The evening telegraph. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1864-1918, September 29, 1870, FIFTH EDITION, Page 7, Image 7

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    THE DAILY EVENING TELEGRAPH PHILADELPHIA, THUKSDAV, SEPTEMBER 20, 1870.
7
AFTER THE WAR.
'roni the Pall Mall Gazette
At the present moruont it is well to bo
sparing of political prophecies, but there is
no great rashness in adhering to the opinion
that the one certain and immediate result of
the Prussian victories will be a general eager
liens to copy the Prussian military system in
its minutest details. We have no reason to
withdraw from onr ""sertion that unless this
process of literal imitation be checked the
lnrden cast on Europe through the predatory
and aggressive habits contracted by nearly all
Continental States since the establishment
of the second Trench empire will be fearfully
increased. The Prussian system (it cannot be
too often stated) involves a standing army, net
distinguishable in any material particular
from the mercenary army of France, resting
on the basis of an armed nation. The instru
ment thus formed is of prodigious efficiency,
and it is possible that the use made of it in
18(')0 and 1X70 will prove to have been an ad
vantage to the world, taking the world as we
find it. But it rather adds to than diminishes
the permanent evils which the experience of
twenty years has ever shown to be inherent
in the employment of mercenary armies. As
was proved in 18C!, the Prussian army is just
as much at the disposal of the chief as the
army of France, and the large number of
citizens in its ranks in no way fetters or
limits his discretion as te the cause for which
he shall make war or the time
at which he shall make it. In 1870
the cause of the King of Prussia is the
cause of Germany, and he did not choose his
own time for fighting; but the events occur
ring before our eyes prove to us that one
consequence of the vast reserve created by
having the nation ready armed at the back of
the army is that human life is cheaper than
ever, and that blood flows like water. We
have not a word to say against this army as a
military instrument, or against the purpose
for which it is now used; but we do say that
if Europe is to remain under that malady
which the poison of vitiated public opinion
has generated, and is to alternate between
the cold fit of armed peace and the hot fit of
war, the universal adoption of the modern
Prussian system would make the periodical
acute seizure more dreadful than ever.
If, indeed, the question to be settled at
the peace were a question between mercenary
armies and armed nations, there would be
much to be said for the latter mode of pro
vision against war. No doubt from the
purely economical point of view there are
great advantages in mercenary armies, if
armies there must be. The fund diverted
to them lrom the encouragement of art and
the augmentation of knowledge, wealth, and
comfort is utterly wasted, but it is reduced
to a minimum. The principle applied to a
mercenary army is merely the ordinary prin
ciple of the division of labor, secur
ing a given result at the least
possible cost of money and
morality. But great mercenary armies have
one fundamental vice. They are a standing
temptation to rulers to employ them. On
the other band, an army which is really the
cation in arms is wasteful in the highest de
gree. It nips industry in the very bud, and
takes away from the arts of peace and from
the production of wealth the agents which
are most valuable just at the time when they,
are most valuable. But in the existing state
of the world it is certainly free from the great
mischief of mercenary armies. It is an un
ready weapoD, and the king or chief who
would use it has to reckon with the hesitations
and the peaceful tastes of the citizens who
fill its ranks. From the military point of
view this was the fault of the Prussian sys
tem as devised with the view of eluding the
jealor.8 vigilance of Napoleon after the battle
of Jena. To remedy it and to superinduce
on the trained nation a standing army which
could be employed at a moment's notice has
been the labor of the present King's life; nor
need we deny that in tho permanent menace
addressed to the continent by France there
was a justification for his sustained
and ultimately successful efforts. But
with France out of the way, all reason for
looking with complacency ou the double sys
tem vanishes. If we are from time to time
to have wars, and if we must have the means
of making war and must submit to the com
parative impoverishment which the provision
of those means entails, the best fate which
could probably befall the men of the present
century is that there should be a gene
ral return to the plan of training and
aiming the whole community as was done in
Prussia before King William came to the
throne. If disarmament in this sense be
agreed to at the peace, diplomacy will have at
least done something on a par with its pre
tensions. Anything is, at all events, to be preferred
to the cruel burden of the double system. It
is in such favor at the present moment that
all its evils should be pointed out. Let us
then ask ourselves whether it is not a system
which none but a despotic and semi-barbarous
government would keep for long in a state of
efficiency. If the present war is suoceeded
by a prolonged peaoe, we may be quite sure
that cations growing in wealth will not long
submit both to paying for an army and to
constituting an army. One ingredient in the
system will assuredly grow at the expense of
the other. But if the Prussian model is
universally followed, it soems to us that
do nation will carry the imitation
further than Russia, and that none is more
likely to maintain the double system after
other States have allow it to fall into decay.
The transformation of the military institutions
of ltussia, the most simiously imitative of
nations, seems to us a real danger which the
German successes may have behind them,
and not one of those bugbears which the
journal which are wedded to the interests of
France have recently been parading. Those
who have been predicting that a policy of
collusion between ltussia and Prussia will
place the destinies of Europe at the mercy of
those States seem to be ignorant that the
press of no country has displayed such dis
content at the German victories as that
of ltussia. Nor is this mere fanciful
partisanship. It arises from the recently de
veloped but most bitter hostility of the na
tional party in ltussia to the last vestiges of
independence in the German provinces on
the Baltic. It is very far from impossible
that the oppression of these provinces may
at the conclusion of the war become the
Eopular German grievance, and that we may
ear as much of them as we did five years
ago of the more problematic iD juries intlicted
on the Sleswick-llolhteiuers by the Danes.
The addition to the fears which Europe may
justly entertain of ltussia appears to us to
come nearly exclusively from the aptitude
she will certainly thow in taking home to
herself the military lessons of the war, and
from the tenacity with which she will pro
bably adhere to a burdensome military sys
tem when other communities have found
it intolerable. The military discoveries of
civilized States have not seldom made the
f 01 tune of barbarous neighbors. There is
no parallel to the discomfiture of Franca by
the Germans closer or more modern thai the
Victories) of ih.9 xlibLtUia uua lug uiiieu de
thronement of Sparta from the military pri
macy of Greece. But Philip of Macelon was
a student in the tactical school of Epaminon
da?, and there he learned the now military
arts which made him master of Thebes and
every other Grecian State. A plan of com
mon disarmament would be worth any degree
of diplomatic exertion if Russia can be in
cluded in it; if she cannot, it will be worth
little or nothirg.
THE PICTVUED ROCKS OF SUPERIOR.
SCENERY OF THE' GREAT LAKE.
Among the many resorts about Lake Supe
rior, cone are more attractive to the tourist
than the Pictured Bocks, situated upon the
south shore, some sixty miles eastward from
Marquette.
From the lake, writes a tourist to the
Toledo Blade, and at a distance, the so-called
Pictured Hocks appear as a huge soa wall
rising abruptly from the lake's margin, ex
tending many miles, and varying in height
from fifty to three hundred feet. Approach
ing nearer, we find all manner of unique
formations and fantastic rocky structures,
reared by Nature's hand.
There are the chimneys tall, slender
columns of rock rising among the trees,
and so very like factory chimneys that one
expects to see dense columns of smoke issu
ing therefrom.
Then comes the sail rock, composed of
gigantic slabs of sandstone, rising seventy
five feet above the water. This is a few rods
into the lake, entirely detached from the
main cliff, so that when viewed from the
east, at a distance, one takes it to be a
schooner with sails set. The illusion is com
plete without the aid of imagination.
The so-called miner's castle bears a strong
likeness to some ancient structure of knightly
days. Lofty towers, solid walls, doorways,
embrasures, all lend so much the appearance
of an old Norman castle that we quite na
turally gaze about in quest of a grim, mail
clad knight who, after the most orthodox
story-book pattern, shall be equally ready to
welcome us with hearty good cheer, or run
his lance through our carcass.
But our Aladdin's lamp failed to bring forth
even the ghost of a genius lici. So we sail on
past mile after mile of this vast sea wall,
where new beauties meet the eye at every
turn, where hurrying streams dash over the
clifi' into the lake below, forming beautiful
cascades, where fantastic walls of rock,
carved, sculptured, and stained in many
colors by nature's workmen frost and storm
all serve to keep us more than interested
until we reach the chapel, which is one of
the main features of the Pictured Bocks.
It is quite appropriately named. A bold
promontory jutting forward from the main
clifi', a single mass of sandstone about one
hundred and seventy by sixty feet, supported
from the east side and rear by the cliff and by
huge columnar masses in front and on the
west sife. Such is the chapel.
Viewed from the city side, it conveys the
idea of some vast and ancient temple in a
state of ruin and decay. Dark evergreens
are mingled with column and pillar with
picturesque effect. Indeed, all along the
cliff from east to west, trees, mostly ever
greens, crown the summit, giving a beautiful
border to this rocky wall. One may enter the
chapel from the rear, but the lake being calm,
we may climb tho rocks in front, reaching
the entrance at a height of thirty or forty
feet above the woter.
Here we are, within a temple not made
with hands. So very like a church is this
huge vaulted apartment, with its pulpit and
altar, all complete, that as we enter we
almost expect a dapper little usher to offer
his services. No wonder the Indians locate
a Manitou in the chapel and in their crude
way people it with ghostly forms. It only
requires Grecian birth, or a location in the
Holy Land, with a flimsy tissue of monkish
stories thrown about it, to render the place
classical.
The heavy sea beating ng tinst the base of
the cliff, singing its majestic, never-ceasing
anthem, fills the chapel with solemn mu-uc.
It is nature's organ rivalling the grandest
tones heard within some vast cathedral. The
storm king with Lis winds and waves is the
orator of this temple. The strong contrast
carries us back in memory to one of the old
mission buildings in California. A wild,
weird sensation thrilled us throughout the
night as we camped by the long-deserted mis
sion, San Luis Bey, far down the Pacific
coa&t. The whitewashed walls of the mission
staring at us like some giant ghost, the
mournful cries of the whipporwill, the grand
Pacific sighing and sobbing upon the beach
below as if grieving over the sides of the
land which it washed, all spoke more elo
quently than did the bigoted priestly fathers
who once ruled that land. So we cared not
that
"The Mission Is more ; upon Us walls
The golden lizards slip, or breathless pause.
Still as the sunshine brokenly that falls
Through crannied roor and spider webs of gauze;
No more the bell in solemn warning calls
A holier silence thrills and overawes ;
And the sharp light and shadow of to-day
Outlive the mission of San Luis Key."
The grand portal is a huge segment of rock
protruding into the lake from the main sea
wall, with a bold, lofty front, and a passage
way leading out upon either side so that one
may row beneath the vast arch.
Imagine yourself in a room 400 feet long
by 180 wide, and 1M to L'OO feet ia height
from the water to the arched roof.
All too hastily must we tell you that to row
withia this grand amphitheatre where the
waves play and dash about, where the ever
varying shades of light picture the walls with
grotesque forms, the deep emerald of the
waters, the never ceasing music of the waves,
the strange, unearthly reverberations of
one's own voice, altogether afford a pleasure
which one must experience in order to fully
appreciate the beauties of the place.
Green Island lies to seaward, within easy
view of the Pictured Bocks. Camping upon
a bold cliff', we have before us the Pictured
Bocks, tinged with royal colors from the
setting bud, and pictured to us as the far-off,
&hadowy bhores of dreamland, where golden
hopes t re to be realized.
A People on Stilts. The pictures of Bosa
Bonheur have made us well acquainted with
the singular habits which the shepherds of
the landes south of Bordeaux have adopted
of passing the greater part of their lives on
stilts. The tirbt time that a group of these
leople are seen, there is a curious emotion in
the tuind as of a strange prodigy. Dressed
in sheei)-bkins, worn by time, knitting
ttockirgs or spinning thread, they gravely
pats over the reeds and furze; the Hpecta-
tor Limed, as it weie, in the bnsues, they
lifted nearer the sky on the verge
of the Lorizou. The long stick, which they
bardie with so much address, serving as a
La'ancirg pole or a suppoit for the arm, con
tributes still m oi e to the strangeness of their
8pptarance: tley look like gigantic crickets,
picj Biing to sjiriug. In the landes of Mo
doc, not only the shepherds but every one
i.sts this btjlo of locomotion; the child re a
have no fear, and the women, who are invari
ably ditftavd iu Liv, IcJCi-'.i,1 ll'Z'i rAVi-.
perched on dead branches. The origin of
stilts is unknown, but it is probable that
they were not in use before the Middle Ages,
us ancient authors make no mention of
them. In the patois of the country they
are called chatiyne, which would seem
to fix their origin in the period of the
rule of the English, deriving it from onr word
shank: probably some inventive British mind
gave them this serviceable mode of progres
sion. Terched on these borrowed legs the
shepherd watches over his charge concealed
in the brushwood, crosses uninjured the
marshes and quicksands, fears not to be torn
by thorns or dry twigs, and can at any time
double the speed at which he ordinarily walks.
Whether it has any effect on the character
cannot be decided; but certainit is that these
people are distinguished by their wild, savage
nature. They have a horror of strangers,
end when they perceive a traveller coming
towards them, they hasten to flee into con
cealment. The song.', either of n J warlike or patri
otic nature, which have been published in
various German newspapers since the out
break of the war, number, aocording to official
accounts, up to August 22, f;ii. The first
appeared on the lfith of July, and 401 owe
their origin to the North German Confedera
tion, while 143 have been written by people
of the South German States. A collection of
all these songs is preparing, and the work
will be sold for the benefit of patriotic aid
societies.
HINANOIAL
A DESIRABLE
Safe Home Investment
TIIE
Sunbury and Lewistown
Railroad Company
Ofler $1,300,000. Ilonds, bearing!
7 l'er Cent. Interest In Uold,
Secured by a
First and Only Mortgage.
The Bonds are issued in
$1000st f 500s and $2009.
The Coupons are payable in the city of
Philadelphia on the first days of April and
October,
Free or State and United States
Taxes.
The price at present id
90 and Accrued Interest in
Currency.
Patties purchasing prior to October will 1 will make
me mnereuce on the GOLD INTEREST.
This Koad, with its connection with the
Pennsylvania Kailroad at Lewistown, brings
the Anthracite Coal Fields C7 MIIiES nearer
the Western and Southwestern markets. With
this advantage it will control that trade. The
Lumber Trade, and the immense and valuable
deposit of ores in this section, together with
the thickly peopled distriot through which it
runs, will secure it a very large and profitable
trade.
Wffl, PAINTER & CO.,
BANKERS,
Dealers in Government Securities,
No. 36 South THIRD Street,
6 9 tf4p PHILADELPHIA.
COUPONS.
THE COUPONS OFTriE FI113T MORT
GAGE BONDS
or TUB
Wilmingtoh and Beading Railroad,
Hue October 1,
Will be paid, on and alter that date, at the Banking
Bouse of
WM. PAINTER & CO.,
No. 30 S. THIRD ST., PHILADELPHIA.
9 23 tolS W. 8. HILLES, Treasurer.
B. K, JAMISON & CO..
SUCCESSORS TO
X. IT. KELLY ate CO
BANKERS AND DEALERS IU
Gold, Silver and Government Bonds
JLt Closest Market llater,
H. W. Cor. THIRD and CHE3NUT SU.
Special attention given to COMMISSION ORDERS
In New York asd Philadonia Stool. Boards, eta
eta ut
qleiii:iii:u, datis & co
No. 48 SOUTH THIRD STREET,
PHILADELPHIA.
GlENDINNING, DAVIS & AMORT,
No. 17 WALL STREET, NEW YORK,
BANKERS AND BROKERS.
Receive deposits subject to check, a'low Interest
on sianding and temporary balances, and execute
erders promptly for the purchase and sale or
STOCKS, BONDS and GOLD, la either city.
Direct telegraph communication from Philadelphia
house to New York; 1 9
Mm
J7 l' J . t
PHNANOIAL.;
UNITED STATES SECURITIES
Bought, Sold and Exchanged on Host
Liberal Terms.
o O U I
Bought and 8old at Market Bates.
COUPONS CASHED
Pacific Railroad Ilonds
BOUGHT AND SOLD.
Stocks Bought and 8old on Commis
sion Only.
Accounts received and Interest allowed on Dally
Balances, subject to check at sight.
DE HA YEN & BKO.,
No. 40 South THIRD Street,
SU PHILADELPHIA.
MOST DESIRABLE INVESTMENT!
LEHIGH VALLEY RAILROAD
7 Fer Cent. Mortgage Bonds.
We ofTer for sale, at par and accrued Interest, the
SEVEN FER CENT. BONDS,
I ree from all Taxation,
or TBI
LE1IIGIL VALLEY RAILROAD CO.
The Fallroad property, which Is mortgaged for
security of the holders of these Bonds, is finished,
and has been In full working order since 1354, earn
lug and paying to Its stockholders dividends of tea
per cent, per annum regularly upon the full paid-up
capital stock, now amounting to 1T,95T,850.
The Bonds have forty years to run, ARE REGIS
TERED and FREE FROM ALL TAXE3, interest
SEVEN PER CENT. PER ANNUM, payable Sep
tember and March.
Purchasers will be allowed a rebate of Interest a
the rate of Seven Per Cent; from the date of par
chase to September 1, and Interest aided after fcep
tcmber 1 to date of purchase.
For further particulars, apply to
DKEXEIi V CO.,
V. V 11. UOH1E.
V. a NE VVBOI.D. 80N fc AERTSEN.
Philadelphia, August 3, 1870. 9 10 lm
JOHN S. RUSHTON & CO.,
BANKERS AND BROKERS.
NOVEMBER COUPONS WANTED.
City Warrants
BOUGHT AND SOLD.
No. CO South THIRD 8treet,
8 205 PHILADELPHIA.
NOTICE.
TO TRUSTEES AND EXECUTORS.
The cheapest Investment authorized by law are
General Mortgage Bonds of the Penn
sylvania Railroad Company.
APPLY TO
D. C. WHARTON SMITH t CO.,
BANKERS AND BROKERS,
No. 121 SOUTH THIRD STREET,
PHILADELPHIA.
gLLlOTT DUUlt
BANKERS
Co. 100 BOUTH THIRD STREET,
DEALERS IK ALL GOVERNMENT 8ECUBI
TIES, GOLD BILLS, ETC
DRAW BILLS OF EXCHANGE AND IBS 01
COMMERCIAL LETTERS OF CREDIT ON THE
UNION BANK OF LONDON.
ISSUE TRAVELLERS' LETTERS OF CREDIT
ON LONDON AND PARIS, available throughout
Europe.
Will collect all Coupons and Interest free of o&argi
for parties making their financial arrangement
wltans. 4tM
c o u rj o iv h.
THE 7 PER CENT.
GOLD COUPONS
or thi
SUNBURY AND LEWISTOWN RR. CO.
Due October 1,
Will be paid on and after that date at the Banking
House of
WM. PAINTER & CO..
No. 36 SOUTH THIRD STREET.
9 SI 82t J. O. L. 8HINDEL, Treasurer.
F
R
8
L C.
Six Fer Cent. Loan of the City of
WilUamsport, Pennsylvania,
FREE OF ALL TAXES,
At 85, and Accrued Interest.
These Bonds are made absolutely secure by act o
Legislature compelling the city to levyjBufflcieut tax
to pay Interest and principal.
P. 8. PETERSON & GO..
Ho. 39 SOUTH THIRD STREET,
N fsiuopm
UNANOIAU,
Wilmington and Reading
RAXXJIOAD
Geven Per Cent. Bonds,
FREE OF TAXES.
We are flerlns: $300,000 ot the
Second Mortgage Ilonds ot
this Company
AT 82J AND ACCRUED INTEREST.
For the convenience of investors ttese Bonds are
issued In denominations of
1000s, 1500s, and 100s.
The money is required for the purchase of addL
tlonal Rolling Stock and the fall equipment of the
Road.
The road Is now finished, and doing a business
largely in excess of the anticipations of Its offlcera.
The trade offering necessitates a large additional
outlay for rolling stock, to afford full facilities for Us
prompt transaction, the present rolling stock not
being sufficient to accommodate the trade.
WI. PAINTER & CO.,
BANKERS,
No. 30 South THIRD Street,
SB m ILAD E LPH IA.
A LEGAL INVESTMENT
FOR
Trustees.EEecntorsand Administrators.
WE OFFER FOR SALE
S2, 000, 000
or THI
Pennsylvania Railroad Co.'s
CSENERAL. 9IORTGAUE
Six Per Cent. Bonds
at 95
And Interest Added to tlte Date
f Purchase.
All Free from State Tax, and
Issued in Sums of $1000.
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 or the
Legislature, approved April 1, 1ST0, are made a
LEGAL INVESTMENT for Administrators, Execu
tors, Trustees, etc. For further particulars apply to
J ny Coolie Ac Co.,
i:. Y. Clarlc Sc Co..
IV. II. 1'ewbold, Son Ac Aertsen,
C. Ac II. Horie. o 1 lm
JayC00KE3;(p.
PHILADELPHIA, NEW YORK, AND
WASHINGTON,
BANKERS
uro
Dealers in Government Securities,
Special attention given to the Purchase and Sale of
Bonds and Stocks on Commission, at the Board o
Broken la this and other cities.
INTEREST ALLOWED ON DEPOSITS.
COLLECTIONS HADE ON ALL POINTS.
SOLD AND SILVER BOUGHT AND SOLD.
RELIABLE RAILROAD BONDS FOR INVEST
MENT. Pamphlets and fall Information given at oar offloe,
No. 1 14 S.TITIIXD Street,
PHILADELPHIA. a 1 8m
S I 3Li V ES ?R
FOE SALE.
C. T. YERKES, Jr., & CO.,
BANKERS AND BROKERS,
No. SO South THIRD Street.
Si
PTTTT.AnBT.THTA;
203 203
IIARXIISSON CRAMBO,
BANKER.
DEPOSIT ACCOUNTS RECEIVED AND INTER
EST ALLOWED ON DALLY BALANCES.
ORDKH8 PROMPTLY EXECUTED FOR THE
PURCHASE AND SALE OF ALL RELIABLE SE
CURITIES.
COLLECTIONS MADE EVERYWHERE.
REAL ESTATE COLLATERAL LOANS NEGO
TIATED. S 87 6ia
No. 203 S. SIXTH St., FMlada.
PBED. VA1RTU0RKK.
THKO. 0. HAND,
FAIRTHORNE & RAND,
Law and Collection Oflice,
No, 17 South THIRD Street,
PHILADELPHIA.
DRAFTS AND NOTES NEGOTIABLE COLLECTED
Prompt atteutlon given to CLAIM3 of all kinds in
the City of Philadelphia, and throughout the United
States and Cuuadas.
AFFIDAVITS AND ACKXOW EDUMENT
taken for all the States. a 12 linrp
TOIIN FARNUM & CO., COMMI33ION MER
f I ebanti aodtMaofotnr.r of OooMtotft Tiskio. at.
AOO riON SALES,
M THOMAS fc RONS, NOS, 13 AND ltt
s, fourth street.
handsome: furniture, bookcase, fins
OARPET.H, ETC.
On Friday Morning,
ROtli lnst., at 10 o cloc k, at No. 1330 X Seventh
street, aiove Montgomery avenue, hy catilopruo, tht
entire superior furniture, made to order by Lutjs. and
Is equal to new. 9M St
THOMAS BIRCH SON, AUCTIONESKS AtsD
COMMISSION MERCHANTS, No. HKLCUS.
NUT Street; rear entrance No. 1101 Sanson s'rueu
Pale at No. 1110 Chesnut street
1XF.OANT HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE, FITS
ROSEWOOD PIANO FORTES, Brussels and other
Carpets, Mirrors, Plush Uarlor Sifits, P.ateJ
Ware, Paintings, etc
On Friday Morning,
At 9 o'clock, at No. mo chesuut street, w.U he
sold, a large assortment of elegant cabinet ware,
carpets, and other household goods, from faaiiiies
declining housekeeping.
ROSEWOOD riANo-FORTES. Also, rosewsMd
piano-fortes, made by Hailet &. Davis, Voae, Sjho
marker, Haines, and others. 28 2c
r)UNTINO, DURBOROW A CO., AUCTIONEERS,
Nos. 33 and 34 MAP EST street, corner of
Bank street. Successors to Jolin B. Myers & Co.
IMPORTANT SALE OF CARPETING 3, OIL
C LOTHS, ETC.
On Friday Morning,
September SO, at 11 o'clot k. on four months' credit,
a:out 00 pieces ingrain, Venetian, list, hemp, cot
tage, and rag carpetlngs ; oil cloths, rugs, etc. 9 243t
LARGE SALE OF FRENCH AND OTHER EURO
1'EAN DRY GOODS,
on Monday Morning, P 2) 3t
uct. a, at iu o'clock, ou tour iuouius credit
SALE OF 2noo CASES BOOTS, SHOES, TRAVEL
LING BAUS, HATS, ETC.,
On Tuendav Morning.
Oct. 4, at 10 o'clock, en four months' ere lit. 9 wit
M
ARTIN BROTHERS, AUCTIONEERS.
(lately Salesmen for 1VL Thomas k Sons,
No. 704 Chesnut Bt., rear entrance from Minar.
CHANGE OF DAY.
Our Regular Weekly Sales at the Auction Rooma
will hereafter be held
EVERY MONDAY.
Sae No. 8M N. sixth street.
VERY SUPERIOR HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE,
HANDSOME VELVET CARPETS, FINS
CHINA, ETC.
On Saturday Morning,
October 1, at 10 o'clock, at No. 8iH N. Sixth street;
by catalogue, the entire superior household furni
ture; superior walnut and plush parlor suits; supe
rior chamber and Uining-room furniture; Una vet
vet carpets; French china and glassware; tine
spring and hair mattresses; kitchen utensils, etc.
May be examined early on morning of sale. 19 26 Bt
IY BARRITT & CO., AUCTIONEER
CASH AUCTION HOUSE,
No. 130 MARKET Street, corner of Bank street.
Cash advanced on consignments without extra
charge. 11 244
CONCERT HALL AUCTION ROOMS, No. 1211
CHESNUT Street.
T. A. MCCLELLAND, AUCTIONEER.
Personal attention given to sales of household for
nlture at dwellings.
Public sales of furniture at the Auction Rooau,
No. 1219 Chesnut street, every Monday and Thart
dav.
For particulars tee "Public Ledger."
N. B. A superior cass of furniture at private sa'.a
JO 8 E P n P E NN 3 Y
AUCTIONEER.
NO. 1S0T CHESNUT feTREET. 5
FUKNAOES.
Established ill 1835.
InrarUbly ths (re&teat nccew orr all competition
whenever and trhsreTsr exhibited or ua j la taj
UNITED STATES.
CHARLES "WILLIAMS'
Paten! Golden Eagle Furnaces,
Acknowledged by tbe leading Architect aaj BaiMera
be'the most powerful and durable Furnaces otfure-l, an
tbe most prompt, systematic, and Urget boose ia
lice of business.
HEAVY REDUCTION IN riiICE3,
and onlf first-class work tamed oat.
Kos. 1132 and 1131 MARKET 8tradt,
PHILADELPHIA.
W. B.-8FND FOR BOOK OF FAOTS ON HEAT
AND VENTILATION. i3Hm
ENOINEli MACHINERY, ETOi
PENN STEAM ENGINE AND BOILER
WORKS NEAFIE A LEVV. PRACTI
CAL AND THEORETICAL ENGINEERS, MA
CHINISTS, BOILER-MAKERS, BLACKSMITHS,
and FOUNDERS, having for many years been la
successfdl operation, and been exclusively engaged
In building and repairing Marine and River Engines,
high and low pressure, Iron Boilers, Water Tanks,
Propellers, etc. etc., respectfully offer their servieee
to the public as being fully prepared to contract for
engines or all slzess, Marine, River, and Stationary;
having sets of patterns of diffeient sizes, are pre
pared to execute orders with quick despatch. Every
description of pattern-making made at tne shortest
notice. High and Low Pressure Fine Tubular and
Cylinder Boilers of the best Pennsylvania Charcoal
Iron. Forgings of all size and kinds. Iron an
Brass Castings of all descriptions. Roll Turning,
ocrew Cutting, and all other work connected
with the above business.
Drawings and specltlcatlons for all work done
the establishment free of charge, and work gua
ranteed.
The subscribers have ample wharf dock-room fot
repairs of boats, where they can He in perfect
safvty, and are provided with shears, blocks, falls,
etc. etc., for raising heavy or light weights.
' JACOB C. NKAFIE,
JOHN P. LEVY,
8 155 BEACH and PALMER Streeta.
SIrABD TUBE WORKS AND IRON CO.,
JOHN H. MURPHY, President,
PHILADELPHIA, PA.
MANUFACTURE WROUGHT-IRON PIPE;
and Sundries for Plumbers, Gas and Steam Fitters.
WORKS, TWENTY-THIRD and FILBERT Street.
Office and Warehouse,
41 No. 48 N. FIFTH Street
ROOFING.
READY ROOFIN O.
This Rooting la adapted to all buildings. It
can be applied to
STEEP OR FLAT ROOFS
at one-half the expense of tin. It Is readily pat on
old Shingle Roofs without removing the shingles,
thus avoiding the damaging of ceilings and furniture
while undergoing repairs. (No gravel used.)
PRESERVE YOUR TIN ROOFS W1TII WBL
TON'S ELASTIO PAINT.
I am always prepared to Repair and Paint Roofa
at short notice. Also, PAINT FOR SALE by tha
barrel or gallon; the best and cheapest la the
market.
W. A. WELTON
t ITi No. Til N. NINTH St.. above Coatea,
PATENT.
STATE RIGHTS FOR SALE. STATE RIGHTS
of a valuable Invention just patented, and for
the SLICING, CUTTING, and CHIPPING of dried
beef, cabbage, etc., are hereby offered for sale. It
Is an article of great value to proprietors of hotels
and restaurants, and it should be Introduced Into
every family. STATE RIGHTS FOR 8ALB.
Model can be seen at TELEGRAPH OFFICE
COOPER'S POINT, N. J.
1 8Ttf MUNDY k HOFFMAN.
ftfJs una vV IoAjl-, U taster CcCirq
toil' V"vAw'5lUL(i'jl4,UrivAv6 fM.t
M vVj 'cU 1 Wi OJUL iaWv- llmliA v,
I I ARNESS. SADDLES, AND TRUNKS. LAROB
II stork, ail grades. Also, several thousand Horss
to the trade or retaiL MoiEK St r0. TW M,A.,a2