t r -THE DAILT -EYEinKG TBL GRAPH PHIL ADBLril I A, JANUARY 18, 1870. 2 " i griniT or em raisss. atorinl OplnUn f tkt) I-fndlne; Joarsmla ; I'pon .!nrreiit. Tapir lmHel Brr liar Ur Ike Telnraph. THK i LAItOH QUESTION IN HOUTII ; , " ."- - CAUOLINA. JVom fVie ChurUrton Sew.' The Orangeburg Xcitt says emphatically 'tint where farmers do not ?ct what hand IhoYWHtit this vear "'tis tlioir own fault," ftf uch land has boon noil ls colored men, who ' are bnildincr and M'Ulinff nnon ilj but this . docs not hinder farmers from contracting ith these very men. A jentlonian in the ' fcoonty hart rented lands to families all aronnd him. The mon of these families are to work i In his contract for one-third, as heretofore. 1 The women are allowed to work the land , rented to the family, the owner having a lien on tbeir crop for the payment or tne rent. The owner, also, bv the terms of the contraot, . at certain times can call on all the hands at so much per day to work In his crop, ibis rar mor always has as many hands as he wants. Hy this arrangement, says our contemporary, the colored man has his home, his family " workingforhiniandforthemseryes. The owner of the land has hands lor ah tne iana ne wants , to ulnnt for himself, and the rent of it is tented out to cood paving tenants. Now, even suppose the land is sold, instead of rented, to these families, the same plan can operate, and the same seourity is given for hands for the planter, and a lien seenres the payment for the purchase of the land. And this latter is better, inasmuch as the seourity to both is permanent and not temporary, for one year. The colored man is settled and happy, and the planter has hands aronnd him ready at his command. Mutual forbearance and kindnesses on either side will seonre con tentment and prosperity to both. The col- - ored man is not avaricious he is satisfied with comfort. By this means he realizes the . ' wish of his heart to have a home. lie is elevated as a man and a laborer. He has " every inducement to be honest as a man and Industrious as a laborer. He is rendered contented and happy. It takes Tory little to make him happy, and he has a right to be happy. Without some such plan as this, the same difficulty will arise each year for nandx. And it will inorease every year, for the col ored man is resolved to have a home and a' start in life. ' .These calm and sensible words are well worthy of general consideration. Colored ' labor is the only labor that we can command; colored people have the political control of the State. Surely, then, it is wiser to make the colored men onr friends and fellow-labor ers in a common causo, than to aggravate the distrust and dislike which are already too bit- ter and too deep for the good of our State and people. ... . MARS ON THE PLATFORM. . ffWH the K'T. World. It is onr duty to present to the attention of the reader Major-General S. B. Roberts, and to solicit for him major-general admiration as . an author and an- orator. Of his feats of arms we know little, for there is less than little worth knowing; of his vocal range and volume we are left to surmise; of his literary capacity, a small green pamphlet, nine inches . one way by six tne otner, and containing .. nineteen pages of plunging panegyric, which , , nas come into our possession, enables us - to form a judgment. Its purpose is to set . I forth the services and characteristics of ' 1 - General Grant, and the title-page informs us '. . that it was delivered before the faculty and students of iale College in lHOft, and that the legislature of Connecticut, jealous of the aoadomio monopoly of so muoh eloquence, . by. unanimous petition, backed up by the t tears of the speaker and by the prayers of the chaplain and the clamerous solicitation of the ,,. local clergy, procured its repetition before them during the year ensuing. Since then its melodious cadences have slept in silence unless the author may now and then have j hummed or whistled thorn on dress-parade until the appearance of the pamphlet we have , . referred to. The General was not content to live merely in the transient memories of un dergraduates and tne muddled reminiscences of rustio legislators. He invokes a wide an- dience. His ambition is not unreasonable, - ana we wiu neip mm to its realization, i The bees, it is said, swarmed about the mellifluous lips of Plato before he was waddled, and their hum and honey prefigured ' the music and sweetness which in after time mould flow from the lips aforesaid. . What Snseots may have clustered about the infant ,. aperture oi tne jaajor-uenerai it is not easy ' ' to conjecture. . Perhaps they were blue bottles. They make a good deal of noise of a confused and incoherent character, and these . ,'k qualities exactly prefigure the qualities of the.' ' and rery long, and very incomprehensible. liike the idol-breakers of the Crusades, the orator strews his way with broken images: ' Cracked ngures or nneecn. mutilated troDes. ; ' and all the dinjecta membra of a savage verbal " Iconoclast, lie is the centre of a stupendous ' system of meteoric adjectives, which decline to swing in regular rhetorioal orbits, but llame in erratic parabolas and wide semi- . ' circles, plunging into eaoh other now and tnen, and issuing in general connaeTation. ' n . 'We have employed a good many figures of ' " speech in shadowing forth some of the char acteristics of the General's style, but onr ex. cuse must be that ordinary language is not . , adequate to tne purpose. . . , The essay contemplates a general survey of Grant's career, from the tanyard of Galena to the Executive Mansion. The rapid traasition from one office to the other kindles the mind ' of the orator to a pitch of volcanic fervor. v 'Mrs. Grant," he says, referring to the Gene ral s simple rue at ualena, "who then spread ' a frucal dinner, laid bv her willinir and helo Ing hands, was content to appear in matronly calicoes and dimities immaculate and fresh from the laundry. . Now the vexation and worry, of her life are to find appropriate . poiit-laoe from Btns&ela looms and satins , ' .', from Lyons mills to grace the table where ., twenty courses are spread," etc. This is col oulated to leave upon the mind of the unwary ' tne impression that Mrs. Grant serves up Soint-labe and Lyons to her guests in plaoe of inde aux t runes, supreme de volaille, and cotelettes a la Maintenon. Are such the prandial usages at the White House? If so, ' there are probably camels-hair shawls for ' dessert ' and brocade peplnms br way of 7tor$,(f(mvrei. "Contrabands," he continues, "in pure white kids (an unconstitutional v dexter covering, by the way, for which the i steward ought to be impeached) "and Bid . dies in starch and Marseilles" (insurrection- . ary and mncilagenous attire) "'attend, in the ' atatelinesa f royal livery, to pour Burgundy t end to change courses for ambassadors and t , plenipotentiaries whone arms are 'quartered with kingly crests." It Is interesting to be Informed by authority so unquestionable that fetarth and Marseilles are the constituents of ' royal livery, and, though that panoply seems Inappropriate to the investiture of a repuu lican waiter, we suppose it mut be all right ml frarwrlit villi inn urlnns reril to our liber- I ties. But we are dooply concerned to lera I that the diplomatic corps at Washington quarter their crests with kings. Have the wnintor brood or aenpots wno roost -wun awful eye" upon the thrones of Europe sur reptitiously sent tbeir relations over core to watch for symptoms of pip in our national bird, so that they may Htep in at the wgat moment and wring us invalid necxr auis ought to be looked into) and prudence snj genta that a Congressional committee ought to: investigate the horaldry of the plenipo tentiaries on whom the contraband in kids and the Biddies in imperial starch and royl Marseilles bestow libations of Burgundy and Kbeiius at the board of our guileless aud un suspecting President. Although the orator awoiis wun mucu fervor upon dinner-tables, and dresses, and high society. the visible and tangible conse quents of his'hero's renown he strays away now and then into by-paths, historic, moral istic, ethnological, and otner. ue laiss about Egypt, and Persia, and Babylon, and says that those elder States, eminent as they were in obelisks, unapproachable as they were in sphinxes and holy bulls, had no General Grant, and henoe the dust of them has been winnowed from the earth and a new divinity has been impregnated. "There are numerous instances," he says, "of the elevation of men from places of obscurity to thrones and empires. But they have been the creatures of chance;" and they have been a number of things and not been a number of other things. All of which the speaker re cites with muoh confidence and many excla mation points, Bhowing his mastery of his tory and of the minor resources-ol compost tion. Of the colonels who went out to the war, no one returned who claimed to be his fGrant'sl peer. He carved his way to fame a fame that is not of tavern song;" and the sneaker predicts for it a duration as eternal as I bat or monumental brass or alabaster, Greatness like that possessed by his hero, and the renown and the achievement conse quent thereon, require some ocoult explana tion. Fambling about the abysses of his in. ner consciousness, the orator finds the key of the mystery. It is Grant's "automony which has done the business. . No manual of terminology with which we are acquainted casts light upon the meaning of this mysteri ous polysyllable, and its obscurity impels us into labrynths of conjecture. What is it ? An organ 7 An attribute t A new style oi hat ? A talisman ? Grant's "automony," we are told, is perfect, and that is why he won the battle of bhiloh and got eieoted to tbe Presidency. The man of genius, on the other ' hand, has an imperfect "auto mony," and can never become truly great. He is a machine with a screw loose, and he fails "when relative homogeneity of powers succeed." Grant, he thinks, is not a man of genius, but is made of ttterner stuff. He prooeeds to liken him first to a woven fabrio, tnen to a fresco, and then to a mosaic; to which similitudes is appended the certification that he is "dyed in the wool If he had commanded Wellington's army in the Peninsula, instead of lurking behind the lines of Torras Vedras, he would have stormed Madrid. If he had entered Moscow as Na poleon did he would have wintered there and had private theatricals in the Kremlin. If -he had led a host to Egypt, he would have snapped his fingers at the disaster of Aboutur and rioted on rnaraoh s flesh pots. This is high praise, and when it is bestowed by one general upon another it is bo very high as to be not easily dis tinguishable from satire. In truth, the eulogy of General Roberts throughout is of much too robust and in'mrpnrate a charaoter, If it were applied to Juhun Ctcsar or Alex ander of Macedon, it would-, be preposterous adulation. If its purpose were to bring its subject into derision, such purpose could not have been better subserved. Ine essay ex hibits the peril which is apt to attend the warrior when he takes np an nnwonted wea pon. It is possible that General Roberts might make a respectable figure at the head of a regiment or brigade; out nis initial escapade in literature is calculated to strike more terror to the bosoms of his friends than his sword ever Zii to the bosoms of his foes. The soldier whom lie so indiscreetly seeks to honor cannot feel obliged to him for his doubtless well-meant, but clumsy and blundering, panegyrio; and the most oour teous wish we can indulge towards tne writer is that his little pamphlet may never reach the modest and worthy gentleman whom it daubs with such merciless and preposterous adulation. THE WHITE MAN'S FBIEND. Tremthell. Y. Tribvne. ,' In that episode of the protracted debate on tbe Virginia question in the Senate which particularly marked the 13th of January, an affecting incident occurred well calculated to revive many fainting souls ana to energize many weary znjrids of the Gaucasian persua sion. . It has been a matter of complaint tnat during tbe deliberations of .the banate upon the Virginia matter, bo much should have been said of sable . and , so little of Heater colored Americans; and, upon the day men tioned, Mr. Trumbull bud expressed mild doubts of the true friendship of Mr. Sumner for Americans of African descent, or rather of the real value of that friendship; and Mr. Sumner had, of course, responded, most un necessarily, we think, however briefly. It was just at this time that the white man. neglected and despised and made of little account, pushfed aside in the Senate with all his interests and hoDes. his historic dicnitv. Gis coioriess ouucie. nis giraiimt nair, nis nne facial angle, and the unexceptionable curve of his shin-boue it was just then that this melancholy member of the human family found a fiiend ! And such a friend I ; One nho in his own person may be supposed to represent all the virtues, all tbe pre-eminent abilities, all tbe ethnio.miiieriomv, ail the gifts and all the graces of the Anglo-Saxon race I - Need we say tnat we refer to Mr. Senator Saulsbury ? : i For a long time the eminent white man had wearily listened to the never-ending, still beginning talk about the "niggers, nntil tbe lion. Willard Saulsbury could bear it no longer. lie rose, and, what is more remarka ble, he stood in his plaoe, to utter his protest against this exolusive attention to Ethiopia. 'Gentlemen all talk," he said indignantly. "of m their devotion to the negro; they are always telling us how much they are attraoted to him; the poor white race seems to have no body to say one word lor it. men, witn an infinite pathos, he added, "Nobody seems to care for tbe white man now." The words went forth like a wail. They sighed and swelled like the death-aong of a on.ee great people. . They seemed like a farewell to fast vanishing greatness, to glories which have illustrated the annals of the world, and to a fecundity which has done so muoh to replen iah it. "Nobody cares for the wnlte maitnow! That every honorable auditor, upon this solemn announcement, did not burst into tears; that all these white Senators did not join in a general dirge and long-resounding croon, proves only the Senatorial imbecility and dccTndntion For ill it be believed that the words wrung from the blooding heart of the- (Senator from Delaware worcU which a Korean might haTe uttered over the deoaying glories of Ins country will it be ueiievea that this sorrowful statement was reoeivo.l with "great laughter?" Well might the weeping Senator have been more discour aged than ever; uut ne stood nrmiy upon nis loos to say: "I am the friend of the white man. lie nas one iriena, at Senate of the United States." least, in the We congratulate white men generally upon their champion. Let us write "JVtl deperan dum!" upon onr banners, a id with the battle- . , i . ... . . i . L3 1 " cry oi DBiuHuury ana toe iinjiu-aaauuei rush once more into the breach! Our own views are well known. ' We have songhtfor justice to the African, bnt we have never bar. trained for the extincticn'of white men, and we are not ready to bud run to it now. n we, . ...... T with Mr. Saulsbury, were the only white men upon this continent, we should solemnly ea treat him to Hold np nis own ena, wnne we tried to hold np ours. , We have been muoh puzzled to understand wny tne con a tors should have "laughed at the prospect of tbeir own extinction; but when all the rest of the white men are gone, should we survive and enoounter Mi. Saulsbury in a bowling wilderness of negroes and monkeys, we pro mise to commit suicide in his company after the high Roman fashion, TOE PRESIDENTIAL, ELECTION CLOSE AT HAND WHERE STAND THE DEMOCRACY? From the IT. T. Sun. We take it for granted that the Democrats intend to make a strenuous effort to carry the next residential election.1 It will be high time to do so, unless they wish to pans into history bIohu with the old Federalists, for it will then be sixteen years since meysuoceeued in a national contest even ty a plurality of votes, and twenty years since tney elected a rresident by an absolute majority. This is a lone time in this fast age i and if the De mocracy rail in 1S7Z, tney wui nnd it very difficult to keep up their organization ' by hopes that have been so oiten blasted, and b promises that seem destined never to be f filled. The Democratic party, then, must triumph in 1872, or dissolve. But while the leaders are beginning to loos around Tor tne princi ples and the candidates wherewith to make a strucrcle for victorv. wo will call their atten tion to an historio precedent or fact which bears very closely upon the main question, and whose consideration tney cannot longer afford to postpone. From the year 1826 down to the present time, the party which has secured a majority of the House of Repre sentatives at the election held in the middle of a Presidential term, has invariably chosen its candidate ior tne presidency two years afterwards. There has not been an exception to this rule in the last forty-four years; and we trace it no further back, because it was in 182(, in the middle of John Quincy Adams' . A it. ! t t J! '1.1 ierm, iuui me lines wnica nave uiviueu par ties since the Monroe ep ch began to be clearly traoed. i There have been t vo or three seeming ex- cent ions to this rule; but, when closely ex amined, they will prove to be striking exem plifications of it. t or example, take the case of the House which elected Mr. Banks Speaker in the middle of 1'ierce s administration. ; It was composed of three parties, of which the Democrats were - tne strongest, though still only a minority of the whole number. The subsequent Presidential election faithfully reflected the state or parties in the House of Representatives. , Three candidates rau, and though Mr. Buchanan was chosen, he received only a minority ot tne popular vote. 'xhere is a pniiosopny underlying this re markable historio fact; but we pass over it, and deal only with the fact itself. The party. then, which shall carry the next Congress will elect the next .resident; and nenoe, the struggle, for the occupancy of the White House after the close of lien. (Jrant s admin istration will practically be carried on and de cided, not In 1872, but in this present year; and it will begin as early as August, when some of the States hold Congressional elec tions. , ' , i. And now, gentlemen of the Democratic party, what is the platform of principles on which you expect to elect a majority of . tha House of ltepresentatives this coming summer and fall t Xs it to be the financial program proclaimed by Mr. Mungen on the door of Congress, or that just delivered by Governor Hoff man to tbe New York Legislature ? Is it to be an approval of the fifteenth amendment according to John Quincy Adams, or its nulli fication according to YYidiam M. Tweed r la it to bo tbe forcible expulsion of Republican members from the Georgia Legislature, er tbe voluntary exodus of Democratic members from the Indiana Legislature ? Is it to bs free Cuba, free trade, and free voting? or is it to be a tirade against everything bearing the name free, including the old Democratic doc trine of free suffrage, to be followed by a revival of the proscriptive Enow-Nothing creed, with a general onslaught upon all races of men who will not bow down and worship the wooden Indian over the portals of St. Tammany ? ' j We do not advise, but only suggest to ' tha Doroocracy that time presses, and that they wonld do well to remove the debris of their two last platforms, and erect a new one in tbeir stead without delay. ' SPECIAL NOTICES. jjja OFFICE OF WELLS, FAKUO & COM-; FANY, No. 84 BROADWAY, Hkw lUKa, Da- oc mbcr 28, 18t. Notice la hereby (Iran, that the Transfer Rooof Wells, FarKo A Company will be CLOSKDoa the 10th day of JANUARY, 1170, at S o'olook P, M .to enable the Canipany to ascertain who are owners ' of the atuck of tha old Ten Million Capital. Tha owners of that stock will be entitled to participate In the distribution of asseta piovided for by tha agreement with tha Psciflo EiprtBS Company. The Transfer Booka will ba opened on tua S34 day of JANUARY, at 10 o'ciook A. M , after which time the $5,000,IHO new stock will be delivered. . ' Notice la also irtven that tha Transfer Booka of this Com pany will be CLOSKD on the i&th day of JANPABY, 1870, at o'clock P. M., for f ho purpose of holding the rnaual ELECTION OK DIRECTOR!) of tbia Company. The bocks will ba RH-OPKNKD on the 7th day of FEB RUARY, at 10 o'olook A. M. 12 81 tfc7 ; GEORGE K. OTIS, Secretary- OFFICE OF THE BELyiDERE MANU- KACTCKIHO COMPANY. - J M Uklvuiebk, N. J., Deo. 8, 1889. Notice Is berrhr sirfti to the stockholders of the UKL VIDEREMAMUD AC'l U RINU CO i t A N Y respwtirely. that assessments amounting to SIXTY PER OKMTUH of tha cauilal stock of said company hero been made and pamfrtir the same called lor on or before tha eighth day of February. A. D. 1M7U, and that paymeat of such a proiiortlon ot all sums ol money oy tueiu suosonoea is called for and demanded from in em on or before the said tune. ! l'iow B. rjll'KRRERD, ftooroUry. . sjT OFFICE OF THE-CITS' TREA8URER, Pbilaxiblpuia. Deo. SS, lfldH. Warrants raaiatefM to No. iS.WO win be paid on presentation at this office, in terest oaaaiac from data. JOS. if. MArfpER, .' ' f City Treasurer I2UI n&" BHAMOKIN COAL , OilFANr, Puukku-hia, Deo. St, 1MB. The Annual Meetinc of the otookuoldnrs of the above. nameOj Company, and an election of Directors to sorvs for ensuing yr, will beld st Ihetr Oltioe on W KIN KNDAY, tbe 1Mb day of January, A. D. liflii. st 11 o'clock M. U til lot O. B. LINDHA Y, Secretary. 6PEOIAL NOTIOE8. vur. F A M K - INSURANCE - COMPANY, , .Oiflca No. OH BB!lTT 8(ro. ' I'hii.a I.MI (Mm A .Iannis H 1R7A Th fnllnwln at itrnnani .1 .kit li'AMte INM.l & NHIC .;,i -n of tfir condition on the 8lt darn linm- tor, lmti, is pnbliahwl in oooidDO with a Mt of A- nilily: Mitl Dthnrtud. and anbaoribad 2ivi,vmi0 iutin yam in .....r. ... l3tIM W inorta W' flnrt " l att In tha oltjr of i'iu(aeiiiii . . Rs.s.wno Unliarr Ivationivl Rok of Republic !.... W.OHnW IV t) i 1(J,4.H)M0 l'hilnrtflphia l;itj Sic Pur Donlai Ulwraberof (Jotnmsroa (took ..... .nnna nm. 1,tM9 I mm i n collateral. Kr lri HtAt.. I. M 00 I'Oloa fiunitur and fUturee. 8.Kinio J ii I r wit Una Hurt accrued.... l!filfiimii riua hv nt? aoIj. mtn ::v": 1.H.MI mi 4.H.VI o InntalniflnUion stock dn and aaable., vaan vi nana ana in Daaa...., SUdlA M RRnv.lPTH tnn tun Prrminmaon Dra rwka amounting to $4,198,788, Interest , .n.wn . 10.7WI7J . 1IU lolit-ioa. $il,57m LESS LOS8RS. KXPRNSltfl FTfi Flra loaaes 4.smi-77 Commtaiton 8 tirpd fiS HxpaiueKent, adiertlninf, talarlaa. . U.tWJ lS ntvimrwiia , January a? MfM Jnljr n........ B.'.UiW l iiaki.h Kltill A KIIWIR, Prmldont. .W ILLIAM H. Hliawif, Vioa Prmldant. WII.I.IAM8 I. Bl.M( HAHI, Becretarr. 1 l;ituntu(;lt BS?- FROVIDKNT LIFE AND TRUST COM- Pru.adbi.phia, lat Mo. 11th, 1870. At lha annual alMtinn hM nn th lllf.K n.tftnt. in An.. lormitr witn tua cbartar, tha followin named paraona were nnanimonalf elected Director of tha Prortdant lUa ana iiwi uomptnj, to eerre lor inrea ft-ara: Daniaei n. Duipier. n m. u. ijongatrein. 'Rlobard radbury. 1 Tha foltoain Dirsotoia ho'd over T. Wiatar itrown, Henry Haines, Kicnard Wood, 1 JusUa II, Morris. William Hacker. I Charles V. Coffin. A nd at a BDoial maetlna of th Board of Uireetara. raia nia aajr, tua loiiowing omoers were aoanimouii re- eieciea t . i H A Ml'FL K. nHIPT,KY, Presldenf. ! ' WILLI AM O. LONU6TBKTI1, Vioe-Tresldank 118tbstu3 KOU I.ANU PARKY, Actuary. fis- TnE ENTERPRISE INSURANCE COMPANY, OF rUILADELPHIA. Offloe, Ko. w rrainui streer. , January II. 1870. Attba snnnal meetina of the stockholders of the Com pany, beld on the loth day of January, the following (en- tietnen were eieota uireutors lor ine ensuing year . Ratchford ritair, Nalbro' Frazier, lohn H. Hrown, j . 1.. jirrinffer, William O. Booltoa, Charles Wheeler, Tboo-aa H. Montgomery,' John M. Atwoon, Ilenjamin T. Tradiok, James L. Claahorn, ueorge ULmuare, James M. Aertsaa. F. Ratchford Starr was re-eleotnd President and I'hamaa 11. Montgomery re-eleoteil vice President. 1 lltuthaot ALKa. W. wiaiKK, BecreUry. BtfS- OFFICE OF THE FREEDOM IRON AND STEEL COMPANY, No. S80 South THIRD fHn.ADiti.PHiA. Jan. it. ixto. The annual maetina of the Htfirkhnlrinra of tha KK.KK- DOM IKON AND STEEL COMPANY will be hold at .. tU,--. n A U. t .. M Ir-Jll U .1 U IHUliin sJ- .A miv vii'VQ wi uo vi'iiijiaut i'u. mv aouiu mini nurvcv, Pbilade'phis. on THUhSDAY, Kebrnary 8. 1K70, at IS o'clock M., when an Flection will be held for Thirteen Directors to eerre for the ensuing rear. iHe Transfer Books will be olostd for fifteen days prior to tJie nay oi said emotion. 1 18 Ut CHARLES WESTOH. Jr.. HenrUry. gOr CAMBRIA IRON COMPANY. THE Annual Meeting "of the Ktockhnldnrs of tha CAMBRIA IRON COMPANY will be held at their Office, No. 4tu CHR8NUT Street, Philadelphia, on TUKS DAY, the 18th day of January next, at 4 o'clock P. M., when an election will ba held for Seven Directors, to eerre for the ensuing year. JOHN T. KILLR. Secretary, Philadelphia, Deo. 16. 186, lSH8adt jct- PHILADELPHIA AND READING RsIL- - ROAD OO., Office, No. 827 8. POUR fU Street. j PHlLlPJtLPHIA, Deo. 21, 1869. ' DIVIDEND NOTICE. The Transfer Books of tha Company will be closed on FRIDAY, the Slat instant, and reopened on TUESDAY January II, 187a A dividend of FIVE PER CENT, has been declared on the Preferred and Common Stock, dear of National an 1 State taxes, payable in CASH, on and after January 17, 1870, to tha holders thereof as thay shall stand registered on the books of the Company on the 81nt Instant. All payable at this office. All orders for dividend mast ba witnessed and stamped. S. BRADFORD, 22 6Ut ' Treasurer. Bgy- THE PARIIAM FAMILY 8EW1NG MA- ohine combines many good qualities. It does its work beautifully. ' It la very simple in construction. It is very durable and strong. It is elegant in design and finish. It is rery quiet In its movements. ' It makes the lock-stitch. In fanfc. it im tha run twnifc In nA ' Bold on easy terms. Salesroom, No. 70 704, 701, 704, 704 CUESNUT Street. 1 17 8t 1SJ- COLD WEATHER DOES NOT CHAP orroochen the akin after nsinar WRIGHT'S At, GLYCF.R1NE. Itadailrnse makee the skin delicately aoitana Daaauioi. rxua rjy au uruMisi. R. A G. A. WRIGHT. 848 No. 824 CHE8NUT Street. tgy- COLTON DENTAL ASSOCIATION vriKi nnbcu tun anrsvuotio uwm ui NITROUS OXIDE. OR LAUGHING GAS. And devote their whole time and practice to extracting teetn witnout pain. Offloe. K1GH1 H and WALNUT Street. 11 DR. F. K. THOMAS. THE LATE OPE- rator of the Oolton Dental Association, is now tba omy one in rnuaaeipuia wuo qotuum iub euLirv time sou practice to extrao4inn teeth, abanlutely without pain, by I roan nitrous oxioo aaa. unce, u n alh u i ot, i sot ICT BATCHELOR'S HAIR DYE. THIS splendid Hair Dra iehe bast in tba world ; the enly true and perfect Dye; harmless, reliable, instantaneous ; no disappointment no ridiouloua tints; remedies tha UI eSectaof bad dyeat inviiroratea and leavea tba Hair soft and beautiful, blaeM or brum. bold, by all JJrugjnsta an Parf uinara : and Drooerlv anDlied at BatohaloTa AVi Fa tory. No. 18 BOND Street. New York, sVmwft M- QUEEN FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY, ar - mvnAM awn i.ivrnpnnT. CAPITAL, 2,000.1100. 84B1NK, ALLRN A DULLESjAcanta, H j1j,,.u and WALNUT Strait. HOSIERY, ETO. v v XIOW OPEN AT UOFMANN'S U0SIEBY STORE, No.' 9 NORTH EIGHTH STREET, . GENTS' WHITE WOOD. SHIRTS, . " GENTS' WHITE WOOL DRAWERS, ' " GENTS' SO Ail LET WOOL SHIRTS, GENTS' SCARLET WOOL DRAWERS, GENTS' MERINO SHIRTS AND DRAWERS, LADIES' MERINO VESTS, '. LADIES' MERINO DRAWERS, LADIES' CASHMERE VESTS. i ' CHILDREN'S MERINO UNDERWEAR, I GENTS' COTTON SHIRTS AND DRAWERS, LADIES' COTTON VESTS AND DRAWERS. Also, a very large assortment of T wtlj I . . . . , I COTTON WOOL, AND MERINO HOSIER!. QENT.'S FURNISHING GOODS. DAT UN T BROULDE 11-S SAM r A SHIRT MANUFACTORY, : AND GENTLEMEN'S FURNISHING STORE, PERFECTLY FITTING SHIRTS AND DRAWER nmila from measurement at very short notltieJ All other articles of GENTLEMEN 8 DREB GOODS la full fartoty. - - i WTNCHB8TEK A CO.. 1H . Nft 100 CUBdNUT Street. YIOLIDAY 1 U E 8 K K T 8 XX . t i torn i ; ' ' , GENTLEMEN. . i . i J. W. 8COTT & CO., . No. 81 CHESNUT Street, Philadelphia, i BtTirp onr doors below Continental Hotel FOR BT6RE niONTS, ABTLUMSj FA .i u;;. ... toiues. eio, Patent Wire Railing,' Iron Bedsteads,' Ornament "Wire Work. Paper-makers' Wires, and eerj Tarle- OI wire wore, iuaxiui act urea oy M. WALKER A SONS isrmwt No. UN. SIXTUStreet. FIRE ANU BURGLAR PROOF SAt-H MARVIN'S SAFES! i ; She Sest Quality! The Lowest Trices! ' ' "'J r : The Largest Assortment! FIRE PROOF. i! f BUEGLAE PROOF. MARVIN & CO., Ho. 721 CHE8TITUT St, (Masonlo Ball), PHILADELPHIA. t68 BrMdwAy, N. T. 108 BtQk St., Cleveland, O. A number of Second-hand 8&fea of different make and slzei for Bale VEEY LOW. in- SAFES, MACBTNERT, eto , mored and ItolstfM promptlj and carefully at reasonable rates. . Please call and examine oar assortment.' 450,000 SAVED : In fine iFatcltes and Jewelry. The content of a laro MARVIN'S SAFE Were perfectly preferred dnrlne the destrnctlre fire of laat Saturday- at the store of el. 91. Warne, 71 Chestnut ; (Street. MARVIN'S 8AFES ABB AlV9VC FirP-Pmnf I IIIHJ J I it W I IUUIf " Always Dry. MARVIN & CO., 721 CHESTNUT Street, (MASONIC HALL), mot PlITLADEIiPlIIA, MARVIN'S SAFES! The JJestlQnality! T . 1 The Lowest Prices! The Xiarrest Assortment! FIRE PROOF. BURGLAR PROOF. . MARVIN.. & CO', ' v. , :r.--;.,: .. ,vr, f ; Ho. 721 CHESTNUT St., , (Kaaonlo Hall), S05 Broadway, N. Y. . PHILADELPHIA.. l(M Bank St, Clefoiand, O. A namber of Seoftnd-aand Safes ot different makes and slzus for sale VERT LOW. - (l tiiatuiut ,s SAFES, MACHINERY, eto., moTed aad kolate'd promptiv and carefully, at reasonable rates. . Please call and examine oar assortment wines and Liquors. I" I F . n M A J E GT CIIALIFAGIIE, 215 SOUTH FKONT STREET i i. fnBE "ATTENTION OF THE TRADE 13 aonoiiea to the followinff vary Lhotoe rVrnsa, ate, lor sale by S BOUTH FRONT BTRKKT. tlHAMPAGMCS. A rent, tnp M.Uf Ini' Hi BtontAliello, Carta Blene. Carta Hlanohe, and diaries Fane's Urand Via Kuaenle, and Vin Imperial, M.,Kle. man A Co., of Haytnoe, bparkling Uoeeila and HliLNB H AI'KIF At. Id island, BontS mile Reeefra. h 11 K 1(1 !.-K. rluifilluhs. Amontillado. Tn.7J. lette, I''e and Colden liar, Ciowa, ete. POH I H. Vliiho Velho Ileal. Valletta, aed Crowa. CLARKT8. l'romia Aina Vim.. Montf errand aad Bar. deaus. Clsreta and hautoroa Wines CIH. "Merterriwea," HR ANDlkH. Hennessey. OtanL Dunuy t Oo.' TAriaaa vintaaes. - 4t c A It B T A I K 8 A 61 0 O ALL, Noa. US WALNUT and II ORAKITB Straota. Importers of BBAKOIF8, IT IE8, WIN, OLIYK Oil, HTO.t AND . ; COMMISSION MEROHA.KTS Fortha aalaof PUBK OLD BYE, IVUKAT. AND BOURBON WHI8. avAivo. - ' e as apf CAP STAIRS' OT T V2 OIL-AN INVOICE af tha abora for sals by tKtpt Nos.lM WALNUT and ill URAN1TKHU. LUMBER. 1870 8PRTJCB JOIST. BPKTJCK JOIST. BEMIAKTK. HEMLOCK. 1870 1870 PKAWINKD CLEAR PINK. SEASONED CLEAR PINK. CHOICE PATTERN PINK. 1870 SPANISH CEDAR, FOR PATTERNS. ;: RED CEDAR, .. 1870 FLORIDA F LOOKING. FLORIDA FIXWIUNQ. , CAIiOLlNA FLOORING, VIRGINIA FLOORING. DELAWARE FLOORING, A8II FLOORING)." WALNUT FLOORING. ' FLORIDA STEP BOARDS. RAIL FLANK. ,1870 1 Q"7A WALNUT BOARDS AND PLANK. 1 Qry A 10 I U WALNUT BOARDS AND PLANK. 10 I V WAI-NUT BOARDS. WALNUT PLANK. - 1870 UNDERTAKERS' LUMBER. UNDERTAKERS' LUMBKIi. RED CEDAR. ' WALNUT AND FINi , 1870 1870 PKASONED POPLAR. SKAtiONED CUEKR7, 1870 ANU. WHITE OAK PLANK AND BOARDS, IUCKOKY. 1 CTfi CIGAR BOX MAKERS' H OTA 101 V CIGAR BOX MAKERS' 10 4 V SPANISH 4JKDAR BOX BOARDS, FOR SALE LOW. 1870 CAROLINA SCANTLING, CAROLINA II. T. SILLS. NORWAY SCANTLING. 1870 1QTA CEDAR SHINGLES. . i OTA 10 V CYPBES8 SHINGLES. ID ( U MAULS, BROTHER CO., Ill - No. 8500 SOUTH Street TJNITED STATES BUILD KRa1 MaXJ: FIFTEENTH STREET, BELOW MARKET, ESLXE ft BR0THEB, Proprietors. WOOD MOULDINGS, . ', .,' 4 , BRACKETS, KTO. , BALUSTERS AND TURNING WOEkJ A Large Stock ajwa7 on hand. ' " . I It am TAR EL PLANK, ALL THICKNESSES. A. 1 COMMON ri.ANK. ALli TUlUaVNlCbtUJIoV. ., ,r . 1 COMMON BOARDS. 1 and 1 8IDK FRNtJK BOARDH. Willi K PINE FLOORING HOARDS. TKIMW AND SAP PINK FLOORlNUd. IU and iV. SPRUCE JOIST. ALL SIK8. , . MKMIIItlK JOINT, AI.li BIZIKB. ' PLASTERING LATH A SPECIALTY. Toaether with a ceaeraJ aaaortaaant of Buildina LntnlMS for sale low for oaaif. T. W. 8 M A VIZ, llMDm r it i run in ana BiiutaMtreeta. U M B E R UNDER ALWAYS DRY. P V B B Wainnt, Wnlte Pine, Yellow Pine, Spruce, Hem lock, Shingles, eta, always on hand at low rates. '' 1 WATSON A GLLUNGQAM, IM ' yo. tti RICHMOND Street, 18th ward. LEOAL NOTIOE3. L ETTERS TESTAMENTARY HAVING b4wn frranted to tba ettbscribers upon the F.state of muiuri. CARR, deceased, all persona indebted to the roe will mk pAyinooW vnd thoM hrinc oUlizu preMat ' J ,.v- JACOB DINGER, No, 12SW r. RIOUTH Htreei. EDWIN M. OARR, 18 81 toBt ' Wo. law MARLBOROUOH fitreet. TN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS FOR A THK CITY AND COUNTY OS" PHILADELPHIA. i In tbe matter of tha Assigned Rotate of UEOKUE BJ TOW NSKND. . T The Auditor appointed brthe Court to audit, settle,; J .1 1 . . 1 . . .( V, )u DU SAUlU A anu ftiijua, in, au wi iuu, ui u vnivr a. w au no, aminn wi uKOHUH . ivwiiMJiu, unaerassianinenc ior ueneut of creditors, and to report distribution of the balance is his hands, will meet toe parties interested for the pur pore f bis appointment, at his offioe. No. Ill South SIXTH Street, In the City of Philadelphia, oo TilUH Pal, tee W Oa oi January, ivu, at s o cloos r. nt. . A. ATWOOD GHAOE, 1 15 atntbSt Auditor. IIAIiDING'S EDITIONS 0 - TEE 110 L Y BIBLE. FAMILY, PDLP1T, AND PHOTOGRAPH BIBLRSi '' WEDDING iND BIRTHDAY PRESENTS. ALSO, PRESENTATION BIBLES FOR cnvRCBEs, .' : . CLERGYMEN, . . ' 'V,-,.. . SOCIETIES AND TJCACHEK8, ETC - ' v New and superb assortment, bound In Rich LeTsnu Turkey Morocco, Paneled and Ornamental Designs, equal to the London and Oxford editions, at less thai nair weir pnecn. rNo. m CHE8NUT Street. J 1. STRENGTH, BEAUTY, CHEAPNIS3c6mbINE1) HARDING'S PATENT CHAIN-BACK rilOTOOItAPU ALBDUS. For Wedding Holiday, or Birthday Prest'ots, ttoesft Alburns are particularly adapted. J The book trade, and dealers to fancy articles, wlf; nnd the most axtenilva aaaortment of PuotogTanli Albums in the country, and superior to any hereto1 fore made. For great strongth, durability, ani cheapna, Harding's PuU-nt Chain-back Albums art inrtvaliftd. Purchaaors Will flnl It greatly to thelt advantage to examine these new lines of goods be fore mnklucr no their orders for Stock. Alto, a large and splendid assortment of new styles Of Photograph Albums maae ia me iisunmauuer, ir'--i hW-! QRESNUr Street, Philadelphia. 117 T?MP1RK FIJITE MANTEL WORKS J. B KIV KM i No SlasUlliUiNUT ntraas, luwnas