The press. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1857-1880, April 14, 1865, Image 1

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    fbbss,
.-iiUSKtU jJAIIiY (SUNDAYS EXCEPTED)
‘ BT I? 8 ® W. FORNEY,
nttm »«■ A* SOUTH FOURTH STREET.
THE DAIU PRESS,
(Jut Bnhssrlhers, Sb Teh Dollars rsa Annum, la
OT TTTBBTT Cents ps» Week, payable to the
rlar Mailed to Sabrorlbere oat of the elty, Mnta
lab® p»* Anfch; Font Dollars and Fifti Cents
1 Srr Months : TWO Dollars add Twentt-fit*
Stb por terbb Months, Invariably la adysiue for
jB-AdTSrttMments laierted at the aanal rates.
TJIK XKI.H EEKI.T PRESS,
Hallsd to Eshmllxts. Five Dollars per Ahxsh, la
RETAIL dry roods.
T BBTAIL.
JAMES B. CAMPBELL & CO.,
737 CHESTNUT STREET,
Offer at Popular Prices:
(SjAJCBL @ILKS
1b mat variety, including the best goods Im
ported. Boyal Armnree, Gro Grains, Lyons
Tafeta. Fsrlutennea, Drap da France, Drap da
Lyoß. On da Rhino, Gro d’Afrloue, &c., &i.
7DOBBD SILKB
In iartrable shades, plain and corded colored
Tafeta and Taffetas Parisiennee, Meat Foalardt
and Golden Brown Groa Grain, of magnifiseni
(inanity.
manses goods.
Lnpln's sholcest fabric., single and doable
width. Moss de Laines, new shades. 8-4 Her
nasl'a Crape Mareti, and Tamartlnes, Bteel
eolorad Mohair Poplins, Rich Mohair Yalenelas,
Frandh Jaeonets, Organdies, Feroalei, Si.
(tDPIW'S BOMBAZINES,
Tanias, Mona de Lalnas, 8-4 Hernanl’a Mo
hair.. Alpaca., and other black gooda at great
ly radn.ed rates.
WHITE GOODS.
Itlnsooki. Jaeonets, Cambrics, Swiss Mnlls, Taney
•ckt. and othar popnlar White Gootyi at low Prices.
LINEN GOODS,
really radnrad raise, ls.mdlng Shirting. Shearing,
1 Pillow Llsans, Damaeka, Diapers, Mapklns, fa.,
treat Tarletr.
HIEAT REDUCTION IN COTTON OOODS.
leached Mnalins In popular brands at and balow
ikttntaa
OOURVOIBIBE'S CELEBRATED KID GLOVES.
PBIXTED LIHBE CAMBRIC DRESSES..
ir prices are marked In Plain figures, from which
do not dSTiat*.
WHOLESALE BOOMS TJF STAIRS.
IhlC-lm .
[LK MANTLES,
SPRING OLOAKS,
SHORT S AOaUES,
CIRCULARS,
WATER-PROOFS, &o.
lOOPEB As COWARD,
E. Cor. Math and Market Sts.
-
1084 GBBSTKUT STKBBT.
E. M. NEEDLES,
1034 (Riestimt Street,
[as “redneed"Ms “entirestock” to corre
spond with the recent heavy
“DECLINE IN GOLD,”
ASP BOW OFFRB3 POLL LINES OF.
WHITE GOODS. LACES. EMBROIDERIES,
HAHDKBBCHIRFS, VgllM. SLBBVBS.
COLLARS, BETS BARBSS, lies. -
Also, agreat variety ofPlanfis, ahlrred, puffed,
ttripod, plaid, figured, and othar fancy MiuUns,
■nttablefor „
WHITE BODIES.
Just received, a Tory large lot of choice styles
needlework. Edgings, andlnsertings, very low.
Also, Duehese, Empress, Qneon Bess, and
other new atylee Collawand, Bets.
IBH OHBBTKPT BTBBBT.
QTXL FROPRIETORS
OX7 8 EIJSESEJPEiRS
can always find a full stock. of
(ANKETB.
QUILTS,
LINEN GOODS,
\
SHEETINGS, <5&0..
KlolTMtirboteul* price., at
J. €. STKiWHRIDGE & CO.’S,
*. W. .or. EIGHTH and HASHES SU.
OODB GREATLY REDUCED 111
THE TIME TO BUT HAS COMB 1 11
A BFLBNDID STOCK JUST OPENED It!!
have held off buying until prices wentrlght down*
ick SBkl,most excellent quality. ' -
tin Silks la All color*.
sal De Haines, Ist mil colon. ‘ ''
land Delaines andOaliooes.
srattfnl Plaid Good*. .
tin mad Plaid Mohairs, eery pretty.
leae Rad Madias, mil trades.
■itmaVA* Min Clotilß^
uuutZa "” u^(ixy« V 'Gh.««k«a Ginghairuu &«>» &«,
awU. ndncTSdkfs, YcUt, Jtc., 4c. ■
nellies, Bwtss, mad other thin mad Plaid Mam
(Cm t
ley-eomb Onllts, Marseilles Quilts, *e. 40..
At THOBNLET 4 CHISM’S,-
lis-lm cor. Of EIGHTH mad SPUING OABDEM.
LNOY CAHSIMERES.
LlthtStyles for Sprint Wear.
Doable width Fiae Coaitnt s.
Beat American Oasslmeres.
Fine Imported Oocds.
Boys’ WeRT for food Castom,
complete Stock Woolens, adapted to the best trade,
il freely at the yery lowest market prices. Tailors
ted to examine. COOPBB 4 OONABD,
ttt 8. B. corner NINTH mad MARKET Sts.
ILL GREATER REDUCTIONS IN
PBIGBB.
lays made sweeplac redactions la the prices of
STIOS. and oar entire Btock of Fancy and Staple
Hoods, so as to meet thd last fall la cold, and place
price* of all oar Stock fkr below the lowest market
:es. , ■
SILKS, ayerr variety, at rednoadprloes.
>RBSS GOODE at redneed prices.
lUSLINB, all the best makes, reduced.
CALICOES at treitly reduced prices,
ir entire Sprint Stock at redhead prices,
M Hoi. 7l3and 715 Itoth TENTH Knot.
'RING *RBBB GOODS, OF NEW
STYLBS, OrailHO DULY,
jprlnt »triM YatandM.
Sprint Foil d» Ch«Ti«».
Sprint atrlwof ropliru.
gammar Poplin..
Hplandid urcuoiu.
Mh, ItniwTnUtT.
law »mn of Piqum.
prist t&ilonra <U linlsM.
Sprint Colour. Mohair*. . u , .
lf.wiW.of j^oo^teir.ngTWist,.
fta gontb ggootfp Btr«.i-
C^IKET_FIDIRJiriTTOIB^^
ar d ;
STEICXAJL, NOTICES.
■a Stole I mm occupy 1» eold for » Benkln* butU
it betitf able to procure a bnii&lnx cufflolently luce
ild my clock, £ am compelled to
BETiTi OUT
tttM£oedble. Inowoffermy Uaraeaaeaeiortmeatof
fu3kivitxji«.e:
AT VXHT LOW PEIOBB.
GEORGE J. HEMELS,
goo Jtwn an gtcssnxn stbkkt.
OIISE-FBBNISDIIVti GOODS.
n ARCH STREET. fJQf)
II HOBBB-BOBSISHIB9 STOBB. VJ \J\J
'DEtf-WABB AMD BASKETS,-
TipWABB ABB iBO»VaBE.__
iB-HEATISG APPARA
WAKKIira AMD YBSrriLATISfa FUBIiIO
ULDIHOB AID PKIYATH EBSIBBHOSS,
««AM US WATSB-KBATING
COMPANY
OF PBHHSXLVAKIA,
P. WOOD &
•1 South FOUBTH STJtBBT.
B. M- FELTWELL, Sup’t.
OL. B.—KQ. 220.
JOBBERS.
1865. spuing 1865.
HALLOWELL, ,GARDNER, & C0 tJ
015 CHESTNUT STBEET,
JAYNE’S KIBBLE BUILDING,
SUES Aim FAUCI DRY 800DS,
PLAGE AHD GOLOBKD DEEDS SILK'S
BL andll* coloebd MODS. BE LAINEB, 3.*
BLACK AND COLORED ALPACAS.
Srni *Sr^s5 TZ * BASEBE HEBHANI.
MOZAMBIQUE, TOIL BB NOBD.
* i «fesSS? > AND PLAIh abd
PACIFIC LAWKS AND OBGAKDIBS
shawls, mantles. &c. apmm
gPßiifG. 1865. spring.
JAB. B, CAMPBELL & CO.,
IMPOBTHtS AED JOBBERS OP DKY GOODS.
797 CHESTNUT STREET.
OPPIK TO
. OASH BUYERS AT WHOLESALE
A. extca.lr. aaeortment of cLolcs fabric, la
fOBUGN AID AMERICAN DRY GOODS,
At and-iinder Market ratec. .
Aa their ctock Is Rally replenlehed with, tie moat da*
lirable offering. of this and other market.. It will
Uway. proT* worthy of ln.pe.tion.
mh7-te WHOLBBALB BOOMB BP STAINS,
gPBING, 1865. - .
HSLLOB, BAINS, & MELLOR,
Koe. M and AH KOBTH THIRD ST-EBBT.
nCPORTKRB 07 ,
HOSIERY,
SMALL WARES.
WHITE GOODS,
If AlterAOTTOßaa OP
MMO-lm BHIKT PBOKTB. .
gPBING—IB6S.
EDMUND YARD Os CO.,
ai CHESTNUT AND «M JAYNE STBEET,
HAYI NOW IK STOBB A FULL STOCK J
Silks and fancy dress gocS>s,
AMERICAN DELAINES,
BALMORALS,
SHAWLS AND GLOVES,
WHITE GOODS AND LINENS,
Whleh wa off.t to the trade at tke lowest market
prieee. mhlS-Stnfp
JAMBS, KENT, SANTEE, & GO.,
DRY GOODS ,
com. an and 3*l Hortu nurd Street,
PHILADELPHIA.
Cloth#, Prints,
Oassimerei, Delaines, .
Sattineta, Alpacas,
leans, Fancy Dress Goods,
Oottonades, " Brown and Bleaohed Sheetings,
Benlms, Brown andßleaehed Shirtings,
Stripes, Ornish Ohambras, •
Cheeks, Ornish Tweeds,
EHnghams, Flannels,
Diapers, Linens,
FURNISHING GOODS,
WHITI GOODB. KOTIOKB. &e., *«. fta-Sm
CARPETS AND OIL-CLOTHS.
1865.-: BPRII,U - 1865.
GLEN' ECHO MHA.S, '
Co..
and importers of
OIL CLOTH, MATTINGS, &o.
RETAIL DEPARTMENT,
mhSl-3m
RALSTON, & 00.,
MANUFACTURING AlTl) COMMISSION MERCHANTS.
CARPETINGS,
OH« OIiOTHS, MATTINGS, BOGS, &C„
IfO. SIB CHESTNUT BTBBBT,
philalTklphia. mllo-2m
PBTOS ATOP CHEBPCALg.
JgIEGJ.BR & SMITH',
WHOLESALE
Drug, mint, and Blass Bealers,
Proprietor* of tbePenneylvaniaFalnt and Color Works,
Manufacturer* of
BEST WHITE LEAD, BEST ZINC,
Unsurpassed for Whiteness, Pine Gloss, Durability,
Firmness, end Evenness of Surface. (
PUBS LIBERTY LEAD—Warranted to eorer more
surface for same velrtt titan any other.
try rr, abb yob ym says so other!
PUKE LIBERTY ZINC,
Selected Zinc, ground In Refined Llnned OU.nneanaled
inquality, alwaysthe same.
POKE LIBERTY ZOIC.
Warranted to do moro and better erode at a liven coat
Store and Office-No. 137 North THIBD Street,
mhlS-Sm*
ROBERT SHOEMAKER & CO.,
K. E. Corner of FOURTH and BACK Streeta,
IMPORTERS AMD DEALERS IN FOREIGN AND
DOMESTIC
WINDOW AND PLATE GLASS.
KAstmAonTßuas^oy
WHITE LEAD AND ZIKC PAINTS, PUTTY. ftO.
Dealers and consumers supplied at
folB-8m YEBY LOW PRICES FOB CASH.
ijHE
“EXCELSIOB” HAMS
ASI THE BEST .
is
THE WORLD.
J. 11. MICIIEIXER & CO.,
general provision dealbbs.
*Kl)''atrßßEB Of lit OEREBBATKD
EXCELSIOR ”
SUGAR-CURED HAMS, TONGUES, AND
BEEF,
Nos. 143 ana 144 N. FRONT ST.,
Between Arch and Baoe streets, Phllada.
The Jn*tly celebrated “BXCBLBIOB” HAMS are
enred by J. H. M. A Co. (in a etyle peculiar to them
selves), expressly for FAMILY USE; are of delfeion*
gay or; free from the unpleasant taste of gait, and are
pronounced by epicures superior to any now offered for
sale. ~ mh3f-faawBm
gNGLISH BROWN STOUT,
. SCOTCH ALB,
' IN-STONE AMD GLASS.
ALBERT CL ROBERTS.
DSALNB IN FINE GBOCBBIBS, .
CO.,
WHITE LEAD, AT REDUCED
" trke S .bythe ffi .nafact„er. LßH
Proprietors of the Pennn. Paint and ColorWorM;
apS-llt* Btore and Office 137 North THIBD St.
> COLOBS.
:u3>ow glass.
OELMBOLD’S FLUID EXTRACT
" BUCHU ispleasantlutaeteandodor. free from
*U lnjnriosa propertlee, and Immediate In lie notion.
WHOLESALE DEALERS IN
Hare now In stock an auortment ol .
IMPORTERS AND JOBBERS
GERMANTOWN, PA.
CARPETINGS,
WHOLESALE DBPABTHBHT,
509 CHESTNUT STREET.
519 CHESTNUT STREET.
PURE LIBERTY LEAD,
than any other.
GET THE BEST!
PHILADELPHIA
A63HTB HOB THB OEEHBBATBD
FRENCH ZINC PAINTS.
Corner of ELEVENTH and TINE Bin
CURTAIN GOODS.
B. WALRAYEN,
MASONIC HALL,
?19-CHESTNUT STREET,
BCAS OPENED HIS
SEEING STOCK
'op
WINDOW SHADES,
/
OF BNTIBBI.Tr »BW. DBSIGHB.
lA.CE CDBTAINR
' *
IS MBW AHD HIGH PATTEEHB.
NOTTINGHAM CURTAINS,'
IHTBHDED BBPECIAILI FOB HIiBEPISO BOOHS,
BELOW GOLD BATES.
- as>S fptf
1026 btbeet. jq26.
CURTAIL STORE.
# CURTAINS, CORNICES, AND SHADES.
O. M. STOUT So CO.,
felo-fmw4m
_________ ■ "•
WINDOW SHADES.
The sahsorlhere are now preparedto pat ap
nr TOWN COUNTRY,
at the chariest notice, all the usual widths and styles of
PLAIN OILED, GILT BORDERS.
FANCY WINDOW SHADES,
And to furnish and pat up to order In the best manner
NEW DESIGNS OB EXTRA SIZES
DWELLINGS, STORES, CHURCHES, OB OTHER
PUBLIC BUILDINGS.
They also keep on hand a larse assortment o(
SHADINGS, SHADE TRIMMINGS. FIXTURES, *c.,
which they will cell to the trade at the lowest market
price.
SHEPPARD, VAN HARLINGEN, & ARRISON,
Window Curtain and Shade
mhl7-fmw]st fp No 1008 CHESTNUT Street.
MERCHANT TAILORS.
JjJDWARD P. KELLY,
JOHN KELLY,
TAILORS,
818 CHESTNUT STREET,
HATS BOW IB STORK
A COMPLETE ASSORTMENT OF
SPRING GOODS,
nma-tr -
STATIONERY &, BUNK BOOKS.
OIL. mining, coal, and other
-V NEW-COMPANIES. .
We are prepared to famish New Corporations with
all the Books they require, at short notice and low
prices, of first quality. All styles of Binding.
STEEL PLATE. CERTIFICATES OP,STOCK.
'’-' : -^&SB&RAZHn&,
TRANSFER BOOK.
OBDEBS OF TRANSFER. '
STOCK LEDGER. >
STOCK LEDGER BALANCES.
REGISTER OF CAPITAL STOCK.
BROKER’S PETTY LEDGER.
ACCOUNT OF SALES.
DIVIDEND BOOK. X
, MOSS & CO.,
CLANK BOOK MANUFACTURERS AND STATIONERS,
seM-tf 433. CHESTNUT Street.
JgLINDS AND SHADES.
B. J. WILLIAMS,
Mo. 1G Storth Sixth Street,
STAXUrACIOBEE OP
VENITIAN BLINDS AND
WINDOW SHADES.
The largest and finest assortment in the elty at the
lowest cash prioes.
STORE SHADES MADE AND LETTERED.
Cheap lot sidled Blinds and Shades. apS-Zm
rjiHE “CYCLOPS”
CAST-STEEL RAILS
POSSESS THE FOLLOWING ADVANTAGES OVER
IRON:
THEY WILL NOT LAMINATE, SPLIT, NOR
BREAK.
THEY WILL DO TEN TIMES THE SEE
VICE OP IRON RAILS.
THEY COST LESS THAN DOUBLE THE
PRICE OF IRON.
THE SAYING DURING A PERIOD OF TEN
YEARS IS SHOWN TO BE EQUAL TO
. @3,000 PER MILE FOB EACH YEAR OF
THEIR USE.
Many thousands of Tons of Oast-Steel Ralls are now
laid in England and on the Continent, with the most
complete success. Orders promptly executed by the
■ole representative of THE WORKS.
PHILIP S. JUSTICE,
No. 1* North FIFTH Street, Phllada .
mhSl-16t. Ho. fig CLIFF Street, New Toth.
GOODS SEDUCED TO .
GOLD PRICES. ,
I have reduced my entire stock of goods, consisting of
WATCHES,
FINE JEWELRY,
SILVER PLATED WARE,
and solid SILVERWARE, to present gold prioes.
HABPES,<|
520 ARCH STREET. *2*
apB-12t ...
J’LOURI FLOUR! I
flour:::
We would respectfully inform, denier* in Flour thAt
we ere fcole Agents for tne well-known brands of In
diana Flour,
“KOSCHJSKO AKDOITY MllildS,” ,
vrhlch. we will sell in lots to suit purchaser* at market
rates.
BROOKE JSc PUGH, <-
FLOUR DEPOT,
Noa. 1731 and 1733 MARKET STREET.
apB-6t '
g H. BLEEPER & CO.,
515 BUNOR STREET,
MANUFACTURERS, AGENTS, ANDWHOLB.
SALE DEALERS IN
FLINT MB SHEEN GLASSWARE,
Stave now in store a full assortment of the above goods,
vhish we offer at the lowest marhst. rates.
Being sole agents for the SALE'H GREEN GLASS
WORKS, we are prepared to make and work private
-uoulds to order.
PORTER, MINERAL, and WINE BOTTLES, of a
tuperior color and finish.
Also, LAMP CHIMNEYS, APOTHECARIES' SHOP
FURNITURE, SHOW BOTTLES, SYRINGES, HOMOS,
IPATHIC VlALS.andDmcOsts’ Glassware generally.
T. A. EVANS ft CO.’S PITTSBURG GLASS VIALS
ionstantly on hand at factory pries*. fel7-3m
jMTACKERBL, HERRING, SHAD, &C.
IYI. —3 MO bbis Mass. Nos. 1,2, and S Mackerel,
;ate* caught fiat fish, in assorted packagqi.
2,000 bhls. New Eastport, Fortune Bay, and Halifax
boxes Lubec, Scaled, He. 1 Herring,
lSObble New Mess Shad.
260 hoxss Herkimer-ceuntr Cheese. &c.
In store and for sale by _ MURPHY ft KOONS.
jalibtf No, 116 NORTH WHARVES.
DEWARE OF COUNTERFEITS AND
bJ TTHPKTifnTPIiSP DBA.IIKBB endsarorlny to dii*
pose of their own and other Ps?pwationa*on theresu
atiou aitiined by B3LMB014) 8 GKfUijSB FSKrl*
: iATIOJfS.
PHILADELPHIA, FRIDAY, APRIL 14, 1865.
ELECTRICITY.
WONDERFUL
SCIENTIFIC DISCOVER^
DR. S- W. BECKWITH’S
(FOBMEKST FKOP. 0. H. BOIXES’)
'• ti
ELECTIUCAI. INBTITDTE,|
t, ..
1220 WALNUT BTEEET, ,
fg& the treatment of acute AisfD
CHBONXO DISEASES.
Electrical investigation bag proved that the humafff
tod? sets on the principle of the galvanic battery..Tb« (
'brain* mucus and serous membranes, the skin, tissues,,!
and fluids, .constitute the negative and positive forces
and every action* whether mental of physical* is thej
result of these antagonistic forces. Digestion*
tion* circulation, secretion 5 , end excretion are- duet*
solely to EUctiicatinflnence, There is a polar a*tioa?
established throughout the nervous system whlch coa-;'
nects with every part of the body* establishing Buds
presezvittg a proper balance of the electrical eiepien|»:i
Which constitutes health* and a disturbance of whisk*
causes disease. There are, strictly* but two condition*.?
of disease—one of inflammation, or positive? the oihhri
weak* debilitated, negative; and as Electricity contains*
these two conditions in the action of th* positive ahd'*
negative current, all we have to do is to neutralize thsi
dUtaae and restore proper healthy action. •
We do not wish to convey the impression that we
all diseases In all couditfons. We cannot cute
tloa after the lungs are all destroyed: yet we do'assert, ■
and are prepared io practically demonstrate, that buu«3
dreds of cases of almost every form of chronic
pronounced incurable by the best medical praciitionerif;'
of the country* have been radically cubed, some of
them' in an incredibly short time, by our Electrical;
treatment. Its great superiority oyer other practices isy
the cure of disease is also attested in the fact that, within?
the past five years, over fourteen thousand
have been treated at this office, suffering from almoaiS
every form and' condition of disease common to hu-%
inanity, and In nearly all cates abemflt or perfect cars
has been effected. Therefore, with, these FACTS tflp
prove our theory and treatment of disease, we are will-/
ing to undertake any of the following diseases, with!
every hope and prospect of success, with very many*
others not here enumerated: ' * 'jf
1* Diseases of the Brain and Nervous System —Epi
lepsy, Chorea or St, Y.itus’ Dance, Paralysis (Hemiple
gia and Paraplegia), Keuralgia,Hysteria,
Palpitation of the Heart, Dock-jaw, etc., etc.; also*
diseases of the Eye and Ear. ,4
2. Organs and Tissues connected with the Digestive -
System. —Sore Throat* Dyspepsia, Diarrhoea, Dysen
tery, Obstinate Constipation, Haemorrhoids or Pile£:
Bilious. Flatulent, and Painter’s Colic, and all affec
tions of the Diver and Spleen. v
8. Respiratory Organs.—Catarrh, Cough, Inflaeni&
Asthma (when not caused by organic disease of the
heart), Bronchitis, Pleurisy, Plenrodynia or EheumaF
tlsm of tiie Chest, Consumption in the early stages. • '
4. Fibrous and Muscular System.— Eh-vumati^m,
Gout, Lumbago, Stiff Neok* Spinal Curvatnre, Hfo*
Disease, Cancers, Tumors. F&
5. Urinary and Genital Organs. —Gravel, Di&bera^
and Kidney Complaints, Impotence and Seminal Weak- 1
ness. ' The latter complaints never fail to yield rapidly
to this treatment. W
6. Diseases Peculiar to Females. —Uterine Com
plaints, involving a raaVposlfcion, as Prolapsus* Aute
vevsion, Retroversion- Inflammation, Ulceration,and.
various other affections of tse Womb and Ovarie** Pain
ful. Suppressed, Scanty, or Profuse Menstruation, Dea
corrhcea. '
TO LADIES can we recommend this treatment'as ohe ;
of UNVARIBB SUCCESS. Almost innumerable, esses
have come under treatment at our office who can testify .
to this fact. Mrs. B. A FULTON, a lady of great exve-'
rience and ability, has entire charge of.the Ladies’
partment, and ail delicacy will be used toward those ,
who entrust themselves to hercare. In female dtsudses'
at mentioned in the above list, with others not xs£h-.
ticned, she has had a large experience, and can confi
dently promise the moat gratifying results.
TO THE AFFLICTED.
The treatment is mild and gentle, producing no shgofc
or unpleasant eentation whatever. Our professional
intercourse with the afflicted will ever characterized
by perfect candor and honesty, and those whom ebjn
plainte are incurable, or do,not admit of amelteratmh,
Will be frankly told so, and not accepted for treatment.
It matters not what may be your complaint, or how
losg you have suffered, or how much or what eouise
of treatment you may have been subjected to, orwJißt
disappointments you have experienced; it .the eystemis
not wont out—if sufficient vitality remains for
there is a fair pro*pect of Tecovery. t
REFERENCES.
The diseased and all intere*ted''are referred tooths
following-named gentlemen, who have treated
and witnessed our treatment on others, at Ho. Wf>
Wabrat street: . ' *
A. J. Pleasanton, brigadier general, Philadelnbla;
A. Pleasanton, major general, St. Louis; W. B. Bnnth,
80. 1022 Hsnoverstreet,Philadelphia: Ooorge DouglAss,
Ho. 28 Booth Fifth street; 'William H. Shrivor, Braes
street, Germantown; L. G. Stockton, Bo 288 Market
street, Philadelphia: Charles H. Grig*, Nos. 2lSand22l
Church alley; Emanuel Bay, 80. 707 SansOm stree&at
torney at law; B, Craig, Ho. 1725 Arch street; Ho;-j38
Broad street; Robert D. Work, 80. 51 'Horti&?l|2rd
street;'A G. Croll. B. E.' corner Tenth and MlU«et
etreets; George Grant, 80. 510 Chestnut street; Hc.T.
Desllver, 80. 1786 Chestnut street; Ed'. MoMallonMtSj.
1227 Front street, with many othere.";*:. i mow* 1 ?'
Consultation tree. " ©sssripti-re- "tlrcnlars of Jjjpnes
effected, with numerous references, can be had by ap
plication at the office* All letters addressed to .
DR. S. W. BECKWITH,..-
mh24-fmwl2t
JO THE PEOPLE,
howlSady, ,
, A WORK BY DS. VOfITMOSCHZISKBB,
of Mo. 103 Y WALNUT Street, ' " -
Entitled
A BOOK FOB THE PBOPLH,
' . On the following Diseases:
MTS AMP SAB PISS ASMS. * •
■ . ... THROAT DISEASES IN GENERAL
CLSBGXMSN’B AMP PUBLIC SPEAKERS’ SOBS
THROAT,
DISEASES OF THE AIR PASSAGES,
(LarjHtltU BroncMtif,)_
ASTHMA AMD CATAJRBH.
The book 1« to bo had of W. 8. St A MABTIBM, Mo.
606 CHBBTMUT Street, and at fell BooifeeUett’, Price, .
One. Dollar. '"*■
The author. Dr. YON HOSOHZI3KRB. era be eon*
railed on ali these maladies, and all N&BVGUS AFFRG
TIONS, \7bici be treats with the surest success.
Office, lOftY WALNUT Street. " -ia2s»3m
INSURANCE.
STATEMENT Of THE CONDITION
OF TBB
PEOPLE’S FIRE INSURANCE CO.
-WOBCESTEra, MASS;.
ENDING BEOEM BE B 31. 1805.
AMOUNT OJ CAPITAL STOCK ~~.$»00,000
Amounted Capital aotnallr pail la in cash.. 1300,000
ASSETS:
Amount of Eoal Estate owned by the Co., ....311,930 00
•* Loan*on Real E5tate............... 75,334 50
“ Bank Stock* (market value).—-, 175,833 00
" United State* Stocks do. 117,364 00
“ - Loans on Collateral 30,775 00
“ Cast) on band and In bank......... 18,506 67
" Cash in bands of Agents... —. 5,855 53
" Other assets not above specified,
including accrued Interest.™.. 4.35813
LIABILITIES:
Amount of Losses unadjusted—,—...—,.—, $3,000 00
Outstanding claims, and dne.„... none.
” “ " andnotdue, none.
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409 WALHUr STREET.
*p3-mwf6t Philadelphia. Pa.
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BX THE
iMmwm eoMPm,
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capital . .....^500,000.
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PHILADELPHIA.
GENERAL ACCIDENT POLICIES
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sation, can be had for $3 per annum, or any other sum
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TEN DOLLARS PREMIUM
Secures a Policy for $2,0C0, or $lO per week compensa
tios for all and eyery description of accident-travelling
or otherwise—under a General Accident Policy, at the
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pensation, as above, at the Special Sate.
FOREIGN RISKS.
Policies issued for Foreign, West India, and Califor*
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SHOBT TIME TICKETS.
Arrangements are in course of completion by which
the traveller will be able to purchase, at any Railway
Ticket Office. Insurance Tickets for onecxthirty days’
travel. Ten cents will buy a ticket for one day's travel,
insuring $3,000, or $26 weekly compensation. - Ticket
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Hazardous Bisks taken at Hazardous Rates. Policies
Issued for 6 years for 4 years premium.
Inducements,
„ The rates ofptemtaia are lesi than those of any other
Company covering the came risk.
No medical examination is requlr«d*.and thousands
of those who have been, rejected by Life Companies, in
consequence of hereditary or other diseases, can effect
in the TRAVELLERS’ at the lowest rates.
Life Insurance Companies p&ymopartof the principal
mm until the death or theassured. The TRAVELLERS’
cay the loss or damage sustained by personal injury
whenever it occurs.
The feeling of security which such an Insurance gives
to those dependent upon their own labor for support is
worth more than money; -No better or-more satisfac
tory use can be made or so small a sum.
J. G. BATTSRSON, President.
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rj-RAPE YINBB FOB SALE.—CATAW-
ba, Isabella, Concord, Clinton, Diana, Hartford,
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POR non-retention or INCON
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prostate glands, stone In the bladder, salonltu, en
rol or brlsk-dost deposit, and all disease, of tbe blad.
1330 WALNUT Street, 1
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j FRIDAY, APRIL 14, 1865.
j:J T 1 Heyary Criticism.
L There Is such Brest attraction to a book of travels
that It Is cheerfully accepted by the public, even
..when rather Indifferently written, provided that It
treats of matters new and-true.- Hence, of late
years, narratives of successive explorations, in Af
rloa, some of them not very artistically composed,
haye obtained great popularity, as can be verified
by Harper & Brothers, New York; who have repub
lished most of them, including those by Mungo .
Park, Bruce, lander, Burton,. Davis, Owen, TJrqu
hart, Barth, Gordon Camming, Livingstone, Bald
win, Andersson, Reade, Du Chaillu, and Speke.
The traveller -who-venturesupon new-ground and.
ban give a good account of.what he saw is sure to be
popular. - Such a than Is Armlnlus Vdmbbry, mem
' her of the lluifgarlan Academy of Pesth, by whom
he : was sent .upon a. SoibnUfle mission Into ahd
tbrough Central Asia, : the particular object, he
being an eminent philologist, being to asoertato
whether the Hungarian language, known to'
belong to the Altaic stock; is to be rOlorred to the
; Finnish or the Tartaric branoh,_._To..pEepare him
self for his task „he resided, several years in don
stanttaople, where residence iBlSAKish houses and
frequent visits to Islamite sohoolßand libraries soon
transformed-Mm into, a Turk—nay,-into ra Effendl
ln this.latter character he went from, the Bos
phorus to SamaVcai-d, In Bokhara, taking a horik
- eastern route when he Went and a southwestern
when-he returned. He travelled not only as a
* Hadji, but as a Dervish; rad, though occasionally -
Suspected of being an European, succeeded lnea
t» oaping the detection which would have" dost, him his ’
Hie, Hle expediUon was performed l in»lSB3,
* Un)ohe was 31 !Vears bid; rad we prealine that IS ■
Msj>iaiologickl observations and dlsobvs
15®4 ibr another, publication. His adventures, how
"over, occupy over throe-fifths of a handsome octavo
volume (pp. 494), republished by. Harpor & Brothers,
rad entitled “Travels in Central Asia: being the
- account o" a ".Tourney from Teheran across the Tur
’•keman Desert on the eastern Bhore of the Caspian to
Khiva;. Bokhara,-and ..Sam&roand, -performed in
1863,” The second portion of the -volume, to the
extent of 170 pages, Is devoted to notices concern
ing the geography, statistics, politics, and social re
lations of Central Asia, subjects hitherto soarceiy,
if at ail, touobed on by writers upon that vast and
little-known country. The extent of Mr. Vambfi.
ry!s journeyingcan be ascertained, at a glance, by
looking: at the map which hero accompanies bis
'Narrative, on .which Ms route Is clearly traced. The
which' he traversed, the people with whom
ho came in contact, the manners which he observed
are, as yet, little known, but his narrative not only
instruotß, but must in a' manner charm the reader,
- forit ls written with Infinite ease; spirit, and sim
plicity. If, as we believe, it is his own oompoai
: tlon, then Htmgary has produced, In this adven
turous scholar and erudite traveller, another per
son who has -mastered tho English language more
completely than most Englishmen ; of course Kos
suth hetog the first. We have read the book through,
with great pleasure, and heartily recommend it as
an interesting and reliable contribution tb the
knowledge of remote lands. Received front'd. B,
Lipplncott A Co,
“Luttrell of Arran,” by Charles Lever, j ust publish
ed by Harper & Brothers, is an Irish novel of const
lierable power and unflagging Interest. The hero, who
represents an ancient but Impoverished Irish fami
ly, Is Introduced as living, wlth hisonly son, in In.
hiihmore, one of the Isles of Arras, -washed by'the
- Atlantic, on the-northwest coast of Ireland. Poor
rad solitary, but proud rad, passionate, Luttrell re
minds us o! the leading character in « The Fortunes
of'Glencore,”by tiie same author, Kate O’Hara,
too, Is partly the reproduction of one or two of Le
ver’s favorite women, and Sir Within Wardle, the ,
retired diplomatist, Is precisely what JMattland, (in
“Tony Butler,”) would have been had Ms adven
tures been oarried on to ah advanced period. Mc-
Ktolay, the. lawyer, is a new, creation, how
ever; Grenfell, a parvenu whose fortune has been
made by a famous dinner-sauce that bears his
name, and thereby keeps him out of fashionable
society, and one O’Horke, a regular patriot, who
keeps a shebeen on the banks of a. lake in .Donegal,
are original also, and drawn with very spirited
handling. As for the story, it shifts from Ireland to
Wales, thence diverges to France and Italy, Crosses
the Mediterranean to Tunis, and closes, In the ac-'
oustomed wooing and winning of a fair lady, in the
Island ol Saints. What Is more, the lneldents are
' more dramatic than usual, and the dialogue, though
occasionally diffuse, is generally natural, always
easy, and sometimes even sparkling. The story Is
a favorable specimen of Lever’s second style, In
Which the dash,.bold action, and.wild Irish fun of
- Charles- O’Malley and Harry Lorrequer are suc
ceeded by a more didactic manner and more artisti
, cal drawing and color. In fact, his early works are •
deficient in ’constructive power, though they over
•flow with animal spirits, whereas, “Luttrell of
Arrau ” ratßol upon tho basis -
~ fee oeived from T.’B. Peter
son Sf-Brothers.- - ; ;.
The biography of Felt* Mendelssohn Barthoifly,
-the great musical composer, written by W. A. Lam
padlns, has been translated from the German by
' William Leonard Gage, and has been brought ont,
ln a single volume, (to mated Us editions of Men
delssohn's Letters,) by Mr. F. LeypoiSt, who, we
pOreeive by his Imprint, has now oxtonded his enter
prise, as a publisher, to New York. This Is a very
'authentic work,, and has been the basis of nearly alt
recent memoirs of Mendelssohn, including that
prefixed to Mendelssohn’s “ Letters from Italy and
Switzerland,” which the omission of facts places
among the curiosities of literature. The fault of
the present book Is its brevity. The author has
taken great pains to be accurate, but has availed
himself only very slightly of Mendelssohn’s letters,
chiefly addressed to his family—letters which deve
lope and exhibit their writer’s oharaoter so well. Mr.
• Gage truly says “it is not the best biography of
Mendelssohn that could be written,or Is likely to be
for some time. Doubtless,, the time will come when
this brief work will be superseded by one more ex.
> hanstive j tilt then It remains without a rival.” To
the original work Mr. Gage has added snpplementa.
ry sketches, personal or oritioal, by Jules Benedict,
Ohorley, Bellstab, Bayard Taylor, Storrs "Willis,
and, John S. Dwight; A portrait of Mendelssohn,
engraved on steel, is given, and the typography is
neat. '
The Adventcbbs of a Cobbbspoisdhnt.—Mr.
Albert D. Biohardson, an able and well-known war
.oorreßpondent of the New York Tribune, has pre
pared an account of his remarkable experiences
daring the war, which will " shortly be published by
Messrs. Hurlbut, Scranton, & Co,, of Hartford. The
work will be entitled “ The Secret Service, the
Field, the Dungeon, and the Escape,” and will
taolude narratives of his secret journeys in the
South, his capture, imprisonment, and final escape.
■The'brlef statements which were published at the
time of his arrival In the North were read with
avidity, and the -public will doubtless take-equal
.Interest ta.the full details which are now offered. >
THE MAGAZINES.
The KorUt American Review, since it became the
property of Tioknor & Fields and passed into new
editorial hands, is much better than, it had been
during the previous ten years. Number 207, com
pleting the hundredth volume, has come to hand
and oohtains the usual number of articles. Of
these, an account of Voltaire’s Besldenee in Eng
land and the curious biography oi Jacob and Wil
liam Grimm are by far the best—in the former, in
deed, new ground is broken. We Cannot say that
there is anything new, or partlonlarly good, in the
paper upon Wordsworth, -On the'-other hand, an
article upon Open Air Grape Culture Is eminently
practical and full of Information. The notice of
Mr. Everett is brief and slight—not to be compared
with the exhaustive article on the same subject in
the Rational Quarterly Review, Over fifty pages
are devoted to The Philosophy of Herbert Spencer
4-rather a hard nnt to oraok. The poliUoal articles
are distinguished by their temperate tone: Their
respective subjects are England and America, Free
MistouSf, and Keoonstruotion. The oritioal notices
of new books, with whioh the volume winds np, are
well,worth perusal. Received from W. B. Zieber,
South Third street.
; The" last number of the Korth British Review,
(Leonard Scott’s New York repnblioatlon,) opens
with a pleasant article on the Else .and f>regress of
the Scottish Tourist, in which various works of
travel in Scotland, from Defoe’s in 1727 to a .certain
“ Teddies ”-ln 1864, are made the subject, and a
considerable amo\mt of local and literary infor
mation, as well as much gossip and anecdote, Is
{liven. A chapter on Epigrams follows, also a
very hopeful exposition of the present and future of
Spain. A dissertation on University Tests will not
Interest many American readers, to whom they
are unknown. The Topography of Mont Blano,
Matthew Arnold’s Essays on Criticism, the Holy
Koman Empire, and the late John Leech are also
discussed. In the notice of Leech, the great artist
Of Punch, a great deal is detailed of that remarkable
hebdomadal,and its principal contributors. In the
British edition of the Review several wood outs from
Punch, illustrative of the various moods and gifts
of John Leech are given; the Amerloan publishers
omit them with a curt notioe that “the cost of re
engravlsg these cuts is altogether-too’ great to allow
of their repript.” Eecelved from W. B. Zieber.
; The April number of Bunt's Merchants’ Magazine
and Commercial Review, edited and published by
William B. Dana, New York, has some articles of
general interest besides those of a class oharaoter.
Such are the first part of The House of Hapsburg
In Arierloa, by Professor Andrew Ten Brook, and
a biography of.Thurlow Weed, by Matthew Hale
Smith*'The-New Tariff, and the Amendments to
the United States Internal Bevenne Law, are here
reprinted In fuff, and we notice a kind and just
paper upon Mr. Hugh McCulloch, Seoretary of the
United States Treasury, who has before him the
mighty task of entirely remodelling the monetary
system of the country, whtoh his predecessors have
mgde what it is !
' The Philadelphia Photographer steadily advances
on Its useful path, and deserves the success
It has gained. In the April number “ The
■Trials of .the Wife of an Amateur Photographer”
has a great deal of quiet humor and truth. Beoetved
from Beuorman & Wilson. s_
PUBLICATIONS BEOEIVED.
■ From John Campbell, 421 Chestnut street. The
Lire and Times of Sir William Johnson, Bart, by
'William L. Stone. 2-vols., Bvo.,pp. 672 and 644.
‘Published by J. Munsell, Albany. This Is one of
■; the most Important biographies published In the
iumted stateß for a long tlme, anfl involves so much
connected with Pennsylvanian history that, on oar
earliest open day, we shall notice It at length.
From Peter F. Cunningham. Sermons on Moral
Subjects. By his Eminence, Cardinal Wiseman.
New York: D. &J, Sadller & Co. We have already
noticed this bcok with commendation.
From Charles Desilver. Tadmor, the Pride of the
Desert; a Poem, by H. Phillips Montgomery. Bos
ton : Roberts Brothers; We have previously praised
this volume; first, for the merit outs contents, for’
Mr. Montgomery, onr fellow-citizen, possesses the
poetic faculty very largely, and next, for the re
markable taste and elegance with which, In every
respeot, the book has-been gdt np.
From W. J. Ashe (the agent for- this oltyj, The
Catholic World, a Monthly Eclectic Magazine of
General Literature and Sclenee. Published at New
York. v
TJbe Fnueral or jrig. Men. Frederick
WlHihrop.
Brevet Brig. (Jen. Frederick WlntUrop was killed
at the battle of Flvp Forks, near Petersburg, Va.,
on the Ist Inst.', andburiea with fitting-ceremony In
Trinity Churchyard, Hew York, on Wednesday af
ternoon. A more Imposing cortege has rarely been
seen bn Bread waypand the silent crowds which un
covered as It moved along regarded with affection
ate interest tb,e enfisgged coffin which contained all
that was left of a brave soldier. The pall-beaters
worejnen who have fought under the true flag and
received stout blows in its Deliulf. Their names
Were-Brlg. Gen. Warren, Brlg..Gen. Sweeny, Brig,
Gen. Morris} Brig. Gen. Van Vliet, Bleat. Col.
Clits, Llont. Col. King, Lieut; Col. O’Bolrno, Capt.-
Accompanying them were a larga number of offi-‘
cers of the army and navy. The street was cleared
of vehicles of every description, and the procession
inarched to the grand tausio of the regimental band
toward old Trinity,!. ;
- At .the church the, orowd was Immense, Captain
Helm. wlth Sergeaht Garland and fifteen men, had
their handsifull to Keep the outer-way clear: while
the church Itself .was thronged, With, the exception
of tie-pews ln the middle aisle reserved for friends
of‘the family. - An offloer was. stationed in the
ohuroh to keepthe" aisle free from Intruding vlsl
tors/while the -vestry door was' crowded by ladles,
-&SS
- Bov. DrnMorgan ms; Rev.; Hr. Vinton;-'
K«v, Dr.,Cgllby, and Rev. Dr...S*abury walked to
the vestibule I to‘receive the rom«Hns,‘whlie the so
lemn tones,of the organ thrilled, the house, and the
entire congregation arose. The scene Was un im
pressive one. The fnU attendance of the clergy,
tie choristers In their, robes, of white, the Silent
.cofiin upon the tressels, the presence of a brilliant
staff of officers, the bereaved mourners, and the vast
sympathizing audience, formed a picture of drama
tic Intensity net often seen-
At the close of the servioos In the church, the
coffin, preceded by the officiating clergymen and
oholr, was borne to the Depeyeter family vault, and
alter the reading of the appropriate services, It was
lowered. Throe volleys were fired In honor of the
deed, and his old oompanlonsmarekod slowly away.
General Frederick Wlnthrop was. a native of
New Torir, horn lit 1889, and entered the ranks of
the welt known 71st In April, 1861, His conduct on
the field at the battle of Bull Sun was conspicuous
for coolness and gallantry, and Insured- him a cap
taincy In the 12th Regiment regular Infantry.
Conspicuous In every action for hls Intelligence,
ecol courage; and determination, ho won for himself
not only the.love and respect of hls comrades, but
the commendation and esteem of his commanders,
From private in the ranks to general commanding
a brigade, hls roeord has' been stainless. Partial
bating In all the principal battles fought In the
East, ills oonduot In each was worthy of the man
who in the heat or battle Could die as he did In an
aotof (inlet heroism and noble self-sacrifice. He
was a splendid soldier, skilful, gallant, 0001, and
aooompuehed. •
ROME AND FOREIGN NOTES,
The ascent of the groat volcano of Popocate
petl, the highest point of land on the North Ameri
can continent, has reoenHy been made by two
Americans—one a Californian, the other from Cum
berland county, Pa.—a full account of which is
being prepared for. the press,
—• It Is a very singular fact that most of the lead
ers of the Southern rebellion are advanced in years.
Vancey, who Was Indeed the' man to set the ball la
motion, was young; but Davis, Lee, Hunter, Wise,
Tocmbe, Slidell, Mason, and others most prominent,
are past middle life. No man for insurrection dr
revolution should be over forty, and ho Is better for
such work If under thirty. ‘Thebestof our generals
—Grant, Sherman, Lyons, Sheridan, ted.others—
have been young men. Sheridan, who has proved
himself as smart as any of them, is only thirty
three ; and sort e,; many years hls juniors, have won
great names in this war. So It is and ever has been
tbe world oyer. On the other hand, men seldom
begin to think profoundly and maturely till they
have reached middle life. Lord Macaulay says
that« of all the good books now extant in the world,
more than nineteen-twentieths were-puhilshed after
the writers had attained the age of forty.” We
get action from the pressure of youthful blood, as
we do power from an engine by the force of the
steam, but for ripe thought there must be ripeness
of intellect. '
The rebel editors of Richmond, for, the most
part, have disappeared.-The Sentinel, whose es
tablishment was not destroyed, was owned; and
edited by Richard M. Smith. The supposition that
Jeff Davis or Benjamin actually wrote leaders for
ItTs a mistake'. The proprietor is now In Rich-,
mbnd, but says he will not take the .00%., The.
Diepatch was completely burned up, aud its proprie
tors have left thei city. Its . ohief editor -was;
Hugber Floasant, who also remalnsbohliyl. ~Ihev
Ekgsiirer was. burned tip. It .vr.a&J>difed by Its
owner, Tyler Mliger,' who has gone, The Examiner
presses and machinery were destroyed-and the type.
removed 5 It was owned by John M. Davis and H. E.
Pollard. It editors were John Mitchell and E. A.
Pollard. Mitchell decamped, but both the Pollards
are still stopping at the Spottswood House. E. A.
Pollard Is said to be seeking a passport to leave the
country. The Whig is Issued now as a loyal paper
by one of Its former proprietors. But the others,
and Its chief editor, McDonald, are gone. Mr.
Graham, one of the assistant editors, remains. The
new editor that the Whig announces will shortly
assume control of its columnsls understood to be
Robert Riageway, Esq., of Bedford county, one of
the strongest Union men in the State.'
—At the Holiday-street Theatre, Baltimore, be
tween the.acts, the band of the 14th Confederate
Virginia Regiment, attached to the late Gen. A. F.
Hill’s corps, and captured at the fall of Petersburg,
appear and perform national and popular airs,
dressed in Confederate uniform.
Two Smiths and one Smyth “govern” New
England States. Rhode Island and Vermont have
the Smiths and New Hampshire the Smyth.
Boston is not satisfied with one holiday for the
viatorles—it wants three.
The Richmond Theatre has been opened by a
minstrel troupe.
The new British Minister has reached Washing
ton and taken possession of the Legation, hut has not
jet, swenty.four hours, presented his credentials to
the President.
Mr. Bamnm announces a moral poultry, pi
geon, and rabbit show, open to ali competition! to
begin, on Monday, April 24th. y
A vsin of gold ore has been discovered in Baker”
Mountain, Moscow, Maine.
The Sunday American isthe title of a new paper
to be published In Baltimore.
A Btrong pressure is already brought to bear
for the release of the captured rebels Gens. Ewell
and Custi's Lee. , ' ’
Mary H. C. Booth, the poetess, died In New
York yesterday morning. '
. —lt is reported that'certaln gentlemen of Eoches.
ter, New York, design to present to Gen. Sheridan
five heavy silver or gold : forks, of five tines each,
marked with the letters “F. F. V.”—ln memory of
the Five Forks, Virginia, or the First Families of
Virginia, whose representatives were compelled to
skedaddle before his victorious arms.
All our National coins are to have the motto -.
‘‘ln God we trust,”
The New York Times announces the publica
tion of a complete edition of the works of Abraham
Cooley, with a lubricated title page. What does it
mean 1 The compositor mayhave been thinking of
his projected investment in Petroleum.
A. M. Geynet, of Paris, has discovered 1,700,000
possible moves of the " Knight” in the game of chess.
Fencing In Paris Is the fashionable and favored
amusement, of the day." The number of the new
salles open for the exercise is astonishing, and there
is scarcely a day passes that there are not grand
assauts at which the Hite of society figure. Are vo
lution in the art is meditated by the introduction of
a sort of wooden shield for the left hand by which
to 'party some of the blows, somewhat after the
fashion In whioh the Spaniards use a dagger cr cap
with the left hand while fencing with the right:
Ohevet, the well-known cook and dealer In
table delicacies, In the Palais Boyal, has opened a
new restaurant -on the Place du Theatre Frangals,
where he promises to keep a supply of the very best
wines. The present Ohevets are the third genera
tion and the grandchildren of the founder of the
house. Their grandfather was a horticulturist at
Bagnolet, near Paris,when the Bevolutlon occurred.
He was singularly successful to the cultivation of
roses. The famous Bose du Rei was discovered by
him, and, as the Princess de Lamballe was his
zealous patroness, he was able to present it to
Louis XVI. He was devotedly attached to the
royal family, and when Marie Antoinette was
a prisoner to the Temple he continued to send
her daily a nosegay. This, however, did not last
long. One morning he wee summoned to appear
before a Commissary of Seotlon, who said: “ You
cultivate rpras at Bagnolet 1” “ Yes, citizen,”
“ Yon invented a rose which bears your name—la
Ohevette—to perfume lee ci dement,” “To sell to
them who pay citizen.”' “Very well. I appoint
you executioner—at Bagnolet and Trianon. Go
and gutllottoe all the roses at both those places.
Destroy thbm, cut them down with scythes, trample
them under foot, burn them that the earth may be
Heed from those aristocrats of vegetation. The
people want bread and not roses. Off with ye, and
to place of fiiowers plant potatoes. If you have not
destroyed all the roses to four and twenty hours I
will send for you and—a word to the wise is suffi
cient, eh l” It was -sufficient- for Ohevet. He de
stroyed his roses, turned kitchen gardener, opened
agargotte (low eating hoUse), and became even
more successful as a cook than he was as a florist,
Hotratoed his son up to the same oaUing, The
latter became one of the very best oooks in France,
and made an immense fortune. He was offered
$25,000 a year to take charge of the Hotel du Lou
vre and deollned it. Three years afterwards he
dropped dead on his chair just after dinner. He
was fond of high living and it brought on apoplexy,
the disease of students and gourmets! two classes
of men not often found keeping company together.
Adolphus Trollope’s “ History of Florence ” is
to be to four volumes.
Str Henry Bulwer is on a visit to Egypt to plan
a new line of railroad from Alexandria to the Bed
Sea.
The clock which has recently been invented by
an Ingenious elookmaker of Versailles Is no larger
than the ordinary Instruments, which will go for a
year, or indeed for a muoh longer time. The inter
nal mechanism is not altered, but the pendulum is
replaced by a horizontal lever, which acts on a twist
of elastic wire suspended vertically.
FOUR CENTS.
A. Relic Kania.
An active competition has set In for relics of tbo
war, and prices are rapidly going up. The State
-and municipal Governments are ambitious for
camion, torpedoes, and bunting, and will probably
monopolize these articles, leaving tha smaller relics
to be divided up among individuals. The rush lOr
Confederate notes is prodigious, and the printing
presses In Mew York and this city are striking off
improved specimens of the; real article, whloh
find a ready sale among the Crowd of tourists
and curiosity hunters In the South. It Is said
that enterprising Yankees are forming a com
pany In Waterbury, Connecticut, to snpply the
active demand that Is likely to take place for
flattened bullets and buttons, and patches of Con
federate gray. This relic business was supposed to
have been brought to perfection In Italy and Borne,
where choice old specimens of the classic era .and
limbs of saints are manufactured to suit every taste,
and are sold at prices that realize fortunes to the
speculators. It will probably be reserved for Yankee
Ingenuity to eclipse even the Italian masters In this
enterprise. Of qne,thing, however, we may rest as
sured, that all the necessary steam and machinery
appliances will be'set inmotlon to render the supply
equal to the demand, The relic hunters may there* •
fore, take courage—there will be “ curiosities”
enough and to spare for all.
FISAS) 111, AM) tMJHSIICIU,.
In another column will be found an Important. com
munlcattcn front'the Secretary of War, announcing the
practical f commsncemenl of the bleated keign of peace.
Drafting and recruiting in the loyal States ate -imme
dlately to ceases the purchases of arms, ammunition,
and othor stores Incidental to war id he curtailed; uu
necersaiy military officers to ba discharged, and the
military restrictions on the trade and commerce of the
country arc a 4, onca tr> bo removed.- Thiefis what might
naturally .have been expected; since the fall of Rich
mond chewed the weakness of the. power which* for
/four long years. Ids hold tts bldody Mud upon the vital
parts -of, ihe ndticH. Tbe-rebelßbnhaa dxhibllcd lts
utter Incap icily to still longer proldag its resistance to,
the national authority, and the completeness of our
victory conveys a lesson full of meaning, not alone to
the South, but toforeignnatione jaalom of our advance
ment and wlihing onr ovirtkrow. The nation that has
passed through a war of such magnitude as that which
Ke have experienced in the last four years can wall
'afford to demand with emphasis that her rights
shall be reppee'ed all over the world. The Ameri
can flag is now the symbol.- not >aldne of justice,
civilization and humanity, bmt also of, power and in
vincibility.. VI am an American citizen,” is, a aen
ie'nce which hereafter wUI be pronounced with more
justification for the pride which the words convey Hun
«T»r the eld Homan one contained. What other coun
try conld'have carried on such a stupendous war as
■ ours, with ifs vast expenditures and sacrifices ? The
public debt, which is still a bug-bear in the eyes of ihe
croaker, is a small outlay for so vast a return as wc
are destined as a nation to. witness in the future. Our
agony ie over, and peace indeed dawns, Hone ever
doubled the ability and prowose of our armies ; all lelt
that victory was theirs, though the day might be long
delayed. ■ In every war the chief cause of anxiety, the
means of success or of defeat, after all, Is the Treasury.
When the purse is empty, and the national credit con
sequently weakened, It la hoping against hope to expect
success. National min foEows in the wake of a depicted
treasury. The Confederacy was long ago lost because
the finances were undermined; and the credit of the
rebel States, even with their best friends in Kurland,
was nearly worthless. The rebel bonds ware
dishonored in England many weeks’ago’, and they
will scarcely, sell for the usual price of waste
paper When the news of Lee s surrender reaches the
earg'orKntland. Onr bonds have commanded a pro
nrium among the people during the four years of our
war. If ihe. Treasury experienced entanglements at
times, they were only, temporary. Involving no serious
embarrassments to the trade of the country, and causing
no difficulties that a few days did not entirely remove.
The Secretary .of tha Treasury has always been master
. of the situation, and never appealed to the hanks of the
country or to .the people that he was not instantly an
swered. We have at last seen the end-of high' prices,
and other inconveniences' attendant upon a statsof war;
we have. We think, not only passed that period when
no further currency will be wonted, but when Its cur
tailment will be at once commenced The high pre
mium Of gold is at an end, hud the speculators 1 occupa
tion-gone. Wc have all been congratulating onrselves
on the great military successes ol the past few months;
there is now equal caned to congratulate the country on
ita present and: prospective financial prosperity. Tha
- intelligence' which we print to-day will ha welcomed
not only by the public creditors who have so long and
patiently awaited the pleasure of the Government, hnt
by the entire country,- that has'so heroically bene the
storifices and buideng of the war that the Union of our
fathers might exist for aU tiihe.
The transactions at the Stock Board wars yesierday
quite large as compared with the previous days, though
we have no important’ changes to note In quotations.
Government bonds ware weak excepting only the 10
4Ts, which sold firm ai 93%. The 1881 s sold at 197%—&
decJire of M, aha the sjgto at Io7«—a fall of Djf. Tor
State loans there waslittlqlnquiry. No sales of Ss were
reported,.and the war loan 6s sold in a small way-at
100. City 6» show no improvement. There Is no sale
for the old, and the new are weak at 89Jf. Ol company
bonds the sales werS moderate. Including 2d mortgage
Pennsylvania Railroad ai97«;.SchuTllrill Navigation
Ceat79, andißorth ’Pennsylvania6s &cB5. Alotofjrew
• Jersey Bo,'long loan, was disposed of at 100. The tm
pioveraent noted a few, days ago in railroad pharei con
tinues, with a prospect of a still further rise. Penn
sylvania Raiftoad advanced 1, , witli sales at. S 3;
Beading was In domand at S 3; Camden and Amboy
at 130. and North’ Pennsylvania at SS. For many
months past not a f<jw have held the view that the close
of the war would produce a general and severe panic,
during which stocka would he thrown upon the market
irrespective of price; and to evade snob a contingency,
many have sold ont their rallro&cl securities, while
ethers have been, ftom the same motive. Indisposed to
buy them. Under each circumstances, a heavy destine
was Inevitable, and prices -hsve probahly fallen below
the fair prospects of dividends held out by the several
roads. It hae turned ont, however, that the closing of
the war is accompanied by a remarkable revival of con
fidence ; and, as the fail in gold has -produced an abun
dant supply of money, there is a general movement to
buy back the stocks that have been sold out at low
prices.
The oil stocks are beginning again to attract atten
tion, and the sales yesterday were large. A sale of
Cameron was made at 3; the subscription books having
closed on Monday. This Is an advance of % per share
The Cameron company, we understand, are sinking
forty weEs, several of which wUI doubtless be produc
tive within sixty days, and the board have directed
forty lotpto beleaied, for which there aieappUcants
for twenty five ’ There was some movement in Maple
Shads, and an advance of % Coal stocks-are quiet.
Sales in a smaU way of Fulton at i%, and Preston at IS.
City passenger railroad shares continue very quiet.
Tenth and Eleventh sold at 44; 57 was bid for Second
and Third; 20for Spruce and Pine and 2514 for Graen
and Coates. There was nothing doing in bank shares,
2S was hid for Mechanics; 43jf for Penn Township; 48
for Gir»d; GO for City .and 07 for Corn Exchange; 190
was asked for North America; 137 for Philadelphia; 137
for Farmers 1 and Mechanics, and GO for Commercial.
Tha Directors of the Diamond Coal Company have de
clared a dividend of two and a half per cent., payable
on demand-
The foßowlnc were the ([notations for cold yesterday
at the hours named:
10A. M..
u A.M..... —• .~u<
12 H.' ..44.. t
I S' §
4 P.
The subscriptions to tie aeven thirty loan* received
"by Jay Cooke yesterday, amount to $3,264,600. inclu
dial one of $338,000 from Pittsburg, one of $53*000 from
laehyille (Team ),and one of $1,060,000 from. First Na
tional Bank, Sew York. There were 2.2&1 individual
enbrcrlptione of sso®loo each.
5.1 he Evening Gold and Stock Exchange, now held at
the Assembly Buildings, has met with great success.
Theeali of stocks, Including oil, is made regularly at 9
o’clock, and the Board includes most of our regular
brokers.
Tie following are tlejcloslag quotations for the prin
cipal navigation. mining and oil stocks :
_„ _ ‘ Bid, Ask. • ' Bid. Ask.
ScMNav....—27 Germania .. ,91
Seal Eav pref.... 32 3255 Globe Oil- 1
SnsqCanai....... 10 10% Howe’s gdiT Oil 1% 155
Big Meant Cogl.. 4 4% Hibbard Oil 1% 1.31
Butler U 051...... S 10 Hyde Firm 2/h 3
Clinton C0a1..... % 1 KeyßioneOil.™. .. I.G)
Conn Mining—.... -- }4 Krotror V,'
Fulton C0a1...... % 4% Maple Shade Oil. 18 19
Feeder Dam Goal .a 1 MeGlintoek Oil.. ZK 4
Gieen Monet Cl.. 3, .» Mineral Oil****** „ 2
N Carbondafe ci. IX .. Mingo. SH Wi
Swataia Pali* Gi •■ SX Mcßlkeny 48 4*l
Atiw *v~~* Vi McCrea&CiaerS. 2 3-16 Vi
Allegheny Sim. .. 2 Oil Creek ax
Aileg & Tideonte -. \% Organic Oil ,68 %.
Big 3# 3.31 Penn* Petro C 0.,.. 2
Brasden Island*. .. IX Perry 2X 2%
Beacon OU I Phila* Tideonte .. 2*
BmnerOil*....v.. % . PopeP&rm 0i1... % 1
Bnil Creek.....*'. 2 3 Pet Centre 2 ix
BrifX*Qtt.~ 2 X 2% PMIa&OU Ork.. % .91
Banting Spg Pet .- 2 jßtJvenae .. 2
Crescent City % IJ4 Koberts 0U.*..~ .. 2
Corn Planter..... 4 4|£ Book 2X 2%
Caldwell—..***.. I % 4,94 BathboaePet...♦ * i>£
Cherry - 344 Sherman~*« % IX
Doikard Oil IX IX Story Farm Oil., ig IK
BunkardCwekO .. IX Sehl&OGk..~~ .9* 1
Densmsre Oil**.* SX -4 StNicholas sk 3X
D«1m11.0U.~.~. 6H 6 , Smabary , g.
Excelsior Oil*♦*. K • • Tarr ,. 2X
Erberfe....— 2% 3 Tarr Btomesfcead. SK .. •
Eldorado. .. \% Union Petrols.. .. l
Fairel Oil***.***. .. 5* Walnut Island... 1 IX
Fianklin Oil M 2% Watson.™™ .. 2%
. The following are the debts of several of the principal
States of the Union, according to the last official re
ports: New York. $23,720,724: Pennsylvania, $39,379,-
60S; Masiachusttts, $22,893,972? Ohio, $13,590,761? HU
note, $11,478,514; Maine, $5,137,506; Connecticut, $5,-
COO,COO; Michigan, $3,451,129; Wisconsin, $2,600,000;
Vermont, $1,642,845.
The Atlantic and Great Western Eailroid earned dn«
ring the month of, March $449,816, which is an increase
over the receipts for the same time last year of $221,032.
There ere twelve national beaks la operation In Chl
eaio, whose aggregate capital foots mp $4,837,050, with
a circulation of $2,217,800, and discounted bills of $5,-
tse, SC-3, . . L ’
Thefollowing are the latest commercial advices from
New Orleans (by mail), under date of Saturday eye-
Bin?, April 1:
The week oloses under marked depression la every
branch of business. There has been some improvement
in regard to plantation supplies, with some few.pur
cl ases of general merchandise for towns and.villages on
the Lower Mississippi- The tenor of business La general,
however, rales as it ha* daring the week.
The money market to day was very chalet the day
through There was something done in exchange. At
one or two counters there was a good demand for checks
on New York, which was met and supplied at one per
cent. premium. There were sales of one*day sight, for
remittance fit X premium net, and small some at X
premium.
The following were the quotations for American seen*
HUes in London on the 29th alt. ;
Maryland 5 per cent ew @B5
United States, 6-20 yearn, 1882, 6per cent....'56 @ 67
Virginia State 5 percent.*.. <js @45
Atlantic and eftSKK&E Sew York sec
tion, Ist mortgage,lBBo, 7 per c0at....,- 88 @ 50
Do. 2d mortgage, 1881, 7 per cent 81 ©eg
PeansylTanla, Ist mortgage, 1877 70. @ 72
Do. 2d mortgags.— 5},,®
Ena shares. *lOO (all paid) BB4@ •$%
. Do. 7per ceat-pref. do—••• —® H
Illinois Central 6 per c6at.. 1575........ 77 ©7B
Marietta and 66 @6B
Panama Bailroad, Ist mort.. 7per cent. *65. 99 ,
Do, 2dmort., 7 percent., 1872. i« <»"«■
Pennsylvania Bailroad.bonds, 2d mortgage, s•»*
6per cent, convertible..*’ ***»*'“** “ ST sf
Do., s6oshares
DrexrfL & Co. quote: . fnQv/awau
United States bonds.
New United States cert, of indebtedness
SSSteSters’ Voucher* ZZZ'IZZut 111
THS3 WAJft E*J*JB23«§„
(PBBLWfigB WEEKLY)
Tag W)i Press will be sent to eubecrlbem fey
(per ennnin in sdvsueMat. = ....SS eg
Yvic00ie,......, .10 ««
Ton copies.—... ———no q»
Larger-Clubs than Ten will be charged at tha (ase
rate. 42.00 per copy.
The money must altsay; accompany the order, and
tmne deviated from, o*
they afford very lillie man than the east of paper.
*£*£*£? “ 9 *»
• *r To ‘iyrt'er-uf Of the Clußof ten or twenty, a*
extra copy of the paper wfll he given, W *
Kalcsor Stocks,
THE OPEi
lOOßxg.Tattk- 3-44
SCO .b 5 3 44
2CO do,**,? —.*lo 344
100 do.-b 38334
2CO ..*155U3
£OO do—*™ 334
200 de..».bid 344
*o do m
100 d0*—......*5 33i
800 do.#-.- 334
200 do.<*— —65 331
200 do 3 91
ICO MeCrea & Cherryß 234
800 do 2k
4CO d0....—< L 6 2 3 16
300 do.—.*s 2 316
7CO do.—*s 2 3*lo
2CO do ....WO 234
6CO 2)4
SCO do.— 22„
2CO do — *... 23i
K 0„ d0. ...........*6 214
2QDCre6cent City.- be 1
SECOND
30£>A«as» ,bIS 134
100 Big Tank 334
100 do .*l5 3.81
7 f O n do *lO 331
100 Bnll Creeks,.2
ecoDunkara \%
400 do.— .—*s ik
2CO Bibberd——... 134
SCO Bowe’sßddy l34
2CO Keystone*.l (8
ICO ..bBO m
KOMcGlintodc£..— 4
SALBSr'AT THB REGULAR BOABI> OF BROKERS
Reported bp Sewes. Miller, & Oo. s Mo, §0 S. Third St,
BEFORE BOARDS.
100 Beading B—..— 5254 200 DalzeJl OU s%
3to do .........2dys. 5O do «...6
ICO -do 2dys .5334 200 Jersey Well.. —* 294
62d*34*ttB— 67 i
FIRSTS
COQO UEIO-40ta ehop. 9334
2CCO do—..*~.ep. 9334
9000 City 6bnew*...lts- 6934
2600 fctate Wit6b.-Teg.ICO
600 Schny Hut 6s 'm, 79
2000 Prana R 2d inort. 97
»C 0 d 0.975;.975;
100 B< adlng B e 5. 53
100 do—Blown. 63
100 d 0—..... b3O. 53
100 . do..— ch, 63
100 d0...........»6. 53> 4 "
10 Norristown-BA*-’ ®;
9dAlntfr*R-—~jarfr >4&>
23
20 Nth & 11th*8t..... 44
SOO Preston CoaL .its. 18
6CO Atlas—.lts. IK
SOSO Bis Tank.sJ..lt*. $K
400 do ....Its. 3K
}OC Del Biv—~.ch. 81
CO d0,... ~3J I
50 Maple Shade—~ 18*!f
SOO do—-....1t5. 19 I
BETWEEN
CCOBif Tani.....-b3O 334
SCO do——,sswn 3H
200 do-- s 5 3?s
soo do.-........ bio m
100 d 0........... »15 3K
SOO do SK
200 Keystone 0i1..-.. \%
.SO O Bowe’s Eddy.—.. 134
600 Clieiry Ban 834
BO d0—...1i30 834
600 - do. —.kSO 834
lCOWißiiow——.. IK
1510th Scllth Sts R.. 44
4GO Besemoxe.—..-.b5 4
SOO do— lots 4.
6GO HeOlintoekOU lots 4
-2*.o__ do-.- e§w» 4
1000 XT S6s 18STL 1073*
ICOOUBS 20 Bondi—lo7*
83 Wyoming T&I lots 47
65GOND
1000 tTS 6s 2881... coup. 107J4
6COON J6s long Joan.. 100 J
1000 City 6*.—.new. mUI
43Prana8.......10ts 68 j
AFTER 1
176 Prana B—bswxl 63
20 do.—— 68
.300 Denemore.*.. tots. 4
18C0 d0.....10t5t£0. 4%
SCO do —. 1)6. 4
EOHyde Fsrsu*«»... 3
.100 Reading Bbfilcp. 53
SALES AT T
2CO MeCrea & Cher S 2K
80G Big Tank.-.. 3K
ICO d 0....—...... 8K
100 Bead B s&wn&int. 53
600 Big Tank— ..>BO 334
ICO Corn Planter...... 434
ICO Caldwell 0i1...... 4%
SALES AT SCOTT’S EVESTING EXCHANGE.
. ASSEMBLY BPH.DISGS.
600 Beading..—.-. 6334! 800 Beading....mMs3 25
200 d0...—...1)30.63-441 300 do ;...*36,5&£
The following are the closing prices at Scott’s-Srenlnff
Gold and Stoek Exchange, Assembly Buildings* od
Thnrtday evening, April 13.1886: i
2COCOGoId 14634146 K Egbert..—* 234 &
UPS-2Qs— 10634 JO7 EDorsdo— jS
M 0 Rtadß.intoff 6334 6334 Parrel Oil—— . . Xt
Pennall—6?34- 68 Franklin Oil— .3L-*e
Catawisiaß 534 9K Great Western... ..
Caiawiraaßpref. 2234 2534 Germania— ..
NoxthPennaß .. 26 27 Globe Oil—.— ..
Phila&Erieß 20 Howe’s Eddy OU. 4%
lioaglflandß 40 Hibbard ?K
SchnylkUlNay.. SS 27 HydeFann^—
Schny H S 2« 33 Irwin Oil-*..... .. ’
bn.rj Cacai.... .10 . Keysiore OU*... .. niiiTCT
Bl« Mount Coal. 3 H 441 Krotzar "
Butler C«»l.~~. 10 MsnleShade Oil. ..
Cllntcn Cca1..... .. ~1 MeClintock Oil.. 3%
Conn.client Min. .. X Mineral W.~..
JHemesd CoaL.. .. 16 Minco-- sitf«in'a nit.
Pulton Coal. 4* iV, Mcßiheny ifi “ d EB^
Peecer Bam. Cl.. .. 1 MeCrea &Chß. 2 2-13 tt*
GieenMtronCoal. 2% 3% Soble * Delam ... 4“— -
K(.yiione Zinc.... .. \% OU Creek—.... 5 , vr
Mouocacy s Organic 0i1...... 67 «
N I AMUCIFd. 4 9 Oimstead Oil. .. 2» i
IT CarhonaaleCl. IX 2 PennaPetroCo. .. 2 \
Hew Creek Coal. X % Perry Oil™. 85£
Penn Biping™ .. .. Phiia & Tideout .. 2
Swat Falla Coal,. .. 4% Pope Farm Oil 1
4»}m- IX Hit Petroleum Centre 2 2f£
Ailtgbeny Klyer .. 2 Phila&OiiCk 1
al and Tideonte. .. lid PhUliw
Big 1ank........ SJ4 334 Beyenne IK 2
Brandon Xaiand. .. IK Boberta Oil 3
Beacon 0i1..™-. & 1. 800 k 0i1—.™.., 2 2%
Bruner'Oil.-.-. % % Batbbone Pet™. .. 3
Bull Creek.™—.• 2 231 .Sherman % ftr
BHgtsOnv™.... 2 3 SeneSOU - « T
Burnintßpricg.. ~ . 2. story Farm Oil- IK IX '
Continenlal OU.. .. IX Kcbyli Oil Cik. X 1
Oreccent City™. .. IK St. H.ctolae SX 4
.Curtin.. f 9 - SngarCreek 3% 9
S..CTHPlanter.—. . 4_ 4K tngarßale.™— . 8 . 4
CaldweU™.—. 4K 6K Sonbnry. .. . X
Cow Greek...™. 1 - Tan Pam.™-. .. 2K
Obemßum-™- 8 SK JJnlen Petroleum .. 94.100
Bnnkard 0i1... IK 334 Upper Econo my.. - 1
Bnnkard CrkOil.. X Penango Oil—. .. 1
Benemore Oa-- fX 4* Walnut Inland- IK IK
Baltell OU.™-. 6K 6 Watsonl-™— — .. 2Jt
BxceMer Oil™.. .. 1 Market firm.
Tie Mew York Post of yesterday says:
Gold ie quiet at 14fi@l46K Xkchange is quiet at IQ9K. ‘
The loan market is working eaaler. The rate 6@B par
cent. The stock market la inegular and aotl-ro. So.
veiDjneaiß are lower and inactive, .BaUroad abarerara
Etreng. Illinois Central being the leading stock et an
advance of 4@6 per cent.
Before the first bow ion New York Central was aaoied
at 302, Erie at 67K* Beading at 10534, Michigan Boath
eit at 62. -
The following quotations were made at the Board,
compared with those of yesterday afternoon:
Thnr. Wed. Ady. De«r»
TT. S. 6s, ’Bl, c0up0n—.....408 10834 .. jtf
TT. s. 6*20 coupons*loSK .. 3tf
U. h. 6-20 eonpons, new** ,107 ICS .. l
B. S. 10 401 0334 9334 ••
U. S. CeiUficates.9SK
TennesseeSs 61 63 ,1
Miaicmi 6a 67 66 1
Nesr YorkCentraL.^ew.......loo)4 102 .. lk
Erie—6BlC 87 IX ..
Erie B4 S 3 2 ..
Hudson Biver.w. M . lO7 .. ..
Beading.—losK 1
Michigan Central. -■« lO7 §
Michigan Southern^...—6lK 62K 34
lUinois Cental.—.—.4l3 m S !t
After the board the market was unsettled, sad quota*
uohsoeceded 3*@34 per cent, recovering at>he dose.
New York Central closed at 10134* Brie at 68K. Hudson
at 1C634, Beading at IC6, Michigan Southern at 62, £Ol
- Central at 11334. Later, in the street* Erie dosed
at 6634.
IOAED.
300 M*ple Shade.. It* 19X ■
2CO- d0.....b50 lt«. V‘X
100 . do.. ..«30. 19
600 Cherry Bob-. bS. 3 4*
SCO d0....1ta...b;M. SiS
2GO Bencjaore..... Us. 4
600 d0....b30...1ta, Vi
100 • d 0...™ b 5. 4
60 Egbert Oil t T ,r.
100 McCimtockOil— 4
MO Jersey W.bSQlta. g
100 McElratb ......... 2£
600 Mtnto 0i1.....U5. 3 g
JS. d 0....™ sjd
ZOOSfeGreaftChß.es. lot
1100 do.-™.ltc. bS. 2
1000 do.™ Its 2
ZOO OUGk ft Cherry B .4
400 St Nicholas O.lte. SK
-ZOO . do ..b». 4
. 60 Cartin . —.—™ JQts
300 Caldwell. lti bSO. B
100 Daizell 0U....M 6
iBOABDS,
300 Beading 8e39 lota SI
38 do...™™, lets Ai
100 do-™*-.. a3O S 3
100 d 0.... Zdys&lnt Slid
2000 ITorth Fenna 6s-. SS
6 Cam & Am B Zdyß. ISO
30 _ do-.™- .133
20 Elmira BPref.... 44
SOOO GSIO -40 Bds cash o.l>f
iOO Si Nicholas Oil h 5 STi
100 d0......™.™, w
400 Eoyal Oil ™.-b-O lit
100 Oald well Oil cash. 4%
EMO McOrea ft Ch Eua
1000 d0~™........bs Sir
ItO Oil Ck ft Oh Bon. 4
200 Organic Oil «
SDPenna tt. ...™bSO 66
100 d0..™.., .S 3
BOABB.
100 Fulton Coal™..™ Ate
IiOO McCrea ft Oh Ban. 2
1103 Maple Shade bSwn IS
1100 BtgTank blo 3 31
10 ABBS.
100 Beading 8.—..b10. S 3
26 d0....-.Trans 63
W C ft A ElotsbSwn ISO
1000 XT B 5-20 bonde-™lf7<f
IoMCity 6s Howziya. ©JJ
600 McClmtock (ft'™. s ot
200 Keystone OU.™»* lfj
-lit. CLOSK
Philadelphia Marhets.
April 13-Evnriiic.
There is rather more export demand for Flour, but
prices are without any material change; sales comprise
about SCO bbls extra at $B.5Q@B 76; 1,000 bbls extra
family at $9.25, and 500 bbls Jenny Lind fancy oa pit*
vate terms. The retailers and bakers are baying in ft
email way at from $7;6G@B for superfine;. $8.25@& 75 foe
extra; $8 sC@9.£o for extra family, and $l0@ll?lbbl
for fancy brands, according to quality. Bye Flour and
Corn Meal continue quiet at about former rates.
6 BAIN. —Wheat continues dull, and pricts remain
about the same ae last quoted. Small sales are making
at from 210@2i6c Tor good toprime reds, and white at
from according to quality. Bye is sell*
Ing in a small way at 126 c &bo. Thera is- more doing'
in Com About 8,-000 bus prime yellow sold at BSfe
sfloafc, and email lots in store andinthe ears at 120@12ie
sbu. Oats are unchanged; 1,500 bus sold at 83c bo.
isABK.--Quercitron is very dull, and we hear of no
sales; Ist No. lis quoted at s29© ton,
COTTON.—The market continues very quiet; Manu
facturers are only buying to supply immediate wants;
about 60 bales of Middlings sold in lots at 35c $ ft, cash.
GKCCBKJES —There ii-rather more doing iaguiar;
about 600 bids sold at from 11>£@12&c ft .for Cuba,!
ar d 18c for Porto Bico. Coffee is rather dull at former
rates.
SEEDS.—Flaxseed Is rather scarce; small sales are
making at $2.5C@2.60 fi bus. Timothy is dull and
lower; *mall sales are reported at $i 60 bus. Clover
»e*d. continues scarce,but the demand has fallen off and
prices are rather lower; about 2fio bus sold at $17.25®
17 64 fts.
WHISKY —The market continues dull at about former
rates; small sales of Pgnna and Western bbls are rna-
VISIONS —The maSefis rater firmer, hut the
sales are in small lots only at aboutforjnei rates Uese
Fork is quoted at s2£@So bbl- Butter continues dull;
small sales are making at 2C@29c for solid-packed, and
*i£@3Cc ft for roll, as to quality
The following are the-receipts of Floor and Grain at
this port to-d»y:
Flour*— 1,500 bbls.
Wheat——4,loo hue.
S.3CGbus.
«-».».......3,000hue
Hew Tork atarhete, April 13.
BREAPSTrjys.—The market for State and Wastern
Fjoiu is without decided change; sales 6,800 bbls at $7
@7.60 for superfine State: $7 75@7.90 for extra Stave;
$7 i.E@S for choice do; s7@7 75 lor superfine Western;
87 9C@B 40 for common to medium extra Western; $S 43
@8 50 for common to good shipping brands extra round
hoop Ohio. Casaditn Flour is rather more steady;
sales 600 bbls at $8.1C@3.25 for common and $3 80@10.50
for good to choice extra Southern Floor is more active;
sales 1 600 bbls at $9.1C@9.60 for common, and 59.7 G&
12 for fancy and extra. Bj e Floor is dull.
Com Meal ie quiet. Wheat is doll; sales 7,000 bus
amber Michigan at $1 81. Bye is dull. Barley is dull
Barley Mai- is dull. Oats are firmer at 90c for Western
The Corn market is rather more steady; sales of 12,003
bus at $1 S?@l4o for new yellow.
© Provisions —The Pork market is quiet, with sales of
2, COO bbls at $2?.25@27 60 for new mess, $84.76 for '63-4,
do cash andragjUar way, closing at $2150@24.75 for
prime, and $25. Si lor prime mess.
The Beef market as dull; sales 400 bbls at about pre
vious prices. ,Beef Hams are dull Cat Me&ts are
steady; sales 40G pkgs at !4&@l6c for Shoulders, and
15&@17c for Bams.
The Lwd market is quiet and steady; sales 1,100 bbls
W hiskt ie dull and heavy; sates 650 bbls Western ah
s2l4fc@2.lfiv
Tallow is dull; tales 74,000 fts at 11@UK-
Boston Markets, April 12.
Corros,—There ie nothing of consequence doing. We
quote middling at 35c ¥
receipts since ycsterday have fcaaa 1,272
bbls The market la ■ very dull we quote Western
superfine at $7.6C@7 76. me
dium ao s9@9. «s good sad choice do SIC@IS gbbl
: receipts have been 10 00ft
bushels Corn. IS,9COdo Oats, 1,200 do Shorcs Coni m
xery dull Sales of new Southern veilow at «1 43W 46
w bushel Oats are dull at bushel for North
ern and Canada. Bye ia dnUat bushel. Shor£
B.re lixg at s@@s3; Fine Feed $-54@55; Middangs $$J
SS“ 4 WdIsSSSd?»QM.t. 8al..l» at IS@
2Qeach. Bame areselUngatll@K vtub, cash.
Cincinnati Provision Market —April 11.
«be market is nearly a blank ae to- transactions, and
quotations at which stuff _iaay ; be bought and s>id
Scarcely
quiry for mess Pork at#!§iwL»it Jha; purenase c’/aN
not be made at less brands. I,COO balk
Shoulders sold at 18^v
Bctter —’the «2ftS£i„«hfiuiie scarce and
with a fair msrketrules 6W?.;y ft 253&1
for fair to - _
. Cheese —A steady market at 2i@22c for
Western Hamburg. , T
Fog? —TI« receipt* era nuly moderate and the mar
ket rules steady at 20@21c <|ose», shippers c unt.
pOTTON AND FLAX SAIL DUCK
V/ AKD CA3VAB. of all i«mMB ani brand..
Tent. Awninc, Trnnk, and WMon-eovar Dn=k. Also.
Paper Manufacturer.’ Drier Fait*, from one to dra fee.
wife: Pauiln.j
M3-K Ho. 11)3 dO&’SS Aliar.
April I®, 1865.
200 Duukard...... ...
do— bio l «j
100 do —-™ 18
ikj do ..™. i.sa
2f)o Horseneek ft Kg.. rS
*0 Jersey Well.WO 3 l-is
100 . do.™.. B 5 3
ioo .do bars i is
200 Mingo ~ 3.44
100 80ya1.............. l.«o
JOOSSar ™. J£
100 Bt Nicholas ™ 35i
200 Sugar Greek-—™ Zy x
430 Sob & Oil Ck 1
600 Alcorn—™ Vi
100 Wm Penn™. 3 M-'
ICO d0.™..™~b20 3JJ
100 d0...' b2O
200 Window™.-..... 141
ZOO Cere*....™..™— lid
lOOAdgms IX
100 Atlas™™..-™ 13-13
GAEL.
100 Me Crea ft Clerryß 213
2M do ™blS lii
100 Mingo ....3.31
ZOOStar ™-bK) %
400 Globe.™™™.™ }|
300 Tienesta ™—.™. 1.94
M»St Nicholas ™.b3o 3 94
100 Cameron Petrol... 3
ICO Star vc
m McQrea ft Cher E. 2
200 Jersey We11....b30 3
100 Caldwell 0i1.™.. 4f£
300 Howe's Eddy 1,66
200 Caldwell 0i1...b30 S
200 Egbert Oil—™.. jk
2:0 sSrl ft Oil Creek- 1
100 Sagar Creek 8K