THE DAILY , , r NG TELEGRAPH PHILADELPHIA, F1UDAY, MARCH 26, .1869. : The London Aihentcam h the following review of ft onrloas work recently published In London: ',.' Etcrjonols aware that this diary has baen freely wed by Mr. Collier, Mr. Hulliwell and other wrltcn on the aRe of Shakespeare; bu much of the matter Bet down by the young Templar la still fr.-sh to the literary artUt. Two or three words will tufflce as to the writer. Mr. Collier had noticed that Mannlnptham de scribes himself m of Keut. Mr. Hunter, who delighted in working out biographical P""'", pnehed his Inquiries much further; and Mr Bruce has followed up Mr. Hunter' course of Investigation to a perfect result. We no know as much of Manningbam a. any one wl care to learn. He was well born i and m -ell educated; he was a member of the Middle Temple; and he lived for the most part in Chambers, in a position extremely favorable to the collection of social gossip. Some of his friends were in high places; his iulormation was direct and peitonal; and lie seems to have been a per.ec-Jj honorable and veracious The Diary, though it covers a few months onlv in tne years 1601 3 -Is rich in personal matter. Let us begin with the great Qiecn, about whom we find some new aud curious di tails. The source of these stories was Henry Parry, one ol the Queen's chaplains, alterwards Bishop of Worcester. Manuingham notes wtiat Parry told him ol the Queen's sajiDgsan i doings, some of which are full of cbwacter and color. Parry was put down to preacfrut Court ou Good Fiidav. Tne yucen sa d she would not go to hear him. On being nsked why. she answered, laughingly. "Ihou wilt speak Hgaln?t me, I am aute." But when the day came she went to hear him. A call of Serleants at-la w was made, five from the Inner, and six from the otner three Inns eleven in all. 1'he Queen was pressed to make the number twelve; but she refused, say ing merrily that the "feared if there were twelve there v ould be one false brother among Ihem." This creation of fcerjeants gave rise to tome other jokes. On the report that there would be a call of new sergeants reaching the law courts, one of the old stagers cried' Call of serjeant! Better have a call of clients." vne oi ine inner xempie men wus uancu Barker, aud on his mine b?mg read out Serjeant Harris cried, "It is well to have one barker among so many biters." Parry told Manuingham that the Queen had one day given "a check" to William Barlow, one of her favorite chaplains, the divine who alterwards held the crozier of Rochester and of Lincoln. Barlow had been very warm against Lord E.sex, and when that starless favorite rose in rebellion against his Queen, lie bad actually preached a sermon against the rebel at Paul s Cross. Barlow bad done a good thing, and deserved the Queen's thanks. But alter the Earl's "execution, the Queen remembered that the rebel bad been her own close kinsman, that be hud been born to her love, and th'it be had chared the kmduess which she never tailed to shower on men ot the Bolcyn blood. All that she had done was rig at and just. But the heart may bwcU with pain when the head is clear; and though the law had beeu suffered by her to take its course, the Queen was still a woman; and the sight of any man who had been forward in that domestic drama threw her into wretched moods. For this reason forbade Barlow to appear in her presence; and when Barlow ven tured to disobey, and to protest bis loyalty, she put him aside with an impatieut gesture. "Oh, sir," she said, "we have heard jou are an honest man: you are an honest man." She would not blame her chaplain, neither could she bear him, in her sight. Bailow got no promotion in the Church until Elizabeth died We have a glimpse of the Queen In one of her eocial moments, when she paid a vi'it to Sir Robert Cecil's new house in the Strand, after wards known B3 Salisbury House. She was received in royal state, and lavishly enter tained. As 6he passed into the hall, three ladies, in the characters of a Maid, a Wife, and a Widow, recited a piece in commendation of her own estate. Out of compliment to Eliza beth, the maid was allowed to have the best of it. After these ladies came aTuri(our inter eourse wita Turkey was becoming close and lucrative), who tald he had heard of her Majesty, and desired to see her face. The yieen feli in with these humors, and discoursed with the pretended Turk in several languages; on which the turbaned mountebank aff. cted much astonishment, of course. He offered her a rich mantle; and this part of the mummery must have pleaded the Queen. Cecil's ball was full of flue armor, which, the diarist says, the ljueen admired most ot all. Ia leaving she sprained her foot. The great event of Mann in gharri's time was the Queen's death; and of this tragic scene we have a nearer and clearer view than any other chronicler has given us. Manniugham rode down to Richmond, where the Court was kept, to hear his fneud Parry preach, ani to learn Bow the Qacenwas going on. She was known to be djlijg, and many persons believed that she was dead. Such things were often kept secret, from motives of policy. Edward the Sixth had been dead three days before the fact was made known. Nay, there were courtiers In Holyrood who swore that Elizabeth had been dead some years, ani that Cecil had got an old lady lo represent her. Manniugham rode down to see, and atter sermon he went to dine with his friend Parry in the Privy Chamber. Watson, Bishop of Chichester, and the Deans of Windsor and Canterbury, were of his company, and lrom these diviues the Templar beard the story of the Queen's last Lours on earth, "For this fortnight," he notes, "Her Majesty refused to eat anjthiug, to receive any physic, or admit any rest Fn the bed." We stand, at it were, in presence of the leonine Queen: "She hath been in a manner speechless for two days; very pensive and silent; sitting with her eye fixed on oue object for hours together; yet she always had lier perfect senses and memory." How like an . cidilone68l Whltglft, the aged Lord Primate, ' atoodbyher couch; now trying to cheet her mind with hope, and now lo strengthen it by f rayer. She would not hear him talk: of longer ife: but when he spoke of heaven, she pressed Lis hand in silence, She took great delight, weleurn, in prajer, aud at the name ot Jusus she raised her eyes towards heaveu. Parry was anxious to know whether she wished to die, as she bad lived, in the faith of her country, and he begged her to satisfy those present by a sign. She instantly raised .her bands and eyes. In this true spirit the great ruler passed away. ''This morniug," says Man uingham, "about 3 o'clock, ber Majesty de parted this life mildly like a lamb, easily like an apple from a tree; and I doubt not she is amongst the royal saiuts in heaveu." In this diary we have the famous words used by Queen El zabeth on her death bed, in refer once to her successor, in a better form, and -with a closer warrant than they have yet lound. The Queen is supposed to have named the King of Scots. Cecil, at least, declared that she had done so, and the partisans of James made right rood use of the dying sovereign's words. But many persons doubted whether she Lad spoken them at ail. At one time she appeared to have fixed her eyes on Arabella fcStuart as her successor, and Henri Quatre had actually conceived the project of marrying Arabella so as to become King of England in Ler right. He sooke to Sully on the subject, nay It g he would propose for her haud the moment Elizabeth declared her the legal heiress of her crown. The Queen presented the little girl to a foreign lady as her cousin ; patting heron the head and savincr. ' This ctiifa will AniilAV hA mlutrAia hprA nvpn Rfi 1 am nnv." But she would not bind herself by a public compact, and without that compact Henri would not consent to make the young lady Queen of France. Still, a good many people fancied that Arabel would be named the Queen's heiress; and wha the Queen's words, naming James, were published, they were received with shrugs and doubts by many persons, aud are even now regarded as the offspring of Cecil's craft, and not ot Elizabeth's will, ilanningham heard them, and wrote.them down at the time, apparently from Parry's llos. 'The Queen." he says, "nominated our King . jor iier sucewsor: joj DeiBj? aeajaau wuoiu she would have succeed, her answer was, theri should no rsoal kit in her eat, 'Who then ?' 1 'A king,' sa'a she. 'What ktnT' Of 3:ots,'. said she; 'for be hath best right; aud la tue name of Hod let him have tt.' - We have no doubt theso words were spoken as set down. JaaiPS was a (treat fool, an I ib(s Quern knew it; yei, fojl as be was, ms blrtu bad made him heir to her throne; and the wlet curo was to take him witu all his faults, and deal with bim as bo miTut deserve. Knglaod made a eood batealn In taking James. She got a very bad klne, but she alio not a very fine kingdom. The Queen," says Mannlngham, "would soojctlmes speak fieely of our king, but could not endure any other to use such language." Verylikely.be was her kinsman. The Uiary ends belore James arrived in London; so thit we tail to learn what tnoTemplo diarist thought of "our king," when he came to know him. Manniugham was a barrister, and the talk which ho noted down turned very much on lawyers aud their doings. Hence we have stories about Sir Thomas More, Sir Edward Coke, Lord Bacon, and many more. We have the story of More in the picture gallery with the friend who owed him moucy, commending a death's head with the moto Mi'men'omorieris, which he said was only Meinen o Moriaris remember to pay More his money. Also the tale of his going to his wife's pew at church and openlug the door for her like a servant, saying, "Madame, his lord.-blp has gone" (meaning his place as Chancellor); aud then adding, merrily "Come, wife, low we may go together and talk." Sir Edward Coke appears in a betier lisht in this Diary than usual; some of his sajlngs are sharp, and almost bright. Only one good thing is recorded of Coke in our books, and that is sometimes thought to have been invented ior him by Bacon, who could easily spare such trifles trcm bis boundless store the saying to a greHt man, "My lord, if you drop in, then you must dine with me; but if yon send me word, thru I shall dine with you." Nothing of this hich quality is recorded of Coke by Manning ham. But th!s is rather keen ior Coke: "The attorney said he could make a lamentable argument; but it would be said of him as ol Cascandrs, when he had spoken much he would not be believed." In a case of a disputed riht to a patch of land, one of the parties prooosed to divide it. ' Then it is not his," said Coke; "ihe child is none of his that would have it divided." A few sayincs by Bacon are heie preserved. "When Mr. Dodridge, in his argument of Mr. Dnrsie's patents, aud so of the preroga'ive in general, began h's speech from God's govern ment, 'it is aone use a gouu arcner,' quom it. Bacon, 'he shoots a fair compass."' Here we find another instance ot the contention between Bacon and Coke, in their earlier days: "Bacon said that the general rules of the law were like comets and wanderlDg .tars. Mr. Attorney (Coke) said rather they were like tue sun; they have light in themselves, aud give light to others, whereas the stars are out corpora opaca." A third entry may bo given, since any true report of what Bacon raid is worth pre serving: "Mr. Bacon, la giving evidence in the Lord Morley's case for the forest of Hatfield, said it had always flown a high pitch; i. e. hath been always in the hands of great men." Among the youna tellows then keeping terms in the Temple was one of niuib e tongue aud subtle brain, who was destined to a lurid tame and singular late. This young mau was Thomas Overbury, a wit, a poet, a bta? earns n of the highest class. Mannlnzbam knew him well, and had the sense to feci that his words were worth setting down. The3e savings of Overbury make a real addition .1o h's biography, for they place the young law student, as it were, on the stage in the very character whlcn men lancy that he developed alter his sudden rise to power. There is a scorn, a tension, and a daring in his speeches, which explain how It happened that King James was so much afraid ot him. Snisrs, one of the lawyers, bad a long and crooked nose. Overbury said, "Suig's nose looked down to see how many ot his teeth were lost, and could never get up again." Overbury railed at Lord Zouch as a proud, incompetent fellow. "When be came to sit on the bench at Ludlow," said Overbury, "there were, as it was wont, two cushions laid, one for the Chief Jus tice Leukuour, another for the President; but he took the one, and casting it down said, one was enough for thai place." Every word from Orexbury's lips is fired with scorn. "Overbury spake much agaiust the Lord Buckhurst as a very corrupt and unhonest person." Again, "He spake bitterly against the Bishop of Lon don." Bancroft was the bishop. Overbury seems to have been a Puritan in religion, a fact which has not hitherto been known; and this fact will explain why he called Bancroft "a very knave." This record of his opinions on church affairs is extremelv curious: "He would not have the bishops to have any temporalities or temporal . urisdiction, but live upon tithes, and nothing but preach. When I was men'.ion lner how dangerous and difficult a tbii.g it would be to restore appropriations, he said, Fiat jus ti'ia el cotslumruat." Elsewhere we Audit re corded, on the words of Overbury, that "Ben J on son the poet now lives upon oue Towuseud, and scorns the world." Mr. Bruce conjectures that this Townsend was Aurelian Townscnd, once a steward lu Cecil's house. We know that rare Ben came into humble and discreditable relations with the great minister about this tlme,and the means oi his acquaintance may have bten the association with Townscnd here no'.el under date of February 12, 1G02, the year after his not quariei witn uecicer ana Marston, and the year before his first tragedy was produced at the Globe. It was a dark time for Ben the darkest time, perhaps, In bis life. The following epi'aph on a bellows-maker is said to be by Jonson, and if it is, might be included in future editions o his works: Here lyes Jo. Potterell, a maker of bellowes, Maister of tils traue. and king of good fellowes; jei ior mi iuih, hiv tuo uuure oi muueaiu, He that made bellowes oould not make breath. The twe references to Shakesneare are of course known to the public from Mr. Collier's extracts. The first refers to the play of Tvceijih. Jflujht, wnicn seemBio nave Deeu periormeu aitne least of the Middle Temple in February, 1001. "At our feast," eays the diarist, "we had a play called 'lwelfih Nigh; or What You Wi'l, much like the Comedy of Errors, or Meneohmi in Plautus, but most like and near to that in Italian called 'Inganni.' A good practice in it to make the steward believe his ldj widow was in love with him, by counterfeiting a letter as from his lady. In general terms, telling him what she liked best in bim, and prescribing his gesture in smiling, his apparel, etc., and then when he came to practice making him believe tney took bim to be mad." The second refer, ence to Shakespeare is the story of the poet cutting out the player with a lady. It was a fashion of that time for people who admired a play to send and bid the actor come and sup with them. Shakespeare, it is reported, over bearing Burbage make an appointment to go and tup with a lady, caught up the pass word, which was "Bichard the Third," and weut to meet madame some time before Burbage was likely to appear. He pleased the lady, aud was warmly welcomed. By and by came Bur bage, and sent in word that Bichard the Tuird was at the door. 'Tell him," said Shakespe ire, "that William the Conqueror was before Iiicnard the Third." Marston has been already mentioned. A small addition is made to the biography of this poet by Manniugham. "John Murstou,"he writes, "the last Christmas he danced with Alderman Moore's wife's daughter, a Spaniard born, fell into a strong commendation of her wit and beauty. When he had done, she thought to pay him home, and told him she thought be was a poet. "lis true.' Baid he, 'for poets feign and lie, ai d so did I when I commended your beauty, for you are exceeding loul.' " Sir Thomas Bodley, founder of the great library in Oxford, crosses the stage, an t is fileasantly photographed. "Mr. Bouley," we earn, "who has made the famous library at Oxford, was the Bon of a merchant of London; was sometimes a factor for the State; after married a rich widow in Devonshire or Corn wall, whose husbaud grew to a great quantity of wealth in a short space, specially by tradin j for pilchards; now. himself having no children, lives a pleasing private life, some while at the city, somewhlle at the university. He followed the Earl of Essex till his fall." How Bodley came to marry the rich widow, and so to have money for books, is merrily told. "Coming to the place where the widow was with one who is reported to have been sore of her, as occasion happened Ihe'wldow was nbsen. While he was ", In game, he finding his opportunity, entrea ed the surmied HssureJ ai-tcleinan u hold his card till be returned, lu which time he found thewldjwlna grdeo, couried. and ob'alneil bis desire; so ho plajed his game while auotuer held his cards." t The anecdotes of Raleigh show a rertain snUo against that splendid boro, not so much ou tho part of Manningham as ju that of his chief In formant. Charles leavers, whom wo take to bo the Sir Charles Davers (or rathrr Danver) who was a follower of Kscx. and tuereloie an enemy of Sir Walter. When the stones are read as reports from the other side, they will do no barm, and are well worth pre ervin. To wit: "A lewd fellow coming before Sir W. Kawley to be examined concerning some wrerk whicU he had got itto his hands, aud being demanded whettor hs would swear to such articles as tbey would propound, answerel that he would swear to anything they wouid ask him; and then b.ing admonlnhed ho should not be so rath in so serious a matter as concerned bis soul so neatly, 'Faith,' said he, 'I hnd rather trust God with my soul thau von with my goods," llore Is a trifle worth keeping: "Sir W. Ritv ley made this rhyme upon the name of aga'.lant, one Mr. Hoel: Ttis word of dental and the letter of fifty, lUkes the treat's name tliai will never be thrifty. (JVttf X.) And Noel's answer: The foe to tbestotnaoh and the word of disgrace, Chows the cent's name wim tue bold face, i&aw. Some fair specimens of legal wit are noted io the Diary. "It is but a mn'.ter of form you stani on," said Hyde. "But it is such a form," answered Tanflcld, "as you may chanco to break your Bhins at." A table was set across the Middle Temple Hall for th? barristers. One of the witlings sld it shoutl be called "St. Albans, becanse it was on the way to Duns table'" meaning, wo suppose, the benchers' table: Dunce-tablei The wit Is not sparkliug. One "Booth being indicted of felony for forgerv the Sfcor.d time, desired a day to answer till Easter term. 'Ohl' said the attorney, 'you would have a spring; you shall, but in a halter.'" When some one said that Venner, a famous coney catcher, had a brazen face, Kudyerd re plied, "Then the fellow has metal in him." A repartee by John Pym has a finer point. Bran stone, one of the Templars, was saying he had sold his bed in Cambridge. "Ifou did well." put m the young student, then in his first year, "for those that keep their beds long seldom grow rich." Here is another good thing from the same: "A man may do another a good turn tnough he cannot perform it for hlaisdf, as the barber cannot trim himself though he can others." A couple of unconnected anecdotes are worth extracting from a book which is not within reach ot general readers. This anecdote of the Scottish guard in Paris U amusine; "la the French Court the guard is all of Scotch men; and to distinguish betwixt a French and a Scot in admitting any t a place of present spectacle, they give the word 'bread and cheese,' which the French cannot pro nounce 'bret and shceee.'" And this also: "The Lord Paget upon a time thinking to havo goaded Sir Thomas White (an alderman of London) in a great assembly, asked him what he thought of that cloth, showing him a gar ment in present. 'Truly, my Lord,' said he, 'it seems to me a very goo J cloth but I remember when I was a young beginner I sold your father a far better to make him a gown, when he was Sergeant to the Lord Mayor.' " Such is the brief diary kept by tho young Templar in the last year, of Elizabeth's reien. It makes us long for more. Who knows? 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Orders ptomptiy at tended to. ioa OLD GRAVEL ROOFS COVERED OVER with feasllcblate and warranted lor ten years. HAMILTON & COORtTKK, 813 6m Wo 43 H. TKNXH Btreet. GENT.'S FURNISHING GOODST H. 8. K. Q. Harris' Seamless Kid Gloves. XTEBT FAIK TVABBAHTED, UOX.TJBrVX AGKNTH FOB QUITS' GLOV23 J. W. SCOTT & CO.. irtrp WO. 814 CHtsmiT ITBBsTf, PATENT 8 IJ 0 U LDKR.SB A W SHIRT MANUFACTORY, AND GENTLKMKN'S FURNISHING BTORB PERFECT FITTING BHIitTS AND DBAWK&i) made flom measurement at very short not lou. All other article, of hhk 17.n-.Nf h a CHEUS WINCHESTER & CO., o. 7u UilUdNUI Btreet, 111 PENNSYLVANIA HOSPITAL.- The attending Managers are: i Wlstar Morrla. Ho. to, W. Third street. B. Morris Wain, No. 128 U. Delaware avenue. Attending Physician J. il. Da Costa. M. D.. No. 10w6 bpruoe btreet.. ' u ' Atteudiug Burgeons William Hunt, M. D.. No. 1300 Bpiuce street. ' Thomas George Morton, M. D No, 1121 Chesnul Street. The Physician and Burgeons attend atthsHoapl Ul every day (Sundays excepted) to receive aunUca Uons ior adintMlou. ' ' Person, seriously Injured by accident are always admitted U brought to the iiospllal ItuiuwdlatHly iieitsaJlfc lti INSURANCE. ntUWAHE MUTUAL SAFETY INSURE XJ ANCK COMl'AJNY. Incorporated by tn Legislature ol Pennsylvania, im. Offloo '& K. corner of THIRD and WALNUT (Streets, Philadelphia. MABItlB lDHURANCKfl ' On Vessels, Cargo, and Freight to nil part of the world. . XWI.AHD IHSURAHOM On goods by river, oanai, lake and land carriage to all parte of the Union. riaa irsurascks On Mercnandlsegeneraiiy; on a tores, Dwellings, Houses, eta A8SKT8 OF THK OOMPAHT. November 1.1H08. (T200.000 United States Ave Pe Cent Loan, 10-40s tans son no 120,000 United . Staves Six Per WMS'9M'W Oeut, Loan, 1881 w 800-00 60,000 United States T BiT Per V'8UUW Cent. Loan (lor Paciflo KX 60 000-00 800,000 Blate of Pennsylvania SU ' Per Cent. Loan ....., 211.S75 08 126,000 City of Phlla. Six PerOent. ",0' 00 Rii no Loan (exempt from tax). 128.SM O0 611,00 Bute of New Jersey Six Per Cent I-oan....... 61.500 00 50,000 Feun. Rail. First Mortgage . Six Per Cent. Bonds.. est) 80,200 -00 86,000 Penn. R. Becond Mortgage Six Per Cont. Bonds 84.000 00 25,000 Western Penn. K. Mort, Six Per Cent Bonds, (P. R. Itgnarantec) 80,625-00 80,000 Btate ofTennessee Five Per Cent. Loan...... 21,000 00 7,000 Btate of Tennessee Six Per Cent Loan 6,031 25 15,000 Germantown Gas Co., prin cipal and Interest guaran teed by City of pEllad'a, 800 shares Stock 15,000-00 10,000 Penn'a Railroad Company. 200 shares Stock .... 11,300 00 5,000 North Pena'a Railroad Co., . m 100 shares Stock 8,500-00 30,000 Phlla. and Southern Mall Steam.Co..80shares Stock 15,000 00 ,B00 Loans on Bond and Mort frnffA. flrat. llnna nn flllw Properties. " " ZZ' 807.900-00 1,109,000 Par. Market value, Sl,130,825-25 , , . Cost, i,oya.-2u. Real K8tate...................... M 88,000)0 Bills reoeivable for insurance made 822,lbti'M Balances due at agencies, premiums on marine policies, accrued Inter est, and other debts due the com pany 10,178-88 Stock and serin of sundry corpora tions, esi56. Estimated value 1,81300 Cash In bank.........H 8U61H) 08 Caan la drawer - m,3 l,M7,367-80 Thomas C. Rinii Edmund A. Bonder, Samuel E. Stokes. Heury Sloan, Wilil.mo. Ludwlg. George G. Lelper. John D. Taylor, 'ieorge W. Bernadou, William G. BoultonT lacob Riegel. jpenoer Mcllvalne, U. T. Morgan.PltUbnrg lohn B. Hem pie, " V. B. BercrAp. u John 0. Davis. James O. Hand, Theophilus Paulding, Joseph H. Seal, Hugh Craig, John R. Penrose, Jacob P. Jones, James Traqualr, Edward Darlington, H. Jones Brooke, . James B. McFarland, Kdward Lafouroade, Joanna p. Eyre, x HOMASO . HAND. PrPnlrlmt. JOHN O. DAVIH. Vi,.PrMl.lf,nlL HENRY LYLBURN, Seoretary. HENRY BALL. Assistant Secretary. (10 8 OFFICE OF THE INSURANCE COMPANY OF NORIH AMERICA, No. 232 WALNUT Btreet, Philadelphia. " Incorporated 1794. Charter Perpetual. Capital, (500,000. "4""u Assets 93,350.000 MARINE, INLAND, AND F1KE INSURANCE. OVER 20,000,000 LOSSES PAID SINCE lia ORGANIZAllON. . DIEJECTOHS. Arthur a. Cpffln, George L. Harrison. Samuel W. Jones, Francis R. Cope, John A. Brown, Edward H. Trotter. Charles Taylor, Edward B. Clarke. Ambrose White, x. Charlton Henry. Richard D. Wood, Alfred D. Jessup. William Welsh, John P. While. B. Morris Walu, Louis O. Madeira, John M.aaon, Charles w. Cushman. a-011.1 1LATT, Vice President Matthias Maris, Secretary, 21 FIRE INSURANCE EXCLUSIVELY TH J 1-AK -incorporated lS2&-(Jharie PelVnal-Nu 110 W AL UT btreet, opnttelie Iudependebce ttqnrS This Company, favorably known to thecommunttt for over lorty years, oontiuoeu to Inbure agalnni T lo or damage by hre on Publlo or Private nUdiita either peruiauentiyor for a limited Uru Also ni, arDlture. Bvooss of Goods, and Merobaudlss ?en rally, oa liberal terms, " Bn Their Capital, together with a large Snrplns Fnntt Is Investen In the most careful nBauner.wuiohenahini (hem to offer to the uuurea an undoubted leoinlii S UiecMSOfliMa. . """ Cr nlel smith, Jr., 1 Jonn Devereux, Alexander Bensoa. I Thomas smiih Isaac iiaslehnrst, I Henry LewlsT Xhom. obin..n)e) B JwJlhgham FellJ STRICTLY MUTUAL. PROVIDENT LIFsTaND TRUST CO. or pHti.aum.rHiA. OFFICE, No. 1U S. iomm STBX-f, members ol the uuas bOOLETY 0 FRIES Da. CKod risks of any class accepted, fohoies Usaed nnou approved pians, at ue lowau Resident, BAMTJ&L it. BJdXPLJtT, Vice-President, willau a. lujnuhtehth. mJ?Jirt,uiHlw ottered by this Uompaay are PHpklhSiDaBAKCB COMPANY Of lNCOUl'OltATAIJ 1804 OHABTiB PBKPETTJAr HO.U WaJL bT Btreet, opposite the Jijcnanaa. This Company Insures rrom iom ox daxnase by on llbeAl terms, on bnlluinKsmerchandtse. furniture etc., for limited periods, aud peruianenil on bulla, loss by deposit of premium . Tue Company has been In active operation for mom than blXTY YLAKH, during which ail losses have been prompUy adjusted aud .pall, "" r.iai"10KH. John L. Hodge, , David Lewis, M. it. Manony, John T. Lewis, XVUUam a Grant, Kobert W. Learning, D. Clark Wharton, Benjamin itklnr. Thomas H . fawtn. A. K. McHeury, ' Aduiuud Castlllon. bamuel Wllooz, I 1 II KT . " Lawrence Lewis, Jr., JOHN E. W DCHKBJCK. President. Bampil Wiloqjc, becretary. uH THE ENTERPRISE INSURANCE CO. OP PiiiLAOKLFUlA. Ouice South west Cor. l'OV KTH and WALNUT St. IIKK ilfSBLKANCJli KXCLUBI VKLY. PEKl-Jh- l UAL AND Th.HU POLIC'IKa irt.-sOKD, Caali Capital. ....................4J k) onu'0 Cash Asset January 1, 1st 9.......... ,sk a F. Batch ford Starr. XXAJLV 1 vno. J. Livingston Enlnger, John U. Atwoed, BenJ, T. Trednk, Gtorne H. btuart, Wm. O. Boultun, Charles Wheeler, Tbos. IT. Montgomery, I hlH ClJUILaUV InsnreS Oi.lv hn.,..u.. riMira ,.VIn jonn xi. jsrown, jamea tn, aerwea. no specially hazardous rlnfc whatever, such as Zacio- rles, mills, etc F. K4.T0HFORO STARR president THOB. H. MOKTOOJUlClty, Vloe-Presldent. ALEX. W. Wibtkk, beoretary. 2 1) I IMFEHIAL FIRE INSURANCE CO. LONDON. EST A BUS II EO 1803. Pald-ur)apltal and Accumulated Funds, 98,000,000 IN GOLD. PB.EVOST HEBBING, Aen, I No, 107 South THIRD Street, rhllada. CHAB. M. PRBVObT. , CHAB. P. HIBRINO DB. KINKELIN. AFTER A RESIDEHOl aad practice of thirty years at the Northwest corner of Third and TJulon streets, has lately r moved to Bonth kmc VXNTH btreet, between MAE. Jf D d Cj H JlatlfiN O 'f His superiority In the Pfosapt an4 perfect ours of all reoeat, cUronlo, looai. and eonaitiaUoaal aUso tlens ol a spwstal nature, la proverbial. . . ... diseases of !! skua, ajppearlus In a hundred lf frrwnt forms, totally eradicated! menial and physioal weaknM,and all nervous deblUtlea aolenUUoally and suoosaefuUy W . itfltoe tWU twn lAtli INSURANCE. 1829.-CHAUTEU rERPETUAL Frantlin Fire taance "tejaaj OF rillLADELPIIIAl Office, JTos. 435 and 437 CIIESNCT Street. Assetsoii Jan.1,1869, $2,677,37213 CA PtTAL... t OO.OOfHM? ACH'Bl' !) SUHrLU8... f VH:! 0'4H?( PKEM 1 li MS m..m. . 1,10 3 Jtj 1 3 43 TJNSETTT.KT) rt,AIM9, INCOMR FOR iwjo. a:uui luu Losses paiasincel829,over$5)5BO)CtQa Perpetual and Temporary Policies on Libera Terms. The Company alo liwoen PolMes on Itnt iTi BnUdlngs of all aluds. Ground Bents and Moitgas . ... DlRVfYrORS. Alfred O. Baker, Alirauriil,r, iIioiiiro bprk, ' William b. UrauL Thomas b. Kills. ' ' UHStavn 8. Rnsnn. rantnei t.-trn,, Otoige W. Ulchards, liaac Lea, Ocorte fales. J P. W. McALtlvi V K. Htcretnrj . w YM. UltKUM, Aatlstat.1 becretary. I J R M La FAME ' FIRE INSURANCE COMPANZ Has EemcTCd to Ken Office, , lio. C09 C1IE8NUT 8 1 root. TT. I. BLJuCllAi:D, " 8ff CRETART 8 ie i2t STOVES, RANGES, ETC KOTICE. THE UNDERSIONfti would call the attention ot the puollo to hla 0S.W tL,VUn KAUliSi UKJNAClfi. Tbl la an enLlrelv new hutnr. I, l. n j stracted as ta at once commend Itself to general favor, being a combination of wrought and cast iron. It la very simple in Its construction, and is perfectly air. tight; self-cleaning, havfiHUno pipes or drums to be taken ont and cleaned. It lav arranged with nprlgh t huea as to produce a larif ionounl of beat from the same weight of coal than any furnace now In use. The bygtomello condition of the air as produced bS my new arrangement of evaporation will at onoe de room trate that it Is tfce only Hot Air furnace thai will produce a perefuily healthy atmosphere. Those in want of a complete Heating Apparatus, would do well to call and examine the Uolden JKasiaT CHARLIE WlLLIAaiST Kos. 1132 and 1134 MARKET Btreetj - A large assortment ot Cooking Rnges!'?re?boarr Etoves, Low Down Urates, VenUlaiors. etc, always Ou hand W. B. Jobbing of all kinds promptly done. ' 1 10 br ECKOPEAN RAHOi;. for families, hotels, or publlo Instltatloos. in TWE1ST V IIFFER. '.KaT aiZka. Also. Fhlladeinhla Ruira. Hot-Air Fornacea, Portable Heaters, Low-dowa Urates, Flreboard Btoves, Bath Boilers, blew-hole piates, Boilers, Cooking btoves, etcn wholesale and taU. by thsntnfturers THOMm) 11 KwfmBm No. 289 N. fcUKCOMD BUeet, ENGINES, MACHINERY, ETC, PENH BTEAM BNOrNW linn. wuusrfsra. Aviis.ju yv ota r n AJf J K LiiVY bUllBJi, and FOUISJDURS, having lor many years been in sucoeesful operauon, antf been exclnslveli engaged In bulidlns and repairing Marine Vnd Rive? nHfi.6biKtx,fi"Cl ww-presaure, Iron Bollen, WatS 7 auks, Propellers, etc. etc, respeotfully otter theiS services to the pnblloas being fully prepared lo con. tract for engines of all slsea, Marine. River, ana btatlonaryt having seta of patterns of different sums are prepared to execute oiders wlUi qaiok dqsnatoh. Ivery UescrlnUon of pattern-making made at th shortest notice. Hlun and Low-presahre Fins Tubular and Cylinder Boilers, oi the but Ponnsylva. ma ctarcoal Iron. Forgiugs of all sUcs and klndi Iron and Castings of all descriptions. Roil TVLn.- Scrow Cutting, and aUethex workwrniectsa with the above business. Drawings and snecilicstlons for all work dons at UieestablLbjnenttreeof Charge, and work .guars. Seed. The subscribers have ample wharf-dock room tnm repairn of boats, whore they can He In perfect safetv and are provided witu shears, blocks, lails, eki. mu,' tot talsing neavy u light wale.hu. ' JACOB O.NEAFTB. JOHN P. LEVY. : II BKADH and PAXMJtR Slraets.1 ,. TA08H MiBwa,M WILIJAX X, MXaIC COTJTRWARK ForjJSDfiy. FIFTH AJSZ PHILAPKUITI, ptwuiwiLiatb amd ujL(jHlsmirs, 'SS1 if .eMjn n.d w Preesure bteauj Fjcglasj Xor Land, River, and Marine Bervlce. Boilers, Qaaomeieis, Tanks, Iron Boau. etc Castings of all kinds, either iron or brass. BiurnorS.lSSf:tt- Workshop., aat Retorts and tias Machinery, of the latest and boss Improved construction. livery description of Plantation Machinery, site Bngar, Saw, and Oris Mills. Vacuum Pans, 04 Bteam Trains, Defecators, Flltexs, Pumpuig, Sa ginea, etc bole AgenU tot IX. BUlenz's Patent Sngar Boiling Apparatus, Meenlyth's Patent Bteara Hammer, and LUMBER. - 18G9 gPttUCE JOlX BPuL'CK JOibT. HEMLOCK, , HEMLOCK, 1869 1 Of'Ci BEaBOInEI CLEAR PLNE, lOUcf BEAbOMED CLEAR PINK 1869 BFAHlbii CEBAR, VOK PA-XIERISHL 1869 FLORIDA FLOORINU, FLORIDA FLOOKLNU, . CAROLINA FLOORING. VIROIKLA FLOOK1AO, DELAWARE i'LOOKlNtf. AbH ELOORLNU. WALNUT FLOOKINO. FLORIDA BTEP BOAJaDB. 1869 iuaiL PLAI tMK. 1 CQ WALMJT BD8 AMD PLANK. . 1 DOH wALvMib.AgPLI: 1869 ur a 1 Mrim ur a WALNUT PLANE. TCPO UNDERTAKERS LUMBFB, ICUcf UN DEBT A KERB' LUMEER. 1869 RED CEDAR. WALNUT AND PINS. 1669 BKAtlON'ED POPLAR. , 1 Of1 ft BEACONED Cli KRlty. . XOUt7 WHITE OAK PLANK AKD B0AKD8. HICKORY. 1 Cf'O CIOAR BOX MAKKK8 - Offl lOOy CIOAR BOX MAKEUP lOUty BPAK1UH CEDAR BOX BOAKDS, ICR BALK LOW. 1 QL-C CAROLrWA bSaNTLINO, -I QJf. ACr.11" CAROLINA H.T. BllJiJ, lODlJ NORWAV BCANTL1NU. WORWAV BCANTLINU.' 1869 KAULE, BROTHER A CO.. w pWMfc PANEL PLANK ALL TUlCKtfE'ME 1 COMMON PLAHR, ALL TIuH2' 1 COM ON B04 R D- 1 "d B!DE HENCH BOARDS. WHITE PINK FLOORING hJar 4. bf BtH K JOliS I, ALL 81ZK,S. " " T,?rJ'' Jol.ST. ALL 81Z 8. Toietlerwig-nefaior 1 s?;bs ,or .Aiuiff!, ..M M alt"?1" -"f oiiuae b.reets. OO B H X O H a Bam BAO AMfDFAOTOr. JOHN T. BA ILK Y H, E. ooneg of HmiT and WATB BtrteMU Philadelphia. - SKAXFR8 IN BAUa AND BAOlf1 , vi every awutrtpMun, tut erala, Floor, Bait, bu,f,M.H,pl, tjjus, JtaM$ Lanrs and ataa orrMw't-Sj Aa ensitaoUr 0-Caaaft sv
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers