THE DAILY EVENING TELKG11AP1I PHILADELPHIA, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1871. 'THE MAGAZINE?. "BCRlBNBR'g." Hie contents of the March number of ikribncr't MonVdy are as follows: "Weather-Telegrams and Storm-Forecasts," second article, illustrated, by Pro fessor T. 13. Maury; "King Gatnbrinus and Lis Subjects," illustrated, by William Wells; "Will fcbe Hide or Walk?" by Miss Trafton; 'In a Garret," by Elizabeth Akers Allen; "Lucky Peer." by Hans Christian AnderseD; 'HomewardJ' by Lois Brooke; "The Ancient Fenians," by L. Clark Seelyw; Viotor Em manuel's Queen," by Elizabeth C. Kinney; "Life in the Cannibal Inlands," illustrated, by J. C. Bates; "Wilfrid Cumbermode," illus trated, by George MacDonald; "The Celes tials in Sunday-school," by James L. Bowen; "Topics of the Time;" "The Old Cabinet;" "Beyond the Seas;" "Home and Society;" "Books and Authors at Home;" "Etchings," a Musical Party, with seven humorous designs, by C. G. Bush. From rrofessor L. Clark Seelye's paper on "The Anoient Fenians" we make this quota tion: TIIE ANCIENT FENIANS. In the early histery of Scotland and Ireland tribe of Celtio warriors stand forth pre eminent by their bold adventures and warlike deeds. The scenes of their exploits received names still perpetuated in the topography of both countries, and the exploits themselves became tbe theme of many poems and ro mances. Finn Mao Cuinhail (pronounced Coole) was one of these warriors and their most famous commander. According to Irish annals, he lived and died in the third century of the Christian era. So great was his renown that these Gaelio warriors, who had pre viously been designated by various names, barbarous to our English ears, were hence forth known as Feinne, Fiana, or Fenians, and as such were celebrated in the legendary history of Scotland and Ireland. They seem eventually to have constituted a kind of esta blished militia, whose duty it was, in the words of an old historian, "to defend the country against foreign or domestic enemies, to eupport tbe right and succession of their kings, and to be ready upon the shortest notice for any surprise or emergency of the State." These meagre historical details give one little idea of the amount of Fenian literature which still exists in ancient Gaelio manu scripts. One of its most accurate and learned students has computed that, were all the Fenian poems and legends published, they would till three thousand closely printed large quarto pnges. To enter the ancient Fenian order, "every soldier must swear that without regard to for tune he would choose a wife for her virtue, her courtesy, and her good manners; that he would never offer violence to a woman; that as far as he could he would relieve the poor; and that he would not refuse to fight nine men of any other nation. Every soldier must be well acquainted with twelve books of poetry, and be able to compose verses. He must also run well, and defend himself when in flight. To try his activity, he was made to run through a wood, having a tree's breadth, and the whole of the Fenians pur suing him; if he was overtaken or wounded in the wood he was refused, as too sluggish and unskillful to fight with honor among such valiant troops. "He must be so swift and light of foot A3 not to break a rotten Btick by standing on it; able also to leap over a tree as high as his forehead, and to stoop under a tree that was lower than his knees. Without stopping or lessening his speed, he must be able to draw a thorn out of his foot. Finally, he must take an oath of fidelity." These are some of the qualifications given to us by an ancient historian, who naively adds: "So long as these forms of admission were exactly insisted upon, the militia of Ire land were an invincible defense to their coun try, and a terror to rebels at home and ene mies abroad." "THE ATLANTIC." TbeMarch number of The Atlantic Month1, which we have received from W. S. Turner, has the following list of contributions: "Woman's Rights in Ancient Athens," B. W. Ball; "Looking for Pearls, an Oriental Legend;" "Ups and Downs of the Bonapartes and Bourbons," J. A.; "Kate Beaumont," part iii, J. W. DeForest; "John Wesley,' G. A. E.; "Marguerite; Massachusetts Bay, 17C0," John G. Whittier; "Our Eyes, and IIow to Take Care of Them," Henry W. Williams, M. D.; "Shoddy," E. P. Whipple; "Prelude to the second part of Faust," Bayard Taylor; "A Passionate Pilgrim," II. James, Jr.; "Active Glaciers within the United States," Clarence King, U. S. Geologist; "The Mulberries," W. D. Howells; "Our Whispering Gallery," James T. Fields; "Recent Literature." The following extract from B. W. Ball's very excellent paper on "Woman's Rights in Ancient Athens" will be read with consider able amusement everywhere outside of Bos ton and its vicinity:- In fact Athens was in some marked respects a community of New England Yankees, pre maturely appearing in the reoesses of the Eastern Mediterranean; and the history of Athens will never be properly written, ex cept by an American scholar. Mr. Grote, it is true, is in such entire sympathy with that fierce old democracy as to smooth over its faults on every and all occasions, and he him self is a man of Periclean or Websterian breadth of mind; but he has never lived in a community of the Athenian sort, as a New Eng. land scholar may be said to have done. In the above Periclean sketch we have all the traits of American democraoy carried out in the spirit of its letter, and it has actually been realized in New England, namely, the sooial and poli tical equality of all citizens; fondness for stump oratory and political discussion, and an average publio capable of forming its own political opinions and discharging the duties of publio office, as well as shrewd managers of their own private affairs; tolerance of dif ference of opinion; a love of trade and com merce; a readiness to admit foreigners to citizenship; and, lastly, a degree of intelli gence which has made New England the democratic exemplar and schoolmistress of the rest of the United States. This may be Baid without arrogance, because it is a fast. But further than this, an enemy of the Athe nians, in summing up their character, said that "they were made neither to be qnut wemseives nor 10 iei me rest 01 th? world be bo," thus assimilating them exactly to tur modern Yankees in their fondness for inno vation, social and political. Ia faot, the de vising of ideal commonwealths, and the dU ensbion of publio and private ethics with a view to legiblation, were as rife among the free-thinkers of Athens in the fifth century B. C. as they are in its modern TTansatlantio counterpart and literary namesake, the Hub. Fnithermore, a sh might Lave been tnepended with as much propriety over the deliberations of the anoient Athenian Ecclesia as over those of the Great and General Court in the State House of thia Commonwealth. For the Athenians were as great fishermen as our Cape Ann folks, and were immoderately fond of a fish diet, which accounts perhaps for their startling intellec tual brilliancy and apprehensiveress, on the theory of Professor Agassiz. Food and fish, says Mitchell, were synonymous terms among the Athenians. Salt fish constituted the f rincipal food of the Attio soldiers and sailors, 'rodigious quantities were imported from the Euxine. When the bell of the fish market rang everybody rushed thither, leaving the sophists and orators in the middle of their harangues without an audience; and the Atheniau Bil lingsgate, like that of modern London, was noted for the scurrilous tongues of its dealers. A story is told of an Attio orator who wa un fortunately in the middle of his "few feeble remarks" when the fish-market bell rang. There was an instant stampede of his entire audience, with one solitary exception, who, to the surprise of the speaker, "stuck." In pure gratitude he thanked his solitary listener, at the same time explaining tha cause of the stampede. It turned out that the fellow was deaf, and as soon as be ascertained that the fishmonger's bell had rung he too rled, leaving the eloquent speaker soliloquizing to vacancy. This interesting bit of literary history we take from Mr. J. T. Field's gossip about Hawthorne in his paper entitled "Our Whis pering Gallery": Hawthorne dined one day with Longfellow, and brought with him a friend from Salem. After dinner tke friend said: "I have been trying to persuade Hawthorne to write a story, based upon a legend of Acadie, and still cur rent there; the legend of a girl who, in the dispersion of the Acadians, was separated from her lover, and passed her life in waiting and seeking for him, and only found him dying in a hospital, when both were old." Longfellow wondered that this legend did not strike the fancy of Hawthorne, and said to him: "If you have really made up your mind not to use it for a story, will you give it to me for a poem ?" To this Hawthorne assented, and moreover pro mised not to treat the subject in prose till Longfellow had seen what he could do with it inverse. And so we have "Evangeline" in beautiful hexameters a poem that will hold its place in literature while true affection lasts. Hawthorne rejoiced in this great suo cess of Longfellow, and loved to count up the editions, both foreign and American, of this now world-renowned poem. W. S. Turner sends us Our Young Folks for March, which is handsomely illus trated and is filled with entertaining reading matter adapted to juvenile tastes; Godey's Lady's Book for March, which contains seve ral engravings on steel and wood, fashion plates, patterns for needlework, etc., and a variety of entertaining literary contributions. The Lady's Friend for March has nume rous illustrations and an attractive series of stories and sketches. The March number of The Nursery pre sents a variety of attractions in the shape of short stories, verses, and clever illustrations adapted to the tastes of the nursery public. MAURI AGE. From Appleton's Journal, Marriage! No one cares for them now. Paul and Virginia are transformed into Darby and Joan. Benedick has forgotten his tooth ache, and Beatrice smiles at the story of Hero's death and resurrection events which sealed her fate as well as her cousin's with the melancholy conviction that somehow she was compelled to yield to a power far more potent than her own sweet will. And here the hard aud unpleasant truth may as well be stated namely, that mar riages occur in accordance with large general facts, over which individuals can exercise no authority, and that in numbers they are in no wise affected by the temper and wishes of the people. This first fact about marriage is not only prosaic, but humiliating. Shall not these people choose companions for life, and listen to the clerical "What God hath joined together let no man put asunder," at such time as they may mutually agree upon ? By no means, ihe law says they shall do nei ther of these things; and )he peculiarity of this law is that it cannot be violated. Further more, all who desire it will ' not be permitted to marry. What is to be said of such immiti gable tyranny as this ? Not marry when we choose, and whom we choose! Not to be consulted as to whether we shall marry or not ! What is life worth if these things are to be decided without our knowledge or con sent? Not much, perhaps; but we might just as well learn the disagreeable fact at once, and submit to it. Nature is fond of cheats, and plays her charlatanry irrespective of per sons "Men are the sport of circumstances, when The circumstances seem the sport of men." Youth has its illusions, and middle age its hallucinations, wherefore these teachings of statistics may go hang. Does not Romeo actually know that he chooses Juliet in pre ference to Rosalind ? Is it at all probable that Miranda would have escaped marriage with Caliban, if she had never met the ship wrecked Ferdinand ? Whero and what is this tricksy Puck that makes maidens see as he wills, and transforms Demetrius and Lysander, subject to no law save his own? Alas! this plodding and prosaic statist, this withered and bespectacled mathematician, will prove to you that Romeo is mistaken, that Miranda and Ferdinand are both controlled by the superior prevision of Prospero, and that Puck is, after all, nothing but the personified Price of Corn. These illusions and hallucinations are results of the operations of law, and we cannot disturb them, though we pile formula on formula, and equation upon equation, until the revolving earth is light as a feather, compared with the weight of the argument. J'er contra, what cares passion for the multi plication-table, or love tor the differential calculus ? A fico for you, law of statistics ! Nevertheless, Maud commits an unintentional perjury when she vows her husband shall be the man of her choice, and we all know that Adolphus Fitzherbert will repeat Romeo's blunder. Leaving the domain of fanoy, we find the plain statistical facts concerning marriage rucnine somewhat in this wise: The average age of women, when they marry, is 'J.rAh years; and, of one hundred who reach this age, twenty-one will never many, vutamenit lares dinerently; for, Etrac"e as it may 6eein, more women than men get married, and, of one hundred of the latter who reach the marriage age of '2'i' Tears, twenty-two will die bachelors. Thus. about one-filth of our people are doomed to die nnweddeu. whether they preier it or not Now,the marriages that