Boston Evening Transcript, [newspaper]. April 18,...

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Boston Evening Transcript, [newspaper]. April 18, 1865. http://www.loc.gov/resource/lprbscsm.scsm1276 Boston Evening Transcript, [newspaper]. April 18, 1865. aSYr!^.--.^j, ^'.JLt-.."^^^:^-i :. - "U.^ ^&^*i^l^^^^ *,'.iiL*.j*4*-.*K'-"?*ri*^f!l^.tfflMHfcf * - li mill twm HKNRY W. DUTTON & SON, PROPRIKTORS, TRANSCRIPT BUILDING, 00 & 91 WASHINGTON STREKT .................... TEN DOLLARS PER ANNUM....................SINGLE COPIES FIVE CENTS. VOL. XXXVII. BOSTON, TUESDAY EVENING. APRIL 18. 1865. NO. 10,734. IReal iBstate. FOR SALE A very desirable House : on West Cedar street near cfhestnut street F. H, .lACKSON, mh 23 tc 12 Union Building, 40 State 8t. TO BELET StoreNo. 39 Summer iiiij Street near Washington street, for a term of years, lull or on a ground rent to rebudd. Apply to A. C. ^HEBSEY, Ho. 67 Commercial wharf. to ap 1 FOB SALE House No. 20 Montgom- ery street This ts one of the best houses at the South End for a small family. Apply at No. 69 Clinton street. 6tt ap 11 TO LET. A partially furnished house, r 10 rooms, on MUton Blue Hills. A desirable loca- Itlon for a summer residence. 'Apply to J. FRENCH, eO Washinnton street STu'l hSt ap 8 " WANTElT^n the area bounded by TreiDont, Park, andMt. Vemou streets, a flrst-class hO'ise. from SJf.OOO to 4,0ill). A. B. WABREtf, 11 Merchants KxchanKe. eoptc mh 17 TO LET Brick House No. .3 Bradford street. Rent 34(Hf and taxes. Apply to , G. 1,. WlMON, ap n StII No. 177 Washington st TO LET Brick house No. 10 Ashland aii| place. Kent 5()0 and taxes. Apply to L. PARKS, ii Ko. 26 West street, tltom 9 to 12 o'clock. apl7 to FOB SALE A first-claas House in ,..- Jamaica Plain, large and commodious, containing Uli ail the modem conveniences, with stable and gui- "^dcn. Inquire of AUSTIN & -ANDREWS, mh 25 SIuTblm 116 MUk street ~'~~VfAS(TWa TO HIBE A smaUTur'- nisbed or unfurnished house, pleasantly situated in |llll or near the city; would not obiect to purchasing '"^"furniture. Address, for one week, Box 2501, Boston o.__________________________en ap 10 TO LET For a term of yearsTEitate I No. 37 Summer street, near Washington street on a Ullkround lease, or build to suit tenants. Apply to "* JOSEPH COJlEIi, 41 Tremont street, llrom 9 to 11 c'clock,.A. M. tc mh 22 r^FUENISHBD'HoWE-To let for t these&son, of ten rooms, pleasantly situated a few i miles from the city in a very plea>.aut and desirable ^town, with first-rate railroad ftclllties. luqnire at I Joy's Building, 81 Washington street tc mh 31 FOB SALE-A valuable estate on Boylston street, near the Market F. H. JACKSON & BLAGDEN, 12 Union Building, 81 to. 40 State street. TO LET. In Cambridgeport, house pl No. 5 Worcester street, containing a large parlor, IIW dining room, ten chambers, kitchen and washroom, '^^with carriage house and s-table attached. Apply to JAMES C. FISK, No. 15 Congress st Bt ap 12 1^". FUBNISHBD^HOtrSE WANTBdI iTij Wanted for the summer season by a family without llll'small children, a genteel funiished residence within "^ten miles ot the cltv, upon the Hue of a steam or liorse railroad. AddressSbox No. 913. Boston Post Olllce. _3tT________________________________ap25_ TO BE LET FOB THE SUMMEB. A few furnished houses at modest prices. In Kings i ton and Lancaster, Mass, and In Newport, R. I. Prl- "ces n-om fSOO to 450 the seiison. B. E. APTHOUP, & CO., 21 City Exchange, Devonshire street, ap 12 2w First

Transcript of Boston Evening Transcript, [newspaper]. April 18,...

Page 1: Boston Evening Transcript, [newspaper]. April 18, …lcweb2.loc.gov/service/rbc/lprbscsm/scsm1276/scsm1276.pdfBOSTON, TUESDAY EVENING. APRIL 18. 1865. NO. 10,734. IReal iBstate. FOR

Boston Evening Transcript, [newspaper]. April 18, 1865. http://www.loc.gov/resource/lprbscsm.scsm1276

Boston Evening Transcript, [newspaper]. April 18, 1865.

aSYr!^.--.^j, ^'.JLt-.."^^^:^-i :. - "U.^ ^&^*i^l^^^^ *,'.iiL*.j*4*-.*K'-"?*ri*^f!l^.tfflMHfcf * - li milltwm HKNRY W. DUTTON & SON, PROPRIKTORS, TRANSCRIPT BUILDING, 00 & 91 WASHINGTONSTREKT....................TEN DOLLARS PER ANNUM....................SINGLE COPIES FIVE CENTS. VOL. XXXVII.BOSTON, TUESDAY EVENING. APRIL 18. 1865. NO. 10,734. IReal iBstate. FOR SALE A very desirableHouse : on West Cedar street near cfhestnut street F. H, .lACKSON, mh 23 tc 12 Union Building,40 State 8t. TO BELET StoreNo. 39 Summer iiiij Street near Washington street, for a term of years,lull or on a ground rent to rebudd. Apply to A. C. ^HEBSEY, Ho. 67 Commercial wharf. to ap 1 FOBSALE House No. 20 Montgom- ery street This ts one of the best houses at the South End for a smallfamily. Apply at No. 69 Clinton street. 6tt ap 11 TO LET. A partially furnished house, r 10 rooms, onMUton Blue Hills. A desirable loca- Itlon for a summer residence. 'Apply to J. FRENCH, eO Washinntonstreet STu'l hSt ap 8 " WANTElT^n the area bounded by TreiDont, Park, andMt. Vemou streets, aflrst-class hO'ise. from SJf.OOO to 4,0ill). A. B. WABREtf, 11 Merchants KxchanKe. eoptc mh 17 TOLET Brick House No. .3 Bradford street. Rent 34(Hf and taxes. Apply to , G. 1,. WlMON, ap n StII No.177 Washington st TO LET Brick house No. 10 Ashland aii| place. Kent 5()0 and taxes. Apply to L.PARKS, ii Ko. 26 West street, tltom 9 to 12 o'clock. apl7 to FOB SALE A first-claas House in ,..- JamaicaPlain, large and commodious, containing Uli ail the modem conveniences, with stable and gui-"^dcn. Inquire of AUSTIN & -ANDREWS, mh 25 SIuTblm 116 MUk street ~'~~VfAS(TWa TO HIBE AsmaUTur'- nisbed or unfurnished house, pleasantly situated in |llll or near the city; would not obiectto purchasing '"^"furniture. Address, for one week, Box 2501, Boston o.__________________________enap 10 TO LET For a term of yearsTEitate I No. 37 Summer street, near Washington street on aUllkround lease, or build to suit tenants. Apply to "* JOSEPH COJlEIi, 41 Tremont street, llrom 9to 11 c'clock,.A. M. tc mh 22 r^FUENISHBD'HoWE-To let for t these&son, of ten rooms, pleasantlysituated a few i miles from the city in a very plea>.aut and desirable ^town, with first-rate railroadftclllties. luqnire at I Joy's Building, 81 Washington street tc mh 31 FOB SALE-A valuable estate onBoylston street, near the Market F. H. JACKSON & BLAGDEN, 12 Union Building, 81 to. 40 State street.TO LET. In Cambridgeport, house pl No. 5 Worcester street, containing a large parlor, IIW diningroom, ten chambers, kitchen and washroom, '^^with carriage house and s-table attached. Apply toJAMES C. FISK, No. 15 Congress st Bt ap 12 1^". FUBNISHBD^HOtrSE WANTBdI iTij Wanted for thesummer season by a family without llll'small children, a genteel funiished residence within "^tenmiles ot the cltv, upon the Hue of a steam or liorse railroad. AddressSbox No. 913. Boston PostOlllce. _3tT________________________________ap25_ TO BE LET FOB THE SUMMEB. A few furnishedhouses at modest prices. In Kings i ton and Lancaster, Mass, and In Newport, R. I. Prl- "ces n-omfSOO to 450 the seiison. B. E. APTHOUP, & CO., 21 City Exchange, Devonshire street, ap 12 2w First

Page 2: Boston Evening Transcript, [newspaper]. April 18, …lcweb2.loc.gov/service/rbc/lprbscsm/scsm1276/scsm1276.pdfBOSTON, TUESDAY EVENING. APRIL 18. 1865. NO. 10,734. IReal iBstate. FOR

Boston Evening Transcript, [newspaper]. April 18, 1865. http://www.loc.gov/resource/lprbscsm.scsm1276

floor. , FOB SALE, at Jamaica Plain, comer I of Greenwood and Sha\vmut avenue, an Italian cot- nllltage, containlne ten rooms, gas, furnace and water, -----uhieteen thousand feet of land, with (Vultand orna- mental trees on same. Also, connected with the above, s new and capacious stable. Forftirther particulars hi jiuirc of J. C. LORING, 28 Ircmont row. M_________________________________________ap 12 FOB SALE IN NEWTONVILLE- Ja larffe and pleasanfl.v-sltuated Dwelling Hous3, lllff containingeleven rooms, with gas, range, furnaee. ^&c. 'Ihelot contains an acre and a half of land, earcftilly laidout and veil stocked with fruit and shade trees, with many choice shnibs and plants. Ihe whole jilacehas been kept In perfect repair bv It< present owner juid wtl be sold on reasonable terms. Applyto LEAYITT & H&SNEWBI.r., ftp 14 6t _________________ Congress st. ESTATE FOB SALE IN BBOOK^_--. lilNE, Comer of Harvard aijd Vemon streels, il!l! house eonfalnin;-'13 rooms, Avith hot und coldwa- ' ter, bathing rooib, set of soap stone wash tabs, irange fhrnace.*">'' "1' ^'^^--m i7is,.v. . ..,.,#,!-.&i,.iotoas rttiblo end one of the uosl wells of water in the State, about H of an acre of land coveredwith a variety of fruit nd ornamental trees, currants, raspberries and blackher- 3y bushes; canbe seen between the horn's of 3 and 4 every cay. For particulars inquire of B. H. WHUNEY, 156^evonsiiire street, Boston. 61^ ap 1.5 FUBNISHED HOUSB~FOB SALE irriT IS MEDFOBD. A thoroughlvbuilt and tastefully iSJIj fluLshed house, finely situated In the beautiful town "" ''of Medford, nearcars, churches, schools, ,fec., and %vithiu 30 minutes* ride of State street, is offered for sale, ^vlthor without the principal part of the furniture, the "Khole in perfect order, with good stable, twoacre of laud, JVult. &c. This is a rare chance to get an elegant and valaablo 3)lace at a low price.Apply to R. TE. APTHOEP & CO., 21 City Exchange Devonshire street, 1st floor. lt*SluTh2w ap 12FOB SALE IN CAMBBIDGE- Kear the Colleges, the House and Gaixlen, cover- ing about 14,000 feetof land, at the comer of Gaiw den street and Phillips place, upon Cambridge Common, near theWashington Elm, *rmetly occupied bv Wrs. liyman, and no-n' by t. B. Parker, Esq. 'Ihe house i%thoroughly built, and contains all raodera conven- iences. Xhe access uom the house \o Bo8toD,byhoise- Tallroad, is very near and couveuienlent Possession Biven May 1st _ Apply to G. H. WILLIAMS,at No. 23 KIlby street, yoston.________________Th8'fa8w1 __________ mh 80 GENTEEL BBSIDENOBIN LYNN, pf FOE SALE Situated on Atlantic (near Ocean) hill street now, with French roof piazzasand porch- '****es. Contains ten rooms elegantlv finished with chestnut, black walnut and marblemantles, bath-room, ^ftter-cloeet, f>imace, gas, and all modem improvements. Ifeighborhoodvery desirable and oce^n view extremely *ne. Price 1111,000. Apply to JOHN P. WOODBUBT, Nos.2 and s Sagamore Building, Lynn, Mas*. 8TV2w ap8 FOB SALE IN SPBING^ FIELD 'TBEET JX storybrick dwelling house containing 14 roonu and alt the conveniences. Price tUM. Apply to JAMES T.ELDBIDOE, 2J tc mhtl FOB SALE A very deaira- tble estate on Canton street, consisting r of doubledwelllng-honse on Canton - . ,------^-^^8treet, 25x33, and a large stable In the lear 6n TrumBull street,containing 15 stalls. Lot 25x90. yiUbesold low. Apply to JAMES T. ELDBEDGE, 2J Congress street. etap 17 FOB SALE In the imrne^ dlate vicinity of Washington street, near the Pine street ( Jnurch twoMarge and subatantUllv built brick houses with about 10 000 feet of land. Sills estate would he

Page 3: Boston Evening Transcript, [newspaper]. April 18, …lcweb2.loc.gov/service/rbc/lprbscsm/scsm1276/scsm1276.pdfBOSTON, TUESDAY EVENING. APRIL 18. 1865. NO. 10,734. IReal iBstate. FOR

Boston Evening Transcript, [newspaper]. April 18, 1865. http://www.loc.gov/resource/lprbscsm.scsm1276

admirablv adaoted for the purposes of a chantable or public Institution. For fall partlcnlars pply toJAMES T. ELDBIDGE, 23 Congtess street. tc mh2S iSse^-t: J. FOB SALE OR TO BB ;LEC At the SouthEnd. Posses- ^sicn given Jnly , or .sooner A. first Jclajjfl house, moderate size, with all -the mortemImprovementa. In fine 4hrder; never been occupied but by owner, who purchased 3t a year ago.May be h,id famiaiicd or unfurnighed, or the furniture will l.c gold on a valuation. Apoly to JAMES T.ELDREDUE. 23 Congress street. 3w ap 3 FOB SALE ON THE BACK ^BAY LANDS. Houses ot mediamffiize and moderate cost on Clareudon S^street, between H street and Columbus ^^avpDue. Thesehouses are jn^t finished and hare all theiaodern improyements and ar uouTeu- iently arranged, eachbouse containinjf 12 rooms and an excellent cellar. Hou-Jes 20 by about 47. Ijots 20 bv70. Tortullparticulars apply loJAilES X. ELDBIDGfe, 23 Confess street tc mh'ii FOB SALE ON OOMMOK It STREETA very deelrable estate, ^corapristng two brick house)*, fronting . , ^___ "on Common street, andtwo smaUer >>rlcKtones in tlie rear. All of .these housed are hi great . demand, and rent readily togood tenants at fair prices. !lhe whole property will be sold at a great bargain, and Wlli insure a liuthrate of interest to the purchaser. Apply t JAMES T. ELDBEDGE, ap 10 8w________________23 Congressstreet ' FOB SALE IN LYNN One ot he finest estates ou Ocean .fite-eet. Apply to JijtCS T. ELDRBDOE,d 0 tc 23 Consxess street. FOR SALE ON BIVBR STREET, DORCHESTER, within five .^minutes' walkof the horse cars and **three raluutes' of Bteam cars an ele- __^_______ gant estate, consisting ofHouse, Sta- ble aud five acres of Land> The House is large and handsome, built in the best man-ner an! contains every possible convenience. On the first fioor l3 a large drawing-room, par'.orand dining-room, with Bpaciouja chlnarcloaets, with hot and cold water, kitchen, 7oom for m.an,and wood-sheds. On the second floor, seven chambers, bathing-room and water-closet. In theattic, tbrce flnisned chamber*. An excellent ccUar ex- Jends under the whole house. ^. ^ ^ ^ XheStable is built in keeping with the bonse, and has 5hree stalls and ample carriage room. , _ ^ . TheGrounds are tastefully laid In lawn and garden and are weU stocked with a choice variety of fruittrees aqd SBowering shrubs. In the rear of the hoode is a small pond auid beautiftil grove of flill-grown oaks. For full DartlctUars iuauire of _ ' *^" H JAMES T. ELDREDGE. ap 10 Im 23 Cougrcss street.' KEEP OTTT~THB~DtJSTr There Is a very simple and easr way to effeciually exclude du.st tromdoors and windows. Any person taught how to do it, free of charge, with the greates* oi pleasure,by calling at * BKADSTRKKT'S OPFrOB, Ko. 95i.......... .W ASHTlfGTOH STREET. _________________tc____________________________ap4 FINE DOMINOES, Ba.iiqiie 0>unters, Cib- bace and Gammon Hoards,hackers. Chess, (^arcis, Ics and Chips, lor aaie by JOSEPH L. BATES, 1^ jfMhJactan strM. d 9 iXL HealIBstate. *^ FOB SALE OR TO LET. One of iiii the flneet houses on Ocean street, Lynn, for sole orliilLto let, with the furniture. Apply to JOHN JEF- ~FRIE8, Ja., 17 City Exchancc. 2\t ap 8 ^ FOR SALEIN CHESTNUT ST. j A Teiy desirable bouse, on the south side of the up- Ijlll per part of the streetthirty feet front. =* F. n. JACKSON, ap J tc 12 rnlon Bnllding, 40 State street. , FOE SALE IN WESTCAMBRIDGE, lITT an : Icgant estate on Pleasant street and delightf\il- " ly located ou the bordersof Spy Pond. Apply to '' C. ttRIKFrfHS k CO., ) 14 ____tc_^______________145 k 147 Federal street.

Page 4: Boston Evening Transcript, [newspaper]. April 18, …lcweb2.loc.gov/service/rbc/lprbscsm/scsm1276/scsm1276.pdfBOSTON, TUESDAY EVENING. APRIL 18. 1865. NO. 10,734. IReal iBstate. FOR

Boston Evening Transcript, [newspaper]. April 18, 1865. http://www.loc.gov/resource/lprbscsm.scsm1276

FOR SALE A three-story swell-front j brick House, No. 23 Hanson street, containing all I modemImprovements. For permit to examine and for tei'ms apply to WII.T.IAM WHITE, >14 2y_______________13, 15 * 17 West St. WANTED TO Q^KE! Wanted~to hire for the snimner month?; a furnishedhouse In the vicinity of railroad depot, not more than 10 mile* from Boston. Address, by letter, W.B. El- lis, Boston Post Offlce. Stl ap 14 FOB SALE. A Tannery with steam power, on a railroad, withinelfi-ht miles of Boston. Inqulr of John Goi.dtuwait, 33 Washington street Also one 12-horse engineand boUer. 6tt ap 12 OR^SALB. That valuable lot of Und on Broad afreet, south of and .TdjolnlngPrentice's Wharf, containing 14,1*70 sqaaie feet, nearlv opposite the head of Congress street Thisestate will be sold by order of the tmsiees, free of all Incnrabrancos, to close an estate. This is oneof the most desirable business locations In the city. Apply to J. A. VEAZIE, 76State St. tc ap 4 lioomisto net. To LET One desirable small ske Room, well calculated for one person, with or without board.Inquire at I'i Avon place. 811 ap 15 T' O LET At 7 Cambridge street, two lar^s, connected parlorson the first floor rooms for geuUe- _________________________6t1 apU ^ T O LET A desirable suite ofunfurnished rooms, without board at No. 5 Exeter Place. eopStT____________________________ap 15TO LET. Large, newly furnished lodgin< rooms for gentlemen, can be obtained at 23 Cresceifl plaee^References required. efj ap 17 ^raposials. O lAVAIiRY HORSES WANTBD, Assistant QrAKTFRH4<'TRR'sOffice, P. S- A. l I8H Faiieuil Hal. Kjuare. Boston. Mass., Feb. 16, iiift-'>.| Persons haviig iiof sea torsa'e snitaole foi the Cavairy service, ai e invi ed to offer them to the iinaerstgned. Each home wili beluspectea at Government Stable, 219 Friend st,, Boston, aud must coniom: to tb'j tollowing standaid:To be tivm i'i tcl6 bands hT^U: from 5 to9 years old; compactly built, tull-fleshed, bridle wise, pei-t'ectly sound aari ot sufQciont size for tavsJry pcu'posos. I will pay for such Horses 170 each.JOHN W. MoKIM. *eb 16 te______________________Caut. aod A. Q. M. ARTIIiLERY HORSES WANTSD.ASSISTANT QUABTBBHASTER'S OPFICR, tT. 9, A., I I3M Fanenil Hall Sauare, Boston, Mass., 23 Feb.,1861. \ rerson^ havltiR horses for sale suitable for artiUepp- ser- vice, are invited to offer themto the undersigned. Th horses will be inspected at Government Stable, 219 Kiienl 8t.bObton, 3IJWEDNESDAY and THURSDAT of each wcek,and m\3i%X strictly conform to tlie foUowIugstanoara:To be ol dark color, sound in all particulars, strong, qaict and active, well broken and square trottersin harness; in good flesh ana condition; from 6 to 10 years old: not less than tfiH h.inds high; ande^jch horse to weigh nol leis th.in 10.^0 pounds. These speclflcations will be rigidlv ad- hered to.as no discretion is allowed the Inspectors to ac- cept any anhnal that these sneciflcations wouldreject I will pay fbr rach horses $l7-' each. * ^ , . JOHN W. MoKIM, ti-\}1% tc Capt. and Asst.Qtr.Master, HIEF QUARTERMASTER'S OFFICE, No 1139 GiRARD Strert. ^ Phit.adelphia Depot, April12,1865. SEALED PROPOSALS will be received at this otfice until WEDNESDAY, April 19,1865, at 12o'cloclc M., for Immediate delivery at the SchuyJklll Arsenal, in merchant- able packages, (casesto be made to conform to specifica- tions at this Offlce): 10,000 pairs sewed Boots, No. fl, Armystandard. 5,000 pairs sewed Boots, No. 10, Annv standard. 3,000 pairs sewed Boots, No. II, Annvstandard. 50,000 pairs sewed Booteees, No. 9, A'nny stantlard. * 8,000 pairs sewed Bootees, No. 11,

Page 5: Boston Evening Transcript, [newspaper]. April 18, …lcweb2.loc.gov/service/rbc/lprbscsm/scsm1276/scsm1276.pdfBOSTON, TUESDAY EVENING. APRIL 18. 1865. NO. 10,734. IReal iBstate. FOR

Boston Evening Transcript, [newspaper]. April 18, 1865. http://www.loc.gov/resource/lprbscsm.scsm1276

Army standard. 10,000 pairs sewed Bootees, No. 12, Arrav standard. 5,000 pairs sewed BootocS,No. 13, Anny standanl. 3,000 pairs sewed Bootees, No. 14, Army standard. Baling Rupe, Armystandard. Hospital 'I'ent-poles, Army standard. One-inch Cotton W ebbing for Canteen Straps,samples r^uired. "Parties offering poods should make separate proposals for each article ofleied,the quantitvtbev propose to fur- nish, the price {tchich should be written Loth m words and fgures)and conform to the terms of this advertisement, a copy of which should accompany each proposal.8am )le^ o*" tiie standard articles required may be seen at this olf;- Sanij citted mu.st be marked andnuna'ierettt. to cori' . P-.-r""ia,-"-:iJ ii; i-ti :n;o "r.-scrcto " t p..... ibe ((oods shall be, In every respect,equal to ami\ ^standard, otherwise the proposals will not be considered. ____ Bids win be openedon WEDNESDAY, Apri' 19,1865, at 12 oVlock M., ond bidders are requested to be present Eachbid must be guaranteed by two responslbla per- sons, whose signatures must be appended tf>the guaran- tee, and certitfed to as being good andsufticient secmltvfor the amount involved, bysome public ftinctlonary of the United States. All proposals should be made out on the regularforms, which win be furnished on application at this ofBce. The right Is reserved to reject anybid deemed unreason- able, and no bid from a deiaulting contractor will be re- ceived. Indorseenvelope "Proposals for (here insert the name of the article offered) ana address Colonel WILLIAilW. McKIM, Chief Quartermaster, ap 15 tapl9 Philadelphia Depot Sbtifools, DANCING SCHOOL. ThbVbxt Last Ct.Ass. TERMS REDUCED, riain and Fancy Dances taught in the same class. Mr. JOSEPHM. BROWN wfU commence his last class for the season at his Academv, 25 Eliot street, TUESDAYEVEKINGS, AprU 18th, an>1 THURSDAY, April 201b. Ladles 7, Gents 8 o'clock-.20 nights for eachpupil, 12 lessons 8 assemblies. Terms re- duced for this class only. Oents$5; Ladles 93; assem-' biles,Uonday, 79 cents; I'oUta parties, Saturday, SO cents. pl4 6t^ f^OMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHXT-v-" asm. TBiunssB's OniOK, Boston, April Sth, 1849. The nndersltaed, by direction of the OoTomorand CoancU, under authority ot chapter 21th of the Besalves of the present Legislature, ^iU recelreloans to the Com- mon^-ealth on notes to run ttom six to tirelre months, at the option of theTreaaurer, and baaring Interest at the rate of leyeu and three-tentha (7 >-IO) per cent ver an-num, parable la currency. HENBr K. OLIVEK, Treasurer and BtceiTer-General of Masesachasetts._to__________ '___________________ apt DUST, DUST, DUStT DUSI', DUST, DtrST! Dovm with the Dust!Dust at this season of the year is a source of great annoyance- spoiling carpets, curtains, draper- ies,and.household furnltore and effects. This can be easily prevented, and dust thoroughly excluded n-om doors and windows of all Inds, by nsing " Brown's Patent Metallic Weatlicr Strips and IWindowBands." W. H. }. FEABSOH, 140 Washington Street, Boston. TO LET Several rooms on bath-roomflight, for lodgln^-roonw or for partial housekeeping In a pri- vate uouse. References required.Address, with name, C. A. M., Boston Post Offlce. 2tl ap 17 TO LET In Ohauncy street, in a private(Smlly, three Rooms, fhrnished or nnniroLsbcd, togeth- er or separate. Address H., Post Offlce BoxNo. 3432. J^l__________________________________________apM TO LET Two front rooma newly paintedand papered, to gentlemen and their wives, or gentle- men. Also table boarders accommodated.

Page 6: Boston Evening Transcript, [newspaper]. April 18, …lcweb2.loc.gov/service/rbc/lprbscsm/scsm1276/scsm1276.pdfBOSTON, TUESDAY EVENING. APRIL 18. 1865. NO. 10,734. IReal iBstate. FOR

Boston Evening Transcript, [newspaper]. April 18, 1865. http://www.loc.gov/resource/lprbscsm.scsm1276

Inquire at No. 12 Essex street. st^ ap 15 TO LET-Bcoms at the Campbell House, So. 6 Wilson Lane,by the daf or week. These rooms are well ventilated, and tlie house is warmed by steam. Businessmen and others will find this a conven ent location. ST&Ttitc o 15 TO LET Furnished or unfurnished,with- out boaix . In a small private family, two large rooms with ample closet room, up one flight,hot and cold water In each room, on same floor with bath-room; one a large, front room, with baywindow. House has all modem Im- Erovements reference required. Apply at 217 West Sprlng- cldstreet._______________________________*'^ P * ROOMS WANTED. Wanted a suite of un- fumlshed rooms,without board, lor a gentleman and wltc. Vicinity of the Common preferred. Address Post OBice,Box 1168. st? ap 17 OOMS WANTED. Wanted two furnished rooms on the first floor, In the vicinityot Northamp- ton and Camden streets, with or without board, suitable for a physician. Terms andreferences required, and will be given. Address, with name. Box 969 Boston Post OfBce. 8tT apIS tSoarH. BOABD WANTED-by a young man 18 years of ae In a private family. Address 8. B. SewALL, ^0. 43 Hanover street- St^ ap IS BOARD. A desirable room, suitable for a single gentleman, tobe let with board at No. 3 AU- ston street. FSTul ap 14 BOARD. A gentleman and wife can obtain asquare room on first flight, with board, by applying at je^ Davis s treet^______________________copetKap 13 BOARD To let with board, one large square room, up one flight of stairs, partly fnrnished.Ap- plj- at No. 18 Edinboro* street. " ' "^ BTuThSat^____________^______________*P " BOARD. Familiesor single gentlemen in pursuit of board, can obtain desirable rooms, that will soon be vacatedat No. 6 Allston street SIuThK___________________________________apJ5___ BOARD. To let, a pleasantsuite of rooms with boar^, suitable for a family; also rooms for one or two single gentlemen, atKo. 8 Faiker street. _CW___________________________________________apU^ BOARD. To let with board,a good sized square room, ftamished, suitable for a man and wife or two single gentlemen. 3darrison avenue. ett__________________________________________jp ij^ BOARD. To let a very fine suiteof rooms, vrith board, either furnished or uaturnlshed. Apalj- atNo 1 Hamilton place, oppositePark street church _Jc_____________________________________mU 2 BOARD To let without board, a verydesir- able snit of rooms on flrstfloor, side room con- nected, with hot and cold water suitable fora physician or dentist: also a room and side room up two flights, 618 Washington street. eopet^ ap12 BOARDING. To let to one or twcTgentle^ men a desirable room, ftimlshed, !f. a priv.lte ISmllv atthe South End. rea'ilhst aindiir-^'" ": rT- "^- '- ' Beit of rrfereuees tnver.snd reji^ir f *>< Jt'.T,':_ ______' -<N BOARD WANTED FOR aIij^ .-sl viMi-jtt. Accommodations at the seashore, Lvnn or Swamp- scottpreferred, for a gentleman and his wile, five children and servants. Address box 2ftll, Boston P.O. St___________________________________________apl5 OABD WANTED. A single gentleman ' wouldlike board in Brookllne. Hease address N. E. D., box 2787, Boston P. 0,, stating locaUtv. The vicin-ity of Walnut street preferred. References given. StU ap IS Bts (Soo'tifi. Gt li D P R I O E S , CA.LL &XUXTLE, TAILORS. 182 WAsitmoTos btkubt, o^raa tbus ELEGANT STOCK OF NBW SPRSr^C GOODSAT THE LOWEST CASH PBIOES. tc ap5 (^ L O T H DEPARTMENT. Oft PIECES LADIES' PALETOT CLOTH,At 91 o. Also, several cases of VBRY NEW 'A.t Tjorw Prices. J. FORTUNE & CO., 7 d; 9 6!nminir at,

Page 7: Boston Evening Transcript, [newspaper]. April 18, …lcweb2.loc.gov/service/rbc/lprbscsm/scsm1276/scsm1276.pdfBOSTON, TUESDAY EVENING. APRIL 18. 1865. NO. 10,734. IReal iBstate. FOR

Boston Evening Transcript, [newspaper]. April 18, 1865. http://www.loc.gov/resource/lprbscsm.scsm1276

_3t________________',_________________apl-s ^E OFFER TO OUR CUSTOMERS TODAY, SEVERAL CASESOF RICH ALPACAS, Th,e Cheapest tjoods ever oflfered to tUe public. J. FORTiriVE So CO., 7 and 9Snmaaer street. 8t______________________^_____________________ap 15_ A JEN'S AND BOYS' CLOOTHir^fOREDUCED PRICES. B In confoimlty with the cuMUges in the general market ol Cloths and ClothingMatexla^s, we now ofTor otu: stock ot Spring: and Summer Clothing, Comprising every vailety ofstyle and mateilal adapted for the season, at reduced pilcei. Wholesale purchasers will find It fortheir Interest to re.Ienish ftom our stocK, as wo shaU offer nnnsnal Inducem'^jts to the trade. ICEO. W. SIMiVIONS & CO., 3 nnrt S4 Northk felrOEt, Boston, Masi tc ap 12 nElv" S K iITt for 1805.Tbe Oreat loTeutlon of tlte Age JH HOOP SKIItXS. IKforggg ana gratriaggg. For sale a New YorkShifting-Top Buggy, but little used. Can be seen at Gareelon^ stable, Byron street. lOt^ ap 12 arness,saddle, and bridle FOR SALE. A splendid black mounted Harness, made by J. B. Balrer .ft: Co.; also anEngUsh Saddle and Bridle, used only a few times, and all m perfect order. Apply to CHAS. CROSBY,at Comee's Stable, Chardon street________________________________ 3tT ap 17 "<j SADDLE HORSE FOBSALE. fJrrC^ A three-quarters thorough-brel Kentucky fYyK Horse, perfectly broke to the Saddle,and ^'*' ^ warranted sound In every respect. Can be seen at Bamard'd Stable, Jov st eop6t1 ap 12FOB SALE A valuable famUy bay mare, long black tail and mane, sound and 'kind In any harness,good under the saddle, __________afraid of nothing, will stand writhout tying, will trot In tH minntes.Nine years old. Weight 97 lbs. Good style. Price $500. May be seen at Emeison place, Henley street,Cbarlestown, Mass. ap 15 6t1 CHARLES EMERSON. M nahn opposite Old South Chnrcb. tc E NGLI8HINCE HALU OANNBIi COAL. For sale at lowest prices, for family, tis In lots to salt. WAKBEN 4t CO.,0 21 6m 136 fltataatieetUrenioal Packet office. pBENCH FLUTING, anRElSrCII FLTTTHSTG-. At FIVECENTS Per ymrd, all vndtlu. aBirKNiD ra rwo hoi^m, ib lisbd, ii IVIME. DEMOREJST'a, t Central plane,Winter St. p tc R B M O V A L ! R E^M OVAL! THE WATERIHAIX KITCHEN FTTBNISEING STOSS ISREMOVED TO N<Mt. 5 and 7 Essex street, TmitD DooB KioH WifemsoToa st. The specialty of thisestablishment (aa heretofore) is to ftimlsh the kitchens for beginners, and replenish those al- readyeatablished_____________t.iyi mh 8 CARVED WOOD BBBAD TRBNOHBBS A aood variety jast opened,with or without "MOT lOES." Also a line assortment of Knives to match, will ke sold at low prices,at TOLMAN'S, 2M Washington Ireet^_________________________________________o T^OTHELAUIIiS! Mrs.Lev6n.ston, 78 Cairhridge street, 78, would respectf'illy Inform the Jidle of Rostonand viclnny, thatf^he contlniitia to par- chase and pay ihe highest pneos in cash for all kinds of led)es'and gent'o ca^t-i-flF clothes, onryiets. fiirnitare and jewelry, X'artios havinij soon to dispose of, will please I oatl a 01adilrei M *<>&?. iwl ap 4 A TIBST-OLASSS CLAIRVOYANT AND oil. MEDIUM, (a Lady) can be foundat No. 10 Tremont Sow, up stairs. Particular attention paid to Female Dis- eases. Cures warrantedwhere attempted Inquire for Da. STEA&NS, Medium. Hours firam 10 A. M. t 3 P.M. No. lO TremontRow. ap7 J____________________________________Iml REMOVAL! REMOVAL! REMOVAL! MRS. GIRARDIN,FaEKOH PHTSICliN, Graduated 26 yearn ago as Midwife in Paris (Europe), at- tends diseases Incidentto women and childion In or out of the city. Ladies wishing for her services during their confinement,

Page 8: Boston Evening Transcript, [newspaper]. April 18, …lcweb2.loc.gov/service/rbc/lprbscsm/scsm1276/scsm1276.pdfBOSTON, TUESDAY EVENING. APRIL 18. 1865. NO. 10,734. IReal iBstate. FOR

Boston Evening Transcript, [newspaper]. April 18, 1865. http://www.loc.gov/resource/lprbscsm.scsm1276

please leave their card sometime previous. Office and residence Ko. 15 Warren street, 8 doors fromWashington street TuThStc }e 8 NOTICE TO WATER TAKERS. Water takers who use Cochituate waterfor hand hose are re<iuested to call at this offlce and settle for the same, or they will be liable tohave the water shut otf for non-pay- ment. Per order of the Cochlttiate Water Board. W. F. DAVIS,Water Registrar. WATEa Office, 23 Chauncy street. tc ap I! SHRUBBERY. The subscriber offers forSale at his Nurseries, Columbia street, Dorchester, a large and superior lot of Shrubs, OrnamentalTrees, Vines, &c., Ac, consisting of Splrteas, Wlegeleas, Pyrus Japonl, ca. Fringe trees, Snownlroptrees, splendid new American and Kilmamock Willows, Siberian Arbor Vitse, Hemlocks, and a gi'eatvariety of other things. Also, a large lot of double scarlet, white, red and weeping thorns, worked onstocks of cockspur thorn and not subject to borers. Much of this shrubbery will be sold low to clearthe garden, ap 8 2w WM. WALES. G,PECIAL NOTICE. The following" rates lO have been establishedfor the use of Cochituate water for Hand Hose: For houses and stores not over tvrcnty-flve feetfront, Hve dollars. For each additional five feet, or any part thereof, one dollar. Comer lota to becharged double price. No charge, however, to exceed twenty dollars. Ihe Water Board reserve theright to forbid the use of Hose whenever they may think it necessary, notwith- standing a previouspermit has been given and paid for. 'Ihe use of Hand Hose is restricted to one hour before eightof the clock in the forenoon, and one hour after sun- set Per order of the Cochituate Water Board,WM. P. DAVIS, March 15,1866. tc Water Registrar.^ T^ HBiroRT^~AMBRiCAN~lETRB^IN- SURAKCECOMPANY, having cash a capital ofi Soo,ooo, and cash assets exceeding $400,000, continue to insureagainst hazards by Klre on .Herchanr disc, Fuinlture, and other property; also on buildings, fo- oneor live years, not exceeding 30,000 on one Bisli, at their offlce. No. lU Old State Honse, Boston.DIEEOTOBS: Silas Pierce, Ch's Henry Parker, Benj. E. Bates, Henry N. Hooper, John Jeffries, Jr., JacobSleeper, Ed. Wlgglesworth, A. A. Wellington, John C. Potter, John P. Ober, Solomon Piper, Paul Adams,Albert Bowker, Ebenezer Atkins, Ezra C. Dyer, Samuel E. Sawyer ALBEBT BOWKEK, President ' iRTnsOMonsE, Secretary. MTuTh&82m&Tuil^Sll)mtc (130 J. W. BSADLEV'S New Patent DUPLEX ELLIP TIC(or double) SPRING SKIBT. PWEST8, BRADLEY * CARY, (late J. I. & J. O. West) PROPRIETORS and SOLEMANUFACTURERS, 87 CHAMBERS and 7il * 81 Reade streets, New York. THIS INVENTION consistsof Duplex (or two) El- liptic Pure RBPt>ED Stkel Springs, ingeniously braio- ED TioBTLT and FIRMLYtogether, edob to EDGE, making the T0DGHE8T, mOSt i'LEXIBLB, ELASTIC aOd DURABLB, Springever used. They seldom bend or bbeae, like the Single Springs, and consequently preserve theirpeh- PECT and BEAUTiFtL Shape more than twice as long as any Single Sfbikg Sxirt. TBit Ever Has orCan be MADE, THE wonmiwul flexibility and groat comfobi and PLEASCEE to any Lady wearincr theDdplsx Elliptic Skirt will be experienced particularly in all crowded Assemblies, Opekas, Carriages,Railroad Cars, ChlechPews, Arm Chairs,/br Prohenadb andHocsi Dress, as the skirt can be folded,when in use to occn- uy a small place as easily and conveniently aa aSiLKot Muslin Deess. A Ladyhaving enloyed the Pleasure, Comfbrt and Great Convenience of Wearing the Duplex Elliptic SteelSpring Seibt for a single day will never after wards willingly dispense with their use. For Children,

Page 9: Boston Evening Transcript, [newspaper]. April 18, …lcweb2.loc.gov/service/rbc/lprbscsm/scsm1276/scsm1276.pdfBOSTON, TUESDAY EVENING. APRIL 18. 1865. NO. 10,734. IReal iBstate. FOR

Boston Evening Transcript, [newspaper]. April 18, 1865. http://www.loc.gov/resource/lprbscsm.scsm1276

Misses and Yocko Ladies they are supbbiob to all oth- ers. THEY are the best qitality In every part,and Unques- tionably the LIGBTEST, most DESIRABLE, COMFOBTABLB and EcoNouicAL Skirt evermade. FOB SALE in all FiRST-c?t.A88 Stores is this City, and throughout the United States andCahadas, Havada DE Cuba, Mexico, South America, and the West In- dies. " inquibe fob the duplexelliptic T. tc mh >1 SPRING FASHIONS. KOW OFKSIXO AT iruE. DEuofisers. t Central place, WinterMm Alt the latest Parisian Koveltie. Hoop 81drta> Frencb Corsets, Spiral Fads, Cress Elevators,&e- FRENCH FLUrmO, FASHIONABLE DBESS-MAK- INO and Finking done in the best manner. tcmh 18 ALL KINDS OF HARD AND SOFT COAL lor sale by HOWARD SNELLTNtl ft CO., ;t8 Congressstreet. ap 8_______tc__________Whan 553 Commercial street. '"g" o M E FOR in"valids7 Establlahcd'ISIT, BT DR. E. B, DENNISTON, At Spbingdalb, NORTHAMPTON, MASS. Bbfbrenoxs : Boston. JacobBioelow, M. D. ; New- York, Wulard Pabkbb. M. D. STurhlm apl ~IHB GREAT ENGLISH REMEDY FOBGOUT AND RHEUMATISM. T RTISTS' MATERIALS. M. J. WHII'Pt.E: ic CO., 85 CornliUI, Boston, Importditect, and have constantly for sate, at wholesale or retail. Artists' Materials, In very largo stock andvariety. Including the finest materials manufactured by Winsor & Newton of London, containingtbeir nnrlvalled Tube Oil Colors, Prepared Canvas, Moist Colors, Oak Water Colors, Brushes andall other articles required by Artists and Amateurs, for Oil or Water Color Paintings. Also DrawingMaterials, Includhig all varieties o( Whatman's Superior Drawing Papers, Reynolds's Bristol Boards,best English and American Tracing Cloths and Tracing Pnpeis, FastUcs, Ciayons, to., Ac. LiberalDiscount to tbsTradk AiiD PtTRquASSRs in QViKIITIBS. gTBThtc JB 1 All enfferers from the abovecomplaints, either of recent or long-standing, are advised to use Blalr's Gout and Rheumatic Pills.They can be relied upon aa the most sate and effectual remedy ever offered to the public, and havebeen universally used In Europe for many years with the greatest success. Prepared by PROt'T* HAR8ANT, No. 229 Strand, Lon- don, England, and sold by their agents, F. C. WELLS * CO., 116Franklin street. New York, and by most drug gists. Price SI 60 per box. Her Majesty's Commissionershave authorized the name and address ol "Thomas Front, 229 Strand, London," to be impressedupon the Government stamp affixed to each boxof the genuine medicine. TuTh36mt d 31 BOSTONEVSNIHG TBANSCRIPT, POBIISHBD FiVEEY EVENING (SUNDAYS EXCHPIBD. HENRY W. BUTTOJC & SOS,Froprietors, TRANSCRIPT BUILDING, Nog. 0 and Washington street.....BOSTON. TEBMS. DAILY. rsBANSvif, (In advance,) by mall, or delivered In the city proper by carriers.......................S19 W Wbbkly,Wednesday, (In advance)....................2 31 Five regular editions ol the Dally are issued, the j(rt( atH before 12 M., with Postscripts and Extras at all hoars af.er lutu c P. M. E\^NirSG TRANSCRIPT.TCESDAT EVZaVmO, APRTL 18, ISSS. "A MIGHTY FOKTBESS IS OUB GOO!" Can any words better suitthe condition of the peo- fle at thlB moment than Luther's majestic psalm? wish that tomorrow,after we shall have mingled out tears and prayers before the altar of God, this song of resolutionand trust might resound lu every church throughout the land. c. A mighty fortress is otir God, Al^nTwurk never failing; Our helper He amid the flood Of mortal ills prevailing. For still our ancientfoe Doth seek to work us woe; His cratt and power are threat, And, armed with cruel hate. On earth

Page 10: Boston Evening Transcript, [newspaper]. April 18, …lcweb2.loc.gov/service/rbc/lprbscsm/scsm1276/scsm1276.pdfBOSTON, TUESDAY EVENING. APRIL 18. 1865. NO. 10,734. IReal iBstate. FOR

Boston Evening Transcript, [newspaper]. April 18, 1865. http://www.loc.gov/resource/lprbscsm.scsm1276

is not hia equal. Did we In our own strength confide, Our striving would be losing, Were not theright man on onr side, That man of God's own chosing. Doet ask who that may be? Christ Jesus, itIs he. Lord Sabaoth his name, From age to ago tho same, And he must win the battle. And thoughthis world with devils filled, Should tiireaten to undo us, We will not fear, for God hath willed Histruth to triumph through us. Tlie Prince of Darkness grim We tremble not for him, His rage we canendure. For loT his doom is sure, One little word shall fell him. . That word above ail earthly powers.No thanlu to them, abidoth; The spirit and the gifts are ours, Through him who with ub sideth. Letgoods and kindred go, Tills mortal life also: The body they may kill, God's truth abideth still. Hiskingdom is forevor. PBEBISEirr UKCOLirS FUITEBAL. QUARTZ CRUSHERS AND PULVERI- ZERS. Theproductive capacity of the Boston Mlll- mtr and .Mannfactnring Co. Cm.'^nlng and Pulveriziug Ma-chines is now known to exceed tliat of any in use In pro- portion to the power employed. Personspurcliasing Mills for Nevada, Colorado, Califor- nia, etc., etc., are Invited to Inspect the action ofihe Co.'s machines at East Boston. Permits for admission will be fiven to responsible parties at tbeOfflce of the Co., No. 05 State street. The machines move without fWction except that of belt- ingand shafting. The steam power is consumed entirely in cmshlljg ana pulverizing the material. Onepulverizer averaging 15 horse power does the work of 24 stamps, and tbe difference in fineness ofthe yield is a floating dnat to sand. The yield Is less or uiore In pro- ppi-tion to the steam employed.eoptc mh30 ITS E WATCHES AT RETAIL. Clioiee Styles for lAdies and Gentlemen, With or wlthontAdjusted Chronometer Balances. War- ranted accutate timekeepeis. I'or sale at a LARGE REDUCTIONFROM FORMER PRICES, F rAiJsmim BY <fc EAC3IE!S:.2>EKS, lS WaaUoewn sweet. Anti-Slatbet Speechbt Andrew John- son. On the 14th of January last, Andrew John- son, then Military Governor ofTennessee, made an address before the Delegates to the State Con- vention which abolished slaveryin that State. We reprint the following extracts from this im- portant address. It shows the thoroughlyanti- slavery character of President Johnson: Gentlemen, 1 congratulate you In the sincerity ol myheart on the successful conclusion of your labors. It is the greatest work of the age. In the great rev-olution Mliich is going forward, vou have performed your part nobly. This 1 say without flattery;your woA has been well done. In this momentous sti-ug- g'.e, in the development of the greatjiriuciples of -lujn^Ubyjity y^u liavc d;.'ichar^3(2 yoar duty ri.aa- Who would have thought, three orfour years ago, that Teimesseans would have been permitted to as- semble in this capitol for sucha purpose, without being molested or driven liom its halls? Tlie mighty principles of human rightsand Iibertv have been pit- ted against monopoly and slavery.' Yesterday you broke the tyrant's rodand set the captive free. Loud applause. Yes, gentlemen, on yesterday vou sounded the death-knell of negro arfstocracy, and performed the funeral obsequies of that thing called slavery. Youhave opened the grave and let the car- cass down, and all that remains Is for you to seal the piton the 22d of February, the anniversary of the day which gave birth to the Father of his ( Jountry.Ccmsecrate your work on that day, EMANOIPATIOIf OF BI.ACKS AND WHTTBS. I feel a heartfeltgratitude that I have lived to see it done, and that I have been permitted to perform my little part

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Boston Evening Transcript, [newspaper]. April 18, 1865. http://www.loc.gov/resource/lprbscsm.scsm1276

in this great drama. The blow has been struck, and slavery lies prostrate. An insolent, insincere,ignorant, unfeeling, hypocritical, neitoious, diabolical slave aristocracy has been tumbled to theground. They who never learned tliat "Worth makes the man, and want of it the fellow;" who lived onthe real or imaginary honors of a buried ancestry, have at least learned that an ignorant, cor- ruptaristocracy must go down. Tour sessions have been, on the whole, harmonious, notwithstandingsome little bickering, which I think will all pass away with your adjournment. While you thinJt thatyou have emancipated black men, I tell you that you have emancipated more white than black menfrom the insolent domination of the slaveholder. Yes, the time was not long ago when you darednot speak your sentimonts. Even in East Tennessee, where there were only fow l.ives, and we alwsjrsspoke more fl-eely. do you notremom- berthe power wlm;h the slaveholder exercised? how manyof our people wore comi>elled to live on barren ridges and cultivate the stony spots, while a fewslave- holders owned thousand? of broad acres in the fer- tile valleys, which they tilled with theirbondsmen? Even you felt their power, and knew the contempt they felt for yon. Because, manyyears ago, I dared to speak of these things, 1 was denounced as an agrarian and dema- gogue,who appealed to the preiudices of the people. Thank God, I have lived to see the day when thepeople of my State have declared themsolvea free. I must now urge you to redouble your efforts tocarry out your work when you go hence. If you consum- mate it with the same resolution, the' foolblot of human slavery wiU be removed from the escutcheon of the State. I shall say nothing of thefuture condition ot the negro, nor of the elective ft^nchise. First reorgan- ize ; time and experiencewill regulate the rest. Let us first get rid of slavery; let there be no bickering or conflict till we getthat out of the way. This being done, we will take up other questions, and dispose of them a theyarise. Who could have anticipated three years ago that we would have progressed thus far? Let us,like wise men, hold ourselves in readi- ness to manage the new questions which may arise in thefliture. There is no need of giving oiKselves trouble prematurely. * ** Go home,"hot as rivals, butas fViends, resolved to save the State and wipe out slavery. To do this is enough for one man to livefor. A life spent in ac- complishing a resvlt like this is well spent. Though some for a while may sneer,the time will come when the nation will be utterly astonished that this great monopoly has beensubmitted to so long. Let no man, then, delude himself with the dream, the vague hope, that hestill holds on to slavery; let him cut the cord at once, and he will feel a great deal easier. Nor let anyman suppose that I think that any portion of the populace should be turned forth as loafers withoutwork. The sooner we get out of this transition stare which is always the worst the bet- ter for us,the better for the negroes. In five years i^m now the labor of the black man will b more productivethan ever, tbr freedom simply means lib- erty to work and eiyoy the products of one's labor Let nstry to comprehend the times in which we live and the great principles which are at work. There is abreaking up of old combinations, and men are coming together by their natural affinities. Old partiesare disintegrating, and new ideas thrown out among men of mind, form the basis ol new par- ties.Here is the great contest of philanthropy, of .;ound reason, of humanity, whose foundation is tlie

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Boston Evening Transcript, [newspaper]. April 18, 1865. http://www.loc.gov/resource/lprbscsm.scsm1276

Christian religion; a bow of promise, whose base rests upon the horizon, and wnose span archesthe universe. In the midst of the darkness which has been resting on the land for three years adarkness deeper than that ot the dark ages- from you, sitting in the midst of carnage, and of de^th,has gone forth a light to illuminate the world^nd teach mankind that you can be free. I feel thatGod smiles on what you have done, and that it meets the approbation of the hosts that' surroundhim. O how it contrasts with the shrieks, and cries, and wailings which the insti- tution of slavery hasBrought on the land! Look along the battle-fields of Tennessee at the new made graves witness yourcountrymen per- ishing in battle; see even the Goddess of Liberty, struggling through desolation,carnage and blood, and almost driven trom our borders! Might I not say with the poet: "0 bloodiestpicture in the book of time!" And yet out of all this gloomy scene, beams a light to illuminate theworld In future years. As your tellow-citizen, who expects in some of your valleys to deposit hisbones, I thank you again for the upble work which you have done. TKACE3 OP THE ASSASSINS. KewYork, nth. There is a confident hope at Washington that Booth will be arrested before tomorrow. TheCommercial's special Washington despatch says it is feared that the assassins have escaped andtaken refuge in the mountain fastnesses across the Potomac. Frash de- velopments point to certainparties in New York as accomplices. The Post's special despatch states that Booth has been tracedto Port Tobacco, Charles county, Md. Passengers frxim Klchmond state that tho assassina.- tion ofthe President created the greatest constarna- tlon thero, Uio peopio sxpretBlag tiioir faan of th >0ns<iugac. Preparations made by CottgresH and tbe Department. Washington, Vth. At a meetingof the members of the Senate and House at noon today Hon. Lafay- ette S. Foster, President protern, of tfie Senate, was called to the chair^ and Schuyler Colflvx chosen Sec- retary. Senator Footof Vermont stated that the object of tho meeting was to make arrangomonts relative to the funeralof the deceased President of the United States. On motion of Senator Sumner, a committee of fivefrom each house was ordered to report at 4 P. IVI. to- day what action was fitting for the meeting totake. At 4 P. M., Mr. Sumner, from tho committee ap- pointed, reported that they had selected as pallbear- ers, on the part of the Senate, Messrs. Foster, Mor- gan. Johnson, Yates, Wade and Conness.On the part of the House, Messrs. Dawea, Coffroth, Smith, Colfkx, Worthington and Washbnrn. Theyalso recommended the appoiutment of one member of Congress from each State and Territory as aCon- gressional Committee to accompany the remains to Illinois, and presented the following namesas such committee, the Chairman of the meeting to have authority of appointing hereafter for theStates and Territories not represented today: Maine, Pike; New Hampshire, Kollins; Vermont, Foot;Massachusetts, Sumner; Rhode Island, An- thony; Connecticut, Dixon; New York. Harris; Now jersey,not yet appointed; Pennsylvania, Cow- an; Deleware, not yet appointed; Ohio, Schonck; Kentucky,Smith; Indiana, Julian; Illinois, tlie del- egation; Missouri, not yet appointed; Michigan, Chandler; Iowa,fiot yet apiM>intod; Wisconsin, not yet appointed; California, Shannon; Minnesota, Ramsey; Oregon,Williams; Kansas, Clarke; West Vfrginia, Whaiey; Nevada, Nye; New Mexico, not yet appointed;Utah, not yet appointed; Washington Territory, not yet appointed; Nebrasica, Hitchcock; Colorado,

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Boston Evening Transcript, [newspaper]. April 18, 1865. http://www.loc.gov/resource/lprbscsm.scsm1276

Bradford: Dakotah, Todd; Arizona, not ret appointed; Idaho, Wallace; Montana, not yet appointed.The Committee also recommended the adoption of the following: Besolved, That the Sergeant-at-Arm of the Sen- ate and House, with necessary assistants, bo re- quested to attend the committeeaccompanying the remains of the late President, and to make ail the nece*(sary arrangements.Unanimously adopted. Mr. Sumner from the same Committee, reported the following, which wasunanimously agreed : The members of the Senate and House of Repre- sentativefT, now assembledin Washington, humbly conltosing their dependence upon Almighty God, who rules all that is donefor the public good, make haste at this informal meeting to express the emo- tions with which theyhave been filled by the apall- Ing tragedy which has deprived the nation of its heail, and covered theland with mourning; and in Airther declaration of their sentiments unanimously resolve: 1st. That intestimony of their veneration and afibctlon for the illustrious dead, who has been per- mitte<I underProvidence to do so much for bis coun- try and for liberty, they will unite in the funeral services,and, by an appropriate committee, will ac- company his remains to thoir place of burial in the Statefrom which he was taken for the National service. 2. That In the life of Abraham Lincoln, who, by tliebenignant likvor of republican institutions, rose from humble beginnings to the heights of powerand lame, they recognize an example of purity, simplicity and \1rtue which should be a lesson tomankind, while in his death they recognize a martyr whose memory will become more preciousas men learn to prize those principles of constitutional order and those rights of sivil, political andhuman for which he made such sacrifice. 3. That they invite the President of the United States,by solemn proclamation, to recommend to the people ot the United States to assemble on theday to be appointed by him, publicly to testify their eriof and dwell on the good which was doneon earth by liim whom we now mourn. 4. That a copy of these resolutions be communica- ted tothe President of the United States, and also that a copy be communicated to the afHict'd widowof the late/P*OKi('cat, ifj uii C->'.v-(;icn ot '^fri>i<\Vfi.y In her great bereavement. * The meetingadjourned. L. F. S. FosiEB, Chairman. ScHUTLEB Coi.PAX, Secretary. OFFICIAL. Arrangements atWashington for the fUneral so- lemnities of the late Abraham Lincoln, President of the United States,who died at the seat of Goveru- ment on Saturday, the 16th day of April, 1865. WAB DlSPAETMBNr,Adjuiant-Qknbbal's Officb, Washington, April ir., The following order of amuigemeuta is directed:OBSBB op PROCHSSION. Funeral escort in column of march. One regiment of cavalry; two batteriesof artillery; one battalion of marines; two regiments of infantry; commander of escort and staff,dismounted; officers of marine corpe, navy and army, mounted. CrVIC PEOCESSIOX. Marshals, clergy,and attendance; Surgeon-Qen- eral of the Unita States and physicians to the de- ceased; pall-bearerson the part of the Senate; tho hearse; pail-bearers on the part of the House of Rep- resentatives;on the pB.it of the Armv, Lleut.-Gen, U. S. Grant, Maj.-Gen. H.W. Halleck,'^Brevet Brig.- Gen. W. A.Nichols; Navy, Vice-Admh:al D. G. Far- ragut, Rcar-Admiral W. B. Shtibrick, Col. Jacob Beiden of theMarine Corps. Civilians O. H. Browning, George Ashmun, Thos. Corwin, Simeon Cameron; family;relatives; the Delegations of the States of Illinois and Kentucky as mourners; the President; Cabinet

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Boston Evening Transcript, [newspaper]. April 18, 1865. http://www.loc.gov/resource/lprbscsm.scsm1276

Ministers; Diplo- matic Corps; Ex-Presldenta; Chief-Justice and .Asso- ciate Justices of Supreme^Jourt;Senate, preceded by its officers; House of Representatives, preceded by its oftlcers; Governors of theseveral States and Ter- ritories; Legislatures of the several States and 'Terri- tories; Federal Judiciaryand Judiciary of the several States and Territories; Assistaut-Seeretarles of State, Treasury,War andNavy, and Assistant-Postmaster- General and assistants; Attorney-General: officers of SmithsonianInstitute; members and officers of the Sanitary and Christian Commissions; corporate soci- eties ofWashington and other cities, and the delega- tions of the several States; the reverend clergy of thevarious denominations; clerks and employes of the several departments and bureaus, precededby the heads of such bureausof their respective chief clerks; stich societies as may wish to Jointhe procession; citizens and strangers. , The troops designated to perform escort wlU as- sembleIn the avenue north of the President's house, and form in line precisely at 11 o'clock A. M., Wed-nesday. 19tb inst., with loft resting ou 15th street. The procession wilj move precisely at 5 o'clockon conclu.ion of the religious services at the Executive Mansion, appointed W) commence at 12o'clock M., when minute guns will bo fired by detachments of artillery near St. John's Church, theCity Hall, and at the Capitol. At the same hour the bells of the several churches in Washington,Georgetown and Alexandria will t)e tolled. Atsunrise on Wednesday a Federal salute will be firedfrom the military stations in the vicinity of Washington, minute guns between the hours of 12 and3, and a national salute at the setting of the sun. By order of the Secretary ol War, w. A. Nichols,Assistant Adjutant-General. ^teamftoats. NEPTUNE STEAMSHIP _ ^ CO.HPANY. t Line betw^ecnBoston and IVew York. A line of SUPERIOR SCREW STEAMERS run daOx between Providence and NewYork in connection with Boston and Froridenoe Railroad, maklnf; decidedJy the cheapest Railroadand StcMnb^at route lor fVetght between Boston and New York. 'i be steamers are of great powerand built expressly ttx this route. Freight taken for Philadelphia and Baltimore st low rates. Forhifbrmatlon, apply to DANIEL MASON, Sapt. B. & P. R. R., or to J.W. RiCHARDBOa, Ageut, U %Ut street.tc mk I ' FOR NEW YoWkT' VIA NEWFORX. Cabin Passaob, 95; Dkck, $4. Cars leave tbe depot of theOld Colony and Newport Railway, comer of South and Kneeland streets, at i.10 ra, daily. For steamerMETROPOLIS Capt. WUllam Brown, o Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays. For steamer EMPIRE 81AiE, Capt P. Brayton, on Tuesdays, Tbursdays, and Saturdays. Passengers by this route can take the4.30 pk Express Train and arrive at Newport one hour before the Steam- buat Train, giving time tosecure State Rooms aad iaala^ otlier preparations for the passage. Passengers by tbisLinc gohigto-Pliiladelpbla,Baltlmor. Wasblngtoii, &c., can connect with tho New Jci-scy or Camden and AmboyRailroad. BagL'age Checked fbrough. A Baggage Master accomimnies the pas><engors ttiroughto New York, 'tickets, Berttis and State Booms secured at this offlce. and at O. C. and NewportRallwav statton. GEORGE SHIVERICK, Genoml Agent. D 7 tc 82 W asblngton street. FOK NEW YOEK.Norwicli TJne, ria TSr<-w T.oBd*ak, ><pec-d, Comfort and Safety, THE FASTEST, SAFEST, AND MostKeliaMe and Only ?f ew Boat* OS THE SOUND. Trains leave Boston aod Worcester Railroad Stationat 5.30 P. M., connecting with the new steamers CITY OF BOSION, Capt, WIICOX; CUT OF NKW YORK,

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Boston Evening Transcript, [newspaper]. April 18, 1865. http://www.loc.gov/resource/lprbscsm.scsm1276

Oipt Jewett. Passengers by this line going South snd West, cross to Jersev Cftv by Debrosses streetFerry, which leaves fl-om Pier next 8bo>e Pier 39 S. R., (occupied by this line,) oou- necting with allrailroad lines South and West. Conductors K. Morriil and T. N. Turner accompany , tbe passengersthrough to Sew York. BAGOAGF, CHECKED THROUGH to FblladelpUa, Baltimore and Washington.For Tickets, Berths and State Rooms, apply at 79 Wajlt- Ington street, or Boston and WorcesterRailroad Station, comer of Albany and Beach streets. ol tc_________________C. C. OREOQ, Agent T^HE GREAT INSIDE ROUTE FOB NEW YORK. Sio.NisoTON Link, via Obotom. The Oldest I TuR Quickest!Thb SafbstI 'fHB Most Direct RofTEl Avoiorac "Point JcpithI" Cars (cave Station of the Bostou andProvidence KaK- road for the magnlKcent steamer "COMMONWEALTH," (Capt. J. W. Williams), onMONDAYS, WEDNESDAYS AXT, FRIT1AY.;. And fnr the elecrant steaTner "PLT- Resioeatiom op thbFlag or Fort Sitmteb. Oiarletton, April 17, via Baltimore, April 15. The news of the surrender of Leewas received on Thurs- day by the steamer Oceans, and caused the liveliest demonstrations ofjoy. The great event of raising tbe old flag on Fort Sumter attracted a large number of visitors toCharleston. Long before 10 o'clock the streets and wharves were thronged with people. The negroesturned out by thousands, and white citizens were largely in attendance. All the national vesselswere decked with colors, and salutes were fired at eight o'clock in honor of the capitulation ofLee. The monitors had never been un to the city before, and the curiosity to see them was great.The whole forenoon was occupied in transporting immense numbers of visitors to Fort Sumter.Detachments of marines and sailors, survivors of the assault on Fort Sumter, with the 129th NewYork and 35thMassachnsetta Volunteers, were drawn up in line to receive the visitors. Some timewas passed in examining the fott before the ceremonies commenced. From 3000 to 4000 personswere present, iaclading from 400 to 500 citizens of Charleston. GeneralsHJillmore and Andersonarrived at noon. The eyes of the latter were filled with !.toy as ho glanced at the flag-staff on whichhe was to hoist the old flag. Mr. Beecher arrived at 2 1-2 oVlock. The ceremonies commeneeil bysinging the song and chorus entitled "Victory At Last," and a prayer by the lU^v. Mr. Harris, cliai,lainin the array, the same who offered prayer when Major Anderson re- moved his command to Sumter,Dec. 27th, 1860. Then followed reading fVom Psalms by Key. Dr. Storrs and the people alternately.Msjor Anderson's despatch announcing the fall of Fort Sumter was read by Gen, Towusend. Theflag was then raised by Gen. Anderson, after some re- marks suitable to the occasion. Tumultuousshouts welcome* the throwing of the flag to tho breeze. A salute of 100 guns from Sum- ter and anational salute trom the fleet and the forts in the harbor followed. The .singing of tlia "Star SpangledBanner" ensued, the whole audience join- ing. Mr. Beecher then dellrered an eloquent ad> TheSrRTtBNOEBii of Lee and Johhstok. WaehingtKm, Vith. Lee turned ov6r in r(mndnumb- ers 30,000men. Our losses probably do not exceed 10,000 or 11,000. .Johnston has surrcnderscL his entirearmy to Sherman. 7.'he rebel Generals express a do- sire to submit to the United States authorities.Tefp. Davis at Maoon, Georgia. BaUimore, nth. Chp.rles C. Fulton ol^ the American, has ar- rivedfrom Charleston and Savannah. At tha latter place he learned that on Monday, th* 10th, Jeff. Davis

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Boston Evening Transcript, [newspaper]. April 18, 1865. http://www.loc.gov/resource/lprbscsm.scsm1276

waa at Macon, Ga. At Havana he learned from a bsn!; officer that Jeif. Davis had on dopasit in 0I> ftbo banks there, $100,000 in gold, AND FRIDAYS: And' for the elegant steamer "PLY- ~ U J. C. Gebb)on TUESDAY!}, MOUTH ROCK, (Cap . IHUUSDAYS AND SATURDAYS at Half-past Firo o'clock, P. M. _ -mm****. These boats are acknowledged by alt -LJa^TiraSHPt., exnerlenced travellers to be amonkthe lai-vest, strongest, most comfortable and best that nava ever run in American waters. In summerand winter, in storm and calm, the COMMONWEALTH and PLY- MOUTH ROCK Invariably maketho passage. V These boats land In New York at Pier No. 18 North River (foot of ConrUandt street),and invariably conneot with all Railroad and Steamboat lines for the NORTH, SOUTH, AND WEST.Tickets furnished and baggage checked to New York, Pbiladelphla, BaUimcre, Pittsburg, Washington,Dunkirk, Buflalo and the West. Passengers and Baggage for the South land at the wharf of theNew Jersey ISadroa<l, ana are transferred to the cats at Jersey City without trouble or expense. "^ , . Steamer Bertbs and State Rooms may be secured at to Washln^on street, and at the Bostonfc FrOT- idenoe Raifroad StaUon.^^^ ^ preSBERT. Agent for the Merchants' Nav. and Trans. Co., a21 tc 76 Washington street^ STEAMERS TO "IPRANCH, DIBF.CT. 'i5iS' ... -----v.,s=!S5*,...v.,i<i*ss->> .-, The General TransatlBBlio Com- pany's New Line of First-Class Side-Wheel ftteamsbips belwecnNew-York and Havre. The flret five splendid vessels Intended to be put unon this favorite route forthe Continent are as follows: WASHINGI^N............3204 tons.......... gOO H F LAPAYETTE..............3204tons... .'Sm a P.' EUROPE...................(Afloat)............. .MO ttP FRANCE...................Afloat).......swap NAPOLEON III...........(BnUdlng)...........lilMap.' ^ FROM NEW-YORK TO HAVRE. Washisgios.Wed.,Match29 | Lafatbttb, Wed., AdtHM Itates of passage-money: From Havre to 7(ew-Tork. FirstCabin...................................... V)tW Second Cabin..........................................40S ft ,,. .^ V. From New-York to Harre. FlrstCabln............ ..........................tut Second Cabin.................................." aYo'or awPa.vable in gold, or its equivalent In United States cw reney. MeHical crtttndancejree 0/ charge. ForIVeight or passage apply to EDWARD O. TILESTON, ft CO.. Agents, Revere Bank BuUdlng, 74 Franklinstreet, Boston, GEORGE MACKENZIE, Agent, !l tc______________ 7 Broadway, Wew-Tort. __jgorporationNoticgg>__ BANK OF THE METROPOLIS. Fbawow O. Fbsnch and Asa P. Pottbs are ftdmlttea mmembers of onr firm IVom tbia date. We sbaU continue business under the name oT tb "Bank of theMetropolis," as a bank of Diacoant and De- posit and Dealers in Foreign and Domestic Ex.chaa2Qa4 Uovemment Securities, Mr. French beinsr AeentlSr/ar Cooke and Co., for the distribution ofthe fz-U Lowl _apj___________ic__________^^'' WARBEH A CO. GLOBE BANK. S'oti^~is^h^by ^rrm. thatat a meeting of the stockholders of theTMobe Bank, held on the 16th day of March, 1865, it waaTote4 that the Director be. ana they were thereby fUlIy author- ized and empowered, at such timeas ther should deem expedient to organize the said Bank av^n 'Astioclation for Banking pniposes,under the laws of The United StatM, and to make all such certmcatee and do all such other ootsaa might be retjuisite thereto. In accordanne with said vote, and by virtue of the a- thority theieincontained, the Directors hare procuroA the assent of tbe owners of two-thirds of the Capital Stock,and have this day determined to organize Immedi- ately aa such Association. C. J. ^PRAGUB, Cashier.

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Boston Evening Transcript, [newspaper]. April 18, 1865. http://www.loc.gov/resource/lprbscsm.scsm1276

Boston, March 16,1865.___________5w mh W "Hf ASSACHUSETTS BANK. Noti^is iT-1- hereby giventhat atameeting of the stockholder! ofThe Massacnusctts Bank,htld on tne 22d day of Maioh, 1965,It was voted that the M^aehusetts Bank in Bost^s Hhali become a banking Assocation for cairylngon th business of banking under the laws of the Unltett States, its directors having first procureil theantboilty of tb* owners of two-thirds of its capital stock to make the cer- tificates required thereforby tbo laws of the UoliaA States. In pursuance of the said vote, and by virtue of tli authoiity thereincontained, the Directors having pro- cured the assent of the owners of two-thirds of the capital stock,have this day determined to orgauize Immediately aa such association. HENRY K. FROTHINGUAM,CftShior. Boston, March 22d, 1865. _________ >w BOSTON BAifk. Notice is hereby giveii that at theannual meeting of tbe utockholders of th Boston Bank held on the 6th day of Octobei, 1864, It wasvoted that tbe Directors be. any they were thereby fti'ly authorized and. empowered, at such time aathey should deem it expeilifnt, to orgauize the said Bank as an Aaso&H ation for hanking purposesunder tlie laws of the Unltea States, and to make all such certificates and doaltsucli other acts asmight be required to be i>en'oi*mod to effect said putpose. In accordance with said vote, and byvirtue of the au- thority therein contained, the Directors have procured the a^itent of the ownersof more than two-thirds of the capital stock, and have thii dny dotcrmlucd to oigaula immediatelyas such Association. ____ mh 21 5w J. C. "WTTiD, Cashier. mBEASUBY BEPAbYMBNTT) J- Office ofthe Couptroi.ler of tijk CrRRHKOT, \ Washington, March J5,1865. > WhereaSjby satisfactory evidencepresented to the un- dersigned, It has been made -to appear that ^^I'fr Globe National Bakk ofBostok ' In the City of Bosloa, In the county of Snfl'olk, and state of Blassachusetts, has been dulyorganized under and according to the require- ments ot the act of Congress, entitled "An Act toprovide a National Currency, secured by a pfedgt- of TTnlted State* bonds, and to provide for (hecu'culatlon and redemptioD thereof," approved June 3,1864, and has complied with all fre provisionsof said act required to be comnlied with be- fore commencing the business of banking undersaid act: Now, therefore, 1, Freeman ClarVo, OomptroJier of tho Currency, do hereby certity that"ihe Gflohe National Bank of Boston," in the crty of BoBton, in the county oT Suffolk, and State ofMassacnxisetlit, is authorized to com* mence the business of Banking nndrr the act aforesfUd. Intestimony whereof, witness my hand and seal of offloew the twtnty-flrth dav of March, 1865. L.S.} .(Signed) FR^OEMAK CL\RKE, mb 27 lOw {Comptroller of the Cvureooy. _--_^ _^_ ^____^___ operateson COBHS for % cents eaob, or Five Dollars pet yewr. ^MJiTZgi^ posite FraukliB. Persons leavingoraers ai above, o: ai ii lemole plaee,. will be waited uoon at their residences in Boston orri- cinltv.S;. B. t>rder9 can be sentthrongh the Post Offlo9. tc____________________^____________ ap 4 FIRST-CLASS DRESSMAKING ANI> CLOAK BOOMS, at No, 1 Kneeland Piace. Also Mnu D. A. Atwooi>'8system of dress cutung tansbt. Patterns- cut to lit the foim for 35 cents. Fin ting audpluking doneai short notice;. 6t% ap 15 NEW ENGLAND DYE HOUSE. Thi. Dye Hou.^e is said to be the best in themited States. Goc-ds returned in one week. Office 144 Court stroett near the Kcvere Bouse. .._ ^'?*.___?L- ___ MANTEL 0IiO KS AND BBONZBS The undersigued are importlag, the present seasoa k

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Boston Evening Transcript, [newspaper]. April 18, 1865. http://www.loc.gov/resource/lprbscsm.scsm1276

large variety ot these goods, trom tlic most desiraUo Parlstas manufacturers, including pattfrasof rh6 roost artistic character and rare qnaUty i*CTer before oserM tor UU.8 in th/s counlTy. ___ Ata l w^shlBirto&8treM4'l ;^SdBOO^^F MUt>i(IiL GEMtTt TBE HOvK MUI.ODl&T contains Marly OneHnndrcd Favcitte Sonps. It U ex( eediiialy conveuleat m size and noat and attrasiive lu style. Thi^anlaue vol uie, bound In oloih,and comprislnfi choice oleces wnluh in another form cos>t3 twice asmary dollars, wll be sftftt, DOPtae* ft-ee, '*n receipt of thiity-ftve cents, by OhlVBn

BOSTON DAILY EVEKING TRA1*8CR1PT, TUESDAY. APRIL 18. 1865. EVENING TRANSCRIPT.! TUESOATETEMNO, AFRU. 18,1863. Ik Accobdjlmcb with the recommendatioa of the National and Stateanthorities, the office of the Transcript will be closed tomorrow, and the publication of the Transcriptomitted on that day, -------------------1 ---------------- The Crimb of Tbeason. The people of the UnitedStates should not, in this emergency, be fooled into sacrificing their instincts of justice, becausethose instincts may be stigmatized by the tpeak and the wicked lis revengeful and vindictive.Keverge, as an impulse and motive of govern- ment, is of course silly as well as uctehristian and ,barbarous, and is as unworthy the brain of a statesman as it is of his heart; but the fire of thatsacred indignation, that righteous wrath, which the spectacle of crime rouses in all just and ear- nestnatures, should not be quenched in the tears of a sentimental pity, because weaklings may confoundjustice with vindictiveness. Tne temper of the public mind should be as stern and solemn as thetime, equal to the duties of the hour and keen to appreciate its lessons. When the malefactors ofa nation are in a plot to destroy its benefactors, it is well to remember that society is not organiiedfor the purpose of giving impunity to traitors and assassins, and that lenity to hardened criminalsis cruelty to honest men. The new President has given, in a short speech made yesterday to theclergymen of the District of Columbia, his views of the folly of making clemency serve the purposeof injustice by grant- ing bounties on anarchy, rebellion and assassina- tioif. The people, he said,"have always consid- ered and treated arson as great crime, and mur- der as the greatest ofcrimes. I will show them the greatest crime is treason, and as such it shall be punished." There isseverity here, but no vin- dictiveness. Treason, in our country at least, is a crime against societyitself, and the safety of society depends on its being not only morally de- tested and abhorred, butrighteously punished. Booth and his accomplices struck at the life of the nation's Chief Magistrate,and succeeded. Jeff. Davis and his accomplices struck at the life of the nation itself, and the fact oftheir failure does not lessen the enormity of their guilt. The whole mass of individual murdererssince Cain have not produced in forty centuries so much misery and ruin as these malignant traitorshave wrought in fonr terrible years. Pkof. Caienes of Dublin, the able author of "The Slavi! Power,"has contributed to the Bel- fast Northern Whig an article on Mr. Lincoln, ftom which we extract theclosing paragraph: Mr. Lincoln is one of those historic characters whom Carlyle, in the better days ofbis earlier and saner genius, would have loved to sketch. Amjng the men who have been summonedti'om the unam- bitious pursuits of every-day life to savo and guide nations In their hour of trial, the

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Boston Evening Transcript, [newspaper]. April 18, 1865. http://www.loc.gov/resource/lprbscsm.scsm1276

uncouth and vat not undignified fltjore of the Illinois rail-splittor and villaee lawyer "mean white"of Kentucky by birth win hold by no means the lowest place. But for the migration of his Citheracross the Ohio, Abraham lilncoln, it is f-trange to think, might noiv be risking the woithlosB life Ola"cracker" or "sand-hiller" in the armies of Jetterson Davis. If it were not for Mr. Carlyle's adhesion tothe principle of "hiring ser- vants for life" as one of the forms of the iule of the strongest, it is easy tosee to which of the two leaders In the civil war his sj-mpathies would turn. Jeliar- son Davis is a typeof the professional politician- practised in the conventions of government a mas- ter ol those arts ofnational "palaver" and diplomatic "having the honor to bo," which excite, even in an unreasonabledegree, Mr. Carlyle's dislike and con- tempt. He is an American statesman with a Euro- pean varnish.Abraham iancoln, on the other hand, with his genius for silence, and its correlative, o.;ca- sional(felicitous speech, struggling irttb the diaScul- tles of an imperfect early education the fine spiritin the rough garb blending Arm purposes with hu- mane heart a deep religion with a genuine, ifhomely humor seems made for Carlyle's pen. Tlie formal, decorous, courtly figure of the founderof the Union will contrast strangely with the ungainly and "Tipolh;,->.i'> ;.jrpo,-;T.etr,iat,) its destinedrestorer. GBorae W'ashinglon audAbrahaia Lincohi a pare honest^- void of self-seeking. Whenthe heafs of party pesBlou and intemational.iealousyhaveabatod, when detraction has spent itsmalice, and the scan- dalous gossip of the day goes the way of all ttes, the place 0Abraham Lincoln,in the grateful alTectlon of his countrymen and in the respect of the world, wUlbesecondonly,ifltbesecond, tothat ol Wash- ington himself. The Stabiiitt of thb Govbrnmbnt, even on the'day whenthe nation was mourning the as- sassination of its head, is significantly indicated by the fact that thesubscriptions to the Seven- Thirty Loan on Saturday were over 83,700,000. Political assassinationis the height of folly as wen as crime when directed against the President of a Republic. Its objectcommonly is to over- turn a government by the death of an individual orfjjnily; but the safety offree States does not depend on individuals or families, and as long as a dosea men remain in them,there can be no diffl- calty in obtaining a Chief-Magistrate. ASSASSTKS ASTBBTISIITO FOB A BBWABS-Among the circumstances tending to show that the plot to asssassinate Mr. Lincoln, and othermembers of the Administration, was encouraged by the seces- sionists, is the advertisement whichappeared in the Selma Despatch, an Alabama paper, last December, and, which was copied into thenewspapers here, of- fering, for a stipulated reward, to murder Mr. Lin- coln, Andrew Johnson andWilliam H. Seward. That such an advertisement, remarks the N. Y. Evening Post, Instead of bemgrejected with indignation, as it would have been In any community no^ brutalixed by slavery, shouldhave been admitted into a news- paper, indicates an approl>atlon of its purpose. The following isthe advertisement: "Onb Million Dollars WAirrED, TO have Pback ev the IST OF MARCH. If the citizensof the Southern Coniederacv will furnish me with the cash, or good securities for the sum of onemillion dollars, I will cause the lives of Abraham Lincoln, William H. Seward and Andrew Johnson tobe taken by the 1st of March next. This will give us peace and satisty the world that cruel tyrantscannot live in a 'land of liberty.' It this is not accomplished, nothing will be claimed beyond the

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sum of fifty thousand dollars, in advance, which is supposed to be necessary in order to reacu andslaughter the three vUlaios. 1 will give, myself, one thousand- dollars toward this patriotic purpose.Every one wishing to contribute will address box X, Cahaba, Ala. x, December 1,1864." A Letterfrom Secebiabt McCclloch. The following extract from a private letter written by the Secretary of'lheTreasury, dated Washington, April 16th, 18 B, will be read with interest: My dear Sir: You will perceivethat the new ad- ministration is inaugurated, and the wheels of gov- ernment are not stopped fora moment. My hope is, and my bel lef is, that this great national calamity will teach t<yt.he worlda lesson which will be of the most beneficial character to our republican form of government; thatit will show that the assassination of cur Chief-Magistrate does not atfect in tne slight- est degreethe permanence ot our institutions, or the regular administration of the laws; that an event whichwould have shaken any other country to the centre, does not even stagger for a moment a govern-ment like ours. Very truly yours, H. MoCullooh. John A. Stewart, Esq., New York. FcKERAL Sermons inPress. J. E. Tilton & Co- have in press and will publish immediately a volume contajf^g the principalsermons preached in Boston on thefnMiof Abraham Lincoln. THIRD EDITION. BY TELEGRAPH TOTHE ismiDMiYEiiEiiieim. VBOU WABHnrOTOH, IRANSPORTAIIOK OP PBiS, IIRCOLJI'S REMAINS TOILLINOIS. MESSRS. SEWARD STILL IMPROVING. THB COKSPIBACT INYESTIGATIOX. 8EABCH FOB THBABSABSDrS-OVE BX- FOBTES CAPTTTBEO. THE NEWS IN RICHMOND. GEN. liBE'S VIEW OF THB CASE.{^eeial Detpateh to the Trantcript.l nioobr Pr*p4Me* t* Surrender. CALLS UPOK PRES. JOHNSONHI8 RESPONSES. THE.StcJrSaS^een overcast during the forenoon, a fresh h^^eztf from the Southeastprevailing. The range (if {h'p thermcmeter has been Srom 12 to 58 degrSfcs. - To the ParochialClergy op the Diocese OF Massachusetts. Severend and dear Brethren: At the service to be held atnoon, tomorrow, I recom- mend that there be used the Exhortation, General Conlfession, Lord'sPrayer, and Litany; and, also, the following prayer, which I have appointed for use next Sunday,and which will pe printed in the Chris- tian Witness of this week. Your faithful brother, MANTONEASTBtTBN. Tuesdaj/, April 18,1865. O Almiffhty God, our heavenly Father, sauctlfv, we beseechtnee, to the people of this country that great calamity, whereby we have been bereaved, thronglithe violence of wicked hands, of the Chief Magistrate of this nation. May the liyely sense of the losswhich we have sustained lead us to cleave more closely to Thee our God. In our deep afflictionmay our whole trust and confidence be placed in Thy power and mercy. And do Thou graciouslybring it to pass that all things may work together for the good of this nation, for the utter overthrowof sedition, privy conspiracy, and rebelUon, and for the prosper- ity of Thy cause and Kingdom.Lookwithplty upon the/hmily of him whoso loss we mourn. Comfortrthem with a sense of Thygood- ness; lift up Thy countenance upon them, and gire them peace. And we beseech Thee withThy favor to behold and bless Thy servant, who is now the Presi- dent of these United States, andall others who are in authority, giye them a right judgment in all things; and direct and trosper alltheir consultations to the safety, honor, .ind welfare of Th^ people, and to the bringing about ofa righteous peace. And overrule all the events of the world to the advancj- ment of Thy kinmlom,

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and Tliine own glory, through Jesus Christ our Lord; to whom, with Thee and the Holy Ghost, beall honor and glory, world withut fad, /imm, GENERAL HAIXECK AID STAFF GOING TO RICHMOND.Washington, nth. The remains of President Lin- coln will probably be conveyed from WashingtonThuisoay morning to Illinois by way of Baltimare, Philadelphia, New York, Albany, Buffalo, Clevelandand Toledo. The time schedule has not yet been de- termined on, but about one week will heoccupied m reaching Illinois. Heretofore the Diplomatic Cori> have, on occasion of funerals, beenplaced after Senators and Repre- sentatives in the programme. They have always raised in thisa question of etiquette, but now thoy have been placed before the members of Congress, theposition to which they claim, they are enS led. Ibis is considereuliiroper, both as to their charaotoraa Representatives of foreign governments and as distinguished euests of the nat:on. PresidentJohnson has for the present an office in the Treasury building. Both Secretary Seward and his sonat 10 P. M. were improving. The Treasury Department authoriaes the state- ment that the Secretaryof the Treasury is not pay- ing government indebtedness by 7-30 notes, but such persons as holdvouchers can make arrangements to subscribe to the loan under certain conditions through theagency of Jay Cooke alone. Investigations by the civil and military authorities are still in progressand the testimony of a large number of witnesses has already been taken. The investigations areproceeding quietly however, as it is deemed best for the ends of Justice that no public- ity shouldbe given at present to facts elicited. Mosby has proposed to Gen. Hancock to surrender himseuand command by Tuesday under the same terms accorded to the Army of Northern Virgini*. Theconditions proposed by Mosby are under consid- eration. This morning, nearly all the clergymenof the Dls- trcit white and black waited upon President John- son and were introduced to him. Thevthenpre- sented to him through Rev. Dr. Gurley a series of resolutions, expressing their estimateof the charac- ter of the deceased and their detestation of the enor- mous crimes perjietratedlast Friday night, and pledging to Johnson their earnest sympathy and cor- dial support in his newand trying position. The President i eplied, thanking them in the warm- est terms for the very kindmention of him, and for the tondere<l support and encouragement. He spoke with feeling of thegreat personal and public worth of his lamented predecessor. In assuming the grave responsibilitiesImposed upon him in obedience to the requirements of the Constitution, in consequence of thissad dispensation of Providence, he felt his own individual insufliciency, and the necessity of kindcounsel and cooperation of all triends of the country. fhat support he should endeavor to deserveby shaping his course by those principles of right which miderlie our government. He said he bada sure faith that if we adhered to those principles the Almighty would save the nation. He beiioyedthe nation hfwi a great mission to fulfil, and that God would not allow it to perish before its workwas done. They had alluded to the murder of the 4ate Presi- dent and to the attempt upon SecretarySeward's life in just terms of indignation and horror. The assas- sination ot any man, high or low,was acrims of the blackest-dye; especially diabolical was it when the blow was struck at a loved andhonored head of a great nation, iu the very moment of triumph. But this horrible i i-ime was only a

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portion of the greatest of crimes the attempted assassination of the nation and he beli,^ vcd that theAmerican people felt it to so. Treai^cn, ;ie said, was a crime, and not merely the diftereno) of pu^lieopinion, The President closed by ago n thanking his visitors for giving him^ at this time, lieir GodSpeed. The inters'ew was very impressive and solemn. Soon alter tli,: beads of the various Bureaus inthe Treasury Department paid Iheir respects to the Pres- ident. Judge Lewis, the Commissioner of theIn- ternal Revenue, briefly alluded to the cordial support of his fellow-ofBcers to the Administration.The President's response was similar to that addressed to the clergj-men. During the day a numberof senators and governors called upon the President. Governor Oglesby said Illinois would give toPresivlent Johnson the same support as they had given to the late President. Gen. Halleck and statt'are making preparations to visit Richmond. Washington, Uth. To E. S. Sanford: We think that both theSecretary and Frederick are better. Thev are sleeping quietly at this ten A. M. (Signed) C. A. Sbwabd.Washington, l8th llA. M. No clue has yet been obtained of Booth or the other assassins. It is nowconceded tbat they made the'r escape to one of the lower coimties of Maryland, and thence crossedthe Potomac into Virginia, and that they had a number of accomplicea in this city and in Marylandwho aided in their escape. Numerous arrests are constantly being made in this city and in Marylandof persons supposad to be Implicated. From the large number of detectives engaged it would seemImpossible for the villians to C8;;ape. An officer who arrived here today from Richmond says that tbeassassination of the President was com- municated to only a few ofBcers, and that it was also madeknown to Gen. Lee, who said he deeply regret- ted the deed, as the South could have made betterterms with Mr. Lincota than with Mr. Johnson, who Is a border State man. It is said that the assassinof Secretary Seward has been captured. Government officials are very reti- cent upon the subject.Kappa, astottkdhtg oevelophekts. Plot to Mtestroj tbe Entire dorern- naent. JEFF. DAVIS AND OTHERREBELS THE INSTIGATORS. SA8SIN CA-XTGHIT. EXCITEIMENT IN WASHINGTON. ISpecial Deepatohto the Boston Transcript. THE ASSABBIirATIOirHEWB IK BICHMOHO. REBEL PRISONERS DELIGHTED.IndlSTUHtlon of our Soldiers. JVeio Yori, Wth. The World's Richmond despatch says Saturday eveningabout 9 o'clock Gen. Ora and Gens. Ould and Muliord were settling up in the Spottswood Hotel,when a telegram was handed in announcing the assassination of* the President. Ould exclaimed,"that is the worst View the Confederacy has yet had. Lee surrender is nothing to it." Sdbn the newsspread through the city, and a vague sense of coming calamities seemed to oppress the people.Some say the loss of the President sets the war back to Sumter. Senator Hunter left the city posthaste, and Judge Campbell also expressed the desire to leave. Lee spent the night in close reticence.Another correspondent of the World says, when Lee heard of the assassination of the President heshut himself up and refused to hear any details. The rebel prisoners in Lihby h<ad a meeting declar-ing they were soldiers and applauded the assassina- tion. A numbc of citizens who could not concealtheir delight at the event were arrested. The Union troops wanted a victim and thought of the fiendDick Turner of Lihby prison infamy. Prompt action on the part of the Commandants saved him fromthe indignant soldiers. THE CAPTTrBE OF THE MOBILE 70BT8, GOOD SUCCESS OF WILSON'S EX-

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PEDITION. Keiti York, lert. The Tunes's despatch, dated Blakely, Ala., 10th, says the capture of SpanishPort took place on the 8th. Twenty-two heavy parrott guns were got within half a mile of the Fort,and half as many mortars, while the dther batteries were advanced to within one-third of a mile ofthe works. At a given time all, together with the gunbeats, blazed away, and at tbe same time thesappers and miners advanced, killing every rebel artillerist that showed himseU'. This was kept upuntil shortly after midnight, when the firing from the fort almost C3as- ed. An hour later the fortsurrendered, together with Fort Alexandria. The guns of the two forts were immediately turnedon Forts Hughes and Tracy, but failing to elicit a re- ply, it was found they had been abandoned.Shortly after the (hll of these forts, news ot the fall of Rich- mond was received. Immediately afterthe troops advanced upon Blakely and captured it after a severe fight. Wilson's expedition has beenvery successful. Ha captured Sehua, Marion and Plantersville. FBOK NOBTH CABOUNA. Kew York,18*. The Herald's Newbem corre- spondence of the 13th, gives report that Johnston was hbout tosurrender. A State convention to con- >sist of delegates tcom all the counties is called for the 14thof May. It appears by an order issued by Gen. Sherman, announcing to his army the surrender ofLee, Sher- man has reached Smithfield, where be dates the order April 12. BEfOBXEI) ABBESTS.lfev> Yorlr, Uth. The Herald's Washington des- patch S4ys it is reported that the assassin, who en-tered Secretary Seward's house, has been arrested. It is certain that one of the assassins, probablySur- rat has been taken. Samuel Mattam of Hookstown, Md,, the one who wrote the letter found InBooth's trunk signed "Sam," has been arrested. Fittsbury, Pa,, nth. A man, supposed to be J. WilkesBooth, was arrested by Provost-Marsha Coulter, at Greensburg, and is held for identification. TheMayor of Pittsburg has sent on a person ac- quainted with Booth to identify him. fittshurg. Pa.,nth. The person arrested at Greensburg and supposed to be Booth, is now stated not to be him,LEE'S BEXmiN TO BICHKONO, Kew York, IBth. The Herald's Richmond des- patch of the 10th saysLee arrived in that city at 3.39 yesterday, and that he and his staff were received with the greatestenthusiasm by the populace, cheer upon cheer being given. Even the Union officers raised their caps(?) to him. SUBBEHDEB OF BEBEL GEN. LTOV. Cairo, Ill.,llth. 850bales of cotton passed up the Riveryesterday and today, principally for Cincinnat- A despatch from Paducah announces the surrender ofthe rebel Gen. Lyon to Gen. Meredith. Washington, 18th 13 l-a P. M. Additional evidence just receivedfrom Richmond shows that the rebel leaders, headed by Jeff. Davis, were privy to the infernal plot,which has but par- tially been carried out. They Intended not only to assassinate President Lincolnand his Cabinet, but also Vice-President Johnson, Speaker Collix, Senator Foster, the Presi- dentpro tem. of the Senate, and Chief-Justice Chase. They thought by this consummation to destroy theGovernment altogether. ITie assassin of Secretary Seward has been cap- tured and identified, lireexcitement here is in- tense. ______________________ KAPPA. THE UTTBDEBOTTS SCENE IN 8ECBETABTSEWABS'S CHAMBEB. Washington, nth. Geo. F. Robinson, a soldier and a nurse on Secretary Sewardon Friday night, has related circumstantially the proceedings in the cham- ber, from which it appearsit was through his hrave and determined endeavors that the consummation of the murderous

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designs of the flend were frustrated. According to Robinson, Fred. Seward, Major Sew- ard and Mr,Hansel! were all wounded on the stair- way. As itobinson opened tbe door to learn the cause ofthe disturbance without, a man struck at his breast, In his band he had a long knife, the blade ofwhich appeared to be twelve inches in length and one inch in width. Robinson determined to opposehis progress, and raised his arm to parry the blow, and received a wound in the centre of his foreh3ai; the knife glanced off. aud the assassin's hand came down upon Mr. Robinson's face, and felledhim to the floor. Miss Seward at this juncture escaped from the room and ran to the Iront window,screaming m-rr- der. The assassin leaped to the bed where Mr. Sjw- ard lay, still apparently in alifeless condition, and gave a tremendous blow at his (ace. He missed his mark, however, and almostfell across Mr. Seward's body. By this time Robinson had recovered and caujht hold of the assassin'sarms. While he was thus at- tempting to hold the assassin, the latter struck Mr. Seward on the leftside of the face and then on the right sit'e. Thea.'sassin then raised up, and he and Robinson cameto he floor together. They both got on their feet, Re Mnson still keeping hold'of him. The assas- sinreai led his left arm over Robinson's shoulder. and eniJcavored to force him to the floor. Finding hecould not handle Robinson in that position, he dropped his pistols, which had been forced agalnatMr. Robimion's face in the hand which was around his neck. He caught hold of Mr. Robinson's rightarm with his left hand, and struck bonind Robinson with the knife. They still continued to strugglefor a few momfnts, Robinson forcing him towards the door, which was open, with the intention otthrowing him over the banisters. When they had nearly reached the door Major Augustus Sewardentered the room, and he (Robin- son) called upon him to take the knife out of the assassin's hanu.Major Seward Immediately clutched the assassin. The latter then struck Robinson in the stomach,knocking him down. He brokeawav from Major Seward and rushed down stairs. During the scuffle,when, he cannot say, Mr. Rob- inson received a woimd quite serious, some two inch- es in depth, onthe upper part of the right shoulder- blade, another a little lower down on the same side, and also aslight one on the left shoulder. While struggling with the man near the bedsido he had clasi>ed thewrist of the right band, in which was the dagger, and did not release his hold until knocked down bythe assassin, near the door, and after Miuor Seward had come to his assistance. He returned to theroom after he found that the assassin had escaped and found that the Secretary had got off the bedon to the floor, dragging with him the bed-clothes, and was lying in a pool of blood. Upon going tothe Secretary he found no pulse in his wrist, and ne stated to Miss Seward, who had re-en- tered theroom and asked if her father was dead, that he believed he was; but upon a second exami- nationRobinson ascertained that hie heart was still beating. The Secretary laid 'I am not dead, send forthe police and a surgeon and clos* the bouse." Robinson then placed th3 Secretary upon the bed.telling him that he must not talk. Mr. Seward did not speak after that. Mr. Hansell told Mr. Robinsonthat having been alarmed by the noise, he had started for the Secre- tary's room, and was met Inthe stairway by the assassin and thrust to one side. Mr. Robinson remained with Mr. Seward until 11o'clock next morning, when he was removed to tbe Douglas Hospital. Bvery attention is being paid

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to this brave man by the attendants of this institntion, and his condition is very favorable. EEBPE'^TTO THE LATE PBKBIDET. GREAT MEETING OP MERCHANTS. The Merchants Exchange was tbrongedat a meet- ing called at aeon today by the Board ot Trade, for an expl-ession of opinion on the partof the merchants of Boston with regard to the terrible calamity now afflicting the nation. Geo. Wm.Bond, Esq., called the meeting to order. The following list of officers was chosen; Presldent^GeorgeC. Richardson. Vice-Presidents Wm. Ropes, Daniel Dennie, Ja- bez C. Howe, Israel Whitney, C. O.Nazro, S. H. Walley, J. I. Bowditch, WiUlm Perkins, J. H. Wol- cott, B. K Bates, George IJbrarmore.Avery Plum- er, G. W. Cocnrane, Charle* J. Morrill, Thomas A. Goddard, E. B. Bigelow, William Claflin,Arthur L. Devens, Ezra Famswortli, Augustus Flagg, Henry N. Hooper, George Hvde, Edward D. Peters,Samuel B. Pierce, Stephen Ttlton, George W. Wheelrlght, illiam Endicott, Jr., N. H. Emmo!!*, AndrewT. Hall, Robert B. Storer, WiUiam Gray. Secretaries Edward Atkinson, C. W. Dabney, Jr., George W.Wale^. After the prayer by Rev. Phineas Stowe, Hon. Goo- 0. Richardson, in a few felicitous iremarksdepicted the virtues of the late President and his great capac- ity. J. S. Ropes, Esq., presented the(bllowhig res- olutions: Whereas it has pleased Almighty God, in his In- scrutable Providence, topermit the sudden and violent death of Abraham Lincoln, the Chief Magis- trate of the United States,whicii event has hawed the bereaved nation in the deepest sorrow, the mer- chants of Boston,profoundly affected by the calamity wMch has thus befihllen them, in common with the rest oftheir fellow countrymen, have assembled in their usual place of public concourse to give suitableexpression to the emotions of sadness and awe which fill their hearts, therefore Besolved, ThatPresident Lincoln, by the steadfast- ness of his purpose, the calmness of bis judgment, the wisdomof his discrimination,' tbe unselfishness of his disposition, the strength of his Integrity, and thepurity of his patriotism, which enabled him to complete, with distinguished succe&s, amid circum-stances of unparalleled embarrasment and difficulty, lour years of official duty, and which led tohis in- vestment for a second term with the highest honors and responsibihties of the Repubii:; hasinshrmed himself in tlie warmest, most affectionate and mist grateful remembrance of the Americanpeople, who now mourn him as a wise and good ruler, and who will ever regard his Ufe, character,and public ser- vices as an illustrious ornament to their history, and as a rich and choice fruitage oftheir natural polity and institutions. We thank God that he was not removed from us till his work wasessentially accom- plished, and that the seal of martyrdom was not set upon his career until it wascrowned with the uni- veiBal applause, gi'atltude and affection of his coun- trymen. 'Besolved, Thatwe offer our deep and heartfelt sympathy to the afflicted family on whom this fearful visitation hasfallen with such crushin.; weight, and with whom the whole nation is now mourning. May the Godof all consolation draw near to them and comfort them m this hour of sorrow', enabling them tocast all their care upon Him, and to feel that He doeth all things well. Jlesoived, That we tender toAndrew Johnson, the associate and successor of our late lamented Presi- dentj the assurance of ourdeep^interest, aud most cordial uipport in the new position, and amid the weighty responsibilities towhich he has been so un- expectedly called. We rejoice that we have full con- fidence in his earnest

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and self-denjing patriotism, his faithflil performance of duty, and his intense antipa- thy to rebelsand traitors of every graie. We pray Almighty God to have him in His holy keeping, and to grant himabundantly the wisdom,' strength, aud resolution of which he stands in need; and in com- mon, aswe feel assured, with the whole American peojile. we pledge to him and to every member of hisCabmet in the fullest measure, our sympathy and support. Besolved, That in this atrocious deed ofassassina- tion, we recognize the natural development and cul- mination of treason and rebellion,those foulest aud most dangerous of all crimes against God and man, and ths legitimate oftspringof that system of social wickedness iu which all these abominations have originated. We pledgeourselves, and we warn our comitiymen, in view of this fearful event, and of the chapter of horrorsto which it forms an appropriate sequel, to hold no parley with treason, rebeUion or slavery nowor hereafter, but to leave them unpro- tected ana unpitied to the curse of man and the righteousjudgment of God. Hesolved, That a copy of these resolutions b3 trans- mitted to the President of theUnited States and to the lamily of the deceased President. 6BEAT SYHPATB7 HEETIKO IN KOK- TBEAL,Montreal, C. E., 18(4. The public union prayer meeting last night was densely crowded. The meet-ing throughout was characterized by the deepest so- lemnity, and a feeling of earnest sympathypervaded the whole of the vast multitude. Clergymen of all denominations were present. Hev. Mr.Kempt said they had come together to express their sympathy with a great nation, the i>eo. pieof which were this night bowed low in sorrow. Shall we refuse to bov with them, with them drapeour hearts in blackness and shed a tear over him who was a victim of a cruel assassin. The fallof Abraham Lincoln was a common sorrow to all men within whose breast* beat true Christianheart?. Let them drop a tear for the mighty Chieftain, slain by the assassin's hand, and pray Godthat the calamity may be converted into a blessing. Rev. Mr. Bonir said he lelt as if he had suffered apersonal loss. He recounted many Christian truths and charitable acts of the President. He felt thatthe death of President Lincoln would hind both na- tions heart to heart more than anything hesiaes.Hev. Mr. Bond of the Church of England, s lid he could not t -ust himself to speak on the subject,nor did he know how to characterize this cowardly, das- tardly and fiendish act, whicli the inmostheart abhors. A number of mhiisters spoke in the same feeling manner. At the conclusion of theservices the solemn tones of the Dead March In Saul was pealed from the or- gan and the meetingdispersed. STTBBESDEBED OT7EBILLA8, Louisville, A'j)., nth. Tlio guerilla Chief, Major W. Taylor,Captain Taylor and five of his men who surrendered themselves undr the late oiitt ot Q. faimer,aniTVO k^rv, FBOCLAMATIOK OF OOV. BBAMLETTE OF KENTTJCKT. IjotiisviUe, Vith. Gov. Bramlettehas issued the following order on the death of President Lincoln, EXECCTIVB PEPABTMEsr, Frankfort,Ky., AprU 17th, Wfi3;) By the hand of .in assassin a great grief has been brought upon the country.The Chief Magistrate of the nation, the President of the Suited States, Abra- ham Lincoln, has fallena victim to rebellion hate, and under the revengeful blow of an assassin he has fallen at a time whenhis great qualities of humanity were so hopefiilly invoked for the healing of our na- tional wounds.With no stain of a vindictive nature upon his soul, with a great heart of generous sym- pathies and

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Boston Evening Transcript, [newspaper]. April 18, 1865. http://www.loc.gov/resource/lprbscsm.scsm1276

broad humanities his untimely fall has bowed the nation's head in mourning. On Wednesday, the19th inst., at the hour ol 12 o'clock, let every church bell be tolled throug'iout the Commonwealth. Onthai day all business be sus- pended, and all business houses closed. The public offices will be closedand draped iu moumin:?. The citizens of Kentncky are invoked to pay tbathomaoe to the nationalgrief which such a great and mourn- ful calamity inspires. (Signed) Thomas Beamlbtte, Governorot Kentucky. Thb Teacbebs of thb Pitbuo Sohoom f Boston met at the rooms of the Natural HistorySo- ciety on Saturday, when Dr. Augustus A. Gould made a statement respecting the appalling eventwhich had plunged a nation into gloom, and suggest- ed that it would be more in harmony withhis feel- ln(,s and what be felt was due to the occasion, if the lecture should be postponed until thenext week. This proposition was unanimously adopted by the teachers, after which a prayer wasoffered by Rev, Dr. Gannett, and appropriate and Impressive remarks were made by Professor Wm.B. Rogers and Rjv. B. 0> WatitB, The metinj thga <^HrDil, The Old Flao on SdMluit. The .Toumal con-tains the addresses of Gen. Anderson and Rev. Hen- ry Ward Bcecher, on the occas^m of restoringthe Flag to Fort Sumter, on the avniversary of the day that it was pulled down. Gen Anderson spokeas follows: I am here my friends nd fellow citizens and brother soldiers, to perform d^ .?^it of dutywhich is dear tomy lart, Kndw'i' -S:.^. > present appre- ciate and feel. Did I i> uiAiiig;, of my ovinheart, X would not . I'oak; but I have f-cendesirK( by theSecic ': w to make a few remarks. By theconsideiali. appointment of the honored Secretary of War, I am privileged to fulfil the cherishe<lwish of my heart through four long years of bloody war, tb restore to its proper place this very fiagwhich floated here during peace before the first act of this cruel rebeUion. Thank God, I have livedto see this day! applause}' that I have lived to be here to perfonn this, perhaps the last act of dutyto my country in this life. My heart is filled with gratitude to Almighty God for tbe signal blessingswhich he has given us blessings beyond number. May all the world proclaim "Glory to God in thehighest! on earth peace ami good wi,l toward man I" We wish our Umits would allow the publicationof the whole of Mr. Beecher's masterly address, but the want of space forbids. Mr, Beecher beganas follows; ' On this solemn and Joyful day we again lift to the breeze our father's fiag, now agam thebanner of the United States, with the fervent prayer that God would crown it with honor, protectit from treason, and send it down to our children with all the blessings ol civil- ization, liberty andreligion. Happilyno bird or beast of prey has been inscribed upon it. The stars that redeem thenight from darkness, and the beams of red light that beautiiy the morning, have been united uponits folds. As long as tho sun endures, or the stars, may it wave over a nation neither enslaved norenslaving! Great applause. Once, and but once, has treason dishonored it. In that insane hour, whenthe guiltiest and bloodiest rebels of time hurled their flres upon the fort, you, sir. turning to Gen.Ander- son and a small heroic band, stood within these now crumbled walls and did gallant and Justbattle for the honor itad defence of the nation's banner. Applause.} In that cope of fire this gloriousflag still peaceftiUy waved to Uie breeze above your head, unconscious of harm as the stars andskies above it. Once it was shot down. A gallant hand, in whose care this day it has been, plncked

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Boston Evening Transcript, [newspaper]. April 18, 1865. http://www.loc.gov/resource/lprbscsm.scsm1276

it from the ground and reared It again, cast down but not destroyed. After a vain re- sistance, withtrembling hand and sad heart you withdrew it from the height, closed its wings, and bore it far away,sternly, to sleep amid the tumult of re- bellion and the thunder of battle. In the storm of that assaultthis glorious enslgft was often struck, but, memorable fact! not one of its stars was torn out by shotor Bhn. Applause. It was aj)roPbecy. Itsftlii: "Not one State shall be ?.5 . ^"n t^is nation by treason."Applause. rhe tnlfilment Is at hand. Lifted to the air today, i proclaims, alter fonr years of war, not aState is blotted out. Applause. Hail to the flag of our fli- tiiert Bd our fiag! Glory to the banner thathas been through four years, black with tempests of war, to pilot the nation back to i>eace withoutdismember- ment! and glory be to God who, above all hosts and banners, hath ordained victory andshall ordain peace! ^Applause. Wherefore have we come hith- eii pilgrims from distant places? Arewe come to exult that Northern hands are stronger than South- em? No! but to rejoice thatthe handsof those who detend a just and beneficent government are might- ier than the hands that assatUtedit. Applause. Do we exult over fallen cities? We exult that a na- tion has not fhJlen. Applause.) Wesorrow with the sorrowful; we sympathize with the desolate; we look upon this shattered fort andyonder dilapidated city with sad eyes grieved that men should have committed such treason, andglad that God hath set such a mark upon treason that all g6s shall drostd and abhor it. Applause.)There win be public services In Shswmnt Church, cor- ner of BrcoUIue and Irtmont streets, at12 M. The society worshipping In the Brattle Street Church are Infoimed that in conformity tothe recommendation from tbe Deportment of State at Washington, the church will be open andappropriate religious servieea held at 12 o'clock. The Harvard Street and Rowe Street Societies willmeet for a limited service at the Harvard Street Church, at VI o'clock. Ihere will be funeral servicesiu the Central Choreh, Winter street, at Vi o'clock. In accordance with the recommendation of theauthor!- tits at Washington, there wiU be services at the Shawmut Avenue Baptist Church, corner ofRutland street, at li M. Services snltd to the National mourning will be held Iu Emmanuel Church atnoou. DorcheiUr. In accordance with the recommendation of the town authorities, St. Waiy's Churchwill be open for divine service at 12 M. tomorrow. ^ Jamaica Plain. Kev. Dr. Thompson's Church willbe open for a united thneral service at 12 o'clock. I.cilury. 8t. James'Church will be open for prayerstemorrow at 12 o'clock the time appointed for the funeral of the late I'residtnt of the United States.ErooVir^e. Religious services will be held In the Baptist Church tomorrow at*l2 o'clock M., as a tributeof respect to the memory of uur late lamented Fresklent. Chcrhstmtn.. Approrriate funeral serviceswill he held ill tbe t'lilveif alist churx^h tomorrow at 12 o'clock noon. Rev. F.. H. Canon will officiate.CITY NOTICES. The sale of Boots and Shoes at the store of T. E Moseley & Co., Summer street, willcontinue a short time. Goods are selling at very low prices tc f 10 LADrBS Sandals, yir quality, sizes2>i, 3 & 3 <; cmly 60 cents per pair at BraziUan Rubber store, 29 School street. tc d 21 Real BrusselsCabpets in elegant Persian and chintz figures, the newest and finest productions, Just received fromthe trade sale of the 12th inst., and for tale at $2 25 per yard, by the New England Oar- pet Co., 75Hanover street. aplJ 3t The "Portsmouth" Six-Cord, Soft-Finish Spool Cotton meets the exigencies of

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Boston Evening Transcript, [newspaper]. April 18, 1865. http://www.loc.gov/resource/lprbscsm.scsm1276

the times ;|is not liable to knot, the twist being even and compact. The "Amoby" Enamelled Thread isfi>r superior to any glad finished. These cottons are produced in all colors. ap 18 Cabpets at ReducedPeices. The trade is at- tracted to that place which sells at the lowest prices. Our entire stock, whichis complete in all its varie- ties, is marked down, and we are daily receiving in- voices from the NewYork sales, all of which will be sold at the present panic prices. New Enoland Caepet Co., 76 Hanoverstreet. at ap 18 Carpets. Don't Pay the High Prices. Crossleys English Tapestries for $1 87 per yard.Union Ingrains for 62 cents per yard. Woolen Ingrains from 76c to $1 per yard. Floor Oil Cloths for60 cents per yard. Canton Mattings for 45 cents per yard. We are daily receiving goods from the NewYork sales at panic prices, and our customers will be sup- plied correspondingly low. New EnqlandCab- pet Co., 75 Hanover street. 3t ap 18 Brussels Cabpets at Old Pbices, $2 25 per yard. This invoiceof Carpets, purchased at the last trade sale in New York, comprises the latest patterns in beautifulPersian chintz and other modern styles, also Hall and Stair Carpets to match. This is be- lieved tobe the cheapest lot of fine Carpets in the market, being a reduction of one half of the former highprices. New England Carpet Co., 76 Hanover street. apl7 3t JWonetarB. SALE OF STOCKS AT THEBROKERS' BOARD, TUESDAY, APRIL 18. Suggestion to ladies. A lady correspondent suggests to herfemale friends that a rosetta of hlack and white or a bow of the same be worn by every la- dy for theusual number of days to show their grief at the national loss. Dorchester Lower Mills. The lectureon "bunshine" by Rev. Dr.Willets of New York is post- poned fh)m this evening to next Tuesday,April 25. Gold was quoted in New York, at 10 o'clock this morning, at 146 3-4. Oil. The attention ofpersons desirous to Invest in oil stock is directed to tbe advertisement of the Sala- manca Oil andRefining Company ia another eol- umn. RELIGIOUS SERVICES TOMORROW. Hollls Street Church willbe open for religious services tomorrow at 12 o'clock. The public are invited. Hawes Place Church,South Boston, wBl be open for commemorative services at 12 o'clock. '1 here will be services hi Rev.Dr. Miner's Church, Sehoo street, at 12 o'clock. Servlcts will be held ot the Shawmut UnlversalfstChurch at 12 M. Ihe social meeting appointed for Thm'S- day eveidng, April 20, will be dispensedwith. 'there will be fbneral services with an a-ldrcss on Wednes- day at 12 o'clock iu the First Chiu-ch,Chauu;;y street. Services appropriate to the occasion will be held m the Old South COdtA at 12 M.Funerel soltmnlties anproiiriate to the occasion will be Ltld in all the Methodist churches in Boston,at 12 o'clock, agretalSle to the request of the Acting Secretarj- of State. Ihe South CoiigregatloualChurch, the Church of the Unity, antl the Church of the Redeemer will unite In rell- Rlous services(as requested by the Secretary of State) at the South Congregational Church, Uiiiou Faik street, atnoon. There will be funeral ser^'Ices at tbe church, Somerset street, ihe Sabbath School childreu willbe present with their teachers. St. Mark's Church, Concord street will be open for a Pi ccial Berviceat 12 o clock. Ihere will be religions services at the New Jerusalem Chuich, Bowdoln street, at 12o'clock. riiblic funeral services wHI be held Iu Berkeley street Cturcb from 12 to 1 o'clock, consistingof addresses, with mulc end devotional servlcte. 1 hcri will be.ftmeral services at the Church of theMes- siah at Uo^o^ 22,00 American Gold........................14S 1-2 *:9,400......do..............................MS

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Boston Evening Transcript, [newspaper]. April 18, 1865. http://www.loc.gov/resource/lprbscsm.scsm1276

1-) 10,IK)0......do...............................14j 3-3 SICWI.......do.:........................8 S..14JSSOOO.......do..........................s 5..145 3-1 5W)fl.......do...............................147 tlSDO U. S.Coupons...................May..144 1-4 f60.........do.......................May..144 10 r. S. Coupon 6'8,1881 .................lOS 1-2 7fOO........do...............................108 5-S m.........do..............................m1-2 S?40U. S. Twenty's...................old..107 1-4 liCO.........do................8maU..oId..l07W SSCiO.........do........................new..in 1-4 810O..........do.......................iiew..lu706,610........do...... .................uew..l07 1-3 IflO.Coer. S. Ten Forties......................ftl 1-J 6tM U.8. Certiis. Indebtedness.......Oct..93 5-S tl6,00.......do........................July..99 1-3 taOtO Mas-iachusetts 5s, 1894...................98 KlOOti N. T. * Boston Air Line 6'8.............43 SO Boston Waterrower Company...........4.', S-S - 10(1............do...........,............b60..4S 1-i 100 Cary ImF.rovcii*!atCoirrany...-.........It lit Boston and Ml,Ine EnluVlnJ..............lls -4 5............do.............................1142 Boston and Providence Railroad.........12-5 lOCheshiie Kailroad.........................45 14FitchburgRailroad.......................109 1-2 8............do.............................110 16 Old Colony Kailroad......................1056 PhU. Wilmington and Baltl. Railroad.....2 SOVemiontand Mass. BaUroad..............4125 Western liailroad.........................132 150 Boston Conner Company...................2 1-4100...........;do...............................2 1-3 100 Dana Mining Company.....................1 ISO MadisonMining Company..................3 1-8 400 Mesnard Mining Company.................4 55 MlnesotaMining Company................l5 1-4 ' fiO Phtenix Copper Company.................17 2 Pittsburg MfuingCompany................65 100 Pontlac Mining Company..................1 7-3 100............do.".............................2iiOStar Copper Company......................5 1-5 100 Toitec Mining Company....................2 1-2650............do...............................2 5-S 45Qulncy Mining Company..................75 25 Bay State MiningCompany...............16 250 French Creek Copper Company..........80c JVLARRIAO-ES. In this city, 16thinst., by Lous Rimbacb, Esq., Mr. John B. Watmach to Maria Connonall, both of Boston; 17th inst., Mr.George J. Webber to Anna Conradia, all of Boston. 11th Inst, at Trinity Church, by Rt. Rev. MantonEast- bum, D. D.j Benjamin Plekman to Caroltoe L., daughter of the late George E. Head. I7th Inst., byRev. B. C. Waterston, Mr. Philip S. Swain of New York to Miss Ophelia F. Nason of Boston. 17th Inst,by Mr. Ltocoln, Mayor of Boston, L. A. FotU- lev, Esq., of France, to Miss Marie Koeth of Germany.'At Charlestown, isth lust, by Rev. G. Gardner, Captain AllenC. HoUofEhsworth, Me., to Miss AlmenaL. Brag- don of East Trenton, Me, At Dover, 15th Inst, by Rev. L. J. HaU, Mr. William T. Eobbins toMrs. Mary J. Daniels, both of South Boston. DEATHS. In this city, 16th inst, Wm. B. Bradford, to the78th year of hla n"0 tiy^'uneral servicej t* St Paul's Church, on 'Thurs- day, at 10 A. M. I8th Inst., atDlscharjjcd Soldiers' Home, Timothy D. WiUlama of South Solon, Me., S9. 16th inst., Mrs. Eliza R.Sampson, 60 yrs. 6 moa. 16th met, Mr. Reuben T. Robinson, 72 years 7 months 22 days. 17th inst,of conenmpUon, Mary, wife of M. H. Sampson, 27 years 5 months. At Charlestown,I6th inst, MaryLouise, daughter of J. W. and Joanne R. Adams. ?j yrs. 10 mos. 16 days. At Chelsea, 15th inst., ol'consumption, Mrs. Harriet T., v,ife of Simeon C. Williams and daughter of S. W. and Betsy Howardof Bamstable. At Lynn, 18th inst., Mr. John H. Shedd of Boston, 60. I^r- Funeral Thursday, at 11 A.

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Boston Evening Transcript, [newspaper]. April 18, 1865. http://www.loc.gov/resource/lprbscsm.scsm1276

M., at the residence of Mr. E. Flint, Jr., Nahant street, LynUT At ISewburyport, 16th inst, Hemy C.Littlefleld, 31 yrs. 6 months. Killed on the 6th Inst, at High Bridge, near Bnrksvlllej Va., Capt JohnD. B. Goddard, 4th Mass. Cavalry, aged 35 ycare, son of the late Francis and Charlotte Goddard ofLiimsvlilo, Ky. Cboui8\ille papers please copy, At Newbem, N. C, Assistant-Surgeon Dixie C. Hoyt AtPalermo, Sicily, 15th ult, Mrs. Charlotte Gardner, a native of Boston, widow of Benjamin Gardner,Esq., for- merly tTiiited States Consul In that city. Stpttml Notkes. The Suffolk Sonth Conference,which was to meet at Berkeley street Church on Wednesday, is postponed one week. Per order ofCommittee, ap 18 ItH H. J. PATRICK, Secretary. Members ot the SVtb Unattached Co.. Inf., M. T. M.,(Harris Rifles) are ordered to meet at the armory, WEDNESDAY, the ISth inst., at 10 o'clock. A.M., inblack pants and coats, fattgoe caps and white gloves, fir pamde. O. R. BLaNCHARD, ap 18 Itl Captain.BROOKUNE, MASS., APRIL IT, 18S5. In Board ol Selectmen. Resolved, That In accordance with therecomacndation expressed by the National Authorities, the several clergy- men of this town berequested to open their churches on WEDKESDAY, the 19lh inst, at twelve o'clock noon, for suchservices as they may deem suitable for the occasion as a tribute of respect to the memory of ourlate 1 ameated President, and that the belis ot tbe several churches be tolled trom eleven untiltwelve o'clock. In pursuance of the foregoing Resolution, the citizens of the Town ofBrookline arerequested to assemble In their several places of worship, at twelve o'clock noon, on Wednesjiay,the I9th inst, for the pui-pose of soienmiztog the occasion with suitable religious eeremomes. Perorder of the SeleetmciL ap 18 HI B. F. BAKER, Town Clerk. KOTICE. In accordance with an tavltatlonemanatlnff from the Katlonal authorities, the City Council of Roibury, invite the citizens to unite withthem in solemulziug theoccaslon of the funeral sei-vlces of the late President of the United States,on WEDNESDAY, the 19th inst, at the Chjrch ot the First Religious Society, where an address will bede- livered by the Rev. Dr. Putnam; prayer, by the Rev. Dr. ThomrEon; reading of Scriptures, by Rev.Mr. Bartholo- mew, and other appropriate ceremonies. Members of the various branchee of thepublic service of the city, and sU eltizens who desire are requested to meet at the City Hall, (r theday above named, at U o'clock A. M., where a pro_ cession will be formed under the direction ofCol. P. R^ Gninry, Chief Marehal, at 11.30 A. M., and move from the City Hall through Dudley, Eustls,and Wasbingtou streets, to the Church. The galleries will be resen'cd for ladles. Doors open at 12M. Xt Is dcelred that buslnes* be entirely suspended for the day, ai:d that tbe usual emblems ofmourning bo displayed frcm ail dwelliufrs, placee of business, etc., etc. By Older of the Committeeof Arrongemonta. UEORGE LEWIS, Mayo- BOKbtuy, Af til 17, mt, tt a II Fontbem Episcopal Mission.The annual meeting of the Soulheru Episcopal Mission will be held at the Church Reading Room,Thorsday, 20th Inst. jit iM o'clock P. M. J. GARDNER WHITE, ap 18 Itl Secretary. JOHN B. GOUGH WiUlecture In Tremont Temple SITNDAY EVENING, April .to, at 7W o'clock. Subject "Temperance." Ticketswith reserved seats 50 cents at Ditaou's only, 277 Wash- ington street Other tickets 25 cents. 14tap 14 MR. FAPAlVn Would most respectfully inform his patrons and pupils, k at in consequenceof the recent National Calamity, his Classes will be postponed until Friday, the 21st tostant 4t ap

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Boston Evening Transcript, [newspaper]. April 18, 1865. http://www.loc.gov/resource/lprbscsm.scsm1276

17 NOTICE. Inconsequence of ihe National Calamity, the Assembly at Papantl's Hall, announcedfor Thursday Evening, April 20th, la hereby ikdefisiteltpostponko. sti Per order of the Managers._________________________________________apl7 ALL GERMANS OF BOSTON Are Invited to meet onWEDNESDAY, April 19th, at 8 o'clock, P. M., at Williams Halt., comer oI^ Washington and Dover streets,iu oi-der to pass resolutions with regaixl to the Calamity which has befallen the American Nation bythe Death of PRESIDENT LINCOLN. ap 17 '2tt I'HE COMMITIEE. TO THE CITIZENS OF DORCHESTER. Inaccordance with the recommendation of the Acting Secrctaiy of State, at Washington, the Committeeap- pointed by the citizens of Dorchester to consider and pro- pose come appropriate mode ofconducting tbe funeral obse- quies of our late lamented President, advise that religious servicesbe held in the several churches In town, at 12 o'clock M., WEDNESDAY next, and that the beUs ofthe several churches be toiled, from 7 to S and 11 to 12 iu the morning, preceding such services.Dorchester, Aprlinth, 1865. It ap IB ~^ ~rarey: ;J Eight Lectures on the Horsel Mr. J. 8. RAEEY hastheHonor to announce to the cltl zens of Boston and ita vicinity, that he will give a coarse of eightLectures on "THE HORSE," beginninvj onUie '26th of April, at s. O. Wheeler's Circus Tent comer ofHarrison avenue and Newton street. Owners of wild and vicious animals are requested to send Intheir fiddre^s^s, together with a uote mentioning the bad traits of their horses. Half the expensewill be paid by the management to those who bring their horses mr from this city. All letters mustbe addressed to JAMES M. NIXON, ap 14 6t Tremont House, Boston. MAYOR'S OFFICE, CITY HAIX.BOSTOK, April 17,1865. In accordance with the recommendation of the State De- partment atWashington, the undersigned requests the citizens of Boatolf to suspend their usual avocations onWEDNESDAY, the 19th of April, at the horn- of twelve O'clock, at noon, (wMch Is the time designatedfor the Fnneial Ceremonies of the late Resident of the United States at Washington), and to repairto their several places of worship, there to implore the blessing and favor of Almighty God In thishour of the Nation's bereavement 'Ihe bells of the churches In this city will be tolled at two o'clockP. M., which Is the hour appointed for the movement of the funeral cortege at Washington. apl8It F.W.LINCOLN, Jr., Mayor. LKilTED STATES CHRISTIAN COMMISSION The undersigned gratefullyacknowledge the following voluntary contriluHons made to aid of the wound- ed soldiers, to hsused exclusively in purchasing stores to be appropriated through the personal agency of Dele-gates of the U. S. Christian Commission, now on tbe field of batUe: liles T. A. Saylor, Ash- jlst Cong.Ch., South by.................... 50 Hadley Falls, by Rev Cong. Ch.,NewSharon, I S. J. Meiwin.........6400Me.................... ) 9 OO Union Service, Hadley. 60 72 Mfcth. Epis. Ch., Bum- Sab. Seh., North Had-ham.ile.............. 20 00 ley....................30 66 Citizens of Windsor, Vt 'Cong'l Ch. and Soc, (add'l)................600, Rutland..............3400 A. R. Plumtr, Industi-y iHigh Street Cong. Ch., Me.................... SOOiAubum............... 6355 6 20 Miss Louisa Luf kin, I Brunswick,Me....... 6 00 1"N. C."................. 1000 900;Coug'l Ch., Ea-itstreet Johiisbury, Vt........1100 Rev. N. Goodridge, do. Rev Wm. Abbott's Ch., KastHew Portland, Me.................... Cong. Chj Sfowc, Me.. 12 75 Chmch, West Albany, Vt.................... 13 00Weth. Epis. Ch., Bar- ton, Vt................ 28 00 Widow's Mite, North Leominster........... 5 00 Soldiers' Aid

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Boston Evening Transcript, [newspaper]. April 18, 1865. http://www.loc.gov/resource/lprbscsm.scsm1276

Society, Dunstable............lOO 00 A Friend...............SO 00 1st Cong. Ch. and Soc, Falmonth............ 7015-- ------- - 5 00 Cong, and "Christian' Sos, W.Randolph.Vt. IS 00 West Church, Haver- hlll, (add'l)...........2053 J. D. liltou, Sauboni- ton.N.H............. 600 Union Service, Central Cong'l and Lawrence St. Chs,Lawrence,. (Fast DayColl'n).... 8100 Teachers and Pupils of Maplewood Youug Ladies' Institute,rittsfleld.............25 00 School District No. 5, Atkinson, Me.........26 80 School District No. 8, Atkinson,Me.........1215 Orthodox Cong'l Ch. and Sab. Sch., towns- 2700 end Centre........... 1000 3312,FreewUlBapl., Meth. -----., I and Coug'l .'^ocs., do.....................USOOi 1 unbrldiie, N. H.. .. 1255 5-"-.,^>?sWSl....v,..' '2 OOlLadles' !fol,ilra' W Cong'l Ch. aha Woe.. , -t..^., Ttathm-af"" Sutton................ 1778Centre,',!.........'.". 5S 59 Mr Wilder of Hanover. Elliot Society, Newton Comer................24218 YoungChildren of Mrs Elizabeth Dslrvmple of ^ewton Comer, (^ilvtr saved before tbe war.............. JuvenileSoldiers' Aid So., Andover......... CoH'n in Free Ch., do.. Mis Dove and family. 95 ( Col'n by Rev 8. Ranks,Cumberland, Me..... zw Salisbury and Amesbu- ry Chr'nCom'n......17218 Fast Day Union Service byRev A. F. Bailey, Natick............... 47 00 Cong'l Ch., Middleton. 73 70 Rev. A. Sargent's Ch., Holhemess,N. H.....25 OS Cong'l Ch. and Soc, Wilmington, (Fast DayColl'n)........... 19 00 SoutuReading Soldiers'Relief Soc, by B. Mansfield.............100 OO 2 00 Coll'n in Beverly bv Rev Geo Pierce, Jr... 36 00 EsptCh., Wattrville, Me....................8100 Mrs. Sarah A. Ford, Westfleld.............10 00 Citizens of Topsbam,Vt.................... 8150 Union Fast Day Service Coll'n, Gan&er......42 35 Coll'n In Swanton Cen- tre,Vt, by Rev H. C.Lcavitt............ 62 80 A Friend, New Hamp. ton................... 80 Cong'l Sab. Sch., Hop-kinton................ 10 78 A Friend............... 600|a Friend............... 10 Christian Soc, Sharon. 5189KorthCong'l Ch., New Congi Ch.. CentreOs- \ Bedford...............16300 8lpee,N.H............ lOOOOuess KnittingBee, UnitedChurche8,Clare- \ SouthHingham...... 3000 mont.N.H...........6900; --------- E. C. Society,Barre, I (2,42171 Mass..................22 60Am't previously ac- Cb. ^d Soc, Monte- knowledged......35,13849 rey, by Rev. Jno, I ^ ------ Todd, D.D............ 24 00 Total................37,610 20 Any furthercontributions that persona may desire to make tjjrough this agency, may be sent to either of theun- denlgned at their places or business. EDWARD S. TOBEY, Cfaaiimaa Aimy Committee, B. Y. M. C.Ass'n. CHA. DEMOND, 91 Washington at. Executive Com. U. S. C. C. It D M ISusiness Notices. Do notDelay. Now to the thne to do It. HARRIS CHAPMAN'S CEDAR CAMPHOR kills Moths effectually, andcheap enough If yon attend to It now. Every dmgglst has It____________3t ap 18 AbraliKin Itineolit.BLACK CAMBRIC AKB CHEAP BLEACHKD COTTON, In any quantity, for Decorating. ap 17 2t SHEp'arDBROIHERS, 520 Hanover st HUli. Department. BLACK AND WHITE CHECK SiluKS NOW OPENINGAT 8PALDINC, HAY& WALES', SCCCESSOBS TO PALMER, WATERMAK & HATCH. IS Winter street, tcav8 "If'twere done, when 'tis done. Then 'twere well twere done qnlclcu." Why suffer on ftir weeksand months, 'the horror of Dyspeptic pangs. Or live a martyr unto Headache dire. Or fight withAgue, Duiness, Vertigo, And al) tbe pains the human stomach bean, WhenPLAKTATioNBiTTEsawlUaffoidrellaf Speedy and permanent. And more, Xhey are the pleasantcst medicine Ibat sufferingman hath ever swallowed. Iheir cures are quick, and permanent as quick. 1 hen suffer not butInstantly procure A bottle of Pt.aktatioh Bittbhs; and thy cheek Shall bear again the rosy lint ef

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Boston Evening Transcript, [newspaper]. April 18, 1865. http://www.loc.gov/resource/lprbscsm.scsm1276

health. And life be jcerry as a marriage IhiU. WSTn ap U Frencb PRINTS AND PERCALES, IN CHINTZCOLORS, NOW OPENTNG, AND iSEtiLINO AT VERY LOW PRICES, AT SrAXiDING, ELA.Y & W^ALKS',SCCCESSOltS TO PAIMER, WATERMAN b HATCH, 13 Wintorstroet. StUl Ciretr Bednottea FROMOUR FORMER PRICBS. ALL OCR COTTONS AND FLANNELS OBEATLT REOTTCE ) DT FBICS. Cases OfBleached Cottons in T-8 and S-4 wido. BALES OF AU. WOOL PLANNEU VERY I.OW AT WHOLESALEAKD RETAIL. SHEPABD, NORWEIX *> BBOWIV, SS and d4 Winter street. fe apt Oreat Keauotion IirHOOP SKIRTS AND CORSETS, AT MADAME DEMOREST'S^ 1 Ckhtbal FiAOa, WiHTia srain. Will be soldtot one month, a large lot of HOOF SKIBTSABD FBEKCH COBSETS. The best stvlcs In the market at ajreat redaoUon trou former prices. to mh IT Heotoli gh vgh:a.m:s, IN KEW AND BEAUTIFUI. STYUBS,AT GREAT REDUCTION FROM FORMER PRICB* SPAUDINO, SAY Ot WA3LEB, SDCCKSeOSS TO Palmer,Waterman A Hatett. * IS WINTER STREET. tc ai>( ' JoblerB' iPrieea. I 3H DABK MADDER GOODS,ISCCENTS TO IS OENTS PER TARD. XXTBA lUEEES CorrespoadAclr Low. roasjtuar WASHBURN,WELCH& CO. By PiCSAdB OB PiKCB, e.& 64 FBAKKLIK STREET, 30ST01T. Dlht Furniture. SPECIAL NOTICE.To make room for the Wholesale Spring Trade, we shall offer, for a short time only, AT PRICES TOCONFORM TO THE TIMES, The entire stock on hand which we have manuihctured expressly forfirst class City Retail Tbadb, comprlslofi over ONE HUNDRED ELEGANT BLACK WALNUT ch:a.m:bjeiisets, Frcm medium to highest priced. Also, about Two Hmr- PHEU PARLOR SXTITS, In Hair Ciotbs,Reps, Broeatellei Plash, Terry, &e. &c. It Is fluescient fi>r US to say we warrant the quality of oargoods equal in evtwy rpcot to tlxgit of any other hoUSC la the country. , To those contemplatingmaking purchases this Spring this sale affords a most favorable opporttmlty, aud we in* viteexamination of the goods at our SALESROOMS, 8 and 4 Holmes RIoek, HAYMABEEI Q IT A B E ,BEAI. Oi HOOPEB, ap 11 ts FmiKiTijaa MAircrACTDKU*. t ( CUcberluir A> Soutt' JPIAIVO FORTES.CONCERT GRANDS, GRANDS, SQUARES AND VPRiaHTS.7 The lutromeDta nowmaaufaotcredbytfalsVell knewa, long-cetablisbed firm, are the resolts of oearl/ half a ee> tnry of itady, experimentand Improveraenta. PeMwsiaf greater advaotage* than ail ether makers ttamgk tUs long iieriod ofIncreasing experience, two geDeratiou ef active, enwgatic minds have been aMidaotuly employed lapetMcttiig their prodactioiM. THE CHIOKBRING PIANOS Are now at the heal ot all the Inctrnmentamanufliotared In this coontry. For rrtiTT and sokoxitt of tone, &>- Axci or rnrua, iBOBOuoaKssa audsirxAsii.riT at STBtCTUBa, tkey rank fuemost of all. Wltb the merely mechanical (xoeUenoe whichresolu '.^ffgely from the tngeniooa laventiona of Hesni. Cnsc- XBiKO themMlvei, mcy combme abeauty, delleacy, aa4 poetry of tone which la a rare charm, and leema to de- pend more on theiatelligence than en the kandiwerk 0 the maker. Among the well-kaowB Pianlsta of Boitoa aalNew Tock,whowe the "CfllCKERUfG PIAHO" Im re*c- eoce to these of other makers In the oeantry,marM mentloaed: OWO DBESEL, RICHARD HOrFMAH, BUQO LEOHHARD. WM. BCH.UtFBMBHRa,B.J.LAKO, FBEOBBIOK BlKKRAir, i. C. D. FABKEB,' i. N. PIOHOWSKI. WAREROOMS, No. 340 Washingtonstreet, BostoB* No. 6S3 Broadwart New York. 8TllThtc__________________________f<*H rover ABaUer's CBI.EBKATSD FIRST PREMIt'M SEWISl'tl MACHINBS. Principal Salesrooms: 13 Summer

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Boston Evening Transcript, [newspaper]. April 18, 1865. http://www.loc.gov/resource/lprbscsm.scsm1276

street.................BOSTON. 488 Broadway.....................NEWTOEK. Branches In all the ErinclpalCities. tc Take Dr. Warren's BlUons Blttera Foi Bumors In Uie Blood and Imperfect Clrcalatloa. lute_________________________aplli Au Amrrloau Oenileoian, A graduate ot Harvard University, at preaeiitreeldeat t Yevey, Swlczerland, will take a few Biji into Ms fam- ily, where they wi 1 h>ye favorableopportanltles for re- ceiving s thoreo^h ^rainmg m tbe Classics and Mathe- matics tor a collegiateconrse,togethet with every advai- tage for studylog the French, Oermaa, aad Italian Lsa- giiapee. Frrterms and tollest referenees, anpir by letter to F, C. FosTBK. ^ Court street, Boston, Maas. TuThSImmk tl For DjspeiMsla, (NDIGESTIOir, COSTIYEMESS, PILES, AMD AL UIFURITIE j OF THE BLOOD, USBSARSAPARII^LA. & TOMATO BITTEB8. FREDK. BBOWX. Propiletor, Cor. State and WaslWurton street*.Sold by all reapectable dealers in mediclaea. TaThSTto nhli Drs. l<ighihul Can dailr he eensoltedbetween the hui oft A. H. aa< i.u, on CATABBH, DEAFMEM, ~Ain> DIBEASES OF THE ETE, EAR AHDTHROAT AT THiiB BaaiBKiioa. So. itBo^Laroa st, ARTIFICIAL T8 Inserted wlthoat pain. enBtc faarApril S. , BOOTS AND SHOPS SeUIng at greatly reduced prices. In aatlcipatien ( 4 change In oar fijm. Ur BUFUS FOSTER, (Ul Foster A Fabady,)oaa k found m our gentlemen's departmeat. THOMAS8. HO^^ELET * CO., ap t tc Summer streH, o r ot Hawler. D. wTbTb, CnJl tat D. W. B. Bitters! At yourDragguts, or Boaa * Co.'s, M Trcaent street, tale U -4

BOSTON DAILY EVE^NING TRANSCKIPT, TUESDAY, APRIL 18, 1865. POSTSCBIPTI QUARTER TO FOUR,P. Ml. Latest by Telegraph. BEPOBTS ABOtri BOOTH. A Omik of Conspimtors Sarronuded by Csraliy.Baltimore, Mil,, \th. A eentleman who was at Pcint Lookout yesteraay A. M., waa informed by ancfBccr of one of tbe gunboats that Booth aacisome 30 other fotwiiirator.s were in St. Mary's coanty,heavilv armed, auo endeavoring to cross the Potomac, whtc& ira strongry i.luXi;ted and no oneallowed to pass. He also stated that Sunday, P.M., a small squad of our caTahry had a collision withthem and had been repulsed, but succeeded in capturing one of tbem. In the meantime our cavalrywere reinforced, and yesterday morning it was understood that they had them (the conspirators)completoly lurroanded. Their escape is deemed impossible. fTTBLIC MEETING IN CINCINNATI.Ci'AcinTiati, 18Wi. In response to a call of a num- ber of prominent citizens a large meeting washeld at Pike's Opera House last eyentng. Mayor Hawes was chairman of the meeting. Ho said therehad been a disposition prevailing among some persons to n?.e tlie terrible calamity, which hadbefallen us, as % pretext to raise a disturbance. Up to the present time, though some propertyhad been destroyed, no lives have been lost. He fiivored law and order and would eni^rce them atall hazards. He hoped the people of this city liad sufficient confidence in Gen Hooker and bimselfto know that they would arrest and punish any one frho would now utter disloyal sentiments.Appropriate resolutions were passed, after which speeches were made by Judge Storer, Messrs.Perry, Cnalford, Gaddiz, Nois and Gen. Cane. The city Is still draped in mourning and basiness hasnot yet fully revived, but confidence Is aim )St re- stored, and a better feeling prevails. A committee ofsix gentlemen have been appoint-nd to communicate with the proper authorities in Washington for

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Boston Evening Transcript, [newspaper]. April 18, 1865. http://www.loc.gov/resource/lprbscsm.scsm1276

the purpose of having the remains of the President pass through the city, while en route to Illinois,THE ABBEST OF SEC. SEWABB'S ASSASSIN. Phlladelphta, ISth. The Bulletm's Washington de- spatch,dated 2 P.M., says a man was arrested enter- ing Surratt's house, Vho has been identified by Sec-retary Seward'a servants as the assassin of the Secre- retary. INCBEASED BEWABO FOB BOOTH.Jialtimore, 18M. The eitv councils have offered a re- Ward of $10,000 for the arrest of the assassin ofPres- ident Lincoln. THE CONDITION OF SECBETABT SEWABD AND HIS SON. Jonathan Amory, Esq.,U. S. Despatch Agent, has received (Vom George E. Baker, a confidential friend of Mr. Seward, thefollowing despatch, dated Wash- ington, at 12.40P.M., today: "The Secretary con- tinues to improve.He slept better last night than Since his injury. Frederick la gradually regaining consciousness. Bothdecidedly better. The Exercises at Fobi SvuTS.s Continved from our Third JEdition. The purpose of thenation was thus dejcrlbed: The nation today has peace for the peacelul, and war for the turbulent.Applause. The only con- dition of submission is to submit. Laughter and applaufe.J There is theConstitution there are the laws there Is the Government they rise up like mountains of strength thatshall not be moved: they re the conditions of peace. One nation under one Government, withoutslavery, has been ordained and shall stand. There can be peace on no other basis. On this b.isi8roconatrnction is easy, anil needs neither architect or engineer. Without this basis no engineeror architect shall ever reconstruct these rebellious States. We do not want your cities, nor yourfields; we do notenvv you your prolific soil, or heavens full of perpetual summer. Let agri- culturerevel here. Let manufiictures make every stream twice musical, build fleets in every port, in- spirethe arts of peace with genius second only to that of Athens, and we shall be glad in your gladnessndrichin your wealth. All that wo ask is ua- swerving loyalty and universal liberty applausel andthat in the name of this high sovereignty of the United States of America we eemand, and that,with the blessings of Almighty God, we will have, Great pplause. * ahe interests restored whentjiis flag ws again hoisted on Fort Somter were thus portrayed: When it went down four millionpeople had no flag. Today it rises and four million people cry out: " Be- hold our flag!" " Hark!" theymurmur, " it is the gospel to the poor; it heals our broken hearts: it preaches deliverance to captives;it gives sight to blind; it sets at liberty them that are bruised." Raise np the glorious gospel bannerand roll out the mes- sages of God. Tell the air that not a spot sullies thy whiteness. Thy red is notthe flush of shame but the flush of joy. Tell the dews that wash thee that thou are pure, as theysay to the night that thy stars lead toward the morning, and to the mondng that a bright- er dayarises with healing on its wings; and then, O glowing flag I bid the sun pour light on all thy foldswith double brightness, whilst thou art bearing round and round the world the solemn joy "a raceset ftee!" "a nation redeemed!" The mighty hand of government, m,ide strong in war by the favorof the God of battles spreads wide today the banner of lib- erty that went down m darkness, thatarose in light, and there it streams like the sun above, neither par- celled out nor monopolized,but flooding the air with light for all mankind!" The effect of the rebellion on the Soutli was forci-bly delineated. Mr. Beechersaid: It would not be honest, it would not be kind or fraternal for me

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Boston Evening Transcript, [newspaper]. April 18, 1865. http://www.loc.gov/resource/lprbscsm.scsm1276

to pretend that Southern revolution against the Union has not reacted and wrought rev- olutionin the Southern States themselves, and inan- furated a new dispensation. Society is like a brokenoom, and the piece which rebellion put in and was weaving has been cut and every thread broken.Ton must put in new warp and new woof, and weav- ing anew, as the fabric slowly unwinds, weshall see in It no gorgon figures, no hideous grotesques of the old barbarism, but the figures ofliberty vines and goldon grains framing in the beads ot Justice, Love, and Liberty. The i>eople havedecreed by the war; /" < That these United States shall bo one and indivisible. iSeoomf That Statesare not absolutely sovereign, and have no right to dismember the Republic. 2A<rd That universalliberty is indispensable to Bepublican government, and that slavery shall be utterly and foreverabolished. Such are the results of war. These are the best fruits of the war. They are worth all theyhave cost. They are fouudatiooa pf praise. ^ ??tetr then placed the responsibility of the war uponthe educated classes of the Sonth, and graphically described the uprising when the flag on Sumterwas stricken down. The whole land rose up, you remember, when the flag came down, as if inspiredunconsciously by the breath of the Almighty and the power of Omnipo- tence. It was as when onepierces the banks of the Mississippi for a rivulet and the whole raging stream plunges through withheadlong course. There they calculated and miscalculated and more than :tll they miscalculated thebravery of men who have been traired !i;;Scr li~ "lie sr" civilized and hate per- fcina! brawls who aresoprotectcd by ;?"e'y s to have dismissed all tlioaght of self-defence < *oe whole force of whose lifecs trained to peaceful pur- suits. The aiTogant conspirators against the govern- ment, with Chinesevanity, believed that they could blow away these self-respecting citizens as chaff fVom the battlefield. Few of them are loft alive to ponder their mistake. Here then are the roots of tMs civil war. Itwas not a quarrel of wild beasts; it was on inflection of the strife of ages between power and rightbetween ambition and equity. An armed band of pestilent conspirators sought the nation's. life.Here children rose up and fought at every door, and room, and hall to thrust out the murderersand save the house and household. It was not a legitimate war between the common people of theNorth and South. The w.'^r was set on by the ruling class the aristocratic conspirators of the South.They suborned the common people with lies, with sophistries, with cruel deceits and slanders, toflght fbr secret olyects which thev abhorred, and against interests as dear to them as their ownlives. I charge the whole guilt of this war upon the am- bitions, educated, plotting, political leadersof the South. (Applause.) They have shed the ocean of blood. They have desolated the South. Theyhave poured poverty through all her towns and cities. They have bewildered the imagination of thepeople witH pantasms, and led them to believe they were fighting for their homes and liberty, whosehomes -were unthreatened, and whose liberty was in no jeopardy. I'hese arrogant instigators of civilwar iiave renewed the plagues of Egypt, not that the op- pressed might go tree, but that the freemight be oppressed. A day will come when God will reveal judgment and arraign at his bar thessmighty mi8cre.*nts, and then every orphan that their bloody game has made, and every widowthat sits sorrowing, and every maimed and wounoed ufi'erer, and every bereaved heart in all the

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Boston Evening Transcript, [newspaper]. April 18, 1865. http://www.loc.gov/resource/lprbscsm.scsm1276

wide regions of this land willl rise up and come before the Lord to lay upon jthsse chief culprits ofmodern hisiory their awful witnessinps. And rom a thousand battle-fields shall rise up armfcs ofairy witnesses who, with the memory of their aw- ftil Buftering s'aali contront these miscreants withtheir works of fierce accusation, and every pale and starved prisoner shall raif e his skinny handsin judg- ment. Wood shall call out for for vengeance, tsars shall plead lor Justice, grief shall ailentlybeckon, and love, heart-smitten, shall wait for Justice. Good men and angels will cry out: "Haw long,0 Lord, how long! will Thou not avenge?" And, then, these guiltiest and most remorseless traitorsthese high and cultured men, with might and wisdom used for the destruction of the country thesemost ccui86d and detested of all criminals, that have drenched a nation in needless blood, andmoved the foundalions of their times with hideous crim-is and crue'ty caught up in black clouds, fullof voices of vengeance and lurid with punisbment, shall bo Whirled aloft and plunged downwardforever and fbrever in an endless retribution, while God shall Bay: " fhus sha'l it bo to all who batraytheir cduu- try;" and all in heaven and upon earth will sy juneni Voices "Amen 1" "Amen!" But for thepeople misled, for the multltadei drafted and driven Into this civil war, let not a trace of anlmosltr re-main. Mr. Beecher depleted the results of the war, and closed by referring to the true policy of theSouth, as follows: Is it feared that the government will oppress the conquered States? What possiblemotive hat the government to narrow the base of that pyramid on which its own permanencestands? Is it feared that the rights of the States will be withheld? The South is not more jealous ofState rights than the North. State rights, from the earliest colonial days, have been the peculiarpride and Jealousy of New Eng- land. In every stage of national formation it was peculiarly Northernand not Southern statesman that guarded State rights as we were forming the Constitu- tion. But<nc3 united the loyal States gave up forever that which had been delegated to the National Gjv-emment, and now in the hour of victory the loy^-tl States do not mean to trench upon SouthernState rights. They will not do it or suffer it to b9 donj. There is not to be one ruler for high latitudesan 1 another for low. We take nothing frcra the Siuth- em States that has not already been t:tkenfor N jrth- em. The South shall have just those rightj tliat every Eastern, every Middle, every WesternState has no more no less. We are not seeking our own aggradizenient by impoverishing the South.Its prosperity is an indispensable element of oar own. Wo have shown by all that we have suffereiin war how great is our estimate of the importance of tba SouthemStiitesof this Union, and wewill measure that estimate now in peace by still greater exertioiia for tlieir rebuilding. v^ ** -^ Willreflecting mtn not perceive, then, the wisdom of accepting established fticts and with alacrity ofentei"prlse begin to retrieve the past? Slavery can- not come back. It is the interest, thorelore, ofevery man to hasten its end. Do you want more war? Are you not yet weary of contest? Will yougather up the unexplodod fragmcnlis of this prodigious mig%- j zine of all mischief and heap themup tor continue 1 1 explosions? Does not the South need peace? arid I since free labor is inevitable,will you have it in its 1 worst forms or in its best? Shall it be ignorant, im- j pertinent, indolent, or shallit be educated, self-re- specting, moral, and self-supporting? ,wi<lK I Will you have men as drudges,

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Boston Evening Transcript, [newspaper]. April 18, 1865. http://www.loc.gov/resource/lprbscsm.scsm1276

or will you have them as citizens, since they have vindicated the gav- einraent and cemented itsfoundation stonos with tlieir blood? May they not offer the tribute of their support to maintain thelaws and its policy? It is better for religion it is better for political integrity- it is better for industry itis bettor for money if you will save that grand motive that you should ed- ucate the black man, andby education make him a citizen. Applause. They who refuse education to the black man, would turnthe South into a vast poor house, and labor Into a pendulum necessity vi- brating between povertyand Indolence. a The Meetiho op the Mbeohawis CoaWnued from our Third Edition. E. S. Tobey, Esq.,was introduced to the meeting. He touchingly alluded to the deep grief pervading the communityat the death of the President, and then stated: So much has already b3en truly said in evidence otthe rare combination of virtue which distinguished the character of Piesident Lincoln, that I will addonly such further illustrations as it is my privilege to state on personal knowledge. It was duringthe ear- lier and darkest days in the history of this war, that this Board of Trade and other kindredinstitutions in our sister cities, appointed delegates to proceed to Washington and confer with theTrcisury Depart- ment, and with Congress, in reference to the finan- cial policy of tiie Government.No measure of taxa- tion had then been adopted. The confidence of the public, and especially offinancial men was rapidly declining. The army of the Potomac under General McClellan was layinginactive before the fortifications of Manassas, The first Secretary of War had resigned his seat, andhis successor had been ap- pointed. Popular gossip In Washington asserted that Pres- ident Lincolnwas wanting in energy and decision, that he was without a policy, that he'had no confer- ence withGeneral McClellan. That the latter was afraid to move, and would not hazard it without com- pulsoryorders. That Secretary Seward was equally wanting in the advocacy of a rigorous policy in pros-ecuting the war. That Secretary Stanton had baea appointed out of regard and deference to thewishes of General McClellan, and especially on aecjunt of their political agreement as Democrats, ^t^Other important features In the President's career were freely censured, Under these ciroumitanoasthe delegates of this Board, and the Board of Trad" in Philadelphia, called to nay thoir respectsto the President, and to assure him of the oonfldenoe and support of the community which eachrepresontod. A member of Congress from a neighboring Stato Wis the medium of introduction.In the courss of his conversation, he intimated the opinion then car- rent in Washmgton. Afterform.'il addresses by the delegates, the President in turn also made a conn""t- ed review of all thepoints referred to by the mam- ber of Congress, in a speech so candid, clear, and concise, as toexhibit his peculiar power in dealing with all difilcult points or features of policy, and refuting everyclmrge or insinuation that had b3en made against him or the members of his Cabinet. When theinterview was terminated, every mem- ber of the delegation, of whatever political faith, left Mr,Lincoln with an enthusiastic admiration of the man, and deeply impressed by the evidence of hisin- dependent Jurlgment, integrity of motives, clear fore- sight, and practical wisdom, and that hewas the President of the United States, and that he had not only had a policy, but .drmness enoughto carry it out. Subsequent Uiiitoj'> lias folly ausiaiKed thes convictions, and the character and

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Boston Evening Transcript, [newspaper]. April 18, 1865. http://www.loc.gov/resource/lprbscsm.scsm1276

administration of Abraham Lincoln now stand before the country and the world as the exponentof a wise and comprehen- sive statesmanship, a firmness and persistency ol pol- icy, temperedby a considerate regard to the opinions of his friends. Referring to the suspicion entertained bysome that there was danger of too much severity towards rebels, Mr. Tobey said: It appears to methat the danger lies precisely in the opposite direction. The tendency of the North- em mind haslong been to the exercise of undue clemency to criminals, and to forget the lunocen* suflerers ina morbid sympathy for the guilty authors of the suffering. Thx responsibility and indifference of acertain magnanimous General, who could, from his own headquarters, look down for months onthat fatal prison-house on Belle Isle, below Richmond, and hHow that Union prisoners were therestarving and being brutally treated, is not far from the spirit which has culminated in assassinationof the trulu magnanimous Chief-Magistrate of this nation. In what marked contrast has been thetreatment and disposition of our brave Union Army. Although frequently mingling with them, I havenever heard a vindictive word uttered. Mr. Tobey was followed by Hon. William Gray, who properlycharacterized the crime of asaas- ination, and also described the interview with the Presidentalluded to by Mr, Tobey. Subsequently speeches were made by Hon. George B. Upton and others.The Wmi Sale. We understand from Mr. C. A. Richards that all the wines and liquors to bs offeredat his great sale on Thursday next will be sold at the auction price, no limit or reserve whateverbeing placed upon them by him. RELIGIOUS SERVICES TOMORROW. King's Chapel will be open forfuneral services o-i ooca^ sion of the burial of tlie late President Lincoln, tomorrow at lli o'clock,according to the recommendation of the Acting Secretaiy of State. Bellgious services will be heldat Arlington Street Church tomorrow at 12 o'clock. Services will be held st the New North ChurchIn Bul- lliich street (Rev. M. Alger's) at 12 o'clock At., in accoid- once with the earnest request of theActing .Secretary of State. Bcv. Henry A. Miles, D. D., will omoiate. In the absence of the pastor ofthe church, the public are In- vited to attend, ADMINISTRATOR'S SALE. By virtue of a license fromthe Probate Court of the wi'?^^Pi',w'i'"S*''' y'" > '0'* ' P"''U auction, on WEDi,ESUAY, the third day ofMay, A, D,, 18S5, at /our o clock in the afternoon, on the pienilses, a certain par- cel of land situatedIn the southerly part of Newton, Ul the touuty of JJldaiesex, belonging to tLe estate of Aaron ".lUard,deceased; coiitaiiiing about tweuty-ciglit ajres, ^v";JQ two dwelling houses; one ot them being themaasiou tioiise oi'sftiil deceased at the time of his death, and othor bnildings thereon, the samebehig fully described in the following deeds made to said Aaron-WUIai'd, to wit: the deed of CasparSail and wife, dated June 21,187I, recorded with Middlesex deeds, Lib. ( JliS.fol. CIS; the deed ofJotinB, Fitzpatrick, dated July 19,1851, recorded as above in B>ok 61?, page 474; the deed of JosephB. Emery and wife, dated August 14,1851, recorded as above in Book 615, pa?e S02; thedeed ofllmothy Baiidnli and wife, dated October 25, 1861, recorded as above in Book 617, page 415; andtile deed of Timothy Randall and wife, dated Nevember 28,1851, re- corded as above, in Book 634,page 277. JOH.V H, 81EPHENS0N, Executor of the will of Aaron WiUard, deceased. TnSt an 13 ClTY,iOFCAMBRIUGE. Matoe'b Ofhce, April 17,1335. The attention of the citizens of Cambiidge Is called to the

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Boston Evening Transcript, [newspaper]. April 18, 1865. http://www.loc.gov/resource/lprbscsm.scsm1276

following resolutions, this day unanimously adoptel by the City Council: I'esoheff^ that ourfeilow-citizens'be requested to closa their places of business on Wednesday next, being the day of thefuneral of the late President, Public services wlu be held in the City Hail, on WEN- >:esday, at IHo'clock, P, M. In accordance with the recommendation of the Acting Secretary of State, I would invitethe various leligious denomlnarions In the City of Cambridge to meet in their respective places ofworship at noon, ou Wednesday, for the purpose of solemnizing the occasion with appropriateceremonies. pl8 It J. WAKBBN MEHRILT., Mayor. POST OFFICE. Bosios.Mass., April 18,1865. The PostOffice will be closed TOMOKROW, the 19th lust, from 10 o'clock A. M. to 5 P. W. All mails, after 5 A.M., %vill clo^e for the day at 10 A. M., except the Southern mail, which will dose as usual at7MP.M. Pet order. apl8 It_______________JOHN Q. PALFREY, P. M. CHABLESTOWN, April 17. Tha annualmeeting of the Bunker HiU Soldiers'Relief 8 iclety, wil' be held in the Library Hall, Charlestowa,fH(JK^ DAY, April 20, at 3 o'clock, (postponed from Weduesiay). 'the report of the Society will bepresented, ami officers elected for the ensuing year, AH inteiested In the society are invited to bepresent. Per order of the President, MK3. S. S. BLANCHARD, ap 18 Itt Corresnonding Secretarv.ASHINGTON .INSUKANCii OOivrPA" j;Y Am;i:ai. Meeting, Stocliholders in ttieWash- ln"ton InsuranceCompany are hereby notifled that theU annual meeting Mill be held ou MONDAY, th>!ltda7 May next,at 12 o'clock, ai,. at office No, 72 state streeW , for the choice ofnlne Directors for the year eusalnj,and the transaction of any other buslujss that may legally come before them. Per ordor, apl8 tmBEn'j, SWEETSER, Soe'v, ITY OF BOSTOJS^. BiAMiNAno.i fd lEACnECS. The Examination pronosedt'j ha^abeau held on Wednesday, the 19th lust., at tlie AdTni SotijO- Hcuse, Ea."t Boston, for thjselection of Tea -.'.l^nt, will bl held on WKDNESDAY, the '2316 Inst,, a', tin bias 0 Twelve, at t^e sameplace. BARNARD CA.PES, Bp18 t2S Secretary Of t<>s Scliggi Coinmittso. TRANSCRIPT EXTRA! FIVEO'CLOCK. Neto ^^bertlscm?nt8. COMMONWEALTH OF MASSAOHU- BBTTS. latest by Telegraph.COimiESIES TO PBESIBEHI JOHITSOH. President Idncoln's Remains. Tt^ashington. ISth. PresidentJohnson this mirn- Ine received a large delegation of citizens from Illinois, and afterwards aboutflfly clergymen. He made a speech to each party indicative of his public career in the future. Thebody of the late President being In State In the East Boom thousands of persons are throngingthither. Between half-past nine A, M. and noon over 3D00 persons visited the remains of PresidentLlncolik, The doors will be kept open until 5 P. M. Senor Don Jose Antonio Garcia yesterday presentedhis credentials to the Acting Secretary ot State, and was received as the Charge D'Afl'aires of theB3pub- lic of Peru to the United States. ^ -w jj TEX ASBESI OF 8ECBETABY SEWABD'S AssASsnr.fVanhington, IBth, Late last night a man disguised as a laborer and carryinu a pick on his shoulderap- proached the house occupied by the family of Surratt in this city. He was &bout to enter whenarrested. Upon washing the dirt fi'om his fiice he was quite a diit'erent lookmg person fl:om whathis appearance Indicated. He called himse'f Payne, and exhibited not a little embarrassment. Hemanaged to ask in agitated tones why he was arrested. The colored servant of Secretary Seward wassent for, when lie imme- diately exclaimed, "That's the mn! I know him by his general appearance

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Boston Evening Transcript, [newspaper]. April 18, 1865. http://www.loc.gov/resource/lprbscsm.scsm1276

and his mouth." The servant then said there could be no mistake. The man arrested is believed tobo Surratt, who perps- trated the dreadtul acts at Secretary Sewarsd's house on Friday. CONSITIOKOF SECBETABT SEWABB AKO 80K. Washinotow, 18th, :86J. TuJS.S.Saitford: Uncle is much better thismorning and cheerful. Today is a marked improvement on yesterday. Frederick is slowl^ut surelyregaining his conscious- ness. He has spoken twice this morning. He sleeps much of the time andbreathes regularly and easily. His pulse and appetite are good. I think every one feels encouragedwith regard to both. The messen- ger and nurse are both doing well. (Signed) C. A. Sbwabs, ABBESTAKD CONFESSION OF A CON- SFIBATOB. Baltimore. 18M. A highly important arrest has been madebore today. The name ot the party at present is withheld, lie has made a canf,)3Sion of being oneof the conspirators against the President, and acknowledges himself as the author of the lettersigned "Sam," found in Booth's trunk. OBDEB FBOM TBEASITBT DEFABTHENI, Washington, ISth.The Secretary of the Treasury has issued orders to all officers of the Eevenue Marine to observeappropriately the death of the President. Crape will be worn on the left arm, and sword-hilts; flagsarp to be half-mast, and minute guns fired ftom the Eevenue vessels. HOUBNINCl IN INDIANA.Indianapolis, Tud., nth. The Governor has ap- pointed Wednesday, the 19th Inst., as a day ofmourning, humiliation and prayer. NEW YOBE STOCK SALES. Kew Yobi, April 18. Stocks lower. Thefollowing are the asking prices, mo' foiinsl session being held. Chicago and Rock IslaiiQ.......................94;< Cumberland Preferred......................... 45 Illinois Central.................................UHHMichigan Southern............................. 61 New York Centjal.,,.*.............;......... 95iiEeailing.........................................104X Hudson.........................................103 CantonCo...........................,.......... 3j Eric.............................................. ^Ji( Cleveland and Toledo..........................93 U.H. One Year CertlBcales.................... 98 Gold............................................14SH Note. There will beno Stock Board until Friday. COBN ExcHAKOE. At a meeting held today, it was Jt*>.olved, ^HiatlntolEa& f aopoeb ud ?noni- tion to the memory of the late President of the Un- ited States, themembers of the Boston Corn Exchange are hereby requested not to open their places of busi- nesson Wednesday the 19th Inst. It was also voted that a portrait of the late President Lincoln be pro-cured and placed,in^the rooms. Entiub SiTSPEMSiOK OF BUSINESS. We Under- stand that it;is theexpectation and desire of the City authorities that there shall be an entire suspension of businesstomorrow. All of the public schools and public offices and buildings will be closed. And it is hopedthat.all citizens will comply with tbe desire so generally expressed, Heaty Stork Robbery. The storeof Haie^ Dame, 66 Hanover street, was robbed last night of some teooo worth of dry goods, whichwere carried off in a vehicle. Officer Walker captured the team and goods near Oragie bridge, butthe driver es- caped, though chased and twice-fired at. EoxBUBT. The attention of citizens of BoxbnryIs directed to the card of Mayor Lewis In another column, A Union service will be held in the churchof the First Religions Society. The Bakes in this city will be closed for business tomorrow. wine SaleNoUee. llje Public are reminded that the sale of the Winchester and other Wf nes will positivelytake place on THURSDAY next, as advertiBed, at 99 Washington st. Samples can be examf ued

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Boston Evening Transcript, [newspaper]. April 18, 1865. http://www.loc.gov/resource/lprbscsm.scsm1276

on tbe morning of the sale. There will be a fine invoice of Rhine Wines offered that was omittedon the catalogue. It ap 18 BY N. A. THOMPSON & CO. lOffice Old State House. large and vahtaiJeetiate in Dorcheste. On SATURDAY, April 22, at 5 o'clock In the afternoon on the premises. jhf.. Thevaluable estate on Adams street in Dorchester, f^fr belonsing to Mr. Parker Barnes and for manyyears Bw'Jj: oceupfed by ulm as a pSace of residence and for the Jiiailucultivation of flowerc, ifcc.,for the lloston market. The estate consists of about seven acres of choice land, a large two storvdwelling house, bam and green house. 1 he most of'the land is of the beat description for gar-dening purposes and especially for the ciiltlvaTion .of fruit and flowers, ha\1ng upon it a number oflarga aud fine fruit trees of various kinds id of the best variety. The house Is very commodious, boiltof the best materia's and In the most thorough manner, contains largi^ drawing- room, dining-room,sitting-room, kitchen and wa^h room on the first tioor, and six square chambers on the secondiloor, besides ample acconunodations for servants. It has a flue, large drv cellar under tlie wholehouse, Is furnished with gas In aH'the rooms, has an excellent furnace, range and other modemImprovements, and is abuddantly sup- plied with well and cistern water. Ihe bam Is quite large andcontains accommodations for two or three horses and a cow, with a separate plastered room forcarriages and is well supplied with water. Ihe f;retii-hous" is also quite laige and contains soma of theargest and fliwst rose-trees in the country, which will go wltb the house. It al^o contains abundantaccommoda* tion for the cultivation of plants, with work-room, office and cellar adlotning. 'Ibelocation is an exceedingly desirable one as a place of residence, being upon the wide and pleasantavenue known as tbe lower road to Milton Mills, Is not over twenty min- utes* easy drive fromBoston and within one-third of a mile of a line of hoist-cars. It is in tbe immediate viciulty of severallarge and fine estates occupied by weU-ltnown business men, and the neighborhood is in everyparticular most unexceptionable. 'ihe properly wiil be sold without reserve to the highest bidder, andis particulaly worthy the attention of florists and hoilicultutlEts. It may ba esaminod any day beforethe sale. For further particulars apply to J. FRENCH, No. 80 Washington street, or to the auctioneers.an 13 BOARD. To let with board two unfurniahad front suites of rooms with all modem convenience,at 23 Harrison avenue.______________TuThSt ap 18 TO LET Rooms. Pleasant Lod^inof Bsomd to let, torespcctabJe .persona, at No. 43 Chambers street, comer Green street. luThS^ ap 18 TO LET liodging-roomg, fumlahed or un- furnished, with modem improvements and good closet room, withinfive minutes' walk of State street. Referen- ces oxchanged. Inquire at No. 3 Waverley place, ap 18____________S*t SECRETARY'S DEPARTMENT,) Boston, April U, 18t>5. y To the People of the Commonwealth. IE The following official announcement having beea receiv- ed Gx)m the Department ofState at Washington: State Dbpabtment,) WA8HIIIGT0^, Apra n. / To the People of the United States:Ihe undersigned is directed to announce that the fUncral ceremonies of the late lamented C hiefJlagistrate wlU take place at tbe executive mansion. In tliis city, at 12 o'clock noon, on Wednesday,the 19th lns^ The various religious denominations throughout the country are invited to meet iutheir respective places of worship at that hoar, for the purpose of solemnizing the occasion with

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Boston Evening Transcript, [newspaper]. April 18, 1865. http://www.loc.gov/resource/lprbscsm.scsm1276

apnroprlate oere- monies. W. HUNTER, Acting Secretory of Stote. I do hereby request all onr people,in obedience to this invitation, to abstain from the ordinai7 pursuits of busi- ness, to meet at the dayand hour above indicated, la their respective places of worship, and there to Joiti In solemn devotionand in appropriate recognltioa of the sad bereave- ment which in the providence of Qod has fiallenupon our naUoo. By direction of His Excellency the Governor. OLIVER WARNER, ap 18 Secretary ofths Commonwealth. * C~" OMMOKWEALTH "op MXsSACHU^ SB'ITS. ITY OP BOSTON. Public Schools.Bt order of nis Honor, tha Msyor, the Public Soholls of thii city will be closed tomorrow, the day ofthe foneral at WasJUngton, of the late President Lincoln. BERNARD CAPEN, . _ Sectetaiy of the SchoolCommittee. April 18 It-- To LET B00M8. In Edinboro' street, for the eummer, to tfcntleman and wife,or single gentle- men i also large front attic. A few table boarders can be accommodated, by applyingat once. Address E, F. G., Transcript office. ____________ IwrhSl ap 18 BOARD WANTED-By a singleyoung man. Board In a privaie fkmllr, In some pleasant locality in the country or subm-bs hi Boston,Best of references given. Address Box 1514, Boston Post Office. ^ ___yi____________ ap 18 BOARD W-ANTED-Within fifteen miles ofBoetononthePltchbnrc or WorcMter Railroads, during July aud August,for a lady and servant. Address Lock Box 230^_______________ Jtt ap 18 BOARD. Wanted in a French orGerman family, 2 or H unfurnished rooms for a ijontlemaii, wife, and mother, Reterence given andrequired. Address L. L,, 1 raiiscrlpt office._______ TuThSl ap 18 BOARD. To let with board, a good-aisedfnmlshed square room; also a very flne sulle of rooms, with large bay window: will be vacated thefirst of Alay; partly furnished. 3 Harrison avenue, 611 ap 18 HSADQCASTSIta, Bo^roK, Aarll 18, mi.GENERAL ORDER, No. 9. Official orders of tbe War Depai'tmentansoance that the ftineral services ofthe late Preeldent of the United States, ABRAHAM LINCOLN, wlU commence t the Executive mansion,Wasblugton, af 12 o'clock tomorivir, April tdth. In respect to tbe memory of the fllustrloUB dead,and to the occasion of his burial, minute guns will be fired ou Boston Common, aud at the StateArsenal in Cambridge, from 12 to 2 o'clock tomorrow. Brigadier-General Pierce, Inspector Oentral,Is charged with the execution of this order at Cambridge, and Capt Cummlngs's 1st Light Battery, atBoston. By order of His Excellency, John A. Akouew, Got- enior aud Commander-ln-Chiet ap 18 It WM,8CHO0LER, idjt. General. ^ A L A M A|K C A OIL REFINiNC COMPANY. BOSTON AND vVfOKOiidriau^_________RAILROAD, As'a mark of respect to the memory of the late Presi- dent, No Trains will bemoveo o^ this Road, or la'jor Serfoi-mtd except that absolutely necessary, on WED- ESDAY, April 19,between the hours of 12 at, and 2 Pil. Offlcee, Stations and Shops will be closed. The BrooWlne andNeedlmm train, dvertlse<l to leavo ai 12.15 PM. Kill be sent at 11.45 AM. 'ihe Brookiine 12 -M inward,aud 1 PM outward, also the Newton 12 31 tiutward and 1.25 Pit ftom Newton L}wec Falls inwardwUi be omltt-^. Ihe 1.30 PM Worcester train will lea at 2 PM. 'the 1.30 P il train Ciom BrooWine w11 leave at 2 PM. E. B. P.lILLirS, Sup'K Boston, April 17,1865. ft NOTICE. The subscriber has remaraihia Employment offco to US Washington street, wh^re the most reilable male and female domssticscan b i hal at all times. li. KEXPiEr.D, Bpl4_________________________________y^fa^ HAT BROKEN VASE.Broken Oiiiii, Gl^s, or Mftrfcl'*, DlEh'^s, Vases, Oroatnauts, aatlqa:, and oestlv fancy articles, repaired

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Boston Evening Transcript, [newspaper]. April 18, 1865. http://www.loc.gov/resource/lprbscsm.scsm1276

In th-> neatest ^n^aa^r, K, CLEMENT, ti Irenumt atreet, at itairs, o;)pjiti Trs- is*at Bouse. ep3:a aplOCAPITAI,, 50I>,OOJ. 100,000 Shares..................Par Yalne Sit OO. Working Cftpltal, ^30,000. OFFICERS:rED. S. LEONARD, President. T. G, BASCROrr, Treasurer. ROB'r E. SKIDMORE, Secretary. Dircators'iHon. Freeman Cobb, Fred. E. Sanford, Col, S. H. Leonaid, Chas. W, Grannls, J K Bannister Elijah B,Sherman, Robert E. SUdmore, Fred. 9. Leonard, T. G. Banorott. Counsel .SAMCEL E. FLOYD, Es^.Superintendent of Oil Works-?. E. SANFORD. Foreman-E. B, SHERIIAN. Inventor and Opcrator-CHAS.W. GRANNIS. The property of thlf< Company -consist': i a rjeflnery of the capacity of 10<) barrels perday, nou in f'jilt operation and70acres,of OU laud, every foot of whic^ fa declared by Geologists andpractical Oil men to .be $ood boring lands. Room for 200 Wells. All the land in the vicinity is alreadyleased, and many wells are going down. . The Company .claim these advantages:' "^ 1st Location ofWorks at Junction of Erie and'Atlantic and Great Western R,R. A spur track running to'Rednery. 2d.ITie cxclUBive right of use of "ORANNIS IMPROV- ED STILL," the most economical refining processknown. 8d. Location of ivorts on side hill dispensing with the large Engine required in other wortsfor pumping. 4th. The Reflnerv alone will yield a net profit of atleast One Hundred Thousand DoDarsthe first year, in addition to which are the prospective profits of boilng lands al- ready controlledby the Company. Several wells will be put down immediately. Maps of Land, Flans ofWorks, andAny desired Infotma' tlon may be obtained at the ofiSce of tbe Company. 90 Washington street,(Trangoript Building.) TnThSSm ap 18 11HIS IS TO CERTIFY, That the Annual - Meeting of the SuffolkSavings Bank for Seamen and others, held at their banking room, on Tremont street, on Tuesday,the lltb day of April last, the following named gentlemen were chosen Oflioers of the Instltutloafor the eufluing year, viz: THOMAS LAMB, President SAMUEL H. WALLEY, Vice President CHARLESHENRY PARKER, Secretary. Messrs. Francis Bacon, James M. Barnard, James M. Beebe, GeorgeWm. Bond, Martin Brimmer, S, Parkman Dexter. J. Wiley Edmands, William S. Eaton, William En-dicott, Jr., Albert Fearing, Nathan B. Gibbs, John D. W. Joy, Abner Kingman, Henrv Lincoln, Francis C.Manning, Charles I. Momll, I'harlesG. Sazrn, Charles H. Pirker, Henry A. Pierce, William Perkins^DanlelN, Spooner, Ja cob C, Rogers, Isaac Thacher, Thomas Wigglesworth, Charles L. Young, Managers.Attest, Boston, April 18,186.5. CHAS. HENRY PABKER, It SecV. F RENCH AND SCOTCH GINGHAMS, re-Elegant Colorings and ComUnations, Just received at much lower prices than any hitherto offered.J. FORTUNE & CO., apl8 St t and 0 State straet. BOARD WANTED In the country by a small Ikmily (nosmall children) within six miles of Boston; plenty of fruits and shade; large, airy rooms de- sired,and where there are no other boarders. A liberal price will be paid. It mnst be near either steam orhorse cars. Address H, P. M, B., Transcript office, 3t1 anlT GOOD COOK AND PARLOR GIRL. A first-class situation wanted Immediately far two ex- cellent girls in the same family, In town. They arcsisters, and have the best recommendation from their employer who is about to leave the State,Apply to Miss S, C, Pu- mas, 15 Winter street. Rooms 4 and 5. Mil ap 19 BOARD. An unfurnishedroom with baard very pleasant, in modem house, hot and cold water In room, lor a gentleman andwife, or two single gantle- mcn, can be obtained in that very desirable locality, 4 Warren avenue.

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Boston Evening Transcript, [newspaper]. April 18, 1865. http://www.loc.gov/resource/lprbscsm.scsm1276

Refereuoes exchanged. 6t"l ________________apl8 TO LET Furnished rooms for lodgmw; two parlorsand two small bed-rooms. Apply at 63 Beash street 3tt ap 18 tSi FOR SALE. A dark bay horse, fV-Tt^eight years old, somid and kind in harness; /"TTA Stands 18 hands highi weight efetm hundred;' ' r^ can be seen at Chestnut Street Club Stable (M r. Monlton'8) 3t^ _____________ap 13 y^. FOBSALE IN MT. VERNON ST. inii Two very desirable contiguous estates, Nos, 6'3 and illii 68 next eastof Mr, xhayers, each 26 feet front G. "s^FOSTEK WILLISJ18,4S State street TuThStc ai 18 TO LET 7miles from Boston, on the line of the Fitchburg Railroad, a pleatantly located 'iili house, 12 rooms,including bath-room, furnace, *'* 'range, hot and cold water, bam and two acres land, with a varietyof fruit trees. A part or all of the furniture can be had if wanted. Apply to f. FRENCH, 80 Washlug- tonstreet._________________ It_________n 18 MFOK SALE IN ROXHtTitY A very deslrab'e honse, with aboutl.'),OOU feet of land, it being a comer lot. It has an excellent well of wa- ter which never has been dry,a large brick cistem, Aimace, range and gas. The house can be seen at any day from S to 5 o'clock,P. M., by calling ou T, HUNT, No. 4 Diamond Block. RoxWy. Price 8000.___ apI8____________ TnThlHFOR SALE IN DEOHAal-lne residence of the late Rev. Dr. Lamson. The house ill! has 13 rooms, withmodem conveniences, anl is ^*" within 5 minutes walk of the Railroad station, and near the centreof the village. The lot contains about two acvesof land, with fmit anil shade trees, and with shrub-berv, Ac, about the house. Apply to S. D, WARD, Esq or A. W. LAMSON, No. 10 Court Street between10 and 2 o'clock.___________tni'bSle a-i t< aT FOR SALE At Island i'ona, Vc, a ii Taiuable Steam Mill, witha gang of 23 saws, circu- li lar saw, clapboard, board, shingle, b9Z,au'l h^adlna; *'machine togetherwith 3500 acres of land heally timbcnd with lirst growth spruce, hemlock, pine, anl a large quantityof wood; also a boarding house, stora, sta- ble, and 6 village lots. Good tnduceuuuts 10 partieswish- ing to form a stock company, or make a jirofitable Invest- ment are here oftered. For furtheipaiticolan call comer of Portland anl Sud- bniy ftrete. J. B. CLAPP * SOV, Bpl8 oat_____________Real F.st\t, yA.^ts. FORSAL^ iN Ud;!iidi.'.i!.v SQUARE A V !ry dsslra'ile hiUJj. Pnce 81-'i.0OO, C >ti be s^en onlvbr ao polntment with JA9, T. ELDlJEDQE, l;C&j^IWtnJt U apU BOARD IN ROXBURY In a private fam-ily. Two large nnfUmlshed rooms to let with board. 'Ibe location Is desirable and convenient to thehorse cars. Call or address No. 12 Chestnut stt. TuWSTul ap 18 BOARD. At No. 2, Cambridge street,for families. Two suites of fVont looms, furnished or unfurnished, having large closets, with hot andcold water, to let with board. 6tt ap 18 WANTED A laundress who thoron^hly understands her workand brings the beet recom- maodatlons. Apply at 72 Mt, Vernon street tc ap 1 auction ^ales. BYHNSI1AW & BROTHER. f^rge SaU <tf Land eit the South End, belonging to the Me- tropolitan RailroadCo.^ Lots of Land on Tremont atid Wei^eld streeti. On THrRSDAT, April 20th, 1865, at 4 o'clock, P.M.,-ou the premises. 14 lots of land on Tremont street, and fi lots on Westfleld street. These lotsare mostly from 21 feet front to W in depth, containing from 1700 to 24 square feet of land, moreor less. * Tor plans and ftirther particulaw apply to the auction ^f^_________________________U apl8UI >S AND TAIXOW. wm be sold at PnbUc AnoUon oo "WEDNEaDAY, th 28lh lnt, at U o'clock A. Jl.,at 6th Street Wharf, the fol- lowiay articles, more or less: 3,562 Salted Beef Hides, 218 Dry Beef

Page 47: Boston Evening Transcript, [newspaper]. April 18, …lcweb2.loc.gov/service/rbc/lprbscsm/scsm1276/scsm1276.pdfBOSTON, TUESDAY EVENING. APRIL 18. 1865. NO. 10,734. IReal iBstate. FOR

Boston Evening Transcript, [newspaper]. April 18, 1865. http://www.loc.gov/resource/lprbscsm.scsm1276

Hldea, U Dry Calf Hklns, 4P6 Sheep Pelle, 24,114 Pounds of Tallow, (Beef.) 58GH Gallons JS eats-foot Ott, 2,642 Pounds 0* Tallow ScraM, 4,flW Pairs of Horns, 2,C0* Assorted Empty Barrels. TennsCash, in Qoremment fUnds. Washington, April M, 1865. O. BELt. apn 5i Li. Col. & C. 9. BY SAMUELHATCH. Office, No. 10 Water street, comer Devonihtre street. An Elegant Estate qf'Thirty Acre$, uiitha Di*elling Hbuse^ Bam^ ijc.^ ftc.^ on Ooddard Avenue^ Brooiline. On THURSDAY, April 27,1P66, at4 o'clock P. M., on the premises. This .beautiful estate located on Goddard avenue, --, and near thefoot of Lfncoin Hii), and opposite the l|i residence of Col. Green, formerly Mrs. Samuel Elii aot'9, isbounde<l on the west by the late Johu E. Ihayei's estate, and on the north by James S. Amory and theheirs of Dr. William Howard, aud on the soutn by AbMah W. GodOard's e3ta^e, and contains about30 acres of land, surrounded and dhlded by a heavy stone waU; Is thickly and heavily wooded withmaple, oaks, spiuce and pine-s, beautifully located on the high grouuils of Brookllm-; i8dl\ided Intopasturing, mowing, aud vege- table garden, with many valuable fruit-trees, ahrubbsry, Ac, iSrc. It hasa never-falling spring of pure water on the Snmiscs, and is a retired and romautic spot Theie Is aecutiful drive-way between stately oaks to the bouse, from which there is an extensive marine view,as well as Ihe elegant country-seats which surround it and lu the distance. Ihe house Is convenientlyarrangtid, has a su- perb ceUar, dug out of a solid rock, alarge iii-awiug-room, library, diuing-room,kitchen, &c., itc, on the flist floor. Ba^^li-roora, water-closet, and ample chamber room, with cedarand other closeMoom,. Ihe cairlage-house and stable are plastered and flited In a substantialmanner, with a lodging-roorn, hitrncss-room, carriage-room, four stalls, and a box stall, the wholeforming one of the mast delightful and retired country residences in the vicinity of Boston. It has notbeen occupied by the owner since hU return from Europe a few vears since. A plan of the estate andfurther particulars at office. It can be seen any afternoon previous to the sale, and if not previouslydisposed of at private sale, will be sold ou the above day. ta________________________ apl7 SAUQ OFFORFEITED STOCK. The stock In the Northwestern Mining Company of De- troit, represented asfollows, having been fort'eited for non- payment of assefisments, will be sold at Public Auction atthe office of the Treasurer between the hours of 10 and 12 o'clock, A. M., on Monday, May 15,1865,unless sooner ro- doemed by th<* iwytnent of all dues including Interest and charges. llie followingwin be sold for non payment of assess- ments of one dollar per share due Aug. 20th, 18i>4, and^twodoHai's per share due January 4th, 1865, viz.: Certificate No. 219 tor 40 shs., No. 1081 for 7 shs.,No. 147 fortSshs.,No. 1070 for25shs. No. 125 for 166 shs., No. 448 tor 6 6- ih.<>., and and 4-!) shs.in name of Wm. H. White. 4-9 sh. !n name of Samuel White. 4-9 sh. In name ot H. J. BucklCT. TheibJlowIng will be sold for non-payment of assessment of two dollars per share, due Jan. 4,1865, via.:Certificate No. 205, No. 85, No. 15, each Ul shs.; No. 186, No. 6.1, No. 1073, each 100 shs.; No. 176for 105 shs., No. 1042, No. 194,No.195 for 10 shs. each; No. lu89, 1058 each for S shares; No. 21for 53 shs.; No. 99 for 3 shares; No. 21S for 122 shares; No. 1080 for 25 she.; No. 4^, 44,1084 eachfor 50shares: No. 1085 for20 shares; No. 45 for 66 shares: No. 2ti fbr 46 shares; No. 1005 for 500shs. i No, 98 for 27 shares; No. 1014 for 300 shs.; No. 533 lor II1-9 shares; No. 209 ibr 55 shares.

Page 48: Boston Evening Transcript, [newspaper]. April 18, …lcweb2.loc.gov/service/rbc/lprbscsm/scsm1276/scsm1276.pdfBOSTON, TUESDAY EVENING. APRIL 18. 1865. NO. 10,734. IReal iBstate. FOR

Boston Evening Transcript, [newspaper]. April 18, 1865. http://www.loc.gov/resource/lprbscsm.scsm1276

Aud the tbllowlng for which no csrtlflcates hftre been 5-9siiares in the name of James M. Shnte;49 In the name of Henry Dally: 1 In the name of Thomas B. Sew^, in all 2497 & shares. By order ofthe Directors, JAMBS M. COOPER, Beo'r and Treat. Northwestern Mining Co. of Detroit. Pittsburgh,April 12,1866. Eastera stockholders may redeem their stock up to Fri- day, 12th of May next, at theoffice of J. W. Ciark <fc Co., 28 Milk at;^et Boston, by payment aa above of assessment. Interest andcharades; or to the Treasurer In Pittsburgh be fbre the day of sale. Im ap 15 BT liKOIVARD fc CO,tCSoomi Hoe. 49 and 47 Tremont street} Tabt<r^l m%4 JStoree Bodts. On MONDAY, April 24, andthe following days, each Aur at 1$ an4 t o'olook. Postponed flrom previous week, The whole of thelamafniuatookot valaabte and scaree booki ot tbe late Lafayette Bomnam, and sola I>y order of theexecutor. The collection embraces In all neariy 90M aambefs, among which are scarce historicalworks ot averrearty^ period works on 4merioaa history rare tract* lUnstra- iedTolames reviewsnewspapers history poetry the drama dtamatle biography the Oreek aud Latin olas- sfcs-oldaadrare theological works early printed rbl smes, tie , etc. A utograph letters, oolos, ete. Cataloguesten days previooa. ph 18 BY SAMUEXi A. WALKER. Office 33 Congress street. Beautifttt Estate onUnion Park. On SATURDAY, April 22, at 4 o'clock, P. M. Muu^ Will be sold the beautil\il house No.45 on Union -flpffr Park, lliis house is built of the best materials, flu iBjig ished in stucco work, andembellished with marble JBI^Jl mautle-pteces, &c., while the richlr-papered apart mt;ut3 render itcomplete. The entrance is byaneatvea tibule to the hall, the walls of which are hung with the mostcostly panelled paper. There arc eight sleeping apartments, two water-closets, hot and cold water,Ac. Ou the main floor is the spacious drawing-room, which opens into the library and hall, lbs cellaris excellent, lu which there is a superior furnace. The dining-room is light and pleasant, and thereis a wash-room and kitchen In which there is a prime range, <fec. This house Is splendidly located,overtooklngf from the side windows the beautiful fountains and the entire length of Union Park,which is ornamented with forest trees, sweet-scented shrubbery and gay flowers In their season;'Ihls estate Is in a highly respectable neighborhood, and within ft few doors of Iremont street,where the horse cais are constantly passing. J huse seeking a really desirable home should availthemselves of this oppoituuity to secure a residence on Union Park, which is one of tho most In-viting localities in the city. Terms liberal; $30? will be required on the spot. For further particularsinnulre of the auctioneer, ihe house will be open for Inspection ot eiy day from 3 to 5 o'clock P. M.until sale. 6t______________________________________apU BY DAVID F. McGILVARY ic CO. Al'CTIOH A^DCOUKISSIOJir MCHANT9. Salearooms, Nos. 5S & 55 Tremont Street Adn^ittrator*$ Auction Sale titValuable thathore Hotel Fropertv in Scituate, quiie near Coftaaset, wid^tf known at the " Glades/^use," together with the Entire JTami- ture and Everj/thing Else connected with the Estaitlish- nMntt,as per Catologue. On WEDNESDAY, 26th inst, at IH o'clock, F. M., on the premises, as above, Willpositively be sold to the highest bidders (to aid in settling the estate of the late ilame-s M. Clark,iiU deceased), the entire real and personal propertv be^ _iM&lotiglng to said estate, consLstiug ofthu matu Hotel uUding, some 40 feet square, 3W stories high, built hi the most thorough mauuer,

Page 49: Boston Evening Transcript, [newspaper]. April 18, …lcweb2.loc.gov/service/rbc/lprbscsm/scsm1276/scsm1276.pdfBOSTON, TUESDAY EVENING. APRIL 18. 1865. NO. 10,734. IReal iBstate. FOR

Boston Evening Transcript, [newspaper]. April 18, 1865. http://www.loc.gov/resource/lprbscsm.scsm1276

and very convenieutly fiulshed In every particular; also two La attached to the h^nae, equallv wellarranged, furnishing in all, with some outside acconunodations on the premises, conveniences forsome two hundred and fifty lodgers; also two fine Billiard and Bowling Halls, complttely funnshed;Bath House, Gas House, Ice House, Stable, Piggerv aud other outbuildings, coivesponding with thehotel. 1 he estate embraces some fifty acres pf good Lind lor pleasure grounds andforcultt- vation,now In excellent condition. Immediately alter sale of real estate wlli be sold, as per catalogue, theentire Personal Property In one lot owing to unavoidable causes, which will be explained, the realand pereonal property must be sold separately. The hotel and other buildings connected with thissum- mer resort are In complete condition for immodlftte o?ca- pancy. 'Ihe thmiture, beds, bedding,fixtures, wines, liquors, boats. faiTning tools, fcc., throughout the promises, are iust what partieswould need In continuing the hotel business. The Glades House Is too well known to need anycom- ments, as thousands of Its former pnrons canHcsHiir. The localitv for a summer, residenceor for transient visitors, with It's healthmi breezes, beautiful land scenciy and sea views, and beju?accessible by lanJ and water, is not ex- celled in New England. All steamers, ships, Ac, from Bos- tonbound tor Europe, pass this dfltghttul place. In a word this home for people seeking health andcomfort, Is only to be seen to be admired, and the sale should command the especial attentionof good landlords who desire to co:itinao a successthl business, or of speculators, as there Is laudenough, if put Into buildlng-lota, which cduld be re-adily sold, (and not Injure the hotel business,) toamount to a large sum. ._ 1 ne property can he seen any day till sale, and fuU par- ticulars obtainedof Wllliara P. Clark, AdnUnlstrator, No. 6 Wlnthrop square Boeton, or of the Auctioneers. Termsliberal Cara'le*T6 Old Coiory Depot a* I o'clook A.. M. Parties carrlfd by boat from the wharf inCohasset ( mlauta. rkle) free of cbarRe oo day of sale- DepcriptiTe ofttftlocuofl ready a week beforetbe Bale. IW l w yfvLijikire, qLil,RK, iklmlBlntratw. Wimx%. WANTED A situation as seunstreiB, by ayMing lady, who nuderataiHis cutting and fttHoK dreaset. Apply at So. tl Albany atrcet. ^tt ap 18WANTED IMMEDIATELY Fire expe- rienced salesmen, at J. C. LOKUia'8,38 and 28 Tra- mont Bow,Boeton. ot ap 18 WANTED A eirli^ American or Nova Sco^ tla to do chamber or "parlor work. Inguireat 87 Chester square. sti ap 18 ANTED A situation ftft: general house- work in a small private family.Good refersncea. w ApplT at 66 South sueet, up two flights of stairs. aplB ANTED A situation By afirat-clasa cook lu an eating or public house. Good reference can be given. Inquire at Ko, J.Chardonstreet, near Merrlmac. StT__________________________________ap IS WANTED A parlor and table girl;one that thoroughly nuderstinds her business, and is a good washer and ironer. A Nova Scotlanor French girl prefeired. Apply at No 179 Beacon street, JtT ap 18 W; ANTED. A respectable girlswishes a situation as parlor or cnambennald lu a private fam- ily. Good city references can bo given.Address H03t< Washington street, fh)m 10 A. M. to a P, M. m ap 13 WANTED. A woman wants asituation as laundress, or to do general housework. One that can come well recoauueuded. Apply at75 Purchase st. W______________________________ apl8 WANTED In a Dry Goods Commission House, anactive, Intelligent boy about 15 years ot age. Apply, with specimens of hand-wrldng, at 57 Fed- eral

Page 50: Boston Evening Transcript, [newspaper]. April 18, …lcweb2.loc.gov/service/rbc/lprbscsm/scsm1276/scsm1276.pdfBOSTON, TUESDAY EVENING. APRIL 18. 1865. NO. 10,734. IReal iBstate. FOR

Boston Evening Transcript, [newspaper]. April 18, 1865. http://www.loc.gov/resource/lprbscsm.scsm1276

street, betivceu tbe hours of 4 aud 6 P. M. 3tT __________________pl8 WANTED. A young girl wishes asituation to do general housework in a small family, or would do chamberwork. Appb- at 3',:5 Federalstreet _sn__________ ___________________apl8 WANTED By a person who can bring good references,a position as honsekeeper. Womd also take charge of the sewing for the family. Address L. C, S,,Box 12S5, Post Office. %f\ ap 18 WANTED By a young lady, a situation as a cook, or seamstress, Ina private iSmily; sewing preferred, Cood reference given. Apply at No. Si Ctiap- man street, from 10to 4.____________ 8tl ap 18 WANTED. A situation by a good cook in a genteel fiimliy. City refeiences,if required. la willing to assisMn washing aud ironing. Address lyL K., at 1 ranscript off ce. Sit ap 18WANTED A situation by a cook, who pre- fers the city. Apply at79-Bovl8ton street. Wedues- d&r,iliursday, and Frlcla.v, between 9 and 10 A. M. 8tT__________________________________ap^ia WANTEDAn experienced woman to take cbargeof anint^nt, at No, 9 Hawthorn street, Rox- buzy. Oak streetcar to Cedar street nearest 6tT__________________________________pl8 WANTED A young man wants asituation; is well (Experienced as coachman or grooming horses. Good references given. Is willingto be useful about a house. Apply at No. 31 Utica street, off Beach street 3tl _______apl8 WANTED.A situation is wanted by a, young man in some wholesale establishment or oflBce, where hecan be fully employed. Has had some ex- perience lu busiucss. Address Post OUce, Box 'iWl. t1__________ apl8 WANTED. A situation as housekeeper, by an American woman of capacity, ecouomy,aud good sense; thoroughly understanas ail the branches of ousekeening, aud cooking in ail itsbranches. Apply at Mes, POWER'S, 288 tremont stieet. 8t1 apl8 I! WANTED A situation by a youngNova Scotian, accustomed to chamberwork and nice wash- ing. Can also do najlor work and plainsewing. City reierenees given. She can be seen Irom 10 to U, at 3. C. PllMAS'6 office. Room 4,15Winter street StT ap 18 T^ ANTED. A situation is wanted by a ? T young Protestant girl to taVo thecare of a child. Has no olwectlon to the country. Would like to go to the seashore for the summeras nurserymaid. Apply at So. U East Dedham street, iTom 9 to 12 aud i to } P. IM. ___apl8________ mWANTED By a respectable English girl, a situation as seamstress or parlor girl. Call tor three days atNo. 2 Messenger street. %t\ ap 17 ANTED BoT. In a Dry Goods Jobbing House. Apply at CON ANT,WOODS dt CO., 142 and 144 Devonshire street, St ap 17 WANTED A paymaster and bookkeeperfor a largo factory. A middJe-aged married man idr""-" ""* '"" - preferred. Address Box 556. 6ttapl7 WANTED A situation for chamber or par- lor work, in a private family. Good city reference.Apply at lUWarreu street, up one flight 3i\ ap 17 WANTED A situation as seamstress, by one whounderstands all kinds of sewing. Apply at fie East Dedham street 3it ap 17 WANTED. A situation bya young girl to do nuiseiy work in a private family. Apply at No. 15 Onelda street 3tl ap 15 WANTED-A respectable Nova Scotia girl wants a situation as chamber or parlor girl. Good reference given.Apply at No. 1 Mt. Vernon avenne. ?tT________ ap 15 WANTED, By an English Protestant girl, a placeto do either parlor or chamber or nursery work. Address H, W, LEONARD, 146 Federal street, 3tt ap15 VV ANTED. ^A sitnation is wanted by a cap- ' * able woman as chambermaid in a private fami^.Will assist in wasliir.'^ and ironing. Best or city reference given. Appi)' at So. 18 West Fabln street

Page 51: Boston Evening Transcript, [newspaper]. April 18, …lcweb2.loc.gov/service/rbc/lprbscsm/scsm1276/scsm1276.pdfBOSTON, TUESDAY EVENING. APRIL 18. 1865. NO. 10,734. IReal iBstate. FOR

Boston Evening Transcript, [newspaper]. April 18, 1865. http://www.loc.gov/resource/lprbscsm.scsm1276

3tt ap 15 WANTED In a Dry Goods Oommission House, a smart, actlva boy, to learn the business.Apply to J. C. HOWE * CO., 61 >ranklin street 6t1 ________________________ ap 11 WANTED By a younggirl, a situation to do chamber and parlor work in a private family; la 6 good washer and ironer.The best ot city reforeuces given. Apply at 66 West Dedham street StU apT7 WANTED A situationas seamstress or chamber girl; or would go out td saw by the day. Inquire for three days at No-12Mount Vernon avenue, sn ap 17 WANTED By a dressmaker, employment by the day or week Ingenteel families, or would take a permanent situation as seamstress for the summer. Ap- ply at No.64 Summer street 3tY ap 17 WANTED A situation by a respectable woman; is a good cook; williugto do washing if required. Wul go to sea-shore. Best city references. Ap- ply to No, 1 Mt, vernonavenue. 3tl ap 17 WANTED A situation as cook by an exjpe- rlenced English girl, in a genteel family.The Best of city reference can be tUmished, il required. Please ciUl at No. 19 South Cedar street Sttap 17 WANTED^A Protestant girl to sew and take care of children, a short distance from the city.Good references will be required, and good wages paid. CaU at No. 42 Court street. Room No, S,from 1 to 2. apl7 U WANTED A situation as coachman in a private family, by a young man of steadyhabits. Can come well recommended. Can take care of garden If necessary. Address J. O., Transcriptoffice. apl7 WANTED. A situation as a chamber and table girl. Is not afraid of work and can turnher hand to any kmd of work usually done In a genteel family, and can come well recommended.Apply at No. 3 Cham beis street court, Boston. 2r1 ap 17 \)|rANTED By a young woman, a situationTV as seamstress or lady*s maid. The best of city ref- erence can be given if required. Apply at 111Revere st, below Charles street, irom 10 A. M. to i P. H. ap 17 Stt WANTED A situation as cook by aPro- testant Nova Scotian, who can furnish city reference. West part of city pretisrred ;but would goInto the country^ for the summer. Apply to S. C. PITMAN, 15 Winter street, from 11 to 1. Stt ap 17WANTED. A situation is wanted by a young woman as chamber or table girl. Would do the generalhousework of a private family. Best of city reference given. Apply at No. 119 Prince street 3tt pnWANTED Immediately, at any distance, employment by the day or week, by a nice s;^am- stress,who can fit children's dresses, and run a machine. Can be seen from 11 to 1, at 15 Winter street.Room 4, Stt ap 17 WANTED A middle-aged American wo- man to do general housework for "a smallfamily in the country about eight miles from the city. For a capa- ble, faithftil and companionablewomar.^the situation will furnish a pleasant home. Appl.r at 105 Devonshire street tc ap 17 ANTED.A lady of education and refine- W; V ment, wishes a sUuation In a family, as a companion orgovernness. Bemuneratlon not considered. The best of refercucea gi^en, Mass. Addresi F. B. in., Box2U, LowoU, m ap 11 w w ANTED A aituation by a young man who understands the caie of horsesand carriages and harness and is willing to take care of small garden and make himself nseftil,and Is well recommeudod. Address T. M., '1 ranscript offlce._____Stt_______________ap 15 ANTED AnAmerican, or Nora Scotia girl to do general honaeworli. None need apply nnless they have goodreference Apply at No. 14 Tajlor street, above Dover street,.between two and flve, P. M, 31^ ap 19WANTED. A situation by a younjj man Lately ftom England, who thoroughly understands looking

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Boston Evening Transcript, [newspaper]. April 18, 1865. http://www.loc.gov/resource/lprbscsm.scsm1276

after horses and carriages. Wo old be wiillng to make himself generaUy uscfoi around a gentleman'splace* Address K. Z. y.. Transcript offlce. 3tl ap 15 WANTED A situation by a con^etant seamstress,< who understands all kinds of aewing, anisliiug and trimming ladles' dresses; cutting and fittingchi-'dren's clothing. Be^t of city references. Can be seen at 1 Mt Vernon avenue. Stt p 15 WANTED.A lady, fully competent, would like a situation as housekeeper, or would take charge of a house,while the (iamily were out of town, fbr the summer. Has no objections to going a short distance tVomthe city. Addrcs M. L. P., Box 631 Boston Post OfBce. Stf p 15 WANTED Cast off clo*hipgr, such 9M.It- dies*8, gents's snd children's garments, for whicih the Torv highest prices will be paid by caillgon m- ad- dressing UB or MRS, H. WHIT, SI Cambridge street Im^ a^1 LATEST! HALF-PAST FIVE, P.M. By Telegraph. FBOK CAUFOBHIA. THE lOBBlitG OF DEI10CR.4TIC PAl'ERS. Grief at the Death ofthe Preside >* .?<IM Francisco, Wh. Ihe destruction of <1 ' Democratic papers last evening was thesudden oul * burst ot long pent np Indignation at thoir oppMl- tion t the goTemment all through thewar It was executed with such rapidity that the u-^ thontiea were unable to prevent it. At nlghtfaUtho military were ih jpossession of the street, and all ap. proaohes to it, which prevented fiirthervioJatlon ia that quarter of the city. The French organ was tbrcatsned and is now un- der guard. TbeUnion & American was destroyod, and Intensie excitement prevailed all night. Memorial serviceswere held today in all th* churches. Public meetings are bsing held. The Mayor has called one fortlds P, M. to prepare for obsequies. It is reported that two Democratio papers at Marysrllle and GrassValley have been mobbed. Two French men-of-war arrived in the harbor to- day, DEVElOPlIEIfTSOF A BAITIK03E PLOT- IDS. WA3ITED. Ladies will please take notice that the underaigned winpay the hijrhest cash priccj for Lailies', Gentlemen's aud Chllitren's wearing Apparey, I Fnrniture.Carpets, Jewelry, etc.. etc. A note properly addrcsseil wUi he duij attended to. 11K9. T. LAZARUS, 242Hanover street.___________Kt^ .___________ap U WANTED Pupil In the French Iiiaguase. An Americangeatlemanand experiencMl teacharof ' the highest reference, is d^irous ot a resident eveninsi pu-Ell in Boston, in the J^renchlanguage, a branch with which e is thoroughly famUiar hv a residence inParis. Ad-lrosa lEACHBB,'!ranscript OfPce. bi| an U BiUttnore, Wth. It ia understood that the partyalluded to as under arrest here states that the orig- inal design otthe conspirators was merely toCiptur^ President Ltiicoln some time back, make him a pris- oner, and in this way compel a generalrelease of all the rebel prisoMers then held by the United States. When the general exchangeof prisoners was com- menced this projact was abandoned, and he he say* he reHised to haveanything further to do with it and endeavored to induce others to give up their de- signs upon thelife of the President. This man is a well-known resident of italtimore. KO NEW YOEK ETEMIHG FAPKBSTO- KOBBOW. New York, Kth. The erenlns papers her sus- pend publication tomorrow. amusements.BOSTOir THXATSE. Lesske jlxo Uanaceb............JQeiibt C. Jisasn. EE-OPENING! The Manager begsleave to annonnce that MR. &1HR& The Dtstinsuished Comedians, AND Original ImperaonatoH otIRISH AKD YANKEE UFE, Will commence an engagement On Thursday- Erening, April Stt, 1 Being Ifteirflret appearance at this Theatre in pivk rauts.. Ihe entertainment will commence with the popular

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Boston Evening Transcript, [newspaper]. April 18, 1865. http://www.loc.gov/resource/lprbscsm.scsm1276

Dm ma, in i acts, entitled IRELAND AS IT WAS. Ragged Pat....................Mr. BAMJEY WILUAMS' JudyO'Trot..................Mrs. BARNKl WILLIAMS- Xo be followed by the humoious Comedietta, CUSTOMSOP THE COUNTRY. Uellssa........................Mrs. BARNET WlLLIAHk The capital Irish Farce, THE IRISHTUTOR. Dr. OToole.....................Mr. BARNEY WILLIASC9- pooraopenatTK; to commence at TK o't^oct.ap IS ''" BOSfOK MirSKTrM. ACTUte MAKAGia................Ma. R. It. Fiblb. In view o/ the Gbcat Natiokai.CALAitrrr, then wHl l> No Ferlormanoe This' Krenlnx. Due notice ot tiio re.openln(? will be given.ap W HOVrASb^ATHEHABUiir" There wlu be NO PEBFOBMAITCE until after the Funeral of theLate PresldenL W 4t BXrCKISTS' SBSEITASSBS WH.L CLOSE THEIR MINSTREL HALL Until Moadar,April %, In consequence of the Diath or raa PaistsxHT. __________________________p IT THB TENTHEXHIBITION 01- AMERICAN MANUFAGTUBBS, NEW INTENTIONS AND WORKS OF &RT Under thedireetloaotthe KACSAeHITSBTTS CHABITABLX nCBSlina ASSOCUTIOV, WILL COMMBNCE AT FANEUIIiAND QUINOT HA&lia. Om Wedneidsr, Sevtamber AOttb CMtiibutlons from all parts ( tk sou^tcr &rwhatarer is New, useful and beaatifW in M^ohaaisaa am . Art are solicited. Steam Motive Power willbe sappMetf for Machinery. Bonorary Awardi of Oold, Silver Km4 Bronze Meaaii, and Diplomas, willbe glvsa tr aiUols* deserving especial notice. CommuDlcations from those who wlsh'more partletfarinformation, and trom those who will tequlre Iargesia40. may tie addressed to the sal>serit>ar. imh JITuWw JOSEPH L. BATES, Searetsff.'l. BILLIABSS CBJ-RAND DmnVCON'STRA.TIONa, Fonneriyof rai-is and TersaiUes, assisted by RUohoel Fhelan and Melvln Foster of New York; Wm. A. Tobin,Champion ot Masa., and R. A. Wlllmartli oi Boston, and other players of distinction, wlU commence aserief of Seances, AFIERXOOS and EVliSINa, at Bnmstead Hall, Winter Street, On THURSDAY EVENING,AprU Mth, at 8 o'olook. Admission 50 cents. Front seats rMcrved (br geutlemsa. aceompauied byladies. tc______aplT " ciiiiJierLBVKis6>~~~ QVEEiX ZEROBIA, t 0HILD8 * JBNKS'S GfcLLBBT OT AST,im TBixoin STun. Open dsllv from S a. M, W < F. M., and Wedaesdar a* Saturday EviMisas. to inhS4F URS ONSTORAGB WANTED A competent per^n who is ao- custumed to tlie management of ahoasehtid, sup- plying a table, ktplng aocounts, aud afl the otlier duties of aboust^keeper. A personof experience who cnn give uufcxotptlonabte if-Xerenet-s, may fc'^rbf a gaud e'taatioii by addi-esslug. in personal handwritbtg, Box -223^, Post Of- tcf. State vnxe(e aa iatuview wa be tad lu Boston.an *^^ Persons leaving town, or fearftal of bavtag th^ nua dt itioyed by Moms, are Intlumed thatMessrs. WM. M, SEPUTE A SON T HI receive them on storage, and lusnre them agaloit tl a 1. sa ordamage, at a trifling expense. U'o prevent mistakes, and ail misunderstanding, a corti fl_. rteforthearticles lelt, with tho cliarge meutloued, T fui (Rir Fur department bofag separate ftom out Hal -_,,< an rooms, we are prepared at ali ttasont <j' Me ytt r K .ll or repair Fur goods. " I'iu Itt waablnetoastreet, Boston. Tu4w . ,11 Host antf 4Pottnti. LOST Sclater'a Catalogiie of NorO j Amari- can Birds,1 vol., 8vo., bound in red clotfc . a^oj _*, ward to whoever wiU return tho same to M iltTvemoii'trcet._______________________________Stt apW llnder wiil fce suitably rewarded upon lea\in</' .h^ro,^ afNo. 98 Washington street. 1H( J^Jg* L~ OST. A^ 17th either in Cb'~i-p- rlt^ ton, a lady's Hunter GoldWatch. WEp^win rJL turn it to 132 Bcliingham street, Che> , J^??rf iniT ham, 19 Commercial street

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Boston Evening Transcript, [newspaper]. April 18, 1865. http://www.loc.gov/resource/lprbscsm.scsm1276

Boston Jm' he iiithiv^ warded.________ Stt____ '*"' '" PKj^ LOST. On Friday mor- .ini^'huttrnaa Q~^~i10 o'clock, on the Pubtie o fo nr l^^n ! ?. ,miY-p( nf i,npnL ii-^d doenmp "Sniea or Beacon street, aA^v nersoSv ng'teST 'glf^, '"I""' "f Prof. iHilsar's. wlllbeTui?ablJ JS^anlr"^;"''' Commonwealth aronu.^.5 .^^^^^'^J^-^ost, Men lay aftomooii; ?U^ta v^ Rpi.?,;? J"'*' between Bostm and JamVoa iJ Jt',.nif ,S 'iArlington, Commonwealth, anil Eeiks t J.t.f3 riT-(vblack delalne dross wraiised in pa">fri Leave at a vjnunonwoaltlj aveans. tt p U

BOSTON DAILY EVENING TRANSCRIPT, TUESDAY, APRIL 18. 1865. EVENING TRANSCRIPT. TUESO^rEVBNING, APRn. IS, MAS. lOCAL IKTELIIOSNGB. GBEAT HEETIKO AT FAHXTTII HAIL. The generalsorrow of the community was partially expressed by tbe large concourse of citizens assembled atFaneuil Hall yesterday, P.M., to hear the touching tributes paid to the exalted character ol AbrahamLin- coln, the late President of the United States. The hall is appropriately draped with habilimentsof mourn- ing. In the centre ot the ceiling is the United States coat of arms, from which radiate tothe top of the Bupporting pillars of the galleries strips of white and black cloth. At each side of theclock in the centre gallery are mourning tablets, upon which are in- Bci ibed: "Abraham Lincoln,16th President of the United States; bora July 13, 1809; died April 15, 1865." Upon the rostrum aredisplayed several American flags, draped. The platform is enreloped Trith black and white alpaca.The light oi day is shut Out from the windows by heavy black drapery. The galleries^are hung Inmourning, and also the large Webster painting at the rear of the plattorm. Upon the platform,besides the members of the City (Government, were a large number of our most prominent citizens,and very many of the clergy- men of the city. Before th meeting was called to order, the band playedappropriate funeral marches. Prayer was first offered by the Rev. Dr. Lothrop; "Pleyel's Hymn" wasthen performed. This im- pressive tune was followM by the annexed address ftom Mayor Lincoln,Feilow-Citizena: On the morning of the 15th of January, a revered and distinguished citizen, thencnpagedin the pursuits of private life, died suddenly t his residence in Boston. As the news of thesad occurrence extended, it produced a profound im- pression over the whole.coumry, and thePresident of the United States immediately took notice of the event as a national bereavement. Onthe morning of the 16th of April, just throe months after the (leceaae of the retired statesman, onthe day sol- emnly set apart by a portion of the Christian church to commemorate the death of theblessed Lord, the President himself, invested with all the cares and prerogatives of ofiicial station,was sum- moned to depart this life, and to Join the vast as- sembly 'of the great and good of otherdays. On that occasion in January, this venerable hall was arrayed in its habiliments of woe; andtoday, ag^iin putting on its emblems o'f mourninj, we are' assem- bled to condole with each other Inthis great grief, und to take counsel together on the new sorrow trhich has fallen upon our country.The last time the citizens of Boston assembled within these walls. It was to give an expression ofthe exulting Joy of a happy people; today we meet, Iwwed down by a common affliction, seekingcomfort and consolation fi-om each other, in that depression of fcpirit which every heart feels, .

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Yesterday we went up to our several houses of tvorship, and before the altar of Almightv God, gath-ered those lessons of resignation for ourselves, and that confidence in the wisdom of the greatDispenser of events, which it is the mission of our holy religion to inspire; today we meet in theaccustomed place for the great gatherings of the people, to pay our fee- ble tribute to the memoryof the distinguished dead, nnd to renew our vows of uufiltering fidelity to our country in this hourof its extreme peril. The death of the Chief Magistrate of the Nation, who , bad been set apart asits ruler by the free suffrages of its citizens, always awakens the most tender j sympathies and theprofoundest regrets; how much ' more so in the present cr'sis of our national affairs, when theevents of the last four years are so fresh In our remembrance. The hand that guided the Ship ofState through the perils of the past, we fondly trusted would remain at ^he helm until all the dan-ger was over, and gentle breezes wafted its course over calm seas. We knew and braced ourselves tothe fact at the commencement of the unholy rebellion that we should be called upon to make manysacrificua to ac- complish its overthrow; but little did we think that one so costly and dear was to berequired as the head of the nation. The fatal shot, whioh, fired by an assassin's hand, laid low thefirst in the land was imed at the happiness of the whole people; and we Bh.atl be recreant to duty,and false to our high responsi- bilities if we fail to extirpate the disloyal spirit which jiromptcri it. Wemay divide anil form parties on minor matters, but let the appalling event we deplore unite all thepeople tn one solid phalanx in behalf of those principles of humanity and ec|ual rights which ourfithers enunciated at the birth of the nation, and which will render the name of Abraham Lincolna blessed memory through many generations. It is not my province, fellow-citizens, to furnish thefitting words wlii,;h will give an expression of the eentimenta of this assembly. There are thosepresent who will speak of the career and services of the la- mented dead, and of the exigenciesin which the country Is now placed. My duty is performed, when. In consonance with the actionof the City Couucil.you are invited to particip.ate in the proceedings of this meeting, and are thusable to testify in an ofllcial form to the world the feelings of the citizens of Bos- ton on the mostsolemn and memorable event in the history of the country. At the conclusion of the Mayor's speech,the Hon, P. W. Chandler presented a aeries of resolutions, which he prelaced by some excellentintroductory re- jnarto, showhag the barbarity of the chivalry. He said: A man was hung In New Yorkthe other day, who was said to belong to a wealthy tamily in Virginia, himself well educated aftertheir style, and an officer in the Confederate army. This man had been con- Tieted for an attemptto throw a railway train from the track, wtdch was crowded with women and chil- dren, A formerofficer of the Confederate army is now under sentence of death, who, with companions In guilt,undertook to fire most of the hotels in a large city, and thus destroy hundreds and perhaps thou-sands of lives of innocent people, and this faraway from the active operations of soldiers in thefield. When have these crimes been disavowed? What blgh and magnanimous Southern officerhas con- demned them, and threatened to resign if they were approved by his superiors? Whatlegislature has rtamped them with reprobation? When has the rebel Congress disapproved of them?

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What Southern newspaper has denounced them? There is nothing in all this to stir up feeUnga ofrevenge with us. Excited passions can do no good, Ent we have a duty to perform, and the considera-tion of these transactions will render that duty less difficult. The present condition of things mustcease. "We have a lesson to teach here, and the pupils must learn that lesson. We must banishfrom the laud every relic of barbarism. We must colonize the country with respectable men. Wemust organize school districts and build schoolhouses, and send schoolmasters and spelling books,and the New Eng- land Primer, and ministers of the Gospel, and Bi- bles. We must, if necessary,withdraw the mission- Aries from Turkey and Asia Minor, India and the Islands of the .^gean Sea, andemploy them nearer home. We will thus possess and elevate this people, to the end that Mfe maybe safe, liberty secured, pro- perty protected and the Christian r<iligion maintained In ite purity, Mr,Chandler offered the following resolutions: The citizens of Boston, in Faneuil Hall assem- l>led, desireto bow in humble and trusting sub- mission to the Divine Providence by whose permis- Bion ourbeloved and honored Chief Magistrate has been removed by violence from the scene of his earthlylabors; and they earnestly pray for the abil- ity to restrain all feelings of revenge "for it is writ- ten.Vengeance is mine, I will repay, saith the Lord." Mesolved, That the character of Abraham Lincoln Isone of the richest gifts ever bestowed upon a tree people. An enlightened statesman, whose highestambition was the happiness of his country; a firm magistrate, who knew how to temper justice withmercy; a wise ruler, who listened to the counsels ot others, but always acted upon his own convic-tions of duty, he stands today, in the affection of all loyal cituens, not second to Washington him-Jtemlved, That we tender to the family of the de- ceased our earnest sympathy m the death of ahus- band and lather whoso kindness of heart, purity of Intention, gentleness, firmness and sincerityare as fiimiliar as household words to this whole people, Besolvfd, That while we do not attribute tothe mass of rebel citizens any complicity with a crime 80 enormous as the one we now deplore, weare firm- ly convinced that It is the direct result of the princi- ples Inculcated by their leaders, and ofa state ot society that is utterly opposed to the doctrines of enlightenedmorality and inconsistentwith the pure' preceptss of the Christian religion. That we can- not but regard the holding of humanbeings in brutal Ignorance ajid hopeless slavery, the unprovked resort to an armed resistance to theconstitution and laws of the country, the deliberate starving of prisoners taken In war, the concertedattempt to burn the hotels of a large city, filled with women and children, the bru- tal assault upon aSenator at his seat in the capitol, and Bnaliy, the assassination ot the chief magistrate of the country,aad the attempted murder of the prlncipai executive otBcer, with everv circumstance ol-ccwardiceand atrocity, are so many kindred evi- dences of a state of ignorance, brutality and wicked- a<S^fljiich have no narallel iu the history of advil- IzediworAe. ' . , Befoifyd, That wo now and here avowour deter- mination-, on -this solemn occasion,, to preserve the Union of our lathers, to maintainthe Constitution of the Unitd States to enforce the laws of the country, to remove everv vestige ofbarbariiftn from our bor- ders, to the end that universal freedom, enlightened civilization, puremorality and the sublime principles of the Christian religion may everywhere prevail; and to this

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Boston Evening Transcript, [newspaper]. April 18, 1865. http://www.loc.gov/resource/lprbscsm.scsm1276

we do here, in this temple of liberty inhere our lathers for generations have assem- bled, pledgeur lives, our fortunes and our sacred Jionor, mvoMpg the aid and guidance of Him iu jvhose handsate the destinies of nations, Hon, C, G, Lorlng was nert introduced. We have only room for thefollowing extracts from his masterly speech! \ No one can_have watched the quickness of peroep-i!?S,' ^^. ,?? J!0<1 sense and ingenuous simplicity with which he hs dealt with the numerous embar-rassing questions *hich have arisen during his ad- mimstratioD, as shown in his official papers,corre- spondence and reported conversations, Vlthout admi- ISi^Sl.^^flJ^i!,'''"; ^ 51 can any one, it isbelieved, contemplate the fact, thb farreachlng foresight, the brimd statesmanship and propheticwisdom eviiiced in his management of the seemingly Insoluble prob- lem ol slavery, and his gradualpreparation of the pubhc mind for its final sfupendMs solution, without teeling ^)n to awe. as ifthey could only be the result ofa Divine inspiration. With perfect compre- hension of the principlesof the Constitution, the de- termination to make them the rule of his admistra- tion, a marvellousinsight into the moral forces per- vading the minds and hearts of the people, a religious Observerof the indications of Providential design, he aid not seek to be accounted a prophet, but stoodcalmiy a waiter upon events as manifestations of the Jisvitable results to which U were tending,U or- der to nie them aright m meuu of ftoeompUfhing tbealTstion of hl> country. No sketch ^the character of Abraham Lincoln, however superficial, could be attempted without re- cognitionof^his simple, fervent, unostentatious piety, breathing alike in every important public document,and throughout his correspondence and speeches to the last day of his life. He seemed to live andact under a pervading sense of the presence and provi- dence of Uod; and in this doubtless hefound much of the strength that preserved him so calm and firm, and even cneerful, in the terrificstorms through which he was called tipqn to pilot the State. No one can read his parting remarksto his friends in Illinois, when first taking leave of them, his exquisite speech at Gettysburg, thanwhich nothing more grand or beautiful has lallen from the lips of man in this gen- eration, or hissublime adflress at bis second inaugu- ration, which, although sneered at by some ignoble criticsat home, has brought upon their knees even the London Times and Saturday Review, ani beenpronounced by high authority in England, "a state paper, which, for political weight, moral dignity,and unaffected solemnity, has had no equal in ouRtimo," without the conviction that he was a God-fearing and a God-trusting man. In the language, as it is be- lieved, of one of the most eminentauthors in Eng- land, we may well say: "When the heats of party passion and international Jealousyhave abated, when detraction has spent its malice and the scandalous gossip of the day goes theway of all lies, the place of Abraham Lincoln in the grateful affections of his coun- trymen, and inthe respect of tlie world, will be second only, if it be second to Washington himself." But we mustturn from this sad but interesting theme to ask ourselves for the interpretation of this seeminglyhorrible dream from which we are yet but half awakened. Why has this terrible sii been suf- ferredto be committed? How is it tliat the kind Providence of God, which we have so exultlngly and I trustreverently claimed as manifested thus far in our behalf, has thus apparenOy withdrawn its pro-

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Boston Evening Transcript, [newspaper]. April 18, 1865. http://www.loc.gov/resource/lprbscsm.scsm1276

tection, sufiered our beloved leader to be stricken down and our Joy to be turned into mourningour exultant hopea into sadness and apprehension? It would indeed be presumptuous in us toattempt to scan or to portray the designs of God in such an event as this. All that we may do ishumbly to trust that He ordains all things lor the best to those who seek the knowledge of His will,and to lay to heart the lesson He is thus reaching as it addresse's itself to our consciences and ourunderstanding. As there seems to be no pretence that the assassins were instigated by anv senseof personal wrong to themselves individually, committed by their victims: and as the attempteddestniction of life was not con- fined to the President alone, but extended to the Minister of State,holding the next most importitnt office in the nation, and whose services iu this junc- ture are ofpeculiar moment: and there is good cause to lieiieve was also designed to embrace the Ministerof War, holding the keys of the military resources of the nation, and other offices of State, therecan be no reasonable doubt that these crimes were the fruits of conspiracy for the breaking up orcrippling ot the Government with a view to save the sinking fortunes of the rebels by giving themtime lor rallying their scattered forces, and reviving their fainting courage, or for the deadly purposeof wreaking a fiendish re- venge for ihe overthiow which they have sustained. Where this conspiracyoriginatoj, and how far it extended, whether it was in pursuance of a plan con- certed by the rebelleaders, or under their auspices, or whether it was conflued to a few desperate men only, is not,and perhaps uever may be satisfactorily ascertaine<l. Nor, so far as our future safety or duty isconcerned, is it material. Unhappily for them, the whole course Af conduct of the Instigators andleaders of this rebellion has been notoriously such as to render their participation or connivance ina crime like this neither impossible nor incredible. It is of hardly less, if any inferior atroci- ty, thoughof more dramatic conspicuousness, than many otners of which they have been guilty. The wholetone of public sentiment with whicli they have long and systematically labored by every speciesof falsehood and malignity to poison and embitter the heart of the South against the North; thereward, oifered in their public print** for the heads of Union officers; the atrocious threats andanathemas which they have, in public and in private, poured out upon the neads of our soldiers andpeople; the no longer questionable, deliberate and fiendisli destruction of the lives of thousandsand tens of thousands of our brethren, their prisoners of war, by lingering deaths from cold andstarvation; the almost universal cruel- ty with which others were killed, maimed or insult- ed, andeven by women accounting themselves la- dies; all too plainly indlcato a deadly rancor and ha- trednursed and encouraged towards the peopie'of the North, of which this crime is nothing more thanthe natural fruit, and for which these instigators and leadei^s are Justly accountable. It is but thenatural culmiuation of the ferocity against the North so long cultivated as a Southern virtue. It maybe that this lesson was needed more fully to Impress upon us and the world the true characterof this rebellion, its inherent atrocity and the nesessity for the further continuance ol our utmostenergy and caution in its entire suppression until every vestige of fliture danger shall have beenremoved. It may be that,, bewildered by tlie magnitude of the rebellion extending over so vast

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an area, and Infecting such large numbers of men, and dazzled by the valor and persistency withwhich they have attempted to main- tain their cause, or lulled by the syren song of re- turningpeace and commercial prosperity, we were becoming blind to the enormity of the crime: that aweak sentimentality was taking place of our manly perception of the right, and our resolution tomain- tain it; that there was danger that old party associa- tions and affiliations between Northernaud Southern Solitieiaus might be again revived to enable the outh to recover its ancient swayover the lawii, and allow its former leaders to resume their places in the halls of Congress. It maybe that the perfldlty of the authors and f)lotters' or the rebellion iu planning and preparing or itsaccomplishment while holding posts of honor and trust under the government which they intendedto destroy; that the stealing of f irtresses and arms and ammunition held tn trust for its use; thememo- rable bloody assault in the Senate Chamber, on the perpetrator of which civic honors andsplendid gifts and the approving smiles of fair women were shower- ed withoutnumber a just type,indeed, of this then incipient erime; the bayoneting of wounded soldiers on the field of battle; theconversion of skulls of those killed into drinking cups and their bones into armlets and necklaces;the robbery of prisoners of their only clothing; the raids and murders upon private citi- zens; thesetting on fire of hotels and places of public amusement filled with women and children in crowdedcities; the deliberate, fiendish murder of tens of thousands of prisoners of war by lingering deathsfrom cold and starvation It may l>e that all these were not enough to excite in us and foreign nationsa due sense of the terrible enormities of this rebellion In its origin and prosecution, but that thedreadful climax of cold-blooded assassination was needed to complete its crowning atrocity andshame, and to make It stand out before the world aud go down to history with this further dreadstamp of inllkmy branded upon its forehead. Perhaps the noble aristocracy of England, who haveso reaaily joined hands with the bastard aris- tocracy of the South, founded upon traffic in humanflesh, may recoil a little now that the hands ot their chosen allies ai*e clothed with the blood ofthe assas- sin's victim, as well as with that of the slave. And the puissant Emperor ol the French,who so adroitly attempted to embarrass our government and encour- age the rebellion by his newMexican empire, and who has had Impressive experience, may, perhaps, feel a little fluttering atthe heart when he reflects that his American allies are not rebels only, but assassins also. It is to behoped, and we will believe, as long as we may, that the great mass of the Southern people will lookupon this stupendous crime with horror and detestation; and that it may awaken many of them toa sense of the hideous nature of the rebellion and Its inevitable tendencies. To all such who maybe disposed to return to their allegiance to the gov- ernment in sincerity and good faitli, we shouldstand ready with open arms to receive them; but to the plotters and instigators of this foul treason,and its chief managers and leaders, no such return should be permitted. Their extermination bydeath or ex- ile is the only atonement that can be made for the oceans of precious blood withwhich they have del- uged the land and desolated our homes: the only reasonable vindication ofthe majesty of the laws they have violated and of the authority they have de- fied, Hon. A. H. Eice'g

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address was every way befitting the occasion. We regret our limits confine us to such brief extractsas may be found below. It created a profound Impression, Mr. Bice said: Perhaps it was necessarythat he should pass away and that a man dra^wn from that section of the coun- try where thisrebelUon originated, and who under- stands more intimately and ultimately the work of treasonand rebellion in the section of country where it has been waged, should now take the chief positionin this land, that he might minister a more equal j us- tice to the parricides and traitors who, afterplot- ting treason for years, at un appointed moment sprang at the throat of tho republic, and uponIts prostrate form trusted they were fo rear an edifice ci eternal slavery. 11 may be that it wantedAndrew Johnson's discernment of traitors, that th3 account which this people have to s ettte withits enemies may be done according to the terms of Justice and right- eousness. He has not yetforeshadowed what he will do or what he esteems necessary to be done, buttjvhat he has said Iventure nothing in saying, is the senti- ment ot ninety-nine out of every hundred ot the loyal peopleof this country, both (North and South. He has declared that he esteems treason to be tha greatestof crimes, that it is a crime to be punished, and not a crime to be forgiven. We may contem- platethe restoration of peace with joy. We may summon to our hearts all that there is of magnanim- ity,of charity and forgiveness; we may extend our thought to the conviction that by some means orother we must become reconciled to the great mass of the people of the rebel States; but instigatorsof this treason and rebellion must siiff'er the just penal- ty of their crimes. We want none of theirfellowship in our society; we want no more of their stalking treason, breeding through the lengthand breadth of the land; we want no more of their secret conclaves; we want no more of their vicesor their presence In our halls of legislation or tn our offices of State, and wewill have no more ofthem. We may trust that this Is the verdict ol God who has discomfited them, and has given us thevictory over them. The last speech was made by E, H, Dana, Jr., Esq. It was a beautiful tribute to thelate President. The meeting closed with the singing of the hymn beginning "God bless our nativeland" to the tune of "America," and the Benediction pronounced by Bev. Dr. Lothrop, Meettno ofthe Boakd of Trade. A special meeting of the government of the Board of Trade was held yesterdayatlernoon, for the purpose of taking appropriate notice ofthe death of President Lincoln, Thepresident; George C. Richardson, Esq., occu- pied the chair, who upon opening the meeting madea few appropriate remarks. Edward S. Tobey, Esq., presented the following resolution: Uetolved,That the merchants of this city be invited to assemble in the Merchants" Exchange on Tuesday at12 o'clock, to unite with this board in a public ex- pression ot their deep sense ofthe loss which our-na- tion has sustained in the sudden death of Abraham Lincoln, tho President of the United States,and in such appropriate demonstrations of respect as pa- triotic hearts, prompted by reverenceana cordial ea- . teem for his distinguished life and cnaracter may suggest. Mr, Tobey sugtalnedthe resolution to bilef but eloquent address, Suiequently It was unanimetulr adopted by the Board,Messrs, Geo, C, BlchartlBon, E, S. Tobev, A. H. Rice, A, A. Lawrence, J, M, Bee- be, S, E, Spauldlng, andOsborn Howes were ap- pointed delegates to attend the funeral of the lats President In Washington,

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It was voted that th) Board of Trade Rooms and the Merchants' Exchangs be draped in mourning andremain so for thirty days. A G^KEBOCS DOKATION, We lam that the sum of $400 was given to theSanitary Commission last week by Chauncy Hall School, Half this amount came from the boys, andhalf from the principals, Messrs, Cushing & Ladd, Gesebal Theoloqicai. Library, The annual meetingofthe stockholders of the General Theolog- ical Library was held at the rooms No, 41 Tremont street,yesterday, the President, Rev. Charles Bur- roughs, D. D., in the chair. The opening prayer was maaeby Rev. Dr. Beckwith, after which the annual report o'f the directors was read. The receipts oftheinstitution have been. Including the Kalance in the treasury at the beginning of the year, $413598; the disbursements <*2971 96; leaving a balance in the tre.T8ury of $1184 02; of this balancethe sum of $1002 24 was given to the permanent fund and is to be so invested. The entire cashreceipts from the beginning have been $9163 56; total receipts in cash and books $11,663 36. Theshareholders voted to transfer to the corpora- tion called the "General Theological Library" all theproperty heretofore held by them. Also to dissolve from this date the General Theological Library asoriginally organized. A vote was adopted authoriz- ing the directors to petition the Supreme Courtto take anv other legal measures necessary for tho pur- pose of perfecting its new organization. Tliefollowing-named gentlemen were elected direc- tors for the ensuing year: Rev. Charles Burroughs, D.D,. Rt. Eev. Manton Eastbum, 1). D., Rev. Baton Stow, D. D., Rev. A. A. Miner, D. D., John 0. Hay- den, M,D,, Bev, Alexander Blakle, D. D., Eev. Ed- ward J. Young, Eev. James Reed, H. S. Chase, Esq., EbcnezerDale, Esq., A. B. Merrill, Esq., Samuel Batchelder, Jr., Esq., Eev. George F. Hasklns, O.D,, Eev. E. N.Kirk, D, D,, Eev, Luther Farnham, lent rebel, wM present, but kept quiet. The parlor of Mr*. Tyler iswhere the secessionists hare often met during the war, and was the headquarters of a rebel sewingsociety. The flag was sent to Gen. Dix. Several secessionists are reported to have been beaten byinfuriated UnionisU on hearing the awful comments on the assassination made by these fiends.An Inflammatory placard was posted around the city this morning, concluding with: "Death to trai-tors," "The Union, one and indivisible," "Strike often," "No more parley." A man was thrown from aBrooklyn ferry boatinto the river for disloyal language. His life was saved by a passing boat. OETICIALANNOUNCEMENT OF THE PEESIDBST'3 DEATH TO THE ABMT, DBPARTMHIfT OF STATE, I Washtogtou,April 15,1865. J It Is hereby ordered that. In honor of the memory of our late Chief Magistrate, allofficers and others subject to the orders of the .Secretary of State wear crape upon the left arm forthe period of six months, W, Hunter, Acting Secretary of State, War Departhskt, 1 Adjutant General'sOffice, April 16.) General Orders, No. 66. The following order of the Secretary of War announces tothe armies of the United States the untimely and lamented death of the illustrious Abraham Lincoln,late President of the United States. On the day after the receipt of the .order at the heailquartersof every military division, department, army, post, station, fort and arsenal, and at the Mili- taryAcademy at West Point, the troops and cadets will be paraded at 10 o'clock A. M., and the orderread to them. After which all labor and operations for tho day will cease and be suspended, as far aspracticable in a state of war. The nati(mal flag will be displayed at half-staff at dawnof day, 13 guns

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wid be fired, and afterwards, at intervals of 30 minutes, between the rising and the setting ofthesun, a single gun, aud at the close ofthe day a national salute of S6 guns. The officers of the armiesof the United States wul wear the badges of mourning on the left arm and on their swords, andthe colors of their commands and regiments wiU be put in mourning for the period of six months.By command cf LlEUT.-GEif. Grant, W. A. Nichols, Asslstant-Adjutant-Genaral, War Department, \Washhtgton, April 16,1865,) Lieut.-Ofn, Grant, U. 8. Army, Commanding Ar- mies of tlie United States,Washington, V. V: General: You will please announce, by General Order, to the Armies of tho UnitedStates, that, on Saturday, the 15th day of April, 1865, by reason of the death of Abraham Lincolr,the office of tho Pres- ident of the United States devolved upon Andrew Johnson, Vice-Prosident,who, on the same day, took the official oath prescribed for the President, and entered upon theduties of that office, Edwin M, Stantok, Secretary of War, War Department, ADatTTANT-GENEBAL'SOFFICE, Washington, April 16,1865. General Order, No. 7. It Is hereby announced to the armies ofthe United States that, on Saturday, the 15th day of April, 1865, by reason of the death of AbrahamLincoln, the of- fice of President of the United States devolved upon Andrew .Johnson, Vice-President,who, on the same day, took the ofhcial oath prescribed for the Presi- dent, and entered upon theduties ot that office. By command of Lient.-Gen, Grant, w. A, NrcH^LS, Asslstant-Adjtttaut-General,Popular Betenob at the Capital. 'Wash- ington, nth. This forenoon several prisoners from PrinceGeorge county were brought to Washington. As they were being wrought to the CHd Capitol Prison(Provost-Marshal Ingraham's office), a large crowd followed, increasing at every comer, although, asa precautionary measure, the rente was down back streetii. The crowd was a motley one of all agesand colors. It being represented that the parties were Booth and Suirat, and the report gaining creditas they reached the vicmity of the Baltimore depot, the cry was raised "Hang them!" "Kill them I" andat the same time the pilsoners wore attacked with stones, and were struck several tmes, as werealso the other guard. Seme orderly persons attempted to quiet tho crowd by remonstrating withthem, and assuring them that they were mistaken, but they failed to stop the riot- ous proceidings,which, however, were soou quieted. Alter the guard were struck a number of times they faced aboutand made ready to defend them- selves with their musket. The prisoners were deliv- ered to theSuperintendent of tho prison, each of them having been somewhat bruised by the flying miesilcg.Among other arrests today were several men in fe- male appai'el,______________________ One DATLATEB FROM Europe. New York, nth. The steamship City of Baltimore, from Liverpool 5th inst., andQusenstown Cth, arrived at 7 o'clock this evening. She broug lit 1700 In gold. Latest by Telegraph toQueenstowa. Liverpool, &th. Madrid papers state that thePortugucoO Govern- ment has acceuedto the American Minister's demand lor the removal of the Commander of Fort Belen, for firingon the frigate Niagara after the Federal com- mander had signalized to him that he understoodbis summons. The pirate Shenandoah was still at Melbourne, Feb. 23. Capt. Weddell threatens toreport to Rich- mond the conduct of the Australian authorities in refusing to ftimish his vessel withsupplies. The lockout in the iron trade has assumed enlarged proportions. A Calcutta deapatoh of

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the 1st instant states that the budget proposes an export duty of 3 per cent, upon all wool, tea andcoSee, and 2 per cent, on bides, sugar, silk and fur. Presidekt Johnson. President Johnson has re-moved fKim the Kirkwood House to the residence of Attorney-General Speed, on I street, between13th and 14th streets, where he will be a guest until he is permanently lociited at the White House.He presided at a Cabinet meeting today, and as he was leaving, the Clerks in the Treasury Depart-ment swarmed around him calling tor a speech. Finding that tbey were bent on making him saysomething, he at last complied, saying: "I can only remark, my friends, that the people of the UnitedStatejiave alwaj^ considered and treated arson as a great crime and murder as the greatest erime,I will show them that the greatest crime Is treason, and that as such it will be punished," Similarremarks were addressed to a deputation of clergymen who ctUed to pay their respects to thePresident. It it is very evident that the sympathis- ers with secession will have to behave themselvesnow, and they clearly tee It. Despatch to the Journal. '- Sympathy BT THE Foreign Legations, Wash-ington, llth. It is understood that members of the diplomatic body yesterday held a meeting at theRussian ljegatits>, and appointed a committee of three. Baron Geralt, Minister from Prussia, M, Mol-ina, Minister fro:n Costa Rica, and Col, Raasiotf, Minister flrom Denmark, to represent the diplomaticbody, and Jo conrey, on behalf of their colleagues, the expression of their deeply felt sympathy withthe family of the lat President and the people of the United States ot the occasion of the recentsad events. The committee waited upon the Secretary of the President, and through him sought aninterview with Capt. Robert Lincoln, which the latter, for obvi- ous reasons, felt obliged to decline,while expressing his thanks tbr the s.vmpathy tendered by the diplo- matic body. They have alsodecided to join in all the outward demonstrations of sorrow which have been determined uponby the authorities and citizens. $2S,000; North American, |10,IM0; KaUonal, $20,1)1)0; Neptune,$9000; New England, $10,000; Preseott, $5000; Washington, $7000. Total $171,000. Thb Fibb athalf-past eight o'Slock this morning was In the Arlington House, corner ot Washington and Essexstreets Earl W. Johnson, proprietor. Damage slight. Gov, Andrew and Staff will leave for Wash- ingtonthis afternoon, to attend the flineral of Presi- dent Lincoln, by invitation of the Acting Secretaryof State. The Billiard Exhibition by Mons, Carme hag been postponed till Thursday evening. WakDepartment, 1 Washington, April 16.} The distressing duty has devolved upon the Secre- tary of Warto announce to the armies ot the United States that at twenty-two minutes after seven o'clock, onthe morning of Saturday, the fifteenth day of April, 1665, Abraham Lincoln, President of the UnitedStates, died of a mortal wound inflicted upon him by an assassin. The armies of the United Stateswill share with their fellow-citizens tho feelings of grief and horror inspired by the most atrociousmur- der of their great and beloved Presidout and Com- mander-in-chief, and with profound sorrowwill mourn his death as a national calamity. The headquarters ot evorv department, post, sta-tion, fort, and arsenal, will be draped In mourning for thirty days, and appropriate IHineral honorswill b paid by every army and in every department, and git every military post, and at the MilitaryAcademy at West Point, to the memory of the late Illustrious Chief Magistrate ofthe Nation and

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Commander-in- chief of its armies. Lient.-Gen. Grant will givftthe necessary instructions for carryingthis order .Into efl'ect. E. M, Stanton,. Secretary of War. SPECIAL OBSn or THB KAYT DBPABTMXNT, ToVessels of the United States : The flags of all vessels aud at all Nary Yards and Stations, and MarineBarracks, will be kept at half- mast durinf tho day, and at 12 o'clock meridian twenty-one minute-guns will be fired by the senior officer of each squadron and the commander of each of the NavyYards and Stations. Gideon Wblles, Secretary of the Nvy. The Assassination of President Lincoln. Aspecial despatch to the Daily Advertiser, dated Wash- ington, April 17th, says: The imviense corpsof detectives scouring the southern counties have not found any trace of the assassin, and it seemson the whole, equally likely that he may be either much further from, or much nearer Washingtonin another direction, as that he is secreted In that region. If, as is probable, the plan of his escapeor hiding-place was elaborated with aa much care and skill as the details of the execution of themurder. Booth is long before this in security aud will defy all search or pursuit at present. The mostplausible motive yet suggested for the actor becom- ing an assassin, i.s in the theory that Booth haslong been a member of a secret rebel association, formed for the purpose of killing Mr, Lincoln; thatthe member designated to commit the deed was selected by lot, and that the obligation thus fellupon him. He has seemed absorbed in some hidden project which caused him great uneasinessfor the last two months, and is now remembered to have lurked strangely about the capitol duringthe inauguration on the 4th of March, and to have appeared as if waiting for somebody whose non-arrival disappointed him, Keccnt examinations of the box in the theatre where the murder wascommitted show some very strange facts. It is certain that some one had, dur- ing Friday, loosenedthe lock on the closed door of the box, so that If the other door were shut in tlje In- truder's face,this one could be easily forced open, and had also arranged a contrivance by which the door inthe passage leading into the dress-circle could lie securely fastened in such a way as to pre- ventany one following the assassin from that part of the theatre, ITiat Booth could have ett'ected allthese arrangements In the daytime without being seen, appears almost incredible. The evidenceas to the precise manner in whicltthe shot was fired is very conflicting. If, as public opin- ion nowincline* to suspect. Booth fired at Mr. Lin- coln thiough the open door of the box, then the holethrough the closed door must have been purposely made during the day, for the probable purposeof en- abling the murderer, if necessary, to take a survey of the inside of the box from the passagethrough this peep-hole. Everything combines to prove that the preparations for the murder of Mr.Lincoln were the most complete and elaborate which mind coulti con- trive. Such developmentshave been made today as are calculated 1o startle one with a sense of the deeply laid and masterlyplanned conspiracy that has un- derlain Washington society for the lust two or three months. Thereseems scarcely room to doubt that the lives of the President and at least three members of theCabinet, and two or three senators have been in daily danger since the middle of February. Theauthorities have made many arrests within the last three days, someof persons of a very suspiciouschar- acter. Many, in fact most of the persons, have been discharged, but about twentv are still held

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in the Old Capitol for further examination. That some of these persons have been engaged In theconspiracy that culminated in the murder ofthe President and the attempted murder ofthe Secretaryof State, is .usserted by high officers of government to be clearly established. It is also establishedthat Booth's connection with tiie conspiracy is not of re- cent date, and that the murder was not thehasty, halt^onsidered piece of wickedness that It was even yesterday generally supposed to havebeen. Facts enough have come to light to show beyond all question that he, or some ono else, madeextensive prej.iration fOr the work in the theatra on Friday, or perhaps during the Bight of Thursday,At first there was a general disj)<>sition to charge'hira alone with the entire affair ofthe President'smurder, but today investigations prove that he had active and cunning accomplices in the matter,PeNISHMEBI OP SECEgeiONISTS. New York, nth. George Wells, John Gallagher. Wm. Fanning, andPeter Britton, the- latter the Treasurer of a theatre, were today sentenced to six months in thePeniten* tlary for uttering treasonable sentiments. Last evening a squad of patriotia young menvis- ited the house of Mrs. John Tyler, widow of the ex President, on Stateu Island, and demandedand obtained a rebel flag which had long been hanging to her parlor. Ex-Uyor J<ewi of SayMiaah, art- A Cleboymak Rebuked. Rev. Mr. Massey, pis- tor ofthe Baptist Church in Bellingham, preachedby exchange in Rev, David Sanford's pulpit at Medway Village, on Sunday forenoon. The church wasappro- priately draped in mourning tor President Lincoln, the people being most deeply moved bythe torrlble crime of Friday night. Mr, Massey, however, made no allusion to the event except in hisprayer, and in that he referred to it but very briefly and in such an indefinite and general way thatno one would have inferred that a nation is bowed In mourning at the loss of its Executive head bythe hand of an assassin. At the conclusion ofthe service an impromptu con- sultation was held bythe principal men of the con- gregation, and aa the result, Mr, Massey was immo- Oiafelv waitedupon by a committee aud informed ttiat his services could be dispensed with in the after- noon. Hedemurred at first, and intimated a wil- lingness to do better, but the people wore not in a state ofmind to be trifled with, and as it was evident that if ho attempted to officiate he would either findan empty house or be invitod to leave the pulpit, he took the advice of the committee and madeoff, Jour- nal, ________________________ General Burnside on Andrew Johjison, General Bumslde wasacco8te<l this morning in Wil- liam street by some friends who chanced to remember that duringthe General's western command he was brought into intimate contact with Andrew Johnson, thenmilitary governor ofXennesseo, and must, there- fore, know much about the character of the citizenwho, by the death of Mr, Lincoln, suddenly becomes the head of the nation. General Bumslde wastherefore asked ; " Can we trust Andrew Johnson ? Is he a drunkard, as has been said ?" Tho Generalreplied : " I know Mr, Tolmson well. He was military Governor of East Tennessee when I commandedIn the West. For some time he was In Louisville and Cincinnati, where I met him at all hours of theday and night, and in most important consultations, and I can say that I never saw him taste liquorof any kind, and never saw him when I thought he had tasted liquor. He was no drunkard then.In my opinion, he is a firm, loyal and talented statesman." N, Y, Evening Post, Real Estate Sale, S.

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A. Walker sold the free- stone house. No. 31 Newton Street, this morning, for $21,100, Dr, Wm,H, Lewis was the gjirchaser. Keal IBstate, $cc. D Sympathy in Nova Scotia, Pictou, N. 8., nth. Flagswere placed at half-mast today as a mark of sympathy toward the United States, in consequenceof the assassination of Lincoln. Anomalous Names eok Counties. Under the above head " Delta"YrtiUx as follows in the Historical Magazine: Beikshire County dates back to 1761 ; but we hsve anearlier instanco of this tautology in the " County of Hampshire," which expression I find used inalawppseed by the Province ofMassa- cliusetts in i699. I havenodonbtltmay bcfonnd stiil earlier.The Coun^ itself was incorporated. Way 7, 1602, by the name of Hampshire not Hampshire County ;and in no part of the early Massachusetts records do T find the latter ex- pression used, tiQless," Hampshire County rates," a marginal nota to October 8,1662, be considered such; but as thisevidently means the .county rates of Hampshire, I do not consider it tauto- logical. There is anotheranomaly in the names of ilas- gachnsetts coantics, which is said to hare been noticed by ,7ohnRandolph. The County of Nor- folk is situated south ot Suffolk. The same time that Suffolk countywas incorporated. May 10, 1643, there was a county of Norfolk formed in its proper position that is,to the north of Suffolk- This county, which is usually referred to as Old Norfolk, included the townsin Massachusetts north of the Merrimac river and all the settled portions of New Hampshire, thenunder the juris- diction of Massachussetts. Af er the government of New Hampshire was taken fromMassachu- setts, the remaining towns, Salisbury, Amesbury arid Haverbill, were added to Essexcounty, Feb. 4, l76-80, and the county of Norfolk ceased to exist. The modem Norfolk county is lessthan three quarters of a century old. It is to the Solons of 1798, and not to the legislators of our earlycolonials days, that we are indebted for this anomaly. From 'Sestcrclay'a Bxtr KdlUons. LATEST 7S0HWASHINGTON. WISTAB'S BAL3A&I THB UREIT ItHMKDY fOK\ coifscinPTiow, And aoknowlddged tivvoAny prominent physiolaus to tie far the mot Sellable Prararatlon ever iatredoced; for the BGLIBfand CUBE i aU LUNC COMPLAINTS. feECBETARY SEWARD'S CONDITION. ABEEST OF SUSPECTEDPARTIES Washington, nth. At 1.30 P. M., Secretary Sew- ard was represented as improving, though herested rather uncomfortably last night. His son Frederick has partially recovered consciousness andhis case is more favorable, Mr, Hansell, the messenger, who was stabbed in back. Is a great salforer,but is believed t be out of danger. Numerous arrests of suspected parties have taken place today,Eeports prevail that Suratt is among the number, but this Is not true. Yesterday^ a gray coat, stainedwith blood, was found near Fort Bunker Hill, just back of the Glen- wood Cemetery. In the pocketwas found a false mustache, a pair of riding gloves, and a slip of paper, upon which was "Mary E,Gardener, 419," This coat is supposed to have been worn by the assassin that attacked SecretarySeward. This morning Detectives Kelly and detail proceed- ed to the House of Nellie Turner, comer13th and Ohio avenues and arrested all the inmates, 8 in num- ber. They are to be held as witnesses.This is the house where Booth spent much of his time. Postmaster Dennison has suspended ailbusiness in the Post Offices and closes them from U to 3 Wednes- dav. Gov. Oglesby of III. has issueda proclamation to the people ot his State calling on them to meet in their churches oa Wednesday,

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Boston Evening Transcript, [newspaper]. April 18, 1865. http://www.loc.gov/resource/lprbscsm.scsm1276

and observe the day in a solemn manner. New York, nth. The Commercial's Washington despatchsays tbaname of the assassin who entered Mr. Seward's house is Thompson. The Post's despatchsays there has been no fight- ing between the forces of Sherman and Johnston. It was believed jtSherman's headquarters that the surrender of Johnston's army wonld take place last Friday. OBDEBor HAVT DEPAETKEHT. BEPOET OF BOOTH'S AREEST. Waslungtem, nth. The Navy Department hasis- sued orders closing business at all the Navy Yards and Depots on Wednesday, and for observingthe day on board all the national vessels in the United States, A report still prevails that Booth hasbeen arrested and is aboard a gunboat in the river, but there is no truth to it. KOBE CANADIANBAIOEBS. Doehester, N. Y,, nth. A telegram was received yestei-day by the Mayor from Major-Gen.Peck, com- manding at New York, stating that information has been received at his headquarters,that an organized band of 150 man were in Carolton Co., Canada, pre- pared to make a raid uponEochester or Ogdensburg. The Mayor called a committee of citizens to take measures for meetingthe raiders. Tho 54th Eegl- ment has been put on duty. COAX. VESSEI. I.OST. Holmes'Sole, nth.The schooner Matanzas, Ham- ilton, from ElijAbethport of and for Portland with a cargo of coal,ran ashore at Cedar Tree Neck, Vine- yardSound, atone, A. M., yesterday, during a thick fog, andsoon after filled. Cargo will be saved. Ves- sel will probably be a total loss. Thb FiEE Nbw YOEK. TheBoston Insurance Companies arc large losers by the fire In the Bonded Warelouses, 278 and 280South street, New York. We hoar of the following amounts: American Insurance Company, J15,0!)0;Boylston, |10,000; City, tuOOO; EUot, S 10,000; Franklin, H0,000; Howard,$00; Merchants',|30,000;ManufiKtarers', This well-known remedy Is offerM to the public, sanc- tioned by the experienoe ofover torty years, aud when re- sorted to in season, seldom tails to etrect a speedy cure ol Couebs,Colds, Croup, Bronehitis, Tnflaenza* Whoopliu; Coueh, Hoarseness, Pains. or Soreness in theChest and side, Bleeding at the L,niiss, Liver Complaints, <te. Those who have not already madeuse of this Kemedy we have only to refer to the wiltten testimoDll8 ot raaoy of cur distinguishedcitizens, who have oeen restored to licalth when the expectation of being cured was indeed a"fotlomhope." Wehave spaceonly for thafoUowbig UNSOLICITEi) TESIIMOinr. From Bev. FHANCISLOBDELL, Pastor of the 8oath Oongregat'onal Church, Bridgeport, Conn.: BRiDOXFOBr, Jan. 21,1861.MEf SES, Skth W. FowiB ic Co. Gentlemen: I consider It a duty which I owe to sutfer- log humanityto bear testimonv to the virtues of Da Wistae's Balsam o Wild Chbekt. 1 have used it for Coufthfl,Colds urSore Throat for many years, and never. in a fitDgle Instance has it failed to relieve andcare me. 1 have firequently been very hoarse on 3at.nrdar, and leaked forward to the delivers oftwo sermons on the fol- lo^ning day with sad mlsal^via^s, but by a liberal use of the BalMim myboarseness ban invariably been removed, and 1 hive preaened without difficulty. I commend it tomy brethren In tlie ministry, aud to public speakers generally as a certain remedv for the brnucblaltroubles to which we are pec uliarlv exposed. Entirely unsolicited 1 send you this test'monial, whichyou are at liberty to use .In any way you choose. Per- napfl the balsam does not afft^ct all perscnsalike, but it always removes my hoArseness. and fits me for the mtuls- tcrs hard working day the

Page 68: Boston Evening Transcript, [newspaper]. April 18, …lcweb2.loc.gov/service/rbc/lprbscsm/scsm1276/scsm1276.pdfBOSTON, TUESDAY EVENING. APRIL 18. 1865. NO. 10,734. IReal iBstate. FOR

Boston Evening Transcript, [newspaper]. April 18, 1865. http://www.loc.gov/resource/lprbscsm.scsm1276

Saobath. Very truly yours, FI6ANCI8 LOBDELL. CUtROYMKN, LAWYBRS, SINOBRS and all thosewhose occupation requires an noasnal exer- cise of the vocal organs, will find this the OKLY BEME-DY which will effectually and instantaneously rellere theU' difficulties. This Kemedy, unlike mostothers, is extremely Pleasant to Taste. A small quantity allowed to pass over the hrltated part atonce removes the difficulty. WISTAB'S BALBAK OF WILD CHEBBT IS PEEPAEE0 BY SETH W. FOWI.I: ACO,, 18 'Cremont street, Boston, ASl> IS FOB SALE BY ALL DBUGGI8TS. oWSOw _____________________mil IS ITY OF BOSTON. Public Sohools! There will be an examination of applicants for the places ofAssistant and Piimary Teache.a in the Gram maraud Primary Schools In East Boston, at the AdamsHchoolhoaae. Belmontsquare, on WEIISESDAY, April 19. commencing at liH o'clock, Tho salary is t40000 per annam, with an annual Inctease of $50 Oo for three years. For the place of Head Assistantthe saiarv Is f SOO w) per annum. Ladles presenting themselves for the examination may bring withthem such testimonials of scholarship aud success in teachhig. as they please to ofTor. BARNABDCAPEjr, Secretary of the School Committee, ap S tap 19 FAUST. A Lyric Drama In Hye Acts. Themusiecomposed by Chaexbs Gounod. Adapted to English aud Italian words, and revised from theFall t'core, with Indlcallons of the lastramenta'ioQ. This new and popular Opera, just nnl>lisbed,terms the 20th volume of "Dilson & Co.'s editloa of standard Operas." It Is prefaced with a sketch ofthe composer, aud a narration of the plot, written by Charles Lamb Kenny. Pr'ce S4. OLIYEB DIT90N* CO., fnlllshcis, _|^J1______________________in Washington street BBOWN'B BSSBNCE OP JAMAICAGIlrOEK" and "BROWN'S ESSENCE OF TUR- KEY RHUBARB" should be in everj family at thia sea- son.It is a preventive and remedy for Diarrhoea, and in prevalent Hummer ComplaintB It is exceUeut,restcrjii the bowels to a regular and healthy tondition So iof dier should leave without a bottle each.Prepared and told only by JOHN I. BROWN BOS, 42.^ WaahlUif ton street, opposite Essex street. B.S. cut this merlitemnt out, anti iesure lul ght artteles etc CITY OP BOSTON. Apbil 3, 1865. Owners otDOGS hi this city are reminded that said Dogs must oe numbered aud retirlstered at the office or thennCerslgned t^ore Ihe expiration 9f th vreiml month. Dofes which were registered In said office m18S1. can re tain the same nambers this year, It then: owners make arlv appUeatlon therefor. 8. F.MoOLEABY, City Cleric, Offlee, Meohanlas' Bullduig, Cnsancy street. Extrae<i flrom Statute* of I3M,Sect.l. Eroiy owner or keeper of a dog shall annaat- y, OB or b^ore ilu thtrtteth day af Apr%l. cauHIt to be registered, numbered, deacrlbea, andiioensed for one vear fom the nrst dav of ihe eiu^liiffMay, in tbe office of the clerk in the city or town wherem he reddea; and shall cause It to weararound iti neck a collar dlstlnotly mark- ed with its otmer's tutnu and rsgistered number, and shallpay tor such license fw doUar tor amalemiMt dollars for a female dog. Scot. Whoever keepa a dogeontrary to the ore- vtsfODs Of this chapter shall fortelt flrieen dollars, to be recovered br complaint;and the money shall be paid to the treasurer ot the county. In which the dog Is kept, ex- cept thatIn the County of Baff.ilk, it shall be paid to the treaauier ol the city or town, y, herein said dog lakept otni/l Hans CJAME OP CROQUET. Complete seU of n Balls. Mallets, &c., of the most approvedpatteitu, ard rules for pUyiag this popular game. For sale by JOSKFH L. BATES, Jy It \A WaahioKtom

Page 69: Boston Evening Transcript, [newspaper]. April 18, …lcweb2.loc.gov/service/rbc/lprbscsm/scsm1276/scsm1276.pdfBOSTON, TUESDAY EVENING. APRIL 18. 1865. NO. 10,734. IReal iBstate. FOR

Boston Evening Transcript, [newspaper]. April 18, 1865. http://www.loc.gov/resource/lprbscsm.scsm1276

DRAM AND OOLOONB FLASKS, Lun- cheon Baskets Dressing < 'ases, Olgar Cases, Writing Cases,Itags, Match, Ilandlierchie'and Glove Boxes, Ci gar Ligblers, Fans, Pocket Combs, Cards, Dumlnoes.an- Qumborlos^ ovher indispensables and conveniences for the summer tourist. .\11 ttiese articlesare ot the oholoes't quality, reasouab.tt tn prce aud shapelv '% form. Before startUig on k Js^meytas traveller slioulo no laC to run na' TOLMAN'S, JyU VA WaUstB street. MFOK SALE In Brookline, NH., 50 miles from Boston, a farm consisting of a large square bouse, 10 rooms, thorough built, andia Roodrepalr; a new barn, shop, out-butldlngs and about 194 acres of land. >0 acres In wood. Will>>e sold at a barvaln or exchanared for real estate ia Boston or vicin- ity. Apply to sAUUEL BICE,cro. 9 State street. oi-w_________________________________ap^ _ TO LET A good brick dwelling-houseon East Dedham street, containing 12 rooms. Rent 400. ' For fall particulais call comet of Portlandaud Sudbury streeU. J. B. CLAPP A SON, apI7 oSt Real Estate Agents, VALUABLB'^STATES"AT THENOB'I H END. A genteel dwelling house on SaJem street: six convenient brick awelling houses onPrince street; and a valuable lot of land oo rrince street, with the buildings, available fi>r presentuse or for Improvement Apply to 8. Covbkly, No. 18 Old 8tate House. oeopOt ap 8 mFOR SALE InNeedham, near the depot, a new 2-story house, containing 10 rooms, high-studded and modem-buitt; one acre of land, with a select variety of fruit trees, a large barn, painted, and aU In peifectorder. Price 3000. For full particulars call corner of Portland and Sudbury streets. i. B. CLAPP k SON,apll OSt Real Estate Agents. MP6r~SALB In Maiden 'ViUa?era commodious House, containing 20rooms, in good repair, with good water.well adapted for a boaiding house; 11,000 feet of land, withchoice ft-ult trees, ornamental trees, shrubbery, grape vines, &c.; near both the steam aud horse carilncs. Price SIOCO. Applj comer of Poitlaud and Sudburv streets. ___a 15 o3t J. P.. CLAPP & SON, RealEstate Agents. ^ FOR SALE-In" South Reading, on r Boston and Maine Railroad, a very pleasantlr loca-'^llllled IH story House, 0 rooms, In good repair, good ^'^ater, Ac: alwut J< of an acre of land, withfVult trees of various kinds: ti minutes walk of depot, schools, &c. Price 1TC0, For full partlculaie callcomer of Portland anl Sudbuiy streets, J. B. CLAPP & SON, ao 15 o3t Real Estate Agents. S(* IJrofeers.JOSEPH G. MARTIN, COMIHISSIOIV STOCK BBOKEa, No, 10 State street, Boston, Author ol **Twenty-one Years in the Boston Stock Market," BVTS ANO SILLS OH COUHISSIOH GOVERNMENT SECURITIES& ALL KINS OF STOCKS AND BONDS Cnrrent in This or Other Markets. PEEBOLEUM OIL STOCKS willbe famished at the SuBSCRii'Tioir Prick, wnile being placed on the matket. Ordeis per Mail, Express,or Telegraph, promptly exe- cuted at the .current mai^ket valfe. te^ Stock Fluctuations and DollyPrices of Gold for 1864, m a convenient form for reference, tor sale as aoo^e. etc f.b 8 lElailtoalrg.jjl- ggaant8..13oart)i anK Hoomg. WANTED By a competent young woman, ft situation as cliamberand parlor girt; is a good washer and ironer, and brinjfs good reference. Apply at Baebk*8, 7t>Tremont street . oSt apll WANTED Any person wishing for a relia- ble man and wife, tbe man to takeoare of horses and drive, and work about a gentleman's place the wife 88 cook- Giye citj reference.Apply at Bakbb^s. 16 Tremont street.___________o2vr________________ap 6 EMPLOYMENT N<:>TICB.Geutiemen m want of Clerks Salesmen, Porters, Waiter*, Coach meu. Men oil Kailroadfi. Steamboats

Page 70: Boston Evening Transcript, [newspaper]. April 18, …lcweb2.loc.gov/service/rbc/lprbscsm/scsm1276/scsm1276.pdfBOSTON, TUESDAY EVENING. APRIL 18. 1865. NO. 10,734. IReal iBstate. FOR

Boston Evening Transcript, [newspaper]. April 18, 1865. http://www.loc.gov/resource/lprbscsm.scsm1276

and Fanps, or Boyi for btoies and Trades, or a* any other hooorahle feuslneag jrooil Americas meuwill be tm-Blshed (gratjtj l-y apjl>'!7!g attbeOKMhKAX. AosKOT Ovirioi 106 Bltc^etc^&e ttrei formerlyfcO, N'aiicK, Tonrtgififnont o employment, wishing to ecure permRKent an dreapectableaitUittioDs,will flua it decidedly to their au rantaaie to call at this ancient a^ rT|r-yoKf>BBD e8tab!<sonT<;ptto A NEGLECTED OOTTGH, COLD, ORSOKE THROAT, which mit,'ht be chtcfced by a simple remedy,like "Bro^on*tB^'onchxal 7*oe?^es,^' if allowed to progtes^, may terminate seriously For Bronchitis,Asthma, Cata-rli, anl ConsiimpUvoCoaghs/'yVi^ 'iyocfies" are used with ad^-aiitage, glvinR oftentlmosimmediate relief. Singers and puttlic speakers will find them alfio excellent to clear the voice audrender tirtioulatjou wonderfttUy easy. BRoNCHIAl: Xirjjgjy CouG'f^S ., SANFOKD'S INDBPHITD.__________l BHT USB. for Bangor and the interme- mediate tandlng}^ on the Penobscot River. thespIeiHlid steamer "KA.rAHDIN," built exprgealy for thla route, wtu leave tbe end of Foster's wbarf,m above, every Tuesday and Friday evening, at JH o'cioo^ commencing on 'luesday, April 18. AUmercbaitdlsa intended for shipment by thla route must be le^bly marked aud accompanied by billsof lad- ing in duplicate. No stoves, castings, camphene, oiled clothing, gunpow- der, or ottter extra-hasardons freight taken by tills steaoi- er. No freight received after iH o'clock. Boston, April nth, mi.B. HASEr.TINE. Agent, 13 Foster's wharC oto apll LEXIITGTON AND WBST ___________CAMBBIDGKKAILSOAD. On and after tionday, March H), 1805, trains wl!l run as follows: Leave l.exlngton at 6,1:io and 9.45, A.M.; Vti. 8.40 and S.55 P.M. Leave Boston (Fitchburg Depot) at 8.30 A.M., 12 M.; 2.45,4.50 aud t;.20 P.iH. U. D. BLINN, Sup't Lexington, March 15,1365. etc mh W NEW YOKK'ANiriBOSTOS'(AlH Link) RAILROAD. 81TM1IKR ARRAJiGKMENT, On and after May ft, trains run as follows: LeaveBoston from the Worcester ttailroad Passenger Station for Keedham at 8.40 am, 12.15, 3.13, 4.4} !taJ(i.U en. For Woonsocket and stations at 8.40 am, 3.15,4.45 pm. Leave Medway for Woonsocketat 7.'25 am. Irfave Woonsocket for Boston at (i.05, 8.30, AM, 8.80 PK, and for Medway at 5.26 pm.Leave Needham for Boston at S.11,1.16, 9.46 am and l.N and 4.22 PH. 7he trains leaving Medway at7.25 am, Woofisocket at 8.30 AU, .',.25 PM, and Boston at 3.15 pm, connect at Woon- Bo<fket withthe morning and evening trains from Provi- dence and Worcester, and at Bellingham with a stagefrom Mllford. T. WILLIS PKATI, SnnL otc myU STONINGTON LINE. SrUMEK ABRANCntMBHT. CabinPassagk, $5; Dbck, 94. Cars leave the depot ofthe Boston and Providence Ball- read, Pleasant street,near the Common, dally, (Buudan excepted) at 5.30 P.M. For steamer COMMONWr.ALTH, Capt. J.W.WUUaims. Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridavs. For steamer PL^TMOUl'H K()CK, Capt. J. C. Ocer,Tuesdays, '1 hursdny.-i and Saturdays. 'through 'tickets I'omlsbed, and Baggage checked throughto Philadelpbia, Baltimore and Wa:hIngton, Qi^ A Baggage Master accompanies the passeogeca'ba^^gage through to New York. 'I iekets Berths and staterooms secured at this offlee aud at Bostonand Providence Railroad depot. JOHN 0. PBE8BRET, Agent, ap 26 otc Ko. 76 Washington street.EASTERN RAILROAD. and after MONDAY, Apeii. 3d, 186J, On Military Officors and Soldiers whoovertax the voioe and are exposed to __ sudden changes, should have them. Sold everywhere, at35 cents a dox. eoptc o 7 ONStJMPlIOK A fBKVENTiyB AHD CuEi. Just leceived from Paris, a supply of

Page 71: Boston Evening Transcript, [newspaper]. April 18, …lcweb2.loc.gov/service/rbc/lprbscsm/scsm1276/scsm1276.pdfBOSTON, TUESDAY EVENING. APRIL 18. 1865. NO. 10,734. IReal iBstate. FOR

Boston Evening Transcript, [newspaper]. April 18, 1865. http://www.loc.gov/resource/lprbscsm.scsm1276

"Dt. Churchill's Syrapsof Hypophosphitesot Lime and Soda." Dealers wishing to sell the true article,and persons snf fering from Lun AfTections, can obtain the ffenuine. wholcj^e and recall of JOHN I.BBOWN ic SOS, 425 AVashington, opposite Es-sex street, oeoptc n 14 BBOWH'8 aAHSAFAKtLIiA ANDDAN DELION. This iS a valuable compound, combiuing In a concentrated fluid extract, inareflieut*which hare ever sustained a deservedly high reputation among physi- ciana as a good SpbikuMedigimk and purifier of the blood. For aerangemcnts of /Aver and IHgesttve oraant, Uifspepna,Headache, Cosiiveness, General Debilih, or any h..mor, a course of this mediome will be beneficial,Pers 'US of sedentary habits will find It of great value Sold by JOHN 1. BEOWN * SON, 425 and lO-iS Washing ton etreet.___________oeoetc________________mT23 TI N C T. ARBoB VIT.^. A sure curefor Corns. Price 35 cents. "This is the best cure for these tronblesome thmgs we have ever tried."LScientiflc Amencau. Prepared and for sale bv L. BARTLETT PATTBK, Dtugglst. 27 Harrison avenue,Boston. oeoptc d I S~TEEE6sCOPFS, of the bestquaUty, finish and power, tur single or a large numberof plcturea rsale Or JO.SEra L. BAT E9. IMWasbington street. FOR CLEANSING AND WHITHNINGthe TEKTH and strengthenli g the gums, "BROWN'S CAMPHORATED SAfONACEODS DENTIFKICB"la the best Tooth Powder In use. Made by JOHH L BBOWN * tlOK, 4U and 102> Washington atreet.otc______________________________ mhSl WILL CURE CHAPPED HANDS. CHAPPED FACE or CHAPPEDLIPS. Brown's Glyceriue Embrocation will be found superior to ail other preparations for the cureand prevention of a tough or chapped skin, renderiiig the skin smooth and soft. JOHN I. BKOWN& SON, )an 11 otc_________425 & 1029 Washington atreet 1BARTLKTT PATTEN'S CAMPHOBt *ATEDBAPSNACEOUBDENTIFBIOE-FotOleaas Ing the Teeth and!Kemovlng tbe Tartar, for CooUsg theMouth and Pnrlfyhig the BreatiH, and glrlng tone mi. vig- or to the Oums. It is invaluable in habitualToothache. This Powder Is prepared with groat care by a peeuMat process aud forms a pure andemcadous DentifMoe. Madfronly by I. BARTLETT PATTEIT, Apothecary, k2T Harrlaon Ta. cor. BeachaL, Beatoci oTuThate___________________________________ MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE. Tho Kkw EnglandMutual Ltps Insubakoh Com ANT 39 Statx 9TSXSI, BOSTON, iujuie; lives on tbe mcii tual otlnciple.Net acenmolation exceeding Stt<000,04M>, and in- creasing for benefit of members present andfuture. The whole safely and advantageously invested. The business conducted excluai/ely for.the benefit of thejpesoiu insured The greatest lisk taken on a life, 120,000. Surplus distributedamong the memtters every fifth year from December 1,1843; settled to cash or by addition to policy.The Distribution declared Dec. 1.1863 amounted to 40 per cent, of the premium paid dnrtog thelast five years. Premiums maybe paid quarterly or seml-annnally whea desired, in amounts nottoo small. Forms of application and pamphlets of the Company atid Its reports to be had oftheagents, or at the olBce of the Company, or forwarded by mail. If written for post- paid, DIRECTOBS.WiLLABB Phillips, Pres't, Chas. Hcmabo, Obables p. Ccetis, Wm. R. Bbtnolds, HAB8BALL P. WiLOKE,jAMBS 8. AmoET, Tbos. a. Dbztes Obo. H. Folobe, Sew ALL Tappan, Hombe Bastibit Pbancis C. LowellBenjamin F. Stevens, 7ice President. Wm. w. Moblasd, M. D., Medlca Examiner. ie 28 IsFAoTutcJoasPH M GiaaENa, Secretaty "IVEW SONGS OF THE WAR. The X" Paeting Kiss at tub Dooe, or The

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Boston Evening Transcript, [newspaper]. April 18, 1865. http://www.loc.gov/resource/lprbscsm.scsm1276

Dying Soldier's Last Thought. FIske, 30. Wheh You and I wbee sol- dier BOTs. Clark, 30. Up withtub Flag op tub Stabs and the Stripe.s. Howe, SO. Babt Slbrp, Shadows Ckkep. C-adle Song of theSoldier's Wife. Barter, 30. Cead Mii.lk Pealthb. (A Hnuitrcd Thon- sand Welcomes.) Brown, .10. TubWar Will Soon be O^ee By the author of "'Tenting on the (tid Camp Ground." 30. OLIVER DITSON& CO., Publtshers, 217 Washington street. mh 28 PIANO STUDIES BY LOUIS KOlT LEH. Op. .-iO, theFirst Studies, !,>. 0 l'>8. New School In 'Velocity, Bk 1.11.74. Op. !-,!, New Sehool In Velocity. Bk 2,X1.15. Op. iVJ, Specia istnoloa. Book 1, tl.M). Op. 112, <i!ecial Studies, liook 2,11.50. Published byOLIVEK Dl'CSOS Si iCO., 277 Washington street n I AEISIAN SHELL COMBS Of theln^ Elegant an^Faphionablk styles, of ray own Im- portatio >; and also from the best 'American Maniifao* tn'( rs,unequalled iu finish aud uuALirr, at lOLMAN'S, 2.'i5 Washington street. leb 10 ITY OF BOSTONLoans. Recnuting Temporary Loans For advances made forrecrulting purposes to be taxed forthe next year. Noted will be issued payable In eight to twelve months at eix per cent. CurrencyLoan Fur general purposes, daly authorized by the City Council. Boiids will be issued, payable inten ^eais, with Interest pavuieotsattached, payable seui- annually, bearing six p^r cent. In currentfotids. The subscriber is duly authorized to receive ftinds on either ot the above loans. t. XS. TRACY, ap4________________to_________City Treasurer. BLANCHISSAGE A NEUF. Laces and muallus doneup to the beat style, French quilliog and fluting. Specialty for drapery curtains aud window shades,done up at short notice at MADAME FERDINAND'S No. i Acorn stieet, 2d door from.West Cedaratreet, Boa ton. ________________otH ap 15 R. MARX'S MUSICAL INSTRUC- TION. General MusicalInstruction. An Aid to To.icheis and Learners m Every Branch of Musical Knowledg>',by Dr. AdolphBemhard Marx. Translated by George Maclrcne, from the original German, The above valuable work,finely bound la cloth, has lust been puollsned by the undersigned, who will send copies by mall,o- otherwise, on receiot cf the price, tl 50 mh 9 OLIVEH DITSON t CO. 277 Washin<tons<. PARIANMARBLE BUSTS AND FIG- URES A veiy excellent variety received this day. Among which are ITna andtbe Lion, Ariadne and the Lion ess, Hermlone, Miranda, Opbella, Daphne, Apollo, Cupid and Pyscbe,War, Hope, Peace, and Charity, Mlitou, Diana, Sbakspeare, Innocence, Solitude, Flora aud Ciytie,(large and small) Bayley's Eve, and many others at much reduced prices at 'lOLMAN'S ,'5 Washingtonst p 15 i ELEGANT'SHBLITcOMBS, ot the best de&igus !ml most elaborate workman^Dip, for salet>y JOBKPH L BATES, ay IT UD iriuluate atreet. will leave Boeton for Portland, Saco^nd Biddcford, at7.30 am, 3 pm. Great Falls and Union Vinage, at 7.30 am, S pm. PortKmouth, at 7.30 ah, 12.15, 3, 5pm. North Hamptou, Greenlaiid and Bye fieaoh, at 7.M ak, 12.15, 5 PM. Nowburvport and Ipswich,7.30 am, 12.16,8,8,6.W pm. Araeabui'y, at 7.30 am, 12.15,3, 5 pm. Gloucester end Manchester at7.15,10.30 am, 2.3(1, J.SO pm. Salem, at 7.15, 7.30, 8.30, 10.30 AM, 12.15, 2.30, 3, 4, 5, t.N, 6.10, 7,*!.30 PM. Lyun, at 7,15, 7.30, 8.30, P.30,10.80 aIt, 12.15,1, S.SO, J, 4, 4.3c, 5, 6.30, 6.10, 6.15, 7, *.30PM. Swampscot, 7.16, 8.30, 10.30 AH, l'i.l5, 2.30, 4, 5, 6.10, T, H.W) PM. Lynn Common, 8.30 am,1,4.30,6.16,7, ?S.30 pm. Maiblehead, 7.30, 8,30, 1P.30 am, 1-2.15, 3, i, 6.10,7 PH. * On Wedueadaysat 11.15 ph. and Saturdays at 10.31 pk. FOR boston From Portland, st 8.46 am, 3 pm. Poitsmoulh,

Page 73: Boston Evening Transcript, [newspaper]. April 18, …lcweb2.loc.gov/service/rbc/lprbscsm/scsm1276/scsm1276.pdfBOSTON, TUESDAY EVENING. APRIL 18. 1865. NO. 10,734. IReal iBstate. FOR

Boston Evening Transcript, [newspaper]. April 18, 1865. http://www.loc.gov/resource/lprbscsm.scsm1276

at6.15,il, 11.1a am, 5.30 ph. Newhuryport, at 7, 8,10,11.50 AM, 6.15 pm. Wenham, at 7.35, B.W,ll).36 am, 6.60 pm. Gtoncester, at 7.30,10.10 aMj 1.35,4.40 PK. Salem, 6.45,7, 8, 8.20, 9, 10,11 AM,12.55.2.30,5.J0, 7, 7.18 PK Swampscot, at 6.60, 7.06, 6.06, 0.05,10.()6, 11.06 AH, 2.36,. 6.36, 7.05 ru.Lynn, at 8.65,7.10, 7.20,8.10,8.25, 9.10,10.10,10.15, U.M A, 1.05, -2.40,2.46, 6.15, 5.40, 7.10, 7.1'2,7.'25 PH. Lynn Common, at 6, 7.24,10.18 ah, 2.49, 7.14 pm. Harblehcad, at 6.45, 7.40, 3.45, 9.45 am,12.40,1.45,5.18, f>.40 PH. Paseengers gotog East from Chelsea must take the Trala leaving Boston af7.15 ah. The Tram leaving Boston at 7.30 AM does not stop at Chelsea. ap 1 tc J. PBESCOTT, Bnp'L_BOSTON AND MAINE BAIL- __________ROAD, Station in Haymarket Square. SPEINO AND SCUHBKArkANOBUENT. Anril t, 1865. onxWABD TRAINS. For Manchester aud Cocord, N. H. and Upper Roads,7.30 AM, 5 pm. For Portland and roads East and etations in Dover and n'lnuepisseogee Road, 7.30am, 3'pm. Exeter, Dover and Great Falls, 7.30 AH, 3 and 8 pm. Haverbill, 7.30, 7.45 AM, 12 M, i.m,3. 6, 5.30, 6 PM. Lawrence, 6.50, 7.80,10.15 AM, 12 M, 8, 5, 6 PM, Andover, 6.50,10.16 am, 12 M,3, 6, 6 pk, Reading, 6,50,10,16 am, 12 . 2, 1, 4.30,6,6, 6.30, 7.30 9.16^ PH. fttoneham Centre, 6.60,7.45, 10.16 AU, 12 H, 2.30, 4.30, 5.M, 6.30, 7.3(1, M6:4rM. Maiden and Mehose, 6.60, 7.46,10.16,am, 12u, 2,2.30, 4,M, 5.30, 6, 6.30, 7.30, H.163 PM. ttOn Wednesdays and Fridays at 11.15 pu, audoa Satnr-; days at 10 PH. l>nvers aud Newburyport, and stations on Danveis and NewhuryportRailroads, 7.45 am, 2.30 and .5.30 pm. East Somerville and Medlonl, 6.4.5,8.05,9.30 AH, 12.45,2.4.5,5.35. 6.35, ll.'20* p. n. 'On Wednesdays at 11.20 pm, and Saturdays at 10.03 ph. INWARD TBAINS.From Portland, 8.45 am, 3 pm. (ireat Falls, 6.40,10.35 am. 4.50 PM. Haverbill, 7.15, 7.80, 9.20, IIAM, 12.20, ,'S.Oe, ,5.10, 6,40 PH. Lawrence, 6.20, 7.30, 9.35 AW, 12 M, 5.30, 6.55 PM. Andover, 6.'27,7.48, 9.47 AM, 12.09, 5.37 pm. Reading, 6, 6.47,7.35, 8.10, 10.(8 ah, 12.20, 2.45, 6.18, &.SI, 8.30 ph.Stoneham Centre, 5.55, 6.50, 7.35, 8.38,10.05 am, 12 H, .4t, 4.40, 5.40, 6.16, 7.', 8.'26 PJU. Mclrosc,6.15, 7.lrt, 1.50, 8.51, 10.24 AM, 12.18,14.40, , 5.K), 6.10, 6.35, 8.42* PH. ton AVednesdays and Fridays1H hours later. Alton Bay, 8 am, 2.30 pm. Newburrppit, 7.30,11 AM, 5.15 PM. Medford,.15, 7.30,8.35,10 ah, 2, 4, 6, 7.S0 PH, ?On Wednesdays at 10 pm. ap 3 otc WILLIAM MERKITT, Sup't BOSTONAN PROVIDENCEK __________KAILEOAD. SrMHSBABBASOGMBNT, April 10,1866. OUTWARD TEAIS8FEOM BOSTON TO New York, Shore Line Estpreas, 11.16 ah. Steamboat, Stonington Line, 5.30 pM.Mall 'train. Shore Line, 8.30 pm. On Sunday at 6.31 ph. Pro'Vldence. 7.25, 10.30, 11.10 am ; 4.00,5.30, 8.36 PM. Mansfleld, 7.25, 10.30,11.10 AM; 4.00, 5.30, 8.3J PH. Canton. 7.'25, l(r.30, am; 12 h;4.00, 5.40 PH. Readvlile and Hyde Park, 7.26,10.3O ah; 12 h; t.M, 4.M, 6.40,6.30,9.45 PM. Forest Hill,Jamaica Plain, Boylston Street, 'Koxburr, 7.05, 8.18 AM; 12.30,2.30,3.00, 4,40, 8.40, 6.18, 6.30,7.30, >>.,9.45 ph. Dedham, 7.0S, 8.15 .\M; 12.80, 2.30, 3.00, 4.40,6.15, 6.J, 7.H, S.30. 9.45 PM. Weet Roxhuiy,Highland, Central, RosJindale, 7,08, 8.U ah: 12.30. 3.00, 4.40, 6.15, 7.30, O.SO pm. Stougbton andEaston, 12.00 M; 6.40 PH. New Bedford and f auuton, 7.'28,10.30 ah ; 4.34 rat. INWAED TRAINS TOB08T0N tBOM New York, Shore Line Express, 12.15 pm. Steamboat, Stonington Line, 5.00 pm. JdailTntln, Shore Une, 8.00 ph. On Sunday at S rv. Providence, 4.'20, (Mondays, 12.15 ah), 7.00,10.40 am ;4.M, 7.^ PH. 'Mansfield, 8.06, (Mondays, 1.00 ax), 7.81, S.30, 11.23 ak; 8.00,8.12 PH. Canton, 7.25,

Page 74: Boston Evening Transcript, [newspaper]. April 18, …lcweb2.loc.gov/service/rbc/lprbscsm/scsm1276/scsm1276.pdfBOSTON, TUESDAY EVENING. APRIL 18. 1865. NO. 10,734. IReal iBstate. FOR

Boston Evening Transcript, [newspaper]. April 18, 1865. http://www.loc.gov/resource/lprbscsm.scsm1276

8.14,11.56 ah ; 3.30, 5.27 pm. apu KcadviUe, 6.08,7.39, 8.26 AM; l'i.08, 3.45, 8.12, 8.40, 8.63 PK. HydePark, about three minutes after the bouia named above. Forest HIU. 8.20. 6.30,7.15, 7.63, 8.20, W.I7,AM; 2.28, !., 4.30, 5.27, R.18, *8.25, 9.05 PH. ,lamaica Plain and Boylston Street, about three minute*alter the hours named above. Dedham, 6.00, 6.15, 7.00,8.00,10.00 AH; 2.10, 4.10, 8,0t, K.N, 8,10,8.45 pm. West Boxbury and Highland, 6.20, 7.08, 8.07, 10.06 aic; i.l5, 4.18, 6.06, 8.15 pm, Central audBosUndale, a few minutes itlter the tkbere hours. Easton, 6.60 AM; 3.00 ph. Stoughton, 7.05 AM: 3.16pk. New Bedford, 7.10.10.10, AH; 3.4 PH. raunton, 8.00. 11.00 am; 4.30 PH. Traiu omitted on 1 uesdayand Tbursdav. 12 H. Stoughton train will not stop to leave paeseagMCi between Boston and MouutHope. ap8 tc___________________D. NA80M, Sup't. ^ BOSTON AND WORCESTER ______^srKAlLROAD.WiNTEE ABBAtiGBMBNT. :ommenctog on Monday, Oct 31,1864. Passenger tralna leave BostonFor'Worcester, 7, 8.30 (Exp.) ah; 1.30, 2.30 (Exp.), 4.M (EXD.) 8.30 (Exp. to Tram.), 8.! (Exp.), 8.30 (Exp.)PH. Albauy, 7,8.80 (Exp.). am ; 2.S0 (Exp.) ph. .Siiilngtield, 7, 8.30, (Exp.) am ; 2.30, (Exu.), 8.30 (Exp.)PK, W. K. E. 'Way Stations. 7 ah; '2.30 (Exp.) pm. Nor.itWor. " " 8.80 (Exp.) AM; -2.30 (Exp.) PK. NewYork (via Springfield), at 8.30(Exp.) ah; 2.30 (Exp.), and 8.30 (Exii.) pm. Kcw York (via Soralch), 8.30(Exp.) PK. MlUbury, 7 am ; 4.30 PM. Westboro', 7 AM ; 1.30, 4.30 and 5.30(Exp.) 11* PH. Farmlugham,7, 8.30 (Exo.) am; 1.30, 2.30 (Exp.), 4,4,3* (Exp.), 6.80 (Exp.). &3(r(Exp.) 11 PH. Mllford, 7 AM; 1.80 and4.30 PH. Northboro', 7 am ; 1.30 and 4.30 pm. Marlboro', 7 am ; 1.30 and 4.30 ph. SaxonvUle, 9.30ah; 6 ph. Natick, 7, 9.30 am; 1.30, 4,4.30, 6, U PM. Newton Lower Falls, 7.10 ah ; 12 H; 3. 6, 7, 9.30*pm. West Newton, 7.10, 9.30 am; 12 M; 1.30, 3, 4, 6, 6,7, 9.ll. 11* PM. Brookline. 7.60,^ tS.40, 9.45 ah;^12.16, 1, 2.35, M.15,t4.4S 5.38. J6.15; 7.15, O.W, 10.45 PH. Sundays 10.10 ah; 12.36, 4.45 PM. SimdayMail leaves Boston at 6.30 ph. Passenger trains for Boston Leave Woi'ceeter 4.20 (Exii.), 7, 0.30 (Exp),9.46 ah; 3.40 (Exp.), 4.15,10.60 (Exp.), pM. Mlllbnry6.4'l am; 3.55 pm. Westboro'. 7.80,10.17 ah; 2.42,4.48 PH. MUford, 7.10, 9.'20 am; 4.'28 ph. Northboro', 7. 9.49 am; 4 ph. Marlboro', 7.24.10.08 am;4.28pm. Faimlugham, 5.10 (Exp.), 6.40,8,10.21 (Exp.), 1.48 ah; (EX|).). 4.21 (Exp.), 8.18,11.31 (Exp.),PH. U, tw SaxonviUc, <).25 am ; 2.30 PM. Natick,5.47, 6.43, 8.10,11 AM; 2.15, 6.28 PM. Newton LowerFaUs, 8, 9 am; 1.28, 3.88. 6, 8.28* PK. West Newton, 6.12, 7.12, 8.12,9.12,11.'24 AM; 1,87,3,12,4,076.52 (Wor.,) 6.1'i, *8.37 PH. Brookline, t.40, 7.15, J7.46, 8.15, 9, tl0.16 AH; 12H: 1.30, t2.16,4, i6.06ii,6.46, *8, *10 pM. Sundays 9.33 ah; 12.10 2.15 PU. Sunday Mall leaves Worcester at 12 Midnight.*May be omitted In case of snow storm. ^Connects wltlt Trains on Charles River Branch. iDoeanot stop at Ctiapel or Lougwood. _otc__________________________________ 031 GLYCERINE SOAP. Justrt;ceiyed from London-by steamer Asia-a large lot of Pure Gly- I cerlne Soap, the same article wehave imported for ao many years, which has given such great satisfaction to customers. Also, OldBrown Windsor Soap, put up in boxes tor ftuoUy use. THOMAS GROOM Jc CO. ap 6 Stationers, 82State street. HALF HOUR GLASSES WITH B RUNZB STANDS. A small lot of this veiy scarce article jrsTBECEiTEDl Cscful for young misses praoticlnc music. For sale at TOLMAN^S. mh 16 255 Washingtonit. QWISS PAINTINGS, WITH CABVISD C? WOOD FRAMES. A very handsome variety ol these choicelittle Paintings, just received direct from SwltzerlaJKl, among them many noted places, which will be

Page 75: Boston Evening Transcript, [newspaper]. April 18, …lcweb2.loc.gov/service/rbc/lprbscsm/scsm1276/scsm1276.pdfBOSTON, TUESDAY EVENING. APRIL 18. 1865. NO. 10,734. IReal iBstate. FOR

Boston Evening Transcript, [newspaper]. April 18, 1865. http://www.loc.gov/resource/lprbscsm.scsm1276

recognlzea oy tlie traveller who has visited that ae- llghttul country. They are little gems in their wayAll aie4nTlted to call audexaTrioe the sumo at TOLMAN'S, _____________________155 Waablngton streetS~'TERE0SC~0PIC pictures; By ~th^ steamer Asia. Stereoscopic Views ot Switzerljuid, Spain, England,Germany, Egypt, Italy, Vatican at Borne, Pyrenees, Pompeii, marine, etc, ic, wore received. Tresepictures are Ihe best iu rxecutioti yet Imported* aud Will approve theouelves to all conoolaaeur^in art. JOSBPHL BATES, Bp4 129 iVashlngton at. WHITE MOUNTAINS, Stereosoopio pictures of ^ biteMountain Scenery. For aale br JOSEPH L. BAl'l'tt, (rf litWaaUagtM