SHB PRT3SS, ■ jffgro DAILY (SUNDAYS BXUEPTED) ft joint w. foruby, OSJSSt. »«. 11l BOPTH FOURTH BTBKIT. «HI DAILY PRESS, ~i rm jr Gun Fib Wbek. payable to tba oarrlori ntiut 10 Bobocribon out of the city at Baras Donnaa* PH >isrKi Yam BoiiLab* aid Ydtt Obits fob Six HostHb; On Dchlab aid Shvbktt nra Own fob pgsii Mom, laT»'lably In adyance forth, ttm.w- AdTsrtisamanls Inserted at the ostial rates. - out {last oonstltato a aouan. VHS TRI WEEKLY PK.KSS, [Malta* to Babaerlben out ol the etti at Fomt Dollamb U iJOTV. in adranca. r-fianmssiow HOUSES. WTOBAOE H> SOOTjB, Jl u rawnsaoi merchant. •* an «obth front etbbst. nnuDßitsu. ***** for tt » BAXOH viLLK WILLS, • BALDWIN COMPANY. WILTON MaNnjAO'rtMNCH 80.. ABBOT worsted company. CARPET WORSTED AND YARNS, vine Worsted, in. colors; No*. 12a and 28e, Jute Tarns. COTTON YARNS, tn warp andßradle. yW~t ? red by PtfALL. OAKMAHTa An* other well-known Hills. CARPETS. OOHTIHWTAi WLM, israatin, ATOTS*fITIA« LINEN THREAD. RAMPBOB’R ARQYLE. VINCENT KILLS, MdDONALD’S BATIK FINISH BOOKBINDERS’, CASKET THREAD. BoiuUby mU-8m JNSKEEP & tIUJEFITT, COMMISSION MERCHANTS. u 0 mi cHESTjnrr street. Mato la Store. and offer to the trado, FBXirOH. SKiriSH, AND GBRMAW DBKBS GOODS, pgiwTA of &1I doserinttoas. XKfb GOODS. In&Ucolors. 4 4. ( > 4 f 'Sod 6*4 ENGLISH OBIFXB. Lnmr cambkiq handkerchiefs. aw. feas-J jjgAGSI BAGS I BAGS I NEW ANI> SECOND-HAND a.nn.Bm. BURLAP, ABD GUSSY bags, ,I,ODE piSTI^T T 080O B 0i O D^T SIZKS - eORAIN BiOS.—A LARGE ABBOBI ! vJT MBIT Of GRAIN BAGS, In Tartan* dm. Sir «!• bw BARCROFT A GO., 1-injh- Bog. *Q» »nd -APT MARKBT Street. gHIPLEY, HAZARD, & HUTCH B o*' 80. US OHBHHIJT STBBBT. COMMISSION MERCHANTS, v 808 TEX BABB OF PHILADELPHIA-MADE GOODS. oriMm NEW YORK ADVERTISEMENTS. gUAW & COFFIN, importers, 19 PARK FLICK AND 16 MURRAY STKSBT, ITKW YORK. H4T« In stor* And constantly recelrinff direct froa {iunfutoren: BDBLIPS, all width.. XIiOOR CLOTH CANVAS, 4,8, And 8 pardl. BAGGING-, In Bond, or Export. CANVAS PADDINGS, HEMP CARPETING, BED PADDINGS. towels, DIAPERS, SHEETINGS, AO. ■ FLAX AND JUTE YARNS, FOB CABFET MANUFACTURERS. For »ale on favorable terme. fel7-Im CARPETINGS. 1864. SPRING, jeuEM echo mil: BEKHLARTOWH. FA. McCALLUM •& CO., HAKUFAOTUBIXS, IHPOBTBBB, AHD WHOLK dealers ur OARPaTINGS, OIL CLOTHS, AC. Warehouse, 509 Chestnut street, OFFOBITK ISDBFBNDBIfCB HALL. «■ gPEOIA-L NOTICE. RETAIL department* McCALLIJM & CO. Ssg lem to inform the publle thet thej hare Meed Oiantaiaiehed Carpet Eton, *O. si» CHESTJUJT STREET. Oopxalto IndBpand.no. Hall, bt & BCTUL DBPABTMMtT, When they are aow openlns a HHW STOgK IMPOBTED AM AffIEBICAB CARPETS, WIWO*. • I^ISKTT*ItS AJtPBT8 ’ '‘loretSir arUh a fall anortaent ofeTerrtUnc t«rti tM to the Carpet Bmrinew. t" 1 fgNTEBPBISE -MILLS. ATWOOD, RALSTON, & CO* IDVAOraW AH) WHOIiMATiI 9IUBB UAHPETINGS, OIL-CLOTHS, MATTINGS, &c., fte. WABIHOnBK «• CHESTNUT STBEETi •IS JATJTK STRUT. CASH DRUG HOUSE. WEIGHT A BIDDALL, Mo. 11» MAKKET STEEET, Mtwmmß ROOT mad SBCOHD BtreeU. W. H. imDIU. BHCOOISTB, PHYSICIANS, AND OB ■ISBAIi STOREKEEPEBS *. w. muon. C( B ini it oar wtabHahmsnt > (till assortment c! Imported and Domestic Brnrs,Popnlar Pa tent Modlcinte, Paints, Coal Oil, Window Glass, Pnwilptlon yule, etc., at as low price* as reall ins. drst-class roods can be sold. FINE ESBKNT iATj OILS or Confectioner*. in (nil TCrletT, and of tit* best *Coelitnenl, Benral Indian, Madder, Pot lab, Ondbear. Bod* Ann, Alum, Oil of Vitriol, Annat ta, OoBMIMi Bxfenct of Logwood, &S.I FOB DYERS* USE, klvift ea. head ai lowest not euh wiess. SULPHITE OF LIME, MekaiM •oatiuliif Bufielent for one l>arreL o^nuSoS^ir^ fnrnUUed wbca rcuncstod,_ WBIOHT Jt SIDDAUC* WHOLBBAIB DEUQ WABKHOUSB. Street, etwee IBOMT. M. WILSON, f«08 HABKBT Street True Turkey Myrrh, wroom. Coriander Seeds, ban. Corrawa* Beads, ban Unb. Jam. GlMer.bbls. Grain Bryotnew eroo, bbls. - Bor. Arrowßopt, ke*«. union Belad OU, bbls. Oil Sassafras, earn. OttronSla, Winter 7 *. esses. •• Cltronella. native, oases * * Xiemon, new crop. eases, •• Bose, Commerelai. eases. •• Orange, cans. 4 * Bersamot V. G.« cans. Fow’d fwtimanv. 100 ft CXBM. Bad Gentian. bales. ISStiMZ*-* *«r To*. «4 igbt shoemaekb 4004 irthuit Quiif of lOUKTH uf KACBStiMtei rHIIiADKiPHIA. ' -«S3 dbuggists, ins UD DULSES ur lOBBIGH JJID DOHBSTIO woroow us plat* blabs. kUanrFAOTtrKBM or IT* li*A» AJH> £l*o PAINTS. PUTTT. *•. Minn rom tn osleb bated BENOH ZINO PAINTS. '»a ton."— liadjJ THIS BEST-FINISHED STOCK of QHTCAKKIAGBB 8. OOLLIHQB * EO. W. WATSON & 00- custom. !QUOT CHAMPAGNE. °ua« WIDOW CDIGQtJOr PONSAEDIK or and for onto to the trade at ttaa 'keta IjJrSIIR OLIVE OIL. WILLIAM H. TXATOH ft 00., Ha. JtMftratk I8e««u* HORACJi H. eOIJI-8.. 33 North FBOMT Street. DKI7GS. IBS 808 GASH. YOL. 7.—NO. 192. BILK AMD DRY-GOODS JOBBERS. JUST RECEIVED, IN CUOIOE AND EIiEdANX DESIGNS, FRENCH ORGANDIES, JACONETS, AND PERCALES. SIGH AND HANDSOME 3XTJETW STYLES SPRING AND SUMMER SHAWLS. M. L. HALLOWELL & CO., mhS-]3t 615 CHESTNUT STREET. 1864. SPRING* 1864. DRYGOODS! RIEGEL, "~ WIEST, & mm, IMPORTERS ASD JOBBERS OF dry Goods, HO 47 H. THIRD STREET, PHILADELPHIA, Have now in store* and are dally In receipt of, all kinds of FRESH SPRING DRY GOODS, OF THE VERY LATEST STYLES. ’ . Have a Full Stock of all the different kinds of PHILADELPHIA-MADE GOODS. Merchants will find it to their interest to csll and ex> amice our stock, as we can offer them UHEQITA.IiLb9 XADUCBMRNTS. mh9-2m CHARLES WATSON. FRANKLIN JANHBT. JJEW BILK HOUSE WATSON & JAMEY, No. 333 MABKET STREET. / WHOLESALE DEALERS IK SILKS, DRESS GOODS, SHAWLS, WHITE GOODS, EMBROIDERIES, &C. To which they reapectfally Invito the attention of buyers. mbd-3xii 1864. 1864. SPRING DRY GOODS. GREAT IHDUCBMEHTS TO CASH BUTBBB. HOOD, BONBRIGHT, & CO., Wholesale Dealers In FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC DRY GOODS, •S 9 HABKBT Street, and 586 COMMERCE Street, PHILADELPHIA* Would reepectfolly Invite attention to their LARGE STOCK of leading DOMESTICS, DRESS GOODS, MEN’S AND BOYS’WEAR, and many popular yoods of PHILADELPHIA MAJnJPAOTUEE. inh2-Sm CASH HOUSE. goods bought and sold fob cash. LITTLE & ADAMSON, 3*5 MARKET STREET. Invite attention to their entire new and Splendid Stock SPRING DRESS GOODS. BLACK SILKS, MOURNING SILKS, FANCY SILKS, FOULT DE BOIES. -SEASONABLE SHAWLS, CLOAKING CLOTHS, MANTILLA SILKS. MANTILLAS, Hanuffcetnred by themselves from late Parle Styles. mhl-9m ' ' 1864. spbing, 1864. _ JAMES, KENT, SANTEE, & CO., IMPORTERS AND JOBBERS Of DBY GOODS, Hot S3V u>d Ml NORTH THIRD ST., above Raea PHILADELPHIA, Have bow own their usual- T.ATtms AND COMPLETE STOCK or FORBIGN AND'DOMBSTIO DRY GOODS. Notwithstanding the acarclty of many klnaßofDrT goods* our stock Is now fall and varied in all its d«- lnvited to otur assortment of T>WTT, APET.YHTA* MAD S GOODS. ▲ fall aMortment'of Cloths, Casslmeres, &e. A fall assortment of Prints, DsLalnes, 4c. * A fall assortment of notions, Wilts Goods, Ac, A fall assortment of Sheetings, Shirtings, i as an espetfal merit, Lst it sHska Pstchos and Listen to Boot! and Shoe, nSdeitur ■trona without .tUshlng. IT IS THE ONLY Families. LIQUID CEMENT Mot, thfttja a, ran tUu to It is a Liquid. mending TOYS, •OM, IYO*Y. Aid utlaltt ol Houahold BEMEMBEBj Milton’s insoluble Cement Ills > ltanld form, end *• Milly wiled u cute. Remember, HILTON'S IXBOLUBIJI OZHSXI Ii lawlafel* la wtter or oil. BOTOX’S IXBOHJBU OUXXT Adhere* oily enbeteaeeo. SnmUedln Fumlly or HumfMln rer* 1 Fmek»*** from 1 ounce* to 100 fefl. BILTOI 8808. ft C«., rronl«to(*> raovxDino*. x. 1 dfMtt 1» Fhlliddpblt tAßre *■ HAamms, No. 30 North THIRD St. JOSKPH RODPRey *. Co- No- 38 North FOURTH St. je26*tuthsly & SHAFFNEE, BUCCBBSORS TO SHAPFNEB, ZEiaLER & 00., CONTINUE THE WHOLESALE HOSIERY AND VARIETY BUSINESS. At the old stand, fs2fl-18t* No. 36 NORTH FOURTH STREET. pAPEB WAREHOUSE, FARRELL, IRVING, CO., 810 MINOR STREET. ■urafketaiwn of ROLL WRAPPERS. DOUBLE and SINGLE MEDIUM, OAF. and CROWN MANILLA. OB Lend, or mad. to ordv. HlgheeSprioepaid mi iopo in large or imall qventi n'* tWSWI PHILADELPHIA, TUESDAY, MARCH 15, 1864. I. E. WILHITES, (SUCCESSOR TO W. H. 0 ABRIL. I MASONIC HALL. 719 CHESTNUT STBEET, HAS OPENED A STRUTS STOCK OF CURTAIN MATERIALS, FURNITURE COVERINGS, LACE CURTAINS, WINDOW SHADES, PIANO and TABLE COVERS, OF REW ARD RICH DESIGNS. AT EXTREMELY LOW PXIOIB. JOHN €3. ARRISON, Roa, 1 and 8 NORTH SIXTH STREET. fHE IMPROVED PATTERN SHIRT, rUBNISHIN G GOODS. D, A —All artialea wads In a superior manner by hand lid (tom tire Dart materials, . JaM 1864. 1864. NEW STOCK. linpord lttkens, H. w. CORNER SIXTH ARD CHESTNUT STREETS, NOW OFFBBS A LARGE AND ELEGANT NEW STOCK OF GENTLEMEN'S FURNISHING GOODS. All the ehoiceet novelties In this department constantly on bud* • THE BEST-MAD* SHIFTS IN THE OIXY. OBDEEB PKOMPTLT EXECUTED. _ PBICSS BKASOXUB&B fe24-stuthtniySl KID GLOVES. pINE shirt manufactory. I. Tlit subMribera would invite attention to their IMPROVED CUT OP SHIRTS. ftUb they mske a ipeelftlity in their hnsinen. Alee, GENTLEMEN'S WEAR. B%a°- Mo. taw CHESTNUT STREET, falMf Fonr doore below the Continental. gPBING GOODS. 013 CHESTNUT STREET. Save just received & larce stock of choice SPRING GOODS. TO LET.—ROOMS UP STAIRS, (12, 614 OHBSTRUT STREET. *fe23- tf DLACK. OAHS. PANTS, 05.60, • D At 704 MARKET Street. BLACK CASS. PARTS, (5.60, At 704 MARKET Btreei (LACK CASS. FARTS. *5 (0. At 704 MARKET Street. SLACK CASS. PARTS, *5.60, At 704 MABKBT Street ■LACK CASS. PARTS, #O.OO, At 704 MABKBT Street (BIOS A VAR GUNTER’S, No. 704 MARKET Street UIGC * YAM GUNTER’S. No. 704 MARKET Street ■BIGG * YAM GUMTEM’S, No. 704 MARKET Street «IGG * YAM GUNTEN’S, Mo. 704 MARKET Street «IGG A YAM GUNTER’S. Mo. 701 MARKET Street teM-6a - ' ■ ■ 1864. PHILADELPHIA 1864, PAPER HANGINGS' HOWELL & BOURSE, MA.NTTFJICTTTBBR S OF •W" ALL PAPERS Aim WINDOW CURTAIN PAPERS, COB. FOURTH AND MARKET STS., PHILADELPHIA. XT. B.—A fine slock of LIKES SHALES constantly on tuuid. * fe27*2mfP G. W. BLABON db 00., ifANXTFACTURBRS OF OIL CLOTHS, No. 184 NORTH THIRD STREET, PHILADELPHIA, Offer to the Trade a foil Stock of FLOOR, TABLE, AND CARRIAGE OIL CLOTHS. G BERN -GLAZED OIL CLOTHS AND WINDOW xnhl-Sm SHADRB. Q.EORGE W, HILL, Manufacturer and Wholesale Dealer In CARPETINGS,' MATTINGS, RUGS. ALSO, COTTON AND WOOLEN YARNS, At Tory Lot Prices. No. 186 NORTH THIRD STREET, ABOVE ARCH, xukl-Sm - Philadelphia, PAINTINGS AND ENGRAVINGS. gLEGAMT UIBROBBi SABLE’S GALLKBIBBj CABINET FURNITURE AND BIL v 7.mm TABLBS. MOORE & CAMPION, No. 861 SOOTH SECOND STREET, eenneeUon with their extensive Cabinet business, are ow manufacturing a superior article of BILLIARD TABLES, nd have now on hand a ADI ropply, finished with the MOOBE & CAMPION’S IMFBOvAd CUSHIONS* ghlsh are pronounced by all who have need them to be superior to all others. , _,, ' . _ For the quality and finish of these Tables* the manu* (actnrers refer to their numerous patrons throughout the Union, who axe lamtilar with the character or their Fork. selT-gm « A VENUE HOUSE,” -tA WASHINGTON, D. C. The undersicned having leased the above Houee*. situated on the corner of BEVBNTH Street and PENN SYLVANIA Avenue, for a term of years, he solicits the foimer patronage and the travelling public generally, and will at all times be happy to see his old friends. Respectfully, . O.T.JONfS. Washington, D. C., March S, 1804. mhlO-om JONES HOUSE, 0032* BB MABKBT STBBBT AND HABSBT SWA3B A firat-cI&M house. Terms, 93 per day. JaU-8m fUFOBTEBS OF *• WIMBB Aim IIIOTOKB, LACMAN, SALLADB, * 00., Vo. 138 SOUTH HIKTH STBBST, Botwooa OhMtant and Walnut, Philadelphia. . G. K. LAUMAIt. A. M BALLADE. j, v Bimua. /GENUINE EAGLE VEIN GOAL— VA Vanai if not superior to Lehljrh. Also. Hart'* Hi Flos Ultra Family Rainbow Coali Bn and Store Usee, 18 60- bITJ* Hit *7.76 per ton. „Ooal forfeited M not full weight u per ticket. Depot, 1419 OIWVHDjL Street.albe'ra'Broad. OJBee 18l Sonth FOURTH, bo low oheetnnt. Oill end eaamloe. Order* by dlspatch promptly attended to by noll-6m . -BbLIS BRAMBQX r\ O AL.—SUGAR LOAF, BEAVEB V hxaBOW, ftßdSpriac Mountain LaUth. Ocdtiai (Wt-u i. wtowK « w. CURTAIN GOODS. GOUTS* BURNISHING GOODS. MAXUPAGTOBER Of FIRST (TUT BY J. BURR MOORS, TO FIT AMD GIVE SATISFACTION. Importer and Manufacturer of GENTLEMEN’S CLOTHING. EDWARD P. KELLY, JOHN KELLY, T A I L O B S, (JONES’ HOTEL.! LATE 142 SOUTH THIRD STBEET, PAPER HANGINGS. Oil. CI.OTHS, <&c. & LARGI ASSOKTMBm. PIW ENGRAVINGS mi sil rinnm JUST MCKVAD. ns ohbstmut: mni. aon-u 6ARIIBT PDRNITURH. HOTEIS. HARRISBURG, FA., WINES AND 1,1Q.U0R9. COAX. TUESDAY, MARCH 15, 1854. In fulness of time, no doubt, Thackeray Trill find a good biographer In the interim various “eminent hands’’ have been em ployed in noticing him—all in terms of high eulogy, according to the ancient adage ■which forbids any thing to be said of the dead except what is good. ' Thackeray appears to have made many friends, and this says as muqh for him as any labored praise could say. Shirley Brooks gave a very kind notice of Thackhbay in the Illus trated London Heim; Jambs Hannay did the same in the Edinburgh Oourant, which has since been reprinted in a pamphlet. Even Mr. Sala, who • had worked under him, on the' Gornhill Magazine, wrote an 11 In Memoriam ’ ’ notice in the Albion news paper of New York. Henry Kingsley paid him a tribute in Macmillan's Magazine. Charles Dickens and Anthony Trol lope respectively lauded him in the Oom- MU Magazine. Dr. John Brown, of Edin burgh, author of “ Bab and Jiis Friends,” wrote an article of fifty-five octavo pages in the new number of the Hot’th 'British Review; ufid Mr. Theodore Tayilor, who knew a little of him in Paris, and was acquainted ‘with some of his London friends, has pub lished a small volume, entitled “ Thackeray, the Humorist and the Man of Letters. The Story of hia Life, ineluding a Selection from his characteristic Speeches, now for the first time gathered together.” This last has been republished by Messrs. Appleton, New York, in a 12mo. volume of 242 pages, and sold here by Ashmead & Evans. The London edition appeared.” with Pho tographs and original illustrations,” but we find only dim shadows of these in the New York reprint. The frontispiece, from Cbuikshank’s Comic Almanac, is a sketch which Thackeray, as a critic, had praised. This is an etching on steel.. The remaining illustrations are wood-cuts, indifferently executed and printed, viz.: a small vignette caricature on the title-page; a portrait of Thackeray, ” a recent photograph by Er nest Edwards, B. A.,” razeed down to an oval, such as that nearly-forgotten coin, a half-dollar, might have. been fashioned into without augmenting its area Ca por trait, too, very like General Scott in this execution of it); a small view of Thacke ray’s house at Kensington; another unlike likeness, entitled “Mr. Thackeray and the Age of Queen Anne,” in which the great novelist is made to resemble Bill Sykes, “with spectacles on nose,” and the Thackeray Arms, where a crayon and quill-pen crossed do duty, as a crest, instead of the family falcon with arrow in his bill; a pair of spectacles taking the place beneath, where the motto Nobilitas est sola Vir tue’ ’) ought to he placed, but the shield care fully preserving the hereditary armorial bearings, viz; Ycrt, a dart or, point down wards, between two garbs of the second; on a chief purple, a cherub’s head in gold be tween two estoiles of six points of the last. Here-they all are —golden dart, garbs (" wheat sheaves) six-pointed stars, and golden che rub’s head. The rule of contrary, seeing that these" arms were first borne by Dr. Thackeray, Master of Harrow School, ("the novelist’s great grandfather,) must have in troduced the cherub’s head, tradition being that the Doctor, who certainly never spoiled the child by sparing the rod, was accused by his contemporaries of such frequent inflic tions upon the other extremity, that his pu pifs often envied the carved cherubs on the monuments in Harrow Church, and wished to be like them, only head and wings, which wopld have made birching a physical im possibility. The illustrations in this American edi tion are indifferently executed, with the ex ception of the iac-simile of Mr. Thacke ray’s handwriting, which is neatly litho graphed. The book itself is of slight tex ture, being chiefly a compilation from the biographical notices of Thackeray, which appeared in various publications before and since his death. Mr. Taylor also ran sacked Fraser's and other magazines to which Mr. Thackeray had contributed, and has thus been able to trace him up from obscurity to fame —from the time ■when he literally wrote to live until he lived to write, and leave from $lOO,OOO to $150,000, hardly earned, to his children. The best part of the volume is that which describes Thackeray’s literary produc tions at Cambridge, and gives extracts from the little magazine which he established there. Mr. Taylor says: 1 “ The earliest of hie literary efforts are aeeoeiated with Cambridge. It wae in the year 1829 that he commenced, in conjunction with a friend and fellow student, to edit a eeriee of humorous papers, pub listed in that otty, which bore the title of The Snob! a Literary and Scientific Journal.’ The first number appeared on the 9th of April in that year, . and the publication was continued weekly. Though afleoting to be a periodical, it waa not originally in tended to publish more than one number; but the projeot was carried on for eleven weeks, in which period Mr. Lettsom had resigned the entire manage ment to bis friend. The contents of eaeh number, whieh consisted only oi four pages of about the size of those of the present volume, were scanty and alight, and consisted entirely of squibs and humor ous sketches in verse and prose, many of whioh, however, show some germs oi that spirit of wild fun which afterwards distinguished the ’YeUowplush’ pepera in 1 Fraser.’ When completed, the papers bore the 1 olio wing title: •‘THE SNOB: it x LITERARY AND SCIENTIFIC JOURNAL. “HOT **CONDUCTED BY MEMBBBS OF THE UNIVERSITY.” Tityre, tu patulrc recub&os sab tegmine fagl Sylvebtrem. Virgil, The first number contained a satirical “ skit,” upon the prize-poem of “Timbuc too,” •which his friend Alfred Tennyson, now Poet Laureate, had then produced. Omitting the notes, we subjoin this pa rody The Situation, In Africa (a quarter of the world), Men’s eklofl are black, their hair is crisp and curl’d, And somewhere there, unknown to public view, .* A mighty'fllty ilea, called TimbUCtOO. The Natural History. There stalks toe tiger—there the lion roan. Who sometimes eats the luckless blackamoors; All that he leaves of .them the monster throws To jackals, vultures, dogs, eats, kites, and crows; His hunger thus the forest monster gluts, And then lies down ’neath trees called cocoanuts■ The lion hunt. Quick issue out, with musket, torch, and brand, The sturdy blackamoors, a dusky, baud! The beast is found—pop go the musketoons— The lion falls ooverea with horrid wounds. Their lives at home . At home their lives in pleasure always flow, But many have a different lot to know I Abroad • They’re often caught, and sold as slaves, alas ? Reflations on the foregoing. Thus men from highest joys to sorrow pass. Yet, though thy monarohs and thy nobles boil Hack and molasses in Jamaica’s isle* Desolate Afrlo 1 thou art lovely yet!! One heart yet beats which ne’er thee shall forget. What though thy maidens are a blackish brown, Does virtue dwell in whiter breasts alone* Oh no, oh no, oh no, oh no, oh n o 1 It shall not, must not, cannot, e’er be so. The day shall come when Albion’s self shall feel Stun Aftit’g wrath, and writhe ’neath Attic’* .tsei, I «ee her ttlbe. the hill of glory mount, And sell their sugars on their own aooount; While round her throne the prostrate nations oome, Sue for her rice, and barter for her rum! fi& this time, Thackeray rather imitated than created. Theohobb Rook, a few years before, had made a Mrs. Rampbot tom correspond with the then all-powerful Tory organ, the John BuU newspaper, and Thackeray wrote several imitations of her letters, in The Snob. Here, as from Cam bridge, are a few paragraph? purporting to have been penned by Mrs. R.: ii i think the library of Trinity College i< one of the moat admiral ohjeoti here. liawthebulk. of several gentlemen .whose statutes I had seen at Boom, and who all received their edißoatlon at that College. There was Aristocracy who wrote farces for the Olympic Theatre, and Democracy who Was a laughing philosophy, 1. 1 forgot to mention that my son George Frede rick is entered at St. John’s, because I heard that they take most osre of their morals at that College. I called on the tutor, who received myself and son very politely, and said he had no doubt my son would be a tripod, and he hoped perspired higher then polly, which I did not Uke.” MrS. Ramsbottom’s “Pax relative to the Late Murder” seems to have commenced the Yellowplush bad spelling, which, strange to say, Thackeray much affected, and mis took for wit.. Mrs., R. herself was evident ly suggested by Sssrwah’s Mrs, ,-JM?p*op, 0. H. Kura. Thackerayana. TIMBUCTOO.—PART I. and we suppose that our own Mrs. Parting-: ton, (who resides with Mr. Shill aber, of Boston,.) is, in turn, a lineal descendant of Mib. Ramubottom. Mr. Theodore Taylor’s book contains a great deal that Thackeray’s readera will be glad to read, though not much that is new. Mr. Hannay’s sketch is written, on the contrary, with great personal know ledge; but we think that he is mistaken when he asserts that Thackeray made a present of £5OO to Dr. Maginn —the sum, by the way, which Dk Quikcey, when a youth, did give to Coleridge. Maqinn died in the summer of 18 IS, fire years be fore Vanity Fair had put Thackeray in easy circumstances. It was Maginn who gave Thackeray an engagement on Fra ser’s Magazine , at a time whence much needed literary employment. If, as has been alleged, Captain Shandon, in “ Pen dennls,” was meant for Maginn, the crea tion of such a character was ungrateful, to say the least of it. ' Dr. Brown’s article on Thackeray, in the North British Review, ib written by a man who was fully master of his subject, and is affluent in personal anecdote. Here is one very touching: 11 We cannot resist here recalling one Sunday eve ning in December, whea'EeaMa wanking with two friends along tlwi.D®i«nwoad, to the west of Edln buigh—one of the- nobipet outlet* to any city. It was a lovely evening, apoh a sunset a* one never forgets • a rich, dark bar or cloud Levered over the sun, going down behind the Highland bUls, lying bathed in amethystine bloom. Between this aloud and the bills there was a narrow slip of the pure tether, of* tender cowßllp color, luold, and asiflt were the very body of heaven in its olearness—every ob ject standing out as if etched upon ,the sky. The northwest end of Coratorpblne Hill, with ite trees art! reeks, lay in the heart of thla pure radiance, and there a wooden crane, used in the quarry below, was so plsoed as to assume the figure of a cross. There it was, unmistakable, lifted up against the orystaline sky. All three gazed at It silently. Aa they gazed he gave utterance. In a tremulous, gentle, and rapid voice to what all were feeling, in the word “ Calvary 1" The frlendswalkedonin silenoe, and then turned to other things,” Those who have read and smiled at “ the holy chant,”'called “Dr. Luther,” which the hero sings in “The Adventures of Philip,” may thank us, if they will, for giv ing them the little ballad of “ Little Billee,” which Thackeray used sometimes sing, when pressed—as all Bingers want pressing, and even the affecting history of “Jack Robinson ” is never volunteered !—and would sing in a grave, characteristic kind of recitative, each line repeated twice. There is not much in the song, as a song, but Thackeray made it entertaining and effective. Here it is as given by Dr. Brown- : There were three tailors in Bristol city, ' Who took a boat and went to sea. But first with beef and captain’s biseult, And pickled pork they loaded she. There was guzzling Jack and gorging Jimmy, And the youogeat he was little Billee. Now very toon they were so greedy, They didn’t leave not one spilt pea. Says guzzling Jack to gorging Jimmy, “lam extremely hungaree.” Say a gorging Jim to guzzling Jacky, “ We have no provisions, so we must eat we.” Says guzzling Jack to gorging Jimmy, “ O gorging Jim, what» fool you be! There’a little Bill ie young and tender, We’re old and tough, so lct’a eat-he.” - 11 0 Bill, we’re going to kill and eat you, So undo the collar of your chemle.” When BUI received thla lnfumation He used hit pocket-bandkercble. « o let me say my cateohism, A a my poor mammy taught to me.” Make haste, make haste,” says guzzling Jacky, While Jim pulled out his sniokersnee. So Bill went up the main-top-gallant mast, Where down he fell on his bended knee. He scarce had come to the Twelfth Commandment, When up he jumps, “ There’s land, I see. There’s Jerusalem and Madagascar, And North and South Amerikee. There’s the British fleet a riding at anchor, With Admiral Nelson, K, C. B.” So when they came to the Admiral’s vessel, He banged fat Jack and flogged Jimmee. But as for little Bill, he made him The captain of a seventy-three. In a day or two we may expect to have the whole of Dr. Brown’s article on Thackeray, in the forthcoming New York reprint of the North patby and affection. He loved hla friend. and hi. creole home, and left tt only when military neoetti. ty called him imperatively to leaver Daring the early part of the war Mra. Beauregard remained at the houce of her brother-in-law, Hon. O. J. Villere-, member of the Confederate Congreaa. some tea miles below the city ; but so enfeer was her dwlre to hear of and from hpr husband, that she came up nearly eveiy dby to meet the daily telegram which he sent her. finally she rent her two boys, of six tfen to seventeen years of age, to join their father, to whom and to whose oauie she was so deeply at tßFM?iijg info bad health, ahe baa been gradually sicking for more than a year past $ but aha would not suffer her husband to know it, nor go where ahe might be a burden to him. She kept, indeed, her ii/tcß* from the world as much as possible, for fear that newsof it might reach him and give him unneoes ■ary pain. All that could be done for her was at tF.Lded to by attached friends; and thus her way to the tomb was made as easy as it could have been had he been present. The New Orleans Picayune gives a new instance of General Butler’s manliness in this connection: ‘ When the immediate predecessor of the present commanding general was in this department, he personally tendered toiler an eioort and every fa cility,'if, and Whenever, she should wish t 6 j»ia t her husband. She was too weak, too ill to be removed. The devotion of this lady to her husband, her love for him was such, that she would not allow her family to communicate to him her oritioal position. Her sorrows and her sufferings have been respected, even by strangers, to the day of her death and her entrance intosheland where there Is always pease-” Anniversary of the Battle of-Pea Speech by General Rosecrans*.. The second anniversary of this battle and vlotoiry under Gen. Curtis, was celebrated in St. Louis on the evening of the Bth Inst. A supper was prepared, about 625 officers were present, and speeches were made by Gen. McNeil, Gen, Gray, and Gen. Bose oracs. In the. course of his speeob, Gen. Boseerans nar rated the following Incident: At the battle of luka I was charged with getting in the rear of the enemy. By some accident I hap* pened, unfortunately, to be the only body who fought. Our expectation was that the enemy would be attacked from another direction before we ar rived, that would be able to occupy their rear, and that we would effect the operation of which we have often heard, but seldom seen performed—that is, bag them. [Laughter.] We oame near succeed' ing in what we call “ bagging the enemy,” and that is the only time I ever saw a chance of it. It hap pened .that the enemy was not attacked, and it hap pened that we had to bear the brunt of the tight from half past four to half past seven* I was at first in the rear, and when I came to the- front, where I knew a sharp fight was going on, I found Bonner and bis men of the 26th pouring in grape and ca nister tolerably warm. At half past seven I rode over to the left of our line, right close Id the rear, and suddenly the moil terrific musket fire I ever heard broke out. It was a perfect sheet of flame from one end of the line to the other. Said I, 11 Hallo I there’s something un usual going on there.” I listened, and on it roared for fifteen minutes. I rode up to the polnt.'but it was so dusky I could not see them. I could hear the bullets whistling around us, but it wav too dark to see. Presently I heard our men cheer, and I knew the fight was over. It was the sharpest firing I have heard in this war. Shortly after came along the 11th Missouri, Col. Mower. I found moat of his brigade had separated from him. He came storming along, and says he, ** Where’s Gen. Boseerans?” It was all dark; nobody could see. “ Oh*” says some one, « he’s just gone over that way. What do you want of him?” “ None of your d—d business.” [Laughter.] One officer says, 11 I’m his adjutant general.” “Oh, all right. I want some ammunition. The wagons have not oome up. Somebody stopped my brigade, and I ‘''have had to fight alone.” I heard him, and. says I, What’s the matter ?” Says he, “I am out of am* munition, Damn this pop firing- Give me my bri gade, and if 1 can take the bayonet, I can run the d—d guts out of them.” It was these Missouri • troops that saved the fight. Down oame a brigade upon them, but they were repulsed, not without dif ficulty* Then a second fresh brigade came upon them, when it was so dark they could not see— so close that the colonel of the 37th Mississippi called out “Jump from toe front linei, and, for God’i a ike, don’t fire on your friend. I” “ Th)rty.«eireiith IYlls .li.ippi, in iff” “ Whoop l’> »y. Mower, and then they fought hand to hand; but the enemy were rolled bach; and thus two regiment, of Mluouri troop. Mved the day. [Cheer..] FINANCIAL AND COMMERCIAL, the: MONEY MARKET. Philadelphia, March 14.1864 The halt in Congress over the gold bill is having the effect of making a very doll market, besides depressing the price of that valnable article, which ruled nearly all day at 160#@160*. The money market is very easy, and no change in rates Is noticeable. Governments are steady at a slight advance on Saturday's quotations. The stock market was weak this forenoon, with con siderable < isposition to realize, but at the close a firmer feeling was apparent, and there was more demand for All classes. The mining and canal shares were the most active. New York and Middle sold at 16. closing at 15# ; Fulton was the firmest, at 9#; New Creek was in de mand, rising to 1#; Green Mountain fell off to 8# bid; Girard was freely bid for at 7#@7#; 9% bid for Penn; Bohemian sold at 11; Marquette al 4#; 4 was bid for Key stone Oil 4 for Cranberry Oil; s#forTamaqua; Venango was offered at 3; Mandan at 6* Oil Creek at IS#; Etna at 19#; Big Mountain at 10#. Union preferred was steady at 7#, the common at 4#; Echuylfcill Navigation common declined #, the preferred #;~Susquehah£a was steady at 29. the sixes at 70#; Delaware Division at 46; Lehigh scrip sold at 66; Navi gation ’B2 at 97#. Beading opened at 69#, declined to 67#, and rallied to 69#, closing strong. North Penn sylvania declined to 85#» closed «t 36#; Philadelphia and Brie was off to 37#* recovered #; 27# was the best bid for Catawlesa common* 42# for the preferred; Penn sylvania sold at 76#, closing 1 lower; Camden and Am boy at 176; Green and Coates sold np to 43#; Arch-street at 38#; Chestnut and Walnut at 62; Second and Third at 80#; Thirteenth and Fifteenth-streets at 43H©43#. First-class securities were steady, the market closing firm. Jay Cooke & Co. Quote Government secnrities, &e.» as follows: United States sixes, 1881* «—» u. a. U. fi.MWGertWMtMOfliliihUiau*.. 99 ar* at r\jrtVaru. ot ffeitoweatein at &.%; OamhurilnJ it The’ appended table exhiblte the chief' movement, at the hoard compared with the latest prices of yesterday: _ . Hon. Sit. Adr. Dm. Belted Mate, 6s, 1881, regia...... IIJJi 111 a JAltoj Etatei 9s. 1681, e0np09.»~.112 Jl2>£' id n4KTJ t * w * eeyen-thlrflM. lllltf 111 X .. s, *S?.i Ie * r *er., «nr.—. 09X suit .. n AanrUin \ i«ij| lfflj? .. \ Tannest. 82 81S .. 5 • & g. 8 * Centeni Bniirond-—."l36ae *l46# ” Rock Island*--.—— 122 123# ” l24# \W l " |» Mil.and PrairivDu Cnlon.w.,—, 67 68 !. r* Terrs Haute **■....-*.n*-.*.**- 76# 78 .. \t£ Northwestern*. 60# 60# l % Cumberland.. 79# 82# .. Quicksilver-» -»* --.-61 65 a* Ohicatoand Alton * 87# 87# # if ter the Board the mark et’rallied, and Dricea advsnsed 1 to 4 per cent. _ Phlladit. Stock E2zci [Reported by 8. S. Slayxak. BSFOBB 60&I £OO 61 | yiBOT I Xoootr bgb. «... •... .roc-ill 600 City 6b». ...... newioe H 12 North 72 6CO New Creek 1% 1000 d0..~ 166 600 do M \% 100 N Y & Middle 16 100 Bohemias Minina. 11 ion Girard Minins.*.bs 7K 100 do m 100 do 7X 100 Bch N»y.pref....b6 44% 16(0 fich Bar, 6«, ’82.... 97% 200 do b3O M% ICO 801 l NaT.pref. ..b2O 44 ICO do 44 160 do..*.- 48% 264 do 43k 16 Lehigh Scrip 68 61 do bS 68 60 Sosa Canal 29)£ ICO d 0... .toa.*h&X 400EQBd!&gR.... 100 do lOOFchNar 36* 100 Delaware Div. .blO 46 SU Cam & Atlan»pref. 30 60 Green & Coates B-* 43>£ 100 do. b3O 43* 000 New Greek .«*•,•»*. IfS 18 Fezuia B. . v. 76$ SECOND 900 New Creek......... 1* 600 do bff \% 600 do 1 81 1 00 do. Vi 1000 do a . Vi lOQNPenna K... 86 100 . do 800 SRH ICO do atO 36)2 ! SOOfHty 6e 104 : 62 Mlnehill B. 66 : 6 do ™ 64% ASTKB B 10CO Wyoming Val6a. .100 100 Beading H bf» 69K 60 do «M.. t b3069)£ 100 Big mountain.. ■••• 10 100 d 0,.............. 10H lOOEchuyl Nav....b30 SfiJH 100 do Mi 100 do b3O 85* 60 G & Coates-et 8... 44 S Korth Penna 37 ICONav... 80% 1(0 New Creek™ 1.81 126 do ITi 60 Green & Coates 43* 100 NavCan.«« bl 6 36* 800 New Creek Vi 100NavC0m...... 36* 400 New Creek..™.bs Vi 100 Taxnaqna..... 5* SOO Cataw Pref bSO 43 2CO Green Mount....2da 8% 600 New Creek*. b 6 Vi «CO do Vi 300 Orderi M0unt.....b5 8* ' 100 Marquette «... 4% : 200 Green M0unt.....b5 8* 1 200 New Creek bS Vi t 200 Nav Pref 45% i 200 d 0...... b 5 4ft* i 200 Penn Mining....b3o 9% 300 KewCreek Vi ' 200 do Vi 2CO Penn Mining i, 9* 60 Etna 19% CLOSING PBII Bid, dsk. U S 6r 'Bl .ill DST 73O0Notes.H2;£ • • PbUa6s lfS Do new*"»"10B% IG9 PennaCs.9B% 99 Readings 69* 69% Do bds ’70.~,.108% IC9 Do 6e ’66 cony, Do 0«’80 43... Penna B Do Ift m 6b<«>l .. Do 2d 112 LSchuylkill 8... 49% 60% Morris C’i consol. 74 75 Do pref. 139 140 BchnyfHav Stock 35 36% Do pref. 44% 45 Do 6s *BB. 97 97% E» subject to dutvj 10 bbls of Rosin at *35.60 ¥ bbl, and 20 bbls Spirits of Tur pentine at $3.59@3 41 ¥ gallon, all cash. PRO VISIONS —The market Is firm, but the sales ara limited. Mess Pork is held at $23.76@24 ¥ bbl. Bacon is scarce; t mall sales of Hams are making at 14@16e ¥ lb for plain and fancy. Pickled Hams are selling at from 13K@13£c ¥ ft). Lard is steady, with sales of tierces at 14@i4££c. and kegs atl6>i@l6c¥ ft>. Batter is in de mand. and selling at 30@86c¥ft> for roll. , . WHISKY is rather firmer, with sales of Pennsylvania and Ohio bbls at 92@94c; and drudge at 9G@9lc ¥ following are the receipts of Flour and Grain at this port tO'daj : . Inn ... F10ur........... 2,100 bbl*, Ofttl. 4 ... > >*.< > II»IM*M4 M I»HH 4,000 bus. Flrlladelpbla Cattle Harket, March 11—Evening. Tie arrivals and sales of Beef Cattle at Phillips* Ave nue Drove Yard are rather smaller ft an last week, reaching about 1,670 head. Plist quality of Western and Pcuna Steers axe selling at from 14® 16b, 28 do at 12®l3e* and common at from 8® lie ¥ lb, as to quality. The market closed very dull, and common Cattle nay-e boon sold at lower prices than the above. . Cows are unchanged ; about 160 head sold at from $2O up to *6O ¥ head, as to quality „ . Bheep are rather better ; 4,600 head sold at from 7?£ up to 9c ¥lb gross, the latter rate for extra. . - . . . Bogs are in fair demand, with sales of 2,600 head at the different yards at from #lf@l2 CO the 100 tbs, net. The Cattle on sale to* day are from the following States 900 head from Pennsylvania, 876 head from Ohio. 800 head from Illinois. . , The following are theparticnlars of the sales . Martin A bhtiner, 66 western Steers, selling at from 14 @l6o for extra quality. , ... . . M Fuller A Co.. 90 Western Steers, selling at from Oh*se?eonuty Steers,selling at from 19 fji hn hn ßach man f7B Ohio Steers, selling at from 14® M !fi?hn r Kirwtn,*6l Western Steers, selling at from 13K@ 36c for good to ex'ra. . . .' . F. Hatboway, 16 Lancaster county Steers, selling at from 15K@14Kc for common to oxtra. Kennedy, S 7 Chester county Steers, selling at iron. ll@l4#c for common to extra , Mooney A Smith, 48 Ohio steers, selling at from 12® HRcfoi fair to extra. . . H- Chain. 22 Pennsylvania Steers, selling at from Ilia @l6c for goed-to extra. , - L. Frank, 42 Pennavlvania Steers, at from 9® 13c for common to good- . . J. S Kirk, S 3 Lancaster county Steers, selling at from for good to extra ... Owen smith. S 7 Illinois Steen, selling at from 11® 13c for common to good, . . ... -. C* Eiremas, S 3 Lancaster county SUera, eelllAg at from ll@l4c for common io extra , . ... _ . . J. Bumaker, 81 Lancaster county Steers, (selling .at from 12®i40 for fair to extra. John Kirvln, S superior Show c Jiss2l paisg county, Ohio, by Pearl Howard, weighing about 2,410 lbs each. . - TTk „. T tteb To. arrival, of Com »l Diova Yard reach about 160 head this W66K< ThtiUlftY* ketls firm, and prices remaln aDouc last auoted. Springers are Belling at from S2G®SO» and oow aSd calf at prom *36®50 ¥ head, aa to quality. fiAT.vES —About 40 head sold at the Avenue Drove Yard at from 634@7>£c ¥ lb, as to weight and condition. THE BHBBP MARKET. it H $2 778,808 37 The arrivals and sales of Bheep at Phillipß’ Avenue Drove Yard arelsmall this week, reaching about 4,600 hoaditbe market, m ceniequence, u mOreaettve, and prices have advanced. Fair to good Sheep are selling at fe@B&c. and extra at9c¥ lb gross. All the stock oa sale were disposed of at these rates. THE HOG MARKET. Tli ere is a fair demand for Hogs at former rates: about 2,600 head sold, at the Union, Avenue, and Using Boa Drove y aide at slo®l2 60 the 100 lbs net. , LS67 head sold at Henry Glass’ Union Drove Yard ac from slo@l2theloolbe net. _ , . TAfc _ 990 head sold at the Avenue Drove Yard, by Joh» Crauae A Co., at from *lo@l2,«rthe lOOlbs net. 2J5 head eold at Phillips A Math’s Yard at from 910®1X 60 the 100 Jbs net, according to qua- Uty. Hew York Marketii Mnreh l*. Arms u. tteadv. at M.S7 X for sota and *lO-» for P BRF 6 ADSTPfF a .-Tho»a*o‘ BtlU WMt,m Floar b dull and 6o lovw-... ..im 05188 45foriHi»rfln«Stat*. 7.M. and tr«l® brand, do al *7 >a i 8 ,.700 Mila at *7 JSBftKlSffil'iSafflL. and ,7 60010.60 for extra Ti-lonr t. k«»VT k»i IOWOJf. With U-lu of «9 bbS n at 41 |”7f@7 for common, and #7.04@8 for ,*ood t* cl Bye Plotulß oellln* at ,6.2 J@6. SB for th« ranee of flne onlet. and ttore 1. no quotable change In pl Wvat Is doll, heavy, and one cent lower : sale* 53X10 bushels at *1.620161 for Chteigo sprint ; *I6M. 1 64 for Hilwankee club ; *1.6401 66 for amber Mloni mn ; *1 6(01-96 for winter nA Western, and *h72o - for amber Hlchtcan. _ dull at ,1.280190 Bariev la qal.t, with sales of 8,000 bushels Esttsrn aMaissrs dull at fS)4@Boe tor Canada : BCo9O)£s fee Etate, and 9C0610 for Western. ■ , . . . . . Cc mis rather more stsadv. but the market la «al«. sales at »I.SI f.r prims Wssteru mlzsd, and *Lm dwwr y^J-VfWr tag! Sale*, March If. ib, Philadelphia Sxehanm.3 BOARDS. l-MSchnyllfar.. SMf EOABDi 100 Delaware Dlv 18 120 do M4B 28-nam A ambK......1?S 300 Beadinc B b3O ttx 200 H Penna K ge UO do baa seu 2TO do.. faSOjjf* MO. d 0... bSOSiX 100 a&ta B 88* 10 Phtla ft Brie 8..... S»2 100, do tax 400 do bS ST« M2d&.14 9t8........ vSt lifi d 0... M 00 Cheat dc Wal 8...« 61 BOARDS 10 Penna B. aO 7 si£ 600 Bis: Mountain...” 10 200 H Penna B ,bSO M 200 do. «sjr lOMinahill K.*.i SS 000 U 8 0-20 BOAdB,rBK 108 BETWEEi 400 Fulton Coal 9% 100 Girard Mining 7)2 100 do ...,..** 7? 200 Union Canal.. b 0 prf 7J£ IfO West Branch. lid SI do 100 tittle Schyl B tQ 200 Reading B. . as'2dye COM 100 do 69% 300 do «.b9O 09 200 Falton Coal .. 99S 100 Oil Creek 14^ 200 N Penna R *...»* *6O 38 14 200 Spruce ft Pine-at B. 16* 40 Little Schuyl R 60 86 Ptnna R 100 Union rw 8 North Liberty Bank 72^ 200 Beading R b3O 89* 400 Big Mountain 10M 100 New Creek.... 1.1.,, 1,81 100 New York ft Mid lfl* 200 do .blfl 15% 60 Green Mount Bit 200 Union Pref. b3O 7% 200 Sf York ft Mid. ls% 60 Green Mount Bit 200 UnionP/ef......b30 7% 100 BeadiaK...,H».,bS 60* 49 Penna*...!..***.*».» 76 100 Frnnadc Erle,...i*. 37 X 100 Jfav Con*.**.* 353 a ICO Nav Fret bls 45% 100 do b3O 45* 300 Marquette . * 4% 2no Green Mount 8% 500 Nav C0n.... 35* 500 d0...' b3O 35 100 13thft 10th...„tb15 m 200 do bIS V-K 100 Spruce ft Pine - .b3O 16 100 Susq Cana1.,.*...b5 29% .00 New Creek.......... ljig [CBS—STEADY. _ Bid. Ask NPennaß... $5% 36% Do 6s 100 -- Catawlsea B Com 28 29 Do. pref........ 48* 43 Pblla ft Brie 8... 37 38 Oil Creek Co.™ is# 14* Big Mountain.... 10* 10* Becond-%t R* 80 80* Fifth at R. 61 Tenth st R 52 Thirteenth-at R.. .. 43 Seveuteenth-at R. .. 21 Somce-stR 15* 16 Onestnut-st 8..«. 62 WPhilaß....™ 71 Arek-stR 38 88* Hace etß... 20 21 Green-et B 43* 44 Girard College B. 30 30* Lomtmrdet 8.... .. .. Bidge avB.»«»« Suaq Canal...***. .. •* Mid Coal Fields Green Mountain I—FOUR O’CLOCK. Bid. Ask, If Yft Mid OF-.. 15* 16* Gre-mMountCoal Bit 0* Penn Mining OH 0* Girard do ***.. 7* 7* Etna do 19* 20 OlUOreek IS* 14 Venango 3 Keystone 4- 4% Mandan 6 6 firafiberry 4 6 New Creak 1# VS 13th and letb 43* 44 Tamaaua 6* 5* 17thand 10th.™ .. Spruce ft Pine .*•' Philadelphia Markets. March 14—Evening.