Daily evening bulletin. (Philadelphia, Pa.) 1856-1870, April 20, 1869, Image 4
rebuke. The world Is old, ui>d ihe world Is cold, And never a day Is fair, I said. Ont of Iho heaveue the sunlight rollea^ The green leaves ruEtle(J>above my head, i Anckttm.eea sea of gold. T'hn world is era cl, I said again, ” Her voice la harsh io my shrinking ear, A SSKo dreary and fall of pain. A Ont of the darkness sweet and clear, Thore rippled a leader strata; B in n^d < ream' ir of tt tho o bnddlDg wood; And the grass where the berries peep. The world Is false, though the world be fair, Aud never a heart Is pure, I Bald. » j tug citaEtatt of white anus bare, A The nnoe« nt g gold of my baby’s head, new publications. Mr J E. Gould, 923 Chestnut street, has rust edited and published a new music-book for Sunday schools, called “Songs of Glad ness." From an extensive acquaintance with this class of musical publications, we are enabled to award to this one the merit of having many good things in it, both new and old There are many very pretty original compositions by Mr. Gould, who has devoted much attention to the subject of. Sunday School psalmody; The selections are well made, from a great variety of sources, includ ing a number of chants and anthems. “Songs of Gladness” deserves, ‘and yrtll probably en joy,a large circulation among Sunday Bchoob and choirs. m ■ -' . ■ THAT FUOH STORY. In its last weeds' bsuethe Golumbia Her ald publishes h atbry abbut the finding of a ] gigantic frog not far from that place, which weighed ninety-three pounds and stood threo feet high in its stocking feet. A great many people called during the week at he plaqe ot Air MittheWß, to see the wonderful varmint, but ascertained that they had been bad y sold —the whole story being a hoax from begin ning to end. One chap who thought to make a speculation out Of his frogship, wrote to Barnum, at New York, to find out how much he would give for the varmint. The Herald publishes the following sequel to the fro b Bt °SonTH of Columbia, March 17. Hr Editor : Having written you a letter on the 12th giving you a description of and the par ticulars in regard to the monster frog we captured in that cave, now I deem it bn right for me to tell you the reason I did not take it to Columbia, as promised, for exhi bition. The frog was visited during the slxtv hours that it remained at Mr. W. u. Matthews’by a great number of the curious and the-seekers of curiosities, but more par Ocularly on Sunday evening was the crowd greater than at any previous time. To enable the visitors (sonde having come-ten- miles) to see the frog at an advantage, I turned it out of the coop into the yard, and Blowly it dragged itself along over the ground, con trary to the iDStincts of its species. Mr. Katliff, wishing it to go faster, struck ( it on the back with a cane and remarked. Move up iastor, you lazy looking Radical. bo incensed the frog tbat immediately Us \vsn b began to Bwell until it seemed as if they would buret. The swel ling in a few moments extended to the whole body, aiid it swelled—and swelled-and swelled- and swelled, and continued to swell,until it burßted with Buch a terrific noise that the united sound of a thousand cannon would not half equal it. Those present were feariully shocked. A hole was made in the earth twenty feet in diameter and thirteen feet deep. One hind leg was found over one half mile from the blowup, and fragments of the body have continued to fall for the last two days. The-pieces are gathered up aB fast as they fall, and are being put in their proper places,and it is hoped that m a few more days a sufficient quantity may fall, which, when put in shape, will give those that have not seen it an idea of its dimensions, and prove to you that the blanket was not stretched in my description of it, as I have too much si cred regard for the truth of hißtory. I am, truly yours, A. P. N. Matthews. Mark Twain’s SUetcli ol the Old Greek Professor. In the following slightly-colored Bkelch ol the ancient Greek, Professor, by Mark Twain, some may perhapß recognize the original o the drawing. We bad an ancient Greek Profeasor among our instructors. lam not sure about his age •within a century or two, but I am prepared to solemnly affirm —being ol Quaker pro clivities —that he had taught Greek for at least sixty years. This Aged Brick was the sweetest-tem pered old boul that ever lived. Nothing could disturb his serenity, A whole pack ot fire ..crackers tied UDder his chair, and lighted with a Blow match, didn’t move him a hair's breadth. We tried it once, and until his coat tail took fire and blazed, he never moved a M muscle. Even then he only said very quietly, “ “F. Emerel will put me out, while the class iffO’es Oh With the recitation.” 1 confess that 1 was so touched by the old boy's gentle ways, that I kept the silver Bnuff-box that fell from his pocket before I had thoroughly ex tin guished him, as a souvenir. But wasn’t he up in Greek, though ? He couldn't talk or think about anything else. I remember that once we had a scarcity ol clergymen in the village. The Aged Brick, who had been educated aB a clergyman, was called on to supply the vacancy. He got himself into trouble though, for he had no sooner taken his text than he wandered off into an account of the second Peloponnesian war, and so entirely forgot where he was that at the end of the sermon he announced that “he would request those present to hand in written synopses of his lecture to- morrow; and would not paBS on to the lesson ot the day, which Was the eighth, ninth and tenth sections of the second book of Thucydides. I The two deacons carried him out of church immediately, and he was afterwards re garded by half of the congregation as an in fidel joker. S , . ,„ . As for conversation, the Aged “rich, couldn’t talk with man,, woman, child, or member of the Borosis, more than two con secutive minutes, without bringing in some thing about the Greeks. The way he would sling Greek nameß at hiß listeners was adapted to utterly confound and stun any ordinary mind. The names of Pelopidas, and Aga memnon, and Methusaleh, and Emmett, and Wolf Tone, and Confuciuß, and Herod, and all the reßt of the Greeks mentioned by Ho mer and cotemporary old files,would bo slung around with the most profuse recklessness. " And he hadn’t any- idea of time either, had this. Aged Brick. I’ve known him to take a fellow by the button-hole, on Borne Saturday morning, when the unhappy victim had in tended to celebrate a jolly holiday by going to a pic-nic, or to his maiden aunt’s funeral, or to some other merry making, and to enter tain him with a new theory of the Amplilcty onie Council, until the church bells rung for morning service the next day. THE MUMI'MIS I‘O»i'-0f E'ICJB. ■ ■; ' IntcrcNlina Bcmlnlsccnco ot tlicWar. tFrom tho Memphis Poat.3 • Yfe had inn agreeable interview, yesterday, with Mr. Deloach, and were very favorably impressed with the solid.good sense of nia opinions on all matters which our conversa tion touched. Mr. Deloach fully reciprocates the friendship of the President, and has a bieh admiration of his character, having evinced it heretofore by openly supporting and taking much pains to vote Many versions of the affair which laid tno foundation of his intimacy with Grant arc afloat,and we asked him to give us a correct account of it. He very Willingly complied, and this is what he related: Soon atter Memphis was captured, General Grant com menced extending his lines in this direction. Sherman and Hurlbut advanced from Corinth, and had reached Moscow and Da layette. Our scouts were traversing the in tervening country, and it was regarded as vir tually in Federal occupation. General Grant was eager to reach Memphis, and started, ■without a strong escort, to ride toward the city. He reached Mr. Deloach's house near noon, on a hot day in Juno, accompanied by fourteen staff officers and orderlies. Mr. Da - loach was known, through the scouts, to be a reliable Union man, and General Grant greeted him warmly, and, having dis mounted, asked for water. This was brought, and Mr. Deloach offered the General a North ern paper, which he had just received. He sat eagerly readiog, when a neighbor, known as a violent rebel, came in and took n seat. In a few minutes a colored boy en tered by a back door, looking much perturbed and alarmed. He beckoned .to i Mrs. Deloach, and whispered to her that i Jackson's rebel cavalry had encamped just back of Mr. Deloach’s plantation the night previous.and were then breaking up and pre paring to move. Mrs. Deloach communica ted this, in great alarm, but in. strict secrecy, to her husband; for their rebel neighbor was watching, as they supposed,,oml would de nounce them if he observed any indication of friendliness to the Union General- De loach returned to the room, much excited, as he says, but be is informed by the President that he caught a wink from him and a nodl ot the head toward the road leading to Memphis. Gen. Grant immediately arose,and said,quiet ly that they had a long ride before them, and must decline Mrs. Deloach’s-invitation to din r.er. Mr. Deloach followed them to the gate, and informed the General of his danger, sug gesting that their safety would depend upon ,he speed of their horses. They left at full gallop, and when they had ridden about two miles" they caught sight oi a squad o mounted men coming down a cross road, and were unable to decide to which side they be longed Gen. Grant told his escort that their only safety was to charge through this Bquaa, if they were rebels,as a heavier force was bo hind them. They quickened their pace, and were agreeably relieved soon to discover that it was a party of our own scouts, who bad just been reconnoitering Jack son’s movements. They reached Mem phis unmolested. But in a few minutes after they had left Mr. Deloach’s house a squad ot Jackson’s cavalry rode up to the gate and hallooed. They asked if General Grant had been there, and Mr. D. replied that he naff They demanded what he was doing. He told them that he gave him a drink of water, as he would them if they asked for it. They commenced abusing him, wnen Mrs. Deloach inteifered, and told them they had no right to blame Mr. Deloach; that he was known by everybody to be a Union man, but be staid at borne and was attending to his own,bu9inesß. I They finally left,'after considerable bickering, and rode rapidly in the direction which Grant had taken, but the delay and the speed of his horses had saved him from any annoyance. This was probably the narrowest escape of our great captain during the war, except when he sometimes sat smoking with his usual ltn perturbability in the midst of the deadly missiles of battle. He never forgot Mr. Deloach. His family and himself received every favor and lenity, durmg the war, that coald properly be given them. Mr. Deloach never asked for anything but his request was granted almost as soon as made, for he had the rare good sense never to ask for anything improper to be granted. General Grant came to know him well, and President Grant did not forget him. He has appointed him Post master ol Memphis, and we doubt not time will prove that he has shown his usnai wisdom in the choice. Good and Bad Handwriting: I have heard illegible writing justified as a mark of geniuß. That, of course, is a very tlattering theory. 1 wish I could think it true. But, like most of these flattering theo ries about disagreeable eccentricities, it has one fatal fault. It is inconsistent with noto rious facts. Men of genius do not, I believe, as a rule, scribble. They write legibly. Thackeray, we all know, was a beautiful pen naan. He prided himself on his writing. He could write the Lord’s prayer in a legible hand on a bit of paper not bigger than a sixpence 1 never beard that Charles Dickens had a contribution returned because it was ille gible. “Douglas Jerrold’s copy was almos: us good as copper-plate,” and my friend, wbo. in bis own graphic style, is sketching the career of “Christopher Kenrick,” in these pages in a masculine, clear and flexible hand, telis me that one of Jerrold’s friends, “Shirley Brooks, writes plainly, and with very littl revision. ’’ Lord Lytton’s manuscript is writ ten in a careless scrawl, but it is not millegi ble, though, from interlineations and correc tions, perhaps now and then puzzliug t printers; and Mr. Disraeli writes in a large , and angular running hand, legible < enough, if not particularly elegant. And | most of our leading politicians are excellen penmen. Mr. Gladstone seems to write a- j be generally speaks, in a hasty, impetuou manner. But with all his haste and impetu osity his writing iB perfectly legible. It L an Oxford band. Lord Derby writes, what I may, perhaps, call an aristocratic hand, a once elegant and legible. Lord Russell writes a lady like hand. It is like everything else about the Earl, small, and occasionally puz zling, but not inelegant. Mr. Bright’s letters are as distinctly and regularly formed as this print. Lord Stanley’s despatches are as legi ble as large pica. You may run and read them. Every character is fully formed; every “i" is dotted, every “t” crossed. You will find no Bign of haßte or slovenliness in his MS. I might go on in this style through a dozen more names. But it is not necessary. I have cited enough cases to prove my point, tha illegible handwriting is not a mark ot genius, or even of superior intelligence. Ik.no w, oa the.other hand, that there are many men ol genius who write and have written execrably. Sir JJobn Bowring is one of these. It is said that Lord Palmerston once sent back an im portant despatch of Sir John’s to China,with a request that it might be copied in a read able handwriting; and Lord Cowley, our late Ambassador at the court of France, wrote a., hastily and illegibly that Lord Granville* i believe, once asked his lordship to keep tk« originals of his despatches for his own in formation, and send copies to theh oreign Office “Lord Lyttleton.who moved a clause to the Reform bill that nobody should have a vote who could not write aloglble hand, writes so illegibly that the clerks at the table could not read the resolution which be handed in;” arid Christopher Kenrick adds that “Tom Taylor writes bb if ho had wool fHfi JJAII.Y BVHSIK6 BUUKTIIS-I'IIILADEU-UIA, TUESDAY. A1‘Uri,20. 1869. at the head of his pen." And these men are the types, I fear, of a far larger class than tho first set of politicians and authors whom 1 have enumerated. — Gentleman’a Maga - zine. .. . CITI BULLETIN. Meeting in Aid of Coda.—Last evening a number of Indies and gontleinon'assembled in parlor C of the Continental Hotel to hear the plan of operations of the New York Junta.ex plained by Mr. Sherman, who accompanies a ’ committee of Cuban ladles from that city. After tbo interchange of friendly sentiments, an in formal meeting was organized by the uninlmdur , election of Mr. Samuel Dutton ns.president, and M A Sonlißleban ns secretary. The Chair stated briefly the purposes for which they were called to ?t was then determined that the ladies present should constitute themselves, into an executive committee, with power to increase their number from time to time as circumstances may demand. The organization is to aid the Newf'York Junta in raking means and supplies for the sick and wounded Cubans struggling for their Independ ence and to take charge of a concert to bo given in ibis city by Madame Isidore Clark,, tho pro ceeds of which are to be devoted to the above P, A P permancnt organization was then effected by the election of Mrs. Morales Lomus as Presi dent, add Mrs. Samuel Dutton as Secretary. The following KEolutiotis Were, rfcad by the Secretary and unanimously adopted: > Resolved, That this meeting heartily sympa thizes with tho Cubans in their struggles for tho freedom and independence of Cuba. Resolved That wo fully endorsetho resolutions of General Banks, as passed in the United States House of Representatives, recommending tho Government to acknowledge the insurgents as belligerents, or tho independence of Cuba. The liveliest feeliDE was manifested i in behalt of those who are endeavoring to accomplish the fiecdom of Cuba, and all who were present sicmid resolved.to old tho cause in every posßi k'V'nnmber 0 f addresses were made appealing "trongly in behalf of tho cause. VTho meeting then adjourned to meet at the call of the Presi dent. ■' - ■■ !¥ Bridob at Fairmount. —Threeflans have been submitted to the Chief Enginicjsr. ,and Sur veyor for a bridge over the Schuyiltlli, at Fatr mount, and a report, with estimates, will shortly be submitted to Councils. Tho proposed bridge Is to start at Twenty-fifth and Bpring Garden striclß, and to ctoeb over Callowhill street on the west, und Bridge street on tho east side of the river Thero will bo two roadways, tho lower one to be on a level with Callowhill Btreet, pass ing under the Pennsylvania Railroad on the west side, and connecting with Haverford street. The upper ioadwav wlllpass ovor the railroad and connect with Bridge street. The bridge is to bo of iron, and two of tho plans are what is known as the Whipple Truss Bridge, asd the third tec Warren Trues, having an arch introduced, lho epan will be 340 feet in the clear. To make the upper roadway accessible, a new street will be opened on the side of the reservoir at Fair mouut. A New Masonic Relief Association.—A number of ihe members of tho Masonic fraternity have recently organized an association which should commend Itself to the Order in Philadel phia. it is Btyled the George P. Little Masonic- Relief Association, with the following iiamed gentlemen as officers: President, E. Hlflrper Jeff ries; Vice-President, George P. Little; Secretary. Joseph Boswell; Treasurer, George F. Lewis; Manogeis, Samuel F. Cloak, E. D. Brown and William H. Royer. The object Is for the relief oi the widows, orphans, or families of deceased members. In tho case of tho death of the mem ber should there bo five hundred belonging to the’ organization, tho family of the deceased wl l receive five hundred dollars, and from this it will be readily perceived that the ereater number of members the larger will bo the amount in the case of a death. Bf.-juf.stb to People Institutions — The will of Jane McCarty, admitted to probate yesterday, contains the following bequests; $l,OOO to the Pennsylvania Institution for tho Instruction ol Ihe Blind; $l,OOO to the Pennsylvania Seamens Friend Bociety; $260 to the Hospital of the Protestant Episcopal Church; $250 to the Orphons’ Bociety ol Philadelphia; s2oo to the In digent Widows’ and Bingle Women's Soc!ety;?iloU io the Foster Home Association, and $lOO to the Magdalen Society. f . . The following bequests are in the will ol Thomas Pratt, also filed yesterday: s‘>"o to the Old Man’s Home: $lOO to the Indigent Widows uDd Single Women’s Society, and $lOO to the Foster Home. Farewell Missionary Mektino.— A farewell missionary meeting and ordination of Mr. Ed ward P. Copp ae missionary to China, took place last evening at the Central Church, Eighth and Cherry siicets. Rev. Dr. Reed presided, and opened the meeting with the Invocation, grayer was then offered’ by Rev. Dr. Musgrave. The ordination sermon was preached by Rev. D. A Cunningham. The charge to the newly ordained Evangelist was delivered by Rev. Dr. Speer, for merly a missionary to China. Mr. Capp will sail on Wednesday for his field of labor. Bout Rec-ovEtißr.- In October last Mr. Wm. Valentine, of Trenton, N. J., fell from tho Co lumbia Budge Id to the Schuylkill. On Sunday bis body was recovered near tho bridge. At the time ol’ the occurrence several parties were ar rusted on euep'cion ol having thrown Valentine into the river, but they were discharged after an Investigation, which showed that there had been a fight at the bridgo, during which Valentine chi.si d one of the men on the bridgo, and by so doing fell through an opening on the side or in ibe Moor of the structure. Military Parade’—' The Gray Reserves Regi ment, Colonel James W. Latta commanding, made a street parade yesterday afternoon.accom punhd by tbe Liberty Cornet Band. On Locum street, between Seventeenth and Eighteenth, the.' were reviewed by Mujor-Generut Prevost, and txecuted tbe usual evolutions with precision and skill. They numbered about 300 rank and file aLd uttracUd a great deal ol attention by their marching and fine appearance. Identitied.— The body found in tho Schuyl kill, on Saturday, at Point Breeze Gas Works, proved to be that of Charles Philip Biehman, lb vears old, who lived at Twenty-third and Sprue .tri-eta He was last seen alive on a civ of th- Seventeenth street passenger railway, on the stb ol December, 1808. I’hiln.delpUlQ. Hunu suusmeni. The following Is tho weekly statement oftho Phlls elphln Banks, made up on Monday afternoon,whic) •resents the following aggregates: •apital Stock jaus and Discounts Sl wit'hir Bankß :::::::::::::::::: 8i:oot:S l - rculat ion 10.620,421 :• B Legal Tender and Demand Notes 12,941,763 .Hearings 3 r'210’401 The following statement shows the condition of the dunks of Philadelphia, at yarlouß times during the last IHCS Loans. Bpccle, Oirculatlo. Deposits, tail 6 .62,002,304 236,912 10,039,003 36,021,274 -'eh 8 . 62,604,919 248,673 10,038,927 37.922,287 Mar' 2' 62 459,769 211,366 10,030,484 35,798,814- tiiri’ o' ' ’ 62,209,284 216,836 10,642,670 81,278,119 \lav '4 ' 53,333,740 814,360 10,031,044 36,109,937. Innc l’ 63,562,449 239,371 10,620,987 80,674,457 1,11 y 6 ‘"63.653,471 233.296 10,625,426 88,528,200 Ann 3 "'64 341,163 187,281 10,623,040 40,425,071 K 7" 65,084.008 222,900 10,022,316 88,075,607 "5 64 258,612 195,089 10,609,330 30,887,608 Nuv 2" " 64,731,040 222,901 10,012,512 34,877,805 Dee.’ 7.! "62,134,431 243,400 10,600,007 32,938,744 Jan BC 4 61 716,999 .352,483 10,593,719 81,982,809 Peb i'" 02,682,818 802,782 10,693,351 83,052.651 , lei,, r ' 1 52 251,361 259.933 10,469.646 81,084,691 " 'in" "51 911,622 217,617 10,459,081 81,209,034 29" "60 597.100 210,044 10,472,420 80,825,232 Anril 5 "'5O 499,800 139,003 10,022,896 29,241,937 ■l2" "50 770.193 184,240 10,023,169 29,889,237 •■l9 '".‘si 478,371 107,818.10,629,427 31,007,089' The following Is a detailed statement of tho biul ueeß of the Philadelphia Clearing Houbo for tho past week, furnished by Q. E. Arnold, Esq., Manager: Clearings. Balances. . 0,931,962 13 442,637 00, . 6,500,023 51 605,999 07 . 8,732,128 15 002,847 45 , 5,015,953 69 440,544 03 5,045,301 58 404,320 82 0,820,210 70 583,796 70 April ltt “ m •» 14 •*; lc. *... «•' aon-IDOO boxes 50 " IvwSnoW-37Sfihde69 tea molas "eWJ°NDaOK??.3-Sdir Nora, Cara-170 tons plaster CC V CALAIS- Fcht M M Bfanscom. Branscom-427,000 laths 111 wf! f JiHK(ItoN B NO—Setr Geo U Mill-. Mills-128733 feet ycUow Pine h0iia544,145 foot scantling O Trump. Bon 4 Kanml T,-_ Relir W P Byrn, RoherUon--38,8i5 foot 6r c?BNFIIEOOS-Bark Bam Shepherd, Evans-419 hhds •“uiBBiMSSSS.^ 4s Oa ‘ bI T CRKS ISLAND- Bohr Virginia. McFadden-10.000 bus ‘uVEm™L--imk AlbaDOsxDavls—3o7o sacks ground M -hds 31 tea me lasses B & W •Welsh. n uv»n«!iw rjsr ,• ~ •Sd-^^. Yot . k : S s uu/of'cirk:::.:.:.L}vornoul. ■gYork*WU«l’*., -April W 01nn?itJ.V.'.' :.'Uwgooi: .Now York .. •■•• ••;fs{ }S &ka....a •NowYt?rk..Uvo™ooL....... . ; |gr|j * Ut> of Akt« crp. ..Now York, .Uvcr^.. ... •• • .April 27 !»<&'Y°o r rk\&hm^v..v::::Anru| $54,(56,239 69 $3,210,401 28 OK TKAUIIi. | Momrnnv Coimrrra. 1 ), <j. McUAMMQN, ' aa AKons buiJjßTlh. port OF PHILADELPHIA—Arno. 20. Bun Bet», 6 43 1 man ffnai «« an, ro fMra p "" ldoßC * "our, from Now York. n ß,l,k ,d Mar 0 |a V A M do n ialdC T *8wo ? ). Stork a, 43 days from IjggSSSS^ ' t Ka,k : A?bS™»! Dayff' U days from Liverpool.with .alt .At «uom“ bon-veewl to L Wcstergaard * Co to lJ?i?Anna?Br). Mortow I* day. from Cleutaego.. with "OTo logwood and '“itVig Golden Light IBrVrguaon. 11 day. from Havana, "K LB from Havana with mo k! lllniaeom Winamore, 12 day. from Sanaa,with “"S* Da?clT™ “ IfrUk. 15 day. from Sagua, with n ’sch'vh o ginia.McFa e ddin. 16 day. from Turk, l.land, W^hrMva^a?SS. m uLd? n is day. from Windior. with 'tchr' idlaF'Srowoll, Howe, from New York, with On " SchrWm Tav" day. from Jame. River. With lt.mber to CoUID. * Co Goorgetown.SC „ ihlnglo. to Lath bury. Wicker ,hsJhr* VF Hvm. Robert.on, from Norfolk, with lumber '“sltta Y ”m«nf ®°a n w«. 3 day. from Seaford. Del. with 6 day. from Newtown. “Sthfw B'Morgan? Kw “'Vd'ays from Seaford. Del. '™hrm o rd°Norain?l dayfrom Lewes. Del. with grain '°S J cht‘)'ou? t Sl.lers. Laws. 3 day. fton Milford. Del. w Ith "S&VmtESS' Tt.nt.ell 1 day from Indian River. D sU"r M%'BnCte J D,wb B orongC day from CamdenDoL to J“V« y & f Rteamer F Franklin. Pierson. Baltimore. A Groves. Jr. Scbr“ otomnc. Elondee. WaaMugtou. L Audenrled & Co. Schr E M Branecom. Bran.com,, Boston, do Schr AUce B, Alley, Boston. do Scbr S B Bickmore. Barter. Boston. no j_hr Archer ft Reeves, Irelan, Boston, po Schr St James, Keefe. Dightom J Rommel. Jr. *j iho. r« hr Robin Hoods Adaniß, Mystic. 5° s c br BBradlry, McGoneahU New Haven, do Schr add Twflsclls Edwarda, Myatic* d SchrC (Jadwalader. Btpelman, 8aleo». .ijfvanm- Schr Tantamount, Mootßomenr, Boston, DsvidCropor. gchr ? i{ockhi : Geo 8 Renter. Schr \\ O Dearborn, Scull Boston, MEMORANDA. ghlp Lndy Hilda, Mills, from London for this port, was o ®) F .p r H a ntfieC l ßcsso (4 roasts). Hesse, from New York 22d Nov. at J?aD Francisco 18th mat ... . . t Steamer Saxon. Hears, cleared at Boston 1/th Inatint *°Btermer'Crescent qitv. Holmes, at Now Orlean. 17th AUeuJandia (NG). Bardua. cleared at N York Guost from Ardrossan. st Providence 17th Iml— she "as reported bound to Phlla d BarkLeab (Br). Jacques. was loading at Buenos Ayres 2 “l!ie , Abbv' 1 Ws t t”m, Allen, at Boston 17th insL from W Bri*g”uha p; e Arey. Babbldge, from Rockport, Me. at B bKS. Verrill, hence at Bangor 16th last. . Fcln Irvine, Diggine, lrom Matanzas, at Baltimore Itth iD lafrW 8 Thompson, Yateß, hence at Washington, DC. 18 »ch?M B Mahoning. Coffin, hence at Gloucester 17th '"sVhrSl l Slalght, Willetts, hence at Salem 16th intt. bchr C H Moller, Brown, cleared at Boston, 17th instant fo Bchr il Jonathan May, Neal, cleared at Portland 17th Inst. cleared at Portland 17th instant f °Schr ? Bntmhall, of Portland. Hamilton, from Windsor, NS for this port, with plaaur, at Boston 17th inat. Ri porta at 4AM. Cape Cod W3VV 4 miles. wm in contact with a schr bound north; stove bow and split sails Damage to olhervcEgcl uokpown. oovernment sale. Ft r hi lP« SALE OF MEDICAL BJjKd. DKUCiB. HOSPITAL STuRKS, sukoical and denial INST HEM ENTS. Attftl&TANT M EPICAL PI'RVKYOn H 0> KILE,/ Wasiilnuton, U. l-., • April 12, 1860- Will be sold ftt Public Auction, In this city, on WKDNEbI)^V, APKIL 21st, R t Judiciary Square Depot. K street, b « t "e? n l i ( ?2 r , , »rr AL j'if'h ntrcctfi. at 10 A. M.. a large quantity ot UUSi J i a*-* no longer t-qulred for the ÜBO *i\'* .. ivicc ftirioriK “vbich »ill bo found Woods' Practice. OT conies- Powers’ Anatomy, SBd copies; Hammond's IlygiiDC,2Bocopies; Dispensatory, . T3O co £. lo ® ; _i \vood" •iitrepi V US copies ; Wileon’e Anatomy, 9» copies , wood fvK'sMnuuaTeoo'cortes; o^o^ol h^bX'Surk^ Yd, hate Sf Clnchon£ lj.oou ounces; Fluid fc^ac. o' Veratiia, ll.uou ounces; l-arbouato of /inu l 600 Powdered Cubebe, 2.000 pounds, and a largo vaiiaty ot SfSl^sSSSi raw* A«ft. Med Purveyor. Uvt boots awe shoes. ■eg, NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC GENERALLY. Im/ The lntoat stylo, fashion and assortment of fgjfi s. SHOES AND GAITERS, FOB MEN and BOYS. Gan be bad at SOPP’S, No. 2SO NORTH NINTH STREET. Bc „ , .'a C !;^ l,n A CALL *** SCmnißß RESORTS. pitot I*ECT b , MONTGOMBRY COUNTY. Tbie delightful Summer Residence • ill bo open for the IC 'TlmSawn andgroundohave Been arranged with eu-nmor n ,iotV c?oo lat groundß blllisrd room* % and for shade A c ; tn flg'w’ Froaland, Pa^ nUSIOAE. ' P RONDINELLA. TEACHER OF SINGING. PRb SvatoYeKona and cloise«. Reiidence, 808 S. Thtotoontb street , i GAB FIXTURES. 'tTT'a FIXTURE B.—MISKEY, MERRILL A (t THAOKAttA* No. 719.Uhoatxmt street* FixturesTLompa, Ac., Ac., would callt h o a tten tio c ?»K public to their Targe and clo gimt aasortp©utof Qw Pendants, I3rackets.&c. They &Uo introduce ‘ dwelling* aud public building#*- and attend ?“*tendl£g. Storing and rSp.trlnggaa pfpaß. All wort warranted ! —• instruction. 1 > Tt nllß EM AN SHIP SCIENTIFICALLY AN-i-v, taught at tho Philadelphia Riding Sohool, Fourth JOfiSJEzUr above Vino. The homes aro quint and thS,n«hly tra?nol Forlilro, caddie horeoi. Also car. Hngea at afl tlmoa for wcddlngo. partloa, opera, funerals, &cf Homos trained to tho ' r a J |gg AS cr aIGE & BON. Affl*)l»EnrlENl’l-8. A M WA«?^”8 S FRENdnOPERI. “ FOK'IHE LAnT TIME, uran .Sfc- VIB :‘T “ufeinpauis. ACT l—Noiv Hallway Station. Arrival of etrangors In p ACT 3-A Llttlo Hotel In the Grand Hotel. Ai.tr—line Bolrtio danfl le Quart doMondo. ... . ... act 4— t irat Tableau. A Parlnlan, Jteatnurant. So cond TaMcauf l-o Jardln MablUo, with tho Favilllon do D S^, G Ka»a l ßtTr. Deacloosiav Gndretil. Rtewolll. uitment no. Vlctorld.,'Maurice, Vllllorn, B lot. In Sequence of tlio great luroro created by the pro duction of BerveT, . . . ■ And In answer to numeroiu request*, Jho management ££ to announce THL’RBDAV-Fo G “bc La«rTimo GENEVIEVET® B MATINEE and LABX NIGHT. FIIH>AY-ME. A HUOGa BENEHT jBE *«ADEMY Q OP H MUe Ifaa the ploaunreto an^ 0 i, H j. o qkaU h “ k S?« P I£VE?<XNG. April 23d. benefit. on which occa«lon aßANDE DUOHEBBE will bo given by bla eolebratcd company for the firat U Ti°cketi can bo had immediately at the Academy and at Honcr*B Mosic Store. ; M «B. JbHH DBEW’B AKOU BTHEtTJHBATK Engagement of the charming artiste, LOTT A. MONbAY, April 10th, 1869, EVERY EVENING AND SATURDAY AFTERNOON, LITTLE NELL AND THE MARCHIONESS. Little Nell, l LOTTA UrajmlT MATINEE, SEATS SECURED BIX DAYS IN ADVANCE. ( THEA T KE :: Manager. 1 TUE®A|'»vmNO.-AP r Ua4th. BENEFIT OF THE CUBAN PATRIOTS. The entit.greftS&SSTOb OF GOLD With all its original and interpolated witticlaroß, ana many iiStroauctiomi appropriate <to the occa.iom l DC ‘ udln | HE CUBAN SONG OF LIBERTY. By Mr.. o^®Mnngj. WBDNEfID^F.^B.^^*^AHDEt TlTai nut street THEATRE. floirtiii at. IV ALNUi EVENING. April 20th. ” TUE FEMALE FORTY THIEVES THE i ONPON BURLESQUE COMBINATION. MISH JFNN Y WILLMORE as i a LIZZIE WILLSIURE as vArts wiku 1 1 grandmarch and evolutions. n.. Fortv Young Ladies, in full Armor. , Vo commence with Hko ft Drama, en Jtled 08. ALPUONSO. THE NONDESCRIPT. tTMIIAa¥EC(HIToiJ& : SEVENTH STREET. BELOW A NISON V’oo C “ Ce ‘ Bt " Proprietor, REAPPEARANCE of the yoaAg. ««&*»*" LonQ *’ •» a c sa‘s jsttMr’'' M O . a Hni C » C HATURDAY M C r All the 1 favorite, appear. \1 FLND HA Street, above Eighth. ’i HKiND TESTIMONIAL CONCERT to A BACH MANN nt the MUSICAL t UND HALL, on THURSDAY , A in!taentte B lent and some of hU pnpil* wlllMrlrt.^^ Hall «» the ( oncer! at Muslo Store?. »P l 9 jt * (j “InX YTLUCIPF.DIETS at the M /VMMOTH \ KLOCIFIDE INSTITETE/rcvonty-ftral and Race ate mjAfTEIWOOS and EVENING, commonclnrt THURSDAY, April 16, Admission 2ocento. ppl4 6t* ‘ 1_ F UX. S AMEmC^THEATR| aoF x THE ARABS. aLdO. IXION. And the No« Ballot rT>HE WuNDkltfUL HESS CHILDREN, MADAME T Behrens and .Min McCaffrey wilt appear at 1 rof E. H ( 11 ABE’S CONCERT, at CONCERT HALL, April -i. Tickets SI, with reserved seats at Mr. INSTITUTION FOR THE BLIND.—EXHIBITIONS I EVERY WEDNESDAY, at 3>4 V M. Admission fif teen Store. No. 11 Bonth_Hghthrtrcet.__selfr_to-t« rTirnMANLA - ORCHESTRA. PUBLIC REHEARSALS Glt the IlorUcuttural Hall, every Wednesday, at 3k e - M ' horticultural hall. . Tickets sold at the door and all principal mtielc stores street! or Store. 1104 Chestnut sL ocl7-tft gENTZ’3 AhP UASBL T EK-B Nn ObCHESTItA w MATINEL ooMAY OF UNEj KSTNbT Street, above Tenth finsn from P A. M« to 6 P< M. . . Benjamin WcPaGr^Ptotn^^ stlU on exhibition. leto-a Ad AMMO-1 STREETS. V £ h °£ ' VeClpedhtH will com menco. THURSDAY, April l£t. r pQg«j. mh9-3inS ——■■ business cakds E. B Window Shader, Bcdr. Mattreaeee, Carpebi and Curtains, No. 138 North Ninth street, Philadelphia, nl " yTunft ure^rep alred and varnished. nthH-3m_ T.MKB A. WBIOUT, TIIOBNTOK TIKU, OI.ESIENT A. OBIBOOM. JA Tur.oi.ona wbigut. r-nanu i. kkam- PETEK WRIGHT A SONS, lmporteieol earthenware and , , . Bhipping and Conunicaion Merchant*. ... No. 115 Walnut gtrefcU Philadelphia. (J U S i«h to % tachS Vw^rDS C tPaper. ma ier- B %mn^.T^ N c. J(ia , No. 103 Church atreet. City Storea nfVomlrpttc. H&IL Ltbr&ry ttreat. BEATERS AND STOVES. THOM ABB. DIXON & SONS, fT&y Late Andrews &HLxpn, wSi Mo, 1324 CHESTN OT Street, rhilada.. Wy Opposite United States Mint, Manufacturers of j>oWN. PARLOR, CHAMBER, An?othCT^RATEa, For Anthracite. Bituminous and Wood Firoi AUO. WARM-AIR FURNACES, For Wanniuß Public and Private Builalnfci. F 1 REGISTERS, VENTILATORS. AN I* CHIMNEY CAPS, „„„„ COO KIN ’l-IIANGEB, BaTILBOILERS. wTTOLESALE and RETAIL. ©JEWTra’ FUBWIBHIWB fIOOPS. -5, GENT’S PATENT BPRING AND BUT fc-'j, toned Over Galten,Cloth,Lcather.whlte au A<J f brown Linen;Children's Cloth and Velve Jk FURMSmNG GOODS, &P'' OA description, very low, fiß Chcstnu street, cornor of Ninth. The best Kid Glove for Indies and goota, at R j GnE LDERFER’B BAZAAR n „l 4-t.ft OPEN IN THE EVENING. 'M 0 K I K & (JO.. N b. corner Fourth and Race Btroota. U U^i lD sto?lt A ofie,s;Tug? a T nd ChcmlcTof o^ Rcorner Fouith und Race fctreota. l\?d 8 oVt° Eu oodaf °V i ea f I Gla^ rU an^ e ' Mtftai SyricgM. &c„ all at “FirM & BROTHER, 23 South Eighth etroet^ HORSES FOR SALE. Foil sale -for want of'Tbe-a fine Buy Horse, 8 years old, 163:1 bands high; hr a £S2q niofieHnt driver, and warranted sound and Rina. Apply at FRKKS’S STABLE. Chancellor etrdot, between Wbli ut and Locust above CETLEKT. RTS,a a^SISS EAR /NSTRUMENTa of the tjroft approved conatruotlMi pnt ‘ ' —- m&zsgsB^sgg&& Delaware avenue. :7?d o’clock. dress. PAIWtfS. COST LEAD. | Pnnttfc ' aplS-ta tb « 3m JTOJB «AlB> Weßt Properties H FOR SALE OR TO RENT. ... T THE BATbtOQE BBOWS-BTOIIE REIIOENCEV 4108, 4110 and 4112 SPRUCE Btreot, and handsome «ra etono RESIDENCE, No. 4113 PINE Street. C. Jt Flllr & 880., 120 a. Front Ifxeet. .1 }! ibh26 th a tu IBtg H House and Furniture For Sale. |§[ Bandiome Bodern Spruce Street Reildeuce ( All conveniencest handsomely furnished j lmmedlate possession. Address P. O. Box 2770, Philadelphia. BPIO 6.’ 4ga KOB BALE- ■■■■:- -rT V.‘ :* D ?.£• frQ?. Miii IN TIIE MOUNTAINS OF PENNSYLVANIA. A Valnablo Hotel Property, r.npubleof Accommodating S B o.TO‘cT5lS!' «"* iU.in. Apply t> ,>\>lnat street ap2ol3t* iT'FOR BALE OB TO LET. FUKNIBIIBD-TUB , raj?desirably brown-rtoua Jteldericc; 16U North Broad ; \ flHt eu ecu baEdeomely fumitbca and ja OTdef. ; i ,7U AYajhjiiLßtreet.' Fim'BaTe.'-A ViiuV DEURABLE OOUNTBY* t #1 iWo, cisUt rnllpß north of the city;;■ *cc. li» . Msi North Peiiwylvanla Knilroad. For full particulars , la wll°a°* MILLER. Sixth and Witloat streets.: Zts, PEREMPTORY BALE.-AT PUBLIIL BALPI ON . ffHS thopremises. AprllSlth, lsSU,at 3o clock.- ft *L. » Ba very dcsirablo country Seat of aliout flu acrej^,lo cated at the corner of the Church ana Mill Hoads. Ohel- , tenham, Montgomery county, convenient to either too - .Jenklutown or Abingtnn Stallon, North I ennsylranl*? ;i Kailioad. The improvements are a nine-room, atonjj house, n Ith tho necessary outbutlatnES, alt tn comptelt* . order, wph tenant housuj location nigh, with-ai com manding view. Tho property will bo sold ell together, or; : tho Improvements with 6 acres, tha. balance divided to make to O very desirable building sites- Ferecma desirous of sim liir the property before day of eale, will apply'to WM t ROYAL, tboowner. NO. 4515 Main street. Oat. mnotown, or to C. MATHER. JENRINTOWN. Emm*, lion can ho hail on day of ealo. and tcimj easy. apt 6 tit* _ A DESIRABLE DWELLING, NINE ROOMS. §a? bath and store botum. m-dera eonveolenees, for. HH sale, on Tioga street. half a square from Tioga «U- Hod Germantown Railroad, bsntc wrick Stable. Im t6o by 23d loot Apply to JON E 3 VV ESS TER 60 Noith KUtta, eiroct. apr; s turn; ~ i'orbale - dwelling, listsfriEOEsritEET. Hm sontheast comer of Jumper. LotgJ by 19) feet. Annlvto 1. ti. H v.sir,, apl6r»t* 2tS South Thirteenth street FOR BALE OR KENT.- A (JlH)tiT-tV RE3l donee, 10 acres, comfortable house, good water, Eli plenty of fruit and shade. Asylum road, one nulo west of Frankford. Addrtee J. C, Franttord l ast Office. »■>■»”*_ -5. FOI; B,\i E-TtlE TWO :NEW HANDJOME Modern Residences, on EIGIiTU atrecL above JSia Foplar. 5? 15 -®L.. MFOR BAI.F. OB TO LET BROADBTREET WARE house property. N.isJ»7 ard KW above Race; three story : lot to by luo to a back street. Apply on tho premises. »P IS «W- GERMANTUWN HOUSE9-MEBT MEBOLp ffis Five French Cottage Houses on Walnut lane and flsfcAdurnft rtr*-et; even' convenience; Urge garden*. Most desirable situation in W I*TBB. ' hlSonth Utlh street. for BALE-TUE VERY DESIRABLE REBI* fp depec. NO. 218 Sodlh Fifteenth eurettt, below W»L Bat nhVvtreet. Lot tffenty by ninety feet. Clear of all trcimihranee. Apply between the hours of 0 mod 1J to 126 fcoutb Second street M" TORSALE-N EAT 8 > TORY STONE COTTAGE. «cod location. Gcriuantown« near w*®** pm; BALeT-A HANDSOME MODERN COT. <§~ tage, built In the beet manner, wh h every city cou flfci venlcnee. plat* glass windows, *n perfert or. dcr. Situate within five mb 'idee’ walk.from IJog* Bta tion. on the Germantown I J lroad. Lot leOahM feet, handecnsly Improved, sue excellent garden. J. M GEMMEY « SONS, 7.-3 Wa! ,ut street. _ FOR BALE.-' MODERN BRICK DWEBSJtNG. « co. ■ mVeiM e. and In ex«Uent repair Sltukte on Filbert . trvet. enal of tJoreptrentta M. Gi'MllEY AjStiN&Jgi ttalnnt atrcct. Vi'BAJiXTE STORE PROPERTY »W ml Bale—Built in the moat aubjtustlal ’“‘“P® till (or tlio henvte’ buitlnere. Noj M «nd 60 North nrct. .J. M. GUMMEY * SWKSaM) Walnut «treot__ ” FORaALE.TBEHANmOMETIIJtEEBTORY W almst street. _ _ GERMANTOWN -FOR BALK-THE MODERN W- Stone Dwelling, rrlth »table and carriage huoae. and SStiiL large tot of ground, .itoate on Itittenbouflo f irerj-. »•« Pt of til ecu .trect Ha* ever* cltv conv e nenco.«nd t* in erfect 0.-der. Five minute* I ,rvark from the Railroad cfe' o! .1 M. GL'MMEY A- BONB. ~a3 Walnut atreeE ~ si.uicf STREET—FOR BAEE-THE llAN'O g~,.omc modern Ueeldence. nituate No H* 3 ., bRCVS?. Miil 'trret lot i!l* 1M to a5O feet etroet ,1. M> 1 & SONS, 733 Walnut Street. (Termantown-for saee-the modern Btono cottage with parlor, library, dining room and kbclreir on die lirtl floor, everj efty cone enience *ud In n I feet order, rituale f n fho Jonthea,t eonrer of I and Hancock eUtete. J. M. GLM3LLY <£ sons, i Walnut ftlCCt mm —i • TTO EtKirff* / UtEEBE & MoWILIM, HEAL ESTATE AGENTS. Jackson ab-cet, opposite Inland, N. J. Heal Estate bought and sold. Pe«on* cj slrouH of renting cottage* during the eeaaon vrUl apply or addrers ae above. Beapeetfully refer to Chaa A Kubleam. Henry Bumnu Francia Mellvain, Auguetua Merino.: John D *Vf;sP® W. W. Juvenal. -.- T° TTTTED-I.'P BASEMENT. . Oae and rearer, for Office or dtoro, "“^rv^ellar^and VBuU ' No. « South FRONT BtreeL- . 'To'i.Vt" A i.ARGE BPOOND-STORY FRONT ROOM. T overtire Office of the I‘rovldeul Difo and Trrut uoaj- SrUV" 10 0( " C ° ° ( th ° C ° mrtDy tp»;utir. a^ th ■TVtit RENT -THESECOND, THIRD ANiTfOURTH F Floor, of ti e now building at the N. 'V. etoruor of l iphth and Market rtreeta Apply to BTRAWBKIDiiIS A- cl Ol 11 IKK. on tho premise!. vL 5 _ 7£T«fu »THY PLACE FOR «ent.-aPLAIN g» C'cuutrv Place, conaiflting of a atone bouJß,«j» |h hum Harden and about 17 acres of laud* . .. . frrett; pump ftlld n P en epilDß of w as^«°’me^ruit, md $;;i V TJZt\n T n l ,Bhbor e UmaW 0 !" tfJ'c.* ?n“ r M™No™ but •s»* SST*- , Ui^Gor«n._ T?^T> - “ijVv r POSSESSION— dr,f,?mN°Am»Iyon the promise,. .>»»» kiimmfr RESIDENCE ifrlTll FKRNITUEFOK rent” Ali?«« modem mansion, with ( bath-room. Splii, ice-liom-e, farden, shady luwn, stable, ire. One “ aU ELISHA*HO^%a L Meore»tow , h.H. j, _ —" Vo~RE N'l'Ta TEN-ROOM HOUSE, ON MAIN fpfrtreet. Ilurlington, N J.. half way between atcem- Malbont landing «nd railroad depot. .Appl> swj ooutU... street Rant, $360. npSutu th a»•_. -^r-TO~RFNT:"-TWO FURNISHEO COUNTRY. ' ffiS House*. known respectively m “Bmler I lice ’ ana «"nl “York Farm, I*situuted 1 *situuted on the fork road, near llranchtown, with stables. coacbboapaJ.ico.boußiia.fiar ders. Ac. For terms.and particulars apply to F WISTIK, Germantown. opl, _ TO RENT - A PLEASANTLY SITUATED ; (Satlioiue (partially furnished), and aboat Mil ground. Tlio property I; about ’.““ulViJun/statlon city and in the immediate vicinity of,a Rahroad^Statlon 731'Walrmi'stroet. ' ' Ten rtFNT -MODERN RESIDENCE IN MAN; ISiO tua.-Three story b™wn plaßtored modern dw *• Hiiliu rooms-.bath, gas, beater, nice porcu “““ a. yard. Lot 40 by US. rtonT GRAFFEN A SON,-- ROBI • UK 637 Pine street. -.oi»iv=sropSffo^^ b ßjg2; T i«^ ft tfS -rj rvnROME LY FURNISHED £s3= TO RENT—AHAN Sixteenth. 'Addreea# nira Douee, Locust hoio inli2tftfrp EUill ALPHA, PULLET*« Q‘ nco> ‘ J : : : fits FOl! iH ] , i, xl d n I i)MMIiV fc pQNtf.7B3 W«lmitßtrojt. 4 l FN*riuSd-SSSL' iWM ®Y* SoNS. 753 v/nlnuutrcct. BEMOENCE, NO. IKiS BtrMt.tat door oatt of Broad stroot. AU ra,,,(jxlora»i.'-'.. t i mn mliatu posucsalon. tf SdS Comrtry Scat, with ton acre? of land. AWilo afir N J. A fulfviow' of tho-wivor,-;3minium wnlk C Bt'atlot Apply to COPPUOK * JOKfJAN.. <«a Walnut Btrctt. , . ™7I)ENT-A‘HANDSOME COUNTRY SEAT. dfSl FOR toe SUMMED SEASON, with two and a. §Bt“r fioif acre'll' ot ground, Thorp's lane, third houejofrom iwb lane, Genhantown, with evory oonvonlenco, gas., hath, hot and cold water, stable, carriage-house, loo house, w ith 40 tons of leer cow stable. 1 chtck6n.hooße. ana overv ininroveraent; will be rented with or without fur niture. Apply to OIJrPUOK «t JORDAN. 483 Walnut st. ART-STUDY IN TH'E IMPERIAL SCHOOL IN PARIS. NO. 2. Tbe descent of a : nouveau intp ,the school ■was like that of the meal into the pot, which subsides for an instant, and then boils up a great deal higher (my phenomena; are taken from Prof. Faraday, and are irrefragable). “ TJn nouveau! un nouveau!” arose, in the - accent of thankfulness/afte#,manna,-from the; ' students; followed,' on-somebody’s part, by “cependant, c’estun cornichon d’anglais." A sly; little marmoset, in spectacles, painting and singing within the door, who was a type of several others, interrupted Theresa’s song, “<7o me chatouille," just at the sneezing re- frain—sneezed in a pointed and affable man " her at tUeiew-comer—and resumed, "dans Tjfc^Ss^”%itlil>lB T cmh an inch-farther out and bis pitch rather higher. Though not much given to small revenges,l had a soothing feel ing as.l passed him,, in directing with my ■elboyjr-bi&/'ow ; n v ;brUßh (loaded with blue) to the feature he had mentioned. He Issued from Ibe contact azure and crimson, and an appreciative youth who caught mv eye the Bame'instant took the trouble to show pie the b'at-room. Here an antique Faun was playing bis solo in a tabernacle of overcoats, the silken ' 'cacfie-'hez or neckerchief of a student hang ing with decorum from his tail. This aleove was so grimy with ends of chalk and char coal, that my new friend quite improved the part of Bir Walter Raleigh by offering bis own - cloak for my wrappings to hang over, i! A‘N«w two re-enter,” said he. “Choose a view as quickly as possible, the good places are being occupied while v vie consume the time. The pose is strongest, to my taste, from the left quarter. The . easels you will find in the corner, the . Stools are piled into yonder barricade, and the charcoal, when there is any, is in a little bos on tbe ledge.” ,The easels, from having served in many ’ Troys as instruments of aggression and de fence, were little but a pile of inarticulate lumber. After a rummage I found the front part of one,the shape of tbe letter A; and made it the initial of my career in theEcoledes Beaux Aits, binding a spare prop and ratchet to it with a handkerchief. Chooaing one of the few crevices visible in the close ranks of humanity around the model, I managed my yronnded easel thither with care and sym pathy, l and finally got it to stand npright therein’, though in a fluttering and hypochon driac manner; claiming location in the usual way by describing with chalk tbe triangle measured by its feet, I loaded it with ma terials and began to profile the classic attitude before me. I had bepn,triangulating and protracting for some time, andbud lost the pervading hub bub in that utter abstraction which is one of the spells of art, when the model was sad denly displaced ia my view by a darkly Shaded object rising directly ia front and in tercepting it; if 1 had continued to copy mechanically, my line would have swerved into tbe oval of a large and swarthy face, full bearded and capped with fur, which bad come into foqus apparitionally, like Itobinaon Crusoe ia aimagic lantern. This was my friend Blanc—my whilom friend; poor fellow! I need not respect hitn, for he has married since—l will portray him remorselessly. Ilis beauty had tbe idiotrgde rived from the lengthened nose and pinched nostrils Of the goat, wnich gives so much of what wb call the Hebrew character to the an cient statues of satyrs. His brown skin, huge form, rude rug of hair, nnmannerliness, and grace would have convinced Keats that it was god Pan in person. Blanc had the men tal thickness, dispersed in tbe abundant and dramatic;gestures, of the Booth; his accent, too, was 'rnsiic and Southern. If the most Parisian Paris be indeed the Latin Q tarter, I constantly find there the most real and cir cumscribed sort of rusticity; and the dis covery of rusticity as the essence of Paris, of all cities, has ever gratified my sense of anti thesis and of the picturesque. Blanc has been tbe best of fellows with me, returning inces sant loans of six or ten sous with painful scruple; I presently found a pleasant way of satisfying this nice conscience by contracting an avidity for the “Rembrandts - ' and other rack collected in his portfolio. Ilia dress bad the peculiarity of a single button, im perishable and lonely, to the pantaloons, and the eternal fur bonnet, which outwatched the seasons; but his athletic fignre was a favorite in the studios, and I know him best in tbe toilet used by his peers in the chaparral of Arcadia. Girt with a (disappointing) con cession to modesty in the shape of a steel brace, be moves in my memory through the marked light and shade of the ateliers—not unlike tbe sylvan shimmerings—a guttural • god wooing perpetual Antiopes and Syrinxes, which always tamed out to be painted can vas. “You will give us a good gross welcome, a hundred francs, a hundred and fifty francs, connie ga ?”■ That was the way he opened .acquaintance, rising to all appearance out of tbe ground and squatting flexibly on his bams. It was the rough,threatening coquetry of Arcadia. In reply I offered cigarette ?aper and blague-d-tabao; “Marchandons,” said, and it began to be, I fancy, quite like a bazar-scene in Cairo. He secured a liberal conveniency of paper and weed, and twisted pp a cigarette like magic. The studio, ap - prised that the game had commenced, as sisted the spokesman with suggestions that were loud in the ratio of distance and obscu rity. “That he sing his song!” “That he pay a worthy bien-venu, the ideal bien-venu, the bien-venu that one dreams I ” “flow does he draw, the Englishman ?” • ‘*Tbat he go for wood!” (This from a email .and frightened boy, who squeaked and ran to a corner. He had been replenishing the stove as I entered). . “His song!, His song I Tbe English pater noster I Got safe ze Queen I Dam I ” Rather contused by all these attentions, I found my best remedy in minding my work. Biahc got bis head round, followed by its own private aureole of smoke, to tbe front of my easel. He complimented me by a narrow and patient perusal of what I had done, and reported a kind criticism to the rest. - “Whatis your name, le nouveau?” he said, in bis oddly magisterial way. The chalk triangle at my feet was vacant of the letters with which each claim is usually marked. I wrote my name in it legibly, and ■ t ißlanc made chaos and dreamland of it in in terpretingit to the studio. ; “Now you must sing nsGot-safe-ze -Cuine!” said he. The chalk being still in my hand, I stooped again and added “ Amerigue ’ to what I had .fwritfon. The effect was pleasant, and far marked than. I Bhould have imagined. “Why, it is on American !” he shouted. “Bring up the other American J L9t us see tbe Americans kiss each other) They will say Vive Vashinptori, and their faces will rrielt together. We have not to do With the Eoglfeh.coldness.” , . : . In foe'meantime the’ marihoset, who had been anxiously -washing his. face at the sink, approaehed with ah’ : empty Kirsch-bottle. He,.was nearly clean, and ho put oq.a cun nlhg! ahdpleasan td ry ness p f .manner. “You ’ vrilt go out and.buy two sous’ worth of milk f andloursoub’ worth of black soap.” I was notunpreparedfortbisincongruous demaud, • it literaUy at need. Milk is .a combat used for fixing a charcoal'dbrigu to the canvas; a ; soft black rosin soap ia nsed for cleaning brushes:- and the laßt nouveau ia always ttia Merctny iniit rtUeved By a’successor. ' “Where is the money?”said I,quickly, The poor vagabond parched pocket after, pocket to no effect; he took it hard, even in that par liament of the impecunious, and blushed pain fully. “Look, monpetit,” he got then in bis ear, “wait until the recess, when thq model rests; then choose six of your friends) buy soap enough.to last a week, and drink to America iffa bottle 6f.respectable champagne at the nearest marchand's. Then bring the milk in the bottle for a proof” , Meantime there was a cqmmotidol: They were dragging up the “other American.’’ Lo! it was mine old familiar friend, Tool East, who had been watching, with a spice of viciousneps, to see how l got on, from aa obscure part bf the room. ' ii f - Tom is a cultivated creature, dressed like a fireman. This is a combination which pleases the Latin Quarter, and I found him high ia favor. Ho is, however,a laconjc companion, and; like Count Moltke,.“silent in seven lan guages." Like all silent people, though, he has occasional of talk, when no onb can reduce him- knd one of these explosions had occurred in mv favbr during tbe past' summer. In the baking, blinding Paris heat, when I was rusticating by the Bay or Biscay, East bad undertaken to manage the Ameri can applications for the Beaux Arts, of which bis own was one. He had passed guard after guard with invincible’ deter mination and convenient misunderstanding of etiquette; had burst veil after veil, to find himself at length in foe presence of Nieuwer keike, the Minister. The Minister had yielded incontinently to East’s merry eyes, biß excessive perspiration, and a few of his Eeven languages, and Tom had passed me in passing himself. A second jet of his elo quence apprised me of all this now at the re cess, when we streamed out for refreshment, leaving the room dnil and vacant, with smoke hanging in a canopy above the poor mode), who spread exhausted, like spilt cream, over bts platform— Nation. Ladles of Madrid. A subject of which I speak with diffidence. I came to see the dark-haired, dark-eyed Benoritas I bad read about, and seen them I have, but, sooth to say, they were not usually natives of Madrid. The Bpanish type—as we think of it—may-j almost as readily be seen in Bordeaux as in the capital of Spain. In the latter there are maoy extremely fair; many have pale, delicate features and chest nut hair; some even with luxurious heads of that lately fashionable color—red. Tne Ma drid ladies are —like the true inhabitants of most large cities —inclined to be petite; but they are often very pretty and always grace ful, but they would not elsewhere betaken for Spaniards, although they might readily be taken for Parisians. In dress, uow-a -d ays, they are French —too muchly French. Ford wrote to them twenty years ago: “Bonaparte never inflicted more injuries on Spanish men than your little French milliner has lo the daughters. The mantilla yields lo the Boulevard bonnet, dec.,” aye, even to tbe modern chignon. But the man tilla has not disappeared, although many Spanish ladies still ignore it, and retain only one of their national features—the use of the fan. With the fan they can talk without opt Ding tbeir pretty mouths; can show ani mation, excitement, pleasure, disgust; they can call a cavalier to their side, and dismiss him also; can recognize an acquaintance or “cut” one, simply by the manipulation of Ibis little elegancy,which elsewhere is merely a dumb instrument Many of these ladies of Madrid have collections of fans numbered by the score and doubtless labeled: “Go-to meetlng dan,” “Fine-weather ditto,” “Mar ket," “Opera,” etc., etc. At all events the mania for collecting tbe fans of all nations and styles is as rational as that for ancient crockery or postage Btnmpa. If you want to see Bpanish women in all tbeir glory of dark hair and eyes, and tawny Bkfo,you will find them anywheie from Cadiz to Barcelona; but correctly speaking these are more properly classed of Moorish or Arabic descent. In Madrid, bine eyes are not uncommon; perhaps black are more thought of. It is among the lower class in the city—many of whom have come from the country and provincial towns —that my preconceived ideas in regard to features, form and costume were more nearly realized. Among them you see the mantilla in all its glory, depending from the comb stuck in their magnificent heads of bair; coral or fancy ear-rings; dark features, full basts and small feet; rather short dresses (b&squinas) and a gene ral look of health and animal vigor. When yon see their lnxuriant hair, you will under stand what a punishment it must have been, in by gone days, for those who had it cut off by the Carliets, when they were found suc coring or assisting their opponents in any way. The big, jolly-looking pasiegas (wet nurses) from tbe country, who nourish the puny little Madrilenas, dress in very brilliant Btyle, and amoDg a crowd look like poppies in a weedy corner of a garden. The modern Hidalgo might be a French man, so far as costume is concerned. It is among the people that real Spanish capos (or togas; aDd sombreros are to be seen. — Alta California. MISCELLANEOUS. ]nt>tend of Bittkb. use ] SWFFT Mothers! give the Children l g ** 6t i Ai*a your Doctor for I HIIIN ! M F I The Druggists all sell j V ap 1 th t tu lms T PARA SOLS.-ALL THE NEWEST LONDON end Paris styles, which fer novelty, variety and elegance aro unequalled. A large assortment of Lace Covres. Sea-Side and Sun Umubkllas, at the lowest prices, at H. DIXON’S FANCY GOODS STOKE, No. 21 South Eighth street mh26-lms KILLINEItt. MRS. 8. D. WILLITS, 137 N NINTH STREET, constantiy ia receipt of a fmo and varied assort ment of French millinery. apH-lmj MAOHUIEATi IKON, 64a Merrick & sons. BOU'iUWARK FOUNDRY, 480 WASHINGTON Avenue^ Philadelphia, MANUFACTURE STEAM ENGINES—High and Low Procure, Horizontal Vtitical, Beam, Oscillating, Blast and Cornish Pump- Bid^UEßß—Cylinder, Flue, Tubular. &c. STEAM HAMMERS—Nasmyth and tiavy styles, and of all sizes, CASTINGS—Loam, Drv and Green Sand, Brass, die. ROOFS—iron Fiames, for covering with Slate or iron. TANKB—of Cast or Wrought Iron, for refineries, water, GAB MACHINERY—Such as Retorts. Bench Castings,, Holders and Ft ames. Purifiers, Coko and Charcoal Bar rows, Valves, Governors, die. 61 GAR MACHINERY—Such aa Vucuum. Pans and Pumps, Ueieoatcrß, Bone black Filters. era and Elevators; Bag Filters, Sugar and'Bone Black t art), <bc 1 Sole manufacturers of the following specialties;. » In Philadelphia and vicinity,of William Wright’s P&tont Variable Cutoff Steam Eogino. In Pt-mis)lvanla,of Shaw & Justice's Patent Dead-Stroke Power Hammer. 7n the United Stated of Weston's Patent Self-centering and BelM>* lanrrac Centrifugal Sugar-draining M&ckluo. Glafs & Dartoi'e impiovement on Asplnwall A Woolseys Centrifugal. Bnrtol’s Patent Wrought-Iron Retort Lid fitrahanV l/xDhGilnding Rest V; Coni ract ora for tlifc design, erection, and fitting up of Re fineries for, working Sugar or Molapspa, JRON FENCE.- , ■ Ttio undersigned are prepared to execute orders for ENGLISH IRON FENCE, of the best make. The attention of owners of Country Seats la especially asked to this as at once tho most sightly, the most durable,' and tho mouteconomical fence that can be used. ’ K •” - ■' ' t .. ■ v -‘' ‘ Specimen panels may bo a£en at our office. ■ “ •; YAHNALu - L9-3m5 416 SouthDola^aro,avenue. /COPPER AND YELLQW METAL Vy/ Nailer Bolts and Ihgot Coppor, con stantly on hand and for, sale by & CU„No.B32Sputh WhaTvea. - ■ P" id .iKONl^A.RfiivfeD'^EEE, OAIiL.JOH&.NN; iIOO i ons No, 1 Scotch Pig lion, Glnugarnock Brand. Fer saltfiu ioti te BUit by ; PETER WrIGH r & SONS, ; apaif .116 Walnut Bt.\ TBE DAILY EVENING BULLETIN—PHILADELPHIA, TUESDAY, APRIL 20,1859. QUICKEST TIME ONBEOOBD; IBS FAIt-lUNDIiB EODTI. „WII HOURS to CINCINNATI, vtaPENNBYLVAj NiARainiOADANDPAN.HANDLEi7M HOURS let* tUU! than by COMPETING LINES. ~... . _-~.J PABBKNGERB taking the B.UO P. M.TRAlN'arrive 1? CINCINNATI next EVENING at 9J5 Pi M... m HOUJBBi ONLY ONE NIGHT on the'ROUTE. 'p- ’--‘H tser THE WOODRUFF’S eslobratod Palace State* Room SLEEPING-GARB ruu through from PHILADBL* PHIA to CINCINNATL Paasengere taking the 12.00 Mi and TLUO .I' M. Train. .reach.. CINCINNATI and «U point. WlS’t and SOUTH TRALUI IN APVANCE of nli'otbor Router, r TON. QUINCY. MILWAUKEE ST. PAUL, OMAHA, N, . T.■ and all- rotate WEST. NOKTHWESTand SOUTH. • WEST, w«l>» particular t ask for TICKETS EW”,VI* ! 'PAN-HANDLE ROUTE, i '•-L > -* ! tap-To SECURE the UNEQUAL ED advantage ol tbi, LINK be VERY PARTICULAR and ASK FOB TICKETS*'Via PAN-HANDLE” at TICKET N. W. CO RNEB NINTH and CHK3TN UT 3treeto.. | NO. lie MAKBSST STREET, Mt. Second'and Front Bta, And THIRTY-FIRST and MARKET Street*, Weat Phlla) B. F. SCULL, Gon’l Ticket Agt., Pitteburgh. I JOHN H. Mfl.l.Rß, Gen'l Eaafn AAJOS Broadway,N.X F-I* waarnmn- PHILADELPHIA,- 'WILMING TON AM) BALTIMORE KAfU wraxjaz*: no ad-time table, comment ,clbg MONDAY’, April 12ih, lE<». Tralna will leave Depot, roim-r Broad and Washinuten avenOA a" follow**: ; WAY MAIL TRAIN at' K3O A. M. (Sendaye excepted), for Baltimore, stopping at all Regular etations. Con necting with Delaware Railroad at Wilmington for Cristield and Intermediate Stations, „ .... . : \ EXPRrtsS'iltAiN at 1200 M. (BundayeexceptedWrir Baltimore ai>d Washington stopping at Wilmington, Peiryvllle and Haver*de*Orace, Connects at Wumiag* ton with train for New C^tie. EXPIU 88 TRrtlN at 4.00 P. M, fSundaye excepted) for Baltimore and Washing ton, stopping at Cheater, IhuT low. hinwcod, Claymont, Wilmington. Newport, Btad. ton Newark, Elkton, North East. Chaileatown, Perry, ville.Havre de Grace. Aberdeen, Perryman's, Edgewood, Magnolia, Chase's and Stemmer's him i ~ ’oiit V XPKE " ” -411.80 K M. Baltimore MGUTEX. .BB a. and Waehingion.stopping at Chester.Thurlow. Linwood, ilaymont, Wilmington. Newark, Klkton, North East, PenyvllJe and Havie de Grace. M , .[ Passengers for Fortress Monroe and Norfolk will take the 12 tO M. Train.j WILMINGTON TRAlNS.—Stopping atatl Stations be tween Philadelphia and Wilmington. i Leave PHILADELPHIA at Fl.oo A M.. 2 30, 5.00 and 7.00P.M. Th* 5.0 U P, M. train connects with Delaware Railroad for Harrington'and intermediate stations. i Leave WILMINGTON 6 45 and &1U A« AL, i 30.4 16 ana 7;00 P. XL The 8110 A. M. train will not stop between Cheater and Philadelphia. The 700 P. M. trainfroffi Wilmlcgton'runs de.ly; ull other Accommodation Trains BALTIMORE to PHIL Bat thr.ore7.2o A. M.. Way MaiL 0.35 a. M., Express.. 2.2 s PM . Express. 725 P. M., Express ■ • J SUNDAY 'litAiN FROM BALTIMORE.t-Leaves HAL* TJMOKK at 755 P. M Stopping at Magnolia, Perryman’s, Aberdeen, Ha* re-de-Grace, Perryvilje, /Chajlefcfc-hVTL Ncrtk-fc ast. Elktoß, Newark, Stanton, Newport, Wil niingtoo, (;iajntont, Linwood and Cheater. ‘ PHILADELPHIA AND BALTIMORE CENTRAL RAILROAD TRAINS Stopp’Dgat all Stations on Chop ter Creek and Philadelphia and Baltimore Central Katlf road Leave PHILADEI PHLA for PORT DEPOSIT (Bunday excepted)at 7.00 A. M . and4.3o P. M. 'i he 7CO A. M. Train wilt stop at ail Stations between Philadelphia aDd Lamokin. 1 Leave Philadelphia for Oxford (Sundays excepted) at 4UOP.AL J Leave PORT DEPOSIT for PHILADELPHIA (Bun ds yt excepted) at 5.40 A. M., 9 25 A M , and 420 P. 1L Trains leaving WILMINGTON at 645 A. M. and 4 15 ~P. M., will connect at Laiuokin Junction with the 7.0 j A. U. and 4.30 P. U. Trains for Baltimore Central Hail road. ' Through tickets to »U points West, South and South west u>sy be procurrea at ticket office, 823 Chestnut street, under Continental Hotel, where aLo ot*te Rooms aLd Berths in bleeping Cars can be secured during tae day. Persons purchasing tickets at ibis office can navp baggage checked at their residence by the Union Transfer Company. H. V. KENNEY, Sup’t. , WEST CHESTER AND PHILA- DELPHI* It AILUO A. L>. —Summer K * ffl3noc - ArTKOgemoDt—un and after MON DAY. April 11 1669. rraitu! will leave aa follows t 1 biladtiphia, from New Depo , and Chwfnut ffrtets 7 25 A M.. 9SO A. M., 2.30 P.M., 4 lo fc*. M.. 4 36 I’. M.. 7 16 P. M. IL3O P. M. Leave Wi *t C.hefter. from Depot on East Market ftreet, A. M., 725 A.M., 740 A. M., 10.1 U A. M, L 56 P. M., 4.60 P. M.. 6 45 P. M. Leave PhiladelpMa for B. C Junction and Interme diate t'oiute. at 12 30 P. to. and 5.46. L>ea?e 13. U. June* tiou for Philadelphia, at 5.i0 A. Jl. and 1.45 P. M. *1 ra n leaving West Chi eter at 7.40 A. M , will stop at B. C, Junction. J.enni, Glen Kiddle and Media;'earing Philfcdvhhia at 4.35 r. M.. will stop at B.C. Junction and Media only, rassenperu to or fioin stations b* tween V\ eel Chester and B. C. J auction going East, will take train leaving West Cheater at 7.25 A. M . and car will bo attached to kxpreea Tram at t». C Junctrou ; and going \\ est Patsengr-r tor Stations above Media will take train leaving Philadelphia at 4 35 P. M.. and car will be at tacb d to Local ! rain at Media. 1 he Depot in Philadelphia Is reached directly "by the Lbtetnut and Walnut street cars. Those of the Market street line run within one square. The cars of both lines connect with each train upon its arrival. ON SUNDAYS: Leave Philadelphia for West Chester at 8.00 A. M. and Leave Philadelphia for B. C. Junction at 7.15 P. M. Leave West Chester lor Philadelphia at 7 45 A. M. and 445 b M Leave B C. Junction for Philadelphia at 6 00 A. M. PasftngeM) are allowed to take .Wearing Apparel only, ais B««egn#e. and the Coiupaoy will not iu any be respoiirdble for &d amount excrediug hundred dollars, unices a epeci&l contract is made lor tho came. tiENKY WOiiD, General Superintendent. PuiLAiiKi.ruiA, April Ist, 1869. R 5? ESSBSSSS3 NEW YORK.—THE CAMDEN AMBOY and PHILADELPHIA PANY’S I-JNES, from Philadelphia to New York, and way place*, from Walnut street wharf. rflfi At 6.80 A M., via Camden and Amboy, Aecam. 82 25 At BA. M. via Camden and Jersey Uity Express MaQ, 8 00 At 2-00 P. M-, via Camden and Amboy Express* S no At 6 P. M. for Amboy and Idtermedirue station*. At 6.80 and 8 A. M,, and 9 P. Mh for ijYoebold. At 8 and 10 A. H.,2.&8U and P. for Trenton. At 6.3U.8 and 10 A. Ed., L 2, L3U, 4.30, 6 and 11-30 P. fiL, for borofcttown, Burlington, Beverly and Delanco. At 6.30 and Lo A. SL.L, 6 and ILiSU P. M. for Flor rente, fiosti water. Riverside, Riverton Palmyra and Fish Houbo, and ft P. h*. tot Florence and Riverton. ESr'Tbe 1 and IL3U P. M. Line* will leave from foot of Market etreet by upper ferry. From Kensington Depot * At II A. Id., via Kensington and Jersey City, New York Exprees Line.. 83 00 At 7.30 and 11.00 A.&L.2.80,&80 and 6 P.M. for Trenton and Bristol And at 10,15 A. M. for BristoL At 7.30 and 11A.M., 2.80 and IP. M. for Morrisville and TuilytowiL At 7.30 and 10.15 A. M., LBO and I P.M. forSchenek* and Eddington. At 7.30 and 10.15 A. M.. L 80,4,1, and 6 P. M« for Cornwells, Torresdale, Uolmeeburg, Tacony, Wisainoming, Brides burg and Frankford, and 6 P.M. for Holmesburg and intermediate Stations. Fross West Phlladolphia Depot, via Connecting Rail wav At 9.46 A. M., L2U, A 0.3 U ana uP. ML New York Express Line, via Jersey City 83 05 At ILBO P. M. Emigrant Line 200 At 9.45 A. M., L2O, 4, auo 12 P. Trenton. At a4SA. M-. 4, 6.30 and 12 P. M., for BristoL At 12 P. M. (Night) for Momavllls, Tnllytown, Schencks, Eddington, Cornwells, Torrisdale, Holmesburg, Tacony, Wleslnoming, Bridosburg and Frankford. The 9.45 AM.and AI2 P. Sl.Linds ran daily. All others. Sundays excepted. For Lines leaving Kensington Depot, take the cars on Third or Fifth streets, at Chestnut, at half an hour before departure. The Cars of Market Street Railway run di rect to West Philadelphia Depot, Chestnut and Walnut within one square. On Sundays, the Market Btreet Can trill run to connect with the 9.45 A. M and 6.30 and 12 P M. lines BELVIDERE DELAWARE RAILROAD LINES from Kensington Depot. At 7.80 A. an, for Niagara Falls, Buffalo, Dunkirk, Elmira, Ithaca, Owogo, Rocheatenßin&hampton, Oswogo, Syracuse, Great Bend, Montrose. Wilkesharre, dcranton. buouosburg. Water Gap, Behooley*s Mountain, Ac. At 7.80 A. M. and 3.30 P. Si. for Belvidere, Easton, LambertvUle,Flemington, Ac. The 8,30 P. M, Line con recti direct with the train leaving Easton for Mancb Chunk,Allentown. Bethlehem, An . s t • At 5 P. M. tor Lambertville and intermediate Stations. °AMDEN AND BURLINGTON CO., AND PEMBERTON AND HIGHTBTOWN RAILROADS, from Market Stroet Ferry (Upper Side.) At 7 and 10A.M..1-3U,a80 and 5.80 P.M.for Merchantsville. Mooieecown, Haiti ord, MasouviUe, Ha insport. Mount Hollj.SmithvUle, Ewans villo.VincentowD.Birihingham and rembertoiL At 7 A.M.,l o 0 and 3-30 F.M.for L.Cwlfftown, C'ookitotvn, Now Egypt, Homoratown, Cream Bldge, Imlay-towD. Sharon and Htghtatown. Fifty Pound, of Baggage only allowed each Pauenger. Posaengorß aro prohibitod from taking anything a, bag gage but thuir wearing apparol. All Daggago over fifty ponnda to bo paid for extra. The Company limit their re iponaibiUty for baggage to One Dollar per pound-and will not be liable for any amount beyond 8100, except by ,po*, dal contract. : Tickets sold and Baggage checked direct tbrough to Boston, Wort ester, Sprtogfleld, Hartford, Now Havon. Providence, Newport, Albany. Iboy,, Saratoga,., Utica, Rome, Syracoso, Rocbostor. BafColo, Niagara Falla and Bnsponslon Bridge. . , An additional Ticket Office Is looatod at No. 839 Chestnut street, where ticket* to New York, and all im portant points North and East, may bo procured. Per sons purchasing Tickets at this Office, con have their bag gage chocked from residences or hotel to destination, by Union Transfer Baggage ExpreM. ESnes from New York for Philadelphia will toave from foot of Cortland • street at LOO and .4.00 P. M., via Jersey City and Camdon. At 6.80 P. M. via Jersey City and Kensldgton. At 7, and 10 A. M.. 1380,0 and 9 P. H-, and 13 Night, via Jersey City and West Pblladel- Pl From Pier No. I, N. River, at 6,80 A. M. Aecommodatlon and 3 P M. Express, via Amboy imd Camden. Nov. S 3. 1888. H. QATZMER. Agent. Vff-nHHMBD PHILADELPHIA AND ERIE I&iIHSSBffISBSa RAILROAD,- FALL TIME TA l™™l " BLE.—Through and Direct Route be tween Philadelphia, Baltimore,, Harrisburg, Williams port. to the Northwest and the Great Oil REwion of Penn sylvania.—Elegant Sleeping Cars on all Night Trains. 'oh -and after M9NDAY, Nov. 38di lßSsTtheTrains on tho Philadelphia «md&1o Railroad win nm as follows: WESTWARD. Mail Train leave* Philadelphia, i 10.45 P. fit* m ** Whiiameport. .&ISASL •* '* arrives at Erie.. ~,..>9.80 P. M, BWeE^f6**leayeePhiJj^^^lh.r.,.-.. ; . ; , ;;; M. " " arrive* at Brio .lauo A. M. Elmira Hall leaves Philadelphia.,, 8.00 A. M, »* .. » ■ Williamsport; ABO P. M. “ " arrives at Lock Haven ....7.4S P. M. , ■ .EASTWARD. . - i-.:. MauTntin i^e. V- , . Williamsport.. 740 A. M. arrives at Philadelphia. .4.20 P.M* Mail and Express conueot with' Oil Creek, and AUo< gheny River H^aißaggn^WkedTtoou|ffi. Generalauperlatendmit.i & “' fi i | TMAVJULfcijKtf* WBSTJEESEYEAIIiBOADS. SFBIBO AKBAnfIEnENT. - . From Footol ulaitet at. (Upper Ferry). ! Commencing Tiinrsduy, April 1,1809; Trains leave as follows: - ' : For Cape May and stations below; MBlviHo 8.15 P. U. A^M F P;fii.^^ intermediate stations 8,00 For Bridgeton, Salem and way stations B.COA. M. and at ais A M.. aoc, RSO and 6.P.M. . Freight tram leaves Camden dhily at 113- o’clock, noon. Freight received at second covered wharf below Wal nut street, daily. . . s . ■ Freight Delivered No, 223 8. Delaware Avenue. WILLIAM J. SEWELL, Superintendent THUIS£ LINE Iren? FhU* " a delphiato the interior of.Ponnsylva* -nJuw ‘the Schuylkill, Susquehanna; Cumberland and Wyoming Valley*, the North, Northweet'and the Cana* d«e, Spring Arrangement of Passeuger Trains, April 12th, the. Company** Depot, Thirteenth and <JsL hill streets, Philadelphia,'at the folio winghoura. MORNING ACCOMMODATION.-At A. M. for Beading and all intermediate Stations, and Allentown* fteturning, leaves Reading at 6-20 P. &L, arriving 10 Philadelphia at 9.15 P. M. MORNING EXPRESS.—At 8.15 A. M. for Reading, Le banon, Harrisburg, Pottsville, Pine Grove, Tamaquo* SonbarjrjWiUiameporLElmiia, Kocheater.Niagara Falls, Bptfalo.- Pittxton, York,, Carlisle, . Ch&m* bersburg. Hagerstown. Ac. The 7.30 A. M. train connects at Reading with the East Pent »ylvama Railroad trains for Allentown. Ac,and the • SJS-A3i;train connects withtio Lebanon Valley train for < Harrisburg.' &c.i at Port Clinton with CatawteeA KJL ■ trains for Williamsport, Lock Haveiv Elmira. &c.; at Harrisburg with Northern Central, Cumberland Vattoy', and Schuylkill and Qtuquehasna trains forNorthumber. land, Wifllamsport. York/-ham bersburg. Pinogrove, Ac. AFTERNt /ON EXPHESS;—Loaves Plffladelphla at B.Bb P. M. ior Readfn&, Pottsville, Harrisburg, dec., connect- Ing wi^ Reading and Colombia Railroad trams for Cot a pCOTBTOWN 1 ACCOMMODATION!—Leave* Potto. town at 6.25 A.M.. stopping at intermediate stations: an elves In Philadelphia at 8.40 A. RL Returning leaves Pht ladelphia at 4.3 J P. M.; arrives in Fottstown at 6L40 P. M. ACCOMMODATION—Leaves Reading at 7.30 A. RL, stopping at all.way stations: arrives In Phiia. delphia at 10. fa A. M> • k - p Returning. leaves Philadelphia at 6.16 P. M.: arrives in Beading atB.( 5 P.M. Trains for Philadelphia leave Harrisburg at 8.10 A. Hm •'and Pottsville at 8.45 A. M.; arriving in Philadelphia af LOOP. M. Afternoon trainaleave Harrisburg at 2J36P.M., and Pottsville at 2.45 P. M.; arriving at Philadelphia at 6.46 P. 2d. Harrisbmg accommodation leaves Reading at 7.15 A. AL, and BarrlsbcrgAt 4.10 P. M. Connecting at Reading with Afternoon Accommodation south at 6.30 P. M.: arriving in Philadelphia at 9.15 P. M. : THArket train, with a Passenger ear attached, leaves Philadelphia at 12.45 noon for Pottsville and all Way Sta tions ; leaves PottsvUle at 7.80 A M., for Philadelphia and all Way Stations. All the above trains run dally, Sundays excepted. * IBnnd&y trains leave Pottsville at 8.00 A ii* and Phlla idelphia at 8.15 P. M.; leave Philadelphia for Reading at 8.00 A M., returning from Beading at 4.25 P. M. CHESTER VALLEY RAlLROAD.—Passenger* foi Itewningtown and intermediate points take the 7.30 A.M., 1245 ana 4.3 U P. M. trains from Philadelphia, return in* from Downingtownat&io A M., 1.00 P.M.and&45P.M. PERKIOSIFN RAlLROAD.—Passengers for Skip, pack take 7.30 A. M. and 4.30 P. M. trains from PbiladeL phia.returning from Skippack at 8.16 A M. and 1.00 P. M. Stage lines for various points in Perkiomen Valley connect with ti ains at CollegeviUe and Skippack* NEW YORK EXPRESS, FOR PITTSBURGH AND THE WEST.—Leaves New York at 9 A M., 5.00 and 8.0( PAL,pasainn Reading at 1.05 A. M..L&O and 10.19 P.M_,and connect at llarriaburg with Pennsylvania and Northern Central Railroad Express Trains for Pittsburgh* Chicago, Williamsport. Elmira. Baltimore. Ac Returning, Express Train leaves Harrisburg, on amvaJ of Pennsylvania Express from Pittsborgh,at 3.50 and 6.60 i-A.M..10.50 P. M.. passing Reading at 6.44 and 7.31 A M and 12.50 P. M. t arriving at New York 11.00 and 12.20 P.M., and &.UG P. M. Sleeping Cars accompany these train* through between Jersey City and Pittsburgh, without 1 change. I Mail train for New York leaves Harrisburg at &10 AM. and2.os P.M. M&il train for Harrisburg leaves New York . at 12 Noon. _ __ SCHUYLKILL VALLEY RAILROAD. -Trains leave I Pottsville at 6.45,1L80 AM. and 6.40 P. M. jetumiag from Tamaqua at 3.35 A M. and 2.15 and 4.35 P. M. SCHUYLKILL AND SUSQUEHANNA RAILROAD— Trains leave Auburn at 7.35 A M. for Pinegrove and liar- 12.16 P. M. for Pinegrove and Tremont; re : "thrning from ii&nrieburg at 3.80 P. u., and from Tremont at 7.40 A. M. and P. M. TICKETS.—Through first-class ticket* and emigrant tickets to all the principal point* in the North and West and Canadas. Excursion Tickets from Philadelphia to Reading and Intermediate Stations, good for day only, are sold by Morning Accommodation, Market Train, Reading and Pottstown Accommodation Trains at reduced rates. Excursion Tickets to Philadelphia, good for day only, are sold at Reading and Inter odiate Stations by Read ing and Pottstown Accommodation Trains at reduced fates The following tickets aro obtainable only at the Office of S.Bradford, Treasurer, No. 227 South Fourth street, Philadelphia, or of G. A NicoUs, General Superintendent Beading. Commutation Ticket at 26 per cent discount between any points desired, for i amilies and firms. Mileage Tickets, good for 2.000 mßoa, between all point* at $5? 50 each, for families and firms. Season Tickets, for three, six, nine or twelve months, fer holders only, to all pointß at reduced rates. Clergyman residing on tbe line of the road will be for nleheawith cards, entitling themselves and wives te tickets at fare. Excursion Tickets from Philadelphia to principal sta lions, good for Saturday, Sunday and Monday, at reduced fare, to be bad only r atthe Ticket Office, at Thirteenth and Caliowhlll street*. „ FREIGHT.—Goods of ail descriptions forwarded to all the above points from the Company’s New Freight Depot, Broad ahoWtliow streets. Freight Trains leave Philadelphia dally at 4.80 A RL, 12.45 noon 8.60 atwl 6 P. &L, for Reading, Lebanon, Harris burr. Pottsville, Port Clinton, and alLpoints beyond. M o n. dose at the Philadelphia Post-Office for aU places on the road and It* branches at § A M*« and for the prin dpal SUUoni only .t 'Dnngan*. Exprce. will collect Bmmre for aU tram; leaving Philadelphia Depot. ‘ Orders can be left at No. 2Sft SouthFoorth. street, or at the Depot, Thirteenth and Cd owhill streets. nramnD Pennsylvania central IjlA3nH»B&Uroad. - Fall Time. - Taking iMSBIt Wllg«_"T«affr e gect Nov. 22d, 186 a. The train* of the Pennsylvania Central Railroad leave the Depot, at Thirty-first and Market streets, which Is reached directly by the care of. the Market Street Passenger Railway, the last car connecting with each train leaving Front and Market streets thirty minutes before its depart am Those of the Chestnut and Walnut Street Railway ran within one square of the Depot, . . „ „ Bleeping Car Tlcaea can be had on application at the TicketOfnce, Northwest comer of Ninth and Chestnut streets, and at the Depot. Agents of the Union Transfer Company will call for and deliver Baggage at the Depot. Orders left at No. 801 Chest imtrtrfleUHoJMMarlart,obget, wiUrecelTOattention. TRAINS LEAVE DEPOT. VIZ.: MaU Train. : at B.MA. M Paoli Accom. . ..-.. .at 10.80 A. JL, LlO. and 9.00 P. M Fait1dne..,........ .at 11.50 A. M. Erie Express. At ILSO AM. Harrisburg Accommodation. at£LBo P. M. y .nrKvurtpr Accommodation. at 4.00 P. M. ParksburK Train at 6.80 P. M. Cincinnati Express at 8.00 P. M. Erie Mail and Buffalo Express 0t1Q.45 P. M, Philadelphia Express at 12.00 night Erie Mail leaves daily, except Bunday, running on Saturday night to Williamsport only. On Sunday night passengers will leave Philadelphia at 13 o'clock, Philadelphia Express leaves daily. All other trains dally, except Sunday. , The Western Accommodation Train rani daily, except Sunday. For this train tickets must be procured and baggage delivered by 6.00 P. ML, at 116 Market street .TRAINS ARRIVE AT DEPOT, VIZ: Cincinnati Express ...at 3.10 A M. Philadelph&Expreas “8.10 “ Paoli Accom.. * at 8.30 A. M. and 8.40 A 7.K) P. M. Erie MaU and/Buffalo Express., “ 10.00 A.M. Parkaburg Train. , “9.10 “ Fast Line, , “10.00 “ Lancaster Train. “12.30 P. M Erie Express “ 4.20 *' Day Express..*..... at 4.20 " Harrisburg Accom... 9.40 ** For farther information, apply to JOHN VANLEER t Jn.,Ticket Agent»BQl Chestnut street. FRANCIS FUNK. Agent, 110 Market street. SAMUEL H. WALLACE, Ticket Agent at the Depot. The Pennsylvania Railroad Company will not assume any risk for Baggage; except for wearing apparel, and limit their rcspouubuity to One Hundred Dollars in value. AU Bagg&go exceeding that-amount. In vqloe wiU boat the riilt of tho owwr. UAlegtak^b^^^trart. General Superintendent. Altoona. Pa, AND *NQRS3*CQ pwrytar"time table.—after Wednerday, March 24; 1869,'and until further notice: FOR GEKMAPtTGWN. Leave PhUadalphla^-8,7; 8, a 06,10, fl, 12 A. M., L 3.15, % 4,6,6 X, 6,6>tf. 7,8.9.10,11,12P.M. ....... Leave Germant0wn—6,7,713,8,8.20, a, 10,11,12 A M. > I, 2,8.4,4 X. 6, 0,6t07,8,9,10, UP. M. , The 6.20 down train,,ana tho S)t and 6X up trains, will not stop on the Germantown Branch. Leave Philadelphia—9.l6ml mites A K; 2.7 and 1034 P.M Leave.Germantown—B.l6 A. M.J 1, 0 and IXP.iI . CHESTNUT HILL RAILROAD. Leave Philadelphia — 6, B. 10, IS A. M. ia, 814. 514, 7. • and Lo'ave Chestnut Hill— 1 7.10 mlnntei. 8.9.40 and 11.40 A. M. 1140.140. MO, iWOi &40 and 10.40 ?. M. !- . 7 ON SUNDAYS. Leave Philadelphia—aiG mlnntei A. M. 1 1 and 7F. U. Leave Chestnut Hi 11—7.60 mlnntei A. M. i LUO, 6.40 and c?>n'b%ohoob®n and Norristown. Leave Phlladelphla-0, 714, 9,1L06, A. M. 1114. 8,414.114, 6.16,8.06 and U 34 P. MT LeaveiNorriiiown—6.4o,7,7.6o,9.U A. 6L1114.8,414.6.16 and 814 P. 61. ON SUNDAYS. Leave Philadelphia-0 A. 6L1614 and 7.16 P. M. Leave Norristown—7 A. 6L:6l4and9P. Id. FOB MANAYUNK. Leave Pkiladelphia-6,734,9, U.o* A. 6L i U 4. B, 414.614, ; 6.U,S.OBandUI4P.M.TP ? « ■ ' _ Leave 8.90.914.1114 A. M. 1A 814 8, 614 and S P, 6L ON SUNDAYS. Leave Philadelphia— 9 ArM7:*ij<i"and Lit P. M. Leave Manaytmk— l)6 A. M. 18 and Wt P. M. W. B. WILSON, General Superintendent, Depot, Ninth ana Green ■treefak fg?TnßWßtoWMfi FaW ; FREtGUT LINE. VIA Pennsylvania rail traatt’ <Ktr RuA l>, to Wilkeatmi-re, Matmuoy CanneL Centralis, and all points on Lehigh Valley Railroad and it* branches. . By new arrangements, perfected this day; thlsroadle .enftl&d** glve.iiicroftßed despatch to merchandise con- Bjrtta idthe ahOYe.nbmed pointß. •? , -Goodfldellvered at the Through Freight Depot, • - . _ ~B E. cor. of FRONT and NOBLE streets, . Before BP. M,, will reach ‘Wllkeabarre, Mount Carmel, Mahnnov City, bud the other stations in Mabanoy aad Wyoming valleys btforo 11 A. M.. of tho succeeding day, ELLIS CLARK, Agent ~. ~ :.-i.. u . ■' ■ , . * * , . ... v-V":c.- XHAVCUKBB* eillOEt yaanpaD uamdem atlaotto hail W boad. .vr 3PEDS)G ABBAS CEMENT, al On and alter MONDAY, April i Sth, 1869. train* mjn leave Vine Street Wharf ae follows via.: wm Preitft.'wltiiP«eBeugor‘ckr attaehed"."VW a! Atlantic Accommodation. atS P. M, BETUItNINO, WILL LEAVE ATLANTIC, : Ma1 , ......i. ........; 4.00P.M. Freight, with ParneDger Car 11.43 A. M, Atlantic Accommodation. 6uU A* 1L Junction Accommodation, to Atco and Intern* diate 8 tail one, . * Leave Vihe Street..... .........10.16A.M.and6.00P. M] .ieayo Atc0....... j 6.8» a. M. and 12.16 P.M. 1 . Baddonfield Accommodation Trains 'Leave Vino i-treet........ 10.15 A. M. ana 2.00 P.Mi Leave Haddonfield ...... ...1.00 P. SL and 3.16 P.M; P. H. MUNDY, AgenL ■g'l.fiwwMcrrwn NORTH PENNSYLVANIA R. K.— AraSEBSSggjTHE. middle KOUm-3hortes< m and most direct Une to Be f hloheim> Eostoin Allentown, Mauch Chunk, Hazleton. White Ho vcd.’WUkeibarre, Jlabanoy City, Mt. Carmel, Pittaton; Tunkh&nnock, Scranton, Carbondalo and all the point* .in the Lebißb and Wyoming coal regions. . ■ . Paisengfr Depot in Philadelphia, N. W. comer Berks end American streets WINTER ARRANGEMENT. TEN DAILY TRAINS. —On and after MONDAY, NOVEMBER 23d. Passenger Trains leave the Depot, comer of Berks.and American streets, daily (Sundays excepted), ae follows: • ■ • At 7;45 A; M.—Morning Express for-Bethlehem an Principal Stations on North Pennsylvania Railroad, con ncctiug at Bethlehem with Lehigh Valley Railroad foi Allentown. C&taeauqna. Blatington. Mauch Chunk, Weatherlv, JeaneeviUe, Hazleton, White Haven.Wilkes* ■harre, Kingston, Pitta ton. Tunkhannock, and all points in 1 ehigb audWyoming Valleys ; also, in connection with Lehigh and Mahanoy Railroad for Mahanoy City, and with Catawiesa Hailroadfor Rupert, Danville, MUton and Williamsport. Arrive at Mauch Chunk at 12 M.; at Wilkesbaneaf 2.50 P.M.; at Mahanoy City at 1.60 P. M. Passengers *by this train can take the Lehigh Valley Train; passing Bethlehem at 1165 A. M. for Easton and points on New. Joreey Central Railroad to New York. At 8.45 A. M.—AccommodatlonforDoylestowu, stopping at ail inteimediate Stations. Passengers for Willow Grave, Hat boro 1 andliartsvilie, by this train, take Stage at Old York Hoad. ... c 9.45 A. M. (Express) for Heth*enem, AUeotewh.Maucb Chunk, White Pittston, Scranton and CarboDdale via Lehigh and: rtfequohanna Railroad, also to Easton and points on Morris and Essex Railroad to Ne* York and Allentown and K&BtezL, Mid points on New Jersey Central Bailioad to NBW York via Lehigh Valley Railroad. At 1045 A. M.—Accommodation for Fort Washington stopping at intermediate Stations. At 1.46 P. M.—Lehigh Valloy Express for Bethlehem, Allentown-Mauch Cbunln White Haven, WTlkesbarre, Pitteton,Scr&nton,and Wyoming Coal Regions., At 2,46 P. M.—Accommodation for Dofloatown, stop ping at all intermediate stations. At 4. 15. P# Mrf—Accommodation for Doyles to wiretap ping at all intermediate stations. At 601 P. M.—'J hrougb accommodation for Bethlehem, and statione on main line o< North Pennsylvania Rail* ro«.d, connecting at Bethlehem with Lehign Valley Eve* ning Train for Easton, Allentown, Mauch Chunk. At 6.2 U P. M.— Accomodation for Lansdale, stopping all ini c’ mediate stations. At 11.30 t. M.—Accom n&Uttons for Fort'Washington TRAINS ARRIVE IN PHILADELPHIA. From Bethlehem at 9.10 A. M., 2.1 D, 5.25 and 8.30 P. M. 2.10 P. M., 6.25 P. M. andB3o P. AL Trains make direct connection with Lehigh Volley or Lehigh and Susque hanna Gains from Easton, Bcranton, Wilkesbarre, Maha nov City and Hazleton. ••• , Pas engtrs leay ing Wilkesbarre at 10.18 A. M., L 45 P. M., connect at Bethlehem and arrive in Philadelphia at 5.26 and 8 80 P. M. From Doylestown at B.&> A. M., 4J» P. M. and 7. P.M From Lonsdale at 7.30 A. M.' From Foit Washington at 10 45 A, M. and 3.10 P. 6L ON SUNDAYS. Philadelphia for Bethlehem at 9.30 A. M. Philadelphia lor Doyleetown at 2 00 P; M. Dojteettiwn for Philadelphia at 7 A. M. Bethlehem for Philadelphia at 4 00 P. M. Jrtfth and Sixth Streets Passenger core convey passen gers to and from the new Depot White cajb of Second and Tilt’d Streets Line and Union Line run within a short distance of the Depot. Tickets must be procured at the Ticket office, in order to secure the lowest rates of fare. ELLIS CLARK, Agent Tickets gold and Raggagf checked through to principal points, at Manu’a North Penn. Baggage Express office No. 105 booth Fifth street SHIPPER!}’ GUIDE. For Boston—Steamsbin Line Direoi SAILING FROM EACH PORT EVERY FIVE DAYS. FROM PINE STREET, PHILADELPHIA, AND LONG WHARF, BOSTON. This line is composed of the fir* lasi trTmirirmmm Steamships, JKOIUAN, 1,48 b tone, Captain O. Bakei. SAXOft, 1,250 tone. Captain Sears, ft O KITI *N « 1,293 tone. Captain Crowell. The *AXON, from Phila. Saturday, April 21. at 8 P M. The NORMAN, from Boston, Friday April, 23. at 3 P.M. Ibeee btesmehipe sail punctually, ana Freight will bv rectivea every day,a Steamer being always on the berth. Freight for points beyond Boston sent with despatch. Freight taken for all points in New England nnd for warded as directed. Insurance V* per cent at tbe office. For Freight or Passage (superior accommodations; apply to HENRY WlNStwt &CO., my3l 338 South Delan-art- avenue. PHILADELPHIA, KIUHM.jNO AND NOR fflgSOgU FOLK STEAMSHIP UnE. through freight air line to the SOUTH AND WEST. EVERY SATURDAY. At Noon, from FIRcT WHARF above MARKET street THROUGH RATES and THROUGH RECEIPTS to all points in North and South Carolina via Seaboard Air line Railroad, connecting at Portsmouth, and to Lynch bur*. Va.. Tennessee and the West via Virginia and Tennessee Air-Line and Richmond and Danville Railroad. Fre'pbt HANDLED DU 4‘ ONCE, and taken at LOWER RA'iLBTIIAN ANY OiHEtf LINE. The reeularity, safety and cheapness of this route com mend it to tie public as tbe most desirable medium fo; carrying every description of freight No charge for commission, dray age, or any expense foi tr&otter. Steoznihipe inßure at lowest rates. Freight received DAILY. m . WM. P. CLYDE A CO., 14 North and South Wharves. W. P. PORTER, Agent at Richmond and City Point. T. P. CROWELL A CO., Agentß at Norfolk. NOTICE TO HAVANA AND NEW Oft* LEANS SHIPPERS. BBSaifii Owing to the depressed condition of the Freighting Businets, the steamship YAZ O will be with drawn from the Havana and New Orleans line until there is nn improvement in trade wi>h those ports. The steamship Jt NIA-TA will continue to make regu lf r trips monthly, and freight will be received (or New Ui leans, via Savannah, weekly. WM. L. JAMES, General Agent, ap£o-6ts Philadelphia and Southern Mail Steamship Co. PHILADELPHIA A ND SOUTHERN M ML 81EAM8H1P COMPANY’S REGULAR FRt 'M 6UEEN STREET WHARF. The YAZOO will sail for NEW ORLEANS, via HA. VANA. The JUNIATA will sail from NEW ORLEANS, via HAVANA. -.April-. The TONAWaNDA will sail for BAVANNAH on Ba. turday, April 24. at 8 o'clock A M. 'lhe WYOMING will sail from SAVANNAH on Sa turday. April 21 The PIONEER will sail for WILMINGTON, N. G.» on Saturday, May Ist, at 6 P. M. T hrougb bills of lading signed, and passage tickets sold to all points Bouth and West. BILLS OF LADING SIGNED at QUEEN ST. WHARF, For freight or passage, apply to WiLLIaM L. JAMES, General Agent, 120 South Third street. HAVANA STEAMERS. _ dggfjftV SAILING EVERY 21 DAYB. JwnßSawfe These steamers will leave this port for Ha vana every third Wednesday, at 8 o'clock A. M. The steamship STARS AND STRIPES, Captain Holmes. will sail for Havana on Tuesday morning. March 16, at 8 o’clock. Passage, 840 currenoy. PaßßiDgeie must be provided with passports. No freight received after Monday. Reduced rates of freight THOMAS WATTSON A SONS, 140 North Delaware avenue. NEW EXPRESS LINE TO ALEXANDRIA, Georgetown and Washington, D. 0., via tffnn i itrC* Chesapeake and Delaware Canal, with con uect'one at Alexandria from the most direct route for Lynchburg, Bristol, Knoxville, Nashville, Dalton and the Southwest. Steamers leave regularly from the first wharf above street, every Saturday at noon. Freight received daily. _ WM. P. CLYDE A CO., 14 North and South Wharves. HYDE A TYLER, Agents,:at Georgetown. M. KLDKIDOE A CO.; Agents at Alexandria, Virginia. NOTICE.— <gg3*s> FOR NEW YORK. ■™™"” Via Delaware and Raritan CanaL EXPRESS STEAMBOAT COMPANY. 1 he CH EAPEST and QUICKEST water communica tion betw etn Philadelphia and New York. Steam eiß leave daily from first wharf below Market street. Philadelphia, and foot of Wall street, New York. Goods forwarded by all the lines running out of Mew Yors-North. East and Weßt—free of Commission. Freight received and forwarded on accommodating terms. WM. P. CLYDE A CO., Agents, 12 South Delaware avonue, Philadelphia. JAS. HAND, Agent, 119 Wall street. New York. FOR CHARLESTON. H. C. Bteau ship J. \V. EVERM&N, Snyder, will Ball THURSDAY, 22d inst, from Pier No. 17, below Spruce street, at 4 o'clock. For Freight or Passage, apply to E. A. 80UD1SRAC0., It No. 8 Dook street NOTICE,—FOR NEW YORK. DELAWARE AND RARITAN CANAL. BWIFTSUIIK TRANSPORTATION COMPANY. DESPATCH AND BWIKTSURE LINES. The busineis ol tbeso lines will be resumed on and after the 19th of Mnrch. For freight,which will be taken on accommodating terms, apply to ' WM. M. BAIRD A CO., No. 182 South Wharves. DELAWARE AND CHESAPEAKE .-*lh N Steam Tow Boat Company.-Barees towed between Philadelphia, Baltimore, llavrc-de.orsco, Delaware City and Intermediate poinu. WM. P. CLYDE & CO.. Agents; Capt. JOHN LAUGH. LIN. Bup't Office, 14 South Wharves Philadelphia* „ NOTICE—FOIt NEW, YORK VIA Delaware and Raritan Company-Deßpatoh. and Bwiltuure Lines.—The business bfMicw Linoa, wUlbere ruined on anti After the Bth of Sn!s% which wl 1 be taken on accoinraodatffig tenns. appiy to WMcM. BAIRD; A CO., m South. Wharves. —•- caution. /I'AUTION—ALL 7 PERSONS -ABB HEREBY CAU* 1 j tinned Siainst trusting or hiy-boring any of the crow ef tli** Hr Kark *Tvllaßrb rt ko* I *^MttBterB,'Master, Roni .* cirdi^is”"'debtVof-of thcircontracUng wiirbo paW by Captoin or ,OoPflJgneca* WuHKMAN « W. ?J *133 , \yaluut Btll'Ct. y.. .. SPECIAIi ROTIOCB, gg£» NOTi CB TO STpCKHOLt EBB. OFFICE OF THE NBSQUEHONING VALLEY RAIL. ROAD COMPANY. No: 122 S. SECOND STREET. • FmtkT>EtPaiA. Aprjl 19th, 1869. The seccnd instalmentof TEN -PER CENT., or FIVE DOLLARS e. on.thn Capital: Stock of this Com pany.!! call'd in by order oftheßoard of .Directors, pay able at the Office or the Company oh tbolsfrday of May next. * . *yi. i ■ ,* -.-j. '■:' ~;-i \t'. ‘iiit'* Stockholders have the privilego of paving in foil, and receiving ccrtlHrates for their stOclLwhiph bears interest at the rate of,TEN FEE CENT, frohx March Ist;, payable semi-annually;, ■ L".- ;>'r. -‘V -.>-?■■>73s J -^b-• .. api&»bts ;->>• ■W*B* WHlTNErYiTreasurer. GOOD SPRING RAILROAD, COMPANY. . ' < PuiLADRLPiiiA* April oth v lBd9. Tbe annual meeting or tbe Stockholders, of this Com pany and an election for Pfesidcntand slx' M'anUMzii t> serve for tbe ensuing year.* : and inxatil r other# shall be elected, will bo held at the Office of the Phiiadeloblaand Reeding Rallr*-'ad « onioany. No; 227 South' FOURTH street, on MONDAY, tho ’Ud day of-May heifckt-lDi oVlorfe, A. M. . WM. H, WEBB^r ap9tmy3. Secretary. asm SCHUYLKILL AND Si SQUEHANNA' RAIL ■V w road Company. Office, 227 S. Fourth Street..« ' . • April 9.18®. Tbo annual meeting of tho pan;, nnd an election for Piesident jrad will take pl«ce at th« Office' of tbe Company, on MON> Dai , the Bdday of May next, at 12 o’clock Mi* • »T>9tmy3 WM. Hi WEBB. Secretary. g&V' NOKTIJERN LIBERTIES AND PEMN TOWN- Slill* KAILROAU COMPAMV .i> , . TmnAnnnnnAv April 9,(1869 Tpc annual meeting of the atockttoldorsof.thlß Com pany , end an election for officers to servo for tnd enadidg ye»r and until others (hall be elected, wilt bo field ht the cilice of the Pbiladelnhla and Reading,Railroad Corn pnny. tvo. a!7 SOUTH FOURTH.acredt, on MONDAY, the 3d day of May next, at 11 o’clock AI M. " ' ■ ' WM. H. WEBB,/ oecrctary. epStmyS VST VALI.E Y RAII.ROADt COMPANY. W T' OFFICE. NO. 227 8. FOURTH STREET, : : : , .... Pun.AiiEl.ruiA, April AlBB9. The annua] meeting of the stockholders of thlaUom paßy.and an election for President and six-Managers, will take piece at theoflice of the Company.ottMUNJDAk. the 2d day of May next, at o’clock A. St., „ , si'h’o m? 8 ’ ALBERT FOaTEßjßeiSetdry. OFFICE VULCAN MINING COMPANY , vT.’ . Pmi.AhEi.rrri*, April 12, 1869. Th© Annual Meeting of stockholders of the Vulcan Minipg Company wiilheheld at their office. No. 824 Wal nut Btreet, on THURSDAY, May 13th, 1669,.at. 12 o’clock M . for the election ©f Directors and transaction of other busineea, i B. A. HOOPBB.T aplB-tmilag - .o;:bii Secretary. THE ANNUAL MEETING- ‘ OFi BToCK holders of the BARCLAY OOALCOMPA& Y, will be held at the office of tixe Company. 154 Soatn Fourth street. on MONDAY, May 8,1869. *t'l2 o’fclock, an election will bo held for ofticere to servo the* enaulnK year. [apl7-Ma.th,7t*j .HAttVt&Y SHaW. Secretary. •SB?* NOTICE.-APPLICATION’ WILL BE 1 MADE ■Jr/, to. the Governor of Pennsylvania for thapardpn of Patrick Shanley. convicted at tha .December, Sesavn. 1869, of tbe Court of Quarter Beepiona, fn and for the city and County of Philadelphia, of larceny, fic. apl3*tu2ts Arum 19.1869. • . • •>.: • 'tv;,; jqjp* ÜBRA RY COMPANY. > V b The annual election of Directors and; a Treasurer of the Libr&o Company of Philadelphia will bo held at the library on MONDAY, the third day of May next, at 8 r 'clock in the afternoon; when the Treasurer will attend to receive the annual payment*. $. ; Ab there ore several shares on which fines.site due,, the owner* of them or their representatives are hereby notified that they will be forfeited, agreeably to'the Charter and Laws of the Company, unless, the arrears are paid off on the third day of May or yrlthlntendaya thereafter. • '* WM.E WHITMAN, Secretary. No boohs will bo given out or received an • that after nocD. aplS-tu,th,otmy3§ OFFICE OF THE SHAMOKIN AND BEAR w VALLEY COAL COMPANY, NO. 314 CHESTNUT BTBEET. ' Piiii.AßKLrniA, April 16,1869 The annual meetinr of ptocSholdens and; election for oflicera of the du&mokin end Bear VaUey Cftal Company w ill be held at the office of the Companybn 'MOMDAx, May 8, at la o’clock. o-:- - i: 'r WILLIAM. P, ATKINSON,; Secretary. apl7 b tn th troy 23 CAMDEN AND AMBOY RAILROAD AND ett? TRaNoPORTAI’ION COMPANY. Camden, March 29,1859. The annual meotirg cf (he Stockholders of the Camden and Amboy Railroad ui>d Transportation Com(i&ny,>for tbe election of eeveu Director* lo serve for the ensuing rear, will be held in this city “t the Office of the West Jersey Railroad (Yinpnny on WEDNESDAY, tho2£t&of April, Ut9, at IS o'clock, M SAMUEL J: BAYARD,. mh£9 dtap29s Secretary of C\ aod A. K. K. and T. Uo. DIVHOEI9D NOTICJER* * «§&» OFFICE OF THE AMERICAN FIRE: INSUR w ANCE COMPANY. Philadelphia* April 12.1869. Tbe -Directors have tilts day declared < a dividend: of 3fcYt*D Dollars *nd liftj Cent# per share fortha Jastaix months, which will be paid to the Stockholders ortheir !e*al representatives, on and afrer t>e 22d Instant, free from n>( taxes. A. C.L CRAWFORD, ap!2 915 - Secretary LECAL WO'iTBCES. I NTIIE DTSTRICT COURT OFTHE UNITED STATES I I*OKTHB 1 ASTERN UI3TIUOI*. PENNSYL VANIA.—In JSankmp'cy.— Tbe undersigned hereby gives notice of hts atippintmei.t na As-ign-e Of ‘ JOHN MCoHN NIS. of philadeTpbittrin ibti county of Philadelphia, and State of Penusylvat in. wlrhlu said District, who h < wb c en adjudged a bankrupt upon his own petition, by, the Dis trict Court of Bald RHrict _ SaMUBLS. FETHEBSTON,' Assignee. To the Creditors of said Baukrupt. . • •; - op2o*tn3t* IN THE ORPHANS* COURT FORTHECITYANB A County of Phiiadt iphlu.— Kstnto of RBEStJ D. FELL* d« ceased —T? e Auditor appointed by the I’ourt'to audit, fettle and adjust tbe fir>*t and final account of HENRY L. FILL and FDWA HJ> K * FELL. Executor* of the last will and teptauient of REEBE D, FELL* deceased, and to rej oi t distribution of the balancetn thebanda of the ac roi ntaite. will meet the partie» interested for tbe purpose of bit appointment, on WEDNESDAY, April2B* 1859, at 4 o’clorkr. M.. at the office of JOSEPH A*, CLAY, >o. 271 South Fifth street, In the; city df"4Philadel phia. apl7g to thfit TN THE COURT OF COSIMON PLBAB FOR THE 1 City and County of Philudt'lpliia.-ANNIE A. KARLE vn. WILLIAM FABLE.—September Term. 186*No. 46. In Divorce. « , , . WILLIAM EARLE, Sir: You will please take notice (bat the Court baa «rautcd a rule on you to show cause why a divorce a. v. in. should not be 'decreed. Personal service bavira faiUd on account of your absence* Re* turnable SATURDAY, May 1, 1569, at tl A. M, _ , Yours, 1 1> -‘ ••• ' Attorney pro Libellant*. epl9,m % tu,4t* FN 7HE OEPBANB* COURT FOE THE CITY A*fD J- County of PhilHd«lphU.>-EBtate of WILLIAM ' MILLS, deceased. Tfco Auditor appointed, by > the Court to audit, settle and adjust the account of MATILDA J. MILLS, Executrix of the will' of; WII*. 'LL&M MIILS, deceased, and to report,distribution of the balance in th» hands of the accountant, will meet the parties interested, for the purpose of his appointment,- od MONDAY, April 26, 1860 at 4 O’clock, P. at;hifl office, No. 128 8. Sixth street, in the City of Philadelphia, • H. K. WALLACE,; Auditor. Bpls-*b.e.tu6ts IN 'J HE ORPHANS’ COURT FOR THE OITYv AND 1 County of Philadelphia.—Estate of JOSEPH GREEN* decerned —The Auditor appointed by tbe Courtto'audf t, settle &Bd adjust the ncc-unt of BENJAMIN GRBRNtana EVAN GREEN,Executors of tbe last willof said JOd&PH GRHiN. deceased, and to report distribution of the balance in the bauds of the accountant, will ftneet the parties interested, for tbe purpose of ois appointment, on- TUEsrAY. April 37th, 1869. at 3 o'clock, Y.flU At Ala office, bo. 144 South sixth street (3dstory),in the city of •Philadelphia. . ; apls-tfr B tufitg IN THE ORPHANS'COURT FOR THE CITY AND' » County of PhiludilpMo.-Fetatoof WILLIAM HAM ILTVN, deceased.—The Auditor appointed by tho Court to audit, Bettle and adjust the" account of HIANCIS BCOFFIN and JOSEPH : HAMILTON. Eaecufo.e of tbe Uet will and : testament of WILLIAM HAMILTON, deceased, and to report; diatri* huiion of the balance in the hands of the accountants, w 1)1 meet the partita Interested for t*o of his appointment on MONDAY, April 2ft 1809, at4P.M.. at i is( fflcp,lvo 518 WALNUT street, io the City of Phila* dWpbia. JAMES LYND, pp!Bl*> tb a 5t5 . Auditor. P'TiiE ORPHANS' COURT FOR. THE:-CITY AND l ounty of Philadelphia.—Eitato of WILLIAM DRUM, deceased.—Tbe Auditor appointed by the Court to pudit settle urd adjust the acoounts of EDWARD WARTMAN aud THOMAS O. JONES, Executors and Sequestrators of tbe Estato of WILLIAM DRUM. dac'd. and to report dhtiibufiou of thclntlanco in thobands nf the At eoun* ants uill meet tin* parties interested for tbe pun obcb r<f I is appointment on TUESDAY, April 27, 1Q6.9 bt 11 o'clock A. M ,at his office.* No. 10 Lw Building, soothe set corner of Sixth and Walnut streets, in the city of Philadelphia. - apl3tutbe6t* IN THE ORPHANS' C >X*UT FOR THE CITY AND 1 County of Philadelphia.— Estate of HUGUELLIOTT, dtci ased —The Auditor appointed by the Court to audit, ecnle and adjust the fust account of J. B. LIPPINLOCT and WILLIAM ELLIuTT. Executors of the last Will of HUGH ELLIOTT, deceased, an) !o rcport.diatribuUon of tbe balance in tbe hands of the. accountants, wilt meet parties interested foi the purree* of hi? appointmoat, on MONDAY. April 26th IMiP. at II « o'clock A. M. ; *i bis office, * o. 9, Law Building. 53D Walout street, in t ie City nf f hll.d.lpliU. • npiatntlmtf 1N Tlib OBPUAbS* COLKT hOR AND 1 County, - of ihllodt Iphin—hatu’O of JOHN HO KAN. de«aeed.-Tho Auri tor »pi-o'utfd bv the fettle and adjuef the firbt mid ««°iinl cr M,AHY H< GAN. A diuliasuatrix of rho batata o(JOUN IJO RAN decene* d, and to report dh*t r loutfon ortho balance lu the hands of the «©roimfHi:t. will moot the partieain- Krt ,!-'ln?E- DO K »* W.toa« to toe T Auditor. ipl3fn th * 7 V '1 Hk uhl'iJAls t* COURT FOR THE CITY AND l County ofPhiladelphia -Estate of RJBEOOAJ. FUL TON, deceased.-T ho Auditor appol •> te dby tho Court to audit, (cttlo and adjust the accouutof, OHAHIiES DEHBON nud MAI GAItKT 11. HENPERSON, Eiocu tors of > EBt< CA .1 FOLTON. deceased.^and■ to report distribution of tho balance In the handa or, tho account ant. will mcettbo parties interested, fdr tho'purpose, of hia.ppolntnient on TUKUDAV. April. 37th., 1689. at 3 o’clo<K F. W ,«t hb oflice, No. 128 Bouth Sbcthatreet, iu aidiMiM h ll t l , l °‘ il:ll ' llU JAM Ea w , LATTA, Auditor. Letters testamentary on the estate op KOUI.vY DUNGUSON. M. I)., late of ihe oity of l’bil.dt lpliiti, di'retapd. having been‘grauttd to theanb «cilbor« bytbo Ih gia’ur ofVViha el the county of Phila delphia, all peraona indebted to said 1 os’ato are requested to male paymint-aud, ttaoaij having*claim, or domanda a.alcit the same: to rreseiit 'tham without delay to the Execulora, VS IILIAML I>'JNQI,I3ON, ' , “ - R. I. IIUNGUSONi M. D . ■ - aplS-tedt* !-fiS72?,6ic|Batedtߣreet.. LETTERS’ /BEEN granted to the .-übetiber upon the Estate of DANJEL I la (JOLLIER. ESQ,.' dt ceau’d.ivll persons indebted to tee tame ufltmako payment; and tho*e having claims pre terit tie ntto (SEoftGl*. 11. COLLIER, Executor; or hla ■'■Attorn, yGEO.OUNKIN, EhQ.,B. B. comer Slxih bind Walnut streets. . aplj tilth-