TEE LITTLE UULPRIT. 1‘„ , A From the school-house old andkray, Under branches pink with Mg, Vatter, patter, all together, - - Little feet have hurried one, ; ' Echoing with their. noise and ront,, • Tbieugh the brooding sprOptime weather Wised uncertainly between April cloud and Bummer sheen, Ballenamored of delay. Wily one poor little drone, Silent, sullen, stays alone, With his book unheeded lying Near the useless, broken slate In - a storm oblige and hate Flung at random on the floor. Froncl, rebellious, obstinate, For a weary while before Beim waited, vainly trying, To repress the tears, that rise e : the angry baby eyes. Well enough it le to play All the golden hours away; Well enough, tolicky scorner Of the Echool-room!s common law, idle curve and line, to draw, While the classes read and s pell; But when work hr fairly done, To be left the only'one, In a dark and dusty corner, Surely'is not 4ntte as well! Vaught for note Of time hos he , Save a neighboring apple-tree, • That a lengthened shadow swinging Nearer; clearer, through the hour, Tracery of leaf and , dower Marks upon the wall so plain, Almost seems it he can see °wile beugh'the eager bee • To the shaken blosiom clinging, the'breezy petel-rain. --:0 you naughty little elf Punishing your silly self While the sun la well n igh" setting ! Delon fancy Bob will wait AU the evening by the gate With bit boat upon the shelf ? I Let the ready tears baVe witYl , Seek forgiveness while you may, lest yon find yourself regretting A repentance code too late. • (From ET4317 BlitUrdiFy.) :ast should we do without clocks and watches? Is there anything comparable to the misery of being benighted on a polmtry read with a watch that has stopped in one's waistcoat pocket, and not a clock with in view to tell one the time? The sun has set, every minute's tramping on the dusty murky road seems as an . hour. We have a - ain - to - tatchi - allinner to-le.in-Xime for,- or-a district meeting to attend, at which it won't do to be late. On ordinary occasions, when cool and collet ted, we might be able to com pute the time, hut in straits like these our xeckoning-deserts-us.---11-may-be•Bve,or_six, or seven, for all We know; 'we should not be ;surprised to hear it was eight. .Our notions ' get muddled, and on we trudge, breathless, nervous' and irritable; pretty certain, too, to find in theond that we have - been fretting ourselves for nothing. - Mut - itis - of - no - ussr - asking-how me:lihould get on without clocks and watches. The jimepiece_mayalmosthe_said to be_the_rnain, spring of eivilikation. It is so intimately con nected with all our wants, it is so completely the regulator of ail our occupations, that we have become, as it were, its slaves; . and we _can no more imagine a state of social exist- .. ence,without it, than we can imagine , birds fly:Mg without wings, or any other thing that in totally impossible. . - The first people who appear to have allotted - the day into portions were the Assyrians, who invented -the water-clock at a period too re mote for - precise calculation. All we know for certain is, that the apparatus existed before. the overthrow* of the first Assyrian empire by Albsces and Belesis, in the year 759 B; C. for we find by the tradition of early Persian au thors that the use of it , was general in Nineveh under the reign of . Phul, better known as Bardanapalus the second; the first monarch of the second Assyrian empire. This water clock was nothing more than a brass vessel of cylindrical shape, holding several gallons of water. A very-small -- hole - was bored in one of.its sides, through which the liquid was allowed to trickle; and it was calculated that the vessel could empty itself about five or six times ha'a day. Under the reign of Phul, the ro'al palace of Nineveh, and each of the principal distriets of the city, possessed a water c- clock of the same shape and capacity. They were - filled together, or as nearly as possible together„at the signal of a watch man stationed aloft on a tower to proclaim the rising:of the sun, and.they remained all day . in the keeping of officials whose busmen it was to fill them as soon as they became empty. There was a regular staff of criers employed in connection with each of the time offices, and as-often as the water clacks were replenished they spread through the streets shouting out the fact for the benefit of the townspj ple. In this way a sort of rough computed of 'the flight of fci time was held. The in ervals between the filling and'emptying of the vessels were called "watches," and were, probably, two hours or two hours and a half in duration. But it is bard to suppose that the water-clocks kept very steady pace with each other; the diffi culty of making by hand vessels of the same ' size, of drilling them with holes of precisely the same diameter, and of supplying them with -water of just the same density, must have given rise to even more irregularity in the working of these machines than exists at present in the movements of our eity,,,,clocks„, those clocks of which Charles LaMb said that they allowed him to walk from the Strand , o Temple Bar in no time and gain five minutes! The water- clock, or clepsydra, continued to remain in its primitive condition for many centuries; and it was not until the invention of the sun-dial at Alexandria, five hundred and fifty-eight years before Christ, that it un derwent any improvement. About that time„ however, an Egyptian of Memphis added a dial with a hand to the clepsydra. The hand _ revolved on a pivot, and communicated with a string which - was fastened to a float. As the water leaked out, the float fell with it, and the tension of the string caused the hand to move round with slight spasmodic jerks, something like those of the second-hand on a watch of inferior make. . This reform, meritorious enough m theory, proved somewhat deficient in practice;for the d'q:ffeulty about getting the clocks to keep step was doubled or trebled when the system became complicated with dial, needle, string and float. To insure simultaneous acting,the. String-or wire of the different clocks ought to have been of the same length and force; the needles also ought to have been of a size and Let on pivots exactly similar in point of height and circumference. And when all this Mid been obtained, there was still the question as to how to make float and suing, string and needle, act in perfect unison. Often,through rast, or some other cause, the needle must have proved obdurate to the faint tug of the string, and the float, in consequence, have • remained suspended in mid air; whereupon, of course, the dial became mute, and t•gyptians, who disliked innovations, must have shrugged their . ehottiders. But, notwithstanonig i ts drawbaCk% Um rrnprovement was a very valuable out:, if ter, bp Oh( r reason than that it pr9ared the way 'for further changeo, and led to-the per kctthg of the elepydra by the sutistitution of si , kystpxt ,of debited u heels for that already in thte,.., The wheels were set at wort ou the water-mill principle, and the addition of a second het,dle to the dial allo wed the clock tolie' ark the one of the different= 'Washes;". This was the ne <pius ultra as ' ferAe- the AlePeYdrlOvaef noncernedCit dates fro ? two_hundresk; and fifty years before Ohriet, and ..Egypi, which, had become the great mart or, - nio new timepieces, exported them to the; different countries of the East as rare curiosities and at fabulous prices'. When Pompey returned to Rome, in the year sixty two before Christ, from triumphing over Tigranes, Antiochus, and Mithridates, one ot the most valuable trophies he brought with him from the treasures of the King of Pontus was a clepsydra, marking the hours and minutes according to the method Of horology in use at Rome. The cylinder which served as receptacle for the water was of gold, as was also the dial-plate. The hands • were studded with small rubies, arid each of the ciphers that denoted the twenty-fonr hours Was cut out of a sapphire. It must have been orenormous size, for the cylinder only needed replenishing once a day. The Romans.; had never seen anything like it, and „when Pom pey caused it to be set up in the chief hall of the capitol, it needed a strong . guard -of--sol diers to protect it against the inclisCreet curi osity of the mob. We come now to those ages of total dark ness which followed the overthrow of the ,Roman Empire, when'science, art,and every thing that was refined fell into'contempt and oblivion. The barbarians who conquered the Imperial city had very primitive modes of Marking the course of time. They, knew nothing about houstritiad minutes; 'they had not sense enough to invent water-clocks,, and surediale, even had they been acquainted with thent, would have served them but little in lands such as theirs, where sun only shone on rare occasions, and where cold, fog and -rain held sway for half the year. -However, it was necessary that they should know when to prepare their mega of half cooked meat, when to gather in circles to listen to the preeChing of their druids, and when to relieve the sentries who Mounted guard on the outskirts of their settlements; and so this is what they imasined. At the break of dawn,when therchieftam of the camp or village rose, a boy-slave came and toc:k poetical at the entrance cif likilint; and sat down: with two helmets, one full of pebbles and the other _empty, before him. His business was to transfer the pebbles, one by one, and not too • fast, from the first helmet to the second, after which-he - surrendered - his turn to some one else, who repeated the operation, and, so on till dusk. As the - helmets were mostly very big, and the pebbles, on the eontrary, very small, the process of emptying must have ta lien a goud'two hours. Itis - prolfable; - there= fore,• that the days of these Franks and Norsemen, Teutons and Vandals, were di vided, like those of the Assyrians, into six parts or watches. As soon as a helmet had been - emptied, the fact was proolaimed through the camp by the striking of a sword against a shield, gong fashion, at the chief tain's door. The echo was caught up around, and men knew that dinner-time had come. But this was not the only method of mark ing the time: There were other ways, which-7differed according to the locality and the various pursuits of the people. In -peasant districts, the laborer reckoned by_the number of 'furrows he could plolgh, or, if it was harvest time, by the quantity of corn he could reap'. In towns, where some faint remnant of Roman civilization survived, the reckoning was_ kept , by watchmen. At day break a soldier started on foot (or, if the town was a large one, on horseback) to walk round the city. When he had / gone his round, the first watch was over; arid he - returned to his quarters blowing loud on a trumpet, whilst a second soldier set out in silences, to perforar the second watch. This_ continued uninter ruptedly day and night,, the only difference being that after sunset there was nhtrumpet blowing, and that the watchmen, instead of proceeding singly, went their rounds in batches of ten or a dozen. . Finally, as a last instant* of barbarous chronometry, we may allude to the method employed in monasteries, the first of which, founded by St. Benedict, was instituted at the beginning_of the sixth century__(A-D.,__.523_.)_, The monks were in the habit of computing time by the number of prayers they could gabble, and it was hence that the custom of wearing chaplets of beads arose. The task assigned to,each monk was to recite,as many "paters" and "aver" as there were beads un his string, and as the orthodox number on , chaplet was supposed to be then, as it is now, , thirty-three; r=ilTiris, - IffaTar fo - r - riach year of our Saviour's life,—there was work for a full hour and a half, if conscientiously performed. As in the case of the urban watchmen, ono monk was 'relieved by another, and the termination ot each "vigil" was notified to the commu nity by the tolling of the chapel bail. We may add that this custom continuos unal tered in certain monastic establishmente. In monasteries of a severe order there is no such thing as a clock to be seen. The only timekeepers are the shorn, becowled monks kneeling in perpetual adoration. A century after the final overthrow of the Roman Empire, the habit of reckoning by hours and minutes had, completely disap peared from Western Europe. One .by one every vestige of art and science disappeared, and, had itinot been for the kingdoms of the East, which kept the flame of science just flickering whilst the West was in darkness, our present system of horology would have fallen into complete abeyance. It was the famous Caliph of Bagdad,liaroun-al-Raschid, „Vgho.restored-the-old-water=clock to Europe. In the year 807 he sent a magnificent clepsy dra as a token of friendship to Charlemagne; but it seems that the present was looked upon as a thing to be rather admired than copied, for we find no mention of' any water- clocks of French make until the reign of Philip, contempo rary of William the Conqueror. Perhaps the reason of this is that the sand-glass (sablier) had been invented in France shortly before the accession of Charlemagne, and that this last contrivance was judged more handy and Simple than the other. The first sablier was made by the same man who reinvented the blowing of glass, after the secret had been lost for some centuries. He was a monk of Chartres, named Luitprand,and the sand-glass he made was the exact prototype of all thOl3C that have been manufactured since. It con sisted of two receptacles of pear-like shape joined by their slender ends. When the sand had all run out from one into 'the other, the lower glass was turned uppermost and kept in that position till empty. ShortlY after he had received the gift of Harouh-Td Raschid, Charlemagne caused a mon ster sablier to be made with the horal divisions marked on the outside by thin lines of red paint. Milt was the first ita'ar-glass. It required to be turned over once only in twelve hours,and if it was blown with anything like the care which modern hour-glasses , are, it must have kept time with as much precision as the beat of lever clocks, indeed; it is not rare to hear people declare, even nowadays, that the ffnur-glase is the best timepiece 4 that was ever 'invented. Whilst France was thus showing to the front in matters of science, Old England with tine conservative instinct, was still marking linos in abostof antiquated,inconvenient ways. Neither-did our ancestors betray any greater qiisposition to adopt the French inventions than wo do in these days when it big question of taking up so Me goad roterrn that comes to 'as from abrond: King Alfred, who reigned from 872 to 000, must certainly haVe heard speak of the uuur-glassiit Is even very probable THE DAILY Aynib* BULLETIN-4EILADELPHIA, FRIDAY, M,Y 14, 1869. tint he, Po : 'seed one of hie own, for the monks and pilgrims, who were continually • traveling' to and fro betWOini` England aud - Finn* would not have alkiweda whole eteP 'tury tO' elapse, without bringing 'a spoil:nen Of the new invention to this country. And yet Alfred devised a method ut'coinputing. time by, means of a rnshlight set Inralantein. Any thing mote unsatisfactory and more expen sive than this it was impossible to imagine. A rushlight, in those days, must have cost two or thtentiencct'of our money; and, as the process of refining tallow , had not ~then bean discovered, there were no means whateVer of reckoning how long one of these luminaries , would take in burning.. ( One coght very well-, flicker and splutter -for an. -hatr,whilst a second was just as likely-o)4lam away in ten : minutes. It was pot till ttit reikn r pf the Confesser (1941: 1 1OW that' the use of the hour- Masa beetme pretty keiiiail Erig land; and the firstywater 7 eloelt., seen in this kingdom was brought from France by Rich ard Cceur de Lion, a lew years befor he as cended the throne. • ' • .1111 We must , now two penturies,dtuing which horology -made no r sensible progreei, and come to'the reign of Charles AhnFifth of France, when the' find Tea clock was setup. This was in the year '1374: The • Maker was one Henri de . Vic, au; Arab;,Who had been converted to. phristianity. Thla 004 was a Monster machine, weighing Ave hundred weight. It was • moved {by weights, was possessed of .a horizontal 'lever, and provided with a bell to toll'the time. There as a full description Of it in Fr 01138111". t;Wafl put Up in the !nand tower of royal j palace (now the Palakt de, Justice), and_attracted: enor mous crowds •every day ler several months after it had been erected. The . maker •re ceived a pension or a hp:tidied crowns of gold for life, and was ennobled. , ilej is the first artificer upon whom thin di stinction was ever conferred in France. , From this time t h e making of large. clocks for public edifices was carried onvery exten sively over:Europe; but it was Lot - until the beginning of the sixteenth'centtiry that small clocks were made for apattMinita. The first ...wo.,k l3 thir eame from Florence,'ln 1518, as a present 'ram. di7.3ledici..(afterwards. Pope . Clement , the. Seventh) to Francis the First of - France. • It. was , also in this same sixteenth century that horology was first applied to astronomical calmilations by Par bath in 1500. 111,1560; tha Danish astrono mer, Tycho-Brahe the teachetc - of the' great . Kepler, set up in eia magnificent obaervatory of. Craniesbnrg a clock which marked both the minutes and the seconds. he_invention_of_watches_had_preceded_by_ a few years that of small clocks. Our ideas of a primitive watch ;,are always associated with a tiiinip - i,hfit it was not until the seven teenth century, when the Scotchmin, Gra ham, invented the cylindrical - escapement, that watches assumed this respectable but - in= convenient shape. At first they affected all sorts of fancy forms, stich'is those of acorns. olives, walnuts, and crosses. They cost fab ulous sums of money, and were generally worn as pendants hanging hy a gold chain from_ ladies' bracelets. Claude wife 01 Francis the First, had • one so `small that it was set in a ring. l i •Popular tradition aseribes theKiverition of watches to Peter Hele,of Ntiremberg, in the year 1490. But then it is a notorious fact that King Robert.of Scotland possessed one so far back as the year 1310. The only way in which we can account for Mill discrepancy is by the supposition that watches were °rip nally invented - by a Scotchman, but that the maker died --suddenly- without _-promulgating his secret. German watches were not intro ,- -duced at the English court until 1597. The first seen in England was worn by the beau . tiful Lady Arabella StUart. It is to Hugens `:of,'Zulichem 'that the- greatest, we might almost - say the last, pro gress in the art of horology is due. Bul Hugena only caught:up an idea that had first occu'rr'ed to the great Galileo. EverY one knows the story of the lamp suspended to the vault of the cathedral of Pisa, the oscilla tion;of which caused the astronomer tareftect that the isochroaal movements of pendulums might - w - ellte - applied -- to - the -- measuring - or time. Galileo wasouly a boy when he stood watching the::afar,§t, , lamp swing; but pe Many years a, A AO tkla 4630, the thought came into his hea Again, and he drew up a • plan on paper fdrithe making of a pendulum clock._ His invention` went no further, hoSy ever, and the honor 'di:inning his*theories into practice was - reserved far Hugens, Who — , in 1657; forwarded to 'the States General of Hollanilltke description of a timepiece, con -struetedth the new--principles. Its-perfee-, tion lay in the introduction of the pendulum and of the spiral mainspring. The name of lingerie deserves to be remembered, for his pendulum clock is the most admirable and .yet most simple Machine i that hap Aver heen , in vented. , , -. . ,' ' •:• Thet.invention of spring pocket-watches, such as we now wear, is owing to the Eng-- lishman ' Hooke; it datea from 1658; and eighteen years After this, in the year 1676, the first repeating watch was made at Amster dam. From this time until the present cen= tury, when chronometers and stop-watches were invented, the science of horology re ceived no further developments; neither do We well see how it can receive any, unless some future Hele or some future Hugens dis- Cover a method of making clocks go by elec tricity without giving us the trouble of wind ing, - In these days it - is a mooted point - as to which is the best country in which to buy a watch or clock. In the last century it was universally admitted, that the watches of Geneva Were unrivalled, -whilst the sculptured wooden-case clocks made in the Hartz moun tains of Germany had the reputation of being the surest-goers, as well as the most valuable in point of artistic raerit. Nowadays, how ever, Geneva, from wishing to make too cheaply, has somewhat lost her prestige for well; Swiss watches have come. to be looked upon With some• disfavor, espe cially in England. The battle seems to lie now by general consent between Franco and Great Britain, our neighbors priding them selves upon the exquisite beauty of their ladies' watches, whilst we, on the contrary, carry off the palm for the soundness and finish or our men's watches. But there is one branch of horology in which the French cannot even attempt to compete with us,and that is in the making of chronometers. English chronometers are held Incomparable the whole world over, and this is no wonder when we remember the severe Sets to which all official chronoineters (that is, those used in her Majesty's Navy) are subjected before; they are approved by the sign -manual of the Astronomer , Royal. All ,navy chronometers have undergone a proba tionary stage of six months, a year, and in mine casea two.years, at the Greenwi h Ob servatory, before receiving their 1' at to go over the seas. During •• ime they are submitted to- a whole series of scientific ex periments, comprising all possible changes rot `temperature, ordeal by fire, and ordeal by water: So that it may well be-said - when one .or thttm.-pftsties-tbe-examinatiOn, that the man who has made it deserves something—better than the title of mechanic; he should take, 'rank as an artist, and a' first. rate artist too. In conclusion, we may remark that the IGreenwich Observatory is Often a deposipry for other chronometers than those which are intended for the fleet, Conscientious makers send the chronometers they , inroad for the public to be tested - there before offering them bgu P- 4 rr liblwtimeAee of these vain • . 4 ,, ,to puttAtme fige ow h mark uponiilo elate insist on the 04.1 1 ;CI ppylhg foie sale; and we should advise anybody v erPlat't) i 1118 we Runtr.. , 436.-4 t he. Y ea r as tie would for the flai l ayspn the safeol ELMITIO bPoN& E. Pennaylvinia?-* Elastic Elponn Och i 1111. Chestnut StreetrPhtledelpldar . , • ELASTIC SPONGE 'A 13103STITUTE FOR CURLED HAIR MDR ALL UPHOLSTERY PURPOSES (unarm THAN' FEATHERS OR HAIR. AND FAN i3UkERIOR. , IleLfghteet, agfel and moo ,Eliurtio and Durable ma. 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In Pennsylvania, of Shaw & manes Patent Dead-Stroke Power Hammer. in. the United States. of Weston's Patent Selt,centerim. and Self-balanemg Centrifugal Sugar-draining Machin, Glass es BartoVn improvement on Aspinwall & Woohrerk ,Centrifegal. fr artors Patent Wrought•lron Retort Lid. . Straban's Drill:Grinding Rest. Contractors for the design, ere d fitting up of R e fineries for working Sugar or Molasses CtOPPER AND YELLOW. METAL BREATHING V Brazier's Copper Nails. Bolts and Ingot Copper. L G straitly on hand and for sale by DENBY WINSUR CU.. No. 839 South Wharves. NEW PIIBLICATIONN. PHILOSOPHY OF MARRIAO E.—A. 'NEW COURSE' of Lectures, as delivered at the New York Museum of Anatomy ; embracing the subjects: How to Live ant what 'to - Live for ; Youth. Maturity and Old Age; Man. hood generally reviewed; the Cause of Indigestion. Flat ulence and Nervous Diseases accounted for; Marring( Philosophically Considered, &0., &c.. Pooket volumes containing these Lectures will be forwarded, post patter receipt of 2.6 cents, by addressing W. A. Leary, Jr., South. east corner of FHth and Walnut streets, Philedel. f 011.131 TIEUGGISTS , SUNDRIES.—GRADUATES, MORTAL Pill Tiles, Combs, Brushes, Mirrors, Tweezers, Pull BozeS. Horn Scoops. Surgical Instruments, Trusses, Hard end Soft Rubber Goods, Viat Cases. Glass and biota; 13.irinSeis. &no all at "First Hands.* pric es. SNOWDM BROTHER. aps.l:f - 23 South Eighth street. TIROPOISTS ARE INVITED TO EXAMINE OUR 17 large stock of fresh - Pings and Chemicals of the latest importation. • Alto, 131913 . cntiftl Oils, Vanilla Beans, Sponges, Chamol Skips, eta. ROBERT SHOEMAKER as C 0.,, N. E. corm]. Fourth and Race streets. eiLIVE 0 1 / 4 :SUPERIOR QtJALIT ;ON' DKAIM 1..1 Slid An 'bottles L various brands. ROBERT RODE MAKER do CO.. N. E. corner Fourth and Race streets. CASTILE SOAP—NOW LANDING.-900 BOXES White and Mottled Castile Soap, very superior quality, BOBEeT SHOEMAKER ,dc CO., Wholesale Cressida, E. corner Fourth aad Rao streets. QM X'. BANDEVLIA. TFIACELEE OF SMUNG. PHI lavaU3 letaoni ana claire& Redaenaa. SOB . Thirteenth , street. . inaiLlva DIi.VONIs gItBIQAL. ML1•1 Si= 'LOIS LAVOrfiILIA DIAMOND AVID S & JEWDL sa. ELlrat Slut* VLSI*. wanintB) aziY • • ' • WATONEB and JEIVART, 802 chestnut it., Eine' Ladies' and Genter-Watches American and Imported, of the most celebrated makers. Fine, Vest Chains . end Leontines, In 11 wad 18 karats. , Diamond and Other . Jewelry. Of the latest deeitme ENGAGENEENWID WEDDING ZINGS, ~ - In.lB karat and coin. EIOLIV SILVER' WERE FOR BRICAIfr'REEItINTS, TABLE CUTLERY. PLATED WARE, Etc. jal tt ak WAIL" B. WARNE & • CO., •, Wholestle Dealers WATCHES AND JEWELRY, •. L corner Santa and Chestnut Shreds, Arid late of No. to South Third street ICU FINA‘AtICIILS.L. REmovAr,. ])LYNN, Mewing removed to their New Building, , *0:109 'SOUTH TH/RD STBEE'p, ,Are now prepared to transact , GENERAL BANKING BUSINESS,, And deal in GOVERNMENT and other SECURITIES, GOLD. BILLS, &c. • • ReeeiveldONEY ON DEPOSIT, allowing interest. NEGOTIATE LOANS, giving special attention to Ater canine' Paper. • Will execute orders for Stocks. Bonds. Ike., on Commis. rion,,at the litock Exchanges of Philadelphia. New Y ork. 'Boston and Baltimore. ITIOANDOIIII B c rd: krßs i t (Fl" .. v . Went, in IL y0n91.0_., dpePal?fwa, of v toot andl i ! di Exchopg receive accounts or B and Bankers on lib. eral (crone, Issue of Exchange On Cs L-Hembro 4 Son, London. B. Metzler, S. Sohn & Co.,rankfort, James W. Tucker & Co., Paris, • f And other principal eltlei, and Letters of Eredit available throughout Europe S. W. corner . Third and Chestnut Street, THE G-It3E, Aor PACIFIC RAILROAD IS FINISHED. FIRST MORTGAGE - BONDS OP THE NIQN AND CENIRWPACIFICILR BOUGIIT AND _SOLD. DE- YEA& 211) ' I h. _Bankers and Dealers in Government% • 4-0. S. Third Street. aD9 tt BANKING 1101:18 - 14 0.1E 5 • ("( A t 0 OET4 k • i l l 5„. . Xl2 6571 d U 4 80. THIRD T. P l 3 DEALERS IN ALL GOVERNMENT SECURmES We will receive applications for Policies of Lift Insurance in the new National Life Insuranet Company of thepnited iitates. Full informatiOr , riven at our office. eitOCEIMIEIs. 1.14/11:101111, age. - - FRESH FRUIT IN CANS. Peaches, Pine Apples, &0., Green Corn, Tomatoes, French Peas, Mushrooms, AsPartikus, &0., &o. ALBERT C. ROBERTS, ' DEALER IN FINE ° GIIOOERIEB. timer Eleventh and Vine Streets,. QWEET OIL.--160 DOZEN OF EXTRA QUALITY Olive Oil, expressly imported for COUSTY'S Elie I.,nd Grocery, No, 118 South Second street. PEACHES IN LARGE CANS. AT PIETY .1 tents per Can—the cheapeet and heat noods in the O SY.. at COMITY'S Eaat End Grocery, No. 1113 South Second street. LAIRENCH PEAS, MUSHROOMS, TRUFFLES. TO watooe, Groin Corn, Asparagus, dtc., in Ooßeannd for ale rrt-COTJSTYIS East End Grocery, No. 118 th Se cond street, . h.! EW DATES, FIGS, PRUNES. RAISINS AND AL. /I monde—all of new crop-1n afore and for sale at t;OUE73OB Eaet End Grocery, No:118 South Second et. QTatalio CHERRIES, PLUMS, BLACKBERRIES, Peachea t PruneDas. Pears. Lima Bean% Shaker Sweet Corn, Ist COUSTY'S .East End Brocou,No.llB South Second street. VALIRBANK9 I SCALES ' A t --,- , ..,.• , 417 . 4, 4,, ' . F ‘ . ,c ; , , - ...--,.. --, . : ,,, i Ks • • •••-_...._........„_____,...._--"z. , ....._ - , Ailt.z.l., ;1.. , *-•:::_e. . - 715 CHESTNUT STREET, myswsuom • ST „ RESORTS MME,It ON THE LINE OF Reading Railroad, ANIS BRANCHES. nonelon Ilroune, Mt. corblin, Mm. Caroline Wunder, Pottevale E'. o.,llicknylkill co., ''x itoctorord. Hotel, Mrs. M. L. Miller. Tuscarora P. 0.. Schuylkill county.. W. F. Smith, Mahoney City P. 0., Schuylkill county. • Mouton Carmel. Itemise. . Charles Culp Mount Carmel P.O., Eloilhuralierhunl 1 • AV-htini liousei' E. A. Moe., ace:ding P. AndaluYl- Fleury Wearer. llettOins P. U. _ ' • 11ii vies* Nprirlits 131OteJ. Dr A . Elmith.,Wornerseillu P. county. Cold apringa Hotel, Lebanon county*. Wm. Lerch, Pine - Grovo 0., Schuylkill county. . - liloyertclun aeininary, • - F. S. Stouffer, Eloyertown P. o... Berke county. - spring*, Gco. F. Greider. Milo P. 0., Lune/toter comity. EPbriain Springs" John Frederick, Ephrata Lancaster county; Perlilenien ftridgoiEltotel, Davie Lonitaker, Freeland P. 0.. Monition/MY gOtnilit'. prospectTerrnee,, , Dr James Palmer Freeland'P. 0 , Montgomery county. Spring Mill !finagling, Jasobil. Brelicb, Conehoho ken P../)., Montgomeryco.... . • Theodore Dowell, Shamokin, Noithumberboad county. „71a MM cAMPuo R., Beet xgairtrt Moms. CURL?! FRAGRANT I B.r.t.unts I Bold by drupAitte eTerywheKe. TIIKOD.8."IIASBIBL Baton. Price. Sty. ; 00; V 50; tnyl.3 - w M. GI-. TtIIOADSO 1221 MARKET STREET, Steam and oas fitting., Tiard Power and Stain Pampa, Plumbers' Marble and Bospstono 'Work. Terra Volta-I'lm Chimney Toys, ace.. wholesale 111.114 retell. Samples of finial:Lid work may barmen at coy store. my 6 ert4 Flies and Mosquitoes. Magenta's Patent Adjustable WINDOW StREEN, W11:11. IC - ANT watiow4, SELLERS B Fi OTHERS, No. - 60" Ma iket - Stieio; Philadetpbia sis IdiNUFAaTIIKEIIIL • - , - ' Liberal dirconist to the Trade; ' • ' ~~ ~~"~'~-: alt of the latest sad tuorr. beautiful dealt:no, and all other Wide walk on 114nd or made ro order. Factory and Saleerooma, SIXTEENTH and CALLOW -1111.1. rtreeta. WILSON dr MILLER. ao2l 61n6 - WILLIAMS 44c Seventeenth and Spring Garden Sts,, HAVE FOR SALE EXTRA WIDE s=B POPLAR BOARDS myll 60 MAULE, BROTHER-&,00:, • 869 1111/E111: 1869 CHOICE SELECTION' oe • MICHIGAN CORK PINE, - - }OR PAT.!. ERNE,. 1869. 1869. 1869. 11811113,1 gTEI: I I3 3 3MI - 1869 RAIL PLANK. 1.E69. BOARDS :ULM L A MAVAVSIMEI.69- , WNUT . • WALN UT PLANS. ALSORTED FOR CAUI3I:TNITP MAKERS. LLDERS. &U. • 1 C‘,lo UNDF;RTAKU,RS: LUMBER.. UNDER TAHLB,B LUMBER, RED ULDA IL WALNUT AND PINE. 1869. NILTEB Mak 18690 - Asti WHITE. OAK .PLANK AND BOARDS. BIGKORY, 1869. 1869. 1869. Lumber Under Cover s , ALLWit Yfi DIEM WATSON Be, GILLINGHAM, 924 Richmond Strooi. mh29 P UMA & .P01:1L, LUMISER MERCHANTS NO. lOU T S. Fourth street. At their yard will ho touud , r at re Aoh üb.rry, Pine.itru.. &0.. at rem. eoualue prices. Give thorn a call • • . • MARTIN THOMAS. mh17.6m... ELMS .POUL. rrio CONTRACTORS, LUMBERMEN. AND sun , -- - builders.—We aro new probated to execute promptly orders for Southern Yellow lino Timber, Sidt,atufr and Lumber, lit/MIRAN, RLiSSEI,L.di Ct)., 22 'North Front street. _ L.LOW PINE LUMBER .- ORDERS POR CARGOES Yet every decoriPtion tiamed Lumber executed at short vsOcel—ir !addedt to torpectlon.Ai) to alitY EDW. ii. It() LEY. 16 deed , ' \nutmeg, 7" • e' •Rii-SkAt - NOTICE TO 'I HE 1-'O3LE° GENERALLY. t, The latest style, faEhinn and apaortment of . , TB. BIIOES AND GAITERS, FOAMIiN and BOYS. Can be had at • - _ ERNEST SOP"g. No. Ino NORTiI NT REET. .• Better than anywheit io the 1 . .Itv A Fit Warranted ap2.6reo GIVE 11Ijt A CULL, y •.:,~~::t_ roion:ie ar,cs. „- , JLIIRLBJEU* LOW .FOR C 4.131.1. 2500 South Street. SPEIJOE; AND lIEMLOCK .18 S.P.I:CCE AND LARGE STUCK FLORIDA FLOORING. FLORIDA FLOORING.' CA It OLINA FLOORING. VIRGIL , . IA FLOORING. DELAWARE FLOORING. ASH FLOORING: WALNUT FLOORING CAROLINA SCANTLING. -CAItOI,INA 11.,T. SILLS. NOEWAY SCANTLING. - - CEDAR SHINGLES. CEDAR BRING LER. CYPRESS bIHNGLES. LARGE A ABLE ORT LOW. MENT. PLA STERING 1869 PLASTERING LAVE _ _ . & SX) SOUTH STREET. atooles Aram shi().+ls. THREE men r e drowned witliVisitlng in a , , pond'at Jackso"n Mish:ion Vi , eduntiotnight, by the capsikingOf- heir boat . 4 GENERAL CANEY has appointed several Judges of State Courts in Virginia, to fill vacancies consol by Feut9v4e:; f ; A rar.Cfor. the annexation of Dorchester to Boston passed the Massachusetts -- State Senate yesterday. - F. Two men and boy were badly injured by a fire-damp explosion in the Mount Pleasant mine, at Scranton, yesterday. Qne of these la , not ex pected to• recover. Tim dwelling of Jonathan Folsom, at Bristol, N. H., was burned on Wedneaday,- and Mr. Fol som, who was 60 years of age, perished while trying to save some gouda. - Tun steamship Mexico was burned yester- Zay at New Orleans , She had no cargo, - and Is supposed to have been recently sold to the Cubans. - MOUNTAIN MAW, of this city, won the purse Yesterday in, the trotting match over the COurao, at Washington, against Star'of the West,from Chicago. • . RNVERDY • Jour:sox, yeatorasy,,..took formal leave of the Queen, and presented Mr. 51dran as charge d'affaires until the arrival of Minister Motley. A rucsremi from Sacramento, Cal., yesterday, announces the arrival there of a train of Spring field cars, being"the first train across the Conti- THE Conneclicut house of Representatives rati fied the Suffrage Ameudment yesterday by a party vote. It had , previously been ratified by the Bea ate. EiOTT ' WOOD, president of the San Diego Southern Pacific ..Railway, arrived in St. Louis on Wednesday, from California,on his way for the Memphfii Convention. , • , AT Pirrsrote, Luzern° county, Pa., yesterday, 1,600 men and boys eniployed in the coal mines at that point, and somtf' by the Pennsylvania Coat Company; suspended work. Gszont.st. Joint LOaaN has' been elected Commender-in-Chief,Governor Fairchild, 01 Wis consin; SenfOr Vice Ciimmander, and Dr. S. B. Wylie Mitchell, Surgeon-General, of the Grand Army ot the Republic. IL - Davis Nixon, SE., was killed at the freight yards in Syracuse, N. Y., yesterday, by a freight train. Be was aged eighty years, and was one of the.oldeat lawyers and moat prominent public men in Central Now York. GREAT intetest Is manifested hi Georgia in the BoutherreCommercial Convention, which, meets in hteraptdirearldaylt — Delegrstes front the-Cars oilmen Georgia, and Alabama will be in attend • - • aldoarrnEss. despatch says it Is stated that in ' formation has been received in that city that the British Privy Council is considering the advisee. bility of relinquishing all the British colonies ex cept India. • A Sr. Louis telegram says that the St. Louis and Illinois Bridge Company commenced ope rations on the Illinois slue of the river on Wed . esday7--Borittrvrill-be eontineted—until-roek-is - reached on which to lay the foundation of the_ shore abutment. THE flood, In the lower Mleslisippi \ continues, and crevasses have occurred just below New Orleans and at Port Hudson. The first crevasse formed; which was reported a day or two since; cannot be stopped. At New Orleans the height of the water causes considerable apprehension. IN the Nova Scotia As.sembly, on, Wednesday, • the Attontey-General submitted resolutions de _ruandhig increased subsidies Bed increased repre sentation Co* Lb° province, a modification of-the tax and, trade arrangements regarding Nova Scotia, and the submission of questions involved In the act of confederation to the people. • Eh:PORTO from the 'Valley of Virginia state that the wheat crop will probably be the largest an. Anna ever known. The tobacco is also pro 'suLsing.. There is much political apathy among ,the people, and it is thought - 'that the distances of the registration offices and polls will prevent - many from -voting• in the comiag election. --- Ls rug suit' - of Waring & King against the United States Telegraph Company, in Nen. York,,, —for damages for a failure to transmit messages. from l'ittsburgh= to New'York, — ordering ptrr chases of petroleum * the defendants claimed that the failure arose front circumstances beyond their oontroL -- The jury.nwarded $6,600 damages. • - A DELEGATION of prominent colored men called upon the President yesterday. and made some sns 'as t 6 the propriety of-appointing colored men to a portion of the Federal offices in the Northern States, which they thought would give a death-blow to the objections against colored men holding such positlona in the South. The President said he would give the subject careful, Consideration. THE papers of Montgomery, Ala.,contain a call, signed by many of the most prominent busi ness men and planters of that city and county; for a convention on the fast of June to organize an emigration company. Col. Lee Crandall, of New Orleans, hie. bean canvassing the State in favor of the plan, and is meeting with great sue cesa. The railroa and hotels have agreed to take half fate fr attending the convention. Ix nut t CouVn Richmond, Va., -- yesterdayi-in proceedings a lost-the_ll. S. Mar shal °label district 'for 18 1, for funds turned over to the Confederate government, the defend ant pleaded the United States statute of limita tions, -and-the plea was-admitted by Chief Justice Chase presiding, the United States being non suited. Thiais an important decision, the plea put forward being the same that will be put in by all postmasters in the Southern States at the breaking out of the war who made the same do - - position of funds. The Cuban Dial:Lyre°nen. HAVA.NA, May 12, via KEY WEST, May 13. Private letters have been received from rebel sources giving accounts of another battle be tween the Spanish troops and the insurgents. It took place on May 3d, at Las Mires. The Spaniards numbered 1;200 and were under Leeca. Thu two first assaults , were repulsed by the Cubans. The third was very determined, and the Cubans began to ret reat , when - Quesada or dered hie rear guard the • front. , -They , ad vanced, driving the Cu ans into the front ranks of enemy. A hand to hand combat ensued, In which the butchery was horrible. The Spaniards finally gave way, and retreated In - good - order. - -Their loss is- estimated at 160 killed, and 300 wounded. That' of - the Cabana, 200 killed, and a proportionate number wounded. - After the fight, the rebels marched to San Mi guel, and burned the town in the sight of the re treating Spaniards. It is generally believed the revolutionary leaders have changed their policy in the field, and in the future will fight, instead of retreating• ,to the Mountains on the appear ance of any considerable force of Government troops. . In the battle at Alta Gracia, which took place on the let instant, the Cuban loss was two hun dred, and that of the 'Spaniards 180 killed and wounded. The Spaniards hero -regard the result of the actions as fatal to the rebellion, but the Cdbans are jubilant over them, as the 'first groat enecesses ol the war for independenee. HAVANA, May 13, Evening.--lt 10 rumored that Valmaseda has had an engagement with the rebels under Cespedes. Nothing definite is known of the affair. More plantations have been burned , by the rebels around Santiago do Cuba: It is estimated that the plantations which have been destrOyed in that jurisdiction produced an nually 18;000 Ude. of sugar. The United Stated flag-ship'Cisntoocook has returned from Key West. fiugar_eictive. Exchange in demand at unehanged rates. HAvANA, May 13.—The insurgents claim SEC- Ceases in-the late engagements near Puerto Pria cipo. A letter received from Spanish sources says' General Latona was mortally wounded. • Senors Sonlata and Ibarres are going to Ma drid to indnee the authorities to revoke the de cree confiscating the property of Cuban refugees, Lfearing that the enforcement of the decree will lead to retaliation. Advices from Trinidad to the Bth inet, state that the insurgents' were near that city, and - a great panic plevalled there. HAVANA, may 13.—The crow of the schooner Galvanic have been released, and taken to Ja maica by the British gunboat Heron. The insurgents have appeared in the vicinity of Santa Cruz. • , - The Britiel► Parliament. Lozworr. May la, Midnight.—ln the House of 'Lords, this evening; Larl. Russell inquired what plan the government proposed to adopt for put, • ling a stop to the outrages which had lately been Ba frequent. He followed his inquiry with some • TeMarks, in Which ho deprecated the land scheme •iiinfIUIWELF. of Mr. Bright„ iii Y 101213 Se' tile the Irish peon . pie.. Be called upon the_goyernmpo tp discon tintleistri. ** * Mati outepitAnViatiWilestlt ; what It Intended to do. t Mr. Granville, coloniartkeretary, regretted the icontinualleetirrentkint th 4 •Pretietittitite,l t o this topic. a s aid the Governnlide was. not pre ! pared'ln state ittcpolley,Abri was!, hh:authoriZed to Ore an opinion on Mr.,Bright's • Lord Derby urged an eipresillowd the terlid policy,: and a disavowal - of ..Mr; Bright's' opinionin ~T he reticence of the government was dangerous to,the best intereste of Ireland.. After a sharp passage between Derby and Kim berly, the discussion was dropped. • After the close of the session tO-night, the House adjourned until May 29. In the House of Commons to-night, Mr. ' Otway, Under Secretary Ofloreign Affilre, said Spain had declined to accord a new hearing in the Tornado ease. The detailed;reasons assigned by Spain were now, under the consideration of the law officers of the Crown. - - Mr: Cardwell, Secretary of War, in reply to some intimations which had been made, said the Government had no intention of.countermanding the orders for the reduction of the troops in Canada under existing circumstances. The Irish Church bill was reported from . the Conimittee. Several amendments t were pro posed, and the bill was , recommitted with the understanding that the vote on its third reading shall be taken on May 31. Brevet COMIIIII6/0113E Seri Officers fin the . Indio" Wars. . , The following is a copy of the opinion of the , Attorney-general in reply to a question from thd Secretary of War concerning, brevet commis sions to officers serving in Indian wars : ATTORERY-CIENERAVS OFFICE, TREASURY Da rserirsar, April-24;.1869.--Hon. John. A.•l?aw--, ling, Secretary of War :—Srn : The second eec- Lion of the act of March 1, 1869, entitled "An act to; amend the act of' 1806, , for establishing rale3 and articles for the government-Of the - armies of • the United States,ii eclares that hereafter "com missions 'by breve Shall onlY be 'conferred in i time of war, and , or distinguished conduct .and public service in the-presence-of-the-enemyt-an. that "all brevet commissions shall bear date from -the ,particular action or service for -which the officer was breveted." ' - ' ' Two days after this law took effect, on the ad of. March, 1669, the Senate confirmed the nomina tions of a number of officers to soromotion by brevet, -which had" been pending, before that body, prior to the date of the act. Among these were some' that had been made on account of services rendered in recent engagements with the In dians, in each of which the date of promotion corresponded with that of the service mentioned. ' Thellication - which yon submitis whetherimnder the terms of the law cited, these latter - °Matra are entitled to commissions by brevet, hereto fore intended for them; and whether, byTts terms, officers of , this class are now excluded from brevet promotion. With regard to the latter branch, of Oki questionit is very clear - that if the officers referred to were not nomina ted for brevet promotion by reason of ."distin guished conduct and Public service in the face of the enemy," they cannot now be commissioned _I ylirevet—Tliesiremns,tanee that their nomina-__ Lions were , pending before the Senate prior, to the of the act does not relieve them of its opera tions. These nominations wore not appoint ments. To constitute the latter required the Issue of commleskins4n pursuance - of the ' pre vions nominations. ,After confirmation thereof by the Senate, the authority to commission in these cases was, it appears, swept away by the statute, even ' before such confirmation was made. It would seem, how ever, that- the other nominations mentioned, Which were made and confirmed for meritorious 'setwice in recent engagements with the Indians, are within the act, and that, consistently with its provisions, brevet commissions may be issued to the officers designated therein. The = only point .ieh suggests itself In connection with this branch Of the subject is whether promotions made during Indian hostilities may, be viewed Jus "conferred in time of war," within the.meaningef the law. That /Of n_ tribes are capable- of maintaining relations of peace and war with - the:United States -4s--recog'nized-- in-numerous treaties made -with them, - and - accord ing'''', where bostilitieshreek out between any of these tribes and the government, a state of war - with propriety May be - said-to cadet -- Indeed,such hostilitteshaveheen so described by the 'Aglaia- Lure. - Thos the act of April 20, 1818, third stat ute page 4, 59, made provision for the - pay of militia called into service, in prosecuting the war with tip_ Seminole tribe of Indians. So that breiret_ promotions made during the existence of Indian hostilities far distinguished service in presence of the enemy,.-are to be deemed as made in time of war, within the meaning of the statute. - I have the honor to be, very respectfully, your obedient servant, E. R. HOAR, Attorney-General. . Resarbi t tl the c niVATlWbulletb2-' PEN ACO —Behr W O Irish. Rathbtm-1411.790teet Y P boards Patterson & Lippincott. ZAZA—Brig John bhal. Ntekenron-629 hhds sugar 64 to do E. & W Webb. • ZAZA—Bcbr Minnie Reppller, Willett-640 hbds sugar 154 Ice do B & W Webb. NORFOLK. VA.—Behr Mohawk. Bradley-24.030 30-inch heart cedar atanalts NM Sleet bunched cypreee do T Galvin & Co. nOVEXIEENTEI OF OUEA.N EITEARLEIIB. TO ABlLlila erns TROY YOB DAI/11 Paraguay • • .... . „London.. New York .. :::.... April 24 Union, ....11oUtbampton..New York, .Aprit 27 .Lrverpool - New York.. .........May Samaria , . --Liverpool-New York via 51 ay 4 European May 4 Deutschland ....Southampton.. hew Y0rk.......... May 4 Colorado .....• ......Liverpool-New York May 5 England -.Liverpool-New Y0rk.......... May 5 City of Brooklyn...Liverpool..NewYork...........May 6 T() DEPART. City of London.... New York..LiYerpool- ' May . ls He -..New York. .Liverpool...... May 15 China........ ...... New York..LiYerpool. May 15 Lafayette.... ...... New York..Havre May 15 Europa. ...... .....New York... Glasgow. -.May 15 Juniata.. ... Orbs via Hay 'May 15 Pioneer. .....= ..... —.May 15 Geo Cromwell Now York.. New Orleans ... . . .May 15 Cuba . Baltimore..N. 0. via Havana... May 15 City of Cork New York..Liverpoolyis. H...... May 18 Cuba N ow York.,Liverpool May 19 Nevada New York.. Liverpoo- 19 Morro COLE tie.- - Mew York. :Havana. . . ... -.May 20 Tonawanda.....Philadelolaia-SaYannab May 22 .1130AICE 0 OF T.lllllll. J. PRICE WETBERILL, s63II:EL G. STOKES, MintruLT Comarrn. JANES DOUGHERTI, • :At% 'oll'.l ;41111U n 01114;4141 PORT Olf,48:1 1 • 4:11 •-• Iva Biszo,:4 40 1 Bus Blore. 7 071 Hien Wants, 4 37 ARRIVED YESTERDAY. Steamer Frank. Pierce, 24 hours from New York. with . deo to W hi Baird & Co. Steamer M Blaney. Smith. 94 hours from Now York. with mdse to W M Baird & Co. Steamer Decatur. Webb, 13 hours from Baltimore, with rodeo to A Groves, Jr. Brig John Shay, Nickerson. from Zaza April 24, with sugar to S & W Welsh. Behr Minnie Itopuller, Willitts, frorn Zaza April 28,with sugar to S & W Welsh. _ Schr Mary A Harmon. Parker, 7 days from St John,Nß. lumber to Patterson & Lippincott. Schr Wm 0 Irish, Rathbun 20 days from Pensacola, with lumber to Patterson & Lippincott. Schr F J Henry, Eaton, 6 days from Greensboro'. Md. with lumber to Hickman & Cottingham. Schr Louisa. Nevins, 4 days from Portsmouth, Va. with lumber to Collins & CO. Behr Commodore. Townsend, 6 days from Now town. with lumber to Hickman & Cottingham. Behr Wllll 11 Morgan, Blades, 3 days from Seaford, Del.. with - lumber to Collies & Co. Schr afar y Jane, Waters. 5 days from Newtown, Md. umber to Hickman & Cottingham. Behr Yeoman, Laws, 3 days from Seaford, Del. with lumber to Collins & Co.. Behr Mohawk, Bradley , . 5 days from Norfolk, Va. with shingles to 'r Galvin & Co. Bohr Jos Parker, Lewis, 4 . days from Rappahannock River, with railroad ties to Collins & Co. Behr Georgians. Poynter, 3 days from Lewes. Del. with grain to Hickman & Cottingham. Seim Bird, Norm:m.lday from Lewes, Del. with grain to Jos L Bewley & Co.• Schr Sabine. Currier, Newport. •-•- - -- • ,CLEARED YESTERDAY. Steamer R Candid'. Baltimore, A Groves, Jr. Brig 11 rperion. Woodbury, Matanzas. Warren & Gregg.• B o h r Ea s ton, Wilson, Kingston, Ja. 1) N Wetzlar dr Co. Seim D& N Kelly, Kelly. Boston. Weld, Nagle & Co. . Sam M M Merriman Babbitt. Cambridgep , t, do Schr Frank Palmer. Latham. Neponset,. Tyler & Co. " Correspondence of the Philadelphia Evening Bulletin. • BEADING. May ii. 1869. The following boats from the Union Canal passed into the lachylkill Canal, bound to Philadelphia, laden and consigned as follows: Naomi. with lumber . to Norcross & mheets; Ella. do to Norton, Black do Co; Lady Franklin, do to H Croskay & Co: Mary Ann, do to Patterson & Lippincott; Mary Ann, do to captain. 51F2d0RANDA. Ship John 0 Baker. Spear, was up at Liverpool Ist inst. for uus port Ith. Ship Webster, Norris, cleared at New York yesterday for Rename. Ship Anahuac, Cook, cleared at Boston 12th inst. for Ban brander°. - Steamer Bunter, Harding, hence lit_ Providence 11th. instant. . Steamer J W Everman, Snyder. Bailed from Charleston yesterday for this port. • ;Reamer Utility, Nickoreon, hence at•Providenoe Ilth inetant. • 'Steamer New York (NG). Nordenholdt, from Bremen April 28, via Bavro May 1, with 139 passengers, at New York yesterday. May no Ist; lon 82, spoke bark. Ma. GIRO° Ilildred (Br); from Liverpool for rbiladelphta,short 0 1 providers; and in want (it assistance; oho b,a on 'loud 4 rEVXMICO 'all Ai;ml"f ft:1869. the ereW GM in Mamba) "Ortherlehliitiloseintyaz , „ . Liverpool for Quebec, abandoned dui 4: heavy wait. • 11E11610_0n a 7,1,• took from the bark Wid d 4 t 13 n•en ail i nAit theM to el Terki - .e. - ( 0.- - Pherson). .9. ati some 44.00 linen ii on the le 111, te ~- - - r t .4,r .....1 .„..0„ - Bark Minnie Cameron (Br). Grahant. at Trinidad 85th ult. for this port 4th met. _ ... ~.„. Bark Borah M-o.olerWhifee , selledfrolln Cat denaa Sd 'net for a port tiorth4if 'natter iv(- , . • - 0 A--• - Bark Andes . obeppard. sailed fro', Cardenas st h inst. Jr • port north of .144(epas, 7, ....,„ „r e , . : Brig M V Comery.Comory. sailed from Matanzas 80th it. for Csibarnn lirlg - Galatese laKenzte.iialeciffthit Matisnisliethirist. :for thir port. I. Brig Bachelor (Br). Carlini; sailed - from Cienfuegos 4th . mist. for ibis port. Ihia loath* (Br) , GOrdon,forthianort. ratllavans Bth Baia F H Todd. McGuire. at Tritddad 25th ult. for this 'port 4th loot , • . ~, , 1 Behr.' 61 Flanagan. Shaw. hence- at Cienfuegos Id inst. i, BelirChorlotte - Ebb. OtrOng , eintle4 frOm.:AlatenzaaSd !net for this port. I Behr Sophia W lison„-Nowell, sailed from Matanzas 6th inet for tills port. . _ tiehr.'l' Vt ilder. Heather, sailed from Trinidad 4:h inst. for New York. _. .• Bahr C W Jones, Gri ffi n. sailed from cardeuas 2d.lnst. .(or a port north of Hatton's.- •. . • - -_ , Schr Elizabeth McGee, Smith. sailed from Kingston. Ja. 23d ult. for tide port via uld ilarbor. - .. - , . ~ 1 NOTICE TO MARINERS. On the 16th inst. the Fishing Rip Light Station will be discontinued. Said Light Ship will be transferred, to •.% bee inland lino% Savannah river..,„Tlie , lie ta d:Ar. be shown or the first tirne on the evenin of 'Jun0"1.41869. and continued until further notice.. _ t he Hay Light. Savannah: andßay Point Light at Port Royal. aIU be discontinued from and atter the Both of 182'9:. -CATER PERPETUAL. z • • FIRE. INSURANCE COMPANY, or Pan,'AntLimmt:' Offioe---435 and 457 . Chestnut Strout Ainfeis on Una:ll7 1,1889; 0R , 9 43 7797, 2.13. . _ • . Capital . . . . . ... ..2100.000 013 Accrued ilrirpliul .. ........ .1, J8 3 4d . • P • •••••••••• EnsakTLED mans. =costs pos . $23:188 12. 12860.000. Losses Paid Since. 1829 Ove/ 54:KA 00C, Th.: Perfe c t:Lai and Temoorary Policies on Liberal Terms. any also banes Policies upon the,Rents Of all Linde of if 1 131,11. es, Ground Rents and Mortgagee. • nthicioga • • - _Alfred G.-Baker.- Allred Finer, Samuel Grant. Thomas Sparks, Geo. W. Iticruspla, Wm. S. Grant. haat , Lea. ' ^ Tholll{llll3. FM& Geo. 1 , ales.' Gustavus fi. Benson. ALFRED. BAILER. President. GEO. PALES. Vice President. JAS. W. MOALLIbTEB. Secretary. - TLik.ODOSE 1.1.-REGES. Assistant fiecreiarl ideal I )ELAWASE MUTUAL SAFETY INSURANCE GOM Uc.orporated by the Legislature of Perutsitiviala, Mo. Office E. corner of TROD and widaurstreete. - . • biladelphia. MARINE INS UttANCES On Vessels. Cargo and Frejgot to it parts of the world. INLAND INSURANCES On goods by river, canal,- lake and land carriage to al parts of the Union., , PrthE INV/LANCES " On liercluindise gene on Stores. Dwellings. Nooses, GC. • ASSETS OF THE COMPANY. November 1. 18038. ; 0300.030 United Stated liver Per Wit. Loan. 10 gra . ... .. . 8208,64)0 120.000 United Btatiii •leakta 6:114: . ' 1631 13;3.69d 00 co 50,000 State States Biz Per Cent:Loan (for Pacific Railroad) . 60,6(10 00 200,000 State of Pennsylvania 81x Per Cent. Loan. . 211,375 di 125,000 Clip of Philadelphia Mx Per - • 594 00 50;000-Biatifoatilleels%TeVry°1341iTraexr) .129, 20,000 Penru lA y sn ly . a . niii Wei -61 ' 5°3 1)3 Per dient.•Bonds. .."•"' 430. Stilt( 25.000 Pennsylvania oad ' _ Mortgage Sir. Per Cent ,ilonds • 05.0(00 . 00` 25,000 Weetern PenuAvania Railroad Mortgage Six Per, Cent /3onda,_ (Penna:.ll.ll: guarantee). • •-• , iltate of , 11)13.nesitee Five Per Cent. •• • 211 - 114 Loan: 21,000 oo . 7,000 State of Tenneeeee Biz Per Cent Loan.. . . 15.1110 Ommttantos . rnAlZ;bo - Miiiii., _ pal and interee - Asuaranteepa byy PlePlf Philadelphia , WY a stOcL mow oo map Pennylvsuda-lailnaaOOmPanY. agi shun stock. . _ 11.300 00 • 50)0 North Pennsylvania Railroad 'Com- • • Pany._lofillkres stock.. - • max Ph il adelphia and iloutnern MILI Steamship Company. Si shares stock 15.il)300 207,900L0ans on Bond and Mortgage. first • - Liens o City Properties 207 - ,900 00 511.1(0.900 Par. Coca. el 093.604 Mark et Value. 311.180225 25 Real Patna... 116,000 oe Bills Receivaii ..... . Balances m made........ AietilaWs-.411' =rams on Marine rolicies-Ac crued Interest and other debts due the Company. - . ow) 03 Stock and ilorip of sun . . Mons. .133.168 00. value ........ . 1.813 00 Cash in ilia. Cash in Drawer . . .... 413 65 11603 78 DIRECTORS: Thomas C.Hand. James IL McFarland. Edward Darling ton. William C. Ludwig. Joseph H. Seal. Jacob P. Jones. Edmund A: louder. Joshua P. RIM Theophilus Paulding William G. Boulton. Hugh Craig,• Henry C. Dallett. Jr.. _ John C. Davis, John D. Talgr icthe. James C. Hand. Edward 1.01 John R. Penrose. Jacob Riegel. H. Jones Brooke. George W. Bernadon. Spencer Ihilivaine. Wm. C. Houston. Beery Sloan. D. W. Montan, Pittebnrgb. Samuel E. Stoker, John ß. B. Semple. do., James Traquair. THOMAS Berger,President do. A. C. HAND. JOHN. C. DAVIS. Vice President. HENRY LYLBERN, Secretary. HENRY BALL. Anil Bocretary. HE COUNTY /F/RE INSURANCE COMPANY—OF flee, No. 110 South Fotuth street, below Chestnut. "The-Fire Insurance Company of the County of Phila delphia,” Incorporated by the Legislature of Penmylvw tda in M 8 for indemnity against Was- or damage by,fire. exclusively. ' • CHARTER PERPETUAL. This old and reliable institution with ample capital and contingent fund carefully invested, contita.N to insure buildings, furniture, merchandise, &c. either permanent. 13 or for a limited tbne,against loss or damage by fire, at the lowest rates consistent witlithe absolute safety of Its customers. Losses adjusted andpaid with all possible despatch. DIECTORS: Chas. J. Satter, Andrew H. Miller, Henry Budd, James N. Stone, John Horn, Edwin L. Itettkixt. Joseph Moore, Robert V. Mammy, Jr.. George Mocks.' Mark Devine. _ 13 J, UTTER;Presrident. HENRY BUDD, Vice President. • ; BENJAMIN F. HOECIELEY. Secretary and Treasurer HCEN I X INSURANCE COMPANY OF PH.I.I.ELPHIC INCORPORATED 11)1)4—MARTER PERTETUAL. No. 224 WALNUT Street, opposite the Exchange. This Company insures o losses or damage by - on liberal terms. on building% merchandise. trtrniture, Sic. . for limited periods, and permanently ed buildings by deposit or premium. The Company has been in active operation for more than sixty_ Years during which all slossou have been promptly adjusted and d . DIRECTORS: 4 Jelin L. Hodge. David Lewis. NL B. Mahony, Benjamin Etting. John T. Lewis . Thos. IL Powers, Wm. S. Grant, •• A. R. McHenry, Robert W. Looming. Edmond Castillon. D.' Clark Wharton, Samuel Wilcox, Lawrence Lewis. Jr., Louis C. Norris, r • JOliN R. WUCkIERBR. Prodded. `Efixtrr.x Vt rinox. Secretary. RITEDI' D IREMEN'S INSURANCE COMPANY 0 Ij This Company takes'rlidts at the lowestrates consistent' with safety, and cenflnes its business exclusively to FIRE INSURANCE IN TIIE CITY OFXITILADEI• FRIA. - • OFFICE—No. 728 Arch etiiiet. Fdurth National Bank BuiIding.DIRECTORS. 4. , Henry W. Brenner. Albertuo King. • .Henry Bunt. Jumps Wood.. John John Sheller:res. J. Henry Aekin. Hugh Mulligan, Philip Fitzpatrick. Dillon. B. ANDRESS, Preal_dent WM. Feozol. doe y. Thomas J. Martin, John Rini, Wm. A Bolin; James Mongan. William Glenn. James Jenne'', Alexander T. Dlekoon, Albert Q. Roberta. James CON WBIL A. BOLIN. TroaL THE PENNSYLVANIA. FIRE. INSURANCE COM. - . —lncorporated 18:15—Charter Perpetual. No. 610 WALNUT Street, opposite Independence Square. This Company, favorably known to the community for over forty years, continues to insure against lora or damage by fireen Public or Private Buildings, either per manently or for a limited time. Also on Furniture, Btooka of Goods, and Merchandise generally, on liberal erms. ' Their Capital, together with a large Surplus Fund, is invested in the most careful manner. which enables them to Mier to the insured all: ViOblibted.:l4;cluparin tho case of DIRECTORS. Daniel Smith, Jr., '' .John Devereui, Alexander Benson, Thomas Smith, Isaac B azleburst, .' Henry Lewis, • • ,Thomas Robins, J. Gillingham Fell. • . -Daniel Haddock:Jr. DANIEL &MTH, Jz., President- . NY/4 G. CROWELL, Licaretarm . ' , • J • axiD94l r IHsURANI4E. NATIONAL iIdIFE INSURANCE COMPANY ItZfrrED STATES OF AE=OAI Washington, D. C. metered by limb! Act of Congress", !p• al,y 20, gags..., t Flash Capital. $1,000,000 -Paid,in run. BRANCH OFFICE: FIRST NATIONAL BANK BUILDING PIELLADICLPIELI6 Where all correepondenee should be addrenea. DIRECTORS; ELABENCE B. ELAM E. A. Roiamae. HENRY D. 000 ICE. J4l ; D liaßAEs. FL O..FAIINESTOCIL • OFTIC ERI3: DIAAEKISO CLARE panBaetblE aeon` lAN COO E, Chairman Finance and Executive Cots JAY cookE ;Ton.N.w. gran. W. a. nicepEA.D. Groncig F. TYLER; • O. SINCE:My CL4118., MENRY p. WOKE. Weehingtetr.ilea Praiddent , , Y•'• - EMERSON - WA'SVP.Tbillidelpida.. Seer ind 9cttn3.l7 E. S. TURNER. Waahlngton, Accident Secretary. FRANCIS G. SMITH . . M. D, Medical Irirector. JAWING mess. M.'r... tomb taut itetuca Director. Tliia C Company. Natlonil ' r ate etuirseter, offers. by reason or its Large Capital. Low. Rates of-Premium. - sal New Tables. the , moot desirable means of Inimins Life let miMented to the pnbUe. Ciretases.,Pamphlete, Lai partLenlaro gAiien on ay.' ilication to Ma Branch Offal:6 4 of • the Competo , or to its. • Eketneral Agents tifrthe JAY COOKE & CO.. New York. for New York State and Northern New Jersey. • JAY COOKE &. CO.. Washington,'). C., for Deiawar Virginia. District of CoMmtdanrui Weet Yhziati. Id W. CLARK. & CO.. for ginineylvanla and Southern "Neuf &trey. B S. Rusami, Hernaburg Manager for Central and Western Pennsylvania. - • j. ALDER KLUB & CO.. Chicago. I mph:WA Wisconan ;and lowa. • Bed. STEPHEN KILLEIL St. Paul.. f o r Minnesota and ' N.W. Wisconsin. • ' ' _joartay, ET F.AlloDinelanatt,for, _Ohioand-Oen Aral and Boithern hadiana., • ' T. B. kuiet, st foibitiecmA and Kansas. EL KEAN & CO., Detroit, foi IdiChligati and Northern Indiana. A. BE MOTH KIRSH ED. Omaha. foi Nebraska. JOHNsTON BROTHERS& 00..,Balthaore: ter mar), tem,' Emigland General-. Agency under she DireeU t on et I.A. ROLLINS an/ ' _ ' 91 the Board of Dipctors. w.i.plißDLEit'.. , Y. P:_TUCKEII. MiOaf t er._ --', - .8 Mord:tato' Exchange. ;State guest. Boston. 11 EFf'EIISON FIRE `' INSURANCE COMPANY 'OF 0 ibila=bia.--Cl33te. No. 24 North Fifth -street, near , incorporated hy the Legislature of Fenrusylvania. Char ter perpetual. capital:Lod Assets, $316.1.,21N9 =Make Wan rams agairut Loss or damage by Fire on rublic or Private Butisium Furniture, Stoehr.. ~.GosAs. a ,Ild.h,kef,a l :4 lB %.p, fgyorabW• terms. D -.....,;., -,..;4•, 0243 • • •• • •—•-- . - 4fm. McDade], '•• 4 -f a • ' ''' ` P.dwariPreir: Imo! Petergont_ _ L ._,_•,.; . ,....t . Fredtpt.l.qr. 'Adger. John P. Bebiterling. v- Adam . Glass, Merry Troemner„ "..--,, . RetaMebulY. Jacob Sebongein., , , t :,,• -i John ott, Frederick MU. - - = Chrintian D. Prick. aamto Miller.__ . _ , Georalf. t. 3 Fort, _ ~._ .. „ .1 . i ) :- 1 :- - 1 'Ala mi rot p ta r ANlEL. Predden't: " • ISRAEL PprElll3ON. , Vice PreaMon t . • PaILIP E. CoisarAn. t 3 • •oa%tatir AndTreoorTer.- - -.• • ,- . FIRE ; ASSOCIATION OF. BEBELABEL• w , ,I" " 71 " A pbli„"inioipoiated Minh 27. 1890. Office, No. 31 I ' ' -414 North Fifth street. Insure BaUdi 4 -,-;`7 ' ...:-• ' 13ooseholerttriiii" ''. and 131.1,erg.dr. • i 77 ..--;reistinerillY.*.from Lou by Fire. /Wets Jan. 1. 1869... ... ........ .... .. . .. .........$1,406.095 OS TIG;3TEES. . William EL munittan. . Samuel BPubaWk: ,. • Peter A. Keyser.. - . Charles Pi Bower. - John Carrow. Jesse Llybtfoot, George I. Young. Robert hhomata. Joseph R. Lyndon. Peter ArmbrUster, Levi P. coati, P M. IL Dickhuson. , • WM. B._ TON_,__Freside t, . L , SAMITELtSPAR.LIAVT. Yiee . Preddent. Wll.-T. BUTLER. BeerearT• - '. ' .;8,500 00 FAME INSURANCE, COMPANY. No. Nig CEIESNNUT STREET. TNCHRPORATED ISM CHARTER PERPETUAL. • _ CAPITAL. 111200,000....ff____ EIRE INSURANCE EXOLUS.IITELY. blames against Loss or Damage by Fire, either by Per .netual or TemPorarY Pollotee. • -` - • • Charles Ilichardson. D Robert Pearce, Win. H. Rhawn. John Resider, Jr.. Francis N. Buck. ' Edward'li. Onto. Henry _ Charles Stokes, Nathan Hilles, John W. Everman. George A. West, Mordecai Thezby. CHARLES RICHARSON. President. WM. IL BRAWN. ViceTreeident. VTILLUUSIS L BL.ANCHARD._Secretary. apl-tf .1,647.367 80 AMERICAN FIRE INRUBANCIE COMPANY.INCOB. porated 1810.—Charter nerPetueL No. ale WALNUT street, above Ttdr u irhiltuielphia. Having a large paid -up Capital 13 and Barri hug In. vested in sound and available Recaritissu continue to in sure on dwellin stores, furnitareonerehandise, vessels in port, and thei r gs cargoes, and other personal property. All losses liberally and promp t ly adjusted. It DOBB. : • Thomas B. Maria. LBEG T - Edmund G. Plutilh, John Welsh, CharlesW , Poultnei. Patrick Brady. Israel Morris, John T. Lewis. John P. Wetherill. WilliamPauL THOMAS B. MAWR:, President. Ar.nrarr C. CEAWITCIIII). Secretary :$ ; • - THOMSONtS _ LONDON EaTtaiLigErt, OR European Ranges,. for families, hotels or public 7 7, institutions; in twenty different sizes. Also, Phil adelphia Ranges, Hot Air Furnaces, Portable IleatertyLow'down Grates, Fireboard Stoves, Bathlioil. era. Stew-hole Plates, Broilers, Cooking Stoves, etc., wholesale and retail by the manufacturers. SHARPE & THOMSON. No. 209 North - Seco:id street, _ a .THOMAS B. DIXON & BONS. Late Andrews & Dixon, No. 13a CHESTNUT Street, yhilada.. Mane cturersOpposite United States mint. fa of . LOW DOW*, CHAMB R, • ' _ . _. 'And OFF.IGE6 ether GulATEu_ ' • For Anthracite, Bituminous and wood Firoi ..2 • - Ateo, , wAltlit•Alii FURNACES, • For Warming Public and Private isuildinp. , • REDISTERS, VENTILATORS. -, • • CHIMNEY cites,- `, COOKING-RANGES. HATHBOILEES.' • WHOLESALE and RETAIL. • Tuonwrox A. onnaoon 'PERINIMITTAIEBOVP -u- - • Importers of earthenware and 131141Ang and Coramiesion Merchant , . N 0.115 Walnut street. Eb. BOYD. . Window Shadoi , , Bede, Iliattiesses, Cainhts and Curtains, N 0.136 North Ninth street, Philadelphia. al: ways on bond. Furniturorepaired and varnished. , mhl7.3m COTS ON-SAIL DUCK OF EVERY WIDTIL FROM 281nrh to 78 Inches wide, all .nembera. Tent and Awning Duck, l'apemnakeni Felting Bail Twine, tie. - JO tiN NV..EVERAINA a36' • No. 103 Church street, City Stores DitlVY WELLS—OWNF.ItS OF PRO.PFINVX.--THE 1 only place to got privy wolle cleanaod and dicin. .tocted, at very_ low prices. A. PEYSSOM. f4annfactarer Pondrette. Ooldanaltb,a Hall. Library street. ODOURS' AND WOSTENDOLIPS ' POCKETR RET.VES,PEARTA and STAG HANDLES of beau. tiful finish. RODGERS' end WADE' BUT'CHER'S, and , the • CELRBRiII.TED•J LECOWATRE RAZOR. , SCISSORS IN CASES of , the fined quality. Razors. Knives,_Schaore and Table Cutlery. Ground and Vollshed. EAR INSTRUMENTS of the moat approved construction to assist the hearing. _at P. MADEIRA'S. Cutler and Sur. nulnsiramml4- Maker.lls Tenth-street. below. Chest. t. • ' • • myhtl IiBUILDBRB ANTI, CONTRACTORS.: -We We pred4red fortiloh Bnitlish imported -- - - - ABP TIC ROOFINQ TELT. In quantities to e t. ,This rooting was wed to cover the Parisi Exhibition in 1867. • I,I[RCIIANT & CO.. 617 and 618 libior street. mv4 Imil REEK GIIKIBR.—LANDING ANDEOR 13A - Lk: BY. BUINIES it GO.; 108 ElauthiDalawaro arrauxuth BUSINESS CARDS T;,ERY ROOFING. 11123WE1 "AivenrigirejoiLNA, 1, ~THO: liiS, . lotigireuario ... ,1 r 4 :... ~.e...1.....1.—..,. micy h tim and un s ou n M Ml rt i a tiii i iit r ',l Ir.trs ti ii ri gy es slos-Aritr i ttn ar m2th4 pi made P FitgA lt rrirafetrit `the liiCtit;„ 13 FIdMSDAY. , P , 3r) , ~.. Mr-Oates at fteddencee receive ' , l• !... ", 13.T0G/t3 4 LOAJIB, do., t J:: x 1 '.. . Estate o aohn% Ileniphitt. .." ' ' '.' • . _ ON TURAIDAY. MAY IS , i l ox At ig ioaoeic noon. si the Philadelphia. E cita 0— aoPo Deinwnns Item nnuenn bend - •. , I NOD North i enneylvenla Railroad 6p r cent. l'hilafelptda. and Sunbury MR., Dement . ma juinele central Railroad? percent. - Sl6OO Union Camatkper tent , '• 18600 'Cumberland Valley Railroad Finer cega, aZZO AntlilbenY :Valley Railroad 6 per cent, . 61161. 88 do do ,_ Scrip. gI,W North Peens Ivinia Itailroad Scrip. $6OO Chester Val ey ltallrotni 7 per cent. 8600 Pennsylvania State 6:., 16V6: , • , . 128 shares fYilliamsport Bridge Co Stock. - ' 895 shares Wrightsville, York. and Gettysburg R. R. r •dip_phares Georgetown Gaa Light Co. , ( Executors' Sale--Retate of Joseph Andrade. $6OOO Lehigh Zinc 7 per Cont.; January and July. $6OOO do .do . _ 49.... May and November. 68000 fennirviiiitta Co. . 150 shares Oswego Gas Co. • $5700 McKean dud Bllc Land and Improvement Co., 1§.500 tril s or e rea d netrCo. $lO,OOO Huntingdon , and Broad Top Consolidated Bonds. • REAL, ESTATE SALV. MAY 18. _ Vast' VALI:TAMP. BLIBLLIESS LOOATIOIY-LAAGE. a n d VALUABLE LOP, BRICK RES lb Ewa: k end. Dunstan- Bally built CE11.:11C11 PROPERTY. Eighth street, above Race,.l.oo feet 1 rent. , it is situate in a very. improving and: business square, and , A all. worthy the attention of Capt. ltars. Blinders MODE ers; See survey and handbills HANDISOidE .RN THREE-STORY. BRIO& IW. BIDENDE.No. 1581 Girard avenue. 20 feet front,- 150 feet deep to Walter,. street. Ithas all the modern conve nt', n erica. 'lmmediate possersion. i Peremptory Sale-ATERY ELEGANT and SUPERIOR TTVE-ISTUR V STONE IidaNSION. with Stables and Coach BMWS, N0..1612 Walnut street, 46 test front, 159' feet deep to Chancellor street, 63 feet in the rear-2 fronts. it bitinished .1n ri.'megys superior manner, and 11146 every moderneonvenience„ , Immediate possession. , . RGE HALE OF CAMDEN LOIS. on Second,Talrd, leNg a gireigsgi r gt N b -_ .. 3 i t 7ll2segt a g il etti ,s st e tlicl i r,f late Edwin .6.....ipeyeite:regl.i de&d. , Full particulars. 'lltrhe. ' ''' • " _ - ELIE ANT COUNTRY RESIDENCE. 12 acres and 152 perch Wave ley Heights, Limekiln Turnpike, Montgo • mom sounty,Tra, .. ti miles' from Philadelphia and 'halt a mile of Abington Station on the North Pennsylvania COUNTRY PLACE. 4 ACRES, Old York ,Road, near Oak lane, about . quarter of a mile from • Oakland Station on the Ninth Pennsylvania Railroad. .___, . , • Pereinpthry Sale-VeRY HANDSOME COUNTRY' SEAT.4u At;1014% near: Obi. York Erion en the North ` pehnsylvania Railroad. . • . ISANDSOME MODERN; 2.3445T0 Y 'STONE. ,RESI DENCE,With Stable and Coach Howie.and Green House... NO-158 Dora lane. Germantown. . Former . • .. , ~..i . -., , Peremptory sale-For Account of a F Purchaser. --mongini , THREEBTORY BRICK DWELLING; No. 1513 .North Twentieth 'street. Has all the modern con- i , veniences , Immediate possession: . - • . - NEAT MODERN 2.ISREEL I TORys BRICK DWEL. LING; No. 531. Wharton 'etree with a Three-story Brick Building in the rear onMciltv street,Ni;s2t. , VALUABLE BUSINESS sTAND-STORE,, ,, 0. 812 North ' Elithth street, above CationshilL 20 feet front. .. Peremptory Sole- -To -Grain Dealers. Flour Merehanter and othere-v ZIT VALUABLE BITEIINEBB PELOPEIVVP-T WO. STORY BRICK BUILDING, Wiushington avenue, east of net street, 65 feet front. MO feet deep to Alter street Peremptory Sale-SUBSTANTIAL , BUILDING and LARGE LOP, Washington avenue. west of 20th et'' , Peremptory Sale-'lO Close a Partnership Account--5 THEIRESTDRI. BRICK DWELLINGS. Nos. • 1728, 1722. 1724. 1.7% and 1728 Leib etreet, between Front street and Pratikford road; and south of Harrison a t. • . flame Estato-GROUND RENT 6150 a year:. I, 2: VERY DESIRABLE LOT 4 . Ridge avenue, through to Titner sanet, Northwest of I. peremptory Sale-TWO-STORY BRICK DWELLING, No.—Beach street. between Marlborough and liana -Per...:- Peremptory Sale---EIANGSOME - MODERN - Tinin. STORY BRICK RESIDENCE. with Stable and .Coach House, Forty-first street. above notion, Wept Phlladel. phis. Lot 120 by 166 feet to a 25 feet erect. 1 ! Brewton , Sale-rotate of liannah Howell. deed.- I VERY DESIRABLE THREE STORY . SMUT RESI DENCE. No. 218 EMI th Fifteenth street, below Wain. , t. i VERY DESIRABLE COUNTRY PLACE, 4' APRi..IB, Baltimore turnpike; Delaware county. Pa.. about 2 miles north of Chester and 11) miles from Philadelphia. i HANDSOME MODERN RESIDENCE, No. 5236 Main street. Germantown, 41 feet front. _ THREE-SToRY issltiCK DWELLING, No 20 Otter et. west of Frankford road, .16th Wax& with . a Two-Story Frame Shop , in the rear _..-. _:: , .. MODERN , TIIREESTORY , BRICK DWELLING. No. 421 South Thirteenth street between Lombard and Pine, ~THREE STORY • Balm DWELLING, No: 210 Juniper et reet, above Race.- .. , . DESIRABLE Ida, Ridge , avenue, N. W. of Vineyard street. i peremptory . Sale-VERY ELEGANT - COUNTRY sEAT-tuREE - sToRy STONE MANSION. Stable and Coaclrlionsei Greenesiss she., acres, New Second. Street Road. Diontgomery county, Pa., ne sr City Lipe , Statioli.:NcOtt Perunylvania Railroad-Residence of - Wm. G. Moorhead, DM. _ r _ . ` a :.. . VVELL-SMURED. GROUND 'RENT. .$ll6 50 a year. payable in diver. . _. , MODERN' THREE STORY BRICK DWELLING. No. 909 North Fifteenth at. - = -- ,_,. • . i Adminhtrators Peremniory Sale , ..To Close an Esate s THREE.STAMY , BRICK DVVELLINGS, N0e:4059,105L 1063 andlo6s North Front et - sTiIitEE,STORY BRICKHWELLING. No. 1906.Wilcoir. street Peremptory 6a 1e- Et:emu:se LOOATION—LA.RGE and VALUABLE LOT. Dneitings Sheds.' Tricks ~ t re., an. old-established Coat Yard, Front street. north of Coates. 11th W ard--783t f eet frond. MODERN ThIREp t FI'ORY BRICK DWELLING. No. 2128 1 , rankUn et • _ALUABLE WHARF PROPERTY. N. W. corner of Tvrenty.third and Arch etreeta; 72 feet front. 270' feet deep. immediate possession. tt , - ^ ' ELEGANT ENGLISH BOOKS :"_. ON TUESDAY, _WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY'AND FRIDAY 'AFTERNOONS, May 11. 12,13 and 14. Will be sold. valuable Miscellaneous Hooke, English ad'. Hons. including fine editions of Bulwer. Dickens, Scott and other eminent writers; Donee superbly Illustrated Werke ; beat , editions Shakespeare, Poets ere. Alio, standard Library Rooks. Theology, History, Fine Arts, Gilt isookeiJuveniles, Arc. Sale No. 1607 Mount Vernon stoeeL ELEGANT FURNITURE, MANTEL. AND PIER KER . ROBS. PIANO. ELEGANT CARPETS. CURTAINS. die., dm. __ ON MONDAYMORNING. 'May 17, at 10 o'clock, at No. 1607 Mount Vernon street, ty catalogue, the entire elegant t manure comprising Walnut Pallor Suit, green plush; elegant Etagere, Centre Table, Gilt Bouquet Table. Fine French Plats Mantel and Pier Mirrors. /superior Rosewood Piano, made by Emerson, Boston; Lace and Reps Curtains; elegant Mantel Ornaments, Walnut Ball. Furniture. superior Walnut-Dining-and Sitting Room Furniture, elegant Buffet Sideboard, Extension Tante, Secretary Bookcase. Fine China, Glees and .Ptated Ware, Elegant Walnut Chamber Furniture, Mirror door Wardrobe, handsome Cottage Sets, fine Feather Beds. Hair Matresses, Holsters and Pillows, Blankets. liedding.frich Velvet and Brussels Carpets, Kitchen Furniture, Refrigerator, dm. . House to rent. . - Execntor's Bale—Estate of Joshua Longstroth. dec'd. VALUABLE BTOOKt3. ON TUEeDAY, MAY 26. ,At 12 o'clock noon. at tne Philadelphia Exchange— , 110 shares Philadelphia National Bank. 100 shares Northern Liberties National Bank. -45 shares (lizard National Bank. _ 16 shares North Amide, National Bank. 10 ab area Commercial National-Bank. • 'l5 shares Philadelphia Exchange. 20 shares Now Castle and Wilmington Railroad. 3 shares Penntylvania Insurance Co. • 1 share Philadelphia Library Co. Sale No. 1402 South Penn Square. NEAT 1101:BEI1OLD FURNIIURE, MIRROR, 'OAR PETS.' Stu. ON TUESDAY MORNING, May 18„ at 10 o'clock, at No. 1402 South Penn Square (Broad. above Chestnut,) bv catalogue, tke neat Furni ture, comprising Walnut Parlor and Dining Roorn.finrui. tare, superior Extension Dining Table, Sideboard. Pier Mirror, China, Glass and Plated Ware, Mahogany Ohara. ber Furniture, fine Hair Matresses. Feather Beds,Bolstern and Pillows, Brussels, Imperial .and Ingrain UarPots, Kitchen Utensils, dm. Sale No. 014 Spruce street. ELEGANT FURNITURE', PIANO,"" — MIRRORS, - CUR. TAINS, OIL, PAINTINGS dm. ON WEDNESDAY MORNING, May V. at 10 o'clock. at No. 614 Spruce atrbet, by cata. Logue, the entire Furniture. eompriaing Rosewood Draw. ing Room Furniture. crimson satin, two elegant Arm Chairs, Centre Tables, Tennessee marble ; Elegant Rose- Wood Plano.7.ectaves; tine Brocatelle and Lace Curtains, tx . French .Plate. Mantel, Pier and Oval Mirrors. tine Oil Paintings and Engravingsr Bronze Ornaments, Superior Walnut Dining Room Furniture, Exteneion Dining Table, Buffet Sideboard. flue Cut Glaee. China and Plated Ware. Library and Sitting Room Furniture, tine Wilton and Velvet - and Brussels Carpets. four elegant Walnut Chamber hita, fuse 'Wardrobes, Cottage Furniture, tine" Hair and Suring Matresacs. Bolsters and Pillows,superior High Case 'lock, Kitchen Furniture, Refrigerator, &o. • May be examined on the morning of sale. at 8 o'clock; • . Sale No. 440 York avenue. HOUSEHOLD FU tiNITURE. ON FRIDAY MORNINCt. AIDS' 31, at 10 o'clock, at No. 440 York avenue; (between Fourth' And 'fifth growl!, above Willow.) the eurulue Furniture, comprising—Walnut Parlor and Oak Wining Room Furniture. Walnut and Mahoganv tibamber Fur ram) e, Of*.linttage Suit; bandeorne Velvet, Brusaele and other Ganda, Kitchen Furniture, am. TO RENT—A very largo and elegant Country Seat and Mansion, with -au modern conventeuoca. pie. hot and cold Water, outbuildings.. beautiful garden. Twenty eevdnth Wail,. suitable for a board - MO.6mm. • FOR SALE. • • L'A ROE AND VALUABLE THREE-STORY STONE ;MILL and six Houses and Farm, 63 acres, Lane, • a', of a mile of Chestnut Hill and -Mt. Airy atation. on the Utieatnut Rill Railroad, 266 Ward. . [For, pailiculars apply to M. dt'Sons. ITHE PRINCIPAL MONEY , B. corner of SIXTH and RACE streets. +Money advanced on Merchandise generally—Watches, anwelry. 1: 'amends. Gold' and Silver Plate. and on all articles of value, for any longth of time agreed on. ;WATCHES AND JEW.ELRY AT PRIVATE BALE. (Fine Gold Hunting Case,Double Bottom and Open Face English American and Patent Trevor watches: • e Got i l Hunting Cloe Swiss and Open Face Lepll7o Watchom e n' naGo Duplex and other Watches: Fine Sliver Hunt eau° and, Open Face English. American and STVIOII Patent Lever andUpliie^Watchem; Double Came Englimh Quartier and other - Watches • Ladies' Fancy Watched ; Diamond Bretustpins; Finger longs: Ear Rings; Studs' Pine;Breastpins Fine (told Chains ,• Medallions ; Braceletei Sean Pine; Breastpin" iFinger Ring, ; Pencil Cases and JONVeIrY generally. _ • TOR BLE.A largo and valuable Fireproof Ghost. • suitable for a Jeweler; coot Bea „ twit Also, mayoral Lots in Booth camden.rutu and -. I Y- . 19- 4 / 1 • . moorzEs & Co Na 606 MARKET 'treat. • * YDDDTANDBRDETHUREDEY MONDAY IND TAiirciITIONEERS. - J... t. • • MeEKETutreot. abovelflttb: All 7 MM ( Ore ISAWs• 1 •:: t131.111LNG.D1IRBOIV teel7ololo . ll3lk. :Aft lrf :Wrier OL:rtakwri - . - • - eft • tlkkpli, VF. JfitkleUll eletlY , Lersarras, •••• 41310 P •,;• • e ONAIONIMY,MiIIgOtt../.4• • " 10, Kw 17. st,lo clekiekt four • Iskangall—e•qV One coact colored and black' Gold•MOdOl.,„1 .ffillitolll6o • ex,steatzter units of 6-4 %old MediP Glace Popeilna‘ rieces pads, high Goloreek Wool PlOitif4ll4l.l - KOMI* tf 4 j c• .1 sr..*, do ' Paris rich colored Brewed Greliadinee. do - London Black and Volored.dieliaire and Alpiroilige Lenou.,•• do French Prictilee. Phluele `reviwzla! Furter pm!" Goode, Ae. 100 EtliCEB BI 138 " BATIN &c Full lines Lyona black Groe do is.bui and Tirffettis Full lines Gros Ottomans:Drop de Frances•Fallifet, e„..• Null lines Cacheniere de tide,' Gran 'Ol6 Lyon. Groe warns. Full lines colored rituit de. Bole. t rap dei • Pout Ltstrinit4 Full lines Lyons It a ayißlsolt. and Colored Bilk Satins. Ise. Brocbe Border Stella. Masan&lcoolend, Pane/ Shawl ll 4..) Pa; is Trhntned *Bilk and cloth • Vidslur. Jacketa.'Boada.• ,- LARGE AND ATTRACTIVE,___ re spEoLsi, SAUD OP_MI • EITIENNE AND - BASLE ' BIBBOSi MiLDWEISZ GOODS. - . • '; •• ; " •b Ordeis of - ' • Bream. BUTTES.. ILUOBB24BIeBB & CO. Particulars hereafter. • . A lino of heart Black Ribbone,'TOrir deidiablo. A Ihno of,rich Faris Fancy:Ribbons. ; • English Crepes, French maligns. Artl6cial=uni Dre eel rlmmings. Boot) Bales, Whitd linen Handkerchiefs. limbrolderies. Tfee, .BAlncreki,- Rid GloVea. • - - • - Umbrellas and Parasols. Eazur,, , Laees,,Bß4oMli BALE OF I 5 S 0 CASES VELING BAGS. STRAW 00D13. dia. TUESDAY MOB NG May 16. at 10 o'clock. on fourmonths'. credit. • , , • 1 ..• • • ='•'' • 10.000. PAIRd ARMY BROGANS. \. s en's prime eoWed Army : .Brogans, , rinrillarboi*o Men'srus , „ - 4 • LARGE SALE OF; - 60,000 ;ROLLS 'PAPER HANGIRGE. • * - •1, ON •WEDNERRAX, , ti ••••••• r-- Mayl9; will be pelemptorily sold, on fear months! credit. 6t'.090 rolls Walt Paper. and,43inding4oLLß44.l6,ott E _ aiCti ioved patterns and stylY4 ; by, Order ot Xeser44Aß WAX dr. RO.orliew`York. • •••,,.t,:Li-r • LARGE BALE OF:BRITISH, FRENCH: . 04.141 29 :1, AND DOMESTIC oRY . GOODS. . • ON:THURSDAY. MORNING. 7 , • ' .1? Mar M. at 10 o'clock. on font:months , ofeatt . , TAMES A. FREEMAN,' AlTdii6ifiEß,:" e 0:492 W.ll4NUTlltrelet='; REAL ESTATE BALE,M&VI9 • This Bale, on YTEDNICADAY A iIdIg St ! ti•elOckingnoik; Y ccbanste. wilt include the fouowimp, ' l'ACltlsit Mortgage ot riven sedured... - OE--Threeitory brick bongs, (belOwnild. • ; and Vine. sta., lot 15 by 17 feet. Orphans , -Court Sais-A; Estate of:P. _Kirk. dec'd „ No. n 4 JAMISON ST—Threestory brick dwelling, tor," 18 by 90 feet to.Enen et-, Bd, Ward; subject to $89.54 grourdi, r; rent. 'Orphan, Court Bale=-Estate of Jamas Carraher.:, LOT—McKeati Stresit,wist:of-Niriateen street, 16x76 OrphansLCOurt Mte--Rstate Of Mrs:,:? D. Btalist„ deed. - NO, 1645 NORTH -TWELFTH: STREET , -.Chintatil story brick dwelling, With back building., lot ,16:70 feet. , Bub ect to 'sl3B ground 'rent. Has , the modern CMIS. en D awes. NO. 711 'ROUTH SECOND STREET--ThreostorY , ry brick store Ind dwelling. lot 16x74 feet: dubjecttto. .41114. , ' ground rent. • Sale by order of the Trlotteesof 'CM O at h'' r'0.615 PABSYIJNS ROAD—Business Stand lot SO bl. 75 feet. Clear of incumbrance. Sarum estate„ GROUND. RENT OF $l4l PER A.NNUM—Weliseenred and punctuall y paid. Sale by order of the'Court of Cara.' Incrn Recut. Estate ofßeni„ Davis, deceased. NO e. 811 sad 818 NuRRIS 5T....-'l.'wt; genteel 'thrad-a story brick dwellings. with back buildings, lot 14'61 feel v liave. : t.ftemloctern_ecinvoniencow. • - • • • • vA.LuABLE AJLOTiI MANUFACTORY.' - imb; buildings, and over 4'acres of land. Second street and Erie pence, Twentylifth Ward. on the -.l , m:totter', and 4., near the North Penneylvanin Kailroad. with fine facilities for shipment. The machinery will' be included, in the sale. Plan at store. Orphans' Court Sale; - Eatate eff Javies Carmichaet, dee*d. , IMIERWIANTvILLF.---TWo lota of ground.” fronting On ' Moorestown end varuden Turnpike roatVand Finalwgo4s nue ; Osunden count.s,l/ J.. each 177 by 310 ..feet. 's(f". absolute. •Pjano at the lama. ' 0 „" ' - MEItCHANTITILLS-3 0 buildings. Lot adjoining the ' above, fronting on'Finn'aVenue`aled Chapel roads, naida 50 by 17e ft et. Plan at, too etore. .Babs absolute.. OritAL LANDS-10-85 interest in 8,500 acres 'of coal in Schuylkill county, ; Pennsylvania. ; particulsin ,•-• Catalogues.-- ' ' ' AATIN EitOTHEliff.' AUCTIONEERS. .' , L , -;• 7 • 1. ot (Lately Salesmen far M. Thoinite &Sonia • • - No. 529 CHENT I NT etret rear entrance from • - - Sale No.SM Oheataut r TO BOOT AND SEDE'MANUFAcTEEERS," . SOOT AND SHOE 14AEHINEKV.'tiliPERIOtiiliii,:3 DIG :MACHINES, }KNOX SOLE CUTTER, Ac. • • • UN FINIDAY 'AFTERNOON; ; . X"r".3 hiay 14 at 2 o'clock at the aectilu rooms. 62210heatiiiik etre at the Machinery of a •.Boot and Shoe ManufaetureriJ inc luding,ele auperior sewing Macbi,s t briforra Shivery ehlittieg 'Machine..iines Sole tatter; Hollent,;‘ Dies,--Lasta -Eireiettizahlachiuti,-.4z0..4., , qz: 4' Salc No. 915LcTcust afreet. THE ENTIRE H00E11.01,1) FURNITURE. OKEPip.; ON SATDSDAY, - monNirid, MOMS, at ID o'clock, at 915 Locust street. Safe No:'-'6:19 Arch street. , • '2 , VERY VALUABLE.- AND tAUFERIDE ,EDIEPWJP - _ SAFEEIiMADE BY LILLIE ON -TUESDAY MORNING: May' 18. at 10 o'clock. at No: 839 Arch'Etroot. - by catalegaf. the entire balance of stock of very superior Fire. liprgiag and Fire Burglarprobf Safes. of very desirable sizes, with the, celebrated Monitor and -13uodecagon. Pineat. - combination locks, made by, the Lillie Safe and Iron Co. kia.Y;be oval:pined the day previous . ' • Stile ItE6 North Tenth r iti` Vet- _ SUPERIOR WALNUT.AND HAIR CLOTH PARLOR. FURNITURE, ,CHAIWBER. DIVING ROOM AND SITTINGROOM.FLENITURE_, HANDSOME- 1114H4n P , SELS CARPETS,' KITCHEN 'FURNITURE, ace: ON THURSDAY HORNING. _ May 90, at 10 o'clock. at No. 1026 North., Tenth itrebt by catalogue, the entire ElnperiorHousohold Foznitall). T HOligl 4 3 BIRCH a..-RO_N A _LAOMS_fINEPHABID COHNIIBBION MERt.M.II°. -- No. 1110 CHEBTNlTT'etreat,' Rear Entrance_NL_. 1107 Barium mired. HOUSEHOLD ..'rUIt,NE OF EVERY. D • VON RECEIVED O 1 CONSIGN:AMU, Bales of Furniture at Dwellings' attendedta•eaUtollllolll'.:' Bale B. E. corner Eleventh and Lombard steeebyl - HOUSEHOLD FURNITC Iticj_CARPETS, - ON MONDAY MORNINQ w"'; Mey ii. yt 10 o'clock. at the southeaetconiar of Veraltat and Lombard etreete. be gold the. Furniture wrists-. may declining housekeeping, comprising Walnut Farb= h Furniture. in air cloth: Walnut • Chlantiet c.Fornitnr% Broach., Tar estry and Vonetain Carpete.Cottage_Fundi , .„. W tore. Beds, .Matreeeee, China and essman:Kitchen •-• Furniture. &c. < tv • fy The furniture can be examined at B.o , clock'onibil morning of ode. AVID de HARVEY' D. AUCTIONEER& Late with M. Thomas ds &PRA Store Nos. lo 48 and 60 North & Reim XVl street. !. Sa at the Auction s. . ELEGANT FURNITURE. -ROSEIWOOD FRENCH PLATE z • MIRRORS.. FIREPROOFS. OFFICE FURNITURF, BOOKOaSES. SPRING AND , HAIR= MATRESSES, BEDS. FINE TAPSSTAX., CARPETS, MAI G TIN, &c. • ON TUESDAY MORNING.; At 10 o'clock. et the auction r , ems. Nos. a and al North Sixth street, below Arch street: Including . Tors:superior Walnut Pallor and Chamber Furniture. in suits; donut and Chairs. Handsome Walnut Wardrobes. , Etaerei.c.o Sideboat ds. Extrusion Tables. Centro and Bouquet blue, superior Secretary Bookc as es, Rosewood ' Piano Forte, large stench Plata Mantel Mirrors, Pier ,Mirrons.4 3 eupttior Fireproof Safes. Office Tables. and Desks. sena — • for Slain kr, Hair and Dusk. Matreases„ Feather Sada , lion Sekccping Articles, China and Glaseware, dre. T A. MoCLErI AND, A.CCTIO t rEER I CONCERT HAM AiNiIt i N IE LtOOM.I3. TND 1. —eat' Hougeholdßogruittifraencillmgrchov-Household stre et. _ever! do. :ic s‘ ription received on consignment Bales of Furniture at— elli*gis attended to on reasonable tern. , • ASSIGNEES' BALE OF FANCY GOODS,AT THE AUG. TION ROOMS. 1219 CHESTNUT STREET. , ON WEDNESDAY MORNING. . , May 19, at 10 o'clock, will be , so'd by Catalogue. by order of assignees. the entire stock of a' faucy.goeds etore, con sisting of Fans, Cabae, 'Writing Casco, Portfolios. Fine Cutlery. Silverware, Tea Bets, Jewel. BoxeaMuslc Bose's. Opera Glasses, lady's Gold. Watch. gents , Toss Chains, Gold Mountings, fine Pocket Cutlery, Perfume Bores. Bohemian Vesos,.Pariars }Busts French Jewelry. Ladies' , ' Work Boxes; Shell Combs. Ladles' Companions, Bronze Ornaments also, 28 feet , silveranountod Show-es/ea..,fCe , A ; . be sold without reserve. • py BABBITT & CO.. AUCTIONEERS. . ` • CiAilll AUCTION HOUSE, • No. :iBO MARKET street. corner of BANK street Cash advanced on consignments 'without ultra. Oars*: .• LIQUORS -LIQUORS. ON WEDNESDAY sfORNINO. - • May 17. at ,111 , 6 o'clock, on account of who= it may ceu7 corn; barrels of. fine Liquors, viz— I barrel findliolland tiro. ~ .7. 1 @Q., duel:ad Brandy. 1 do' Riki;old Bourbon Whisky. ' • , 1 csek Bay liub3. Sale reremptory. Ti SCOTT, an., AUCTIONEER. A.P. SCOTT'S ART GALLERY , , ••L. 1090 CHESTNUT street, Ptilladelebas. SPECIAL SALE OP ROMAN•AND PAIDSIer • • . PHOTOGRAPHS. ON SATURDAY MORNING. At Scelt's Art Gallery, will be Eold, a opecial 'invoice or ~Roman and Parlalan Pbotographa, ,Jusit landed per, , :. steamer. 4310VERNBIENV 1,3 - 1111LIC SALE OF MEDICINES, .'HOSPITAL 1 Stored, llreseingv, Mosquito Bare. &C. , AguIf,TANT MI:OIGAL PUHVHICOII,B OPPLO - Fi WASHINGTON ,D Ci.. May 10.11150. Will. ho offered at public auction in this 'city. en WEDNESDAY, the 19th day of May at igk 51„. , a,gulac yr Judiciary Square Depot. E etreet, between Fourth alga Fifth streets, a largo and valuable aseortment- of Idedu 'thee, Hospital Stored and,. other, property no- longer , needed for the public service, among which tio found • the tollowing. viz: SUlphuric Ether,• 7,000 °tamest `Aleobol, 1,100 quarts; Carat° of Cantbarides, 6.000 °MUSS; MOW, Extract or Cinchona. 3,00J-Olamca„,* Fluid Extract of Ginger:ll,ool ounces; Compound Spirita of Lavender. sgooo-ounces; POV, dered Opium, 2,so4Younces; Tinct. OpilUamphoratan. • COCO ounces; Sulphate of ounces. Sperm Candles. Beef Extract,' Condensed Milk; Beil6. cated.Bilas -er . Rata.. .a Patent Lint, Oiled Silk, and - Mug Boller I3anaaße4'"" Linen. Also, 15,000 Mosquito Bare. new. sull particulars in catalcuilies.- Terms cash; %PerEen,,....) required as depoits at time o f f sale, and all geed 1.1 " removed wlthin five days. ) • • CBAS. SUTHERLAND, , myl2-Ot§ Assn Med. Pllo'o3'o4 Bvt.-Oalill . fl. •ULoA MEE
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