1308114 1314, , /OVAL , 711 AN YOB TEN image. 41PlflIllgOtlive.--Flne all wool and Fur neIIV.N . : nalocad to. , Of theMeweetand dfdll.—EtPl6h materials, Cat • and make. a filth hav'e bcall cold at .° . .. . i. 15 • A coat variety of all 'AI upwards from $6 SKATLNO JACHI.IB he beat kniortment in the city; ea U log ofl vely low. ll'Orauwans , cot Caealmore, reduced t 0.......... LRa - itl Site, all-a 00l Carat:tura, reduced • 442 tassesa ena.re. in great variety, at priced eq , ially low. illoxi!pArrueno, very !Use indead. • One allele stock of .1511:rea. Forms'. Boy and Cum) CLOITIN4I to Do sat out at a grunt -8r0VX71102.1 Or _PIIIOV.,,S, a inch r e in all casdi guaranteed' lower than the loweat elsewhere. o r the rate cancelled and money refunded. Call al,d examine our Roods after having oz *witted thme of the 'Sacrificing'. houses before burcbaring A fair test is all we cwk. 'tali way between BaNNETT.n Filth and U'owea 518 :Al atm CT ST., Ytli LAT a1.1.1.11A. ANT MO IITOADWAY, NSW 'l ontc. Almost every day sVe hear many per wow (crepitating t•f beagle:he. 100 A of appetite. and that they ate Lot fit to do inythaug, &c. Many it the day that wchaye ft It eo ourrelecr. and In fact have: gone e ep bet and ireettim d oureelece rick, but fur the life of tut coithi sot tell what wag the matter. One day white Ong mum shining a ill •aid to 118. "Why don eyon try PLANTA: .110E1 BITTERS? they ate teary p a Fend thing and will make you I ett 1.10 as tawman." Upon ac recommendation Turcheseo a totile, d took them riecohling to the dlree• tiona. They teemed to go right, to the spot. and gave ue immediate re •tef. Ever elexe we have. taken-every op. yortuniti , to recommend them. 111.sOrma1A IV.erpn.—eltivetior, to the beet Imported Getman Cologrp.aud eold at half the price.. 'le:At .stit.r3t. ateek d:: Co.'s and Haines Stros"...Pia.no Fortre. is on & Hautlinte Cabinet and Metropolitan ()mane •alth the new and beautiful Vox Humana. Every looncereent offered to'vurchairere. J. E li.,ULil. N 0,1,23 Cba.tv nt etreet. • de29 bi the tanlill Ellis' Iron Bitters Can be taken at all times as a tonic, and 011'11:01 the blood and impro, o the complexion, by the iron tvh'on they c,nt sin. Prepared irt*,a rosy palatable term, and for gale by Druggists generally. . jal 3t mwl tf - ALBRECHT. • ' - RIEKEB & felanufa elopers of FIRST-CLAfizi AGii FFE PLATES - PIANOFORTES. Warer 00MP, No. 610 ARCH Steel, Philadelphia. dela th a to slit; tre9i• CONRAD MEYER. INVENTOR AND fdanefacturer of the celebrated Iron Frame awes, has received the Prize Medal of the World'e Great ...21atobition. London. Eng. The highest prizee awarded wit= and wherever exhibited. Wareroomc. ie2 Arch aVeet. Fatabliched 1823. 1v2.9 w s mtft STEINWAYS PIANOS RECEIVED THE highest award (first gold med.!) at the Interna -1 oUZar Exhibition. Parts, 1867. Bee Official Report, at the Wareroom of 131.A61LS BROo., " No. 1000 Chestnut strent. Og4ITHE iiIIICKERING PIANOS RECEIVED the highest award at the Paris Exposition. WITTEN'S Wareroome. 914 Chestnut street 0f321,t0 EVENING BULLETIN. tiaturda,y, January 2; 1869. IBE IMITUIIHMEIL VEttOier. The verdict of "Guilty of murder in the first degree," rend ered against George S. Twitchell, last evening, probably took the majority of the community by surprise. That the verdict was in strict accordance with public sentiment there can be no doubt; but our American jury system has been so abused, and the unreasoning prejudice against circumstantial evidence ,is so strong, that a general impresalOg had gained ground. that the jury would disagree. The counsel for the defence conducted their case with the bold- nem, energy andpgennity of despair, and it may well be questioned whether Twitchell's aim could have been better handled than it was. The fact that doubts were raised in the minds of many whose attention was arrested by isolated fragments of evidence for the de fence proves that Twitchell's counsel used all means to save their client. But the case was a desperate one, and no dispassiunae listener, remembering the splendid polders of Mr. Mann as a criminal lawyer, and the extraor- dinary ability which be has so often brought to the investigation and punishment of crime, could fail to be impressed with the fact that the task was felt to be not only a difficult, but a desperate one. Counsel are not bound to believe In the moral innocence of their clients. Their duty is to secure to them, in nocent or guilty, their rights under the law, and this was the duty for which Messrs. Mann, O'Byrne and Collis labored with an eagerness that led them, at many points, be yowl the bounds of prudence, and compelled them to risk the introduction of evidence and the adoption of hypotheses which only strengthened the cause of the CJIIIMOII wealth, and added fresh conviction to the minds of the jury. It was no fault of Twitchell's counsel that their defence was transparently weak at many points. It was the fault of their case, not 01 themselves. The Commonwealth's case wa, evidently felt to be so strong that the Dis trict-Attorney, though pitted against his p Jw erful predecessor, quietly left the active con duct of the examinations to his assistant, M-. Hagert, to whom we are bound to award high praise for the decided ability which marked his course throughout the trial, and which ranks him at once among the promi nent criminal lawyers of our bar. Mr. Beep pard'riclostrig argument was irresistible; and although he disclaimed the idea that this was an occasion for any display of personal or pro fessional rivalry, it would be moat unfair to withhold from him the credit which accrues to him, in view of the tremendous force which he broUght to bear upon the '•prolific: ingenuity" of the defence, and the well known powers of rhetoric with which Mr. Mann strove for his client. There is much connected with this remark able trial,deserving of comment and criticism, to which we will do no more than to refer at this time. The hazards of our ,tt.mericau jury system; the theory of circumstantial/ evi dence; the relations and responsibilities of experts; all receive striking illustrations.from this case, and we shall allude to them at another time. The main result' of the trial is undoubtedly the true and proper one. The terrible crime, whether premeditated or not, bas been followed by instant detection, swift prosecution and righteous condemnation. We,presume that the Commonwealth will now proceed with the trial of Mrs. Twitchell. The case against the prisoner already convicted has proved so much stronger than it was at first supposed to be, that it is impossible for the , ntaie to form any just conclusions for or rust his wife. The superficial indications Tasty all in her favor, but as we are not Ca 9 11 0 0 either of the theory of the C nn- Ou lt h in her case or the results of the an swelon 6 in that direction, we must new mi lit, ll lo determine" her innocence or w hite fiteraryall should desire justice whose prey this community have no Chinese subje'PAA, and they wiil he gl.td gives a trans 6lrs. Twitchel! li.sd no morality often iu the fearful fornia Chinaman, eu hid has just been Mind; from its thick-in tract simply one, becatii be no delay in frembles the "Golden Rai is guilty, then, ligion : ulet kuori Luta PRIP; -(11111157 lAN U11111.i.: 1 1 thy tin Tbo master—ChWang said : :ry dies 00l to him who does good to me: 1 kuive liii good to him who injures me: if done evil to'others, will others be „ • • . . -DAILY EVENINEs•Buti- - 2 4869,, It Ea. Lt! IINTJI TOlJE♦rale. The teudehey f one departnieSt Ofthe theatre, diet,now, is low ards tatetise and'vi via Isabela). The people BYeto to 'havOtio eager sppetite for scenic t.fieetitupon the stage, whiatt repteeent actual things-W - ITb ati ab4ard and unrctoonable minuteness of detail: 'Per- Pons who can Kew upon ferry boats, loCoruoj tives, and horse ears by the hour,for nothing, axe shays abXlOl2B to pay half a, ddlise' to w lincia a coin r al at ively viretcht cl imitation of theie things upon the stage; and the.greater the, number of :the aceessoriei ,of real lire that are tbrewn around the'eentral'objectithe heartier will be the applause. Managers, quick to detect the popular taste, cater to it , w lila much ingenuity, so that we have Steam boats, railway trains, raging billows, conti— terparts of familiar buildiegs and a multitude of others of the things of every-daYaekuaint mice, represented with scrupulous fidelity. And if the locomotive only whistles and puffs like the genuine article; if the steamboats glide timoothly and explode boisterously; if men pull real door bells, are admitted by real hired gills, bang their bats on real raclre, deposit bona fide umbrellas on the stand, and take their seats on a palpable sofa, in a common-placeparlor; half the play-goers are aatibfied to have the drama poor, and the acting worse. But there is a foundation of reason in this hunger for good counterfeits. While Pre- Jlatpbaelite managers may carry the theory too-far in descending to the most trivial 'de tails, it is true that that the drama is intended to depict real life, in a large measure, and seemly is designed to make the illusion more I effect. It is perfectly proper, therefore, That the painter's and machinist's art should be called into n quisition to make the picture as complete as is possible. Bliakespeare's companions played without any accessOrie 4 of the kind, and even cast smooth-faced young men for the female parts; but we ven Lure to say their perfoimances were poor enough. Garrick played "Hamlet" dressed in a full-bottom wig and the costume of a genii( rnah - of his own time; and in the last century Each anachronisms were customary and common; but even Garrick would have appeared to better advantage it he hid worn au orthodox suit of sables, and had arranged his scenery with the scrupul tus care and good taste displayed in some of our best theatres of the prevent day. "Hamlet" certainly could not have dressed as Mr. Garrick did, and the Castle at Elsinore could not have borne any resemblance to the interior of a common Hagfish dwelling house. If scenery and costume do not fit the time and place and sentiment of the play, the spectators are troubled with an ever pres ent sense .of incongruity, that is not'dis pelled even by the best acting. ' The two rightly belong to and help each other. A first-rate actor, costumed correctly and sur rounded by scenery nicely in accordancelvith fact or reasonable probability, affords an en tertainment that appeals to the senses and the intellect in the most powerful manner. The difficulty is to obtain such a combine - tion; managers at present seem to have a dis position to make the stage a mere vehicle for splendid spectacle—to sacrifice the actor that the painter may be glorified; to degrade his trionism and exalt mechanics. It will be the golden age of the drama, when only the jewels of the art are placed in the handsome settings. While managers are very energetic realists In some particulars, however, they are en tirely too artificial•in others. There aro some conventional stage effects which seem to be regarded as sacred, and not to be rashly touched by the profane fingers of modern in novators and inventors. With all their lip preach to exact imitation to nature, managers wave never made any improvement in stage thunder. The same manifest sheet iron is shaken by the prompter, to day, exactly as it was a century ago, and the sound now, as then, bears not the slightest resemblance to the real thing. A. little wet gunpowder is still fizzled off, as a substitute for lightaing, even in this time of triumphs of electricity, and the effect is no more like a genuine flash than a shock from a, galvanic battery is like a so Like of celestial ligutning. Rattled peas still do very impotent service as representa tives of rale; moons continue to be made of dirty canvas illuminated by ineffec tual candles; the roar of artillery is thought sufficiently like if the bass drum is thumped energetically; rosy wine is rep resented by emptiness poured without a gur gle into thinking cups that are innocent of liquor; the arrival of a coacu is still desig nated by spirited cracking of a whip,altuough all the world knows that coachmen stop cracking their whips when they halt their horses; chandeliers are fiat, palpable shams, with only one side gilt; every kin i of crash from the breaking of a window-pane to the ilea of au earthquake, is represented by the jingling of a lot of broken crockery behiad the scenes; the super, whether they belong to the Roman army under Virginius, the Scald( forces under Macbeth, the Ducal bat tenons under the husband of Luerezia, Borgia, or the English army under Richard Tnird, always march in with the same spears, in the same impossible red costumes, wearing the laminar old coal-scuttle helmets of tin, and with their unrealistic calves twisted around to the front, or else dangling around their ankles as if they were afflicted with de pliantiaBlB. Now all these things are susceptible of provement, and while managers are seeking eagerly for nearer approach to reality, these time-honored, but very absurd effects should receive sojue attention. if we. are to have exact imitations, we might as well have them in these particulars as in:any other; and the manager who has the courage to abandon the conventional methods in treating the matters to which we have alluded, will be entitled to more praise than he who Becks new fields for the display of his realistic tastes. I=SN2M General Grant is having a Pleasant and cemfortable tajourn in Philadelphia, during the New Year's holiday. With the exception of his public reception, 'yesterday, at Inde pendence Hull, when many citizens braved the storm, for the pleasure of shaking the Gloat Captain by the hand, the President elect has enjoyed the relaxation of private hospitalities, and been permitted, to a very -*mat txtent that high privilege, which he so successfully refused to our &Althorn brethren big the lateonpleasalitness," the privilege ~ t heiug let alone. General Grant has had ivaty mason to treasure up pleasant assouia tiont: with lual Pliilude/phia, tied we rj)iee to find bim,insking himself so , itUnilYeethi t y hone. f Thcf;"freodoni 6f PITYIE 4 Wftitlfrit , tegPSt,bfe, we:,ltergl that ..;be frequently will be able to take refuge among the quiet and beard hospitalities of Philadelphl4 from ,the tell and turmoil ;and Caly4;lltioll' of ikz ntivoinehl iife. =4: r, ' THE IDONCIIIIIKNAMONAL 0031TESIN. Hen.' Leonard Myers, has already preyed aullicient fraud on tlipark of the Democrats to gain his seat by b decided .majority, and Withlnibe Past week nr. Moffet, the contest.. ant, has.had his Witnesses on`the stand.' As the people feel a warm interest in the case, We will state that a searching probs-erkinina- Goa by , the contestant„Of the Democratic in spectors in two -diviiions, fully eorroborates their gross violation ahnost every important provision of the election laws. On Thursday,; a Democrat named Henry J. Drystle attempted to prove five votes illegally cast for' Myers. - _Re butting testimony yesterday showed that one of the men named did not vote at , all ; another was a goldier - voter and - a resi&nt; another a legal voter, who only losthis right in the November election by voting ihe night befere ; ,at t - )ther had ",lived in the division all hie life' and Dr.ogge knew it ; ; and the last one Who Was sworn to bii "Personator," was'so in reality, and voted the Democratic ticket ! Frederick Graswick-then swore that he was thiity-six years old; had been in the country but aix years; yet he was takebto court frornthe oflice of 'a Deincesratibalder man, vouched for by one,John Kinnicker,_as coming, here under eighteen years of age; and although he (lid untlerattuail English without the medium of an interpratei to:satisfy even a tipetave, he was , given minor's papers, on whicb, in the seventeenth Ward, he votei the Demecratic ticket famished him by one George Bissinger, who tpok him to the polls. This and like proof will• give a faint idea of the Supreme Court frauds and the Violation of law by the Judge of that courV---if any judge was there when this man got his papers. We congratulate Mr. Myers on this proof, and trust •be meg unesrth still more com pletely the villainy which deprives bim o his certificate. ST. PAELOItIf AAD PAtTL. The Young Men's Christian Association, ol St. Paul's M. E. Church, of Wilmington, have been discussing the question of the whipping-post. Feeling that the eyes of Delaware were upon them, these interesting young Methodist brethren laid themselves out upon this important subject with great power. One Y. M. C, A. of Delaware, assisted by some . foreign, talent, imported expressly from Maryland, "argued, powerfully, in favor of that particular form of enlightprted Christi anity which has its "centre of percussion" in New Castle jail. What the arguments of these disciples of St. Pillory were has not yet been made public. But 'that they were powerful is, proved by the result. The adVoCates , of • fit. Pillory, whose teachings were not in strict accordance with those of St. Paul, were declared to have won the•day, and St. Paul's M. B. Church, in the city of Wilmington, in the State of Delaware, is henceforth to recognized as the champion of the peculiar barbarities of , the whipping-post and the pillory. Flogging will, of course, be intro duced into the discipline of the church, and the tone of its Sunday &look' will be improved by the introduction of these evan gelical instruments of torture. St. Pillory het ceforth ranks St. Paul, in the Methodist Episcopal Church of Delaware, and the Y.M C. A.'s should immediately substitute the name of their new taint for that of the ol I apostle, the genins of whose doctrine they so little comprehend. CIIICRCR's NIAGARA. The exhibition et Church's uew picture -of Niagara is continued by Messrs. Eatle. The painting,though cold and somewhat petty is an accurate, novel and interesting likeness 0 the cataract, and a fair sample of the Amerie speciality of dioramic landscape. We, d ) 1 much approve the exhibition for ply of singlt, weaker—this fashion is dying out in En-gland,u a known on the Continent we believe, and certai not likely to succeed except in communities vrtry ku-ciplibie to it licences of pulling and boisterteil and the demagogy of art.