THE DAILY EVENING TELKGKAPII PHILADELPHIA, SATURDAY, JANUARY 28, 1871 2Tv ouzl RXJI.IOIOU3 coLur.in. "UNTO US A CHILD 11 B ORN." TROM THE QIRHAN OF DR. A. TUOLVCK. 0xn thy porUlri, life, behold I A King in thee Ilia court would hold ; Ah! who shall toll I1U worth ? A King before whose glorionn light And gorgtitiH npleudor, hhriuk from sight The meaner king of earth. O see How lie, In royal state, Now through the gate DeRcen'lB, and ho The heavenly choir before Him bow ! Ah ready there He stands, all round The heights of heaven with Bong resound, And pulum bestrew Ills way ; But ah ! bow strange ! as near the earth Approving, all thin sacred mirth Grows dim, and fades away; And paluiR, And pnaliuH, And crowns of gold, And thrones, behold, All, hII are gone, A little child is found alone ! N plehdor here adorns Ilia brow; O kloriouH state we hear not now; IN or Hi raw His bed hupplies. O hHppy he who ftndeth grace, LnH'de this Infant's resting-place, To ponder aud be wise! () see, How lie, Withiu us, mild, And like a child, His work begins, And heirs for heaven thus daily wins ! vuiiiars rEitrETUAL presence. It. was a Had hour to the little company of dit-cipltH when Christ announced his purpose to li-ave tht-m and return to he-tven. Nor could they at once comprehend his words of coiiifort, or see that there was any consolation in them, hh ho Bpoke f the necessity for his return, and of the greater advantages which Hhonld follow to thuinsblves. Que proof thtt Lin withdrawal was an advantage, was in the precious meaning which they afterwards saw in these comforting words. . And so, wanting this uiiderHtaiidiiig of his words, their sal neHH was increased even to bewilderment, and almost to agony, when his prophecy be came l'liltiliijiiit, aud they witnessed his actual aso ut from Olivet to the skies. He oxNiired them that all authority in heaven aud earth is Ins, he coumiiHsioned them to spread the UnHpel throughout the world, he pro mised to be with them always to tho end of liine; but even while these wondrous utter ances sounded iu their ears, and whilo they stood beholding, he was taken np from among them and a cloud received him ont of their hight. We can now readily understand that while Christ was visibly with his disciples, they would almost inevitably regard his bodily presence as necessary to his spiritual pre sence. How could he be where his body was not ? and Low could his spiritual energy be manifest when his physical senses were dor mant ? "Lord, if thou hadst been here, my brother bad not died," said Martha, with a chiding regret; and Mary soon repeated the words and the tono, with a deeper pathos. As though, being absent, he Lad not known the need of Lazarus, or had not been able to heal him from afar. "Master, carest thou not that wo perish ?" cried the imperilled disciples on the boisterous sea, when the Lord was indeed present bodily, bat asleep. As though being asleep, His humanity and His Deity were alike inactive. And thus would it have ever been. The apprehension of His omnipre sence and universal power required his bodily withdrawal. He went away that He might be forever near. He retired from the sight of a few that, through the Spirit's ministry, He niiglit be intimately mauifest to the entire multitude of believers everywhere to the ond of tLe world. HUM MARY OF CUUUC11 NEWS. PREHBYTEBIAN. The Synod of Missouri (Declaration and Testimony) has 127 churches, 81 ministers, 4 licentiates, and 4 candidates. During the year there were admitted to the Church, .r.'!2 by profession and !5f2 by letter making the total number of communicants C85U. The ltev. J. G. Fackler, pastor of the First Church in St. Joseph, Missouri, writes: "We are in the midst of delightful religious services, continued since the beginning of the year. The Lord is pouring out his Spirit upon uh, and quite a number are inquiring the way of life, while some have already ex perienced peace in believing." An interesting revival is reported in the Presbyterian church at Doonville, Missouri, nuder the pastoral care of the ltev. 13. II. Charles. There had been twenty-six addi tions, previous to December L'C, to that church aud a few toother churches and the good work was still in progress. The Central Church, St. Louis, Missouri, of which the ltev. Dr. lirank is the pastor, finding their house of worship to be too far "down town," have taken thefirst steps in a movement westward. A roomy and every way desirable lot has been purchased, corner or Garrison and Lucus avenues, on which a chapel will be erected in the spring. The ltev. William E. Boggs, pastor of the church in Columbia, South Carolina, has signified Lis intention to accept a call from the Second church at Memphis, Tenn. Ten or twelve full-blooded Indians de sire to become students in Highland Univer sity, Kansas, with a view to enter the minis try in the Presbyterian Church. ltev. T. S. Kendall, D. D., who was moderator of the last General Assembly of the United Presbyterian Churoh in Pittsburg, .in May, died in Oregon on the otb, at the re sidence of bis sou-in law. The Presbytery of Belfast, Ireland, has denounced Mr. Gladstone for the interest displayed by him in the welfare of the Pope. Mrs. J. V. Farwell, whose husband is so Srominent in the Christian activities of the lethodibt denomination, is herself an active member of the Presbyterian Church, and an officer of its Woman's Board. The Presbyterian General Assembly has changed the day of Prayer for Colleges from the last Thursday of February to the Ust Thursday of Jauuary. On the L'Oth of October last, the day on which the union of the 1'ronbj teriau Churches ia the United States was consummated, a new Synod called the "Synod of China" wis organized at Xingpo, Cbina. Dr. Candlish's Church, in Edinburgh, is the largest ond most prominent of the churches of the Free Church of Saotl.tnd. It has thirty-nire deacons and thirty-nine elders. An elder and a deacon supervise the parish work in each of the twenty-one districts into which tb parish ! divHe-1. Tliey li-il -mi' trouble about tie 8io2 uul t&ey adjotwi the plan of having font choirs, which conduct the tinging alternately, and occupy pews in the middle of the house. BAPTIST. In 1830 there were ! Baptist churches in New Jersey, the membership at that time being 39G7. The average of ministerial s Va ries was $212. Value of churoh property about $150,000. At present the denomina tion owns two and a half millions of church property, pays an average of $1028 in sala ries, has 12; additional chnrohes, and six times the membership of 18.10. Mr. A. W. Dimock, a Wall street broker, has lately built and presented to the Baptists of Elizabeth, N. J., a large and handsome church edifice. Mr. Dimock is the son of a Baptist clergyman of Nova Scotia. The Rev. W. II. Eaton, D. D., who for a year past baa been trying to raise a $200,000 endowment for Newton Theological Semi nary, says that the total amount raised and pledged up to January 1 had reached $170,000. We learn that the remaining $:!0,0()0 has since been secured. At Harper's Ferry the Free Baptist Church lately held a funeral service for the twenty-one members of its congregation who were drowned in the great flood on September HO. Only two bodies of the twenty-one were recovered. A Baptist lady at the North gives $1.1,.VM) for the establishment of a school for colored preachers and teachers at Columbia, South Carolina. The ltev. E. G. Taylor, D.D., pastor of the Coliseum Baptist Church, New Orleans, reports favorable prospects. He is the only Bsptiht pastor in that city except those who have charge of colored churches. METHODIST. Rome of the fruits of the Methodist work in the Conference of South Carolina are 80 preachers and a membership of 20,000, and an educational institution of much value, and church property worth $100,000, since the war. The splendid, substantial, and beautiful St. Paul's Methodist Church, Cincinnati, Ohio, stands alone among the costly houses built for Christ there. Its cost is somewhere near ."iOIOO. Two churches have been ab sorbed to form this one, and one poor little mission church on Plum street has recontly been disbanded; so there are two less charges than there were a year ago. They are moving to organize other interests. The usual estimate of non-communicant adherents in the Methodist Church in this country (children and other members of Methodist families, etc.) to each communi cant is three so that tho Methodist popula tion (such as the Itoman Catholic Churoh in cludes in its statistics) should be r,4(8,r:N;. This is at least a third more than tho best authenticated estimates of tne ltomish popu lation of the country, as given by their own statisticians. The Methodist Churoh Extension Society was organized in 18G4. In 1800 it raised by collection about $00,000, and for the Loan Fund about $114,000 on subscription; aided 70 churches in about 20 States and Territo ries; and in 1870 over $100,000, aiding 170 churches in .'!( different States and Territo ries, extending from Maine to California, from the lakes to the gnlf. The Michigan Methodists are moving to endow Albion College in that State, and for broader foundations. David Preston, of De troit, offered to callect $00,000 if $60,000 could be raised otherwise. Edgar Conkling offered $10,000, and also offered 25,000 acres of land, located at Mackinaw, "for a national university." That place he reckons "the true Northwest." David Snow, a leading Methodist, of Boston, Mass., has offered fifty dollars for tho best eNsay on Free Scats and Congrega tional Singing. The Methodist Mission to the Chinese in San Franr-irco has erected a mission build ing. The Chinese thomselves have contri buted $410 towards it one man, Dr. Li Po Tni, subscribing $50, and the scholars of the Echool $112 50 in small sums. Dr. T. P. Abell, for many years known extensively as a Universalis minister, was re ceived into the Methodist Church in Salem, Mass., on Sunday, January 1. The Bishops of the Melhodist Church have chosen the ltev. II. II. Farrall, cl Do oorab, Iowa, to establish a mission at Itome, Italy. ltev. E. Davies writes to Zion'a Jlerald the following reasons why he hopes to see the rule abolished which requires "six months' probation" of candidates in the Methodist Church: "I would have the rule abolished, 1. Because it is unscriptural. Just think for a moment of the Apostles putting three thou sand souls on six months' probation for church-membership. 2. It is often injurious to the candidates. Instead of being led right forward in the ordinances of the Church, they are left to delay from month to mouth till multitudes of them lose their first love and go back into sin, that they might have been saved from if the prac tice of the Apostles had been followed out. 3. Because it seems to imply that Methodist converts are not so good as those of other churches; hence they must be kept on trial 182 days. 4. Because, while we are waiting six months to try our probationers, other churches step right np and take them into their church, even, sometimes, after they have been baptized among us." EPISCOPAL. The noted choir of Trinity Church, New York, has been strengthened by an orchestra of thirty brass, wind, and stringed instru ments. ltev. W. J. Ellis, rector of Christ Church, Memphis, Tennessee, has felt compelled to resign the charge of the church on account of a difference between himself and the vestry on the subject of free pews, Mr. Ellis be lieving that the Rystem of renting pews tends to exclude many who would otherwise attend chnrch. Bishop Clarkson, of Nebraska, report. that of the 75,000 Indians in the bounds of his diocese, 15,000 attend religious services. He thinks the effort for their Christiunizatioa has been a great success. The Church of the Ascension (Dr. J. C. Smith's) in New York has just successfully completed its effort to raise $:!2,000 for the building of a church for the instil utions at Gambier, Ohio. One new bishopiio is to be erected in Ireland (ArdagbJ. and two iu South Africa n'ransvaiil and Cart'raria). A correspondent to the Loudon lluardinn ad vooutoa tho re vival of tho old archbishopric of Loudm. The new Bishop of Wellington, New Zo. land, has been consecrated without the Queen's muudute. TLe Synod of Ferns have passed a resolution approving of the endea vors to biiui; about, the auiulLMiuation of the Piiinitive Methodists with tho Church of Ireland. The congregation of Grace Protestant l.piseopal Church, on the Heights, Brooklyn. N. Y., contributed 10,000 in behalf of 1 iiituct. LtmiEKAM. The attempt to establish an English Ln tlx .n chnrch in Petersburg, Va., has failed, l it is thought there is abundant room for n rman one. --One hundred and seventeen new Lu l i t ran churches had been dedicated in the United States during the year 1870, being a fraction over two every week. The Luthtran Obtsrver asserts that a Rev. Mr. Bond, "who was excluded from his church for alleged immorality," has recently organized a Lutheran church in Chicago. In order to obtain funds a ball was advertised, the published card announcing that "Messrs. will furnish wines of the very best quali ties," and "after the concert and raffling of the articles unsold, there will be a merry ball, at which the beauties of the West Side will be seen in all their virginal decorations, eto." CONOIIEOATIONAI.. Eighty-nine Congregational churches have been formed during the past year in the United States. The ltev. Dr. Dexter, of the Boston Con. gregationalist, has gone to Europe to com plete his preparations for writing the history of the "Old Colony" a work on which he has been for some time engaged. ROMAN CATHOLIC. The Itoman Catholics of Richmond, Va., on January 12, held a meeting to express their sympathy for the Pope in his afllio tions. The Bishop of the Diocese presided and made a speech. The Mayor of the city read the protest, and the programme was oar lied out without dissent. Some of the avow als of the Bishop and other speakers were strangely discordant with what is generally thought to be universal American sentiment. Growing bold in consequence of the silence of opponents, the Bishop affirmed that "the Reformation had given birth to the heresy that the people are the source of power, but it was now becoming every day more appa rent that the people cannot be governed by their own consent." A law has been enforced throughout Italy for the removal of the numerous shrines of the Madonna. The British and Foreign Bible Society, having secured a suitable looality in the Corso, Rome, have opened a Bible depot, with the sign over the door ti8ucre liibbie in L'iocrtte Lingue." CNIVERSALIST. According to the statistics of the "Uni versalis! Register and Almanac for 1871," the Universalists have 2 unLversiMes, 1 law school, and 7 academies and institutes. For these, there are 80 teachers and professors, and the endowments, etc., are valued at $1,8:!2,000. In California there are at pre sent no Universalist ministers in active service; while in Massachusetts there are 107 ministers, 105 parishes, and 1)5 meet, ing-houses. Illinois has 50 ministers, 01 parishes, and 48 meeting-houses. They have 025 ministers in the United States and Canada, and !X1 societies, of which nearly 700 have houses of worship. Thirteen Uni versalist periodicals are published. The Uni versalists, as well as tho Unitarians, publish no statistics of their membership. The con gregations of both are, on an average, much smaller than Methodist congregations, the average membership of which, in 18G9, was a little over 100. WATOME8, JEWELRY, ETO. TOWER CLOCKS. Wo. 22 NORTH SIXTH STREET, Agent for STEVENS' PATENT TOWER CLOCKS, both Remontolr &v Graham Escapement, striking hoar only, or striking quarters, and repeating hour on (nil chime. Estimates famished on application either person ally or by malL s 26 WILLIAM B. WAKNB CO., Wholesale Dealers in WATCHES. JEWBLKY. AND aaljl SILVER WAKE, First Boor of No. 63a CUESNUT Street, a B. corner SEVENTH and CUESNUT Nr.rent. EDUCATIONAL. -y ASII1NGTON COLLEGE, VIRGINIA, GENERAL G. W. CI'STIS LEE, PRESIDENT. WITH FOURTEEN PROFESSORS. The Spring Term of the present season begins on the FIRST OF FEBRUARY. The rearrangement of classes then made enables students to enter the several schools with advan tage. Students entering at this time pay only half fees. All the ACADEMIC SCHOOLS of the College, as wpII as the Professional Schools of LAW and EN GINEERING, are In full operation. For further information, address WILLIAM DOLD, Clerk of Faculty, Leilugton, Va. January 1, 1871. 1 17 6w J D G E Ii I L L SCHOOL MERCHANTVILLE, N. J., Four Miles from Philadelphia, Next session begins MONDAY, January 9, 1871. For circulars apply to 11 1 j Rev. T. W. CATTELL. A70UNO MEN AND ROYS' ENGLIsnnfTTTj 1 CLASSICAL INSTITUTE, No. Itfus MT. VERNON fctreet, Rev. JAMES G. BHINN. A. M, Principal. l'i 31 smtu2in OLOTHS, OASSIMERES. ETO. QLOTH HOUSE. JAMES & HUDDR. no. 11 Worth Hi:JOtI Street, Sign of the Golden Lamb, Are w receiving a large and splendid assortment of new styles of FANCY OASSIMERES And standard makes of DOESKINS, CLOTHS and COATINGS, S S3 mwi AT WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. MILLINERY. R 8. R. DILLON NOS. 323 AND 831 SOUTH STREET, FANCY AND MOURNING MILLINERY, CRAPE VEILS. ladles' and Misses' Grape, Felt, Gimp, Hair, Satin, Silk, Straw and Velvets, J lata and Bonnets, French Flowers, Hat and Ronnet Frames, Capes, Laces, Silks, baiiiis, Velvets, Ribbons, Sashes, Ornaments and all kinds of Millinery Goods. 1 4 GROCERIES, ETO. SHOTWELL HrVVXSK'I1 CIDER, ALIiKUT C. ROBERTS, Dealer In Fine Groceries, i il 1 MNANOIAL, A RELIABLE Safe Home Investment TUB Sunbury and Lewistown Railroad Company 7 PER CENT. GOLD First Mortgage Bonds. Interest Payable April and Octo ber, Free ofMtnte and United States Taxes, We are now offering the balance of the loan of $1,200,000, which is seoured by a first and only lien on the entire property and franchises of the Company, At SO and tho 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 looal trade alone is sufficiently large to sustain the Koad. We have no hesitation in recommending the Bonds as a CIIEAr, 11ELIABLE, and SAFE INVESTMENT. For pamphlets, with map, and full Infor mation, Apply to HI. PAINTER is. CO., Doalera In Government Securities, No. 33 8outh THIRD 8treotf 6 tf4p PHILADELPHIA. Wilmington and Reading RAXLF.OAD SEVEN PER CENT. BONDS Frco of Taxes. We are offering $200,000 of the Second Mortgage Bonds of this Company AT 82i AHD ACCRUED INTEREST. For the convenience of Investors these Bonds are lfitiucd In denominations of $1000s, $500, and $100s. The money la required for the purchase of addi tional KolUng Stock and the full equipment of the Koad. The road Is now finished, and doing a business largely In excess of the anticipations of Its officers. The trade oirurlng necessitates a largo additional outlay for rolliDg stock, to aOord full facilities for Its prompt transaction, the present rolling stock not being sufficient to accommodate the trade. WI. PAINTER & CO., BANKERS, No. 3G South THIRD Street, 6 D PHILADELPHIA. AMERICAN STEAMSHIP COMPANY Of Philadelphia. BOOKS OF SUBSCRIPTION FOR TH1 13 O IV I s Of this Company Are now open at the following placet Office of the Insurance Company of North Ame. rk'H, No 232 Waluut street. Oillce of the Delaware Mutual Insurance Company, sou meant corner Third aud Waluut streets. (J nice of K. C Kulght& Co., southeast corner of vt au-r ana i nesDui sirecis. Otllce of Drexel it Co.. No. 84 South Third street Oillce of 11. K. Jamison 4 Co., northwest corner of ruira ana i nesuui mreei. C. CamhloH Si Co., No. 33 South Third BtreeL Otllce of Darker, Uros. & Co., No. in South Third street. ortice of Qlrard National Bank, Third street, below onice of Central National Bank, Fourth street, below Chefnut. These IiONlS are Issued In sums of $500 and tiouu each, with lutf rest at the rate of 6 per ceuL per annum, free of Htate tax ; are a drat mortgatro upon the property of the Coiupoy, aud the prompt payment of the principal aud law-rest of the same Is guaranteed by ths Peunsylvaula Kallroad Com pany. ii va F O It HALE, Six Per Cent. Loan of the City of Wil liamsport, Pennsylvania, Froo o Jill Taxo, At 85 and Accrued Interest. These Bonds are made absolutely secure by act of Legislature compelling ths city to levy samclent tax to pay Interest and principal. P. 8. PETERSON & CO., No. 39 8. TIIlltD STREET, 86 PHILADELPHIA. 580 C30 XZAftZlXSSOCT GRATvIBO, BANKEK. DEHMT ACOOUNTB HKCEIVKD AND INTJClt BhT ALLOWKD ON DAILY BALANUKS. OHDKKH PKOIdlTLY EXECUTED FOR TUB PUM'HiABB AMU bALB Olf ALL K&LLAULg ML- COLLECTIONS MADB EVPIRTWHKUS. HEAL BSTATB COLLATERAL LOANS NBOO TlATtfD. f8SIm j M0. 03U WAUNUfBt., JTCUftOA MNANOIAL.. THE RTRONUE8T AND rtWST-RK-OI'Fltl). AS WBLL AH MOHT PROFITABLE, INVK8TMBNT NOW OFFERED IN TUB MAR KET. 7 run cent, a OLD First Mortgage Bonds, Coupon or Kegtsiered, and free of U. 8. Tax, FRINCIPAUAND INTEREST PAYABLE IN OOLD, iflsran by ths llurllnston, Odnr ItapidM, aud MI sola It. It. Co. The small remaining balance of the Loan for sale At 90 and Accriied IntereMt In Currency. Interest payable May and November. J. KDOAR THOMSON, ,.,. UUARLKS L. KR08T, ( T8168- The bonds are issued at t20,nco per mile aifnlust the portion only of the hue fuilr completed aud equipped. The greater part of the road Is already la opera tion, aud the present earning are iargK,y In enoni of the operating expenses and Interest u the bon.K The balance of the work uecessary to establish through connections, thereby shortening the dis tance between St. Pul aud Chlcsgo 5 mil 's, and 90 miles to Ht. Louis, Is rxpldly progressing, Iu time for the u.ovenient of the coming grain crop, 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 thl'.kly-setild and richest portion of the great state of I to gether with Its present advanced comiltiru and large earnings, warr.int os lu unhesitatingly rucomiuund lDg these bonds to luvestora as, In every respt, an UDdontted security. A small quantity of the Issue only remains unsold, and when the enterprise is completed, which will be this fall, au Immediate ad vance over subscrlptlou price may be looked for. The bonds have fifty years to run, are convertible at the option of the holder Into the stock of the Com pany at par, aud the payment of the principal U pro- Tided for by a slnkiug fund. The couvertliilllty privilege attached to these buuds caunot fall to cause them, at au early day, to command a market price considerably above pnr. U. S. Flve-twenttes at pre sent prices return only 4x per cent, curreuoy inte rest, while these bonds py V per cent, aud we regard them to be as safe and fully equal as a security to any Kallroad Bond Issued; and until they are placed upon the New York Stock Exchauge, the rules of which require the road to be completed, we obligate oarselves to rehuy at any time auy of these oondB sold by us after this date at the same price at realized by us ou their sale. All marketable securities taken in payment free of om mission and express charges. lllZNKY i:VH Ac CO., no. 33 UA1.L Mtreet, J. Y. F0K SALS BY TOWNSEND W11ELEN & CO., BARKER BROS. & CO., KURTZ A HOWARD, BOWEN fc FOX, DK HAVEN fc BROTHER, THOS. A. Ill DOLE A CO., WM. PAINTER fc CO., OLENDKNNING, DAVIS & CO., C. DTNVILLIERS, EMORY, BENSON fc CO., G ILBOUU H, BON D & Co., Bankers. C. F. YERKES fc CO., Bankers., i'UlLADBLPDIA, Of whom pamphlets and Information may be ob tained. 19 1 st yE OFFER FOR SALE, AT PAR, THE NEW MASONIC TEMPLE LOAN, Bearing 7 3-10 interest, Redeemable after Ave (6) anu within tweuty-one (31) years. Interert Payable Itlarch and Hep teraber. The Bonds are registered, and will be issued In sums to suit. DE HA YEN & BRO., No. 40 South THIRD Street. 11 PHILADELPHIA, Stocks bought and sold on commission. Gold and Governments bought aud sold. Accounts received and Interest allowed, subject te Signt Drafts. JayCooice&IQx PHILADELPHIA, NEW YORK, and WASHINGTON", II A N K K II H, AND Dealers in Government Securities. Special attention given to the Purchase and Sale of Bonds and Blocks on Commission, at the Board of Brokers in this and other cities. INTEREST ALLOWED ON DEPOSITS. COLLECTIONS MADB ON ALL POINTS. GOLD AND SILVER BOUGHT AND SOLD. Reliable Railroad Bonds for Investment, Pamphlets and full laformatlon given at our oillce, No. 114 SOUTH THIRD BTKEET, PHILADELPHIA. ruim JOHN S. RUSHTOU & CO., BANKERS AND BROKERS. NOVEMBER COUPONS WANTED Gity Warrantw BOUGHT AND SOLD. No. 50 South THIRD Street, 8 Mi PHILADELPHIA. L(i . rs' .' ft 1J, .. i flNANOIAUi jay cooke, Mcculloch & co.f No. 41 LOMBARD Street. LONDON, INQLAND. In connection with our houses In New Tort aa Washington, we have opened a Branch la Loudta, under the above same, with ZXon. Hugh XVIcCalloch, Late Secretary of the Treasury, J. n. PULESTON, of New York, and FRANK H. EVANS, of London, as Resident Partners, and are now prepared to transact a General Foreign Exchange Business INCLUDING PURCHASE AND 8 VLB OF STERLING BILLS And the Issue of COMMERCIAL CREDITS AND TRAVELLERS CIRCULAR LKTTErtS, The latter available In any part of the world. The above extension of our business enables as t receive Oolcl on Deposit, And to allow 4 per cent. In currency thereon. JAY COOKE & CO., BANKERS, miLADELPH I A, WASHINGTON, AND) NKW YORK. ruira L LEGAL XNV.&STMEOTX FOR Ti Tisi ee, Executors and Administrators WE OFFER FOR SALE $2,000,000 or TBI Pennsylvania Railroad Co.'s UUHUItAL. ITIOKTUAOC SIX PER CENT. BONDS at 0 And Interest Added to the Date of Purchase. All Free from State Tax, and Issued in Sums of $1000. These bonds are couhou aud registered. Interest on the former payautti .fauuary aud July 1; on the latter April aud October 1, and by an act of; b Legislature, approved April 1, 1870, s- made S LEGAL INVJWTMKNTfor AdmlBtBtrato a. execu tors, Trustees, etc. For further particulars orrlf to Jay (jjooke A, Jo., K. W. lark Ac Co., W. II. NwlolI, Nob Ac Aertien, C. A. II, Horle. laira ELLIOTT, COLLINS & CO , ItArtltfUKN, No. 109 South THIRD Street. MEMBERS OF HTOUK AND GOLD EX CHANGES. DEALERS IN MERCANTILE PAPER, GOVERNMENT SECURITIES, OOLD, tm ETC. ETO. DUNN BROTHERS, IIANItlSUtf, Nos. 51 and 53 S. THIRD St., I ealers In Mercantile Paper, Collateral Loans, Government Heourlflea, aud Gold. Draw Bills of Exchange on the Union Bank of I ondon.and issue travellers' letters of credit through Messrs BOWLES liROS A CO., available in all the cities of Europe. Make Collections on all points. Execute orders fur Bouds and Stocks at Board of Brokers. Allow lnteiest on Deposits, subject to check at sight. 18 B. K. JAMISON & CO., SUCCESSORS TO 1'. IT. It fc CO, BANKERS AND DEALERS IN Gold, Silver, and Government Bonds At Clowes, i Market lia test, N. W. Cor. THIRD and CUESNUT St. Special attention given to COMMISSION 0HDBR3 In New York and Philadelphia Stock Boards, etc. etc. 864 fi,lltc.i Ordtj tru, tJL vvA-a vmaI ax tCculJ my pOTTON.-MIDDUNO FAIR AND MIDDLING Gulfs, lal suia stid Uplands, samples, clean nuilu, etc., for sale by x to 2m Hq. loicuitiNUTitJuet
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers