1101.1NESS NOTICES. lira stunsueoption Curable? .who QUCS. lieu' Deeldeas --When a man cannotdo treY,PorOVIIATM!..be. I4 Ye.,. l° ver y vitt to eetteintie thst that thing cannot be done.' - Wife< TV/ 14111 LIM phyiltinnp of the old pelmet found that they would not mire conssutption, they declared eonlinimption to be incurable. This declaration, however, is contra dicted by facts. We have many recorded instancee of eeneumption being cured, both in Ferenc anti America, in Pomo rare cares, even without medicines of ally kind, and in mere nnmerons carer by the use of vegetable remedies and a judicious .system cf dieting. Dn.). IF Schenck, of Philsdelph in, hoe been extremely successful •in the treatment of consumptive them. having devoted hie attention excltr eively to that branch of Medical practice for snore than thirty-five yearn. lie uses three medicinee. The princi- Anil one, called "Schenck' s Pulmonic Synip," a vary cele brated article, hoe cured ninny consumptive patients in almost desperate circumstance& and Dr. Schenck himself among the number. The two other remedies, viz.: Schenck's Seaweed Tonie and Mrndrake Pills, are need ar auxiliaries, and particularly in those caner where con sormption is-complicated with other diseases, such as liver amn ataint., dyspepsia, Otc,, Dr. Schenck declares that, by the Proper Me or Clime mediCinee, any cage of consump tion may be cured, tinker the lunge are almost entirely destroyed, which, cf course, makes a cure, by any human Macs. impossible, Dr. Schenck is prof emionally at hie principal office. No. North Sixth street, corner Commerce, Philadelphia. stymy Saturday, where all letters for advice turret be ad. dressed. Ile is alert professionally at No. i 2 Bond street. New Yerk, every Tneeday; and at No. 25 Hanover street. Hine' ton, every Kednerday. Ile gives advice free, but for a thorough examination with hie Iteepirorueter, the Price is $6. Office hours at each city from 9 A. id to :a F. M. Trice of the•Pulmonie Syrup and Seaweed Tonic, each. Si 50 per bottle, er Iv 50 n half dozen. I.lan-dralce Pills 25 cents per box. A full supply of Dr. Schenck's medi• thaws for sale at all times at his rooms. ' Alen. by all druggists and dealere. It AMERICAN HOUSE, BOSTON, MASS.—The very im portant ano extensive improvements which have recently taee..n made in this popular Hotel. the largest in New Eng land, enable the proprietors to offer to Tourists., Families, end the Traveling rublie, accommodations and convent cosies superior to any other Hotel in the city. During the rut summer additions have been made of numerous suites of apartments, with bathing rooms, water closets, ke. at lathed; one of Tufts' magnificent passenger elevators, beet ever constructed, conveys guests to tho upper story of the house in one minute; the entries have been newly and 'richly carpeted, and the entire house thoroughly repien ish'W end refurnished, making it, in an its appointments, equal to fins hotel in the country. Telegraph Office, Bil liard Halle and Cafe on the fln , t floor. fel-m.w.f-lim LEWIS RICE ,k; SON, Proprietorv. UtiagliettilatlMlKlVlo.ll lriday, March_ 27, IS6B. PURE WATER SUPPLY. That the people of Philadelphia demand and must have the Schuylkill water furnished to them pure is not to be denied, and it is to the interest of the city that this should be as sured. There have been several plans for se curing the purity of the water. One, which has been included in the proposed grand park extension, is to remove all factories from the banks of the river for a number of miles above the city; This would be enormously expen sive, and would be ruinous to a very large population. The inhabitants dwelling between Philadelphia and Norristown have become alarmed at a proposition which, if carried out, will be destructive of their property and their means of making a living, and, at a meeting of manufacturers, held last month at Manayunk, a committee was appointed to prepare a memorial to the Legislature setting forth the reasons for their opposition to the project. This memorial is now before us, in a small pamphlet, which presents also - a mode of securing pure water 'in abundance and aheaply, without inflicting damage upon the people. A few of the facts of the pamphlet, which we print entire elsewhere, may be mentioned here. Between Fairmount limn and Norristown That, there are ninety-one manufacturing establishments, employing 9,362 hands, who represent 4,957 families. The annual product of these factories is $23,335,972. These facts have been obtained from only partial reports, for some establishments failed to furnish in formation. Allowing for these according to mo derate estimates, the whole number of hands may be put down at 10,000, the number of families at 5,000, and the aggregate annual product at $24,000,000. The removal of all the factories, to secure the purity of the water when it reaches the forebay at Fairmount, would be ruinous to these people and destruc tive of a very large and important industry. The remonstrants propose a plan which will obviate s the removal, and will at the i same time avoid the other expensive project , of constructing a vast under-ground culvert, running for miles along the shore of the river, which should receive all the drainage from factories and houses and leave the river pure. This would be enormously expensive, and it is hardly conceivable that any engineering or masonry could make such a culvert strong enough to be safe from damage in times of floods.. The plan of the remonstrants is to lay a large iron main pipe from the Flat Rock dam to Fairmount, using the river only Co drive the wheels to pump into the reservoirs the pure water delivered in the forebay by the main pipe. If one main were insufficient, another could be laid along side. The plan is to carry the main across the Wissahickon by an aqueduct, and then along the shore of the river underground, following the line of the shore road of the Park, after it reaches it, and thus avoiding all interference with the comfort of those riding or driving along it. There is enough fall, between Flat Bock dam and Fairmount, to ensure a suf ficient supply of water, and as it will come from a point above all the drainage that is sought to be avoided, there can be no fear of its being impure. The general plan includes a capacious settling reservoir just this side of the Wissahickon, where enough pure water can be stored to supply the city for a number of days, in case that the river should be muddied by a freshet. Accom panying the memorial is a map which explains the plan proposed. It strikes us as more fea sible and cheap than any plan_proposed, and it has the great advantage of not interfering with the prosperity of the great and ever growing population dwelling along the BALTIMORE AND STEAMSHIPS. Baltimore held high revel, yesterday, over " the arrival in her latrberOf the pioneer rshirt of a line of steamers that is to Ply between the Monumentld city and Bremen. There was a military and civic parade, a general closing up of stores, a promiscuous display of flags, including the "stars and bars," and a grand rejoicing generally. There, are to be two other steamers placed upon the line, and it is expected that the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Company, which bore a large .share of the cost of establishing the line, will be greatly benefited by the enterprise. Bal timore has done well by this move, and her iertarnidi is worthy of imitation upon the part lot tier sister cities. ,A 9 to the wisdom of her - wild jubilation ,over a mere expe l/meal, that may be an opon question. Most x Philadelphians will 3:1111) e system is strongly condetnned through remember the grand jubilee we had in this 1 out ,he repor t , Anil herein lies one of the chief City . in January, 1851, when the . " City of f /Y 1 . „exits of, the whole plan of revision. The Glasgow " made her maiden trip from Liver- Is examinations for promotion are to relate to a liObl" to' "Philadelphitt'• - Cannon -were- flred- r ..t.. krre wieke of_. principles,. rather. than ..mere. flags w_ere dist:timed, Captain Mathews rAd strength of memory." lnstead of an intri 'c fellow offir - were t: his fellow officers , .reated with the. ( u s _ tlnction of nabobs, and the t4overnor of the State, the members of the Leg l 'Afature, the Mayor of the city, City CounrAte and Mer_ chants and Manufacturer*, Plrmost without number, got up a grand en , .ertainmerit at the Chine2e Museum, where_ champagne nearly sufficient tb float the r)tnneer ship was poured out (and in) as a . ifbation to the great occa sion. On referrir,g to tiles 0- f 1 h-0 r, of Issl we flr,ad, in the course of an editorial article which appeared on the day of the grant', banquet, the following words: '`,Xll the dinners, to all the captains of steamers that ever sailed would not build a new steadier. Three, four or five thousand dollars expended on a grand dinner add not a cent to the capital stock necessary to build up and establish u.lni nently a line of Philadelphia and Liverpool steamships. Any number of baskets of cham pagne, however exhilarating they may prove, Will never raise the steam necessary to carry on a grand commercial enterprise, and any number of long-winded speeches can never raise the wind to waft on the commercial prosperity of the Penn sylvania metropolis. We hope that these things wlii he remembered this evening, and that when enthusiastic gentlemen toast, over a sparkling trohlet,the grand project that they are celebrating, ey will, each one, mentally, resolve to let not their enthusiasm die out with their to-morrow morning's headache, or their contributions to the enterprise end with their subscription to the din ner." These words have as much significance now as they had seventeen years ago, and they fit the case of Baltimore as well as they fit Philadelphia. Champagne, terrapin and chicken salad failed to retain . the "City of Glasgow" line in Philadelphia, and such of the ships as were not lost at sea were drawn into the voracious maw of New York. The moral of all this is that it is always safest to wait until success is assured, before indulging in very boisterous rejoicings over the .event, and wisest to put the shoulder earnestly to the wheel in order to secure coveted success. The arrival at W'timore of its floating namesake has IT .ved the periodical talk about Philadelpl .lines of European steam ers, and already we hear and read invidious comparisons between Philadelphia and Balti more, and the Pennsylvania Railroad and the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad. It is easy to find fault, but those who find fault so glibly should look a little deeper into the subject before they talk about the "apathy of Phila delphia merchants," the "narrow policy of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company," or the "superior enterprise of the capitalists of Balti more." The cause of the trouble in the steam ship way, which Philadelphia has already expe rienced and which will be the probable lot of Baltimore, lies farther north than either the Delaware or the Patapsco. The ' solution is, in the greedy rapacity of New York mer chants and the easy virtue of federal officials in that city. It is not mere assertion to, declare—for the fact has been clearly proved and demon strated over and over again, and it has fre,- quently been made the subject of Governr mental reports and denunciations—that a regular system of scoundrelism is in opera tion in the Custom House in that city. Out and-out smuggling, fraudulent invoices, false weighing and measuring, the appraising of large invoices of costly goods by inexpensive samples, which are hit upon by collusion be tween the merchant and the Custom House clerk—these are among the expedients by which the Government is robbed of annual millions, dishonest importers accumulate vast fortunes, and steamships are loft to rot at the wharves of cities where honesty the rule and private and official rascality the excep tion. While this eoPdition of things exists it is as hopeless to try to establish successful lines of European steamers in other ports as it would be impossible, for an honest distiller to do business and pay the Government tax of two dollars a gallon on the product of his still, when he had for a direct competitor a knavish membar of the "whisky ring," who could make money fast while selling his manufactures at a price below the amount of the Government tax upon them. If Provi dence will vouchsafe us an honest adminis tration in the early future, it should pay prompt and vigorous attention to the corrup tions of New, York which not only plunder the National treasury by wholesale, but which fall like a blight upon the enterprise and the industry of sister communities. THE PUBLIC SCHOOLS. The wisdom of the change by which th Controllers or the Public Schools of Philadel phia are appointed by the several Courts is already fully apparent. Anew and healthy clement has been infused into the Board by judicious appointments, in the place of a "ring" of politicians, whose chief end was to patronize some pet publisher or to bargain with some favorite over the ever-tempting question of supplies, or to further the pros pects of one principal or teacher, or to hinder the success of another. The new Board, from the moment of its organization, has ad dressed itself to the great business of a thorough reform of the Public School system. A committee, consisting of Messrs. Edward Armstrong, James H. Macbride, Jno. W. Clark, M. Hall Stanton and Lewis C. Cas sidy, have been at work upon the important question of a general revision of studies, and their report, just printed, shows how well they have performed their difficult duty. Eighty thousand children in Philadelphia enjoy the blessings and advantages of a public school education, and with such a field for practical experiment, the community has a right to look for the highest possible develop ment of the best attainable system, and for very large - results in - the - general character of the generation of men ,and women next to come upon the stage. In the report of the Committee there is a free admission of existing defects both in the system and machinery of our public schools, and important reforms in both are recommended. The old plan of admission to the High School is changed, and greatly for the better. --Instead of the present system, which keeps the gram mar schools in a constant state of feveriSh ex citement, the Principals of the Boys' and Girls' High Schools aro to make semi-annual requisitions upon the grammar schools for a regular supply of pilpip, upon a basis of a toxed proportion froM each. Tire "cram THE DAILY EVEr.4OI2I BULLETIN PAILADELPIIIA, FRIDAY, MARCH 27 , 1868. eate system of questions contrived to tax the brain with useless masses of undigested and indigestible mat ter, our school reformers propose the ' more reasonable plan of bringing forward the pupil with a steady development of the men tal, physical and moral qualities, and ground ing him iu a clear comprehension of the principles of education, which will enable him to undergo a fair and thorough examina tion when the time for his promotion arrives. There could be sad tales told of fine intellects wrecked and healthy frames broken down by the system of cramming and forcing the minds of ambitious boys, beyond the power of endurance, in the struggle for admission to the High School. The revised system of studies laid down by the Committee appears to be a very judi cious one. Through the courses of the Pri mary, Secondary and Grammar schools there is a gradual and easy progression in all the essential branches of a sound English educa tion. Music is given a well-deserved promi nence, and ihe committee recognize the fact, little comprehended, as yet, in this country, that it is as easy to teach a child to read music as to read anything else, while the value of the study and practice of vocal music is fully acknowledged. By drawing, and by a well-digested series of oral instructions, a vast amount of practical knowledge is con veyed, well calculated t o o prepare the pupil for industrial pursuits in after life. A new and important feature is the estab lishment of a Senior Class in each Grammar School, to be limited to twenty-five pupils, and to include a two-years' course of higher studies. This class will serve to relieve the preisure upon the High SchoOls, and, will possess an advantage, not referred to in the report, of enabling pupils to complete their educations under the special instructions of the principal of the Grammar school where they have already pursued two years of study. In the studies of the S: nior Class we think the Committee have made a mistake, in giving the course of Science of Government in the first, and Natural Philosophy and Chemistry in the second year. The latter studies are of such great importance that they should run through both years, in connection with some sys tem of practical mechanics, while the Science of Government might well be re served for the finishing course, especially in this country where, as a science, government may be regarded, as in an experimental or, at least, in a developing condition. One of the most valuable parts of this in t:resting report is the, appendix, containing Vee series of "Educational Suggestions," which the Committee have iOlopted from the Chicago school system, and which are full of practical good sense, not only in reference to the eetails of the direct teaching of the pre scribed lessons, but to the wider range . of good morals and, good manners. These sug gestions are full of wisdom and should be carefully studied and faithfully put in practice by every teacher. Patience, firm nese, gentleness, cheerfulness, fidelity, discre tion are all urged upon the teachers and in a way that challenges the approval of every intelligent person. ,The remarks upon cor- I poral punishment are admirable. It is al lowed in extreme cases, but with due caution that it be, not inflicted in haste or passion, or With unreasonable and disproportionate se verity. The whole report and the reform it inau gurates is the most important step in ad vance which has yet been made in the cause of common school education in Philadelphia. We hail it as the beginning of an order of things which will do away many abuses and bring all the grades of schools, from the Pri mary to the - High School, up to such a grade of wise efficiency as will command the re- :-;peet and admiration and hearty commenda tion of the entire-eornmunity. "Ti e History of the Thirty-ninth Congress,' by William H. Barnes, A. M., author of "The Body Politic,"takes up the subjects of reconstruc tion, the negroes, &c., immediately after the sup pression of the rebellion, and leaves the ground about the time of the first motion for impeach ment, by lion. Mr. Ashley, January 7, 1867. The various exciting topics which filled the inter val are reported in a way which leaves a vivid picture on the mind of the uniclue difficulties of this Congress in the history of legislation. The tone of the book is temperate and equal. Relia ble portraits of Speaker Colfax and of seventeen other Congressmen are interspersed; while aiot the least valuable portion of the work is the bio graphical index at the close, where the history of each member is paragraphed in a method at once handy, condensed and correct. Harper & Bro thers.- For sale by G. W. Pitcher. Harper dc Brothers also publish "A Smaller History of England," by William Smith, LL. D., commencing' with the earliest times, and coining down to the Victorian age. This is a good manual for schools, clearly expressing the facts that are known, and getting over moot questions with much discretion. It is illustrated by cuts of considerable antiquarian interest. The compila tion ranges with the Smaller Histories of Greece and Rome, by Dr. William Smith. "The Three Little Spades," by Miss Warner, a story for juvenile gardeners, rather too childish in parts, but successful in arranging a good many valuable hints for youthful horticulturists in a cheery narrative, has been collected from the pages of Harper's Weekly and bound into a pretty little book. Issued by Harper & Brothers. We need not reiterate our high opinion of Ticknor &lds's elegant "Library Edition" of ihe - Waverry Novels; they have just added to the collection "St. Ronan's Well" and "Old Mor tality "—that frankly-supercilious view of presby terianism by the stout tory laird Sir Walter. James B. Claxton has published again—we do not know why—the novel of "Dunallan," by Grace Xennedy, the soft and balmy authoress of "Father Clement," "Profession and Principle," &e. "Five Hundred .Pounds Reward," an anony mous novel of English society, very pointless and mediocre, COMB from Harper & Brothers. DOW 'IMPS AMERICAN LIQUID CEMENT, FOR JJ inevdint; - broken ornaments, and other articles of Glass. China, Ivory, Wood. Marble, Ate. Nu heating re quired of the article to Do mended, or tho Commit. Al ways ready for use. For sale by JoliN R. DOWNING, Stationer. te7•tf 139 South Eighth street, two doors att. Walnut. NEW PUBLICATIONS. "Wanamaker & Brown's Opening. o:Wanamak er& Brown's 0 enin *IT Vranamaker & Brown's Opening. !Er Wanamaker & Brown'S Opening. Spring Clothing.zo Spring Clothing...ol Spring Clothing..ail Spring Clothing..iss elTine Tailoring Goods. Fine Tailoring Goods. co" eine '1 ailoring Goods. CO - Fine Tailoring Goods. SPECIAL CA.RD.—We have the best stook Gents', Youths', and Boys' Beady-made Clothing, and Cloths, CasEimerei. 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. EDWARD P. KELLY, TAILOfI .9 S. E. Cor. Chestnut and Seventh Sta. Largo stock and complete assortment of SPRING GOODS, From the beet Foreign Manufacturers. Clothes equal or superior in Fit, Style, Comfort and Durability to those of any other 'FIRST-CLASS TAILORING ESTABLISI.I. MEN T. Moderate Pricey. Liberal Ditieount for Cash, _ _an77 tyrp_ CLOTHING FOR SPRING. CLOTHING FOR SPRING, CLOTHING FOR SPRING. All-Wool Cassimere Suits. All-Wool Cassimere Suits. All-Wool Cassithere Suits. Ready Made Clothing. Fresh Made and Reduced Prices. Fresh Made and Reduced Prices. Boys', Boys', Boys' Clothing. Boys', Boys', Boys' Clothing. Boys', Boys', Boys' Clothing. Always on hand a carefully selected stock of uncut goods for Men and Boys' wear. Clothing made to order. We make the Boys' trade an especial feature in our business, and parents may rely on procuring at this establishment Boys' Clothing well cut, well made, well trimmed and durable. RocEmEr_, & WILSON, ROCE HILL & WILSON, ROCKHILL Sc WILSON. (303 and 605 Chestnut Street. PROVISIONS. Davis's Celebrated Diamond Brand Hams, Choice Dried Beef. enperior Tongue+. NEW BONELESS EXTRA M ESSAND NO. I MACK. EBEL, Spiced and Pickled Salmon, Yarmouth Bloaters, Scaled herring and Cod Fh.h. Eia.NCII PEAS AND MUSHROOM, FINEST QUAL- ITY Fred' Penchee, Tomatoes and Green Corn. NEW YORK PLUMS, PITTED CHERRIES, PARED and unpaved Peaches, Dried Lima Beane, and Tart Dried Applso. k BENCH AND SPANISH OLIVES I3Y TIIE GALLON. A general arlortmes tof the Finest Family Groceries, for sale at reasonable prices, by A. J. DECAMP, 107 South Second etreet. LEGAL NOTICES• LiS•itU(Ji' Uh• PENNSYLVANIA, SS. - Uin Bankruptcy. t Philadelphia, March rth, A. D., The uac ertigned hereby gives notice of his ap. pointment as OPPIrliCe of OPCIV E. Moore. th,-, city of Philaddllis, in the County of Philadelphia. and State of Pe) nf.ylvania, within said Diatriet, who has been ad. judged a Bunkt nut 111,oriiiiit own petition, by tae Dixtriet Court of etid IRVINE WEITEIIEAD, Artignee. No. tilt Walnut Street, Philad. Whin. 're the CroOitolv of Paid ilanki apt. inh27 f nt• FITLER, WEAVER a Co. NEW CORDAGE FACTORY NOW IN FULL OPERATION. Na 23 N. WATER AM 23 N. DEL. swum • j OW. CRUMP, BUILDER. 1731 CLIESTSLT STREET, and 213 LODGE sTREEr. 1 1 ,1 C ice of every branch required for homebuilding and tittn g promptly f,irnielled, fe27 ti At JUNES, TEMPLE Id CO.. No. L'it SOUTH NINTH STREET, have intro It.ced their Spring Styles, and incite act Benicia that wi,ll a flat combining Beauty, Lighmeee auml Durability to tell and examine them. .1., T. ht. Co. martif a< tura all their Silk hate. mhlatfip , WA Pai U ETON'S IMPROVED, VENTILATED e ; and easy-fitting DFOPLI Hats (patented), in ad the ap proved fashions of tho season, Chestnut street, next door to the Post-otLee. st-13.1yrp - 1 4 -I XTRA QUALITY OF DELL-IEIANE;EIIi' NIPPER X/ Flyers, Itonnd and Flat Nose fiver', aro Eland Vises, for dale by TRUMAN & SHAW, No. 831 (Eight Tbirty•live) Market street. below Ninth. DBRASS AND GERMAN SILVA?. Bandii, iron and brace chain. leather and morocco Dolt•Uhaind and email Padlock, tor (lobar, for dale by TIR,MAN No. 13,3 S (Eight %%las five) Market etreet, below (Ninth. `BEEP' SIIEARS.--A VARIETY' OF SIZEd AND qunilties, for rale by TRUMAN & ELIA3V, No. igb (EightThirtydlve) Market area.. below Ninth. BLACK LAMA LACE eACQUES —GEO. W. VOGEL, No. 1016 Chertnut street, hats Jut t received an eosin meet of Mack LlLnia Late Sacquus. Also, , u levoice of very oh2al. LLACK LACE POINTES. ni1f2.7,15t. AFINE LOT OF BANANNAB On hand at JOHN G. KUHNLE'S Fruit and Confectionery. Store, rnh274p3t" No. 635 Market street 1033, —L n. ° u ° gu K iiies i ni " P4r I tin L Z ° t K of "1 . 3 1 , ri liC ap l e i ra " a — nd Linen .\\liidow nest in for spring miles; sheep, prices. JtiliNSTO. ,, ao rit,103:3 li Spring arpeu street. N. d. sel4.lyrp. a,r En , .mArm ' A. IS AILVITT lIAS }M ail. d woll-Ituown extubllplunent from 116 41, bout]. Fut( clith to 112 South Eleventh Street. m 1126 6t. LAOS SALE.—TO MERCHANTS, STOREBEEPDAS. I.` Made and dealers - 200 Cases Champagne and Laab Cider. 360 bble. Champagne and O Crab Cid Jr. P. J. RDAN, 220 Pear Amt. ikt4 USWAL BOXES. USEFUL TO iWILILE AWAY the tedium of a nick chamber, or for a handnome bridal prompt FARR & BROTHER. Importers, feZerp 32A Chestnut street. below Fourth. inMONEY TO ANY AMOUNT LOANED UPON DIAMONDS' WATCHES.' JEWELICY. - PtiATE, CLOTUING, &c. at JONES & CO.'S OLD ESTABLISHED LOAN OFFICE, Comer ofßel Third avid bd. ° ar sati n,' streets, ow Lom N. B.—DIAMONDS, WATCHES, JEWELRY, GUNS, &c., FOE BALE AT REMARKABLY JAW PRICES. mlAfelre¢Si MA i l iu tli" , Lll l 4 /y u l g T , ll B L t i li Nd p )alß a L C E INK. EMBROIDER .SI. A. ToRRY, 1E0) Filbert etreet. I MAC NATIIANS, AUCTIONEER, N. E. CORNER .1 Third and Burnet) streets, only one square below the Exchange. $260,000 to loan lulu' ge or small amounts. on diumonde silver idate, watches, Jewelry, and all good,' of value. Ol%ico hours from 8 A. M. to 7 P. M. ZW — •.F.tstab. Wised for the lest forty year& Advanced made in largo amounts at the lowest market rates. Fro GROCERS, TIOTEL•KEENEIttI. FAIIILIES AND Othera.--Tho undoraigned hna lust receivod a freell eupply Catawto,eablortila and Viiampagno Ala (for invalide), constantly on hand. • P. J JORDAN, VA P' atreet t Below Third and Walnut etrcete. ItIETAIL• DAN 41000ffe BILK% BILKS, SILKS, SILKS, SILKS MACS FIOEN T NEW STOCK SPICING AND SUMMER SILKS. BLACK SILKS, $1 05. • BLACK SILKS, $1 75. ' • BLACK GItO GRAI NS 00. ELEGANT CORDED 'SILKS $2 76. BLACK AND WHITE (11ECK SILKS. $1 00. PLAID SILKS. 62 35,, • I CASE VERY SUPERIOR PLAIN SILK. ALL TUB NEW SHAD S. AT 62 00, A GREAT BARGAIN. CHOICE SHADES CORDED SILKS. 63 00. , BLACK FIGURED SILKS. $1 FL J. C, S'!RAWBRIDGE &CO., N. W. cor. Eighth and Market ste. FRENCH POPLINS, FILENCII POPLINS, FRENC t POPLINS. WILL OPEN. 711 I N DAY, ONE CASE FRENCII SILK AND WOOL POPLINS, AT $1 65, WORTH $2 25. C, STRAWBRIDGE & CO., N. W. corner Eighth and Market. 'in Open This Day,- FORTY PIECES FRENCD ALT:WOOL DELZIES. AT 3bc. PER YARD. J. C. STRAWBRIDGE & CO. ) N. W. cor. Eighth and Market. CLOTHS AND CASHMERES. ALL WOOL CASS DI ERES, POI: BOYS. 65c. GOOD I'ANT STUFFS, AT 5,5 c. . , I lAN PSOME CASHMERES, 75, 57e. • .(:ANT CASSIMERES, $1 25. ONE OF TIIE LAHOEST STOCKS OP CASSIMEEES AM) LAMES' CLOTHS TO tIK FOUND 1N THE CITY. J. C. STRAWBRIDGE & . CO N. W. cm Eighth and Market. WHITE CLOTHS. WHITE CLOTHS, SCARLET i,LUPUS, BEEF CLOTHS, FOR MISSEs' AND CHILDREN'S SACKS. J. C. STRAWBBIDGE & N. W. cor, Eighth and Market. SPRING DREIIS GOODS, AT 15 CTS. SPRING DRESS HOODS, AT IEI CPS. I.I'HINO DRESS GOOD- , ,, AT w tPRING DRESS I.lOODs. AT f. 5 J. C. ETRAWBRIDGE. NEW SPRING GOODS. We are now receiving our Spring supply of WHITE GOODS, EMBROIDERIES, and HOSIERY, At Greatly Reduced Prices. New Style Fringed Lace Tidies. At is Applique Tidies. 111 " Crochet Tidies. Tucked Mulllino, Puffed Muslin, Lace Muslim, 13rilliantes, French Mull, Soft Cambrics, Jaconets, Tape Checks, Nainsooks, India Mull, Sheer Lawns, Organdies, a Tarlatans, White and Colored Plquets, French Percales, Madapolams, Together with a choice enortment of Collan, Cuffs, sets, Worked Edgings, Insertion, Bands, Cambric Hdkfs., HOSIERY. Sheppard, Van Harlingen & Arrison. 1008 Chestnut Street. mhl.llolrp GREAT BARGAINS WHITE GOODS, &C. The dissolution of our firm on the let of January. re. (miring for its settlement a heavy reduction of oar Stock. we aro now offering, at Greatly Reduced Prices, To Insure Speedy Sales, 01/11 ENTIRE ASSORTMENT OF White Goods, Linens. Laces, Embroideries, And House. Furnishing Dry Goods. Ladles will find It to their advantage to lay in their SPRING SUPPLIES in WHITE GOODS, &0., NOW, Ae they will be able to purchase them at about ANTI, WAR PRICES. • Extra inducements will be offered to those purchasing by the Piece. E. ,M, NEEDLES & CO. Eleventh and Chestnut Sts. 4IRARD ROWI fel Walking Suits. Traveling Snits. JOHN W. THOMAS , woe. 405 and 407 N. Second Street. Just received, e full line of PLAIN AND CIIENE POPLIN% SILE. ANo WOOL POPLINS. BILK AND LINEN POPLINS, ALPACA POPLINS, farcEPriLAPIONIIINIScEN E MOHAIR% . SILK SINCE. NEW GOODS ARRPVING 1331111.2r05T1 OPENING.• WOOD & BERNS,. (Formerly Thornhill & llama) • • - 1208 Uhemtnut, tstreet. Aro now - opening an unusual fine /I lock of _ppring, Lacer; Llumfragemtekltreirfe'AtiteltiettiCitooe, Suite, infants! Cape, lirevai4v, Pompadours, dge, . kc Ako. JIILKEELIAITIt Ilt of Glovea andlioklam_in addition to the' caret ully /elected mock of Fancy White Gonda, rr h2', 3tr TME FMB moors. ISTCMBIAE'S GREAT PICTURE, "JOHN BROWN," NOW ON EXHIBITION. ROGERS'S NEWEST GROUPE, "A COUNCIL OF WART JUST READY. EARLE'S Galleries and Looking-61am Wareroomk 816 Chestnut Street GuOCERIEN, LIQIIOI/19,-,0 CANNED GOODS: Winslow's Green Corn. Very Choice Tomatoes, Extra White Heath Peaohes, Finest Quality Frenoh Peas, Finest Quality Mushrooms,. In Eno order and of the beet quality. ALSO, Renrie's Pate de Foie.,Gras, SIMON COLTON & CLARKE, Importer Of and Dealers in Fine Family arocerita. Finer Wince, lirandlias, Cordials and Ciaara. S. W. cor. Broad and Walnut Ste. MEM COAL Extra Large Lehigh Nut Coal, $5 50. Lehigh Stove and Furneoe, $6 50. WARRANTED PURE AND HARD Also, a !taped or Rebroken Schuylkill Coal, ALL SIZES, 85 TO SS, AT WM. W. ALTER'S COAL DEPOT. Ninth Street, below Girard Avenue, AND Office, corner Sixth end Spring Garden. a4tfrr4 EADEEIP DRESS TULEDISINGS. MARY B. CONWAY, LADIES' - DRESS IfIigNISHI2IG arm 'SHOPPING EMPORIUM. 31 SOCTII SIXTEENTH STSEET. PUILA Ladies from any part of the Gutted Stater can eend then ' orders for Drees Materials. OrtesesCloalce.flotutets, Shoes. Under Clothing, :Mourning Suits, Wedding Trosseau, Tra veling Outfits. Jewelry .te.„ also Children's Clothing. In. ardiobes, In ordering Garments, Ladles rvlll please send ono or their over srminu Immo:a for measurement; and Ladies visiting the city shouldtiot fail to call and have their measures registered for future convenience. Refers, by permission. to MR. J. M. HA.FLEIGIL 1012 and IUI4 Choetnut Went: MLBSRB. 'HOMER COLLADAY Inhl4-3171 rp MS said Cheetnut street. HOOTS AND 'SHOES. tct c) t l Spring Styles in Fine Custom 0 4, Er 4 Made Boots and Shoes for Gen- a ilemen. The only place in the r tg E-4 city where all the Leading Styles gl o in First Class Boots and Shoes w may be obtained. Prices Fixed t-) - w at Low Figures. BARTLETT, tit !- 1 53 South Sixth Street, above Po co Chestnut. 'wilily rve WOOD MILANGIINGS. NO. 917 WALNUT STREET. WOOD HANGINGS Positively don't fail to see them before ordering any thing else. - Wallpaper is now among the "Things That Were." WOOD H&NGINGS Cost no more. and are selling by the thousand rolls per day. Bee them and be convinced. No speculation, bu.P stubborn facts. Opecimens are also on exhibition at the Stnre of JAMES C. FINN ,Sc SONS. SouthOoet corner 7 enth and Walnut streets. mblZti • 39138ERS AND IMPORTEIIS. Red Cross Wig-ans. Deceiving from manufacturer the above well•lcnowr, make, together with our lanai stock CuRShT JEAN - SILESIAS, SLEEVE LININGS, "OLD ELM MILLS"' VEST PADDINGS, WIG ANS, de., to which the at ter,. Lion of the trade le reapectf tiny invited. THOMAS R. GILL, cOAPAIBBION MERCHANT, No. 6 Strawberry Street. faXlmi FOlll SALE. GERMANTOWN BUILDING• LOT- 'FOR SALE 98 OR TOfront LET 610 Net GROUND RENT fee t t , deep. GREEN Street, near CHELTON Avenue. n; dift - .5.'11. BROAD and GREEN Stroke. m 1127 bt4 ri FOR SALE—A HANDSOME MODERN RE:iS dense, Yittlitted ou Tenth street, above Ureen. Apply to JOSEPH PARRISH, No, 784 Sansotn street: mh26,BPIrP• SAMPSON SCALES!! TIIE NEWEST AND MOST IMPORTANT INIPROV r, MENT IN PLATFORM SCALES. CHARLES H. HARRISON, Solo Agent of Sampan Scale Company for Philadelphia. and Camden comity, N. J. N. F. corner of Market and Jim!per. Streets' rnh2ll w atm ELIDE NIL FLO MI .2 Et SO me, H. P. 85 C. B. TA Vl4ol{, No. t4l North Ninth Straet. SECOND .'EDITI... '4O-DAY'S - CABLE 'NEWS LondOn and Paris Money Markets The Weekly Cotton Report Kuk Klux Klan Troubles in Tennessee. Appeal From Governor Brownlow. A Political Fight at Saddle, Missouri. A Railroad Meeting at St. Louis. The Suicide of a Chicago Merchant ND FIRE IN PROVIDENCE, RcIODE MIND. LoNnolii, March 27, Forenoon.—Consols, 93@ 933 for money and account; Erie, 46; U. 8. Five , twenties, 72g; Illinois Ceneral, 893" 3 . PArus, March 27, Forenoon.—The bullion in crease in the Bank of France is 9,000,000 francs. LIvLBrooL, March 27, Forenoon.—Cotton opens firmer, but quotably unchanged; estimated *ales 12,000 bah's; vales of the week, 79,000 bales, of which 11,000 were for export, and 10,000 on epteulation. Total stock, 391,000 bales, of which 228,000 are American Breatistuffs firm Inlet but steady. QUEF:NSTOWN, March 27.—The steamship Rus , Ida, from New York on the 18th, has arrived. GLASGOW, March 2i.—The steamship Europa, from New York on the 14th, has arrived in the Clyde. Troubles In Tennessee.. Special Derpatch to the Philadelphia Eresing Bulletin by Franklin Telegraph Company.) NA , 1101,1,1C, March 27.—Governor Brownlow publishes an article in the Knoxville Whig. Under hip own name, iu which he denounces the Knit lux Kim in the severest terms. lleadvises Union __wen of the League to arm and exterminate them, and says: "If any of the former shaild fall in the effort there will he a million swords ready to avenge them." TIJe editor of the l'iddte, a paper published • at Hartsville, In Sumner county, received a note yesterday from the adjohalnlng county of. Macon,. warning•hlm that the Union men were COMiLI2; down to clean out the Kuklux Klan. He imme diately Issued an extra calling on the citizens to come and repel the invaders. A collision is seri ously apprehended in that section. The revenue officers continue to meet with great trouble from illicit distilleries In the moun tainous regions. A large number of arrests have been made in the last few days, and the cavalry are kept continually on the go. General J. P. Brownlow, who has just resigned his captaincy in the United States anny,has been elected Superintendent of the Knoxville and Kentucky Railroad., J. Q. Pullen, one of the oldest and most re spected citizens in Giles county, committed sui cide to-day by blowing out his brains with a shot-gun. Mental aberration was the cause. Allegro was arrested yesterday at Winchester, for attempting to bum a church at that place, on account of spite against some of the members. (EpeeJai Despatchp tkle Ivpning BulleUn Sr. Lours, March 2i.—Bacon Montgomery, the Radical nominee for Mayor of Sedalia, and W. B. "Wallacv,United States Marshal, had a terrific per zonal combat at Jefferson City night before last, In which Wallace was badly worsted. A large number of railroad officials were in this city last night. The several otlicers representing the Eastern roads, and under the direction of the General ticket agents, threw out the tickets of the Atlantic and Great Western Railroad, refus ing to sell them any longer. It is expected that the Atlantic and Great Western Railroad, will immediately reduce the price of tickets. [Special Dm/oth to the Philadelphia Evening Bulletin by the Franklin Telegraph Company.) PROWDENCE, March 27th.—A fire this morning destroyed a big wooden building owned by Henry IV. Slocum, and occupied by the American Steam Gas Pipe Company, Manning & Potter, manufstc. tiring jewelers, J. Wood's dipper manufactory, and Adams & Claflin's comb manufactory:All of these parties lost the principal part of their stock and tools. The insurance will probably cover the full loss in each case. Among the losing offjees outside of Providence are, the Western, of Buffalo; 'the Home,of New Haven; the Commerop, Albany; the Putnam, of Hartford; the North American, of Philadelphia; the Market, of New York; the Atria, of Hartford; and the Buffalo 4 -City, of Buffalo. cl tct tel ca BY ri 14.11.4E:G A PH.. By the Atlantic Cable. Provisions and Produce, From Bllosourl. From Vlticago. Medal Despatch to the Phila. Evening' Bulletin by the Franklin lelcgraPh C0mP3119.1 CitteAco,,March 27. Joseph Keich, an old and wealthy merchant of Chicago, committed suicide yesterday by hanging himself. He has been in= Lane for a fortnight. Fire in Providence. From it entucky. LouisviLLE, March 27.—The Insurance Com pany embezzling controversy was concluded in the City Court to-day by the discharge of Bly, the Secretary. Arnold was discharged yester day. It will be remembered that the above in dividuals were arrested on affidavits charging each other with embezzling the funds of the Company. The Presbyterian Synod of Kentucky has been in session tWo 'days, but transacted no business of importance. Great Billiard Playing. Medal to the Philadelphia Evening Bulletin, by Frank lin TelegEaph Company.] CHICAGO, March 27.—A match-game of bil liards wee played yesterday afternoon: between McDevitt and Honohan, 760 points up. McDe vitt, on hie second inning, made a run of 838 points. Weather Report. Mora 27. 9 A. M. Wind. Mather,' Flaister Cove, S. W. Cloudy, Halifax, N. W. Clear. Portland, _ W. Clear. Boa'ton, - B. Overcast: New York, 8. W. Overcast. Waahington.D.C., N. E. Raining. Fortran Monroe, N. E. Raining. Richmond, Va., •R. Raining. Mobile, N. W. Clear. New Orleans, N. Clear. • Oswego, S. W. Clear. DOW% . R. Clear. Pittsburgh, E. Cloudy. Chicago, N. E. Cloudy. Louisville, N. Cloudy. Havana,* Calm.' Clear. Bey West,f E. Clear. Barometer, *13940, f3O-07. —A place called Helltown, In Florida, before the war, and inhabited by lawless characters, is now called Gordon, and the seat of law, order and civilization under its Yankee eeitlers. _ ItIVIVOrEAI+I AVVAIRS IrfLANCE. The iltient tat Wonlouse—Me nistialeb. &anew. more fteriOUs Rican Reported. tFrool the Journal de Toitle9fo., Mareh 11.1 ..,.:YestLL du.y„(thelbtl4 at.ffne.illdt A, crowd of young men trom dwerity to twenty-live years old doirincliedian_the Place •du tolkl , singing the "Marsellaise." They perambulated the prineipal streets and returned to the PI tee du Canticle at about 11;, o'elock,. but in greater numbers. We were not able to ase , rtain wlrat was the precise character and object of. this demonstration; but it was probably meant as a sequel to another which occurred in the after noon, and whichescaped our memory (sic), when a tumultuous assemblage took place in front of the Prefecture,where the recruiting for the Guard Mobile was going on, and a few arrests were effected. P. 6.—We learn that last night's demonstra tion continued to a late hour. We arc assured that, at first merely noisy, it assumed a more se rious character, and that the mob broke into the head police-office, and that a number of gas lamps were smashed. At 11.45 strong detach ments of cavalry and infantry took up a position On the Plate dd caphohi, rani patrols were sent out in various directions. At 1 A. M., more troops sallied forth from the barrficks. • Pouts , se Cor. aventr Nationale. March 11.1 It is .1 A. M., and the streets of Toulouge, usually so quiet at this time of night, echo to the tramp of armed men. The young men who are to form peat of the Toulonse.Moinle Guard were summoned to the Town Hall yesterday and the day before. Yesterday the young men of the St. Cyprien suburb proceeded to the Town Hall, accompanied by their wives and children. The "IlorFelllaise" was sang, and a few arrests made. At 1 in the afternoon the groups in the streets broke up, but in the course of the evening Isolated bands began again to perambulate the greets, without, however, making too much noise. But in the suburb of Arnaud-Bernard a less pacific mood prevailed. At 8 o'clock in the evening a band of about 500 men marched to the Prefecture, the gates of which were closed. The " Marseillaise" was sting, a few lamps were broken, and-the crowd, having been recruited, advanced against the pollee office,. which is near the Prefecture. The office was m the custody of a solitary sertient de sills, who thought it prudent not to make a show of resistanee. In the twinkling of an eye the papers, hooks, desks, furniture, were all tossed into the street—even the carpets ar.d curtains were not spared. The flag over the door was torn down and used as a banner, preceded by which the column marched, . singing the "Marse - illaise,v and shouting `` riec hr Liberi , s! ' towards the palaec. of General 'de; Goyon. The guard tnrned out, but without :MOs, whereupon di wolf shouted, Fir , la Liyu—A li e la Thencc the mob we at to the gen-d'ar me barracks, where a. few windows were broken. Every window In the :Jesuits' College was also smashed. At 10;;; - o'clock the crowd consisted of about 2,500 persons, and debonched on Hue Lafayette, singing the "Marselllaise," and break ing lamps and windows as it went. Up to that time the crowd had not fallen in with any sol diers, or even with a stray policeman, and was fast breaking up whert - the Place du Capitols was invaded by two squadrons of hussars, tyro bat talions of foot ebtisseurs, and about thirty mounted gendarmes: the wole flanked by a cloud of :ergente de rills. The troops deployed, formed Square, and patrols went through the streets, but everything was quiet, and no trace of the dis turbance remained but the broken lamps. Did Disraeli shake Hands With' the 'Lord eliancellor?—a drama Cabinet Question. [From the London Port of March 14.] We understand that the paragraph which we quoted from the Pall Mall Gazette, stating that a reconciliation had taken place between Lord Chelmsford and Mr. Disraeli, was incorrect. -The ex-Lora Chancellor still feels himself aggrieved by the Premier's treatment: and the report of his having shaken hands with Mr. Disraeli is untrne. He has not seen the Prime Minister since- the day he went to Osborne to resign the Great seal. Application to Imprison Air Robert Peel. [Front the London Post of March 14.1 On Thurailey the application was renewed be fore "Vice-Chancellor Malins to commit Sir Rob ert Peel to prison for refusing to. render the ac counts of Tam worth School. The Charity Com missioners urged the demand Made for the ac counts by the inhabitants of Tainworth. on the ground that the funds bad been improperly ad ministered. Sir Robert Peel filed an affidavit that the income of the property had been devoted to school purposes. Messrs. Cotton and Keke wich, on the part of the defendant, protested against the application to com mit a member of Parliament to prison, Instead of the usual motion for sequestration, which was the only course open. Thu argument was concluded yesterday, when the Vice Chancel lor gave judgment. He said the Charity Com missioners would have done batter if, instead of making application which involved the personal liberty of Sir Robert Peel, they had in the latter part of 11 ,, G7 caused an information to be filed in order to have it decided whether the property was or was not permanently devoted to the purposes of charity. Until that question had been decided his honor was of opinion that he had no jurisdiction in the matter, and the motion must be dismissed. Coats were given against the plaintiffs. THE RAILROAD WAR. Business Becoming Brisk at the lersey Headquarters—Ettect of the Bedue- Bon of Fares. [From the N. Y. Herald of to•dac.i A renowned sage remarked that the world is made up of contradictions. Only a week ago the gigantic monopoly known as Camden and Amboy obtained a complete triumph over the people of Jersey City in the Harsimus Cove bill. Jersey is looked upon now as the vantage ground of monopolies. At an indignation meeting in Jersey City on Wednesday night the people cried out with one voice against this oppression. The sympathy of the meeting under such circumstances naturally fell into the scale with the Erie Company in their struggle against another monopoly,and this struggle promises re sults more favorable to the public interests than the other. Already the beginning of the end is seen. The reduction of fares on the Eric Railroad has turned the tide of travel thither, and if the New York Central do not reduce their fares it is calculated that no less a sum than $lOO,OOO per month will be netted by the Erie Railroad on each • car over the ordinary receipts. Five additional passenger cars were re quired on the eight o'clock train yester day morning to meet the increased demand. Messrs. Drew, Fisk, Eldridge sad Gould arc so much engrossed by , the business transactions of the company that few visitors are admitted to the garrison. The bridge for the ferry at Twenty third street, New York, is almost completed, and the new ferry-boat Delaware will be plying on that line within another month. Telegrams came 'pouring in from all quarters yesterday, the tenor of which did not transpire; but the directors have under consideration the reduction of freight charges ,on the line. The river traffic having been resumed at unusually low rates, there is very likely to spring up a monopoly , of travel most beneficial to the public during the ensuing summer. Here, then, is one result of the Drew-Vanderbilt contest, and it is pretty clear that the tables have been turned. The "Erie Railroad siege" was the prevailing topic around Taylor's Hotel yesterday. The reticence of the Drew party during the past two days has been canvassed as an indication that a chef d'aut , re is meditated in some new quarter. So far the people have been the winners, and as the chances of compromise bet Ween the contending parties become fewer by delay there is no proba bility cf retrogression.. The wheel Is going around, and it will be interesting to watch the next turn. Governor Ward had not signed the Eric Rail road bill up to five o'clock yesterday afternoon, but there is little doubt that he will do so to-day, after which the time allowed the Executive ter minatee and the bill then becomes a law. Robert E. Bardwell, late President of tho Erie Railroad, and Mr. Eldridge, the present incumbent, had an interview with the Governor on Wednesday in relation to the matter. Thermo nuger. • ROTIIWELL.—On the evening of 86th inst., Edward Id. Bothwell, in the 36th year of hie age. • 1118 relatives and friends. Decatur bodge No. 21. 1.0 O. R. and Philadelphia Typographical Society, are reepect• fully invited to attend Ids funeral, from the residence of Lie uncle, Israel Amiee, No. 1018 Ellsworth Direct. 013 Sunday afternoon, at 3 o'clock. Interment at Indian. threplc Burial Ground. THE DAILY EVENINCI 1111.1,141'1N.-1111LADELP111 A, FRIDAY, MARCII 27, 186 S. DIED. THIRD ' EDITION. ,T7J-EcilltA" ) / 4 * 1 - LATER - CA - BLE QUOTATION-ST: vv.A.siiraw(3 ,, ro.N. Postal A flair% before rile Huse Committee Hy the Atlantic Telegraph. LoNcox, March 27, 2 P. M.—Consols are steady; U. S. Fire-twenties, 72X(072,%:; Erie it, R., 46‘; Illinois Central, 80;1. LivEnroot., March 27111,2 P. M.—Cotton firmer and more active, with an advance of 30. The gales to-day will foot up 15,000 bales. Middling Uplands on the spot, 1030.; to arrive, 10%d.; Middling Orleans, 10;%d. The stock of cotton afloat is 332,000 bales, of which 150,000 bales are American. Breadstuffs arc firmer. Flour 375. Gd. Cali fornia wheat,l6B. per eental,nnd 14s. 3d. for No. 2 Red Western. ' Corn, 4s. 3d. per cwt. for New Mixed Western. Barley, Is. Gd. per bushel. Oats 4s. 2d. per bushel. Peas,46s. Gd. per quarter. Provisions---Bieon, 435.; cheese, 555. tid.; beef, 1:.0s. per bbl. for extra prime mess; pork, 795. !for Eastern prime mess; Lard, 625. for American. Produce—Silbetuiet and steady at 255. Gd. for No. 12Dutch standard. Refined Petroleum is. 3d. per gall6n. Turpentine 31s. per cwt. Rosin Gs. 9d. per cwt. Spirits of Petroleum le. per gallon. Linseed eakes .£lO 15s. per ton for thin oblorar for feeding. _ PoAtal (Special Despatch to the Philadelphia Evenin g. Bulletin.) WAsii !Nov's, March 27.—ThelIonse Commit,- tee . on Post Offices and Post Roads,at their meet ing this morning, decided to report a bill guaran teeing bonds to the amount of . "3,500,000 of .the New York Commercial and Navigation Steam ship Company, running between New York and Bremen. This line of steamers proposes tePcarry the American mails. This same bill was before the committee of the Senate route weeks ago for the purpose of get: tint! a Government subsidy in money, and also to guarantee bonds, but the fact leaked out that certain I.ersons were engaged in advocating the hill with the avowed object to swindle the Go vernment. It s did not meet with a favoranh; leport, hence it was transfer4d 'to the House. There will be great opposition to the bill in the House, and it is believed it cannot be passed. If it passes the House it will surely fail in the Senate. Robbery. ST. Lorni, March 'i,7.—The banking hott4s of Hulc A: Rice, at Jnnetion City,Kausas, was robb2cl yesterday morning of eirow, deposited the pvcning before by F. Hawaii. There is no eine to the robbers. Congrebs—tiecotad Nosmon. WafiaiNGTO. March 27 S . l N ATE.—DI r. Conkling (N.Y. , intTeduced a joint tuner. for ti.c relief of eel min oflicere and non-comrniasion ed efheere and soldiers of. the army. Referred to the Com m litre on atilithry Afars. r Stewart (Nevador introduced a bill to fix the salary of the lehti fit Attorney of the State of Nevada.. P.eferred to the Committee on the iudielary. Mr. Chandler (Mich.) called up the bill to rezelate the emitting tr. de on the Northeastern and Northwestern frontiers of the United States, for which he offered an etathotete substitute. r. chandler explained that a ',easel clearing at Baffale is now otliged to take Cut a manifest at every port at which she tenches. Thu , bill authorizes the captain to etate in the original manireat what hie cargo is, where it 15 to be delivered. v ithout renaring him to take out any other until he reaches hie destination. The fees were ether wi,e but slightly (hang, d. At the ruggretion of Mr. Fessenden (Me.) the bill was laid over. Ile Chandlc r giving notice that te would call it up tomorrow. Mr. bore K n. ) offered *resolution te print s,ral addi tional cm of the report of Ross Browne on the mineral resources of the territories. Referred to the Committee en Printing. Mr. Cotten (N.. 1.) moved fo take up thetal supplemen tarY to an act to provide a national earrency secured ha t ledge of United States bonds. and to provide for the cit t Linden end redemption thereof, approved June lE2 el air.'Howard (Mich. ) and others urged that the bill in relaticu to the Central branch of the Union Pacifies Rail road be taken rep end the dieensnien on it concluded. 11r. unttelre motion pc and he addressed the Sc nate in support of the hill. Ile claimed that the No tional Banking system should have a fair trial; that it was bated on emend principles, and (hat it had hoc n shown already to be a great im proyCinent upon the system of State Banks. This bill would correct what experience had shown to be a defect in the s) stein, namely. is plethora of money in the yastern cities, to the impoverishment of other places. re l ating Iron. aendieg bank reserves, which are intended to he the c miser:afire power of the evotem Ilvr SF,—Sir. !dyers (Pa.) oretented a memorial of 51 men herhere of the Philacielpida Commercial Exchange in favor of the remission of detiea and taxes on chip build ng toeteriale and of a judicious syetem of eubsidica for () ,- 1,111 rt..111:101{1 , lines. The Speaker anicounced that the regular heeiness in the Pour was the call of comic itteee for reports of a private character. alr. Welker (Ohio) took the floor to make a report from the Committee for the Pietrict of Comrade. Mr. Burr (11I.) eugi.;csted, in view of the pendency of tile Alabama bill, which to to be voted on et half pant (sir secloel todey, that the morning hour be dimensed with ea us to allow more time for di-cession.. J Mr. Welker objected. and reported a bill camerae; property of married women in the DiArict of thclii table. Mr Maynard (Tenn.) made the point of order that the hill was a . public enr,and ahead not be reported under the eal tee ',ls fr I , II , IIIPYS • end the Speaker co lur.it4 'a a 'au 114 PORT OF PHILADELPHIA—MAtou 9i tar ate Marine Bulletin on Third /'ace., ARRIVED THIS DAY. Steamer H L Gaw, Ber, 13 hours, from Baltimore, with incise to A Groves. Jr. Steamer Decatur. Young, 13 hours front Baltimore, with 'rodeo to R Fester. • • ; Steamer S C Walker. Sherin, 54 hours from New York. with mdse to W M Baird & Park Moss Men. Cutter, from New York, in ballast fo L Westergaard & Co. • Schr W B Mann, Ftanford.l from Jacksonville, with Inn ber to R oank & Co. 15th inst. lot tl5 22, ion 74 Is, epcke schr ht H hanks. from Jackeonville.' Schr M E Simmons. Gaudy, 5 days from Norfolk. with lumber to f' °rem's! & Sheets. Sehr Peronme. Eldridge. from Norfolk,- with lumber to J W Gaskill & Sons. Seta Gen Grant, Coos. Gloucester. Schr It l'Avv. York. Stoningtou. Schr E W Gardner, Steelman, Tilaurice!River. Schr 3 M . Vance. Burdgo. Providence. Schr Sarah Clark. Grilling, Greenport.r. Schr M Hand. Breoks,Greenport Fehr D E Wolfe, Dole, Pennogrove. Seta C Mcore, Ingersol. Bridgeport., Fehr 11 A Rogers, Frambee, Fort Delaware. Schrß RR 47, Reed; New Haven. . Fehr R RR 50, Corson. New Haven. ' • Fehr Isabella Thompson, Endicott, Little Egg Harbor. Rehr 0 Hawley, Penny. New York. Schr A El Learning, Brower. New York, CLEARED THIS DA",. Steamer Decatur. Young Baltimore. Ruben Foster. tichr It RR No 4% , , Roes. Norwich. Scott. Walter dr. Cu. Schri '1 bon pron. Endicott. Bristol. RI. Slnuicksou & Co. Fehr It Law. York, Stonington. :• do Fehr Sarah Clot k. Gt tiling, Providence. • ; do E W Gardner, Steelman, Providence; Borda, Kellar A Nutting. Fehr 11 W Benedict. Case, Providence, J Rommel, Jr. Schr Marietta Hand, Brooks, Ctreettport, Costner, Stick ney & Wellington. • ; chr Chas Moore, Ingersoll, Pawtucket. fdo Correepondence of the Philadelphia Exchange. LT WES. Dm.. March PM. °clic General Torbert, from Virginia for N°w York. camiv.ed MO night oil Ile-ate rd Inlet; crow saved: Bark Colmwalli.. from Philadelphia for Antwerp, went to sea thin morning. The following vessels remain at the Breakwater: Ship Bunnell for Antwerp; brigs Dagmar, for Cork; B. C. I Brooks, or Barbadoer, all from Philadelphia; retire Pam gussett, from Alexandria for Providence ; John Ilan, Bal timore for New York: A Falkenborg. taking in sugar from rchr Di Brooks, ashore; B F Wooloev, taking to card') from ; ark David Nichols, ashore. Also in the harbor, bar lc,)net arrived. supposed the Telles. from Philadelphia I or Havre ; and brig V. nk Welsh, before reported, waiting steam for Philadelphia, Yours. &C MEMORANDA,: ' ' Ship Tuscarora, Rowland, from Liverpool 9th ult. at Mobile yesterday. h hip Niche, Bowers, cleared at Liverpool 13th instant for thisport. , • Shit , City of Boston, Baker, from Efowlamrs Island via , Valparaiso and Holmes` Hole, at Woods , Hole 26th inst. Bark Belmont), Crosby, from Messina for this port, at Gibraltar 9th It st.. . Bark Meta (Pros), Schultze, cleared at Boston yester. , day for this port to load for Europe. , . Brig Mira OM Holder, from Mossina. at Gibraltar Elth fist. for this port. 1 : Behr Henry B Glbson,l.lncoln. tforn Fall River for this N port. sailed from Newport 24th %net • tichr Billow.' Griffin, cleared ,Boston gall instant for port, ; • , ,' + . Bethrhis Montezuma, Gordon, henl lc, for Poitsinouth, at Holmes` Bole 24th inst. I • ~ , I fiche Theodore Dean, Phillips, Ibenco for Dighton. at Fall River 2fithinst \ , 7 , Sehr Nellie P tter, Simmons; andletm S Cannon, Cobb, sailed from Fal Myer 25th inst.. f . bis port. 1 1 1 Behr Mll Reed, Benson, hence a Bedford 86th inst. Behr John Boynton. Reed, ' fro Voisin for this port, sailed from Newport Seth inst. z' , Behr C P Stiekney, Matthews:'A?litail Haley, Pierce, and ES Conant, Hammond. /ailedfrom Providence 66thbat, for this port, . ...... 2:30 0' 0 look:. JOSEPH LAPETRA. FOURTH.. EDITION, kTER FROM WASHINGTON. Alabama, Qi to .stion... HE VETO IN THE HOUSE HE ELECTION IN ARKANSAS THE CONSTITUTION R PLTIFIED OUTRA.6I.4;' AT THE POLLS. Voters Intimidated by Robes. The Admit/Nikon of Alabama, Lfteciai Despatch „to the. Philadelphia Eveaing Bulletin.) WAsitriioloN; . :March 27:--It'is the intention of the Reconstruction • Committee to call up the Alabama bill to-day. There is considerable op position to the last section of the bill, and it is very doubtful whether it can be adopted. Many members of the House are in favor of adopting the bill of Senator Stewart, which provides for new Provisional Government for Alabama, requiring the people to hold another election for State officers, i,nd there is a good prospect that this bill will be accepted by the House instead Of the one reported from the Reconstruction Com mittee. The Veto Message. ISpocialllcapatch to the Philadelphia livening Ilidletio.l IY.lliNtryt)N, March 27.—At half past 1 o'clock, Mr. Wilson; of lowa, called up the su preme Court bill, vetoed by the President, and pasted over the veto by the' Senate yes terday. He gave notice that he should call the previous question on the passage of the bill over the veto at three o'clock,and thon yielded thirty minutes, time to Mr. Woodward, 'of Penn sylvania, 'who took the floor in opposition to the bill. The Arlittimonti Election. Special Despatch to 'the Philadelphia Evening Bulletin WAsiIiNG•ToN, March 27. = Adyieei Teedyed this morning from Arkansas at the rooms of the Congressional Republican Committee confirm the drepatch received yesterday, that the con stitution is ratified by from three to five thousand majority: The dTstric:t commander extenvl‘k - ::::::: original time for holding the cketion several days, in consequence of severe storms and high water, which prevented the voters from reachiug the polls. One-half of the Radical vote was cast by white men. In the more thickly populated negro counties intimidations were successfully used to prevent them from voting. In one place the rebels attacked the polls, and force] colored voters to vote against the constitution. under threats of killing them if they did not do so. During the melee several ne4. - Traes. were wounded. From Georgia and North Carolina. Mecial lle2patch to tll4,llllladalithia Ercnin; Beillethij IVAmwswrox, March 27.—Daspateaus received from Georgia and North Carolina assure the Congressional Committee that' the new Constitu tions and Republican State tickets will be carried by large majorities. North Carolina promises a white Republican majority of thirty thousand, and Georgia claims twenty thousand. A I Icred Plan+lta.togli ter. [Special Der patch to th Fr e aPhiladelphia Evening Bulletin by 'theTelegraph.] BosdoN, March :l7.—Charles 11. Marloou and Nicholas Kearny, Captain nod mate of the ship Them's, were arraigned in the Municipal Court to-day, for manshughter in causing the (lentil of a seaman named Charles E. Hooper. They were committed for an investigation be fore the grand jury. The witnesses in the case were also committed. The evidence at the coro ner's inquest was very strong against the officers named. Fiom IlL'ashington. WASIIINI:IoN:Mnrch 27.—1 n the Supreme Court of the United States to-day. Mr. J. 6. Black asked that the argument in the preliminary injunction bill in the case of the State of Georgia against General Grant and others be heard. The Court, howevi r, was not prepared to resume the sub ject. Process has bumf served ou the counsel fur the military authorities, or General Grant, the only person within reach, but not on the other military officers aetii , g under the Reconstructiou laws, and this is assigned as the reason for the Court not granting„ the request of the com plainant. Nit. Black says that :mule parts of the; various published Et:ST.(II,IAS why he declined to act as one of 'the conned tor the President. are mer,t spectilation. The reason why he refused to ba retained was, that it is impossible far him to de fend the President priq#,lt sust tined the Secretary of State in the Alta Vela case, and he wee well Eatistied that the President didsustain the position of Mr. Seward. From , Canada. ()WAWA, March 27.—1 n the Rose of. R Com mons yesterday, the Hon. Mr. ose said it was the intention of the Government to introduce very soon n bill nicking American silver a legal tender up to a certain atuount,ett such rates as the Government in council may determine. 'Amongst the papers laid before the House re garding the case of the Reverend John McMahon and other Fenian prisoners in Canada, is a letter dated January 11th, to Lord Monek, from the Duke of Buckingham, in which the latter says Her Majesty's Government would not he justified in mitigating their sentences. It is said the Government has resolved to re peal the duties on corn, dour, &e.,as a conces sion to NeW Brunswick and Nova Scotia. It is. understood the Government will yield to the wishes of the life insurance companies. ' and ac cept deposits of $50,000, to he held by the Gov ernment as security to policy-holders—the de posits to be increased according to annual re ceipts, until Snloo,ooo have been deposited, and deposits tot* made in Dominion stock, except in the case of American companies, from whom Ametican securities may ho accepted. Pennsylvania Legislature. HAIIRIeI6I , ItO, March 27. 199,9. SENATt:.— The Semite. alba ha. log spent two thorn in considel mg and alecielhig the ileuerst Appropriation billoshich expended over four millions of dollars for State purposes and churities, and which had already passed the Dome, this looming thleoted it as a whole under the mevione ffecation, Mr. Council. without any eX plallatiOn. 1 he following, however, is mentioned to be the reason: The Republicans allege that while the Democrats allowed the bill in its various stages to progr.ss without opposing its large appropriations, they Intended, as a Democratic -minority, to vote against it as a whole on its final passage, no as to throw the entire responsibility of its becoming a law upon the hepullican party. Several Repuldl. cabs were di-posen to resist this. and accord ingly Joined the t. eineentta in costing "n 0 on its final Ir:usage. thus defeating the bill On the other hand the Democrats allege that they endeavored through Mr. V , ' ',lace to obtain a fietlier consideration of the bill for thepurpose of offering amendments which would re. duce its amount to the extent of nearly half n million of dollars. but that they NI ore prevented from doing so by the previous question which was called by Mr, Connell. Failing in their effort they voted solid again -I the bill. be Private Calendar was considered. The publication rf 279 bills of an appropriate nature, which were upon it, it mild probably till three entire newspapers. •I hose affecting Philadelphia wore:as follows:. house bili to incorporate therllnion Market Company. on North Second street. near tjallowhill, was panted, with the fol. lowing amendment: sud after the pvasage of this act it shall not be law ful to sell the meat of any slaughtered animal in less quantities than one.quarter of said animal is Rhin two For su ea of said market-house, any act of Assembly or or. dinance •of the City 4 bunch to the contrary notwith standing Provided, That the provisions of thus bill shall 'not apply to green grocers The amendment was. sent to the House for Its cou currence nt, following Mills were passed: The Senate bill authorizing the Darby Turnpike to charge tolls to persons going ,to and from funerals. The Douse bill exempting the real notate of the Fort Washington lodge A, Y. M, from taxation. The Renate bill ineorporathig the Lutheran Observer. The Senate bill incorporating the National Cottage Company. - • The Senate anthoriging the Managers of, the Douse of Refuge to compensate their solicitor. 'I he Senate bill allowing the Brady Coal Company to hold two tbousarid acres of land. - • Thu House bill supplementary to the Amateur Draw. lag Room Amelatieg. 3:15 O'Clocal. Navigni _;einpany. )1(01ii: -- Mr. Kleckner, from the Committee en Public Delilah es. presented a jointresolution authorizing the anpointirent of n committee. o' three from each 11cu confer with proper authorities relative to the public huildintia. The following hills were read: By Mr. 'Toren (Derr.). one incorporating the Reading Brewing Company; also, authorhring ,she Directors of Poor of Perlis county to lease the Poor•house lands for mining pnrposin. By kir. Playford, an act authorizing persons living in One I ehool district to send their children to schools to an other district under certain circumstances. By Mr. Armstrong, rept enentstlye of Lancaster, a sup. lament to the act revising cud amending the charter of the city of Lancaster. dividing the came into nine Wards. • This bill increases the lumber of inembern of the Select Council from one to tee o•in each Ward. supplement to the act authorizing the appolutmen* of inspector of Refined Petroleum, approved February 14.1E68, extending same to Montgomery cc unty. by Mr Bull, an act to regulate the salary of the Treasu rer of the Commonwealth, ond to protect the pnblic fends. as follows: tiyrrtlON•l. Beg er,aelett, d-e., That the salary of the Treasurer of the Commonwealth siren hereafter be $3 Me per annum. and he shall receive no other compensation • than the salary hereby provided. kfEc If any revenue e.bnll hereafter accrue from de posits of public funds in any manner whatsoever, such revenue shall be paid into the Treasury to the credit of the Commonwealth; and if any officer of the State shell receive any interest for deposits, or any compensation for deposits or bonne of walk funds, shall fail to account to the state for the same, or shall appropriate any such d e e v em n e u d e gu to l tyh is o f mis n d e n m e e e a nosru, ch nd ofuf i p c o e n r conviction thereof in any Court having jurisdiction, shall be sen tenced to pay a fine not exceeding double the amount found to have been misapplied or misappropriated as aforesaid, and to undergo an imprisonment nst exceeding five years. and shall he thereafter disimaliti^d from hold leg any Ake of trust or profit under the authority of the Cimmonwealth. Sec. 3. The Governor, Attorney-General, Airditor•Gern crab, Surveyor-General and State Treasurer shall condi. tote a Board of Revenue Commissioners. whose duty it hall be to have the general supervision over the public funds. and to portion of the said funds shill he deporited or lopped to any institution, or to any individual.wib rut the unanimous consent of the mernbera of the saiiPlioard, and no dtpobit shall be made with any foreign 'corpora: Sr'. 4. One-half of the penalty provided by the second section of this act shall go to the person who elicit trifoem of. institute and prceccute, in the name 01 the Common ' wealth, any suit or suits provided for in said section. to Tlouge bill. authorizing tho Oreglioim Turnpike I Ph illedellibilt Produce MI arketo • Company to as feed their reeld and regulate trif ir toile._ . Ihe Boum) hill illCiaporaiiikibe Pegigiyivarilt tioriety i Fri! , )v, MEM 112/ . —9O , ourgeed hi dull and deefininpF. ft r the Prt VI ntiri) , f CriublY to Animate. Amended init li rhuill mice Mt $7 0 00 - 0.8 25; Timothy cannot he The if 0111 Fe bill authorizing the American Mechanics' I , lii ru, 4 ) oior ib2 SIJ tiiii.i. Flamced is ceiling in loth, at Bell Arpociation to hold real Mate.s3 per bilebel ' - . The b erigte bill regulating the delivery of election hilt eupplie , . pa era to the election (Accra of Philadelphia., • I•he Flour market ig legg. active tebilaV,, 'the II owe bill anthoriz.tng the Union 1:1 team n hi p Goth - e(sTile forward slovrly, and priceg are stegdily maintained. 1, any. to Fettle their affairg • :Ivaco of RIO btu nig, innatly, Extra Family. at $10@•811 76 The a bill ilenrtte amending the chrter of the Locuet er barrel for Nortlivregtern, and timailag for Pcnryyl - Mcuntain Coal Cerernity. • FUllitir , bill inaking the tette et the Presidentot the Print Prerye APRoctation three yen , F. "the ornate hill ineorperntlug the Philadelphia Ocean Wreck of the Schooner P. Armetronn• (From to-doe's New York Herald.] It to cnly by decrees that the disasters which °or:lured at tea doling the storm of last Friday and Saturday are to tog heard ; but two days ago a vessel w ild found ashore about forty miles from this city. with four of her crew frozen to death, and three others in the hint stage of exhaustion. Last night intelligence woo received that the tchonner Philander Armstrong was wrecked en Bareford Bar, about tweuty.fivo miles south of Bartugat. She wan bound fm' Joules river for thin port with a cargo of pine. ane on Wednesday of loot week enco, ntered pt city still breeze. which gradually frtelt. cried into a strong gale until Thursday morning. when ' the wee blow et ashore and stranded On the bar 10 foie rained. and very soon began to settle in the Fend. The crew, five -in number, then see. ing no other drone(' of saving her, commenced th•nwinc the cargo, overboard in order to ojtalnten the echoonor, but all to no plenum, for shy wee firmly stranded. The wind continued to blow very bard until the storm of Friday burst forth in all its fury. laid then there WHo no eat thly ch once or holey. rof the crew being abb.', to row through the tw - o nines of fierce hicakere which foamed between them sod the land. On • hoard the schooner they Were nbliged to stay, with morel ly one hope to direr tioma of gritting font on land again. The woven ]rote over the deck, sweepirg violently away every thing that came within their reach. and the cold eddid more to the inclemency of the weather, and the forlorn crew beg n to give up all hope of eocape from their prriloni situation On Sunday. however, the m rained down considerably, and. availing themselves of the sin left. the men took to the small beat and withh dldiculty or ived sole on chore. where they were met by a nomber of the inhabitant ladies and gentlemen. of the village of Cape May tiourt fence, who treated them kindly and gave them every possible aosist ROM They told the crew that they could Fee their orheoner. hut, as was the foct were unable to aid there, and expected every moment to ace their bodies IVO rbrd asßory. They. however were all saved. hut the echooner is a total loss. he vessel and cargo were valued at about $8.600. on which there wan no . insurance. The men PAN' that although their distress flag was flying for over thirty-six' hours they were neither signaled by nor rendered any assistance by the government life-boot house, which laywithin two voiles of the wreck, and which is provided with everything necessary:to amid or revive shipwrecked seamen in their distress. • CITY BULLETIN. STATE OF THE THFRATOMETER THIS PAY AT THE BELLETIN OFFIOV; 10 A. 21.....42 dee. 1 Id.' ..42 deg.. 2P. 01 43 Am Weather reining. Wind Senthwee.t. COEONFICS 'INVESTIGATION hearing took • place before tbc Coroner, this morning, in the case of Patrick F. Maguire, who was attacked , on the 13th of February, near Thirteenth and Callawn' streets, by two men, who .knocked him rdown and beat him, breaking his law and causing internal injuries. He lin gered until ;.! Wednesday night. when death • terminated his sufferings. This men ar rested on the charge gave the names of James Devereaux and• John O'Neil. After a hearing before an Alderman they were admitted to Devereaux is now in custody, but O'Neil has disippeared. The evidence in the case was as follows : Fohert Gray testified—On the night in question be and Otlicer Worrell were standing nt Thirteenth and Callow. hilt streets; a young man came down and said there was a fight an there: we went tip and saw Magnin standing three; he was bleeding; the officer asked him what was the matter; he said he had been bootee,: the. otticer brought O'Neil in and asked him if he identified him as 01 the men; be said he did identify him; he was ar rested in a tavern at 'Thirteenth end Wood streets. AI drew 1 oam, sworn—Mr. 'Maguire and Owen Hannon were together, at Thirteenth and Caltowhill streets; v elk ed by there.he was in Moor; lie wont by MI and went towards a dog belonging to deroaeed; we heard the dog hark, but don't know whether ho kicked him or not: saw Devereaux get off the step and go towards deceased; he struck..at hint hut 'could not Fee whether he hit him or not. Ile did not interfere through fear of getting a beating himself. Ire went after a policeman to have him arrest the man who was striking at the deceased. i worked in the same sta ble with Devereaux; he got discharged and I took his place. Owen Hannon, sworn—On the night of the occurrence I was in company with 31116,11 re; be was on his way herne and had a dog with him ; he stopped and talked with its about bard times and the nad winter; James O'Neil came across the street, and got in unsung tie; his kicked the dog; Maguire askad him why he kicked the dog; he then said "I will kirk yell also. what do I care for vour dog?" Devereaux then came nn amillwith his right hand struck IMagui^, , in the je.ty staggered ;O'Neil and Devereaux got him down and hold him by the hair of his head and kicked at him; lea them hit him and kirk him; they hallooed kill him, kill hi ,• ;I saw there both thumping The verdict of the jury WOE.: '"That Patrick F. Maguire came to his death frost , debility superinduced by violence at he herds of James Devereaux and Edward O'Neil,Feb ruary lath, 1F138: died March Patti. 18K8. FINANCIAL and COXRIERCIA.L The Phlladelphl Sales at the Philadelp VII :ST I 100 City 6s 911 100 4noo do 100 1 4 400 City (is new I.! 103 3 4 300 City Gs now Its 103 4000 do do 103, 1 / 4 000 Union ('id lids 10% 10 sh Fzir&lilee Bk 181 YO :Ai 2tl &3d !•0 It 50 24 eh do Its 55 100 eh Resriß 40 100 sh do 030 Its 4034 100 sh do b3O 45;4 errurglar4 1 non Lehigh 6s Coln in 89'o f Soh Hazleton Coil 47 2000 Penn 5s '74 Its 094 100 oh l'ltibtErieli 254 1000 Lehiel.l Val 1)(18 1154 95 sh penny H 55 0000 Elmira To 954 100 eh Bend 13 00 45i sr • ON 11 WARD. 1000 City Os new 1034 100 eh Bead B stSwn&in 2000 City 6's old 45:81 14ctlei 100 i 100 oh Leh Ns. stir b3O 25ri 1000 Bead Os '7O 1110 10 sh Lehigh Val 11 511 6000 t - 4t Lebiat Old In 894 100 eh Ultima pr WS 274 500 Sch Nov o'7B s 5 HS 100 011 do b6O 271 n 111 oh FerBt.lNeeltlc 101 'BOO eh do Its 27 1 . r 45 sh 2d &hi Sal c 55341 Fliday, March 27.—The demand for money continues active, and "call loans" cannot bo quoted under 703134 per cent., and mercantile paper rangestrom Bto 12 per cent, the most of the transactions in gilt-edge obligations being above the former figures. Second class nausea aro universally rejeet . fd • The coun try banks are preparing for their Ist of April settlements, after which period a more desirable state of affairs will be likely to exist. There was less activity, but Government Loans were a shade higher, and State Loans were hold with increased confidence. city Loans wore per cent. higher, closing lta!f bid for the New, and 1.003,7 for the Old Issues. RcadlniS Railroad wile 'i9ti'te4s',Tand• closing at 45. Camden and Amboy Railroad sold at ill. a decline. Pennsylvania Railroad at 65, a decline of !. - E Lehigh Valley Railroad at.52r.1"., a - decline of Nf. Catawisint Railroad Preferred at 2 7 , no change, and Norristown Rail road at 68, a decline of N.. 124 wail bid for Philadelphia and Trenton Railroad; 6131.1 Jor'Mluo Hill Railroad; 82 for North Pennsylvania Railroad, and 2t . r. for Philadelphia and Fria Railroad. in Canal Stocks the tendency *as, upward. Lehigh Navigation sold at 2b?,(, an advance of ;cc, and Schuylkill Navigation Preferred at 22?-4, an advance of 34. In Bank and Passenger Railway Shares, no change. no inspections of Flour and Meal, for the week ending March 26, 1868,ure as follows - Barrels of Superfine ...... " torn Meal. Condemned, Puncheons Corn Meal. Pe.. - - yenta .nd Ohio do. dos, including:Ml _b.rrebt Panelsphrio,. at $1:30 - 0$15 00; dispertine at $7 754.0 05. and Extras at 28 M 49 O. In 1# ye Islaur no ehange: son all sales at $0 50 68-70.—Prirca-af-Cora Meal are Isere is a good demand for Wheat, and prices are wells tuktain.d. HUM sales of good and prime Penneylvanie Pod at $2 60052 IV. nrd 15,00 bushels No. 7 lBpring, in the Ph rater. at $2 33; White may be quoted at s3t $3 Z. Rye le tteady at $1 f 5 for Pennsylvania and wratem. Corn comes in alowly and is held firmly; salmi of MMus.. yellow at $1 20. and 1000 boa. mixed 'Wes ern at $1 20. oats art:11111/ot ; otitis of 1,600 bue. Pennsylvania at filiC4.B7c. In 11.rley and Ilan no change. The provielp market is firm. butt there io not 1)1111h 40 - leg. Salta of Moos Pork at $25 75®526. Ilam in pickle at 16 , .,c. Lard at 170,1 e. - The New Tern Money (Market. (From to-day's Herald.) P'sMa EV U 56. TIPt told market was steady to-day. and the fluctuations were from 138:i to 1893+1. with the closing treneattions prior to the adjournment of the beard at Me following which the price • declined to The rates paid for carrying ranged from seven to eleven nen cent. per annum, and 1.33 to PM per cent per diem. The gross eismings amented to it n 3,566000: the gold ha Innee4 to 121,463,1ne, and tee currency balances to $2,182,607. The .steamer New York, for Breen n,. took ottt 415 Oillin specie. The peonage by the lime of Representatives yesterday of • tb.e amendateraf Tax law end the urospeet of its becoming +slaw hael thus . far exerted no influence neon the premium, bid the pro bability is that it will ultimately tend to strengthen it by reason of the reduction it will work in the revenue It is needlees to say that the bill in quo Mien is a piece of legislative patchwork which makes the inequalities of our tax law FOR more glaring than they were before. There is no perm ptible change in the condition of tho money market to note. Leans on call were mode by the hanks and private hankers at coven per cent, in gold: but in some instances a commission of an eighth rev cenr. chatpai in addition. Tile demand from the volumex - om was rather light, owing to the redneed of business consequent upon the beakers refusing to buy stocks on commission became of their inability to carry them. The transactions ere therefore confined almost exclusively to the bell cliques. the specelative brokers. anong 1 A pthaeree l aba an me n to w o th he rexormsseonrainsgpncuy is heked forward to after the let proximo, this being "Fettling day" in many of the States; but last year the barks here continued to lose depesits until after : the middle of April. The national hank returns will he made up en the Rth. this tieing the first Monday in April% but the Minim of this city will show in their statements their rendition on' the morning 'of Satnrday, the -- 4th; and hence they will be as mach diaeoeed to extend their Inane on flint day, if they are in a position to into' as on aby eubeeenent ene. The flow of' seeutities Wall street fore ome weeks past and the simultaneous with drawal of money have been greater that naval at this sea son. and this is traceable in some degree to the active ape euletion which is going forward in real Oeitate. Capitalists% small and great, have been exchanging their +stocks for homes and lands, and hence the advancing tendency of Pricer. for the latter. Hence, tee, the enlarged demand for money from the Stock Exchange, for Walt street at present is carrying a heavier load of securities than it ie ecreatemed to handle, the ten millions of new stock re issued by the Erie Railway Company being of it self a large addition to the aggregate burden. This vast ' weight rests mainly upon the bull cliques, and if their eupnott was withdrawn the result would be as severe a pante at+ Wall street h. s ever experienced. The artificial props by which present prices are suotained aro in guest. amebic danger of being accept away. and the market wholly lecke °Meld e support, for with the commencement of the Erie litigation demoralization set in. and the public rapidly deserted Wall sired. Thus a healthy hall Merkel was turned into a weak and dangeronely artificial one. which is little at any time to break down despite the efforts of the cliques to mote in it. To.env, however. itlinte.h it opened weak. it hes beim remarkably steady. rumorthatalseeti from 66N1 to C9,le, closing at tin. ender a. the Railway tot of the Aesembly had resolved to report against. to le he legelizing the nets of the 'Erie Compeey, owieg the latter having derided not to make a tight flyer it by expending money enough to carry it through the tegisletere Snore was n mcdernte investment demand far govern tlt securities at the counters of the lending dealers. acd in improved feeling prevailed among speculative holders, limit itlistanding tied an eighth of one nor cent. per (ley ir ?till paid for"turtiing" them. The Pub Treasurer anserstocd to_have bought a smell arnennt of eevesoihirty notestoday ; but it is claimed that the -resources I.f the Treasury are not sufficient at present to enable it to afford substantial relief to tut' money market, (ether In this way or by any other n e , .118. owing to the light revenue re ceipto thten onth. The Secretary of the Treasury re proeched by some for not having Weed the whole of the fifty millinns of 3 per cent certificates nethorized to be exebanfed for compound interest notee; and it mould have been better bed he done out, althointh it is doubtful, even if he had, whether the present preosure .in Wall street would have been averted; for a stringent money market is liable to occur while the currency is being inflated as well we while it tie being contracted, in proof of which we may . refer to the memorable re onetaiy spasm In the spring et 18154, which resulted in the great panic on the Stock Ex ellen ee. When the supply of money becomes equal to the demand nt seven rer cent. a sharp recovery in govern ments will take placee-but meanwhile the market is likely to remain quiet . 'From today's World.) ,sawn ..96.—The money market ie bromine, some firm a reporting it much easier and others again that there is not much diff• rence front yesterday ; bat in the aggregate .there is an improvement, and more more money lending. at 7 per cent. in currency. The feeling of Indignation general amongst the community againet the_ banka that have infringed the mosey 'KW. in its 'pit% if not letter, by charging': per cent, in gold, emit] to about 10 per cent, in enrrency.hes mode some of the banks desirous of clearing their reputation of this stain. Treasury Department's movement++ to-day have rather tended to tighten than relieve the stringency. as the male* . ofgoldwere about 5500.000 and the purchases of seven thirtiee et similar amount. Telegrams frees -Weehington state positively that Mr. McCulloch le going to do some thing to make the money market easy. het no details are given of the mode for doing so. It it. eedeniftble that too keeretary can make the money market easy at once if he pleases. It fs prneer to state that Treasury Department officials and brokers have been industriously circulating the re.- port that the money market on Saturday will bn more etringent than it line been. The moneystotrket cannot be made tighter on Saturday. unless lee movements of the Treasury Department in the way of aellieg gold and dig hewing slowly. On the contrary, it is well known from the homey eniounts of currency carried by the expiates rempanier Sr the country every day of this week since . Monday that the country hanks are already well pro vided with all the eurreuev they will went for their quar terly exhibits on April I. It is quite possible that the bears in eovernment bonds and stocks nifty take some demoniac lira ma eo to engineer an unesnal efringeney on Saturday. testae they kr ew that after April 1 the New York city hanks will he flooded with n plethora of money from the + - enmity bunko. which will swamp ell their efforts to it' Ake the mem y market tight and affect prices. If Mr. Met elloch chooses to stop the oelin of gold nod to buy evcn•thirties until Timeline next. the money market can not be made tight. Definite end prompt action on the pert of the Feeretery of the Truaoury, as stated in the Weald of this Illorniug, um make the Wiley market Batty at once. 711 e ;public elitel Is dispirited, and reerwantice confidence weakened bythe actions and lansuage of Tee:t am v Itepartinent c Mole heeling greyer - merit bond brArUrs. and the presidents of enille•Of the banks who are realieing 11,11rielis rates of - interest by charging—per cent. in cnl+l, and also by turning railway *hares and gov . wino lit horde , at the rate of 15 to 24 per cent. per anemia. e repent our ointment in the Woriel• of this morning fled "If the Treasury Pelmet - met had been willing ten duos ego to do what it has done today. and whet it offered to do yesterday arid. to-day. then the present st+ ingrecy in the money market could not have taken ',lace." Money litarke t. lila Stock Excholge. OA RD. 00 sh Penns 11 153 1 4 76 sh Lb Nv stti c 2614 100 sh do , bp 100 sh do 25y, 01 sh non f AmR 124 100 sla Seii Nov of c 2.2 ( t4O sh do #4ohvo 221 t 2 eh Leh Val It lon sh Cataw or 27 1.10 Rh do 1)09 '27.4 100 sh Norri.town It 06 100'sh Philesttrlelt s 5 254 i The Latest quotations from New York. [By Telegraph.] Randolph eh Co., Bankers and Brokers, No. 18 South Third street, have received the following quota tions of Storks from New York bi Aran 27,166a,1236 P.M.— G01d,103 4 ; ; U. S. 60.1681. a 1103;.: 5-rm, 1261.1094@109X: do. do. 1.8 4 4.107 , 60107f0; do. do. 1665. 107%q , 108 . : ;do do. jnly, 1966 10656(6101P.C; do. - do. 1267. 107:'.1a1073; do. &I —1440. 1003 0 '66100%; 7410 e. 2d series. 105340105 U: do. dn. ad series. 105'4@106.4.; NOV York Control, 118*,; Erie. 6831; iteadimt 45!I; Michi gan Southern. 6 . 7?,''.; Cleveland & Pittsburgh 9P,;'• Rock Island. 915,',: North West, common, 6:3 Do. preferred. 74. : Fort Wayne'. 101'''[. March 27 1669. 236 o'clock.—(told. 128 , : United States Sixes. 1991.1119 1 411 U ; United Shims Fir" twenties. 19:2, 1811..(N11. 1 9?.,: do. 1884. 1; , 77 4 .6i.1073,;; do. 1866, 108(4108.4 do. July. 108".“31063; ; do. do. 1807. 101(4107S; do. Fives. Ten• forties. 100:',1(a1100 . 3,;; United States Seven thirties. ad cone,. 103'.'.6 , 1057.[: do. do. ad series. 106 0 1 .8 10.7, N. Y Central. 11Vi,i; Erie, 69; Rending, 45:',,,:: Michir n Soothern. 'Cleveland' owl Pittsburgh. : Rock Island. : Northwest, Common. 62; Do. Pro. forred. 74%; Fort Wayne. 102. Markets by Telegraph. Nye' Volta, March 27.—Cotton firmer at 25/05 , :ffie. Floor firm, and advanced 5(410e.; %oleo •of 13.000 barredo; 9 we, 20a1:$10 70; Ohio. 010 0,5(6414; Weston., $9 `3q, $lO 45: 9 outhern, *9 900414 75: ealifornia $l3 75(41114- 25. Wheat active and advanced 2(03o.; males of - 41,00.1 bt ebele firing at $2 420.32 53. %Corn firmer; edes of 71$ OW hoolo ix ut $1 27(?:$1. 214. Oafs firm. and advo.ncod to.: Western. tic. Reef onict. Mere York, $2l 75:324 Se. Lord. 1607'1Wie. Whioky BALTTNIoItr„ March 27.—Lottnu firmer:middling. active, ot 'Vie. flour firm, email Mline.* at unchanged pricer Wiecat firm : t'ennoyiennia red, $2 6114370; choice %fore land red, $2 socall IA Corn firm; white. *1 13(at 15; Yel low. $1 17R1 19. Oafs, 81485 cents. Rye, $1 133 Al 145 cente. l'ork firm at $25 50. Lard: 17 ...mate. Coal Statement. . The following is the amotn4 of coal transported corer The Philadelphia and Reading Railroad, during the week ending Thursday, March . 26 - . 'From St. " Port Carb0n........... " Pottsville " Schuylkill Haven...—. " Auburn ........ " Port Clinton " Harrisburg and Dauphin Total Anthracite Coal for week Bituminous Coal .from flarriaburg and Dautdrin for week Total of all kinds for week erevicately tlkit3 .. • • .. . To Fame time Mat year inrrense II ER NEXT FRIEND. ELI J. T /NI‘IIIS*Isk'AI'iN,DvHI.CIKI.O. 11 1-lE v ilT DICK, Coma in ea , 4 tiKarre, March Terrn.lB6B. m 23. To ROBERT I)iCK, Respondent. Sir: \ will please take notice that; interragatories, with the names and 01 . ell pat! on of the wltneeaets to be examined in the above Noe, have been filed and posted in the ProthopotarY'l inlet+ ;eaid witneose will be examined beforeJno Roberts, examiner appointed by the Court, at lite m_ No. 1488. Sixth etreet..city of Philadelphia. on MONHAY. April 1,9, I€o, at 3 o'clock, P:111., when and where on 1111TY_attiond if you think proper. JOHN C.-ROWMR, • 127-15ta • Attorney for latbellant. LPOND'B BOSTON AND TRENTON BISOMT.—Tfra trade rupplied with Bond , a Butter. Cream Milk, Ova. mere and ERR !Recall.. Able, Weal, di Thorn's eelebrated Trenton and Wino Bizeuit, by JOB. B. BUBBLER .41 Soh) Agents, lee south Delaware avenge. Tons. Cwt. 30,750 05 5,045 05 271 18 . 74,250 11. 1,780 12 - 4 613 OS , 3,023 00 10,8711 OS 15,0 is 66,0 n 19 673,625 . 739 S5B 01 651,665 19 63 192 04