tgPlfilb Second Part of Mira Alcott’s "Utils Women."* IN THE GAKRET. Four little chests all in a row, • - Dim with duet, and worn by time; ■ All fashioned and filled, long ago, .By children now In theirprime. Four little kevs hung aide by Bide, •With faded ribbonß, bravo and gay, When fastened there with childish pride, Xong ago, on a rainy day. Four little names, one od each ha. Carved out by a boyish hand, jjpd underneath there lioth hid -Histories of the happy band Once playing here, and pausing oft To bear the sweet refrain, That-eamc and went on the roof aloft, in the falling summer rain. ‘'Meg” on the first lid, smooth and fair,— 1 look in with loving eyes, For folded here, with well-known care, A goodly gathering lies— The record of a peaceful life, Gifts to gentle child and girl, A bridal gown, lines to a wife, - A tiny shoe, a baby curl. Ho toys in this first chest remain, For all are carried away, ■ In .their old age to join again In another small Meg's play. Ah! bnppy mother, well I know ;' You hear like a sweet refrain, Lullabies ever soft and low, In the falling summer rain. "Jo” on the next lid, scratched and worn, And within n motley etoro Of headleßS dolls, of school-books torn, Birds and beasts that speak no more. Spoils brought home from the fairy ground Only trodby youthful feet, Dreams of a future never found, Memories of a past still sweet; Half-writ poems, l stories wild, April letters, warm and cold, Diaries of a wilful child, " Hints of a woman early old; A woman ln a lonely home, Hearing like a sad refrain, — “Be worthy love, and love will come,” In the falling summer rain. JMy "Beth!” the dhst iB always swept ' From the lid that bears your name, As if by loving eyes that wept, By fcareful hands that often came. Death canonized for ns one saint, Fiver less human than divine, And still we lay, with tender plaint, Belles In this household shrine. The silver bell, so seldom rang, The little cap which last she wore, The fair, dead Catherine that hnng By angels borne above her door; The tongs she sang, without lament, In her prison-house of paiD, Forever are they sweetly blent With the falling summer rain. Upon the last lid’s polished field— Legend now both fair and time— A gallant knight bears on his shield, "Amy,” in letters gold and blue. Within the snoods that bound her hair, Slippers that have danced their last, Faded flowers laid by with care, Fane whose airy toils ore past— Gay valentines all ardon t flames, Trifles that have borne their part In girlish hopes, and fears, and shames, The record of a maiden heart, Hew learning fairer, truer spells, ~Hearing, like a blithe refrain, The sliver sound of bridal bells In the falling summer rain, Four little chcßts all In a row, Dim with duet, and worn by time, Four women, taught by weal and woe, To love and labor in their prime. Four.sisters, parted for an hoar, None lost, one only gone before, llade by love's immortal power, Nearest and dearest evermore. O, when these hidden stores of ours Lie open to the Father's sight, Slay they be rich in golden hours, ■Deeds'that show fairer for the light! Lives whose brave music long shall ring Like a spirit-stirring strain, Bonis that shall gladly soar and sing In' the long sunshine, after rain A LITTLE AGRICULTURAL EXPE RIENCE. BY JOHN QtJIIJ. If yon take my advice you won't practice agriculture for a living. This thing of being a farmer is all very nice to read about, but if ever yon get in the business you will wish you had been born in an orphan asylum and died in your second summer. I don’t wan't to obtrude my private affairs on the public, but I am like an awful ex ample in a temperance lecture, and if I can save any other man from my fate, why I am going to do it. My advice to all young men is, be an honorable organ-grinder, or an ex- President, or a gorilla, or go into the cold victual business, or peddle matches, but don't agricult 1 bought a small farm in Mew Jersey, and became a husbandman. I stocked the estate with all the usual apparatus, and as I didn't know anything more about farming than a goose knows aboHt four dollars a week, 1 engaged a man named Straddles as my con stitutional adviser. Straddles professed to be up to all the bucolic dodges, but I must confess, after eighteen months’ trial, I con sider Straddleß a fraud. As an absolute failure he is a perfect success. In the first place there was not a drop of water on the premises, and Straddles said he would advise me, as a friend, to dig a well. So I got a lot of tools and began. We hadn’t dug more than Bix feet before we Btruck solid rock. 1 wanted to slant her off to one side, but Straddles observed that that was the rock on which the State of Mew Jersey was founded, and we would have to blast her. So we blasted her, and got up one of the finest earthquakes you ever saw in all your born days, it shook down two chimneys and the lightning rod, and Straddles was Btruck in the head with a falling brick. We dug in that well for a week, and wq Btruck everything but water. I could have got oil, or coal, or marl, or gold, or marble, or anything else out of that excavation, but I was looking for cold water just then, and 1 wouldn’t touch anythinc else. Straddleß took me aside at the end of the week, and confidentially advUed me to stick at it; “for,” says he, “you know if you can’t just get water at first, if you keep on you’re bound to strike the ocean on the other side, and then you’ve got a sure thing of it; you’ve gbt it all in your own hands, you under stand.” Straddles put me in mind of the man who grew his carrots so long, that the Chinese pulled them through by the roots from the opposite side of the globe before he got a chance at them. My oxen were very singular oxen. They both seemed to have St. Vitus’s dance in their tails, for they never could keep them still. It annoyed me, for 1 was afraid every minute thty would work them loose, aud no decent farmer, you know, wants to be wandering around with bob-tailed oxen. So I tied on a etone to the end of each tail to keep them this worked well enough until one morning, when the flies were bad, and the £° l \ liE bruoh “P- stone and aU, and hhtd to have brained my oldest boy. V V r -! iea 10 his olf h ' ni 'eg now, switch it, he s got to lilt hitttPClf off of the ground. I planted some onions a while ago, and 1 waned; all summer to see the nlanta h»ar But ft gone to seed, Mr. Swaddles said that anions grew underground, and 1 ought t 0 have dug them out. & Mext yeat 1 planted tomuUiea and ue sood ss they came up 1 began digging for them. Mr. Straddles said I had jtuined'ail the'plants, for tomatoes grew cm top. Why don't they have oil these thingk alike, anyhow ? What’s the use of one growing in the ground and the other out of it ? Why, there ain’t any. I planted potatoes last year, but they didn't seem to grow. “Never you mind,” said Mr. Slraddleß, “they're all right” But I was natu rally impatient, and so, after waiting seven months, I went out and dug for one, and there it was, in the very spot where I put it, looking so familiar and natural, that I sat down over the old Murphy and cried like a baby. Then I dug them all up, and they had kept first rate. There didn't edem to be milch profit in it, but Mr. Straddles remarked that ■they were not a prolific variety, and I don't think they were myself. Don’t ever keep bees. I had some, but Straddles accidentally sat down on one, one day, and he made such a howl about it that the whole hive swarmed on me and scared me ont of my senseß. I like a sociable bee, bnt there is each a thing as overdoing cordi ality. How are you on parsnips? I advise you not to cultivate them. A man gave me some seeds which he said were a good kind. 1 planted one to try it. It was the double rooted variety —Btraddled out like a fork in the roads. When it got ripe I thought I would take it up, but it wouldn’t come. I tackled that parsnip with a monkey-wrench, acrov bar and a cross-cut saw, but it never budged an inch. Straddles said it was “on account of them roots.” He said he thought “very likely them two roots ran round the globe, like the equator, and clinched on the other side. ” So we got out a yoke of oxen, and hitched them on, and the fine old vegetable came along with a half a ton of rock in its grip, and then it waa so tough that you couldn't make any impression on it with a cold chisel. I suppose yen are not bothered much with creme. Well, lam. The crow is a vivacious and sagacious bird. Our crows combine'the acute intelligence of the human race with the hearty appetite of the anaconda. I sowed a patch of corn last spring, and went to bed at night feeling sweetly and calmly happy. The crows held a caw-cus that evening and fell inJbr grub on my corn. There wasn’t a grain left in the morning. I sowed some more, and harrowed it in. Well, singular to relate, the crows missed seven grains of that corn, and precisely that number of stalks came up, and very likely I should have got in a crop of two or three ears to the acre, if the cows hadn’t broken down the fence and ate it before it came to anything. Mr. Btraddieß says corn is a poor crop. Well, I should think it was. As I couldn’t get water from the well, I concluded to take it from the river. Bo I laid down a mile and a half of pipe, and set a hy draulic ram to forcing the water along. It worked first-rate, but the trouble is, that 1 can’t stop the ram. After I got enough water in the tank, the ram kept on pumping, and the water overflowed, and drenched the house,and flooded the kitchen,and Anally ar ranged itself into a first-class cascade out of the garret window. It is going yet, and I sleep in the barn. If you hear of anybody advertising for a magnificent waterfall let me know, will you 1 And then as to horses. I know that man whose horse went bo fast that when he stopped him suddenly, it turned his hair