1Mb THE DAILY EVEMINU TEL EG R A V li-?) 1 1 L AD BLPlHA, THURSDAY, OCTOBER M, 18G9. liVIMKUISY. I'i tl.r 1 1 ..' " '' ,,, "' 'J ) rrc in niii' h inilii in tin' iM s'orv of 0p. ln iivu r oiiioi His'' iuuiioriit ileryiu,;ll whu ,,,, iutniti" il tli.it l is I'xliiuiiitioiis to Mio vir tu. wliuh hi- i-r,i!!i ji nni just us jmfital'le ti l Wis (' Lin morn iij.;!itoo:is liittbroii. H was l:!:r a i'in;;.'r-)st; ho M owicl the rij;M. w.iy 'ri'oi:fly well, a!:,ln;i;,'h lio did not (.;) along it liiiuso!;'. Hit; case was ('onl'tk'Ks an pxtrdinp cawo. ami In? 'mist have liern an impudent, linrilune-1 follow; hub ho had got hold of a truth. It in no answer, as jnany people think it i, to a nun's exhortn tiunH, or arguments, or wli.ituvov ho puts forth, to hid him look at homo, o to clmr.ro him with hypocrisy I'caiuse liis own (ouduct iM not nlways in exact conformity with his own doctrine. Hypocrisy in tho Ktrict sense, conscious and deliberate pi'nl,nno m nv.xt ters f devotiou and morality, is, we RtiHpeet, a much rarer vice .than poople think. At itll events it is a chiu-o which, as one ;asy to luing and hard to disprove, ought not to be l,voni;ht ngainwl any man without very nlrong grounds. Inconsistency, Kelf-dolusiou, mere irreeolution and weakness, the mere imper fection, in short, of hunmn nature, go a long way to account for a great deal which is often ronghly Rot down as hypocrisy. The clergyman with whose story we started, whatever else he was, was at all events not a hypocrite. His vices were known to himself and to everybody else; they were openly avowed: though he acknowledged the excel lence of virtue and recommended it to the practice of others, he made no pretense of practising it himself. Self-dolusion in such case is quite possible, but for hypocrisy there is clearly no room. But suppose that, instead of impudently avowing his vices, he had simply practised them in secret. Snp poBO that it was suddenly found out that a man who had always preached good morality, and was supposed always to have practised it, was really a drunkard, an adulterer, n gam bler, or whatever the vice may be. We sup pose that most people would ry out, What n hypocrite that man has been ! Yet the chances are very strongly against his being what they mean by a hypocrite. What they mean is that, without any real feeling of virtue and piety, lie pretended to virtue and piety simply for the sake of the gain or reputation which they might bring him. One may doubt whether this is necessarily tho New Testament sense of the word hypocrite: it is certainly not the necessary explanation el' such a case as we have supposed. A hypocrite, in tho original Dense of the word, is an actor, and it is quite possible that, in its New Testament use, it may often r i'ei to eondnei which may be fairly spoken of as noting, but which is cer tainly not hypocrisy in (be vulgar sense. John "Wesley bade 0110 of his preachers to preach a certain doctrine. The preacher had his doubts and scruple. : he could not sny that ho fnlly believed tho doctrine, "l'rec.ch it till you do believe it," was Wesley'. ansver. We may be mire that Wesley did not mean to bid any one to act in a dishonest or what is com monly railed a hypocritical v:iy. But he cer tainly required his disciple, to act in a highly artificial way: he called upon him to act a part, to be in the strict sense a t'xih rlte. Wesley no doubt looked on believing as wholly 11 moral and not at ull as an intellectual process, and he bade a man to learn to believe rightly by believing rightly, as he would have bidden him to learn to act rightly by acting rightly. Still he was bidding a man to act as if he be lieved what as yet he did nut believe a pro cess which differs only in tho motive from the act of him who pretends belief for the sake of gain or reputation. So in many other chsos, men throw them selves into artificial slates of mind, which are put on as it were to order, which often prove only temporary, but which still are put on in good faith. What we call making the best 01 a bad bargain olten takes this form. A man finds himself in a sot of circumstances which are not of his own choosing: he is forced to a lino of conduct width is distinctly against the grain. lie is called on to do something which up to that time has been against his feelings, perhaps ! against his conscience. In such a case he j often tries to persuade himself that the un avoidable course is not only a righteous, but ' a pleasant course. He makes an eiTort and throws himself into the thing; his voice is louder, his arm is more forward, than tho arms and tho voices of those to whom tho course which to him is new is a matter of long habit or of old-standing conviction. The zeal of new converts has a good deal of this element in it; they have consciously to act a part, while those who are before them are acting naturally and unconsciously; they therefore commonly overdo matters. Or a man has to maintain a po sition about which he has moral doubts. Jn such a case it commonly happens that he will be more confident and more inclined to talk big than the man who never had any doubts at all. He is trying not only to per huade others, but to persuade himself at tho same time. When a man changes his side in politics or religion, we often hear of his loud professions of unalterable faithfulness to the old cause almost up to the moment of his forsaking it for tho new. A cry is generally raised against him as if his professions were imply Hypocritical, as if he was simply try ing to lay suspicion at rest after his own mind is made up and while ho is only waiting for a convenient moment to carry out his plan of desertion. And no doubt it often has been bo. But it certainly is not so as a matter of course. It is just as likely that ho is on the very edge, of making up his mind, but that he Las not yet made it up. As long as he has not mado it up, as long as ho has any doubt, as long as the old system has any chance at all with him, he trios to satisfy himself even more than to satisfy others by talking louder man ever on us nenau. In all these cases a man is certainly acting an a hypocrite in the etymological sense. He is consciously acting a part, a part which is not natural to him, a part which involves Home degree of moral or intellectual incon sistency. But it does not at all follow that lie is a hypocrite in the worst souse, lie is tampering with his conscience, he is trying to guide his conscience in a certain direc tion, rather than wilfully disobeying his con science. A hypocrite 111 the worst sense either wilfully disobeys his conscience, or else lias stifled the voice of conscience altogether. And it is strange how easy it is for a man to turn his conscience and his belief in a cer tain way. Take tho case of forced conversions, such as we read of in the history of the Mahometan conqnests, or in that of tho vanelization of . Germany and Scandi navia by Christian emperors and kings. It often happened that tho man who embraced Mahoinetanism or Chris tianity simply to save his life lived ever after as a very good Mahometan or a very good Christian, sometimes even as a zealous champion and missionary of bis new faith. Were such men hypocrites? We feel aire that in their later stages they were quit sincere, that they had in a manner worked tktuwtlYta Mo ft Steady vi wbat ilwy had nt f'.iM ( ndi'Hceil only under conip'iisioii. J'.ut wh;.t wit t). ;. stiile of mind when they is. ink :h ii li-M pit ic-sii.ti YV vmi.v-t that in 1111 tiy euM'K men .nuvu it possible to work tlicii!si iv( s in'.o a .!,! e in which they ' ould prutess tin h- jivw cr"d without any conscious lying. Il was a rry strong c.ise of unking the best of a bad bargain. Aiany no d.mbt. relapsed; tl;ry e:l'uer were shamming at the time of their pioi'e.ision, or eiso tho .irtiiicial excitement wore off, and they fell back on their former and more natural st.ite of mind. But there are i;iul'i cases enough of compul Mry coinevls denying st caddy to their new faith to show Unit, the state of mind which we have isnpposud is not an impossible one. We may now change the venue from mat ters ( f belief to mat ters of morals, and take the ruse which we put before of a detected tinner. We have known such rases; and we have known the outcry nn-de. What, a hypo crite he is! Now there is really no need to rail him anything of the kind. It is very likely that he simply is, what most men are more or less, inconsistent and imperfect. He has a conscience, but he, does not always obey it. Ho knows what is right; he says, if need be he teaches, what is right; but ho does not always follow his own precepts. Wo are not. defending him: we are only saying that his fault is a different fault from that of hypo crisy. To have a conscience, but not always to obey it, is, in different degrees, the moral state of the vast mass of mankind. It is the state of all save (wo suppose) a few unusually saintly people at on end, and (we suppose) a few desperately wicked ones at tho other end. To be very inconsistent and very im perfect, and to be aware of one's inconsistency and imperfection, whatever it is, is cerlaiuly not hypocrisy. Steele was no hypocrite whi n he wrote the "Christian Hero." leading a vicious life, and wishing to cure himself of his vices, he took tho somewhat strange means of sJiaming himself by writing and publishing a book in which he described a model of ideal piety and virtue. Such a course directly drew attention to his vices. But neither would he necessarily have been a hypocrite if ho had striven to hide his vices from tho world. It is rather hard to say that a nian.is pretending to be better than he is simply because he does not wish his imper fections to be found out. To lake a very strong case, we could never quite join in t ho outcry against the l'apal Legate in Henry the First's time who bavanguod against the mar riage of the clergy in the morning and was caught in a very discreditable position in (lie evening. Wo ore far from defending him; all we say is that his sin of the evening does not prove his zeal ' of the morning to have been insincere. 'py, ho miyUt possibly have argued "I acknowledge my transgression and I regret it; I am ever and anon carried away by the strength of n:y passions; but meanwhile I am zealously serving the Church. But you married priests are always thinking of your wives and chil dren, and do nut servo the Church at all.'' The weaknesses and inconsistencies of men are endless: let them have all (heir fair .share of blame; but let them not be indiscrimi nately called by a name which does not be long to all of them. A man is guilty of a pnrticular vice who is, perhaps, an enthusiast against some other ioe very likely not worse than his own. Let him have the fair measure of blame for his own error, but do not let his zeal for virtue in another quarter bo set down as insincere. Let him not even be suspected of trying to atone for the vices to which ho is inclined by abstaining from those to which he, is not inclined. Nay, more, men's minds and consciences are often so strangely twisted, there is such a power of what Air. Lecky calls '"localizing'' princi ples and feelings, that a man will be indig nant against this or that form of a particular vice while he practises other forms of it with out scruple. Such a man is llagrantly incon sistent; we should press the point of his in consistency as a special aagument to convince him, but wo should riot think of charging him with insincerity simply because he is in consistent and imperfect. We have often heard, and we have always been pained to hear, really good actions attributed to bad motives simply because the life of tho actor was open to objection on other grounds. We will not enter into the theological nature of sin, and the doctrine that ho who offends in one point is guihy of all. Such is at least not the doctrine of natural morality, which certainly welcomes whatever is good in any man, even though it may be mixed up with much that is bad. All the cases which we have mentioned Beein to us quite distinct from hypocrisy in the usual sense. In tho former class of cases, where a man is certainly acting an artificial, though not necessarily a dishonest, part, the word may be applied in a certain sense. To cases of mere inconsistency and imperfection, however glaring, it should not be applied at all. Strict hypocrisy, the conscious and de liberate pretense to virtues which a man has not and does not care to have, is, we suspect, much rarer than people commonly think. PEKE HYAC1XTHE. IIIh Expected Arrival. With the arrival of Father Hyacinthe, whoso departure from Franco is announced by cable, we shall have a new sensation. Tho great question will remain to bo decided, With what ecclesiastical body will he affiliate? With which of the great modern reformers does he compare? Though really in rebellion against the Tope, will it be either possible or expe dient to throw himself directly into the arms of l'rotestantism? A contemporary remarks as follows: How much of absolute pluck and enduring courage may we expect from him? So far, ho has only published a formal letter against the forthcoming (Ecumenical 'Council in Borne, its commissions, and intent. The reverend father asserts that in his opinion the assem bled prelates, with tho Tope presiding, will attempt to execute a divorce between tho Church and the progressive liberalism of the present century, and forcibly characterises tho attempt, even the idea of such an attempt, as at once impious and foolish. The and tho Sleek; neither of them controlled by church influences, speak of the letter as a sign of tho times and destined to exert a great influence. The Journal (hit Dclititx holds a similar tone. Tho real question is whether Father llyacintho reully deserves the position and connection to which we have ashigned him. He has some thing of tho veheineuce of Luther: none of the mild, gentle, and persuasive force of llelancthon: none of the acerbitv of Calvin: . much, perhaps, of the enduring soul of La mennais, which fought out its own battle in a I somniy ana nnshnven death-bed. whose cofl u 1 went to no church, over whose grave no dirge ! was sung nor cross was raised, bnt whose pure soul could face its Maker and its only Master. He was a Protestant revolting against numan dictation only a godly man worshipping God through the Bible and reve'- reucing his own soul. A Clerical Nuuworter A t.e In Poi. The following letter has befcn addressed to ftinur a vftvilitue by Jom Ueij i'iiliers, tx-lkiieiiictir.e Superior and founder of the Abbey ot Air y:- J.Iy Much Honored Hrotlier in oar Iord: tiod be praised for 1h ing granted you the strength to loudly confess, beforo Him and before men. the truth of the cause that is drawing the Church with r.ipid strides to its destruction. The upright i.iimK rllliclcd by the evils of Israel, are grateful towards you for your action, and by iu iuet. rally aro.ind 'a preacher of tho (inspclwho dares to offer such an example to their timidity. I'm my part 1 am happy lo tell you so, and 1 have come to to so, too. Being made a prieftt of the Boumn Church when twenty three years of age, at twenty-five I entered upon the cloister life, which to my mind was the type of Christian perfection. My acception wos great. After many struggles, many tw inges, 1 had ultimately, in order not to sacri fice my upright conscience, to fall out with my superior, General Dom Gueranger, the leader of the above-mentioned, who had written me as follows: "When a thing is intimated yon have but to acknowledge it. Yon are not responsible for anything, and I an swer for all. My errors will not bo imputed to you. Your conscience is safe." Such a doctrine renders tho inferior but a blind serf, irresponsible before God for his personal actions. Therefore, like you, I pro tested. I renew my protest before the Coun cil, the highest ami last tribunal here below, before which I can bring my cause. After exhausting the local ecclesiastical jurisdic tions, who honored me, some by silence, others by insnlts and threats, order ing me to submit myself to tho iniquity, under pain ofi nfotuy, I, guided by my artless faith, addressed myself to Pius IX. My letter of March was filial and full of abandonment. In order to make it more confidential I had added the words, "To be delivered personally. Important and very particular matters of conscience." This was equal to a sacramental confession. I had sealed it with five seals, and placed it in an other, addref sed to the intimato Secretary of Pins IX, begging him to place the enclosure in the hands of his Holiness, personally, who alone should know the contents, in considera tion of the niojor importance and particu larly of the matters of conscience and tho personages thereby brought into question. March L'.'t the secretary of Pius IX wrote to rifsnre mo that he had himself placed the letter in the hands of his Holiness, who would read it in duo course. I prayed a great deal, and waited patiently, full of confidence in him who proclaimed himself the Vicar f Jesus Christ and the common Father of the faithful. For eight months I remained with out news. At last I learned from eye wit nesses that in full of all justification Pins IX has sent, that confidential document, that con fession of all my feelings, to my most bitter enemies. On November L't, I demanded their replies. On tho L'2d a vicar-general wrote me fron) St. Claude: "His High ness confines himself to the communica tion of his orders and those of the Holy See. That is all that yonr obedience re quires you to know. By acting thus his High ness complies with the orders received from the Holy See, and has to render no account to you. On the L'-ah 1 replied that, in order to obey reasonably, according to that maxim of St. Paid, rittiutiahllf ohxtfjuirii, my con science required some enlightenment on the subject of the provoking doenmeuts contain ing the orders from Borne, and that if 1 did not receive an exact and authentic copy, 1 should lie obliged to renounce all nopos of a conciliation, which I have never ceased to im plore by ull my vows. On the L'.uth, in a let ter strewn with epithets familiar to an abso lute autocracy who experiences resistance, tho Bishop wrote me: "Monseignenr will give you no communication. qu Iris part, as on the part of the Holy See, he owes you orders, direction, and cor rections; ou your part, towards yonr superiors, it is a matter of submission and pardon, not of conciliation. Therefore, sir, the docu ments you ask for will not be forwarded."' This, my very honored brotner, is the man ner in -which tho l'opo himself respects tho conscience of a Christian, of a priest. Now, if ho is all in the Council, and ii tho bishops, like myself, are but to receive orders, direc tions, and, if necessary, corrections, it is easy to foresee what kind of justice we may expect from it. Like yourself, I wished to make tho trial, and if I am deceived, like yon, will I then cry, "Ad ttniui, JJoni.tr Ji.iu, Uiomud ttjijuUo.'" Therefore, courage ! On the path that we have chosen others will follow. Let the outrage and sarcasm of men, for whom a word of command of the party forms consci ence, shower upon us; that is the extent of their knowledge and of their argument. For us, strong in our good right, and faithful to the maxim of the Apostles "It is bettor to obey God than man'- let the pharisaism struggle in hatred. What it leads to is not new. Christ even raised obstacles against it, flis word of command not beiug observance of human traditions, but solely the will of God His Father; now, that persecuted and put Christ to death, and the disciples of Jesus cannot be better treated at present by mod ern Pharisees than the Master was by their predecessors. Receive, my very honored brother, with the homage of my admiration, the assurance of my respectful and cordial sympathy. Piekkk pes Pilmees, Ex-Benedictine of Solesmes, Founder and First Superior of the Abbey of Acey. Paius, Bue de Seine, Sept. -J7, l.s;:. MURDEROUS ITALY. HlntUlics of Crime Kdurnllonnl Defect the AlevluK Cause. "When, about a quarter of a century ago, the patriot Gioberti endeavored, in his nutto Civile t Morale ikgli Jtalluni, to estab lish the titles of that gifted race to the fore most rank in modern civilization, he was probably (says the London Time) far from foreseeing that what the Italians would first achieve, upon regaining full control over themselves, would be a sad pre-eminence in crime. There is something absolutely appalling in the statistical intelligence lately published by order ' of King Victor Em manuel's government. In the course of the year 1SC7 there were no loss than 'JiiL'G murders committed yvithiu the king's dominions. Of these, it is true, 2Gi cumo under tho category of "involun tary homicides," but the remainder were the work of deliberate assassination. It is thus reckoned that there were in Italy U murders for every 1110,000 inhabitants, while the ave rage in Spain was K for every 100,000 inhabi tants, in Sweden 'J, and in Belgium 1 every four years, out of the same number of in habitants. The homicides for tho whole of France in the same year, 107, were .'507, and 1 the number of all offenses comuiittod in the empire against life and property did not ex ceed ;iii!i4. Thus murder alone attains in Italy proportions not much less formidable than those reached in France by crime of every description. In Kngland and Wales, with a population nearly equalling that of Italy, in the year ending in September, IHiS, tiere were IS) murders recoiled tho police, being in tho proportion of one to Hi.lM of the population. The murderers brought to pnnishmcnt in England and Wales were L in im;.'., iii in is.n;, mid 'J7 in 1 sf.7, while the whole of tho offenses against the per-on amounted for those three years re upretholy to l;.."!, l.-,nr, and 1 101 that is, they fell considerably short of half the num ber of murders in Italy. It would be vain to try to escape the con viction which forces itself upon us by throw ing doubt upon the accuracy of these com parative figures. The Carabinieri, or police lorco of tho king loin of Italy, draw np their reports Willi praiseworthy diligence, nnd they supply ample evidence that, melancholy as the budget of crime was in 18(17, it might, bo taken as "a slight improvement on that of previous years.'' The Italian Government deserve praise for their candor in thus laying bare the worst evils in their body poiilic. Confession may generally bo taken as a symp tom of a wish for amendment. Tho Pope takes good earo to keep all unpleasant know ledge of that nature to himself. Tho Papal Government never publish statistics of any description; but the French, who have a police of their own nt Home, tell us that w hile in their own country there is one murderer over 124, (M) inhabitants, in tho Papal States there is one over fiiWH inhabitants. Deplorable as the condition of emancipated Italy n ay still be, we can look back to no time in which matters may be thought to have been better? A certain looseness nnd violence of temper and an incapacity for local or moral restraint were characteristic of that southern nation even in its palmiest days of media val greatness. By tho side of the loftiest deeds of their glorious republics there always occur in their annals such startling domestic and political tragedies as would cast even the atrocities of Count Bossi nt Hume, or of the more recent assassination of the Countess Cattaneo in a railway carriage near Isoletta, completely into the shade. These evil instincts which have, however, common sources with passions capable of better aims were suffered for centuries to rankle amid the debasement to which the Italians were doomed, and the people's crimes were, not without reason, imputed to tho corrupting influence of their religious and civil instruc tors. The charge is so well grounded that, whil in Piedmont, in Lombardy, and throughout the North, the yearly murders do not exceed four for every 100,000 inhabitants, the ratio in the Marches in Fimbria and in tho wholo south is r.O. and in Sicily and Sardinia 'X it proportion alraostly perfectly in keeping with that presented by the statistics of education; for, while in tho whole of Italy out of 170, l"t! marriages it appcors that there were r7 cases per cent, in which the bride and bridegroom could neither read nor write, the number of illiterate couples in Piedmont was only 22 per cent., while in some of tho southern pro vinces, as in the Basilicata, the proportion was no less than .S7 per cent. It must be ob served that the efforts mado by tho liberal government towards the spread of public in struction dates in those southern provinces only from I SCO, and cannot, therefore, have affected the grown-up generation. The Nea politans more than teu years old are still what they always were what their priests have made them: yet we hear those same priests complaining of the State's interfe rence v ith the training of youth, and con tending that education ought to be a mono poly of the Church. WATCHES, JEWELRY, ETC. ESTABLISHED 1828. WATCHES, .TKWEUiT, CLOCKS, 8ILVKHVFARB, and FANCY GOODS. C3-. W. RUSSELL, NO. Vi N. BIXTH STREET, PHILADELPHIA. "VILLI AM B. WAUNE & CO, (:Z Wholesale Denlers in tL-iC VfATl llKS AND JEWKLHT, b. K corner SSKVKNTH and CHICS NUT Streets, al ieend Hour, and lwto of No. :5 S. TIUHT St. CARRIAGES. SH GAUDUEH & FLEMING, Ko. 214 South FIFTH Street. BELOW WALNUT. A Large Assortment of New and Second-nand O It It X O JZ H, rxexmnjo Kocfcaways, Phaetons, Jenny Llnels, Bngglei Depot Wagons, Etc. Etc., 3 23 tutoa For Sale at Reduced Prices. LOST. T OST CERTIFICATES. NOTICE IS IlffllE 1 b given that, application has been m.ido to the Uity Treasurer lor t he inuo of duplicates of the following de Msritied certificates of the Six per (Jeot. Loan of the Uity ot Philadelphia (tree of taie) : Mo. -1: 6f, ttUWM, dutd October 5, IM. 4!trm, " " 25, tftn. fcsTI, ii0, " November 30. lbtX. 6uo, in name of JOHN H. R. LATROBR. in IniPt. AUSTIN A OBKlUiH, f thi-frt No. iil3 WALK UT Suet. LEGAL NOTICES. f TTATE OF DAVID C.FULTON, DKC'D. J J l.cttera Teatainentury on the edtate of 1MVI1 O. KC'l.TON, deceased (formerly of Little Hock, Arkansas), bavitie linen Kruntol to the PENNSVLVANI A COM PANY Mt INSURANCES ON UVKS AN1 tiRANT 1N(. ANNUITIES, all persons induhtod to aaiil estate are reqiKited to make payment, and those having claims against tho same to lr..ieut them at the ollico of said company, No. M WALNUT Stroot. Hi 7 th itutSf 0 11 ARLES DUTI LH, Presidont. IN THE COl'KT OF COMMON PLEAS FOR 1 THE CITY AND COUNTY OP PHILA DELPHI A. MARY SAILER, by her neit friend, vs. OSUARSAILEH. liccmber Term, lHin, No. f9; March Term, lij:i. No. 74; June Term, ltsdi, No. uo. In Divorce. To OSUAR SAILER, Kospomlfrnt.- Sir: Please take notice that a rule has been granted on yon in the above case to show cause why a divorce a vinculo matrimonii should not be decreed re turnable on SATURDAY, Oc.Uihur 111, IftU, at 11 A. M. Personal service of this notice bavintf failed on account of yourahsence. L. R. ELE'l'CJHER, 10 7 tliHtutMt Attorney forj.ibollaiit. PHOTOCRAPHS. XT.WE1.L, LANDSCAPE AND GENERAL i BUSINESS PHOTOGRAPHER, No. 74 AROH Street, has every facility for taking pbotoftraphaof country seats, in or out of the State. .Merchants, manufacturer, and imiyrtcrs can Uavo sample! of goods photographed in the very best style. H I7Jm ALEXANDER O. CATTELLA CO.. FliODUCK COMMISSION MERCHANTS. AND No. 87 NORTH WATFR STREET, PHILADELPHIA. 12 AlJtXNDKB O CATTKLb. EUTAB OATTHJ. TOHN FARNUM & CO., COMMISSION MER1 fl chants and Manufacturers of Oonestog-a Ticking, etc." No. l!aa CUESN UT Street. Philadelphia. 4 1 wfm I EMPIRE ELATE MANTEL WORKS J. B !i UlUKti. No. SUoOUliKNU'r tiueafc. 113wfm R. KINKELIN CAN BE CONSULTED ON all diseases of a certain sneoiaiiy. tMbca lui.n n in Ut,t.,JUJVJUlUbtll. FINANCIAL. A RELIABLE HOME INVESTMENT. THE FIKST MORTGAGE BONDS K THX Wilmington and Reading Railroad, BEARING 1NTKRIWT At SEVEN PER CENT, in Currency, rAYABLB APRIL AND OCTOBER, FRER OF STATE AND UNITED STATES TAXK This road rnns thronpti a thickly popnlutcd mid rlfh BfrrlfnUnral ami ninimfautrinng rthttrict For the present, v. c are oHerlug a limited amnnnt the aoove Donds at 5 CENTS AND INTEREST. The connection of this road with the PennRylvHnia and Heading Kullrouds Insures It a large and remu nerative trade. We recommend tho bond as the cheup.'ut hrnt-eJass Investment In the market. PAITJT23SX CO., BANKERS AND DEALERS IN GOVERNMENTS, No. 30 SOUTH THIRD STREET, t!2Sl PHILADELPHIA. "yyTE HAVE OH SALE SIX PER CENT. GOLD BONDS OK TBB K0C11ESTEH WATER W0UKS CO. DUE 1889. PK1NCIPAL. AND INTEREST PAYABLE IN GOLD. INTEREST AT SIX PER CENT. COUTONd MAY AND NOVEMBER. For particulars apply to DE HA YEN & BRO., BANKERS, Fio. CO South THIRD 8treet, ii PHILADELPHIA. RANKING HOUSE OP JAY C00EE & CO., Nos. 112 and 114 South THIRD Street. PHILADELPHIA, t Dealers In all Government Securities. Old fr-208 Wanted in Exchange for New. A Liberal Difference allowed. Compound Interest Notes Wanted. Interest Allowed on Deposits. COLLECTIONS MADE. STOCKS bought Ad sold on Commission. Special business accommodations reserved lor ittdles. We will receive applications for Policies of Life Insurance in the National Life Insurance Company ef the United States. Full information given at our office 7 1 3m E. II. JAI&ZSOltJ i CO., SUCCESSORS TO P. F. KELLY & CO., Hankers and Dealers in Gi, Silver, aii Gnmat tods, AT CLOSEST MARKET SATES, N.W. Corner THIRD and CHESHUT Sts. Special attention given to COMMISSION ORDERS In New York and Philadelphia Stack Boards, etc. etc a 5 tia 81 ELLIOTT a DUNN. . BANKERS, NO. 109 SOUTH THIRD STREET, rniLAnsLrniA, DRAW BILLS OF EXCHANGE ON THE UNION BANK OF LONDON. DEALERS IN ALL GOVERNMENT SECURITIES, GOLD, BILLS, Etc. Receive MONEY ON DEPOSIT, allowing interest. Execute orders for Stocks in Philadelphia, New York, Boston, and Baltimore. 4 20 QLENDLNNIN0, DAVIS & CO., NO. 48 SOUTH THIRD STREET, PHILADELPHIA. GLEHDINtilHG, DAVIS S AMOKY, NO. 2 NASSAU STREET, NEW YORK BANKERS AND BR0KEK3. Direct telpgrapblo communication with the New York Stock Boards from the Philadelphia Oillce. Vi ii CITY WARRANTS BOUGHT AND SOLD. C. T. YERKES, Jr., & CO., NO. 20 SOUTH TniRD STREET, 9 PHILADELPHIA FINANCIAL.. &1ITM. RANDOLPH & CO.. BANKERS, PHILADELPHIA AND NEW YORK, DEALERS IN UNITED STATES BONDS, and MEM I.V.MH OF STOCK AND OOIJ) EXCHANGE, Hn eive Ari)unta of Banks ttnd Bankers on Libera TerriiH. IHSUB BILLS OF EXCHANGE ON C. J. HAMUHO A SON, London. B. MKTZLKK, 8. SOUN CO., Frankfort. JA1IKS W. TUCKER A CO., Paris. Ami Other Principal Cities, and Letters of Credit 1 9 tf Available Throughout Enrnpn. JOHW 8. RUSH70H Cc CO., No. ,10 fcOUTH THIRD STREET. c: 1 t "v W AR HANTS 10 f. am KnUWHT Ani) SOLD. pm 8. PETEJJSOH & CO., Stock and Exchange Brokers, NO. 39 SOUTH THIRD STREET, XcniDFrs of UieNew York und Philadelphia Stock and Ciolil Boards. STOC KS, BONDS, Et, bought and sold on com mission only at either cli.v 1 ENCINES, MACHINERY, ETC PF.NN RTJT.AM TrVRTVn' ivrn P - ------ imiiiu T-ii Sj BOIT.KR WORKS.- Ji K V I'l K A I,K VY 2 PKAOTlO A lj AND TlIKOKimtM L V.KNrUNKTWUlAUUINISlS. KIM I KH. aiAKKKN, m.AUK SMITHS, Kurt FOIJNDKHH ThaTinii lor tnaoj year been in im-owwiul operation, and bean elnsiTel engaged In buKliu and repulriu Marine and R.ver fcnRine,, blKh and low preMnre. Iron Hollers, WalM Uank. Propellp, eto., eto,. respectfully oilor their Mr. ie. to the pnbUeaR being nil, prep.rd oonU-Mttor ngmee of ad size .Marine, River, and SUMonrVTbTTiM eU of pnttenia ol different sizes, are prepared to eleooti orders w.tb omok Jeepatoh. Kvory deerribtion of vlttm. making made at tne eborte-t nolio a. HiRu and I f w ml sure r me InbuUr and Cylinder Boilers of tho bort I-mST sylvania Cba-eoal lton. Forcings of all sizes "nd kindl Iron and Kraas Castings of alldoaoriptions. lMlVirfSS Drawings and specifications for all work dona at ih. establishment free ot cbawe, and work guaranteed The subscribers hate ample wharf dock-nom for repair, of boats, where thoy can lie in perfect safety, and uVr ded 1 with sheare, blocks, tnlla, eto. etc., for raisin nun or light weight JA0O3.0. NFAF1H. JW ErACH'akPAlKKSt'recU. COUTIHVARK FOUNPRY, FIFTH AND O WASlilMOTON Streets, rnir.ADM.rnfA. MEKKICK & HONS. E.GrNKEKS AND MACHINISTS, nirtLUfactare High and Low Pressure sttum Enainei for Land, Klver, and Marine Service. "-"B'uei Hollers, Uasioineterri, Tmiks, Iron Boats, etc I'ar.tiiiRs of all klnda, tithe' Iron or Urm-a. Iron Frame Koofs for Oaa Works, Workuhops, and Railroad Stations, etc. ' Hetorts und Gas Machinery of the latest and most improved construction. Every description of Plantation Machinery, also Sugar, Saw, and GriHt Mills, Vacuum Pans, oil Steum Trains, Dofecators, filters, PumpiuK En gines, etc. s Sole Agents for N. Billenx's Sugar Bolllncr Appa. ratlin, Nenmjth'8 Patent Steam Hammer, and Aspin. wall A Woolney'8 l'atent Centrifugal Sugar Brain, lng Machines. 4 aw QIRARD TUBE WORKS JOHN H. MUltPHY & BKOS. aianururtiirt-ro of Wrought Iron Plp, Uv, PUILADKLPUIA, PA. WORKS, TWJiNTY-TIIIRD and FILBERT Htreeu. OFFIOF, (4 1 Mo. 4 i North FIFTH Street. ROOFING. T E A D Y ROOFING. X i This Koonng is adapted to all buildings. It can applied to STEEP OR FLAT ROOFS it one-half the expunge of tin. It is readily pnt on oU Sbincle Koois without removing the shingles, time avoid mg tbe damaging of oeilintrs and furniture while under go:nc Tipnirs. (No gravel used.) PliKtSiUi VK YOUK TIN Kt OKS WITH WKLTON'I KLA&TIO PAINT. I am always prepared to Repair nnd Paint Roots at shori notice. AIbo, PAINT FOR SALK by the barrel or gallon tbe best and cheapest in the market. V A W F I TO N 8 175 No. 711 N. NINTH Street, above Coalea. ri"0 OWNERS, ARCHITECTS, BUILDERS, A AND ROOFlHS.-Roots! Yes, ye. F.very size ana kind, old or new. At No. 5-18 N. THIUU htreot, Uio AME RICAN CONtiRKTH PAINT AND RIMM.' COMPANY are soiling their celebrated paint for TIN ROOD'S, antf lor preserving all wood and mutuls. Also, their solid com I ilex roof covering, Ibe best ever offered to the public, with rushes, cans, buckets, etc., lor the work. Anti vermin, tiro, and Water-proof; Light, Tight, Durable. Nocrnck inn, pealing, or shrinking. No paper, gravel, or heat. Good or all cliniutns. Directions given for work, or good work men supplied. Care, promptness, certainty! One price' Call! Kiamine! Judge! A front wanted for interior counties. JJfiaf JOSKPkl LKFD8. Principal. CROCE RIES AN D PKOVISIO N S. JIOHAEL MKAGHKH &c67 No. 23 8outh SIXTEENTH Street, Wholesale and Retail Dealers In FKOVISIONS. , OYSTKKS, AND SAND CLAMS, FOR FAMILY TJS1 TK RRAPIN S II 8 PETC TOZKN. sts CARPENTERS AND BUILDERS. Rb R. THOMAS & COr. DIALERS m Doors, Blinds, Sash. Shimc-rs WINDOW FRAMES, ETC.. N. W. CORNEB 0' EIGHTEENTH and MARKET Streets 916 8m PHILADELPHIA. NEW PUBLICATIONS. PHILOSOPHY OF MARRIAGE A New Course of Lectures, as delivorod at the Now York MuMjum of Anatomy, oiubraoiug the subjects: liow to Live, and What to l.ivo for; Vuuth, Maturity, aud Old Age; Manhood Oenomlly Reviewed; The Uause of Indigent ion; l'lutulenue and Nervous Dinna&ee Accounted: Kor; Marriage Philosophies lly Conxidered, eto. eto. Porket volumes containing tb oss IjBoturtin will be for warded, post paid, on rvompt of 5 centti. by addresuiut; W. A. LKARY, Jh , 8. K. coruarof IlTIi aud WALNUT fet ret!, I'bilmlelLiuiti. 93$ WIRE WO tt K. GALVANIZED and Painted WIItE GUARDS, store fruuta and windows, for factory aud warehouse windows, for churches and cellar windows. IRON and WIRE RAILINGS for balconies, offices cemetery and garden fences. Liberal allowance made lo Contractor?. Builders and Carpenters. All orders Ulled with promptnes, and work guaranteed. KOBF.KT WOOD A CO., Tawuthfim No. H0 RIDOK Avnn Phila yy 1 it e o u a it ii s, I OR STOKE FRONTS, ASYLUMS, FAC TORIES, ETC. Tatcnt Wire RnuliiR, Iron Bedstead?, Ornamental Wire Work, l'mtrr-uiHkerH' W iron, and every variety of Wire Work, manufactured by M. WALKER A SONS, 2 CJir.wl No. 11 N. SlXTIIStreet, 1 i
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers