G THE DAILY EVENING TELEGRAPH--PHILADELPHIA, SATURDAY, MAY 28, 1870. OUR RELIGIOUS COLTJIttTJ. NUMJIAIIV OP CHUKCII NEWS. EPISCOPAL. -The Episcopal Church In Hanover, Mass., fas directed that no clerical robes except the gown be npcd in its service. The New York Pont gives ft list of abont ft dozen new Episcopal churches now tcolnir, np In New York State. The largest is Christ ChuroiJ, liuflalo, to cost $150,000. Kev. J. W. K. llenuctt, fif Frome, England, a lending ritualist, lately celebrated a mass for the repose of the soul of the late Bishop of Bath and Wells. In accordance with the Koman Catholic custom in masses for the dead, Mr. Bennett was the nly one to partake (we can bard'y say communicate) at the sacrament. 1 he Kansas Diocese takes the lead among the Episcopalians in recognizing the ecclesiasti cal rights of women. At the meeting of the Kaueas Convention this month two ladies and eix gentlemen were placed on the board of ex aminers of the diocesan seminary, being the first Instance in the country in 'which women have been elected to a diocesan ollicc. They have always had a right to vote at the parish meetings of the diocese. The rectors of Law rence and Leavenworth took the lead in these uomiuatioEB. PRESBYTERIAN. The Kev. W. (J. Moorehead, returned mis sionary in Italy, has accepted a call to the pas toral charge of the First United Presbyterian church of Xcnia, Ohio, late under the care of Kev. Dr. K. D. Harper. The closing month of the financial year ha Lrought the Treasury of Missions into a good condition. All the expenses of the entire year ore paid, and there is a small balance on hand with which to enter upon a new year. The Kev. Dr. Lansing has received from Mrs. Caroline Anne Gamble for the mission a bill on her London baker for .250 (about $12 50 in gold), payable the first of July, for the Mis sion in Egypt. It was a welcome gift from an unexpected quarter. She is an Irish lady, and was travelling in Egypt with aD invalid hus band. At the communion in West Forty-fourth Street United Presbyterian Church, New York, on Sabbath, May 15, thirty-five persona were added to the membership of the church; thir teen by certificate and twenty-two by profes sion. At the communion four months ago, there was an addition of twenty-seven to the member ship. J. C. Baldwin. Esq., of Madison Avenue Prcfcbvterian Church, New York, gave $009,000 to various benevolent objects during the last fourteen years of his life; and by his will gives $72,000 to various benevolent societies, and makes Williams, Wabash, Middlebury, and Ham ilton Colleges residuary legatees. The reunited Presbyteriau Church lacks but SI of having doubled its ministry since the dis ruption in 1838, and but 10,000 of having doubled its membership. This does not count in the Southern Presbyterians, who have 657 ministers and 79.901 members, and who have Ecparated since then. METHODIST. The receipts of the English Weslcyan Mis sionary Society last year were 41145,750; expendi tures a little less. The Methodist for May 23 reports the vote on lay delegation as: For, 4907; against, 1589; which gives a favorable three-fourth vote and a surplus of 35. The Australasian Wcslevan Methodist Church has just held its sixteeuth annual con ference. Its membership is 55,550, an increase of more than 3000 over last year. The sixteeuth anniversary of tho Broadway Methodist Church, Camden, will be celebrated to-morrow. Interesting addresses will be deli vered by the pastor, Revs. A. Atwood, A. Man ehip, C. P. Masden, A. Wallace, and others. The Southern Methodist Church is rapidly osing its colored membership; at least, it reports but 19,080 colored members, against 32,085 last year. Very likely these missing members are in the colored conferences that have just been organized. There are 2833 itinerant and 4753 local preachers, and 571,055 mouibers. On Saturday, 14th inst., the East Maine Conference gave 43 votes for Jay delegation aud 14 against; on Monday, the aflirmative gained one vote, making 44 to 14. This brings the total aflirmative to 4907, the negative to 1589, and the grand aggregate to 0190, and carrying lay delegation in the Methodist Episcopal Church. The growth of tho Methodist Episcopal Church South, since the time of its organization in 1845, and of the Northern Church for the same period, appears from tho following re turns: M. B. Church South. M. E. Church. 1815. 1870. 1845. 187(1. Conferences la 81 vi Trav'gmachers 1,345 2,040 8,838 Local do. 4,753 10,340 Members 405.2S3 &71,S!41 CG4.229 l,29d,VUS CONGREGATIONAL. The Congregational Church in Cheshire, Connecticut, received 41 new members last communion Sunday, as the fruits of a recent revival. Their ages ranged from the youth of eleven years to that of tho aged grandparent. The Kev. S. B. Halliday, until recently Superintendent of the Five Points nouse of Industry, New York city, has been appointed, at the Kev. Henry Ward Beocher's Bpecial re quest, to assist him in the discharge of the pastoral work of Plymouth Church. The Oakland Congregational Church, of Chicago, is a year and a half old, situated on the outskirts of the city, and has just put up a beautiful and spacious church, with a splendid organ, with Dot a cent of aid from any other church or society, aud installed last week its pan-tor, Kev. J. C. White, whose services, ever since the organization of the society, have been of eo much value in assuring this success. The Kausas Congregational Association held a meeting May 13, at Leavenworth. The most exciting discussion was on the Bible la the public schools. Kev. Peter McVickar, the able euperintendent ofr public schools, introduced a resolution to the effect that tho reading of the Bible should not be insisted on where a minority is conscientiously opposed, aud the opinion of the association was about equally divided. LUTHERAN. The Increase of Lutheran congregations in Minnesota is quite remarkable. The Kev. A. P. Caderstaur, missionary on the Upper St. Croix, visited several places, in a journey of two hun dred and seventy miles with his sleigh, where there are from tea to eighty Swedish families and openings for organizing congregations. A certain Kev. Lammers, of Norway, some years ago abandoned the State Church and or ganized independent congregations. These churches have not made much progress duiiug this time. Lust fall a movement was com menced to uuite these churches by adopting articles of faith. It seems that the point of widest departure from the Lutheran Church is In the doctrine of baptism. They say: "Inas much as the Bible has not gives any specific command at what time baptism should be ad ministered, therefore we believe in liborty of baptism," i. e., to baptize, or uot baptize, their children. BAPTIST. The Kev. W. Freeman, Baptist missionary along the Pacific Railroad, is engaging houses in Chicago for different posts. One is under way for Laramie, and one will soon be com menced for North Flatte, and another for Fre mont. A Free Baptist (otherwise Freewill Baptist) educational meeting held at Great Falls, N. 11 , has settled the question of locating the theologi cal school, which has been under discussion fr eome time, by providing for two such schools one at Lewiston, Me., and one at Hillsdile, Mich. This gives the preference to tte two institutions already existing at these pUces, and pleases both sections. Buffalo had been pro posed as a compromise. The Iowa Baptists appeal in the Wa!c?iman and Jlejtevtor for help to put Burlington L ul verslty on a good foundation. The Baptists are stronger than any other denomination la this State except the Methodists; aud yet they say tLat U-o C'ogrca'.w.i.iliiii, .villi Lu; SJ'JJ uio-u bers, have at Grlnnell tho best eollegc in the State, while the Presbyterians have just secured an endowment of $75,000, and the Methodists have two flourishing Institutions. They offer to allow any donor of $10,000 to give his name to artj professorship thus endowed, and the donor of f 50,000 to give his name to the uni versity. CATHOLIC. Rev. E. do Pressense tells in tho Watchman and Jiejlector of two Oriental bishops who were sent for to see the Pope. Kemembcring the fate of their colleague, who was forced to sign a paper giving up his rights, they agreed to keen perfect silence during the interview, and could not be induced to utter a word. A few days after they were sent for again; and, remember ing the old proverb, "non bin in idem" (uevcr try the same dodge twice), they went to bed and feigned sickness. Father Gratry. of France, who has been ex posing the "forged decretals' has been pelted with Papal and episcopal rebulics since his brilliant attack on infallibility. He takes them quietly, and says: "They injure me, but they do not convince me." n 23 w-y o ii ni s pi s. From Our Own Correspondent. Nkw Yobk, May 28, 1870. The Ninth Itrclinrnt Reception. Tho reception of the 0th Regiment, Colonel Fisk commanding, was celebrated last night at the Academy of Music. In some respects it was the most successful ball of the season if a ball out of the season can be said to be so. Everybody was there. It was a compression of many balls into one, and all the elements present in mo6t of the balls given during the winter and early spring were found united in the affair of last night. The man of sin and the woman of diamonds were there in large numbers. There was a good deal of opera ball, something of 7th Regiment, a pinch of opera-boutfe aud a suspicion of Turim. The Academy of Muslo, where the entertainment was given, looked very beautiful. It was radiant with supernumerary lights, and profusely deco rated with the badge of the regiment formed of blazing gas-jets. There is nothing particularly new to be said of the accessories. These are pretty much the same in all public balls. There were colored and perfumed fountains, vari colored lights, expensive tapestries, a shower of twitterings from caged birds, and incessaut music from a very big orchestra. Description would be incomplete were mention of Colonel Fisk omitted. That jewelled and phlegmatic notoriety was present, surrounded by satellites and beaming with triumph, nis broad shoul ders were , never more fairly and squarely set. As for his dress, I absolutely decline to deecribc it. I may have occasionally attempted themes far, far beyond the flight (if pens may be said to fly) of this Gillott I am writing with, but Mr. Fiek's costume 6hall not be one of them. Subjects there are which even the audacious shrink from touching. The privilege of portray ing the Fiskian entemble shall be sacred to the Gotham reporter who interviewed him. By-the-by, every phase of Jenkinsism was represented, and I suspect that this morning's papers will teem with a mantua-maker's inventory and the names of persons with the vowels omitted. Hlowlv Dylrj Out. Within a few short years tho washerwoman will be no more. She has flourished quite long enough, and now the epoch in which she was ascendant is drawing to a close. Probably no other class of laborers ever made so much of an opportunity as she has done of the chance of eating holes into apparol by an overweening quar tity of washing-soda, and then declaring that the mice must have done it ere the gar ments left the customer's house. Tho want of conscience eviuced by a metropolitan washer woman is one of the saddest things in human nature. It all melts la the tub along with the indigo. The way she scorches fine linen, and sends home twelve-cent rocket handkerchiefs in lieu of hem stitched ones! The avidity with which she runs up bills and spreads out a dozen legitimate pieces 60 as to make them twenty! The thoughtfulness with which she leaves patches of yellow soap on the insides of wristbands and rubs the buttons off your flannel shirts and creates undarnable fissures in your hosiery and enlarges the circuit of your buttonholes 1 The pertinacity with which one of her lnfants,of which 6he has a constantly fresh supply, is always having the -measles at the wroHg moment, and causing your clothes to be sent home too days af ier they have been needed ! And now these trials ara coming to an end. They do these things better in California. John China man is the washerwoman there, lie banishes the women, and, with the exclusivlsm of a male Sorosis, establishes laundries for his own sex only. He frowns upon the conventional wash board, and abjures the patent wringer. He poetizes the labor as much as possible, and takes his soiled linen to the river's brink. There amid the gritty music of a rapid stream pad dling against the shore, he infuses sentiment into soapsuds, and in the process of rinsing discovers rhyme and fbythm. We are told that he washes clothes in gangs, boils them up in gangs, hangs them out in gangs, and irons them iu gangs. It is also hinted that he moistens muslin with his mouth, and reno vates tarlatan with his tongue, and that he is peculiarly successful with colors that in most other hands would run. Well ! there are enough Chinamen in New York city for the reformatory process to commence here at once. You will find quite a little colony of them below Vesey street, selling cigars and candies, and looking like reanimated Anummles. I should not be sur prised if we had a Mongolian wash-house soon, aud all our soiled clothing were coutided to Celestial renovaters. ".Hualcln the Air' I should think there was music in the air. There ought to be, with an evening band sup plied to every park in the city. Not only lu Central Park, but in Madison, Washington, and Tompkins Squares, bauds are Btatloned. But as yet they have not been under the most sensible supervision. They have commenced playing, for instance, at 5 and ending at 7, the inteival be tween being the very lime when the working people, for whom these open-air concerts were instituted, are coming home from work and eating their suprers, and unable to appreciate the pleasure. It would bo far better if the eou ccria commenced at 7 and terminated at U. So far us the attendance goes, among people not belonging to tho working classes, they have been a grand success. The pilueipal listeners, ! to be sure, are babies, children, and loafers. , The music has been Oftcubach. Will the debt ' of gratitude wiiich the people owe to that com- poser ever bo paid ? I fear not, except eo far I as appreciatiou Is payment. Surely his Duvhesse und Jiarle JiUuemvutvputaAu some magical elixir i of sound, lor the fagged musses lift their de jected heads when strains thence greet their ears, and the wayfarer's desert-soul blossoms like the rose. Some attempt has been made to cram classical music down the throats of the crowd, but the crowd gags at it, makes a face, ; and t-c ut.capt will lo; b: permit'): in. Fashl.a and Ferllng, As I remarked the other day, a good many Philadelphia Quakers are in town attending the meetings of the Hlckslte society. Into the excrdiums of the speakers the agitating ques tions of tho hour have found their way. The McFarland-Kichardson trial and the bevy of social questions to which it gave rise, the con dition of the Indians, the Fenian trouble, and even the plebiscite, have been discussed by these metk-moralled counsellors. At the close of one Of tbeir meetings a day or two ago, a fashionably-dressed young lady stepped hesitatingly up to one of the matrons. "Will you let me shake hands with you ?" she asked. The withered old woman regarded the sweet yeung thing with tender compassion, and then extended her myriad-wrinkled hand. "This is the first time I was ever at any place like this," exclaimed the sweet young thlng. "I feel as if it was good for me to be here; as if, perhaps, some day, I might like to become one of you myself." "Thee la not a member, then ?" asked the old Quakeress, her compassion melting into a sort of happy mourn fulness. "No; and if I wanted to be, I supposo I should have to leave off these vanities ?" This in a tone of comical self-pity, and with an injured look at her expensive clothes. "Just as thee feels about it, my dear," was the response, and as the young lady sighed and turned away, the Quakeress looked after her as Christ might have looked after the young man of great possessions. Fashion does sometimes send to the surface jutt such pretty and capricious bubbles ! Alabama, REFRIQERATORS. REFRIGERATORS. FOR THE CHEAPEST AND BEST GO TO THE MANUFACTORY OP P. P. KEARN8, No. 39 NORTH NINTH STREET, 4 23 smw3mrp BELOW ARCH, EAST SIDE. REFRIGERATORS, 13. S. FARSON & CO., Self-Ventilating- Refrigerators, The cheapest and most reliable fn the marfcet, and Will keep MEATS, VEGETABLES, FRUITS, MILK, and BU1TER LONGER, DRIER, aud COLDER, WITH LESS ICE, Than any other Refrigerators In nse. Wholesale and Retail, at the Old Stand, 4 30 lmrp No. 240 DOCK Street, Below Walnut. XTT -ALL REFRIGERATO RS ALWAYS RELIABLE. The subscribe! guarantees the make and finish of his SUPERIOR REFRIGERATOR !equal in every respect to his former makes. The thousand sold and now in nse testify to their superior qualifications. For sate wholesale ana retail at the Manufactory, No. 305 OUKRxtY Street, aboT Third. Alto, W. F. NICKEL'S Patent Combination ale, beer, and liquor cooler and refrigerator. 3 Mthstnait GEORGE W. NICKELS. IQfc. 1870. 1870. KNICKERBOCKER ICE CO. ESTABLISHED 1832. INCORPORATED 1SC4. OFFICE, No. 435 WALKTJT St.', Philadelphia. OFFICES AND BRANCH DEPOTS: NORTH PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD and MAS TER Street. RIDGE ROAD and WILLOW Street. WILLOW STREET WHARF, Delaware Avenue. TWENTY -SECOND and HAMILTON Streets. NINTH Street and WASHINGTON Avenue. PINE STREET WHARF, 8chuylkM. No. 1S63 MAIN Street, Germantown. No. 81 North SECOND Street, Camden, N. J., and CAFE MAY, Ne w J ersey. Wholesale and Retail Dealers In and Shippers of Eastern Ice. Send our orders to any of the above oulces. "For prices, see cards." ts 3 lm CARPENTER ICE COMPANY. . No. 717 WILLOW Street. GOOD BOSTON ICE AT MARKET IKATUS, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. CHAS. S. CARPENTER, JOHN GLENDENINQ JOS. M. TRUMAN, Jr., o 7 Btuthlm JOHN R. CARPENTER, WM. E. FRAZER pENN ICC COMPANY OF PHILADELPHIA. Incorporated 1868, Ol-KICKS, B. W. Corner FOURTH and LIBRARY, No. '8 North TWENTY-FIRST Street Shipping Depot. SPRUCE STREET WHARF, Sohayl kill Hirer. OHAB. J. WOLBERT. President. 830 60trp C11A8. B. REKS, Superintendent. BOOTS AND SHOES. BARTLETT, FINE CUSTOM-MADE CIO O T S AND SHOES. Made on cur Improved Laste, Inaurlng Comfort Reauty aud Dui ability. No. 33 SOUTH SIXTn STREET, 1 13 thtcD81 ABOVE C11ESNUT. WATCHES. fjx C & A. PEQUIGNOT, Cf MANUFACTURE RS OF WATCH CANES, AND DEALERS IN AMERICAN AND FOREION No. COO CHESNUT Street. MANUFACTURE, NO. M South f IF Til tjirtei. OARPETINOS, ETO. B. J. LESTER. CHAS. F. WKBEB. WM. T. CKRNXA. E. J. LESTER & CO.'S CARPET WAREHOUSE, No. 29 North SECOND Street, Opposite Christ Church PHILADELPHIA. CAR PETINGS. VELVETS, SOD'S BIUSSTJL3, TAPESTIIY BRUSSELS, TXZRZSQ-PXiir, xxtfazxAxx? VEIJETIATI CAXIPZ2T3. ALSO, Oil Cloths, Window Shades, Etc., IN GREAT VARIETY. ALL THE ABOVE GOODS WILL BE BOLD, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL, AT THE Lowest Market Rates. E. J. LESTER. & CO., Opposite Christ Church EVo. 29 North SECOND Street, 4 S Bmw8m PHILADELPHIA. Q'ANTON MATTINGS. CANTON MATTINGS. Fancy IViattings, White Mattings, Red Check Mattings. CANTON MATTINGS, ALL WIDTHS, Lowest Prices. IMALLUM, CREASE & SLOAN, MATTING WAREHOUSE, No. 609 CHESNUT Street, 8 3 WfmSm PHILADELPHIA. MATTINGS ! Great Variety, all widths, at all prices, from 30 to 75 cents R. L. KNIGHT & SON. 1222 CHESNUT STREET, 8 5 Btnth3m PHILADELPHIA. CARPETS CLEANED AND FREED FROM MOTH bj a process entirely daw. by HOPE, LAUBAOH 4 OO., AT 5141m - Ho. Sou. UttO AD Street. CARRIAGES, ETO. CARRIAGES WM. D. ROGERS, CAXUIXACX2 EUXLDEZI, ORIGINAL AND ONLY Manufacturer of the Celebrated ROGERS CARRIAGES, lOOO ana lOl 1 CHESNUT STREET, PHILADELPHIA. New and elegant styles .of Carriages constantly produtyd. 8 88 tutnasmrp WATCHES. JEWELRY. ETO. WILLIAM B. WARNS A CO Wbolmal. Dealers In K. oner SKVKMTU and OliKcjNlfT tor Ml booond floor, and late ol Mo. se 8. THIRD bt. CLOCKS. 1)W KB CLOCKS. MARBLE CLOCKS. BRONZE OLOOKS. COUCOU OLOOKS. VIENNA REGULATORS. AMERICAN LOOKS No. 22 NOKTII BIXTII STREET. CLASS AND QUEENSWARE. 111 K VINE STREET. U MRS. E. ROWLAND'S CHINA, GLAKN. AM) QUEENS WARE KlIPOKlt M. No. 1U VINE STREET, 6.211m N EWELL, LANDSCAPE AND GENERAL Buaioees Photographer. ha.VJA ARCH Street. b4 very facility for hiking Pb'jlugrphs of Oouuuy BU in or ont of the State, alerchants, manafaoiarurs, and im ixrr oao ti samples of goods p)wtographe1 In t ie tijr best at iWlai FINANCIAL,. SEVEN PER CENT. First Mortgage Bonds of rni Danville, Ilazleton, and Wilkes bnrre Itnllrond Company, At 05 and Accrued Interest Clear of all Taxes. INTEREST PAYABLE APRIL AND OCTOBER. Persons wishing to make Investments are Invited to examine the merits of theBe HON l& Famphlets upplled and full Information given by Sterling & Wildman, FINANCIAL AGENTS, No. 110 SOUTH THIRD HTKEET, 413 tf PHILADELPHIA. Government Bonds and other Securities taken In xchange for the above at best market rates. WE OFFER FOR SALE THE FIltST M0KTUAUE UONDS 0 or run SOUTHERN PENNSYLVANIA IRON AND RAILROAD COMPANY. These Bonda run THIRTY YEARS, and pay SEVEN PBR CENT, interest in gold, clear of all taxes, parable at theFirt National Bank in Philadelpoia. Tte amount of Bonds issued la $(145,000, and are secured by a First Mortgage on real estate, railroad, and franchises of the Company the former of which oost two hundred thousand dollars, whiob has been paid for from Stock subscriptions, and after the railroad is finished, so that the products of the mines oan be brought to market, it is esiimated to be worth 1,000,000. The Railroad counects with the Cumberland Valley Railroad about four miles bolow Uhambersburg, and runs through a seotlnn of the most fertile part of the Cumber, land Valley. We sell them at tt'J and accrued interest from March 1. For further particulars apply to C. T. YERKE8, Jr., CO., BANKERS, TO 3 BOUTH THIRD STREET, PHILADELPHIA. Wilmington and Reading RAILROAD Seven Per Cent. Bonds. FREE OF TAXES. We are ofTeriue 200,000 of (lie Second Mortgage Ilond ot tills Company AT 82 AND ACCRUED INTEREST. Foa the convenience of Investors these Bonds are Issued In denominations of glOOOs, 500, and lOOs. The money la required for the purchase of addi tional Rolling Stock and the fall equipment of the Road. The receipts of the Company on the one-half of the Road now being operated from Coatesvllle to Wll mlngton are about TEN THOUSAND DULLARS per month, which will be more than DOUBLED with the opening of the other half, over which the large Coa Trade of the Road must come. Only SIX MILES are now required to complete the Road to Blrdaboro, which will be finished by the middle of the month. WHL PAINTER & CO., BANKERS, No. 36 South THIRD Street, 66 PHILADELPHIA. JayCooke&G). pniLADELFpiA, NEW YORK, AND WASHINGTON, BANKERS AHS Dealers in Government Securitiei. Bpecial 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 FOR INVEST MENT. Pamphlets and full information given at our office, IV o. 114 8. Trillltl Street, PHILADELPHIA. 4 1 3m D. C. WHARTON SMITH & CO., BANKERS AND BROKERS, No. 121 BOUTH THIRD STREET, looeeesora to fimltfa. B adolpb A Oo. very braaoh of the acinose trill hay prompt aUentloa as heretofore. Quotation of Blocks, Government and Gold eon. tantly reoeired from New York by-yvfeais were, from em i triettda, Kdmukd O Haartplt A Ou. FINANCIAL. LEHIGH CONVERTIBLE 6 Per Cent Firit Mortgage Gold Loan, l'rre from nil ' Taxes. We offer for sale tt,73O,0O0 of the Lehigh Goal and Ifart-a-atinn Company's new first Mortcae 8ii Per Cent Gold Hcmts, free Uom all taxes. Interest due March and Bep Umber, at KIlVIIT'y (00) And interrst in currency adde to date of purchase. These bonds are of a mortae loin of $3,000,000, dated October 6, IMS. 1 h-y bare twenty tire (25) years to ran, an ar convertible into stock at par Until IK79. Prinoipal and interest payable in cold. Thf y sre secured by a first mortf.r. on MOO acres ot coal lands in the Wyomion VaUey, near Wtlkesbarre at present prodnoinn at the rale 800,000 tons of coal per annum, with works in progress whjoh contemplate a lam increase at an early period, and also npon valuable Real Kstatein Ibis city. A Bit king fnnd of ten cente per ton npon all coal taken from the mines for tWe years, and of fifteen cents per ton thereafter, Is .Ftsblisbed, and The Fidelity Inrarano.. Trust and Safe Drpoait t ompany, the Trustees under th. mcrtgsge, collect tbese suns and invest them ia these Bonds, sgreealily to the provisions of the Trust. Kor full particulars, oopies of the mortgage, etc., apply to O. A H. BORIE, W. H. KKWBOLD. 80N A AERTSEN JAY COOKE A OO.. DREXHL A CO., K W. OI.AHK A OO. 5 Him CITY WARRANTS Of LARGE AMOUNTS Tnlien Very Clieap. DB HAVEN & il0M Ho. 40 South THIRD Street. I Hi B. K. JAMISON & CO.. 'buucessors to X. IP. KKJLLY & CO., BANKERS AND DEALERS LN Gold, Sliver and Government Bondi At Closest Market Rates, K. W. Cor. THIRD and CHESNUT Sti. Bpecial attention given to COMMISSION ORDKR3 in New Yorfc aud rnlladolphla stock. Boards, etc. et W S Z Xu V 3E2 IR, FOR SALE. C. T. YERKES, Jr., & CO., BANK EK3 AND BROKERS, No. 20 South THIRD Street. 8 PHILADELPHIA. QLEIVDLiriVIIVC, DAVIS & CoT, No. 48 SOUTH THIRD STREET, PHILADELPHIA. GLEHD1NN1NG, DAVIS & AMORT, No. 2 NASSAU STREET, NEW YORK, BANKERS AND BROKERS. Receive deposits subject to cnecK, allow Interest on standing and temporary balances, and execute orders promptly for the purchase and sale or STOCKS, BONL8 and GOLD, In either city. Direct telegraph communication from Philadelphia house to New Yorfc. i g p o n S A L E Williamsport City 6 Per Cent Bonda, FREE OF ALL TAXES. ALSO, Philadelphia and Darby Railroad 7 Per Cent Bonds, Coupons payable by the Chesnut and Walnut Streets Railway Company. These Bonds will be sold at a price which will make them a very desirable Investment. P. 8. PETERSON & CO., No. 39 SOUTH TniRD STREET, 869 , PHI LA D SLPHIA E LLIOTT I U If 1 BANKERS Ho. 109 BOUTH THIRD STREET, DEALERS IN ALL GOVERNMENT 8 ECU HI TIES, OOLD BIIJ. ETC. DRAW BILLS Ol' EXCHANGE AND 18b UB COMMERCIAL UsTTKRS OF CREDIT ON THff ONION BAN OK LONDON. ISSUE TRAVELLERS' LETTERS OF CREDIT ON LONDON AM FAIU3, available throughout Europa Will collect all Coui'ons and Interest free of charge lor parties tuaklug their financial arrangements with us. M a . HIANOSi -r-r , ALBRECHT, IrrF BIKK Hi A HOHMIDT. MANcrAOTCKKiia or FIR8T4JLAKB PLANO-tORTES. KliU enarantee and moderate nricea. , t AJiAAOOMJi. No. IM AB0U Btrsrtj
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers