NEW PUBIAGA.T.KOC ' t ' Captain Mayne Reid Sends tis, before the', middle. of January, the rebruaiy nuMber of lds new - magazine, 040.0'0. -iVerhaps if be bad waited the rema'ininf fortnight he Would have Made a better thing of it. The cuts and cover, although subjects of a perfectly Mica w 'beilikh '6l4f-felicitation 'On =the' part of. the • sallant Captain, hurt our feelings worse than 4 eVer: As for'ihS MibjectLrnatter with which the number is filled, we have no complaint; it is romantic, ad Veuturotts,and better than pos.- poshible."The Lost Sister," a tale of the — Gran Chaco, sweeps on like £ troop of gaucho cavalry—all plumeti, war taint,and tempest; a literal teitmest,by-the-by , she torments, is described in the course of the present instalment with spirit and , truth ;fulness. "The Yellow Chief," another tale in "baff-breed costume, proceeds; "The Ringer's •Grave" carries us to the .Mexican War, and "Brother against Brother" to the late Rebel - lion. These tales are just what the titles pro fess, adventure-stories of great briskness, with a general flavor of Cooper, Gustave Aymard and the editor, or, as it Is customary to say, the "gallant" editor'. The latter, in his "Tri fles," (by the' by, ,the Notes are printed in a sort of low. oblate type very dazzling and hard to read) attempts to excuse his printing cifTrentice's "I think of thee," in the first number, without acknowledgment, but we Ithinkids explanation as feeble as his self gratulation about the dreadful pictures.—Car leton, publisher. • ' art, mintare and Love. 'That odd bundle of sublimated sensations lvhich`we call our memory contains nothing litter than its landscapes. It has many faces --of men and women, some ot them giving e lath perpetual sunshine; others clouded with anger and hate; it even holds the forms of favorite dogs and horses; it stores up recol ' leetious of particular rooms in houses that are now level with the ground, of chambers in country inns where merry or tender meet ings have taken place; but its richest and .finest treasures are its landscapes. You can not call before your mind the figure of any one who was once dear to you without filling In a background, and the background is sure to be some well-remembered scene, which is made to glow with all the magical light of re miniscence. Love and- memory between them - have a knack of creating landscapes oat of nothing. The coarsest materials leap into artistic harmony at their wizard touch. What can be made out of a large manufacturing town for example—out of its dismal grey streets, its hideous pall of smoke, its ghastly ehimneys rising up into the cold and clouded sky, its squalid lanes, and dingy people, and muddy pavements, and - what not? The subtle alchemy of love crimsons the grey clouds, the tall chimneys become spires of gold,the dull streets have a wonderful glamor about them, far more wonderful than any transformation scene with shining fairies and g•reen light; and then, this flue picture having been completed,lovebands it over to memory in order that it may acquire the richness, and softness, and mellowness of age. So it hap pens that they who have lived their life in large towns are not entirely deprived of love landscapes. Perhaps the oddest fact, how ever, about these mental transformations is that once certain forbidding materials have _ been made beautiful to you, they are always beautiful. The modern loVer, whose heart may be as big as that of a Petrarch or an Abe lard, walks the cold streets with no more idea of the change which outward things are un dergoing than he has of the political move ments in Japan. He is only conscious that -he is about to visit a particular young person and trusts that she will be at home, and that her mother may be asleep over a novel, or busy scolding the servants. Perhaps he has just visited her, and now walks past the shop windows seeing nothing and hearing nothing, engrossed with the windy delight which is blowing through -his not over stocked head. He does not know that upon the dismal buildings which he passes he is leaving such a coat of imaginative paint as shall never be washed off by any rain, or Lail, or snow. He is altering the material of the pavements; he is making a new heaven and a new earth out of this not particularly lively city. And not only has he tranatprined this city. he has also transformed all similar Bow the Emperor Napoleon Broke His cities. Years afterwards, when his head is W ord to all ankee. gray and his imagination quite withered up— , irrom the Cincinnati Commercial.) 'when he has by his side a lady who is not WASHINGTON, Jan. 4.—Some time in 1853, that young person whom he used to go to see while your correspondent was holding an —he may come in sight of a large town with , official position in Paris, he was much its tall chimneys rising up in the horizon,aud afflicted by a slender, pale gentleman of that commonplace picture will at once be-- thirty, or thereabouts, in a blue cloth cloak come tender and sad, he knows not how, and straw-colored •kids, who would sit for and the air will be filled with snatches of for- hours in the bureau of the Legation, appa gotten melodies, and there will crowd upon rently contemplating some unknown region him, called up by these prosaic chimneys, on the other side of Jordan. reminiscences of things unspeakable—the old This was Mr. Robert Austin Parrish, Jr., joys, and the bitterness, and the sweet part- and he was not contemplating any region on ings, under the stars, in the cold. j this or the other side of Jordan. He was con- And if love and memory can make beauti- templating the auriferous region of Africa, ha scones out of smoky manufacturing cities, which he had ceded, by treaty, to his Imps what indescribable pictures do they not form rial Insignificance, Louis Napoleon, son of a out of pleasanter places' Three-fourths of iDutchman, and Emperor of France by the the people who walk throug - tithe picture gal- grace of God and the votes of no end of peo leries know nothing of painting as an art. plc. His Imperial Insignificance, son of the • They are ignorant of the vices and virtues of Dutchman aforesaid, had failed, in the most composition ; the treatment of color is a mys- I foul, fraudulent and false manner, to carry out tery to them' bad drawing and flimsy work - his end of the treaty, and citizen Parrish manship need not fear their scrutiny. Their Bought the Legation for relief. test of a picture—and it is a very good one in The duties of the Legation at that time its way—is its suggestiveness. Does it re- were confined to eating dinners given by mind them of one of those vaguely beautiful Muggins, in return for the arduous labors of pictures in their memory ? The truth of the i presenting Muggins to the Uourt,of his Im painting is of little consequence; the art of perial and Scorbutic Majeaty,Louis Napoleon, the painter none at all ; the question is, does I above mentioned. And as .for relief, it had this representation of a sunset, or of a pearly not much relief for itself. His apoplectic dawn, or of .s. calm evening, suggest those Excellency John Y. Mason heard the com dawns and sussets that lie hid away in our plaint, and, after studying Vattel and Galig mental storehouse, fresh after the lapse of ever nani's Paris Guide, came to the wise conclu so many years, growing more beautiful as sion that as Parrish did not come from one of • the years advance upon us, and tone down I the first families of Virginia,he had no power the beauty of the actual scenes amid which to enforce a treaty concerning the auriferous we dwell. While this pleasant valley or this I region of Africa. But he offered to play Par breezy height, or this picturesque nook on risk a little game of draw-poker for any au She coast which we see every day, scarcely riferous region that said Parrish might have looks more than commonplace—while the left about him after making the treaty above finest scenery snywhese awakens little admi spoken of. This Robert Austin Parrish, Jr., ration and no surprise—these other scenes of declined, and his Excellency Envoy Extraor the past which we carry about with us are dinary—very extraordinary—turned the corn each day becoming more brilliant and ten- ' plainent,in high disgust,over to the Secretary. duly suggestive. If the painted bit of land- Joking aside, the case was a very singular scape which we find in an exhibition only re- , one, and worth a brief mention. On the 30th vests that common world with which we are of October, 1853, Parrish obtained an inter too familiar, of what avail is it? This is view with Louis Napoleon, and offered to really the, perhaps unconscious, theory on cede to the Emperor certain gold regions in which most people ground their judgment of Africa, for and in consideration of 15,000,000 apicture. The landscape must suggest some- ; francs, to be paid Parrish so soon as the no thing more than a landscape, or they do not thority of France should be extended over tare for it. The sunset must be typical of the region Parrish should indicate. The all sunsets, and must re-awaken the senti- Emperor gave his word of honor that this menu and associations buried with the old should be done, and Parrish put him in pos half-forgotten sunsets of the past. , session of his information. He had never But of all the tackgounds around which been in Africa, had never Been any one who love (while pretending to be intent on the knew of the mines, but, by long Barisal, and consideration ot one certain person) delights careful study of the gold history of the world, to Weave tender associations, the chief favor- and comparing works of African_ explorers, its is, the sea. - Doubtless the sea has a ape- the young man claimed to be able to indicate cial power and emanation of its own. Its with unerring certainty the exact location of constant change and motion, its. unknown the mines. strength, the apparent infinity of its size, its 'This sounds like a midsummer night's loneliness, its many voices, appeal vividly to dream; but sound it ever so much that way, ''`the imagination. But all these things love it is capable of proof that almost Immediately , sip seizes,and makes out of them suck ideal- subsequent to the information thus given, the isms as sometimes:puzzle a man through his French Government acted. A force of this entire life. He cannot tell why he so in- teen vessels and 2,400 men was sent out,and, THE DA 0110141%1y to to get near tbellet4 hekcen '` Bet wit* . he 'l. gets there,* 'weight ex resit e s nese: 04 V ' l* in OA ad io `eisi o him. 7 ,:Lotrefdittensilles these vngneinipres`i pions whieh the sight ef,the"seit:corveys tq the mind; and gives ,- to inethotY •.the` most - curiously-jumbled associations linked with _ the most ordinary sensations. Tne smell of` seaweed, for example, is not a fine per fume.- - It< cannot be • compared' with the fragrance of roses after rain, or the scent of a beau-field in blossom; and yet, the first whiff of it one gets, in coming down from some close city to a seaside village, and getting out upon the nearest headland, seems to transfigure one. The swift rush of, mem,- ries is far too confused to admit of any single bygone experience being recalled; but the whole effect of this solitary sensation is so new, and strong, and bewildering, that years are taken from or added to one's life, and you .vaguely imagine that past things , may noti be quite past. In such a moment, if yon were to turn and find at your elbow some person who could by no possibility be actually there, you would scarcely feel surprised. You feel as if you had not yet proposed to the lady who is your with, and that you might choose somebody else. You think you will not in vest that money which has been invested, and - lost, years before. You resolve that you will alter the plan of that book which is to set the , river on fire—that book which was long ago printed, and bound, and published, and barely got noticed. There are various causes for the senti mental interest with , which certain phases of scenery are invariably linked in the mind, but love is undoubtedly the chief of these. And even as a story which ends tragically is longer remembered than one which ends happily, so scenes which have been consecrated by the bitterness of love are more keenly remem bered than these which have witnessed its pleasures. The trifling accidents which will suddenly revive these old pictures are com mon and curious. Familiar objects which have no intrinsic interest whatever—a bit of scratchy landscape on the outside of a sheet of music; the first fall of snow; the whistle of plover, the howling of wind round the house at night—in short, any little bit of one of these mental pictures becomes the key with whichthe whole Cabinet is unlocked. The odd freaks which every person at times 'manifests in an incompre hensible liking for this or that commonplace story, or snatch of poetry, or painting, must often be accounted for in this way. We cannot see what tue entranced spectator sees in that coarsely-executed lithograph of a moonlit castle on the front page of a drawing room song. We see only a tumbling ruin, with a rough sky, an impossible moon, and some heavy and black foliage in the fore ground. But the person whose eyes fill with tears over this glimpse of bad art may see in it unimaginable things—may have forgotten years in the space of a moment ; and be there and then breathing the air of the sea, con scions of starlight overhead, and of the s3und of waves, and of low, and urgent, and bitter protestations, with the delight of making up, when she who has been wayward suddenly grows gracious, and the night is full of joy. There are some happy people to whom memory is only a sort of quiet and pleasant churchyard, in which they can take a sedate and respectable Sunday walk. Here they tenderly place a wreath over a certain grave; there they have the mute delight of scowling over the tombstone of a buried enemy; but, one way or the other, there is nothing of a disturbant or repellant kind to confront them. And there are people whose memory is very different—a powder-magazine which any casual spark of reference is likely to blow up with a sharp and sudden shock. Love is the etorer of that powder; and sometimes the explosion is so fierce as to transfer the unhappy victim to a better world. And there are other people—perhaps the ma jority—whose memory is stored with recol lections painful and humorous, pleasing and terrible, joyous and full of despair; and these are the people who carry about with them ideal landscapes. It would puzzle themselves, 'perhaps more than anybody else, to refer back to their original elements those mystic pictures of thunderous forenoons, and sum mer days, of happy evenings, and stormy nights of rain and wind. The materials are doubtful; but the band that combines them is unmistakable. Love is the master-painter; and as yet no explanation has been given why he paints more sad pictureblhan merry ones. A VERY CURIOUS STORY pBULLMIN--PHILADF.s_LPHIA, FRIDAY, JAN' . ~ i-,- , .ft# jlome reverses, on an, ovaeldsr3,. csmrsit .Butiliareilm , She territory indioatec),V67 VitrrslOW:pait cifi li i rin 're! L k , , .. i .7 rrugsk,' .. . Ap'vrench Empire 6lA4 following this'l i 1.,44. flita c t,),-.rht *=.l. l ,.'st , gum0b , 19. ,, ,. , , 0003 quest, the gold dot* of fthe , t l Yrenctii %cult si , t. dordery t ,-4racf,' - iit /44'annall 9thf4 P lrortoil ''..inipts rose suddenly fie two•andls, lief , mil ..1 !Vlr,o r teNvi n aik, l id o , at i.„ 11 ', , 14,, a ;t40th i cult :'l lv g , ; 'Tons of dollars per t nannoil' ; _to'.ohe hundred' . ,Thatezeie...;- , -_-:.. ~, •,,,_ ~.',•-•. '•• .- .- `lO. , millions of dollars. :../ ' :,,,. ' = , &.hr litru7 Allen;Tateln, at Jaalmoriville lib Inas: grom Savannah. "'""There are facts, and very hurler's facts they , Bohr N W Magee,Betchure. cleared at Boston 18th i le. for Wilmington NG. - are. But Parrish was algreat ass to take the 1 . ~- • itrurd of s man having-Bach-a-bad-reputation I , Blue - 1/MaNE MISOEUANZ • for truth and veracity as this son of a Dutch- , heavy ir ?` eZ l stie tt il)tota r r7 l 4: l l3:t t &g p :;a li ii a r! man, Louis Napoleon. Nor do I. see how r /Hat of guile; , ahlited cargo between cocks; sprung lore Parrish helps it by appealing to. Congress. It rg ai g i onleYti r ot. t ig Irst i .VVeo t u h a e igiVatlr c ei v = is as much as that learned and gifted body from pleat . est, which lasted 66 hours, during which can do to reconstruct the South without seek- re4,chno, ' from' Beaton for Georgetown, tnt into ing to reconstruct Louis Narileon. As Par- Nada% NP. 28th ult. with toss of mainbecm. rish made his agreement With the little tin- NOTICE TOCIABINERS.. penal Dutchinini, inthe - shapo - or a treaty, I . milted II tate l affiltratre,rartiliTyTa'r `4 " ' would suggest that., as a high treaty-making Sir-Bv a swan boo; from (Oar°, tast.mtght, / have re power, Parrish declare - war on the Preach . : L ',;',',',Vl i f f=lll ll9llch I thh/t 13h .” id, . °43 ma, P ublic government,and, judgingTrom the haste with Its insurgents have taken mien of the lighthouse which we seek to recognize Cuhanindepead- 1114 1 2 1 4a l afi r s . rl i tter v 7: af ,r at .r,7,r a i, t 174,4 1 ,,1 ence and Irish nationality," have no doubt bat order, newly erected, and lit fot the Son time met Oc. Congress would grant the nevi government , t ill J. important to vessels bonnd through the old Ba of Parrish belligerent rights, acknowledge ham s channel. BIOIIARD GIBE I. its power to issue letters pf naarque,and if the', United States Consular agent. auriferous region is really what the govern- 1 Jap e r state a Corumlar Agency, Nuevitas. December ment 'of Parish represents, Congress w ill make a treaty offensive and defensive, and thereby become an ally. Let the government of Parrish move on the Dutchman's works-- including his "Life of Cresar"—without de lay. • DON PLATT. FROff IILAHR IS BURG. feorreerperodence of fhb PhilaiiNienln:g Bulletin.] HAIMISRMIO, Jan. 14; 1869.—The . time of the Senate and House today has been mainly occu pied with drawing the committee "to try the Greenbank contested election case. You will see that two Democratic Senators and two Republi can, and three Democratic and six Republican Representatives were drawn. To-morrow the some tedious operation will have to be submitted to to please the Dernocratic citizens of Philadel phia who desire to oust Judge Hare The meet ing to-morrow was ordered more particularly so that the political minority could have no cause to complain of unfair dealing, but the passage of the resolutiOn so ordering was rather distasteful to many of the Senators and Representatives, woo desire to go home to-day. Mr. Mclntire, of the Senate, .has introduced a supplement to the act relating to Orphans' Courts, approved March 29, 1832. It provides that In all cases of proceedings in the Orphans' Court, in .partition.wherein a wife has made or shall m Ike her declaration in pursuance of the 48th auction of the act of March 29, 1832, of her desire taat the money secured to her under the said proceed ings shall be paid to her hnsband,and subsequent to the filing of the said declaration and before the payment of the money, the parties shall have been or shall thereafter be lawfully divorced from each other, the said money'shall remain the pro perty of the wife notwi hstanding the said decla ration, and shall be legally collectable by her in her own name and for her own use. Mr. Connell has a bill in charge which proposes to rep( al the eleventh section of the act of April 28, 1850, relative to party walls. The reason given for its passage is that the section was ,Passed by a then member of the Legislature from your city, who owned a frame house, and de sired to restrict to his own territory the owner of an adjoining lot, who wished to build a brick house and have the party wall half over the line, as is alWays allowable; an. unless the repeal Is effected, great hardship and injustice will be caused as property be a. -s more valuable. Mr. Sobers has intN•ciOd a bill, which, .if it passes, will take fro the Supreme Court the power of appointing one>of the Building Inspec tors, and place it in the hands of the District Court. He is to serve for three years. from July next, and receive the same compensation as hie colleagues. Mr. Kleckner has read one in place which makes it lawful for any one to use a Oiling ste ve or drift net in any part of the Delaware river. from March Ist to June 100. of each year, but not within ten fathoms of the shore line at: low water mark. Any person fishing as a basinesb with such sieve or net, must pay a license of five dollars into the treasury of the city or county nearest to his place of operations. Mr.McCan chess's bill to incorporate the Masonic Publishing Company names as incorporato , s Jos. B. Livingston, Andrew Robeno, Jr., Jas. H. Campbell, J. S. McCalla, Michael Jacobs, Jos. S. Money and Clifford P. McColla;gives them a cap ital of two thousand dollars, and empowers them . . to publish the Keystone in Philadelphia, a news• paper to be devoted to the objects of Masonry. Mr. Brown, of Mercer, has introduced a hill supplt mentary to the act to consolidate, revise, and amend the penal laws. It enacts that when ever any justice of the peace or alderman in the State shall be brought before any magistrate on theeharge of assault and battery, simplt assault or any other breach of the peace, the magistrate shall compel him to give security for his appear ance at the next Court of Quarter Sessions, and in default of ball, commit him to answer. Any justice or alderman who shall be convicted of as sault and battery or simple assault shall be im prisoned not less than three months and pay a fine of not less than $2OO. atiovk.numrifirs OF AR OC EA N ISTEARLE.REe TO RIVE. stars FROM FOR 131 VD 10wa............. 0 trusgow ..N ew York. Doc. 25 Atalanta London..N ow York.... ...... D sc. 20 'Union.. .......Southarupton..New York.. . Dee. 29 Denmark ...........Idverpool_Now York .....Doc. 30 France..............L1verp001_N ow York . El ,e. 30 Moravian ....Liverpool_ Portland.... ..... ...Dec. 31 Caledonia .. .......Glaagow..New York Jan. 1 Villa do Yalta Breet,..N ow Y0rk...........Jan. 2 Cuba.. Liverpool—New York Jan. 2 Kangaroo Liverpol —Now York vla 11... Jan. 2 New York. Southaruuton..New York ..1 an. 5 l'ir DEPAriI Rising Star New fork. :Asoin wall ...... ....Jan. 16 low a........ ...... .New York..Glasgew Jan. 16 Pioneer.. Philadelphia.. ..... Jan. 16 City of New 1 ork..New 'lr or k ..Liverooool .Jan. 16 Tonawanda Philadelphia—Savannah ...,Jan. 16 (Juba ...............New 1 ork..Liverpool Jan. 20 C010rad0............N0w 20 Union New York.. Bremen ....... 