The press. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1857-1880, April 16, 1861, Image 4

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    &tract of a private letter from an Ame
rican resident in Paris to a friend in
this city.
On account of the disturbed condition of
things in Europe, American affairs do not at
tract so much attention hero as they - otherwise
would. What is said of us, however, is hu
miliating enough. We are considered, gene
rally, as a Power that has been, but is not. The
asserted right of sccession,and want of power,
if not of inclination, to coerce a rebellions
State into submission, has rained us as a
Power. Not only so, but as these disastrous
doctrines will be carried into the new Con
federacies, Europe looks on with perfect in
difference, knowing till well how trail a cord
will bind together all new Combinations. I
believe we aeo now considered nothing more
than a second-rate Power—a nation to be
placed in the same category as Spain, Portu
gal, Sweden, Belgium, and Persia! Pleasant,
is it not?
The English say that "both sections of the
old United States seem to be occupied with
but one thought, and that is to see how they
can best transfer their power and greatness
into the hands of rival nations!"
Posterity will mark with scorn and con
tempt, if the present generation do not, all
such traitors as Cobb, Floyd, Toombs, and
others of like stripe.
The mentioning of Floyd calls to mind his
defalcations. What a condition of things haa
existed in the Cabinet at Washington ! How
many millions have been taken from the peo
ple by their servants ! What rottenness !
What depravity ! What infamy !
Were it not for the occasional exposés on
this side, I should really think we were the
most depraved nation in the world.
In respect to ''defalcations," however, we
are not yet up to the cc old world." The re
cent affair, or failure of the great Paris mil
lionaire and banker, Monsieur Mires, makes
our peculation appear rather small.
Among other little irregulanties" of M.
Mires is the over-issue of railroad bonds—a
favorite operation. He was empowered by the
Roman Railroad Company (his house in Paris
is called the Caisse Generale des Chemins de
Fer) to issue 240,000 bonds, each for 600
francs. So far, so good ; but it is alleged
that, after having got hie hand well in, and,
probably liking the business, he concluded to
issue a batch of duplicate (in Nos.) bonds (it
is supposed duplicate, as no No. higher than
240,000 has been met with,) to the modest
amount of fifty, or so, millions of francs, and
pocket a goodly portion of the proceeds.
With the aid of a taw "high officials," to
wham he had to ie come down handsomely,"
it is asserted he succeeded in ce placing " all
the extra bonds ; bat where, and how, is not
yet known. I wonder if he didn't learn the
business of Schuyler, of New York 1
Mons. Mires is in prison awaiting his trial,
is .
but it said so many g , great personages"
are implicated that he will be whitewashed,
and come out all right.
Let me here compare some few of the re
cent defalcations in Europe with our "Floyd
one :"
Baron de Bruck, Austrian Minister of Fi
nances, estimated. 825 000.000
Monsieur Miretb - whole loss estimated ..-.-- 30. 0 0 0 . 060
Defalcation of cashier of , Union . Itank of
London L about ..... -••-• -- - 1.800.002
Fraud of Zook-keeper of Commercial Bank
of Loudon. about-- ...• •.- Sto.ooo
Fraud on United States Treasury, by Floyd,
Russell, it Co.. • • 7.500.000
A respectable catalogue indeed, and one
which could be extended almost indefinitely ;
but we are, thank Heaven, as yet bebind in
this race, if in no other, and I hope may
always remain so.
A few words more about the Mires affair.
A short time since, J. Mires ez Co., as
principals of the joint-stock concern which
they called geLaCaisse Generale des Chemins
de Fer," but of which J. Mires is the head,
middle, and tail, contracted with the Turkish
Government a loan to said Government, the
amount of which was rather indefinite. Ho
agreed to give the Sultan 275 franca for each
bond of 500 francs, bearing 6 per cent. inte
rest on their face value, and to be paid in the
course of 36 years by semi-annual drawings.
He then offered these bonds ler sale in Paris,
London, Antwerp, Brussels, Amsterdam, and
Hamburg, at 3124 francs each, (374 francs
profit on each,) but stated in his circular that
certain bankers had taken 205,000 of the
bonds, andethat there were 250,000 more to
be offered to the general public. This so far
seemed all correct. Unfortunately, however,
for Mr. Mires, some one bad the curiosity to
add up the number of bonds, which he stated,
in a finely-printed table, (a thing no one ever
thinks of doing,) would be redeemed each
year, and it was found that instead of 455,000,
there were 801,891 to be issued ! Upon calling
Mr. Mires' attention to this discrepancy be
tween his nicely-printed circular and his
closely-printed table, be coolly remarked :
cc The table is correct—the other is not. But,
you will observe that I do not say there were
to be no more issued than the 455,000 bonds.
I say that certain banks have taken 205,000,
and after this I add, Il a ate reserve en
outre pour was sousutption ptsbliqu4 1 250,000
obligations!"
He admitted that he intended, 14 , the nice
wording of his circular, to deceive the gene
ral public, " for," said be, " it people knew
the Turkish Government were contracting so
large a loan as is represented by 801,891
betide, each for 500 francs, and at such a ruin
ous rate, they would never have purchased
them at so high a figure as 3121 francs each."
c , How, then, did you expect to dispose of
the 346,891 bonds you would have had left on
band, if this exposure had not been made ?"
gc Simply by selling them, from time to
time, in small lots at the Bourse."
This is what I call a swindle. Of course
there is nothing in it that law can reach.
Still, it is a deception of a most dangerous
character.
A part of the 455,000 were sold at 312 e
francs, but they are worth to-day only about
250 francs each, making a loss of 62e francs.
Mr. Mires lately married his daughter to a
forinne-hrmting nobleman, the Prince de Po
lignac, and promised to give her a dot (mar
riage portion) of 6,000,000 francs. The Prince
get 200,000 before the explosion; the balance
he will get when Mires comes out of prison,
and gets a chance to issue a lot more of dupli
cate railroad bonds.
As for the "Caisse des Chemins de Fer,"
it is composed of Mires and Millaud—or, more
properly speaking, it was formed by them, and
they are the principal owners of its stock. It
has a nominal capital of 50,000,000 francs,
and is constituted very much like our banks.
Its business was nothing in particular, but
everything in general. For iustanee, it 944-
tracted to furnish gas for the cities of Arles,
Marseilles, and, I believe, to other towns ; it
worked coal-pits at Fortes and Seneclias,
(France;) contracted to build docks at Mar
seilles; it was engaged in building Roman and
Spanish railroads, and issuing bonds on ac
count of said roads ; it loaned money to the
Department of the Seine ; contracted for the
Turkish loan; owned two Paris newspapers
the Conetituonne/ and the Pays; speculated
ti
enormously at the Bourse and had a finger in
pretty much everything that was likely to make
or lose money.
The stockholders in bin company are only
held to the extent of their stock; the whole
of this they will probably lose. It is reported
that his speculations at the Bourse in a single
day, involved his company 5,000,000 francs !
Mr. Mires is of Jewish origin, aman 56 - years
old, and. in 1848 hadn't a son to his name !
His failure is a tremendous blow to the credit
of such companies as the cc Societe. Geaerale
du Credit Mobilier," and is also a severe blow
to various industrial companies. Thoneands
are thrown out of employment by the collapse,
and hundreds are completely ruined. How
ever, the French rather like a brilliant affair,
even in a failure. They do not fancy the An
glo-Saxon way of eompromising—extending
aid Ind time to, or compounding with cre
ditors. It is too much of a hum-drain,
quiet, sombre way of doing such things to
suit 'them. They prefer a grand crash—a
splendid financial wreck a going down
into the shadowy gulf of bankruptcy amid
a blaze of blue lights and congreve rockets,
to any other way of ending a failed career!
There is something glorious to them in this
"conclusion" of a, tremendous insolvency!
It smacks of Solferino--rifted cannons and
military glory! The tears of the orphan,
coursing down cheeks wan and pale with
hunger; the widow folding to her bosom her
posthumous child, and striving to nourish it
from a tont frozen up with poverty, and the
poor old solitary man trembling on the verge
of the tomb—the meagre pittance due to
- these unfortunates suddenly wrung from them
by a 44 grand embarrassment," are but ao
massy thrilling circumstances added to the
great cataatrophe!
After all, however, it is their pleasure and,
perhaps, happiness ! Hence we must not
question too closely their manner of enjoying
a failure—their love of grandeur in roguery—
lest then might retort, cc It's none of your
affairs; mind your own business, and let us
alone!"
Te this subject and Monsieur Mires I say,
wale
Coercton—And the Enforcement of the
[For The Prem.) .:
It seems to he a pet:Altai - 4f some minds,
that while they accept and• acknowledge cer
tain conditions, they at the same time shrink
from giving, or allowing its being given to
them, the names which describe them most
accurately. It would appear that if we were
not strangely constituted, it should be only
those who are conscious of the appropriate
ness of a name which was _intended to make
a charge against them, that , would repudiate
it but we find that the innocent, those who
might be proud of the position- assigned
them, in an attempt to condemn, repudiate
the term as well as the others. In fine, inno
cent and guilty alike will not swept from their
opponents an idea embodied in a name with
an outline too well defined.
That mankind should carry this repugnance
so far as to reject everything, even if true,
which describes, in the words of another, their
condition or position, if that other pretend to
deride er contemn; t, is preposterous;.but it
is exactly 'what the friends of the Government
have been doing for a long time,
,props of the word coercion." The
South asserted, in the beginning of our diir;
caltins, -- that the Government Wad in favor of
coercion—that it was coercing. The answer
is immediately returned that, on the contrary,
the South is coercing the Government. The
supporters of the Government reply that they
Merely intend to carry out the laws. If we
suppose that this was intended to spare
the feelings of those who are willing
to do right; if they are only to be made to
obey the laws, but not coerced, we might pass
over the expression and say, lets represent
carrying out the laws, and y traitorous resist.
ante to them. This; will spare the feelinge
of gentlemen who want to do right and who
will not be obliged to sacrifice the country to
oppose coercion, although they will knock
under to s. Bat this is not so : maintenance
of the laws is no more liked than coercion.
Let us take our stand then, and say, enforce
ment of the laws is coercion, and coercion is
right. If any one denies this, let us ask him
what laws are; whether the penalties of
law are not enforced, or whether we hear
of criminals hanging or imprisoning them
selves in punishment for their misdeeds,
or whether some persons who are not
so bad, or who represent the moral sense
of the community, are not obliged to
perform these offices for them. Laws, then,
we apprehend, are agreeable only to those
who are not amenable to them, and the latter
enforce them on those who are. When the
punishment meted out by law is accepted as
Justice by the breaker, and submitted to by
him as an expiation, there Ps no coercion, of
course. But the enforcing of law presnp
poses resistance, and the overcoming of resist- -
(ince is coercion. If the enforcing of the law
is right, then is coercion. Shall we say, be
cause we are called white, that we are black
Shall the Government relinquish the weapon
which, conscious of right, it holds, because,
mirror-like, it shows its antagonist his horrid
attitude? Rather let its enemies, Orson
like, terrified at their image in their bro
thers' shield, drop their arms and fly from
fratricide. How there are men who acknow
ledge the supremacy of the law, and still deny
that it ought to be enforced, is an anomaly
which the world witnesses for the first time.
Generally, in communities where the penal
ties of law are executed on offenders, whether
I in a difficulty to which a gentleman may be a
party, or on the lowest offender, we do not
hear of all who know that such might be their
case in certain contingencies, rising in remon
strance because it might be. Yet, strange as
it is, it is true that many would rather be
come traitors than remain true men on com
pulsion. The Southern mind, in the ag
gregate, seems to be of strange material. It
prides itself on many things with justice; but
if it pride itself on one thing more than an
other, it is on being a little more passionate
than reasonable. Let us, then, consider this
peculiarity, and let us regard our difficulty as
in the family. Madness is epidemic in the.
South—some of our friends are very Ill—let us
remove as much as possible whatever they can
damage, and abide the time when some of the
well members among them can allay the lever.
Most of all, lot us refrain from doing aught
that might endanger the well-being of the
latter. As for our honor, where it is in the
family there is identity of everything. At pre
sent, honor is most to those who most recede
—not that there is not a point at which to
stand. Onr cause is strong enough without
unseemly threats; and so should conscious
right and strength calmly do their duty hand
in hand.
A Maryland View of the Secession
Movement.
(For the Press.]
ILiosaseowN, April 5, 1861.
Tyranny or violence alone can justify revo
lution, and legitiniate revolution can be com
menced only by the people, by whom oppres
sion is first and last suffered from the offending
cause. Whenever the body politic becomes
grievous, the poison of discontent is first visi
ble among the people, and not amid their
representatives; but when the tranquility of a
Government is dethroned by the law-givers, it
is a as reign of terror" to bate their factious
ambition, and not a pure-minded effort to re
dress the wrongs of the people and prevent
their repetition. The people of all Govern
ments, ancient and modern, were distinguished
by loyal reverence for their country's laws,
except when their jealous, impulsive regard
for their liberties was craftily inflamed by
the fraud and falsehood of those in whose
keeping they had reposed their political safe
ty; and the history of the people of this Union
has furnished no exception to the merit of this
eulogy, and presents none now in our distract
ing agitation.
The people, to an extent comparatively in
significant, have been misguided by the de
positories of their good faith, and persuaded
to believe that, unless their respective States
Would Needs, the lieTtli will revel in ill , *
ruin. This will prove but a transitory illusion
to the victims of a preconcerted treasonable
deception. The fate of a Denton, Robespierre,
and Murat, begets the assurance that a retribu
tive reaction will yet opportunely come and
save the innocent and extitpate the guilty.
The majeety of the people ie awakening from
its lethargy. The people's unerring sense of
right and wrong is slowly, yet surely, rising to
its highest poise. The film of the mountebank
is being coat from their eyes, and the evil in
dignation with which traitors had inspired them ,
is ceasing to control them. They are com
muning together in their own councils, away
from the sound of the syren voice that would' ;
transform them into beasts, and are taking
counsel of each other. They are inquiring.
They are discussing the causes that alarm the
safety of the Union, and brought famine and
gloom to their homes of former plenty and
happiness, and the impending desolation of
civil war- They are repeatingwith execration
the words and deeds of the treason of Rhett,
Keitt, Yancey, Cobb, and Davis, and their
compeers in guilt, by whom they were wickedly
incensed to despise their country, degrade its
honor, and dismember it into worthless frag
ments, that they might pluck-from successful
rebellion's diadem its brightest jewel.
The people now behold that the helmet of
truth is not , aggression upon their rights, but
the insatiate lust for political dominion of a
few notorious men who regard the people as
their serfs, and now that autocrat Russia has
approached the Mecca'of emancipation and is
about to proclaim the liberties of 80,000,000
of her enslaved subjects, these Jeroboams of
accession seek to inaugurate the serfdom of
an equal number of their fellow-men on this
continent. When the people are not excited
by demagogues, they know no cause hut the
real one. They have no ambition or interest to
manufacture colorable pretexts and eernplaintS
to revolutionize their Government. They
never attempt to rebel while the Constitution
of their adoption remains inviolate, but sub
mit to its enforcement with the happiest con
tentment. The people have reviewed the al.
leged grievances of each State that has raised
the standard of revolt, and found them all of
ancient origin, (except the election of Lin
coln, which they effected by the dieruption of
the Democratic party ; ) none of which has bal
-1 paired the constitutional rights of any citizen
of this Republic.
In the fattens of all their causes of seces
sion they endeavored, with cunning thrift and
Idevotienal energy, to elect Breckinridge, their
factious leader, whose election they knew
could not repeal or influence the repeal of the
personal-liberty bills, or control the territorial
question of slavery. Yet his election would
have been a balm for every woe, to console
all which have have now plunged, with
reckless temerity, in the abyss of disunion.
This indubitable iact reduces all the causes of
secession to the disappointed ambition of
those who were the head and front of the
offending at Charleston and Baltimore, for
the same coterie are now in the vanguard of
the new Confederacy or cottonocracy, who,
while the North was extending the olive
branch and laurel wreath, were despoilmg the
Government of millions of property, and de
claring to their outraged fellow-citizens of the
North that they would accept of no compro
mises or concessions. Thia was not the voice
of the Southern people, but of Jeffemon Da
vis, their President, elected, not by the people,
but by a selitconatituted Convention of chronic
place-hunters.
Buchanan, and the Southern members of his
Cabinet, (all of whom are now in open rebel
lion,) attempted a similar dictatorship in 1857,
in Kansas. He then broke lance with the
sovereignty of that people and they proudly
triumphed in the rectitude of their cause. This
was the advent of his mighty fall from his high
estate; and the more he struggled to reclaim
his laurels in the way he lost them, the more
hopeless became his efforts, until be became
what he now is, an object more of sorrow than
anger. A. recurrence to the past history of
the South, so far as its political magnates are
concerned, makes self-evident the fact that
their withdrawal from the Union is the off
spring of , a distempered apprehenelon of their
equilibrium of office being lost in the great in
creasing preponderance of the. population of
the North. The past distribution of office
pabulum and honors to the South shows that
the beam of patronage bas leaned too partially
towarda them for equal justice to the North.
Judging the fhture by the past, the North will
receive no advantage from its overshadowing
numbers, but will remain content, as hitherto,
with the same ratio of official diepensation.
That the Southern Confederacy will consent
to any adjustment that does not embrace the
acknowledgment of their independence, I can
not believe. They have reiterated 'this assn.
ranee to the Government and the whole coun
try. They have assumed the gravity of a per
manently organized government, and are pre
paring to. ask
_; for it European recognition.
Oar State Department has denied their right
t o secede, aminefused to treat with them as
independent States. Yet, as such, they defi
antly regard the Government, the inertness of
which has made thousands of mutes of Union
people of the' South, because there is no
power with them to protect their freedom of
speech or action. Some action would be po.
hey. To suppose that the, laws can be en
forced without collision is a vain conceit. Nor
to enforce them at once is infinitely more sui
cidal to the best interests of .'the country than
would be the recognition of their Independ
ence. To do the latter would establish a pre
cedent for other States to go and do likewise,
which wouldlcreate such an instability in the
duration of our Government, that Europe
would regard it as a rope of asind, or an ignis
fallow, and-our days would be numbered, and
full of trouble. We would then canes te be a
nation, and exist only as a discordant conglo
meration of States, each pulling a different
way. J. D. S.
PRILADELPRIA BOARD OF TRADE.
EDMUND A. POUDERI
GEORGE L. RAIZ BY,_ uOMMITTHE OT THE MONTH
EDWARD C. BIDDLE,
LETTER. BAGS
At the Merchants' Exchange, Philadelphia.
Ship Tonawanda, —.Liverpool. May
Mu]; Daphne, naveiler— •-.-. Landon, 500 A
81141 Westmoreland. Won
ship Wm Cummings. Cope --Liverpool. soon
Ship Belle of the Ocean, Heed-- - ----Liverpool, soon
Bark Ellen Morrison. Platt-- ...,-,Lagnarra, soon
Bark Pension. Siolk,ns ~.........Fernando Po, soon
Bark Sea Bride,_,-Cork, soon
Brig B T Martin, Fren c h -- -Havana, soon
Brig Marshal Be,, Darling_ ._._ -Vora Crux. soon
Brig Loango, Evans -- ..8t Jago de Cuba. soon
Brig Thomas, Da Cunha _.........--Oporto. loon
Sehr Geo .1 Jones, Crowell— ......Demerara, soon
Bahr Eveline, York.. -- ..__-Havana. goon
MARINE INTELLIGENCE.
~ i e.
BUN RISEN-- -5 20-NUN SETS- -- .6 40
HIGH .6 56
lEEFIEEEI
Steamehiv Roston. Croaker. 24 hoar. from New York.
with mdse and passengers to James Allderdioe. Yester
day. at 4 P M. pitassd two large schooners- bound up;
brig Allston. at anohor off the buoy on the Middle; ship
Lanottater. hence for Liverpool, in tow of tug America.
off Bombay Nook; sohr Law , . Mulford. from Bagua A off
Liston's, and sohr B Wales, from Wilmington, DI C.
above New Castle.
Bohr Greenland, Garver, from San Bias, via Apala
*Mao's. 10 clay.. with cocoa nutsand red cedar to /Saba
J0a11430 & CO. 9th inet, off blatteraa, experienced a very
heavy gale from 8 during which 104 part of deck
load, split foresail, jib, and badly strained the main
sail; let go both anchors in thirteen fathoms water.
Same night, off the Ooraooke Light, bearing W by S.
lost stem boat, sprung both masts, strained vessel, and
commenced leaking ; lost both anotior stooks, and rode
out the gale : saw a fleet of vessels in distress, some
stranded, some dismasted, and many with signals of (Ba
rren flying.
Bohr Maryann McGee. from Boston, via Fort Dela
ware, 1 day, in ballast to David Cooper.
Bohr Rosannah Rose, Burgnsa, 4 Gaye from New York,
with laths to Baskin & Galvin.
Bohr Goernine. Willetta, 0 days from Wilmington.
N c, with naval stores to Baker & Folsom.
Bohr Silver Magnet. Perry, 6 days from Boston, in bal
last to N Sturtevant & Co.
Behr Lizale Mizell, Haley. from Boston.
Boar Mart Elizabeth, Medar Prov i d e nce York,
Bohr Sea Winn'. Tyler, from
CLEARED
Brig T Martin, French. Havana. John Mason do CO.
Brig Thrones, Da Cunha, Oporto, Manuel & Bebopler.
Brig. Tangent, Wylie. Wilmington, Del, E A Bonder
& Co.
Behr Tema', Andereon. /oaten. B A Bonder & Co.
Bohr Silver Magnet. Perry, Boston, N Sturtevant &
Co.
Bohr Lizzie Mann. Haley. Boston. E R Sawyer & 00.0
Bohr Mary Elizabeth, lugedara, Boston, J k Henry &
Bohr FE Rose. Burffese. Boston. Gaakill & Galvin.
uon t Son Witch, Tyler, Providence, John R White.
(Correspondenoe of the Philadelphia Exohangb.)
HAlrftB- DE GRACE, April IL
The Kingston left with 18 boats in tow, Mien and oon
signed as follows:
Burning Bush, wheat and corn to A G Cattail & Co ;
Mary Lund-wheat and flour to Humphreys, Roffman, &
Wright' Nymph. wheat and eloverseed to R Kirkpa
trick; Traveller, wheat to Budd dz. Cemler .1. William
Courter, lumber to M Sum & Sons • Judge Tern, and
J 0 Crawford, lumber to Norcross & sheets ; Ire, .T
Boadley, lumber to Samuel Wilson, A 8 Tinsman lum
ber to D Dadra
Wgdeerton ;Dr 8
, Dauphin. Judge
Higgins, United States, Emma & Milton, Baskin &
Reed, Two thetera, and A J Whitney - . coal to Delaware
CRY James Cook, lime to Elkton.
Yours, &e. W. E. W.
(Correspondence of The Preen.)
READIftGr,
The following' boats from the Union Canal passed into
the Schuylkill Canal to-day, bound to Philadelphia, viz:
Barbara, lumber to J H Deysher ; G Trevia, grain
to Perott Zs Brothers ; Conroy' & Barber, lumber to Mr
Lincoln ; Elias Reber, lime to AMOg Gaul : A IVE Mane,
lumber to otrery, John, dc Co; Charity, flour to Budd
Comley. F,
MEMORANDA.
Steamship Delaware. Cannon, hence at New York
13th inst.
Steamship Novaßootian, Ballantine. for Londonderry
and Liverpool, sailed from Fortino] 13th inst.
Ship Gre Eagle. Hashes, henna arrived at Rio do
Janeiro 11t h Ult.
Ship Frank Haynie, at Boston 12th ins t from Liver
pool, had helm western gales the first part of the pass
age, carried away main yard, &o. April 6, lat 43. lon 67.
had a heavy easterly gale, and carried away upper roam
u'rt 4 a . arilici =Li:Hallett. Little, for Havana, cleared at New
Orleans 9th wwt•
Bark Ellen Morrison, Platt. Laguayre...7no Hallett &
Co.
tiaras hlondamin. from Rio de Janeiro Feb 26; Cava
lier, from do 27th Feb. and Agnes, from do March 1. ar
rived at Baltimore yesterday.
Bark F Bill, Sylvester, hence at Havana 6th inst.
Bark 7.intarellar Bi l ker . from Rio Janeiro Fen 23, at
New York 14th inst , w th Coffee.
Brig Lydia Franoes, Campbell, was at St Thomas 30th
nli. (uncertain.)
Brig Avalanche, (Br), MoDugal. from Mayaguez for
Philadelphia, was abandoned 24th ult; captain and
crew were taken cif end earned to Matanzas-
Brig Prentiss Moths, Perk, Balled from Havana 7th
met for ItLstaisse.
Br schr Margaret Ilifford, Halifax. Kennedy, Stairs,
& .
B hr 0 8 Edwards, Gandy, Boston, Tyler, Stone,
& Co.
Bohr Hannah Willetts, at Newport 12th inst for this
port,
Bohr B Watson, Willoughby, at New York 24th last
from Cionfuogoe.
Rohr Julia Smith, from Apelooluoola, at Now York .
yesterday.
Bohr Fesaenden. Hooper, from Eastport for this port,
returned to Newport Ilth Mat on account of head winds,
and remained A M 12th.
Bobr P.lizs Williams, Taylor, at Mayaguez, P R. 25th
tilt for this port. to sail in a few days.
Ketch Commerce, Barnes, hence at Mayaguez 23t h
alt.
Bohr West Dennis, Studley, for Philadelphia, cleared
at New Orleans 9th ult, with 196 bales cotton, 61 bags
rope cuttings, 159 bills molasses, 13 hhde sugar, 409
empty oasts, and 69 pkge mdse.
Bohr Lewis Mulford, Doyle, 7 days from Sago& with
22 hhds sugar. 20 to, do, 6 Tibbs do. and hhds molasses.
to S W Welsh. Left brig Xenophon. just arrived.
err J 8 ehriver, Dennis, Baltimore, to A Orove., Jr
sir Tsoony, Ely, 24 hours from New York, with gide°
to Wm I Baird fr, Co.
Sir Ann liaise., Robinson, 24 houni from New York,
with mdse to Wm P Clyde.
MEDICINAL.
DYSPEPSLA. REMEDY_
D. DAILIIIS HAM'S
AROMATIC INVIGORATING
This fifsiticins kis born sold by Ms public for 31% viers
wok tacitasing favor, It is iscommendsd to Cars
Minifying, igsreousniss. Heart-Burn, Cot.
Pains, Wind in as StornatA, or Pains is the
BOMal, Hstittischs, Of (110.0‘415, Hiders
Coittplainis, Lots Spirits. /1/iirilift
biloisperanu,
Is simmaglig,write, ISVIOORLTIB.
