CITY BULLETIN. —Sirs. Fannv A. Weaver, nqert 35 years, wl„, with her husband, .John Weaver, has been occupying house No. 1104 Parrish street for about two weeks, died last evening under cir cumstances which indicated that death was the result of violence. From a statement ot her nephew, a lad nine years of age, it ap peared that a party of men and women; there congregated had been dancing and drinking all day! About'- 8 o’clock in the evening St. John A. Doras, angered at a remark made by his wife, struck at her with his list. At the time she was sitting on the lap of Mrs. Wea ver. and dodging the Wow; it took effect on the temple of Mrs. Weaver, knocking her ofl of the chair on which she was sitting. Doras then took a light towel-rack aud beat and kicked her, and . she getting up; he kicked her "into the yard, lie then tore his wife’s hair, and was going to strike a man named Mulli <ran, who went out., being afraid. The lad, about half an hour later, went into the yard to -ret a drink of water, and found deceased lying in the yard. She said she was going to die, and complained of the stomach ache. He went into the house, and afterwards went out and found she was dead. He then told those in the house. At the time Doras struck de ceased the lad said his uncle, John Weaver, the husband of deceased, was lying down in bed upstairs, tight. Another lad, also a nephew of the deceased, said that Mrs. Weaver had hit her husband on the head with a glass, and that he had beaten and kicked her. This was before Doras struck her He also agreed with the other boy m stating that Doras boat and kicked Mrs. Weaver into the yard. Lieutenant Steinauer, when he entered the premises, found the body of Mrs. Weaver partlv in and partly out of an out house. She had a broken arm in a splint. On lier temple, was a mark of a blow or a fall, aud a bruise was on her breast. IV eaver, Doras, aud a man named James Mulligan, were arrested and locked up in separate cells, in the Station House at Thirteenth and Spring Garden'streets, as was also Mrs. McFarland, the mother of deceased,, the de ceased’s sister, and Mrs. Doras. The lads were taken care of by the police. The kitchen had the appearance of a severe fight having, taken place there. A scuttle, containing coal, was upset, and the contents in part scattered over the floor; one of the chairs (a new one), was broken, a basin on the -floor was filled with bloody water I ,'and almost everything in the room was in disorder. —The third annual meeting of the Bishop Potter Memorial House and Sisterhood was held yesterday afternoon, in the chapel of the Hospital of the Protestant Episcopal Church, comer of Front and Huntingdon streets. Elo quent addresses were made on the value of or ganized services of wemen in the cause of the Lord by the Kev. Dr. Washburne, of Calvary Church, New York; Dishop Stevens, of this diocese. Kev. Dr. H.\ C. Potter, of Grace Church, New- York, was present and partici pated in the services. William Welsh, Esq., manager of the House, read the report. The House was opened three years since. The lady ■ principal was the only occupant at the first, but others came in slowly. The House is designed to be a home for ministering women,members of the Protestant Episcopal Church, who desire to increase their sphere of usefulness, by uniting with •thers of like mind, and devoting all their time and. powers to aid in extending . the knowledge and love of Christ. ■ The House is under the control of the bishop of the diocese, who appoints one or more supervisors, clerical or lay, to whom he confides its general management during the term of their appoint ment. The internal management of the House is under the charge of a lady principal, ap pointed by the bishop. The work is divided into three departments—nursing, mission work and parish schools—which are under the direction and supervision of ladies of large and successful experience. In the Bible classes and mothers’ meetings 240 men and 225 women of the working classes are thoroughly instructed in God's Word and familiarized with the usages of the Episcopal Church; 350 children are taught in the Sunday school and ICO attend the night schools and in dustrial school. A parish school will be ©pened' on ' Easfef 'Mouday next. - More thau -300 families are visited periodically, and assis tance in nursing is frequently given. Mainly through these agencies the large hospital chapel is now statedly filled with a reverent congrega tion of intelligent worshippers, who contribute liberally tow ard the support of the hospital and its mission.. Since the opening of the House twenty-six ladies have been received as proba tioners. —As a servant girl at the residence of Mr. Wm. Crooks, Seventeenth street, above Alle gheny avenue, was going out the back door, on Monday eveniug, two men passed in, forcing her along with them, and threatening violence if a noise was made. Mr. Brooks was not at home, but his wife was up-stairs. One of the two men said that if they aid make an outcry it would not bring assistance, as no one was in the house but them. Upon this one of the burglars started up-stairs, and was followed by a servant. When part of the way to the second floor she called to Mrs. Brooks, telling her that thieves were in the house. A front sash was then raised and an'alarm given. Upon this the fellow on the stairs seized the servant by tho throat and dragged her-down, -Meanwhile the other thief had gathered up about sixty dollars’ worth of silverware, and this they carried oil'. They had three confederates, who remained - outside the premises. —Messrs. Thomas & Sons sold at the Ex change yesterday, the following stocks and real estate: 10 shares Pennsylvania Railroad, Sol; IS shares American Dredging Company, SI 18; bo shares Central Transportation Com pany, $5O; 2 shares Bank of Northern Liber ties, $120; :i shares Bank of Germantown, $9l; valuable coal-lauds, liti acres, Schuylkill aud Luzerne counties, Penua., $0,200; very desi rable country seat, !!0 .acres, Washington lane, ■ Germantown, (per acre), $445; valuable farm, :i0 acres, Washington lane, adjoining the above, (per acre), $OO5 ; modern tliree-story brick re sidence, No. 713 Green street, $11,700; frame dwelling, No. 522 Marriott street, $000; three story brick dwelling, No. 988 North Seventh street, $4,150; two frame dwelliugs, Nos. 528 and 530 Lombard street, $2,750; irredeemable ground-rent, $2O a year, $4lO. .—The Committee on Fire and Trusts held a meeting last evening, and agreed to report-an ! ordinance adopting the box system of giving alarms of fire. This plan provides that when an alarm is received from a box, a certain number of companies clearest the box shall attend. In case the number of companies is insufficient, the companies nearest the next box shall be summoned. This plan calls out about sixteen companies to a fire, nine of ■which are steamers, and the rest hose carriages and trucks. , —Kt. Rev. Bishop Wood, accompanied by Bishop O’Corman and Kev. Chas. O’Connor, have arrived by the Ville de Paris at New York, all in good health. The grand recep tion, Te Deum, Ac., for the safe return of Bishop Wood, will take place at the Cathedral on Thursday, at 8 P. M. All the reverend clergy of the Diocese, and as many of thejaity as the Cathedral will accommodate, are ex pected to be present. —The Republican Invincibles, through their .-Executive Committee, last evening, elected the following officers: President, Alexander P. Colesbeny ; Vice Presidents,JDr. dames Tru man and Joseph K. McCainmon; Correspond ing Secretary, Benjamin Iluck&l; Recording Secretary, W. Uarry Miller; Treasurer, John W. Ciller. THE DAILY -EVENING Bin.I.ETIN -I‘HIT.AHETJ‘IIIA. WEDNESDAY, ABRIL 6,1670. ! —The Board of Health, yesterday, anuulled the contract of Thomas Coday for cleaning the m recta of the Tenth District, because its terms I>ml not beep complied with. To-morrow a meeting will be held to take action in reference to other delinquent contractors. —The House of - Correction Committee of Councils have returned to this city from Pitts burgh, where they inspected the Workhouse w ith a view of establishing a similar institu tion hej-e. —Albert Yandergrift, Postmaster at Taconv, was instantly killed by a barrel of molasses rolling over and crushing his head yesterday. NEW JERSEY MATTERS. Board op Education. —The members of the Board of Education of Camden held then annual meeting in the Stevens School-house, on the evening of the 4tli inst., all the Board being present, and John S. Bead, President, in tTi6 clitilr ' JJ David L. Taylor, Timothy &. Moore and Thomas McDowell, the newly-elected mem bers, presented themselves, duly qualified, and took their seats. On motion the Board then proceeded to the nomination and election of officers for the en suing year, with the following result: Presi dent, James M. Ridge, M. D.; Secretary,James M. Cassady; Treasurer,Joseph C. De La Cour; City Superintendent, Alexander Macray, M. D.; Census Taker, Thomas McDowell. Joseph C. De Lacour, Treasurer, presented his monthly report, by which it appears that since last report he had received $5,351 18. ; The Committee on Accounts reported for payment amounting in £he aggregate to 55,- 209 83, as corrrectly rendered, aud orders were directed to be drawn in payment of the same. Mr. Fewsmitli, from the Committee on Teachers, recommended the appointment of Miss Clopper as the Fourth Assistant in the Boys’ Primary Department of the Central School, which request was acceded to. A resolution w-as passed adopting Mitchell’s Elementary Physical Geography, asatext book for the use of the schools. The amount of the Treasurer’s bond was fixed at $20,000, the same as last year. Miss Eudora Merribew presented her resig nation as Third Assistant of the Kaighn’s Point School, which was accepted. The Treasurer was authorized and directed to borrow, for the use of the Board, $5OO. Ad journed. ' Union Officious’ Association. —General W. J. Sewell and Captain R. H. Lee have been appointed a Committee to make arrangements for the annual meeting of the New Jersey Union Officers’ Association, on Saturday next, ill Camden. An oration will be delivered by General Joseph C. Jackson, of New York, at which the pub lie generally are Invited to at tend. Tumdi.e-D own Houses. —At the corner of Broadway and Morris streets, Camden, some party is putting up three or four buildings which will be no credit to any one. The par tition walls are Only one brick in thickness, and a portion of them have already fallen down. There ought to be a prohibition of the erection of such structures. SPECIAL NOTICES. THE ANN UAL ELECTION OF Dl recurs of tho Triumpo Silver Minin# and Com mercial Company of Lower California* will be held sit Ux* office, Walnut street, on TUESDAY, April Us 1871)-.-at 12 o’clock noon. mh3o.w,2t§ THE .BO AHD OF DIRECTORS tMy of the Lehigh Valley Railroad Company lias do id si red a dividend of Two and a Half Per 'Cent, on tho capital stock ot the Company, payable at thoir office, Vo. 303" Walnut street, on andaftor I-TIIDAY,ApriI 15th, 1870. CHAS. C. LONGSTRETH, mli3o-wfmBt" Treasurer. OFFICE OF THE FRANKLIN FIRE IKJy INSURANCE COMPANY. PHiLADS.r.rHiA, April 4, 1870. At a Meeting of the Hoard of Directors of the Com pany, held tills day, a Semi-Annual Dividend of Six Per Cent., nod an Extra Dividend of 'I en Per Cent, .wore de clared on the Capital Stock,payable to tho Stockholders, or their legal representatives, on und after the 14th instant, clear of all taxes, „ nps to U; J. W. McALUTSTKR, Secretary. |Y-S» PHILADELPHIA, MARCH 2.lth, 1870.—'The Annual Meeting of the Stockholders of tiie CANNON IRON COM P ANY fof Lake Superior) ivil! lie held at thoir oilice, No. 824 Walnut Street, on MONDAY, the 11th of April, 1870, at 12 o'clock, for the election of Directors, and tlio transaction of ether husi ncss. B. A. lIOOPES, mh2s tl npllS ; Secretary. irs»rNOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN -Ikc^'--that the annual meeting of tiie StiVckhnlddrsof tlVn “ CENTRAL TRANSPORTATION COMPANY ” of Pennsylvania will ho held at No. 300:1 Market Btreot, West Philadelphia, on MONDAY, the 18th day of April, 1870, at 10 o'clock A. HI., for the purpose of electing nino Directors, uml a Socretary and Treasurer, to servo for ono year. J. F. COTTRINGEK, Secretary. ' I’HiLAnvi.rHiA, April 4, 1870. apt-ni \v frit^ AMUSEMENTS. LAURA KEENE’S Begins at 8. CHESTNUT-STREET THEATRE. Last week of tho Wonderful BIOPLASTIO TROUPE. Last week of tho great LAURI FAMILY. First time in America of tho PRISMATIC FOUNTAIN. First time of the now Pantomime. TUB FIRE FIEND. Sixteen new nets unprecedented for elegance. ON J. A. OATES'S Burlesque and Opera Combination "Will make tlieir firwt appearance. ftTKB. JOHJN BREW’S ARCH STREET LVI THEATRE. Be*ins7tf o’clock FROU-FROU AT THE ARCH. MONDAY AND EVERY EVENING, Mr. Augustine Daly's successful Comedy from the French, entitled FROU-FROU. teg WITH EVERY SCENE NEW. Costumes and Appointments New. MRS. JOHN DREW as GILBERTI Aided by the Full Company.* SEATS secured six days In advance. . _ TVrAIiN UT STREET THEATRE, VV THIS ( WEDNESDAY) EVENING, April 0, Third and last week of MR. F. S. CIIANFRAU, The romantic Drama of . . THE HIDDEN HAND. WOOL MR. F. S. CHANFRAU To conclude with Chantrau’s version ot THE WIDOW’S VICTIM. JEREMIAH CLIP.... MU. F. S. CHANFRUU FRIDAY—BENEFIT OF MR. (JUANFRAU. SATURPAY-CIIANFRAU MATINEE. _ Eighth week—the - imlgium. "7 Benelltfi as follow#: WEDNESDAY, 2.30 P. M.; also, evening, TTuiverblty Hospital. THURSDAY .EVENING,tin" Ponn Asylum for lodi* •g<*nt Widows and Single Women. FRIDAY, Viola Social Temple, No. fi. Silver Ray—BATVURAY, l-'iO P. M„ uml evening, fractional change in silver. Concert Hull. Reserved seats 75c. Admissionsoc. Children2sc. apti-2t^ q N'’S SERIES OF SIX MATINEES. FOYER OF ACADEMY OK MUSIC. SIXTH AND LAST OK THE SERIES. RAFF MATINEE, fiipV3t§ FRIDAY AFTERNOON, April »,187Q,»t 4 o’clock. DTJPREZ & BENEDIUT'B OPERA HOUSE, SEVENTH Stroet. below Arch. CONTINUED BRILLIANT SUCCESS. THIS. EVENING, DUPREE & BENEDICT’S GIGANTIC MINSTRELS OFFER A GREAT SENSATION BILL. Emit Time—Bouuherty’s Ilunkuv mid Dory.] First Time—Burlesque Purls Milliner. T?OX’B AMERICAN! THEATRE, T WALNUT STREET, übovo EIGHJTH. . World-renowned CARLO BROTHERS, FRANK WOOD,DICK CLARKEjROBT. BUTLER’S TROUPE, tlu lieut Puntomimiets in the world: Adn Winy. Mile. DE ROSA and LA ROSA in two Grand Ballets. PARLOR CONCERTS THE SIXTH ami Last CONCERT will bo (riven at NATATO RIUM HALL. Broad, below Walnut, SATURDAY EVENING, April 9th. STRING QUARTETTE by Rufl. Tickets Si 2.*>,to 1,0 had at L. Moyev’e, 1413 Chestnut; Andre saml Boner's, and ill the door. ap4mwfB4t* New eleventh street opera HOOBe: , THE FAMILY BBBOHT. CARNCKOSS 4* lUXEY’S MINSTRELS, EVEEY EVENING. J. L. C AItNOROS 3, Man ager. aIEMPLK OF WONDERS—ASSEMBLY . BIIILIUNGS.-SIGNOB BLITZ, Jr. SPHYNX! SPHYNXt BPIIYNX ! MAGIC, VENTIULOQUIBM and CANAIMUSI Every Evening' ul 7 %. Wednesday and Saturday jtt 3. S' ENTZ AND LIABSLEK’S Musical Fund Hall, 1868-70. Every HAT OKI) A Y AFTERNOON, at S)i o'clock. oolS-tf A" o’ADEM V OE FINE ARTS, „ CHESTNUT street, above Tenth. Open from!) A. M. to 6 P. M. Bonjamln Weat’e Great.Pictnre of OHItIST BKJEUTED Is still on exhibition. it>22-tf BOARDING. PERMANENT AND TRANSIENT boarding, 1021 CHESTNUT street, upl-Ot* CITY ORDINANCES. COMMON COUNCIL OF PHILADEL PHIA. Cdebk’s Office, PnrnADEnpniA.iMarch 25,1870. In accordance with a resolution adopted by tho Common Council of the City of Philadel phia on Thursday, tho twenty-fourth day of March, 1870,’-the annexed bill entitled “An Ordinance to authorize a loan for.the erection of a bridge across the river Schuylkill at Fair mount.” JOHN ECKSTEIN, Clerk of Common Council. AN ORDINANCE TO AUTHORIZE A loan for the erection of a bridge across the River Schuylkill at Fairmount. Section 1. Tho Select and Common Coun cils of the City of Pliiladelphiado. ordain, That the Mayor of Philadelphia be and he is hereby authorized to borrow, at not less,than par, on the credit of the city corporation, from time to t ime,such sums of money as may be necessary to pay for tho construction and erection of a bridge over tlio river Schuylkill at Fairmount, not exceeding in the whole the s un of seven hundred thousand’dollars, for which interest not- to exceed tlfe l-at'o of six per cent, per an num shall ho paid, half yearly, on the first days of January and July, at the oilieoagf the City Treasurer. -The principal of said loan shall be payable and paid at tho expiration of thirty years from the date of the same, and not before, without the consent of the holders thereof; and certificates therefore in the usual form of certificates of city loan, shall ho issued in-such amounts as the lenders may require, but not for any fractional part of one hundred dollars, or, if required, in amounts of five hundred or one thousand dollars; and it shall be expressed in said certificates the said loan therein men tioned, and the interest thereof, are payable free from all taxes. Section 2. Whenever any loan shall be made by virtue thereof, there shall bo, by force of this ordinance, annually appropriated, out of the income of the corporate estates ;m<l from the sum raised by taxation, a sum suffi cient to pay the interest on said certificates; and the further sum of throe-tenths of one per centum on tiie par value of such certificates so issued, shall he appropriated quarterly put of said income and taxes, to a sinking fund, which fund and its accumulations are hereby especially pledged for tho redemption and payment of said certificates. RESOLUTION TO PUBLISH A LOAN BILL. Resolved, That the Clerk of Common Coun cil be authorized to publish in two daily news papers of, this city daily, for two weeks, the ordinance presented to tho Common Council on Thursday, March 24, 1870, entitled “An .ordinance to authorize a loan for the erection of a Bridge across the River Schuylkill at Fairmount.” And tho said clerk, at the stated meeting of Councils, after the expira tion of four weeks from the first day of said publication, shall present to this Council ono of each of said newspapers for every day In which.tho same shall bo made. mh2o 24t$ Ij PHIA. • ' Cr.EitK’s Office, PHii.ADEi.rHiA, March 18,1870. In accordance with a resolution adopted by the Common Council of the City of Philadel phia on Thursday, tho seventeenth day of March, 1870, the annexed bill, entitled: “An ordinance to create a loan for the further extension of the Philadelphia Gas Works,” is hereby published for public infor matloU' JOHN ECKSTEIN, Clerk of Common Council. An ordinance to create a loan' for tho further extension of tho t’hiladeiphia'Gas Works. Section 1. The Select atid Common Coun cils of the City of Philadelphia do ordain, That the Mayor of the city be and heis hereby authorized to borrow, at not less than par, on the credit of tho city, such sums as the Trustees of the Gas Works may require, not exceeding in the aggregate one million dol lars, at a rate of interest not above six per cent, for the further extension of the Phlla-. delpliia Gas Works. The principal of said loan shall he payable at the expiration of thirty vearsfrom the first day of January, A. D., 1870, and shall be free from all taxes. Sec. 2. Certificates for said loan shall he is sued by the Mayor in such amounts as tho lenders may desire, but not for any fractional parts of one hundred dollars, nor made trans ferable otherwise than at tho City Treasurer’s office, and shall be in the following form: Gas Loan Certificate No. Six per cent...loan.of..the .city.of.Philadelphia,is-, sued under authority of an ordinance entitled “ An ordinance to create a loan for the further extension of tho Philadelphia Gas Works, ap proved ” This certifies that there is'due to , by tho city of Philadelphia, dollars, with interest at six pur cent., payable'half yearly, on the first days of January and July, at tho office of the City Treasurer, in said; city, the principal to be paid at the same oilice in thirty years from the first day of January, A. D. 1870, and not before without the holder’s conseiit, free of all taxes. Th wit ness whereof the City Treasurer has hereto set his band and aflixed’the seal of said city this - day of ,A, D.lB—. [i.. s.] , City Treasurer. Attest, ■ City Controller. Section 3. Tliat said Trustees shall on or before the thirty-first day of December and the thirtieth day of .June in each and every year until, the said loan is paid, retain out of their receipts for the sale of gas and other pro duct* of the said Gas Works the sum of fours' per centum on tho amount of said loan, and a sum sufficient to pay the State taxes on said loan, for which certificates may have been issued, which they shall pay to.the City Trea surer, who shall apply a sura dent sum thereof to the payment of -the interest of the said-loan and the State taxes thereon, as the same may fall due, and to no other purpose whatever ; and the balance thereof shall be paid over by the said Treasurer to the Commissioners of the Sinking Fund, who shall invest the same and its accumulations in the loans of the said Gas Works, or in the other loans of the city of Philadelphia, as a sinking fund, which is hereby specifically pledged to the payment of said loan; and any surplus remaining after the payment of said loan shall be applied bythe Commissioners of the Sinking Fund toward the extinguishment of the other loans to the said Gas Works, if any; otherwise, of the funded debt of the city of Philadelphia. Section 4. The Mayor is hereby empowered and the requisition of the Tras tees of the Philadelphia Gas Works, without receiving tliepay of any money therefor,to issue certificates ot tho loan providedforin this ordi nance, In such amounts and to such parties as the said Trustees shall designate, not oxoeed ing the amount of the loan authorized in and by this ordinance. * Section 5. That the terms and provisions of the ordinance entitled “ An ordinance for the, further extension and management of the Philadelphia Gas Works,” approved June 17, 1841, shall not apply in any way or manner to this loan,,and that nothing contained in this ordinance shall interfere with or obstruct the city of Philadelphia in taking possession of said Gas Works whenover the Councils of the said city may by ordinance determine to do so. RESOLUTION TO PUBLISH A LOAN BILL. Resolved, That the Clerk of Common Council ho authorized to publish in two daily news papers In this city daily, for four weeks, the ordinance presented to the Common Council on Thursday, March 17tli, 1870, entitled “An ordinance to create a loan for the further ex tension of the Philadelphia Gas Works.” And the said clerk, at tlio stated meeting of Coun cils, after the expiration of four weeks from the first day of said publication, shall present to this Council one of each of said newspapers for every day in which tho same shall have been made. ,inliH)-24t$ COAL AND WOOD. s.mabon Minks. „„„„„„ Joiink.bhbaff. riIHE UNDERSIGNED INVITE ATTEN* X tlon to their stock of Spring Mountain, Lehigh anu Locust Mountain Goal, which! with tho preparation S* T 9 a by us, wo think oan not be excelled by any othor Coal. Ofllco, Franklin Institute Sevontli Street. BINES & BHHAFF, ■ jalO-t street wharf, SohuylklU, FOR SALE m BROWN STONE RESIDENCE ® FOR SALE. Mo. 19** ARCIf STREET. Elegant BrowicStono Reaidonco, throe etorloft* an Blau Mini roof; vofy commodious. furnished with eyory modern convenience, nntl built in a very chtporJor ami substantial manner Lot 26fo«tfrout by 100 foetdeoa to Cufhbertstfiot,ciii which ie Greeted a handsome brick • Stable and Oobch House. " J. fit. GUMMEY & SONS, 733 WALNUT Btroot. mhSft tf,n>§ FOR SALE. YARNS FOR SAL e. Cotton and Worried Yarns, all numbers. Cotton Yarns, one. two, throe.or four ply, oil cops, on beams and in skeins. Also, Chain and tintinot Warps,Cotton ami Wool Waste, CileO. F. UALI, Commission Merchant, C 7 KILBY Street,Boston, Musa, mb2s 3ms~ , . ; Fox* Sale Cheap. A FIRST-CJLASS FIRE PROOF SAFE. Address, VLEON» M this office. de2o-tfrps tt”xwc)l^s7^oo7^^i xa\v n , Elegant Stone Mansion, situated on high ground, commanding an extensive view of the Biirronnding country. The hoUHO in new and coiupleto in every respect, and accessiblo T>y steam and horsc-cars. Stone titanic for four horses; Cowhouse, Currifigo-hoiiso, and all tlio uppurtonances of a first-class establishment. Address J.H., at this Office. upfi w f m (it* MODERN THREE ffillli Htnrv residence. No. 2016 Arch street. Has convenience and in perfect ordor.. Will be sold with, or withont the furniture, and terms made to suit the pur* chaser. Apply to v ROBERT BUIST, ,Tr.. npfi6t§ 022 ami #2-1 Market street, above Ninth. "FoirsALEr ~~ ROKEBY FARM, CHESTER CO., BA. 2E The country seat and farm of tlio late Jobnß.Pcip rone, situated in Thornbury township, 4 miles from West Chester, and within 10 minutes’drive from Street Bond Station, on tho West Cheater and Philadelphia Railroad containing 186acres,more or less, m'a high state of cultivation ; fencing, Ac., Ac., in complote or der. Adjoining tho lands of SunmoLJ. Sharpless, Wel lington Hickman and Geo. Brinton. Tiie improvements consist of a largo and oonlmodions serpentine Stone Mansion House {snrrouudej by porches), built by tho luto owner in the year IS&3. con faining 20 rooms, with all tho modern conveniences ; also farm honeoj 3 tenant houses, gardener's houso and spring house, with never failing spring;. largo barn, stable, coach-house, and all the necessary buildings for a llrst-dass dairy and stock farm. The late owner spared no expense to make this ono of the most complete farms iu this Staten Terms easy. Immediate possession. Apply to EDWARD BURTON, Executor, No. 5 Walnut street, or toO.H. & H. P.MUIKJIKTD, mlilG w f m tfs 205 South Sixth street, Philada. SALE OR TO LET—A LARGE Country-sent, furnished, near Bordoittown and Trenton, iu a beautiful and perfectly healthy locality. Fine Graperies, Garden, StubJing, Ac. Jmtuiro 1311 Aivhstreet; - - aptmw fOt* — FOR SALE.—TH E "ELEGANT M AK IM ble Front Mansion, No. 200fi Chestnut street, re plete with every modern convenience. A small pro-, perty would be taken In part pay. FOX A BURKABT, ap4 6t* 221 South Fifth street. EX CHANGE—A i-iilli fine house, No. 2017 Itidgo avenue. It has double three-story flout, und double two «tory back buildings. The house if* 20 feet front, and lot 147 feet deep to Twon tieth street—twotrontn. Price §s,!jwdollars clear* This is a very cheap property. W. HINCKLE, No. 773 Wal nut street. - ap*2 7t* " AV ES T PHILADELPHIA— FOR Mai sale—handsome modern cottage, with every con venience, and large lot, situate on a corner in the highest and most desirnblo portion of West Philadel phia. J. 31. GUMMEY A SONS, No. 733 Walnut street. EOR SAIjE.—HOUBE AND STORE, sjiHiS. K. corner Tenth and Shippen streets. Apply UM7 Locust street. PosxeAsion immetliatrli/ mh3o 12f *pT” IVY S 1 GER MAN" TO \VN™FOR Sale.—The Elegant Pointed HtonoCottngn Resi dence, known as IVYSIDE, situate on sauthweri cor ner of West Walnut Lane and Green street, Gorman- Town, finished throughout iu tlio very beet manner, fur i.ihbcd with erery city convenience; and iu perfect order. Mo tic Stablo and Carriage Ifous». Cow House and larg« Lot of Ground, bi-autifully shaded, and planted with cl mice shrubbery* «L M. GUMMED A*Sositt, 733 Wal nut street. sm NEW BROWN STON E HOUSES; IMnos. u«o, am and isho spruce street for sALK. finished in walnut IN THE MOST SUPERIOR MANNER. AND WITH EVERY MODERN CONVENIENCE. E. IV. WARREN, S)l3 SPRUCE STREET. APPLY BETWEEN 2 AND 4 O'CLOCK P. M. - , mbiitf ill FOB SALE.—THE DESIRABLE Three-story Dwelling, with Thr-e-story Back Building*, N 0.400 South Ninth street, with all iniprove inents. Lot feet deep to a back street. Also, a Mod'Tn Dwelling, No. 2225 Spruce stnu-t; all imnrovo mentH. Immediate possession. Terms easy. Appiy to COI’PUCK A JORDAN,433 Walnut street. CHESTNUT HILL.—FOR SAIJ3-A Handsome Modern, Pointed-Stone Rosidenco, with parlor, library, dining-room, large pantries, two kitchens,ninechnnibers, bath, water-closets, Ac., Ac.; ..ltnii.largo lot., of .ground, situate on Chestnut avenue, within five minutes walk from Bi»IIroad ‘D“potV Lntue dinto possession given. J. 31, GU3I3IKY* & 50N5,733 Walnut street. March strei^t—for sale—-the handsome throe-story brick residence, with attics, and threo-storv back buildings, situate No. 1723 Arch street. L0t,24 foot tiinchej* front by 340 fe»t deep. Im mediate possession given. J. 31. GUM&IEY ABONS, No. 733 walnut street. SALE—A vory desirable Stone Jlansion, with stone stable and carriage-house, with three acres of land attached, situateon Duy’s hiue, within K of a mile from Duy's lane station, on Germantown Railroud. Has every con venience and is in good order. Grounds handsomely laid out and planted with every variety of choice shrub bery. Terms, accommodating. Immediate possession. J. M. GUMMKV & 50N5,7.33 Walnutbtreet. \VEST SPRUCE STREET—FOR SALE jtiii— The desirable Building Lot No. 2102 Spruco street. 22feet front by 150 feet deep to a street. J. 31. GU3IMEY ft SONS, 733 Walnut street. CHESTNUT STREET^-FOR SALE— An elegant modern Residence, 25 Toot front, with ovory convenience, built and furnished throughout in a Biiperiormanner,and lot2Bs''feetdeep through to San* Bom street, Bituat" \v<*nt of Eighteenth street. J. M. GUMMEY Ar SONS, 733 Walnut street. " GKII MAN TO W N\—F OR SAL E—THE hnndsonieStone Cottnpe, situated Northwest cor ner East Walnut lam* and Morton street. Every city convenience and in perfect order. Grounds well shaded by full crown trees. J. M. GUMMKY & SUNS, 733 Walnut street. x . . _ _j__ Sa’LE.-DWELLINGS— ~ , ' 11331 North Twelfth street, Three-story .modern dwelling. . * 1422 North Twelfth street. Three-story modern dwell* iuc. 235 North Twelfth street.- Three-story dwelling with three-story tenement on rear of lot. - - J52Si South. Tenth street.... ThreCrfitoiT dwelling. 3008 South Third street. Three-story dwelling. 1212 Marlborough street, Richmond, Tkroo-story brick d ' vx ' l| i" f jj l j SlNESS PROPERTIES. 606 South Second street. Throe-fitory brick, 22 by 133, 2fit) North Eleventh street. Four-story brick, 18 by 53, <423 Reed street. Corner store and dwelling. . EO6 South Sixth street. Tavern and dwelling. 14351'aB«y»nkEoad. EOBEKT GRAFpEN & SONi No. 537 Pino street. MEKCHANTVILLE N. J.-BUILDING Bjteß for Bale, fivumimitcs’s walk from Welwood THllil’y MINUTES FROM I RONT AND MARKET STREETN, Philadelphia. Fare by the Annual Ticket. 8 cts. per trip. Address J. W. TOUJIEY. mh29-lni§ No. 127 Chestnut street,.Philadelphia. mo CAPITALISTS AND BUILDERS.— . I For sale—A large and rapidly-improving LOT. NORTH BROAD STREET, between Norris Mind Dia mond ; 628 feet deep to THIRTEENTH STREET, inter sected by PARK AVENUE. FOCH FRONTS. ,mhB-tiS ' Apply No.322Chontnut streot. Ml’SlC Alt. PHILADELPHIA 'MUSICAL ACADEMY. SECOND HALF SPRING QUARTER WILL BE -GIN APRIL 26. Earlv application at the OFFICE, • No. 1226 SPRUCE secure choice of days and hours. Pupils may begin at any tiinn. Circulars at the music stores. / mh'lO-w b bt§ CtJO/P. RONDINELLA, TEACHER OF Singing. Private lessons and classes. Residence •808 B. Thirteenth street 1 au3fi-tf| cost; Lost— certificate no. 12s, for one shore of stock in the Point Brco/.o Park Asso •ciation of Philadelphia, in the name of Duniol Greeue. As application will bo mado four woekß from date hereoi for a renewed certificate, notice is hereby given. u S. KILPATRICK, Secretary; -No. 141 South Fourth street. MAUCIT 22.1870 mh233<) a0f.13 20.$ WANTS UG^NVANTED—WANTED A SHALL Steam Tug, suitable for Southern River ' Naviga tion, of light draught. Apply to COCHRAN, RUSSELL & CO., 11l Chestnut street. cargo of timber from Georgia-full cargo out. Apply to COCIIRAN, RUSSELL & CO., 11l Chestnut street : GAS FIXTUKKS. AS FIXTURES.—MISKEy, MERRILL & THACKARA, No. 718 Chestnut street, manufao tnrora of Gas Fixtures, Lamps, &0., Ac., would call the attention of the pnblle to their large and elegant assort ment of Gas Chandeliers. Pendants, Brackets, <feo. They also Introduce gaspipos into dwellings and public build ings, and attend to extending, altering and repairing ga Sipes. AU work wa ranted! TO RENT. /"YK.KJEB.K & McOOlil/UM, BEAL ESTATH Offloo. Jnckßon stroo^ < ojipo«so Mansion street, Caps, Island, N.'J. Real Estate bprighT and sold. Porsons’ dosironsof rontlngoottageadnriugthe noMon wUI apply or addrf>paasabove. ~.. . Rcapeetfnllr refer to Oh as. AjßtibloainiHoilw Bumm, Francis Mcllvatn, Aaguattur Merino, John Dictlb and VT. W.Jnvenal. , v foB-tq dpi, TO LET—FURNISHED OB UNRUU jpS;| a Country Hesldenoo at Ohelton/HUls, Within u few minutes’ walk of City, Lana or. Old York Hand stations, North Pennsylvania Railroad. R. J, DOBBIN 8, LtilKtr Building. ■ apG-w.tb.j* * TO RlfiN'F -- FIJKNISHEfi', On™ |||' MiL urfornlshed.—•’ A mbdorh-biiilt house, with ~73m* line stable, outbuildings. etc., and 11 acres of grbumly with abunditnqo of fruit, five miles from tin city; high and healthy location; also, very convenient .to . the rnilroad station. Inquire of JOHN HA/LKHURBT, 1330 Bprnce-atrept. mh3o,w f in H* , RESIDENCES TO RENT Plil —ln Bolmesburg, Twenty «tlilrd Ward* about eight miles fn-m the city, three Cottage houses, with hrowu stone fronts. French nmf; purler, dlnmc-ronm and two kitchens on first floor : largo yard, all the modern im provements. Accessible soverftl times a day by the Phil adelphia and Trenton Railroad. Apply to * OHARLKh H. MASRONY ap2-Bt* 329 North Sixth street. f”g| TO Let —SECOND-STORY .FRONT [ii! R00m,324 Chestnut streot, about 20 x 23 foot.j Huitnblo for an office or light business. jtilS tf ry FARR & BROTHER fJB 'IID GTiIARD STREEI\—X GrUARD cai‘il Finite dwelling, at roduccd rent. Apply at Tower Ha 11,318 Market street. mh23*tf§ tfß~ FO R K lfi N T-FURNISHED-A pipit bfuidwrunio four*etory brick dwelling, with back ImUdhiKfl and every modern convenient, situate on Broad street, below Fine. J, M. GUM2ISIY A SGNB, No. 733 Walnut street. ••• , jjsja TO LET.—THE STORE * CONNECT gjiiil ing with the Colonnade Hotel, 1502, 1504 and lftOd Chestnut street, suitable lor gent’s furnishing goods. Bent moderate. Apply on the premises from 10 to 12 A. 21. mhl2 tf§ 4fß FOR RTBNT-MkNISHEITOR UN-' wSil furnished,tho ibree-Btory briok dwelling altuato No. 1308 North Twelfth otreot, J. M. GUMMKY le BONK, 733 Wnlnnt street. __ e TO RENT—ROOMS OK ALL SIZES, well lighted,suitable for light mainifactnfinß b'i*i uess. In bmldinir No. 712 Chestnut street. J. HI. GUM MEY & 50N5,733 IValuot street. fS“KOR RENT—CHESTNUT STREET. fiSiL—The dc.lrablo property northeast corner of Chestnut and Eleventh streets ; will ho improved. MARKET STREET-Valuable store property, 40 feot front, southwest corner of hixth streot. Fnur*story Store, 017 MARKET street. ■ . VINE STREET—Largo Dwelling, suitable for board ing-house, situate N. F.. corner Eighteenth and Vino. J. M. GITMMEI A 50N5,733 Walnut stroet. <!§• to" EEkli-tA handsome ioße Country Resldeuco, Day's ldno, Germantown. A handsome ponutry residence, Manheiia streot, Ger nlA*dwelling honso No. 119 Rlttonbonso stroet, Ger- A dwelling lionee, No. 1511 North Twentieth streot, A dwelling liousn. No. 911 South Ninth Streot. A stable oil Miles street, below Wnlnnt street and above Tenth street. Room for three horses and car riages. Apply to COEECCK A JORDAN, 431 S\ olunt st reet. TRAVELERS* GUiDii.* HILADE L PHI A, GERMANTOWN ANUNORRISTOWN RAILROAD n TIME TA BLE.—On and after Monday, Nov.22d, 1869, and nntll further notice; rOR QEBMANTOW n. Leave Philadelphia—6,7, 8, 9.05, 10, H,UA.M.,I, 3.15.856,4.06,4,36,6, 656,6,6)6,7,8,9.20,10,11,19 P. M. Leave' Germantown—o, 0-55,8.20,9, JO, 10.50,12 A M 1.3,3,'3A0,4M.5,6X,6,65,7j,J,r0,11,P.M TlioB.2odown-traln,and the 3S£and6s6np trains,will not stop on the Germantown Branch. ON oUNDAiS. ... Leavo Philadelphia—9.l6 A. M.,2, 4.03 minutes. 7 and B.IS A. Mj 1,9,8 and9l6 P.M. * chestnut hill Railroad. Leave Philadelphia—6,B,lo, 12 A.M.; 2, 336.636,7,9-20 “uavi-ChestnntDill-7.lomlnntes, 8,9.40, and 11,40 A M • 1 40,3A0, 6.40,6.40,8.40 and 10.40 P.M, I'*' ' ' Oil SUNDAYS. ... . „ Leave Philadelphia—9.ls miuntea A. M.y Sand 7P. M. Leave Cb(7atnut HUJ—^minutes A. M,; 12.40,4.40 and AND NORRISTOWN. Leave Philadelphia—<s.7}4,9,ll.o3, A. 21.; Lh»» 3,4, 4)i, 860,11 A. M, IH, 3,4^, 3.15,8 and 9HP. M. „ . ' ... . „ >1 Train# from Norrirtowtivrill not stop at RlogAo’f/Potts’ Bunding, Ig»jjuo or Schur'a Lane iry* Th<> 4 p 31 Train from Philadelphia will stoponly atSchoolLanc,MamiyunkandConshohocken. Leave rhiladolphia—9 A. 21.;i'H,4 and 7.15 P. H« Leave Norristown—7 A. M.:l,6>ihikl 9P M, utnve norri rOB 5 j ANA VUNK. Leave Philadelphia—B,7l6,9,ll66 A. HI.; !>*, 3,4,43 s 8.10,930,1.36 A. M.| 3H,6,eN,«60 ttndlo ( { , I j l yjj NDA YB. Leave Philadelphia—-9 A.M.; 2)6,4 and 7.18 P. M. Leave ManaynnU-Tlj A.M,.^lg. d and J/a 1. M. Leave Philadelpbia.TH A, Leave Plymouth. f>VL A. M.,4. 4 F» . . . w k WlLSON,General Superintendent* . ? * • Depot, Green^Htroety, tShILADELPHIA AND ERIE KAXL r road-winter tisie table. , On and after MONDAY, Nov. 15, 1869, the Trains on the Philadelphia and Eric hall road will rnn as follows from Pennsylvania West Philadelphia . Mail Train leaves PlillndMphla - WP. M. “ “ “ Williamsport 7.40 A.M. “ “ arrives at Erie Erie ExpressU'-aveaPhUadelphia.-..,.-.-"—-11-te A; m.. •i »* 44 WiUlamsport 9 wP. a.. 44 44 arrives at Krl* - 4* Elmira Mail leaves JMladelphlju , ' , 'ai«P if* 66 46 ‘4 Williamsport- -S*!2ls*{r »* * 4 arrives at Lock Haven... 7JOP. 21. EABTWABD. ain . M Mail Train Teavee Krle J*” •“* 44 u arrives at Philadelphia..... - J**o A. 21. Erie Express leaves Eri“ • *» 44 44 44 Wiiliarpsport-.. u «» arrives at Philadelphia - Elmira Mai) leaves Lock llaven B*w A, M. " “ “ Williamsport 9.46 A.M. 44 14 arrives at Philadelphia ?* u‘ Buffalo Express loayos WHliamsport... „..»A2.i5 A.VL. •6 44 44 Unrrißburg. 5.20 A.M. »* 4 * arrives »t Philsulofnliia 9.25 A.M. Express east connects at Corry. Mail east atGorry and Irvtncton. Express west at irvineton with trains on Oil Creek And Allegheny Elver Ballroad. ’ . ALFRED L. TYLEB, Goneral Hnoerlntende P‘ hii.adeT/Thia and iiAi/riMOiuo CENTRAL KAIMIOAD. , , CHANOE OK HO!.lts. On nnd after 3IONDA Y,-April 4,187 U, traiim will rtm "’IEAVE'PIIIIiADEI.PIIIA, from donotof P.W.,t li. It R . owner P.rnad street and Wnuliimiton iircnne, ForPOP.T DEPOSIT, m 7 A. M.nn.M.SJ P. M. Kor OXFORD, at 7 A.31..4.30 P. 51.. nml. P. M.-..- Kor CHAM'S FOKI) ANI) CHESTER CREEK R. It,, at T A. 31,. 10 A. -11., 2.30 P. 31..4.3U P. M., uml 7 1 Train Raving Philadolphia nt 7 A. 31. connects nt Port Deposit with train for Baltimore ■ Train* leaving Philadelphia-nt 10 A. M, nml 4.30 1, 31.. leaving Oxford ntii.t)s A. 31., and leaving Port De pofiit nt it 26 A. M., connect nt Odmdd;* Ford Junction with thc Wilmington mill Reading Railroad. TRAINS FOR PHIDADEDPHIA Rave Port Deposit ntn.2s A. M. nml 4.2 a P. 31. on arrival of trams from ato.os A. 31., 10.35 A. 31. and SJO P. 31. FRAUD'S FORD nt 7.20 A. 31., 12.00 11., IJO P.M., 4.45 P.M. and 0.40 P. 3f. , , . . . PasßPjig'jrs are allowed to taise wearing apparel onl) no hngrngii, nml the Company will not bo responsible Tor mi uiiH.tujt excia'illng ono limnlrod dollars, unless u n ucial contract 1h made tor tlio eaino. . . , . 1 HENRY WOOD, Oimeral tDipmntei)dont._ /■tAMDEN AND ATE ANTIC RAILROAD, ly Ou and-after Friday, April 1, 1870, trams will leave "Wne Street Ferry as follows : aan a m Mail and Freight........ : .>' m‘ .^, rLANT i _ Junction Accommodation from Atco, 0.22 A.m. ami trains leave Vine Street Ferry, 10.15 A.H. iAn Extra Train will run every Saturday ju advance of i;s?ftviE«' I'witedphtoftt.. ...... m. L AlUwin# nearlyiflYEliOuTtS oVru^each'. s«rho Union Transfer Company. No. 8128Chestnutstreet (Continental Hotel). will cull tor anil check baggage to dUitination. • *’ .Tickets, also, on sale. B. H. MUNBY, Agent. -^y- jE BTJRR S K Y' RA IE ROADS COMMENCING MONDAY* April 4, 1870. ■ Leave Philadelphia, Foot of Market street (Upper V 2 r if(f i Ut M., Mail, for Bridgeton, Salem, Millvillo,Vine ifttid Swedeshoro und oil intermediate stations. 1‘ jM; Vineland PMBongwffor B Bridgeton, Balera, Swedes. modatlon. TBAIN FOB (Ape MAY. • • (Saturdays only.;, Leave Philadelphia; 8.00 A. M/ t . Freight tnSn leaves Camden daily, at 13.00 o’clock, ” Freight rocelved in Philadelphia at aocond covered W Frolkht delivered'at N0.'218 S. Delaware avorrae. Commutation, tickets, at reduced rates,between Phila delphia and(WILLIAM J. BEWELL, Superintendent. April 1.1870-. —-r TP AST FREIGHT LINE, VIA NORTH Iht^M ena^ledto gl?o!Zroo«e’d deßpptoh4o moroWndtoocon- Before 8 Mabfttfoy Olty, and the other stations in y Wyoming yafley.beforo A • {j£ask I^gont, "ftfORTH PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD. Al —THE SHORT MIDDLE ROUTE to the Lehigh and Wyoming yalloy,Northern Pennsylvania, Southern and Interior New York* Rochester, Buffalo, Niagara Falls, the Great Lakosand the Dominion of Canada, WINTER ARRANGEMENTS. TAKES-EFFEOT, November 22d,186L _M DAILY TRAINS leave Passenger Dopot, corner of Berks and Americas streets (Snndaya excepted), follows: . :■ * v ' ■ - -. 7.50 A. 21. Accommodation for Fort Washington, . At 8 A. M.—Morning Express for Bethlehem and Principal Stations on main line of North Pennsylvania lUlJrctuL connecting at Bethlehem with Lehigh Valley liailroadfor AllentowniMauchChunk. Mahanoy Olty Wilkesbarre, Pittston. Towanda and Waverly: connec ting at Waverly with ERIE RAILWAY for Niagara Falls, Buflald, Rochester, Oiovoland, Chicago, San Frah€isco,and all points in the Groat West, A*B-45 A. M.-i-Accommodation for Doyleatown, stop* ping at all intermediate Stations. Passengers for Wfl low Grove. IDtbonP and Hortsvillo, bythU train, take Stage at Old, York Road., . 9.45 a. M., <Express) for Betblobcm, Allentown, MauchOhnnk, White Haven,'Wilkesbarre, Pittston, Scranton and Carhondale via Lehigh and Susquehanna Railroad* and Allentown, Easton. IlackeUstown* and on New Jersey Central Railroad And Morris and Essex Railroad to New York via Lehigh Valloyßailroad, At 10.45 A. M.—Accommodation for Fort Washington, ■topping at iutonuodiate Stations. 1.16,5.20 and 8 P.M.—Accommodation to Abington, At lAf> P. 21.—Lehigh Valley Express for Fan ton, Allentown, 21aueh CbunK, Hazlotou, White Haven, Wilkesbarre* Pittston, and Wyoming Coal Re gions. At2.45P. M.—Accommodation for Doyleatown, stop ping at all Intermediate stations. At 4.15 P. 21.—Accommodation for Doyleatoirn,stop ping at all lntefmedlate stations. . At 5.00 P. 2f.—Through for Bethlohom, connecting at Botjilchem with Lehigh Valley Kvoning Train for Euaton, Allentown, Mauch Chunk. AtC.2OP. 21.—Arcommodation for Lonsdale,stopping at all intermediate stations. - At HAG P. M.—Accommodation for Fort Washington. „ TRAINS ARRIVE IN PHILADELPHIA. From Bethlehem at 9 A. 21., 2.16* 4.40 and 8.23 P.M. 2.16 P. 21.,4.40 P. 21,and8.25P.H. Trainsmakodirect connection with Lehigh Valley or Lehigh and Susoue bnnna trainsfrom Kdston, Scranton. Wilkesbarre, 2fa hanoy Oity and Hazleton. A „ .. From Doyleatown at BAS A.M.*4AO P.M.and 7M P. M From Lansdulo at7AO A. M. , From Fort Washington at and 10A5 A, M. and 3.10 , '* l ' . . ON SUNDAYS. Philadelphia for Bethlehem at A. M. Philadelphia for Doytestown at 2.00 P. M. Doylestown for Philulelphia at 7.00 A. M. Bf-thlchem for Philadelphia at iJOO P. 21. Fifth and Bixth streets and Second and Third Streets Lints of City Passenger curs rnn directly to and from the Depot, Union Line run within a snort distance of the Depot. Tickets must be procured at the Ticket Office, In order to secure the lowest rates of fare. KLLIB CLARK, Agent. Ticket* sold and Baggage checked through toprincl j>rtl points, nt Mann e North Poun. Baggage Exproaa oflico, No. 105 South Fifth etroet X BO Al>.—After 8 P. M., SUNDAY, November Mth. 1860. The trains of the Penunylvania Central Railroad leavethf Depots Thi rty-flr*ton'i MarketatroeU,which Is Tracked directly hr the care of the Market Street Paa tenger Ball way, the lost car connecting with each train leaving Front and Market street thirty minute* before its departure. Thom of the Chestnut and Walnut Streets Hallway run within one aouare of the Depot. Sleeping Cor Ticket* run be bad on application at thn Ticket Office, Northwest corner of Ninth and OheatmU street*, and at tho Depot. „ • ...... Agents of the Union Transfer Company will call for and deliver Baggage at the Depot. Orders loti at No.»I Chestnut street, No. 110 Market street, will rocoiraat tention TRAINS LEAYE DEPOT, VIZ.: Mail Train.- - : .at 8.00 A. M. PaoiiAccom. at 10J0 A.M.* Lid, and OJOP.M, Vast Liu<?~ ......at 11J0 A. M» Erie Kxpr*t*...-w....... at 1144 A. M. Harrisburg Accom ......at 2JO P. M. Lancaster Accom ....at 4.10 P. M« ParksLurg Train. at SJO P.'M, Cincinnati Kxpreira... - at 8.00 P. M, Erie Mail and Pittsburgh Expreaa........... ...at 9.45 P. M. Accommodation ......i .at 12.11 A M, pacific Express ....at 12.00 night Erie Midi leaves daily, except Sunday, running on Bftturday night to Williamsport only. On Sunday n'ght ra will leave Philadelphia at 8 o'clock. Pacific Express b-fiTes daily. Cincinnati Ex press daily, except Saturday. All other train* dally, except eiunday. . .. The Western Accommodation Train rnn» daily* except Sunday. For thin tram tickets must be procured and baggage d ♦lUv r-fl bv .s no P. M.«at 116 Market street. S fi TRAINS ARRIVE AT DEPO*. VIZ : Cincinnati „.~..-at3.l&A. M, Philadelphia Express.— —«■——at&JJ A. M, Erie Mali _ at 0.30 A, M. Pool! Accommodation at 8.20 A. M. and 3.40 A 0.25 P. 31 Parksburg Train. .—*• *•*•*££*!? JJ* Lancaster Train - - - —at I2J& P. M, Erie Express. - at 13J5 P. M, Southern Express ..—.—...at 7.00 p. M. Lock Haven and Elmira Express.—~ at 7 W P. M. Pacific Expre55.......... - -attJZS P. M, HarrlsburgAeccunmodation— »tg.W P. M. Forfnrtb'*r Information,apply to ~»w„ ' . JOHN F. VANLKEIi, Jr., Ticket Agent,»l Chestnut Bt FBANCIS FUNK, Ticket Agent, 1W Market street, SAMUEL H. Wa/iLACE, Ticket Agent at the Depot. The Pennsylvania Railroad Company wiUnotaasuma any risk for Baggage, except for wearing VE^n 1, and linnt their responsibility to One Hundred Dollar* in value, Alt »•***«« oswlint? that amount In value will, be at the risk of the owm;r, uulcsia*i by co ni.lAV AKD H. \ ILLIA2J&, * General Superintendent. Altoona, Pa. PHn.ADKI.PHIA, WILMINGTON AND BALTIMORE RAILROAD—TIMETABLE. Com mencing MONDAY, A vri 4th, K7O. Trains wlHJUi.ro Depot, corner Broad and WhshingtOD .venae, a* RU NWAY MAIL TRAIN at B.SO A. M.(Hun,Sirs excepted), for Baltimore,stopping at nil Regular Station*.. Con eluting with Delaware Railroad Line *t Clayton with Hmyrnirßramh Bailroiui and M.irjlend and Delaware Jt Harrington with Jurictlonami Wreakwatfr tt.B., ut Soaford vrili* Uop.he*t*r and Delaware Railroad, at Delmar with Esulfn* Shore Bailyoad and at Salisbury with Wioanlca and lVconi'-ke lUilroad. 4 EXPRESS TRAIN at 12.00 M. ISundays exceptedhfor Baltimore ami Washington, stopping at Wilmington, Perryville and Havre tie Grace. Connects at Wiiming ton with train for New Caktle: " , < EXPRESS TRAIN at 4 J30 P. M.(Sundays excepted), for Baltimore and Washington, stopping at Olrnsbr, Thurlow, Linvrood, Chiymont, Wilmington, Newport, Stanton, Newark, Elktun, North East, Charlestown, perryville, Havre do Grace, Aberdeen, Perryman’s, Edgewowi, Magnolia, (Jhaso's and Stammer * Bun. NIGHT EXPRESS at 11 JO P. M.idaily) fpr Baltiraora and Washington, stopping at Lofstwr, _Lin wpod, Clayniont. Vt ilmington, Newark, Klktoii, North East, Perryville, Havre do Grace, Perryman 1 * and Mag n for Fortress Monroo nnd Norfolk will tako TRAlNS.—Stopping at all Station* between RhilinleJplil.v and WilmlnKton. Leave I'UILADKLPIIIA at II.OU A.M.,5J0,8.00 and 7 If) P. M. The .-i.OO I’. M. train connects with Dolawars Rsilrnad for Harrington and intennidhite sutlona. Leave WILMINGTON 6,11 and 8.10 A. M.,'MW, *.oO,ind x 7.15 P.M. The 8.10 A. 51. train will not stop between \ Chester and Philadelphia. Tho 7.15 P.M. tram from \ Wilmington ran* daily;allotberAccommodatlonTrain* \ B Trai^h“X'WILMINGTON atd .J A. M and 4 M P.'M. will connect at Lamokin Junction with tho 7.'JO A.M. and 4AO P. M. trains for BajtimoroCentral B. R. From BALTIMORE to PHILADELPHIA.-Loavea Baltimore 7.75 A.Al.,Wav Mail. O.ia A.M.,Lxpreu, onii 31 .Exurrss. 7.23 P. M., Express. 2 MINT*Vy VIiAIN FROM BALTIMORE BALTIMORE at 7.25 P. M.StoppineatMaCTiolia.Por rjTnoD’a, Aberdeen, Havreelc Oraco.Perryvilled-harlca town, North-East, Elkton. Newark. Stanton, Newport, Wilmington, Claymont, Linwood and Olicstor. ' Through tickets to all points West, bouthcoml Sontli weßt may he procured at tho ticket oiUco, 828 Oh* stunt street, under Continental Hotel, where also Stato Room, and Berths in Slw.pin* Cars can bu secured dnrlng tho day. Persons purchasing tickets at this oihcocan navo, bdggago chocked at their reahliuco by tlio Union Trans fer Company. - 11. F. Khflah i. nap t. ■TT7EST GH ESTEtt AND I'IULADKL- W PIIIA RAILROAD COMPANY, oil and after MONDAY, April 4, 1870, trains will leave thc^Depot, THIRTY-FIRST and CUESTNLT, a* tol IOWB FROM PHIRADEIPniA. C 45 A.M.for It 0. Junction stops at all stations. 7 15 A. M. for West Cheater. stops at nil stations west of *Mediu(except Greenwood), connecting at I). C. Jnnc tian for Oxford, Kemiett, Port Doposit,and all stations on the P. and 11. C. R. B. ‘ . . 0.40 A. M. for West Chester BtopH nt allstatlons. , U £0 A. M. fur J). C. Junction stops at nil stations. 2 80 1\ M.for Westchester stops atnll stations. 4J6I 1 . M. forß. C. Junction stops at all stations. 4 46 P. SI. for West Chester stops at all stations west of Media (except Greenwood), connecting at 1) 0. Junc tion for OxJordjHo>unett,Port Deposit,and all stations 5 .‘ll'p 1 31 P for 11. <;. juiictlen. This train commoner running on uudufter Juno Ist, 1870, stopping nt all 0 to'p' lK for West Chester stops at all stations. li 30 P M. for WcHt Chester stops at all Btatlone. FOll FIIILADEIiPHIA. 5 o', A . 11. from B. C. .1 unction Btops at all stations. 6*30 A. M. from West Chester stops at all stations. 7 40 A. M. from West Chester stops at all stations lie tween W. 0. and Media (except Greenwood), connect ing nt B.C. Junction for Oxford, Kemiett, Port Do iiosit. and all Htiitlonß ou tho 1. &B*O.B. B. 8.16 A. M.fromß. C. Junction stops nt all stations. 10,00 A. M. from West Chester stops at all statloiis. 1 OS P. M, from B. C. Junction stops at all stations. 1.66 P.M. from West Clioster stops nt alltflatioiis. 4 65P. M.from West Chester stops nt all stations, con ilectinit at B.C. Junction for Oxford, Kemiett, Port Deposit,and all stations on the P. *«• v.ll. u. 0.66 P. M. frinn West Cheater stops « t {\ u ( , 9, f, ti S, nB ’ con : r l ,iTl' n"'juuctioi' I'iiis train commenced 9 ! f on n and o afte7‘junu Ist, 1870, stoppings, all stations.. . ON SUNDAYS. , 805 A. M . for West Chester stopsut nl sMflcOw,connect ing at B. O. Junction with P. & B. U. It. M. e ;,(} p f o r West Chester stops at nil stations. 7'"o A M from West Cheater stops at nil stations. 4AO P.'M.'from West Chea.er ijU stations, coil veninTetr nt ti fl Junction with P. « B.C. B. B. nectiwg Ht ti. WHE£LK rt, Superintendent. XTEW EXPRESS LINE TO ALEXAN |\ Georgetown and Wanhlngton, D. 0., via Ghea **’ako and Delaware Canal, with at Alex undrlafrom tho moat direct routo for Lynchburg, BrU tol, KnDXTIH6,-Saah»fl!o, Dalton and thei Southwest. Btownera loave regularly from the first wharf afiox Market stieot, every Saltai'day at noon. __ ' recoived daily. WM. P.CLYDE AOO.j no 12 Booth Wharves and Pier 1 North Wharvos. HYDE A TYLEB* Agents at Georgetown. __ g KLDBIDGB & OO.i Agents at Alexandria, Ya FOREIGJN FRUITS, NUTS, &rO.~MßS eina Orangoe and. Leroons,Turkoy Figs, in kog* : drums and boxes : Anstrian fPrunollos in kegs and fanoy boxes ; Arabian Dates, new crop: Turkey Prunes in casks and fancy boxes* Raisins—Layers. Boodles® Imperial, Ac.: Fig Paste and Guava Paste; Naples and Bordeaux Walnuts,Papor Shell Almonds, toT sale by JJ JB f BUBBIER A 00.. 103 South Delaware avenue. Vy landing froiA schooner ..TKSSE OLA UK? from Sa vannah,•(iU.,andforiialt‘ by COOUItANy UuSSELL A GO., 11l Chestnut btroot. NEW PERMEATIONS. The Bab Ballads. Much Sound and Little Sense. By W. S. Gilbert.; Illustrations by; the author. Philadelphia. Porter & Coates. If any one thinks it an easy matter to write a nonsense-verse, and write it well, let • him sit down at a desk, nib a fresh pen, and try. To burst with untamed freshness from incongruity to incongruity, to introduce scraps, : of French in thefhymej v/itliout effort, to cover ,aH''witli a certain gloss of education and good society,: never to deviate into sense, never to seem to, try, never to pun except most casually and. in-, noccntly, and yet not to be dull, all this is about as easy as to imitate the gait of a butter fly in the air when weighed down with fifty pounders. flood uonsense-vcrsificatiom de mands, we may say, the ruin of a fine and well-stored mind, the childishness of a cultured intellect, the decadence of a University educa tion, the dotage of a life of intellectual in dustry, the second-childhood of a scholar; may the world appreciate tjie sacrifice! The author before us hits or misses, according as ho keens his ideal of nonsense strictly before liim; a few of bis lucubrations, where the ghost of a serious meaning is outlined, are to be charita bly passed over as the lapses of a sometimes forgetful pantomimist. The moment Pantaloon neglects to grimace, or allows a'tear to twinkle cn his floury cheek, he becomes insupportably incongruous. We charitably omit all notice o “At a Pantominc” and “The Phantom Curate,” and “ The Reverend Micah Sowis,”— whose poor function it is to prove that the pulpit is comparatively amusing, contrasted with the modern theatre. But, in another sort of efforts, the author of the “ Bab Ballads” has all the success possible in the way of his choice. The English of Mile, de la Sauce Mayonnaise is literally accurate, the real English- the Briton hears over the little supper-tables of the Jardin Mabille: “ Oh my! - pretty man, if you please, Blom boodin,'biftek, curric lamb, Bouldogue, two franc half, quite ze cheese, P.osbif, rue spik Angleesh godam.” The joke of attributing elegant emotions to common folks is rather pointedly shown in the terms used by the captain of the Panther, who, after weeping to think that a tar, of his should “ lean so gracefully on posts,” to the confusion of the Boulogne fish-girls, thus pa ternally rallies tlie too-kiiling sailor: “ You bare a graceful way, I learn, Of leaning airily on posts, By which you've been and caused to burn A tender flame on these hero coasts. A. Usher-girl, 1 much regret,— 'Tier age, sixteen—her name, Babette.” Upon which, to the saving of domestic morals in the British marine, tlie sailor fecollects bis own wife, Wapping Sue: “ Jltrlje anty .ia beneath her skin, And ilea in layers on her bones * •* Slic’d take your honor’s scruff,” said he, “ And pitch you over to .Bolting.” “ J pardon you,” the Captain said, “ The lair Babette you needn’t wed.” . The "Periwinkle Girl,” who seta all the men to falling at her tootsies,” —the “ Three Kings of Chickeraboo,” who get them upon islands in the Pacific, to receive otters of Victoria’s- al liance at the hand 3 of the ambitions Admiral Pip,—or the foundling sailor Gplightly, who sings his “Willow,” like Gesdemona, on the topmast and bores everybody almost to death, —or “John’’and “ Fred,” who try to win Mary Ann by different styles of dancing, until the wandering curate passes “ that way,” “ And talks a lot of goody-goody,” and cuts them both out,—and the policeman, who sighs to Anonyms that he “ wants her,” that lie has a “ cell for her,” in stately Pentonville, —these are specimens of the amusing inconsequent characters of the • book of Bab. Of the collection as a whole, It may be said, that while many an intelligent person would pass the book in disgust, only a person of intelligence is fit to perceive. all the points and allusions, and to relish the peculiar sort of smartness gone wild which has created it. Some of the illustrations, for which Mr. Gilbert apologises, are capital, and they all go admirably well with the tost. The English woman and Frenchwoman, for instance, mothers respectively of Ilauce and Pierre, who defy each other so gallantly across the channel, are perfect cachets and exemplars of their several nationalities. And the reunion of the principal characters in the frontispiece shows ability of a sort which, like the literary part, only needs sensible direction to achieve an other sort of excellence than is shown in these tributes to bathos and the art of sinking, Messrs. Porter & Coates have now ready The American Gentleman’s Stable-Guide, a handy volume, with full details for feeding, stabling,- and grooming horses;--hints about the harness, carriages, etc. It is a small, com pact, and therefore most useful work, with full index and an illustration. Messrs. Porter & Coates will add to their list, during the coming month, three volumes by well-known authors, edited by Longfellow, Hedge .and Griswold, giving a survey of the literature of Europe and America, They will present in a compendious, and at the same time portable, form specimens of the best prose and poetical writings, with biographical accounts of the authors, in all parts of the world. Under the able'management of L. Colange, Zell’s Encyclopedia progresses rapidly and regularly to a successful completion. In the number just issued we observe a good biogra phy, with portrait, of Goethe, a capital indus trial paper on Glass, etc., etc. The Encyclo pedia is a concentration of all science and all history. At the same time, it answers all the ordinary purposes of a dictionary. We know of no compilation in wbicli the results of mod ern study are distributed for reference in so accessible a style, and at a price so easily corn passable by the people at large. The sloul|>enNler-ll«*nrboii Dnel—The Duke d’Anninle’s letter. The Duke d’Aumale has written the follow ing letter,to a gentleman at Paris: , “Woodnohson,Evesham, March 17,1870. — My Dear friend: I have at length received diiect news, from 5 ilontpensier. He was better, and awaiting at Madrid the conclusions of the inquiry. Dr.'Rubio was attending him. That gentleman is a republican Deputy for Seville ; he was one of the seconds of the Infant and hostile to my brother, but became his fi iend on the ground. I have beon shown a letter from a Spaniard who is not an'admirer of the Duke; it depicts the attitude of fhe latter in terms which have drawn tears 'from my eyes. * * * 1 Who would have told me,’ exclaimed Mont pensier, ‘that I who have always been un willing to learn feueing and the use of the pistol, and, who hold duelling and. the punish ment of death, in horror, could ever? * * * I have done'my duty and only thought of avoiding a misfortune. God willed it.’ * Hkniu jn’Otu-KA^e.” TUB DAII.Y fiYEXIaQ BPLLB’ITN—PHILADELPHTA. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 6.1870. THE'EBEAH OF THE NEW BOOHS. A<lmi«‘al>le--;Pnp»lar Explanations In Hf'lo'iice and Art. As an instance of the clever popularization of science, and of the presentation of modern discoveries in a way ;whlcbj while , strictly iri harmony with the philosophic method, is com 4 pfehensiblo to the most Illiterate and interest ing to nil, we take some; passages fipm The Sun,” by Amcdee Guillemln, translated for C. Scribner .&. Co’S. Illustrated Library of Woruiers, by A. L. Phipson, 1). D. 1 ' 1 POSITION oi’MlEfiriN IX lilE MJI.KV WAY. To the naked eye, aud to the eye armed with’a telescope, the Milky Way does not up* pear to possess in all 1 its parts the same degree ~of brilliancy. The nebulous background r,f which it is composed presents various of intensity, and as this appearance is owing to the agglomeration of-multitudes of very small stars, this condensation is very irregular in the various portions of the zone. | In order to study the' comparative richness! in stars of these portions, llerscliel applied liis well-known method of gaugingthe AlilkyWayj which consists in counting the number of stars visible in the field of his telescope as, carried along by the diurnal motion of the Earth, it passed successively over the various regions of the zone in question ; he employed in this re search more and more powerful instruments! having, as lie observed, more and more power of penetrating into the depths of space. In this way he discovered that the extent of the Milky Way increased as the power of his instruments increased, and that in many points it is impos sible to fathom ft; its small breadth compared to its other dimensions shows that It is formed of a layer of tiuns distributed in irregular heaps, and comprised between two ■ plaues nearly parallel one to the other, which gives to the en tire figure the appearance of a flattened mill stone, split into two portions throughout nearly one-half of Us circumference. - It is about the centre of this gigantic ag glomeration of stars, about the middle of its thickness, and near to the region where the separation of the zone into two layers or two principal blades occurs, that our little solar world exists—our little world, 1 Whose dimen sions appeared at first so enormous, which was reduced, by a glance at the stellar world, to a star of the second or third magnitude, and which we now perceived to be a mere atom of luminous dust in the region of the Milky Way. . - HIE SUN AS SEEN I'JtOM THE I.IMJTS OF THE ri.ANETAUY woisr.D. Let us -imagine, the sun removed far away into the regions of space farther and farther from .the earth. What would it appear like to. the inhabitants of oiir globe? As it traveled farther and farther from us we should observe its-.apparent diameter di minish without noticing any diminution in the intrinsic intensity of its light. At the confines of the planetary system, at the distance of Neptune, its disc would be seen under an angle 30 times less than that we now observe, thfi mean value of which is 32 min, 3 sec. 0; there it would be reduced to 1 min. 4 sec.— still a very appreciable diameter. As to the intensity of Us heat and light, though reduced: by a thousand times, it would still surpass to an enormous extent that of the most brilliant stars, for the light of the sun illuminates the; earth with a force equal to that of. twenty-two thousand millions of stars similar to the star Alpha Centauri, which is of the first magni tude (J. llersehel). * * * 1 * What would it be if it were removed to the distance of .Sirius itself, which is about six times as considerable as that which we have just mentioned ? The extinction of its light would be of course 30 times greater, and in fact Sir John Herscbel considers the intrinsic brilliancy of the star Sirius to be 223 times greater than that of the Sun. THE PI.ANETAKY WOW.D AS “KEN FROM Let us imagine an observer traveling in the depths of space, to such a distance from our planetary world as w ould enable him to em brace the whole of it in one view. If the di rection taken by him be that contained in the plane of the Earth’s oibit, or in that of any other planetary orbit, be would see a brilliant star, shining Very brightly, and on each side of it a hundred smaller stars, some lost in the bright rays of tbe central star, others far enough s from it to a110w... them to be more easily distinguished: ail of them, however, infinitely less: bright than the sun,and varying in brilliancy according to their apparent distances from the latter. All these satellites of the Sail would be seen to' oscillate about its disc, descilbing, to all appearance, right lines »r nearly so, as we observe to be the case with the satellites of Jupiter, which we see move from one side to the other of that planet. Some would appear to move with j great rapidity ; they would be those nearest to the central star: Mercury, VeDus, the Earth, and Mars. Tbe others would describe tbeir' course much more slowly. Tbe whale would ; present the aspect of a lenticular mass of stars, or, if the distance of the observer were too ! great to allow him to distinguish tbe different luminous points, of a bright star surrounded - by nebulous matter of an elongated form. As for the dimensions of the planetary sys tem, at least as we know them at the present time, it has a diameter equal to sixty times the distance of the sun from the earth, or about 5,700 millions of miles. If we desire to form some idea of this immense extent of space, we must estimate it by the time which certain bodies would require to pass through it. Light, which progresses at the rate of ISO,OOO miles per second, requires 8 hours, and 17 minutes to travel from one end to the other of the planetary system ; as for a cannon-ball, if it contiuued.to travel with a. uniform velocity of -195 yards per second, it would take no less than 020 years; sound would require 815 years to travel, over-the same distance. ■ The thickness of planetary Space is much less extensive than its length. In considering it represented by a line-perpendicular to tbe plane of tbe earth's'orbit, we find it nineteen or twenty limes less than,the dimensions of the long diameter, or about 300,000,000 of miles. ' •SOI. An ItADIATION ON MOUNTAINS. It results from experiments made at differ ent altitudes by the late Professor Forbes, by the German meteorologist Kaetnlz, and after wards again by SI. Martins, of Montpellier,that, the intensity of solar radiation is mueh greater o'n the mountains than in the valleys. The reason is, in the first place, because the layer of atmosphere which the rays pass through is less extensive; and next, because the air above the mountains is much dryer, much less charged with vapor, than the air; of the plains.. Never theless, we feel it colder the higher we ascend, so that there is an apparent contradiction here, which is not difficult to explain. The ob jects which receivo directly the influence of the solar rays get heated, whilst the air absorbing oiily a small quantity of heat re mains cold. 'Never,’ says Professor Tyndall, ‘did I suffer so much' from solar heat as when descending from the corridor to the griind plateau of Mont Blanc, on the 13th August, lSSI; whilst Lsunk up to the waist in the snow, the Sun darted its rays, upon me with intolerable fierceness. On entering the shade of the Boitie dit Gouti these impfessions in stantly changed, lor the air was as cdld as ice. It was,not really much colder than the air traversed by the solar rays; and I suffered, not from contact with warm ally but, from the stroke of the Sun’s rays, which reached me after passing through a medium as .cobl es icq.’ ” The Old Cflass-Uabers, The same Library published a very ipterest ing Volume On the manufacture of' glass—an industry perfumed, as it’ were, with all the aroma of Venice add Bohemia. Several pasr sages are worth quoting, for general perusal From “ The Wonders of Glass Making, in all Ages,” by A. Sauzay, we borrow: ANII.MJKTHIOUS OEASS-WOHKEB OUTWITTED. " Amongst the most illustrious glass-makers we must place in the first rank Angelo lieroviero (fifteenth century), who is justly re garded as having made the greatest step in the art of glass-making, aided, however, by Paolo Godi da Pergola, a celebrated Venetian chemist, who gave him a number of receipts! lor the coloring of glass. These receipts, were of shell importance to lieroviero, who alone possessed them, that for fear' doubtless less Ijis memory should deceive him, lie had them all carefully written- in a manuscript, which ho kept hidden from everyone. j “ Ope fis nevef .betrayed except! by one’s friends,” says an old proverb, and we are about to give a fresh proof of its sad truth. Beroviero had a daughter named Marietta,; and employed, a,, young man as a workman named Gtorgiri, Or ratlier' “ il Ballcrino,” as lie was called, in consequence of a deformity in hia- feet; a' deformity, says tradition, which made his whole person so ungainly that it was to iris simple' and candid look that be must have owed his being accepted by Beroviero, wlio was nearly as suspicious as the Repub lic. Whether Giorgio fell in love with the young Marietta, or whether Marietta shut her eyes to the deformity of the young workman, the legend does not say; all that we are told is that il liallerino one day seized upon the manuscript volume, which, it appears, was con fided to the care of Marietta, and copied the Whole of it. Having finished this work, Biorgio, armed with the second copy, the existence of which the over-confident Beroviero was far from sus pecting, demanded and obtained, in place of the enormous price he should get by the sale of the books, the hand of Marietta, together with a handsome dowry, by the aid of which he constructed a furnace that brought him con siderable gains. THE MIIHiOE OP MAIUE HE MEDICI (LOUVIiE COI.X.ECTION.) “Itis of rock crystal, and agates, cut, pol ished,and set in a network of enamelled gold, foi m frame , around the glass which marks its rectangular form. “ This inner frame is surrounded by a larger one, every part of which is formed of precious stones; the fronton is formed of sardonyx, the two columns supporting it of oriental jasper; the base is highly decorated with enamels cut in relief, and the pedestals of the column? which stand out over this base, the outlines of which they continue, are covered with slabs of sardonyx. Precious stones of the finest water glitter in the more conspicuous places on the frame, particularly three large emeralds; one of these, .placed in the centre of the fronton, is set in the delicate details of a gold mounting, enriched with diamonds and rubies; the two others, placed on the side pedestals of the base, support helmeted heads or small busts, repre senting a warrior and an amazon. The face and neck are cut in the gem re sembling a garnet, which jewelers call hyacinth : the helmets and the drapery which surrounds the breast are of enamelled gold, enriched with diamonds. Emeralds of smaller proportions, closely pressed against each other, serve as a setting for two carved stones; one of them, which is at the top of the whole con struction, is an onyx of three layers, of antique can ing ; it is the bead of a victory, winged and with a crown of laurel in her hair; the other stone is an onyx agate, with three layers, caned at the end of the sixteenth century; it is a female head in profile, draped, having a veil w hich fallsfrom the head on to the shoulder, and wearing on her forehead the crescent of Diana. They are also emeralds which in threes decorate the frieze of the entablature, alterna ting with twelve small finely draped heads cut in hard stone of the fifteenth century, and which are portraits of the Catsars.” The valuation made of this in 1791, was fixed at a hundred and fifty thousand francs (£C,OOO, or $30,000 gold). A hundred and fifty thousand francs being about its intrinsic and venal value, let there be added its artistic value, that derived from its history, its rarity, and above all the passion for collecting in our own days tbe rich spoils of that time, and we leave the reader to deter mine for himself wba‘ would now be the enormous price of such an object. THE INVENTION OF FOUNDING. “ The first improvement was the invention of founding. I believe that there does not ex ist iu all the wonderful processes"employed iu manufacture, a more marvelous operation, or one that require? a greater mixture of strength, skill, courage and rapidity. “ When one enters for the first time into one of the vast glass-houses of St. Gobain at night, the furnaccs.are closed, and the dull sound of a violent though captive fire alone interrupts the silence. From time to time a workmau opens the icorkiug-hole to look into the fnr nace at the state of the glass; long blueish flames then light up the sides of the anuealing ovens, the blackened beams, the heavy flat tening tables, and the mattresses in which half-naked workmen sleep quietly. ‘‘Suddenly the hour strikes, the call is beaten on the Iron slabs which surround the furnace, the whistle of the foreman is heard, and thirty strong men stand up. The manoeuvres begin with tbe activity and precision of an artillery movement. The furnaces are opened, the glowing pots are seized and raised into the air by mechanical means; they pass like hanging globes of fire along the beam, then stop, and are lowered over the immense „ cast-iron table, placed with its roller before the open mouth of tbe annealing oven. The signal given, the pot leans over, and the beautiful opal liquid, bril liant, transparent and unctuous,falls and spreads over the table. At a second signal the roller passes over ! the red-hot glass; a work man, with his eyes fixed on the fiery substance, skims off tlie apparent defects with bold and skilful band; then the roller falls or passes off, and twenty workmen provided with long shovels quickly push the glass into the oven, where it is annealed and cools slowly. The workmeu then turn round and. begin again, without disorder, without noise, without rest. Tbe founding goes on for an hour, the pots are immediately refilled, the furnaces reolosed, darkness again falls, and the continuous noise of the fire preparing fresh work is again the only sound heard. ‘•When tire glass lias been, placed id the an nealing oven it remains there about three days. HOW THE FBENCH GEASS-MAKEIiH STOLE THE bEC'JIETS OF THE VENETIANS. These are the means by which the French succeeded in making looking-glasses notwith standing the ill-will of the Venetians. The manufacture in the Faubourg, St. Antoine was about to extinguish its furnaces, when M. de Chamillart informed Colbert that there existed atTourlavillb, near Cherbourg, a manufactory of white glass and looking-glass in the Venetian fashion, which, directed by Kieliard Lucas, Sieurde Nehou, enjoyed a cer tain reputation. How could a.fimple individual become mas ter of a secret refused to the power of Colbert, and bow is.it that (lolbcrt did not .know of the existence of this manufactory? Without, undertaking to reply here to the second question, we come at once to the first. According to the chronicle, several young men of Strasbourg, having left their native town in'older to learn the art of glass-making, agreed to take a journey to Venice, hoping that alter having served an apprenticeship iu a mir ror manufactory, they might bring back to the,kp(>ytleclge,'and;;the; practice they would have acquired in a foreign laud. Their hopes were not, however, of, long duration few days bad elapsed since their arrival at Mn ratio when each of them had been pitilessly re fused by tbe glass-makers, fpr wboiii ;itvery foreigner was an enemy. But when unable to Acarn openly they bad recourse tp secrecy, and this, according to the tradition, is the means they employed: Profiting by the moment when the Venetians, jealous even of each other, were . working in all security at their looking-glasses, doors and windows closed, ouryoung Stras bourgeois, perched on the roof, and; watching their movements through skllfully-raanaaed holes, succeeded after many dangers in learn ing the secrets, or rather the tour de ' mtiiq. which alone constituted the supremacy of the glass-makers of Murano. As skilful now as their masters, the young men returned to France and offered their services to Lucas de Nehou, who, as may be imagined, eagerly availed himself of them. It Was thus that mirrors in' imitation of the Venetian ones Were introduced into France. , To turn the new importation to profit, Col bert annexed the glass-works of Tourlaviile to the royal manufactory at Paris. Very soon, assisted by this intelligent minister, Lucas do Nehou, freed, thanks to the title of royal manufactory, from many embarrassments which bad paralyzed his labors, and, provided with greater privileges, advanced so steadily in his improvements, that it was frdm the glass-works of Tourlaviile,directed by him,that the first fine French looking-glasses came. doetbe’s Table-Talk. -We apply once more to “ Goethe’s Unter haltungen mit dem. Kanzler Friedrich von Aliiller,” (Stuttgart: Cotta,) for additional ex pressions of this great man’s views on almost all the subjects of life; philosophy and science. The following sayings are intensely Gocthean: Let us have no recriminations, no com plaints about what is past and unalterable. Sufficient for the day is the burden thereof. How could one exist if one did not deal out a general absolution to oneself and others every evening? I will not meddle where I cannot see clearly and operate securely. I have always refused to see a somnambulist. I would rather bang myself than be everlast ingly denying, eternally in opposition, per-, petually prying after the defects and errors of! my fellow-men. Goethe’s remarks on the subject of religion are numerous and striking. He frequently re curs to the question of immortality. A mem orable passage in Eckermanli is thus ex panded and enforced: . Reinhard’s present of Tibullus led to a very s serious converaaticHi-en. tbe “Ecce jaeet Ti bullus,” and on tboMielieK in a personal exis tence after ijeatb. expressed himself decidedly. It was impossible for a thinking being to conceive nonexistence, a cessation of thought and ITfe jTSus far every one involun tarily carried the proof of immortality in him self. But as soon as one quitted the ground! of inner consciousness, as soon as, in the at tempt to demonstrate Or comprehend, one stufied this subjective perception out, into an inept system (philisterhaft mmlaffire), one be-' came involved iu contradictions. On another.occasion he said: I must confess that I should not know what to do with immortality if it offered me no new problems to solve and difficulties to surmount. But there is no fear of that; one need only look upon the starry heavens to see that there will be nuts enough to crack. Lucretius has attracted much attention of late. Goethe’s opinion of him as a thinker will be found interesting: Lucretius’s religous opinions need not be con sidered ; his conception of nature is gorgeous, ingenious, sublime, and altogether praise worthy ; his views of the ultimate ground of things are of no importance. Men were haunted in his day .by a terrible fear of the state after death, something like the purgatory of bigoted Catholics. Enraged at this, Lucre tins fell into tbe other extreme, and waated to make an end of their fears once for all by his doctrine of annihilation. Throughout the whole poem we perceive a gloomy, indignant spirit, disdainful of the intellectual poverty of the age. It has always been so, as with Spinoza and other heretics. If men would not be contemptible, philosophers need not be absurd. The abstruse paradoxes of Lucretius always remind; me of Frederick the Great, when at the.battle of Kollin be exclaimed to bis grenadiers who hesitated to attack a battery, “ Dogs, would ye live forever?” Fewer utterances on science are here re corded than might have been anticipated, but the following notes are, however, very interest ing, arid their interest is enhanced by the cir cumstances of the conversation being the last recorded. s It look place on February 20th, 1832, one month and .two days before the death of Goethe. He observed, on being in formed that bis interlocutors were endeavoring to master his Theory of Colors: The matter is very simple, bnt difficult on that very account. The greatest truths are often—nay, almost always—contradictory to the perceptions of sense. What can in ap pearance be more preposterous than the motion of the earth around the sun ? Nature delights in the infinite variation of the individual phenomenon, but we must not suffer ourselves to be distracted by her. We must ascertain the one invariable ride on which all her seeming variety depends. It is well for you who can go into gardens and woods arid look innocently on trees and flow ers. All I see there reminds me of the meta morphosis of plants, and -torments me with speculation upon it. The great comet is coraiug in 1834. I have already written to Schron, in Jena, to compile a collection of all the notices we have of him, that so distinguished a gentleman may not fail of a becoming reception. The great controversy of development versus fixity of type, in which Goetlie took so intense an interest, is only once referred to, but the passage is full of sigtiificanco : Geoffrey de Saint Hilaire, with his oni original • type of all organizations, and his Systime W Analogies , is quite in the riglu against Cuvier, who is after all only a pros> fellow ( Phillster ). I chanced long ago upon that simple original type. No organic being entirely corresponds to the idea at the root of of it; behind each is concealed the higher idea; there is my God! there is the God whom we all everlastingly seek and hope to contem plate in his fullness ( ersehanen ); but we can only divine, never behold Him 1 HEATERS AND STOVES. THOMSON’S LONDON KiTOH ener, or European Ranges, for families, hotel.- flBFp, or public inattentions, in twenty different sizer , Also, Philadelphia Ranges, Hot Air Furnaces Portable Heaters, Low down Grates, Kiroboard Stove*. Bath Boilers, Stew-hole Plates, Broilers (looking Stoves,eto, - EDGAR L. THOMPSON, _ . Successor to SHARPE A THOMSON, no29m w f fim*} . No. 209 North Second street. j&t THOM A 3 3. DIXON & SONS, " £3 __ Andrews A Dixon, . . fiU. No. 1324 CHESTNUT Street, Philada., _ Opposite United States Mint, annfaoturers of • LOW DOWN, PARLOR, CHAMBER, OFFICE, - . • AndotherGßATES, ■ .. For Anthraolto, Bituminous ana Wood Fir • ALSO _ WABM-AIB FUBNAOEB, ForWarmtnßPnbllo and-Prlvntoßnlldlnga, .. BIBIOT* BB.VKNTtIiATOBa, GOOEISO-l^NQlly - V, ■' - WHOMSAUC.and BK'I'AH.. COTTON.— 17B BALES COTTON. IN ■tore ond .for ante by GOOHBAN, BUSSELIiA 00., 11l Ghestabt attest. FIRE-PROOF SAFES. TME KECOSn CiftEAT -tfißE IW <iAl. ;■ , ' ' YjSSTON. ■ ONE .MILLION DOLLARS OF PROPERTY. jj®. •.• ; BTROYED! , HERRING'S SAFES PRESERVE THEIR CONTENTS IN EVERY IN . STANCE; WHILE SAME OF OTHER ' MAKERS KAIL. Galveston; Tfixan. Fcb. 25,1870. ! Messrs. Merritt*:, Farrel£ Sherman, New York: Dear Sir : ,We beg to inform you that during the nightof tho23d inflt. another yerydGstructivoconflagra tion took placo in this city, destroying property vuluod at not less than one million dollars. ’There were a number of your safes in the fire, and every on© thus faftotfened Jioa proved entirely satisfac tory,■while the contents Of other makers were more or leas injured. Yours, A. W. A; E. P. CLEGG. SPECIAL DESPATCH BY TELEGRAPH. A FURTHER ACCOUNT. Wes'tkrxUxion Telegraph Company, ( GalvEston, Texas, March 3, 1870. { Messrs-. Herring , Farrtl 4* Shertnan % 2sl Broadway, New York : Yotir Champion Safes haVo stood this second largo firo splendidly, saved their contents in every instance; Sumo safes of other makers burnt up. J. J. GREEN. HERRING’S PATENT CHAMPION SAFES, 4t Tho most reliable protection from lire now known.” HERRING’S NEW PATENT CHAMPION BANKERS’ SAFES, Combining wrought iron and hardened steel, and Iron welded with the Patent Franklinito or “Spiegel Elson,” afford protection against burglars to an oxtent not here tofore known. Dwelling house safes for silver plate, valuables. j©W' elry, silks, luces, Ac. All safes warranted dry. FARREL, HERRING & CO., Philadelphia, HERRING, FARREL & SHERMAN, 251 BROADWAY, CORNER MURRAY 8T„ NEW YORK. HERRING * CO., Chicago. HERRING, FARREL A SHERMAN, mlill f m w Mt*Blt§ BUSINESS CARDS. MICHAEL WEAVER. GEO. Jf. S. UHLKR. WEAVER & CO., Rope and Twine manufacturer* and Healers Ip Hemp and Ship Chandlery. 29North WATER. . 23North WHARYES. PHILADELPHIA. apl tf| Established IS2I. WM. G. FLANAGAN & SON, HOUSE AND SHIP PLUMBERS, No. 129 Walnut Street. jy7 ly§ JOSEPH WALTON & CO., CABINET MAKERS, NO. 413 .WALNUT STREET. Manufacturers of fine fuVnituro and of medium priced furnliureof superior quality. GOQDS ON HAND AND MADE TO ORDER. Counters, Desk-work, &c,, for Banks, Offices and Stores, made to order. JOSEPn WALTON, I JOS. W.LIPPINCOTT. fel-ly§ JOSEPH L. SCOTT. Efi. WIGHT, . ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, - Oommlseloner of Deeds for the State of Pennsylvania 1e Ml Madison street. No. H, Chicago, Illinois. anlStf? Cotton's ai l "duok of every width, from 22 inches to 75 inches wide, all number? Tent and Awning Duck, Paper-maker’s Felting, Sal* Twine, Ac. JOHN W. EVERMAN, ja2o Nn. 103 Church street City Stores. SOFA BED, WM.FAESON’S IMPROVED PATENT SOFA BED makes a handsome Sofa and comfortable Fed, with Spring Mattross attached. Thoso wishing to economize room Hhotild call and examine them at the extensive first-class Furniture Wart-rooms of Farson & Son, No. 228 S. Second Street. Also, WM. FARSON’B PATENT EXTENBION TABI/E FASTENING. Every table should have th‘*m on. They hold the leaves firmly together when pulled about the room. mhl7 3m§ HARDWARE, &C. BUILDING AND HOUSEKEEPING HARDWARE. Machinists, Carpenters and other Me chanics’ Tools. Hinges, Screws, Locke, Knives and Forks, Spoons, Coffee Mills, Ac., Stocks and Dies. Ping and Taper Taps, Universal and Scroll Chucks, Plants iu great variety. All to be had at the Lowest Possible rrioes it the CHEAP-FOIt-CASII Hard ware Store of J. B. SHANNON, , So. 1009 market Street. FdeB-tf' • Gifts of haedwarb. Table Cutlery, with ivory, ivorylde, rubber and »ther handles, and plated blades; Children’s Knives and Forks, Pocket Knives, Scissors in' sets, Razors, tiny Pocket Knives, Scissors, Razors, Hatchets, Pincers, Ac., for watch charms ; Dotes and Chests of Tools, from Si to $75; Patent Too! Handles (twenty miniature tools In them); Boys’, Ladies’ and Grata’ Skates; Clothes WrincereftneyH save thoir cost in clothing and time); Carpet Sweepers, Furniture Lifters, sets of Parlor and Field Croquet, miniature Garden Tools, Carpet Stretch* )re,"Plated Spoons, Forks and Nut Picks, Spice and Cake Boxes, Tea Bells and Spring Call Bells, Nat Crnckers, Tea Trays and Waiters, Patent Ash Sifters <j>ay for themselves in coal saved); Carved Walnut Brackets, Gentlemen’s Blackiqg Stools, Boys’ Sleds, Ap* pie Purere and Cherry Stoning Machines, Patent Nut meg Graters, and a general variety of useful Housekeep* fug Hardware, Cutlery, Tools, *&c.,at TRUMAN & SHAW'S, No. 835{Xleht Thirty-five) Market street, bo ow Nfotb-rPhiladelphia, LEGAL NOTICES. TN THE ORPHANS* COURT FOR THE A City and County of Philadelphia.—Estate of JOHN HOOH, deceased.—The Auditor appointed by tho Court to auait.aettle and adjust the first and final account of FKANOIHCES HUCH. Administratrix of tho estate of JOHN HOCH, deceased, audio report dis tribution of the balance in the hands of* the acconnfcint, will meet the parties interested, for the purpose of his appointment, on MONDAY, April l6th,!S7U,nt9o’clock, P.M..at his office. No. 128 South Sixth street, in the city of Philadelphia. WM. VUGDBS, ap6wfm£t* Auditor. INSTATE OF JOHN H. IRWIN, DE ILi ceased.—Letters testamentary having been grauted to the undersigned oh the above estate, ail persons hav ing demands against the enmo arc requested to preseut their claims, and nil indebted thereto to mnko payment to MARGARET SB. IRWIN. Executrix, m Walnut street,or her Attorney, L. POULSON DOBSON, Walnut street. apdnrCt* TN THE ORPHANS’ COURT OP THE .1 City and County of Philadelphia.—Estutoof FRANK L, HAINES and CLARA R. HAINES, minors.—The Auditor appointed by the Court to audit, settle and adjust the third and final account of EL.UA HAINES, wii -rdian of FRANK L. lIUNESand CLARA R. )i A INKS, minor chi Wien of Kb TON HAINES, deeM., and to report,distribution of the balance in the hands of the accountant, will meet the parties interested for tho purpose of his appointment, on MONDAY, the Mill dnr ot April, at a o’clock P. M.. at hi** bfiioo, No. •«3 Wuiuut street, in the oi,y joa KPII °P D V»lilSIl. n»li3o w f m st§ * Auditor. TESTATE OF THOMAS MORIUSSV, DK J’j censed.—Letters testamentary upon the estate o] THOMAS MORRlSSV,deceased, having been granted to ti*o undersigned, all p'-rsons indebted to said osint-’ iirevi'QUOnteci to mnkejaymcnt. and thoeo haring nlalniH will pnwunt them to JOHN HAGEN, Kxwntnr. No. 2113 'nllowblll atr. ot, or to his Attorney, B. BHARKKY,No. 619 Wnlnut street. mhJUw6t NO TIC E ! —L ETT EKB T EST A M ENT AR Y on tho EUato of WILLIAM W. HANSON, doc’d, buying tioen grunt'd to tho uudormqucd. nil persons in debted to unidEKtutr sro requested to m-iko payment, »nl tlios» lmvine olslnw tn pre-wit them to WM. It. M ANSON. ELIZABETH T. HANSON, Executors. ISIS South Rittenhonm- Sqn»rQ. | ■ n1112.w6t MEDICINAL. Philadelphia surgeons’ band- AOK INSTITUTE. 14 Norlli Ninth street, nbovo Morki t 11. 0. EVERETTS TRUSS positively cures kiiDlures. Cheap Trusses. Elnstio Bolls, Stockinus, supporters, fhoulrter Braces, Crutches. Buspousorios, Pile Bamlapes, Laillcs attended to by Mrs. K. jyl ly rp cf R. LEIGH’S IMPROVED HARD s Rubber Truss novor ruHts, breaks or soils, lyv fi use,l In bathing; Supporters, Elastic Holts, - - Stockings. all kinds of Trusses and Braces. Ladles attended to by MBS. LEIGH, 1239 Chestnut, second story. , no9lyrp§ THE ■ WONDERS ACCOMPLISHED through, tho agency efjhe genuine Cml Lhir Oil In Sdrotuln, Bronchitis, Chronic Cough, Asthma, and even Consumption, almost surpass belief. In Jon!* C. Baker AL'o.'s " Pure Medicinal Ood-Llret Oil' oar h bottle of which Is accompanied by medical guaran teea ortho highest order—tho pnhlio have the bent brand of tlib'-propaVnllon knovyn to tho selentlno world. JCJINith BAKER & CO., N 0.718 Market street, Phiia- f«T tfS _ CJPIRITS TURPENTINE."—III BARRELS O. prime wlUt/. Spirit. Turpentine, now landing from steamer Pioneer, from Wilin ington. N. 0. For sale by COCHBAN , RUSSELL h CO., 111 Chestnut sUeet. PAKCOMP'&MAULi: THIRD AND I»EAR STREETS, DEALERS IN IVROFCHT AND CAST IRON PIPE For Gas, Steam and Water. FITTINGS, BRASS WORK, TOOLS, BOILER TUBES. Heating by Steam and Hot Water, * Pipe of all Sizes Cut and Fitted to Order. CARD. Faring sold HENRY B. PANCOAST and FRANCIS I. MAULEfgentlemen in our employ for several years past) tho Stock,Good Will andFixturog of our RETAIL ESTABLISHMENT, located at the corner of THIRD and PEAR streets, in this city, that branch of onr busi ness, together with that of HEATING and VENTILA TING PUBLIC and PRIVATE BUILDINGS, both by STEAM and HOT WATER, in all its various systems, will bo carried on under the firm namoof PANCOAST & MAULE, at tho old stand, and waro commond them to tho trade and buslnesspublie os being entirely competent to perform all work of that character. MORRIS, TASKER & CO. Philadelphia, Jan. 22,1870. mhl2 : tf JKON FENCE.— : * New Orleans The undersigned are prepared to execute orders for ENGLISH IRON PENCE, of the best make. The most sightly and the moil economical fence that can be used. Specimen panels of TOrious styles of this fonco may be seenatouroffico. mh93m§ Merrick & sons, x. ~ SOUTHWARK FOUNDRY, 430 WASHINGTON Avenue. Philadelphia, MANUFACTURE . STEAM ENGINES—High and Low Pressnre.Horizon* tal, Vertical, Beam, Oscillating, Blast and Cornish Pumping. Fine, Tubular .Ac. CASTINGS—Loam, Dry and Green Sand, Brass, Ao. ✓ SVU?A“ Iron Frames, for covering with Slato or Iron* TANKS—Of Oast or wrought Iron,for refineries, water, oil, Ac. . . M Botortß, Bench Castings. Holders and Frames, Purifiers, Ooko and Charcoal Barrows, ValvOs, Governors; Ac, SUGAR MACHINERY—Such os Vacnnm Pans and Pumps. Defecators, Bono Black Filters, Burners* *v3K R 8 P e £ s and Elevators, Bug Filters, Sugar and Bona BlaskCarsj&c.- Sole manufacturers of the following specialties: In Philadelphia and vicinity ,ofWilliam Wright’s Patent Variable Cut-off Steam Engine. In the United States, of Weston’s Patent Self-center* ingand Solf-balancing Centrifugal Sugar-draining Ma chine. Glass & Barton’s improvement on Aspinwall A Woolfley*fl Centrifugal. Bartol’s Patent Wrought-Iron Retort Lid. Strahan’s Drill Grinding Best. Contractors for the design, eroction And fitting up of Be* finoriesfor working Bugar or Molasses. CUPPER AND YELLOW METAL Sheathing, Brazier’s Copper Nails, Bolts and Ingot JJoppor, constantly on hand .and for sale by HENBY WINSOB A C0.,N0. 332 South Wharves, - ... MAULE, BROTHER & CO., 2500 South. Street. 1070 PATTERN MAKERS. IQ7A 10 IVm patternmakers. lo IU. CHOICE SELECTION MIOHIGAN°COBK PINE FOR PATTERNS IQ7A SPRUCE AND HEMLOGK.I O7 ft lO iV. BPBCOE AND HEMLOCK. AO I If. LARGE STOCK. IQ7A FLORIDA FLOORING. 1 Q<J(\ 10 I V. FLOKIDA FLOORING. 101 U. CAROLINA FLOODING, VIBGINXA FLOORING. DELAWARE FLOORING ASH FLOORING. WALNUT FLOORING. 1 Q7A FLORIDA STEP BOARDB.I Q7A 10 lU. FLORIDA STEP BOARDS. ■lO4 U. BAIL PLANK, BAIL PLANK. IOiJO WALKUT BOARDS AND ICWA V WALNUT BOARDSAND PLANK. * WALNUT BOARDS. WALNUT PLANK. ABSORTED FOR CABINET MAKERS, ■BUILDERS, AO, IOTA UNDERTAKERS’ TQ7A -10 1 V. LUMBER. 10 4 V. UNDERTAKERS’LUMBER. BED CEDAR. WALNUT AND PINK. IQ7A SEASONED POPLAR. TQ7A 10 4 V. lO 4 V/. WHITE OAK PLANK AND BOARDS. HICKORY. IQ7 A CAROLINA 80ANTLENG.1 Q7A 10 4 17. CAROLINA H. T. SILLS. 1041/. NORWAY SCANTLING. IQ7A CEDAR SHINGLES. IQ7A 10 4 U. CEDAR SHINGLES. 10 4 U. CYPRESS SHINGLES. LARGE ASSORTMENT, FOR SALE LOW. IQ7A PLASTERING LATH. IQ7A 10 4 U. PLASTERING LATH. lO 4 V. LATH. MAULE BROTHER A CO., 2600 SOUTH STREET. \TELLOW PINE LUMBER.—ORDERS X for cargoes of every description Sawed Lumber exe cuted at snort notice—quality subject to inspection Apply to BDW. H. BOWLBY, lfl South Wharvoa. f\VAL DEKTALLANA. A BUPJSRIOB w artiele for cleauing the Teeth .destroying anfmaloula which Infest them, giving tone to tbo gums, and leaving a feeling, of fragrance and perfect cleanliness tn tho mouth. It may be used daily, and will be found to strengthen weak and bleeding gums, while the aroma and detoraivoness will recommend it to every one. Be ing composed with the assistance of the Dentist, pbysv cians and Microecopist, it Is confidently offered as a reliable substitute for the uncertain washes fonuorly in V< Wmiuent Dentists, acquainted with the constituents of the Dontalllna, advocate iteuso; it contains nothing to prevent its uitfoetralnod employment. Made only by * ■. SHINN, Apothecary, J Broad and Spruce streets. For sale by Prtfgglsta generally,and . Fred. Browne, D. L. Stackhouse, HuKsard & Co,, .-Robert 0. Davis, 0. R. Keeny. Goo. Bower, Isaac H. Kay, Chas.gbivera, V. H. Neodlea, . B. M. McColin, T.J. Husband, , 8.0, Bunting, Ambrose Smith, 4ybae. H. Eborle, Jtdward Parrish, Wm. B. Webb, K. Brlnghurst & Co., James L- Bispnom» » o *,* a Hughes A Tombo, H. U. s Sons, Henry A, Bower. WyethAßro. HOBSEMANSHiP. —THEP HtLA DBLPHIA BIDING 80HOOL, N 0.8338 Mar kTn-frratJaopen daily for Ladies and Gtutlemen. It in the largest, best lighted and heated establishment in the city, The horses are tliorougbljr broken for the most timid. Au Afternoon Olass for Young Ladies at tending echool, Monday, Wednesday and Fridays, and an Evening Class for Gentlemen. .Horses thoroughly trained for the saddle. Horses taken to Uvery,: Hand eorno carriages to hire. Storage : u£^igMghs, Proprietor. JJQVQ EBB* AjTO WOBTBNHOEM'a UA7(IR* I TOiBSORS <, flsw2gn«U*r. Ritvora, Kulvca, Stiaaon ujS Table Cutlecyvf round ana poll.bed., EABTNBTUUMENTS of the moKancroyrf or,n»tructlon to asai«t the hoaring, at P. _SLA DKIBA'O, Ou t lor lnatrumontSlaker,!!/ Tenth atrej* belowOheatnu,. mnm MACHINERY, IKON, &C. YARNALL ft TRIMBLE, ■ 147 South Front street. XillMilEK. CORSETS. BARATET. C O RS B T S. TODRMRES, PANIEttS, HAIR CLOTH SKIRTS. 112 Sa Eleventh St. DENTISTRY. INSTRUCTIONS. CUTLERY.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers