EeLosE sAsußDAy's PROMNDINGS House.—Mr. Rigby, referring to the ap t stointment of the Joint Committee on Re construction and to its action in reporting some constitutional amendments and a large mass of testimony, said he proposed now to direct his attention to the report made by that committee on the 6th of March last, and the joint p resolution then reported for the admission of the State of Tennessee. Be must not be considered captious if he differed with fifteen of the wisest men in Von gressin regard to some matters embraced in that report. -Two things were to be ob -Served in the joint resolution reported by by the committee. One was that the com mittee endorsed the new constitution of Tennessee as republican in form, and the -other was the declaration that the only xneans by which the State could have any reprpsentation in Congress was to be through the law-making power of the "United States. The constitution of Tennes see prescribed who should be entitled to the elective franchise, and it would be found that the word "white" was used in almost every section of it. The elective franchise was limited to the white loyal citizens -of the State, those who had been engaged in the rebellion being disfranchised. The co lored people of Tennessee were more than one-fourth of the whole population, and taking the relative contributions of Tennes see to the Federal and rebel armies as data -on which to form an estimate, the loyal White population did not exceed one-fourth of the Whole. If that one-fourth were to have exclusive political control of the State, there would be no republicanism in it. He • held, however, that the Civil Rights bill; .giving civil rights to the colored people, give them the political rights. There would be nothing effected by giving them their civil rights unless they possessed the politi cal power to protect those rights. If these people were citizens of the United States, where did the power lie to take away the elective franchise from them? Mr. Harding (Ky.) discussed the question of reconstruction from the opposition point -of view: He said there had been two rebel lions in the country—one at the. North and one at the South. Although differing widely -on some points, they had been yet in reality leagued together, and had been warring to overthrow the Constitution and dissolve the 'Union. The rebellion at the South was ended. The people had abandoned and re pudiated secession; they had returned to their allegiance, and now yielded obedience to the Constitution and laws, and earnestly -desired a restoration of the Union; but the 2i.rorthern rebellion was still rampant and defiant; and there was no hope for the re storation of the Union until that rebellion also was subdued, or was at least reduced to a controllable minority. The country had gone through four years of terrible, exhaust ing war, to keep eleven States from going out of the Union; and now it had gone through four months, and was threatened with four years of congressional and politi •cal war, to drive those eleven States out, and prevent a restoration of the Union. There could be no such thing as reconstruct ing the Union unless it had been broken up and dissolved. The basis and central idea, therefore, of the Northern revolutionary movement called reconstruction, was dis union, and it rested on the assumption that the Union had been dissolved, and had no ••other foundation or support. The war waged by the Southern insurgents to take their _States out of the Union was a failure. The war on the part of the Government to keep - them in was a success. To say, therefore, that the eleven seceded States were out of the Union, was to say that the success of the Federal Government was its failure, and that failure of the Southern rebellion was its success. This important discovery has been made by the superior wisdom of the Northern rebels. It was wholly un known in the South. If the eleven States were out of the Union, then Jefferson Davis bad not been guilty of treason, but owed it no allegiance, but owed it to the Confederate government, and his long imprisonment was an act of cruelty. If that were so, then the war was waged not to keep the eleven seceded States in the Union, for they were already out, but was a war of mere conquest and subjugation; and who would justify for such a cause the millions of treasure expended, and the rivers of blood abed in carrying on that war? The theory of the reconstruction party meant disunion and revolution, and meant nothing else. He called upon the people to unite with the great Democratic hosts of the North, and rally around and support the President in his noble stand for the liberties of the people. Thus the Northern rebellion would be crushed and subdued; the blood bought heritage of constitutional liberty re covered, and the Constitution restored and preserved. Mr. Moorhead (Pa.) next addressed the House on the financial condition of the country and the tariff. He said that, in discussing the duty which the government owes tO labor, he did not wish to avoid considering the other duties which that de volved upon this Congress, in connection with the work of restoring the national authority over the lately rebellions States. These duties he considered as of the hignest magnitude. They must be perfor.med faith fully, wisely, and well. There should be no haste, no rashness, and no cowardice; but on the contrary, cautious, watchful ness should precede every step, thorough self-possession guarantee the soundness of every link of policy, and manly courage point out the dangers and surmount them. Ample guarantees for the future should be required. The South should abandon not -only slavery but the principle of slavery; :should secure the rights of freedmen; -should repudiate the rebel debt; renounce the claimed right of secession; should culti. vate a spirit of loyalty, and prove it by their works; and should accept as the true theory of the Constitution that which the war had settled in conformity with the purposes of its framers. Passing from this, he pro ceeded to discuss the question of the national debt, and the duty of Congress to protect its sacredness, and at the same time so to dis tribute the burdens of taxation as to aid the development of the resources of the 'country, the encouragement of its labor and the improvement of the condition of the peo ple. He alluded to the efforts of foreign in terests to prevent legislation for the pro motion of those purposes, and in this con nection read and replied to a recent circular sent out by New York agents of the foreign iron trade. He enlarged upon the benefits of the protective policy to all branches of business and to the government itself, showing that the revenues of the go vernment have never been so favorable as under the protective system, and that in every free trade period the whole country languished in allits interests. Be discussed in detail the question of steel, glass and wood manufactures, and the efforts of past tariffs upon each, showing their value to the country, and enforcing the duty of raising the tariff upon them, so as to secure adequate development for them and the commercial supremacy of the nation. He maintained that the free trade experi ment, which began in England in 1846, had failed to produce the fruits expected of it, and that the rate of progress in British in dustry and foreign trade in the years since the policy of porotection was abandoned had not succeeded, but had actually fallen be hind the rate of progress of any equal period .of years previous to the change. He held that one result of the Cobden treaty with Fiance had been to unsettle the strength of the English manufacturers in certain branches in which England had thought herself sure, French prttection operating to create a rivalry thought to be impossible. Discussing the return of specie payments, /to took the ground that, by increasing the First Seamiest. rates of 'duties so as - to make the relative position of American and foreign manufac tures the same in 1861, when the Morrill tariff was enacted, .excessive importations would be restrained, the balance of trade thrown in favor of this country, and coin kept at home, to become the circulating It would be much easier, and would less violently disturb business thus to resume specie payments on the seven hundred and forty millions of paper money now afloat, than to contract the currency to half its pre sent volume, and to allow the present rate of importations, twelve millions per week, to continue. He eulogized the Morrill tariff as destined to be known in history as the great agency which enabled the country to pass throug,n the war. and to grow in material prosperity, and declared that all the manufacturers of the country asked was to be placed where that act put them when it was passed in 1861. Since then, excise taxes have been heavily imposed, and the wages of labor had largely increased. The tariff should be increased to an extent equal to these points of difference. The condition of the country would then at once improve, and no one would feel the blow except the for eigner, who hated the country,and his agent here, who was undermining its prosperity. He closed by an appeal on behalf of labor, from which.the country had its strength, and in which was its hope. As labor sinks, the nation sinks. As labor rises, the nation rises in all the elements of greatness and power. Congress should be just, he said, to those willing giants who supported the fab ric of freedom,and the jewel ofliberty would remain with the country forever. Mr. Finch (Ohio) addressed the House on the question of reconstruction. He insisted ,that Congress could exercise no, powers not delegated to it under the Constitution, ex cept such as were necessary to carry , out express grants. That power did not en large the delegate powers. He quoted the writings of Madison to prove that the gov ernment formed under the Constitution was a federal one, as contradistinguished from a national one. At the same time he de nounced secession and nullification as here sies; but the danger to the country to-day came from a different direction. It lay in the strong and well-organized - attempt to destroy the rights of the States, and to es tablish on'their ruins a powerful. centralized system. A part of this attempted revolution was the denial to eleven States of the Union of their right of representation. He regarded the Civil Rights act as unwarranted by the Constitution, and as an invasion of the just rights of the States. If there was anything' which the people would never surrender without a struggle worthy of all the great defenders of free government, it was the cherished right of each State to regulate and control its own domestic affairs. unchal lenged and uncontrolled by any power ex cept the Constitution of the United States. While Mr. Finck was speaking,-several hundred little:orphan girls, the inmates of one of the Catholic orphan asylums entered the galleries and took seats for a few mi nutes. As they were filing out again, Mr. Wentworth (I 11.) asked and obtained unanimous consent to their admittance to the floor; but the nuns who had them in charge resisted all the seductive influence brought to bear upon them by the member from Tlrnois, and the children therefore did not have an opportunity of enjoying the privileges of the floor. Mr. Banks (Meat.) addressed the- House in defence of New England capitalists who had been somewhat severely reflected upon the other day by Mr. Wentworth, in the de bate on the Northern Pacific Railroad bill. He (Mr. Banks) did not doubt that the capi talists of New England were largely inter ested in the financial results of the enter prise in which they were engaged; but it was strictly true, historically true, that no enterprise had ever been undertaken by the people of Massachusetts since the founds ion of the government,that had not in view above and beyond personal advantages,the welfare of the government. Although it might be conceded that they had been very fortunate in all their enterprises and had 'Acquired wealth, that acquisition was hono rable in itself, because it strengthened the g.•=vernment. If the House would look to the fisheries which were the foundation of the coantry's commerce, to the opening of the East India trade, to the substitution of manufacturing interests for commercial in dustry in that part of the country, to the creation of public schools, to the opening of railroads in the East, and lately to the con struction of the railway line which eaten is from the Atlantic to the Mississippi and towards the Pacific, it would be found that herever New England men had been en gaged in these enterprises the first object was to strengthen the government, and the Qecond for their own personal advantages. But the capitalists would never have conceived, much less executed, any of these great works but for the common people. captial would not have invested a dollar in the construction of railways if the public mind had not been prepared for them through discussion by the common people. The interest was with the people, not with the capitalists, and when appeals for sup port were made to Congress or the State Legislatures it was from the people they came, and not for the benefit of capitalists. The very first public act of his life was the introduction in the Massachusetts Legisla ture, in 1849, of a resolution in favor of the construction of a railway from St. Louis to the Pacific, which resolution was adopted unanimously by both Houses of the Legis lature. Artificial lines of communication were supplanting the natural lines of com munication. There was scarcely a doubt that the Mississippi river was one of the greatest elements of power that held the country together during the late rebellion. The mind of every man has:been fixed at the onset, that so long as the water of the Mississippi ran from north to south so long the United States would be one country. The world was now entering upon a new system of works unexampled in extent and importance, namely, that of ship canals. If the cause of the intervention of European States in South America were carefully ex amined, it would be found that the real ob ject was to gain control of those great lines of natural communication—the Amazon and the Rio de La Plata—which drain the best portion of the South American confl uent. So the object of the Emperor of France in Mexico was to gain control of the line of transit across the Isthmus, which unites the Atlantic and Pacific oceans. It was impossible to conceive of anything so important as the occupation of that narrow isthmus. For twenty years Napoleon and his great predecessors in his time, had had this object in view. When Napoleon en tered on his Mexican scheme,he believed that the American government was destroyed, and that he would be left in undisturbed occupation of the position. Had he suc• seeded in it, his letter to Marshal Forey and his declarations to the French people would rave been made good,namely: That France had achieved a destiny on the continent which had never been contemplated. The canal across the Isthmus of Suez, eonnecting the Mediterranean and the Red Sea, had been already completed, and for the success of that work Napoleon.ltad been ready to encounter all the opposition of the crowned heads of Europe and Asia. Rus sia had lately celebrated the inangration of a railway from the frontiers of Poland to Odessa, by which she united her great grain growing regions to the Black Sea. Italy had undertaken the tunneling of the moun tains separating her from Europe; and Prussia and Austria were now about to en gage in a dreadful war, which, though it might be postponed for a few months, could not long be deferred; he prize to be con tended for being a ship canal to connect the Elbe- 7 the second river in the German States, second only to the Danube—with the Bahia atlabeo or Eiel, The people of New THE DAILY E VINING BULLETIN ; PHILADELPHIA, MONDAY.- AFEIL 30;3866: England appreciated the importance, nay, the necessity, of this country competing with Europe, in such enterprises, and it was not just or generous for the gentleman who represents Chicago (Mr. Wentworth) to charge unworthy motives and objects noon them. Mr. Wentworth remarked that the men interested in the Nerth Pacific Railroad Company had avoided him, and that he had been unable to smoke them out; and his sole object in making his speech, the other day, was to draw out information, and for that purpose he had fired at the flock. [Laughter.] Mr. Banks declined going into a discus sion of that matter. His remarks were directed to the cause; not to the case. It was because of those-great enterprises open ing on all sides that the people of New En gland, the men who work in the shops, - who cultivate the fields, and who gain by toil a .scanty livelihood, took a deep interest in those questions. It was not improbable that the Ohio would be connected with the James river by a ship canal on the Kanawha; that the great lakes would be connected by a ship canal with the St. Lawrence. If the cost of transportation of grain could be thus reputed one-quarter or ose-half, the United States would have control of the grain mar kets of the world. By the completion of the enterprise which he had indicated in the Mississippi valley would be- given the grandest prize ever opened to man—the control of the grain markets of the world; to the Pacific States would be given the control, not to say the monopoly, of the Asiatic trade; and to the Eastern States would be given the control of manufactures in the markets of Europe and Asia. He could not doubt that the man was now living who would see Paris and London yield in importance and power to the city of New York, and to the rising city of the West, whichever it ,might be that would share with New York its financial influence and power. Whenever these things were accomplished the -credit of their incipiency as well as of their execution would be due to the common people of New England; who never yet were warped from their true par pose and their honest intention in any o these enterprises. And the first railway that wended its sluggish and heavy root ' over the Rocky Mountains, with the un earthly harmony of the steam calliope, would chant the requiem of the solid men of Boston until Euceladns, the son of earth, should stir in his mighty cavern. Mr. Wentworth remarked that he was opposed to making over the immense grant of the Northern Pacific Railroad Company o Galt,of Canada, and:that he had fought the bill because he thought that New England had gone over to Canada. Mr. Banks replied that New England never went with Canada or to Canada. She was for the government of the United states, and none other, and would be to the end. Mr. Wentworth said he was opposed to the union of New England with Old En gland. The first battle of the late war had lt.en between the United States of America , ind England, and the United States had chipped her, thank God. Mr. Grinnel (Iowa), in the absence of his . olieagne (Mr. Price), who had charge of the Pacific Railroad bill, expressed the regret of the latter gentleman that Mr. Banks had riot had the opportunity yesterday of making his able speech. Mr. Wentworth asked and obtained leave absence for three weeks, but announced !hat he would not avail himself of theprivi iege unless he could effect a pair on the questions of liberty, of economy, and of keeping whisky out of the Senate, [Laugh ter.) Adjourned. 80A1^2.1 Ole TRADE: ANDREW WHEELER, Vi. Y. TOWNSEND, IMOXIITCLY I • • TIMENTO2 , 7 k FLOWN. Rsoorted for the Philadelphia Evening Bulletin CARTIRICAS—SrIar Charlotte &haw, rhaase-255 hbds cut lo"ses es trs do 70 bbls do I Rough Co. IF2SFUEGOS—Schr alba, Adr.ms—Sil htils sugar ::4 tcs do Madeira fi Cabada; 1M hhda sugar 6 tcs do ai w Welsh. PORT AU PRINCE—Sark Victoria', Christian—€'u bags coffee 4303 lbs lottcycsd T Wattson dt bons. .'rs ral aod S4Mlm i l , soeasas Stesimers TO Molt YOB na.T2 80Fph0rn5............11verp001-Boston&Phila.--Apral 10 York 11 Preraen....New:York....__4.lwll 11 York___Apra 13 .... York.....__April 14 York..__,Aprli 14 14 Wxn Penn:.- ..... York i 5 P01n33. - ra. -.LlverpooL-New Tork.—_-Aprll 17 City of London_LlvorpooL.:New York__ kprll 18 foe Queen.- LaverpooL..New Y0rk.,......,..April 14 ortuann .—Southatooton—New York- ..._..A.prll 18 „lay. of Llmerick_laverpool...New York otta_...—..__Uverpool-New York April 21 TO_Dar.A..IIT. - - - - -- . -trizona..---.....New York—AspinralL............_May 1 .-'ersui -______New York__Liverpool........ May 2 siora C.Wstle.--New York-. Havana —__ May . 2 a ertnann New Yorir...llremen,.—___.- .May 5 -I Ilez.sania -_____New 'York...Hamburg . . .... ... _May 5 L•stayerte........—New York...Havre May 5 uity of London... New York_Liverix.ol._.— May 5 Nova So otian Portland... Liverpool . _May 5 k trice_ itoston__Liverpool_ nay 9 A Iv gl , ----..7tiew York -.Havre .-...................May 12 - , •-_sotta..... New Tork—Llverpoo ..............May 19 2.1 y of Waslaingt`n_lsi York—Llverpool.....—.--MAY 12 ro.R.T OF PHIL, IDELPBIA—A.parr.3O. .R.Lsm, 5 9 I sus 88TH, 6AI I Mail Wance... 2 26 AERTVHD YESTERDAY. Steamer Nevada. Grumley, 41 hours from Hartford, with mdse to Wm M Baird t CO. Bark Victoria, Christian, Intim St Marc nth inst. with coffee and legwood to Thomas Wattson & Sons. Left achr Bethany. for Boston in 4 days. Schr R B Townsend. Townsend, s dams from Cienfue gos. with molasses to E C Knight & Co. Schr Alba. Adams, 12 days from Cienfuegos, with • ugar to Madeira & Cubada. -chr Osceola, Harris, 3 days from Baltimore, in bal last to Bacon, Collins it Co. schr Stafford. Skinner, 3 days from Baltimore, in ballast to Bacon, Collins & Co. Schr D E. Merriman, Johnson, 2 days from Indian River, with corn to Bacon. Collins 3 Co. ARRIVAM ON SATURDAY. Steamer W C Pierrepont. Shropshire, 24 hours from New York, with mdse to W M Baird & Co. steamer Vulcan. Morrison, 24 hours from N. York, with mdse to W W Baird & Co. steamer Buffalo, Jones. r. 4 boors from; New York, with Incise to W P Clyde & Co. Steamer Ruggles, Chase, 24 hours from New York, with mdse to NV P Clyde & CO. Bark J H 11,Leran,Corning. 5 days from New York, ballast to Carman, Merchant Shaw. -chr S B Thomas, Arnold, from New Haven, in bal last to captain. Schr Stephen G de Hart, Rowley. 2 days from New York, in ballast to Warren, Gregg it Morris. Schr Windward. Kennedy, 5 days from Vienna, Md. with lumber to Bacon. Collins & Co. Schr Diamond, Townsend, 3 days from Indian River, n it h lumber to Bacon, Collins & Co. Sehr Mary, Rickards. 1 day from Camden, Del. with grain to Jea L Bewley it Co. Schr S P Chaae, Bostick. 1 day from Smyrna, Del. I. with grain to Jas Bewley & Co. Schr John S Moulton, Crowley. 2 days from New York. with inci Jane,,Caran, Merchant & Shaw. Schr Cynthia Bellows, from Brookhaven, with gravel to Warren, Kirk & Co. BELOW. Bark Ann Aiice,from New York: brig Henry Leeds, ftom CLEARED ON SAT_VRDAY. steamer Norfolk. Vance. Richmond. W P Clyde & Co. steamer B Willing, Cundiff, Baltimore, A Groves, Jr. Stesmer A C Earners, Knox:Washington, WmP Clyde A. (o. zstearuer Alida. Lenny. New York. W P Clyde & Co. - Steamer Bristol. Charles. New York. W P Clyde & Co. !au k Eliza Young, Hatfield, Londonderry, Workman & Co. Brig Anne Helene (Pius), Mohrdick, Falmouth, Eng, E A Bonder & Co. - Brig W A Dresser. 'Hatch Boston, Mershon dr. Cloud Brig Harp. Arey, Bangor, Carman, Merchant & Shaw. Schr Knight. Romer, eangor, do Schr brace Clifton. Otis, Newburyport, W Hunter, Jr. 'chr Jamestown. „Alegee, New Haven, captain. Schr Oen Grant, Shropshire, Washington, Caldwell, Gordon & Co. Bohr J Williamson, Winsmoreßostt Sinnickson tCo - , ,chr Victory. Kelly, Baltimore, Bacon, Cellos & Co.- s( hr Artist. Price, Baltimore, do Schr Rate, Cox, Baltimore, do Schr Farmers' Friend, Curran. Washington, do Schr R J Karon. Adams. Richmond, do Schr Extra, Taylor, Richmond, do Steamers Norfolk. Vance.hence, and Kennebec,from Wilmington,DeL at. Fort Monroe yesterday. day. Steamer Norman. Crowell, hence at Boston yester steamer Axles, Boggs, cleared at Boston 28th: inst. for this port. Steamer Erin, Cutting from Liverpoul llth inst.. at New Torkyesterday. Steamer Cali' of imeton (Br), Brooks, cleared at New York 28th inst. for Liverpool. Steamers Evening Star, DelaneY.and George Croat. well, Valli, cleared at New York 28th lint. for New Orleans. t.bip John Clark, Letwarnean. hence for Baltimore, Went into the Capes on Thursday evening. Ship Eddystone, Peterson, cleared at Boston 23th Inst. for Bombay. Ship Winged Hunter, Raynor' from BooliOn 6th Dec, iW CALcatta Olt insih iri Alttlivi kl It IDLILLItIit . cioß/I.lcrna Sbip Harrisburg, Wiswell, at Bordeaux ilth instant from Pew Orleans Beth ult. . Sark 7 W. Seaver, Snow, cleared at New York 28th inst. for -Na; asaki.' Brig Waredale, lielseed, hence in Hampton Roads 26th-.lnst. Brig Matilda, Dia, sailed from Fall River Zr.th Brigs J . Leighton, Brown. and Idella, Quinn, cleared at New York 28th inst. for tins port. I (Brig Edwin, - -Allen. from Calais for this port, at Bolmes'llole 27th inst. Sebr J Patterson,, Whittaker, cleared at Balve.toll 18th inst. for Matamoras rcbr Wrus L borings, Steelman, for New York, and Oriental. Crocker, for this port. cleared at Baltimore 27th net . , Schr Flight, Littlefield. hence at Newport 27th inst. Schr Raven. Rosehericent Bangor 26th inst. `echr Binh B Baker, knight, hence at Portland yes terday. Schrs S T Wines. Hulse, and 13 0 Floyd, Kelley, hence, and Wm Gillum, Scovill, from New Castle, Del at Providence 26'h inst. Schrs Sarah J Bright, Shaw: .1 111 Vance, Bardge; Banns!) Little, Godfrey: R G Porter, Crowell: Boston, Smith; Wm Wallace, scan, for this port; Wm Picker ing, Quinn. f r do or Itnngor, and Scud, Ireland, for Trenton, NJ. sailed from Providence 26th inst. ElliS sIACIAJLi P. S. PETERSON ac CO. P. S. PETERSON SSE CO., 39 South Third Street. Stocks, Bonds, ita, &c., Bought and Sold at Board of Brokers. NOT%s.Liberal Premirsa paid for CON:POIIICD - - Interest allowed on Depoaita. .oClDr_t i, 0 4 4, SPECIALTY. L SMITH, LINDOLPH & CO, BANKERS AND BROKERS, 16 South Third Wt., I S Nassau street, Philadelphia. I New York. STOCKS AND GOLD 13017GHT AND SOLD ON ooh 5-20 7 3-10, COMPOUND INTEREST NOTES WANTED. DE HAVEN ASz BRO., 40 South Third Street, 111.U 1 U.110.11 IS3ILIPI3 1 'SWILLS FIRM & SON. &btu - WNW= AND COMMISSION' No. 11.10 Cl:Lea:3 l T= - (Bez ennioacello7 Sans= street) _ oriseho• ld Fornitore „. _of ever)" deoart - PlOol "-nliervito C. SALM MORNTNEI, -ilea of Forr.nore ai iflwelnoce atte-aded to on the MUM Reasonable Tune. ALP. OF REAL ESTATE. STA:ICM% &T TB:3 ESCRANOR :lamas Birth & Son respectrally lath= that r1F:3:15 and DBEs;] that they are pr . . - red to =eV 1.121. gale Eteate 137 &action and at private tab SALE OF FJ , r,GANT 31ABBLESTATUA.IM. ALA 4STEB VASES. STATUETTES, PLATED WARE, eke ON MONDAY EVENLNG. AMITE. SO. At 7.? , ; o'clock, at the attain/ stare.l4O.ll.lo Chest= treet. will be sold— ti as - sortment of elegant Alabaster. Acme and Bar dl,:ho Vases, Statuettes. Mantel Ornaments. Bohe mian Glass, Slicer Plated Ware. the-- MARBLE STATUES. A Iso, sereral Marble Statues. The goods will be open for examination on Monday .morning. Sale at a% Arch street HOESEHOLD FURNITURE. dz. ON Ttr.e2nDAY MORNING. .t tie o'clock: at No. 5.9 Arca streetoull be sold, the Nurphis furnit are of a family removing. comprising an ar.s,rimedt of parlor, chamber, dining room and Wicben furniture. Can be c" mined rn the morning of sale at 5 o'clock. Sale at No. 161 S Ogden street. HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE.. ON i L , ' , -DA."I" MORNING, At to too clock, at No. 109 Ogden street, will be sdld— fornhure of a family removing.compriaing the ual parlor thamber sad kitchen fur itare. S ATN OF COLTS AND MEDALS. WED".ZESDAY. MAY 2, At 3 o'clock P. M. at the auction store, No. 1110 Cbestnut street, will tie sold— A n interesting collection otallcer and copper coins atd medals. Catalogues now ready. Sale No 1342 Spruce ftreet. NEAT HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE, ROSEWOOD PIANO FORTE. CARPE &c. ON \V3.DN SDey MOILNINCi, SLAY 2, At 10 o'clock. at No. 1.542 Spruce st. by catalogue, the ocr or, chamber, dining room and kitchen furniture of a family removing. DRUG STORE AT PRIVATE SALE. A well established Drug store, handsomely fitted trp • lib lease of the premises, for sale. Apply at the action store. DY SOHN B. MYERS & 00., AITOTIONE YRS Ul Nos. 232 and 214 MARKET street. corner of Bank L&BGE PEREMPTORY SALE OF ROOM, SHOES, BROGANS, TRAVELING BAGS. itc. ON TUESDAY MORNING, MAY 1, Will be sold, at 10 o'clock, by catalogue, on lbw months' credit, shoutl:2oo packages Boots. Shoes, Bak morals, &c., of City and Eastern manufacture. Open for examination with catalogues early on the mornMl of sale. RAE PEREMPTORY SALE OP BOOTS, SHOES, pour large in our large sale of boots, shoe'. &c., ON Ti.i.ersDAY MORNING, May 1, will be found in part the &Bowing fresh es c desirable assortment, vir. Men's, boys' and youths' calf, double sole, half welt bre pump sole dress boots; men's, boys' and y o u ths kip and buff leather boots; men's fine grain, long /c 2 ess boots; men's and boys' calf, buil bather Congress boots and balmorals; men's, boys and youths' super kip, buff and polished grain half welt and primp sole brcgans; ladies' fine kid, goat, morocco, and enameled patent sewed balmorals and Congress galtem women's, misses' and children's calf and. bafi leather bahnorals and lace boots; children's fine kid, sewed, city made lace boots; fancy sewed balm a rale and ankle ties; ladies' fine black and colored lasting Congress and side lacegalters;womens', misses and children's goat and morocco copper-nailed lace boots,• ladies' fine kid slippers; traveling bags; metallic overshoes &c. LARGE. POSITIVE SALE OF BRITISH. FRENCH, GERALLbi We will bold a Large Sale of Foreign and Dotaestic Dry Goods, by catalogue. on four months' credit and part for cash. On THUF.SDAT MORNING, _May 5, at le °clock, embracing about 900 pack area and lots of staple and fancy articles, in woolena, worsteds, linens, silks and cottons. N. it—Goods arranged tor examination and cats I oraca ready early on the morning of sale. LARGE POSITIVE SALE OF CARPETINGS, CANTON AVD COIF?. MATTING.% chc. ON FRIDAY MORNING, May 4, at /11 o'clock, will be sold, by Catalogue, on four months' credit, a"zont 250 pieces of superior and fine ingrain, royal damask, Venetian, list. hemp. cottage and rag carpetings, which may be examined earl) on the morning of sale. T.• L A avrizttrnolE & CO. AUCTIONRS No. sa; A tr ,, LARM:CT set. above Fifth poSltivE SALE OP BOOTS. SHOES. GAITERS &c. ON WEDNESDAY MORNING, MAX 2, At 10 o'clock, We Will sell by catalogue, about MO cases of men's fine calf boats creole Co4gress gaiters, lasting do.. Orford ties, Balmorals, slippers - boys' and youths' do., la , lee'. miss.s' and children's fine calf, goat lasting. kid and morocco gaiters, Balmoral% slippers, &c., to Iwhich the attention. of the trade is incited. Also, cases men's and boys' wool hats. B Y RLERPIT dr. 00. AUCTIONEERS. CASH AMMON HOUSE. No 230 MARKET street, corner of Bank street. Cash advanced on consignments without extra charge. LARGE ,SADE 800 LOTS FIRST-CLASS BEADY ONM ADE CLOTHING. WEDNESDAY MORNING. SAY 2. Commencing at 10 o'clock, comprising the entire stock of flrsCclass goods from a house declining busi ness. Also. SOO lots Cloths, Cassimeres, Domestics, shirts, Furnishing Goods. Spring Dry Goods, &C. rikrticularP a Tnesapre advertisemes" Air TH.0.111.A.8 & SONS, AUCTIONS . - Nos. IBS and lei South YOURTHstreet. STOCREt AND BEAL ESTATE.--171ESDAY.isnorT. Pamphlet cataloghes now ready, conta fall de• tat ic uilit r ion , s o y f weitzoangltrotf,,lsseard ay 2d , gaiD, mth, end ged, ramprising * atht large arnount and great variety of very desirable and valuaole Property, by order of Orphans' Court. .131xec+. tors, Trustees, and others, to be sold peremptorily. BALES OF smalls AND SEAL ESTATE At the I...zehenge, every TIMEDAY, at 12 o'clocknoon fkiir.Handbilra of each property issued separatelY. and on the Saturday previous to each sale 2000 cata log-nes in pamphlet fbrin, giving full cescriptions. BEAL SSTATE AT PRIVATE SALE. Printed catalogues., comprising several hundred thousand dollars, including every description of city and country property. from the smallest dwellings to the most elegant mansions, elegant country Beata, larms. business properties, &c. tar' FURNITURE SALES at the Auction Store EA , EBY 'I H 013.STIA.Y. Particular attention given to sales at Private Residences, dm. STOCKS, LOANS, &C. ;ON TUESDAY, AY 1 At 12 o'clock noon. at the Philadelphia Exchange, Executors' Sale. 19000 Ridge Avenue and-Manaynnk Passenger Rail way. secured by mortgage 7 per cent coupon bonds, it serest January and July. due 1880. 64,00 Willl• sport and Elmira 7 per centi bends, terest Jantutry and Tub , . 140 shares Commonwealth National Bank. be shares 33.11111,C8 insurance CO. 50 shores Union Mutual Insurance Co. Pew No. 16 north aisle Church Holy Trinity. 1 share Philadelphia Library Co. • To Close a Concern -80 shares Union Bank of Tennessee. 1(0 shares Penn'a. Middle Coal Field and Railroad Company. For other acceunta 3. bon da. $lOOO each, Consolidated Ist mortgage 7 per cent (coupon registered) Hnntlngdon and Broad Top Alon.ntain Railroad and Coal Co. 21 shares pre erred stock Huntingdon and BrOad Top Mountain Railroad and Coal Co. 4 bonds. 0060 each. lst mortt age 7 per cent Columbus and Ixdiannpolis Central Railroad Co. 1 bond, $lOOO, 2d mortgage 7 percent. Colnmbua and Indianapolis Central Railroad Co 19 shares Columbus and Indianapolis Central Rail way Co. Sit shares Philadelphia City Passenger BailWaY CO., (Filth and Sixth Streets). 15 shares do do do do do 16 shares preferred stock Continental Hotel Co. h 50 shares • Afton Coal Co. 20 shares Home Insurance Co. of Phila. MO shares Great CentriV Oil Co. of Pa: 500 shares Plymouth Bock 0.11 Co. of Pa. 1000 shares Winslow Oil Co. 46 shares. $.1600 eoch. of the Clarion Ricer and Spring Creek Oil Co. 5 ,- .osharesDorchester (Copper) Mining Co. certified for $lOO Dorchoster Mining Ca. hoc shares llinmbelt Oil Co. shares Franklin Fire Insurance Co. =0 Chester Va-ley isailroad Co. 10 000 starts McKim Creek Oil Co., of Pleasant!, West Virginia. 1200 shares Pearson Petroleum Co. MO shares Organic Oil Co. 1000 shares Centsal City Oil CO. - Lot No. 16 Mount Morlah Cemetery. 50 shares Pittsburgh and Boston Petroleum Co. 100 shares Winslow Petroleum Co' . 50 shares Sadorns Oil Creek Petroleum Ca. 100 shares Government Oil and Minlng Ca. share Mercantile Library Co 4 shares Bank of Peon Townsh'p. ON DEPOSITS. al TWELFTH SPRUNG SALE, MAY I. Executors' Permitistory Sale-l.tate of Josh Ba t errs, Esq., deed-S .RRY VALUABLE; BL --- STESS LOCATION. No. 710 Arch st, 5) feet on Arch st, feet in depth, with an outlet into. Seventh at. Hale absolute. home Estate--ITEREESTGRY BRICK lIIMI DENttE, No 64 north Seventh st, south of .Arcig 19.4 feet front. Sale absolute, Adrcir.lsU-Nors' :Peremntory Sale-Estate of Susan R. Pollard. deo'd-TEIREESTORY BRIOr. STORE at d DWIU LING. No. irs Girard avenue. Orr bans' t. ourt Sale- Estate of Geo e Binder, decd THR-EE-sTORY BRICE DWELL. Palmer st.noi th oftsirard avinue. Orphans' Court. Sale-Estate of Deborah Brown, deed- HANDSGIIE MODERN POUR-STORY BRICK ItESIDENC.E ho, 16.7.1 Spruce street, with a front on Nineteenth street. Peremptory Sale-VALUABLE COUNTRY SEAT and .F.Ahlt 31 ACRES, known as "Linden," Old t ork road, Montgomery county, Pa., at the 8 mile stone, near the Cheitt.naills or Old York Road Station on the North Pennsylvaniz, Railroad. Sale Absolute. RElNscutors' Sale-NEAT THIUM,STORY BRICK SIDENCE, N 0.1427 Walnut street, west of Broad, IS fret front. 100 feet deep-one of the most desirathe squares on Walnnt street. "•anie Esuae-Valuable Business Stand-TECREE, STORY BRIGS.. STORE and DWELLINt3. No. LUZ Market street, west of Thirteenth. TBILEE-'4TORY BRICK DWELLING. No. 441 North Thirteenth airier, sou h of Buttonwood. 2 BRICK DWELLS GS, Nos. 613 and 616 New Mar ket street, with Ii Dwellings in_ the rear. ale by Order of Heirs- te of Francis Itcßrids, dec'd - Busints stand - THREE STOR BRICK DWELLING, S. E. corner of Twelfth and South Str eets. Same Estate-2 TIMEE-STORY BRICE sTomrs and DA' ELUL\ GS, Nos. 114213nd 1144 South sttreet, ad joining theabore. , Same EState—THREE-STORY BRICK STOKE and EtVik - t ,Y. 1160 , 615 South Twelfth street. Same ) , state--2. THREE-STORY BRICK DWEI.,- LINOS. Nos. 613 and 611 South Twelfth street, &Waffl ing tie stove. r sane Estate-74 TEL BRICE. STORES and .I , WELLING4i, N. W. earner of Shippen and Juniper streets. VERY DESIRABLE COUNTRY SEAT, 5 ACRES. tulles south-west of "1,‘,1 Chester, Chester County Pa. S-tone Mansion, Carriage Honse Barn and out- AL$O Z-74: acres adjoining. Executors' Peremptory Sale—Estate of Tames Greer, dec - d—IiIUDERN THBEE-STOR t B stICE. DW LLN G, rot South Seventeen „h Street—has the mod ei n conveniences. Sale A teolute. MODERN THREE-STORY BRICE DWELLING, No. a.-o South Fifth street, north of 'Claristian—bas the re odsrn conveniences. - - THREE-STORY BRICK DWELLIXO. 2Ca. 1613 lA:mbar:l str,et. THRE.I.6TO.RY 13.1310 E. DWELLUS - G, No. 1612 Richards street_ 711RnE-STORY BRICK DWELLING, ICtI.ISIS South street, with two La reentory Brick Dwellings in the rear. luatie Business Location—STOßES and DWEI, LINGS. N. E. corner of Third and German streets. ELLINti and STABLE with •it Acres and so Perches, .allegheny avenue and Howard street, 2341 Ward. • ,THREE STORY BRICK DWELLUiti, Ico. 1213 Buz' ( nwood ttreet. LARGE and VA.LL'ABLE LOT, Front street, South Pi NPR" adjoining the 'valuable Iron Front Store cr liceutcheon & VALUABLE FARM. ES ACRES, Limerick Town ship. leontgomery county, Perms Also, a Stone Quarry. Immediate pteeession. LARGE .A NO VALUABLE LOT, Shoemakers lane Germantown, !SO feet front. NDSOME 1,4 0 OERN FOUR-STORY BRICE LE...F.112E1s OE. No. aliWalnut St: eet,west Sixth street, has the modern ennvenlences. 1-Fremptory Sale.-31015ERN THREE-STORY BRI CE. RE - 1' , 71/ENCE Spruce eueet, has the rapeern conveniences. e•alearsolntp THREE-STORY BRICK DWELLING. No. 1061 Beech street, NO thin half square of the,proposed Ferry 11,1 Sltackam , xon street wbart _BUILDING LOT, Alaryat.between lah and Broad and Jefferson and master Eta. Executors' Sale—No.lsl4 Pine street. SUPERIOR RESIDENCE AND FURNITURE, MIRRORS, PIANO, CHANDELIERS, NaNE_LN rITINA, CARPETS. (te. ON TCF_SDAT MORNING. May let, at 10 o'clock, at No 1514 Pi ue street, by cata logue, am superior Residence, Rose Wool Drawing. Room Furniture, Rosewoori Piano by Bacon & Raven. Rosewood Bookcase_, double set fine Nankin Chlisa,24s pieces, Frtnch China and Glatsware, Plateaware, russ e Is Carpets, superior dining room and et:amber lu- nitrite kitchen utensils. sa - - The liesidence will be sold at 10 o'clock, pre. easels. previous to mils of furniture. SALE OP AN EXTENSIVE AND VALUABLE LIBRARY. O TUESDAY, WEDNT§DA:Y and THUBSDA.Y, , Rill be sold at the auction store, the valuable pr . '. vrte library of the late Wm. McCarty, Esq., which in eludes a nnruber of rare and valuable works on Ame - rican History, and other interesting and important L.ohieets, many of them being now out of print. Vti. The sale will commence each:day at loo'clock. catalogues, with fell partionla , e, will be ready two d 4VS previous to sale, and the books arranged for inspection. Sale No. 874 north Sixth street. _ _ _ _ SUPERIOR HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE, HAND SOME VELVET CA_RPETS, ON 'WEDNESDAY MORNING, MAY 2, At 10 o'clock, at No. 574. north Sixth street, below Poplar street. by catalotne, the superior household rurnlture, handsome snit walnut chamber furnitare, fine ye vet and Brussels carpets, oil cloths, &c. Ito, the kitchen uten-its May be e" , amined at 6 o'clock on the morning ofsale Sale No. 2045 Walnut street. SUPERIOR FURNITURE. PIANO, MIRRORS CI'RVAINS, CRANDELTFRA, OIL PAINTINGS, FINE CARP .TS. &C. uN FRIDAY MORNING Way 4th, at 10 o'clock. at No. 2045 Walnut street, by catalogue, the superior rosewood drawing-roomfurrd• ore. tine satin coverings; elegant curtains to match; French plate mantel and pier mirrors; rosewo piano: paintings and engravings, fine carpets; handsome chandeliers; dining room and library furniture fine mattresses, &c. 190, the kitchen furniture. Fall particulars in catalogues. TEE PRINCIPAL MONEY ESTABLISH/LENT S. E. corner of SIXTH and B.ACE streets. Morey advanced on Marchandlas renerally: Watches, Jewelry, Diamonds, Gold and Shve and on all Suliclee of value, for any length of time WATCHER AND JEWELRY AT PRIVATE SALE Fine Gold Rating Case, Double Bottom and Open Face IMglish, American and Swiss Patent Lever Watches; Fine Gold Bunting Case and Open Face Le pine Wetchea: Fine Gold Duplex and other Watches. Fine Silver, :Hunting Case and Open Face English. American and Swiss Patent Lever and Lepine Watches: Double Case English Quartier and other Watches; ladles' Fancy Watches: Diamond Breast. ping; Finger Rings; Ear Rings, Studs, &c.; Fine Gold Chains: Medallions;-Bracelets; Scarf Ansi Brawl Pins; Finger Rings; Pencil Cases, and Jewan7 gene rally. FOR SALE.—A large and splendid Fireproof Chess, suitable for a Jeweler, price f 65 0. Also. several Lots in South • Camden, Fifth and Chestnut streets PHILIP FORD a co,. . • ANOTIOIMERS, No. wei NA bores street SALE OF 1500 VASES BOOTS AND SECONS. ON THUD-DRY MORNING, MAY Commencing at 10 o'clock. we will sell by catalogue far • casb, 1600 MINS prime Boots. Oboes Brogans, =ma. COnkte s3 Boots. Slippers. Buskins, &c., cow. Prtlng a gezmitlMlOrtMeal OrtratclasagUgla, if f erlOrii BALY#2, May 1, 2 apd 3 AITODION SALES. j : .t , -/n(:3 A, 1, AXICTIOIM r 422 PirliTEE uplumti 18.A.1.1Z W MA:lr st r lSSlL litreet. " Thla aide, at is o'clock anima as include the following properties— .&rebalge. n 5.000 shares Premont B O T Pl p r o of Philadelphia. 10.000 shares Maim Oil C0..0f Pleasant& county West Virginia. , on, ..taasms,.. _ A tract 0122 acres. Venango county. Pa... &Meet tto two judgments amounting to stas 72 .Izn'i descriptions in lianabills. .Peremptory Hato on account op whx.nn it may concern. WEST VER.GENIA. 390 acres of the Eiger tract in Motumgohela county,West Virginia. See handbills. on Sate OR account of whom it may concern: • PHILIP ST., 19TH WARD-6 houses together gR feet _front by 60 feet deepclear. LOT ri Tit PRICA ST—Building lot, America st,bo. low Columbia avenue, 35by 60 feet. N. 8.110.8,D • T—A. valuable lot, Broad et, below Tioga 110 by 400 feet to 15th rt. NO, 411 - I.:. welling, above Callowhlll, 1 636 by 78 feet. $66 ground rent. Executor's Sate—Estate of' Eliza pea Physick, deed._ • 140. 217 RACE ST—Hotel and factory, 23 bY1.14 feet to Rar.dolph's'Court. NEW MAHE - ET ST—A lot 26 feet front on Nevv. Market st and running through 87 feetto Rachel st.on vrhich .it front- 81 feet, 3vith the frame houses thereon,. Nos. 826. and 828 New Market st. $24 ground , rent. Orphans' Court Sale—Estate of Goforth minors._ I'.O. 803 S. FRONT s.o—Two story dwelling. Third Ward, 17 by Se feet. Same Estate. • 'TIMBER LANDS, flr.vr.kßeln.LD CO—A valuable tract of ,1280 acres on Clearfield creek. accessible te market? These lands are heavily underlaid wittvatith .e-`ports. dc. at the auc...tion eta re. 140. 1239 VINE ST.—Store and Dwelling 173ihY 873 feet. Part may remain. WHAM fON ST.—A. three s brick "below 7t 12 by al% feet. c.rphans' Cou t r o t S ate.—Estate of h firc- Goughey. minors. 210111 10TH ST.—Three-story brick dwelling Tenth below Jefferson , 17 by 74 feet, r,O 26 -Ground Rent. d. .Orphan areal Sale—Estate of John .HfChfanus, dee 10TH AND CATHARINE—Store and dwellings, W. E. corner, 64 feet on Tenth street, by 70 feet deep. 1.11 Ground Bent per annum. Orphans' Chart Scrie—.EP sate of Matthew .2hompma, deea. NO. 112.5 FITZWATER ST.—A genteel three-story brick dwelling, with. Dar-k buildings, 18 by 72 feet. Has . all the modern conveniences. 863 Groundltent. Same Estate. ADJOINMG—No. 1121 Fitzwater. Same description.. SR" These are desirabis Propertier. Estato 12TH AND CATHARUCE—A building lot at the S. W. corner. 22 by 85 feet. Saran Estate. 16TH AND CHANCELLOR Hones Nos. 1624 and 1626 Chancellor-street, with houses on the rear, 25 by EA feet. 152 Ground Bsnt, Same Estate. t82..;‘ GEGUND BENT. oat of lot 13th e_ e`, between Tidn3arah and Prime streets. 2nd Ward, GO by 32 feet. Same Estate. LOT : RTM ST—West of Bth 8t.,16 by 57feet. Same: Estate. .OT Descrip&ons and plans may be had at as auction kZorc. • - Public Sale, by order of the United States. PEA - ESYLVA BANK PROPERTY, SECOND STREET. AB , VE WALNU T.--- Ender direction of the Treasury Department; will be sold at public sale, at the Exchange, at ILI o'clock noon, on the iSth of May the valuable property kn. Doown le the Pennsylvania Bank, bounded by Secondck. Gold and Lodge streets. It has a front of. 75 feet on Second street and a depth of about 250 feet, and has been prepared by the construction of the most substan tial foundations to have erected thereon extensive additions td She present marble building. • VALUABLE RESIDENCES AT PRIVATE BALD TO TM A I Fc TATEOPERATORS. ELEGANT WALNUT STEN= MANsiON—One of the most elegant residences on Walnut street, El feet front ,ground. stable. &c. Broad Also, P.ROWI‘ STONE MANSION. Walnut neat st. Will be sold, at very low rates, to a partywho wBI take them all in one lot, five desirable dwellings in the heart of the city. Immediate occapancY can be had if desired. This is a very favorable opportunity to par who seek good real estate investments to bey as old prices property which will pay well and Maresca in vslne, For particulars apply at the auction aims. STABLE—A very desirable prope.:l4 in the neigh. oorhood of Twelfth and Locust eta. TAVERN STAND and It acres of land, on M. du road, 9 =ilea from the state HOTI3e, known as the Sorrel Horse." Plane , surveys, fie, at the store. Property No. 402 south Front at, 41 by IMO feet. do do lilt and 1146 Lombard at SO acres, Germantown n do Fisher's lane Valuable Lot, Market sheet, above Nineteenth ddo Barker do do s Bui l ding Lots, sonth Twenty-second at Property northeast corner Fourth and spruce ate Dwelling, with side yard. Darby road •- trans-stene Store, Second at, near Chestnut Residence and large lot, Burlington do do 418sarath Eleventh at 6 acres of Land. Federal st, Twenry-aulth Ward TALL - ABLE STORE, CHESTNUT ST—A Vet) valuable business Firoperty on Chestnut at, having Me fronts—in good order, Asc, Occupancy with the deed. _Davis a HARVEY. AL ur.t.U.s (late with M. Therese & Soma.) Store No. t 33 Chestnut stress zu - RsTreatE SALES at the Store every Tuesday. SALES AT RESEDENTM-1 will receive particala attention. Sale Nci. "M3aeetant street STrPERIOR FURY TORE. ROSE WOOD PIA.NO, MIRROR, BRCS -FT S AYD VELVE./. CARPETS, (tr.. dc. ON 'TUESDAY 31031ISTNG. At 10 o'cleck, at tne auction store, a large assortment ofsuperior secondhand furniture fine toned rosewood Oar o fine Enamels= d velvet carpeMspring matreso. tench plate mirror, kitchen farnituredx. also, superior sewing machine, in walnut enclosed care. .*1 so. large counter and elrawers; - large marble slabs, sbow cases, &c Sale No 1= North Eleventh street. maxDsoat E FURNITURE. ROSEWOOD PIANO, MIRROR. FINE BEDS, r 4 FPETS, Atm ON WEDNESDAY MOELNENG. .At 10 o'clock, by catalogue, at No. 18= nurth lith st, abo , Montgomery avenue, the entire furniture, fine toned rosewood man°. bh Ensbe & Co.. oval pier itror. lar feather beds curled hair matress, tine ban keta. due Came's, chMa, refrigerator. &c. The parlor furniture was made to order by Moore & Cam pion. May be examined at S o'rlrbrk on the morning of sale, BMT. 18. AECTIONEMI. int B. SCOTT, Ja. will sell at auction. tri. BlaseL ON 'Pu.KsDAY RVENES - 0. May 1, at 7% o'clock, without reserve, at the Art Gallery, nal Chestnut street, a beautiful collection or tboFe famous Paintings known as the RUGGLES GIMS. The collection embraces Lands apes and M curtain Scenery of America, Old Mills. Romantic Ruins, Bnvines and Pictnr.?que Architecture of Eu rope. The Paintings will remain on exhibition until Lire erenitg ofeale. and all lovers of Art are invited to ear.mite this beautiful collection. SPECIAL SAI,T . OP IMPORTED - IrkTfy-mg DE, CLOTHING. ON WEDNESDAY MORNEcG, May 2, at 15 o'clock, will be so d without reserve. a large invoice of Resoy made Clothing. manufactured expressly for custom trade, in the Paris and London Markets, consisting in part of fancy and black doeskin, all :wool Scotch and English cassirsere and drap d'ete pants. f all snits ail wool English and Scotch cessimera, Melton. tweed and serge pants rod vests. ,te .all of the latest styles The above goods were imported directly from Eu ropeSi ex steamship RangarOo, and will positively be Open for examination on Monday afternoon. JFITZPATRICK & CO., UCTIONEERS, . No. 416 North SECOND Street. p hove Callowhill LEGAL NOTICES. TN Tar: ORPHANS' COURT FOR t'iztr, CITY IN AND COUNTY OF PEELLADELPHIA.—Estate of CYRUS HILT BORN. dec'd.--Notice is hereby given that kJ .T 7 a RFTH S. ILILLBORN and FRANCIuS W. HII.T.BOEN, minor children of said decedent by their guardian, Benjamin Stevenson, have filed in said Q•urt thelrpetition and an appraisement of the per or al property in money, amounting to $350, elected to be retained by them nnderthe acs of April 4.1851. and the supplements thereto, and that the same will be approved by said Court on FRIDAY, May 4th, 1868, unless exceptions be filed thereto. J. SERGEANT PRICE, Attorney for Petitioners. L STATE OP ANNE D. IitORRLSON, deceased.— Letters Testamentary upon the above Estate hay ingbeen grant( dto the undersigned. all persons In rehted are requested to make payment, and those Laving claims against tne same. will present them for Fettlementto W EF.T.1A.41 BIDDLE, .511. e HillOttice, No. 15 South Seventh street; M. L. DAWSON. N. IL corner Seventh and Walnut streets; WILLIAM BID DLE, N 0.15 South Seventh at., Executors. ap-M,StA VSTATE of GEORGE W, BAXTER, DECEASED: I'J Letters of Administration on said Estate, having been granted by the Register of Wits for the City and County of Philadelphia. to the undersigned, all per. SIAM having eleims or demands against the estate of said decedent, will make known the same without de lay, to MARY W. BAXTER, 2107 West Delancey Place. or to her attorney, THOMAS BRADFORD DWIGHT, 202 South Fifth street. ate mete .11C N TI:LE COURT OF QUARTER SESSIONS FOR THE MT? AND COUNTY OF FRIT, DEL PHIA.,—In the matter of S.S. LISTER, ball for Tani. Eloolz and Fagan.—The Auditor appointed by the • curt to audit. se.tie and distribute the 111 ,, d paid by Bail in the case of Commonwealth vs-Tully. Moots s.nd Fagan, will meet the parties interested for the purposes of his appointment on MONDAY, the nth day of April, A. D. 1866. at 4 o'clock P. M. at the office of * GEORGE R. EARLE, Esq., No. 6uo CtIESVNUT street, second floor, in the City of F'hiladel phia. apZls to thsl COAL. S. MASON Itrisma THE I:MBE/11E310MM /Si v.riae li...r.r.b.riTiON TO their stock of Buck ldonntaln Company's Goa Lehigh Navigation Company's Coal, and Locust Mountain, - - which they are prepared to sell , at the lowest innate rates, and to deliver in the beat condition. - Orders left with S. MASON BIKES, Franklin Insti tute Balding, SILT ENTH streett,, below- Market. will be promptly attended to. BINEiz dr, SMILS ses 71 1 11,,t( .dreh Street Wharf; SchtlY, fOAL.--StO3ABEOAFT3. Spring Mountain, /eh igh Ooal, and best Loctust Mountain erain - SchrO,lkffl. Prepared ,Wr‘xt'2%iZ taartji N. W. elYner MOB and —No. 112 South SEOOND =Pet. rah?! T. WALTON & CiELATII4. TaPInOA AND RAGO.—Cox's Scotch 1 .-. 1 Gelatin; Rio Tapioca and East India Pearl Snip,. landing and for sale by J. at RIMIER dr• 041 . /118 Delaware Avenue fdlerang AND YELLOW METAL 2313EAT1L11.18 Braalar%Oornage. Nana, BMW and Ingo Ca oanid hand and far sale by NIMAT