2 SPXXIX? OV TIMS PIUJ33. Editorial Opinion of the Leading Journals uponCurrent Topics -Compiled Every Day for the Lvening Telegraph. MARRIAGE AND DIVOUCE. From the (TuVay.) 2'iiinr. Atnoiig ilia 8iciitl proMc-nn whi.jh nro at tracting ho much Httiiiitinii, ih'Tii is uone tint presses more seriously for H'lluiion, nti l wnui tbat bpcuis more diiliiiult to koIvo, than tlm question, "Whituhall be the la v of divorco?' for upon its proper adjustment dopeiiiW tlia successful regulation of tha most dhtrcHtin evils of tbe tiuio. Ia mo.it of tbo St, it o t divorces are now granted not only for ud il tery ami f or ol her felonious crimes, but for desertion, brutality, and ub tudoued driiukuu neBS. In ninny of the oldnr HtateM, a dosor tion in not considered u millioieut jtwtiS jittion until after tha lapse of live yo.irn, ud tbe divorced party in not permitted to remarry. In Mattsachub Us a proposition is now before the Legislature to grant divorces at the end of a tLroe year' desertion, and to permit both parties to marry ntjiiin. The Springfield lla 2Mican opposes this amend nent vigorously, and snggettis a aubstitnte for divorco, which seems to ns about as bad. It says: "We would legally rerogtilze ami ordain sepira tlon of learned prson wh.i elder could nut or would not endure ou Another. Wii wouiii protait weakness from hro'u Hy ny the Interference of it, limit dies not flloiV innt wu stwuid allow all tlieio releaHcd parties to o forth and marry agtln, ami possibly again to separate, uii't aulu and ajruin to marry, ferthlit la a nlaeiine tint irrows by v lint it feeds on. Tint is Just what we would not do, and that-society cannot airrl to permit. Siulo life should lo I ho penally paid for tlie misUKe of a wrong mating Miuriage and divorce alike need this f'ouserva'ive Influence. Marriage will he more thoughtfully and catefully mwie, divorces less eagerly sought, under suon a rule." Love is unquestionably the sign, seal, and Banotirlcation of tnarriago, but wo are not able to see the force of the claim set tip by Robert Dale Owen and other socialistic phi losophers, that a compulsory cohabitation is prostitution enforced by law. There is no thing like "prostitution" in compelling a man and Lis wife to abide together under the same roof. If they "cannot endure each other," let them live and sleep in separate rooms, and eat at separate tables. Under this arrangement, if they are kept apart by a mere whimsy or aversion, the chauccs are nine out of ten that they will conquer it. If they do not it is their misfortune., and they will suffer; but they will probably suffer Iohs than society would Buffer by the general adoption of the Indiana and Connecticut standard. Of course, no woman should be compelled to live tinder the same roof with a brute who beats her, or with a confirmed sot, but we doubt the efficacy of "separation" as a remedy for those "uncongenial'' persons who are driven asunder merely because they do not like each other. For the statistics of social science go to show that "separation," formal and informal, is the most prolific source of the crime for bidden in the seventh commandment. Esta blish separation and forbid remarriage, and the social evil would show an alarmiug in crease. The Republican gives us the apothegm that "easy divoroe means easy marriage," and we add that easy separation means easy morals. This is a grave question to handle. No man oan decide it ex cathedra. We can see that in those religious organizations where men and women are ruled the most arbitrarily by priests, marmges are the most constant. In the Mormon (Juurea no sucn thing as a divorce is known, and adultery is punished with death. In the Catholio Church divorces are practically prohibited, and the adulterer is punished with death spiritual, instead of temporal. Something must be done in these States to prevent our social fabric from falling asun der from lack of cohesion, and to give to marriage some of the permanency and so lemnity which ought to belong to an institu. tion which stands at the base of all human government. ' BABY-KILLING. From the Pall Kail Gazette. Some of the crimes and vices of highly civilized societies are scarely less inhuman or more refined than the crimes and vices dis played by savages or by semi-barbarians, Among untutored tribes, and among nations like the Chinese, infaut life is little valued, and many are the tales recorded by travellers and missionaries of desertion or infanticide. In England and in France we may hear siuil lar stories almost daily of inhuman mothers, and of women who muke it their business to get rid of infants that are not wanted by their parents. The lirituh and Foreign Madico-CIdrvrgi-eal Review for the present quarter contains an article on this subject which deserves a wider circulation than it is likely to obtain in a professional journal. The writer points out that at least iiuit ot tne infants born in Lug- land and Wales die within three mouths of their