TOE DAILY EVENING TKLKOKAPH PHILADELPHIA, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1870. - The Character f IaMeelt Frswt fas Leit Sttturfiny Re Dine. f t Bit ThocoM Malory's oUefrtion iof the i .ArthnHnn romanfru, if King ' Arthnr Is "flos ' Mgnnv1' Hlr lAncclot da Lake is "'llos erpii trun ct clariRsimornrn viromm." He holds a rank which foidignity and grace is second nlj to that of Arthur, and in tragic interest it hardly yields even to the king s. 1 A W.f ' ' rketch t such a character, as it stands in th , t! fmmct, cannot , be wholly uninteresting. Contracted with the great heroic figures of 'Ihe ancient epic; it shows forcibly what a 'i. v. world of change bad been by the Christian - i idea introduced into the region of the imagi- ' nation. 1 And, as a conception dating from ' ' ' mediKTval sources, it is a proof how fat the -Mm "and truest ideal of oivilization the basis in the individual of all that can really Vl ' wake society move forward and move higher HBiay precede the actual development of i . ; those conditions which thd word civilization - , now to us donotcs. Incidentally, a review of . Lancelot's character cannot but bear on the -''- magnificent series of poems which Mr. Tenny aon has lately completed. To study what must have formed the chief material for those jwems is to recognize with greater olearness than before the genius which has been at work upon them, the intuitive delicacy in se lection, the power and the beauty, which will lender them immortal. Sir Lancelot is the son of King Ban of Benwicke, shadowy king of a still more ' shadowy kingdom. In the legend, Benwicke v, - is deiined only by the details that it is beyond . seas, and that when returning thence from hiB wars with Lancelot after the final diflrup " iion of the Court, and on receiving news of Mordred's treason, Arthur lands at Dover. "'When first established as a knight of Ar- 1 thnr's Court, Lancelot is chosen as the fore most warrior, to conduct Queea Guinevere to ' ker marriage from the realm of her father, ' ,'. Leodogrance, of Cameliard. Then began the , love between them the bond of true false hood and of loyal disloyalty which lasted to the end, and which made the tragic element , ( in Lancelot's life. Only on two occasions, and on both by the arts of an enchantress, ( Lancelot is unwittingly drawn from his faith-. " fulness to the Queen. By the first of these f magical deceptions he became the father of Sir Galahad, and the whole matter was after wards explained and confessed to the , . Queen. When the deception 1 was prac ' ; ; tised a seoond time, and on his appearing, ' since the affair was instantly known to Gni severe, twice convicted in her eyes, Sir Lancelot falls into the terrific two-year fit of " madness, half raving, half melancholy, which makes an important episode in the romance. ' But he isheroio even in his dejection and ' ids remorse. Being partly cured at last by a first vision of the Sangreal, he settles in the Joyous lie, under the feigned name of Le Chevalier Mai Fet, and his great deeds soon bring Knights of the Round Table about him, . said lead to his restoration at Court. Then follows the great quest of the Sangreal, of which his own son Galahad is the moving cause, and it is during the quest that, within an ancient .chapel, Lancelot has .the second .t t- dreamy sight (mentioned in Manniori) of the Beatific Cup, when - v. , ' ' "Slumbering, fet saw the vision nigh He might not view with waking eye." Before the quest was over, he met and con versed long with his saintly and knightly son, just before Sir Galahad's disappearance from the world; and, being afterwards shriven, he solemnly renounced the old offense which had, so long hung about hit neck. But when the remnant of old knights were ' tlSce again reassembled at Court; when the . : table had been replenished with new men, and the disturbance caused by the quest was 'I wearing off, Lancelot and the Queen fell back , Ssto the old ways.) After clearing her name ' and fame in many a mortal combat, he is at V 1 last overborne by Gawaine,' Agrawaine, . and . .. Ifordred, the three nephews of. Arthur, , of whom the first is more conspicuous as Lancelot's mortal foe, the last as the plotter against the King. Guinevere goes into sano i tnary at Almesbury, and Lancelot retires 1 to . ' Benwicke beyond seas. But he does not quit ' the Court without proffering the fullest terms of satisfaction. His own request that Guine- were may be reinstated and : he himself re ceived into accord is backed by an engage extent to spend all his substance in founding religious houses at every ten miles between Sandwich and Carlisle, himself making the whole pilgrimage barefoot, and Papal bulla are sent to second this fair and pious pro posal. But Gawaine will hear of no compro mise; and Arthur, with that curious weakness which in the romance is allowed to stand part of his character, lets depart his best and : noblest, and follows him presently to Ben- wieke in battle array. There Gawaine re ceives his mortal wound from Lancelot, and the forces are recalled by the news that Mor dred has usurped the kingdom. The "great tattle in the West" then follows, which is not described but sung in splendid verse, in "The Passing of Arthur." But no sooner had Arthur withdrawn from Benwicke than Lancelot prepared himself to ' follow, not for reprisals, but that he might , aid his king and friend against Mordred. The v ghost of Gawaine, reconciled in death to Lancelot, appeared to counsel delay till these succors should arrive, and it was a slight and unforeseen accident alone that - prevented obedience to the warning. After the battle Lancelot betook himself to Almesbury, seek ing an audience of the Queen. Bn learning there her settled resolution to abide by a holy life, he himself was received into the cloister by the "Bishop of Canterbury, a her mit," and renounced forever his last hope of taking his old love away, beyond their com mon sorrows, to the distant retreat of Joyous Gard. When, after several years of the silent life, he had been an admitted priest for near a twelvemonth, he was miracu lously summoned to Almesbury, whenoe he was to remove the body of the . Queen, then at the point ef death, and to convey it to Glastonbury for a final resting place. During his journey, the Queen, in her dying moments, spoke freely of him to the owns. Bhe had died but half an hour before his coming. Sir Lancelot, she said, had been priest near twelve months; and "hither he cometh as fast as he mny for to fetch my corpse. And beside my lord Arthur shall he fcurv me." It should be said at this noint that. in the romance, on the morrow of Arthur's Passing, Sir Bedivere finds a tomb newly craven, and a hermit crro veiling before it. who informs him that at midniuht a corpse . aad been miraculously laid there by the queens and other ladies of the mystio barge; so that, in the mind of the writer of the legend, an actual burial co-existed with the -visionary hope and prospect of Arthur's con tinued life in Avilion, and of his future re tarn. Before setting out on the journey to Glastonbury. Sir Lanoelot "did all the ob - servanoe of the service himself, both the dirge at night, and the mass on the morrow." She was buried with all the tender privilege ' ' and care that love and religion could bestow: , and then at last the great knight's heart would no more serve to sustain his troubled and rareful body. Sir Bors, his kinsman, and v . ihioufch all bin adventures his devoid and. unswerving friend, could avail nothing to re vive, him; thejtishop could avail nothing, and then "be sickened more and more, and dried and dwined away." One night the Bishop awoke the whole hermitage with a loud and unseasonable laughter. He had never been he said) so merry and well at ease. For "here was Sir Lancelot with mo, with more angels than I ever saw men upon one day; and I saw the angels heave Sir Ijancelot towards heaven, and the gates of heaven open to reoeive him. ,. Go ye to his bed, and then shall ye prove the sooth." "Ho when Sir Born and his fellows came to his eel they found him stark dead, and he lay as he ha 1 smiled, and the sweetest savor about him that ever they smclled. and the greatest dole tbey made that ever made men. And on the morrow the Jtlshop sang his mass of Requiem; and after, the HlHhop and all thone nine knights put Sir Lancelot In the name hoinchler that tynecn Guinevere was laid In before she was buried." He was entombed by them with all honor at Joyous Gard. Such Is the naked framework on which the French rematocer has portrayed one of the most beautiful and splendid characters to be found in the literature of the imagination. To say that Lancelot combines the tine qualities of an Achilles and of a Hector is to say what is inadequate and even beside the mark. To the body and spirit of Achilles has been here united the soul of a Sir Philip Sidney. King Arthur reaches to a wider grasp of sovereign and large-minded design; the conception of the Cid is drawn in grand and generous pro portions; but . in the whole region of ro mance, will there be found such another union of strength with delicacy, of profound sensi bility with entire capacity, as was dreamed by the author of the character of Lancelot ? Generosity and courtesy and forgetfulness of self are its broad basis, its pervading elements. To forbear his own advantage ' ; j - ' "In open battle or the tilted Held" .. is with Lancelot, as with Arthur, a second nature. This part of him, like his complete tranquillity and self-possession never once broken by danger or by insult, never by any thing but the full stress of grief and of re morse comes of his supreme and conscious power. During the final war before Ben wicke, after long enduring almost passively the assaults of Gawaine, by. whom every kind of aggravation and disappointment has been brought upon him, Lancelot at last puts out his 'Btrength and unhorses his old enemy. Gawaine challenges him desperately to take his life outright, "for if thou leave me thus, when I am whole I shall do battle with thee again." "Sir, I shall endure you by the grace of God," said Sir Lancelot; "but wit you well, Sir Gawaine, I shall never like thee smite a felled knight.'' During all the taunts of Sir Gawaine at time the when the restoration of Guinevere and of himself still hung in the ba lance, Sir Lancelot never fails to answer rea sonably, liberally, and courteously. And when Sir Galahad is knighted, and a myste rious lady rides to tell the new knight's father that he must no more look to hold the first place of chivalry, "As touching that," said Sir Lancelot, "I know well that I was never the best." ' ' His fidelity is, if that were possible, even more than a match for his large and generous courtesy. It is as if the romancer had de signed to show to what moral heights a man may climb while a mortal sin still hovers, abeut him. In Mr. Tennyson's "Guinevere" the great excuse for the relation between Lancelot and the Queen is distinctly spoken of. It was a misadventure that Arthur should have Bent his best and greatest to represent himself; that he should have dazzled a young fancy with "warmth and color", before it had grown to love the i "puro severity of porfect light" ' j which hung round his own character and de signs. But though this misadventure lends a palliation, and though nearly every chapter in the romance hints a further extenuation in the general customs of the early age, yet it' is clear that the connection was to the writer a mortal sin, and nothing short of it. In the long episode of Sir Tristram and La Beale Isond (the "Iseult of Ireland" in Mr. Matthew Arnold's charming poem), it is easy to recog nise a secondary reproduction of Lancelot and Guinevere. As Lancelot conducts Guinevere to Arthur, so Tristram conducts Lsond or Isolt to King Mark of Cornwall. And, if we assume this secondary relation as a fact, it is interest ing to notice that in the subsidiary story the mortal taint has been provided against by throwing a supernatural halo over the rela tion of tbe two later lovers. A miracu lous philtre has been prepared by the father of iBolt of Ireland, by which she is to become firmly, indissolubly united to King Mark. Of this philtre she and her knightly guide in advertently drink during the voyage, and their destiny is thus sealed beyond the power of their own wills to alter. Yet, though there is no blinking the romancer's view of Lance lot's fault, it is wonderful to observe the labor and care which he has spent in drawing a portrait, this great fault notwithstanding, of lifelong and unwearying faithfulness. - "Ills honor rooted In dishonor stood, - ' And faith unfaithful made his falsely trus." In those lines the complexity of the charac ter is admirably and " perf eotly described, but in the mind of tbe romanoer it is clear that the ruling tendency was to set the honorable and the faithful qualities in the stronger re lief. The whole poem of "Elaine," in ( its threat and multifarious beauty, is a tribute to the faithfulness of Lancelot. It might almost bear these words for its inscription, if it were not a picture of his generosity as well. The great and tracicol madness which occurs in the story fell upon Lancelot for the sole rea son that he could not bear so much as the ap- Eearance of infidelity. He could not brook to e thouoht "wanderingly lewd." Nor was he faithful to the Queen alone but the one dis loyalty excepted to Arthur also. Against him he would never lift a hand; and, when once the King bad left beleaguring him, he was following on nis tracK, not as foe, oui as Dro- ther and ally, ne was never petulant, never recklessly neglectful of what (even in ex treues) might yet be done for those friends; never nagging in devotion while they lived, nor after their deaths. Of his magnetio power of attaching others to Himself there is no need to speak, enoh a character, even in a low degree, cannot live and move without exercising something of that power. And some of the most striking episodes m the legena arise out of this lnnu ence, which drew to Lanoelot Sir Lavaine as well as his sister "the lily maid of Astolat" which was fult at times and seasons by knights like Sir Tristram and Sir Gareth, and which entirely dominated a character so different from that of his great kinsman as was Sir Bors, a figure which, if not one of the first magnitude, is among the most distinctly I drawn and the most interesting in the whole , romance. Lancelot is not a man "of gramarye," not a master of technical instruction, such as was i then confined to the clergy, and would not ' have beseemed a great knight of chivalry. I But he is manifestly intended to be held as a !. man of Intellectual penetration and (though I not furnished with its technical machinery and instruments) possessing the essence and spirit of tiue culture. W (Kteota the xeiU eg. cellenee of the ow-comr, Beanmaias, when others fail ,in that perception, and when many of the Court hold him for no betW than a kitrheb-page; and by Lancelot's countenance and encouragement he is lost' knighted ai Sir Gareth and recognised for a nephew of the King himself. And when the damsel Maledisaunt has explained that the discredit she- has throw on a certain knight arose 'from' no malicious intent, but through a desire to detain him from the danger of tbe field, Lanoelot not only con dones her offense but decorates her courte ously with the hew name' of BienpensaUnt. This intellectual delicacy 'is naturally accom panied by a keen sensibility on which the ro mancer has bestowed the most striking touches. The tone of : the character may be indeed resembled to the string of Ulysses' great bow in tbe Odyssey. Its strength made all other strength seem weakness, yet it re sponded to the slightest; touch, v Ulysses did but try and test it, J "And In a low tne beaaUXnlly it sang Voiced like a swallow. " ( Thus Lancelot, tbe undisputed master of the tilted field, is represented as being also a man frequent in self -converse, and responsive, not only to the lightest word or look from the Queen, but to appeals from his own inner nature of the most subtle kind. Quite late in the romance, when tbe direct and settled attacks on himself and the Queen had begun, end when he bad just been doing mortal com bat in her defense, he comes into the conrt at a moment when a wounded knight, Sir Urre, is occupying Ihe full attention of the King. As the leeches have all failed, the King and the best knights are trying the effect of "handling the wounds" themselves, a process resembling the ."royal touching" for various maladies in later times. Last of all, , Sir Lancelot is .called to try where every one else has failed. He comes forward, not the man that once he was; though outwardly unchanged, he is in wardly aware of ' personal default, of failing name, of uncertainty and danger. But he touches the wounds, and one by one they are all healed. Then Arthur and all the other kings and knights gave loud thanks and praise, and made a sort of triumphal procession in honor of Sir Urre's recovery; but "ever Sir Lancelot wept as he had been a beaten cliild." No com ment should be needed on those words, which supply the key to some of the finest concep tions in this complex and magnificent nature. . Mr. Tennyson will have many claims upon Eosterity. And this will not be the least, that e has from amongst a masB of ill-arranged romance disengaged and placed in a fair and perfect setting the portrait of this great knight, who, "Marr'd as he was, seemed yet the goodliest man," and whose character will have been by his means Landed down and remembered as one of the most remarkable creations of niedireval fancy. , INSURANOE. 1829. -CHARTER PERPETUAL. Franllin Fire Insnrance Company OF PHILADELPHIA. Office, Nos. 435 and 437 CHESNVT ft, tssets Jan.!, '69, $2,617,312' 1 3 CAPITAL. ... ., . . . .'. l.J.l ...1400,000 -flO A irtT)T'UT OTTO TIT TTU ;i..n7 nvJVllAi OU1U iiLD . 1. IKI.n'H' u PREMIUMS l,193,848-43 UNSETTLED CLAIMS, INCOME FOR 1869, dou,uuu. ; Losses paid since lBMverSSQOO rflrunui mu innmruT rouoiH cm unmi thii. The Company alao imnea Policies on Rants oQBaildiast im iu HHiBiWiiiniMl events, uiu i nrncmna. DIRECTORS. Alfred O. Bukar, . A 11 red Fftler. bamnel Grant, I Tbomaa Sparks. George W. Richards, William B.Grant, Iaaao Lea, I Thomas 8. Kllia. aij jvbjj u. AKJK, President, JAR. W. MOALLISTKR. Sectetar. ZVfrV 'auiB, Yioo-rreaiaaat, THKODOKK M. BJCGl IGttK. Assistant Secretary. STRICT LY , MUTUAL Frevident Life and Trust Co. m- ; ; OF PHILADELPHIA j . OFFICE. No. Ill 8. FOURTH STREET. i Organised to promote LIFE INSURANCE amona uood risks or any class accepted. Policies issued on approved plans, at the lowest rates, President, SAMUEL R. SHIPLEY, Vice-President, WILLIAM C. LONG8TKETH, ' - - - ' Actuary. ROWLAND PARRT. The advantages offered by tola Uempaoy are un- unsueu. wjt rpUE ENTERPRISE INSURANCE . CO. OF A PHILADELPHIA. I Offloe 8. w. corner of FOURTH and WALNUT Street PFRPKTUAL AMD TKRM POLICIES ISSUED CASH Capital (paid ap in full) itauoMXI'M Cash Assets, Jan. 1, 1870 8324,36515 niKKU'iUHS. , . : r. Katcnrora Dtarr, i Nalhro Frailer, John M. At wood, , , - J. laiii(reton Erringer, James L Dim; born, i Win. O. Boulton. ' I Charles Wheeler, 1 nomas H. Montgomery, Hnai. T. Tredick. George H. tituart, jo tin n. nrown. uames h. Aertaen. i . RA I'CHKORD PTARR. President I . THOMAS H. MONTGOMERY, Viea-Presldent Alif-A. w. ninriiH, neereiary. ( JACOB K. PKTBRhfN. Assistant Beeretar ' I LEGAL NOTIOES. i TN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEA8 FOR A. THK CITX Attl UUUflll W ftl 1LADKLPH I A. MATT is. T. liUUKNK, dj hut next friend, eto.i v June Term, 1HSP, No. 7, 8eptomber Term, I860. No. 67. To KOUAH A. JIOURNB, the Respondent: Sir-Yon will please take notice I tint a ruleiiss been granted on why a divorce a vinculo matrimonii nhonld not bade- m(I l.lmrfwm PAtlirn.tilM fia H ATI I R.Tl A V ........ 1., 1K70, at 10 A. M., personal service having failed on account Of your aospnoe. unaKLnci jc. L,KX, 1 1 wftnMt Attornsy Pro Libellaat. f N THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS FOR A. THh, UlTlt AINUtiOUttTY U FUILADKLPHI A. I.11I1INI1A RlNNK'lT n. CHAKI.KB KIKllirra Jnne Term, lfctti, No. 44. In Divorce. Charles Bennett! If MtmnrienL. Bir: on win p leans iaae nonce mat a rule has been (ranted on yon in the above case, to show cause, if any you have, why a divorce a vinculo matrimonii should not be riVcreed thiiTein Returnable SATURDAY. i!ebruar 1J. MO, at 10 o'clock A.M. ' U WM. KNIGHT 8HRYOOK, 1 lmw4t - Attorney tor Libellaat. 1? STATE OF , EDWARD SUIPPlSBUED, J J deceased. , Ihe Auditor appointed 4y the Orphans' Court for the City and Comity ot Philadelphia to audit, sett le, and ad juht the eifhth aad flnnl account of KLI K. PKICBand JOaKPlt M. TOKKNl, Ksiis.. surviving. executors of the hint will and testament of KIIWAKD 8H1PPKN UURD, deceased, and to report distribution of the ba lunoe in thuir bunds, will nieetthe parties interested lor the purpones of his appointment on TUKNDA Y, Kehrnnry 8. lf'.O, at 11 o'clock A. M., at his office, No. 717 WALNUT Hireel. in the oity af Philadelphia. t ax (inw DtlBanta v JOH N CLAYTON, Auditer. T ETTEK8 TESTAMENTARY HAVING BEEN XJ Kranted to the subscribers upon the estate of MART hlMMONH, duceuHcd, all persons indebted to the same will make payment and Uiobs having claims present tbeinlo 8AMUKL HOOD, T ROUT. 11. McfiKATH, I ' ' ' No. 247 8. SIXTH Street,' 1 6wtit Kxecuton. NEW PUBLICATIONS. PHILOSOPHY OF MARRIAO A New Coarse of Leotnree, as delivered at the Nn York Museum of Anatomy, embracing the subject How to Live, and What to Live lot) Youth, Maturity, sod Old Aa ; Manhood Generally Reviewed; The Cause ot Indigestion; Flatulence and Nervous Uisoasee AoooanU4 For; iiuniii Philosophically Considered, ete. etc Pocket volumes oootainfn tbesa Leotnree will be for. warded, post paid, on receipt of S6 cent, by addressing W. A. LKARY, Ja..B. K. curuexf Hi'lil and vVALSUT bUU, PtnlatWU'liis. t INSURANCES DELAWARE MUTUAL HAFKTT INSURANCE COMPANY. Incorporated bi tbe Leirtelatore ol rcnsnyl?aiila, 1085. Office BOBtDeart eorncr tf THIRD and WALNUT Btrwm, PbHideipMA. i MARINE INSURANCES f On Vessels, Cargo and Freight to all parts of tbe worm. INLAND INSURANCES : On goods by river, canal, lake and laud carriage to an imrui m uie union. KIRK INHUKANCK8 On Merchandise generally; on Stores, Dwellings, , . , uouBua, eta. ( ASSETS OF THE COMPAN T ' . i November 1, iw,. ...... 20,0 United States Five Per Cent, loan, ten-forties j. . 1316,000-00 . 100,000 United HtoU't Hn Per Cent Loan (lawful mouey). ....... lOI.IOO-OO W.0O0 United htAtes Six Per Cent. ' Loan, lsst . OO.OOO-OO SO0.OOO Stat ot Pennsylvania Six Per cent. Loan 913.9&0-O 200,000 City of Philadelphia Six Per , . Cent Loan (exempt from tax) 200,923 -00 100,000 State of New Jorsey Six Per Cent, Loan 102. 000 -00 80,080 Pennsylvania Railroad First Mortgage Six Per Cent. Bondn 19,460'O 86,000 rennnylvanta Railroad Se cond mortgage Six per Cent. Bonds 83,026-Oi 86,000 Western Pennsylvania Rail- i road Mortgnps Six Per ; . , Cent. Bonds (Pennsylvania Railroad gnarauteo) 80,000-00 30,000 Stt of Tennessee Five Per Cent. Loan.. 16, 000 "00 , 7,000 btate of Tennessee Six Per Cent. Loan 4.270-00 18,600 Pennsylvania Railroad Com pany, 260 shares stock 14,000-00 6,000 North Pennsylvania Rail road Company, 100 shares stock 8,900-01 10,000 Philadelphia and Southern Mall Staamnhlp Com- pany, 80 shares stock 7,5O0-0 846,900 Loans on Bond and Mort- , gage, llrst liens on City Properties 240,900-00 $1,231,400 Par. Market value, i,260,870 00 Cost. I1.H16.81K2-ST. Real Estate.. 86,000-00 Bills Receivable for Insurances made... 823,700-76 Balances due at Aeenuleg: Premlums on Marine Policies, Accrued interest, aiiu otuer aeuts due uie Com pany " 6S.097-BH Btoek, Bcrlp. etc., of Sundry Corpora tions, 14706. Estimated value 2,746-20 Cash In Bank........ $168,818-83 Casa in Drawer .972-20 169,29114 $1,852,180-04 DUIECTORS. , Thomas C. Hand. Samuel E. Stokes, ! William . Boulton, 1 Edward Darlington, , II. Jones Brooke, Bdward Lafourcade, -Jacob Rlegel, 1 . Jacob P. .Tones, 1 James B. McFarland, , Joshua P. Kyre, ' Hpencer Mcllvaln, ' J. B. Semple, Pittsburg, ' A. B. Berger, Pittsburg, D. T. Morgan, Pittsburg. John c. Davis, iwimuna a. Bonner, Thcophllus Paulding, James Traqualr, Henry Sloan, Henry C. Dallett, Jr., James C. Hand, William C. Lndwlg, Joseph H. Seal, Hngb Craig, John D. Taylor, George W. Bcrnadon, William C. Houston. THOMAS C. TIAND, President ! JOHN C. DAVI8. Yice-rTfiHldent. HENRY LYIXURN, Secretary. . . HENKY BALL Assistant Secretary. - . 1 1 LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY. No. SOS BROADWAY, corner ot ILUeYenth Street, New-York, I c ' . i-f . '. '1 j: J rt 1 .. i.' I CASH OAPITAL...................................$iiin;ooo 8126,000 deposited with the Bute of New York as security for Doha holders. LEMUKL BANCS, President. ' . GKORGK ELLIOTT, Vioe-President and Secretary. EMORY MoOLlNTOOK, Actuary. A. E. M. PURDY, M. D., Medloal Examiner, PHILADICLPHIA BJaTKBXNOa. I Thomas T. Tasker,; John M. Maris, 1 J. U. Lippinoott. Charles Spencer, William Divine, I James Long, , John A. Wright, I S. Morris Wain, I James Houter. Arthur O. Comb, 'John B. MoCreary. K. U. Worn. 1 ' Oraanlsed April, leos. 876 Policies issued tint sis months 1 over 2000 in the twelve months following. , i All forms of Policies leaned on most favorable terms. ' Special advantages offered to Clergymen. ' I r law good agent wanted in oity or oonntry. Apply ', JAM KB M. lxNGAGrtkV " ' i Manager for Pennsylvania and Delaware, Office, No. 802 WALNUT Street, Philadelphia. 1 SAMUEL POWERS, Special Agent. 4109 TNBURE AT HO M E, in tm . j Penn flutual Life Insurance' , COMPANY. j NO. 831 CUES NUT STREET, PHILADELPHIA. ; ASSETS, 83,000,000. CHARTERED BY OITR OWN 8TATK. MANAGED BY , OCR OWN CITIZKH liOSSES PROMPTLY PAID. OUC1ES ISSUED ON VARIOUS PLASS. Applications may be made at tbe Home Office, and at the Agencies Uiroughout tbe State. (1 18$ JAMES TRAQCAIR.. ............ .....PRKSIDENT SAMUEL, E. STOKES VIOE-PRKSIDHNI JOHN W. IIORNOR .A. V. P. and ACTUARY HORATIO B. STEPHENS BJCOBJtTAJtY IFICE OF THE INSURANCE COMPANY OF NORTH AMERICA, No. S WALNUT fitreei. Philadelphia. AABlsk''iN'iAND'ANb MRg DSSURAJn?'0' OVKB $WXXft0l LOB8E8 PAID BINGE ITS OHO AN. . . . ... . LIATION. ..1 - , Arthur O. Co Bin, Samnel W. Jones, John A Brown, . . Charles Taylor, Ambrose White, v.'til;. Wal.U -Sncl.ROoWL , . Edward H. TroUer, . Edward H. Clarke, ' T. Charlton Uenry, Alfrari 11 B. MonriaWaln, . Louis O. Made7ra7 uoiui r . TY 111 .1... John Mason, J . . Charles W. Ouahmaa ' on U ART&UR G COFMW, President. ! UXU.JwA.nrf3 AAA. A A, V JO-rTUAll, III F AME INSURANCE COMPANY. ' No. 809 CHESNUT Street, 1 ' ! INCORPORATED 186. CHARTER PERPETUAL. CAPITAL, tmOOO. ' rnUE INSURANCE EXCLUSIVELY. I Inruree against Loss or Damage by Fire either by Peg. petual or Temporary Policlea, DIRKCl'V.Hhi OharlM Richardson, Robert Psaree, W illiam H. Rhawn, . Joan Keealer, Jr., William M. Beyfert, Edward B. Orno, John V. Umlth, Charles Stokes, Nathan Hillea, ' . John W. Kvermaa, Uoamm A. West, Mordeoai Buxby. , OHAKIJED KiuiiAttuaun, rreaiaaati WILLIAM H. RHAWN, Yloe-President. WnxiAXS L HiaWchabp. BecreUry. SM ryiLE PENNSYLVANIA FIRE INSURANCE 1 COMPANY. i Incorporated lifio Charter Perpetual. . No. DO WALK OT Street, opposite Independenoo BVrnara, This Company, favorably known to tbe ooaun unity foe over forty years, oontinons to insure against loss or dam age by fire on Publio or Private Buildings.leither senna. nently or for a limited time. Also on iurniture, Stqokg of Goeds, and Merchandise generally, on liberal terms. Their Capital, together with a large Surplus Fund, la tmwtA in the most careful manner, which enables thm to otler to the insured an undoubted oeuifay in kus ease of loss. puutox at Paniel Smith, Jr., I John Devereux, ' ' Aleaanaur dodwd, i ."w" muul Isaao xlazleburet, 1'enry Lewis, Ikoniaa Robins, Cillingiuun Foil. uaniei nauuoca, or. ww DANIEL SMh'H. J.. Proddent. ' WM. O. OROWELL, Secretary. 9MU, TMl'ElUAXs HERE INSURANCE OoT LONDON. , ESTABLISHED 1803. paid-up Capital and Accumulated Funds, 08,000,000 IN GOLp, PREV0ST & HEEEINO, Agents 1 41 No. 10T & TXUKD Street, Philadelphia, , ' CUAS. J4. PRSY0ST, CHAS, R DJLSysXNQ PBOPOBALS. IJKOPOflAl FOR STAMPED ENVKLOPKH AND WIJAITKKS. roer omo DtpTnttrf, Jannarv 10, 1 Healed Trvwosals will ne reoelved an til S P, ft the 1st av of MARCH. lftfO. for farnlshinir all tbe "Stamped Envelopes" and "Newspaper Wrap pTn wliwh this Department may require daring a period ef four years, commencing 1st of July, M7, viz. : STAMPED ENVELOPES. Vo. l. Note sisc, 'Vi by inches, of white paper. No. 9. Ordinary letter sise, S l-; by taekes, or white. bufT, canary, or cream colored paper, or in such proportion of either as Baay be required. No. A Fall letter stse (unirnmmed on flap, for Iranian). 8 V by inches, of the same colors as No. a, and ander a like condition as to tbe propor tion of each. No. a. t all letter slee, 8V by 6 Inches, of same olors as No. S, and under a like condition as to the proportion of each. No. 5. Extra letter sire (ungummed on flap, for circulars), 8)4 by V Inches, of same colors as No. 8, and ander a like condition as to the proportion of each. No. 6. Extra letter slie, 8f by 6X inches, of same colors as No. 3, and under a like condition as to the proportion of each. Xo. 7. Official size, by 8J Inches, of same colors as "Ho. S, and tinder a like conaltlon as to the proportion of each. ho. 8. Extra orrtelal slse, H by t inches, of same colors as No. and under a like condition as to the proportion of each, , , NKVVSPA PKK WRAPPERS, X by inches, of bull or manllla paper. 1 1 All the above envelopes and wiappers to be em bossed with postage stamps of snch denominations, styles, and colors, and to hear such printing on tne face, and to be made in the most thorough manner, of psper of approved quality, manufactured specially for the purpose, with such water marks or other de vices to prevent imitation as the PosUnaster-Uenoral mav direct. The envelopes to be thoroughly and perfectly gummed, the gumming on the flap of each (except for circulars) to tie put on not lens than half an inch in width the entire length. The wrappers to be gummed not less than three-fourths of an inch in width across the end. All envelopes and wrappers must be banded in parcels of twenty-five, and packed in strong pasteboard or straw boxes, each to contain not less than two hundred and liny of the letter or extra letter sixe, and one liuudred each of the oiri cial or extra oiilclal size, separately. The news paper wrappers to be packed in boxes to contain not lees than two hundred and fifty each. The lioxes are to be wrapped and sealed, or securely fastened in strong manllla paper, so as to safely bear transportation by mall for delivery to fiostroastcrs. When two thousand or more enve opes are required to fill the order of a postmaster, Uie straw or pasteboard boxes containlDg the same must be packed in strong wooden cases, well strapped with , hoop-Iron, and addressed; but When less than two thousand are required, proper labels of direction, to be furnished by an agent of the Department, must be placed upon each package by the contractor. Wooden cases, con taining envelopes or wrappers to be transported by water routes, must be provided with suitable water-proofing. The whole to be done under the Inspection and direction of an agent of the Department. The envelopes and wrappers mnut be furnished and delivered with all reasonable despatch, complete in aH respects, ready for use, and In such quantities as may be required to fill the daily orders of post masters; the deliveries to be made either at the Post Olltce Department, Washington, D. C, or at the olllce of an agent duly authorised to inspect and re ceive the same ; the place ef delivery to bo at the option of the I'ORtmuster-Geueral, and the cost of delivering as well as all expense of packing, ad dressing, labeling, and water-proofing, to be paid by tbe contractor. , ; Bidders are notified that the Department will re quire, as a condition of the contract ,that the en velopes snd wrappers shall be manufactured aud stored in such manner as to ensure security against loss by lire or theft. The manufactory must at all times be subject to the inspeotlon of an agent of the jjepnriuiviib, who win require ww stipulations of the contract to be falthfullv oWrvod . t The dies for embossing the postage stamps on the envelopes and WraiVinera ar tn ha nivntiiii tn rhn satisinotlOB cl the Postmaster-General, in the best ltie, and they are to be provided, renewed, and kept in order at the expense of the contractor. The department reserves the right of requiring new dies for any stamps, or denominations of stamps not now usea, ana any changes oi dies or colors snail be made without extra charge. i . specimens or tne stamped envelopes ana wrap pers now in use may be seen at any of the principal post offices, but these specimens are not to be re garded as the style and quality fixed by the depart ment as a standard for the new contract; bidders are therefore invited to submit samples of other and different qualities and styles, including the paper proposed as well as the manufactured en velopes, wrappers, and boxes, and make their bids accordingly. ,(. i The contract will be awarded to the bidder whose proposal, although it be not the lowest, is con sidered most advantageous to the Department, taking into account the prices, quality of the sam ples, workmanship, and the sufficiency and 'ability of the bidder to manufacture and deliver the envelopes and wrappers in accordance with the terms of this advertisement; aud no proposal will be considered snless accompanied by a sufficient and satisfactory guarantee. The PoBtmaster-Uene-ral also reserves the right to reject any and all bids, If in his Judgment the interests of the Government require It Before closing a contract the successful bidder may be required to prepare new dies, and submit impressions thereof. Tug usb of thb pkbsbnt dibs MAY OR MAY NOT BK CONTINUED. Bonds, with approved and sufficient sureties, in the sum of 1200,000, will be required for the faithful performance of the contract, as required by the seventeenth section of the act of Congress, approved the 2;h of August, 1843, and payments under said contract will be made quarterly, after proper ad justment of accounts. . The postmaster-General reserves to himself the right to annul the contract whenever the same, or any part thereof, is offered for sale for the purpose of speculation ; and under no circumstances will a transfer of the contract be allowed or sanctioned to any party who shall be, in the opinion of the Postmaster-General, less able to fuliiil the condi tions thereof than the original ooatractor. The right is alBO reserved to annul the contract for a failure to perform laithfully any of its stipulations. The number of envelopes of different sizes, and of wrappers issued to Postmasters during the fiscal year ended June 80, 1869, was as follows, vis. : i No, 1. Hole sice 1,114,00. 1 No. a. Ordinary letter size; (not heretofore sed). No. . Fall letter size, (nngummed, for circulars) 4,160,000.- I No. 4. Full letter size 7,8eT,600. No. 6. Extra letter size, (ungummed, for circulars) S0,DUU. No. o. Extra letter size 4,204,600. No, 7. Official size V4,eco. No. 8. Extra official size 1700. Wrappers 8.66,860. - Bids should be securely enveloped and sealed, marked "Proposals for Stamped Envelopes and Wrappers," and addressed to the Third Assistant PoBtmaster-General, Post Office Department, Wash ington, D. C JOHN A. J. CRESWELL, I llleotUMl Postmaster General. ROOFING. KEADY ROOFIN G. This Hooiing it adapted to all buildings. It can be applied to i BTERP OR FLAT ROOKS I . at one-half the expense of tin. It is readily put on old Bhinirle Roofs without removing the shingles, thus avoid ing the damaging of ceilings and furniture while under going repairs ( No gravel used.) PKiBhKVifi YOUR TIN ROOFS WITH WELTOH'S ELASTIC PAINT. T I am always prepared to Repair and Paint Roofs at short notice. Alao, PAINT TOR BALK bi the barrel or gallon, Mio pen atnu vsospen w uio uuarsu. f W. A. WKLTON.I , 1 171 No. 711 V. NINTH Street, above Ooataa. 1 1 I rpo OWNER8, ARCHITECTS, BUILDERS. A AND BOOFERS. Roofsl Yes, yes. Kvary sl.e and kind, old or new. At No. 148 N. THIRD Street, the All K. RIOAN OONURJCTX PAINT AND ROOi" OOMPANx are eelltng their celebrated paint for TIN ROOKS, and for preserving all wood and metala. Also, their solid ooa plex roof covering, the beet over offered to the public, with brushes, cans, bucket, etc., lor the work. Anti-vermin, I'm, and Water-proof ; Light, TUU. Durable. Mooraok Ing, pealing, or shrinking. No paper, gravel, or heat Uood men supplied. Oare, promptness, certain tf! One tvioel or ail oimiatee, inreouona given n r.ir wnrK. or sooa eork. Ualll maminei Jndgel .. I AfcnwwaatoaiortotorioTjoOTiiuo v e&ti JOHKrU LEEDS, Principal - .' 1 - - 1 ' " ' "P J. T. IABTON. J; H'MAMOW. 17AP4TON & McMAHONi ho IL OOKNl'IF.H HI. I P. New York. ' fiSlS BOOTH WHARVES. Philadelphia, svt it far Ot) ATT Ht ratM Hull linnra. We are prepared to ship every description of Freight to Philadelphial New York, Wilmington, and intermediate points with prompt-ess and despatch. Canal lioat and Steam-tugs furnished at the shortest notice. t gTISYENSON BIIO., fc CO., O I li 8 I ussa Re,13!8.6KOOKDIWtft, PROPOSALS. OrjflCK OF THE COMMISSIONERS FOR Pnii.AMi.rnu, Jan. 17, 1870. SEALED PROPOSALS will be received for the following work snd materials required In toe execu tion of the WALNUT Street portion of the PUBLIC BUILDINGS, to wit: For all the excavations, Including the trenches for the foundations. The price to be stated per cable yard, which is to cover all digging, hauling away the surplus earth, and cutting down and re moving whatever trees may come in the way ef the excavations, without extra measurement er allow ance. For taking down the terraoe wall, cleaning the bricks, and piling thera np adjacent to the buildings, taking down the Iron railings, the gate piers, the coping of the wall and the steps, and depositing them on the grounds, and removing all the rubbish occasloued by the same. The price for this portion of tbe work to be stated fn cross. For concreting the entire foundation of the build ings with small broken stone, and cement, mortar, and grout, in conformity with the specifications. The depth of the concrete to be thtt4 feet, and the lateral dimensions to conform to the plans. The price to be stated per cubic foot, and to include all materials and labor. For furnlBhlng and delivering large-size building Stone, the price to be stated per perch of 21 cubic feet, measured In the walls. Also, for select build ing stone, averaging 8 by B feet, and from 12 to 18 inches thick ; the price for the same to be stated pci cubic foot, df II vered on the ground. For building all the cellar walls, and the outside walls of the . basement story, as high as tbe levet line of the pavement, according to tbe Diana and. specifications. The price to be stated per perch or 22 cubic feet, laid in the walls, without extra mea surement, and to Include all labor and all materials except stone. The contract or contracts will be awarded to the best and the lowest bidder or bidders, who will be required to give approved security for the faithful performance of the same. The plans and specifications maybe seen at the office of the Architect, Mr. JOIIN McAKTUUK, Jr., No. 208 S. SIXTU Street. The proposals to be sealed and endorsed "Pro posals for Public Buildings," and addressed to JAMES V. WATSON, Chairman of the Committee on Contracts, and to be left at the office of the Com missioners of Public Buildings, In the new Court House, SIXTH Street, below Chesnut, on the 14th day of February next ensuing, between the hours of 11 and 12 o'clock A. M., at which time the bids will be opened, in the presence of such bidders as may wish to attend. , . . .' , , .. By order of the Committee on Contracts. ' , 1 19 wfm lit H. C. PUGH, Secretary. Q F F I C E , O F THE,,, CUMBERLAND COAL AND IRON COMPANY. NOTICE OF STOCKHOLDERS' MEETING1. A special meeting of the Stockholders of the Cum berland Coal and Iron Company has been called by the President and Directors of said Company, to be held at Its offlee, No. .90 BROADWAY, corner Wall street, in the city of New York, on the 19th day or February, 1870, at 12 o'clock M. The objects of said meeting are : To accept, as aa Increase of the powers of the Company, and as an amendment to Its charter, the 'provision contained! the charter of the Consolidation Coal' Company of Maryland, which renders It lawful for all bodies cor porate to become subscribers for and owners of the capital stock of the last-named company; also, to consider and act upon the question of a consolida tion with the last-named company and other, com panies having coal lands la Allegheny county, Md. ; to arrange the terms of such consolidation and the manner or carrying the same Into effect, and to authorize the Directors to effect the' same; to autho rize the Board of Directors of this Company to sub scribe in its behalf for 15,000,000 of the capital stock of said Consolidation Coal Company of Maryland, and to agree with that company upon the terms and1 conditions upon which such subscription shall be mado, and to convey and transfer to the last-name Company in free payment for the amount of stock, which may be so subscribed for, such portion of tbe lands and other properties of this Company, includ ing its railroad, as may be agreed apon. And gene rally, to pass upon all ojuestlons which may arise touching such proposed consolidation, or transfer of property, or subscription for stocks, and the dispo sition to be made of the stock subscribed for, and If deemed expedient, to authorize a lease of the pro perties of this Company or any part thereof, and to make all alterations in the by-laws which said meet ing may deem necessary or proper. ; 1 IMotlce is hereby given that, for the purpose of holding a stockholders' meeting or the Cumberland Coal and Iron Company on the 19th day or February next, the transfer books will close on SATURDAY, Jan. 29, 1870, at o'clock P. H. , , By order of tbe Board of Directors. , ' J. RICHARDS, Secretary. New York, Jan. 18, 1870. . l20tF18 i . . i . i i. i IIA.RII3NGrS EDITIONS i (OF . j. i . THE HOLT BIBLE. ; i FAMILY, PULPIT, AND PHOTOGRAPH BIBLES, , " t . ! ; oa ,. i". .i. , , .' .I i - WEDDING AND BIRTHDAY PRESENTS ALSO, PRESENTATION BIBLES FOR. CHURCHES, ' ' J ':u' ' ' ' CLERGYMEN, -u ' . '' SOCIETIES AND ' ' w ' - TEACHERS, ETC New and superb assortment, bound In Rich Levant Turkey Morocco, Paneled and Ornamental designs, equal to the London and Oxford editions, at less than, half their prices. ;.. -t t No. 820 CHESNUT Street STRENGTH, BEAUTY, CHEAPNESS COMBIXED T. HARDING'S PATENT CHAIN-BACK , rilQTOQRAPIl ALBLMS, j For Wedding, Holiday, or Birthday Presents, these Albums are particularly adapted. ! " ' i ' Tbe book trade and dealers a fancy article will find the most extensive assortment of Photograph Albums in the country, and superior t? any (hereto fore made. For great strength, durebllty, and cheapness, Farding's Patent Chain-back Albums are unrivalled. Purchasers will find it greatly te their advantage to examine these new lines of goods be fore making np their orders for stock. " ' Also, a large and splendid assortmeot of tew styles of Photograph Albums made In tbe usual tanner. No, 326 CHESNUTtreet, ..!, . . . . , i Phittdelptiia. 1 17 GALVANIZED and Painted , WTREGUARDS, tore fronts and windows, for factory id warehoua windows, for churches and cellar whdows. IRON and WIRE RAILINGS,' for hCoonies, offices cemetery and garden fenoea, ' ' ' ' Liberal allowance made to' contactora, ilnllde and Carpenters. All orders filled with promptaei and work gTiaranteed, ' KOBEKT WCOD A CO., 2 3 ituvhom . , . He, uae uiyX Annua ftUiftV