'BUSINESS NOTICES. litehimay & &lune lOLA ND, SQUARE AND UPRIOIIT PIANOS. lientral rminction in prices in accordance with the do 4Use in the premium on gold. Steinway A Sons manufacture also an entirely now style of instrument termed the • , SCHOOL PIANO. , Precipely the Same' is firm, scale, Ulterior mechanism and workmanship as their highest priced 7 octavo sianoe, in a perfectly Pain,yet eveeeoingly neat trx 'Wier case. which are o ff ered to thew• who desire to Arst.olass " Steinway Piano," yet aro limited Cu=sg, at very low prices. lipecial attention to also called to Steinway A Bone' new, PATENT UPRIGHT PIANO, • With Double Iron Frame, Patent nominator, Tubular zeta) hams Action, /Cc., which are 1116toblose in tone mad teeth; end unrivalled In durability. Etvery Pinneforto is warranted for live years. rilastattit a t, and Mao eold on monthly Installments Ofd Plahoi, taken in exchange. 11111101 LES BL/11911713, sole Agent—for the axle of Stedowrydr Sons'ototht-renowneMalpfortes. Wsrerooms,'loo6 Vliestuutetreet. ana ,xisurairae. 110w in" prf ilidki4sl"tbol" o xlro nitdF'rdredielitisl6lq.„ll4)l- reso lved le r X 0 , 111, m w. linglatt ' bAglowit One aw when and wliwwwreron Woweroonne,rn Arch greet. Wkilkatol • myl-s m w tf§ Geo. Intiek az Co.'s Grand lixisbtPWice. Pianos to rent P Square and , • • JAI ' •Jr L 00IITAp, No. 923 Chestnut street. .ti V %PINING BULLETIN. Wedneaday, Nara& 23; 1E670. KOBE TEIEVIIIE LIES. The New York Associated Press and its dependents in Philadelphia, are getting very much alarmed at the success of the American Preiss,/aseciation. The ,Tribune, still refusing to retract its first lie concerning the l3url.Eritv, prints a fresh one to-day, in the form of a des paw) Purporting to have been sent from Phila delphia. It says the BULLETIN was sometime since cut off "for repeated violation of the , titles of the Associated" Press." This is an absolute lie. The BULLETIN never be longed to the Associated Press, and never heard of any ,rules to obey or infringe. It bought news from the Association of Philadelphia morning papers, which binight from the New York Associa- , tion, and paid much mei e for it than it was worth:. ,It chose also to make additional ar rangements for news, which alarmed the own ere of the morning papers, and a majority of ru tbat r cure their news. It was a great relief to us In more ways than one. Our readers get more and better news than they did before, and we are saved a great deal of useless ex pense, besides being released from all vassalage to the N4eW York Associated Press and its rep. resentalves here. The BULLETIN'S arrange ments for news were never so good as they are now; and:the prosperity of the paper was never so great as it is now. The New York World, fraternizing with the Tribune, tells a lie about the, BULLETIN to-day ; but it is used to the business, and nobody minds it. Among the papers of the New York Associated Press and their abject dependents we are getting a good deal of gratuitous advertising, for which we art very grateful. In ,the memitime, the American Press Association's growth in otnilgth end importance Is such. that the New York Association will soon be more frightened ever. NINTH AND ABCS. When the Democracy of Philadelphia went to housekeeping in the ,fine old doable man sion'at'the corner Of 'Ninth and' Arch streets, there were great expectations that the family would be happy. The Union League, as a social and political organization, was to be eclipse& and under+ the potential influence of the " Deniocratic Association of Pennsylva nia'," this city and the whole State werelo be rescued Von' Republicanism and, made com pletely Democratic. These flattering visions were never realized; ' there never, was the slightest prospect of their realization. The club-house Was litted up at the cost of the genteel and wealthy Democrats; but the ungenteel and poor, including the roughs,"_tould not see any real democracy in an institution which was exclusive or dictato rial; and on allexciting occasions, they, rebelled against the action of the authority that pre sided in the club-house of Ninth and Arch ! It was among the little coterie that Used to rule there that the nomination of Asa Packer for Governor was determined on ; for money was worshipped there, and its power a.l , a political agent was recognized. It was among the Ring, of Ninth and Arch, also, that a ticket for the city and county offices was concocted, which ,was 80 utterly odious that the mass of the party outside of the Ring rebelled against it, and 'a new one had to be put forward. The results of the State and city elections demoralized Ninth and Arch completely. There has been continual discord there, with very little hope of anything else, so long as the existing organization and management are continued. A few enlightened men, like Camp bell, O'Byrne, Shapleigh and Cochran, have been making addresses at the Saturday night meetings, totally at valiance with the past teach ings of the Association; and these have beets like hot shot thrown into the camp of those who cling to the traditions of the past and the theories, now dead and fossilized, that were set np as eternal truths and immortal principles - when they went to school in politics. The death of an eternal truth or an immortal principle was a paradox that could not be com prehended, and the progressive men who had' witnessed the death struggles, assisted at the obsequies and acknowledged the fact, were looked upon as little better than black Repub licans. The great difficulty at Nitith—ard Arch has been to harmonize on the subject of ," the nigger."' The conservatives, or reactionists, will not believe in the Fifteenth Amendment, which is going to endow a good many thou sands of colored men in Pennsylvania with the right to vote. The Irish element in the party revolts at the idea of a man with a dark skin voting, hoWever enlightened he may be men tally' and morally. It prefers that the right should be given to an ignorant and unlettered fox eigner as soon as he arrives in the country. It has been trained to regard the black race as the enemy of the Irish, and as the Poemocmc, is fargely Irish, it detests the idea of the two being brought together ou an , equality ~,at the polls. The authorities at Ninth and Arch have not had the courage to take decided ground on this question of negro suf frage. Hence came discontent and quarrels; hence also came a' falling off in the funds of the Association ; hence came a doubt of there being money enough to pay the expenses, Tat Litti:ltAY . 11 . .EN1M-iI,,BiIjaLLETIN * 477PIII.I,IADE , P.III,A« W 13NrESDAX, M _RC 42c r, :70 , , cluchug the , rent hence , a 'loth.* from the landlord that be Wanted pcesession of his property on the firstof July. Hence a ma nta of the Aisoclation, boldlast evening,to con sider whether it bad riot better breakup house keeping and wind, up its affairs. The subject Was referied to "a committee, will is to re port to a Ineet.intO , hejse4pn:olo , ,2ftth at which smet,i.cic 1t,h0gp m ,4 4 0e094 9 1,414 it, will deciAelf - ti. , Wind , hirr efr As good Republicane, t wo shall regret the extinction of the Democratic Association of Ninth and Arch streets.. The negative service it has occasionally rendered to the cause of Republicanism is recognized by us. ' The re cent addresses of,its progressive members, an 4 the disairection they have, produced, ..opeined the eyes of many. sundble Democrats to the truths of real Republicanism, which is, after, all, the only. real Democracy. Still there itti something sad in the rapid downfall .of. , an in stitution which was begun so boldly, and on which, as a foundation, so many 'confiding creatures expected to see old-fashioned De mocracy rebuilt as a substantial and enduring structure. TB E CENTENNIAL CELEBRATION. To-morrow,the Committee on tanirfactuse.s in the houseof Represenatives, at,Wasibington, will consider the proposition to bold a national celebration of the Centennial,. ,Anniversary of American Independence ''in this city. 'The propriety of choosing Philadelphia for such • a_ celebration is entirely manifest.. It. will be readily admitted by every unpreiudiced.xuretkm, the United States, arid if arik,pkiecttibp l it;alWiti, to the selection r the reason may be found sectional feeling of the objector, and in his selfish anxiety to secure for his own . city the material advantages . which will accrue to the inhabitants of whatever place is chosen for the purpose. So far-, the oply vigorous protests against the claims of Philadelphia have come from New York politicians and newspapers; and we _ have good reason for know ., nig that a desperate effort ' will lie, made hi Congress by these, to have this ex hibition in NEW York. One of the journaliof that city declares that if there is an industrial exposition it should be held in that city; but as• the superior claims of Philadelphia cannot be .e_ried _down-or sirgo &Amt. nLexistence„it_co tends that if New York is not honored the bet ter plan will be to have no special celebration under the direction of Congress,' but to perinit each city and State to manage the celebration at its own expense and , after its own fashion. We shall not liaVe the . slightest objection if' every city, town and hamlet in the country burn gunpowder, waves flags and hurrabsi through all of the twenty-four hours of the Fourth of July 11316. That is precisely the sort of thing that should be dare, in the. Most enthusiastic manner, whether Congress lands a hand or mit. But it is very: fitting that upon this anniversary a great fair should be held, in which shall be made manifest the WondrOus progress of this nation in those in dustrial arts and sciences which "have. given .us greatness anti power and riches;.in which shall be displayed the fabrics, the tools and the me chanical devices for the existence ofwhich the world is indebted' to American ingenuity and' skill; and in which we shall compare our pro dncts with the similar produets of the old • world. We have neV.er had In, this:country an industrial exposition at all proportionate to our greatness, and no more appropriate time .could, bb chosen for the first enterprise of the kind. than the day upon which we complete the first century of our national existence. ;If we are to have such a fair, Philadelphia is the place for it. There are'poetiCal and prae tical reasons why it should be held here. If it is not sufficient that the Declaration of Inde pendence was signed here, : and that from this city the glad tidings of a nation's birth were sent out to the woad, we may . find au , Ulna siverable 'argument in the - superiority'of . the Material advantages,offered by Philadelphia as, a site for the proposed exhibition. : The city ia accessible from all points by the best railroad.; in the country ; the largest vessels • may navi gate its river and lie, at its wbarves ; it has tbe finest hotels in the iverld, and a muititaide of private houses in which visitors can find all the comforts of a good hotel at half the cost; it has a system of street railroads which is of larger extent than any Other on the,globe, and by which persons can reach, any point in the cityquickly and easily ; and in the summer season, as well as in the winter, it is the healthi est of all the large cities iu the country. But chiefly do we claim the' right to this fair be cause Philadelphia is the greatest manufactur ing city upon this continent, and it can con tribute to the proposed exhibition a greater va riety of fabrics than any two—perhaps, three— of its rivals. Without the assistance of its artisans no exhibition could begiMto represent adequately American industry ; while it is very +Min that a simple display of all the articles' Manufactured in this city would include nearly eterything of importance made in the country. It would be sublime retribution if, in the event of this fair being given to New York through the unjust action, of Congress, oar artisans should refuse to contribute their goods. Better than this, if Congress refuses to help us in the fatter, let us help ourselves. There is wealth enough, energy enough and material enough in Philadelphia to get up a celebration of the cen tennial anniversary, with an industrial exhibi tion included, which will be creditable to the city and to American art, and which . will honor the occasion as it deserves to be honored. For the credit of the, country we want all the help we can get; but, if the authorities will not be just and generous, we ought to show the nation and the world that we can manage this affair in the best manner without assistance from anybody. YOU PAY YOUR MONEY AND YOU DON'T TARE YOUR, CHOICE , The action of the Legislature yesterday, upon the question of the selection of a site for the new public buildings, reminds us of the story of the kind-hearted father who said to his little girl : "My child, which would you rather do;go to the circus or pay a visit to your grand mother's grave ? But 1 give you notice be forehand that you shan't go to the circus, if you want to." The Legislature of Pennsyl vania passed a bill, yesterday, permitting the people of this city to 'vote up0); 1 „.#1014cstio,11 of the location of the public' building4.lnit.de- Oaring that Independence Square:tttbould—not be selected for the purpoie, even if 'a majority gave it the Preference. This. is a virtual declar ation that we must accept Penn Square firer we wish to do so .or not. ash it:ton Snare has wider' ' been consid e d seriously in the matter, and if it had been, all the,objections urged against Independence Square mild be brought to bear against'it with tenfold face. An election in which the voters are prohibited from expressing their honest opinion freely, is a farce, and the Legislature Which appointe such an election indulges in an exhibition of arbitrary , power' which is insult ihg to its constituents and masters. i By this action it aclinowledges that ti, majority of our citizens prcbabiy favor the 'Selection of the for ' hidden site and would vote for it if they laden Opportunity. This acknowledgement is an admission of the outrageous Character of the scheme to which the Lecislature has given its i tf,tioction. Recognizing that . the peo- Ple of , this community desire to appropriate to their ownuse their own property , . ---to which the State has no .claim and over Which it has no Moro jurisdiction than it' has Over the building lots owned by any priOate citizen, it deliberately undertakes to exclude the owners froin such dispcsition of their Property as they may see fit to make. This is carrying Legislative interference in our munici pal affairs a little too far. The Legislature has no business to take any part in this dispute; its simple duty is to order an election to be held, and to give to every citizen a chance to place his opinion on record. When it proceeded further, and assumed to anticipate Or to defeat the popular will, it transcended its powers, tind cemmitted an outrage 'against this Ace community as grois as its scandalous at tmpto to place the health and comfort of our itlzenli'atAlte , inerey of a dirty corporation of scavengers, to authorize a weighing company to rob our Merchants, and to give our streets to rapacious railroad companies:. This last of fence is as grievous as any of the outrages per petrated against this city by that corrupt body. If Governor Geary signs the bill, we will have qne resource left.; we must appeal to the courts, and obtain' froth them protection for our rights, and a declaration that the people alone have authority to select the site for buildings which are to be erected upon their own grOund and paid for with their own money. A day or,t.wo ago the Cincinnati Gazette re and it proceeded immediately to convey the melancholy information to its readers as a pre face to the customary obituary notice. The apparent enterprise displayed by the Gazette in securing the news of the assassination of this gory warrior so soon after the occurrence of the event, is to be attributed entirely to the fact, that it purchases its news from the Asso clafe:d Press., Certain` philosophers entertain tii theory that everything which happens in this world has already happened, 7,777 years ago, 'and 'will'happen again when '7,777 years have elapsed. If the Cineinnati papers remain with the Associated Press, probably they will obtain, information of the death of General George ; Yirashington, :the, immortal Blather of his country, by the time the Ameri can Revolution has been fought a second time, and George has again trod the path to glory and the graie. The Associated Press can do Well enough, if it has time. It may even yet have some account of Mr. Burlingame's death tle fore the resurrection. DRAMATIC. I French Uoniedy. 1 Last evening's performance closed the second subscription season of French Comedy . at the Amateurs' Drawing-Room, with a large, attendance: ---- M .-Juignet,.in A„ ne4 speech; taniced. the subscribers for their constant sympathy, and for the benefit performance with which they dcare' fe - ieWard the labors of the troupti:''.",The: latter, M. Juignet an nounced,, would take place on Monday,March 2/ith,instead of on the previous Saturday, as. at tirst intended. It will be devoted to a repre sentation of Frau-fro/L o gs now played in Paris,. Withont alteration, and will of course cram the Drawing-Room. . The final performance was varied and 'brilliant, consisting of two comedies; an operetta, a viplincello perform :Lee by ;ellard, and ,a recitation of Cop 10e's ,new • poem, • "La .Greve . des Forgerons,” . by • Juignet.. . The last, for which N. Juignet blackened his hands and tied on • the leathern apron of , 4 pi;re Jean," was -wonderfully real and lin iihed. The - lameness of M. Genet, who could hardly get through his part in .131'ttieu Landry, Prevented the representation,of_Un Lroutineda , td, for which Les JttronsdC Cadillac was sub ituted, to tbe delight of the_ audience, Who 4 1. Were glad" enough to; loSe Ate shilling for the shke of the guinea. ,'The performances of the troupe have given great pleasure, and they deserve all the gratification, they will in turn receive at their own benefit next Monday evening.. - - • , ' 1 Billll4lllM Durborow r io., Auctioneers. Nos. 232 and 284 Market street, will hold on to-morrow, Thursday, March 24, at 10 o clock , on , four mouths' credit, a large sale of Foreign and Domestic Dry Goats. including 24.4' packages Domestics, 700 pions. (Botha, Uassimeres, Doeskins, Monona, Italians, Satin do oldue, Lrap d'Ete, Spacial offerings of 800 lots of Linens and Litton Goods, Piques, White' Goods, Ilaml• kr chiefs, English Hosiery, Shirts, &c. Also, full lino o Press Goods; Silks. Shawls, (Monks, &c. Alan, Balmoral and Hoop Skirts. Gloved, Quilts, Um brellas, Ties, Shirt Fronts, Trimmings. /ie. On Friday, March 20, at 11 o'clock. on four months . credit, 200 pieces Ingrain, Venitian, List, Ilemn.Gottage and Nag Carpeting., Oil Cloths, Canton Mattings, acc. eTREGO'S TEABERRY TOOTHWASH.- It is the mold pleasant , cheapest and best dentifrice tent. Warranted free from injurious ingredients. ' It Preserves and Whitens the Teeth I Invigorates and Soothes the Gums ! Purifies and Perfumes the Breath I Prevents Accumulation of Tartar ! ttleanses and Purifies Artificial Teeth ! Is a Superior Article,for Ohildreu I I Sold by all, Druggsts. . . A. M. WILSON, Proprietor, 'Uhl ly rp§ Ninth and Filbert streets, Philadelphia. ..._ "ILIF EADQUARintB FOR EXTRACTING .1.1.„ TEETH WITH ,F RESH NITROUS OXIDE "Afiffilit MAY NO PAIN." Dr. F. THOMAS, formerly operator at the Velton Dental Rooms, devotee his entireteractice to the painless egtraetion et teeth. Office, 911 Walnut et. mhs,lyro PiGLTO,NDENTAL ASSOCIATION 081 la ginated the anaesthetic MO of NITROUS OXIDE, OR LAUGHING GAS, And devote their whole time and practioe to extractha teeth without pain. Office, Eighth and Walnut etreet4. ap2Oly L ARDING - NEEDLES, SKEWERS , basting apoone,egg Whim cooks' knives, mincing knivne,loasting forke, pante niggera. and a general sort men I of hardware and cutlery for houaakeepare , use. TRUMANat & SHAW'S, No. 835 (ElghtThirty-live) Market etreet,below Ninth. MTJBS'WASHBOARDS, PAILS. ROLL- A. ing pine, potato mashers, mince meat tram wooden bowls and apoone.meat pounders, and other wooden and houeekerphae hardware, for sato by TRUMAN , & tRIAW, No. B.ls(Night Thirty-fly e) Market street, below Iqintb. TIGIITLY AND QUICKLY PUSLIED over a carpet the patent sweeping -machine gathers up shreds of threads, scraps of paper, pine, needles, dirt and dust, auite ae well ne in sweeping with a broom. and with no in the nap of the carpet. For Sale by TILVMANI& 1311 AW, N 0.1186 ( Right Thirty-five) *millet street, below Ninth. FITLER & CO., Cordage Manufacturers P and Dealers In Itiv2 . 3 N. Water Street and . Delaware Avenue PUILADXLPHIA. EDWIN N. YITLBR. CONRAD P, movinin THE do*. , DOWN': : THE GOODS PUT:DowN. THE GOODS DtlIT HORT. THE GOODS PDT DOWN: , THE GOODS PUT DOWN. EiT:EOIZ AT OAK lIALIk. ;opiaptE'qi,. 4 l:kpf: Batt.' OPiilolla AT OAK BAAL. I§OllOlE,l AT oAli OLD TIME PRICES. OLD' TIME PRIMES. OLD TIME PRICES. OLD TIME IPRIOMB, *EN AND BOYS' OLOTH3I3 ? lINN AND DOTS' 11f.0141118. NEN AND Dine' 0.1011;431 1 / 2 . MEN AND' DOTS' OLOTNIIB.' CABlL—loist MODOW,WO ittUrned to specie poymonts. Ititriod ant Other for *bong*, Instant of Free dens' Currency. Wai hare mdre Beady-Idado °tattling than any lionise this side of the Atlantic Ocean, and prices sante . fis it Gold was at no prentluni. WANAMARffiIIf,4I. BROWN; , , OAR HALL ' THE LABOEBI' OLOIMINO HOUSE, K. E. corner SIXTH and MARKET Streets. At the Head of the Heap. 1 . The quality and style of the clothing kept by ROCKBILL & WILSON , not only entitle them to the appellation of - SIJPERIOR but 66 initch more excellent are they ,than the clothes inade by any other house for the 'Phila. delphia.market, that Philadelphians,' and all the pectplevbo deal In Philadblphia, ac snoariedge them to be . . , BottOr than Anybody Else's Best, ROCKII II A+, i& IYIL§PNA I 3OPubue Clothiers' are also, t -Public Benefactors For they contribute to • the Good 'Looks, the. • Calif Oft; the; Sound .11ealth; and the. social Enjoyment of the Public. hare .A.ttractions for Spring.' Big Big Indneements'for Spring. • • Low Prices fpr Spring: Immense Stock for Spring.. arnti nna fnr Spri Come and see the variety, Ready-made or made to order Great Brown gall, 603 and 605 CHESTNUT Street, ROCKIHLL & WILSON. SEGARS, &C. ' B, C., WORTHINGTON SON, Wholesale and Retail Dealer/ in IMPORTED AND DOMESTIC CIGARS, AND ALL ARTICLES OF THE TRADE. 433 Chestnut St., opposite the Post,olllce. Branch of 106 South SIXTH street, PHILADtLYVIA. ' AGENTS FOR KEY w.Far CIGARS. We inette an inspection dt our stock ; every sato being guaranteed. • • ' • • , soh2ti Wire LADIES' DAM; GOODS. TO Tlig, GRAND arsativiro OF THE LATEST xoluattits JN LADIES' DRESS TRIMMINGS, Laces and Trimmed Paper Patterns, • ON TVESDAY, ELAItCH 29, 18/0, AT MAXWELL'S LADIES' DRESS TfillflitlNGS; PAPER PATTDRIV, AND DRESS MAKING ESTABLISHMENT, 14. E. corner Chestnut end Kleventb Stu. PRINCIPAL ACENCY FOR E. BUTTERIOR. A 00.'S ; • CELEBRATED PATTERNS 07 OARPIEN TS _for Ladies, Missea, Boys and Little Children. mh23 w f m 3mrp HATS. -- HATS A.ND CAPS. _ JUST OPENED SPRING STYLES AT TILE SOUTHEAST CORNER ' FOURTH AND CHESTNUT, AT WHOLESALE PRICES. 'rabl9 lair FOR SALE. ea West Thipehookeit Street, 111 'Rut GERMANTOWN. !FOR BALE -A BARGAIN. A 'delightful doable dwelling HOUSE, in excellent repair and having all the modern conveniences. Location unsurpassed. Lot 100 feet by 216 feet handsomely improved. Room far /Stable 011 roar end. Owner wishes to realize during the coming outh. Address. with real name, Box B, Philadelphia P: 0: 26 26 30 ap2-6t* AGRICULTURAL teBUIST'S GARDEN .MANUAL AND Almanac for 1870 contains 120 -pages of useful in formation to country residents. Distributed growl tpuely from TWIST'S SEED WILBEHODSE, , 022 and PA Maritet tftreot, above Ninth. BVIST'S WARRANTED GARDEN &eds.—Market Gardeners or Private Families who desire the most improved seeds Should purchase their snPPlics at DIIIST'S SEEDWAREHGUSE, 922 and 924 Market street. above Ninth. .A.GRA:IILTURAL IMPLEMENTS AND GARDEN TOOLS, Ploughs, Ilarrowe, Culti vators: Seed-Sowere, Churns, Garden and Field Rollers, Lawn Blowers, Railroad and Garden Wheelbarrows, Ray, Straw aud Fodder Cuttore, all at reduced prices. Oall, and erautine our stock. . • 1 , itonERT TWIST, Jn., Seed Warehouse, 9= and P 24 Market trout. • l THE PHILADELPHIALAWN MOWNR.--Thia le the most improved band-ma , c iillo made. and Millet the article , needed by, all who have graea to cut. It can be operated by a lady wit bout fatigue. Price $2B, and every mower warranted. bold by, , , ROBERT BUIST. Jll.l tul7 lm rp§ . Seed Warehouse, 922 and 924 Market et. WANTI4. ANTED-BY A F Wll RENCHMAN 0 yenoaks German and English, a situation ad 'Courier for family traveling in Europe, 'having boon several years in that position.. Addresti GEORGE KRIEGER, case of Drexel & Co. .. • • BOAUDING. WANTED—BY 'A LADY AND tlernan, one or two rooms, with bathroom and board ; location, sweat of T,wolfth and north of tloatea. Address "E. ,A „' No. 6.15' Market r at es . • roh23-ve a 2t." pIE3R 13ARREL8 LIGHT-OOL ored sweet FM 00, lorr-prieed, for ,ssle by BDW JWWLEY, 10 Routh Front street. 777 :kn ;', '-e , : i'", , ;VIA y:L:: t -A' i (,' 717 r 'll !_ 4 OST': It3lit - MA#01N0131D,1111!" , ;HANS AI 414 iTAIAN li 13 nAT I LOs t i Woo t Rtgargo o.nd otity/wo Ittlisiin,l Ltlyil ITER; itAnatsin; br re. " Caitillno Lei) Beitin't tivul ' /11AlittY tcuital. ellt. ' Ivein'Airlion; raid ilytoe; boinntin etah. And other Now Books are pobilahodthie day by T. B. RETXUSON A BROTHRBS, 300' (1111.8'11 MT *STREET. And aro for talo.by oil 411 . 004014ers and Nowa Agents. . , 1, ...LI; i • ~ , .11; ; MASSINGBERD. EffillMllll ROMARcE OF REAL LIFE: 111 illTllo/1 OF "A County Family," "61Orr,itsil Rot:loath ilim," "The 0 01gFerds of, (1170..' "Oarlyoa's ,Year," • ' "066 of thO • • "Be is the Moot homoroutt of the writers of fiction at present, but hie fun is 111114,11 tionirollild by good taste, trgatkathottp_, Also, his toneol fooling le RS rational as it is pure. Tterei is no novelist who more the a ffections hoinnetitY and •bapplitess of the a ff ections lb their b est and most virtuous oler Mee; but there Is no sent mentality his writings —nor • tOnek et OM g e llaglOwt of fltltebood which woul'i I::the heart. p coma of toe conscience, ant i exalt salon at 10 , 01tpdrme Of- Princlplo."--Erarnixer coed. don littnew. Complete In one largo duodecimo volthroi. Price $1 76 *cloth; 0r,.511 VIIn phiteroOrer: , • , ; ' HANOI iiit4llllliAßUO6 nAtiolliDS: ' • lIANS BIIEITINANNIN BALLADS. , 1 / 4 1eit4; Enlarged nodes/a templets..g.dittos. By Charles o.44eland. ThiN Ogle rdision of M usts Bfritmassx's Ba ll ads " ' contaitis eerytherue that. 'l Nests .Breirenaren P has ever torfne s .. ho volume contains " Hata -11reitmann'a PIO/ ; with oder Ballade," " Nana ltrettrannn 'About Town ; owl' titer Bilhttle," o 4114. 1 '11am) :Mreittunnn in Church ' eta ther New Ballads," being the ".First,!' "5et0:14, 4 and .• TAW 9 Ekriei of ihi famihis • aisitnfisms' Ehtlials,'lslitS Complete Glossary to the whole. , It la pr rod in 0 n 4) ly o ge volymo,no.the 4 neat tints& plate A r., 'and' en inzliteroced Cloth:gilt tup , gilt aid el,an gO. Week, with evened , bonnie making it une of .the handsomest elanies v e leta Issued' in title , country. l'rico' Three' olive.: tl /:' .*, ..:.. ' • ;,',i 1 .... ' ' • . We have also Just issued new and reirleededitlons.of 1114.1)10BBEITM AN NIS PARTY . wit h other flatlad4l," 11A,NRITITILANN IN on lifiCtd, with other, ital. adn," and . VJHANS 13 REITMAN N AI3O,IiT.PWN4 with other allude."G Br Charles . Leland. Inch inane iroterne, tinted payer. . Price' Serenity-fire Centavo:tell. MARRY I.OIIII , EQ,IIIRIL , CLOTH'. 1 DARBY ' LISRBR4ITIOR.- WITH ' hit CliNg.F.B - annosxpArnizncts. , fly Charles. Lever. Iv ew and Boulltiftil edition, printed from large trPe• Ine larger octavo volnme, twnud it) cloth, for tt.: 00; or , a cheap edition iu paper cover, fur 75 cents./ . . . 1 , ';3111119;111ENTIM 0111,E4,"B 11100IL6, ` - IMVB • AFTII.N ...NABRIAC. ; AND , OTHER nroloß,ti OP TUN:BRANT, By Mrv. Carotin,' Lee IH.leuta. Nente‘ , Thte Seth)) rentA volume of " Peterson '44" new nee uniform edition of the cool &pie worko of Mre. Caro. lino Lee II ente s now pohlishing In twelve volumes. ono volition beinglesued every two weeks until the . eeri es Is i,n,plete. ill to by in uniform style with the new e lithium of "MOE 'AFTER MARRIAOP.;.' "COURTSHIP AND; II A Ital.Atißi" ':II.IRI.EN AND ARTHUR," O •PLANTNIt'I3 •NoRTUERN BRIDE ," "ROWSE," i,•E T ItNEH' LINWOOD," "MARCUS %VARIAN 1),• 1 !.11ENA," "LINDA." and "IttlitEßT GRAHAII.”. hiready issued. , Each !owl; is compl, , te In one YOlllint . , dfirulecinio, 'honed in green Merocco Cloth, with a Ilf.w full gilt back, price al 73 ; or in paper cover, price g 1 r,o, i All beekttpnblighed are finr tin e yin, the up,ment they are ilianotl fri.ari; the prep. Call in pernoti, or . end for Whatever liookii you miry want, to W. U. P1E1717.84)N d BAOTiIEES. 306 Chestnut Ht., Philadelphia, Pa. 114 y CARR, AGES. ESTABLISHED 1853: JOSEPH BECKHAUS, 1204 FRANKF'ORD AVEXUE, I ABOVE CREAM) AVENUE, Idanulictarer of Exeltotholy Firat-claw CAE a Ac 7 i s. NEWEST STYLES dlarenc..?e, Landaue, ' Landanlettes, 'Close•roachisi, Shifting gr. , %sic' hoe, Coupen, Buroncloe, 'Phaetons, ReckawliTit;etc.. l3 UlTA ISLE FOR PRIVATE FAMILY rna PEIBLIO USE: Workmanship and Math eecond to none in tlie conntri , . Finn and varied Stock on hand--completed and in the yorke. Qrdeie receive Prompt.' n(11'501141 attention. All work warranted. ' mbl4 hurpli . . 0. N.C. . LANE, ' 1 - , 1 CARRIAGE,ZULLDER, 482, .3484 and 848 . 6 Market St.; • . • WtBT PIIILADELPIIIA. ~ ' • A large anortnient of Carriages ,df every deecription ! onetaut47 on' hand,.'Especial attention • - paid to repairing. Al 4 6turp§.l, MISCELLANEOUS, . , JAMES M. SCOVEL, Lwyeri cAdirozat, NEW JERSEY. mh29 MTV • • • • IL P. •& C. R. TAXI,OIt, PERFUMERY AND TOILET OAPS, • 6111 and 61311drth Ninth street oIap.LESS 'CARPET 's WEEP Es, ii witb'eushions. Vlutihg machinev at reduced pricks. Olotbee•wringers, with patent rolls that will, not twist off.., Bold by on.q.rxrnlL ArchPA Et „et lippi ,LIP ' 4 " L '' CARPENTER AND DDIONW NO. INUIANSOM STREET; : PifiIfAVELPHIA. Jelo•lyrD 1..).111.1...6DVAAP11.1.41. SUAGE NEW BAND -1 AGE IN STITLITE,I4 N. Ninth et ~aboye Market. R. 0. EVERETT'S ' Truss positively cards • R u ptures. oheap . Trtameb; , Elastic Belts, Stockings Supporters, Shoulder Braces, Orutcheet Buzpensoriee', 'Band. Ladies attended toter Mrs. R. . , 'toe, WEDDING D ENGAGElitigiit IT V Binge 2f solid , 18, karatline Hold--a specialty; • full flasortment eyeball, and no °barge for engraving nattidei, FARR & BROTHER, Makerift I anq244,ro if , 8240heetnnt street below 'Fourth. Icgozo MONEY • TO : 'ANY AMOL _AT I LOANED' UPON' DIAMONDSLWATOIIing JIDWNLBY,RIATV,c I LOTERVG, ao., of , -, • s Jovigp & G 0.% OLDTESTAFHHED LOAN OFFION, corner"of d and °WWI stroetA °low Ltnnberd. , • i 1 V ,11,—VIAliONDS , WATOIINS, now nuir,Otaill 10.. 11111111111minzammuimw (:O VERB 'PUB 'ROI3 - ES, Ln if antL SE .kpd Horse Ge ar. All kinds. None 1 - or or offkkper. 4NEttridli harness Stor e n 26 Mar% ket otreet. tut Norse in Lbe _ do. • ir-tros rens• R. LEIGH'S IMPROVED HARD Rubber Truss never rusty; breaks ct 8011 01 used in batlllnisj Forprorters, 'Elastic Mena, Otocatimipll,kinde of Trussed , iind Braces. &lies atteded ' vylipli. LEIGH Hr Ohbortnnt,sepc- D4gtor.Y.. .'`' - u :' • ' . . , feIUICEIIISS; LIQUOW Azi). wM .r :"NbAe ,Celebrated :Irrr OOMPAGIFI4• - :' GOtOIIII4Xit t 0 , 1 -.., 4.,, 4, , ,i ~ t . g::zt 't ,T, f)C " ~ 1 . ~n ,-,..; 14 Our Second Importation of esie Vent , . , , , r.. , •, - ! , -,- : HYGlElifle CHOCOLATE, just arrived., 141T071= & FLETOggis„‘ No. 1204 CHEtrin. MOOT. 6 f SilVOlrf i';V:0, , ,X . ...-W. : 111.'..,E..:t THE FINEST IN. THE WORLD P.AYIS:k:.tiVitARIA.): TENT!' STREM LITIZ CURRANT WINE. ALBERT , C. ROBERT De,lerkke , er , c4czt9tioP of rine 9AWicrieli4 Corner tleventh ind Vine Streets i3XlietTrilets; RETAIL DE!ARThigNt, ,ALLUN, CREASV Sc . SLQAN, ImPolikrs and Dealrg C'ALn,]PIETINGriS, ; Warehouse, 509 Chestnut ,StreeL SPRING IMPORTATIONS • New 'and Blegaitt Deeigto GREATLY REDUCED PRICES. 1,000 pieces'English ;13,41015, 1,000 pleces.ores*l Tapestries. , Mott of tto above art ,f t il)lfikatlrtaitY, galitl, pa' sate pattovrae, awl EleetiFeed I . !+ f prissily for Oar trade. CANTON MATTINGS, ENGLISH OIL CLOTHS, COCOA MATTINGS. McCALLIIM, & SLOAN, rok.2 wfas harp • ' • • °. NEW CARPETING& WN ARN NOW OPENANIa A Jr Umi 141-nr Or FOREIGN and DONIEMTIC t'ARPET.ii • • OIL CLOTHS MATT:INGS • OF ALL ORADEA, • • 191 Tell WE ARE ovvEnrica AT GREATT:r • ' DUCEP PRIMES FROM LAST 5EA892.1. _ LEEDOM, SHAW fir. STEWART, . • . . , 68.4 1/ARIMT . STREET. fe.l93mr. 111 k -FIN ,-Altre; NEW CHROMOS. JAMES s. EARLE & SONS, Sl6 Thestnut Street, I Are renstlntly in recelpt of numbers of NEW EN GRAVINGS and NEW (31110M08. A few of the fittest ate as follows: , . Artist's. !' Litilitiva," • J. G, Brown " lunoceuce,"„.-...-. .•.- ..... ..--' .........—..-.3• •.•11rd'aut lA by Don't lie Comer Corupardon.-. ..... .-.J. GGBrown Innovate bletriorles A. 3. If. Way he First Leeson in Music ......... : ... -...-..... ... .14,obriatton aid Asleep I gra. Anderson , Wide Awake I re. Andersen ,T he Queen of the Woods 4.••„ ,•••••1 iO. Brownr Little Bo Peep" • ' .3. (."Brown A. Fam i ily Scene n Pompeii. , 'A:Yeomans i l Dotty Dimple"..,, . . ...... .........,,, • i.Mrs. iistrrity The Monastery in Niuter - Jac'Obsen " A Wet Sheet and a Plowing Bea,".— ' De Sunset on the Coast De Ilium Lannch of the Life-Boat • E. Moran Yo Semite Valley. • Thos. Hill The Birthplace of Whittier i ........ Thee Mill Beatrice Cenci Guido Always on hand the largest collection in the conntry St the very loweetprices. Chrogtos and Engravings sent in safety by mail. ~ , Co F. kIASIATINE WILL SELL AT HIS GALLERIES, 1125 CHESTNUT STREETS AT PUOLIC SALE, bout 500 Magnificent Coi'd Photographs, On the Eyontnig of Thursday . and Friday, March 24 and 25. , . • Now on Exhibition. to be 601E1 bi B. 130011, BARI'LETT, No. 33 South Sixth Sireei, Ever thankful= for the patronage ex ',ended him' heretofore, and desirodil of further &fors' begs toannOonee his '110641' tcr Gents' andßoys? wear. , large assortment of Custom-made s'iods, Modem' his improved Lasts', whiph re TMOVA,I4 comfort and Wady, eimbles him' to furnish a ready ht . time, axis -131 ' 4v f I Fril ORS i A s e.-7 - 7 - 7 - 7 ~ tratoA,r; . • Bolsi* s 4 ocass r :Fion for the Mak chamber:L*4i fined orb:Deo lathe in , and a great 'variety , fat to trot° ; tido° direst h ~_ _°_ 111 K. , • _ lrAnu:,t ifllulliElli sublaffs, ' • 11111 Uheetnnt street, below Rana; =MEE EMiIM SECUIar, a 110-N V I ft 1% /'/ ; tafiatioiL) , , •••S; twirt" MENTA=MMI I) .l UAL_ The Patin Joarnals Warm in tfteir , Av -prfrk on of Napoleon's Poitcy. TROD, S:: IN NEW: Z 1 L4l D^ / / AAVikira666o6.l' Search • City ,of Boston. MON WASHINGTON An ( WA. rreoureAgslast tI innelank A l genth" ll !d! The , Ptesidentl,Werhing Hard for the IhiFi ,Doteigo , Tiesty.• ) VROM . Ur.' is .Auteudeat ,to. : .tbe !Owlet Derpateb to tho t nilia t WitsniNaroN, MaYdr23.—There is great ef tire nutring - 14;Cre4t4 ''an• entiide' pressure : afitrist the Bingham amendment to the Gtorgid bill,Ow pending-in the , *lento. .A nuels-meeting was held in, f.inert oi l INA,. 'elfrely" attended; 'the hall ;net! , being ptalf . 114e511 though it had been' extett- • advertised prominent -.speakers srottidlitke, .part. Mayar,.Dovien presided,and speeches ;vier* txtmle by John,,W, , ‘ForritiY J re: presentatiy,e-c lent Ileard,, of Aprace pf s." 4 :fF!St• i qo.vierfiqF; 9fs, Snutly Carolina; Goveruotullsakc Thayer and others, white and colored.. • irate Pfau nintiingoVietitk, Stscretary Fish and Senatons,Carpetiter,.l)at- - terven , ,.Terry, Ross, Sprague, Vragin, Buck- inghan4 , newts . , Itic:e, Abbott, 116`tlie, Tra i rris, CV, e rre out: * Pratt, Tipton I be:rt were fiuumnoge A to,thu ttomit-,141, no; t to confer with the President about the Linn Domingo treutt The .Prpiident's axtp - e'Wl artf to get t ! hq yeaty,rati fled are eiharpls - otjeyed in Borne qaarter§. • • , .• • fgols EUROPE. ity tip AnseifiOi Prey Aassast464,l • _ NapOltePiCe lieelnrwiton: ilcistrch . 2V-:-Thejourn4s gas city aro wa,ftnln,liVilapprobation of Napoleon i c thopliration ,in l'4v9r of adopting all reforms which the constitutional goyertnneat reinire.s. Zesioxid. Lo)ipoN, march • fro7m ,New Zealand state that hostilities have recom menced in that conntry between the Maoris and the ' Mathias , Heard tram the City of Magian. The vessels which were recently sent out to search for the missing steamer City of Boston have retatvied.'nnsimeeisfal, 'having foururno traces Other. ' • d v ' •' FROM THE WEST. , f By th • American Press Association.) 011[10. Weight of Cern. . . Cutenowt% March 23.—The Chamber of Commerce have adopted a rule that fifty eightpounde plould,be.the weight.of a hu.shel of corn, after the tint 'thy of April. The Cfnehmiet -end Chattanooga_ Sail • j s' - 111111. 4 , The Board of Trade.willmetnorialize Con gifts, on Saturday'vettf,oa , the Cincinnati an( Chatta,ncidgarailtoad bill, presented to Con griaa by Senator Sherinan. Derision Beiitie suid.,for the recovery of ,twenty-:five thou sand dollars, invesfed by Mr. Van Camp through a gentleman 'named Gilbert, for spec ulatipn in Cleveland and ~.ir ' ,ittbburgli Itailrozu stOck, was decided in favo ortlie defendant. Lecture C.I.WcivNATi; Match' 23.—The Secretary of the American Vree Trade Lear,ae leettires tierpAo-zoorrow. , ,1111oveutieut Against the Albite. The anti-Bible movunent inaugurated here Jai nightevinced a bitterspirit of antagonism- The Germans passed resolutions in= favor of the free-thinkers; against having the Bible read or hymns sung in the public schools, and against the rectignitiort of the rAlntighty in the National Constitution. WISCONSIN.' ' , The Weathee..-Fonr Feet of Snow on the Orosand;, ~ MrLwAncizE, March, 1 23.—A letter from North Monastique, dated, March 13th; repdas four feet of snow upon ,the ground, and the mercury two degrees below zero, There'liad been no thaw for oue hundred . and twenty days, and the prosiieet.4 of an inirly`4eiling of the Straits of Mackinaw are not . very flat tering. A genfiernan,just arrived frore Lake Supe: liar, reports the snow front fiye to aeyen feet deep itrthe vroods. - • • ' otan Alleged Bliirderer. itAciNE, March 'l. 2 J.—Samuel Watson, a man aged sixty years, is being tried here,on the charge, of murdering Mrs. Annie Hawley, a woman with - whom he had been intimate. Her remains were found under a bridge, tied up. In a shawl, with the limbs drawn up .each side of her head. Her ~ s lpull was fractured. The prisoner claims to be innocent. MISSOIIIII. - • Reopening of Navigation. KANSAS CITY, Mareh 23.—NavikatiOn has reopened. The Mountaineer, the first boat of the sewn* Arrived yesterday. • Heath from Suffocation. Drennon, the man who blew out the gas at the M. Nicholas Hotel, has since died from its eireeta• Pacific Railroad Bonds. The Governor bas signed one thousand bonds ) of one thousand dollars each, amount ing to a million dollars,' of the South Pacific Railroad. These bonds are to be sent east tor conversion into money, which is to ,be placed to the Credit of the State''Treasurer, and then drawn out under the law required. ILLINOIS". • __ Chicago Mortality. 9 / UFAGcI, Mar ghZ 3 d.7 -- "T . _4eAtits this city during last week were 3.211. • ' ' Receipt of ,California , Threatens of fish caught in the Sacramento river 'were receives yesterday over the Nat' la) Railroad, by : 0,10 dealer. Also, a lot , pinialinaiisraaparatunrgreenTWF and cauliflowertio,i t‘;',l Of' mere nste 117sstliqs this. fity - wrietday, but, thn total lika tunnuntdeonty;to abet& six thousand dollati, , Sudden- Deauteradr•aub otrtiaired ; A sl , 44ifiil kge:lB gli4tfir:suw :the Deptiitoop,t gf the raiedanddersiy on his way from Texafi, • • MAL:BI7IAL- AND COMINIER induidelpide Stook litsetumege Sales. , Imul, somin. r gno4;ity,oo nem ! „ 3, , ~,Nl4 . 01 oin Aux ; ~,.; la% lAde do 30 sh do 116 , 4 2790 •do Its 101! Beh do 113li IWO A l lem% A, to, 90 I lab do , Its )14 600034 Basic 12 , ', 68 .4111sti , Penni% -lts , ~, 60% 110001,e, fah Gidd In 66 Nlg ishteh Val A 86 194 sh Mesh Bk_ 81,14 286 Morel/v(39,ml licp 13 sib It 10 enanNt A awn 4204 ) ' 4 .. 8511Welli 1155511 De. 0 E 000 Penn l mise6s 93$ 200 oh Leh Na, elk 110lys 92' '1 24 she*Asult lts 116 100 eh Read A , 4104 l i 10 a Leh Val A ,66 200 at. do alO .Its 1 a do , •. • mi,,,i r o , ,do 1, 66 I aril r 110. II do '63 ''' 65 11 eh 'do - `9odis sn.vl ,4$ s • Oa, , 2419 s VI , .100 eta ~, • do.; bills , : Aki isegiJts" Sinew . • ,' ' • 1011 3NB Leh' Na. Bth4, 144t0 N Prune 64 __... 90 1 10 eh Bled At ' • ' ;1000 Cam &A tl 2injg Ade bS' 190th ~ 'dti' '15304,11' 434 - 96 sh 0 Cab JIB W Its 41%1 I •1 11 78 BOARDS. - sopa Leh Val It Cu. Ada _A , 2 eh ; Penn B. 11 1 \ : now, 11#1;9514 . 01hCRilyszo, - . , I* , I.o9Let! 11141 Lt •k . ,' i -, • . , MIME . 1 - ~ 11111 / 064110 /10 1 4 14 Fr 0 4 " ~.. WanttSett.tijdayeji - .16:.- eyr litntett:, t i ttlointw smarty tolatirto, era s boar call - • line„ . ouders, oPerild'Oeilywith ell stip can 0 ,gitodr croat r Pro' iv use 4 with , Ifivirnd t Itateriklei lk 113° 1 0 pqaitia ria ex , ,hI id tri d , if Inerettiin 1 be' c.l) Di' rPTRI Pl a rriPPoda• It rry Mon. ,We quotece loatie a EMI per - cent. ,tirat-olaes Mark eldtile'*wr t Gee per cent..., The g.tilnr_,l_,_.oan market ler'ettritablY allitgOW 111 . - fpar ' °/- ' 4 *"" ""*'. yenry canal It tne appeoac i 'of April, tleeme. to - have vanished. - • Gold opened quiet but' atroxig i at 1.1% 4i! , C4/21ipii be foie moon to' Ilk.. • '' ' , ~' . ' " • • Government Bonds are drill but prices are;steadl. The Cnrrency Sixes ato parricithlrir atrngt 6 / 1 ° l ag 6in M *ante 013 i. . • • ' " - There was very little bitatipeiti at the,Stock Pcitad, but Trices are unyielding. • , ' - ' • In City Sixes, there . were,- trifling. i .eales 'or 'tile new bona at 101,N.: Small sales of - Ilehilth Gold Loan at HEX. , „ Reading Itailioad Was•ntilei, a n d ; In wales wore re. ported,: but pricre eoptin iv, *lthatt t change. Sales of Penssylvanta at tafr. • Camden itted Amboy- Railroad at . I 1..5S agt,...' ; Lehigh ' Valley Atettroad at 55—nri advance of , 37,4t,'wee o ff ered for Pacendy)raniai 27:4 for phila- ' deli q. ga end 'A rite, and 344 for Catexiara'Preterred, _ JD the telacellartrona liar there' 'WM conelderablet de. wand, bnt • the' o nly sale wan in Meehan ice Batik at ,31.1‘, Prices were very prof. f . ,' ' ' • ,- . ileettrit.lo4 l ffirren ilatorbitYNo:4ol6rotrib thii:dittrok: make the,followipa rile otattone of the. rates of •exchanen:, today' at ' nom: United States blzeit of 4881. 111311.0(; do. , 410.:18611, 10911010: do. do, 1864.1083fig1a1i.; do. do.; , V 1164 yviatil: do.' do. MS, new, itr/Pfalnfia,' '',, do; do lga. rel(ry iner4alltfifg; do. do. 'MA, 106)Salod,la; d0.d0... - 4 , 8.10405. 10t5i0.94 ... . It. S. , 30 year 6 per cent.: cnttendr; ; I ifdiall.t.. { 3, , r , tiolnynand fnterest pitgee, 19. Gold, 1323i'at .1.,*, Jo ri , t.'ll'iliallitc. Union. Paei fi c, BertaSp). Central'. ilOnP4O ; I: Man Pacific Land Grants-7E4A77 I.).C.Wharton Smith st ,Co., hauliers. 1.21 Muth Thir. l seree , t, quote wt 1.0.46 (Ptioek as follows: G01d.112'.: U. A. Siits,lBil, titans:4.; do. do. &SM. 1.362. Mill DOI ; d 0.., do.; IS* it_eiNsiOtli : dd.4o. ISO: IGri'alikl; de, "dr: July - ISrA, /07i.a107t , .. • do. 42- Inly.. latV.,4o‘44'a rarercites, lif.,;alinr. ". .is ' ' ' ' Js y Cooke Jc Vo. quote Vbrerinhent * securities kr.. to- • day, lif (QUOVE , : United States 64. -- 1891. 11441 it% ; s.2tra of IR 2: 109%ft i iiiii ; do. nes. icalifilots?‘_; dn. Li6S, 1014ia W.. ; dn. J nll,lBO, 10734altilil ; 'de. 1567, liiioinlikrli .10, i lSili; Itel,eloi , .; , .141.fortive, ..16.5.`iaititeic Correher fitt. '11:3.411S; G01d,112;..- . . . . . • Philadelphia Produce Market. VIDA T, March 23.—The delinaelon noted in Floor ftirsome.thite past has In i.owlee abated , and ttwre are fruieedler* *tour uotatlots. There fs scarcely airy shippin," demand. and the hams censumare man ifeat no disposition to overate beyond immediate ne“-faities.' .thout foli barrels changed hands, Superfine 'at $t 133i,54 tft ; latras at 04 fitiiai 75; Blorthweiteni ;Extra Family at Van la; Pennsylvania do. at •SS 123‘113'/S; Indiana Slid Ohio do. do. at SO Zed Z and tansy brands at 411650x7 W. No change in Bye VDU r or dors Meal.. fihe 'offerings of Wheat. although relatively small. are in excess of the WatilS of the !omit millers . Sales of 2.200 hi:whets good anttprime Pennsylvania and Western Red at 41 pal 25. White r anfreefrom 80 a41,40. Bye is Steady at SUPS cents. The receipts of areem and it meets an attire detatild. ' 867 es of 3,5311 bushels Ponnrylvanin and Southern Yellow at 92a93 cents: •Gits are in limited request . and command 5.3a65 cents. Barley: and, tialt are very dull and nominal_ •• • :, • In surfs po change. GOO bushels Clovei Ert,si:' Wlttalty is veep quirt. We quote woad-bpuul barrels at Walt* cents, and iron-bound at el 01. . .Ittlarketis b 7 Teltivraspitt; : , itipeCial Despatch to the MU. tritnitur New Vomit 'March 23,123 L P - .1 1 1..-ICotton.—Thernarted. this morning as beavierthen yesterday and most of the business has Lien at a concession.' Bales of about. ,100 balm, We quote as follow': ,ltUdnUing 001stida• ,22 - 5c0.; lthidlin_g Orleans, 235ic. • , • lour, de.—The market for Western and atate Floor is header than yesterday, and mostly tie business has bees at a concession. Receipts, 6,901/ barrels... The sales ate. 6./X0 bbls. at es 40a4 60 for finperlitle • State ; .44 r6s its 65 for Barra Butte ; OM E.O for FacioY eta° ; ittate Di (or the low grade* of Western &atm ; 4 litias 20 for good to choice ' Opring Wheat arras; 84 1516 f,o for Minnesota and lowa Extras; 84 70 a 5 is for. IthiVllble obit),'Round Hoop; 85 20e5 50 far Trade brands; 85 60ad 4(1 for Faintly 15 35 , ..f0r Amber - Winter Wheat Ptate and Western ; 5 204 40 for. White Wheat do. do.; 86 46 1 7 50 for retil ty do.; 515.60-L; - .a9 '3l for tit. Comfit Extra'6lnrla. Dmible and Triple. California and Oregon Flonria devoid of life or anima tion. Bales of 1,054 harrels and sacks et 84 40. Sour hara, •If !oar I:idyll and prices heArr; gales of 600 barrels at: 55 foal) 30 for ordinary to good Extra Baltimore and' eauntry : 85 /Sad 40 for Extra Georgia and Virginia; ?6 65a2 75 tor 'smile do.; 45851040 for Ex Maryland and Delaware. nun 45a9 75 for do.. no'. lire Flour is quiet but steady. Sales of 300 barrels at :3415 for hue and superfine. Rnio—ltecelpts, W beat 17.600 bushels. The Market Is than yesterday , ' and most of the business liaa been: at a concession. Tits sales , are 4,1)w buot-, of, - 2 Milwaukee at 81 Oda] 12, cued No. 2 Chi c aco at el Wel 07. Amber Winter at 81 25a1 Curn— Receipts. =MO bushels. The market Is irregular. . Slt's of 31,ittl bushels Newrly:lt 96c.a41 00atont. - Old at 6) 02a1 ()ate dolla; pricos nominal. Roc, cel pis. 11 .210 bushels. Bales. 1000 bushels at 5635&!.. Provisions .—Tbe receipts of Pork are 400 barrels;` . , at 82d Dia26 37h. for new Western Meas.. Lardy-Be-. ' crime, 50 pkgs. The market is a shade firmer. bar not very active. We quote prime steamer at 14'hilbeic.. hisky—lteccipts. 622 barrels. Tha market is dull and prices nominal. We quota Western free at 55. I It, the American l'nws Association.) . BALTIMORE, March 23 Coifed is quiet but firm. Cotton—The market to • dull and weak. We quote law middling atlla2l4 ; middling at 121a.7.24c. The Flour market is very dull and heavy ; no' salsa Worth mentioning, and prices ere nominal. , Wheat is firm. Sales of 2,000 bughelg Red at '3l 234 150, and 6,0t.0 bushels at 11 38a1 4.5-•-the latterforchoice Misty land. tiara is firm at 92.93 e. for white, and 93.191 e. for yellow; soles T. 04.0 to 8,000 bushels. „Rye—Sales of Prime Pi-nnsylvanis at al 03. Oats dull, •but steady at 05 cents. 'Stade—Closer ra flrm at OS 2.5a8 60 for. Prime to ehojuo. False of 460 to trObnahals Timothy at $5 75a5. Wbialry is held at $ l for Inm-bound but no salsa. Provielot,a—Tbs market la yory dull and weak. and prices nominal. Bulk meats, 10a133{ and lit.; baron, 1134, 1435a153;e.; lard, 1434a15c.;nress 00rk,.525.t26 O per barrel. - . , The New M oney >l Mo arhott. Herald.. ... . [From tho l of to - day...l • TUEOPA Y.. Marche 22.—The gold' enarket is to coining daily less active, and -,recently the , specu lative interest has. been transferred to . the stock market. In the absence of sales for the abort account the volume of business bus boon largely decreased,' as shown by the clearanees, which now average less than forty millions each day. - • The under tone of the market, however, is firm: The' extreme range of the price to-day was, from .1124 to 112, . the transaction' at the latter figure occurring in smell amounts towards the close of street bnalnees. the reports from Washington were not sensational'enough to make any decided • impression , but what, little influ ence they did exert . was to strengthen prices,' • They" an pounce t be feelingof the 110tiedt0 bb in favor of funding the debt at the rate of - four and a half per cant. for all the bonds ; also, that Senator Sumuer'skipecie Pa meat and Resumption bill luta been ," killed" by the. Finance Committee ; andfurther, that Senator Bankroll resolu tion recognizing • the' belligerent rights the Cubans has the dissent•of only one member of the Committee on Foreign A ff airs, Hollers of gold Paid 4 to 5 per cent. to have their bal ances,carried over. An exceptional transaction was re-. corded at g per cent. for carrying. The operations of the Gold Exchange Bank were as follows: , • Gold cleared $37,,E10,000 Gold balancer, , ' 1,4f1it.6.;,'..1 CuireacY balances ' ' 1.638.55 There was a Made more activity In money to-day, and while the general business was at fogr_to flue per ' cent. on government and stock, collateraldahere were rimer mut transectiona at six per cent. where the .aecnrities ,k pledged were miscellaneoue stocks: Th increased 0,:- ti vfty is dbe to the increasing volume of eculatioo ,at the Stock Exchange, the buying movemert leading to a more widespread engagement of money, e bonito re port the outward movement Of enrrency cry light in comparison to what was.anticipated at this eason. There is a good demand for 'conuriercial paper, with thepreference for prime acceptances running from sixty days to four months. Six months paper fa hardly salable, except at a large cenceselon in rates of discount. For the grades first mentioned the rate ranges I rom seven to nine percent. Singlet names aro more irregular., and range from sight to,sigbtooll Per cent. , , • . The suspension of a dry goods commission 'house in • Leonard street and another firm in this city aro nn :note/teed. No statement idgiven of liabilities. ' -Their embarrasarnent is. attributed to over advances' on con- • sionments from the Eastern mills. The light supply of commercial bills rendered foreign examine ettildogr t To-day the Market was rather active. tindf.loaed z•m , tut the , barite of 108:5 for sixty- dayand 1 593.-foralght atelittllg. i ~, ~ . • . , - ••• , , AbpIVE:.I I 6O CASES CAROLINA - RICE n Wading from eteameri J. VV. Sternum, from ,rlpstori: Er. C., and for ono by pp infiLilil 1ii.1131351 . 44 u0.,11,1 Unoetnnt 'afoot. e10970 1 q--- 1 70 OOaTQbr, eto *4ll for aae:Pyt 0 001 PAN, MartSIMLA; ~Jll b • • etOTTON.--94 - BALER OOTTO'N, I.IIYW ‘,/ liquttna and for eale try 000UBAN, ItUSSIL747. - ' r =THING FEE,Te—TIZT PRlUStaft fish Sheathing_ Felt fOr :Mlle by parrs ek804,411S 01:0 4 46 ~ 2 t I DAI DECLINE OF AMERICAN COMMERCE ,Coileat,or DIAMOND ~ THE' EitATIOG EnISTNESS ['Special Despatch to lb. Pkljods. Evening Bulletin. 1' WASHINGTON, Mareh 26 .-. 4 The , RePabllcalr LV,n4t0,1101,494 ortuotaithin'mornitig., great ott wa4 made tolteleil:ibtir the 'preceedir4l3 ' " t't Relland e pug ; e a pro oun seure , but iti - otFp ih t atthe deßbiiratiOmi` had refer-i ,ence to the fendiatriong the Pa clfiaceast people about- Wasidngtotr, which had 4F smard a yttetiy. personal 'cliata,cterbe r tween Senator Cele and the :4ecrOtarY of the senate, Gorhara.:. It'is tinderstood that;Cole's ilifilierice 'Will &eyed, and a new Secretary • b elected, though Gorhani Is sUPported by, fed art' and others frotii that scetlon. I A • (By the American -Prat, Aingsintion•l - IBocidtnot 4 s Case. WAtIIINGTON, March .Z3.—Elms C. Bou di not, a Cherokee Indian. wlwee_tabac tory was seized by the Revenue oflicerd last' fall, in the Cherokee reservation., had a per sonal interview with the House Judicia.ry Cemmittee this mottling, and made a brief , statement of his case,which justified the Coin mitteain the conclusion that the Seizitre was in violation of the treaty stipulation and law. The matter waS referred to a sub-committee, which will prepare a report accordingly. tides, in answer to the - application for the re lease of ' • the 'property seized by Collector Bailey without any charges being preferred, not to order any release until the 'new Colleo ,tor has made a re-examination (Wall the eases pending in his office. • Secretary Boutwell was befori, the Ways and Means Conittattee this ritorriing, and gave his views at length upon various points in the , , . Decline of Ameriean Two Delegation* Heard .FrOW• klarge delegation of ship-o . wners and ship captains, representing coasting interests, were before the Special Corninitt•ee'on th e Decline of American „Commerce this.mornine,, The del egation included, representalayee from New Jeraey, New York, Penneylv . arda and Mary land, • • , M , r: Edmunds, of Philadelphia, Prmident of the Associated Ship Owners and Ship Max_ tern, and Wm. MoOre, Jr., of New Jersey, pre , rided -the views--of the delegation, who ask to abandon all local and State taxation or exacticais upon .shipping, excep• wharfage, ,pferage Anil dockage; and abandOn emiipulsorY pilotage ' • ' A delegation of whale fishers;' from New Bedford, Irlassachusetts, headed 'by Mr. Crapean, also appeared, and represented 'the:injustice of compelling the payment "of three', , Months'. 'salary to seamen' dis 'charged in 'foreign ports; and also the abuses which have' crept into the system of consular ;fees, in ,cck.usequence of the fact that the, fees of consuls or commercial agents are in crea-9edin proportion to the number of sailors they may order to be discharged,' and their natural dispositiOn is to side unjustly with sailors. making ;petty complaintS, t i ci 'the great injury of the shipping interest. • Diaatand•Watt Case—Mfore Evidence —Mr. Diamond Disappears. Special Despitch to the Plula.Evenmgßulletin .] HARRIBBUB.G, March 23. The Diamond-Watt Committee sat until a late , bour last night. The witnesses testified to numbers of personation in the Second,Third and, Fourth Wards.. Benjamin _Edger Jr. confirmed the previous testimony as to the i . epeating System. He testified that as he was going to the poll of the second division ',Fourth Ward, between one and two o'clock, he saw a lot of Men,' known.' to him as iepoaters. Of Baltimore and New York, coming from it. Te gave the names of two New Yorkers 'as Clark and Pathey Colton, and declined, unless convened, naming the' Baltimoreans, on the ground that he runs a boat to Baltimore, which he feared would be' burned did he men tion the nameB l go:also : stated that Mr. Josephs was at the head of the'party. John Springman testified that early on. the morning of the election twenty-six men came to the, house of, his father, at 70l'i Walnut street This is the house'which Ball testified that the New Yorkers Went to. Mr. Hall then oftbred to prove to the 'Consmitted that Lawrence hall, a witness in this ' ease, _was arrested on the cars, between HArtisburg and Philadel. Oda, and kept in confinement in Philadelphia tor a long period., alid. was forced , ' to sign a katement, which was believed to be contra dictory to the testimony before the ,Committee. 1 r: Hall wariteda process to being the par-. ' ties implicated before the,Committee, of the . , iienate,,tp answer, for: interfering with the , Witnesses;and to prevent the introduction , of the alleged statemenfs:of Ball long argu- Mont ensued, and the Cerninittee decided that testimoay with reference to the introduction the'bf statement would bd. , irrelevant at tins stage of the proceedings;,' . Mr. Hall - than de- Mred to call Mr. Diairiond on the stand to prove the arrest of Vali; but that geritlceinen, Who 110 been'alreadynotitied appear, and who' Waiiresent but a OW,minuteS,,prior, did:loot iespond,i•noitall attemptsto' tiMl him proyed fruitless. ',DeteOttv.is %Fletcher was put on the eta, d,and , Mr, Cassidy RAjooted toi,the,teati togony.;; The Vamitittee eoneluded'•not to hear "Nate of 1140Matoleter Tiallf.llNsy at the utletta 0 1 / 1 1rbti.6. 1 .4itdat B .12 M . Ohlee .dad'. 2 fk. , Weather Win d 21 " orthWelit.. ' EDITION; • I.' S Jt4 . 2I A I A 'o,PillAct°4• BY TEL t..;q444P.11;L. • • . , A , t 3 MIZEI RgiViMeit e 4 04 IS ONMMO ; Pi*data& Eketkoh of aNew Secretary Of • • • ` 4 """ .'T}Wi • ' Balleiop nnocross. FRolli r W4llo4TOff. , . Colleetor Ba!ley's Selzurefr. The Cotalandi4oner of Internal Revenue de The Tariffnill. FROM HARRISBURG. ißil 1121111221 PESNSTLyARIA LEGISLATURE. tBPeetal Despatch th the Phila. Hiehine Bulletin:l . • • HARRISBURG, id akelvti SENATE. —Among . , the, bills favorably re-: ported, upon were the following : „Thiel-louse bill - repealing an act relative to appeals from transcripts of aldermen. 'The House' bill anthoriiing private ' patrol-' nien to•perfornepoliee• duty in Philadelphia , under the direction of the Mayor. The House bill authorizing Councils to widen any j.trect Upon, application of a ma jority'of property-owner/49n ip4 line. ' 'The House bill' inflicting a penalty upon , patties who fail to register their property in ;Philadelphia at the office designated. • friiP Anir, nr ,,,, r:ara" ng Bank. • , , House bill for the punishment of gambling. Among the new bills introduced and referred were the following: One by Mr. Connell; incorporating the Bank of America; also, increasing the capital' stock of the Moyamensing Fire Insurance Com pany ; supplement to the Pennsylvania ;Musical Institute. 1 •One by Mr.' Randall: incorporating • the Butchers' and Drovers' Bank. (Melt's. Mr. Watt; rearranging the election divisions of the Sixteenth and , Seventeenth Wards. One by Mr. Brooke authorizing the West 'Chester Railroad Company to increase its cap ital stock. ' The House bill prohibiting sidewalk markets in Philadelphia between Walnut street and Girard avenue was passed finally. ,novas—The House met at ten o'clock. M, r.Ainies offered ajoint resolution appoint ing Thomas Nicholson a Commissioner to in vestigate the cases of all applicants for pen ' sions, and to"ascertain whether any persons 'now receive pensions who are not entitled to them. The Commissioner is to be paid $1.3,040 , per annum. Passed. An effort was Made by Mr. Bunn to report the Police bill, which was objected to by Mr. Dailey. • Mr. Humphreys offered a resolution to direct the Resident Clerk to prepare his legis lative handbook for 1871, and to furnish the usual manlier of ,cgpieu next year. Passed. Mr. Harvey introdneeti,,a__ bill authorizing thePhiladelphisi,,Agp i naptpwa ,and _Norris-, town Railroad Company, to increase its capi tal stock to two and a half millions of dollars, which' passed. • Mr. Stokes offered a resolution giving twenty live copies of Bates' Military History to each' member, the cost ofpririting and binding each ohmic not, to, exceed three dollars and soy-. entv-live cents per volume. • Mr. Brown moved to postpone the resolu tion fer n the present, which was agreed to by 49 ayes t 0,41 nays. The Philadelphians voting to postpone Were Albright, Dailey, Davis, Elliot, Forsyth and Maxwell. Those voting in taVor.of considering the resolution wore Hong, Stokes ); Adaire, Bunn, Carlin, Cloud, Comly. Mille,r and Mooney. • Mr.liavis `opposed this resolution• because the Legislatiird bad not ' Made any contract with the State Printer to print the books. The contract price for them authorized by law was three dollars and twenty-tive cents per volume,complete, and now it-was proposed• to charge three dollars .and seventy-five cents per volume for the binding and printing alone, without regard to the material, which, would largely increase the expenses. The House bill, authorizing the Fifth and Sixth, and second and Third Streets Railway Companies to salt their tracks north of York and Berke streets, was amended, by Mr. Mooney, to include all the railways west of the Schuylkill, and was passed HEAVY- AND LACE DRAPERIES, - Sat , int,Damask,_ Silk, and. Silk and Woo , f=abrics. or all shades of colors,' ' 1 - the latest Imported, 7 WINVOW SHADES In all the Newest Tints. i PcLITS'IE S 11.1 FR 1 't For Railroad Supplies: . , i :1 URA VEN "r 1 ri r','L itlAkool.lo ;.' Le 4141 1 ,1 ;. , ; inErAT ' 1)1)4 '; two slor I . . • i a . IA eAM 4 I Ots, • • ; ; o s 1;1,200 144 r . U.ll4sliartelsqlot 116'3 12 011.; 'lmistoria Add • bt! egt.;# 2l ooEtvg4El , 44 ds 00 ... ,. //kett44 l ntalitrotp • ; 1..' B.lußvilsamakiEN.T.Lwx , -111. , BaRnEigal vriThrbiAceat l T m to, Ifiit fir 'steamer tones %IC . IP -sato 141INIE ifs 111 Ottsiltttall astt''!!.. I I P ° ' FROM NEW" YORK. J. 4 - PINANCIAL'AFFAIRO utifigw!olti ~• L :If 1 ' •.) , ,; ~"( ; rwr Morey I:Marktl: ,E1163 46 . 4 00rd ; -- !dbvirtimeriti Firm :Mid' Quiet: I —Sioeke DeNlined. • , By the. Ascleneark tea Ass ociation, , N E*V94X,; March '23.--At tile !Sob-Tresury 1titki0y:15,1,73,006 gold wan 141 for at 11145 to 1/1 1 '. 16 . TbSSwaTde will be at 112 ; 20 to 112.26, `if no more than $1,000,0170 ie /Of& .1411° PA ne Y - 3 tl rtit ° , 83 " a t fr9nl to 6 per ogift, 6)/. , • • I . 11 'Oreign X-legYige is firmer at 10 01 to loaal for prime,baukers' 00:daYs sterling fiold•operied at 1121; declined to . 1 / 2 1, but afterwards rallied t 0 ,1120.. = fiOYernlniellt to.nfis are quietand firm. . aouthern kitate.Secttrities• are strong.f ortgageti. are quiet;' Bales at ttifor lb° Unions and 93i for 'the Centrals. ; ' ktoilk inarket °pitied steadi, btif after wards Northwest preferred declined if .per tent. in tonsequeriCiFpf s tigi.de9rfse of $9,000 lin the earl:ll4ll . 4r iiiird_Woek in March. 'Therewailli,. general „denniie, bttrifiv rmjiket ,aftertiardi rallied; ; • ) • , ..; z*Exprees atockslare'dnll. a l• - No gueesitiptecia:orArrircel ota Railroad. rirelegranis from .West stfto that •tliereis nn,detention,on.tho..PaOtic :Railroad, and tbe roads. east are tilso 'running on Shipping Newf. a lif, l4 4zlr •Y 4 . 21 8ai March P---AFrivecl-43tealner ar4ita, from Liyerpool, I NP.W,YQRK, March 23,-- Argived o tbexteamer I Tybee, from San Domingo. , FROM HARRISBIAIG. CURTAIN BIATNRIALN. WINDOW DECORATIONS, LACE CIIRTAINS, LAMBREQUINSI A ALA ACM 0 1,," rOV:KTII:IITIT,ftOIf'''. • ...Gtiatt , . . • -,!.!., .• =MEI LI; 14: L; Financial Panic .n Buenos Ayres A Ntimber of Failnrei3 3F4/)orte EUROPnA.N . .. 'X' l 4l#lrE S LATER FROM, WASHINGTON Investtgating - thetarces Against Secre tary' . The NelltTa.litY ResPlAtl°n THE . .FUNDING 13.1 ti; .—' • 1 . ",_; , e:1 A DESTRUCITVEWILLTAILSk. . Iti (Sr Om American Praia Asaoilstiona , 1 *,, , BdhA}UD. ' an lc in Ilup..pos Axres.—Filptvs,plll4l:irpli.. L 9P 1)014, 4arcii, 2 1 3 -'I7A . 11 *es f.r0in , ibi.39 41 90. Ayres report that a pante - prevails among the mercantile, firma of that city. 'Several heavy; failures are already autiorineeel. • --cf .; ' . MairiLue Intelllvaneed Liatzuroor., March :26.:—„The'. SteatEnships. City. of Londcin and Weser.., haarb arrived out to-day. • FinanCial and Contain' , Cial. March 23.—Tallow is (inlet and steady. ( Sugar, 308: 3d. Per etyt' for No: 12 'Ditch 'standard on'the spoi.' Sugar - afloat is hrm Linseed Califs are, dull. Cointoon' E•lif tis."6d.al:44:9d. per cwt. I.lvEitioot., 'March 23,;X130 31.—The Cotton Market opens quiet., Sales estimated at 12,0 C o„hales. Middling Cplands, 1 1 / a ll/d. Cali/An:nip. Wheat bq ;7ft Flour,l.9s.•t•d.. Corn. 275. • Lol.noz, March 23, 11.30 A. M.--Consols for money open at 031; do. for account. WI; IT. I S. , lends of the issue of 11362, 90}-; 10-40's, 861 Erie Railway shares, 21/ : Illinois 'Central, :1151 FROM WASHINGTON. 'The Charges against 'aeeretaa,r "of the , , ISlenaleGlorham.- (Special Despatch to Phila. Evening Bulletin.) WABIIINGTON, March ,-r , Thri! Senate cau cus, this, morning, - appointed a committee three, 'with Sumner at,' the head, to-investi gate the charge that Gordam is responsible for the various newspaper and.pamphlet at tacks upon -Senator Cole, which have ap peared,ori the Pacific coast. Another Caucus will shortly be held to con sider and receive theilreport. Atter a con sultation with the Attorney-General,the dent has referred the ceinmiiiiication'to, Gov ernor Seater, of Tennewe, to Gen, . Butler, as chairmanof the House Cbmthittee on Re ecrnstruction. • The 'Tennessee; • Secretary, of State gre . fclief,,of Tennessee, will be beard about affairs in that State at the Committee% meeting to-morrow. [By the American Presa Aegoclation.f ' • • Personal. WASHINGTON' March 23.—Secretary Robe son left here le ' st 'night for a hrief visit to Philadelphia. ' , • The Nteiiiikiiliti• ' ' On the:vote of "General' Bank..es neutrality resolution; pieked yeeterday in Committee, the diisenters`tiere Messrs. Orth, Ambler'and , - folle‘iing gentlemen ' voted infavOr of the substitutien of the Senate bill for Banks's resolution, and will report it to the Efouse as a minority 'report : .Messrs..oo4, Willard and Myers. The Funding , 11111. Seeretary,Boutwell auct the comptroller o the 'Currency 'were before the. Committee on Ways and Means on the Funding,bill; this morning. It is probable the bill will' be re. ported to the Hotise this week, and the Torii' , bill laid aside for its coneddeiatiou. • Lieut.-Commander R. R. Wallace bas been detached from ordnance dtity at the New kork . Navy Yard, and ordered to command the store:3lo Idaho, of the Amatic fleet. Passed Asiistant-PaymU.ster Geo: L. Meade is detached from ,dutY in Charge of stores ut gey West, and ordered' b 5 settle his accounts. Passed Aisistant-PayMaster nister has been ordered to Key West in his stead, Itemtruptipla ot' St111:o. Supervisor Perry, of North Carolina, re ports, that six illicit stills have beep broken up in Willies county, in that State s ; during the 'past month. , InCrease of Assessment.. Th 73 assessments in the First• District of• the State for the past nine months exceed those of last year by $15,000. t ;The baptors of JeaDavis—ThOßewaird to - Drafts, varying in , amounts from' $293 to 51,281, are being:prepared at the Treasury De ; partment for sthe two hundred and thirty seven cantors , of Jeff Davis, and Will be for ; Warded' to them or their attorneya. These drafts Eire for the sum'of • $lOOOOO, offered for the arrest of 3 - eat/mils in 1865.''A majority Of 'tPh'aptors'are in Michigan and Wisconsin. '.llruidgo Bradley Sworn In. Mr: Briidley, the' new 'Asiioeiate Jugtico of ;the Suprown Cona, wa4; sworn in this niorn !ing by Mr. Middleton, the,clerk, and iniA meikt on' the bend) to the, Jefp of Jtido . e Meld. FRom,NEw YORK. luirtheitnierigan Press soseeiatiou.l • , Deltri,tivr Fire Mare ocieurr,ed morning in a large furniture, warehou 4 e Inn Grand street, between Third and .Ifogrth `streets., •spVefkd , , yirAt4.gNatrayi,dity t and 'eP4 ll ?rPun4ated' to , ,al , PMQ l Ping fere its Aegfd!Nar Aould J) o ,oheeketl. ;The ,loSs: has not yet been.aseertained.•..,.• • ~ • • • IN~'l+~BB~R6i T¢ r~'~IiI1 : 8'v; 1X u • EliftattllitEgStS . (4 . il , M4043 - Iat I ATE PiXttEs. T4e Ninoorligyo hpa veru,rtiod frQm lietw York :with for tiiitip4 , lhir lAn 140 i SUITt4, IltiolllPlloll' Ona ,LXONlitltft' (DIMS tIVWIDDtzta, otvirrrs juguTUATXVING" ilMlingeousdiwit Becormiorrj to 1l 46nre , t tvis A P qP#lsl 749 010 f 3. nti°o' Isblo s2Ctrp opci 90 , PROM EUROPE. Naval Orders.. Poid. 7TIFTit.; . :EDITION MESE T f T, 'gr~Ei lY~,° ~. ~ , .'F . ~: T" n-11:419:.•:31.7 '' ' 111 i l i ti 3 Andgiti:Niliii 0011; 1 .14041 to ° ire lEOW In • • OMR.. d • , =MIME FROM NEW . ENGLAND By the 'llmerfolOp.tie duociationl - " ' l, • .11LialdtA41/*FIIIIS. - Aiibtber BosroN, March 22.—.* felitival tine der ibe l itifeetion,tit. r.it, (Atmore, dot , zer. 31 4;4 1 ,.t 1 0§; totirgip; oq/er :o*** bookiected wits; the management of tim•Petics Jubileer lost year; will be held in this idt.fiTuns 24th; and continued five days. 7 They-Skating Itink 'bait been' giekeeted tO the inoitilidlabla structure in. whieh to held this waii~ino mad: steal fiihilbre: Aateme-pritimetr heart .. 47° , 1F,P. "A'l4PeP,rts qah ' VPPii Art a144'Pf4r. 1 49 . 1 4 1 e49P§i 94.0Wi Jobb ad:Ail:the made given at thsJubasewils be rev eaterdi ATM, rricifiestravill'emisist ofistionk tiiilbtliidrettskillod • musicians ) to boaeletits4 from the orcht;Stribi : Boston ,ang gar - Mirk; Akolifyol:o•sll4oiii'aielifiatiri of Theodore Thomas. Artilieryridillm firedl toy electrief4;.abd , kdiecito :wilLhe in troduced. A: , iirefebt foie•titelereet i ipp of a tuarnmothtp;t i iot i hkrekAf ;tith'biiildinjr' tot the further accomniodntlep of. i tKro patrons is - The profits of. .theunntorisise;Noin be dietributed firbrilkiiniimethe societies par. . 7,rtqtici A . , 1 If— - t b e 41 9 er/ 9' 4'P:e t a ° V ORTTAPIWIT COaIieRMSNI , Neco`44 ~,,,Wslogrotgrox, March 23. • Bgrioac.,-:Mr. Sumner presented trmenayrkal from Generpi- Rosecrans; snaking for an in corporation . ,act., ito• • :raise.;, oppkt44fl,7aNt transact business fpr tho i;promotion of telegraikk ;il4lPO`, and other... ,intans: of intercommunica, - diem , . 'with-the Xtepublic • Of, Mexico,W in- Consistera,. with the laAi,•s of the United ''afes. .kic,.,ferred,to",the Com natfee on, Foreiipi 'Re)* Tbe - to promote fie ern tzatio oP,ti e Indlaps and,t er>; p ogxess`hi nridaltlifflil'POT nflames taken up, anti passed. •' .• . ,IThe,l)ll.l,to erect, a light-house :thei (4 - lb* thnk rivetvWes passed. ' . , The bill to -promote, the pregrese .Oregrii cultural and.. mechanical arts was. taken-,.up. and considered: -- • ' '*•‘• •• •• = , • ` Mr! Sum ner'reoYo 'the SeliaitY go into exec utive business .- • *Objected to. - • • ==i'lle t die- of ••General Ames,••Senetor-elect from Idississlppi;ivewtakezi tip, and Mr. War Hews' addressed the. Senate in support of 'the legality of his claim tb a seat, hcildink that bei is as inubb an inhabitant of that State ag though he'bed been - born there. , • . • • . Mr. Carpenter .= Mad& at powerful argument againit General Ames' cleans, basinhitt re, marks mainly on constitutiortal grotinde...• , Mr._ Morton contended , that •the Jndiciary committee had felled. - to make one a, 044, agsliest'Getiefal_,Ames.: • • Hong,,—The &Rowing bills and resolutions Were introduced and'referred:.. ''' ' ' " To preVide tot the tenioval of the BrOaltl39l Navy Yard. , • t ' ' 'Ta donate the Marine Dospitat'at Natchez to 'the State "of MlSsisalppi, for' educational purposes. , ..,,,_a...., Mi" ,, A resolution d the fifty Councils of Jersey City, in favor of t inalang that ,city a port 'of entry. - ' • ‘ t - • On motion •of. kr, Poland, the Committee ou Rules , was'directed to report a role•thall a motion, for the pretleas question shall no, be swinge ed, on any , question , until two /wars .da kate shall be had thereen,t unless it shall have been "ordered by "a; two-thirds, vote ,Of ',the • The advt.rse repert of the Mining' Comn4. tee ea the Soft° Tunnel,and the working frktf-, ohises originally granted'" to. airl Sittro,twas taken up.; • 1 , 1 ' • t • ' •-• '• *I L.. Mr. Kerr thought, the bill 'oughtenot to , PASO. delegation,The rom. the Pacific 'Coastand, t a entire gentle Mair fkom Nevada (langlifei), e nonneed the original bill, as providing for he tunnel, aid - Trawl and an outrage. It 'Was passed 'at the urgent request of'the 'Peet& and officials of Nevada. If •it was a.trand Nevada was.apartyla that. raud, and Cortgreas , aisch The mine-owners bad agreed to give the roy alty of two dollars per ton to Mr. Sutro. They claimed and demanded it. They soid it Would be a gteat help to the miners along the,route of the'tunnel for taking out the, ores and aralning the drafts. , It was but just'that they should pay the Tunnel Company the linitall royalty stipultited for::: '• , , •• •l c' ~ Mr. Woodward said lie VMS a member or the Mining Committee of the Fortieth Congress, before which this enterprise first canie up. , Mr. Sutra came ' before that committee wfth' the endorkern'ent of the Nevada Legislatiire, and the itcheine, was pressed with' all' the'power that Nevada !could concentrate."• The gentle =introit Nevada,who denounced the original tunnel 118. a fraud, did not represent that State. The objection that Mrt,Sntro, had not coin rnenced work on the tunnel within the time stipulated was a matter'for the consideration Of the courts of la*, and could not properly he taken up in this House. - Mr. Blair considered Mr.. Butte's claim' for a perpetual royalty on the Comstock lodejust , and legitimate. If the original - bill was before the House for the first time to,dity, he :WOlll4l not,hesitate to vote for it. Messrs. Sargent, and Axtell argued in,fayor of a revocation of Mr. Sutross. franebiSe; on the ground that he has violated the fundamen tal conditions of the contract. ' ' '-' ' Mr. Kelley thought' the proposition to de prive Mr. Sutro of his franchise was the most gigantic wrong ever attempted on thin floor. The holders at these mines have no titles save that of possession, • The Government has a perfect right to bnild a ,tunnel itself, and charge the mine-owners a suitable price for its use. The Government had delegated that right to Mr. Satre, and he should be protected in it. The Whole body of• miners demanded it. • The whole opposition directly, or indt, reetly came from the, banks of California. ,• ,Mr. Stevens closed the debate by urging the n ecessity, of the tunnel and the, legality et - Mr. StitiVs'priVileges, He felt compelled to all the attention of the House to a large number of individuals present on the floor during • this debate, who were lobbying in the most inde cent manner in the interest of the banks of California. He moved to lay the bill on the. talk. Agreed to. Yeas, 126 i nays. 41. • , Considerable merriment was occasioned on thefloor,iinmediatelv after the announcement of the vote, catised by Mr. Sutro himself, who stood in one'of the galleries, anti; for a mo ment, executed in pantomime a speech re turning due acknowledgments. . , " The Speaker laid before the Honso,a utea.: sage front the President, calling, attentkia ,to, rile decline of American commerce, ai shown. in the rep,ort of the Special Counnittee„ awl,' earnestly urging early action thereon:2'l-Di says the fact that thirty millions of dellari att4 annually paid to foreign vesiels as ' passaga money is humiliating. lie is of the,upinion that direct tonnage subsidies. are leka. liable .to abuse than indirect'awtihtkuce• '.• t, •:, .' pi,. , 31r. Brooks, said he was,T,er.y glad that c .the Prcsident had recognized the greatlact or the destruction of ArnOtioan - cotnrnoree, and hoped it would` secure` speedy trench, o,4pe eitilly,in connection with the-Tariff fillip • " • Debate arising, as tal the-referent* of,tito mesedgegit vittairetutned tet.thisSpeakerls table forttlie_nreStli;'iii f.•,.1, , n •ik ~k ,7' i', I ' `:' ' , '4'4 u.tAlla billmio .oe4 ‘•4l4o:upi,fip(l Ar. HP°P.PTRIMe494 to Pl** itie, #PI?-19, 4 1 ,c l .o' P*9, of 4.9g-KdIAY , ) 11 , :: _, ,„ I 'i „ • • - -Tolit—e-1411.-77-.:204' BA—t—, E11 i T i n 6 h7 0 , * 0601 6 . 11 , 1 4 ' r ii ll id e u . , t l; , ,ili k o tog 6;66 litottnak illt, jllks„ek,L , .4, 004 e 0 41:1094` 431401 439441434 ' , : • •, ' 7 g ,. eigupFAtrefd., 4:30 04Citiou. • .t =IIIIE ). • ' )