BUSINESS. NOTICES. Oh hew Choy roar and growl.. be im:toe DOD Paint cum otiall the profits of the 11013t1 nine ibrit burn abd blister the body. Pain Paint leaves no stain, no smart; gives relict instantly; and doctors and ratans else buy it. Tested free of charge. 6:::2 Arch wee; drugstore. S. H. Hastings, Agent. _ ALIiEItiCAN 1100 SE, BOSTON, MASS.—The very im wrtant ono extensive improvements which have recently been tondo popular Hotel, the largest in Now Eng lhaDdirable the proprietors to offer to Tourists, Families, =e Traveling eublic, accommodations and convent es superior to any ether ilt tal in the city. During Din Mgt glummer additionz have been made of unmet 0118 aultoe got Apartments, sc ith bathing rooms, water closets, &a., at tached; one of Tufts` magnificent passenger elevators, the beet.ever constructed, conveys guests to the upper story of 11 be house in one minute; the entries have been newly and richly carpeted, and the entire house thoroughly replen ished tad refurnished, making it, in all its appointments, equal to any hotel in the country. Telegraph Office, Bit. 'hull Balls and Clan on the first floor. fel-na.w.f-Im ',Elvis RICE ti 80N, Proprietors. MEYER'S NEWLY IMPROVED CRES CENT SCALE . , OVERSTRUNG PIANOS, gStrerledged to be the beat. London Prize Medal and eat Awards in Anprica received. MELODEONS ECOND.IIA,ND P - NOS. .taMlm wadin War roonia, 722 Arch st..beL Eighth. EVENING BULLETIN. Wednesday, April 8, 1868. TUE DOMINION TROUBLES. Patriotic Americans have had no reason to tibia well of Thomas D'Arcy McGee. But •they regard his assassination with abhorrence. He bated and maligned the United States, but he was sincere in his opinions, and coura geous in expressing them. In becoming a citizen of Canada, his loyalty to his sovereign became a passion, and he made himself eared as well as hated by those of his farmer countrymen who have been beguiled into Fenianism. This well-known fact has led to the inference that his murder is a Fenian work, to be added to the longhst of dastardly outrages that have brought a cause into disre pute that might, if properly and honorably maintained, have won the respect of the world. The assassination at Ottawa has produced throughout the Dominion a feeling of horror, mingled with alarm, such as has never before been excited in the provinces. At onoe there are suspicions raised tika formidable secret organization of a rev tionary cha -racier. It is declared that the murderer is a New York Fenian, and if this be so, it is to be hoped that he will be caught and hung. It is also rumored that the French habitans of Lower Canada—now the province of Que bec—are acting in concert with the Fenians. This is a very improbable thing, for there is no intelligible reason for any sympathy be tween the'French and the Irish in Canada. The French of Lower Canada are the simplest ,and most contented of all the inhabitants. They are descendants of French of the old ante-revolutionary regime, and they prefer `their present condition as subjects of Queen Victoria to any visionary pcheme of re annexation to France under a Bonaparte. If any of thein have been seduced into co-opera tion with the Fenians, such a crime as the murder of McGee is likely to disgust them with the alliance. • The provincial subjects of England have, thus far, had no reason to be pleased with the new system of government, styled a Dominion, which the Queen's Ministers have arranged for them. Nine months of expe rience have shown that it works badly and expensively. One of the members of the Confederation, Nova Scotia, is almost in an attitude of rebellion, and everywhere there is more of dissatisfaction and party bitterness than was ever before known. With Fenian ism besides working secretly, and with assas sination coming to horrify and alarm the people, the new Dominion cannot be re garded as quite so happy and pacific a coun try as its advocates like to represent. EOPEACIRRIENT ENDORSED. An examination of the Connecticut elec tion shows that while the country districts gave Jewell over 1,900 majority, they were overridden by the frauds perpetrated in a few of the worst Wards of New Haven, where a larger majority was polled for Eng lish than that cast by the rest of the State for his antagonist. Fortunately these gross frauds were localized at a single point, and while they served to control the State ticket, they could not prevent the triumph of the Repub lican representative ticket, which, in this case was of far'greater value. The practicill pint gained, not only in Connecticut but throughon the country, wherever elections have been held, is the endorsement of the impeachment of Andrew Johnson. Senator Dixon, by his perfidy, has made himself, most unwillingly, a tower of strength to the party which he has deserted. He has stimulated the Republicans of Connecticut to a determined effort to repu diate him and they have succeeded. In •Ohio, although there was no general issue before the people, there was the same desire to express their approval of impeach ment, and the municipal elections iu many directions show large Republican gains. In Indiana, Orth, Shanks and Julian are re nominated by heavy majorities. In Madison, the capital of Wisconsin, the Republicans made a large gain. In St. Paul, Minnesota, the Republican ticket is elected by a, hand some majority, for the first time in many years: These are, to be sure, but scattering indi cations of the great sentiment of the public; but they show that Mr. Johnson, so far as he has Indulged his favorite amusement of "going to the country," has only met with his usual success, and that he had far better have stayed at home. PETTY Ell PE liTi NE NCE. There is a cool impertinence about Mr. Johnson's Ad _interim that deserves some sharp rebuke from the powers that be in Washington. The ridiculous figure which General Lorenzo Thomas has presented as he ,has paraded himself in full uniform before the Impeachment Court, is had enough for a regular officer of the United States Army; but his attendance at the weekly Cabinet meet ings atihe White House is a piece of positive Insolence which should not go unnoticed or unpunished. The commonest dictates of delicacy or decency would suggest the propriety of his refraining to play ;the part of a sham Secretary of War, at the ,very titne that the man who has made ,him his worliden tool is one trial for the offence. But age does not always make men wise. who -were born foolish, and this roan, whose piti- JEd bragWocia about the Was Office has become the laughing stock of the country, 4aeel►4s hlinseltwitlt the gravity of an owl at .the, Council table of the :President, preciiely tis It ha had•a right to be there. It hurts "aptly to haTIO L9renz Thomas indulge himself in,these petty impertinences, but it iv anything but creditable to the cloth which he adorns so very badly. ROMANCE ANIP ItEALITII. That this is a practical and a utilitarian age is demonstrated constantly, and, not unfre quently, whimsically. Take, for example, the formal entrance of a menagerie and circus combined, into the city: The gilded chariot for barbaric display might have done service for the grand Khan of Tartary on some state occasion,or it would have graced, in a showy sort of way, the magnificent. Pe of "The Field of the Cloth of Gold," when Henry VIII. went forth to meet his brother sover eign of France. This great vehicular pile of Yankee patent axles, and improved running gear,with a more than Oriental superstructure of gold-leaf, Dutch foil, grotesque carving and violent papier mache ornamentation, heads the line, and what with the musicians who fill it, and the eight or ten "in hand" which draw it along, it is an object of prime attraction. The mounted knights, in tin helmets and leather and muslin armor, follow, escorting equestrian tinselled and spangled maids of honor and cotton-velvet Queens of Love and Beauty. The train of "high-bred dames" and "courtly lords and gentlemen" are generally well-mounted; but faces that never would be mistaken for the frontispiece of a Crichton,a Howard, or an Essex; a Lady Montague or a Countess of Capulet, with "Brummagem" jewels and appointments, dispel the chivalric illusion, and while the unskillful may gaze and admire, the judicious will smile and, perchance, inly grieve. Next in order to the cheap and showy triumphal car come the elephants, large and small, the camels, and the other interesting quadrupeds that can safely be trusted afoot. The long line of gaudily painted vans bring up the rear, and the youthful fancy is left to run riot in its attempts to penetrate the hid den mysteries of the enclosed cages, and to essay guesses as to which of them contains the great performing lion, which the great Bengal tiger, which the roaring hyena, which the leopards, and, nearest and dearest to the youthful heart,which of the mysterious vans enclose within their grated and wooden sides the monkeys and the baby ponies. But, as the BULLETIN has frequently urged, ehi • valry is not compatible with trade and manu factures; tin armor rind mu in-ring tourna ments are out of place in an age of locomo tives, iron-clad ships, needle . -guns,fast-presses and Rocky Mountain tunnels. Nur do we be.: neve that barbarism in display, or in ariy other way, can be made to accord with the practical experience of American life in L the Nineteenth Century. A whimsical exhibition of the mingling to gether of barbaric show and common sense utilities was made on Chestnut street on a very recent occasion, and the show carried a moral with it to the thoughtful mind. Ve hicles of every description became mingled up with gilded chariots and showy vans; the capering steeds of the sawdust arena were jostled by the sober and useful dray horse; dirty shoe blacks, unchivalrous looking porters and brawny laborers in untidy shirt-sleeves, got themselves entangled among maids of honor and gentlemen-in-waiting; and there was no appeal for knight or lady except to the cudgel-wielding conservators of the peace who stand like blue-coated statues, at the street corners, and who care no more fur cotton-velvet doublet than for linsey-wolsey jacket. The order of the procession was somewhat in this wise : Barbaric chariot, band and prancing steeds. Dray loaded with hams and codfish. Lords and ladies mounted on capering palfreys with an admixture of shoe-blacks and gentlemen in the pea-nut intereit. City Railway car. Elephants afoot, with an energetic body-guard of ragged Urchins. Furniture car containing iron castings and machinery. Camels afoot, pre ceded and flanked by admiring juve niles. Wagon having emblazoned upon its sides, "Cold Spring Ice Company." Vau con taining voracious beast. Milk wagon. Another van containing untameable. quad ruped. Cart loaded with Pennsylvania an thracite coal. More vans containing un plactical animals, and more practical every (fay wagons, the whole forming a strange Medley of wild beasts, carts, cars, drays and iiagons. The circus-menagerie people do wisely enough to make their barbaric- Oivalric display, even although it is made colder difficulties. They mean business; and llttainess, to be successful, must be pushed. 'Pie folly is in the attempt to carry-exploded j 001503 and things into the practical details of fdal life, and how foreign it is to the spirit of 'Ale age was well illustrated by the scene welave attempted to describe. If the muffin-ring chivalry of the South would read .the lessons of the time aright, it would greatly tend to their own advantage and aid the so lution of the great political problem of the *Y. 11111 trOlt CIMSERVAWIVE “NIGS. , 7 'The fire-eaters of Memphis have on hand a scheme for supplying to the town of felons, in Arkansas, a stock of trades-peo ple, mechanics and servants, white and black, who shall supplant and drive away all Radical working people and stock the town with Conservative operatives. A letter from that *embryo rebel paradise which was recently imblished in a Memphis paper, enumerates the 'different classes of workmen who are .most needed in order to rid the • town of the Radical element. Among other things they want are a couple of barber-shops. They must be "neat and elegant," 'and "Carried on by white or colored men, who mud. de Conservative to the core—that is essential. One hundred end fifty genttemen have pledged them selves to sustain them, and our whole population will extend to them a thorough and hearty sup. port. We have heard dozens of gentlemen ex claim Fibee the recent sneaking hostility to 13emliern nicu, white and.blitek, and the Radical- Worshiping proclivities of the two nigger barber shops of He lena, that they never would havri ton eorsal operations 'lel:Armed here while these fellows nere the only kniyht3 of the razor-strop to be/yawl .in the city. Ixt Conservative barbers come, and if they unite with otheir business the art of good . musicians they will pocket many an X at balls end parties now monopolized by Radical lags." There, Conservative "Nig"; there is a Chance for you that does not often offer. good run ofenstom to begin with promised; and' a promiscuous shower of X's hinted 'at provided the C. N. can mingle the fiddle and ihevazor, catgut and pomatum, Orpheus and soapsuds. There might be some trifling THE DAILY EVENING BULLETIN.-hiILADELPHIA, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 8,1868. drawbacks to the felicity of the Conservative "Nig," in the shape of bowie-knives and re volvers in the hands of his playful but high-spirited customers; but the open ing is well worthy of the conside ration of all colored gentlemen of tonsorial skill, musical accomplishments, and conservative principles. In the mean time the admirers of personal neatness will indulge the hope that a supply of Conserva tive "Nigs" may be speedily forthcoming, else the hundred and fifty Conservative gen tlemen of Helena must go unshorn and =- shaved until they look like so many unkempt and uncivilized savages. It would be a pity to have them mistaken for such. But the Helena "Conservatives" are to be congratulated upon their advance in civiliza tion and in the amenities of social life. A few years ago the Radical element of the town would have been got rid of in a much more summary manner, and the rope, the pistol, the bowie knife, the tar-bucket and the feather-sack would have rendered the im portation of Conservative " Nigs " unneces sary. Helena is certainly improving. Ai is a laudable curiosity that induces men, uariatevatt*, to desire to look upon the great and dittinguished of their own kind, and the Man who can cater legitimatery to this mild form of hero worship by inducing the idol to place himself on exhibition, is certain to ac quire fortune. If this is true of living heroes, how much more deserving of success is the man whose enterprise resuscitates the great departed, and enables him to strut once more upon the stage! 'The announcement in the Press this morning that "Thomas Jefferson will succeed Booth at the Walnut," although at first calculated to startle those who were not prepared for such a statement, cannot fail to gratify the living admirers of the departed but returning statesman, who having? just completed his one hundred and twenty fifth year, may reasonably be supposed to be in "the sere and yellow leaf." Precisely how he has been induced to burst his cerements, and revisit the pale glimpses of the moon, we do not know the Ptcss has this intelligence exclusively—but accept ing the fact, we cannot aufficieatly praise the enterprise of the managers of the theatre. In this degenerate day of flippant and foolish drama, even the ghost—if such it be—of a great man, may furnish us with refreshing interludes between the acts of undressed bal let and of criminal sensationalism. What characters the revivified Thomas will sus tain, we cannot tell; but we suggest that a repetition of his great act of writing the Declaration of Independence would bring down the house, especially if, the modern scenic artist's talent 'could be called into requisition to furnish. a life-like ,representa tion of the Birthplace of American Freedom in the background. The' only objection to the appearance of this supernatural star is; that it will establish an unpleasant precedent.. Other managers will, of course,make immediate arrangements to call into action the rest of our ex-Presi dents,and we shall see the departed John Tyler and the mummified Old Public F unctionary Attitudinizing in sock and buskin and flesh colored tights, to amused and disgusted audi ences. But a moment of Jefferson will, per haps, compensate us for a milleniurn of these, and if the sage of Monticello can be induced to make a political speech or two before the curtain, he will not only add to the condem nation of these two, but will crush the Demo cratic party in time for the Presidential elec tion. On the whole, his appearance is not to be regretted, and while we censure the Press for the niggardliness of its announcement, we warmly congratulate the managers of the Walnut upon the prospective filling of their coffers through the efforts of the great un cofflned. The State Senate, yesterday, concurred in the House bill which looks to the preserva tion of fish in the streams throughout the State, and to the systematic stocking of the waters, and the propagation of fish in them. The enormous cost of food in the Unites States, in comparison to what it wi a few years ago, admonishes us to put ii stop to the lavish wastefulness that has always dis tinguished the American people, and it also directs our attention toward the immense natural 'resources that lie within our reach. The waters of Pennsylvania formerly pro duced in almost unlimited quantities the most delicious fish that swim. Destructive systems of catching them and an entire neglect of the adoption of any means of keeping up the stock, have caused the salmon, shad and trout, that used to be so abundant, to become very scarce and dear. In France the propa gation of fish is as much a matter of business as the raising of cattle or the growing of wheat; while in England they are stocking lakes and .streams with trout and salmon. Pisciculture is almost or quite as much a ne cessary pursuit as agriculture or horticulture, and it is eminently worthy of scientific atten tion and legislative protection. Bunting, Buroorour AL Co., Auction eers, Nap. 232 and 234 Market street, will hold on to morrow, (Thursday) April 9, and on toriday, April 10, commencing each day at 10 o'clock, a large and Ml ta nt sale of Foreign and Domestic Dry tioods, on four months' credit,iMluding 950 packages Domestics, 800.piece:A Woollens, including some or the finest im ported hill lines Shirting. Tionseliceping and Tailoring Linens, Dress Goode, Silas, Shawls, 10,0011 doza:i Dosicry. Glows arid Lace Mitts; oleo Travailing itad Under Shirtu and Drawers ' White Goads, Balmoral I loops, Shirts, Splendid Line L. U Whit e Pique gtillte. Umbrellas, Gents' Furnishing (loods,&c. A iso, ux Fin unii*, April 10, at 11 o'clock, by cata logue, on rone moo the' credit, aboat 2UO pieces Reid Tapestry, Ingrain, Venetialli List, ltemp, Cott:n*4 and ltug Carpetings, 250 Rolls Whim and Bail Check Can ten 11.attibvs. - PsOWNINWS AMERICAN LIQUID CEMENT, FOR mending broken ormaneute. and other articled of Glaso, China, ivory, Wood, Marble, &c. No floating re quired of the article to ho mended, or the tbanont, al teaye reedy fur nee. For zelo by JOHN DOWNING, Stationer. fol-tf 139 South Eighth street, two doors eh. Walnut. 0111 N CRUMP. 111tIl,DER. 1781 Ur STREET, and.,2t3 1, 01n:11 ST REP, t. • meal/take of every branclirequired to: immmbulkling and fatting promptly furnioned. ftB7 ti _ JONES, TEMPLE ez (0., • No. 29 SOUTiI Sprig STREET, nave introduced their Spring Beauty, and invite gentlemen that with aDa combining Beauty, Lightnea and Durability to call and examine them. J., T. it Co. manufacture all their bilk Late, m 1110414) VENTILATED and lid PROVED, VENTILATED and naoy4lttlin4 Drape Cato (patented), In all the aP• proved fashione of the eeneon, Cheetnllt street, next door to the Poet-ofllee. eel 11 " M ARRY B. MoCALLA, tetortmEn o ne r D T ate h ad Caennt nfr.e tr S e p eto n . gTh Eineryt fiat and Cap has price marked on in plain figures. apo tint To ollougus, .111YrEL.KEEPIM. PAMILIDS AND Othere.—The undersigned has Just received a fresh anpplY Catawba,Californin and ottumpagno Wineo,Tonto Ale (toy invallals), constantly on baud. ... P. J JORDAN. • • 22d a strd,. Bulow Third and W Pe aln r ut d ut r • ‘ta. CLOTHING. NOTE TO LADIES, AND ILL NELECMG EICrYS' CLOTIIING On FIRST floor Special Department -- BOYS' and YOUTHS' CLOTHING, -- -- for Children, from 3 years upward, GABIBALDIO, BIS MARCHS, SCOTCH SUITS, &c., and for ----7-Youth have all -- sizes. our 'Boys' Department" shall be what Gentlemen's IS, THE BEST IN PHILADELPHIA. Prices -- lower thark any where else. WANAMAKER & BROWN, Oak Hall Buildings, Sixth and Market Sts. Ilr Entrance for Ladica on Sixth street. EDWARD P. KELLY, TAILOR, S. E. Cor. Chestnut and Seventh Ste. Largo stock and complete assortment of SPRING GOODS , From the best Foreign Manufacturers. Clothes equal or superior in Fit, Style. Comfort and Durability to those of any other MST-CLASS TAILORING EdTABLISII. NIENT. Illoderato Prices. Liberal Discount for Cash• ap27 lyrp. CLOTHING FOR SPRING. CLOTHING FOR SPRING. CLOTHING FOR SPRING. • All-Wool Cassimere Suits. All-WoOl Cassimere Suits. Cassimere Suits. Ready Made Clothing. . Fresh Made and Reduced Prices; Flesh Made and Reduced Prices. noys:,,Boys', Bo 3 B' Clothing. BoYs', Boys', Boys' Clothing. Boys', Boys', Boys' Clothing. Always on hand a. carefully selected stock of rinent,goods for Men and Boys' wear. Clothing made to order. We make the Boys' trade an especial feature in our bubiness,.and parents may rely on procuring at this establishnicnt Boys' . Clothing well cat, well made, well trimmed and durable. ROCKHILL & WILSON, ROCKHILL & WILSON, ROCKHILL & WILSON. 803 and 805 Chestnut Street. BANK STATEMENTS. QUARTERLY REPORT OF THE NATIONAL BANK OF GERMANTOWN. PHILADA. ()Env NTOW N. April RESOURCES. discounted *5343,4n •- V. 8. Bends deposited with the Tresrurer of the United States to secure circulating notes. ..... 200,00 ull U. ti Rends pledged to secure Guy. siemens ... . .... MOW GO United btatee Bonds And securities en hand . ...... ......... ...... WA 00 $787,343 145 Specie, Legal Tender and Compound eterert Ilillr of National Hanka._ 6,561; QmJ Doe Item National 57044 03 Gael' itemr ............ ............ 1,40 M • 81X174 , 15 Real E,tale.. Premlume ...... ........ ................ ...... 8,962 ro Ll A BILITI ES Capital Stock__ ............... . . ...... ........ $200,000 00 Surflue ........ 100,000 1.0 6, - 663 1 4 3 Direount and Interest 1e,78.3 04 N dons! 'tank Notes Oatetandlng ..... ........ 1774 , 3 h 00 Stote Bank Notes 3,612 00 . ... ....... .........$578,4f9 71 Duo ......... 29 475 bl -- 00,30 52 Charles W. Otto Caelder of the National Dank of Gerinauton xi, Philadelphia, do eoleinnly alarm that the a hove h ttt temcnt to true, to the beet of my Icnowledga and belief. CIIAItLES W. OTIO, Ceebier. A !brined and euteeribed to, before ale. ttie 7th day of April, lea. CHARLES B. ENGLE. ate.. 34 .1 , chary Ptibile. vicarrii QUARTERLY REPOK:P OF THE NA TIUNAL BANK OF THE REPUBLIC. April 6, li7R RESOUItUe.B.I Tonne and ... 05 United Mateo bondu deposited with Treuetirer of the United titAtex.... 600,M 011 United states bonds and other Been ritieN onhand .. . ..... ....... . 346,000 00 Real cacao (prcductive). 132,105 60 6.1 Legal tender notes„.mnd certifi cates . : ~ • •, • • • • ......... 341203 00 ationm ...... .......... 37.T28 00 Fractional currency and etampe 14,600 05 Frew ion. ...... 13,525 00 Due ft ern ether ........ 378,120 13 7) 7G 18 Expeneee and taxee.... ........ ........ .. ....... 28.4,7 e 4:1 Total ...... ; ..... .................... ...... $2.534.528 25 CapitBl Stock..... ....... ..... ...... $1,002,000 00 Circulation—. 417.00) t 0 Dorawitx .. . ............. ......................... 1,119 708 12 Profit and 10e8 • 87.222 12 ........ ............... r;44 - T,'2.3 JAMES P. 311;3.11F0RD. a•luur, To Architects and Builders llyatt'a Patent Lend Band and Cement Sidewalk Lighte, Vault Lighte, Floor and Roof Lighbi, made by Brown 13r0e., Chicago, for male, fitted and laid down by ROBEkiT AVIROD Ar. CAL. 1186 Ridge Avenue, tip? w rm 3mrpo Sole Agoutis for Philadelphia. ELDER FLOWER SOAP, 11. P. & C. R. TAYLOR, No. 641 North Ninth Street .S• $7 AND $8 P.M A SPEINtIr AT. O. at 11ARICY AIcUALIA , 3 N. E. corner of Tenth and iMerinut litreets. Call and examine, Idomething now and pretty. All ntylen of Undrmn Hats. Witt rin3 )01'S' HAT, N EW HAT AND CAP i)m Perim, N. E. corner Mail and Cheetnut etreets. Largcat useortment of Hata and Caps for Boys In the city. Call cud examine the Immense stock. apt; tit rP3 rimiE PATENT CLOTHES 13PlaNKLER DAMPENS clothes for ironing mere evenly tind quickly than by hsnd. It may also be used by cigar, makere, printers, or °their, who have occasion for light Sprinkling. For male at TRUMAN & Hity WS; No. 833 (Eight - Thittplive) Market street. below Ninth, Philadelphia. • 131;1"1:ILI: PRINTS, ROLLING PINS, PO'L'ATO Mashere, , Meitt Pounders Mince Meat Bowls and Plucks, TOVIPI Hollers, MO' Boards, aud other Wooden W:110 for flron , ekeepers, for male' by THU NUN di: I AW, No. Eib (Eight Ihirty.tlye) Market, 'street, below Ninth. (1 FIVE ROASTERS Olf SEVERAL STYLI , S AND ,' vaiioiuH 'kin& of Coffee Mille, for 01110 by Tittlslo . o4 & 6 (I AW,Dio. Kof. (Elgin Tuirty•livo) )Larkut itroat, below obah. I .Bfi 8 •-g I .IrET s Y I OUR 11A1R . C . 15 .4 1.T Bair and 4611411>y Shav e, r4 and Bath 30 con 3 t:. Itazore eat in order. 4 Open 'Sunday nernluF. 140.125 Ex change Place. [IV) . . G. C. KOPP. KNOX'S GRAPE VINPiI ARP,UNBORPASSED, IP equalled. anywhere, and Include all vartetlec.' 'Also, porom - berry, rarpberry and blackberry Plants.all varieties, of the very beat quality, for rale at 727 Market etreet 0i2.i11t40 J. 13. LAS/.1 As CO. ' M A Itl? ii 9 U N tillerlil l ioc,;YE Pß l M l i iireixTl l 4 s lll . l 3 :rdt horn Meirlition, 'dirk T. from dem: and tor sale by JOB. JR. BUoSIER em W. ° . 108 loath 1)010.wftro avenue. WORSEN rIG3.---25 CASES imw CROP, _vAgtous gradoe, lauding and for rale by JOS. S. HUSSIES .S 1 1013 South Delaware avenue. • AUCTION NOTICE. INFORMER'S SALE. Oarge Brig "Fanny." 5588 Boxes Messina Oranges & Lemons. GOOK WILL BELL On First Wharf above Raoe SC, ON 10-NOBROW (Thursday), April 9th, AT 12 O'CLOCK M., 4,12311 BOXES ORANGES, I,rmio BOXES LEMONS, Landing cx brig "Fanny," from Messina. It GOOD BLACK SILKS AT $125 Black Silks at $1 W. Black Silks at $1 76, $2 and $2 $5. Black Gro. Grain Silks at $2. Black Gro. Grain Bilks at $2 24. ' Black Ciro. Grain Silks at $2 OS. VERY FINE SRO. GRAIN SILKS, $3 to $4. Satin Face Lyons Oro. Grains, $4 to $9. PLAIN PORT DE 6010, CHOICE' mos, $1 S 7 1.2, Plain Poult do &tea, choice colors, $2 03. Plain Poult de Soles, choice colors, $2 25. Colored Oro. Grains, choke oolore,s2 50 Corded Silks, Choice Colors, 82 25. 2fanch Colored Oro. Grains:63 to $6. Silk Poplinettes, Plaids, Stripes and Figures. Very cholco styles of this scam!, importations. Handsome Quality Black AIM Hernanlea, 75e, Ileavy Conroe Mesh Silk ilernanics, $1 00. 8-4 (Josue Mesh Iron Barego, 1112 26. 3,000 YARDS 611 K FIGURED BARER Hiliking, 633:c.; worth $L Bich Silk and Wool French Poptins.aew and choice colors, $1 CS; worth $2. NEW STYLES OF SILK AND WOOL POPLINS. Also a large assortment of novelties in Spring Dress Goods. STEEL & SON. Noe 713 end 715 N. Tenth St: It KULII & MACDONALD, No. 12.,0C Chestnut St. . Staple and House-furnishing Dry Goods. GREAT BARGAINS usT . Embroidered Cloth Piano Covers, • • A very extensive variety of Barnsley, Irish, French and German ?ogre's, Table Linens, Napkins, ika. Flinch and Barnsley Sheeting% PWorr•Case Limns, all widths - . • ' French and Irish Shirting Linens. All variance of White Gooch, ke. .CARD. The long connection of Mr. KULP with the old and valued firm of J. V. COWELL 4: SON emboldens him to hope for a thare of the patronage an liberally extended to that deserving house, and he hopes, by Increased at tention to the wants of their customers, the new firm may establish a rephtation second to none in their line of business. , ap3 imrp. SILKS RICE EY SHARP& CO. 727 CHESTNUT STREET. OFFER AT POPULAR PRICES A Ilia areortment of the most detirablo Rich Brown, node and Steel falletas. Heavy Black Ciro Crain Bilks. &verb Black Tapissler Superb Black Cro de R.hlnc Silks. linperb Black Taffeta Parisien. Superb Black Gro de BrWlantes. full fine of Elegant Heavy Lustreless 'lrks for Suits. RICKEY, SHARP & CO. No. '727 Chestnut Street. ween rp tf $1,114.562 1;5 $1,114,561 65 4 746 LINEN STORE, IP • 828 A..reh Street. SPRING AND SUMMER LINENS Of Every Description, Receiving by Weekly liteamers fl OM Europe. NEW STYLES OF Printed' Shirting Linens, Linen Cambric Dresses, Lin ens for Traveling Dresses. FULL LINES OF Real Barnsley Table Linens, Real Barnsley Sheetings, Pillow and Bolster Casing% Towelings, doe.,