The evening telegraph. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1864-1918, September 21, 1870, FOURTH EDITION, Page 7, Image 7

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    THE DAILY EVENING TELEGRAPH PHILADELPHIA, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21 1870.
POLITICAL COnitTTrTWK AND NA
TIONAL DISASTER.
From tke London Spectator.
A remarkable lelter in the Daily Newt
Seems to afford the real key to the expHni
lion of tbe gigantio failures of the French
ftrmy. The writer was tjlJ by two graziers
of Picarcjy, as a matter within their o tu
knowledge, that in a very considerable num
ber of instances which they could specify the
military authorities had got only 1800 men in
a full regiment, instead of 8000, though there
were !3(H)0 names on the rolls. The modus
operandi was this. Fourteen or fifteen yours
ago, private societies undertook to find sub
Btitnte for such of those drawn in the con
scription as conld pay for a substitute. While
this wat ho, those societies received the con
scripts' money, and as it was, of course, the
interest of the army authorities to get the
full number of men, the men wore always
provided. But since tho law bus re
quirtd the money paid by those
who enn pay for substitutes to be paid di
rectly into the military chest, it has become
the interest of those who control the military
chest to pocket the money and put sham
soldi ra on the rolls. These graziers of
Ficnrdy told the Daily Neics' correspondent
that tLey could point out many oompanies
which Lonrinally consisted of one hundred
men, and could only muster about thirty, and
as we lme said before, they maintained that
the average French regiments could not mus
ter much above half their nominal strength.
How, individual statements of this kind, made,
as they only could be made, from personal
knowledge of a few selected cases, would be
utterly" worthless as evidence, if they did not
agree so marvellously with the conspicuous
facts of the war. The French have been not
only disastrously outnumbered, but their
armies have fallen ludicrously short of their
nominal strength. Every one who knows any
thing of the war knows that of the
7."0,00() men whom the French army should
have numbered on a war footing, barely
400,000 fighting soldiers were to be found in
France before the great defeats. And if this
folicy of embezzling the 80 paid by every
reach conscript as Bubstitute-money has
been laigely pursued in some regiments,
there can be little doubt that it has spread
more or less throughout the whole French
army. It is a "real cause," i. e., one proved
to exist, end also one adequate to produce the
remarkaUe effects which have been produced;
kence, we may fairly assume it as one of the
most pro! able of all the hypotheses account
ing for the French failure. That the same
cause gross corruption was at work in the
Comnribttriat Department and the depart
ments regulating the 'supply of Chassepots,
every one knows. Everywhere the French
army has been starved to enrich individuals.
TLis is the more serious a lesson to us, be
cause pecuniary corruption is the very root of
the greatest and most menacing evils in every
Anglo-Sax jn society. It caused a great pro
portion of the disasters in the Crimea. It
caused eformous waste and many disasters in
the American Civil War. It still causes the
greatest possible political evils in American
society. It was certainly at the root of the
monstrous waste of our Abyssinian campaign,
where th published evidence goes to show,
for instance, that a good million sterling was
wasted oh mules never wanted, or at least
. never used; that "CoesuIs and Vice-Consuls
received huge commissions for a few weeks'
service in procuring mules"-i-we quote from
Allen's Indian Mail of the 23d of August
that "a large batch of camels was bought at
Suez the day after Magdali was
Inoun to have fallen;" and gene
rally, that several millions were wasted on
what was known to be useless to the expedi
tion, for the gain of various classes and indi
viduals. Unless there be some early and
severe check to this sort of canker at the
heart of nil great organizations, the Germans,
who seem at present to be almost completely
free from the temptation to corruption, will
not only become the masters of Europe, but
deserve to be so. No nation can confess
more plainly its complete nnworthiness to be
held as of any great account in the political
counsels of the world than by giving evidence
that its average citizens those whose opin
ions build up the publio life of the State
value their own private interests so far more
highly than the publio interest that they
will cheat the State to serve them
selves. It is quite certain that people
of this kind do not deserve to belong to a
State which exercises a wide control in
foreign ailttirs, and that they take the surest
possible means to undermine the very foun
dations of the controlling power. A tem
perate, frugal, and laborious Germany, in
which every man really honored the State as
the true organ of what they call with so much
love "the Fatherland," would have every
right to what it would ceitainly soon gain
a predominant influence in Western Europe,
if its only rivals were a selfishly and un
scrupulously mercantile Great Britain, a
false and gasconading France, and an ' in
triguing, wily, pliant Italy. There is no such
thing as a great State built up out of a people
that is not great. If any sort of corruption
pervades publio morality, this dry-rot must
attack, and sooner or later, as now in Franoe,
go far towards raining the State.
But there is undoubtedly in the present
day a very large amount of political corrup
tion whnh does not imply anything like as
great an extent of peiBonal corruption as it
would if the same deceptions were practised
on private persons; and it is to the extinction
of this that we look most hopefully, for when
once tbe morality of a whole nation has be
come conscientiously indifferent to the obli
gations of sincerity and honesty, inveighing
against tnose sins is as unprofitable as the
most udj rofltnble of all the exercises of the
pulpit. Xso iuigushman, however, can doubt
that there is a great deal of political corrup
tion which does not imply any equivalent
amount of personal corruption, and so far,
perhaps, a remedy is possible. Surely there is
Hope of teaching people teaching children as
a part of their ordinary school education
that instead of its being less wrong to cheat
a corporation or a public department than it
is to cheat an individual, it is. if you can
weigh guilt against guilt, a great deal more
so r The thinkers of old time used to say
that every moral rule was magnified, a hun
dredfold in relation to the Mate in modern
times, the comparative difficulty in realizing
the definite wrong inflicted, in seeing ex
actlywho really Buffers for your meanness
when yon cheat a board, or a corporation, or
a government department, that makes it
otherwise now. Yet what can illustrate tbe
old maxim better than such disasters as those
fromwlich Franoe is pow suffering? Is not
every peer Ittion which robbed a single regi
went of its full strength now written out, as it
were, in tbe flaming letters of burning towns
and desilated plains? Is not every little
cheat by which the army was depm eJ o
chassepots for which the price had lxa paid.
or the Commissariat defrauded f w'ul was
essential to the health and comfort of the
soldiery, magnified now into the sort of
treason which brings whole nation into
mom-Bin? and provinces into subjection to a
foreign soke? If such lessons m the did-
asters of the Crimea and of the Franoo
rrnssian war of 1870 will not teach how un
limited is the consequence of every im
morality committed against the State, how
rapidly the infection of sins against the State,
or agairst any molecule of the State, spreads
till all its strength is undermined, and it is
left a mere name for a rope of sand, what
moral lesson can be taught at all? We
cannot but believe that it would be quite
easy to diffuse a tone of morality in which
cheating the State would be regarded
as the next thing to blasphemy in fact, as
cheating of an infinitely deeper dye, instead
of a less guilty kind, than the cheating of
individuals. So far, of course, as the mere
dishonesty is concerned, there is no choice
between cheating an individual and cheating a
community. But so far as the consequences
go, every man feels that stealing from a poor
man is worse than stealing from a rich to
the same extent, and that a theft which ruins
is worse than a theft the effect of which is
hardly perceived. It is impossible to teach
children that stealing from the State is the
Bleating which ruins, is the stealing from the
poor man whose wages form the revenue of
the State; that stealing from a corporation is
stealing health and happiness from the
population over whose health and happiness
that corporation is the sole guardian; that
stealing from the army is stealing from the
poor men who guard England; that stealing
even from the treasury is stealing from the
resources by which the poor combine to pro
cure for themselves a good government;
that stealing from any department of the
State is the wilful introduction of a most
oontagious disease which ends in death? One
would think nothing easier than to make it
evident, even to children, that the peculiar
defenselessness of the State, in the deficiency
among its guardians of that vivid self-interest
which protects private interests, adds, like
the helplessness of the blind man against
those who would plunder him, a new igno
miny to any fraud committed upon it. And
if with this be combined the immense area
over which fraud against the publio interests
spreads, if it spreads at all, and the terrible
destruction it breeds, one would suppose it
quite possible to bow anew in the publio the
ancient feeling that any sin of this kind
against the organ of the people is really more
guilty, instead of less so, than a like sin
against an individual. In truth, the religious
feeling which substitutes God for
the object of every guilty ac
tion, great or small, while it has
done a great deal to strengthen private
morality, has done a good deal to weaken
relatively the Bprings of publio morality, by
rendering those who have no religious feel
ing comparatively indifferent to all offences
which are not on the face of them productive
of immediate pain and suffering. Many a
man who would not for his life rob a widow
or an orphan will think nothing of robbing
a department. Surely it is possible to
introduce into elementary schools
enough explanation of the result to
innumerable more helpless persons
than widows and orphans of robbing depart
ments the fearful result, too, in the way of
making widows and orphans to inspire all
men who have any vestige of moral feeling
at all with a certain sense that the State is far
more sacred than any individual that it
really represents the strength -and shield of
millions of individuals, who will be not only
less happy, but less noble, less honorable,
less just, less generous beings, if the State be
once turned to ignoble uses by selfish and
vulgar men.
LUMBER.
1870
SPRUCE JOIST.
SPRUCE JOIST.
HEMLOCK.
HEMLOCK.
1870
i QTA SEASONED CLEAR PINK.
lO I U SEASONED CLEAR PINE.
1870
CHOICE PATTEKN PINK.
SPANISH CEDAR, FOR PATTERNS.
RED CEDAR.
IQwn FLORIDA FLOORING. 1 QTA
10 U FLOhlDA FLOORING. 10 I U
CAROLINA FLOORING.
VIRGINIA F LOOKING.
DELAWARE FLOORING.
ASH FLOORING.
WALNUT FLOORING.
FLORIDA STEP BOARDS.
RAIL PLANK.
1870
WALNUT BOARDS AND PLANK. 1 QTA
WALNUT BOARDS AND PLANK. lO I V
WALNUT BOARDS.
WALNUT PLANK.
1870
UNDERTAKERS' LUMBER.
UNDERTAKERS' LUMBER,
RED CEDAR.
"WALNUT AND PINE.
1870
1870
SEASONED POPLAR.
SEASONED CHERRY.
1870
ASH,
WHITE OAK PLANK AND BOARDS,
HICKORY.
1 Q7 A CIGAR BOX MAKERS' -t Q'TA
10 I U CIGAR BOX MAKERS' 10 I U
FOR SALE LOW.
CAROLINA SCANTLING. 1 QTA
10 I U CAROLINA 1L T. SILLS. 10 I U
NORWAY SCANTLING.
IQTA CEDAR SHINGLES. "I QTA
10 I V CYPRESS SHINGLES. 10 4 V
MAULK, BKOTHKK & CO.,
115 No. 8600 SOUTH Street.
PANEL PLANK. ALL THICKNESSES.
COMMON PLANK, ALL THICKNESSES.
1 COMMON BOARDS.
1 and B SIDE FENCE BOARDS.
WHITE PINE FLOORING BOARBS.
YELLOW AND SAP. PINE FLOORINGS. 1 and
iX SPRUCE JOIST, ALL SIZES.
IIJ&MIAHJK. JU1HT, A.L.LI B16B.3.
PLASTERING LATH A SPECIALTY,
Together with a general assortment of Building
Lumber for sale low for cash. T. W. 8MALTZ.
6 81 6m No. 1715 RIDGE Avenue, north of Poplar St.
United States Builders' Jilill,
FIFTEENTH Street, Below Market
ESLER & BROTHER,
PROPRIETORS.
Wood Mouldings, Brackets and General Turning
Work, Hand-rail BaluBtera and Newel Posts. 9 1 8m
A LARGE AfcSORTM&NT ALWAYS ON UANU
BUIUDINQ MATERIALS.
H R. THOMAS & CO.,
DIAUB8 Hi
Doors, Blinds, Sash, Shutters
WINDOW FRAMES, ETC.,
' h. w. ooanxa or
EIGHTEENTH and MARKET Street!
4 11 PHILADELPHIA,
FIRE AND BURGLAR PROOFS ARM
J. WATSON & BOS,
in Mi Of the UU firm of IVANS 4 WATSON.
FIRK AND BURGLAR-PROOF
BATE B T O It IS,
No. 63 BOUTU FOURTH STREET,
Bli A 1 tw dwn Catsuit A.. rui4fc
I
J
FINANOIAL
MOST DESIRABLE INVESTMENT!
LEHIGH VALLEY IUILK0AD
7 Per Cent. Mortgage Bonds.
We Oder for sale, at par and accrued Interest, the
SEVEN PER CENT. BONDS,
Free from all Xaxatlon,
OF TUB
LEUIGIL VALLEY RAILROAD CO.
The Railroad property, which U mortgaged for the
security of the holders of these Bonds, is finished,
and has been In fall working order since ISM, earn
lng and paying to its stockholders dividends of ten
per cent, per annum regularly upon the fall paid-up
capital stock, now amounting to 1T,957,3S0.
The Bonds have forty years to run, ARB REGIS
1ERED and FREE FROM ALL TAXE3, Interest
SEVEN PER CENT. PER ANNUM, payable Sep
tember and March.
rurchascrs will be allowed a rebate of interest at
the rate or Seven Per Cent, from the date of pur
chase to September 1, and Interest added after Sep
tember 1 to date of purchase.
For farther particulars, apply to
DBEXEI, CO.,
:. iV- n. no it ik.
W. V NEW BOLD. SON ifc AERTSE.N.
Philadelphia, August 8, W70. 9 1Glm
R
8
Six Per Cent Loan of the City of
Williamsport, Pennsylvania,
FREE OF ALL TAXES,
At 85, and Accrued Interest
These Bonds are made absolutely secure by act o
Legislature compelling the city to levyjsufficlent tax
to pay Interest and principal.
P. O. PETERSON ft CO..
No. 39 SOUTH THIRD BTREET,
U PHILADELPHIA
XIAXtRXSSOCT GRA.1VXBO,
BANKER.
DEPOSIT ACCOUNTS RECEIVED AND INTER
EST ALLOWED ON DAILY BALANCES.
ORDERS PROMPTLY EXECUTED FOR THE
PURCHASE AND SALE OF ALL RELIABLE SE
CURITIES. COLLECTIONS MADE EVERYWHERE.
RKAL ESTATE COLLATERAL LOANS NEGO
TIATED. 3 27 6m
No. 203 S. SIXTH St., PMlada.
REAL ESTATE AT AUCTION.
N
E.
Bv virtue and In execution oi the powers contained
in a Mortgage executed by
THE CENTRAL PASSENGER RAILWAY
COMPANY
of the city of Philadelphia, bearing date or
eighteenth day of April, ls63, and recorded In the
ottlce for recording deeds and mortgages for the
city and county or rniiaaeipma, in Mortgage book
A. C. II., No. 66, page 465, etc., the undersigned
Trustees named in said mortgage
WILL SELL AT PUBLIO AUCTION,
at the MERCHANTS' EXCHANGE, in the city of
Philadelphia, by
MESSES. THOMAS & SONS, Auctioneers,
at 12 o'clock M., on TUESDAY, the eighteenth day
of October, A. D. 1S70, the property described In and
conveyed by the said mortgage, to wit:
HO. l. Ail mose iwo contiguous iota or pieces ui
ground, with the buildings and Improvements
thereon erected, situate on the east slue of Broad
street, In the city of Philadelphia, one of tliein be
ginning at the distance of nineteen feet seven
laches and fl ve-elghtlis southward from the southeast
corner of the said Broad and Coates streets ; thence
extending eastward at right angles with said Broad
street eighty-eight feet one inch and a hall to ground
now or late oi bamuei jumer; tnence south wara
along said ground, and at right angles with said
Coates street, seventy-two feet to the northeast cor
ner of an alley, two feet six Inches In width,
leading southward Into Penn street ; thence west
ward crossing said ailey and along the lot of ground
hereinafter described ana at right angles witn saia
Broad street, seventy-nine feet to the east side of
the said Broad street ; and thence northward along
the east line of said Broad street seventy-two feet to
the place of beginning. Subject to a Ground Rent
of tibO, silver money.
No. 8. Tne oiner or mem situate ai me norcneasi
corner of tbe said Broad street and Penn street,
containing in front or breadth on the said Broad
street eighteen feet, and In length or depth east
ward along the north line of said Penn street seven-ty-l
our feet and two inches, and on the line of said
lot parallel with said Penn street seventy-six feet
nve lncnes ana mree-iouruis oi an mcu to sum two
feet six inches wide alley. Subject to ground rent
of 172, silver money.
No. 8. All that certain lot or piece of ground be
ginning at the S; K. corner of Coates street and Broad
Street, inenca extenuiuK nuuiuwuru niuug tue nam
Broad street nineteen feet seven Inches and five
eighths of an Inch : thence eastward eighty feet one
Inch and one-half of an Inch ; thence northward, at
right angles with said Coates street, nrne feet to the
south side of Coates street, and thence westward
aiUlig iuq Dvutu diu vi dwv wuwa a u vwv uwvi toui
to the place of beginning.
No. Fonr Steam Dummy Cars, twenty feet long
by nine feet two Inches wide, with all the necessary
steam machinery, seven-inch cylinder, with ten-inch
stroke of piston, with healing pipes, fco. Each will
seat thirty passengers, and lias power sufficient to
draw two extra cars.
None These cars are now In the custody of
Messrs. Grlce & Long, at Trenton, New Jersey,
where they can be seen. The sale of them is made
subject to a lien for rent, which on the first day of
July, 1670. amounted to tooo.
No. B. The whole road, plank road, and railway of
the said Tbe Central Passenger Railway Company
of the city of Philadelphia, and all their land .(not
Included In Noa. 1, 2, and 8.) roadway, railway, rails,
rights of way, stations, toll houses, and other super
structures, depots, depot greunds and other real
estate, buildings and improvements whatsoever,and
all and singular the corporate privileges and fran
chises connected with said company and plank road
an railway, and relating thereto, and all the tolls,
liiCBTLe, ltiuues, and prollts to accrue from the same
or any part thereof belonging to said company, and
generally all the tenemeuts,hereditaments and fran
chises of the said company. And also all the cars of
every kind (not Included In No. 4.) machinery, tools,
lmplements,and materials connected with the proper
equipment, operating and conducting of said road,
plank road, and railway ; and all the personal pro
perty of every kind and description belonging to the
Bald company.
Together with all the streets, ways, alleys, pas
sages, waters, water-courses, easements, franchises,
rights, liberties, privileges, hereditaments ana ap
purtenances whatsoever, unto any of the above
mentioned premises and estates belonging and ap
pertaining, and the reversions and remainders,
rents, Issues, and pronta thereof, and all the estate,
right, title, Interest, property, claim, and demand of
every nature and kind whatsoever of tbe Baid Coin
paay, as well at law aa In equity of, In, and to the
same and every part and parcel thereof.
TERMS OF SALE.
The properties will be sold In parcels as numbered.
On each bid there shall be paid at the time the pro
perty Is struck off Filty Dollars, unless the price Is
less than that sum, when the whole sum bid shad
be paid.
' tit T urar 1 vvrro
813 611
wl W. LONUSTltETH, ( Trostees.
LEQAL NOTIOE8.
IN THE ORPHANS' COURT FOR TUB CITY
AND COUNTY OF PHILADELPHIA.
Estate of SARAH BURD. deceased.
xne AUUltur ,yjftjiuwu ut tiic lAiun w Huuit,
and adjust the accounts of EDWAKDSHIPPEN and
THOMAS K. WALKER, Trustees for JOSEPH
BURD and family, under the lltu and 10th clauses
nf the will of SARAH BURD. doceaaed. and to
report distribution of the balance la the hands of
the accountants, will meet the parties intereted for
the purpose or his appointment, on Tl'KSDAY,
No. 6WS WALNLT Ktreet. in tne city of Phila
delphia. W1LL1AS U WAUJllim .
flfinwfot Auaiwr.
PINANOIAL,
A LEGAL INVESTMENT
FOB
Trniteei.zecntoriand Administrators.
WE OFFER FOR SALE
52,000,000
or mi
Pennsylvania Railroad Co.'s
UILTERAL itlORTGAUU
Six Per Cent. Bonds
at 95
And Interest Added to the Date
f Purchase.
All Free from State Tax, and
Issued In Sums of 91000.
These bonds are coupon and registered. Interest
on the former payable January and July 1 ; on the
latter April and October 1, and by an act of the
Legislature, approved April 1, 1870, are made a
LEQAL INVESTMENT for Admlulstrators, Execu
tors, Trustees, etc For further particulars apply to
lay Cooke &, Co.,
IS. W. Clark Sc Co.,
XV, II. IVewbold, Son Sc Aertsen,
C. Jk II. Ilorle. i im
JayCooke&0.
PHILADELPHIA, NEW YORK, AHD
WASHINGTON,
BANKERS
an
Dealers in Government Securities,
Special attention given to the Purchase and Sale of
Bonds and Stocks on Commission, at the Board o
Brokers In this and other cltlea.
INTEREST ALLOWED ON DEPOSITS.
COLLECTIONS MADS ON ALL POINTS.
COLD AND SILVER BOUGHT AND SOLD.
RELIABLE RAILROAD BONDS FOR INVEST
MENT. Pamphlets and fall information given at our offloe,
No. 1 14 S.THI11D Street,
PHILADELPHIA. TiBffl
Wilmington and Reading
XLAJXXIOAZ)
Seven Per Cent. Bonds,
FREE OF TAXES.
We are ottering 300,000 ot the
Second Mortgage Honda ot
this Company
AT 82 AND ACCRUED INTEREST.
For the convenience of investors these Bonds are
UJOUCU 111 UCUU1UUUIUU1UI Ul j
f 1000s, f 800, and 100s.
The money Is required for the purchase of addi
tional Rolling Stock and the fall equipment of the
Road.
The road la now finished, and doing a business
largely In excess of the anticipations of Its officers.
The trade offering necessitates a large additional
outlay for rolling stock, to afford fall facilities for Its
prompt transaction, the present rolling stock not
being sufficient to accommodate the trade.
WM. PAINTER & CO.,
BANKERS,
No. 3G South THIRD Street,
I B PHILADELPHIA;
LLIOTT A D C If IV
BANKERS
To. 109 SOUTH THIRD BTREET,
DEALERS IN ALL GOVERNMENT SECURI
TIES, GOLD BILLS, ETC.
DRAW BILLS OF EXCHANGE AND ISSTJ1
COMMERCIAL LETTERS 07 CREDIT ON THE
UNION BANS 07 LONDON.
ISSUE ' TRAVELLERS' LETTERS 0? CREDIT
ON LONDON AND PARIS, available throughout
Europe,
Will collect all Conporj and Intereal free of ckarrt
(or parties frlr,"g tnelf P nwt arrangements
vitanat tm
NOTICE.
TO TRUSTEES AND EXECUTORS.
Tne cheapest Investment authorized by law are
General Mortgage Bondi of the Penn
sylvania Railroad Company.
APPLY TO
D. G. WH&RTOIi SMITH & CO.,
BANKERS AN II Bttwnjwa,
No. 121 SOUTH THIRD BTREET,
PHILADELPHIA
FINANCIALS
A DECIRABLE
Safe Home Investment
this
Sunbury and Lewistowii
Railroad Company
OfTer $1,900,000; Ilonds, bearing
7 Per Cent. Interest In Gold,
Secured by a
First and Only Mortgage.
The Bonds are issued in
1000s. $500s and $300.
TheConponB are payable la the oity of
Philadelphia on the first days of April and
October,
Free of State and United States
Taxes.
The price at present is
90 and Accrued Interest in
Currency.
rattles purchasing prior to October will 1 will make
me oiuerence on tne uuld INTEREST.
This Road, with its connection with the
Pennsylvania Railroad at Levis town, brings
tne Anthracite Coal Fields 67 MILES nearer
the Western and Southwestern markets. With
this advantage it will control that trade. The
Lumber Trade, and the immense and valuable
deposit or ores in this section, together with
the thickly peopled district throucrh which it
runs, will secure it a very large and profitable
trade.
WM. PAINTER & CO.,
Dealers in Government Seouritles,
No. 36 South THIRD Gtreot,
0 tf4p PHILADELPHIA.
UNITED STATES SECURITIES
Bought, Sold and Exchanged on Most
Iiioeral Terms.
O O L X
Bought and Sold at Market Bates,
COUPONS CASHEIX
Pacific Railroad Bonds
BOUGHT AND SOLD.
Stocks Bought and Sold on Commis
sion Only.
Accounts received and Interest allowed on Daiiv
Balances, subject towneck at sight.
DE JJAYEN & BRO.,
No. 40 South THIRD Street,
611 PHILADELPHIA.
JOHN S. RUSHTON & CO.,
BANKERS AND BROKERS.
NOVEMBER COUPONS WANTED.
City Warrants
BOUGHT AND SOLD.
No. 50 South THIRD Street,
6 25 PHILADELPHIA
B. E. JAMISON & CO..
SUCCESSORS TO
J, XT. KKLLY & CO,
BARKERS AMD DEALERS Eft
Gold, Silver and Government Bonds
At Closest market nates,
V. W. Cor. THIRD and CHESNUT Sts.
special attention given to COMMISSION ORDERS
In New Tort ana Philadphla Stock Boards, eto
eta W
QUGIYDCYIf IHG.DAYIS A CO.,
Wo. 48 BOUTU THIRD STREET,
PHILADELPHIA.
GlEliOIIIHIKG, DAVIS I AMORT,
Ho. IT WALL STREET, NEW TORS,
BANKERS AND BROKERS.
Receive dePoslts subject to check, allow interest
on standing' aa temporary balances, and execute
orders promptly (or the purchase and tale of
STOCKS, BONDS ana gold, in either city.
Direct telegraph communication from Philadelphia
aonae to New ork. IS
S I Hi V ES 3E
FOE SALE.
C. T. YERKES, Jr., I CD.,
BANKERS AND BROKERS,
No. SO Oouth THIRD Street.
PHILADELPHIA.'
03
J303
AOO HON BALES,
M
8. FOURTH STREET.
Ittn,,,T the Aontlon Rooms.
SUPERIOR HOUSBHOLD FURNITURE, PIANOS,
French Tlato Mirrors, Fire-proof Safes, O.floa
Desks and Tables, Wardroba, Bookowwn, SMn-
, boards, Extension Table, China. Glassware, Fine
Bedding, chandeliers, Btovea, Fine Velvet. Brus
sels, and Other Carpets, et
On Thursday Moraine,
Sept. M, about 900 lots superior household f arnl-
tnre, comprising a general assortment.
Also, for account of the United States, 80X barreu
flour. . , go st
A.1m,nl"tmor's pft,cf No. 1 Woodland Terrace.
SUPERIOR FURNITURE, PIER MIRROR, FINE
CARPETS, BOOKCASE, ETC.
n Friday Morning,
83d mst,, at 10 o'clock, at No, 7 Woodland Terraca
(uarby road, Twenty-seventh ward), by catalogue,
the superior furniture, made by George J. Hon-W-
0 8t
TBOMAS BIRCH A SON, AUCTIONEERS AND
COMMISSION MERCHANTS, No. 1110 CHBS
N UT Street ; rear entrance No. lioi Sansom street.
Sale No. 1110 Chesnut street.
EI.KO ANT HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE, WALNUT
PARLOR SUITS, in Pluh; Rosewood and Wal
nut Chamber Suits, Wardrobes; ' Bookcases,
Secretaries riano-fortcs, Cabinet Organs, Largo
French Plate Mirrors, Carpets, Silver-plated
V, are, Table Cutlery, Tatntlngs, Engravings, Flae
Onps, etc.
EES On Friday Morning, .
At 9 o'clock, at No. 11 10 Chesmit street, will be
sold, a large assortment of elegant household furni
ture, carpets, etc, from families declining house
keeping. PIA NO-FORTES. Also, 8 rosewood plane-fortes,
one cabinet rrirn. etc.
LARUR MIRRORS. Several lnro-A Frannh.nlatA
mantel and pier mirrors.
ijmk ulivs.-Also, several double-barrelled
fowllug-pleces. 9 21 gt
T)UNTING, DURBOROW A CO., AUCTIONEERS.
4 Nos. SSil and 834 MARKET street, corner Ot
Bank street. Successors to John B. Myers ft Co.
Special Sale on the Premises, No. S31 Hancock
street, anove Norrts,
On Wednesday Afternoon,
September SI, at 3 o'clock precisely, embracing
8 looms.
1 warp mill.
1 rolling machine.
176 pounds yarn. 9 19 9t
LARGE SALE OF BRITISH, FRENCH. GERMAN
aim' iAjTnnaiij unx uuuus,
On Thursday Morning, 91
September 22, at 10 o'clock, on 4 months' credit.
IMPORTANT SALE OF CARPETINGS. OIL
CLOTns, ETC
On Friday Morning,
September 23. at 11 o'clock, on four months' credit
about 200 pieces Ingrain, Venetian, list, hemp, oot
tage, and rag carpeMngs ; oil cloths, rugs, etc 9 IT St
SALE OF 2000 CASES BOOTS, SHOES, TRAVEL
LING BAGS, HATS, Etc.,
On Tuesday Morning,
Sept. 27, at 10 o'clock, en four months' credit 9 21 4t
LARGE BALE OF FRENCH AND OTHER EURO-
On Wednesday Morning, 9 21 5t
Sept. 29, at 10 o'clock, on four mouths' credit-
MARTIN BROTHERS, AUCTIONEERS.
(Lately Salesmen for M. Thomas k Sons.)
No. 704 Chesnut St., rear entrance from Minor.
CHANGE OF DAT.
Pur Regular Weekly Sales at the Auction Rooms
wDUiereafter be held
EVERY MONDAk.
TRADE SALE OF POCKET AND TABLE CUT
LERY, HEAVY AND SHELF HARDWARE,
AND OTHER GOObS.
On Thursday and Friday,
September 22 and 23, at 10 o'clock, at the Trade
Salesrooms, No. 704 Chesnut. street, by catalogue,
an extensive assortment of hardware and cutlery.
Including heavy and shelf hardware, fine grades of
table and pocket cutlery, Wade & Butcher cutlery,
Ivory and other table cutlery, plated ware, tea trays,
shovels, tacks, Britannia ware, and other goods
suited to this trade.
Catalogues ready day previous to sale. 9 9 6t
Executors' Peremptory Sale on the Premises.
THREE-STORY BRICK STORE and DWELLING,
No. 838 North Second street, 19 feet 9 Inches front,
40 feet deep.
On Saturday,
September 24, 1870, at 12 o'clock noon, on the pre
mises, will be sold without reserve or limitation, by
order of Executors, all that lot or piece of ground
situate on the west side or north Second street, 17
feet inches southward from the southwest cor.
ner or Second and Canal streets, containing In front
19 feet 9 Inches, and In depth 43 feet 0)tf Inches on
the north line, and 40 feet 5if laches on the south,
line, more or less, with free use and privilege of a
certain three feet wide alloy running Into Second
street. 9 20 4t
Pale No. 60 North Seventeenth street
HANDSOME WALNLT HOUSEHOLD FURNI
TURE, elegant Rosewood Piano Forte, fine French,
Plate Mirrors, handsome Brussels and other Car
pets, etc.
On Tuesdav Morning,
27th Instant at 10 o'clock, at No. 040 North Seven
teenth street, by catalogue, handsome walnut ami
plush parlor tult; eleyant walnut chamber suit,
wardrobe, superior sideboard, dining-room furni
ture, elegant rosewood 7-octave pluno forte, fine
French plate pier mirror, handsomely framed ; hand
some Brussels carpets, line spring and hair mat
tresses, kitchen furniture, etc
May be Been early on morning of sale. 9 20 Ct
BY BARRITT fc CO., AUCTIONEERS
CASH AUCTION HOUSE,
No. 230 MARKET Street corner of Bank street
Cash advanced on consignments without extra
charge. 11 849
LARGE SALE OF
OF BOOTS, SHOES, BROGANS
RUBBERS, ETC.
On Thursday Morning
Sept. 22d, at 10 o'clock, on 8 monthj' credit.
It
FURS FIRS FURS.
SECOND TRADE SALE,
On Friday Morning,
Sept. 23d, commencing at 10 o'clock, by catalogue,
comprising soo lots manufactured Furs, In large va
riety ; also, Robes, Afghans, etc Also, 200 Angora
Skins of best quality. Also, large assortment of
fcqnlrrel Goods. 9 81 2t
C" ONCERT HALL AUCTION ROOMS, No. ISIS
CHESNUT Street
T. A. MCCLELLAND, AUCTIONEER. 1
Personal attention given to sales of household for
Blture at dwellings. '
Publio sales of furniture at the Auction Rooms,
No. 1219 Chesnut street every Monday and Thurs
day. 1
For particulars see Public Ledger."
N. B. A superior ciass of furniture at private sale
JOSEPH P E iN N B Y
AUCTIONEER, 1
No. 1307 CHESNUT fcTREET. 16 3 tl
N
S T.
LOUIS,
M O.
AUCTION HOUSE OF
HARVEY & TYLER, V )
Nob. 119, 121, and 123, corner FIFTH an PINS
Streets, ST. LOUIS, MISSOURL j.
We have a large and commodious Building
erected by ub expressly lor the Auction and Com
mission business.
bt Louis is known to be the most rellao'e auction
market In the West .
Cash advanced on Consignments.
Our Commissions from six to ten per cent
We refer to the Bankers and Merchants of St
Louis. Mo. A. UNO,
No. 732 CHESNUT Street, Philadelphia,
8 12fmw2m General Agent
T N L O U I BYI L L E, K X
THOMAS ARDEKSOH A OO.
(K.tabhitheii lHi).
AUCTIONEERS AND IXJMMlKglON MERCHANT!. I
LOUIS VIliLH, K.Y ,
BulDMt itriotlf VommiMioa. AUaaotloa mJmmoM
jvely iow iTfcsihi
OoD.iKDaienU tolioiUd for motion or prtou
KegaUr taction wUm of boot. bMa.nd 01 Wl
'lUgKr auction nlmot dryfeoodi, clothing. wmM
1, T. S ASTON. . . M'MAHOM.
pASTOIf c McMAIIOHf,
SBIPPIXO ASD C03TMISST0X VERCEAHTS,
No. 9 OOBNTIKS SLIP, New York,
Nc 18 SOUTH WHARVES, Philadelphia, .
No. 45 W. PRATT STREET, Baltimore.
We are prepared to ahlp every description 01
Freight to Philadelphia, New York, WlUuiagton, ana
lntepuiedlaU point wiin promptness and (iesyi
Canal Boats aud Steam-tugs furuialiwl at VHftiMiWt
ET'goTsTnBWEST 8TYLEOLt,N?
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