21 Columbia ...... ...New York.. Havana. ..........J an. 21 City of Antwerp .. New Y ork..LlveroooL ..... .......Jan. 23 Ville de Y 0rk..1iavre...... „Jan. 23 Caledonia .....New York..Gbasgow ....... ......Jan. 23 Juniata,. ..... Philadelphls...New Orleans. .......Jan. 28 rimack.........New York ..Rio Janeiro, 28 stars and Ottlpes....Philad . a..Havans • Jan. 27 Java ...... .New York.. Liverpool ..... —Jan 27 Nebraska. Now York..LiverPool...... ....Jan. 27 CAM' pt. *I) THADJK:. D. O. McCAM MO J.ENRY PRICE WIN ,WET Li EIULL. Mommy Colcurrntr, H ill A_RINE BULLEITIN. rOBT OP PrILLADELPELIA—JA.Nuany 16. Bon Rum. 7 161 St= Sm. 4 441 Woe WAvii. 412 ARRIVED YESTERDAY. Steamer Fanita.Freeman. 29 flours from New York,with mdse to John F Obl. Behr Olivia. Fox. 1 day from Odessa, Del. with grain to Jae L Bewley & Co. Behr Daniel Uorbit (new), Eldridge, 1 day from Odessa, Del. with grain lo Jas L Bewy & IJLEARED Yb le err anmAY. Steamer J Shrivel., Dennis. Baltimore, A Groves, Jr. Bark Beene Barrie, Allen. (henna. D Stetson & Uo. MEMORANDA Ship Mount Washington, Titcomb. from New York. at Valparaiso 11th ult Ship California, Adams, sailed from San Francisco 18th host for Sap kranctaco. Ship Kit Carson. Pennell. for Havre. which put back to Callao, tu distrese, repaired and sailed for destination on the lid ult. Steamer Wyoming. Teal. hence at Savannah 18th inst. Steamer Roman, Baker, cleared at Boato lath instant for thir port. Steamer Juniata, Rosie. at Havana (tom Now Or leans, and called 13th for this port. Steamer Hermann (NO), Wenke, cleated at New York yertordy for Bremetr. Steamer Morro Castle, Adams, cleared at New York Yesterday for Havana. Steamer Villa de Verb (Fr). Surmount, from Havre, at New York ysterday. Steamer City of New York. Tibbetts, from Liverpool. at New lock yesterday. Steamer it ginia (Br). Forbes, cleared at Boston 18th inst. for Liver pool VIA Halifax. Steamer General Meade. Sampson, from New York for New Orleans. was passed 11th inst. 130 miles mouth of Cape Lookout !Reamer Fire Queen, Williamson, at Liverpool 13th inst. barn new Orleans'. Steamer Acadia, Lee, from Glasgow 11th ult. for New York, was seen on the 24th. lat,bl 85, ion 00 Bark li• gin (Norw). Olsen. 82 days from Iquique. at New York yesterday with nitrate of soda and wooL Dark Pearl, Harding, from Heston loch Oct for Calcutta, Was spoken oth ult. let 2216 EL lon 80 38. [Wk. Faraway (lit) Dunham. from Boston 24th Sept. for Sydney, NS %V, was spoken 4th ult. let 24 02 13, 100 29 16 W. bark Annie Boylston t Br). Clark, at Callao 18th ult. from Boston, and called 24th for Chinches. Dark tlareptat. Minot from Havana for Now York, put into Nieman, Nl'. list ult. leaky. Brig Almon Sowell, Davie, cleared at Portland 13th inst. tor,4;ardenas. Brig Cite (Dar). Kalloron. 10 days from Rio Janeiro, at Nee. York yeattrday. with rodeo • Brig Johanna, McCarty. 48 (Jaye from Rio Janeiro. at New York yeste , ay. with coffee. Sans . Mary Milues. Crowell, hence for Boston. and Sarah Watson dtwth, from Portland for this oort. at Holmes' sole 11th inst. MIEDIVAIto F Iti,i4CII34IEDICINEB ' ' ' raxtrAntro 431 . GiumnuLrat. CO., ODEIIIST TO IL I. IL 'MINIM 'NAPOLEON, 45 iluz DE 141u1IELIEU, ... PARId. SOLUBLE PHOSPHATE OF.IILUN. By lames. Ed. U Docteur es Sciences. ÜBi &LILT ttG CO.. CURIE IBM PABIB. ACOOrdillg to the opinion of the members of the Paris Acad«my of 11 dielne, this article is superior to all the ferruginous preparations known. It agrete best with the stomach, never causes costiveness; It contains the eke. mouth of the blood and the osseous frame, and succeeds where other preparations fail, such as Valleys pi le, iron reduced by hydrogen, lactate of iron. and ferm nous mmeral %titer. One tablespoonful IA the rola on or syrup contains three grains of salt of iron. They are both colorless. A g ents in Philadelphia, • tritENCIT,RICUARDS & CO., N. W. cor. TE,NTiI and *IARKET Ste. (,OPAL DENTALLINA.A SUPERIOR aR'TICLE FOR 1 .-1 cleaning thr Teeth, dentroying animalcule, which in. feet them; giving tone to the genie, and leaving a feeling of frngrance and perfect cleanliness In the mouth. It may be used daily, and will be found to strengthen weak and htee...ing gums. while the aroma and tleterelvenens will recommend It to every one. Being composed with the assistance df the Dentist Physicians and Microscoplat, it in confidently offered aura reliable nubstittlte for the un• certain washes forme ly in vogue. Eminent Dentiste, acquainted with the constituents of the Dentallina. advocate tie use; it contains nothing to prevent lie unrestrained employment. Made only by - .JAMES T. '3IIINN. Apothecary, Broad and Spruce streets. For sale by Druggista generally, and k red. Browne, I). L. Stackboune. llassard & Co., • Robert C. Lavin, C. h. Reeny, Geo. C. Bower. 'mac H. Kay, Chan • Shivers, C. H. Needles., B. M. McColin, T. J. Husband, S. C. Bunting. Ambrose Smith, Chan. H. Eberle. Edward Parrinh, James N. Barka. Wm. B. W ebb. E. Bringhurst & James L. Bispbam. Dyott & Co.. Hughes & Combe, H. C. Weir's Sone, Henry A. Bower, Wyeth & Bm. I SABELLA MA tati RIANNO. M. D.. 225 M TWELFT H iStreet. Conadona fres. mra.l7 COAL AND WOOD. CROSS CREEK LEHIGH COAL. PLAIBTED & MoODLLIN. _ No. 8033 EIESTN UT Street. West PtrildelPhia. Sole Retail /kg for Cos° Brothers & C.o.'s celebrated Cross Creek Le Coal. from the Buck Mountain Vein. Thia Coal is p cularly adapted for making Steam for Sugar and Malt Houma. Breweries, &c. It is also mumr• passed as a Family Coal. Orders left at the office of th e Minent, No. SU WALNUT Street (Ist floor), will receive our isompt attention: - WNW arrangements made with manufacturers min a vs . jyld tf B. Id.SBOO BIM_4IIEIN F. BIIVAIT. MBE eir lON k 0 NED INVITE ATTENTION TO th stoc " O BPlitil Mountain. Lehigh and Locust Mountain Coal. which, with the pr anon givenbY us. we think can not be excelled by aro,' other Coal Office, Franklin Institute Blanding. No. 15 S. Seventh street. EINES & SIIEAFF. ialutf Arch street wharf, Schuylkill. DRY 6100D6: FANCY DRESS SILKS. (61 to el 50 per yard. CLOW. 0 OUT DttESS GOODS AT LOW PRICES.; CWEN STOUDAR SecondOTHE 4W, 4IV. and 4M Nortk Street. RICH BLACK BILKS AT LOW PRICES. Hevoral•Lute at $1 75. $1 86 and $2 00. Full Lines from $2 25 to $6 per yard. CUitWEN EiTouDART At BROTHER, 450,452 and 954 North Second Street. BLACK VELVETEEN FOR SACQUES AND sutra. 131,1PERIOS Ga.ADE. TWILLED BACK. BL CR. VV.I.VETEEN SI 26 to $1 50 Res yard. CURVIrEte 3'11)1)13,1kt & Baum 450. 452 and 454 North Second Street jal3-3t rrIEIE BF S. ST MAKES OF BLACK AND COLORED I SILK Fancy bilks. Fashionable Drees Goode. Lyons Silk Velvet.. . beet Velvet Clothe. Fine Astrachan Clothe. Deeirable Cloaking!. Breaks and Blanket Shawls. Silk Harker, and Velveteene. Fine Blankete, Fancy Drees Goode cluing out cheap. EDWIN BALL 6; CO., 25 South Second etreet. INSTRUCTIOrt. PENNSYLVANIA IA IT ITARY ACADEMY, AT CHESTER, DELAWARE COUNTY, PA. (For Boarders only.) Session reopens THU/BR/AY, January 7th. The Buildings are new and very complete in all their appointruer to l horough instruction in the Rnglish Branches. A very thee ouch course in Mathematics, Mc , hanics, Chemistry and Civil Engle ceile.g. Ancient and Modern Languages optional. Careful attention is given to the moral and re , "igloos cultue e of cadets. Circulars may be obtained of JAMi 8 H tett NE, E5Q.,626 Chestnut et.. T. B. PE i ERSON, ESQ., 8 , 06 Uhectnut or a COL. THEU. HYATT. d. President P. M. A. Il 0R B E M ANS H I P SCIENTIFICALLY taught at the Phlladi Iphia Riding School, , ourth street above Vine. 'fhe horses are quiet and thoroughly trained For hire, saddle homes. Also car. riages at all times for weddings. parties, opera, funerals, dm. Horses trained to the saddle. THOMAS CRAIGE & SON. JODltfcaintorv. THE LEHIGH UNIVERSITY. SULTH BETHLEHEM, PA. The Second Term-will open on WEDNESDAY. Fob. Bd, 1869. '1 he special schools of Civil Engineering. Me. cba cal Engineering, Mining and Analytical Chemictry are in full operation for advanced Students reeking a p fersional course. Practical instruction in the Machine t.hop and Rolling Mill, and in Railway Engineering on the road, is combined with theoretical exorcizes Jo the class room. Ayply to HENRY COPPEE LL D., , jaB lmrp4 DEBT PENN b QUARE ENGLIBII AND Le,?. School School for Young Men and Buys, 131:m01m/cat corner time,et and Merrick dram. Puvits admitted at anY GEORGE EABTD oltN, 13.,PrInclpaL All lino* 011 N 61. FOX. DI. D. 611 Borah Fifteenth etreet, will give instructions in French and German, at any place desired. to gentlemen wishing a knowledge of these languages, with a view to the medical profession. 'fills is a deeirable opportunity. 4021.tfe : , THOMSON'S LONDON KITCHENER, OR European Ranges, for families. hotel 33 or public institutions, in twenty different elms Also. Phil" adelphia Ran_gee, Hot Air Eurnacee. Portable Deaters.-Low down Grates. Fireboard Stoves. Bath Boil. ere. Stewhole Plates. Broilers, Cooking Stoves, etc., Ns holeeale and retail by the MbllUfaC lucre. SHARPE & THOMSON. n026 , e7.f.m1im0-J No. 209 North Second street. THOMAS 8. DIXON & SON% Late Andrews & Dixon, No. 1324 CHASI NUT Street, ghilada.. Opposite:United States Mint. Manufacturers of LOW DOWN. P.ARLGit,_ CHAMBER. OFFICE And other GRATES, For Anthracite. Bituminous and Wood Fire WARM.AIV FURNACES, For Warming Public and Private Buildings. REGISTERS, VENTILATORS, D CHIMNEY CA PS. MORIN fI.RANGES. BATILBOLLERS. WHOLESALE and RETAIL. HAJ1111;WAIIIE. 'DODGERS` AND WOSTENTIOLM'S POCKET it, KNIVES, PEARL and STAG HANDLES, of beau. tiful Stitch. RODGERS' and WADE & BUTCHER'S, and the CELEBRATED LECOULTRE RAZOR. SCISSORS IN CASES of the finest quality. Razors. Kniv, S INSTRUMENTSbIe Cutlery approvednd Polished. EARof the roodconstruction to assist the hearing, at P. MADEIRAS, Cutler and Sur. gical Instrument Maker. US Tenth street, below C lktf hest. nut. my GAS EIXTVRES. Li_ AB FIXTURE B.—MISKEY, MORRITAL & YOTXtigiallg . 1 1 .I ( e.r.n.ut , ollet Alilllgaggitro% ghlingialc.itfialfrnti:reagt:lX‘gc...t.rtzrzoofitgoLCll:e gas pines into dwellings and public buildings, and attend to extending, altersag and rep Airing lOU Pip a. All work warranted • TI3ITE CASTILE SOAP.-100 SORES OENUINE White Castile Soap. landing from brig Pennsylvania, from 003014 and for sale by JOB. B. BUSBIES .b CO.. 10) South Dolman) amine. r-tl5 1869 • w 110104. 400'# 111 Vii 'IADIMUS *, CO 3 1 .6 - • ' V.I4 DIAMONDI. Ilk AtiEltg, WATCIIIMANIFSLIO k BUN vitiLVe - WATDEP:444 4EWELRY REPAIRED. Criiiietnnt Rt., Phila. A. for, Watches of the Finest Makers., Diamond and Other Jewelry. Of the West style& Solid Silver and Plated Ware, SMALL STUDS FOR EYELET MOLE!. A large assortment Ind reeelvoldorith a variety of eatfinge. b to . Wlll ' IL WARNE & 00.1 Wholesale Dealers in WATCHES AND JEME.L.I4IE, L Z. WWI' Seventh and Chestnut Steeds, And late of No. 86 flout)) Third street id 18 WIMP WVILNINIIIINO 000DIlle FINE DRESS SHIRTS GENTS' NOVELTIES. J. W. SCOTT & CO., 814 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia Four doors below Continental Hotel. n2bl4 m W ti PATENT SHOULDER SEAM SHIN', MANUFACTORY. 3rders fat these Wanda!" n 13hIsts =woo itfounptto WWI otice. Gentlemen's Fandtahing Goods, Of late deo In fail varlets. WINCHESTER & CO.. 706 CHESTNUT. of .tf • - GENT'S PATENT ESPIUNO AND BUT' j ii toned Over Gatterat.lotha.eather.wluto =a ... ~.. brown LLnen ; Cbildren's Cloth and Velvet 4 Leggin also also made to order ( 4 4 ,1 , ,-;., WENT% FL KNIBWNO GOODS, -•!" ,Of eve ry desatiption, very low, Ka chaertnuil 1 1 ' street, corner of Ninth. The best Kid 13Inveir for ladies and lents. at _ u Fat rLDERFEWB BAZAAR. note tti OPEN IN THE EVENING. PICTURES FOR PRESENT 3. A. S. ROBINSON, No. 910 CHESTNUT STREET, Use just received exquisite specimens of suitable for Holiday Gina. Fine Dreidin "Enamels " on Porcelain, In great variety. SPLENDID PAINTED PllO rota SIAPH Including • number of choice gems. A Superb Line of Chrornoco. A large assortment of NEW ENGRAVINGS. &c. Also, RICE STYLE FRAMES of elegant new patterns. THE LATEST, MOST BEAUTIFUL A.ND PERMA• vent method of coloring Photographs. termed I.IWRYTY FES, The greatert advantage of the ivorytypo over ewers other method let to durability. being impervlou4 to water or air. The paper being prepared and cemented on plate glass, the colons cannot possibly fade. end have all the beauty and appearance of the fined ivory painting. They can be either taken from Life Daglerrotypes or Ambre. types. 'A hen not taken from lite. It Is necessary to give the color of the eye, hair and general complexion. Rte. cuted in the 1131 , be.t, style of art JAMES W. WI .1 .lAMS, Artist's Emporium 146 South eighth stmet, Paile.delphia dell 6m5 Where apecimene can be seen WA MI TNOTON. D. C.. Vovemtw , 2Prh, lisr% To the llosPn and Philadelphia Sall Fish Company: I have thoroughly eir.snined the Letters Patent grunted to William IX Cutler. of Phtlad.lehia, September Silt, PIA, for an inu.roved method of preparing, desiccating and preserving 11th. with the following result: The claims in Cutler's patent cover- fine, the ooned and desiccated fish as a new manufacture or commarcial article: and. second. the proms, described in the 'Pacifi cation by which that new article te prepared. In my of tnion, th, re are valid and mtllcient The first claim socurea to the inventor booed and desk. rated fish ar a new article of mantas ture or commerce, hie whatecer process it map be, prodWea. t )01 , ,r processes than that chtino d by Cutler may be d.-vired, and may pet baps. be new arid p•tmanble; but the elective. er of such iow r,ofee , annot put th• article into the markof end fell it. If be did en he would if.frtnee the fleet china in Cutler's patent, and be liable to damageo to the extent of such infringement ; and to produce this new article by an 001 procene app-fed to other things would be equally an infringerectit 4J Cutler's patent. I have no doubt the article and the process claimed in Cutler's patent are new and patentable, and , t oo patent etifficient for their protection EDMUND fiCTIK 8, Former Commissioner of Patents, concur in the above opinion of Edmund li ßurk., Peg AR. 0010. PUILADELPCIA, December dfftb, I concur in above opinions el' 'Edmund Burke and Geo. I:Jardine, Eeda. Nam 1 De CLARBNGEceA.EW A 3Oth. Ik RD. mb S er 7 , ... • I have examined the letters patent referred to in the foregoing opinion of Mr. Burke. and fully avec with Mr. Burke in that opinion. Any'oerion using the precast! to Prepare the fudi infringes the patent, and any person either wring or selling the "Mt tN M D A SD DESICCATED CODF1811." whet/ter prepared bp Oat PTOCCB9 erre ern= I'ILOCEtIe, infringes the patent. GEO. GIFFORD. Name Youn, December sothosaa. I concur in the foregoing opinion', of Meows. Burke, herding, Reward and Gifford. CHAS. M. KELLER. Nnw YOMi. January Mb, 1869. We concur In the foregoing opinions. bTEWARr. RiTCli& WOODFORD. 271 lineenwar, N. Y.. January 9th. 1869. jell 818 D pLAtsica TI arm I . FRESH FRUITS AND PRESERVES. Bunch, Layer, Seedless and Sultana Raisins, Currants, Citron, Oranges, .Prunes, Figs, duo., Every description of Groceries suitable for tie Holidays. ALBERT C. ROBERTS . Corner Eleventh and Vine Streetas ADY APPLES WHITE GRAPES HAVANA Orasles--New Porter Shen Almonds—Fineet Dohe. Raielne, at COUdTV/3 Bad End Grocery, No. 118 South Second street. 11011 EMUS'S PATTE DE FOI GRAB—TRUFFLES— French-11 Peas and Mushrooms, always on baud at Ci ÜbTlOB East End Oroiery, No. 118 South Second street. SQCOTOI - 1 ALE AND BIVIWN STOUT, YOUNGER , dc C 0.% Scotch Alo,and Brown Mout-the ger aloe article, at $2 frOper dozen, at COMITY'S East End Grocery. No. 118 South Second street. qUEEN OLIVES-800 GALLONS 'CHOICE QUEEN oby the barrel or gallon. at COUSTY'S EAI3I. D GROCERY, No. Ile bouth Second street, SHERRY WINE-CHOICE SHERRY WINE AT $2 - 75 per gallon, bY tho caek of 1234 gs. at 6. OUSTY'r) EAbT END GEOCERY. No. 118 s outh&cowl otrart. 1610 PIIBILICATION d). L E9 URFS,—A NEW (301DISE. OF - LECTURES. AS del vered at the New 1 ork Muscunf whatatomy, . bi acing the subjects . . Dow to live and to live for; Youth, Maturity and otd age; Manhood generally re. viewed; the cause of indigestion, flatulence and Nervous Diseases accoun forwardedoe ki t unableni t heso lectures will be to nettle , ' to attend on receipt of four dimwit, by addroivina J. J. Dyer, 35 tieh ,o 1 street, Boston. feILA THE FINE AUTO. 311INCELLANEdbCrs. :' t - -4 k '4lAr*R"'6 4 : 9Ast 1T H, ANDolpilBc ‘,. • iCI„, • 4 •T:, , ...zyttS Irealelivin V. S. Bonds and Members of ittocip and Hold excliaego, receive accounts of Batiks and Planners on lib. erat tertnai - ativairmincor e'*clittlige on C. J 41, SOIVIAndOn• B. Metzler - S Co;: Frankfort. James W Tucker & Co.: Peels, Atid other priorities.% eines; avid Lettere Of Credit ftvallable - iiiireugholat Europe S. W ;earlier TPIIII and'ettestnut Street. COUPONS UNION PACIFIC R.R. CENTRAL PACIFIC & 5-20's and, 31.S.S1's, DUE JANUARY let AND GOIL4 ID, WANTED. DE AVEN&BRO, Debiers in Government Eleouritiert, No. 4 0 S. Third St. GLENDINNING, DAVIS & 00. 8 MAKERS &NO BROKERS, No. 48 80IITH THIRD STREET. PIIILADELPIILL OLENDINNING, DAUB & AMORY, No. 2 Nassau Street, NEW YORE. Buying and Selling Stocks, Bonds and void on Vommismion. a Specialty. Philadelphia House connected by Telegraph with the wench Boards and bold Room of New Vora. detZein B.A_NEJNG BOOBS A YCO Oliel 112 and 114 80. THIRD ST. PHI.C• A 1) DEALERS IN ALL GOVERNMENT SECURITIES We will receive applications fcr Policies of Life Insurance in the new National Life Insurance Company of the United Btatea. Fall information given at our office. ELEVENTH QUARTERLY REPORT OF THE NATIONAL RANA. UF TUE REPUBLIC If+O - 4 RESOURCE:6 - Loans and dieconnto..... , ,st,otO 0,54 United Btates bond deposited with Trearnrer of C. 8........... MVO 03 Ford' on hand.... . . ..... . ..... 14i.fitu fict Real cattalo (productive)... ...... 10 12 Leral.trnder note!, coin. and can thicatee Natio al Bank 'Wes .. . I ract Jona' currency n05e5. ... . ...... rts/nom Prom Iblue Doe from other banks Ex pewee and taxer LLA imams Capitol ti , tock. Circulation.... k(eposii ii ..... l'nnfit and Idea a6w I mot' IbUMIBEJI. MAU - LE BROTHER & CO., 2500 South Street 1869 r 24111111 1,111Eilli: 1869 CHOICE SELECTION OE MICHIGAN CORK PINE MR PAT i EENS. 't69. 3Y,•IICE HEW 1869 LARGE STOCK FLORIDA FLOORING. FLORIDA FLOORING. CAROLINA FLOoK.IN G. 'Moll , IA FLOORING. DELAWARE FLOORING ABB FLOORLNG. WALNUT I. LOORD G 1869. Wi.IBFLORIDA STEP BOARDS. IE6 FLORIDA STEP BOaltDr. RAIL PLANK. BAIL PLANK. 1869.1vvfdl1l: VlrytEuiss 69. WALNUT BOARDS, WALNUT TED PLANK. AbBOR FUR CABINET :MAKERS; BUIWEIO3. &O. 181.:011 UNDERTAKER& LUMBER VEY. UNDRRTAKERS , LUMBER RBD WALNUT AND TINE. 1869. SEASONEWPOPLAR. bEASONED MURRY. ASII WHITE OAK PLANK AND BOARDS numoxie. 1869. ElPratt 1869. 'NORWAY SCANTLING. ---- - CEDAR SHINGLES. UEDA H. SHINGI.E9._ CYPRESS SHINGLEbi. FOR LARGE BALE LOW. ENT. 1869. PLASTERING LATIN. 1869 RI PLASTENG LATH. lawTH. NatILUILE IntarVIREER aC 09. 2600 Bourn STREET . 1869. ItEDIOVAILA REMOVAL.—THE LONG EBTABLISIIED DEPOT for the purchase and .sale of second hand, doom windows. atoro fixtures. die., from Bmonth street to blith. street. above Oxford, where ouch articles aro for Mak in great variety. Also new doors, sashes, shutters, f 3 c. jilig3m• • /NATHAN W ABUINGTON 1101;6E, CAPE ISLAND, N. J., Romaine open during the winter; good 'tee 3mmodAtin e GEO. Ii CAICEI Proprietor. set.B49 (40 14001 00 14 4'12 148 014.. A 00 G 47,2.4 $957.315 95 6 19 no, 82.bal rj3l,dOl)WU tA) 4r/ fiki OnJ -T7,111,,,,0.,Lt.ba,5ii 1, 64, $2 W4;49 , 1 !ra JOAEPII I'. IAUSIFORD. L.:adder 1869 1869.. 0 A% LS. • TELIESSIAPIEIIO--sloo2ollutitir.. Litter. Cirneis'of India , RIOT. nits h ie l 7 . .nbinlnated for Vatted liiMtes Senator., by' t he, publican dinette pf the •Legleitititte pt, that State.' Tine-Virginia Conferenee °entwine° had inter views with General Grant, Seeretary a fich ‘ ufteld, and prominent Congressmen, yesterday:. - • Govsnruna FAIRCHILD'S message to the WISCORi Ein Leghlature,yesterday morning, indicates that the State debt is $2,252,057, hi Inn Florida Senate a. resolution to recon sider the vote of Wednesday, contirailug Gover nor Reed's appointments since impeachment, was .lOst. •-• Tint "Ktfillux" carried ofra colored horse thieto from the Jail at Murfreesboro' Tenn., on Wednesday night. , NVhat_tbey have dime with him is not, known, , • - - • - THE President, yesterday, nominated to the Senate, Hoe. Thomas B. Florence, as Internal Revenue Assessor, for the Second Pennsylvania District. - TnteConntittee sent by authority of ;hs.. .Ma bama Legislature to negotiate for the transfer of West Florida to Alabama, arrived yesterday in Tallahassee, and called 'on Governor "Reed, and presented their credentials. Tim steamship Gulf City, from Galveston, for. New York, has been totally wrecked off Cape ,Lookatit. Of 25 persona on board, only three, who mere picked up by the W. P. Clyde; are known to be saved. IN Louisville,' a few nightielnee,, a man named Weathers. while intoxicated, asked his little eon to spell a word. This-the child could, •mbt do, whereupon he beat it savagely, - aa tlata held it over the tire until its body was all blistered. Se has been arrested tor the crime. Tun Committee appointed by the Directors of the New York Central Railroad to examine' the stock matters of the company*, report that the regulations to prevent an over-lesue of stock are as perfect as can be devised• no such over-issues have been math, and that the capital stock out standing on the 16th of December last was $26,- 795,006. The report is signed by Rufus W e Peck ham, of Albany; t.harles Stebbins, of Cazenova; and A. W. Griswold, of Troy. Fortieth Congress—Si:gird session. CLOSE. OF. YESTERDAY'S PROCREDLEGS. BESTATE.—Mr. • Wilson introduced a bill to amend the act of March 2, regulating the tenure of certain civil offices, which was referred to the Joint Committee on Retrenchment. It providds that all persons holding, or who shall hereafter hold civil offices; to which they have been up ' pointed by and with the, consent of the Senate, except the Secretaries of State, Treasury, War, Navy. , and Interior, the rostma.ster-General mid Attorney-General, and others that may hereafter be made Cabinet offices, shall be entitled to nold such offices until a successor shall have been In like manner appointed and - duly qualified, except otherwise provides for in this bill. Section two provides that daring a recess of the Senate the rrt.licient shall have authority to suspend any officer SO appointed, except Judges of we Supreme Court, and to matte en ad interim appointment until the neit meeting of the Senate, and until-the case shall be agreed upon and determined by that body. The .suspension must be report-ea to the Senate within twenty days stfU:r lta meeting. In case of Its Concurrence that suspension may be made by a removal, but it the Senate do not concur, the suspended (Mittel shall resume the furretions of his office, big shall notreceive'parfor the time during which be was suspended. The President may, however, at any time before reporting such suspension to the Senate, revoke it and reinstate the suspended officer in diaper for Mance of his duties. Section three repeals the, first two sections of the act of March 2d, as above referred to. . Mr. Kellogg introduced a bill to aid the con struction of a orotribsitestern railroad and tele graph line to the Pacific Ocean, with branches and connections, Which was referred to Me Com mittee on .Pecifie Railroads. It incorporates a company under me style and name of We South western Pacific Railroad Company, with a &pi ta! stock of ono hundred million dollars, to con struct and maintain a railroad and telegraph line from Fulton, ArkanallA, crossing the Trinity river between the 32d and and parallels to El Paso, on tee Rio Grande; thence through New Mexico and Arizona ton point on the Rio Colorado, near the southeastern boundary of California, and thence to San Francisco, with branches from the cross- Ing of Trinity river to a railroad running from Louisiana through Marshall. county, Texas, and from some point in California to. Sea Diego. in aid of the enterprise the bill proposes to giant twenty sections per mile on each side of tue tine, abet six per cent. thirty-year bonds of tee government to the amount ut twenty thou sand dollars per mile in New Mexico and Arizona, and sixteen thousand dollars per mile for the rest of the line, to be secured by a second mortgage. Mr:Sumner introduced a bill, providing that persons attempting to exercise powers of office for which they are disqualified by the Constitu tion and laws of the United States shall be pun ished, on conviction, by Imprisonment for two years at bard labor, and making it the special duty of officers of the United States Courts, which are to have exclusive jurisdiction over such Cases. LO institute proceedings against such persona Referred to the Committee on the Ju diciary. The Senate then resumed the consideration of the bill for the relief of Bac Murphy, of De catur, Alabama, which was debated by Messrs. Sawyer, Thayer, Howard, Stewart, Morton, Wit h. Williams and Howe. , / 6 Adjourned. The special order was then taken up, when Mr. Van Horn (N. Y.) spoke at length in support of his bill to provide for the construction of a ship canal around the Falls of Niagara. He argued its importance and necessity in a military, travel and commercial point of view, and earnestly maintained that its construc tion could work no injury to our present lines of CoMmunication. and that it was a national work, fdr' the benefit of the whole country; and the duty of .Government was to further and support it, as It would increase the production of an immense extent of country. Wisdom and sound statesmanship and a high sense el duty demanded that the work be consum mated as speedily as possible. Mr. Van Horn spoke one hdur in support of the bill, and was followed by Mr. Humphrey (N. Y.), who opposed the bill. One for the purpose of constructing the canal was passed by the House during the Thirty-ninth Congress, but failed in the senate, and why was this bill Intro duced here? Private capital could not be pro cured to build it, and that was the reason why Congress was asked for 512,000,000 to be placed in the hands of the Secretary of War to construct the work. It was a scheme of •the Dominion from beginning to end. The construction of this canal was to revive the reciprocity treaty with Canada, and for no other purpose. . Mr. Van Horn—Do I understand my colleague to Buy that I am in favor of the revival of the re ciprocity treaty. Mr. Flumphrey—l say that fide Scheme is in the interest of the Now Dominion and of a revival of the reciprocity treaty. Mr. Van Horn—l want to say I dad my friends are oppOsed to' ita.renewal.'. • , Mr. Humphrey was sorry to say that one of the Secretaries of the Government should so far pan der to the interests of the schemes as to use the report's of Mr. Brega, in view of the fact that the canal would be, of no interest to, the West, and a part of the plunder scheme. R esealed to hini it was,time the I3ouee should consider whether they, have the money to invest for the purposes of the billvvhich he opposed at length. Mr. Paine (Wis.) delivered his views, showing that the interest of the great Statei Of the N,orth west imperatively'demand increased facilities for the transporting of their surplus agricultural pro ducts to a market. He said what they want and MUM have is cheaper transportation. Mr. Washburn& (111.) desired theta time should be fixed to,r tolthigAvote on the bill; it was now the middle of January, and they had passed only three of the general appropriation bills. The others should be passed, so as to be sent to the There was conversation on the subjedt, but no -conclusion reached as to what time the vote should be taken. The liouse adjourned Sale of the Steamer £tlautic. WASHINGTON, th 111 - 14.—The Senate Naval Committee at theirsessien , this morning agreed to 'report adversely upon various private bills. They also decided to refer the House bill for the sale of the steamer Atlantic to the Attornoy •General, for his opinion upon the legal points In volved.' From ow Late: Editions of Yeaterda,y !.• • Affairs E 4 ltOifiktoe4Pitfttycetbe•gtilladeistila Evening Valletta: 6 Wm:nimbi : tar,' Vani' BeconstriiritiOn, Cistimittee egamined General Gillem in reference to the condition of affairs in ,Mississippl, this, morning s ,b adjournediwltsout concluding un el , to-mo row liGeh.`Gille;m testifies that affairs are in a pros perous condition, and thattitirep and order pre vail. :Be defended taimielf against the charge madertbat be , was adinlniStering affairs In-tbe•ln tercet of the rebel element, and, affirmed that the recent election which defeated _ _ the Committee . will not tie ready to. rq - I constitution was conducted- - fairly. The I Falai Affray 10 11111qois. port tiithe House on this case for , rieverat, dity4l4 ;' CnrCson •, Jan: N'apl Ille, ['page yet. ' ‘ 1 : j%.1..c0up0, Illinois, on, Tuesday night, James Laird, The evidence in the Georgia case Is about ;. Deputy U. B. birtrehafief. .:Wyoming : . Territory, finished. The Committee will make a report to t-'was •try,Channeey Bailey as he was enter toe House earl next week., " . • , Ing4blr43ailey's bed room, &Ir. Bailey suspecting It is said that s Teti - art-will recommend the i impropet`itaffeourse 'with 'a'rlivomatt 11 4 State be remanded back to - its''tcrritorial condi- 1 , previously elcitied-, with a Universalist ' nalnister. thin, until the people realize that it is to their The citizens justify the homicide. Interest to act In accordance with , the reeonstrne; ' non laws. From Washington. [Special Deapatch to tha Phila. gverdna Bunetta.l Vorn.stinvaroN,Jati. 15:—Both branches of Con gress were devoid of interest to-day. In the Hon scMr. Ashley, from the. Committee on Territorlee• reported a bill wiping out of existence the territory of Utah, bydividing it out to the adjacent territories. Th i s is one plan for breaking up Mormonism. No action was taken en the The . Niagara ship canal bill came up at the close of the morning hour. _ Mi. Van Horn made a long speech in support of it. The National Colored Convention now in sea- Sion here were addressed this afternoon by CoL Forney, and Col. Tnmerck, N. H. A resolution was adopted, inviting Congress to visit the con vention. . Alinendiug the Civil Tenure Act. [Special Despatch to the Philadelphia Evening EuMelina WiteIIINGTON, Jan. 14.—Senator Wilson's bill, introduced to-day, provides for amending the present Tenure of Office act, and not for repeal ing it. It looks as if the law would be amended by the Senate, but there is a doubt of its being repealed. The Missouri Senatorship. [Special Deepatch to the Philadelphia. Evening Bulletin.) WASHINGTON, Jan. 14.—The despatch announ. clog the nomination of Carl Schurz, as Senator from Missomtin caucus last evening,gives gene ral satisfaction to all the Republicans here with the exception of the few friends of Senators Hen derson and Drake. There is much silent rejoicing among the Radicals that Henderson has met with such an overwhelming defeat. The action of Senator Drake in going to Missouri to defeat the nomination of Mr. Schurz is criticised very severely by many of his valleagnes,as being unnecessary interference nrt his part, and his failure, therefore, is well received in Republican circles. Speaker Colfax and Governor Harriman of New Hampshire, bid an Interview this morning with Gen. Grant. The Repeat] of the Civil Tenure Bill• (Special Despatch to the Phila. Eveuiag Bulletin.) ViAtiIiDCGTOB, Jan. 14.—A partial canvass of of the Senate shows that the sentiment is gene rally favorable to a repeal of the Civil Tenure law. It is thought, however, that it will not be acted upon until 'afar the close of the session. Senator Ferry, of Conn., says the repeal of the law now might defeat the Republicans 'in his State at their election next April He believes that every Republican in, office would be at once ,turned out. The Geqrgla Casq. (Spectal,Deepatch to the Mite. Evening Bulletin. esiimoro-s, Jan. 14.—A special meeting of the Judiciary Committee of the Senate is to be held to-morrow, to consider the Georgia case. The Maine Senator—U. A. Sin yttie. ISeectet terpetth to the Plated& 'Evening ttulletin.l WASH/I.:610N Jan. 19.---Senator Morrill ap peared on the door fresh from the Senatorial con test in Maine. Among the memorials presented to-day was one from twenty-nine leading mercantile firms at New York, asking the conftrmati•n. of Q. A. Smythe. to the Russian mission, _ It Is. thought Smythe's case will come np this afternoon. Pension to Mrs. !Lincoln. illpecial lleepatch to the Phila. Evening Bulletin.) WA,III_NGTON, Jan. 14.—Senator Morton intro duced a bill granting a peneion. to an amount which was lett blank, to the widow of President Lincoln. The preamble recounts that President Lincoln. while Commander-in-Chief of the Army and Navy, was killed in the late war, and his widow, therefore, is as much entitled to a pen sion as the widow of any army otlicer. The Case of Commodore Meade. WSpecial Detpatch to the Phila. Evening Bulletin.] ASHINGTON, Jan. 14.—The chairman of the Senate Naval Committee made a report to the Senate recommending that the application of Commodore R. W. Meade, asking to be restored to active service, be indefinitely suspended. Ity the Atlantic Cable GLAsi.ow, Jan. 14. The Prince of Wales Thealre. in this city, was totally destroyed by fire Is st night. No lives were lost. MADRID, Jan..l4.—The government authori ties received a despatch yesterday from Captain General Hulce, of Cuba, asking for reinforce ments. He thinks he can suppress the insurrec tion there with 1,000 additional troops. LoNpos, Jan. 14.—The press of London and Paris almost unanimously condemn the attitude of Greece in insisting on representalion in the conference. Pennsylvania. Legislature limuusturno, Jan. 14. SENATE.— The Senate was called to order at 11 o'clock, and three petitions were presented, but none of interest to Philudelphia. Mr. White moved to proceed to nominate can d dau s for the United States Senate. Mr. Connell nominated John Scott; Mr. Jack son. C. R. Buckalew. Mr. Searigbt, Samuel Evans, of Fayette: Mr. White, George Connell,of Philadelphia; Mr. 'Mclntire. W. A. 