—sotne of our coon ,is sews uud newspaper men, we flu d, were a little surprised not to receive invitations for a private view of the picture; the simple explanation 110 i in its rapid transit through Pollatielphia, and the necessary baste with which it was arranged fur exhibition. We have received from Sir. Wine the Chrism IS number of the filabtrated London Nev.. It ii very rich miscellany of pictured and literwurc appropriate to the season, and is accomp•inikd by an estia Supplement, with a waculti. cent engraving in colors; the latter, in the pre sent case, is a large copy of the floe plintinc by James Sant, A. R. A., representing the boy Whittington listening to Bow-bells. It is ex ceedingly rich and artistic in color, effect and design. The Journal proper is tiled with very beautiful engravings, holiday stories, ronstc besides the ordinary function of a news Vale ollf Real ll•state and Stocky.-- 7 human & SODS' sale on Tuesday ilex , at the Ex change, will include several very dei.lrable propo-uve. and ‘aluable stocks and loans. Hee their citasig nes issued to-day. 131 f OVER'S PATENT COhIbIEATION SOFA BEDSTEAD. It has tla appearance of a Purlor Sofa,, with erring bank nnr eyi g reat, and yet in leen than one minute', flint) with out uneerewing or detaching in any ,vay, it ..an bo ex , tended into a handnome French Bednmad. with h 'prim; mattrate, complete. It in, wit hone doubt the hand someet atd meet durable Sofa Bed now In um. For sale at the Cabinet manufactory of D. F. HOVER, Owner and Sole Munufaeturer, No. 230 South Second tltrait. • oc2B 3m4p HENRY PUILIAPPI, CARPENTER AND BUILDER, NOJOASANBOMBTREMT. WPM PHILADELPOLL • e l DIM CRUMP, BUILDER. 1781 CHEB rNUT STREET, and 2111LOIKIE STREET, Mechanics of every branch required for hounebnilding nd fitting promptly twinned. • . 0 "1 1 .% ARI3URTON'S IMPROVErI, VIL:NTILA'f 1;1) and eaey.fittipp Drew Ilata 'fluttolued) iu all nu approved faehioue of the aeaeou. l)heotaut ntreef neat door to the Yoet-uniue. • oed tfrP SABDINE BOX BCISSORS _%N 1) OPIN • as. OF , Rev e,,al notterne, adi hOhio aubsver for opentuß fruf CSIDE: Charnpugue Upenere, cora Orriwern, . 1 0 n „ a d o ., ork Selene. for !fah by TItLIMAN & ',IV, No: 1135 (1- lat. t ty•five) MARKET t, 11. low __________ • _ __ iivT OS ENIIOLM 8 , PATEN r.nA(.;ii h . c , K F., F . kmvt. (ix sp!o,dild article), /tad .m va. ifly a otll , l , and Sribao. sln HOOK lor li ifte. For oala , )v I` ttr \ r •.4 Br. sh. W, No, U 5 (Eight 'lllllly-ft co) NIARKET bLreet, be. 1 w Muth. frill , M. L CIIEIBE AM) (It:ll'Kit ic..1%; t;],y AND tibovel.. are 41 arable to ttul, t•as gr,a; Lt.° t„. „onting of tin t ilitl 1 . 11 , 111 g. ticvarnl Izr wt. fur pule b) I ItUM SI IA W. No 9do tCotbt till) -ti ve) Market otreet. below Ninth, l'ai.ad,laltla I.LAINK POOKt; AND aTA !JONI:RV 4t. •puer) PO flans and others at witele, , ,lo ode( W. G %HY. , tatiotler. rp 738 sre P.ilo.v Eighth. UCIP.NESEP, [UNA. COLOGNP.— FINI bItr,NCH EX kileurs FOR 'I'UB ILA !iD. F. 1 • t8V1 A EIFB, :BIN ScENTED 8 ',Are. Ila It PEEP &a., in great variety. For eau by JAMFIi T. SHINN. Broad Lula nte..214i.1 44. 5 . .• .' t..4 ' :;:,:t i!*o 7 iliE6l*•;,:..' • IetTHE LAROE BROWNSTONE rk "BUILIDINGF, ! 818 and 820 Ohestnnt Street , CiCcipied by ?deism i rhde.. W. Avant' ac. Co.. is TO RENT On favorable lease. Poiseiilcin Feb. 'next. ' owing to recent 'changes in our business Plans we will revive applicati , _no for the rental of the above property. All applications will be strictly confidential. • • TIT n ;rim Vi f ANAMAKER B T' ' BROWN. & G. EDWARD P. KELLY, T A I'L 0 R S. E.Cor. Chestnut and Seventh Streets. trYtro.D Closing Out Pattein Cents and Clothes not Delliered at Lbw Prices. How Funny the liew,Year Came In ! Whatiliiiriviridlegotts;•sert of weather! Rain, and anew, and ice, together! Frost, r tmO hall, and slipper)* sleet, Ghialng the , ptiveritent SlOng -the street! .• Broad as a river, each well lilted gutter, Canting a hOrrible` splash - and splutter. Covered with ice, the limbs of the trees, Whisking, about, in the . vviatry, breeze. hicks tunibling upon your hat, 11tavv.enongh to knock you flat. Wasn't IVearlobe Werether,44,—t- - - - • This singular sort of a New Year's Day? All creation was frostily freezing; All the people were coughing and sneezing; And the must of the folks who went oat at all Went straightway, to the GRE hT BROWN HALL; Fur ROCK HILL & WILSON stilt manage to keep „lonics for the winter, stroug and cheap ; Thick and stout, substantial and warm. Fur the minuted Sort of a winter storm. And the publie go there for clothes so, flue, For the winter of eighteen sixty nine. UTTERLY IMPOSSIBLE for mankind to buy t masculine raiment anywhere, that is better, stouter , stronger, more ele gant, or that can be had cheaper, than at the tibtatubtb-. _ Great Brown Stone Hall OF RO CK RILL &WILSON 603 and 605 Chestnut Street. ~GLtoI2C(I2J y6iiewecleia &o , , 637 Chestnut St., Cor. of 7th. Mir YOUNG- MEN About Engaging in Business. YOUNG MEN dolling to improve their positions or to nequhts beitcr qualiiicatinna MEN vt ho are oil , at yin tans client, end mrho wiU tOte the heat means for sootrln 2 it YOUNG MEN nwhode,isengoodßmtneetEducationthat W 1 )1 prove valuable to teem throngs will find eaperior advantages at Orittenden's Conmerolal College, 637 Chestnut Went, touter of Benoit. EST AI3LISHED 1P44. INCORPORATED The accumulated advaut .gei of over TWENT -r'ol IR MlB,,and 'he am, or.ant kflurow men's recently intro duced ;'ruder the i onree of in-truction unequaled. 'I" ho , hose natnber'nf filuoonts in attendance and the emoer , apnlico.tione for ite graduatee received (angle finu.ee. , gest the etandlng nf the inetituttm anent the l minted eon ni,mily Inet,uction in Eifloll-REEXING In all its branches. PENNI liEltP, by a Superior Penman. 011,1141F1 (AM, Cal tIiII.p.TIONA. the beet abort and rapid nu thode ip nee; Busineee Forme, Practices. Com m, rcialLanci bc. • DJP/ 0 1r , 1 , S limardnd onginduation. ihMu Mondaion, /Or AND PSENING, from 9A. to ,IP, fr m BP. 61. to 91'. M. Cirenlare containing orate, Anc..may be 'procured at the t fate ge. 'Far "The CRITENDEN COMMERCIAL AME- N , ' LTIC T and DUONESS MANUAL" fel pale, PRI .E, 50. deal siNs 2tAp FEW PIIBLIN.IATIONe. HOLIDAY BOOKS At Greatly Reduced Peioo9. Annuals,' Juveniles. Toy Books. Prayer Books. Bibles. etc.. eto. CHARLES DEMILVER, No. 1220 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia. de76 w&R 6trin WINES, LIQUORS, &c. TEST RVOEIV,ED AND STORE 1.000 CASES OF tham rape, spark , na Catawba and California Wines. Pelt -Medals, Bherrv. Jamaica and Banta Cruz Rum, line old Brandies anti Wbisives, wholesale and P, J. JoftDAIS, 220 Pear street, Below Ihird. and Walnut streets and above Doak street. del tf- 40.11OAVIT CET:EI:MATED PURE' TONIC ALE FOR ti invalids, fomily uae, &c. he subscriber is uow furnished with his full Winter supply his highly nutritious and wolt.kuown beyermo. its wide ?Tree° and increasing use, by order of. phvsi oval clans, for 'val ds, use of families. am osmmond it to the steer tiou of all consumers who want a strictly pure an ; premed from the best matorials, and put up to the most careful manner for home tire or transportation. Or ders by mail or otherwise promptly supplied. Y. J. JO MONEY TO ANY AMOUNT LOANED UPON a 9 W DIAMOb DS, WWI car.a, JEWELRY, PLAIT, ULOTfUNG, &c., at E 3 • OLD.ESTABLISHEO LOAN OFFICE. Comer of Third ond Oaakill armors, Below Lombard. N:I3.—DIAMONDri, WATIM.ES, JEWELRY-, GUNS FO Lt /MILE AT LOW PRICES. de:11-burril -- - IbailA RUBBER MAGIIINE BELTING STEAM t Packfng Gore, gm Fawn:more and dealer! will Bud a f rill tuseortnaent of :00dyear'e Patent Vulcanized Rubber Belting, Packing lioce„ dtc., at the blanufacturer'e kieadquartere. GOODYEAR'n, 808 Clicetuut !treat N. 13. —Wo have .now on hand a large lot of thintlelneri`e, Ladino` and !Mane Ginn Booth. Also. ovary variety and II M 3 uS Gav:ti 1A4.110)444 MO roar street, Below Third .nd Walnut at , actg.. South aide. - •!`'`;tit , I 7, ri,niiTTrrrmi , "lIIIE',II3I[3]EtNING. . ' or.PP.. RICHMOND PASSENGER DEPOT.- Destructive.Copilagration. • PHILADELPIiIti, Dec. 80.1889. Jhosri Ferret. Heir ing Co .; 649 , eltssinut West— Orrert MIEN: THs morning, about 8 o'clock. our Rich nd Passenger Railway DePot, situate at Lehigh avenue d Ldantent street, was entirely destroyed by dre, to gether 'with the contents, consisting 't arentv.three paw gouger care, e,.° lancer and a 13 JetUtt plow: Wilco I'4llll - &0., which made au hitt:nee heat. , ' The only things we saved wore in one .of your Patont - Champion Fire Proof Baia, consisting of books, papers, bank notes and car tickets, which came out all right. .JACOB IILNDER. President, The .11 1 nhhe are srivited to COM at our Store, PI 06 '029-Chestnut Street, Phila• dOlphia, and examine she herring's Cho copious that, passed through trio great Wires Daceinber, SOS. 'FARREL HERRING sk, CO. deal th s tu'2,trtiti ' Tam FLOE ANTI,. CITIJRCUS . NEW "NIAGARA, " Lib lad important Picture, and tbo beat and molt corn- Praenelvo viow , of the , GREAT FALL. On Exhibition for a Short Time. Admission 25 Cents. EARLES' GALLERIES, " AND LOOKING GLASS WAIIIROOII9, No. 816 Chestnut Street. VONIVABUICIONERt. NEW YEAR CONFECTIONS Nc•vir STEPHEN F. WHITMAN, - .Np t , ; 121.0 Market Street. 01100 IEIII ES• FitlITS FOR THE HOLIDAYS. MITCHELL &FLETCHER, 1204 Chestnut Street, Invite attention to the following New Malaga Raisins. Row Zante Currants. Fresh Leghorn Citron. WI, ice Spanish Grapes. Florida and Havana Oranges. Pnneese Almonds. Lady Apples. Barbary Dates. Di ew Bordeaux Prunes. Turkosh Figs. Pates des Foies Gras. Dried and Canned Fruits, And nil the choicest delicacies most del& able at this reason, in quantities and at 'nice!' to suit large or email bus ere. de3 lumps FlJii4. 6 a. MI S.PBOUTOR, lett WALNUT STREET, will oell the balta.te of her Stock of FRENCH WALKING SUITS At one half former m itee, to eloee them out. RUSSIAN SABLE FURS, Just opened, Twelve Set+ of these Valuable Furs, thin See coli'm hoportat'on, from Petrogtulowski. which will be cold at moderate prices. MktS. PROO TO R, de2.9-6t4PO 1014 WALNUT STREET. REMOVAL. REMOVA L. o accommodate our Bucinete we have removed to our New MAI Ppaclous Wag-rheum No. 20 tionth net and N 4. It VEGA' UR duet where, with increased fact itiee. we trent to be better - able to meet the wanta o the 'I rade and the coneumera of Pacer generally. T. 141EllActOgh: & ja2 Otto* MARSHALL'S ELIXIR. Bead ache—Dyspepsia—Co aliveness If you suffer with headache try MARSHALL'S ELIXIR, and be convinced that althvfogh other remeoies have failed to cure you, this will give you instant and permanent relief. If by over-excitement and fatigue your, nerves have become so weakened that Headache admon ishes you somohing, more dangerous may hap pen, such as Palsy, Dimness of Sight, and other alarming nervous affections, then Marshall's Elixir, by giving tone and strength to your syg , tem, restores you to perfect health. Whenever food which should be digested re mains in the stomach, causing pain and uneasi ness for the want of that principle which would render it easy of digestion, then by using Mar shall's Elixir you will supply this deficiency and prevent its recurrence, and so be radically cured of Dyspepsia. a The stomach being thus cleansed from an un healthy to a healthy condition, costiveness and the other attendant disorders of the bowels are or necessity prevented. Price of Marshall's Elixir, el 00 per bottle. For sale Iry Druggists. Depot, 1301 Matte street. M. MARSHALL & CO., Druggists, Pro prietors H. P.; & 0. R. TAYLOR: PERFVM EBY AND TOILEV 60APS. 641 and 643 N. Ninth Strata. FITLER, WEAVER tib CO. NEW CORDAGE FACTORY NOW IN rum orsueer/ON. No. sts N. WATER and is N. DEL. so., 1 BAAC NATHANR, AUCTIONEER, 'N. E. CORNER I.Tbird and Spruce Streets. only one square below tie Exchange. 81250 000 to loan In large or small amounts, on diamond! saver plate, watehesjewelry, and all goods of value. °Mee hours from BA. M. tol P. Pr — Eat it). 116 e d for Ole last forty years. Advances made In large 83MQ unto at law w obi waskia. todea 003•111 V .7Z . SO . .FS:. 'it'. 4'i if . :;. , !', - I.: , Si i• - :.4. Hi; 0 - 4 Otr, SON, ri)lt THE SEXT THREE WEEkI, ' Privions t, Taking Accoint of Stook, Will drew Ike balance of tbclr atock of DRES GOODS AT A Still Further Reduction in Prices. Mixed Poplins. at 20, . 25, St, MX., 134. y ardS wide English Iderinoes, atsoc. slack Alpaca Poplins, at 40, tO. 62.75, 85. el. Sniped Poplins, for suits, at 375, 75, $1 IG. Silks at Itedaoed Prices. Lions Cloaking Velvelo.,at Redaocd Prices.- $lO 82. inch Lyons Velietsiiduccd to $l5. Shawls at Hoduchd Prices. Nos. 713 and 715 N:Tentb. Streets BLANKETS AND. QUILTS. STRAW BRIDGE & CLOTHIER. CENTRAL DRY GOODS STORE, Corner Eighth and Market Mg.,- PitILADELPUTA. HURON. BLANKETS. Wa still ban a 1 all stIPPIY of the celebrated HURON BRA PiKIETS, which have heretofore had such unpr.cedented eale. Attend.= is tmecittily directed to the quality. laze and weight of 'lite° litantetr. They come to ue direct from the Manufacturers, and will not be found in any other catahliettwent. Pomba:ma may rely on getting Blankets of the bft , t qumitv. and at only ~no profit on first coat. HURON OHLD MEDAL. HURON SWA.N.'BDviWN. 111/RON PREMIUM, HURON EXTRA SUPER. FURNITURE LISIITIES. MARSEILLES EXHIBITION QUILTS. BC REAU MIMES. . COUNTERPANES. FIVE CASES FINE ALL.WOOL BLANKETS. elightly damaged at the milla, will be told at a bargain. ALLWoOLI3LANKETS. $4 PA K PAIR. ALL-WouL B..ANKETS. Qb PElt PAIR. ALL-WOOL BLANKETS. $6 rEtt STRAWBR,IDGESI, CLOTHIER EDWARD FERRIS. I will remove on the sth of January. M. to the Store No. 807 CHESTNUT STREET. Until then I offer my stock at a Eetall Deafer. a 111 find it to their advantage to frupoet my Stock. a.l will offer GREAT BAIiG&L' 4 IB In Laces, Embroiderfea, Whße goods and Habdkercbirfe. EDWARD FERRIS, 80 South Flev - enth Street. tb • bUI\I3LE & DREISBACH. ' YD E "Y" G- 0 Co ID S FOR THE HOLIDAYS. more CaFee Black AtPaola , from New Yo-k Auction. Icmr of rdtxtr. 109c11 Poplin for Wolk tor dolt.. btriged Poi 110 reduced tro,u to 25c per yard. black and a ulortd elvetr. h.lH.o.utcachokeatylo Iklaineo, 18 2042 and 55 route per Metino, lyard,. wide, at lb CCrire per yard; four yards for a dr. re. raft To. HA IV:4 FOR Tlll LADIES ! ildkerctitcre, Nee.. Glores,and t he only place la the city when. the real k neowl4 Ale Sold--a tow wore left. Somt.thing vice for a C H 1 MAS PR KSENT. Alsn,n inns et 1 ctian of Ladle,' Lace Collars, Linen Cohere and tulle, ..ace and Embroidered !landau*. ch it to kph mild Cloth, Gloves and limo forP.s cents a pair. ou eta Table Ctt the, napkins, tilanitats, tJonnter pe a es, t otton t lanuele, All Wool Flannels. Starer Linen, It rd Eye, Ac Urea reduction in Lyons Black dilk Velvet to close out before the let d ay of J nutlet ry. Pert is br luring tuts ndvertleement with them will have n lltr rob discount made from theft purchases. tall at the Large Four. Story Store, 140 N. bagtith isireet. above Arch. DUN fi CFI & DR EPOS /WIG SPECIAL NOTICE. Ibe dere will be kept open every evening until 9 e , e!ock. ii con row nail New Year. for toe uccommoda of the public. del amt,w,lotrpo 727 OBESTNIIT S REDUCTION IN THE PRICES DRESS GOODS. RICKEY,SHARP&Ca No. 727 Chestnut Steeet OFFER TODAY 50 Cases of Imported Dress Fabrics, At 25 rests per yard, worth doubt() the price. RICHEY,SIIARP& CO. No. 727 Chestnut Street. , tilj .1414. At tl r '''' Fourth and Mob dels to the final) 'MVP REDUCED SOME DESIRABLE AND SEA. BONA BLE 04 lUDS. A$ M Mal AND PERHAPS hlottE. THAN VI HI. RN, PO it T El SAME OLASS GUODEI. rms SII.K VPLVET 4. ENtitVE LONG SHAWLS. Flk T QUALITY BP ST A S.Th AUAN 11LOTIIS. VI.LV I TEE" AND 'SUES. DitFks (.(.4)DS NPDUUED. ALL-WOOL PLAIDS AND PLAID POPLINS. m.w (r _ 11/I AMONG WITH INDELIBLE 1201. EMBROIDER: 1111 lug,Bralding, Stamping, 6tc.. litE MCOV.A.L. (Second story.) HEAVY SACRIFICE. EPECIAL REDUCTION TREET 727 M. A. TODAY. /14ort alotnet 0 . - •• Tie.L.Lia.R . AP'4. LATER;' , ; CAliiika NEWS Foreign Money. Markets! Fire at 13ang:or, THE LOSS DALE A 31L14itON ANOTHER FIRE, AT,,1303T0N: DEMI H OP AA . ii -SENATOR". By Ilse At.l[Liitnc(ltßbfß. ' :,• LONDON, Jap.'Uonsolis, 92M for both aeons end uetcust. U. S. Five-twenties stet* at 74%- Amerlean Stoeks;tirat. Erie Rtlfroal, 26N; Illiads Central, Llvv.ftreer., Jsn. 2,'8. !J.—Nothing bas been done us 3 et In the markets. .I..ennor , i, Jan. 2, A. M.—Mitt:4r, 475. 9d; eager' afloat. 26., - Lo7snoN, Jan. 2, P, M.-4C4nkols, 929 for monry and account; Plve-twenties quiet at 715;;; Rail% a 3 e tiro; Erie flat at 25;1. , , LONLON, 31:.-;B9gar on the epotis _ Destridetivo ' ylirecial Di rpatth to the BA'oon 31 e., Jur i —ti destruct 'e the, be. carved hero at about 7 tVeloUlt.last.eienlifg. A block of brick titidluge,,t4even la number, with etof c•hc.uf es attached, was almost totally de f 'Toyed. The 1041616 estimated at half a million dollare, about h_.ll of which le iritured. Bc 63 (,:s, Jan; 2.:—A brOko Out_tbta re e el 40 Co r.tral wharf, occupied by W. F. Writ] dr. CO. The bulliliog Vine filled w)th a teat y mods or enfro e, spleee, Jrc. The' loss le str3 krge, twilit not - yet oceuristety estiwata Death et Ex.senator .llates. , Wit.m l)1•11., J•in. 2. —The lion. 'Huila W. Ba:t 1 , , Ex 8. Serrttor !Nal Dehware, diod at DAN r, )f.f.terday, at an advancerl age. fie wtrred In,tlic 5 unto from 1857 to 1859, It4vlog be e n rte eted to fill the vanancy, caused by Me death of Jobu If. Clayton. Destructive Eire tit' New ?Maven. New thitalitry repair silo i 6 Of the NI w York and Ni w Haven R &Woad were de su oyt dby five st 11 o'clocli Last night. The tos3 is estimated at e w0.0{,0. lksirma Baltimore. 13Avrifrorte, J..n. 2 —llle vloleut Sierra of fain whkb Fet in no Tbufeday afternoon continued until yesterday afternoon, wbieh rendered New Year ealisnot as general as 'trey would other wise have been. o,torm ltt Ilaasacbusetts. BritLNOIIIO.I7, Mafih, ..tan. 2.—A. furious anew storm, with a gale, occurred in this vicinity yesterday. AU the railroads were seriously ob stritcted. Shipment of Specie. tApeciel t matt"' to the PhiL‘. Evenealt Balletat) Naw Yonu, Jan. 2.—The steamer City of Bal.- titnore ealkal to-day with $lOO,OOO In spode. Mite Of Thermometer This Day as the Ilytlletin Office. ID 11. 11.....21 dae. 12 rim 2 h M.... deg. Woe./la outlay. Wind NortheaDt. •rae ■IhOI&NS. Letters Etrcelved by General Sherman Irons tiento. wberzdan and liazesui, (Flom the St. Loafs itepublient. Dec e‘i Gen. Sherman is in receipt of a - number of letters froze the 30 to the 7th inclusive, giving various accounts from It,dian sources of Gin. Custer's fight on the 17th of November last- Tittle all substantially agree with the accounts heretofore published. Goeral Hazen says since the tight he bag had no trouble what( ver in distinguishing between the friendly and hostile Indians. He prououneesail Cheyennes and the Arrapaboes to be hostile; Kluwer, d.vided half and half; Cam lectirs, all or nearly all friendly. The Air.e)les, Ktchies, Ca 1- does Wlcheraws and affiliated bands, Form: 3,000 In al l, are clustered round about Fort Cohn 1112 d claiming the protection of the United States. TI e hostile lave separated from the, friend y tribes abd gone over to the bead of the North Fork en R d River, near the mouth of the Sweets ater. Toey number 400 warriors. Gen. Sherman is oleo in receipt of letters from Gen.bLetidan, kbo fixed Dec. 7 as the date for Came Supply on the Upper Canadian for Fort Cobb, arta the probabilities were that within Once to five days from that date he would to in communication with Gen. Ginn and be enatlid to strike the hostile Indians without in terfcrlt g. with those who are friendly and ,have SOW& t his protection. A Ktowa Just in from the peaceful camp re petit d Satdr.ta, chief of the Klowas, as not hav ing gone to the hostile camp. Gen. hilt:men states that Satanta is regarded one of the most hostile of the Indians on the Nutria, and is one of the most treacherous. He beitev t o l u sting peace cannot be seared while Satanta and Buil Bear are at large,and his orders are peremptory that these two Indians shall be killtd, or, If capttirtd imprisoned at Fort Gib son. The ladibns give contbcting accounts to General Hazen of General Castles tight. Information has been received by General Sher man from - opposite points of a circle. General Hazy n is at. Fort Cobb, and General Sheridan is in motion toward this fort. General Hazen's in formation is communicated by way of Fort Gib son,,Fort Scott and Kansas City, while (31 , •neral Sherldan's information comes from an opposite direction, by Fort Dodge, Fort Hays and the Pacifier Railroad. Letters from both' General Hazen and General Sheridan, of the same date, December 7, arc among those received. FROM !VIEW FORK. Nnw Yonic, Jan. 2.—New Year's Day was folly observed in this city yesterday. Business was wholly suspended, and New Yorkers forgot their cares and toils and devoted the day to plea sure-seeking. In spite of the tinfa.v9rable wea ther callers were more numerous than during any previous year, and every description of ye e—sleighs, cerriages and omnibuses—was vessel] into the service by those who wished to escape the pelting of the storm. Two young men, ambitious for fame, essayed to make their round of calls upon velocipedes, but their novel mode of locomotion proved unfit for snow drifts, and they were soon obliged to abandon the idea in despair. Mr. Rogers, of 42 East Twelfth street, who was mortally stabbed in front of hi' own house on Thursday by an unknown ruffian, was still alive yesterday afternoon. A man named James Tolland was suspected of being the assassin, and learning that the police were upon his track, re paired to the Fifteenth Ward station house, and gave himself up to the authorities. Upon being confrouten with Mr. Rodgers the wounded man said that Tolland bad no hand in the outrage, and he was at once discharged. . An.uffray occurred at the corner of Thirtieth Street and EiCventh avenue, about three o'clock yesterday afternoon, in which a boy named Wm. Devine stabbed Wm. Concklin, inflicting a wound of a very SCAM character. Grant and the New York World. The Boston Journal's correspondent in Wash inton telegraphs as follows : General Grant, in a conversation with a wes tern m' mixt. of Congress, three or four days ago, very freely expressed his opinion of the Now York World. Referring to certain articles in that paper. intimating, if not directly asserting, that the President-elect would eventually split with his party and pursue a course similar to that •pursued by President Johnson, be of coarse demouncod the whole statement as fait), and add ed tbat he considered "the New York Work/one of the most traitorous and disloyal papers in the torintry." ) SPLENDID Szonv.—This morning the trees in • and around Camden presented a beautiful and gorgeous appearance, Wog covered with Ice, i • which bang in myriad pendants, looking like airings of glass beads. =iiEMM 'rho Irbil . elphlet Illginey Illarliest. 13#8, , galls!. Ptil fir lgelPhlA RlDekl 3 ,l, 0 44 0- ' ^ 'i). , l" * ' 22P0 City6torcw 1(0 loop, 50 eat Pctuta It 1 5534 700 beliii.(6 (110t4 814 113'mb - ' (to cHs 54% 4000 Lehigh ft !dim EB,‘; 500 ah •do Itn 55 10n eh Phi'itttErteir ' 215 1 4 150 eh ' ill): Usain 55 100 ch - du ; : bsdtint 25 1 1 19.0, 85- do lta 55Ni rnit.APErmilm'Jannery morry market in a,srkibs%-quietiet td,dry,i;trith' etnyigh; doing - in riper to fix quotatione. .the quarterly starements of he honks ate worrmachlrtp.: and:there thstitutims- will be prepoirdto purroo Won; Itheiat course to their juttioac nyder which ihe dieburermentr,in the shave of intee.-st. divideydr..ket , dlc. wilt he laritei which will nail - rally I us reale thckarooent of , lea : tins currency re Alen invert, Government Loam were nominally , unchanged ? , a n d in State and City Lynne the 'trammel lona were unimportant. Meadhvg Railroad wait siteady,at4A4e,ay. rets;n.ylyanla Railroad was quite active. and !Wynne( di. elosfrut att €,z154 - .. Philadelphia and Erießailroad ,old at 653.‘—n0 chotnae.' hi* lopeamden and Amhoy Parotid; V for Slit chill Railroad, and 323.. i for Catawiat t Railroad • Canal. Bank and Paegenaer Railway aberre Were with ottt eteentlal change., • , &torero. De Haven and Brother. No. 40 Booth Third atreet, walla the following onot.stione of thrvratea of ex change today; at I P. ratted States filter. 1891. 111 1gt113.4 : do. do.. , R 2, 1113 , -(*112. do. do.. 18V1k4108: do. do .18E6 1080,1113,4 bow. ;do. do. 'lPd7. new. 1011if410714: la& 107?itialenc; ive, Ton. fordo„. Ifthglfdli‘ Due C0111,W:lat. Notes. 10!., 001 d. 124N0r12.P5: t . flvP;'• 1 W 1 X( 7 4 182 . ' • ien4th. ndolnh & Co. baniteto., _Third and Meath nt, quote at 10,}f - o'clock m followa: Gold: 135: United Mateo Pixes.,lBBl. 111%Tal I 14; Five.tweati.a Ifkil. 111 (4112: do. do:do , 1861; 107341(41a 4: ln. do do.. IRA lOC Iff,:t do.: do. July; 18E5 10074(410734: do In. do . .. do.. I'C7.lemoie - 34; do do do. .11811, ItiVie(4lo7fo' : v. 8. rives. len.forties.lo6(4lf(ll4: Currency 6'4, M 4414. Jay (Tooke & Ve:Anote trovernmonv Sore orrtfro, at m, to. day as follovra: 11.14 ra. 1911. 111;0.41113 f old Irive.twen tleo,lll%o,lllM.: new , Flxotwerdiea of 11 4.101% ( 4103W:do. do. Md. Iffir4lV3l4: Pive.twentios of. l0I(41.07,4 • do. V. 17, 10/10.41077P Bfliit.4llfiNil 11.6(41CaSU: Void. • - , Igiwallets Mieene, 6abltera.llB Booth Third streot,quoto Harder Htnte Bonds today ar folj , w4: Netmeemo._-01d. 88Cg011 ex to von : - ‘16. - new" Ayg(18; do..Vlrglnta, 01d.61 do. new; 07(411; lltiotontl:B6A. AO ex °upon.. • PhifadelphiuProduce Tfrarket._ , PAITT.DAV. Jsnuary2.lff) ..:-There was hot little nst• n ee effected at the onnnereial Exchange thls_inornine. and (Breedstutre - Were4 (neatly depressed. In Flour the transactions were :confined to jibblpg lots. at. 554145.6) per bbl. for superfine: , $..Gq) GO for P.:Less; f)7 )7 IL tor lore*. and Wise:owl° - 14 - xtris Family ; )7 ROs4B 00 for Nflnneenta'en dn. ;,$) 7)440 fie far Femseyivania do. do.; 49 00(010 GO for low grade and Choice di. do, and $ll Orfa 13 On for fancy lute accoidine to 'lye 14 14 sr is in email euppiv. no d kWh, at $7. 76!11 UO. Pricer, of Corn Neel a e notolual. be Wheat market 'ic inaction : and the only Sales re- Petrol 'Ale 4tf.lburbelr Amber at $2 01; a..-d 1404 bus vary choice W}, to at $3 CO% per bushel. MO hashels We.tern Bye sold at 131 re. Corn is not so a tomdenr and pri4es are rather better Rama 4 1.440 t - Isbell' new Yellow at 91:142:4' some to arrive at Pm.. and old , ellow I. held at $1 to. Oats are q 4iiet. and Taupe trop. 74 to 744. No cal-a of Barley. 7:10 bushels ~tern IS% t• 11 It told at SY 69. 4 I,,vf err ;A is In good demand. and 300 bushels sold at d'h 25 Pricer of Timothy areirominaL Flaxseed sells at 4152 CO. WhYrky.—The demand is' limited. with small . Wes at $1 0101 15.. . • New . Woirk (Roney vlftrkes. TProm the N. Y Herald of to-day. 7 as rtt %E.t. inednet tor twveinmeßt bonds closed ett,nr. The hut clay of the year was marked by. a maveno pinch in aunty. for a hien ea high as three . lettt . a of one per cent. ter day lot. real was bid at three o'clock.. The banks contract..? theirloann during .the af et - noon. in prat...Lec tern for the quart...Ay statement- and their c.cstouters an o.g the wreck houses being d "sirens of 'showing large balances at the wind up of .burinces I ,, rthe year, were at.itletta bettowere...3lAmey trmaht and a •1 d like rtockv. Moth uncertainty extsted'ae to the ore.lee time at which the stattmentwould re nude up; -hutit brume uncork...A that the banks will be ambled to exo4nd n Swatter at' clearing:home iDre: the reoo - t baking hre ed cm their stator alter the Pettlement of 1:1411.ne , 5, eAth institution haying the privbese of changing the ticrures of its tearrve in accordance with • he amount of Ogel tendert; received nu to tfte dose of Launder of deo tardity glen:mon.. If the scram. of dolling .forthean rtatements were chanted pone to allow the Co optroller of the Current y to demand dem whenever he chem. It would prevent there annoyi..g pr tarinctions of the money market and would neeettain the real oendltt• n , of' the haulm. • 'As the system stands now each bank can "cram" for statement day., inat as coliego heye do for their biennial examinations Money la r, potted to be coming mote abundantly from the West. The remittances to the Snath are very heavy. however. Ti a teircrarra from the Southern ports, published this morning repent continued heavy arrivals of cotton from the interf-r. Discounts were very dull to the close an ac• count of the high rates or canteens. old rt.. euddonly during the aftestnoinf from I3tsit to account of large purchase. toy the "'diens" who bedsad its the drooping market of the earlier portion of the week. he a e Qa, : aix •. - • IT • [Bs Teiell2ADb.l New YOWL, Swirl . 2.--Btocks strong ; Chicago and gra island. 1215 i: Reading. 98: Canton Llotn gang. 49}5t Erie. 99: Oleicland and Toledo. 1014: (neva. Inv .1 and Pittsburgh. 841.. ; Pittsburgh and Port Wayne. 113: Michigan • 'entral., 116: Michisan douthern, ; hew ork Central. IMP; ; Illinois Central. litiV; Cuinuer. land Prs (erred. 35; Virginia eixes% bi ; axe& F 7; Hudson River. 1154: Pive-tiventies, 1.50, 11114; do. IVA ; do. Itifts. 1.084.; do. new. 1074 Ye forties. 10634 ;Vold. LIN !annoy. 7 per cent; Exclionge.lo934, . - . 1111llirkets by lrolegrapfs. (Speclal Despatch to the P r btladelptda gat:moue Bulletin.) awalia Vat= 31.;-Gottatilintnarketthis m"rntrag WWI *tend,: demand moder.t.; sales of about I.alea. We quote as follows; 31tdthing Orleans. 25.56; db. lit:Mind!. 21. nom: &e.—Receipts MOO barrels The market for W. te•si rEd Stat. , Flour to firmer with a moderate demand. The sloth h about thin obis.. Including 4 tmertine dtato at tea ) : Slit Extra Ware at 201487 tn; low grader tfrters Faint. Ed 6547 80. So uth ern Flour adult UM". fort 14 Flour dull. • Gram—its aripta—Wheat. 4.(Cri bnebele. The market Is firnur. Lot quirt: the craws are 10.000 boatels No. 2 Mil rtairkee at ei int - 4s CO. The stock is 4 023.000. Ciro - 11swipta gje.ro Ime. The ma.itet la firmer, with * geed demat.d. r ales 01 2. 1 0. bushels , now Western at P4c.0.97e. afloat. Old at 4.1. 11(41 12. Stock 1. 2%403 buohel.. tr,.t.- Meant. none market is qn et and firm at 75 earth PrcvleiOns- -The receipts of Pork aie7W barrel.. The triazket 1s dull, and nominal at 403 for new Western ticee. rt.. Ir. 31 4,9 barrels Lard— Recripte.2lo eke. The msiket is quirt. and Firm We quote prime steamer at 1746.0.11).. Bogs rale hle; Western at 12itirel'y at 191,.. Whir ky—Receiptera, barrel.. Tho market Ls nominal. We quote Wren rn free at PV(499e. _tilerr.e.powisece te the associated Prera.l .NE , A Yoati, Jar.. 2. -Cotton finn at %I. Flour wrier and nrwharged. Wh...at quit t. Corn firm at'9401,.(431 Oat, nu at lissf quiet. Pork tinn at Laid dull at 171.0:417.14c. .lan. 3.4 Cotton firm at 2514a2.51(e. Flour inactive and unchanged. lion] dull:. prime n - hite esrgme.; nu can a o f y.4 ow. Oats dull and ro e , pts Rye firm t all fk ral 60. Pork firm at nal 114.coti firm: rib eidt r 16%C. clear do. lbs.; shoulder* 1874 c. , h tee. ; Lard artict• at CID Ilat'ANDl-11,ietEiatet.N. -1868. HOLIDAY SEASON. 1868 . BROCIIE kiTRIPED TERRYS. PONCEAU EPLUSHES. TERRIES IN PLAIN COLORS, Cretones, Tassals 'and Loops, PIANO AND TABLE COVERS. The above goods are fresh, and are 'offered with confidence; Rs lite most recherche and'complete assortment of Fabrics for the embellishment of Par. lore, Libraries, Chambers; Dining rooms, Slane, &c. ever"exklinterdr fn this city. I. E. WALRAVEN, MASONIC HALL. No. 719 CHESTNUT STREET. Pennsylvania Elastic) Sponve Clo., 1111 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia, V , R LABTTOPONGE. A SUBSTiTUTE FOR CURLED HAIR FOR ALL UPHOLSTERY PURPOSES CHEAPER THAN FEATHERS OR HALIt. AND FAR SUPERIOR. The Lighteet. Softest and mom Elastic and Durable map forint known for MATTRESSES. PILLOWS, OAR. CARRIAGE AND CHAIR CUSII,ONS fromlo entirely Indestructible, ~p erfectly clean and free duet. IT DOES NOT. PAL'S AT ALL As always rho from insect ale; is perfectly fi ea ut iv , an d for thepleb le unequaled. If soiled in any way. can be renovated (Maker and easier than any other mattreea. Special attention elven to FußmsuiNG tiIIIIRCHRS : HALLS, Ate. Railroad MOD are eaneciallY invited to i m m u ne th e Cushion OPODEL ' SATISFACTION . GUARANTEED THE TRADE SUPPLIED:- . .Iy2o to w f 131 , • ;1, 4.n JR ..:E.Difrotmr„, li.i ' .k; . .7!iPa::.P..0::. 1 9! ? ...P11:r4...,.: . BY TELEGRAPH. FIODM ,-HARKESBURG, 14 ''*-'i'.'i,,i'..i!.i:ii:.l:';..'..C.6o,foi4; FRAM. STROTJDSBUR,Gr Fentenee of the Broadhead 'Moderns Thi seirorivoriul Corite'si [Brecial Deepitcb to the Philadelphia Bienl , l.g Bulletin.] • i'Llnuonuliot Jon. 2 .—There Is no coneentra tion on any Senatorial candidate.-- Mr. Grow , has many warm friends :especially from thenorthern tier, of eetinties. MOorehead's eon has at-, rived'. 'Hellas eigaged stlite: ' of,ten rooms. Mr. K. MOorehead will be bere soon. There 'is a dirposition to heul the , Marshall- Moorehead difficulty. All.,the' Allegheny.delegs lion' is here', and but one of the eight, Senator Graluizo, 'peaks oFtwaly , for Marshall as Senator. Mr: Erten' Is a warm friend of Mr. Moorehead. Mariy weinhers will leave here for Philadelphia, this afte-inoos.' Sessiter*e oft the Broad is, o ant litterderere. fivrionniiiintto, Jun. 2. -Tbe prisonere; Bi•Ooke and Orme, were brought into court this morning to receive their sentence. _ E _4.b made a speech, confessing the killing; but eriderivoridg to justify themselves by having acted in self•defenee. Tney also tried to bide behind drunke.unces, although, they professed to -remember: every paint lu the affair. The Judge' addressed 'them very; touch. ingly, grid they ehowed rib feeling of regret or Compunctiop. - The day of execution will be fixed by ttur€l6.r• • • Found Vlead. • • ,WouvEsTirst., Jan. 2..'-'-Darict apection hand on the Fitchburg 'Railroad, was found dead on the track Lc ar his hOuo3 at • Shirley, Has= sichusetts,:this nfornitg. It is supposed he was run tivefabd Cier. Edetail , Crushed by Snow. ALBANY - ; Jan. 2.—A large building on Union street, belonging to James G0u1d45.,. Co., and used as a Lai. factory. was czu-bed by snow this morning. The building was completely wreck( d and the contents pretty much demolished. No one was injured. Tbe loss is estimated at 0,000. Weather Deport. • - • Jan. 2. 9 A: M. • Wind. WPstber.. Men phobic.). C0ve........ .... .N. E Porltuid ... . ... .. .. . . N. E. quutli: 27 EIMIZI Philedelpblo lg. B. Clourry. 26 Wtlnift,gtup, D01..........E. Clots ly. 30 Waebiugtou. ...... ........E. Cloudy. 30 ttlebrneud N. E. • ltilulng. 30 Augusta. Oa , 8 W Clear. _ 59 &ram bh N. W. F ,, ,lgy. 70 Clnleatue,B C W. Clear. 62 Oficego... ..... S. E. ' C. , .oudy. 22 Bagel° B. Cloudy. 35 Raining, , SI New Orleman S. E. Foggy. 62 _.. Key West Haysna.. CITY BULLETIN. City mortality During' 1868. The following statement, of the mortality of the cltyfdur ng the year 1868 was obtained from the records in the since of Mr. George E. Chambers, Emistrar of Births,. MThiages and Deaths. -The number of interments in the city in each month of the year, compared with 1867, was as follows: 1868. 1867. January 1,249..,.. 1,376 February 1,(163 1,042 Match 1,096 1.094 April 1,857 1,088 May ... 917 1,260 June 1,201 950 July 1,900 1.795 August 1.570 1,291 Suptt Ober 1,258 1,012 October 955 1,177 November 878 871 December 1151 971 Inert ate The following statement shows the number of &sibs, in detail, in each month during the year le6B : 111 the. Adnlta Children. lialee.Femalea. Brim Girls. Jun 6.5 574 647 602 308 266 Feb 593 470 556 507 273 197 Mut eb ..` 551 545 590 506 304 24] Apt ... 719 638 736 621 365 273 May . ... 471 .446 491 426 252 194 June.... 529 672 655 546 381 291 it:oy .... 693 1207 1009 891 630 577 ue .... 554 1016 767 803 498 518 Sr pt..... 564 789 697 656 417 372 Oct 473 482 511 414 255 227 N0v.... 452 426 435 443 207 219 Dec .... 614 540 580 574 263 277 6888 7805 7674 7019 4153 3552 The nal ix lilts of the deceased were: United Stales. Foreign People of color Unknown The number of rea , las in each warn was: 1 620 11 3e9 21 250 2 791 12 331 22 * 351 3 423 13 234 23. ... 325 4 661 14 409 24 472 5 513 15 856 29... .. 273 6 270 16 • 409 26 61 , 5 840 17 514 27 750 8 390 18 553 28.... . 73 9 367 19 902 Unknown :68 10 441 20 989 Tun WEEKLY Moncranrrr.—The number of in terments in the city for the week ending at noon to-day'was 274 against 238 the same parted last y. ar. Of the whole number, 158 were adults and 116 children-67 being under ono year of age; 15] at re males, 123 females; 65 boys and 51 girls. The number of deaths in each Ward was— Wards. Wards. First ' • 16 Sixteenth • Second' - 16 S-venteenth.... .. Third . 6 Rauh teenth .... .. Fourth.... 20 Nineteenth Flfth 8 Twentieth ..... Sixth 6 Twenty-first... ..... 5 Seventh 9 Twenty-second 8 Eighth 7 Twenty-third._ .... 6 Ninth 8 Twenty-fourth 9 Tenth 7 Twenty-fifth 9 Eleventh 5 Twenty-sixth.... ....17 Twelfth . 6 Twenty.seventb 9 Thirteenth 9 Twenty-eigh•h 1 Fourteenth.......... 8 Unknown.... Fifteenth.... - 15 The principal cans of of the brain, 6; congestit sumptlon, 44; Convulsion of the 'heart, 9; deiglit typhoid fever, 9; inflame inflammation of the lam age,,ll, and palsy, 6. WILLS. HOSPITAL.—The following is It re port of operations at Wills Hospital for December, 1868: Patients admitted during December—males, 14; females, 5; total, 17. Patient° discharged during Decem ber—tnales, 14; females, 4; total, 18. Of those were cured, 7; improved, 6; 'incurable. 4; not treated, 1. Patients now in Hospital—males, It; females, 6; total, 17. Surgical operations for Deci mbar—Rouse patients, 10; Dispensary pa tients, 17; total, 27. New Dispensary patients,loo. Whole number of patients treated in December, 190. Nativity—United States, 120; Ireland, 50; Germany, 0; Scotland, 1; Wales, 1. RI SIONED.—Mr. WiMUM C. EfaitNB, One Of the clerks of Mayor .McMichael, resigned his position yesterday morning. Mr. Baines was originally appointed a policeman by Alayor Conrad, and arcec thrOugb successive grades until he became clerk. In that capacity he acted diirln{ a por tion of the term of Nlay or Ooorad, and throngn tbe entire _terms of Mayors Pans, Henry and McMichntl. He always disctfarged his duties with nhttitv and satisfaction. EW TURKEY PRUNES LANDING ANu FOB SALE 1.3 by J B BUBB= di 4.10• Ma Boatb Dela • are avenue Cl..udy. 40 Clouds , . 20 CIA T. 71 Clear. 1040 2969 644 , ) 10 13 `2l f death were congestion 'on of the lungs, 6; con- , n, 18; dropsy, 6; disease ty t 10; scarlet fever, 9; tmatlon of the brain, 8; ' 'a, 22; inarastaus 8; old ;at`. , -. , :i:f .. .:_!..r.i . .i.1.,.. , ,- '......:,i , .. 3:18 t',CriOlotstri'. BY TELEGRAM; , :'::' , WASH'INGTONT.;': 'the 'E lectoral Vote THE CIVIL TENURE BILL The 'Act' - to be Amended . - The. Electoral Vote, (BPecl;ll,l3Malchlo the Phila.Fivening WASHINGTON, January 2.—Vice President Wade bas received the official Presidential vote of all States by , mall: althOugh only, half of the Messen gers appointed to bring the voted here have ar rived. Next Wednesday is the last day on which these votes cawbe received. It Is not generally Minion that the law provides that thine Li:lessen. gus , who fail to deliver. the vote here by the first ;Wednesday. in January are subject to a fine of $l,OOO. In case all the messengers dw 'net arrive with the votes, those received by Moll will be counted on the third Wednesday in , . Februsu, by Mr.ade. 'The Civil vennre Deipateh tif the Eveuing &Mean. Wasrimorox, *Jan. 2. Senator Sherman is preparlog.aud-will introduce after-the holidays, a bill amending the Tenure of Office act, The principal plaints of his measure, are the repeal:of an parts of the act which relate to, the tenure of Cabinet officers,. and an important irodification of the law relating to suspension for cause. Under the, proposed set the Preildent will report that the officer ensfiendedfor cause. On his demanding it, an investigation is thrown on the officer so sew peilded. If within forty days the officer flies such:written demands, the President Must far nikh charges, and the Senate condrms or amends the stispension. If not made within this time,the suspension amounts to a full removal. Ad in terim appointments will be allowed pay daring the time ed their services the money to be drawn froM the contingent fund. Mr. Sherman does not know whether his pro positions are approved by General Grant. • Generals Glllem and Reynolds, from the South, are expected here soon, having been ordered to report to the Adjutant-General. Now Yeat's (Special Despatch to the Phila. Eveatus WAsoncurox,Jan. 2.—New Year's did not pass off as brilliantly as was expected. The very In clement weatber prevened as much display as there would otherwise have been. The Executife Mansion was thronged all day although not as many were present as last year: The receptions of the various Cabinet Ministers Were well attended, and Speaker Uolfax's par lors were filled during the reception hours. Gen. Butter's call upon the President creates considerable talk. _ _ Killed at a abootinglilatch. TonoicTo, January 2.—The well-known rille shot, Caleb Giles, was accidentally shot dead at a shooting match yesterday near this city. Superintendent Appointed. BUIrALO, Jan. 2.—James Tlliinghurst, Super lutendent of the Buffalo division of , the New York Central Railroad, has been appointed Gen eral Superintendent of the Central road, vice John Newell, and entered upon his duty. CITY ESUIaiETIN. STY...AI-LNG AT ASOSE Hours.—Chailes Lincoln alias Dcran,aged 17 years,was arrested yesterday in Norristown by DetectiveLevy,upon thecharge of the larceny of three watches and about st; in money from the house of the Humane Hose Company_ The accused bas been hanging about the house for several days. Between•five and six o'clock yesterday morning, it is alleged, he took the watches from the pockets of members ot the company who were asleep. From one he took the keys of the closet, and in that manner got a few dollars. Lincoln had a hearing before Aid. Kerr at the Central Station last evenine.and was committed in default ot $2,000 nail, to answer at court. APPOINT3CMIT9 13Y THE CITY SOLICITOR.—Thos. J. Bareer, Eeq., the new City Solicitor, made the following appointments to-day: First Assistant—Cbarles H. Gross. Assistants—Richard Ludlow, Jas. V. Mc- Dononob Solicitor of the Park Commission—Pierce Archer. Financial Clerk—Geo. McGowan. Search Clerk—Charles J. McAllister. The growth of a Better Feeling an the South. [From the Memphis (Tenn.t Pont, Dec.2ll Many of our Northern eachaogee are cougratn- Inting and readers upon a better tet•t ing in the South. We are happy to be able to to say that this, in a measure, is well founded. Since the election of , Grant politic al fanaticism has somewhat moderated. Many of the more thoughtful and discern ing, Fick of turmoil and revolution, and of blood and thunder, are really pleased with the election of General Grant. They have become satisfied that the struggle of any section against the national will is hopeless and fatal to those Naito wage it. The worse and more violent class have been somewhat restraint d by a certain impression of the shadowy sword of the inevit able. There have been less of the flenclkh out rages of the cowardly Ku Klux. The beat of the blond immediately arising from the contest has sul.sided, and reason is now itself again. The better cheer arising from au abundant har vest and high prices has greatly accelerated the growth fr indifference to old sores. There is, un doubtedly, too, a livelier moral sensibility tel the South of duty to the State, and of the right and wrong, than has ever before prevailed. The more conscientious class has gained a little more heart and courage. We can hear, now and then, their voice of remonstrance against inhumanity and wrong. The public sen timent and strength of the colored people has had 'much to do with this improvement. Their steadfast devotion to the national authority and the national party has been a power in this direction. Their good behavior and growth in intelligence and wealth has surprised and com manded Vie respect of those who bad hated and despised them. The material result of the year's labor of these blacks,in so many millions of Dales of cotton, is little less than their moral influence in the general upward tendency throughout the South. THE COURT& THE COURT OF Cosmos Pules .judge Aili son.—ln the contested election cases of General Hector Tyndale vs. Daniel Id Fox, for Mayor; Joseph Hancock vs. George Getz, City Con troller; Charles Gibbons ve. Furman Shrppard, District Attorney; Major MeCuen vs. David P. Weaver, City Commissioner; Captain Richard Donagan vs. A. W. Fletcher, Prothonotary of the Court of Common Pleas. ' Thomas A. Worrell vs. Thomas J. Barger, City Solicitor; and Richard Fritz vs. Jcihn M. Melloy, Receiver of Taxes, application was made this morning by William H.` Rawle, E , q. for the op ointment of an 'Examiner and a Receiver. On the part of the District Attorney it wis ob jecied to by George W. Biddle, 111.4, on the ground that Omens(' was pending in the Court of Quarter Sessions, and that the Conrt had no power to make such appointments as asked while that cause was undecided. Judge Allison stated that he was of — the- opinion that the Court did possess the power, and expressed 'an unwil lingness to set all 'the other business of tin) court - aside - to take the testimony - in open Court. Mr. Biddle said that he , should have an opportuolty lobe heard on that point,which the Court stated would be allowed him. • It noon then announced, that 'on Meadav next the appointiments in the other cases would pro bably be wade. , ' Try D • 111$ ILE*. Bloo!ly - Teruktukattoti, of • Chrlatinkas rLaaesster. Ky.tDee anscaresponfienee of the Leal/mina Cotater-Joi , Thal.l Cur town was the scene of a brutt&inurd6r on . Cbtiktimas night, Between ten and eleven o'clo,ck a large tatiabber of, both )oung men: and ,baye were celebrating Christmas by shooting crackers and tiring ,-'A, Young man who signed his name Wieman was engaged with °them in loading and sheeting an anvil when some one tmknow'n came •up and shot Mtn through the , heart with a vistel, firing two ortbree , tames. His comrades seeing him ran thought it a farce and paid bat little atten tiOn to it at first. They soon sari , their error, bowever 4 and found that a Warder hid been emu milted when it was` too late to identify the assassin. Be was seen to walk off app stonily at conctrned, mingling with the rest, and was lost in the crowded street.- The victim was a young man about twenty-five years of age—a stranger, having been here but a few weeks. Little or nothing is known of him more thin he came here, sought and obtained work ae a carpenter, .working industriously when not drinking. It is not known of , his having had any difficulty with any one; hence the mystery. The Coroner was sent for immediately, and sum moned ajoy. who examined the deceased, when they adjourned over until next morning at nine o'clock, from which time they eat until '2 o'clock, examining a great number of witnesses, bet With out any clue an to who the murderer was. Noth- Ing is known of the friends.of theedeceased, save that be basalt uncle in. Michigan, This may be the means of their hearing of his sad death. The Weather tor Deceiiiber. B. J. L. sends no the following table of the weather at Germantown for the month just passed : DECEMBER, DM 1.4 • -3 . • f - ..E Wind and Weather. , - cct A 13112 3 / 2 9.5 80 35 29.9 34 37 80 2. 31 94130 34 88.1'9.7 35 39,30 89 381299 38 3629.4 131 88129 9 '24181029 8 129 29 7 10 27,80.1 18122'80.3 :5 1 31129 9 94 33 :0. 31 33•29.6 35 94129.3 41 42.29.7 27'59'30 2 3213 29 9 '3'.145129 7 195 31.30. 20 24130 IS 20'29.8 12 24,29 9 2al 29'30 8 98 31;30.1 31 38 30.1 131,34 29.9 131432 30.2' 132135130 2, N. W. Clear. W. elear. Spit Snow. N. W. Clears N E. Cloudy. Snow. N. E Cloudy. Rain. N. Clear. N. S. elmAy. Rain. N. W. Clear. N. W. Clear. W. Clear. N. E. Cloudy. N. W. Clear. N. W. Clear. W. Clear. N. W. Clear. N. E. Cloudy. Snow- Rain. W. C!ear. - - N. W. Clear.. , N. Clear. E. Cloudy. Rain. Sleet. N E. Cloudy. w Cloudy. N. W. Clear. N. W Clear. W. Clear. N. W. Clear. 17. E Cloudy. Rain S. W. C!ear. 8 Cloudy. Rain. N E. Cloudy. Snow. N. E. Cloudy. _ • • _ ONTIILY ASIMAGEB. Lowest Point Eight' o'clock. Twelve o'clue Three o'clock Depth of It 1" r. I PI LEHIGH VALLEY RAIL4OAD MORTGAGE BONDI . We offer for sale a limited amount of these First Class Bands AT NINETY, And Accrued Interest from Deo. let. The Bonds are in amounts of • $1,009, either Registered or Coupon, at the option o the chaser, and bear interest at SIX PER CENT., FRBR PROS ALL COVRRNTIBIT AND STATE The Mortgage under which these Bonds are issued is Five Millions of Dollars, upon a property coetiup over Twenty Millions of Dollars. The gross receipts upon which for the year past are er Four Million Dollars. We offer t hese Bonds ai in every respect A II RIST-CLANS SODUILITY, And will receive in payment for them, Flitted states, E.tate, City, or other mask euible eteetwaties, allowing ' the full market price. 1:114P.X.P41-4 At BANKERS, 34 South Third. Street. H.NEWBOLD, SON & AERTSEN, Corner Walnut and Dock Sts. e 24 1111 LP 40AR K 4• c e • . BANKERS, 4)0 No. 35 SOUTH THIRD STREET, PHILADELPHIA. DEALERS IN COVERNMENT SECURITIES, STO CK, C OLD AND NOTE BROKERS. Accounts of Banks, Firms, and Inawtduids rtneilcd, sulljeol to check at idea. INTEREST ALLQWETI ON •BALANCES qENERAL:kENTS FOR ec , PENNSYLVANIA 41P47 ZRAI A is a i D O pzie j l OF THE .41 01 IF El Attit ort e OF ME Ktu, UNITED STATES OFAMERICA. The NATIONAL LIVE 11.4sTrlIANCE COMPANY 19 Corporation chartered by special Act. or Congress, ap. proved July 25, MS, with a CASH CAPITAL, $1,000;000, FULL PAID Liberal terms offered to Agents and Solicitors, whe are invited to apply at our office. Pull particulars to be had on application at ourodlce, located In the second story of our Banking House, where Circulars and. Pamphlets, fully describing the advantages offered by the Company; may be bad. E. W. CLARK & CO.. No. 85 South Third &. • FOR,RFW TO rojilLY WITEOUT StIiALL r"chiltireu. well furntehed bona, In central I,oAith) el4o ptr month. Allpt at Bulletin Lance. 114-2 • Alps at Bulletin...____ BORDEN'S BEEF TEA. BALE AN OUNON Ok"C11113 extract will matte a pin of excellent Beef Tea in a few minutes. Merman and and for sale by JOSHIPH B. BURNER A C 0... tOil ',cloth Del..ware avenue.; tes fI ter bo of this splendid fruit. ROWN BRAND ILA ER RAURNES. WHOLNi. klbslyes sztd quarter lead fug aud for sale by JOB . . i BITEIR di CO.. 108 Borth - I:lBlawide amine. ' ' --- iII:MEANT JELLY =GENUINE ".GURRANWEIAY and 10 lb.' cane, for solo by B. HOMIER . CO.:;108 Elooth Delaware Avenge:l 'll7 HITE CIA/STELE 'BORES GENUINE White Castile SOO% Wolfeg Moo (rota Of Vox, and for lab by JOU. B. 11i:164= OA, Ule Bouth Deiware pewee , ' FIFTII - .':', - : . ::''',.. - .1 : 1 - ..`ioN. BY, -711F7'171.GP•4W-g' LATEST coLE„Ngiwa THE MALAGA iNsuithEcTioti The G-reek Troup leet THE CONTINENTAL CONFERENCE LLTEBT , FROM WASELINGT(ii How the Overleil Mail is Iri*o_a MURDER Ar:sHoi.g.N.Bljr.t.io',4!4B The 13 a, n g (Yr - Fire• By the Atlanti . ccallllo„ tr LouorJanuary 2d.—Furtber detalisfotilact suppreeilon of the ineurreclAri at , htrlasra. beau reedited by telegraph. After SATO evgagt mtnt in the streets' of, the city; General Do 'hada succeeded w . 40 1 1 1 t. ing the rebels and restoring order. The war vessels in the barber acted in ctme.ertlidtbr Gen; De Rods 'by ffrinic a eallirg fire, into the'lviks of the insurgents. . he country le t now trarquil. " Rum, January 2.--T'he conference for the itet lernoet of the . dittrenets between Turkey Greece will heciney csed ot, the Authaseidoreto Fratce from the - V,4llotl9,powcp,s of EctrOpe. sitrisgs will belAjd in this city, and will be one tbdcd over by Lavallette, the; new French. Foieign fitcretary. The time of meeting hate!aot yet been fully sgrced upon. , QUEENSTOWN, Jan. 2.—The bark George& Brown, Captaintrlpe.y, whictisailed froth Ham b 201urg on Nov. 'for New., York, has ppt in hero leaking, having t;tperitneed's heavy , now the Ovigrimild [Specie) Deeyetch'to the Phila. Wenbig B uftetii l' Wasnmerrozy, Jan. 2 --:The Missiiuri :03;rocrat. n Thrreday has the following, regarding. the manner in which the overland mails are carried by Wells, Fargo & Co. It, says': ' „ • "The overland mull, receive(' yesierday "'iota California was In a very damtged "The mall matter appeared to,haVe,been brought through 1n water- tanks. Oar ownjettersWare so defaced by dirt and wet as to be 'alsnOlit Illegible." • ' Pliirder at Ehtpßenisburg, Pa. • thurrEi;ssuito;, Jan. g,—aur usaallir quiet town Was thrown into a high state,fareitetnen_t yesterday, by the report that a mamitted bixo found murdered about two •Miles south of this place. A warrant wait issued for • the':arrest of Adam Titnstbe supposed nturderer,', - , Who was in town at the Au. AngtOst was. held on the body, after which it was brought here. When the prisoner was confronted wick the murdered man, he showed signs of his guilt; by blanching. He was questioned auto'Witen, he was last with the man, when he acknowledged that they had quarrelled, and he . stircit; him, whereupon he was placed in:custody natal taken to the county jail. The murdered 'man's name is Henry Steel. a stranger in tt!esepaTts He was in company with Titus from atiON' till Wednesday last. ritua's family, inquired of him where he was, and giving evasive answers, they made an ciao:A . 44On around the premises, when they' fonit:d the man burled on the bank of a pond, a short `distance from the house, with his thro st cat from ear Ito ear, and his skull crushed, apparently by a•blow of an axe. 83 4-10 . 3 T-10 In The Palmer Fire. • [Special Despatch to the Phila. Evening Bulletin:i BANGOU, MP., Jar Mary 2.—The fire in thla 'city lost night damaged property to alarge ainottO. The priming' occupants were E. F. 8401,n, Conner & Fuller. C. Harwood & Co., .Fogg 4r, Bridges, G. W. Ladd, C. H. Dunning, G. N. Dale & Co., W. J. Mitchell, Emery, Wing & Co., 'and G. W. Pickering all of whom sustam considerable lose by lire and water. [Qerreepondence of the Associated 'Prom], BANGOR, JAM 2.--At about 7 o'clock last even ing a fire broke out in the grocery store of Harris & Cooper, on Broad street, and spread' ettet6vay until ten brick stores were destroyed, neatly, all of them containing . heavy stocks of goods.. The following Is a list of the losers, with the amount s pf damages: E. P. Baldwin, shoes, stock mostly Axed; Insured for $4,000; Emery, Wing & Co., g roceries; lots 20,000. imam d for $6,000; them Hayward & Co., loss $65,000; Insured for $42,000; Connor & Fuller, loss $15,000; insure.' for $12,000; T. T. Farrington, hardware, loss $10,100; Fogy & Brliges, hard war loss $25,000; is cured for $16,000; George. C. Pickering, grocers, loss $7,000; insured for $4,000. George W. Ladd, loss $40,000; insured for $20,100. G. IL Dunning, loss' $1,5,000i . In eon d for $4 O. H. Dale & Co., ship chand lers loss $50,000. The other pathos have, lost, bur not heavily. The• total loss is estimated at $250,000. Nrw YOnn, Jan. 2.—Rogers, who was fatally slabbed on Thursday lust, while resisting art at terupttd robbery. by unknown parties, dted 10. . 1 100 LATE FOR CLASSI FICA T.10.111c Nap OFFICE of, TIDE LOCUST MOUNTAIN COAL"""" AN D IiZON CUM PANY. PIILLADRI:PIitA. January 2, latiive Th6117113'011/ ThentifiF of the efockhotdeed of the 4e cee t Afeeefatn iDeitt Ord Iron CoMpxl37 will 1) , hail ar.the office of the ron.ptny. Wit B. Third street, on MON DAY, the tires day of Febru*ry next. at 13 o'clock, M., wren an election will be held for Dlreeteta. ED WA KD SWAIN. tiAcretary. HOLIDAY GOODS. Annual Olosing Oat Sale OF NOTTINGHAM AND SWISS LACE CURTAINS. TABLE AND PIANO COVERS. DAMASKS, REPS, TERRIES,. ind a ficneral Line of Curtain. Materials. PRICES MARKED DOWN.' icoordiogto our Cuatom !it thooe glom An extra force of rplialptereia engaged will imam Promptneed in executing any ordain. CARRINGTON I D ZOUO HE sOO. S E Corp Thitteenth and:Chestnut; dell Ay, VRESB LOBSTERS AND BA LAION*-500 , OASES, lid) I dozen s frerheLohedore and daimon, lauding fpr rale by JOS .- IV BUBBLER & CO,. US Slut& DOI&Waa (ZAhDINEEL--100 OASES, fIAINQIJokI3rOII BOXES, IJ landlux and fs,r*ftle by JOA - 100 S3uth Delaware aventta. , SEATRING FELT F(R BAG.—TEN at)) Fit t riEl3 Eriglinh biteattring Felt, by PEER 'OI%I3.IIO Walnut ayeet. no 7. tt . • • • 4i:00 • O'Clook. From Neav York.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers