THE DAILY EVffNINO TELEGKAPH PHILADELPHIA, TUESDAY, MAY 9, 1871 THE TRUE FAITH. A Sermon Delivered at St. Clement' Chnrch, Philadelphia, by Her. IV. II. N. Stewart, IL,.I., on gnoila jr Kveulug, May 7, 18)1. "TUB faith which was once delivered to the Saints." .S'. Jude., 8d vtrne. It is a great pity that people are not more impartial. It is possible that judicial fairness is a cold frame of mind, and orators and de claimed seek to excite an impassioned state of feeling in which men will fuse and talce a shape and be moulded into partisans, often without care or capacity to understand the points thoronghly to the defense of which they are once committed. This will be found to be true in most disagreements in religion. It is particularly true in the controversy between what is called Protestantism and Catholicism. These terms are difficult to be defined with precision, and are by no means contradictory of one another. Protestantism, at least in its original condition, was opposed to Romanism or Popery and not to Catholi cism. Now, by Catholicism I understand that system of doctrine, or aggregate of be liefs and practices which are retained by the Greek, the Italian or Latin, and the Angli can Churches in common, after discounting from each of them the peculiarities it has re tained; and by Protestantism I mean every phase of belief or unbelief, from the Wal denBes to Theodore Parker, which agrees in protesting against Romish errors or additions to the faith. That aspeot of these different societies "in which, methinks, they do pro test too much," does not save them individu ally from error; and if Home be oorrupt, the Protestant sects, on matters concerning the faith, which was once delivered to the saints, are in a hopeless muddle. I say this on my responsibility as a theologian, from a thorough conviction, fonnded on in vestigation, that if the Greek and English Chnrch wore out of the way, the sects of Protestant Christians would be virtually at the mercy of their great opponent, the Roman Chnrch, without a Bible and without an agree ment, and without capacity to cohere. Very few men understand their own faith, or the true methods of defending their own positions and doctrines. Still fewer have any just conception of their antagonist's system. No more painful or absurd scene can be wit sesscd than that of two theological disputants, each ene imputing to the other principles he does not hold, or logically convincing each other of holding opinions which eaoh reciprocally repudiates. Tnus, on sev eral occabions in my yonnger days, I have been deluded by Protestants declaimers wiih irrefragable confutations of Roman opinions and practices, but had at last to awake to the conviction that Rotnia ists did not always hold thi-ir doctrines in the terms or on the grounds that Protestant orators assigned them. Instead, then, of in quiries into points of difference, which pro voke temper and raise illusive elouds of argu ment, it is more rational and Christian to inquire into points on which there is substan tial agreement, and see by what possible or extorted concessions on either side both could concur in a joint statement of substan tial truth. If that were doue men would not . long be separated by needless divisions, but would abate them. As long as Satan is prinoa of this world, brethren, bo long the truth of God passeth in the world for a stranger, and being among strangers, easily findeth an enemv and is ill-treated. "This only thing truth desiretb, that no man condemn her before b.3 know her." (Veritas scit se pereginam, etc. Tertul. in Apol., D. C. 1.) As an example of the haste and injustice with whioh judgments are formed, we may recall the statements made respecting St. John the Baptist and our blessed Lard Him self recorded in the Scriptures. St. John, rebuking sin, preaching repen tance, and hearing confessions, offended the Jews by his simplicity, abstinence, roughness of speech, and love of solitude, and was said to be possessed with the devil. While our Lord who went to the feast at Cana and ate and drank in the houses where he was in vited was thought to be a gluttonous man and a wine-bibber and a "friend of sinners," which indeed they both were, you know, bat ' in a way their enemies did not wish to ac knowledge. "We know from Scripture and history that equally unjust, capricious, and even flagrantly blasphemous opinions have prevailed against the doctrines of Christ and against earnest men, like the Baptist, who make them a reality. When their good life, or their re formed life, cannot be denied, or their work has become a success, as St. John's was when the region ronnd about went out to him "re penting and confessing their sins," theu tug old heathen method is revived. The friendly Herod of the day, who hears the preachers gladly, but cannot bear personal reproof, and desires to shut up the preachers in prison, but fears the people who count them as pro phets, is at last urged on, in spite of his own regret, to cut off St. John's head, and, for the sake of his consistency in a bad promis3 and false human respect for those with him, he givt s it to the women of his family who bad been waiting, if not plotting to receive it long before. And thus the world often triumphs over the Church, private spite over public principle, and the concubine, Hero dies, has power to destroy; and her daughter, Salome, is exultant, while the Bride of Christ herself the Church is outraged, and her sons and her daughters denied a place or a voice in the household. Both the hostile and the friendly being in more or less of a muddle rospeating the truth, some 6ay, "This is a good mm," others Bay, "Nay, but he deoeiveth the people, and his greatest enemies, who are nothing if they are not 'Episcopalians,' say honestly that he is not only 'in a wing of tho castle,' but in 'the very citadel,' dofonding the literal truth of the Prayer Book, and tht be has a right to be there, and this avowal is made with the distinct admission that it is not the destruction of the man they crave, but the overthow of the citadel itself, the Prayer Book be defends and stands protected by. Our Lord, when accused of detnonisoi, said, with simplicity and dignity, "I have not a devil, but I honor My Father and ye do dis honor Me," and wheu they insinuated tho charge that the Baptibt was the Christ he simply disavowed all power but that of a Voice, and a Messenger, or Ambassador for Christ, preaching repentance and proclaiming remission of Bins, confessions of whioh he beard. It was snch misrepresentations as these that in later days led apologists for Christianity to write thefr explanation an 1 set up a defense of the faith odm delivers 1 to the saints. Kraiueut men like Bis'i i;n Jewell and Bull, ere spokeu of ail claimed by rhetorical declaimers as dtfendHM of doctrines they deny. T he dual rimers men whom I know to be without fiiruo9i in argument, hontbty in quotation, or theuLigio l attainments autnuient to enable them to understand what they say or whereof they affirm. Buhop Bull, in his famous vindica tion of the Church of EoLul, p. 210, says, "The Church has retained soma ceremonies that had on them the stamp of venerable antiquity, or whioh recommended themselves by their fitness. The Reformers did not pull down the old structures, and raise new ones; no, nor so much as newly conse crate the old; but they removed the objeots and occasions of idolatrous worship, leaving the other things as they found them, and freely and without scruple making use of them." Calvin, who was not a priest, male what he called a Churoh without one, and in his "Institutes" directs unquiet consciences to go to their self-corstituted pastors. And the Puritans repudiated or reformed Calvin. They razed the altars, discredited the orders of the ministry, superseded the sacramental system of the Church by a do-nothing-faith-onlj (system of the results of whioh Luther himself was ashamed. They converted the priests of God into preachers who went out before they were sent, pnd could not tell by what authority they taught the things they did teach. " And so, by a process of attenuation and minimization of the Catholio usages of primitive antiquity, they assimilated them selves to those who never had any authority except an authority like Korah and his com pany in the Church of God. The puritan in heart, inside and outside the Church, still denounces that as Romish which has always been held in the church catholic, and in every part of it; and this church is the only one bulwark from behind which the puritan can point his guns, and they are all antique and wornout artillery which will not bear to be dis charged, and which are more fatal to those in the line of their breech than to those in the line of their muzzle. The fundamental truths of religion are ackno leged to be contained in the creeds of the Church, and were at first believed as they are now, because the Church taught them before any New Testament was written. And Bishop Bull says: "The Church does not deliver the articles of religion as essentials of faith, but simply as a body of pious principles for the preservation of peace, to be subscribed and not openly contradicted by the clergy. The laity are not obliged to subscribe them, and Arbishop Usher Bays, "We do not oblige any man to believe, but only not to contradict them." And Bishop Hall, in his Catholio propositions, says: "The points of faith are contained in the canonical Scriptures and in the ancient creeds, received and allowed by the whole Church. There are and may be many theological points which are wont to be believed and maintained by this or that par ticular Church, or the Doctors thereof or their followers, as godly and profitable truths, be sides those essential and main matters of faith, without any prejudice at aU to the com mon peace of the Church. But it is not law ful for the same persons to impose or intrude the same doctrines upon any Church or per son as of necessity to salvation, or to eject out of the Church any person or company of men that think otherwise." Vindication, p. 213. I may now enumerate briefly, with a few comments, some of the points on which our branch of the Catholio Church differs from the Church of Rome, and you may rely on my statements as judicially impartial, no dis honesty being in my mind more odious than that which underrates or overrates the ex pressions of an opponent. I do this for the information of the unwary, as well as for the confutation of ill-informed Protestant and Popish talkers, who know not what they say or whereof they aflirm, and I fear they do not care for anything but momentary partisan success. First, then, we reject the supremacy of the Pope. We are willing to conoedo to him a primacy, as a patriarch, or presiding bishop of the Latin Churoh, but we deny his su premacy in the Catholio Church, because all bishops are equal, and no bishop can be su preme over his brethren. We are willing to grant that the Pope, in a general council of his province, may come to right de cisions on faith and usage, but we deny that he is infallible. This simple denial is a corrective of all erroneous additions to the faith once delivered to the saints, which additions were made by Papal authority or insinuation. The Roman Church has of late been forced to lay aside her tem poral power. The English Church is now voluntarily adherent to temporal privileges of endowments and State support, which the Church of Ireland has been violently despoiled of; so that the Presbyterian Establishment in bcotland and the English Established Church are the only two organizations allied to the State by pecuniary and privileged ties, and trying there with lamentable nou-snooess to serve two masters. I believe the English Churoh will soon be severed from the State; and 1 hope it may be somewhat impoverished in the process, or at least have its now nu justly allotted endowments redistributed in a fairer and more equitable way. Thus in the matter of temporalities the various branches of the Church are drawing together again, rejecting human treaties with States aDd Kings, and preparing for reunion in dependence upon the Divine support of Christ without any State aid, when the time Khali come to reunite. In regard to the doctrine of justification by faith, the best divines do not think the doctrine of the Council of irent so far from the truth, or the Lutheran doctrine so near it, as that an honest mind could not strike a man which would obviate grave objections en botn sides, and unite the opposing parties. Our articles on justification are so cautiously expressed that a Roman Catholio could, I think, sign them freely. But Methodism brought in the Lutheran doctrine in a flood. It is of this doctrine, whioh Luther claims to have discovered, that Luther himself thus writes, "If God had not shut my eyes to con sequences, if I had foreseen the scandal I should create, I would certainly never have ventured to propagate my doctrine." EI. Waloh. vi. l20. In the matter of transubstantiation the assertion of a real objective presenoe is no longer thought by intelligent theologians or devout Christians to imply any physical or carnal presence, but.a sacramental, spiritual, mystical, and real presenoe. For, on a calm inquiry into the word "substantia" it appears that Rome and England meant different things by it. Substantia is the substratum or underlying something in which all qualities of bodies inhere where crain in mo uciu, uuur m me mm, oreaa In the oven have qualities whioh vary, change, and disap pear at each change, but the substauoe re mains the same that underlying thing by which we are nouiihhed. Bat though the eubt-tacce be unaltered while the sausi'de qualities are changed, you can reverse this order, and imagine tho substance to be altered aDd the quttliiies whioh strike tho Eeme lo be still unchanged. Thin is transub. BtaiitiUiun. The substance alters, the quU. tis remain the same. No the EuulUh Church saja th qnlititis of the bread and wine remain sensibly the same, but that a chaege does, by the consecration of the I riebt, take place (for God blesses His work) somewhere in the bread and wine. But where is this change located ? The English Church does not looate it anywhere. The Roman Churoh does, and thst is the amount of the difference between them on transubstantiation; and when men cease their - wrangles they will see substantial unity on that point now exists. To say with the Romanists that the change is in the substance, is to say with the true Catholio that the change is. not visible, is inward, is not in the sensiblo qualities, but that while the sense perceives one thing, faith receives another. Neither Romanists nor true Catholics pretend to worship or adore any material thing. Again, the great Roman writer, Dr. Moehler, Symb. p. 203, says the confession of Augsburg, a .Protestant doou ment, expresses itself in a manner to enable Romanists to declare themselves tolerably well satisfied with it. And a subsequent "apology" for it was still more explicitly satis factory. In the course of time no important differences, inherent in the nature of thing, could be pointed out between the parties. But as a dispute had once existed in Germany between Roman Catholics and Protestants, from which the original Protestants had re treated, then the later would not acknowledge the mistakes of the earlier Protestants, and to keep up a separation bad to invent other dif ferences. Thus, Marheincke says the difference between Protestants and Roman ists is this: Romanists say "the sacraments contain grace," Protestants say "the sacra ments confer it," but the Romanist will use both phrases; so that this alleged fundamen tal difference vanishes before the critioal statement of it; not by the Protestants ac cepting the Roman view, but by Romanists acquiescing in the Lutheran-German-Protestant doctrine. With Puritans all grades in the ministry, and especially Episcopacy, or government by bishops, is in fact prelacy, if not actually Popery. Now the recognition of the autho rity and jurisdiction of diocesan bishops over their own flock, according to law and in con formity with standards, is the most effectual bariie a J strongfst protest against the ar bitrary rule of any one bishop, or any at tempt at domination over others. The equality of States prevents the nsurpation of authority by any one State over toe others, and in like manner the usurpation by any one bishop, and the law which protects those under him, render his attempts to rule at will, instead of according to law, nugatory. So that if a Bishop were to order what is not, or forbid what is, in the Prayer Book, or deny it to be there when its accredited expositors (such as Wheatly and fifteen other writers and thirty- six bishops) have found it and expounded it as contained therein, then that single bishop's judgment, however Btrongly expressed, may be disregarded with perfect respect for him and his office, until he can get the House of Bishops and the whole Church to join him in altering the words of the Prayer Book which he ignores, and which it is the radical pur pose of a persistent party to change I, for my part, do not think that a bishop who is a mere rhetorician, and without accurate theo logical knowledge, can induce any respect able number of priests or bishops to believe that God did not give power and command ment to His ministers to declare and pro nounce to His people, when penitent, the absolution and remission of their sins. This is patt of the power and commandment transmitted from Apos tolio dys in what is called the apostolical succession. I remember the time when men oast down their eyes in modest deprecation of "apostolical succession as a thing, you know, whioh only very imprudent extreme men acknowledged themselves to hold, and always apologized to their dissent ing brethren for holding even in a timid way. But, I believe, it is no beginning to be re garded as a thing which nobody can deny; and I have heard that Presbyterians are look ing up their titles, and trying to clear the flaws in their records and exhibits of them that they may claim a Presbyterian succes sion; and I suppose it may go on until we have Quaker preachers, who intone thoir ser- I mons with acceptance, and prove thoir lineal descent from I ox through ronn, with a pneu matic but not tactual junction with Buuyan and the "Pilgrim's Progress." I know from Methodist friends in England that the young people there are much exercised about the validity of the orders Mr. Wesloy is supposed to have given the Methodists there or here; and the feeling that, if they have sound doctrine, they at least have no priest's sacra ments, is driving their most studious young men into the Anglican Church. The power of remitting sin (ministerially) was undoubt edly given by Christ to men. There must be some sense in which it is still true that the power of remitting sin exists on earth still. This power is exercised before men's eyes by men who are priests, in baptism, absolution, and in the Holy J '.ucharist. "In baptism it is a whole and full remission," says Bishop Jewell, and St. Paul says, "There is no con demnation to them that are in Christ Jestts," to them "who by baptism have put on Christ." Def. p. 21'J. In holy communion prayer is made for the remission of our sins and all other benefits of Christ's passion. But in both baptism and communion the absolution or remission secured proceeds upon the previous renun ciation of sin and confession of it, whioh tho parties make in the ear of the priest, who exacts the promises of renunoiation, faith, and obedience, and diotates to penitents the very words of confession in the publio service before they are absolved. But sinners are penitent at other times than at baptism or communion, and need the comfortable assurance and de claration. The desire to confess, the deter mination to be honest and thorough, and no longer a sham and a lie to others, requires, demands, craves the opportunity. It is a need of nature, not at all times, nor habitu ally, but sometimes, and those times are gra cious times when God is dealing with the soul, and convincing it of sin. "Mo Booner I my wound disclosed. The guilt that tortured me within, But Thy forgiveness Interposed and mercy's healing balm poured In." If any one in this state desires to relie ve his conscience, and come to the minister at any time, like a physician he is open to such calls at all times, and must in pity take those first who are in the greatest pain of mind. He must restore those grieved and wearied with their sins in a spirit of meekness and charity by "the Word of God," which is "the power of God unto salvation." And in doing this there must be no restriction placed by any one, bishop or layman, on the right of resort to the priest by the penitent at his own will, and in any buitable place, but, on the contrary, he must be encouraged to come, though never urged or compelled to come. This Luther rejoiced in, Calvin reoom mended, Knox practised, aud the whole Church, except a bishop or two and some veKtrymeu, allows. The Roman rule of confession is practically compulsory, enforced, aud in voluntary, for without sacraments there can be no salvation, and, practically, sacraments are denied with out confcffiion. This Roman rule is objected to by the Anglican father, and by uh priests of this Church is repudiated. A voluntary resort to a minister of recon ciliation to obtain the comfortable assuranoe of God's mercy, and those are. "comfortable words'' which contain it, is no more censura ble than resort to a legal adviser for counsel or guidance, or to a physician for reliaf and remedies. Usually in all three cases the same sins confessed to the priest appear as diseases to the physician or as crimes and offenses to the lawyer. While it is true and even notorious that among a certain class of medioal and legal praotitioners the most shocking otimss, connivances with guilt, compromises of felo nies, frauds and immoralities are planned and executed, there can be no doubt that in general the highest principle and the nioest sense of honor regu late every detail of snob, interoourse. There is, therefore, no need of restrictions being placed on the confidential interoourse of priest and people, whioh only base minds suspect, and which goes on every day in purity with physioians in respect of disease, and with lawyers in respect of crimes and immoralities in their clients. Suoh restric tions as a wise prudence will suggest are placed by us upon those who resort to us and do not come unattended. And here lot me sey I know physicians who are baulked and baffled in their treatment of disease, where young men and young women die of con sumption, or become nervous wrecks on their parents' hands, and these physicians have told me that it was not the physician with medicine, but the priest with moral and re ligious restraints, who was needed for their cure or conservation in body and soul. Again, the question of the celibaoy of the clergy is dependent upon an arbitrary rule of the Roman Church. Many Popes were mar ried men. Pope Hormisdas was married, and left a son Silverius, who was Pope after him. Pope Adrian IV, the only Englishman who was ever Pope (Nicolas Breakspeare), was son of a married priest, and Pope Clement IV (A. D. 1205) was married, had children, his wife died, and he was mnde Pope, and no bad one either. Churtou's, Ear. Eng. Ch.,'p. a.")7. The State law in Italy now allows that there is nothing in the condition of a priest to for bid his marrying, and it is desirable and inevitable that in time the greater part of them will. The compulsory enforce ment of celibacy, as a rule, is one thing and the voluntary adoption of it by priests or laymen or wo men is another. There are thousands who think it good for the present distress, and daily men or women are devoting them selves to this life. We have already con nected with our Church a company of celibate priests, and there are say forty such companies of different orders in England. Those that are here have the sanction of the bishops of Illinois, Massachusetts, and New York, and their celibacy being voluntary, the Chnrch does not interfere with any one who seeks in that way freedom for a religious, or as the sects are beginning to call it, "the higher life." So we are building up brotherhoods and sisterhoods who take up the cross and leave all to wait on their Lord in the person of his weaker brethren. Thus, while the Italian priests will, under protection of the State, gradually cast off obedience to the law of the Church about celibacy which has been foroed on them, many here are freely embracing it. The Greek Church compels her parish priests to marry, but selects her bishops from among the celibates. So we shall soon have the like mixed and free condition, every one in his vocation and ministry truly serving the Lord according to nis guts and grace. I have thus noted some of the point on which we Catholics are drawing nearer and nearer to each other. There are many and grave grounds of difference which bar inti mate ubbociation with Rome at present, or nnlil the reforming party within her do that for uer which we are trying to do for the Protestant Episoopal Church. Toe good work of promoting unity, peace, and concord is engaging men of peace and piety w no labor lor its restitution, and the reunion of Christendom, not on an ecclesiastical muddle like the Evangelical Alliance, but on the statements of the truly Catholio Church Let us, without losing our love to the truth, with uniform intention seek for unity of spirit, first the reunion of Christendom afterwards by the removal of old errors, pre judices, and walls of partition set up by un reasonable, unscnptural, or wicked men. Hitherto the Greek Churoh and the Anglican nave been lite brotners and Bona ot one mother who do not even speak. Until lately the Anglican Protestant has denounoed everything Roman because it was Roman and the Roman has denounced everything Anglicanbecauseit was Protestant, and neither of them for any other good reason often After the opposition and abuse Rome has re ceived, there is, or will be among Protestants, a reaction in her favor, as is seen by the con versions she makes. Men educated in the narrowest Protestanism, and in the strictest sects of Puritanism, have gone over to Rome, Most of these converts were evangelical Pro testants who went through many phases, and were High Churchmen by the way, before they joined Rome. They wore obliged to crosB our territory before they went over, but they started originally with tho Protestant idea that Rome alone is the Uatnolic Churoh and they passed over, or never stumbled on the truth that our Church is the true Catholic Church for English npeuking people. These men who went will tell you they found Protestants igaoraut of the claims of tho Catholio (not Roman) Church on all Christians, that they found Protestants misrepresenting those claim when they noticed them, aud treating the gravest questions of faith and morals even with coiitroverbial bitterness and partisan utifairnebs, instead of Christian caador aud honesty. As a general rule catholics do not go to Rome unless under extraordinary pressure, and when they go are not happy there, as many of them have returned. But wheu denied the privileges which catholio Chris. tians love and our Church allocs, even her enemies being judges, they go wheru they can worship the Lord every Lord day la the Eucharist, instead of listening to tb inapt talk of preachers who, denying the sanraments of Cbribttheir sacramental force, transfer that force to sermons, which they assert to be the word of God. which Protestants believe to be so for a time, but which, when their eyes an opened, they see to be only the crude tradi tion of a sect, er the ignorance, the folly, or the jargon of tongues'in strife. The revival of Catholio truth, which the Prayer Book is a manual of, is one of the miracles of our day. Christian people Lave told toe they laarne 1 their Prayer Book over again from us, and never saw in it until they came here the real measure of its worship, or the real signifi cance cf its wordH. When even bishops ig nore what is on its pages, aud what forty coiuLuenUtors, bishops, and presbyters, and laymen have found there, it is no wonder if buuibler men are deceived. The preaching and teaching of these doctrines make the hearers Catholics. In the articles there are 750 negative and 150 positive propositions. We Catholics teach positive truth; Trotestants teach negative truth. We say this is so; the Protestants say that is not so. A proper un derstanding of infallible supremacy, the doc trine of purgatory, and the worship of the Virgin Mary are the real obstacles to union. It is not possible intelligently to unite with a Church teaching them. It is the duty of the Er elish and American Chnron to retain, pub lish, and mActise onenlv. full v. and honestlv everything catnolio sue noids and nas. Al , r "..." . . ready the Greek Churoh hails us as a sister. The Roman Church has two manners of peo ple struggling in her. The late Counoil showed their strength. It is not doubtful that the catholio party will triumph, and the Roman will fail. The Anglican Churoh has only to maintain her catholio protests against Rome and to abandon those l'uritanloal denials of truth which sectarian Protestantism has implicated her in. and in less than a generation, at our present rate of progress, the Greek, the Roman, and tne Anglican Church will be seen advancing with outstretched hands to reconciliation, and our own Chnrch throughout the world will be the honored instrument of reunion, on the basis of "the faith onoe delivered to the saints," which she upholds. IN SU KAN Ota Firf. Inland, and Marina Ininranct. INSURANCE COMPANY OF NORTH AMERICA, Incorporated 1794. CAPITAL $500,OOC ASSETS January 1 1871 $3,050,533 Receipts of P 70 2,098,164 Interests from Investments, 1ST0.. 137,030 -43,233,304 Losses paid In 1870. .$1,136,941 STATEMENT OF THE ASSETS. 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CUAKLTON HENRI, AL.rtlC.lJ L. al&MSUL, LAJU1S IT. HAUKIKA, 1KORUE I HARRISON, CLEMENT A, GKIiJOOlf WILLIAM BROOEIE. DELAWARE MUTUAL SAFETY INSURANCE COMPANY. Incorporated by the Legislature 01 Pennsylvania, isso. Office S. E. corner of THIRD and WALNUT Streets, MARINE INSURANCES on Vessels, Cargo, and Freight to all parts of tie worm. INLAND INSURANCES n Goods by river, canal, lake, and land carriage to Hi pnria ui tuo uuiou. FIRE INSURANCES n Merchandise generally ; on Stores, Dwellings, iiouueo, etc ASSETS OF TUB COMPANY, November 1, 1ST0. .000 United States Slx Per Cent Loan (lawful nione)) f 333,378 00 30,000 state or rennsyivama oix rer Uent Loan 814.000 0C 130,000 City or rnuaaeipnia mx rer Cent. Loan (exempt from Tax) 804,163-50 164.000 State of New Jersey Six Per Cent. Loan 163,920-00 20,000 Pennsylvania Railroad First Mortgage Six PerCU Bonds. SO.TOO-OC 85,000 Pennsylvania Railroad Second Mortgage Six Per Ct. Bonds. 83,250-OC 85,000 Western - Pennsylvania Rail road Mortgage Six Per Cent. Bonds (Pennsylvania Rail road guarantee) 80,000-00 80,000 State of Tennessee Five Per Ct. Loan 18.00000 T.00O State of Tennessee Six Per Ct. Loan 4,800-00 12,500 Pennsylvania Railroad Com pany (850 Shares Stock) 13,000-00 6,000 North Pennsylvania Railroad Company (1U0 Shares Stock).. 4,300-OC 10,000 Philadelphia and Southern Mall Steamship Company (BOsu's Stock) 4,000-01 1,660 Loans on Bond and Mortgage, first liens on City Properties.. 861,650-00 11,860,100 Par. Cat, 11,864,441-84. M'ktvT $1,893 17-0( Real Estate 66,000'SO Bills Receivable for Insur ances made 830,071-27 Balances due at Agencies Premiums on Marine Policies Accrued Interest an I JUier debts due the Company 83,379 40 8 took and fcerlp, eto, ot sun dry corporations, 87V&0, esti mated value 8,818-00 Cash 148,811 78 l,830,787-iT DIRECTORS. Thomas C. Hand, .Samuel E. Stokes, John C. Davis, William t. Boulton. Jdiuand A. Soader, oseph H. Seal, Jamea Traqualr, Henry Sloan, Uenry C. Dallett, Jr.,: James C. Hand, W ullam C. Lad wig, Hugh Craig, John D. Taylor, Oeorge W. Ilernadou, Wni. C. Houston. Edward Darlington, U. Jones BrouKe, Edward Lafourcada. Jacob Rlegei. Jacob P. JoneB, James B. McFarland, Joshua P. Kyre, Spencer Mcllvalne, Thomas P. Btotesbary, John B. Semple, Pittsb'ig, A. 1J. Busger, Pittsburg, D. T. Moriran. PHULmrtf. U. Frank Kobtnaon, juuMAi) u. iiabii, rregiaaut. JOHN C. DAVIS, Vice-President. Hbnkt Ltlbckn, Secretary. Hkxhy Bill, Aaaiataiit bacretary. Men Mutual Insurance Company OP PH1LADKLPIII 1. INCOKPOKATKI) I Mil. Fire, Mai ire, and Inland Iaiurancs. Office. N.E. Cor THIRD and WALNUT LOSSES PAID S1NOK FOEAIATION, S7.O00.O0O. ASSETS OF THE COMPANY, JANUARY 1, 1ST1, 255,30709. RICHARD 8. SUITE, President. JitUii MOSS, becreuu-j. INSURANOE. 1829 CHARTERFKRrKTUAL. jQ"7j Fndlii Fire Insurance CGiaay 07 PHILADELPHIA. Office, Ho. 435 and 437 CHES3TUT St. Assets Jan. lt'7lJL$3f087t45235 CAPITA!",, 1400,000-00 INCOME FOR 18T1, LOSSES PAID IH 18T0, tT,88W0. 11,100,000. jLohrcis Paid Since 182i Nearly &c,ooo,ooo. The Assets of the "FRANKLTN" are all Invested In solid securities (over 11,750,100 In First Bonds and Mortgnges), which are all Interest bearing and dividend paying. The Company holds no Bills Re ceivable taken for Insurances ell'eoted. Perpetoal and Temporary Policies on Liberal Terms. The Company also issues policies npon the nents or an sinas oi Buuaings, urouna Rents ana Mortgages. DIRECTORS. Alfred O. Baker. Alfred Fltler, Thomas Sparks, William 8. Grant, Thomas 8. Bills, Gnstavas 8. Benson. Samuel Grant, George W. Richards, Isaac Lea, George Faloa, ALFRED G. BAKER. President. GKORGB FA LBS, Vice-President. J4MKS W. MCALLISTER, Secretary. THEODORE M. RHGER. Assistant Secretary. , ASBURY LIFE INSURANCE CO. TJX2W YORK LEMUEL BANGS, President. GEORGE KLLIOTT, Vlce-Pres't and Sec'y. EMOKY McCLINTOCK, Actuary. JAMES M. LoNGACRE, MANAGER FOll PENNSYLVANIA AND DELAWARE, Office, 302 WALNUT St., Philadelphia. H. C. WOOD, Jr., Medical Examiner. REV. S. POWEHS, Special Agent. People's Fire Insurance- Coipanj, No. fflJ. WALNUT Street. CHARTERED 1869. Fire Insurance at LOWEST RATES consistent rtth security. Losses promptly adjusted and paid. NO UNPAID LOSSBS. assots .December 81, 1870 1128,851-73 CIIAS. E. BONN, President. OEO. BTJSCH, JR., Secretary. jji I B E ASSOCIATION, INCORPORATED MARCH 17, 1S20, OFFICE, NO. 84 NORTII FIFTH STREET, INSURE ILDLNQS, IIOTJ8EHOLD FURNITURE, AND MERCHANDISE GENERALLY rom Loss by Ore (In the city of Philadelphia only). ASSETS, JANUARY 1, 1870, $1,703,310-07. TRUSTEES. Wllllnm H. Hamilton, John Carrow, (ieorge I. Young. Joseph R Lyndall, lfvlP. Ooats. Charles P. Bower, Jesse Llghtfoot, Robert Bhoeinaker, Peter Arrabruster, m. ix. LiicKinaon, Samuel Spar hawk, Peter Williamson, Joseph E. Schell. WM. H. IIAMIL1 ON, President. 8AM C EL SPARHAWK, Vice-President. WILLIAM F. BUTLER, Secretary. F AME INSURANCE COMPANY, No. 809 CHESNUT Street. INCORPORATED 1S50. CHARTER PERPETUAL. CAPITAL 1200,000. FIRE INSURANCE EXCLUSIVELY. Insurance against Loss or Damage by Fire either by Perpetual or Temporary Policies. D1KSCTOKB. Charles Richardson, Robert Pearce. wunam n. unawn, William M. Seyfert, John F. Smith, Nathan Wiles, John Kessier, Jr., Edward B. Orne, Charles Stokes, John W. Everuian, Mordecai Buzbv. George A. West, CHARLES RICHARDSON. President. WILLIAM U. RHAWN, Vice-President. Williams I. Blakcbarp, Secretary. TUB PENNSYLVANIA FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY. Incorporated 1S26 Charter Perpetual. No. 010 WALNUT Street, opposite Independence Square. This Company, favorably known to the comma alt j for over forty years, continues to insure against Iubs or damage iy 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, la Invested In the most careful manner, which eoa bies them to otter to the insured an undoubted seca r i y in the case of loss. DIKavTuim. Daniel Smith, Jr., iHaao llaf leliurst, Thomas smith, Henry Lewis, J. Gllllngbam Fen, inosias nouiua, John Devereux, Franklin AX7omlv, DANIEL SMITH, Js., President wm. u. lhowiuh Decretory. THE ENTERPRISE INSURANCE COMPANY OF PHILADELPHIA. OFFICE S. W. CORN h R FOURTH AND WALNUT STREETS. PERPETUAL AND TKRM POLICIES ISSUED. CAfrH CAPITAL (paid up in full) $200,000 00 CASH ASSETS, December 1, 1870 00,83800 F. Ratchford Starr, J. Livingston Errlnger. rvaioro i ruzRT, John M. At wood, Benjamin T. Tre.llek, (it-oige 11. Stuart, William a. Boulton, Oharle Wheeler, ThomasQ.Montgomery, James M. AerUeo, jonn it. irown. F. HATCH OBD STARR, President. THOMAS II. MONTGOMERY, Vice-Pre AI.RX AfNDER W. WISTKR, Recrelary, JACOB E. PuTERSON AsaUllftt-Seere - president. cretary. NTHRACITB INSURANCE CO DIP ANY. INOORPOK4TED 1864. CHAKTER PERPETUAL. Office, No. 811 WALNUT Street, between Third and Fourth streets, Philadelphia. This Company will insure against Loss or Damage by Fire, on Buildings, Furniture, and Merchandise generally. Alo, Marine Insurauce on Vessels, Cargoes, and Frcifcliia. Inland Insurance to all purls of the Union. William Esher, Lewis Audenreld. Win. M. Balrd. John 1L Blaklston, W. V. Dean, John Ketcham, J. E. Bauin, John B. Heyl, Peter Sieger, Satnm-l H. HothermeL WILLIAM ESUEH. President. WM. P. DEAN, Vice-President. M. Smith, Sn-rctary. w. r MVSRIAL PI It If INSURANCES OO. LoiiDoa. (ir.tti.iouhu isoa. : on .'iii.l ud AoiuoaUld Fauda. rtK,o0,0(iO IIS GOLD. i'UEVlisl . HI RUING, Agents, Ita IU7 S TU IBJI Rtrt. PbiLuUlnhl. has. r . Mi V(3 ouas. y. HiSBiia i. t. ttSVOI.. MKAJLQM. j j,.l atnnnJOM XKhtaAXTX COKvriMi.isLJP, New York, J SOUTH WUAKVES, Philadelphia. Na i Co No. IS SOUTH WUAKVES, Philadelphia. Na AS W milT KT&RKT. Rlttmrrr are prepared to ship every dtoriptloa I height to Puiiad. if b'a, t ew Tork, WDiiiLgton, an niieriLfcdiaU points ua promptnatM auddosptttch. Canal Boats and bteatu-ULs f aruiahed at th auuruxt aottca,