'Wallace; Mr. McCandless, Hon. James H. Campbell, of Phila delphia. Mr. Nagle presented a petition from sundry citizens, contesting the seat of J. I. Clark Hare, President Judge. To-morrow was fixed for the drawings of the committee in the case. The Senate then proceeded to the House to the drawing df the committee, in the Greenbank contested election case, and, on returning, ad journed. norm—The annual report of Wein 'Forney, State Librarian, was presented. The Speaker announced the Standing Commit tees of the House. The chairmen are as follows: Of Ways and Means—Mr. Wilson, of Alle gheny. Judiciary—General Strang - , of Tioga. JuOlciary, Local—Mr. Herr, of Dauphin. Municipal Corporatione--Mr. Stokes, of Phila delphia. Iron and 'Coal Coratinnies—Mr. Foy; - of Phila.;. delphia. Mines and Manufactures—Mr. Holgate, of Philadelphia.. 1 • - . Roads, Bridges and Ferries—Mr. Marshall, of. Indiana. Railreads--Mr. Davis, of Philadelphia,..,. Pen sicins-31r. Hamilton, of Indiana. : Federal Relatioris--Mr.-Philiips, of Chester. Education—Mr. Nicholson, of Beaver. Estates—Clark, of Warren. Counties—Brown, of Huntingdon. Corporations—Hong, of Philadelphia. ..Agrichlture—Mtiler, oL Allegheny. • Divorces—Webb, of Bradford. Passenger Rail ways—Subers, of Philadelphia. Banke-,-Leedom, or Delaware. - Accounts—Rea, of Erie.. Mrarown, of Huntingdon, moved to proceed to the nomination of candidates for United States Senator ' 'which Was agreed te. ' Mr. Davis nominated John Scott, of Hunting don. Mr. Brown, of Clarion, nominated Wm. A Wallace. Mr. Jones nominated Asa Packer Mr. Brown nominated Goo. F. Morgan. Mr. Josephs nominated 'C.' R. Buckalew. - The Senators being- introduced, the members of both branches proceeded to choose a commit itee to try the contested election case of M. Rus sell Thayer vs. Thomas Grcenbank. Messrs. E. T. Chase and J. A. Simpson appeared for the con testant, and Messrs. R. A. Lambertzu and a H. A. Dechert for Judge Cireenbant. THE DAILY, VEMNO, BULLETIN-PHILADELPHIA, FRIDAY, JANUARY 15 1869. . , -Impiroveissont ott tveiri flax bora. I_ll3peclal Despatch to tho Mal /Cranial! Bituoun.i - WesiltriarON, Jan. I.4.—The &hate . on Commerce were at work to-it_t yn the River aid 'lather bill left before, th.o or aV,Jttel : 'close of thetiat aetialon. They arc correcting the various amounts op ! proprutted,and exptet to finish the bill this week. , Vlore nioansastitionii. ' D3peelel Deep/itch to the Dbibe. Evening Bulletin. l Wasuirurron, Jan. 14.--The, R;esident today nominated Ptny Fuller. Collector Of Cnstomis at 1 New Orleans, and John savage as Consul at Leeds. The latter. the Howl Centre of the re nhtn organization In New York.' b bevy. Flrsngru., N. Y., Jatt.'l4':—The dry goods store of 8. T. Conch, at Cold, fifylpg, was entered by burglars yesterday morning, thi3`thieves forcing an entrance through the shoit*lndewan4 rob= bing the store of *BOO. - • The Denver (Colorado) Tribune of . tho after giving a_long account-, of Indian - thleviw.. sad Murdering operations , 'concludes with this , statement: _ - _ ' Mr. W. H. Malony, who is engagedln hunting. and has been in camp at the month of :Crow Creek, eameld last, evening, and furnished us with the following tidditionEit particulare of late Indian operations. Christmas day six Indians ran off his stock, eight horses. A' tight between his party of eleven hunters and the Indians en sued, -anti resulted in wounding -one Indianand capturing his pony, and one pony killed. gr. Malony had his horse killed in the fight. Next, 'the redskins dropped in and burned Iliff's camp, fourteen miles from Crow Creek, where his herd ers, with 2,000 head of cattle, were staying, and ran off four horses. They also set fire to the prairie and the feed is entirely destroyed. Last Sunday eventing twenty-eight Indians ran off thirty horses. belonging -to Geary, who immediately raised a company of thirty men, and _ went in pursuit, ex-, , pecting to overtake them on Arrapaticie Creek. They had nbt returned when Mr. Malony left. Geary's wife's father (an Indian) says that this a= band of Sioux and that _they are camped on Pumpkin Creek, yhich is north of the South Platte and empties into it below Crow Creak. ,21, warrior's hat, bedecked with feathers, indicating that they are on the war-path, was picked up near Pine Bluffs. Geary Says that the Indians who ran off his stock, all had their war-caps on. Mr. Malony has seen: many "signs" for a month past, indicating , that the country between the Platte and the railroad at Pine Bluffs is alive whirred skin s. MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE c as h Assets..... :414200,000. By the provisions of lb charter the entire surplus belongs to policy holders, awl must be paid to them in dividrT , rw or. reserved for their greater , securiA. Divi dend. are made on the contribution plan, and annn. ally, commencing two years from the date of e policy. it has already made two dividends amounting: to e 102,0011, an amount never before equaled during the first three yeare of any mmpany. PERMITS TO TRAVEL GRANTED TVITB OUT EXTRA CHARGE. NO•POLICP FEE REQUIRED. FEMALERISKS TAKEN AT THE USUAL PRINTED RATES, NO EXTRA LLEMIUM BEING DEMANDED. tlpplicatioil for all kinds of policies, life, tee-year life endowment, terms or cnildren•e endowment, taken. and all information cheerfully afforded at the NO. 408 WALNU P STREET Particularattention ev en to FIRE AND MARINE R Which. in all Instancee, will be pineed i ttrt-dasx Com. paniee of thie city, ae well ae thou) of known standing In New Y ork. New England and Baltimore. ACCIDENTAL ELDER STO AND CK INISURANCE ON LIVE carefully attended to. in leading Companies of that kind. By atrict personal attention to, and prompt despatch of haziness entrusted to my care. I hope to merit and re. ceiye a full share of public patronage. M. M. BARKER. "No. 408 Walnut Street, mhl3-1 w tit QTATEMENT OF THE ASSETS OF THE ai PENNSYLVANIA FIRE INSURANCE COSI PA NY. published in conformity with the provisions of the sixth section of the Act of Assembly, approved April 5, 1t42: Bonds and Mortgages ..... ..... „ Dills i ece ivable .... . ........ ..... . Philadelphia City sixes Philadelphia City lives Penneylvania State Loan Cincinnati sixes . . Piileburgh sixes United States Loan, 6 per cent., 1881........... Unxted States Loan. 5-20.1865- ........ United States Loan. 5-20, 1867 United States Loan. 5.20, 6 per cent.. . Philadelphia, Wilmington. and Haitimore Railroad Company, 500 'Mares 33,957 38 PennsylvaLia Railroad Company, 430 shares.. 31718 46 Pennsylvania Railroad Company Loan 10,000 00 Camden and Amboy Railroad Company Loan, 53,430 55 Philadelphia and Erie Railroad Co. ... 34,609 010 North Pennsylvania Railroad Co Loan 37,91.3 50 Harrisburg, Portsmouth. mc. It. Co. Loan.... 18,560 00 Schuylkill 'Navigation .... . 19.944 41 Chesapeake and Uklavvare Canal. Loan ' n,602 50 Lehigh Coal and Navigation Company Loan, 34,570 00 Delaware Division Canal Loan. 17,615 00 Philadelphia Bank, 231 shares 54,340 26 Waste's Bank. WO shares 11,000 1.10 Girard Bank, 195 shares 6.0 0 Oil Franklin Fire Insurance Co., 30 5hare5........ 2, 0 97 73 anayunk Gas Co., 20 5hare5........ .......... 91 4 8 M S eal Estate. NO. 510 Walnut street 311,000 00 Ca5h.............. .............. .............. 11,752 33 036,440 31 WILLIAM GI, CROWELL, Secretary. THE COUNTY FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY—OF. A fir" No. 110 South Fourth street, below Chestnut 'The Fire Insurance Company of the County of Phila. delytda? Incorporated by the Legislature of Pennsylva , Ma in 1833, for Indemnity against loss or damage by fire. exclusively. CHARTER PERPETUAL. This 61d and reliable institution with annle capital and contingentt fund carefully invested, contin.. - 1 to insure buildings, furniture, merchandise, dm., either permanent -13 dr for a limited time,against loss or damage by fire, at the lowest rates consistent with the absolute safety of its customers r• . ; Losses adjusted and ff ald . with all Possible despatch. IRbOTORS : Chas. J. Batter. Andrew H. Miller, IlenryLßudd. , • James N. :none. John Horn Ealiyin L. Reakirt. Joseph Moore, itobert V. Masao, Jr.. George Mecke, Mark Devine. CHART. B J. BUTTER, President. ' 'HENRY BUDD,•Vice President. BENJAMIN F. ROECELEY. Secretary and Treasurer Y EICEN I X INSURANCE COM ANY OF PHILADELPHIA. INCORPOUTEDIBO4—CHARTER PERTETIJAL. • Nn.'.j..f WALNUT Street, oppOsite the Exehange. This Company insures from losses or damage by IRE on liberal terms on build F ings,.!Merchandise.!furniture. dic.. for limited periods. and permanently on buildings depositlbydeposit Or premium. _. The Company hag labni'in!actlye operation for more than sixty years, during which all losses have been promptly adjusted and paid. DIRELITURS:' ; John L. Hodge, Daiid • LoWia, ' NI. 11. Mahony, Benjamin Etting, Win. T. LoWie ,--. ..Th9seli. Powers. B. Graht. W.:McHenry. ,• gobereW—Laamickg,,, , :'Esttnoad tjaetWon, ' D. ClarksW_harton c Samuel Wilcox, Lawrence Lewis. Jr.. Louis C. Norris, JOHN. R. WUCHEREII, President. SAMUEL Witoe:t: Becretary:: , • ' DAME INSURANCE COD eqeet. • , FIRE IIiSURANC DIRE* Chas. Richardson. INm. Ij. Rhawn, Francis N. Buck, - - I - lonryLecvN, John Keeelor, Jr.. Robert Pearc e, CHAO. RI WU. li. R WiLtuais I Bx.&.uatts.o THE INDIANS. store outlawing Aluider.: • ISSUAANCE CLOSE COMPANY. NEW YORK. !LIU MUM, Prealdem LORING AJWILEWN, Viee-Preirla. JNO. A. HARDEIIBERGHJ HENRY C. FREEMAN, if eertlarY• 011011.N1ZIED. JUNE. 1864. aLL POLICIES IJORPORPEITABLE PREMIL - MB PAYABLE IN CASH. LOSSES PAID IN CASH. It Retches No Notes told Gino Sono. BRANCH OFFICE OF THE CORPENT, PHILADELPHIA. M. M BARKER, Manager, Eastern Department of the State of Pennsylvania. ANY. NO. 406 CHESTNUT la EXCLUSIVELY. *TORS: (leo. A. West. Nathan Elites. Johu W. Eysnnan. Edward B. Oree, Chas. Stokes, Mordecai Buzby. EIARDSON. President. vice•ermstiout , -•> ~. Boorotszy. - • ' ESENEtEIa Amon, OA ES' ' OF Ttro BTAT satixtztoni DO. Chartered by ,lII*OI4I Ad of Congress, AP• .: pqwed Joly 25,.1608• dash- CaPital. 1 : 1 ,0P 0 , 000 Paid in Fan. BRANCH OFFICE: _ FIRST NATIONAL BANKBUILDING *here all eorrespozidenco should be edircesed. DIRECTORS: CLARENCE H. CLARK. • E,A.ROkulvs. JAY, COOKE J 0167 W. ELLIS. ti..3IO9ItHEAD. GEORGIE K.,YICLEE,- j, NagOKLEy CLARK. OFIFICERS: CLAMENPE OLARK, Philadelphia, Presidont. , JAY CO mitresOE, CairmnF9amc*eatave CoMK HENRY D. COOKE, Washington. Vice President. •• EMERSON W. PEET, PhiladelphiN Bee, and Actoari• E. S. TURNER, Washington, tussistant Semotary. , • FRANCIS G. EMITS. IL D., Medical Director.' J SWING NEARS, M. D.. Assistant Medical Disaster. , . This Company, National in its character. offara.lbr reason of its Large Capital, Low Bates of Premium. and New Tables, the most desirable means. of Insuring Life -Yet presented to the bublic. Circulars. Pamphlets, and Wl particulars giver} on ap plication to the Branch Office of the' ComPinui or to Its General. Agents. General Agents of the Company JAY COOKE & CO., New York, for New York State and Northern New Jersey. JAY COOKE & CO.. Washington. 13: b.. for Dahmer " 2 - Virginia, District of Colurnbia and West Virginia. E. W. CLARE. A; CO., for, Pennsylvania and Southern New Jeteey B S. itussit., iiiirnsbuig. Manages for Central and Western Pennsylvania • J. ALDkit ELLIS & CO., Chicago,. for Illinois. Wisconsin and lowa. Hon. STEPHEN WILES, St Pant. ,for Minnesota and N. W. Wicconcio. JOHN W. ELLIS & CO-. Cincinnati. tor Ohio and Cern tral and Bouthern Indiana, • T, B. EDGAR. Bt Louie, for Miesotul and Kamm S. A. KEAN & CO.. Detroit, for Michigan and Northern Indiana. A. M. MOTIiERBHED. Omaha. for Nebraska. JOHNSTON BROTHERS do CO.. Baltimore, for Mary land. New England General Agency under the Direction of E. A. ROLLINS and W. E CHANDLER, Of the Board of Director!. . J. P. TUCKER. Manager, 3 Merchants' Exchange; State street, ilostcm. 1829. -CHARTER PERPETUAL. • E JECALISTMLIN EIRE INSURANCE COMPANY OF • • PHILADELPHIA, Nos 435 ono 437 Chestnut Sing, Assets on Januaryl,lB6B, _ . 0 0 7%4 0 09. caplud soma° 00 Accrued Surplus L 108,293 39 Premiums ... .... ......... ....... UNSETTLED CLAMS, INCOME FOR 1863. UNSETTLED 23. 5X.0,000. Lessen Paid Since 1829 Over iN;a3,500,000. rerrietina and Temporary Policies on Liberal Terms. DIRECTORS. Chas. N. Randier.l Alfred Mbar. Samuel Grant, Thomas Sparks. Geo. W. Richards. r Wm. 8. Grant. Isaac Les, Alfred G. Biker. Geo. Fates, Thomas S. Elia. CHARLES N. BANCKES. President. GEO. FALES. Vice President, JAB. W. MoALLISTER. Secretary pro tem. Except at Lexinston,R.entucky. this Company has no Agencies west of Pittsburgh. fel2 THE RELIANCE LNSITRANCE COMPANY OF PHIL. ADELPktIa. Incorporated in 1841. Charter Perpetual. °Rice, No. 308 Walnut street. CSPLTAL $300.000. Insures against lose or damage by FIRE. on Houses. Stores and other Buildings. limited or per petual, and on Furniture, Roods. Wares and MercbandUe in town or country. LOnSES PROMPTLY ADJUSTED AND PAID. Assets ............................................5437.108 32 1340.670 00 - .4,30; 20 67,131 40 4.998 '7O 33.0 W WI 10.990 00 3.435 00 20,000 00 25.900 00 106,000 IX 50,000 00 InVented in the following Securities. viz.. First Mortgages on City Property, well secured.sl6B,6Bo 00 United btaten Government Loans_ ........ 117,000 00 Philadelphia City 6per cent. Loins. ....... 75,000 00 Pennsylvania $8,000,060 6 per cent. Loan.. 80,000 Pennsylvania Railroad Ronda. Suit Mort gage.. 5,000 00 Camden and Amboy Railroad Company's 6 per Cent. Loan. . Loans on Collaterals ..... auntin . goon and Broa . ti l foVi . ii . e . r .. e..;eni: Mort gage nonds_.. . . 060 00 County Byre In surance Co mpany's Btoak.. .... 1,060 00 Mechanics' Bank Stock..... 00 Commercial Bank of Penneylvaula Stock 10,000 00 Union Mutual Insurance Company's Stock. . . 880 00 Reliance Insurance Company of Philadelplita Stock. . . Cash in .. hiu2d. 12.258 Worth at Par Worth this date at market prices. _ - Clem. Tingley. Wm. Miner, . Samuel Meehan', H. L. Canon. Wm. Steveneen, Beni. W. Thigl°Y„lsiar, Timmes C. a 3 niz._ € 43( "- raurrynxinue, December NITED FIREMEN'S INSURANCE COMPANY OP U .PLOLAD.ELPILLEk. Thin Company conduce at the lowest rates conEdntept with safety. and its bueinete excluelvely to FIRE INSURANCE fl THE CITY OF YBILADEL . OFFICR—No. 7:13 Arch street, Fourth National Bank Building. imitygroßs. Charles 11. Smith. Albertie King. Henry Bumm. • James Wood, '. John elhallcross. J. gHenry Aekian,n, Pu Atulg hilippFltz li atiick. B. ANDRESS, Preeident. W.m. H. PatigN, Bec'y. Thomas J. Martin. John Dirst, Wm. A. Rolin, James 31ongam W 11liam Glenn. James Jenner, Alexander T. Dickson. Albert i. Roberts. CONRAD Wm. A. Bourn. Treae. JEPP ERSON ' FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY OF Philadelphia.—Oillea„ No.:A North Fifth 'afteet, • near Market street. Incorporated by the Legislature of PenneyiYania„ Char ter perpetual. Capital and Assets. $166", Make lasu ranee against Loss or damage by Fire on Public or Private Buildings, Furniture, Stocks. Goode and Merchandise, on favorable terms. DIRECTORS. ' Wm. McDaniel, Edward P. Moyer. Israel Peterson, Frederick Ladner. John F. Belsterling. Adam J. Glass. , Dewy Troemner, klenryDelauy, Jacob Schandein. IJohn Frederick Doll, , - Christian D. Prick. , Euiott, _, Samuel Miller. • , ' George E. Fort. William D. Gardner. • - • • WILLIAM MoDANIEL. President. ISRAEL PETERSON,_ Vice President. PHILIP E, Comussn. Secretary tusd Treasurer. A MERIOAN FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY. MOOR.' .ti porated 11310.—Charter perpeteaL . No, 1310 WALNUT street, above Third, Philadelphia. 'laving se large paid-up Capital Stork and Surplus in vested in sound and available Seenrittee, continue to in sure 'ort dwelling's,- stores, furniture, merchandise, vessel! in. Port, and their , cargoes, and other personal PrOPertY. All losses liberally and fronetlaTusted. .. • . Tbomaelt. Marls.' - , - • BM:roil:4G. %IVA, ~ • ~; ; L. John Weld), Charles W. Pouitney. Patrick Brady. - ' Israel Morris, John T. Lewis. -- , - : .John , P. Wetherill. William .Paul„ _ , , THOMAS B. MARA President. ALBERT, C. Cnnwrann.Secretery ,-• , , •‘L .-., - . ', . . EIMME OEM BENDY D. (=KM W. - E. CatIIMED. JO EDI D. DEFEEEEt EDWARD DODGE, EL C. FAIERESTOCK. $437,698 33 UM7I DIRECTORS. Thomas H. Moore, Samuel Castner, James T. Young. Isaac P. Baker. Christian J. Hoffman, I Samuel at Thomas. rd Biter. 'GLEAN. TINGLEY. President. 3eretary. Jal.tu th e tf SSW .• • • . . The' , ,Li.o - erpootEtr's t.;• • • • V d Ot e4o .Y 3 ; ' , • . , ve;;Robil of Ihii:Com= party for x 8 §8 • Premiums: .1 4 5474, 2 7 8 Lops . :3,344,728 and ,4fter -- ..,pizyiTng lend% g t: ; .10; pqr Total A,% cad,- ' .$17,q05,0.2 • JTWOOD SMITH, - 4g - eyi4 No: 6 MERCHANTS' EXCHANGE:, Nfiladitar. nELAWARE MUTUAL SAFETY INSURANCE COM Al PANlC incorporated • incorporated by the Legislature of Pennsylvania, 1835. Office .8. E. corner of THI and WALNUT Streets. • Phil I delp_hia; MARINE NSURANCES On Vessels, Cargost Freight to all yards of the world. and On goods by river, c anal, la k e and land CES carriage to all _parts of the Union. . - FIRE INSURANCES On Merchandise generally • on Stores, Dwellings, /incises. Ass. ASSETS OF THE COMPANY. vetatierlaB6& • •-• $200,000 United States Five Per Cent. Loan, 10 40 , a , • • 8208,500 00 122000 United States Six PertYant.:Le"alL _ 1881 . . . 138,800.00 60,000 United Stafes Six Per (J est Loan (for Pacific Railroad). ~ 260.000 State of Pennsylvania Six Per Gent: L0an..........211,375 00 125,000 City of Philadelph i a ix Per bent. Learl_tar.Olllpt from Tax) 50,000 State of New Jersey Six rer Cent. 128494 ' 00 Loan. . . • 51,600 00 20.000 Penn s ylva nia ki;:t gage Six Per Cent. 80nd5:.... . 20.520 0 25.000 Pennsylvania Railroad Second. Mortgage Sit Per dent Bonds.. 24,000 00 25,000 Western Pennsylvania liebroad Mortgage Six Per Cent Bonds (Penna. RR. guarantee).. 20.625 00 80.000 State of Tennessee Five Per Loan ....... 21,000.00 7,000 State of fe . nnesset; .............. Cent 5.031 25 17,000 Germantown Gas Company. psi -and-interest guaranteed by the thy co Ptilladelphia, 800 aka, ea stock—. . .. ... 15,930 00 10,000 Pennsylvania Radioed Company, 200 shares stock. 11,300 00 5,000 North Pennsylvania Railroad Com pany. 100 shares stock 3,500 00 20,000 Philadelphia and southern Mail Steamship Company, 80 shares stock.. . ... . 15,000 00 201,900 Loans on Ron . d and Mortgage, Srst lima on City Pr0pertie5.........207,900 00 4E1.1A. 900 Par. Market Value, 031,1191.t0 25 Coat. $1.093,604 , 20 Real Estate . Buls seeelVable for Insurances made. .. . ... Vsl,' 486 91 Balances Ykieniles miums on Marine Policies—Ac , • crued Intercit and Other debts • cue the Company. - 40,178 88 Stack mid Scrip of sunthybirpera. done, 66,166 ou. • Estimated value.. 1.818 00 Cash in Cash in Drawer. ........ 4113 , 65 • • . 1.16,566 78 .. ' DIRECTORS •l • ' ' -• ' 1 .. i Thomas C. Hand. Edmund A. Bonier. John C. Davis, Samuel E. Stokes. ' • • James C. Hand. Henry Sloan, Theophium Pau ding, William (I I.udwig. Joseph H. peal, 4 , tieorgo O. Leiper, Hugh' Craig. Ilimry C. Hallett, Sr., John',R. Penrose. John D. - Taylor, Jacob P. Jones. George W Hernadou. James TtaqUair, I William G. Bonham. • Edward Millington. Jacob Riegel, IL Jones Brooke, Spencer M'llyaino. James B. APloarland, John..B. Semple, Pittsburgh. Edward Lafourcade. , D." T. Morgan. do. Joshua P. Lyre. A. B. Berger, do. . THOMAS C. HAND. President at/RN C. DAVIS. VicePrealdent. HENRY LYLIICRN, Secretary. HENRY BALL. AEASecretary. de2l. if FIRE ASSOCIATION OF PRILAD6I- (.7 , * " Mils. Incorporated March 27. 1820. Office, N 0.34 North Fifthetreet. Inaure Buildings, . 4 ,12.,‘, /leasehold Furniture and Merchandiae rnerally li f i rom Loss by Fire (in the City of Statement of the Aaaets of the Association January let, 1868, published in compliance with the pro Visions of the Act of Assembly of April sth, 1542. Bonds and 'Mortgagee on Property in the City of Philadelphia only. —51.076.15'0 17 Ground Renta.................... ........... 18.514 98 Real Eatate....',, 51.744 57 Furniture and Fixtures of 4390 03 U. S. 6.70 Begietered Bonds 46,000 00 Cash on hand.. 31.573 11 .%.' b 8 OES ' T0ta1.......... $1 TRUSTEES.: ..... "*" ' 8 William H. Hamilton, . Samuel Sparhawk, Peter A. Keyeer„ ' Charles P. Bower, John Carron', Jesse Lighiloot, George 1.1 oung Robert Shoemaker. Joseph it . Lyndill. Peter Armbruster. Levi P. Coats, Peter Wi 'aro M. s il om . Dickinson. WM. H. M.A.I.IILTON, Preside t, SAMUe L SPARHAWK. Vice P/ cadent. WM. T. BUTLER. Secretary. 'l,lllktt INSURANCE. EXCLUSIVELY.—THE PENN- I! sylvania Fire Insurance Company—lncorporated 182.6 —Charter Perpetual—No. 610 Walnut street, opposite In dependence Square. This Loro puny, favorably known to the community for over forty years. continues to insure against loss or dam age by fire. on Puplic or Private Buildings, either perma nently or fora limited time. Also, on Furnitme, Stocks of Goode and Merchandise generallY. on liberal terms. Their Capital, together with a large Surplus Fund. hi invested in a moat careful mein:ter, which enables them to offer to Mainsured an undoubted security in the case of loss. • DIRECTORS. Daniel Smith,Jr., I John Devereux. Alexander Benson, Thomas Smith, Isaac Bazlehuret, Ho Lewis, Thomas Robins, J. Gifiing. ham Fell, Daniel Haddock, Jr. DANIEL HALTS, Jr., President. Wri.nAm O. Caowxma.. Secretary AIiTIiIIACITE INSURANCE COMPANY.-013.AR TER PERPETUAL. Office. No. 11l WALNUT street, above Third; phi's. Will insure against Loss or Damage by Fire on Build• lugs, either perpetually or for a limited time, Household Furniture and Merchandise generally. Also, Marine Insurance on Vessels, Cargeee and Freights. Inland Insurance to all parts of the Union. DDIECTORS. Wm. Esher, I Lewis Audertried; D. Luther, . Jobn Ketcham. John It. Blakiston, J. E.MarIM, Wm F. Dean. I John E. HoyL Peter Sieger. Samuel H. Rothennel. WSL EIMER. President. W&L F. DEAN. Vice President, Wis. M. Smog. ilecretal9. .1822-tu.th.s.tf frucrAmmarit, Isom. *L. 11SPRIUOR di 13011d.._ AIL • „SOUTHWARK FOUNDRY, 430 WASELVIGTON Avenne„Philadelphia. MANUFACTURE STEAM ENGINES-Migh and Low Prenttre, Horizontal, Vertical, Beam, Oscillating., Blast and Cornish Pump. BO Under. Fine, Tubular. &c. STEAM It AMMERS—Ntiamyth and Davy Ones, and, al all size& CASTINGS--Loam, Dry and Green Sand t Etrass, &c. ROOFS—Iron Frames for cover with slate or Iron. TANRS=Of Cast or Wrought /con. for refineries, water. oil, &c. GAS MACHINERY—Such as Retorts. Bench Outfit" Holders and FraMes, Purifiers, Coke and Charcoal Bar. rows, Valves, _Governors. &c. SUGAR MAODINERY—Such as Vacunm Pans and Pumps, Defecatore,Bone Black Filters. Burnam, Wash. ore and Elevators Bag Filters, Sugar and Bone Black Can% 4:11. , Sole manufacturers of the following snecialtiesi In Philadelphia and vicinity, of Wam Wright's Patent Variable Cutoff Steam Engine. In Penns*lvanitt, of Shaw & Justice's Patent Deadatrolsa Power Hammer. In the United States, of Weston'.tent Self-centering and Self-balancing Cenialiugali.drainins kiv.htue, Glass di-Barters improvement on Aspinwall di - W'ooliori ntrifugaL Barte Ce rs Patent WroughtironNetort Lld. Strahan'a Drill Grinding Rest, • . Contractors for the design, erection. and fitting tir of Re fineries for working Sugar or Molasses. COPTER AND, YELLOW NIETKL SHEATHING. Brassier's Copper Nails. Bolts anklusgt eon. 'tautly on band and tot sale by HENItY wubOß a CO., No. SD Booth Wharka. DIG IRON.---TO ARRIVE, NO. 1 SCOTCH PIG IRON— L . Glensarnock and Carnbroe brands. For solo in lots to suit' by PETER WRIGIIT & !lONS. 115 Walnut street. h tadelabia.: not() tt LOST• NecISOARRIE'D4 LETTER MAILED JANUARY And; COP tainizig a. note for' 936,000 at 6 mon th s . Won . 22nd , 1868 ;of ARNOLD HE Z , .o his Own ordor, endorsed- by , CHARLES LENNIG. All porsons . aro worntd against negotiating the said noto. p_ayment lie 'Ong been stopped. - ' - MILER BROTIRERS, laSJAin,waC44 . l'ittolaurgh . Pa. THOWdeleitlN E ART* os,. AND l3out B4e a FIN c RIG - IMPORTANGI4 KNOEDLEB, successor to -GOITPEL Ahem. ar03011110611 50 MO People of, Phil_ Idelohia,,that be. tOidruake an imOttsidt 'offering Of Fine WOrks 111 Janda* 441, and dredge:id that tit Shallobo ,, thes and Meat elegant collection of Pictures and Workstdli Veer offered ,lll .YbiladOlintha".nt Thonatten Collecillon will no on cahlbition in the,eastern gaift____.e4 oll o l r - • IhOPtinntiltranter Academy of. 'Fleet Artaitorunsurania • about jaritisty• Ist,;• anti' the'day of sedde. , ' ' ,,,1 1? • • At4bereqtteelt. of BL•Knoedlar the; entire ' a - 4„1 • exhibition and selling. will be under the inansixeonint di Ifir. Merles F Daselttne,ll2s Ciresultet at tr " SALES OF STOCHES-AND . 1197 Pabtio sake at thogrdisielphisiExclusenus, • *y . TUESDAY at tit Ir Furniture .Bales stAnitieti EitOre - E INr7lisies atße liant:ea Mara est . sSollll attention.) . STOCKS. - LOANS,'PEW.Atic.• "= ON ''II7.I32SDAA-lAtf. 19 At 19 o'clock noon:at the Fnuadditiths , • 50 shares Union Dank of. Tennessee . . 10 shares Fourth National:Bank: - • 10 !shares hank of Neorth•Americk... 100 shares Peeled lima Atlanths.TeiegrePtnr. • 50 shares Central Transivrtation Co,/ • i share Philadelphia Libretti.' , - • -•' 1 1 share Mercantile Library Co. . , $lO 000 Union Pacific R. W - Co. 6 porte nt.olm $H 00 Union Pacific Land Grant Bondet,7 per cent. $lO 000 Id mortises° bonds McKean and Elk Lan& Oat 200 shares stock-McKean an 'Elk-LandCat, • • , 1 share Arch Btreet Theatre.+ - • 10u shares Broad. Top improvement Co: 19 shares Camden andAtiantio'Raiuoad,4ldl. Tru,tees , e , ale. s2l;4oChesspeake and Del Canal ,f+ o9 / I .' - $4200 Penn's htate Loan, third eerier.... .._;_,. • 20 - sharea Phi:mix Insurance Co • .i - ' 40 shores Germantown '1 unipikci Co.. ' 1 share PhiLtdelphia and Southern Mall ineasse., - . Executor's Sale• • Pcitir N 0.62 Phil. Baptiet Church; Broad end Arociatms' , share ithiladeinhis. Atheneum. • • For:Account of Whom it may COneettl.— '• • 460 shares American Buttonhole, Orersoam ing Sewing Matildm . •,-11HALL EBTATE BALE,.JA.N. IP.. -- • -• Will include— • , . peremptory Sale—To .Close risKetsLet-VElty ,J3UII.IINRIg ABLE 6TORE.and. DWELLING. N. W. cougar of latelith watt "' "Cherry eta. witlt2 Three-story Brick Dwellings la thelt rear on Cherry et.-20 feet front. 104 feet deep. _ PeremptorySale—To Cloee an Estate —VEßE DESI--,- , -- 11ABLa end VALUABLE CLAY LOT: 12;4 acres. PtellaK`.: 'delphla and Trententtailroad and Bridge et., thideaberg. 'lWenty•third Ward • Perereptort.Sale— , To Close an Fstats—TEIRESSTORr BRICK DWELLINCL No. 1026 Wistar et. fisle' by,. Order of 11 eire—TELEEESTORY , BRIDIC DWELLING. NP: 1318 Brown et - • • TIIREESTORY BRICK DWELLING, No. 20 Otter et, • weft of the Frankford road, with Two story Frame Show in the rear. Sixteenth Ward. -_ • - • • MODERN THREE...SIDRA( BRICK BUILDING, No.. ; 1919 Pat • riot) et! • - • DESIRABLE FOUSSTORYBRICK DWELLINGS, Na pga B aneom et VALUABLE LOT, S. E. corner of. Broad and Kates eta, 19 beet 6 inches front, 100 feet 4 inches deep. VALUABLE LOT, Rroad st.„ adjoining the aboVei 19 feet front, 81 feet 4 inches in. depth.___, ^ 4 • • VALUABLE LOT and IMPROVEMENTS: Broad adjoining he abark2o feet front.:4 inches in depth .• VALUABLE, BUSINESS. JireaND—FOUR.STORY BRICK 110 TEL and DWELLING. N. E. cdrtter of Broad and Christian IBM, 20 feet front, 80 feet , in depth. ILA NDSOME MODERN Tiir EEEPADRY BRICK SIDENt E, No. 13E6 Christian et., 19 feet, front, . depth. Or" riatfof the obeyed: properties can Jai seen at tint • _ auction rooms. Peremptory SaIeTIIREE-STORY BRICK WORE. and DIN niL,LIN er, B. E. corner of Front and Ott.r sts.,, sixteenth Ward. . • • , r t. ; • _ Peremptory 1. aIe—MODERN THREESTORY BRICK' REBILENcE, No. 118 North Nineteenth et... above Arch ! street. Peremptory SaIe—LARGE and VALUABLE thy.. BREWER and FIXTURES. S. E., corner 9f Ann and ;-. ,,„ _Edgemont wenty-111th Ward._ • • - Peremptory Bale—Estate of. Sarah Stewart, deceased W ELI .oECURED IRREDEEMABLE GROGND, • BALE OF A VALUABLE LAW LIBRARY.":", ON FRIDAY AFI'LIINOON. Jan. 15. at 4 o'clock, including the l'ennsiivanla4nd other Repotta. . . , . , By Postponement. STOCK OF SUPERtuIt DAIRY COWS, 110.1tgESY BARNF.Sq FARM WAGONS, CARTS, MuWING MA= CHINES, 110 ROE RAKE, FARMING IMP Ii EM &NTS.. lac:. &a. • ' .. 1 ON MONDAY, Janoary 18. at 12 &clack M. procicoly, at W. Harmer Thor:own Farm, Ware lauo, between o , arby: road and , Baltimore cike;'Pwentyteeenth Ward,-Ivithont the entire stock. , • • „ N o postponement on account of the welt er.- 'the cab; will commence prectecy 412 o'clock. ITALIAN ALABBLR STATUARY. Ad,' ON THL ItAMO% January 21. at tho auction , ntord, Will he sold EoVerat - ,t Italian Marble Statues and Bush% Bronzo Clocks. 121 n alataware; , Ac., haws the' property of a gOntlentatr: dining houeokeeping.. „ , . 181.647,887 tN, DMIN/13TPATOR'S SsALI —WPOOKS ' ON TUESDAY, Jan.. 26. at la o'clock. ' noon, at the 1%111401011a cbenge..byorderof Admini,trater of Pr. David. Gilbert. deceased— • • - - . 3 7.1 .:,) 93 chores Greenwich Imprevemen, and ErkilretatlOn. DAMS do HARVEY. AIJOTIONEEES. ; • - • Late with 151. Thomas - &Sons, 4 Store Nos. 48 and 50 North SIXTH Street. . , Sale at Nes 48 and' 50 North rixth 'street. ELEGANT FURNITURE. ' , REM:I-14-1./ITE MI 1 3 .1.AN0 FOLTE, F.T.IIE.P.Ir)OF 'SAFES, IIEDDING. ON TUESDAY MORNTIia ' At 10 o'cloeJr. at the auction store. Now 98 and 50 North. Sixth street, le low Arch, the elegant Parlor and Chamber' Furniture. in Snits; atrporbir Walnut SocretarrEcolecase. Oak Etagere, Sideboard, Extension Tables.blouguot and Centre 7 able d, Walnut Office-Deska and Tables French • Plate- Mirrors, liano Forte. line J'apestrY. ingrain And Vcnetilen Cal pots, large and !snootier Fireproof Safes. Matressea Feather Beds, Plated Iv Are.461,C. ,- ; - , PACKAGES OF GLASSWARE.' Also, • Also, It packages of Glassware. consisting of Tumblers.: WineS, Goblets, Creams, Nappies, Balte, THOMAS BIRCH & BON. 'AUCTIONEERS COMMISSION No. 1110 CHESTNUT street. Rear Entrance No. 1107 Sansom stroet. 4' HOUSEHOLD FUItNITURE OF EVERY DESCSIP..., TION .RECEIVED ON CONSIGNMENT';:, is Sales of Furniture at Dwain= attended to, on the Meat reasonable terms. SALE OF ELEGANT ITALIAN ,VASES, STATU-, ETTES. SILVER PLATED 'WALL ' ' ON FRIDAY. EVENING, At 736 o'clock, at the auction store, will be sold; an in voice of elegant goods. lust impOrted from Italy,,consist• ins of Italian Carved Stone Vases, Tazzas. Groups and. Figures, Mantel Ornaments. dm. . . Also. an assortment of Superior Silver Plated Ware and Table Cutlery. - tz scam Jn._, _AULTIONFThrt • IJ. SCOTT'S ART GALLERY lOW CHESTNUT street. Philadelphia. SPECIAL SALE OF A PRIVATE COLLECTION PAINTINGS. The Property of D. T.SEIAW, Esq.. late of Ekiltimore. ON THURSDAY AND FRIDAY EVENING/3. January 14 and 15, At 735 o ' clock . at Scott's Art Gallery No. 10`33'Cheat t ." nut street. will bo sold. the private colleetiort or Pictures belonging to D. T. SHAW. Esq.. late of Balti more. comprising works by English; French and Ameri can celebrities; also, a number by some of the old mas tore. Now open for exhibition. , • , L. AtiBBRID GE & C0.C0.._ _UCTIONEERS. T. No. 508 MARKET street. above Elfth: SPECIAL. BALE OF BOOTS AND SHOES. ON WEDNESDAY MORNING. Jan. 20, at 10 o'clock, we will sell by catalogue. a large assortment of tint-class city made Boots. Shoes, 'Bro gans. &o Also, a line of Eastern make Boots and. Shoes, to which . the attemion of city an a. country buyers Is tar Open early on the morning of sale for examination. Telma A. Frumnsim, AUCTIONEER. IUP N 0.422 WALNUT street. • A : VALUABLE TDAGT OF 30 ACRES OF LAND. With BISDEIOII House, Rising Sun Lane, intemeoted Eighth. Ninth. Tenth and eleventh, Ontario and Than, streets within 200 icet or the Old York Road. •IVainaNds &red of Brick Clay. Terms easy. , ~ - BO! business property No, 819 Arch street. ' " 7 . HILDILINOTON.-41 Handsome Hamden. on‘ Xelk • lot 08 by 700 feet,. EL McCLELLAND, AUCTIONEER, kits 011114TNUTsi . CONCERT HALL AUCTIoN .1100fda: T - Rear Entrance on Clover. street • Household Furniture and Merchandise of ' every des. Pcription received on consignment , dales of Furnituroatka dwellings attendee to on reasonable terms. , DITRBOROW & CO.. AUCTIONEERS.' LP Nos. 223 and 234 MARKET street. corner Bankit. Successors to John_ B. Myers & Cu AT PRIVATE BALK._ • • • 30 cases INFANTRY OVERWATS. _perfect. 60 bales GRAY nna ARMY SHIRTS: T KARIUTT di• CO., AUGTIONEERn. B GABII AUCTION ROUSE. . Na. MO MARKET street. corner of BANK stoat Gash advanced on COMIIIMXPOIIteI withontL extra .charge. THE PRINCIPAL MONEY - EBTAI3L&BUMENT-. ' S. E. corner of SIXTH and RACE streets. Money, advanced on Merr..handise Jewelry, 1 iamoude, Gold and Silver Plata and on au artictes of value, for any iength of time affeed on. • WATCHES AND JEWELRY AT PRWATB SALE. Fine Gold Hunting CaseDoutde Bottom and Open English, American and 6 WiEttl Patent Leveratches t Fine Gold Hunting Case and Open Face [Aram Watallealo Fine Gold Duplex and other Watches; Fine Silver Hunt ing Case and Open Face English, American and Swing. Patent Lever and Le the Watches; Double Case Fagitsh. Quartier and other Watches ,_ Ladies' Fancy Wesolair., , Diamond. Breastpins; Finger Rinse; Ear. Icings; dm.; Fuse Gold Chains Medallions ,_• Bracelets; :Scarf - I rim.: Breastpins; Fingerings; Pencil Case, and ,Ittssdnin,, generally._ FOR SALE.—A large and valnablg ,Firqnroorcome.ir, suitable for a Jeweler; cost Sae Aliso. Several Lots in South Camden.blitltindilitana.A• streets. C D . rd°l3." 4-11 ).17CTIONIIIER,IV • No. NS MARN.F.4T,qree.„ MARTIN BROTHERS AtLOT/OrEl3B. (Lech , Solomon for= 4nas &lona.) No. 629•CIIEBTNUT streoGrear entrauice flgra g#011%., t ft.NEST. Bopp,. ; 1. • ~.. •;-,.•; IN NO,l=l NOATEI,I7I , OII,STRECIV. Lae on hand a. supply or ' • •• • • • •, • •- • • • • - , i. • . Gontlemen'tt Boots , and Mos% of the _itna4 clOaliti-of leathea and werttanuobitst'aba3* - made toorder.„, v,•,,_ •_ ,_-• , , , ~ _ ;.., o j e lg i o, , . . /'LIVES FANCIEs. CIArEIIB, to.-411;ligkCPARGINS 1 -/( l3 tuffed 0 1 0 66 ) , Nonpareil and Bttporane, Capers and French Olive's; fresh Rooth' ; 'aniline Natoleon Rem Havre, and. tor etge bY. • d.Qs..,l}. l}lJB 109 South Delaware; avenue.. - AVOTION SAIGII,2 noeirS r J''f Z r , • „
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers