2 THE DAILY EVENING TELEGltAPIt PHILADELPHIA, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1869. srzzizT or inn truss. K.UKirlnl Oplnlum f th ldlnK Journal, liny for th Kwfatnm Tnlenraph. FATriF-H HYACINTIIE IN AMERICA, y rent the If. Y. Tribune. Tho moment tho l'eroirn touched her wharf on Monday, Father llynointlio 1egnn to taste the bitterness of poiinlarif jr. Until far into the night reportom for tho iiewHpupers doggod bus footstcpH, tried to talk with him in a tongue he could not nndorntand, took iuTen torios of his lugfTagp. "elt of his dinner, and clamored at his chamber door. Nothing Baved hiiu from the persecution of a mob of interviowers but his sturdy refusal to admit them. Evon when lovely woman bore the note-book and the pencil, Hhe was turned away with polite mesHagoa of regret. A gen tleman representing the Tribune was cordially received, and enjoyed a full hour's conversation with the distinguished ee ltHinstio at the hotel; two reporters for other pnpers were allowed an inter view of one or two minutes only; the others were not admitted. Vafllcd Bohemians lotingod all night in the lobbies, stealing sur reptitious peeps at the key-hole. They way laid the waiters. Thoy lurked in the shadow of the pillars, and pounced from dark pas sages upon the chambermaid. They got from the servants what descriptions they could of the revorend gentleman s looks, garb, and Appetite. It is said that the reporter of the World evf n bribed a waiter to change clothes with him, and so got access to the room under the flimsy pretext of a pitcher of ice-water; Lut as he did not understand French, the result of his - experiment was not com mensurate with its boldness. All these expe dients of the great mob of the excluded must have filled the reverend father with terror and amazement. Great, too,' must have been his astonishment the next morn ing, at the extraordinary circumstance of a correspondent of the World professing to write at sea on the Pereire, and quoting, misprints and all, the Tribune's translation of the Carmelite General's letter, published only the day before. Terrible must have been his perplexity to find that; though ho bad spoken with only two members of the press besides the representative of the Tribune, eight or nine papers had full and particular accounts of special interviews, all diff erent and contradictory. Hunted and tortured in this awful manner, Tather Hyacintho, while he may be charitable enough to remember that his pursuers (if we may slightly vary the words of a distinguished novelist) "though exasperating to the feelings are actuated by professional dictates," will need all his resolution and all his patience to maintain the reserve that befits his present situation. If he aspires to be the leader of a great liberal party within the Catholic Church, be will needlessly compromise himself and ob struct his course ky premature eloquence in the lecture-room or the newspapers. If he pre fers to attach himself to some Protestant de nomination, his case will not be such a singu lar ona that the general public will make him more than a nine-days' wonder. It is precisely because he does not reject the Catholic faith while he denounces Catholic practices that bis career awakens such deep and respectful interest. Let us try not to spoil his work, whatever that work may be, by an insane baste to make him speak before he is ready. If we do, we shall find that our incipient re former is changed into a mere tempestuous polemic. He is not the first foreign eccle siastic who has sought refuge in America from possible persecution and annoyance. Achilli and Gavuz.i, and a score of others have preached to passionate audiences hatred of the Alan ot bin, and gratitude that Trovideuee has preserved them from the thraldom of the Scarlet Woman. Whatever benefit may have resulted from the eloquence of these ardent converts, the excitement of their coming has generally awakened more or less bad temper and violence. But the arrival of the new re former is not in the whirlwind or the storm. Men are not quite certain that this is a re former. The voice which has been lifted up in the church of Notre Dame against the sins of modern Christianity, the selfishness of the churches, and the "abortive sanctity'' of the cloister, has been heard from one end of Europe to the other, and its echoes have re sounded across the sllautic: yet we hardly know what manner of voice it "is, whether it is the voice of the apostle of a new faith, or merely the cry of a suffering priest, to be hushed as so many eries bnve been before, when the heart (hat uttered them knew not fully its own wants, and at last sought refuge in the negation of all faith like Lamennais, or found comfort in submis sion like Lacordaire. We know not whether to hail Father Uyacinthe as a good son of the ancient faith, or a second Luther, who is to lead another great rebellion. He professes to be still a firm believer in the Roman Catholic creed; yet the llonmu Catholic Church has cast him out, and it is not easy to understand how, upon the principles of that creed, he can question the infallibility of a general council and yet avow himself a Catholic, - or how he can htay in the Church if the Church will not keep him. Bui men are not always logical in religious any more thnn in other matters, and the Protestant clergymen who have hastened to take the unfrocked Carme lite by the hand may perhaps regret their rashness if it prove that he is very far from making common cause with them. ' The true explanation of this uncertainty we believe to be that Father Hyacinth has no distinct purpose for the future, and does not himself know exactly how he stands. In America he doubtless trusted that he could await further developments of the Roman policy, and deliberate upon his course with less embarrassment thau in France, and here perhaps, if we only lot lain alone, he iuity find the rest which his native land denies hiui.' Yet he is a man of move than common Htrength of intellect and fixity of purpose if our countrymen, in their wild pursuit of celebrities, do not drive hiiu into sonm un comfortable theological corner, from which it will be harder to get out than to walk away from the Carmelite convent in Paris. FISH AND SEWARD. From the N. Y. World. "After tlie election of onersl (Jrant to the resi dency, there wore not few friend of Mr. Seward who IndulKed the hope that, hi service would bi retained under tUe new administration, and that tht mmnontnua international uuesUona wliiith tiad ariiieu during his direction of sri'sirs would continue to have the benefit of kin masterly wind and Brest experi ence. But General ('rant, allowed the secretary u retire from Uie Mate Dpjmrtmcnt. . '" . 'Whether with a view of leading Mr. Seward tfcu-L Into the Cabinet, or from a ehivalnc feeling towards a rival candidate for the White House, it Isocrtaia that the volume containing the speeches which Mr. Keward has recently delivered iusitxa ami la the J'aclflc Mates has jiiHtbteu distributed among a num ber of distinguished personaae In Watuiugton, Hu rler the umpires of General Giant ImiiHuif. "Secretary KIhIi Is too lnh toued ami well-balanced a gentleman to take umbrage at a proceeding which does not necessarily imply a want of coiin Ueiiee In iiis atuleswHusliip. "rt" h I e chaos me nean 01 tne cabinet, would have saved ;neiKu maitou 01 me government from the chain into wnicn iney nave been plunged by the present advisers of General Gram, few student of the late premier's Mexican and European policy will he In clined to doubt. Nor can it be questioned that from the beginning of the Cuban war of Independence he would have uphold before Spain, and her Kuropoan allies, the principle of American supremacy In the American hemisphere, In such unmistakable terms ? to crush out the more or leas taoit coalition airnlust the extension of free Institutions In the Antilles, which hits exerted such a baleful and Intimidating liuiuence upon Mr. Klsh's timorous though well meaning tactics. bndrall the aspects of the oiiso General Grant's overture to Mr. He want may be re garded as a bright spot In that total eclipse of genius which has characterized the foreign polley of the administration." .Y. r. Sm. The friends of Mr. Howard have been, since his departure from Auburn on his pre sent travels, diligent in the prediction that he would return homo the most popular man in the nation. They have flattered themselves that absence, nccompaniqd by speeches from the departed and judicious announcement by telegraph of his movements, would, by a kind of reflex action, awaken the people to medita tion upon his virtues, bring about his acts while in the Department of State, and a general revision of the judgment, respecting him and his career, already pronounced. Wo had supposed thnt all this coming change of opinion in respect to Mr. Seward was antici pated by his admirers with joy, growing solely out of foresight of what a pleasure would thereby bo given to the years of retirement of the late Secretary of State; but we evidently saw through a glass darkly, for it now appears that he is a candidate for office, and that President Grant is playing around the edges of the Seward plot by patronizing the (list ii bul ion of speeches of the latter among "dis tinguished personages in Washington." There are circumstances in the case of the Sttn which make that journal an organ of Mr. Seward, his friends, and the aspirations of both. Of course, before Seward can be got in the State Department, Secretary Finli must be got out. Hence the assaults upon the ad ministration of the latter, which have been open in the Sm, and in tho Time (another Seward organ) a realization of tho tactics sketched by Pope in the well-worn lines: "Damn with faint praise, assent with civil leer, And, without sneering, teach the rest to sneer. Willing to wound, and yet afraid to strike, Just hint a fault, and hesitate dislike.." Of course, this is a Republican family quar rel in which Democrats take no part. If He publicans iu this State see fit to calumniate Mr. Fish in tho interest of Mr. Seward, it is their own affair. And so it is if President Grant makes himself busy in distributing Seward's speeches with intent to show his preference as between two public men of New Yoi-k. The friends of Mr. Fish and those of Mr. Seward iu this city will, of course, respectively have their own apprecia tion of the afl'air. In like maimer, the asser tion of Seward's friends, that the foreign re lations of this Government have been plunged into "chaos'' since he left the De partment of State, must by 1 )omocrats be looked upon as a matter they are not called upon to investigate in order to decide, if there really be a "chaos" there, whence it came. As to Seward's upholding "the principle" of American supremacy on this hemisphere in relation to the Cuban revolt, if ho were Secretary of State, so as to crush the "tacit coalitions against the extension of free in stitutions in the Antilles," which bavo "ex erted such a baleful and intimidutiug influ ence" upon Mr. Fish that is rubbish. The only conspicuous foci about the conduct of the members of the administration in Caban matters is that Graut has been most of tho time under the influence of Cuban refugees, who, with no thought for the duty and mate rial interests of the Unitod States, have impelled him to talk and advise in the in terest of the insurrection, just as Corbin talked and advised in the interest of the gold Ting under the guise ot seeking the best in terest of the Treasury. Mr. Fish, on the other band, seems to have considered that his first duty was not to Cubans, but to the interests of the people of the United States, and that all such matters as Cuban bellige rence and the like were things of private con cern as between the citizens of this country and its Government, about which there was no need of the advice or menace of inter loping foreigners without courage to take per sonal part in winning independence on the field of battle. If the solicitude of Grant for Cubans and Fish for Americans be evidence of "chaos," then it exist but how would Seward's presence dispel it unless he fell into the policy cf the President ' As to Mr. Seward, his constant, persistent, shameless violation of the rights of individual liberty, in the persons of Northern men, while he wus Secretary of State: his indecently hasty striking of our colors and surrendering to the insolent seven-day demand of England in the Trent afl'air; his utter abandonment of our real rights and grievance in the Johnson Clarendon treaty, after having for two years absurdly vexad and teased Earl Russell nearly to death about the asserted offense to us of recognizing the rebels as belligerents; and the general perception of the country that the suc cessful conduct of our affairs with France and England during the critical period of tho Rebellion was mainly due to the conspicuous good sense of Messrs. Dayton and Adams, and not to the verbose aud" elementary despatches from the State Department, will effectually prevent bim from accomplishing a reversal of the existing popular judgment. If, however, President Grant has deter mined to differ with Mr. Fish as to the true policy of the country in respect to certain foreign questions, or, for any other reason, to get rid ol the latter to make room lor air. Seward, it is some consolation to reflect that he is braiding a rope wherewithal his own neck would in due time be stretched MR. SEWARD IN MEXICO. From the X T. Herald. No other foreigner has ever received from the Mexican Government such an ovation as that with which Mr. Seward, our venerable x-Secrctary of State, is welcomed to the halls of the Montezumas. President Juarez, in whose name he was formally welcomed when he landed on the 7th instant at Manzanilla, amidst roaring salutes from the forts, is mani festly not ungrateful. It was the policy of Secretary Seward which inspired the instruc tions forwarded in October, lwiti, by General Sheridan to General Sedgwick, and which do termined the destiny of Juarez as well as that of Emperor Maximilian and other competitors fur power in Mexico instructions which, said General Sheridan, "will be enforced agaiust the adherents of the imperial buccaneers representing the so-called imperial Govern ment of Mexico, imd also agaiust Ortega, Santa Anna, and other factions. President Juarez is the acknowledged head of the libe ral government in Mexico." This amounted to a virtual recognition, of the position which Junrez still maintains. Mr. Seward will doubtless have accorded to Lim all possible facilities for studying the pre sent political, religious, social, and material condition of Mexico, and for discovering its future prospects. If he had not already ex hausted all the resources of rhetoric iu his voluminous eulogistic 'descriptions of the "That Mr. Seward, ir he had continued to be pl0"6 f Alaska, with its iniraeuhmi climate, lt - 8 Tnst supplies of furs and Real skins, and tti spontaneous growtn 01 ice creams, sueroen, Komnn punches, and oilier similar "vegeta bles," Mr. Seward might lie expected to favor the world with equally voluminous and oulo gistic descriptions of Mexico. In this case, at least, ho would uot be compelled to draw on bis imagination for his facts, and (icneral Thomas oould not contradict any statement, however uppareuLly extravagant, which he might make. Mexico is one of the finest and richest countries on which the sun ever shone. Mr. Seward miht endlessly prolong tho report' which ho could give even if ho were t restrict himself to the porphyritio mountnins which wall in tho plain of Tenochtitlnu, whereon sluuds the capital of Mexico. It would be pleasant to learn front him tho remote connections between this vol canic circle formed by Fopocntepot. I.tacci huatl, Toluca, and their uniting ch'.in of smaller volcanoes, and the other volcanic wonders in the East Indies and elsewhere in which ho has token a special intorest. Nor could he be suspected of boing indifferent to the progress of the various railways which are yet to replace some of the good old roads laid out in various directions by the most distin guished of tho Mexican viceroys, tho Count do Jlivolla-Gigedo. Railway enterprises, emigra tion schemes, and many other Mexican jobs would offer a more practical intorest than tho study of Mexican picture writing, or of Mexi can history from the times of tho Toltecs and tneir successors, tho Chtchniiocs, tho Aztecs, tho Tezcueans, the Tepanecs, and tho Aztess under the Montezumas, to the days of Spanish viceroys, and tho revolutionary priests Hi dalgo and Morelos, and tho native Mexican Emparor Itubide, and the often broken suc cession of republican Presidents, and tho Franco-Austrian Emperor Maximilian and President Juarez. The mineral wealth of Mexico and tho fauna aud flora of the three regions into which tho country is ual ttrally divided licvros ealienten, tkmm tcihpltdt, and tierrttx friiin would supply abundant topics for a book on Mexico, should Mr. Saward be tempted to write one. Perhaps ha had better reserve Alaska as a subject for a descriptive poem until ho can disprove the testimony of General Thomas that there is more poetry than truth in the imaginative ex-Secretary's speeches on that thome. If his prophecies had not sometimes turned out to be by no means infallible, wo should like to have him predict how soon Mexico will probably become one of the United States of America. now the moni:y ooks in cont- (UiKSS. F'mi the X. V. TUnf. A well-kuown contributor to llio Athnilic Monthly calls attention lo the waste of public money wLicli goes on in and around Congress. He condemns tho pictures under the dome and elsewhere, in common with most other critics who have any cultivated tssto to Loast of. He is saveic in his venmrka upon tho young lady who managed to cajole Congress men into awarding hev 11 large sum of money, in advance, for executing a "statue" of Presi dent Lincoln. Mr. I'urton does not give us his impressions of tho clay model prepared by tho young lady in question, l'erhaps he did not see it. Those who did will siucerely hope that it will lie some time hoforo the statue itselt is hmslaed. Wiiat puzzles our contemporary most is the charge made for carrying on the daily work of Congress. A session costs the coun try St 1,000,000 a good round sum, consider ing tho little we get for it. Each day entails upon us an expense of Cll.ooo. 5ut there is something more than tma to wonder at it we look into the details, ihe i ortielu uongress used up nearly eleven hundred penknives, costing about three dollars each, and, of course, the members did not pay tor them. The country is so rich, and has so few tasas to pay, that prodigality in I ongress is a venial fault. Liesides penknives, such neces sary articles as snnn, tobacco, poefcet scis sors, hair-brushes, and "extra morocco desks have been furnished by a grateful nation to its representatives. Among the items is this very startling one: "12 cotton stay-laces, .0. Can such things be? We presume the Htav-lace8 were not dear at that price, but is there no dark mystery concealed nuder the supply of them.' Does some intelligent patriot keep his family in such articles at tho cost of his country i Or does Congress give stay- laces to "sculptresses, as well as money for European tours ? Or is there a Congressman somewhere in the background who is proud of his figure, and has revived the old custom of wearinc stays to keep it in shapo? Let us have a committee on the subject. Tho "re velations" would be a change on the usual stylo of such reports. It costs $2144 MW to transport tho body of a defunct Congressman to his home, and that when the distance is only short. The people mav well hope that their representatives will manage to survive their term of oftioo. They ouL'ht to be examined by a medical man before being put on tbe nomination ticket. Sometimes there is a "c.tll of the House," and absent members have to be hunted up from all parts. The Hergeant-at-Avuis is allowed to charge if .V20 for every trucnt whom he thus cap tures. How his heart must rejoice when a prolonged "filibustering" movement is going on, and the majority of members go home to l.ffl! Ho mav bring up a hundred in ona dav. and thus bag '20 as his perquisites. Stationery is an article which most members of Congress use by tne oanioaa. Jias air. l'arton ever made a lour ot tlio rooms of our legislators during the session ? If so, he otK'ht not to be so much at a loss, as he says hels. to account for tho enormous quantity consumed. There are many ways of getting rid of ood writing paper. Our contemporary advisfs the abolition of all the allowances now given to members ot Conaressrand the substitution of one fixed sum ns salary instead. The "franking privi lege is the first abuse that ought to be put an end to. Now a Congressman may send almost anything under his frank, from a stay- lace to a pair of top-boots. It amounts to nothing more nor less than a wholesale rob bery of the nation somebody must pay everything that a Congressman uses, and of course the poor taxpayer is the victim. The Add a tie say that other nations are no better on man we imi two blacks tton t make a white. Will Congreis reform itself, or wait until an indignant people takes it in hand r n it h at NAi n; of FifEL.- 1 o.vi.vror kn patent kevoiainu fl.lJf ICALUATOIt Flinuld he In use on ever Heater and Htora. It Inoreases the bent tilly percent, and saves nearly one-half of tha coal, and will albo host a room ubote in pluue ot a stova. UALL A AD bl.K i HUM at the manufactory of O. J. UOO'JHKBTT, wi No. 1JD N. NIATU Street. WILLIAM ANDEPJ30N & CO.. DEALER? 1 ml' ins WUibkios, An, Its nortB BKUun n, fuilaUalpuim, "I OHN FARNUM & CO., COMMI38ION MERJ f I rhantaand Manufacturer of Coneatoga Ticking, oto, Ko.iStfCHKliNU'i hlreet. 1'kOadolpuia. 4 1 miiai IMTIRE 'SLATE MANTEL WOUKS.-J.'B Id K.1411S. No. .WiOUHaiiUXIstrMt. lUwiiai WINES. j H E R MAJESTY! CHAMPAGNE. j Durisow & LTrasora, : 215 SOUTH FRONT STREET. 1 rvilE ATTENTION OF TlTE TRADE 13 J 1 tolutUd tO Uie fodottioa Tr (Jkuiaa Winaa. Atn . ta t4,eJ . , . TMTNTON A I.USSON. Ill) 8(UTU KKONT 8TRFKT. Onr.PANm--Ai!8nt for hnr Mnjoity, Dno do WdDtehe lo, Carlo Hl..uM, Cm to IWnnche, iinj Ohnrle. Farre r.Drt Vin KiiRonie, unit Vin Imperinl, M. Kliw VV I1 R wnt. hKrUliD(t MwwU and BUKxK J'.fj'W1 IiM,rt. f""1" HwierTt.. BHKKN ikS.--li. Kodnlithf, Amontillado. Topai, lettp, rntomiri tioMen Har, Crown, oto. ,??,'2vVi,lho Vulbo ""'i VidfetM, and Grown. ULAKKTH-rroinia A in t (H., Monlfarrwid aud Bor deaux, ulHrataand hauterna Wium. lN.-"S1fderbwao." HKANDIK8.-Ueno8r, Otaxd, Dupnj Oo.'f Tariont Tintucea, 4 g QAHSTAIHS A -MoO ALL, Moa. UA WALNUT and 21 GRANITE Btrseta, Import or of BRANDIR8, WI31KS, GIN, OLIVE OIL, KTO.. AKD COMMISSION MFR0HANT8 for tha aals of PURE OLD RYE, WtlKAT, AND BOURBON WHtfl- KlliiJ. 6 3Hi CAllSTA JUS' OLIVE OIL AN INVOICB of tha abora for aaJ bf . , . UAKMTA1KH WAI,L, 6 28M Roe. U WALNUT and ill UitANIXK Ht. HOOP SKIRTS. ETC. 1115. -h o P K I N 8' HOOP-SKIRT AND COKSET MANU FACTORY AKD SALESROOMS, No. 1115 CBESNUT STREET. Onr CHAMPION SKIRTSTbettor and cheaper than all others, lit to 60 springs, Ao. to!$2H5. Our Keystone Skirta, 20 to W springs, 608. to $UU ; New York .made Mdiia, from 2U to 40 springs, 45 to 75c. R. Werley Corsets, $t'u0, $.T.V), il'trt. Beckel Corsots, from $1 to 47. Thomson's "GltiTe-Bttinu" Corsots, from $2'2 to $5. Mrs. Moody's patent self-adjusting abdominal support ing Corsets, from $3 to 47- highly reoommeudod by pay sicer.s, and should be examined by every lady. Over 40 other varieties of Corsets, from 76c. to $9150. hkirts aud Corsets mads to crdor, altered aud repaired WIIOLKSALIC AND RETAIL. 7 33 3a WILLIAM T. HOPKINS. CENT.'S FURNISHINQ GOODS. 'pnu roirrvr or fashion. HEISTS' FUKNIWIIINl! STOKE. MBS. MIKNIK CUMMIXG8 baa ooeued the tbtvs- nanied place, at No. lis South KIUH I U S'.reet, where (entlemcn can UnJ evemhlug in their lion. The best fit tin M11RTS in the city, read made ot mace to order. Purchasers of twelve articles receive the thirteenth as a Gift. TJMBRKtXAS TO HIKK for S3 cents. Handkerot iefs ht mined (roe of charge. Polite (Salesladies in attendance. A call is reiecUu'.ly solicited and satisfaction anteed. 9S MINNIK OUMMINQ8. PATENT BHOULDEU-S EAM SHIKT MANUFACTORY, AND GENTLEMEN'S FURNISHING STORK. PTTRflCt .TT.Y TClTTrVfi dniltTS A VT nutirnn' made from measureiueiit at very short notice. All other ai tides ut GiNTLKMEN'S DRK3 GOODS in full vatic ty. WINCHESTER CO., 12 No. 71 Hi CllKiiNUT Street. Y I N E D 11 ESS S H I 11 T S AND GENTS' NOVELTIES. J. W. SCOTT & CO., No. 314 CIIESNUT Street, Philadelphia, 8 27trp Four doors below Continental Ilote. CROCERIES AND PROVISIONS. choice new nnmrwiiEAT riltST OF THE season, Just received and for sale by ALBERT C. ROBERTS, Dealer la Fine Groceries, 11 7J Corner ELEVENTH and VINE Streets. IO HA Eli MEAGHER & CO. no. 828 south SIXTEENTH Street, Wholesale and ReUil Dealers la PROVISIONS. OXBXHKS, AND SAND CLAMS, FOR FAMILY U81 TERRAPINS IIS per DOZEN. 8H DRUGS, PAINTS, ETO. JOBEBT SHOEMAKER 4 CO. XT. Corner FOURTH and SACS Sta. PHILADELPHIA. WHOLESALE DRUGGISTS, Importers and Manufacturers of Whit Lead and Colored Paints, Fatty varnishes, Etc AGENTS FOR TUB CELEBRATED FRENCH ZINO PAINTS. Dealer and consumers supplied at lowest prlcat for cash. 13 a ROOFING. TEADY ROOFING This Roofing Is adapted ts ail buildings. It oaa aooliod to STKKP OR FLAT ROOFS at one-half tha expense of tint. It is ruadilf pnt est oli bhlnale Koots wiuioui removing tne anmaies. tnus avoid ln the daniasjina of ceilings and furniture while under PKESKRVtt YOUR TIN KOOK8 WITH W ELTON! Kl.ASTIO PAINT. I sin always prepared to Repair and Paint Roofs st ehoi notice. Abo, PAINT FOR bALK bj the barrel or gailuo the best and uueapest la the mamet. wRLTOIf 9 179 Ho. 711 N. NINTH Street, above Ooatee. mr nmvTrpa 1 T?r,TTTTFr"ra utttt niTRsi X AND ROOl' KRH. Roofs! Yes, yes. Every sice and kind, old or new. At No. WM N. THIRD Street, the AMK RIL'A.N CONCRKTK PAINT AND ROOK UOMPANV are soiling their oelebrated paiut for TIN ROOb H, antf for DisAeivina ull wood and metals. Abo. their solid ooie plex root ooveting, the best ever otferod to the public, Willi prusnes, cans. Duckets, eto., tor lue wora. Ann veruun, Fire, and Water-nroof: Liatit. Tiuht. Durable. No cruck lng, pealing, or shrinking. No pa per, grave), or heat-, Good or u cuuiaiea. I'lreciiuiiM given lor woig, or (cuou wora men suppiieu. uare, promptness, oenainiyi una pnoe uaui r.xuuuue: ouue: Agents wanted fur interior oountles. 4 &tf JOhi'.PU I.F.FDS. Principal. IRE won K GALVANIZED and Painted WIRE GUARDS, store t ront and windows, for factory aud wtu'elious windows, for churches aud cellar windows. IRON aud WIRE RAILINGS, for balcoules, oftlf es cemetery and garden fences. Liberal allowance made to Contractors, Builders and Carpeutcrs. All orders tilled with proiuptues, and work guaranteed. ROBERT WOOD A CO., TSstutteta No. USO RIDGE Aveuua riilta. FINANCIAL. A RELIABLE HOKE INVESTME.IT. TIIE FIKST MORTGAGE BONDS OF 1(1 K Wilmington and Reading Railroad, BSAKINU INTLI'EST At SEVEN PER CI NT. in Currency, PAYADLK APRIL AND OCTOBER, FItEE OP STATE AND UNITED STATES TAXES, nils roa1 runs ttirough a thickly populate! an1 rk'h Bfrrlenltural and niHHU'nctnilnR district For the present, e'ate offering a limited araiant tbe aoove Bonds at 85 CENTS AND INTEREST. The connection of this rond with the Pennsylvania andliendiDg Kallroads insures it a large aud remu nerative trade. We recommend tlio bouds as the cheapest llrst-clasa investment in the market. V7I&. FALNTER & CO., BANKERS AND DEALERS IN GOVERNMENTS, So. 3G SOUTH TIII11D STREET. 9 4 tt2 SI PHILADELPHIA. UNITED STATES BONDS BOUGHT, SOLD, AND EXCHANGE!) ON MOST LIBERAL TERMS. . O 1 1 BOUGHT AND SOLD AT MARKET RATES. COU. PONS CASHED. PACIFIC RAILROAD BONDS BOUGHT AND SOLD. & t o c m BOUGHT AND SOLD ON COMMISSION ONLY, COLLKCTIONS MADE ON ALL ACCESSIBLE VOINTS. DE HAVEN & BKO., No. 40 South THIRD Street, oUj PHILADKLPI1IA. U. JL. JimXXSORJ & CO , SUCCESSORS TO P. F. KELLY A CO., ' tiaukers. and Dealers la Gold, Site, an! CoTernmeiLt Bonis, AT CLOSEST MRKET RATES, N.W. Corner THIRD and CIIESNUT SU. Special attention glTen to COMMISSION ORDERS lu New York and Philadelphia Stack Boards, oto. eta 6 tin 81 gTLLIOTT & DUNN, BANKERS, KO. 109 SOUTH THIRD STKEET, PHILADELPHIA, DRAW BILLS OF EXCHANGE ON THE UNION BANK OF LONDON. DEALERS IN ALL GOVERNMENT SECURITIES, GOLD, BILLS, Eto. Receive MONEY ON DEPOSIT, allowing Interest. Execute orders for Stocks in Philadelphia, New York, Boston, and Baltimore. 4 litit QLENDINNING, DAVIS & . CO., NO. 48 SOUTH THIRD STREET, PHILADELPHIA. GLEND1NNING, DAVIS AMORY, NO. 2 NASSAU STREET, NEW YORK BANKERS AND BROKERS. Direct telegraphic communication with tlio New York Stock Boards from the Philadelphia Onice. 128 g WITH, RANDOLPH & CoT. BANKERS, . PHILADELPHIA AND NEW YORK, DEALERS IN UNITED STATES BONDS, and MEM- BKBS OF STOCK AND GOLD EXCHANGE, Receive Accounts of Bants and Bankers on Libera Terms. ISSUE BILLS OF EXCHANGE ON a C. J. DAMBRO A BON, London. B. METZLER, B. SOHN A CO., Frankfort. . JAMES W. TUCKER A CO., Paris. And Other Principal Cities, and ketters of Credit 1 S tf Available Throughout Europe. JOHN 8. RUSHTOTl & CO., No. f.O SOUTH THIRD STREET. CJ I T A' W AKUANTS 10 6 3m BOUGHT AiD SOLD, QITY WARRANTS BOUGHT AND SOLD. C. T. YERKES, Jr., & CO., NO. 0 SOUTH THIRD STREET, miLADELPIIIA FINAMOIAU ' PACIFIC KAIL1Y.VYU0IJ, LOAN. Mewe. DABNIiY, MORGAN & CO., No. 03 EXCHANGE Place, and M. K. JESUP & CO., No. 12 PINE Street, New York, orTcr for sale the Bonds of the Kansas Fatiuc Railway. These Bonds pay Seven Per Cent, in Gold; have thirty years to run; are Free.' tm Government Taxation; are secured by t Land Grant of Three Million Acres ot the Finest Lands in Kansas and Colo rado. In addition to this special crant. the Company also owns Three Millions of Acres in Kansas, which-are being rapidly sold to develop the country and improve the road. They are a first mortgage upon the extension of the road from Sheridan, Kansas, to Denver, Colorado. The road in operation NOW EARNS MORE THAN ENOUGH NET INCOME TO PAY THE INTEREST ON THE NEW LOAN. There is no better security in the market this being in some respects better than Government Securities. PRINCIPAL AND INTE REST PAYABLE IN GOLD. Price 96, and accrued Interest, in Currency. Pamphlets, Maps, and Circulars fur nished on application. We are authorized to 8&U tht) bonds ith Philadelphia, art them as a reliable invest our friends. NO. 309 WALNUT STREET, D 24 fmwrplm PHILAOr.LPUIA. THE FIRST MORTGAGE BONDS OK THf UNION PACIFIC RAILROAD CO. INTEREST (J PER CENT. IN GOLD. . R'bos tho oponinst of the PaciHa Rjiilroad, Mar 10, its ssminRB hnvc bnenet the rat 9 nf about. K1UHT MfLL'ON DOLLAL8 Pl.R YKAIt. The earnings for Septnmber if ere $762,177-43. The First Mori guge Bonds of tho Comnanjr amount to 1 28,81 . C0(). and the interest lwbililr to $1,728,!l Kokl, or aliuut Bi.'ir.t.Ui'C in ti.iTency. It will bo noticed that tile present euininKS provid. an ample fund tor tbe payotoat of this interest and leave a hti'KU urlus. THE LAKD GRANT BONOS, To the amount of Ten Million Dollars, ware issued to ob tain means to finish the road, and are secured br a 1RST SlORTtiAGK upon the entire Land f Jrant of the Com pany, amounting to 13,824,000 acres. The sales of land were opened In Omaha July 27, aud average at the rate of $30,000 per month. THE LAND CHANT BONOS ARE RKCFIVKD ia payment for all the Company's lands, at par, and the de mand from aotual Ket tiers will give thorn a certain market. They run twenty yeurs aud pay seven per cent, interest is currency. Although the Company bare disposed of all their bonds, Tot, as they are ctlered in market, we continue to sill orders at the current rates. We have no hesiiation in recommending- both tbe First Hurtgage and tbe Laud (.rant Houds as a very valuable and perfectly bafo iuvclmout. DE HAVEN & I5RO., BANKKIIS, No. 40 KoutllTIIlHD Struet. 10 U mwfCt RANKING HOUSE JAY COOKE & CO., Nos. 112 and 114 South THIRD Street. PHILADELPHIA, Dealers In all Government Securities. Old B-208 Wanted In Exchange lor New. A Liberal Difference allowed. Compound Interest Notes Wanted. Interest Allowed on Deposits. COLLECTIONS MADE. STOCKS bought Ad 1014 on ComniUslon. Special uuslnedH accommodations referred fox ladles. We will recelre applications for Policies of Lift Insurance In the Nittk nal Lire Insurance Company 9t the United Stales. Kail Information given at osr oiUce. T 1 8m pa S. PETERSON & CO.. Stock aud Exchange Brokers, NO. 39 SOUTH THIRD STREET, Members of the New York and Philadelphia Stook aul Gold Boards. BTOCK8, DONPH, Etc., bougut and sold en com mlBslonoBlr atcltiier city A?., NEVV PUBLICATIONS. "PHILOSOPHY OF MARRIAGE A A New Course of Leoturef, as delivered at tbe New York Museum of Auatmur, suibraoing the aubjeota-. How to Live, and What to Live for; Youth, Maturity, anal Old Age; Manhood Generally Reviewed! The Cause a. indigestion ; flatulence and Noivuus DiMtaaos AeoounteJ for; Marriaxe i'uiloKiphically Considered, eto. et Vocket volumes containing these Lecture will be fo. warded, post paid, on receipt of cfliits, by addressing W A. 1.ICAKY, J n.,S. K. comer vt i liill sad WALNIH btreets, Philadelphia. THE ADAMS EXPRESS COMPANY, OFFICf Me. SJt CUK8MUT Ntreet. forwards Sgea. Merohaudise, bank Note, and hpie, owDiine. or in connection with other - fr W U U prutOJWtl towns wd siUss Is &0,',V&ajK Bufllu4.U . hd offer m,ent ir 1
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers