[TranelatcJ from th0 I j[^* 1 j J y i, J,‘ | ‘ Tho Schonberg-Ootta OI,I) liAStER HYMN. Coaso yonr.sorrow, Magdalona, Glad, rejoicing, dry your team, jjow the words more sweot than feasting, Bid depart your weeping fears; Cause of ceaseless gratulation, Cause of boundless exultation: Allelulia! lot it sound! Baugh for joy, O Magdalena ! Bill your glowing face with light, He whom every criiuohad blackened, Rises now with glory bright! 1 Christ has burst the bars of prison, Triumphing o’er death has risen; . Allelulia Met it sound! Baud and praise Him, Magdalena j , Christ has risen from the tomb, Binished is the fearful trial, Bives He viptor o'er death s gloom; Whom you mourned, disgraced and dying, Greet Him now, dcath’s.power defying: Allelulia! letitsoixnd! Baise your eyes, .0 Magdalena! Wondering, see, your Saviour lives, See how joyous are His features, Every wound a glory gives; Print of'nail, or spear mark cruel, Glisten, each a precious jewel : Allelulia! let it sound! Bivc, O Jive then, Magdalena, See, your light; of life returns, Swell with joy your throbbing pulses, Whilo He death’s dominion "spurns; Tearful sorrow far he driven, Bid return the joy of heaven: Allelulia! let it sound! amusements. —At the Walnut Street Theatre, to-night, Mr. and Mrs. Barney Williams will appear in John Brougham’s drama, ehtitled The hrne rtdd Ring. ' . —At the Chestnut, to-night, Mrs. Oates’s Burlesque Company will appear in The Field of the Cloth of Gold. . ' —At the Arch, this evening, Goldsmith’s comedy, the Good-Natured Mail, will be pro duced To-morrow night, The School For Scandal. Wednesday, Time* <8 They Were. Thursday, Mach .Itie About Nothing. —At Fox’s American Theatre, this even ing, a miscellaneous performance will he given. ' —At the Eleventh Street Opera House, a minstrel entertainment will be given. —At the Seventh Street Opera House, a iitst-class miscellaneous performance is otiere<l for this evening. —The Pilgrim pictures are still on ex hibition at Concert Hall. —We are informed by Carlotta Patti’s agent that she will appear in this city, in opera, on the second or third of May. She will be sup ported by Miss Pauline'Canissa, Mile. Dzuiba, Miss Hablemann, Hermans, Formes, Wein lich, Wiegand, Steinecker, and others, and by - a powerful orchestra. The Mayic Flute will bo given on one of the nights. On Thursday evening next, at the ' Academy of Music, Sig. Brignoli will begin a season of opera of five nights and one, mat inee, with Lucia di Lammermoor. On Friday evening 11 Trovalore will be given, with Mad. Gazzimga as “ Azucena.” On Saturday Martha will be presented at the matinee. Tickets can be procured at Boner’s music store, 1102 Chestnut street. CITY BULLETIN. , —An examination of applicants for qualifica tion as music teachers in public schools, au thorized by the Board of Control, was held on Saturday last, April 10, at 9 o’clock A. M., at ■the Girls’Normal School. The examination in writing was made by Prof. George W. Fetter and his lady r. assistants. The vocal, instrumental and verbal - examinations were made by Professors Jear, Louis, H. G; Thunder and Cornelius Everes.. The folldwing persons were also present: M. Hall Stanton, President of the Board; the Com mittee on Revision of Studies, Edward Arm strong, Chairman, H. C. Hickok, Simon Gratz, Charles F. Abbot; also Daniel M. Si,einmetz, several professors of music, and others. ? .Twenty-four applicants were present (23 fe males, 1 male). They had to answer twenty- I fire questions in writing, play upon the piano a piece of their own choice, sing a song of their own choice, play a given accompaniment, sing a song by sight, and write exercises on the blackboard. ' • The examination in general gave great satis faction to the Examine: sand visitors. After 3 o’clock the Examiners and the Com ' mittee retired,.and the following verdict was given: Passed with certificate No. 1 (fully quali-. lied): Nos. 1,2, 4, 10, 11, 14, 10, 24, (8 appli cants). i Passed with certificate No. 2 (qualified). Nos. 3,5, 8,9, 12, 13, 18, 19, 21, 23, 28, 29, (12 applicants). The others to be rejected (4 applicants). The iiames of these applicants are not-known to the Examiners. Questions on the examination for music teachers: i 1. How do you describe the staff? 2. Of what use are ledger lines ? r 3. Give the effect of a sharp, flat, natural, double sharp, double flat. 4. Write and name the elefs, and give their , ” purposes. 5. How do you form a major scale ? 0. Name the key notes of the usual major scales and give their signature. 7. How do you form the minor scale ? 8. Name the key-notes of the usual minor scales and give' their signature. 9. Where do you find the relative minor key to the major one ? 10. What is a chromatic scale? 11. llow many semitones form a major third; . how many a mihor third? . ■ 12. What is au interval? How many kinds are there ? 13. Give the common chords of flf major, G minor, F major, F minor. 14. Name the dominant, subdominant, and leading note of the key of it. 15. Write all the notes and rests; give their names and relative value. 10. What is the effect of one dot after a note ? What of two dot|? 17. Name the Italian syllables for sol-fa-ing. 18. Name the different kinds of time. 19. Which beats are naturally accented in 2-4, 3-8, 4-4, 0-8 and 9-8 time? 20. How do you explain syncopation? Give examples. 21. What is Melody ? 22. What is Harmony ? 23. Describe the difference between a chro matic and diatonic semitone. 24. Give the meaning of staccato, legato,porta. mento. 25. Give the different marks and terms of ex pression, with their meanings. [Signed] Jean Louis, H. G. Thundkw, , COItNKLIUS EvKItIST. Apbii, 10,1870. —The house of Dr. D. D. Richardson, resi dent physician in the Insane Department of the Blockley Almshouse, at Thirty-seventh street and Darby road, was burned between four and five o’clock yesterday morning. The fire was discovered by a bou of the Doctor, who awak ened the family, who escaped by climbing out on the portico, which encircles the building, from which they were rescued by the neigh bors. They lost all their clothing. A valuable library, comprising about two thousand books, was mostly saved. Dr. Richardson estimates liis lass at $5,000. No insurance. The build ing belonged to the city. It was a large two-' Story frame, and was worth about $l,BOO. The lire is supposed to have been kindled by au in cendiary. THE DAILY EYEHIHG BTTLLETIH-PHILAPELPHIA, MONDAY APRIL 18 j 18T0. —A disturbance occurred in the neighbor hood of Ninth and Carpenter streets, yesterday j afternoon. One man was stabbed and several were knocked down and beaten. The affair caused a gathering of several hundred persons, Lieut. Smith detailed a : squad of men,, under Sergeant Duffy, to quell the riot. Dully' was knocked down and beaten, and several of the policemen wore roughly handled. Win. Smith, Albert Noble, Joseph McCarney and Thomas Hemphill were arrested. Alderman Bonsall j held, each in $l,OOO ball on the charge of as sahlt and battery and inciting to riot. —Gob. Reagan, aged 90 years, arrived in this city from Brandy Station, Virginia, early yes terday morning. Immediately after stepping j from- the train at the Baltimore depot, at j Broad street and Washington avenue, lie dis-| covered that his pocket had been picked of ai wallet containing over $7,000 worth .pf, bonds I and notes, and a small amount of money, .’The j bonds, being all registered and recorded, aretof j no value to any but the owner. ■ ' i —During the past year the Association fijrtj the Belief of Disabled Firemen appropriated! $3,230, of which $2OO were , for funeral ex penses, and $125 for an artificial limb—making, the sum total. $39,209 30 appropriated since j the origin of the Association. The amount set! apart this year was distributed td persons, including fourteen widows and or phans of deceased firemen. —The store of. Andrews, Harrison & Co.,j northeast corner of Juniper and Market streets, j was entered by thieves early yesterday morn-j ing. The scoundrels directed their attention j to the fire-proof, and' succeeded in drilling aj hole in the door above the lock, into which, powder was inserted, a fuse attached, and the j door blown open. The thieves obtained DUt| $2O for their trouble. 1 j —Sijas Ashton, aged 18 years, and residing at. the S. W. corner of Christian and Swanson! streets, was drowned on Friday, near Forts Delaware. The deceased was on board the 1 sloop-Atlantic, arid at the time of the sad, accident was sitting near the side of the vessel,, and while in this position was seized' with a fit. and fell overboard. —The citizens of the First aud Second; Wards held another meeting in opposition to; the laying of a freight railroad in that section,' on Saturday- evening. John Patterson pre sided. A resolution providing that legal steps, be taken to testthe constitutionality of the bill was adopted. ' I —Grand Sire E. D. Farnsworth has issued a! proclamation to the different Lodges of Odd Fellows in the United States, to take action for. the general observance of the 26th day of April! as a day of solemn thanksgiving aud prayer to Almighty God for His unmistakable care and; protection of the Order. —lnto the Eastern Penitentiary during the year 1SC1), 309 convicts were received,-and 302 were discharged. . The total number received since October 25, 1829, is 0,527, The number remaining in confinement December 31, 1809, was 638. 1 —Appropriate Easter services were, held in the Homan Catholic, Episcopal, Lutheran and Moravian churches yesterday, and were well attended, notwithstanding the disagreeable state of the weather. : —Mrs. Susan Haines and Miss Laura Haines,; convicted of larceny, were, on. Saturday, 1 sentenced lo an' imprisonment of one year.' These are, the women who represented that; they expected to come into a large fortune. ! .—Rev. Samuel Durborow, pastor of the; Evangelists’ Church, on Catharine street,above. Seventh, delivered his-farewell sermon to the. congregatiori last evening, preparatory , to en-! teririg upon his new, field of labor in the mis sionary cause. ! —Lewis List was arrested yesterday, at Sev enth and Wharton streets, for representing him- Eelf to be a revenue officer, and was com mitted for a further hearing by Alderman Bonsall. —The Athletic Base Ball Club played a picked nine on Saturday, and was successful by a score of 16 to 1. —The Knights of Friendship have decided to have a parade in this city about the middle 1 - of next month. —George Wilson has been held to bail by Alderman Allison, for insulting ladies in Fair mount Park. ’ NEW JERSEY MATTERS. Reorganized. —The Democrats of Middle Ward held a meeting on Saturday night and reorganized their ward association for the com ing campaign. Easter Sunday.— Services in the Camddu churches yesterday, on the occasion of Easter Sunday, were unusually interesting, and, not withstanding the inclement weather, the attend ance was good, . Delegate Election. —The Republicans of South Ward, in Camden, elected on Satur day evening five delegates to attend the Con vention, on the 30th inst., called to revise the rules of the party. A colored man riamed Davis was elected as one of them. • Fire Matters.— The Weccacoe Engine Company have had their steamer thoroughly; repaired. It now throws a svream one hun-l dred and twenty-six feet through a,n inch nozzle. It was brought home and housed on Saturday. The same company have sold their carriaee and 400 feet of hose. Good Fellows.— At the recent meeting of the Grand Lodge AncienrQrder of Good Fel lows, in Camden, the following officers were elected for the ensuing term: G. M., Henry' W. Gauss; D. G. M., Joseph Tucker; G. C., M. Tates; G. S., William H. Schwaab; G. T., George Brown; G. G. W., J. W. Olden; G.W., Jacob Horn; G. Ty., H. M. Finger; G. G. Ty., T; J. Sparks. art mats. —Mr. Henry Probasco, of Cincinnati, is owner of a cartoon by Kaulbaeh, new on exhi bition at the warerooms of Messrs. Herter Bros., No. 877 Broadway, N. Y. The subject is “ Charity,” and is illustrated by the allegorical figure of a large and superbly-formed woman dispensing liberal gifts to a group of children who surround her. —M. Maurice Richard, the young and wealthy French Minister of Fine Arts, who at the first Conrt ball lie attended ih official uni form, took Paris by storm with the florid and I’.ubenesque beauty of liis calves, has married a Mile. Aubenot, an heiress, whose parents made a fortune by keeping a small shop in Paris, where their motto was “ small profits and quick returns.” —A report that Dr. Rimmer is about to re sign his position as Director of the School of Design at Cooper Institute] New York, we hope, for the sake of the culture of true art in this country, is not correct. We have heard of no professor, now teaching in any part of the world, endowed with his capacity of off-hand in illustration of magnificent attainments in anatomy and art-history. Dr. , Rimmer has completed a large painting of “ Cupid Relating his Adventures to Venus.” The Subject is evidently chosen with a view of bringing out and asserting the artist’s complete knowledge of the human form, so little com prehended or demanded in this country. It shows close familiarity , with the old masters. Lest it should he thought that such a theme, even tyben well treated, would be unsalable in this country, we hasten to allay all doubts by stating that, Dr. Rimmer’s painting has been purchased by a wealthy connoisseur for $lO,OOO. —Calame, the great landscape paiuter of the French school, now deceased, is strongly re^/ resentodjn many of. the private collections lu i this country . Mr. Bruce- of Madison avonue,N.; Y. has one of his best works—“ The Ruins of. Paestum.” Lucius T. Tuckerman also has a ! fine example, .entitled “On the Mediterranean,” and there are other strong pictures in the gal- i lories of August Belmont, who owns two or three; and John ' Taylor Johnston. In Haiti-; more, Calame Is well represented in the collec: ’ Mr. William WniWra'; in Cincinnati,: in those of George Long worth, Henry Pro-; banco and W.S. Groesheek. Ln Boston .there ; are* representative works in the galleries: of Messrs. T. Appleton, ; hi Cabot, Mrs. Hem saingway and T. Wigglesworth, and in Phila-; rdelphia itt the collections ef of Mr. J., Bolilen, Mr'.:J. I R. ’and Joseph Harrisbn. j Upon two, at least, of our excellent landscape ; .painters, Calamo had a strong, educational in-; ilu'ence—Paul Weber arid Thomas Moran. —Hiram Powers first executed his “ Greek ! Slave” by order of Captain Grant, Of the Eng lish army, in 1844. It was afterwards sold to j the "Driko Of Cleveland, Who’ still owns it, at Raby Castle.' The first replica was made with i the Duke’s permission for Mr. Corcoran, the ; banker, at Washington, who has presented it to t the American nation with the Corcoran Gal lery. The second copy was made for Mr. A. T. Stewart, of New YOrk, . The third copy was made for the Earl of Dudley, and the; fourth for tlie Prince Demidoff, which has just been sold to an English bric-a-brac merchant for 53,000 francs, or nearly $11,500 currency, the highest price obtained for any statue in that great collection. Thd fifth, arid last copy which Powers intends to execute, was for Mr. E. W. Stoughton, of New York;. .So -it appears there are six repliche of the “Greek Slave” by Powers, iti 'existence? three mi which are in the hands of Americans,‘arid-the rest is the noble galleries of Europe/' The prodn.be of this single ! conception, therefore, must, have been a handsome mercantile; affair for the; clever sculptor. : ; : , . - —The Pope’s art-exhibition at Rome is a disappointment, even in the statuary. The throng of American sculptors now in .the Eter nal City is conspicuous by absence of contri butions. Chevalier . Lombardi has a young girl, representing Purity, remarkably beautiful. This artist’s works appear to be the best in the exhibition; but there are some of Benzoni’s that equal, if they do not excel them. Both of them have sent Rebeccas and both are excel lent, Lombardi’s represents her in the attitude of observing Isaac—Benzoni’s,when vailed aud presented to him. A fac simile of Trajan’s column' in palembino marble is very handsome. The scenes in the life of the Emperor, as they were cut by his admirer, ApollQdorus, upon the most beautiful of all the columns in honor of Homan generals ever ordered by the Senate and Homan people, are faithfully copied and cut with wonderful skill. The lower scene is, as all visitors to Rome know, the passage of the Danube on a bridge of boats, and the leading incidents in the Dacian wars. Readers who remember the plaster petticoats on Cano va’s genii in Saint Peter’s wi.l not be surprised to learn that there has been a great deal of prudery exhibited in arranging the statues, seme of the female figures being a little nude about the bosoms. —On the 2d instant, lengthened allusions were printed in the two principal English weeklies—the Atkenmum and Saturday Review —to the importance of the carbon autotypes from the old masters. The Athcnaum dmpi a remark from which we. learn that “many hum dreds” of the productions of Herr Braun in the process Of carbon copying now “ enrich ”the British Museum. American ; museums, libra ries, &c., are rapidly following suit, 'and we should not wonder if a greater number of com plete sets should ultimately be found'in wealthy “America than in the old world. Our readers know that the wholesale agency is established in this city, at 1125 Chestnut street. .The Saturday Review, in a notice of Woodward’s “Specimens of . the Drawings of Ten Masters, from Windsor,” strikes the first hostile note we . have heard in approaching' the sub ject of these fac similes: “We cannot join with those who find in ‘autotype’ itself a genuine fac simile of original'work. The original is indeed there, but, more or less, in a corpse-like mockery. Except in a very few cases, the'best' autotype misses precisely the toueh of the real thing—the surface of it—, the rerre,the indescribable that by which Rey nolds,’in a famous story, indicated the presence of the peculiar vital quality which, to the artist, is simply everything. To look for that in the autotype is a snare and a delusion.” This is easily, said, as it is easy to say that a plaster cast from an antique is dead, too; but the two methods, of photographing and casting in plaster, still distance every other in 1 artistic completeness, arid the former represents a perfection quite unimagined before the days of Daguerre, a perfection, which now renders use less the most costly engravings. It may occur to many to ask how it is that the sketches of the Old Masters have been faithfully pre served in such extraordinary numbers. The Saturday Review says : “In Mr. Woodward’s introduction the main history of similar col lections is very briefly sketched. They began amongst the artists themselves; Raffaeleleft 'his drawings to his friend Timoteo, Leonardo to Franeesco Melzi—bequests the value of which it is not easy to estimate, and which even at this distance of time provoke some thing of a sigh of envy. Then follows the precious collection formed by Vasari, Who as an artist himself, and the friend alid biogra pher of Italian artists, stood in a more fortu nate position than wealth and taste. could con fer upon Mariette two centuries ago in France, or the Duke of Devonshire in the last century in England.” A New Boundary Question Between tbe United States and Canada. [Front the Toronto Telegraph,4th.] According to the report of Colonel Dennis, with respect to his surveying operations ia the northwest, a serious mistake was made by some former surveyors in defining the boundary line. The observations of the Colonel at Pem bina resulted in his placing the line two hun dred and four feet north of the line laid down several years ago by Captain (now General) Pope, of the United States army. A belt, two hundred and four feet wide, extending right across the continent, embraces land enough to be worth looking after. But a mere important matter still is mentioned in the report. 'Col. Dennis says that, though he started his line two hundred, and four feet further north than Captain Pope’s, after running ten miles west tlie two linos crossed each other. From this it is evident that either Pope or Dennis—or pro bably both—made mistakes in either their ob servations or calenlations. Dennis says the line he took was the 49th parallel, and Pope’s line has been generally acceptedas the 49th paral lel. Yet, in a distance of 10 miles, these lines cross each other. As a “ Provincial Land Surveyor ” says in another column, “ the cop sequence of this would be that, in a distance of 1,000 miles,the Colonel would be into American territory about four miles,or Capt. Pope would be into our territory about the same number of miles.” Either one must be sadly astray in his reckoning. This is a matter of too much importance to he neglected. The first thing to be done on our obtaining possession of the country, is to find the precise position of the'49th parallel, and to mark it out across the continent at once, in order to avoid mistakes and misunderstandings in the future. In settling thisquestionJhe co-operation of the American Government will be necessary. As our correspondent suggests, a commission composed of thoroughly competent and reliable persons will have to be appointed. Pope’s parallel must be % very peculiar parallel, in deed, if, as Colonel Dennis states, it runs par tially north and south, as well as east and west. ... ■ AMUSEMENT**, Academy of music. ; RRIGNOLI’S \ GRAND ITALIAN OPERA. five nigiuts and one matinee. SEASON TICKETS, including roserved aoata. SIX DOLLARS. ..... Thosnlo of season tJdkoU 'commenced thta morning, at 9 A.M., at W. H. IIONKB’S Mu»lo Moro, Ho. 1102 SECOND NIGHT—FRIDAY, Anrll22, IL TROVATOKB. • , MMU. MAiUUTI’A’OAZZANIOA . for tlio first and dnljr tline (n tho roloof A/UOENA. SATURDAY AFTERNOON, at 2 o’clook, OALA MATI NEK—MARTHA, A MERIOAN ACADEMY OF MUSIC.— *”■ HAYDN’S SIXTH MABS. ...... STABAT MATER, WUI bo HAYnN SOCIETY, TUESDAY EVENING, AprillS, GALTON KELIjEIIER, MISS FANNY HEIM, ; MR. JACOB OIIAF, r UARNnURST. FULL ORCHESTRA AND CHORUS. Conductor, L, ENGELKE.' Reserved Seats, SI. For salo at Gould’s and at Boner s Music Stores. Family Ulrclc, 60 cents.. Amphitheatre, “tLD.-To Chorus nud Orchestra-Genoral Rehearsal at ’Washington Hall, MondarMorning. at 10 o’clk. aplist MBBT JOHN DREW’S ARCH STREET THEATRE. Begins 1% o'clock • . RASTER WEEK—COMEDIES.. _ - TO-NIGUTtMONDAY>, April 18,1810, Only timOofibliverOoldsinith'H. 7 GOOD-NATURED MAN. MBS.' JNO. DREW.i......;...a5.., MISS RICHLAND . , Aided by,the Full Company. Concluding tvith P.I>.,ORTHE MAN ANPTIOBB. TUESDAY-TIiE SCHOOL E() R SO AN DAL. BE ATS BECUBED SIX DAYB IN ADVANCE. ALN UT BTBEET THEATBE. THIS (MONDAY) EVENING, April 18, FIRST NIGHT of tlie Groat and World-Retioitnod Comedians • AND ORIGINAL IMPERSONATORS OF . IRISH AND YANKEK*LIFE. MR.and MBS. BARNEY WILLIAMS, who wni.naug«r» A .on NivAL OJ . _ . commencing with Brodgliam’s beautiful Drama of THE EMERALD RING. SEATS SECURED SIX DAYS IN ADVANCE. , LAUBA KEENE’S , . Begins atrB. , CHESTNUT-STREET THEATRE. SECOND AND LAbT WEEK OF ' MRS. JAMES A. OATES’S : , BURLESQUE COMPANY IN THE FIELD OF THE CLOTH OF GOLD. First and only time of burlesque - . BOSTON PEACE JUBILEE. 100 MUSICIANS. . „ MATINEE ON SATURDAY. ArTEftNOON, at 2. _ DC I’lt EZ &RE N is DIG T’B OFJffiRA HOUSE. BEVENTH Streot.bolow'Arch. EASTER HOLIDAY WEEK—GREAT BILL. THIS EVENING. DUPREZ A BENEDICT'S GIGANTIC MINSTRELS INTRODUCE THE New Afterpiece—l2tii Temptation. Firet Week—Sketch, Cuban Dispatcher. Sixth Work—Douglierty’e Great Stumpspeeoh. FOX’S AMEBICA2N .THEATBE, WALNUT STREET, above EIGHTH EVERY EVENING—Prof. TURNER’S PERFORM ING DOGS AND MONKEYS; “Punch and Judy, COLLINS and DAISEY; UaAlO BROTHERS. Two Grand Ballets. Milo. DE ROSA and LA ROSA. New eleventh btbeet opeka HOUSE. FAMILY RESORT. CA UN CROSS J- DIXETS MINSTRELS, EVERY EVENING. J. L. OABNOBOSB, Manager. I\/TB. THUNDER’S CONCERT. IVI MUSICAL FUND HALL, FRIDAY EVENING, APRIL SOth. apls-6t* ROSSINI’S " MESbE SOLENNELLE. ’ OEMTZ AND HAStJLEB’B MATINEEB. O Mnsicnl Fund Hall. 1889-70. Every SATURDAY AFTERNOON, at 8H o’clock. ooW-tf Academy of fine arts, . CHESTNUT etreet, above Tenth, Open from 9 A. M. to 6 P. M. Beniamiii Wegt’a Great Picture of ohbistbsjectbd Xb stm op exhibition. • 2SPECIAE NOTICES. irs». library company—the an- NUAL Election of Directors aud Treasurer of tho Library Company of Philadelphia will be held at the Library, ou MONDAY, the 2d day or May next, at 3 o’clock in the afternoon, when the Treasnrerwill attend to receite the urinunl payments. Ah thcro aro sOvcral fharosonrrhicli fiiiea aro dneithe ownenj of them,or tboir ropreßc- ’tativeav are hereby notified tliat they will ho forfeited, uffroeably to tho charter »nil laws tho Oompiinyi, unle*B the nrroar* aro Mata off on Ino 3d day of May, or within ttin days thercaltor. ' . No hooka will he given out or receive*! on that after noon . >VM. E. >V 111 1 MAM« apllmvv f to my2| Secretary. PENNSYLVANIA' HOSPITAL. '. pinx,xm;r,rnrA, Itli Mo., lltlt, 1870. Tho Annual Election of Managers and Treasurer, by the Contributors of this Charity, wilt-beheld pursuant to law, at tiro Hospital, on South Eighth etreet. ou tho 2d proximo, at I o'clock P. M. WISTAR MORRIS, Secretary. PENNSYLVANIA HOSPITAL, PHILADELPHIA, ."dm0.,28th,1870 —Ata stated meeting of tho Board or Managers, hold this flay, it was “ Resolvt'l, That the question whether tickets shall or shall not Vt issued to ftina'e studtnts to attend tba general clinical lectures at the Hospital, bo referred to the Contributors at their annual mestinjr, to he field in sthmonth (May)next, for their instruction in the case.” apllm w« t? 3 dtmy2§ CAMDEN AND AMBOY RAID ROAD ANJ>.TRANSPORTATION COMPANY, v Trenton, N. J.t April llth, 1870. Thoonnual meeting of tho Stockholders of tho Cam den and Amboy Railroad and Transportation Company will beheld at the Company’ll ofllco. in Trenton, N.J., bn TUESDAY, the 10th of May, 1870, at 12 o’clock M., for tho ele«tion of flevtn Directors, to eerv© for the cn suing year. SAMUEL J. BAYARD, apll till Secretary C. & A. B. R. A T. Co. OFFICE OF THE AMERICAN FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY. Philadelphia, April 11,1870. Tho Directors have this day declared a Dividend of Seven Dollarn and Fifty Cents per share for tho last «ix. months, which will he paid to tne Stockholders, or tnoir legal representatives, on and after the 21st inst., clear of alU ' l * e6 ' A. O. L. CRAWFORD, apll-9t§ Secretary. , ON AND AFTER SUNDAY, 17TH inst.,the Spruce and PinoStreets Passongor Rail way Company will run tln*ir cars through from tho Ex-, change to lfainnount Park for one fare. Residents of the southorn part of the citv will find this to bo tlie shortest and most direct route to the Park. • - apis 12t$ OFFICE OF THEDIAMOND COAL. CO:, 718 MARK ET STREET. DIVIDEND NOTICH/.—l ho Hoard of Directors have declared a dividend of One Dollar per share, payable ou demand. faplS3fl 8. ALTER, Secretary. MUSICAL. Madame sauvan- (nek miss Pintnid) is prepared to give Lessons in Singing, at private houses and in schools. Residence 025 Locust street. . : up7l2t* SIG. P. RONDINKTiLA, TEACHER OF Singing. Private lessons and classes. Beaidenoe 308 8. Thirteenth street autf-tff GAS FIXTURES. Gas fixtures.—miskey, Merrill A THAOKABA, No. 718 Chestnut street, maun facturers of Gas Fixtures, Lamps, 4c„ Ac., would call the attention of the public to their large and elegant as sortment of. Gas Chundellers, Fendauts, Brackets, Ac.' They also introduce gas pipes Into dwellings and public buildings, and attend to extending, altering and repair ing gas pipes. All work warranted. CUTIEBT. DODGERS’ AND WOSTENHOLM’B ft, POOKBT KNIVES, PBABL and STAG HAH BLEB of beautiful finish: RODGERS’ md WADS* BUTCHER'S, and the CELEBRATED LBOOULTHI RAZOR. BOISBOBS IH CASES of the finest quality^ . Razors,Knives, Scissors and Table Cutlery, ground and polished. BAB INSTRUMENTS of the meet approved construction to assist tbe hearing, at F. MADEIRA'S, Uutlor and Surgical Instrument Maker, IMTenth street below Oheatnnt. myl «f coalandwood. S. MASON PINKS. JOHN F. IHKAF7. mjBE UNDERSIGNED INVITE ATTEN- X TION to their stock of „ . „ , SpringMonntain, Lehigh and Locust Mountain Coal, •which, with the preparation given by us, we think can not be excelled by any other Coal. . „ „ Office, Franklin Institute Building, No. 15 8. Seventh street. BINES A SHEAFF, ialOtf Aroh 'Street Wharf, Schuylkill. mHE BEST HOME INVESTMENT. • FIBBff MORTGAGE SINKING FUND. SBTBNFWUaWT. eOMBWrof dFTkB FRED ERKTKSinrBG AND ttOBDoSsVIT.LB BAIL ■ ROAD COMPANY OFTIBGINIA. PRINCIPAL AND INTBRBJIT PAYABLE IN COIN, FREE OF U. B. GOYEBNHBMT TAX. The reed is «2 miles long, and forms the SHORTEST CONNECTING LINK in the system of roadß leading to tile entire South, Sentbwest, and West to the Pacific OC«S*Be ' ’ It passes through country, the heal trade of which is more than enough to support it, and as it has Ares important feeders at o&ch end, ite through trade will be heavy andjornunorative. Maps and pumpblets furnished, which explain satis -1 factorily ov<*y quostion that ean possibly bo raised by a party seeking a safe and profitable Investment. The mortgage is limited to $16,000 per mile o f completed and bkBPECT. „ A limited dumber of the Bonds are offered at 92>&, and interest from November Ist, in eurroncy, and at this JjHICaPeBT GOLD LNTBBBBT-BBABING SEOUBI ■ : , t TIES IN THE MARKET SAMUTIiLWQEKpBanker, fe2wAssptf ' 26 South Third street. DPI JUTS TURPENTINE.—I6O DARRELS Chestnut street., mAR—IOO BARRELS LANDING FROM J stesniDliip l'ionnCr, nnd'fori sale by COCHRAN, RUSSELL A 00., 11l Chestnut street. > roR hale. BROWN STI)NEftEMNGE|i FOB SALE, ~ Wo. 1922 ARCH STREET. JElosnnt Brpwn-Btono Ucwidonco,' three stories an 51 ill]Hard roof; very commodious. furhiHhoa with oyer, modern convenience* and built In n’Yorjr superior and euhßtnntial manner. ■ Lot 26 foot front by 150 foot deop to OuOibort etreoti on which in erected a hamlaomo briok StabjoandColichHOttso. '■;- ’ ' „„„„ . i., i i ! 1 .. i ; > J» Ml CrUMMKV A 80N8, , i ~ 733 WALNUT Street,' mhmfrpS . ii JfQB SALE—A HANDSOME NEW »- JKIL story Brick Dwelling,with iloqlile back buildings, aide .yard, -Ac., on, the west side of Thirteenth etreot, second !ioulie>below Jefferson street, with all modern im pruteuionti.. ; . . ... i: ' „ Applyto A.U.OAKVKn Aeo„ *PE 6t 8. W, cor. Ninth and_J?ilbort <ftreets,_ Sr FOR e SAXiE Oft EXCHANGE—A "ne house, No. .»W,n(d*eaYonue. It hasduuble V*tory frouf, Amt double two-storjr back buildings. ■* iKMioutiO ia2o fi;ct front, and lot 147 foot dcop to Twcn- : ,V: HIMCKLS, 773:3Valirntstreet. m. EOB SALE. AT GERMANTOWN, Elegant Stone Mansion, situated on high. ground, commanding an extensive viow of tbo, surronndlng cbuntnr, ‘The houßO In now arid complete in avory respect. nndaccessiblo by steam and horse-curt. Stone stable'Tor four horses! Cow-house, CarrJago-houso, and alMbo'ftppurtnnaMcQa of a- flrat-cfaa# moblishment. Addx.o6^«r.P»»fttthi9pfnce,?qpgwfin 6t* /; FOR SALE.- ;,«! m ttOKEBV FARMvCHESTKROO.; PA. Z 1 The country float and.fannof the late Johnß.Pon rose. situated in Thornbury township,! miles from West Chester, and within 10 mlmitesMriTe from Street Road Station, on thp West Chester and Philadelphia Railroad ; contAiaiug 18fiacros,moreor less, in a, high etuto of caltivation i fencing, Ac., Ac., fn complete or dflr. Adjoining the lands of Samuel J. Sharpless, Wel lington Hickman and Goo, Brihton. . The improvements consist of a large and commodloas PcVpontißO fttono Mansion House (surrounded by porcbob), built by the lato owner in the year 1893c0n taining 20 rooms, with oil the modern conveniences; also farm house, 3 tenant houses, gardener’s house and spring house, with never falling springy large barn, stable, conch-house, and all the necessary buildings for a flrst-clatrtf d&lry and stock farm. Th.o late owner spared no exsenso to make this enoef the most complete forma in thus State. ■r Terms easy. -Immediate possession. Appl) " 0 EDWABD BUBTONy Executor, No. 6 Walnut street, _ or toC.H. A 11. P. BrTuRHKID, mhl6wfmt£§ 203H0 nth Sixth etreot, Phllada. mfcSALE BY THIS SHERIFF,ON TH C7RS day, April 28th, 1870, of Mrs. E. X-. Aroni’e flaw* F.ckarirst—Beautiful Country Seat, containing 31 acres, 20 porchos, at White Hall Station, Pennsylvania Central Railroad, close by the new town of Bryn Mawr, formerly the ~ property -of John 31. Lind say.. apld b ro w a m Ot* ARCH STREET—FOIi SALE—THE .Knii handsome brick residence, 24 feet 6 inches front, with three-story back buildings, every convenience, and lot 143 feet deep, No. 1723 Archstreot. J.GUMMEY& SONS, No. 733 Walnut street. ® WEST — HAND some modem- cottage, with every convenience, and large lot of ground, southwest corner of Pine erul Forty-first streets. J. GUM3IBY A SONS, N 0.733 Walnut street. QPIUNG LAKE—CHESTNUT HILL,fB IOPHILADELPRIA—FOR HALE—Ton minutes’ SSL walk from Depot. ELEGANT COUNTRY SEAT. LAWN OF NEARLY NINE ACRES, adorned with choice shrubbery, abundance of evergreen, fruit and shade trees; most healthy location ; views for forty milch ovor a rich country. Modern pointed-wtono house, gas, water, Ac.; coach, feu and spring houses; never* failing springs of purest water. LAKE FOR BOATING, all slocked with Mountain Trout. Carp, Ac. Beautiful cascade with soccea ftion of rapids through tho meadow. . Applyto J.li. PRICE, apl3,w f s Op the premlscr*. m 'FOK SALK—THE ELEGANT MAR BLE Front Jlansion, No, 200# Chestnut Htreet, replete with every modern convenience. .A small pro* perty wouM bf.‘tskfn & Bur;KART> np!3-6t’ 2218buth fifth street. ® DWELLING HOUSE FOR BALE.- Thedesirablu Dwelling No. 232 South Thirteenth street, between Walnut nod Sprnco. A large part of the purchase money nmy remain on mortgage. ’Apply to ALEX AN DEB' UA3iSBY, mjso. 1111 EIGHTEENTH STREET, ABOVE WAT,NUT. TIIO3IAB & SONS, Will soil this els"»utmeilium-si7.o ilnollink, April 16tb. Possession Immediate. JTcrmsoiuiy. _ apll to apJOj Mclp e YiayXSeTa'tl an tic City. —OuJy Ag« ncy in PhllaUelphlalfor tho Kale of Cot tages aud Building Lots at the above placed. Several desirable opportunUfeu now ofTercd by ' . H DANIEL 31. FOX A HON, npll-Im§ No. 340 North Fifth street. FOR SALE-NO. 1114 PINE STREET, Mai handaojho throe-story brick dwelling. with three-' story doubly back btiildiitg*; evury modern conve nience and in coed order, nmnodiatu possesion given.' J.'M. OUMMKy & SONS, 733 Walnut street. new Mown stone houses. Ell NOS. 3920,2004 AND 3)10 SPttttOE STREET FOB: SALK. FINISHED IN WALNUT IN THE MOST SUPERIOR MANNER.' AND WITH EVERY MODERN CONVENIENCE. E. B. WARREN, 2013 SPRUCE STREET; APPLY BETWEEN 2 AB1) I O'CLOCK P. M. mh2stf dp FOR SALE.—THE PESIRABLE lailiLThreo-fltory Dwelling, with Throe-story Back! Bnildings, N 0.400 South Ninth utruet, with improve-; meitfs. JiOt2lJ*xlB3 feet deep to a back street. Also,a ! Modern Dwelling. No. 2225 Spruce street; all imorove-' ments. Immediate possession. Terms easy. Apply toi COPPUCK & JORDAN,43.I Walnut street ; EOXi SALE.—DWELLINGS -1331 North Twelfth street. Three-story modern dwelling. • . ■ 1422 North Twelfth street. Three-story modern dwell ing. 235 North Twelfth etreot. Three-story dwelling with three-story tenement on rear of lot. 1529 South Tenth street. Three-etory dwelling. 1008 South Third street. Three-story dwelling. 1212 Marlborough street, Richmond. Turee-story brick dwelllDF. uBiNj , gs pROpEBTIEB 606 South Second street: Three-story brick, 22 by 133. 260 North Eleventh street. Four-story brick, 18 by 63. <23 Reed street. Corner storeand dwelling. 606 South Sixth street. Tavern and dwelling. 1438PassyunkBoad. BOBEBir QnArFEN 4 gON< . N0a637 Piue street. M TIOGA STREET—IfOB SALE OR exchange for good city proporty, an elegant large mansion,one square from Tioga station,on Germantown Railroad. Main bailding forty feet square, with double back buildings. Spacious verandah on throe sides. House replete with all the modern conveniences. Coach house and stable, Ac. Coldgrapery. with ehoicc vines in full bearing. Grounds carefully laid out, with abundance of fine fniit. A most desirable aud conveni ently situated residence. ■ Will bo sold a aery great bargain. Plau and photo graph can bo seen and terms obtained on application to apl3flt§ No. 707 Walnut street. Bittll geat,S. E. comer of Clapior street and McKean avenue, Germantown—Residence of the lute JOHN F. l PKRlty, deceased. The improvements are modern residence, two basement kitchens, two ranges, cellars ; first floor—parlor, diuing roorn, sitting-room and library, and six chambers above. Gns, with lmndfloroe fixtures. Uouso newly papered and painted throughout, and handsomely frescood. Numer ous closets, bath, hot aud cold water, water-closet, ex tensive porch and cupola on house. Also, frame stable, log cabin,spring-house, ico-bouse, grapery, good spring water. „ , The ground, comprising botween two and three acros, is tastefully laid ont and planted with shade trees, fruit trees, evergreens, Ac. °G»rden,witkBmall fruits. The above ts in the Immediate vicinity ef elegant resi dences, and needs to be seen to be appreciated. If not sold, would bo rented, partly furnished. For >»rticHlars, apply to oiBTßiN spl6-lt" 617 Walnut street. TO DYERS—FOR BALE OR TO LET ON GROUND RENT.—A largo lot of. ground, containing 42,897 square foot, extending from Seventh to Eighth,Botwo.n Tioga and Venango streets, with a never-falling stream of pure soft water running through it. Price #2,600. -Apply to JOHN TURNER, near Sixth street and Beading Railroad. apKlm- O CAPITALIBTB AND BUILD Bits.— For sale—A large and rapidly-improving LOT, NORTH BROAD BTREBT, between Norris and Dia mond ; 628 feet deop to THIRTEENTH STREET, Inter sected by PARK AVENUE, FOUR FBONTB. mhB-tfj Apply No. 322_Chestnut street. : Merchant ville n. j.—building sites for sale, flvemlnutos’s walk from Welwood THIBFY MINUTES FROM FRONT AND MARKET STREETS, Philadelphia. Faro by the Annual cts. per tr mh29-lm§ CliB N0.,127 Chestnut street: Philadelphia, [ FIRE-PROOF SAFES. For ©ale Cheap. A FIRST-CLASS FIRE PROOF SAFE 'Address, “LEON,” this office, deOO-tlrpS highway department. ■VrbTIOE.—APPLICATION WILL BE mads by the lindorslened to the Department of Highways (No. 101 seuth FifOs street) on MONDAY, the2sth inst.,at 12 o’clock M..for a eontraot ,for P»vinß Forty-third street, from Hayerford etreot to Lancaster avenue. In the Twenty-fourth Ward. All pors.ds in terested may attend at the Jimo aud place If. they ttilnK proper. Tho fellowing-named persons 'have .{gnoii a contract for sold pavipg. viz.: J. Kendrick, W, P. AIR son, John V. Wrmljt, Thomas A. H. Merlein, Josopk G. Henzoy.D. B. Fuller,O.B. Dodd, E: Henry, John Olvm, Anna Cnniiolly. John E. KanolNoahGill, S.tli Hum QWI N,, aplBm w f3t§ ■—Contractor^ Rosin.— ioo Harrhls lng from steamship I’iou.or.aKfiforv’'' oby 0 by 000H ltAN, RUSSELL A CO., HlUUestnutetroet. TO RENT-FURNISHED HOUSE" B9.Ycry liirao nordenj on Forty-third street. Very d. slrable, A. 8. ABIIMEAD.3MXI Hamilton street. It* S TO LET.-A FURNISHED RES* denco In Mooreetown, N. J, Large honee wi» rooms and city conveniences. Ample grounji shade, coach-house and stables, Ac. Eight trains diar each way. Apply to OHAB. RHOADS,' apli Bt" ,N 0,36 South Heyonth etroet, Philadelphia M TO IjHT,—A HANDSOME RRR denco en high ground In suburbs of (hmien, ntafcto and modern convsnleuceo. Alply to OHA-ni.KS RIfOADS, No. 30 South Soventllßtreot, Thilldelphia. ” - ’ a|46t* No. 620 Walaut street TO RENT. gmf TO LET—A MODERN IS nOUHK, I’lno.Yrsstof Broad street. Rent, $M Address, “8.0,, 11 BPM.HTiwOlllce. ap!3 m w2t* Mto rent-store and dwell Ine, No. 811 Arch street. Wilt be rented separately or topsthor. Apply at *pl6-6t* N 0.709 W ALNUT street./ JSS TO RENT.— ftiiL An Blerfant Country Residence, with abot eight acres ot land, on which thero aro, beside? a conftrtablo fartn-hoiißo—tonant-boneo, stable, cow and aicken lioupob. It is situated at the junction of Grr’elane and Marshall road, and about on a lips with uestnut utreet, from which bridg® it 1b only three mill; very easy of access. Terms reasonable. Keys and information at, - _ ' . HARPER & OHEPI apl2 6t*] No, 337 Walnut isjj FOE RENT.— HANDSOME , Kiig try placd, with several acras of land* on (1 road, five minutes’walk from Gale Lane station North Pennsylvania Railroad. j FURNIBIIEP COUNTRY' BEAT, within tn min ittCK’ walk from Haverford station, on tho Penarlranla Central Railroad. ' ELEGANT COUNTRY BEAT, with several rres of land and outbuildings, complete, on tb® new.trnplko, Germantown. J. M. GTJMMEY A SONS, 7AiValiiut Street, - FOR RKNT-THE HAKKOME I Jaliilrpur-ftory property, No. 28 South KJghb street, corner of Jayne, aud flrßt above Chestnut alrei, J. M. GUMMEY & SONS, 733 Walnut street. Ijggp C'APfMAyiNb ATLANfICCErr Jala.—Numerous Cottagon to Kent. Some fory da flirahlo opportunities oflbred, Parties desirlu to rent can have description aod information and otbr facili ties furnished, nud aavo th*ra»nlvi>s a run to titeilian* by applyiug. to PANIEIj M. FOX & SON, .’riuclpal Agency, No. P4O North Fifth afreet; tall Im§ «TO RENT—FOR SIX MONTHS—A JHIHNIBHED HOUSE ON wat.nct hbekt, -WEEN TWENTIETHAND TWENTYEIIIdT. APIJLY TO B. L.,2H1 OHESTNUT STKKET b,*Ms ifSaj -HnOIRARt) OTREET.—AGIi&ARD .Jl&Ketato dwelling, at reduced ront. Apply t 'Tower Hall, 618 Market street. M FOB KENT—FUKKXSHSD-A ■ IKttl handsome four-story brick dwelling, wth back buildings ; and ©very modem convenience, eiutite on Rroatf tercet, below Pino. J.M. GUMMEY c SONS, No. 7.H3 Walnut street. *TO LET^THESTORK“cONsTECT ing with the Colouu&de Hotel, 1502, 150 t md IWtf tnut street, suitable lor gent’s furnUhin; goods. Rentnioderate. Apply on the premises from lo to 1 2 A.M. . ■ ’ AililJ tft ®" TO LET —SECOND-STORY FRONT R00m,324 Chestnut street, about 20 x 23 foet.j btiitablo for an offleo or light busloosa. ja!s tf rp YAUU A BIOTniCB lg 3&" FOR RENT—FURNISHED Oil UN- Blin furnished, the three-story brick dwelllig-situate NSri.W.S North Twelfth street. J. M. GUMM£Y A SONS, 733 Walnut street. V "TO RENT—ROOMS OF ALL SIDES’ |s£?> well llghted.suitableforliglitmanufacturinjEhu?,!- In building No. 712 Chuatnut street. J. M. GUM MEY <fc SONS,/tt Walnut street. Jgg. TO RENT—A HANDSOME *22 Country KesMence, PuyV lane, G«nn*aiown. A handsome country residence, Manheinr street, Ger tDHntown. „ „ i A dwelling house. No. 119 Kitt*nboaa» street, Ger mantown. _ .... A dwelling house, No. 1541 North Twentieth street. ■ A dwelling bouse. No, 911 South Nin'h Street. A stable »»n Miles street, below Walnut street and above Tenth'street, Room for t horses and car riages. Apply to OOPPUCK A JORDAN. 433 Walnut street. • • /"IREESE Sb McCOLLUM, BEAL ESTATE i j _ AGENTS Office, Jaekeon afreet, opfoeiti Manilon afreet, C.pa I.land, N. J. Beal E.tate bought and aold. Peratmi drairou. of renting cotU«Mdaring the #eaaon wUlapplr or addree. >• atore. Beijactfnllr refer to Chaa.A.Enblcain, Henry Bcmm, Trent in Mcitrain, Angu.tn, Marino, John Darla ana W. W.Jutenal. M-tll WANTS. K AAA -WANTED, A PARTNER, t)IU,UUU. tpaciftl or retire, with aboro anmcmt, to tako’tbr place of retlriugaanlor partner, ui an old, weU'Cfltabmhcd and prohtaMa The junior partaer will remain, and fnn»islr9s.oW capital, and. if deilred, take whole thnrge of th'J bn*ri»M*. Tlio ropn* tnifott «f <U <ut«*jrti*~r U w«U-kfio«-u. PrincipaAi ouiy dealt with. Addreci, with r«a) uamoand addie^p. h. O. X., Philadelphia P. O. aplß-Ct* WANTED TO RENT-BY A FAM- E 1 ill of adults, f.r tbe summer month*, a neatly fur nished honsu iu the country, with .table, lies he easy of acce»« to the city. Addret., elating terms, ttc., vr.p. S., Post-office Box 2.A11. aplB2is xA/Xnted-by Two gentlemen, VV Room., partly furnUhed, in a private faieiiy, with break!.nt, east of Broad street aud south of Mar ket. ' Unexceptional refer.uc.givensudrequired. A - dres.lt. B.».,tbl»offlc.. aplB-2t- PARTNER WANTED TO TAKE A HAL F irrtere4f in an old Wholwala Drue House In Chi cago. For paiticularnKidrw»Po*t-ofßce box Cl 2. Chi cago, 111. npM D‘> . TXrAKTED-BY A YOUNG MAN HAVI YV inghad nine<9) years experience in the Hardware and Drug business, a situation with some house hi «ithor linfc, witha view to advancement. Beat of rofir #lAddrPBf “ DItUGGISt,” Box 49, poatoffica. Mount Holly, N. J. _apH ot’ TUG WANTED—WANTED A SMALL Steam Tng, suitable for Southern Hfver Naviga tion. of light draught. Apply to GOCiIBANy BUSSELL AGO., lHOhcftnut street. to being a cargooftlmberfrom Georgia—full cargo out. AppIytoX’OCHUAN, BUSSELL A CO„ Uj7 Chestnut street' '\ ‘ • ' - ' l CITY ORDINANCES COMMON - COUNCIL OP PHILADEL PHIA Cr.EKK’s Ofkice, Philadelphia, March 20, 1870. Jn 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 Fairmounf^ Section 1. The Select amf'Coßimion Coun cils of the City of Philadelphia do ordain, That the Mayor of Philadelphia he and he is hereby authorized to borrow, at not less than par, on the credit of the city corporation, from time to time,such sums of money as may be necessary to pay for the construction and erection or a bridge over the river Schuylkill at Fairmount, not exceeding in the whole the eim of seven hundred thousand dollars, lor which interest not to exceed the'rate of six per cent, per an num shall he paid, half yearly, on the first days of January and July, at the office of the City Treasurer. , ~ The principal of said loan shall be payable and paid at the expiration of years from the date of the same, and not before, without the consent of the holders thereof; and certificates therefore in the usual form or certificates of city loan, shall he issued in such amounts as the lenders may require, hut not for any fractional part of one hundreddollars, if required, in amounts of five hundred or one thousand dollars; in said certificates the said loan theremmen tioned, and the interest thereof, are, payable Section 2. * Whenever anyloapshall be made by virtue thereof, there shall bo, by force of this ordinance, annually appropriated mrt of the income of the corporate estates and from the sum raised by taxation, a sum sufii- interest On saiicertiflcates ; nml the farther sum of three-tenths of one per centum hm valnh Of such certificates so issued, shall ne appropriated quarterly out of said income and taxes, 1 to a sinking fund, which fund and its accumulations are hereby esnecially pledged for the redemption and payment or said certificates. ■ RESOLUTION TcTpUBLISH A LOAN RILL. Jtmlved, 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 the 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 the said clerk, at the stated meeting of Councils, aftpr the expira tion 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 the same shall be made. mh2o 24t$ (Selected by Ercry Saturday from CafiKOll *h Magasfne.} REIOM,Et;iIO)|B OF THACKERAY. lIV Mlt. nKDIKGKIELD. The writer desires to deprccato any charge of egotism in publishing Thackeray's letters. They could not be used without the insertion of names which are 6f no interest to tho world, except in connection with his, •. AVhen Thackeray Was a little boy at sckdoi; be was fond of attempting caricatures, He was quite small for liis ago (for no carao into the world before bis lime), and was petted by his larger schoolmates, and encouraged.,hy them in Ills artistic attempts. ' Oh one occa sion, I belicvoj he had reason to suppose that one of his caricatures of his Usher might have fallen, into tho wrong hands, ami thathe would he punished for liis impertinence ; so ho set off on a runaway expedition, and sped along until he was out or breath. Then it occurred to lilm that he would be worse oft', if caught, than if he braved the peril of cen sure for his previous conduct, ami accordingly be ran back as fast as ho could, and saved Ws skin. He was telling me before bis groat-aunt, Mrs. Turner, tlmt he was quite a short fellow, being but five feet six inches at fifteen ; but that he bad an illness of some 1 months’ dura tion, and rose up at bis full altitude of six feet three. - - ■ ■ “ People must have . looked astonished at yon,” was the remark. “ I don’t know; my coats looked astonished,” replied Thackeray. From Dr. Turner’s school, at Chiswick, bo went to the Charterhouse, where, in a fight with a big boy, tho bridge of bis nose was broken. Jdow and then be used to come to Chiswick when X was acliild.and I remember I used to jump up and try to touch Ids face, but did not succeed in doing so. “ Wbackaway” was biß school name. I used to hear the boys cry gleefully, “ Here’s Old Wbackaway 1” when, a Triton among the minnows, he'appeared on the playground. It will be remembered that be refers to Chiswick in the early scenes of “Vanity Fair," Becky Sharp being at a school on tho Mali, the identity of which I recognize; I re collect I asked him once the question what he wrote when he was a lad. *‘l used to write poetry',” he answered, “ and it was devilish bad: „ bat then I didn’t think so.” There was a dash of the poet in him, as there was in Hood : but a generous man of the world, quick-sighted, keen-witted,, shrewd, and caustic, seldom tim-s to “ the vision and tho faculty divine’/; and X don’t believe that he saw far into anything beyond the actual; in the actual he lived and breathed. ” . He told me that lie read more history than anything, and advised all authors to make historical studies the greater part of their “ Head a tremendous let of history,” he raid, as we walked out of the reading-room ofthe Ilritish Maseurn. Ah! Is there any literature that makes one more melancholy than the lolig, dreary record of human'errorr ? ,r «. 1 don’t think latterly he read to any great extent, for he said to a relative of ours that he thought “ hooks very great lumber” ex cept works of reference. I was told that when he was quite a young mau he made himself master of many works of phi losophy iu German. One would have supposed Thackeray was ever fond of met;s phvsics. . ' Tbackeray was often grave and reticent, especially after lie had reached middle age, when in society. Tho liveliness of his youth, • the keen vivacity and zest of life which h@ dis playedat one period, vanished after he was crowned with success. The penalty that ho paid for liis popularity was heavy. He said “he bad fiercely fought for H,” anil broken health and, - a jaded mind did not allow him to eDjoy his good fortune. But he always made a good fight for the victory over his gloomy feelings, so manly and firm-hearted was he by nature. Once! called on him, when he told me thathe ; had not the power of writing at all; he feared it was going from him ; ant then, indeed, he appeared most wretched. / One night'! was at the Lyceum Theatre with his mother and daughters, 7 and we had been enjoying the rich humor of Wigan’s acting. After one of the ] acts Thackeray came to us, and observed to /me that he had been talking behind the with tho comedian, and that be never say a man in more wretched-.spirits. /I had written to him to ask for tickets for the theatre one night, and received the following notes: “llensinoton, Sunday.— My dear Btding field: A liomd rememhraoee comes over me, as lam madly plunging through my work, that you wrote to me for theatre tickets, and sent me an invitation to an evening party. My deaf’ftdlow, I,beg your pardon! I’ve lost the lettofk, :or they lie hidden in I the • enormous / heaps. They came when j I was writing for life and death, j X forgot to aepd to Lemon. I’ll write j to him to-night; and beg you to make my'ex cuses to Mrs. Marson, and I regiet very much : that lam engaged to dinner on Monday, or i I should have had the pleasure of coming to her party. I know 'this is rude. But what can I da?—do. my work, to tots sure, and go at it again this moment. “fiver yours, W. M. T.” “ KxNftrkOVOJf, Tuesday.— My Dear Befling field: X shall have great pleasure in coming to you on Monday evening; bnt not the iadie9, thank you. My grandmother is too old to go out, and Miss Xlammerton stops to tak« care other. I don’t know if yon got tho orders. I spoke about them on Saturday, and will write awtmlnder to Mr. Lemon to-day. “ Truly yours, “ W. M. Thackekay.” “My Dear Bedingfleld: I am much vexed that you lost -your ticket yesterday by my blunder. I sent a messenger with it to No. 17, like an ass, and be returned, of coarse, not finding you. X will get you others soon, how ever, and am always yours, W. >l. T.” When X was writing works of fictiop in my juvenile, days, my kinsman Thackeruy invited me on one occasion to dine with 1 him at the Bose Cottage, Richmond, and we were talking on tho subject of stylo. Like most very young fellows, J admired a, more ornate and a less simple and Saxon: phraseology than X do now. “The more simple and the more natural a J .style, the better,” iny entertainer observed; to which X objected that in the highest works of art, the most ideal and poetical works, “this simple style—such as Goldsmith’s, for instance—was not appro priate .• ■ , • '■ : •‘Dickens persuaded me to admire Tenny son,” said Thackeray; ‘.‘ but I don’t care for idealism.” Beware of it!”' Brnlishmen like roast bee/.” - Although much overworked, he was ever ready to help a friend, and his'experience and igdvice,werealy,;ajs,at my disposal: . • . 88.Bt.'Jamj£s’m StnbeT, Sunday, Juns I.—! Dear Bedinpkld:— I was vetysorry not to, sue you the other day- when you called, but Xi wasn’t in a fit state to receive anybody, labor-' ingi under a violent attackiof bilious Sickness,! for which tho only fit company was a basin. 7 Luckily, my illnesses don’t last long, nor come) Verv olteu. • “'X baVo' read, both your stories,.anti hero! you see they come back—that -is cold oncour-' agement to a man with a great deal of merit ■ and imaginatioa; X thiuk they contain a groatj of good stuff, but I’m sure they are not salable —that is the point. They are done ‘in an old-! fashioned manner, I think, and you could no! more sell them than a tailor could a coat of 1880, or a milliner a bonnet which might have! been quite the rage in;the jast reign. . j “ it ’s not the m'-rlts of the thing I fall foul of,—though I should like to quarrel with ai : '• j.lfttld' fine priting, hero and. there,—but only i/.the'question, of 1 trade. It is , not because a, story is bad or an author a fool that either should not be popular nowadays, as you aud JQ know, who may See .donkeys crowned with! laurels, while certain clever fellows of our.ac-j qiiaintance fight vainly for a maintenance or tvreputation. l ?l can suit the magazines (but JJ , can’t Mt the, public, be hanged to them), and from my knowledge of the former, I should say you will gever get a good'saJe for commod-j , ities .like these, (julct; sentimental novelets .. fypnjt .do nowadays,'x’ui Hure. Think of the; i higli-Seasd'ned dishes the British public hak been feeding on for the last thirty years, and) yopTl 'agree witjh me that they won’t go back to such simple fare as you give them in 1 The Blind Lover,’ : All! can say, my dear fellow,j is Try again. In reality, your system may be; the right one and mine the wrong, but I’m: .sure I’m righUas' *o ike state d/ Vie market. ! “ Ever yours, \V. M. T.” A THE DAILY WHINING J3L IrLL'I'IN—PHILADELPHIA. MONDAY, APRIL 18.1870. “B. C., 21 Deer., 1843.— My dear Bedingfield: 1 am.sincerely sorry to hear of the, accident ' which bas befallen Dr. Turner, and fear with yon that, at his time of life, the' consequences ; may be very doubtful. Your mother, please < God, will be able'to bear up under this inlsfor- , tune; and I trust, howover it may affect her , domestic happiness, it will not at all injure ; her worldly prospects. j “l am only this moment come ont after a five days’ bout of illness at my lodgiDgs. X ; sent onTne/dny week last a very pressing : noto to Jerdap.regarding, the ‘Miser’s Soil,’ ; with a little iiotice-which I'myself had writ- j ten, to.as to pave him trouble. ; “ it was, I need not teft you, a favorable one > as the story dtHcrvcd ; it JiSa a great deal of talent of a great number of kinds, and many i a man has made a fortuno with a tithe of the j merit. "But in spite of -this, Jerdan has not in serted my article.; Havb you ever advertised in his paper or elsewhere? .A laudatory, para graph nof eandthen; will do you no earthly good, unless the name of your book is per petually before the public. The best boon X ever wrote X published with, an unknown publisher, and we got off two. hundred and fifty copies of it, and this was after the success of. the Paris bpok, with some thirty pounds of advertisements, and hugely laudatory notices in a score of journals. Shakespeare himself would not get a bearing i ri Gray’s Inn Lithe’. “ Unless your publisher actually Offers ’yoa money for a future work, I beg you to have nothing to do with; him. Write short tales. Make a dash at all the magazines; and at one or two of them I dim promise you, as X have said, not an acceptance of your articles, but a favorable hearing. It is, however, a bad trade at the best. The prizes in it are fewer and WOrse than in ahy other professional lottery; but I know it’s useless damping- a man who will bean author whether or no, —men are doomed, as it were, to the calling. “Make np your mind to this, my dear fel low, that the ‘ Miser’s Bon’,.will never suc ceed,—not froth want of-merii,- hut froth .want of a publisher. Shut it up without delay, and turn to some work that will pay you. Eschew poetry above all (you’ve had too much of it), and read all the history you can. Don’t mind this patriarchal tone from me. I’m old in tho trade now,.and lived so much with all sorts of pe6ple!iri the world that X plume my self on Tny expericnco. Give my best love to your mother and aunt. I will call to-morrow to ask after their health, and that of your poor patient, aud am always truly yours, ■ - “ W. M. Thackeray. “I shall give you a notice in Fraser in the I’obruary number; but I toll you it’s ho use.” “(November?.'), 38-17.) N,o. date. My deab Reijinufusuj,—X beg your pardon for not writing sooner. X would have corns to you to morrow with pleasure,, hut I am engaged to iriiho with Mr. Macrcady, ' “You saw, I daresay, in the papers, the death of the old g.mother. at/Pans.: Tho children are not hack yet, bill always coining, and X. hope my troubles iu y fhis respect are over. / “Don’t he displeased at my not reviewing you. By Jove, 1 have hoy time to do i what I ought to do, and have tiooks upon hooks on my table at this minute,—all the works of private friends who \y:nit a criticism. “Yourdistractediy - / ' , “W. M. T.” The genius of Thackeray was all flesh and blood. He is one of themost literal, one of the least imagination of authofs. I heard a cer tain Bishop, and a fine scholar, on one occa sion remark that he “had everything but im agination.” 7 Fancy, doubtless, be possessed. Ho deliglited in pretty, charming and whim sical things. He had a great respect for Shakespeare ; but, he said to me, “he did not always write naturally.” No, Lord-Lytton has very truly observed that “ Shakespeare is emi nently ideal. EvenFalstaffisdead. ButShakes peareis never unnatural. That is the distinc tion.” The great writers and painters—Milton, * Goethe, Baflaelle—are ideal, not real, like : Thackeray, Fielding and Hogarth. The latter are great In a sense, not dealing with the highest themes. Inall their admirable works; in all their very brilliartt aml delichtfuU glimpses of nature, do we find an 7 instance of what Oersted calls “a *pulin nature”?. ; For; this we must go to the loftiest and the'finest geniuses. Stand before a picture of Baftaelle,; and a spirit shines out on you from the eyes, divinely limned. Contemplate Lady Macbeth,' Rosalind, Juliet, Hamlet, or Mereutio.aiidyou! are conscious o 1 an inner life revealed by the great poet. Browniog and Tennyson—nearer; to Thackeray than to Shakespeare in point of g&ius —have the ideal element, winch the great master of irony had not. Dr. Stirling,an : eloquent writer, has asserted that Jerrold, wrote as with the point of a needle. Thacke ray wrote as' keenly, and cut deeper than Jer rold. as it were with a lancet. He was a won derful anatomist of character; he saw far into the recesses of feeling; but his synthesis was inferior to his analysis, hence the poetical ele ment. was not greatly developed in him. The mighty passions which shake the world,: Thackeray, I suspect, was sceptical of. The tremendous, the awful, and the harrowing, he* did not seek to penetrate. When I asked him what he meant in a certain' illustration in which “Becky” is “Clytemnestra,” he re plied, “ I meant she bad committed murder; but I didn’t want anything horrible." .. He could not see the difference land there; is a great one) between the horrible and tho terrible. But, with these limitations, I most add that I think the hnmor, the kindly tender ness, the pathos, and the manly, the masculine! grasp of my cousin Thackeray’s peculiar and most robust genius, have even now received little more than half the appreciation which ; they merit. LEGAL NOTICES. TN TdE ORPHANS’ COURT FOR THE _1 City and County of Philadelphia—ln the matter of: the estate of WALLACE LIFPINCOTT, late of the. said city, deceased. To \Vi:(iam Cde and hit eldest son, his heirs and as suras, the ktf ptr of the CoUstoun Cemetery; nr persons in (ftorge ther>(\f; the Methodist Conference of the city of; Phiadolphia ; tho nieces and nephews, grand-niece* and; grand-nephews of th« said decedent, or their guardians of minors; the J3ishnji of tho Meiboliet Epis opal; Church in the rify of Philadelphia,and all orherueviseeß,, legatees and other persons interested in tho estate of! said do< i-deut: Take notice!, That MARYANN LlP*' PINCOTT, tho widow of said decedent,on th* twenty-- sixth day of March, A. 1),, 1870, presented to tho B:iid ! Cciirt her petition setting forth that the parties inter ested in toe said estate cannot agree for the appoint* meat of s“ven p-rsons to make partition of th M Bara",, and praying the Court to award an inquest to mako said ; partition among the parties interested in sni.l estate according to law; that, theretorcv-thi said Court; awarded a citation, to the pari US int**re« ted in said) estate,commanding them to appear before the sonic at a. Court to be held on Saturday, in'* twenty-third day of; April. A. D. 1870, nt 10 o’clock of tho forenoon, to show* cuttse why the Court should not award an inquest toj make snid partition, and further abide tho ord**rof thn! Court in tho premises; and did thereupon also onb*r that! fidvorlifiinent na to parties whose ,n union or residences 1 aye unknown t«> be maiio twice a week. for two weeks, in two dully newspapers in the city of Philadelphia and! twice In the Legal Jntellig<Aeer. Arid also that on tho said last mentioned day application will be raa<io to tho Court to grant the prayerof the said petition: Attest, ALFRED J.FORTEN, . ■ ap£Uin4t§ > Deputy Clerk Orphans’Court. | TN OpFHANS’IxjUIIT'FORrTHIS X City andCouutyof Philadelphia.—Estate of JOHN 11. SPlllNtiEß, deceased.—Notico is hereby given that MARTHA EVSPKTNGER, wffi»vTflr said dtVodent, lus) filed in the Bp.id Court her petition, with an appraiso-i nidnt of tlid pafsorial property spo eltH ta to retain 4 tinder, thoactof Afreeihbiy. of April 14tb; 1857,’and its-stipple-, ments, and that-thesanm will be approved by tin* Court! oh SATURDAY,'ApriI 2&U 1870, unless exceptions bo, filed thereto. . .. JOUNGOFORTII, * «pU-xn,w4t§ Attornoy for Petitioner, j P THE OiIPHANS’ COURT FOR THE X City find Oonnty of Philadelphia.—Estate of OfIASJ T. AMOS, deceased.—The Auditor appointed by tbrv Court to audit, settle and adjust the account of SUSAN AMOS, Administrator of the 1 estate of CHARLES Tj AMOS, deceased, and to report distribution of tho| balance in the hands of the accountant, will meet tho; parties interested for, the 'purposes of -his 'appointment, l 01} WEDNESDAY, April fctb,’ IS7O, at 9K oYIoOkP.I -M 1 ., at hie office, No. 68/ RuCestixiet. in tho oity of Phila delphia. J JOS. ABRAMS, * apfcf mw 6t* Auditor. 1 IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS i for tho City alnt County of TliibiilPlphla,— \h itiKuril Eftnte of BUOWN * SnOKT.-The Auditor appointed t,y tho Court to audit, nottlo and adjust the proouiit of OKOHGEiW. atcWHAIAJIS, awienoo of SAIITJEVPROWN and SAMUEL A. BHOWN, trad ing n-BBOWN » SHORT, and tofeporfdistributlou of tho balance in thebauds of tho accountant.,willmaet tho L ,r tho pUrponeoof his appoiiitmont, on SATURDAY, April 23. 1370, at 12 o’clook.at bio of-; fire, N 0.202 South Sixth street, in tho city of PliHadol-l Pit"'. _ „ c asa E. apEENOOGH RLATT, J ap!3,w f m Etg • • • ' - -■ - Auditor, 1 CARPETINGS, &C, CARPETS MAI>E TO \VE£R WELL.—j WM. POLLOCK, 937 Market 'streot, soils the’ chenpcßt Carpets. Just examine thorn. apB im§ ' GOOIJ 'i'HB.LAXJIES. . DUSTY: 11AKPBT8 OP At/L KINDS . CAREFULLY CLEANED, by improved ■ mnvMnery, lit CENTRAL-CARPET- ■ , ' CLEANING ESTABLISHMENT, v 250 N.ftUOAI) street, below VINE. , . apMlmo* TRAVELERS* GUIDE T> ®AD ING RAILROAD, - GREAT Xl/Frtrak Lino.from Philadelphia to the Interior of , Peunaylvanla, th® Schuylkill, Snaauehanns, Camber* Wyoor.w Valley®, the North; Northwest and , Arrangement of Pa»«enger Train®, ka’lDFtha Company’® Depot.Thlrteenth ; * 0W ” 11 »*reet®,Phll«kfelptila, at the following ; MoiNINC AOOOMMODATION.—At7JO A. M for ; Beading am) all Intotmedlate Station®, and Allentown. ; h?l». r t.ln ? , loaves Reading atdE3 p. M„ arrirlng.tn , Philadelphia at 9ES P. M- / • - ; MOBNINO EXPBEHS.—At 8. Id A, M. for Bea4lng, Lebanon, Harrlabnrg, Pottaville, Pine OroTO.Tamaqna, ; gnnhnry,, Williamsport, Elmira, Bochostdr, Niagara ; Fall®, Boffslo, Wilkesharre, Pitta ton, Tori, Caraale, ( Chanjberibnrit, Hagerstown, *o. _ . i „ The? SO K . M. train connects at Beading with theßAst Penney Ivania Ballroad train® for A lleutownAc,, and the B.lt A. 11. train' connect® With tho Lbhan'on valley,train ! forlfnrrisVurO-V&c.; at PortCllnton with Catawliaa If, B. trains for WUllamsport,Lock Harem Klmlra, Aoaat Hairlabnrg with Nonhern, Central, Cumberland Val ley: and Bchnylklll and Snsanebanna trains, fey North umberland, Williamsport. York, Ohamb rsburg,Plne fAifiKKNOON EXPBBBb!—Leave® Philadelphia at P. M. for Pottsvllle, Harnfiburg* Ac., eon* ncctlnp with Beading and Oolmnola) Ballroad trains for Columbia® Ac. > PCrrTBTOWN ACCOMMODATION.—Leayea PotU* town at 6A6 A. M.ietopplng at the Intormedlato stations; arrives in Philadelphia at 9.10 A. M. Betarnlng leares Philadelphia at 4 Pottstown at Al 5 P.9S. READING ASV POTTSVILL* ACOOMMODA* TIOB PoUsvilleatfi.4oAe M..and Beading at 7 JSO A.M., stopping at aUway stations; arrives in Phtla*. dolphlaatioio A. M. : _ Rotnrnlng, loaves Philadelphia at iM F. M.: arrives Jn Beading at 7AO P. and at Potter Meat o.s P. M. Trains for Philadotphia leave Harrisborg at 8.10 A. H.,and Potfsvllle at®.oo A. M.,arriving in Pnlfadelpbla atI.OOP.H. Afternoon trains leave Harrisburg at 2.05 P. M..and PottpvMeat 2A&V. M.; arriving at Phila delphia at fir-CT. M . _ , . ifarrfflbnrg-AccoiDCDodatlon leaves Beading at and Harnsburg at 4.10 P. H. Connecting at Bead* lng with Afternoon Accommodation south at OA9J?. M®, arriving in Philadelphia at 9.25 P.M. - Mar feet train, with a Passenger car attached. leaved Philadelphia ai 12.30 noon for Pottsville and all Wap Stations; leaves PottsviHe at 9.40 A, M., connecting at Beadingwith accommodation train for Philadelphia and Way Stations • aa • . . , An tno above trains ran daily, Bondars excepted. Sunday trains leave PottsviHeolB A. M., and Phila delphia at 3J6 P. M.; leave Philadelphia for Reading at 'B.OO A, M.. retnrninar from Beodlna at P. M. CHESTER VALLEY BAlLBOAD.—TftssengiJtt for Howningtown and Intermediate points take the 7 JSO A M.» 4,00 P. M. trains from ing from Downiogtown atGJO A. M., 12.45 andfl.U P.M PEEK lOMEN BAILBOAH .-Passengers for Schwenks* ville take 7AO A.M., 12A0 and 4.00 P.M. trains for Phila delphia*, retaming from Bchwenksville at 2.06 A® M., 12.45 oooni 4.16 P;m; Stage lines for various points in Perklomen Valley connect* with trains at Oouegevflle andHchWenksvillo. > COLEBROOKDALE BAlLKOAD.—Passengers for Mt. Pleasant and intermediate points take tho7Ao A. M. and 4.00 P.M. trains from^Philadelphia; returning from Ht. Pleasant at 7 00and 11.25 A. M. NEW YORK EEPBEBB'WB-PITTBBUBGH AND THE W r EBT.-Leaves New YorkAt9,oo A. M. and 9A9 P. M., passing Beading at 145 and 10A9 P. M., and connects at Harrisburg with Poimsylvanla and Northern Central Railroad ExproeoTrainsfor Pitts burgh, Chicago, Williamsport, Elmira, Baltimore, Ac. Returning, Express Tram leaves Harrisburg on arrival of Pennsylvania Express from Pittsburgh, at A. 51. and 22.20 noon, passing Beading at 7.23 A. M. and 2.05 P. M., arriving at New York at 12.05n00n and OAA P. M. Sleeping Cars accompanrthese trains throagh between JersevCity and PitUourgb* without change. Mail train for New York leaves Harrisburg at 8.10 A M. and 2.P5 P. 31. Mail train for Harrisburg leaves New York at 12 Noon. SCHUYLK ILL VALLEY RAILROAD—Trains leave PottsviHe at 630 and 11.30 A. 31. and 6-60 P.M..returning from Taimujoaat BA6 A; 3!..and 2.15 and4.6o P. 31. SCHUYLKILL AND SUSQUEHANNA RAILROAD —Trains leave Auburn at BAS A. 31. for and Harrisburg, and at 12.10 norm for Pine grove, Tremopt and Rrookslde: returning from Har risburg at 3.40 P 91: from Hrooknido at 4.00 P. M.and from Tremont at 7.15 A.M and 5.05 P.M. TICKETS.—Through first-claes tickets and emigrant tickets to all thaprincipal points in tbeNorth and and Canada. Excursion Tickets from Philadelphia to Reading and Intermediate Stations, good for day only, are sold by 3lornicg AccominodationvMarket -Train, Beading and Pottstown Accommodation Trains at reduced rates. Excursion Tickets to Phi]aiiolpbia,good for day only, are sold at Reading and Intermediate Stations by Read ing and Pottstown Accommodation Trains at redneed rates The following tickets are obtainable only at the Office of 8. Bradford, Treasurer, No. 227 South Fourth street Philadelphia, or of G. A. Nicolls, General Superinten dent, Beading. Commutation Tickets jit 25 per cent, discount, between any points desired, for families and firms. Mileage Tickets,good for 2,ooomilee,between all points at 952 60 each for families and firms. Season Tickets, for three,six, nine or twelve months, fer holders only® to all points, at reduced rates. Clergymen residing on the line of the road will be fur nished with cards, entitling themselves and wives tickets at half fare Excursion Tickets from Philadelphia to principal sta tions, good for Saturday, Btmday and’Monday, at re duced fare, to be had only at the Tioket Office, at Thir teenth and Callowhlll streets. FREIGHT.—Goods of all descriptions forwarded to all the above points from the Company’s New Freight Depot, Broad and Willow streets. Freight Trains leave Philadelphia daily ftt4Ao A. M., MAO neon,sjBo and 7.15 P. M.,for Beading, Lebanon, Harrisburg,PotUTllle,PortClinton,and all points be* M ails close at the Philadelphia Post-office for all places on the road and Its branches at 9A. M., and for the prin cipal Stations only at Dungan’s Express will collect Baggage tor all trains leaving Philadelphia Depot. Orders can be left at No. 226 South Fourth street, or at the Depot, Thirteenth and Callowhill streets. North Pennsylvania ratt/road. -THE SHORT MIDDLE ROUTE to tbe Lehigb and Wyoming Valley,Northern Pennsylvania, Southera and Interior New York, Rochester, Buffalo, Niagara Falls, the Great Lakes and the Dominion of Canada. WINTER ARRANGEMENTS. TAKES EFFECT, November 22d, 1869. ' M DAILY TRAINS leave Passenger Depot, corner of Berks an£ Americas streets (Buodays excepted), follows; 7JO A. M. Accommodation for Fort Washington, At 8 A. M.—Merni.Bg Express for Bethlehem and Principal Stations on main line of North Pennsylvania Railroad, connecting at Bethlehem with Lehigh Valley Railroad for AlleutownJHauch Chunk, Mahanoy,' City Wilkesbarre, Fitts ton, Towanda and Waverly: connec ting at Wavorly with ERIE BAILWAY for Niagara Falls, Buffalo, Rochester, Cleveland. Chicago, San FraDcisco, and all points in tbe Great West. At 8.46 A. M.—Accommodation for Doylestown, stop ping at all intermediate Stations. Passengers for Wfl low Grove. H^fboro’and Hartsville, by this train, take Stage at Old York Road. 9.46 a. M. (Express) for Bethlehem, Allentown Maucb Chunk,'White Haven, Wilkesbarre, Fittsten, Scranton and Carbondale via Lehigh and Susquehanna Railroad, and Allentown, Easton, Hackettstown, and Ednts en New Jersey Central Railroad and Morrisand ftsex Railroad to New York via Lehigh Valley Railroad. At 10.46 A, M.—Accommodation for Fort Washington, •topping at intermediate Statious. 1T6,6 JO and 9 P.M Accommodation to Ablngton. At 1.46 P. M.—Letdgh Valley Exorew for Bethlehem, Easton, Allentown, Maueh Chunk, Hazleton* White Haven, Wilkesbarre, Pittsfon, and Wyoming Coal Re gions. At 2.46 P. M.—Accommodation for Doylestown, stop ping at all intenhediate stations. At 4.16 P. M.—Accommodation for Doylestown, stop ping at all intermediate stations. At 6.00 P. M.—Through for Bethlehem, connecting at Bethlehem with Lehigh Valley Evening Train for Easton. Allentown, Maueh Chunk. At 6JO P. M.—Accommodation for L&nsd&le, stopping at all intermediate stations. _ At 11 JO P. M:—Accommodation for Fort Washington. TRAINS ARRIVE IN PHILADELPHIA, From Bethlehem at 9A. M., 2.16, 4.40 and 8.26 F. M. 2.16 P; M. t 4.40 P. M . and BJS P. M. Trains make direct connection with Lehigh Valley or Lehigh apd Susque hanna trains from Easton, Scranton, Wilkesbarre, Ma banoy City and Hazleton. ' From Doylestown at 8.35 A/.H.,4.30 P.M.and 7.06 P, M From Lausdale at 7JO A. M'. . w From Fort Washington at9J5 and U)JS A. M, and 3.10 P ‘ M ‘ ON SUNDAYS. Philadelphia for Bethlehem at 9JO A. M. Philadelphia for Doyleetown at 2.00 P. 81, Doylestown for Philadelphia at 7.00 A. M. Bethlehem for Philadolpiiia at 4.00 P. 81. Fifth and Sixth Streets and Second and Third Streets Lim e of City Passenger cars run directly to and from the Depot. Union Line run within a short distance of the Depot. , Tickets must be procured at the Ticket Office, in order to secure tbe lowest rates of fare. ELLIS CLARK, Agent. Tickets sold and Baggage checked through toprlucl pal points, at Mann’s North Penn. Baggage Express office. No. 106 South Fifth stroet •yy EBTJERSEY EAiLBOADS COMMENCING MONPAY, April 4,1870. Pears Foot of Market street (Uppei B.OO*A. M„ Mail, for Bridgeton, Salem, Millville,Vine land, Bwedeehoro and all intermediate etationa. 11.45 A. M. Woodbury Accommodation. 8.15 P. M;. Mail, for Cape May, Millville, Vineland and way BtatwbS below Glassboro. 3.30 P.M., Passenger, for Bridgeton, Salem, Bwedea boro. and all intermediate stations. 5.46 P.M.., Woodbury, Glassboro and Clayton accom modatlon^ xTEA TB aiN YOB CAPE MAP. (Saturdays, only.) Leave Philadelphia, 8.00 A. M. LeaveCapeMay, 1.10 P. M. Freight train loaves Camden daily, at 13.00 o'clock, Freight received In Philadelphia at second covered' wharfhelow Walnut street. Freight delivered at No. 228 8. Delaware avenue. Commutation tickets, at reduced rates, between Phila delphia and j HWim,, Superintendent, April 1,1810. . .. TJHILADELPHIA AND ERIE RAIL- I BOAD-WINTEB TIME TABLE. ‘ On arid after MONDAY .Not. 11, 1809, the Trains on the Philadelphia and Erie Railroad will ran as follows; from Pennsylvania MjroadDfgot, Weat Philadelphia : Mail Train leaveß Philadelphia. 9.3* P. M. » “ «• WlUlameport PAD A. M.' “ “ arrives at Erie 8.30 P. M. Erie Express leaves Philadelphia.. ....11/40 A, 11. •V ,r “ William sport 9.00 P. M. “ arrives at Erie...... 101)0 A. M, Elmira Mail leavea Philadelphia; I*l.l, “ T > Williamsport- 0.00 P. M, ! •* “ arrives at Loch Haven.. ~...„ 7.80 P.M. 1 EASTWARD. Mail Train leaves Er 15...... 8.40 A. M. •• “ •» Williamsport 9i9S P.M,’ •* •*. arrives at Philadelphia..... - 6.20 A, H. Brie Exproeß leave* grip..,..,; LOOP. M, “ “ Williamsport. 3JM A. M •t “ arrives at Philadelphia 18.41 P.M, Elmira MallleoVoaLoeß Haven. 8.00 A. Me « « • “ Williamsport. 9.41 A. M.i •< " arrives at Phi1ade1phia........... 6.60 P. M, . •• arrives at Philadelphia...9ja A. M. Express east connects at Oorry. Mall east at Oorry.and Irvlnetan. Express! west at .lrvlneton with trains on Oil Creep And Allegheny Htver Ballroad. - “ AUraiD li, TTLIB, (Moral Hnpeilntends ! TRAVELERS' GUIDE F°?vn N FJL~ rOEK — TfIJE L OAMOBH A,.™ PHn.ADiii.PHrA: and P?i?S?i2S«? A^'E^.AI I OOM P A *H'’B LINES, from XSit&Xltiti?"' *«*•“* way ftom WAb *«S‘2 )i M R tl y i?S^i ndeil !i n l A,nb ®XiAecom.V. *2 a Aft§j»P f ilt-&n d ®3 wul Jowey dttf®*. Jfifl, '«00 A*A*P M j & ,v i J<l S aindo^ a 2 Dd Amboy B*pre», 109 *{* Si™*? t a^tuP oj etatlQna, A.M.,and2P.M.,forFrecMa. 3 B. 2 &°D B K^B o*' 0 *' Lons Brftncll and Point* <ra Ats % 4 M **• M.»for Trenton, A «» d A W A ‘Mv "M. ,23.50.4 JO,a, 7nnd lIJOP.M.. jOJ^ oro«ntown»yioronce,Burllnffton^eTerl|r®ndDe«■» 0 ro«ntown»yioronce,Burllnffton^eTerI|r®ndDe «■» v.ajiot £ lv6 "J l i e 4, Riverton, Palmyra odd Fish *S i3 ?r- M r' ° r * lv orton. ““ i i ‘I ;® P ■ M* Lina leave* from foot of Market street by npper ferry. v ‘ . Jijotn KansltJgton Depot: ■ ' A rr[a*, , A, . M 'J 7.30, sJdand B P. M. . for Trenton-and 4jJJ®A. «.,*# and® P. H.forMorrisTillaandTully ‘and 10AIS A. M.,2.30, B and B P, M. for Schenck’s and Eddington., . I . t , At/AOand 10.46 A.M.,3.30,4,8and 3 P. M., for Com wejli, TorresdalmHolmofiborg.Toeonr, Wlsstnoming, ' Bridcaburg and Frankford-, and BAO P.M; for Holm™. - bnrgAnd Intermediatoßtatlona. , . From West Philadelphia Depot na Connecting Ballwar At7,9AO and 11 A M., 1.20, 1,6.45, and 13 P* MV New York Express Line,via Jersoy City a At IIAO P.S. Emigrant Lin0...'„...„ ~IM At 7,9.30 end 11 A. 51 ,1.20,4,6.45, and 12 P.M.for Trentom At 7, flJfJand 11 A. MV. 4, 6.1 b and IS P. M., for Bristol. Atl3 P.M.( Nightlfor ilorrisyille.Tnllytown, Bchenck’g, Eddington. Cornwells, Torresdale, Holmesburg, Ta- Wisslnoming, Brldesbnrg and Frankford. TheSAOA. M.and and 1* P. MV Lines run daily. All others, Sundays excepted.: : -,- „ .For Lines leaning Kensington Depot, taka the pars on Third or Fifth streets, at Chestnut, at half an hour be fore departnre. The Cars of Market Street Ball gay ran direct to West Philadelphia Depot, Chestnut and Walnut within one sqnare. On Sundays, the Market Streetcars will run to connect with the A. M.,6.46 and 13 P. M. lines - BKLVIDEEE DELAWARE BAILBOAD LINES from Kensington Depot. , At7AOA.M., tor Niagara Falls, Buffalo, Dunkirk. Elmira, Ithaca, Owego, Bocheater, Binghampton Oswego, Syracuse, Great Bend, Montrose, WUkesbarre, Bcbooley’s Mountain, Ac. . At 7AO A. M. and 3.30. P. M. for Scranton, Stronds bufg. Wator flap, Belvldorev Easton, Lam bertville -Flemington, Atr. The 3.90 P. M. Lino con nects .direct with the train; leaving Easton for Hauch Chunk Allentown,BetMehem. Ac. AtH A. M. from west'Philadelphia Depot, and* P. M, - from Kensington Depot For Liunbertviue and interme diate Stations. . i CAMDENAND BURLINGTON CO,, AND PEMBEB TON ANDHIGHTBTOWN BAELBOADS,from Mar ket street Ferry (Upper Side.l, , ; At 7 and 10 A.M.,1,3.16,3.30,6 & 6AO on Thnra day and Saturday nights at 11.30 P.M for Merchants- - ville,Moofestown, Hartford, Masonville, Halnsport andMonnt Holly. At 7 A. M., 2.l6and6AoP. M. for Lomberton and Mod ford A ' it T and 10 A M., !, 8-30 &5 P. M., for Bmlthvi]le. EwansvillfsVincentown,Birmingham and Pemberton. AtlOA.Bl.for Lewis town, Wrightatowa, Oookstown, New Egypt and Horneratown. At 7 A. M.. 1 and 3-30 P.M. for Lowfstown, Wrights* town, Ctfotatown, New Egypt, Hornerstown, Cream Bulge, Imlayatown, Sharon ana Hightstown. Fifty pounds of Baggage only allowed each Passenger. Paßsengert are prohibited from taking anything as bag gage but their wearing apparel. All baggage over fifty pounds to be paid for extra. The Company lim ntheir responsibility for baggage'to Ono Dollar per potmd, and will not be liable for any amount beyond 8100, ex cent by special confracf." ' Tickets sold and Baggage checked direct through to Boston, Worcester, Springfield, Hartford, New Haven Providence, Newport, Albany, Troy, Saratoga, Utica, Home, Syracuse, Rochester, Buffalo, Niagara Falls ana Suspension Bridge. An addltiomrihTlcket Office is located at No. 823 Chest nut street, where tickets to Now York, and all impor tant points North and East, may be procured. Persons purchasing Tickets at this Officer, can bare their bag gage checked from residences or hotel to destination,by tTniua Transfer Baggage Express. Lines from New Y ork for Philadelphia win leave from foot Of Cortland stroet at 1.00 and 4:00 P. 31., via Jersey City and Camden. At6.6oand 10-A.M., 12.30,6,6 and 9- and at 12 Night, via Jersey City and West Phila delphia. /Frdm Pier No. I,N. River,'at 6.80 A. M. Accommoda tion and 2 P. M. Express/via Amboy-and Camden. A prill 1.1370. WM, H. QATZMER, Agent. PENNSYLVANIA CENTRAL RAIL BO AD.-After 8 P. M., SUNDAY, Novombor 14th, 1869. The trains of the Pennsylvania Central Bailroaa leave the Dejpot,at Thirty -first and Market streets,which la reached directly by the cars of the Market Street Pas senger Railway, the last car connecting with each train leaving Frobt and Market street thirty minntes before its departure. Those of the Chestnut and Walnut Streets Railway run within ode sonars of the Depot. Sleeping Car Tickets can be had on application at the Ticket Office, Northwest corner of Ninth and Obestnnt streets, and at the Depot. Agents of the Union Transfer Company will call for and deliver Baggage at the Depot. Orders lett at No. 901 Chestnut street, No. Hi Market street, will receive at* teution TBAIHB iBAYK DEPOT, VIZ.: Mail Train.*................. at 8.00 A, M. Pauli Acc0m....... -...at 10.30 A.M.,1.10, and 6.60 P. M. Fast Dine..... - - at 11.60 A. M. Erie Express..— at 11J0 A. M. Harrisburg Accom. ...................at 2.30 P. M. Lancaster Accom at 4.10 P. M. Purksburg Train...-......... -..at 6 A 0 p. M. Cincinnati Express. ....... -...-..... at 8.00 P.M. Erie Mail and Pittsburgh Express.--...-. ...at 9.46 P. M. Accommodation.....-..-...-. at 12.11 A M. Pacific Express.——— —at 12.00 night Erie Mail leaves daily, except Sunday, running_on Saturday night to Williamsport only. On Sunday night passengers will leave Philadelphia at 8 o’clock. - Pacific Express . leave® daily. Cincinnati Ex press daily, except Saturday.. All other trains daily, except Sunday. - • ' - , . .. The Western Accommodation Train runs daily, except Sunday. For this train. tickets must bo procured and baggage delivered by 6.00 P. M.,at 126 M&rxetstreet. * * TRAINS ARRIVE AT DEPOT, VIZ : Cincinnati Express— at 3.10 A. M. Philadelphia Expresa——.— -at 6 JO A. M, Erie Mafl-... ...... i at 6JO A. M. Paoli Accommodation at 8 JO A. M. and 3.40 k 6J5 P. M Parkftburg Train— Faet Line...—.— Lancaster Train—.—. Erie Express.. Southern Express....... Lock Haven and Elmira Express.. Pacific Express.—.—. — Harrisburg Accommodation...—..—. For further Information, apply to JOHN F. VAHIiEEB, Jr., Ticket Agent, SOI Chestnut street. . __ FRANCIS FUNK, Ticket Agent, llflMarket Btreet. SAMUEL H. WALLACE, Ticket Agent at the Depot, fVTho Pennsylvania Railroad Company will not assume any risk for Baggago, except for wiring apparel, and limit their responsibility to One Hundred Dollars in value. All Baggage exceeding that amount in value will be at the risk or the owner, unless taken by special con* tract. A. J. CASSATT, ' General Superintendent. Altoona, Fa. PHILADELPHIA; WIEMINQTOH and J 7 BALTIMORE RAILROAD-TIME TABLE. Com mencing MONDAY, Apri 4th, 1876. Trains wilUloave >pot, corner Broad and Washington avenue, as fol ow-s' WAY MAIL TRAIN at 8.80 A; M. (Sunday* exceptal), for Baltimore, stopping at all Regular Stations. Cd!i necting with Delaware Bftilroad Lino at Clayton with Smyrna Branch Railroad and Maryland and Delaware- R.lt.,atHarrington with Junction and Breahwaterß.B., at Sen ford with Dorchester and Delaware Railroad, at Delmar with Eastern Shore Bdprpad and at Salisbury with Wicomica and FocombkeSafiroad. EXPRESS TRAIN at 12/10 &I. (Sundays excepted *. far Baltimore and Washington,stopping at Wilmingioa, Perryville and Havre de Grace. Connects at Wilming ton with train for New Castle. EXPRESS TRAIN at 4.66 P. M.( Sundays excepted), for Baltimore and Washington, stepping at Chester, Thnrlow, LlnwoOd, Claymont, Wilmington, Newport, Stanton, Newark, Elk ton, North East, Charlestown, Perryville, Havre de Grace, Aberdeen, Perryman’s, Edgcwood, Magnolia, Chase’s and Stemmer’s Bun. NIGHT EXPRESS at 11.30 P. H. (daily 1 for Baltimore and Washington, stopping at Chester, Lin wood, ClaymontfWilmington, Newark, Elkton, North East, Perryville, Havre de Grace, Perryman’s ana Mag nolia. Passengers for Fortress Monroe and Norfolk will take the 12.00 M. Train. WILMINGTON TRAlNS.—Stopping at all Stations between Philadelphia and Wilmington. Leavo PHILADELPHIA at 11.00 A. M..2.90,0.6b and 7.00P.M. Theo.OOP.M. train connects with Delaware Railroad for nnmngtoD and Intermediate stations. Leave WILMINGTONO.46 and 8.10 A. M., 2.00, 4.00and 7.15 P.M., The 8,10-A. M. train will not stop between Chester and Philadelphia. The 7.16 P. M. train fVom Wilmington runs daily;allotherAccommodation Trains Sundays excepted. * Trains leaving WILMINGTON at 6.46 A. M. and 4.00: P. M. will connect at Lamokln Junction with the 7.00 . A. and 4 .SO P. M. trains for Baltimore Central B. B. ' From BALTIMORE to PHILADELPHIA.—Leaves Baltimore 7.25 A.M., Way Mail. 9.40 A.M.jExpress. 2.36 P. M.j.Express. 7.25 p. M„ Express, i' SUNDAY TRAIN FROM QALTIMOkE.-Leaves BALTIMORE at 7 .25 P. M. Stopping at Magnolia, Per-! rymku’s, Aberde6n,HaYre-dQ-Grace,Perryvulq,oharles- ‘ town, North-East, Elkton, Newark, Stanton, Newport, Wilmington, Claymont, Linwood and Chester. Through tickets to all points West, South, and South west may be procured at the ticket office, &28 Chestnut street, under Continental Hotel, wheroalso State Booms nnd Berths In Sleeping Gars can bo secured during the, lay. Persons purchasing tickots at this offico can nave baggage checked at their by the Union Trans for Company. H. F, KENNEY, Sup’t. pHITVABEKPHrA : AND BALTIMORE I OENTBAL nAIT.ROAB. CHANGE OF HOURS, On and after MONDAY, April 4,1670, trains will run as follows ; ‘ LEAVE PHILADELPHIA, from depot ef F.W.A B. K. R.i'oorner Broad street and Washington avenue, For PORT DEPOSIT, at 7A, M. and 4.391*. M. For OXFORD, at 7 A. M.,4,36 P. M..and 7 P. M. For CHADD’B FORD AND CHESTER CREEK It.; It., at 7 A.M.V 10 A. M.,2.30 P.M.,4,30 P.M.,and7; P; Mi, •• . • . 1 •■••••- Train leaving Philadelphia at 7 A. M. connects Port Deposit,with train for Baltimore Trains leaving Philadelphia at 10 A. M. and 4.36 P. M..le»vinjfOx)ordnt6J)sA.M I ,and leaving Port De posit at 926A.M., connect at Obadd’s Fora Junction with the Wilmington and Reading Railroad. TRAINS FOR PHILADELPHIA leave Port Deposit nt 9.25 A. M. and 4,28 P.M. on arrival'of trams from Baltimore * : OXFUBH.ot6.OS A. M., 10.35 A. M. and 5.30 P. M. „ CHADH’B FORD *17.23 A. M., 12.00 M., 1.30 P. M., 4.45 F, At. and 6,43 P.M. . , , , Passengers are allowed to take wearing apparol only as baggage, ai}d th« Company will not bo responsible far an amount exceeding one hundred dollars, unless a special contraot la rnado for tho some. . . , HENRY WOOD, General Superintendent. 'COAST FREIGHT LINE, VIA NORTH i? PENNSYLVANIA BAILBOAD. to WiUtwbarre, Mahanpy City. Mount Carmel. Centralis, and all points on LenighYaUey Ballroad andlts branches. . By new arrangements, perfected this day, this road is enabled to give increased dospateh to nterpnandisooon- Bi/rned to the above-named points. ‘ Good. delivered at BMotaS PjHl.|i|rin' njmh Willtoshanei'Mddnt Carmel. MahaAby City, and the other stations In Hahsnoy and WyWPlngTiSCTShOfewA.^therooojg^ngday^ AMJL) t-mLAjiw, PHIAIiAILnOAD COMPANY, on and after HONDA Y, April*, WO, trains will loam the Depot, THIKT Y-FIB IT and CHESTNUT, as fol lows: . - „ , FROM PHILADELPHIA. 6.« A. M. for KO. Junction stops at all stations. . '•?S C.V*? - for West Chester, stops at all stations west of Medla(except Qraemvood), connecting at 15. 0. Jnne tianfor Oilord. Kenn^i, Port Deposit,and all stations on too P.aiid B.G.R. B. 9.40 A, M. for West Chester stops at all stations. <3. Junction stops at nil stations. 2.30 P.M.for Wost Chester stopsatallstatlons. 4.16 Pi Ms for B. C. Junction stops at all stations. 4.4 b West Chester stops at all stations west of Mcdta (except GreoDWood), connecting at B, 0, June* tfou for Oxford.Kenhett,Port Deposit,and all stations ontbwP, dfB.C.R.R. . . 6.30 P. M< for B. O.'Junction. , train commences running on r and after Juno Ist, 1670, stopping at all stations. * ■ ' 6.05 P-. M. for West Chester stops at all stations. 11.30 P.M. for West Chester stops at all stations* FOR PHILADELPHIA. 6.26 A. M. from B. C. Junction-stops at all stations. 6.30 A,M,from West Chester stops at all stations. 7.4(1 A. M. Irojn West Chester stops at all stations bo tween W.C. and Medla(oxcopt GreonwoodLconnoct wg at B. C. Junction for Oxford, Kean6tt, PortDo posit, and all stations on the P.-& B. 0. Bi R. BJ6 ArM. from B; O. Junction stops at all stations, 10.00 A.M, from West Chester stops at all stations, 1.06 P. M. from B. C. .1 unction stops at all stations.} LSOP.M. from Westchester stops at all stations.' 4.*>6F. M.from Wost Chester stops at.hll sOvtions, con necting nt 8,0 JuncMon for Oxford, Kennott, Port . Beposit, and nil stations on tin P. & B. O. B. R. 0.66 P. M.from West Chester stops at all stations, Con* , "ff& Junction with P. &B. C. B. R. ; 9.Q01 . M. from B; C. Junction. This train commences running on and after June Ist, 1870, stopping at all ’ stations. " v . ' - • ON SUNDAYS. 8.05 A. M. for West Chester stops at all stationSiConnsot- It. R. 2s)C or Chester stops at all stations. ?*52 *^ rom *syest Chester stops at all stations., 4.6QP,M,froni WestOhes'er stops at aR stations, con necting at B. C. Junction with P. 41J.G. B. It. ' W. C. WHEELER, Superintendent, Philadelphia, Germantown _ AND noebistown bailboab time ta- S} i !v m ’^ n S D^ afterMonday, Nov.22d, 1869, and until further notice: L.hjhDhU^OTOTjI.UA.M.,I. 8.W,5H,4.08,4.36,8,8X,6,6)4,7,8,9.21^10,11,13 P.M. ; Leave Germantown—6.6,6£ 7*4.8, 8.», 9,10,10 JO. 11A 2,3,3 80,134,6 6)4, LsS, 7A, i, 10,11, p’.m ’ * The 8.20 down-train, and t£o 334 and 634 npVrainS, wOl not stop on the Germantown Branch. ON SUNDAYS. „£ c £ T 0 A M.,2, 4.08 mlnnt»s,7and lv/4 r • 81, leave Gernrantovm—B.l6 A. M.: 1,8.8 a«d «4 P. M. CHESTNUT HILB RaWboAD. ' end'llp P M ad ° Ilkl “~ 5 ’ 8 > A - M -i a < W.M.LM# Leave Chestnut Hill—7 JO minutes, 8,9 JO. and 11 JO A M.; 1.40,3.50,6.40, 6.40,8.40 and 10JO P, M. ’ . ’ , ’ .0* SUNDAYS. • leave Philadelphia—9.lBminutes A. M • 2 and 7P. M. simjnoSrp 1^ « Hlll-7AO minutes A. M.; 12.40,6.40 and FOB CONBHOHOCKEN AND NOBBISTOWN: Leave Philadelphia—6.734,9, 11j06, A.M.: 1)4,3,4, 4)4, 6)4,6.16,8.06,10.08 and 1134 P.M. * ’’ ’ "*> Leave N0rri5t0wn—6.40,6.26,7,734, 8.80,11 A.M.: 1)4. 3,4)4,6.18,8 and 9)4 P.M. ’ ’ ’ fS- Tho 7% A.M. Trains from Norristown will not stop at Mogee’s, Potts’ Landing, Domino or Schar’s Lane. Tbe4P. M. Train from Philadelphia will stoponlv at School Lone,Maiui^nnk^iuadConBhohock«n. Leave Philadelphia—9 A. M.: 2)6,4 and 7.15 P. ii. Leave Norristown—7 A. M.;i,6)6and9 P M, FOBMANAfUNK. Leave Philadelphia-6,7)4.9,11.06 A.M.; 1)4, 3, *,4)4 6)4,6.18,8.06,10.06and 11)4 P.M. Leave Manayunk-6.10,6.85,7)4,8.10,9.20,11)4 A. M.: 3)4,6,634.6.30 and 10 P.M. ’ ON SUNDAYS, Leave Philadelphia—9 A. M.; 2)4,4 and 7.15 P. M, Leavehlanayunk—7)4 A. M.: l>i,6and9)4P.M. PLYMOUTH B. R. Leave Philadelphia, 7>4 A. M., 4H P. M. Leave Plymouth, A, M.,4J£«P. M. W. 8. WILSON, General Superintendent, . Depot, Ninth aud Green streets. CAMDEN AND ATLANTIC RAILROAD. On and after Friday, April 1,1670, trajnstwiU leave Vine Btrt-ot Ferry as follows : Moil and Freight 9.00 A. M. AtlanticAcooinmndation * 3.-15 P. M. Atco Accommodation..... 10.16 A. M. and 6.30 P.M. ‘ RETURNING LEAVE ATLANTIC: Mail and Freight....; 1.48 P. M. Atlantic Accommodation 6.05 A.M. Junction Accommodation from Atco, 0.22 A.M. and 12.10,N00n." . Barfdonfield trains leavo Vine Street Ferry, 10.15 A.M and 2.60 P.M.. LeaveHaddonfield,-1.00 aml3Js P. M. EXTRA TRAIN FOR ATLANTIC CITY. (WEDNESDAYS AND SATURDAYS ONLY.) An Extra Train will rnn every-Wednesday and Satnr day in advance of the Mail Train- Leaving Philadelphia at... - Leaving A tldntfcOitv at, _ Allowing nearly FIVK HOURS on the Reach. The Union Transfer Company. No. 823 Chestnut street (Continental Hotel), will call for and check baggage to destination. Tickets, also, on sale CORN EXCHANGE FLOUR MILLS, 2136 Market Street. Superior Family and Bakers' Flour, manufactured by K. V. MAOHJBTTE, «Jr. Every Baff or Barrel warranted. mb3o wfmtlS USE KITCHES~CRYBXAL soap For Cleaniug Paint. at 9.10 A. M, - at 9.40 A.M .—at 12.56 P.M, .... at 12.65 P.M, at 7.00 P.M, at 7.00P.M. -at 4 A 5 P.M, ...at9 M P.M, PRICE REDUCED. „ ‘ ALL GROCERS SELL IT. Nothing Genuine but KITCHEN CR YSTAL SOAP. SHERRYWINE.— A VERY SUPERIOR and pure Spanish Sherry Wine at only $3 00 por gallon, at COUSTY'S East End Grocery, No. lid South ocond street, Chestnut. CL A RETS.—EXTRA QUALITY TABLE Clarets, at $4. $5, $6 and $7 por case of dozen bot tle#—of recent importation—in store and for sale at; COUSTY’S East End Grocory, No. lid South Seoond street, below Chestnut. CALIFORNIA .SALMON.—FRESH Salmon from California; a very cholco article ; for sale at COUSTY'S East End llB Bouth Second street, below Chestnut. SEA" MOSS FARINE—A NEW ARTICLE; for food, very choice and delirious,- at COUBTY’B East End Grocery, No. 118 South Second street, below Chestnut. i Mutton .H4MB.-a very ghoice . articlecfl &rif?l Mutton, equal to tho neat Uriel' beof, for sale aijOQuSXY'S East End Grocery, No. 113 South Second tfjTjwv/jbTww Chestiiut. TUST liEfwMo AND IN STORE 1,000 O cases of Cmi&Vflgiiß, sparkling Catawba and Cali fornin'Wines, Port,Madeira, Sherry, Jamaioa and Santa Cruz Bum., fino old Brandies and Whiskies, Wholesale and Retail. £>. J. JORDAN, 220 Pear street, Below Third and Walnut streets, and above Dock street. - de7 tf TORDAN’S celebrated p ure tonic, O Ale fot Invalids, family use, etc. Tho subscriber is now furnished with his full Winter, supply of bis highly nutritious and woll-known hover-' age. Its wido-Bpread and increasing oso,by order of: physicians, for invalids, use of families, Ac., commend it 1 ro tho attention of nil consumers who want a strictly pure article ; prepared from tho best materials, and put up in the most careful manner for borne use or transpor tation. Orders by mail or otherwise prompUg supplied. No. 220 Pear street, de7 below Third and Walnut streets. , HON FENCE The undersigned are prepared to exeento ordore for ' ENGLISH IRON FENCE, of the best make. The most sightly and the most economical fence that can be used. .. ■ ! Specimen panels of various styleß of this fence may be' <een at our office MERRICK & SONS, ; SOUTHWARK FOUNDRY. 430 WASHINGTON Avenue, Phitodolphla, „ MANUFACTURE j STEAM ENGINES—High and Low Pressure, Horlaoc 1 tnl, vortical, Beam, (Vacillating, Blast and Oornlal! Pumping, ' HOlLEBb—Cylinder, Flue, Tubular ,&o. STEAM HAMMERS—Nasmyth and Davy styles, and oi; all Bines. CABTINGS-Loam, Dry and Green Sand, Brass, An. j ROOFS—Iron Frames, Tor covering with Slate or Iron' TANKS—Of Oast'or Wrought Iron,for reflneries,water- GAS'mACHINEBF—Such os Retorts, Benoit. Castings? Holders and Frames, Purifiers, Coke and Charcoal Barrows, Valves, Governors, &o. . i SUGAB MACH INK BY—Such as Vacuum: Pans and Pumps, Defecators, Bone Black Filters, Burners, Washers and Elevators, Rag Filters, Sugar and Bon» Blaek Cars, Ac. > 1 Sole manufacturers of the foUowlng specialties: In Philadelphia and vicinity,of WUliwn Wright's Patent Variable Cut-off Steam Engine, In the United Sfates, of Weston’s Patent Self-center lug and Self-balancing Centrifugal Sugar-draining Ma chine. ; ilaes A Barton’s Improvement on AsplnwOll A Woolsoy’v Centrifugal. ~ . ■'■■■ i Hartol’e Patent Wrought-Iron BetortLld, Utrahan’a Brill Grinding Rest. . . ■ Contractors for the design, erection and llttlng np of Be* finerlesfor working Sugar or Molasses. j COPPER 'AND YELLOW METAL Bneathlng, Brasler’a Copper Nalls, Bolts and Ingot Conner; constantly an hand-and for sale by HKNBY WINBOB A CO.. No. 833 South Wharves. V Chalk,Alio?- > Applytp f’QFffILMANAOO., f CRAVEJLEKS’ SCUMS' D.H.MUNDY, Agent, GROCERIES, tiIQUOHJS, AG. VSE KITCHEN CRYSTAL SOAP For Cltaning all Metals. USE KITCHEN CRYSTAL SOAP For Cleaning all Wood Work. USE KITCHEN CRYSTAL SOAP For all Household Cleaning. ’ EASTMAN & BROOKE, Proprietors, 431 North Third Street, Philadelphia, M A CHIN JURY«IKON, &C. YARNALL & TRIMBLE, 147 South Front street. FOR NEW YORK, Via Delaware and Raritan Canal. -EXPRESS- STEAMBOAT COMPACT. Tho Steam Propeilora of tha lino will commanco loading on tho Bth leaving Daily aa nsnal. , THROtGH IN TWENtfr-FMJHHOOBS. Goodfl forwarded by a 1 tho Linen going ont of New York, North, Kaat or Went, free of commlaaion, Freights received at low rates. >, : WM. P. CLYDE <t CO., Agents, .... . , ~ 12 South Delaware Avonuo. JAB. HAND, Agent, 119 Wall Streot, Now York. . ’l ■ mht-tf pHJILAUJSIrRHJA. RICHMOND AND L NORFOLK STEAMSHIP LINE. THROUGH FREIGHT AIR LINE TO THE BOOTH ... W£BT, INCREASED FACILITIES AND REDUCED BATES • pyjj Is7o STEAMERS LEAVE EVERY ‘WEDNESDAY and BATUHDA Y,at 12 o’olk, Noon, from FIRST WHARF, above MARKET Streot. BBTDRNINO LEAVE RICHMOND MONDAYS and THURSDAYS, and NORFOLK TUESDAYS and a A i Unit A ia, _ Bills of Lading signed after 12 o'clock on Sailing Day. “ THROUGH BATES to all points In North and Sonth Carolina via Beaboard Air-Lino Railroad, connecting at Portsmouth, and to Lynchburg, Va., Tennessee and the West via Virgtntn and Tennessee Air-Line and Rloh mond and Danville Railroad. 1 Freight HA NDLED BDT ONCE .and taken at LOWER BATES THAN ANY OTHER LINE. No charge for commission, drayage, dr any onenadfbr transfer. . ' ■ ■ Steomshf pa Insure at lowest rates. ■' Freight received DAILY. - Stato-room accommodations for passengers. „ . „ WILLlAftf p. CLYDE ft 00/ No. 12 South Wharves and Pier No. 1 North Wharves,' W atßichmond and City Point. T. P. CROWELL A CO,, Aeonts at Norfolk FOB BOSTON.—BT!£AAIBHJLP NIN® DIBEOT. SAILING FROM EACH PORT EVEB* Wednesday and Saturday* . ; 8 FROM PINE STREET WHARF, PHILADELPHIA. _ AND LONG WHARF. BOSTON. From Philadelphia From Boston; „ 10 A.M. ■ : 3PM. ; ; NORMAN,Saturday ,Ap’jl 2 ROMAN,Saturday, Ap’il‘2 ARIES, Wednesday “ 6 SAXON,’Wednesday, •* 6 ROMAN,Saturday, “ 9 NORMAN, Saturday,•• ;• 9 SAXON, Wednesday “ 13 ABIES, .Wednesday, “ 13 NORMAN, Saturday," 16 ROMAN.Saturday, “ 16 ABIES, Wednesday, “ 20 SAXON, Wednesday, « 20 . ROMAN, Saturday, “ 23 NORMAN, Saturday “ 23 SAXON, Wednesday “ 27 ARlES,Wednesday, “ 27 KOBMAN,Wodnesefay,“ 30 ROMAN, Saturday, “ 30 These Steamships a all punctually. Freight received every day, . / .. Freight forwarded to all points in New England. , ap F p^to Fre,ght ° r P lMT^sSi§S o ATo W ! tt ‘ ,on ■ , ' 838 South Delaware avenue’. J3HIL AD ELPHIA AND SOTJTHBRH .MAIL STEAMSHIP COMPANY’S REGULAR INKS FROM QUEEN STREETWnABF. Tho ACHILLES wfli sail for NEW: ORLEANS, direct. Saturday, April 23, at 8 A. M. « T a h ,?a Y A Zo ° flail from NEW ORLEANS, via HAVANA,'on Wednesday, April 20. Tho CENTIPEDE will sail for SAVANNAH on Saturday, April 23, at Bo’clock A. M, Tho WYOMING will sail from SAVANNAH OR Saturday, April 23. The PIONEER will sail for WILMINGTON, N.O.tOn Thursday, April 21, at 6 A. M. Through bills of lading signed, and passage tloketa sold to all points South and West. BILLS of LADING SIGNED at QUEEN ST, WHARF, For freight orpassage, apply to WILLIAM L. JAMES, General Agent, . 130 Sotiih Third street/ ATKW EXPRESS LINK TO ALEXAIT JJI drla, Georgetown and Washington, D. 0., via Ohes- and Delaware Canal, with connections at Alex* andria from the roost direct route for Lynchburg, Bris tol,HnoxviUe, Nashville, Dalton and the Southwest, Steamers leave rogUlarly from the drat wharf a dot Market street, every Saturday at noon. Freight received daily. . WM.P. CLYDE AGO., No. 12 South Wharves and Pier 1 North Wharves, HYDE & TYLER, Agents at Georgetown. M.ELDBIDOB ft CO., Agente at Alexandria. Va . Delaware and Chesapeake STEAM TOW-BOAT £OMPANY t -Bargc* towed between Philadelphia, Baltimore, Havrodo Grace, Del aware City and intermediate poiutfl. WM. P. CLYDE A CO., A«renta; Capt. JOHN LAUGHLIN, Sup't Office,: 12 South Wharves, Phila delphia. ■ • - • aplltf j? For new York, via Delaware AND RARITAN CANAL. BWIFTBURE TRANSPORTATION COMPANY, DISPATCH ANDSWIFTSITRB LINES, . Leaving daily at 12nnd5 P. M. . The steam propellers of this Company will comzdence loading on the Bth of March. Through in twenty-fourhonrs. Goods forwarded to any point free of commissions. Freights taken on accommodating terms. Apply to WM. M. BAIRD & CO. T Agents, ron4-tf , • . 132 South Delawaro avenue,, _ .8.00 A.M. ..3.50 P. M MAULE, BROTHER A CO., 2500 South Street. IQ7A PATTERN MAKERB. IQ7A 10 (V. patternmakers. 10 (lr. I CHOICE SELECTION MIOHIGAN 0 CORK • PINE FOB PATTERNS,, I Q7A SPRUCE AND HEMLOCK. IQ7A 10 4V. SPRUCE AND HEMLOCK. 10 4V. LARGE STOCK. 1 Q7A FLORIDA FLOORING. 1 Q<Yfl 10 (V. FLORIDA FLOORING. 104 V. CAROLINA FLOORING, VIRGINIA FLOORING. DELAWARE FLOORING 1 ASH FLOORING. WALNUT FLOORING. 1 Q7A FLORIDA STEP BO ARDS. 1 Q7A 10 4V. FLORIDA STEP BOARDS. 104 Vo - RAIL PLANK. RAIL PLANK. lOTA WALNUT BOARDS ANDIQiYA V WALNUT BO AMS AND PLANK. * WALNUT BOARDS. WALNUT PLANK. ASSORTED FOB i CABINET MAKEBB, BUILDERS, AO, IQ7A UNDERTAKERS’ IQ7A 104 V. LUMBEB. 104 V. UNDERTAKERS’ LUMBER., BED CEDAR. WALNUT AND PINK. IQ7A SEASONED POPLAR. IQ7A 10IV. seasoned Cherry. 10 4 V. ASH. WHITE OAK PLANK AND BOARDS. HICKORY. l Q 7 A CAROLINA SCANTLING. 1 Q7A 104 V. CAROLINA H. T. SILLS. 104 V. NORWAY SCANTLING. IQ7A CEDAR SHINGLES. IQ7A 104 V. CEDAR SHINGLES. 104 V. CYPRESS BHINGLES. LARGE ASSORTMENT. BALE LOW. IQ7A PLASTERING LATH. IQ7A 10 4 V. PLASTERING LATH. lO 4 V. MAULEBBOTHEK A CO.. SOUTH STREET. ATELLOW PINE LUMBER.—ORDERS X for cargoes of every description Sawed Lumber exe cuted at snort notice—uuultty subject to inspeetion Apply to BDW. H. ROWLEY-18 South Wharves. mam* THIRTY YEARS' ACTIVE PRAO ®B«ETI(!K.-Dr. FINE, Np. 219 Vine street, below Third, Inserts.tho handsomest Teeth In the city, at priei-B to suit all. Teeth Plngged, Teeth Repaired, Exchanged, or Remodelled to suit. Gas and Ether. No pain in extracting. Office hours,B tofi. mh2d-s,m,tuiini3 OPAL VEXTAIiLLitA. A StJPJSRXOJB artielofor cleaning the Teeth,destroying animalcule which infest them, giving tone to the gums, »n 4 leaving a feeling, of fragrance and perfect cleanliness in the month. It may be used daily, and will be found to strengthen weak and bleeding gums, whilo the aroma and detersiveneaa will recommend it to every one. Be ing composed with the assistance of the Dentist, Physi cians and Microacopiat, it is confidently offered as a reliable |ubstitnte for the uncertain washes formerly m V< Sminetit Dentists, acqnaiuted with the constituents of the Dentallina, advocate its use; it contains uothihg to prevent It* m U re.tr^ned,en if loju,ent. MW. «jlr bj Broad and streets, rally, and D. L. Stackhouse, RobertO. Davis, Goo. C. Bovvor, OUus. Shivers, 8. M. McColin, 8. 0. Bunting*; Ohaa.H. Eherle, James N. Marks, E. Brlnghurst A 00., Dyott A Co., IH. 0. Blair’s 8ons« Wyeth A Bro. ’ For sale by Draggistß genei Fred. Browne, Hass&rd A Co,. 0. K.Keeny, Isaac H. Kay, C. H. Needles, T. J. Husband, Ambrose Smith, Edward Parrish, Wm.B. Webb, James L. Biapnam, Hnghes A Combe, Henry A. Bower. The wonders aucom pushed through tho agency of the genuine Cod-Liver (,n in Scrofula, Bronchitis, Chronic Cough, Asthma, anil oven Consumption,almost surpass hollof. Iti John C Bjikkr & Co.’s “Pure Medicinal Cdil-Llyer OilV— each Bottle of which is accompanied by medical guaran tees of the highest order—the piibliehavo tin,' host brand of the preparation known to the sclenuflc world. JOHN 0. BAKEK & CO., No. 713 Market street. Phila delphia. Penn. -i . V. s , . *y For sale by alj di ugglste, . v fe7 US IN STRU CT IONS: CW HORSEMANSHIP—THE PHIXA PJSLPHIA RIDING SCHOOL, No. .laid Mar kot eircct, la open daily for ‘Ladies and Guitleiuen. It Js tho largest, beat lighted and 1 heated establishment la the city. The honea, toe thoroughly broken for the nnißt timid. An AttenihoQ Olasa for Yonng Ladies at biidirg school, Monday, Wednesday and Fridays, and an ‘Evening Class for Gentleman. Horn* thoroughly trained for tbeiaddle. Horses taken to livery Hand some carriages to hlro.„ Storage Proprietor* SHIPPERS* GUIDE. DENTISTRY, MEDICAL
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers