THE STAMP-POINT OF THE BOARDING-HOUSE. The kernel has its meaning; and so, too, has each of its husks, if you can fairly got a? thorn. Now my object here is not to discuss the question of- husks in general, for that would Le a matter encyclopu dic and endless. I pro pose rather to consider simply a mere variety cf one of the physical husks of the soul, in connection with its parallel moral husk,; In other words, to look at the boarding-house in the liyht of civilization. For the boarding house is, I take it, the modern type of one of the Soul's primeval husks the new light ver sion of the old-time idea of shelter and habi tation, house and home, hearth and roof-tree the lineal descendant of wigwam, porch, cabin, ctiil, bungalow, booth, den, pagoda, and all the rest. , It was the theory of Vied that nature re peats herself; that history, civilization, soci ety, and polity come bauk at last into them selves, their progress being always in circles conformed to one great archetypal plan, bo that every large fact or form is 3ure to reap pear sooner or later in the course of ages, whenever its round has been completed, (loetbe, while he adopted the substance of this view, modified it so far as to represent the course of history as a spiral, instead of a circle. A law of advance blends with the law of returns; and hence epochs and phases and forms and events return, not just as before, but changed somewhat, and farther on along the winding line. This has always seemed to me a true solution of the probleiu of civili zation, and the only ono, inasmuch as it alone reconciles and explains t'.ie too great necessary and coequal facts of chauge, and of the equality of action and reaction. Here we Lave the key to much in literature, too, as Well as in life. 'Within the past month I have read the words of an American l'lotinus, an English Thucydides, and aUallic Aristophanes. In each there was the old Greek, but moved forward. So, too, these habitable husks which man makes Irom age to age for shelter and home have their appointed cycle of change. How different the roof-trees under which the cen turies have dwelt 1 Yet each housing was an utterance of the spirit of the time, changing only with its informing spirit. Like uiau, like house. And as the race is sure to come back to the old traditions, and to stand by the old landmarks, sooner or later, so the house hold gods return after a while to their starting-point to sojourn for a period in their an cestral home, and quicken themselves at the native hearth. "Tccta mulantur, nos et mutamur in Mis." In order to describe this household circle, at least three points must of course be fixed. In the present case, there seems to me to be four, all natural, necessary, and easily determined. Tor leaving out of view all subordinate types and mere variations, men's local habitations reduce themselves to these simple forms the Tent, the Cabin, the Castle, the Home. The circle then completes itself in the boarding house, which is at once both the original last form and the fac-simile or parody of the first form in the old circle, as well as the original first form in a succeeding series. The locus of the boarding-house, and its relations to society, I shall hope to define the more exactly by first outlining in a rougn way ue prominent leatures of each of its three predecessors just named. And I. The Tent. The type of this epoch is nomadism. Men livo nowhere. They only exist, making bivouao for a night, and pack- ; where to una. mem: mey nave no ciues, no 'Streets, no fixed numbers on their houses. The places through which they range they never inhabit are deserts, yielding no good thing. The occupation of society is chronio war, not satisfactory internecine destruction, but bickerings, endless feuds, and cavalier One-horse engagements. Everybody fights With everybody. The result is seldom seri (us: at it they go again: it is hammer and tings forever. The great question in life is jbout their daily food. They produce nothing, and consume much. Each, tribe is domineered wer by a patriarchsome hoary ruffian who gains his place either by seniority in the fimily, or by being less scrupulous than his ftllows. Ilia word is law; his ipse dixit settles everything. The arts and sciences never flourish here. The enly talk is gossip and speculations on the weather. The only reading, if there is reading at all, is the local news and the war bulletins of the patriarchs. The only fine art at 11 practised is music, which expresses itself partly in whistling, ana partly in numming ovr plaintively the familiar airs of the coun try. There is also much thrumming of rude musical instruments, such as the jewsharp aid its descendants; and the fierce clangor of the gong both urges the tribes to good, and launches them against the enemy. The chief im of this vagabond people, in the brief intervals of war, is to kill time. To this end tke men prey upon society, and the women witch the weather, the neighboring tents, and the tunics of casual travellers. Humanity looks back with fond fancy to this epoch of the tent, and sees it loom radi ent through the mists of long generations. It is called the Age of Gold, either on the lucus-a-non-lucendo principle, or on the omne-ignolvm-pro-magnifico theory. lleing most distait and diil'erent from the present, it is dreamed of, sighed for, and sung, as some thing never to be seen again. Yet it comes back, though changed. II. Uy-and-by the Tent gives place to the Cabin. Restlessness, being tired, craves rest, and var subsides for a while into peace. As population increases, tillage begins, the land of itself not being able to feed swarms of idle roamers, who do nothing but graze, and hunt, and fight. So each man builds his rude cabin, ties himself to the earth, turns tie sod, watches nature, and sees his bread at his own door. This should be the true age of iron, tla time of the ploughshare, the spade, the axe, and the sickle. It is the era of natu ralism, when man lives close to nature, liken ing himself to vegetables and animals. He tstrives to get at the heart of nature, hoping to conquer and make it his servant. Humanity is one vait peasantry, whose business it is to make the earth ready for future generations. Hard hanis are funding capital for the use of the more subtle brain, the finer sense, the nicer taste, which shall come after. It is a pioneer age, standing in the van of civilisa tion an age which creates, develops, sub dues, and accumulates. Its cabin is the shanty of a farm-hand. III. Time goes on, and the reign of the Castle begins. Just as war before reacted into ?eace, so now in turn peace reacts into war. he cabin falls to the rear, and the castle steps to the front. The peasant's shanty yields the vas to the soldier's fort. Hard knocks ara the order of the day; the strongest arm makes itself lnrd. and the weakest becomes vassal Feudalism Is the type of the age: a centralized society coheres in a series of successive links, all meeting at last in a suzerain, who stands At the heart 01 things, -cttcu uwemng THE DAILY EVENING TELEGRAPH PHILADELPHIA, FRIDAY, becomes the centre of a wide circle, the focus of life far around. Kach comes to stand for two facts The first, is btrenpth, and the second is Beauty a new revelation at the fireside. There must first be a stronghold, then galleries, museums, and the decorations of art. The hoarded capital of the cabin epoch now blooms in luxury and s lendor and airy forms it is the radiant Age of Silver. The'castle is the birthplace of much that is true and tender in our modern civiliza tion first cradle of the arts, home of the graces, true shrine of social life. Here, too, between the stormy blasts of war, were born or nurtured many of the liner vir tues loyalty ' to woman, obedience, reverence, truth, the chastity of honor, self-sncrilice, and sublimcst of all martyr dom for an idea. Within these four walls lived cultured courtesy. IV. At last the barons cut each others' throats for their ladies' sake, or die for king and crown, or leave house and land for fatal crusades. Then come the burghers, mortga gees of fair estate.,, apostles of the new era, lovers of peace. They are family men, true to domestic ties, fond of homo. For the shelter of their dear ones they build a home, and live in it. It matters nwt what its form may be whether it be of wood, or brick, or marble whether it have Doric peristyle, or Gothic spire, or Egyptian column. The spirit is all, the form nothing; for the material home is but the husk to cover the glory that lives within. Where home is, there only and there always are there homes. The home is the era of good feeling, the Age of Love, which, beginning at the hearth, goes out to the ends of the universe. Neither silver nor gold can rightly typify this fairest of epochs: naught can be its emblem save that precious metal of the alchemists, com bining in itself the virtues of all the rest. At the hearthstone all things centre: it is the final cause of society. The arts and sciences, culture, taste, heroic deeds, the far-reaching thought, the soaring imagination, the sweet affections, the fine courtesies, and all right-mindedness these, and all the gene rous things of life, culminate in the home era. The family is the true fostering mothering of the highest worth. The Lares are the best helps to all high thinking, high living, and well doing, liy the fireside each true tiling finds best expression. V. Generations pass, and the cycle of civili zation completes itself. Home deliquesces into the Boarding House, anil the series Of the tabernacles is at an end. For the old noma dic instinct has never wholly died out; though long dormant, it still lives, and bursts out once more in undiminished vigor. The epoch of vagrancy returns; new editions of the tent, revised and cor rected, are scattered broadcast over the land. For what is the boarding-house but a tent with modern improvements and an L ? Fach is the very emblem of unrest, the home of the vagrant, the theatre of war. These two en campments, standing respectively in the van and at the rear, as the beginning and the end of civilization, serve to mark the limits of society, when extremes meet, and life returns into itself. If you will recall the outline of the first epoch, as sketched in Section I, you will find that many of its most characteristic features reappear under the regime of the boarding-house in the epoch of to-day. The primary meaning of the boarding-house is, then, locomotion and unrest. Stung by the gad-fly within, which never dies nor tires, the modem Io is goaded up and down, and wanders uneasily over the face of the earth, finding no rest for the sole of her foot. Your representative nineteenth-century boarding house man is only a developed Bedouin, a veneered and varnished Gipsy. He takes root nowhere; he has no flavor of the soil; he grows into no natural fruitage. He is only a consuming waif, self-driven from tent to tent, and picked up by one landlady after ivnother. He, the flotsam and jetsam of humanity, is tossed about on the currents, and tumbled against the headlands of life, with the wreckers and salvors in his wake. The great question always arises within us in regard to the dis position of his body, What will he do with it ? Where next will he carry it ? Look, for a moment, at the term, "boarding-house." Turn' it over, pick it to pieces, and what do you make of it? It is biuiply the word "board," and the word "house," most awkwardly tacked together, without moulding or blending in any degree. The teims do not mix any more than oil and water. Now from this homeliness of make and texture, this awkwardness of juncture, this absence of welding, one or two infe rences naturally follow. For, since all language is but the retlex of life, since words are but the images of things and ideas, and the character of the thing or idea always -modifies the character ot its word in a certain definite way it follows that from the form, the moulding, and the currency of the word, we can argue a jiosteriori as to the form, the moulding, and the currency of its parent idea. Ihe word "boarding-house, then, is uncomely, simply because its idea is un comely. The plain fact is simply this that our Anglo-baxon likes not the idea of the boarding-house in life, and therefore shows no favor to the word boarding-house in language. The Saxon likes his home and believes in it, and therefore makes for it one of the sweetest and dearest of all words. He dislikes and disbelieves in the boarding- house, and, with characteristic frankness, will not stoop to veil his want of love and faith under any graceful circumlocution. If it is argued that the want of honor for the boarding-house in our Saxon tongue comes simply from the inflexible nature of the lan guage, making it impossible to mould a better term, I reply that whenever a strong desire is felt on the part of the community to italicize some favorite thing, or to glorify a pet idea, no difficulty is found in magnifying the cor- responding expression. And this is done either by inventing, or by substituting, or by transferring to the idea or thing in question some delicacy of diction, or some smooth and respectful word or paraphrase. If there is a general wish to pay honor, honor will be paid, or an attempt intended to pay honor will be made in good faith. Thu3 the tradesman, desiring not to sink, but to elevate the shop, is able, because the community consents, to dignify his place of business with the title of "bazaar," "emporium," "establishment." So, too, a house is called a "mansion;" a little patch of ground, an "estate;" a closet an "apartment;" a school, a "college;" an aca demy, a "university;" and anything popular, an "institution." Tartly for the same reason, and partly from a ridioulous squeamish ness and false modesty, a leg is called a "limb," shirt and drawers "under wear," and so on. I do not bring forward these instances as worthy of imitation, or in order to defend their manifest vulgarity, but merely to show that the community can find, and do always find, when they choose to find, glorifying words, or which amounts to the same thing words intended and believed to glorify favorite ideas. The principle remains the same, no matter whether the glorifying word is in good or In bad taste. The only requisites to this sort of linguistic transforma tion are that the idea shall be popular, and its word unpopular; while, on the Other hand, if the idea is unpopular, but its word popular, there will result linguistic degradation. The word must ad just itself to the idea. If both are popular, or both unpopular, in an equal degree, the word remains unchanged. 5 One more inference may be drawn from lan guage namely, that the boarding-house is of modern growth. This inference history also conliims. I cannot conceive of a boarding house in the reicn of FJizabeth. In the reigns of Charles II and Anne, such a thing might havo been pnssihlo sporadically among a certain caste, but not otherwise. It was never organized into an institution; the nation had nothing to do with it. The word "boarding-house" does not occur in Walker or Webster, but is found in Worcester, who represents a generation or two later. The next W. who provides a dictionary will probably sanction that horrible monstrosity, boarding-house-keeper. . The thing exists, and will exist, and must have a name. And unless society changes radically, and Saxon ceases to be Saxon, there can be no other name. Our language will only tolerate the thing: it will show it no favor, decorate it with no euphe mism. The word "boarder" has a greater anti quity. Its former meaning, however, neces sarily differed somewhat Irom the present, inasmuch as it indicated only unique speci mens, anomalous offshoots of society. It never implied then, as now, a special class. For the boaider was then the exception, not the rule a monstrosity, not a normal product. I doubt not that some confused perception of the analogies existing between the nautical and Ihe land boarder may have led to the first terrene application of" the term; it may have been thought that both are far from "home, both are given to attack, both are devoted to the use of the knife, both rejoice in the grab game, both are a law to themselves, and so on. The boarding-house is simply an expression of materialism one phase in the religion of things. An age with materialism on the brain must have boarding-houses. As manufac turers, motive-power, and all industrial inte rests grow, they grow: they are the home of the herding artisan, and from him come to permeate society. They are temples of the religion of the body, altars to the faith in things, and the want of faith in ideas, propa ganda of the gospel of conventions. Yet it is a mistake to say that the boarding-douse is without an ideal: it has an ideal its front parlor boaider. Its common faith and aspira tions are unto him. So, too, it is not without worship: its homage is to the practical to that which will pay. With it there is no suc cess but success; and success is dollars and cents. It worships steam, percentage, corner lots, mines, stocks, fly-wheels, and the vari ous devices by which man divests himself of bis manhood. The boarding-house is civilization gone to seed the anti-climax of society the last trituration and dilution of the art of livinsr. Its epoch is the Age of Brass, that factitious metal whose sole viitue lies iu its superficial resemblance to something better. So the boarding-house is a parody of home, a carica ture of comfort, and a fonrerv of societv. Here lies the great battle-ground of the frip peries and vanities of life; here is the arena in which the foibles of humanity contend without ceasing. No man cares to stand for what he is, to show himself in truth to his fellow-boarders: he wants, like ilebased coin, to utter . himself for more or other than he is worth. The homely vir tues, the sweet sincerities of life, the truth of character, the high thought, the noble en deavor, the unselfish purpose, all languish here. A subtle poisou gnaws at the very life of simplicity, integrity, and independence of character. Conventions take the place of con victions; shams are the maxims of life; the ad raptaiidum Is the aim of life; and appearances are the test of life. No true art, poetry, or science can flourish in the sterile soil of the boarding-house; they are flowers of home-growth,. Taste is vulgar ized by cutting loose from the eternal fitness of things, and clinging to the shifting despot isms of coteries. The notion about science is, that it is a good help to labor-saving and money-making inventions. Literature wor ships the gods of the hour; poetry degene rates into ornament, and revels in tho morbid excrescences ot lite and character; and art becomes upholstery. l)o you think that Homer, Phidias, or Aristotle could have lived anvwhere else than at home I And do you think that the stuff which heroes are made of is found at mercenary firesides The heioio, like the homely virtues, wither when moved from their native hearths. Did you ever hear of a great thought born in a boarding-house of sublime love of honor, of stem devotion to principle, of lofty self sacrifice? Such things, wherever they show themselves, were lirst nurtured at home. No nation ever fought for its boarding houses. The wars of tent-dwelling races have always been raids for plunder, not strokes for principle. Conceive of a nation of boarding houses what would they fight for but per centage and profit f Would Marathon and Thermopyke have been fought, would Decius have devoted himself to death, would Ilegulus have kept his word, would the martyrs have welcomed the flames, if theirs had been ages of boarding-houses ? The highest culture, . true conversa tion, and real contact of mind with mind, are in the boarding-house utterly null. Talk is limited to gossip, colds, and the weather. Gossip we know, and colds we know, and thank Heaven for the weather! The weather, past, present and future fair, foul, or dubious illimitable, fresh, omnipo tent forever! Boundless stimulant of thought, neutral ground of the small affections, mother of small talk, nurse of sociality, regulator of the proprieties, sweet occasion of sweet offices, stop-gap of pauses, rippling stream through the desert ocean of straugerhood, fertilizer of friendship, herald of an era of good feeling, meeting-place of the conventionalities, pivot of society we hail thee, Weather, sum mum bonum of the talking boarder, solace of the silent, leading-string to the diffident, spur to the balky, crutch to the lame, life uoat to the foundered. Great art thou alike in thy history, reality, and prophecy great alike, whether absolute, relative, or potential a blessing forever I What were the boarding-house without thee? A solecism. And what can they do in the tropics, where for months thou changest not ? The boarding-house, like the tent, has its patriarch. He is not, however, necessarily identical with the ideal alluded to in a pre ceding column. It matters not whether he dwells in garret or basement, or whether he is young or old; his title and office come from seniority as boarder in a given household, and are merely honorary. The only privi leges thereto appertaining are . the right of acting as mediator between the two contending factions of the house, and ot having his utterances on all subjects quoted as the law of the family. His usual title is lather Of the hnilHA. Bo trront 1st iliu mlirrnllnn in American households, that the title mar be j " - vtvviu tiuunii'iiuui J hough only a Biliele man. of not remarkable B1euiiy earned ana often transferred. antiquity, 1 recollect that In one case, after sojourning under ono roof for only some six to eight months, the title fell to me; and I proposed to, and did, fight it out on that line all summer. Jn the early autumn a new champion of the table succeeded to a vacancy. Think for a moment of tho blessed in fluences going out from a true home. The old hearthstone of the child glows in the eye oi the youth like the star of hope; it is the rock of manhood, and in old age it is like the shadow of a great rock in a weary land. ' ; Look then at a boarding-house child, with out home in esse, possr, mrminisse. Original castaway t Shuttlecock between the vanities and the inanities, bubble of bubbles, feather tossed on every wind of nothingness, young convert to materialism, unconscious martyr to the trumperies), human victim on the altar of the superficialities 1 What is he good for ? What will he be good for f What will you do with him? He has no safeguards, no inspirations. Home is to him a word without a meaning; it can never be anything more than sundry numbers in sundry streets. Whence is his motive power? where are his ideals? whither his aspirations ? A lady, having asked a former servant of hers where she was now living, re ceived the answer, "I don't live, I board."' The answer was true in a sense not thought of. To live is one thing; to board is another especially in the case of the young, whose character is still in the making. The child of the boarding-house only exists. He has no memories, no sanctities, no principles, no mainspring. Faith, and tenderness, and all spiritual things, are nipped in the bud; and the bloom and sweetness of innocence and purity are wiped away. Ami when he drags his existence to its prinie, of what possible worth will he be to himself, to you, to me, to society ? We are now only in the beginning of tho boarding-house era. But when the climax is reached, when the minima become maxima, when tendencies work themselves out into facts, when exceptions become rules, when the elements have shaped themselves into an organization, and the parts have adjusted themselves to a system when, in short, the boarding-house has grown into a world-wide institution, and men dwell only in vast cara vansaries then tell me where, in the language of the popular play Where shall we go to ? Atlantic Monthly. PROPOSALS. HILADELFIIIA DEPOT. Assistant Quartermaster's Office, ICE,-! ii7. r JNl. liyj GlKAltl) STREET, May t). lsii Proposals will be received at this ollice until 12 o'clock M , THURSDAY, Mny IU, 1H.7, tor im mediate delivery at the United Stales Store house, Hanover street whurf, properly packed, mid ready for shipment, of t lie "following de scribed Quartermaster's mores, viz.: 0 bottles Arnica. 3SUU feet American Glass, first qunlity, 1200 lOx 12.H00 1'JxlS, 20012x3), CM) 14x20,201)10x18, MA) 10x20. 2U0 17x20, 2t'0 ISx.l), 100 18x22. 2t0 feel American Gluss, second quality, 109 11x18,100 10x18. 50 sides Bridle Leather, "Oak tanned, 10 lbs. per side when lliiinlied " 2 dozen Brushes, Marking, "plain." 2 doen Brushes, Murking, "round." 6 dozen Brushes. Whitewash, "large." 24 dozen Butts, Wrought, 2J Inch, "narrow." 60 pounds Castile Soap. ' 3 dozen Chamois Slcius. 100 pounds Cotton Mop. 800 pounds Cotton Waste. 25 dozen Corn Brooms. "Gale's." 200 pounds Chrome Green lu OU 20 1, 40 2, and ; ajapouuucHUR. 60 riounuu Chrome Yellow. "Dry, 100 pounds Chrome Yellow la Oil 10 1,' 20 2, ana io o pounu cans, 6 dozen Curry Combs. dozen Drawer Locks, "2 Tumbler." 5 quires Emery Cloth, No. . 1 keg Flooring Brads, bd. 5 keys Finishing Nails, 1 keg 5d., 2 kegs 6d., 2keustid. 18 dozen papers Finishing Nails, 6 dozen in., o uozen i in., o uozeu iya in. X Garden (scythe, "Darling's," without Snathe. ; 2 Garden Hakes, "Wooden," 0 pounds Ground Ginger. 1 Hack Saw. 0 Hack Saw Blades. 2 gross Hand Haw Files, 4J inches. H dozen Hand Scrubs. 1000 pounds Harness Leather, "Oak tanned, 13 pounds per side when finished," 6 down Horse Brushes. 6 hottles Horse Liniment. 2 Hickory BaskeU.witn handles, "2 unshel." 12 sections Ho.se Gum, Couplings alUched, 2 inch with 0 E.strtt Couplings, 25 sections Hose Gum, Couplings attached, Inch with 0 Kxtra Couplings. CO 6oii Hose Gum, CouDilngu attached, 1 Inch Willi 21 Kxtra Couplings. ,10 rounds Irish Glne. (i dozen Locks, Till, Double Tumbler for Desks. 5 gallons Lnrd Oil, "Best." 40 gallons Linseed Oil, "Boiled." 18,&'0 pounds Nails Cut 2o0012d., 800010d.,5'00 8d, 2500 lid. 100 pounds Ochre Yellow, "French la Oil." 6 dozen Padlocks 2 dozen 2-inch, 8 dozen 3-inch, and 1 dozen ii-inch extra. 1 dozen Paint Brushes, 8 Clintons, 1 Paving Hummer, Bricklayers'. 500 pounds Putty in 10-pouud cuus. 1 Hatchet. 500 pounds Red Lead, In Oil, in 25-pound cans. 50 pounds Hal Soda. 8 dozen Hash Rollers, Plate 1 inch wide on lace. 1 dozen Hash Tools, No. 0, "Clintons." io gross Screws, 10 gross Inch, No. 7, 20 gross 1 inch,, No. 8, 5 gross VA Inch, No. ,10. 200 pounds Scrubbing Soap. ; 10 pounds Hoap Stone "Packing," 3 pouuds inch, 5 pounds -)i Inch. 1 Scythe Stone. 12 Sponges, common "Larno." 100 pounds Sponge, Mediterranean, "com mon." 2 Trowels, bricklayer's, !H) pallous Turpentine. 10 gallons Turpentine Copal Varnish, furni ture 50 pouuds Twine, Cotton. loOpounds I'mber, Burnt in Oil, 10 1, 20 2, and 10 5 pound Caus. 2C0 pounds Umber, Haw In Oil, 20 1, 40 2, and 20 5 pound Cans, All of the above named articles to be of the bst quality, and to be subject to Inspection. Samples of the articles bid for must be deli vered at thisolllce twenty-lour (24) hours pre vious to the opening of the bids. Each bid must be guaranteed by two respon Bible persons, wQose signatures and residences must be appended to the guarantee, and certi fied to as being good and sufficient security, by the United States District Judge, Attorney, Col lector, or other public etllcer. The right is reserved to reject all bids deemed unreasonable, and no bid from a delimiting contractor will be received. All proposals to be made out on the regular forms, In duplicate (which will be furnished on application at this office), and conform to the terms of this advertisement, a copy of which must accompany each proposal. Envelopes to be endorsed "Proposals for QnartermaBter's Stores." judders are requested to be present at the opening of the proposals. By order of Brevet Mal.-Gen. O. II. CUOSMAN, Asst.auartermaHter-Gen, U. 8. A. HENKY W. JANES, Captain and Asst. quartermaster, 95t Brevet Major U. H. A. JV O XL I S T AMD Preserver of Natural Flowen, A.H.POWELL, No. 725 AECH Street, Below ihH BonnaeM,rWretli., Baskets. Pyramids of Cot Plow er furu ished to order si .11 .uwuun. iut( MAY 10, 18G7. INSURANCE COMPANIES. P 1101 KLA WAKE MUTUAL SAFETY INSU- a vnwwktiu a M V 1 t t t .lure of jVeiiiiBylvauim 1n& Office, B, K. Corner TH 1 HD and WALNUT Street, iiiinuHifinin. MAR1NK INSURANCES On vessels, etuK", ami Ireltht. to all parts ol the world. lSLANIIlNHL'KAM'W on trnrxld by river; canal, lake, ud laud carriage, to all parts of the Union. fill; 1 ""UilAiM.lU on merchandtus gcnpraliv. uu Bioies, swelling iiuu'u, juto, ASSETS OF THh, COMPANY, Novpuihtr 1. IKS. lOOiOOO CnHedBtalesa Per Ceut. Loan, l7l 12S,noO United (Stales 6 Per Ceub Loan lssi ...M 800,000 tnlted Htates 7 8-10 Per Ceut, 1 Loan, Treannry Motes 124,000 CI ly ol Philadelphia btx Percent. Loau (ext'iiipta) M.0O0 Htate or Pennsylvania Six Per t ent. Loan - M.OOO Btateof Penusylvaula five Per C'euU Loan .. n 60,000 State of Mew Jersey biz Per t'tnu Loan 10,000 PemiHylvanla Kallroad, lat MoitKiiRt, slz Per Cent,. Honda. 15,000 PemiNylvanla Kallroad, 2d Mori- 114,0O0'00 lM.SOO'OO 111,606-00 126,662-60 54,700-00 44,820-00 60,7V) -00 . 20,500-00 (4,250-00 10 ,760-0 Brum HT Pm. CnL Kfimln 26,00 Wen tern Pennnylvanla Kallroad t-lx Per Cent. Bond. (Fennsyl . vanla Railroad guaranteed) 80,000 fetateofleuueeaee five Per Cent Loan.. 7,000 Stale of i eunessee blx Per Out, Liiann 16,000 800 hhures HiiM'k ol Oeriiianlown Uk Company (principal and In tercut guaranteed by the city of Philadelphia) 7,150 H8 (Shares htock ot Pennsylva nia Railroad Company 8,000 lm Shares Mock ol North Penn sylvania Railroad Company-.... 20,000 feOMiare isiock ot Philadelphia and Knithera Mail tstearusulp Company.. .. 195,900 Lobiih on ,lionrt8 and Mortage, 1st Liens oa City Property. 18.000-00 1,040-00 16,000-00 8,2.8-26 8,950-00 29.000 -00 18,900-00 tl,O70,2S'7e tl,tx5,0o0 par, Market value. COTt. IhOSn.bfutlin. Real Estate Bills receivable lor luurauuus made. Balance due at agencies. Pre miums on ilHrlnel'ohcles, Ac crued interest, and oilier debts due to the Company...... Bcrip and Mock ol sundry Insu rance and other Companies, o.lVfl. Intimated Value Cash In Ilauk Sll.lir2'2e Cash Id Drawer........ 447-14 86,000-00 27,637-20 88,923-90 1,930-09 41.640-00 1.4ir7,aU-66 This being a new enterprise, the Par Is assumed ThoniasC. Hand, Bauiuel K. Stokes, Henry bloun, Wlllluin U. Houlton, Kdvvard Darlington, H. Jones Brooke, Kdwurd Latourcade, Jacob P, Jones, James B. AlcFarland, Joshua P. Eyre, Bueucer Mcllvalne. Kdmuud A. bwtiflpr, TheophllUN Paululng, John R. Penrose, James Tranuair, Henry C. liailett, Jr., J nines C. Baud, W illiam C. Ludwlg, Joseph 11. Heal, Ueorue i. Leiper, Hugh CralK. John D. Taylor, J. R. Hemple, Pittsburg, A. is. Merger. I). '1 . Moriian, Jacou Klegel, . Ueorue YV. liernardoo. TITOMA8 C 11 AND. President. JOHN C. DA VIM, Vice-President. Hknky Ltleukn, becretury. 18 1829CUAIlTER PERPETUAL. Iraiiklin Fire Insurance Co. OF I'HIIADEi rHIA, OFFICE! KOS. 43il AM) 437 CUJSM'T STREET AfeSETN ON JANVART 1, IS Capital ...., Accrued Surplus.. .......400,000-00 V4S,71S'tl8 preniluuj . TJMSET'l LED CLAIMS. , .......l,ZW).-ti2-16 INCOME FOB U6t, S420.OUU. EOMMEM PAID SINCE 1829 OVER 5,S0V,000. Perpetual aud Temporary Policies on Liberal Terms DIIlECi-OES, Charles N. Buncker, 1 George Faleo, Tobias w uguer, Alip.-a Hitler, bamuel Oram IK"",,, '',f r fi cjras I i-euMcaii: u-A 4B"v"r. I'thomas parks. ??Ef.1?VBAiScK1Jt' President. 1. W. McALLibTEB. becretary pro tern, L318tl281 INSURANCE COMPANY OK NORTH AMERICA. Oli'lCL, u. oi VtAl-NUXbi... PHILADELPHIA J 2i COB FOB A TED 1784. CHAKTEK PERPETUAL, CAPITAL, 9500,000. AETN. JANUARY 8, 1SC7, l,763,07-a3. JiS MARINE, INLAND TKAKsPOB lA'ltvA AMPltt lllSlis, LllltK(?TmLtj. Art!: r O. Collin, ueorye L. Harrison. j-aiuuel Vi . Junes, Joi n A. UrijW u, Chunea 'iaylci , A Uihione hue, Hichaid D, Wood, W llnalii v elbh, K iuorrlH uiu, Euward Jl. '1 roller, Eiiwurd 6. Ciurke, W1UI1.U1 Cumuiiugs, T. Charllou Henry, A lu'tu D. Jessuu, John P. White. jouu juason, J. on in c. MitUtlra, CHABLX8 PiaIT, secretary. WILLIAM LUEHLEK, Harrlsbure, Pa,. Central A gent lor thebtaleoi Pennsylvania. 1 aij Ti IKE JJ.SLRANCE EXCLUSIVELY. THI Jj PEMCjLVAMA FIHa HNBUKAJNCK OOM k A i Y incorporated Ibvb Cnarier Perpetual Ma Dlu WALbli cut el, opposite iudepeudeuoe HuuareT ThiB Company, lavoiaoly known to the iximiuuuitj lor over tony years, continues to insure against loss 01 damage by hie uu Public or privaie Buildings, either permanently oi lor allmlted lime. Also.ou Jburnlture, blocks ol (juuiU.ttud Merchauu me generally, on liberal terms. 'Iheir Capital, together with a large Surplus Fund, Is Invested iu me most carelul ujuuuur. which enable) them u oiler 10 uie Insured an undoubted security la tue case ol loss. Daniel Emtlh, Jr., SlJtXOTGKS, John Devereax, Thomas bmlth, Henry Lewis, J.Uiniiivhuin Pflll. Alexander Ben.son, itaac Ha.ieuurst, Thomas Bobbins, J nil n ' 1 ,1 .Mlll'l A, tt , DA MEL BMUH, J a, jfresldeni, William G. Cbowill, (secretary tsot )11CEMX INSUBANCJS COMPANY OP PHILADELPHIA. Iti COBPt )B A T ED 1DU4 CHAKTEB PERPETUAL. ISO. i4 WALNUT btreet, opposite the Exchange. in auuiiioa to xhaiuunji; and iJNuaJND i.NB(JK- ajsca, tuis ixuiipauy insures irom loss or aamage by HUE lor liberal terms on buildings, nierchaudlse, lurnlture, etc., for limited periods, and permanently on buildings, by deposit ot premium. The Company has been In active operation for more than ISIXIY YEABW, during which all losses uavs Oeen promptly aujustea ana paio. UiaLCTOliH. John L. Hodge, .Lawrence lwls, it, David Lewis, Benjamin Eltlng , Thomas H. Power. A. R. McHeury, Edmund Caallllon. l4ulH C Ndrrl. at. B. Mauouy. John T. Lewis, W illiam b. Grunt, Boberl W. Learning, D. Clark Wharton baiuuel Wilcox, , WTJ CHEBEB, President, Rakckl WlMOX, Hecretary. pilOVIDENT L1FK AND TRUbT COMPANY Vo. Ill Bouth FOOBTH btreet. , INCOKPOKATED gd MONTH, ifiid., IMS. CAPITAL. I1S0.OU), PAID INT Insurance on Lives, by Yearly Premiums: or bv 10. or UU year Premiums, fton-lorieliure. Endowments, payable at a future age, or on prior decease by Yearly Premiums, or W year Premiums both classes Nou-fbrfelture. ADnuiiies granted on favorable terms Term Policies, Children's Endowments. This Company, while giving the insured thesermrlty Of a paid-up Capital, will Divide the entire proiits oi Uie Lite business among its Policy holders. Moneys received at Interest, aud paid on demand, 1 Authorised by charter to execute Trusts, aud to act as Executor or Administrator, Assignee orttuardlan, and lu other fiduciary capacities, under appointment ol any Court or this Commonwealth, or any person or persons, cr bodies politic or corporal BAMUEL B, BHIPLEY, I HENBY HAINES. JOSHUA H. MOHBia, T. WlbTAKBHOWN WM U LONUHTRKTH, WIl'i'I A M HACEEit, p. (xir'FlN. uiWLAJSD PARRY. KllUAKU WUOll, BICHABD CADBURY, I I rlAHLia X BAMUEL B. BHIPLEY, President. Actuary. THOMASIWUSTAU. at. D-c Z7 Medical Lxamlusr. Legal AdvifteC, INSURANCE COMPANIES. BROOKLYN LIFE IKSUKAXCE COMPANY OF Nliw YOUK MUTUAL, CAPITA I 18ri,000-PAII III. Lt.r AlCUmUliATION, !O0,O Cash liTllenl In 1807. lorly Ier Cent. CHRISTIAN W. I50UCK, President. EICIIARD II. HARDING, Secretary. K. BBA INAHD CO LI ON, General Agent for Pen sylvsnla and Bouthern New Jersey, N. K. comer o blVUil'll and CHKbNUTBUeets.seoondstory froa olllce, Philadelphia, Pa. rillEAUELrillA REFERENCES, Morton Mc-Micbael, Mayor. A. B. Cooley & Co., jwo. zi youub. Wni, H. Uatr.mer, President Camden A Aniboy R. R, James Boss Knowden, late Director Mink l.2Jt A. O. B. Hlnkle, M. D., Medical iLxaminer. A FEW OOOD SOLICITOUS WANTED FOB TH3I CITY OP PH1LAHKLPH1A. QlllAPvD PIKE AND MA RINK INSURANCE COMPANY, (No. 639) N. E. COR. CUESNUT AN" SUViSmu BT. FBILAOKLPBX. CAPITA I. AND KIRPLI'M OTIB $300,00. IN COM E lOR I.SfiO, 0103,1134. Losset. Paid and Acorued In lt66, SI7.00V Of which nmonnt not anoo remalo nnpeldat tblsdat4L liiu.tMi ti ol proerty has been buccesslully luaiirea by this Company In thirteen years, and Lisht iiuit dred Losses by Fire promptly paid. DIllUUTORB. Thomas Craven. mi iui YerKPS, jr., Allred IS. UilleU, K. B. Lawrence, Charles I. Dupont, i Henry P. Keuney. lurniau niiei'para, Thomas MacEullur, Juliu Minnlee. John W. Clagliorn Jiisenh TC latin. M. D. '1HOMAU i HAVEN, President A. R. GILLETT, Vice-President, 2 2Vfniwt JAM KM B. ALVORD, Secretary STRICT ECONOMY IN MANAGEMENT PROVIDENT LIFE AN I) TRUST COM PANT OP PMILARELPUIA. No. Ill S. FOURTH STREET, Commenced Business 7mo. 24,1665. Organised to extend the beuthls til Lite lDSursnc among members of the borlety oi Frlenos. All goo risks ol whatever ueuomiuaiioD sum in u. ISA M L EL K. bHIPLEY, President, KOWLAND PAKKY, Actuary. THOMAS W'lbTAB, M. I)., Med. EJtamlne( JObEPU B. TOWNSEND, Legal Adviser. ThlR rnnmanv. lu addition to the security arising from the accumulation ol premiums, gives the lusurea the advantage ol au actual iiaiu-up ipuai. i.u THE P1U)HTB OK lNI-CllANCE A HE DIVIDED AMONO THE IMSUHED. Lite Policies and Endowments In all the most ap proved loims. Annuities graniea on lavoraoie terms, timmwim GOVERNMENT SALES. DEPOT OF ARMY CLOTHING AND KCiUIl'AGE. jkkkksonvii.lb, ma., April -M, 100. Will be hold at nubile auctioi.. to the hietiest blUUer.cn WEDNESDAY, May 15, 1867, at 10 o'clock A. M., the lollowlug articles of con- deumtu properly: iiU.uLi Woollen lilan- 164 Haversacks. 1 , 111 Knapsacks. 1,23b Knit Jackets. 4K2 ureat-Uoat (Straps. 23 bashes. KctH. 16,493 Trowsers, Inf'y. 2,349 " Mounted. I,7b2 Sack Coats, lined, 10,761 " unllneU. 2,473 Uniform Coats. U.7'20 Jackets. 6M) J reat Coats. In fy 12 Pans Uhevrons. Baits Bb.ou.lder CU11CD, 9 Canteens. 59 Bed Backs. 69 Picks. 6 Pick and Axe Han 641 " Mounted. 701 Bhlrts. 237 Drawers. 3,3ti6 I'll Irs Blockings, Fairs Boots, 10 I'll Irs Bootees. . uies. 6 Wall Tents. 4 Wall Tent Files. . 80 Hat Feathers. 16 Hat Bugles. 10 Hat Eagles. 40S6ts Drum Huarea, SO Drum Cords. 8 Trumpets, 24 BtiKles. 10 Bugle Cords and Tassels. Ill Forage Cap?. ' 1,677 Cap Covers. 21 Hals, crossed sa bres. 81 Hat Cords and Tastels. 3Slbl?y Teiifs. 25 Shelter Tents, 8 Flies. 29 Drum Heads. 6 Drum Slings. lo'A Pairs Drum sticks. ".0 Sets Tent Poles. 4.10 i'ards 10 oz. Duck. OS Y&tfii? oz J-'uck. Terms Cash, In Government funds'? Kale to take place at the Clothing WarehblDfc? (liocpltal grounds). By order ol Major-General Thomas, Captain and M. S. K-.. ljjffl&r 4 29 12t Depot Quartermaster's Officii. Wasiijng'ion, D. C'., May 8. 18b7 1 1 ?,treCr1,1U """erinastef-GeneTtti. a large lot of Quartermaster's Stores will be sold Rttublio Auction, at Lincoln Depot com lueucing ou WEDNESDAY, May 22,' at 10 phdAer Kh?u'vl.",..u uPta James SO four-horse Armv Wagons. 6 two-horse Army Wa gons. 84 0HU Desks. 23 0tlio "ables. , " 2I!)f)lllA IVnlfiln 6 spriue Army Wa- 2(JOnice foodstovRi. 25 l'ortab Forges. 1(J4 Smllh'o l,'-.... 10 four-horse Scavenger Armv Wagons. a Cooking Kanges, with fixtures. 10 Bath Tubs. SB Doors. 15 WllMPlhnprnnMt 10 Carts. 3li two-horse Ambu- InTinua 1)5 sets Wheel Harness, titf sets Lead Harness. 67 sets wheel Ambu lance Harness. 67 Lead Harnevu. 153 McClellau Baddies. Tools Carpen ter's.Rad ller's, Blacksmith's, Tluuer's. 315 yards Cocoa Mat tin cr. 1010 pounds assorted Hope. 4000 pounds Scrap Iron. 6000 pounds old Horsa Shoes, 191 Window Sashes. 141 It. K. Wmmn Wlilna SM Halter Chains. .'tl.'t KnekutH 1)27 Gum Buckets. 2UI wagon Bridles. (UtKnriilla Ituuu And a large lot of oth erartloles. Tur ni uf 'uuh In il. .. -. ..... ., . -... r,., . 1 - u UUVTJiUIUI'Ub 1UIIUH) Purchasers will remove their goods within ten days from day of sale, r n t, r, CH AHXKS H. TOMPKINS, 6 0 lit Bvt. Brig. Gen.. Depot Quartermaster. JJOKSES AND MULES A AUCTION. Depot Quartermaster's Office,! t 'Washington, D. C. May 8. 1W7. f Will be sold at public auction, on WEDNES DAY, 15th instant, at Eastern Branch Corral, under the supervision of Captain James G. Payne, Assistant Quartermaster, 30 HOUSES AND 5 MULES, good for farming purposes. Bale will commence at 10 A. M, Animals will be sold singly. Terms Cash, in Government fnnds. CHAHLES II. TOMPKINS, Brevet Brigadier-General. 1 S9 5t Depot Quartermaster. g ALE OF GOVERNMENT VESSEL. Deputy Quartermaster-Gen.'s Office Baltimore, April 27 I8h7 ' t Will be sold at public auction, at ihe port or Boltlmore (Kartly's wharf, South Baltlmnrwlii THUBSDAY, May 10, W. 12 M.,the light tirart "ld.r.w,!tLBt.?"m' COSMOPOLITAN, "of 779 iug. uuj, 4 ieei Dreaath or beam Si tset-Terms-Cash In Government funds ondayof . .-- .v uuudoiKueu or to too auc tioneers. STEW A ?T v a iu vi iu-.T pui? 9u"terlna8ler-0euerl U.S. At Breyet .... ANDKEON THOMAS' & CO. 6 8 dt Auctioneers. Nn. 18 M Charles st. PRIVY W ELL8 OWH RHS OF PEOPEBTVf Tha.i.1. ..1 . .,'..11- . 1 au. 1 1 Mu dislnlectedat ary low trices. A. rri"'"! If annAwirr of Ponilreita, 10 SOIUITh" BAL-TLLUaAKlf bU.