NEW PUBLICATIONS. ~Tb*BMahW ~Mcord, XtonteUeet, furnishes eight folio pages of, SHE, tritt «•"?# SjHfSS': religious news, clipped paragraphs, The Awil number embodies a careful and allur ine dißcription of the object, work and suc- Ss oftfie Association, aud.iu another: place, Statement that the society is almost out of debt, more,than $30,000 having been con- Uibuied to free its real estate from obligation. “Bhort Stories for Spare Moments, ".pub lished by J. B. Lippincott & Co.,ts thetitle of a second collection of the charming tales that have enlivened the excellent - magazine bear ing the; name of the publisher. Twelve stories are included, the authors’ names being such strong ones as Mrs. Harding Davis, Lucy Hamilton Hooper, Caroline Chesebro’, J<mo <3.: Austin, F. R. Stockton, &c. Certainly a capital railway-reading pamphlet OEVRIENT’S “RECOLLECTIONS OF MENDELBSOHN.” Herr E. Devrient, director of the opera at Cailßiuhe, has .written a book entitled “My Recollections of Mendelssohn and his Letters Me.” Of this the Pall Mall Gazette Bays: Herr Devrient made the acquaintance o Mendelssohn when the wonderful boy was barely thirteen years old, he himself being a voung baritone singer, engaged at the opera at Berlin; The Mendelssohn family had then been six years in Berlin. Originally they had lived at Hamburg, where Felix was boro. Immediately the youthful actor yielded to the faßcinationß Of the precocious boy, and they remained on the most affectionate terms until death pfffted them. Herr Devrient has now at last-put upon paper his recollections ot the life-long friendship, and we can only express ouic surprise that he has not long ago yielded to the request of the Mendelssohn family to write a full biography of his friend. If we may lodge from this book of “Recollections, he ia eminently fitted for the task, and we very much doubt whether any other living pefeoh is equally fitted tbr it. There can be no question as to the value and interest of a life of one who, in his personal character and history, stands almost alone among great musicians, and whose individu ality itras so marked, and, on the whole, so adtriirable and attractive. No man, again, could do Mendelssohn thorough justice who whs fiersohaliy a stranger to him, however ample the materials which the memory ot many friendß and relations would Bupply,and however fertile in suggestions may be the let ters,-published and unpublished, of his own eager and honest pen. In one respect, too, Herr Devrient stands apart from the ordinary run'df enthusiastic biographers. He pos3es seS'thefrafe power of appreciating his heros character as a whole, and of bringing out ns defCCtßwithout any diminution of his own admiration and affection. For the first time English readers will be enabled to understand the influences under which Men delssohn grew up, and their definite results upon a character at once so susceptible and Bo independent in its native vigor. Although, as Herr Devrient says, these influences were mbst beneficial: tbougn, as. he also thinks, they at the same time fostered those, special Infirmities Which were the Bingle, and even thus'only the superficial, defects in a mind and* life' essentially noble and lovable to an extraordinary degree. Notwithstanding the regularity and almost rigor of the family discipline enforced by Felix’k father and mother, and the devoted ness of the affection and respect taip&4>jjfUSflßfe ffoTEo‘ see that his constitu - tional susceptibility and irritability were deep ened by over-education from early years. His brain worked at high pressure from the first, while at the same time he exhibited a simple, charming, unconscious.-manliness of thought and action which,however morally delightful, betrayed a precocity, not only of ability, but of character, which onght to have taught his father and mother the frightful peril of for cing him to excessive work. The mother was one of those vigorous women who look upon all rest from labor with aversion, and she kept all her children to their work with inflexible energy. “If I called,” saystiferr Devrient, “in the forenoon upon the mother, and Felix came with his lnnch into the front room, during which he was allowed to quit his work, and we hap pened to chat longer than the bread and but ter rendered necessary, the mother’s curt exclamation, ‘Felix, are yon doing nothing?’ quickly,drove him away into the back room." And “work,” in his case, meant work, indeed. The four children, all of them of great capacity, were taught together by one tutor, Dr. Heyse; Rebecca, the youngest, taking her Ureek lessons with Felix, in order to make the study more attractive to him. Besides these general studies, in pre paration of Felix’s university examination, he was learning thorough bass, the piano lortc, the violin and drawing, alii under dif ferent masters. To these he soon added gym nastics, riding,swimming and dancing,throw ing into every one ot them his characteristic energy and ardor, and doing everything well. At thirteen yearsold'he began to conduct the. performances of his own little operas in his father’s drawing-room, with the composure of a grown-up man. Herr Devrient was generally one of his performers, and from the first was struck with the absence of vanity and seif consciousness in the boy thus directing the singing and playing of his el ders. , He was a charming little fellow, too, to.lopk. at, with his handsome face, bright, brown eyes, and curling hair, as he stood with his hands in the poems of his big trou sers, rocking his head from side to side, and shifting restlessly from ono foot to the other. At the same time, with all the rigid obe dience claimed by the parents, and "heartily rendered by the son, Felix was the spoilt child of Fortune. He was never seriously crossed by sorrow, difficulty, or hard, relent less. opposition; while, simple-minded and modest as he was, it was impossible that he should be uninfluenced by the recognition ot hisgiffs which met him on all sides. Tout a ceftaimlnconsideiate impetuosity in dealing with others in after life, with an irritable sen citivenees towards those whom he thought cold and unsympathetic, should be the only important results of such influences is really wonderful. He inherited from his father, Herr Devrient Bays, “the conviction that our life is given ub for work, for usefulness and constant striving;” and from this principle he never swerved; ~ So richly favored and endowed he was (Herr Devrient writes in his last page), so beloved and admired, and at the same time bo strong in mind and character, that he never ogee let slip the bridle of religious dis - cipline, nor the just sense of modeßty and t^ l U v,!l?u e , ver . fell ehort of his standard of duty, t-arth denied him none of her joys, him the fulfilment bf all the wishes of his heart. How little in this great circumference of p eac e and happiness the hours of querulous humors, the days of vexation and those of mortal discomfort It the false honors that were heaped upon him. In tbe'midst pf work newly begun of far reaching intentions, the rapid death that re moved him from onr; world of anxiety and uncertainty ..completed the/brilliant a man who was called into life tru.y for hia own and''tltli’drii , ll 7" .. T " Bv the discomfort a false honors, of which Hen Devrlent here sbeakB,he means Meu delssobn’e disgust.at the servility with which be was flattered and courted by ' people at Berlin after he became a royal favorite, very much against his own will. But for.the ur gency with which the Prussian King hid thus forced Mendelssohn into his service, tak ing him away from his happy life at Leipstc, if is probable that his days might have been prolonged some few years. At. any rate, it was from the time these unsatisfactory ar rangements were in progress that Herr Lievri ent noticed that change in manner and dimin ished capacity for enjoyment which indicated the commencement of the brain disease «f which he finally died. Of the utterly mis taken character of these arrabgements the readers of Mendelssohn’s published letters are already aware, and Herr Devrient’s fuller ac count serves at once to prove the radical mis take upojrwbicli they were founded, and to show how little there is in royal patronage to atone for the ignorant despotism and ca price with which it is top often accompanied. THE “WELL-INTENTIONED” NAPO LEON. The London Times has recently engaged a Parisian letter-writer, a native Frenchman, whoße communications are very able. The Emperor is spoken of in these letters with undisguised hostility, but hostility of a Kind wholly different from, and even opposite to the vehement denunciations that were em. ployed against him by his political opponents some years ago. He is nicknamed “Napo leon the Well-intentioned;” lieis spoken of as a man who invariably desireß to do the right thing, but who as invariably fails from cou fusedness of mind and a stupid habit of bung ling. The Saturday Review points out that: Such a representation of him has,no doubt* a measure of truth and a measure of preju diced caricature. But what first occurs to one is, what an inversion this is of the view generally entertained in Europe at the time of Magenta and Solferino, and for some years later! Then he was looked upon as an un scinpulous, and on one occasion cruel, but subtle and deep;Cpunselling, ruler; as the man without whose implied assent no great change in European politics could be effected; as one wtp had never any but selfish aims, but whfise aims were prudently conceived and surfely carried out. And if we go further back in his history, we shall see him in a third guise, widely differing from either ot these two —as a harebrained enthusiast, whose visionary schemes were rather topics of mirth to sensible men than susceptible of serious consideration. Can three portraits of char acter differ more from each other than these t hree do? And yet it is quite certain that the Emperor cannot be described rightly without an admixture of all three of these delinea- tIOBS. „ , , The surest way of understanding what a man is is to see what he admires. Now Louis Na poleon has never left the world in doubt as to the hind of character towards which he in variably looks with special admiration. “To understand the epoch in which one lives” is with him the keynote of all praiße; to mis understand it is the keynote of all blame. The Emperor, then, has choaen as his motto, “to understand his epoch;’ he has tried,more than anything else, to assimilate himßelf to the men of his time, and to be the propagator and champion of modern ideas. It is this effort fthich has introduced into his character th at extreme complication of which we have spoken. For “to understand the epoch in which one lives” ' Practf- BBf'ifien mhy,if they can and if they will,con sider the thoughts of the age as a whole; it is better that they should do so, but their not doing so will not entail on them immediate ruin. But to practical men, and most of all to the rulers of countries, it is destruction not to have a quick eye to their immediate en vironment, to have ready expedients for emergencies, to be alive to superficial changes of feeling and the variable workings of the ma' hinery of States. Thus the necessities, of a practical man differ wholly from that “un derstanding of his epoch” which is the prime necessity of a epeculalist. And in history'or fiction the characters which are the most inexplicable problems are those in which the speculative and practical efforts, the “desire to understand” and the “necessity to act,” have co-existed side by side, but yet have not sufficiently amalgamated with or influenced each other. Such a character was Crom well, and such a character was Hamlet. Of all practical men, the despot has need to be most practical. If he fails in this, his down fall is at once certain, and far greater than any that can befall men in a meaner station. It may be his wish to understand; but to em ploy hard physical force is his necessity. Now the First Napoleon was the model des pot, “To govdrn” was his watchword; none could look with such scorn as he did on the “idealists,” on the men who tried to look a little deeper than their neighbors. To under stand the manivuvring of battalions, the friendly or inimical dispositions of his neigh bors, the means of keeping down obßtinate, refractory people, was all very well; but to understand anything further, of what practi cal use was it ? Thus his figure was at once collotsal and simple; if he fell, it was because Europe was too great to be dominated over even by his imperial capacity. He had-no secret enemy of continuing impulses in his own mind. We should be doing the present Emperor injustice If we did not say that his singularly complex character appears to us to erntain Dobler elements than any which were exhi bited by the First Napoleon. He certainly has no contempt for idealists; he has in him self much of the idealist. His desire to un derstand his epoch is even noble; and he has always endeavored, as far as was consistent with the maintenance of his power,to further the good of his generation. But, ’’then, “as far as is consistent with.the maintenance of his power” —this qualification is so vast that few can believe that posterity will look back upon Louis Napoleon aB, on the whole a benefactor of mankind. A Greek tra gedian would have represented him as a man afflicted by an Ate—byian inexplicable curse, arising out of some action of his own which turns all blB good endeavors and struggles into mischief and calamity. It is easy to see that at the outset these two impulses co existed in him —the fresh and honorable de sire lor the good of mankind, the enthusiasm for liberty, for national life and vigor; but, alongside of this, the desire to be himself the chief agent in human affairs. It is easy to Bee, likewise, that whenever these two im pulses have come into collision, the latter has always gained the mastery over the former. Nor can the moral verdict of repro bation on such a career be doubtfully de livered; though there is much to mitigate our hatred of the,man. —Two editors in Chicago undertoolc to pro duce a velocipedo on anew and tern. One.was to furnlehAbo Uie other the inventive skill, AJaTge throewwnoelod affair was secretly constnicted in a bUaeindoijaud when finlebed-St woe found, to bo several Inches wider Aban the doorway, ,The two editors aro consulting whether to tear down tho bouse or pull tho -velocipede to pieces. THE DAILY EVENING BULLETIN—PHILADELPHIA, MONDAY, APRIL 12,1869. 5 TBE ! * " lUe Thames Bowing 'dpjfle _ great powers of invention, has inventecl.a perfectly noVel i>r}ze; namely, one foVhutfcks ia what itcallsan “Obstacle Race,f.Jflays a London paper: ? fe?'' The unhappy competitor&,were'» to swim across a lake (which, by the way, was cov ered with lee a-few-? hours earlier), then rnn. 160 yards over five flights of wattled .hurdles, then surmount “an obstacle;” tKearacehbme. There was a great deal of mystery about this obstacle. One paper said it would be an ex traordinary obstacle; another’; ;siii(J'. that it would be an Obstacle simply;'another that no conception whatevercould-0e ; -fbr'med - about it When made manifest to- it turned out to be a barriermade up’of VthreO perpendicular scaffold-poles;'crossed at three feet intervals by three others;” It was nearly dark when the start was effected. . The lake was crossed, the, hurdles were'cleared, and two dripping athletes got over the obstacle and secured first and second prizes. But the candidates for third honors were hot so for tunate. TwO gentlemen reached the top of the obstacle, and there they remained. They could not get down. Perched on 1 the summit of three perpendicularhcaffold poles, sitting there exalted, “by merit raised to that bad eminence," on a bleak evening in March, in the dark, numbed with cold and saturated with muddy water, their position cannot have been very comfortable. 1 But soon a friend arrived to keep them company, - A third gentleman equally eager tobe placed in the race appeared on the summit of the obstacle. Be also could not get down. " He looked at the paii - beside him, sitting fixed and motion less. Sedent, ceternurnque' aedebiint. Should he also abide on a perpendicular pole crossed by a horizontal,one? No. How then Bhould he get down. Happy thought; tumble down? Accordingly he .tumbled down, and the shock of the fall preventing him from reassumihg the efect:'posture, crawled the remainder of the .distance and won the third prize; Thus we gather that if you are willing to swim, run, jump, climb up an obstacle, sit on a pole, tumble off it, run the risk of vertebral paralysis, and finally crawl on all fours, and will do all this in the dark, on a wintry night, you may get the third prize, and have the reputation of being a rather indifferent athlete. ‘We shall look with curiosity for future specimens l of inge nuity in the developments of athletic science. If there is any truth in the converse of the proverb, we ought to be not far off. the sub lime of athletics, for the ridiculous has been attained already. COMIHOH-SEMBE ABOUT RELIGION. Henry Ward BeecUor Against Bel clous Inebriation—Christian duty ol Knocking a Olun Ootvn. [From the Plymouth Pulpit for April &] People think that that is the. Christian who lies back in his chair and has .glorious visions and experiences. “Oh! such a good time, such a joyful time, as I have had!” a man says. Well, let me see him a day or two afterward, and I can tell better whether it is a genuine Christian experience or npt. Here is a man that has had a quarrel. He never has lost a chance to Bay an ugly thing, or to have an ugly thiog said against him; and his wife aid children have , taken it up; and here is a set of familes that have warm times. They are as spiteful as cats' and dogs, and throw sparks like a blacksmiths forge all the time. And yet this man is a roaring good Christian. He goes to meeting. There is a revival; and his religious feelings are all aglow. And it is all does feel just as he does. ! nro $, 1 an d the'm i n is ter happens to be fortu nate, and the hymn comes right home, and circumstances concur, and - the electric in fluences are favorable, and the meeting is a joyous one, and he won’t go home until twelve o’clock. He has sung twenty hymns; and he does feel as though he could not keep himself on the ground- “A little more, Lord,” i he says, “and I Bhall fly away.” Now, I waßt to see if to-morrow he will go to that neighbor and say: “Look here, toy dear fellow, we, ate wrong—at any rate I am, whether you are'or not. I have been ugly. Forgive me. I had such a good time last night that I must clean my heart. My pride mußt come down, my vanity mast come down, and I must be reconciled to you.” , He did have a good time, and that is the Sign that the feeling which he experienced was genuine. That he roared his hymns joyfully was no sign of it; that he had an ecstacy of prayer was no sign of it; but that, having that elevation,- he changed it to a moral purpose; that out of that feeling he' wrought garments of duty; that out of that experience he came back to his feilow-men more sympathetic, more gentle, more humble, more Christlike —ah! that was a sign that the feeling was a genuine one. Otherwise it would have been simply a sign of self-indul gence. A man that takes his excesß of moral, so cial and religious excitement,to raise the tone of his moral and emotive feelings, is just as dissipated as if he .raised the tone of his phy sical feelings by physical stimulants. I am not instituting a comparison as.to which is the better and which is the worse. I merely say that one is intemperance just as much as the other, though one, is grosser than the other, and is more disastrous in undoing the very structure of the body itself. And men ought to be made to understand that there is such a 1 thing as moral intoxication, and thata man can take a religious feeling, and that he, can _ w hat shall I say?