BUSINESS NOTICES. *a km it ego Mot bog off CotleAllllllpllOilo The origin of this disease is not eorained to the iunCv,as many siemens euppose. In many caves the disease origi nates in the liver or stomach. Many medical writers have declared that dyspepsia or indigestion is one of the meet frequent causes of pulmonary disease. Dr, iii.Schenek. of. Philadelphia, whote exclusive attention to con...utile, live caeca for the last thirty•five years has made him the tonehly acquainted with- the peculiarities of this fatal. Malady, certifies that dyspepsia is really a very common forerunner of consumption, and that it tends directly to the formation of tubercles in the limes. In view of this :fact, Dr Schenck, in the treatment of consump tive cases., when indigestion is one of the prominent symptoms, prescribes his Sea- weed Tonic and Mandrake Pills (an infallible cure for dyspepsia). to be used in connection with reheaelCa Pei nicuic Syrup, and be finds that this combination of reme dies greatly facilitates the cure. The evidences of Dr. Sehenelt's success. axe very numerous. Some coneume. gives who have been cured by him are persona of the highest respectability, and their testimony ‘ntay be seen In Dr. Schenek`s pamphlet, which will be forwarded by mail on application, or can be had gratis of druggists and dealers. Dr. Schenck b. professionally at his princi pal office, No 15 North Sixth street. corner Commerce, Philadelphia, every Saturday, where all letters for advice must be ad dressed. Be is also professionally at No. 33 Bond street, New Ycrk. every Tuesday, and at No. 35 Hanover street, Boa. non. every Wednesday. Ile gives advice free, lout for a nbercugh examination with his Reapirometer, the Price is $5. Office heurs at each city, from 9 A. 31 to 3 P. M. Price or the Puimpute Syrup and Seaweed Tonle, each, be per bottle, or $7 50 a half 'dozen. Mandrake Pile. cents per box. A full supply of Dr. Schencles medi cines for sale at all times at his room s. Also, by all druggists and dealers. The Rost Horrible Cancers or Ulcers soeitmely healed. Try Walcott's Pain Paint, free of cost, at OM Arch atraet, Philadelphia. . CENT SCAMEYER'S LE NEWLY IMPROVED CRES OVERSTRUNG PIANOS, Acknowledged to be the beet. London Prize Medal and ;,hest Awards in America received. MELODEONS Bpd BECOND.BAND PIANOS. Adigan w e.Bm Warerooms. 122 Arch st.,bel. Eighth. EVENING BULLETIN. Saturday, April 4, 1.868. ANERI MOTOR' &LS. A weekly pictorial newspaper that under 'takes to keep up with these times, has no easy task. Competition permits no delay, and the traveling artist must sketch and the engraver must cut with breathless speed, lest some rival.paper shall anticipate by a - whole week the illustrations of events which will become stale in the public mind between the publications of two successive numbers. There is therefore much allowance to be made for defective drawings and imperfect' likenesses, and fertile imagination forced to supply the absence of accurate situations and effects. But after all due allowances have been made, what shall be said of the condition of American art, as exhibited in all the pictorial periodicals? The field for the exercise of a high order of talent in this direction is a very wide one, but there is nowhere any indica tion of improvement. Take, for example, the opportunities offered by' the Impeach ment Trial, and there has not yet appeared in any paper a single illustration that is not a grotesque caricature of the scenes of that im posing event. Chief Justice Chase, the Managers, the President's counsel, the Sena• tors and many of the Repreventatives, are among the leading men of America. Their personal appearance is familiar to thousands in this country, but if those who do not know them, here or abroad; are to form their ideal of American lawyers and statesmen, from the representations which the pictorial papers give of them, our public men will fall very low indeed in general estimation. General Butler, for instance, is not a handsome man, but he is not the abject idiot that the artists make him. General Logan is usually repre sented as a huge, moustache with a small man behind it. Mr. Manager Wilson is more kindly dealt with, and usually presents the back of his head to the spectator. Messrs. Stevens and Bingham can sometimes be guessed at,but not always. The choice is precisely that offered by the famous showman, "vichever you like, my dear you pays yer money and takes yer choice." The fine stateliness of the Chief Justice is dwindled away to an insignificant person, with a bald head, which is supposed to be the distinguish ing feature of Mr. Chase. Here and there the keen critic can detect in those pictorial groups a head which he recognizes as faintly ongeesting some prominent man; but ordinarily the eye roams wearily over a wilderness of -"dummies," without form or character, or any trace of the slightest reference either to accuracy of likeness, or the requirements of art. Comparing these garbled productions with the elegant engravings of the French, English and Gernaaii illustrated papers, there is a most humiliating sense of inferiority in the American workmanship., And the worst of it that there is no improvement: The standard is, if anything, lower than it was a few years ago. The "Police Gazettes" and other indecent papers, that deluge the country with their vile illustrations of crime, seem to have dragged the other papers down to their own standard, so far as their pictorial feature is concerned. We refer to the subject by way of urging upon American publishers the ad vantage and necessity of doing something better for the cause of American art. If they will employ only the best artists, there will soon be more good artists to employ, and if they will approximate to the elegance and excellence of the foreign illustrated journals, they will find that they are• continually in creasing the numbers of that class in this country which appreciates and patronizes 'whatever is really good. OVIL COUNTRY PIASTERS. Are are nearly two centuries that Phila delphia has been in existence as a city, insuffi cient to give her a right to claim her majori ty and the power to manage her own affairs in her own way ? Or do our rural masters at Harrisburg imagine that she has grown into her dotage and that her affairs must be placed in the hands of trustees from the interior ? A few days ago, Senator Lowry, who comes from an extreme section of the State, lec tured our local judiciary and insulted our people without the slightest justification for the outrage. Not very long since we were ordered by the fepresentatives of counties on Lake Erie and the borders of Virginia and Ohio to build a bridge over the Schuylkill which we did not need, and which was only useful to the greedy city railway corporation that .was procuring special legislation at the cost of the city treasury. Railway tracks have been run through streets where they were not wanted, 'and the city has been compelled 4 So stand idly , cuid helplessly by, while men, armed with the authorityof a legislative en actment, took possessibn of the. public tho roughfares and did as they pleased with them, without regard to the public, wants or the public wishes. In fact, this special inter meddling in affairs which concern the city alone is incessant, and the people of Phila delphia are kept in a constant fever of appre hension from the time the Legislature meets until the hour of.,..jts adjournment. Yester day, the House reused to allow Philadelphia to pay the judges of the district courts 'an additional anntial stipend, an act that was as unreasonable and as arbitrary as it would be for City Councils to forbid a merchant to increase the salary of a faithful and valued clerk. - But the most wanton defiance of the wishes of the people of the city and the most em phatic exhibition of an arbitrary disregard to all considerations of fair play and common courtesy, was in the action of the House in regard to the relinquishment of "eminent do main" in the Penn Squares,so as to enable the city to apply them to the use of scientific and literary institutions, in accordance with the plans of the founder of the State. There may have been honest differences of opinion as to whether the majority of the people of the city . were in favor of this appropriation of the property in question, although they had spoken very emphatically through their con stituted authorities. But Mr. Bull, of this city, proposed an amendment which dis armed this objection. It was to the effect that the control of the property should be given into the hands of the city, but that no grant of it for building purposes should be made until March let, 1869. This amendment would have enabled citizens to express their opinion at the ballot-box, if they dissented from the proposed use of tue inclosures. This reasonable proposition was voted down and our country masters voted solid against the bill on the taking of the final question. There can be no further action upon the subject for another year, and the representatives of the counties where coal, petroleum, iron, potatoes, corn and wheat are better understood thaw books, philosophy or natural sciences, have thus settled for us a questim of purely local concern. There are families in which the needy mem bers entertain feelings of dislike and jealousy towards those of their number who are more prosperous than themselves, but who are, nevertheless, willing to tax the fortunate ones for their own support, and who put upon them the lion's share of the family burdens. Philadelphia is in this precise predicament: she pays every large proportion of the taxa tion of the State, • is •made the `•strong ass" in bearing the public burdens, and she is syste matically crossed, annoyed and snubbed by legislators who vote against everything she desires to accomplish, and apparently for the gratification of an unworthy feeling of small spite, envy and hatred. REGISTRATION OF VOTERS At every stage of the progress of. the Gen eral Registry law in the State Legislature, it was opposed by all the so-called Democratic members. It has also been bitterly con demned by every Democratic newspaper,and yet it is as fair to one party as to another. It provides that the canvassers of each election division shall not be of the same political party, and it affords legal voters every facility for securing their privilege. It imposes se vere regulations against illegal voting; but these apply to the men of one party as well as to those of another. All who wish the laws to be observed and illegal voting pre-, vented, must, if they are candid, give their hearty approval to the new measure. Prop erly and fairly executed, the new Registry Law will secure a more honest vote at future elections than we have ever had before in Pennsylvania. When the attorneys for the defence resort to quibbles and petty objections in ordinary trials before courts of justice, it is always esteemed a sign of weakness. Mr. Johnson's counsel exhibited these signs of doubt and timidity during the progress of the impeach ment trial yesterday. The phonographic re porters who took down the celebrated scurri lous Cleveland speech, and the scarcely less scandalous Washington speech to the Wig wammers, were upon the witness stead. Every intelligent person knows that phono graphy is as clear a medium of communi cating words and ideas as the common English alphabet and the words formed therefrom are. There is not one of the President's counsel who has not had his speeches reported through its agency, and doubtless each of them has perused, with feelings of mingled delight and wonder, the faithful way in which their rounded periods have been transferred to paper by the nimble fingers of the skillful reporter. Yesterday they suddenly became skeptical as to the correctness of the pub lished reports of the President's speeches and they quibbled over them with the zeal of a Quarter Sessions lawyer. But quibbling availed them nothing ; the evidence of the reporters was received and every person pre sent was satisfied of its truthfulness. It turned out, however that the Wigwam speech was " doctored " for the Associated Press by the President's private Secretary. Mr. Butler is proving himself far more than a match for Mr. Everts and his associates,. and the latter have "come off second best" in all the professional bouts which they have had together during the progress of the trial. Calling bad names amounts to nothing now, and the old familiar weapons of "Beast" and ‘‘ Brute " have to be cast aside. As the almanacs would say ; "about this time look for a stir in business." The dis appearance of winter and its melan choly traces; the coming in of Spring; the necessity for meeting the wants of the chang ing season in respect to clothing; and the commencement of active building operations will give a renewed impetus to trade, and The gloom and depression of a long, severe and tedious winter will be succeeded by cheerful prosperity that will be in keeping with the brightness of the vernal season. In the meantime. the Senate will conclude the trial of Andrew Johnson, and his deposition will bring peace and quiet• to the country, and tend to the promotion of general con fidence and prosperity. While' the ad vancing season will give fresh vigor to Was- THE DAILY:EiTENING BULLETIN .--11a1LA.D ELPHIA, SA TIII3 DAY, APT IL 4 , 1868. try, it will tend to the reduction of the hi !:ri prices demanded for every description of' food. The growing grass will bring down the price of butcher's meat, butter and eggs; the markets will soon be filled with the boun tiful products of gardens and fields; the, streams, which have been cleared of their icy letters, will freely yield their scaly treasures, and the happy change will be felt all who have dependant mouths to feed. We believe that there is but one substantial obstacle in the way of the present happiness and pros perity of the American people. Whether or not this obstacle is an insurmountable one is, a problem that is now occupying the atten tion of the Senate of the United States sitting as a High Court of Impeachment. Some of the pictures of border State life that are drawn with so much effect by Mr. P. V. Nasby, are thought to be gross exag gerations. The Revereed Petroleum's sketches are certainly broad and strong; but changing the spelling of the words in the fol lowing paragrapll which appears in the Mem phis Post of the 26th ult., and substituting for the names mentioned, the appelatious of some of the playful inhabitants of the "Con fedrit X Reads," we have truth made fully as strange as fiction, however broad and strong the latter may be. Says the Post: "A short time since a young man named Crew, living in.Williarnson county, rode up to the little village of Bethesda, near what is known as the Ridge Meeting House. He appears to have been in a sportive mood, and attempted to ride over a group of colored men who were standing in front of one of the houses. After chasing one of them in to an adjoining lot, he turned upon another, who caught his horse by the bridle, 'remarking, `You can't run over me.' Crow drew his pistol. and cocked it in the face of the colored man, who, to escape, sprang behind the horse, whereupon the young desperado wheeled and shot him dead. A coroner's jury was summoned, an inquest held upon the remains ef the murdered man, aud a verdict of accidental shooting rendered. The ne gro was a carpenter, a peaceable, hard-working man, who was universally respected by his race for his excellent qualities.' Mr. Nasby never drew a picture of a play ful citizen of "the Roads" that exceeded in breadth of coloring the portrait of this "sportive" young Crow, and the genial amiability of the coroner's jury that "sat upon the body" of the victim of Mr. Crow's sportiveness, could not have been exceeded if it bad been made up of the regular frequenters of Deacon Pogram's Grocery. Mr. Badly, the sculptor, has completed the or naments designed for the tomb of Captain Thos• P. James, First City Troop, who died hero in 1861, in the position of Colonel of the t'2d regi ment, Ninth Cavalry, Pennsylvania Volun teers. The monument is already erected by Mr.Strutbers at South Laurel 11111, and the decor ionshaving been cast in bronze at the foundry of Messrs. Wood tt Co., are now waiting to be at_ tached. The design includes two' pieces of bronze: the uppermost is a simple, but very perfect repre sentation cf the helmet of a Captain of horse, viewed in profile, with the plume and flexible chin-strap most naturally executed. This will be attached to the- cap-atone of the monument- Below, upon the die, will be placed a group composed of the cavalry jacket and accoutrements; it forms - a fragment of intricate casting in one piece of four feet in height, carefully imitated from the actual relics left by the deceased, and modeled with a delicacy that is at first illusive. The drapery of the coat, with its embroidery and epaulettes, adds, by its flowing lines, a grace to the composition, and covers as a centre-piece the extremities of the arms that compose the group. The gloves rest upon the pistol, as if the manly hand were still, within them; the sword and belt, the cartridge box and sash appear around, while the sabre tash trails beneath the trophy, with the legend "Trenton, Princeton, F. .T. P. C. C., 177 a," worked upon the pouch. Few artists could have assembled with more readiness and taste than have been shown by Mr. Bailly, a mass of stubborn and intractable acces sories like those which meet in this composition. The casting' is flawless. Although the group,. composed of slender, detached articles, is full of undercutting, the bronze exhibits a fine and en tire surface, with so little roughness or occasion for chasing, that the eye catches everywhere the graphic marks of the modeling-tool; precisely as the sculptor first left them in the clay. The Messrs. Wood are to be congratulated in the possession of a founder of art-castings of the first ability. This gentleman, Mr. Achille Bureau, originally from Lille, after practicink his art in its utmost refinement in Europe, has been for some time associated with Messrs. Wood & Co., at whose foundries ho has executed the finest specimens of statuary-casting ever produced in the country. The universally admired statues of the Indian Hunter, by Ward, and of Napoleon, by.Lannt Thompson, at the Paris Exposition, were cast by him, as well as the larger and magnificent equestrian Washing ton, by Henry Kirke Brown, in Union Square, New York; while we have seen —for art will sometimes take to carving cherry-stones—little figures of stags and other animals, the size of the fingernail, with antlers, Lte., detached, of a. more delicate workmanship than the best of the famous iron art-work of Berlin. We observed, in the work-room of Mr. Bodily, a proposed model for the. General Reynolds monument at Gettysburg; it awaits the decision of the committee. The figure alone is intended to be nine feet high, and represents the General in a standing attitude, the hands meeting in front and leaning on a sword, while one of them holds a plan of the Gettysburg region. The composition' has the merit of straightforward simplicity. Visitors to the Academy of Fine Arts during the past season must have generally noticed a largo painting, attractive by its subject, at once idyllic and patriotic—the "Harvest Home," of Mr. J. W. John. The "groups under the dreaming garden trees," treated with a little of the manner of the festivals of M. Maus, included returned soldiers, politicians, beautiful Quakeresses, and all the most characteristic population of some Happy Valley of Rasselas in the fattest corn-lands of Pennsylvania. This interesting picture has re cently been sent to Boston, where we believe it NV iII be much admired: Mr. John has just com pleted, and will exhibit on the opening of the Academy, a tranquil and luminous scene of Lun cheon in Haying Time. . To Builders, Capitalists awl Others.