THE DAILY ISVlSNIISG TKLEUltAPH- PHILADELPHIA, MONDAY, APRIL 11, 1870. 2 opih.it or Tnn rnxss. Editorial Oplniont of the Leading J-urnalt uponCurrentTopios Compiled Every Day for the Evening Telegraph. ttirLADELPHU PROFANITY, from the X. T. Tribune. J There is a certain square patoh of grass overgrown by old trees,' which had beoume, in the lapse of a centurjr, holy ground lite rally a sort of God's acre to the poople of America. , It is the ground where the decla ration of human right was first given to the struggling nation as the basis of it.i future life, over which the old bell obeyed the legend that by a curious prophecy it chanced to boar, and proclaimed ''liberty throughout the land, to all the inhabitants thereof. Heretofore Philadelphia has been content to fulfill the trust eoufided to her, and has preserved fho State House and this Square intact, an, indeed, she is legally compelled to do, the ground having been ceded to her by Pennsylvania only onoondition that it "should be kept a pnblio green f rover." Perhaps she was not ignorant of the faot that it was the 'possession of ' this ground and these old buildings which actually gave her rank and place among Amerioan cities. It has become a Meofa; foreigners and Aaierioans alike make pilgrimages to the old State House as the birth-place of Liberty. There is no spot in the country se instinct with noble moaning, or so suggestive of the highest and purest motives of our National life. We have, unfortunately, too few of such, Meccas. We are too hurried a people, too full of the rank vigor and brute ' strength of youth, of love of money, and intolerance of the old shapes of government and civilization left behind us, te appreciate as we ought our need of a past. It is a noble thing to "make history hand-ever-hand," but it is as noble to understand and build npon history. Our lakes like seas, our thousand-acre fields of corn, our magnificent mushroom cities, are matters to boast of only to a certain length. They put health into our bodies and money In our purse; but if fields and cities were stamped with the reoord of a mighty past, of heroic deeds or thoughts, they would serve, perhaps, a nobler purpose: we would find in them the ennobling and softening education which now we lack, and beoome a wiser and more thoughtful people. The nation who reads upon its soil and its buildings such a ' history, lives in the constant hearing of a lofty poem. It inherits honor; it knows itself of good birth noblesse oblige. The vague consciousness of this want drives the most oultured class among us back to Europe, to claim kinship, to root into old ruins, to look at old houses. We are not con tent with our free institutions; to be only able to brag of our hardly earned liberty, or our pork, or cotton, or iron-clads; we want our ehare in Shakespeare and in Milton; in the soil where Cromwell was born or Hampden was buried. The signs of our own mental history in the two great wars for liberty are yet too close at hand for us to rightly read their meaning; our hands are full; we are in too creat haste to settle the Mormon problem or the tax difficulty to listen to any great les son which the past may have left for us. We Blight the few mementoes we possess, flout at associations which foreigners coming among us hold sacred. We are in the condition of the vulgar school-boy who would make a bon fire of the records which proved his inheri tance of nemlity to warm himself and his ignorant companions. - Especially is this the case with our frugal minded neighbor, Philadelphia. She has tried for a long time to turn an honest penny out of the old State House and ground of which she was left in custody by the nation; she fenced in the square with offices, and even shouldered the poor old bell almost out of Bight with cake-stands. Mow, However, the ground has become so valuable that, although it does not in any sense belong to her, the cannot afford to be honest about it any longer, and therefore proposes to quietly squat upon it with ner nest or criminal courts, and blot it now and forever out of eight. Hereafter we shall be unable to point to the spot where Hancock read the words which yet echo through the world, Philadelphia will substitute her own peculiar annals. There the murderer Probst was tried, and II agger ty broke from the Black Maria; and there can a man rid himself of any crime by straw-bail. Is it for so ill-flavored a mess of pottage as this that she is willing . to soil her birthright and ours ? The matter is vet undecided. It is pushed, we are told, by a few needy politicians who own property in the neighborhood of the gtate House. We hope this is true, and that there is enough wisdom among the people of Philadelphia to prevent an outrage so disho nest to the nation and damning to their own character tor enlightenment or refinement, THE ANTI-SLAVERY SOCIETY. From the N. Y. World. Whatever may be our views of the intrinsic righteousness or of the probable beneficence of the fifteenth amendment, we can all at least unite in gratitude that its passage has extinguished that singularly disagreeable sodality of saints the American Anti-Slavery bociety. The dissolution of that body affeots us with an elegiac feeling as if an ancient monument had thereby been razod. But, in faot, the society was only twenty-five at the time of its death. The physiologists, however, and the cosmetio-makers assert that "a frown is the nreoursor of wrinkles:" and we ruav rtro bubly ascribe to the vicious temper of the embittered male and female persons, the , product of whose aootous fermentation was the Anti-Slavery Society, the premature hoarineHS of that body, and be content in its case to confound its venerableness with its vinegar. And, indeed, its members have managed to fill the whole land with the noise . of their meetings, and the buds of May in - this metropolis have been blighted by their brooding presence for now these many years, until it is not wonderful that their final ces sation from troubling should seem to moat of the generation which is now in the vigor of life to be the removal of a life-lone miserv. It is not necessary to asperse the motives er even to question the procedures of the original prophets of abolition in order to ' feel and express a profound aversion for their successors, who have now finally dis solved themselves into the baseless fabric of ! a vision. The inflnenoe of the pioneers of i that agitation, indeed, was rather indirect in embittering the temper of the South than direct in stirring up the people of the North i to war against the accursed thing. It is true that slavery has bean abolished; but the war which resulted in its abolition would have ,' v.bn deferred for many years if it had been tiobtponed until the sentiment of the North , . bhould have allowed it to be waged osten 4 ' Bibly as a crusade against the sorvice system "3 of the South. There was, to be sure, an immense dislike of slavery among the people of tho North; but t" wm a fMII dtill stronger and still more honorable dislike to the violation of chartered rights and the infringement of a national compact, the keep ing of which was strictly our business, than mere was to ine aonieno rrnugeiueuui 01 other States, with which it was equally dear that we were not concerned, and tor wmon we were neither in law or morals responsible. Even when slavery was abolished not one in ten of the men who approved its abolition was willing to avow himself an abolitionist; and the President who issued the Emancipa tion Proclamation, to which the nfteeutn amendment is a supplement, was careful to have it understood that he was using a purely Military measure; so little had the labors of the Anti-Slavery Society accomplished towards moulding tne people into tiioir own way 01 thinking that slavery was a monstroiity to be destroyed in any way or at any sacritloe. But. whatever credit may attacn to tne men who organized the sentiment which the society embodied, no sentiments of any other than a ludicrous or a contemptuous sort can be arousod by the contemplation of the coad jutors whom they found when oace a mom bershiD was no loneer a candidacy for mar tyrdom, and who have been describod by one of themselves as tne "Folks with mlHHlons, whose gaunt eyes Bee golden R rising, Ealt of the eartli, In what qneer guys Tbou'rt fond of crystallizing." Their adherents were like the adherents of David at the cave of Adullam. Evory one that was in distress, and every one that was in debt, and every one that was discontented. joined himself and clave unto the standard of Garrison. The young and yearning, the aged and despairing, confirmed celibates of every ace and soured shrews of both sexes, de scended like a flight of locusts upon the lyceums of the laud. It is awful to reflect that it is to this society we owe it that Wen dell Phillips has been hindered from making a secluded home unhappy at the cost of devastating a nation, and that Wendell Phillips is the spiritual progenitor of Anna Dickinson. We have Been the society descend from the lofty eminenoe on which Garrison once stood and abode the pelting of the pu trid eggs of his countrymen, in really rather a heroic manner, to tne abyss 01 degradation in which Wendell Phillips crouched as a sup pliant and held a plaintive hat for the elee mosynary "chickens, boiled preferred, of bis friends. "Men are we. and muBt grieve when even the shade or that which once was great has passed away." Who will decline felicitating himself that the Anti-Slavery Society has spared him the spectacle of a still deeper degradation, by folding its hands and saying its nunc ditnitUa over the passage of tne fifteenth amendments HONOR TO WHOM HONOR. Fiom the N. Y. Times. A certain obscure and moribund coterie of ex-agitators in a neighboring State will be disgusted, no doubt, at Mr. Lloyd Garrison's late letters. The Union League Club held a special meeting on Thursday night, to re joice over the adoption of tne hi teen th amend ment, and one of the chief features of this meeting was a letter from the veteran Wil liam Lloyd Garrison, "lnough identified ti.:. famous champion of freedom, "I deem it simple justice to say that whatever has been done, by political action and legisla tive enactment, to secure this glorious triumph, has been done exclusively by the Republican party, and by tne .Loyal Leaguers co-operating with it. loat is pre cisely what most people think, though it is creditable for Mr. Garrison to award the sole merit to an organization whose fortunes he nas not snared. .But what about tne f hiiiips faction? What about the Anti-Slavery Stand ard? What about the knot of tea-drinking zealots who, under the defunct name of the "Anti-blavery Bociety, persistently meet every May in Boston, and, finding no other "anti-slavery topic to discuss, fall to abusing Grant, Congress, and the Republican party? Is Mr. Garrison going to leave them ouk in the cold? Has he no crumb of consolation for them? On the contrary, besides ignoring completely their late herculean efiorts, Mr. Garrison even exasperates them by declaring that "President Grant is deserving of high praise for the support he has given to the claims of a long oppressed but now redeemed people. The adoption of tne fifteenth amendment is indeed due to the resolute and enthusiastic efforts ef the Republican party or let us say, rather, of that party as the political standard- bearer of the Amerioan people. It is one of the proudest honors the party can claim, and it deserves to enjoy it. wherever tne Ue- mocracy has been in power the amendment has been fought; and as it is a bright jewel in the crown of the Republican party, so it is a conspiouous and memorable triumph for General Grant that under his admin istration the great amendment has been carried. Mr. Garrison draws a distinction between the "moral struggle" which pre ceded the war, and the "patnotio duty which followed it. The former struggle, he Bays, "virtually ended when the first Rebel gun was fired at iort bumter; but Mr. Wil son's speech here supplements the argument by declaring that it was "only in the light of battle-fields" that we could see just where the path of national duty led. At all events, the former justly doclares that "at last we all Btand upon tne high plane or universal liberty and equality before the law, so far ri complexional distinctions are concerned," w ith "not a yoke to be broken, while tho "re sult of all this cannot fail to be unexampled peace and prosperity." The time will soon come when the fifteenth amendment will be pointed at with patriotic pride by all Ameri cans, of all parties; and the honor of its pas sage must go, in history, where the honor is due. THE LATE MB. BUKLIXQAlIE. The Ileport that He mi Poisoned Kefated. Respectable journal! In this countrv are giv ing curren y to a foolish report set afloat by tome lover of sensation that "a rumor exists in St. Petersburg that the death of Mr. Burlinramo was caused by poisoning, the motive to the crime Doing iuo jcaiuuny 01 nis unmeae asso ciates in the Embassy." Of course, like all such fabrication!, no explanation accompanies it. in view oi me Met mat tne story is having a wide circulation, to the discredit of Americas, lournalism as well as to the treat Injury of the honorable representatives of the Chinese Gov ernment on the Embassy, whose great grief at the loss of their chief it is dlllicuit to appease. we are authorized to state, in behalf ot the family of Mr. Burliagame. that the most posi tive evidences exist that his death was the result of a severe cold contracted at Berlin, and for the want of suillclent care and treatment Imme diately upon bis arrival at at retersburg, m a more stern climate, where he incurred new anxieties and responsibilities, the combination of diseases set in, as publicly and ofilclally announced at the time, which caused his suddeu death. There was nothing mysterious about it. Full particulars of all the circumstances at tending Mr. liurllngame's sickness and last hours tne writer nas oeen peromieu 10 reaa iu a Drivate letter from one of the family of the do- ceased to a relative in this city. H would bo Improper to trench upon the sacredness of such au inttruu:cLt by o'lo'.i:! from It. OuflL's !: to eay that U is a coiajylete refutation of the. wicked report that Wr. Burlingame was poisoned, la wbolo and in all Its i irt. From a letter, written at 8t. Petersburg, February 1!J70, by the second son of Mr. Burlingame, who arrived In that cltv from Berlin the day alter bis fathers death, we are permitted to make a brief extract, In justice to the Chinese, ot wnom he apeaKs specially. Members of Mr. Burllngarne's family In Cambridge, Massachusetts, and in this city, feci moon grieved at mo ronon reierrea to above, aad on this accouut alone depart from a rule which would otherwise be highly Improper under the circumstances, and permit the publi cation of the extract alluded to, which Is as fol lows: The Chinese seemed perfectly broken-hearted, and roor Clilh Taien. now the chief minister. walks up and down all the day long, mourning for "TheOrcat Minister," whose loss they think can never be repaired, iney always speaK or him as "The Great Minister." that being, in Chinese, his title, and seem to honor him as though he was a being of some other world. 1 hey feel that they have lost their best friend." J. . JNUH. 8PEOIAU NOTIOE3. figy NOTICE 13 IIF.UEBT GIVEN TO THE " nliaorihr.ra to tha Capital 8tok of "THR PKO- PLF.'N HANK" that a ii.wtine: will be held at No. 144 B. SIXTH Btreot, on TH UKS A Y, the 6th day of May nit, at 10 o'clock A. M., for the purpose of organizing aid liana and aiecting oinoernnua uirertom. i'. r. mi'itinijrbT. tlUARl.KH A MILLER, K. l. HAKOLIY. 4ttMS J. B. WALKKB. 1ST TREGO'S TEABERRY TOOTHWA8II. It if tho moat pleasant, oheapent and heat dentifrice extan t. warranted tree iron iriurionn inRreouanu. It rrraerrea ana w miens me i eoim Inriirorate end Hontues the Gams! 1'urifloi and 1'erfumna the Hreatht Prevents Accumulation of Tartnr! Cleanse and Purines Artincial Tooth! Is a Huperior Article for Cbildrenl SaIh k -II HmirffiRtji and dentin!. A.M. WILSON. DrumHst. Pronrietor. 8 810m Oor, NINTH AN 1 ULIlhlKT bt Philadelphia. WARD ALE G. MCALLISTER, Ko.2til BROADWAY, Hew York tfiy- HEADQUARTERS FOR EXTRACTING no Twin. Dr. F. It. TliOMAH. formerlj operator at the (loltjin l)ntjt.l Unnmi. devote hi antir nractice to the painless extraction of teeth. Office, No. WU WALNUT Btroet. I gy- QUEEN FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY, iAX AAW Ul liitS VVli, CAPITAL,, X,NI.WrO. SABIJNK, AF.I.KN A DULL PS, Agent, F1BTI1 and WALNUT Street. 89 6EWINQ MACHINES. THE AMERICAN Combination Button-Hole AMD SEWING MACHINE Is now admitted to be far superior to all others as a Family Machine. The SIMPLICITY, BASK and CERTAINTY with which It operates, aa well as the uniform excellence of lta work, throughout tne en. tire range of sewing, In Stltclilne, Ilemmlnx, Felling, Tucking, Cording, llraldlng, lulliiiifr;f CS lathering anil Hetrlng on, Overgeomlng, Embroidering on the Edge, and Its lleautlful llutton-llole and 10 ye let Hole Worlc, Place It unquestionably far In advance of any other similar Invention. This is the only new family machine that embodies any Substantial Improvement npon the many old machines In the market. It Certainly has no Equal. It la also admirably adapted to manufacturing pur poses on all kinds of fabrics. Call and see It operate and get samplos of the work. We have also for sale onr "PLAIN AMERICAN a beautiful family machine, at a Reduced Price. This machine does all that is done on the Comblna Uon except the Overseamlng and Button-hole work Ofllce and Salesrooms No. 1318 CIIE8NUT ST., 1 87 thstnSmrp PHILADELPHIA. EDUCATIONAL.. TAW SCHOOL OF HARVARD UNIVERSITY, Oambmdob, Mass. Beoond Term Mm 10 begins 31st February, 1870. INKTKlimiiWs mil n i l ick. Nathaniel Holmes, A. M., Kojall Professor. Domesti Rjtlittinn. !..... UI. .4 i I 1 4 ...... Christopher O. LangdeU. A. ill., Dane Professor. Nego- tiAuiB i speratiu rartnerump. Charles S. litadlej, LL. D Leotorer. Law of Real Pro- periy. Edmund H. Bennett, A.M., Lecturer. Criminal Law Wills, and AdlniniNlrat.inn John V. Ciiuy, Jr., A.M., Leotnrer. Jurisprudence of 1 be United htates and bankruptcy. The instruction is by lectures, most oourts, exerolses in written and oral discussion of legal suhject,and prepara tion oi uittaainge. The library is one of the most oomplete in the United Stales, and in some departments unequalled : it now com prises about ltf.Uuu voluuieo, and additions are constantly The fees ure $50 per term, and 26 for one-half or any aniauer rraciion 01 a term, flio eatra ouarfros. l'or admission to the school, catalogum, oireulars. auv infi.rmnlii.n. drir .1. A. L. Will i' I IRK. 3 V Registrar. M Y. LAUDER D ACH'S AOADKMV, SRUlTXIYirv dttti iuwhu M IfW R Tir'NTTT Rf. A I'KIMAHV, Kl.hMKNTAKY ANU UNIHUINQ SUilCOI. KIR HOYS AND YOIj'N3 MK.ll. Oirculuiua t Mr. YVarbnrton's. Wo.4W Obeenutst. 12 ittlnt I? D Q E II I L L SCHOOL, MEROHANTVILLK, N. J. FOUR M1LE3 FROM PHILADELPHIA. NHXT CESSION BEUINS APRIL t. For Circulars apply to 8 81 tf T. W. OATTKLL. FURNITURE, ETC RiCHNfOKD & CO., FIRST-CLASS FURNITURE WAREHOOMS No. 45 SOUTH BEOOND STREET, FAST SIDK, ABOVK OHESNUT. U 1 tf PHILADELPHIA WILLIAM FAR SON'S Improved Patent Sofa Bed Make a handsome Sofa unit nnmfortable Bad. with KpriiiK Jiattreps aitnuhod. Those winning to economise room rliould call and eiaiuine them at the eateuaive iirst- Clue t manure r arerooms of IWECNON Sc SON, IVo. U iS H. NKCOND Hirer. Also. WILLIAM FAiiSON'NPATKNT EXTKN810N- TAL1.K t ABTKNLVU. Kvi-ry utile nouhl have ttiam on. 1'ii.y hold the luaves hrtuUr together whuu pulled CAMUEL 8MITII A CO.. No. 4 8. SEVENTH Street, bTRAM AMD GAB FHTKHH AND H.ITMBKR8, Tnbe. Fittings. and lira Work ooostauU on nann. (aWauiMd Tab Jot UerwteiT Lota tatilka& U FIN ANOI Al. THE UNDERSIGNED Offer For Sale $2,000,000 OP TH1 PENNSYLVANIA CENTRAL BR. CO, GENERAL MORTGAGE Six Per Cent. Bonds At 92 and Interest added to Date of r urchase. All free from (State tax, and Issued la sams of $1000, These Bond are Coupon and R rlst,red Interest on the former payable January and July 1; on Uie latter. April anu ucionir. Hie ootids secured by this mortcaire are tunned to W1MTAK lUilKlsaDu JUNIAU 1JAUON, TrUHtens, who cannot, under its provNlotis, deliver to the Company, at anr time, an amouut of bond exceed ing the full-paid capital stock of the Company luiutca to i.io,utfti,uuu. Enough of these bonds are withheld to pay o!T all ezlettnit liens upon the property of the Company, to meet which at maturity It now holds ample menns independently of the bonds to be reserved by the Trustees for that purpose, making the bonds prao- ticaiiy ariKsr muhtuauk upon an its railways, their equipment, real estate, etc. etc. The cross revenue oi me rennsyivania nauroaa In 1869 was 117,250,811, or nearly twenty-eight pur rent, of the capital and debts of the Company at the end of that yenr. Since I8f7 the dividends to the Stockholders have averaged nearly eleven and one-half por cent, per annum after payinc interest on Its bonds and pans- lug annually a large amount to tne credit oi con struction account. The security upon which the bonds are based is. therefore, of the most ample character, and places them on a par witn tne very nest JNationai secuntiea. For runner particulars appiy to Jay Cooke & Co., E. W. Clark & Co., Drexel & Co., C. & II. liorie, IV. II. Ken-bold, Son & Aertsen. WE OFFER FOR SALE the first mortgage bonds OF TDK SOUTHERN PENNSYLVANIA IRON AND RAILROAD COMPANY. Then Bonds run THIRTY YEARS, and par SEVEN PBK OKNT. intoreat in gold, clear of all taxes, payable at the First Rational Bank in Philadelpuia, The amount of Bond issued 1 SB-i5,000, and are aecured by a First Mortgage on real estate, railroad, and franchise of the Company, the former of wiiicn eost two hundred thousand dollars, which baa been paid for from Stock subscriptions, and after the railroad is finished, so that the product of the mine oan be brought to market, it i estimated to be worth S 1,000,000. The Railroad connects with the Cumberland Valley Railroad about four miles below Uhainbersburg, and run through a section of the most fertile part of the Cumber land Valley. We sell them at 92 and aoorned interest from March L For further particulars apply to C. T. YERKE8. Jr., A CO., BANKERS, NO. 20 BOUTH THIRD STREET, 880tf PHILADELPHIA. NEW JLi O -A. IV. City of Allegheny Six Per Cents, FREE OF STATU TAX. We are offering a limited mount of this Loa At 90 Fer Cent, and Accrued Interest. Tne Interest la payable first days of January and July, in Philadelphia, FREE C? STATE TAX. We recommend them as an unquestionable se curity for investment. The debt of Allegheny City being comparatively small, the security offered 1b equal to that of the City of Philadelphia, the difference in price malting them a very desirable and cheap soourity. Wl. PAINTER & CO., Hauliers and Dealers In Govern- ment Securities, No. 36 Scut!) THIRD Street, 1 So 3m PHILADELPHIA. QUSNDIXIVIXG, AVI8 & CO., No. 48 SOUTH TI1IRD STREET, PniLADBLPniA. GLEKDINNiNG, DAVIS & AMORY, No. 2 NASSAU STREET, NEW TORK, : BANKERS AND BROKERS. Receive deposits subject to check, allow interest on stunding and temporary balances, and execute orders promptly for tha purchase and sale of BTOCK 8, BONDS and OOLD, In either clt v. Direct telegraph comnimlcaU-JU frvE Fltf!alc!?h!a House to New lorfc li FINANCIAL JayC00KE3;jP. riiiLADELrniA, new yoiik, and WASHINGTON, J J A N K E It H AHTJ Government lealeri In Seeuritie. tpcclal attention given to th Purchase and Hale of Bonds and Stocks on I'oromlaalon, at the Board of Brokers In this and other cities. INTEREST ALLOWED ON DBfOSITS. COLLECTIONS MADS ON ALL POINTS. GOLD AND SILVER BOUGHT AND HOLD. KLIAULS RAILROAD BONDS FOR INVEST MENT. Pamphltts and full information given at ouromoe, IV o. 114 H.TIIIIMJ Htroot, PHILADELPHIA. (4 llm D. C. WHARTON SMITH & CO., BANKERS AND BROKERS, Ho. 121 SOUTH THIRD 8TKEKT. uooeseors to Smith, B adolph A O. Bveqr branoh of tha basins will hr prompt attention aa heretofore. Quotation ot Stock. OoTernmenta, and Oold a atantlj received from New Tork brprteal vrire, from oaf friend. Edmund D. Randolph (Jo. 8. PETERSON A CO., STOCK BROKERS, No. 39 Hontli T1IIIIB Street. ADVANCES MADS ON GOOD COLLATERAL PAPER. MoBt complete facilities for Collecting Maturing Country Obligations at ow cost. INTEREST ALLOWED ON DEPOSITS. 1 M "P. It II X G I j fc CO. No. 84 SOUTH THIRD STREET, American and Forei?n ISSUE DRAFTS AND CIRCULAR LETTERS OF CREDIT available on presentation In any part of Europe. Travellers can make all their financial arrange ments through us, and we will collect their Interest and dividends without charge. DBIZU, WlNTHBOr V CO.,IDEBXBX, EABJia CO. New York. I Parta. C81 gLLIOTT & 1 U N It, BANKERS No. 109 SOUTH THIRD STREET, DEALERS IN ALL GOVERNMENT SECURI TIES, GOLD BILLS, ETC. DRAW BILLS OF EXCHANGE AND ISSUE COMMERCIAL LETTERS OF CREDIT ON THE UNION BANK OF LONDON. ISSUE TRAVELLERS' LETTERS OF CREDIT ON LONDON AND PARIS, available throughout Europe. Will collect all Coupons and Interest free of charge for parties making their financial arrangements With UB. 46t IS I Hi "V ID "JEL FOR SALE. C. T. YERKES, Jr., & CO., BANKERS AND BROKERS, No. SO South THIRD Street. 4 25 PHILADELPHIA. B. K. JAMISON & CO.. SUCCESSORS TO I?. JP. KELLY te CO., BANKERS AND DEALERS IN Gold, Silver, and Government Bonds At Closest Market Kates, N. W. Cor. THIRD ftnd CHESNUT Sti. Special attention given to COMMISSION ORDERS in New York and Philadelphia Stock Boards, eto, etc. -M JOHN 8. RU8HTON A CO.. No. 50 SOUTH THIRD BTREET. MAECH COTPOffS WANTED. CITY WARItANTB 1 0 Bm BOUOUT AND BOLD, FINANCIAL. A RELIABLE HOML INVESTMENT. $1,000,000 Firit Mortgage Bickinft! Fund 7 Per Cent. GOLD U O N D 8 or Till Frederick burg and Oordobsvllle Rail- J n r tt i j j 1 u vumpnuy, wi Virginia. lrl net pnl and Interest l'nyable In Coin, Free of U S. GoverLment Tax. Th road Is Utv tro ciIIm 1cm. ennnoounc t rod ert oka iniri, l 'raiiKK "urt IIiiim.. wit b Utlarl t. ir'ttlle.whintl le Uie point ot juuotion ot the llb'Mpeati ,n1 Onm Itail- riiao l tn unu nvur, aoil tue extan. tno of tho Orange and Alrirnilria htiilrond to Lyiiohlnirg, It forms the rtinttr-Kt i rni' lini; link in the ajnt-em oi mails leadina to th tiitir. ti ulh, hoiiihwp.i. and Wont, to the l'scille t cn. It vaw. t hriMiau a iicli .eo'lnn of the Shnnaniloail Vatle. th. Un-aI trsHia of whion alone will sniort the road, anil it rm.t cniruani1 an Hhiiniant sttura ot throtieti tmilr. iiom the let of tta lieioir a Mtottl' tHJ 1' TO TinrWA'll-K lf1 TUK I'liTlJ.MAO AT TH K r A Kilt r n I irvi.ariu f m r hiikhh, iikkp A1IK H'R liaAVY8HirPINf!AM l!W FlIUND ON WHOI.K I kMil ll OK TIIK ATI.ANIIul t)()A-T. Inn Uirlc.K.'ilU to tiilewatnr bythiamiito the (lis. tanre ( i mile l"S than ia Alexandria: tI6 milne loa than tta l u hiuoud and Wt I'uiuti 124 uiile loa than. TIM ftorlnls. Th m'.r'i Is lltnitrd to (ltl.tXKI por mile of completed and eiUiiiM. r'il - (the i tnunUHi coot of the road to the tman, TiirniMieo ann e)iiipHHi, win exrweu T-ai miu por mile. tMua rl'ina th. hondliol'titr. an nnn.nal maiein, the bonded del. tot the other irmaia roads lieiua from J,U0 to !.',(V4i tt nilli-l nnd Is IhmiixI to TUK FA KM) llh' I tA N AMI 'I R17ST fXJMPANY- ur ir iiihiv, i lui'Mf.r.s ma TUK HONOUOI.lif UN. and the arnrit t. nrnt-rlmwi in evrr roatioet. A hKIISH Hi IN l I" alro nroTiiioo whiot) will redne. the princti slot th llit TWtt'l It I IUM of it. entire aniunt in .ilT.no. of tho inaturi'y of th hond. M havf InvamiastfHl the Mtivaiiia, of tin Railroad and the ipirit of th rnioiprise, ami oontiilnntly recom mend these bonus to our on Ioiiihts and the puMio. UKJIKK rs ltd i ll kki, lianaors. No. It) Hroad street. Mow Vork. A limited ttimlerot tbe ttundm iund In denomination. of Mm and tWtaOar ottnroj t fjs and interest from r4venir 1. n otirrfney, snd at this pro e are tuo UllKAfl Sr IHMU IMKH KS'I 1IKAK1.XU SKUUKl TlKS IN I HK AlAKkK.r. ftlapond PsniphletM, which explain Mititfactorily ererf qu.ftion that ran Mtnilily t raised by a part eekina a safe and profitable inreelinent, will k furnished ou apoll oatioo. SAMUEL WORK, BANRKR, IVo. 25 Moulli TIIIIll fHrM)t, rillLADFLl'lllA. 314mth SILVER On hand and FOR SALE in amounts and sizes to SUIT. DE HAVEN ft BR0, Tlo. 40 South THIRD 0 trout. tut PU1LADRUPU1A. 8 AF ED ' E PO 8 1 TQ 6 M PAnTe ' rpu PHILADELPHIA TRUST I)L:iOSIT AND lNMUUA.NCB COMPANY, OnriCB AND BUBOLAJt-rBOOr TAULTS IK TUB PII ILA ICli'lI I A BANK -BUILD IUO, No. til CUKBNUT BTRKKT. CAPITAL, 1500,000. For BArK-antKPTNO of OnvamwurcirT Bowna aad nth Segubitiem, t AMiLT Plate. J KWKi.uT. n( other Vaa.it Alihx.n, under special guarantee, at the lowest rato. The Company also offer for Kent at rate Tarrlna from 916 to $76 per annum, the renter alone holding the aej, BMALLBAKK8 INTHK BUKGLAIt-PRUUK VAULT'S, affordin absolute 8EOCB4IX Maioai Vuut, Tkuurr, bua OLABX.aod AOUUlKHT. All fidnciary obliaatloni, such aa Thuat. GnaRDlAit KliiFfl, Kin iTOHhiiu-a, .to., will b nudartak. and laithf uU discharged. Oirealar, giring fall detail, forwarded on applisatioav, DIRECTORS. Thome Robins, . Heujumln B. Oomegji, Lewis K. Aahiiurst, I Auuutitus lleaton, J. l.ivni(tat(in Kmuger, V, lUU lifiml Htarr (. P. nloUnlhgtu, iMniel lladihvk. Kdwin M. Lewis, Kiiward V. Towuaenda damea L. Claghorn, 1 Jotju l. Tajlor. lion. Wm. A. Vorter. OIKK'KRS. JVMfoVnfc-LEWIS K, ASlttll.KHT. Vi-Yfjio.' J. LIVINUNI'tJN KHRINOFR. Brcretnry nvt IVrajmrtr n. P. Mrt t'l.l.AHH. .Winir-KlC'lAUl L. A8HllL'U.sr. a I loth ia HOOFING. READY ROOFIN O. This Rooting 1 adapted to all building. It can b. applied to BTKEP OR FLAT ROOKS at one-halt tbe expense of tin. It i rMdilf pnt oa old rihinel lioofs without remonuu the sliiuxUa, thus afniO inK to dainatiina: of ceiiium aad furtuture wlul ool going repairs. I No travel umhI.) J-KtbliRVK VOLK TIN HOUFH WITH WKLTOS? KI.AM IO I' AIM'. I am always prepared t Kt p.ur and Paint Roofs at eho notice. Also, PAINT ION hAl.K l the barreior aaUu) th. beet aud oheapest in the iurk.l.w WFITON I 17 Ho. Ill N. NINTH BlreeliaboVe Uoalia HX) OWNKK8, AKClUTKC'ia, bUILDEKB, JL AND KOOrKHH. Kootsl Ym tea. Kv.r; sit. aad kind, old or n w. At .So. e-ili N Til i KIj Blrot, Hi. AM if. F.IUAN OONCHKTK PAIM ANU ititiik iHiMPAMV Are aellinn their eelehiated paint tor ilN KlHirH, and Iji prtwerriiix ail wooa ami niriaia aiao. tiieu tulld uoa lex pool coreriui;, ue Lew rer oji ri to toe pulilto. rurihea. enna. bncLela. Ate . lor th work. Anil ttfiuia. rire. aoo nAiiir-orooi: i-iifin. i :rnr. lfaroie. namiiiX. ire. ana alor-proof : l.itlit tog, peaiinic, or anriiiKini. n i. ueallnir. or ahrinkinff. fio i inur vr.vitl.or ha.t. HhaA for all onuiaiea Ulreuiions kiji f jr wo. X. or awd wr. men snipliud. Care, promptnee. rtsinty' 'Jst pr ( (lalll 'uKiinel Jail,e! AKn. wnted for interior oonnUe. i !Siif L'iisl'J'i!. l.RJiR- riu'JtV CEINT.'to KOKNItiHIfxa COOD!, J) AT EFT SlIOULDKU-HKAM Aftl GfiNTLKAIEN H (riTKMKUIKD 81X1 KA. JEP.FKtl'LY FirflNO HEIKTH AMD DUAWti 9 made ironi BicttH'irenirmt at vtry short notluo. All other articles or iTNTLhM.RN'8 OHHSS GOODS In fnll arltjr WINt-'UIWTtCK A CO., U No. Ytaj CUKSNl'T Htroel. . T. EABTON. J. WUAIIOH. IiUrr'l'ON A ncDl.tlKIIV, li BHIII-tNg AND VoMmmiOK MtKVBAKT ho. i. tK)Kt T1KH 81.1 P. N.w York. No. 18 HO I! 'I'M WHAEVKS, Philadelphia. No. 4ft W. PKA'iT Street, Haltluwre. W. are preiared to ship every dowiriplioa of rtn PhiluiolpW, New York, V liiuinKton, and interineJiat. rtoipU .,ti orwptnr-M -inrl ,ti.-'li. 'WnsJ ilval . Btauua-tagj furnlahed at th. crtt nvtioa,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers