i). V i ( i i G rij,ii;uI,'Ai)ii rillLAOi j i' SATUUlAi", OYKMHER 27, lSoi). v j.i.U7 or TZZ23 rasaa. Kd 1 1 mini Opinion f the I.rmMn Jenrnnl. I'Ko'm Current Toplo-)oinilled Brer Day for the Kvetilnn Tolrraph. "WOMAN'S RIGHTS," AND HOW TO GET , THEM. From ths y. Y. Tivits. Tbe Convention junt held at Cleveland for Ibe purpose of organizing what is called a 'National Woman 8 Suffrage Association" doBcrTcs to bo troited in a serious Rpirit, chiefly for tbe renson that its own delibera tions were free from the extravagance and buffoonery which umially bring ridicule upon meetings of the same kind. The promoters of these associations complain Tory bitterly of the levity with which their cause is treated by the press. They never seem to bo aware that publio writers have done no moro than answer them "according to their folly." They constantly deliver addresses which are Sntendod to be laughed at, and which, as a general rule, are both foolish and vulgar. Then they profess to be aggrieved at our waut of respect." The clown, after chalk ing his face and cutting antics in the ring, might as reasonably complain that the spec tators laughed at him. If the loaders in this agitation wish to have their demands seri ously discussed, lot thorn first be serious themselves. We admit, indeed, that one advocate of woman's rights, who has recently published a sort of mauifesto in a monthly magazine, cannot bo accused of trifling with the subject. His statement of the case is brief, and we hope it will prove intelligible to his "fair" clients: "What wo wish to establish is, that the foci of the true social ellipse are occupied by equal, complomontary parties, who give a law to its curvature by joint and reciprocal relations, making it the evenly balanced and exact product of its two constituents." At first sight this may seem to exhaust the subject, but a fow words in plain English may, perhaps, bo added. Those who contend that women ought to Le admitted to the exercise of political power completely mistake the ground on which their battle has to be fought. They always argue as if men were oppressively depriving women of their just rights. The letter of Mr. George William Curtis to the Cleveland Con vention would, as a statement of abstract principle, command "almost general assent; but it does not in any way touch the practical question of "Woman's suffrage." His argu ment is essentially as irrelevant to the sub ject as the "Fourth of July" rhodoruontade in his concluding sentence; and it is diffi cult to bolieve that ho would ever have ven tured to,address either to an assemblage of men. He assumes that the reason why women do not vote is that men are opposed to it. The truth is quite the other way. The vast majority of men are roally indifferent to the whole matter, and very willingly stand aside to leave women to settle it among themselves. The difficulty with which the advocates of "woman suffrage" have to contend is the disinclination of women them selves to take an active part in political life. Whenever the majority of women really de sire admission to the franchise, they will ob tain it, and it would bo fruitless as well as . unjust to oppose their claims. When they Lave made up their minds that it is good for them and for the country at large that they should vote, they will be admitted to the suf frage as a matter of course. But we decline to accept the opinions and statements of a handful of "agitators" some very eccentric, some moderate and sensible as a full and fair expression of the views of a majority of American women. The private experience of almost everv man is. that women are the first to ridicule the pretensions of those who pro tend to be their leaders. Lot every f aniily- xnan take his own home, and see how many pf its female members sympathize with the ' claims which are put forward by even the inost temperate of all the "women suffrage" party. Tho proportion would be found ama- ' Singly small. We contend, tnoreiore, mat it is aosuru to " attack mon as if they were tho cause of the exclusion of women from the franchise. Women themselves do not want it will, in fact, have nothing to do with it. Mr. John JStuart Mill has been unable to prevail against precisely tho same state of feeling in Eng land. He has lent the weight of his name and the force of his genius to the "woman suffrage" party, and the women of England firmly persist in standing aloof from him. Mrs. llowe said at Cleveland that the right to Tote "would at once place woman on the footing of a noble and conceded equality with men." Now she cannot get her sex to believe that. They see very clearly that she is wrong, and then, as Mrs. Howe cannot move them, she upbraids men for their injustice. As a ..' condition of woman's admission to the suffrage, women must show that they desire it. At present they are heartily opposed to it ninety-nine women out of a hundred all over . the country would vote against it; and it is only beating the air to assail men for a state of feeling which most of them approve, but which they were not the moans of bringing into existence. . THE INCOME TAX WHY IT OUGHT TO BE DISCONTINUED. From the A'. Y. World. This unpopular tax will expire by its own limitation at the end of the present fucpl year, on tho liOth of June next. Whother Congress will renew the law imposing it is a question which has been of late pretty widely discussed by the press of tho country, the general drift of sentiment being thoroughly adverse to its renewal. In those discussions, however, so far as wo have looked into them, the objections to tho income tax have been rather feebly stated, and some of the most important have been overlooked altogether. - The arguments against it which are chiefly dwelt upon are its inquisitorial character, and its evasion by so large a part of the comuiu--riity as to make it a tax on honesty rather than a tax on incomes. These grounds of objection are so trite and familiar that we merely allude to them in passing; it being our purpose to present some ot tne neglected considerations which weigh against the tax. A tax on incomes, even if it were not in quisitorial in its nature and were paid with out evasions, would nevertheless be one of tne most objectionable forms of raising a revenue that could be adopted. The incomes of people are no measure either of their ability to pay taxes or of the amount of protection they receive from the Government. This is emphatically true in a young country like this, of astonishing "' -growth and development, where there are such amounts of property, unproductive at present, but constantly and rapidly rising in value. The certainty that un improved property in and around our thou sands of expanding cities and villages will i i i a , i -HA- ii. . uk m vmue, uui uie capabilities oi me vast area of cheap, unoccupied land in the "West, much of it lying in choioe looations, vhere, in a few years, its value will be en hanced tea or twenty fold, havo caused extensive investments in such property by 6 largo proportion of onr wealthy classns. I Hundreds or millions oi dollars aro so in- F, vested in pronorty which at presont yields : owners. The consoquonoe is, that great num bers of mon reputed in their own com munities to be wealthy some of them sun posed to be worth millions return soarcely any income at all. Neighbors of theirs, re ceiving small and precarious incomos whose continuance depends on the uncertainties of life and health or tho caprice of employers, pay a burdensome tax, while those shrewd, rich men who are rising to be nabobs and all whose heirs will be millionaires, pay none. If the industrious earners of small in comes, who are dependent on salaries or professional fees, die. they leave their fami lies penniless; but if these rich-men without incomes die, their famines are left in affluence. Tho present income tax docs not reacn, ana it is impossible to devise an in come tax which would reach, this constant growth in the value of property. In old and densely-peopled countries thore are few such opportunities of making great fortunes by buying up unimproved real estate; and in sucn countries an income tax is not attondod with such gross and flagrant injustice. Its effect here is to relieve a very large propor tion of the accumulations of our richest men, and lay the whole burden on thoso whose growth in wealth comes in the shape of tangi ble money incomes, and, still worse, upon those who make no accumulations at all, but are barely able to live upon their salaries or their professional fees. Another reason why an income tax is not suited to the circumstances of this country, and necessarily works injustice, lies in our system of agriculture. In England proprie tors of tho land are not, for the most part, its actual cultivators. The land is ownod in large estates by the nobility and other wealthy men, who give long leases at a fixed rent, rendering the income from farming lands as tangible, and as easily ascertained, as income from any other source. But in this country, where nearly all tho land is cultivated by its owners, there is no means of ascertaining agricultural incomes, and hardly any income tux is paid by our farmers. Thus our largest interest and greatest source of accumulation almost entirely escapes a burden which weighs heavily upon some other classes of the community. A farmer returns as income (when he makes an income re turn at all) only the proceeds of