— Thomqii & Sons' pamphlet catalogues issued to-day, for their sales, 7th, 10th. 14th, 21st and 28th April, com prise a number of elegant residences, country seats, farms, building lots, stores; desirable dwellinan,hotele, bank and other valuable stocks, loans, Sze., by order a of the Orphans' Court, Executors, Trustees, Adminis trators, Assignees, Heirs and others. See fall adver tisements on seventh and last pages. BlinCing,lnirborour A: Co., Auction.. eers, Noe. 232 and 284 Market street, will hold during next week the following important sales by catalogue, vs. : ON MONDAY, April God 10 o'clock, on four months' credit, 1,000 lots ' French, India, German and Waal! Dry Goode, including a full, line of Darla Percales, black and colored Challies, Crapes, Tamartlnce and Grenadines, Delaines, black and colored Mohair's. Alpacae, Popline, • Mozambique, Glinghame, Lam% black and colored silks, Spring Shawls; 600 dozen ART I TROIS. Paris Silk Mitts, 300 lots rich Dress and Cloak Trim mings, Kid, Buck and Beaver Gloves and Gauntloth, Cause and Merino Undershirts, Ribbons, Balmoral and Hoop Skirls, Linen Shirts and Undergarments, White Goods, Quilts, Umbrellas, &c. Also, /500 dozen real Paris Kid Gloves, of a favorite make. • On Toinn.s.y April 7, at 10 o'clock. on four months' credit, about 2,000 packages Boots, shoes, Bahnorals, Hats, Caps, TraVeling Bags, &c. On TIIIIIISPAY, April 9, 1,000 Packages and loth of Foreign and Domestic Dry Goods, on 4 months' credit, at 10 o'clock, including Cloths,. Omelmeres, Satinets, Melons, Tricots, Doeskins, Ramos, Italiane, Satin de Chenes, &c. Also, Dress Goods, Silks, Housekeeping and other Linens, Balmorals and Hoop Skirts, Shawls, Travel ing and Under Shirts and Drawers, Ties, Suspenders, L. C. fidkfs, Hosiery, Gloves, , &c. Also, 200 packages of Cotton and Woolen Domes tics. On Eh IDAY, April 10, at 11 o'clock, on lonr months' credit, 200 places of Ingrain, Venetian, List, Hemp, Cottage. and Rag Carpetings, 250 Rolle Mattings, &c. CLOTHING. NOTE TO LADIES, IND ALL SELECTING EtCrYS' CLOTELIENG- On -- FIRST floor Special Department —= BOYS' and YOUTHS' CLOTHING, for Children, from 3 years upward, -- -------- GABIBALDIS, BIS MABCKS, SCOTCH SUITS, &c., --Youth --- have all and for ----- SIZeS. "Boys' Department" shall be what Gentlemen's IS, THE BEST IN PHILADELPHIA. Prices -- lower than any where else. WANAMAKER & BROWN, Oak Hall Buildings, Sixth and Market Sts. tom' Entrance for Ladies en Sixth street. • . EDWARD P. KELLY, grA.1.L40,11 , S. E. Cor. Chestnut and Seventh Sts. Large etock 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 Ei3TABLISIL BENT. Moderate Pricer. Liberal Dieroartt for Cash, • etp27 Irp CLOTHING FOR SPRING. CLOTHING FOR SPRING. CLOTHING FOR SPRING. All-Wool Cassimere Suits. A 11-Wool Cassimere Suits. All-Wool Cassimere 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. ROCHHILL & WILSON, ROCISHILL & WILSON, ROCKHILL & WILSON. 603 and 606 Chestnut Street. ONE PRICE ONLY. • JONES' Old Established ONE PRICE CLOTHING HOUSE, 604 MARKET STREET, &BOVE BUTYL For style. durability and excellence of workmanship, our goods cannot be excelled. Particular attention Paid t o customer work, and a perfect lit guaranteed in all cases. - _spa ato th tiffuly CONFECTIONERY. STEPHEN F. WHITMAN, MANUFACTURER OF MOST SPLENDID CHOCOLATE PREPARATIONS, Delightful to the taste and melting upon the tongue. Store No. 1210 Market Street. ap4 3t DOW'MG'S AMERICAN LIQUID CEMENT, FOR mending broken ornaments. and other articles of Glass, China, Ivory, Wood, Marble, dm. No heating re quired of the article to be mended, or the Cement. Al- ways ready for use. "For sale by JOHN R. DOWNING, Stationer. fe7-tf 189 South Eighth street, two doors ab. Walnut. JOHN CRUMP, BUILDER. 1781 CHESTNUT STREET, and 213 LODGE STREET. Mechanics of every branch required for housebuilding and fitting promptly furnished. fe27 tf JONES TEMPLE th CO., No. 29 SOUTH NINTH STREET, It Have Introduced their Bering Styla, and invite gentlemen that wbali a Hat combining Beauty, Lightneaa And Durability to call and examine them. J., T.. 15 Co. manufacture All their Bilk Hata. mhlo.tf4p isWARBURTON'S IMPROVED, VENTILATED and easy-fitting Drers Bats (patented), in all the ap proved fashions of the (mason, Chestnut street, next door to the Post.ofilee. Nel3.lyrp 'LIVERY HOUSEKEEPER, SHOULD REMEMBER .1,11 that we keep a stock of Hardware especially adapted to their wants. TRUMAN & SHAW. 835 (Eight Thirty. Eve) Market street, below Ninth, PATENT TOr)L AND AWL HANDLES CONTAIN. ing twenty Miniature Toolaall fitting into ono handle, and a variety of Chests of Toole. For eale by TRUMAN .A SLAW, No. 835 (Eight Thir4.five) Market street, below Ninth. IVORY -HANDLE TABLE AND TEA KNIVES. WITH Ism.' or silver-plated blades; game and Moat Carvers, 1" , blo Steels and other Table Cutlery; also , extra plated "Nickel Silver" Forks, for sale by TRUMAN d; SHAW. No. 895 (Eightlblrty-flye) Market street. below Ninth. ISpoa MR. ELIAS MULL, FOR MANYYEARB AT UOP. Second and Cho blut str firit-C1 Lair cutter. at Kopp's Shaving Saloon . L liair and Whiskers dyed. • inlay° and Bath, 80 amts. Razors get In order. Oven Sunday morning. .1581 Exchange Mace, Ito O. C. ROPE incirmL DRY GOODS GOOD BLACK SILKS, $1 50. 33L4A.Cli GOOD BLACK BILKS, $1 75. 'WIPE BLACK BILKS, $1 85. RICH BLACK SILKS, $2. ELEGANT GRO. GRAIN. $2 25. BLACK SILKS. GOLD EDGE, $2 50. BLACK BILKS, PURPLE EDGE, 31 RICH PURPLZEDGED BILKS, $ 75. VERY HEAVY GRO. GRAIN, $2. TWENTY PIECES OF WIDE AND HEAVY PLAIN SILKS, IN MODE, BLUE. BROWN. STONE, PEARL AND AMBER COLORS. AT S2' WORTH $2 IA PL AID .SILKS, $1 GO. • PLAID SlLka,,,sl P. PLAID SILKS, $llO RICH FIGURED SILKS. 812.,00. J. C. STRAWBRIDGE N. W. cor. Eighth and Market sta. sp4 Ptrp PRICE Sr, WOOD, N. W car, Eighth and Filbert, WILL OPEN THIS MORNING, 250 dozen real Kid Gloves, $1 25 a pair, the bent in the city for the price; medium colon, light, black and white; same goods as are cold at $1 65. Jolts in's Kid Gloves, choice Minden, beat quality. Ladles' and Children's Berlin Thread Gloves. 600 doz Dimity Bands, 1°.34.16, IL V. 25 and 31. 60t'0yds. Hamburg Edgings and Innortings. MVO pen. Daisy Ruffling, very cheap. Magic Linen Fann, 250 eon,. Ladies' Linen ltdkfm.. POO.. extra cheap. 100 doz. Ladles' Linen lildietn., 2.5 c.. worth 83c. 5C4.1d0z Ladies! Linen lidkre.. IS, IA and 200. lee doz. tios' Colored Border Mkt's., ail linen, I.2Mc. BO doz. Ladieto Hemstitch 1141 doz. Ladies' Hemstitch HAW..., 31, 3a, 45 and 50c. 6(I doz. Tucked, 21. '38, 45 and We. 250 doz. Gents' HAMS . all linen. 18, 25,, 31, 33. 45 and 50c. 66 doz. Gents' Hemstitched tidal's.. 43, 64) and 750. 100 doz. Genie' Hemstitched Col'd Border Mikis., 50c., co.t 33 a dozen (golds to import. V dozen Gents' Colored Border IBM, all linen. Mc.; job lot very i heap. lee pieces White Piques, very cheap. t ram auction. very cheap -26 deceit figured Shitting Linens, 21r,. 5 pieces 10-4 Barnsley Sheeting Linen, $1 a yard, worth 3734. UV dozen Linen Napkins, all linen, $1 50 a dozen. 60 dozen (Assn Towme, 12310. 500 dozen Linen Hurkabaek owebt. Plomnek Towels, very cheap. Itzt tioiwycomb uilts. best quality. • Banall. in Table Linens. etc. • A Dirge lot of v.. bite Goods. Linndecane Plaid Musiins, Stripe Muslinn,laconetn, ( Jam• bike, Aeineooke and Victoria Lawns. A cheep lot of Spring mohair', 25c.; same goods as have been sold at 2se. M Minh it I rows!. r. 5 and bee., very cheap, &c. Black Alpacas, 37E. 45, 52, 66, 62.,%, 75c. and /1. PRICE Bo WOOD, N. W. Corner Eighth and Filbert. KULP & MACDONALD, N0.1520G Chei4 - nut St. Staple and House-furnishing Dry Goods, GREAT BARGAINS -- ( co IN I Embroidered Cloth Piano vers. A very extensive variety Of Barnsley, lee, French and Guinan Towe's, Table Linens, Napkins, he. Frt nett and Barnsley Sheeting', PUlow,Caee bil Frtnch and Irish Shirting Linena. ill varletlea of White Goods, tie. CARD. The long connection of Mr. Ki'LP with tbo old and valued firm r f .1. V. COWELL A: BON emboldens him to hope for a rhnre of the patronage go liberally extended to that di t ervio g hnuee, and he itopee, by atilt increased tertian to the %Amide of their emtamere, the new firvi may tetablieli a reputation eecond,to now) in their lino of buiineee. ay3 Inirp • _ BLACK LLAMA L K ACE SHAW VS, GREAT EDUCTION PIa.CE4 Black Llama Lace Shay. Is reduced trout $lB to $l3; $2O Shaa tO *l3 ; *l:2 to $l5: $25 to $l9; s2s to it 'al ; *3O to s22' fiLO to *f.'B; $lO to $3O; higher coot gouda in elm pro portion. A large stock to select from