NEW Pll l lll.l CATION& TAINT , IN IT.SLY Mons. Henri Tactic, the hardest, keenest and saost scintillant of modern critics, made in (we Mph) lii6s a journey into Italy, 'from which country the letters now republitted and trans . laced" were sent hot and hot to a Paris journal. IL Tempe is the finished, last result of the French system of analysis; in a sense more absolute than has ever been fulfilled until lately—ln, a sense that would have shown the lamentably broad generalizations of poor logo to be quite unworthy his own boast—he 18 "nothing If not critical." That• brave ensian was well enough in his way, and in Inn— day; he exhibits the intellectual irritability of a spirit, naturally keen, but lacking . in educated breadthi'and even a little warped by an ethno logical bias of a totally, unscientific character; but if Henri Tempe bad stood in lago's place on that sunny quay at Cyprus, and had undertaken tlie world-famous philippic 'on woman, we should have a delineation that would seem the abstract and brief chronicle of the sex; we should hive ber feminine intuition celebrated, and at the same time made to seem something singularly , ignoble; we should have her vanity caressed and epigrammatized: her weakness adored; and, notably, her virtues placed in the most seductive light, and made to p , o-. (Ince the impression of vices. That ie the way in which Taine would have managed a phil ippic. But the philippic hardly belongs to criti cism proper; the temper of invective can only be led by a one-sided attention to a single set of characteristics, the vicious ones. To the accom plished critical faculty vice does not exist; vice is part of the type. Criticism is Brahma; she is the doubter and the doubt, and one to her are shame and fame. The repose of her senses may be dis turbed by no passion, no predilection, no gene rous heartburn for the wrong, no "rich anger' like that of Keats' mistress in the moment when, at his most antipodal distance from the mood critical, he "imprisons her soft hand, and lets her rave." Here is a picture of the critic, by a mod ern author of excellence, arid it happens to have been intended as a picture of M. Taine. eludes nothing, he looks out for nothing but his object; he carries himself over to the autho r whom he is reading, with the full vigor of his mind, and In that way derives an impression sharp and firm, at first Buds, at first sight (facie ad facium) ; he thus draws A conclusion which wells from the fountain-head, Which boils up and 40verflows. He, will describe the niain and his book; but he will so describe them that his text In rendering the picture will give you the impres- Eton 'to the life, to the very quick. In his descrip tions, or rather in his pictorial analyses, his style. as it were pressed, serried, moving by series, by ranks and enfilades,by dense and repeated sallies, by phrases, and, I was going to say, by cross hatchings deep, short, well bitten in and re-bitten, has caused some old-school critic to say of it that it was like hearing the hard, thick hail falling and skipping over a roof. This style produces on the mind, upon the whole, a fixed, inevitable itn pet,;;,:ril pvhich strikes sometimes into nerve 111 itself." Witb This description, which blends in one liVely image both the ideal critic and the indi vidual one whose work we have to review, we may withdraw from our self-imposed delineation of the critical faculty in the abstract. But it seemed absolutely necessary in some degree to prepare the reader's mind for the manner of in telligence he will meet with in these pages. The critical faculty then, as demanded by the advance of our age and as cultivated by those who are foremost in the vocation, is a dedication of the inmost sympathy to the 'object of the hour's ex amination; the perfect critic has no tenger an individuality, a conscience; ho lies chameleon like upon his subject, feedbag upon the air that exhales from its vitals, and gradually taking on its color; in this terrible union there is no self-hono r left, no opinion, no choice; what more pathetic gift can a man make to his public than when he parts with his centre, his line of gravity? What can a man betome that is so shocking as becom ing a mirror, whose only face is the face of every man it meets? But such is the perfect critic. With Machiavelli he is a politician, with Fra An gelico he is a mystic, with Borgia he is a villain, with Savonarola he is a reformer. To hear him describe the pageantry of the Italian renaissance, you would think M. Tairie had never heard of a civilization more modern than the sixteenth cen tury: ."A man of the people, accustomed to corporeal exercise, is caught through his eves. What he desires to see is not a noble intellect, but a hand somely dressed muscular figure erect in a saddle; and when instead of one there are hundreds, when embroidery. gold lace, feathers, silks and brocade glitter iu broad sunlight, amidst rattling drums and trumpets, when the triumph and tumult of the festival penetrate to his senses through every channel, and his whole being is aroused with involuntary, sympathy, then, if a wish still remains, it is to mount a horse himself, and, in similar costume, form one of the gay throng parading before the attendant multitude. Through their proud nudity, valiant attitudes, and grand flowing drapery, the painted and gilded sculptures heightened the Pa gan effect of those Pagan processions, and communicated energy and joyousness to their _living companions, who, to the clang of tram pets and the acclamations of the crowd, dis played themselves on the horses and cars around them. That generous still, ( WWI was shining overhead ; agate illuminateu klworld tO the world of formerldayt4n the same place, that is to say, the same deep sentiment of natural poetic joyousness, the same blooming physical health and energy, the same air of eter nal youthfulness, the same triumph and the same religion of beauty. And when the spec tators, after witnessing this long and rich array of splendid accoutrements, these rustling,flo wing draperies, the bright glitter of sliver scarfs, the tawny reflections of gold, garlanded is flowers or flourished in arabesques, saw the climax, the ap proach of the final ear, with its pyramid of living faces, and above these by a green laurel, a naked infant personifying the new birth of the Golden. Age, well might he believe that he saw for an instant the noble lost antiquity reanimated, and that after its fifteen-centuries winter the human plant was to bloom again in its entirety." In all that, what a perfect sympathy, what a breeze of objective, out-of-door existence! The narrator seems to have lived ail his days in the sun, in the glitter of thoughtless street-sights. Are you deeelied, do you fancy that it is the natural habit of the writer: Turning two leaves, you find him entering into the inmost soul of Michael Angelo, with such a bitter intricacy of compre hension as you would think could only have been formed by a life-long recluse. It Is the little bio graphical sketch with which he preludes his notice of the Sixtlne frescoes. •'There are four men in the world of art and of literature exalted above all others, and to such a degree as to seem to belong to another race, namely, Dante, Shakespeare!, Beethoven, and Michael Angelo. No proibund knowledge, no full possession of all the resources of art, no fertility of imagination, no originality of intel lect, sufficed to secure them this•position, for these y alt had: these, moreover, are of second ' ary importune,; that which elevated thorn to their rank is their soul, the soul of a fallen deity, who is lifted up in all his bulk for an ikresatible eflPrt in the direction of a world disproportionate to our owli, lOicr. , :r in the It avail and in the tem pest. and who, as incapable:of being sated as of sinking, devotes himself in his solitude to raising before the eyes of wen eolosbi us ungovernable, as vigorons, and as dolorously sublime as his own insatiable and impotent desire. • "Michael Angelo is thus a modern spirit,and it is for this reason, perhaps. that we are Ethic, to comprehend him without efforts Was he more unfortunate than other then: Regarding things. " . .ITA LA% Rome and Naulee. From the Froneh of flew i Tainr." Trawintiutiof :Mtn 11,1 ;,ud. Nett/ York, JAI poi dt, dt Bolt, If externally, it seems that he was not. How many anteing life contemporary artists experienced greater disappointments! . Suffering, however, must be measured ihy inward emotion, and not by outward circumstance, and If ever, a spirit ex isted capable of transports; of horrors, and of in dignation, it was his. He was sensitive to excess, and therefore 'timid,' lonely, and ill at ease in the petty concerns of society, and to such an ex tent, for example, that he.never could bring him self to entertain at a dinner. Those men whose emotions shake them too much, maintain reserve hi order not to render themselves a spectacle, and • double on themselves for lack of space to act in. From his youth up, society was .distaeteful to him; he would so shut himself up in study and silence as to be considered proud or insane. ~ L tater, at the acme of glory, he plunged still deeper into it; he took solitary walks, was served by one domestic, and passed entire weeks on seattaildings, entirely delivered up to conver sations lie held with himself' And this because be could hold converse with no other mind. Mot only were his sentiments too powerful. but again they were too milted. From , his. earliest years he cherished a passionate love tor all noble things, and first for his art, to which he gave himself up entirely, notwithstanding his father's brutality. investigating all its accessories with compass and scalpel in hand, and with such extraordinary per sistence that he became ill; and next, his self. respect, which he maintained at the risk of his life, facing imperious popes even to forcing them to regard him as an equal, braving them 'more than a King of France would have done.' He held ordinary pleasures in contempt: 'although rich, he lived as a poor man;' frugally, often dining on a cilia of bread, and laboriously, treating himself severely, slettping but little, and often in Ina clothes. without luxury of tiny kind, without household display, without care for money, giving away swims and pictures to his friends, /0,000 francs to his servant, .10,000 and 40,000 francs at once to his nephew, besides countless other sums to the rest of his family. And more than this; he lived like a monk, with out wife or mistress. chaste in voluptuous court, knowing but one love, and that austere and pla tonic, and for one woman :13 proud and its noble as himself. He felt in her beauty a revelation of the divine essence; he beheld her enveloped in her fleshly covering ascending radiant to the bosom of God.' The rest of his life corresponds with such sentiments: he took great de light in the ,areasonings of learned profes sors;' and also in the perusal of' the poets, Petrarch, and especially Dante, whom ho almost knew by heart. 'Would to heaven,' he one say write, 'that I were such as he, even at the price of such a fate! For his bitter exile and hie virtue I would exchange the most fortunate lot in the world.' * * * * * Finally, he goes so far as to separate himself from himself, from that art which was his monarch and his idol; 'paint ing or statuary, let nothing now divert my soul from that divine love which opens its arms from the cross to receive us!' The lant'sigh of a great soul in a degenerate age, and among an enslaved people; for At self-renunciation is the last refuge." 'cYlde/1 is the actual Taine,—the Paine whose soul went out with the pageantry, or the Taine • whose soul entered in with the solitary? Alas, neither shows the soul of the true Taine, for his business is not to have a soul, it is to be a critic, You may ns well ask the mocking-bird for its note. Place him in Naples and he interprets, ,with the same singular absence of Individual pro dlientien: the voluptuousness which is the central trait of thn tana,lOn, 'Mon)? among them have heads like those or .lralregglo, with a tranquilly voluptuous air, and a smile constantly blissful and serene. It is very pleasing, and enables you to comprehend their amatory characteristics. When they address a woman this smile becomes more captivating and tenderer; there is no French piquancy or petu lance in it; they seem to be enraptured, to relish with the keenest zest every word that falls from her month, one by one, like so many drops of honey, The light popular songs, the national music, and the operas of Cimerosa express the same sentiment. "Amongst the lower classes every young girl of fifteen has a lover; every young man of seven teen has one linewise, the passion with both being strong and enduring. Both intend mar fiage, and wait as long as is requisite, which is until the young swain can purchase the principal i article of furniture—an immense square bed. "Observe titian however, that he does not in • the, • intkrvall lead the life of a Trappist. No people arc more given to pleasure; none arc more preccreious. At thirteen years of age child is a man. "A young girl stands at her window, while a young man passes and repasses, and stands in the nerte-each , re, both making signs to each other: In the street I live in is a certain window, half open; the lover in a vehicle ascends and de ' seems the street thirty or forty times every af ternoon, and then goes off to promenade on the Villa Reale." In pure descriptive art, the style is almost above criticism; we need do nothing but open our oars and admire: absolute perfection, in defining the impression of a landscape or a work of art, is something which the critic drops behind hinens an accomplishment too trilling to be noticed, while his mind engages itself in grappling meta physical refinements. If the landscape is grand and simple, he sketches it in a few large lines; if detailed, he fingers it with minutiae and prera- Thaelitism, with the careless case of a good pianist; but be generally describes with a singu lar, misting manner, which could hardly have existed before landscape' art became the proud_ nent mania of a century, and in which vein the first description we recall is the painter flaydosns account of the coronation of George IV. Here are a few sentences front this finished penman's sketch-book: "All is gray and neutral: the mountains are bare, the rocks are white, and the broad Plain 9-- dry awl Molly; scarcly any trees are visible, save on the clues or in the bowlder-strewn hollows, where the pale olive and the almond tree find shelter for their meagre stems. Color is wanting; it is a simple design, delicate,elegant as the back grounds of Perugino. The country resembles some grand web of the gray of flax, barred, uniform, "And suddenly all the Inagnifteinnees of the South expand; the marsh of Berm, a wonderful blue sheet,umuoved within its cup of mountains; then the see. ' opening out to the infinite, the great, radiant, glittering deep, whose beaming tint has the delicacy of the roost fascinating vio let or a periwinkle expanded; a conservatory flower in a marble vase,—the pearly veins of an orehis with the pale velvet on the margin of its leaves, and the violet-purple pollen slumber- • ing in its calyx--is not at once more splendid and more tender. "A uniform tint, a blue pale and as it were ef- He translates the puffed frisettes of the Empresses faced. fills the immense space, the whole sky and (bu (f' anles) "the ridiculous modern knobs." the whole sea. Sea and sky, both are merged in ° • Then, he thinks the Braccio-Nuovo of the Vatican each other; sometimes the small black boats seem to be birds poised in the air. There is not the the mime of a statue, (p. 126), translates the scin faintest sound; you scarcely detect the light flap tillatious of candles, called "flakes of pArl," of the waves. The delicate shadings of dripping (tenill,,,i de )lacrO by "scales of jet" (p. 3-17), and slate in its dewy crevices alone furnish an idea of that tint that has faded away. You whisper to spells Meenmas .31(tornas, • Medd. A5,ii3.34 yourself the verses of Virgil; von imagine those and Adonis A dome Similar triumphs of silent realms into which the Sibyl descends, the skill adorn every page. M. Taint:, even realms - where shades are floating, not cold and iif he is a heathen man and a for lugubrious like Homer's Cimmerian people, but signer, has done nothing to merit the prolonged where existence, vague and evaporated, reposes - torture he receives at the hands of this somewhat until the force of the sunshine shall concentrate and send it up to flow sparkling Into the torrent brutish inquisitor. The well-meaning American of being; or perhaps you think of those shunbt , r- has clumsy lingers. He has attempted to copy a lug strands where future souls, a humming va- piece of finished Gemese filigree, all the while port' throng, fly indistinctly like bees around the working with the materials and among the ap calyx of a flower." plitinees of a brass-foundry. Such a description as this, like a felicitous watercolor cartoon, exhibits not only the Ma tures of a landscape, but its atmosphere--its ' "breath of life." But it is in delivering his int- pression of a work of art that the famous critic has the easiest and most assured success. HOW be throws himsel tint° the meaning of the painter! How be appreciates, sympathizes, interprets to an indolent age the motives of the great workers and doers of the live past How he loves Durer for his medievalism, John of Bologna for his Greek spirit, Titian", for his sensuality, the Frate for his quietism!. HOW differently cornea to our senses the breath exhaling oat of these pages, from the impression gathered in reading the works of that hapless anachronism lfr. Ruskin, who wanders all' through the classical revival of Italy seeking only the Gothlcltiens which suit bin), and which crop out here and there through it like thistles between THE DAILY I&VIENING BULLETIN ITHILADELPHIA, MONDAY, APRIL 27,1868. thOtones of the Parthenon We could gather from the bright paragraphsi of M. Taine gems as rich and abundant as those with' which Aladdin Ililad his bosom; but as we Intend to restrict our selves to a single master, we glad that the comments on Raphael are so precisely to our purpose; they are truly graphic, and seem to reveal the very seal of the young Urbinate; but we select, them partly from another motive, and that is to show how courageously the critical traveler, when practising the style epistolary, will correct himself, say and unsay—give first a, Impression and then another that cancels it, anx ious only to be honest and to put his correspon dent in possession of that " conclusion as it wells from the fountain-head," which was spoken of in our first-quoted . allusion to M. Thine. This hearty frankneSe is rare now-a-days, when every author trims and barbers his arguments before he will let the public see theih; but Henri Thine has no weaknesses to conceal, and is not afraid to strip himself and let ne watch his intellectual muscles awork.' At the first blush, in the pre sence of the Raphacis of the Vatican, their bas relief paucity, their cold-blooded .method strikes him, and strikes him disagreeably; "fourteen people kneeling on the stairs, that is Raphael's idea of a crowd!" and of the Massacre of the In nocents-he declares : "Not one of these innocents runs any danger. The large jolly fellow at the left who displays his pectoral muscles, the other in the middle who shows the trough down his spine, are never going to kill the piccaninnies in their fists. My good creature, you are In high condition, and you know what to do with your muscles; but you don't know your liminess. Forany King Herod, what wretched executioners you make! As for the mothers, they do not love their children, they are taking their leaVea with - tranquility; if they cry, it is moderately; they would have too much fear of spoiling the harmony of their attitudes. I found the same thing at Hampton Court in the farmers Cartoons: the Apostles who strike down Ananias with their lightnings advance to the ledge of the platform like an opera chorus in the fifth act." But directly afterwards, in a revusion of which he is not the least ashamed, he throws consist ency to the winds, and gives us the other side of the genius Raphaelesque: "His Venus receiving the vase is a virgin of the primitive' eras, of inexpressible innocence and gentleness, and her baby head which has not yet had a thought, planted on her herculean trunk, produces an emotion of such a character that the fancy is involuntarly carried back to the very origin of the human family, when races athletic and unthinking, with their short swords and their stout dogs that brought down the lion, decended from their mountains to colonize the universe. The very hand of Raphael is seen in his Galatea: you see it in her grace and sweetness, m the gesture of the little cupid who spreads his limbs so harmoniously, in the original Inven "-eneqs through Out the marine gods and goddes t. • , The pug-nosed, bearded triton who superbly enlaces, and fetters, and monopolizes the nymph in his nervous arms has all the spring and suppleness of an animal god Who inhales full-bosomed contentment and power out of the salt sea-air. The painter is not carried away by his subject. he reposes sober and temperate, he stops short of the extremes of movement alit expression, he purities types and arranges attitudes. This natural taste for rhythm, these affectionate instincts which make him paint, Mozart-like, the goodness of nature, this delicacy of soul and of organs which leads Lim to seek everywhere noble and calm beings, whatever is happy, generous, and worthy of tenderness,—and then that unique fortune of having met with art at the point which separated achievement from the age of prepara tion and from the. age of decline, that unex ampled privilege of n double training, which, after having shown him the Christian innocence and purity, gave him to 'feel the force and joy of pacanism, all these eirettf . 'istances were necessary to lift him up to his pinnacle." Thus, with a touch a shade and a touch of light, the clever critic finishes his portrait, and may feel as Wortli;worth felt of his "Rob-Roy" that the subject is disposed of, and . that other workmen may as weltleave it alone henceforward. That this style of criticism is cold at heart, that the mere intellect, with all Its address, must freeze what it embraces, we do not mean to deny. One sometimes sighs amid all this ease and finish for the bungling enthusiasm of an English de scription, or the vaporous mysticism of a Ger man one. But for the purposes of an accom plished Italian guide, for the' function of teaching the modern,cultivated gentleman out of the dram igrn-oom what eyes he ought to look out of, we have found no itinerary half so'apt, so frank, so companionable as this of M. Henri Taine. Of the form in which the work is presented to the Anurican public, we wish we could avoid saying anything, The translation is constantly and consistently awkward. Mr. Durand seems not to know that be is dealing with a master of style, whose epithets are chosen as an accom pliAud modiste chooses her trimmings, and for whom a misapplication is barbarity. It is pitiful to tee the weld-artist's little triumphs and felici ties undone and unperceived. perpetual chill, an infallible gravitation to bathos, emanates from the cold steel with which John Durand shepherds his unwilling ranks of captives. The extracts we have made we were com pelled ourselves to translate, hastily and crudely it is true, but we hope with an eye to the intention of the author. On the very first page, the comparison of the Provencal plain to a gronde (Pun 974; de lin (we have, rather faultily, called it a "web of the gray of flax') is given as a "striped uniform car; et;' , Spagnoletto's magnificent siienua at Naples, d'horriblcs genuux caiiivnx (horrible knotty knees), is made to have "horribly crooked legs;" they are not crooked, in the picture, but are de formed with callosities, evidently studied ft , "n the life, and moat appropriate to the petit stars such a paunch and such a flabby "bosom (trans lated chest) of Vitellius." The weary spectator who stands for hours in the, Sixtine pointedly complains that his legs begin to run tip into his .body (les .julnhes coinmenc (Sit it 515 reqtrer duns, le corps): the interpreter is satisfied with the vapid old expression "my legs are sinkin; from under me." Na,c LIMTIONS oi • SIR WALL EIt—TUE EI)InON, TIC i KNUIR A FIELPS.—It 15 ' strange: in onr day, when English historians, in the interest of Queen Bess. have been so harshly and icily handling the character et Mary Queen of Scots, 10 tun , again the loyal pages of "The Abbot," wherein, preserved in the pathetic credulity of ihe most faithful of Scotsmen, Mary Stuart still wields her bleeding sceptre as the sad, wronged Queen of Romance. The form of Daruley's tour duress again dissolves into the beautiful and tragic fiction arranged by the romantic school of a couple of decades past, the Marie Stuart of Schll ler,of the French and of Waverley. It Is pleasant enough to shut our eyes an instant to the ugly lights of modern revelation, and dream again in that false sweetness that took the wild Scotch winds with beauty so many winters back. The textual accuracy and great neatness of Messrs. Ticknor Rc Fickbe Library editions, to which this volume is now added, deserve to win for the novelist a new train, of readers among a world Which le forgetting him. "Redgauntlet," in the same form, Is now ready. Received from G. W. Pitcher. Appleton's cheap pamphlet issue of Waverley, prettily covered with red and green plaid; now includes "The Antiquary." Peterson's twenty-cent Issue has received the addition of the "Heart of Midlothian." For the trifle of five dollars a subscriber receives the whole twenty-six volumes, in sufficiently legible type, and with hardly any mistakes. NEW EDITION 4 or Drcarys.---From G. W. Pitcher we,get the "Charles Dickens" edition of ''The Old Curiosity Shop," with which are re printed a number of the shorter essays and sto ries from Mr. Dickens's periodical. The pages have running headings, prepared by the author, indicating the progress of the story. "The Old Curiosity Shop," as we nifty recall, embodies one of Dickens's most perfect delineations, Richard Swiviller, one of his stupidest and stagiest vil lains, Quill), and ono of his most popular exam ples of false pathos, Little Nell. Appleton's brilliant little "Plum-pudding" Dickens, in stitched covers, now includes "Bleak House,"—with the immortal lire. Jellyby, Mr. Turveydrop, and that immaculate cockney Vidoeq, Bucket. The twenty-fourth volume of Peterson's cheap paniphlet edition of . Dickens is "The flaunted House," perhaps the * slighest and least character istic of the Christmas compilations so long habitually edited and prefaced by that author. Mr. Howard Challon, of this city, is preparing, and will shortly publish, a work which bibllo philists will find of practical use, videlicet, a Classified Circular of the Trade Lists of leading publishers of literary works, with au alphabeti cal index,co that any one can determine the price of a book by referring to Belles Lettres or Fiction. Also Valuabk information respecting books, lite rary reviews, magazines and newspapers. • "The Physiology of Marriage," 308 pages, anon ymous, published by W. 11. Piper LC/. Co., Boston. From the fact that this work Is sold by Mr. J. B. Lippincott, the Inference may be drawn that it is a reputable one. „ D. Appleton ti Co. have published a email, neat edition, on tinted paper, of Butler's "Hadi bras," with some appropriate portraits and the author's autograph. For sale by G. VI. Pitcher. Messrs. Appleton tit; Co. issue a Convenient large page edition, with woodcuts, of Julia Cava nagh's "Dora." For sale by Pitcher. From Messrs. 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Order* for time celebrated Shirts moiled promptly brief notice, Gentlemen's Furnishing , Goods, Of late ityles in full variety. WINCHESTER & CO.; 106 CHESTNUT. Gentlemen's Fine Furnishing Goods, RICHARD EAYRE. No. 58 N. i3ixth Street, below. Arch, Invitee attention to hie Improved Shoulder Seam Pattern Shirt, Which for ease and comfort cannot be 'surpassed. It gives universal satisfaction for neatness of fit on the BREAST, comfort in the NECK and came on the SHOULDERS. It la made entirely by hand, with the beat workman• ship on it. Also a superior quality of KID GLOVES. at No. 58 N. BIXTII Strout, Phiia. mblaam oGENTS' PATENT-SPRING AND BUT• - toned Over Gaiters, Cloth, Leather, white _••••• and brown Linen Chlldren'e Cloth an. Velvet Leggings ,_• aLio made to order tar GENTS' FURNISHING GOODS, .... 0 ,,, of every description, very low, 908 Chestnut street, corner of Ninth. The best Mid Gloves or ladles and gents. at . RICIIELDERFER'S BAZAAR nolatfs OPEN IN THE. EVENING. • WATCHEIS. JEWELRY, L- LEWIS LADOMUS & Co: DIAMOND DEALERS & JEWELER. WATCHES, J MAL LH V A; SILVER iy•Alte. WATCHES and JEWELRY REPAIRED. . 8 02 Cheßtnint St., Philp Would invite the attention of purchasers to their large stock of GENTS' AND LADIES' WATCHES Just recetved,of the finest Enropean makers,lndependent Quarter lieCond, and dolf.winding I in Gold and Sliver Gases. Also, American Watches of all Maas. Diamond Sets, Pine. Studs, Ringsatc. Coral,hlalachite. Garnet and Etruscan dots, In groat variety. Solid Silverware of all kinds, including a large assort, meat suitable for Bridal Presents. NW TURKEY PRUNES LANDING AND FOR SALE by J. II UUBSJER dr. C0..108 Muth Delaware avenue ' CHILDREN'S 01.010111 Na. GRAND OPENING OF CHILDREN'S CLOTIIING ) Thursday, April 23d, AT • MRS. E. KEYSER'S CLOTHING EMPORIUM, 1227 Chestnut St , below Thirteenth, North Bide. Boys', Girls', Infants' and Misses' bits on hand and LIMO to order at ahart notice. MRS. E. KEYSER, No. 4227 Chestnut Street. arkl4 tato RETAIL DUI GOODio E. 'll. NEEDLES & CO., 1101 Chestnut St., Call Freda] attention to their large invoices of SPRING GOODS, In new and desirable desirru!, which they offer atr rice that cannot fail to give sansiactlon, consteung of Laces and Lace Goods, Veils and Veil Material in Colors, White Goods and Embroideries, Handkerchiefs, &a, &off, Linens snd House-Furnishing Dry Goods, In Great Variety. Ladies will find it to their advantage to call and ex amine our large stack of Piques and Material for White Waists, E. M. NEEDLES & CO. NEW NEW STORE } JAMES MoMULLAN,} STOCK 'lmporter and C ealer In Linens and Bonse•thrnistang Dry,Goada, Takee thie opportunity to return hie thanks to the ',adieu of Philedelptia and curroundlng digricte for their liberal patronage, and be to inform them that FOR. TIM AC CONIMODn'I lON OF FAMILIES RESIT/INN IN THE WEnTERN PANT OF THE CITY, he has opened Itia - NEW STORE, No. 112-8 Chestnut Street, Two dooriel)..low Twelfth street. Hie long experience hi. Liner Goode. and hie [saltier for obtaining inppllee 'DIRECT FROM EUROPEAN MAN UYACI CREitti, 'noble him at all time, to offer THE BEST HOollti NC LOWEST The Old Store. B. W. corner Ii.EVIS.NTH. and CIiEST. NUT. will be kept own, ae tonal. f e29-e m iv.2rn JCHAMIIiIItB, NO. cIU ARCH 811 f PFT.._GREAT . HAItIiAINS FLOM' AUCTION IN WI I IT E GOODS. Mancini.. and Pique• for :a ctg. Nainrook, Stripe Swk. M French Mwlin two yd.. wide. 50 cte. French Tucked Marlin for %Vast.. Lama Lace Pointe.. bargains * Marie Antoinette Flotilla. • Lama Partool Curers. Colored Trimming Lacers. Itamburg E dgin gm and tweeting., choice detigw, abort half the cost of importation. f .11,6E 6'l °CF. OINVILT.S. VERA' CHEAP. Iloneyeenat Quills •, from $1 75 up. • A !lend ale. guide, firm *1 f,Oldt. Lancaett r fro!. L st) Jacquard Qttilt , ,of eurirtur itatternet. Mat ecillett gitiltP, at? it/. $7. t?.. tio) and 810. time of the.te are bet:n(11111 It3ttertut and very fine quality. heytin been bought fatly, and 1 nut othtring thttn ctrl lute, a y•:.te SCF GRANVILLE IS, lIAINES. 1013 Mnrket etreet fent') I, , i)vy HALLeIi„ bot"rii tECOND STREET. Ili have now open their new crock of White Goode— Tucked and Pulled Muidins; French Malta and Soft Cain. brica ; Jaconela and Tare Checks; Large Plaid Nilin poolce, Milli, Nainrookr, and Lawee, Brabrolderiee and I ioderv, Table I inenn and shirting Janette, liollare, Sette, 'Worked Edgingo and Inkertinge Banda, Band k errhief be.. White flquee In great variety. tnlidi 18(18. o f Releaainig 'New Silk replies; ' /lain Silks; Black Mei New Brodie Shawls; New New Lacr Shawls, the. EIDNV IN HALL CO., mhTh 11 2i South Secourl street. 4 —q it DoZEN lIEMMED-BTITCII HANDKER r (1111 , FS-I'iirchaccd at Auction.-13.¢ and 2 inch 4 Hem., 45 and 50. worth 75 and dit; IY. and 2 Inch Hem., p3'/,: and 75. worth $1 and $1 25: 2,1.1 and 2 inch Item., $1 and $1 25, worth $1 50 and s2.' Gents' Hemmed Stitched ilandkerehiefe, only $l.. The , above gouda aro the cheacept. ever offered by no. STOKES & WOOD, 702 Arch street. PRING D 1 ES3 (mous. L) We otter to•day too pieced 7iloznrribignes. at 18 cents per yard. UC.RWhIN EiTirDDART I; 11W), 450. 452 and 4E4 North Second street. 117 E OFFER TODAY ONE HUNDRED PIECES VI Spring Caseimeroi, in medium and light colors, from 60 to 95 cent+, per yard CURWEN STODDART k BRO., aril° Nor. , INJ. 452 and North Second street. GROIDEMEN, Liquous, &O. Fresh Spiced Salmon, Fresh Mackerel in Cans, New Smoked Salmon, Mess Mackerel in Kitts. ALBERT C. ROBERTS, Dealer In Fine Groceries, Corner Eleventh and Vine Streets. Fresh Fruits and Vegetables. RASPBERRIES, PEACHES, PEARS, FRENCH PEAS. MUSHROOM% GB.EENIUORN, at JAMES R. WEBB'S, 3a26 B. E. corner WALNUT and MOUTH Strode. BURLINGTON! BURLINGTON! Herring! Herring! Genuine, G. I'. Mitchell's agents for sale of same. U. P. KN WILT & BROS., ap27,3t* 114 South Wharred. DAVIS` CELEBRATFA3 DIAMOND BRAND CIN clunati Ham that condgnment of the Rouen. just re. celved and for gale at cousTra Eat End Grocery, No, 118 South Second Street. Ie , RE9II PEACHES FOR PIEI3,.TN 81b. CANS AT 90 .1 cents per can, Green Corn, Tomatoes, Peas, also French Peas and hiushrooms, in shore and for sale at COUSTYIS East End Grocery, No. 118 South Second street. NEW BONELESS MACKEREL, YARMOUTH Bloaters r _Sriced Salmon, Mess and No. 1 Mackerel for sale at cormerrs East End Grocery, No. 118 South second Street. WERT INDIA HONEY AND OLD FASHIONED V V Sugar House Molasses by the gallon, at COUSTY'S East Enid Grocery, No. 118 South Second Street. (111010 E OLIVE OIL, 100 doz. OF SUPERIOR QUAL': ty of Sweet Oil of own importation, just received and for sate at COMITY'S East End Grocery, No. 110 South Second street. A LMERIA GRAPES.—iOO KEGS ALMERIA GRAPE% .101. in large clusters and of stiperior quality, in store and for sale by M. F. ISPILLIN. N. W. corner Eighth and Arch streets. _ DRINCEBB A ONDS.—NEW CROP PRIMERS per--s Abnonde Just received and for Bee by M. F. SPILLIN. N. W. cor. Arch and Eighth otroots• 1100 MEd B 'RAISINS I I--200 WHOLE. HALE AND Alb quexter boxes of Double Crown Raisins the beet fruit In the mouket, for uelo by M. V, IffILLIN:N. W. cor Arch and Eighth streets. NATORTON , S PINE APPBE CBEESE.-100 BOXES ON Consignment. Longing and for male by JOB. B. BOSSIER & CO.. aigonto foriNorton & Elmer. 108 South Delaware Avenue. 11 / 11NANCIA'IL. Seyen per cent. First Mtge. Bonds OF THE Danville, Hazleton & Wilkeibarre R.R. FREE Vitpht ALL TA XES This road will connect with the Northern Central , Philadelphia and Erie. Lehigh Valley.. Lehigh Naviga tion, and 13azieton Itallroade, and openly one of the richoat etetions of the le eat middle Coal field. We offer for sale a limited amount of 'theme Honda at the very low rate of Ix AND AalltUED INTEREST. BOWEN & PDX - ' 9 mhl4.2mrn Metrohante' 114:mohange.. BANKING 110ILSP JAYCOOKE ecO, 112 and 114 So. THIR,D ST. PHLGAIO.6, Dealers In all Government Securities, POPULAR LOAN. Principal a Totem* Payable in Goik CENTRAL+ PACIFIC ItAII-JE1.00:A1) First Mortgage Bends. Office of DE HAVEN 1 BRO., No. 40 South Third. WI. WE OFFER FOR 8M,)1 FIRST MORTGAGE EOM CENTRAL PACIFIC R. R. CO. At Par, and Back Iniereat. There la a very large European demand for theca Bonele- wkde , idded to very large home demand. wild ' soon absorb., the bond' the Company can lame. The above Bonds ray SIX Per Cent. ■ntereat In Gold, and are a First Mortal/goon aroad costing about three dune their amount, with very large and constantly Increasing net revenue. DE HAVEN & BRO., DEALERS IN ALL KINDS OF GOVERNMENT ElEc taunts. GOLD. acct... No. 40 S. Third St. Seven per Cent, Mortgage Bond& OF THE PENNSYLVANIA AND NEW YORE CANAL A.ND RdILIWAD COUPANY, Gila) anteed, Principal and Interest ) By the Lehigh Valley Railroad. These Ronda are a portion of s3.ooo.otai on a road which wllico About 05,(00.UO1I, and being guaranteed by 014 Lehigh Valley Railroad. representing about 1115,,UKOLA are. in every reaped, A First-Class Investment. At 104 thotpay.aa much interest u Readies e's stn. At 110 " Lehlth 2. suer es a t At ILO " Norm reams. Wit at vt., • We offer them for emu at 95 affd accrued interest from Dee. I, 1807. C. & H. BORIE.. 8 Merchants': Exchange, OR BOWEN & FOX, 13 Merchants' Exchange. DESIRABLE INVESTMENTS, Producing Over 7 and'B per cent. Interest. LEDIGEI NAVIGATION AND RAILROAD FIRST MORTGAGE SIX PER CENT. BONDS. FREE FROM ALL TAXES, DUE Ll. ERIE CITY SEVEN PER CENT. BONDS. SECURED• BY REVENUE FROM WATER WORKS, Interest Payable in New York. UNION AND 1/.IGANSPORT RAILROAD FIRST' MORTGAGE BONDS, SEVEN PER CENT.. Interest Payable In New York. COLUMBUS AND INDIANA CENTRAL, RAILROAD , FIRST Id TITO ARE SEVEN PER CENT. BONDS. The attention of parties about to Invest money or ex, change soeurities is In vited to the above. Information and prices given on aplation. DREXEL & CO., 34 South Third Street. NEW YORK STOCKS: ALL FLUCTUATIONS IN THE NEW YORK RLARK.ET or Stooks, Gold and Governments!. Constantly furnished us by our New York HOW& STOOKS Bought and Bold st on 00111111 4, 8i012 in Philadelphia. NM. York at . Boon, eoLD Bought and Bold in large and small amounts. GOVERNMENT SECTTE ABS Bought and gold at . New York Price:k ! SMITH, RANDOLPH & CO., NEW TONLE, I PIIIIADELPH I A, 3 Nassau Mt. 16 S. Third Si. X 120.000 y r ri k on,,, i g d a , AND slo,ooo n TO L ( AN iiti FOS tv lrly' prop erty. Apply to g eou o vey r :ncer, 5T2 Wlnut street. ap2s , i§ . , g t ;‘)K (Inn AND $15.000 WANTED ON MORTGAG I F. -..-‘4lO. Ftl of valuable city properties contrpl y altuated. Vint-clam securities. Apply to E. R. JONES. ra Walnut street. 445410 SLATE 111 A NTELS. SLATE 1W A.TcrlrV LA S. - The laying aseortment and the beat fhdehed Enameled. SLATE MANTELS. Also, WARYI.AIIt FUENACES: RANGES, MOH and LOW DOWN ORATES. Manufactured and for Bale by W. A. A 13, NOE 1), 1305 Clkestmit Street. ivlBmw f tv 110ARDING. BOARD FORA GENTLEMAN NO LADY MAY BY'l had fn a private family, Wert Philadelphia; legation delightful: hotiFe pleasaut ,• toema largo' and airy, Ad drers "F. .a.,” West Philadelphia. ap24.3t* SUMMER BOARMIVQ H —ELIGIBLE ROOMS, WITH. board, now vacant at 9921 Locust argot, West Phila. violptilar ap23-Le THE IM PEACH ME NT , TRIAL: CLOSE OF SATURDAY'S PROCERDINGSI Mr. Mossy:gen resit med his argument, commencing by reminding the court ot the poilits belied been call lug its attention to - bolero the merle. Ile 'expressed his astonishment at Mr liontwelert summing up of the debate of 1759, and declared, with all respect to the honorable manager, that the statement was notauther ized br: anything that occurred >ln: that debate. The only quest ion that wee ditcureed 'anti settled in that debate, was whether the power of removal was lodged in the President alone, or lodged in the President and Senate, and it was deeided that the, power was in the President alone. The phraseology of the bills was changed so that all appearance of a grant of the oower from the Legislature might be avoided, and that Congress might appear as simply ricogniz ing the fact that the power was vette?! by the Constitution in the, President. De had stated accurately the substance of the debate, and challenged all contradiction. What had followed? That congress had passed three bills establishing three executive departments, and in the language of Chief Justice Marshall, It had, in order to avoid legislative instabliity on that question, framed those bills 'so that thy ahoald not take tae form of a grant from the Legislature, but should ap pear as a constitutional interpretation. These laws were in force to this day; they were professedly an in terpretation of the Constitution; were so declared by the Supreme Court; were so declared and treated by the Congress which passed them, and were so regarded by every subsequent Congreee down to the Thirty ninth Coiwf,rere. De would pass on for nine years, and come down to 1798. Another executive department was then formed, called the Navy Department, and in the law creating it the power of removal was recognized in the phraseology, "In care of vacancy by removal or other wise." The words were not "removal by the Prod dent;" the idea being conveyed that it was a power lodged by the Constitution in the President. Be passed on for twenty years—to the creation of the Posteffice Department, the law creating which con tained this provirion: "In case of the resigna tion or removal from office of the Postmaster. General." It did not say by whom the removal was to be made, but it adopted the preceding laws in reference to which it was distinCtly under stood that they were interpretations of the Conetita Don acknowledging that* the power of removal was lodged In the President, and therefore not necessary to be conferred by express grant. Then he came to the act of March, 1649, creating the Interior Depart ment, and providing that tbe Secretary of the Interior was to hold his office* by the same tenure, and to re ceive the same salary as the secretaries of the other departments. Under that law the Secretary of the Interior was removable at pleasure. Then he came to the law establishing the seventh department, that of the Attorney-General. In the law establishing that office there was not one word said on the subject of removal or vacancy, but the Attorney. General had taken his commission during the pleasure of the President for the time being, and had been sub ject to removal by the President rust as any other of the heads of departments. Be had thus gone through the legislation establish. ing the Executive departments ranging from 1759 to 1549, a period of sixty years, and showing the princi ple that the power of removal IV2ls recognized as being lodged by the Constitution in the President. Bat that was not all. Be might cite a large number of laws on the subject of other officers, such as pestmas !ere, Sc, and bearing out the same idea. Ile stated, not from hie own examination, but from Information on which he could rely, tbnt if all the laws of Congress were collected from 1759 to 1567 which affirmed this construction, they would average two or three to each Congress. The law of March, 181;1, came into work on the concurrent chain of constitutional Interpretation, but he would ask Senators whether human reason might not pause here and human judgment doubt On this question. All the Presidents had Olivier' the Consti tutionality had actetion it for eighty years; the Supreme Court bad affirmed itt thirty eight Congresae-. had concurred In it. All this was on the one aide of the question, and on the other side there was the action of one Congress. Might not, therefore, human reason pause and human judgment doubt? Was it criminal in the President to stand by that great mass of precedent and to believe as thirty-eight Congresses had believed, as all adminiatrattons had believed, and as the Seprerae Court bad affirmed. that the power of removal from office was vested by the Constitution in the President! That was the question this Court was to decide. Did Senators 'believe that at the time Andrew John son honestly thought that the Constitution lodged the power of removal in the bands of the President? What should be the effect of this long line of Inter pretation by every department of the government? What rule shonid be applied! Stability was as much needed in regard to powers not expressed in the Con stitution as in regard to those as are expressed. If the construction of one of the President's powers was to be fixed by interpretation and decision when was it to be regarded as fixed? 7n flee hundred yearm? They would all agree to that. In four hundred years? He thought they would all agree to that. In two hun dred years? Yee, in one hundred years. Yes ! Well here was a construction and Interpretation existing for seventy-eight )ears. If this government was ever to have stability In ha institutions it must adopt and adhere td the rule of State del-4a4. The Thirty-ninth Congress alone had given a different interpretation of the Constitution. 'De did not propose to institute any comparison between that Con gress and any preceding one. He wyiuld not say that it was not just as able and iw-idst as good condltioxi as any other to offer a correetopinion. but he would say that Awns no better. This bronght him to the question: whether the Senate was prepared' to drive the President from his office, and convict him of crime, because he had believed as every other Presi. dent before him had believed, as the Supreme Court had believed. and as the Thirty-eighth Congress had believed? Was Mr. Johnson to lie down with his baud upon his mouth, and his mouth in the dust, be fore Congress; or was he to deed up as the Chief Magistrate of the nation, in the great contest. to de fend the integrity of his department? It was for the President to execute the laws, to execute even doubt ful laws; bat when he was called upon to execute a law against which all precedents were arrayed, against which all the voices of the past were sounding in his ears, was be not justified in seeking to get a judicial interpretation of the question, and was the Senate to undertake to brand him with criminality because he proposed to go to the Supreme Court and have a decision on the question? He (counsel) should have referred also to the President's conduct on the subject in reference to his consulting those who are by law his advisers ae conesellers. The Senate had abut out many of these facts and would not hear the evidence upon them. Suppose it had been brought to the attention of Senators that on a serious and im portant question like this the President had disre garded the advice of his Cabinet, bad turned his back upon hie counsellors, had held ro consultation with them, but had in wilfulness and disregard of their wishes acted in the manner he had done The managers would probably have put that in ev idence against him, bet yet the fact that he could prove just the contrary was excluded from testimony. What was Mr. Johnson's condition? Ile had Cabi net officers who were unfriendly to him personally and politically. 'All confidential relations between them had been broken off. That 'officer himself had told the Senate in a letter dated as lately as the 4th of February, IS6S, that ho had had no eorrespondence with the President since the 12th of August last, and had received no orders from him. It thus appears that that Cabinet officer was merely a new executive repudiating the President, having no official commu nication with him, and proposing to have none, and proposing to carry on his department withontaccog nixing even the Preslden;'s name. This was the condition of President Johnson when he communicated with General Sherman, and coun sel would read to the Senate what General Sherman's testimony on that point was. . General Sherman said: "I intend to be very precise and very short hat It ap peared to me necessary to state :what I began to state, that the President told me that the relations betweet him and Mr. Stanton, and between Mr- Stan ton and other members of the Cabinet wen: , such that he could not execute the efficeovnich he ffiled,as Presi dent of the United States, without making provision ad interim for that office, and that he had the right underithe law. Reclaimed to have the right and his purpooe was. to have the office administered in the interest of the army and the country, and he offered lee the office in that view. Re did not state to me then that it was his purppso • to bring it to the courts directly, but for the purpose of having the office ad ministeredproperly in the interest 'bf the army and the whole country." That was the condition of things with a Cabinet officer who refused all intercourse. Counsel did not intend to go into any inquiry as to who was right or wrong; he merely stated the naked fact. This Cabi net officer had refused all intercourse and was propos ing to carry on his department without communicat ing with the President, and as a sort of secondary executive. In that condition;: of things, was it not the duty of the Chief Magistrate to make a change? There was not a Senator before him who would not have made the change. It was impossible to adinin later the department while there were wranglings and controversies and want of confidence between the head of the department and the President. In that necessity it was that Mr. Johnson had moved to pro cure a change in the department. If he had sued out a writ of quo warrant° as the manager suggested, he would have been laughed at and ridiculed, be cause a determination of it cnuld not have been reached before a. year, and because it was re ported at the time that he would be impeached and removed in ten twenty, or thirty days. But Mr. Wanton had brought a suit against General Thomas, and had had him arrested. There was the President's opportunity; by reason of that he could reach a nice decision instantly, The President snatched at it, but; it was anxiously snatched away from him. The managers bad talked of force—where was the force ? Where was there ode Biagio, hitter, personal inter view in all that transaction ?. There was not a quar relsome word with anybody. The only force exhi bited was in the cordial embrace between General Thomas and Mr. Stanton, with the ono putting his arm around' the other and running his lingers affec tionately through his silver leeks. That was the "force, intimidatlon, and throat" that was used, and that was about ail there wits of it. Counsel for the President bad offered to bring hero the members of the Cabinet to testify as to what their advice was to the President on the subject. They had consulted on that very question, but yet the Senate would not hear them, it shut their mouths and remanded the.defense to the man from Delaware. . . Ihe Senate was asked to dad the employment or the intimation to employ force from the utterances of that man from Delaware, and: froth the conversation' ormt midnight masquerades of a man dressed In a ; little brief authority, and Yet' the Senate would not -hear the deliberations of the Cabinet, the censulta time; which were held on that very (Ideation when tar aransaction Was warns in the minds of the' Pardee; there wee no rescuing this trial from the manifest imperfection of the testimony on teat point. Now what was the President's course? Why did he give this letter of authority to LorenZe Thomas? Lie had to do it. There was no other way he could adopt by which 1w could put the case in a cOndition to test the law. If the President had nominated to the Senate the office would have remained in the exact condition It was without notninailon, and therefore it was nines. eary by an arrangement of this kind to get into the (Alice one who could represent the government .on that queetion. ~ The President's intention in all the movement was simply to get rid of that defiant. unfriendly Secretary. Couneel used this expression without conveying any personal eentiment. What had the President done in the Bret place? He bad' selected General Grant, a man whom the country delighted to honor—in whom it had the utmost confidence, and for whom probably time honorable manager, Mr. Butler, intended to express OBI' greater confidence. The President had selected finch a man as that, and yet this was to be regarded as a mischievous transaction. What next did the President do? The very next step that the President tool; waa not to get a dan geroueeman, not to get a man in whom the Senate had nd' confidence, but the next man to whom he offered the place was General Sherman—would any. one charge wickedness upon that high officer ? But General Sherman would hot take the office. To whom old he next offer it ? To Major-General George B. Thomas. It seemed that the President had picked out the three men of ail others in the nation who could command the respect and contidence of the nation in reference to the purpose he had in view in the matter. You cannot make creme out of atie,Sena tore. The President had one purpose in view, and that was to change the head of the War Department, and it would have delighted him to make the chi nits, and put there permanently any com petent man, and thus to get rid of the condition of his Cabinet. What them gentlemen? He executed this law in other respects. He changed the forms of law, and. Senators. it is one of the strongest facts in this case. He did not take up this law aLd tear It to pieces; he did not tske this law and trample It under foot; and in all other respects he tried to obey it without the surrender of his own convictions. It is said that in the suspension of Mr. Stanton he acted under the law. I cannot adjust it to your law; and Instead of seizing upon that as a subject of censure, I tell you it was an overture from the President to get out of this difficulty and to conciliate you. Take that sus pension—take the act. In the very letter of the meesage of suspension he tells you my Cabinet and Mr. Stanton, the most emphatic of all, believe this law •is unconstitutional. Mr. Stanton was the one that was selected to draw up these objections. But the President tells you in that net of suspension what his views were about the law. He goes on and tells you Maher in that very message: "We had this matter up in the Cabinet meeting, when the Secretaries said it did not apply to him or any other of Mr. Lincoln's Cabinet." All these opinions were in hie mind. He communicated them in the very message where you say ho surrendered himeelf to the very terms of the civil office-bill, Ile did all that, and it Is to his credit that he has not gone about everywhere violating the law, instructing itB violation or forbidding it to be exercised until it was a's certained as to its constitutionality in some way or another— Well, now, I Levu been sitting here listening to the evidence presented in this case for a long time, and reading inure or less about it., and I have never been able to co:4e to the conclusion that, when all these matters were placed before the Senate. and understood, they could convict the President of criminality for doing what was done. Theme is no force—where Is it? Where is the threat? Where is the intimidation? Nowhere. He tried to get into the courts; that we know. Be did hie best to get it there; tin - after a case by which he could have ;rot it there. Where is his criminality? Is he criminal because he did not surrender the convictions of his mind on the constitutionality, according to your in terpretation of the act of leti7? Why, so was k3eneral Washington criminal: so was Adams criminal. But the precedent in the whole history of the government is at his hack in the position which he has taken. How are we going to try criminality upon this single question of the constitutionality of the act of 1a.67, having the opinion of one Congress at its back, the opinion of all the administrations, and Lae opin ion of the Supreme Court, as far as it goes? Let us go bank a moment to that brief examination which I made of the right construction of the civil-office act. I told you then that if Stanton were not included, the first eight articles of this case entistantiallyiell, and even if be were included, and we were advised as we were, there could be no criminality in acting upon a question of law under the advice of the Attorney- General, who was officially designated for the very purpose of giving tie that' Advice. Seithat from that point of view suppose Stanton were under the law, and we had no excuse for what we did, then the question is, where in the condition of this ques tion was the power of removal lodged; You may have your opinion about the constitutionality, lit there is another question which I present; it is this: It is a question of construction. Will you condemn are criminal a President who stood on the side where every portion of the government had been up to that time? I come now, gentlemen, to the next question about the ad inter - inn appointment, and I bee, you to observe: That if von shall ceme to the conclusion that the President had the right to make an ad inherint appointment, then there Is great shipwreck in his case. It nearly all tumbles into rain. I beg you again, when you come to'examine three articles, to see how many of them are built up of ti d e two facts— the removal of Stanton and the ad isd rim appoint ment of Thomas. Ho merle the ape( ntment, Sen atoms, under the act of February 13, 1790: - Mr. Groesbeck read the .law which authorizes the Presider t, in case of ei vacancy in the milieu of the Secretary of State and of War, to authorize a p.mrson to perform the duties of such office until a successor serif he appointed, and continued: You will observe that all possible connitions of the department are ex prefreed under the single word, -vacancy." It covers the removal, the expiration of the term of office, res ignation, ;absence, eleknees—every possible condi tion of the department in which it would be news-. eary ad triltrim to supply the place. That law was passed on February 13, 1795. There has been another act paseedpartially covering the same ground, under the date of February 20, laine Now, does that act re peal the actof February 13, MO? Allow me to draw -, our attention ton few rules of interpretation of stet. ides before I compare them: First, the law does not favor repeals by implication. Again, if statutes are to be construed together they are to stand. Still another; a better statute, in order to repeal a former one, must fully embrace the whole subject matter. Still again, to etlect an entire repeal of all of the provisions of the previous statute the whole euhject matter must be covered. Let me illus trate. Suppose, for illustration, there was a statute extending trout myself to yonder door; then if another statute were passed which would reach half way, it would repeal eo much of the former statute as it overlay, and leave the balance in force. What lies beyond le the legislative will, and just as binding is the eriginal statute. Now we come to n comparison of these statutes. The statute of February 20, 1863, provides for the occasion of death. resignation. absence from the seat of government, or sickness. There are two cases that are not provided for by this statute, and they are cov ered by the statute of 1795—removal and expiration of term; so that we are advised by that simple state ment that the reach of the statute of 1795 was beyond tbat•of the statute of February, 1863, and so much of it as lies beyond the latter statute is still in force. With these few remises upon the repeal of amtutes I come to the consider/41°nel the ad interim letter, From the foundation of the government, as you have been advised by my colleague (Mr. Curtis), and others,' it has been the policy of the government to provide for filling offices ad interim. They are not appoint ments. There.ia nocommiesion under seal. • It is a mere letter of appointment, and they are not consid ered as filling the office. When Mr. Upshur was killed, in 1844, an ad interim appointment was made to supply the vacancy occa sioned by that accident, and soon afterwards the Pres ident nominated to the Senate Mr. Calhoun to fill the office perinanently. That illustrates the condition of an ad Interim in the office. It has been the policy of the government from the beginning to thus supply vacancies in the department from sickness, absence, resignation, or any of those causes, and this occurs both vain the Senate is in session and when It is in recess, The law of 1863 makes no difference. It may be at any time. Now. Senators, I will dismiss this part of the sub ject by calling your attention to ad interior appoint ments that were made during the session, of heads of departments. In the first place I give you Mr. Nelson, who was appointed during the eession of the State, Secretary of Senate. I give you General Scott, who was appointed ad interim Secretary of War dur ing the session of the Senate. I give you Mr. Moses Kelley, who was appointed ad interim during the session of the Senate, to the Department of the Inte rior. I give you Mr. Holt, who was appointed ad interim during the session of the Senate, Secretary of War. But I intend to linger a little at the case of Mr. Dolt, which deserves especial attention and con elderation. Mr. Groesbeck read from the message of President Bach anan .of January 1, 1801, in reply to a resolution of inquiry by the Senate in regard to the appointment of Mr. bolt to succeed John B. Floyd, and continued : There was a case where the Senate took the matter under consideration and inquired of the President what he had done, and by what authority he had done it. Why did you do that? Why did you not report upon it? A full inquiry was made by the Senate into that case of this ad interim question, and Mr. Buchanan replied that he had supplied the vacancy by , an ad interim oppeintment under the law of 17:15. He com municated that fact to the Senate. The Senate re ceived that communication, and were satisfied that it was ares adjudieata on his part. • • The Senate, on that' occasion, investigated thor oughly this identical question of ad interim appoint ments during the session, and received Mr: Buchanan's reply that he did it under the very law under which we' acted, and the Senate did not con sure that act, while they bring us forward as a . erinit mil and. brand us with crime for ours. Yew :cannot diserhainate between them. Both were ,done under the same law, both done during the BeliSioll, I shall glance now at the next article. .do net in T . tend to linger upon such charges as, arc oentained.iu it. It makes a great noise in the articles, but it Is Very hard to gee through it. What is the proof to, stistairt THE DAILY EVENING 13IILLETIN.-PHILADELPHIA, MONDAY, APRIL 27, 186$. Mrs article? The President had an interview with General Emory, and in the course of: that inter- , view General Emory informed hirMof the p waste of a certain law. They had a conversation abmt it, and the President said, in the course of that con versation, that the law was uticonstituttonal. Lie did not say anything inereiand that is the'enormous Crime committed under article nine. He said it was uncon stitutional. What about that? Is it not in evidence before you and uncontradicted that the President had been informed that there were unusual military move meets going on in the city the night before; and Sec retary Welles called upon him to inform him of that fact and the President said he would temaire abaut it. tie sent a note to General Emory, and General Emory waited upon him witit the information. ^That Is all. Is that not an explanation? Does anybody contradict it? No! The time. the occasion, everything in the transaction adjusts itself to that explanation, and no other. Here was a President whom you had subordi nated to an inferior--I mean to the extent of requir ing - him to send orders through an inferior—groping in the dark as it were, belied upon by one of his Cabinet to inquire about it. I now come to article ten. I shall leave the elabor ate discussion of this article to my colleague, hut I wish to say just a few words about it. I refer you to the provision of the Constitution bearing upon this subject, which denies to Congress the power to deny freedom of speech, Are there any limitations to this provision? Does this privilege belong only to the private citizen? Is it denied to olllcers of the govern I:Lent? Cannot the Executive discuss the measures of any department? May Congress set itself up as the standard of good taste? Is it for Congress to prescribe the rules of Presidential decorum? Will it not be quite enough for Congress to preserve its own dignity? Can it prescribe the forms of expression which may he need, and punish by In peachment what Congress cannot forbid inthe form of. a law? lint Ido nut pro pose to discuss It. In Me sonic of the good people of the country, who had been operated upon very ntuch as the House of Representatives were in this instance, took it into their heads to niake a sedition law. It was very like article ten. I propose to read IL Mr. Groesbeck read the law punishing libellous pub lications or utterances against the President or Cou rt-reels by fine and imprisonment, and proceeded: This was the most offensive that has ever been passed since the government was started. So obnox ious was it that the people would not rest under it, and they started, as it were, a hue and cry against everybody who was concerned in it, and they devoted a great many, for their connection with this law, to a political death. But it was a great law compared with article 10. So unpopular was it that since then no law punishing libel from that day to this has been passed. It has been reserved for the House of Rep resentatives, through its managers, to renew this (inestimable proposition; but I take it upon myself to suggest that before we arc condemned in a court of impeachment, we shall have some law upon the subject. Mr. Groesbeck then read a burlesque law, with a number of preambles, which created considerable laughter, reciting the duty of the President to oh eerve official decorum and to avoid the use of unin telligible phrases such as calling Congress "a body. banging on the verge of the government," and re cce:plying the right of Congress, especially the Howse of Representatives, to lay down rules of 'decorum to be observed, punishing the President by fine and im prisonment for any breach of such decorum. "Teat," be said, ' article ten.' [Laughter.] He then took up article eleven, saying there was no testimony to support it, except the telegram between Governor Parsons, of Alabama and the President, dated on the 15th day of January preceding the March in which the law was passed. They had heard the magnificent oration of one of the managers about it, sounding, and sonorous. red sensational, but would they uphold that article upon such proof as thee: He had gone as far as he need go. since he was to be foie lowed by a gentleman who would take it up, step by step, article by article. lecolting back over the case, he was glad to he able to say there were no political questions involved to It. Toe questions were, where is the power of removal iodeael by the Constitution 2 Is that covered by the :il tenure act Could the President mace an ad ';,'ester appointment: Did he do anything inis chievous'in his interview with General Emory And then the matter of freedom of speech which he appre hended nobody would carry on his back as a heavy load for the remainder of his life, stripped of ail verbiage. That was the case upon which their judg• ment was asked. It shocked him to think it possible that the President cekld be dragged from his office on such questions as whether he could make an ad in- ;.rim appointment fora single day. Was this smat ter justifying the disturbing the quiet of the people, shaking their confidence in their President, and driv ing him from office? How meagre, he said, how miserable Is this case—an ad int:rri/n appointment for a single day, an attempt to remove Edwin M. Stanton, who stood defiantly and poisoned all the channels of intercourse with the President. Ido not speak this in censure of Mr. Stanton, but such is the fact. • We have been referred to many precedents in the ;met history of England, but those precedents should ;)ss t , . yon, Senators, not matters for imitation, but the beacon lights to warn you from the dangerous rocks on which they stand. What is to be the j tide meet. Senators' Removal from office and perpetual disqualification? If the President has done anytalng ter which he should he removed from office, he should also be dleenalified from holding office hereafter. what is his crimes He tried to pluck a thorn oat of his heart, for it had become a thorn there, and the Senate bad fastened it there. What more had he done? He had made an ad int, , rbn appointment, to last for a einele day, which you could have tenni rated whenever yon saw fit. Yon had only to take the nomination which he sent to she Senate. and which was a good no mination; and the ad fete/int would have vanished the smoke. The thing was in your hands. Tou hail ouly to act on the nomination, and the matter was settled. That was no crime. I can pointyou to cases that have occurred, and I point especially to that case of Floyd's, where the Senate, in its legislative cepa :it.y, weighed the question, decided noon it, heard the report of the President, and received it as satisfactory. ~ For the purpose of this trial, that is res ad jadicata. `What else did the President do? He talked with an ctlicer about the law. That is the Emory article. What Flee did he do? He made intemperate speeches. When reviled, he should not have reviled again. When smitten on the one cheek he should have turned the ether, then he would have escaped impeachment; - but, - said the gentleman who addressed you the day refore yesterday (Mr. Bontwell), "he was eager for pact ecatiou, and to restore the South." I deny it in the , ease in which the gentleman presented it as being seminal. Here too the President followed reason, tnd trod the path on which' were the footprints.of Lincoln, sad which was lighted by the radiance 'of that divine utterance of Lincoln's, "Charity towards all, malice towards none." He was eager for pacifica tion. He knew that the war was ended; the drums were all silent: the arsenals were all shut; the noise il the cannon had died, and the army had disbanded. Not a single enemy confronted us in the field, and to was eager for pacification. The hand of recon ciliation was stretched out to him, and he took it. Was this kindness--this forglveness--a crimes leindeces A crime! Kindness its omnipotent for 2 cod ; more powerful than manpowder or can non. Kindness is statesmanship. Kindness Is the !sigh statesmanship of heaven itself. The thunder of Sinai did but terrif y and dietract. It is the kindness of Calvary that subdues and pacifies. What shall I say of that man? He has only walked in the path and by the Heist of the Constitution. The mariner, tempest tossed on the seas, ie not more sure to tarn to the ,tars for guidance 'than this man, in the trials of public life, to look to the star of the Constitution; Ile does lurk to the Constitution; it has been the lady of hie life. He is not learned or scholarly like many of you. Be is not a man of many ideas, or of much speculation BC is a man of Intelligence. Ile is a patriot second to iso one of you in the mea eure of hie patriotism. He may be full of errors. I will not canvass how he views his love to his country, but I believe he would die for it if need be. Hie cour aee and his patriotism are not without illustration. My colleague referred, the other day, to the scone which occurred in this chamber when he alone, of all Ihe Senators from his section, remained, and even whets his own State bad seceded. That was a trial to which many of you, by reason of your locality and your lifelong associations, know nothing. How his voice rang out in this hall on that occasion, in the hour of alarm and in denunciation of-the rebellion! But he did not remain here. This was a pleasant end easy position. He chose a more difficult and ar duous and perilous service. That was a trial of his courage and patriotism of which some of you who now sit in judgment upon him know nothing. I have thought that those who dwell at the North nt a safe distance from the collision of war, know but little of its actual trying dangers. We who lived upon the border know it. Our homes were always sur rounded with red flame; and it sometimes came 'so near that we felt the heat on the outstretched hands. Mr. Johnson went Into the very borders of the war, and there he served his country long and well. Which of you has done mote? Not one. There is one among you whose services, as 1 well }mow, cannot be over estimated, stud I withdraw al: comparison; but it is enough to say that hie services were greatly needed, and it seems bard, it seems cruel that ho ahead •be struck here upon these miserable technicalities, or that anybody who has served his country and bore himself well stud bravely, • should be ' treated as a criminal, and condemned upon these miserable charges. Even if he bad committed a crime ;leaflet the laws, his services to the country entitle him to some consideration. But he has-precedent for every thing he has done.. Excellent precedents ! The voices of the great dead come to us from their graves sanctioning his course. All our past history approves it. Can you ;single out this man now in this condi tion of things, and brand him before the country: Will you put your pram( upon him because be made an ad i,?(eriin appointment and attempted to remove- Edwin . ...7.. Stanton? I can at a single glance, Senators?, fix tnyeye or many of . you who Would not endure the position the President occupied. You do not think it right yourselves. Yost framed this very civil tenure act,tu give every President his own cabinet, and then the President's whole camels that he wants an officer in the War Department with whom he can communicate on public' busineSs and entertain friend ly relations. .• .: . • .: , _ BebatOrs, lam too tired, anti ho doubt .you are. There ie a.great.deal crowding on me. for utteranee, hut it is Sot froM titY head, bat tether loth tray heart, and would be but a, repetition, of what • I hove been . saying this islet half hour. Andrew Johnson, admit:is let tor of the Presidential Office, fit to me et riethilig int, ompsulson with thopossible consequence , of your act on in the e,oyernmeut of the 'Count/. No geed can oome of conviction on the articles Of impeach-. meet. 'List how much wilt the hoarc of the country re joice if it learns that the United Stares Senate isrui nor unmindful amid the storm, and p testae, and strife of boar, 01 the Constitution, and of the country, and of its own dignity. Mr. Groesbeck was throughout the whole argument, but particularly at the close, listened to with marked attention by the Senate, end with straining' eagernees by the spectators. It was to ho regretted that; on ac- count of indisposition, he could not mako himself beard distinctly. The reporters for the Associated Press, anxious as they were to give a lrorbatim report pf the speech were unable to do so from the difllculty of bearing - it in the gallery, and had, therefore, to put much of it in the third person, and in other parts to construct the sentencea out of the portions which they did happen to bear distinctly. • The Court, at halflinst four, and the Sonata imme diately afterwards, adjourned till Monday at noon, when it is expected Mr. Stevens will address the Senate, to he followed by his colleague, Mr. Wil liams. „ INPIEULSUL nowiems, OFNICE OF TILE PHILADELPHIA ,AND TRENTON RAILROAD COMPANY, No. 224 South Delawaro Avenue. Pn I LADRLPIIIk, April 24, 1869. Notice Is hereby given that the bonds of the I'hlladel• phia and Trenton Rnilrond Comm/failing due on the LI of May next, will then be paid on presentation of sold bonde at thin niece, with Internet to that date. And notice in alto given that the lute:cid on all bowie. no falling due st ill cenee on the let day of May aforesaid. By order of the Board of Directors. . . az24tniy2•s J. PA h KEE N 0 EMS, Treasurer, • jeer BFFICE ,OF THE 'A.SIYODALOID MirsTING ic MPANI OF LAKE SUPEEIOR, No. 111 WAL. NUT &rect. NHL/M:1,111U, April 2:3d, 186-9. Notice is hereby. given that en inanlinent of PIETY on each and every th ere of the Capital Stock of the AM Y (WALOID MINING COMPANY, of Lake Superior, will be due and payable at the olliee of the Company, Sr,. 32.1 Walnut etree.t, on or before MON. DAY, 114 ay dth. lblk, with intere:it added alter that date. By order of the Board. _ . M. H. HOFFMAN, spl'A t myr,l Treasurer. @Qtr. OFFICE CATAIVISSA RAILROA COMPANY, """'" No. 424 WAL street. _ Pill LA Dr.DPIIIA. March 30th, 1898. The Board of Directors of this Company have declared a Dividend of Three per Cent. en account of the dividends due the Preferred Stockholders, payable on the Ist of May next, to those persons in whoeo name the stock stands at the c 10.44 of the Transfer Books. Tho Transfer Books of the Preferrr A Stock will be closed on the 20th day of April, and re•opeaed on the Ist of May. AV. L. (:ILBUY. Treasurer. MONUMENT CEMETERY NI )TICE.—TIIE annual meeting of the Lot 11oldera in "Tun Moult. merit Cemetery of Philadelphia," and an eloction for Managers to serve the ensuing year, will be held at the Hall of the Fire Aa , ueiation. North street, west of Fifth, on MONDAY AFTEI:NOON, May 4ell next, at 4 o'clock. :4)23 truy43 E. TAYLOR, Secretary. ter NOTICE—A SPECIAL MEETING OE THE Stockholders of TILL: SWATARA GOMPAN Y will be held at No. 4d North Seventeenth street, in the city of Philadelphia. on :MONDAY. April:;ith. IM S, at o'clock P. M.. for the a urpose of censieering the provisions of an act of Assembly of the. Commonwealth of . Pennsylv:mia, approved the third day of April, Ml e, entitled "An net ex. tending the Charter of The Swatara Company, and autho. size, the said Company to hold additional lands, to issue bonds and mortgage ire Heal Lactate,” and oldeterinining whether the same shall be accepted or refused. By order of the Board of Directors. • GEO. VACS, Secretary. :11,15ta;C:i' Arr.n.l4th, 18-eR WIN. CAMDEN AND A MPJ /Y RAILROAD AND ThANSPORTATION COMPANY. CAM . PEN, N. 1., March 311t1i. NOTICE.. -The annual meeting of the Stockholders of the Camden and Amboy Itaitread and Tram!portati.,n Company will be 'hid in the city of Camden, in the (mice of the West Jersey Railroad Company. on TUESDAY,t he nth of April, ltto,at 12 o'clock M., for the election of seven Directors to Ferro for the 111. uing year SAMUEL 13 A:VARD, Secretary, Camden and Amboy Railroad and Tram,portation Coal. pony. • ger NOTICE—TUE ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCK. holder of the Tioga Impi , ,ventent Company for the 4alection of eflicere to serve ingwill be held at No. hi Philadelphia Exchange, on TCE6DAY, May sth, at 1 M. apls to myM G£.o. 11. COLKET, Secretary. jw. VULCAN MININO COMPANY (OF MICEII - Anneal Meeting of the Stockholders cf the Vulcan 31 ining n Company tvirl be held at the Ottice of the Company, No. 024 V ahaut street, Philadelphia, in THURBDAY, the 14th day of May. at 12 o'clock M., for the electron of Director?, and trcncitction of other hwdnea. B. A. HOOPES, Secretary. PntroknEtratA, April 13th, Iktis. aplantylV, OFFICE OF THE LEIIIGII ZINC CO NO. 3 WALNUT STEEET. PIMA April 20. 186,.. The Annual Meeting of the Stockholderi of the Lehigh Zinc Company will he held at the company's °nice, on WEDNEtiDAY. MAY rith. ppm, at l o'clock M, for the purpose of electing seven Directors to serve during the en !3 tang year, and for the transaction of other bueineee. GORDON MONGES, aV2.14-tuyti: Treasurer., gligar• OFFECE OF THE • FREEDOM IRON AND EEL COMI'AN Y. PiIILA vraalliA; April 30. A special meeting of the Stockholders of the FREEDOM IRON AND STEEL COMPANY will he held at the Office of the Company, No. 2.30 South Third street, on TUESDAY, the fifth of May next, at LI o'clock, M., for the purpose of taking action on the acceptance of the pro. visions of the Act of Assembly, approved the lath Met., and on the adoption of by-laws. CHARLES WESTON. Jr.., ariff Secretary. see. OFFICE OF THE LEHIGH COAL AND NAVI GATION COMPAN V, Piltr.anrr,cui a, April '2,1, BSI The Annual Meeting of the Stockholders of thie Com pany Si ill be held at the BOARD oF Tr:ADE 800315, north aide of Cheetnut street, above Fifth, on TUESDAY MORNING. the sth day of May next, at half.pa.-'t ten o'clock. After which en election n ill be held at the came place for Preeident and Board of Managere, to serve for the ensuing year, the election to close at 1 P. M. of the rams day. E. NV. CLARK, President. tbr GOOD dPRIP4G RAILROAD COMPANY.— . rIIILADI:LiquA, April 11. Tie Annual Meeting of the Btockholders'of this Com pany, and an election for President and six managers to serve fur. the' ensuing year and until others shall ho elected, will he held at the office of the Philadelphia and heading Railroad Company, N0.2:17 South Fourth street, on MONDAY, the 4th day of May next, at 1134 o'clock A. N. aplitmy4 WM. EL WEBB, Secretary. air NORTHERN LIBERTIES AND PENN TOWN SHIP RAILROAD CODS PAN Y. . =Mt= The annual meeting of the Stockholdem of thin com pany, and au election for officern to nerve for the ensuing wax, ana until others shall be elected, will be held at the efficd of the Philadelphia and Beading Railroad Com. yaw:, No. •2•2,7 South Fourth street. on MONDAY, the 4th d3:r - I , t May )(mat, at 11 o'clock A. M. apll t my 4 WM. 11. WEBB, Secretary. tibr,OFFICE OF SHAMOKIN AND BLAB VALLEY , 41751PANY. NO 911 (9,"—oNIPP COAL COMPANY, NO. 214 CHESTNUT SF. PHILADELPHIA, April 15, 18611. The Annual Meeting of Stockholder,. and Election for , n4.cra of the Shamokin and Bear Valley Coal Company a ill he held at the Office of the Company, on 31( May 4th, at 12 o'clock, M. W. P. ATKINSON, apl7 182011 24 27 zP myl Et,! Seca tary. -”. BATCHELOR'S HAIR DYE .— THIS SPLENDID `1.4), `"'" flair ace ie the beet in the world ; the only trite and t , t-q feet Dye; harmless, reliable, instantaneous; no !Bean ;..it,tinunt ;no ridiculous tints; remedies the ill clients of c.,01 dyes; inclEoratce and leaves the hair cot: and be au •Cul, block or brown. Sold by all Druggists and Perri'. and properly applied at BATCHELOR'S 'WIG FACTORY, iti Bond street, N. Y. SCHITYLKTLL AND SUSQUEHANNA RAIL • ' HUAI) CUILYANY. Office ti south Fourth Piii LAPELPIIIA, April 11, ll? 49. The annual meeting of the Stockholders of this C ny, and au election for President and nix Managerv, iil take place at the Office of the Company on MON. V. the 4th day of May next, at 12 o'clock M. apllnny4 WM. It. becrotary. 3HAMI IIVERY, MON. au. C L 311,TCS 3 it FARMERS'. BOILER '; 1 10 ',41 any other. It is par -1:t Can be made to boll with one third l triPti e l l y t a h rti IliltEl<e, tAk.~tl:[l3 and ME. , . okA. , e b t `, - "Ove, A r.,.- 'l. or, a",:ii'fortomwi t :,Woo t \the-- 12 llgellons in size. - WholeArle and Retail. J. S. CLARK, 1008 Dittrket Street, Philadelphia, inhal •VIERRICK & SONS, sourruwA RIK FOUNDRY, CO WASHINGTON Avenue, Philadelphia, MANUFACTURE STEAM ENGINES—High and Low Pressure, horizontal,' Vertical, Beam, Oscillating, Blast and Cornish Punap,l ins. BOlLERS—Cylinder, Flue, Tubular, kc. STEAM HAMMERS—Nasmyth and Davy styles, and of all :lies. CASTINGS—Loam, Pry and Green Sand, Brass, &c. RooFS—lron Frames, for covering with Slate or Iron. TA NE S—Of Cast or Wrought Iron, for refineries, water, oil, &C. GAS MACHINERY—Such as Retorts. Bench Castings, Holders and Frames, Purifiers, Coke and Charcoal Bar. rows, Valves, Govoru,,rs. &c. SUGAR MACHINERY—Such as Vacuum Pans and Pumps, Defecators, Bono Black Filters, Burners, Wash ers and Elevators; Bag Filters, Sugar and Bone Black Cars, &c. Sole manufacturers of the following specialties: In Philadelphia and vicinity, of William Wright's Patent Variable Cut off Steam Engine. In Pennsylvania, of Shaw & Justice's Patent Dead. Stroke Poo or Rainer. In the United States, of Weston's Patent Self-centering and Self-balancing Cent rif u gal u gar.drainin& Machine. & Ballot's improvement on Aspinwall & Woolsey's Centrifugal. Bartol's Patent Wroughtlton Retort Lidt Strahau's Drill Grinding Rest. Contractors for the design, erection, and fitting up of Re. fineries for working Sugar or Molasses. 110PPER ,AND YELLOW METAL SHEAMING, Brazier's Copper Nails, Bolts and Ingot Co, pper, con• shinny on hand and for sale by fIBNRY NiqNSOlt• 6t bio, ss2 Bouth-Wharve UMBER ONE SCOTCH PIG lIRON---GLEINGAR. N work brand,. in store and for sato in lots to suit. 1:1 PETEIt vnucaur do SONS. 115 Walnut attest MIANTh• 13A lITIES WISHING , TO PURCHASE TERRITORY for ono of the beat inventions of the day . , condo so at prim+ that will pay- them richly Don't fail to eee it at the Allegheny lious_k Market' stroot, Pnlladelphia. inquire tot • AM to MON. aqv' AV4YrIIOI4 vALm..za. THOMAS BIRCH & SON AUCTIONEER/3 AND ' COMMISSION , MEIRMANTS, No, 11,10 CDESTNt T Street. • Rear h.ntrance 4187 ?'111)801T1 TIOUSEIiOLD FL ttNiTURE OF EVERY OESCRIP. " lON RECEIVED ON CONSIGNMENT. • Sales of Furniture at Dwellings attentod to on the moat reit:unable fent!, tilde at Na. ell 9 North Broad Once.' • • lIANDI3C/Jllt UltNI.Tt its, ItO_EWoOD PIANO FORTN, kc ON TUESDAY MOKNING. At ID o'clock, at No 89 North'llroad street, will be told the F'inniture of family riccliling ho , sekecling, corn. lePidd Ycalnut Parlor Furbiture, tt , aoD7ood ~V* n cops, lien,, Is and other Csroets, teg l ,nt Walnut Chan ber ki•urniure, Walnut Wardrobe, mirror doon,; Dinieg room Furniture, Extension Dining Table, Secretary and I:token:ie. ',lording Kitchen lurid. tore. the Furniture can be examined after 8 o'clock on the morning ci ?ale, Sole at No. 131; Cheihnit etreet. STOCK AND Fl VEERS' OF A s'EATiONF.P.v STORE, SUOMI CASES. LEASE OF riTu c. ON WEDNESDAY and TII.GItdDAY EVENINGS,. and 30, nt 7,!-5 o'clock at ho, 1317 i.he9tout Ptreet, will be eold. the entire eteck f Fine Stationery, dom.. pruin, n large neeortment of Letter and Note Paper with Invelupen of every de , cription. Fine Pocket cutlery, Porten. 01)118ICY and Fancy Donde. Aleo. the Hum (inset!, Furniture, Fixturee, Awning, to. gether with toffee for two yearn of eture. SALE OF OLD ITALIAN PAINTINGS. I)Pi 'THURSDAYMORNING, April 30, at 10 o'clock, at the auction store, No. 1110 Chertnn , street, will be sold- A Collection of over one hundred Paintings. having been collected within the last veer from various 111011f1.8• term- and convents, suppressed by the Italian govern. cent. Catalogues will be ready on Monday, when the Paint. Inge will be open for exhibition. JAMES A. .FREEMAN, AUCTIONEER: I No. 422 WAI,NUT street. REAL ESTATE SALE, APRIL 29. This Palo, on WEDNESDAY, at 12 o'clock. noon, at the Exchange, will include the following- RESD So. 705 CALLOWCILL ST.-The hand. Rome Residence with back buildings, stable and coach house on Willow et.: 22 feet front by about 153 feet deep. being 41 feet on Willow at. Has all the conveniences. Orphans' Court Sato- Estate of Abraham ll...l.lburger, deed) No 919 LAFAYETTE ST.-A three-story brick house, Id by 60 fee . 520 ground rent. Orphans' Court Sate- Estate of John Hagerty, deed. GERMANTOWN.-A pointed atone twin residence, Tulpobocken st , between Adams and Green a' s.; lot 371 d hs 210 feet. Orphans' Court Sale-Estate of Maputo [books, deed. LINDEN ST,-A three etory brick house, above Green et.. 15 by 75 feet. Same Extate. ADJOINING.-Pwelling No. 37 Linden at., same d& scriptiun. Same Estate. • QUEEZ , I,ST.- A three-stony brick twin house, 30 by 1544. Same' Mate rir CATALOGUES NOW READY Sale N 0.1003 Cherry Street. NEAT HOUSEHOLD FURNIIDRE, CARPETS, SO FAS. TABLES, ON WEDNESDAY MORNING. At 10 o'clock, will be told at public sale. at No. 1008 Cherry street, the neat Househnd Furniture, Brunie ano Ingram Carpere,. Sofas. Table, Kitchen Utensils, &cc. AT PRIVATE SALE - - BURLINGTON.--A llntaleotne fittwioit. on Main et., lot ;Al by 700 feet. W MIDLAND TERRACE—HAnditome Modem Reel donee. BITSTiNG, DUItBOROIN & CO., ALICTIONEtatr No.. Lad and 0 14 NI ARKET street, corner Bank street JOH . .!Y. - . • LAP:Of BkIiEMi'TORYSALE OU BOG CS t SHOES, •ILV.O, CAPS,' TRAVELING BAGS: dre. ON TUESDAY MORNING. April P:a, at 10 o'clock, on FOUR MONTHS' CREDIT, f.'oQo packages Boole, Shoce. Brogan, atc., of firat.claes city and Enptern rminoinctnro. LARGE PEFIEM VIORY SALE OF 2000 CASES BOOTS, SHOES. 7. RAVELING BAGS LACETS, NOTlCE—lncluded In our Large Sale of Boote, Shool, ON TrESDAY MORNING, April 2e, on FOUR MON TII 8' cILEDIT, at 10 o'clock, will be found in part the following fresh and desirable amid. 'tient, viz— Men's. bayed and youths` Calf, Kip and Buff Loather Boots; line Grain Long Leg Dress Boots; Congress Boots and Balmorala ; Kip, Buff and Polished Grain Brogans; women's, muses' and children's Calf. Goat, Morocco, Enamelled and Butt Leather Balmorals; Congress Gai ters; Lace 11 ota ; Ankle Ties: Lasting Gaiters; Metallic Overshoes, Slippers; Traveling Bags; &c. LARGE SPECIAL SALE OF WOOLENS AND TM LORID.G GOODS. ON WEDNESDAY MORNING. April 29, at .10 o'clock, on four months' credit, by order of, MCEEIT. LEIDI %MR BROS. ltar For particulars see display advertisement. LARGE POSITIVE SALE OF BRITISH, FRENCH GERMAN AND DOMESTIC DRY GOODS. ON FOUR MONTHS' CREDIT. ON THURSDAY MORNING. Ap ;i1 30, at 10 o'clock, embracing about 1:2 1 10 Packages and Lots of Staple and Fancy Articles. LARGE POSITIVE SALE OFCARPETEsIGS, ON FRIDAY 'MORNING. May i. at 11 o'clock, on FOUR MONTHS' CREDIT, about ag) pieces Ingrain. Venetian. List, Hemp. Cottage and Rag Carpetings. BY B. SCOTT, JR. SCoTT'S ART GALLERY No. lel CHESTNUT street. Philadelphia. SPECIAL SALE OF MODERN PAINTINGS. ON MONDAY and TUESDAY EVENINGS. April and 2a, at Li before a o'clock. will be cold with' out reserve. a collection of Modern Palnlinge,all elegantly framed. Included in the above gale will be found "The Maniac." by Robert Street, deceaeed. We would call the attention of connoiseeurs to it. MR. GEORGE C. RENE UFF'S LARGE SPECIAL Sale of Mantel and Pier Mirrom Looking Glageee, cte. Mr George C. Renkautf, who to now making exteneive improvements on hie preinigeg, and entirely remodeling his establi-bment. is compelled to offer his entire stock of Mantel and Pier Mirrors, Looking Glfieses Pier, Bracket and Boguct Tables. all expressly manufactured for his store trade, and in splendid order. at public auction. The sale Will take place at Scott's Art Gallery. No. 10V.0 Chestnut street. ON MONDAY MORNING. May 4, at 10 o'clock. MR. AARON SHAW'd PRIVATE. COLLECTION OF lIIGII•CLASS MODERN PICELRES To take place at Scott's Art Gallery, 102 U Chestnut et., on the eN, hinge of WEDNESDAY, May f, and TIMMS , DAY, May 7, at Ai before 8 o'clock. Particulars hereafter. 'CTils ( artnAttatiVißTl°ll l (rallttl2l9 CHESTNUT street and 1219 and 1221 CLOVER street. LARD.—We take pleasure in informing the public that our FURNITURE BALES aro cnn6ned strictly to entirely NEW and FIRST CLASS FURNITURE, alt in perfect order and guaranteed in every respect Regular Sales of Furniture every WEDNESDAY. Out-door sales promptly attended to. SALE OF SUPERIOR NEW AND FIRST•CLABS HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE. &c. ON WEDNESDAY MORNING. April 29, 1808, at lu o'clock. at the Concert Hell Auction Rooms, will be sold, a very desirable assortment of Household Furniture comprising—Antique and modern Parlor Suits, in French satin brocatelle, plush. Irak cloth, terry. and reps, in oil and varnished; Bedsteads.; Bureaus and 'Washstands, in Elizabethan, Grecian' Antique and other styles; Cabinet, Sewing, Dining, Studio, Reclining, Reception and Chairs; Piano Stools, Escretoires, Armoii es, Music Racks, elegantly carved Sideboards, com bination Cord and Work Tables, Turkish Chairs, marble top Etegeres, Whatnots, Library and Secretary Book cases, Wardrobes, Commodes, marble top Centre Tables, I,xtension Tables, pillar, French and turned lege, Library Tables, Harping and Standing hat Racks, &c. Also, an invoice of pure curled hair,' straw, sea grass and Bair Matreeeas, Spring and Hair Milestone, DAY'S & HARVEY. AUCTIONEERS. Late with M. Thomas Som. Store No. 4:31 WALNUT Street. FURNITURE SALES at the Store every TUESDAY. SALES ,AT RESIDENCES will receive Particular attention, Salo No. 421 Walnut street. SUPERIOR FURNITURE. rI:EGA: , iI BOOKCASES, ROSEWOOD PIANO FORTE, CARPETS, PLATED slit/WC:ISE, Ec. UN TUESDAY MORNING. At le o'clock. at the auction store, au assortment of Superior Furniture, including—Superior Parlor. Dining room and Chamber Furniture, very Elegant Secretary Bookcase handsome Cabinet BOOIIC/lEWS, tine toned Rose od Piano, Tapestry and other Carpets, line Oil Cloths, line flair Hstresses, fine Feather Beds, Alirror,Glassivare, Housekeeping Articles, line Plated and Glass P,hoypasen, .L•c. rrillE PRINCIPAL MONEY ESTABLISHMENT. S. E. 1 corner of SIXTH/ and RACE streeta. Money advanced on Merchandise generally—Watches, Jon elr , ), Diamonds. Gold and Silver Plate. and on all articlee of value, for any length of time agned on. WATCHES AND JEWELRY AT PRIVATE SALE. Fine Gold Hunting Case, Double Bottom and Open Face English, American and Swiss Patent. Lever Watches; Fine Gold Hunting Cape and Open Face Levine Watches; slim Gold Duplex and ether Watches; Fine Silver Hunt ing Case and Open Face English, American and Swim; Patent Lever and Lepina Watches; Double Case English Quartier and other Watches: Ladies' Fancy Watches;, Diamond Breastpins; Finger Rings; Ear IRings; Studsfie , J ; Fine Gold Chains, Medallions; Bracelets Benxi Pine; Breastpins; Finger Rings ;Pencil Cases andjewelry generally. FOB SALE.—A large land valuable Fireproof Chest, meltable for a Jeweler • coat $6BO. Ate°, several lota in South Camden. Fifth and Chestnnt treets. L. ASLIBRIDGE dr CO., AUCTIONEERS, • No. 505 MARKET street. shove Fifth LARGE POSITIVE SALE OF BOOTS, SHOES AND ON WEDNESDAY MORNING. • April 28, at IC o'clock. we will Bell by catalogue. about came Roots and Shoes, embracing a lino assort mput of first class city ar d Eastern made goods, to Which the attention of the trade Is called i D. MoOLBEIS ;it CO.. Eiaiiiiii:kiiglifoit,S. u ieda rozurcartivis.. A..). (1 61J_CCEDSORS TO _ MoCLELLAND di CO., Auctioneers, No. 6e6 MARKET,"Itraet, . 000; , /,/ J .4) 4' ' t LARGE BALE OF BOOTS. SHOES. BROGAN% BALMORAL& die. ~ We will sell for cash P,V.N.RY MONDAY and TUURf4I - MORNING. at ten o'clock. a largo assortment of .' Mr u'', W01)101.'N. MP:AN? and Children's wear, both City and Eatitern manufacture. ' ap2:l lin ._ .. TEAM FLOUR MILLS AND WHARF PROPERTY , '17:11 Packet irl lt3, , ~ or t mon , 141!-- i..) at BALTIMORE, Mo. , ,6 4 ' 0 , Cigar Cases , i ... v4 Ri , . -5 Portfolios, . - Tbe subeerlber will offer for 3itle on the promises on ov TH, up SPAN', April such, 1868, at 4 o'clock P. Al., tho cele- • k i lo' Dressing Cases, „,. brated Mill Property. known as , , . 0 . - 0 lionkere CaSes. 1 "ABli011"I'S CITY IIi,oCIC FLOUR MILLS." 4 4 . , ono of the in ost complete . milling establishments in the , • country, of capacity i0r.300 to 3IJO barrels a day. Also, , Rosewood Ladles' At Goals' o• - • for lollPe, for a term of years, a. valuable wharf property ~, ,I4adlose ' adjoining the mill. , „ - Wads aikd ~ -. e t : G o i l t a 1- , Mane any For tornior partiedlini. see lledtithore papers, Stn ,•"' - ~t Traveling Bags. 4 pr e ssing ! ' 'American or 'Gazelle.. • : . _. . ... . ~ , Writing , . , ' -' • ' 13: II: GOVER, 'Auctioneer. • , D es ks. ; in all styles. P1 1 04 6. ,r '• D'an2l-210.5,27,5d,fitiS ~ :i . - ,- 54 Baltimore street. ' • • - . f. -' '• HOOTS ASP SHOES. 1 000 PALI; sgWED AND PEtIGED SHOES, AT $1 25 per pair; halt u t ho. original (lost. ' STODDARTI3 R O . , 450. 4123 And 454 North Seconil atroot. AUCTION SAII.E.S. MTHOMAS & SONS. AUOT/ONEEBS, . • Noe. 11i and 141 South FOURTH street. SALES OF STOoKS AND REAL &STA CE.• :112W" Public sales at the Philadelphia Exchange EVER, Ti ESDAY, at 12 o'clock. liandbilb of each property issued ilePfiretelY.RS addition to which we publish, on the Saturday previous to each rale, one thOucand catalogues in pamphlet form, giv ng deacriptionc of all the property to lie sold tea the t OLl.OWiNti TUESDAY, add a List of Real &tate at Private Sale. Our Sales are also advertised in the following nen BPSPer3 : bor.Tu A NIKUTOAIt, PRitBll. LIMORP., IiSOAA INTELLIGENCJER. .1014 F.:VP:NINO Btit,xxxll4 h VENino TELT:GI:APIS, GERMAN DENIOCUAT, Furniture 'Sales at the Auction Store EVERY THURSDAY. tar" Sales at residences receive especial attention.' ASSIGNEES' SALE OF, OIL STOCKS, ON Mt 61)AY, APRIL Z 4 l, At 12 o'elork neon, nt the Phi adelphia Exchange, by order of Assignees in Bankruptcy— We shares Silver Creek Mining Co. 100 tits reit Vulcan Mining Co 230 shares Boston and Lake Supeilor Mineral Lane Company. no shares Philadelphia and B ston Mining Co. 200 shares Reliance Mining Co. 223 shares Metier A killing Co. :100 she Copper flat bur Copper Co. asd shares Decolith Mining Co. • 'LAN , elm es Lehtmcn Oil and Mining Co. 5173 shares Decatur° Oil Co. 140 e shares 'I ipton 011 Co. 2500 shares Middle Walnut Oil Co. WC shares Pennsylvania Petroletun Co. 6 , 00 shares Roamer 011 Co. 5(0 shares River 01) Co. WO ' , hares Petrona Oil Co. 000 shares Bruner Oil Co. 5(30 shares Cow .reek and Stillwell Run Oil Co. 500 shares Canine) dal ()II Co. • 100 shares Weitcell Run Oil Co. 2250 shares Feeder Dain Coal CO. OA shares Walnut Island till Co. • BANK AND OTHER STOCKS, LOANS. drc. ON TUESDAY, ad HIL Exchange, lel2 o'clock noon, at the Phielphia Exchange, le shares Steubenville and Indiana Railroad, news. 1 share Point ',Velez° Park Association. 110 shares Camden and Atlantic Railroad; 1 share Camden and Atlantic Land Co. 9 .hares Western National Bank, an shares Empire Transportation Co. 114 shares Central Transportation Co, BO shares Southern Transportation Co. 64500 Lehigh Navigation Mortgage, 1204) Lehigh Convertible Loan. 0 per cent. $lO,lOO Union I anal Mortgage Loan. 50 shares Petroleum Storage Co. of Philadelphia. Dia shares Moshannon Coal Co. 2.(0 shares Revenue Extension Silver Mining (Jo. Pew No. 100 south a'steSt. Mark's Church. 9 shares Bank of Northern Liberties. 4 shares Farmers' and Mechanics' National Bank. 100 stares Union Bank of '1 ennessee. 25 shares Southwark National Bank. 29 shares Commercial National Bank. ' 13 shares Northern Liberties Gas Co. 80 shares Union Mutual Insurance Co. Lot Secticn D, No. 319. Odd Fellows' Cemetery. 5 shares Academy of Music. with ticket. REAL ESTATE SALE APRIL 29 VERY ELEGANT COUNTRY SEAT ano MANSION. 8 acres, known as the "Jefferson Mansion," Oak lane, Cheltenham Township, Montgomery county, .4 of a mile from Oak Lane Station, North . Pennsylvania it ed road, convenient to seven driving roads. Mansion hes all the modern conveniences, and in excellent repair ,• stone barn ann carriage house, ice house, atc.; beautiful lawn. evergreens, •ke. Immediate possession. See plan and photograph. HANDSOME MODERN THREE-STORY BRICK RE— SIDENCE, with F table and Coach House and aide Yard. N 0.517 South Ninth et—leas all the modem conveniences. Lot 40„Se'feet front Immediate possession. Orphans' Court Sale—Estate of George Smith, deedt— THIME-STORY BRICK DWELLING, No. 1001 Batley at, west of Tenth, below Pine at. Same Estate—THßEE-STORY BRICK DWELLING. No. 1414 North Tenth at., north of blaster. Orphans' Court Sale—Estate of Joseph Conrad, deed. LOT. Pine at, east et Fifty-second Same Estate—LOT. Spruce et, west of Fifty - second. Orphans' Court Sale--Estate of Wm. Scheurenbrandt, Minor—BUSINESS LOCATION—THBED•STORY BRICK. DWELLING, N. E. corner of Front and Pine eta., ex tending through to Water et-8 fronts. Administrator's Sals—Estate of Frederick Schwaeble, dec`cl.—THßEl:-STORY BRICK STORE and DWEL LINO, No 991 North Seventh at.. above Poplar. .: Mune Estate—VALUABLE LOT, adpining the above. Peremptory Sale—AN ENTIRE SQUARE of 'LING, 56 BUILD! CI LOTS, Newport et., Thirty-fourth st., Reed at. 'Wharton et., 26th Ward—ll fronts. Plans at the Auction Boons. VALUABLE PUSEEr— CO al, YARD, No. 1927 Market t., between 19tu an 20th, 26 feet front, 17d feet deep to Jones at-2 fronts. THREE-STORY BRICK DWELLING, Carpenter at.. second house east of 19th. MODERN THREE-STORY BRICK DWELLING, No. 471 North Seventh a'. Sale by Order of Heirs—Bust:ma Lommon—THßEE. STORY BRICK DWELLING, No. 321 North Ninth at. above Wood 858 MODERN THREE STORYP arris BRICK DWELLING, No Marshall at. north of h.. DESIRABLE MODERN RESIDENCE, No. C 314 North Twelfth et, below Wallace. VA 1.17 A In. E 13cstrcess STxtro—FOUR-STORY BRION STORE and DWELLING. No.d. South Second at, ad joing Southwark Hail' HREE•STORY BRICK BUILDING. No. 635 T Wallet.. between Catharine and Christian and Sixth and Seventh ets. Immediate possession. * MUDERN THREE-STORY BRICK DWELLING, NO. 720 North Front at,, below Brown. THREE-STORY BRICK STGRE and DWELLING. No. 724 North Front et VALUABLE LOT, Baring at. between 33d and 34th. West Philadelphia VALUABLE BVSINESS teran - n—FOUII—STORY BRIGS 137 OKI and DWELLING, No. 356 North Second st,below Callowhill ELEGANT POINTED STONE COTTAGE, one acre, Wissahickon turnpike, adjoining ground of St. Joseph's Academe, about one mile from Chestnut Hill Depot. MODERN THREE-STORY BRICK DWELLING, No. 514 Sot th Tenth et. above South. 2 THREE-STORY BRICK DWELLINGS, Noe. 923 and 925 Cumberland at., 19th Ward. MODERN THREE-STORY BRICK RESIDENCE, No. 474 North Sixth et., south of Buttonwood St. Assignee's eeremptory Sale—Unexpired term of lease— Store No. 45 South Fourth et. Also, Fireproof, Press. Desks and Chairs. . Sale No. 60t North Sixteenth street; SUPERIOR WALNUT FURNITURE, FINE BRUS SELS CARPETS. dm. ON TUESDAY MORNING. Aprils at 10 o'clock, at No. 601 North Sixteenth street, by catalogue, the entire Fountain, including superior Walnut Parlor, Chamber and Dining room Furniture, Walnut Bookcaee, fine Brussels and other Carpets, Reid gorators, Kitchen Utensils, &c. May be seen early on the morning of oak, Sale at No. 316 South Eleventh etreet. HOUSEHOLD FUKN iTURE, HIM otiELS AND IN GRAIN CARPETS CHINA AND GLASSWARE, &c. ~ v....... .~ .~ ..~__. ON WE~NRtIDAY biORNINQ. April Z. at 10 o'clock. at No. 131.6 out ri Eleventh street, the entire Household Furniture, including Yarlor,Dining room and Lhamber Furniture„ Brussels Ingrain and other Carpets Matreoses, Beds and Bedding, China and Olassware Kitchen Utewila dm. May be e xamined on the morning of sale at 8 o'clock. Salo No. 1817 North etraet. SUPERIOR FUI , NI I' RE, FINE CARPETS, ON WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON. --- - - _ April 22, at 2 o'clock, at No. 1819 North street, (between Wallace and Coatee) superior Walnut Parlor and Cham ber Furniture, Oak Dining-room Furniture, Cottage Chamber Suits. line Carpets, Kitchen Utensils. dtc. May be aeon early on the morning of gale. Executors' Salo at No. 3:11 South Third street. Estate of Clamor Frederick Hagedorn. deceased. VALUABLE OIL PAINTINGS, M CHOICE MARE STATUARY INE BRONZES, OH OM TAL GOODS, Am ON FRIDAY MORNING. May 1, at 10 o'clock, at No. 321 South Third street, by catalogue, a collection of very Valuable Oil Paintings. including Judith and Holofernes, by Reldel; Christ Leav ing Jerusalem. ton pore, lab.) by Kaulbach; Reidel's Bin doe Priestess and other fine subjects by Miller Achenbach. Reuse!, Dirket, Birch. Web,r, J. R. Martin. .fau Claa, Vermeerach, and other celebrated artists; Marbio tuary by Steinbauser, Thorwalden and others: large bronze statue of Apollino, Groups, Figures, Buda, Statu ettes. tine Steel Engravings, rare and emcee; valuable endow:ions models richly decorated and Bohemian Cut Glass. Ornamenta,Fancy Gc &c. Catalogues ready ten days previous to sale. SUPERIOR HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE, FINE BRUSSELS CARPETS, Atc.. ON SATURDAY MORNING. May .at 10 o'clock. at No. 821 south Third street. by order ol4xccetors. superior Mahogany Parlor and Chanr her Furniture, tine Mussels Carpets, 'lair and Spring tkl atrce,.ep. k.,xteusion Dining Table, Stoves, &e, May be examined early on the morning of sale. • Sale at the Coagusnock Mills. N and atu street, above Twentieth street. ON SATURDAY AFTERNOON. May 2. at 2 o'clock precisely, at the Coaquanock Naudain street, above Twentieth street. and below Lom• and etreet, the valuable Cotton Machinery. including— Fifty I. 2 and 3 Shuttle Looms, made by Jenks, roon and hood; Cloth Beams, Woolen Reels, Size Trough, Dyeing Frame, Splitting Machine. dm. May be examined early ou the morning of sale, with catalogues Salo No. 1832 .no street. HANDSOME WALNUT FURNtaURE, ROSEWOOD PIANO, MANTEL AND PIRR MIRRORS, HAND SOME AXMINSTER AND BRUSSCILS CARPETS. &e., &c. ON WEDNESDAY MORNING, May 6. at No. 1532 Pine street, op catalogue, the entire Furnsture, including—Handsome Walnut Parlor Furui• nice, superior Chamber and Dining room eltrniture, Rose wood rhino Forte, tine French Plate Manttl and Pier Mirrors, large itegulatinc Clock, handsome Axminster. rugli 11 Brussels carpets, China, Masa, Hair Matresses. .t.; lichen Furniture, &c. May be seen early on the morning of sale. BY BARIUTT & CO., AUCTIONEERS. CASH AUCTION HOUSE, No. ZIO MARBET street, corner of BANK street. Cuih advanced on consientriont3 without extra charge. PAPER U.S.NIGINGS• S. FWDERSTON 4t, sox • 0. PAPERS AND WINDOW SHADES. &pit Znaq 9 , 02 arauto (441,UDEN Litatat:
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