Columbus enquirer-sun. (Columbus, Ga.) 1886-1893, November 14, 1886, Image 6

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DAILY ENQUIRER - SUN: COLUMBUS, GEORGIA, SUNDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 1*, 1886, * GOD IN NATURE. •‘The Heavens Declare the Glory of God, And the Firmament Sheweth His Handiwork.’’ Firs! of » Hrrlcii of Nprmnas liclnir Itcllvcrcd l>y Krirri nil It. II. lUrrlu. I’snlor nfllie First Bap. list Church, Columbus, lln. Reverend R. II. llnrris, pastor of the First Baptist Church, of this cdty, is preaching a series of sermons on “God in Nature.” lie delivered the tlrst last Sun day night, and it was as follows: GOD IN NATURE. GENESIS. Text—“He walketli in the circuit of heaven.”- Job, 22:11. “He stvelcheth out the north over the empty place, ami hangeth the earth upon nothing. * —Job, 2il:7. “For He hath founded it upon the seas, end es tablished it upon the floods." Psalm, 24:2. My subject is broad as the universe, deep as infinity, limitless as creation. Of course, then, I shall not tie expected to attempt an exhaustive presentation of its details. 1 can only hope, in the series of discourses contemplated, to present a rude outline of its most salient features to the minds of those who may favor me with their at tention. I advance the initial proposition that there is a revelation of God in Nature. And it may he true that, without the book of Nature spread open before us, the book of Holy Inspiration would la: totally in comprehensible. Without perception and apprehension of (he faetsof nature around us, and in the absence of consciousness Within us, it might lie difficult, if not im possible, to form a conception of God. Assuming that it were, under such cir cumstances, possible to acquire the nrt of reading, and, assuming another impossi bility, that tlie materials of the hook and the impression of the letters would sug gest nothing, the man who had never looked beyond the blank walls of a closet, and never felt the conscious existence of immortality, would, probably, learn noth ing from the pages of the Bible about God or anything else. Nature proclaims the God who has created it, and the Holy Scriptures confirm the teachingslof nature. 1 was told of God and taught the lessons of the Bible at my mother’s knee, in the Sunday Hehool and the sanctuary. I believed in Him and in them upon the assurance of others, but 1 found God in nature, and I believe in Him with all my soul to-night upon the evidence of my own perceptions and my — own consciousness. Moreover, 1 accept, without question, the teachings of the Bi ble, because they are confirmatory of na ture’s revelation,in addition to t he fact that they carry internal evidence of their di vine authority and present to me a plan of redemption that nature alone could never suggest. And l am not singular, lint here we encounter a phenomenon. All men rend the book of nature, more or less at tentively, and most men find God in that book; but as soon ns the general lessons of nature are reduced to their elementary principles and are compendiously classi fied into different departments, called sciences, a mighty disintegration of senti ment is perceived. The great musses of mankind, even in enlightened countries, know little about Bcionce, as such, and care less. But among those whoso attention has been attracted to its teachings, there are two classes of ex tremists; precisely agreed in opinion upon one point, but at opnosite poles, in the conclusions at which they arrive, from the same point of departure. They agree that, the teachings of science contravene the teachings of the Bible: “Therefore,” sna the members of the one class, “we discard science;” and “Therefore,” say the others, “wo discard the Bible.” "There is a large intermediate class, how ever, of conservative thinkers, including many men of profound learning and exalt ed piety, who accept all the demonstrated propositions of soience, and yet stand fifmly by the Holy Scriptures of God, steadfastly maintaining that there is no conflict between the real revelations of the two. They carry the magic wand will: which to dissipate the conjured mist in which the extremists of both classes have enveloped themselves. One wave of the wand, and the fog iH scattered, the phe nomenon is explained. Science is what is known. Knowledge is the meaning of the word. Speculation is not knowledge; theory is not science. Nothing is known except that which is proved, either by external evidence or in ternal consciousness. The. assumption is unwarranted that truescionoe is in conflict witli the Scriptures. The Bible does not claim to bo a scientific book, in the technical sense of that term, hut it is a demonstrated fact that, in every instance in which it incidentally states a seientiih- proposition, or makes a scientific allusion, the proved discoveries of true science have corroborated the Scriptures. This the ex tremist will not see, and, therefore, he. cannot admit. * Many an honest-hearted, old-fashioned Christian eschews astronomy and scorns '■'geography because the former pietu es the earth whirling in its orbit through the empty void of space, and the latter tells him that a straight line downward, per pendicular to the sole of his America:-, foot marks the shortest course to Chinn. He brandishes his Bible defiantly in the face of such infidel doctrines, in utter ignor ance of the fact that his cherished book pro mulgates the very doctrine which he con demns. “God stretcheth out the north over the empty (space) and hungeth the earth upon nothing.” He repudiates, with contempt the “infidel” notion of spherical form of the earth and other great bodies, and of the universe, while he ignorantly clutches in his antagonistic hand the Bilfie teaching that “God walketli in the circuit of heaven.” 1 think the scholar will tell you that the word here translated heaven means the “universal firmament;” not the eternal abode of the blessed. “The heav ens declare the glory of God and the firnia incut slu wetli his handiwork.” 1 love old fashioned Christians and I believe in old- fashioned Cristianity, but l clamor for th> au dition of old-fashioned stu stubborness. that stolidly refuses to accept demonstra ted truth. The book of Job, from which 1 quote, is a very old-fashioned document. It is supposed to be the oldest hook in ex isteuce; but whether this supposition be true or not, there can be no doubt that it i.-- vaslly older than any of the discoveries of modern science. The fundamental doe trines of astronomy, to which I have just alluded, were incidentally taught in the Word of God ages before the first- profes sional astronomer was born. “Day unto day uttereth speech and night unto night sheweth knowledge.” These doctrines settled, the others, dependent upon them, and their corollaries are inevitable. For herein are involved the laws of rotation, day and night, revolution, nodation and nutation, the seasons, lunar phases and the tides, gravitation, centripetal and cen trifugal force, eclipses, transits and other phenomena, definitely predicted and ac curately measured, times out of number, by every almanac maker in the land. My old-fashioned brother believes in his alma nac next to his Bible, and his blessed old wife regards it as the infallible guide to success in gardening and household econo my; but both reject, with ineffable scorn, the astronomical principles upon which all its trustworthy calculations are based. And now uprises the erudite infidel sci entist, from the other class of extremists, and solemnly declares that the Bible gen esis cannot be true, because, forsooth, the self-evident facts of geology contradict it. , “The testimony of the rocks,” he maintains, proves that the earth has pro gressed, through a succession of vast pe riods. from a molten state to its present condition. That, after the cooling process had advanced sufficiently far, the globe was enveloped In a bubbling, steaming ocean, and that, gradually, by unequal contractions, nt difierent points, elevations of the land occurred, above the surface of | the waters, and thus were slowly formed the continents and the islands; these changes extending though a general pe riod of many thousands, or perhaps mill ions, or possibly billions of years, in view I of these unrl other evident geological I facts, lie urges the utter falsity of the Mo- | side account of creation which describes | the whole process as having taken place | God in nature-the Godot providence and within the brief period of six days. j of love, i But do the facts of geology contradict ! t ie teachings of the Bible? In the first . Mox reach: and the vast beds of stratified rocks were broken up and tilted for the conven ience of the future.miner. Thus after all the denizens ofthe waters, the birds and beasts and creeping things, and plants (or food, had been appointed to their places; after the waters had been pu rified and ttic atmosphere made salubrious: after plant products had been secured,and flesh for sustenance; and even the phos phate beds had been prepared to fertilize the soil when exhausted in the coming ages; after everything necessary had been provided, man was called into being. What does all this mean? Was it acci dent? Is it, chance? No. It means God! COLUMBUS Iron Works place no one knows wlnit period is meant by tnc word translated "day” in the hook i of Genesis. From the different applica tions of that word or term, in difierent connections in the Old Testament Scrip Lures, we are justified in the conclusion that the Mosaic descriptive “day” might have meant epoch or a vast period of time. Or it may be, as I have heard some one state it-Dr. Josephus Anderson, I think— that Moses used the word “day” in its present sense, hut ns limiting the period during which lie enjoyed a retro-prophetic vision of one stage of creation. And this appears the more reasonable from the re peated peculiar expression: “The even ing and the morning were the first day,” “the evening and the morning were the see,ond day,” etc. In naming each one of the. Hix days, the word “evening” invariably precedes the word “morning.” As if the vision of a stage of creation began at evening and continued through the whole night until morning awakened the seer. In either ol these views the objection of the infidel is met. “In the beginning,” which may have been as far in the past us the most exact ing geologist can demand, “God creuted the heaven a ml the earth. And the earth was without form and void: and darkness was upon the face of the deep. Ami the spirit of God moved upon the face ofthe waters. And God said, ‘Let there be light,’and there was light.” Does this Scripture contradict the evident foots of geology? Again: “God hath founded it (the earth) upon the sens and established it upon the floods.” On the contrary,does not the one corroborate the other in the particulars just suggested? So might the parallel he traced onward, showing that nature, as expressed in true geologic doctrine, confirms the Scripture account of even the order of Genesis. The advent of light between the breeze-lifted clouds of steamy vapor, the appearance of the land above the waters, bringing form and stability out of the shapeless void of a transforming chaos, literally founded in the seas; even the geologic ages—the azoic eozoic, paleozoic, mesozoic and eenozoic periods—ail being accurately observed in the Mosaic account down to the entrance of man upon the saene. In all essential particulars there is a perfect correspond enee between the two lines of teaching. Our fossil brother rejects geology in tolo on the six days issue, and because the six thousand years of Bible history do not ac cord with the chronology of the scientist. He is not aware that there is no certain standard by which we can accurately measure the chronological periods of the Bible; and he will not countenance the fact that six thousand of our years may really limit tlie period of human existence to date, and yet not falsify the chronology of th o rocks. The infidel scientist in turn rejects the Christian’s Bible as untrue, because of his misunderstanding of these same points, and further, because that Bible speaks of the rising ami setting of the heavenly bodies, forgetful that he himself writes the words “rises” and “sets” against the sun, moon, planets and stars, all through every edition of Ills almanac. And so they go on wrangling ad nau seam. Truth is true wheresoever found- in the Bible, in geology, or in astronomy, and when demonstrated we must accept it. Let us, then, ignore theory of every kind, whether predicated upon the Scrip tures or upon science; and proceeding upon positive revelations in the Bible and in nature, let us contemplate God wherever wo find Him. Jt is perfectly consistent with both tin. teachings of the Holy Scriptures nnd of science, to say that, during the formative period, extending down to the advent of man, our globe was the subject and : he theatre of t lie I most stupendous opera Lions of physical forces. And. since t in Bible teaehes us that all things terrestrial Were created lor the use of man, and that to him is given dominion over all tin car 111, we arc led to the conclusion that all those marvelous operations were diructei; in his interest and tor his benefit. The little bird, long before the appear alien of its callow young, locates its nest in Unit region | where see is or fruits or in sects abound tint may furnish food for the prospective fledglings; many fishes speed their way from the deep waters far up the shallow streams to spawn iti localitie. promising protection to their unliatcheo young; the humble insect glues its eggs to some sheltering leaf that may serve tofu d its helpless lnrvas when they creep from the shell. These, nnd countless other creatures comparatively obscure, provide, in advance, for the security and the sus tenance of their offspring. Was the God, the universal Father ofthe man, less prov ident, loss kind? L’hevo are sixhy-fjur elementary sub stances known besides, doubtless, others to he discovered. During the fusion state ofthe globe the natural laws of physical and chemical affinity and repulsion must have been in operation. Segregations and combinations were occurring in every quarter, and in cracks and crevices, pro duced by the cooling of the mundane crust, deposits of metals and ores anil amalgams and erystalized gems were formed in seams and veins and dikes and quartzy lodes. Thus were placed in the storehouses of the mountains, afterward to lie upreared, materials for the future use of uncreated man. Iron and lead aim copper, silver and gold and precious stones. Shell-clad mollusks and crustaceans, in calcareous garb, and phosphoriforous lislus swarmed in the tepid waters of the luU r seas to die, in countless myriads, and form deposits of lime and chalk and beds of marl. Noxious gases and mephitic vapors, ex haled from glowing mineral matter, filled the atmosphere, rendering it unfit for hu man respiration; therefore, scaly reptiles and immense amphibians of n low viLiU-v were brought upon the scene to aid in ex hausting the poisonous elements ofthe air. And, further, a dense, universal, tropical growth sprang up, wherever there was up- heaved land, to inhale and fix in its own substance the deadly carbon oxides and to exhale oxygen in return; while other pro cesses were set in operation to secure a wholesome proportion of oxygen and ni trogen in the air, and of oxygen and hydro gen in the water. Then came vast earthquakes, monstrous tioods and terrific cyclones, stupendous cataclysms, of which we can form no ade quate conception, during which the endo- genus forests were torn up in universal de vastation, and the trees were piled in mammoth drifts and buried at such enor mous depths that the internal heat of the eartli converted them into coal. Nor was that all. Then followed other seismic convulsions, lifting the coal beds toward the surface, and pushing up the mountains. And such was the config uration of the ranges that often coal and lime and ferruginous ore, all necessary for the produc ion of the best metallic iron, were thrown in juxtaposition; gold and silver and cinnabar, holding mercury for the separation of the precious mctals.were neighbors made; all minerals land fossils, 1 for the use of mau, were placed within his xio Nerve Food will give you solid and durable strength. Hail Mule of Tlilinrs. It has already been so cold in Dakota that a man couldn’t go buggy-riding with a widow and keep liis arm around her fif teen minutes without getting his fingers frost-bitten. Fight months of the year is dead against Dakota women, and that is wiiy no many single women return east. Sore Mon' y for Vnur Work If you improve good opportunities, Hal- lett it Go., Portland, Maine, will mail free full information showing how you can matte from to $26 and upwards a day and live at home wherever you are located. Better write ; some have made over $50 in a day; all new. No capital required; started free. Both sexes; all ages. Suc cess for every worker. Send address and see for yourself. oe2(i dflm OOMPA1TY, Columbus, Georgia. FOUNDERS AND MACHINISTS, -DEALERS IN- Lime, Shingles, Dressed and Matched Ceiling and Flooring and other Lumber, Specialty made of Dress ing Lumber for other parties. -AGENTS FOR II until . Gill “There are two maxims,” said the vend er to the grocer, “‘Honesty is the best policy,’ and ‘Integrity is the keynote to success.’ You can take your choice for twenty-live cents.” "Well,” responded the grocer after thoughtful contemplation, “l guess i'll take tile one about hone ty and see how it works. I’m a little afraid,” he added, “that the ‘Integrity is the keynote to suc cess’ motto would look too dudish.”—New York Sun. •■Itlfi till ON I! V I S" Clears out rats, mice, roaches, flies, ants, bed bugs, beetles, insects, skunks, jack rabbits, sparrows, gophers. 16c. At drug gists. “HOUGH ON COHNS.” Ask for Weils’ “Rough on Corns.” Quick relief, complete cure. Corns, warts, bullions. 15e. ••ItOKill ON ITCII." “Rough on Itch” cures skin humors, eruptions, ring worm, tetter, salt rheum, frosted feet, chilblains, itch, ivy poison, barber's itch. 60c jars. “HOCtilt ON catarrh" Corrects offensive odors nt once. Com plete cure of worst chronic cases; also ttti- cqunled as gargle for diphtheria, sore throat, foul breath. 50c. il&vvtf tin' llenthm Flmnw. “Why ilo we always wear wedding and engagement rings on the fourth finger?” she asked as they were about to leave the jeweler’s shop. “The reason is,’’said the smiling jeweler, “that in olden times a nerve was popu larly supposed to run from the fourth fin ger to the hhart. It used to bo called the healing finger, and physicians invariably used it when they mixed their medicines.” —London Times. YffifmaCordial CURE 0 DYSPEPSIA, INDIGESTION, WEAKNESS, CHILLS AND FEVERS, MALARIA, LIVER COMPLAINT, KIDNEY TROUBLES, NEURALGIA AND RHEUMATISM. 1 T gives NEW Royal Pumps, Judson Governors, Eberman Feeders, Standard Injectors, Hancock Inspirators and BROWN COTTON GINS MANUFACTURERS OF Stratton’s Improved Absorption Ice Machines, Saw Mills. Pumps, Hollow Ware, Syrup Kettles, fill ENGINES, CANE HILLS, POWER COIN PRESSES, GOLDE1T OOTTOIsT IPIRzIESSIES , AND The Improved Calender Rollers. JT is Invigorat ing and De lightful to take, and of great value as a Medicine for weak and Ailing Women end Chil dren. 0| if ! tea* MaaamA/ / ’OWTA1N3 V ~ v ' no hurtful Minerals, is co.v.- posed of care full / Selected VcgCt 31- LIFE to the whole SYSTEM by Strengthening the Muscles, Ton- * _ the NERVES, ! and complctelyDi- gesting the food. M^dicVnea", gCV- ibincd skill- gj. F<»r rule by nil Druggist* yon nut Keep > Ol.l N \ I Ol VulUv Will be went, cliutgen rrm LIU A Book, ‘Volina,’ by 1 e a d i n g physicians,telling | how to treat dis eases at HOME, mailed, together with a set of hand- Heliotype process, on receipt of 10 c. ra. Should tho denier iie ir milt $1.01), «ud n lull 6l4j Volina Drug and Chemical Company, BaltnoUR. j»n. r. s. a. (Copal) Chicago. Apu.u .. . This is to certify, that the Illinois Trutt ..tv Savings Brink has this day received from tli v Union Cigar Company of Chicago, to be held as a Special Deposit, | U. S. 4 °lo Coupon Bonds, «s follows: ' No. 22029 D. (5500. s Market Value of which is “ 41*204 100. I “ 41205 100. I $8012. •• 68870 IDO, f *soo. J (S.) yas. S. Gibbs, Cash. We offer the above as a FORFEIT, if our “FANCY GROCER” due* not prove to be a genuine Havana-fltler Cigar. -Union Cigar Co Tlie above cut. represents the Improved Calender Rollers, so much admired and extensively used by Cotton Manufac turers of the present day. They consist principally of five Rollers, six inches in diameter. 40 inches long: two of them hollow, being a receptacle for steam. They are furnished \vi 1 it all necessary pipe and valves, lifted up ready to be at tached io a Boiler; has all the latest improvements on same, including the Selvage Rollers ane Cloth Yard Folder ; a taut and loose Pulley, 20 inches in diameter, 4 inches face, all ready to be connected to a line of Shafting. It only requires a (rial to demonstrate their indispensihilily. ie-20 wcd.se&wflm ESTABLISHED 1866. G.GUNBY JORDAN Fire Insurance Agent, Pioneer Building, Front Street. Telephone No. 104. REPRESENTING AMERICAN FIRE INSURANCE CO., of Philadelphia. Honestly paid every loss since 18to. NIAGARA FIRE INSURANCE CO., of New York. Every policy issued under New York Safety Fund law. SUN FIRE OFFICE, of London. Established 1710. Always successful. Policies issued on all classes of insurable property. Representative Companies. Courteous Treatment. Fair Adjustments. Prompt- Payments, A share of your business solicited. CIGAR Our LA LOXA 10c. Cigar is strictly Hand made. Elegant quality. Superior workmanhip. Sold by all Grocers. UNION CIGAR COMPANY, 76 N. Clinton St., • CHICAGO. Retail by C D. HUNT, Columbus, Ga, ■Bie-24 dly ■ recceive free a costly "box oi goods which will help all, of either sex, to make more money right away ths a anything else i this world. Fortunes await the workers abso lutely sure. Terms mailed free. Tbue & Co. Aueusta. Maine- EMPIRE STABLES. Successors to JOHN I)ISBROW J- CO. Sale, Feed and Livery Stables, East Side of First Ave., between 12th and 13th Sts. New anti Nobby Turnouts, Safe and Sliowy Horses. Careful and Experienced Drivers. FUNERALS personally conducted and properly attended to. The finest Hearses in the citv. AFTF,R SEPTEMBER 1st, Horses boarded and cnretully cared for at $16 per month. Ample accommodations for LIVE STOCK. Headquarters for dealers. Ajf-Telcpboue No. St. oc . l dly COMMISSIONERS’ SALE —FOR PARTITION— Valuable City Property. G eorgia—muscogee county: un<w and by virt ue of au order from the Him,..:..: ers. appointed by said Cuuri, will sell in front of the Court Bouse of said county, in the city of Co. luuibus. on the first Tuesday in December next between the legal hours of sale, at public outcrv' to the highest bidder the following described city l-roperty, alt lying in the city of Columbus county of Musr ogee, State of Georgia, to wit- * The ground, with the improvements thereon formerly known as the McKee Carriage Renositni ry and Shops, now occupied by John Dlsbrow & t o. ns a l.H'cry stab'e. being, known and distin- Bundled in the plan qt suid city us lot number "20 bounded on tie 1 ortli by lot formerly owned by Garland B. Terry, on the soutt by tot formerly owned hv Jones, McDougub and Cleghorn, on the east by lot number 225. and on the west bv First avenue tlormerly Oglethorpe street), on which said first avenue said property fronts hav ing a front of mnety-mue (99) feet, more or less and runs back with a depth of one hundred and forty-seven teet and ten mein s (1-17 feel to inchest more or less. '■ .Also, the following lots and parts of tots in said city of Columbus, to-wit: u All of. ity lots numbers 625 und 626, contalnign v ol aii acre each, more or less: also, the north parts ol city lots numbers 623 and 524, Faid parte being of the breadth of forty-nine feet three and one-third Inches (.40 feet 3S inches) each, running through both of sate lots the same width from Forsyth to McIntosh streets, being the north thirds of said lots numbers 623 and 624, the whole ol the aforesaid property beingthe same pronertv which was owned b> tlie late James M. ftuinliv in his life time. The four lots last described lie in a contiguous body and are uuimproved. For the purposes of this sale the four unim proved lots and parts of lots.last above described have been sut divider into eight equal lots, cone mencingon Fifteenth str: ct i formerly Lee street: and numbered as follows, to-wit: 1.2. 3 4 5 6 7* . each of said lots being of a breadth of 49 'feet ■1 inches, and running hack with a depth of 147 feet 10Inches. I.ots numbers 1, 3, 6 amt 7 in the above subdivision are situated on tlie east side of Fourlli avenue (formerly Forsyth st ect), each lot fronting on said Fourth avenue forty nine feet three amt one third inches (40 feet ,r , inches) and running buck east 147 feet 10inches. Lots numbers 2,4,6 and 8 in said uibdivision are situated m the west side of Fifth avenue I formerly McIntosh street), each of said lots fronting on said Fifth avenue 49 feet 3'-, inches and running back w est 147 feet 10 inches. Tei ms—Cash 011 day of sate. Possession given on payment of purchase money. D. A. ANDREWS, TOLY. CRAWFORD, JAS. Q. MOON, nov2 dim Commissioners. J.C.REEDY, Real Estate Agent, NO. 22. NEXT DOOR TO POST OFFICE, COLl’M. HCS, G A. FOB SALE. $1450. l 4 acre lot, five room House, al 1 complete, on upper Second avenue. 650 One vacant lot on 4th avenue, between 8th and 9th streets. 22 0. hi acre lot. six room house and other homes, all new, on lower Broad. 2750. 5 room house, two servant houses. 250 One vacant lot fronting park. 1800. 1 1 acre ot, 6 room house and store house •150. ‘-i acre lot on 3d avenue, between 5th and 6th streets. 3000 Small farm two miles east of city. 1000 10 acres land. 5 room house. 3 miles east of city. 1200 20 acres land, 6 room house, good fence, two miles noi th of city. I have, also, other cit> property, which I will show you, and several small farms in Geo gia and Alabama. Cal and see me before you make any arrangements, us I mean business. J". G. BEBDT, Real Estate Arrent, No.22 12th St dtf PLANTATION FOR SALE. I OFFER my plantation in Crenshaw county for sale, containing 520 acres, with 250 acres under good fence. Good frame dwelling house with seven rooms, new framed kitchen adjoining, and good servants’ house in the yard; also plenty of good tenants’ houses and all necessary outbuild ings. My place is situated two miles south of New Providence, on Conecuh river, also on the line of the Montgomery and Florida railroad which is being vapidly built. Convenient to three churches, Primitive Baptist, Missionary Baptist and Methodist. A good school conve nient all the time. There are thiee good wells of wat« r and several good springs on tlie plantation, good cattle and hog range, and facilities for hunting and fishing good. I will sell cheaper than any one and give thiee payments, one-third cash, one-third in twelve months and one-third in two years with 8 per cent interest on last pay ment. My reason for wishing to sell is on account of being too old to attend to a farm of th s size. W. P. MOUNT. New Providence, Ala., Oct. 15, 1886. oct24se4t REAL ESTATE FOR SALE, A new six room house and '<» acre lot on lower Broad street. A six 100m residence on 4th avenue. he size of the 1* t is' i of an ane; next door sout hof girls’ public school. A two story six room house on 10th street; rents lor $20 per month. acre lot '• ith new five room residence on Rose Hill. Half acre vacant lot cor. 1st avenue and 5th street. Corner lot. 74 feet front, with desirable res idence, centrally located, on 3d avenue. Four thiee-room Houses in Northern Liberties-rent for Sin per month. Will sell one or all on installment plan. A very desirable residence and 150 acres of land in Wynn ton. 250. A vacant lot on lower Second avenue. 225. A vacant lot near Slade's school. 1600. Key of Rose Hill, good Store and Dwelling House. Apply to W. S. GREEN,. Real Estate Agt. eodtf CHEW $2250. 3209. 1500. $1700. noon. 2500. 1000. 3500. RUDOLPH FINZER’S STARLIGHT CAPITAL PRIZE r\ XV { At Wholesale* by LOUIS BfJHLER & Co, OOLTTIMI-BTJS, GKA~ Je5 eodflm k ‘a. :>0O F1N*- BUILDING LOT» Payable $10 a Month. / \UARTRR-ACRE LOT in Northern Liberties, on extension cf Third avenue. Good settle- se Wi d fri tf