The evening telegraph. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1864-1918, July 20, 1870, FIFTH EDITION, Page 6, Image 6

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    THE DAILY EVENING TELEGKAPH -PHILADELPHIA WEDNESDAY, JULY 20, 1870.
THE AUGUST MAGAZINES.
'MPPINC'OTT'H."
The August number of Lippincott's Maga
tine has the following articles:
"Southern Society;" "Amy'B Lover," a
Btory, by Florence Marryat; "The One Sweet
Thing That is Lost to Me," a poem, by How
tod Glyndon; ''The Virginia Tourist," part
III, profusely illustrated, by Edward A. Pol
lard; "The Emperor Alexander;" "The Old
Book-shops of London and Taris;" "Sir Harry
Hotspur of llumblethwaite," a novel, part
IV, by Anthony Trollope; "On the Hypothe
sis of Evolution," part II, by Trof. Edward
D. Cope; "Our Castles," by Edward Spencer;
"The Hungry Heart;" 'Tb.e Dominican Re
public and Annexation," by II. Ilargrave;
"Noncarra's Bad Luck;" "The Island of
Time," a poem; "Our Monthly Gossip;"
"Literature of the Day."
Wo make these extracts from the paper on
'Southern Society:"
For as yet there Is no peace In Southern so
ciety, l'assions once rouecd to a full flame re
quire much time to calm down and to change
into gentler feelings; and with sadness and sor
row it must be confessed there has been no oil
and no wine poured into the wounds of the con
quered. Accustomed to act with the liberality
and generosity which are so often found com
bined with hasty passions and impetuous action,
the people of the South expected the same from
others, and were disappointed; they fan
ciedwhether rightly or wrongly does
not matter so long as the feeling was there
that the purpose was not only to subdue their
etrong arms, but to crush their spirits and to
break their hearts: the bread they asked for at
a brother's hand looked to them like a stone,
and the fish that was offered like a serpent; and
the waters of bitterness rose in their hearts
higher and higher. And yet they were silent.
They had surrendered, and they kept their
parole; they had promised to be of the Union,
and they obeyed its laws: in sorrowful silence
they did all tbey were required to do and bore
all that was laid upon them. The heart know
cth its own bitterness, and they cared not to
lament aloud.
But where men and women, old and young,
0 about with such burdens weighing upon their
souls, with a grief gnawing at their heartstrings,
society cannot be joyous, it cannot be healthy.
The simple pleasures of rural life are gone
forever w here there is no peace of mind; and
how can the cheerful farmer of former days
look with pleasure upon his Impoverished
homestead, worked by hired laborers, bur
dened with heavy mortgages and taxed almost
beyond endurance? The simple, happy
life of the city has departed, and feverish ex
citement, a restless desire for high-wrought
amusement, and an utter disregard for health
and real comfort, have - taken its place. The
(ting of poverty at home and the sight of great
wealth at the North, the desire to enjoy life
once more and to drown the harrowing memo
ries of the past, have led to an insane haste to
be rich, which has rendered social enjoyment
almost impossible. Where so much has been
lost, the paltry remainder is readily iiung after it
into the abyss, and where life becomes a lottery,
prudence is laid aside and conscicuce but too
often bidden to be silent.
Southern society still consists of the same
elements which before the war made it so dear
to its members and so attractive to foreigners.
It will be different when the present generation
has died out, but as yet we meet the same
large-hearted land-owner, the same gentle aud
discreet matron, and the same happy, thought
less children as of old. Yet the spirit that once
animated them all has changed sadly: they
have all grown wiser in their generation; their
hearts are no longer so open, their hands
no longer so ready to grasp yours with hearty
kindness, their minds no longer free from suspi
cion, simple and straightforward. They have
hardened in the fiery furnace: they may make
better citizens hereafter; they have already, in
many cases, become more industiious, more
frugal, more provident; but they are happy no
longer. They feel a few clearly, from their
knowledge of men and a power to read the signs
of the times, others instinctively, often uncon
sciouslythat a new trial is in store for them,
harder in many aspects than war itself. They
have to pass through a period of transition, to
work out great problems, to adapt their native
land to a new order of things to be, in fact,
the pioneers of a new era, and, like the settlers
of the Far West, to pay with their lives and
their happiness for the success and the welfare
of those who come after them.
The greatest of all these problems Is the social
question, How to reconcile the various forms
under which an active, aggressive antagonism
presents itfelf in Southern society? For here
lies the danger: if the manly energy and well
tried self-control of the Southern people enable
them to fuse the new elements into an organic
whole, to bind up the discordant parts by wise
(statesmanship and personal forbearance, and to
accept wisely Inevitable evils in order
to force them to produce good, then the
South will soon be greater and happier than ever,
and rise irom the struggle and the suffering
with increased power at home and Greater re-
epect abroad. But the task is a heavy one
calling, not for great acts ot darincr, efforts of
sublime courage, but for the far harder endu
rance in silence, patient waiting and humble
submission to the Divine command: "li still,
and know that 1 am the Lord!"
It Is difficult for a people to sit still when the
long-accustomed habit of self-government is
eudaenly interrupted by the rule of outsiders,
who from the very force of circumstances must
be without familiarity and without sympathy
with their wants and usages. And here was
the first bitter antagonism arising between the
native and the foreigner. From the governor to
the poor-house steward, every oflice was filled
bv one of that class which soon became known
all over the country as "carpet-baggers."
Many of them won the respeet of the
communities on which the sad state of
things not unfrequently forced them
against their own wishes, and these were met
with courtesy and treated respectfully; but the
simple fact of their being Northerners, con
querors aud Intruders raised an impassable wall
between them and their new neighbors. The
men mastered the feeling with that facility
which alternate political triumphs and defeats
naturally engender in republican communi
ties; but the women, always more ready to
follow the impulses of the heart than
the dictates of reason, would hear of
no truce and no peace. With that naive
ignorance which, attected or real, is their
common-prerogative, tbey classed all the new
comers as Yankees, and refused to meet them
in society. They thought this conduct plucky;
they called it constancy; above all, they found
it so sweet to wound where men had failed, aud
to Inflict pitiless scorn where no other weapon
was available. It has been a costly indulgeuce,
and bitterly has many a community rued the
day on which a commander's heart was stuug to
the quick by a slight offered to his wife; wnlla
not a few fathers have sighed over their inability
to control the feelings of some members of their
amily, when tbey found that the peace they
onged for in public life was not to be obtalued
even at their own fireside.
In other cases the sentiment ol re
pugnance was well founded, and might
have been Justified bat for the urgent plea of
necessity. Violent convulsions, in which so
ciety is disturbed to its foundations, are apt to
bring to the surface a scum of adventurers aud
unscrupulous characters, who are eager to extort
reward for their real or pretended service,
and w no become as annoying and injurious to
their friends aa they are intolerable to their ene
mies. Swarms of such locusts settled upon tbe
conquered land, and with the rude ignorauud of
their class boldly squared their elbows and tried
to puch their way into society. Need we wonder
that they were received with loathing, and that
their victims, Impoverished, mortified, and
plunged Uto unspeakable grief, shrank in
stinctively from the contact ? There they were,
notwithstanding these generals and judges,
lawyers and preachers, tax-collectors and Bu
reau agents, whoso every act in the perform
ance of their duty was a humiliation or a wound.
There could be no common ground in society
on which two such hostile classes might meet
the one flushed with victory and clothed with
arbitrary power, the other humbled and
wounded, and almost despairing.
Fortunately, the antagonism has dimin
ished with every year, .and good
sense on both sides has been productive
of good-will. The conqucrers have
ceased to abuse their brief authority: the con
quered have learned to submit to what could
not be helped, and even to appreciate whatever
deserved respect. Carpet-baggers have been
taken by the hand, made at home In many a
Southern house, and raised to high stations.
Did not Virginia quite recently present the
strange spectacle of a New York man vindicat
ing, ns Governor, her honor against one of her
own sons, wno attempted to inflict a new hu
miliation upon her? The Northern man who
makes a fair Southern farm his residence is wel
comed in all sincerity, and, thanks to the genial
Influence of the climate and the character of the
people, in a shoit time feels himself at home
among those who are no longer his enemies,
but friondly neighbors.