—imbibe and imbibe, imbibe, for no other reason than because it feels so good. It is self-indulgence. It is a luxury—a higher luxury, to be sure. And be imbibes, and imbibes, and is more joyful. He is not a better man; but he is a much happier man. And.he imbibes, and imbibes, until by and. swigs, and swigs, And swigs; and the man is.besotted. I have seen; men that were literacy debauched at the top Of their brain, and who had gone into a sys tematic self-indulgence. They neyer were trappy except under circumstances where they had this peculiar form of enjoying themselves. If I found that , the whole form of this en jpvment was a mighty spring that was pressing them toward self-denial for the sake of their fellow men; if I found that jit was Bcouring their morals white as snoW; if I found that it was multiplying the avenues of their useful ness; if I found that they were gentle and hieek in following Christ, then I should say that there was no debauch there, that there was no moral intemperance there. Feeling which, beginnihg as feeling, haß transmuted itself' into life and conduct, and become wholesome—that is genuine piety; tbatiß true Christian character; butthe mere feeling withr out the transmutation is nothing of the kind, and it is not desirable'. If it is not going to be transmuted into any thing but emotion, it ie not only an undesirable thing,it is a danger ous thing. Let us take instances that are familiar to us in common life. _A man sits in his door,- and seeß a bully abusing a child that iB weak, gentle, mild, and meek; and the man is ter rifically indignant; ;he fairly swears with rage to ee'e such an abominable bully abuse such a helpless, nice boy. Avery Btaid and quiet apprentice in' a shop near by witnesses the occurrence. He does not feel half so much indignation, but he drops his tools, and claps on ms paper cap, and rushes out into the ‘OBSTACLE RACE.” attest, and knocks that bully, 3£|^SSMl#«fe salutary." One'felt it lJpartv and the other felt it in his fist.' In one it took on the form of helpless protest-the form dienation in a lazy man. And so he sat and reeked with indignation. -The other man transmuted his indignation into a fist which carried hita out and made him the champion and protector of the weak, and the punisher of the oppressor. I say that the last feeling was ; the hearty| fe'olirig—.the feeling that took on the form of action instantly.. . . CTTMBta'ed for tto rblla.Wonlng^Ballctln.] : uoiJSKiionn HEtH’ns. tiY' BARRON BRIBSE* Bash.—Chop themeat fine; put oyer the fire in a pan some sliced mushrooms, parsley and scallion, moistening either with sohp Btock or with drippings and water. When the mushrooms are cooked, jast> before serv ing, add the hash; season it highly; let it w arm without boilipg.and arrange it on a dish in the shape of a dome. If y o^.^. o , n meat enough ypu can < mahe the disn go further by adding poached eggs. White Sauoe. —This is fine for asparagus; or artichokes. Put in a little saucepan .three or four raw yolks of eggs, six tablespoonstul of olive oil (pr butter), salt, pepper and a pinch of nutmeg; heat some water in a sauce pan larger than the firsts and when it is just too hot to bear the hand dip the j former Into it and stir the eggs and oil briskly with a wooden spoon, This sahee should never get much mote than 1 tepid; if the surrounding water is hot enough to eook the yolks, they will of course not : mingle with the oil. When intimately mixed,.take out the saucepan and sprve the sauce. —Petit Journal. WAICHEI, JJKWgJkBH. ladgmus OIAMOyD DEALERS 'As JEWELERS^ [I WATCHES, JFAYEI.HY A SII.VKIt W4HE. j VJWATOHES ana JHWELKY SEPAEKED./ 802 Ches tnut ‘Bt.,PhilQ; Ladies’ and Gents’ Watches American and Imtorted. oi the most celobrated makers. Fine Vest Chains and Leontines, In 14 and 18 karats. Diamond and Other Jewelry, Of the latest deelgna. ENGAGEMENTAND WEDDING BINGS, In l&karat and coin. SOLID SILVER WAIiE FOR BRIDAL PRESENTS. 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Fourth bojtonng Walnut, II Mahogany M Satchels and H ondQonto Jl eo nal),o pricer. Givo them a call. -pirOMAB T'vRUGGXSTS ARE INVITED TO> EXAMINE OUR AJ large stock of fresh Drugs and CUomicuhi of the At bo!enflat Oil*. Vanilla BonnH. Sporigpp, Bfcioß. etc, ROBERT? SHOEMAKER & 0 J-. N. B. corner Fourth and Race streets. • • /•IABTILB SOAP-NOW LANDING.-3IW BOXES U White and Mottled Cnatilo Soap, voryauijQrlor rtaMty. ROBERT, SHOEMAKER h CO.. Wholeaalp Dru.fUate, N. E. corner Fourth and Race streets. /\UVE OIL, SUPERIOR QUANT?, ON DRAUOUT V/snd in bottles; Various brands. ROoBKI IBiIUE MAKER Si 00.. N fc corner Foarth and Race streets. DRUGGISTS’ SUTJDRIES.-ORADnATEB. MORTAR. FUlTllca, Combs, Bruahea.: Mirrora. TweozQrß, i-ufl Boxes. Horn 8coop& Surglcal lnstrunientei Truaao*, Hard and Soft Rubber Goods, Vial Caaea. Glaaa and Metal Syringes, to., all at "Firal BROTHER, } RP s.tf , , aa Bonth Eighth afreet TyURBANT JELLY.—GENUINBGURRANTJEIJjY IN V/6 and 10,1 b, cans* for sale by J# B. BUSSIIwR & CO.* 108 South Delaware avenuo. v OldDOh Il’o'rX&wjas,: "ileS “.topplled by ( £e tfwtoeot from the wharf or tt ie”dyom C, S§£SS% Pr~“«. free, .‘"l ° f too Farm.” UAVfJIf Ac RONS, No. 50 South DELAWARE Avonuo.. FcrtMapr can bo had of all Agrlcuharal^ou^roin THE JFINE AltXa. No. oxo CHESTNUT fetBKT, L l|aß Just received exquisite Bpcclmehs of : Fine Drcidtu ‘* Enamels on Porcelain* - '* - ■■"■" jn great variety., , t , -,? ■ SI’LENIHB I’AISTED PHOI'OORiI'US, Including a number of choice gems. ; A Soperb Line of Ohrombs. A large aesortmentof NEW ENGRAVINGS. Ac. Also. RICH STYLE FRAMES of elegant nowj»ttotn».. «Biwnra» gum«»Buag». coops* fine DRESS SHIRTS AND » GENTS’ NOVELTIES. J. W. SCOTT & CO., 814 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia, ' gonr doors below CanMiumtal m w M PATENT BHQULDER SEAM SHIRI manufactory. 3racn tot these supplied woraySSr Sentlemen’B Furnishing Goods, OI late stylos in (all variety. WINCHESTER & CO.. 700 CHESTNUT. leWß.wJ.tf ~n ZT QKNT*B PATENT SPRING AND BUT; m W^B?w&&‘Sn J r o OOOD3. . . tin ladles end gents. at RICBBLD ERrBIt’3 BAZAAR. noU-tfi OPEN PI THE EVENING. BBOCEBIEB. BJqPOBMs FRESH FRUIT IN CANS. Peaches, Pine Apples, &0., Green Corn, Tomatoes, French Peas Mushrooms, , Asparagus, &c., &o. ALBERT c. ROBERTS DEALER IN FINE GROCERIES. Corner Eleventh and Vine Streets, End Groe*»y. K <», 118 Soulhßccooi etrfiot XTEW DATES. FIGS, PRUNES. KAJBIVB AND AL IN ironde—all of new crop—ld *tor« end -for eele *t COUbTY'S E&et End Grocery. No. U 9 South Second et. TTRI.NEII PEAS, ML SBLOOMS. TO- J? inatoes, Greeti Corn, Aeparnßue, <fcc.. In *torc ana ror ealo at liast End Grocery. No. UB South «<** <?oud street • QTONED CHI P KIES. PLUMS, BLACKBERRIES. D I’encbcs, Pruntlln. Penra. Unis Beane, Shelter Sweet Com. »t OOUSTY’S East End Grocery. No. 118 South Second etrect { ILRESII PEACHES .IS. LARGE CANS, r Gent* per Can-t-tho theap«it and b*e&KObaain the bity, at COUSTV’S Eaet hnd Grocery. No, 1W Souta BecoLd etr<*feL MAULE, BROTHER & ( CO. f SSOO Sonth Street iqcq pattern makers. IRAQ 1869 PATTERN 5! AKER 8. iOOt? CHOICE SELECTION MTCinOANCORK PINE FOR PATTERNS. IQ/jO BPRDCE AND HEMLOCK IQ AG 1869. SPRUCE AND HEMLOCK ±OO-1. LARGEBTOCH FLORIDA FLOORIN G. FLORIDA FLOORINO. Carolina flooring. VIRGIN IA FLOORING DELAWARE FLOORING. ABH FLOORING. WALNUT FLOORING 1869. IQitO FLORIDA STEP BOARDS. IRAQ lCby. FLORIDA BTEP BOARDS. 1009. RAIL PLANK. RAIL PLANK. Ti. AG WAl.h liT BOARDS AND PLANK. IQDQ leby. WALNUT BOARDS AND PLANK- ±OO-7. WALNUT BOARDS. WALNUT PLANK. ASSORTED FOR CABINET MAKERS. BUILPEKB. AO. ■ ■ ini.(l .UNDERTAKERS’ LUMBER.. IRAQ 1869. loby. WALNUT AND PINE. ToUrT" SEASONED POPLAR. IQCfI loby. SEASONED CHEKKY. ±OO-7. WHITE 0AK h PLANK y AND BOARDS. CAROLINA feWiSS 1869. NORWAY SCANTLING, 1869. 1869. m t cypress bhingles. j LAEGEASbOR'J'MTCNT I FOR SALE LOWV IQ/.Q PLA STF.KING LATH. 1 Q«Q loby. PLASTERING LATH. -LOUE7. ratAiJAiE BttOXHEfS 4 CO.I 26(10 SOUTH.STREET. mo CONTRACTORS, LUMBERMEN AND SHIP -1 buildor..—Wo erenow, prepared, to oxoouto promptly ordere for Bouthom Yellow Pino Timber ShipstulLana Lumber. COCHRAN, RCSBBLL& CO., 33 North Front Btrect. , ... m1»34-tf : VELLOW PINE LUMBER.—OItDF.TtB FOR CARGOES I' of every dCßcription Sawed Lumber executed at abort notice—quality, subleot to inspection. Apply to EDW. H. ROWLEY. 16 South Wharves. fed lilEli. 1869 1869. CORSETS. ■BROWN’S triioWe and Ectatl OOESET STOEES, 329 and 819 Aroh St, Whore the Merchant* and Ladies will find an extensive aasortmont inlactured'Coreote and Hooe Basra. and of ktocit nnd Gold ft xcliaufjo, receive accounts of Hanlis and Banners on Uh oral terms, Issue Bills of ExcluutKe on- O, J Hambro & Son, London. * - B. Meizler. S. Sobn Apo., FpankfMls v James W. Tuokir & Coi, Parts, 1l ,r And oilier principal cities, and I*tte» of credit available Uirouifhout Europe 8. Wi cortei Third and Chestnut Btrefit. STERLING 4 WILDMAN, BANKERS AND BROKERS. r ,r! ill. 110 lontb Third Street, Philadelphia, Special Agonta for tho solo of DaDvllle,Hazelton& Wilkeebarrefi.B. FIBBT MORTGAGE BONDS, Dated 1807, dno In 1687. Interest Seven PorCont-pay. able half yearly, on tbe flr«tofApril and flint ofOctober, clear of Sloto and bolted Btatoataxo|. At present tbeser Bondi are oflered at the low price of 80 and accrued In terest. They ore in denominations of 8300, s£oo and 81,000. Pamphlets containing Map., Reports and full informa tion on band for distribution, and will bo sent by moll on- Government Bondi and otlusr Securities! token In ex changeatm.rketra}«*._- ■ w Dealers In Stocks, Bond*, Loans, Gold, dm. jansnd UNION PACIFIC R/IL First Mortgage Bonds Bought and Sold at Beat Market Prices. Ihue Bonds pay 8U (6) For Gent. Interest in GOLD. PRINCIPAL Pay able in Gr old* FFll INFORBATIQS GELER3FULLY FCBSIHHH). The Road ,vill be completed in Thirty (30) I>ays, And Train, ruD through In Forty-Five (45) Days. Dealers in Government Securities, Gold, &0., 40. S. Third Street* atft tl - - ■»-- - BA.N&ING .'HOPS® m and 114 So THIRD ST.FHI 7JkT>'Jt DpAtaEBB IN ALL GOVERNMENT SECURITIES We will receive appHcatdonsferFoUdMOlUle Insurance In the now NationaTnfo Ineomca Company of the United |tatea. ShU information givSn-otmur office. ’ HIBOEMiANEOVB< j^vfid 'dcubc.?l s/ ciiv{> J?acL ocdt'i at - mh23 m&etfi : ■ TT 8. PATENT OFFICE. _ o. IM9. * L . Washington. D. Cm Marco % wj» W. D. CUTtER, K?q.~ Please find'below a fommum&a tion Irom the Examiner, in tbo matter of between Fund, and Cutler* fofmanufactoxe fiom Codfish. Commissioner of Pawnte. l?™™• In tbo matter above refereedto, Friorft“?f lnvoK’ia AWARDED TO CbTLEB, .and the application!) o( Kauff Examiner. . •rt o.foViHnhea the ratoiit under which the BO3TOM AND“ “iHLaDKLpSiSa BAIT *ISII COMPANY. No. Ml COLUMBIA Avenue, inanutacturo their DESIC GATED CODFISH. • * ’ !■ Forssloby.ffUQOd jjHODES'fi ,CO.. - , WATER and CHESTNUT Stiecta, General Agontt. None genuine unless bearing bur trade mark aa above; Parties offering any otbor wffi tK) aummarffy prosecuted no!9 com 6mB •, ■ ■ >— '^r“>AHASOCB.-ALL i THE NEWES'ELONDON Ao9*>and Paris styles, which fbr novelty, .variety end J eldganco are unequalled. , A large oi A- Laos Covens, SeaiSiuk .and Etm A the lowest prices, at H. DIXON’S VAN92f,>,sv«tiS?S -STORE, No. 21 South Eighth street l__L!sS3£22a FAfEjit. II PAPER HANGINGS Wholesale and Retail. MOLE, COOKE & EWJTOj HOKEIiIi & BBOIHIM) NO, 1338 CHESTNUT STREET, Trade supplied of Manufacturers' prices. ffQS'ni'Wßging. - ; ————. BOOTS AMO SHOES. NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC GENERALLY. Tbo latest stylo, fashion and assortment of t S. SHOES AND GAITERS, FOE MEN and RqyS; ■uontota ‘ t EKN SOPP>s,, ' * ' No .280 NORTH NINTH STREET. Better than any whoreln theiCitr. A Fit Warranted. ai,2 font'. ■■■' GIVI. 11151 A CALI, i •, SIG.F. RONDINELLAv TEACHER OF BINGING-FRl vate lessoni and cluuen, Rotldonce, SOS B. Thirteenth street. ani&toS v .RIMISGS. ‘ Late .w ith £3ISJSSCA!>. Kx-GovniiKoit *» be appointed Minister to Russia. ... Tukre was a snow storm la Washington yes terday. ' . ■ ' ....■ .• '. ~ . ■ TEx.PitES(mt5X Jou?sow at Nashville, &onn.,'©n flaturday.fn Mbs usual style.'--"' O' -&* -*■ ' One hundred and forty Swedish emigrants, many of them destined for Salt Lake, passed through Concord,.N. H., on Friday night. F. G. Jewett, the misslDg banker.- of Skaj Beatles, bo- In Canady and his money Is safe. Tint steamer G. A. Thompson was sunk by a snag, near pine Bluff, Arkansas; on Friday night, anif seventeen lives were lost. Six hubdekd Carllsts attacked the town of Leo de Urge), in the Pyrenees, bnt were repulsed with behyyJpss. , . . ■\ i V ■; A TBi-EciKAM from Augusta, Ga. t says that tho .disposition made by Congress of the Georgia matter gives universal joy. Thus far 49 of the male and female employes of the Post-offlco Department at Washington have been discharged^} ' ? The Indiana legislature has thus far been, un able to accomplish anything at (ho extra session. The Democratic members absent themselves, pre venting a qaornm. iN tho U. 8. District Court: at' 8U Louis, on Saturday, a verdict for ■ ®IB,OOO ; was rendered against Win. B. Mann, of Hannibal, Mo., for vio lating die revenue laws. Tire live missing men who pnt off .in a boat fromtiiostcamerThatnes, recently/burned near Cape Hatteras, have been picked np by a schooner. The Pope’s Jubilee was celebrated at Rome .wHfrgftstSPlendori tnePppe 6aykpg i M aß9 ' <lt ’/H;i 'Petersi in presdhee of the,Cardinals and Ambassadors. - : ' •'* - Futy-tiibke nominations, including that of A. R. Calhoun, for Pension Agent at Philadelphia,' were not acted upon ■before the adjournment of the Senate, and mu*t be repeated or now nomia-, aliens matte. ‘ * ' ‘ ’ " Tux New York Board of Health reports that the members of three families In one row of homes in the Sixteenth Ward of that city were stricken with emall-poxon Friday night, and the Board bad the whole population of the' row vaccinated yesterday. In tub Corps Legblatif, Saturday, the Govern ment’s defensive movements were generally approved. Marshal Neil thought that the armv eoold bo placed on a peace foollng.and.if needed, dt- Could rapidly pass to a War footing. M.’ de Xiavalbtte, in a powerful speech, concluded by saying that “it Is the policy of France to maintain resolutely a dignified peace.” The United States Commissioners appointed to investigate the East river, Now York, bridge projects,- hate about concluded tbelr business there,and will, next week.leavefor Nlagara.Pilts bnrgh and Cincinnati, to report the bridges at those points, ami on; their return they .will »n -’nounco their decision relative to the nature of the bridge which they shall deem best to span the East river, after which tho work vylli be imme diately commenced. Thb Overland Mall Company Is now carrying the moils between the ends of the Uolon and Cen tral Pacific roods, a distance of one hundred aud ten miles.' All the delayed malls ate carried across the Steptoe Swamp, and will soon reach their AeattnaUon. The Central Paclfic Bpad, on Saturday, commenced transporting the mails to -the six hundred and fiftieth mile -post, end-only fifty miles of the track remain, to be laid to com plete the Pacific Railroad. From our Late Editions of Saturday Brtbo Atlantic Cnbl . Madrid, April 10.—In the Cortes yesterday, Olozsga made a speech, In which he urged upon that body the adoption of a statute, to be incor porated in the new Constitution, which shall materially modify the powers and functions of the ministry, oa well a s reduce that branch of the Government numerically. , • T ,-- From Woshlngtoni ■ iWiskiHGTOS,. April 10.—'The amount'of frac tional currency issued from the Printing Bureau of the Treasury Department for the week ending to-day Lb .$476,730. Shipments to Assistant Treasurer st New York, 6200,000; St. Louis, $50,000; National Banks, $156,000. Treasurer Spinner bolds as security for national bank circulation $342,798,300, and for public de posits $30,875,850. National bank notes issued during the week, $199,150/ Total to date, $313,796,806. Muti lated bills returned, $12,920,653. Insolvent bank notes redeemed, $1,058 398. Actual circulation at this dat9 $299,817,765. Fractional currency destroyed during tho week, $536,600. In the Boose last night, during the debate on the tax bill, Mr. Marshall, a member of the Con ference Committee,also explained and advocated the report. The debate was lnrther continued bv Messrs. Dawes, Yoorhees, Marshall, Jones (Ky) and Schcnck. hlr- Schcnck, answering the argu ments of Messrs Logan and Butler,remarked that some people mako their charges openly, while otbera .insinuate ties, and thus add cowardice to Insult!' , Mr. Logan atbfd Mr. Schenck whether he alluded to him. In speaking of those who in sinuate lies, and thus add insult to falsehood. Mr. Schenck—No, sir. Mr. Butler—l ask the gentleman whether tho Pharisee did not say, “I thank God that lam not like Other men.” Mr. Schenck— l think It very probable. Any thlng that hypocrisy may have altered will .be familiar to the gentleman in whatever form it may come. „ . _ , The discussion closed, and the Conference re port was agreed to The joint resolution for the protection of the interests of the United States Ur the Union Pa cific, Railroad Company, tho Central Pacific Railroad Company, and for other purposes, re ceived the approval of the President to-day. The following 18 the affirmative vote on the passage ,of Mr. Banks’s resolution relative to Cubat-' Allison, Amber, Ames, Archer. Armstrong, Asher, Axtell, Banks, Bentlev, Binghatn r Blair, Boyd, Brooks, Buffington, Burdett, B. F. Butler, Roderick P. Butler, Cessna, Churchill, Clark, Amasa Cobb. Clinton L. Cobb,-Coburn. Conger, Dewees, Dickinson,- Dockery, Donnelly; Duval, Ferris, Ferry, Finkelnburg, Garfield’ Gotz, Gll flllan, Hawley. Hay, Peaton, Hill, Hoge, Hol man, Hopkins, Hotchkiss, Ingersoll, Jenckes, W, H. Jones, J. L. Jones,-t Jndd, Ju lian, 4 Kelley, Knapp, Lash, • Lawrence, Logan, Loughrldge, Lynch, Maynard, McCarthy, V McGrew, Moyer, Morrill,Myers, Negley, O’Nell, ' “‘•-'-' -Crtb, Packard, Phelps, Pomeroy, Pfosser, Roots, ‘ Sawyer, Schofield, Shanks, Porter, Sheldon, L. A, Sheldon, John A. Smith, William C. Smith, Stevenson, Stokes, Stoughton, Taffe, Tanner, TfilmaD, Trimble. Twltchell, Lynne, Upson, Van Horn, Vorhees, Ward, C, O? Washburne, Welker, Whittemore, Wilkinson, Williams, J. T. Wilson, Winans and Witcher—9B. K'unoral of Sir edwud Canard, [Special Despatch to the Phil a. Evening llullctin.l Nbw Yobk, April 10.—The funeral ot dir Ed vard Cunard look place at Grace Church, and ■was largely attended. Rev. Dr. Potter officiated. The British shipping in the port had their oolors at half-roast in mpect. Specie Shipment, [Special Despatch to the Phila. Evening Bulletin.] New Yobk, April 10 —The specie shipment to day was only $16,000, by the City of London. Tlie Petroleum market. [Special Deßpatch to the Phila Evening Bulletin.] New Yobk, April io.—Petroleum firm and strong lor Crude; 600 barrels aold'nt 17c.; Re fined, 32 to 82%; balanco, April delivery, at 32%. Sales Rght. /' J’ennsylvanii* legislature. v. lUKttiamniii, April 10. Honsr,—Mr}.'McGinnis, moved,that tlie Senate bill 1,281, known ttß the Philadelphia Cattle bill, be put upon the private calendar of next week. •• i,Mr.- : K.epkner objected,: : - . ReßoluUpns being ini order, Mr.,'McGinnis thenq>re sented his motion In the shape of h resolution. Mr. Uleckner raised a point or order, which was eus taided, that it would require atwo-thirds Vilto to adopt the resolution; the biirhavlfig'beeu reported with a ne gative l ecommomiuttou. A Viva voce votoi was takeu, when the resolution was defeated by a decided ma-:. jority. The Senate resolution relative tbftbe final hdjourn xnent of the Leglßlatnro next .Thursday was : referred, to thq Committee on Ways and Moans. , ; , : ..i / The House adjourned, until Monday afternoon, at % o’clock. ' 1 ; I Tho; following appeared in a portion of our |fflattfrfayfl fK>' *i prcparotlons ' for the Celebration In the factual cuy of the fiftieth anni versary of the t'opc’s Reception Into* liie/Fyiesthood. ry :IRoifie:(Mkrc& toaßorretponijiwceM 11 iqMbrolnsPpAj The •' ofß eial'fon rn al%fWednesday eontaifftd a Papal brief, of which tho opening paragraph was as follows: “Pope Pius IX., to all tho falthfal who shall feaddhepresent lettcr,- heaUhsapd'ithe Apostolic bCricdlctioif: Thaty/hiehtwe hardiy liopea would be possible in the midst of eur great and most grievous cares, that tlic Most High shonld grant usa term of life sufficiently long for ns to cele brate the holy sacrifice with more solomn pomp on the fulfilment of tho fiftieth year of onr re ception of priesthood, will take place, 'if-;: rrrP,lease, - . -on the ‘llthdSy ofHbe approaching. AprlL- -This day, which fills onr heart with great Joy, has afforded to tho faithful a fresh opportunity of manifesting 'their piety and proving their attention towards ns. For they, with incredible desire congratula ting ns on eo fortunate an event, have humbly preeefiiedfifius 'earnest prayetf that wo might delgn ’to add spiritual advantages to the celestial treasures of the Church of which God haa in trusted us with tho distribution.” A specification of the conditions on which ple nary indulgence-will be obtainable on the day In question follows this etortUum. Some items of tho programme to be carried out on this com memorative festival have already transpired. On the preceding day, that ls,lbcl(Hh April, tho pro clamation; of an amnesty; will take plocvofasaf 'fieiintly'gericr'anf not universal ohafaetcr.*' All the prMs.ljo'KtJnji?, whether of-- thfc regular, or secular clergy, will offer to his Holiness the pro duct of the masses celebrated Jby them oq ,that ■ rfhprnlng, and aB the number.' Of celebrants may be reckoned atxight or, nine, thousand, and their i daily' remuneraubn varying from one to five francs, we may ca'culate this offering at an ave i rrfige value of 20,000 francs. The devout portion of tho Inhabitants will have i ap ppportunily of testifying-;tbelr,love and vene ’ ratlon'for the. Supreme Pontiff “by taking tho sac rament in bis name on the same morning. On the Uth the Pope will celebrate mae3 in St. Peter’s, and as it will be the fiftieth anniversary of his having done so for the first time at the Church of St. Anna, del Falegn&mij which belongs to the Hospital of Si Giovanni,-where Plo Nino, then Abbate Moetni, taught the boys their catechism, twelve of the boys now belonging to that educa tional establishment will bo.present in prominent situations at the mass in St. Peter’s, and will afterward hove.the honor of dining In the pre sence of bb Holiness with the other guests in vitod to the Vatican. After mass the Pope will receive the congratu latory addresses and offerings > which will be brought to him by deputations from aU’parts of the world. The banquet In the palace will then , be attended by the dignitaries selected for that' distinction, and the: twelve hospital,hoys men tioned fahdve. In the afternoon 'Bis Holiness will visit the Church of St. Anna del Falegnami and the Hospital of S. Giovanni. Thb establish ment Is, near Saint -Andreq-della .Vaile, and-the State ptogresaW.thfe Papa! edrriye-therefrom and back to the Vatican will be made the occasion lor os overwhelming a demonstration of loyalty and deyotiDif asicAnipoESlbly be orgqntzed. On the 12th of April the Pope will visit, ac cording to annnal custom since 1855, the Church ; of St. Agnes i «xfr<niJuro*(fWhen‘Bitoilar demon strations of rejoicing will take place, and music, flre-woiks, illuminations, and transparencies will enliven fhe clty on the three Bucceseive evenings. _ . CUBA. . , i "1"T - The Chaincea of Revolutionary Sac- The Havana -correspondent of the N. Y. Tri bune furnishes the following Intelligence: Tne present population of the bland is about 1.400, 000, jof,whom -about-HtlOO,ooo tire native CnbaßS, white or colored. Of the remaining 400,000, there may be 125,000 .Spaniards, troops, employes of lheGov6rnment,‘‘carpet bag” 'ad venturers, &C-; the balance'areprobably enslaved Africans, who have been brought, here In despite of efforts to suppress the slave trade. A few thousand residents' ' apl "probably qlliaena of the United States, or of" European States, engaged In business. Of the inhabi tants of Cnba there are not then 200,000 persons who are either friendly or indifferent to the Spanbh rule, and among these not One single born Cuban. Tho remaining portion of the people are all bitterly hostile to its continuance, and ore everywhere readyto show that hostility as opportunity offers. .With the daily and un doubted evidences of'this' Important fact, in the shape ot news from Havana that appears In our papers, nearly all of which b filtered through the Spanish censorship, there b Jlttle need to cile.faets or enter into an argument.to provo the unanimity of the Cubans. The best proof, however, b found In the steady progress of the Revolution itself. Since its in ception it has received not one serious defeat, but on tho contrary has dally enlarged Its active boundaries and more, seriously imperiled the Spanish rule. The Provisional Government of Cnba b st this moment master of at least three fifths of the entire area of the island; It com mands all the interior lines of communication within thb revolutionized territory; it threatens ihe control of the Spaniards over the remaining twoLfifthe; it has confined the trboDß operating against them chiefly to the sea-board and to the walb of a few principal towns; it has an organized semi-military Government whose authority b readily and seriously respected by the people; ]l has. to-day an -army of over 40,000 men In the field, find could easily double that number If In possession of arms and proper equipments. Bo much the Rcvolmicn haß, practically accom plished. It has in reality done much more, for from the outset it has established the policy of Emancipation and fall cnfranchbement of all citizens, as its-purpose. The - moral value of ibis unqualified position hfis been immense. There is another notable feature in the success so far achieved. It b that it has been gained by the almost unaided exertions of the Cubans Ibem6clves. In spite of all reports, there haa been but very elight ald glycn from,the outside, cither frohi our snores or other of the neighbor ing American f.Statbs. A -few small cargoes of arms have been run in. but even these arc of re cent date. Another point b. that from the outset the movement has. been regular and orB<ti , parried'v (forward j under or ganized direction, and with a definite policy to guide. The Provbional Government, of which Ccspedes b tho known chief.bas been everywhere recognized by Whatever differences and jealousies may have .existed, and it Is pre sumable there hive been Buoh, they have never been allowed to impede the patriotic work. At the present moment the entire Eastern Depart ment,wU|i tbesexcggilpn of 7 ,tijo eeaporfs, and two or thfee'intefior places of importance, like : Puerto Principe, are controlled by the Repub licans. Awful Accident In Italy. An avalanche bad suddenly fallen on the Sim plon road, near the Galcrle (lea Raux-Froldes, and burled thirty Itallfttf'wdrkmen soming from Domo d’Oesola, and their two guides. The lat ter and ten of the fonnerj had not re-appeared, only-twenty' having succeeded In saving their lives. TerrlblcGnlcfs. A storm raged throughout Europe on the 27th and 28th nits. ~Severe gales.were felt.aU over England. From the porta on the northeast coast baa accounts of the state of the weather are to band. In Birmingham a enow storm raged for fourteen honrs without > Intermission. Eaßter Sunday throughout the midland counties was as uupropitions as if this holiday season had fallen in mid winter.' ; • “ •' j 1 , : Ullners’.Strike lu England The miners’ strike in South Yorkshire has as sumed 1 very formidable : prbp6'rtlbrie; J l/700 men two ppwout ofemplojmentrflndi between- 6,000 and 6,000 persons.are depending on them for sup pSW. 1 * ’They ireM‘Tiroseht' maintaihe'd ! by the Miners’ Union,,whicti hfta a fundof £lo,ooo;'and by contributions from other trades. GAB FIXTUBRS. , ....,: . Gab fixtures.—mibkey, merbill a TIIACKARa, No. 718 Oheatnut street, manufacturer! of Gob Fixtures, Lambs, Ao.,&et.'would call the attention iif the pah lie to tholr large and elegantaaaortmont of Gai Chandeliors, Pendants, Brackets,Ao. They also introduee gas pipes Into dwellings and public buildings, and attend to extending, ottering and, ( rop'>triogKoa pipes. All wort —warranted-'' _l__—Ll—Ll——Ll_—l—l— <" VAN’XON PRESERVED GINGER.—PUEBERVED J■ s Ginger, In syrup.oftho celebrated jJUyioong brand; ’also, Dry Preserved Ginger; In boxes, Importoifand for saloby' JOB. 11. UOSSIhR & (JO., 108 South Delaware avenue. IlUKfßMtte t" /'./ ‘;‘-r | Jg 29 PERPETUAL. £>* , ■■■ j' FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY ■>' Vo# I Office*—49s C)Ke6tfluf Btroef a ! " i Assero on ?antuiry.l,lB6os 13. \ « Lo«»eßPaid,Bixiae;lB39 J O’tror Perpetnal anUTefflnorarjfPptieleson Hberal Tens*. Tlio 'Company also issues Po'lfilos upon tho Eouto of alt kinds of BuildlutsTGroundltentSAud Mortgages. PIBEOTbaB. A If rod O. Baker, Alfred FKler. Bsmuel Grant, Thomas Sparks. Goo. W. Blcaarfls. • Wm.B.<liwt. Ti&ao Lea, ' Thomas 8. Ell la. Goo. Fates, . - 1, . Gustavos S. Bpnson. . ALFRED G.BAKEK, Vresldeut. . GEO: FALES. Vico President. JAB. W.'MdALLTBTEE, Secretary, WM. GEhEK, Assistant Secretary. -- 7 f n Uc3l jjK. AWAKKMIITIiALBAyETY iNBUBANCECOM mcorpo?at«d by the Legislature of Pennsylvania, IB3S. Office AE* corner of TillßD sed WALNUI' Streets. I'hlladolptiia. MARINE INSURANCES ■ On Vessels, the wori4 On goods by river, canaL lake and land carriage to oO parts of toe Union. ETRE INBURA.NOE3, . . ■ - On Btoree,Dwenings. ASSETS OF THE COMPANY. r» , NovembeiAflsra; r . r Lomi. 130,000 United States Six Per Cent Loan, w * . <s• v•* v*""** H&flOQ 00 -MLOOoUated States Six Per Cent Loan - (for Pacific Railroad) 60,000 00 200,000 State of Pennsylvania Six Per Cent, Loan SLU37K 00 125,000 City of Philadelphia Six Per Cent. . ~ Loan (exempt from Tax) OO eojre Bate of New Jereey Six percent, - w Uoan....bubw w 20.000 Pemuylvanift Railroad Pint Mort* gago Six Per Cent. Bond* 90*200 00 25,000 Pennsylvania Railroad . Second __ __ Mortgage Six Par BoDds . SWOO 00 25,000 WG*tem j Pennaylvania Kwiroad 20.625 00 80,000 State of Tennessee Five Pet Went. Loan... * 31*00° 0U 7.000 State of Tennoesoe Six Per Cent' „ ' Loan 6,031 so 15,000 Germantown Gu Company, prind* pal and'interest guaranteed tar the City oi Pbfladelphla, Bdo . fbaieaetock. ..iV*..... 16*000 00 10,000 Pennsylvania Railroad Company* «.**«-*, 200 ehareestock, f..;.1L3M00 5.000 North Pennsylvania Railroad Com- paDy, 100 shares stock. &6oo 00 20.000 FfaUadelphla and Southern r Mall Steamship Company, 80 shales stock.I&000 00 207JW Loans on Bond and Mortgage, first liens on City Properties ........ 207,90000 BLUS.WO Par. Market Value, 25 ““ Cost, 8LQ93.604 2S ' ’ 4 Real Estate. 88,000 09-, BUIS Receivable for Insurances ': made 322(488 24 Balances due at Agencifis—-Pro rnippiH on Marine PoUciee crued Intents and other debt* due the Company.. ...... *0.178 88 Stock and Scrip of snndry Corpora- Gone, 83,156 0a Esbauted value. LBl3 00 Cash In Raiik .SllEflSO 08 Ossh In Drawer. ' 418 65 _ ■ !■ 1181563 73 81.617.867 80 DIRECTORS; J_" ' , rhomss C. Hand. James B.McFarlsnd, Edward Darlington, WUUam C. Ludwlg. Joseph B-BeaL : Jacob P. Jones, ■ f3Snod Zander. JoahoaP.Evre.: Tbeophilns Paulding WllUam G. Boulton. Hugh Craig, nmuyO.DaUeU. Jr, John a Davis, John D. Tayfor, ~ James C. Band. Edward LaiauAade, John & Penrose, Jacob RJngel, a. Jones Brooke, Deorgo ViC Bernadoa. Spencer M’Hvalne, Wm. C. Honaton. llenry Sloan, D. T. Morran. Ptttabnrgh, Samuel E, Stokea. John B. Semple, do, James Ttsqnair, raOMA /- < f^® Preßlte ? t »’ JOHN a DAVIfI, Vloa President HENRY LYLBURN, Secretary. HF.NRY BALI* Aaa»t Secretary. CUMB INSURANCE COMPANY. No. 809 CHESTNUT |i STHEET t - INCORPORATED 1866. CHARTER PERPETUAL. CAPITAL. 8200.000. FIRE INSURANCE EXCLUSIVELY. Tnsnret against Loss or Damage by Fire, either by Per petual or Temporary Policies. DI&ECTOB3. | Robert Pearce. John Kessler, Jr„ Edward U. Orne, I Charles Stokes, 1 John W. Everman, ; Mordecal Roaby. i RICQARSON. President. ELA.W.N, Vice President Secretary. apl-tf Charles Richardson, Wdl H. Rhawn, Francis N. Buck, Bcnry Lewis, Nathan DiUoa, George A* West GHARLEI WM. H. WILLIAMfI L BLANCA PH (E NIX IN 8 USANCE COMPANY INCORPORATED 1804-CHARTER PEKTETUAL. N 0.224 WALNUT Street, oppositethe Exchawfe, TUa Company insured from losses or .damage by yn liberal terms on bail dings, merchandise, furniture, tc-for Umited periods, and permanently on buildings b WrSi^S^>M P been In "active operation for more chan sixty years, during which all ‘looses nave been promptly adfurfed' “gjgj^Ba. Jotmli. Hodge,' David Lewi, BLB:MahonyT Benjamin Etting, John T. Lewis, Thoa. H.PoWera, Wm. 8- Grant, A. K. McHenry. Robert W. Learning, Edmond Caatillon, D. Clark Wharton. # Samuel Wilcox, Lawrence Lewis, Jr* Louis C. Norris, OH J, a WDCHERER, Preatfent. WIIoOX. Secretary. ? t ' FIRE ASSOCIATION OF PHILADEL » m&Jv ■ phia. Incorporated March 27• 1820. Office. jMlffllo. Si North Fifth street Insure Buildings. Household Furniture and Merchandise tJMaij^a a gSßg generally, from Loss by Fire. Assets Jan. 11869. - TBUBTBEB. 1 /_• . William H. Hamilton. Samuel Sparhawk, Peter A. Keyser, Charles P.Rower, John Carrow, .Jesse Lightfoot* . George I. Voung. Robert Shoems&er. Joseph R. Lyndfall, Peter Armbruater, LeTI P. Coats, ■ „M. H. Dickinson. - Peter Williamson. WM. H. HAMILTON. Preside t, SAMUKL SPARHAWK. Vice President WM. T. BUTLER. Secretary. . A NTHRAGITE INBURANCB COMPANY,—CHAR A TRR PERPETUAL. Office, No. 811 WALNUTstreot, above Third, Mi. Will insure against Loas ,or. Damage % Fire on Build- Inca, oltlier perpetually or for a limited time. Household Furniture and Merchandise generally. ' Also. Marine Insurance on Vessels, Carpoes and Freights. Inland Insurance arts of the Union. Wm*Eaher, LewisAudenried, D. Luther, John Ketcliam, John B. Biakiston, J. E. Baum, Wm. F. Dean, John B. HeyL Peter Bleger, Bamuol 11 Ro therm el. —• ESHER. President, F. DEAN, Vico President, Ja23-tu,this,tf Wm. M. Smith, Secretary. lEPPERSON FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY OF J Philadelphia Ofßoo, No. 34 North Fifth street, near ranee against Boss or damage by on Public or JJivate Buildtara. Furniture, Stocks, Goods and Merchandise, on favorable term,. djbecTOßß. Wm. McDaniel, Edward P.Moyer. Israel Petoruon, Frederick Ladner. John F. Betateriing. AdamJ. Qians, Henry Troemner, HonryEplany, »®EWck. SamnelMlUer. wfr.T.TAM MoDANlEL, : President PEXErBONTvIco President. —*«rr and Treasurer. IB RAJ Philip E. Colemah, American fires insurance company, encor porated 1810.—Charter perpetaAL • „ •%. , ~ No. 810 WALNUT street, above ThlrdLPhnidelphla. ■ Having a largo paid-up Capital Stock and Burplus In. vested in sound and: available Securities, continue to in . jure on dwellings, stores, furniture, merchandise, vessels in port, and their cargoes, and other personal property, aii losses liberally andyrnmjrt^adjusted. \ Thomas B. Maris, Edmrad a.gutilh, John Welsh. OharlesW. Pouitney, • Patrick Brady. Israel Morris, . John T. Lewis. > THOMAS H. MARIS, President. I AnnkET O. Cbawtobd, Secretary . ' L'lKlS ItiBUKANCK EXCLUSIVELY.—THE PENN; i r BVlvanla Fire Insurance Company—lncorporated 1826 .—Charter Perpetual—No, 610 Walnut Btreet, opposite In- i <1 ®ISia d uonfpanyr?avoraMy khown to the. community for over forty years, continues to insure .against lobs ordam .age by finvpn PubUc or Private Buildings, either porma nently orfora limited time. Also, on Furnltuie, Stocks (of Goods and Merchandise generally; oh llboral terms. ! Their Capital, together with a large t Burplus Fund, u iinventod In a most careful manner, which enabloa them ;to offer to the Insured seourlty iu thecase i ‘ Daniel Smith,Jr., John Dovoreu*. J -■ " Thomas Smith, SLByiTH, Jr., President, itarir ; Alexander Benson. > Isaac Unelohurst, . , Thomaß Ilobina, . . ' ; I >. , ' ■ Daniel Hi ‘ ' ’ ■■ ■■ - • ■ DANII WILIIAM S. COOWKIA, Sec _ ' s * ' . Lljfl IfiStjItANCeOOMPANY j ■ 'it' S ' f >: UNITED BTATES OF AMfiBIOA, Washington, D. C. - xi Chartered by Special Act of Congmi, Ip : ' . provedJnly 25*. 1868» r . ' Cash papitaJ, $1,000,000 BBureja omoE: FIRST NATIONAL BANK BUILDING Where oil correspondence •hould be addrefflefl. CLARENCE H. CLARK, JAY COOKE JOHN W. ELLIB. W.G. MOORHEAD, GEORGE F. TYLER, J. HINCKLEY CLARE. OFFICERS; CLARENCE H. CLARK, Philadelphia. President. JAY COOKE, Chairman Finance and Executive Com mitten. HENRY D. COOKE, Washington, Vice President. EMRRBON W. PLET. Philadelphia, add Actuary E.B.TCRNEP, Washington, Assistant Secretary. FRANCIS G. SMITH. M. D., Medical Director. . .. J . EWING HEARS, M. D- Asalatant Medical Director. This Company, National in its character, offers, by reason of its Large Capital, Low RateaefPremium, and New Tables, Iho most desirable means of Insuring Life yet’presented to the public. ' ■Circulars, Pamphlets, and foil particulars given on ap plication to the Branch Office of the Company or to its General Agents. General Agents of the Company JAY COOKE St CO., New York, for New York State ami Northern New Jersey. JAY COOKE & CO, Washington, D. C„ for Delawar , Virginia, District ol Columbia and West Virginia, ■ E. W. CLARE St CO, for Pennsylvania and Southern 'i New Jersey BS. Rubbsuu, Harrisburg, Manager for ; Central and Western Pennsylvania. : j. ALDER ELLIS St CO., Chicago, for Illinois, Wisconsin and lowa, t Hon. STEPHEN MILLER, St. Paul, for Minnesota and r ' N.W. Wisconsin.' / JOHN W. ELLIS St CO, Cincinnati, for Ohio and Con i tral and Southern Indiana, T, B. EDGAR, St. Louis, for Missouri and Kansas, s. A. KEAN St CO, Detroit, for Michigan and Northern Indiana. A. M. MOTBERSHED, Omaha, for Nebraska.. JOHNSTON BROTHERS * CO, Baltimore, for Mary Uni!. Sen England General Agency under the Direction of E. A. ROLLINS and; .. . / Qf of pulton, W.E.CHANDLER,)- - J. P; TUCKER, Manager, S Merchants* Exchange, State street, Boston, mHB RELIANCE INSURANCE COMPANY OF PHIL 1 ADKLPHIA. _ Incorporated in IML Charter Perpetual. Office, No. 808 Wahratstroet CAPITAL $300,000. _ Insures against loss or damage by FIRE. on Houses Stores and o'her Bandings, limited or papetua), qpd on Furniture, Goods, Wares and Merchandise in town or ““iXjbBES PROMPTLY ADJUSTED AMD PAID. 8437,698 S 3 lnverted in the following Securities, vie.'! ~ firrt Mortgages on City Property,well eecarod.sl6B,6oo of United b tales Government Loans U7,0004W Philadelphia City 6per cent L0an5.......... ... 75,0(K/00 ; Pennsylvania $3,000,000 6 per cent. Loan. 80.000 &> , Pennsylvaniaßailroadßonds. first Mortgage.. 5,900 00 Camden and Amboy Bailroad Company's 6 per CebtLoan. —~ 6,000 js cKa Mori: 600 00 gage Bonds. 4*560 00 County Fire Insurance Company's Stock 1,050 00 Bank Stock. 4,000 00 Commercial Bank of PennsyKehia Stock 10,000 00 Union Mutual Insurance Company's Stock 880 00 Reliance Insurance Company of Philadelphia : Stock. aasooo Gash in BaAkand on hand... .."r. 12.858 33 Worth at Par •Woxthlhli date at market prices. DIRECTORS. Thomas C. Hill. Thomas EL Moore, Wm. Musser, Samuel Cashier, Samuel Blivoul James T. Y oung, lsaac F. Baker. Win. Stevenson, Christian J. Hoffman, BcbJ. W, Tingiey. Samuel B. Thomas, Edward Biter. , THOSMAS a HILL, Present Wjc. Chubb, Secretary. „ . ..v* February 17,18®. J&l»tu th a if UNITED FIREMEN'S INSURANCE COMPANY OF pnn.AnRryHTA. This Company takes risks at the lowest rates consistent' with safety, and eonfinea its business exclusively to EXHE INSURANCE IN - THE CITS' OF PHILADEL PHIA- OFFICE—No. 728 Arch street, Fourth National Bank Bonding. . . ■ . DIEECTOE3. Tbomaa J. Martin, Henry;W. Brenner, John Hint. Albertna King. Wm. A. Bolin. Henry Bumm. James Mongan, t . Jamea Wood, William Glenn, ' John Bhallcroe*. James Jonner. J. Hehry A akin, Alexander T. Dickson. Hugh Alulligan, Albert C. Roberto. Philip Fitzpatrick. James F. Dillon. Conrad B. ANDBESS, President. Wm. A. Bonne, Trees. ■ Wm. H. Faoen. Bec'y. .$1,406,095 08 TIHE COUNTY FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY—OF. X Bee, No. 110 South Fourth street, below Chestnut ‘The Fiie Insurance Company Of the County of Phila delphia," Incorporated by the Legislature of PennajlTa oio in 1838, for indemnity against loss or damage by Ore, exclusively, 1 * •' CHARTER PERPETUAL. This old and reliable ittetitutlomwith amole capital and contingent fund carefully invested, contim. to inaurt buildings, furniture, merchandise, 6a, either permanent ly or for a limited time, against loss or damage by fire, at die lowest rates consistent with the absolute safety of its customers. Losses adjusted Chas. J. Batter, I Andrew EL Miller, Heniyßudd, ‘ ] JamoaN. Stone, John Bom, 1 Edwin L. Reokirt, Joseph Moore, Robert Y. Massey, Jr„ George Mecke, - I Mark Devine. ’ CHARLES J. SUTTER, President HENRY BUDD, Vice President BENJAMIN F, HQECKLEY. Becretary and Treasurer CBO&S* OBKEB: LEHIGH GOAL PLAIBTED ft MoOOLLIN. Ho. 8033 CHESTNUT Street, West Philadelphia, Bole Retail Agents for Coxe Brothers & Co.'s celebrates Cross Creek Lehigh CoaL from the Buck Mountain Voin This Coal is paruculariy adapted for making Steam fo> Sugar and Malt Houses, Breweries, Ac. It is also onsur passed as a Family CoaL Orders left at the office of tm Miners, Mo. 841 WALNUT Btreet (Ist floor), will receivt onr prompt attention. Liberal arrangements made witt mannfacfarers using a regular quantity. mo tr R tm JEFFIiIfeON BT. A Im/nVwEU-TH ST. HAAS A FETTER. COAX. DEALERS. N. W. COR. NINTH AND JEFFERSON STREETS. PHILADELPHIA. Keep on hand a constant supply of Lehigh and Schuyl kill coals, from the best mines, for Family, Factory and Steam Purposes. Kept Dry, under Coyer, well Cleaned. Weight Guar anteed, and sold at the mb!7-tf LOWEST CASH PRICES.. __ pOMPLAINTS OP , SLATE AND DIRT BY CON \J Burners of coal are. done away with by our Coal Breaker. All pure coal broken Into family sizes, ready for use, 8. W. comer Thirteenth and Washington avenue. mhZWJma KEITER & LE3INGKE. E. HA6OH tUKEB. 1 JOHN F. BHEAFF. rB UNDbSsiGNED INVITE ATTENTION TO their stock of „ . Sprlng Mountain, Lehigh and Locust Mountain Coal, which, with the preparation given by us, we think can not be excelled by any other Coal ' jalO*tf . ■ Arch etreot wharf. BchuyUcill. Spirits turpentine and rosin—ho barrels Spltmb Turpentine:-142 bbla, Pale Soap Rosin; 1166 bbla. No, SiShipplsß Rosin,landing from steamer Plodeer lor »ale by ED>P. H. ROWLEY. K S.'Wharvs» noEtt /"IOTTON.-M0 'BALES COTTON IN STORE AND ■\J foreole by COCHRAN, BUSSELL ft CO., 22 North Front street. , . : y;,. -• . RICE -175 CASKS in store and for sale by COCHRAN, ItCSSELL ft CO., 22 North Front street, . : , \LIVEBFARUIE3. CAPERS. ftc.-vOLIVEBFABCIis \7 (StuffddOllvci); Nonpareil and Superfine Capeniand 1-Vench Olivos;■ freflh goods: laiullng'or Napoleon ILL from Havre, and for sale by JUA B, BOSSIER ft CO» KB South Delaware avenue. ; • O?THE ‘ Paid.in. Full, fhha nm.pniA. DIRECTORS. E. A.BOLUNB, HENRY P.COOKE. W. E. CHANDLER, JOHN D.DEFREEB. EDWARD DODGE, H. a FAHNESTOCK. OOSlt SSD WOOD. ■'< NAVAL STOKES. , ■■ . Nos. IJy and 141 South ionrih .tiool, i t; ’ BlttoW BTIKJSB aMD.mtSITBSTAmi J ii ! rar PghUe sales Mina PhiMclphiaExch&nra EVEBI ■‘ TUESDAY; #MSo’clock-'';}! a • • :’ .VB Jfnrelturo BaJet..at _tha, Auction Store EYEHV TMURBDAY. -' u.>J < , WT7 Salci at especial attention. , , ■ BTOCKB. LQANB.&C, - ; ON TUKSDAV, APRIL 13. Atl2 o’clock bodd, at toe Philadelphia Exchange— v t Executor, a Sale. 64ah-rca BhamaMn . i IS aoarta Arorrlcan.Mutual Jmuranco Co, ' ■ is Mist®. iMabayunk Gaa \x>: = » ■ Ba ahareaMecbaDlca’ National Bank. ' 826 AmeHcWA Mutoal lniurancoScrip. ' ■ i« shar caFhUa'Scfphlioijmanto wn and Norristown v; i •.•.-! KollroiuL' }->-••• - 155000 PhiladClphiaUltv Doan.cloar of taxca BIULOUO PbUadelohla and Erie K.R; bonds, guaranteed. SO abaree Girard National Bank. For AccountOf W hom it mav Concorn— -88000 Loan el the City of Philadelphia, (sued to Penu ■ ■ ejlvanis Kailroad. redojmable July 1, 1887. «»', .. For other Account*— * . I enaro Philadelphia Library Co. _ '■ . . ,44 aharea.Gennantown amPPcrkipmen Turnpuco Co. 2U irharea Cn'on Uutua] liiS. 1 Co. . ' 31 shMes OoosolWaiiop National Bank.. 30U nharealialzi.il Oil Co .. . ' , II ebArea National t>sukor North America. 77 shares I ciaware Division Canal Co, II eharebfichomacker Piano Porto Manufacturing Co -F2 than b Union Transportation Co. SJCUOuWeBtem Penn’d K.K. firvt mortgage 6 per cent . 20 share# Seventh National Bank. 100 et area Pccnt-ylvaufa Canal Co. 1 share Acadtrayofjsine arU*. , , & e harts Academy of Mufjc. with ticket S and Southern Mail 8. 9 Co. . 31000 Second and ‘j bird Streets Fas«cng«r Rahway Go. Ut mortgage.- . _ , dOU shares American Buttonhole Machine Co. . . JIEAL ESTATE BALE. APRIL 13. Orbtiazu’ Court sale—Estate of “enjamtr F. Btrawn, dec*fI.~’JHBEESIORY BRICK DWELLING, No. Bi 9 Nrrfh Broac street b ..tb Of Atmoie.; “ Orphans*, Court ttaje—Estate of Mary Given, dec’d- Sk-oTOKY BRICK DWEILiNG.No. fi9CorUtlanat orphans* i iourt .oalc—Estate r of ib uinas F. Maber. aec’o.—VEßY VALUABLE FARM, 62J4 ACRES. 23d Wardltoud'partiy in Montgomery .county. - ._. Mt J r _ XT VEKY ELLGaNTOOItN I'liY SEAT and TdANBION, known aa "Silver Pine,'* 3134 ACRE'S. River Delaware,at *j aconj. Pa.. % (nilea fro***, Philadelphia, from the itftflirond StuUon, rind'if square from the SteaWioat Landing- 900 feet front on ti\e iviver Delaware, 23d Ward, late the rei*id> nc of Edmund GreeiLdecM. MODERN THBEBSTOJtY BRICK RESIDENCE, No. COUNTBY BE3IDENCE. Wont Walnut lane, N. B. of Wayne etreet Germantown,22d Ward. Lot 140 bi 831 feot Large Mansion, 53 feet front, with ail .the modern improvemente and conveniences— bt-»ble and Coach House and beautiful giODfcda.; •' Sole by Order of * eirß-E«tntoof AnnCoiyeU, dec*d— GENTEEL THHE&STORY BRICK DWELLING. No. 1U B 8 «me Te ifotate- GENTEEL THREfe BTOftY .'BMCK SIGBK aud DWELLING. No. 418 Bouth Tonth street, 11 B^iuoiietate—TWO.STOßY BRICK DWELLING. No. 239 Currant alley, south ot Locust at. Same tecat**— 2 "rUKILbTOKY BRICK DWEL* LINbS, Nos. 226 and 228 Acorn aUey. north oLBprixce st Same Estate—THKEE-Si ORY ‘ BRICK DWELLING. No 2UB Quince street-between Walnut and I»ooust; BANDbOME MODERN with Btab!e and Carriage House. N. W.comsrGreen and dohnaon stieets, 22d Ward, Germantown i U 0 feet lront, 2UU feet Valuable residence, large Lot and WHAHP. Burlington. N. J. frontlogon the RtvdrDela n are. Green Bank. Wooa street and Pearl strceL ; Executor#* rale—Estate of James W. EarbT. dec*d.— LOT. Enterprise etreet eaatoi Sixth. First, Ward. Same Estate—i OT, S. K. corner of Seventh and Moan tain ttrfeta. first Waj d . . Same Estate—LOT. Deehong street, west of Twenty ei BLkIhESs“fAND-THKEe-&TORY STONEBTORE end DVST3LLINO, No. 4523 Main at eet, south of Wiutar, G T™KEeSttSY Wa Bti ICK DWELLING, liNo. 1706 Barker street, 9th Waid. .. t OT,U. \V. comer of Nineteenth street and Columbia avenue BUILDING LOT,Frankford road,aouthwest of Cum bTWG-iTOBY BRICK COTTAGE, No. 1714 North Twelfth street, above‘Cclambia avenue, with a Brick L «“I h a irMO&IM n THREE-BTOKY BRICK RESIDENCE, No. 666 North Sixteenth etreet, below °BMALL COUNTRY PLACE, 10 ACRES. Luzornoco., Pa., one mile from the Leblgb LA RGE *Dd VALUABLE LOT, TullP etreet, 8. W. of 11 high avenue—4 front*. . . - , - BRICK BUILDINGS and LOT OP GROUtfD, Tw6nty fifth street eomh of Spruce. . Eaecutoja* Peremptory Saie—Fstate of Charles F. Lex, d.c’d-TWO-STORY BRICK STABLE, No. 1223 Cherry sti eet with a Three B*ory Bfick Dwelling in-ihe rear Same State-4 TBREE-aTORk tfRICK DWEL DINGS, Wuddrn'B court, in the rear of the above. THR&E.B ( ORY BRICK DWKLLING» No, 2126 Frank Unstreet, above Diamond , i, LAttGE and VALUABLE LOT, Hutctiinson street, south of Columbia avenue, 2utb Ward-2 fronts, , Peremptory Sale —3 LARGE and VALUABLE LOTS. Nor'hfiJde of - 4rch street, west of Thirteenth,each 18 feet front. 230 f*6t deep. 2 WEli-bBCUBED GROUND RENTS* SBI 50 a year. ! VAIJUABLE2& STORY dTJnE REaIOENOE, 84 Linden etreet, between Coulter street and dndl&tt Queen lane Germantown. Immediate possession. VALUABLE MISCELLANEOUS BOOKS, FROM - libraries ON TUEBDAY AFTEBNOON. April 13, at 4 o'clock. Sale No. 2015 Green street. , HANDSOME FURNITURE; FINEOARPETB, Ao. ON WEDNESDAY MORNING. . . . April 31, at 10 o’clock, at No. 4015 Green street. by cata logue, the entire Furniture, in. ludtng-Walnut Parlor Bmt;HalrCloth:Elegant Etagero-marole lop and mir ror • Handsome Centre Table and Reception Chain; fine English Brussels Carpets; Walnut Hall and Dining twom Furniture; Superior Extension Dining Table; Buffet Bide board, marble op; China and Glassware: Walnut and Green Reps Bitting Room Furniture: Suit Elegant Walnut Chamber Furniture, cost $700; Handsome Cottage Suita, marble tops; very tine Hair Matresses; Fine Blankets; Ki cben Furniture Hefriger.tor, Ac. The furniture has boen in use but a short time, and la In excellent order. .8437,698 89 ■ $454,381 33 • Sale at the Auction Booms. Noe. 139 and 141 Boutb irourtja street. OTHER MORNING. April 15 at 9 o'clock.at the auctioD roouu, fty catalogue a large assert ment of *dporior fclouiehola Furniture, crmpribiDß—UftPdfioine .Walnut Parlor Suits,, cowed vitb plush, reps and.hair doth; Walnut Chamber Suits Cottage Chamber Baits. toperloi Dining . Room Furniture, fine French Plate Mirrors. 2 superior Rosewood 7 Octave Piano Fortes, made by Decker B;oa. and Schluter; handsome Wardrobes, Bookcases, Side . boards, HatStand. Extension, Centre and Bou quet Tables. China and uiasaware, Beds and Bedding, inne Bair Matrasses, superior Office Furniture. Cabinet makers’ Bench, lAandeliem. jGos-cousaniicg and Cooking Btmes. Oil Paintings and Engravings, handsome velvet. 1 Brnseeh anr other Carpe£..Ac. < k Also, Cluster Diamond Ring. . , Also, Go d Hunting . ON THURSDAY, Aprl'ilfi, at 12o’c'ock. noon, at ibe! auction.store, com piling superior Old Rye, Bourbou and Wheat Whiskies, French Brandy, Port, dherry and Madeira Wines, Ja maica and SL Croix Uutaß, Scotch and Irish whiskies, Ac,, Ac. , Sale bv order of John Rosier, fcaq., Suporlntendont of J City Railroads ABOUT 4U TuNtf OF RAILROAD IRON, UN SATURDAY MORNING J _ April 14. at 10 o’c’ock. at the corner of Broad and Mar. ketitraeS, about 40 tons of Railroad Iron and Frog Cast, logs. *Aerms —(Jaali before delivery. Sale on ibe Premises- VERY ELF GANT OOUNFUY 8 b AT. MANSION. 92i ACBES. llorsea, Cowb, (Jarriages, Harness, &o, d. W. corner of Old k oik Road and Übelten avenue, Uhoatnut Hill, residence of " May 1. at 3 o’clock P. M. will ho soid at public sale on the prtmiios. Full particulars In handbills at the auction rooms. A dmlnlstrators’ Sole on tho Premises. Estate of WILMON WHILDON, deceased VERY iIFGANT RESIDENCE AND BUPERIOR FURNITURE, CARPETS, AC., No. 1910 oPRUCE SIRtKT. o}j MONDAY MORNING* May i, st 10 o’clock, will be sold tbo very elegant Four story Hrick (marble to second Btory) RESIDENCE, with Double Sack Buildlugß, No. 1910 Spruce street. 22 foot front, 167 feet deep to Howell Btreet, finished in a very superior and elegant manner, with every modern im provement and convenience. • SI PEKIdR FUBNITURE i Alto, tho elegant Walnut Furniture made to order by Moore A Campion;, handsome Carpets, largo Iredell Plato Mantel Minor, Ac. tar Full particulars in handbills. •_ B SCOTT, JB., AUCTIONEER. . SCOTT’S ART GALLERY 1090 CHEeTNUT street. Philadelphia IMPORTANT SPECIAL SaLE OF BB*T QUALITY EXTRA TRIPLE SILVr R PLATED WabE, Manufactured by Mr- GEO. 11. BECHTEL, expressly for his cltv Custom Trade. •' ON TUESDAY MORNING. „ „ _ April ,13. at luM o’clrck at Scott’s Art Gallery, 1030 Chestnut Btriekwill bo offered for public sale anim inenso assortmout of host quality Triple Silver Plated Ware, comprising—Chased and Plain I'ea Sots, Urns to match; Salvers, Water and lee Pitchers.. Tetho-tete, Epergneß, Berry Dishes, Cake Baskets. Breakfast, Dluuor and Tea Oastots. Call Bells. Goblets, Celery and Pickle frames, Vaees, Spoons, Forks. Ac. , . AU the abovo Wares have been manufactured ex pres.ly for Mr. Bechtel’s City Trade, and warranted as reprctentcdornoßale. , p Also, an elf cant aasortment of Bordigllo,. Ainanno. Agate and Sienna vases, 1 azzaa, large Urns oupedestalst Bronzes. Clocks, Candelabras, Aa, being the bal ance ol Invoice of Messrs. VIG Bos’ late importation. The collection is now ready for. xamiuatlou. TABLE GUTLEKV. ~ Also, an invoice of Table Cutlory, comprising—Dinner, Dessert and Tea Knives, PearMvorv aud\Bono Handles. rpHE PRINCIPAL MONEY EBTABLISHMENT • J. B. E. comer of BIXTH and RACE tricots. Money advanced on Merchandise genoraUyw'Yatcnea ; Jewelry, 1 lamonfs,Gold and SUver Plate, and on an •articles of valno, for any length of time agreed ou. ! WATCHES AND JEWELRY AT PRIVATE SALK • Fine Gold Hunting CaseDoublo Bottom and Open bace English. American and Swiss PMtont Lover Watches. Fine Go\d Hunting Case• and Open]Faceilrfplne •Fine Gold Duplex and otherWatchospFins• Sllvm: "JnirCase Open Foe© F^lish, jmaowui Patent LovSranS Leplno WarihM; Donble Uw^EngGh hrige Md vahrablf Fireproof Ghost and Chestnut. Street*. .• '■ . -_l. ! - : : XT p, uouleeb a ' ' ikFAN D ‘ ! ■■ y »««■.,-'.n-tt ! Gin etmit ttreof, by catalogue. - ; - :-, , ‘ isow ready for cxsiiilnatioin , ~y , , .... . : -rr: -~y; r <t,.,& ! HANCSfIMB .WaLNUT BOUBEUOJJ? I GAUGE KRBN(,U>L,ATB PiElt MtRRDE, SUBK- . I RIOJt BLHOLAK PBUOIf iJAFB, PIANtG—HAHO"- BOIIE BiG'»BELB ANI> IMPKIIIiVX/UABPETBiTtoIGv( ■ - ;ON .VVEONESDAVriIUBNIeitM '■h-~t3pß April 14, r.t 10. o’clock, at the auction roomteftr,CM«oi loguov vciy deslmblo Purnito'fv iocladini;—Hioafohsa Parlor KunUiirc, covered In fine pl O3O, re pa~&cd"hllilt‘ cloth: 4 suits. Handsome ,tya|aattobawbor PirndtaNKjM. perior Gluing .boom ar.d.LdbraryiFurrUtuis/largejißua French PI t« I’ler Mirror ,rraperior liiirglarpraoGfiafav Plano l-’ortc, handsome BruaselaCarpeta, unfl Ingrain ana In perinl Carpets. new;‘Mlr#dYe.;Kngrt»in«i»‘.* Superior Offl'e Fnrnlunc, hsndaomoCaseßtniredßlraa.GHSßAlan.* and Glassware. lluirand Spring Mntreesee, Feather Bsd*. Gold Watch, drc. V 1 - ■“, - ~, ;• '■ ‘•"U. ' Executors’ Bale Nineteenth and-Tcirnerte Lane, T'nnro of JOSHUA LO.VOS fUlirir, AceSaaed. 7 it ijl SUPERIOR UOUoEHwUOv- ETJRNIXURR UAROje, HtFKCH PIiATBMIRHOfIS.EIKB BRUSaBt*A'*& OTHERCAKEETS. HAIKM ATRESBES,,I’fiAT{IER? BROS, 4 HORSES. 0 UARIUAGE3 t '2'WAQJNa, Bl HA sN"rablUoA^MASi^(S7";?’r- ! '\ t ® April 15, at lo onthe' premUe$ t :s|Mt£eiSHMfc[ ftDd Tum.r*« lano, (adjoining tho. Carman Hospital} bv order of Erccrtore of the by catalogu*. the OLtira Furniture* incluaJQif—JitfpQrtjr*,. bailer. chamber and DlQingKooto'Firnituf«v'twt» Jaffa* fino k ranch Plate Mi iors. .tine Ualr Macres3ea« Featiiof, nedis Table and Bed Lines; line China and 'GiawWarei’ fine Hat* d vy an*, fine Braeaeli tnd Isgr&iu Carpota,; Gardes Bollcre, Tools, 60. . • HO.nSESs WAGOSB*. fcc. ■* «' • uvr y 4 t Alao. 4Horeea. 4Canlaße3 aod i.'oUpo* 2 Market Wa« Ron?, Double aifdaingle U&rneaß.&c. , - * ■> , TO FI ORISTB A’Sd OTBBES.' " V ' . of .Joebual.yngetrethu decsaand. Executors* 8<»Ie- Very Valuabla and CUolce Collection of-' HOT HOUSE PLANTS.U *T flWr ON ttATUBDAY MORNING.^ April 17. at 11 oviock. stNineteenth Btroj-t aod-TKrnerttf Urn.by order of Executor* ef Ka-ate'of tag U£W'Jualma Lonstireth. deceased, by catalog-ic, tbo.entlre lar«n;cote lection of extra valuable Hot House Plants Incladma 7IT. Azalias, 26*> Camillas tlon, 11)0 Dahlias, and a yeryiar#e number of very fiqo andvaluableplants. >• -• ■•ma* . GREEN HOUSES. SASH,.\y **-w. Large quantity of green hoiee Saab? Walk*;* Flower Stones. Bricks, Tanfcß, drc., &c.. comprising the luge extensive green bouses; May bo seen two day a previous to sale. . * ( < DAVI& d HARVEYv AU<mUNJfibR&,. , < Lat© wUh^LThornr.* & Sou*. r k BtoiteNoa,4Baßd6oNortb9lXTn3h , eev Extensive dale at tlie.Auctien, Rooms. • ELEGANT* furniture ROSEWOOD S - FORTP. SUPERIOR FIREPROOF Hf\NT>-u SOME VELVET AND OTHER OARPETfiO PRBMOft PLATE KIRROR BEDS, EASX jtf-. DIABASES. FINE'PLACED 1 WAKE. *e. ’’73i ' ? >' C ON TUESDAY MORNING., At 10 o'clock, at the auction storo Nos 48 and BONorth Sixth. «treot,‘ below Archotreet, an Mtoftmont of very elegant Cabinet , Fnrnlt ire, magnificent W’aUb* 1 Chamber SnitA anttiraejand other unique 'stylos,by!best makers: Bandeonie Etigere Sideboards, finished Id oil, with mi’ ror backs; very euperior Wardrobes; Secretary and Cabinet Bookcases. ennerlor Baits Drawing Room Furniture, in terryand tine hair cloth: Extension-Dialog' Tables, Office Peaks, and, Tables, Kosewopd Plano Forto. by'SrhrSma’.krr; Mahogany Piano'Forte, by Albrecht; Handromo Medallion Velvet. Carpet Bruesela .ln,ral»; and Venetian Carpets." fins French 'Piste Mirror; fin* Feather Beds. Hair and Husk Marerses. .Cano Sop tend other Chairs pair,largo Eaat India Vases, invoice fins Triple Plated ware, China. aiasevsare.i&cii fild’X’iSt SUPEBXOK FIKBPROOF SAFES, Also, atl2 o’clock, four superior Fire and Burglar-prodp Safer, by different first class maker s. ’ “ OFFICE DESKS. Several Office Desks, and Tables. ■ WHITE LEAD. Also, logo ponnda White Load, DENTING. DURBOROW & CO„ AUCTIONEERS;,.» 13 Nos. 233 and 231 MARKET Btreet, corner ot Bank at. . Bnccessei»,toJGr , N B. MYERS BAXl! OF 2000 CASES BOOTS, SHOES?HATS.Aa ON TUESDAY MORNING. ‘iKO jv'O April 13 at 10 o’clock. on four monthß’ credit, iaclttdlmc —Men’s, boys’ aUdyouilib' Calf,Kii> andßaff, Leather Boota; fine grain long leg Drees Boole; Congress Boots,and Balmorals ;klp. bad and polish grain’Brogans; -women'll,’ misses’ and children’s goat, morocco, kid and enamelled. Balmorals: Congress Gaiters; Lace Boots! Laa-ingGal tern Ankle Ties I Traveling Bags; ad,; T AHOE SACE-OF-BRirTaH; FRENOBr.,(jBBJi AS AND DOMES'IIO DRY .GOOD3TT , ~ ON THURSDAYMORNINO.' April 15. Ilt 10 e’clyclL on tour/nontha’ credit, j ;j 9 n LARGE BADE OF CAHFEITOGB. OH: CLOTHO,U CANTON MATTINGS, Ao. ■ ON FRIDAY 510HNJNG. tf-Wh! April 16, at 11 o’clock, on lour mofitta’credit. abontSO* pieces Ingrain, V, netnn.List. Remp; Cottsgo and RsuT Carpetings, floor Oil Cloths, ;Mattlbge. Ac, : 'hi-,,?. No. Ulfl CHEaTNin; street.,-., iiiiriffi-i ' Fpnr FnfrHnr.fl Nn. 110*7 Bftnsnm itrefft. - -' HOUSEHOLD iFUBNXXUEE OF BYERXL;D®BOBOV TK>N RECEIVED ON CONSIGNMENT. Bales of Eamltore at Dwelilii£» attended to od the moaT' reasonable terms. SALE OP A PRIVATE COLLECTION OP VALOABW AMERICAN-AND VO REIGN GOLD.- SILVER AND COPPER COINS AND MEDALS.- ■, , ON TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY ANDTHURSDAIT, - - April 18 14 sad 16. I■■ A» 3K o’clock P. M.. at the Auction Store. 7VO.HU Chestnut street.will be soldi a lsrsecolloctlonot valuable co ns and mec als, the property of E. J. Farmer,. Rsq., u Cleveland.. Ohio. ~ ' ’v f.> .JwJ •• •. Catalogues see now ready for distribution.at the Aue*' lion Store. • • ; ■ < •••< JAMES A. FREEMAN, AUCTIONEER.- . No 433 WALNUT Street, • Bale No. 124 Catharine •< - ! household Furniture. beddxng. Ac. „ .. ON TUESDAY MORNiNG,- r > ' At 10 o’clock, will besold, withouteesorve, the ourpla*, Furniture of a family removing, comprleimp Bedsteads. Bedding. Tables, Chairs, Carpets, Jutchon UtpnailSe Ac,. : VALUABLE EIGHTH BTREET PROPERTYIAT '. , PRIVATE BaI.K . e The yalnableCHUßCH PROPERTY, on EIGHTHJst, 1 above Roce. suitable for a largo wholesale orret,it stores, could readily be altered. Could be adaptod erra tnasie! hall or manufactory, the walls being olunusualsrioegthu, WiUbeeold with or without the pmsonoge.es may 1m desired. Plans at the store. ,Tennseasy, T A. CONCERT HALL >r V X Rear Entrance on Clover street Hoticehold 1 Furnjture.and Merchandise oC ayOTy cae-/ ecriptioD received on consignment Siues of Furniture at dwdlings attended to onreaßdnkblaterms. ' NEW AND SECONDHAND 'FURNITURK' CARPETS. 1 . -■ &c.» &C. ON ' TUESDAY MOitNING. = ’ A ‘ April 13, will. be sold. ny catalogue, at 13l»Cueatnut st» •; commencing at 10 o’clock, a large a-eortoient of Snpßrtor ,Furniture, Carpets, Ao.,- comprising ,OMm-; her Suitsof sif kinds. Also. Triple Plated SUver Ware. Table Cutlery.Qlockß. Ac. • ■ . .: •. r ,r April 14, at 10 o’clock, we will uoll byf catalogue, about» IOOu c&flOB of Boots and Shoes, of cltffxnd Eastern, manti’-j factuie. -- —ALSO— .: • ~. - V 50 case? of men’s and 'boys* Fur and* Wool flats -add Capa to wblch tbe attention Qf tho city and country trad® Open early on the morning of ;sale for examlaaflom t No. SCO MARKET etrOet. comer ofcßANKitreqE;. rwrhndvonced on consignments •withoat extra cbareo. NEW ; PBBiICAWqSB. T>OXES OF FRENCH NOTE PAPER. - ENVELOPES TO MATCH. .. i n' LANDBCAPB INITIALS, IN BRIGHT COLORS, ' STAMPED WITHOUT EXTRA CHARGE.. ONE QUIKE, 25c. FIVE QUIRES, $t Oft STAMPED PAPER ALWAYS ON HAND. OR STAMPED AT ONCE TOrOBDEK.- Sir MAKING A SPECIALTY OF STAMPED. PATER. Buying in largo quantitiea, an Allaying my own DESIGNERS. ENGRAVERS-AND STAMPERS. I can do , work choapoj, give bettor, papery and delira promptly all orders. wedding. Visiting . ana business oa ■ • printed in latest styles tar Plato engraved; and two packs of cards, $4. Without* plate, S 3 for two packs. . >< MONOGRAMS. CRESTS, LANDSCAPE. Iniliato en graved and PRINTED IN COL.OR3. ' ‘ ‘ ALL KINDS OF STATIONERY AS LOW. IV,NOT LOWER THAN ELSEWHERE. . . . - CHALLHN. Faßbionatlo Stationer. Wok 1308 Chestnut,street.: uf°m:Hnd&?^ f —*—— ;■■» i :':■ J IH)B»IWHSS CABPS. P] B VV?ndmy Shades Bede. MattraB^>Saro&' '■ SfrwKriW fcortli Ninth etreot, ,^!^R-^:. £ V and varnished. mM7-3gt , , ,„6 A. WIUGIIT, TUOBNTON PIKB. OI.KMBHT A. OBtBOOJ*. JAMMA.»jU« • (iwn[o t »KAtt. ‘ ' PETEK WKIGH'I! & BQNB,,i i " importaiflot earthenware. and •■ ' >-. ;. 'yfi.-i; I ':,-,". 8 Shipping and .Coronilsalon Merchants . Mo.lld Walnut etren. < rion ON SAIL DUCK OP EYEEY ..WJDXH, PBP« li aalofhto 76 lnclioa wldq, all nqnißerß.. Tent and Awning Duck, Papor-maker*' Jb26 No. 103. Church «tr&et,Clty.Btot«i. KkIVY WELLS—OWNERS OF FaDPBttTY-TBB. Jr only place to get. prto wella cleauqad anddWO fcctod, at very low pricde. i PEVSdON, 1 Manufacturer qf Pondrctto. OoldMnlth'a HalUiUhraiwatroat.- t ■ above Vine. The hqreea aw quiet and thoroughly trained . Forhlro, saddle horses. Alao o*r* riugea at allitimea.for weddings, parties, opera* funerals* Ac. Boree. trained to toe * SON. :v ;Tr-j
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