WILL NOT iNTOXICATZ OR STOPEFT.
r Mediates it is eeiek and eftitnal. marine the
mostagirsvatod oases of Dyspepria, Kidney Comphunts,
and ell other derangements of the Stomach and Dowell"
Incspeedy manner.
It will instantly revive the most melancholy and
drooping spirits, and restore the weak, nervous, and
sickly to health, strength, and vigor.
Persons who, from. the injudiolocus nee of liquors, have
become deleotrul, and their nervous systems shattered,
eonstitationi brogan down, and cnbject to that tiep ins
ourse to humanity, the asuititibt TREMENS, wi ltal most immediately, feel the happy and, healthy invigo
rating eillcaoy of' Dr. Ham's Invigorating Spirit.
WHAT I'R WILL DO.
Dosir.—One wine glass full as often as necessary.
One dome will remove all Bad Spirits.
One doge will ante Heart-limn.
Three doves will ours Indigestion.
One dose will give YOU a Good _ Appetite.
One dose will stop the distressn g g pains of Dyspepsia.
One dose will remove the distressing and disagreeable
effects of Wind or Flatulence. and as soon as the
stomach receives the invigorating Spirit, the distress
ing load and all mufti feelings will be removed.
ope dose will ramose the out distrualing twins of
Colic, either in the atomise ti or bowels.
A few doses will remove all obstructions in the Kidney.
Bladder. or Urinary Organs.
Persons who are seriously afflicted with any Kidney
Complaints are assured of speedy relief by a dose or
two, and a radical cure by the cum of one or two bottles.
NIGHTLY DISSIPATION.
Person! who, from dissipating too much over night,
and feel the evil enacts 01 poisonous Liquors , in violent
headaches, sickness at stomaoh, weakness, giddiness,
&0., will fi nd one dose will emove all bad feelings.
Lunen of weak and sickly oonsiatutione should take
the Invigorating Spirit three tunes a day ; it will make
them stroMr• healthy, end ham y, remove all °berme
dirregularities ons and from the menstrual organs, and
restore !hi bloom df, irenlit and bbaiit 14 the careworn
During Pregnancy it will be found an invaluable medi
cine to remove disagreeable sensations at the stomach.
AU the proprietor oaks is a trial, and to induoe this, he
has pot up the IPITMORLTING SPIRIT in pint bottles at
Ingoents, quarts 81.
Neural Wear. dig WATER Street, New York.
DYOTT & CO., 111 W North SECOND Street,
Wholesale Agents in PDiladejnhisi,
And for eale by JOHN H. EATON, 25 N. EIGHTH.
Street. and ail Druggists. ley-thetalr
U gs. JAMES BETTS' OELEBRATED
A-Ln. SUPPORTERS FOR LAMES, and the only 811P
potters tinder eminent medical patronage. Ladies and
physicians are respeottallyrequested to call o_ni7 on
Mrs. atts,, nt her resndenoe, 1039 WALNUT Street,
PhiladelPhla. lto avoid nonnterfeits.) Thirty thousand
Invalids have been advised by thoir phyvielant to use
her applianeee. Those only are fOl3lllllB bearing the
Unaed /Mates ouorright. labels on the hoe. end nese
tures, and also on the blupporters, with tertisnotuals
eon.- bath &OS
BUSINESS CARDS.
A LFRED D. BRICK'S' -
UNITED STATES
AND
PATEENT OF UROPEAN
FICE,.
N. 144 SOUTH FOURTH. EITEMIT,
PHILADELPHIA.
Patent Lave of U. 8. (new) and F.uroee oan be ob
tamed gratis..
n F. GLENN, ACCOUNTANT AND
z-x• Rem. Estate Agent, Ro. 21.8 WALNUT Street.
((second floor. Room N 0.1,) and Southwest corner of
Seventeenth and Green. •
Acconnta sainted, Boar written ne. Estates settled.
money procured, money invested, Real Estate bought.
sold, end rented. tent-km'
a I'ABIES SOOVEL,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
No. 113 PLUM STREET, above Front.
narn-Im* CAMDEN. N.. 7
ly C. II LLM'A N, ATTORNEY-AT
• LAW, JEMMY SHORE, Pennsylvan ia.
Col Motions promptly made in Canton and Looming
eounbeir.
*trate.. To
Moser& Walter & irLb. ph•l a d .
Del: Jersey' Spore - 'Messrs Ilaro a rt ft ina g
Ca., Philad4,
ilhauner, Ziegler Co. Pif Co
r k bill o rlo.. , L, A a ...lstooter, e ioxi:ll_ l ravtn F ; rigl Y hni ard a , th
Uilm &
rat%
,k. T l l e m o r loddrop, Phila&e.; Ater2.
l a d - felB-3m
GEORGE J. UMBELS, UPHOLSTERY
and CABINET WAREHOUSE, No. L',l4 WAL
NUT !Street, opposite Independence Square, formerly
of No. 173 Chestnut Street. Philadelphia. .01364m*
JOHN ELLIOTT, WINES and LIQUORS,
Nee. 317 and 3/9 WALNUT Eneeti (Otteement
store.. between Third and Fonrth, north sided rails
dobbin. N. B.—Fine Old Whiskies always on head.
(Established in 1816.) ia3o-1r
PAWBON & NICHOLSON,
BOOKBINDEIM
!I 319 and 371 bIINOK Btrecd,
ttetween eetnu
trterlret , end Cht street:,
PRII. niiLPHIA.
JAMBS YAWBO24, JAM B. Nicnotaort
/07-Ir*
NEW ORLEANS 'PICAYUNE.—
JOY. COE, irg 00.
Nave been appointed aple agents in Philadelphia fog
this extensively emulating leper. of commanding
in
iiaenes. Business men are advertising in the best news_
tw o ld eity rt v a d country , At at E ty4we a tto63o4 , s , s ys l i t
isle
,
YUGUET it. SONS,
No IMPORTBR OF HAVANA Ofedl.ll.
flo. 210 Eolith FRONT street.
laseira regularly a fall sasortmett or desirablo
whjoh - tho afar at low ratas t for sash or sp
ired audit.
- • I
11,/ lIRPRY-WHIPPLEIRON 'BRICIGIL
LTA- STONE, QX/ejtNY, & BURTON.
No, 333 WALRLU STREET.
par avELpma,
ucir leave to inform Railroad Companies, and othem
tutereatAxi.in brolx opsuitanetion, that thir hava formed
& connection In Monism With JOHN W.MURPHY,
Gird Nellneerr (author and inventor of the above wall
known plan of non bridge,/ and are prepared to execute
orders. from oar start of the coontrY, from his designs
anpe rust 'superintendence.
.I. m lllettera relating to pions and estimates phould be
addressed to JOHN W. MURPHY Civil 15liatem,
mel3-fts. Far STONE. 0 WOLlcire & BUXTON
COPARTNERSHIP NOTICES.
NOTICE Is HBEKBY GIVEN that the
partiership lately existing between IgATAR
WOOtAKION and PAMUEI. O. ShIlTll. under the
name of WOOLSTON & SMITH. was dissolved on the
eighth day of April. A. D. 1861. by mutual consent. All
dents owing to the said partnership are to be re-
sewed by. and all demands on the said partnership are
63 be presented to. Runnel U. Smith. who will eentinee
the Danes Business, at No. 107 MARKET anent.
rhilij e jphig. ISAIAILWOO_DeiTOM.;
• BAWL. C. *DRIVEL--
THE PRESS.-PHILADELPMA, TUESDAY, APRIL 16, 1861.
utisugaoroz uospirrati.
THE JEtELIANOE
MUTUAL INSURANCE COMPANY,
OP pan,LnzLPlnt,
OFFICE, No. 3M.1 wALOWS ISTREET.
Insures against LOBB OR DAMAGE BY FIRE, on
Homes, Biome, and other buildings, limited
or trz k tual tr and i o: ni l'il v T r tnr . a,
chandise. irt town or
. .
country.
CASH CAPITAL. Ailll,llo 60-AERETS 4117.14,4 or,
Which is invested aei follows, ;
In first mortgages on city property, worth
double the amount --OREM go
Pennsylvania Railroad Co.'s 6 per cent, first
mortgage loan, at par Cow eo
Penmsylvaina Railroad Co.'s 6 percent. se
cond mortge load, 73 1 0,0 0 0)--.- WAD CO
Runtmgdon and ag Broad on Railroad and
Canal.Co.'s mortgage can— 4,600 00
Ground rent, 1.463 fp
Collateral loans, well secured—......r... Lirgo Cp
City of Philadelphia 6 per cent. Imo—. man al
Allegheny County 6 per cent. Pe. EL loan.. Mae co
Commercial Fleet stook—. 6,1 60 or
Mechanics' Bank stoolc-.-co
Pennsylvania Railroad Co.'s 5t00k...." 4,060 00
The Reliance Insurance stook 25,3 m pppp
The County Rim Insurance Co: stack 1,000 00
The Delaware Id: B. Insurance Co:. stook- Ito co
Union Mutual Insurance Co.'s scrip- on
Bills rroelvable 14,5 174
Book secounts, accrued interest. Oro- 7,104 66
Cub on hand 11,644.64
5817,143 OS
The Mutual Principle, combined with tho 'county of
a Stook Capital, entitles the insured to participate in
the profits of the Company, without liability for losses.
Losses promptly adjusted and paid.
DIRECTORS: •
Clem Tinsley, Samuel Bispham,
Witham It Thompoort, Robert Steen,
Fredenok brown, WI lram Muu4rt
William Stevenson* Bela W. MAIM*
John It. Worrell. . Marshall Rill,
' R. L. Carson, J. Johnson Brosin.
Robert Toland, Charles Leland.
(1. D. itosenzarten, Jaoob T. Bunting,
Charles a. Wood, Smith Bowen,
James S. Woodward John Bissell, Pittsburg'.
cI.RM TINGLEy. President,
B. M. RINCBMAN, Buffeter'''.
February 18, net. fen
THE ENTERPRISE
INSURANCE COMPANY
OP PHILAIIIELPHA.
u hilt irmintexcE AXOLUSIVELY.)
COMPANY'S iivarviNitz, S. W. COR.NDD
NOURTH AND WALNUT STRESTS.
DIRECTORS: .
F. RATCHFORD STABS.
WILLIAM SICKER,
NAIHRO Faaziwa,
JOHN M. ATWOOD.
BM. T. TRNDICK,
RIMY WHARTON.
F. RATCH
CHARLES W. COME. Se
PENN MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE
-a- COMPANY,
NO. 821 CHESTNUT Street E Ntirelphith -
CHARTERBA.PETUA
ALL PRE PROFI TSSURED DIVIDICD AMO U THE IN
Insure Lives for short terms or for the whole term of
life ; grant Annuities and Endowments ; purchase Life
Interests in Real Estate, and' make all contracts de
pending on tee oontingenoustref'Vf9.
TkcT ac; se E;eentore, Administnitors,Asaionetl i .
Trainees, and Guardian.. . •
AEMETB OF THE COMPANY, January 1.1961.
Mortgages, ground rents, real estate.----- .i11M2„9131 Iff
'United States stooks. Treasury notes, loans
of State of Pennsylvania, city of Phila
delphia,-
- .- X 8,796 At
Premium notes , loans on eollaterele, A.e.- 732,694 4Z
Pennsylvania. North. Pennsylvania Rail
roads. and County els oar oent. bonds— 1611.101 BO
Bank,
Bank,insurance, railroad, canal stooks. Ro. PIM 49
Cash on hand, agents' balances, &0., &o._ 88,106 14
$1,071,128
DANIEL L. MILLER. Preeident.
n a o A R y , y , EL E. STOKES, Moe President.
JOSH
It,
Secretary. mhae-tf
PELAWARE MUTUAL SAFETY Ifi•
BURANOE COMPANY. FICILADELPH/A.
Inooyeorated by the Legislators of PennrylYstua.lBlls.
Office 5. E. owner of THIRD and WALNUT arm%
MARINE INSURANCE,
eesel
On
CarVgo, li To all parts of the World,
Freictiti
I LAND INSUILAECES
On Goody by Rivera. Canals, Lakes, and land Car
riageslßE /. to oil
817. RAN ,rt
CES
n of the Union.
?I1
On Merobandise generally,. On Storni Dwelling
Roues,
AIMETE OF THE COMPANY,
November 1,1860.
10100,000 United. States five cent. loau---.*100,500 00
111,000 United States sin Y cent. Treasury
Notes, Fist* seemed intereet)--- lima as
100,000 Penneylvama Btate Ave oew
20,270 01)
31,000 do. do. ed.: do. do. 21.945 02
323,060 khilssielphia City six Y cent. Loan. 116,202 SF
WOG Tennessee State five oent.-loan-. 74,000 03
60400 Pennsylvania , Raulmad 2d mortgage
MA 0011 t. Wide 46,000' 00
15,000 SOO Mares, Moot aermaribawn 1,66 -
Comparin• interest and prinoipal
guaranteed by tae City of Phila
delphia • • 75.300 OD
IMO 100 shares Penasylvania Railroad
Compara_
LOP) 100 shares North rennsykno:Witail
road Company...-.
1,200 80 Maras Philadelphia Iceßaan
Steam Tag Company. • 1,100 00
250 5 shares Philadelphia and Harrwde-
Grace Steam Tow-boat Company. SR) 00
MD 2 shares Philadelphia EXOiIBMP!
CJOIP." 12100
1,000 2 shares Continent* #o 155 05
0536,700 Rat. Cast #547,335.34. Market va1.#55!,05S 71
Bitty reoevrabie, far uractroacom 171.336 42
Bonds and mortgagee...—. 64,600 00
Real estate— 01,853 65
Balance , dee at
Ma
rine Petioles. interest. and other debts due
the Company:-...... . 51,U6 03
Boris and stook of sundry Inestrance and
other 00Miginiett mom* 2, 0 IQ .
Cast on band—in aan tn 16 •
in drawer—. 465 35
29,108 U
. .
.#594,90761
DIItECTOBB.
William Martin, Begmel B. !Stokes,
Edmund A, Bonder, reuidern"
weer rani= - Item - 7 ellisan,
John
Fame, Edward "Darhaatoa.
J o h n „_Thwig, H. Jonesßroop,
James Tref:wait, fteneer Wllbrauw.
wilham lir, Wisomas C. Rand.
Wiibam James' 0.• ad, Robert Barton,' •
0: - redeig. Jacob
Josejth H. Beal, James B. m'lrlipen.
Dr. A. M. Rintlen, . Joshua P. gyre.
Stores C. Leiner, Lob,ußaemple, Pitteet,
Angie Craig. ' D.T. Morgan,
Charles Keily. A. 13. Berg_er,
WILLIAM MARTIN,' President.
TROIL C. HAND, Vice Premident.,
ABNEY LYLBURN. Secretary. - xica-tr
.
FIRE INBI3BANCE EXOLUSIVBEY.—
THE PENNSYLVANIA FIRE INSURANCE'
COMPANY—lncorporated HZ—CHARTER .FERPJa.
TUAL—No. 4 / 1 0 WALNUT Street, opposite Independ
ence Square.
ThM Company, favorably known to the community
for thirty-era years, continues to insure against loss or
damage by Fire. on public or Private Enildinge, either
permanently or for a limited nine. Also. on-Furniture.
stocks of Goods or Merchandise generally:on liberal
Their Capital, together with a large Surplus Fund 'is
invested in the most careful manner ' which enables
them to offer to the insured an undoubted security in
the ease of loss. _ . .
• • DritICTORS. •
Jontithas Patterson, Immo Hal Joining.
Quante Campbell, Thomas Robine.
-Alexander Benson, Darnel Smith, Jr.,
William Montanus, John Bevereux, -
a"homas Smith.
JONATHAN PATTENBON, President.
BEATON Mersa', Secretary. ap4-Iy
-mu SIIRANOR COMPANY OF Tin
STATE OF PENNSYLVANIA—FIRE AND MA-
ItlitE INSURANCE Rom. 4 AND b RECHARGE
BUILDINGS.
Chartered in GAI---Capital-SlOo,ooo—Feh. I. DSO, *situ
*433.792 77. - - • •-•
_All Invested In sound and available eeenntote-uten-
Wine to An Vane% and Canaan. Duddindus
Stook' of Merohanduss &a. on liberal term,
DAtlitdrOJW. - •
Henry D. Sherrerd, Saone H. Stuarts
Simeon Toby, Sanwal. Grant, Jr.:
Charles Maeadester, Tobias Warner
William S. Smith, 'Shaman B. wattoolt,
.7141.21. Henry G. F Levi r;
reeman,Wallin:lE. Wide*, Charles b.
. George C. Canton.
HENRY D. SHERHERD, President,
WlLlsLitt HARPER, Seeretary. je9-11
FIRE INSUBANOII. BLECHANIOI3'
INSURANCE COMPANY of Philadelphia.. No.
138 North SIXTH- Street, below 'Roos. inewe' Bu il d-
Irmo, Goode, and Afemboadbre- generally from lose or
damage by Fire. . The company guarantee.to admot all
lemma prompuy, and thereby hope to merit the patron.
age of the public,.
William Morgan. • !Waft Nnunian*
Francis Cooper, Michael Mc or,
• Saone Dougherty Edward MaGovani,
James Martin, Thomas B. McCormick
James Da m e? - Joan Bromley,
Matthew M eer, Franom Falls,
Bernard arty, John.
Wheal= L Banisr C itenlsemiut,
If }tonal' Admit , Marie*
Frain& Moblslass Miohabl.•Caki
FRANCIS COOPER, .Preedent.
RERNARII RAFFERTY. Secretary: • oc2i4m
AMERICAN FIRS DISURINITS 'OM;
• INCORPORATED 181@ CHARTER PER
1%11141h
No. ni.o WALNUT Litreet,above Third, rhitattelions,
laying a large paid-up.. Capital Stook andßarsine,.
invaded. in sound andninutable Besturittep,aoritinnetto
insure on Dwelling, anima, Furniture, Merehandise.
Vessels in port. and ~their cargoes, and other personal
property. All losses hbendly and promptly Wasted.
DILUTOR& •
Thos. R. Marie.: - John T,Lonwie.: •
John Welsh. . Lames R. Camapeli.
Samuel C. Morton, Edmtuld G. Dada. •
Patrick Brady,Chap. W. retinae's.
• - hose Morn..
3TRODIAB R. MARlS,President;
IL
ALBERT E. CRAWFORD. Beeretsrs;
_ _ _ _
,FXOHA.NGE INSURANON -00MPANY
—olsoo,No, 409 WALNUT Street.
DIRE INSUR ANCE on Houses and, Merohantlie'
ItOnerallY, favorable tonne, ether' /mired o r pe r -
"h"
DIRECTORS:
Jeremiah *mall, Thome Marsh,
John Q. Chnnodo, charts' Thompson*
Edward D. Roberta, James T. Mae*
Samuel L. Smalley, Joshua T. Owen. ,
Ran "
C.," JEEEHIAH fraS l if i .f.7President.
. JOHN Q. 0114N0.110, Ptemdm*t,
Erratum con. Seoretari. . jam
SAYING FUND--11VE PEE GENT.IN
.
THEEBT—NATIONAL SAFETY TRUST 60m
iyjusitrw Street, southwest corner 01 Third.
'lamely Inuorgotatgd hl the Shp of renmyl-
Monis.
Who aloe ove evry day from nine o'cleek In th e
morning till five o 'clock in the evening, and on Monday
and ThursdakeverMtglitill eight o'eloog.
011. :mar( la b. DENSER. ?reliant.
oultET SELFRIDGE. Tioe'Sregident.
Wrizum .I. Huss. Secretary. . -
DIRECTORS.
Han. Henry L: Benner, F. Carroll Brewster.
Edward L. Carter, Joseph B. Barr,
Robert Selfridge, Francis Leroy
84111nel K mittou, Joseph Yorker,
C. Landreth ?drums, loam L. stengtouscal.
aul-ly
VRANSLIN SAVING FUND, Noll
JR. lArl Routh FOURTH Street, Imdween.
Chestnut and Walnut, Philadelphia, pays all
de to on demand.
Depasitore money secured by Government, M
State. and City Loans, Ground Rents, Mort-
This Thu Company deems wady better than large
profit/ 7 oonsequently will ran no risk with dppe
niters' money; but have it at all times reedy_ to
retain. with 6 per oeur.rureresWo rbe owner,
as they h ave always done. This Company
never suspended,
Females married or single, and Minors, can
deposit in their own right, and such deposits can.
be withdrawn orwr by their consent.
Metter perpetual.. , Inoorponget by the State'
of Fenneylvania, with authority to receive
money from trustees and executors.
LARGE AND MALL BUMS RECBIVED.
canoe open daily, from 9 to o 'olool4 and on
Wednesday evening until 8 o 'clock.
DIRECTORS. '
Jamb B. Shannon. emu CadWalhhiee,
John Dhindler. George Russell,
.M&aohi W. ak• e
rta CharieaDelany LaMing,
Jeriah Comfo, Henry
Motto's. Rittenhonae, Nathan Drier,
Jos. R. Setterthwaite, Jones Yer ea,
IJohn Alexander.
JACOB B. BRAWN. President.
t CYR'S Canwara.snin, arearer.
aelS-1y
• THE ADAMS BXPREES
co., Office 320 CIENXIMpoort.
forward* P Paatiwear. Idejvhandue is atm.
and 02020, IMO r .4,124000M'
with otaar -- =prear. -al au.. A nima
iris* 00 d ittallAa, Yluts W ig Imo L ' A.
*O4 • .1141,0,11
MORDRCAI Lb DAWSON,
OZO. H. STUART.
.renill H. .13nowN.
A. FarmErtocx,
JN . EAsiniamr•DßNW MUM,
1i
ORD SWARR. Preindent.
PHILADRLPHIA.
17=
BAYING PIANOS.
"A little: but often. fill the Pune."
•' A Dollar taved is tortes aratred."
114 *;iS:Cizztis),,l.ANO 1 *A
MEDICINAL.;
CEPHALIC PILLS
SICK HEADACHE.
NERVOUS HEADAOHE•
CURB ALL . KILNITh UB
HEADACHE!
By the use of these Pills the periodical attacks of Nit.-
Irons or Sick /hada{As may be prevented and if taken
at the commencement of an attack immediate relief
from pain and sieknisits will be obtained.' '
7.4ey seldom &Mit removing , the N 414844 lied Hoed
oche to which female' oresoauldeut.
They sot gently on the bowele, removing Carrierators.
For • Literary Mos, Modesty, Delicate Females, and
all persons of sedsagary Ambits, they are valuable am a
LI:MINOS, improving the apposite, giving toito and vigor
to the digestive organs. and restanng the natured elas-
tioity and strength of the whole system, • •
The CEPHALIC PILLS ire the revalt of long investi
gation 'and carefully conducted 'exitirimenta. having
bean in use many years, during whir& time they have
prevented and relieved a vast amount of
_pain and
suffering from Ileadatihe, whether originating' in the
01141 . 001da rigatoni or from a deranged mate of tha.rro-
. . .
They eye entirely vegetable in thelloompavition, and
maybe taken at all Imam with perfeot safety 'without
making any change of diet, and slit absram of nay diss
triatabia. 16480 risdars it , tally so adottittiStii AIM t.
skiidrgai
BEWARE Or COUNTERFEITS!
The genuine him Soo signatures of Henry 0. Spalding
on each Sox,
Sold M Dinginati and All other Dealers 113 M 6410112044
• Big will pit sent by mail prepaid on receipt of the
PRICE. 25 CENTS_
All mins should I* 'midmost
HENRY 0, SPALADING,
413 CEDAR STREET, NEW YORK.
THE FOLLOWING ENDORSEITENTE OF
SPALDING'S
CEPHALIC PILLS,
WILL OONVIHOE ALL WHO SUFFER FROM
HEADACHE.
THAT
SPEEDY AND SURE MIRE IS WITHIN
THEIR REACH. •
As these Tastimexials ars 'gasp:into! by Mr. BPALD
/NG. they af f ord itsquostionobie proof et the EA*
can' Of this trray seism-tilts discovery.
MR. sPALDINfi. MASONVILLN. Conn., Feb. 6, 1861.
Sul:
I have tried your Cephalic Pills, and I like them so
112/ti i that I want you to send me two dollars worth more.
Pert of the** ere for the neighbor., to Them f
for of the ilret box I got from Ton.
Send the Pills by_reall, anitobhge
• Your ob't Servant
JAMES KENNEDY.
. . .
HAVIRFORD, Feb. 64861.
Mai grAIDINeI ata
I wish Ton to seed me one more box ofyour Cephalic
NU, /Ace° roceived a proof deal of boson from t*em.
Younkrecteotintly,
BtARY Arm STOIXHOUSE..
SPAII62 Cnrent. Mrumnanem Ceitivr, Pa r ,
IL &Amor:mi
January 1811861.
C. l;
Ton please send me two boxes of your Ceuhallo
Phis. Bend them i mm ediately.
"U jit i O. aiBIONE.
hams recovimi bez vow r v
abetAlM
Arm excel/cm.
Baru VERNON, 0/110, An. 13,2861.
RAI SPALDING, E• t.
Passe and enolosed twenty-five °onto, forwhich send
3ao another box of your Govhabo Aux. nor ars tridy
ohs boot Pine /Awn “Lorjrc.34.6.
Direct .kl., a:PU . 1334 P. PCs
800 Vernon, wyartaot co., O.
Bzerravy, Main. Deo. U.
C. Xpar.nwro. Est.
Wish.kr some annulus or large show bills. to Witt
your Uorareho rills more pertieumrly before *ne
wsier& If you MTh any Mug of the ilea please send
I l ine of my customers. Who is satenot to severe .13iok
Ilendsobe. (usually Meting two dsys,) was awed of as
*Wank to OM hourly vouryilts. which I sent her.
.wasymtmay yours.
' Wr
RZYNOLDIMITRO.FILLISZLIN OhiOtt
JanuaryUM 9. .
ILINI.T C. SPALDING,
NO. 48 Cedar
]J SIR;
Inclosed And twenty-0V Dont% (211.1 for ',Molt sand
box of Coolish° nun. tlond_ro address of Aso. Wm.
o....riner...lltornoldsbprn.7nknkiin Co. Ohio.
roar Pslis mot* list a charm—ours tisadachs almost
is/stags:sr. ,
'2llll7rtt, Whl. C. PULLER.
YrBILMITI. MICH., JIM. 14, ISEIL
Kw. Brezotroa.
8121
Not long rim* rant to you for a box of Oe_phehe Pius
for the ouzo of the Baryons Readsoho and ft.tveneim,
end reogoved the Item: and thew had so good as offaet
fiat .1 go fittlend to lead /OW week
Please Read bt re
tu
rn amt. Direot to
, : . : • A. R. WRRELER. -
. , „ . Mich.
POOH' Me Dresossiirtw. Norjkik, To.
Cephalic Fills accomtdish the (Meat for whioh they
were made, rnsa Care of headache in aline forms.
PForn she Exainforir, Norfork, Ye.
They have been tested in more than a thousand ewe.
With entire monies.
From. ths Democrat, St. efoutt,'Bfina.
If you are, or have been troubled with the headaohei
mead for a box, (Cephalic so that yon mar have
them in cue of an attach
f
Film the Advertise , ,Procr4teste.R. L
The Cephalic. Pills are said to be a remarkably effec
tive remedy for the headache. and one of the very beet
for that very frettept oomplaint which, has ever been
discovered.
.Fteng ti Western R. R. Gazette, Chicago, In.
We heartily endorse Mr. Studding, and his unrivalled
Genitalia rills.
.Ftvoi the Siouanha ratita Star, %armsha, Va.
We ere sere that persons snaring with the hem:Niche.
wit° try them, will stick to them
ROM thi Southern Path Ytiadrr. AMY Ofillettla, La.
Try them'. Yell that are afflicted. and we are sure that
our testimony ean be added to the alreads.namar9as
DS that has moulted benefits that no other Madigan.
oan matooe.
Prom the St. Louis Donetraf.
The hrunenae deiherkd for the ertiole rCeShlis
nor,TIVT!IF"
From Ms Gazette, Davenport. lowa. ;
Mr. Spaldihr would not connect his name with an ar-
Male he did not knew to Doman real merit.
Prom thiyideeritsdr, Prov4stinscodt.
The tsstuneny in Melt favor is strong, from the most
respectable camters.
• -
From the Daily Arnim, *wort, 8.1.
CopheAto Pills ore taktug the - plum bt an kinds.
Fro., tia Conintstotat Buitatts. Batas. Matt *
laid to be very oak:seism' for the headaohe.
JFrein the Commirciat, Cincinnati. Chia.
Suffering humanity win now be relieved.
itir,A Single bottle of RPALDIN6IS PREPARED
DiUE will NM ten EMS ikeir 00n MIIIIIIMIIT.-111
SPALDING'S PREPARED GLUE 1
SPALDING'S PSEPARED GLUE!
SPALDING'S PREPARED GLEE
SAVE THE PIECES!
-ECONOMY! DISPATCH
flar" A &riven to 'lbws Sinn Nina. ""01
Li accidents will happen. even in well-regulated
familiev it re very daerrahle to have some obese and
convenient war 'for repsdrillit Fittlaws. Toga. Ormike
ry, &a.
ILPALDINSPEI PREPARED GLUE -
msata all rush einsrgeneiou, and no household can
afford to do without IL „It is always ready. and up to
thp stinking point. .
" UtilEloUL jai EYE! Y 40UlaBZ'
N. 13.--A Brush secsompanies each bottle. Price. El
cents. . Address,
HENRY Q. SPALDING.
NO. 48 CEDAR STREET. NEW YORK.
CAUTION.
As certain unannoipled persons are attempting to
mum . olf au the uniumwating public', imitations of lay
PAEPARBD GLUE, I would caution all persona to ex
amine before mmshaaing. mad we that the full name,
me lIPALIILNGiII PUTAIED DLITE NMI
le *RAW 411164411 Vflorrt 1141 Mari are 'Moan
iirafasbllC
• -. "sir
saimeoem maws.
THE PENNSYLVANIA CENTRAL
ILAILROAE,:•-__ • '
260 MILES DOUBLE TRACK.
1861. 1861.
THE CAPACITY NOW EQUAL
N"Y
TO AN U GH RY.
THROUGH ASS R TRAINS
BETWEEN PHILADELPHIA AND PITTSBURG.
Connecting direet at Philadelphia with Through Trains
from Boston. New York. And all points East, and in the
Unton'Depot at "Pittebmg with Through Trains to and
from all point/ in the West, Northwest. and Southwest
—thus furnishing faoilities for the trangoOrtittion of
Passengers unsurpassed for awed and comfort by any
other route.
Emirs= and Fast. Line, run through to Pittsburg,
without change of Care or Conduotors. AU Through
Passenger Train, provided with Loughridge'e Patent
Brake—seed under perfect control of the engineer.
thtu adding much to the earety of travellers.
Smoking Care are attached to each Train; Wood
ruff's Sieepice Care to Batmen and Feat Traine. The
EXPRESS RUNS DAILY Mall and Fast Linen, Sun
days excepted.
Mail Train leaves Phil a delphia at 7.30 As. M.
Fast Line " 11.46 A. M.
Express Train leaves " 10.46 P. M.
WAY TRAINS LEAVE AS FOLLOWS
Ifarriaburg Acoommodation via Columbia ' 2.30 P. M.
4.
Columbia It 00p M.
Parkeaburg " at 6.10 p. M.
Wee Chester " No.l, at 11.15 A. M.
No. 2. at 12 30 P. M.
WeetChester Passengere will take the West Chester
NOM 1 and 2 and Columbia, Trains.
Paaeengera for Sunbury Willlamimort, Elmira, Buf
falo, Niagara Falls, and intermediate points , leaving
Philadelphia at 7.x0 A. AL and Zan P. INL, go directly
through.
Tie eta Westward may be obtained at the offices of
the Company in Philadelphia, New York, Boston, or
Baltimore; and Tickets Eastward at any of the-impor
tant Railroad Offices in the Weet ; alao on board any of
the regular Line of Steamers on the Mmeeieeippi or Ohio
rivers
glir Fare taWll7ll as low. andtime ae quick, ae by any
other Hoots.
For farther Information apply at the Passenger Sta
tion, bentheast corner of Eleventh and Market streets.
The completion of the Western connections of the
Pennsylvania Railroad to Chicago t make this the
DLRECT.LINE BETWEEN THE EAST AND THE
GREAT WEST.
The connection of tracks by the Railroad Bridge at
Pittsburg, avoiding all drayage or ferriage of Freight,
together with the saving 01 time, are advantages readi
ly.appectiated by Phippere of Freight, and the Travel
hn blia.
erohents and. Shippers entrusting the transporta
tion of their Freight to this Company, can rely with
confidence on its speedy transit.
THE RATES OF FREIGHT to and from any point
in the West by the Pennsylvania Railroad are at ail
times as favorable as are charged by other Railroad
' .
go - fle particular to mark packages "'via Pennsyl
vania Railroad."
For Freight Contracts or Shipping Directions, apply
to, or address either of the following Agents of the
Company .:..
P. A. Stewart, Pittsburg
H. S. Piereelb Co.. Zanesville. o._; J. J .J. Johnson, Rip
ley, O .; R. McNeely, Maysville , Ky.: Ormsby & Crop
per, Portsmouth 0. • Paddock & Co.. Jeffersonville.
ludiesta W. ilrovin Cinoinnati. 0. • Athern
& Hibbert.Cinoinnati., O. R. C. Meldrum, Madison,
Ind.; Joe. E. Moore, Louisville, Ky. ; P. G. O'Ri ley &
Co., Evansville, Ind. ; N. W. Graham & Co., Cairo.
Id.; R. F. Sass. Sheler & Giaits,l3t. Louis. Mo.; John
U. Harris, Plaahville, Tenn.; Harm & Hunt, blem
pine, Senn.: (Barge & Co., Chicago, 111. ;W . H. H.
Koonta, Alton, or to Freight Agents ' of Railroads
at different points in the West.
S. B. KINGsTON, Jr.. Philadelphia.
MAGRAW & KOONS, 10 North. street. Baltimore.
LEECH it C0..1 Astor House, or 1 S. William et.. N. Y
LEECH & CO._. No 77 State street, Boston.
H. H. HOUSTON. Gen'l Freight Agent. Phila,
L. L. 11101IPT. Gang Tioket Agent, Phila.
E. LEWIS. Gen'l Sinn Altoona. Pa.
" - • • SPRING
MENT.—PRILADELPHIA,
WILMINATQr_kIALTIMOY.E RAILROAD:
On and et MODIDAY,:_APL.IS.IB6I
PAASSETOFtga IIf&LRAIM. path DELPHIA:
For tOgre.li (Mxoregg),
end 1 050 . 4 ) .X.. - -`• :•-; • - • - - •
For- Olialmor, 2i,.'.'14.,,22.36 A. M., 449 and /0.50
For Wilinington- at 8.15 A. M., .1136 A. M., 4.15 and
MOO 2. M..
For New Castle at 8.15 A. M. and 4.15 P. M. •
For ~900,ver at 835 A. M. and 4.15 P. Id. •
For Milford at 8.15 A. sg. • .
For sfalle9nryll.ls A. M. • -
. TRAINBI FOR. PRILABELPELLt
lheaveDaltlmore at 5.15 A.. M. (Express), 9.41 A. M.,
an Leave Wtbningten, at 6.53 and 9.10 Ai: mit 1.20 and-
Leave
ittl.4o P. M. : . •
Leave Milford at - 4 P. M.
Leave Aiever at. 6.31 A.' M. and 5.80 P. M.
betqu Flue t qaatit et. 9.39 A. 74., 7.90 P.M.
move Chewier it r..40.A. #4O, lka and gm rad. . •
Leave re: Baltimo or Salisbury and Delaware ha il-
roast at 4.1GA..M • •.-
T 8 FOR - 11ALTIMORF.;:,
Leave Cheater at 8.45 A.M., 12.55 and 11.10 P.M.
LeaVe'
Wilmington at 9.55 A. M.. 11 P. 33 M.. and II
rRE/CfliT TRAIN, with retwongor- tai attached,
• will run as follow"
Leave Philedelohia. for Perryville and intermediate
places at 6.10 P. 1.• .
Leave Wilmington for Perryville and-intermediate
flames at 7.15 P. M.
Leave Wilmington for .Phdadelplua and interme
diate Naomi at 5 P.10.'
Leave Havre -de- woe for Baltimore and intormodt-
Ate stations A. . • •
Leave Baltimore for Ravre.do-Orace and intermedi
ate stations at 5 ft. M. •
• • ON .1111NDAYS
Only at MM.P.M. from Ptuladeintua to Baltimore.
Only at 446 P. M. from Baltimore to rtubsdelptiis.
09(8 • • • 11. At. PELTONi President.
jas
immult PHILADELPHIA
AND READING RAIL
ROAD.--PASSENGER TRAINS for POTTSVILLE;
ERIVAHO. end, API.E./RDU/10, on and after Nov.
ALORkftEG - 119t11, 'DAILY, (Sunday. exaepteda:
Leave New Depot,' corner of BROAD and CALLOW
EMI.• Street:, PRLLA PUIA,I reaer *Mammon
on Thirteenth and on . Oaiiowhiil streets at BA. M.,
aonneetingatEarriabarg with the PE NN SYLV ANIA
RAILBLAD, I Y. M. train running to Pittsburg; the
CUMBERLAND VALLEY 1.05' P. M. train muninr to
Chaberebur_g,,o &0, .• and . the NORTHERN
CEPURAIi RAILROAD 1 Y. !ti. train, running to Sun.
Wu. ilto•
AFTERNOON I.INES. •
Leave New Depot, corner of BROAD and CALLOW
HILL Streets, PRILADELPIIIA.(Passenger entrances
on Thirteenth and on Callowhill street%) for POTTS
iItiAT and ifARRIBBITRO,_at AMP. M., Da MY, for
ADIIIO only. at ALSO P. M.. DAILY. (Sundays en
eepted.i_
DUISTA.NCES VIA PRILADEL.PILLA AND 1.1.2' DINO
ILLILROID.
To P h
FILMS
re ilgttaarr.srtuA.
parrille—.— 38 241i1e
}s.
Reading-- . 88 Philuleiphia and Reading
Lebanon *--- 86 and Lebanon Valley R .eC.
Harrisburg.--_
Dauptein:
Millers buzz 48
?marten Juneti0n....15.3
Sunbury .-188,
Northumberland .-172
lowish= —... —l7B
Milton
Proy—--161i Williarogport and Elmira
_ _IST • Railroad.
The BA. war 3.ila P. AL train connect datly_ at
Port Ollntoti,_ Elmira
tnindaya eiteepted,l with the_ DAA-
Wind, 17,11, 1.61181.0 RT, end BEL% RAILROAD,
mating Mow oonneolgona with lines to Niagara Fall',
Cabala. tie Went and Bonther e s t..
DE IN IN PHILADELPHIA! Corner of -ROAD
and CALJAWRILL Street'.
avairtt" . •W. H. McILMENNEY. Se rotary
NOTIOE.-ASTER
aliligell VALLEY RA ILROAD.--PAIB
-
BE Gft RAINS FOR DOWNINGTOWN AltO IN.
TERMEDLATERTAWIOIIB.—On and after Nov. sth
1850, the Pasaenser..araine for DOWNINGTOWN
will start from thesiew.Pamenger Depot of the Phila
delphia. and Readißailroad Company, corner of
BROAD and CALLO ng WEDA.,./Streets, (passenger en
trance on Callowhill.)
MORNINO TRATN for Downingtown leave/ at B.OO A
AFTERNOON imam for Downingtown leaves at
4.30 F. M.
DAILY (Sunday! excleptedl,
By order of the Board of Managers of the Phi lade
phis and Re&dint RailroadCOTAPani•
anp W. H. Secretary.
D 4.1 L Y INLAND
FREIGHT LINE TO NOR--
FOLIC AND POR SMOOTH,' VA:, and to the prinok
pal Cities and -TOPirtnf--4n the South and Southwest.
bloods Bent to the Depot, corner- BROAD Street and
WASHINGTON Avenue, will be forwarded daily, and
at as tow rates as by any other line.
H. F. KENNEL
Muter of Trannportation
P. W., & b. R. R. Co.
SHIPPING.
• 1: WEEKLY . COPOIIINICATION
BY sTRAI4 BETWEEN NEW VORtt
AND LIVERPOOL, calling at. QUEENSTOWN (Ire
land,) td landand embark passengers and despatches.
The Liverpool, New York, and Philadelphia Steam
ship Company's splendid Clyde-built iron screw stem
/hire, are intended to sail as follows:
FROM NEW YORK . FOR LIVERPOOL.
RANG). ROO Saturday. April 13
RHIN BURGiL Saturday, April go
qbAsoow, " Saturday, April 6
Aad every Saturday throughout the year, from P- ER
No. 44 H.R.
RATES OF PASSAGE
THROUGH FROM PHILADELPHIA.
Cabin, to Queenstown. or Liverpool.— ----- e 73
Do. to London,vm Liverpool— . 880
Steerage to 9=ustanatown, or 060
Da tio
Return ke b. available for els months.
from Livery«) geg
Passengers forwarded to Havre. Poris, .insuiburg,
women, and Aprwqrp, throne* rage,
Gernfioetee or poemeo missed from Liverpool to New
York - 40
Certificates of vamoose issued troM — Queenstown to
New. York-- , . . fano
These steamers have superior accommodat ions for
Pinseorigers. ate oonstmoted with watertight comport
metal'. and carry experienced burgeons.
For freight, or peteagetagply at the Moe of the Com
pany, _ J 0 JIN DAWN. Agent.
• 109 Walnut strse_ ,t
In Liverpool, to WM. INMAN.
Tower Buildings.
In Glasgow, to WM. INFilArt,
13 Dixon street.
da.THR BRITISH AND NORTH
AMERICAN ROYAL MAIL STEAM
/MP&
diat iatar paa osl ge rßA LIVE WOOL.
ploolidesinia Pa4saaxe—::.= ••-- 75
iiiiiiirs iiivri iii; OLIVERPOOL .
Chief Cabin Dianne— _ _______. ______ 91111
Becond Cabin reissue— —. ~ , se
The "hip" from New rink call at Co r k ' r.
Harbor.
The alma [rem Boston tall at lialtfal and Cork liar
bor.
1
PERSIA, Cat &wilting. FR / CA . Gait. Shannon.
AM/AMIA, Ca t..r. atone. AMERICA . pt. andenion.
ASIA. Capt. ._l3l,Lott.. - Capt. McAuley
AUBTRALA lAM, NIAGARA,_Capt. Moodie.
Celt. E. M. Moakley. BUROPA , Capt. J. Cook.
SCOTIA, ((now beildink./ - •
These vessels carry &clear white light at slut-head t
green on 'larboard bow t red on port bow.
CANADA
Andorslio, leaver notion, Wednesday . April 3.
AFRICA, Shannon, " 'N. York. Wednesday, Mini 10.
hsUROFA, Cook', " Down. wedecaday. April M.
I' FILSIA ..I n dlkinsi " N. York, Wednesday. Ap_nl M.
NlAMARAillloOdie. " Boston, Wednesday , relay.
A.SIA._, Lott' " N. York. Wednesday. May 11.
.A.EtABLA,Ione. " i loaton, Wednesday, May 13.
!WAWA, § eizzion, ," , York, IVOthiIIWAY. AllaT n.
Berths no "soured anti paid for.
An exionenoed Eargepo on board.
The owners of these ships will not be aocoun table for
Gold. Silver, RulUon,flrecia, Jewelry, Precious Stones
or Metals, unMas bills of Wing are signed therefor. and
the value thereof therein expressed. For freight or
peerage i apply to M. CUNARD.
mlifrtl i Bowling Green, New York.
SPECIAL NOTICE
NMFOR THE SOUTH.—OHARLES
TON AND SAVANNAH STEAMER PS.
Stile hiding forgoods for pointa other than the cities
of eillWeetiM And Savannah. must be accompanied
with eartißed iitivaioes. to 1.1111111.4 prompt delivery.
All goo/li not permitted immediately alter the arrival
of the istsamere at Charleston and Savannah will be
sent to the Custom-house etorea
The Steamship STATE OF GEORGIA having_ been
withdrawn for the present. the Steamship KEYbTONE
STATE will run to both Savannah and Charleston,
taking freight!, for both pone at the same time, pro
ceeding Milt to Savannah, and from thence to harm'.
ton, making a trip every two week.. thus =long de
hyenas ag frequently in Charleston and Savannah as
when both ships were running.
Passengers for Charleston will be ticketed through
from Savannah to Charleston by Railroad.
Fare to havannah, lie; through to charleeton,
FOR MIAMI_ Bray AND SAVANNAH
The Steamship .E.YNTONE STATE, Capt. Charles
pp apnibrims; and ixonire freight until Saturday Eve
ning. Anilll3. and sail with despatch.
Goode received ever* day, and Sills of Lading signed
at second wharf above
SURA VineNCE street.
IN.
_
Freight and insuranoe on a large propor ti on of Moods
shipped Routh will Mt found to he lower by theme ships
than by nailing vermeil.
IMP' inentranoe on all Railroad Freight is entirely
unnecessary, farther than Charleaton or Savannah
the Railroad Companies taking all - rinks from them;
points.
Philadelphia to Now Orleans and intermediate
Polutii, Ottarleatori and Savannah mate, Mn
with esteemed; for Florida, and with railroads for New
Orissa' and intermediate pmts.
tiftia'S ILEICIL/earloN IN FARE,
Fare by chi/3 route' to 40 per cent! aheaper than b.r
the Inland moats, as will be aeon by the fonowiaz
/schedule. Throh ticket,' -from Philadelphia. via
Charleston and Sa vannah steamships, INC LUDING
MEALS on the whole route, egoapt from Otbarleaten
and Savannah to Montgomery I
To Savannah.....--410 it To Coln= hum. —al 00
Charleston...—. 16 (B Albany -- 11 00
anginas-- 17 60 Montgomery -- 16 00
Mason— —.. mOO Mobile-- ......... 65 IX ,
At1anta....,,......, n vat New Orleans.— SR Tf
b kf t4 d; h n e ßoute.. — sean ' o
o in a n g tgo v e :n y t it h b : oo, Ca th r l o th i ti r i n g u e :an to ro x n eo: w e rg - 6 r t Georgia, t v h . eliti
No hills of Mint maned after the of
has awed.
No freight received on the day. of Lading..
Agents In dbarleatea,T. 8. & T. O. II 11 tio
lirr,
Savannah. RUTTER & eaMid&
T. R. T. (LB= Charteston,' and ItUitTliß $
GAMMISLIo.fia attand to entering and toe.
warding all good* oonsuned to their care.
FURNESS, BEWLEY, & 00.,
No. 429 MARKET STREET
THIS (TUESDAY) MORNING, APRIL 10, AT 10
O'CLOCK.
A CARD.—The attention of vurohavere is requester+
to OUT sate One (Tuesday) morpin i t o , Atorit 16, at 10
o'olook, on six months' oredtt, of 0, plOl3Oll 811t0137
dregs goods, of the importation of Masers. C. F. Schnei
der & Co., comprising the newest and most desirable
rtyles,iust d. land
1 e ,200 PARIS SUAWLB.
Also, This Morning,
imo 12-4 printed and btootie-border Paris Stella
• VERY ATTRACTLVE
SPECIAI. SALE
OF SAXONY WO EN DR.EBB Orme
NIEBBRIS. C. F. SOHNEADER & CO.
Will sell, through
FURNESS, DR' ril..F.Y . ac 00. .AUCTIONEERS.
No. 429 MA ET STREET,
TRIR MORNING.
Apnl IS. at 10 o'clock,
The entire balance of this season's importation of
SAXONY WOVEN DRESS 600 OS,
Of their well known manufacture and favorite styles.
Comprising the most desirable line of this class of
goods to tie offered this 11011.11011. all of the choicest fabrics
and noVelties. The larger proprtion ere adapted to
neer-by and city trade, and just o landed ex steamers
New York and Borussia, to which the attention of buy
era is particularly called.
pieces plain gray chine Leonorm, staple and very
desirable, best finish in the market.
Maosdonias small set figure chine, superior qua
lity and designs, for best city trade.
—pa PO.Meai. A. large plaid, broohe figure,irupenor
quality, excellent style, very desirable for best
city trade.
—pa B, gray chine, broohe figures, most ex
pensive and yen scarce.
pa Sardinian. ohine plaid, corded satin stripes, and
broohe figured. a superb style.
—ps bin] line. imprime, gray chine, striped and small
plaid, high ()cloyed set figures, very exPensive•
pa Grlandle, ireprime, colored ine. plain striped, and
small plaid, high set figures, very high
coat, for best city trace.
pa Amehae, gray small chine and ex broohe three
colored figures. very costly.
petSpetanzaa. double width, gray chine and extra
• brow's bouquet, the moat expensive style in the
elle. •
pa assortmentfirms, small plaid, of coloring . splendid
quality, and superb.
pa Amass Thestelhas. larms Maid chine.
us Btripes areg Me
e e lm s .
prb, sus gray chine large plaid with satin
y
—ps Barege Rosalias. chine large plaid, gold stripes,
all the rase.
ps Serape Hispanolax, broche figured, chine
superb style and elegant qualities.
—ps Barege A ussonias, gra chine large plaid. with
satin stripes and broc lie figures, a magnificent
stile.
—pm Berens Palermort small plaid, striped up and
down, high colored set figures, for the best city
trade.
UNDERWRITERS' SALE. FOR CASH.
This
April 16, at 10 o'clock.
—oases ginghamn, printx, levoila/4 lawns, Monism
bluing. term, de btgoa, *White goods, dullest:4 by
fresh waßr, par ship John Truokn.
Peremptory_ sale for clash of
LARGE STOCK OF FANCY GOODS,
At the store formerly occupied. by
MESFIRd. SCRAP FFR & ROBERTS,
NO. 4v.9 MARKET STREET
On Tuesday and Wednesday Plonitngs
22 sad 24, at 10 o , eleek,seissisties of
Wool shirts and drawers. cotton and wool hosiett,
gloves, gauntlets, patent thread, &noel cotton, stay bind
ings, silk haudkerobiefit. suspenders. steel.sp , ins boons
skirts, merino wool coats, gotdlewelry, combs, brushed,
busk and leather purses, portmoonsies. pocket books.
paver. envelopes, buttons. voters. Cans. pipes, pipe
stems. horde, pins, hooks and eyes. pistols. Permission
eats. baskets. Ilunte. Cologne water. DertumarP, and a
great variety of fanny goods.
Also, large size chief-proof sate.
2 large size show eases.
N. It—floods will be open for examination on Mon
day morning. April 22, with catalogues.
110IIITLIP FORD & 00., AIIOTIONEERS,
/ 1 - ti O. 630 MARKET Street and Sill buxom. at.
LARGE SALE OF 1.000 CASES BOOTS, BROM.
.AND BROGANS.
On Thursday Morning,
April 18, at 10 o'clock precisely, will be sold, by eata
leant-
-0611) oases men's, boys' and youths' calf, kith and grain
booisi,calfkin, and grain brogans, gonglekk gaiters, Os.-
ford and Bo oth nes, tto.; women's, misses '. and owl
dren's cal ,lap, grain, goat, morocco, and kid heeled
boots and shoes, gaiters. buskins slippers, /co.; also. a
large aasortment of first-oduis oi ' y-made goods.
VP Goods open for examination, with catalogues,
early on the morning of sale.
M. FITZPATRIOK It BROS., AOC
TIONEERA. 604 CRESTNII !kraal. above
BALES EVERY EVENING. •
At T delook, of Books , stationery and fanny roam
eratohes, jeweiry, clocks, silver plated ware , cutlery
atuntitigA. mateal instrnemeritc. k.e.
Also, Holdery, dry goods, boots and shoe., and may
ohandise of every 0111401jpd.011.
DAY BARED every Monday. Wodnsgday, and Fri
day at 10 o'clock A. M.
PRIVATE DALES.
At physical. several large consignments of watches
toWolrY, books, stationed i shyer-plated ware, cutler'
Manor gooey, to, To Innen is erred Me attention o
etg o and ootr u yzera t h
toi merchants
all ° L e go( merchandise
for either public or ptivate sales.
Sir Liberal cash advances made on oonsignmants.
Ont-door gales promptly attsaacc to.
CLOTHING AND CLOTHING MATE
RIALS.
NAVY DUPAATMENT,
BURRAIT OF PROVISIONS AND CLOTHING.
April*, MI.
fiEPARATiI PROPOSALS , sealed and endorsed
" Proposals for Navy Clothing and Clothing Mate
rials," will be received at this office unit , 9 o'clock A.
M.. on the 9th day . of May next, for furnlehing and de
livering (on receiving sixty days' notice) at each or
either of the navy yards at Charlestown,_ l'd saga
chi:matte ; Brooklyn. New Yore: or Gosport. Virginia,
the quantities below mentioned of any or all of the fol
lowing easiest of articles of navy clothing led elation!
magentas, and snob further quantities of the same as
may be ordered by the ohief of this bureau, or by the
commandants of the said navy yards, respectively
during the fiscal year commencing on the lot day of
.Xoly next, and ending on the 38th day of June, 1862;
NTT!
CLASS I.—Cloth Clothing.
Blno cloth irowae....— 60
Blue satinet trowsere. ........
Crass 2.L - Seamkse Clothing.
Blue felt pea-j ackets
Blue felt caps.._.__.
Czars
Blue flannel overabirta--
Blue flannel underehirts
Northern 13entral.
Blue /tonne
Cia raW4tii
ss 4—Litmos atethats
Canvas duel trowsers—
CL
sheeting
ass s.—Blus BOWL
Banbury snit Erie L IG
Blue satinets-- . yards. 10,000
Cuss 6,-.Base Flannel.
Blue flannel - ~- • t MAO
these (:-Shecring,Eisii,Tiiil nankin.
Barnsley sheeting..... 10,000
Canvas duck— 10,000
Blue neukia— . do 10,000
.- CLA es -S4OOB. •
Calf skin laced shoes.. cone
Riu-eltin shoes.... ..
—do 4 . °99
Woollen make_ _ .
Mattresses, (with 2 covers for each,)..
MASA 11.—BlankeM
Blankets— . . ...
CL Age
Black milk handkerchiefs.....____.. —8 000
Offerer may be made for one or more Macon, at the
°talon of the bidder; bat all the artuilee imbrued in
chum melt be bid for.
. .
- Each class wilt be considered by itself, and the con
tract for that *lass will be awarded to the bidder whose
proposals for the &tholes comprised in the elects are
lowest in the aggregate.
The seamless ototning shall be of felt cloth. died pure
indigo blue, made of good wool only, and shall conform
in the sizes. color. grade of wool. and in all other re
spects to the samples deposited at the 11110, Yard,.
The cloth for blue cloth trowsere shall be twilled, all
wool, sad pure indigo blue. wool-dyed. It shall have a
list on each edge. complied of 24 white threads, of all
wool. All pieces under 11.4 ounces per yard will be re
'meted ; and.each bale of about SOO yards must average
18 canoes per yard.
The satinet must be 27 inches wide inside of list. with
is heading to consist of not less than twelve white wool
len threads at each end of the piece; . most weigh not
less than 95%r ounces per yard. to contain in neckpiece
about 28 yards ; the warp must be cotton, pure indigo
blue, yarn-dyed; and the filling wool, pure indigo blue.
wool-dyed. Each bale of 400 yards shall average nine
and a half ounces to the yard, and no piece shall be be
low 9, 3 ,i ounces to the yard, The satinet trowsers mot
be made of material like the above. The broadcloth
and satinet of which garments are made shall be well
spongbefore made up.
The flannel must be all wool, wool-dyed pure indigo
blue.land twilled ;mind be in pipet, of about 60 yards in
length. 27 inches wide, weighing five ounces per yard,
with a list on each edge of four white woollen threads
woven 1 the Whole length of the mane, Tp be peeked
in bales of ten pieces, the pieties to be tolled eeparately
without cloth boatda eaon bale to contain 4570 yards
and 156 X pounds flannel. No piece to have a leas ave
rage weight than 4 8-10 ounces per yard.
The overshirts, undershitts, and drawers must be
made of flannel like the above.
The lialneley sheeting must be free from cotton. 83
inches in width- weight, twelve ounces 31-190 pet
yard ; texture, 4 by 4 to 1-10 inch.
The canvas duck must be free from cotton. 27 inches
in width, and about 36 yards in the piece. double-thread
warp and filling; weight. eight ounces 23-100 per yard
texture. 9 by 10 to .0 inch.
The shoes must be plainly stamped with the contract
tor's name, r umber of the oboe, and year when made.
The sizes to bs in the following proportions for each HQ
pairs, unless otherwise ordered, viz: Bof N 0.5. 17 of
140. 6.23 of No. 7,25 °llia. 8. 16 of No. 9,7 of No 10, and
2of No.ll. They must conform in all reapeots to the
samples at the yards. and be delivered in good. strong
boxes. the tops of which to be wienrely fastened with
Korey*, and each bastoentain 53 pairs. In these sect
portions. viz : 8 pairs of No. 5, with 17 of No. 6, 13 of No.
7, with 12 of No. 8, or vice versa, 15 of No. 9. with 7 of
No. la. and 2 of No. 11. The catf-akin and kip-akin
Awes to be puked in separate boxes.
The woollen socks must be woven or knit. indigo mix
ed. all wool, shall be well scoured, and in coior and
quality folly equal to samples.
The mattresses must welsh ten pounds, including
ticking which is to be cut 6 feet in length, and 31 inches
wide. The covers must measure 71 inches in length.
and 29 inches in width. The hair, ticking, and covers
most conform to samples.
The nankin must be equal to the beat blue American
nankin, =3 inches wide, texture a threads 07 4 threads
So the 16th of an inch, dyed with pare BC/1811; indigo.
The blankets must weigh six pounds per pair, and
measure 68 by 78 inches eaoh. A bale of 540 pairs must
weigh SOO pounds, and no pair shall weigh less than
pounds 33 ounce,. They ma r ked made of_olean wool.
and each blanket must be •• U. 8. ftlavy,. m e in
the sample.
The black sing handkerchiefs must be 8114 by 3105
inches. and weigh one ounce and 12 grains Troy; tax
hip). le by a to one-eighth of an inch.
budder* for the above will specify wneilier the arti
cles they 'impose to furnish are to bo of the growth,
prodeotion, and manufacture of the United htates. as
a preference will be given to such.
A schedule of the three sixes for each /I}9 ieces of
made-up clothing will be found with the samples at the
respeettve 3 arts ; and all the above articles, inainijin g
the necessary button., rings, ho., are to be fully equal
in the quality, texture, color, weight, and finish of ma•
terial. and conform in pattern, sizes, and wurkmanslap
to said samples.
The /Wm ber or inentitY which will be required of
04011 01 the foregoing articles cannot be precisely
stated. It will hot be leas, however. than the quantity
f lo e r d e , f).`tesa i rreor ' t r y h Of c =h ri ri: a tiore i sci
specified, and for anon further quantity as the bureau
may.require. The price must be uniform at all the
stations.
atilt, above AM oleeinuat be eatneot to tunh Omen.
tion at the place of delivery ea the chief of this bureau
may direct; and no article will be received that is not
fully equal to the sample in every respect, and which
does not conform to the stipulations and provisions of
the contract to be made,.
0 . 3 , 3
The whole must be delivered at the risk and expenie
of the contractor. Each and We to be marked
With the contrattor'e name. The militating offie,ers to
be appointed by the Navy Department.
The offers must dietinguisti the prices for each artiole
mentioned in a clam. and must to calculated to cover
every .expense attending the fulfilment of the cot
tract, =toiling the ueoessary buttons.
In case of failure on the pert Of Ike contractors to
deliver the several artier,' which maybe ordered from
them. in Prow time asst: of "toyer quality, the ehief
of the Bureau of Provisions end Clothing shall be an •
thorized to Rumbas" or direct purchases to be Made of
what tnay e n requited to supply the deficiency, under
the penalty to be expressed in the contract ; the record
of a requisition or a opt Bete copy thereof at the Bureau
of Provisions and Clothing, or at, either of tbu ) ary
yez de afore...id, e6all be OVIIIOLICO risoinatlon
hew been made and received.
Two or more approved surstles in a sum equal to the
estimated amount of the respective contracts will be
requited. and twenty per oentum will be withheld from
the amount of all payments on account thereof as col
lateral sonority, and not in any event to be paid until it
rdePtddilOtintElted ; andlei(htv per centum
theof amount of all deliveries made will tie paid liy the
navy agent within thirty days after triplicate bills, duly
authenticated, shalt have beenpresented to bin.
Bidden whose proposal" shall be acooptertrabd none
others) will be forthwati o notified. and
ti aa early as prac
ticable a contract will traulmitted to them for exe
cution, Whiet, c,ontrant tat GO returned to the bureau
within nye alms, exelusive of the time required fey the
regular transmission of the mail.
A record, or duplicate of the letter informing a bid
der of the acceptance of his proposal, will terdeamed a
notification thereof, within the meaning of the apt of
1846, and his b!d will be mode and accepted in (color
mity with this tuidensteuillug.
ZrerY odor mode moat be accompanied las directed
in the apt of Cone rasa making appropriations for the na
val service for 3E16247. approved leth of August, 1845)
by a written guarantee. signed by one or more respon
sible parsons, to the effect that he or they undertake
that the bidder or bidders will, ;this or their bid be ac.
°opted. enter into an obligat.ou within five 44011. With
good and miffioient sureties, to furnish !lie supplies pro
posed. The bureau will net ba oldissied
guaranteedee
any proposal noires iti„,oompasied br the re
quired by f the aompetency of the nuarantee to be
certified by the nave agent, distriot attorney, or the
collector of the 00111.0n111.
Illatticforms of proposals may be obtaised ee appli
cation to toe navy areas, at Portsmouth. Neva ;lamp
/Aire Boston. Nets Eerk, Philadelphia, Baltimore,
Norfolk, cad at this bureau
The emetic* cf. bidders is tallest to the ram, kr cad
description of articles required. as, in !ilia in...waf cubs
fors reception. a just but rigictsacs will bs made
between the articles kfsued ashcf rXs sexvict aid coi4-
sricti rspeipiwg wont +Wet. dfrzU telute Ikon i . otect their
.C.lgt sr gliso pajleoliarif chiseled le the ivies " LI Z'
fetters el MAI Mord, INN, tit oddities to Ms act el /et
etsgsahline. ag9 tees
SALES BY AUCTION.
O rricrAL.
000
SALES By AUCTION
THOMAB 1 SOI4(8,
• Dios. 139 and 141 south FOC tt h
(Formerly N0e.67 and 49.!
groCKB AND REAL EBTATE—TIIIB
Pamphlet 03411i0gUell now Nadi. 93titivnt NI / ' de
leth ??...1117.1.2PeziT
May La end 7th, oomproting , a large amulet 4.1,
estate, by order of Orphans Court , executor.
tu,
others.
PEREMPTORY B ALF—STOOKB, br Postsonemtm.
This Day,
April 16, noon. at the taohane. 'will he Rohl
AN about reserve, for account of Whom it in" 04
°9 11197200 (8 bonds of $lOOO, and 2 or 0100 eaoh)
del Ilia and ktalurnore Central Railroad Compa q,
1,00 share Thirteenth and Fifte e nth-streets
hila
ter RailwaCompany
Company. 100 shares Raoe and Vine-streets
p
Ra
ICo shares Fairmount and a roh-strost Car Psi.,ilway Company. “ter
For aoeoun. of whom it mar concern--
23 shares Philadelphia Mutual Real Estate Aseoci,
tlon—par $175, full paid.
1 share Philadelphia Library Company.
1 share Mercantile Library.
For other accounts
-1 share Yank-street Theatre.
Executor's male—Estate of Henri D. GilPilli dee'd
5 shares Aoarlemy of Music.
1 ebare Philadelphia Library.
1 share Philadelphia Attienreum.
Assignee's Peremptory Sale
-17 shares North Pennsylvania Railroad Cron,
LLI . NO
REAL ESTATE SALE— APRIL
ow 1 61 :
Orohand Court Selo—Estate of Fligibeth'yin,,,
deceased.—TWO-STORY BRICK DV/ 41 .L11n, 74'
1034 Frantford avenue . south of Otter street. ••
Same Eatate.—VALUABLK LOT.
BARN, &0., 12 84refl, Twenty-third ward, 0w,.,•,
Coopersyille, between the Second street turnpik e :.,..'''
Front- street road, adjoining the elegant country ""°
Dr. Bartell. late Jacob Ri :sway , dime...led. letlit of
Orphans Orrirt Sale—Fstige of Bamuv Lolls
.6
ceased .SIX BURIAL' LOTH. ount .. riab .
terY. They are well located. an
.lorm a senate. in i -
DEHIRABL IS COUNTRY HbAT. over Li ,
Milltown road. between the oxford and Heft e d r os.
turnpikes, Twenty-third ward. !abet
eremptory Bale.— EL bOANT MODERN RN,
DgricE and large lot, Tulpehooken street. north
Wayne street,Oernesetqwn.
perem_ptory SaIe.—THREE•HTORY BRICK Dtv 4
LINO, Brown etreeri
t east of Eleventh etreet. ..•
STOR a AND DWELLINO, southeut corner of g
1 the
ventb and State streets between Heed and Whihi e Ze -
THREE-8 fORY /MICK DWELLI.N G. ho. tik - N.
FourtP striset,_
THREE -13 roil Y 8E1147
986DWNEorLthLSINiltretirtehealt.
VALUABLE pottßl:3BTt
soiditeYo?uotli,,strner.nicoftstlke
modern.t olun:bmi:r:ovnestass.'n'tie
north o f A ff..li street, and near to Penn @quer & eel
VALUABLR WEST PIIILADEL/111/1 PROPRR
TV.—Larye W il liam , be Lot, northwest corner i
Chestnut and or Thirty-unt.h, ear corner
by °
1/B)Cleet. Two valuable fronts.
TwO REb I DENCEB.—Akeo. two neat Resideme
adjoinirg on William etreet, each lot m fe et j ,,,%1.
One of them bee also a front on a. bock street. ti t '
will he sold sstarately. I
RACE It PREP: P.—Store Dad Dwelling, No. 1320 h ew
street wit h t wo story brick shop in the rear, on hoc:
bark skeet.
COATES BTREET.—Three-story brick Tarern `,,i
Dwellink. No. 1606 Coates etreet.
WALPIUT STKEt.T.--Neat Residence. Na. 1e.3
Walnut street. between Broad and Fifteenth streets.
06.000 may remit'.
Sale No. 1903 Chestnut Street.
ELEGANT FURNITURE. MISHORS PIANO
CHANDIsLIERS, VELVET CARPE S, &e.
This Morning.
April 16th. at 10 o'clock, at No. 1303 Cheetout onset,
by catalogue—
The entire furniture of a lady deolining
comprising of rosewood and hm.ateks aratnorgoosi
furniture, pianoforte by Gale & Co.. andeccutitilibtel
and pier mirrors, fine velvet carpets, Ouse Will
i China end o n . ware, superior walnut chamber tem:
nure fine marre„". cottage furniture.•oil moths, ke.
Also. a quantity of fine preserves; also, the !aide s
furniture.
Ems°. an oil painting. by Edward Hick,.
sir May be examined at 8 &stash oo mount el
the sale.
Sale No. 1111 Chestnut Street.
SPLENDID CABINET FURNITURE;
FIRST-CLASS OIL PAINTING,
FINE ENGRAVINGS, STATUETTES.
VELVET CARPETS, MIRRORS, &o,
Un Wednesday Morning).
April 17th, et 10 o'clock, at No, 1111 t.hestnatstreet,
by catalogue, the entire taeteful and besuplul limiters
of a gentleman going to Europe. comprising two,
or very rioh and elegant parlor turniture; a Bunco(
e &borstal, oarved oak library furniture, suetleather
coven ; Butte of oarved oa dining-room furniture.
Suites of handsome chamber rnieurs, (one of
them verl elegant and expensive.) &e... xr Ali
ir
,414, Liusizarp . fr. 0 4 14 sehtita erencts
and without regard to cost. Splendid royal Asunsite;
medallion carpet ; Wilton. velvet , and Brussels ¢u . Petal; Fren n h. plate mantel and pier mirror.; ileum
curtains, piano, chandeliers. glass and animism., rims
superior mattras.mr, bedding. &n.
PAINTLNGIS, ENGRAYINGs,
Also, +1 large number of brat-ulagg original oil WM
Inge, of the bast French, and Goma.
.boo's, rare and hue engravings, marble statue:is,
articles of bilouterie and virtu. &e.
B' May be examined on Tuesday, AUTiI IS. from lo
to s o'olook.
sir Particulars in catalogues. nos ready.
Sele at Nee 1,41 and Routh Fourth rnr.. l
SUPERIOR FURNITURE, FREP4f 2 R- PLATE SCR
ROBS. PIANO-FORTEe, BRUSSELS CARPETS.
On Thursday Mortons•
At 9 ceelook, at the Anotien ems, an assortmtst 01
excellent second-hand furniture, eleaantmasetwtet.
fi n e mirrors, oarpeta, eta o from laroihes deosusu
boosobooptiag, roluorod t he store for 00014111if15e4
sole.
Also, a set of vary superior Rent double hernias lam.
ly new,) made to order tsy Lacey Es Phulipe,
Bale No. 1319 Marshall Street.
SUPERIOR WALNUT FURNITii RE. TAPESTRY
BRUSSELS CARPETS, ie.
Oxit Friday Mornin
19th inst.. at 10 o olooko at No, 13 19 .Marshall
above AllOmpson street, the entire household 11441
sitohen furniture. tapestry Brussels earpete, kc., of ft
gentleman declining housekeeping.
KT May be examined on the tnorning of Elle, 11 .!
o'olook.
Sale 122 z South Fourth Street.
SUPERIOR FURNITURE• MIRROR, kilitTSMEI,b
CAR PtiTS. as
On ltendity naornlng.
19th inst.. at 10 o'clotik. at No. 1923 South Fourth
street, below Federal. the superior furniture, French•
plats pier mirror, Brussels carpets, &0., of a gentleran
leaving the city.
May be examined on the miming of sty., 4 i
o'clock.
CLOBING ZiAIAVAT TEE GIRARD 11011 E,
FURNITURE, UNCLAIMED BADDAGE,
On Saturday Morning.
ARAL 01. at 10 o'oloon, by catalogue, at the Guard
House, Chestnut street. a quantity of chamber lane
tare, hue hair mattresses. carpets, a aaantm et UT
vants' bedding.
Mao, the kaohen tenutare, to,, lane 0111101t1 el
copper cooling. utensils. table oil clothe. &a.
Also, a quantity of unclaimed trunks and valiarr.eith
the conte nts atalo .
Mir ilgves will be ready and articles may be trr
amined on Friday.
-....1,000
-.3 000
. 9,00
Public Bale at the Bann= Garden.
FITOCK MOWINGEL tiAllll.lA GYM. 1 / 1 _
CARTS. MACHINES, CATTLE, FARM
ING IMPLEMENTS, &o.
On Monday Morning,
April 2 2 , at 10 o'clock. at the reside/lee or A. M. Eint•
...Lots, *e a .. haloes bray's Ferry- sr:11 pa saki at nit. ,
sale. without resserrey about Rl:lead of canoe, tn.:motet
a number of Sae nyiloh costa, several with gains by
their sides l some Tel 7 denirable young stock; a thy
tough- bred Durham buil,,eud &re young buil/ ; hie
orbits; carriage, by Jacobs' carriage , by Donley;
York wagon, by Watson ; double and single harness.
saddle and bndle, &o.
Also, Ketobam's mowing =tains and seed drill
Landreth's mower and raspier, with all toe latest ini•
nrovementa ; hap rake, need drill. patent hoisting hay
fork, cultivators, ploughs, harrow". large roller, dot
bla-hema gitIVINSY. ttio broad-wheel hey td aeons,
row-wine' hay wagon. with box bed, two one-hotst
carts, spring oart, new spring wagon, block and tack%
for window frame,, &soh. lot lead pine, cast-iron aim
old iron. it large lot of farming implements,
Hale peremptory. Terme cash.
The uarby Passenger Railroad Cars pans the nos
every half hour.
LETO
- ._._.2,000
SACO
Administrator's &leant Walnut street—Estate of Dv.
Tholllllll Hairis,
deoeeted.
SUPERIOR RESI OF:NOE AND PURNITURk.MI2-
11tOSS. OIL PAINTINGIs, CURTAINS, CHASM:
LIRAS. ho.
On Tuesday Morrein
23d inst., at 10 o'clock. at No. 1011 walnut stmt, tr
eetelogne, t6o entire furniture, oompnelne svprer
walnut drawing room furniture, wanted and von mir
ror/I, fine oil paintings and engravings, sunning, ctn •
dation. glass and china, superior dining-roost std
chamber furniture. Also, the kitolion furniture, rein•
gerater do.
Air The superior residence. sritk aoauh Soule. in:l
be sold at 10 o'clock nreedeely, previous to the if,e el
innutura, Full particulars' in handbills and mallow!,
Sale 83 tea Pennsy Hotel.
HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE, FEATHER BEV,
CARPETS, CARHIAGEn. 73 AR F)XTUIt.E;2, LI.
QUORS, Ao.
On Wednesday Morninx•
nth int tant,at o'clock, at the Penns, lvania
No. IS Norte Ninth weal, the ',kali& furniture, fodeat
beds, carpets, family oarriaye horse. two family CU -
Mg es. bar fixture', 11 0 1011 .
NW May be examined at 8 o'olook on the naornisyof
the sale.
- iv F. PANCOABT. AUCTIONEER,
l• ottntor to IL Boom Jr.. 43/ CHESTNUT /t.
SALE OF STEREOSCOPIC -NC PURES. BOERS. ,tc.
This PI orning,
April H. at 10 o'oloolt. to be continued in ilia eveniM
at U o'clock. at the store of Messrs. James Creamer
gc Oc.. Vv. 38 South isittith street, will be sold s /arts
eon attractive stook of one stereoscopic pictures, con
sisting of American and foreign scenery, mum sta•
tuery, &c, Also, a variety or revolving and hand in
struments. of rosewood, walnut, papier mach*, and
morocco, the whole comprising the finest assortment of
first-class good' ever offered et auction. Sale positive.
SALE OP 800 LOTS AMIPRICAR AND IMPORT
ED DRY GOODS. EMBROIDERIES, RIOIRM
FRENCH FLOWERS, &0., by catalogue. on a ere
dit—
On Wednesday Morning.
April IT. sale eomm MBROIDERI onoitir at 10
o'clock smellier.
ES.
A line of late style embroidered laoonet °Qua WI
sets. adclnra, fleueelnsedlee.
Wes ITE GOODS.
Madmen to fine qualities Psoonet muslin, tape check.
Laney dress 'Aeolis. Swiss mull elco.
100 BONNE RIBBONS.
'amens choice one T s
styles brats. embroidered.
ola,d, and solid colors 1)o:isnot ribbons.
FRENCH FLoWERAI. MILLINERY GOODS.
700 cartons rich Paris artifintal nower., for best CO
lots blank and white joined blonde. silk twee C.
DRY GOODS BY ORDER OF ASSIGNEE.
lota American and imported dry geode, shawls, le.
SHERIFF'S SALE AT JONES' iIIyEEL.
On Thursday adorning,
AprillB, at 10 o'clock, will be sold the stook of furni
ture of Jones' Hotel. Bale positive, by order of Sheriff.
Partiouiars In future advertisements.
.
Inoluded sale of Thursday will he found—
large quantity of ioearly new furniture. confining
of riot' parlor antes of revs and brOnatallei rniowl
Piano. warble-top tables, tapestry carpets, lace
nrooatelle ourtains, gilt corttaes hair-seat chairs sir;
softie. French walnut bedsteads. 'bureaus, wastifisfidg..
and wardrobes. Holland curtains, ingrain carpet, ** l
not dining tables and (Maim. French-plate mirror , .
orookery and glasswnre, a great variety 1 :4 " 4 " i '
uteusiltii 4c,
sEe' ,DS,
:COND SPECIAL SALE OF STRAW 600
eataiogue, on a credit.
Fnday l'Uonatng.
April 19, commencing at 10 o'clock preciselt
MOBES NATHANS A 'JOT lON NB
-LW.- ANDCDAIMISSItg xtusacmthit,B. 4 . llll
limner arsant and SA Strsabt.
AT PlitSAiE BALE. ~.,,, s ig
flo_oae of the Anent pATENT LE v D.• I
OHRObIoMETER W .E 8 nounsfactere 4 . tO
Vl e " eel " 114 1 roes, col lever cud teem* vfo ° l7:l
.V6T lever ekaa p o h eii g l ip h T Sina i
of
tench waltia, at &no togly l ow prise
every dVion on, Tory ow,gune. pistols. com ic s tge
strg.wonts, runt itusitty of Havana cities. at hs,
hoitlllnatiOn price, inguantitlea to snit narokaaera. W.
various other lona o good*.
SPLENDID SET F
.4! D4dONDR AT PRIVATE.
C.Oneketlng of .E.m oils' %a opai breiatllia Ind gar
rings. Prioo ease. Gott in Pada MAD. was
A splendid aims-stone diamond breast-via.
1150, cost um.
OUT 110 OR BALED
Attended to uersonelly by the Auctioneer..
uonmuninenta of any and every kil? Cel I.?"'n.ji";
nand. BIOBLd :tat JiA-
MONEY TO LOAN
a.OO 0 to loan, at the lowa* saws. Ott diuncl4 l ::
watohes, Jewelry. silver pigpe n Asp toads, °Whist. i.
aeries, curers, hardware. outliers, warns, '
nitnre, bedding , and gcsods of evert desetislion.‘
large or small a..%onntg. Cram one Cocoa to L ioutaa j , .
for SAY ingth of ILme agreed on.
Eir The Oldest Estahllshed HAMS is this oaf
DT Pi/irate entrance on RAC itir;•et.
lOr Business hours from A. .so 9 P. )1.
Heavy Insurance to ' t of depot tors,
CHARGES latiL W PER CEtri,
rT Adsatrotil*f OW and upwards at two Par °eh
Advances c ii•bx and upwards, at one we. acct.. s
short PAazut.
GRAVE-STONSIS, tiltAl7X-STONES. —
My stook of Grave attune and Ma'amls 10
sold at very reduced prices. Please call and examine.
before purchasing elsewhere, at Marble Works of
A. lawn 111
feE~mMORE Leann& Wow IKLF.VENTII "
VIIAMPAGNB.—Ve. Cliquot, La!WOO .
Duoal Grave. and a:1 of De Venots & Co.'s CSete•
acne.. for tale by .1 UR ETCHk: Ir. 4.:AKST AIRe•
%sea' end 204 South ' , RON!' Street.
N. B.—Orders for the direct importation of anf of Iht.
Stowe breeds sill he fluntitunlly attandia tn. IIP3
HAMS —lO tierces Gardner Phipps & C°'
extra/Sugar Cared. oovered Hama; *WS bereo
ohnpiP & Co. to. wo.. tor sale by C. a BAlMbis
sAli. 103 ARCH tract, ceoond door ahoy. Front. JO,
(11.1ERSE.-860 boson Herkimer County
Cheese on consirnmeot, and for sale by E.C. SAP"
LER & CO.. 103 ARCH Wrest, seem. d door ovo"
Front. ars
WIRKNOH ZlNC—Pure SNOW WELTS
(Vivito, hloutei k nk k t u M) Tu t itr i d o Nar
k tr i by
67 aatas ..orU &WM