2 THE DAILY EVENING TELEGRAPH PHILADELPHIA, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 13, 1870 8 TIE. IT or TXXX3 P2IZI33. Editorial Opinion of the Leading Journals uponCurrent Topics Compiled Every Day for the Evening Telegraph. RELIGION AND THE RICH. Front the S. T. lleratd. We believfl it a fortunate thing that there are no sects in hoaveu. A witty leotnrer once pictured a Methodist preacher standing on one of the battlements of the celestial abode arguing doctrinal points with sturdy Pres byterian standing on another battlement. The Idea of such a discussion, in such a place, is irresistibly comical; but, unfortu nately, there are good grounds for it. If we ignore or regret the picture, it must be ad mitted that, supposing there are sects in the home beyond the grave, heaven must be a somewhat lugubrious place, although cer tainly not dull. Jiut all religious denominations are united In declaring that in the divine land there are no sects, and how, in the fnoe of this belief, they can insist npon theirs being the only true mode of worshipping Qod passes oar comprehension. Matters of ceremony and mode of worship do not, however, comprise the only differences. The ideas promul gated are so opposed, the one to the other, that people are rather puzzled to know what is right and what is wrong. Not long ago we had Mr. Beecher deolaring that it was proper to amass wealth; on Sunday Mr. Ilepworth dis coursed so as to leave the impression that the possession of much money was the cause of much irreligion. We think that he colored his picture too highly. If "a poor man, paying honestly his small rent," is "without respect, then must the clergymen of our churches be directly responsible for bis contemptuous treatment. Is Mr. Ilepworth prepared to ad mit that his influence over bis congregation is next to nothing? Why is wealth the idol before which all bow down and worship, while worthy poverty is ignominiously thrust aside? Perhaps the question will be sufll ciently answered by referring to the faot that clergymen have a weakness for brownstone front houses not less than secular mortals. On the whole, it is our opinion that the rich are neither so selfish nor so influential as Mr. Ilepworth would have as believe. At the same time we admit the force of his argu ment against an absorbing greed of gain. It is not, however, that men desire to amass riches so much as that they aim to possess enough money to spend freely. And the temptation to spend as the evil one dictates, the indulgence in frivolities whioh oooupy the mind to the neglect of God, and the gradual extinction of religious sentiment which so frequently follows a life of luxury, are the rrjknt. ilanofkn wriinh. tiARAf. r.hArw WAaltH ia by no means inconsistent with Christianity. Indeed, without it many souls would have been lost which have been saved. There is hardly a religious mission which is not mainly supported by the wealthy. True, it was dif ferent in the early ages. St. Patrick re ceived no salary for converting the heathen Irish, and we do not remember reading that, at an earlier period, St. Paul was supported by a board of missions. But times have changed since the Christian fathers spread the troths of the Gospel throughout the world. A Christian hotel keeper exacts pay for the bed and board furnished the missionary, which the pagan gave gratis, and, to do them justice, the wealthy contribute their quota towards defraying expenses. There is no more favorite subject than that of money, its use and abuse, with our clergy men, excepting the proline topio of the Papacy. And it is noteworthy that those who declaim most against riches are the very ministers whose congregations comprise the wealth of the country. Are we to conclude from this that they speak by authority ? Are their sermons founded on personal experience with their flocks? If they be, then we have nothing more to say. We can only lament widespreaa innaenty in niga places, ana pray, for the sake of Christianity, that there may be many more cases in the bankrupt courts than there now are. BOSTON BOSH. From the IT. T. World. i We fear that we were hasty the other day in assuring mankind that nothing in the life of the American Anti-Slavery Society became it like the leaving it. The proverb assures us that a mounted mendicant will bring him self to grief. But a fanatio differs from him in this respect that his own days are unac countably prolonged, while his wretched hobby is ridden to an unhappy end. Belays of hobbies are always standing ready, how ever, for the insatiate and headless horseman of hobbies: and accordingly we need not be surprised to find the Anti-Slavery Society transferring their trappings and their truou lence from the useful animal which lies in the highway, slain by the fifteenth amend ment, and already begins to affront the sensi tive nostril, to a new eminence, and careering madly over enclosures upon which they have hitherto abstained to poach. Candor compels us to confess that they are not so amusing in this as in their former characters. The funeral baked meats of the Anti-Slavery Society, including the "chickens, boiled preferred," but coldly furnish forth the marriage-table of "Christianity and lleform." But candor compels us also to acknowledge that, though none of them are known as ex emplars of orthodox "Christianity" and very few of beneficial "Reform," they have made a nearer approach than ever before to prac ticality, and an endeavor to discuss, if not to remedy, the actual wants and woes of men. Their charity did not begin at home, nor has it arrived there as yet; but it seems to be on the way, and we confidently look for it to end there. Formerly they were wrought up to feverish eloquence by the wrongs of men in Virginia and Louisiani; they have now narrowed the range of their vision until it can discern the sins and sorrows of the popula tion of New York; and by and by, perhaps, they will condescend, when they seek a grievance, to look around and make the con sequent discovery that everything is not pre cisely pure and lovely and of good report even within the sacred cirole of the Hub or the inviolate precincts of the alms-houses of Massachusetts. As they have chosen, in the meantime, to consider that, now that the Southern States are redeemed, regenerated, and disenthralled, this city is the sink 01 tne touiest remauuag iniquity, it perhaps becomes us to accept their btnetures with a becoming numilitr, and to order our sackcloth and ashes ia silence. They have indeed, as reformer, , paid ua the same sort of compliment whioh was bestowed upon the robbers daughter by . the Italian confessor in the ballad when bu-i Intimated to him her desire- to quit her evil coursfs; . : "For shame! I sever knew bo criminal a family as "j L- yoara, ' -' ... For iiihii j and many a year they're kept starvat Ion ..... -from niyauiira,. - ,m, , Ann if vou marrr bdv on rasnocuble at sJL ' ' Why you'll reform, aitd wliut wlU ttiou become of rthr rmr If we were any less wicked we would not be half so dear to the Bostonian reformatory mind as we are in our present nnregenerate condition. For the vocation of the Boston reformers would be gone if there were no carnal capital to which they might point and express gratitude that they were not a other towns, or even as this New York. Of course, Boston is not to be criticised by the standards of New York, nor are the con ventions of human society in general of any weight whatever in that capital. Otherwise we should be moved to deprecate that truly Bostonian courtesy which takes ud its para ble of the wickedness of New York to a New York audience, and tells us, to the faoes of such of us as are verdant enough to put our faces in the way of being talked to, what a generation of vipers we are. The indictment which Boston has drawn up in New York against New York, we regret to say, lacks specification. The speakers were all verv snre that New York was a dreadful place, but they did not seem to be so sure what were the prodigies of vioe which we performed. Mrs. Julia Ward Howe was kind enough to say that, though "the ma terial distance between New York and New England was but eight hours by railroad; the moral distance has the whole breadth of the Atlantio in it." The metonymy of Boston, which is indeod eight hours from New York, for New England, of which region Mew 1 orkers can reaoii tne nappy confines in an hour and a quarter or so "by railroad," is as truly and touchingly Bostonian as is the assumption that between us and Boston there is an impassable moral gulf. Bat when Mrs. Uowe came to give reasons for the faith that was thus in her she could only say that she had reud about it in the ATorli American lieriew. "Mr. Barton's record of the City Hail and "Mr. Adams article on tne Erie Road," it seems, decided Mrs. Howe. But we fear it must be owned that Mr. Parton is himself a New Yorker, as Mr. Fisk, Jr., is certainly a Bostonian; bo that Mrs. Howe ought in justice to have conceded us the anti dote in one case and assumed for Boston the bane in the other. And if Mrs. Howe had read her Tribune (which is understood to be good authority in Boston) for the past few weeks with the attentiveness it demanded, she might have inferred that the "ring" and the "City Hall" were not nearly so black as Mr. Parton hod painted them. But though Mrs. Howe s diagnosis is thus vague, her expression is explicit. "I think yon ought to have more Unitarian churohes in Mew lork. Tne want of centrality makes itself felt in this." Deeply as we regret to differ with Boston when Boston is good enough to advise us, we are compelled to reject with soorn the project of precipitating upon a helpless population additional Jiel- lowses, and Frothinghams, and Osgoods. The same nebulosity characterized the re marks of our other Bostonian critics. The single grievous and crying sin that seemed to afflict them was the existence of Mr. Stewart's new house. "Is not that marble palace on Fifth avenue," fiercely inquired the Rev. Mr. Channing, "a fruit and result of the business ambition of this great Vanity Fair?'' And Mr. Wendell runups "tnougut that the marble palace on t nth. avenue ex pressed the orthodox type of Christianity. Very severe things have been said by metro politan critics about Mr. Stewart's house. But, if Boston can find nothing worse in New York than the architectural monstrosity which so excites its horror, its reformers may go home and look at their own glass-house on Beacon street, and let him that then appears without sin among them cast the first stone at ours in Fifth avenue. THE DEMOCRACY AND THE FIFTEENTH AMENDMENT. From the K. Y. Timet, Democratio resistance to accomplished faots has manifested itself anew in Ohio and Call fornia, this time in opposition to the fifteenth amendment. The Buckeye Bourbons, being in control of the polls in Circleville, refused to receive the votes of colored men whioh were offered, on the ground that they had no sufficient evidence of the ratification of the amendment, and that the State law forbade them from receiving them. This action was taken in obedience to the behests of a secret caucus of Democratie leaders, held on the previous evening, and the result was that 150 votes, all told, were excluded. A despatch from California informs us tnat a combina tion of county clerks had been entered into there to refuse to enrol colored men as voters, and that the Democratic members of the Legislature numbering over fifty had ad dressed a letter to the Clerk of Sacramento congratulating him on bis refusal, and pledg ing themselves to sustain him with all the moral and physical force God has given them ! If the proposed action is adhered to throughout the State, it is probable that nearly eight hundred negro voters will be temporarily disfranchised. The inquiry at once suggests itself, what will be the result of so ridiculous a demon stration? Certainly no sane person can sup pose for a moment that the Cirolevillains of Ohio or the multiform villains of California will be able to interpose a veto of the amend ment to the Federal Constitution. The only practical result which can follow their stupid action will be to consolidate the negro vote of the country in the future against the Democratio party, by the demonstration of implacable hostility to the negro whioh it affords. It is estimated tnat there are not far from 120.000 negroes in the Northern States who have been enfranchised by the fifteenth amendment, and at least 706,000 in the Southern States. With such a policy as has just been foreshadowed in Ohio and California, to say nothing of the similar spirit of nos- tility which was evinced by the Demoorats in the btates of Mew York and Indiana in refer ence to the ratification of the amendment, it in fair to assume that seven-eighths of the whole number of negroes will hereafter vote Bteadily with the ltepnblioan party. Ihey certainly will unless they are even more stu pid than the Democrats have asserted them to be. It is difficult to harmonize euch obstinate and suicidal action with accepted ideas of the feeblest regard for partisan prudenoe or policy by the Democratic party, even upon the hypothesis that its ancient prejudioe has become inerudicable, or that its impulse of resistance to every political result in opposi tion to its ancient creed is uncontrollable. It miht rensonably be supposed that a politic icpnrdfor success would curb even its in stinct of obatruction to permanent and irre versible progress, and that it could be in duced to "move on" to the championship of new issues in fresh fields of endeaver. But it Keenis not to be so decreed, and that we are doomed to be pluguod and annoyed by a continued post-tuorteui resistance. Demo cracy seems determined not to forsake the old batt'le-iield, but constantly revisits it like a ghoul, to tear and devour the dead. Aceordlji; to, the latest reports, not TIerr Wsifner. but J I err Ferdinand ililler and I M.1 tyaaiiutWrBy are to aoudoct. tne lieetauvaa Fete, at Bonn, next August. We bojio the laleat , reports axe true, FINANCIAL. jAYC00KE6;(p. PHILADELPHIA, NEW YORK, AND WASHINGTON, B A N I E R 8 AND Dcalcri In Government Securities. Bpectal attention given to the Purchase and Sale of Bonds and Stocks on Commission, at the Board of Brokers In this and other cities. INTEREST ALLOWED ON DEPOSITS. COLLECTIONS MADE ON ALL POINTS. GOLD AND SILVER BOUGHT AND SOLD. RELIABLE RAILROAD BONDS MENT. FOR INVE3T- Pampnleta and full Information given at our ofnee, IV o. 1 14 S.TIIIITO Street, PHILADELPHIA. 418m D. C. WHARTON SMITH & CO., BANKERS AND BROKERS, No. 121 SOUTH THIRD STREET, Snoeessors to Smith, B ndolpa A Oo Every branch of the basin ess will havs prompt attention M heretofore). Quotations of Btooks, Gov.ram.nta, and Gold o stantly reoolved from New York by-prrnita wW-e, front oat friends. Edmnnd D. Randolph Oo pm 8. PETERSON A CO.. STOCK BROKERS, No. S Soutb TIIIIIO Street. ADVANCES MADE OH GOOD PAPER, COLLATERAL Most complete facilities for Collecting Maturing Country Obligations at ow cost. INTEREST ALLOWED ON DEPOSITS. 1 SS TT, K K X E 1. afc CO. No. 34 SOUTH THIRD STREET, Amerioaa and JTorelcm ISSUE DRAFTS AND CIRCULAR LETTERS 07 CREDIT available on presentation la any port of Europe. Travellers can make au their financial arrange tnents through us, and we will collect tHelr Interest and dividends without charge. Drixxl, WnfTHBOr & CO.JDbbxxl, Habjw A Co. ' New York. I Pari. a I E LLIOTT U If W, BANKERS Ho. 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 us. 4SSC SIH. "V 12 K, FOR SALE. C. T. YERKES, Jr., & CO., BANKERS AND BROKERS, No. 20 South THIRD Street, 4 89 PHILADELPHIA. B. II. JAMISON & CO.. SUCCESSORS TO I. IT. ItKLLY ate CO., BANKERS AND DEALERS IN Gold, Ellver, and Government Bonds At Closet Market Bates N. W. Cor. THIRD and CHESNUT 8t. Hpeclal attention given to COMMISSION ORDERS lu New York and Philadelphia Stock: Boards, eta, etc. - JOHN t. RU8HTON ft CO.. No. 60 SOUTH THIRD STREET. MAKCH COUPONS WANTED. CITY WABBANTB ... I. ii c. lesm BOUGHT AND BOLD, FINANOIAL.. HE UNDERSIGNED Offer For Sale $2,000,000 Or TUB PENNSYLVANIA CENTRAL RR. CO. GENERAL MOETQAGE Six Per Cent. Bonds At 92 and Interest added to Date of r nrchase. All free from State tax, and Issued In sums of f 1000. These Bonds are Contxm and IlrirlBtered Interest on the former payable January and July 1; on the laurr, jipni mm urionr r. The bonds secured by this mortjragre are Iwoed to W1STAK MORRIS and JOSIAII BACON, Trustees, who cannot, under its provisions, deliver to the Company, at any time, an amount of bond exceed ing the full-paid capital stock of the Company limited to .VNHj,tnx. Enough of these bonds are withheld to pay off all existing liens upon the property of the Company, to meet which at maturity it now holds ample means Independently of the bonds to be reserved by the Trustees for that purpose, making the bonds prao iicuijj r uu5i aumuAUjt upon au its railways, their equipment, real estate, etc etc. The gross revenue of the Pennsylvania Railroad In 1869 was f I7,8fl0,811, or nearly twenty-elKht per rant nf tho ranltul sanrt taKt. nf who, I'mnnani at the end of that year. Since 1867 the dividends to the Stockholder have averaged nearly eleven and one-half per cent, per annum after paying Interest on Its bonds and pass lug annually a large amount to the credit of con struction account. The security upon which the bonds are based Is, therefore, of the most ample character, and places litem on a par witn tne very best Mtuonai securities. t ot farther particulars apply to Jay Cooke & Co., J2. W. Clark & Co., Drexel & Co., C. & II. Borie, "' W. II. Newbold, Son & Aertsen. WI. PAINTER & CO., BANKERS, No. 36 South THIRD Street. Government Securities ; BOUGHT AND SOLD. Gold, Stocks, and Bonds BOUGHT AND SOLD ON COMMISSION. Southern and Western Col- lections, AND ALL OTHER POINTS, PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO. ACCOUNTS RECEIVED, AND INTEREST AL- LOWED ON DAILY BALANCES. II 203m WE OFFER FOR SALE THE FIRST MORTGAGE BONDS OF THI SOUTHERN PENNSYLVANIA IRON AND RAILROAD COMPANY. Thaaa Bonds ran THIRTY YE1RS, and pay SFCVRN PR OKNT. Interest In gold, clear of all taxes, payabl. at the First Aatlonal Bank in Pniladelpala. Tb. amount of Bonds iaaued is SliiS.OOO, and ar. secared by a First Mortgage on real aatat.. railroad, and franchises of the Companr, the former of wUlcb cost two hundred tbonaand dollars, which has been paid for from btock subioriptton., and after the railroad is finished, so thattbotirodaotsof th.minesoan be brought to market. it is eatlmaUd to b. worth 1,000,000. Itae Itailroad connects with th. Uumbarland Valley Railroad about four mile, below Uhamb.rsburR, and rnns tbroonh a aeotioa of the most fertile part of the Oomber. Und Valley. W. aeli them at 93 and aoorued interest from March 1. For further iiarlionlura apply to C. T. YERKES, Jr., A CO., BANKERS, NO. 20 BOUTH THIRD STREET, 83o:f PHILADELPHIA. QUSNBINNIXC., IAVI8 Sc CO.. No. 48 SOUTH THIRD STREET, PHILADELPHIA. GLENQ1NN1N&, DAVIS & A&J0RY, No. 2 NASSAU STREET, NEW YORK, BANEEK3 AND BROKERS. Receive deposits' subject to check, allow Interest on staudliiK and temporary balances, and execute trdera promptly for the purchase and sale Of fcTOCKS, BONUS aud GOLD, In either city. . I Direct telegraph communication from Philadelphia house, to New Yort. XI FINANOIAL.. QEVEN PER CENT. First Mortgage Bonds or tbb Danville, Ilar.Irton. and WIlkr barre Railroad Company, At 82 and Accrued Interest. Clear of all Taxes). INTEREST PAYABLE APRIL AND OCTOBER. Persona wishing to make Investment are invited to examine the merits of these BONDS. Pamphlets supplied and full information given by Sterling & Wildman, FINANCIAL AGENTS, No. 110 SOUTH THIRD RTRKET, 418 tr PHILADELPHIA. Government Bonds and other Securities taken In exchange for the above at best market rates. SILVER On hand and FOR SALE in amounts and sizes to SUIT. DE HAYEN & BR0., No. 40 South THIRD Street. ui PHILADELPHIA. CARRIAGES, ETO. BREWSTER & CO., or BROORflE STREET; WAREROOMS, FIFTH AVENUE. CORNER OP FOURTEENTH STREET, NEW YORK. ELEGANT CARRIAGES, In all the Fashionable Varieties, EXCLUSIVELY OP OUB OWN MANTJFA0TURB, AND IN ALL KESPKCTS EQUAL TO THOSE BUILT TO THE ORDEK OF OUR MOST VALUED CUS TOMERS. CORRESPONDENCE SOLICITED. 4 8 wfrt)20t FURNITURE, ETO. RICHMOND & CO.. . FIRST-CLASS FURNITURE WAREROOMS No. 45 SOUTH SECOND STREET, . VAST BIDE, ABOVE OHESNUT. Ultf PHILADELPHIA yy.l LLIAM FARSOfw'8 Improved Patent Sofa Bed Makes a handsome Sofa and comfortable Bed, with bpruiK Matiroxa attached. Those wishing to economi. room f bould call and examine them at tha extonaiv. lirst cUaa iornilui. Warerooinaof FAjtMOX ate SOX, No. ti'iS N. NKCO.NI) Htreet. Abto.WILI.TAM PARSON'S PATKNT KXTKN8IONT TAbl.K FAbi'KNINtJ. Every table ahould have them on. Thty hold th. leares firmly together when pulled about tb. room. 8 Usmw3m D EINQ AND SOOURINQ. JO 8 12 I II HI O T T fi T, Kt.KVK DK PARIS, FRENCH 8TK.AM DYKINQ AND BOOTJRIRO, On any kind of Wearing Apparel, for Ladiee, Uenta, and Obildren. Tatent aeraxatas for Stretching Pants from on. to nr. inooas. No. 809 S. NINTH Btreot, Philadelphia STOVES. HANQE8, ETO. THOMSON'S LONDON KITCHENER T KUKOl'KAN RANOK, for families, hotels, or Riihlto institutions, in i wunik utrf kkk it IZK.H. Also. Philadelphia Kanirea. Hut-Air Fur. naees, Portable Healers, Low-down Gratee, lirubrurd Moves. Bath Boilers, BUiw hole l'iates, Hoilers, Uookina Stov.s,eto. EDUAR U THOMSON, Successor to Bll A UP K A THOMSON, 127 fm6m No. 8u N. BKOOND Street. XT O T I C E TO CONTRACTORS. Tlie Western Maryland Kullroad Company having secured the aid of the city of Baltimore, will soon be In funds suDlclciit to complete the road from Pipe Creek Bridge to Hagcrstown, and will receive Proposals until 8th April for all the unfinished Gra ding and Bridging on the uncompleted section, the work on which has been suspended for a year. Payments made in cash for all work tlouc. The work on the.Graduatlon, Masonry, and Super structure of Bridges will amount to about f ioo.ooo. For all Information as to the present condition of the work to be done, apply to W. LiOLLMAN, President, 8 89 6w No. 84 N. HOLM DAY Street. M1CUAEL WBAVEU. UliOKUK II. B. UHLKK. WBAVSn L CO., It ope ami Twine IVJunuIactMrers) AND Dealers lu JIeu uutl Hliip . Cbuutlxery. No. 8 Noi Ui WATEli Street, - - mm No. SS North WUASVES, Philadelphia. SHERIFF'S ALE. RHERIFF'8 8 A L E. By virtue of a Writ of Levari Facias to me dlreotet wlU be exposed to 1'IJIIL.IC BALI?, AT TD E HOTEL OF JOSEfl! YAUNALL, In the town of New Castle, New Castle Coanty Delaware, O HAT IJ It WAV, The 93d day of April, A. D. 1ST0, at S o'clock P. M., the following descrlbtd REAL ESTATE, Viz.: All that certain tract or parcel of land called the Mil. Booae Farm, lituat. ljinir, and being in th. huodrad and county of New Oaatl., in th. Stat, of Delaware, nearth. town of Now Oaall., and whioh is bound.d and daaoribed aa follows, to wit : Beginning at a point in th. centre of th. road leading from New Castle to Hamburg Una, .ppo- aiU a etoaa, aet on th. north aid. of aaid road, and at th. distanc. of 17 16-100 perohea from a ditoh dividing th. land hereby to b. conveyed from land new bald by T. Taaker, formerly a part of btonham farm, tbenoe along th. crntr. of th. aaid road north 78X dngr.ee, east 17 16-ltiO perohea, to a point in th. Said road oppoait. th. middle of th. ditoh aforesaid, tbeno. along th. middle of the ditoh aforesaid notth371 degrwa, waste 1 56-11)0 perches, theno. north 49 degree, west 44 78-UK) perches, north SV d. greea, tut 84 44-100 perohea to th. oentr of tbeNewOaa tl. and Franobtown Railroad, tb.no. along th. lin. of th. aaid road, westward lr to the Una dividing this land from Und of tb. heirs of Kobert Burton, deceased, theno. with the aaid dividing lin. south, nine degreea, west 73 perch... north 78 degrees, west 10 ft-lo perches, south 804 degrees, west bi perches, aouth 7fitf degraea, aaat I 4-10 porohea. south 84 degreea, weat 89 S-lO perohea, to the Marsh Bank, and continuing tb. aame ooura. 11 HO perches to low. water mark an th. river Delaware, theno. by th. lin. of low-water mark op tb. aaid river to a point opposite to tba stone on the aide of the Hamburg road aforesaid, and thence by a lin. at right an. lea to tha said road, to tho centre of tb. aaid road and place of beginning, containing of upUnd and marab eighty four aorea, mora or leas. Seized and taken in sxeontlon aa the property of Charles YT. Grant and Isabella bis wifa, and WillUm II. Paddock and Laura bis wife, and F.uner Ulaik, terra tenant, and to be sold by JACOB RICHARDSON, Sheriff. Sheriffs Office, New Cattle, April 4, A. D. 1879. 4 11 let WATOHE8, JEWELRY, ETO -EVIIS LADOM-US & CoT DIAMOND DEALERS & JEWELERS.V WATCHES, allTILKY A BILTKU WARS. WATCHES and JEWELRY REPAIRED. . 02 Chwtnnt 8t, PWla. BBBsaannaaaiBaisHHiiaMsiia" Ladies' and Gents' Watchei AMERICAN AND IMPORTED, Of th. moat oelebratad maker. FINE VEST CHAINS AND LEONTINEJ In 14 and 18 karat. DIAMOND and other Jewelry of th. latest dealer Engagement and Wedding Rings, In 18-karat and ooia. Solid BUrer-War for Bridal Prseeota, Table Cutlery, Plated Ware, etc Ulfmwi QENUINE OROIDE GOLD AND SILVER WATCHES, S13, $15, 30, $35. W. are now selllnc nnr Watahaa ai nttall Inm . Wholesale Drioea. IK 12 and nowarda. all In hnnt.ln ZC' cases, eotlmen's and Ladies' sizes, warrant a ik i timers aa tne nest, oosting ten limes aa BBOOO. OUA1A8 AM1 JttVVttLHV. ., ' Send for circular. Goods sent O. O. D. Customers can examine before paying, by paying Morass charges ah way. JAMES GERARD & CO., No. 85 NASSAU STREET (UP STAIRS), 88mwff MEW YORK. RICH J E W C L R Y, JOHN 11 It 13 INT IN A W DIAMOND DEALER AND JKWKLLEH, NO. 13 SOUTH EIGHTH STREET, 8 1 mwl Smrp PHILADELPHIA. WILLIAM it. WARNS & CO Wholesale Dealers in oorner KKVKNl'U and fJHKSNI'T mtrmmu 8 SJlKacond floor, and Ufa of No. Rf 8. THIRD HI. CLOCK8. TOWER CLOCKS. MARBLE CLOCKS. BRONZE CLOCKS. OOUOOU OLOOKS. VIENNA REGULATORS. AMERICAN OLOOKS, . W. ItUSBULL, No. 22 NORTH PIXTH STRFET. ACRICULTUHAL. C3 BUIST'8 WARRANTED GARDEN iE,SKKD8. Th. Rends we iftor are oxclusiroly taose of our own growth, and will be found far superior to those aenerall) sold ty dtali'rs. Market gardonera and privit. families, to whom rwliuhl. eeeds are of tho utmost im portance, should obtain their supplies from RUIHT'M HKKD WAKKHOUtiR. Nos. 933 and M4 MARK FT Street, above Ninth. Call or send for Kulht'e Garden Manual and Price List for IH7U, wliii'h contains 120 pages of useful information to country rebidenn. 8 171ns ft AGRICULTURAL IMPLEMENTS AND 3l GARDKN TOOLS. Ploughs, Harrows. Onltira-lui-b, heed bowers. Churns, (iarden and Field Rollers, awn Mowers, Railroad and Garden Wheelbarrows; Hit. bt raw, and Fodder Cutters, all at reduced prices. Call and eiannne our stock ROBERT BUIST, Jr., SKK1J WARKHOUKK, 8171m Nos. 983 and KM MARKET Street. TIIE PHILADELPHIA LAWN MOWER. This is the most improved hand machine made, and is just tb. article needed by all who have grass to oat. It can be operated by a lady Without fatigna. Pric. $28, and .very Mower warranted, hold by anu .very aioww r"""K0BKR. BT7IRT, Jn., HKKD WAREHOUSE, 8171m Nos. 032 and IM MARKET Street. REMOVAL.. THE OLD-ESTABLISHED UNITED STATES REVENUE STAMP AGENCY HAS REMOVED FKOM No. 67 South THIRD Street TO Ho. 60 South THIRD Street, 8 St JACOB B HIDQWAV. OTTON rJAlL DUCK AND CANVAS, or all nnobers and brand. Tent. Awning, Trunk and Wkkoohiovw A)nok. Also, P4or MiaufaotureiV I ricr I)!-s, from sevny-sig lnebe With Paalin. littog. Wllwtr, w n-ywRM AH, KO.U OSDUJUBU(UiUrttK,
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