THE DAILY EVENING TELEGIUrn. PHILADELPHIA, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 18GG. THE NEW YOBK PRESS. Editorial Opinion of the Leading l Journals Upon the Most Import-. ant Topics of the Hour. OOMFILKD EVERY DAT FOB KVKNIICO TltEORiflt. Practical Legislation The Dankrnptcr Kill. From the Timet. A certain amount of optimum Is as essential In politics as in the common ethics of everyday life. The evils' and annoyances of the present hour are Incidental and transitory; the goo J we hope for, though unseen and undefined, is sure, and will bo enduring. Prolonged debate3 about reconduction , and he seemingly Interminable manufacture of con stitutional amendments, may therefore be sub mitted to patiently, if not with indifference. After theorizing will come practice. Beyond a fathomless ocean of words lies a solid land of work. The era of discussion ended, we may confidently expect a rolgn of action, and the adjustment of matters into which partisanship does not properly enter. The revision of the revenue system cannot b3 long delayed, now thutthe report of the special commission has been presented to Congress The careful consideration and rearrangement o our flrcal burdens is a task to which the states manship of either House will not be more tha equal. It is a labor to be performed conour rently with the adoption of judicious Gnancla measures, which will be hindered or helped by the manner of its performance. When this legislation shall have been accom plished, another question closely alfectin? the interests of trade and the well-being ot the country will challenge attention. Scattered through the commercial world are snags and wrecks which should be cleared -away, if we would give to our people fair play in the arduous career that is before them. Acknowledging the necessity of so arranging internal taxes that labor and capital shall have the freest possible cope. let it not be forgotten that both continue to sutler from the consequences of former tinan cial disasters. There are tens of thousands ot honest men whose energies are crippled and whose u.-etulneps is impaired by a legal inability to pscape from the results of byerone misfortune. Whether thene enibarransmenta have proceeded from businens inaptitude or a want of fair busi ness strength, or Irom the crash which shook the land in 1867, and azuin in 18G0. is really of minor importance. The great fact, is indisputa ble. And the only metbod of averting the em barrassment it produces, and destroying the evil of which it is the cause, is the enactment of a judicious bankruptcy law. The business community of this countrv are not generally chargeable wiih short-sighted sel tishnesii. They discern their true interest with more readiness than mont people, and their keenness is usually tinged with an honorable liberality!' ' The maiortty ot them are rarely un willing to make due allowance for misfortune, aii(l'arraiiee with their debtors on a basis of mutual sacrifice. To this general feature may in some degree be attributed the elasticity which is associated with the prevalent idea of the Ame rican business character. Down to-day,' the American is resolved to be up to-morrow. A tum ble does not impress him a otherwise than tem porary. He sees in misfortune an incentive to renewed exertion; in difficulty, a motive to bolder effort and more ambitious aim. Hence, commercial panics and crises are less terrible to us than to any other people under the sun. We emerge from them with a spirit unimpaired, with hof e undimmed, and with a faculty for adapting ourselves to circumstances, which Is one of the secrets of our marvellous progress and prosperity. But the breed of Shvlock has multiplied in the land, and now thwarts the liberal purposes of the business maionty. An unfortunate trader who proposes honestly to settle with his credit ors by giving up all he has, and as us in retirn exoneration from further liability, too often finds his plan frustrated by the greed and obiti nucv of come individual, who resists compromise under an expectation of thereby securing his full claim. There are merchants to whom this course is a settled nile of trade. They never release a debtor except on his payment of every dollar in full. The willingncs of other creditors to accept a part in full settlement of the whole has no influence upon them. They stand upon the bond and demand the pound of flesh. Wbat the effect may be upon the condition and future of the debtor is of no concern to them. Whether their obduracy operate as a perpetual impedi ment to his resumption of business, in their judgment matters not. They will keep the screw upon him continually, although the effect be to ruin hint utterly, and render his business salvation virtually impossible. How this state of tbincrs operates every man knows. There is hardly one among us who cannot place his finger upon cases which illus trate the mischief and cruelty occasioned by the inability of bankrupt traders to escape from a long-borne load of misfortune. On all sides business persons may be seen whose integrity is untarnished, whose qualifications are excellent, and whose willingness to work none can gain say, but who are nevertheless debarred from the use of their opportunities by the constant pres sure of an old Indebtedness. What follows? In too many cases an evasion of legal liability most 'detrimental to commercial morals. Shylock is circumvented, and trickery becomes a part of trade. Business is carried on under false but specious pretexts. They who cannot buy and sell under their own names, do both under the names of others. lroperty which rightfully belongs to creditors is transferred to relatives. Thus the moral force ot business obligations is weakened, the standard of business integrity is impaired, and a blow is inflicted upon the con fidence which should subsist between man and man. And for much of this mischief Bnylock is unquestionably responsible. The insufficiency of State legislation is not less obvious. To the extent that it is operative, it is of course useful: but being limited in Its application, and lacking in uniformity, it is not suited to the wants ol the time. Only the action of Congress can dispose of an evil which is of national magnitude, and provide means of reiiet which snail oe national in tneir operation The constitutional right of Congress to legis late on the subject may be taken tor granted The sturdiest stickler for "strict constitution" will find it difficult to persuade the country that a power which has already at different times been exercised, and which the Supreme Court has pronounced constitutional, should now be regulated by any other consideration than expe diency. And the expediency ot a bankruptcy law appears to us as evident as that of a law re- guluti.ig the national currency,or determining ''the obligation of contracts" upon citizens of the several states, instead ot treating it as exceptional, and limited in its duration to a spe clal set of circumstances, we would have It per maneut and universal as commerce itself. It can hardly be more necessary at all times to provide for the enforcement of contracts than to provide for the adjustment of the relations of debtor ana creditor, irrespective of the peculiar cause of disaster which at this moment render It ot urgent importance. Abuses were wrought under former bank ruptcylaws. At one time the debtor enloyei uuiair aavauiageg; at another the creditor, What then These are reasons, not against a new law, but tor so carefully considering its , . .. 1 .i r, V, . . J - attained. For anything like a general whitewashing law there can be no excuse. Indeed, the most sincere advocates ot a pankruplry bill are they who would most stringently provide for the Srevention and punishment of fraud. They esire legislation, not to ratify the title uf knaves to plunder, nor to shield knaves from the consequence of their misdoing, but on one hand to assist the honext unfortunate to regain commercial freedom, and on the other to aid the patient creditor in redeeming some portion oi uis loss. The Finances. . From the Tribune. s Congress has now been two months In session, yet no bill has yet boen reported looking to a resumption of specie pay menu, or to financial solvency in any way. Meantime, every influ ence Is brought to bear by tha speculators and Inflationists to prevent any earnest effort for rcsumption,and keep the currency as Inflated and rickety aa possible, bo that gamblers in the nccessarioslof Ufo may grow rich at the expense of honest labor. No eflort, no device is snared to defeat any attempt at resumption outright, or, if a Pill must be parsed, to load it with conditions that will render it inoperative. Thus clamor is raised agatnet allowing the "Secretary of" the Treasury to negotiate, a loan abroad, to sell stocks, under par,, to fund his short tune indeht edness otherwise than in a prescribed ordor, etc. etc., the oblect of all this being to prevrnt tlifi funding of Hit greenXmck at all. This last is the aim and obfect of all these dodrcs. Keep seven hundred million of greenbacks afloat, and high prices must rule; fund thc-m, and wo come down to hardpan Inevitably. We trust the people are looking on. White Labor at the South. From the Tribune. ' "Liberty," says a high authority, "Is liberty to work." That Is the sort we have mainly en joyed; and yet we cannot regard the definition as exhaustive. Liberty to ply occasionally say a day or two every ten years strikes us as not necessarily a bad thing; though, like all good things, it may be susceptible of abuse. We have a Freedroen's Bureau, which is very good in its way. Its main object la to get the recently emancipated blacks to work for wages at the earliest practicable moment, meantime preserving them from starvation; and in both aspects it has done nobly. It ts easy to say, "Let every one look out lor himself;' but wheu the neighboring possessors of property, power, and intelligence are nearly all hostile, how are the destitute and lgnoiant to get a start f The Chinese are a most ingenious, efficient, indus trious race; yet if lour millions of Chinese were to bo wrecked on our coast next week, we fear many of them would perish, though abundantly able and willing to work for a living. They would die before they could get a chance to live. Akin to tnis is the peril of the blacks; and we have no doubt that the Freedmen's Bureau has already saved many thousands of them tro Hpnth nr lflriv r thousands of them- from But who is dolne or devising anything for 'the Southern poor whitear Who tells them that "Liberty ii liberty to work ?" Notoriously, tbey ore vcrv needy; undeniably, they are less haoit uated to labor than the blacks. Formerly, they contrived to pick up a few dollars now and tnen by hunting a runaway slave lor this or tbat Elanter, or by selliuer whisky clandestinely to is negroes and getting paid i n stolen meal or bacon. Mean ways these; yet they eked out tire meagre subsistence of many a poor white. The old false pretense that whites can't work at the South is now discarded nobodv affects to doubt that they can work there at least as ellcctively as the blacks. Germany and Ireland are entreated to send laborers to the South; even Coolies from the East Indies have been talked of; but there seems to be no sort of re- Itanco on the labor of Southern whites. "Will be negroes contract V "Will the negroes work ?" were asked till the Questions became too Dalna- bly absurd: but no out, has a iked whether the whites would work.. It has been quietly taken for granted that they would not. We non-concur in this assumption. , . Why not give them a fair trial? There must behalf a million men and boys, say between sixteen and sixty, in the ex-slave States who can only live honestly by manual labor. Tbey need food, clothes, and nearly every comtort ot mo. They own no land; tbey have no skill in lawyer- era It or other head worn ; they are oo Droud to beg, and must work or steal. Yen few of them are at woik this day; not many expect to work: steady through the ensuing genial season. Were seven-eighths ot them set to wofk alvanta-. geously, they count not lau to add at least one hundred and fifty millions per annum to the wealth of our country equal to the burden ot our national debt. How long shall this mine of wealth remain unproductive? We pray the statesmen and thinkers ot the South to look to it. It is not possible to go back; we must go forward. The poor whites are the strength and glory ot their country. It tbey work, the South must rapidly increase in wealth and comtort; if they remain idle, the South must remain impoverished, ignorant, ira- Eotent. And now is the time when old things ave forever passed away to imbue them with wholesome conceptions of the nobility of labor aud the manliness ot living by your own honest and useful exertion. We hop? soon to hear that thousands of cotton and other manufactories ara springing up beside Southern rlveis and among the gleni ot South ern mountains the cheap food, ready cotton, infinite water-power, and abundant children of the Southern hill country rendering that a most favorable region for manufactures. But the im mediate want of labor iu agriculture cannot be supplied by blacks alone. We shall not grow halt the cotton and food that should be grown this year unless whites are extensively employed inerein. And why should they not be? If any planter finds negroes scarce or indolent, let him resolve to do without them and employ whites instead. We are confident that tens ot 'thousands would gladly hire out to work by the month for la' r wages and good treatment generally. They would probably refuse to work with blacks; and there Is no need that they should. Let those planters who are tired of negro labor, or cannot rely on it, give wnue laDor a iair mai. L,ei tnem advertise that they want it that tney will have no other and they will be surprised at, its abun dance and efficiency. And he who gives white labor a fair cbunce and lair wages soon rind it as eut-lly at the South as at the North. Idaho. From the World. The message of Governor Lyon to the Legisla ture of Idaho contains some point" of interest to Eastern people. During the past year it seeing over seventeen millions dollars' worth of gold and t ilver has been produced in that Territory, and the yield is rapidly increasing. The follow ing paragraphs from the message read like an extract from the "Arabian Nighta:" AbuU's-eve view of the accumulating discoveries in our minora! resources reveal that we have no Urns than throe thousand gold and silver-bearing quartz ledges, graded in their value as in their rich ness, anu new uiscoTenea ana new loo&uous ara being made almost daily. The width of these lodes, or leads, vanes from three to thirty luet, and they prospect from twenty to five hundred dollars per ton. Located usually where water-power and tim ber are in abundance, they onor the higueat induce ments to the enterprising capitalist, whose invest ment csn rarely tail of being ot tha most remunera tive character. . Among the other useful ores which have boon dis covered withn tbe last year, tin, cinnabar, copper, load, and iron in many forms, are of the first va'u ; yet- plutlua, antimony, mcket, bismuth, indium, and ibodiuin. simple, or compounded with otuer minerals, are found in various looa'itiesi but this ia not all : beds oi the best oi eoal, both anthracite aud bituminous, with rock salt, sulphur, and gypsum (belter known as the fertilizing plaster of com merce), while the most pr cfoua ot gems, the dia mond, has been discovered in our gulches, all give you a feeling foretaste of the admirable extent oi Idaho's varied mineral wealth whoa tha hand of man sbali have unbosomed her hidden treasures. The wide extent of our auriferous placers, only a nioietv of wbico have been veil prospected, check ered as thoy are by auriferous quartz lodes and leads, are rivalled only bv argentiferous mountain ltdpos, striated, laminated, and loliated with silver in chlorides sulpburots arsenical, autimoutal, and ii gin. This presents a fabulous array of marvellous deposits, which will require the indu.try ot axes to aevelop aud exhaust. In view of these facts and of the increasing E reduction of the precious metals, Governor ,yon thinks that Congress ought to give them a mint and assay otlice iu the Territory. Several will be needed if the above statements are orrect. Theflovernor also call the attention of the legislature to another important matter tha necessity for a railroad! from Bait Lake to tna Columbia liver.) He says j AI.er a caieful tends otsonnrtlnn t low water, ft lias I eon .ound that the Bnakeor kbonhone uver can be made navigable at a nominal e.pcn.e, Irom O.a'i Fen? to t-sliuun tails, a distance ot two hundred and City ml in, thus making an important line in he ol am oi rai toad communication Irom the north nl .ot Gieat Halt Lake to Wailula v a .arud Hondo Va lev and Walla Walla, over the lowest pans in the 1 ne Mountain " With about one nnadred miles ol navicatlon on Great Salt Lake, we have less-man lour Hundred miles of rsi'road to build to r ndor a branch 1'aeillo Kullroad a success, whose entre ot will be Portland, and It turm mm u?eat Salt Lake ciIt-1 Tim route la dome fire hundred miles nearer China and Japan than tile trunk route through Nevada and California and by v our endorsement of tl.e state ot lacts id a propei war, bv memorial, it cannot fail to attract farorab T the attention oi Con nies', that we may liare the, same' chartered rights and Government bounty to induce its construction that has been riven to othi-r measures af a aimilar cbnrac'er. 1 bus ibe Columbia river, the natural avenne ol eommeres. wouln attract the trade of the orient as we'l as the Occident, and form the last grand link in thin truly not orial highway. Oregon, as well as the Territories of inontaua and Washing ton, will be largely the gainers by its progress and completion. This road will be a necessity some lime not far in the future, but the Pacific roads now under way aie first ia order. The New Revenue rian W hisky and Sugar From the lit raid. While the general features of the recommenda tions in the report of the Revenue Commission are quite acceptable, there is one point which wo think is open to some objection. For in stance, the Commissioners propose to reduce the tax on distilled spirits from two dollars a gallon to one dollar, while they Increase the tax on sugar half a cent a pound. Whisky is an article which the people can live without, but sugar is an indispensable commodity. Of all taxable articles which come within the category of luxu ries, whisky is perhaps the ono which should be mado to bear the heaviest taxation, not merely in a commercial, but in a moial point ot view. It is probable that the Commissioners have arrived at the conclusion that a larger revenue can be derived from this article by imposing a lighter tax upon it, inas much as theie will be less temptation to fraud: and they certainly have a pretty good basis lor the idea in the fact that the largest frauds committed upon the Government in the whole scale of internal revenue operations hitherto have been in the manulacture of whisky. The article can be produced at aVory low figure bv the manufacturers, and the increase in its value by the addition of a tax of two dollars a gal lon leaves a tempting margin ot prolit tor the dis honest manu'acturer. Several seizures of whisky have been made, to the amount, in some cases, we believe, of over a million of dollar. This, of course, bos been confiscated, and sold at auction, and bought up at greatly reduced rates, often by the original owner. In this way frauds have been committed with comparatively little lobs to the petpetratorc. it may he that the Com missioners looked at the matter in this light when they recommended a reduction in the duty. However, we dare say that th" whisky clause will be made the subject of extensive lobbing beiore the bdl gets through Congress, and we hardly expect to see it come out in its present shape. There win, aouotiess, be conflicting in terests brought to bear upon it. Those who hold or have contracted tor large stocks of whisky will manipulate to retain the present duty, and those who want to buy will advocate the reduction. It t) said that when the present Internal revenue law was before Congress, and the tax ot two dollars a gallon was imposed on whisky, several largo holders of the article formed a leugue to get the clause inserted exempting irom duty the stock on hand. For this purpose they raised a fund of a million dol lars, which was so cflictently used in Washinsr- ton that the clause was got Into the bill, and the adroit confederates made some live or six mil lions by the operation, realizing a clear profit of some eignty aouurs a narrei upon tue several thousand barrels which they had in store, and which they bought up with the security that their investment In Washington would result precisely as it did. The proposition to reduce the tax on whisky, fhoTplore. mav bo eneeted to lend to sundrv jobs and speculations beiore the bill goes through Congress. FLAGS, FIREWORKS, &o. J. M c O U I G A N, Importer and Wholesale Dealer in FA3CY GOODS, K0TI0B8, ETC, FIREWORKS, FLAGS. Etc MATCHES AND BLACKING, NO. Q STKAWltEHHY STRF.ET, First Street above t-ecoud between Murketand Chesnut 81 Philadelphia (HEAP-ONLY TEN CENTS FOR ONE OF J. B. CAPE WELL & CO.'i CELEBRATED WISD-GUAED AND AIR-HEATERS FOR COAL OIL LAMPS, " Patented October 25. 1869. Ci PEW ELL S CO.'d Wind Guard and Alr-Ueater for Oil Law ia. Use the Patent 'Wind-Guard and Air-Heater for Oil Lamps. Tkm Cijits onlv Fob CaPEWELL CO '8 Patent Wind-Guard and Air beater lor Oil Lumpi. It you wan: to save oil. use tha Patent Wind Guard and Air Beater, lor Oil Lamp". Ureat Having in Glasa Chimney. Tee CAPEWELL A C'O.'B Patent W ind Guard and Air-Heater, as it keeps them Irom breaking t APEWtLL &. CO.'S ratent Wind-Guard and Air Heater laves one-third more oil than any otber lamp. Trv one they Coat but ten cents. Great inducement offuied to agents. bold wboltaale inly by . . 3. B. CAPSWELL A CO.. Flint Glass Manufacturer!). Wrotvllle. N. J. Office, nortbwest corner ol bECOSD and BALE StreeU, Philadelphia. CAP SWELL'S PATENT WIND-GUARD AND AIR HEATER FOR COAL OIL LAMPS Sent to any part of the United States, post paid, on Ihe receiptor 'iwtntv Ave ceiits. Ibey une one-third lens oil tban any other Lams now In use. 'I hev prevent the lass irom tireaalna or Ihe lamp Irom smoking. J. B. CAPEWEuL t CO. . Patentees, 122 lm tio. 'HI MACE street Phliad'a, TO HOUSEKEETE II S. I have a large stock of every variety of Furniture which I will sell at reduced prices, consisting of PLAIN ASD MARBLE TOP COTTAGE HTJITB WALNUT CHAMBER SUlTd. PARLOK SUIT8 IN VtLVET PLUSH. PARLOR 8PIT8 IN HA1B CLOTH. PARLOR BU1TS IN REPS. Kldeboarda, Extension Tables, Wardrobes, Book-cases, llattiesses. Lounges, Etc Jttc. P. P. GUSTINE, 1 it 3m' N. F. Cor. SECOND AND RACE BT8. MONUMENTS, TOMBS, GRAVE-STONES, Etc. Just completed, a beantiiol variety ot ITALIAN MARBLE MONUMENTS, TOMBS, AND Q B AYE-STOKES. Will be sold eheap for cash. Work sent to any part of the United States. UENRY H. TARR, MARBLE WORKS, 1 24wrm Ho. 710 GREEK Street, Philadelphia. "ORIDESBURO MACHINE WORKS, JL urriuE BO. 64 N. FBOMT STREET, ralLADKLFHlA. We are prepared to nil orders ta any extent for em wen mown MACHINERY FOR COTTON AJTD WOOLLEV MILLS. Including all recent improvement In earning. Bpluning. and Weavlna. We invite the attention of manufacturers to our eztea alve works I I ALFRED JENKS BON. KJEW MUSIC STORE. WILLIAM II XI BOKKR CO.. Xo. 1102 CHESNUT fttieet. Dealers In American and Foreign Music ; Piano, Melo ii (.iiK.aiKi MiiHical liibtruineniaoi a i kiiiiM) auo. a supe rior quaui) oi BUlugs cousiauuy on uauu it i dm LADIES' FANCY FURS. LADIES' FANCY FURS. J OUH FAREIRA, No. 718 ARCH STREET, ," i ABOVE SEVENTH STREET At his old-established store, 1MP0BTER, MANUFACTURER, AND : DEALER jy FANG Y FURS FOR LADIES AND CIHLDllEN. My assortment of Fancy Fura for Ladios and C hil ar en ta now complete, embracing every variety tha will be worn during the coming season. Remember the name and number. JOHN FAREIRA, No. 718 ABCH feTEEET, above Seventk. I bave no partner or connection with any other t tore in thia city. lOiUmip FINANCIAL. R E 1I O Ar A. L TO NEW OFFICE. On MONDAY, 8th lnnt. , we ohall remove from our temporary Office, ho. 309 CHESNUT Street, to oar old .ocatlon, No. 114 S. THIRD STREET, With greatly enlarged facilities lor the PURCHASE AND SAL.K OP GOVERNMENT AND OTHER SESURITIES, And the transaction of a general Banking business. JAY C00KE & CO. Philadelphia, January 1, 1866. 1 1 lm POPARTNERSIIIP NOTICE. FROM THIS date, HENRY D. COOKE, HARRIS C. FAHNE HOCK. PITT COOKE, JOHN W. SEXTON, and GKORliE C. THOMAS ara partners with us In the Fum of JAY COOKE & CO., Philadelphia. JAY COOKE, WM. O. UOORHEAD. Philadelphia, January I, I860. ldlm XT. S. SECURITIES. A SPECIALTY. SMITH, RANDOLPH & CO., BANKERS & BROKERS, 16 S. THIRD ST. PHILADELPHIA. 3 NASSAU ST. NEW YORK. STOCKS AND GOLD BOUGHT AND SOLD ON COMMISSION. IKIEBEST ALLOWED ON DEPOSITS. 1 2 TJAVIES BROTHERS, No. 225 DOCK STREET, BANKERS AND BROKERS, BUT AMP SELL UNITED STATES BOSDS, 1881i, IWiOs, 10 40s TJMTED STATES 1 S-lOs, ALL ISSUES. CERTIFICATES OF INDEBTEDNESS Mercantile Paper and Loans on Co laterals negotiated. Stocks Bought and Sold on Commission. I 31 ly JJARrEK, DURSBY & CO., BANKERS, STOCK AND EXCHANGE BROKERS, No. 55 S. THIRD STREET, FIIlTAIfELPtllA. Stock and Loans bousrht and sold on Commission L'ncunent HanK Notes, Coin, Etc., bought and sold Special attention raid to tbo purchase and sale oi Oil S'ocki. Deposita received, and interest allowed, as per agreement. 12 1 3m 5 20s 7'30s, WANTED. IDE HAVEN k BROTHER' No. tO 8. THIKD STKEET. l-T pATENT W 1 11 E W O II K, f OB RAILING, STORE FRONTS. UCARDS. PARTITIONS, ETC IRON BEDSTEADS AND WIRE WORK In variety, manufactured by M. WALKER fc SON, 1 18 lm No. 11 N. SIXTH 8TBEET w LEY B R O T II E R, IMPORTERS AND DEALERS IN HAVANA CIOAtt AND MK'RCII tUM PIPES, . H. W. Cor. EIUU1H auu viAL.mi i Biruu. We offer the finest Havana Cigars at prices from 30 to 30 per ef nt below the regular rales. Alao, the oelebiate'1 . . LONK JACK'1 SMOKING TOBACCO, wblch la far superior to any yat brought before the public. t otto of Lone Jack t "SEEK NO FURTHER, KOH iO BETTER CAN BE SOUND." 1 15 3m J C. PERKINS, LUMBER MERCHANT. Successor to R. Clark, Jr., No. 824 CHRISTIAN STREET. Constantly on band a large d railed aasortmen of Building lumber. . 6 M ly DEAFNESS, BLINDNESS, AND CATARRH. J. ISAACS, M. V., Profeaeor of the Eye and Ear treats all dt.ea.ea aipertalnlna to the above membeo with Ihe utmost suocru. TextlmonU. from tlieuio.l reliable sources In tin oil eau be aeeu at his office. No lllll'INE Htreet Tna Medloal Faculty are invited to accompany their palienta, as be has uo seorets In his lattice 10 WATCHES AND JEWELRY, DIAMOND DEALER A JEWEtElU wTmts,jwEi,iiTah!i.vrnwrii, il v T, A V uj nu. w aj n UMLrn JL aiifciji. , 802 Chflgtnut 3f...TV,'V.,- WATCHES AND CORAL GOODS. A targe Inrotce of Ladles' and Gents' Watches of the best makers and FINE CORAL SETS, To which the attention of those aboat purchasing Is In vited. Just received by LEWIS LADOMUS, DlAMOKD DaALRB AKD JaWBIXBB, li t Ko.' 801 CHESNUT STREET. RIGGS & BROTHER, Chronometer, Clock, and ' Watchmakers, No. 244 S. FRONT STREET, Have constantly on hand a complete assortment of Clocks, etc, for Railroads, Banks, and Counting Booms, which they offer at reasonable ratea. N. h. Particular attention paid to the repairing of fine Watches and Clocks. 1 6 lm PIIOICE HOLIDAY GOODS. Large and handsome aasortmont of COLD AND SILVER WATCHES DIAMONDS, JEWELRY, SILVER AND PLATED WARE CLOCKS, BRONZES, ElC. CLARK & BIDDLE, Successors to Ihomaa C. Garrett, 6 12 lyrp No. 712 CHESNUT STREET. WATCHES, JEWELRY, &o. MUSICAL BOXES. A full assortment ot above hand at modoiate prices tha 1 Irom 2 to 10 bcanufut A ira. roods constantly on lusical Boxes playing FAEE & BROTHER, Importers. No, 824 CHEtNUl' hTEEKT, 11 lltmthlrrp Below Fourth. II I C II JEWELRY. JOHN BRENNAN, DEALER nr DIAMONDS, TINE WATCHES, JEWELRY, Etc. Etc. Etc. 9 20 ly Ko. 18 8. EIGHTH 81 BEET. Philada. HENRY HARPER, No. 520 ARCH STRISKT Manufacturer and Dealer in Watches, fine Jewelry, Silver-Plated. Ware, AUO 8 801y Solid Silver-ware. SHIRTS. FURNISHING ROODS Aa ' J. W. SCOT T & C O., SHIHT MANUFACTURERS, AND DEALERS IN MEN S FURNISHING- GOODS, No. 814 Chesnut Street, FOUR DOORS BELOW THE "CONTINENTAL," 8 26 lyrp PHILADELPHIA. PATENT SHOULDER-SEAM SHIRT MANUFACTORY AND GENTLEMEN'S FURNISHING STORE. PERFECT FITTING SHIRTS AND DRAWERS made from measurement st very short notice. All otber articles ol GENTLEMEN'S DRL8S GOODS In full variety. WINCHESTKR & CO., 8 24 ly 70 CHESNUT STREET COAL. (OAL! C O JZ BEST QUALITIES OF COAL AT LOWEST MARKET RATES, AT ALTER'S COAL YARD, NINTH STKEET, EE LOW CIRARD AVENUE. BRANCH OFFICE CORSE OF SIXTH AND fi THING GARDEN bIBkETS. Ill J A M E S O ' B 11 I E N, DEALER, LS LEUIUH AND SCHUYLKILL COAL, BY IHE CARGO OR SINGLE TON. Yard, Broad Street, below Fitzwater. Has constantly on hand a competent supply ot tha abore superior Coal, suitable lor family use, to which he calls tha attention of hia Irion di and tha public aonertilly. Oidora lelt af no. 206 S. Fi'th street, No. 82 8 (Seventeenth atreet, or through Despatch or foat Office, promptly attended to A SLI'tlllUK QUALITY OF BLACKSMITHS COAL. 7 Sly WILLIAMS. G R'A N T, COMMISSION MERCHANT, s No. 13 6. DELAWARC Av.nue, Philadelphia, AoimrvoH Duprnt'a Gunpowder, Refined Mtr, Chareeal, Eto. W. llaker A Co 'a Chocolate, ('000., and tirvuia Crocker Uroa. & Co. 'a Yeilow Mtt'U Shealblng, Holts, and Nail. I'U FIRE AND BURGLAR PROOF SAFES, pll FIRE IN CHESNUT STREET tetter irom 7ells, Tarco & Co. 810,000 SAVED IN HERRING'S PATENT SAFE. rniLAOKLrm.. January 1, MbmrS rABRKL, IliBimo A Co. Gentlemen : w"e bare Just opened oorHafo, one of your manuiaetara, which passed through the destructive lire laChespat street last night. The Rale was in our office, No. aT. which building was entirely destroyed. The Bat was la a warm place, as you msrwell suppose, and was r4 hot wben taken ot of the embers. We are well satisfied with the result of tbl. tnal and find our books, papers, and some ten thousand dollars In money almost as fr feet aa when put In the Fafe. Kotblng is lojarad, U wa except tl e leather binding of the books, wbloh ar .teamed; the money and papers are as food as eTr. Truly yours, WELLS, FARGO & CO., Per J. II. COOK, Agent. Theabore Safe can be seen at our store. FARHEL, HEREINO & CO.,- II So. 62 CHE9MJT TBEET. gEVERE TBST OF MARVIN'S SAFE At Charleston Fire, October IS, 1885. "After rfmoTtne mr seC tone of Marvin A Co 'a Talent) from the ruins, wheie It bad lain lor fittt- Ti'BKB ftnars rrff'rf 10 m'rnie Ural. 1 'ound mr books in a prrito siaie 01 prenervation 1 rxprexs mydn lnt and tatlr sa (action with the result, and heartily ail vIm ali to purchase Marvin A Co.'s farm. (BlgDBd) "W. H. CHAFER. A full assortment of the above SAFES, the only pur- . fectlv dry, as well as thoroughly flre-proot ones tn the market, for sale by MARVIN CO., No. 721 CHESNUT STREET, (Masonio Uall), Phlla. No. 2C5 BROADWAY, N. Y. Dwelling House Hates, ornamental styles. Pates 01 other makes taken In exchange. Rend tor descriptive circular. I W lm A N O T H E R T H 8 T or IIF.BBINO'8 FIRK-PBCOr SAFES. THH FrEBT ORDEAL PASSED TRIUMPHABTLTf, The Herrlna Rale used In the office of oar warehouses. destroyed bv the dlsastious Are ol tha niabt of the Mtk Instant, was subjected to as intense heat as probably. any saie wui ever do UDecieu in any ore so inteoaa tbt the braa knobs and mountings of the exterior ot same were melted off. aid the wholo surface scaled and blistered as ll it bad been In a iarnaoe. and vet wheat onenrd the contentshooka and nature weia fonaa ta be entire and uninjnred 1 his fate is now on ezniDttton in onr ware Dae Seventh street, with the books and naDer. still remain ing In It Just aa It was wben taken from the ruins. Met chants. Bankets, and others Interested in the proteotiaar ot their book ana papers are invited to call aad)fc- amine It. J. P. HA 1 THOLOW, Agent-tor Herring s a es, 11 No KH PF.VENTH St. Washington. IX O. PERSONAL. iMREAT REDUCTION IN COFFER. AT WILSOK'S Tea Warehouse. No. 236 CHESNUT Street Jfl CENTS. ROASTED RIO COFFEE. AT ) t WILSON'S 'J ca Warehouse, No. V36 CUESNUT Street JK CENTS. BEST ROASTED RIO COFFEE, i)Q at WILSON'S, No. 836 CHEBNUT Street A( CENTS FINEST OLD JAVA, ROASTED, 4U at WILSON'S, No. 236 CMKBKUT Street 7f CENTS. 15LACK AND GREEN TEA SIFT- ' " ING8, In quantities not loss than one pound, at W1LBOM '8. GOOD DOLLAR TEA, BLACK AND GliEISN, at WILSON'S. No. 236 CBfcBNUT wtreet TEAS AND COFFEES AT WHOLESALE I prices, at WILSONS Tea Warehouse. No. 2J CUESMJT Street lSIm TEAS, &o. TEAS REDUCED TO $1, AT INGRAM'S JL Tea Warehouse. No. 41 8. SECOND Street "ROASTED COFFEE REDUCED TO 30 CTS, A at OBAM'S lea Warehouse, No. 43 8. SECOND Street. AfC. BEST MILD COFFER, AT ING RAWS iU Tea Warehouse, No. 43 8. SECOND Stroet. ' rTEAS AND COFFEES AT WHOLESALE Warehouse, No. 41 8. I .-inm Tvru aua ta SECOND Street.' Try them, iREEN COFFKE9 FROM 22 TO 28 CT3. A VJT pound, at INGRAM'S Tea Warehouse, No. 41 8. SEC 1 Street try thorn. 14 JAPANESE T E A. EXTRA FIN DU JAPON, THE FINEST EVER IMPORTED, Put up orlglnallv for the French Markot For sale by JAMKS E. WliBB, 1 13 lm WALNUT AND EIGHTH STREETS. ! MAN U FACTU RER, AND DEALER IN ghctatjraph Albums, BOOKS, BIBLES, PRAYERS, Uagazines, Novel., and all the Now Publications. CARD, MEDIUM, AND IMPERIAL PHOTOCRAPHS. Stereoscopes and Stereoscopic Views. Pictures of all Lis Ja Framfd to order. 808 CHESTNUT 8T. 808 pOWN A M A Q E E, MANUFACTURERS OP TRUNKS. VALISES' ( BAGS, RETICULES. And all atylea ol (roodi aaltabla for Travellers and Excursionists. A larjre stock of . UO&OCCO TRAVELLING BAG8 AND BKTICULK3, FOR GENTS AND LADIES, Ol our own Manufacture, suitable for HOLIDAY PRESENTS. 112fi ' Ko. 708 CHEbNUr STKKKr. I , , , : . THE STAMP AfiEN'CT, NO. 804 CHESNUT S I RKET, A HOVE THIRD, WILL BE COHTllXUED AM HEUK'IOFORM KTAWI'Sol EVERY DK8CRIPTTQN CONSTANTLY ON UAKD AKD IN AS Y AMOUNT. U II iii'i'' vjfj 808 CHESTNUT 8T. 808 M'a