BVSIN~tSSaNOTICES —. -. the ~1110u,sirtioth Cave. , /Extract from a Private Letter.) ' " • We groped about for many hours in this vinailerftd place. I never saw anything like It, The !realm Of nature ‘dhiplayed bere are very strange, and' Idri4e,the beholder with awe. , But the air in some parts 44 the cave is close and stifling, and when we rune out I fond myself saddled with n terrible fever, which entirely isrectrated Me. The physician had never seen a ease like la Antforiev; awl no remedy he prescribed - seemed tdo lithe ]east good. My :life was despaired of. Ere. - Wilson, with whom I -was residing, had in the house A bottle rif PLANTATION Brl - TERS, and sbe insisted I. should try it, for she said she knew it to bo a certain cure in all eases of fever, debility, ague, dys pepsia, itc. 1 bad but little faith, but finally cemented thery it dose last resort: In less than three hours .after first my fever left me ; in two days I was sitting icip and before Saturday night I was no well as ever. I tel . ytou all this that von may knew how to act in any cape of fever, or any• girdles - disease. I firmly believe the ,StmsrraTtii; BITTERS saved my life. . • 7 As my nest I will tell you about the Cave in detail. A. J. F. MAGNOLIA. WATER—Superior to the best importod Ger man Cologne, and sold at halt the price. my2s-ta s-3t • Magan's Magnolia Balm. This article is the Trne Secret of Beauty: It is what Fashionable ladies; Actresses and Opera Singers use to produce that oultiated distinsue appearance so much admired in the ~irdee`of Fashion. It remotes all unsightly Blotches, Redness, Freckles, latOnlaburn and Effects] of Spring Winds, and gives to the Complexion a Blooming -Purity of transparent &Macy and power. No Lady who yklnes a fine Com tanitin can do without the Magnolia Balm. 75 cents will iIPtY it of any of our respectable dealers IyotOsHathairon is a very delightful Hair Dressing. tayls s to th The "lichomacker" Piano. BVY A FIRST CLASS PHILADELPHIA-MADE PIANO 'AT MANUFACTURER'S PRICES, OBTAIN IIINIR , GUARANTEE,.AND THEREBY ENCOUR AGE ROME INDUSTRY. FOREIGN Pianos sold by AGICNTB are generally, the *heaped thatean be found in Raw YORK OR BOSTON markets, and after all, they cost the purchaser as much as first-class SCHOMACKER. PIANOB. The Agent has. already several CoMMIBBIONs ADDED before the customer abtiains an instrument, and in a few .years it becolues worthless. and there is no redress. Our Pianos have maintained their high reputation as Titter. CLASS FOR MORE THAN THIRTY TRAUB, and lave been awarded the highest premiums, and are now admitted to be the finest and most highly improved in ernknents made in the country. Otarnew and beautiful Warerooms, No. 1103 Chestnut strestPare constantly supplied from our extensive facto- Mei With a full assortment.of superior GRAND, SQUARE Alen UPRIGHT . PIANOS, which we offer on the most FA voRABLE terms. Call and examine them, and all will admit that we are able to rnevz that which we have said, and that no other establishment , .in this , city can MISBE the Same LIBERAL INDUCEMENT:. • • THE SCROMACKER PIANO M'F'G CO., . . ' No. 1103 Chestnut street. N. lii7-Nsvi Pianos to Rent. sting - moving promptly attentle,ll6. fe2.; th s tuff; ' Albreeht. RIERNS .5c SCHMIDT, • Manufacturers of zicIRST-CLASS AGREFFE PLATES • ' PIANO FORTES. . . Warerootus, No. 610 ARCH Street, Ilda3stutb2m§ Philadelphia. !Wel& & Co.'s and Haines Bros.' Pianos, litabini &Thunlin'e Cabinet and Metropoitan Organs, with Vaxliuniano. J. E. GOULD, mhZT-s to th . No. 923 Chestnut street. Steinway's Pianos received the hiFhest sward (first gold medal) at tho Intornntionnl Exhihition,% Poria,lB67. See Official Report, at tho Warersoin of BLASIUS BROS., No. 1006 Chestnut street. The -4Shichering Pianos received the highest anent at the Paris Exposition, 18S7. DUTTON'S Warerooms, ae2l•tf§ • 914 Chestnut street. EVENINO- BULLETIN. Thursday; Hay 27, 1569. CUBAN AFFAIRS IN THE SPANISH COWES With' characteristic dilatoriness, the Spanish Cortes has but just now begun to discuss the subject of the Cuban rebellion, its causes and results. Yesterday the clauses in the Consti tution referring to the colonies came up for d - bate, and then, almost for the first time, the important. movement in Cuba was reviewed by the representatives of the people. The discus sion was begun by Senor Castelar, the author of that fiery and eloquent appeal for religious liberty which, a few weeks ago, excited the a& miration of the liberal men throughout the world, and placed the speaker in the very front of the patriots who are striving to win from the Spanish revolution pttrehberty for - the Spanish people. Senor Castelar's remarks, yesterday, were characterized by strong common . sense, and a keen appreciation of the true situation. He charged the trouble in Cuba upon the Members of the Provisional Government., whoselaggard-policy denied to the dependency the blessings conferred upon the mother coun try by the revolution. This, as American journals have contended from the beginning., Was the sole,, powerful provocation of the Cuban outbreak. Long after the Spanish peo ple had been blessed with freedom of speech of religion., of the press, the right of public meeting, and universal sulliage, Captain Gen enfit.Lersunth continued to rule the Cuban peo ple with an iron hand, enforcing the cruel and _f"-irm.ciotts laws dictated to him by the despotic Istb-- . ...11a. No word of sympathy for the revolu -Iz-1-fr.:was permitted in Cuba; every manifestation eftx . .l at Ile prospect of coining freedom was s repressed . ; res - pet .. .t for the dethroned e....r.ifecAred as rigorously as if she still the ,siseprre; the press was muzzled; the t* . r-PITL- suss Ralf to censorship. and the nalik:v4—e 37 . 14, nvo - Ltzl , to e medium id private letters, kainliEr4o 4 211.1naT5 friar 2air l YNA - 27.1 of the zvvolu thn... CUM. -was. ran is a thrall as CP:11- Tite.l+2., gailing.., as. vas attAd oL spanii - 4) rale. Mit, Cubans knew -w-er.• mid frbe.. and 1:hz:. thetles-otv. - Lnl svhidi grottud theral the slaudov .Lvtlepartee] 4:v.till6rity. What eoulel (15--what .could. any brave pe , :t:i3e 4.1.0. 43131 YeEiolve to follow the 4- , ,22.11 , ,.i1e c,f the -:ipa7iiar.:k theartstilvts. unjust and iviched zoverllne- , This was their only resource, traless they wished the world to believe that they -wf.- , re T r l rcr i , rf o r ; o f liberty; and IR-tea:use thf-y chose the , N , -.1:1,tr . an ,4 'pottier(..,l..n.trse ctlxevolutioh. refus.l2l-. .eow-aril; subiriission, at the first blow they 11 . 011 /IY , SVlE pally of liberal and just men everywhere. approved their conduct, for the reason tha we congratulated Spain when her revolution was accomplished. ." T,he . same feeling that aetualed us in the 'case of the latter, moved us to give to Cuba earnest wishes for success. In replying to Senor Castelar,yesterday,Mar-. ahal Serrano endeavored to excuse the action of the Provisional government 1)3/declaring that General Duke did grant the reguired liberties when'. he. entered upon the government of Cuba, but that the Cubans were blinded by. party spirit 4 and would not accept the gift, Ser rano.ileclared,also„that the rebellion was nearly .2.1. end, and that, upon the restoration of Spiirrith authority, the government would sim priist:the slave trade and slavery. Either Mar'- filial Serrano is very culpably ignerantorir_he Itidstitizet the case wilfully. The rebellion in tuba 1.44 been hi active existence for months Were General Duke arrived in the island. • Wiwi) Ike did ci.mrie, he did not offer complote "Marty to ale -people. Ile ~proclaimed co y_ fria -- tiR;Ss the 3t, meking. There was no lberty of no right of suffrage, no 06adonauf .404,f,tvac tvp.rePtstation 1 aE o,„jer y =rid XID re -114* - ion of We governifiont wausta 4o l9 prir-„die 3euers and, jkleg - riuni. ifflPTl few irkiel* 1110.,0 litnitokl ttttiAt*:l4l: VLte sewed, a 4 the old despot- ism was.revived. o rs. n It • L actiVelbrbe.taday, but Made more terrible by the daily outrages committed by a lawlesSand ungovernable soldiery. It is a despotisM , con- . trolled by a ':Weak and vacillating man. Against this; the Cubans are tiOiting bravely, and . with' every **et of success. Marshal Serrano's declaration bf the failure of the move ment has no .fotindation • but in his imagina tion; and his promise to abolish slavery will win him no friends, for 'the Cubans consummated that most righteous act while Spain timidly dis cussed its policy. 'lt would be better for Spain if such men as Serrano informed them selves more correctly of. the true condition of affairs' at home and in the 'dependencies. Such gross ignorance as he exhibited in the Cortes yesterday is not creditable to him, and it augurs ill for his conduct of the grave duties entrusted to him. TRAINING OF 'IIIiLE IMBECILE. It is only within a very few years - that any success has been achieved in the develop meat oflntellect in the idiotic Aid imbecile. For ages this species of human infirmity, was regarded as incurable,and the poor utifortuhate,s whom Nature had left without the means of self-guidance and protection, lived and died, for the most part, the victims of Poverty and cruel neglect. We live in a better age, when Science and Charity go hand in hand , the fOrmer encour aging, instructing and helping the latter in the Divine work with a skill which . seems limit less; until there is scarcely a form of human malady which is not brought within the range of possibility of cure or, at least, of ameliora-. tion. Amopg the numerous institutions devoted to the great work of Charity, there are few whose field is so difficult, or whose. Work Is So neces sary, aethe PennsylVania Training .Schoorfor Feqble-Minded Children. • „Whoever has any knowledge of the difficulties of the ordinary care and training of children knows the inces sant demamlthat there is for patient, judicious, hopeful de - ion to the work, even under the stiniulus of Mc abuntiant harvest of satisfaction which such a field produces. But there is something heroic in those who are able and willing to expend all, lids labor and devotion upon the care and training of children who are hopelessly idiotic, or whose mental imbecility is such as can only be overcome by an amount of per Severing, patient ingenuity which very few men or women possess, and which is, to the mass Of people., quite inconceivable. The Pennsylvania Training School for Feeble-minded Children has now 'been in opeiation for sixteen years. From its location in Delaware County, its operatiOns are com paratively unknown to the citizens of Philadel phia, and yet it is emphatically a Philadelphia institution. Not only are its officers and managers ahnost wholly Philadelphians, in cluding such well-known citizens as S. Morris Wain, Wistar Morris, Judge Stroud, Alfred L. Elwyn, M. D., Mahlon Dickinson, Edward Browning and others, but much the largest portion of the pupils are the children of Phila delphia parents. In Pennsylvania there are frOm three thou sand to thirty-five hundred idiotic or feeble minded children,. and the experience of the past sixteen years demonstrates that about one sixth of this number may be cured, and so grow up not to burden but to help the com munity, while all them present a pitiful ap peal to the wittier mercies of the people of Pennsylvania which none but a savage could faillo appreciate. his no reflection upon the people of Phila delphia that this work of pure humanity and charity has become gradually burdened and hampered with an oppressive debt. The men who have devoted themselves to it, with so much of the best sort of moral courageand few can realize how, much moral courage is needed to spend one's life in the education of those who have, by nature, no sense .of moral responsibility, and often none of ordinary phy sical decency—and with so much success, have struggled hard to escape the neces sity of appeals for public aid. The masses of this community, always ready to respond to proper demands for aid in-all charitable work, have known little and thought less of an institution which has worked too quietly to be much noticed. When such wants are made known by the few who work to the many wilt) give, they rarely wait long tin. a generous supply, and we are very sure that now that the Pennsylvania Training School asks the people of Philadelphia for $lO,OOO in order to secure the recent conditional State appropriation of $5,000, and so to ' , relieve this admirable charity from the pressure Of debt, we an sure that the appeal will ree.uve a