BUSINESS NOTICES. HOTHLEsS DBED. To what dire baseness men will Stoop ! A than poured Croton oil, Lately, into some oyster soup, The lucloulmess to spoil And he who such a deed could do Must lack a heart, and stomach, too, Why, if, in man, we may suppose Depravity So tall, He'd spoil a splendid snit of clothes Just bought from Tower Hall. 'Our stock of Clothing is the largest and most complete in this eity, , surpassed by none in material, style and .1 1 t, and;soid at prices guaranteed lower than the LOWS& TOWER HALL, No. 618 market Street, MINNETT & 00. INDUSTP.Y, OR THE EIGHT PLACE TO EIJY. They constantly prate of inferior clothes, .And where the superior nobody knows! - Until with industry to Mid out they try, And then they perceive soon the right place to buy. The right place to buy, without doubt, is the "Star ;" Irsupxmon GABILBVIS you want, there they are; Eo the man that's industrious; after all, goes, . . To purchase his clothing at Perry & Co.'s. We are now in the middle of Spring, and all contem plating a change in their apparel should not fail tb re member the great advantages offered at the "Star." Our stock is all new, having been bought very low for cash, and comprising every variety of goods. Oar ; prices for Clothing of equal quality are the lowest to be had in Philadelphia, of which all can satisfy them selves by an examination elsewhere before coming to the "Star." We have just received a large invoice of stylish fancy Cassimeres, of foreign and domestic ma nufacture, for ,onr custom department, which is con -ducted by superior artists. STAR CLOTHING EMPORIUM, LOW PRICES AND FASHIONABLE MODS, 609 CHESTNUT STREET. SIGN OF STAR. /pmA. REDTICTION OF 25 PER CRNT., or from i 1125 to $2OO less uppon each INSTRU MENT than our REGW.,AIt SCHEDULE PRICES. Desiring to reduce our large stock of superior and highly improved richly finished seven. octave Rose wood Pianos, previous to the removal to oar new store, Girard Bow, No. 1103 Chestnut street, we have con cluded to offer them at the actual coat to manufacture, and at prices equally as low as we sold them before the 81" These instruments have been awarded the highest premiums at all the principal exhibitions ever held la slim country, with numerous testimonials from the ant artists in America and Europe. They are now the leading Pianos, and are sold to all parts of the world. Persons desiring to purchase a first-ciass Piano, at greatly reduced rates, should not fail to avail them selves of this opportunity. Circulars of the regular -schedule prices, with precise cuts of the styles of our Pianos, can be had at the warerooms, and on applica tion will be sent by mail. SCHOMACKEE & CO., apstmyl Warerooms, No. 1021 Chestnut street. p m MEYER'S NEWLY EAPBOVED CBES CENT SCALE OVT7FtSTRITNG PIANOS, Acknowledged to be the best. London Prize Medal and Highest Awards in America received. IwKW MEANS AND SECOND-HAND PIANOS ja24 wa,mana Warerooms, 722 Arch st., beloW Bth. MARSHALL & MITTAUER'S Grand and Square Pianos, superior to any other make in the Union. Eindtral lfanz's well-known Pianos, for sale by A. SCHERZER, 325 Arch street. .Mh3143,m,w-lm STEINWAY & SONS' PLA.NOs MMAra now acknowledged the beat atnramnts in Europe; as well by America. They are (used in public and private, by the greatest artists tiving_LnEer_ope, by VON BULOW, DBE YIsCHOCK, LISZT, JA.ELL, and others; In this country by 1517.144, MASON, WOLFSOIEN, etc, For sale only by BLASMS BROS., tea- tf 1006 Chestnut street. EVENING BULLETIN. MONDAY, APRIL 9, 1866. "THE SAGE OF WHEALTLAND.,, "All honor tothe Sage of Wheatland!" 'This is the closing sentence of an en thusiastic article in a Copperhead organ -at Harrisburg, describing a visit with which that city has been honored by James Buchanan. It appears that the late breach between Congress and the President furnished a motive for bring ing him to the seat of government, to consult with ex-Governor Porter and the Dethocratic politicians in the legis lature-as to the best means of taking ad vantage of the situation for the benefit .of the,arty. The ex-President was the guest of the ex-Governor, whose resi- Alence was thronged with the faithful iduring the whole visit. The organ of the party gashes all over - with jOy and admiration of the 0. P. F. "We welcome Mr. ,Buchanan," it says, - "to the capital city of Pennsylvania. We welcome him, because we admire the man, his character, his uprightness, This honesty, his purity, and his sterling integrity!" Slightly tautological, this; but "a nice derangement of epitaphs" is natural in a burst of enthusiasm. Then the writer becomes prophetic, and with awful solemnity he pronounces this impressive vaticination: 'The day will come—as surely as there is - a heaven above us—when his administra tion will stand forth as one of the most glori ous and best recorded upon the pages of our country's history. His political oppo -nents may revile him; those whose mouths he filled with bread may ungratefully tra duce him; but his character will remain without a. blemish! His name is engraved in the hearts of his countrymen, who honor, cherish and love him. Posterity will• do him justice, and when life's fitful fever' is o'er, and he shall be gathered unto the good and great who have gone before, a grateful people will revere his memory." If the aforesaid grateful people are not to revere the aforesaid . memory until James Buchanan is gather ed to "the good and great," the memory aforesaid will be kept out of its reverence for a very long period. How ever, we repeat, that an enthusiastic gusher, who is uttering a prophecy, is not to have his sentences very strictly criticised. But we are anxious to know what has been the result of the conference at Har risburg ? Of course, some plan of c,a,m paign for the next fall election must have been determined upon. President Johnson's course has encouraged Mr. • Buchanan to enter once more into the - political arena, and he is once more to be the Democracy's "favorite son," and its "guide, philosopher and friend." We presume that he will bring out aliso from their retirement, Francis W. Hughes, William B. Reed, Ex-Governor Bigler and his other faithful supporters, and that they will join him in striving to elect. Heister Clymer. The next ad - dress of the Democratic State Committee will be looked for with much curiosity, for it will certainly have been inspired by the conference with ex-President Buchanan in ex-Governor Porter's parlors. SENATOR DOOLITTLE. We took occasion, some time ago, to express F our great satisfaction with a speech delivered in the Senate by Mr. Doolittle, in January last. It was an eloquent, able and patriotic effort and swell deserved all the praise we bestowed upon it. Mr. Doolittle's leading idea •seems to be that Mr. Johnson must be oright. because he is strictly carrying out Mr. Uncoil:Os policy, and assuming this for a fact, he casts in his lotwith him, in opposition to the official instruction of his State, the well-pronounced senti merit of the party of the Union through out the country, and the majority of both houses of Congress. That Mr. Doolittle has sadly disappointed his friends, in taking this attitude, cannot be doubted. He has proceeded upon a theory, in sup port of which we in vain look for corre sponding facts. Whatever may have been Mr. Lincoln's theory of reconstruc tion at the time of his death, we know that he held all such theories easily and loosely, watching earnestly and honestly for the signs of the times, and always ready to yield his personal preferences for the public good. No one can study Mr. Lincoln's life, without seeing that, far down below the surface of mere ques tions of immediate policy, there were certain grand foundation-principles of humanity so broad and deep, that they never could be inov ed. These always con stituted the final test, to which he brought his perplexities and difficul ties to be solved, and with his rare blend ing of sagacity and humanity he seldom failed of a right conclusion. No one, with the slightest power of discrimination, can fail to admit that the present difficulty in Washington could never have occurred with Mr. Lincoln in the Presidential chair. He was never the tool or the puppet of any man or class of men, and he never sought to make tools or puppets of them. Flexi: bility and strength, growing out of the simple, honest integrity of his nature, marked Mr. Lincoln's ontire career, and we recall with delight those pecu liar traits which, while they en deared him to the people, carried the nation triumphantly through the great crisis of its history. It is sim ple absurdity to suppose that Mr. Lin coln would have vetoed either the Freedmen's Bill or the Civil Rights Bill. The cardinal idea of these mea sures, protection and aid for the oppressed and down-trodden classes of the people, was too near his great heart to have al lowed him coldly to withhold his assent from them. And it is just here that we think Mr. Doolittle makes his fatal mis take. It is just here that the paths of Mr. Lincoln and Mr. Joluison begin to diverge, and Mr. Doolittle seems to have pressed forward in Mr. Johnson's lead, and to have passed the point of diver gence without noticing it. We fear that time will show that like radii from a common centre, the two paths of Mr. Lincoln and Mr. Johnson are destined to a constantly increasing separation, and Mr. Doolittle will awake to the con sciousness, that while cherishing the example and emulating the noble char acter of Abraham Lincoln, he has been carried far away, into a position where no trace of his former leader and model will be any longer recognizable. PERRY & CO Mr. Doolittlehas won for himself a na tional reputation as an able and ardent advocate of the great principles of hu man liberty, and he cannot afford to throw himself into an affiliation with the Saulsburys and Davises of the Senate or to adopt a policy which wins for him the approbation of every copperhead of the North and every rebel of the South. The Hon. John Hogan represents a portion of the flourishing metropolis of Missouri in the House of Representa tives at Washington. He is a rotund, jolly gentleman, in whose composition humor has a large share, though we do not know that he ever, like Milton's myth, "holds both his sides" with laugh ing. On Saturday, while the "Debating Society," as the "Committee of the Whole" in the House is often called, was in session, Mr. Hogan felt called upon to deliver an essay. The shades of Addison, Steele and Macaulay possibly looked down while Mr. H. unfolded his MS., expecting something far superior to their efforts in the line in which they have won their renown. If they did, it was a good thing for Mr. Hogan,because the House itself never listens to any thing but the first and last sentence of any speech in the "Debating Society." Mr. Hogan's subject was "Essays." He thought this, the first session of the XXXIXth Congress, was the era of es says and magazinearticles, all of which save four or six being utterly devoid of any new ideas. He did not see how this "weak, washy, everlasting flood" of repetition could be beneficial, particu larly as the main topic of the said essays was "the American citizen of African descent." Having finished this part of his essay, Mr. Hogan went on to give the second palt of his gigantic mental display, and as if to prove that we can - see the mote in the eye of everybody else while the beam is unnoted in our own, he deliberately proceeded to show. that slavery was not so bad after all; that the slaves of the South had not had such a hard time as most people thought; that the Unionists and Republicans were fa natically wrong and that the President was right. Here the representative from St. Louis paused,overcome by his efforts, and sat down, wiping the perspiration from his rubicund face. - If any one had told us that a repre sentative from the far West would, after four years of war and one year of political action, in which every energy of the loyal people had been bent towards getting rid of slavery,deliberate-, ly go to work to defend that institution, we would not lave believed it. "Bled soe on Slavery," "A South-side View," and myriads of other pro-slavery books were written whilethe corpse of " the in stitution" either had some.itality, or while .it still galvanically twitched; but to deliberately attempt its palliation after it is dead and buried is a touch of the absurd beyond anything that ever "swam into our ken." In essaying to THE DAILY EVNligalaillanaluaLuzziguannualkinud; I HOGAN ON .ESSAYS. ridi f. l other people's essays, for the wan' freshness, force and originality, Mr. ogan has given an exhibition of dullness, stupidity, and want of appre hension of the age he lives in, which could scarcely be paralleled by. Sauls bury himself, last sla,veholder in the Union though he boasted of being. RAPHAEL SEMMES. We once heard a certain eminent Awyer, who had framed a series of very important laws, say that when these enactments were under consideration in court it not very unfrequently happened that he could not get the judges to admit that he had any very clear conception of what the laws meant. He would gently intimate that he had prepared the laws in question, just as they went through the legislature and as they ap peared on the statute book, and that their meaning and intention were so and so; but the judge would take a dif ferent view of it,-and in such cases he would decide substantially that the man who wrote the law did not know what it meant. The President is following •in the track of these judges in his disposal of the case of Raphael Semmes, better and more properly known as the "Pirate Semmes." The hero of Sixty Chronometers was arrested on the charge of having per petrated sundry; little exploits such as piracy and murder upon the high seas, burning helpless merchantmen at night for the purpose of entrapping certain other helpless merchantmen, and luring them to their ruin through an appeal to their humanity, and finally proving as mean and as recreant in a contest with an equal, as he had been savage and merciless when his victims lay helpless in his power. After his arrest this pre cious specimen of= corsair claimed that he was included in the terms of the parole granted by General Sherman to Johnston's command. The Attorney General of the United States decided differently; General Grant decided differently, and General Sherman gave a most emphatic dissent to any such con struction of the terms of the parole. But the President refuses to take the Attorney General's law for legal Gospel; he will not recognize the superior familiarity of General Grant with mili tary usage; while, like the judges afore said, he is not to be persuaded that General Sherman has any knowledge to boast of concerning what the parole with Johnston was intended to mean. The substantial result is that as mean and as wicked a pirate as ever hoisted the black flag has been allowed to go unwhipt of justice, that there is consequent joy among Southern rebels and Northern Copperheads, and that the hearts of all loyal men are filled with sorrow, not unmixed with indignation. BIR. COWAN IN A DILEMMA. Mr. Cowan, who so grossly misrepre sents Pennsylvania in the Senate of the United States, was very bitter in his opposition to the Civil Rights Bill, and in his advocacy of the President's veto of the measure, principally upon the old Southern ground of an exceeding tender ness for States' rights, and a solemnly expressed conviction that the vetoed bill tended towards "centralization." We shall not stop to discuss this buga boo of centralization, which has always been raised by the rebellious South and its. Northern creatures in the Irrational councils, whenever the brakes were put down upon the. Slave Power and its ag gressions; but which was all perfectly right and proper when a Fugitive Slave Law was to be enacted, or an infamous Lecompton bill waa to be forced through Congress. We only desire to know of Mr. Cowan whether he is in favor of the exercise of National authority or of the principle of exclusive State rights and State sovereignty ; If he believes in the first he should have dropped the old Southern Calhouh-Davis-Wise-Breckin ridge talk of State sovereignty, and have voted either for or against the Presi dent's veto upon its own merits alone, without regard to tne old clap -trap cry of "centralization" and the "reserved rights of the States." If, upon the other hand, he believes in the Robert E. Lee theory, that he is bound to go with his State right or Wrong, let him bear in mind that his Sta4t, through its constituted authorities, instructed him to vote for the identical bill which he oprosed so long as opposition evaded anything, and that as he refused so to vote, he has been invited to resign. Which horn of the dilemma will Mr. Cowan take? Will he stick to the Black-Buchanan doctrine, that the United States have no right to make laws or to enforce them after they have been made? And as a common sense corollary to this assumption, will' he practically recognize the State sove reignty principle, and as he has failed to vote as his constituents instructed him: to vote, will he resign, as they have re quested him to do? Will Mr. Cowan resign? Large Sale—Extra Valuable Real Estate. Messrs. Thomas & sons' sale tomorrow will Include a very )arge amount of valuable property; by order of Trustees. Executors, Orphans' Court and others. tiee auction column and pamphlet catalogue. JOHN GRUMP: BUILDER. 1781 OM :STRUT STREET and 218 LODGE STREET. Mechanics of every branch required for honsebuild Dig and fitting promptly furnished. jaiwim• S'IATIONERY—LETTER. OAP ..AND NOTE PAPERS, ENVELOPES. BLANK BOOK 4, and every requisite in the Stationery line, Belling at the lowest figures at J. R. DOWNING' a Stationery Store, mal2-tfrp/ Eighth street.two doors above Walnut. A. L .n.c. W. ROBINSON, Conveyancer, has removed oNo 812 WALNUT street ap7-stro* A 0 31.10NABLE IRESSNAKING„—No. 804 FIL- F .11EriT street, above kighth. Dresses and Cloaks made in the most fashionable style at the shortest no tice. Also. duffing and basting, ap7-2t* VOR RA.DE.—To ShippiGrooervi Hotel-keepere and others—A very superior l o t of e tham „ gne Older, by the barrel or dozen. P. T. JORDAN, no9-rptf 229 Pear street. below Third and Walnut .IiSTABLISHED IN Igo. A great variety or sun Ulu- dlikt• brellas. Fancy and 'Mourning Parasols, Bun•sbades and Child- - ren's Parasols, at reduced prices, At BLNCI=pil Old Stand, 905 VINE Et. sps44ll* Tina is a personal Invitation to the reader to examine our pew styles of _ SPRING CTOTHING. - - - - , CassimeTe Spite for 06, and Black'buits for #22. Finer Snits, all prices urr to $75. , ' WA.NAN A_R ER & BROWN, . •0 • 6017THEAST CORNER SIXTH and M' A vor n'T Sta. EL Summer Residence Wanted. 6:1 A family desires to BENT. for the Scunmer Season, a FIIhNISIFIRD RESIDENCE, with stable and car riage house , convenient to either of the principal railways, or the river Delaware, and within an hour's ride of the city. Addresa with statement of locality and terms. "V," at this Office. ap9 St ra* JUST RECEIVED, VIENNA LEATHER BAGS, VERY PINE. BAILEY ifk, 810 Chestnut Street. aP7 - 4ti rP TRAVELING DRESS GOODS. CIF DESIRABLE MIXTURES, FROM 3 73' TO 75 CENRAL...UR YARD, AUCTION LOTS AT REDUCED PRICES. CURWEN STODDART & BROTHER., 450, 952 and 451 NORTH SECOND STREET, ABOVE WILLOW MEW LOTA OF SPRLNG GOODS, • 1.11 FROM THE LATE AUCTION SALES OF BRITISH GOODS, GREAT REDUCTION IN PRICES CIIRWEN STODDABT 3 BRO CHER, 450. 452 and 454 NORTH SECOND STREET, ABOVE WILLOW LIGHT CA SSIMFRES AND CLOTHS, FOR LADIES' SAC..S AND CLOA_ES, CHOICE STYLES, AT REDUCED PRICES, CIIRWEN STODDART a BROTHER, 450, 452 and 454 NORTH SECOND STREET, ABOVE WILLOW LACE ALPACAS, FROM THE LATE AUCTION SALES. FROM as TO I 5 CENTS PER YARD. PRICES GREATLY REDUCED. CDRWi STODDART & BROTHER, 450, t.V. and 454 NORTH bECOND STREET, ABOVE WILLOW COLORED ALPACAS, OP CHOICE SHADES AND SUPERIOR QUALITIES. AT 50 C 78., FROM A LATE AUCTION SALE. - CURWEN STODDART a BROTHER, MO; 4alt and *I NOR7II SECOND STREET, ABOVE WILLOW BLACK AND WHITE SOLID C •ECK POPLINS, FROM A LATE AUCTION SALE, AT GREATLY REDUCED • PRICES. CURVE STODDART & BROTHER, 450, 452 and 454 NORTH SECOND STEERS', ABOVE WILLOW. MA IiztEILLE> QUILTS, Au. OF ALL SILK tiND.GRAIMA. CLTIOVRN STODDART & BROTELIZEL 450, 452 and 454 NOST.IIsECOND STREET, ABOVE IiVILLO W COLORED AND WHITE GROUND FIGURED MOHAIRS. FROM AUCTION. AT REDUCED PRIM. LTIBWEN STODDART & BROTHER, 4.50,152 and 454 NORTH SECOND STREET ap,•st ' ABOVE WILLOW L3l rat orr EnED bESLIIV Sir ANV.1.17-OEO. GG VtAIEL. No. Ml 6 Chestnut street, has just res , iced from Paris, a very attractive case of the latest novel ties current, Paris styles tor this summer, motorising Embroidered Di uslin Pointes (Half shawls,. Muslin Paletets. Basquines, Muslin Bodies, • various new shaper. Valemiennes and Cluny Lace, trimmed, Col lars and Slees , s, oral], the newest sPapba, nov-Ities io Embroidered Handkerchiefs, 6.c., &c, spa -throw. . riImREE QUARTS OF LINSEED OIL mixed With a box of stead s Roofing Cement (costh34 tit will make enough paint to coat 3 u square tees of metal roofing, which it will protect from cot rosion far better •than ordinary paint. So say those to the New Eng• land Stab s who have used It for six years. So dby the Agents, TRUMAN & SHAW. No. 835 (Eight Thirty-five) Market street. below Ninth. h, YE, PROTECTORS, for guardlog Lae eyes from cinders dull, &c., a bile travettug on ratlrnatts or of bt rwise for sale at the Hardware btore of iItHAI,„LN 8.11 AW. /\o. 8:35 (Eight Thirty-live) Market street, below lilntb. P. SALE.- Three purchase money MORTOAGE.B— and only incumbrances—amply secured. One fur ts,the on Tenth Ptreet below Walnut. One for V 3,500 on IN Orth Broad,ive istt street. One for V,l roe on the same locati adjoining house and lin. Apply at the Office, IsTo. 2.3 South FOURTH street second do RY tiRUJItsLN ANI. GROWL over 3 , :mr dull I' T Scissors, when a few draws over the Patent 4C'S -51.118 Sharpener would put them in good cutting order. For bale by TRUhIaN & SHAW, No. 835 (Eight Thlrty.tive) Ns) ket street, below Ninth. 1866 -TO LOOK WELL. HAM CUT TO .please, at KOPP'S Shaving Saloon corner of Exchange Place and Dock street. Itazont put in order. G. O KOPP. rl , 11.. E 11 RR] cuts hOLLER, A. SELF STF..A.SI BOILER.—The attention of Manufacturers and others mina Steam is confidently called to this new Steam Generator, as combining Essential' ads - ante s -es in absolute sale v from explosion in cheapness of first cost and cost of iet.airs In economy of fuel, facility of cleat tug and transportation, &c., n. t possessed by'any other boiler now in use. This boiler is formed of a comtipation ofcaf.t-ii on hollow spheres, each sphere 8 lathes external diameter, and of an inch Mica.. These are held together by wrought•iron bolts, with cats at the ends. Nearly one hundred of these Boilers are row in opperation, some of them in the best establishments in this city. Ae For descriftive circulars or Boiler P WorksOSEPH ItitISON, sr.. Harrison Gray's Ferry Road, eejoining the U. S. Arsenal, PhiladeL phia. P" /EOPLE DIFFER ON MANY POINTS. BUT ALL AGREE THAT THE "LONDON HAIR COLOR RESIORER AND "London" . DRESSING" air Color Res "London" Is the most "Hair Color Restoretorer"r" "London" "Hair Color Restorer" "London" Reliable Hair "Hair Color Restorar" "London" "Hair Color Restorer" "London" Restorative "Hair Color Restorer" "London" "Hair Color Restorer" "London"Lo " Restorer" Ever Introduced "Hair Color "Hair Color Restorer" "London" "London" to the 'IL it Color Restorer" , "Hair Color Restorer" "London" American "Hair color Restorer" "London" "Hair Color tse tore r" "Lond. n" People "Hair Color Restorer" "London" "Hair Color Restorer" "London" "London" For Restoring "Hair Color Restorer" Hair Color Restorer" "London" Gray Hair and "Hair Color Restorer" "London" ".H.eir Colo Rtorer" "London" Preventing "Hair Color r Res es torer" '•Lonr on"' "Hair Color Restorer" -London" Baldnoss. • Hair Color Restorer" PRESERVES THE ORIGINAL COLOR TO OLD AGE "Louden" . "Hair Color R-storer" "LOndon" Life, Prevents "Hair Calor Restorer" "London" "Hair Color Restorer" "Londoe: Growth, the Hair ' Hair Color Restorer" "London" "London". Color Restorer" "London". . and from "Hair Color Restorer" "Lone on" - "pair Color Restorer" "London"= Beauty, Falling. "Hair Color Restorer" No watibing or preparation before or after its use; ap plied by the band or soft brush. Only- 7& dents a bottle, six bottles $4. Sold at Dr. SWATNEB,No.A3O North Sixth street, above Vine, Pbiladelphia,nnd at the leading Druggists and Dealers in 'lollekArtieles. % intizi-m,w,s 'UT, dt X. CARPENTER, TAILOftS, V, • ' '...t , ...7.-, ~G IRARD HOUSE, Take pieasnreM calling the attention of their friends and the pubbogenerally, to their stock of Imported fabrics for men's Rear, which they are prepared to make up, In , their Wined approved style, at reduced prices. -,"." ,:2 , - apeln,w.f-amerp TWO NEW P.OOKS,I Published This Day. , . LETGHTON COURT. A Country House Story. By BEN/CYlie:slaty, author of "Get:airy Hamtyn," r•lta.venalsoe." etc 1 vol. 16030. $1.50. • The vigor "of this story, its graphic descriptions of character and scenery, and the deep Interest excites, justify the follow!' g :igh praise of a careful critic: "Mr. Henry }Kingsley is to be welcomed among the masters of modern fiction. He knows the world; he has shrewd opinions: be has an artist's eye for a bit of landscape with's sea-vlew, a trout brook, or a great waving forest; he draws characters warm ...nd naterat as people we know, andthe Incidents ancisituadons of his story are vivid and well managed." BONOis MAY. A Novel. 1 voL- 16mo. $2 00. V This book possesses much interest for : all intelligent readers. but will be specially attractive to lovers of music. The heroine is an enthusiastic musician, and tries to give the world a better knowledge of what music really is The story of her devotion to her art, and of her social experiences, is full of healthy ling ges done. *** bent, postpaid, on receipt of price. 'Ticknor Sr, Fields, Publishers: Boston CLARIFIED CIDER, SUPERIOR PICKLING VINEGAR, PioWes, Pieserves. Tellies, Mustards, Ketchups, Sauces, Byrups,etc.,etc All warranted to be of a superior quality. I.fANETFACTUBED BY EMIL MATHIEU & SON, N 05.120, 122 and 124 Lombard Street, Below Second. ape lm rp EDWIN HALL & C 0.,. fr?....s S. Second fit., Will open this morning one of the largest andbest as sortments of MATERIALS FOR LADIES' TRAVELING SUITS Ever offered In Philadelphia, at various prices. ap9 2t rpl 111 A k le; T 44 - t 1 :9 NI:TH. HAVE JUST OPENED A MAGNIFICENT Era= OF THE ratrzWlNG GOODS : 150 doz. Napkins, $2 75 to $9 00. 100 doz. Assorted Towels. 250 Pc& Heaviest Diapers. Barnsley Table Linens, $2 25 up. Finest Damask Cloths. White Goods, stock complete. Gingham,s and Prints. Black Alpacas, 50 cts. to $1 25, - Wool re Laines, 38 es. to $l. 25. apS6m,w.i AT RETAIL JAS. R. CAMPBELL & CO., 727 Chestnut St., Have made extensive additions to their popular stock of SELIKS AND DRESS GOOD , WHICH THEY CONTINUE TO RIZT.T At INiuderate Prices, Wholesale Rooms up Stairs. rp FRENCH LIQUEURS 'AND' CORDIALS. A LA GRAND CHARTREUSE, In Quarts and Pints. LIQUEUR BBNEDIC7 INS, In Quarts and Pints. BRIZARD and ROGER'S.iirr.r.PBR&TED • ANISETTE, MARASCHINO. ABSINTHE and CURACOA. _ SIMON COLTON & CLARKE, ap6.fm,w B.W. cor. BROAD and WALNUT Stn. PHILADELPHIA AND MONTANA GOLD 1. AND SILVER MINING . 00MPANY, CHARTERED BY THE STATE OF PENNSYL- V ANIA. CAPITAL STOCK, 100,000 SHARES, AT $0 EACH, WO 000. SUBSCRIPTION PRICE, $0 PER SHARE. WORKING CAPITAL, mow SHARES, or $150,000. Subscription books tor the stock of the Company are now open, at the prinelpal o lice of the Company, No. 26 South THIRD street, where specimens of the ores can be seen, and circulate with prospectus ob tained. t rders for stook, by wishingpress,will be promptly attended to; and thoseany additional infor mation can obtain the same by applylng,elth son or through the mail s to H. H. WAINWRIGHT, Treasurer of the Com any, . At th e Company's (Mike, No. 26 THlRD street. m1615-th,m-Strp2 Philadelphia. MARRING WITH INDELIBLE Embroider •A l La• Szaiding, Stamping, an, H. A. TORREY, 18003311 t ert atreeL .IrTijim, WEAVER & Cu. Manufactureis ot MAMMA AND TARRED CORDAGE. Corde, Twines, No. 23 North Water Street and No. 22 North Delawar Avenue, ihßadeir Emmet H. Irrnaa.. mitaAß:r. WiLAVNIZi CONRAD P. Currmore.. J. L. CAPEN, PHRENOLOGIST. - Ail es r to Fowler,Wella & Co. gives written and t verbal descriptions of ch aracter 4 44: with Charts, daily at [ap9 In,w,s,2rarpl NO. 215 8A'.111.14111 Street, .DR Et S GOODS AT LOW PRICES. Poll de Chevres, 25 cents, coat 40. Foulard Crat.lies, 31 cents, cost 45. Foulard Chalbes, 31 cents, cost ay Plaid Poplins, 57% cents, coat 55. Plaid Poll de Chevres, e 0 cents, coat 55. Plaid Illusions_ 50 cents, cost 65. Double Width Plaids, 75 cents, svOrth -$1 OIL Double Width Plaids, 87:4 cen LB, worth $1 2 5. Double Width Fig'd Mohairs, 50 cents. worth 65. Double Width F.g'd Mohair's, 50 cents, worth 75. Double W kith Fig'd Motiairs, 75 cents, worth ira. New Styles Challis De Lathes, at 25 cis. Dress Goods of Every Variety, at prices below tlx cost of importation. Neat Plaid Silk Poplins, el 21. Pleat Plaid Silks, $1 25. Small Plaid ellks, $1 50. Small Plaid Silks, $1 75. Small Plaid Silks, $2. Small Plaid Bilks , $2 50. Plain Green. Purple and Brown Silks, $1 75. Plain Blue, Wine, Purple and Brown Silks, Plain Silks, all colors, SA 25. Plain Silks, all colors, t 2 to, Wide Plain Silks, all colors, $275; worth 1 325 . Wide Plain Silks, all colors, $3 50; worth $4 25. Plain Black and'Brown Corded Silks, at $2 50. Extra Heavy Corded Silks at $3, all colors. Wide Heavy Corded Silks, all colors, at $4 00. Wide Extra Heavy 4. orded Silks, all colors. at M Fancy Silks, For Evening Dresses. Light Colors Plain Silks, For Evening Memel, Buff, Salmon, Pearl, Mode. , White, Aniline Blue Fight Blue, Black and Wine Color Moire Antiques. Foulard Silks, at 61 25. cc st $155. Finer Foulard Si ks, at $l. 50, cost $1 20. Foulard Silks, Chintz Colors, ffe; worth $3, Figured Silks, all colors, at $1 75. Finer Figured Silks, all colors, $2, aroe.h $2 75. Figur e a Black Silks, $1 25, $1 50, $1 75. Plain Black Silks at $1 25. Plain Black Silks at $t Plain Black Silks at et 75. Plain Black Silks at $2 00: Plain Black Silks at $2 25. $2 50, #2 75. Plain Black Silks at $3, 50, $4, $4 50. 13; Yard Wide Lyons Taffeta, is 50. worth $7 50. Black Gros Grain Silks, at $1 75; #1 37. $2. Black Gros Grain - Silks from 12 25 to $7. Black Taffeta Parlslennes $2 to $6. 23 inch Black Armure Fitks at $l, worth Si. We bare now one of the most complete assortments of Silks In this city, and we are selling them at lower prices than they can be Imported, even If gold should go down to a much lower figure. Very many qualities we are Bering at the original gold cost H. STEEL & SON, Nz3 h 7l3 and 715 North Tenth Street. Redaction in Prices EDWIN HALL '& CO., 28 South Second street, Will open this morning several lots of' SILKS AND DRESS GOODS PURCHASED AT AUrTION. 'IN NEW YOB LA-ST WN'Y'K', At a great reduction from former prices. WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. ap9 Yt rDi J. M. EIAFLEIGH, • 90.2 Chestnut Street, WILL OPEN MONDAY, APRIL 9th,. A great novelty In ILIK. ROBES,. JUST LANDED. ALSO, • ONE CASE INDIA SHAWLS, at 5100, $l2O, VW. The follcpw it g will ne sold at greatly reduced prices: 5 Cases Dress Goods, 37 1-2. 1 Case Foulards, $1 25. 1 Case Black Silks, $125. 1 Case Plaid and stripe do., $1 50=- 1 Case Black and White $l7 . 5. 1 Ca se Black Alpacas. 25c. 1 Case Lawns, 37 1.2 c. alq2ta ICE ! ICE! ICE! ICE ! Incorporated 1864. THOS. E. CAHILL, President. JOHN GOODYEAR, Secretary. HENRY THOMAS, Supt. COLD SF'I : IIINT Gr ICE AND COAL - CO. DEALERS IN AND E RIPPERS OF ICE and COAU We are:now prepared to furnish BEST QUALITY ICE in large or small quantities to HoteLs,Steamboats Ice Cream Saloons, Families. Offices, &C., Jsc., and a, the LOWEST MARKET RATES. ICE served DAILY in all paved limits of the con solidated City, West Philadelphia, Mantua, Rich mond and Germantown. Your custom and influence is respectfully solicited. You can rely on being fur.. fished with a PURE article and PROMPTLY. Send your order to OFFICE NO. 435 WALNUT STREET DEPOTS. S. W. corner Twelfth and Willow Streeta. North Penna. R. R. and Blaster street. Lombard and Twenty-fifth streets. Pine Street Wharf. Schuylkill. ap7.2 4r,/, PATENT WIRE WORK FOR RAIIaNGS, STORE FRONTS, GUARDS, PARTITIONS, &c: MON:BEDSTEADS AND WIRE WORK in variety:, manufactnzed by OM. WALKER & NS, pihs-eda 4p/ NO.II NORTH SIXTH Street. WE BMWS. W l'ill iJA.L.Li alaelllloll 10 0122 cent aceortanent of superior MAIM, Wfilk mA jr we always have on Mind, and offer them slivery restionableAricee to urobasem. Best of refer ven ences and FULL GU BB invariably ri by THE WRION MAZZO xelitafAcrruitterci„ j oo: moo WV Wainnt mini
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers