THE DAILY EVENING TELEGRAPH PHILADELPHIA, MONDAY, JANUARY 1G, 1871. DICKENS' AMATEUR THEATRICALS. Frtm Jtttry Saturday, It is sow some eighteen years since the present writer then in his school days took part in the earliest of those winter evening festivities at the house of the late Charles Dickens, which continued annually for seve ral years, terminating with the performance of Mr. Wilkie Collins' drama of Tht Frozen Deep. And when he remembers the number of notable men who either shared in or assisted (in the French sonse) at those dra matio revels, who have passed away in the in terval, he is filled with a desire to preserve some recollections of evenings so memorable. What nights have we fieen at the Mer maid!" What evenings were those at Tavis tock House, when the best wit, and fancy, and cnltnre of the day met within its hospi table walls! There was Thackeray, towering in bodily form above the crowd, even as he towered in genius above them all, save ohly one; Jerrold, with the blue convex eye, which seemed to pierce into the very heart of things and trace their subtle resemblances; Leech, with his frank and manly beauty, fresh from the portrayal of "Master Jacky," or some other of the many forms of boy hood he knew so well; Mark Lemon, "the frolic and the gentle" (dear to all ns younger ones, irrespective of blood-relationship, as "Uncle Mark"); Albert Smith, dropping in late in the evening after a two or three thou sandth ascent of Mont Blanc, but never re fusing at our earnest entreaty to sit down to the piano and sing ns "My Lord Tomnoddy," or his own latest edition of Galtgnani's Met tenger; Augustus Egg, with his dry humor, touching from contrast with the face of suf fering that gave sad presage of his early death; Frank Stone, the kindly neighbor and friend, keen as any of us boys for bis part in the afterpieoe; Stanfield, with the beaming face, "a largess uni versal like the sun, his practiced hand and brush prompt to gladden ns with master pieces of scene painting for the Lighthouse or the Ice-fields; and last but not here to be dismissed with a few lines only our bountiful host, like Triplet, "author, man ager, and actor too;" organizer, deviser, and fcarmonizer of all the incongruous assembled elements; the friend whom we have so lately lost, the incomparable Dickens. The very walls of that home and the furniture which filled it were rich in interest and eloquence of his fame and the tribute which it had brought him: the testimonial given him at Birmingham; the handsome case of cutlery sent him by Mr. Brooks, ot Shef field (reoognizant of the chance mention of bis name in the pages of "Copperfield"); Grip the raven, in his habit as he lived, under the glass case in the hall; the Chinese gong, then less common in English houses than now, reminding the reader familiar with his "Dick ens," of that one at Dr. Blimber's which the weak-eyed young man, to Paul's amaze ment, suddenly let fly at "as if he had gone mad or wanted vengeance;" the pictures which looked down npon ns from the walla of dining-room and staircase, Sir Charles Coldstream in his ploughboy's dis guise, er Bobadil prostrate on the couch; the lady in the barouche reading the oarrent number of "Bleak Ilouse," and the curious tiger skimming the contents over her shoul ders Dolly Yarden in the wood; poor . Kate Nickleby at work in Madame Mantalini's show-room; little Nell among the tombs of that old church which in these days of resto ration will soon have no existence but on the oanvas of George Cattermole; these, and many more such signs of the atmosphere of art and literature in which we moved, were gathered then and are now soattered to the four winds. In one sense our theatricals began and ended in the school-room. To the last that apartment served us for stage and auditorium and all. But in another sense we got pro motion from the children's domain by de grees. Our earliest efforts were confined to the children of the family and their equals in age, though always aided and abetted by the good-natured manager, who improvised cos tumes, painted and corked our innocent cheeks, and suggested all the most effective business of the scene. Our first attempt waa the performance of Albert Smith's little bnrletta of Guy Faieke, which appeared originally in trie pages of his month ly periodical, the Man in the Moon; at another time we played WUliain 2'ell, from the late Mr. Robert Brough's clever little volume, "A Cracker Bon-bon for Evening Farties." In tnose days there were still extravaganzas writ ten with real humor and abundant taste and fancy. The Broughs, Gilbert a Beckett, aud Mr. Flanche could write rhymed couplets of great literary excellence, without ever over stepping the bounds of reverence and good taste. Extreme purists may regret that the story of the strug gle fer Swiss independence should ever be presented to children in association with anything ludicrous; but, those critics ex cepted, no other could object to the spirit of "gracious fooling" in which Mr. Brough re presented William Tell brought up before Gesler for "contempt of hat;" Albert, his pre cocious son, resolving that, as to betraying bis father, "though torn in; half, I'll not be made to split;" and when he comforts hia father, about to shoot at the apple, by assur ing him that he is "game," the father reply ing, "Wert thou game, I would preserve, not Bhoot thee." This is drollery, it seems to us, not unworthy of Sydney Smith or Hood, and in no way to be placed in the same catalogue with the vulgarities and inanities of a later brood. Another year found us more ambitions, and with stronger resources, for Mr. Dickeqs himself and Mr. Mark Lemon joined our acting staff, though, with kindly considera tion for their young brethren, they chosa subordinate parts. In Mr. - Flanche's ele gant and most witty fairy extravaganza of Fortunio and His Seven Gifted Servant, Mr. Dickens took the part of the old "Baron Dunover," whose daughters so valiantly adopt man's attire and go to the wars; Mr. Lemon contenting himself with the role of the "Dra gon," who is overoome by "Fortunio's" strata gem of adulterating the well, whither he usually resorted to quench his thirst, with a potent admixture of sherry. What fun it was, both on and off the Btage! The gor geous dresses from the eminent costumier of the Theatres Royal; our heads bewigged and our cheeks rouged by the hands of Mr. Clark son himself; the properties from the Adulphl; the unflagging humor and suggestive re sources of our maHager, who took upon him the charge of everything, from the writing of the playbills to the composition of the punch, brewed for our refreshment between the acts, but "craftily qualified," as Michael Cmio would have said, to suit the capacities of the childish brain, for Dickens never forgot the maxima rectrentia due to chil dren, and some of us were of very tender age: the comedian who played (ia a complete jockey's suit and top-booU) Fortanio'a . ser vant Light-foot, was we are afraid to say he young but it was somewhere between two and three, and he was announced in the bill as having teen "kept out of bed at a vast expense." The same veracious docu ment, by the way, represented the sole lessee and manager of the Theatre Iloyal, Tavistock House, as Mr. Vincent Crummies, disguising Mr. Dickens himself in the list of dramatii persona as the "Modern Iloscius," and Mark Lemon as the "In fant Phenomenon," an exquisitely con ceived surprise for the audience who, by no means expected from the description to re cognize in the character the portly form of the editor of Punch. The time, by-the-way, must have been the winter preceding the commencement of hostilities with Ilussia, for Mr. Dickens took advantage of there being a ferocious despot in the play the Emperor Matapa to identify him with the Czar in a capital song (would we could recall it!) to the tune of "The Cork Leg," in which the Emperor described himself as "the Robinson Crusoe of absolute state," and de clared that though he had at his court many a show-day, and many a high-day," he hadn't in all his dominions "a Friday! " Mr. Flanche had in one portion of the extrava ganza put into the mouth of this character for the moment a few lines of burlesque upon "Macbeth," and we remember Mr. Dickens' unsuccessful attempts to teach the performer how to imitate Macready, whom he (the per former) had never seen! And after the per formance, when we were restored to our evening-party costumes, and the sohool-room was cleared for dancing, still a stray "pro perty" or two had escaped the vigilant eye of the propesty-man; for Douglas Jerrold had picked up the horse's head (Fortunio's faith ful steed Comrade), and was holding it up before the greatest living animal painter, who had been one of the audience, with "Looks as if it knew you. Edwin!" Another time we attempted Fielding's Tom Thumb, using O'Hara's . altered ver sion, further abridged and added to by the untiring master of our ceremonies. Field ing's admirable pleoe of mock-heroio had always been a favorite of Charles Dickens. It has often been noticed how rarely he quotes his books, but the reader of 'Pickwick" will remember how in an early chapter of that im mortal work Mr. Alfred Jingle sings the two lines: "In hnrry, post-haste for a license, In hurry, ding-dong, I come back." They are from Lord Grizzle's song in Tom TJtumb. Mr. Lemon played the giantess "Glumdalca" in an amazing get-up of a com plete suit of armor and a coal-scuttle bonnet: and Mr. Dickens the small part of the ghost of "Gaffer Thumb," singirjg his own song on the occasion, a verse of which may be quoted, if only to illustrate the contrast be tween the styles of the earlier and later bur lesque. In O'Hara's version the ghost appears to King Arthur, singing: " Pale death la prowling, Dire omens scowling ' Doom thee to slaughter, Thee, thy wife and daughter; Forles are growling With horrid groans. Grizzle's rebellion What need I tell you on? Or by a red cow Tom Thumb devoured? Hark, the cock crowing, Cockcrows. I must be going. I can no more !" Vanfohe. Mr. Dickens' substituted lines were, as nearly as we remember, the following: 'I've got up from my churchyard bed And assumed the perpendicular, Having something to Bay la my head, Which isn't so very partlcalar. I do not appear in sport, Itut in earnest, all danger scorning I'm at your service, in short, And I hereby give you warning I (Vck crows. Who's dat crowing at the door 7 Here's some one In the house with Dinah! I'm called (so can't say any more) 13 y a voice from Cochin China!" Nonsense, it may be said, all this; but the nonsense of a great genius has always soma thing of genius in it. The production next year, on the same stage, of the drama of I he Lighthouse, marked a great step in the rank of our performances. The play was a touching and tragic story, founded (if we are not mis taken) upon a tale by the same author, Mr, Wilkie Collins, which appeared in an early number of his friend's weekly journal, House hold Woi-ds. The principal characters were sustained by Mr. Dickens, Mr. Mark Lemon, Mr. Wilkie Collins, and the ladies of Mr. Dickens' family. The scenery was painted by (JiarkBon btanheid, ana comprised a drop soens representing the exterior of Eddystone Lighthouse, and a room in the interior in which the whole action of the drama was car ried on. The prologue was written (we be lieve) by Mr. Dickens, and we can reoall, as if it were yesterday, the impressive elocution of Mr. John Forster, as he spoke behind tho scenes the lines which follow: "A story ol those rocks where doomed ships come lo cast their wrecks upon the steps of home: Where solitary men, the long year through, The wind their music and the brine their view, Teach mariners to Bhun the fatal light A story of those rocks is here to-night: Eddystone Lighthouse" (Here the green curtain rose and discovered Ktanfield's 'drop scene, the Lighthouse, its lantern illuminated by a transparency) "In Its ancient form, Ere he who built it died iu the great storm Which saivercd It to nothing once again Beheld out gleaming ou the angry main. Within it are three men to these repair In our swilt bark of fancy, light as air; They are but shadows, we shall have vou baclc Too soon to the old dusty, beaten track.'' We quote from memory, and here our memory fails. We are not aware that the prologue was ever published,' or -indeed the play for which it was written; though the Lighthouse was performed two or three years later at the Olympio, with Mr. Robson in the character originally played by Mr. Dickons. The main incident of the p'ot the confes sion of a murder by the old sailor, "Aaron Gnrnock," under pressure of impending death from starvation (no provisions being able to reach the lighthouse, owing to a con tinuance of bad weather), and his subsequent retractation of the confession when supplies unexpectedly arrive afforded Mr. Dickens scope for a piece of acting of great power. The farce of Mr. Nightingale's If.iary, the joint production of Dickens and Mark Lemon, which followed Mr. Collins' play at Tavistock Ilouse, was well calculated to exhibit the versatility of the principal actor. Mr. Dickens played one "Mr. Gabblewig,". in which character he assumed four or five diffe rent disguises, changing his dress, voioa, aud look with a rapidity and completeness which the most practised "entertainer" might envy. TMs whimsical piece of extravagance had been before played by the 6aoie actors in the per formances for the benefit of the Guild of Literature and Art, but has never boon printed, except privately for the use of the original actors. WJint portions were contri buted by the joiut authors respectively we oin only surcuise; but there were certain charac ters and speeches whioh bore very dearly stamped upon them the mark of their author, ship. One of the characters played by Mr. Dickens waa an old lady, in great trouble and perplexity about a missing child; of which character (being nameless ia the drama) he always spoke, when be had ocoa sion to refer to her off the stage, ai ','JIfs. Gamp," some of whose speeches were as well worthy of preservation for droll extravaganoe of incongruity as the best of her famous pro totype in "Martin Uhuzzlewit. In addition to her perplexity about the missing infant, she is further embarrassed as to the exact surname of "Mr. Nightingale," whose name she remembers to be that of a bird, but can not always refer to the correct species of that order, A quotation we make from memory will leave no doubt as to the fertile and sin gular fancy from whose mint it came: "No, sir, I will not leave the house! I will not leave the establishment without my child, my boy. Mi boy, Bir, which he were his mother's hope and his father's pride, and no one as I am aweer on's joy. Vich the name as was giv' to this blessedest of infants and vorked in best Vitechapel, mixed upon a pin cushin, and 'Save the mother' likewise, were Abjolom, after his own parential father, Mr. Nightingale, who no other ways than by being guv' to liquor, lost a day's vork at the veel-right business, vich it was but limited, Mr. Skylark, being veels of donkey-chaises and goats; and van V88 even drawn by geese for a wager, and came up the aisle o the parish church one Sunday arternoon by reason of the perwerse ness of the animals, as could be testified by Mr. Wix, the beadle, afore he died of draw ing on Vellington boots to which he was not accustomed, after an 'earty meal of roast beef and a pickled walnut to which he were too parjial ! Yes, Mr. Robin Redbreast, in the marble fontin of that theer churoh was he baptized Abjalom, vich never can be unmade or undone, I am proud to say, not to please nor give offense to no one, nohows and noveres, sir. . . .Ah! 'affliction sore long time Maria Nightingale bore; phy sicians teas in vain' not that I am aweer she bad any one in particular, sir, excepting one, vioh she tore his hair by handfuls out in con sequence of disagreements reJitive to her complaint; and dead she is, and will be, as the hosts of the Egyptian fairies; and this I shall prove, directly minute, on the eving dence of my brother the sexton, whom I shall here produce, to your confusion, young person, in the twinkling of a star or huinin eye!" Scarcely had tho old lady quitted the stage when Mr. Dickens reappeared as "my brother the sexton," a very old gentleman indeed, with a quavery voice and self-satisfied smile (pleasantly suggesting how inimi table must have been the same actor's man ner as "Justice Shallow"), and afflicted with a "hardness of hearing" which almost baffled the efforts of his interrogators to obtain from him the desired information as to the certificate of Mrs. Nightingale's decease. "It's no use your whispering to me, Bir!" was the gentle remonstrance which the first loud shout in his ear elicited; and on the question being put whether "he had ever buried" he at once interrupted to reply that he had brewed; and that he and his old woman "my old woman was a Kentish woman, gentlemen: one year, sir, we brewed some of the strongest ale that you ever drank, sir; they used to call it down in our part of the country (in allusion, you understand, to its great strength, gentlemen), 'Samson with his hair on, " at which point the thread of bis narrative was cut short by the reiteration. in a louder key still, of the intended question in a complete form. A third character in the farce, sustained by Dickens, was that of a malade imaginaire, for the time being under treatment by a new specific "mustard and milk." the merits of which ha could not highly enough extol, but which nevertheless was not so soothing in its effects but that the patient gave every minute a loud shriek explaining apologetically. "That's the mustard! followed immediately by a still louder one, "That's the milk!" We are afraid to say in how many other disguises our manager appeared, but there was cer tainly one other, a footman or waiter, in which character the actor gave ns a most amusing caricature of the manner of one of his own servants; and we remember with what glee, one night at supper after rehearsal, Dickens learned that the man in question had been heard imitating his master in the part for the amusement of his fellow-servants, in utter ignorance that he himself had eat in the first instance for the portrait. The same amazing fertility and rapidity of invention, in which Dickens stands without a rival as a humorist, often served him in excellent stead, in the sudden substitution of extempore remarks known to the professional actor as gag." On one oc casion in a farce (we forget its name) played after "The Frozen Deep," one of the charac ters having ocoasion to disguise . himself for the moment in the chintz-cover of the sofa, Mr. Dickens suddenly observed, to the aston ishment of his fellow-actors, "He has a general appearance of going to have his hair cut!" a comparison so ingeniously perfect as to convulse everybody on and oft' the stage with laughter. In this rapid discovery of re semblancesfor example, Mrs. Lirriper's dei cription of the poor gentleman, when the fire broke out in her lodgings, carried out in a chair, "similar to Guy Fawkes," or the des cription of Captain Bunsby's eyes, "one mov able and one stationary, on the principle of some lighthouses" our great novelist has never been approached. "Phus," it has been truly said, "he makes human nature and its surroundings speak to us; and thus the rich ness of life is multiplied to us infinitely, so long as we are enabled to view it with his eyes." It was perhaps partly owing to Mr. Dickens' sense that his mission in life was to be an "entertainer," that from the outset of his literary career he exhibited so strong a fellow feeling with entertainers of all kinds; and these few rough notes of his own theatrical relaxations may be of interest if only as illus trating one undoubted characteristic of his genius. His love of the stage, and his faun liarity with every aspect of it, are apparent in almost everything he has written, from the "Sketches by Boz," in which he described an evening at Astley's (which, by the way, may be compared, by those who like to trace the growing power and the perfecting touch of a great artist, with a description of the same scene in the "Old Cariosity Shop"), to the casual mention in the unfinished "Mystery of Edwin Drood" of the picture of "riignor Jacksonini the clown, in the act of saying 'How are you to morrow?' quite as large as life und nearly as melancholy." The conventionalities and ar tificialities of the stage afforded him constant material for humorous description or com ment. He has written nothing more genu inely humorous and clever than the account of Sir. Crummies and his company at the Portsmouth Theatre. Who can ever for get Mr. Crummies' expression of honest &ret . as he recalled the first-tragedy-man, once a member of his company, who "when be plajed 'Othello' used to black him self fill over. That's going into a part as if jou felt it. It isn't common, moras the pity"; or the same gentleman's account to Nicholas of his first introduction to Mrs. Crummies: "The first time I saw that admi rable woman, Johnson, she stood on her head on the butt-end of a spear, surrounded by LlaziDg fireworks"' But, although Mr. Dick ens constantly introduced the theatre and the theatrical profession, to laugh at their tot t . m . common ftosureiueB ana meir aanerence to tradition, he believed in them still. His own genius was too dramatio for him not to have strong sympathy with dramatio representa tions, if at the same time his close ob servation of human nature and his keen sense of the ludicrous forced him to see how little illusive stage illusion commonly is. There is no theme on whioh he appears to love more to dwell. "The Uncommercial Travel ler," and the miscellaneous papers which he contributed to his periodical Household Word, are full of exquisite instances in point. He cannot mention Dullborough as "his boy hood's home" without remembering that he feels "like a tenor in an English opera when he does so." He cannot pass the Dullborough Theatre without calling to mind that there he had first seen "the funny countryman, but countryman of noble principles, in a flowered waistcoast, crunch up his little hat and throw it on the ground, and pull off his coat, saying, 'Dom thee, Squire, coom on with thy fistes, then!' At which the lively young woman who kept company with him (and who went out gleaning in a narrow white muslin apron with five beautiful bars of five different colored ribbons across it) was so frightened for his sake that she fainted away." And every one has noted, in reading that nncomfortable and rather dreary story "Hard Times," that the part which the author himself really enjoyed is that which deals with the interests of the poor horse-riding people Mr. Sleary, Sissy Jupe, and Master Kidderminster. Mr. Grad grind's method of gauging all human nature by statistics is a trifle caricatured, and the boasts of Mr. Bounderby a thought conven tional, but poor old asthmatio Mr. Sleary's account of his new scene in the circle, as be imparts it to Sissy Jupe, reveals at once where the humorist was really strong and rejoiced in his strength: "If yoawath to thee our Children in the Wood, with their father and mother both a-dying, on a horthe their nncle a receiving them ath hith wardtb, upon a horthe themthelvth both agoin' a blackberryin' on a horthe and the robinth a comin' in to cover 'em with leavth, npon a horthe you'd thay it wath the oompleteth thing ever you thet your eyeth on I " Dickens was drawn to ward all that multifarious class who live by affording what he conceivod to be innocent amusement. It was his favorite doctrine that people must be amused that they needed it; and no form of Pharisaical pro priety was more irritating to him than that which advocated the mechanics' institute or the lecture-hall as the only legitimate relief to the working man's hours of labor. The success of Tht Lighthouse, performed at Tavistock House in the January of 18."(5, and subsequently repeated at Campden Ilouse, Kensington, for the benefit of the Consumption Hospital at Bournemouth, in duced Mr. Wilkie Collins to try his dramatic fortune once more, and the result was the drama of The Frozen Deep, with aa excellent part for Mr. Dickens, and opportunity for charming soenio effects by Mr. Stanfield and Mr. Telbin. The plot was of the slightest. A young naval officer, "Richard Wardour," is in love, and is aware that he has a rival in the lady's affections, though he does not know that rival's name. His ship is ordered to take part in an expedition to the polar regions, and, as we remember, the moody and unhappy young officer, while chopping down for firewood some part of what had composed the Bleeping compartment of a wooden hnt, discovers from a name carved upon the timbers that his hated rival is with him taking part in the expedition. His re solve to compass the other's death gradually gives place to a better spirit, and the drama ends with his saving his rival from starvation at the cost of his own life, himself living just long enough to bestow his dying blessing on the lovers; the ladies whose brothers and lovers were on the expedition having joined them in Newfoundland. The character of "Richard Wardour" afforded the aotor oppor tunity for a fine display of mental struggle, and a gradual transition from moodiness to vindictiveness, and finally, under the pressure of suffering, to penitence and resignation, and was represented by Mr. Dickens with consummate skill. The production of The Frozen Deep has a literary interest for the reader of Dickens, as marking the date of a distinct advance in his career as an artist. It was during the per formance of this play with his "children and friends, he tells uj in the prefaoe of his ';Tale of Two Cities," that the plot of that story took shape in his imagination. He does not confide to ns what was the precise connection between the two events. But the critical reader will have noticed that then,' and from that time onward, the novelist discovered a manifest solicitude and art in the construction of his plots which he had not evinced up to that time. In his ear lier works there is little or no constructive ability. "Pickwick" was merely a series of scenes from London life more or less loosely strung together. "Nicholas Nickleby" was in this respect little different. In "Copper field" there is more attention to this specially dramatio faculty, but even in that novel the special skill of the constructor is exhibited rather in episodes of the stoiy than in the narrative as a whole. But from and after the "Tale of Two Cities," Mr. Dickens manifests a diligent pursuit of that art of framing and developing a plot which there can be little doubt is traceable to the influence of his inti mate and valued friend Mr. Wilkie Collins. In this special art Mr. Collins has long held high rank among living novelists. He is indeed, we think, open to the charge of sacrificing too much to the composition of riddles, which, like riddles of another kind, lose much of their interest when once they have been solved. And it i3 interesting to note that while Mr. Dickens was aiming at one special excellence of Mr. Collins, the latter was oss-imilatiDg his Btyle, in some other respects, to that of his brother novelist. Each, of late years, seemed to be desirous of the special dramatio faonlty which the other possessed. Mr. Dickens' plots, Mr. Collins characters and dialogues, boro more and more clearly marked the traces of the model on which they were respectively based. It is possible, however, that another conside ration was influencing the direction of Mr. Dickens' genius. He may have half sus pected that the peculiar freshness of his earlier style was no longer at his command, and he may have been desirous of breaking fresh gTound and cultivating a faculty too long ne glected. As we have said, we believe that his gf nius was largely dramatic, and that it was the overpowering fertility of his humor ts a dtseriptive writer which led him at the outset of his literary career to prose fiction as the freest outcome of his genius. How ever that may be, he loved the drama aai things dramatic; and notwithstanding what u.iht be inferred from the lecture which Nicholas administers to the literary gentle man in "Nicholas Nickleby," he evidently loved to see his own stories in a dramatio r shape, when . the adaptation was made in accordance witn the spirit and de sign of the originator. Most of his earlier works were dramatized, and en joyed a success attributable not less to the admirable acting which they called forth than to the fame of the characters in their original setting. His Christmas Stories proved most successful in their dramatio shape, and it is difficult to believe that he had not in view those admirable comedians, Mr. and Mrs. Keeley, when he drew the charming characters of Britain and Clemency Newcome. His "Tale of Two Cities" (which, by the way, Mr. Wilkie Collins has somewhere publicly re ferred to as the finest of his friend's notions in point of construction) was arranged under his own supervision for the stage, and he seems to have had a growing pleasure in seeing his works reproduced in this shape, for "Little Em'ly," the last ar rangement of "David Copperfield," was pro duced with at least his sanction and approval; and at the present date a version of the "Old Curiosity Shop," under the title of "Nell," is announced for immediate production, as having been similarly approved by himself shortly before bis lamented death. In the present state of the stage we may well be thankful for pieces so wholesome in interest, so pure in moral, so abounding in unforced humor, as his best stories are adapted to provide. DIVIDENDS, ETO. ggy- PHILADELPHIA AND READING RAIL EOAD COMPANY, Offlce No. 82T South FOURTH Street. Philadelphia, Dec. 24, 1870. NOTICE. In accordance with the terms of the Lease and Contract between the East Pennsylvania Railroad Company and the Philadelphia and Read ing Railroad Company, dated May 19, 1869, the Philadelphia and Reading Railroad Company will pay at their Offlce, No. 227 South FOURTH Street, Philadelphia, on and after the nth day of January, 1871, a dividend of T60 per share, clear of all taxes, to the Stockholders of the East Pennsylvania Rail road Company, as they shall stand registered on the books of the said East Pennsylvania Railroad Company on the 3 1st day of December, 1870. S. BRADFORD, Treasurer, Philadelphia and Reading Railroad Company. NOTE. The transfer books of the East Pennsyl vania Railroad Company will be closed on Decem ber 31, 1S70, and reopened en January 10, 1871. HENRY C. JONES, Treasurer, 12 27 tJ17 East Pennsylvania Railroad Company. rtS- OFFICE OF THE NORTH PENNSYL VANIA RAILROAD COMPANY, No. 407 WALNUT Street. Philadelphia, Jan. 4, 1871. The Board of Directors of the North Pennsylvania Railroad Company have this day declared a dividend of FIVE (6) PER CENT., clear of Taxes, payable In scrip bearing no interest, and convertible into the capital stock of the company when pre sented In sums or not less than fifty dollars. The scrip so Issued will be deliverable on February 1, and convertible at any time thereafter. The Transfer Books will be closed ou SATURDAY, the 7th Inst., at 3 o'clock P. M., and the dividend will be credited to the stockholders as they may stand registered at the closing of the books. The Transfer books will remain closed until MON DAY, the 10th lnst. WILLIAM WISTER. . 1 5 2w Treasurer. tfiy- STATE OF SOUTII CAROLINA, TREA- SURY DEPARTMENT. Columbia, S. C, Dec. 23, 1S70. The interest maturing January 1. 1871, on the Bonds of the State of South Carolina, will be paid in gold, on demand, on and after January 1, at the nanking House or n. ii,.tt.iMnu, rio. Nassau street, New York, and at the TREASURY OFFICE in Columbia, S. C. The IntereHt on the Registered Stock of the State will be paid In Columbia only. NILES G. PARKER, Treasurer State South Carollpa. Coupons will be received for examination oq and after the 27th InBtant. II. II. KIMPTON, 12 SO lfit Financial Agent State South Carolina. Rgy TO TBE HOLDERS OF OHIO STATE w STOCKS Notice Is hereby given that ths Interest dne January 1.1871, on the Funded Debt of the State of Ohio, will be paid at the American Ex change National Bank. In the city of New York. from the 1st to the 15th proximo, and thereafter at our ottlce In this city. Columbus, Ohio, December ' JAMES II. QODMAN, Auditor of State, ISAAC It. SHERWOOD, Secretary of State, Commissioners of the Sinking Fund of the State of onio. vi an lm HZX- NOTICE TO STOCKHOLDERS. A DIVL w DENDof FIFTY CENTS PER SHARE will be paid by tho HE8TONVILLE, MANTUA, AND FA1RMOUNT PASSENGER RAILWAY COM PANY, free of State tax, on and after December 27th next, at the offlce of the Company, No. 112 South FRONT Street. Transfer books will be closed December 15th and reopen December 3 1st 12 10 smwtf Treasurer. y OFFICE OF THE UNION .MUTUAL IN w Sl'RANCE COMPANY, N. E. Corner of THIRD aud WALN UT Streets. Philadelphia, Jan. 5, 1871. At a meeting of the Board of Directors of this Company a dividend of SIX PER CENT, was de clared ou the outstanding scrip and stock of the Company, clear of taxeB. payable on demand. 1 6 2w JOHN MOSS, Secretary. OFFICE ANTHRACITE INSURANCE COMPANY, No. 811 WALNUT Street Philadelphia, January 2, 1370. The Board of Directors have this day declared a Dividend of FIFTEEN PER CENT, on the capi tal stock paid In, payable on demand, free of taxes. WILLIAM M. SMITH, 1 5 lotrp Secretary. ny- THE ENTERPRISE INSURANCE CDM w PAN Y OF PHILADELPHIA. Company's Bpildino, No. 400 Walnut stbeet, January 2, 1871. f The Directors have thU day declared a dividend of THREE PER CENT, on the capital stock or the Company for the last six mnrthn, pavnhle on de mand, free of all taxes. ALEX. W. WISTER, 1 f . Sec rcUry. MISCELLANEOUS. y CAMBRIA IRON CJMPANY.-THE AN- nual Meeting of the stockholders of the Cambria Iron Company will be held at' their offlce, No. 218 South FOURTH Street, Philadelphia, on TUESDAY, tho 17th day of January next, at 4 o'clock P. M., when an election will be held for seven directors to serve for the ensuing year. JOHN T. KILLE, Secretary. Philadelphia, December 17, 1670. 12 17 im mv- OFFICE BUCK MOUNTAIN COAL CO. Philadklpuia, Jan. l, 1971. Thn Annual Meeting or the Stockholders of the BUCK MOUNTAIN COAL (JO. will be held at the offlce or the Company, No. 820 WALNUT Street, on WEDNESDAY, February 1, 1871, at elevua (11) o'clock A.M. An election for seven Directors to serve the en suing year will be held on theuame day between the hours of 11 A. M. and 2 P. M. 1 2 inw let T. H. TROTTER, Treasurer. gspi PENNSYLVANIA INSTITUTION FOR w THE DEAF AND DUMB The Annual Meeu lng of the Contributors to the Pennsylvania Institu tion for the Deaf and Dumb will be held at ttie In stitution, corner or BROAD and PINE Streets, ou W EDNESDAV, the lHth of January, at 4 o'clock P. M. The annual report of the Biard of Directors will be aubmitted, aud aa election will be held for oillcers to serve for th ensuing year. 10fuiw6t JAMES J. BARCLAY, Secretary. MERCANTILE LIBRARY. THE AN VOAL mw meeting or stockholders or the Moreantlle Library tJompany will be held at the LIUilAKY BIILL1NO ou TUESDAY EVENING, the 17l!i iost.. at 7 o'clock. JOHN LA K ONER, I a iat Recording Secretary. rry- SHAHOKIN COAL COMPANY, OFFICE No. a WALNUT htrctt Fuii.auklpiiia, Da -. 81, 1S70, The annual meeting of the stockholders or t!ie above-named company, and an ejection ol Direcium to serve for the ensuing year, w ill be held at their offlce on WEDNESDAY, the lsth day ef January, A. D. 111, at li o'clock M. Transfer books will be cloned from January eih to lth. C. R. LINDSAY. 12 8113t Secretary. SPECIAL NOTICES. THE ENTERPRISE INSURANCE CONt w TANY, OF PHILADELPHIA, Companf' jjuuaing, no, w haui ii oireeu January 10, 1871. At the annnal meeting of the Stockholders or the Company, held on the 9th day of January, the fol lowing gentlemen were elected Directors for the ensuing year: F. Ratchford Starr, Nalbro Frr,ler, John M. At wood, Benjamin T. Tredlck, James L. Cloghorn, John H. Brown, J. L. Errlnger, William . Boulton, Charles Wheeler, Thos. 11. Montgomery, ueorge ii. rnuari, At a meeting of the Board of Dlrectora. held thin jump m. Aermen. day, F. RATCHFORD STARR was re-elected Presi dent, and THOMAS 1L MONTGOMERY re-elected Vice-President. ALEXANDER N. WISTER, 110 6t Secretary. USS- FARMERS' AND MECHANICS' NATIONAL BANK. rmr.ADKLrmA, Jan. 18, 1871. At an election held on the llth day or January, isn, the following-named Stockholders were elected Directors oi tnis nam: Edwin M. Lewis. George W. Farr, Jr., William II. Woodward, Charles 11. Hutchinson, Henry P. Sloan, Thomas McKean, Ueorge II. fiirkham. John Aahhurat, Anthony J. Antelo, Lindley Smyth, Richard C. Dale, Joshna B. Mppincott, J. Edward Farnum, And at a meeting of the Directors this day, EDWIN M. LEWIS, Esq., was unanimously re-elected Pre sident. 113 6t W. RUSHTON, Jr., Cashier. COMMONWEALTH NATIONAL BANK. Philadklphia, Jan. 13, 1871. At the election held on the loth Instant the follow ing gentlemen were elected DIRECTORS of this imdk ior tne engumgyear: E. P. Mitchell. Samuel K. Ash ton, William F. Hansen, Robert B. Sterling, Robert Morriii, Walter . Wilson, H. N. Burroughs, Paul P. Keller, John Wanaraaker, C H. Duhrtng, xi. w. uray. And at a meeting of the Board, held this dav, ED. WARD P. MITCHELL, Esq., was nnanlmons'ly re elected President, and JAMES T. MITCHELL, Esq., Solicitor. 1 13 8t H. C. YOUNG, Cashier. cawara i. steei. ffcjV- THE INSURANCE COMPANY OF THE Philadelphia. January 11. 1871. At an election held January 9, the following gentle men were duly elected Directors of this Company i or nie Tear 101 1 ; Henry D. Sherrerd, Charles 8. Lewis, Edward C. Knight, John B. Austin. Christian J. Hoirman, Richard Dale Benson, Ueorge H. Colket Charles Macaleater, William S. Smith, Qeorge 11. Stuart, Samuel Grant, Jr., Thomas B. Wattson, Henry G. Freeman, Ana at a meeting or tne Board of Directors, held- this dav. HENRY D. SHERRERD. Esq.. was unani mously re-elected as President of the Company. 1 12 6t J. H. HOLLLNSHEAD, Secretary. ? PHILADELPHIA AND READING RAIL- ROAD COMPANY, Offlce No. 227 S. FOURTH Street Philadelphia, Jan. 9, 1871. At the Annual Meeting of the Stockholders or this Company, held this day, the following gentlemen were unanimously elected officers for 1871 : Fresldent-FRANKLIN B. GO WEN. MANAOKR8 II. Pratt McKean, i J. B. LIppincott, A. E. Borle, I John Ashhurnt, It B. Cabeen, I Charles E. Smith. , Treaaurer SAMUEL BRADFORD. Secretary J. W. Jones. 1 10 6t I I. I. I n l K A 1 I. II . Mil If K- J. M. HUTCHINGS (of Yo-Semlte) will give a Lecture Illustrated with the Finest Series of Views ever taken on "The Wonders of Yo-Semlte and the Big Trees of California, " at CONCERT HALL. CHESNUT Street, near Twelfth, on MONDAY EVENING, 16th Inst, at 8 o'clock. Tickets, 60c. To be had at GOULD & FISCHER'S Piano Rooms, No. 923 CHESNUT Street, rrom 9 A. M. to 5 P. M. lOmwfamBt THE LORRAINE VEGETABLE CATHAR TIC PILL is far the best Cathartic remedy yet discovered. The most complete success has long attended its use. It never falls to accomplish all that is claimed for It It produces little or no pain ; leaves the organs free frora irritation, and never overtaxes or excites the nervous system. In all diseases of the skin, blood, stomach, bowels, liver, kidneys of children, and In many dliilcultles pecu liar to women, it brings prompt relief and certain cure. The best physicians recommend and prescribe It; and no persou who once uses It will voluntarily return to any other cathartic It Is sold by all deal ers in drugs and medicines. TURNER k CO., Proprietors, 10 6 thstnt No. 120 Tremont street Boston, Mass. jgy TURNER'S UNIVERSAL NEURALGIA w PILL Is an UNFAILINU REMEDY lor Neu. ralgla Facialis. No form of Nervous Disease falls to yield to its wonderful powsr. Even In the severest canes of Chronio Neuralgia Its use for a few days affords the most astonishing relief, and rarely fails to produce a complete and permanent cure. It con tains no materials In the slightest degree Injurious. It has the unqualified approval of the best physi cians. Thousands, In every part of the country, gratefully acknowledge Us power to soothe the tor tured nerves and restore the falling strength. It is sold by all dealers In drugs and medicines.' TURNER A CO., Proprietors, 9 29 mwft No. 120 TREMONT St. Boston, Mass. BATCHELOR'S nAIR DYE THIS SPLEN did Hair Dve is the best in the world, the only true and perfect Dye. Harmless Reliable Instan taneous no disappointment no ridiculous tints "Doe not contain Lead nor any Vitalie Poiiton to fo jure the llair or Ssntevi." Invigorates the Hair and leaves It soft and beautiful ; Black or Brown. Sold by all Druggists, and doalers. Applied at the Factory, No; 16 BOND Street, New York. 4 87 mwft jgy- THE IMPERISHABLE PERFUME! ASA rule, the perfumes now in use have no perma nency. An hour or two after their use there la no trace of perfume left. How different is the result succeeding the use of MURRAY A LArN MAN'S FLORIDA WATER I Days after its application th handkerchief exhales a most delightful, delicate, and agreeable rrogrance. . 3 1 tilths ytgr- THE UNION FIRE EXTINGUISHER COMPANY OF PHILADELPHIA Manufacture and sell the Improved, Portable Fire Extinguisher. Always Reliable. D. T. GAGF, 880 tf NO. 118 MARKSTJ3teirugenfc tjy INSTEAD OF USING COMMON TOILET Soap at this season of the year, me "Wright's Alccnated GlycerineTablet or Solidified Glycerine." It softens tne skin, prevents redness and chapping by cold, and beautifies the complexion. n or saie oy uruggisis srenerauy. k G. A. WRIGHT, 1 6 fmw2Ct No. 674 CflESNUT tt, PhUad'a. jgy JAMES M. SCO VEL HAS ESTABLISHED A Law and Collection Agency for Pennsylvania and New Jersey at No. 614 WALNUT Street 1229 ey JOUVIN S """" KID GLOVE CLEANER w restores soiled gloves equal to new." For sale by all druggists and fancy goods dealers. Price 23 cents Der bottle. 1 1 2Sm wf i gy- DR. F. a THOMAS, No. 911 WALNUT ST., formerly operator at the Colton Deutal Rooms, il.iintfiB lila anfira nrajt1cn tsh AVtrun.tlncr tuolh with- out pain, with frcbh nitrous oxide gaa. 11 171 THURSTON S IVORY PEARL TOOTH 1 UfiAir HI.' 11 lu lh. hact artltlA In. i-Uanfilnir an1 preserving the teeth. For .Bale by an Druggtkts. Price 26 and 60 cents oer bottle. 11 26 stuthly CROOERIES, ETC. LITIZ CURRANT WIN E. ALBKF.T C. ROBEKTS, Dca'er in Fine Groceries, 11 T Corner ELEVENTH and VINE Sta. CUTLERY, ETO. RODCERS A WOSTENUOLMU POCKET KNIVES, Pcuxl 'and Stag hacalea, and beautiful diiibh; Rodgeis', and Wade h Bulchefs ltaKortt, and the celebrated Le cou!tre Itozor; Ladles' Scissors, in cases, of the OLeut quality ; Rodders' Table Cutlery, Carvers and Forks, Raior strops, Cork Screws, etc Ear In struments, to fcbHlbt the hearing, of the most p proved construction, at P. MADEIRA'S, No. lie TENTH Street, teiov Cheanut,