Daily evening bulletin. (Philadelphia, Pa.) 1856-1870, May 18, 1868, Image 2

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    WO KW CW.
1 he DeinCe Dentition colleenttn Again.
The sale of the Sun Donato pictures condones
to attract comment in the Parte ..pre* no the
greatest job in the history of art. , clorrespon#,
dent, a most thoroughly posted Wee, ilites dint
the whole affair was a money-n4ipg one. The
Prince'a Secretary got 50,e00f30r negotiating the
affair. Stevens, the Belgian `Sitist; had his anger
in the pie, and sold out for 25,000 f.; a prominent
dealer who is supposed to have been one of the
three parties who made the purchase, disposed of
his Interest the day before the sale. An illustra
ted eatalogue with 11'13 etching of each picture was
published at a high price—purchasers were only
admitted to the sale by ticket, &c. Altogether
the affair is the most remarkable picture scandal
on record.
"Will you know," says a sagacious writer in
fhe Paris Figaro, "the complete history of the
famous gallery sold last week?
"It was narrated behind my back, in the
.auction hall, Rue Drouot, by a jolly fellow who
was trying to console his neighbor, an angry
spectator. The latter, - at every bid, ground his
teeth and fulminated atrocious" imprecations
against the buyers, whom he qualified, as decoys;
against the pictures, which he found , execrable;
against the seller,' whom he denounced as a
rogtte, &c. 'There's where it is,' says he, after
one of his worst fits of violence; 'there's where it.
is, for Prince X. (Demidoff) everything is a sue
eces! Hew his daubs' are selling! Water
always melees for the river!'. !You
d:CeiVe ',Totiiself,' says + my „good'
man gently to hie irritated neighbor, 'and,
show You that Prince X. makes no such—pretty
affair. > One day; eoMe four or five years back, he
needed a heavy sum; that happens to. plenty of
people. He caused to be proposed to Count D.'
(Conitepuehatel,) former minister under Louis
Phllippe,"antla great amateur, that the gallery
shonld be sold to him for 400,000 francs, reserv
ing
1 g
to himself the right of repurchaee at the and
of a'year tor the same slim. Eleven months and
a half pass; Count'. has a visit from the Brim%
intendant, who provisos him that if ho will pay
100,000 ,francs more, he may. rest master of the
gallery, otherwise the prince ie going to buy it
brickleithin fifteen days.
"'The Count prefers to take his chance of
hating the picteres for his 400,000 francs.
"'Fifteen days after the gallery emigrated,
and went to form the decoration of the drawing
rooms of the Marquis of H. (Lord Hertford), a
foreign nobleman who had given 500,000 francs
on the same conditions as those accepted by
Count D.
"'A year rolls by : the same intendant intro
duces himself and offers perpetual ownership of
the gallery for an extra payment of 100,000
francs.
"'Lord H. refuses. More courageous than he,,
three picture dealers form an alliance, advance
000,000 francs, become the owners of this ramb
'nig gallery, -- and gain by re-selling it a
profit of more that 600,000 francs.'"
May it repose in peace, now that its scattered
members are sown to the four corners of Europe.
The Independence says :
They are contemplating the erection, some
where on the new Rue de l'lmpdratrice, of an
immense edifice to be called the Strangers' Club.
It is to have a theatre, ball-room, conversation
room and gardens.
The conditions of admission will be : to be a
member of some Paris Club, a distinguished for
eigner, or 'at , any, rate some kind of a notable
of established position.
In the "Conversation-room" will be put two
tables, one for roulette, the other for trento , et
quarante, with a minimum stake of twenty francs,
to exclude with the utmost certainty people
'Whose poverty denies them the right to these
luxurious pleasured. It l 5 to be tip regulation of
play, substituted for Its ltance, which la at this
Triercent the cause of immense losses on mere
parole, and which too often leaves to the mercy
of old gamblers the fresh pigeons who come up
to the green cloth. The management of the
cluh will offer to the city of Paris for its good
will a sum not less than six million francs.
The project has met with some sympathizers
in government circles, but also some pretty lively
opponents, especially M. Rouher, minister
of State, who fears lest the responsibility of the
government will be awkwardly involved.
Yon hear, among the gossips in the cor
ridors of the French Lower House, of a
kind os chagrin which has struck in a
very high quarter. Why ? Simply
becaUse the " prestige of England is taking the
wall of everything else. England is to be the
talk. The Abyssinian expedition, so brilliant and
BO swift, strikes all Euiope. Gladstone's propo
sition for separating Church from State, the affair
of a Queen's son attacked by a Fenian in Austra
lia,—a number of facts contribute to restore to the
British name its faded splendor. In public, and
particularly in the French cafes, you hear every
day, in a high key, "What men those English
are !"
The literary world is gossiping about the mar
riage of Henri Taine, the critic, one of the par
takers of Sainte-Beuve's shocking„Good Friday
banquet. The brilliant young phil6Sopher mar
ries the daughter of a rich master house-painter,
who will have a dot of several millions. And
the friends of the future husband, the already
renowned essayist, are saying " Taine always
loved rich color!"
The Figaro wants to know if the courts of.
Europe are to go Into mourning for Riug Theo
dore.
A FEVER. DREAM.
London is a wondrous poem,
—Butwero " What Witt lie Da Inth
tThe following article appears in the Conti
nental Gazette (published in Paris, France,) of
April 18. It is trom the pen of the late Ernest C.
Wallace,.of this paper ;.!
It is pleasant to get well, after having for a
'week had a giant Fever storming over you, '
griping your bones, bullying ytiur head and turn
ing all your dreams and visions into wild Wal
ptagis Nights. We were seized by the Fiend just
after reading a Letter from London, in a morning I
paper, In which the author describes his rambles I
over tlae queer old churches in that city, where
the deist of genius reposes. He spoke of St. Sep: I
ulchre's, where Gower and Beaumont and others
are interred, and it is singular that he did
not seem to know that the mortal part
of Captain John Smith, of Virginia, ,
rests there after his; devious world-wide '
wanderings. The author also spoke of London
publishers, famous, in literature, and showed
how their insignificant "shops" could not com
pare with retersons' or Harpers'—John Mur
ray, for instance, having his name on a little
sign on a door, in a street .not wider than Car
ter street, through which we pass every day to
get our mail. When the Fever Storm-king
seized our bones and brains, this letter, tortured
into the wildest extravagance,
flitted up and
down our consciousness, and added ru aseit
other recollections of London, so that ; - ,:temed
we were under some uncouth enci;vitment.
Now wandering along Oxford street with De
gnincey, looking along that Mediterranean' of
humanity for his poor, forlorn, !oit noble
hearted.Anni whom we fancied ;; ;;u wal;'ng,
for us at the bottom of Titchfield
lag, too; by dreamy t , .60 airs
barr4,l ormaio, to Melt they once tutored, st , :d
sighing Iva _the youthful 'Grecian," "01 cx.
ford street, atony-bearted stepmother—thou •ha,.
listeneth to the sighs of orphans and drinks the
tears of children." 1..g,a1n, a ludicrous of
Tittlebat Titmouse, airing himself at a fire plug
on an Oxford Arcet corner, would hr. .11 tie
eliarzn; lint we r.2rutt.abered Quincey and his
--------- -- - 4
Ann again, as we Utricted eb , ward Piccadilly witlvi
them, to meet the WOW mall. and then par Eqpt
with;" bem at Goldettiquaritt. , Here the fantastb
trgtipe*f charaetersifOlielibliis Niekkbyleom4
,infshr ithipb, in hiii grulOop b4OlB na
;•bl`ewai
No ti
1 4
g rtishineln at f 'op o dhOr of the tavprn o.t
Go l 1 en square anctiJanieill'':.streetLand outlet
the 'other; Nieholas, In Big ,Mulberry ; ; Hawk'a
cabriolet,. bentisig4httt 'scoundrel treMettdonslyi
as i e. hoof° daslfed, • dbOn the Jhoroughfare
"between Park lane) and";•Bond street," as very
satisfactorily recorded; Mrs. Niekleby, attended
to the omnibus by those fascinating gentlemen,
Pyke and Pluck; Tim Linkinwater; Miss La
Creevy; Squeers, with , his •stittintyamike, - and
all the rest of them. But again the scene changed,
and we were In the Park, with the Drive full of
carriages, and the walks full of characters in
novels—Thaekeray's people, Blames men,
Disraeli's airy creationsMrs.Gore's Dukes and
, i 2,
Marquises, characers in Warren's Ten Thousand
a Year; while a myriad of faces lined the railing
surrounding it.— We sawrrere (in Lewis Arundel)
talking to , that elegant dandy, • Churloy
Leicester", g,estieulating with his coarse ,coc
ton umbrella, • while Tom. Bracy was iin
posingi, some fresh tactical joke on the
mighty De"'Grandeville. Looking in. at Lord
Elgin's windows we saw some world-famons
sculpture, and this sent us off to those httge
statues of Gog and Magog, at Guildhall. Through
this fever-light we also saw the glories of May
fair and the shops of Cheapeide. Like Edgar A.
Poe, we seemed to see the terrible lace of "the
man in a crowd," and we f him as he
wildly paseed from street tostreet to keep within
the blaze of gas-light and in' close contact with
humanity. We smiled,• too, as the old clothes
men chaffered us, like the "barkers" on Market
street, in • . .
"St. Mary Axe, with Jews so weary, _
That for old clothes they'd even we St. Mary."
At another time we wore on Highgate Hill ehak-
I g the hand of Keats, and ,feeling, with Cole
ridge, as he met him there with his friend Hunt,
that was death in tat had." How sul
phurous"there h n
looked London from hero, with the
great dome 01 St. Paul's towering above the mass
of "smoke and bricks and shipping." Now,
Shooter's Hill, seemed our stand-point. and we
drove over Westminster bridge with Byron. up
to Charing Cross and along St. James street.
Again, we stood ou Old London Bridge,
crossing from King William street to
Southwark. , , Thdre lapsed the old, old tide,
"with foamy Flips,
w " he j n Watust as it did in the thir
teenth century, Tyler's rebellion'
raged, and when the unseen spirit of the plague
hung over the doomed.city; how many thousand
rogues bad fled across, that bridge to 'Sanctuary,"
in South,Wark 1 And there was the "dark arch"
which Hood has made. more gloomy than'that
famous Venetian bridge; there was the black'
flowing river," and all around
' l —The lamps quiver
So far in the liver,
With many a light
From window to basement."
0 ! unknown suicide the poet saw you through
a mist of tears; not friendless, brotherless, sister
less, motherless now; not houseless and shiver
ing in the "bleak wind of March." Perhaps, as
he has told us, "her sins ate forgiven, for she
loved much," and many mansions have been
offered her by a Saviour's love. Not a stain rests
upon her sweet memory, tor it has a home in
every heart where our English tongue is spoken;
a hundred thousand hearts have stirred at her
story, and like precious dew of morning the
tears have stood on human eyelids as the
sad delicious music of her monody has
melted in among our purest, stainless memories.
For ever unspotted from the world remains that
history, to show the power of one human heart
overflowing-with sympathy as with genius. "Not
a reporter, from London to San Francisco, ever
gazes upon the dripping form or the wet tresses
of a woman suicide but he repeats this sftd,sweet
song. Hardly a "CrOwners' quest" is held but
homage is there rendered to the genius and the
heart of Hood. d when you hear Thackcray
or Curtis read th A at n poem, it o receives an added
. _
power and pathos.
But such reveries were too quiet for a fever
dream, and anon Blackfriat's bridge loomed in
sight, peopled villa memories of monks and nuns,
and cavaliers and roundhead. The Tower,uddy
too,
rose through the misty
along the m
tide; barges floated on the stream; prisoners
entered by the traitor's gate; Raleigh, Russell and
Sidney; and a dun cloud over Tower Rill scorned
to has in mourning above their place of execu
tion. Like the alternate splendor and gloom of
etormy sunset PCOIXIti to glow and
frown that Suisl:4,): yltlee Of Towers; It
has been a royal home; it has been D,
martyr's son; it as awed liberty, and it
has been h p a ri llowed by h
remembrances of grace and
beauty and poetry; bravery and true-heartedness,
as well us blood, and England's shame. The
spirits of Arabella Stuart, of Lady Jane (key, of
Anne Boleyn haunt its echoing corridors. One
cannot shut out the remembrance of that latest
Plantagenet, the old Countess of Salisbury, as she
refused to lay her head on the traitor's block, and
the bloody executioner followed her around the
Scaffold, striking at her venerable head! Sir Thos.
More's pleasantry, as he was led to exe
cution, seems as' fresh to-day as ever.
We yet smile at the obstinate young Eliza
beth, wilfully seated on the Tower step, al
most forcing her guards to carry her within.
What an army of nobles laid down their lives
here in the reign of Henry and the visitor
of to-clay sees in the Armory the very suit worn
by this many-wived old tyrant. Splendor and
blood reeked together here during the thirty-six,
years of his reign, and England truly became
Merrie" when he died. But the Thames lapses
onward; borne with itsdark flood we feverishly
float towards the turrets of Hampton Court,past
the haunts of Pope and Gray and other poets
mere; but drawn again towards the smoky town
we see the Hall of. Westminster,
and remember how all the great
State trials, from Sir William Wallace to
Warren Hastings, filled this spie num court
room. Some of those who stood there for
their lives will be green in memory when
William Rufus, who built it, shall be forgotten.
Then a broken dream of that other West
minster, the Abbey, filled our mind; in the
chill gloom of night we seemed to feel the
presence of the Spirit of Life and of Fame
which makes that spot the central one toward:
which the Anglo-Saxon mind irresistibly leans.
As the pole attracts the needle, so must West
minster Abbey draw the wandering visitor to
London. But remembering our beloved friends,
the poets and authors of London, the air
seemed peopled by their spirits; Chaucer and
Spencer we love without a close acquaintance :
Shakepeare is all about us, like the common air;
Milton and Johnson, Beaumont and Fletcher,
Ford and Messinger, and their friends we shade
off in Shakspeare's light. Coming down later,
we remember poor Goldsmith and his struggling
life in London; bluff old Johnson, Steele, Addi
son, Fielding, Smollett. At a distance we keep
Messieurs Pope and Gay ; and we dream away
the ages till the time of ,Coleridge, Shelley and
Byron, Keats ; Haydon and Lamb. Christ's Hos
pital appears looping through the night. We
think over MID t's delicious reminiscences,and the
pleasant voice of Elia chaunts this well-remem
bered strain:
"Samuel Taylor Coleridge, logician, metaphy
sician, bard;--how often have I seen the casual
passer through the cloister stand still entranced
with admiration to hear thee unfold in thy deep
and sweet intonations the mysteries of lamblictis
or Pletinu., or reciting Homer in his Greek or
Pinder, while the walls of the old Grey Friars
echoed to the accents of the inspired charity
boy."
Then, too, who could forget the' story so well
told by that genial scholar, Professor Reed, (to
whom, we used to listen at the University with a
respect which is now a pride to us), of the day
dreams of •the boy Coleridge; how lie passed
along the crowded Strand with his childish arms
extended, so that his band touched one of the
throng; how he was accused of trying to pick a
pocket; and how "the little dreamer sobbed out
his Innocence; and to the astonishment of the by
standers, explained how he thought himself 'Le
ancitr swimming across the Hellespont." And
among a multitude of other dream images, we
feverishly wished ourselves among that immor
tal party at Haydon's room, so capitally de
scribed by himself, where Lamb grew
. jolly over'
Wordsworth's friend the gauger, and heats, and
Ifitzlitt, and Hunt, with the rest, triad to stop
Lamb's queer jokes about the man's "organs."
Following the fair young Keats, we went to
"Drury Lane" with him, and saw the first ni s ett
of Shiel's "Evadno:" Lamb, too, was there, hiss
ing. his own farce of "Mr. H.:" and Byron and
Sheridan were in a stage box listening^
to Kean and Mrs. Siddons . ' Again, by a shift, of
sceeery. the "Rejected Addresses" came before us
and we heard the imitation of Coleridge:
"I heard a trowel tchick
Against a brick."
THRDAILY EVENING BULLETIN-PHILADELPHIA, MONDAY, MAY 18 1868.
Hrfts,anatifik s , , the sonorous imitation of Scott
dolled•qut: .f) ,
.
, „'.4`.llltisbes each spout intMarAntt Court, , ••
' V'Aiti:Barbican moth-eattitufoW:•
'note „Lipton was there, atiit, lanhint;
,at is
tort-ati theyouiz his phis, , 'o wins anfi,/lunt,
ii;i g
Ftgaitii,llaydon, Clare and 110rAce, mith., There,
too; the ; "(tuatu t witch MumOrY" q Anted a;b4 of
Shelley's "Letter to Maria Giaborriel" '. ' „
" Yon 4tenpw ,
In London, that great sea, Whospeibp and flow
At once is deaf and loud, and'eMt;the shore
Vomits its wrecks and still howl 4 on for more;
Yet-In its depth what treasures !,"• •, •-
A host of ideal lady friends of ours belong to
Loudon. from the starched alfd ruffed age of
Queen Elizabeth, when Saccharieitts abounded,
and such us Wailer sang their, beauties, to the
time of Queen Anne, when Addison derided
farthingales, hoops and scandal,‘ aiid.+Steele fell
desperately in love, and Dr. Johnsen took tea
with Mrs. Thrale. From thence - doWn- to the
days of Victoria hundreds of, ladies fair could be
recounted whom the world , worships.- We bow
silently before each, until resetting Elizabeth
and Caroline Fry, we knbel before the former,
and remember the angel. 4, liewipte; in the
galaxy are the Countesa Of Bl6slugton
and Lady Morgan, gay and gracious ladles both.
Then there arc L. E. L.,
Caroline Bowles, Mrs.
Rename, and last of all Elizabeth. Barrett Brown
ing. In the dream her habitation could- pot be
fixed, but now we find that her,graceful address
to the American, public, in the dedication of the
first New York edition of her pOems, (1844), is
dated from No. 30, Wimpole street, • London.
There it is presumed her most. splendid • sonnets,
far greater than any, ever rhymed by a woman,
were felt and written; theio Lady Geraldine was
created and the "Vision of Poets' was seen;
there Is the birthplace of - the noblest of: her
poetry, written ere she honored Italy by her pres
ence, We could ,almictst hear her cry—, •• :
"I dwell mild the city,, ' ' -
Amid i ts , crowded streets, .
* * * •* • • * '* '
. , ,
I do not hear each separate tone that r o ll s,
Of art, or speech, of merry-make, or folly;
I hear the confluence and sum of each;
And that is melancholy.,
Thy voice is a complaint, OI crowded city, .
The blue sky covering theelike Geld's great pity."
And then there was a blank; the fever died
down; NVO fel back into sleep. . Awakening, we
saw that. it .was an April rooming, and that we
had been no nearer London than several delirious
attempts to get out of bed and out of the room
would have carried us. Thus ended the , vision;
the door was shnt,and like the "glorious dreamer,"
Bunyan, "we saw no more."
Forced Infarcheis in the Teche Country.
• - - - -
Oh, the horrors of marching on bliStered feet!
It is an incessant bastinado applied by one's self,
c
from morning to n i l kt. Ido not moan a single
blister, as big as pea, but a series of blisters,
'each as large as dollar, or, to j edge by one's
sensations, as large a cartwheel. I have, had
them one under the tber, •on the heel, behind
the heel, on the ball f the ' foot, on every toe, a
net work, a labyrinth, an archipelago of agony.
Heat, hunger, thirst /and fatigue are nothing
compared with this torment.. When you stand,
you seem to be on recl-hot iron plates; when you
walk, you make grimaces at every step. In the
morning the whole regiment starts limping, and
by noon the best soldiers become nearly muti
nous with suffering. They snarl and
swear at each other; they curse the general
for ordering such marching; they curse the
enemy for running away instead of fighting; they
fling themselves down in the dust, refusing to
move a step further. Fevered with fatigue and
pain, they are actually not themselves. Mean
time, the company officers, as sore-footed as any
one, must inn about from straggler to straggler,
coaxing, arguing, ordering, and, perhaps using
the flat of the sabre. Instead of marching, in
front of my , company, I followed immediately in
the rear, so,that I could see and at once pounce
upon every one who fell out: . . .
It was curious to see how cheerful every one
became if cannon in front told of the proximity
of the enemy. We were ready to fight the blood
iest of combats, rather. than march a mile farther.
We filed into line of battle delighted, and then
resumed our pursuit heartsick.—J. TV. Pe Forest,
in "The Galaxy."
A Bovel Invention and Its Results.
An ingenious lunatic in San Francisco lately
Invented a sell-propelling vessel. It was a com
bination of three boats,
hitched together tandem,
and the theory wee that as the leadng . tmd hind
most boats each descended a wave, their impetus
would draw and push forward the middle one
out of the tough; the latter in turn, pushing its
leader up the next wave, and- so on. At a
cost of $B,OOO or $9,000 a working model was
constructed of this odd variation of the old
idea of a man lilting himself in a basket; and en
experimental trip was undertaken. The thing
was turned loose, with tke inventor and two or
three confiding companions on. board:. it drifted
down the harbor with tire tide, and met the
waves outside which were to demonstrate the
success of the invention. Five minutes had suf
ficed to show the party the letter absurdity of the
plan; five minutes more placed the estalishment
Reel upward, and the adventurers contrived to get
into a small boat, and were returned to the city,
sadder, wetter, and something wiser than when
they started. A tug offered to take the self-pro
peller back to port for $5OO, but the inventor
had fooled too much money away on it already;
and declined the offer. At last accounts the
queer establishment was drifting Sandwich
lslandsward, and we shall next hear of it pro
bably, doing duty in the exciting narrative of
sonic ship master, as the latest and most indis
putable specimen of the sea-serpent.
GEO. J. HENKELS, LACY & CO„
THEME AND CRISTNUT MEM
Now offer an entire new dock of furniture in he fated
et) le, comprising
NEO GREG.
RENOISISANCE.
POMPEII.
GOTHIC.
And other dike.
e are prepared to offer road cements in
UUE.
We melee a G
ITipziEloetfES
FINE AND
ENAMELLED FURNITURE.
CEO. J. HENKEL' , LACY sr. co.,
f m 8m THIETEENTII and CHESTNUT.
Pennsylvaaia Elattic Spongii, Co.,
111 Chestnut Street,
PHILADELPIIIA.
FOR ALL
Upholstery Purposes.
Cheaper than Feathers or Hair,
AND FAR SUPERIOR. '
The Lightert, Softest and Inert Eleatic and Durable
material known for • ' '
Matressev, Pillows, Car, Carriage
and Cliair Cub Mops.
It I. entirely indertructilde, perfectly clean and free'
from thud.
TT HOES NOT- PACK AT ALL !
Ie alwayr free from /meet life; is perfectly healthy, and
futile rick in unequaled.
If roiled in any way, can be renovated quicker and
carter than any otheita areal.
Special attention given to
Furnishing Churelms, Halls, &e.
Euilroad men are eriletlallY inviic,l to examine the
Cueldon bponge.
Satiit oti on. Guar irteed.
Eno Trade e'uppllcd, wylti f m to
iil, - 449 ,11351'
landed and for male by COUI - 111d.N,1X68ELL & CV..
0 North Prom et. 10y1.1141
Sil BARRELS VIt.:I;NIA WIII'VE ROSIN FOR SALE
lfhy COCHRAN, ,i1;b61 , ;(.f. of CO., Igo. 27 North Front
!Jima. mylatf.
6 . l'l'ol`7,CE %USN BALES corroT,
oirce,,M, too, 413 1.1, , rr010 Virgin Rmin. now larding
from fteozour Wy0n,;01.;, , , for COULLICAN, Rl.i
-bELI.ds CO., 25 North kioht tueot. in.yls/f
FURNITURE, acc.,
ELASTIC SPONGE,
A SUBSTITUTE FOR
CURLED HAIR
SPIT►OD&
'
. 1;4 ) 4 ; 4
7 ;1 ;
,
L NEEfAkSw V O
Aro Suringpeninglarge invoices o ca l l Goods imitable for
the Trade, to which theyhe attention of the
LADIES;
New and beautiful deelgna in
Pique Welts and Figure' s Plain and
Cplored;
Material for Garibaldia, in Puffed,
Tucked and Revered Muslin ,
Plaid, Striped and Figured hainseeks
Rets.in Linen and Lace,
t ,
Dotted Nett for Veils in Fanoy Colors,
Fmbroiderioe, White Goods,
Handkerchief's; Laces,
Scarfs
conipleto nooortmont of
BOUSETLENISHING DRY GOON.
We inviib S'on'to call mid eittnainkotir stock.
E. IC, NEEDLES CO,,
1101 Chestnut Street.
st, LA*
-Sv
411 ' Fourth and Arch._ 1"
KEEP A STOCK OF DRY GOODS ADAPTED TO TEI
DAILY WANTS OF FAMILIES.
LARGE STOCK or BEI AWL&
LACE POINTS, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL.
WHITE GOODS IN FULL VARIETY.
BLACK GOODS OF ALL GRADES.
STEEL AND GRAY GOODS.
SILK DEPARTMENT WELL STOCKED.
CLOTH DEPARTMENT, NEW ASSORTMENT.
DRESS GOODS DEPARTMENT. FRESH STOCK.
HOSIERYOUSEPING DEPARTMENT.
GLOVES. MEM, LACES, /sc.
deism ar i 11
NEW STORE. NEW STOCK.
JAMES .M'MULLAN :
Importer and Dealer in
LINEN AND HOUSE-FURNISRING DRY GOODS.
westerne accommodation of Families residing in the
part of the city, he has opened his
•
NEW STORE,,
No. 1128 Chestnut Street.
Ilis long experience in Linen Goode, and his facilities
for obtaining supplies direct from European Mannino ,
turere. enable him at all times to offer
TBE BEST GOODS AT THE LOWEST PRICES:
The old Storc, S. W. corner SEVEN and CHEST
NUT, will be kept open as tusuaL
mylde m w 2m
A U(, 10 GOODS!—BAR r Al.
. ; Q.* s 11.
..011. 100 doz. Good Linen Ildkft, 1234 and 110.
160 doz. Good Linen Doylies. The, to $1 26.
60 doz. Gents , Col'd Border Wide 60 and 82)6C.
8o doz. Dente Dem'd-stitch Mids. 87c. and
The above good' are Bargains:
STONEB Arch 702 Arch street.
NEW STYLES OF FANCY SILKS.
CHENEA BILKS
STRIPE SILKS.
PLAID BILKS,
PLAIN SILKS.
CORDED SILKS.
SUPERK,Ht BLACK BILES.
EVENING BILKS.
WEDDING BILKS.
EDWIN HALL & CO. W ,
28 South Second ee%
(JAILP/E3IINGSI &Ca
1222 CHESTNUT STREET. 1222.
Special Notice.
Having completed onr removal to New Store, No. l!
CHESTNUT new stock
arenow resit' , to offer , allowed
cash pricee. a new stock of handsome
CASPETINGS,
. 0111 CLOVIS.
MATTIN - GS,
With all other kinds of goods in our line of business.
REEVE L. KNIGHT dr SON,
1222 Chestnut Street. 1222.
ape
GROPERIES, Ammons, *U.
FINE OLD CURRANT WINE,
A Very Choice Article,
JEST RECEIVED.
ALBERT C. ROBERTS,
Dealer In Fine Groceries,
Corner Eleventh and Vine Street&
, FINE NEW CROP TEAS.
GOOD CHULAN TEA cheap. OOLONG TEAS, all
gradee. YOUNG DYSON, GUNPOWDER, &c.
ENGLISH BREAKFAST TEAS. For pale hi •
JAMES R. WEBB,
jade S. E. corner WALNUT and EIGHTH Street,:
ITURLINGTON 1 BURLINGTON 11
Burlington Herrings—O. P. Mitchell's.
No others genuine.
Agents. C. P.
myle.gt. ll4 South saws
AlSid. DRIED BEEF AND TONgIiES.
AU Steward's justly celebrated Ilatasi and Dried Beef,
and Beef Touinies; also the best 'brands of Cincianarl
klams. For, sale by Id. F. BPILLIN, N. W. corner Arch
and Eighth etreeta,
ALAD OIL .- 100ASKETS OF LA.TOUTVS SALAD.
S Oil of the lilted importation. For male by AL F,
aPILipiN. N. W. cprner Arch and Eighth strpete.
►GABLE CLARET.-43 1 0 CASES OF BLIPERTOR TABEE
Claret, _warranted to glvo satisfaction. For. sato by
ht. 'E. IiPILLIN, N. W. corner Arch and Eighth streets.
DAr3 OELELEATED DIAMOND DIIAND OIN
ceevedligkiftirasTif3 attoclirBTiTAL,'tll:l=l77tiatite
118 South ocoond Street.
- -
&TEEM PEACHES FOR PIES, IN 81b. OANS AT Et
c f erde par can, Green Von Tolnatoo B . Pei* aka
Franc Pe and .binishroolna, in gore and Or Bale at
001.113TY43 *AO End Grocery . ,No; 118 Routh &wad
IJKW ' BONELESS MACKEREL, ' YABMOUTB
.I.llt Bloatenkfiniced Salmon Mesa and No.'l Mackerel
for sale at COUSTX'S, Kos% End . Grocery. No. 118 SOnth
SeCond Street. , ,
vitoloph 0L1VE10116,400 doz. OP SUPERIOR QUAL".
ty of Sweet Oa or own , importailon, Just received
and for intle.at COOSTIB,Puit Fall 9r9nmi i zio, ln
Boomeecond.street.
e:.
agDR. JOHN M. FINE'S DENTAL. ROOMS,
N o .-219 Vine street. , --Thirty years' Practiee. and.
one of Maddest eatublished Dentists in thu city.
Ladies beware. of. cheap dentistry. We are receiving
cans weekly from those that have been imposed ttl . n.
and are making new seta for them. beautiful, e.
like teeth, and neat and substantial w ork, our Prices e
more reasonable Abut any Dentist in e city Teeth
plugged, teeth roared, exchanged, or ressodele . d_to suit.
N Wale Oglde Om and Ether always on hand. To gave
Elmo MA( money, give ua a call before engaging else.
where. No charge unless satiuded, Best of refer.
onto. Jell.s.m.te.due
!?;',
• GOLD BD GOLp ,VOUP 51,101D3
dSy ta. PEINE 0 TA 41 ; ? . .
11
•
38 Soutp.
' .
Teiegrßphio iudex
ti tatioiti .statjollad a'aati
opiouono place io our o etf. '
STOCKS Arc., &e.,
13ouplit awl So'd on C4tamlosino at the roPpontivo Boardi
of PI oh era of now YOrlfq .tiottOtit.DOtinlotO ?hit..
dept.. n 306 6m§
NEW YORK STOCKS .
ALL FLUCTUATIONS IN TRH
NEW YORE NEARKSIT
iltooke, Gold at Government!,
ematontly fornbihed as by oar Now York Rouge.
STOCrita
Boiled and Sold on Cominbolon In rldladelpldsh Nor
, Yprk And Boston. r
Sought AO lold in bailie sad emanate.
G()VF.. UNMVINT SECITRITIPIS
nought and Magda% New °lrk Pricer;
&(104,
,
voRK,. I PAILAaELPIIIMAi
a NOMIEVIII at. 16E4 111.114 St.
'..Neck .Ti.a.9,..'&0,,
•
Seven per Cent. Alortgate Bonds
OF TBE PENNRYLVANIA AND NEW TORS OANAI,
AND RAILROAD COMPANY.
Guaranteed flincipar pa Interest
By the Lehigh Valley Railroad.
Theme Bonds are it portion of:MV P° On Vila
eoert about .15,00%00 0.
r a: El being reran
fig g jell e re e Pi " lnUr4
A F'irst-Claili Investraent.
dt 109 they Dal XV& inteiFeet as
• u llta i is ate.
A At 110 t
ice " " " Norti la r= P. at 90.
We offer th em for male at '
95 and accrued Inteicat from Dec. . 1, 1867.
C. & H. EIORIE.
8 Merchants' Exchange,
on
BO wEN & FOX.
18 Merchants' Exchange.
(021.1air04
BANKING HOUSE
JAYCOOKEetC9g
112 and 114 So, THIRD ST. PIEGLAVA
Dealers in all Government Securities.
CENTRAL PACIFIC
bail now an important and valuable traffic on both glom
of the Sierra Nevada liange. and will command the
through overland businere The Company offer
SIX PER CENT. BONDS
rerimirriiTwg4
THE
RAIL WAD
THEIR, FIRST MORTGAGE
(to the name amount only as the U. S. Sobeldy bonds
grouted them) at their par value And accrued Interest in
currency.
Both Interest and Principal Payable
la OLD COIN.
Pamphlets, kc.. giving a full account of the property
pledged, f untitled by
DE HAVEN & BRO.,
No. 40 S. Third St.,
DEMERS IN GOVERNMENT DRUMS, GOLD, No,
I'OM :1 kV_Z._•l i:J=l!l.l‘i ' 13/4,
A. S. ROBINSON,
910 CHESTNUT STREET,
LOOKING GLASSES,
3PA.IMMTGIES,
Engravings and Pho6graphsl
Plan and Oros:l24mb%! Gilt Frame'.
carved Virittraißatt"Tectosoza*
As FIXTURES. —MISHEY. MERRILL ,
G
TIIACICARA, No. 718 Chestnut street, manufactnrert
of Plan Fixtures, Lamps dsc., &c., Would call the attention
of the public to their lame and elegant aesorbment of Gas
Chandeliers, Pendants. Brackets, &c. They also introduce
gas pipes into dwelUngs and pub to buildMge. and attend
to extending, altering and repairing gas OK.. All work
11 • ' 111 :, • D• 7: 1 •• l• • :
only plape to got privy wells cloansod and pinion •
at very low price. A, PON, lllanufacturer of Ro
drotte, Goldomitik's Hallv Li b raty otreat.
V,ANKIREC dc MARSHALL HAVE A COMPLETE
Port,!)le Stand and
BrOn:tgkatiliklangrett'Yetek;e!s.
TALL AND " innr . 1151 TR HAS.FIX.I'ORES FROM
thezianufacturers.
wawa/ix do MARSHALL.
. , ' No. 912 Arch street.
IiTANICTRIE & MARSHALL, NO.'9 2 ARCH STREET
' manufacture and keep au otylas of Cies•Fixturoo and
Chandeliers. ,
Aloe; rethlish - old fixtures.
I.ANHLRR & MARSHALL, NO: 912 ARCH ESTEEM.
Pips gly run at e speelal e
attorkti tes.
on to fitting up °Rumbas. -
til lowest ra
goLD, Galt AND' li;UL OTRO 13Mt VS LAT/ ED
Goollxture4 ot , VAN KI tS.dl No.
Arch otroot.„
All work gtiorahteed tcP *hie oitiefacthin; 'NOIR° bill
first-chum ,workto en employed. fe B4 now Oral
coraitirrist.
U 101BILlitiEd'ittA;IPEOltektk 103.
Mr. J. H. Butler (brotaer.ofin•ll. Btler) it a part
net' in oug film from and after this dllfe•
roble4nl BUTIma CO.
G.
• • IC;
AR C S 'A BIOMES'S KID GLOVES,
Ev W arranted.
.„-erx
xciudv. Agents for (kale %ma
J. W. SCOTT 4
,C 0
€414 Chestnut, Street *
•r • iihmin iil4l
PATENT 61101/LDER SHIRT
mANI
Order* for thete
brietp9tl , co, , • • -
Gentlemen% Fine Furnishing Goode.
„
RIO HARD gAVRE. ' ' "
NO. 58 ICI. Sixth Streert,:bol9w 'Arch,
Invites etteetfon to Ui
Improved She eider,giffiffit Pattern Shirt;
Which for cape anethmfort ',!,i'o3,tie be Eirp4 , 4404 It
Pveil ahtvereal satithetton for_tunthresse or dt on '- the
RIM comfort In the NZUJE and dna. on thy
tit fi wade entltol7 bYhs;/110 with the heat i?Orkeren-
Alsott i Verior drafty of go, ,ci.tArrns. s: li ti sa ).
0293
IRE=
=72:Crr OW 1 4 rrtsu MCI 0-0;1110—;
fientlenien's Fartishizig Goodo t
tate iltYleit 11111..inuiety: r t, •
WINCH PSTEIt'
f.t 706 crilEslA.NuT. '
' '.' : GENTS' PATEIVW SMT•
4
„ i..... toned il .„ m mit ,0,,„,. thar t ym_tif
Lanier , la - WI
4*
4 Iltrer L lMM l rldr i lillt . r . "
41 . aro i. t , , iria.
'or every deserflersa,_nart low, It:Egerton*
v street, corner or Num 'me beg KM Gloves
ladles and dents, at iiv iiimiii mpst ...
masts OPEN IN 111P5 EVENINIC 77= - , Tr .
I,SWIS LADOIOUS 41'CO
DIAMOND DEALEUS & JEWELERS.,
itcroir.4, Jim }JAW .11. '44II.YRR WAR,
'WATCHES TIIIVELEY 88.PATILEal
802 Chektrnnt St.. Phila.
stock Would buffo the .atteattloo of paroftlionkfo• theft' bow
of . .
_ . .
GENTS' AND LADIES'
NV A. rr C 1-1
Just reeetved.of the aneattaropeatt mater s I nd
&cond. delf-wilutlng 1 in Gold and Wirer
anrs. Algo;
Sete.
Watebea of ala alma _
Diamond date. Murat Rlnesolite. Cara4tialarmte.
Garnet and Etruscan • In groat variety.
Meat d
' una
dil ble f or B verrarn ri4hil Prima
of an k di, includiug a Inge abort.
te.
PILATE ITIANWEJA.
SLATE. MANTELS.
The !amid emortnant end the beet tintahed Elterelqt6
BLAT_L -
_MANTELS, Meg
_WAR44N FURNAGLS.
RANOEN.IIIOII and W W DOWN MUTES.
Manufactured sr.d for isle by
W. A.:ARNOLD
,
1303 Chestnut , barect.
ITIRm w f ltr -
LO4sREB.
MAULE, BitOTHER'& CO.,
1868: 'ME 131 g: 1.868 1.
JOIST.. • .
• Eri
EWE ,11:81E
VIL&VLIE, HMOs HER & CO..
SOO 801.1T11 STREET.
1868. 1868,,
FIORIDA EL_OQRING. •
'FLORIDA vLoveltiN_Q
F k oo
OAM.LiNA LOORIN i I.
VIRGINIA'
RR
DELAWAR Ma
*SD ROM.
WALNUT LOORIvO
FLORIDA ES y. p..42Asihs,
RAIL PLA.L4G.
WALN BO
UT ARDS AND PLANK. IOD L
1868. WALNUT WARM:MOD PLANIC. LOW..
WALRILT BOARDS.
WALNUT PLAN&
1868. tuITAT E 4guLMZER.' 1868..
WALNUT AND , rlllO..
1868. ligBtriß tirEM. 1868.
AH.
WHITE ISAK PLANK ANN; BOARDS.
186E3. §,Blll P383,` rakTat: 1868..
apA24 t;EDAR 130XJWARDS.
FOR.BALE Ww.
CARO O LINA M scANTLIN.
CANA ti. T. LLS.
et
NORWAY RuANTL BI INO.
T. A 414E,A83iniTMENT.,
1868.
1868, fßlit figiri' SEER:
PLASTEM ING
CYPRESS LE
HING&
AtillanNU'r PLANK AND BOAXML
1868 SEASONED CLEAR PINE. Qg
. SEA SUMO) CLEAR PINE.. As.JV
CIiOILE PATTERN PINE.
SPANISII CEDAR, FOR P.ATFERNR
FLORIDA RED CEDAR.- '
111AU141F., autoviirts erg Co.
SWSOUTH STREET.I
PHELAN & BUCKNELLe
Twenty.third andl Chestnut Sts.
WALNUTE errocK sir
ASH AND ruPLAFti.
ALL THICENEESEIL OLEAII AND DAY,
'FINE LOT WLNUT VENEERS.
CEDAR. CYPRESS A ND WHITE PME SHINGLES;
MICHIGAN S EAS ONE D
AN(ANY)_, MBEtr VA NIA.
_ U AL R ue
TYWRIN D4s&EPEWL9P4R
BU S IBLe4O L MBF—R ST.
isigorOSlMS. ,
O aCitTRAOTORi3 BUILDEBO,—BPALED
TPRO SALE . endorsed **Prop.:male for R- aa
,
Public fie oothouso in the Twenty.first Werd,"- will of hy toe undessigned.at the Office. E: corder of
Sixth andrAdelphi streets. until FRIDAY. May Skageb,
at 12 o'clock DL. for building a Public Sahoalihouse, on. a
lot of ground situate In Roxboro, between the seventh
and eighth inilostoneis,.ba - the Twent,r-thst,War
Said J. o g . to be' built in acCordance with =o
nline of O. Sidney, architect , to be seeltritt Hui °fin of
the Controllers of Public fiehoglit_ _
No' be'conxldere4 unties' siiiiolupansea ,DY
certificate from the Cityfieucitort toat,ithe. nr.,vie tons of
an °salmi:lce, approved May 25. JBBu,havu been compliod
with.
1 he.contract will be awarded only to 'known nnuiter
builders. •4 • : • •
By order of the Committee on Property,_
myllimi ot ' it. W. 111.I.LLWELb, Secretary.
„ , ,
DEPARThIENT OF PUBLIC HIGH WAY°I3, OFFICE.
NO. 104 Soma FIFTIi ST itEBT. . , • '
, , Pini.anm.rnis, May 14th, laigt
Sealed proposals will IDe receiwid at , the Office At the
Chief Commissioner of Righwaye until 12 o'clock M., on
MONDAY, 18th inst., for the construction of a Sewer an
the line of Race street. (rem the River Schuylkill to the
east line of Twenty•Secondiltrolit; to be of brick, circular
in form, thredfeet inside diameter, excepting through
wharf, where a wooden trunk, four Seat square, of wharf,
timber, 'will be built; there will be three Manlieles,....at
St Davidt`fwentyeacond and Twenty.'Fhirdstreets. To
be constr cted under Ordinanee approied May9EllB6B.
The understanding to he that hie Contractor shall take
bills prepared against the property, fronting on said sewer
to the amount of one„ dollar and, tWent.V.five cents ter
each lineal foot of front on each side of , the street as so.
much cash paid; the balance, limited by Ordluance,ap.„
proved Al t ril 24, WI to be Paid by.the city,
When't oetreet is 'occupied by is City Parisenger Rail
road track; the sewer shall be constructed along side or
said track in such manner as not t 9 obstruct or interfere
with the safe passage of 'the cars thereon; and ne claim.
for remuneratiop shall be paid the Contractor by the
company using said track, tie specified in Act of Assembly
approved May. eth, Ifitia, . , , , n=
all Bidders are, invited to be present at the time and
place of opening the said Proposals. Each proposal will
. twearapanitd by a certificate that a Bond has been tiled .
In the Law I)epartment,us directed by Ordinance of May
2iitli, IE6O. • If the Lowest Bidder, oliall not execute o. contract within five day after the Work is awarded, ho
will be deemed as declining, and will be held liable, on.
his bowl. for the difference between his bid and the next
highesindd. Specifies tiens may, be had, at the Depart
'went of Surveys, which oil i be strictly adhered to,
, Aid IILON IL DICKINSON,
Chief Commissioner otlllghways._
irlylfi at§
,LOST AND FOUND.
T onOR 14181,A113—.PIMPFMCIAL'POLICY, 'lO. 326 ?
for $1,2000 iemed by'''Tild'Prhatcea of the Fire Mao
dation ot J'hilatielpitia. , ' to 'the Roman Catholic So.
defy of St. Jootiph tor FM:mating and Maintaining Not;
Orphan Children "on 11ott teost'oide'of 'Second Wed..
below Dock attest, No. 122, old number. Application inol
been made to eautel the eater. Any one .Imvintt , it will
'dame rethru it to SIIAIthEY,
Tr eaeurc r, .., No, r 319 Walnut otrect.
1868-
fr° l 7 l ) ,ll Fa xhi par tou• P,,;
IMPORTANT Rumour.
,
WASULICCIVON,'MAYiI;—:The ,
HtWOrtit is
predicated on infonlusion received from` highly re
sponsible seurces:
It is generei known here that scone of :t o meal- "
bore, if not a r o! PrvAtient oname e (Olney ,
signified a willingness to retire from oilicikand hence,
there is , much spenalitien en that subject. PrOnainficit
gentlemen of both parties, in conversation/recently;
agreed in sentiment that much of the troublebbetwoon . ,
Congress an d es
the 'to en t springs "from' the defeat
of the ExecutiU tdminietratiou under our present
fetid of luid that if the Ministry here,
u la Snglaud, would retire and give place
to one in accord :with the expressed will
•of the'people; ' Odd have had peace
long ago. •Iteconatniction under the President's
plan ha,„"lrilf UPI rejected. it IS now thought by Con
gressnien of bah parties that be will agree to admit
Southern representatives in any way practicable, in
order that the national intercetwof u the booth may be
beard and Cared for in Conirress. .
The statement that,, the President has made any
prombin to Coneervative Senators voting for his ac.
.quittal, to eupport or uphold them by the power of
his administration, is untrue. Those Republicans
voting against impeachment claim to be decidedly
opposed to president Johnson:o political course, as
are the rneitdorned Radicals. They regard impeach
uent eon jitilielal and not as a political proceeding.
It islgajwn that they , claim to be as detenninbd to
' 0177 Cortighiliejoild policy ae are their
radical colleagues, but thei do not think that the Pres
ident either caner will attempt further obstructions.
TheiGiedgelihil'Andimf thablie Will arrange' his:Cabl..
net to a,gter4 ext Fit Aleut. and by a more liberal
policy t ;ecibiret better :licentd with' Oftgress• 'and
whatmt 4.Xn e eY:(lo Or net dean thie behalf, Jule 'had
and can haver* affect pit their judgment in, pusing
.cal the articles OfiiMmiehment. It It In acid, the
Impeachment had fief bun pending, there is little
doubt but a new Caifinet Would long since 'hive
been designated, composed of the most
•distinguished and eminent men of the w e ir-
try, It should not, therefore:, create, surprise
if a thorough change shall be made in the Com
plexion of Pelideddtairs. It these amjectures elsonid
be realisid,ltirill remain' for the Senate, in view of
the prabahle defeat of the remaining articles of - ha- .
parchment on the Ifith inst., to accept or reject what,
If offered mud !accepted in good faith, must soon
lead to the restoration of the Union, and the peace
and prosperity of the country. It is not true, ttat
President Tohnion has indicated the 'precise party
character of the contemplated Cabinet appoint.
ments,• further: than • that they shall be men
of eminent abilities, each as to challenge the
confidence and respect of the entire country.
Lila CONGUESs.—sECOND SESSION.
CLOSE or SATURDAY'S PROCKZDDDIS.
Sinate.
WASIIINGTON, May 16
The Senate met at 11:80 A. X
The galleries were well filled at the opening. A
trio of policemen in each aisle were particularly no
ticeable as being uncovered. •
Mr. TIIVXBCIAL. from the Committee on the Judi
chary reported favorably the bill to admit Arkansas
as a S r. Era tate.
Minucies announced his intention of making
a minority report,
Mr. Tnuxectn said that it would hardly be proper,
since a majority oetheeoinnettee had made no written
.report. •
Mr Drums submitted an amendment, which was
ordered to be printed.
The Court of Impeachment was then opened. After
the adjournment of the Court, the Senate having re
earned its session, took up the concurrent resolution
of the House for a recces till Monday, the 25th inst.
This stave rise to a disci:m*3n- The concurrent reso
lution was supported by Messrs. Morrill of Vermont,
Hendricks. end Sumner. and opposed by Messrs.
Conkling. Morrill of Maine. and Nye.
Mr. live said he hat enough experience in this
body to know that it was useless to oppose an ad
journment for *week, a day, or an hour. Re thought
the President would be able to take care of himself
- with his new recruits. Ile thought a little embarrass
anent to the President would not he unprofitable. Let
Arkanras come into-day. Let ns have a birth tarn a
death. Let OB PUS &concurrent resolution admitting
the State'otArkansas and relieve-him of his ember
rassment. by not Sending: It to him at all, to have It
sent back here at thelend oeten days. Return another
defiant veto! We have had enough of them. Let us
admit Arkansas betore tbe "sun is down, and let the
President have another sweet morsel to roll under
his tongue. -
Mr. Busoant fevered a renew, on the ground that
it would be beneath the , dignity of the Senate to con
tinue to transact business with the President of the
'United States , :Ile had always felt it to be unbecom
ing in the Senate to transact bristmes with' him while
be was on trial for high crimes and misdemeanors.
The President might go forth nominally acquitted,
but he would ge forth, nevertheless, a blasted public
f reactionary. That was his inevitable destiny: but
until acquit'al watt entered on the records. the Senate
-would consult its own:character by ahistainteg trona
any further interchange of massages between (ire:Teas
and the President,' /or this reason he favored a re-
COW.
Mr. rizarnensom took Mr. Sumner to account for
U11(4110118 on the President. Ie nothine else should
cause Senators to abstain from such remarks, a - decent
sense of eelf-respect should restrain them. No asso
ciate had a right, either in the Senatoor in the Court,
to reflect' on the' conduct of any Senator. No
man had a higher respect for his constituents than
himself, but his ccmatitsenta conld not enlighten him
'on the question of impeachment. it was a matter for
his owls conscience, and nothing could ever drive him
from the performance of his duty.
if Ids 'constitnentti dLsapprove of his course, he was
in their hands and they talghtdo with him as they
wished; but he would pet be told that party duty should
make him turn his Melon lew, and order and justice.
It was no nee in teying to make impeachment a party
-question. It was no party questiob, and the moment
a party should put itself in the position that its mem
bers must:- forswear 'themselves,
_thae party ought to
and would cremble into dust. For his own part he
regretted that the subject of impeachment had ever
beets brought before the:Senate,. and , he believed it
never ought to have been: lie thougbt as long as the
President was not convicted it would not injure them
to send a bill to him.
Mr. Duane askeillf any Senator had assailed his
colleague for Ole Course in the Court of Impeachment.
Several Senators—No one.
Mr. Ilsemenscor inquired when his colleague had
become the guardian of his character?
Mr: I)naits replied that here and elsewhere he con
sidered himseltin duty bound to defend it when as-
Mr. Idotteent raised the question of order that it was
improper to assail Senators for voting one way or the
•other. •
Mr. Smietent dtschimed any allusion to the nenstar
in that remark, but maid he was listening to the Sen
ator: he mill pardon melt I say that I was ,reminded
of a proverb, which deemed . to be very' applicable to
Wass es he presented it.lt ie this: "Who excuses
himself accuseshirneelf " . The bitiftness with which
he rushed to self- defense brought to my mind this an.
cient maxim, 'Mt%Strainer wept on to: repeat his
erguthent, that it would be tuba:oink:la in theS'enate
to interchange messages, 'Am, with the President while
the I m pe achment
et le Pending, A vote, he continued,
has taken on one article, brit there are ten to be
acted upon,e and'on the article. acted epee we all
know that the , Acqutttal was Only by one vote. Ile
WU saved,' the saying the akin of hie
teeth. " I mulls a nominal acquittal on .bat one ar
ticle, and I allulnstos that.
_now because it has 'been
- acted upon. There ilea moral judgment against him,
a )ndgment—
Mr. BENDIUCKB -- I wish to know what decision the
Chair made upon the point of order made by my col
league.
1 he Panne:me, pro tem. --The Chair did not make
any
HEVDRICKS—Then I shall ask a decision On that
point of order as applicable to the remarks of the
,Senator from Massachusetts (Mr. Sumner).
The Pnasinfaam,pro tens.—The Senstor.must put it
In writing. . •
Mr. HENDRICKS—I make the point of order that
..the line of artrument made by the Senator is not in
Mr. 'Bu.iorim, said that he know of no rule that dic
tates to a Senator what cause of argument he can
pursue, and he proceeded with his romarksYin the
• courts() of which he said he knew there were Senators
who, since the impeachment question had been agi
tate& have continued in personal relations with the
President, and others who have slught ofllcial ap
pointment at hinhatids and who have frequented his
house. He had no criticism to make; bat he could
not have done so himself.
Another motion to adjourn. , made'by 11ir. CAMERON
Was voted down. The question was on the motion to
include thetSenate in the resolution of the House.
It was agreed to by a vote of 29 to 90, 'and the ques
' lion recurring on the resolution as Amended, it was
rejected by the following vote; . •
' Yeas—Messrs. Anthony, Bayard. Buckabiw. Cole,
Conness, Corbett, Davis, Dixon. Doolittle, Fowler,
Ilendricka. Johnson, McCreary, Merrill of Vermont.
Vortott,Tatterson of New Bampsture, Patterson, of
Tenuesee. SauThbury,Sprague, Stewart, Sumner, Van
'Winkle, 'Vickers and Williams —24 •
blays.—Messrs, Cameron. Chandler, Conklin g,
Cra
in,,.Drake, Edmund.'" Petry, Fessencien, Strohm,
.lowe,fiforgan;Morrill o'f Mu Min
ne, Morton. Nye, Poe-
Toy, Ramsey, Rose, Sherman. Thayer, Tipton, Trum
hull, Wade, Willey. 'Wilson and'Yates.-25.
After an unavailing attempt 14,,Mr. Morrill, o
'Maine, to &ill up the deficiency billf at a gamer to
four the Senate adjourned.
BIEWEEI
H o use or Iteareeentattwee.
Mr. Illtaarows Offered as a quation of privilege,
the following' , •
IraWhreas,,lt appears by the foll9wlng letter. purport.
to hive Aeseritteg *di addresses' by eeren
I nembere_„cif.thasli use to_ ; •e3e of , the Smears of the
United. States. a - which' is ptibliebed in the duff y
/*Waft/ &Idelligencer of thes clty„to ,wit ithls lets ,
bewbeasi haeultdre published), that an' indecent and'
ceraptcombhuition of the liepresentatives aforesaid
had been entered Into to improperly Influence the
Seuetor , stfureabt in hls :judgment and fjeCi4loll on
theinlqadectuediat boW.pericting and undetermined id
the Senate; therefore.
Resolved, That a select coin‘nittee of seven be 'ap
pointed to investigate the matter of the writing of
said letter, the motive and purpose of said- memoera
in Writing said letter, Whether the Fame was written
to corrupt or imprOperly influence the judgment and
decision of said Senator. and what action the House
ought to take with reference thereto. and that Bald
committee be authorized tO seta for pereons and
papers.
31r. Marrietto inqUiredayllether that was a Ties
tion of privilege...
The Misuse replied that the gentleman from Wis
consin had so presented it. After,examming the paper,
the Chair said the gentleman did not directly ch urge
corrupt purposes, but made use of the words "it ap
pears, ' and, therefore. in the opinion of he Chair,
it was not a. question of privilege; but' he would sub: -
mit the question to the determination of the Rouse
Mr. Eunninos said he was desirous that the 'Mis
souri members should be either exculpated or con
victed. as the facts might warrant.
Mr. BLAME inquired whether it was in order to
move that "the paper be not received.
The firearm replied that it was not yet before the
House.
after further prow. the Haase, by a itarty .
vote—yeas 82, nays ,28 —dec ided that the paper did. not
present a question.of petvilege.
lialtizeigin Matti that the resolution; of Mr. El
dridge, not having been read as a quasticm of privi
lege, an impression might get abroadlhat this dispo
sition of the letioltillem wile at the instance of the
Missouri delegation. who signed the letter which had
been reed at the clerk's deek. He was not satisfied
thatimen attleapreisiontinould' be made for himself,
and be believed he also swim for his colleagues. They
desired the fullest biessictit into all the facia in
relation to the matter mentioned, and they asked that
a special eceemittee of three be appointed tor the par
es
There were other fade wi in his latowledge, and
others which would enter largely . into , the privileges
of one of the Senators. • They • would , not interpose
any obstacle, but render every aid in their power
which the HOW Or conunittee might .require. ' ,They
desired that there sheruld' be a tall investigation,
and that all the facts should go to the country. They
knew that they bad nothing to fear. They had
neither done or said anything dishonorable, or which
would not bear the light of day before the country at
large.
Mr. ELDIOXIOD deelred to know Whether the gentle
man thought it was right for the whole Mtge:lan dele
gation to call on one of the Senators from that State;
who was then considering a case judicially, and ask
him to withhold his vote on one of the articles of im
peachment.
Mr. Bertsesere said that in view of the circumstances
preceding the writing of the letter, he would reply
yea. emphatically. •
Mr. St raitoon further staked whether on the princi
ples of justice and right it was proper to interfere
with the deliberation of the Court when the question
was pendind
Mr. Bgtirmenr left that for the committee judge,
and the House can then assent or dissent to what they
mar report.
hie litany totted the gentleman the question,
whether they did not think they were right tf they. sure
posed there was to be a corrupt proceeding?
Mr. CILANLER demanded that these words of the
gentleman from California be taken down by the
Clerk.
The Sraerreat, with reference to the objection thus
made, said these words did not come within the par
liamentary law, for the reason that the Senate forms a
part of Congress. It was the Senate, although pre•
sided over by the Chief Justice. The roles prohibited
offensive remarks toward the proceedings of either
branch. Although the question of the gentleman
from California was hypothetic, the Chair thought it
did not come within the parliamentary law. The pre
sumption of the gentleman was that the Senate could
make a corrupt decision.
Mr. MIGEY said he did not charge anything of that
kind.
Mr. Bummer observed the gentleman from Mis
souri (Mr. Benjamin) had made no such charge him-
M
self.
Mr. Cumin asked that the rules of time House be
fully carried out.
Mr. Muttons', resuming, raid that the Missouri
delegation had no idea in the world. nor did they
throw out any suspicion whatever, that he (`;en ator
Henderson) would act corruptly, or that any influence,
her ond what the evidence dclosed, would be brought
to bear upon him. They explicitly negatived such an
Inference. They charged nothing corrupt. It was
stated on the floor that the Senator requested the
presentation of such a letter to him;
trona niteractriocer.
Mr. Bream/n said he was instructed by the im
peachment manners to report the following resolu
tion. and ask that it be put on its passage:
Whereas. Information. has come to the managers
which seems to them to furnish probable cause to
believe that Improper or corrupt influences have been
need to influence the determination of the Senate
neon the articles of impeachment exhibited to the
Senate by the; Home of Representatives against the
President of the United States; therefore,
Bemired. That for the further and more efficient
prosecution of the impeachment
_ter tint President,
the managers be directed and inetructed to summon
and examine witnesses under oath; to send for per
eons and papers: to employ a stenographer, and to ap
point sub committees to take testimony, the expenses
thereof to be paid from the Contingent Fund of the
House.
Mr Ross rose to a question of order, and stated it
to be that the House had no power to try Senators.
The SPEASEtt replied that the resolution did not
propose to try Senators.
Mr. BINGHAM said the resolution proposed no ouch
thing.
Mr. Boarssort made a point that the managers ap
pointed by the Hones to conduct the prosecution had
discharged their; duty, , and. therefore, had nothing
farther to do. Judgment in fact having been rendered,
they could not be further heard any more than counsel
could after a case has been submitted to the court.
The SPIARDR overruled the point, on the ground
that the duty of the managers had not been folly d a
charged, as the House had reserved to itself the right
to present any further articles of impeachment.
The House then Agreed to consider the resolution.
Yeas, 78; nays, 2b- , It. party vote.
Mr. BDROILIai said it WU 'not his purpose to delay
the liouse, except for a moment or two, inasmuch as
a queetion of order had been raised, and as it had
been intimatedthat this.was an-attempt to exercise a
power on the part of the House not warranted by the
Constitution. He cleared to say for himself—and he
believed be could speak in behalf of all the managers
—that the resolution expressly declared that its pur
pore was the further and more efficient proseention
of the impeachment of the President, predicated en
information communicated to the managers that cor
rupt influence ,had , been employed to prevent a suc
ceeded protiecutlon try 'the House.
Mr. Munoz's rose to a point of order, namely, that
after the managers appointed to conduct the prosecu
tfon against the President, had discharged their duty,
it was improper for theM to 'look to articles of im
peachment against Senators, that being for the Senate
itself to undertake.
The BI.ZAKER overruled the point because the
House had resolved to consider the resolution.
31r. .Roinerne moved that the resolution he laid
on the table. •
Mr: Ross nioved that the House adjourn.
The. House refused to adjourn—yeas, 22; nays. 79;
and also refueed to lay the resolution on the table—
yeas, 10; nays, 88
31r. Roauteoe—l ask leave to make a suggestion in
one word to the gentleman from Ohio. Would he
not let this subject go tea select committee, or at all
events to some committee that has on it a representa
tive of the Democratic ;party, which, we claim to be
the majority of thelpeople •of the : North ? Is it not a
mockery to send it to a committee on which there le
no repreeeptative of Abet party?
Mr.-Bneedux —I insist on the previous question.
Mr. Pacree--With the consent of the gentleman
from Ohio, I should like to ask a question, and to
make a suggestion,
Mr. BINGHAM declined to yield. '
Mr. Paterti—l was not 'here when the discussion
took place: .
Mr. BINGHAM insisted on the previoeg question.
The previous question was Seconded. and the reso
lution was adopted--yeas 88, nays 18.
The House then, at a quarter past four o'clock, ad
journed till Monday next. the Senate' having die
agreed to the concurrent resolution' for a week's
CON.
P I T git t T iVnt
Bit rO r l e i - tge t tnlsh :N e o c e aptai r ill V . r . efi vr . l lll-60
bids fish Atwood, Anne ' s. a.. Coo4lo to wadi. citruing &
Co; 47 do CJonee; 10 cs shoes T L Alaimo d l! dt Co. ; 46 do
Bunting, Durborow & Co; 32 do Chandler , Hart& (1o; 163
do Clatin & Partridge; 11 do Early & Harriet 29 do Grad;
Watkins & Co; 31 do Haddock, Reed & Co; 19 do C I)
bleelees & Cotwee wine A Prohman; 140 pkgs stook
P BuitColo orsans J E,Gould; 20 bxo tacks Handy,
Brenner & Co; coils rope A 11 Hinkley & Bon ; 163 pkge
stuck Hilburn & Gates; 72 do paper H 11 Longstreth ; 86
do ink J B Lippincott & Co; 68 do iron Middleton & Haw
nod: blids tallow Meßeone Van Haagen ; 75 pkge
mdse order; 29 cases shoes Pieper & Markley - 31 do out
ter & Millor; 17 do t) Slate, - 89 do A A Bliumway &' Co;
13 do Thatcher & Cot- 22 do B. G Townsend 41 do ,• 11 . Til
den & Co; 29 do D L Winebrenner,. 60 pkgs - dry goods G
Brenner &. Co; 13, do T .W 4 M Brown; 40 do Boyd &
White ; 17 do Coffin & All ernes;'bbls paint d Pettit &
Co; 79 pkge bananas Pritchard & Bee; 70 trails dates
Phillips & Bro; Bu pkge stock W.l) Mclver; 19 Into nidoe
S Richards ;'Bl pkge stock D 133 Slifer: 98 cake ashes 13
Smith; 20 bblo oil ordor; 20 kegs zinc nails N Trotter&Co;
BO ear axles A Whitney & Sons; :60 Pkgtl springs J P
ton & Co; 129 toile paper Nixon & stokes; 15 sacks wool
Davio, Flan & Baines; 23_pkgs dry -goods Frothinghani
Wills; 37 do T T Lea & Co; 65 do Penn Elastic , S Co 17
do l'esse & Baxter; 9A . do Sutton, Smith &Co;
ul
10; do pi p
& I' Smith ; 10 do T SprOhl & Co; 4A do F L 11 Soe;
207 slabs splitter Pltiladelaltia GrlVardzing Co; 64 co ra t io .
Coo W Illabou & Co; 55 do Berger & Butts; 43 pkgs glassJ
ware S G Boughton; 340 Otto hides Raeder & Adamson;
25 do lb my Cohen; 44 do furnituro I&11 Davis.
LIVERPO;_ , I —Bark Niobe, Bowere.--500 bxo tin plates
91 bills iro N & (1 Taylor & Co 1.203 bills hoop iron 40 do
bar iron 'Nathan Trotter & Co; 2116 bill bar iron A.& I'
1 , °hello & Co; , 194 rails Raring Bros At Gi - b; 75 dramo caustic
soda :145 keel isle Naylor & Co ; 6 cc mdze G A Schwara
- _
, • •
THE - DAILY •-EVENING7BIJLIETIIi-PHILADnLPHIA - MONDAY MAY' 18 - 1068;
'"'' -
10111 cs bleach gph o r e POwere & eightnion 500 burr
linillates Bah Carpeso4 91 oks'holts,J' Coleinantti do '
13 do chains Jaco &. b - 11 4rmbraeter ; 49 ate soda ash Yarnell
& Triinble ; t see printed boat Vir G Main:olc* winti3s
do oil Dutton di Lussonj s cask grindstones • Mit chell .1; Co ;
15 es able earttenwsibir; J'Wdleite & Off; 199 41, oks
do 1 bundle bay Peter, right & Sons; 96,blaig soda cm.
tals'6s drams caustic , rodali4 eke bleaching' poWder 19 ' do '
soda ash iienr7 liareten; 76 drums confabs, soda 110 cos
soda ash 60 tea radte 100 sacks Salt 400 b4U hoeb Iron 848
boxes tin plates 66 must steel tyros 50 do axles 25 cases
1,111100 5 cases lithographic "(Wino 4co wine '1 cask brandv
MATANZAS =Brig Brightniarl, GreJ.-633 hhde 46 tee
rooleseet2 hos Watson & Sons.
r,AGUA—Brig Leona Blshop.-472 IMO 51 tee sugar C C
SAGUA—Brig_jolin A.yiles, Bowden. -292 hilds 25 tea
molasses Him° Bough & Morris.
bAGUA—Bark, Frank ilow_ard Beueveau.-343 Midi 46
telt sugar 40 hbdo Molasses 11 Morris Wdln m Co.
IttteF,Dlo6--echr Chattanooga, Black-294 Mulls 52 tea
woisetes TI•MS Watteon & bons.
klAilahlEN—Schr Jbeget, gills-238 hhde 25 tce sugar
80 bhda molasses 26 tcs 6 obis honey G vV Bernad ou& Bro.
(JARDEPiAI3- Brig Anna Wellington. Johnson-590
hhda sugar 21 do molasses John Mason di Co; 100 boxes
sugar istaollough & blorrle.
CARDENAS—dehr D Watson, Jones-447 hhds molasses
66 tee dole bbis do R C Kniaht & Co.
JACKSONVILLE-Scar SV B Mean, Stanford-120,000
feet I allow pine lumber J R Sank & Co.
bT. JOHN, NB.—tlehr 0 IS Rourke, llicAhnon--617,000
laths 27.782 feet lumber order.
11110VEIMENTS OF OCEAN STEAELER'4O'
TO 42.11,44V8.
snips rsom ?OS DAVI
Britannia Glasgow. Now York.... ... . .. May 1
Cella London—New York. May 2
Baltimore Southampton ..Baltimore May '4
Manhattan •Liverpool—New York May 6
Malta ..• .. . . Liverpool—New York. • May '6.
City of IParia Liverpool.. New Y0rk...........Mav 6
N•atorian.., ... . . . Liverpool.. Quebee......... .. . .. MAY 7
Sax ew York, May, 8
Etna • • • •• • • •• • • • • •LimPOOl..N Y via $
Germany ...,..... „LAverpool, Quebec MaY 8
Ruts's. - • - • • • • • LiverlX•ol-..New York May 9
Europa... ....... . ...Glaagew..New York... . —May 9
TO VEPARI.'.
City of Washirtgton..N. York..Livertnviallarx...Mar 18
Stara and Stripes., •Shilatloa. _Havana. - May 19
Cimhria. ...New York. ,Hamburor May 19
Gild W Star New York,AsainwalL May 20
AustrMasion.......New York..LiverpooL May 20
reaks .......... New York. •/41 , 01190 0 1,, ••• • • ••••MaY 99
Utechlsod.. ..... New York. •Bremen. . . ... . 21
Palmyra: • ..... ....New York..LiverpooL. May9l.
Ruh, York—Havana • „... • —May
M.
City of Parte New York..Liveropool Mar 23
South Ametiea„ —New Y0rk...1110 Janeiro May 23
Gen Grant New York.. New Orleana . ... . . May 23
Mt/Ma& New lr
23
Bating!' ....New York. :Hamburg May ci 121
Stoidt New York.. Bremen— .... ....May 23
Manhattan.... ..New York. •Liverpeol Kay 27
• Ypr_k—Liverpool.
Wyoming... —Philadelphia. Savannah.. ..... ....May 30
D TRAD.t: ,
D. C. MaCW..... • •
J. PRICE El I:IbRII4,_ Mantua Colmar=
WASHINGTON SUTURE& •
BIALRINB BULLETIN.
,1 .Y s q: 1 .i N '1:1 _
Sad ROM 4 sot Stris srra. 700 I Hum WATrs. 12 0
ARRIVED YESTERDAY.
Bark Waite. Bowers. 56 days from Liverpool, with midge
to Peter Wright & Bona.
Bark Howard (Br), Bolliveau, II days from Sagua,with
molasses to 8 Morris Waln & Co.
Brig klildegaard (Swed), 48 days from Liverpool, with
milt to A Kerr A Bro.
1311 a Leona (Br). Bishop.ll days from lingua, with sugar
to C C Van Horn.
Schr Chattanooga, Black, 12 days from Remedios, with
molasses to Thus Wattson & Sons.
Behr Jos Seger, El is.l4 days trom Csibarien. with sugar,
&c to 0 W 13ernadon & Bro.
Schr Olive L urke. 151cAlmort, 13 days from St John.
NB. with lumber to order.
Salt Halo, Disney. 5 days from Newburyport, with
twin to Knight & Bone.
ARRIVED ON SATURDAY.
Steamer Norman. Crowell. 48 hours from Boston, with
mdse and panel:gere to 11 Crowell..
& Co.
Steamer w C Pierrepont, Shropshire, 24 hours from
Sew York. with rods° to Win M Baird & Co.
Steamer Norfolk, Vance. from Richmond and Norfolk,
w nidse to W P Clyde &Co
Steamer Geo H. Stout, Ford, from Washington. with
mdse to W P Clyde & Co.
steamer Maynower.Robinson, 24 hours from New York.
a ith anise to a `l M Baird & Co.
steamr r Novelty, Tuft. 2A hours from New York, with
mdse to W El Baird & Co.
Brig Anna Wellington (Br), Johnson. 11 days from Car
denas, with segos and molasses to vallett & Son.
Brig .1 Brightman, Graf, 10 days from Matanzas, with
molasses to 1 boa Wattson & Sons
mßehr David Wasson.'Jones. 10 days from Cardenasovith
molames to .E.C. Knight & Co.
Seto Wro B Menu. Stanford, 9 days from Jacksonville.
with lumber Jit Sank & Co.
Schr Rebecca Lane, Lane, 5 days from Yinalhaven,
with mdse to E A Bonder & Co.
Soh W B Morgan. blades. 4 days from Seaford. Del.
with lumber to Moore, Wheatley & Cottingham.
Behr Marlon Woods, I day from Newport. Del. with
grain to Jae L Bewley & Co.
Schr Etttie Hall, Maxon, 1 day from Frederica, Del..
with grain to JaS L DEM ley Co.
Sehr Wm Townsend, Maxon, 1 day from Frederica,
DeL with grain to Jas L Bewley & Co.
Behr Reading Rh No 41, Bartlett, n orwalk.
Behr Reading KR No 47, Reed. New London.
r chr Reading RR No 45. Anderson, New Haven.
Seta Dick 1% iiliams. Conon. Horton's Point. LL
Schr W B McSbain, Christy. Georgetown, DC.
Tug 'rhos Jefferson, Allen l from Baltimore. with a tow
of bargee to P Clyde & Co.
Tug Chesapeake. Mershon. from Baltimore, with a tow
of barges to W P Clyde & Co.
CLEARED ON SATURDAY.
Steamer Promethlis, Gray. Charleston, E A Sonde , di Co.
St, tuner New Yor Jones, I', ashington. W P Clyde&Co.
eatlatX Utility. Fargo, Providence, D 8 Stetson dt. C 3.
Steamer Valley City, M oan. Richmend.W PClyde & Co.
trainer R Witting. Cundi rg n. Baltimore. A Groves. Jr.
ink Esther
Fultz. WorkmanW Glyde&CO'
Balk Esther, Merrill, Matanzas. & Co.
Bark David Nichols. Brown. Bangor. Scott, Walter & Co.
ig G E Prescott. Mills, Portsmouth, Lennox it Burgers.
Schr W B Mcrihain. Christy, w arhington, Tyler it Co.
SchrWilliamoCorson,Pawtucket Blakistom.lraeff&Co
. Schr B RR No 4.5 Anderson, Norwich, John Rommel, Jr.
Schr R Rmt No 41. Bartlett, Derby, Ct. do
Schr Geo R Conover, Robinson. Pawtucket, captain.
rug Thus Jefferson, Allen, for Baltimore. with a tow of
barges. W P Clyde & Co.
Tug Cherapeake, Diershon. for Baltimore. with a tow of
barges, 'W P Clyde & Co.
Tug Loout. Alexander for Baltimore. with a tow
of barges ko . P Clyde Co.
MEMORANDA.
Steamer City of Antwerp (Br). &firehouse, cleared at
New York Itch inst. for Liverpool.
Steamer Ocean Queen. King, cleared at New York 16th
iusr. for As_piuwall
steamer Worcester. Graham, cleared at BaMinor° 16th
inst. for LB. erpooL
Steamer Helium (Br), Pinkham, cleared at New York
Pith inst. for Aspinwall.
Bark M H Culbert. Tabell, hence at Barbados 22d
di, charging.
Bark Andes. Merriman. from Cardenas, was weed 6th
!net, reported for Portland.
Brig Clara M Goodrich. Look, hence for Matanzas, was
spoken 11th that. oft Hatteras. .
Brig lea M Comm , . Harrah, fro days from Cienfuegos.
at New York 15th inst. _
itri J B Kirby . Outerbridge, hence at Sagriath alt. to
return.
Scbr H E Sampson, Sampson. sailed from Matanzas 7th
'net for this rport.
Schr Ellie L Smith, Smith. hence at Mobile 12th inst.
Schr Lewis Audenried, oink in the savannah River.
had not been raised on.the 12th inst. but was somewhat
t , it ted from where she first sir hick t.
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All Bpote published are for sale by us the moment the,
are issued from the prem. at Publishers` prices. Call in
person. or seed for whatever books you want, to
T. B. PETERSON k BRUT fiERS.
myle.2t $O6 Chestnut St.. Philadelphia. Pa.
T ST READY—BINDELAWS LATIN GRAMMAR.—
New Edition.—A grammar ofthe Latin Language for
the Vse of Schools. With exercises and vocabularies by
William Bingham, A. AL, Sunerintendent of the Bingham
SchooL
?he Publishers take leasure in announcing to Teachers
and "denda of Education generally, that tho new edition
of the above work ie now ready, and they. invite a careful
examination of the same, and a cemparison with other
orks on theim S up erintende n topies will be furnished to
Teachem and of Wools or this purpose
at low rates.
Price $1 60.
Published by
E. H. BUTLER & CO„
Routh Fourth atroet,
' Philadelphia.
And for oaf° by Booirsollerateneraily. nun
Lectures.—A new COUTSO of Lectures, as delivered at the
Now York Museum of Anatomy, embracing the outs
Jects.; Bow tO live and what to Uve for; Youth, Maturity
and Old Age; Manhood generally reviented; The cause of
indigestion, flatulence and. NOTTOUS Dbeatiel acommted
for. rocket volumes containing these lectured; will be tor•
warded to parties unable to attend on receipt at tow
stamps, by addressOg J. J. Dyer, to flobool street, Doe
1.20058 TIOUDIFIT. BOLD AND EXCIDANDED AT
I) JAMES B It' qt. 1106 Market street, Phil'a. !Maly
filblt SALE -A.51" ENVOLOO OF RANDOM RAGS
assorted Untat and cotton.
PETER WRIGHT & SONS.
It 5 Walnut otroet.
NEW ruin.liciontoras.
M '
THOMAS & bOttil'AVollati .M.,; ' u'L 4
431.1
' OPVTAVIMISIAVIEB iYifft. 4,
vi NP R IV ° pt Ms r
~ plite Szatiania'RVEßY
T ecloet.
.enabillio of each property:lr iillertattip in
addition to which we nubucia, on the aturdatm , inn
to each - ewe, one thoueant eataiognee Pamiiniez •
Arm.
tiring full eescription,o all the tro2egrty,to_noleout et
I+
the OLI:OWING TURBO/Yrs anti a &MCI "nom alf 4 °
at Private Sale. •• • , , •, • ,
Irtr Our Salmi are abo advertised In the followint
newspapers : Nonni AMILIIIOA2 , I4 Paten, iiinXinni Man ,
INVELLIOVICE)I, lucerniza, AGE. Elltellne BMW TIIII,
EVENING TYLEORAPII. OXIIIKA.VIDEMOMIATA me. '
or Furniture Bales at the Auction store . EVERY
THURSDAY. • ,' ,
10Ir Sale. at rolidences receive esoecial attention.
, .
BANK. AND OTHER STOCRS. LOANS. dtc. •
ON TUESDAY, MA k *P. • '
At 12 o'clock noon. at the Philadelphia Exchange..
Executors' r , ale—
s6.ooo Oily of Pittsburgh Coupon Bonds,
124 shared Penn National Bank
lit shares alerchents' and , Manufacturers' Bank.
Pittsburgh.
riS shares Baltimore and Philadelphta SteaMboat Co.
27 shares Pennsylvania Railroad Co.
UP shares Buck Mountain Coal Co.
For 1.. titer Accounts.-
1 share' Mercantile Library.
200 'hare , kooal Ridge improvement Co.
10u shares American Batton Hole Machine Co.
80ehares Western National Bank
80 shares Manufacturers' and Methani Nat'l Bank.
19 shares ,ity national Bank.
' 127 shares Delaware Mutual !nuisance Co.
100 shares• Fifth and Sixth Streets Plum Rallwa.. CO.
110 shares Mechanics' National Bank. "
6. shares Franklin Fire Insurance Cos
sBMo Philadelphia and Baitimore Central RR. Bonds.
1 share Point Breeze Park Association
$BOOO Lnion Pacific R Broad 8 per cent. Bonds.
10 shares National Bank.
2 lli.uo bonds West Cheater and Media Railroad.
REAL ESTATE SALK MAY 19.
Orphans , Court Sale-Eetatel of James Carmichael
decli.--VALUABLE Busman Savants-2 THREE STORY
BRICK STORES, Nos. 150 and 162 North Third et, he
tween Race and _
Orphans' Court Sale-Estate of Hervey Bateheller,
dechtand Harwood and Weld,Minote-4 THREESTORY
13E1CH . DWELLINGS.. Noe. Kilb. 26.11, 2623 and 2533
Frankfordroad, nortb of R.eaditut Railroad.
bame Estate-GROUND. RENT, S5O a year.
Orphanir Court ' Sala-Estate of Wm. Strang, deed.-
BRICK DWELLING and LOT OF GROUND. No. 623
Dividend et'. west of Parry, 19th Ward
tienne.Estate-TRAtiT OF LAND, 5.16 ACRES. Cambria
et., Penn Township.
Same Estate-BRICK MESSUAGE, No. 2013 Kessler
et.„ south of Diamond.
dame Estate- FRAME • MESSUAGE,' Susquehanna
avestio. east of Twenty-ninth et.. 21st %Yard.
Same Estate-LOT, (No. ferl on plan of North Penn
Village) north aide of Susquehanna , avenue, mud of WO,
street.
Executors' Peremptory Sale-Estate of Christian Cor.
nelius, deed.-HANDSOME MODERN THREE-STORY
BRICK RESIDENCE , No. 206 Franklin 'at, north: of •
Race, opposite Franklin Square-has the modem coma
'dances, ImMediste poeseesion. Sale Absolute. -
Aesignees , Sale-VAttmpus BUSINESS aTAriDer•-2FI U
STOlti BRICE STORES Noe. 215 and 217 North Front
et„ utter' ling through to Water et-2 valuable fronts.
EXecutore' Sale-Estate of Jane Peterson. deed.-- VITILY
STORE
Bverstras liworn--THREE-SR BRICK.
STORE and DW E LL S O . No. 1306 Chest tat.
dame Estate-2 THREE.STORY BRICKDWELLINGS,
Nce 1303 and 1305 Sansom st.
Same Estate-TIDIEWITORY BRICK DWELLING.
No. 13061.ruty at.
A dministratrix's Peremptory Sale-Sy order of the Or.
phone Court-Estate of Hamilton Cress, decd-VERY
DE HIRABLE 234 STORY STONE REdIDENCE. Stable
and Cantaqe Roue°, 1 ACRE. Main et, Chestnut Hill, We
Ward, ne..r the Toll Gate.
GENTEEL THREE-STORY BRICK DWELLING, No.
1110 Carpenter et.
THIOLL'•STORY BRICK DWELLLNG, No. 2226 Cuth
bent st
To Capitalists and Manufacturers-VALUABLE
MILLS MANbltiN and TENANT IlUlioES. 16 ACRES,
Rockhill road. Lower Merlon Township, 3lontgomety
county, Pa, half a mils from Manayunk anti five miles
tram Phladelphia.
Sale by . Ceder of Haire-VALIFABLZ erfarrrEßß LOoa.
VON- 2 IIItEE.BTORY BRICK DWELLINGS, Nos. 407
and4oB South Front et.. a' .1 2 WAREHOUSES. Nos. 400
and 403 Penn et. below Pine-40 feet front, 150 feet deep
-2 fronts. 'lmmediate possession of the dwellings, and
poesessl on of the warehouses may be had on giving Three
months' notice.
THREE -STORY STONE MANSION, with Stable and
Coach Home and Large Lot. No. 3816 Market et., Weet
Philadelphia-100 feet front. 214,1 i feet deep-2 fronts.
VERY ELEGANT C. SEAT' and MANSION,
8 ACRES, Warerley_Helghts, Limekiln Turnpike, libel.
tenham Jowl:whip, M ontgom.ry county, Pa., nine miles
from Market et, half a mile from Abington Station,
North Pennsylvania Railroad.
Exec, tors. Sala- Estate of Harriet Eingston,_deed.-
DESIRA.II...E THREE-STORY BRICK RESIDENCE,
No. 621 Spruce at. Immediate possession
Satre Estate-LARGE and VALUABLE FOUR,
d'IORY BRICK DWELLING, No. 620 Locust et., oppo
site Washington Square-28 feet front.
Same Y state-Vsuassur. Busrsrms LaokrioN-BRICK
DWELLING. No. 1316 Callow hal ..t., with tour email
dw, llings in the 'lsar on Carlton et, No. 1313
NEAT STUN CDTTAGE and about TWO ACRES of
GROUND. Darby Road, 7.; of a mile below the Blue Bell
Tavern
HANDS( .ME MODERN THREESTORA STONE RE-
S IDENDE. Queen st,, Germantown, 86 by 16334 feet; has
ail the ni..dena conveniences. Immediate possession.
Peremptory Sale-VALUABLE BIIEJINT.BB STAND-FOUR
STORY BRICK STORE, Nos. 11 and 13 Strawberry at.-
25 feet front. dale absolute.
PUBLIC SALE'. •
VALUABLE MACIIINERY, STEAM ENGINES,
BOILERS. &c.. of the FOUNTAIN GREEN ROLLING
MILL, Beth etreet and Penneylvnaia avenue.
ON TUESDAY. M. s Y 19,
At 12 o'clock noon. will be Bold at public sale, at the
Phi adelpbia Exchange,
All the valuable Machinery of the Fountain Green
Bolling Mill, on the Sebulkill River and Reading Rail.
toad, attire Intersection of `.l hirty.ainta street and Penn
ey Iva n is avenue s - crtuaistiug of
-1 150 horse power Engine, with solid iron rim fly wheel,
Tremper a improved governor, cog wheelie sm. 1 60
home power Engine and 1 25. home power B 1 swing En
• Me.
19.i1)03 Train of Rolls (small mill.) 119-inch Merchant
Train of Rolla. 1 eet of Puddle Rolle, I get of Chaiuplate
Rolle. •
2 Railroad Burden Spßte Machines, capacity about five
tons per day. also, 1 ILK Chair Machine.
t Large and 2 Small Powerfitheare.
1 Largo Aligator Squeezer.
1 Large Flue Boil: r.
5 Large Low.preseure Boilers.
All the Furnace Plates belonging to 8 Puddling and
Heating Furnaces and 2 Spike Furnaces, together with all
the Floor and straightening Plates, Shafting and Belting,
and Iron of all buds in and. upon the premises used for or
is convection with the machinery , of the mill.
gear The entire machinery to be cold iu one lot,
Terms— $5OO the
o removed be paid wn the operty ie struck oil;
balance cash: Property lo be v within 90 days.
Executor's Sale at No. 35 South Second area.
Estate of Isaac Barton, dee'd. _ •
SUPERIOR liOnEWot AP FURNITURE. PRENCH
PLATE MIRRORS. FINE VELVET CARPETS. dtc.
ON TUESDAY MORNING.
May 19, at 10 o'clock, at No. 35 South Second street, the
entire superior mahogany Houeehold rurniture, 2 tine
French Plate Mau el 24 irronefine Matreesee and Bedding,
;bine and Glassware, fine Velvet Carpets, Kitchen Uteir
fis, c.
blaybe examined at 8 o'clock on the morning of tale..
VALUABLE PRIVATE LIBRARY. **-
ON TUESDAY AFTERNOON.
May 19. at 4 o'clock. } uglish and American editions. in.
eluding I,Vilsouls and Bonapartels American Ornithology,
s cols ; Vaip3'o Classics, 52 vol.. ; Hfetoiro des ?epee, 10
vole., &c.
Ea eentors''Sale—Fstate of Isaac Lesser deed.
SILVER PLATE, BIBLES [AND PRAYER BOOKS.
MOUNT SINAI CBMETEAY S COCK, dre.
ON WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON.
Ma 20, nt 3 o'clock, by catalogue• at the 'Hebrew So.
defy Building, Seventh street, above Wood street. the
elegant Silver Plate. 3 dines Mount Sinai Cemetery
Mock, Family Bibles. daily and holidaY Prayer Booke,
Sale. No. 1625 Vine street.
HANDSOME, WALNUT FURNITURE, FINE
ENGLISH BRUSSELS CARPETS, &c.
ON FRIDAY MORNING.
May 92, at 10 o'clock. at No. 1695 Vine street by cata
logue, Handsome Walnut Parlor Furniture. Superior Oak
Ainingloom Furniture, Superior Chamber Furniture.
Bookcase, fine English Brussels Carpets, Kitchen Uten.
silo. Ac.
May be seen early on the morning of sale.
Davis & HARVEY, AUCTIONEERS.
Late with M. WALNUTns.
Wore No. 921 Street.
FURNITURE SALES at the Store every TUESDAY.
SALES AT RESIDENCES will receive particuhr
Attention.
Sale No. 421 Walnut street.
SUPERIOR FURNITURE, HAND:MAE TAPESTRY
CARPETS. FINE OIL CLOTHS, ENGRAVINGS,
LEATHER BEDS. BEDDING, &c.
ON TUESDAY MORNING.
At 10 o'clock. at the auction store. the entire Furniture
01 a reticence, including—Superior Parlor and Chamber
Furniture, tine Spring Matresses, Feather Beds and Bed
ding, Crimson Reps Sofa Bedsteads perior Secretary
Bookcase Walnut Wardrobe, handsome Tapestry Car
pets.Onelngrain and Venetian Carpets. Glassware, fine
Engravings. cte. FLOOR OIL ()LOTUS.
Also, a large invoice (27 rolls) superior Oil Clothe, in
84, 6-4 and 4.4. ,
FIRST CITY TROOP UNIFORM.
Also,,
a complete outfit of the First City Troop, com
prng dress,_fatigue and summer Uniforms, Sabre. PIA*
tole, Ssddle, &a, of a deceased 3namber.
THOMAS BIRCH' lit ON AUCTIONEERS ANL
. COMMISSIO N pIitiLIANTS.
'No4IIOOIIEB NOT street:
Rear Entrance 1107 hansom street.
HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE' OF EVERY DESCRIP•
. 'PION RECEIVED ON ,CONSIGNMENT.
Bales of Furniture at Dwellings attented to on the most
reasonable terms.
Sale at No. RO7 North Eighth street.
110USE11OL1) FURNITURE,
' PIANO PORTE. FINE CARPETS, &c.
ON WEDNESDAY MORNING.
May 20, at 10 o'clock, at No. 607 North Eigth et, will be
sold the htwniture of family declining housekeeping.
eluding Rosewood a even octavo Piano Porte. Parlor 'Suit,
covered with plush; Velvet Carpets, Pier Glass, Marbl
Clock, Oil Paintings Framed Engravings,. Bruseels Stair
and Entry Carpets. Chamber, Dining, room and Kitchen
Furniture
The furniture can be examined after 8 o'clock on the
ling of sale.
cALKILEMI & 00. t y no
• : eCLELLab & Nclt
_ B AM:assers.
No. 508 mARR'L'T ere.'"
SALE OE 1900 OASES 800 TS SHOES, BROGANS,
L,I_ALHORA OA_ _
ON T H URSDAY Blume/Y G.
May Sl. qommenclug at .10 o"elook. we will Poll by vats-
Logue for cash,' a general ussortrnegt of Boots, gimes, Bre'
idalmorale.&c. , .L.l • .
All3O. a large line of women's. Misses' and Obildron's
citymmde goods'. - .
rr L. A9EIBRIDOE & CO., AUCTIONEERS ,
•, . . No. US MARKET street. above Fifth.
LAAVE POSITIVE BALE o S_ r BOOTS, SHOES AND
OAT _ •
ON WEDNESD AY MORNING
MAY =Mat it o'clock, sell by catalogue alma*
1200 cases , of flrat close 'city and' Ea s tern inake ot - Boots
and Shook Dalmorida, Dregaisai &Sev,. die„ of man%
m
'iroeli 4 b &bn.% aro wear. to `whic h `the attentionnf
CO, and Country Buy 0113 In called.
Open early on the morning of cal° for examination.
1.11( N. OLIN
JUI . 4 ,= , 4 : 411.H.T GALLERY(' • ' •
- - No. 1090 CHESTNUT streot.
SALE OF ELEGANT VASEII^,' oivr , olsrantErcre.
GROUPS.. -STATUETTfr.A.,
ON THURSDAY RR O.
May 21, at 103 ti o'clock:at the On try 109Kheettint
greet,. NAM be 801 a. an elegisnf co cation of Agate , Oar
digit°, And d'etalVaser. of Ront 4 li.• Gothic t ad' , Ethnic , s
designs.; Tagus§ and Fruit Holders, large open whiga on,
soltlzot black marblitlind gilt 91.114 Y Cloaks, gilt Gratipt
and Figures.. finely executed Groups representing , the
Tbrre Graces and Dance of Venus, after Canova:l4V°
sad Bacchus, Fidelity, dm. • .•• _
Also, choice richly euanuiled and decorated Itobetalan
V ayes. dtc..
All the special importation of Messrs. Viti Bros. (late
Viso Viti ds Bons):
Tito collection will be arranged for examination on .
Wednesday, 90th inst., with o.,talognes;
ITALIAN MARBLE GARI,pM STATUARY.
ALSO, four elegant Carrara Marble Stat..es, for Gar
dens, repro ..enthig March, allay , d'Ciantre, dm.
The above Statuary will be sol d at 12 o'clock. -
SALE OF WWII-CLASS MOI ERN PAINTINGS, AND
LAST ONE oF THE SEA.eO.s.
Part comprisingp the weltknown importations of A.
ttuyv (Ater. Eery., of Antwerp. and part the private cob
'cotton of a lady about dep.rting for Europe.
Among the artists represented are---
,
W. blitsyer. Sr., F. Vanieverdonek, Montague.
B. U. R oekkoclt, .1.. J. M, Damecnrooder.
H. Sam • E. U. Barnes, Walravene,
Chas. Leickert. Jaw:a. . M. A. Koekoe.
H. Von Bebop, Oyselinckx, Zettz,
L. Lam pf Mr. AIWA. -,Boogaerd.
W:Kocaodir. A. Everson. Devoe.
A. (owe ) t. E. Mayes. It. IL A., Van Brea.
Y. Kobbel. La- font de Metz, Van Merck,
Jonkind, ' D. Maw, L
AM KCICA h.
L. ,Tililiard, • Van Willis; W. Nl.Winner•
bee. birch, E. Aondell, T.J.Yennimorek,
J. Balaton, 'A. Stanch. .1. E. Cialvan.
Milne Ramsey, • 11. lf. ,13 , epham, and others.
The Mile wPI tate place at Seott's Art ()alter,. lie. IMO
Cheetnet etreet, OA the .evinintes -ot THURSDAY • and
FitIDAY, May 21._and inst., at s quarter before &Alit
O'clork, arid 18 Won worthy the attennost of connoisseurs.
BUNTING,. IDUBBOW 00.. AUCTIONEERS.
doe. ni and atie M streets comer Bout street.
SUCCESSORS TO OEMS. , bums A 00.
LARGE PEREMPTORY EWE BOOTS. SHOE%
• ELATilbniffat G BAGS.,4e. •
May 19, at 10 o'clock" on FOR 'MONTHS' OREM%
2000 nutcases Boots, Shoes. wrogiuno. Ac.. of Antal&
city and Eastemulatinfatrtuts
LARGE PEREMPTORY RALE OF 9000, CASES BOOTS.
13110 ER: TRAVELING BAG& GATO, Au. •
NOTlUP:—lncludiag In our Large Ral.g_of Boots, Shaw
tte:„ ON TIMEDAY MORNING:
May 19, on FOUR MONTHS , UREDTE,at 10 o'clock, will
be found in part the following fresh agd deadrable snort
meat. eta—
Men% boys* and youths' Calf, Rip ilia' Butt tesitlier
Boots: flne Oran Long i,eg,DressßoozerCoggrees Boat
and Dal m orals Rip, 11uB and Polished Grain Brogans
women's mimes' and ebildren'er MIL Goat; Idoroisbei.
Enamelled and Buff Leather Balmorals, Congregg Oat
ter.: Lace B. eta: 'Ankle .Ties: Lasting Geliterg; Metallic
Overshoes, Slipoem Traveling Bags: dtc- •
LARGE POSITIVE BALE OF BRITISH. FRENCH.
GERMAN AND DOMESTIC DRY GOODS.
ON FOUR MONTHIP_, CREDIT. •
ON TEUR3DAY MO G, •
May 21. at Ipo'clockonnbtacing about 1090Esekages and
Lots of Staple and Fancy Articles.
LARGE POEINIVE SALE OF CARPETFROO. soo
ROLLS MATTINGS, Ott, CLOTHS, C. -
ON FRIDAY MORNING.
May 22 at 11 o'clock, on FOUR MONTHS' CREDIT,
about lory pieces Ingrain. Venetian. List. Hemp. Cottage
and Rea Carpeting', Canton Matting'. die.
AXT B. THOMPSON & CO., AUCTIONEERS.
V CuNCERT HALL AUCTION ROOlo1S:I219
CHESTNUT street and 1219 and 1221 CLOVER street
Ca RD.— We take pleasure in informing the public that
our FUNNTTURE SALES are confined strictly to entireb
NEW and FIRST CLASS FURNITURE, all 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 FERST.CLASS
HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE. dta
ON WEDNESDAY MORNING,
May 1.1), 18a at 10 o'clock. at the Concert Hall Auction
Rooms, will be sold, a very desirable assortment of
Household Furniture. comprieing—Antique and modern
Parlor Suite, in French satin brochette, plush. hair cloth,
terry. and reps, in oil and varnished; Bedsteads, Bureaus
and NVashstands. in Elizabethan. Grecian' Antique and
other styles; Cabinet, tlewirg, Dining, Studio Reclining.
Reception and Hall Chairs; Piano Stools, Escretoires,
Armoir andacs, elegantly carved SidebOards, corm
bination Card Work Tables, Turkish Chairs, marble
top Etrgeres, Whatnots, Library and Secretary Book'
cases, W ardrobes, Commodes, marble top Centro Tables,
Extension Tables., pillar, French a-d turned legs, Library
Tables, Hanging and Standing Hat Racks. &c,
MATROSSES
Alec., an invoice of pure curled hair, straw, tea grass
and Hair lt , latrassas, Spring and Hair Paitantata.
Alto,Villeon'y great painting, copy alter Rosa Boulieut's
celebrated "Horse Fair."
BY BABBITT do CO.. AUCTIONEER&
CASH AUCTION HOUSE,
No. 830 MARKET street, corner of BANK street.
Cash advanced on consignments without extra charge
BANKPUP i 81 OCK. ESTATE OF W. IL GREGORY.
BY OP.Hat. .S.
COM B R R S N IENTG
P.
,O T k u LO e Te,S by Catalogue.
To be peremptorily sold
ON WhDNESDAY MORNING,.
May Mb. commencing . at 10 o'clock, v iz. • Cloths, Cass'.
meres. Satinets, Domestic Goods, Linen Goods, Alpacas.
(Them L
e, 51ozambiques, Poplins, awns, Mohair Lustres.
Prints. I.:lngham% Bleach and Brown Goods, Cambrics,
Corset Jeans, Shirting Stripes, Satin Damasks. Table:
cloths, Napkins. Doylleaßrown Table Damask. Bleached
Loom Lice. s adles' and Gents' L. C, and Hemstitched
Handkerchiefs. Also,
REA DY.MADE CLOT 'HNC.
Comprising cloth, caesimere and linen Coats, Pants,
Vests and suits hi lam_ variety_; also. Kid Gloves,
Hosiery, Notions, Lyle Thread. Gloves and Gauntlets
Pocketbooks, Patent Thread, Spool Cottons, Table and
Pocket Cutlery. Pearl Buttons, Neck Ties, Paper and
Linen Collar+. Suspenders. Shoes • Shirt 'Pronts, ,tc„,
Also, iou LoTS BOOTS. SLICES. HA TS. . .
• 13 t RAW GOODS, &c.
THEL PRINCIPAL MONEY ESTABLIMMENT, 11,
corner of SIXTH and RACE streets. c,
Money advanced on Merchandise generally—Watebes,
Jeweirt. Diamonds, Gold and Silver . Plate. and ,on all
‘rticles of value, for any length of time agreed on.
WATCHER AND JEWEL RY AT PRIVATE BALL
Fine Gold Htuating'Case, Double Bottom and °Pen Face
English, American ••and Swiss Patent Lever Watches;
Fine Gold Bunting Case and Open Face Levine Watches;
Fine Gold Duplex and other Watches; Fine Silver Bunt.
Ing Case and Open Face English, American and Bwiss
Patent Lever and Leckie Watches; nimble Vase English
Diamond
and other Watches: Didiep,.Fanoy -Watches;
Diamond Broastpine; Finger lingo ; , • Ear Rings fettula,
Ac.; Fine Gold Chains, Medallions; Firacegiatsj Sc .
Pine: Breastpins: Finger Rings ;Pwdl , Cates add JeWOl27
generally
, , •
FOB S A LE . —A large land valua b l e Chest
suitable for a Jeweler; cost *MO.
Also, several lobo in Bonito CaradeibTifth and Chestnut
treets. •
J AMES A. FEIT m AN. AUCTIONEER,
No. 422 WALNUT street.
AT PRIVATE BALE.
BURLINGTON.—A Handsome blansior, on Main it,
lot 66 by 7( feet.
VsuODIAND TERRACE—Handsome Modern Ited•
deuce.
Y VIRTUE OF A WRIT OF FIERI FACIAS TO ME B
directed. will be exposed to sale to toe bigbest and
hest bidder for cash, on the premises, southwest corner of
Noble and • New Market, on Friday,. May 22d. 113 CA, at 2
o'clock. P. :NI., DI Barrels IWhisky,s three•spring WAROns.
6,0c0 feet oak plank. 60 new Carriage:Meets, Ha.Y
lot of House Fut tame. seized and taken in execution as
the property of U1i11.112T14.N PRKIBIDNDANZ, and to be
sold by • P. C. ELTAIAKEN, U. S. M
my 16.19.20,22 Eastern District Of Pennsylvania.
FUR :lams.
FOR SALE—A SMALL FARM OF 18 ACRES_
fr, situated 4 miles west of the city, on a turnpike road,
" having on it a beautiful situation for a country seat,
with plenty of shade and water,and one mile from station
on West Chester Railroad•. inquire, Po. lf) North Sixlih
• ' . n1y1.6 3t•
street
FOR
In new
NEW AND BEA,UTIFUL RESI.
rideuce in new block No. 822 South tiewpiteentl2 street,
" between Spruce and Pine is Just finished, and will
be sold. Inquire of C. il. Wright, If2s Spruce. or 142
South Third street. mylfqf
riFOR SALP,—A COUNTRY PLACE, CONTAINING
;:: 2 5 acres of excellent land, with atone dwelling,
" tenant house, born, ice hOtUle,_ itc., situate on the
Concord 'turnpike. one - auto from: Wilmington. Del ; Bite
to en elevaLed one, commending a fine view of the Dela
wo re, • Wilmington nnd eurrounding country. J. hi.
(11731AlEY & SONd, Wil Walnut 'greet.
FOR • HALE.—.AVERY ELEGANT GERMAN
rt, town Residence. built and tiaished lathe most surto
' rior manner, with large lot ofground. stable. ice
house, dic.„ beautifully and conveniently located, and in
perfect order.
Will be sold on accommodatitii terms, or exchanged for
firstclasa city property, or !Calif tics.
For turtlier nuormatiou address Box 1106, Postoilice,
Philadelphia. myl4 et*
FOR BALE.—A BEAUTIFUL RESIDENCE' 0
E r on the River Bank, in the upper part of Wsverly,
' N.J., containing one acre, extending to Warren
street. Te house is urge and convenient; wide hall io
the centre; large shade trees, grounds tastefully laid out,
and 'garden filled with all kinds of fruit; within *few
minutes , walk of steamboat or railroad. Aly on the
premises, or to WM. SAM No. 10 North 'ourth street,
rhilada. apt tt
FOR SALE, TOREFINVINV DWELLINGS, THREE
fridtory witb tWo-etory back buildings. Noe. ton 24. and
28 South highteenth street, will be sold cheap, e.sy
terms; furniebed. Also a three-story Dwelling, No. 421
mouth Thirteenth street. it 11 modern improvements.
Apply to LOPPUOIK & JORDAN, 483 Walnut Bt. myll3,tf.
E. WEST. PIiILELPFLIIITA'-- FOR BALE, THil
handsome double residence. built in the best. man.
ner, with every convenience, and lot 80 feet front by
.160 feet deep. 8. E. co. our of Walnut and ThirtrOghth ,
streets. Grounds well shaded and improved with' choice
shrubbery. J. M. GUMMY 14 BON, 608,Witint4 street
......._..__....
FOR SALE.—TIIE THREE-13TORY BRICK
EDwoMag. No. 910 Coates street. J. Pd. GUKKEY
" tiON a, 508 Walnut street. ,
rkORSALE.—TUEDrSI kuLE aimmANTowN
Ileeldence enlisted. in Church lane. third home
' east of Railroad; three minutes w alk w o n the
station. The LOllOO ie replete with every convenience,
grounds ample and beautifully laid • Out with' treea and
eloubbery ' Pubetantial STONE STABLE. Will be sold
low to a cull buyer. Apply at LT Laiestnut attest, id
story, . . . -. 1 n,Y14 w f In tiCO
FOR SALE.—THE HANDSOME THRRE-STORY
ry t brick Dwelling, with three•story double badk build•
wWa lugs , situate northwest comet' ot Nineteenth and
Filbert 'Arcata : bap every , modern' convenience and Iru
povernent, putt is iti_.:parfect erder throughout. J. hi.
UTABIRY Suliti Warnut 'groat
.
FOR 13AT,R--.A efOUNTRY SRAT, CONTAININ
al camO alnerio locatedit ozoellent iniproveents ,
desirablyoni 'the' old Lancaster Turn
plkoovithin)s nlile from Mellon Walton. on Pennsylva
nia Ventral Railroad. 5 nines' (iota Market Street Bridge.
3, M. 41G 1.l fic RONIA. 508 Walnut street.
ti%"I9WMAYI47/11,9lI•tb:Olt 'BALE, CONTAIN.
elf Jolt intoted on' York Avenue. Will
be tented if not oold (Intolobed) for the ettnunor emo
tion. or Particulars itddres4 M. C., Oita °lnce.
FOU .14A1.41M,
MORTGAGE OF $4,090w'
MORTGAGE - OF- 11;604::1.
APPLY TO
BALDERSTON di ALBERT N ,
.
140. 120 North hirtOonth Ott: efet
.apsa , 451',6
FOR SALE, OR TO LET Emtvastoro;4:
SANTIIOUSE aud isrounda, near; GreMarktiV% •
Shade, and Fruit. Pointed btone Stable( t
betweett lo 91412 to ht . C. LEA, 430 Walnut,' lnyl3
VOR 43ALE—BUILDING:IMSi '"
Litgeto_t Waehingtott aventte•and•TWentV4ltii;Sitee'
2 lota E. 8. Twenty -accord. above Arck et. •
slot' N. B. Walnut, above Thirty•geventh street. Wed
a lots W. s. Franklin, akoVe Poplar 4.•;-. , • • , •
6 tote E. g.E.41:416 above POP I Ar •
2 tote E. B. Frankford road. above Elnneingdod_er.
AU in improving neighborhood . Ally to tATRir : a
JORI)AN. 413 Walnut street: , • • •-c• a •• •
•
TO UJEIT)I.
STORE, 809 , OHESTNUT STREtti
TO LET.
APPLY All
BANK,OF Tmaltoiwraig,.
' —Bbe' Dl' G .1 : •RT
Otrdert. after 13eptomber • • : :
myn qt.* 162 Loath, Folgthotroot.
TO I.,ET 'IPOR SIX MONTIIS OR ONE YEAR A
furaleht &latent°. house+ ' and 4}¢ urea] at ',coda& at
iolleatuut MIL, with atone, statue luta etetableur
den. Aaaly to O. STUART YA'I ERSONJ No. 623 Wal
nut atreut.. rnylitar
iri'lo BENZ HANDSOME COUNTRY. BEAT
with tour acres of ground, Nicetown lane; Gunman
. town. within s few minutes walk of atatie n..• •
ALBO desirable RESIDENCE: on Stenton reenters
0 , R Fisher ' s three minutes walk of lane sad Wayne
stations.
A s.no, two Teti handsome , OoUNTltY ,SEATS, near
Buitieton, containing land 8 acres.
LE•0114 H. INEDER. _
731 Walnut street
mylsf.m.Btt
it TO RENT.—COUNTRY RESIDENCE, AT O4 Ht. Cottage ; has parlet. 'dininittoom; kitchen
ge
and otx chambers. Also. carria house and stables,
die.; immediate possession. Rent, Per ammo. AWAY
to AktilEt, C. Fon%
reilealt• South Fourth street.
ittl,7l,ttr;Vlllso'itizeßmATZgy°.l
painted; containing tenroome. seven bedrooms;
garden planted, large lawn. plenty, of shade trees and a
variet.l - of fruit ; also good stapling; situated within a X
of a mile of Pelienck'e Station. Op the Philadelphia and
Trenton Railroad. MTV to DR. RENCIT. at his
residence at Schenek , s Statdon. or .15 North Birth street,
Philadelphia. - myl6 St.
inTO RENT—A VERY DESIRABLE HOUSE TO A
priVete latrily.l•lo. 1104 rine et., with all the modern
improvement/. Inquire at It; opposite. my 15,00
DESIRABLE GERMANTOWN PROPERTY TO
Rent.—To rent, every desirable double Bowls.. with
stabling, and about four acres of land, on Man
'street, convenient to horse and steam railroad. Gas and
water on the premises.
Also; a large, modern built MANSION, With about ten
acres of lawn, situate at the corner of Bristol Township
live road and Gorg.s lane. near the railroad station. It is
very desirably located, has hot and cold water bath.
stabling. Th &c. 'e grounds are embellished with shade
trees. shrubbery, dte. •
Abb a desirable RESIDENCE, with two acres of land.
stabling, be , on Bristol Township line road,above Got gas
lane. Terms morl,r-ete. Apply to. •
royl4 tit§ W. C. lIENSZBY, 737 Market street.
TO LET—A FINE RURAL DWELLING, C. N..
iniug nin rooms, with basement kitchen, adositute
Greenway LRIIC. near Fifty:third and • Drby!
road. Darby rummager, Railroad Care rata evorY Ilia
hour.
Apply to
myl4-th R mat"
TO 'LET.—DI HIRABLE ItirSlNEßli L9CtaTiON,,
11E, 1223 Chestnut street, We by 150 feet to (Royer street.
" Building altered into store, or lot on imorovement:
lease. or tloora let separately. Inquire at 314 South Broad
street, or of GOO. ea WEST. ,
insl4 them w.4t• -, 419 Locust, street. •
E. FOR RENT—A lIANDSOME 11113,NISME13
Res Memo, south aide of Arch street. west of Seven
" teenth street. J. M. GytiMKEY sallo. pos Wal
nut -street
Ft RNISaED COUNTRY PLACE NEAR MEDIA
larrent.--Prlco. including Ice, stabling And garden.
- $6OO. • Address CARLLItuk.. Box A Medi* Post
offi.ce. • • . pyl« 6t*
FURNISHED HOUSE FOR RENT, SITI.TATEI
on South Eleventh street—from June to November.
J. M. Otal4EY dc SONS" 6t Walantstreet.
FOR RENT.—AT YORKROAD STATION. r North PennsylVania Railroad, a commodious Stone
Manton thoroughlyy.tuthbhedt win* verandahs on
three sides. tteautiful large lawn, seeded. by, large old
forest trees; stabling for four horses; ten acres of .land.
Garden kept by mident gardener at owner's etpense.
Lee of fresh row; dm. For rent for summer season. J.'
FREDERICK LIST, 629 Walnut. ,
MINE.
TO RENT,—FURNISHED, A LARGE 'STONE
tension HouPe, with good garden; eituate near the
Bell Tavern, Twentpteventh Ward. Apply to IA D
WOE & PASCHALL, 71.5 Walnut street. myll•tt
TO RENT FR:TANI/MED. OR MR SALE—A
Bandecinie Modern . Residence, with IC acres. at
ground attached, eituate in Darby Township.
Delawarerconsity. within 10 minutes Media the Darby
Road Shia on on Philadeiphia a Railroa&
J. M. GUMM IiY & 130N13.1tE.Wainut street.
ei• Tn RENT FOR TVE- Stlifid-EN bIONTIM--A
highly'desirable Residence, on the Old York road, op
nosito the North , , tennsylvania Railroad Station. 7
miles frcm the city. The bow in large._ handsome, and
furnished. There is a well-stocked fruit and vegetable
garden, ice,house filled, stabling, ate., do., dos. Possession
given 15th of June. Address "MIXON," Shoemaker
teen P. 0.- Montgomery county, Pa. • In3l- 11 4
._ _
TO RENT FROM JUNE lb, TO EEPiEVLBER.
rl6. a Funnelled House, on Price street. German..
town. All modern conveniences. Address W.
Box 2064. P. 0. . myst:4
FOR: DENT. THE FOUR-STORY MUCK'
Dwelling, with three-story back - buildings, situate
218 North Tryentieth street. J. M. GUMMEY
BONS, 508 Walnut street.-
'FORRENT.-I'l3E LARGE BRIM DWELLING
...fifteen rooms. with every, convenience; N. W. corner
" rine and Eichteenth streets. DS. GUMMY as
BONS, Stft Walnut street.
inTO LET.—A LARGE COUNTRY BEAT, FUR
[tithed, 4 trifles from Market Street 13' idge, 10, min
uteri, walk frona horse cars. Lawn with shade; good
garden, fruit, stable, carriage house, ice house full.. Ap.
PIS linl Market street, trona 12 to 2 o'clock. , aratfc,
TO LET—A SUPERB COUNTRYSEATJUST
rpapered, painted, &a., near Frankford, with sta.
King. carriagehonse, garden; imhousa, die. Inquire
1321 Girard avenue. , , ap2Btf4
itFOR RENT FOR THE SUMMER SEASON.
furnished.—An elegant Residence, with stabling,
Vegetable garden and several acres of land attached;
situate on Manheim street. GerM&Dtol9ll, J. M. RUM.
MEY a& BONS. 108 Walnut street.
rpo LET.—TEIE LIPPER ROOMS LifeO. SOUTIT.
1 Fourth street, over the rrovident and nest Corn
punv's
. oflke..
mylgatg
Premieres
TO --
LETTHE ffiLENPID SECORD.STORY ROOM
of store B. W.• corner Eleventh and. Uneetnutetreete.
Every 'modern improvement, rent low. - 'Apply' On the
.remises. my1%.16t0
INEATEIIb AND ITOVE*.
f7 i 4 . ' -
--\l\ , B ATATIM OR
E
i6ll, , 131PEOVED IA£IIIIIN*O
q4l FIRE-PLA3EHEA,Tin6 w
l i MAGAZINE
ILLITMIN4TX*,OO O OR B .
The most Cheerful and Perfect Heater in Use.
To be bad, Wholesale and Retail, of
, J. S., CLARK,
1008 Nl/11111,ET 811LEET•
nutlilm4
THOMSON% LONDON ICITCE I / 1 BIN
ropean Sangria, for families', hotels, or pabUo WO*
tUtiol2ls, in twenty different slow. Also, Philadrg.
D his Itsumea,Plot Air Pomace& Portable Hostel%
Low-dorm Grates. Fir aboard Stover. Bath 130116111, Steir:
hole notes, Broileft, Cooking Stoves, etc., wholesale an
r etl an * " the manuliaturen4 SHAßPH ar THOMSON.
• tio2s.M,w,Pluti ' No. 2( North Second street
4 ..1710151A8 8. DIXON dr SONO.
Late Andrews Dixon,
No. UM CHESTNUT Street, Philadelphle,
Opposite United State( Allot
141111 t. acturello ! LOW DOWN.
PARLOE,_
CHAMBER,
OFFICE
And other ORTES,
For Anthracite, Bittnniriona and Wood mi.
WARM-AIR ruarliCES,l
' For Wartniu Midi° and Private Yftildbas. ,
REGISTERS. VENTILATOK4
CCl(VgiiitigliaraltrA
MADDLES,
JODI.; DICK,
'Fifth - third arid Darby road.