all the wrong way, but that is not the forte of my horse. My horse’s weakness is backing. As a backer I never saw his equal. He would back from here to Kansas if you’d let him. He seems to think that’s the way Nature in tended him to go. 1 always hitch him up with his head over Jhe dash-board of the wagon, and he trots along first-rate. That is, he used to,for last Wednesday I tied him to a tree, and he got one of his fits on him, and backed clear out of his hide, which he left hitched to the tree, while he waltzed hiß old carcass over on the asparagus bed, and died. But as he had the glanders, and wa9 worried with the bote, and bothered with the blind Btaggers, besides having the heaves, and being sprung in the knees and glandered, it was perhaps just as well. Mr. Straddles says it is the best day’s job he ever did. I concluded to raise turnips this season. Straddles brought me some seed out of a tur nip, which, he says, took the prize at the show. I planted one, and it sprouted in an hour and a half. The next day the turnip was nice feet in diameter. Mr. Straddles says he never saw such a turnip for growing, in the whole course of his life,and Straddles has bad experience. In a week it covered half an acre; day be fore yesterday it filled the whole field. You know those earthquakes which have been around? Well, I think this is it It is all on account of this turnip, and it is still spread ing. What would you do about it? Can’t an act of Congress be obtained to stop it? If you know a man who has a taste for farming—some regular feeble-minded, gib bering imbecile of an idiot, who wants to buy a place, recommend him to me, will you? I want to sell out cheap. I’d rather have a comfortable situation in the State Prison than be gardening around here in this kind of style. DIXON’S “NEW AMERICA.” Mr. Hepworth Dixon thus, in a note' pub liehed in his own journal, the Atherueum. disclaims the intention of selecting the sores of American religious life as specimen “sam - pies,” and recurs again to a paragraph in bis preface, which, if properly read, sets the matter nearer right; St. James's Tbkkace, April 1, 18(i!».—The public references made to my book, “New America,” first by Mr. Ball, in the House of Commons, aDd still more recently by the American Ambassador at Newcastle, require from me a word of explanation. I never meant to oiler my pictures of the Mormons and Free Lovers as samples of American religious life. Quite otherwise. I described them &b disturbing forces in that religious life. The key-note of “New Ame rica” is given in the Preface, in these words : “The men who planted these Free States — doing the noblest work that England has achieved in history—were spurred into their course by two great passions: A large love of liberty; a deep sense of religion; and, in our great plantation, liberty and religion exercise a power over the forms of social and domestic life unknown at home. In the heart of Bolid societies and conservative churches we find the most singular doctrines, the most auda cious experiments; and it is only after seeing what kind of forces are at work within them, that we can adequately admire the strength of these societies and churches.” I have seen too much of the work effected by the American religious societies —not in the United Slates only, but in Syria and Egypt—not to hold those societies in the highest respect. Of course the facts recorded ip my book are public property, and every one is free to draw from them his own con- 1 elusion. My conclusions are no secret. They are stated irUtoy' preface, and Mr. Reverdy Johnson is efeady_cnlitled to say, as he said at Newceatle, that “nothing hi Mr. Dixon’s book justified the inference” that the free reli gious life of America iB a failure. W. Hki’woutii Dixon. pABTJLE BOAI-—NOW UANDINO.-300 BOX ESQ V'While and Mottled Castile Boap, very superior quality. KOHKtT SHOEMAKER fa CO., Wholesale N. iu. corner Fourth aDd Race strode. THE DAILY JjVENKN (j BULLETIN—PHILADELPHIA, SATURDAY, APHl§sfe|B^. paPkb hangings. PAPER HAjTOMS . Wholesale and Retail. NAGLE, COOKE & EWING, Late with HOWELL A BROTHERS, NO. 1338 CHESTNUT STREET. Trade supplied at Manufacturers' prices. . ff23m w«2m& ■ nxiscdJLAflnsou&L L ijict dXeaaunp JPm, oalpt lM. 66 5>°75- oc Losses in 1868, $3,662,445.00 No. 6 Merchants' Exchange, Philadelphia. LEGAL NOTICES. t N THE ORPHANS* COURT FOR THE CITY ANL 1 County of Philadelphia.—Estate of WILLIAM MILLS, deceased. Tbo Auditor appointed by th > Court to audit, settle and adjust the account of MATILDA J. MILLS, Executrix of the will of WIL HaM MIILS, deoeaeed, and to report distribution of the balance in the hands of the accountant, will meet the parties interested, for the purpose of Ms appointment, on MONDAY, April 26, 1869. at 4 oVlock, P. M., at hu* office, No. 128 S. Sixth street, in the City of Philadelphia. h. e. Wallace, apl6-fh-e>tustS Auditor. TN HIE ORPHANS* COURT FOR THE; Cl PY AND 1 County oi Philadelphia.—Estate of JOSEPH GKEEN, deceased —The Auditor appointed by tbe Court to audit. *e f tle and adjust the acc-'untof BENJAMIN URKEN aod EVAN GREEN.Executorsofthelastwillof *#irt GREEN. deceased, and to report distribution of the balance in the hands of the accountant, will meet the parties interested, for the purpose of Ms appointment, on TUESDAY. April 37th, 1869. at 3 oMock. t*. M , at hi. office, b o. 144 South Sixth street (3d story), in the city of Philadelphia. apls-th s tu6cft fN THE ORPHANB* COUKT FOR THE CITY ANT) I County of Philadelphia—Estate of WILLIAM HAM ILTON, deceased.—The Auditor appointed by the Court to audit, settle and adjust the account of MtAMJIS SCOFFIN and JOSEPH HAMILTON. Ex«-cuto>e of the last will and testament of WILLIAM H aMILTOcJ, deceased, and to report distri bution of the balance in the hands of the accountants, vt ill meet the parties interested for tho purpose* of his appointment on MONDAY, April 26 1669, at 4 P. M..at tie Office, No 618 WALNUT street, in the City of Phila delphia. JAMES LYND, #ipl3 tn th s 6ts Auditor. TN THE ORPHANS* COURT FOR THE CITY AND 1 County of Philadelphia.—Estate of WILLIAM DRUM, deceased.—The Auditor appointed by the Court to audit, settle and adjust the accounts of EDWARD WARTMAN and THOMAS fl. JONES, Execu*ore and Sequestrators of the Estato of WILLIAM DRUM, dec’d, ana to report dhtiibnfion of the balance in the hands of (he Areoun* nnts. w ill meet the parties interested for the purposes of his appointment on TUESDAY, April 27. 186 9 at II o’clock A. M.,at his office. No. 10 Law BuUdiat}, southeast corner of Sixth and Walnut street, in the oity of Philadelphia. aplOtu th TN THE ORPHANS* COURT FOR THE CITY AND 1 County of Philadelphia.—Estate of HUGH ELLIOTT, deceased.—The Auditor appointed by the Court to audit, settle and adjust the first accouut of J. I). LIPPINCOPT and WILLIAM FLLIOTT, Executors of the last Will of h COB ELLIOTT, deceased, aud to report distribution of the balance in the hands of the accountants, wilt meet parties interested for the purposes of hie appointment, on MONDAY. April 26th. 1869. at 11 o'clock A, SI., at his office, h o. 9, Law Building, 532 Walnut street, in the City of Philadelphia. apl3tuthsst* IN •JHE ORPHANS’ COURT FOR THE OITY AND 1 County of Philadelphia.—Estate of JOHN HORAN deceased.-The Auditor appointed by the Court to audit, settle and adjust the first and final account of MARY H< GAN, Administratrix of the Estate of JOHN UO RAN, deceasid, and to report distrioutlou of the balance io the hands of the accountant, will meet the parties in* ferreted for the purpose of bis appointment, on MON- Da Y, April 26th, 1869, at 3k> o’clock P. M, at hia olficc, 6(M Walnut street. In the city of Philadelphia. JOSEPH K. MoOAMMON, p pintn th s fit* Auditor. lb IHL uhPIIAMP uOUKT *OR THE CITY AND l County of Philadelphia.—Estate of REBECCA J. FUL TON, deceased.—’J he Auditor appointed by tbo Court to audit, settle end ndjuet the account of CHARLES HE* DKKSON and MAt GAKET M. HENDERSON, Execu tors of hEBLCCA J- FULTON, deceased, aud to report distribution of thfe balance in the hands of the account ant, will meet the parties interested, for the purpose of his appointment on TUESDAY, April 27th, 1869. at 3 o'clock P. M, at his office. No. 128 South Sixth street, iu the city of Philadelphia. apl3 tu th e6t* JAMES W. LATTA, Auditor. TN THE ORPHANS' COURT FOR THB dfnTAND I County of Philadelphia.—Estate of HuPPEK MINORS. The Auditor appointed by the Court to audit, settle nod adjust the account of SAMUEL W. BLACK, Guar dian of Joseph, Jacob and Clara Hopper, minors, and to report distribution of the balance in the hand* of the ac countant, will meet the parties interested for the pur poses of his appointment, on WEDNESDAY, April 2(et, 1869, at 12 o'clock, M., at bit office. No. 141 South Sixth street et cond story, in the city of Philadelphia. upB-th,p,tu6tC WM. P. MESdICK, Auditor, IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE UNITED 1 States for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania.—ln the matter of ISAAC P. WENDEL, Bankrupt.—The underpinned hereby gives notice of bis appoiu’mcDt as Assignee of ISAAC P. WENDEL (formerly of tin firms of 1. P. WENDEL ELFINQER, 810 and 831 Market street. Philadelphia.^ j Sent bv mail on receipt of price. aplSth s2t IgOXES OF FRENCH NOTE PAPER ENVELOPES TO MATCH. LANDSCAPE INITIALS, IN BRIGHT COLORS, STAMPED WITHOUT EXTRA CHARGE. ONE QUIRE, 25c. FIVE QUIRES, SI 00. STAMPED PAPER ALWAYS ON HAND, * OR STAMPED AT QNCfi TO ORDER MAKING A SPECIALTY OF STAMPED PAPER Buying in large quantities, and having my own DESIGNERS, ENGRAVERS AND BTAMPERB, I can do work cheaper, give better paper, and delive promptly all orders. WEDDING, VISITING and BUSINESS CA printed in latest styles IF" Plate engraved, and two packs of cards, $4. Without a plate, $2 tor two packs. MONOGRAMS. CRESTS, LANDSCAPE, Initials en graved and PRINTED IN COLORS. ALL KINDS OF STATIONERY AS LOW, IF NOT LOWER THAN ELSEWHERE. CELALLEN, Fashionable Stationer, fell tf& No, 1308 Chestnut otreot. PHILOSOPHY OF NEW COURSE Jl of 1 ectures, as delivered at tbe Now York Museum of Anatomy; embracing the subjects: How to Live and what to Live for; Youth. Maturity and Old Age; Man bood generally reviewed; the Cause of Indigestion, Flat nlence and Nervous Diseases accounted for; Marriage Philosophically Considered, Ac.. Ac. Pocket volume* containing there Lectures wilt be forwarded, post paid Lon receipt of 25 ceLts, by addressing W. A. Leary, Jr.. Sooth east comer of Fifth and Walnut streots, Phiiade! phio. fe&Uvft FRESH FRUIT IN CANS. Peaches, Pine Apples, &0., Green Corn, Tomatoes, French Peas, Mushrooms, Asparagus, &o„ &e. ALBERT O. ROBERTS. DEALER IN FINE GROCERIES, Comer Eleventh and Vine Streets, SWEET 01L.—150 DOZEN OF EXTRA QUALITY Olive Oil, expressly Imported for COUBTY’S East Fed Groce’y, No, 118 South Second street. VDW DATES, FIGS, PRUNES. RAISINS AND AL D nionde— all of n*w crop—in store and for sale at COUbTY’S Ea*t End Grocery, No. 118 South Second st EMIENOH PEAS, MIiSHKuOMS, TRUFFLES. T«>- JP matoes, Green Com, Asparagus, Ac., in store and fot sale at COUBTY’S East End Grocery, No. 118 South Sihahc«al. K -)>\ ~Y W*i©MANj' /?•* BANKBRSAiroBROKERS.; '; ' > So. 110 lontb Third Street; Philadelphia, Special Agent* for thoulo'of' Danville, Hazelton & Wllkeebarre 8.8, FIBST MOBTGAGE BOITDS, Dated 1867,.du0 in 1887. Interest Seven Per Cent, pay able half yearly, on the tint of April and first of Octobor, clear of State and cnited Atatea taxes. At present these Bonds are oflered at the low price of 80 and accrued In terest Tbty are in denominations of $2OO, $OOO and $l,OOO. Famphlota containing Maps, Reports and ftiUinforma' tion on band for distribution, and will be sent by moil on a'topUcaiJon. • - - -r . • • Government Bonds and other Securities taken in ox* change at market rates. Dealers in Stocks, Bonds, Loans, Gold, die. . Ja2l3mG UNION PACIFIC R.R. First Mortgage Bonds Bougbrand Sold at Best Market Prices. ?b< ee Bonds pay Six (6) Per Cent. Interest In GOLD. PRINCIPAL ALSO Payable in Gold. MI ISFGBHMIOStUmmLf mVISBED. The Road will be completed in Thirty (30) I>ays, And Train? run through in Forty-Five (46) Days. M^n&gaa Dealers in Government Seoorities. Gold, &0., 40. @. Thii'cl Street. ap9 u BANKING eOUSD 03-' Jpsr(j(>QKE&(P MS and 114 So. THIEX> ST. *-.RLL,AJD'a DEALERS IN ALL GOVERNMENT SECURITIES We will receive applications for Policies of Lift Insurance in the new National Life Insurants Company of the United states. Foil Informatlot given at our office. Dealers In IT. 8, Bonds and member, of stock and .GO)U Kxcbabge, receive accounts ol liuiiK. and Bankers on lib eral terms, Issue Bills of exchange on C. J Hambro & Son, London. B. Meizler, S. Sohn & Co., Frankfort James W. Tucker & Co., Paris, And otber principal cities, and letlen of Credit available lhrou,liout Europe S. W. corner Tbird and Chestnut Street nnn sB.6cu, g&oco ands4ooo to invest in ON*." IUI/. the pursue of Mortgages. Applv to A. PITLEB, No. 51 North SUth street. apl7 3f WATCHES, IBWSUI, ftO. ladomus & co^\ DEALERS <1? .IKWELEBBuI It WATCHES, JEWELur * SILVKII W»HE. H \kVATOHEB and JEWELRY REPAIRED,# ®o2Chei3tnnt Bt., Philo; Ladies’ and Gents' Watolies American and Imported, ol the most celebrated makers. Fine Vest Chains and Leontinos, In 14 and 18 karats. Diamond and Other Jewelry, Of the latest designs. ESLAOEMjBNT ANl> WEDDING BINGS, In 18 karat and coin. SOLID SILVER WAKE FOR BRIDAL PREBENTS TABLE CUTLERY, PLATED WaRE, Etc. l,l tf ©V Will. B. WARNE Ac CO., BfilAtk WholewUo Dealer, in WATCHES AND JEWELRY. 9, B. corner Seventh and Chestnut Street) ' And late of Ho. 88 Booth Third rtreet. loll: SARATOGA WATER. A STAR SPRING, SARATOGA, NEW YORK The analysis proves that the waters of the SARATOGA BTAR SPRINGS have a much larger amount of solid enhatance, richer In medical ingredient* than any othor spring In Saratoga nfnd «howa what the taito indicates— namely, that it is th* BTRO N G KttT WaTBR. »It also demonstrates that the STAR WATER contain* about : 100 Cubic Inohes Moro of Geis In a gallon then any other spring.. It la this extra amount of gas tliat imparts to this water Its peculiarly sparkling appearance, and renders It so very agreeable to the taste* jf clbo tends to preserve the delicious flavor of the rwatei when bottled, and. causes it to' uncork with an euervoa ebce almost equal to Champagne, | Sold by the leading Druggists and Hotels through out the country . JOHN WYETH & BRO,, 1412 Walnut Street, PliilaUa, Wholesale Accents. ! _]Alsofor v efd© by W. Walter Mullen, Chestnut HiU, Fred. brown. corner of Fifth and. Chestnut streets; 1; J. Graham*, Twelfth and Filbert;* H. B Uppincott, I'wenth th ana Cherry; Peek &. C'o.; 1328 Chestnut; Sam 1 8. Buntii g, Tenth and Spruce; A. B. Ta dor, 1016 Chest nut ; P, Q? Oliver, Eighteenth and Spruce: F. Jacoby, Jr.. 017 Oiesfntit: G6o. 0. Bower. Sixth and Vine; Jarnes T. Shinn, Broad ond dpruco; Daniel 8 Johem Twelfth and -Hpvuco; w. R. Webß, 'Tenth and spring Garden. ; del.fu fh p Ivrpfi , • , , « • l P ec ond,h^SP A r V a^r ? w.l bewnon v * ’i ' A ’J.vj- ; 'S' «■ i*ttot»r (dares, fjr r 1 |,1; " MAHfIN’S 7*31 Chestnut Street,. IUB BANK Nt, CIATVSLIND, OHIO. Second-Hand Safes of all makes for SAFES AND MACHINERY MOVED*. mh£4 w § 3m Ayer’s Sarsaparilla, for piHinmrc xjjxe bioo». j The reputation this ex cellent medicine enjoys, in derived from iU curl's, many oi' which ore truly marvellous. InvctcrntQ cases of Scrofulous dis - ca&c, where the system >l/ seemed saturated with corruption, have be,-a t3t3C * purified and cured by it. Scrofulous affections anti :j rV *U { disorders, which were ag gruvated by the scrofu b»iH contamination until they were painfully afflicuug, have been radically cured in .such great numbers in almost every sec tion of the country*, that the pnblic scarcely need to be informed of its virtues or ures# Scrofulous poison is one of the most destructive enemies of our race. Often, this unseen and uufelfc tenant of the organism undermines the constitution, and invites the attack of enfeebling or fatal diseases, without exciting n suspicion of its presence. Again, it seems to breed infection throughout the body, anti then, on some favorahlo occasion, rapidly develop into one or other of Its hideous forms, cither ou tho Mirfacc or among the vitals. In the latter, tuber cles may b*=#iiuden]y deposited in the lungs or heart, or tumors formed in tho liver, or it shows its presence by eruptions on the skin, or foul ulcer ations ou some part of the body. Hence the occa- Monal use of a bottle of this Sarsaparilla in ad visable, even when no active symptoms of disenso appear. Persons afflicted with the following com plaints generally And immediate relief, and, aC length, cure, by ihc use of this I.A: tit. Authontj f s Fire, Jlose or HryslpclaSp Tetter, Salt Jlhettm, Scald Head, ILtnywormp Sore Ff/cs, Sore Ears, and other eruptions off visible forms of Scrofulous disease. Alfeo in tha more concealed forms, as Dyspepsia, Dropsy 9 Jleart Disease, Fits, Epilepsy, Xcttraltjia, and the various Ulcerous affections of the muscu lar and nervous systems. Sftplt Ills or Venereal and HTcrcurlal Diseases are cured by it, though a long time'is required foe Mibduing these obstinate maladies bvany medicine. Put long continued use of this medicine will chro the complaint. Feueorrluea or Whites, Uterine Vlderations, and Foliate Diseases, are com monly soon relieved and ultimately cured by its purifying and invigorating effect. 3finute Uirec lionH ibr each case are found in our Almanac, sup plied gratis. Jlhctnnatisvi and Gout, when, caused by accumulations of extraneous matters in tho blood, yield quickly to it, as also Liver t'oniplaints,torpidity, Congestion or In/fani mation of tho Liver, Mu\Jaundlee, when arising, an- they olten do, from tlto rankling poisons in tho blood. This SAD SAFA VIDUA fs a great re storer for the'strength and vigor of the system. Those who nro Lanyuiil and Listless, Despon dent, Sleepless, and troubled with XervOus Ap prehensions or Fears, or any of the affections symptomatic of Weakness, will And immediate* relief and convincing evidence of its restorative power upon trial. nsr. J. C. A "O'IK HR <& CO., SiOlvpll, ITCuM.* Practical and Analytical Chemists. SOLD BY ABL DRUGGISTS KVERYWIIf,TIB. At wholeeale by J. M. MARIS ti CO., Philadelphia. mliS-til thejm L'KERCH MEDICINES I , iT.Ki’Ar.ru nv GKIMAIJL >' & CO., „ CHEMISTS T" 11. I H. napoleon. 45 RUE DR RIOUEUIEU, PARIS an excellent r ubetitutofor cod liver oU^wWcn^iagon^ BiS^ ,or i K iV pxdtiH tno nppetu.e. promotes4igc*~ rcatoree*to e the Ucduoa their natural finrioV * dlientoln Philadelphia^ BJOIJABDS & CO., ! \ N. W. cor. ; i oaith and Market eti‘ofte. DKOJSIfc 1 BUA sb,. WTO 9MERY. CQITJWV. Xtil* 'dolfetlitfUl Sumirior Jir«id»»ai!.. ill' bo operiforihij rcofMion ol'mOHK »n nmt nfto' May 1. , •i ho lawn »nd i; onndnh'avcj won niYitigedwirhtmmmor arhnris crpg»' tgroiiynin rind beatify un« very delightful; boutinir. fishing, ntunßO batliH, Ac. -ddrtiHi*, -.f aMKB‘ PALWKR. j nplß‘fhrtTr»mn> tfroalwid, Pa. j|kath house’ " ””' 7 BOFJOOLTIY’ri MOUNTAIN SPRINGS: N; .1.. - Opcne .luijm 2n. wiili iiUiPiMriod attractious. Torino modHH’c. 'J line 0 hmin* by r-iil. 4»| l blm >■> I*• CH *A i*!. Proprietor. f, V / - VM.TS’mT Alum & Dry Plaster firl \-JmM : v•) -V- li.r; , U* Are most desirable for quality, finish and price!' MARVIN’S SPHERICAL BURGLAR Cannot be Sledged ! Cannot be Wedged I Cannot be Drilled.! BANK VAULTS, VAULT DOORS, EXPRESS BOXES, N FAMILY PLATE SAFES,. COMBINATION LOCKS Please seed fbr a catalogue to MM?Q7 & CO., BALL.) Philadelphia, zu a naovßim. nkw vork, sale low. OEDIOAi. PREPARED BY s o iw Ifi* it *« ip. «rrs*~ VBLK6BAPHIO BDDIIIAIIIi *' Point stores in Toledo, Ohio, were burned yes* icrday'morning, causing a lose of ©30,000. - Davih.H. Carpenter was executed ot An- Rellea, N. Y-, yesterday; for 'the murder of his Brother; ; Tim west aide of Public Squaro,' in Murfrees-' toro’. Tenu., was destroyedby tiro yesterday. Jt included ton stores, and the loss Is estimated at 475,000. ■ ,?A - %.i ' !>X. ? - Thu Italian Parliament has before it a bill for. the reorganization of the army forthat Kingdom. It Axes the entire strength of the army at 400,000 m*n. . •••' Hon. W. B. Syojufs arrived in Nashville,Tcnn., last ivcnißgivffomiWeiliinKtoh; lie will apeak to-day in front of the City Hotel, in response to cx-Preaident Johnson. Mr. Stokqs, will probably be the Republican nomlneo for Governor. Some laborers, in.excavating a great mound in the northern part of St. Louis, unearthed some Indian graves, Bixty leet In length, tiveuty-fivo feet below the Surface. Large quantities of bones, beads, coins and other relics werojhrown about. . A - convention 6f railroad superintendents, Which has been in session in Louisville for the poet few , days, adjourned yesterday, alter re modeling theirs schedule. One feature In the' summer arrangement Is a through exp ress train which will be run without change Irom Louisville lo New York. The brig H. C. Colson was seized at New Orleans, on Thursday, by Collector Casey, for alleged violation of the revenue laws,and because it was alleged she had on board arms for Cuba. An investigation revealed an attempt to defraud; Insurance companies; the captain stating that he had been offered $5,000 to tube the vessel to sea and destroy her. ConflrmatlonN by ttac Senate. Among the confirmations by the United States Benale yesterday were the following: Commissioner of Indian Affairs —EU 8. Porker, of tho District of Columbia. M inisters, Resident —Robert C. Kirk, Ohio. to. the Argtmiijio Republic;?,EbenCzer D. Bassett, of Pennsylvania (colored), at Hayti; Leopold Mark bielt, of Ohio, at Bolivia. Secretary of Legation— George W. Warts, of Pennsylvania, at,Florence. . . : ■:,, Envoys' Extraordinary arid Minuter* PlrnipOten - liary —Andrew G. Curtin, of Pennsylvania, to Bu'eia; Thomas H. Nelson, of Indiana, to Mexico. CWemfo—Augustna L. Cbotlaln, of Utah, at Brussels; Lemuel Lyon, of Oregon, at Kanagawa: Felix Matthews, Of California, at Tangier; David Turner, of California, at La Paz; Charles Welle, of Nevada, at Guayaquil; John P. Greer, of Kan sas, at Matomorae; Freeman N. Blake, of Kansas, now Consul at Fort Erie, to bo Consul at Ham ilton; F. W. Partridge', of Illinois, nt Bangkok; George P, Hansen; of-Illinois. now Consul at El sinore, to be Consul at Copenhagen; Henry J. Winsor, of New Jersey, at Sonneborg; Andrew C. Phillips, of Maine, at Fort Erie: J. B. Gonld, of Maine, at Cork; Jotin L. Stevens, of Maine, at Birmingham; Dewitt C. Bprague, of Connecticut, at Brunswick; Robert P. Keep, of Conneoltcut.nt Pir-.euf; Robert Y. of Vermont, at Barba doee; Robert C. Mack, of New Hampshire, at Londonderry; Edward Vaughn, of Now Hamp- Bhirc, at Conlicook; Francis B. Webb, of Massa chusetts, at Zanzibar; Evan R- Jonek of Wiscon sin. at Newcastle; John F. Hansor, of Wisconsin, at Brindisi; Richard M. Johnson, of Missouri, at Hankow; James Read, of Illinois, aj Belfast;John 8. Ram.ells, of lowa, at Tunslalf;'®. L. Glasgow, of lowa, at Havre; Milton IL Price, of lowa, at Marseilles; Joseph C. Brand of Ohio, at Nurem bure; Robert M. Bauson, of Ohio, at Bre men; William H. Young, at Carlßrube; Henry S. Neal, of Ohio, at Lisbon; Edward D NtlU, of .Minnesota, at Dublin; Harry H. Davis, of Pennsylvania, at Cardiff; Ferdinand Cox, of Pennsylvania, at Leghorn; Charles O. Shepard, of New York, at Yeddo; Charles E. Perry, of New York.nl Aspinwall; David M. Arm strong, of New York, at Rome; Frederic Schntz, at Rotterdam; Charles J. Clinch, ot New York, at Bordeaux;” James Haggerty, of New York, at Glasgow. Consuls Ueueraf—Trisunan ll. Morse, ot Maine, at London:. Thomas B. Van Bnreu, of New Jerncy.-at Florence; J. Meredith Read. Jr., of New York, at Paris- William A Dart, of New York, for the British North American Provinces. Collector of Internal Hereiitte — W. H. Bomes, First District. Pa. . i siC-oser of Internal Heeenue —James Ashworth, Film District, Pa. Postmasters-tb. K. Dnfenderfer,Allentown,Pa.; Mrs. Barnh L. Prlzcr. Doylestowu.Pa; B F.Blalr, Iluntmedon, Pa. Tbe Irtwb Church, London, April 16, 3A. M.— ld the House o f Commons, to-night, Mr. Gladstone moved that the House go into committee on the bill for the Disestablishment of the Irish Church. Mr. New degate, Conservative, moved as an amendment that the House go into committee in six months Irom the present day. This motion was equiva lent to an indefinite postponement A lively de bate followed, durlDg wnicli Mr. R. 8. Avtoun. member for Kirknldy, created a sensation by de claring his objections to that clause in the bill which provided for the support of Muyoootb Col lege. Mr. Ay tone is a Liberal,and voted with tbe majority in tho divlsißh on March 23, when the bill passed to its second reading. His declaration •waß followed by a scene of great excitement in the House. ■ ; Tho Opposition cheered repeatedly, and counter cheers and other interruptions c »me irom the Ministerial benches. When Mr. Aytonn ended bis remarks Uiq confusion subsided,aDd the debate was'Continued. Most of the speeches were made by the minor members of the Opposition. At the end of IhU (jUscusslon, which lasted six hours,Mr. Gladstone foes and said due care would b* given by the government to the terms' of' the provision made for May nooth College. He attribu ted much of the opposition to the bill to the power of tho clergy in Ireland. That power had been built up by the old policy of England, which has lately been partially reversed, and was now about lo be finally and 1 coibpletely abandoned. He concluded by declaring that the success of this bill was not a question of party, but of justice. Mr. Disraeli followed. ■ Ho disapproved of the division on Mr. motion for postpone ment. and said he was anxious to go into com' 1 ml It eo on the bill. The House divided on the original motion to go Into commitfet* with the following result: l or. 355 ; against, 223. The House Itiun for mally went Into committee on the bill, and ad journed." * rtntlouai Acnilcmv of Science At a meeting of the Naliotiol Academy of Sci ence yesterday, at Washington, the subject pi a uniform gold coinage was tho subject of an y animated discussion. Samuel ii. Ruggles, the representative of the Unit 'd States in the Paris Monotury Conference of I»67,attended, by special Invitation,'to state’ the progress ot monetary unification in Europe up to tho present dato. He showed to tho Academy that tho work of unlfica tir n which commenced at the Berlin Statistical Congroeaof 1863, had gone forward with such vigorous success that it now embraced ten of tho Continental nations of Europe,with an aggregate population of one hundred and thirty million inhabitants; that Germany would probably follow during the present summer, with thirty eight millions more, and also the -empire of Russia, with sixty-eight million inhabitants. Mr. Ruggles took tbe ground that tbe plan of tho Faria Conference was.sufficiently metrical for all practical purposes;, and that any new scheme, stekiDg more pcrlect metrical conformity, would 1 keep the United States in perpetual isolation,and •send all the coins of this Country into tho mints and melting-potß of Paris and London, to be re coined at the expense ot tho shippers of the coin from tbo United States, He presented his views •with much earnestness, and they were received by tbe Acadomv w)lh marked attention. : ;,r - 1 ! ■- , coal statement. Tho following is ttie amount, ol coal transported ojer the PblladelpMa .and; Reading Railroad daring tho ■week onding'Tliiiisday,' April is, 1869: ■ ‘ From 8U Clair , ?o,m 15. , “ PortCnrbon...... - 0,6*119 \ “ PottsviHo... 2,837 14 | « Schuylkill Haven. ■».<#* 0« “ Auburn. .. 9,84110 ! •* Port Clinton 18,989 0» | 11 Harrisburg and Dauphin 8,837 02 Total Anthroctto;Coal for week 32,075 11 Jjitunilnuuß Coal from Harrisburg and Dauphin for week 6,64 T 01 Total for weak paying freight 03,022 12 Coal for the Compuuy'a pae..........,. .. 3,811 12 Total of all kinds for week............ 102,431 04 Previously this year.. 303,661 03 • P t | Total To Thursday, April 10,1868. Daisy, PhUllpS-S eke Kosougarton A. Son*; IBS nkga w_M Wilson: 259.do.Powers Ss VVelebt msnysdoOjiyjMPWHihtiaonSsdl) oka brandy Wat dem Koebn it tSO:IK oidfalia 87t putoa spelter to casks , antimony SdipkZkindto 16 cks oil I0(|< tone block chalk it Beegcr AXk): 3lspkgemdseO F&OOLenntgi j M Leandro, Uarou~2otSl bxs sugar Albert F . KP; t'OEO OS—Bch r Ajrcli er It Reeves, Ireland—37B bhds Bates Sugars*W Welsh, r ,< UAIIDENAS—BchrB oEvans Bennett—Stihbds 76 bx* eugaysatce honey Q W Bcrnadou * tiro. aovßOEivvs or ooban bteaoebsi *■"><: TO. AftBlVE. «ntvt non rom rat* Britannia Gloigow. .Now York April 2 0ft10dD81a.’........,-«.Glaagow..Now York April 2 Wceer.... Southampton.,New York. April 6 Tarlfa,.»..........Liverpool.,Bo*tondi N York.. .April 6 Manhattan.... Liverpool..NewYarkl.....»...Aprtl 6 I'eruvmn Liverpool. .Portland. April 8 lowa. Glasgow.. New York. April 9 t City of Cork. .Liverpool,.NYorkvtaHal’x....April 10 ’ Buraia.-;..... Liverpool.*. New York. . April IU Olvmpun Liverpool.. Now Vork April 10 Lafayette..;..;... .Brest,.New York. . . . April 10. iio'eatia....... ....Havre*.Now York.;/...... ’.April 10 Celia., ... London. .Now York. April 10 . r V TO DEFAttI Cleopatra New York..tit*al& Vera Cruz.... April 19’ Allemannia,.......Now York, .liambur*. 1 April 20 Etna. -. .New York. .Llverpoolyia H..... April 20 Henry Chaoncey..New York..AßpinwaU April2l Java Now York.. Liverpool. April2l Nebraska.,,.., New York, .Liverp001....,.,, ..April2L 8eU0na........New YorJC.-.London. ..i.. April 21. Aurtraldslan .Now York. .Liverpool .April 2i J W Kvcnnan..Phlladeli>hla .Cnarleatoo April 22 Eagle New York.. Havana ...April22 ■ herilroack New York.. Rio Janeiro, Ac..,.April 23 Virginia New York.. Liverpool April 24 | City of Antwerp... New York.. Liverpool .. April 24 j Britannia........ziNeW Vork..filaßgow. April 24 ! £S'6a!KD'OF TBADb OEOBGE N. TATIIAM, / WM. C. KENT, > Mohtxily Commti D. 0. MoUAMMON. \ . Sc* Riasa, 5 201 Be* Bm« 6 401 fclieg) Wactb, S 18 \KKIVED YESTERDAY Steamer P Utley. Shaw. 34 hours from New York, with mdictoW M BafrdA C<* ’/l ling Daisy IBrr, Phillips, 49 daysfrom London* with mdio to C * A G G Leuufg. BrigLe&ndre (Br). Caron, 43 days from Macoo, Brazil* with sugar to Albert F Pam oil 4th Inst, off Bermuda , w mdNE* very equally.’cea rough and : roalnma*t five feet aboye the -mainboom, but eoctired i ■ before it out over'. ~ ‘ ' " Bohr B C Evans. Bennett. 12 days from Cardenas, w itb sugar and honey toGW Bornadou & Bro. ttcbr Arc! er a Reeves,lrelAnd.l7 dava IromCienfuegoi ~ with sugar toB AW Welsh. . Bcbr P H Merriman, Tracey, 2 days from Indian River, with lumber to Collins & Co I'ebr Martha M Darla, Robinson. I day Pom Milford with grain to Ja« Barratt£_ y BELOW. Bark Providence. CoaJ fleet from London, and a ehip. unknown. Steamer Wyoming, Teal. Savannah; Philadelphia and Southern Mail So Co. Steamer H Willing, Oundlff, Baltimore, A Groves* Jr. fcchr Emznar B Shaw. Shaw, Charlestown* (18 RoppUer. Bcbr Jotm Stroup* Crawford. Boston* Day, Huddell to Co. BchrG H Bent, Smith. Cambridgeport, , do Schr V Sharp, sharp, Boston,' ' ’ • ' do Schr J M fci'zpatrick, Smith. Bostou, do Bchr A F Wilson, Kelly, Providence. do MEMORANDA Ship Highlander* Foster, cleared at New York ryester day lor San Francisco. Ship Garibaldi. Berry, cleared at San Francisco l£th in*t lor Liverpool i bip Nina, febotwell, tailed from Manila 9th Feb. for Stitt York. Ship Arracan, .lessen, sailed from Singapore 21st Feb. lor New York. Ship Caraefacus Inst for Cuba. Bcbr K G L win, Atkins, cleared at Charleston 13 Ih inst lor Baltimore. Bcbr Btepben G Morris. Seaman, at Savannah 12th inet from Charleston, to load for this port. Scbr H D Cranmer, Cranmer. cleared at Boston 15th Bchis Wm £ Leggett. Porter, and Wm B McSbane, Johnson, hence at Norfolk 181 h ihflt .t „ • Scbr L A Edward*. .Marshall. cleared at W ilcnington, NC. 14th msL for this port, with IW) tons iron and 40,242 feet lumber Scbr Clara, Barrett, from Mobile for Boston, was spoken ’3th Inst, off BatU-raa. Scbr Wave Creel. Davit, 14 da rs from Cardenas, at New York yesterday. Bcbr* J Truman. Globe, and Sarah. Cobb, hence at- New Bedford 15th insf. SchrT Sionickson. Dickerson, e&Red from Marblehead Btb Inst- for this port. Schr Mcnteveu, Llppfncott. bi nee at Newport loth in&t. Bcfara 8 T Win.*, Hu he, and Westmoreland, Rice, hence at Providence 15th Inst Schr L D Small, Tice* sailed from Providence loth Inst for this port. Schi Marv It Samson. Sanuon, cleared at New York yesterday for Matanca*. Schr Union Flaa. Maloney, from Batila river for Boston, at Holmes' Hole Uthinst. Schr* W S Doughten. from Gloucester for this port, and Margie Cummins, from Cobasset for do, at liolules' Hola 14th inst and sailed again next day. MARINE MISCELLANY. The Coast Wrecking Company’s schooner is at work upon the schooner T Lake, Adams, from Philadelphia for Newport, ashore on the beach at Atlantic City. NJ. The T L registers 137 tons, and was bnilt in 1656 at Egg Har bor. whence the hailed. pflF&fr SPECIALITY OF Pony PhaetoßS and Velocipedes Of tbe lat«rt *tyl*a and loweet prices, together withall tbe new Spring Patterns of tirat claw Phaetons and Carriages, lii etock and finiehing.-yFor tale by S. wffACOBS, No. 617 Arch Street. npIIWKStW CBOSS CHEEK LEHIGH COAL. FLAISTED A MoCOLLIN, No. 3033 CHESI£NUTStrqet, W.eagFmiadelpbia, Sole Retail Agents for Coxa Brothers A Co.'s celebrated Cross Creek Lehigh CoaL from thq Buck Mountain Vela. Tills Coal Is pirticalariy adnpted for making Steam for Sugar and MaftHouses. Browerlea. *c. .It la also urnmr. paseed it a “Family' C6aL Orders’ left at the office Of the Miners, No. 6U WALNUT Street (Ut.floor), willreccive our prompt attention. Liberal amnigemants made with mirnrif acfureri qb|u& a regular_quanti£y.., . , . ( 'OMPLATNTB OP BLATB 1 AND DIET BY CON v / suiner* of coal arc done away with by our Coal Breaker All pure coal broken into family size*, ready lor u.-p. 8. W. corner Thirteenth and Washington avenue, inh29-3mj KEITiiR & LEdINGKK. rnifjf’VNtSiSlG NED INVITE 1 their stock ot „ A w . . _ . Spring Mountain* Lehigh and Locust Mountain Coal* which* with the preparationgiven by ua, wo think can not be excelled by any other Coal _ .. Office* Franklin Institute Building, No. 15 8. Seventh ■treet. ° r 1 ““ BINGES dr BHEAFF. jaio-tf • Arch atreot wharf* Schuylkill. •niBLIC SALE OF MEDICAL BOjKd. DRU.S, 1 HOBPITAL STOBEB.SUBGICAL AND INSTRUMENTS. A distant Mepioal PrmVKYor.’R Oi vtob,/ WASHnsuTON'i D« C„ '■> April 12,1 S Will be Bold at Public Auction, in thiacity, oa WEDNESDAY, APRIL Slit, ' . • • at .1 udiciary Square Depot. E Btreet, bet ween \ onrthi and Fifth etreete, at 10 A. M., a large quantity of HOSPirAL PROPERTY. no longer -equlred for the use of the service, among which will be found Woods' Practice, 200 copiefl: Powers' Anatomy, 238 copies; Hammond's Hygiene,2Bo copies; Dispensatory, 330 copies; tfirieliapn’e Surgery. liB copies; Wilson's Anatomy; 95copies; Wpod waid’B Manual* 500 copies; Smith's Surgical Operation*, 100 copie*; Thomson's Conspectus, Longmore on Gunshot V oiiuda, Gutbricß’ Burgery and othor valuable worse. ■ Sulphate of Cinchona, 14.0UU ounces; Fluid Extract of- Yerntiia, 11,000 ounces; Carbonate of Zluc, I.BOU ounces. Powdered Cubebs, 2,000 POhnde, and a large variety or other medicines. , _ ... « , Desiccated Egg. 8,00!) pounds; Prescription Boalos. Teeth Extracting Sots, Scarificators, Bniiqt Forceps, Spring Lancets. Trephining Cases, Exeocting Eases, i'Tpld Caeeß, &c. • „ , _ t , Many of tho above articles are of tho firet quality, and the attention of phvufcisnH aud druggUta ..m called to them. Catalogue** hud upon application. Terms cnoh. Purchaeea to bo removed in five days. CUAB. SUTHERLAND, npl4-6t5 Aest. Med, yurveyoty Bvt, Col. U. S. A; \ FOR BALE—FOR WANT OF USE—A FINE Horse. 8 yeara hands highi ia a *•**-*> pleBß&nt driver, and warranted tound and kind. Apply at FREES’S STABLE. Chancellor street, botw'een Walnut and Locußt, above Sixteenth. apl7-Bt* MRS. 8. D. WILLITB.I37 NINTH STREET, f^.,-\)fi B conßtantly in receipt of a fiho and varied aetiort. jgygr inept of French millinery. . , , apl4-linB ■DODGERS' AND WOSTENHOLWS_POCnSiET- • JY KNIVES, PEARL and STAG HANDLER of boau , Hfhltoißh. RODGERS' and WADE & BUTtOHER’S, 1 “a tho CELEBRATED, LECOULTRE RAZoS BCISBOBB IN CASES of tho flnost qqaUtv. Raxorj Knives. Scissors and Table Cntlory, Ground; ana Polishsa, EAR INBTRUMENTS of the most approved construction toass Ist the ho aring, at P.MADEmAU Cutler and Bor gioal Instrument Maker. 116 Tenth xtrijet, bcloW Cheat* uut. • ’ nrt-tt ; ...........1,071,288 0T . 842,008 07 THE DAILY EVENING BULLETIN—PHIL AD ELPHIA, SATURDAY, APRIL 17 I 860.: MABIBB BUnUSSTLN, POET OP PHILADELPHIA-Ai-uil 17. CLEARED YEBTEBDAV. CABHIAUES. oou. sno wood. GOVEUIVMENT SALE. HORSES FOR SALE. DDUUniIKRT, CUTLERY. ir The Improvements consist of main buUdmg.brlckana>; brown wfoDe. 55x800feet, with other building* attached; containing 175 borae-powcrCorUsA steam engine and boll* era, 12eets 48inchcorde, with all other-machinery ahd appurtenances complete, nearly new and in first-class. order; everything-requlrim for: making, double-width • Fancy Csppiroem*. AltfO, Separate brick and stono buildings for picker-house, drying room* macUlnO'fchop,; stable* toe. Forty biick dwelling Inure?, Including sitperiu tfrdent’a and boarding-house,all buIU of the best mate* rial. . i ' There is a large wharfage front on tbe property, and an abundance of pure eoli water. - The location is deiirable for procuring cheap coal and the best of help. ‘ ALSO, _ !HE Dill PfiOPEBIY KHOffS AS IHB SAXONY WOOLENOO. ! j SITUATED AT Little Falls, Herkimer Co ,N* ¥., Now running equal to eight seta on their well-known make of Flannels,; Thia mill is now inf alt and success' 1 . ful operation* and has always been run to ' advantage, and paid handsome profits., - * „. . • - To tbe properpahles who would fakehold of either of thctenrop-nlc;, they can be disposed of at.a prico that cannot but be largely remunerative if properly managed; Both properties will be sold clear of incambrance. ora large portion of tbe purchase money can remain for a term of years. Address I /Ko§ aplO a 3t5 PHILADELPHIA, PA fg FO,K SALE. i & LABGE BUSINESS PBOPEBTV, I On Cbeithnt Bt., eaitof Fourth It. ( ALSO. ' 4 . Tlic Property So. 604 Wain at Street. ! Desirable for Offices. ' PRATI, 108 South FOURTH Street, apl3 tU 8m o V . i, ' : ■ ■ f • ' ; 0 FOR SALE. •' i h ! e Very Desirable Private Residence, i '-i LOO Arch Street, immediate possession. Apply 508 Daiunt Strcei, Second Story, back building, apft 2tAfuth s St* West Philadelphia Properties fj| FOR sale: or to rent. THE BAHDBOTIE BKOWS-rrOSEREtIDESCEI 4108, 4110 and 4112 SPRUCE Street, and handsome gra etone RESIDENCE. No. 4118 PINE Street. C t J. F&LL & BUO., 120 0* Front Street* mb2s tb etu 13t5 : • ' ' - STTDESIRABLE DWELCING, NINE ROOMS, BHjbath and store bonte, modern conveolencea, f os> Kitpnip, on Tiogs street. half a square from Tioga sta tion. Germantown Railroad, Large Hrick Slable.. Lot 50 bv23B feet. Applv to JONES WEBSTER 50 North Fifth Hireet. *PD s tu2t} r FOR BALE.-A VFRYDE3IRABLE Ci’UNTKY MUg: Place, right miles norlh of tbe city;accees by : North Pfcnnrylvaxiia Railroad, For'fuli particular* Inquire of aplT 3;* MILLER. Bb:th and V* alnut gtreets, . - PEREMPTORY SALE.- AT PUBLIC SALP) ON : thepremiseu, April29th. la*2*. at 2 o’clock, r*. M., a lo very desirable country Heat of about 20 acres* lo cated at thecorner oi the Church and Mil! Roads, Chel* tenoain, Montgomery county, convenient to either the .fenldntown or Abingtnn Station, North Pennsylvania Railroad. The improvements are a nine-room store house, with the necceeary outbuildings, all in complete order, wM» tenant house; location high, with a com nibDding view. Tbe property will be eold all together, or tbe improvement* with 6 acres, the balance divided to n ake two very desirable buildingeitee. Perrons desirous of f-eeiuktlie property before day of sale, will apply to WM. C.RUYALh the owner. No. 4615 Main street, Ger mantown,orto C. MATHER, JENKINTOWN. Posses ilon can be bad on day of sale, and teims oaey. ap!6 lit* MFOR SALE-DWELLING. 1334 SPRUCE BTREET. eoatbeast corner of Jumper. Lot 20 by 120 feet. Apply to T. H. BACHE, 233 South Thirteenth street. gia FOR SALE OR RENT.-A COUNTRY REBI- E3u| deuce, lu acres, comfortable house, good water. Wilt plenty oi iruitand shade. Asylum road, one mile wc*t of Frankford. Address J. Cl, Frankford Post Office. anls 6t* MFOR SALE OR RENT.—EIGHT NEW FRENCH Roofed Cottage Houses, near Wayne Station, Gor. mantown. 10 rooms, lots 48 by 225, Price $6 000. Terms very easy, or a *ma!l house token in part p >y. BOBfcBTB, ;m Franklin street. " ap!6 3t* MFOR SALE—THE TWO iNEW HANDSOME Modem Residences, on EI(.;HTH street, above Poplar. oplptk*. MFOR BALE OR TO LET BROAD STREET.WARE bou.e property. Sea. '2ol and 203, above Race; three etory; lot 40 by 100 to a back street Apply on the premise- apln fltj. ■gat, GERMANTOWN.-FOR SALE—A DESIRABLE will Residence, eleven rooms,with modem conveniences. on B a6 t Walnut lane, near Morton street; lot 60 by 160 feet; handsome evprgreena hnd other shrubbery. '1 he location is unsurpassed' by any in Germantown. Brice 88.500. portion in ay remain on mortgage. Apply on tho premises, or to IV. FRAZER, 24 South Fourth street. ap!44t* M GERMANTOWN HOUSES—MUST BE 80M5- Five French Cottage Homes on Walnut iane and AdBiup »tr**et; even' convenience; large gardens. Most desirable situation in Gcrmanvown. wm. ROTcn -wist er, 131 South Jb if th street fs, GERMANTOWN.—FOR SALE OR TO LET—I u large double bouse, everr convenience, \v«th stable H nnd five acres of land. Fire minutes walk from railroad. U ' Inquire 224 North Fifth street Mi F<>R SALE—No. 4102 BPRKCE STREET. WEST Philadelphia—A French Roof Brown Stone Dwell ing. tow empt>; 12 rooms and modern conre ulencca. Lot 40 x 100 feet FOR SALE—AT ABIbGTON STATION, NORTH fw!?! Pencejlvania Railroad, f*rm of 42 Acre?, with good •Ha* old dwelling. barn. Ac. Several tine springs, wood land. Ac. >Ye!l t-ituated for building eites,beiug high aud having extensive views therefrom. Fronts, on. German; to«n and Willow-Grove extending through to ‘Mill Road : thiee minutes walk from Station. I*\ A. TREGO, No. 512 Walnut street. .g- FOR !sAIjE—THE VERY DKSIUABt.E' UEBI- Egjfi dt*nc»*. No. 21H South Fifteenth street, below Wal ■Six nut *treet. Lot twenty by uinety feet. Clear of uli incumbrance. Apply between the konre of 9 &Sd Id to 1 LT» South Second street. apls-st* *«& FOR SALE—N EAT 3> TORY STONE COTTAGE* WflH{ good location, Germantown, near depot ; #l 9 room*; «litl every convenience. Lot 30 bfr'HU febt. • Price $4,500. «r.7-tl{ J. M. P. WALLACE. 1888. abctii et •j&jL FOR BAIF.-a COUNTRY BEAT. 7« ACRES, gsuil on the Delaware—convenient to railroad and steam* Limi. boat--with Douse and Stable, furniture, horses; carriages took*, bd&ts. die. Healthy situation, fine view, old trees and choice se lection oi fruit in bearing. Tenna easy. . Photographs at 284 Bouth Third etreet. fe2o 2mos Jga FOR SALE--A HANDSOME MODERN COT. Hpffl «ge, built in the best manner, wi*b every city coa* Wmß venience, plate glass wiudows, and in porfect or der. Bitnato'witbinfivo minutes’ walk from Tioga Sta tion, on the Germantown Railroad. Lot 1(111x280 feet, handsomely improved, and oxccllent garden. J. M. GUMMEY &, SONS, 733 Walnut street. ■. FOR SALE,—A MODERN BRICK DWELLING, ls|jUj with even* convenience, and in excellent repair. JSial Situate on Filbert street, oast of Seventeenth stmt. J. M. QOMMEY,& SONS, 733 Walnnt street. -a VALUABLE GRANITE STORE PROPERTY FOR Mijij Rale—Built in the roost substantial manner, suitable Hial for tlu* heavies* business. Nos 58 »nd 60 North Front street. .L M. GUMMEY & SONS, 733 Walnut street FOR &ALE.—THE HANDSOME THREE.STORY brick dwelling, situate No, 812 South Tenth street! Lot 31 feet 4 fuchea/Font. J.M.GUMMEY 6 BJNS, 33 Walnut street ' ' ; -65 i GERMANTOWN —FOR SALE-THE MODERN gsH Stone Dwelling, with stable and carriage huose, and . BRiiL largo lot of ground, situate on lUttennouse street, wot Of Green street Das evcrjpcltv convenience, and la in i erfeot order, Five minutes'walk from the Railroad depot; J,M.,QUMMEY & SONS,7BBWalnutstreet..,, . „ 'tern. SPRUCE STREET—FOR BALE—TiI E^IIAND-: BHreome modern Residence, situate No. 1713 Spruce JSuiti street Lot 21x106 to a2O feet etreet J. M. GUM MRY & SONS, 733 Walnut Btroot. iGERMANTQWN—FOR SALE.—THE MODERN ' Bpw Stone Cottage with libraiy, diningroom and -But kitclien on the first floor, every city convenience and in perfect order, situate on the southeast corner of Price and H&ncock streets., J. M. GUMMEY & SONS, 733 Wslnat etieet * f . :• TO »Wf< !to RENT-A HANDSOMELY FURNISHED Bouse, Locust street, bolow Sixteenth,. Address, ALPHA, Bulletin Office. nih26-tfn> > ®IFOR RENT-FURNISHED-AN ELEGANT Residence, situate on Arch street, woet of Broad, JIBLjQUMMEX fcBQNS, 733Walnutstreat;, FOR RENT-HOUSE NO 2120 BRANDYWINE Hpstreet *, newly papered and painted: in complete or- 7. to&A. Mi., and. 4 to fiP. RLixent 850 permonftL * MoOOLLUJL.KiSAL EaXAl'B AGBft i’a. onrc&' Jackeon «*recf, oppo«I»a M»n«lon.«treet. C*pe slslsnc), N. J. Ke»l Eetuto bought and sold. Persons do- of renting cottages during the soaaon will apply or uddrera aa above. PeppectfnHv referto Chaa. A RnHcam. Hentr Bnmm, Francis Mdllvaln, Augustus Mexino,l'John Davis, ana W, w. .Tn venal. - ;• v: > •- TO LEASE — • “• 5 A UAND3OMKI.V FITTED-U P BASEMENT, Gas and wmer, for Ofßce or Btorb, with drr cellar and vault. : > [at>l7-s tu thlOt- ■ ; ho.49BoothFKoNl'street. ’ - FOR KENT.-l’HESECOND, THIRD AND FOURUS i Floor, of the new building attha N. W.'coroer bf Eighth and Alarket streets ; Apply to arRAWBUIDGE ifeUl.oTHlEß.ontbopr»nilßes. ■. JaSottf a O RENT.—UPPER ROOMS. NOB. 42« and > 428 MAR. thet street, . DICKSON BROS. - intiß«.iT,tf' MO Walnut atroot. ' rro LET-A I.AKGE BFCOND-STORY FRONT ROOM, a over the Uliice of the Provident Life and; Trust com* the Oftlce of the Company, Nor 11l Soutli Founh gtreit. apßßuthelSM 4S± TO RENT- - TWO FUKNIBHEO COUNTRY ■ua Houaef. known respectively as ‘Butlor PI *ce” and ■-A **Yorkcann,'*Bi(ati(ed on the' kork road, near Braschtown, with itahles. coach-boiiees*. ice-houses, car. ders. &C.JPor terms and particular apply to DR OWEN F. WISTFK, Germantown. ap17,12t5 Of* FORBENT.-AFURNIBHED COUNTRY RBSL BUS dence neaf Wynnewood Station, PenflOTlvania Railroad; 11 convenient rooms; houm w’ellklisded; largelawn* veget*Uo garden,Arc.: nlso stable-and car rlopo house. Applv at 28 South Front afr eet . 11$ 1 Mto rent, for the summer a small FUR. nifbed bouse. Apply at No. 625 * MINOR street, Philadelphia* aplMfrs2t* OfiL Ji O LET.—A SUPERB COUNTRY BEAT, NEAR |guf Frankford, with garden, lawß. etabling, carriage JBua house, etc. Inquire 1321 Girard av. apls ths tu tf} m FURNISHED HOUSE TO RENT FOR SIX IJjjf months, 3914 Walnut street, ‘VVCat Fhltodel- MLL phia, - v •: - apl»2ts vTO LET, FOR THE SUMMER, IN GERM IN Pgjfftown, a large and a-eil lurnlrhed hoae*«, near a rail aaJfroad etation. Icquiie at 1234 Chestnutatroot, room Xo.t7, or of GUMMEY & BON3, sp!62t* " Walrint street. gpj TO RENT—DWELLING NO. 1509 GREEN Baa 6trret* In complete repair.. t Furninire for Eia oft th from ,io to 12 A- M?, v < f apl6*2t» - Opi TO RENT.-A HANDSOME BESIDENCE.WITH stable attached: aleo. lawn, fruit trees, toe, eitua ted at and Lak lane; Twm?f r Wafd.;lnquiieofMXiS.&l/:AtiS.6n thepremi* eetv-orof C. H. to 11. P. MUIKHEID. ap!2 61* 205 South Sixth street. MB, -TQ . RENT - A PLEASANTLY 'SITUATED J .Bg§ House (partially iiii-nished), and about an acre of 1 Ha ground. The propel to ie About lour inllea from the city* and in the immediate vicinity of a Railroad Station - _ B. ». HARLAN, ap&tfS 731 Walnut a tree t. M TO -BENT—MODERN BEBIDENeE7iN/ MAjfr lEjgtrtfti-Three-story brown plastered modern dwelling; jo rooms: bath, gat*, heater, nice porch uni large yard* Lot 40 by llfi. » ROBT. GRAFFEN,* BO^. ‘4M STORE PROPERTIES FOR RENT.—LARGE BBS four-story building, No. 41 Worth Third • street. ■'BZtL Handtcme Siore nod Dwelling, No. 1U24 Walnut street. Bfore ond Dwelling, No 812 Walnut street. J. M. iGUMMEY A SONS. Tjs Walmitetreet.. TO RENT.-A MODERN RESIDENCE, NO. 1839 figi&OxfoTd street. tin-t door eaft of Broad etreet. All - MlSficoodem improvements. Immediate possession, Al. c o. the handsome Country with ten acres of land, »t Eogewater. N •). A full view of the river; 3 minutes walk from station. Apply to COPPUCK A JORDAN, 483 Walnutstreet. .. . AGa T<« KENT—A UANDSOME COUNTRY SEAT, Bs&FOK THE BLMMF.R SEASON, with two and a • Hlul half acre* oi ground, Thorp’s lane, third house from prv f a lane,-Germantown, with every convenience, gas, l)£th* hot and cold water, stable, carriage-house, ice bouse, w ith 40 tone of ice, cow stable, cliicken-houae, and every improvement; will be rented with or without fur niture. Apply to CpPPUOB & JORDAN. 433 Walnut st. ciEum’ ruiinisajiNo «oon«f GENT’S PATENT SPRING AND BUT toned Over Gaiterß,Cloth, Leather, white and Jfy brown Linen; Children**; Cloth and Velvet . c$ Leggings; also made to order , jMp 20 k§y“GEiiT*S FURNISHING GOODS, of every de&eription, very low, &03 Chestnnt ■ street, comer of Ninth. The best Rid (Hoves (or ladle, and; gont*. at EICHELDE jjp EE ,g BAZAAB. pol4-tf» OPEN IN THE EVENING. DEMOYAL.—THE LONG EBTABUBHED DEPOT IV forthe purchase and sale of second hand doors, windows, store fixtures, Ac., from Seventh street to Sixth street, above Oxford, where such articles are for sale in great variety. Also new doors, sashes, shutters, Ac. ap!3-3m NATHAN W. ELUB. SIG. P, RONDINELLA, TEACHER OF SINGING. PHl vate lessons and Residence, 808 S. Thirteenth street. ' ■ • • ■ - 1 •' an2s-lvs r\AVIB S HARVEY. AUCTIONEERS. U Late with M. Thomas & Sons. Store Noe. 48 and 50 North SIXTH street: STOCK OF (MATERIALS OF A MARBLE YARD. ON MONDAY MORNING. £ t lo o'clock* at the 8. W. corner of Ridge avenue and Fifteenth itreet* the Stock of a Marble Yard (owner de oiiniDg business), comprising Mantels, Marble Benches, dx. To be sold without reserve Large and Attractive Sale at the Auction Rooms. ELEGANT FURNITURE FRENCH PLATE MIR ROR& PIANO FORT If & FIREPROOF SAFES. FINE VELVET, BRUSSELS AND OTHER CARPETa matklssus. marble mantels. &c. ON TUESDAY MORNING. At 10 o'clock, at the auction store Noa. 48 and 50 North Sixth street, below Arch street, a very extensive assort ment of elegant Parlor, j ining Eo-mi, and Chamber Fur niture, in Baits, finifhea iu the manner and of hand setae defcfgns; superior Bookcases, elegant Buffets, Exten sion Tables, Oak Dining Room Chairs Handsome Ward robes, fine French Plate Mantel Mirror, in rich gilt frame; 3 Piano Fortes, several superior Fire and Burglar proof Safes, fine Brussels and Velvet Carpets. 20 Mat resacs, Bede.kßolsters and.'Pillows, Bedding, invoice \Yindowfchades,ChromoH and Prints. 1 ' PIANO FORTES. Rosewood Piano, fine tone, by Scbomuiker. Rosewood Piano. Mahogany Piano, by Albrecht ' MARBLE MANTELS. Also, 4 Handsome Marble Mantels. FIREPROOF SAFES. Aleo. Fireproof Safe, by Evans & Wats m. fireproof Safe, by Maiser. Fireproof Safe, by Lillie, combination lock Fireproof Safe, by Denny, large. Fireproof Safe, by Scb&nnlnger. VALUABLE MISCELLANEOUS BOOKS, In Fine Bindings, from Private Libraries, ON THURSDAY EVENING, April 22. at ?.'•:• o'clock, at the auction, roQmfl, ; 'NoB. 43 and 50 North Sixth *t. including octavo Poets,!.antique bindings: Life of Jefferson, 3 vols.: Tucker's United btares, 4 vola., half calf; Motley's Dutch Republic and Netherlands; Allison's Europe. 2 vola. Irving’s Washing* ton, 5 vole.; Cumtoing's Works,‘ 13 Vola.Addison’s Works; Cooper's Works; Greeley's American Coathct; Hctures of Society ; Golden Thoughts; Song 4 of ['raise, elegantly illustrated; Appleton’s Encyclopedia Litera* tare. Arts, &c„ 20 vols , American Portrait Gallery, April 20th. at on the , premiHQg. No. 6 North Front Btreyt,win ho sold, by order, cf Executors, the un expiredterui of Leaee.GoQd.'NViJh valuable stock of Uao ola Liquors, in Casks. Demijohn* and Bottles, belonging to the estate of the !ato E, P, Midcllotrm, deccasedu : Utitaloßuoathreedaya vmwujttoiwltt. -an Wit vo Wemr,;:.. 537* Pine~street. BEMOVAb. BDIMOAI, AtC'ilOA SAiiEk. - auction sajlks; T3IIVI7NG. DURBt)KO W_& f CO., AUCTIO NE T 2 83, 11 X> Nos. 223,and «234 ccnior of BuiclU' • ? MYERSdr Ci). . r LARGE SALK OF, FRENCH’A*D OTHER : - EUROPEAN DRV GOODa - ‘ ? _ ON MONUAY MORNING. « ' . J , . ; Aprill9,at 10 50 pieces Paris Grenadine, raye. 50 pLcesJaapeGrrtnttnne.rayu, ■ ,• : 40 pieces Foils Jbhp© Foulard* . .20 piecca PopeliDe Satin btripto§. i—j>ieccayalenciae.UoieandJaepe. . ■: . ,40.piedis 64 OheDe'JßorbaixFopUna. <4O pieces Flint. Warp Mixtures ' V 40 pieces rfch Vfctoriat Melanges, 20 pieces Paris Rpingllne* Unto. 20 ptecesParls Eplogilne. Jaape. 20 pieces Faria Bpfogline.-Chine. 40 pieces Print do Sole 40 pieces Marl Sdobairs. ' 40 pieces Black Pure Mohairs. 40 pieces London Colored Alpacas. 60 pieces fine Muddcrßrllliant*. » piece# Paris Wool -Taffetas, -superb quality; for triw voling robes. . pieces Paris Plaid Popelines, superb qaality, for tra veling robes. ■i pieces, Paris, Crepe Epinele, superb finality, “Gold Medal” make. pit c?s Paris Epinglina Grisatie, superb qaality, "Gold Medal” moke. ; -v pieces Paris Silk Chaine Mourning -Taffetas, , u Gold Medal” make. pieces rolled silk chain© Taffeta Grisaille, super qua lity. pieces black and white satin striped Skirtings, . ' ’ LYONS SILKS. SATINS, die. Afplllino superb quality Faille de Lyon and Draj>d& . Lyon. ; A r full line superb quality Drap de Abyßsinia and Drap' de France. Aiußlineeuperb quality Cachemero a Sole and Lyons Taffetas... A full line superb-Taffetas Parisienne and Gros Otto mans, A ftmlibe enperb Drap lnipcrstrice and Gros Grains. a full line Fancy ivrwa silks; black and colored; Satins; j &c., &c. -ALSO- Black Centre. Stella and Fancy Spring Shawls, Cloaks, p died A©- ' ST. ETTJEVNEAND PASLE niBBON?,&c, lOOcartoos of the latest* Paris Doveltlea in Fancy Rib' hone end Fancy Trimming Ribbons, Nob, 4,6,6.8,!V12 and l& • »• : • ' —ALSO— Superb quality Plain l and Fancy high cost SaaU Rib* bone.. ' ' , ’ ; : —ALSO— . Paris Drrss Trimmings, Velvet Ribbons. English Crepes. Malincß, Flo were. Embroideries, White Goods, Handker chiefs, Kid Gloves, Ae. ■ ; —AL3o*r»,x -50 casea I’nlm Leaf and fancy. 40 cases Silk and Gingham oim Umbrellas.. PABIo KID GLOVES. Jonvin, La Princeae, La Duchepac/and Empress blade, white and colored Kid Gloves, BALE OF 2000 CASES BOOT& SHOES. HATSi&I UN TUESDAY MORNING, . * 1 April 20 at 10 o'clock, on fonr months* credit* including —Men's, boys' aod-youthtj’ Calf, Kip and Buff Leather Boots: fine grain long leg Dress Boots; Congress Boots and V Balmorals’ kip. butt aria polish grain Brogans; woman's, “mieie*', and children's goat, morocco, kid and enamelled l Balmoraie: Congress Gaiters; Lace Boots; Lasting Gal. ter?; Ankle Ties; Traveling Bags; Metallic O verßhoaa. dtc." -ALSO— LARGE STOCK OF A WHOLESALE BOOT AND SHOE HOUSE w itb the Shelving, Fixtures, 6c., ol the same, by order of Aieignee. LARGE SALE OF BRITISH, FRENCH, GERMAN AND DOMESTIC DRY GOODS. ON THURSDAY MORNING. April 22. at 10 o'clock, on four months* credit LARGE SALE CF CARPETINGS, OIL CLOTHS, CANTON MATTINGS, *a ON FRIDAY MORNING, April 23, at 11 o’cUxk, on font months credit about 200 pii’CMj Ingrain. YT of sri» per annum. Same Estate. GROUND RENT—HaIf interest in s69?* perjannum.— Sant i Estate. VALUABLE EIGHTH BTKEET I’KOVEItTY AT PRIVATE SaLE, The valuable CHURCH PHOf-EkTY, on EIGHTH et., nbovo Race, suitable for a lore© wholesale) or retail store; could readily be altered. Could be adapted to a music bfitl or manufactory, the walln being oi unusual strength. \\ iU be cold with or without the parsonage, as may be d'esirod. Plans at tho storo, Tenna easy. B SCOTT, Jn., AUCTIONEER. . SciOTTB ART GALLERY 1020 CHESTNUT street- Philadelpbla- MR. G 11. BECHTEL’S SPECIAL SALE OF BEST QUALITY TRIP* E SILVER PLATED WARE. ON Tl ESDAY MORNING. April 20, at lu)6 o’clock at Scott’s Art Gallery, 1020 ( bcHtnnt street, will bo sold, without reserve, a full HReortment of the a-ovc msnul acturer’a celebrated Plated Wares. All warranted as represented or no sale. IMPORTANT SPECIAL SALE OF OIL PAINTING 3, < T.YSTAL MEDALLIONS,aII from the AMEIU CAS ART GALLERY OF NEW YOttIC. ON IUESDAY. WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY AND FRIDAY EVENINGS. April2o, 21 23 and 23, At before H o’clock, inch evening, at Scott’s Art Gallery. 1020 Chestnut street, will be sold, without re serve, one of tbe largest collections of oil Paintings, Crystal Medallions, &c., ever exhibited in this city. rpHE PRINCIPAL MONEY ESTABLISHMENT— X 8. R..comer of SIXTH and RACE streets. Money advanced on Merchandise generally—Watch e*. Jewelry, I iamouds, Gold aad Silver Plato, and on all articles of value, for anv longth of time agreed on. . _ WATCHES AND'jfiWELRY AT PRIVATE SALE. Fine Gold Hunting Caao.Double Bottom and Open Face English, American and SvVies Patent Lover f Watchesi Fine Gold.Huntlng Case and OponFaco Lepino Watches] Fioo Gold Duplex and other W atches; Fine Silver Hunt lag Case and Open Face English, American and'Bwiu Patent Lever and Lopine Watches j Double Case English Quartfer and other Watchco: Ladiee*Fancy watches; Diamond Breaatpius; Finger Ringa; Ear Rings; Studsi Ac.; Fine Gold Chainsi Medallions; Bracelets: Scan Pius i Breastpins; lingerlUnga;Pencil Cases And Jewelry A large and valuable Fireproof Chest, •nltable for a Jeweler; cost 4050. , „ . Also, several Lots in Bouth Camdeiul'ifth and Chestnut street*. BY BABBITT & CO. t AUCTKiNEEBB. > CABU AUCTION HOUSE. No. 230 MARKET street, comer of BANK street n n,M) advanced on eonaiimnjonf* withnnl PEREMPTORY SALE.OP THE ENTIRE STOUR OP A RETAILER DECLINING BUSINESS. TO BE PEREMPTORILY. SOLD; ■ > .• On MONDAY MORNING. April 19. at. 10 o’clock. oomprijiiiK Dry Good. , urM» Goods; Blenched. and Brown-Gvod.; mere,; Cutlery I Hoop Skirts ;3hirta; Ho.iory; Buspond oniTiimminga;Notions, &c. , ,T. BALE OF BOOTS. SHOES. HATBAND CAPS* April ai, nUO JS?k?wfwUl ” 3 cU o^c C iSf«fdttra liwu packagca of Boota and Shots, of city ana Eastern ot men's and boy, 1 Uttta and Capa, to »h/ch tho atteuUo U of the oity and country buyoraio ontlyou tin rnoiulnstil t'jro.cuuiiuutlju. Avcnrioz# mamsm;- THOMAS ATaOHB._ACCXIONEEJBa,i •. • . _ ' _ Koa. 139 npd Ml Boq'h Faro* 1 * itrnrtT .. ' BALEBOF 3TOCBKAND BUAXjESTATE. _jgrr RiMitfisMia at ttaftiKtgetrMtßWihaußßVmni'- TUESDAY, nfria o!el«fc« , «, «.u ■?'»* ;, Bala, »f tha Auction StnreKVBKK ; THUEBDA Y.• ; 4 -. ,: son Sate, at Boddaneej teerfva anttgUlatteattai* - '_LJ " •’ • ; At 12 ... Rxecutor'a Sale.' *•* i* 900 ehares North t.arbondale Coal Co*‘ 200 ah area Union Bank of Tenneweo. . For other Accounts l - ’ i i »■» * II shares Greenwich Improvement Co.' > r < 37 shares Delaware Division Canal Co. 35 shares Oil Creek and Alleghany Valley RaßrOkdJ’;: 3 shares Southern Mail oteanJehip Co. ' ■ ’ r v * u *■■■; 10 shares National fiank of North Americfc - ITthares Union TrabspottatiohDo. 84 shares Empire Transportation Cfe 160 shares Freedom lon and Steel Co. 10 shares National Bank of the Republic, 50 shares Second and Third'Streets Paisdng&f RaAc way Co. < £3 shares C&tawiesa Railroad Preferred Stdck; „ Administratrix's Sale. > A quantity of Oil, Mining and Railroad Stocks. Par£- ’ culars m catalog ues ’ * For Account of Whom it may Goflcdm— _i r > - 27 Rbarea Farmers* and Mechanics* National Bank. 1 $5OOO Loin:of the City of Philadelphia, G per cent,,ifeue4t to tb® Pennsylvania Railroad, redeemable July UiSSt* “ 60-shares Bordentown Gas Light Stock* * i > ’ ' v ' REAL ESTATE SALE,APRIL 20. - .Orphans* Court Bale-E«Ute of Dr. David • 1 LooA*riorr-“MODERw '. FOUB-BTORY BRICK RESIDENCE, No. 781 Arch at, IV ' 1 feet front, 140 feet deep to a 22 feet wide atreot—2 fronts* J 1 Orphans* Court bale—Estate of James C. Umbonrer,' LOdATioif-THRBE BTOBK I>\VI^IaLiXNO, No. 14 North. Seventh strooU - above Market Same Eatato—THKEE-BTORY BRICK DWfiMfCt' No. 110 Union st * y "; . Same -Estate-2 THREE-STORY ’ BRICK DWHfitf*;- LINGSrNoa. 909 and 911 North Eleventh atreot, abtfva**'* Poplar. Same Estate—THßEE-STORY BRICK DWEI^JNG* No York street, westofiTulip. < ‘ Same EeUtOr-LARGE and VALUABLE LOT. N. W. corner of Eighth and G±ford streets, 20th Ward. Same Estate—LAßGE and VALUABLE 1 LOT. Niritk ' street north of Oxford., : ~ ; ' ••Orphantf' Court Skle—Estate 'of Wm; Rayner, COUNTRY PLACE-TURCE-STORY STONE'DWEL 4 * •* ** UNO, Bam and Wogbn.House ahd acrea,'Msnaynnki.VL " LAKGEftna VALUABLE w“comse; :I . of, Seventh and Vine streets ,35 feet front, 130 jfqetdaejr—o, • oppositeFranklinMouare. ' . , -.r-.-TSv. LABGE lir a VALUABLE LOT. north sido of ati wf east of Twentieth, 60 feetiront. HO feet deep to ■■ -afronts. Bnil- BMALL TRUCK FARM, ACRES, BakerSvfflbvlM- «~* tween Ahsecom and Point, Atlantia ’couityi' ' *• New* Jersey. * . \ -a -.-i > Peremptory Bale—Fy Order of Heirs Orphans jm j Court—Estates: of Nathans, Minors, Is aboil a Tinder Will- of Daiah Nathans, dec'd—TWO-STORY FRAME ROUGH-CAST STORE, No. 134 GatlowhUlßL-A: ' ? Same Bstatfr-THREE-STORY HOTCU* w»- bnownas the Ward House,” No.-iaG.Cailavr*'^ iIODERNTHRERRTGRY RESIDENCE, Tuipehocken street second house west of Mala 'atvGsr- " mantown—6o feet front ; > ’ H . ' DtBIBAULE COUNTRY RESIDENCE. 8 ACB*H. • Chester Valley, Chester county. Pa,, near Woodbine Bta* 1 tion. on the Penn'a Railroad and Chester Valley Ball road, one mile by pavement from Uowningtown' gUUlo&t * and one hour’s ride from Philadelphia., ... • Peremptory Sttfe—VALUAßljaPßOPßitTYVlcnowrii/* the “VictoriaPetrolenm Oil Works," Bteam.Engino- M'a cbineiy, Ac., Rope Ferry road and Movamcnsing avenue, 26th Ward. . * - ... - .y,* FRAME DWELLING and LARGE LOT; Nos. sll'and 3613 North Broad street extending through to German town avenue. ; , TWO STORY FRAME DWELLING,' Germantown u road, north of Angle street. KisingSuo. r , MODEHM DOUBLE THREE-bTORV BRICK EESI DENCE. No 1707 Mount Vernon street—36 feet front ’= r, GENTEEL THREE-BTORY BRICK DWELLING. No. 1621 Christian st « ; • >. * > : 2 MODERN STONE DW ELLINGS, with Stable and Coach House, Pulaski avenue, N. W. of Apeley street Germantown. _ • MODERN TH REE -STORY BRICK DWELLING* with Brick and Frame Stables and Conch Hoaaefl, N(*. 1823 Ellsworth etreet. extending tlirough to Marshall st—3 f AME BTORE, No. 771 South ThW etreet. with it Frame Dwellings in the rear, between Cor-. man and Catharine ats. . •* Sale by Order of Heire—THREE-STORY BRICK DWELLING, No. 217 Monroe st • , Peremptory Sate—2 IRREDEEMABLE GROUND RENTS, each s26J. v ' aye«r. . • v : ,; THBEE-STOaY BRICK STORE and.DWELLING. N. W. corner Eighteenth and Catherine sts. THREE-87 ORY BRICK BEVELLING, No. 766 South Eighteenth st. •--- WELL-SECURED GROUND RENT. $6OO a year. 2 THREErSTORY BRICK DWELLINGS, Noa. 801 and -803 Ooekill etreet, west of Third st. TWO-STORY BRICK BUILDING, N. E. corner of - JefferEon street and Stillman street Twentieth Ward* with ftahloJn the rear TIIREE-&TOKV BRICK DWELLING, No. 1026 Federal r street, west of Tenth st Peremptory Sale at No. 1707 Cliestnut street STOCK OF bUPERIOR CABINET FURNITURE. > ON MONDAY MORNING, April 19, at lo o'clock, at No, 1707 Chestnut Btreet .{ bv catalogue, the entire stock of superior Furniture, inclu ding elegant Rosewood and Walnut Parlor Buit% various coverings; superior Dining .Room, Libr&iy and Halt Furniture; Bookcases; elegant Walnut Chamber Suit; superior Wardrobes; Lounges; Chairs, Arc. The cntirc-Btock was made vy Thomas McGuin; ex pressly for bis wareroom sales, and U ot first quality, and to be sold without reserve. Sale inPaschalville, Twenty-seventh Ward. HOUSEHOLD FUItNITLRE. ON MONDAY. April 19, at 1 o’clock P. M., at the residence of JoUu Ford* Pascbalville. Twenty seventh Ward* the House hold and Eitctien Furniture* Stoves, Ac. Sale No. 1900 Brandywine street. HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE. CARPETS, &c. ON TUESDAY MORNING. April 20, at 10 o’clock, at No* 1900 Brandywine street, tho rtiu nlna Furniture, Walnut Lounge, green reps; Chairs. Oval Mirror, Whatnot* Centre Table, Cottage Furniture, Feather Bed, Carpets, Aquarium,Kitchen Utensils.'Ac. Sale No. £Ol5 Green street. ' ' HANDSOME FUKNITURB. FINE CARPETS, An. - ON WEDNESDAY MORNING, April 21, at 10 o’clock, at No. 8015 Green street. bYoaia-: / logue,the entire Furniture, including—Walnut Parlor Suit; Bair Cloth; Elegant Btagore.mOrble top and! mir ror; Handsome Centro Table and Reception Chaira; fine r. English Brussels Carpets; Walnut Ball and Dining Room * - Furniture; Superior Extension Dining Table; Buffet,Side board, marble top; China and Glassware; 'Walnut'and ,r —‘ Green Atepa Sitting Room Furniture; Sait Elegant Walnut; Chdmber Furniture/cbet $700; Handsome Cottage Suits; marble tops; Tory line Hair Matrcsaes rFiue Blankets; 4.-. Ki'chen Furniture. Refrigerator,,Ac. ’ r r , , The furniture has Jjoen . inuse but a short time,: Mid) is , : in excellent order. Sole No. 110 South Eighteenth street. ■> . .. HANDSOME FURNITURE, ROSEWOOD PIANO,'Ac*, V < ON FRIDA* MQBNINtv i i April 23, |at 10 o’clock, at No. 110 South Eighteenth 1 * by catalogue. the entire Furniture, comprising—Walnut and Mahogany Parlor Furniture, superior Robb wood.; ‘ . Seven Octave Piano, tnade by Reichenbach; Walnut -p Dining Room Furniture, China and Glassware, Mirror." elegant suit of Walnnt Chamber Famiture, Wardrobes*) HT Mahogany and Painted Chamber. Furniture, Feather Beds, Matre&ses. Bedding, Bruaeela and Ingrain ' lot of Books, Kitchen *umßure, Refrigerator, Ac,.., ...... Sale bv order of John Bosler, Esq., Superintendent oij:.. < r . ; • City Railroade. s< - ’ ABOUT 80 TONS OF. RAILROAD IRON. ON SATURDAY MORNING. . ' * f ‘ April 24, at 10 o’clock, at the comer of Broad and Mar- i. j ket cstieetr, about 8Q tons of Railroad Iron and Frog Cast* in gw. Terms— Cash before delivery. ' x \ 0 1 .1; i ;> Said No. 1748 NdrtU Tenth street. \I ■ RESIDENCE AND FURNITURE PIANO, MIRROR. CARPETS. &0. ; On TUESDAY MORNING. a ... April 27, at lo o’clock, at No. 1748 North Tenth street, below- Montgomery avenue, the entire furniture,*com-' prising walnut Parlon Dining Room, Sitting Room .and Chamber Furniture; Cottaao Furniture; Rosewood Bed- . (•tead;Rosewood Piano;Pfer Mirror; fine Plated Ware;, China and dlassWnro;Lace Curtains; Featlier Bedariiha < Matreesee; Bedding; Brussels and Ingrain Carpeta,. Kitchen Utensils, &c. v/.j Previous to tho sale of furniture, will bo sold at 1A o'clock precisely, the modern thr<»H.Btory Brick Dwelling* Is leetfront, 70teotdeep. Immediate possession, . . " Sale No. 1432 North Fifteenth street, ' . ELEGANT FURNITURE, LACE CURTAINS, FINE /OIL PAINTINGS AND ENGRAVINGS*BctONZES. MIRROR, FINK WILTON VELVET AND BRUSSELS. CAfcl et “^ ) < \ VEI)NE3 O AY moRNISO. April 28. at 10 o'clock, atN0.1433 North-Fifteenth at.. by catalogue, the entire furniture of a family going to bu rope. Partlculais hereafter. v : Sale No. 1303Nortli Sixth street, HANDSOME FURMTURE. FiNE CARPETS, On FRIDAY MORNING. April 30, at 10 o’clock,'at No Mud North Sixth, street above Thompson street, b> catalogue, the entire furab tmu of a family leaviug tho city; comprising suit elegant walnut Drawing Room Furniture, covered with bluo and. gold brocatelle; handsome waloat Sitting Room £jrnk ture. green reps; haudpoine w»iuut Dmmsßoom JburnL.- tore; Pedestal Dining Table: supeiioimil walnut Chamber Suit, ebouy finish; walnut chaiuber Furmtiire. Ward- . robe**. tine Matratees, Hue china and Glassware, iloor carpets, and, also, the Kitchen Ltensiis. , . , J, gs?*‘ The furnituro ii«n bceu in use but n short tlmi, and is equal to new. VERY ELEGANT iI 'coUNEHY. SHAT. MANSION, #?£ ACMES Horsea, C'owgi'Carriages. Hama*3, , Mracrof OldVoik Kiwd.and Chelfen avenue. Uuwtaufc.. . Hill, rteidcn.o./ “^TMMAY^''' - .. ~ . / rooms. . ~ ; .. .• .r \ 9»toon thegromtaw. Ertatp Ol WIUION.WBIUJON,, deceMOd. ■ vibuv i< t KtwVN'J RESIubNCb AND-.• SUPERIOR 'M'kNITIUE.UAJU-ETe, &C., No. 1!>10 aI'KUCB BTURET. nN MOSIUy MORNINGi , ’V'’. u x May :i. at |0 o'clock, win ba sold tiOYOfVclogantJojir-J {; sforv Hrick (marble to second story) RBSUJENUE. wuh . k dSuLio Back ttulldiOßß. No. ISIU Bpliicy •twotjS3ltoS ('•. front. 187 foet deep to Howell street. UuMwnin.il yoir.., . suvenar nmielccout manner, with every modern ifa- • ■ provemont “VwImorWbNITORE. * *’ Ai,o. the. tletiunt Walnut VuruUtiroiuuaettosorderbjri i, Moore & Campion •. lmiodaome' Carpets.' large ■ EriunJi Rlate Mnntol Mirror, &C. | ' . ' , lar Fnll porticnlurs in handblllu. , , ■■ ■■. CD, UoCIiBBS & CO.. ■> . ■ ACCTIONEERfIi '■ ' No. DM MARKET rimet. ■ . , BOOT AND SHOE BALEB EVERY MONDAY AND THURSDATv' QTEA RIBIIIP HOMAN FROM BOSTON.-Conetenf-en O of Merchandise nor »Ikwo Steamer williploaao vend rot their gooda now lauding alßiuo utreot wharf. :v. ‘UK.NRV WWHORfc.CCI,