ocour ia New Yok number, yea? by year, about nine thoabaud two hundred and eighty eighteen thousand v hundred and sixty persons and for every one of these marriages there will at some time Le left a widow or widower, for it rarely happens that husband and wife die at I tbe same moment. Some of these widows and widowers will remarry more of the lat ter than the former, and because of this faot the actual nnmber of women who marry will exceed the actual number of men. The rule seems to be that about one in three widowers, and one in four widows, remarry. Of one hundred marriages, about thirteen f the men will be widowers, and only eleven of the women will be widows, the baohelors numbering eighty-seven, and the spinsters eighty, nine. On general principles, there may be no serious objection to old Weller's advice, "Bovare of vidders;" but we, not basing our conclusion upon domestic experi ence, out upon a series of mathematical cal culations, can absolutely aflirui that widows do not, by any means, monopolize the matri monial market, and that there is more to be feared from one spinster than from a dozen widows let bachelors make a note of this fact for the truth is, that spinsters have a better success against widows in the hunt for husbands than bachelors have against widowers in the winning of wives. Aud, as all the hunting and winning is above the will, and superior to it, we cannot Bay "beware" to any, but simply admonish all to accept the conditions, and to yield as gracefully as pos sible to their predestinate fate, whatever it may be whether single blessedness or wedded woe, conjugal felicity or nnweddod discontent. Suppose there be a hundred weddings in New York within a given time, in all respects of the average kind, how many of these per sons will be minors? From Paracelsus aud Cagliostro down to Home and Fox, not one of all the soothsayers and clairvoyants can tell you that. No palm-reading gypsy, no spirit from the vast deep, let him be called ty so matter what boasting Glendower, can tell half so much of these oocult events as this interrogating mathematician will learn from his curious figures and bewildering signs. Afk him, and he will reply, without any mummery or gibberish, twentv-four will have been married and about nineteen will be under age. Of this latter number all but one will be women spinsters not yet out of their teens. At all events, this is the result of his present calculations, and if time and in creased numbers should alter the averages he will learn the fact sooner than any one else. The remainder will be bachelors and spinsters ox tne average age or 2'J -5 for the former, and 25 40 for the latter. What tbe law is that makes bachelors so much more prudent than spinsters we will not undertake to say; but certain it is that maidens make much more haste than young men in getting into the matrimonial net. Still it must be remembered that girls, whether prudently or not, are regarded as marriageable at fifteen, and are certainly so at seventeen; so that, in view of the fact that only eighteen in every hundred of the delicate creatures who marry are under twenty years of age, while forty-three of the same hundred are between twenty and twenty-five, and twenty-two more between twenty-five and thirty, we must candidly confess that they manifest a degree of prudence in the matter that would seriously disturb Mr. Malthus were he only aware of it. We will not say that marriage previous to the adult age is in variably indiscreet; but we will defy any one to form a just conclusion in regard to the age of discretion from the study of marriage sta tistics. To find this result, the marriage and mortuary tables must be studied together. The question is of some importance, but it must be unwillingly deferred. But if women come upon the marriageable list earlier than men, they suffer the inoon- venience of being stricken earlier from it. After forty-five, women are no longer re garded as eligible, matrimonially, and the demand for wives of this age is so slight as to be hardly worth considering, although we find an occassional widow still more rarely a spinster willing to marry even after having passed the sprightly age of threescore years and ten. Under twenty-five years of age the number of women who marry is a little more than twice as great as the number of men; but, after forty-live, the number of Benedicts is more than thrice that of the brides. In one thousand marriages of the average kind as to ages, fourteen women and forty-nine men will have passed their ninth lustrum. Widows remarry at an average age of thirty-nine years, while the average age of widowers who again take to themselves con jugal partners is forty-one or thereabout. We will not undertake to tell eaoh of our fair readers how old Bhe will be when led to the altar a blushing bride, if that should prove to be her destiny; but we can tell her what the chances are in the present state of our knowledge , of statistical facts. If we take the weddings that actually occur, we shall hnd that in every thousand there will be one hundred and seventy-nine wives under twenty years,, while there will be only nine husbands of that tender age. Bat perhaps these facts will be better stated in statistical terms, thus: In every thousand marriages there will be II inland k. Wives. Ayea. 9 179 Under 20 years of age. soa 434 Between 20 and 85 years of age 849 2'2tJ ' 26 " BO ' m ki " 30 as ' hi 43 " 85 40 " 44 20 ' 40 " 45 25 8 " 45 " AO " " 12 3 " B0 " 65 " " 6 1 63 " 80 " The remainder, nine men and five women. will be scattered along between sixty and eighty years an age at which . almost any one would be expected to know better. It will be seen, however, that the desire as well as the opportunity for marriage falls off ra pidly in both sexes after thirty up to that age both seems to increase, in twenty-seven thousand five hundred marriages, or therea bout, there will be one hundred and nineteen men and only sixteen women between sixty and seventy years of age, while fourteen men and four women will be between seventy and eighty. Interesting as these ancients are, there is Btill another class deserving of something more than a passing notice. We mean old maids. How many are there, and what are their matrimonial chanoes r We have already stated that twenty-one out of every hundred women who reach the marriage age namely, 25-40 years never marry. But even this does not tell the exact number of marriage able women who are waning ior husbands, if indeed so nneallant a thing as this may be said of any. But, then, how is it possible to expect an algebraio sign to be guilty or gal lantry ? From the best authority that can be had upon this exceedingly interesting topic, it appears that the number of unmarried and marriageable women, within those heretofore mentioned as the marriageable ages namely, fifteen and forty-five is about twenty-five per cent, of tbe whole number oi women livinc between those aces. Now, if the last ceusus of New York be correct, the application of this rule will show ns that the number of unmarried and mar riageable women living on Manhattan Island at the time the enumeration was made was exactly fifty-one thousand two hundred and sixty-two. The race has somewhat increased since then; for the total population has been considerably augmented within five years, and during a part of the time the high prices of rents and food articles, the scarcity of labor, the darkened prospects and depressed business activity so loudly complained or among all classes of the community, made tbe number of marriages less than the ave rage, and added largely to the list of nn wedded maidens. It seems to be a part of the creed of the discontented sisterhood, whether wives or spinsters, that one of the inalienable rights of woman entitles her te a husband. It will be seen that Nature sets her face against this assumption, and makes a very different de cree. The truth is, that every woman living between the ages of fifteen and forty-five has twenty-five chances in one hundred of dying an old maid that is, her chances of marriage are as four to one. This is just enough to give them all hope, and not sufficient to drive any to despair. The complaint s of managing mammas are of no avail. Even the ballot will not bring them a better fate, and, with suf frage or without it, one-fourth of all between the above-named ages are doomed to live in old maidenhood and to die uuhusbanded. Our task is done. In dealing with these secrets we have doubtless been dull; but these hard facts will not admit of poetic treatment even if we were capable of treating facts poetically. When Benedick enumerated the virtues of the woman he would consent to husband, he said, "Her hair shall be of what color it please God. He might have trusted the same good Providenoe call it fate, destiny, or whatever you will for all the other qualities just as well. An old adage says, ".Marriages are made in heaven, but Benedick's was made in old Leonato's garden, as we all know; and it is absolutely true in every case, as it was in the one we are con sidering, that those most interested have less to do with tbe result than they can well imagine, or, if they knew, would be willing to admit. For the individual that which he desires is good, that which he would shun is evil; but in the grand economy of the uni verse the two are so evenly balanced and so closely intertwined that he must be bold, indeed, who would undertake to say which :s which. Talleyrand, upon being introduced to two young men one recently married, the other Btill a bachelor called the former a happy man, and the latter a lucky dog. I his is the broad philosophy f our deductions. Those who live unwedded need no sympathy; those who die married are worthy of no envy, for which of the two events is better no one can possibly determine. VVATOHEIi JEWELRY, ETO. -tWIS LAD0M.US & CoT ( DIAMOND DEALERS & JEWELERS. WATCIIKS, JEWELRY A SILVER W1RK. l WAT0HE3 and JEWELEY REPAIRED. 02 Chestnut St., PhUa; Would Invite attention to their large stock of Ladles' and Gents' Watches Of American and foreign makers. DIAMONDS In the newest styles of Settings. LADIES' and GENTS' CHAINS, sets of JEWELRY of the latest styles, BAND AND CHAIN BRACELETS, Etc. Etc. Our Btock has been largely Increased for the ap proaching holidays, and new goods received dally. Silver Ware of the latest designs In great variety, for wedding presents. Repairing done In the best manner and guaran teed. D 11 fmwj TOWGER CLOCKS. CJ. XV, Kt'SSELL, Ho. 22 NORTH SIXTH STREET, Agent for STEVENS' PATENT TOWER CLOCKS, both Remontolr fc Graham Esoapement, striking hour only, or striking quarters, and repeating hour on full chime. Estimates furnished on application either person ally or by mall. 529 WILLIAM B. 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SILLS. 10 1 1 NORWAY SCANTLING. i CU i CEDAR SHINGLES. - Qrji lOll CYPRESS SUINGLE8. 10 I 1 MAULE, BROTHER k CO., US No, aeoo SOUTH Street TiANEL PLANK, ALL THICKNESSES JL COMMON PLANK, ALL THICKNESSES. 1 COMMON BOARDS. 1 and 1 SIDE FENCE BOARDS. WHITE PINE FLOORING BO ARBS. YELLOW AND SAP PINE FLOORINGS, 1 ana HEMLOCK JOIST, ALT, SIZES. PLASTERING LATH A SPECIALTY, Together with a general assortment of Buildlng Lnmber for sale low for cash. T. W. 8MALTZ, 11 BO 6m No. mo RIDGE Avenue, north of Poplar St. lUtO. LEONHtDDT & CO., Ei graving and Steam Lithographic PRINTING ROOMS, JTos. 612 and 6H CHESNUT Ssreet, S !2 wfm3mrp DEMOCRAT BUILDING. MATS AND OAPli nWABBUHTON'S IMPROVED VENTILATED and efjty-fluing DRESS HATS (patented), in all tha improved fashion of tbe season, CilESNU' bitoet, aest door w ui iron uinua. rpt INSURANCE. Fire, inland, and Marine Iniuranci. INSURANCE COMPAH? or NORTH AMERICA, Incorporated 1904. CAPITAL .....$500,000 ASSETS January 1, 1871.. $3,050,536 Receipts of Premiums, 'TO 2,090,184 Interetts from Investments, 1S70.. 137,060 1 J, 233, 804 LoBsespald lnlSTO 11,136,941 STATEMENT OF THE ASSETS. First Mortgages on Philadelphia City Pro perty tS34,9W) 1-tilled biates uoverninent Loans 3W.9.tl Pennsylvania State Loans 16,B10 rniiaaeipniauitj l)ans 800,000 New Jfitey and other State Loans and City Bonds 825,510 Philadelphia and Reading Railroad Co., other Railroad Mortgage Bonds and Loans S&'t.aiB Philadelphia Bans and other Stocks 64.4H6 rash In Bank 881,048 Loans on Collateral Security 81,434 jNoies receivable ami marine premiums unsettled 439,420 Accrued j merest ana premium in coarse of transmission 63,801 Real estate, Office of the Company so.ooo 13,060,536 Certificates of loonrance Issued, payable rn London at trie counting noose or Messrs. BR SHIP' LEY fc CO. AltTIIMt . COFFW, PBE3IDENT. CIIAUI.I.H I'MTT, VICE-PRESIDENT. MATTHIAS MA KIM, Secretary. C. II. REEVES, Aaslatant Secretary. DIRECTORS. ARTHUR G. COFFIN, SAMUEL W. JONES, JOHN A. BROWN, CHARLES TAYLOR, AMBROSE WHITE, WILLIAM WELSH, JOHN MASON. FRANCIS R. COPE, KUW, H. TROTTER, EDW. S. CLARKE. T. CHARLTON HENRY, LOUIS C. MADEIRA, en i u w rtmiiuiv GEORGE L. HARRISON, vunm ... V Ulili ill I Hi CLEMENT A. GRISCOM, WILLIAM BROCKIE. 1 Hi 1829 CHARTR rflBraiuAL. gyi FraitUo Fire Insurance tapj OP PHILADELPHIA. Office, N08. 435 and 437 CHESNUT St. Assets Jan. I , ,7l$3t087.452"35 CAPITAL 1400,000-00 ACCRUED SURPLUS AND PREMIUMS.2,6ST,45i-35 INCOME FOR 1871, gl,2CO,000. LOSSES PAID IN 1870, I272,8SW0. Losses Paid Since 1829 Nearly 86,000,000. The Assets of the "FRAl KLIN" are all Invested In solid securities (over 12,750,000 in First Bonds and Mortgages), which are all interest bearing and dividend paying. The Company holds no Bills Re ceivable taken for Insurances e Hoc ted. Perpetual and Temporary Policies on Liberal Terms. Tbe Company also issues policies upon the Bents of all kinds of Buildings, Ground Rents and Mortgages. DIRECTORS. Alfred G. Baser, Samuel Grant, George W. Richards, Isaac Lea, r , T7" -In. Alfred Fltler, Thomas Sparks, William S. Grant, Thomas S. Ellis, Gnstavns 8. Benson. ALFRED G. BAKER. President. GEORGE FALES, Vice-President JAMES W. MCALLISTER. Secretary. a 7td31 THEODORE M. REGER. Assistant Secretary. Union Mntnal Insurance Company OF PHILADELPHIA. INCORPORATED 1S0I. Fire, Max is e, and Inland Iniurance. Office, N. E. Cor. THIRD and WALNUT LOSSES PAID SINCE FORMATION, S7, OOO.OOO. ASSETS OF THE COMPANY, JANUARY 1, 1S71, $255,39789. RICHARD S. SMITH. President. JUUJN muss, secretary. 8 13S People's Fire Insurance Company, No. 514 WALNUT Street. CHARTERED 1P59. Fire Insurance at LOWEST RATES consistent with security. Losses promptly adjusted and paid. NO UNPAID LOSSES. Assets lecember 81, 1870 1123,851-73 CIIAS. E. BONN, President, GEO. BUSCH, Jr., Secretary. a 143 THE PENNSYLVANIA FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY. Incorporated 1S20 Charter Perpetual. NO. 610 WALNUT Street, opposite Independence Square. This Company, favorably known to the commu nity for over forty years, continues to Insure against loss or damage Dy Are on Public or Private Build ings, either permanently or for a limited time. Also on Furniture, Stocks of Goods, and Merchandise generally, on liberal terms. Their Capital, together with a large Surplus Fund. Is Invested In the most careful manner, which ena bles tbem to offer to the Insured an undoubted seen my ia the case of loss. Daniel Smith, Jr. Iaaao Hazlehurst, Thomas Robins, Thomas Smith, Henry Lewis, J. Glllinghain Fell, Daniel Haddock. John Devereux, Franklin A. Comlv. DANIEL SMITH, Jb., President WM. G. Crow ill, Secretary. 8 80 F Alia INSURANCE COMPANY No. 809 CHESNUT Street DiCOBrOBATKD 18B4. OH ARTS B PCRPETUAL. CAPITAL 1200,000. FIRS INSURANCE EXCLUSIVELY. Insurance against Loss or Damage by Fire either Perpetual or Temporary Policies. Charles Richardson, Robert Pearoe, John Kessler, Jr., Edward B. Orne, Charles Stokes. John W. Evermaa, William H. rtnawn. William M. Beyfert; John K. Smith, Nathan limes, Georae A. West, Mordecal Buxby. CHARI.E8 RICHARDSON, President WILLIAM 1L RUAWN, Vice-President Williams L Blanchabo Secretary. TBS! THE ENTERPRISE INSURANCE CO. Of PHILADELPHIA. Office 8. W. cor, FOURTH and WALNUT Street, FIRE INSURANCE EXCLUSIVELY. PERPETUAL AND TERM POLICIES IfiSUED. CASH Capital (paid up In full) laoo.ooo-oo CASH Asset, DeBi-nilKir 1, 1870 U00-8S8li4 DIRECTORS. , F. Ratchford Starr, 1 J. Livingston Errtnger, Naibro Frailer, (James L. C'laghoru, John M. Atwood, jWm. G. Boulton, BenJ. T. Tredlck, Charles VV heeler, George H. Stuart, , iThomas U. Montgomer John U. Brown, !Jaiue M. Aertseu. F. RATCHFORD STARR. President THOman U. montuomkhy, Vice-Piesldent ALEX. W. W1STKK, hecretary. JACOB a, ?TEiuON, Aaaishtnt Secretary. INHORANOEI Delaware mutual safety issurancb COMPANY. Incorporated by tbe Legislature of Pennsylvania, 1835. Office S. K. corner of TH I RD and WALNUT Street. Philadelphia. MARINE INSURANCES on Vessels, Cargo, and Freight to all parts of tha world. INLAND INSURANCES on Goods by river, canal, lake, and land carriage to all parts or the Union. FIRE INSURANCES on Merchandise generally; on Stores, Dwellings, Houses, etc ASSETS OF THB COMPANY, November 1, 1870. 1300,000 United States Six Per Cent Loan (lawrul mono) 1333,376 00 800,000 State of Pennsylvania Six Ter Cent Loan 814,00000 200,000 City of Philadelphia Six Per Cent. Loan (exempt from Tax) 804,162-60 184,000 State of New Jersey Six Per Cent. Loan l8,020-00 80,000 Pennsylvania Railroad First Mortgage 81x Per Ct Bonds. 80,700'00 85,000 Pennsylvania Railroad Second Mortgage Six Per Ct. Bonds. SS.SWOO 25,000 Western Pennsylvania Rail road Mortgage Six Per Cent Bonds (Pennsylvania Rail road guarantee) SO.OOO-OO 80,000 State of Tennessee Five Ter Ct Loan 18,00000 . 7,000 State of Tennessee Six Fer Ct Loan 4,800-00 12,600 Pennsylvania Railroad Com pany (250 Shares Stock) WjOOO-OO 6,000 North Pennsylvania Railroad Company (100 Shares Stock). . - 413000 10,000 Philadelphia and Southern Mall Steamship Company (SOsti's Stock) I.OOO'Ot 201,460 Loans on Bond and Mortaage, first Lens on City Properties.. SCl.eOO $1,260,150 rar.C'Bt, 11,864,447-84. M ktvTl,293-66r'? Real Estate 66,009 Bills Receivable for Insur- , anccs made SSO1 Balances due at Agencies Premiums on Marine Policies Accrued Interest and other debta due the Company 93,375 4 Stock and frcrlp, etc , of sun dry corporations, J960, esti mated value 3,812-00 Cash 148,911-73 11,820,727-91 DIRECTORS Thomas C. Hand, .Samuel E. Stokes. John C. Davln. William (K KfinHnn. Edmnnd A. Soudcr, Joseph II. Seal, James Traqualr, Henry Sloan, Henry C. Dallett, Jr.,; James C. Hand, William C. Ludwlg, Hugh Craig, John D. Taylor, George W. Bernadou, Edward Darlington, II. Jones Kmnkn Edward Laf our cade, Jacob Riegel, jacoo f. jnefl, James B. McFarland. Joshua P. Eyre, wpencer Mclivaine, Thomas V. Rtnteshnrv. John B. Semnln. PlrtjhY wui. j. uousion, a. a. cfTger, nusourg, - - . r . - . Q, U. Frank Robinson. D. T. Morgan, Pittsburg, . THOMAS C. nAND, President M 111 M I ' TUVIU V' , - 9 I Bknrt Ltlbckn, Secretary. ' i Henry Ball, Assistant Secretary. 8111m ASBURY LIFE INSURANCE CO. RECT Yonn. LEMUEL BANGS, President GEORGE ELLIOTT, Vice-Pres't and Sec'y. EMORY McCLINTOOK, Actnary. JAMES M. LONCACRE, MANAGER FOR PENNSYLVANIA AND DELAWARE, Office, 302 WAIHUT St., Philadelphia. H. C. WOOD, Jr., Medical Examiner. B23mwflm REV. 8. POWERS, Special Agent JfZl B X ASSOCIATION INCORPORATED MARCH 17, 1S30. OFFICE, NO. 34 NORTH FIFTH STREET, INSURE BUILDINGS, HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE, AND MERCHANDISE GENERALLY From Loss by fire (In the City of Philadelphia only) ASSETS, JANUARY. 1, 1ST0, 81.703,319 07. TRUSTEES. William H. Hamilton, John Carrow, George I. Young, Jos. R. Lycdall, Levi P. Coats, Charles P. Bower, Jesse Lightioot, Robert Shoemaker, Peter Armoruster, M. H. Dickinson, Peter Williamson, Samuel Sparhawt Joseph K. Schell. WM. H. HAMILTON, President SAMUEL SPARH A WK,r Vice-President WILLIAM F. BUTLER, Secretary pIPERIAIi FIRS INSURANCE CO.i LOUDON. CMTAHMMHED 1S(IS. Paid-op OkititAl and Aoosmalti Foods, S8.000.000 IN GOLD. PREVOST & HERRING, Agents, .4 Ha. 107 8. THUUJ Streot, Philadelphia.' OHAB. M. PKKVOaT OH AH. P. HBBRIWa INOINEB, MAOWINEKY. BTOi jMSftfc. PNN STEAM ENGINE AND BOILBH XMiiwOKKS. NKAF1E A LEVY, PKACTI CAL AIxD THEORETICAL ENUiNEERS, MA CHINISTS, BOILER-MAKERS, BLACKSMITHS, and FOUNDERS, having for many years been In successfdl operation, and been exclusively engaged In building and repalrltg Marine and River Engines, high and low pressure, Iron Boilers, Water Tanks, Propellers, etc. eto., respectfully offer their servleea to the public as being fully prepared to contract for engines of all slseas, Marine, River, and Stationary having sets of patterns of dlireient sizes, are pre- Sared to execute orders with quick despatch. Every escrlptlon of pattern-making made at tne shortest : notice. High and Low Pressure Fins Tubular and Cylinder Boilers of the best Pennsylvania Charcoal Iron. Forgings of all size and kinds. Iron and Brass Castings of all descriptions. RoU Turning, ocrew Cutting, and all other work connected with the above business. Drawings and speclhuatlons for ail work dona the establishment free of charge, and work gu ranteed. , . . m J ' The subscribers have ample wharf dock-room fot repairs of boat, where they can lie In perfect safety, and are provided with shears, blocki, fak. etc. etc., for raiaing heavy or light weights, ' JACOB C. NEAFTJK, I JOHN P. LEVY, j 8168 BEACH and PALMER StrestA j ipURARD TUBE WORKS AND IKON CO PHILADELPHIA, PA., Manufacture Plain and Galvanized and Sundries for Gas aud Steam Fitters, Plumbel VVOKKS. 1 TWENTY-THIRD AND FILBERT STREETS, ,.WM-i,-f? ani W A REIKllKK 81 No. 2 N. FIFTH bThKLT. , PATENTS. u NITED STATES PATENT OFF nTiDDtuniiuir Ta Tam m on the petition of DAN I kl S. NI PPS, of Merlon Township, Pennsylvania, -artruiniB'ra Albert ts. ippes, deceased, praying ior tne alon of a patent granted to the said AINsrt S. : on the 21st day of April, li67, for an improves brinaing eaws: It is ordered that the testimony In the closed on the 2ist day cf March next, tl time for tiling arguments and tha Examiner'! be limited to tne uistuayoi aiarcn next, i said petition be heard on the 6th day of April Anv nerson may oppose mis extension. " SAMUEL A. DL'NC 9 in 8(t Actlnir Commlasloiier of int. A LKXANDKR O. OATTBL "SnnS t PRODUCK COMMISSION BSKW"i no. w nunru wMaim AND HO M NORTH WATKR 8Ti rli ILADKLPHIA. i AuxAMsn a cattbu. kluvaitilW f