• BUSINESS NOTICES: ponttiunt ffledleal Dio•covery. Sub , minute for. Calomel. ?be pernicioui ellecteof meteors , on their - man eyelet' lire produced an earnest desire among the more enlight mid Add teriscientious members of the medical profes sion to find some eubetltute for that deleterious mineral. Mr. Richard Reese, a celebrated London physician, and soaker of the " Dictionary' of Popular Medicines," the vegetable kingdom can furnish semedle for every case in which mercur • o - ealemele can po r i Ably be ueeful. Dr. J. if IStbenck, of Philadelphia, hoe actually oompoeed a medicine of purely vegetable ingredicnte,which le proved, fry experience, to have all the good cffecte of calomel, and none of its miechievone qualities. Thie invaluable needficine is comprised in SOItENOK'S MANDRAKE PILLS. whkh are found to be a never -failing remedy for all die. fames of the liver, and every other disorder for which cal *met is usually prescribed by Allepath physicians. These Pills are prepared only by Dr. J Schenck, and sold wlokesle and retail, at hie principal office, No. i 5 North Math street, corner of Comment*, Philadelphia, and by &lige/its and dealers everywhere. Price, :15 centes per box. It ME Eini NEWLY IMPROVED CRES CENT SCALE OVERSTRITNO PIANOS, !Acknowledged to be the beet. London Prize Medal add b e N That Awardki N I America received. MELODEONS PIANOS. w aSni Wareroome, 722 Arch et...bel. Eighth. EVENING BULLETIN. Saturday, March 14, 1868. TUE 1111PEACRUENT TRIAL. The trial of "Andrew Johnson, President of the United States," may be said to have coin imenced yesterday. As was expected, the first movement of Mr. Johnson's counsel was for delay. The unreasonable demand for forty days was, of course, refused by the Court, and ten days were allowed instead. As the Managers will undoubtedly be ready to file their replication immediately thereafter, there is every probability that the trial will be fairly in progress before the close of this month. The proceedings yesterday were marked by a degree of dignity and decorum befitting the high occasion. Low as the individual who occupies the Executive chair has sunk in the eyes of the people, he has failed to break &WU the respect which belongs to the office t and there was all the gravity and delibera tion in disposing of the preliminary questions which there could possibly be, if Andrew Johnson were a noble, high-toned and re spected gentleman. At the very outset of the trial it is evident that Mr. Johnson has not secured any very strong array of counsel. Jeremiah Black is no longer anything more than a broken-down politician, whose influence is gone, and whose connection with this case can only be 4)arnaging. Judge Nelson is a lately-gal vanized rebel, who deserted the Union same at the outbreak of the rebel lion, and cast in his lot with thacountry's enemies. He has been lately pardoned by his present client and now ap pears in his behalf. Mr. Stanbery resigns his seat in the Cabinet to take part in the Presi dent's defence. So closely has he been iden tified with all of Mr. Johnson's lawless acts, that-he may almost be regarded as_ pleading his own case as well as his client's, and this fact greatly lessens the freedom of his action and the weight of his influence. Mr. Evarts is an able lawyer from New York, formerly a Republican, and Mr. Curtis is a well-known lawyer from Boston. The great lights of the American bar have either not been sought by Mr. Johnson or have declined to be mixed up in his hopeless case. There are now no other steps to be taken until the 23d inst. It is most 'gratifying that the Court refused to burden the country with the needless protraction of the impeachment excitement. The universal desire is for a speedy settlement with Andrew Johnson. livery day that he continues in power is a hindrance to reconstruction, to peace and to prosperity. The people are disgusted with him and want him out of the way. The case has already been tried by their High Court of Appeal, and the verdict has been pro nounccd. The court before which be is now arraigned is a necessary form of Constitutional law; but it cannot possibly change the facts of the case, or reverse the decision which the whole sentiment of the country has already pronounced. To do so would be practically to sweep away the ju dicial and legislative functions of the govern ment and to vest them in the executive. , It would be to declare that the President is su perior to law, and that he may obey it or not, as he in his private judgment may see fit. There is no question of constitutionality. .to be decided, but simply a sentence to be passed upon an ofrender who confesses to having have" never by the judiciary or repealed by the legislature of the land. TUE SUSPENSION QUESTION. Compromises are nearly always tokens of weakness, and the compromise which Con gress has made upon the question of suspend ing the President, during, his trial, is no ex iseption to the general rule. The idea that the President of the United States, while being tried for "high crimes and misdemeanors," should continue in the free exercise of his Innctions,using his official powers for mischief, plotting and counter-plotting for his own advantage, ie a simple absurdity. English precedent is admitted as governing our pro - ceedinge in -impeachment,- except so-far as it conflicts with the constitution and laws of the. United States. This precedent distinctly points, to the custody of the accused during trial. The House of Lords takes him in charge, from the moment the articles of im peachment are presented, and common-sense strongly endorses the practice. Congress needs no new legislation to sus pend the President. A. joint resolution of loth Houses declaring the suspension of the President, as a Constitutional and essential element of impeachment, is all that is needed, and such a resolution ought to be passed. If the charge were treason instead of high crimes and miedemeanors, no • one would question the right to suspend. And yet there is no express provision that a President shall be taken in custody when tried for treason. In both cases the dictates of common sense point to the principle of suspension as a na tural consequence of impeachment, and the failure to act upon it has all the appearance of one of those timid compromises which, in the face of the bold and prompt action letklb Congress has otherwise taken in the matter, was not to have been expected and is So be regretted. JENKIAIS IN bran:SENATE. The unusual scone presented in the cham ber of the . United States Senate, yesterday, afforded an opportunity to the enthusiastic but often indiscreet newspaper correspond-. entswho novrcrowd the capital, to indulge to the utmost their proclivity for what is anomalously styled "fine writing." Some of .e P Corm of_these_gentlemenare___v_ery amusing, and serve to enliVen the columns usually devoted to bare statements of rather uninteresting facts. But the most extraor dinary report is that written by a correspond ent of a certain morning contemporary, who evidently went to work with a determination to outrival the great original Jenkins himself in his description of the appearance of the prominent personages present. As a first at tempt at this kind of writing, the report is not very bad, but the writer is evidently only a budding Jenkins, and if he has done these things in his incipiency, 'what may we not expect when be blossoms into full flower? Bome of his statements are' absolutely sta: irtling, and we may well be pardoned for suspecting them to be the offspring of a pro lific and vivid imagination. For instance, he says that "Mrs. Ben Wade wore a black cloth sacque, two short locks of brown hair, and a brown rose in her braid." Of course, the plain inference is, that the respected lady not only took advantage of her hirsband's at tention being distracted, to make an extremely simple toilette, but that she is the possessor of a bead entirely bald with the exception of those "two side locks of brown hair," and the braid adorned by that extraordinary botanical phenomenon, "a brown rose." Under these cir cumstances we are not surprised to learn that Mrs. Wade occupied "a corner seat," al though for the sake of propriety we would rather it bad not been "next to the diplo mats." Miss Vinniei Ream's toilette approached Eden ic simplicity. She is "a little sculp tress"—whatever that may be—and she "wore a wave of flat ringlets down her back." In view of this statement it is impossible to be lieve that she bad "admirers in numbers buz zing around her.", If this is so, what could the Sergeant-at-Arms have been about? It seems to us that his duty in the matter was vtry plain. How the ladies of British Min ister Thornton were . attired, alas! we are not informed; one of them, however, has "the step of the winner of the Derby," and may, perhaps, have amused herself during the con sultation of the Senators, by prancing around the lobby on all-fours. The other, we are told, has "the motion and figure of a gazelle," and of course as a natural curiosity throws the Feejee mermaid and the What Is It ? into the shade. "Two Englishmen," in the diplomatic gal lery, seemed lost to all sense of shame by sitting there calmly "in mutton-chop whis kers" and "a prodigious quantity of jewelry." Their sensibility to physical pain also mus t have been deadened,for we are informed they had"glasses screwed into their eyes." And yet these heroic Britons sat there without a mur mur, and pondered o'er the blessedness of Magna Charts and the foolishness of Repub licanism. This is all we learn of the costumes of per sens present, but there is a brief list of the foreign ministers who happened to be there, and it concludes with a statement to this effect: "Many of these Ministers have wives from Washington and Georgetown, who appear to take their distinguished expatria tion very pleasantly." This is sufficiently obscure to lead one to believe that the writer's intellect was somewhat muddled, and that he did not know precisely of what he wrote. In view of this fact it will be well to accept his other statements with some doubt. For our selves, we do not believe that any of the per sons mentioned above would have ventured to adorn themselves as this writer would have us believe. .1111UTLER, RAILROADS AND 1111- IPEACICII ir,Nl Mr. ex-Attorney-General Stanbery, in the course of his argument for delay in the im peachment trial, brought forward the case of Judge Chase who was impeached before the Senate more than sixty years ago, and while offering his case as a precedent in the cpaes tion of delay, he urged that the impeachment managers were disposed to push forward the trial of the President "with railroad speed.' Judge Samuel Chase, the person referred to by Mr. Stanbery, was a citizen of Maryland and a signer of the Declaration of Indepen _Acme. After art_ emineut and somewhat eccenlikliidiciil career in his own State, he was appointed by President Washington an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court, and while acting in that capacity he was im peached for arbitrary and illegal acts; but after many delays and a long and tedious trial before the Senate, he was acquitted. This was in 1804, long before a railroad line had been_constructed in the country, when steamboats were scarce, when the Mail - was carried from Philadelphia to Pittsburgh on horseback and when the magnetic telegraph was not dreamed of. General Butler, with the keen perception and quick judicial tact which pronounced black chattels "contraband" of war, instantly seized hold , of Mr. Stanbery's "railroad speed" idett - , - -and declared that he could not see-why the trial should not proceed with railroad speed. "Railroads," said the gentleman from Massachusetts, "have affected everything else in the world; telegraphs have brought places together that were thousands of miles apart. It takes infinitely less time, if I may use so strong an expression, to bring a witness from California now than it took to send to Phila delphia for one in the trial of Judge Chase; and therefore we must not shut our eyes to the fact that there are railroads amlthere are telegraphs to give the accused the privilege' of calling_his counsel together, and of getting answers from any witnesses that he may have summoned and to bring them here. It should have an importantbearing on the course we are to take that I respectfully, submit, is not to be overlooked. Railroads and telegraphs have changed the order of things. In every other business of life we recognize that fact : why should we not in this ?" General Butler's point was well taken 110 the weakness of the argument of Mr. Stan bery WOl3 fairly illustrated by this reference to "railroad speed." Mr. Johnson's offences are not of the kind that belong to the era of dignified statesmen, any more than the period THE DiILY EVENING BULLETIN S TITR DAY MARCH 14 ,1568. , in which he is to be called to account for them Ulongs to the days of pack-horses and lumbering Stage coaches., We could not if we were to try, imagine a Washington, an "Adams or a Jefferson going upon a " swing ing around the circle " expedition. Mr. Johnson' belongs to a later breed of states men, and as he has chosen to discard dignity and decency, under the promptings of a• low nature and a vicious progressiveness in partisanship, he has no right to fall back upon a plea that can only fit a past age. Mr. Johnson's " high crimes and misdemeanors " were committed with a recklessness which is significant of a railroad era; he has no right to complain if his trial is brought about and carried for ward with railroad speed, when he has the same railroad facilities at his command for his defence as are employed against him by his accusers. Mr. Johnson'tf official career has been fast and reckless; he has evinced no consideration for the rights or feelings of others, and to ask for the delays that were inseparable from the period of twenty-miles a-dny-journies, is as absurd as it would be for him to claim a place for his drunken speeches among the dignified and statesman like utterances of Washington, Jefferson or Madison. General Butler takes kvery clear view of the situaton, and he will doubtless prove to be a very sharp thorn in the side of Mr. Johnson and his friend Stanbery during the progress of the impeachment trial. Bunting, Durborow dc Co.. Auction.. eery, Nob. 232 and 234 Market etreet, will hold during next week, the following important ealee,by catalogue, viz: ON MONDAY, March 16,at 10, o'clock on four months, credit, about 1,010 lots of French and British Dry Goods, including full line Fancy Spring Dress Goode, Rich Black and Colored Silks, Heavy Black Silk Satins, Fancy Spring Shawls, 1,000 gross English Pearl But tons, large assortment of White Goods, Linen Furn ishing Goods, Linen and Cotton Ildkfe., large invoice Drees and Mantilla Trimmings, Braid,Gimps Fringes Hoop Skirts, Curtain Muslius, Ribbons, Notions, :c. ON Tunsonv, March 17, al 10 o'clock, on four mouths' credit, about i,OOO packages Boots, Shoes, Balmorale, Hats. Caps, &e. ON TIIIIIIHDAV, March 10, at 10 o'clock, on four months' credit, 1,000 packages and lots of Foreign and Domestic Dry Goods. including Cloths, Cassimeres, Satinets, Fancy, Cloaking. Diagonals,,Doeekins, Coat ings, Italians, &c. Alsio, Dress Goods, Silks, Shawls, Linens, Hosiery, Gloves, Shirts and Drawers,lTies, Balmoral and Hoop Skirts, Sewings, Umbrellas, ,tc. Also, 100 packages Cotton and Woolen Dolomites. ON Fames, March 20, at 11 o'clock, - on four mouths' credit, about tittO pieces of Ingrain, Venetilfb, List, Hemp, Cottage, and Rug Carptitlngs; also, 200 rolls Canton Mattings. Extensive Sales or Real Estates.-- Thomas 4 - , Sons' forthcoming sales, March IT, 24, April 7, 14 and gl, comprises several valuable estate.. by order of the Orphans' Court, Executors, Trost, Assignees, Heirs, Sherill and others, including hand some Residences, Country Seats, Stores, Hute!s, Farms, Building Lots, &c., &c. See their pamphlet catalogues issued every Saturday, and full advertise ments on the BCVOLth and last pages. Salo ot Boots and Shoos.—We world call the early attention of the trade to the large sale of Boots, Shoes, Brogans, Balmorals, to be sold by catalogue for cash on Monday morning, March 16th, commencing at ten o'clock pre cisely by C. 1). McClees di; Co. ' successors to lifc- Cleßand Co., Auctioneers, at their store, No. 506 Market street. Valuable Store Property.—We invite the attention of capitalists to the very desirable store property, No. 418 Areh street, to be gold by Mes,rs. M. Thomas .4: Son, at the Merchants' Exchange, on Tuesday next, the 17th inst. Davis's Celebrated Dianiond Brand Hams, Choice Dried Beef. superior Tongues. NEW BONELESS EXTRA MESS AND NO.I MACK. EREL, Spiced and Pickled Salmon, Yarmouth Bloaters, Scaled Herring and Cod Fish. Fits...NCH PkAS AND MUSHROOM. FINEST QUAL. ITY Fresh Peaches Tomatoes and Green Corn. NEW YORK PLUMS, PITTED CHERRIES, PARED and unpared Peaches, Dried Lima Beans, and Tart Dried Applp F. FRENCH AND SPANISH OLIVES lIY THE GALLON. A general experiment tf the Fined Family Hi - merle I, for sale at reasonable prices. by A. J. DECAMP, mlll4-3mrpl 10 South Second street. CAMEL'S HAIR BAREGE, %ERA' DESIRABLE FOR SPRING AND SUMMER WEAR. IPERIKINS, SOUTH NINTH STREET. nhl4-e to w 3trii DOWNING'S AMERICAN LIQUID CEMENT, FOR mending broken ornaments, and other articles of Glans. China, Ivory, Wood, Marble, &c. No heating re quired of the article to be Mended, or the Cement. Al waye ready for one. For Bale by JcIIN It. DOWNING, Stationer. fe7-tf 139 South Eighth ntreut, two doors ab. Walnut- JOHN CET_lhll 3 , 1311ILDER. 1731 CHESTNUT STREET, • and 213 LODGE sTary.r. Meet:mules of every branch required for lioueontilldifilS and fitting promptly furnished. fe27 tf WARBURTON'S IMPROVED, VENTILATED and eary-titting_Dre7i& Rota tontented), in all the ap "taVrett-tititAdini of the eonsiin, Ch7f ctetreett,, next door to the Poe-oil:co. eelMYrp JONES TEMPLE & CO., No. 29 SOUTH NINTH. STREET, Have introduced their Spring Styles, and invite gentlemen that with a Hat combining Beauty, Lightness and Durability to call and examine them. J., T. & Co. manufacture all their Silk Hate. mhlo4,f4p - PROFESSOR BLOT'd COFFEE POTS.—SEVERAL 11 sizes of these, made from hie personal directions, and a variety of other Tin Coffee and Tea Pots, and House keepers' Tin Ware for bale by TRUMAN & SHAW, No. 835 (Eight thirtsdive) Market street, below Ninth, Phil. adelphia. PATENT BROOMAND BRUSH HOLDERS HAVE springs for clasping the handle of these or Other house keepirip articles, instead of using twine, loops and nails to habit them up by. They are also convenient for holding the tools of artimaus. TRUfdAN &SHAW, No. 835 (Hight thirty.tive) Market street, below Ninth. - - "IRON DUMB BELLS. OF A VARIETY SIZES, AT 1 TRUMAN & SHAW'S No. 4a5 (Eight thirty.tive) Mar ket area, below Ninth, PhD adelpliia. IeRgLIAS HULL. FOR MANY YEARS AT conda nd Cho etnut etre eta, firet•clase Hair cutter, at Kopp'eShaving Saloon. Shave and Bath, 30 cents. Razors Bet in order, Open Sunday morning. VA Exchange Place. 0. O. ROFT, MONOGRAMS. CRESS OR INITIALS, STAMPED In Indelible Ink ON LINEN At very moderate piece, At the WEST END STATIONERY. 1644 Chestnut mtreet, ltt Philadelphia. ELDER FLOWER, SOAP, S. P. At C. R. TAILOR, No. 611 North Ninth e:' - - DEBT QUALITY RID GLOVES $1 75 A PAIR.— LP Belling oft over 1,000 dozens Ladies' beet quality Kid Glover, oil new choice diadem. fimat qualty imported; sizes 6to 7 3 6, at $1 75 a pair. Price eleowhere ; $2 and $7lO. stock Felling off. GEO. W. VOGEL. mhll-6trp• 1016 (thestaut street. T WAGNER JERMON. o • Attorney and Couneel at Law, RAB REMOVED MB OFFICE.' To 729 BANBOM 'street, ' f016,hn,r14 13BICAL BOXES, USEFUL TO 'MILLE AWAY tho tedium of a sick chamber, or for a lattlistinte bridal present. FARR di BROTHER, ImportArs, b 24 Chestnut street, below Fourth. nejej WALL PAPERS AND LINEN WINDOW 11,00. SHADES. 'Spring StylOe, 'finest and cheapest goods. Phadee manufactured at JOHNSTON'S DEPOT, No 102.3 Spnng Garden etroot, below Eleventh. sel4ly4P Ott BALE.—TO MERCIIANTS, STOREKEEPERS, JP Betels and dealers-200 Cases Champagne and Crab Cider. 2bo bbla. Champagne and Crab Cider. P. J. JORDAN, .220 Pear street. 1 NDIA RUBBER MACHINE BELTING, STEAM PAWL ing Hose, &c. Explorers and dealers will find a full assortment of Goodyear's Patriot Vulcanized Rubber Belting, racking Hose, &e., at the Manufacturer'' Headquarters. GOGDI EA WS, 308 Chestnut street, South side N. B.—We have now on band a large lot of Gentlemen's Ladles' and Misses' Gum Boots, Also, every variety and atyie of Glum Overcoats. 12 - Wanamaker at Brown's Opening. Wanamaker & Brown's Opening. iii" Wanamaker & Brown's Opening. Wanamaker & Brown's Opening. bpring Clothing.- • Sprin g spring Clothing.x.D Spring Clothing..l4l 425" Pine Tailoring Goods. TEirFine Tailoring Goods. 61 - rine 7 ailo ring Goods. el 'Fine Tailoring Goods. SPECIAL CA.RD.--We have the brat stock Gents', Youths', and Boys' Ready-made Clothing , and Cloths, Caseimere' and Vesting' for measured work ever collected in one establishment, and those who make an early choice will be well repaid. Our prices are considera bly lower on many goods. WANAM AKER & BROWN, The Largest Establishment, SIXTH and MARKET Streets. SOAP. The undersigned, known to the public as Man ufacturers of Pure, Unadulterated Family and Fancy Soaps, have spent many years and mttch of their means in educating the public to believe, the facts that "so-called cheap or low-priced" Soaps, being necessarily adulterated, are the dearest, and that good pure Soaps, although ap parently dearer, are the cheapest. They have reason to know that their teaching has had its proper effect upon the minds of Intelligent house keepers, and believing the time has come when a really Superior Soap will be appreciated, they now put in the market au article which they are confident is the best. Family Washing Soap ever offered to the people of this or any other country. MERINO SOAP. The superiority of the materials used, and tlic chemical combination of them, is of such a scien tific nature that the Merino Soap is perfectly neutral and mild, and cannot injure the texture of the most delicate fabric, whilst its washing or detersive properties are truly astonishing. The Merino Soap can be used by rubbing on the clothes in the usual way; but if cut in shav ings and dissolved in hot water, the clothes soaked for half an hour in the solution, its extraL: ordinary detersive properties will be more fully obtained. One pound will go as far as thr , e pounds of an!, if the many so-called labor-saving, but clothe:. rotting, Family Soapi in the market. SOLD By GROCERS AND DEALERS IN SOAPS ALI. OVER THE UNITED STATES, AND WHOLESALE. BY TILE MANUFACTURERS. • McREON,VAN HAAGEN & CO. 32 South Front Street, Philadelphia, or 30 Barclay Street, New York INDIA. RUBBER GOODS. REDUCED PRICES. MARCH 1, 1E.68, EERIE DELVING, ENGINE MD HAAN HOSE, IC, RICHARD LEVICK, No. 708 Chestnut Street. :elegfl National RubberCo. i t4l; A NEW BOOK BY MRS. STOWE. Publit3ha.d Thi, ):ty The Chimney Corner. Br Cnioirrornrit Citnwritt.D. Anew - A' "house ot "oueernd l'aperr, , and ”Little Foxee." 1 vol. Blum Morocco Li.th. ttil A Fenea of Eeenym and Sketched on topic.. of present and permanent intereet, euch as Woman's 'liable and Dale% Health, Amuimmetate, Entertainment of Company. Drees, tielf Dlecipline, and Bereavement. The nature of the tuhjecte treated, and the genial, practical wiadom brook ht to the diecudeion of them, give thld volume great attrattione and value to all thanghtful readerd. Dickens's Readings. An elegant volume. containing all the pelections from his works, read by Mu. Dieutris, namely: A CbriAntas Carol, David Copperfield, Mr. Pick flick's Trial. Nicholas Nickleby, Mr. Bob Sawyer's Par' y, Little I:tomboy, Boots at tbe*liolly-Trec lnn. Doctor Marigold, and Mrs. Garetp Selected and condensed for publication by Mn. DICKENM . litestrutious.b3-6:-E-yr Bleak House. Tho sixth 'volume of THE CILERIES DICKENS'S EDITION of the Complete Works of CurAULF,B Dtex tgs. Elegant compact, cheap. With eight Illustrations. Purple Cloth. •.• For Hale by all Bookeellere. Sent poetpaid. on re , ccipt of price, by the Pubbehere, TICKNOR & FIELDS, Boston. lt, FOR BREAKFAST, FOR DESSERT. HITMAN'g CIRIUOLATE . ' The beet and moat delicious aliment for breakfa4 over known. STEPHEN F. WHITMAN, MANUFACTURER.. Store No. 1210 Market Street. inhl4 3t MARY.B. CONWAY, INDIES' DRESS EIIIIIISLSICVM AND SHOPPING EMPORILM, 31 SOUTH SIXTEENTH sTtarr. FAILADELPIHAr 4 • • Ln dice from any pat t of the United States can send their orders for Dress Materials, Dresses.Oloaka. Bonnets, Shoes, Under t lothing, Mourning Suits, Wedding 'rroeseau, Ita• vehngOuttitr, Jewell y Sir., also Children's Clothing, Im halve ard. obrs, Gentlemente Linen. &e. • In ordering barmiest., Ladies will plase send one of their EAST FITTING DIUINEIBB for measurement; and Ladies visiting the city shot Id not fail to call and have their measures regimen d for luttue convenience. Eden, by permlakion, to MR. J. M. 11 XFLERVII, 1012 and 1014 Chmtnut street: 1,11 , 188103. HOMER. UOLI.AII.►Y & td)., mbl4-0m rp 810 and IV.O Uhertnut street. ARKIN() WITH INDELIBLE INK, EMBROIDER /141.. Braiding. Stumping, &0. 3 t. A. TORRY. 1090 '.lklbort street itriETAILi Milt etotolvo. JOHN W. THOMAS. Noe. 405 aid 407 N. Second Street.' NEW STOCK OF SPRING AND SUMMER GOO DS NO W OPEN. rnbl4 to th Strp_ MAGIC RUFFLING! • Will open to day, a mum of Magic Ruffling, plain and Loa-edge; full assortment from Ito 10. No. 1, plain, 31 cents a piece: No. 1, edged, MEP cents. All numbers cor respondingly low -A superior ING. TAPIb.; all Best quality, 49 cents apiece, several widths. Second " 33 cents apiece. " Really good 9 yard pieces at this low pi ice. 1111111 rdal'lON C,.UNEV 16061:: AND IN. .NEILKIING• A very largo assortment of new and desirable patterns, reeelvt d at WORN E'S Lace and Embroidery Store, o, :93 North Eighth street. • 1111114-it - _ PRICE ziks WOOD, N. W. cor. Eighth and Filbert, Steve rout opened 10 pieces heavy power loom Table Linens. 50 cents, same geode fee have been Felling, at 75 rents. 8.41 'deem , d brown and colored Table Linene, Bargains In Napkine, Towel., and Doylies. bcotch Diaper ny the t irce or yaid. A jib lot of Pillow Da.e Linene, very cheat , . Best malice 6birting Linene . liirtley e Uncut , for Aprone. arc.. Al-e. White Goode. Wham Goode. litilmook Plaid .Mileline, hi 20. 25, 31, .17X, 40 and 50. a lint de, me batin trive ad }lid Naineook soft Cando S ire, .fac n onctis and Naimooks. Swiee Marline and Yictela Lawns. 1311 White Piques. White Piqued, very cherip. l liandeome Marecillee Quilt.: at lees than Importers' prices. it, it makes bleached and unbleached Mullin' at the very low NM market i tires Al wool and [forum Ilannele, very cheap. A Ipar se, e. • choice ehades worth 45 et?. 'war. 37.14. FA e12;.1,, dl. Dareninn in Iloutcry end Glovee. Gent's Neck Tie,'. bhirt Fronts, and Suspenders. Joe in'ii Kid tilovee, hest quality, choice colors. PRICE Ss WOOD, R. W. corner Eighth and Filbert. DRY GOODS AT POPULAR PRICES. RICKEY, SHARP & CO ., 727' Chestnut Street, Have now the most complete and elegant stock of SPRING GCODS Which they have ever offered, and invite Ilpeclalatteatton to their Moe& of SILKS, Comprising a fall Hoe of HEAVY BLACK COtt DED 611.0 GA AIN AND LUSTRELESS SILKS for Sults. BOMA NODE AND STEEL TILTPETTIS. BI i E, GREEN & PEsILL POCILTE DE SOLES. MOHAIR & ALPaCCA POPLINS of the choicest Colorings. An Extensive Variety of HOUSJ-H'URNISBIFG GOODS, Cloaks, Camellia/welt, dec., ac. RICKEY, SHARP &CO., 72.7 Chestnut Street. fe24 in wsre tf _ _ ELI K \ * LINEN STORE, 82S A....reh Street. NEW PRINTED SHIRTING LINENS, Just, Received from Europe. ALEN WILE PLUT WOVEN 511111 T BOSOM. There Fhirt Roeomr, Tflade ezpreeely for up, arc of extra rise and are warranted to oatwear the tat Marlin Shirt bodice. Stitched Shirt Bosoms, every style. Gents' Linen Handkerchiefs, NEW STYLE. BORDER, VERY HANDSOME. We Import our awn Goods, and are able to , Retail at less than Jobbers' Li The Largest Linen - Stack in the City. GEORGE MILLIKEN, Linen Importer, Jabber and Retail Dealer, 828 Arch Street. de%m w s _ NEW SPRING GOODS. We are now receiving our epring supply rf EMBROIDERIES, and HOSIERY, At Greatly Reduced Prices. Nevi• Style Fringed Lace Tidies. • At " Applique Tidies. " Crochet Tidies. Tucked puffed Muslin, . Lace Muslim, Brilliantes, Franck M-Pn, Soft Cambrios, Jaconets, Tape Cheeks, Icfalasooks India M ull, Sheer Lawns, • Organdies, Tarletans, White and Colored Pl.quets, French Percales, Madapolams, Together with a choice amortmera of Collare, Cuffs-, 'Bete, Worked Edgingi, Insertiona l Bands, Cambrielidkfs., HOSIERY. Sheppard, Van Harlingen & Arrison, ICOB Chestnut Street. nill74(4rp FOIL SALE. - - COUNTRY BEAT AN D FARM FOR SALII-04 it"or BA acres, Bristol riko. above 7 lon e a t "" e4 = " d nosr Taeony. Mansion house coach shopis and Sin ening') to! , t. Apply on the premises, or th to R. YULTAR ER, No. OW Locust streel- mh1.4.8.tn,,7t. GERM ANTO W N—FOR SALE—A MOD ERA'rEI. Flee Donee, I,n good order, %%Rh water and gas, and deep lot; pleasantly Mil ooted on..pchool street, mwestlß CO of an en street. W m A m ,;,,vatit !A NI ' rcot. WALNUTS AND ALMONDS.- -NEW CROP GRSNO ble Wa)nute and Paper Shot' Altnondli, for side by J. V. DUSSIFIB & ON, lee South Delaware avenue. J. T. 'GALLAGHER (lAN or Oniley Co.). MANUFAOTTIRING JEWELER, 1300. Chestnut Street, - IMPORTER OF FINE , h i WATCHES 7a,• OF TITE - MOSTI:EL - EBRATED MAKERS. STERLING - SILVER WARE DESIGNED FOR BRIDAL GIFTS. • FECPI JEWELRY: Elamonds, Ccral, Silver Filagree, l'earh, Ctruoesn, Vulcanite and Jet, Ami7thyst, Malachite, Cola Ring, Btono Cameo, Garnet,Cathnnele, Cogageinent do. th at American and English rioted Ware, London Ess. Bouquet, French (locks. Superior Table Cutlery, with Ivory handles, Plain or plot( d blades. Watches and Clocks carefully repaired by competent workman., All Coeds warranted of fird quality, at tow prices. nth t4.,1,t mth..tt NATIONAL WATCH CO, ELGIN WATCH ES ! ELGIN WATCHES! srs. STYLES NOW IN MEET. No. 1. B. \V. Iloymond ; No. 2, Culver; No. 8. 11. Z. Cut. ver ; No. 4, J. T. Ryenou; No. 5. G. Id... Wheeler; No. 6. Mat. I.oftin. But recently pirtee7d before the public. The WPM. RIOT ITY OF THESE 'WATCHES IN DESIGN AND CONSTRUCTION hat already secured for them a NATIONAL REPUTATION, Sild - the DEMAND for them has to RAPIDLY INLREASED that the Company have been compelled to make LARGE ADDITIONS to their force of Employed and NI achinery, in order to meet the requirements of the Trude. Railroad men and others desiring an accurate and retie: ble Watch, are luvlted to examine the B. W. RAYMOND MOVEMENT. One of our leading Railroad Companies have been co well convinced of Ito superiority, that they have furnished It to their Engineers, and It is pronounced by them to be the closest running American Railway Watch yet manufactured, and fully equal to tome of the finest imported \Vetches as a correct Timekeeper. No Movements Retailed by tin:Company, Lail on your Jeweler and at-ir, to see them. Buenas Office and dalesrome, 159 and 161 USE STREET, CHICAGO. rr 1)14r 40 J. E. CALDWELL & ca. 4114 ' NEW 4.7 • Marble Building, Z., No. 902 Chestnut Street, Nave the pleasure of offering to their MrtOnttn/ VERY SUPERIOR GOLD WATCHES; MADE BY I I: R. EICEGrREN; IN 'GENEVA. FROM COPL'NILICIM.. Theca Watches remised the FIRST GOLD MEDAL AT TilE LATE PARIS UNIVERSAL EXPOSITION, rind were manufactured eapreAr for their retail sake. mla;•l..:t J. P. Clark.-PSam'l Biddle, AMERICAN WATCHES, EN aLISH WATCHES, SWISS WATCHES, FEOli ALL THE LEADING MAKERS. 18K. LEONI • INE CHAINS. 18K. CHA.TELAIN CHAINS. 18K. VEST CHAINS. 18K. GUARD CHAINS. 71 Chestnut Street. 712 fcs vireteAfrrl THE FINE ART& Philadelphia, Feb. 26041868. MiC"Chas. 114: DEAR But—Understanding that you deeire to dispose of the Works of Art in your possession, we would slugged that it be done at Public Bale. to that all may have an opportunity to view and W eir adme them. . are, truly yowls, JAY COoKE, JAMES L. CLAGUOBN. J. G. FELL. TUGS. A. SCOTT. C. L. BORIE, IL P. BORIE, CALEB COPE. DANIEL EMITS. Ja. A. J. A NTELO, EDWIN M. LEWIS. TI;OMAS EMITH. JIENRY LEWIS. MR, CHARLES F, HASELTINE'S CHOICE SPECIMENS PAINTINGS (Including nearly every School of Art). WILL BE 0 Free Exhibition AT THE PelltSylVaDia Acadtmy of the Fine Arts:, From dlarob 516 to March 23d. Every day from 9 until 7, and on Baturdayo untlllo. The Entire Collection will be Sold at Public Sale ON TILE • • EVENINGS OF MONDAY, MARCH 2ttd,, AND TUESDAY, !LIKUD 21th,- (lommencing fit Seven o'clock, albs ASSEMPLY BUILDINGS, , W, oorner..Tenth and Chestnut Ms. JAMES A. FREEMAN, Auot'r. inb7.lstro 0 ObOCERS, 110TEL.ICEETERS. FAMILIES AND T Othi rs.--Tbe undersigned has just received a fresh sanity Catawbe,Ual foreia and Champagne Wines,Tonic ale (for invalids), constantly on band. ' P. J JORDAN. 220 Pear street, • Below Third and Walnut streets. C2B.AKER SWEET DORN-25 BARRELS JUST RE, t.D ceived and for sale by JOSEPH B. BUSSISR 10S South Delaware avenue. SECOND EDITION. BYc k'rELEG RAPII. IMPORTANT FROM TENENSSEE. W 114, EXCITEMENT IN WASHINGTON. den, Thomas Telegraphs for Orders. GRANT PROMPTLY RESPONDS The President's Comp Holly Suspected. Effects on the Impeachment Trial. RECONSTRUCTION IN FLORIDA. War In Tenn CSSPO. ittpeclalDeppateli to the Philadelphia Evening Bulletin.) Wasitlenciroce, March 14th.—There is conside rable excitement, this morning, over the news from Tennessee, that trouble may be looked for there. Yesterday afternoon, General Grant rc›• treival a brief despatch from General Thomis, stating that the enemies of the - present State government in Tennessee were organizing for re sistance to the laws, and to get control of the. Kate. General Thomas asked for immediate instruc tions. Ills telegram to General Grant assured the latter that these statements were certainly founded upon positive movements of the rebels and supporters of the President. Without delay, Gen. Grant telegraphed to Gen. Thomas, Without communicating with Mr. John son, or seeding the order through him, to use all the forces at his command to preserve peace and protect the State authorities in their execution of the laws, to their fullest extent, and to report If more troops were needed. Nothing additional has been heard this morn ing, but. there is a feeling of uneasiness, among loyal men, that this movement is made with the direct knowledge of the President, in order to frighten Congress. Ile ,is openly charged with this by U S. Senators, and whatever may have been the intention yesterday, It settles tho ques tion, beyond doubt, that Johnson will not he allowed another day to prepare for trial, in addi tion to what was given him yesterday. Large numbers of Senators and Congressmen are at the War Office, with Secretary Stanton. awaiting further despatches front (lon. Th-mas. Deconstruction in Whiridit. lapteial Ikapaich to the Philadelphia Evening Bulletin.] WASHINGTON, March 14.—Reference was made in your despatches of Wednesday last, to the immanent made by members of the Constitu tional Convention of Florida, to have General Meade change the time of holding the election to ratify the new Consantion, from May to April. General Meade, under date of last evening, tele graphs to Mr. Alder, the member here, that General Grant telegraphs to him his positive opinion, that the Reconstruction act does not permit the Military District Commander to change the time of voting, after the date 'has been fixed upon by_ the State Convention. General Meade, therefore, declines to make the change. Mr. Gleason, the Republican candidate for Lieutenant-Governor of Florida, arrived here last night, direct from Florida. He was selected as. Financial Agent of the State to come north to negotiate the sale of State bonds, issued to defray the expenses of the Convention. He informs your correspondent that the only oppoation to the new Constitution comes from the negro ele ment, led by ox-army officers who, falling to secure nominations, on the State ticket, have incited the necioes against the Con stitution, by making them believe that if it is adopted they will all be returned to slavery, and misleading them with the Idea that a clause in the Constitution so provides. The whites who aro doing all this mischief aro men from the North, with not to exceed six months' residency: in Florida. The two members of the Convention here com plain bitterly of the misrepresentations circu lated against the recent Convention through the correspondence of the New York Tribune from that State, and state that much damage is done to the loyal efforts now being made to restore the State thereby. The rebels arc not manifesting any opposition to the Constitution, and will generally vote for its adoption, through fear that, unless they do so, the Convention, on assembling, will insert a provision in the Constitution disfranchising them. By the Atlantic Cable. LoNoos, March 34, Forenoon.—Consols, 95 for money and account. Erie, 49%; Illinois Cen tral, 8934 ; United States Five-twenties, 72. LlvEnrool., March 14, Forenoon. -- Cotton firmer 'and prices .unchanged, sales probably hales„ Breadstuffs quiet. Qu HEN sroNVW; 'Mara Ti.—The steamshliCribi from New York on the 4th has arrived. From California. BAN FRANI'I6I;O, March 13.—The Savage and Yentuck Mining Companies to-day declared a dividend of $5 per share each, payable on the 14th of March. . . Flour quiet:, extras $8 25; superfine $7 50 Wheat $2 60@12 75. Legal Tenders 72. NEWS BY THE CUBA CABLE. Liberation of Political Prisoners—New Governor of Yucatan—Murder, Duels and Indian fights. HAVANA, March 13, 1868. From Merida, Yuca tan, -we havoinUilligence tn. e7II:L instant._ AIL political prisoners had been liberated and a safe conduct promised to those who were hid away from their homes. General Alatorre had been recalled. When he leaves the peninsula ho be= replaced by Don Matins Zamora, who will also substitute the late unpopular Governor, Cepeda. The latter aban dons politica altogether and will retire to Cam peche. A number of assassinations had taken place, the victims being soldiers. Some duels had also been fought between officers and young Yuca- The Indians of the south had defeated those of the east at Chau, near Santa Cruz, whore the in zurrcalenists now have their headquarters. Drought, Fires; arid Smallpox—Ler. oundri4 Movements. HAvAxA„March 13, 1868. There is a drought The plantation of Lap Nieves, near Bemba, also that of Martinez, at Laguna del Palo, near . Lium7 var. have been burned. There la some smallpox at Puerto Principe. Captairt.44eneral Lersundi is at Sagua. THE COURTS. QUARTIER.Smnorra---Judge Peirce.—A number of cafes wore disposed of on writ of haheas cor pus, but none of them were of public interest. Catharine O'Heleren, convicted of adultery, wee sentenced to ten months in the County - Mon. Nun Pruvs—Cidef Justice Thompson.—Steven son vs. WWiame.—Bcfme re'ported. Still on trial. MEXICO CUBA. RELIGIOUS INTELLIGENCE. ANNUAL CONWEIV. IfENOW. OW TUE 0111WHICII. VOUETH DAY, The Bishoopp being absent at the hour of open. ing, the chair was occupied bfßov. T. J. Thong). son, D. tD., and the opening religious exercises were conducted by Rev. A. Atwoo d. • The Journal of the previous session was read and approved. A - draft - was - ordered - by - the - Conference-to - be drawn on the Centenary Fund for $474 55, in favor of the Stewards' Fund. The report of the Treasurer of the Centenary Fund of the Philadelpnia Conference was pre dented, showing investments of $7,G54 50 belong in to that fund . • The chair stated it was necessary to hold an election for a Trustee of the Educational Fund, to fill the place of Rev. F. Hodgson. Rev.'A. Maned!), S. T. Kemblo and S.' Pan coast were appointed tellers, who received the vote and were granted leave to retire and count. A request was' presented from the Quarterly Conference of the Union M. E. Church, request ing the restoration of • the orders of Thomas Steward. The re quest was granted. Bishop Janes at this point of the exercises en tered the church and occupied the chair.. A request was presented from Broad Street M. E. Church, requesting the return of the parch ments of Richard Shields. The request was granted, and the official order restored. The tellers reported that 213 votes had been east—necessary to a choice, 107—of which Wm. McComas had received 108, and he was declared elected, making the number now elected as fol lows : Dr. Durbin, Dr. Castle, Wm. 8. Gray, Dr. Carrow, James Cunningham and William Mc- Coombs. The Conference was then directed to prepare their ballot for three candidates, which was done, when the tellers were granted leave to retire and count. Tellers report of vote for Trustee of Education Board reported M. D. Kurtz, having received e 6 votes, and F. Hodgson, 31. M. D. Kurtz having received a majority of the votes cast was de clared elected. A paper was offered by W. Mullen and A. Wal. lace recommending to the General Conference a declaration of some kind concerelug the custom of private arrangements being made between certain of the preachers and people in regard to the appointments. Some pertinent remarks were made on the sub ject by W. Mullen and E. J. Way, when, owing to the prose of other business, on motion of G. D. Canoe", it was laid over for the present, and made the order of the day for Tuesday next at 10 o'clock. • Question second of the minutes was taken up. George A. Singer's character -was-passed, and he -y was continued on trial with a view to his transfer to the East Baltimore Conference. Question fifth taken up. S. H. Reisner's char acter priesed.and he was elected to Elder's orders. The quettfon of recommendation and election of local preachers for deacon's orders was called up. The following were elected: Benjamin Heri tage, of Union Church, Philadelphia; Enos Cros land, of Haddington, Pailadelphia: Joseph R. Minker, of Birdsboro. Pa.: Thomas lierrison, t' Norristown, Pa.; William Kershaw, of Newark, Delaware; Samuel Logan, of Principle, Maryland; George B. Cutler of Onancock, Vs. Joseph M. McGaw from the "Evangelical As eociation," was admitted as a Deacon in the M. E. Church, after examination by the Bishops. The tellers reported the result of the election for representatives to the several conferences as follows : 205 votes were cast, necessary to a choice 103. Vaughan Smith, R. H. Pattison and T. C. Murphy were declared elected. A motion prevailed that the three persons having the highest votes be declared the alter nates. Rev. T. J. Thompson and Joe. Mason declined, and their request was granted. A motion prevailed that a ballot be held for three alternates,and the tellers were granted leave to retire and count. On the call for the recommendation__ of local-: deacons and elders, the following-named local preachers were' represented and elected: Michael Z. Senderling, Jos. J. Camp, IL G. Simpers, James Murray, P. Henry Rattling, John T. Reed, John Perrino, Francis Scoffin , Maxwell Rowe and Rev. Edward S. Marks. An elder of the Independent Presbyterian Church was recommended for admission, and his orders recognized in the M. E. church. The following visiting ministers were intro= dnced to the body: Rev. Dr. Albert, of the Lu theran Church; Rev. Mr. Mitchell, Presbyterian Chneeh: William Codville, of Canada: Rev. Mr. Hand, 0. 8. Presbyterian; Rev. Mr. Perry and Rev. Mr. Ruling, of the New Jersey Con, ference. The Bishop announced the transfer of Rev. F. floilg,Son, D. I)., to the East. Baltimore Confer ence. " • Dr. liodgson feelingly addressed the Confer ence, after which the following resolutions were presented by Rev. F. J. Thompson and adopted: lb/tress, Our highly esteemed and deafly beloved brother Itev. F. liodsc.en, D. P., after so long a Confer ence connection and FO many years of distingtilthed eer viee among ses, is about to leave us lei a field of labor not connected with this Conference; therefore Brßolred, That tin the removal, by transfer, of our brother gust Confer. nee has lost a devoted and successful mini. ter, and an able and di-tiuguished theologian. That we assure our brother of the kindle let ling and high regard sat kit the entertain for him, and that eh/mid he. in the providence of God, be returned to us. nillextend to him a hearty IN elceme. Rescir. d. That we commend him to the, affectionate regard and highest consideration of the brethren of the Fast Baltimore ter. focnee of the church to which be simil be appointed. Tellers reported whole number cast 169, necessary to a choice 85; no one having a ma jority, the following named were elected by count vote Rev. Messrs. •T. J. Thompson, Chap lain, and S. W. Thomas. A motion prevailed for the appointment of a committee on conference boundaries in case of - division. After announcement of the appointments for Sabbath, the conference adjourned with benedic tion by Father Boehm. The following are the appointments for the pulpits of the city to-morrow: St. George's-10302a . Durbin; 7%, B. F. Price. Lindannith ; 714, C. W. Ayana. S. 3 :-Mtestionarv - Anamoma7. 2% o'clock, J. Lindainuth. NV eaten , - Ordinatioi - M - Elde-m,-4.'adei - -maghlhg - br-tie'- Bishop • 7% P. M. Rev..l. S. Cook. Ileddin-Rev. W. Hammond, C. L. Schaffer. Second Street-J. E. Kessler and C. Whittaker. Calvary-Wm. O'Neill and John Hough. 8.8. Mission Anniversary at II o'clock. • Siloam-15.v. Kemblo and 13 T. String. Central-J. A. Brindle and 8. W. Knrtz. Missionary Anniversary at IL Address by Rev. J. H. Alday. St. Paul's-J. 4. Merritt and 8. W. Thomas. Union-1034, T.J. Thompson ,• 7%, J. F. Chaplain. Fifth Street-10%, Dr. Holdich; 7%, A. D. Davis. St. John's-Geo. V. Burke, 10%; J. B. Qulag, 734. Ilancock-J. B. Maclaughlin. 103¢: W. B Wood, 734. Front Street-1034¢, T. F. Poulson; 734. Jae. Cook. Se netuary-10%.J. 0. Lypherd ; 7,%, 0. W. Landreth. , Nineteenth Street-W. Rink; Lindamuth. Poi t Ricianond--10%, E. J. D:Popper ;'7hc - S. - 13.1Cembler. - Spring Garden Streets-1034. J. F. Chaplain; 734, J. W. ricrac n. Trinity-10%. R. H. Nadal; 7%, A. M. Wiggens. Frankford-8. N. Chew. Nazareth--im F. Bloom; aes. S. L. Gracey. Centenary-10%, J. Shield's; 734, A. A. Fisher. Ebenezer-1031:, B. F. Price; 7%, J. Aspril. Arch Street-1034, C. P. Maiden. - "Fmi6ly=lo3s7;et - Cunnhighamr 734; - .1; F. Swindells. Green Street-A. hi Wiggins. T. Y. Aston. Summerfield-10,%, John Allen; 7%, J S. J. McConnell. Etc venth Street-10%, H, & Thompson; 734, W. J. Mills, Coliocheink-10%. Jas. Cook ; .1% James Conner. Broad Street-T. L. TomPkintiOn. Nos th Baptist-8. C.Bare. - - Wharton Street-1034. J. Y. Ashton; 7%, F. Church. Coates Street Presbyterian-T. J. Quigly. Messiah Lutheran-S. B. Best. Thirty.eiglith Street-G. A. Phoebus. Scott-1036, T. S. Williams; 734, B. T. Gardner. Tabertacle-1034, J. B. Cook. Second Moravian-734. G. T. Hurlock. South Presbytetian-J. I. Taft. Lut herbaum -W. W. Redman. Salem , M. P. 'Church-1034, E Townsend; 7 - %.C. W. Buoy. Calvary W. '• Mt. Carmol-J. M. Hinson, D. McKee. . Cheitenham-T. Kirkpatrick. Pitman's Chapel-T. Montgomery . C. IL McDerrnond. 'West Federal street-it. B. Hazzard, J. .I.• Lewis. Fortieth street-W. Codville, T. L. Tomkinson. Centenary-J. Shields. a. A. Fisher.. • naddinston--B G. Grove, Ilestonville-J. C. Pearson, . Paitehalvillsi-V. Gray. - Mariners' Bethel-E. J. Way, W. 0. Neill. Itabary, West Philadelphia -D. George. a • -13ridesburg-W. Patent- E. Miller. W. P. Congregational Church, Eleventh Ward -J. P. Crouch. .• Enton Bethel- H. B.:Mauger, • , • -. Ordination or Deacons in Union .131:E. Church. liermosi by Rev. T. J .Thomplloll. ' • Ordination of Elders In Western 'Church-Samson by Rev. Dr. Kynett; at II P. M. Father Boehm, the aged veteran from New-York, is an nminced to preach, in the Asbury Si. E. Church, West Philadelphia, at 336 o'clock la the afternoon, and conduct a baptismal service at that hour. •_ - The Forth-seventh ,Anniversary, of the Philadelphia Conference Missionary Society will, be he'd at Ilorstailtu. sal Hall, on Monday evening. the 16th instantcom !fleecing at 73 o'clock, to be aadreseed by Bevis. H. H. Cleveland, S. Foeter, 0. H. Tiffany, J. P. Devlin. Thebilore Tilton hadliropped l'The American' Woman" and taken up "Mind,r a subject, with which hole, if poesible, still more 'utterly unac quainted. ' TRE DAILY . EVENING BULLETIN-„4-211II;ADELPHIA., SATURDAY, lilAlttill 14,1868. t3ITY LLFITIING STATE OF TILE THERMOMETER THIS DAY AT - , THE BULLETIN OFFICE. 10 A. M M deg. 12 M., ..01 des. 2P. M 112 deg. • ' Weather cloudy. Wind Southwest. STIMET CLEANING.—Mr. Henry Bickley, the contractor for cleaning the streets, got his men to work on Tuesday morning , last on ..Market street, and up to the present time the northern side of that thoroughfare has boon cleaned from DelkWilre_aTentita_to Thirteenth_elteet.:Abollt_ 500 loads of dirt were removed. On Thursday the men commenced operations on Delaware avenue and worked north as far as Willow street, when they were interfered with by the rain. About 300 loads of dirt were removed from the avenue. This morning the scavengers were placed on Third, Fifth and Sixth streets from Walnut to Chestnut, and on Chestnut street wast ward from Third street. Twenty-four carts are employed, and the Ice and mud is rapidly disap pearing. Many of the streets are yet so ice-bound that they cannot be cleaned. CITY MORTALITY.—The number of interments in the city for the week ending at noon to-day, was 2+48, against 253 the same period last year. Of the whole number 145 were adults, and 113 children-70 being under one year of age; 118 wire mules, and 110 females, 77 were boys, and 66 girls. The greatest number of deaths occurred in the Second Ward, being 18. and the smallest number in the Twenty-eighth Ward, where only two were reported. The principle causes of death were: Croup, 5; consumption, 42; convulsions, 13; dropsy, 1 difea.ve of the heart, 45; debility, 7: typhoid fever, 10; inflammation of the brain, 12; inflammation of the throat, 7-, inflammation of the lungs, 29; marasmus, 6, and old age, 10. Bwtvor.m.--Leonard Flogans, a machinist. at No. 1227 North Tenth street, was swindled yes terday by the Custom4touse dodge. Three men entered his place and enteredinto conversation with him: Finally one said that he had some goods in the Custom-house and had not 80E den t funds to pay the duties. He asked Mr. Flogans to loan him $250, and offered to leave as security a lot of very nice looking watches. One of the other men examined the time keepers and was very anxious to make the loan. Mr. Flotons, however, forked out the $250, and took the watches. As the man did not: return at the ap pointed time, the watches mide.rwent a critical examination, and it was found that the whole lot were not worth over $25. Cor.LEnE CO3l bIENCE3IEN annu a 1 com mencement exercises of tho Woman's Medical College. of Pennsylvania, wiis held at. noon to day at the College building, North College avenue and Twenty-second etreet i in—presuic-o of a fair audience. The degree of Doctor of Medicine was - can- fi rrtd upon the following graduates : Noiry C tire ith Pa., • IPclin E. IriA, Mary E Grene. 4 Y., (Frances A Rutherford N.Y., A delta f tine, Mripii. A gnen M. .Johnsen, Ohio, liarrh t Preston, Pa., Itiarah A. Loan, N. Y.. bleu E. Wilron. irraneena E. Porter, N. Y. The Valedictory Address wt.s delivered by Prof. Erneline ll.. Cleveland. This institution is in a very flourishing con dition. CIIARGF.I) wJra ROI3I3EUY.—AId. Fitch had be fore him this morning Snian Slaughter, charged with the larceny of $lOl 53, the property of Elizabeth Goldey, residing at No, 2109 Ridge ave nue. Mrs. Goldey missed $lO about two weeks ago, aid yesterday *9l 59 disappeared. 'Mrs. Slaughter, who occupied a portion of the same house, was suspected of the robbery, and, upon being arrested, said that the money was in Mrs. Goldey's bed, and, with the exception of the unit ten dollars, was found there. The accused was held for a further hearing. Armsit-rso SVlClDE.—Yesterday afternoon a German got upon a rake of ice, in the Schuylkill near Fairmount, pushed out into the stream, and then plunged into the water. went under. _twice and _then called lustily for help, at the same time making a desperate effort to get upon the ice again. He waa taken out by a policeman, and said that he bad intended to drown himself, on account of domestic troubles. The chilliness of the water, probably, changed his mind. BAD ROye.—Three yonths,namedJohn Rooney, James Maxwell'and William Ryan, aged from 1t to 18 years, were arrested and taken before Aid. Bonsall, on the charge of malicious mischief in damaging the property of John O'Connor, on Ellsworth street, above Ninth. They were com mitted by Aid. Bonsall. MARK ET THIEF.—An Englishman named John Jones was before Alderman Toland this morning. De was arrested for breaking open a stall in the Callowbill Street market. He was then recog nized as one of three men who, a few days ago. opened a cellar at Crown and Callowhill pocked about ilOo worth of provisions in• a wheelbarrow and went off. He was committed tor a further hearing. RE4 FIVING STOLES GOMM. - Robert and Jane Howell were before Alderman Heins yester day, upon the chatge of receiving stolen goods. It is alleged that they bought a lot of ingrain carpet which had been stolen from a house on Hope street below Harrison. Howell keeps a second-hand store on Litimow street. The ac cused were held in i6OO bail to answer. TIIE RIGHT REV. G. M. RANDALL, Bishop of Colorado, will preach and .admiuister the rite of Confirmation at St. David's Church, Mau ft-morrow evening. DIED. MA I:KLEY.- At St. • Auguetine, Florida, on the Fill Edward C Markley. The n and friends of the family. nl4O l,a l c No. M. A. Y. M are reenectfully invited to attend hiafuneral, iroin hie late residence, No "2.i South Sixteenth street, on Tuprdav afternoon, the 17th inet., at 2 o'clock. TILL SECOND OF A SERIES OF UNION Miteionmy services to beheld during Lent in enoeral churehe!=fif Germantown, will be hold at Calvary Church. en TI ESI /AY, March 17, nt 7'; M. Rev. Dr. Howe, Rev. Dr. Twirus of New York, and °there. will make ltl vied tee' HED, DING M. E. CHURCH. SIXTEPNTII BE low Coates. Morning, 10X; Rev. W. Hammond; 73%<, Rev. G. L. Shaffer; 3, presentation, of Mieelonlry Certificates to Sabbath School. Appropriate addreeeee. it* .Seven per cent, First Mtge, Bonds OF THE Danville, Ifaz eton & Wilkesbarre It.R. FREE FROM ALL TAXES. This road will connect with 'the 'Northern Central. Philadelphia and Erie. Lehigh yalley. Lehigh. Naviga tion, and Hazleton Railroads, and . orono one of the richest sections of the g• eat middle Coal field. We offer for sale a limited amount or these 'Ronde at the very low rate of lib AND ACCRUED INTEREST. BOWEN,& FOX, 13 Merchants' Exchange . !.. mlillgann) • NO. 917 WALNUT STREET. , WOOD. HANGINGS Positively don't fail to see them before ordering anY , thing oise. Wall paper is now among the • "Things That Were." WOOD H B iNGINGS Cost no more, and are selling by e thousand •rolls Per .day,No SCO them .and GO convinced . o speculation. hit stubborn Meta. ninistiro _ . 1 r2ILPAL ESTATF.- THOS. d',SONS 8 ALE.--MODERN Tin ee.rtory Erick Residence. No. 407 South Eighth etre et. below Pine street. (ln(lteisday, April 7th, !' 113€8, 12 o'clock, noon. will be sold'at , public sale, at the ,' Philadelphia Exchange, all that w . huilt, modern thre , ... 1 T ylt 4 dory ' flick ruereugge, wit threcestory ,bark huildineand lot of 'ground a . to on the i engt side of Eighth sheet. south of Pine f 1 4 ,reet. No. 4G7, cent tin lug in front on Eighth street 19 ft', it!, And extending' in dm th 114 feet. The,bopes is well bUilt, and recently been rsg!lgllijgg r iggingagi r ei l 4::RTOn e ll i at i L l i l v= watenclogets; gas a, a other moder*einivemences. lar' Clear of all fiecumuranee. ' : I: '. ! 1 'rerms--Half cosh. Immediate poimession. K. THOIVIAB tt. PIONA. Auctioneem . 18n and 141 ktouth rourtb street. , . i RELIGIOUS :voricEs. FIN4NCIAL. WOOD HANGINGS. THIRD EDITION. CONGRESSIONAL PROCEEDINGS. PURCHASE OF TERRITORY. -A-N-IN-TERES-T-ING-DIMAM Xl.th Congresti-Second Itession. Wagniberrost. March 14. Ii tier. —The proceedings tn.day tieing con fi ned to the general debate. as it in Committee of the Whale on the btate of the Union, Mr. Dighy Wahl addressed the House on the question whether t ongrees is bound to make appropriation/I for the taming out of treaty atipulatione, expreening his opinion in support of the affirmative of that question, be cause of the difficulties in which the country might ho placed by the adopti to of the oppositoview lie held that the treaty making power was lodged excltutively in the esident and the Senate, that their action was a finalty, and that when once a treatria made, the foreign power ith w hick it is made becomes a party to the quettion, which is no longer simply a question between the House. of Pepresentatives and the Exi•cutive. Mr. Maynard ('Fenn) suggested that the powers with ta nit h ft( titles are Node are hound to know the Ameri• ran Constitution, and to he aware of the fact that the 'President and Sc. ate had no right to pledge tho payment of a elan of money. Night' reminded the gentleman from Tennessee that it wee a mooted iteration even in this country, anti that Washington and a wtmle line of distinguished men held to the contrary opinion. Mr. Maynard admitted that the remedy did not lie against the pow tr tt ith which the treaty was made, in re fusing to reeks tint appropriation, but lay asattist the President and the Senate in making an unwire treaty. ilirlty said that in that remark the gentleman trout 5 nue spec hit the question exactly. , Mr. weon eN. Y ask, d Mr. Malty whether lie denied the abstract right of the Hoare of iteprete.ntativett to judge of the policy of making appropriations of the public money under any circqmstancee whatever. Mr. ilighy reminded the gentleman that he said in the outset rf hie remarks, that if this filmset/r was to be scttit d between the President and the denote on one side, and the Donee of fiepresentativen on the other. lie would . go at far as any member in that line of argument. lit did not doutt at all the right of the floin‘e of RePre scntatives. hut waeonly say/ing why the rights of the Berme should not be exercised. Mr. Weed—Son admit the right. r..Higby-1 certainly admit the right, hot lefty that it is directing all our force and all our strength where it it of no use, when we talk about what the President anti Senate have done. So long as tie re is a poser outside of the itooerument that can demand the fulfilment of tr. e treaty, the Russian Government presumed. and have a right to presume, that in the treaty for the cerrion of Alaska It mai dealing with the treatyPunking power of this nation. Mr. Ilighy went on to argue that the treaty having been exchanged and ratified, the ten Prey delivered over to the Government of the Lnited titEltl , ,thei , lriodletiOn Of R114151a haxirg been withdrawn and that of the United btatea substituted for it, this nation was hound In good faith to curry out the stipulations of 'the treaty,. and to ray over to the Emden Government the sum agreed noon for the transfer. He declared his belief that good policy and statesmanship dictated the carrying out of the treaty ith P,natia, aid that no difficulty should be made wth that Government which has alt.ayit been most friendly/ to the Gowen meat ar tl people of the United States. Mr. Waeht urns /Wm ) replied hereby to portions of Mr. Eitel Vs argon:cut particularly as to the climate and lot earn; by of A litskr,and as.to.tle etonns prevailing on 'Phat conk. and reading from reports to show the had character of the land and tea. Ike?! Weather Report. Mardi. 11. Thermo- 9A. M. • Wind. Weather. meter Port Hood, E. Raining. .',O Halifax, S. Foggy. 44 Portland, W. Cloudy. 44 Boston, W. Clear. 42 New York, S.W. Clear. 42 Wilmington, DeL, N. W. Clear. 44 Washington. D.C. W. Foggy. 50 Biebniond. Va., W. Clear. 'A Oswego, , .8. Clear. 40 Buffalo, 8. E. Clear. 52 Pittsburgh, W. Clear. 38 Cbica2o, 8. Clear. 50 New Orleans, S. W. Clear. 7:2 Mobile, W. Cloudy. 711 Key West,* W. Cloudy. 74; Havans,t W. Clear. 7t; *Bar. 32-2:2; - Ulan 30-22. 081 MARY. Jobn Doyle. Brief notices in the English journals lately announced the death of John Doyle, eretwile to famous as a political caricaturist under the initials H. B. The initials were probably gum Peed to him by the 'made of pencil to wicked. whiehis the - heat - one - for - effective - and =rapid- - sketching ;tut he combined them into a monogram, the upper and lower division of whlchboth formed 1. D., the initials of his proper name. Doyle had been in oblivion for nearly a quarter of a century, the advent of. Punch, and the applies lion of the wood cut to comic liters. lure in general,. having paralyzed the lithographic porte-crayon en far as that branch was concerned: We have Beer but little notice of Doyle's career, and the men tion of hie death was accompanied by meagre reminies center of him only. He genus chiefly to have been re lax-Inhered as the father of Richard IThyle, who.° grace. ful fancies were formerly one of the moat attractive tea-. tures of Punch, .from which publication he eeceied' many years - ego,- on- account of the /hafts levelled by it against the Emmen Cathelice. But Jobe Doyle's caricatures are a etandard political history of England during a portion of three reign& and some idea of their number may be formed from the fact that the key to them, in which brief descriP th EH are given of each design is a large quarto volume. one of the brief notices written at the time of his death etatit that he commenced We in come humble capacity in the horsehold of Judge Mayne, in Dublin. This ie loutishly true and it is likely that hie employment wee in the stables, for it is known to the present . writer flat F oyle's cattiest chore In art were oxetelies of horses. jockeys and stable seenes made by him while employed in route each capacity as groom at the Curragh of liildare. Judge hi ayne'e POll. Neal 'Mayne, from his I ralyercirly swarthy comPlexinn was a famotie fox-hunting bowman and steeptmehese rider. Doyle made elcuteliee of him in come of his sporting teats. and 'we have heard it I toted that it was ow ing to hie advice that the voting artiq I went tc London. there to enter the political ar, no with Lie pencil for a lance. 'lhe political career I cf Uani, I(Toenail furnished Doyle.. who we. one of the logic Tory E tripe. it ith no end of cult tie for hie .atirto tic delineated the great agi titer with features which. lea. el er ere gernted, never loot their vat - V.llms, of el erecter. Broaeh aui was ever a sure card for I. cyle.hte in itchy nose and shepffird'e plaid trow sent tigitri” often in the bold sketchy lithograrlis I .ng before PtoMlc had bi.,uctst them to the wood-block. Once lie was pro pLc lie in his caetoon. lie represented Loot Sy iirnham, apropos of some move taken by that Matt ~to au in polities, a' pitching over his lierpc's Iposd into a peel of water. Soule yearn after this Lord Sydsii. hem. then Governor-General of Canada, had a severe fall f rem his hose, which resulted in his death in a few weeks. Doyle -, as fond of petting his characters on horeeh ick, si he never the subject admitted of it, because he dre.v the borer with facility and spirit, his early occupation bitting furnished him with opportunities for studying the animal, Palmerston figured much in his cartoons. as did Melbourne, also, and the hietoricel nose of the great Duke of Welliz gton o no frequently presented there without notch exaggeration. Unlike life predecessors, Gillray and Pot-huri, Doyle was nevervuls or. the coarse obscenity of caricaturists being nowhere traceable in his works The time ft,r that sort of thing was played out before Doyle arove, and allusions that were tolerated, nay. ap preciated, fifty years ago, would not have admitted in deer nt society twenty years later. In some of Banbury's • esricaturee aimed at the matrimonial difficulties that existed between George IV. and Queen Carolina, actinn a shied reale:Wed....and words inecribed on thsuheoT,_tth hat at thee --- ttreeent _ publisher to prosecution in anicivilized exceptingcommunitiee— , perhape, those of Dot ton and New a k, teed even in some of George Crnikehank's earlier , pred eel lone on the came toil* ct the same ribald greet. neES in to he observed. Doyle was never guilty of the lik.. nor were hie design to much caricatures, in the strict sense cf the term, as dashing likenesses of the poli tical men of the day. to which situation, rather than har liqu Made of physique. he imparted the proper touches of humor and entire. A compl-to edition Doyle'e cartoons, with the key to them, nmet be attires in this coun try, and would be invaluable to any writer touchiog upon English political events of thirty or forty years ago. He has been described by tome of the *Mere, who remem beret him when dead, as having been an indifferent draughtsman.. Buch e _however, is not the fact. In his eke tchy. cravonnarte style there was generally the intention, at least, .of anatomical • correct wee and true composition. Far granger in these points arc hie designs then those of tallrav, Banbury. Si. dby.or any of the English caricaturists who flourished either a little before his time or were coteinporary with him in his earlier dare, Ws renouncement of the pencil while be wee vet in the vigor of life. may be attributable to the necessity which :wore about that time for using wrod blocks as the material for dips lug_ on. Doyle'a hand feed grown, - from long uelfge, - th the lithographic - crayon, and he would probably have experienced much difficulty in adapting it to the more precise and cramped process of drawing on WO( d. MARINE BIIL.LETTN. PORT OF PHILADELPHIA—Bisuais 14 tin See ifarine Bulletin (m Stcth Page ARIti'VED gTLI IS DAY. Rehr J J Spencer, Flen ing, 1d days from Charleaton, with ind.e to D 1:1 Stet-on & Co. Behr H G Band, + , and from New Yolk, with nide() to LPthbury, Wiekerebam & 1. A Bent ett. Laird, from Washington. cLEA Rt 71118 DAY. Say Frank B Colton. Robinson. 114rbado., Jno R Rue. Fehr L A Bennett, Laird. Washington. 'I yler & Co. Sr hr Dirk Williams. Comm Richmond. Audenried&Co Srhr Pert British!. Ireland. Georgetown. DC. Caldwell, Gordon & CO. Scbr 3lanawav, Hampton. 311tIvIlle, Lehigh Coal and av Co. Sellr Maly E Ranker, Beane. Baotou, E R Sawyer Co. petertitoollnau, Robinson, New York. D Cooper. Correepoudeucaof the - Phlladelphla Eaehatym. LY.WEB. DM.; llareb i—t; AM. The 'bllowne.vf peas arrived at the Breakwater yeater.. day: ParkP J W Itorten. from Sago., Shp ffield. from Leo,' frog t lenfgettap, nod . ac•ir Rough Dia. nun iron , rardeita.. nil for Ptilladalphizi.. - C Colgate. fiem lo.pholn for Boatan and Praucia Ariherve. ttom Jackeouville for Provideuce put in hero tern ipiile.• jtai k Linda, for 11avre ; brigs Anna A Lane, for Mar. reilird .1 B Klibv, for Sagna J D Lincoln. for Trioid4d. and G W t hope; tor Septa. all trout Philadelphia, are de tained here by head wind. Wind E. • 0 3 0 Youre. &c. JOSEPH LAY • --- ^ • • •• MEMORANDA. Phip Andel, Honey, cleared at Liverpool 28th 81t. for tht. t 0rt.... d-varner M France. r), Grace, cleared at Nes? York yea. terd ay for Liverpool. Sehr Hive Jacket, tailed !rota Halifax tuitnut for thfo 'port: • Behr Lady Emma, Saedecor. cleared Lit tialtinnoro. yex terday for this port. . . 2:30 . WO FOURTH EDITION. BY TELEGRAPH. FROM N3F,'W THE STUBBS - TYNG THE DEFENDANT ADMONISHED. IRVASIIINGTON". From Nosy ]fork. Nitw YORK, M arch 14.—The Rev. Stephen IL Tteg, Jr. was publicly reprimanded this morn ing in die Church or the Transfiguration, for a Violation cf the Canon of the Church, in offi ciating in the parish of another minister without Lis consent. . . An immense concourse of spectators filled the church. Bishop Potter administered the repri mand, expisining the nature of the offence, and cautioning Rev. Mr. Tyng against a repetition of it. The Rev. Mr. Tyng sat in the aisle of the church, in plain costume, Manifesting no emotion and made no remark whatever. In the Supreme Court to-day, in the case of the people against the Directors of the Erie Railroad Company, Judge Barnard appointed George A. OFgood receiver of the sum realized by the sale of eight millions of stock issued in violation of the injnection. Mr. Field objected to Judge Barnard trying the Pste on the eronnd that he was personally in terested in the litigation. 111 e Judge ovtiruled the objections and dis claimed the imputation. Mr. Diven was produced in court by the Sheriff, and liberated on nominal bail. From Washington. [Spe•cial Do - patch to the Philadelphia Evening Bulletin.] WAsnix(yros, March I.l.—The House Judiciary Committee, at their meeting to-day, had before them a delegation of Indians, representing vari ous tribes, from Southern Kansas, who are opposed to the extension of jurisdiction of the Courts of Kansas over their country. A resolu tion was introduced to make this extension some time ago, and the Indians are opposed to it. At the present time the Courts of Arkansas extend over their country, and they are opposed to any change: The Purchase of Walrussia. [Special Deopatch to the Philadelphia Evening Bulletin.] Vissititsi.toN, March I.4.—The Home Com mittee on Foreign Affairs will take up for final action next Tuesday morning, the subject of the appropriation for the purchase of Walrnssia. They have nearly completed a resume of the whole subject, and will decide at that time what action they will recommend. Although tothing is positively known, there is good reason for lalteNing that the report will be against any appropriation for the purchase. The Senate is not in session to-day. The House met for general debate. But few members are present, and the galleries are almost empty. several speeches have been made on finance. Worreapondence of the Aesociated Press. WAsniNivroN, March 14.—The fractional cur rency issued from the printing bureau of the Treasury Department during the week ending to day, amounted to $282,600. The following ship ments were made during the same period: Notes.to Assistant-Treasurer at New Or leans $200,000 Notes to Assistant-Treasurer at Philada.. 100.000 National Banks and others • 33,964 National Currency to Assistant-Treasurer at New York 200,000 National Currency to Assistant-Treasurer . at Charleston 50,000 National Banks and others, 156,834 The United States Treasurer holds in trust far the National Banks. at y this date, the following amounts, viz.: As security for circulation, $341,637,400 ; for deposits of public moneys, $38,177,950. National Bank notes issued during the week, $131,390; Total amount to date, $306,730,721. From this is to be deducted the followinz : Mutilated bil's returned, $6.557,305; notes of insolvent banks redeemed and burned by the United States Treasurer, $389,860; leaving an actual circulation at this date, $299,783,556. Fractional currency redeemed and destroyed during the week, $392,200. From Baltimore 13.kurtmoitE, March 14.—The City Councils last !lied passed over' the Mayor's veto the ordinance for the rellcf of the Conuellsville and Pittsburgh Railroad Company, The Erie Railroad Fight. Sons fete days ago iniiinctions were issued against certain directors of the Brie Railroad. restraining them from acting as pitch, owing to a difficulty vt hich exists between a part of the etockholders, headed by Corinne dote Vanderbilt, and another section led by D evid Drew, Prepident Eldridge and "%lettere. Gorda and Fisk. Gem 1 (Ain. the Vice• President of the road. was arrested on Thursday night while about to take the frolic tor Albany, to give We testimony be fore the Legislative Cenneittse, and warrants ve ere , IPeil, d le be served on Bun's. Fisk and Gould, and several of the directors, but the two former gentlemen evade d the siren. end in conjunction with several of the others and a ntimbee of the empl 'yea, took the archivea end portable property of the company to Jersey City. '1 hey are new stopping at Taylor's liotel, Jersey City, nod they de there that they are in possession of $8 000oISI belonging to the company. Rooms have been hired in the betel, and eentinels arc potted at the doors to prevent tha entrance of the avenging minions of the Sheriff. Mr Drew ling posted a se ntini I at his bed-room door and the keyhole is stuffed with cotton wadding to avoid alt outtide inter. f venee. Bet orient are. uartered in the bar room before being admitted to their prege nee, and the rebellious direetore assume the I ok of injured men in conversa tion, while declaring that they are prepared to tight it o it JD Jersey if it takes a month of Sundays. In relation to the injut ctions served by Judges Barnard and Gilbert; one director paid that things had goner.) far in Now York that injunctions would goon be served on people for eat ing their breakfasts. 'obey also state that they have to pay only a doll , r a Any for board in the hotel. but this set me rather doubtful from the number of birds consumed and the quantities of champagne. Some of the gentle. intae—LagL_Met,Vneleette, - othearm courteous and et di gay nothing, and not a few are strong for the old Commodore; one director declar ing "that it is all nongen•e , to fight against Van derbilt as he is the smartest old man in' the country and has energy enough to eat up ale the rest of the [hectors." In the corrid re of the hotel the moat narrowing buttoreholeing wee carried on yesterday; everything woo done with the greatest air of secToo.7;larits roll, of paler were borne into private rooms. Yesterday afternoon, while the banquet woe at its height, and high wassail reigned, some mysteriona individual appeared, at d the conspirators were summoned, terroratricken• _front the "feast of reason and the tiow of soul." Every . one kit the dinner but Mr. Gould who - remained for a while, when suddenly a voice pealed fettle front the corridor: - Go and bring - Gould—hurry up—this is fearfuL Tell Lim to leave Lie dinner. There is going to be a con ference. Get him—out " "Why, what's the matter; in it a flank movement of Schell's? " said another, pulling oat a cigar in a revolting Earner. Never mind, get out. But stop! Gould has a family Smith n motions are damteroug—let him finish that quail —there la bloody work in there—he will need • meshing to eta in hint in the perils before us. lam awful afraid of Vander hilt." At a late hour bet night the "rebels" had deserted in gee at numbers, and it was proposed by som e meters to rend a flag of truce tte Commodore Vanderbilt. The blockade ail' continum—lV. E. Woftei qt.to-day. FINANCIAL and cotamEucrAL. The Philladelpb I Sales at the Philadel inusT 60001186-20x'67 cp B6wn 1074 1200 Clty 68 new c 103 1100 do 10 •. e 3000 Ph LettiebGidln 923 1000 Morris CanBl Beatloan 86 nrrwrit. 2000 City 6s new 103 • 600 Penna 69 t tiers -1043 i Si 00 Lehigh 0 Goln in 0 2,4 12000 Snell Canal bds 62 22 eh.Liaro & Amit 12534 16 eh Penna b 5 5511 156 eh do e 5538' 46 eh do 50',1 9EOO , f ito S 7 . 3-109'.1y 100 trAtu US/54208'0 ,Ty MO do do 107), 14100 Catn&Am Os' SO 9T 900 eh Hestonv'elt t GO is 11. P1111,A1)PLVIIIA, Saturday. March 14, -The Plipply of int nor coutin , ten large,an d the rat.% of di,,count aro ntead y at 0 , 0 per cent. "an call" and ti.BBM per cent for good, commercial paper. Trade' le fur front active, and un'il there la roma rovtlitino change from the preaent. condi tion of the market can be looked tor;, blotto were doll toalav, and the bneinem nuuecnlly light. Covernment Loans worn fraction h!stho , r,' and (loot it Jim ut our coot/show, State 1. , !41110 of Me 'f)r't 3:15 O'Cllock. Money Marko t. hie, Stock Exchabge. 1000 CamtArn6s'B9 97,4 S 600 Pa 6e 1 ecr 104 h; Buoo Elmira R 7,4 100 sh Reedit Ite 4; aa 100 sh do eGlwn 45% 10 eh Hazleton Coal 4731 116 tih 2d Sa 3d. 61, R N BOARDS. 350 oh Readit 4634 100 eh do 46.56 (N) sh do B.swuttlt 46.44 100 eh Leh Val It *A 5334 100 sb thttasv DO 21 e 0 Sea Nov la so,tiut 2226. 100 6h Itetstiß • 40V 3 nh ltiitehill R dT 200 sh entaw Dr 2714 100 5h PlRlStErielt 2G% Feriae, sold at 104!,. City Loam , were In better soonest, and closed at 103.,; for the New, and R 4 for the OM le.,' ,suer. LohlOti Gold Loatinte - c/ined to nr;. and wart weak' Re ad trig Railroad was a shade lower. closing at 41; 60 ar 46 60. Pennsylvania Railroad' sold at 55. , ;'—n0 chinge. and Catawisea Railroad preferred at 27hj--$111:1 advance of , 34;125M WAS bid for Camden and AmboY for Mine Hill Railroad ;113': far Lehigh Valley Railroad; 32 for North Pennsylvania Railroad; 2iiM for Phliadelphia and Erie, and 4494 for Northern Central Railroad.. Canal `Flocks were firmer, but the transactions were Ulr important. Passenger Railway Ahares were quiet; 68 wan bid tor Be gan/Land Third Streets; 4Z% for Chestnut and Wenn street 00 for Green and Coates, and fur Elestoriti Meeere. De Haven & Brother. No 40 South Third Etna, make the following quotations of the rates of emshange today, at IP. M.: U. 8. Os, of Pm 111.14@l1134; do.. 14111, 110l(4110:la; do., 1864, 107%@106!..; do., 1866, 108v - 414,65, , , do., 1865. new, 108%0107; do.. 1867, new, 107(41073il Fives, Ten-forties, 1011-10101:4; 7 8-10 e. June, 105;d41073ir July, 106".@1063,i ; Compound interest Notes—Jun 1164, 19.40; July, 1864, 19.40; August, 1861, 19.40; Octobe 1861, 19.40; December, 1864, 19.40; May, 1866, 1 71f01841; August, 1885, 161.&"(417J.1"; September, 1865. 16ki®1 1 33.1; Oct° ber, 1865, 157 , .1"®163,;; American Gold, 1:190189;.; ;1 Silver 17036(412. Smith, Randolph , Co., Bankers. 16 South Third street. quote at 11 o'clock an follows: Oold, 139?•4; United States Sixes. 1%1, 111? 6.4111 IS: United States Fivatwentles. 186 k. 110',;8110't: do. 1861, 1073£0 1u8; d 0.1865. 108..'00108.fi'i do. July, 1.865,106, 7 „10,107 do. 1867; 107!.i'co07x;;; United States Fives, Ten-forties, 10V-60,101.3.;: United Statne Seveuihirties, second series, 106@r108!n: do. third Be des. 118(d116.„. Jay Cooke & Co. quote Government sermities. eta.. to day, as follows: United States Ts, 1881. 1113‘®111%; Old 640 Fonds, 110@l10'.1: Now 6-20 Bonds, 1864, 107.4(4108: 6.20 Bonds, 18IZ, 1081,(4168X; 6-20 Bonds, July, ineggiev,i; 610 Bonds, 1867. 1078 , 1074: 10.40 Bonds. 101%1;410W; 7 340 June, 106.41061., ; 7 3-10. July, 1060106 LA Gold. 139.'i. • Philadelphia Produce Illariceu SaTrapay. ]Starch 14.--The demand for Cloverseed continnes good, with sales of 100 bushels choice Ye - astern at VI 75; 300 bushels fair and good Pennsylvania at $7 75@..8 50. and PO bushels do. at $9 61.15. Timothy is nominal. Small salea of Flaxae , dat va43 ir) per bushel. There is but little Quercitron Bark here„ The loot sate of No. 1 ACUP , at $55 per ton. Tanner.' Bark selle at sl7® 1218 per cord. he quiet course of tho Flour market recorded for some weeks past still continue~, and we continue yesterday's quotations, with the remark that the demand is only for email late for.the Pupply of the local trade. Small salon of superfine at *7 7fia'*9 ' . .!5 per barrel; extras $8 50q, *10: somo North Went - litre. Family at sloCiasl.l 50; 250 barrels low grade Pennsylvania do. do. at $lO 50 and good do. do., at $11;$12 26 and fancy lots at $1034115. The stock of rye Flour is light. and it commands $8 75. 'Prices of Cmii ?deal are nominal. The market is poorly supplied with prime Wheat, and Shia description commando full price. Salem of Red at *2 0061192 €s'st barrel. Rye is steady at $1 80. Corn is dull and drooping; sales of 2,000 bushel.' Yellow at 121 18. in store. Oats arc inactive; 1,(.110 bushels Pennsylvania at 81ra Ese. The New York Money nozket, (Pram to•day'a Herald.] Mance 13 --The gold market has been unse'tlod to day and the fluctuations prior to the adjournment of the board were from 13e';; to 140, the closing quotation being 132%Ca. Let"; ; /ellen - leg which there was increased pressure tosell without any apparent cans-.and a'decline to 13.93.4faj119.e Took place. Cash gold *as in superabundant supply. and from seven per cent. per aminin to 3 fifths per cent. per diem wee paid for carrying. The gross clearings amounted to $47,481.0ee, the gold balances to $1 434,031/, and the currency balances to ii 12.0 3 ,3,215. The tranquil corn ni cavern ent of the inmeschin en t trial at Washington had a reassuring effect upon the public mind, and in this way the event may have influenced the decline in the pre- nmium. (in the other heed, the recent passage by the House of the bill repeating all the internal taxes on manufactures is calculated to impart firmness to it, for it will en far reduce the revenue that embarrassment to the Treasury may he-the result. Moreover the repeal of these taxes will Lenefit manufactures more than consumers to long ris the present high tariff remains un adjusted to this change, and the people at large will thoefore hardly be gainers thereby. There is no unifor mity in a system which abolishes taxes on eight thou sand articles hitherto taXed, merely because they are • domestic manufactures, and retains high duties and heavy internal' taxes on nearly everything else which is taxable. The entire tariff and internal rev( nue laws need revision, -as well as the finances of the country generally, and each item in the national account must be adjusted to every other item, so that a harmonious whole may be the result. The time for this to be practicable hasnot yet come,however, so far at least as the debt is concerned. Until after the outetanding aeven-thirty notes are funded into five twentiee any new funding scheme is to be r.cated.forit would not only be uncalled for but positively niter-hie yoUl. There is consequently no need of any atterept to change the existing condition of financial affairs at present, but Congress (should give its atten tion to maturing plane for the future, especially with regard to taxation; but this bill repealing the tax on manufactures loses eight of that equality which should be kept constantly in view in all systems of taxation. To _ discriminate in this manneria to_make the taxes fall un equally upon the people and to snake our tar law even worse than it was before, although the reduction of the -burdens of taxation is greatly to toe desired, and the more free trade we have consistently with the Maintenance of the public credit the better. The money market was much less stringentthan yester day. but more owing to the diminished requirements of the Stock Exchange than an increased supply of kanable funds. The general relator call loans waaaervezeper., but in some instances the private bankers asked and obtained this rate in gold for small amouuts on min celleneous coliaterals. Commercial paper, even of the best grade, was slow of sale, except at one or two pet cent. above the legal rate. The curtailment of the monetary • -facilities at the disposal of the. stock brokers has. led to-a lull in speculation; and to-day the aggregate of transac tions was lighter than usual for some weeks put, and. this wee particularly noticeable with regard to Erie. bere was a decided change for the better in the tem per of the market for governineut securities, and ender a. brisk den.and, both nn speculation and for investment, prices advanced /t n 34 per cent. This reaction from the undue depression which has latterly prevaiied was not unexpected. and the low priers now current are calcu lated ro stimulate the demand for all the issues of 530 e. If we compare the eummtwions at the beginning of January with those of today we rind that they are now about three per cent lower, allowing for the accrued Interest. Thus the bonds of 1807 were then minted at 108, since which time they have gained I!.E in gold interest. equivalent to 'Pi per cent In currency, whiff they are selling at 107, or ono per cent lower, which makes them, in eotnt of fact, 371, per cent cheaper. Moreover, governments are the lowest pelted stocks in Wall street for the rate of interest they bear. and there is far spore safety in buying them than securities of any other kind. notwithstaueing the attempts which are made et financial tinkering in Congress by every one who line a political or financial axe to grind. Thu Sherman funding hill is too damaging and prepost roue a measure -to be supported by any het a email utinority in either 'ionic, end ell the kindred schemes for unsettling con fidence in the public credit are likely to share a similar, tate. .From today's World-1 Mersa 13.--The money market halm recovered from the recent ebingcney, and the sum ly of money to-ilay was in excess of the demand at 7 tar cent.. and on 1 iovern nm ents loans were made at doer cent. Tho report of the high rates of interest paid here has, reused considerable Rail to be lent to the city to he net d In loans, and for the purchase of Government securities at their present low pm ices. In scene dunce with lute instructions, very heavy purchases were made by Wallis and capitalists of Govern ment bonds. chiefly 7441,P, and a St asp advance was real ized throughout time mei ohm I tovernment list, The decline in time rates of interest And the probable return at an early date to the same rare in the money market that existed a fortnight ago will, without doubt, cause Govern. went securities to reeover the 3 to :1 per cent. decline which took place within the last fortnight. owing to the stringency mu loans. The legal complications with Erie and Rock island have influenced the more cautious clam of money lenders to confine their !onus+ to Government bonds at lower rates of interest, and in some eases they have become bury ere themselyee, as the safest and- most profitable use for money in 'the present state of Wall' The Government bord -- riiiii i ket opened active- and strong, and there was ft very large investment demand from banks and capitalists, who are satisfied- that prices touched bottom yesterday, and that time current had now set in strongly on the upward tern. In the World of this morning our readers were advised that yesterday was the lowest point of the market, end a general advance of 34 to tel per cent was realized today. As the future of the rummy market points to lower rates of interest. Gnvern roent bon& bee4ne more desirable as inveslensinta for the floating capital for which the owners want'employment. ithout incurring the risks and anxiety attendant on Stock loans and operations. The market.closed strong. with an upward tendency : . ._r: ... _ The god market was weak throughout the day.renging. between 140 and 13934 for scene sake, after_thetsgerd. nel jormied. Theottening was-109M, -and the closing- price E at% at 3 I'. 1,1,, with eater in the interim at 1891.. The rates paid for carrying were, 8.1.99. 9,10. 3414:7 and 3 per cent. after the board adjoureed the quotations ranged 139 J,, to 139,3,4 cloeing SP.M. at 1395.'1 f oreign exchange Market is dull. and prime bankere eixty-dev sterling bills are quoted 1e5, 4 4 to 1.0034; toed short,. 109 X to 1C93f,. Bankers' bills on Earle, long, 5.113, 1 i to 5.16 N ; and short, 5. 143im to 5. The Latest Quotations front New :York. illy Telegraph.) Smith, Randolph & Co.. Bankers and Brokers, No. ld South Third street, have received, tho following quota 'Bona of Stocks from New York.; Mekou 14, 1868;1536 P.M.—Gold, 139; C. S. 60. 1841. 111' %4 ( . 0111 do. Sag. 18d1..1104.®11034,1d0,-1.84,W , ' ,(4105 L.; . do. do. 1865. I 08X(alOi 1 1.," ; do. do. July , 11 , 45 d0. . lin VO4II/fri; do do. July, 18t17. 1073,A107 3 / 4 ; do. 56-10.40, 101 q(4101.'4 ; do. 7.30 e. 2d series, 106,3,;@106.3.5 ; do. do. 3d dori. , o; 06(1' 1064; New York Central. 126? 4 ';Erie, 73,',; Reading. 4644; might. gan Southern, 8,314,• Cleveland'& Pittsburgh ; Rock Island, PV,; North Went, common, 06.56; 110. preferred.. 73; Fort Wayne, 1003... f. Markets by Telegraph. NEW YABK. 'March 14.—cotton firm at 55 cents, Flour dull, and 50310 eenta .. lower. 5.500 barrels void; State.' Es@slo. 05: ohio, $50.1'418 75; Western, me 90r411 .:outhern. $9 ItTI;$141 95; t alifornla. ;918 50404314. Wheat dull, 13,11.14) huebele geld Spline $2 90. Corn firmer Agit cent higher. 51.000 buchela aold ; Weitern. $1 2041 27. fate firmer. eaten at 80R404. Beef quiet Purk dull at 81:.4 18./b. Lard dull at 14,1;',94157,4. Whieky quiet. • HALTEMOItt : , March 14. --Cotton dull and nominal at 2.1!g. Flour him. high .grade, city mina extra IAIO 855, ..12 CO. Vt• beat firm; Southern Red $2 7.5119 945 i Pennai„- vania $2 fe0.12 (5 for prime , In choice. corn atil y t; whip , tpost 10 t cllow. $1 MR. $llB (hiti•akfliS2.. hyt , pm $1 PO. Clocer,eeil unchaugtid. Pr9v - 1131qcus • dui It„ It nr rtiouldelm - ; - CALIFORNIA: , 'Orange Blossom Wine Tonic,' , , A delicious beverage. made Of pure Win% and free from Alcohol. As a leinedy for djspepeja and nomno .4 10. bility it is wed in France and south America: The trade will be supplied on liberal terms. a ARK/ CR SOLE AGENTS. 14. B. corner Front and Chestnut.
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