birth; but how many of these are delibe rately done to deatu is unknown. Illegitimate inrauts (says the reviewer) are not necessarily, or even usually, put out of the way directly; more couiinoiuy imureci meaus are em ployed. Mill tlie statistics of tue general registrar olhce tell us that la the five years 1803-7. out of tbe 8Us vloieut deaths of Infants under one year of age, 8V4 were proved to be Instances of direct infan ticide, and of these sio Infants were murdered within a month of the time of their birth. Ot these we Hud that 218 were strangled or otherwise siufocated, rt were killed by mows iracturmg tne skuii, by cutting, or by stabblng.M by Intentional n-irlect,22 by drown lug, V oy exposure com, auii i ujr mu eiuipiu pra ceeding or leaving tne corn uuueu at uirtn. But, unhappily, what we know with regird to the prevalence of baby-killing does not show the full extent of the crime. Much is left to conjecture; for the irregular mariner in which verdicts are returned, the ease with which the dead bodies of infants can be dis- rosed of. and the habit which prevails of bringing in the verdict "Found dead," forbid correct btatistics. There is therefore room for cross exaggeration, as in the cue of a writer in the Church and the World, who observes that "the metropolitan canal boats are impeded as they are tracked along by the number of drowned. infants with which thoy come in contact;" but it is certain that tbo murder of infants directly by their mothers, or indirectly through the tender mercies of baby-farmers, is a crime of no common ra.ig nitude in this country. Ihe author of the paper from which we have quoted believes with Mr. Acton that among other means of diminishing tbe evil a change in the bastardy laws is imperatively necessary. Not one m m in fifty, aocording to Dr. Lankester, contributes to the support of his ille gitimate child; for, since :.'. od. per week is all the mother can claim, there are few woiueu who will put the law in force. Mr. Aotou ' points out with terrible distinctness how our bastardy law tempts to murder, makes prosti- ' tution compulsory, and "encourages a trade hardly less infamous that of baby-farming." This law was enacted nearly forty yearn ago; tiid t Li re can bo no doubt that cogent roa-wtjSiw-v bo urged for Hs amendment. At the same time it is essential that some means should be adopted for (Jiwiaialuiig the evil of baby-faimiiig. How this cm Ve done, however, is not very obvioun. Tbo reviewer HtigeMfi that the registration of every birth should be compulsory by law, as in Sootl.ind niid Inland, and this whether the infant be born prematurely or at lull period, alivo or dead; that tbo registration of death should lie nccon pMi iil by a certificate from a duly qualified practitioner, tttatiug that be has had proper opportunities for forming an opinion pud fpeeitjing the ciause of tbo d.Jatb; and "that some statutory chack should be plncrd upon tbo practice so common among undcitaktrs of disposing surreptitiously of the bodies of infants dying uubaplized or un registered, in the coffins of other persons, or otherwise." lie suygots, too, that baby farms should bo licetised and placed tuider tho eyo ot a judicious niodu.ul otlicer; and tuat "houses to which females moving in the better classes of society who so far forget themselves us to becume pregnant may retire dining tho period of their coiitiuement" tdiould be liable to a similar supervision. Mr. Aeton also, although he justly characterizes the trade of baby-funning as infamous, would have it publicly licensed, and the houses open to inspection by properly appointed officers. In the present state ot Luglisli feeling about such matters a plan like this is impracticable. We cannot discriminate between a law which recognizeB tbe existence of an evil for the purpose of diminishing it, and a law whioh sanctions what all good men confess to be abomination. isetwetu England and f ranee tuoro is a wide difference of opinion about many ques tions affecting public morality. Nevertheless it may be well worth inquiring how our neighbors act with reward to this question: ai.d an article in tbe Jteoitc den Deux Monde for March l." will give us some of tho infor mation we require In that country, an in our own, the excessive mortality of infants hiis excited the atteutiou of physicians and of social economists, and JI. Leon le 1 ort attri butes it in a large measure to the iiiduntne vourricitre which is carried on in some of the country districts. This trade is not conducted secretly, as with us, but is subject to super vision and control. I ho nurses engaged at the grand bureau have a small sum secured to them in case the parents fail to pay for the Mtpport of their children, and the result is that in a vast number of cases the parents are defaulters, the income of the nurses is diminished, and of course the children suffer in consequence. Moreover, the organization, we are told, does not give the advantages that might be expected from it, and the nurses are fiequently able to neglect their infant charges Viiihoutfear of discovery. In the thirteen departments aronnd Paris where baby Pari sins are placed out to nurse, the infant mor tality is so much greater tban elsewhere that, according to M. Leon le Fort, there can be no doubt that it is due to the indwtne nour- lia'ere. A year or two ago it was stated (we believe in the Medical Times and Gazette) tLat of 5:5,000 infants born annually in Paris IS, 000 are sent into the country to be nursed. M Le Fort, however, gives a total of 1 1,000, and remarks that it is impossible to calculate tbe mortality precisely, since the nurses whb undertake the management of these infanta are not all under a like control. A TERRIBLE ENCOURAGEMENT TO DISSIPATION From the Chicago Tribune, 11. G. has been writing about whisky in a manner that must satisfy the most superficial observer that he was full of his subject. If we had time to stop, and knew who it was, we would denounce the heartless fiend that for a paltry stamp sold the great philosopher that tire which set his brain ou.hre. He must have known that with Greeley's propensities the consequence of his being drunk for half an hour would be a tipsy leader in the Tri bune. Sure enough, having got his whisky, and not knowing what to take after it, he rushes into the Tribune with tbe startling query, "After whisky what?" An experienced friend would have answered, "A headache But, having no such kind counsellor at hand, as tipsy men are apt to do, he takes the pub lie into his confidence. "After whisky whut?" is the question. Tbe philosopher, by a hallucination quite natural under the cir cumstances, imagines himself to be Joo. Such a phenomenon is not at all strange. We have seen persons fancy themselves to be the prophet Jeremiah; and that, too, at a time when we ourselves were tne prophet J ere iniah. But in his fancied character of Joe, he soliloquizes thus: "To Joe drink is almost a necessity. IJis spade or hod tires only his body; the brain, lies torpid, and there is a brain there, after all. His glass of liquor is an outlet, a safety valve, for whatever imagination or passion lies in Lim. It serves him for onera, ball, theatre; it is his Tennyson, his fine clothes, his exhilarating combat of wit; it is, let us remember, all he has. Cinderella's rats and pumpkin to our educated eyes would be, no doubt, absurd and disgusting enough, but to her tbey were an enchiuitod chariot that drew her into fairy land, and made her for the time the compumou of pnuces. It is easy to believe that whisky has some ngreeableness of ilavor, especially to a prohi bitionist. But II. G.'s experience of the bliss of being drunk would be calculated to make any man invest half a dollar in that direction, if he were not incorrigibly abandoned to modernte drinking. Compute the net pecu niary profit which II. G. author of "Politi cal Economy" and "What I Know about Fanning-' finds, in a glass of grog, over every other means of earthly enjoyment: C't st of 1 opera, lucludlnar carriage and giovig $2i-no 1 ball, single ticket Hfoo Tliertre, private box 6 DO 1 cipt Teuuvsuu, diamond edition, dirt cheap at 185 1 suit flue clothes for II. Cl 75'OJ flcture-Bay lO.OUOuO Total cost 6f the equivalent of 1 class of wlilBky tto.m-as Cost of whisky first proof II. G.'s net profit on 1 glass of whisky $10,110 us lit re is an encouragement to dissipation such as bad never before been spraad, like the net of the fowler, in the path of American youth. How can II. G., when sober, forgive Lin self, or, rather the incarnate fiend whose whisky, transferred to II. G., producod this epistle ( THE THEATRICAL SIDE OF MRS. Mc- FARLAND. Fim the firooktyn Eagle. The principal testimony in tho painfully prolix trial of Daniel MoFarland is that which bears upon bis alleged Insanity. The cause at-sitned. as produciug that condition was tho conviction, real or fancied, that his wife loved another man better than (the loved her hus band. This ambulatory affection of the lady in the case led the object of it to further her very strong desire to attempt the career of an actress. The course of events in evidenoe shows Madame to have been stage-struck. It is with this prevalent passion of various per kotih for a (Irainsno rlenitinv fiat we propose generally to deal; particularly relating u to the facta of this case, Mxa, McFailaad aljriuf histrionic history and her involved conjugal tragedies have no grown, tho ono out of the other, that, in pursuing the first, we are led up to the second. iter original essay as a pnouo performer was elocutionary, uur auojeot, nrst in strncted by her husband, himself a doughty dcclaimer, read at a "select entertainment' at Newark; rested a few months, and real on her own responsibility at Trenton, and had by this time so impressed her feminine and other friends with her elocutionary abilities as to lead them to contract for her an en gagement at Winter Garden. There she suc cessively assumed the name of Miss dishing and the role of "Julie do Mortimer," in lliche.Hfv; of tbe "Queen," in Hamlet; and of "Nerissa," in The Merchant of Venice. After her husband's first rencontre with Richardson, Mr. Manager Stuart at onco rotirod her from his boards, whereon she had been playing from niul-Novombor, lSlili, to March 11, 18(17, just about four months. Read in the lii;ht of Mrs. Calhoun's confident and afl'ectionato prophecies of suocess, Mrs. MeFarland's career as an actress is in structive by contrast. Mr. Booth, to whom she played, and Mr. Stuart, for whom hbe played, both say she was "a most dire actress." It is readily reojlleotsd by those of us present at tho successive 'Booth Revivals at winter (Jarden, that Miss Gushing, never known to be Mrs. Mo FurlBnd, lacked not merely the i$preciation of her characters, lint could not subsittute for that lack such electric and bounding per sonality as stands so many actresses in good steud for other gifts. The lady was not "stngy," we admit; but "neither was she "natural, tho features of her representations being expressed in the words "timid, tame, inert, and devoid alike of art or impulse." Such was the judgment of contemporary cri tics. Such was the apotheosis of tho artist whom Mrs. Calhoun had picked out to de monstrate that "actresses are born, not made." It is an instructive remembrance that the person who succeeded Mrs. McFarland in her last role was the very Miss Johnson whom Mrs. Calhoun impaled in a letter to her friend as a bistrionio horror. It is needless to say that Miss Johnson's acting heaped coals of fire on the head of her critic. So much does the theatrical side of Mrs. McFarland anggest and enforce. Whatever be tbe issue of that trial, it should contribute to the community a wholesome discourage ment of all purely gushing ambitions stage- ward. Theatres and the public alike are en titled to this degree of protection. Let an honorable profession and the wide, wide world not be exposed to an irruption of incapables upon the stage. So will boards and benches rejoice in common. AMERICAN FAMILY LIFE. From the N. T. Tribune. For a year or two the articles in the Lon don Saturday Jleview upon social topics have gained for that cynical and shallow journal increased notoriety by the virulence and wit of their attacks upon women. Wife, maiden, mother, and old maid have each been held up to ridicule with a rancor and malignancy only to be explained by personal spleen; the more gentle and womanly the type of woman, tho more implacable and venomous was the assault. Now. this puerile and almost cattish spitting of ill-will, which might provoke reply if it came from a man, becomes only amusing when we know that it emanates from one of the maligned sex. Whether hell can furnish no fury like a woman scorned is hard to tell; but we do not need this instance to teach us that a woman here, disappointed in the happi ness or love which has fallen to the lot of her more fortunate sisters, is apt to regard them with about as much justice and temper as did the immortal Sairey Mrs. Prig when she pos sessed herself of the whole of tho salad. In one of the last numbers of the lieview this gentle savage pounces as usual upon the latest disgusting scandal, and gloats over it as evidence of the hopeless condition of her hex. ihe Mordaunt trial and the cowhidin" exploit of Lydia Thoir pson are the especial incidents which she selects, and from which sho arues, with true womanish logio, that all English women are strong-minded ballet dancers, or, if not ballet-dances, worse. She fairly whoops with exultation, like a Ca manche over a fresh victim, at the pitiable spectacle of the miserable blonde tramps and the crazy Mordaunt woman, first shrieking out the usual feminine triumph of "I told jou so," and then trying her brain to invent new and more filthy epithets for her sex, for the last young peeresses and tripudiant matrons," us well as tho "cive-and-take. loose-zoned ace." in which they live. She denounces all English womon as ani mbls, and as animals either wallowing in nastiness or peering wishfully over the brink of it, und then, by a reasoning which we confess ourselves unable to follow, throws the blame of this condition of affairs upon the long retirement of tho Quoon aftor her husband's death. "While this continues," she predicts, "English society will present a happy combination of all the sin of Versailles and the insolence anil brutality of a S iratog t boarding-house." It appears to us outside barbariuns that if English women were only held out of this slough of corruption hy the chance of an annual drawing-room or ball at liuckinylihm i'ulace, their tenure ot virtue must be very slight, indeed. But, however amusing her sketches may be, they carry with them no evidence of truth. We would be us loth to receive them as accu rate pictures of English homes as the prurient uncleanness of Ouida'a novels. We protest against tho mistake made by this woman and those of her stamp on this hide of the Atlantic, when they take the thin and impure crust of fashionable life as the exponent of either English or American society. Because Sir Charles Mordaunt'a wife was mad from disease or vice, we cer tainly do not argue that the pure homes of England are all suddenly filled with Messa limis; because our own fashionable girls exhibit themselves in immodest) dances or revel in tho indeoencies of the opera boujff'e, we do not suspect the air to tainted about well-bred women, or feel disposed to doubt the integrity and purity of our own wivea and daughters. Immorality among womon is found in two strata only of our social life: in the lowest class who fill the houses of prostitution in the cities (eight-tenths of whom, by statistics in New York and Philadelphia, aro foreigners, and in that spurious aristocracy whose only claim to notice consists in wea'th and the vulgar display of it. Both of these bodies of women, by virtue of a certain unity of aim and Hash demeanor, keep themselves glaringly before the publio eye. They find their ready organs, too, in some of our Now York jour nals, which willingly advertise not only tho fine dresses of the latter, but tho assignations of their unnamable sisters. Hence the name of American society has been gradually absorbed by Anonyma and Mrs. Shoddy, and is degraded almost beyond help by the silliness of the one and the vice of the Other, how, what have liiusti lo wooiou to do with tho great eUiuent of American domestio life? Absolutely nothing. Tlmy flaunt out their littlo hour, they help build temples to vice and to infanticide, and that is all. Apart from them in the cities is tbo great class of workingwomen the teachers, writers, artists, tradeswomen and a purer body of women does not live. Healtbtul work for body and mind leaves no room for tho vagnries of passion. Utterly apart from them, too, is the class in tbo citios which most powerfully represent tbe culture aud re finement of the country. But it is outside of cities, lot us remember, that wo must look for tho strength and substnnco of our national life in the qtiiot homes that stretch from ocean to ocean, innumerable, ns their sands. In this great national domestic life, tbo feverish, uneasy fow who call themselves society, on one or two city streets, aro never heard of. Not only virtue, but modesty there is yet the rule, and it is our honest belief that nowhere in tho world is uod as sin cerely worshipped, is the marriago tie as universally respected, and are women as pure in thonght and deed, as in the ordinary family life ot America. Our faith in Anglo- Saxon blood, too, is strong enough to pre serve our old respect for British wives and mothers, despite the lamentations over them of their own prophets. THE TEERAGE IN PHILADELPHIA. From the X. Y. World. Some years ago, aa we all remember, a question agitated the land: "Have we a Bourbon amongst us?" and grave pamphlets were printed to prove that a certain half-breed Indian was a chip of the disreputable old block. Whatever may have been the result of this controversy, there can be no doubt that now we have a "Aluncaster. It is in Philadelphia, too, that we find the real sangre azul of the peerage, albeit Irish. This reve lation has been made in consequence of the startlings news having reached his family connections here that a "Muncaster has re cently, when wandering near the plain of Marathon, been kidnapped by some of the nomad descendants of Miltiados. Thus runs the story and the pedigree. Gamel de Pen nington came over with the Conqueror, and "settled in Lancashire. He was a knight, iliovcs auratus," but whether "banneret or bachelor," does not appear. Gamel left descendants, one of whom served under Marmion at Flodden, and probably took part in the nuncnpative charge which that exem plary chiettain ordered just before his demise. Then there is a tremendous gap in the pedigree, from l.ril3 to 1;2.", from tho Tudor to the Stuarts, when we hear of a "worthy" called Sir John Pennington, "admiral to Charlea I, and distinguished for loyalty," which waa rewarded as loyalty, then as now, is sure to be by promotion, and Sir John became a baronet. But "surgit aliquid a mart, etc., for a tangle just then occurred in the family. A certain Alderman Penning ton, "Lord Mayor and M. P.," was aregioide, and in the days of Restoration brought shame on his kinsman the baronet. He was, to use the gentle language of the Liturgy, "one of those violent and bloodthirsty men who bar barously murdered the anointed, blessed King Charles the First." Whether he was hanged or only exhumed is not clear, but we learn (and all this we glean from Forney's J'rens, now the accredited organ of the Phila delphia aristocracy of both colors; that the crime waa expiated by confiscating a con sonant in the regicide branch of the family, making the name read "Penington." They, naving Had enough of capital pun ishment, turned Quakers, emigrated to America, "and suffered much persecu tion, wnetner in tne via world or in Massachusetts the record does not say. In the meantime, the double-?! Penningtons continued to prosper, and in 1783, John, fifth baronet, probably for ratting from Mr. Pitt and voting with the coalition, waa made a peer Baron Muncaster. In the meantime, repentance was doing its work with the drab dtscendants of the regicide, and there was reconcilation between the one "i" and the two iin," for we are told that, during tho lit tle unpleasantness which occurred in the last ceLtury between these colonies and the mo ther country, a certain Captain Pennington, sixth baronet and four''i baron, made au ex cursion westward, anu in the autumn of 1777 visited Philadelphia. It ia obvious we are striving to state tbe ease euphemistically. Then was it while Washington and his sol diers shivered and starved at alley I' orge- ihat the British captain and the descendant of the regicide were warming their toes and smoking a sympathetic pipe in the Quaker City. From that day to this, when the Sulioto or Athenian brigands cap tured Muncaster, the family harmony ha9 been perfect; and the rrens, in a leaded edi torial, tells the wondering world that the alderman who aided in cutting off Charlas Stuart's poll "was a cadot of the family now repro&ented in chiet by Lord Muncaster, who is twenty-fifth cousin of Mr. Penington, Jr., bibliopole, South Seventh street, Philadel phia." It ii so unusual nowadays to get any information about white folks from Forney's pnper that we have felt it a duty to emphasize this exceedingly interesting and important contribution to the family story of our rec tangular and radical neighbor. It is a comfort to know we have a Muncaster so nigh, evon t hough twenty-five times removed. COAL.. FEHCIVAI. K. BK1X. HEW80B si:b:jivai. h. uull & co., CEALEI1S W Lehigh and Schuylkill Coal, DKPOT: No. 1336 Nortb NINTH Street, I 7 West Hide, below Miwtar. l'.ranch Office. No. 407 RICHMOND Street. MEDIO Al. TV7EW DISCOVERY ELIXIR J. F. BEH- 1 NADD-TONI 81 HKNIOtJK. ANTI-DYSPKPTIO. 1 be Bovuml olmervatious made by tbe best pbyaiomae ot tbe I'aculte de Paris bave proved tbut tue siukaetwee kriHiup from impoverishment of tbe blood or nervous ex- Phthisic, Diabotes, Albunnneria, Boorbut, etc, etc., are h tlm K.I.IXiK .J. r. Dr.iuiaau. tieneral Delot A ly curea w 9d Vxir. ho nr.KnAttu. rtti. 01 u . u . mumb. . .i c nun i u k:.- . le by all reuecUblo(lrUKKiBta. 8 1 talna; DIVORCES. ABbOLUTE DIVORCES LEGALLY OB tained In New York. Indiana, Illinois, and other States, lor persons from any btate or Oouutry. leKal eery. D.hA.u Hnuurtiim. Hninb.iin.Ui. DOD-SU OOOrt. OtC. SUltl' cient cause: no publicity; no obarxe nutil divoroe ob- uunea, auyiu. una jiuaiu.B. now... , , v - Address, ni. nunr-, niwn'wi 8 lil Bm No. 78 NASSAU Street, New York Oily STEAMBOAT LINES. fob chestek, hook, and Wll Ml MIJ'I'IIM Tl,n itmmiir H. M. FKL- TUN loaves UHKSMI T hTKKKT W H A Htf at lu A, Al. and 860 r. M. : leaves vnliMinnu A. M and lil 60 P. M. Fare to Wilmloalon a" oents (Jhtuttur or Hook. 1U cents. 4lilllU LOST. T OST CERTIFICATE No. C5S1 FOR 3 1J SHARKS COMMON RTODK of tbe LKIilOli VAI.LKV RAILROAD OOMPAN V, in name ot Mary K. Chance. A pplicatiun baa been made lor renewal. April 20, l7u. 4 ao iat POTTON BAIL DUCK AND CANVAS, I J nl .11 -nmKara anil hranrfa. T.nt Awnlna. Trank and Was-on-cover Duck. Abo, Paper Manufacturers' l oit., rrnm thirty to saveuty-ais inohaa, witb NO. 10 GRUftUUBuaaWUlUlitor INSURANCE. DELAWAKR MUTUAL 8AFKTV INSURANCB COMPANY. Incorporated by the Legislature of Pennsylvania, late. Office southeast comer of THIHO and WALNUT Streets, Philadelphia. MAKINB INSURANCES On Vessels, Cargo and Freight to all parts of the worm. INLAND INSURANCES jn goods by river, canal, lake and laud carriage to au pans oi tne union. K1KU INSUUANC'Ktl Merchandise generally; on Btorcs, Dwelling, liooBeg, etc ASSETS OP TUE COMPANY November 1, 166U. fiOO.OOO United Btates Five Fur Cent. Loan, ten-rortleg laie.OOO-OO 100,000 United fct.at.eg 8ix Percent. Loan (lawful money) 10I.T60,00 60,000 United States 8U or Cent. Loan. 1S81 flO.OWOO xw,uuu oiaie ui i eiiiisyivaina six i er Ceut. Loan 113,S&0'00 800,000 City of Philadelphia Six Per Cent. Loan (exempt from tax) SOO.WS-OO 100,000 Stat of New Jersey 81x Per Cent. Loan 03,000-00 0,000 Pennsylvania Railroad First Mortgage Six Per Cent. bonds 453 OD 13,000 Pennsylvania Railroad Se cond mortgage Six per Cent. Honda J3.836-O0 SBjOOO Western Pennsylvania Rail road Mortgage Six Per Cent. Bonds (Pennsylvania Railroad guarantee) 90,000-00 80,000 State of Tennessee Five Per Cent. Loan 15,0001X1 1,000 btate of Tennessee Six Per Cent. Loan 4,370-00 13,600 Pennsylvania Railroad Com pany, mi shareB stock 14,000-00 6,000 Korth Pennsylvania Rail road Company, loo shares stock 8,900-00 10,000 Philadelphia and Southern Mall Steamship Com pany, 80 shares stock T.BOOOO t40,S00 Loans oa Bond and Mort gage, nrst llena on City Properties I4,oo-00 11,231,400 Par. Market value, 11,866,310-00 Coat, ll.sin (Wi-at. Heal Estate M.OOO-oo Bills Receivable for Insurances made... 833,100-TO Balances due at Agencies: Premlnms on Marine Policies. Accrued Interest, and other debts due tbe Com pany cnnoT4K Btoek, Scrip, etc., of Sundry Corpora tions, $4706. Estimated value J.T40-30 Cash in Bank 1168,318-88 Caan In Drawer...., 073-38 169,391-14 11,803,100-04 DIRECTORS. Thomas C. Hand, John V. Davis. Samuel E. stokes, WlUiam H. Boulton, Edward Darlington, II. Jones Brooke, Edward Lafourcade, Jacob Riegel, Jacob P. Jones, James B. McFarland, Joahua P. Evre, Spencer McUvaln, J. B. Semple, Pittsburg, A. B. Berger, Pittsburg, D. T. Morgan, Pittsburg Edmund A. Sonder. Theophllus Paulding, juitiee j ruquair, Henry Sloan, Henry C. Dallett, Jr., ames C. Band, W llllam C. Ludwlg, Joseph II. Seal, Bngh Craig, John D. Taylor, George W. Bernadon, WUllam a Houston. thumas c HAND, President, JOHN C. DAVIS. Vlra-frAalrionf. HENRY .VYLBTJRN, Secretary. HENRY BALL Assistant Secretary. 11 HOMESTEAD LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY. Policies Issued on all the Ordinary Flans, AT LOW KATES OP PREMIUM, With full participation In the Profits. All Policies ft on.Forl'el table. Ful cash Surrooder Indorsed on Each Policy. NO RESTRICTIONS AS TO TRAVEL OR RESI DENCE. The form of policy adoDted is a nlain and almnla nnn. tract, precise and definite in its terms, and tree from uiuiKuuua cunuiuous anu restrictions. Special attention is called to ths HOMESTEAD this Company, offering the Combined advantages OF TUB Building Visisjociiitioii AND OF . I-.il o IiiHiirmico. Every Tollcy Holrier Hecuret a House oi atl Uwu. Descriptive Paninhlots. with Rates, furnished on annll cation to tbe Company. OFFICE, N. W. comer Seventh and Chesnut Sts. PUILADKLPHIA. WILLIAM M.SKYFEKT, President. LAURENCE MYERS, V ice-President. R. W. DORPHLEY, beoretary. WIXLIAM L. HIRST Counsel. D. HAYES AGNEW, M. D., Medical Director. DIRECTORS. Wm. M. Seyfert, Laurence Myers, J. M. Alyeis, Wm. b. McManus, Wm. B. Reaney, K.dward Samuel, 11. P. Aluirheid. Clayton ftlo Michael. 496m 182) JJA14AJK PEKPKTUAI Franklin Fire Insurance Company Off PUILADKLPHIA. Office, Nos. 435 and 437 CHESNUT St. Assets Jan. I,'70. $2,825,73 m CAPITAL .io,mio-uu .il,.7iil'dT INCOME FOR 184), LOSSES PAID IN ISO IfcBlU.UUO. 55 t--l,U5 -ti. Losses paid since 1829 over $5,500,000 Parrjetnal and Temporary Policies on Libers! Terms The Company also issues policies upon tbe Kentaof all fcmdsof isuiiuines. orounu items, ami niorteaires, iue "aanajiin ' uaaoo iioruimi uiun. DIBKUTOKS. Alfred G. Baker. Aiirea ruier, Thomas Sparks, William b. Grant, Tbomas 8. Kllis, Gustavns 8. KHuaori. Samuel Grant, Oeorxe W. Uicbards, Isaac Lea. Ueorge tales. ALFRKU G. BAKKR. President. UK.OKUK FALK8, Vioa-Freeidenb .TAMFB W. MoALLISTh R. Secretary. '1 II KODORK M. KKUEK. Assistant beoretary. igs T HE PENNSYLVANIA FIRE INSURANCE UUMrANY, Incorporated 1W5 Charter Porpetnal. No. B10 WALK (J T btreet. opposite Independence Ranare. This Company, favorably known to tbe community for over lorty years, continues to insure against loss or dam ae by tire on Publio or Private Uuildinxs, either perma nently or lor a limited time. Also on b arniture, btnoks oi 4ooas, ana aiercuanuise generally, on utieral terms. Their Capital, together witb a lance Surplus Fund, is Invented in tbe most careful manner, which enables them to oiler to the insured an undoubted security in the oasa of loss. Daniel Smith. Jr.. DUlaUTOim. John Devereux, Thomas HmitU, tionrr l,ewis, J lillllni7l,M,r. Van. Alexander Heuaon, Ixaac llazleburat, luonxaa fliddock .lr IfANIKIj SMITH. .In PraKlilent. WM. O. OROWELL, Secretary. U 30 THE ENTERPRISE INSURANCE CO. OF PHII ADKI.PHIA. Cilice 8. W. eornerof FOURTH aud WALNUT Streets FIRK INSURANCE HXUI.UHI VKLY. FFRPKTUAL ANDTF.RM POLICIES IiSUKD. CASH Capital (paid up In full) ji,KJ0 00 Vuu Aaaeu, J J,; M.3W1 F. Ratohford Stair, i J. l.muifston Rrriner Nalbro raster, James L. iJlaahurn, John M. Atwnod, Win. U. Boulton, Heuj. T Tredick, (Iharlea Wneeler, Ueorye II Stuart, Tboma H. M.imgomery, John 11. Brown, James M. Aertseo. F. RATOll FORD STARK. Presiiienu TUUiiAS 11. -.(. 1-wOMF.KY, VUi Presiiit. AI FX. W. W1RTFR. Seoretsry. JACOB K. PKlKittiON. Aasuuat Secretary. INSURANOb. INSURANCE COMPANY or NORTH AMERICA. JANUAUT 1, 1870. Chnrtrr PerpetuaL Incorporated ljfti. A PIT At. 8300,000 AMKTN 84,9M:l.3Mt I.omrs pnld since orannly.utloo.... 8:1, 000, OOO Kerelpta of Premium. IU!....8 t,1Hl,N.'!?4,5 loterrat from Iovretmeotat t9. 114,U1iH'74 l.oatiea puld, iy.. l,0:5,:i.S-84 Hlnlrmrnt of the Anuria. First MortRaaes on City Property 1788,480 United btate UoTernment and other Loan Bonds I.1MJI4S Railroad, Bank and Canal Stocks 6,7o8 Caab in Bank and Offloe ,' g47.tjK) loans en Collateral Security 83,6m notes Receivable, mostly Maiine Premiums. .. S3I.W44 Accrued Interest SU.3&T Premiums in course of transmiseiea 86.IHH Unsettled Marine Premiums lihj.mw heal KateU, Offloe of Company, Philadelphia. . Bu.uuo DIRECTORS. S.1 SsmnelW.Jo sea, John A. Bros. A, Chanes lay lor, Ambrose VVnite. Millism Welsh 8. Morris Wain, .lnhn Munn r rands R. Oopa, Kdward U. 1 rotter. F.dward 8 Clarke, T. Oharltoa Henry, Alfred t) Jessnp, Louis U. Madeira, Charles VV. Casnman, Clement A. Grisoonu William Hrockia. Ueorte L. Harrison, ARTUIfR fl nnifViM i j , . OUARLKS PLAIT, Vice-President. Matthias Mabis, Seoretary. O. H. Kkevks, Assistant Seoretary. 1 4 IS J3 XJ i T LIFE INSURANCE CO , N. Y. Number of Policies issned by the five largest New York companies anring tea nrst years of their exiatenoe: MUTUAL (23 months) low tsBW YORK (18 months) uwi MANHATTAN (tl ruoutliH) 053 KN ICK KHBOCKKK. . . (W wombs) 66 EUlTABLJt, (U months) 8b Daring tbe 91 months of Its existence the ASBURY HAS ISSUED 2600 POLICIES, INSURING NEARLY 16,000,000. Reliable Canvassing Agents wasted throughout tha country. JAM KB M. L()NGAORft. Manager for Pennsylvania and Ielawara. Office, No. U-i WALNUT Street, Philadelphia, SAMUKL POWERS. Special Agenl F IRE ASSOCIATION. INCORPORATED MAROH 37, 1820. OFFICE, MO. 84 NORTH FIFTH STREET INSURE BUILD HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE, A 3D MERCHANDISE GENERALLY, From Lou by Fire (in tha City of Philadelphia only). ANfeUTH, JANUARY 1, 1870, 8L,574,?34' J3. TltUNTEKH. WM. H. HAMILTON, JOHN CARROW, GFORGK I. YOUNO, JOS. R. LYNDA LL, twtf T A TU OHARLRS P. BOWER, JF.BKK LIUHTFOOT. ROB'P. 8HUKM AKKR, PKTKR ARMHRUSTKR, M. H. DICKINSON, PKTKR WILLIAMSON. UI'. V A a. , VV "i SAMUEL SPAR HAWK cv 11 a v rv , a n. 1 r. rv rr 1 JOSKPU E. SOHKLL. WM. H. HAMILTON, President SAMUEL SPARHAWK, Vioe-Preeident, WILLIAM T. BUTLER Secretary. SH MME INSURANCE COM PANT No. 809 CHESNUT Street INCORPORATED ISM. OHARTITR PERPETUAL CAPITAL 2uo,0U0. FIRE INSURANCE EXCLUSIVELY. Insnranoe.agairst Loss or Dsmage by Fire either by Paa petual or Temporary Policies. DIRF.CTURS. Charles Richardson, Robert Pearoe, W illiam H. Khawn, John Kessler, Jr., William M. Seyfert, Edward B. Urne, John F. Smith, Charles Stokes, Nathan Hillos, John W. Kvermaa., Ueorge A. West, Mordeoai Buzby. CHARLES RIOUARDSON, President. WILLIAM U. RH AWN, Vice-President. . Williams I. Klanchabd, Secretary. 1 JMPERIAL FIKE INSURANCE CO.,' LONDON. ESTA11LIM1EU 1S03. Paid-up Capital and Accumulated Funds, g8,000,000 ITX GOLD. PltEVOST & HEKRING, Agents, 2 4S No. 107 S. THIRD Street, Philadelphia. OUASM. PREVOST CHAS. P. HERRING ENOINE8, MAOMINEHY, ETO. PENN STEAM ENttINK AND . unn if u wiku u u ai w . h'l if a t urtr . TTFRAUTIUAL AND THKUUK TIUAL aaCfV' F.NGINKKR8, MACHINISTS. BOILKU. MAKTiTisTBLACKHMlTHS, and FOUNDERS, having for many years been in succeaaiul operation, and been ex clusively ena-aged in building and repakinK Marine and River Kngines, high and Ion pressure, Iron Hollers, Water Tanks, Propellers, etc. etc., respeuttully oUer their ser vices to tbe publio aa being fully prepared to contract for engines of all sizes, Marine. River, and Stationary; bavins sets ol pattern, ol different sir.es, are prepared to exeoute orders with quick despatch. Kvery desuription of pattern making made at tha snurtest notice. High and liow pres sure I1 iue Tubular and Cylinder. Boilers of tbe best Peon tylvania Charcoal Iron. Forvingsof allsizeaand kinds, Iron and Brass Oaating of all descriptions. Roll Turning Screw Cutting, and all other work oonneoted with tha above business. .. .. Drawing's and specifications for all work dona at ths establishment tree of charge, and work guaranteed. Tbe subscribers bave ample wharf dock. room tor repairs of boats, where they oan be in perfect aalety, and are pro vided with shears, blocks, falls, eto. etc, for raising bean or light wight JACOB 0. NKAFIK, JOHN P. I.F.VY, 11 BEACH and PALMF.lt 8treet QIRARD TUP E WORKS. JOHN B. MUKFHY & BROS., Plan u tact urrra of Wrought Iron Pipe, Etc., PHILADELPHIA, PA. WORKS. TWKNTY-Tllllt I and FILIiEUT Mireeia.' OFFP E, 141 No, 4i North FIFTH Mlreel. rpU s F-HINUIFAL DKPOT for mn balk or REVENUE STAMvPS No. 804 CHESNUT ST RETT. CENTRAL OFFICE, NO. 105 8. FIFTH STREET (Two doors below Clu-snut street), ESTABLISH KD 186 11. The sale of Revenue Btimips to still continued at the 01d-EntulllHheil Ageuclca The stock comprises every denomination prlntoa by the Guverument, and having at all times a larKe supply, we are euablod to till and forward (by Mat! or Express) all orders, uuuiedlately upon receipt, matter of great Importance. United States Notes, National Bank Notes, Drara on Philadelphia, and Post Oillce Orders received In payment. Any information regarding the decisions of the Commissioner of Internal Revenue cheerfully and gratuitously furnished. Revenue Mumps printed apon Drafts, Ctiecl Receipts, etc Tito following rates of commission are allowed Stumps and Stamped Paper: On aud upwards. per 100 " " aoo " Address era, eto., to STAMP AUkUSCY, HO. 10 CHISHL'T, STREET, rHIUHEU'dik'