THE DAILY EVENING TELEGRAPH PHILADELPHIA, TUESDAY, MAY 17, 1870. srmiT or txxxi mnr.s. Editorial Opinion of theLeading Journal upon Current Topics Compiled Every Day for the Evening Telegraph. HARMLESS DOVES. From the If. T. World. It is not to be denied that the "female suffrage movement," so far a it has jet ex erted any influence at all npon human society, has unpleasantly disturbed the heretofore amicable relations of the sexes, shaken the ancient peace of many a connubial bower, and added new terrors to matrimony in many a celibate mind. Of course, we do not for a moment believe this to have been the object of its promoters. AVe dare say, indeed, that the most earnest and the most estimable of their nnmber will be loudest in denying that any such effects have been produced by it. But, with the deepest respect for these earn est and estimable souls, we must beg them to remember that we speak as men speaking of men and or men, and to reflect that no woman can possibly enter like a man into the natnre of a man. Our excellent but erring sisters know not fully what they are doing. We know whereof we affirm, and we are sorry to know: it. Aris tophanes has painted so lively a picture of the disastrous domestic consequences ensu ing npon a great secession or "barring out" of the female sex in antique Athens that one may well be excused for contemplating with some uneasiness the prospeot of a similar tolicy to be suddenly adopted by the mascn ine population of modern New York. We desire to avert bo dreadful a possibility; and with this end we entreat our fellow-creatures of the male sex to look with ns at this new peril calmly for a brief season, confident as we are that the matter, when fearlessly gone into, will lose the greater part of its terrors. "Fling but a stone, the giantess will fall." One of the most implacable prophetesses of "female suffrage," Mrs. Julia Wardllowe, in a discourse delivered by her during the past week in this city, declared that she and her sisters who think with her had come to the metropolis, not even as Amazons, still less as Fates or Furies. "We are here." she exclaimed, "as harmless doves." The dove, to be sure, with all the soft susurous soothings of its gurgling voice, is sometimes a rather dangerous bird. The doves of Venus, in the old mythology, lent the wings of their speed to their mistress swooping upon Phie dra for her prey. And the "soiled doves" of modern London and Paris have not seldom fed npon the substance and the souls of men as fiercely and as unappeasably as the vultures of Prometheus npon the liver of that unap preciated inventor. But the voice of the turtle has for ages been the symbol of peace and of the springing year. Billing and coo ing, gently milling its full plumage, and softly swelling its deep bosom, the beauteous creature heralds May and youth and love. Is the voice, then, of Mrs. Howe and of her sis ters, the voice of Miss Lucy Stone and of Mr. Tilton and the rest, in very truth as the voice of the turtle ? We believe it bo to be, and, like Mr. llichard Swiveller reposing upon his faith in Miss Sophy Wackles, "we are blest in so believing." Mrs. Stanton, it is true, would have ns un derstand that the ladies and gentlemen who have thus suddenly added a new terror to an niversary week are really but the vanguard of a great Amazonian host moving forward to a battle long, desperate and deep as that through which the legions of anti-slavery for thirty years contended unto victory. She de clares that "fifteen millions" of American women are rising npon ns, determined to vote or die. But, then, Mrs. Stanton herself gives ns reason to hesitate over her statistics when she unguardedly admits that a consid erable number of these "fifteen millions" whom she recently persuaded in the State of Missouri to sign petitions demanding "the franchise" came vehemently back upon her, withdrawing their adhesion as soon as some malignant wretch of a man had explained to them that in asking for the franchise they had asked for the right to vote. They were horrified at the disco very. The dear, devout souls had innocently imagined, as Mrs. Stanton ingenuously con fesses, that "the franshise meant something to do with the church." Of course, Mrs. Stanton regards such conduct as this as con temptible. But it really proves these good Missouri women to possess an intrinsic, in tuitive sense of their real mission and of the true natnre of their power in the world, which seems to us much better even than an exact knowledge of etymology or a hot zeal in party politics. The qualities which lead women to take a deeper interest in church affairs than in affairs of State are precisely the qualities through which nature offers them an influence, eyen in affairs of State, far greater and nobler than any which can be Bymbolized by the ballot or exerted through the polls. The right of suffrage, after all, is not a power, but an instrument. You may give a man the right of suffrage as you may give him a shillelah, but the mere possession of the one will do but little more than . the mere possession of the other to make him an influence among bis fellows. What the Emperor Napoleon was sensible enough to see to be the truth concerning erowned heads and their armies is equally true concerning the voters of a political party and their ballots. Bayonets may esta busn order in Warsaw, ana Daiiots may reconstruct Georgia, or erect a Chinese wall of tariffs between the industries of one peeple and the needs of another. But there is a new power, making itself daily more and more the master of the world, of parties and of princes, of bayonets and of ballots, and this power is public opinion. Whatever may be the war, and how long soever it may be wagea, it is pubiio opinion which wins in the end. In this very anti-slavery war, of wiucu me iemaie-sunrage movement is so idly thought to prefigure the re vival under another form, woman, by her anu lumwiioe in ine cnurcn and in the Home, in literature and society, was incooi paraoiy more powerful than man with his platforms and his ballots. , In whatever developments of liberty and whatever modi fications of law may await the relations of the sexes, woman, we may be sure, will still exert her influence through the channels in which it naturally moves. One of.tha mala champions ef the suffrage chimera, in a lucid moment, on one 01 we ust week s platforms expressed bis belief that "the only immediate effect of the adoption of female suffr&ffa would be to increase existing party majori ties;" and he had the good sense to add that . be didn t see mucn use in bucu an increase. What the world needs most just now is not an accumulation of popular votes, but an en lightenment of popular volition. To this (hundreds and thousands of women in all civilized lands are daily contributing with infinitely more effect than if they anhalled in caucuses to march up ' to booths and plump for feminina of CoBCTees and alder women and judgesses. Our doves of the platform, coo they never o persistently, will nardly inter rupt this wholesome, subtle, and irresistible process. Let no man, then, be alarmed at their ooointr. The theme they treat of is in nowise sulphurous or volcanic, like the ques tion of slavery. n.ven when the more milled of their number deal with us men and with onr infirmities as mercilessly as the Fhillipses and Pillsburys of old were wont to deal with the Southern slaveholder, no man's blood is thereby made to boil; nor need we fear that the fifteen millions of our better halves will be thereby roused into rushing upon us, scissors and bodkin in hand, to snip and bore away our little lives. Incidentally, indeed, the palombine crusade may very well help on a good many really needed reforms, throw light on forms of suffering to be relieved, reveal social wrongs to be redressed, while it certainly must provide a more or less considerable number of comparatively intelligent and warm-hearted women both with occupation and amusement. To be a "harmless dove" and coo for votes is by no means the worst thing that can befall a woman. We are not of the mind of a famous woman, Madame de Stael, who declared that women had only one use in the world; and, though we are not prepared point blank to question the dogma of another of the sex that the first duty of every woman is to be beau tiful, we cannot religiously doubt that Provi dence must have meant to provide other lower and yet respectable callings for women to whom its dispensations may have rendered the performance of this first duty either mate rially difficult or morally indifferent. Who could find it in his heart, for example, to quarrel with one 01 the thirty thousand sur plus spinsters of Massachusetts for choosing to lace the air of metropolitan platforms with twittering tropes, and to ply far and wide over the land the delusive bobbin of sexual politics, rather than mope in a sterile inspec tion of her next-door neighbor's soup-kettle, and sour into predostinarian desperation be tween her sewing-circle and her choir ? Let the "female-sun rage movement, then, fulfil itself in foam. We may be sure that it will neither subvert the foundations of the State nor reverse the genetio conditions of humanity. At the worst, it may chance to some of the too zealous among the fair vota resses as Montaigne tells us it did to Marie (ierman in his days, who, overleaping her self, fell from th high feminine estate into the deplorable and pendulous condition of a man. liut, as men will doubtless be gradu ally improved under the discussions attendant upon this movement, even such a calamity would not be absolute.. It might possibly prove, indeed a blessing in disguise, and con vert a rather unsatisfactory woman into quite a tolerable man. OUR SHIPPING INTERESTS AND COM MERCE HOVv CAN WE REVIVE THEM ? From the N. Y. Herald. There is but one opinion as to the necessity of doing something to restore the shipping and commerce of the country. Every Ameri can mourns over the departed glory of our former maritime greatness. Ten years aero the tonnage of tho United States exceeded that of any other nation. W e had over hve and a half , millions of tons, inclusive of registered, enrolled, and licensed steam and sailing ves sels. Mow we have less than lour millions, This is a decline of over a million and a half tons in less than ten years. The yroaUut falling off has been in the tonnage employed in foreign trade. The cause of this is well known. The terrible civil war which we lately passed through drove our shipping from the oceans, and transferred both the ownership and the carrying trade to for eigners. But that is not the worst. We have been coiner, behind relatively to other maritime nations, and particularly to Eng land, ever since. Our great maritime and commercial rival has got a long way ahead in the race. She has not been slow to lm prove the advantages given to her by the war, and considering her resources and facilities for ship-building she will maintain her supremacy, unless extraordinary and wise measures be taken to revive our shipping interests. What can be done, then, to restore our ship ping and commerce ? That is the question, and no easy one to solve. But our shipping interests can be resuscitated and we may again take the first rank among maritime nations if proper measures be adopted. We are told, it is true, that the wages of labor being so much higher here than in Great Britain and other parts of Europe' and the interest of money so much greater, that we cannot compete with foreign shipbuilders. Then they have the materials for building and au the things that enter into htting up and navigating vessels far cheaper. Nor can it be denied that in ureat LSrnain, and par ticuiariy on the uiyae, tuey nave attained a high degree of skill in shipbuilding, as well as having sunenor advantages in the abun dasce and cheapness of materials and labor. In the matter of skill in modelling and construct ing vessels we are equal to the British, if not superior, and there could be no doubt about finding within a short time all the skilled labor necessary lor any amount of work. Nor can Great Britain beat us in the quality of timber and iron used for shipbuilding, while we have a thousand times over more in quan tity. It is, then, simply a question of com parative cost in the price of materials and labor. This we cannot overcome. We cannot bring the wages of American labor, either in preparing the materials or in putting them together, to the level of British labor. Nor can we bring the interest of money or capital down to what it is in Europe, 'mere are so many opportunities of employing profitably here, and such a demand tor it in the deve lopment ot this new country, that money must continue to be more valuable than abroad, u is evident, therefore, that we cannot compete, under such unequal condi tions, with Great Britain in shipbuilding. Committees of (Jongress have been long and carefully examining the matter as to how the tonnage of the country can be increased and our shipping and commercial interests re vived, and there have been a number of pro positions maoe in ana to uongress with a view to accomplish this object. But the easiest, moht practical, and surest plan seems to be the one that nnds least favor. We mean that of changing the Registry law so as to permit our merchants and capitalists to buy vessels abroad where they can get them cheapest and best. If American merchants were permitted to have vessels so purchased nationalized the same as if they were built here, we Bhould soon see a vast increase of our tonnage. It would not be long before we should have splendid steamship lines competing with those of England on the ocean. If even the American built vessels which changed their national character and pastied into the hands of foreigners during the war were allowed a register aoain under the old flag, a great many might be repurchased by our citizens, and thas our tonnage be increased. But it is urged that the repeal or change of the Registry law would damage or retard shipbuilding here for a time, if not almost ruin that branch of industry. It might possibly check shipbuilding here at first, but in the end that interest would not be damaged, for the increase of our com merce would develop new wants and give more employment in time even to oar own shipyards, men competition stimulates en terprise, and, with a gradual return to the normal condition of things as they were be fore the war, our mechanics, inventors, iron workers, and shipbuilders would soon learn to rival those of Great Britain. But. after all, the shipbuilding interest is not the great est in the country, and in importance does not begin to compare with the interests in volved in a large mercantile marine and in the foreign commerce of the country. The interests of a few shipbuilders, of the iron workers of Pennsylvania, and of the lumber men of Maine, are insignificant compared with those of general commerce and the carrying trade. ' To increase the tonnage of the country, to bring us up to our former maritime greatness and to make the United states the successful rival of England, throw all other questions and local interests into the shade. This is the one supremely im portant object to be considered. Among the crude schemes submitted to Congress for increasing our tonnage is that of giving bounties or a direot bonus of money on every ton of ships that may be built. This is the most absurd, ruinous and corrupting scheme ever proposed in a Legislature. It would be a stupendous fraud upon the people and Treasury for the benefit of a few indi viduals and must lead to a great corruption. Something might be done, and, perhaps, ought to be done, to help shipbuilding by taking off the duty on iron and other mate rials actually used in the construction of vessels. The interests of navigation might be promoted also by a drawback of the duty on things that are used on board ships. A liberal compensation for mail service to im portant steamship linen might foster that im portant branch of the mercantile marine. But, perhaps, the most effeotive way to both stimulate shipbuilding and to rapidly increase our tonnage would be to make a difference in duties upon imported merchandise when carried in American bottoms. If ten, fifteen, or more per cent, of duties were taken off imported foreign goods when carried by American ships, our merchants would very soon import their goods under the flag of the United states, it may be Baid that such a discrimination in favor of American and against foreign bottoms would give offense to ther commercial nations and cause them to retaliate. Well, we are not afraid of that. They are compelled to seek a market here for their silks, satins, cloths, bijouterie, and luxuries of all kinds, and it would do no harm if we did not consume so many of these, while our staples of cotton, tobacco, and other things they must have. In fact, they could not retaliate so as to do us any serious harm. Our own interests, and particularly those of our shipping and commerce, are first to be considered. To discriminate largely and wisely in favor of American bottoms in the carrying trade between this country and foreign countries would rapidly increase our tonnage. It is to be hoped Congress will drop all the crude and little schemes for re viving the shipping interests of the country. and especially that monstrous one of a bonus on tonnage, and will adopt some comprehen 8ive plan worthy of statesmen. GOV. HOFFMAN ritOTEOTQ DUOADWXI l rom the K. Y. Times. Governor Hoffman has indicated his con sistency and preserved the city from flagrant robbery and outrageous wrong by refusing to sanction the Arcade Railroad bilL The reasons for his decision are clearly stated in the document we printed on Monday morn- 3 ii e . 1 1. 1 l : i : it ing, aim mey iuiuuu iuo uiupiuab vmuicauuu of his course. To the readers of the 1 uncs. the objections relied upon by the Governor are not new. We urged them again and again, during the progress of the measure through the Legislature, whose action is now omciauy arraigned with a cogency which seems to us irresistible. To state fairly the provisions of the bill is to secure its condemnation. The extraordi nary powers conferred upon the corporators, the unexampled manner in which the rights of property are invaded and the business in terests of our great thoroughfare placed in jeopardy, the extent to which public pro perty is surrendered in utter violation of faith with the city's creditors, the fact that for the purpose of conducting a speculative experiment the machinery of the local Gov ernment is operated adversely to the puDiio weal, are points upon which the Governor enlarges with admirable effect. He shows that while property-owners are menaoed with a method of estimating damages or compensation for which there is neither pre cedent nor justification, and while public property is assigned away to an extent which has no parallel, the corporators are virtually absolved from the responsibility which should attach to all publio works. They acquire enormous and most dangerous privileges, and, in turn, furnish no adequate guarantees. They may take public property without compensation, and, after all, leave a large part of their project untouched. They may obstruct business for a period that is practically unlimited, and so defeat the only purpose of the bill which possesses the least plausibility. They are made the masters of Broadway, its property and trade, all in con nection with an enterprise which many prac- tical men pronounce visionary, ana ior me failure of which there can be no remedy. To the corporators the bill is a mine of wealth; to our propertied and trading classes it is a scheme of spoliation and wrong; to the general publio it is a delusion and a snare. From evils so manifold and great the in tervention of Governor Hoffman happily de livers us. He has moral courage enough to disregard appeals based upon his alleged" ap proval of another charter, and vision clear enough to detect the falsity of the pretenses by which some have sought to conceal the real scope of the plan. Nor does he ignore the necessity of providing increased facilities for city transit. The direction to which the growth of the city is limited renders impera tive additional means of travel; but an ad mitted public necessity furnishes no pretext for a scheme fraught with the mischief and peril which attach to the Arcade Railroad bill. Wa hmilrt have been glad had Governor Jloffman's sense of duty prompted him to go one step beyond his present posiuou, protest against any scheme involving inter ference with the sarface of Broadway. Apart altogether from the objections incident to the particular bill in regard to which his Judgment is so emphatically stated, we think that the necessity of preserving Broadway intact, as against all railroad schemers, can not be too soon or too explicitly affirmed. Other methods of getting up town are indeed indispensable, but they Bhould be provided without essentially changing the present character of Broadway. Relieve it by di verting some of the traffio which at certain hours now floods it, but let it be preserved from railroads, surface or underground, If the Legislature could be indsced to manifest this determination, we believe that improve ments through other channels would be has tened, and the property-owners and business men of Broadway would be preserved from the assaults that are now made upon them periodically. PROTECTION AND THE REPUBLICAN PARTY. From the Cincinnati Gazette. The Democratic journals, particularly the New York World, propose that Republicans who advocate a reform of the present tariff shall join the Democratic party. They do not desire that the Republican party shall reform the tariff, but rather that the present odious system shall stand, in the hope that it will split the Republican party. And it has been observed that the Democratic members of Con gress act upon this policy, and that when questions of practical tariff reform come up in such a shape as to make them show their hands, they are found unreliable. A number of times daring the tariff debate of the pre sent session important ameliorations of the present proscriptive system might have been carried if Democratic members had sup ported them. Un the other hand Horace Greeley, who may be accepted as the representative of the Republican proscriptionists, co-operates with the Democratic plan of splitting the Repub lican party on the tariff, by declaring that their scale of a tariff is "an impost of $100 a ton on pig iron, with like duties on every thing made of iron," and the application of a like scale of duties to wool and woollens. plain and printed cottons, linens, eto, etc." in short, absolute prohibition. And that be is willing to concede something to harmonize the party, but he says: "The tariff, as it is, makes enormous concessions from our mark, which we assent to for quiet's sake." He therefore lays down terms to tariff re form Republicans, which in substance are these: Protection means prohibition. But he will compromise on a lower scale of duties than $100 a ton, provided it be practically prohibitory on the articles of the favored interests. Therefore he will accept the pre sent tariff as an ultimatum, If there are Re publicans who will not accept these terms, then they may leave the party. ' If this party reconstrnction shall take place, then he de clares for a revision of the tariff on the scale of $100 a ton for pie iron. All this was laid down in an article in the Tribune a few days ago, in the insolent and abusive style which Mr. Greeley deems proper to apply to all who differ with his proscription lunacies. We do not pretend to say that the Tribune and the World plotted this concerted policy for splitting the Republican party. It shows a striking coincidence, and Mr. Greeley has been reported as in very suspicious Demo cratic company lately. At any rate, the Tri bune is playing the game laid down by the World for dividing the . Republican party, and with, most intemperate zeal, by refusing to know any such thing as tariff reform; by declaring that all who are not for prohibitory duties are free traders, and their professions of tariff reform a lie; by heaping upon them its stock charges and epithets about British gold and British interests, and by proclaiming its prohibitory ultimatum for the existence of the party. But this joint game for splitting the Re puDiican party win not win. The sincere tariff reformers are not going to wait for so ' poprtfc as the anndancv of the Democratio party. Nor have they any cer tainty what the tariff policy of the Demo cratic party would be. , The organs cannot now define it. It is not long since the World. apparently becoming alarmed at ,the strength of the tariff reform movement in the Repub lican party, changed its note, and advised its party to accept no compromise on tariff re form, but to demand absolute free trade. The present tariff has grown up on various frauds, pretenses, and grabs during the war. When enacted the extremest protectionists avowed that only the war and the heavy in ternai excise jusunea it. jnow the excise is abolished, and there is a surplus revenue- of $7',000,000. It can not stand, and it grows weaker every day. Another Congressional election will bring in the moral and material forces that win reiorm tne tarui upon a sys tem which win mane revenue ana not prohi bition the object, while wise discriminations will give sufficient advantage to home manu factures without creating monopolies. If the prohibitionists are content with this, they win nave an opportunity or joining those whom they are now serving by their efforts to split the Republican party. GOVERNOR nOFFMAN AND THE ARCADE RAILROAD. From the S. Y. Sun, v For reasons already noted, Gov. Hoffman has sent te the Secretary of State, without his approval, the act authorizing the construc tion of the Broadway Arcade Railroad. He analyzes the act, and objects to a nnmber of its provisions with more or less energy, but his principal ground seems to be that nothing is required to be paid into the City Treasury in return for the privileges which the bill proposes to confer upon the railroad com pany. Considering that the whole under taking is, as he says himself, a difficult and costly one, and that its success is problemati cal, and considering, too, that all the citi zens and property-holders in the city would be immensely benefited by it if it should succeed, this objection would seem to be much more captious than solid. The Gover nor might better have contented himself with refusing to sign the bill, and not have argued the question at all. The simple truth is that Governor Hoffman has succumbed to the pressure brought to bear upon him by some of the millionaires who own real estate on Broadway, and who fear that the Arcade Railroad may possibly diminish its value. He has taken the side of the rich against the poor; of the capitalists against the laboring classes; of the aristocrats against the people. He has turned a deaf ear to the cry of the toiling thousands who de mand cheap and rapid transportation between the upper and the lower part of the city, and listened only to the appeals of gentlemen with heavy bank accounts. We presume bis con duct will be remembered Bhould he ever again come before the people for their suffrages. FURNITURE, ETO. RICHMOND & CO.. FIRST-CLASS FURNITURE WAR EROOMS Ho. 45 SOUTH SECOND STREET, AST &WM, ABO VI OHX8HOT, Us PHILADELPHIA F U R li I T U R C SelllAK at Cost. No. 101 IIAHUUT Street. 18 8m a. K. NORTH, IN8URANOE. DELAWARE MUTUAL SAFETY 1N8URANCH COMPANY. Incorporated by tne Legislator of Pennsylvania, 1836. Office southeast corner of thikD and WALNUT Street, rniianeipnia. MARINE INSURANCES On Vessels, Cargo and Freight to all parts of the worm. INLAND INSURANCES JU goods by river, canal, lake and land carriage to an pans oi vne union. FIRE INSURANCES Merchandise generally; on Stores, Dwellings, Mouses, eto. ASSETS OF TUB COMPANY November 1, 1869. isoo.ooo United States Five Per Cent. Loan, ten-forties 21,OO0"O0 100,000 United States Six Per Cent. Loan (1 awful money) 107,760-00 60,000 United States Six Per Cent. Loan, 1881 60,000-00 100,000 State of Pennsylvania Six Per Cent. Loan 1 3,950 DO 900,000 City of Philadelphia Six Per Cent. Loan (exempt from tax) 900,996-00 100,000 State of New Jersey Six Per Cent. Loan 03,000-00 90,000 Pennsylvania Railroad First Mortgage Six Per Cent. Bonds 45040 96,000 Pennsylvania Railroad Se. cond mortgage Six per Cent. Bonds 93,636-00 96,000 Western Pennsylvania Rail road Mortgage Six Per Cent Bonds (Pennsylvania Railroad guarantee) 90,000-00 10,000 Stat of Tennessee Five Per Cent. Loan 15,000-00 T.000 btate of Tennessee Six Per Cent. Loan 4,970-00 19,500 Pennsylvania Railroad Com pany, 950 shares stock 14,000-00 6,000 North Pennsylvania Rail- road Company, 100 shares Stock B 900-00 10,000 Philadelphia and "Southern Mall Steamship Com pany, 80 shares stock T.6O0-O0 946,900 Loans on Bond and Mort aase. first liens on Cltv Properties 946,900-00 11,931,400 Par. Market value, 11,955,970-00 COSt, il.316,629-97. Real Estate neai Estate m,ooo-oo Bills Receivable for Insurances made . . . 933,700-78 uwoii uue m Agencies: Premiums on Marine Policies, Accrued Interest, and Other debts due tha Com. Pany .. 6,W90 Stoek, Scrip, etc, of Sundry Corpora. tlons,47. Estimated value t,T40-90 vBsn in anx 1168,31899 Cash in Drawer 78-8 169,99114 1,853,100-04 DIRECTORS. Thomas C. Band, T Y. T i " Samuel X. Stokes, William i. Bouiton, Edward Darlington, U. Jones Brooke, Edward Lafoorcade, Jacob Riegel, Jacob Pi Jones, James B. McKarland, Joshua P. Eyre, Knenrpr Mrtlvnln. jumu ... nana, Edmund A. Bonder, Theophllus Paulding, James Traqualr, Henry Sloan, Henry C Dallett, Jr., 'amesC Hand, William C Ludwlg, Joseph H. Seal, Hngh Craig, John D. Taylor, George W. Bernadon, J. B. Bern pie, Pittsburg, a. is. merger, nttsourg, D. T. Morgan, Pittsburg THOMAS C HAND, President. JOHN C. DAVis, Vice-president. HENRY LYLBURN, Secretary. HENRY BALL Assistant Secretary. ' 1 1 HOMESTEAD LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY. Policies Issued on all the Ordinary Plans, AT LOW RATES OF PREMIUM, With fall participation In the Fronts. All Policies NonForreItalIe. Fnl Cash Surrender Indorsed on Each Policy. NO RESTRICTIONS A8 TO TRAVEL OR RESI DENCfl. The form of policy adopted is a pUio and afmpla con. tract. preoiM and dennit in ita terma. sad frea from mDiguoBa eonaiuona and restrictions. Special attention ia called to tha HOMESTEAD PLAN this Company, offerinc the COMBINED ADVANTAGES or TBS Building: -Ajsjsociatiou AND or JL.il O IllHlLVflllCO. . ycry a-oiicy jioiaer secures a House or His Own. Descriptive Pamphlets, with Rates, f umiahed on appll cation to the Company. - OFFICE, ' N. W. corner Seventh and Chesnut Sts. PHILADELPHIA. WILLIAM M. SEYFERT, President. LAURENCE MYERS, Vioe-Preaident. D. HAYES AON EW, M. D., , Medical Director. . R. W. DORPULEY, Secretary. WILLIAM L. HIRST - OoooaeL DU1ECTOK1. Wm. B. Reaney, Kdwardhamoel, H. P. Muirheid, Clayton McMiohael. 496m Wm. M. Seyfert, . Laurenoe Myere, J. M. Myere, Wm. 8. McManns. 1829. CHARTER PERPETUAL. FraiUii Fire Insurance Cipy Office, Hos. 435 an"d437 CHESNUT St. Assets Jan. I,' 702,8 25,7 3167 CAPITAL (400,060-00 AOCRUKD SURPLUS AND PREMIUMS.... iBl W IKOOMK FOR 18:0, BlU,0U0. LOSSES PAID TBI 1880, Lcs:csr3id eiccg 1829 over $5,500,000 Perpetual and Temporary Petioles on Liberal Terms. The Company alao iuaea policies npon the Kent of all kind of BuildiDga, Ground Keata, and Mortracea. ib "E&AKK.LiN" baa no DISPUTED CLAIM. DIRECTORS. Alfred O. Baku. Samuel Grant. George W. Richards, laaac Lea. Thomas Spark William b.UraOa TbomaaS. Kllu, flnitMiii H K.nmn. George tales. ALFRED li KAKHR. Praaidank. GKOKGK VALK6, Vioe-Preaident, JAMF.8 W. MoALLlbl KH, Secretary. TH KODORK M. KEGKH. Aaaietaot Secretary, f 19 THE PENNSYLVANIA FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY. Incorporated lhti Unarter Perpetual. No. (10 WALNUT btreet, oppoaite Independence Square. Tbia Company, favorably Known to the community far orer forty yeara, continusa to insure against loaa or dam. age by tire on Publio or Private Buildinge, either perma nently or tor a limned time. Alao on furniture, blocks of Goods, and Merchandise icenerally, on liberal terma. . Their Capital, together with a Urge Surplus Fund, is invested in the most careful manner, which enabloe them to ofier to the insured an undoubted aeuarity in the esse of Inaa """ cutECioBft. Daniel 8mith, Jr., I John Derereux, Alexander Benson, I Thomaa binith, Isaao Hacieburat, I Henry Lewie, Tbomaa Kob.n. M. WM. O. CROWELlLtg.c.t: J" Yfc THE ENTERPRISE INSURANCE CO. OF PHII.ADKLPHIA. Office 8. W. corner of FOURTH and WALNUT Streets IRK INjsURANUK KXCIA'KI VKLY. PKBPtTUAL AND TK KM POL10IJCS I6SUED. CAbU Capital (paid op ia fall) 0,uuu'00 lata amciii jaa. i, ivy-.. 9,JiiZ l DIRECTORS. T. Ratchford Starr, Nalbro racier, Jobs M. Atwood. Renj. T. Tredick. J. Liruuratoa Krrin James L. U lag horn. Wm. U. Bouiton. Charlae Wheeler, Thomas H. Montgomery, Jaineo M. Aerteen. ueorire ti. btuart. John 11. Brown, Jaineo M. Aerti F. RATCHFORD 8TAKK, Preaidena. THOMAS H. MONTtiOMfcHY, Vice-President. ALEX. W. WIN I KK. beoreUry. JACOB K. PJtTKiibOM, Assistant Ssorstary. IN8URANOfc. INSURANCE COMPANY NORTH AMERICA. JaftrjlBT 1 lR7fl. Charter PerpotaaL farorpernted lI4. CAPITAL. S.100,000 A WETS.., SJ,783,3Sl . i Leaea paid since raanlza.tlaa. .. .8 j:t, 000,000 Receipts mf Preatlama, 1S69....8 1,91,M37'43 latereat front laveetnaeata, 69. 114,69674 K'2.IOI(..'V:t.ftf . Isaacs paid, 1869 81,033,3S6'84 Mintemeat af tha Asaeta. Pint Mortiraaes on Oity Property..... fj7&,4&0 United States Government and ether Loaa Bonds UaiM . Railroad, Bank and Oaoal Stocks. tt,TOs - Gash In Bank and Gffloe MI,aw Loans en Collateral Security M 83,668 Notes Recallable, mostly Matins Premiums... Accrued Interest M 90,367 Preminma in course of tranamisaiea.... ....... M 86,190 Unsettled Marine Preminma. . . n 100,000 Real Estate, Office of Company Philadelphia.. niooo DIRECTORS. Arthur O. Fraaoie R. Oopa, Kdward IL Trot tar, Kdward S. Clarke, T. Obarltoa Henry, Alfred O. Jeesup. Louis O. Madeira, Oharlee W. Onahmao, Clement A. Grisootn, William Brookla. BemnelW.Jo see, John A. Bros a, Charles Isy lor, Ambrose Vvbita, William Welsh, B. Morris W ain, John Mason, Georte L. Harrison, ARTHUR O. COFFIN, President. OHARLRS PLATT, Vloe President, ' Matthias Makib, Secretary. O. H. Rrrvxs, Assistant Secretary. t 4 ' piRE AB8GCIATI O N. INCORPORATED MARCH 87, Kao. OFFICE, no. 34 NORTH FIFTH STREET ENSURE BUILD HOUSEHOLD FURX1TUKE, AVSD MERCHANDISE GENERALLY, From Loss by Firs (ia the City ot Philadelphia Only). . AB8ETH, J ANUARY 1, 1870, 8 1.37 5. TRUSTEES. WM. H. HAMILTON, JOHN OARROW. GKOKGK I. YOUNG, JOS. R. LTNDALL, t rTt T riniTH OHARLRS P. BOWER. , JK88K LIGHTFOOTl ROBT. SHOEMAKER. PETER ARMBRUSTER, SAMUEL SPAR HAWK, ... U. PETER WILUAMSOIT. nun rv, ini r-rv wj -, JOSEPH E, BOHELL. WM. H. HAMILTON, President. SAMUEL BPARHAWK, Vice-PraeJdenta WILLIAM T. BUTLER Secretary. IH JPAME INSURANCE COMPANY, No, 809 CHESNUT Street INCORPORATED 1866. CHARTER PERPETUAL, CAPITAL (300,000. FIRE INSURANCE EXCLUSIVELY. Iniurance.agsirst Loss or Damage by Fire either by Par. petual or Temporary Policies. DIRKUTOR8. Charles Richardson. , Robert Pearoe. William H. Rhawn, William M. beyfert, John F. Smith, Nathan liilles. John Keealer, Jr., ' r Kdward B. Orne, Charles btokes, " John W. KTermaa, Mordeoal Buzby. . George A. West, WILLIAM H. RHAWN, Vioe-President. Williams I. Blah chard. Secretary. 7 23j TMPEWAIi FIRE INSURANCE CO., LONDON. ' ESTABLISHED 1803. raid-up Capital and Accumulated Funds, 88,000,000 1 3V GOLD. PKEVOST & HERRING, Agents, 45 No. 107 8. THIRD Street, Philadelphia,"" OH AS. M. PRKVOBT OH AS. P. HERRING: LPMBERi 1QTii 8PRUCK JOI8T. IOTA 10 i U SPRUCE JOIST. 10 I U HEMLOCK. HEMLOCK. ' 1QrrA SEASONED CLEAR PINE. -fQ-TA 10 I U SEASONED CLEAR PINE. 10 4 U CHOICE PATTERN PINE. SPANISH CEDAR, FOR PATTERNS. RED CEDAR. 1QTA FLORIDA FLOORING. 1 0TA 10 I U FLORIDA FLOORING. lOlU CAROLINA FLOORING. VIRGINIA FLOORING. DELAWARE FLOORING. ASH FLOORING. WALNUT FLOORING. FLORIDA STEP BOARDS. RAIL PLANK. 1 OTA WALNUT BOARDS AND PLANK. 1 OTA 10 f U WALNUT BOARDS AND PLANK. 10 I U WALNUT BOARDS. WALNUT PLANK. 1Q7A UNDERTAKERS' LUMBER, i QTA 10 I V UNDERTAKERS' LUMBER. 1 0 I U RED CEDAR. ;J , ' WALNUT AND PINE. . . 1870 SEASONED POPLAR. SEASONED CHERRY. 1870 ASH WHITE OAK PLANK AND BOARDS. HICKORY. 1870 CIGAR BOX MAKERS' , -t OTA CIGAR BOX MAKERS' 1 0 II SPANISH CEDAR BOX BOARDS, FOB SALE LOW. 1870 CAROLINA SCANTLING. CAROLINA H. T. SILLS. NORWAY SCANTLING. 1870 1870 CEDAR SHINGLES. H QTA CYPRESS SHINGLES. 10 I If MAULS. BROTHER A CO., No. 8600 SOUTH Street in PAX EL PLANK, ALL THICKNESSES. 1 COMMON PLANK. ALL THIO&MIfcSbJBM. 1 COMMON BOARDS. . I and 8IDK FENCE BOARDS. WHITE PINK FLOORING BOARDS. YELLOW AND SAP PINK FLOORING.. LMtnd 4Mk SPRUCE JOIHT. ALL 6IZKS. "wi,M ,-" H KMLOOK JOIST, ALL 8I2E& JsTKKiNu Lath 'a specialty. Toe-ether with a senarsJ assortment of Btuldin Ltuabsr lor aale low tor sash. T. W. 6MALTZ. 11 U em FIFTEENTH and BTILKS Streets. United States Builders' Mill, FIFTEENTH" Street below Market ESLER & BROTHER. PROPRIETORS. , 4 29Sm. Wood Mouldings, Bracket and General Turning Work, Bacd-rsll rialugters and Newel Posts. A LARGE ASSORTMENT ALWAYS ON HAND.' UMBER U N d'e R COVER, ALWAYS DRY. ' Walnut, White Pine, Yellow Pine, Spruce, Hem lock, Shingles, etc., always on hand at low rate. WATSON A G1LUNGHAM, 8 m No. m RICHMOND Street. ISth ward. BUILDING MATERIALS. B. E. THOMAS & C0. DIALKB8 IN Doors, Blinds, Sash, Shutters,, WINDOW FRAMES, ETC., K. w, CORKIB of EIGHTEENTH and MARKET Streets sll PHILADELPHIA.