2 THE DAILY EvflNINo TELEQRAril PHILADELPHIA, TUESDAY", MAY 10, 1871. BriRIT OF TUB PRESS. EDITORIAL OPINIONS Or THE LEADING JOURNALS CTON CURRENT TOPICS COMPILED EVERT DAT FOR THE EVENING TEL EORAPH. MR. nilLLirs ON TIIE 'HANGING COMMITTEE." From the y. V. Tribune. We fear that we did but scant justice to the plan proposed by the graceful and epi grammatic orator of the Bay State for paci fying the South. We can never sufficiently admire the statesmanship of Mr. Phillips. There is no war that he cannot foresee, or invent; no ill that he has not a remedy for; no posHible combination of fractures for which he has not an epigram ready. lie has perfect faith that he can govern the universe by epigrams; and punish it by epithets. He was born to command on the rostrum. What a leader he is! Tnt him on the stage, before the footlights, and he can tell any number of men to go anywhere. He is the mitrailleuse of the platform. He is most dangerous when he is safest. Tlace him on the steps of the Hotel de Ville, and he would annihilate the Versailles Gov ernment with a bon mot. He could invent an epigram that would keep the Paris Commune running a year. There is no doubt of it. He is terrible, this man. And to think that he is r robably full of epigrams undischarged. He has never spared anybody or anything; except one. Why has he spared Bntler ? Probably for the same reason that Butler has spared him; neither has been able to think of an epithet adequate to describe the other. Scratch a Russian, Mr. Phillips is fond of say ing (he has nearly scraped the skin off that Russian), and yen will find a Tartar. If you scratoh Phillips will you find Butler? We cannot say; it is not our scratch. But Mr. Butler evidently has an epigram worth to him twice that, namely: Scratch Phillips, and be will scratch back ! Mr. Thillips has two remedies for the Ku klux trouble, both bloody, both epigram matic. One is, to "march thirty millions of men to the Gulf;" irrespective of women, children, camps, baggage, bay, cows, horses, clean clothes. This is an old remedy of Mr. Phillips. He is always marching that thirty millions to the Gulf, on the slightest emer gency. We seem often to have seen them on their winding way; the promenade is fami liar to ns. It is the easiest thing in the world. It is only necessary for Mr. Phillips to stand in Stein way Hall and say "march," and those thirty millions are off. Marvelous man. And so cool, and so unexcited. But be is to stay at home. What are they to do at the Gulf ? Bah ! "Let me tell the tanner of Galena that if he don't go to the Gulf, the Gulf will come to him 1 (Sensation.) But Mr. Phillips holds his thirty millions in reserve. His simple summer campaign is to have Grant go down South and hang five of the richest ex-generals he can catch. The merit of this plan lies in its simplicity. And it is so practicable. And it would instantly inaugurate an era of good feeling. Many of the most prominent men down there never have been hung, but it isn't possible they would object to it if it was put to them in the right light. It is to be an amicable and peaceable proceeding. "It does not need an army. You do not need one hundred men." The process of arrest and execution is clearly pointed out. As a beginning, Grant is to go down to Georgia and arrest some ex general, who counts his acres by thousands and his wealth by millions, and stands pos sessed of the admiration of half the Sonth. Let Grant track him to his lair in this nest of assassins, seize him at midnight (tho most tragio time in the whole twenty-four hours), try him before daylight, and bang him before the sun is an hour high. There are all the picturesque elements of terror in this. The mysterious hour, the swift trial, the dangling millionaire. How sweet and calm Mr. Phillips is in contemplating it, and he is not bloodthirsty either. He would limit the number to five. Not another man, even though his millions outnumbered his fingers and toes. Hang five of the first men in the South in this quiet, unostentatious, winning manner, and r.o more will want to be hung. We don't need any army or any courts; nothing, in fact, but a rope, and perhaps a cheerful epigram as they swing off. Mr. Phillips and General Butler would be just the men to do it, if they would march to the Gulf; they must themselves see that they can't hang anybody, worth mentioning, if they stay where they are. This panacea is so promising that we beg leave to suggest to the President to appoint a hanging committee, to visit the disturbed districts during the recess of Congress, with power to send for persons and papers; to read the papers and to hang the persons. The committee need not bo large, but it should have two heads Mr. Phillips and General Butler. Let the committee move slowly down towards the Gulf, hanging gently as it goes. Mr. Phillips is not the man to ad vise a scheme he would not be willing to take the peril of executing; we never knew him, in the most troublous times to shrink from any danger. It was always with him a word and a blow; and the word first, then the blow wasn't needed. We have no doubt now that he is ready to undertake this Southern mission which he advises. We can almost see him sow executing it. He comes to a Southern Tillage with his committee, He inquires for the assessor's list. "Who," says he, "is your richest man buow tite your local Vauder bilt." "What do you purpose to do?" ask the villagers. I purpose, says Mr. Phillips, "to hang him, in the name of the forty- second parallel." "Wnat for?' "I'll be hanged if I know what for," says the orator; ' 'what for?' is a queer question Sin a free country has it never occurred to you to scratch an ex-general millionaire? Try it; you will find a Ku-klux!" At mid night Mr. Phillips and General Butler track the Dives to his lair, scratch him till day light, and then hang him up in sight of the camp breakfast table. No more Ku-klux in that region, but great terror falling on all the country round about, and everybody asking Butler what he ahull do to be saved from Phillips. Is not this a terrible picture? But it is not so frightful as it will be to lnve Phillips coming around again, with a now quiver of epigrams, in 1872, and jocularly say. ing, "I told you so." And, bei,i8g, it is eco nomical. Mr. Phillips will kill two birds with one stone; he will despatch an ex-geral one of the millionaires who would eluo adorn a New York lamp-post in 187:5 for the mob that year, he blandly prophesies, "will in dulge in a millionaire." Anybody can sea that all such causes of indulgence ought to be removed now. Behold the simplicity of genius! "I show you," says this admirable man, "the two dangers Ku-klux and corporations. I hold in my Land the remedy. Hang five topmost Alpine Southerners, smash all the Northern corporations, and then come to me and I will tell you what next to do." Alas, if we would only be wise while we have this guide with us! If he should die and net leave a stook of epigrams to last at least fifty years, we would not giva a Confederate not for the repnblio. While be is here let us utilize him. Let him have a free commission to play back and forth between North and . South a destructive double-ender, hanging the very rich and scat tering the corporations. Only let him also remember the maxim of the Persian Saadi: "A learned man without works is a bee with out honey. Say to the austere and uncivil bee, 'When you cannot afford honey, do not sting. " SOMETHING BETTER THAN A VIGI LANCE COMMITTEE. From the X F. Times. The frequent references made by the press and in society to the famous Vigilance Com mittee of San Francisco recall manyinoidents connected with the history of that body. It is undeniable that the state of affairs in San Francisco at the time the Vigilance Commit tee was organized, and the state of affairs in New York to-day, bear a striking analogy in many respects. New York is the metropolis of the nation, and San Francisco only the chief town of a distant State, but otherwise the cases are almost identical. Here, as there, the corrupt and ignorant have absorbed power only to abuse it. Here, as there, a depraved mob controls the right arm and the purse of the community. Here, as there, criminals escape justice because they are the "friends" of the officers of the law. Here, as there, an elective judiciary and a municipal organi zation rotten to the very core, at once infect and despoil the Commonwealth, and disgrace free institutions. Here, as there, notorious dishonesty is regarded ns a capital joko, and the chief rulers of the people have clambered to their high places, and prosperously retain ibem, not only despite, but because of the fact that they are peculators and cheats. Here, as there, crimes against the person multiply apace, since they are committed for the most part by members of the "ruling clnFS," whose escape from punishment is almost a foregone conclusion. Now, it is in consequence of this similarity of condition of the two cities that the "heroic remedy" of a vigilance committee ooours to fo many minds, and so often finds expression. But ught we seriouf ly to contemplate the adoption of such a remedy? Assuredly not. In the first place, the San Francisco commit tee was illegal. True, it was organized not to resist, but to enforce tie law; but it was none the less illegal; aDd although many have asserted that it wes the sole possible refuge from anarchy, its inconvoniences.both at the time and afterwards, are warnings against so hazardous and doubtful a resource. For example, members of the San Francisco Vigilance Committee were sued years after it bad ceased to exist, and held accountable for its proceedings. Merchants have been brought into court in this city on such suits; the ruffians whom they helped long ago to expel from San Francisco having found lawyers of their own political and religious faith to assist them to procure damages. Were a vigilance committee ot like character to be formed in New York, and to take sum mary action in the same way, an endless train of suits would be one of the conse quences, and for years to come the Courts would be crowded with litigation. The in ference from this, putting aside other objec tions, is that the New York Reform Commit tee should act at first, and always, strictly within the law. No provocation should tempt it to act otherwise. It can be made quite as irresistible by moral forces as the San Fran cisco committee was by physical force. But, equally with the latter body, it requires orga nization, zeal, industry, and personal risks and sacrifices. Deeds, not words, was the motto of the stern avengers of outraged so ciety in the Oolden City. We may hope that reformatory action will not be confined in New York to words alone. The nucleus and starting-point of a suita ble Reform Committee were supplied by the late reform meeting at the Cooper Institute. That meeting was regarded with profound interest throughout the country, and com ments upon it have now reached us from many other parts of the world. We need not diseuise the fact that, while approval has been universal, the movement has been spoken of by some in terms of discourage merit. It has been thought that the enemy is too strong, and that he can either purchase or defy any influences that may be brought to bear against him. This, we need hardly Bay, we do not credit, and, for some reasons, among others, that may be briefly adduced. In the first place, it cannot rationally be supposed that the emi nent gentlemen who gave their presence and support to that meeting intended to stop short there without doing anything further. They know very well that mere idle threats would be a most signal encouragement to the bad. men against whom they were launched, Hence, it may with safety be assumed that no apathetic attitude will be taken by them, bat that they will proceed, in due time, to follow np their original promises with spirit and effect. Another reason for anticipating proper activity in the mutter consists in the fact that tne evils so snarpiy do nounced are always growing worse But for the recent demonstration at the Cooper Institute, a publio meeting would probably have been convened to do nounce the contemplated alterations in the code of procedure. Moreover, the pulpit, as those who read carefully their Monday's news paper are aware, has been eloquent and per sistent of late in demanding reform, and we may be sure that all this seed has not fallen upon stony places. But the merohants, and bankers, and lawyers men who have a definite stake in the community, and whose names and character, being well known, will command confidence must themselves work for the harvest; and those among them who, while expressing doubt about the practical results of the reform meeting at the Cooper Institute, fail to work, neglect a solemn duty to society and to theai selves! These gentlemen are the proper leaders of political reform, and the sooner they assume their legitimate functions, and Btrive industriously to break -down political corruption, the sooner will New York be freed from the grievous disorders that now enact and dishonor ber. TIIE QUARREL IN ST. CLEMENT'S. From the H. Y. World. Philadelphia is no more than Chicago a oity from which we should expect ecclesiastical excitements. The reasons are different. From Chicago we should not look for any contro versies about religion for the reason that we should not look for any religion. And in Philadelphia we should not look for any oon trovertiea about religion for that we had sup posed that all controversies calculated to stimulate the mind or embitter the heart had there been settled beyond the possibility of a reopening long before the birth of the present old tht inhabitant of Philadelphia. A wit divided contemporaneous mankind into the two clubfef g of those who tolerated everybody because they believed nothing, and those who tolerated nobody because they believed son la thing. Chicago is composed of tho former, and it is astonishing that any eoolesiastioat proceedings whatever should have excited opposition or even remark on the part of a population wnion goes on its way rejoicing, caring for none of these things. Philadel phia is of the latter, and it is equally aston ishing that the first manifestation of religious dissent, or other form of mental activity, should not have been suppressed by popular indignation, and tne dissenter foroed by tne chill contempt of Philadelphia to seek a more congenial clime. Nevertheless Cheney hai plunged himself into hot water by ont Chicagoing Chicago in the looseness of his theology, and Batterson made himself the target of Philadelphian scorn by out-Philadel-phiaing-Philadelphia in the scrupulosity of his adherence to forms. Of the two it is more intelligible that a man should be per secuted for practical piety in Chicago ttiaa that he should be despitefully entreated in Philadelphia for ritualism never so advanced. The shepherds who are thus despitefully entreated for the sake in the one case of righteousness and in the other of ritualism, represent the opposite poles of the body in whose communion they both profess to be. The one has provoked the indignation of his flock and suffered extrusion from his sheep fold, and the other, in spite of the fidelity of his Hock, has attracted the animadversion of bis bishop. But they agree in invoking the secular arm when the ecclesiastical decision to which it is to be assumed that they havo beforehand agreed to submit themselves goes against them. Mr. Cheney appealed to the civil courts to keep Lim in the position from wl ich the decision of an ecclesiastical court had removed him. And now Mr. Batterson appeals to the civil courts to keep him in a position in which a majoiity of his congre gation have strongly intimated to him that he was not wanted. Mr. Cheney his boen convicted of violating, and furthermore ex presses bis intention to keep on violating, what there is no doubt is an express regula tion cf the Church ofwhich he still insists (bat be is a priest. The charge against Mr. Batterson is not so specifically made nor so fully proven. The objection to him may only be that the Philadelphian, in the interest of his own ease, declines to go throHgh the vio lent exercise which is 'demanded of him in public worship according to the practice of Mr. Batterson. But it is at least clear that Lis congregation do object to him. And it is ulno clear that Mr. Cheney's usefulness as an Episcopalian clergyman is ended with the de cision of the proper body that he is not an Episcopalian clergyman, and that Mr. Batter son s usefulness as tae pastor ot the particular ilock to which he ministers is ended with the determination of the flock that they have ro further use for his ministry. Yet the one persists in clinging to a church whioh hRS rejected him, and the other to a coogro gation which dislikes him. This tenacity, to t be secular mind, lurmsues a much more iu jurious imputation upon the character and tho fcelf-reppect of the inculpated clergyman than any possible looseness in doctrine on tho part of the one or aDy possible rigor of ritual on the part of the other. For the sake not less of the tenacious rector of St. Clement's than of his vindictive vestry it is to be hoped that the courts, ecclesiastical and lay, will arrive at a decision whereby the wicked Batterson may bo made to cease from troubling and the weary rnilauelpninn be put at rest. MODERN MAN-HATE KS. From the London Saturday Ilcoiew. Among tLe many odd social phenomena of the present day may be reckoned the class of women who are professed despisers and con- temneis of men; pretty misanthropes, doubt fnl alike of the wisdom of the past and tho distinctions of nature, but believing vigor ously in a good time coming when wooieu are to take the lead, and men to be as docile dogs in their wake. To be sure, as if by way of keeping tho balance even and maintaining tne sum cf forces in the world in due equia brium, a purely useless and absurd kind of womanhood is more in fashion than it used to be; but this does not affect either the accu racy or the strangeness of our first statement; ard tho number cf women sow in revolt against nature, religion, and the 8r.pren.acy of men is some thing unparalleled in . our history. Both before and during the first French Revolution the esjmts forts in petticoats were agents of no small account in the work of social reorganization going on; but hitherto women, here in England, have been content to believe as they have been taught, and to trust the men to whom they belong with a simple kind of faith in their friendliness and good intentions, which reads now like a tra dition of the past. With the advanosd class of women, the modern man-haters, one of the articles of their creed is to regard men as tueir natural enemies from whom they must both protect themselves and be protected; and one of their favorite exercises is to rail at them as both weak and wicked, both moral cowards and personal bullies, with whom the best wisdom is to have least intercourse, and on whom no woman who has either common sense or self-respect would rely. To those who get the confidence of women many startling revelations are made, but one of the most startlmg is the tierce kind of contempt for men, and the un natural revolt against anything like control or guidance, which animates the class of modern man-haters. That husbands, fathers, and brothers should be thought by women to be tyrannical, severe, selfish, or anything else expressive of the misuse of strength, ii per- haps natural, and no doubt often deserved; but we confess it seems an odd inversion of relations when a pretty, frail, delicate woman, with a narrow forehead, aoouses her stalwart, broad-shouldered male companions of the meaner and more cowardly class of fanlts hitherto considered distinctly femi nine; and when she says with a dis dainful toss of ber small head, "Men are so weaK ana unjust, 1 have norespeot for them: we wonder where the strength and justice of the world can have gone, for, if we are to trust our senses, we can scarcely credit uer with having them in her keeping-. On the other hand, the man-hater ascribes to her own sex every eood quality under heaven; and, not content with taking the more patient and negative virtues which have always been allowed to women, boldly bestows ou them the energetic and active virtues as well, and robs men of their inborn characteristics that the may deck her own Bex in their spoils. She grauts, of course, that men are superior in physical strength and courage; but she qualifies the admission by adding that all they are good for is to pusa a way for her in a crowd, to protect her at night against burglars, to take care of ber on a journey, to fight for her when occasion do mauds, and bear the heavy end of the stick always, to work bard that she may enjoy, and encounter dangers that she may be snte, This role is the only use of their lives, so far as the is concerned. And to womou of this way of thinking the earth is neither the Lord's, nor yet man tt, but woman s. Apart from this mere brute strength which Las been given to men .mainly for her ad vantage, she says they are nuisances and for tne most part shams; and sue wonders with less surprise than disdain at those of her Bisters who have kept any trust in them, who still honestly profess to bold love and respect them, and who are not ashamed to own that they rely on their better, judgment in all im portant matters of life, and look to them for counsel and protection generally. The modern man-hater does none of these thin era. If she has a husband she holds him as her enemy ex officio, and undertakes home life as state of declared warfare, where she must be in antagonism if she would not be enslaved. Has she money? it must be tied up safe from his control, not as a joint precaution against future misfortune, but as a personal protec tion against his malice; for the modern the ory is that a husband will, if be can get it, squander his wife's money simply for cruelty and to spite her, though in so doing be miy ruin himself as well. It is our new reading of the old saying about being revenged on one's face. Has she friends whom he, in his quality of man of the world, knows to bo unsuitable companions for her, and such as he conscientiously objects to receive into his bouse ? his advice to her to drop them is an unwarrantable interference with her most sacred affections, and she stands by her un desirable acquaintances, for whom she has never particularly cared until now, with the constancy of a martyr defending her faith. If it would please her to rush into publio life as the noisy advocate of any nasty sub ject that may be on hand, his refusal to have his name dragged through the mire at tho in stance of her folly is coercion in its worst form the coercion of her conscience, of her mental liberty; and she complains bitterly to ber friends among the shrieking sisterhood of the harsh restrictions he places on hor free dom of action. Her heart is with them, she says, and perhaps she gives them pecuniary end other aid in private; but she cannot fol low them on to the platform, nor sign her name to passionate manifestoes as ignorant as they are unseemly, nor tout for signatures to petitions on things she knows nothing about, and the true bearing of which she cannot understand, nor dabble in dirt till she has lost the sense of its being dirt at all. And, not being able to disgrace ber husband that she may swell the ranks of the unsexed, she is quoted by the shriakers as one among many examples of the subjec tion of women and the odious tyranny under which they live. A3 for the man, no hard words are too hard for him. It is only onrnity which animates him, only tyranny and op pression. There is no intention of friendly guidance in his determination to prevent her from making a gigantic blunder, no feeling of kindly protection in the authority whioh be uses to keep her from offering himself as a mark for publio ridicule and dampging dis cussion, wherein the bloom of her name and nature is swept away for ever; it is all the base exeroise of an unrighteons po?er, and the first crusade to be undertaken in these latter days is the woman's crnsade against masculine supremacy. Warm partisan, however, as she is of her own eex, the modern man-hater cannot for give the woman we spoke of who still believes in old-fashioned distinctions; who thinks that nature framed men for power and women for tenderness, and that the fitting, because the natural, division of things is protection on the one side, and a reasonable measure of we will not mince the word obedience in the ether. For indeed tho one involves the other. Women of this kind, whose sentiment of sex is natural and healthy, the modern man-hater regards as traitors in the oamp; or as slaves content with their slavery, and therefore in more pitiable caso than those who, like herself, jangle their chains noisily, and seek to break them by loud uproar. But even worse than the women who honestly love and respect the men to whom they belong, and who find their highest hap piness in pleasing them, and their trnest wis dom in self-surrender, are those who go a step further, and who frankly confess the short comings of their own sex, and think the best chance of mending a fa nit is first to under stand that it is a fault. With these worse than traitors no terms are to be kept; and the man-haters, rise ina.bodyand ostracize the offenders. To be known to have said that women are weak, that their best place is at home, that filthy matters are not for their handling, that the instinct of feminine mo desty is not a thing to be disregarded in the education of girls or the action of matrons, are sins for which these self-accusers are accounted "creatures" not fit for the recog nition of the nobler-souled man-hater. The gynecian war at this moment going on be tween these two sections of womanhood ii one of the oddest things belonging to this odd condition of affairs. This sect of modern man-haters is recruited from three classes mainly those who have been cruelly treated by men, and whose faith in one-half of the human race cannot survive their own one sad experience; those restless and ambitious persons who are less than women, greedy of notoriety, indifferent to borne life and holding home dnties in disdain, with strong passions rather than warm .affec tions, with perverted instinots in one direc tion, and none worthy of the name in another; and those who are the born vestals of nature, whose morale falls below the sweeter sympa thies of womanhood, and who are unsexed by the atrophy of their instincts as the other class are by the perversion and coarsening of theirs. By all these, men are held to be enemies and oppressors; and even love is ranked as a mere matter of the senses, whereby women are first sub j ugated and then betrayed. The crimes of whioh these modern man-haters accuse their hereditary enemies are worthy of Munchausen. A great part of the sucoess gained by the opposerd of the famous Acts has been due to the mon strous fiction which have been told of men's dealings with the women under consideration. No brutality has been too .gross to be related as an absolute truth, of which the name, and address, and all possible verification could be given, if desired. And they have not been afraid to ascribe to some of the most honor able names in the opposite ranks words and deeds which would have befouled a savage. Details of every apocryphal crime have been passed from one credulous or malicious ma tron to the other over the five o'olook tea; and tender-natured women, horror-stricken at what they heard, have accepted as proofs of the ineradicable enmity of man to woman these unfounded fables which the unsexed bo positively asserted among them selves as facts. The ease of conscience with which the fair propagandists have aocepted and propagnted slanderous inventions in this matter has been remukable, to nay the least of it; atd, were it',, not for th gravity of ; tho principles at stake, and the nabtinehs of the subject, the stories of men's vileneps in connection with the working of these Acts would make ope of the abaurdest itbt-books possible, illustrative of the credu lity, the falsehood, and the ingenious iuiagi nai'tun of women. We do not say that women have no just causes of com plaint . against men. They have, and many. And so long as human nature is what it is, strength will at times be brutal rather than protective, and weakness will avenge itself with more craft than patienoe. But that is a very different thing from the sectional enmity which the modem man haters assert, and the revolt whioh they make it their religion to preach. No good will come of such a movement, which is in point of fact creating the ill-feeling it has assumed. On the contrary, if women will but believe that on the whole men wish to be their friends, and to treat tbem with fairness and generosity, they will find the work of self protection much easier, and the reconcile ment of opposing interests greatly simplified. SPECIAL. NOTICES. Jjy- OFFICE PENNSTLVANIA RAILROAD COMPANY, Philadelphia, May l, 1S71. NOTICE TO STOCKHOLDERS. Notice Is hereby given to the Stockholders of this Company that they will have the privilege of sub scribing for New Stock at par In the proportioa of one share for every six as registered In their name, April 80, 1S71. Holders of less than six Shares will be entitled to subscribe for a full share, and those holding more than a multiple of six Shares will be entitled to an additional Share. Subscription will be received and the first lnstal- nieutor Fifty per centum will be payable between the 22d day of May and 22d day of June, 1S71. Second Instalment of Fifty per centum will be pay able between the S2d day of November aud 22d day of December, 1871. If Stockholders prefer, the whole amount can be paid at the time of subscrip tion. No subscription will be received after June 22, 1871. THOMAS T. FIRTH, B 1 Bw Treasurer. jgtfy PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD COMPANY, IRE AS USER'S DEPARTMENT. Philadelphia, May 2, 1371. The Board of Directors have this day declared a semi-annual dividend of FIVE PER CENT, on the capital Block ot the Company, clear of National and State taxes, payable In cash, on and after May 30, 1S71. Blank powers of attorney for collecting dividends can be had at the oillce of the company. The office will be open at 8 A. M., and close at 3 P. M., from May 30 to June 2, for the payment ot dividends, and after that date from 9 A. M. to 3 P. M. THOMAS T. FIRTH, B 2 2m Treasurer. CONDITION OF THE NATIONAL BNIC OF THE REPUBLIC AT TUB CLOSE OF BUSINESS, April 29, 1871. RESOURCES. Investments 12,443,702 62 line from banks B30,650-88 Cash 655,ttM-22 Total H,63T,09T-?2 LIABILITIES. Capital f 100,000 -oo Surplus and profits, net 6S,B04 49 Deposits 1,703,69824 Circulation 8oo,ooo-oo Total f.1,637,037-72 Attest J. P. MUM FOR I), 5 9juths6t Cashier. XQF J. & L. L. BARRICK'S LEGITIMATE Tailoring Establishment, No. 41 8. TENTH Street, where yon can get the beat suit for the least money. Where, furnishing your own material you can have It made and trimmed exactly right. Price, lit, and workmanship guarantee!. A good stucK always on hand, to Bliow which Is no trouble, and to Bell the same at rates not to be excelled la our highest ambition. 6 2 tuth82tt t DEPARTMENT OF HIGHWAYS, BRIDGES, SEWERS, ETC. OFFICE OF CniKF COMMISSIONER, ) No. 104 S. Finn stkkbt, v Philadelphia. Mav 9. 1871.1 NOTICE. OwnerB of Hacks and Carriages kent for hire are notified that they must renew their Licenses on or before the 1st of June, 1811. The penalty for neglect la live dollars for each time the vehicle Is used after that dato.andwlllbestrict.lv enforced. - J. G. DIXON, " 6 Utnwtu 6t License Clerk. CAMDEN AND AM BOY RAILROAD AND TRANSPORTATION COMPANY. Tkknton, April 10, isri. NOTICE. Tho Annual Meeting of tho Stock holders Of the (JAM DEN AND AM BOY RAILROAD AND TRANSPORTATION COMPANY will be hold at TRENTON, May 10, at 12 o'clock, M., at the Com pany's oillce, for the election of seven Directors to serve for the ensuing year. SAMUEL J. BAYARD, 419 Secretary C. and A. R. R. and T. Uo. jgy TIIE UNION FIRE EXTINGUISHER COMPANY OF PHILADELPHIA Manufacture and Bell the Improved Portable Fire Extinguisher. Always Reliable. D.T.aAOB, 6 30tf No. 118 MARKET St., General Aga afiy THE CHEAPEST AND BEST HAIR DYE w IN THE WORLD, Harper'a Liquid Hair Dye Never Fades or -Washes Out, will change gray, red. or frosted hair, whiskers, or moustache to a beautiful black or brown as soon as applied. Warranted, or money returned. Ouly 60 cents a box. Sold by all Druggists. 8 93 tutluOm tf PILES. DR. O UN NELL DEVOTES HIS time to the treatment of Piles, blind, bleed ing, or Itching. Hundreds of cases deemed incura ble without an operation have been permanently enred. Best city reference given. Oillce, No. 21 N. ELEVENTH Street. 4 IS 3m 5 THE ANNUAL MEETING OF THE Stockholder of the CLARION RIVER AND SPRING CREEK OIL COMPANY will be held at Horticultural Ha'l, on WEDNESDAY EVENING, the 24th Instant, at 8 o'clock P. M. 6 10 lit rSf DR. F. R. THOMAS, No. 9U WALNUT ST, formerly operator at the Colton Dental Room, devotes hla entire practice to extracting teeth with oat pain, with fresh nltroua oxide gas. 11 1J tW- THUKSTONS IVORY PEARL TOOTH w POWDER Is the best article for cleausiag and preserving the teeth. Fur Bale by all Druggists. Price 25 and CO cents per bottle. 11 26 atuthly DISPENSARY FOR SKIN DISEASES, NO. S16 8. ELEVENTH Street. Patients treated gratuitously at this Institution daily at 11 o'clock. i u COAL.. I P. OWEN k, CO., V COAL DEALERS, FILBERT STREET WHARF, SCHUYLKILL. 101y8 SNOWDON A RAU'S COAL DEPOT, CORNER DILLWYN and WILLOW Streets. Lthlgh and Schnylklll COAL, prepared expressly for family use at the lowest cash prloea. 1 18 HATS AND CAPS. HWARBURTON'S IMPROVED VENTILATED and easy-tl 'ling DRESS HATtt (patented, In all the Improved fashions of the season. (JHE5NUT Street, next doorto the post Office. rp PDGBHILL SOUOaL MEKCHANTVILLK, N. J.i Four Miles from Philadelphia, The iebbloa commenced MOWDAY, April 18TI. For circulars apply to R6TLTWCATTKU GS, BlSIIOPTIIORrE.-FIRST-CLASS BOARD Ling during July and August. Fine aceurrv, Uuo water, flue grounds, aud Urge rooms make IUU ene of the pieaaautest places in the State. Address MRS. J. H. ATKINSON, 512 et Bethlehem, Pvuua. LUMHtH 1 000 000 FKKT ,,kmlock joist ' ' - AND SCANTLING. ILL LENGTHS,, ALL SIZES. 500 000 FEET n SOUTH ERN 1INK FLOOIIINO (Dry). Onr own working. Assorted and unassorted. 250 000 FEKT VIRGINIA SAP ' FLOORING (Dry.) Our own working. Aborted and unassorted. 250 000 FEET 3' a"8 ' INCH SAP BOX BOARDS, Together with a large and well-selected stock of thoroughly seasoned Building Lumber of all descrip tions, Miltahle for the erection of ltrge factories, stores, dwellings, etc in connection with the above we are now running a Nteam Sum- mid lManlnsr Jltll, And are fully prepared to furnish Builders and others with 131111 Worlc of all descriptions, WINDOW FRAMES, 8ASFT, SHUTTERS, DOORS, BRACK BT8, Etc SUPERIOR WOOD MOULDINGS A SPECIALTY. BROWN & WOELPPER, No. 827 BICUMOND STREKT, 6 9tuth8lm PniLVDELPHIA. 1871 SPRUCE JOIST. epRiicrs joist. HEMLOCK HEMLOCK. 1871 1871 i-fi SBAKONED CLffAR PIE. 8EASONED CI.rtAR FINK. lO I 1 CUOiCK PATTKKN PIN 5. SPANISH C1CDAR, FOR PATTERNS. RED UEDAR. 187! FLORIDA FLOORING. FLOKIDA FLOORING. CAROLINA FLOORING. VIRGINIA FLOORING. DELAWARE FLOORIM1. ASH FliOOKlNU. WALNUT FLOORING. FLORIDA STEP BOARDS. KAIL PLANK. 1871 1 071 WALNUT BOARDS AND PLANK. - Qrf-t 10 I 1 WALNUT BOARDS AND PLANK 10 i WALNUT BOARDS, WALNUT I" LANK. 1871 UNDERTAKERS' LUMBE3. UNDERTAKERS' LUMBER. RED CEDAR. WALNUT AND PINE. 1871 1871 SEASONED FOPLAR. SEASONED CHERRY. 1871 ASH, WHITE OAK PLANK AND BOARDS. HICKORY. iQ7 CIGAR BOX MAKERS' lO i 1 CIGAR BOX MAKERS' 1871 SPANISH CEDAR BOX BOARDS, FOR SALE LOW. 1Q1 CAROLINA SCANTLING. lOl CAROLINA H. T. SILLS. 1871 NORWAY SCANTLING. 1871 CEDAR SHINGLES. -i Q74 CYPRESS SHINGLES. 10 I 1 MAULE, BROTHER Ik CO., No. 8600 SOUTH Street PANEL PLANE. ALL THICKNESSES.- COMMON PLANE, ALL TIllOKNESJd&i. 1 COMMON BOARDS. 1 and S SIDE FENCE BOARDS. WHITE PINE FLOORING BOARBS. YELLOW AND SAP PINE FLOORINGS, IX an X SPRUCE JOIST, ALL SIZES. HEMLOCK JOIST, ALL SIZES. PLASTERING LATH A SPECIALTY, Together with a general aasortment of Building Lumber for Bale low for caah. T. W. SMALTZ, 11 80 Cm No, 1T10 RIDGE Avenue, north of Poplar St JUlLDElSli, TAKE NOTICE. The largest and beat stock of W O O I 9IOU1L.D1IVQ8 IN THB STATE, AT GREATLY REDUCED PRICES, Can be found at the; U. S. BUILDERS' MILL, Nos. 82, 84.86, 88 South FIFTEENTH 8treet. Also, Scroll, Biacket, and Turning Work fur nished to order at very short notice. Call and Bee stock and prices. 4 BTlm WHISKY, WINE, ETQ. TV 7 INKS, - LIQUORS, ENGLISH AND SCOTCH ALES, ETC. The subscriber begs to call the attention of dealers, connoisseurs, and consumers generally to his splendid stock of foreign goods now on hand, of hla own Importation, aa well, also, to hla extensive assortment of Domestic Wines, Ales, etc.. among Which may be enumerated : 600 cases of Clarets, high and low grades, care fully selected from best foreign stocks. 100 casks of Sherry Wine, extra quality of finest grade. 100 cases of Sherry Wine, extra quality of finest grade. 88 casks of Sherry Wine, best quality of medium grade. 86 barrels Scnppernong Wine of best quality. 60 casks Catawba Wine " " 10 barrels " " medium grade. Together with a full supply of Brandies, Whiskies, Scotch and Engllah Ales, Brown Stout, etc., etc., which be la prepared to furnish to the trade andcoa suiners generally la quantities that may be re quired, and on the most liberal terms. P. J. JORDAN. 6 6 tf No. 820 PE AR Street, Below Third and Walnut and above Dock street. CAR STAIR 8 & McCALL, Xo. 126 7amut and 21 Granlto Sti., IMPORTERS OF Erandiei, Vicei, Gin, Olive Oil, Etc., ' WHOLESALE DEALERS IN PURE RYE WHISKIES, IN BOND AND TAX PAID. 88 GROCERIES, ETC. JOKDON BROWN STOUT AND SCOTCH ALE, In glass and stone, by the case or dozen. ALBERT O. ROBERT3, Dealer In Fine Groceries, Corner ELEVENTH and VINE Bta, EDWARD POfJTI & CO., . IMPORTERS OF FOREIGN PRODUCE, Wines, Oils, Fruits, Cigars, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL, No. DOl IVALillJT Btreet, PHILADELPHIA. KDWAHD PONTI. 13 87S JAMES W. HATKK9. OLOTHS, OASSI MERES, ETQ. Q L O T H HOUSE. JAMES & II U O s n. tto. 11 Rorttt gKt'oni) Street, Hlgn of tue Golden Lamb, ait receiving a large and p!eniid a&sortmen of new style, or FANCY CASaiMEltF.3 Ac siauJurd makes of DOESKIN4, CLOTHS aa COATINGS, 8 43 mil AT WHOLESALE AND RETAIL.