Xi( ISINEFreI 040T1014_18. iffigEp MB' R'S le,vg Ll' IMPROVED CRESCENT SCALE 0117 1n3T - RUNG PIANOS. Acknowledged to ° ',e thebert. London Prize Medal and ltiphrrß avviirib' in America received. MELODEONS aim SEWN 13 '41A ND PIA Nt , S. iY2t-' 7 ii w te,rn* Warerooms, 722 Arch et, bet Eighth. EVENING BULLETIN. - ,Vaturday, January IS, 1868. VINE MARYLAND SENATOR. 'ie way of the transgressor is hard, and lifter all Governor Swann's intrigues :and bargains, he has lost the prim which he so coveted and for which he has labored SO unscrupulously. The Democrats having -tsed him, to their heart's content, for the ;purpose of disorganizing the Republictin party in Maryland, have cast him aside as of no more use to them, and elected an original Secessionist, William F. Hamilton, to the Senate, in the place of •Reverdy Johnson. Poor 'Swann is left, where all such politiCad tricksters are left sooner or later, out in the coil, and neither Republican nor Democrat would care a straw if he should carry oart the parallel which he has , estab lined with his great prototype, and "go away and Itang himself." Governor Swann's public career is full of wise lessons for men who:seek political advancement. Never in any real sympathy with the people, he climbed the first rounds of his preferment by 'his loud-mouthed professions of fellowship with the "roughs" of Baltimore. His ambi tinn was then tounded by the gubernatorial chair, 'and no sooner had he reached it than liegan'to drop his disguises and show his cloventoof. Swelling With immense preten siOnsldaristocratic position, he kicked away the .ladder on which he had ascended, and threw himself into the arms Of the rebels of 3litaryland. They gladly received him because he 'could be made a useful tool in 'their hands; but when his ambition amounted higher and grasped • at the neat which Rcverdy Johnson adorns *filth's intellect, if not with his love of lib .crty, his new masters found • it necessary to -Check his soaring aspirations and to suggest 'to him that he bed already been paid in ' full for all services-rendered. 'Swan's defeat in the contest for the Sena 'torahip is a real cause for congratulation. It is a rebuke to -political treachery, intrigue .and demagoguism. If Maryland cannot have loyal man to represent her, it is better for -the country that she should have an original rebel like Hamilton in . the Senate, than a man who pretended to be a,Unionist when it 'served his purpose, and then sold himself in 'the vain hope to destroy the party to which • liewas indebted for all his success in public 'Nfe. - 78mitz.wrirsscxstiNcELEnnarroNs. it has not, of course,- escaped the notice of our readers,. that the •staple theme of the speeches delivered at the Eth of January cele brations, peoent/y held in this city and in Washington i vonsisted of abuse of the colored people. • From Thomas B. Florence, Jere , miah 'Black, and Andrew •Johnson up, the speakers vied with each other in heaping abuse upon this oppressed people. The battle • of New Orleans was magnified, it is true; but •.• a• remarkable feature of these celebrations , vrati, that entire regiments of gallant soldiers, • -who • bore a most valuable part in the .‘ victory, were referred to only in terms of cruel abuse. Florence, Black, and Johnson profess to be warm admirers of Andrew • Jackson'. But, on reading the subjoined of ficial testimony of that great commander to the eminent services of the colored troops in the defence of New Orleans, the tongues of their traducers should cleave to the roofs of their.mouths. The fact is, if Andrew Jack - sorrwere now-living, he would spurn such vilifiers of a-zGost important wing of his . forces from -his -presence. •The entire record of 'the battle of New -Orleaoo, indeed, furnishes proof that Gen. ..Jackson.deriveddrivaluable service from the colored troops, and that he was too brave a • soldier:and tog Just a man not to acknowl edge the debt of gratitude he and the country . owed them. : Let :facts. speak for themselves. On _the .18th of December, 1814, General Jack son:reviewed the militia of New Orleans, among which waaen entire regiment of men of. color, • commaaded by Major Planche. Iking drat: up, they were addressed by Mr, L4.og,ston, one of She General's Aids. One ofthe paragraphs cd' this -address, found at lergai eiVileB's Ilreekly .Rf g gister, vol. 7, Page. 34.6, reads as follows: 1.70 THE XEN OF COLOE. 844:;:fr,4 : ?sow the shores of Mobile I col } kx:ted you to arms. .1 invited you to.share in the ~,perilti and to divide the glory of your.whitecoun , IFyxnen. . I expected much from you; for I was , tot :uninformed of those, qualities which must , reAderymi set formidable So an Invading foe. I ~..hvpw,th,at you (amid endLre hunger and thirst, .and all the hardships of wer. I knew that you ,lo,T,Al„.the land *f your nativity, and that, like our2elves. you had to defend all that is most dear to.rari. 4A; you ou.-pass no most sanguine - hopes. I Dave _found m you, solaiers, united to those qualities, Clot notd , , entionri,ls..n which .4v.pels to Treat deeds. Soldiers, the ;President of the " United States shalt Sr, inform td of your conduct Abe. pres4m t ecrqq(on, and the voice of the re tpresewlatives„of the American nation shall ap .plaud isvar vakr as p...tr. amerce; Now ruses aoar sardOn" after.the issue of the foregoing ad dlress, occurred the.battle (ISt. Mary's, ,pre- Aminary.to the ,battle „of New Orleans. du sheofficialreport of Andrew Jackson to the then Beerstary of War, ,elated December 27 4 153,1 4 1, he thus ,refers to the conduct of the colored troops in :that battle. See .Nilekie Ikytakr, Nu!. .7, page :157 : "The uniformed companieo of militia under the conuannd of Major Plandie, men of color, raised by Co). Savory, deserve ehe greaA4t credit. Day realized my most sanguineeepectuticns and iehored ceteram..l. ThAy manifested gr.eai bra wry." The battle of New Orleans, it i known, oc curred oat She Bth of January, 1815. A couesporklent of Nik.B%.? Weekly vol. 7, page:JP...tr. writes us follows; "The enemy early to the charge on our worfa; _with_yl__ehout_iikc that of their red Eillks. the Et diens. The killed and woondat, on .our pert,, -were chi ffly of the ,Yee o , 44uts caored Aggiutent. Thev lbtojtit 141.: licro,e, and &Prue di4stisstished pratoe." - The most conclusive testimony, however, to the courage of the colored troops is that ! given by A Niamw JACKSON himself, coutairted in an official address, read tit the head of each a the corps composing the threes who iv..:Vie,ved that glorious victory. The address is &tot January 21, 1141:i, to be found in dYil,eB':4 Weekly Pegister, vol. 7, page 403. This is the Sifost conclusive testimony of all; coming as it does direCtly from the Command ink General himself, issued thirteen days aft& the battle. It is as follows: "The two corps of colored vohtnteers have ttO dq , appointed the hopes that were formed of their courage and perseverance in the performance of rluty. Majors Lacoste and Daquin, who com manded them, have deserved well of their cone try.. Captain, Savory's conduct has been noticed in the accoun rendered of the battle of the 23d, and that officer has since continued to merit the ',highest praise." We dare Pay there is scarcely a so-called Democratic leader in any part of the country, who is not prepared, if need be, to swear, by Andrew Jackson, and who is not willing to treat any of his utterances, on any subject, with sanctimonious reverence. In this city, we are confident, the Pages, the Vauxes, the Charley Browns, et id genres wane, will acknowledge that Andrew Jackson's word is equal, in point of authority, to Moses and the Prophets. Let them read the foregoing official declarations of their illustrious chief, in regard to the help he derived from' the black soldiery, at St. Mary's and New Orleans, in December, 1814, and Jan nary, 1815, and then let them hang their heads for shame, that they endorse and gloat over such vilification of the colored race as is contained in the speeches delivered at the recent banquets. As to Florence, Black and Johnson,we have long ceased to feel surprise at anything they do. But what hypocrisy for such as these to pretend to be followers of Andrew Jackson! And then, worse than all, what brazen effrontery to compare John son to Jackson! 'Wonderful similarity! Hy perion to a Satyr! Three •disinterested Philadelphia patriots, named W. Y. Leader, Anthony Conrad and William G. Conrow, have been on a visit to Washington and A. J. They are three gen tkanen -with a grievance, and a politician with a grievance is apt to be a most restless mor tal •and a nuisance generally. The three gentlemen named above, about this time skyle themselves Constitutional Unionists; but they have been so many things by turns, and nothing long, when it, suited their pur -1 pose,to change their coats, that it is an even chance whether next week dOes not behold them out-and-out Copperheads or dyed-in the-wool Radicals. The special grievance of 1 these ill-used gentlemen is the fact that the , unappreciative Collector Cake has refused to appoint one Of them to a place in the Phila delphia Custom House, and the other two are more seriously aggrieved in the fact that he turned them out of the places which they held in Uncle Sam's revenue department. No right minded office-holder can be expected to be happy under such treatment as this, and it is no marvel that they formed theinselves into a committee of three and went to Wash ington to see A. J. about it. They were of course received by the Tycoon of -the White House, and Messrs. Conrow and. Conrad, not being as much in the oratorical line as Brutus was, Mr. Leader was the spokesman on the occasion, and in the name of the Conservative party of Philadelphia, ,he sternly demanded the removal of Collector Cake. This was all well enough, but Mr. Leader, warming with his subject, further assured his august listener that the Constitutional Union Club •had unanimously nominated him for the' next. Presidency, and they accord ingly tendered him the vote of the city of Philadelphia, which they were ready to carry at a moment's, notice, and that in any steps he may deem necessary to take in these, the darkest hours of the country, he should be upheld ! We are further informed that the President, overcome by the suddenness and completeness with which they had over % helmed him, with much feeling assured them that their wishes should be complied with, d'nd thanking them for the high honors they had in store for- him, and their encour .aging words, bade them farewell, his • eyes meantime being suffused with tears. Messrs. .Leader, Conrow and Conrad have put an ex tinguisher upon the three tailors of Tooley street, and A. J. has demonstrated that when a man becoMes the victim of inordinate self conceit he can be fooled to the top of his bent as easily as a child can be tickled with a straw, and with weapons that are no more formidable. The New York Worid is unhappy; it mournfully grieves because. Congress will not admit to a representation the people of the rebel States, and it says that the Radical ma jority is treasonable because it will not con sent-that foiled traitors shall immediately re sume all the rights they haveforfelted by their treason, and join the Democratic party in rulingthe nation that both together did their best to. destroy. If the rank and file of the Democratic party were not the dunces that their own leaders take them for, their organs would never dare to set up the political grievances of a parcel of defeated traitors against the earnest and patriotic precautions of a loyal Congress. The war .is forgotton, its sacrifices are lost sight of, all the great is sues involved are forgotten, treason is glori fied, and for the sake of securing the suf frages of men who, if they could, would vote the country into perdition, and the political organization that is doingall this sets itself up as the party of Jefferson, Madison and Jack son! There never was a bolder or more im pudent swincte perpetrated NEW PEEL ICAlrraNki. Mrs. M. A. Hoge, associate of the N. W Branch of the Saul tary Commission at Chicago, has written an admirable book in'reference to its operations during the war, which has been published in handsome style. It is entitied•"Tne Boys in Blue; Beroes,of the Rank and File." It 'will be canwsEetd for-here by a lady duly author ; iized, and we commend it to our citizens. Mrs. 1 flow; is a Philadelphian, and her patriotic cervices ate well known, here. There is an in troduction to her book, .written by Rev. Thomas M. Eddy, D. D Marne Sale .of Valuable. Stocks and Rrw VbTAT}:.--S4,rmitri '64 fine 01' Minh! on Ttio.dny if( t 2lit n 0 . „ uil4iuciudte mittrzt (map i t} , . stf Valea bile tstado. uhtl Ilea) Y.Ailloe, hr order of the thl ) letee' Con rt.......`xecti to rs laulatber.. Pal4crtici thus In Cuta loguev, alow AMEIDCAN LIQUID SJENIENT, )H JJ Oil tidt.:,te broken ornatnente. and other artiff , Cti- of (Mane, Uhinst,; Ivory. 4V ood. Marble, lao. Igo heating, re attired of the to be mended. or the "Jetnent.' Al. ways ready for UK'. For .ate by 1011 N R. DON. ' , IND, f3lationer, fe'.tf 189 South Eighth t,tn t.wd doom ult. Vultitd.. BiTeti;kiES Lit, AT EN CI I t 1' STR Elil APPLY TO TifEODORE ii. M,CALLA, de2o4frpO IN TUE JMT STOW), filF, DAILY EVENING BULLETIN.--PHILADELPHIA, SATURDAY, JANUARY 18.1868. Alibt. oN'd IlaPtcyl Ell. VEN rILATED and atop-fitting Dream Hate (patented), in all the ap rlnn pr e eyed f P aehionr off . the aeriaou. ktheatnut atreet, next tho flpt ael3lpra itit; Et,S. SPRIG. 1.1 .AT BOW. BRIDGE AND T. 1.1 Warded Cupboard, Chest, Pad and Trunk Keys, I ye's Patent, Flat and Round Cylinder Night Keys, Braes and Iron Rim Ke, a. and other Locksmith's ila-dtvare in variety. TRUMAN & SHAW'S, No. szl ( Eight Thirty.tivo m a 1- , •••t • - tre rt. below Ninth lug EN'ry.rivE cENTS. 13 and Skates repaired. A good vs+ iety of Skat-e and Skater's. Implements. Seven styles of shoe Creepers, to prevent slipping on ire while waking. TRUMAN SHAW, No. K 35 (Eight Thirty-live) Market street, below Nhe h. L I t. ncoo et,l SAW FILES —Tiflis MAKE. k.) the moot celebrated known in the United Staten. for rale by Ia:MAN A: SHAW. No. E 35 (Eight Tliirtytote) Market ntrc.t. below Ninth. Phihnicinhin.. A• DEAD MAN'S HULK—SEE THAT "QUEEN OF tbe Monthlies," 'THE LADY'S MEND" for Febru ary. For iiale.by all first-claed periodical dealers. A DEAD MAN'S PULE.—SEE THAT "QUEEN OF the Monthltee," "THE LADY'S EMEND" for Febru• cry. For eale by all firetoclaze periodical dealere. ADEAD _MAN'S RULE.—SFE TIIAT "QfTEEN OF. the Mounties," "THE LADY'S r ItIENTi" for Febru ary. For sale by all filt-clasa periodical ADEAD MAN'S EULF.—SEE THAT "QUEEN OF the Montbliea," "THE LADY' , FttIENIV for Lebru. ary. For vale by all that-time periodical dealers. A DFAD :MAN'S RULE.- SEE "FllA'r "QUEEN or ..lci the Monthliety , ' LADY'S FRIEND" for Febru ary. For Axle by all first-clat a periodical dealere. C 000— f6,000, and other amounts to loan on ' - mortgage. Apply to LL IS 11. REDNER. ; 731 Walnut street. 1, Af•D i COP:. AUJ.S•r•ENSE FAMILY SEW a ing Macbinee, 5(t9 Arch h treat. Price :W. Warranted fivP jals,4t,rp• AI 1. tOOM, WITHOUT BOARD, a anted. in teepeetable private fau , ily, by a single G. ntbluat . Letrab.lll, floni Che,tn.:t to Locurt, :Lnd 'rota ivelfth to 1. - -ixtecnth steeds. 'the beet of reTercnce given and required. prvrv. PrwITIN QlBee, jai El• 2t• to .t..—A I.V f OF I,fAX , HS Fort A rina t tithe, on au fl 000 dollar Life Policy.for which a rtakopable rate of interert will he given. Addreen with real rattle, JA3,11.8 It. .11. UIIALG, Philadelphia Pont f1', ,, . jaIR-2t. .1. A‘ 11. M FOR SA 1..k 1 2 . to or IGO nu t Bristol pike, above btven stone, and near Tacony. Factory. Maradon Douse. rtrre at d Dwolling to let. Apply on prendsea, VVIII 9 AK E 610 Locust street. SZII (MO 10 $3O OW 'lO LOAN 1N ONE SUM ON Mortgnge of firpt4 bout bto e property, cen trally f Ittiftted. A leo. 0,000 feud other tuna to lean. Ali l'..loN F. 521 Walnet street. inlß•at• lUD 61..OVEri. l The new Paii- Shade for evening wear, with one and two buttons. Sizes 5.1.; Just received by GEO. W. VOGEL, ipl7-gfrr! Pea iliestout wtreet. BUTTON WHITE KID GLOVES. sizes 5?.4 to 6,?.; oleo One Button White Kid Gloves Just received by _ _ tI 114•11.0, -- soar, natal - AND Others.—The undersigned has Just received a troth supply. Catawba, Cantonal& and Champagne Wins& Tonto Ale, (tor invalids), ecnastantiv hsed. P. J. JORDAN, no Pear street, Wiese Third and Walnut streehi. 0.1,N1r.t.a11. IS. E. WItNER I. '1 bird and Sonme ?trent?, only one equkre below the Exchange. $2.50,000 to loan in large or ?magi amounte, on diamond?, ?fiver plate, cradle?, jewelry, nd all goods of value. (Mice boom from SA.M.to7 P. M. rie &stab !hated for the lace forty yca'o Advmce? made in laige rgi.r./.. jait.tfrp 414 PACK. L the llone, Ac. Enoineern and dealeri will find a full enrollment of Goodyear's Patent Vulcanized itubbar Belting, Packing Hose, ac., at the Manufacturer's Headquarters. GOODYEAR'S, 308 Chentnot etreet, South side. N.ll.—We have now on hand a large lot of u en tl emon ,, Ledien , and Hinson' Gum ilonta. Abo every variety and lAT )mli A L.) AL.E.MENT ~, WAR I't rented of eo.id fine Gold; ft full ae.ortin .o of elzel ?Ann ! ere, !: ( hee'ee• ••••• t. below Fourth, I cr Tine -' I oituutita AND it Da just lam ved Irmo Rochester, a ImPerior lot of owe .t elem. Akre. reoetved from Virstnia, crab cider. P.. 1. JORDAN, Zle Year ottoot, B flow Third and Walnut nreete, m A g i nil v egAt ii i;lvr ,l l , 4 l . B dlV AlNlC, EM! OIDER M. A. WARY. IMO Filbert Nteoet. 8 Depot 1 /h. . OK WALiTi'O3B73. tc.)t.'. re 'need. Iteautind atyleo 1236, 18,20 and , dr.,e A -o, d and Min Papers. Him cheap. wi n d ow ; 8 t m ¢ fs°. arcra` pricer. JOHNSTON , t ' ' Bp ir GRf f sel4-tyrP. .yl.li ur I ••• Lcn • IN.-4,1a3 PATif:NTS have II 4 II II '44kr the care 44i luatitution do.riug the • ear ending I tce, miff. , 16, I&i7 ....... 1.0.15 ?4 Tilc ecoipb. ond wipt•mlit 41. a have been - follows ItElif I The rrreartuer hag tree veil fr. intereat on Monde. tg Leann, Di Men& and $*2481 88 .114441.1114. ?AMU ' geepaid oil. Briancu in the 21 V:111rY DC1:0111lier 33 1 20 .FolT ie ru!o, Fuo, eo e 80I* 1-2 luttrikt hi Cit;• ' • 1 i' ,( ll Ai Balance in Treavitry........ .. , ..... ... .... $417 0 5 At tin- ALliwil Mt...t ng li, Id on tho 7th fag .. , the I ollow 4, 4 44 . 1 , ii, L ,•,,,, ~ , L .j u ' do ; y I 14111 11 1 1$ 1 jiligtrrt, VIZ: 1,i.. COT FlllilP, P. 111! t Chulc, utry \VIII ,ti•Fon. 10n W. II fulc4 e 11 0. I Jloll.l'oll, , .Irtlitir 1111g1,4..!, „, 1,, Stout'. IN'iti I. otiglili , , I. i 13 N\ 110: fon, E i .1., hgt. It 1,%1..1,11. t I r 4 't Of, I, r 5 ruin , I F. 1 , 10.).1, T.:,. 1 , , A , d it Li Ii It tier Of Ihr AL. 11,, g , r 0 on I ht. Ittlt I.tit , .1.41,. C , LS Allis v 01.% l'ilneell I . ..e.igletar,. . ,r, , ,ii ' , I (i.III•UN . Treiyiti.cr. I r 1 .1.11 'IV 1.L . A ., 11(1N............... ..... ..,31TrI•tit,y . V , M. !+ (i . l. ON. ,N. 1) km. , ult•tB •'hyrit: an. I I- n in d,) l'Ri Eit ‘VILLIA %I SON, ,4118,2 t, S.tutary. Cr Bargains in Ciothing. I Bargains in Cfothint tom - Bargains in Clothing. -Aq 119 - Bargains in Ctothint. Ba , ganis in Clothing. -al 13, - Bargains in Clothing. EV' Ba , gains in Clothing., f Bargains in (Nothing. tip Bargains in Clothing. _Ally ElB ,ll): Clothing.. Bargains in Clo t hing,4 ja l VW - Bargains i i Clothing. -410 Dar frirgains in Clothing. _al far Bargains in Clothing. • Bargains in (Nothing......EB IV - Bargains in (Nothing,, Bargains in 'igthing. Mr' Bat gains in thing. .ai tom - Bargains in Clothing. _RA Bargains in Clothing. -411 . A Card.—Prices of of stock; the assortment of both Men's and Boys' Suits and Overcoats stilt very good WANAMARYI2 & BROWN, WANAAIAKER & BROWN. Wwmt.vsatan WANAMAKER & BROWN, WANILMAKER & BROWN. THE LARGEST CLOTHING Hover, OAK HALL, THE CORNER or 8.1x"r1I AND MARKET ST6. 23. GREAT REDUCTIONS! 23. GREAT INDUCEMENTS! GREAT IHIARGAINS I AT THE CHEAP DRY GOODS STORE OF F. SCHZELLERNEA.NN, No. 23 North Ninth Street. MY ENTIRE STCCK OP CHOICE DRESS GOODS, AT STONiBbINGLI LOW PRICES. 10c. POPLINS REDUCED 70 25c. 66c. POPLINS REDUCED To Sic. 'The. Poplins, double widths, only 117,14 e. $1 Plain and Plaid Poplins, only boe. $1 60 Plain and Plaid Poplins. - CLOAKING CLOTHS BELOW COST. All.wool Cloaking .at $2 Etl, worth $5. Clraking at $3, worth 55. Fancy, Plain and Black Cloakinge in ondlees variety. .141 EN AND BOYS' \YEAR. AB-wool Carshocres, from 87.55fc, upwards. Aaplendid arsortment at low to' icea. BROCIIE A ND PAISLEY SHAWLS. All-wool Broche Long Shawls. $l5 tolat Paisley Shawls from $2O to $75. ALL•WOOt LONG BLA N ko,T stIAWLS, 86. GLOVES AND 11.03IERY VERY lA.)W. -Cloth Gloves, all-wool, from 37%c. upwards. - Ladies' Kid Glover. all colore, $1 25. , tlentr. Kid Glover, 75c . LADIES , MERIN() VESTS, .SL 1..• DIES' MEE] NO 1105 K, `2.5c. Skating }fore, all rtyles and colors. BES'i 1:33 c. MUSLIN IN SIIECITY. MERRIMACK CALICOES, ONLY 1- c. • Bleached and Brown Murline of every width and quality, at lowert market rater. BARGAINS IN TABLE LINENS. BARGAINS-IN NAPKINS. TOWELS, HANDKERCHIEFS, dtc. F. SCI - I.UE.LL ERMANNT, Oe 23 N. Ninth Ntreet. IcXpENSFS GEO. W. VOGEL.. No. MI6 Glieetnot 'Area. For Sato Keeping of Valuables, Seenrl. tits, etc., and Heeling of Safes. N. B. Browne, J. Gillingham Fell, i Alex. Fleury. ', C. 11. C Ace, C. m Ewalt:pier, . S. A. Caldwell, John Welsh, E. W. Clark, IL C. Gibcort. OFIL'ItE, NO. 424 t ft EsT SuT S ie ot m. Er. C. IL CLAP K. Vice Prebident, N. 13. BROWNE. Vresideut. v, Sec. >l3liTreneurer. -- j 0.16411. ii,tu,l9TP - 3 311 75 FITLER, ; WEAVER & CO POPULAR PRICES FOR DRY GOODS. RICKEY,SHARP&CO, 727 CHESTNUT STREET. 18438. IS6B. GEORGE H. BROWN, (Formerly Brown dr Priced MANUFACTURER • • FMEST OILCLOTHS IN THE UNITED STATES Office and Salesroom. 40 South FOURTH Street. Inc torn, ANN and EDGEMONT Streets, Philadelphia. Haring the most COMPLF.TE Factory in tho United States, with. new machinery and improved methods, I am ma nufacturingfur the best articles over offered to the trade, tad at prices as low as inferior yooda are sold. My large facilities enable me to supply orders of every description. A sprcill ;'capers is made of NEW and TASTEFUL PA'l TERNS In Stair and Carriage Goods; and in Table Goode, be,icles usual styles splendid articles in Oak, Rosewood, Mahogany, Marble, and Bronze, with a fell line e f Er arnelled Ducks, Drills and MuPllus. . . rErOrders by mail have the same careful attention am bills bought in person. Issued This Day. LIPPINCOTT'S MAGAZINE LITERATURE, SCIENCE AND EDUCATION. FEBRVARY NUMBER. L DALLAS GALBRAITH. AN AIII:111cAN Novgi PAM' 11. 2. LOIJKING SEAWARD. 3. LIFE AND ITS ENIGMA. 4. THE CHRISTIAN COMMISSION. 5. LOVE ON TILE 01110. 6. LI - 10 IP EA N_ AFFAIRS.._.. Tit 11/O4iN -QUEISTION 7. -.RI eo MARIE ANToINETTE. 8. ALASKA. WHAT I 8 /T WORTH. WI Gll A MAP. 9. THE OLD SLATICROOF MOUSE. 10. NATIONAL FINANCES. - • 11. REMINISCENCES OF FITZ GREENE HALLECK 12. THE ORANGE TREE. 13. ECIR•ES OF MELANCHOLY. 14. OUR MONTHLY GI. , SSIK 114 LI I I RAW' RE OF TUE DAY. TERM IS —YEA r. 1.1" STES(1:11-110N—Four Dollarr.Slv,tt N.r.autc—Thirty• five ct.. SPECIMEN Nuu uEgu pent to *O3 uthiferri ot receipt of Thirtrfive eta. Sunsoatucus wil pit age be careful to give their Poct.ollice ire-e in full ddreck J. B. LIPPINCOTT CO.. l'rmi.lBllEßS, rrlgrp Philadelphia, Na. Published This Day I. Woman's Wrongs. A Cotinter-Irritant. By GAIL 13.kun.Tos, Author of "Gala Das v," "A New Atm)*lore," etc. 1 vol. Wino. $1 50. This book is a most valuable contribution to the discus sion of the "Woman Questiow." Tho author indiognantly rejects the the , ries of those who propose to define "Woinan's 81 here." aril urges considerations that may profit.bly he bey ded by those IA ho claim that the posses. sion of the ballot by women will surely remove the un just limitations end burdens of their lot. it is a book that should be rend by all who desire the best interest of society; it abtunds in facts and I , uggeo dons of vital importance—and, like all that GAIL HA mu, •ros writes, in eminently readable. 11. David Copperfield. By CHARLES DieuKss. 'The fifth volume of the cheap, fluent and popular edition of Dickemee Complete Worke, known ae Th e Charles Dickens' I dition, With eight of the orioina/ Illustrations, eelected se the beet 16mo. Purple Cloth. $1 60. For enle by the Bookeellere. Sent poetpaid, on re. ceipt of price, by the Publinhein, TICKNOR & FIELDS, Boston. It . VERY SUPERIOR 31aniifact - tures • IN FINE CONFECTIONS FOR PRESENTS. STEPHEN F. WHITMAN N0..11.0 MARKET STR,EF_,T. Jall3.Bt White's New Perfume, "PERFECTION," Wexquieite perfum.• for the Handkerchief, combining the d.llcacy the Violin with Lilt perpetuity of Musk. zoid everyp her,. PtiT, 728 ARCH STREET, PERLADA. ja ,, .lmt • , FOUL P.LiAlco— TEE GI E Vl` STORY OF THE YEAR, By C 011 Lt'r REALE and I•ION BOUCICAUL r Four• Pam h•• r n • • appeared in EVER:y.B4 r "{DAY. tar - . NoT 1 . 4 tlo tine to oubso ribt. •.• 1 or eole In Net+, vdealerm everywhere. 1 ; 111 1 MiU . MUM, Publish re, Balton THE SAFE DEPOSIT CO., DIRECTORS 7t - PATTER6 ELDER FLOWER. IN OAP, H. P. & C. TAYLOR, No. &Al North Ninth iitrcer* NEW CORUAGE FACTORY NOW IN FULL OPERATION, Zip. ;12S, WATER and a N. DEL. aranin3, TWENTIETH ANNUAL TIEPOitT OF THE PENN MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY PHILADELPHIA, Office, No. 921 Chestnut Street. PUBLISURD IN CONIOLVITY IVITII RIB CIIARTIR, Receipts for the year ending Dec. 31, 1867. Premiums received $477,604 63 Interest on Investments, Policy fees, Am. 187,860 24 Lome and Expenditures During the lame Period. Loories on 42 lives amounting t 0... Expexses, Salaries, Advertising, btamps, Medical Examinations, etu MeP.,O Ji .. Rent and sr, state and .... _7,61413 Commissions to Agents, Licettrco, 4B,47l3 dvertinivg. etc. • • •• " 91 Premiums returned and olielea 3.2.21 11 Interest on titocka and Leone, Bought, ate, Sumb! . $112,12186 Accumulated Capital, December 31. ICf 0.. , ....... ....... 1,6 0 1,571 11 Deduct Merin . received In reduction of Premiums and Payment of Nctee ..... ............. 104,070 00 ----- 1,6E9 524 11 Accumulated Capital, December 31, 1167 $2,001,615 97 Afflicts of the Company Liable for Losses. Char. $ 102,000 00 U. S. 5 per cent 10-40 Loan .......... $102,000 00 3:0,010 00 U. S. 6 per cent. 5.20 L0an.....:...... 321,575 00 75,000 IA U. S. 6 per cent. *Regis tered Loan, 1001 79,907 50 10.01000l't nneylvaula 6 per cent. War Lonn 10,23 i 00 • 100,000 00 l'hiladelphia 0 per cent. Loam free 152,001 13 6.000 00 Ithilad Iphia 6 per cent. LOnn. taxed.... 0,1;6 01 6700 00 Philadelphia 5 per • et Loan. taxed, short 5,3 , 0( 00 10.000 00 Pittsburgh 6 per cent. Coupon Bonds. • 8,25 CIO 26,100 Allegheny County 6 per cent. Bonds 19.594 00 12,1(0 00 Allegheny County 5 per cent. Bonds 90)0 00 10.000 00 Washington. County 6 percent. Hondo • 7,5 0 32 ii 00 21.010 00 Penne, Ivaninliailrond 6 per cent. let wort; • gage Boucle 20,990 00 17,510 00 l'enus,leanialtailrond 6 per - cent. Bonus 1071. 17,000 00 22,000 00 Lehigh Coal aid Novi gallon 6 per cent. . 18,450 00 . • 10.100 00 11surbiourg nallrond 6 per cent. Hondo 10,700 0) 10,000 00 Louisville City 6 per • cent. 80nd5.... .... . . 7,141 40 • Shares PenniP , tennis Railroad Stock 41,412 77 2(0 Shares Lehigh Coal And Navigation Co. 5t0ck........ ...... 13,317 26 20) Shares Northern Cen tral Hi Prowl Stock. 8,53.5 00 212 Shat es Girard I.lle, .• 'Prance, Annuity and Trust Co 5,576 38 100 Shares Weetern Na- • • tional Bank Stock... 6.862 5.0 209 Shar,s - Commercial• National Bank Stock. 11,035 25 76 Shares North Amenca National Bunk Stock. 10,103 00 100 Sharer blarnifacturtne National Bank Stock. 2,784 00 50 Shares Girard.- Na tional Band Stock... 2,000 00 19 Shares Farinerb. and Mechanic.' National Bank Stock 1, 0 .00 00 425 Shores Corn Ex change National Bank 5t0ck.........21.2.50 00• 50 Shares blcchanicb' Bank of St. Louis Stock ........ ......... 4,950 50 0991.493 E 9 2EO Shares Delaware Mutual Safety Insurance Stock. ....... ..... . 0,250 01 . 427,412 04 Bonds and Mortgatco. .a.ll Sett liens .' ... . . ...... ..... 485,740 13,095 73 Ground Rents 12,1;5-5 Real Estate. Buildings of the Company...-. 74.544 19 Premium Notes secured by l'olicice 32.14°6 61 Loans on Collaterain..• ................ • 5 9r9 Balance!. In lion& of Agents. 3.232 10 Quarterly Payments doe Company . ..... 23. <26 62 Office Furniture..... ..... ............ ........ 2 452 33 Scrip lEvidendo purchnoed by Company.... fti4tois 70 Cosh on band and in Bank-. ...... ...... 2,1 I.lle interest ...................... ........ lntersst on Storks and cans accrued to De cember 21, 1067 Deduct !wee, (!ze., not yet due Market Value, *2,074,('35 43-100 At an OCCIIPII held at the Office of the Company on Monday, Jallllol y lEV 6 he followin< named gentle men acre Trniitee r three years:— SA MEEL L. DUEY. THEOPHILLiS PAULDING, EDMUND A. SDUDE It, SAMUEL E. STOKES, HENRY C TOWNSEND, IDOMAS W. D JOSEPH M. P. PRICE, SAMUEL A. BISPIIAM, &DIN A. NEEDLES, halt. At a meeting of the Board of Trustees, held on the 14th instant. the tollowing Officers were elected JAMES Titelol"A IRPresident. SAM Ul. L E. STOKES. Vice President. JoIIN W. HOICSOR, A. V. P. and Actuary. DOSATIO e. STEPHENS, Secretors. 'I he Board declared a Return Premium Diridtnd in Scrip of FIFTY PER CEN r. upon the Premium paid in 1E67 on all Policies in force December 31,1867, and decided 'to receive the Scrip Certificates of 1t65 In settlement of premiums and premium notes as the premiums mature. TRUSTEES: Rodolphrm Kent, Joseph H. Trotter, Samuel J. t hrietion„ William 11. Kern, Janus 0. Pease, . James Huston, Warner M. Rosin, Edward 31. Needles, "ore& ic A. Hoyt, 4arnuel C. Huey. Christian J. Hoffman, Theoplalua Paulding, Charles Watson, Edmund A S ruder, Ellwood Johnson. Samuel E. Stokes. -John G;:lteppller, Henry C. Townsend, John 0. Brenner, I '1 homas W. Davis, Benjamin Coates!, Joseph 31. P. Price, Richard S. Newbold, Samuel A. Bimphom, James B. McFarland, John A. Needles, Ban, William P. Hacker, SOLICITOR, lIENRY C. TOWNSEND. MEDICAL. EXAAINEPA, EDWARD HAI TSIIOIINE, M. D., No. 1499 Walnut et. EDWARD A. PAGE, M. D., No 1415 Walnut street. In attendance at the Office of the Company from 1 to 2 daily. JAMES TRAquAIR, President, SAMUEL E b POKES, Vice President. JonN W. Ponrion, A. V. P. and Actuary. Hosomo 8. 8T81 , 11::::6, Secretary. -jal&th,e,tratrp OFFICE OF THE ENTERPRISE INSURANCE COM. STREET PANV, 13. W CORNER FOURTH AND WALNUT S. lA, January 14, le4lo. ANNUAL STATEMENT OF THIO COMPANY ON .DE CEMBI It 31,1b67. CAPITAL. Authorized Paid up in Cash in full , ASSETS. Uot dm and Mortgagee, all first Ilene In Real Es. tote in the Cloy of Philadelphia 976,1 N) 00 Ground Rents in d 0... _ ......... ...:.. 8 400 00 Philadelphia City 6 Per Cent. Loan 3.495 tai Unit( d States L0an......... ...... ~......... ..... 9A,030 00 Ent el prime Insurance Company Stock.... . 5, )00 so Rent 'Fete° estimated, and (rice Furniture:: 70. 9i nn Revenue and other Stampe ..* .................. 81 27 Due by Agente.. 2,752 ::13 Cern in Runk and on hand................ ..... 9.525 02 Interest and Rents accrued , but nut due. ........ .... .......... .. ... $4,729 21 Interest and Rents due and unpaid.. 296 40 Cost $3.c.2,784 6 1 . Value RECEIPTS IN 1887. Prerriatna on Fire ......... . I,tereeta, Roue and Eanuinge on Careened Perpetual Pollclet. Tranefer and Polley ........... PAYMENTS IN 1867 Loom+ by Fire.......' ............ _ .......... iti63,783 88 Return Pr, initials and Iteltieurause. .... . . 14,128 81 In ICC L States, Pennsylvania; . a . nd City 4,474 66 Advertirit.rt, Stationery, Salaries. Uniathissions. Fire al arshabLegal. Traveling, . and other expenses.— ..-... 22,182 31 F. BATCILEORD STARK, Eremident. TIRK it. ZION I (10MERY, Vice l'reiddent. • ALEX: W. wIsTER, ecrehdy. jatto.tu,ths . - TILE CENTURY ALMANAC.—SOMETIIING NEW nuclei the 141111. Ham ybody vveut.l uue. Price 50 stud 25 code. jetAlit,re rMONEY TO ANY AMOUNT LOANED UPON DIAMONDS WATCHES, JEWELRY. PLATE ' \ OCLOTHINB: kc , a . , lONES & CO.'S OLD ESTABLISHED LOAN 0 PriEE. Corner of '1 bird and Haakill efroora. - Mow Lombard. N. D.—DIAMONDS, WATCHES, JEWELRY, HENS, arc, POR BALM AT REMARKABLY LOW PRICES. eattn AT MB WES7'-END S7' A TION ERY ,4 N 1) , 1300 K STORE A Boa: of Fine French Note Paper (5 quires) initialed for One Dollar. No_ 1844 Chestnut street, Mils. Orders by mail. 801.5,454 87 AT THE IVEST-END STATIONERY AND • BOOK BTORE French .Vote - Paper already Initialed In colors from A to Z., constantly on band, No. 13•14 Chestnut street. Phila. Orders. by mail. 122,450 IX) 17' TT IE WEST-END TA'7'/ON/ RY AND BOOK STORE an entirely new Card from Parts. Wedding Cards In perfect taste. No. 1311 Chestnut street., Phila. W3,3,X1 01 AT THE WEST- END .S'TAT lON EBY A BOOK &TORE a variety of sty/es of Fin': Frencli Note Paper, initialed in color withimr. extra charge. No: 1314 Chestnut street, AT THE W EST-END ST.I TfONER AND' 1;00K ETU E Monoyrunts, C r , es, Names or Country Rata for Note Ileadings, exquisitely executed. Visiting Cards written and en graved. No. 1314 Chestnut street, Phllada. ' T TUE WEST-ENI) s'T.iTIONERY LOOK STORE Good Note Paper for Family use at ten and fifteen cents per quire. No. 134-1 Chestnut street. AT THE 117:87'-E.V1) s7ATIONERY BOOK STORE School Books and School re (inlaltes furnished at very moderate prices. • No. 131.1 Chestnut etrcet, Marla. AT THE JS'l.'h'T s',l'.-1711)NER1- BOOK .'TORE• Fancy Photograpliffi, Cartes de Visits, Five Dollars per Ilundred;, Fancy ?no _ tographa, .Cabinet_ size, at •Twelvo.Dollars Ifrer Thandred. AT TIIE WEST-END STA TIONERY .I.VIy BOOK STtiliT New Bible Ithortrations,l2 cards, 25 cents per pack; A titumn Leaves, colored. 12 cards, 25 cents per rack; Forest Birds, colored, 12 cards, 25 cents per pack; T/ Ten Command= mi-ittr, colored, 12 cards, 25 cents per pack. So. 1311 Chestnut street. 1T THE WEST-END 87'.1 TIONERF .4 booK STORE Fine French Lithographs, Chrctnos, Illuminated Texts and Designs, and Oil Paintings. gs?,uit3 315 97 14.710 7' Tlll 11" ES T-E.VI) TiONER/ .1 ND BooK ASTuRE an 13.88013111tra of Picture Frames on hand: also, Picture Frames made to IT THE WE.:7-END STATIONERY .1 VI) Roo K STORE BibleS and Prayer Books in variety of Binding at greatly reduced prices. No, 131-I Chestnut street, Philada. A7' TEE WEST-END STATIONERY .1-ND , BOOK STORE a large and well-assorted stock of Sunday School Books at a liberal discount. No. nil Chestnut street, AT TR E IV EST-END STATIONERY -.4 NI) , BOOK STORE Fang Goods and Recherche. Trifles at low prices. MRS. HAMILTON THOMAS,. a1a10,9 , 0 00 200,,00 00 STATIONERY, BOOK STORE- No, 1344 Chestnut Street, X409,1{99 13 $101,093 09 20,01 24 128 043 921 75 41123.094 14 $80,614 615 - 4 No. 1344 Chestnut street. No. 1:114 Chestnut strteL No. 1314 Chestnut greet.. West-End PICTURE DEPOT, PHILADELPHIA- ECOND EDITION. TO-DAY'S CABLE NEWS. State of the Markets. fly Atlantic Teicigraph. Lormon, Jan. 18, Forenoon.—The steamer At lanta, from New York, has arrived. American securities in demand. U. S. Five twenties, 71%@12. Illinois Central, 85%, Ex dividend; Erie, 48%. Consols unchanged. QvuEssrowri, Jan. 18, Forenoon.—The steam ship Scotia, from New York, has arrived. Liviturom, Jan. 18, Forenoon.—Cotton ex cited; prices unchanged. Tile sales will proba bly reach '20,000 bales. Corn doll. Wheat firm. Commoa Rosin, 6s. fid. Linseed Cakes, £lO ss. LONDON, Tan. 18, Evening.—Consols, 92% for money and 92%@92% for account. U. S. Five twenties 72. Illinois Central, 85%. Erie Rail road, 48(g48%. LivEnrooL, Jan. 18, Evening.—Cotton active and excited, with an advance of %d.; the sales for to-day have been 20,000 bales, closing at 7%d. for Upland Middling, and Bd. for Orleans; Up lands to arrive, 7;,A. Breadstuffs---Corn firm ' ' Provitime firm. Produce—Sugar . dull at 295. 6d. ANTwEnp, Jan. 18, Evening.—Petroleum quiet at 44 francs. Afri vat or the 'Etna. al Hal fa.x. Jan. 18.—The steamship Etna arri rived yesterday, and sailed for New York. CRIME. INIHECMB, iTY OF A MOTHER. Alleged Nurdera—tarticulare of the Upper handoalky Cane. IFteni the Cincinnati Gazette.) .; UPPER SAKI :SKY; 0., Jan. 14.—Some years since, Milton Bowsher, of this place, died, leaving a widow and five children, named respectively, Fanny, William, Theodore, Olive and Lettie. Some time alter lila death, Fanny (the eldest) left biome, re using to live with her mother, on 'ac count of her disreputable actions. About one year ago she was taken sick at the place where she was living, and died, all efforts to relieve her proving unavailing, and the cause of her disease . unknown. Nothing was thought of it until last fall, in September, when Olive was taken sick in the same manner, at home. She was relieved, and was able to be up, when she was taken again and soon died, having the symptoms of poiaou. Sus picions were quietly whispered about, but noth ing done. Then little bade (the youngest) was taken sick in the same violent manner, but retovered,partially, and is able to he around, but net well. The suspicions were Whispered louder, and the physicians thought of exhum ing the body of Olive and having a rug nwr. tem 'examination, but it was not then done. About the 15th of last Deeember William was also taken down with the same mysterious dis ease, and, a feW days after, Theodore, likewise. William died in a tew days, and a coroner's jury was summoned, i'nd a post modem examination made, and the stomach, and a portion of the liver taken to Columbus for analyzation. Meantime Theodore was removed from home and recov ered. In due time the Professor at Columbus re ported that he had discovered arsenic In very no table quantities in the stomach and liver of Mi nna ilowsiler. On receipt of this,. the, bodies ,of . Fanny and Oliver were immediately disinterred, • and the stomachs of each sent to Columbus. On these, the Professor report Id' nothaving finished the analysis he could not . ..report the quantities of arsenic .found. The mother wait suspected very strongly, because of her want of feeling and apparent disinterestedness. No proof sufficient to warms tan arrest was found until last Tuesday evening, when a Mr. Shaffer di vulged the following conversation, which he said he had held with Mrs. Bowsher, about fifteen months belare, viz.: "Mrs. Bowsher said she had received a letter from a man, in which he said that if she would get rid of the elder children, be would take her and her three little (illegiti mate) children and keep them, and clothe the children and send them to school. She said, I was so mad at Fanny, the other day that I bad amnion to step into a drug store anti get some arsenic and poison her. I remarked that she would not get poison without being found out, for they would take her name, age, Sze. She could send to Ft. Wayne and get it of her brother, or send to this man and he would send it to her. I told her that she could not poison Fanny, for she did not live at home. She said she could bake it in a cake and send It to her by the little girl. She could poison all her children one by one, if she wanted to, and the doctors Dever would find it out. She could poison my wife if she wanted to by sending her a ginger-cake with some poison in it. I told her 1 OW not want any of her ginger cake at my house!" The above Is the substance of his story, and on the strength of it she was immediately arrested, and on Thursday the in quest was finished by hearing Shaffer's and oilier testimony, after which the Coroner's jury ren dered their verdict, "That Wm. Bowsher came to hip death from the effects of arsenic adminis tered by Siary L. Bowsher." The next day she bad a preliminary trial, and was committed to jail to answer the charge of murder. Effort is being made to bail her out of jail. Who can conceive a greater crime than that of a mother murdering her own offspring? The affair causes much excitement in town. ISCANDAIL IN HIGH LIFE. A New York Lady Indulges In a Sharp Game The New York Neal of yesterday, contains the following Moral insanity appears to be epidemic. It has 'been - caught -- by - the - female - portion of the city; and although their position as non-business members of the community unhappily pre vents their "making paper," they indemnify themselves by experimenting in other branches. A lady of, high respectabillity v living in one of those streets which in this city are appropri ated by the equestrain or aristocratic orders, has long been distinguished for an admirable philanthropic consideration for her less favored fellow-creatures. She was the .manageress of various excellent institutions, all having for their object -the-relief of , legitimate - -distress. Her name was at the head and tail of all charities, and last season, daring the rage for calico balls, she distinguished herself by combining canvas back suppers with charity. Clergymen eulogized her. Even "Young New Y. - .rk' respected - her, and at her parties did not get drunk before sup per. "The charitable Mrs. X—" was a pass-word at the door of evert, benevolent institution in the city. This year Mrs X—, no doubt with the intention of hum oviug on the rather worn-oat idea of the "calico ball," suggested a new form of that benevolent divertissement in the shape of a "brocade ball," or, as Young New York sacrilegiously called it, a "heavy-swell hop." At this entertainment the programme of the calico ball was reversed. Instead of the ladies coming in cheap dresses to be afterwards removed for the benefit of the ,poor, and the evening terminating en grande (cane, the female portion of the guests were expected to come attired in their very best, and at twelve o'clock retire to the dressing rooms, where they were to doff all their silkp, brocades and jewelry, and assume sonic inexpensive attire provided before hand. The cast.otf attire was to he sold for the benefit of a benevolent institution which Mrs. X. was about starting, ands') realize a much more considerable sum than even'the most liberal of calico balls. The idea met "with general ap probation. Mrs. X.'l3 !o(itna were crowded. Li dice who had credit. at Stewart's cud Tiffany's vied with each other in brocade and ornaments.' One lady wore a set of sapphires valued it _;l,_ thousand dollars. Charity, winged with vanity, soared to the seventh heaven of benevolence. But alas, for Iminan nature! When a week or so had passed, and the exclteineutof being fashionably merciful had subsided, whispers began to be heard. One lady beard front a maid servant, whom Mrs. X. had diseharged. that that lady was In considerable pecuniary difficulties. Another traced a splendid moire antique dress which she had worn on that. occasion, to a cositaniee's in Broome street; and ajcweler was accidentally dis covered who stated that Mrs. X--- had offered him a set of sapphires in part payment of her WM Charity's wings, like those of Icarus,.giuti- denly melted, and the poor, benevolent aiml tumbled lido the loweit gulf of fuehlonit. Ic con tempt. Since then Mrs. X— has retii , d from active charity, and it is Eupposed that Filth aye line will, for the future, refrain from gi ing alms by deputy. FINANCIAL and C )MMERCIAL. Bales at the Philedel mew 1000 U1315-20s '6O Jy reg c 105,1,1 500 City Es ;nun 101jo' 1000 W ,'rersey R 6s Its tss 10000 l'enna 6s 1 eery C&P 104 500 Lehigh 6s gold In due bill 893 St Rh Penns 10 Its 521.,"; ; 13g sh do ri29. t l 12 eh do 52:7,1 NETWYEInt 1000 USS-20s '67 reg 106 1000 City es new 101 100 do do 101,%'' 3000 do Its 101. i BLOOND 6MO UES-209 . 62 cp 1073 S 2400 City 6s new 101 3000 W Jerseylt Gs E 5 40 eh 2d& Ed St R. sr, 73 1 eh PCIIII4. it 52; PIIILADELPIII•, Saturday, January N.—There is abundnnec; et money reeking employment on , the etrnet, but capitalimic are remarkably eircumapeet in their velec none of paper, and nothing but gilt edge obligations can be placed at G(0 8 per rent. Call Loans range from V , 1,8 percent., s,„t which lignrce large HUMS have been placed. There was come reaction in Government Loam, and theft; were j,; (4,1.‘ per cent. higher than at the dome last evening. State Loans of tho tiret aeries fold at 104, and iu:3 was hid for the War Loans. City Loam receded 34. and Lehigh Navigation roce!,f. Reading Railroad . wan higher, and Closed atl46X, reg ular; Pennsylvania Railroad advanced to 6.2.7'i"; Phila delphia and:Erte Railroad sold at :19.36 regular; Camden and Amhoy Railroad, was steady at MO; Germantown Railroad. 65:' Little Schuylkill Railroad. at 2634; North Pennsylvania Railroad at tr 3; Cattawlssaltailroad pre fer red at audNorthern Central Railroad at 43. h. In Canal, Bank and Passenger Railroads sharea there no change, and no sales of any extent. The Board of Directors of the West Philadelphia Pas senger Railway Company have declared a semi-annual dividend of live per cent. on the capital stock, clear of taxes, payable on and after the 24th irk. 7he Director cf the Bellefonte and Snow Shoe Rail road Company have declared a dividend of oue dollar and it half per thrum free of taxes. Jay Cooko Co.. quote Government securities, etc., to day, as follows: United States b' r, IN$l. 1007,,:a110; Old 6.10 Bonds, 1114,(4.110; New 5-20 Bonds, larA. 'L -LO Bonds, 11936, 1(64108 8 , ; 117.-2 O Bonds, July, 1.,;,7 (k0(6 ; 5.20 Ronde, 1e.5:',0r1057,;; 10-40 Ronde. 102:l ‘ O0 103 ; i 3-10, June, RV ,:q VAR 7 ;?-10, July, ; Gold binitb, Randolph t Co, Barkers, la South Third street, quote at 11 o'clock no follows: Gold, t 2 1 4; United Stap,6 107,(a1tn,7, , ,; United States YIT, e-twentien. 1012, It.lf,7,,failu; do. IFrA, ; do. Th6s, ; do. JtJY. ttts, 10.34. 4 rif!..: do. 1l! 4 ;7. 10.V..0 , 103; Unitqd States FiVEY, l en.fortieo. lnited States Soveh• thirties, et cond Fetier, do. third series, 105'P4 la% ; Con4potnds. 1 et-ember, 1S51,119; Messrs, De lf aven Brother, NO 40 South mint street, make the following quotations of flue rates of exchange nt IP. 31.: C. S. of Ifitl. 10 . 9,10:t.1(9.%; do.. 1162, 109, L ,44109!e; do., Iktl. 107q.10:', ; dry., 1F4.5, 10g 410 , .0.1 ; do., 1t66. new, lo57 ; 0s1t6; do.. It9i7. new, 105?:0 , 103; Fivc4. Ten-forties. 111', (.1fri . 1.,,; 7 3-10 d. Jun , , - Compound interest Note—..fune, 1'o;4, 19.40; July, 1c.4. 19.40; Auguut, 1604. 19.40; October, 1k41., 19.40; December, 1% ,- 4, 1940; 17 i ; 17fry ; August, 19C,,, SepteMbe r, 15',;(016!:: Octo. r. 15,5, 155,.@.1b%; American G01d.130 (WS; Silver, Phlladelpbta Produce itlarket. Pumanys.rnia, Saturday. January 16th.—The Flour mr.rtet I, e.ytremely dull, there being no b..quiry for ship. ment and not much demand from the hove Consumers. Prices are less firm, and in some instances adecline of Sic. ter barrel his been accepted. Small sales of and impel fine at -e; 25q411 :14- -Extras- at 110121ig..9 ra; North Western Extra Firmly at SIO6YII 2:5; Panusyl• vaiala and Ohio do., do., at SIO 5& ell, and fancy lets a'. higher figures. Prices of Rye Flour and Corn Steal are nominally unchanged, with email ealed of the former at S. to. The Wheat market lo dull and weak, the demand being confined to email lots for the eupply of the local millerr. Sales of good and prime Red at 82 40(42 52 per beetle!. White may be quoted at $2 8).1q. I 20.. Rye is steady at $1 a 4.1 (8:for rennelvania. Corn le quiet, Lot re ice) are unchanged, ae there is not much coming forward; vales of 2010 bushels new Yellow at $l 12? ) 1 and mixed Weetes nto offered at $1 27. ()ate are eteady at pyam a nte. In Barley and Malt nothing doing. In Cotton,Groceties and provielone the business LI email without change in pricee. . The New York Money Market. I Front to-dav's lierald.l .e , ram' 17.—The advance of yeatru day was not sue taint din the gold market this morning. and prior to the or, Mug of the board sales were made at 1:;e' ; but after the formal conmuncereent of business the range of the day a ae ['Gni to with the closing transactions pilot to the adjournin mt. at 1:›0, ; follo wing which there was considerable pressure to reit. which forced a decline, and the latest quotagon wan 138'4. The "short" interest being lighter than nein,' the borrowing demand wee not equal to the •upplY, and leant wers made at rates for carrying ranging from four to seven per cent. per annum, and at 1.31 per nt. per diern. '1 he prose clewing! amounted to $83.953.W0, the gold balances to *2 fila gre, and the currency balances to Ti crt. {sae little or no excitement in the dentinge, owing to the re , seining character of the nen - a froth Washing ton. and the volume of speculative I nein-so trait smaller than It hue horn for several dace past, owing to matt)* of the principal operators having nitLdrawn from the tea ket. '1 he stock ma. ket has been firm, with an upward ten. ncy, although the iincrovement was resieted by a rsity of promintid Licata nho .ve been selling "short" Nay ly since Friday Ise . The "short" inmrest out standing is now considerable and this will reeve to stimulate the rise t, n filch all the material conditions affecting act elution on the Stock Exchange are favora ble, The supply ef money is increasing, and loans on mixed collaterisls are made mainly at a per cent. with exceptional .ransactions nt 5 and 7, the higher rate being gs nerally asked by the private hankers for em .1l and mo derate amounts. First-class commercial paper is in lim ited supply and rated on the street lit 700,7;4, while the banks dirtount it without hesitation for their custom. ere at the legal rate. '1 he Wive Committee of Ways and Means has non concert • d in the Senate amendment to the anti contraction bill. hut this is an unimportant circtun• stance and will in nowise endanger the final result. The bill will have to be sent back to the Senate, and a committee of conference must agree as to the wending of the act. The bill reported by the committee of TA aye and Means this morning to limit the amount of internal revenu• to :IVO t OUU per annum and confine taxation mainly to distilled spirits and for. mented liquors. tobacco, stamps, special taxes, incomes; dividends, luxuries and amusements, banks and rail. roads, green receipts and legacies and successions, is n stepln the right direction and entitled to the serious at lention of both housesof Congress. This bill has for its objet` the reduction of taxatime, which is at n-recent excessive. and the reduction of the num ber of articles taxed, which are now almost too numerous to mention. In this way the cent of collect. tug the revenue may be largely dimiui bed and the re. dues d scale of taxation will tend to enforce economy in the public expenditures. The people have been strug gling too lei g tinder one ous burdens, and the public credit a ill he strengthened by the practical relief which thin reduction of taxation will afford The currency questten has been already satestecto.ily reed upon in bulb houses. and there is reason to hope that equal sagacity will be exhibited in relation to the revenue. Melina - bile it is unsatisfactory to find that the hill re pealing the tax on cotton should have been treated by the be mete in the manner it was. -A mere suspen- sion of the tax for a year is little better than a farce, sued offers but slight, inducement for the planters to persevere iu cotton •Mil .14 *Hon in the face of great °lobules. 'I he elate of the cotton trade requires the abolition of the tax, and no halfway measure like the one Fropescd by the Senate would answer the object in view. Let the Femate, therefore, recon Mier its amendment and adopt the hill as it wee part•ed by the House. Coveinnient srcuritiea enuthme in good investment de mand at the counters of the leading dealers, and the mar ket tor them lots a very firm te•,clr none, although tor the tines being Fp' ciliation is rather quiet. The eek's lot ores at thin port of Foreign Dry Geo . & have been to the value of $1 541=6, ag.,iust dn.1,2.11,003 saing.week.lest year. The Money market at Boston is very oa.y. The Tray. air? say : "The city banks are not only supplying the vonnfs of their regular cestomeis. tint quite a number 01 theta In. titutions are soliciting outside business in order to RR . t en: I loynient for their lonEebalaucea of curreecy. Cell loehe on the poblic eeeuritlee re freely made today at 5 per coot. In the line of ediunu rcial discounts tours to as a rearrioy of elide.; notes and acceptances offered (or tile. Ibe boa double names fohnd ready takers at tl@7 per rent " The Cincinnati Gazette of Wednesday Bays: '1 here 1B a good deal of mono , still, and the market is active, N , ithout being string, nt. Currency is in f Cdr sum ply, but it accumulafre slo a ly, and rates o. interest .are st ell maintained for fint claw paper at kintle percent. be I: nkets and tL it deposltem 'I here is rather tiler,' of this elude of paper to he obtained in the open market at 10,012 per cent. lii demand for exchange is ntoder at ly and, with a !literal Huppl.y, the market is steady. 1• t•ln•itors tae pv11.11111 , 7 allowed par for it. but voila; ecruiderable MPH were bought from outt , ide partle, at Me. discount. The tuna) selling price ia 1-10 premium, ith txceptious at We. premium. l'lse Latest !Report.. by Telegraph. Nr.w Yolut.,lan 18. —Blocks steady and very dull. Chicago and Kock Island, tal'a ; Beading, 9312; Canton compauy, 60 : ; : tie, 76; Cleveland and Toledo. Clestreland at Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh and Fort Warne. 100 . 2 i; DlM:ban Central .109; Michigan Southern, 874'; :Now York Central, l'4illinois Central, th entral, 123; auberland Preferred, 182, Virg t; I mat:44o; Missouri fis, 100 Ei. r Dike, 1802, 10971; da., 1891, 1073 i; do., 186, 1.013h1; new i e 6X(4106% ;I en. Fort! es. 1023( ;Seven-Thirties, 106 X ; 0r1e13834: P.sehange, 109%; Money easy at 8. IKW 1 OHL JUL, 18.—Cotton firm, 17.4. Flourdull: sales 3190 WI. Es ate, 8 8 000210 60. Oltto *9 704:13 73. West ern, it 8 NM $l4 is; Bouthnrn, $9 70419 1 5 0); : $ll 76(0013 60. Wheat doll, (I.:ru dull; declined 2.410. Cats dull; Westetn. Beef quiet, P o rk dull; mess, $2l 872 e. Lard dull, 12,4314. W . :risky quiet. HAV ( let Mu 9nm:616 receipts of the s r ek by vessels. 2.898 bake ; H al o , o f hi g h grades, city mills, 1276 for ihiplient. Wheat quiet and sleuth'. Corn dull and lower; Immo Whit:: and Yellow, I0(11 17. Carta firmer, 74(t47.9c. Rye very dull. Provi , alone active, sales of bulk smoulder., to arrive 9c. THE DAILY EVENING BULLETIN.-PHILADELPHIA, SATURDAY, JANUARY 18, 1.868. DYuuey Market. hla Stock Exchange. /LEDs • 100 eh Read R c 48X !utt mil do bso soy ; 100 eh do 130 46.41 25 sh do due blll 40i 100 sh do 616 4634 000 sh do MO Its 46% 100 sh l'hll4tErlelllo3o 257. f. 000 sh do eoo 2 sh N Penna. I/ 00 sh Leh Val It Its n 0,%; 10 eh do 50,4* BOARDS. 409 Pa Gs 1 s.er 104 1000 Leh Wm Gold In duc Lill 893 do SW, 6500 do, 100 8h Read R 1)30 46.61; 100 FL do b6O . 963:0 lini ph PhilattErle b!.; 2734 10 81" Lehigh Val R c 504' CITY MORTALITY.—The number of interments in the city for the week ending at noon to-day was 271, against 287 the same perioirtst year. Of the whole number "152 were adults and 119 children, 67 being under one year of age; 147 were males, 124 females, 64 boys and 55 girls. The greatest number of deaths occurred in the Fourth Ward, being 18, and the smallest number in the Fourteenth Ward, where three were re ported. The principal causes of death were—Apoplexy, 7; croup, 11; consumption, 48; convukious, 12; dropsy, 5; disease of the heart. 12; debility, 8; in flammation of the brain, G; inflammation of the lungs, 23, and old age, 12. THE SIMONS RELIEF FrNo.—The following additional contributions to the Simons Retie Fund have been received by Chief Ruggles: From two ladies $lO 00 E. IL R 2 00 11. S. F 300 G. B 5 00 D S. W 1 00 Employ es of Tax Receiver's Office. 20 00 The total amount thus far received is $97 00. Condition of the Piouth-Letter from Major-Gen. 0. 0. Howard has written a letter to a citizen of Chicago connected with a Southern relief enterprise,in which be says that the reports from Mississippi, South. Carolina and Louisiana are more gloomy, and furnish more cause for apprehension than any re ,ceivcd_from _other. _ States. __ _Leaving out political bias, etc., he thinks this want may be attributed to the following causes: First, the sudden fall in the price of cotton. Second, the failure or neglect to cultivate cereals in such quantities as past experience has shown neces sary. Third, the shortness of the last crop, and, in some sections, its total failure, caused principally by the overflow of the Mississippi, and by the caterpillar and army worm. N otw ith standing, however, the numerous reports received bearing on the subject of desti tution be thinks that the Freedmen's Bureau. can and will be able to meet the emergency without any very large expenditure of the public money. What in General Howard's opinion is really needed from the North is shown by the following extract from his letter: "When we once get a good, thorough 1196tem of common schools in practical operation, self supporting, with a perennial supply of good teachers throughout the late slave - States, the mate rial prosperity of those States will be se cured bey and peradventure. Now, in order to produce this state of things, we must overcome the inertia of that prejudice which quarrels with uffrage, that ignorance which despises schools, and that covetous, money-making selfishness which would monopolize all the lands and mines of we alth, keeping all things in the hands of a tyrannical few. "It is undoubtedly difficult for gentlemen In the northern States to determine the measure of their responsibility in the work of education. Yet it is so important . that this work, which has been so well initiated, shott:d ' not cease, should not even nag, so important in.' the interests of the country, so important in the interests of humanity, so important in the light of a practical solution of the great pro blem of liberty for the whole word. that I urge upon every man of intelligence and means to consider cjirefully his own duty in the premises, and to.glve his aid according to the measure of his own convictions." Very truly yours, "0. 0. HowAno, Maior-thmeral." BORDI , NI3 DEN EA. -11Ai.d..AN OUNCE OF THIS extract will wake a pint qf excellent Bcef Tea ais f.w o,inutee. Always nu band and for fide by JudlaYli B. Di BellElt & CO.. 108 South Delaware avenue. MEW PtCANB.--10 BAHRELB NEW CROP TEXAck 11 Pectin landim_ez.uteainship Star of the Union, and (or sal!), by J. U. SUMER & log South Dolawarr 111761101,11: iHoWN BRAND LAYER RAISINS. -- WHOLE'S V balvae and quarter boxes of thikeplendid fruit, land ing end for sale by JOS. )3. BUEISIM DO. LOS South nalaware avenue. NORTON'S PINE APPLE OBEEBE.-100 BOXES ON courdanninut. Landing and for said by Joe. B. BUMMER a CO., Agents tor Norton& Ebner, 108 South Delaware Anna THIRD EDITION. BY TELEGRAPH. CONGRESSIONAL PROCEEDINGS. XLth Congress—Second Session. WASHINGTON, Jan. 18. HousE.—Mr. Mallory (Oregon) introduced a bill to aid in the construction of a railroad and telegraph line from Portland, Oregon, to connect with the Pacific Railroad at the northern bend of the liutriboldt, in NOwitin, Referred to the Committee on the Pacific Railroad. Mr. Ross (111.),rising to a personal explanation, referred to what he had said yesterday in refe rence to one of his colleagues (Mr. Farnsworth) drawing pay as a brigadier-general and as a member ot Congress at the same time, and said that he had no knowledge or information of his colleague having done so. He therefore consid ered It proper andjust to take it back. - Mr. Farnsworth (III.) thought the . retraction very well as far as it went, but it did not cover the whole case. His colleague had spoken of his relatives wearing shoulder straps or employed in foreign missions. Mr. Ross - explained that that part of his re markc was not intended to apply to Mr. Farns worth, but to his other colleague Mr. Wash burne, who had applied It to himself. Mr. Farnsworth stated that he had many rela tives in the army who wore the garb of a soldier, but that the only relative he had had in the army wearing shoulder straps was a gallant officer who fell at Gettysburg. He bad not rotated, as his colleague charged, from one place to the other. When the war began. he raised a regi ment and took it to the field, and was in tits scrvice,•fighting the enemy, when his constituents elected him to Congress. He remained in the service until the 4th of March, 1863, when he ten dered his resignation, and from that day his pay as an officer had ceased. He wished he could say that at that time his colleague (Mr. Roes) was not a member of the Knighs of the Golden Circle, fighting the Union army in the rear. • Mr. Ross declaied that any' such allusion to him was entirely :without foundation or truth. lie bad never been a member ot any such organi zation. He had never bad more sympathy with those who bad been striving to destroy the Go-, vernment by rebellion than he had now' with those who were now trying to destroy It.' Mr. Farnsworth asked whether his colleague had not repeatedly declared on the stump in Illi nois that' the war was an abolition and unholy war, and that be had never voted, and never would vote, a dollar to carry it on. Mr. • Roes assured his colleague that he had never said any such thing. He had objected, as the Democratic party objected, to the war being carried on for abolition purposes, but as a gene ral thing he had voted for appropriation bills, unless there was something very obnoxious in them. Mr. Farnsworth said he was of course bound to believe his colleague, but he bad been told this morning by a gentleman of the very highest re spectability that be bad now in his possession the report of a speech made by his colleague in a Lodge of the Knights of the Golden Circle. Mr. Roes repeated his denial. Any statement 'that tic had ever been in such a lodge or had had anything to do with the Order,was false in every respect. Weather Report. [By the Weetern Union Telegraph Carnpany.l EMEIM tp A. 4f. Wind. .Weather. meter. Port Hood, N. W. Snow squalls. :;2 Halifax, W. Clear. 20 Portland, W. Clear. 6 Boston, NV. Clear. 11 New York, W. Clear. 14 Philadelphia. 8. W. - Clear. 21 Wilmington, Del., N. Clear. 14 Washington, N. W. Cloudy. 20 Fort Monroe, 8. W. Clear. 23 Richmond, N. W. , Clear; 32 Oswego, W. Cloudy, 22 Buffalo, W.. Snowing, '- 16 Pittsburgh, W. Cloudy, 15 Chicago, W. - Cloudy, 12 Louisville. S. W. Clear, 2.5 New Orleans, . N. E. Clouy, 41 Mobile, N. Cloudy, :35 ..... Key West, W. Cloudy, *63 Havana, S. Cloudy, f 73 * Barometer, 53.24. f Barometer, 30.11. CITY BULLETIN. Gen. Howard. 2:30 O'Clook. - - The House went into Committee of the Whole on the State of the Union, Mr. Dawes (Mass.) In the chair, for general debate on the President's annual message. Mr. Banks (Mass.) addressed the committee on the subject of the recent treaty for the acquisition of the Russian American possessions. He con tended Huddle treaty,although complete In form, was not the supreme law of the land till it should receive the sanction of the legislative department of the Government, by way of making an appropriation to carry it out, and argued that the acquistion ought to be discountenanced, and the appropria tion refused. Aside from the plain power of Congress to act according to its own full discre tion m appropriating money for the purchase of new territory, there was another ground on which he rested the power of Congres to reject such a treaty. The Constitu tion ' provided that new States may be admitted by the COngrass into this Union, and thus Congress was made the sole judge of what new elements shall enter into the political body of the republic. This great power would virtu ally be stricken down and removed from Con-' gress it the treaty-making power could of_ its own motion and without the sanction of Con gress buy a State and bring it to the door of Congress. STATE OF THE THERMOMETER. THIS DAY AT TILE BULLETIN OFFICE. 10 A. M............ 29 deg. 12 M... Weather clear. Wind Southwest. (WALL DESCRIPTIONS Thermo- Attention is specially asked to the quality of the Goods offered. Being selected personally of the best manu facturers in the foreign markets, pur chasers may rely on getting artioles 01 priMe quality and at only one profit on first cost, there being no intermediate profit to pay. I. E. WALRAYEN, 710 Chestnut Streetr UNION PACIFIC IL R. BONDS, Price 90, and Interest from let January. GOVERNMENT AND OTHER BECIIRMIES TAKEN IN EXCHANGE AND FULL MARIVET PRICE LOWED. 1 3 Naasau Street, 1 Y., MIL RANDOLPH & IR, 1G 8, Third Et., Phila. Bankers and Broken. WE OFFER FOR SALE UNITED STATES 6's,-1895 . - - Theee Bonds are an absolute obligation of the Govern• ment, and la ar iuhreet at 6 per cent. per annum in cur. rency. payable January and .July. /Holders of other Wiles of Government securities may make a large profit by exchanging for these Bonds. ' BANKERB AND BROKERS. No. 35 South Third Street. noso-2m ri 1-30'S Converted into 5-20'S And Compound Interest Note., Wanted. The. Lehigh Coal and Navigalion COMPANY'S FOR SALE IN SUMS TJ SUIT PUROIIAE Ell '• • E. W. CLARK & CO., We-300MS e ' N 35 South '1 hird Street. FOURTH EDITION. BY • TELEGRAPH. FROM PITTSBURGH. A Terrible Explosion of Fire-Works. TWO MEN SUFFOCATED Explosion off Fireworks. PITTblit:11011, Jan. 18.—A terrible explosion of fireworks occurred at 11 o'clock this morning at the confectionery of Messrs. Knaber & Schrock, on Smithfield street. It was occasioned by the friction of,a falling box of fireworks. John Serock, a son of ono of the proprietors, was fatally injured. 'Leavy Campbell and Fred. Ramsay were killed by sufibeation. Loss, about /32,000, which is covered by In surance. XLth Congress—Second Session. IllousE.--Contimmd from Third Edition.) LACE CURTAINS UPHOLSTERY GOODS MASONIC HALL, THE POPULAR LOAN. INTEP.,LIBT payable in GOLD. (ISSUED TO THE PACIFIC &ULM AD,) I3elow Par. E. W. CLARK & CO., G01_413 DIEU@ X.710.1:4 & BANKERS, 134 South Third Streets GOLD 0 per cent. Bonds. 3:15 O'Clook. IMPORTANT CABLE NEWS Arrest of Norge Franois Train by Great Excitement Amongst the Amer NEWS BY THE CUBA CABLE LONDON, Jan. 18.—When the Cunard steamship Scotia, from New York for Liverpool, entered the port of Queenstown, late last evening, for the usual transfer of the London and Irish passengers and mails, a strong police force quietly went aboard and arrested Messrs. George Francis Train, Grinnell and Gee, three of the passengers who sailed from New York. It is understood that these gentlemen were taken filto custody on a charge of being active members of the American wing of the Fenian organization. These proceedings, naturally enough, caused considerable excitement both here and else where - throughout the . kingdom, and 'especially amongst American residents. PARIS, Jan, 18.—The Duke do Persigny in a letter objects to the bill recently proposed for the government of the press of the country. He thinks the press will be allowed too much lati tude, and while be would favor a bill designed to give more freedom to the press, the obvious ten dency of the provisions of the present bill would be to leave the journals free to assail public and private character. Srocimor.3l, Jan. 18.—Parliament met yester day, and the King, as usual, delivered the open ing speech. After reviewing the state of the country, he entered upon the subject of the inef ficency of the entry, and favored the enrollment of all the male population in militia organiza tions, and the purchase of the most improved arms for the use of the army. HAVANA. Jan. 18.—Sugar, No. 10. to 12, at 70 , 734 reale; Nos. 15 to 20 at 83i@)9X reale; Mo 53,f,(463.; Freights a shade higher, and Email vcBeels in demand. Bacon, $l3 25; Batter, 20@30e.; Shooks, $8 50 @s9 for sugar boxes, and $19;;526 , for hogs heads. Flour, sl2@i . $l3 50 bid for Spanish, $l4 50@515 25 asked, and sl6®sl9 fur Ameri can; Onions, $7, 50, Potatoes, $1 10; Rosin, $6; Tallow, sllesl2. • Sailed—Steamer Moro Castle, I , Tew York. Wind north and weather stormy. CoNcono, N. H., Jan. 18.—The farm building of John Brown, at Northfield, N. H., was burned last night, together with a barn and outbuildings, twenty head of cattle, thirty head of sheep, ninoty tons of hay, farming tools, provisions, etc.. BOSTON, Jan. 18.—Andrew Curl, alias Dutch Sam, Edward Livingston and Truman Young, all alleged noted thieves, are under arrest, charged with robbing the house of D. W. O'Brien, in Cor nisb, Maine, of $20,000. They were arrested in New York, and taken back for trial. UNION PACIFIC RAILROAD CO. OFFICE OF DE HAVEN & 137.0., No. 40 SOUTII THIRD STREET, PIIILADELP/lIA, Jan.. 13, IP6B. We desire to call attention to the difference In the rela tive price of the First Mortgage Bonds of the UNION PACIFIC RAILROAD - and the - price - of - Governmentr. -- We - woulcl - to day - glve these bends and pay a difference of $194 25 taking in exchange U. 8. 6's of 1881. $lB9 25 do. do. 6-20'a of 1861 $169 2S do. do. 5.20's of 1864. $l7B 00 do. do. 5 Ws of 1866, May & Nov. $165 60 do. do. 5.208 of 1866, Jan. & July. $155 50 do. do. 520's of 1867, do. $124 25 do. do. 6 19 cent. 10-40's. do. $l6l SO • do. do. 7 310 Cy. Juno issue. $l9l 90 do. do. 7 3.10 Cy. July issue. (For every thousand dollars.) We offer these bonds to the. public. with every con& deuce in their security. DE HAVEN & BRO., DFALEREI lIN A.lOl KINDS OF GOVERNMENT SECURITIES, GOLD, dm, No. 40 S. 'Third St. FINE CHAMPAGN E Sherries, Brandies, Clarets, Moselle and Hook Wines. L.-114-rdereres Carte Blanche; Lisped sliand Dry Billory ; Widow licquotor the vintage et iRd nail the finest since 1847-48; Carte D'or ; G. 'H. Vjoleti Helaine's; iluldsick ds Co. • Hopfeibergls t 4 parl lb g (wile and Hock Winos; Lon:re orth's et sultana and Dry Catawba and Golden W e ding; Bordesux W.:to—Wine; genuine Oordials. 4 lords, pb and stied hirn aides; Sherrise de.' Old Port do:sites Brandy; English- and - clootdr - Aleei Gniutassihs 1. nigh} Brows, Stook all thou One goods aragearanteed gt twice, add sold by the cask, demijohn, case or bbttle, at ibu it a porters , or agents' prices, by StMON COLTON ft.CLARKE I . Importers, Jobbers nal Retailers, S. W. corner Broad and Walnut. JaLw t' • WALNUTS ritraev UV MAIONDS. —NEW CROP GAB "tathelondiorrle by JB. BUBBLER CO.. Paper Delaware .venal EXTRA. FIFTH EDITION. BY TELEGRAPH.• the British Government. can Residents. By the Atlantic Cable. By the Cuba Cable. From New Hampshire. From Boston. POPULAR LOAN. Special Agents 4:00 O'Clook. $1..901.334 90 The Trustee's have made a Return Premium. Dividend of FIFTY PER CENT. upon the premiums paid in 1867 upon all Mutual Policies in force December 34 19dt to be credited to said Policies. and have ordered the Dividend of Jan. I. 1866, to be paid in 'settlement of premiums aa they mature. Alexander Whilldin, Hon. Alexander G. Callen, r eorge Nugent. hal lIC Haziehurst, lion. ;limes Pollock, Jainea L. GlAghorn, , J. Edgar Thomson, Henry K. Bennett, Albert IR boberte, li. M. %Minh', Philip B. Mingle, George W. Hill„ John Wanaautker. ALEXANDER WIIILLDIN, President. GEORGE NUGENT, Vice President. JOHN C. AIMS, Iduary. JOHN S. WILSON, Secretary and Treasurer. attendance at the Office of the Company from 19 to 1 o'clock daily. COMMISSION STOCK..BROKERS, STOCKS, BONDS AND LOANS, ao4-Bmry BOUGEIT AND BOW ON 001011138.10N1 111ACDOWELG8t WILKINS, STOCK BROKERS, No. 150 South Third Street. STOCKS AND LOANS Bought and Sold on Commission. JAB. J. MAODOWF.LL. Joe. R. WILILLI4S. Ju. jae4mrP• UNION PACIFIC R. W. No. 28 S. •Third Street. LalB-12trply CANNED FRUIT. VEGETABLES, &0.-'x.ooo CABB3 k.) fresh Canned Peaches; 500 MOB fresh P,anned Pine Apples ;200 eases fresh Pine Apples,. In glata• 1.000 cues Breen corn and Green Peas; ma cue, frost, Plums, ip CRAB ;800 eaves froth Green GROW awn syrup ; SM) caeca Blackberries, injyrtipt -53 eases Straw. berries, irk syrup cam trisiltreartkinsyrun i A; % J o u r Canned Tomatoes : 500 cases Oysti3rs,l4bitere 1, p Cum. Roast Beef. Mitton , Neal. SOITS: &C.' For sale by JOSEF/CR BLi t It di 130,. lie South. Delaware jepONTOB HORTON AND TRENTON ' BIEClar.-41 Ls trade aup i l with Bond's lbatterAbnatn, tow ter and Egg %it • Wed ThorgeAele Trenton and bae t, try JOB. R BUWLER 411 en 10 A Amnia. Solt lawarp *venue `MAKER SWEET CORN-86 BARRELS Judi' REI, ►J ceded and foy We by JOSEPH H. BUSS/ER & CO.. 108 South Delawareavennt. 5 , 000 AND SAIWO TO LOAN ON MORTGAGE. jal6-6V6P ANNUAL STATEMENT Or THE. AMERICAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY Walnut St.O. E. oor. of Fourth, PHILADELPHIA* For the Wear [ending Deo. alet, 1867. RECEIPTS. Premium's' Received Interest Rents t,2 LOSSES AND EXPENSES. Life LOPPPS, die., paid amounting to 824215 17 raveling Agents,'Expenses of Agencies and Commissions.... .. . . ..... . . ....... ........ 85,536 &7 Salaries and Medicali;xam 23,246 79 rnited States and btatc Taxes and Licenses. 11.969 97 Return Premiums and Policies bought—. .• . 72.474 11 Printing, Advertising, Stationers, lit.amps,le. 19,974 87 DISBURSEMENTS. Burplus premiums returned to insured and dividende.... ....... ....... $70.311 09 ASSETS. JAN MUM 1, 1668. 8400,000 City of Philad'a Loan Now 6'a, 173,100 U. S. Five-1 wesity Loan, 0.000 State of Penna. Loan, 6'o, 32,00 e State of New Jersey Loan, 6'o, 25,000 Allegheny County Bonds, 22 OW City of Camden, 'N. J., Loan, 6's, 20,000 Rending IL It. Bonds, 15,00 U. S. Lorin of 1881, 12,000 Penna. R. ILlst Mortgage 6 , 0, 10,000 I'hilada. & Erie R. R. Bonds 28,800 Barrisburg R. IL—Wyoming Val. Canal end other bonds. - 1,030 Compound Intermit Treasury I Notes, 1,000 abarea Penna. Rd It. 950 Corn Exchange National Bank. 4 " (;onsolidation National Bank. So 4 ` Farmers' National Bank of Reading. 142 " Williamsport Water Co. I 000 " Northern Central R. R. J Mortgagee. Ground Itenta and Real Estate.... 137,711 33 Loam. on Collateral amply secured 1 N1A,37 65 Premium Notes, secured by. . . 977,153 95 Premiums in hands of Agents, secured * by • Bonds 04.74 12 Cash on band and in Banks..... . , ..... .. 117,720 08 Accrued Interest and Rents due Jan. let 11,541 62 Trustees: OFFICERS. Medical Examiners. J. NEWTON WALKER, 112. D., THOMAS J. YARROW, R. D., JOHN C. TABER. General Agent Jal&e.tu4ll.Bt4 AUSTIN & OBERGE, 813 WALNUT STREET, PILMADELPEIL4. Eastern Divisio4, BONDS BOUGHT AND SOLD BARKER BROS. & CO., A. B. CA RITER (10,, B. W. corner Ninth and Filbert. Igtit,s:ra 76 77,g28 33 1.721 20 te4A424 48 $935,811 'hi
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers