Bombazines, Crapes, AND A GREAT VARIETY OF NEW FABRICS SUITABLE FOR CIILTELNING-. fen fr m Ks/ MARKET .440 NINTH. & . 1866. 1866. CA.SSINUERIES. AMERICAN CASSIMERES. ENGLISH COATINGS. FRENCH FABRICS. ORDERED GOODS. SELECTED STYLES for MEN'S FINE WEAR, and BOYS' SPRING SUITS. Tee Keck ie large, varied, select, and the prices are richt BOYS' W EAR F.I.NE. ALL t ASSINiERES. $.l of, BLACK AND'W"HTTE cEKcic. FINE MIXED TINEF,A,S,p FANCY STYLE CASSIALEREi, el 37,., FINE GOODS FOR BUITB,SI tO to fl 87 FANCY MIXED FOR SUITs,,I MENS' WEAR. NEW STYLE CASEIN:ERE& LIGHT GOODS FOR SPRING WEAR STUFFS FOR BUSINESS SUITS BLAU% CLOTHS, CHIL3P FINE SPRING COATINGS FANCY CASSIKRRES FOR SUITS LADIES' SACKINGS. PLAIN MIDDLESEX CLOTH FA.NCY lIIIDDLFRFX CLOTHS NEW DOUBLE WIDTH CLOTHS SINGER WIDTH CASSIMERES FOR SAQUFS J. C. STRAWBRIDGE it CO., cor. Eighth and Market Sts. fels-4z rP sz aitiw”, .:11:.-Irrt1WEINWITN etALLL attention to our cent assortment of superb:lr PIANOS, nireTrOv cliwe always have on band, and offer them at Very reasonable prises to purcbasere. Beet of= references and yErLL GUARANTEE • Invariably' IT P 1114/0151 PIANO MANUPACTITRICTO 00.. 4 am UV Walnut WWI GENERAL REDUCTION OF. PRICET IN ALL RINDS OF DRY GOODS. CURWEN STODDART & BROTHER Have purchased from the late Auction Bales, large lota of desirable goods, at greatly Reduced Prices, and • will sell any Goods on hand at a corresponding Re duction. Our:stock is large, and embraces the most desirable styles of AMERICAN FOREIGN GOODS. S toc Bu yers will find GREAT ADVANTAGES in out k. CIIRWEN STODDART & BROTHER, Nos. 460, 952 and 454 North SECOND Street, mh7 at/ Above WIDOW.. NOTICE. JAMES, KENT, SAN TEE & CO. Beg leave, respectfully, to Inform their patrons and friends, that they will be ready To Resume Their Business, AT THEIR OLD STAND, Nos. 239 and 241 North Third St. ON MONDAY, March 12,1866. mhsiet rpp WALN, LAMING & CO., No. .9.21 Chestnut Street, AGED TS FOB York and Boott Manufacturing Cos. Have on hand and are receiving the desirable goods of these Companies, viz: Tort - Co.'s: NANKIN S. NANKIN CHECKS. PLAIN AND PLAID COTTON.A.DEB ,, HEAVY TWILLS, &c. Boon Mills: DRILLS and 30. FS, 90 inch BROWN SHIRFDIDS and SHEETLNGS. raks-1.1?:7 100 BALES OLD QUALITY Havana Yara Fillers and Wrappers FOR SALE. LN; BO;SiD OR DUTY PAID, In lots to snit purchasers, by Gumpert Bros., 106 South Del. avenue. mhs-3s "GLEN ECHO MILLS ' 1 GERMANTOWN, PA. McCALLUM, CREASE& SLOAN, M A NITA CTURERS, IMPORTERS A_ND WHOLE.. SALE DEALERS IN CABPETTNGS, OIL CLOTHS, y _ c MATTINGS Si WAREHOUSE, NO. 509 CHESTNUT STREET, Opposite the state lionee. PHILADELPHIA. Retail Department, No. 519 Chestnut St.. rp JAMES S. EARLE Sc SONS' Fifth Great Sale o 4 Valuable Foreign. and American 4011_, PAIN PIN . 4G-S. THE ENTIRE IMPORTATION OF JAMES S. EARLE & SONS SELECTED IN THE STUDIOS OF THE BEST EUROPEAN ARTISTS BY 1S R. JAMES S. EARLE IN THE FALL OF 1E65, WILL BE BOLD AT AUCTION, In the EASTERN GAL- LEDD , Sof the PENNSYLVANIA ACADEMY OF FINE ARTS, On Tuesday, March 27th, And Wednesday, March 28th, B SCOTT, Jr, AUCTIONEER. mh3 a rp COAL ! BEST QUALITIES OF coAL AT LOWEST MARKO RATlftlk. ALTER'S COAL YARD, NINTH STREET, BELOW GIRARD AV NUB. NrIMUTC3I OFFXiDE CO.BITER OF BITE. AVE! EPRIN43 GARDEN. COAL r woutslHi;l