Oodey's Lady's Book for August main
tains its old reputation with a variety of in
teresting articles especially designed for the
edification of the sex feminine, and nume
rous illustrations of the latest ideas in
fashions.
The August number of Tlie Lady's
Friend is nicely illustrated with wood and
steel engravings, fashion plates, etc., and
it presents an excellent series of stories,
sketches, poetry, and household reoeipts that
will be appreciated by the ladies.
Arthur's Home Magaziyie has numerous
fashion plates and other illustrations, and an
entertaining variety of reading matter suited
to the home circle.
The August number of Tlie Cldldren's
Hour is filled with pleasantly written stories
and sketches suited to the tastes of the
younger class of readers.
The Iransatlanlic, since it has assumed a
monthly shape, has commenced a new era of
prosperity. The August number, which com
mences the second volume, has an exceedingly
interesting list of short stories and sketches
which are admirably adapted for summer
reading. Received from Turner & Co.
The Central News Company, No. r0."
Chesnut street, send us the latest numbers of
T7te CornhiU Magazine, Temple Bar, London
Society, and All the Year Bound.
litehatuhh.
REVIEW OF NEW BOOKS.
From Claxton, Remsen & Haffelflnger
we have received the following recent publi
cations of Harper & Brothers:
"Free Russia," by William Hepworth
Dixon, is a rapid resume of the past and pre
sent condition of the Russian empire, with
various rnoit or less erudite speculations as
to the future. This work is the result of
three visits to Russia, in which the greater
part of the country has been traversed, and
if open to the charge of being superficial, it
is at least bright, vigorous, and interesting.
Mr. Dixon sees, as the majority of the Ame
rican people have long seen, beneath the
autocratic system of Russia the germ of a
great free government; and although some of
his facts have been impugned by reviewers
on the other side of the Atlantio, it cannot
be denied that his work really gives a great
deal of just the kind of information about
the Russian people that is needed at this
juncture, and that, whatever other faults the
writer may have, he is never dull or unenter
taining. We therefore recommend the work
aa one that may be read with profit, and as
containing much information that American
readers especially will be glad to obtain about
a nation that is noted for being the warmest
admirer and the most steadfast friend we have
in the Old World.
The canoe Rob Roy is already a favorite
with the public, and those who have been in
terested in the story of its adventures in
European waters will read with pleasure the
narrative of "Rob Roy on the Jordan, Nile,
Red Sea, and Gennesaretb, etc.," as told by
J. Macgregor, M. A., who combines in him
self the functions of commander and crew.
This work, like those which have preoeded it,
is very much given to the individual glorifi
cation of Macgregor. A certain amount of
egotism, however, is allowable in an indivi
dual who has paddled his own canoe over the
rivers and seas of Europe, Asia, and Africa;
and leaving out of the question an undoubted
charm that a personal narrative of this kind
has, the writer possessed unusual opportuni
ties for exploring some almost unfrequented
regions, and for studying some little known
phases of oriental life, and on these accounts
alone the record of his cruise is exceedingly
entertaining. The book is prof usely illus
trated, and we recommend it as exceedingly
pleasant reading.
Charles Dickens may be considered as the
founder of the school of romance of which
Charles Reade and Wilkie Collins are now
undoubtedly the greatest living exemplars
a sort of combination of the utile with the
dulce that, however open to criticism on
purely artist io principles, certainly does some
good in its day and generation. In the spe
cial field of attacking social, political, legal,
and other abuses, Dickens has almost been
surpassed by his two disciples above named,
in vigorous invective at least. If Mr,
Charles Reade's last novel, "Put Yourself in
His Place," does not crush out trades
unionism in England, Mr. Wilkie Collins'
story of "Man and Wife" will go very
far towards exciting publio opinion in
favor of reforming the marriage laws of
England, Ireland, and Scotland so that such
outrages as the Yelverton case disclosed will
be impossible in the future. "Man and Wife,"
which was perused with uiuoh interest by a
multitude of readers while it was being pub
lished serially in Harper's Weekly, is a very
powerful novel, one of the very best that Mr,
Collins has yet produoed, although it is less
mysterious and involved in its plot than most
of his previous works. The author started
out with the objeot of making a thorough ex
position of the gross injustice of the present
marriage laws of Great Britain, and he has
succeeded in stating the main points of his
cftRe with a clearness and force that must
bring them home to the publio mind. Inde
pendently of this, however, the story is one
of great interest for its own sake, and to
those admirers of Wilkie Collins who have
not yet read it we can offer the assurance that
they will find good entertainment in its
pages.
The Mormons have been written np
pretty extensively of late, but we are not
aware of any complete history of the "Latter
day Saints" from the time when Joe Smith
started his new religion to the present day,
when the Mormon question begins to assume
a national importance. A work entitled
"Life in Utah, or the Mysteries and Crimes of
Mormonism," by J. n. Beadle, editor of the
Salt Lake Bf porter, which has just been
issued by the National Publishing Company,
No. 26 South Sixth street, will therefore be
acceptable to those who wish to become ac
quainted with the ins and outs of Mormon
ism. This book is a compilation of facts and
fancies, gathered from various sources, and it
is not entitled to praise on account of its lite
rary style or the philosophical tone in which
it discusses the subject under consideration.
It is intended for popular use and is written
from a popular standpoint, and, with all its
demerits, it gives a reasonably complete and
faithful account of the rise and progress of
Mormonism. Sold to subscribers only.
From J. B. Lippincott t Co. we have
received a cheap paper edition of "Dallas
Galbraith," by Mrs. llebeoca Harding Davis.
This fine American novel achieved much
popularity when it originally appeared serially
in Lippincott's Magazine, and afterwards when
it was published complete. It is a story of
strong and peculiar interest a work such as
no novelist of the day but Mrs Davis could
write and we commend it to the notice of
those who have not already made its ac
quaintance.
The thirty-sixth part of "ZelTs Popular
Encyclopedia" includes among its most
prominent subjects "Life," "Light," "Lime,"
"Lincoln," "Line," "Literature," "Litho
graphy," "Livingstone," "Lock," "Logic,"
"Longfellow, and "Louis," under which last
title sketches of a great nnmber of distin
guished personages of that name are in
cluded.
OITY ORDINANCES.
COMMON COUNCIL OF PHILADELPHIA,
Clerk's Office. )
Philadelphia, July 8, 1870. j
In accordance with a resolution adopted bv
the Common Council of the city of Philadelphia
on mursaay, me an aayoi Juiy, 187U. the
annexed bill, entitled "An Ordinance to Create
a Lean for a House of Correction," is hereby
published for public information.
tlOHN JS.CKSTEIN,
Clerk of Common Council.
AN ORDINANCE
To Create a Loan for a House of Correction.
Section 1. The Select and Common Councils
of the City of Philadelphia do ordain, That the
Mayor of Philadelphia be and he Is hereby
authorized to borrow, at not less than par, on
the credit of the city, from time to time, for a
House of Correction, five hundred thousand
dollars, for which interest, not to exceed the
rate of six per cent, per annum, shall be paid
half yearly on the first days of January and
July, at the oflice of the City Treasurer. The
principal of said loan shall be payable and paid
at the expiration of thirty years from the date
of the same, and not before, without the consent
of the holders thereof; and the certificates
therefor, In the usual form of the certificates of
city loan, snail be issued in such amounts as the
lenders may require, but not for any fractional
in amounts of five hundred 'or 'one thousand
dollars; and it 6hall be expressed in said certifi
cates that the loan therein mentioned and the
interest thereof are payable free from all taxes.
fcection 2. Whenever any loan shall bo made
by virtue thereof, there shall be, by force of this
ordinance, annually appropriated out ot the in
come of the corporate estates and from the
sum raised by taxation a sum sufficient to pay
the interest on said certificates; and the further
sum of three-tenths of one per centum on the
par value of such certificates so issued, shall be
appropriated quarterly out of said income and
taxes to a sinking fund, which fund and its ac
cumulations are hereby especially pledged for
tne redemption aua payment or said certm
cates.
RESOLUTION TO PUBLISH A LOAN
J-V BILL.
Resolved, That the Clerk of Common Coun
cil be authorized to publish in two daily news
papers of this city daily for four weeks, the
ordinance presented to the Common Council
on mursday, July 7, 1870, entitled "An ordi
nance to create a loan for a House of Correc
tion;" and the said Clerk, at the stated meeting
of Councils after the expiration of four weeks
from the first day of said publication, shall pre
sent to this Council one of each of said news
papers for every day in which the same shall
nave been maae. i b she
PATENTS.
N
8.
OFFICES FOB PROCURING
Patent in the United States and Fo
reign Countries,
FORREST BDILUIHQS,
11 IS. FOITKTII fit., Pkllada.,
AD MARBLE BUILDINGS,
SKVliNTII Btreet, above 1
(OppoaiUU. 8. Patent Offlos),
WASHINGTON. D. O.
II. HOW8CW, Solicitor of Patents,
O. HOWSON, Attorney-trLw.
Ocmmanlcstlons to be addrsassd to ta PrinoipsJ OfSoM
r iuUdelphis. 10 bwi
US. PATENT OFFICE, WASHINGTON,
D. C July 9. 1871).
On the petition of HAJRVBY II. INGHAM, of
CamptowD, Pa., praying for the extension of a Pa
tent granted to mm on the 28th day or October. 1856
for uu improvement In Smut Machines, It Is ordered
that the testimony In the case be closed on the 27th
Uuy of September next, that the tune for tiling argu
ments aua me examiner s report ue limited io tne
Tth day of October next, and that said petition be
ntaru on me mn aay or ucwoer next.
Any person may oppose this extension.
SAMUEL. S. FISHER,
T 13 w3t Commissioner of Patents.
STATE RIGHTS FOR SALE. STATE
Riicbta of a Talosbl. Invention jtwt patented, and for
the bliOlNO, OUTi ING, and CJHIFPINU of dried b.ef,
cabbage, etc, are hereby offered for aale. It is an artiole
of rreat value io proprietor! of hotels and reotauranta,
ana it should be introduced Into every family. HI'ATM
HiUH I B tor sale. Model ean be seen at TKLBUUAP1J
u v iuK. uuur ttK'H ruin l. n. J.
i?!U S1UNDY HOFFMAN,
FIRE AND BURGLAR PROOF 8AFK
J. WATSON & SOtT,
Of the late firm of EVANS WATSON,
FIRE AND BURGLAR-PROOF
H A. I?" 1Z 8 T O II IS,
No. 53 SOUTH FOUHTII 8THEET,
1 81, A few door, abof baanat st. Philada,
ikslj
FINANCIAL
Wilmington and Reading
hatxhoad
Seven Per Cent. Bonds.
FHEE OP TAXES.
We are oA'crlng $200,000 of tlie
Second ItlortRnge Honda ot
this Company
AT 82J AND ACCRUED INTEREST.
Foa the convenience of Investors these Bonds are
Issued in denominations of
91000s, $500s, and 100s.
The money la required for the purchase of addl.
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 CoatesviUe to Wil
mington are about TEN THOUSAND DOLLARS per
month, which will be more than DOUBLED with the
opening of the other half, over which the Urge Coa
Trade of the Road must come.
Only SIX MILES are now required to complete
the Road to Blrdsboro, which wlU be finished by
the middle of the month.
WE PAINTER & CO.,
BANKERS,
No. 36 South THIRD Street,
BD
PHILADELPHIA.
LEIllGU CONVERTIBLE
Per Cent. Firtt Mortgage Gold Loan,
Free Front all Taxes.
We offer for sale $1,750,000 of the Lehigh Goal and Pvi
ration Company's new First Mortgage Six Per Cent. Gold
Bonds, free Mom all taxes, interest dot March and Sep
tember, at
rrxmsTir (90)
And interest in currency added to date of purctaee.
These bonds are of a mortgage loan of $3,000,003. dated
October 6, 1(459. They have twentr-flve (26) rears to ran,
and are convertible into stock at par until IS"?. Principal
and interest payable in sold.
They are secured by a first mortgage on 6600 sores of
ooal lands in tne Wyoming Valley, near WUkesbarre, at
present produoing at the rate of 200, XH) tons of ooal per
annum, with works in progress which contemplate a large
increase at an early period, and also upon valuable Real
Estate in this cit y.
A sinking fund of ten cents per ton upon all coal taken
from tbe mines for five years, and of fifteen oents per ton
thereafter, is established, and The Fidelity Insnranoe,
Trust and Safe Deposit Company, tbe Trustees under the
mortgage, collect these sums and invest them U theta
Bonds, agreeably to the provisions of the Trust.
For fall particulars copies of the mortgage, etc, apply
to
O. H. BORIS,
W. H. HKWBOLD. SON A AERT8E3
JAY OOOKK A CO..
DREXEL A CO.,
E. W. OLARK A OO. 7 11 la
gEVEN PER CENT.
First Mortgage Bonds
or TBI
Danville, ITazIeton, and Wilkes
banre Railroad Company,
At 85 and Accrued Interest
Clear of all Taxes.
INTEREST PAYABLE APRIL AND OCTOBER.
Persona wishing to make Investments are Inylt
o examine the merlta of these BONDS.
Pamphlet supplied and l uu information given by
Sterling & Wildman,
FINANCIAL AGENTS,
Ko. 110 SOUTH THIRD STREET,
19 XS
PHILADELPHIA,
Government Bonds and other Securities taken !a
exchange for the above at best market rates.
QUBIWUVKIXQ, DAVIS fc CO.,
Ho. 48 BOHTH THIRD STREET,
PHILADELPHIA.
GLENDIIIHIHG, DAVIS & AMORY,
No. 17 WALL STREET. NEW YORKJ
EANEERS AND BROKERS.
Receive deposits subject to check, allow Interest
on standing and temporary balances, and execute
orders promptly for the purchase and sale of
STOCKS, BONDS and GOLD, In either City.
Direct telegraph communication from Phadelptria
house to New York. n
gLLIOTT DVHl.
BANEJE8
NO. 109 SOUTH THIRD STREET,
DEALERS IN ALL GOVERNMENT EECUItl.
TIES, GOLD BILLS, ETC
DRAW BILLS OF EXCHANGE AND ISSUE
COMMERCIAL LETTERS OF CREDIT CN TEE
UNION BANK OF LONDON.
ISSUE TRAVELLERS' LETTERS OF CREDIT
ON LONDON AND PARIS, available throughout
Europe.
Will collect all Coupons and Interest free of charge
for parties mating their financial arrangements
with us. M( -
B. K. JAMISON & CO..
SUCCESSORS TO
P. IT. KELLY sto CO.,
BANKERS AND DEALERS IN
Gold, Silver and Government Bonds
At Cloaestt Market llatesi,
N. W. Cor. THIRD and CHESNUT fits.
Special attention given to COMMISSION ORDERS
in New York and Philadelphia clock Board, eto,
etc. H
FINANCIAL.!,;
A DESIRABLE
Safe Home Investment
xii i:
Sunbury and Lewistown
Railroad Company
Ofler 1,200,000 Hondo, bearing
7 Per Cent. Interest in Mold,
Secured by a
First and Only Mortgage.
The Bonds are issued in
glOOOs, $500 and &400.
The Conpons are payable in the city of
rhiladelphia on the first days of April and
October,
Free or State nnd I'nited States
Taxes.
The price frt pr6seat is
90 and Accrued Interest in
Currency.
This Road, with ila connection with the
Pennsylvania Railroad at Lewistown. brinoa
the Anthracite Coal Fields (J 7 MILES nearer
the Western and Southwestern markets. Vith
this advantage it will control that trade. Tim
Lumber Trade, and tho immense and valuable
deposit of ores in this section, together with
the thickly peopled district thrench which it
runs, will secure it a very large and profitable
uaae.
VVM. PAINTER & CO.,
BANKERS,
Dealers in Government Securities,
No. 36 South THIRD Street,
tf4p PHILADELPHIA.
Free from U. S. Taxes.
Eight Per Cent. Per Annum
in Gold.
A PERFECTLY SAFE INVESTMENT.
First Mortgage Bonds
OF THE ISSUE OF
$i,soo,ooo,
by itj
ST. JOSEPH AND DENVER
CITY RAILROAD CO.,
Issued in denominations of $ 1000 and $500,
Coupon or Registered, payable in 30 years,
with Interest payable 15th August and loth
February, in New York, London, or Frank
fort, free of tax. Secured by a mortgage only
on a completed acd highly prosperous road,
at the rate of $10,50379 per mile. Earnings
in excess of its interest liabilities. This line
being the Middle Route, is pronounced the
Shortest and most Natural O ne for
Freight and Passenger Traffic
Across the Continent. St.
Louis and Fort Kearney
Spanned by a Rail
way, and connect
ing with the Union
Pacific at Fort
Kearney.
Capital Stock of the Company.. ..f 10,000,000
Land Grant, pronounced valae of 8,000,000
First Mortgage Bonds 1,500,000
$19,500,000
The remaining portion of this Loan now
for Bale at 97 J and accrued interest in cur
rency. Can be had at the Company's Agen
cies in New York, TANNER Jb CO., Bank
ers, No. 49 WALL Street, or W. P. CON
VERSE & CO., No. 54 PINE Street.
Pamphlets, Maps, and all information car
be obtained at either of the abovt-naniei
agencies.
The attention of Capitalists and Investors
is particularly invited to thesa Securities. We
are satisfiod they are all that could be desired,
and unhesitatingly recommend them.
TANNER & CO.,
FISCAL AGENTS,
No. 49 WALL STREET, NEW YORK.
W. P. CONVERSE & CO.,
COMMERCIAL AGENTS,
No. 54 PINE STREET,
saw YOUK.
R SALE
WilUamspcrt City 6 Per Cent Bnds,
FKEB 01 ALL TAXS.
Philadelphia and Dai by Railroad 7
Per Cent Bonds,
Coupons payable tj the Cheauat &ad Walnut Streets
fttkuwaj Company.
Tbeee Bonds will be sold at a price walca will
maXe U.fcUi a verj dcalrable Investment.
P. 8. PETERSON & CO.,
No. 39 BOUTII THIRD STREET,
S4 rmiADZLFHU
S B Urp
F
MNANOIAL,
JayCooke&(Q).
PHILADELPHIA. NEW YORK,
WASHINGTON,
B A N K E R B
JT9
Dealers in Government Securities
Special attention given to tbe Purchase and Bale oi
Bonds and Blocks on Commission, at tne Board 0
Brokers In tills and other cities.
INTEREST ALLOWED ON DEPOSITS.
COLLECTIONS MADS ON ALL FOINT&
BOLD AND SILVER BOUGHT AND SOL
RELIABLE RAILROAD BONDS FOB INVEST
MENT.
Pamphlets and mil Information given at our offloe
No. 1 14 8. XIIIItD Street
PHILADELPHIA. 7 1 8V
UNION PACIFIC RAILROAD CI
land Grant Bonds
Are obligations of the UNION PACIFIC RAILROA
COMPANY, secured by all the lands which they r
ceivearrom tne Government, amounting to abp;
l'Auuu.uuv acres.
Tbe total amount of the land grant mortgage la
a
Between JuU 28. 1809. and July 1.18T0. tha TTntd
Pacific Railroad Company sold 181,463 32100 acri
for 1834,091-03, being an average price of f4-o pl
acre.
The Company have received $521,000 land rci
bonds In payment for land sold, and they have f i
stroyed the $521,000 bonds, and have reduced u2
amount of the bonds to that extent. The Unloi
Pacific Railroad hold obligations of settlers amoun
lng to 1243,745 09, secured by the land purchased bj
them, which Is also pledged to the redemption i
the land grant bonds, Should the sales of land 00
tlnue as above, the whole issue of land grant bon
will be retired and cancelled within ten (10) years.
The Union Pacltle Rallroadland grant bonds pa
SEVEN PER CENT. INTEREST, April and OAobe?
Ran for twenty (20) years. For sale at $7S5 each.
BE HAVEN & BR0.j
v
No. 40 South THIRD Street
NOTICE.
TO
TRUSTEES AND EXECUIOBf
The cheapest Investment authorized by law aret)
General Mortgage Bondi of the Penr
ylvania Hailroad Company.
APPLY TO
D. C. WHARTON SMITH S CO
BANKERS AND BROKERS,
No. 121 SOUTH THIRD STREET,
PHILADELPHIA.
SILVER
FOB SALE.
C. T. YERKES, Jr., I CO.,
BANKERS AND BROKERS,
1
No. SO South THIRD Street
a IS PHILADELPHIA.'
ST. LOUIS AND ST. JOSEPH E.
FIRST MORTGAGE 6 PER CENT. BONDS.
PRINCIPAL PAYABLE NOV. I, 1893, IN
G0L1
Interest payable May 1 and November 1, In Go'
coin, free of United States Tax.
These bonds are limited to the amount of I
per mile, on one of the beht roads In the West. 7. A
Interest is guaranteed by the North Missouri Ra
road, wblch Company has leased the St. Louis a',
St. Joseph Railroad.
Price, 80 and accrued Interest In currency. '
We confidently recommend these bonds as a god
investment. KURTZ & UOWARB,
T mwffit No. 88 South THIRD Street
ENGINES, MACHINERY, ETO
PKNTV STFAM E?JflIJK AVH T?OTT.
ILLS! WOK KS. NiiAFlE A LEW, PKACT1
LAL AND '1 Ilr.UKli'l'lUALi JiNUlIM KliKS, HJ
C111NISTS. liOlLEU-MAKERS, BLACKSMITHS
ai d FOUNDERS, havlug for many years been I
Huccetsfdl operation, aud been exclusively engage
i .. i. .. i .j . .otiuiHiifv UjHna mn.i Ulna. TT .. ,,i .
high ana low pressure, iron uuuern, water Tans
I'ropeiiers, etc. eu, repeeuuuy oner meir .ervie
to the public aa belug fully prepared to contract fi
enainea of all sizesH, Murine, River, and Statiomvr
having sets of patterns of dtileient sizes, are pr
pared to execute orient with quiok despatch. Eveij
descriDtlon of pattern-making mode at toe shortej
notice. High and Low Pressure Flue Tubular
Cylinder Boilers of the best Pennsylvania Charcot
Iron. Forpiiifrs of all size aud kludH. Iron aiJ
Brass Castings of all descriptions. Roll Turnlnl
Screw Cutting and all other work connected
with the above buaiuess.
Drawings and specifications for all work done
the establishment free of charge, aud work guaj
Tlie subscribers have ample wharf dock-room fcf
repairs of boats, wneie iney can lie in perre
saivty, and are provided with shears, blocks, fall
etc. etc., for raising heavy or k wn
JOllN P. LKVY.
3 15 BEACH and PALMER Streets,
IRABD TUBE WORKS AND IRON Ct
JOHN H. MURPny, President,
rUII ADELPUIA, PA. '
MANUFACTURE WROUGI1T-IRON PIPE!
and Sundries for Plumbers, Gas and Steaq Fitter
WORKS, TWENTY-THIRD and FILBERT Street!
Cnlce and Warehouse,
4 1 No. 43 N. FIFTH Street
I. I. EASfYW.
3 UU A VMW I
E
A H T O n
Ac
91 O 91 A 11 O Pt.
KBIFPINa A fTD COMMISSION MWRCHAKTX
Jfo. t OOKNTIK8 BUP. N.w Vork,
no. io ouu u u n v txo, rDiiaiDiiiaV
n, mm . m , j s uqii imluluiimsj
. s ahin vl . .. . .... A4 VaIAI 1
PhiUdslpbi, Maw York, WiluuiiffVm, nd inUrmdUU
doidU with promptneM avod dauUh. Uajl itafcU tWU