Daily evening bulletin. (Philadelphia, Pa.) 1856-1870, March 05, 1870, Image 2

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    RELIGIOUS INTELLIGENCE.
'Acid and Genera
Tun Churchman's Year Book Contains the
zanies alit Episcopal bishops and 2,641 cler-
omen.
Tun ladies' movement to' pair the $40,000
debt of the Metropolitan Methodist Church,
Washingtoti City, has resulted already in the
icceipt of 110,000.
13781f0r PetkiitE*;u4" will' 'officiate to-morrow
alerting at St. Michael's Protestant Episco
pal,Chttreh,!GerroardoWn, and in the even
mg at St. Jude's Church.
Taw Monday afternoon union prayer meet
ing will be held on Monday afternoon next,
at 4 o'clock, at the Church of the Adient,Old
York road, above Buttonwood street..
Tun' new Baptist Church edifice at Broad
and Spruce streets will be 'completed in a, few
weeks. In the meantime it will be opened for
the use of the Sunday schools froM to-morrow.
'Thu Rev. George ll:Kirkland; of the Di
vinity School, West Philadelphia,has become
aseistatt minister in St. Andrew's • Protestant
Episcopal Church, and has entered upon his
dirties:
BOTH the Baptist and the Presbyterian For
eign Missionary Boards are likely to end the
year with a heavy debt. Both need to receive
ever 8160,000 during the last three months of
their fiscal year to cover expenses.,
,TYIE Rev. A. A. Willits will preach a ser
mon especially to the children of, the Sabbath
school to-morrow afternoon at 3 o'clock, at the
West Arch Street Presbyterian Chard), cor
ner of Eighteenth and Arch streets. Music by
the children. The publicare cordially invited.
Wrung the Baptist Mission Board met fifty
years ago, they reported one mission,one Mis
sionary and one convert, a Burman, When
the Board meets in May next they will report,,
missions, 13; stations and outstations, 1,800 ;
churches, 750; converts,lio,ooo; converts dur
ing, the year, 4,000.
A connusroNzumr says that Washington is
She most slandered city in the world. Instead
of being the modern Sodom, it is the most
quiet anclorderly city in the "Union, and one
in which the Sabbath is better observed, and
the churches better filled than in any other
city on the continent.
THE thirteenth annual report of the Society
for the Increase of the Ministry in the Epis
sepal Church says the great want of the
Church is men—not costly churches,nor lands,
or endowments, nor more or less freedora,not
even more money—but brave, earnest, edu
cated men. Money without men will never
convert a nation.
Tura 'Tract Visitors of the . Second District
of the Philadelphia Tract and Mission Society
will bold their Spring Union Meeting for
Prayer and Reports at be Presbyterian Chnrch,
scorner of Ninth and Wharton streets,on Wed
nesday evening next, 9th inst., at half-past
seven o'clock. Tract for March—" The Seed
that Frank Sowed,'''which is commended for
perusal. •
Tnx Blairsville Presbytery of the Presbyte
rian Church, in this State, declared dancing to
be an amusement which tenda to dissipate re
ligious impressions, and unfits any one for
communion with God; they therefore en
joined upon all the sessions under their care
to use, all proper means to dissuade the young
from the practice, and if they persisted, to ex
elude them from the cximmunion of the church.
BArristis have recently taken place in the
following Baptist, Churches in this city :
Twenty-six at the North Church, Rev. Mr.
Cole; five at the Mariner's Church, Rev. Mr.
FerrYiPastor ; four at the Third Germantown,
Rev. Mr. Lung, pastor; four at the church,
IFFermantown avenue, Rev. L. Hartman, pas
tor; five at Manayunk Church, Rev. Mr. Per
ris, pastor, and two at Chestnut Hill, Rev.
Mr. Cage, pastor. .•
Tim first public meeting of the Branch of
the. Evangelical Alliance for Philadelphia and
parts ad' cent will be held in the First Re
formed Presbyterian Chureh,Rev.,Dr. Wylie,
pastor, Broadetreet, below Spruce, op Mon.
day evening next, at half-past seven o'clock.
Rev. Philip Schaff, D.D., of flew York; Rev.
ilne t tneat Butler, D. D., of the Episcopal Di
yintty. Rev. James I. 1( cCoeth,of Prince
tou.Collegc/,and others, will address the meet
•officers Tun following are the present of the
Methodist Tract. Society : Bishop liforris,Pro
sident ; the ,remaining bishops, with S. A.
Rtirdy, MfD., and Hiram Merritt, :Vice Pre
tddents; D. Wise,Corresponding Secretary; D.
Denham,Jr , Recording Secretary; John Lana
ban 'Treasurer; M. D. C. Crawford, T. Carl
ton,' b. Wise, W. 11. Dikeman, S. J. Good
enough, T. A. Howe, Ira Forego, Jr., S. D.
Brown and. E. G. Andrews, Executive Com
mittee.
Tmt resolution declaring the infallibility ot
ihe Pope, if proposed, will be in the following;
form : ,4 To the Sacred (Ecumenical Council
of the Vatican—The undersigned . Fathers
humbly and earnestly ask the Sacred Synodal
the Vatican to declare in terms precise, and
excluding all doubt, that the authority of the
Roman Pontiff is exempt from error,whenever
it determines in matters of faith *owl morals,
and declares what ought to be believed by all
the faithful,and what ought to be rejected and
condemned."
...TEE venerable Dutch Church, at the corner
of William and Fulton streets, New York, is
soon to disappear.' The land on which it stands
is offered for a twenty-one years' lease, with
the privilege of two subsequent renewals of
equal periods. The estimated value of the,
corner lot is $lOO,OOO, and that of the four re
maining lots 00,000 each. $20,000 a year is
asked for the lease of the whole, the lessee
paying the taxes and assessments. The noon
day rirayer meetings will be held in.the chapel
on the second floor of the new building ad
joining, if the removal takes place.
Tnx Tract Visitors of the Philadelphia Tract
and Mission Society will hold their Spring
!WOE Meetings for March at the following
churches:
March 9, Wednesday evening, at 71 o'clock,
at the. Presbyterian Church, corner of Ninth
and Wharton streets, in the Second District,
south of Market and east of Broad.
March 16, Wednesday eveuing,at 71 o'clock,
at the Presbyterian Church,corner Eighteenth
and Christian streets, in the Third District,
west of Broad to the Schuylkill. •
March 28, Friday evening, at 71 o'clock, at
the Presbyterian Church, Thirty-ninth street
and Powelton avenue,
in the Fourth District,
west of the Schuylkill.
A striTniu of the Presbyterian Board of
Publication was held yesterday afternoon at
their rooms on Arch street. above Ninth. The
report shows that the number - of candidates
for the ministry - during - -the eleven months
was 84; whole number during this time in the
theological course, 108: whole number in col;
legiate course, 119; in academical course, 107;
total candidates on the roll at last report, 334',
entire number of candidates for the ministry
received from the beginning, in the year 1819,
3,606. Of the, above 334, twenty have corn.plated their theological staidies at the semina
ries of the church. The total receipts from all
sources, for eleven months, $38,423,10. For
the same portion of the previous year the re
ieeipts were $38.378 38; increase, $44 72. The
officers of the Board are as follows : Presi
dent—Charles Hodge, D. D., I.L. D. Vice
Presidents—George Sharswood, LL.D., E. It.
Beadle, D.D., H. D. Gregory, H. L. Hodge,
M. D., Morris Patterson. Corresponding Sec
retary—Wm. Speer, D. D. Treasurer and Re
cording Secretary—Wm. Main. - Auditors—
Wilfred Hall, Morris Patterson. •
A MEP:TING ot ladies connected with the
Methodist Episcopal Churches of this city
was. held on Thursday afternoon at the Book
Arch street, above Tenth, to organize
a branch of the Women's Foreign Missionary
Society of the Methodist Episcopal Church.
Mrs. J. T. Grace!, defined the object of the
contemplated organizatton, and stated that
the field had been opened in India for the
spread of the Gospel by the Society through
its missionaries. Having been in the field,she
; vas persuaded, from personal knowledge,that
single ladies are particularly fated for this
wor To tarry out this object the ladies of
the, nation were exicected to take boi,
the matter and organize themselves into
societies. It is not intended that this Society
• ?ball ..interfero mivith the collections in the
churelirs for miSsionary purposes. as the con-
,trihutlans toward the organization will be
ma d e by iedivklual appeals. The operations
tbeflociety will be confined to the States of
Pennsylvania, Maryland and Delaware. About
to,tx,o have already been secured for this oh-
, THE DAILY Ey ENING BULLETIN -PHILADELPHIA S rruRDAY. 34 ARC 11 E SHEET.,
jottv Abe, ladles' Societiee in the • different
churches ,; 'Mrs. Grate.y then gave inatances
of convel°eio among, the women iw
Similar societies now exist in NeW;lCorli, Bos
ton and Chicago. The constitution of the nets ,
Society was then read and adopted,atter which
a committee of five, ladies Was •Uppointed, to
nominate permanent officers, who'r_enorted
the following: President—Mrs. .T. T. ()Tracey.
Vico Presidents—Mrs. J. Keen, Mrs. C. Scott,
Mrs. Wilson, Wilmington, Del.; Mrs. G. D.
Carrow.,Mrs. D. Taylor, Mrs. Kier, .Pitts
burgh; Mrs. E. Barry, MN. Dr. N ewman,Mrs.
Hammett, Mrs. T. W. Price. Managers—Mrs.
Allison, Mrs. Dr. Wood, Mrs, Whittalter,Mrs.
Wm. Brown Mrs. J. Maguire,Mrs, J. Hunter, B
Mrs. M. A. ay*ard," ivlrs. A. Winchester,
Mrs. J. L. Long, Mrs. Woodford,'Mrs. S. Mel
len Mrs. T. Hare Mrs. W. 11. Brisbane, Mrs.-
I). ' N. Sinn, Mrs. 'Clark. Mrs. I.J. H. Walker,,
Mrs. Ronne, Mrs. H. C. core. Treasurer—
Mrs
M .-A. W. Rand. Correspondig , Seretary
Treasurer
- Mary Cin
ummgs. Record n ing Sec c retary
—Mrs. A. Townsend.
CITY BULLETIN.
-The. Grand Jury empanelled for the Feb.
ruary term of the Court, of Oyer and Terminer
and Quarter Sessions of the City and County
of Philadelphia made the following present
ment to Judge Ludlow yesterday :
The Grand Inquest of the -Commonwealth
of Pennsylvania, inquiring for the city and
coubty of Philadelphia for February sessions,
IS7O, respectfully present, that they have dis
charged all the business brolight before. them
,4 without envy, hatred, or malice, and without
fear, favor, or affection." They have acted
upon 302 bills, or which 232 were returned
as „ true hills, and 130 have teen
Ignored. The Grand Jury visited , the County
Prison, Almshouse, Eastern Penitentiary,
House of Refuge, Northern Home'for Friend
less Children, Asseciated Institute for Soldiers'
and Sailors' Orphans,and Girard College. • 'At
the County Prison everything seemed to be as
cleanly and in as good order as The 'crowded
condition of the bailding'wonld allow. Many
of the cells that were intended for but one per-
son contained three, and in some cases four.
Of course the officers of the institution are not
to blame for this, but the necessity is so press-,
ing for a. .House of Correction .that we
most earnestly urge the earliest atten-.
tion possible thereto, and especially so ,
in consideralien of the late action of Governor
Geary,' who""declines (for a certain period
longer) to interferdin our municipalaffairs; but
the necessity is of so vital a character, and the
neglect of so imperative a duty must affect the
morals of our people in a great degree, that we
recommend the necessity of •speedy 'lnd con
clusive action, which we earnestly hope the
matter may receive.. The Almshouse was
found to contain its regular. (late) quota, about
B,EOO inmates, a number of whom were large,
able-bodied men, and should have a salutary
lesson taught them for not striving to earn an
honest livelihood whilst there Is such a uni
versal demand for steady help without. The eon
dition of the institution throughout was very
creditable 'when considering its overcrowded
character, and the sanitary requirements un
questionably call for increased accommodations
for those justly entitled to our consideration
and sympathy. The number of patients about
the same as per late report. Bath and wash
rooms, bakery, &c., were found to be complete
and satisfactory, and it affords pleasure to
testify to the wholesome bread prepared here
in such large quantities, of which we partook.
So far as we could determine, our opinion is
that the "management" is able and' efficient:
The Girard. College reflected great credit upon
the accomplished president and skilled corps of
assistants, performing duties so varied and yet so
well that it was a pleasure to contemplate them,
which we would fain have lingered hours over.
Everything here bespeaks a work • progressing
which must go far toward ennobling our whole
people through this grand benefaction. The
Ilouse of Refuge, was. unexceptionable for.
order, discipline, and cleanliness. We cannot
but congratulate the city upon so valuable an
adjunct to the proper control and education of
the young, and would heartily recommend the
establishing of a number of such schools for
teaching trades to youth, where parents could
send children of both sexes without incurring
the opprobrium which attaches itself more or
less to those having a residence here. The
present institutionirriglittten - be — reserved for
those only who 'were'of 'a' refractory character.
The Northern Romeridtheassociate institute
were both found to begin the best 'possible con
dition, and we can scarcely find words sufficient
to express our admiration and appreciation for
labors so arduous as are apparent here where
so many young are educated and controlled by
so small a staff of officers, but thorough disci
pline vindicates itself. n conclusion. we de
sire again to call attention to the " concert
saloon", and unlicensed "rum-shop" nuisances,
and trust that every effort may be made upon
the part of the authorities to abate such dia.
culties. Many of the cases before us the
present month have been caused by the use,
or rather abuse, of liquor, and we think
no greater saving to the community in
money and morals could possibly be
conserved than by arranging some
well considered and stringent license system.
The Grand Jury thank the officers of the court
for attention and courtesy, thereby facilitating
our labors, and we respectfully submit this the
report of your Grand Jury for the term ending
It 4,1870. S. T. Anon, Foreman.
TIIMMORE EAIIP, Secretary.
Judge Ludlow thanked the Grand Jury for
the efficient manner in which they had per
formed their duties, and said how much be re
gretted that the time had arrived when they
must retire again to their , positions as private
citizens. Ile referred to the fact that the Grand
Jury bad visited all the public institutions in
the county, which they reported as being in a
healthy condition, and said it was a satisfaction
to know that this was the case, although they
could not say anything which was particularly
new.
—The U. S. frigate Congress went into com
mission DIU° Philadelphia Navy Yard yester
day. The following is a list of her officers :
Captain, N. B. Harrison; Lieutenant Coim.
minders, R. C. McCook and Stephen A. Mc-
Carty ; Lieutenants, Charles 11. Stockton, Eu
gene B. Thomas ; Chief Engineer, J. W.
Thompson Jr. ; Paymaster, Casper Schenck ;
Surgeon, William M. King; Marine Officer,
Captain C. L. Sherman; Assistant Surgeon,
John J. Liggett; First Assistant Engineer, A.
Fisher; Master, William Watts; Second
Lieutenant of Marines, E. T. Bradford; En- '
signs, J. V. Bleeker, Adolphus Mari,; Second
Assistant Engineer, W. D. Smith; Mate 3,
David Tudor, George P. Gifford, Edinciud
Larys ; Boatswain, William G. Tompkins;
Gunner, Samuel D. Hines; Carpenter,Leonard
Hanscom; Sailmaker, John 4. Stanford; Pay
master's Clerk, W. 11. Alexander.
—The opponents of independence Square
as a site for the new public buildings held an
adjourned meeting last evening. Daniel B. Be it
ler presided. Mr. Philip Lowry,chairman of the
Committee on Petition, reported that 7,432
names had been sent to Thrrisburg since the
last meeting, and that 2,000 more were ready
for transmission. This would make a total of.
over 20,000 names sent. Mr. Win. 11. Jones,
chairman of the Finance Committee, reported
amount on hand $4 ; • bills outstanding over
$lOO. Mr. Poulterer, chairman of the Com
mittee on Legislative bills, reported • that no
bill had yet been passed by the Legislature.•
After considerable talk by C. A. Walborn,.
Win. F. Carlin, Mr. Gumpert and Dr.Gazzam,
the meeting adjourned.
—J. Kanner and Robert Randolph were ar-.
retied fait evening on the einigran train from
New Y.oik, on the charge of robbing Jacob
' Eisenbach, at No. 24 Forsyth .street, New
York, of a lot of suspenders.
num called at the residence of Mrs.
No. 4(111 South streetip4thout. flenti ye 4-,
teirday,' and asked if she *4B toll
she was not, whereupon he,lattipast :the e'er
yant girl, up stalls, and, seiOrig khree Witches,
Made off with them. One Idas
lever, another a, silver lepiner‘Kiff\the third a
gilt hunting watch. A gold- chain and hook
and a gold seal were also carried Off.
—Francis Conner, a youth, was arrested and
taken before -Aid. Dallas yesterday-on a charge
of setting tire to the stable of John Grugan,
Christian street, above Twentieth; Oti: Thurs
day night. He admitted setting the place on
fire,and added Olathe wanted to see some fun.
He WitSlierafer , a further hearing. Ile is sup
.
posed to be weak-mitined.
• --Willrani Francrs Judson, a member of the
Philadelphia bar;,died,'. yesterday , morning, of
congestion 'of the dung% at his residence, , No.
2181: Walnut street, aged .3'l„ .11. e ,studied latv,
=der Henry J. Williams,and was 04Mitted to
tbo,bar about /844 r lie. was a son-in-law •of
Qyrus W. ,Field.
' --The Grand Jury. ; yesterday ,fpund a true
bill against Ilichard.Fieken for an assault and
battery with intent, to kill Arthur Curran. The
little boy is out of danger, and is • slowly pro
gressing towards cot - widest:cue.
—Patrick St. Clair, residing at. No. 255
Acorn alley, was badly burned last evening by
the upsetting of a coal oil "lamp. 'llls hands
and arms were burned in a shocking' manner.
.
—Patrick Collin, • aged 55 years, residing at
Twenty-seventh and Ellsworth streets. was
run over by, a train of ears on the Philadelphia,
Wilmington and Baltimore 'Railroad. His leg
was fractured, necessitating . amphtation.
—Mr. Geo. Get; late City .Controller, Centroller, has
been presented with a handsome gold watch
by the gentlemen who were in ids employ as
clerks.
—J. F. Knorr, of New Haven, was arrested
in this eity yesterday on 'the charge of hiving
embezzled a number of watches from' a man
named Hedges, doing business in New Haven.
—The payment of pensions. was commenced
yesterday. About V,OOO were disbursed. The
payments will continue daily in alphabetical
order. • • ,
INE W. JEBBEY 11!kTrER , .
A BOLD Vit.l.An.r..=-Charles Ward, a vil
lainotis-looking individual plying, the voca
tionof a burglar, wis before Mayor Cox, yes
terday, charged with having entered the:house
of Sarah Robbins, „109 North: Sixth
street, with.burglarious intentions.: lot of
burglars! keys and instruments was found in
his possession, and he was committed to an
swer at, court
Hourtini.E.--Antbony Barnard, , colored
man residing at Snow Hill, Centre township,
Camden county, was arrested on Thursday
and committed to the Camden jail, on the
charge of having committed robbery, murder
and arson. On Tuesday . morning last, the
residence of a Miss Catherine Murphy, at that
place, was destroyed , by fire, and she perished
in the flames. .Suspicions were subsequently
fastened upon Baniard, and he was arrested.
It is said that the evidence is quite strong'
against him, and the excitement is intense.
TOE DESTITUTE.—The present ,cold snap
tells hard again on the destitute of 'Camden.
Hopes had been entertained , by them that the
severity of the winter , bad passed, and the' va
rious philanthropic 'societies bad seine what re
laxed their efforts in supplying many of their
pressing wants. Now, however, they are busy
again, and are seeking out the most deserving
and those who most stand in need of assist
ance. The committees of City Connell, are
likewise energetic in distributing the appropri
ations directed by that body.
APT QUOTATIONS AND WITTICISM®.
A writer in an English magazine says :
•
"Of that power for classical quotation of
which Dr. Johnson spoke, several witty exam
ples are told of Dr. Parr. When, in• taking
- down Borne books from his shelves, a critical
work of Lambert Bos fell upon a volume of.
Hume ' be promptly said, Pronisambit humi
bop.' When some one opened the window of
a room, while be was, suffering from a cold, he
said, That.draug* ot) air is too muck; at, pre
sent, I am only "par lenibus Iyhen
a lady, at a musical party, in passing S a
, table on whiCh lay a valuable Cremona violin,
accidentally swept it on the floor with her man
tua, Parr quoted Virgil's line :
," liantua, sae minerfe, nimium vicina Cre
mon.% !
(Ec. ix. 28). When asked for an address to a
.tea-chest, he promptly gave the words,
doces'-- , Thou tea-chest; though this joke is
also .attributed t 6 his friend, Loid Erskine. A
caricature of Dr. Parr was published, repre
senting him as preaching and smoking, 'and
using the quotatash, Ex Imo dare tucern.'
When he tried for the head-mastership of Har
row, and was opposed by one who made a
long, swelling speech, a Harrow boy wittily
quoted the line :
"Si te'niperio, non par erie
" A Mr. Cole, of Cambridge, left money to
erect Bt. Clement's Chnre,h, Cambridge, on
condition that his name was plainly inscribed
on the exterior of the lower. It was dotal
thus : Cole : Deum,' 1. e., W orship God.'
Pere Foster asked Dr. John Taylor, editor of
Demosthenes, why he was going to sell his
horse. The Doctor replied that he could not
aflbrd to keep a horse in such hard times.
Then,' said Foster, 4 you should keep a mare.
As Horace says
H gAquam memento rebus in arduis,
Bervare.'
44 When Wakefield published an edition of
the Hecuba,' Porson, who had done the same,
said:
"'What's Hecuba to him, or he to Hecuba,
That be should publish her?
"And, when 'Hermann accused Porson of
being more dictatorial than explanatory in the
metrical decisiOns contained in hiS notes to
Hecuba, Porkin replied to him with an epi- ,
gram in Greek, accompanied with a transla
tion in English,about ' Hermann the German,' ,
which is equal to his other epigram on Pro
fessors Brunck and Ruhuken. When Her
mann's pupil, Passow, published his lexicon,
he Is reported to have happily quoted Horace
(Car. lib. lit. xxx) in reference to Brasse's'
'lexicon. ' Exegt montonentum cure petennius.'
Another ode of Horace was quoted by Bishop
Heber, when, after dinner, the removal ' the
white cloth revealed a green balm covering to'
the table: 'DUN/fere nit es,recieurit ;Pun grant- '
flux compis" (Car. lib. rv. - vii. 1). Bishop He
ber also wittily quoted Horace's ' Ex.somnisr
stypei Enias " (Car. lib. in. xxv. 9), when the
fat gentleman, who was known by a peculiar
nickname, awoke and asked in astonishment
what they were all laughing at? A Vice
Chancellor, who was unjustly hissed by the
under-graduates in the Senate House at Cam-'
bridge, bowed to them politely and said, 'Lau
datur ab his.' When Sir Robert WalpOle was
talking to his friends of retiring from the cares
of office, he quoted Horace (Ep. lib. XI, -rt,
214) :
" Lusisti satis, edisti satis, atque bibisti :
Tempus abire tibl est.
when a friend observed : 'Yes, my Horace
says so; but I should have thought that in
your Horace it was bribe-isti.'
.
"When Lord 'Sandwich (who was known by
the sobrigtet, of 4 Jemmy Twitcher,' and is said
to' have been the inventor of the sandwich]
was , First Lord of the Admiralty, and was'
entertained by the corporation of Worcester, al
servant let fail a neat's tongue, and, when the
Mayor apologiied Nit the' mishap, Lord wad.,
with Said, Never mind, it WO a
/intio? ,iyl>lctl{rai9ed laugh a 1 a 7
who 'vas present;- tepasnred r t itsayin in is
memory, andAtiotedOlten:; is *ant thraW - 1
down a jeg :of rriutton';': an* wq*greatly 814
prised tit,!hiti .quot4tion,
Paley took 111sdoctor's, decree 1Z e , t00.3.
a false quantity in profttgus, pronoun o cing
profiegus, upon which one of ills tearers,
quoting from the opening of the Aneld, said :
Italiam,. foto prof'tigusy Lavivaaue
Litor--
adding, t ,Errat Virgi/IUS, forte proftegus erat.
When a classical lecturer OF Trinity College,
Cambridge, was laughed at for pronounetng
ninlirtnu with *long accent on the first syl4b,le,,
Porsork defended' Baying' that Intace•
had declared to. Claudius ...Nero that there was
only one persen who ;Tony understood the
word--(Ep: lib. 1) ; r i s. •
Claudi, itimtrutn itttelhgit atriun •
Porson's' powers of apt quotation were
unusually great, and this, •together with his
prodigious and exact memory, is shown in an
anecdote ,(mucli Jon long, to, lie . berg quoted),'
'commencing an apology 'for
borrowedAoes, ho and. alesped -friend quoted
and capped; in quick - snceeSaiiin,, felicitous
passaces froniHoracb; Theocri
tus, 4Escbylus, Bion, Homer and other classical
authors.
, Phenomenon it n Maine.
,A correspondent, of the , LeWristoli' (Maine)
Jennie/ Dar,a singular, phenomenon occurred
last week'in the field of "liint `Ginild; in
Lisbon. A loud noise *as heard in, , the vicin
ity, on the same day the shock of earthquake
was experienced at Richmond. People rushed
out of doors and looked around to discover the
cause of , the poise, but nothing,unuenal pas
be seen. Since then, it 4.lB,been round that a
large mass of earth had“been lifted from its
place, in Mr. Gould's field, by some unknown
power. The earth removed is nearly in the
form of a parallellogram on the surface. It is
about twelvelect long and four feet wide - , and
is fully a foot thick, or to, the e depth of the
frost. It is' as regular,'and the 'c6rtierit as well
defined, as though cut by a saw, and was
thrown out apparently by some tremendous
power exerted ! by , all parts alike, ; as it was de
posited ?right, side up ",halt ' its width from the
place it : formerly, occupied. The ground on
one side of the hole is puffed up about six
inches, Co the rising land, abont a rod distant.
==l=:3
CITY BOTICES.
NSW ADTYLE YICTUUE, THE
• • '
BERMAN OHEOIIO lot kris,
so lunch admired in Earupe. Anticipating the wishes
or my patrons. I have secured the assistance of Kona.
J. E.: NV olowslii, of Viennei;one of "The first artists in
Europe. For his work ;in Photography, ex Whited at
the Paris Exposition, he was awarded one of the first
prize medals. •Persons wishing the new stele Card Pho
tographs will find toy Gallery less crowded in the worn-
no.
Sittinoo mode of children under seven jean of age
rorn9A.M.to2P.ll
A
No. 40 North Eigikeriee rn t,rttlia
CHANIXO STOKER,
MERCHANT
CONTINENIAL HOTEL
Pantaloon Cutting a Specialty. Perfect fit guaranteed
Prices greatly reduced.
AN INDELIBLE BLEatlmit.—Nothing will re
store the skin of the head to its-original fairness, after it
has been turned of a copper cedar with hair dyes. Yet
none of them will produce the rich natural hair shades
bronclit out by the 131400 f PRALON't YITALIA, OR SAL
VATION eon THE HAUS, a Oeparation clear and transpa
rent, and which does nut Main the akin. Sold by all the
druggists and fancy goods dealers.
AELMBOLD'EI FLUTD EXTRACT DUMB la
pleasant in taste and odor. free from all injurious
properties, and immediate in its action.
WILBOR 13 COD lifvtlß VIL AND
-The great popularity of this safe and effiticions pre
paration is alone attributable to its intrinsic worth. In
the cure of Coughs:Colds, Asthmas Beonchitis,Whoop
ing Cough) hcrofnlons -limners. and all VOnsuteptive
gr e rnar P, it i has ne t super o icir, d il . equal. i l Let nb one nt;
fbnce hand ea fr i t r tic i r will s alleviate alli i 'co w mpla en e i n nts ci e rthe
Chest, Lungs or Throat. Dlanufacturetloaly by A. B.
Chemist, No. 164) Courtstreeti Boston. Bold
Lynn druggists.
CHOCOLATE CARAMEL.—Very fine.
S. W. cotter TZTlMEallißil'ille,ltTePt-'4ii,
---
STztAwsEußtEs—Sweet, rosy, lusc:ious, at
A. L, Virouttor's' B. It. corner of Ninth and Chestnut'
etreets. Do Ant fail to ',hit bingetablishment, and see
the tempting display of hot- fruit. ;
. . _
lioneklir,EpEne can get a complete outfit
or the kittben nt ' ' •
/CARRON
Thick etreet, below Walont.
MANHOOD AND Younirer. VIGOR are re
gained by ri L II t NITRACT
„
33111,111301.01 EXTRACT BUcE D glVeg health,
aktd vigor to the frame and bloom to the pallid cheek:
Debility is accompanied by many alarming, symptoms,
and if no treatment is submitted to, ceneumption,
unity, or epileptic Atacama. • --
ENGLISH HOT CROBB BUNS—fresh, daily—at
Morsele, OW Arch and 238 South Eleventh street.
FOR NON-RETENTION OR , INCONTINENCE
of Urine, irritation, inflammation, or ulceration of the
bladder, or kidneys, diseases of • the prostate glandsi
atone in the bladder, calculus, gravel or brick-d net de
posits, and all diseases of the bladder, kidneys and
dropsical swellings,
ÜBE HELICSOLD'S IirLIIID EXTRACT 1317C1111.
CHOCOLATE CARAMEL.—Partictilarly nice
Manufactured by
STEPHEN F. WHITMAN,
• S. W. corner Twelfth and Market streets.
SHATTERED CONSTITUTIONS RESTORED BY
Him)!MHz's EXTIIACT BUMS,
ENFEEBLED AND DELICATE CONSTITII.
Bong, of both sexes, nee JIELMBOLD ' S .ExTgacT B
It will give brisk and energetio feelings, and enable you
to isleip well.
TAKE TTO . MORE UNPLICAAAFT AND UNSAFE
remedies for nnpleasant and dangerous diseases. U.
lIELMBOLD'S EXTRACT EUCIID AND IMPROVED BOSE
WAt3ll. •
To QUIET, soothe and relieve the pain of
children teething, nee BOWlill i e iTITANT CORDIAL.' sold
by all druggists. .
-
THE. GLORY Or MAN IS STRENGTIT.--There
fore the neryona and debilitated should Immediately We
itRLII4OI.IIII EXTRACT BITIIO.
Cloarts, Bunions, Inverted Nails, skillfully
treated by Dr. J. Davidson. 'No. 916 Chestnut utroet.
charges moderate. ,• • • • •
•
'ELmBoLp xiXTRAOT • 81101111 and.. In t
earwax , Boss 7lNA.ert cares secret and delicate dieorders
In ail their stages, at little expense, little or no chatge
In diet, no 1 ucotivenience and no expobure. It is pleas
ant in taste and odor, immediate in itsaction, and tree
from all injurious properties. - •
OAKFORD'S stock of fine Hats and Caps are
Belling lower than any in the city. ' •
Go and get a bargain.
Stores, under the Continental.
-
REAMER), BLINDNESS AND CATARRH
treated with the utmost success, by J. I4A.tes, bt.' D.,
and Professor of Diseases of the Eye and Bar f his , Men
aitY),ill the Medical COll6Re al Pennsylvania, 12 years ex
perienre. No. POSArch street. Testimonials cad be seen
at his office. The medical ,faculty are invited to ac
orogen) their patients, as he has no. secrets In his pram•
lice. Artificial eyes inserted without pain. No charge
for, examination,
• BELMEOLD'S CONCENTHAVID EXTRACT
Bucntr
Is the Great "hurdle.
nELAIDOLD'II CONCE:STRATED Earaac2
RILL/.
Is the Vita Blood Pur(fier.
Both Oro yoreparkd according to rules of Pharmacy
and Chemistry, and are the most active that can he
LAPIEW HATA. MIMES :FIATS.--The MOSit
exquisite styles. Selling stt prices lower than elsewhere.
OAKPORD's,
Under the tiontinental.
SIInGICIAL 4.245T/LUIMENTB and draggiane Inin•
aivowta BRE
Roo narh OT th ! H dr r
ug.
— SAVING'IeUM),
E WEST.IIIII4 8 4 0,ArrN6 7 VIIND B0(3f
-,
TETY.--oflfce 8 'W: sorter WALNUT and TENTII
Streets. Incorporated rebruarrt2. P47_ Open for
posits and Payments Daily, between the hours of 9 A'. M.'
and ; 2 P. and , on. Monday. and Thursday afternoons
from 310 7 o'cloc4. Interest IS per cent, per'anntn from
Jantiary ' '
President—JOHN WIEGANR.
MANAGERS:
Charles linmphroys, • John 0, Cresson, •
samuel .V. td arrick,, John. (I. Davlac •
William W. Keen " Jodeph B. Towntiend,
Peter Williamson ;. • E. E. J. Lewis, Is l .
It, Rundle i3mlth, Jacob P. Jones,
A.'T. Lewis, Win, H. Tilghman,'
Robert Toland, Charles Wheeler,
lease F. Raker, himmlers
John Ashburst; a John E. Mae,
Fredft. Fraley, Ifettry.l., GAP,
P. B. Cumming, Winsor,.
• Joe. tt..Lowle,l , ijohn.Welsh. .
WM2I3. 000E101. J . Treasurer.
11Kr.f3PECIALIMPOS1TO TUCIUNIVEID.' ,
AL
4 4
, 1 1
A ;:f.litST 'ST mEoultrkyl,
•..,
WE Off EkrooptLE./. , :4
11 4 1 q. 43'43
LOUISVILLE - AND NASIIVILLE
RAILROAD
FIRST MORTGAGE SEVENS at 871-2
And Accrued interest from Oct. I.
Length •
.
of Road
390. Mlles.
TM; ROADIB,OOMPLETED AND, FULLY EQUIP.
.PFD AT, /OVA 6'04; O.F OYRR . •
• , , •
f.
s l oloool '
' LAND RAS PAID 'FRO§ YTO CENT 01171• '
VENOM ON ITS 6TOC FOR TUE PAST kIGHT
The Bonds are Coupons of $l,OOO eaoh,
with right flegistration,
t.. 1 3 2 9 4 !: 00 0 At the Bonds *aye: been sold
'already (ope werfy':, iabing,ss4:ig,floo as a
permanent, investment), ; and we, have bat
l)1;000,000 oriblindiirbleb
vet:deka tufa Iltst-elala security,
DREXEL &
No. S 4 Soiith. Third Street. •
fe OM 2. • •
7 PER CENT. GOLD BONDS
FREE OF GOVERNMENT TAX,
11iiiiingto,n, Cedar Rapids and Min
, • nesola Railroad Company,
't' fret Mortgage •and Convertible.
LIBERAL SINKING FUND.
Interest Payable In Coin at New York or
London. Principal Payable in
Coln in Fifty Years.
TAILOn,
3. EDGAR THOMPf3OIT, President Penn
sylvania Railroad Company.
CHAS. L. FROST, President Toledo, Peoria
and Warsaw Railroad Company.
These Bonds, at present price of gold, yield over 9 per
cent. Interest, and air en investment they are fully
secure as 11. 8. o-204, which now only pay eV per cent.
In Clal eney
They are only betted upon oath section of the Road as
ste fast as the same is completed and to successful opera
tion. Oyer two and a half raiWons of dollars hare been
expetded on the Road. Eighty-three miles are about
completed and equipped. and sdready show largo earn
ings ; and the remainder of the line is rapidly progress
lug toward completion.
'The State of lowa, through which this road runs, Is
' one of the richest agricultural sections In America. Its
large popidatioa, extending with surprising rapidity,
and Its Immense yield of grain, port, wool and other ag
ricultural produits, create a pressing demand for the
construction of this road, which affords the beat possible
guarantee for the bondholders, overlay as the line
runs through the wealthiest and most thickly populated
section of the State.
The r oad also runs through the rich and growing State
ref Minnuota. Reference to the map of the United
States will show that it traverse:l the most enterprising
and growing portion of the West, and forms one of the
great' - trunk lines in direct communication with New
York, Chicago and St. Louis, being to the latter 'city
ninety miles nearer from Northern lowa and all por
tions of the State of Minnesota than by any other road
now built or projected, and also the nearest route from
Central and 13iiiiifiein lows:
The road is opened for local traffic as rapidly as con
structed, and thus RECEIVES EARNINGS ON ITS
COMPLETED SECTIONS GREATLY IN EXCESS
OF THE A.MOUYT NEEDED TO PAY THE IN
TEREST UPON ITS BONDS BEFORE THE
ROAD IS FINISHED. The buyer of th'ese Bonds is
therefore guaranteed, by a great business already its exist•
once on the route of the road, as well as /,V . nOlO current
•
earnings, and htie not to fish any a/ the contingencies
which always attend the opening of roads in a new and
'unintied country.
A limited quantity only of these Bonds
Aftrr a thorough investigatiOn of the above enter
prise, vve recommend these Ronde as ifirst-cleAs inveet•
ment,affording abaolute safety, and paying an untunrally
liberal rate of hiterept. All marketable securities at
their full price, free ot commission and express charges,
received in payment. Pamphlets and maps furnished
on application.
HENRY CLEWS & CO.,
No. 32 Wall Street,
ox
BOWEN & FOX,
NO. 13 MERCHANTS', EXCHANGE.
r t nahl9rp
J. W. GI.LBOIJG-H & CO.,
13ANIERS,
42 SOUTH THIRD STREET, :
Negotiate Loans, Buy and Sel
Government and other re
liable Securities.
ingl lliw 1196
D. C. VHIRTON & CO,
BOILER'S AND BROILM,
No. 121 S. TRIED STREET
SVOOIC NOM TO
SMITH, RANDQVIIi.4( O O.
Ziary ilejoittrnont 131inIcing' IPtithioti'leliall receive
prompt ottentinw, op tiVrottifore.--Quototions of Stooks";
Goki itbd 'Garortimento'kitlotirottilitroMiTed tYroll oar,
Mende, BAD, Rd. NtkOLP.II 4+l AOWilloW forkt ItT our
PitIVAT3II *LAE. *4l
, t'' •
FINANCt.
AT 95,
ISSUED BY TAB
AND PROTECTED BY A
TRVBTEES.
are now offered at 95.
BANUIEMS,
kiNG HOUSE
112 and 114 Sol THllitl) ST. PHILAD'A
.*; ":
IN ALL GOVERNMENT SECURITIES.
We • receive applica One for olieles of
Life Immune° in the new National Life In
surance Company of the United States. Full
reformation alien' at our
5-20'S AND 1881'S
Bought, Mole and Exchanged on motit
liberal tonne.
GOLD
Bought and Sold at Market Bates,
COUPONS CASHED.
PACIFIC RAILROAD BONDS:
Bought and Sold.
S "T` C T
Bought and Sold on. Commission Only.
Accounts received and' Interest allowed
on daily balances subject,to -
check at sight.
DEMYEN&BRO.
40 South Third St.,
PHILADELPHIA.
sou
FOR NEW YORK.
Via Delaware and Raritan Canal.
EXPRESS STEAMBOAT COMPANY.
The Steam Propellors of the Line will commend
loading on the ath inst.. leaving Daily as Ewald.
THROUGH-IN TWENTY-YOUR 0017E8.
Goods forwarded by all the Lines going out of New
York, North, East or West, free of commission.
Freights received at low rates.
WU. P. CLYDE a CQ., Agents,
12 Booth Delaware Avenue.
JAN. HAND, Amt.
listiVall Street. New York
DUIIJADELPBIA ItICTIMOND AND
NORFOLK • STEAMSHIP LINE.
THROUGH FREIGHT AIR LINE TO THE sou=
AND WEST.
INCREASED FACILITIES AND REDUCED EATER
FOE
STEAMERS LEAVE EVRRY WEDNESDAY and
SATVIDAkat 12 n'ellt, Neon, front VIRST wawa.,
above MAR ET Street. •
RETURNIN LEAVE RICHMOND MONDAYS and
TR UESDAY'S, and NORFOLK TUESDAYS and
SATURDAYS.
sGr No Dills of Lading signed after 12 o'clock on
Sailing Day.
THROUGH RATES to all points In North and South
Car olina via Seaboard Air-Line Railroad, connect at
Porenth, and to Lynchburg, Vs., Tennessee the
West via - Virginia sad Tenntellell Air- Lino mad h
mond and Dayville Railroad.
Frelaht HANDLED BUT ONCE And taken at LOWER
RATES THAN ANY OTHER LINE.
No charge for commission. drayage, or any erricoollor
transfer.
Steamships insure 'at lowest Mei.
Freight received DAILY. ,
State-room accommodations for passengers,
WILLUM P. thal i at 3110,
No. ',South Wharves Nut Vier No. I Nor d
W. P. PORTER Agent atllichinond and 0 ty l ,l 9 Zr
T. P. CROwnr, &CO., Agents Si Norfolk —
PHILADELPHIA AND SOOTHERS
MAIL' STEAMSHIP COMPANY'S REGULAS
LINES F NOM QUEEN STI/FXT.WILA_At.
Tilt. YAZOO will • sail fez' 'NEW ORLEANS, els
'Savona. on Satunda March 3. at 8 A. M.
The 3IES lATA wil r. l
gall tram NEW OEWilakliP. VP"
HAVANA. on
The wiostosi will tail for HAVAIMA# oa
Saturday, March 6. at 8 o clock A. 31.
The TONAWANHA , will sail frets
.6AFANItAII
Shitarday, March 6.
The PIONEER will will for itruattwros o.mi
Tueaday, 'March 8, at 6 A. DI. ,
Through Wilt of lading signed. and passage tickets
mold to all points South end Welt. ,
DILLB of LADINO SIGNED tit - quEsat ET. WHARF.
For freight
W or passage, aply' to • • -
MLIAN L. JAMES, General Agent.
LSO South Third street.
For,' B 013 T 0 N.=-STRAMSTUP LIM!
DIRECT. SAILING FROM RAGE PORT ZVIIIII
. . Wednesday and Saturday. ,
FEOld PINE STREET WHARF. PHILADELP/i/A.
AND LONG WHARF. BOSTON.
I
PEON( PHILADELPHIA • ' 'Tama likerrosl...-
le A.M. 3P.M.
SAXON,Wedneeday,Mar. 2 ARlESLWainesiday,Mar. 2
NORMAN, Saturday, " 6 RableMpßstimrditirr "
•. 5
111F.13,wednesday "' 1/ISAX
t tl it s a Wedn , : 9
, OMAN, Saturday, is MINDER , Bat ts y," is
AXON, Wedneeday " 16 ARIE , Wednesday, " .16
NORMAN, Saturday," MlROMAN,Saturday, " 19
ARIES, Wednesday, " 23 SAXON,Wedneedisy, " •23
ROMAN, Saturday , " 26 NORMAN, Saturday "26
26
SAXON, Wedneeday " 301 ARIES; Wednesday,- "'' 30
These Steszoshlpe Pail punctually. Freight Meted
every day. - ' •
Freight forwarded to all points in New England.
For Freight or Pluelage_fautriorescooenmodadopla
EZNRY INSOR AUG.,apply to
, 338130 rt h Delaware avenue.
FUR NEW YORIc, VIA D.ELAWARE
AND RARITAN C A N
BWIFTHURR TRANBPORTATION COMPANY. n
DISPATCH AND swisriire LINE!},
Leaving daily Id l2alid6P. M.
The steam propellers of this Company will cornimenco
loading on the Bth of March. " •
, Through In twenty-fenr hours. .
Goode forwarded to any Point froe oleo/missions. ,
Freights taken .on 'accommodating tends.
Apply to WM. RAIRD do 00..'Agentsc
mht-tf .• 132 Routh Delaware avenue.
'Fc'' BALTIMORE! DAILY, AT 4
,
o clock, P. M. Baltimore awl Philadaphiaßtotim
host Company Erica:am Ulm. ' • • • . .- .'
The Steamers of thin ,Cotopany arty makitig their
Itegular Trips to Baltimore , via the VIIPIIRpeake awl
Delaware Canal., ono of which leaves the upper Bide of
Chestnut Street ',Mbar( daily,( Sundays, excepted t.. at 4
o clock, r;:m • .„ and arrives in Baltimore early Aoxt
morning.., Freighla of all kinds take:tat the laWeet rates...
428 6p A. GBDV ES, Jr., Agent, N 0.94 S. wharres. .
itCW E.XPREBB LINE TO iiitilailt;
dris,o eorgetown and Washington, A. 0., via Ches.
Ake and DelawaF Canal, with' ctmneetionit 'fit 'Vex*
&Adria from.themo direct route for , bysehburgr , 'ta
to]; Ktloxville, Nes 'Ole, Dalton and the &mamma.
Steamers leave regularly from , the first whiff , abov
Market street, every Daturday.at noon.
__ ~ ,
Freight received deny.- WM. D. clitx,P4,„& O.
Fight
Smith Wharves sr4Pier $ Dorm 'lrr i llarrea ,
RYINED & TYLEII , , Agents at Georgetown, . • -
EL ELTIGIGGE at (10., Agents at Alex:marls. Va
WANTED—A VESSEL .TO
cargo of timber tram qeorgla—full cargo out.
Apply to cocurtAN, RUStigla , &CO:,' 111 Opednut
street. • , .
1:1 (;j:4
El 3 e o A •
NELDE at
R," front Vorthuel,Mo now 0 .'harping!
Hoy whom Ognalguoee plonto attend to
the roctptton of their gocelii, 'WORKMAN 11{ 00. 1 0on-
OD OPP. W alnnt A tro.t della
C - ATITIE3N
CA tr y I 0 1.4.--ALL PURSONS
ta , reby cautioned against harboring or situating
Any of tbe,ort.w , of the 'British• brig'! Estelle," Delay ,
viewer, from Rotterdam, ae no debts of their contract
ing win be Quid by Cantata or Coneigneen. WORKMAN
At et) . CoMnanere - tf
sa . Crl,i•Feßt - N:7";
a r lt 4. 8, FixT — ta - ,Et3 - 7-Airsiiifir • MEB3ILL
ic TRACK ABA , tio.'ne Obeid:nut street, tanggfito
1 ter . , e ail v. r 0, 7 0. etn., Ito., wouid eon the
to ~' , 1' the girlie to lien...large on blegariglort
ii
' .I . A . 44 4. rri ti
lf;l i p e gi'lltrdicv an el t i fi lP' a
ger"ollVllnt46bicioPahalli
'llrig ka , A ent o extending, altering Ind repidrktii g wo ,
*WC' Illtrlt worroXitek* ,, . ,
„ TX1401441',P.11?.. 8 ,1 1 / 1 ”.7...
THE Brittsb iron-clad Monarch sailed from
Annapolis for England yesterday.
Guff. Jonbaw's resignation of the cdhan ,
command is contirrued. Bembetta is his sue-;
: eeesq• • • t
A Canon mosque as been given by'the
P6l+4 tir'the 'Aro:fakir West.,” excom
,
municated by the Pope, for A chunk_
Tim Commissioner of Patents yesterday, de•
Bided in favor of the extension of Owen 1)or-i
sey's reaping patent.
Tnt city of Portland, Me., has commenced'
to pay the interest on its debt' in gold or its
equivalent, under the recent decision of the,
United States' Supreme Court.
A LARGE saloon in St. Louis, known as
"The Monkeys," was destroyed by fire early
yesterday morning, with $35,000 worth of
liquors.
TRH West Virginia Legislature adjourned
at one o'clock yesterday morning. One of its
last acts was the passage of a bill removing
the capital from Wheeling to Charlestown.
• .T2iE deamee Druld'has returned tollallfax
from Sable Island,, where she has been cruising
in search of the City of Boaton, having ob
tained no informatiorrof the tnissing vessel.:
lion discoveries or silver were mule recent=
ly In New Mexico, near the Arizona boundary
line, in the Apache country. A quantity of the
ore has been taken to San Francisco, and yields
as high as $2,000 a ton.
A BARQUE which arrived at Boston, yester
day, reports having passed, on February 12, a
steamer answering to the description of the
City of Boston, apparently lying still. She
gave no signals of distress, and appeared to be
in good condition.
AT 'Huntingdon, Pa.,
yesterday morning,
Gottfield Bohner, one of the murderers of the
Pelgtel family attempted to escape from jail,
by attacking the,keeper. The latter called for
help', when a prisoner, narneit Butler, can@ to
tbe rescue, and struck Bauer On the head
with a poker, causing, a dangerous wound.
Bohner is noW under Medias! treatment.' '
IN the Canadian House of CommonS, on
Thursday night, Sir John A. McDonald an
nounced that no license would be granted 'to
foreign fishermen during the coming sensors,
and that the Government intended to take
steps for the protection of the rights of Cana
dian fishermen in Canadian waters. Sir
Francis links stated that confidential commit
nlcations relating to reciprocity Were passing
between Ottawa and Washington, and that on
the Canadian side there was no obstacle to the
freest commercial intercourse with the United
States.
Altorrii the bills recently approved by the
Governor are the following :---Supplement io
the Thirteenth and: Fifteenth Strgeta:Rallotay,
(Locust street track); To.,ratify the charter
of the Delaware Bridge CoMpany;' Incorpo
rating the Miners' and Laborers" Publishing
Company ; Incorporating the &ate Council of
the junior Order of the United American Me
chanics; Incorporating the Philadelphia Ride
Club; Incorporating the People's Printing
Company;
Defining the powers of the Wet
Philadelphia Bank ; Incorporating the Phila
delphia Wood Paving Company.
Forty-first Concres*-41tel'ond Newton.
The U. S. Senate yesterday adopted a reso
lution calling upon the President for copies of
any correspondence between the Department
of State and the United States Minister to
France relating to the so-called Memphis, El
Paso and Pacific Railway Company, and
copies ofanylettiul of the SeCretaiy.o the in
. wrier on the subject. Mr. Revels presented• a
'numeral frem the Mississippi Legislature ask
ing for tbeatemoval of political diciabWties,from
the people of that State. The Judicial Circuit
bill was discwaed. The Funding bill was post
poned until Monday. The bill for the settle
ment of claims for Quartermaster and Com
missary stores furnished by loyal persons in
the States in rebellion was considered.
Without acting upon it. the Senate adjourned
until Monday.
In the House of Representatives Mr. Shanks
introduced a bill to organize the militia of
Wyoming. A bill was passed, appropriating
$46,910 for deficiencies in items of the House
service. The Senate Joint resolution prohibiting
the publication in the Globe of speeches not de
livered was referred to the Committee on
Rules. A bill was passed, making Jersey City
colleetion district and a *fit of entry. Mr.
Haight offered a resolution• looking to the re
moval of obstructions from the Delaware river,
between •• Bordentown and ' Trenton. The
Georgia bill was discussed, and .M.r. Butler said
he would soon bring the condition of Ten
nessee also before the House. Mr. Farnswolth
opposed the bill. The House adjourned, to
continue discussion to-day, and with the un
derstanding that Mr. Butler would call a vote
upcin It on Monday.
ART ITEMS.
a t
—Negotiations are on foot providing fo a
transfer of pupils in drawing from the Co r
Union, N. Y., to the National Acade y,
whereby those of the former institution ho
have advanced beyond the elementary cl es
may perfect.theinselyes under the,, auspice* of
artists: The - idea is a goed drie; and' WM lead
to' the. best results. - , It . is contemplate dl4 • es
tablish 'a reading i roeln at, the
,Academy for:the
use of artists.' ' ' '
' —The choice collection of oil paintings,) by
eminent French, Belgian. Dusseldorf and
American artists,advertised last week in the But,
LETtli, and also a selection of rare engravings
and water colors,were sold atauction on Thnro.
day afternoon and evening, at Barker's Gallery
of Art, No. 845 Broadway. At the sale oflen.-
gravings in the afternoon the prices realized
were very satisfactory. " A Cold Winter Day,"
by liasohn, J., was sold at $lO 50; another
engraving by the same artist, " The Village
Beau," sold for $26. "Farmers PerceiVing
their Village on Fire," engraved by Steffen
sand, sold at $l2 50. "Dalphius and Chlee,"
RiChomme,Ankl f0r,,;512.7 Raphael's
Vhgin
s , called with the Fish," by .Qes
noyers, i'iltfe print; 'tibia sl3' 50. 'ln ; the
evening tbe , sale of oak Fpaintingai commenced,
and the 'alma obtained. were_regarded. to be in
most cases about half he estimated' "•zdue.
"The Conflagration," by Patti. Seignac, broight
$l5O. "Three Friends," by C. M. Webb, V2O.
"The llintersee-Tyrol," $2lO. " The Orphans,"
by Carl ITubner, $3lO. A Petrarch's Laura, a
work of the pre-Raphaelite order, by Adolphe
Lesrel, sold for xs42o. A Norwegian Lake
Scene, by J. Duntze, $385. "Mother ;and
Child," by Meyer Von Bremen, $4OO. The
Well and Wetterhorn, by Waagen, t 380.,
" Checker Players," by David Col, $440. Many
others of the paintings were sold at equally
• high prices; one of them a miniature painting,,
scarcely six by four inches, but executed with
all the alcety. or a Ifeissonieri said for $4OO.
.
'L Maistetatent.
The following is the amount ot coal traosporte4 over
the Philadelphia and Iteading , Eallroad during the week
ending Thursday, Mar. 9, 1870:
111 ton St. Clair
Port Carbon
"Potteville
" Schuylkill Haven
" Auburn
Port Clinton
'• Harrisburg and Dauphin
" Allentown and Minutes..
Total Anthracite Coal for week 37,04 14
Bituminous Coal from Barrieburg and Dau
phin for week. 14373 03
•
Total for week paying freight.
Coal for the Company 'e nee
Total of all kinds for the week
Previously this yoar
Total
To Thursday, Mar. 4, 1869.. „„
THE PAKIN• rAsitiONloVrt
The lisiesi isortimuctorisalts-iresersol
4 , shone of,lieo4ll r •
A Paris fashion writer says: Ever since the
return of the EniPiesi from t , hee• 'Eastern tour
we r have. ,been anticipating some marked '
changes in the mode—some rem initieenmS,as
were, of fl 3 Iterituries;old • costumes of the
banks of the Bosphorus and , the Nile adapted
, tti,the orgendes tofiri,Vostern Civilization;
hut:the:oll4W situation has been too anxious
over hereto:or ,Idga4 as t9 ' the ,precise' style of
toilette which One should wear to he fipper
most even in the feminine mind ; consequentli,
the diOIREI Wolth and. Paugat have madane
sign' in the conierbplated direetion. While can
non Were (refining behind' the iron railing of,
the Legislative Chambers, and the Pala& de
l'lndustrie was converted, ler the time-being
into a , barrack add magazine for war tuaterial,
'and Zonaves were bivouacking in the Tuileries,
Gardens,
• it was, hardly the time for court or
eflicial festivities, or even for Mere piivate dE3-
plays. Still less so was it ,when barticedes.
were, blocking up , the northeastern fauboimrs,
and Gerdes tie l'aris were scouring the streets;
throughout the night.: Now, 'however,' that -- e,
sense of security has again come over those in,
high places, banquets and balls and receptions
are nightly succeeding each other, and all the
latest creations of, the Parisian modiste are
seeing the light.
FULL DEEMS TOILETTES.
Robes A. demi-train would seem to be on
the wane ; it is ether the grand robe with the
full train'for toilettes of ceremony, or the robe
"touchant terre," as it is styled, or the robe
courte, still a deux juries, for the promenade.
For the , latter • plain or finely striped velvets.
trimmed usually with fringe or deep or nar
row bands of- fur, in the latter, case with toque
and muff en suite, are as much in vogue as
ever. • It is nevertheleSs becbming the fashion
to vary these costumes with an finder jupe of
satin or faye, either black or of the same
shade, the plaited flounces of which; rising to
meet the short upper jupe, are !either inter
sected or surtnounted by , velvet bands.; For
these rich warm tints of color are usuallypre r
(erred ; such, for instance, as 'golden ov russet
bream, various shades of plum-c.olor, notably
"prune de Monsieur," `deep mauve, violet,, and
a rine black and gold stripe. One toilette
entirely of velvet of a warm violet shade is
made with a short jacket bordered with
chinchilla fur, a band of which is arranged tb
form a small simulated pelerine behind. The
cuffs of the tight-fitting undersleeves, together
with the openings of the loose hanging sleeves,
which droop almost leiel with the knees; aro
tiimrned en suite. The perfectly plain tunic
has a fur border, and the 'under jupe has a
deep band of far some few inches from the
bottom. A velvet muff bound with fur and a
rah.*
• mr,Avuel:r Iry nal co 81 t.y tier, St—
cured with a large gold buckle, complete a cos
tume the elegance of which rivals its simplicity.
A toilette in. Carmelite velvet, trimmed with
twisted silk cord. the under-jupe of which has
a deep flounce with heading, has its upper jupe
raised at the sides by Interlacing cords and
tassels; while the jacket, which Is open bebitid
to accommodate the slight bouffante, basia
couple of pointed hasques fallhig down rather
low in front and a. vaporous-looking lace frill at
he open collar.
A LITTLE MORE ROBBY.
A more pretentious costume is of black
velvet and garnet-trolor Faye, the under pipe
being of the latter material, and trimmed with
numerous small flounces, each with its plaited
black velvet heading. The upper jupe of velvet
forms a tablier in front, and is gathered at the
sides ' where it joins the bouffante , its trimming
consisting of a fringe formed of sniall
shaped ornaments of black silk picked out wi4
gold thread. A little jacket, with loose sleeves
and skirt compered of four lappets, Is trimmed
to correspond. The Princess Dalzouniki, who
wore this , costume, rendered it more striking
by tbe addition of a long ceinture in sky-blhe
moire antique.
robes of , the most. , brilliantecolored satin,
with black velvet stripes of more than half an
inch wide, have latterly come into vogre, and
are commonly worn with fur or velvet man
ties, though they may be observed in conform.
tion with colored satin redingotes bound with
ruches of black velvet and a deep border of
black lace, and having velvet revers edged with
narrow lace at the collar and the cuffs. The
front of this garment is dosed with ornaments
in black silk passementerie; the skirts being
open behind to display the bouffante of the
robe.
Simpler toilette/3 are in poplin merino, cash
mere and other woolen stuffs, the myrtle
peen already spoken of being the predomina
ting color, and velvet being the favorite triin
ming, with the addition at times of a rich :silk
fringe. Seme of these robes, as well as these
of, lighter materials.such mixtures of silk
and wool, are trimmed at the bottom of the
upper jupes and round alike basques 'and
tabliers when these form part Of the costume,
also at the neck, and occasionally , at the cuffs
and shoulders, with ruches of the same stuff'
as the robes themselves. The under jupes
have one deep flounce surmounted by a hr
fd
ing or else a series of small flotmces, either In
dependent of or ' overlapping one another.
Now and then bands of velvet and chenille
Pasterneetetie will enter in addition into the
trimming of these costumes.
CASHMERE ROBE,
of the rich prune de Monsieur shade, has its
jupe trimmed with both a vandyked and a
scolloped flounce, With black velvet borders
and headings. The large pardessus, sligtrtly
caught up all round, is crossed in front on the
left side where it is trimmed with a bread
velvet and ; the square collar falls back, and
forms'a pointed cape behind, and the sleeies,
tightened at the shoulders, become extremely
loose at the wrists, where they are bordered
with arid' flounce. Velvet buttons'are ranged
down the entire front of the garment. ;It
would seem that the "snivez-moi" is about; to
reappear in a new form, for it is becoming the
fashion to wear posed at the back of the n4ek,
both of in and outdoor toilettes, an elaborate
pendent ornament in rich silk passementerie•
terminating in tassels or grelots, and which
falls almost level with the waist.
,
appear to, have arrived at the last stage of
magnificence, , the richest stuffs being 4ow
; garnished with the richest; trimmings. Take,
for instance, a lobe of. golden brown velvet,
and warm grey satin made with a long train,
an manteart de cow, the satin Dupe having t,wo
tounceii ' coquilles, the uppermost of tin
I T
~ , ,
4impied with a delicate Interlacing passe en-
Aerie, the„ lower one , of velvet .edged wi h a
gathered border of black• lace. The velvektrain
untrimmed all , round with bands of -rich Rase
menterie, •that' gradually widen 1 towar4 its
extremity, (leaded , by ruches of grey satin.
The velvet corsage, bordered at,the top with'a
deep entredeux of black lace on a satin piping,
has little pointed . barque& trimmed Ivitk
passementerie falling down in front, and larger
ones, bordered with deep black lace,, at I the
hips, where they are puffed out. The short
open sleeves; vandy keda at 'the ' edges, 'and
trimmed with lace, reach only.' to the elbow;
satin sleeves being seen beneath, , .
THE PTUNCEEIS CLOTILDE 1
Toss.Chot.
17,612 19
2,496 02
46 07
9,489 95
1,104 09
4,083 18
2,663 12
)78 02
on a recent occasion of ceremony ap
peared in a light green satin robe,
boroerea half way up the ju with flounces
composed of darker green velv pe
et .bands, alter
,nated with rows 9f Pack Isee,p9l;ed upon a
white lace. The corsage was ornamented with
a small fichu of the two kirids;df lade, and the
chapeau of Marabout was trimmed with Clus
ters of oats in green velvet.' ,On 'th'e same ocea n ,
sion the Duchess of Hamilton 'had 'ola' Si robe
of dahlia color silk, striped with velvet 'of tho
41.502 17
2,121 18
15,624 ii
616,60111
461,128 ft
013,n0 16
THE DAILY LVENING BU'LLETIN-PIIIIJAD.ELPHIA, SATUR 0A V. V ARCH u , 1870.-T t ;
RAINBOW RUED
MORE SIMPLICITY
ToitE,TTEN DE VIEUTE
same Shade 4 the jape being rberilgsk*lth a
deep flounce. The , redingote—en suite,•which'
had puffs behind, was bordered all around with
point de Venice, and bad large revere in front
of the corsage, which, together with the deep
cuffs, were edged with Venice point, to corres
pondc, Among t,ojleitpa de visite .9,119 mays also
instance a robe of bine Faye, the Corsage high,
the sleeves tiglit-litting; and , ' , the ., skirt- just
touching the Igxoundo ,ornarneAted with an
elaborate flounce formed (it closely plated
ruches, with coques'abnier ' Over'is- Worn: a
tunic of black velvet with an extremely low
corsage and skirt, pulled sleeves a la. mode pre
mier Empire, trimmed all around with an em-!
broidery of silver cord on a band of black silk.
C • V • 11l V! r ItoMEN.
One of the oddest things in this strange
contradictious life of outs is the disagreement
continually occurring between material fact
and moral reality. " Things are not what
they seem" in very truth ; and we should sel
dom be far out if we took appearances, as the
witches of old used to say their prayers, back
' wards. Axtdforenrcitstamong:thesio-sontradtc
tions are certain circumstances touching; tie
written" and the' itetual 'cOndition of women
in -England, By law ; a .wife ,is nowhere.
Ranked with Infants and idiots, she is, the
property of Uri:l'6'6MA; her 1101 s -ire vested
in him, her very individuality Is merged in his;
of herself, and disallowed by hint, she can do
nothing either to defend or to maintain her
self; all of which is bad enough when:
the marriage is a failure, and the.
home falls asunder, and the wife .
has to bear the brunt of two evils at once—fet
4ers on the one band and want of protection;
on the other. And yet what is the moral re
ality in the face of this positive legal fact
That nine times out of ten the woman is the
mistress and the man walks in leading strings;!
that the law assigns her as property but society'
- grants her - postessien;: and - ithall she ; being
more exclusive, more jealous, more arbitrary,
aiidnarrOVver than able: to. impose her
own WM anti oxici , PkAine4 3 4 to - Make' him
accept her will unconditionally. The man
must be •Veryr hard' dr Every -Sharp whom'a
woman cannot sail round as she Chooses, and
manipulate to any form she takes a fancy for.
She has but to adapt her battery to the charac
ter of the citadel—surface-submission for the
blustering, coaxing for the soft-hearted,
flattery for the vain, deception forithe obtuse—
and she' gains the day on her own terms.
Unfortunately for herself, she generally gains
it by something less than the rigid truth; for
though Merlin and Vivienne represent an ex
treme case, still the type is true,ff exaggerated,
nature, which denied woman strength, having
made up for it by a double share of subtlety:
hall comes to the wile thing in the end;, and
the end is mastery. The monnium bonum of
life; the thing forywhich all nations, all rell
glom, all Men.have striven since the world beL
gun, that desire for supremacy and mastership,
which is to human'history what iron is to the
blood and lime to the bones, is by no means a
specially masculine characteristic, still less a
specially masculine possession ; albeit com
passed by different methods and exercised in
diflerent ways,it is as much the central desire Of
women as of men, and their swmnum bonum
too, when they can attain it. And they do
attain it, in spite of Blackstone and the laws
touchine 6 and regarding the rights and condi
tion of f.rron and ferne.
In nothing do women show their mastery
over men more than in the extent to which
they carry their exclusiveness. No women in
the world, not told off into castes, are so ex
clusive as the English, none so jealous 9f
sbaring,their good _thing& - is not in one
thing, but, in everything alike- 7 dress, station,
dornestic happiness - , the companionship of men ;
they would, if, they oordd, keep all they
distinctively. , their. own, rigidly to themselves;
they would suffer no longing eyes ' to look over
their park palings, still less allow another to
share in their fruits and flowers. As a rale, it
is not the man's fault that the English home is
so dull as it generally is. It is the wife who
prevents all easy intercourse, all simple friend
liness between her husband and other
men, and yet more between her husband
and other women. It is she who bars the
house door, and forbids it to be opened save
with such pomp and ceremonial as makes the
opening a weariness to all concerned. The
very woman who, as a spinster living with her
sisters, is glad to have a facile unceremonious
society about heron' a wife seta her face de
cidedly against thaVkind •6f -firrnillaiity which
lets a person feel at Inane, in ber house ; 'and
above all things she feats and dislikes a female
friend strhottdmires' her husbandj though in
the most innocent,way, and,who says so. The
profound moral scepticism which has pene
trated society from end to end has eaten away
feminine trust with the rest and even puke
and virtuous women, incapable foe their min
parts of anything ike immorality, are not
ashamed to suspect their sisters of improper
feelings and naughty practices. and to think
themselves safe in their married homes knit
in proportion as they are isolated. Especially
are happy wives suspicious of those who have
made shipwreck of their own venture. Un
married women and contented wives may be,
if rarely, admitted into the heart of the
charmed eircle--if the husband is conspicu
ously iraliferent,t9 „theta ; hitt - .14P JuillaPPY, wife
is held to be a kind of pirate in disguise, arival
who *ill isteeitiyaq the bisband'staffeetion4 if
she cap, and on - 1 0 01 R, it is, name than probable
he will bestow them Unasked. 'Very few
women •haie - 'generisity enough , to befriend
one of thPir own sex when in mat
rimonial difficulties, if their friendship is to
include their husband's,
,
Of all things most abhorrent to women we
may count duality, under any name or aspect.
Only a man and a masterful man, could have
written as Coleridge did about the ~ two be
loved women" in his Day Dream, with As 's
eyelashes playing on his cheek and Mary's
hand upon his brow, Mary's lap the pillow ;of
the two lovers, and her head leaning on the tee
l i
where the two names were carved. Tis
sharipg.ofo inftn's,affectien, Abeugh in wid ly
'different - - prolmrtione and - In - ' quite ' distinct
spheres, 1 la I alAhlog, -ne ~ woman ..COUld be
found, to, praise , if even she forced her:
/ .eif ' tii ' enddie" it:' Tt la" hat' 6heially: geen,
however, Ellett:women lire ,a•S' ligist in their-
elusion of male friends from their own hearts-;
most women having set, up a tame cat of their
own some time or other in their livi,ea,
though not liking tame mice for their husbands.
The fact Is, a wife in England claims to beer
husband's all. She is not content to possess the
whole of such love as rightfully belongs to a
wife, but she must also possess the whole; of
his sympathy, his interest, his admiration. She
must be the only woman in the world to him;
and the rest of her sex must be neither as Man
nor woman.—Saturday Review. , i
:Stiar.ltsts.r the
Lase 6feorare war ra. •
0136 1 . of Ake ) rnoet . uotedionlusical vines ,
of
Emhpi- u -Q,orgoAlogartb- 7 -is dead. , ,He bad
reached big elgltty-siiittf Year; hairwritten,
at various timeNlfor theolfornitzg,Chronicle,
th 9 Daily ,Wetos, Illustralec
_Lonclon News,
and other journals, besides publishing several
books on musical subjects. In his judgments
of artists and performances he leaned towards
lenity. He belonged to the celebrated clique
of literary notabilities which included Walter
Scott, Professor Wilson, Lockhart and Iloggs,
and be is mentioned in the •‘Noctes Ambro
siante." His best-known works are his
"Memoirs of the Opcia," and his volume of
" Musical Biography and Criticism." He was
father-in-law to Charles Dickens, and the eon
in-law of the George Thompson, of Edinburgh,
tcti3.o.l34l),ltysil,eo.l94POPAt cim'j
pose arrangements or Scotch and other tiort !
Airs with aceerriprtnitnents./
' • ~..__. jiA4 ,PQR,t.i'Ar TISMS.,„.,' ~,,-..'
' 'now or the rnuddelphis isetulltlit DULA...."
BOHTUN—fitiraitier Artett,.' ,W11030 ,4 -31.1•—pkgs- , - glue—.l ;
Aubizi,• 352 bxs nada Biddle Hanisvaro Co; 30 bags glue
mock A Battler It • Co; 20 Siligs Yarn Boyd & WWto; 24
pkg., glassware 3 0 Boughton; 85 do dry goods U Wower
• 4 Cd; 62 like boots and alines D'Blinting &Col 7640 John
Uorden; 51 do Chandler, Hart & Co,• 02 do 0 el Clatlini 40
do Darling" & 00;45 lout clolcoloteW 14 Haat:32 do boots
and p !men Craft, W atkina it: Co; . 71 pkge paper Howlett,
Ondordonk & Co; 20 kegs ,uitilitHandY, Brenner &Vii;.ti
Ws hilw Beaton & Dtrick la ; 9 pkg, glassware L B ar
border; 9 bales rags J Hey; 14. bxs boots and shoes Hart,
t:handler * Co; 14 em dry goods It Jordan & Co; 41 pkge
do Lewis, Wharton & Co; 44 do A_ll Lilllollo do 1 1 1.1111 . 0 . 8
T Lea; 10 bbla dole,. ()wan ',Moe; 11 pkgs niche Leung &
' Magid/lid; 19 es dryrgoodaLelatuti Allen & Bates; 7/ hdls
pa per. J•• Jai .I.ongstretl 4; 3:1 pieces disc& C Ldwreneo; 41
bxishoots and shoes Lev Irk Bros:. 10 ell Ml' oldtb 11t(15I•
lute, Crease & 2. loan ;, 30 Idols 2s ;ibis W.Massoy & Co' 6
eats/lull cloth 0 31eClIntOok & CO,: d'prosses Win Minn;
80 ,vastia • 'bents, and, shoes Monroe,. Smaltz. & Co; 21
rils,l2o toots and shoes Illckerilon,_& Blosely; 23 do W j
W l'atil•, 11 do M 0 'Diner; 10 do 1.: 41 Reeves; SS kalem ,
yarn J 1 Sproul &Do; 40 tulle Weisel C , Utokos; 23 pkge
chair stork 11 13 Slifer; 45 es boots and 004% W W :Smed
ley; 4 do W 31 Showell & Son; a Butter & Miller; 10 J &
31 Saiintlerg• 4 A &Smith & Hon; 42 A A Hhinnway k
Co; 15'A Tilden & Co; •2.3 pkge rivets N & 11 Taylor Co ;;
lit tidls tack lonia° P. Weaver; 9 pkge yarn It T White;
7 Ildsto ;rodeo W Witte; 50 bxa bloaters., Stroup * Co: 10!
bales sstrnewell & Co: '
THIN IDA —Brig 8 , & W Welsh-A3l hhde 50 toe 239 ,
bile tnotatisas 149 hlula segar S & W Welsh.
Cl)BYUS41011—Bork Treat-486 hhole 50
_ Aberdeen,
ten P1140;,8 & W, We' `
A Nki EN (4 ERN S A .I.L. E7 2) .1t
In steamer Vi y,omlng, for Savannah-Samuel w right,
wife ono PPrrant;lliss fl N Phillips. li Xeseler. filasfrr
Jehn Kessler, Jnrsen C ftilva, Thee Jazritr.l 4 Mrs Jnz
card and three ebildrhn, J B Bishop, E. J Walker, J J .
Id nrphy 4J elm Ilellly , 1 - ,1 It Idellvain and wife,
MOVEMENTS OF OCEAN STEAMERS.
TO ARRIVE.,
611TP8 PROM yea - - 8A173.
8Mu1t.... Bremen... New York. Jan. 20
Silesia Havre-New York - , Feb.l2
Paraguay ....... -......L0n00n...New York Feb.l2.
India Glasgow... New York' Feb. 16
America.- Southampton-New Y0rk,.... Feb. T 2
Palmyra Liverpool... New Yotk via "B
_Feb. 22
Colorado Liverpool... New York Feb. Zt
(illy of London.Liverpool-Now York - Feb. a
Cambria- Glasgew...l2ew York Nab. 22
Samarla Liverpool... New York. Feb. 26
Etna Liverpool... New York vieD & B-Feb. 26
Silesiti.i" Ilarre.'..New Y0rk............:......Feb. 26
Lafayette 9rest-New York - Feb. 26
Chniputra....:.., .. -Ver,a Crtl2l. ..li Y via- Havana... March 1
America Southanipton-Now York- March 1
TO DEPART. . .
Pioneer Philadelplinc..Wiltnitigton March 8
llolsatia New York...Harnburg ' March S
Nervddti " New York..blverpooll..... ..... -.Mardi tY
Ntirro CBS t le.....New,Yqrk ;.llayana .' , ....,-......--Marc bail
Elitzot Loudon...New York,..Livrapool March 12
atlpesti ' ...New York. .New (Alfons Marchl2
Itidfa..- 1. N4W 'YUrir...olttsgow . IliarchilZ
Paraguay.-- ... .. . New York.,..London.-...,. ......... .fiLsrcli,l2
Franco. New York-Liverpool March 12
Weser New York...Bremon March 12
a ChOttitey tie* York..digpinwriti ' 'March 21
• 13(110ARD TRAD.E.
JOB2•C. °BUBB
'EDMUND A. EidUDER, hiosrnLy COMMITTER
13AMUBL STOKES,
COMMITTEE ON ARBITRATION.
J. 0. .lornes, E. A. Somirr,
Geo. L.lluzby, I , Wm, W. Paul,
Thomaß
r•t1i 4 114 0 ., 1 11101114g$ 1 / 4 1 1 1
PORT OF PRILADELPRIA—MXTMIT 5.
8ETI!• b 4U l Aloe WeTii, 4 - 39
ARRIVED YESTERDAI• ---- -
Steamer Aries. Wiley. 48 houra from Bolton, with
ruder to H Winger & Co.
bteinner'Centipade, Fenton. from Norwich, in ballad
to W.b
Bark Aberdeen. Treat, 17 days from Cienfuegos, with
tamer to S & W Welsh.
11Ing ..' A Pferce, 70,•sni. So .laya from Sagan, with sugar
and molasses to 8 & W Welsh; . •-
Brig Sec W Welch, Watson 14 dare from Trinidad de
Cuba, with sugar awl molasses to S & W Welsh. Towed
up by Citrlce Boat'No 2.
CLEARED YESTERDAY.
Steiner Yazoo, Catharine, New Orleans, Via Havana,
Philadelphia and Southern Mail Co
Steamer Wyoming. Teal. bavanuah. Philadelphia and
Southern Mail 88 Co.
Steamer W A Groves, Jr.
Schr Tennessee, Creed. Savannah, Lennox Burgess.
Behr Wm Buttnan. Smart:Savannah. • do
AT THE BREAKWATER. . • ;
Bark Bccttiah Bride, hence , for Marseilles. was at tbo
Breakwater yesterday afternoon,' also. Nair Bard Reed,
Gregory. from Charleston for Wilmington - , Del. with
foss of jibboom and foretopgallantmast, and had 'nails
blown away in a gale off Hatteksa.
WENT TO SEA.
_hip Wm Wilc. , s for Pr—
for Portland. went to sea 4th Wet.
Schre R W Haddeliad
Matantas, went to sea Sd E itt hi° Will"'
both hence for
MEMORANDA.
Ship Abyssinia Br), Christian, hence at Savannah
yesterday.
Ship Thos Durward, Strieklaud; from Davra la bal
last, for Nur Whine; was at the BWPasaldth alt..
Steamer El Cid. Nickerson, rall
cleared at New York -
tenisty for this Dort.
Steamer Regulator, Pennington, at Wilmington, NC.
nth inst. Imm New York. ,
Bo S=oser Concordia , Sears , at No Plieozo 2d lust frost
Bark Idolique,Darkee, at St Thoiaaa 17th *lt; train
usra Olinda (Br). Prange.- cleared at New York yes
terday for Pernambuco and Bahia.
• Bark Talisman ( Br), Blackford, cleared at New York
yesterday for Pernambuco and a market. . • .
Brig Woe Welsh, titrebridge., sailed from St Thomas
lab nit. where bound not stated.
Bchr Thos tilnnickson • Dickerson, sailed from Call's
rien ZSd ult. for this port
Schr C A Thole. Amesbury, at Calbarien 15th ultimo
for a port north of Batteries.
- •
Sra John H Perry, Kelley, from New Bedford for
this Port; Jag Bakeri and Rachel Searban, Bea
man, from Boston for do, sailed from New London Ist
Instant.
. ~ .
Schr .11 Simmons, Godfrey, sailed from Salem Ist inst.
for this port.. . ,
Schr E B Shaw, Shaw, at Charleston 4th instant fr.=
Baltimore, ,- - . . • P
Behr Patoe.Bbackford, remained at Mayaguez about
Bab ultimo, for Armadilla next - day to finish loading for
Delaware Breakwater.
Bebr 3 Babooek, hence for r Boston, at Mimes' Bole
3d Inst.
Behr 8 P M Tacker, Allen, at Savannah 28th ult. trim
Baltimore.
Sehr Mary Stowe, Rankin, hence at Charleston yes
terday ♦ia Wilmington. Deli
Behr Baal •Brittain. Carroll. sailed from Charleston
yesterday for Wilmington,
&be W S Bilks. Burgess. at St Thomas 17th tilt fTOIII
Demerara, - and sailed again same day, where bound not
stated. -
Bcbr E Down. Jarvis, hence at Portland 2d inat
MARINE MISCELLANY.
Behr Jackson sailed from ,Baltimore let December,
bound for Bennnea, since which time there haVe bden
no tidings of her, and the apprehension is that she fodn
dered at sea and all the crew perished with her. for
crew consisted of Edward Clavell master,of Baltimoye;
Auguste/ B West , mate. of New Jersey. and 4 coloted
seamen. The holism) was originally a revenue cutter,
and was built. at the navy yard, Washington, in 1930.
She WEI named in bogor 'President Jackson.
Fehr J h Lee. from Savannah for Cardenas, got ;off
Ty bee Island 2811su1t. and went to sea.
AUCTION SALES.
Sir For additirmai Auctions RA Fifth Pare
DURBOROW & 00., • I !
• • • AUCTIONEERS,
ago. 1101 and 231 MARRRT street,oorner of Bank street.
841.1 R OF 2000 CABER ROOTS, HRONIL RATS, &c.
ON'TUREIDAY MORNING.
Marcia 8, at 10 o'clock, on four morittecreditincludiag—
Rases Alen is, boys ), and youths! calf, kip and kat/
leather Boots; tine Grain Long Leg Dream Boots; Con
gress Boole; Balmorala;" kip,' Duff and polish grain
Brogans; A 4 men's, - misses' and children's calf. kid.
goat, morocco am. enarnelled.Balmorale; Cfingrein Gni*
tars: Lace Boots:, Ankle Ties: Lasting Gaiters, Slip
pers; TI sveling Bags; Metallic Overshoes, &a.
LARGE SALE OF CARPETINGS, CANTON MAT
TINOS, kc.
ON FRMAY MORNING.
March That 11 o'clock on four months' credit, about2oo
pieces Ingrain, Vet etian, List, Hemp, Cottage and Bag
earrotinaa. Canton Mattloga• .te
D AVIS & tIAR VEY, AUCTIONEEEtS,
(Late with M. Thomas 3 Bone )
Store Noe. 48 and tO North Sixth street.
• Sale at the Auction Store.
ELEGANT FURNITURE, PARLOR AND CIIAM
BER SUITS, BOOKCASES, TAPESTRY CAR
PETS, gm.. &c.
ON TUESDAY MORNING.
At 10 o'clock at Nos. 45 and tO North Sixth rf °Liu
cludiog. eleg ant 'crimson terry Parlor Suite. made to
order; Ilancleoute Parlor Suite. In tine plush. terry OP/
r
and haicloth; Elegant Oiled Walnut Chamber S uits,
superior Secretary ,Buoi case, Oak and Walnut Exten
sion Tables, Etagere, tildeboorda, centre and Bouquet
Tables. 25 new. kislresees. Feather Beds, Boleters and
Pillow. Large Case of Birds Cigar Show Case, pie
er ether , t en. ra.
B y DABEAT1 4 & CO., AUOTIO : ttr 8,
_cuti:o3. AUCTION HOUBB.
No. IV MARKET street. corner of Bank iitreet
LABOR PRIth.kIPTURY ZA I. i. -IUUU LUTIC . '
OrN '4O/ 4 /my MOANING.
March 7, comment mg at 10 o clock, viz: Staple and
yoney Iltr Goode, Ready-made tdotninir, Shine, po
ttery.•eel ery, • Fancy Geode, Itibbone, Jewelry, St eke
from Retail Store 4 &e. &e.
Aloe, at 11 o'llocki 160 ,easee and earione Felt I:cata,
TL. AIMXIAXDGEL & AIIOTI ( M
. grits. N. 5. , r mARK Emit rim •
LAUGH BALI OF BOOTS, mon, HATS AND
OAPS.
• • ON'WEDNESLA Y MORNING,
]Hatch 9. at 10 o'clock, we will sell by entalogue, long
.12e0 Pa kagee of Boo th and Shoes, embracing a I rgo
aiseortnrut of Brat clasacity and Eastern muda goods,
to which the attention of city and cauulry buyers is
called. •
sir open early on tanning of the tale for examina
tion.
THOMAS & SONS, AUCTIONEERS,
..1311_• biog./ SY and 311 South FOU i,lll e:.
STOCKS, Arc.
ON TUESDAY &noir A.
At 12 o'clock, noon. at the f'biladelphla Exchange.
Exocutore
Pow N0.,77, north olnluDr.Wtalsw,,rl Ws Church,
non aint Filbert stroonl.
20 shares I nattrallem LO, of Wel L Au:erica.
.'.loshares Sete Nattonal BAnk.
'Muth.
xpo
SCOTT'S , ART OALL'ItY AND AUCTION
UOJtml.ceauNA bEtIR, uMS,
li scorr, Auotiqneer.
/ 1 " . • " 17 eIIFRIRUPPPIrtet (Girard Rnw /
BARLOW'S: 81ECt , K1).14,41A OF SUPERIOR
- FrittNITURE.
• , • A Y,
virtu 8, at Ing W
eino Avg D A. BARLOW' will make
hie Fee. lid Salo Na w Pompom connieta gof every
variety , of• Porlar•liulta: °bomber Sidebourtla,
Wardrobt 8,130. kt.noc,,,..eltalia, Tablet; lace.
Mr. errurticle ie yi ;imitated.
TRIMMINGS .AND PATTERN!".
Grand Opening,of Spring Fashions
IN IMPORTED PAPER PATTERNS,
•
aeaday, March Ist, 1870.
The old established and only reliable Paper Pattern,
Drees and Cloak Making' Emporium.
Dresser made to fit with ease and elegance in 24 hours' !I
Mrs. fir.l.llisiotivEr reeent 41mit to 'Paris enabler
her to receive Fashions, Trimmings and Fancy Goods
superior to anything In this country. New in design, .
moderate in .price,
A perfdet system of Dresa Cutting taught.
Cutting, Basting, Pinking.
Fashion nooks and Gofferinglitachinestor sale.
Sete of Patterns for Merchants and Drees Makers now
ready, at
MRS. M. A. 13 ENDER'S,
HOI, N. W. coy. Eleventh and Chestnut Sts.
Carefully note the name and number to ovoid being
deceived. my 22 tf r
The Pocket-Book Calendar and
Directory Ibr 1870, In,
*neat style of
PRINTING
Is now ready and may be Lad
NOTHING.
which is as „nor ae, possible the rates 4
at Which Worktenetally is dolie -
A. C. 13ItYSON & CO.,
Stealti-po - wer
No; 607 CHESTNUT STREET,
(Bulletin Building.)
NEW PUBLICATIONS
Q UNDAY SCHOOL sUPERINTEb
10 denti, iet Prof. Hart's tultnirable address: "How to
lect a Library," at the Sabbath School Eittportura t
61143 , Arch atte.t. Philadelphia.
ZELL'S POPULAR ENCYCLOPEDIA,
Z. - CGLANGEI-EtlittiK-" z'
The PEST, LATEST and CHEAPEST ever pubIIEIH.
ed, is not only a COMPLETE ENO YCLOPEDIAi
written et Nen THE WAIL hence the only one giving
any account of the LATE! BATTLES, and those who
fought them, but is also a thorough and
COMPLETE LEXICON,
A GAZETTEER OF THE WORLD,
A _BIOGRAPHICAL DICTIONARY,
A BIBLICAL DICTIONARY,
A LEGAL DICTIONARY, 1
A MEDICAL, DICTIONARY,
j
and tho only book containing all iheso subjects. ,Th
more than 2004 ILLUSTRATIONS, on eve
variety of subject, alone will cost over $lO,OOO. o
other work is so fully and so well illustrated. • . .
VIEWS OF CITIES, PLIILT0.13IIILI17XC8; PLANTS, '
ANIMALS, MACHINERY, GRHAT MEN
Total cost, bound, to Sttnectunnits ONLY, V 7.50,
a saving of more than *lOO over other similar work*.
A 50 cent specimen number, containing 40 pages
and 78 pictures, will be sent free for 10 cents. Agents
and Canvassers wanted. Sold only by aubscriptiod.
Address T. ELLWOOD ZELL, Philadelphi
fel9. 1M
LI) NIBER.
MAULE BROTHER & CO.,
24500 South Street.
1.870. PA R:rT4III,I=-! ". _ 1870
CHOICE SELECTION
ow
MICHIGAN CORK PINE
FOR PATTERNS.
1870. 8 1 M clicA l4 A R.11111g1C.K . 1870
LARGE STOCK.
1870. FLOR ID A
ING. FLOOR ING.
1870
CAROLINA FLOORING.
VIRGINIA FLOORING.
DRLAWARE FLOORING•
ASH FLOORING.
.WALNUT FLOORING.
1870 FLoßnm. STR BOARBIB7O
. /PLOBSIIA 1311 V P, Besii,ED/L
I
BAIL PLAAR.
.1870 *
" .A_LN ITT ] 41 .
" /870
AI4I3WALNUT BOARDS AND PLANK.
WALNUT BOARDS.
WALNUT PLANK.
ASSORTED
POR
OARINET MAKERS,
BUILDERS, &O.
Ig7o. lIN
L Eil i tigtICLEREY 1870 .
UNDERTAKERS' LUMBER.
WALNUT CEDAR,
AND PINE.
1870 8 EASONEA, POPLAR. IT7/1
. REASONED ()HERBY. Au V.
- -
WEITZ OAKTLANK - AwD - Boirßinit:
HIoKoRY.
1870.°A - RI L
_ _LI_ _ T. SILLS. 'lB7O
NORWAY SCANTLING.
870. cgnell.itSßlllia."?
GrYPRESB 8R1..0‘2 1 0 3 0.
LARGE ANORTEI RT.
FOR BALE LOW.
1.870. "FiTTMITiffLIAT.H . 1870
LA.
NAVLE B TH ROTIKER & CO.,
2600 SOUTH STHEZT.
Lumber Under COVei e g
A.LWATE DRY.
Walnut, White Pine, Yellow Pine, Spruce, Hamlo l ot
Shingles, Ite.. always on hand at low rates.
WATSON & GILLINGHAM
924 Richmond Street, Eighteenth Wald.
nt594.4
yrTOW PINE LUMBICE.--ORD
0ar.0.. of ever), description Sawed Lumber e•
notice—Quality subject to Ms a
Apply to EDW. H. BOWLEY.I6 South Wharves.
HEATERS AND STOVES.
aTHOMSON'S LONDON.HIT H.
ever, or European Ranges, for temples, ho
or public Institutions, In twenty different si es.
Also, Philadelphia Range/3,110t Air runt Olt
Portable Treaters, Low down Grates, Pireboard Bto es,
Bath Boilers, Stew bole Plates Broilers. Coo
Stoves,ew., wholesale and retail b;the m i gfactur a,
.. 7., SEA E & MSON
no99m ler 614 i1i0.209t orth ' d street.
.
THOMAS
S 4.
t D e U O R N
_& SONS, ONS,
No.lB24 he l An TNl w PSre i s x ndluds..
anulhottiOpposite United itatou t Mjnt.
rers of
LOW DOWNI- ,
PARLOR, t
CHW& A80T.%
, °I • ;
And other atiATREI;
For Lughracite 111 , , 1n0t3s and Wood fir ;
WABH-AnatiftiAoEo,
tor. Warmitiff Pqbna_and Private uildings.
REGIM B
ES, VENTILATORS.
AND
CHIMNEY OAPS
00011,ING-RANGlka t lATI-XOlll4lllB.
W : OLIONAtif - ins g TAnri
sl'itllTC
RORSEM
DELPHIA RllflNo SOBOOL u No. Mai Atar
tet street , is ovn daily for Ladies and Gentlemen. It
Is the largest, best lighted and„htuitoil; retablishment in
the city. The horses are thoroughly: broken for, the
most timid, All Afternoon elites for Young Ladies at ,
tending school k 74endav, Wednesday and Yridays, and .
an gyenitkOlititCfOr; ntlefilehl Horse% thoronght
trained for tuo saddle. broreek 'taken to livery Ilan
some carriages to hire. Storage for owls and
SETH GRAIGE,
Proprietor.
PRINTING.
1871
GENTS' FURNISHING GOODb. •
•
PATENT SHOULDERSEARISHIRT
mAritlF . A.Ofibßy.
ordern ter tienenelebinted Shittnerippli4 promilltlY
i:) kj u.P •
Gentlemen's Furnishing Goods,
Of late styles In full variety.
WIITCJEIESTER &-CO. w•
706 C STNUT.
fol•tti the t i
POCKETBOOKS;&C. -
11AR DWA-RE;-&-C-.
BUILDING AND HOUSEKEEPING
R A RDW - 2i RP.
Machinists, Carpenters and. other
,Me
chanics' Tools.
Binges, Screws, tocka. Knives and' irorks, Spoons,
Coffee &c., Stocks and Dies. Plug and Taper Taps
Universal and Scroll Chucks, Planesn great varlet
All to be bad at the Lowest Possible Prices y.
, .
At the CHEAP-FOR-CA4II
warn Store of
J. B. SHANNON,
sto.idogmaiketietteet.
GIFTS OF , HARDWARE.
Table Chdlery, with Ivory, .ivoryido, rubber4ind
other handles, and, plated blades; Knliee and
Forke, Pocket Knives, Scissors In sets Band* tiny
Pocke Knives, Scissors,BaeOniinatchet_,e' PitiOonh, Sic
for watch charms; Boxes and - Chests . Chests of Tool Ate ireM
to einft ; Patent - Tool Handles (twenty miniature tools 3n
them); Boys', Ladles' and Gents' Skates: Clothes
Wringers (they'll save their test in cickthint and time);
camet Sweepers,..Furniture:•l4ters, sets of Parlor and
Fi n n Croquet, miniature, Garden Tools, Carpet Straka'.
ere; 'Plated Spoons, Workr and Nut Picl.B Spice and
Cake Boxes, Tea Belle and Spring Call 'Bells, Nut
Crackers, Tea Trays and Walters, Patent Ash Sifters
(pay for themselves In - coal Raved) ; Carved Walnut
Brackets, Gentlemen's Blacking Stools, Boys' Sleds,Ap•
hie Parole and. Derry Stoning Machines, Patent Nut
meg Graters ( and a Renetal 'satiety of medal Honlik N
eeP. ,
In g Hardware. Cutler', Tools ; TB.
SHAW'S. No, 816(Eight Thirty-tits) Market street, be
low Ninth. Philadelphia.
9MBIIV ESN, CARDS.
Established '1.1121.
lIANAGAt dg SON;
HOUSE.AND SHIP IPLIIIIBBILS,
Na 129 Walnut Street
her i7§
WALT()
CABINET MKRS. •
NO. 413 WALNU A T S T R EET.
Manufacturers of
S ne.forniture and of medium priced
furniture of superior quality.
GOODS ON HAND AND MADE TO ORDER.
Counters, Desk-work, Be'., for Bunke, Offices and
Storee, made to order.
TOSllint 'WALTON,
1708, W. LIEPINOOTT.
JOSEPW L. SCOTT,
E WORT
commissioner of Deeds for the State of v
.rontosTivoeito is
OS Madison street, No. fil, i oTiPtato, Illinois. • Solid,
OTT ON BAII; 'DIICK'6I II 7I4I7:XLIY
C
width, from Xl inches to 76 'rches wide, all numbers
Tent and Awning Duck, Paper - maker ' s YelUng. Sail
Twine, kr,: JOHN W. EVERMAiII,
bad. N 0.103 Church street, City Stores.
HOW' 14111.11.T8 AND, CORSET. S .
1115.
GREAT CLOSING OUT SALE
HOOP. RUTS AND, CORSETSr
Commencing Saturday, PoolMbar 4,
Ana' win be Continued until lannati 1; IMO; with prices
marked down to end below the wholesale gold prices"
ntretling an opportunity for unprecedented- bargitine in
aria-class .1100 P SKINTS and OONSIETS fdr;thn time
above- stated ONLY.
. - - .
15,000 floor' Skirts for Ladies kiisees'and Children in •
• 100 varieties of styles, size, Qual ity and prhies, from Mo.
to 82, many of them marked down to, lens than One 'third'
. Price.
oYer 10,000 hornets, {deluding 83 kinds and prkwei such ,
na Thocenork'n Glove fitting 0011110, ill five mobil Jan..
Seckel'a Superior French Woven, In all gnat
M s:
Werly 'O, in four varieties; Mrs. Moody's Paten t elf-ad
lusting Supporting hornets; adame Foy'e Oor t and
nirt BApporters,• Superior* /land-made hornets, in al
grade'', At Children's, &e. , 'Together with our own
make of Cornets, in great variety.
All of which will be •
'RARETIi DOWN TO PANIC PRICES.
,
Call early, while the stock remains unbroken', as there
eau be no duplicates at the prices. •
At 1115 Chestipatt Street
dam w f3ml ,
_ WM.' T. ii .ORICINS.
FHE FINE ,ANTS
Established 17945.
A. S. ROBINSON
FRENCH PLATE LOOKING GLASSES,
13eautiful Ch9zailorsi;
ENGRAyiNGS Arm
nrilrfrws ,
Looking-G7awrzahrfeureoli , me,
92.0 CHESTNUT STREET.
" nth DpVierTriglAir"rtall
COAL AND'W ID.
R l. meson Birts. , , .., ~...____ _ 13811 r; emus,
TEX ••CPID t ItT 4I P I 4 3 ,n 4 iVrMO:c .A.TTBN:
nethelsitook o . , • .. . • •,1 : i ,
s ikti4lB
whfottraTtl i rtrAadm Lord notiltete OW.
...__' .4 Wit We Oa* our
hot be o , a.byikley ii.,,,
i gg i ce, NI .g t All
street whaaglannyarill.
DB FBTjt,
ri ga ',.._. ‘ • , .A.OT " ' PRA a TICE.
........ ''Att'.: JAW ' ii.'llB 'Vine "trail, below' Third ,
40_4,itilh
, 11110,Aindsomnat Teeth la tbs aityvat prices
or Nm°4 %; to xrivti; Tiotdiart L olygree.i:
—thaii• pourosB to 8 • saiirsAisldle
CORSETg.
ÜBMQVAIr
OP
RS. 1. H. GRAHAM'S
Irset , slWanufeetary 'and
ioup Skimped Variety,
Store,
'rem No. 207 N. Eighth St.'
1NFP,4471r. ,E!gliith St.,
Rant Sbie, above .PrA.
BARATET.
TOURNURES,,
PANTEitS,
HAM CLOTH SKIRTS:
12 S. kievollHi st.
1115.