TH i3 DAILY-. KVKM IN G TELEGRAPH PHILADELPHIA., THURSDAY, DECEMBER 29, i370 LEh KAISKJi VON DEVT8CULAAD. r,cm tit xw'cn Bpertntfir. How litt'e the world changes ! Hark once ft&in to the shouts of the chiefs of the tribes m they raise Tchengis Khan on their shields on the field of battle, and salute him Emperor f the World 1 That is one view of this eleva tion of King William to the Imperial throne, and a poetical one; but then it is also a cyni cal and a partially untrue one. It would be far truer to fall back on much more prosaic morality, to repeat a sentence which would do for a copybook, and say, see how far one gets by the aid of even a humble evrry-dny virtue like fidelity , to one's work; or to contrast, after Hogarth's fashion, the H aps bnrgft and the Ilohenzollerns, the Idle and the Industrious Apprentices to the trade of governing mankind. The condition of existence for the Kaisers after the Thirty Years' war ended, was that they should be come again what the Roman Cn;sar was sup posed to have been the large-hearted arbiter of mankind, the ultimate judge to whom na tions when wronged oould appeal, a sove reign to whom kings oould bow without loss of dignity, or fear that the decision would be aright but a fair award. That was the raixon d'etre of that "Iloman" Kaisership of which the House of Austria was so proud, of that pretension to such precedence among sove reigns as a sovereign has among his nobles, of that antique and stately ceremonial which conquering kings 'strove in vain to relax, and which popes could not break through. The Iiapsburg Kaisers saw this was their function, always claimed this position as theirs, and persist ently refused to perform the work for which this transcendent state was assigned to them. Great or little, Charles V or Charles VI, reformers like Joseph or reactionaries like Francis, they were steadily selfish, perse veringly unjust, unanimously narrow, gov erned kindly only in their own States, used their semi-divine claims to obedience only to aggrandize themselves; could no more be trusted to arbitrate between States, or creeds, or even men, than the most corrupt of judges or the most fanatic of priests. They could !e bribed into injustice by the hope of ter ritory, driven into it by the threat of a bishop, or deluded into it bjjany worldly-wise and flattering diplomatist. And so, when the first Btorm came, they saw they had no meaning, and resigned that wonderful "llo miache crown, link of the old and new civilizations, symbol of the claim to the fie jure sovereignty of earth, and slunk away mere Kmparors of Austria; and when the second storm came were driven even from German position, flung out of Germany, made to resign even the hope.of primacy among their former vassals. The condition of existence for- the Ilohenzollerns, on the other hand, with their long strips of sandy provinces and four millions of people and ab sence of all hereditary rights, was that they should work at their trade of ruling like mill owners, or traffic-managers, or non-commissioned officers; should organise their ''hands" so as to get the largest amount of result from the smallest amount of expense, should ,ac cumulate and not squander property of all kinds, should actually do the work they were made kings to do. Up to their lights they did it all faithfully, laboriously, persistently. They drilled their handa with each stern steadiness, and yet such justice, so far '.s either of them knew justice, that, they wve obeyed as if served with machines, and yet with devoted willingness. Their armies, badly paid, cruelly disciplined, little rewarded, fought for them as the . soldiers of great monarchs have seldom fought; their greatest leaders, men who had won pitched battles, bore rebuke like chil dren; their half-starved, close-watched civil servants actually governed as few bureaucrats attempt to govern; their diplomatists, unre warded with rank or wages, or even praise, tricked or threatened, bullied, or cajoled, with unrivalled fidelity and success. The line never produced in it a man of genius for even Frederick was but a fair general of division and able manager of property but every man of it save one gave himself to his labor, worked at his trade, would have effi ciency, and did have it; would be master, but never took master's ease; if he got a new property, made it a reason not for enjoyment, but for toiling the more on that. Their ideal, a state organized like a camp or a fac tory, was not perhaps a high one; but it was honestly their ideal, and they realized it by means which, though often utterly bad, were but once bad by the standard of their own age, or of that sturdy "bacon-and-greens conscience" by which the most of them were guided. The one infidel among them died worn out with toil, never having done less than eight hours' work a day. The one dreamy mystic among them rejected the Imperial throne when actually in his hand, because he thought only kings had a moral right to give it him! And now the hour having arrived, the simplest, solidest, perhaps even stolidest of them all though there muBt be flashes of deep insight in him too having reached the reward of all their labor and all the devotion they had secured in their great servants, having used the huge armaments they had amassed, and the credit they had built up, and the property they had gathered, to such purpose that his people (scarcely lament either lives or treasure, heavily mounts the steps of the Imperial Throne, turns a frowning face to the shout ing crowd, and reluctantly seats himself upon the pinnacle of the world. "I had rather be King of Prussia," says King William, as they place on his heai the crown which makes him, but seventh from the little Kur-furst of those sandy steppes out there in the far northeast, a king of kings. He is a strange and somewhat dim figure, that old man who has never been a despot in the sense of wishing to seoure his will by pure Tolition, but who said, "I will be pivot of the State," as who should say, "I will be master in my house;" who has been bo hated and so loved, whose stubbornness made an army as genius might have done; who seems to have in high measure but one capacity, but that the supreme one for kings, the faculty of recognizing among men far down below the genius he requires, and who stands, an average man among men of the first rank of brain, the heavy, over-weighted, but calm master of them all. He is a dim figure, as we say, to ua, that drill sergeant who can recognize and yet nse such captains; but it is hard not to fancy that at the bottom of his Btrange reluctance to grasp the prize is a vague consciousness that the work not only of him, but of his house, is done; that the typical Hozenhollern is not the fit occupant of an Imperial throne; that if the HoheBzollern Emperors are to reign as the Hohenzollern Kings have reigned, if two oen. furies hence a Kaiser Fritz is to summon all Germany to some mighty task, and find all Germany rise at his call, silent, regimented, and yet burning with inner fire, the Kaisers must be men of larger sympathies, deeper insight, and less selfish nature than the Kings of Prussia have ever been. It is by doing his duty as he aaw it that the Elector has besome Emperor, 1st the duty of Emperers is other than mere drill, and the justice desired of them not the justice defined in the old sen tence, "justice to all men, but to Ilohen zollerns first." "Let Fritz have it,'' says the King; and he who chose Bismarck and Von Moltke, who gives to his ablest enemy of IStiC the supreme command north east of Paris, and trusts to the only Prinoe of his House who might found an Orleans branch for Frederick Charles is head of a party the command of the most active of his armies, may be right once more, though such insight might seem above him, and the Crown Prince may be the man best fitted to wear the new Imperial Crown, and play the part Germany, deep in its heart, expects from the successor of Frederick Barbarossa. If ha is and all Germany suspects him of hating war and loving liberty Europe may yet have no reason to repent of the most bizarre, pos sibly the most important event of eur time the recrowning of the German Emperor in the year which has seen the Pope-King dis crowned. But if he is not ? The effect of the change of title depends so absolutely on the reign of the first Em peror who shall bear it for any time that it is scarcely worth discussion. Two points only may be accepted as certain. One is that the Kaisership will make unity slightly easier, by giving Germany a visible head, supported by traditionary reverence as well as popular feeling, and by removing the jealousy of the sub-kings, which, meaningless now, might be full of menace hereafter should Germany ever again be struggling in the grasp of a foe. Men hate or love their admitted supe riors, but' they are not jealous of them. And the second in, that a German Emperor will in his heart consider all German men his subjects, will sigh for the lost valley of the Danube, and look wistfully northward along the Baltic coast. Whether be will de sire to "recover his subjects-' by conquest or by attraction by the sword, as in Holstem, or by the drawing force of a nobler and more massive national life, as in Gotha and Baden is the doubt with which Europe for years to come will be disturbed; but that he will so desire there is no room for doubt whatever, and it will be wel for the freedom and the diversity of Europe if he desires no more. Beaten in Paris or victorious, the Kaiser of GermaBy reigns from the Baltic to the Italian frontier, from the (Silesian plateau to far be yond the Rhine. OX CHAIRS. A chair must have been one of the most ancient of inventions. After the use of fire, after the rudest forms of grinding and weaving, something to sit down upon must have presented itself as the next desideratum. But it must not be supposed that a ehair was the direct result. As Lord Lytton says: "Man has only given to him, not the immediate knowledge of the perfect, but the means to strive towards the perfect." And he elsewhere observes: "Man must build a hut before he can build a Parthenon." At work in the primeval forest, felling trees and clearing the ground, man may first have experienced the comfort of a raised seat by placing himself on the stump of a tree. But, however eligible this support might be in other respects, it labored under the disad vantage of being immovable. A brilliant thought ! no sooner conceived than acted upon; and perhaps several generations passed before some great genius hit upon the idea of obviating the cumbersomeness of these heavy; solid blocks by fastening a piece of plank on three supporters, and producing a three-legged stool. The tradition runs that Tarquin introduced the ivory curule chairs into Home; be this as it may, they were in nse in the time of Brutus, -who, though he destroyed the kingly power, and changed. the Constitution of liome from a monarchy into a republic, knew how far he could safely go, and did not care to touch the chairs. The prretors and ediles who were permitted to occupy them, esteemed the pri vilege so highly that they retained the curule chair at home after their term of office had expired, as a proof of the dignity to which they had attained. These Roman othoials were so much attached to their seats that they would not part with them when they went abroad, but had chairs placed upon wheels, and in these chariots, often elaborately orna mented with gold and precious stones, they showed themselves to the admiring, unseated multitude. The Romans considered it an honor to ride in these wheeled curules, that were "remarkably high," Pliny tells us a convenient method of aoquaintmg the spec tators with the degree of homage expected from them, equivalent to the method em ployed by artists of olden times, who always depioted kings and heroes as at least twice the size of ordinary men. "There is nothing new under the sun," saith the preacher. At the period known in art language as the Renaissance, the modern European was 6truck with the idea of going about in chairs. About the year 1581 cov ered chairs, slung on poles, were invented at Sedan, whence the name of these convey ances, air banders JJunoombe obtained a patent for the Sedan chair in lC'lt, and by 1640 they were in general use. In 1711 an act was passed limiting the number of licensed bedan chairs to L'(M), but in 1720 it was increased to 400. This aot, however, did not affect the use of private chairs. When the favorite, Buckingham, used this mode of conveyance.' he was hooted at bv the public, who cried that he was employing his fellow-creatores to do the service of beasts; but this prejudice soon cave wav. and the Sedan chair, often handsomely gilt and painted, became part of the furniture of the hall in the houses of the nobility and the wealthier classes, and the chairmen formed a part of every large establishment. Temple oar. Not Familiar With the Book. The Ohio Statesman relates the following good joke at the expense of two partisan editors: Soon after Chief Justice Chase, then a Whig, as sumed the gubernatorial chair in Ohio, he issued his proclamation appointing a Thanks giving day. To make sure of being ortho dox, the Governor composed his proclama tion almost exclusively of passages from the Bible, which he did not designate as quota tions, presuming mat every one would recog mze them, and admire the fitness of the words as well as Lis taste in their selection. The proclamation meeting the eves of Democratio editor, he pounced at ono npon it declaring that he had read it before couldnt say exactly where but be would take his oath that it was downright plagiarism from beginning to end. That would have been a pretty fair joke; but the next diy the Whig editor came out valiantly in defense of the Governor, pronouncing the charge false and libellous, and challenged any man living to produce one single line oi tne proolama tion that ever bad appeared in print before. MATS AND OAPli nWABBUHTOW8 IMPROVED VENTILATED end eatij-flttlng DRESS HAT (patented), In all the Improved faahiona of the season. CILEaNUT ctreet, next ooor to rest o ce. rpt WATOMEl, JEWELRY, ETOi CHRI8TMA8 PRE8CNTS. Watches, Diamonds, Jewelry, and ' Silverware In threat Variety A fine 88ortinen of BAND and cn K?T BRACE LETS, OrERA CHAINS, NECKLACES, Bxj. Oar prices are unusually low. LEWIS LADOMUS & CO., No. 802 CHESNUT STREET, 13 10 tjl PHILADELPHIA. TOWER CLOCKS jJ. W. IIU8SELL, Ko. 22 NOKTH SIXTH 8TUEET, Agent for STEVENS' PATENT TOWER CLOCK. 8, both Remontoir fc Graham Escapement, striking hour only, or striking quarters, and repeating hour on full chime. Estimates furnished on application either person ally or bj mall. e 20 "BREAN'S CASKET OP JEWELS." The Largest, Finest, and Cheapest STOCK OF JEWELRY IN THE CITY. joun hui:.wv:, 121713trp, No. 13 S. EIGHTH Street. HENRY HARPER IS STILL AT THE OLD-ESTABLISHED 8TAND, IVo. 520 AIICII Street, And Is sellingatLOW PRICES, previous to mating alterations, his stock of Fine Watches, Jewelry, and 12 1 thstulm SILVER W A. Tt E. WILLIAM B. WARNS A CO., Wholesale Dealers In WATCHES, JEWELRY, AND 8 8 1J1 SILVERWARE, Second floor of No. 632 CI1ESNUT Street, S. E. corner SEVENTH and CHESNUT Streets. COOKING CLASSES, ETC. -" -fou LOOKING-GLASSES, RELIABLE AKD CBEAP. JAMES S. EABLE & SONS, No. 816 CHESNUT STREET. CARRIAGES. ESTABLISHED 1853. JOSEPH BECKHAUS," No. 1204 FRANKF0RD Avenue, ABOVE GIRARD AVENUE, Manufacturer of exclusively FIRST-CLASS CARRIAGES. NEWEST STYLES. Clarences, Landaus, Landanlettes, Close Coaches, SbUtlBK ar. Coaches. Coupes. Barouches. Phaetons. Koekaways, Etc, SUITABLE FOR PHI V ATE tAHiiii aaa ruuuu vas. workmanship and finish second to none In the country. Fire and varied stock on band completed and In the works. Orders receive prompt and personal at tention, jm wora warranted. i jfi amrp r-URNACES, ETC.. E8TADLISHED 1825. FKEB. T. MBCKI. H. J. DEAfl n. J. DEAS 6L CO., MANUFACTURERS OF Warm Air Furnaces ADD Co oiling- Xfcang-esr, Portable Beaten, Low Down Grates, Slate Mantels Bath Boilers, .Registers and Ventilators. No. I I I North SEVENTH St., PHILADELPHIA, 9 22 thatu6mrp JOBBING PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO. fLD OAKS CEMETERY COMPANY OF PHILADELPHIA. This Company Is prepared to sell lots, clear of all encumbrances, on reasonable term. Purchasers can see plana at the office of the Company, NO. 618 WALNUT STREET, Or at the Cemetery, where all Information seeded will be cheerfully given. By giving notice at tke office, carriages will meet persons desirous of purchasing lots at Tioga Station' on the German town Railroad, and convey them to the cemetery ana return, free of charge. ALFRED C. HARMER, President MARTIN LANDENBEROER, Treas. MICHAEL NISBET, Secy. 10 5 wfm 6m TO CONTRACTORS AND BUILDERS. Sealed Proposals, endorsed "Proposals for DUiiaing a ruunc ecnooi-nouse in the Twenty' seventh Ward," will be received bv the nnder signed, at the Office 8. E. corner of SIXTH and ADELP11I Streets, until I R1DAY, January , 1871, at 12 o'clock M., for building a Public School-house, on a lot of crround sitnatn nn tha corner of Thirty-eighth and Spruce streets, in the Twenty-seventh ward, said school-house to be built in accordance with tha plans of L. II. ESLLER, Superintendent of 8chool Buildings, to do eccu b we uiuce ut iub iioara oi Jruouc Education. No bids will be considered unless aecomna- nied by a certificate from the CHy Solicitor that the provisions of an ordinance, approved May 25, 1800, have been complied with. lne contract will be awarded only to known master uuuuers. Bv order of the Committee on Property. II. W. HALLI WELL, 12 22 4t Secretary. TOHN FARNUM A CO., COMMISSION MERJ anajM ni i-i-T-gf- m unninaa ilfllTg. NO s M cux a-. aiiwirtifc U FINANCIAL.. A RELIABLE Safe Home Investment XII 11 Sunbury and Lewistown Railroad Company 7 PER CENT. GOLD First Mortgage Bonds. Interest Payable April and Octo ber, Free of State and United States Taxes. We are now offering the balance of the loan of $1,200,000, which ia secured by a first and only lien on the entire property and franchises of the Company, At 90 and the Accrued Into rest Added. The Road is now rapidly approaching com pletion, with a large trade in COAL, IRON, and LUMBER, in addition to the passenger travel awaiting the opening of this greatly needed enterprise. The local trade alone is sufficiently large to sustain the Road. We have no hesitation in recommending the Bonds as a CHEAP, RELIABLE, and SAFE INVESTMENT. For pamphlets, with map, and full infor matioD, apply to WM. PAINTER A CO., BANKERSi Dealers in Government Beonrltiet, No. 36 South THIRD Street, I W4p PHILADELPHIA. JANUARY 1,1871, O O TJ IP O IV S. THE COUPONS OF THE SECOND MORTGAGE BONDS OF THE Wilmington a ad Reading Railroad Company, ' DUJS FIRST OF JANUARY, Will be paid on and after that date at tne Banting House of WM, PAINTER & CO., No. 36 SOUTH THIRD STREET, PHILADELPHIA. 18 H tf WM. 8. HILLES, Treasurer. UNITED STATES SECURITIES Bought, Sold and Exchanged on Most Liberal Termi. Gr O JLi 13 Bought and Sold at Kaxket Satea. COUPONS CASHED Pacific Railroad Bonds BOUGHT AND SOLD. Stocks Bought and Sold on Ccmmli ion Only. Accountatecelved and Interest allowed on Dallj Balances, subject to check at sight. DE HATEN & BRO., No. 40 South THIRD Street. Ill PHILADELPHIA. D. C. WHARTON SMITH CO. .BANKERS AND BROKERS, No. 121 SOUTH THIRD STREET, Successors to Smith, Randolph A Co. Xvsry branch of the business will have prompt at ention as heretolore. Quotations of Stocks, Governments, and Gold, constantly received from New York by privati wibi, from our friends, Edmund D. Randolph A Co. S I ,U "V E K, FOR SALE. C. T. YERKES, Jr., & CO., BANKERS AND BROKERS, No. 20 South THIRD Street. 6 PHILADELPHIA. f)30 530 XIAXIXU350N GXlAItlJDO, BANKER. DEPOSIT ACCOUNTS RECEIVED AND IHTEU BST ALLOWED ON DAILY BALANCES. ORDBK8 PROMPTLY EXECUTED FOR THB PURCHASE AND SALE Of ALL waT.iART.it gg. CURITIKS. COLLECTIONS MADB KVKRYWHIRB. REAL EbTATE COLLATERAL; LOANS NEGO TIATED!. (8 41 CiU Ho. 530 WALNUT St., FMIad, FINANCIAL. A LEGAL INVESTMENT roa Trustees. Executors and Administrators, WJ OFFER FOR BALE 82,000,000 or mi Pennsylvania Railroad Co.'s Six Per Cent. Bonds at 95 And ntereftt Added to lne late f Purchase. All Free from State Tax, and Issned In nras or flOOO. These bonds are coupon and registered, interest on the former payable January and Jnly l; on the latter April and October 1, and by an act of the LeglBlature, approved April 1, 1870, are made a LEGAL INVESTMENT for Administrators, Ex ecu tors, Trustees, eta. For farther particulars apply to lay Cooke Ac Co., E W. Clark A Co., W. II. IVevrbold, Boa Jk Aertoen, C. A II. Borie. ' n l im Wilmington and Reading XXAXLHOAJD Seven Per Cent. Bonds, FREE OF TAXES. We are oHering (200,000 of the Second IKortcace llonda of tills Company AT 821 AND ACCRUED INTEREST For the convenience of Investors these Bonds Issued In denominations of f 1000s, $500s, and 100. The money Is required for the purchase of addi tlotal Rolling stock and the fall equipment of Road. The road Is now finished, and doing a easiness largely In excess of the anticipations of Its officers. The trade offering necessitates a large additlona outlay for rolling stock, to afford fall facilities for Its prompt transaction, the present rolling stock not being pafflclent to accommodate the trade. WM. PAINTER & CO., BANKERS, No. 36 South THIRD Street, 1 1 PHILADELPHIA. JAYC00KE3;(Q) PHILADELPHIA, NEW YORK, AND WASHINGTON, B A N IC E R 8, AND Dealer i In Government Securities. Special attention given to the Purchase and 8a1 e of Bonds and Stocks on Commission, at the Board of Brokers In this and other cities. INTEREST ALLOWED ON DEPOSITS. COLLECTIONS MADE ON ALL POINTS. GOLD AND SILVER BODUHT AND SOLD Reliable Kailroad Bonds for Investment. Pamphlets and fall Information given at oar office, No. 114 SOUTH THIRD STREET, PHILADELPHIA. flO 1 3m 8 l sr. Biz Per Cent Loan of the City of Williamiport, Pennsylvania. FREE 07 ALL TAXES, At 85, and Accrued Interest These Bonds are made absolutely secure by act o Legislatare compelling the city to leryjaafflcientr x to pay Interest and principal. P. 0. PETERSON A OO.. No. 39 SOUTH THIRD 8TREET, M , PHILADELPHIA JOHN S. RUSHTON & CO.. EANKEES AND BROKERS. JTOVEKBER COUPONS WANTED City Warrants BOUGHT AND SOLD. No. 50 South THIRD Street. 6 96f ' PHILADELPHIA. B. E. JAMISON & CO., SUCCESSORS TO P. F.KELLY &- CO., BANKERS AND DEALERS IN Gold, Silver, and Government Bands, At Closest Market Rates, N. W. Cor. THIRD and CHESNUT Sts. Special attention given to COMMISSION ORDERS In New York and Philadelphia Stock Boards, etc eta 86 jjjLLioTT b enn BANKERS To. 109 BOUTH THIRD BTRBBZ, DEALS! 18 IN ALL GOVERNMENT SECURI TIES, COLD BILLS, ETC DRAW IXLS OP EXCHANGE AND IHfiUS COMMERCIAL LETTERS OP CREDIT ON VHJ UNION BANK OP LONDON. ISSUE TRAVELLERS' LETTERS OP CREDIT ON LONDON AND PARIS, avails bis tkrooghoal Europe Will collect all Coupons and Interest rres of darn or parties D tteir Cnt"ai arrangements r. n- tstt FINANCIAL THE STRONGEST AND I'.KST-SE-Cl'KRl, AS WELL AH MOST PROFITABLE INVESTMENT NOW OFFERED IN TEE MAR KET. 7 run cent, a OLD First Mortgage Bonds, Coupon or Registered, and free of U. S. Tax, rRlNCirALJANI) INTEREST PAYABLE IN GOLD, I88CED BY TBI Iliirllner.on. 7edar Rapids, and 31 Ik .sola It. K. Co. The small remaining balance of the Loan for sale At OO and Accrued Interest In Currency. . Interest payable May and November. J. KDGAU THOMSON, CHARLES L. FROST, f "n8lee- .The bonds are Usued at 20,0C0 per. mile against the portion onlj of the line fuilT completed and equipped. The greater part of the road Is already in opera tion, and the present earnings are iargeiy In exoes of the operating expenses and Interest on the bonds. The balance of the work necessary to establish through connections, thereby shortening the dis tance between St. Paul and Chicago 45 miles, and 90 miles to St. Loula, is rapidly progressing, In time for the movement of the coming grain crops, which, It Is estimated, will double the present Income of the road. The established character of this road, running as It does through the heart of the most thickly-settled and richest portion of the great State of Iowa, to gether with its present advanced condition and large earnings, warr.nt us la unhesitatingly recommend ing these bonds to Investors as, In every respect, an undoubted security. A small quantity of the lssae only remains unsold, and when the enterprise Is completed, which will be this fall, an Immediate ad vance over subscription price may be looked for. The bonds have fifty years to run, are convertible at the option or tho holder into the stock of the Com pany at par, and the payment of the principal' Is pro vided for by a sinking fund. The convertibility privilege attached to these bonds cannot fall to cause them, at an early day, to command a market price considerably above par. U. S. Five-twenties at pre sent prices return only 4 per cent, currency inte rest, while these bonds pay 9)4 per cent., and we regard them to be as safe and fully equal as a security to any Railroad Bond Issued; and until they are placed npon the New York Stock Exchange, the rules of which require the road to be completed, we obligate ourselves to rebuy at any time any of these bonds sold by us after this date at the same price as realized by us on their sale. All marketable securities taken in payment free of commission and express charges. llEN It IT CL.12WS &, CO., Wo. 33 WALL Street, !t. Y. FOR BALE BT TOWNSKND WHELEN 4 CO., BARKER BROS. & CO., KURTZ A HOWARD, BOW EN A FOX, DE HAVEN & BROTHER, THOS. A. BIDDLE A CO., WM. PAINTER A CO., GLENDENNING, DAVIS k CO., U. D IN VILLI ERS, EMORY, BENSON & CO., PHILADELPHIA, Of whom pamphlets and Information may be ob tained. - Hi 84t -olV LUMbbR. 1870 SPRUCE JOIST. SPRUCE JOIST. HEMLOCK. HEMLOCK. 1870 1 Q7ft SEASONED CLEAR PINE. Q-A lO i U SEASONED CLEAR PINE. Io70 CHOICE PATTERN PINK. SPANISH CEDAR, FOR PATTERNS. RED CEDAR. 1070 FLORIDA FLOORING. FLOAIDA FLOORiNG. CAROLINA FLOORING. VIRGINIA F LOOKING. DELAWARE FLOORING. ASH FLOORING. WALNUT FLOORING. FLORIDA STEP BOARDS. RAIL PLANK. 1870 1 Q7fk WALNUT BOARDS AND FLANK.t QTA 10 I VWALNUT BOARDS AND PLANK. lOlU WALNUT BOARDS. WALNUT PLANK. UNDERTAKERS' LUMBER, -g Q7A 10 U UNDKKTAK-KK'S' LUMBER. lOlU RED CEDAR. WALNUT AND PINE. 1870 SEASONED POPLAR. -f n7A SEASONED CHERRY. lOlU. Abli, WHITE OAK PLANK AND BOARDS. HICKORY. 1870 CIGAR BOX MAKERS' - O CIGAR BOX MA.KEH8' IMII SPANISH CEDAR BOX BOARDS. FOR SALE LOW. IQ'JA CAROLINA SCANTLING. OTA 10 I U CAROLINA H. T. SILLS. Io70 NORWAY SCANTLING. 1870 CEDAR SHINGLES. -f OTA CYPHE8B SHINGLES. lOlU MAULE. BROTHER A CO., No. 8600 SOUTH Street US 13ANEL PLANK. ALL THICKNESSES. . COMMON PLANK, ALL THICKNESSES 1 COMMON BOARDS. 1 and S HIDE FENCE BOARDS. WHITE PINE FLOORING UOAHBS. YELLOW AND SAP PINE FLOORINGS. 1 ant i)4 SPRUCE JOIST, ALL SIZES. HEMLOCK JOIST, ALL SIZES. PLASTERING LATH A SPECIALTY, Together with a general assortment of Bulldlnf Lumber for sale low for cash. T. W. SMALTZ, llo em No. 1715 RIDGE Avenue, north or Poplar St. 8TOVE8, RANGES, ET O. THE AMERICAN STOVE AND HOLLOW WARE COMPANY, PHILADELPHIA, IKON FOUNDERS, (Successors to North, Chase A North, Sharps A Thomson, and Edgar L. Thomson,) Manufacturers of STOVES, n EATERS, THOM. SON'S LONDON KITCHENER, TINNED, ENA MELLED, AND TON HOLLOW WARE. FOUNDRY, Second and MliMln Streets. " OFFICE, U09 North Second Strt FRANKLIN LAWRENCE, Superintendent. EDMUND a SMITH, Treasurer. JNO. EDGAlt THOMSON, Trewdent. JAIES HOEY, 6 IT mwf Sm General CUTLERY, ETO. RODGEB8 A W08TENUOLWS POCKET KNIVES, Pearl and 8tag bandies, ant beautiful finish ; Rodgeia', and Wade ft Butcher's Rasors, and tha celebrated Le coultre Rasor; Ladles' Scissors, la oases, of the finest quality ; Rodgera' Table Cutlery, Carvers and Forks, Rasor Strops, Cork Screws, etc Ear In struments, to assist the hearing, of the most apj proved construction, at p. MADEIRA'S, No. lis TENTH Btreek elov Chesnat