• IFrom Good Words, for My.) SONGS WITH REFRAINS. ET JEAN I. 7 llnte,r is4)nir. , s • Came the dread Archer np yonder)awn (Vight is the time for the old to die), Bnt woe for au arrow that smote the lawn, When the hind that was sihk unscathed went by. Father lay moaning,'" Her`fault was sore (Night is the time when the old must die), Net, ah to bless her, my child, once more, For heart is failing: the end is nigh." "Daughter, my daughter , my girl," I cried: "(Night is the time for the old to die), Woe for the wish if till morn ye hide"— • Dark was the Welkin . and wild the sky. - Heavily plunged from the roof the snow= (Night is the time when the ohlwill die.) She answered, " hly mother, 'tis well, Igo" Sparkled the north: star, the wrack flew high. First at his bead, and last at his feet - (Night is•the time when the old should die), Kneeling 1 watched till his soul did fleet, None else that loved lath, none else were nigh. Lwe.pt in the night - as the desolate weep; (Night is the time for the old to die). Comutli my daugh er ? the drifts are deep, Across the cold hollows how white they-lie I sought her afar through the spectral trees (Night is the time when the old must die), The fells wi=re all muiled;the Hoods did freeze, And a wrathful moon hung red in the sky. By:night - I fonnd - her where tient waves steal - (Night is the time when the old should die). But sbe lay stiff by the locked mill-wheel, And the old stars lived in their homes on high. 11.---A Gleaning Song. 'Whither away thou little carelessrover? (Kind Roger's true) WhiPier away across yon bents mid el - o*er, -Wet, wet with dew?" " Roger here, Roger there— Roger-o,le sighed, Yet let me gleam among the wheat, Nor sit kind Rodger's bride." " What wilt thou do when all the gleaning's ende d, "hat wi]t thou do? The cold will come, and fog and frost-work blended (Kind Roger's true)." ' Meet and rain, cloud and storm, When they cease to frown I'll bind me primrose bunches sweet, And ery tfieni up the towu." • " What - if af last thy careless heart awaking This day thou rue?" "I'll cry my flowers, and thi,uk for all its breaking, • Rind Roger's true; Roger here, Roger there, o,my true love sighed, Sig once, once .more, I'll stay my feet Ard - re - st lihrd R ogtTr's liri-de:" GREAT DEN AND THEIR HABITS. We'examine for a few moments " The Re creations of a Recluse," just published anony mously .at Bentley's,. in London.. Taking up the chapter which treats of the likeness or un likeness of an author to book, we .begin with . an ObserVation froM Lord Lytton,. who seems to be a great favorite with the Recluse, to the effect that people are generally like their hooka. The Recluse, however; thinks that,- shrewd men are often mistalen, and - that Mon taigne was probably wrong in assuming that Erasmus would. talk epigrams to his hostess. Walton, again, trills us that Hooker did not come up to the. expectations ,of his visitors; lzaakote are reminded, says that Hooker looked like "an absurd harmless man • • • of so mild and humble a nature that his poor parish clerk and he did never talk but with both - their hats on and both off at the same time." Similar statements are made about Kant, Young of the _Night Thoughts, Rowe and La Fontaine; and the 11'f:weenies is quoted for the re mark how Sandy M'Collop, who painted the " Torture of the Covenanters," the "Young Duke of Rotbsay Starving in Prison," and similar lively subjects, was "one of the most jovial souls alive." Christopher North's daugh ter thought thatßaeburn's portrait of her father in =his- youth looked far too bland -and--mild;. Washington Irving made a similar remark about Giflard ; and Buy, Constable, Words worth, Handel. Leigh Hunt, Turner, Byron, and Dr. Charming all disappointed various ob servers. After a short excursion to France, with remarks about Voltaire's su,ccess in trage dies, Racine's personal mildness in - spite of his literary irritability, De Maistre's personal plea santness, and so on, interspersed with two or three Englishmen, we work back to tale _Yew conies, and are reminded that MiSs Ethel New come watched an author with great curiosity to see whether he ate and drank like other peop e. Then we are told that the poet Mason was sullen and reserved—a fact which is in no way surprising— that Ilayley was irritable, and that Rogers was ampsingly described by Mrs. Trench; - in-an - imaginary - review of the - year 1920, as exhibiting an " excess of meekness" in his daily life, the reviewer being supposed to judge entirely from his writings. Sainte-Beuve thinks that Rabelais would have disappointed people, who expected to find in him a mere jo vial buffoon. Godwin, of the Political Justice and Caleb Williams reputation, was singularly tranquil, and showed self-restrained . dignity of manners. Miss Braddon declares, in one of her novels that Mr. Sigismund Smith, a sensation writer for the masses, was a very mild young man in ordinary life. Dr. Chalmers declared, and we will leave to some of our readers to judge of the accuracy of the remark, that Mr. Carlyle's talk is not at all Carlylist. Perches found the conversation of Jean Paul decidedly soporific. Goldsmith is, of course, brought out once more as talking like poor Poll. Some body thought Burns " a silly chiel ;" and it is disputed by some wise people whether Walter Scott did or did not satisfy their preconceived impressions. Finally, Hood, though a comic writer, appears to have been constitutionally nidancholy. On the-general-subject of Boswellistn ' or in quiry into the petty habits of celebrated mem it is curious; says the Put/ Mull GaZel tc, how little,we know of the personal history of some of 'Our greatest men of letters. We are not certain of the year in which Chaucer was burn, nor do we know the university at which he studied. Shakespeare's biographers amuse or fatigue their readers with conjectures, and have only a few barren facts with which to supple ment their fancie - s. About Spenser we know' evedieSs, and the latest editor of his works, in a sketch of 'the poet's life, acknowledges the meagreness of his facts by writing, " His poems are his best. biography. In the sketch of his life to be given here his poems shall be our one great authority." Milton, a subliMe ego tist, tells us almost as much * abont, himself as his biographers are able to collect from extraneous sources. Of Bishop Jeremy Taylor, Milton's • contemporary, his equal in' eloquence and learning, and the greatest pulpit orator _England has produced, ourldowledge is so limited that it is, even a qnestiow whella!r, like the _poet, he married three' wives, or contented himself with two; whieh 'reminds us that it is also open to ques tion whether. Ben Jonson married a second time; or whether Fletcher, twin dramatist to Beatutiont, married at all. Who has not read that, enjoyable and inimitable book, the "Anat .omy, of , Melancholy?" •let of Burton little morefis related than that he resided cbietly at Oxford, was an indefatigable student, and -foretold his own decease; which happened so exactly at the time predicted that, ac cording.,to Anthony Wood, some ~of - the students said "that rather than theke should be a mistake il': the calculation; he Sent' bp his soul •to heaven throngh a.slip alma: his liec)c." A:few years befere .Burton's ;death waii - boin'Mtie of .the nattatikitable Men' let; tersAliat England pas produced. Jiiat as Bea Johnson held a higher rank than ShakeSpeare _among‘his companions ' ..so„ was Dryden . es • leerned inhiss.own s daylar more highly. than - Yet.it is how little, even Diyden's biography, belongs strictly to the re gion of fact. Ile is said to have done this, it is conjectured that he did that; it is probable that he acted in such or such a manner. This is the mode of writing adopted, and no doubt wisely adopted,by the biographers of "glorious John;'.?,and M i Mir. Christie,. n_ his, admirable "Globe_, ;Edition " just published, observes that, in Spite of all research, the deficiency of information abOut Dryden is still remarkable, and. "the names and dates, order of his pliblidationsmake . a large portion of his biography." Yet Dryden was Poet Laureate and Historiographer Royal; he was a Fellow of the RoYol l S'nciety ; 'he was a popular dramatist; lie. was the su preme object of jealous' to the literary hacks of his day, just as 1 3 .0 p. was to Grub-street scribblers forty years later ; his name for a long period was constantly before the public;the works produced in hiS 'old age Were even more heartily welcomed llialltheie Prodneeitin.mid die life, and when he died lie had a "splendid funeral," and was followed by a,hundred car riages to his fitting resting-place in Poet's Cor ner. The conspicuous position occupied by Dryden, if contrasted with the paucity of our oration "about him,' pretes t as in the earlier instances we have mentioned, that what Lord Macaulay calls the "Luesldoswelliana" is - a complaint of modern growth. The extent to which it exhibits itself in these days is Sometimes ridiculous enough. We are told • how often illustrious • .men strop their razors .or put on their spec tacles, how often they eat, and What they drink, and upon which leg they are accus tomed to enter a .room, how they look in a night cap, and what appearance they present in a dress-coat. if they — smoke, the average number of cigars is chronicled; if they drink of the liquor which Dr. Johnson 'appropriated to heroes, the - quantity - is scored down with exactitude. __As there is nothing too minute for a life-writerlu the nineteenth century, so it is possible _also that nothing can be found-too great ; but, unhappily, there, is rarely room in this diPection for_ the_exercise of his giinius. Perhaps it is well that so little is known of the men of letters WhO are _the pride and boast of our_.earlier. literature. The bloom of -a plum is spoiled by over-much handling ; and there are not many men, who, like Dr. Johnson and Sir Walter Scott, can bear without serious detriment the research of the modern biographer. [From Mark Twairt.l 4IIlRJ( Contatniaz a Moral. _Night before last l i had'a singular dream. I — Seemed to be sitting"on a doorstop (in no par ticular city; perhaps), ruminating, and the time_ of night appeared to be about twelve or one o'clock. The weather was balmy and deli cious. There was no human sound in the air, not even a footstep. There was no sound of - any kind to emphasize the dead stillness, ex cept the occasional hollow barking of a dog in the distance, and the fainter answer of . a fur - then dog. Presently, up the street,..l. heard a— . bony %clack clacking, and guessed it was the .castanets of a serenading party. In- a-mindte. more a tall skeleton, hooded and half clad in a tattered and mouldy shrOnd,whose shreds Were flapping about the ribby lattice-work of its person, swung by me with a stately stride, and disappeared in the gray gloom of the starlight.- It had a broken and worm-eaten coffin on its shoulder, and a bundle of something in its hand. I knew what the clack-clacking was, then—it was this party's joints working together, and his elbows knocking against his sides as he walked. 1 may say I was surprised. Before I could collect my thoughts and enter upon any speculations as to what this appari- I Lion might portend. I heard another one coming —for I recognized his clack-clack. lie had two thirds of a cant on his shoulder, and some foot and head-boards under his arm. I mightily wanted to peer under his hood and speak to Sim, but when he"turned - and smiled upon me with his cavernous sockets and his projecting grin as he went by, I thought I would not de tain him. He was hardly gone when I heard the clacking again, and another one issued from the shadowy half-light. This one was bending under a heavy grave-stone and drag ging a shabby coffin after him byl a string. When he got to me he gave me a steady look for a moment or two, and then rounded to and backed up to me, saying: " Ease this down for a fellow, will you ?" I eased the gray-stone down till it rested on the ground, and in : oing so noticed that it bore \,k the name of "John Baxter Copmanhurst," with "May, 1889," as the date of his death. Deceased sat wearily down by me and wiped his as frontis with his major maxillary—chiefly from former habit 1 judged, for I could not see - thatte - brought - awayany-perspiratiom- - "It is too bad, too bad," said he, drawing the remnant of the shroud about him and lean . ing his jaw pensively on his. hand. Then he put hiS left foot up on his knee and fell to scratching his ankle bone absently with a rusty nail which he got out of his eofliu. " What is too bad, friend ?" "Oh, everything, everything. I almost wish I never had died." "You surprise me. Why do you say this? Has anything gone wrong ? What is the mat ter:"] Matter! Look at this shrond—rags. Look at this gravestone, all battered up. Look at Unit disgi'aceful old coffin. All a,, man's prop erty going to ruin and, destruction before his eyes and ask him if anything is wrong? Fire and brimstone!" " Calm yourself, calm yourself," I said. "It is too bad—it is certainly too bad, but then I had net supposed that you would much mind such matters, situated as you are." " Well, my dear sir, I do mind them. My pride is hurt and my comfort is impaired—de stroyed, I might say. I will state my case—l will put it to you iu such a way that you can cornpreheud it, if you will let me," said the poor skeleton; tilting the hood MT his shroud back, as if he were clearing - for action, and thus unconsciously giving himself a jaunty tiud festive air very much at variance with thd grave character of his position in life—so to speak—and in prominent contrast with his distressful mood. Proceed," said I "I reside in the shameful_ old grave-yard a block or two above you jiere in this street"-, ' There now, I just expected that cartilage would let go!—Third rib from the hottoni, friend, hitch the end of into my spine with a string, if you have gut such a thing about you, though a bit of silver wire is a deal pleasanter. and more durable and becoming, if one keeps it polished—to think of shredding out and going to pieces in this way, just on accoUnt, of the indifference and neglect of one's posterity!" —and the, poor ghost grated his teeth in a Way thatgaVe me h wrench and a shiver—for the effect is mightily increased by the absence Of Muffling • flesh -and cuticle. "1 reside in that old'graveyard, affil have for these thirty years; and 1 tell you things are changed since I first laid this tired old franie there, and turned over and,stretebed out for a long sleep, With a. deli cious sense ou we of being done with bothel',and grief,:andlinxiety; and doubt and tear, forever and ever, and listening with. comfortable and increasing satisfaction to the sexton's Work, from thmtartllug elatkT - of his .first spadeful PHILADELPHIA EVEN. ._G VIITA un my.eoilin till rt utUkU 11.Wdy Co the rata pal hipg that shaped the .iiinf• of my new home-- Ai , Nylons ? My ! 1 wish you could try: to night !" and out of my reverie_ deCeaseiffetehed .tue with a rattling slap with a bony hand. Yes, sir, thirty . years` 'there, and was happy. . For it,,WaS out. An. , the country, then—out in the breeiy,, flowery, grand old woods, and the lazy, winds gossiped -with the leaves, and the ,squirrels capered over us and around us, and the . .creeping things visited us, and the birds' filled the tranquil, soli tude with music. Ali, it was worth ten years of ,a, man's life to be dead then ! Every thing was - pleasant. - I was in a good' 'neighborhood,: for all the dead people that lived, 'war Ind be longed to the best families in the city. -Ours posterity.appemed.te think the . world., of r.lts. They kept our graves in the very, best con , dition ;' the feneee were alwaYS'in faultleSs re : pair, headboards were kept painted or white-7 washed; and were replaced with new ones as soon as they began to look rusty, or decayed ; monuments were. , - kept upright, railings intact Slid Might, the rosebushes _and shrubbery trimmed, trained and free . from blemish, the walks • clean and smooth and graveled. But that day is gone by. Our descendants have forgotten us. My grandson lives in a stately house built with money made . by these old hands of mine, and,. sleep in a neglected grave with invading vermin that., gnaw my Shroud to build their nests withal! land friends that lie With me founded and secured the- prosperity of this tine city, and the stately bantling of our loves leaves us to rot in a,. dilapidated - cemetery which neighbors - curse and strangers scoff at. See the difference between_ the:iold this—for instance: Our graves are all caved in, now; our head-boards have rotted away and tumbled down; our railings reel this way and that, with one foot in the air, after a fash ion of unseemly levity; our monuments lean wearily and our gravestones bow their heads dis touragedi there be no adornments any more, = no roses, nor shrubs,-nor graveled walks, nor anything that is a comfort to- the eye; and even the paintless Old board fence that did make a show of holding us sacred I from companion ship with beasts and the defilement of heed less feet, has tottered till .it overhangs the street, and only advertises the presence of our dismal resting place and- invites yet more derision to it. And now we cannot hide . our poverty and tatters, in the friendly woods, for the city has stretched its Withering arms abroad. and taken us in, and all that remains of the Cheer of our old home is the cluster of 'lugu brious forest trees that stand, bored and -weary of city their feet in our -coflinsi- look-- ing-into the-hazy-distance-and-not wishing they were them. I tell you it is disgraceful! "You begin to comprehend—you begin to see how it is. While our descendants .are living sumptfionsly on our money right around us iu the city, we have to light hard to keep skull and bones together. .Bless you there isn't a grave in our cemetery that doesn't leak—not one. Ever time it rains in the night we have to climb.out and roost in the trees 7 -and spine times we are wakened suddenly ,by the chilly water trickling down the back of our necks. Then I tell you there is a general 'heaving up of old graves and kicking over of old monu ments, and scampering of-old skeletons:for the trees ! Bless me, if you bad gone along ,there some , nights 'after twelve o'clock you7might have seeu.as many asfifteen. of us roosting on - one limb, with our joints rattling drearily .and the wind wheezing through our ribs I Many a time we have perched there for three or - felir -drepry hours, then come down ' stiff and chilled through and drowsy, and borrowed each other,p_skulls to bail out our .graves yen glance up in my mouth, now as I tilt my head back, you can see that my headpiece is half full of old dry sediment-'-how top heavy and stupid it makes me sometimes! Yes, sir, many a time if you had - happened to come along just before the dawn you'd. have caught us bailing out the graves and haiiging our shrouds on the fence to,dry.. W",lis,,ji had an elegant shroud .4tolen from there one morn ing—think a party by the name of Smith took it, that resides in a plebeian graveyard over yonder—l think so because the- first time I ever saw him he hadn't anything on but a check shirt, and the last time I saw him, which was at a social gathering , in the new cemetery, he was the best dressed corpse in the company —and it is a significant fact that he left when, he saw me ; and presently an old woman from here' Missed her she generally took it with her when she went anywhere, because she was liable to take cold and bring on the Spasmodic rheumatism that originally killed her if she exposed herself to the night air much. She was named Hotchkiss —Anna Matilda Hotchkiss—you might know her ? She has two upper front teeth, is tall, but a good deal inclined to stoop, one rib on the left side gone, has one shred of rusty hair hanging from the left side of her head, and one little tuft just above and a little forward of her right ear, has her under jaw wired on one side where it had worked loose, small bone of left forearm gone—lost in a fight—has a kind of swagger in her gait and a gallus' way of going with her arms akimbo and her nostrils in the air—has been pretty free and easy, and is all . damaged and battered up till she looks like a -queensware-crate-in-ruins—maybe-you-have met her?" "God forbid !" I involuntarily ejaculated, for some how I was not looking for that form _of question, and it caught me a little off my guard. But I hastened to make amends for my rudeness and say : " I simply meant I had not bad the honor—for I would not deliberately speak discourteously of a friend of yours. You were saying that you were robbed—arid it was a shame, too—but it appears by what is left of the shroud you have on that it was a costly one in its day. How did—" A most ghastly expression began to develnp among the decayed features and shriveled in teguments of my guest's face, and I was begin ning to grow uneasy and distressed, when he told me he was only working up a deep, Sly,f, smile, with a wink in it, to suggest that about t he time lie acquired his ' present garment a\ ghost in a neighboring cemetery missed one. This reassured me, but I begged him to con fine himself to speech, thenceforth, because his facial expression was uncertain. Even with the • most elaborate care it was liable to miss fire.. Smiling should be especially avoided. What, 4C might honestly consider a .shining success was likely to strike me in a very different light. said I liked to sea a skeleton cheerful, even decorously playful, but. I did not 'think smiling was a skeleton's best hold. - MARK TwAnt. (Conclusion—with the. rest of the Alol:AL— nxt week.] . THEII6IE4N ThOUBLES , . Dlsconratting Reports. = - Cormnisioner Parker's explanation _of the diflieulties, and his anticipations of an early, long, and expensive war, are equally dis couraging. In the first place lie states that we are unprepared tp cep? with the Indians. This is. bad, but might be, worse, for we can, in time, recruit our cavalry to an adequate force. Bid what is worse than all this is the fact.that it is Congressional procrastination in making appro priations to' pay the ••Promised annuities to the Indians, and Presidential failUre to' prevent'a large expedition of minersliaiii in vading the Indiairo reservations on a prospect.: ing tour, which threaten to provoke the war. Commissioner Parker thinks the starting of this party- will precipitate the bloodiest and most expensive Indian. war we have evertad. Slnce manifestly unjust toThe Indians and *Selves that OAS expedition should march; vi,by,does not the President stop it? And it Commissioner Parker can, as he sye, have peace by. paying our .promises, why dries not Congress make the appropriations?—Tribunc, VV,EDIT , SDAv. MAY 4, Is7O. CITY- ORDINANCES 110 Et- , OLIUTION INSII UCTETN TO the City Controller and Commissioner of erkete:and City Property, Resolved, By the Select and Common Coen- ells of the, ility of Phibulelnhia ' , That thU.. Cortunissioner ofsMarketA atet - City Prorerty:',' be instrncted to draw a warrant for the cleans; lug of the Afarketlionses, from the first o 4 January; 1870, to April Ist, 1870. Providrd, , :, The'.:amonnt.Shall .not be greater than the. amount paid for the seine during 1801, and the . , 'City Controller be instructed to countersigh4 ,the same; and the said Commissioner is hereby directed to discontinue the cleaning of the Market-Flouses of the' City - of Philadelphia; from and atter April Ist, 1870. I4OU'IS WAGNER, , President of Conunoti Council. A , r;rEsi.—ABRAFIA'M STEWART,' Assistant Clerk of Comtnoit Council. SAMUEL W..CAT'r L L ,. President'of Select Council. Approved this thirtieth day - of pril; Amino Domini and thousand eight hundred and seventy (A, D. 1870)... DANIEL •M. FOX, It Mayor of Philadelphia. D ESOLUTION TO APPROVE THE CON -11.; traet of 'the : :Pliiladelphiti and Reading Railroad Company for the Building of a Bridge over said Railroad on the line of Broad street. - Resolved, By the Select and Common-Coun cils of the City of Philadelphia, That the con tract of the Philadelphia . and Reading Rail road Company with the city of Philadelphia, for the building of a. Bridge over the Rich mond branch of said .RailrOad on the line of Broad street, be and the same is hereby ap )roved. -.:_LOULS , ;WAGNER, President of Common. Council ATTEST—JOHN ECESTEIN, • • Clerk of Common Council. SAMUEL' W. CATTELL, President of Select Council Approved this thirtieth day of April, Anno Donnni one thousand eight hundred and seventy (A. D. 1870.) " DANIEL M. FOX; 1 t --711n7yor- HARDWARE. &C. BUILDING AND HOUSEKEEPING lI.ARDWA7' E. Machinists, Carpenters and .other Me- • chanics' Tools. Et triges •Screws, Locks, Knives and Forks, Spoons Ooffeo &c., Stocks and Dies. 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Thos. wishing to economize room should call and examine them aLthe extensive first-class Furniture WtlrProom 6 - Of Farson & Son, No. 228 S. Second Street. AIR°, WM PARSON'S PATENT EXTENSION TABLE FAPTENING. Every table nhouhl have th^m on. They hold thelenvee firmly together when palled about the room. mhl7 3m§ -B U S 1 Pi ESS MICUAEL WEAVER. CEO. li. R. WEAVER & CO., Rope and Twlue M Inesurers and Dealers In Hemp and Ship chastener:v. :CO North WATER. North WHARVES. PHIL A rim. r II lA. nDI tf§ Established 1521. WM , G. FLANAGAN & SON, HOUSE AND SHIP PLUMBERS, NO. 129 Walnut Street. wriy§ JOSEPH WALTON .86 CABINET MAKERS, - • 110. 418 WALNUT : STREET. Manufacturers of fine furniture and of modfnm priced fOrniture of kuperior qualify. GOODS ON HAND AND MADE TO ORDER. Connters, Desk-nork, . &c,, for Banks, Offices and Stores, made to order.: • JOSE PII WA LToN, ' JO JO SE S. W.PH LIP L. SCOTTPINCOTT. L. tB. WI'OHT, 1. • ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,'' JpinnOsaioner of Deeds for the State of Pennsylvania 1n Illinois. 118 DIPCIII3OD street, No. 11, Chicago, Illinois. el OTT ON SAIL DUCK OF • EVERY V..) width; from 22 inches in 78 inches wide ' all 'numbers Tont ,and Awning Duck, F Paper-maker's elting, Sail Twine, An, JOHN W. EVERMAN, We. No. 10311hureh street , Oity Stores, NEW PUBLICATIONS. Q. 'LINDA Y SCHOOL' S ERINTEN- Krdelitii, pet Prof. fart's admirable address, "How to lect a Library," at the Sabbath School EmporiUM, .60ii Arch Street. Philadelphia. eirditil: , BEST WORK—ON ALUSIG--AND the °illy (Moot its kind, is" Piano andllinsical Mat- Pronounced by competent judges the most perfect it stil:teflon book ever written for the piano, and a coin, phhhnilinln of mUsicalinfortnation. Cold by all music and hook- dealers School edition, 42 Library edition, sj•g. Rent post free, Liberal discount on quantities. & 'PERRY, Publishers, 298 aril 300 ashltigten area, Roston. ' ap3o-ire INSTRUCTIONS. BURS MAN: 111 P. —THE 'PHILA DELPHIA RIDING HOHOOL,' N 0.3338 Mar. - 4 .l eifti loot, litopon daily for. Dailies and Gentlomon... la Dm largegt;hootlightod and heated ostabliohinont tn the city. Thg horsoo are thoroughly Igrokon for, the* most timid • AOhbaAttornoon Ohba for Young . Ltulloo at. tending .schdol, Monday,rWodneadity and "Madam and an Evouiug Olainvfor Gentlemen. Dorm+ thoroughly trained, fog the saddle. Doreen talson .to livery. Jiand ocitno.ct.rruigeo to hire. Storage for wagons and Weighs. ' . • ' BETH CRAIOE, • , , Proprietor. ' ' CONSPIPMEg' so-ricTs . , . N'°7l,c ALL: PERSO,NS ARE , ber Ily Cannoned ngriinet liiirlinring iinetlni; any of the' drew , of the , .bark Thinbrody. SpookeL inflator, from Liverpool. LIB no debit; of 'their enntraetlna will be paid by Captain or Connigneee. WORKMAN & Vousigneco. - El EATERS AND ISTOVEb. PANCOAS!U & •MAULE At . D .i ; ; t' . 1 ; Plain and ,Galvanized ., 1 - lIIIOUGHT AND CAST IRON PIPE . For Gas Steam -and Water.. .. FITTINGS, BRASS WORK, TOOLS, BOILER TUBES.: Heating .by Steam and-Hot Water, rive of all Sizes Cut and Fitted to Order. . . . . CARD. Having sold HENRY B. PANCOAST and .I . BANGIS AISTLE (gentlemen in °neer!' ploy for BOTOTIII. rear. past) the Stock,Good Will and Fixtures of our RETAIL ESTABLISHMENT, laated at the _corner of THIRD and PEAR streets, in•thin city, that branch of our bnol 'lives, together with that of BEATING and VENTILA-, TING PUBLIC/ and ritrvATE BUILDINGS, both by STEAM and HOT WATER, in' ell its .various systems, will be carried on under the firm name of • I'ANCOAST A MAULE, at the - old stkupL - and wOre commend them to the trade and buslnoss public ae being entirely competent to perform all work of that character. MORRIS, TASKER & CO.. • Jan. 2 .2,1870. tuhl2-tf THOM 8 0 t li;q3 LONDON:K.ITUE. ever, or European Ranges, for families, hotela or public institutions, in twenty different wizen. Also, Philadelphia Ranges, Hot Air Furnaces, Portable headers Low down Oraten.,._ffireboard Sloven, Bath —Boliers, - .lstow•hole Platen:- - s rni fern (looking Moven, etc. EDGAR L. THOMPSON, - Successor to SHARPE . THOMSON, no29m w f eni No. 299 North Second street. THOMAS S. DIXON Ar,1161413 - • • Late Andrews Dixon & NO. MU OnESTNUT Street, r 7Posite United States Mint. statue riot mof LOW DOWEL PARLOR, CHAMBER, OFFICE, And other ORATES, For Anthracite, Bituminous and Wood Fir LSO. - WAIIM-AIR FURNAOES For Warming Public and Private buildings • REGISTERS, VENTILATORS, AND • ' CHIMNEY OAPS, VOOICITIO-RA NOES, BATH-BUTLERS WHOLESALE. antLITEITAIL, GROCERIES. LIQUORS. &C. CORN. EXCHANGE FLOUR MILLS, 2146 Market Street. Superior.. Family and Bakers' Flour, MANUFACTURED BY E. V. MACI-LIV.ITTE, Jr. Everytllng or Bomb womranted. mh3o cr I in tfi 'USE KIT CH EN-CiaItiTAITSOAF-- . • For Cleanittg Paint. USE KITCHEN CRYSTAL• SOAP _Tor USE KITCHEN CRYSTAL SOAP --For-cleaning-fill-Wcod Work.' -USE KITCHEN -C-R-VS TA L SOAP For all Bougehold Cleaning. PRICE REDUCE:D. ALL 411013ERS BELL Er. Nothing Genuine but KITCHEN CRYSTAL SOAP. EASTMAN Sc BROOKE, Proprictore, apl3lm 431 North Third Street, Philadelphia. PURE 01,1 V E OIL.—THE sumsciti- I era, beg 11.avn to announce to the nubile - that they lili:Si• - tiititiviirriingeinirthi for revel sine% and bare now in the store, the celebrated 31 octet brand of Salad Oil, N% hie)) they warrant renerior to any Oil imported into this country. JOS. 11, BLISSIER -4lr• Delaware arennt,, - Q . IIEERY AVINE.—A VERY SUPEit and pure Spardeb Sherry Wine at an! ) , t 1 00 pir gallon COUSTVS Ea4t End - Grocery, IIS South Second ,traet,helow Cheat nut. fi I, Alt ETS.—EXTItA Q ['AL [TY 'PAHL E CluretB. nt 5.14. $6, $_? , G and Ri per CA.,?, of doom recent Importation—in .31.01,1 1111 , 1 for Nolf , ..‘t (MUSTY'S Eat Edo( aro6•ty, 'No. 1H South stre,t Cheotnut. 0 A LI F 0 NI A SALMON.--FRESH Salmon 'from California ; a very choice articlo ; for Hain at COUSTY'S Enid End ,Grocery, Nu. iiii•South Si-cand Cheatnuf EA MOSS FA RINE—A NEW ARTIftE for fo,al; very choic. and 11,1i , 1013,i, at .COUSTY '8 Rapt End Grocery, No. 115 South Second stn,t, *low Oheatnnt. MUTTON BANIB,—A VERY CHOICE artiele of Dried Mutton, ett nut to the boat thin beef, for e•ulo at CQ UST East End i.,;ro , erf No. 113 South !Set:owl street. below Chestnut. 1 UST RECEIVED AND IN STORE 1,000 ty rases of Champagne, sparkling Cat , twha awl Oa fornia Wines. Port,hladeira, Shoff y,_Jawaica and Santa CTII7. I{lllll, old BrandiesWholeaale and 11. tail: P. J. JORDAN. no Pear strnet, Third and Walnut etreetzi, and above Dock street. del tf I OIM AN'S , CEL Ell R-A-"TED PURE TON IC ty lo for Invalids, family use, etc. Th subscriber is now furnished with his full Whiter sup ly -of his highly nutritious nod well-known Uever age. Its wide-spread and increasing rse, by order of physicians, for invalids, use of families, se., commend it to the attention of all consumers who want a Strictly pure article: prepared from the best materials, and put up in the most careful manner for borne use or transom , tation,___OsilesalLymkitor otherwise prom KIN Y supplied. ------ P. .1 7.711 ND CS 7 . Nu. 2O Pear street, del below Third and Walnut streets. Lll MEER . MAULE, BROTHER & CO., 2500 South Street. 1.870. PATTERN, 1870. CHOICE SELECTION MICHICAN °I7 OOI4I PINE FUR PATTERNS.. 1870. 1 npMA - NAN I ? =al'. 9870. BSTOOK 1870. 1 . 4 . 9 1, 1 ,11%/1 - ITZTO.G . 1870. OAROLINA•FLOObaNG. 'VIRGINIA FLOORING. DELABU FL AWARR O FLORING' OORING. • WALNUT FLOORING. 1870 EOARDS . FL IPL I O t RIDIV4.; BOARDS. 1870. • RAIL PLANK. RAIL PLANK. • 1870,.:""TpMe Ds A' 4 "1870 ~vAr.' ALNUT B BOARDS -OARDS. 'AND PLANK. WALNUT • ' WALNUT • PLANK. ASK/BT$? NOIC OABINET MAKERS, BUILDERS, &O. • UNDERTAKERS' 18701870. v,DEBTuKERS4UMBER. • - • RED OEDAR. WALNUT.AND PINE. 1870. .E;: - EsIllocALD' Mt:MR . IB7O • IiVIIITILOAIF PLANA AND BOARDS. - 1870.c' cri?.iiihii4A - A T..SILLS. 9870. NORWAY SCANTLING. • Qty O. CEDAR' SHINGLES. Qry -1 n, CEDAR "SHX.NGLES. O. OYPRESS SHINGLES. , LAIIGE ASSOUTMENT. . • FOB SALE LOW. 1.870• PLASTERING TE LATH 91 , 7 ft PLASRIN G LATH: * I Ifs ButAnYakown ER & CO , . . PEOSQGTHETREET. SAW AND PLANING MILL; • DICKERSON' STREET WHARF. '' Particular attention given to Flooring, Fencing and Snrfacing. Hard and soft troop , • • 1 ap2B Into* IIrFaTER TREGO. - A „, , • I,', g ; :41 :• Z for cargoes of eyery dbeorlition Sawed Lumber axe opted-' o' 'Mort notloquali subject • tovinePoution Ap .ly to EDW. 11,1tOWLEY. South Virharved. 1007 TUN' AND 1t1011:7L147.53'0.V.S COT Viton ; 110 .enaka Beep. Now lavniing : from istiiatnnr Wyoming, from Savannah, Ga., and for 840 by vocra, iteN, RUSSELL & CO., 11l Ohootalit 1 _ MILLINERY GOODS. GEO.\f)..HAYES & CO. 214iMORTII EIG II Tilt sTREET. 4111010 E A Vigni II MEN r OF FLOWERS,. LATEST STY r.T.OF HATS. 1101 IN ETA No HAT THAMES,. AT EHY SMALL PROFIT. FINANCIAL. J. W. GILB:Otr011 ifc CQ. BANKERS,. 42 SOUTH THIRD STREET, Negotiate Loans,', Buy and Set Government and - other . re -liable Securities. MM=I 5-20'S AND Bought,. Sold and Exnhanged on' most . • liberal tern's. GOLD Bought and Sold at Market' Rates. COUPONS CASHED. PACIFIC RAILROAD BONDS Bought and eOld; S rr Co C S Bought and Sold'on Commission Only. Accounts recelyo and Interest allowed on daily balances subject to check at sight. _ • DE"AVEN&: I ItO 40 South 'Third D. C. IAIHAIITON _SMITH & CO., BANKERS - AND BROKERS, No. 121 S. T=D STREET. SIICCXBBOI4S TO 'MTH, RANDOLPH & CO. Every depertmerit of Booking busfnesa shall receive rrompt attentimweie - heretofore:---trnotationui of Stocks, Geld and Governrnenroconstantly received from our friends, E. D. RA NDOLKI. St CO.. New York by our PRIVATE WIRE, jaB-11 JAY COOKE & CO., Philadelphia, New York and Washington, F3ANI ..EELS, ..Gove.rinnent.Seeurities. Special attention given to the Purchaae and Balc of Bonds lid Stocia on Comudelon, at the Board of Bro ken; in thin and other cities. INTER F:S7 ALLOWED ON DEPOSITS. . COLLECTIONS MADE. ON ALL POINTS. G OLD AND SILVER BOUGHT AND SOLD VELIABLE RAILROAD rvorms FOR INVEST XENT. rarnohlets and full information given at our office. No. 114 S. Third. Street, PIitI..UMELPULL tn 1179 tf rp CHOICE IN VESTAL ENTS.—S3S,OOO, 1 1 .18 ,00(1, 81.400.). First -clasH City Dlortgages. Fecitml nu central city property. For salt by •R. J0N613, 707 alnut pt teat. niy3„it• COUPONS OF FIRST MORTGAGE S Co~doneetileltailro,,adCompany. of Virginia, duo May lid, payable lu gold, will he paid by the Farmers' Lean and•Trinit Company, New-Xork, Trustee's. The coupone.will Ue entitled at theofflee of SAMUEL WORK:Banker, No. 25 South Third street, Philadelphia. -- rCYCKEIT - 1100KS - ; - & - t. o . C, R.RUMPP, 120 A. 118 N. 4111 81., Nannfaotaror and Importer of POCKET•BO(KS' rB fy. ..d-IN ! 13 ,0- 2 Ai c 3 : ...k, 4 .,, c T4m1 , 41 •' 40ananny '. Miritlnp..7 Lad lee' 6floifts' ' entchtls /Travelling Rags, • In all stile& m 1122 arn „, WarerEEsT&t. Of Om latest and most boantiful designs, and all othor .late work on hand or made to order Also, PEACH BOTTOM BOOFINO SLATES. Factory and Salesroom; SIXTEENTH and CALLOW :ILL Strode. 'WILSON Jr. MILL) B, MMMDM kiiurra,y &;\ Lanmani's Florida Water The 'most,; celebrated and most delightful of all per. fUmes,,for use on the hand- . tzerclii.cf,,:,a( the: toilet, and in the bath, for sale by, all Dru t gists and Perfumers.. jt2ldm Oa§ ij! ;: li M ZU i 1881'S tde 0 mm to. a,a•a.a, we e and TELEM A fiERIOUHriot 'Wearre d St. Qttentin, France, on Monday.. •Gittifielnt outln 6 Ingitieto,urghig the French army to revolt = - A irEnv.Lritow has broken , ont In India among the Khirghilittlbe,Ma the shoOti of the Caspian Sea. A PARTY of Fenians, arrested near Liv eipool for igteretly'etilistine and - drilling men, have been discharged for want of evidence. Tux; term .of tiler United 'States' Supreme Court, just closeil, dispose'd of two hundred and twenty-five cases, leaving about two _hundred and fifty on _the docket. A vuestan building, in course of erection at Chicago, fell 3resterday afternoon.: 'Four, men at work op,lt here severely, ; not fatally in jared. YlllOl,lll-4, Nevada,• beld.its municipal elec tion on4•Monday. Eaves, 'RePublican, was elected Mayor by 282 majority over Bird (colored), the opposition candidate. Indianapolkt, nienThens orthe City Coun cil were elected, 6 Republicans and 3 Demo aats being chosen. This makes no political change. n • AT Belfluit, Die., yesterday,Joseph 13. HoWes recovered a verdict for $40,000 against Dr. N. P. Menroe,,for malpractice in the treatment of plaintiff's eyes.' A WAHUINGTON despatch says that several Cubans, prominent in the insurrection, have madeovertures to the_ Spanish Minister for a reconciliation with the Spanish Government. TuE )`Too[_. York. Canal Board,,at Albany, yeeterday, made he following reduCtions in canal tolltt: On salt, 33 per cent.; coal, 50; grain,B3l- ; flour, SQ; bloom, pig and scrap iron, 75. Pr is reported that the Sioux-, Indians - re cently appeared at,the Hudson Bay Company's .T.Fort.at—White_Horse-Plains,•and-theatened---to kill all the Americans in the settlement. Be ing glvdn supplies, they retired, saying they would return and fulfil their threats. There is great alarm among the American settlers on the border. AT Helena. Montana, on Monday, A. Le comptou and James Wilson,.-charged with robbery and attempted murder, were tried by a committee of twenty-four citizens, found guilty, and hanged in the presence of about 3,000 persons. The lynching - was brought about, not by a vigilance committee, but by a public:meeting 'cif AT Molviicw,o, KanSas, a few dayg since, CoL__A—Payrie_-and C. Stapleton,--i-linflu ential citizens,"Auarreled while drinking to gether, and agreed to fight in a dark room. Payne' bad Is:knife and Stapleton a pistol, and the result was that the former was shot through the - limp and the lattei bad his throat cut At last accounts liothare alive, but not expected -to recover. IN THE Canadian House of Commons, Sir John A. .31cDonald has introduced a bill making'the Northwest T,erritory a province of the Dominion, under the nacre of Manitoba. Provhdon is made for a Lieutenant-Governor, Executive Council and Legislature; a Subsidy of-V300,000 is granted, and - lamb are reserved for the .Indians and half-breeds. The expense of the military force required to_preseive: order .is to be divided between the,Canadiau and Im perial Government.• A 'TORONTO despatch announces that yes terday the _steainer Algoma -- left Collingwood. for Fort Williamovith•storesforthe Red River expedition. The first detachment of the expe dition is expected to be ready to start about the 15th instant. According to whims re ceived by way__ - _ot-Cliicago, - Riel- has arranged with the 'Hudson's Bay Cempany fora loan of £3,000, and an advance of £4OO worth of goods to his soldiers, his Government .being recognized as - legally - existing: The company is to reoccupy and garrison so much of the fort as is not needed-by-the-Provisional Govern- Inent; and-resume-RS-trade; Provision for the Oneida Orphans. . The Secretary of the Navy has addressed the following letter to Airs. Fremont, in response to a communication from that lady announcing that the Managers •of. „the Union Home and School for Soldiers' and Sailors' Orphans will take charge of and educate the children of those who were lost on the Oneida : WAWlticrrON, /trAy. :1.5710 . : Dear Madam : 1 have received your letter inclosing the announcement that the Managers of the Union Home for Soldiers' and Sailors' Or phans, New York - ,are prepared to take charge of and educate the children who have been left fatherleSs by the fatal collision of the Brit ish steamer Bombay with the United States ship Oneida, in the Bay of Yeddo. I beg that you will allow me to express to you and your associates, for myself and for the whole naval service, the'high appreciation that will be felt for this act of generoifs charity. The fate._of._ tite_nilicers and_.men_of -- the Oneida and the circumstances under Which it was met were such as appeal for sympathy to every heart, and they present to the world an example of courage and discipline of-which the men and women of our country may well be' proud. To provide for the orphans of those who died so It was not to Dr. Newman's purpose, and it...is nerin ours,. to "determine how the passage ought to be read, onto express an opinion ',as to-.the date and personality of Mr. Collier's anonymous annotator. ..We only refer to the subject to observe how instinctively Dr. Newman, when dealing with a matter which:he does not - feel to be - important, clings to the Merest semblance 'of authority. The first folio commands his 'respect, for it was published by knovin persons, only. six fears after Shakespeare's death, from his "own manuscript,- as. —it -appears, -- and with his corrections of earlier faulty im- pressions. Its reading of the passage in question is indeed nonsense; but authority, we are Ltold, 'though it cannot sanction non sense, can forbid critics from experimentalizing upon it. The anonymous annotator, is also handled most respectfully. Dr. Newman serves that, for what we know, his authority may be very great ; ; there is nothing to show he was not a contemporary of the poet. But'poor Theobald's candor> and ingenuity do not gain. for him the slightest - degree of favor. atis read-_ lug is confessedly a conjecture, founded on a coals:mare. Dr. Newman will not alldw - it to be assumed 'as a first principle Which_needs no proof, that a text - may - be tampered with•be- • cause it is corrupt. He recognizes the claims of a badly printed book; he is willing to take for granted the disputeditnnota= Lions ; but he can scarcely give:grave attention to - the avowed guess of a clever man. Letter from Etatztol. Signor Mazzini has addressed the. following letter to Mr. Edgar , Quinet : , Dear Friend: I feel a kind 'of remorse at heart for _not -having thanked Maclaine- Quinet for sending me her work; and ._you ... for the letter of those- who wished "to - return you as a member to the Chamber. Ido so now, on the point of . starting for Londen. When the book reached me I was very ill. Subsequently I was wholly absorbed by the political situa tion of Italy. My life is one continued strug gle. I would give__:up the little -Iliave left of life for one year's quiet, to be able be fore I die to write a book. saying all that I be lieve to be true about the world as it is, and its future,- 'without sparing personal feeling, without reticence or reserve, and that is impos sible.. Placed at the bead of a vast system of practical organization, I must devote all my efforts to evolve from it -an equally practical result. There is a multitude of young men and trades unions (associations ourriercs), to whom li4Self - _have given as a watchword, "action,• . and who, right or wrong,con sider me as their standard-bearer. I could not forsake them for the purpose of writino 6 a book without feeling guilty of deser tion. 1 am, therefore, going on with a task for which, old and wearied,morally and physically, I have no longer strength enough. lam busy from morninr , to night writing letters, notes, circulars, instructions,. and a few newspaper articles. That is the reason why I have delayed writina 6 to you. Forgive and , pity me. I go .on working,. impelled by the feeling that Lhave - a duty to fulfill—a duty cold, dry, arid, without any poetry or compensation. With the excep- , tion of a few bright spirits (anie.4 dente), I no longer esteem the generation for which I am working. That generation is an. instrument--- nothingmore. Do you understand, dear friend, the sadness of this confession ? The generation which we are marching with has fatal instincts, reactions and impulses, some times hatreds; and above all is accustomed'to tight. We may, we must, try and get some thing out of it which will smooth the ground and pave the way for the future._ - But we can not sympathize with r it ; we cannot rejoice and sutler with it, we cannot grasp cordially the hand of those who stand by us in the fight. This generatiiin has opinions but no faith. It denies the existence of God, of immortality, of love, the eternal pLornisc, the future of those who love, the belief in an intelligent and providential law, all that is beau tiful, good and holy in the world— a whole heroic trinity, of religious' feeling from Prometheus to Christ, from Socrates to Kepler—but grovels on its knees before Comte and Buchner. This:generation studies passing PhenoMena Mit ignores the causes that pro duce them. It admits laW, but ignores the law giver—the form without' the' substance—the means without the end. As an inevitable con sequence it is a Machiavellic generation, all for expediency and tapies—but-a stranger to the moral sense, to the *.onsciousness of the holiL ness of its'works, to the power of truth. - It labors to overthrow, yet takes the oath of fidelity to the Empire. In Italy it: speculates whether, to compass the" downfall of the Monarchy, an alliance with Prussia or with Imperial France be, preferable—wbether, to obtain the Italian Tyrol, it be better to make war against Austria or drive heragainst Moldo- Wallachia. That is the point we have arrived at. Success, the theory of Hegel, the worship of strength. Justice, justice for all and every where, is set down as a Utopian idea. That is the reason why, discouraged and disgusted as I am, I remain at my post. It is possible that I may, in doing so; influence the first acts of a revolution, which beget consequences which are not foreseen at the outset. A whole century may depend on the initial impulse. Good-bye, dear friend, continue unshaken, and preach the truth.' Yours from my heart. ••• Boston Worknomesst. There are 30,000 women in and abont'Bos ton who live by sewing ; very few of them earn twelve dollars a week; the average earning t is about tivd dollars-And seventyffive cents a week. Those - who Work in shops; fare better than those who take work home. The price for a shirt is from four- to seven. ,cents; -fine bosomed shirt, ten to twenty-five , cents; satin vest, twenty cents ; pantaloons, fifteen, twenty and thirty-seven ceuti ;; coats,: fifty cents; French calico. shirts;.-lined sack, faced skirt, twenty cents. The tailoresses and cloak-, makers work ten hours in the shops, quitting at 0 P. 'M., and many,of them take work home .and sit up,till 12. - in good •• shops-rAmr ~ brisk word they can ea.rti a dollar'a day--sOme• of the best machine • girls more ; but the • ma:, chine work is very wearing, and few, girls can perform it more than two years without becam- Mg entirely broken down. The girls pay from two to three dollars a week for rooratent, and usually occupy, rooms with two or more double WEDNEPAY,, :MAT 4.„1870. GIUSEPPE MAZZINI. beds. In the slop-work shops girls can Seldom earn more than - enough to pay their room rent, and they have to do over-work in order to get oniethingto eat. luslack times theicautforipg is xt reure,maq bei‘rig known to' work fot 'weeks With only bread and water for food, and very fortunate is she who can proeuretiii ounce of tea; pany have been .foitnd.: who- . balm: litre& for weeks'on'fi've cents worth of bread a Week, while seeking Work through' 'erfold 'and snow. Besides the lodging , houserkeepers discrimi nate agahast them, ancLcharge tbern- more, for rent fhantlie - Y charge then; that mauy of, thear have' to sleeif in , ,dens • where they • vionid! be ashamed to be seen going. . And in spite of all their suireibags and, temptitions ; sery few of ,these women break—down morally or become untidy in dress. Their heroic struggle for life, and for, • a virtuons,life, is one of the most' touching things in our, modern eivilliiNft, ands if one does fall, she ought tri„have the sympa thy of "all Christian people'. And then, to tidnkbow unevenly the food and clothing are Aistributed in this world ! What is wasted at lmost any table in, this city daily, would - feed one of these serving women struiptriditily. ' If' duly some one would invent -a. method of r 4 quable distribution, the'peor in Boston would lfrive on the waste of' the Hell. We, who,' do• ot know what it, is to be hungry, leave our Christian duty undone, in suffering --these Women tobe so wretchedly underpaid fot" wor k.—ffailford Courant.' ' IMPORI'ATIONS. . Reported tor the Philadelphia Evening Bulletin. NE WCA BTL E, ENO—Bark tidies, Norss9 Olsen-300 bide vonetiiiti red Baring- Bros: SS grindatones J E - Mitchell; 1,100 kegs bl cart, soda .712 eke do 70 cks baking powder 1,4f.4 eke alkali WirCiroP. ikinoilleloot et Ro• NEbSili A—Brig Gazelle. (,tole-2,700 bx lemons 2,040 do oranges 200 half boxes'elo 640 couture brimstone Hei ser dc Bro. LONDON. vi PALM . OUTFI-43rig Amphion (Br). pre. -150 tons old steel springs Naylor & Co; 231 tone China- clay Charles B Dunn. CANDENAS—Schr Chas' I Ebner, Corson-343 Mule H Ylt ir N l Vit4t o A C A t ctr l Vl ) o 'C riV il ahtso,4Bo feet A-4 yel low pine plank L 0.566 feet yellow pine step plank 52.302 -feet scantlipg-and step boardirPatUrson* Lippincott TUB TLAND—Schr Frank Herbert. Crowell-29X° 4- feet .1 inch spruce pickets T P Galvin & Co. MOVEMENII73 OF OCEAN ETEAMEES. TO ARRIVE. 'ntra. . . -. FROM . VoR ' DATE. City of Dublin-Liverpool-New York April 16 Siberia Liverpool... New York via B April 10 Manhattan. Liverpool... New York April 20 Holland Liverpool... New York April 26 Australia Glasgow... New York April 22 TO DEPART. . Prometheus -.Philadelphia...Charleston- ..... -.--Mi53 , --li IHilis .. oull" - New York... Havana. -..... ....... ..- May 5 Alaska...... New York...Aaplawall May 5 Tripoli Now York...Liveroool - May 5 Pioneer Philadelphia... Wilmington,........ ..... May 6 Tonawands_...Philadel phis...SavannahMay 7 Ch-of A titw erm - _.;.N ew Y ork - ... Lir erpcitir Misy 7 . Malta New York ..Liverpool May 7 Anglia " New York...Glaagow.-...- 151;sy 7 Deunithiland - New York... Bremen - . May 7 Saionie New York.-.Hatatiurg.-- Kay 10 - Yier.oo- ...... .....Philadeiphia...N Orlae via Hay..... May 10 .Isva. ... .New York :.Liverpool ' `lay 11 Manhattan' New York...Liveronol .May 11 Siberia New York... Liverpool May 12 OreAD queen"...liew Tork„,Dremeit. .--111ay-4.2.- ea r 0 stnnitiZitignatcul-by-an asterisk (*) carry the 6nited States Mails. OAR T 1 OF TRADE. J. PRICVV ETti BRILL, ( IIEN HY j .N.SOII. MONTAILY COMMITTER GEORGE l'. ALLEN, • COMMITTEE ON ARBITRATION. J. O. James, 1 E. A. Bonder Geo. L. Buzby, Wm. W. Pad, Thomas . Illes pie. INE ItU_LLETII4._ POET OF PHILADELPHIA—MAT 4. SUN 816E54 .a I Bub BETA. 6 66 I Hum WA.TER - .5 32 ARRIVED YESTERDAI. learner liars,ar Grarnler.24 Lours from New York.with mitre to 19 . 24 Baird Co. - titeatineffi F Phe Briawn, 24 hours from New York, with mdse to W AI Baird A Co. Bark 'Citing (Nor). Olsen, 70 days from Netvcastlo, E. with mdse to Westergasrd.& Co. _ Bark Amphion (Br), Reese, 67 daYs from London via with wdee - ter Peter Wright &Sons. - Brig Gazelle, Cole. 43 days - from klesema; with fruit and brimstone to Selser A Bro. . bctirCE Elmer, Corson, 10 days &urn Cardenas, with sumo to C k C Al O'Callaghan. Seim Flora, Smith. Y 3 days from -Pensacola, with-lum ber to Patterson & Lippincott. lo Scar Isnd Belle. Pierce. 6 days from- Charleston, with himber to Lennox A - Burgess. Sear Eitza-A-ItebecearPrice7ls days from Beaton. BELOW. Schra E G Knight, from Cardenaa. and Statunede,froni• Porto Rico. CLEARED,YESTERDAY. Steomer Volunteer. Jones. New York. John F Ohl. Steamer F Franklin. Pierson, Baltimore, A Grorea, Jr Bark siciliars Percival, Boston , Knight 3: Sous. - brig liennebeck, Minott, Charleston, C Haslam A. Co. Brig .1 Boa laud, Freeman, Barbados, Warren & Gregg. Stair C A Jones, Griffin, Boston, do Buhr Charlie 6 Willie, Thomas, Portland. Lennox & nurses Selo A ki. Flauagan, Snyder. Savannah, 8 Lathbury&Co Correspondence of the Philadelphia Evening Bulletin. HEADING. May 2, MO. The following boats from the Union Canal passed into the Schuylkill Canal, bound to Philadelphia, laden, and consigned as follows: M Withers and Delaware & Hudson No 151, with lumber to Bolton. Christman & Co; Leh Trans Co No 13, bit coal to HA kb Seyfert; C firing, lime to Charles tiring. HAVRE p ,GRApE, May 3., This - following boats 'left this morning in tow, laden and consigned as follows: Chriatian Fable, with lumber to Norcross d: Sheeta; . P 0 leveler, do to Hay Charlotte Blackwell, do to Cheater, Pa. MEMORANDA. Ship Abyssinia, Christian, from Savannah, waa below St John, NB. 30th ult. ' Ship Fortune, Taylor, cleared at Boston 2d inst. for Cafruit.. ship Huguenot, Peterson, from Ban Francisco Dec 30 at New York yesterday. Ship Grace Darling, Spear. at Liverpool 2d init. from Baker Island . . Ship Peruvian. Thompson, from Alan ila - for 1i York. pa -red Anjier sth March. Steamer Wyoming, Teal, hence at Savannah Yester day. Stenmerillanbattan. Forsyth, from Liverpool 20th ult at New York e,.terday. . - .. . Steamer New York, Nordenholt,from Havre 21st ult.at New York yesterday. altsteamer Holland, Webster, sailed from Liverpool 20th . for New York-. Steamer Beekton (Fr). Dryden, from Naples 'March 29i Iles ins. April% Palermo tith and Gibraltar 17th, at New York yesterday April a.' Mt 352(, lon 45, spoke Lark nyx (Br), for Philadelphia; 23d, Ist 35 18, Jon 41_ ct( -37:ii-pns ed-shirr-Sonorazfrora—NevrYlWitafriFls-foi-San Prstickeo. steering SE. Steamer Norfolk, Platt, sailed from Norfolk 2d inst. for this Ream r Java (Br), Cook, from Liverpool 23d ult. at New 1 o k yesterday. Steamer. Britannia (Br), Campbell, at Glasgow 30th alt. from St.7ohn. NB. Reamer Pioneer ( Br), Sbnckford, at Havana 25th nit From New York. Bark J IJDutfus, Blauvelt, from Liverpool fld March for this port. was spoken 30th ult. lat 41 le .jona6. . Bark Havelock (Br). 'Madden, from Yokohama for New York, passed Anjier 22d Feb. Bark Samuel Larrabee, Thompson. from Manila for New York, passed Anjier 24th Feb - Bark Herbert Graham OW, James, from Yokohama 13th Dec. at New York yesterday. with tea. Bark Win Tan Name Craig, cleared at New York td inst. for Cadiz.' . . . • . llrig Lucy ldr Snow, Hal, cleared at. Darien ,27tti tilt for thin port. Seim Angle. A toshary, Rogers, cleared at Pensacola 27th tilt for this ttort. Schr J A Crocker, Chase, cleared at Jacksonville 25th ult. for Oils Dort - Schr J A Garrison, Smith, clegred at Jacksonville 27th ult. for this port: Behr Henry iday, Backed. sailed from Solent 30th ult. for this port Schr J 8 Clark ,Clark,sailed from Charleston yesterday for this Dort.. - Schr Webster Bernard, Smith, at St 'Toting PR. 19th lilt for Delaware Breakwater for orders, to sail 21th. CARPETINGS, &C CARPETS MADE TO WEAR WELL,— ,roLLooK, • 937 Market, street, sells the cheapest Carpets. Just examine them. aDB lm§ (100 D NEWS.FOR THE LADIES. NJI DUSTY CARPETS OF ALL RINDS ; CAREFULLY CLEANED byimproved tnnelitnery, at CENTRAL CARPET CLEANING ESTABLISMIENT, 250 N. BROAD street, beIow:VINE. aililmo WANTS mUG WANTED—WANTED .'A SMALL Steam Ttig, suitable for Southern Hirer Naviga tion, of Ught draught. - Aflply to COCHRAN, RUSSELL .4 CO ~ 111 Chestnut Street. VANTED.,—A .. VESSEL TO BRING A cargo cif timber from Goorgla-,full cargo out. etre. poly to COCHRAN, RUSSELL A CO., 11l Ghostnut MUSICAL. --- SAUND ER S COLLEGE, WEST Philadelphia. A lecture every MONDAY IGVE• Q 143. P.-'RONDENELLA, TEAOHER OF 1 '303 liVn,Lnfiril=tiosso- and dolma. Beesnlo - NELR6ii E WONDERS 'ACCOMPLISHED through tho agency of the . genuine God-Liver Oil in Scrofula, Bronchitis, Chronic Cough, Asthma, and even Consumption, almost surpass belief. In Joirs .0; BAKER & Co.'s " Pure Medicinal' Cod-Liver (hi"— earh bottle of which is accompanied by medical guaran• tehil of the highest order.-tbe public have the best brand o the preparation known to the 'scientific world. .1 C N . BAK ER & MarkoLstroet do phis, Penn. _ W" — For sale by all drnstilata.' ! t'n7 111 ICE.-22 CASKS STICIOTra Y Ytil at lo Charloaton nice landing and tor' ado impni..4l4otipirrompteut t , : . PRINTIMi. A. C. BRYSON & CO., A.Or B]IYSON ts&'6,o.;( - A. C. BRYSON — & CO":, A. C.. BRYSON a; CO., A. C. BRYSON & CO., A. O. BRYSON do CO - A. C. BRYSON & CO:, A. C. BRYSON .t 00.. 607 Chestnut St. & 604 Jayne S 60r ChAsinnt St. Se'6Ql J ayne sis 601 - ChefitniiCst.,V 604 . Jayne St: 607 Chestnut St. - & 604 'Jayne St. 607 Chestnut at.,8r.,604 Jayn9 St. 607 Chestnit i St:&'do44ayne St. 607 Cheetnat St. & 604 Jayne St. 607 Chestnut 8t.4.!6114 Jay . ne St. (Bulletin. Mulling. Plulattellibia l )_ Bot kard4slPAPPiraire'r;i: ; Book and Job Printers, Book and Job Printers, Book - and Job Printers, Book and Job Printers; Book and Job' Printers,' B9ok and Jdb - Printers Workmen Skillful. Prices Low ":Workmen Skillful. Prices Low. Workmen - Skillful: 7' • ' Prices Low 7 Workmen Skillful. . PriemLow. Workmen Skillful. _ Prices Low. Workmen Skillful; , ' Prices:LoW. Vrirkmea Prices Low. Workmen Skillful. Races Low. 01V2 US •A THIAL. 0117,E lja A TRIAL. GIVE'TIS 'A TRIAL. i GIVE. US,,A., GIV rS' A GIVE US:A. RA T I AT GIVEL . GIVE; US' A TRIAL., DIVE - ITS - A IRIAI-.-- ':•' SHIPPERS' GUIDE. FOR BO S-T .--BTEAMBELIP LIMB DIRECT. SA TLINGV ROM EACH PORT EVERY Wednesday and Saturday. tw A NE D STR NG T W W A A R B F E , B PRTLND.ELPHDL, , Tno PIIILADRLVIIA. , Faom BOSTON. _.113.A. hi_ 3P. 51. &RIES, Wednesday, May 4 SAXON,Wednesday,May 4 ROMAN, Saturday, " 71NORHAN Saturdai t T SAXON,' Wednesday " ARlES,Wednesday, "I] NORMAN Saturday," ,J 4 ROMAN, Saturday,. " 14 ARIES. Wednesday, " 18ISAXON,Wedneedny," Is ROA/AN; Eattirday, " 21[NORMAN Saturday 21 SAXONLWednesday.. " 251 ARIES, Wednesday,'." 25 NORMA N,Saturday, " 23,11051 AN, Saturday, " 28 • These Steamships Bell punctually:: Freight received everyday. . - • • Freight forwarded to 'Milk:dote in New Enea Fur Freight or 'Passage (Auperior acco dons) apply to HENRY .wgispß & 00., — 5 3 South Delaware avenue. PHILADELPHIA AMY SOUTHERN MAIL STEAMSHIP COMPANY'S REGHLAJ3 LINES FROM . QUEEN STREET WHARF. _ The YAZOO will sail from NEW ORLIOANB, via HAVANA. on Tueaday, May 10th, at 8 A. M. The ACHILLES will sail. for NEW—ORLEANS, +faaro May, , The CENTIPEDE will sail for SAVANNAH on Saturday, May 7th, at'B o'clock A. Bt. The WYOMING will sail from SAVANNAH on Saturday, May ith. The PIONEER will sail for'WILMINGTON,H.O.,on - Friday - 4day Oi at 6 A .' 11; Through bills of lading signed; and- paisage tickets sold to all points South and West. BILLS of LADING SIGNED at QUEEN ST. WHARF. For freight or p manage, apply to • • WILLIAM L. JAMES, General Agent, 130 &nth - Miro. street, PELLA, RICIEEMO.ND AND NORFOLK STEAMSHIP LINE. THROUGH FREIGHT AIR LINE TO THE SOUTH AND WEST. INCREASED FACILITIES AND REDUCED RATES FOR lES7O. STEAMERS LEAVE EVERT WEDNESDAY and 'SATURDAY at 12 o clk, Noon, from FIRST WHARF, above MARKET Street. RETURNING, LEAVE, RICIIMOND:MONDAYS and THURSDAYS, and NORFOLK TUESDAYS—and SATURDAYS. kr No Bills of Lading signed after 12 o'clock on Sailing Day. TB ROUGH RATES_to all points In. North and Bonin Carolina via Seaboard Air-Line Railroad, connecting at Ptirtsmeuth, and to Lynchburg, Va., Tennessee and the West via Virginia and Tennessee Air-Line and Rich mond and Danville Railroad, Freight HANDLED BUT OBOE,and taken at LOWER BATES THAN ANY' OTHER LINE. No charge for commission, drayage, or any expense for transfer. Steamships insure at lowest rates retaht received DAILY. . - • • - Etato•room accommodations for passengers. WILLIAM. I'. WADE A 00. No. 13 South Wharves and Pier No. 1 North Wharves W. P. PORTER, Agent stßichmond and City Poidt. T. P. CROWELL & CO., Agents at Norfolk TOR NEW YORK VIA DELAWARE AND RARITAN CANAL. EN PRESS STEA Ml3oa T COMPANY. The CHEAPEST and QUICKEST water communica tion between Philadelphia and New York. Steamers leave daily from First Wharf below MAR ET street, Philadelphia, and foot of WALL street New York. THROUGH IN TWENTY-FOUR HOURS: Goods forwarded by all the Lines running out of New York. North, East or West, free of commission. Freights received Nally atm forwarded on accommoda ting terms. . W.M. P. CLYDE & CO., Agents, - , 12 South Delaware Avenue JAS. HAND, 'Agent,ll9 Wall Street, New York. AT ESP EXPRESS LAVE TO ALEXA-N -4,1 dria, Georgetown and Washington, D. 0., via chin dvake and Delaware Canal, with connections at Alex. andria from the moat direct route for Lynchburg, Bris tol, Knoxville, Nashville, Dalton and the Southwest. Steamers leave regularly from the first wharf allov. Market street, every. Saturday at noon. Freight received daily. WM. P. CLYDE lc 00., No. 12 South Wharves and Pier 1 North Wharves. HYDE & !TYLER, Agents at Georgetown. N. ELDRIDGE & OD., AgentitatAlexandria, Vs DELAWARE AND CHESAPEAKE LI STEAM TOW-MOAT COMPANY.—Bargei towed t etween Philadelphia, Baltimore, Havre de Grace, Del awn re City and intermediate points. MM. P. CLYDE, it CO.' Agents; Capt. JOHN LAUGHLIN, Sup't Office; 12 South Wharves, Phila delphia. apll U.§ V-lAL--DELAW-ARE AN'D RARITAN CANAL. ' SWIFTS - URE TRANSPORTATION COMPANY, DISPATCH AND SWIFTSCRE LINES, Leming daily nt 12 nod 5 P. 51. • The steam propellers of this Company will commence 10i - ling on the Bth of March. Through in twenty-four Imam Goode forwarded to any point free of commissions. Freights taken on accommodating terms. A pply to W.M. N. BAIRD A - 00., Agents, mho-tf 132 south Delaware avenue. MACHINERY. IRON. &U. .ON FENCE.- The undersigned are prepared to execute orders tot ENGLISH' IRON FENCE, of the beat make. The most sightly .and the moat economical fence that can be need. Specimen panels of various styles of this fence may be seen at our office. YARNALL & T RIMBLE, 147-South front street. trib9 3m§ MERRICK & SONS, SOUTHWARK FOUNDRY, MO WASHINGTON Avenue, Philadelphia, STEAN- ENO MANUFACTURE S—High and Low Prestrare, Horizon tel, Vertical lNE , Beam, Oscillating, Bleat • and Contist Pumping. BOlLERb—Cylinder, Flue, Tubular, &o. STEAM HAMMERS—No:myth and Davy st y les, and 01 all sizes. • CASTINGS—Loam, Dry and Green Sand, Brass, &o. ROOFS—Iron Frames, - for covering with Slate or Iron. TANKS—Of (last or Wrought Iron,for, refineries, water, oil, Src. GAS MACHINERY—Bach as Retorts,.Beurtt Hastings. Holders and Frames, Purifiers, Coke and Charcoal Barrows, Valves, Governors, ao. SUGAR bIACHINERT—Such as Taciturn Pans and Pumps ; Dofecators, Bone Black Filters, Burners. • iuthers and Elevators, Bag Filters, Sugar and Bout Black Care, &c. Sole mannfacturers of the following specialties: In Thiledelpitia and vicinity;of William Wright's Patent Variable Cut-off Steam Engine. In the United States,-of•Wescon's Patent Self-center• ing and Self-balancing Centrifugal Sugar-draining Ma. chine. Glass St Barton'e improvement on Aapinwall it Woolsey's Centrifugal. Sonora Patent Wronght-Iron Retort Lid. Stratum's Drill Grinding Rest. Contractors for the design, erection and fitting up of Re• flneriesfor working Sugar or Molasses. fIOPPER- AND YELLOW METAL Sneathlng,'Bratier's Copper Nails, Botta and Ingot Copper constantiY on hand and for sale by HENRI WINSdB & CO.. No. 847 South Wharves. COAL AND WOOD. . JAASOT: DINER. JOIIN F. SHISAFF. TB E UNDERSIGNED . INVITE TION to theirstock of • ' Sprints Mountain, Lehigh and Locust Mountalo Coal. which, with the preparation - girth by us, we think can• not he excelled by, any other Coal. Offies,.Franklin Institute Building, No. hi B. Se'venth street. ' DINE'S .Sc STICAFIN ialOtf Arch Street Wharf, Schuylkill. GAS FIXTURES. fIAS FIXTURES.:—,MISKEY, MERRILL Vf & TfIACICARA,No..7IB Chestnut atrect,-Inanu factill,re of Gioarixtures, Lampe, &a.: &co - if - out(' oali the at tentiomof the public to their large and , elegant at onement of tine Chandeliers, l'endanta t Braeketa, They ale, hitrodnee gas pipes Into dwellingif and public Lunn Ingo, and attend to extending, olteri4g an 4 ropti4; lag gad PipoP, Ali TfPfl& WATTAMC4i . . AUCTION SALES. TH.OBIAB & SONS, AUCTIONEBBBe • i Noe. les and U 1 Ronne FOURTH street, semis' (..)r STOCKS AHD REAL ESTATIO, ;ter Public sales at the Philadelphia It:change nett -TORSDAY,st 12 o'clock. - ruminate • sales at 'the Anetiern Atiire rtzsir Trivasney. • Or Sales at Residencoe receive especial attention Fxtqueive Salo at the Auction Rooms. RUFF:WOW idIODSHROLD FURNITURE.- PIANOS 111IRR0148,;:FLREPROOF FINN, 08,,R. , PETS, (VC: n /ON TfiIIIIEWAY MORNING. Idity 5, at 0 o'clock, at tbe Auction Rooms, by cats. logne. larke.asoomnont oD superior Parlor, Chamber. Library andMelning•Noem learn ituro,6Cott.tge Chamber Sidle; Of Desks and Tables, Narrosees, Feather Redo, Refrig rntare,. Ben ing • Blachinee Stoves, Grain Mill, 2 awn tlowbrit: fi nd Velvet, Bruds ils and other ()emote, PIANOS. Also. euroribr rosewood 7.octare Piano Forte, made by McCammon. , • , Oleo` superior rodeirbod 7-ootaio Plano , Fdrto, mace by R, N. ticherr. • • Aleo:superitir rosit*ood Pianb^ Forte, made Mhbogeny Plano, Madill br Loud. ' • , FRENCH PLATE billiltOßS: ' Aleci, nine Primal Plato Mantel and Pior Mirrors. • , FIRIi.PROOF• FEEL • Also, larde Flreproof befe.inade b byarrl dt Herring. Also , large Fireproof 'set°, made' hvane & Watson. Sold ler account ef a former purchaser._ , • • 011/NA' , AND PLATED NFARIS„ ' • Also, fine India China Dinner tiet,lsB,ploces. Also, th roe. decorated C Hine' Dinn Or and Toe Sets. Also. fine Plated. Tureen. Coffee Lim , Castor, pitcher, Berry Dishes, &c. • ' Safe No. 7106 Pine strbet. SURPLI7BFUBNITURE, FRENCHE PLAT MAN TNL MIRROR. FINN VELVET. CA ItPlad. . :ON MONDAY IlIORNING.• • ' May 9, at 70 o'clock by catalogue, the superior Filrni tore, comprising—Walnut and hlahogany Parlor Fur niture, covered with hair cloth; Walnut Centre Table, Walnut Extension Table Mahogany Sideboard, fine China and Glassware. blaliogeny and Walnut Chamber Furniture, Feather Bede, Cooking Ntensile, Acc. , . Sale No. 12-31 Arch street. HANDSOME FURNITURE, PIANO, GHANDLIEES, ELEGANT FRENCH PLATE, MANTEL AND PIER MHIBORS;r1H011 AXMINSTER, ENGLISH BRUSSELS . AND OTHER CARPETA. kn. ' = GN TUESDAY MORNING. May 10, at 10 o'clock, at No /231 Arch street, by cata- . logue, the Handsome Furniture, comprising—Walnut Parlor .Furniture.• covered :with. hair cloth; Walnut Centre and Bouquet Tables, 5 elegant French Plate Mantel end Pier Mirrors. ebony and' gilt 'frames; Plano Forte. made b' Meyer; Walnut Hall Furniture, Walnut and Aik._.Dliting Meyer; Furniture t revered with reps: Mahogany Chamber Furniture, fine Curled Hair Matresses, fine Feather 11'ds Bolsters and Pillows, Mahogany Secretary and Bookcase; Mahogany Wardrobo, rich Axminster;Eng lien Brussels and other Carpets, etc, Most of the Furniture was made by Mooie & Cainpion. May be oxamined'at 8 o'clock on the morning of sale.' Psremptory Sale on the Premises, No. 1331 North . • Twelfth street. MODERN RESIDENCE AND HANDSOME WAL NUT HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE, PIANO FORTE, PIER 'MIRROR, FINE _VELVET AND BRUSSELS CARPETS. CHINA, CLASS WADE. Ac.- ON WEDNESDAY MORNING, Moy 11. at Id 'o'clock; by catalogue, ht No. 1331 North TWeitth street, above Master street, the entire House hold Furniture, Comprining—flandsome Walnut. Parlor., Sitting Room and - (Humber. Furniture; 7-octave Piano Forte. made by Fiecher; Pier Mirror. Paintings, Cliromos,ttne Yelvet.Brussok and.other Carpets,Chittai Glasswere, Kitchen Utensils. -Ac: May-be examined-an the morning of ease - at-8 - o'clock: - MODERN RESIDENCE. . Provions to the sale of Furniture, will be sold the MODERN THREE-STORY BRICK RESIDENCE, with Three-story Back Buildings, lot 17 feet, more or less, front, by 97 feet in. depth, to a six feet wide alter. Immediate possession. Sale absolute. Terms—s226o may remain on mortgage. • NOTICR—Our sale 17th May will include tho Valu able Residence N 0.239 South Thirteenth street. - SibOTT - 13 -7— ART GALLiERY - sarD - AUCTION COMMISSION SALES ROOMS, ' B. SCOTT, la., Auctioneer. 1117 CHESTNUT street, Girard Row. Ftwniture Bales every. Tuesday and Friday morning, -at-10 - Particular,attention paid to ont-door Bales at mode rate rates.de2P tf . FINE MODERN OIL PAINTINGS: - •-"' - In consequence of the severe storm on Friday, the Sale of Paintings has been postponed until TUESDAY AND WEDNESDA.Y EVENINGS, May 3 and 4, at 744 o'clock. The Collection contains 125 Paintings,. _Chrotnos, En gravings, ,tc., mounted in fine gold leaf frames, pm brncing many pretty subjects. The following Artists are represented:. - J •Damilton, • ED. Lewis. ; W.Shoridan Young Dammanu, 11. C. Bispham, T. Dlm au, Searby, T. Henry Smith, Krause, G: F Bensell, W, Anderson.- Briscoe. Sale positive, without reserve. Now open for exami nation. PEREMPTORY SALE , - - - W Reserve. ..._Without Rerve. . - Mr. CHARLES F. II ASELTINE , before sailfng - for Europe, on the 14th day of. May. will cell, at his Gal leries. 1125 Chestnut street, on TRUESDA Y and FRI PAY EVENINGS, May 5 and 6, all hie VERY VALUABLE COLLECTION OF OIL PAINT INGS AND WATER COLORS, containing specimene-by the folloWing artists : Boutthonne, Boulwanger, Meyer Von Bremen Desgoffe, Zomacois, TT erbsthafTer,- Pre) er, Prof. Ittenbach, De 'Touche, Id iliner, Cow. Achenbachaloraud. Herzog, Illeyerhenn, Fauvelet, TriEbel; Berliner, 'Troyer, De Boos, Lobrichon, Verheyden, Lasalle, IC orwaseeg, fits, Vortin, Iliklebr . andt, Pant Weber, DeshOyek, lirillomn, • Von Marche Willichni, Co!, 'Zither Buehler, Boettcher, Cam phausen, Dansaert, De Block, • Sonderman, Peoria, Wittkamp. Soli, Laroche. Leroy, Carl Becker, Milroy, Thiseltine, Jacobsen, Ramsey. Wilms, Atmonx, Camillo, Aretz, Moran. Diffenbach, Do lies, Memel-, Marnhn. •- '' - Mario, ' . '- ' Lewis, Crutkolimok, Leichert, Caralmiti, Junghefm. 0. Erdtnann, Snitzereg, . De Brackeleor, Dorm, hrliren, Schopin, A. R. Jones, - Verwee, Voltz, Werner. • Now on exhibition at the Galleries • STILL ANOTHER OREAT SALE OF SUPERIOR FURNITURE. THE PUBLIC DEMAND CALLS FOR THEIR CON TINUATION. BARLOW'S NINETEENTH Sd.LE. ON FRIDAY MORNING. May 6, at 10 o'clock, will be offered at public sale, an- other great and elegant Stock of superior and warranted Furniture, in unusual variety, comprising—Parlor anti Chamber Sets, Eookcases, Hair and Hoak Matresses, Mirrors. A . c. Also, 54 yards of- Elegant English Brus sels Carpet, used_ but _thirty days. We earnestly desire to impress upon Hie minds of the public that all goods offered I,y us aro not tho usual goods made for auction, but is the most Superior Furniture. both in quality and design, that is manufactured in thiscity by cetebrkted Makers, and each and every, article sold by us be accompanied by d written guarantee. .Store open ,day and evening for examination of stock. Prices given. and "polite attention to all, both great and small." Catalogues ready on_ntrtlay_afternoon_ on othe premises tor purchasers and shipped to any part of the United States. EXTENSIVIc STOCK OF FURNITURE. BEDS AND BEDDING AT PUBLIO SALE The entire large stock of Messrs. F. G. Sc V. J. FRASER, No. 110 MARKET street, will be disposed of at Public Selo, without any reserve, . ON WEDNESDAY and THIJRSDAY MORNINGS, May 11 and 12, at 10 o'clock each clay. MESSRS. FICA IIER are retiring from business after TM ENTY-FIVE y.ears'osaldnons application, and take this method of disposing of their largo stock. which will most positively be sold regardless of cost. To 'those de siring to purchase their spring Fnrniture, and from a house of established reputation, this opportunitylS one seldom offered. The stock embraces an unusual variety of Parlor Suits, Walnut Chamber Scts. Cottage Furniture, Parlor Tables,-Bookcases,-Mirrors, Hall and lEtmbrclla Statffiti, Ilat Racks, , Etageres,. Lounges, Extension Tables, Chairs of all kinds, Matreiscs and Bedding in great ya.•• riety, Office and Library Furniture, Wardrobes, Towel. StandtqCommodes, dc., dc. We. invite special attention to this sals,being one of the largest of the season, and the excellent quality of goods that will be offered Catalogues ready:THlS DAT, and may be had upon application to Messrs. Fraser, at their warerooms, or at the office of the Auctioneer. ' Tbe premises No. 1109 MARKET street, now occupied by 'Messrs. P. G. /t V. J. Fraser ak a Furniture Ware• roomovill be routed to a responsible , party, and the good-will of the present buoinees for - sala. Apply at the office of 11. SCOTT, JR, 1117 Chestnut street. DAVIS & HARVEY, AUCTIONEERS, (Late with and 60 Sixth e.) Store Nos. 48 and 60 North street. OW' Furniture Sales at the Store every Tuesday, OW" Sales at Private Residences solicited. Sale No. 1216 North Eighteenth street. SUPERIOR WALNUT PARLOR AND onAmmiat FURNITURE, SPRING MATHESSES, FINE TAPESTRY AND IMPERIAL CARP ETB, &c. ON THURSDAY MORNING, Flay 5. at 10 o'clock, by catalogue, at, No. 1216 North Eighteenth street, above Girard avenue, the entire supe rior Furniture, including Walnut and Hair Cloth Parlot Furniture, handsome Centre Table. Tennessee marble, Oiled Walnut Chamber Furniture, fine Spring Mat t esi,es. Extension Table, handsome Tapestry Carpets, tine Imperial .Carpets t superior Refrigerator, COOk.ing Utensils. &C. . . Blny•be examined on the morning of sale. J AMES A. FR E 'MAN, AtTOTIONELICA, No. 422 Walnut street, ' ' • • Saloon the Premises, klerehantv ille. DESIRABLE BUILDING LOTS. ON THDRSDAIf 'AVTERNOON,_ At .4 /'Clock, will be sold at auction. a nutribor of desir able Building Lots, adjoinieg \Velwnod Station. Mar ellaittville, New Jersey, each al by go feet fronting on I la turnpike, Myrtle, Woodbine and'Welwood avenges. Pl e as at the Auction Store. Tickets. gratis to and from HE;P,RINGIPAL .24.0NPY;ESTABLISH fd.ENT,1LE. cornor'of of and RAGE streets. fdoitayAdvanced on Merehandise.generAllyWateltes. Jewelry, Ditimmide, - Gold and Silver Plato, and on all entries of value, forany longt4l, of time agreed on. I', ATCHES AND f SWELR AT PRIVATE.-SALE. Fine Gold Hunting Uwe, Double Bottom. and Open Face English, American and 'Swim Patent Lover Wittglieu ; Fine Gold Hunting Case and Open Face Mho Watches ; Fine Gold Duplex And other Watches Fine Silver Hunting Case anti Open Face English, Ame• rican and Swine Patent, Lever and Laraine Watches ;. Double Case English Quainter and other Watches • La tires' Fano% 'Watches, Diamond—Breastpins, Finger Rings, Ray Rings, Studs, dro. • Flub Gold Oinking, Medal lious,•Bracelets, Scarf Pins, 'Breastpins', ringer Rings , Pe/101) CUM and Jewelry generally • - FOR BALE—A largo and valuable . Fire-proof Ghosts suitable For a Jeweller' cost eat*, Also, tahmralLots iu §outh yamtleullriftlx anci COailt , • nut . • .•\ AUCTION SALES BIINTING,DURBOROW & 00. ; -- • • Nos. 232 and 231 Market streotA... c UCT O oruerofEßatiltSk, ;LARGE SALE Or FOREIGN' 4,,ND_ftoksanart , , DRY GOODS, ; ',, • ON THURSDANBIORNING.' •4, ' May NOM 10 o'clock.on four months'oredit,fitchidlig4-:' . , DOMESTICS. . 7 e Bales bleached and brown laustins add brll IR. do white and scarlet all wdotemd DORIAI ,• Canes Renincky and • ther hems,' Miners' Flan els. do Blue CbecksTicks,Denims,Stripon,'Osnatimouf do ilecian, Corset Jeans linings, paddiags, - it o Blanchester and;Demeetre,GlndhainsiOdttotioddo !do Satinets..omommerm Twes, Keratin, Prlnta, t. LINEN GOO D S ..- • Caeca Duck Coatings, Drill., Oraah.• Diaper. •Dirlaps. do 4 4 Itibh Shirting Linens ; Barnsleir Showings. .;' , l , ••;o do Dollande, Canvas, Bu, ks. Napkins, Doylies. , do Blenched and W. 'Dambeks,'. Table, patio d ,. Towels, - &c. AI ERCH ANT TAILORS' GOODS. . pieces English, • Belgian' Wid Saxony black and btnitio plain and twilled allool and Unidireloths,.' ' ' ,do El bceuf Tricots, English Motions, Drop. (Plat,. • ;do Aix In ()Lavelle Fanc3i - CansitoOold: an 00111104 ,do ' /trench Doeskins. _ltalian _Cloths,' Satin -do Chines. . _ . • SILK .10 IN TIMED, VELVETS, of very elegant quality, for city trade. - • DRESS GOODS, SILKS, -pieces London. Klock and ; colored Mohair's, 'Alpacas, do Scotc Gingbams,llf nwunbiOirSi.Bnifige4Pitrilig! ;do. Delaines, Percsles, Grenadines, Poplin- 4 1 Pull.i , 'do ' black and colored Silks. tiLnks: Basques', did. t,. • 2000 DOZEN g L.O. KOK FB,, embracing fall lines of all qualities, of a well kricrwis ma k e. ' • ••-) PARR . PRINTED CASHMERE snAvn.A. . Fall lines of the richest designs, In superb qualities. 'Also, very r l 9 l l Faris Silk Shawls '. , Alno,. • ' i • ‘, English Lisle and India Gauze Shlrte. ' • . English regular made *hits and broiyft Cotton Balt ' Ladles' and gents' black and colored Rads real Aid= Gloves. for city Balm ; "-- Also, - • .- ' i. Hosiery Gloves Balmoral and Hoop Skirts, Paris Ties, TratMlitikafid Morin o S hLrts arid: Drawers, Tailor , ' Qniltv," Notions. Tailors' l'rtrumkno, pone ers, Umbrellas, Are.. - . • 36 PI CE9. BLACK BILKSig , of the best Lyons makes;for city retail trade. • • . • Also, by order of , Messrs: KIITTER. LOCK 15.11115YER &CO A, full line, of black Thibet riquaro and Long Shawbis wool fringes. • A full line of .black double twilled Merino; ffii(uSralsii Long Shawls, wool fringes._ „. A Nllllll6 of black. double twilled Maribo • A full line or black'fifoneseline Delaine*Shawls.''. • A full line of white all wool Llama Shawls. Arun line of black all wool Llama Bhawla. Arun lino of bluek and white Grenadine Shawls. . . kfull line of black and white Crepe drEspagae. Also, a line of brocho border. black all wool 'Stella ' Shawls, Also, 5(0 rich printed Cachemere BLACK ALPACAS.„ , " A full line of - all grades to finest Importedyof Taft" " superior finish. , ~. • • LARGE • BALE OF CAROETINGS. 600 :ROLLS WHITI2,I RED CHECK AND rAzigy CANED!! kIAITINGS, &c. • .. UN FRIDAY MORNING, • May 6, at 11 o'clock, on four months' credit, shoat= piecca Ingrain, Venetian, Liar, Hemp,' Cottage - and pig, Carpetings, Canton Mattings, an. - L4110.1C et:Lit OF FRENCH. AND Oni trIVAPA I VANI B I44. -- may 9, at ICro'clock.on four months' credit BALE OF WEI CASES BoOTS. snows,- neTs..ato UN TUESDAY MORNING. May 10. at 10 o'clock. on roar months' credit. '• THOMAS BIRCH •& - SON AUCTION= ERRS AND COMMISSION iIIERCHA.NTE4 No 1110 CHESTNUT street: Rear entrance No. 1107 Hansom street,: _ ;Household - Furniture of every description Tecettod on Consignment- Bales of Furniture at Dwellings - attended to on the • most reasonable terms.- Sale at No. 1110 Chestnut street: ' HANDSOME WALNUT. PARLOR, LIBRARY. , - - CHAMBER - AND DINING ROOM FURNITURE. FINE VELVET, BRUSSELS AND mattein • CARPETS, LARGE MANTEL AND PIER' 01,ASsEtii 4 ROSEWOOD PIANO FORTES, EPINIC , .;., BROCAVELLE. DAMASK AND LACE C p FOR 20 LARGE AND EIMALLBOOK..i.:I,, •!A CATEB~PEVEBAL`FINE iIiiT I PAGE SUITS, SPRING AND HAIR. MAT RESSES, BOLSTERS AND PILLOWS, 'JUNI; SILVER PLATED WARE AND TABLE OUT - - LEHI PAINTINGS ..AND. _ENGRAVINGS. .h.ITCHEY FURNI rurtu, &c. ON FRIDAY MORNING, At 9 o'clock, at the auction store, No 1110' Chestnut street, will be sold, n large assortment of superior made Furniture.; for. Parlor, Library. Chamber and Dining Room. ADO. Carpets, stirrers; Piano Fortes. Curtains, Sew ingMachines, Plated Ware and Cutlery, Paintings, : Engravings• do SUPERIOR SECONDHAND FRNITURE. Also, the entire, Furniture. Carpets and Mirrors an. large country residence. rentovert to thestore ittgocat cendition and made by Moore 4t Campion. . LARGE MIRRORS. - Also, 10 large Muntel end Pier Glasses. WINDOW CURTAINS.' , Also, Curtains for about 25 windoWSTer - biTiCatello. damask and floe lace. . Ito above will be ready for examination on TharsdaT afternoon, with catalogues. • EXECUTORS' SALE. 11031 AS BIRCH A SON, Auctioneers. REAL E W P AT E a . v MA y CHINERY AND FIXTURES OF THE PHILADELPHIA IRON HOLLOW WARE FOUNDRY, Southwest corner of Front and Reed Streets, ON THURSDAY MORNING. May 12,. 1870. at 12 o'clock noon- At the AUCTION STORE, No. 1110 CHESTNUT street, WILL BE SOLD AT PUBLIC SALE, by order of the ExPcutor N 0.1.—A II the interest P. B. Savery,deceaeed., being one undivided half of Mt that certain lot or pieco ground, with the buildings, thereon Orectedr at the southwest corner of Front anti Reed streets, beginning at the southwest corner of Front and Reed streets, ex tending southward on said Front street:lo6 feet 6 Inches; thence westward 102 feet 3 inches to Lancaster street, thence northward along, Lancaster street 215 feots Inches to Reed street. anti thence eastward 100 feet to place of beginning. The buildings are two and. throe stories high, substantially of brick, with metal roofs, and all to use for foundry, worktehomt and ware-rootns, and contain 3 steam engines and boilers, 2 HoKenzle's cu polas and blower, and a complete set of fixtures for eon ducting the hollow-ware business in all Ito. ranelles. and the miscellaneous casting hominess. The'above do scribed property is subject to an annual ground rent - or $l9B 10. • No.. -,The ono undivided half of the Lot or Piece of Ornund, on the west side of Front street,with the Three story Brick Dwelling House thereon erected, adjoining. the above-described property on the south, beginningat the distance of 300 feet G inches southir the senthwest.,. corner of Front and Reed streets ' contaiulug33 feet 5. Inch , s in trout on cold Front street, and extending west ward ut that width ltfi foot to Lancaster, street. with a. ironic dwelling on Lancaster street. The above property to be sold subject to a yearly groan& rent of 646e7. . . . .No.6.—One undivided half of a lot of ground on the ; east mile of Front, street, op_pusite the above described: - fentidry. begimong at the distance of about 107 feet soathward from the south stile of Rost street, and ex tending thence southward on .the east side of Front street 45 feet, and thence southeastward 208 feet to tno west side of Oswego street (formerly Church street). thence northward along the West side ,of Oswego street 66' feet 6 inches to a' 25 feat wide street, bid out and thrown neon for common nee by James M. Leonard, called McLeod street and thence, northwest along the. southern side of McLeod street about 208 feet to the east side of Front street the. place.. of beginning. with the improvements, consisting Hof is shed 300 feet long, Subject to a yearly ground rent of $7OBO-100: • the interest of P. 8., Soren' in titellaske, patterns. and moveable tools, Patent processes - anti'.` good will of the Foundry business carried on ,at the above described premises, under the hrin of Savory & Co., and Barrows, Savery & Co., svhich 'are more par denominated and described in the inventory 'and appralsement of the estate of said P. B. Savory, on file at the office of the Register °Mills of the County or. Philadelphia, A copy of which.' together With the Rasksi% tools, etc.. therein described,. may he seen' and exam ined on the above described premises, and at the office of Barrows, Slivery & °O. , No. s.—Also, 8 shares of the Sotithern Mall Stetuntildp Terms at sale, T A. MeGLELLAND, AII6TIONEES ]219 CHESTNUT Street. a Ofir Personal attention given to Sales of Household Furniture at Dwellings. Y®" `Public Sales of Furniture at the Auction Booing, 1219 Chestnut street, every blonday and Toursday. GET For particulars see Public Lodger. Wl' N. 11.—A superior class of Furniture - at Private Sale. , , Manufactnreeo Salo Manufacturer's Salo ManufactUror'it Salo ELEGANT CABINET FURNITURE, SUITABLE for Parlor, Chamber, Dining 'loom, Library and Onion Wardrobes, BOO(CRSOB. Sideboards, Easy and Chinn her Chairs, Extension Tablee. Lounges, Centre end; Bouquet Tables, Hall Chaim, Ac., he. To be cold • ON THURSDAY MORNING, May S. at 1034 o'eleek, by catalogue, at Concert Hall Auctiou Rooms , _ No. 1213 Chestnut street, a very largo assortment of Elegant Cabinet Furniture, by order of manutactorers. Sale peremptory. 1 SCI3ARRITT 86 CO., AUCTIONEERS CASH' AUOTION HOUSE, N 0.230 111A11/11 5 T strecti, corner of Bank street. Peremptory' Sale. 200 CASES BOUTS. SHOES, BROGANS.a&L MORALS, do., • ON THURSDAY MORNING. May 5, commencing at It/o'clock. On account' of whom it may coneern.at II 0 0 oc .1.1 Idris older and Rine Vinegar. , Also, 100 cases genuine IVorcesterthire'Sfittee: r • AirARTLIT BROTHERS; ATIOTIONEIIaink/ 111, t Lately Salesmen feria. Thomas . it ftni t i , N 0.704 CHESTNUT street. Above Seventh BLANK WORK - AND STATIONERY - TRAPS BALM, Invoices will be receive , ' fora few &Aye for the Trade, Sale.of Stationery and , Blenik. wock 'Molt off: PERSONAL PR()FESSOIt Jona BuertA.NAK, M. D. , csu be cOnsulted personally or by letter in all 'die- 005,08. Putlents can-rely upon a safe, spoetly, nod per msnent cure, as the., Professor prepares and furniollow . ; new, scientific and positty6 remedies specially adapted to the wants of the patient: Pp rate offices in Oellpeo / 31,11 d i ng , Ncl .5/4 PANE vtrvotr ()Met+ hours from 9A. ( tV V P. DI, 1139 sElN_Trarg_,Vidl74 - 0,