the crops he sells, making no account ol the consump tion of his family. Other people spend a great part of their taxed incomes in purchas ing the subsistence of their households. Good farming constantly increases the value of tho lands cultivated; but such enhancement of value is never returned as income, although it is as real an addition to tho wealth of the owner as the money which he receives for his surplus crops. Thus a thriving farmer, who is every year improving his circum stances and adding to tue value ot ins pro perty, pays no income tax; wbilo multitudes, whose yearly earnings are consumed in their yearly expenses, and whose death, sickness, loss of situations, or loss of professional re pute, would plnuge their families into desti tution and distress, havo their scanty means diminished by this unequal and unjust im position. DECLINE IN GOLD-GOOD EFFECTS OF GENERAL GRANT'S FOLIC V. From tit K. Y. Herald. The remarkable decline in gold tho price on Thursday touching 124 the lowest since tho year 181 !o is the fruition of the policy which General Grant inaugurated when he delivered his brief and simple address on the 4th of March last. The promise which he then made of reducing the expenditures and of faithfully gathering the revenues of the Gov ernment is being fulfilled in the falling of the price of gold, which is but tho financial sign and index of the increasing credit and stability of the Government. The practical enects of his policy are now quite visible, since the smashing of the gold ring and the breaking up of tho Wall street combinations that were formed in mid-summer to advance tho price of the precious metal. It will be remembered with what delight his enemies then pointed to the rise in gold as a proof of tho weakness of his efforts. The gold gam biers were the sole cause of the upward move ment, and in pushing it onward abandoned themselves to the belief that they possessed the power to undo all the good work which General Grant set out to perform. His sim ple order to sell a few millions from tho Treasury ruined their fond anticipations and dissipated the gold corner in tho most effec tual manner. The results of General Grant's policy are all the more remarkable for the reason that in taking hold of tho reins of government ho was encumbered by the abuses bequeathed to him from the previous administration. Be fore setting his own plans in operation ho was under the necessity of righting what was wrong in the various departments. Ho had to unearth and put an end to all the various frauds and schemes ol corruption clinging to tho appointments of the former irfinif, and make a general cleuring out of the public offices. Ihe lormidable conspiracy which at tacked tho gold market was an obstacle for a time to the operation of his plans, but ho eventually triumphed, as the apparent dis credit of the Government finances implied in the rise in gold was the result ot artificial in lluences only, which had in the long run to succumb to natural causes. The good results of his honest determination to faithfully col lect the revenues and to retrench the expenses of the Government aro at length reflected in the gradual and steady but sure appreciation of the national credit. I nuer tho cir cumstances of our present political situation gold is a commodity whoso price depends, on the one hand, upon the condition ot tho national credit and, on the other, upon the relaiions of our foreign trade. The burden of the publics debt is not necessarily an insurmountable obstacle to tho resumption of specie payment for tho Government currency. Otherwise Lngland would never have returned to specie payments. It is only bufticient to assure the national creditors of tho honest intentions and ability of the Government to meet its obliga t ions in order to restore perfect confidence. 1 his portion of the plan Gcnoral Grant has assumed as his special duty. Tho commercial value ot gout is settled by the laws of demand ard supply. According as the balance of trade is for or against us will gold be in de mand for export. Gold, after all, is not the real currency of the business world. There is not gold enough in the world to suffice for all the transactions of commerce. Signs of value, such as checks, bills of exchange, drafts and bunk notes, are the real vehicle of busi ness operations. Between different countrios gold is essential simply as a means of settle ment for the difference in value between the imports and exports. Now, General Grant on his side is doing what is proper to restore the national credit. Economy among the people and production in excess of consump tion will contribute what is needed to com plete the work. THE LATEST FASHION IN MUjMC. From the Jf. Y. Tritmne. Two yoars ago, when half the town ran madly alter lier rollicking Highness of Gvirol stein, and clapped their hands for joy that in the new i rench Apollo they had a greater god than any of tbe old Italians whoso lavs had charmed us before, a few sober people who bad not been caught by tho prevailing mania cried out that the musical art had got its death blow, and we were all rushing to moral and ii'Hlnetio destruction. And it seemed, in deed, for a while as if they might be right. r rom tne uranu Jmchess to tho lair Jloien was only one step, and from Troy to Brabant was another. While the revels of Off enbach raged fast and furious at one end of Four teenth street,- the faces of musicians grew sad and anxious at tho other. Artists raised their voices in vain amid the solitudes of the Academy while shapely women were flaunting their skirts and saying naughty things on tho boards of tho French Theatre. So the doors of the opera house were locked one day, tho cotton covers were drawn over the gilded boxes, and dust was left to settle on tho great stage until such time as the world should got through with us frolic and recover its senses. Mr. Grant White and others might well believe that art was depart ing forever from tho stage, and mere non sense and frivolity comijg to permanently taKO its place. At last, however, tho trolio bo came so daring that innocent eyes were opened to its real significance, and ladies found out that tho Fair Helen and the un happy Genevieve were not very good com pany for them, and then the reaction began. So much money was lost in opora bouffe, and such a marked change took place in the cha racter of its patrons, that after tho second season not a vcst'ge of that stylo of entertain ment was to be found in the whole city. It was a serious questiou at first, however, whether the true art and the false had not both been overthrown. Very few supposed that musical tasto would revive without at least a year or two of depression. But fash ion is as fickle in music as she is in skirts and bonnets, and goes back as readily to a dis carded composer as she does to an abandoned petticoat. We dare say the groat Jubilee at Boston bos had its effect in turning tho public away from their false gods, and convincing them that they can worship with quite as much pleasuro and qttito us much stylo at tho feet of Rossini as at the calves of Tostoo. Bo this as it may, fashion has sot violontly and suddenly towards tho legitimate in the art of music. A seat at the Philharmonic Concert is an unpurchnsublo luxury for which a New York bello would sacrifice the best ball of tho season. Tho ccntouary of Beethoven is to bo celebrated hero with a grandeur which will make Boston blush with mortification and howl with envy. One English opera company bus dung for us and gone away with full pockets, and another follows it with the same success. And finally, Italian opera, thought to be the most hopelessly prostrate of all lyric enterprises, basks in such a sunshine of favor that manager and singers must be amazed at their own prosperity. All these succosses are well deserved, but they aro not tho less re markable for all thut. A good performance of Williitin 1 'ell is a blessing which descends upon America only once in a deeado or so; and a performance with such an "Arnoldo" as the new tenor who has now fired the town would mark an epoeh in tho musical sistory of aby city; yet music is so seldom rewarded as it .should be that there is per haps more reason to be surprised at the fashionable enthusiasm than if it wasted itself upon the dyed locks and stuffed anato my of the ludies of the ballet. Frankly, we must say that Fashion has shown a degree of sense for which we wore quite unprepared. Let us take the good the gods provide and be thankful. last will grow from experience. The fair dames and polished cavaliers who go to tho opera now because some mysterious, awful, unseen autocrat has decreed that the opera shall be patronized; because the boxes are well arranged for flirtation, and the balco nies aro unrivaled for tho exhibition of silks and pearl powder, will learn to go pretty soon for love of art itself, to keep silonco during tho soft music, to pat their hands and cry bin? bin in the right place, and to remember with a sort of shame the barbarous days when an opera season could be mado by an accident and ruined by a whim. THE INCOME TAX ANOTHER BLUN DER OF GENERAL GRANT'S. Prom the N. Y. Sun. A series of articles on the income tax has lately appeared in the New York limes, which, if not written by Mr. A. R. Corbin, contain strong internal evidence of having been authorized or inspired by rresident Grant The Times has always supported the income tax, unjust and unpopular as it is; but this fact was never of the slighest account so long as the ideas were only the productions of the various conductors of that sheet. Now, how ever, that the advocacy of the income tax through its columns comes from high official sources, and from the i'resident s brothor-in law, if not from the President himself, it is worthy of notice. There seems to bo no hesi tation on the part of tho Times in urging the continuance of the tax directly in the face of the law. We are further informed that tho Secrotary ot the Ireasury and tue Commissioner of In ternal Revenue favor a renewal of tho present income tux at the next session of Congress and it is stated also thut the President in his message will recommend a continuance of Jail the present revenue laws, it he does this, lie will ask Congress to break a most solemu promise, and one which cannot bo violuted without dihhonor. The income tax was imposed at a time of the greatest danger this country has ever known. The people did not like it, but they submitted to it for the sake of national safety and success, 'lho law was universally re garded as a war measure, or it never could have been passed; and tho 1 Kth section of tho act itself contains a most emphatic pledge that tho tax on incomes should cease with the war. It says: "Anil be It further enacted. Tliat tlio taxes on In comes herein lmpcmed gtixll be levied on tliu tlrst day of March, uuil be due and pavuble on or before the thirtieth day of April In each year, until and In cluding the yeur eighteen hundred aud seventy, and no umijer. Now, when President Grant bogan his ad ministration, he appointed Mr. Stewart Soc retary of the Treasury, in total ignorance of mo law wmen lorbade that gentleman to ac cept the place. We should bono that a simi lar want of information might not mislead the President in regard to the income tax. It is by no means certain, however, that know ledge will teach him wisdom in this case any more than it did then. He began by request ing the repeal of a law which had stood on the statute book fifty years, in order that his personal friend and pecuniary benefactor might take office under him. It would not be very surprising, therefore, wore he now to advise Congress to violate the solemnly pledged faith of the nation. But should he do this, he will commit an enormous wroug. Wo have shown that in the internal revenue act which contains tho provisions relating to the income tat, lho national legislature promised the poople that tho lax should ocase to be levied after 1870. 'Until and including the year einhtoon hun dred and seventy, and no longer," are the wornu. instead or a recommondation Iroin tho President that the law bo re-enacted, it would be his duly, in case Congress should uw iu uuui-iiiiiu it, tu veto lun uhi. x no Government of the United States, powerful as it is, must not bo at liberty to disregard its pledges to tne peopio, lust bocauso thoso pledges were made five or six vears ago. No statute of limitations runs nuuinst tho public, by w hich tho rulors of the laud can oscapo the just porlormauco of their promises. bo high is the publio estimate of the im portance or national honesty, that all our recent elections have pronounced the doom or tho policy which had for its basis tho repu diation of the nationnl debt. Tho poopln insist on the rultilmcnt of every obligation growing out or tno war, although a largo pro portion of tho dobt is owinu to forniicnors. Can they do this, and at tho sumo time purtnil tho Government to break faith with tho public here at home ? Wo think not, and I'resident urant, in advocating tho ronowal of the income- tax, advocates repudiation of the nation's promises just as cloarly as do those who ask us not to pay tho nationul debt. FINANOIAL.. Burglary, Fire, or Accident. The Safe Deposit Company, IN TIIKIK New Fire and Burglar-Proof Building, Nos. 329 and 331 C1IESNUT STREET. The Fidelity Insurance, Trust, AND SAFE DEPOSIT COMPANY. A11TA1j $i,ooo,o DIRECTORS. N. B. Browno, Ubirrnno H. Clurk. .lohn Welsh, OkmrleH Mucalestttr. Kdwnnl W. (Nark, Alrtxuntlor Htmry. Steulien K. i Iitlilwoll, Ooiirno h Tylor, HonryO. Gibson. Prcbldcnt-N. B. BROWNK. Vice Prosidont-OLARKNOH II. OLA.RK. Bocrotary and Treasury ROB KRT PATTERSON. Assistant Socrotary-J AM K3 VV. UAZLK HURST. The Company have proviilod in thoir now Building and Vaults absolute security against loss by FIRE, BUR- CLARY, or ACCIDENT, and KEOK1VK SECURITIES AND VALUABLES ON DE POSIT UNDER GUARANTEE, Upon tho following rates, for ono yoar or loss period : Government and all other Coupon Bucuri- ties, or those transforablo by delivery 9100 por $1000 Government ami all other Securities regis tered and negotiable only by endorsement fiO por 1A00 Gold Coin or Bullion 125 per 1000 Silver Coin or Bullion 2 00 por 1000 Silver or Gold Plato, under soal, on owner estimate of value, and rate subject to ad justment for bulk l'OOpor 100 Jewelry, Diamonds, oto 2'50 por 10(H) Deeds, Mortgages, and Valuablo Papors generally, whoa of no fixed value, $1 a year, each, or according to hulk. Those laHer, when deposited in Tin Boxes,are ehargod according to bulk, upon a basis of 16 feet cubic capa city, $10 a year. Coupons and interest will bo collected, when dosirod, aud remitted to the owners, for one per cent. The Company offer for RENT, tho lessee exclusively holding the key, SAFES INSIDE THE BURGLAR-PROOF VAULTS, At rates varying from $15 to $75 each, per anuum, accord ing to size. Deposits of Money Received, on which interest will be allowod :-3 per cent, on Call Deposits, payable by Check at sight, and 4 por cent, on Timo Do posits, payable on ton duys' notioo. Travellers' Letters of Orodit furnished, available in all parts of Europe. Thii Uis Company is also sQttnrized to act as Executors, Admin xiinistrators, and Guardians, to receive and execute Trusts of every description from the Courts, corporations, or individuals. N. B. BROWNE, PRESIDENT. ROBERT PATTERSON, 11 23 tuthsSmBp SECRETARY AND TREASURER. A A It 1 I ii II O IJ 8 11 OF JAY COOKE & CO., Nos. 112 ami lit S. TIIIISI) St., PHILADELPHIA. Dealers In Government Socuritles Old 6-20S Wanted In Exchange for'New. A Liberal DWerenee allowed. Compound Interest Notes Wanted. Interest Allowed on Denoslta. COLLECTIONS MA OK. STOCKS bought and sold on Commission. Special business accommodations reserved for lumen. We will receive applications for Policies of Life Insurance In the National Life Insurants Cnmnn of the United States. Full information given at our o'co- io l am SITH, RANDOLPH & CO. BANKERS, PIIILADELriHA AND NEW YORK. DEALERS IN UNITED STATES BONDS, and MEM BERS OF STOCK AND GOLD KXCHANOH. Receive Accounts of Banks and Bankers on Libera Terms. ISSUE BILLS OF EXCHANGE ON C. J. HAMBRO & SON, London. B. METZLER, 8. SOHN ft CO., Frankfort. JAMES W. TUCKER A IX).. Part a. And Other Principal Cities, and Letters of Credit i u Avauauie Throughout Europe. P. 8. PETERSON & CO.. Stock and Exchange Brokers, NO. 39 SOUTH THIRD STREET, Members of the New York and Philadelphia Stock and Gold Boards. stocks, bonds, Etc., bought and sold en com. mission omy at either city 1 LLIOTT & DUNN, BANKERS, NO. 109 SOUTn THIUD STREET, PHILADELPHIA, DRAW BILLS OF EXCHANGE ON TUB 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, ana uaitimore, 4 m FINANOIAL.. Tin: FIRST MORTGAGE SINKING FUND 7 PER CENT. 40 YEAR GOLD BONDS or THR Chicap, Danville ani Yiacewies RAILROAD COMPANY. Total amount to IclMiicl,jt'.t, 500,- OOOon 1 IO Mllcw ofltoad, (Extending from Chicago throngh Efttorn Illinois to the Junction with tho Kvansvlllo and Tcrre naute Railroad, with which it forms the shortest TRUNK LINK to LouiHVlUo and the South), making the average of Bonds about 113,000 per mile, and It Is expressly guaranteed that the bond Ihsuc shall not exceed that sum. The Road traverses a country that assures a large and profitable business; Is built and equipped from Chicago to Homence, a distance of 66 miles, and Cl'OrJ THIS PORTION OK THE LINE ONLY WE NOW 01 FEU TDK U0ND8 FOR SALE. These Bonds are protected with extraordinary caro by registration and otherwise; the Interest upon them will be paid out of one-third tho net earnings, and the Sinking Fund, created and set aside, will provide ample means for their redemp tion. They are Olllclally Registered and Transferred by the Union Trust Company of New York, who thus become the custodiry)' thCSC Bonds. IT IS CONFIDENTLY BELIEVED TIIOT -m Bonds can db made moke perfectly secuke,tir MOKE ABSOLUTELY SAFE. It IB a CAPITAL ADVANTAGE of these Bonds that they bear 7 per cent, gold interest for 40 years ; and compared with 6 2cr cent, gold bonds, the addl tlonal 1 per cent, at compound Interest, for thirty years, would give the owner of this Bond a proUt of ta&l 128, and for forty years, 82003 43. Government 8ixes might be exchanged with this result: 810,000 would buy 112,000 of these bonds, payable In gold, yielding a profit in hand, and besides TUE GAIN OF 8-,000 PRINCIPAL AND THE AN NCAL 0 PER CENT. THEREON, WOULD, AT MATURITY, NET TIIE BUYER 824,041-10 ADDI TIONAL FROFIT IN INTEREST. Prices at present, 95 and accraed interest from October 1. Pamphlets, with Haps and detail, and the BONDS may be bad of us, or of ii? iiAvurv v iiieotiii:i:. Dealers In Government Securities, etc., No. 40 South THIRD Street, Philadelphia. Having personally examined this entire lino ot road, finished and projected, as well aa the country through which It runs, we oifer these Bonds with every confidence In their full worth and soundness. W. BAILEY LANG & CO., No. 54 CLIFF Street, New York, Agents for the sale of the Bonds. 11 23 tuths4t A RELIABLE HOME INVESTMENT. THE FIRST MORTGAGE BONDS OF THE Wilmington and Reading Railroad, BEARING INTEREST At SEVEN PER CENT, in Currency, PAYABLE APRIL AND OCTOBER, FREE OF STATE AND UNITED STATES TAXES. This road runs through a thickly populated and rich agricultural and manufacturing district. For tho present, we are offering a limited amount of the aoove Bonds at 85 CENTS AND INTEREST. The connection of this road with the Pennsylvania and Reading Railroads insures It a large and remu nerative trade. We recommend the boAda as the cheapest first-class Investment In the market. M, FAINTER & CO., BANKERS AND DEALERS IN GOVERNMENTS, No. 36 SOUTn THIUD STREET, 9 4 U2 31 PHILADELPHIA. QE,E.lIIi, KAV1S & CO., No. 48 SOUTH THIUD STREET, PHILADELPHIA. GlENDINNING, DAVIS & AMORT, No. 2 NASSAU STREET, NEW YORK. BANKERS AND BROKERS. Direct telegraphic communication with the New York Stock Boards from the Philadelphia oilico. 18 2 CITY WARRANTS BOUGHT AND SOLD. C. T. YERKES. Jr., & CO.. NO. 20 SOUTn THIRD STREET, PHILADELPHIA FINANOIAL.. CENTRAL RAILROAD OF I0VA. ITS SEVEN PER CENT. COLD FIRST MORTGAGE BONDS, Free of Government Tax, At 95 and Accrued Interest. This road runs through the richest and most ' thickly settled portion of this magnificent state, and Is the only link wanting to connect St. Louis and 8r, Paul by a diroct line, UT miles shorter than any other. It runs through the great coal Acids of Southern Iowa to the North, where coal Is Indispensable and must be carried. It runs from the great lumber regions of the North, through a district of country which Is destitute of this prime nsoesslhy. IT D0K3 NOT HON THROUGH A WILDERNESS, Where It would wait for years for a population to give It business, but through a tier of counties which are now producing about twenty million bushels or grain, most of which is freight for railroads. Forty-live miles are Just finished, and the Super intendent reports that on the portion open for busi ness the net earnings are more than the Interest liabilities. Sixty miles more are graded, and a million and a half of dollars havo already been expended on the work. Tho mortgage Is made to tho Farmers' Loan and Trust Company, and bonds can be Issued only at the rate of llfl.ooo per mile, or only half the amount upon some other roads. Special security is provided for tho principal and for the payment of Interest. First mortgages upon most railroads aro the very safest Investments, and, so fur as we can learn, there is not a single completed line in the Northwest which is not only paying Us Interest, but a good dividend upon Its stock. The immense grain and ot:ier freights to "be car ried away, and the domestic supplies to be brought In, ensure a profitable business. First Mortgage Bonds for so small an amount upon a road running through such a rich and already well-settled part of Iowa, can well be recommended as a perfcotly safe as well as very profitable invest ment. At the present rate they pay about ten per cent, on the Investment. Over S4U0,0tt) have already been taken by the Company's oillcers and others In terested In the enterprise. Pamphlets, with map, may be obtained, and subscriptions will be received In Philadelphia by B. 1C. JAMISON te CO., N. W. Cor. THIRD and CHESNUT SU., BOWEU & FOX, Icrchniita' lixclianc lluildlng-. And In New York at THE COMPANY'S OFFICES, No. 82 PINE Street, at the BANE OF NORTH AMERICA, No. 44 WALL Street, and at HOWES X MACY'S, No. 80 WALL Street. Pamphlets sent by mall on application. W. B. SHATTUCK, 11 13 stuthlnup TREASURER. UNITED STATES BONDS BOUGHT, SOLD, AND EXCHANGED ON MOST LIBERAL TERMS. GOLD BOUGHT AND SOLD AT MARKET RATES. COU PONS CASHED. PACIFIC RAILROAD BONDS BOUGHT AND SOLD. T O C I H BOUGHT AND SOLD ON COMMISSION ONLY. COLLECTIONS MADE ON ALL ACCESSIBLE POINT DE HA YEN & BR0., No. 40 South THIRD Street, in; PHILADELPHIA. i it. .1 a 71 iso : & 4:0., SUCCESSORS TO i. r. k 1:1,1.' ,v ;., 15ANKEHS AND DEALERS IN Gold, Silver, anfl Government Bonis, AT CLOSEST MARKET RATES, N. W. Cor. THIRD and CHESNUT Sts. Special attontion given to COMMISSION ORDERS In New York and Philadelphia Stock Boards, etc. etO; 6 5tiaai JOHN 8. RUSHTON & CO., No. 50 SOUTH THIRD STREET. NOVEMBER COUPONS AND CITY "V A. II 1 1 A. IS" T fej 10 5 8m BOUGHT AJTD SOLD. DR. M. KLINK CAN CURE CUTANEOUS Krnptiuna, Mark, on the Skiu, Ulcer, in tb. MirttAt, moutb aud u, .ore le ud iwi ot every ooaoeivalit. clmrucler. Oltioe, No. BHhouUk UKYUMU, btwM UUbsuuI uid Mftrk.t Sir at, 4 1 I . I 1 . L