V THE DAILY EVENING TELKfiKAl'IT PHILADELPHIA, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 12, 18C7. SPIRIT OF TIIE rilESS. editorial onnon or thi lkadwo journals pro amum topics compiled veb? PAT FOB THI SVKNIKO TEI.KOBAFH. Tli Public pebt and ilia Burden of Taxation. fVom the I?. T. Time: ih ntubllcsn party Las hitherto con- cernedW mainly with the political recon struction of the Southern States, and has given Lut little attention to other BUije;ts. To this canee very likely the reverses it has sustained In the late elections may be partly due. For, although the question is one of deep interest to the wholo country, there are others quite as important, and which come more closely liome to the business and bosoms of the great mass of the people. The taxation of the country is beginning to be a subject of the gravest importance, and of the deepest interest to all classes of the people. It comes home to everybody's hearthstone. It affects more directly and more seriously the daily comfort of every man, woman, and child in the land, than any and all political questions put together. Taxation now falls Tvitb, heavier weight upon us than upon auy Other people in the world. Our debt may not hd larger, but the rate of interest which it pays is greater, than in England, Franco, Austria, or any of the nations of Europe which We have hitherto regarded as crushed to the earth by the taxes Imposed upon the masses of their people. With a smaller population and less wealth than either of them, we have to sustain burdens and endure taxation quite equal to theirs. Our people are beginning to feel this bur den, and they will feel it more aud more every year. During the war and for the first year or two after Its close, while business in every department Still felt the stimulating effect o' it while commerce, manufactures, and agri culture were alike pushed to their utmost activity to supply the losses and repair the damages of the contest It was comparatively easy to pay the taxes, no matter how heavy they might fall. But that state of thi nirs has passed away. Industry is on the whole very greatly depressed. The demand for labor has not increased. Taxation has raised the price Of every article of consumption. Hunts, nut only in the great cities but everywhere e hh. are so enormously high that to live in comfort ana with a reasonable amount of space is, for : men in moderate circumstances and with fami lies, simply Impossible. The reaction, inevitable in all such caies against the abounding wealth and lavish luxury of a year ago, has set in with great eevemy, ana noi one man in ten now makes half the money he did two or three veara Bince. And while a few have been growing rich faster than ever, and the number of tho.se who are very poor has increased in a still greater ratio, the condition of the great body of those in the middle class neither very rich nor very poor has been, and still is, growing worse and worse day by day. The great mass of our poople not only are poorer, tut, what is still more important, they fid a ; great deal poorer this year tUau tUy did U-it. And the burduim of taxation tliim prow heavier, and the people bear them less easily and less willingly with every successive year. It will not do for any party to neglect or tamper with such an interest as this too long. It will force itself upon public attention in epite of parties; and it demands careful aud prudent, as well as prompt and effective treat ment. The quacks and demngogues of the day, who are naturally the first to seizu upon it, need not hope to satisfy the public with their nostrums, or to delude the people into adopting their dishonest and deguitliug Schemes. Neither Jiutler on the one hand, nor l'endleton on the other, will succeed in Winning public favor for their ingenious pro jects of repudiation. The people do not want to escape the payment of the debt, nor tlie taxation required to carry it along; they ouly - ask that its payment shall be made as e'isy as - possible, and that the taxation demanded to meet its interest shall be so adjusted a3 not to crush the industry and exhaust the resources Out of which alone it cau bo raised. It seems to be assumed by some that the Whole of the national debt must be paid by the generation which incurred it, and that we must not only pay the interest noTr, year by year, as it falls due, but pay also a tenth or a twentieth of tlxs puncipal, so that the next feneration may feel nothing of its burden, fothing could be more absurd in theory, or more disastrous in practice. Why should the ComiDg generations bo wholly relieved fYoru payment of the debt incurred in defense of the integrity of the Union the existence ot the nation ? Are they to share none of the ad van tages it has secured none of the bleiins it haB bought? Unless the legitimate resulw of . the war are thrown away by party ambition or political quackery, coming generations Will share in these blessings far more richly . than we can do. Tlie present generation gave generously of its blood, and took npon , Itself all the dreadful sulWings to families , neighborhoods, and States, which such a war Involves; is it too much to auk that those who are to come after them should pay at least part Of the debts incurred bo largely on their be half f In fctrict justice, those who fought the war should be released entirely from plying the debt which it cost. Exhausted as the country is by the tremendous struggle, checked and depressed for tlie moment as are all its industries and sources of wealth, they Should have time to recover and regain their Strength, before they are called u;?on to be ir thin additional and tremendous strain. It is all whk-h the present generation should bo re- meet i?VnUBtJliu the ('ernment, aud meet, as H falla due. i.,(.NlJt m. tCietht if , 11 V?" U ,,ono without n-I"S SS JSS.KViBS'SB Wl b' : XTC:ll& H-tive inore equitable Kt t.f11,r"rer' U the industries that ar or , t,x.at,out ani ,,,S experience of the worft 'w, U' T," Dense, shows that the iiumW o arti,! "'""'J Should be as small as possible; and ' VX,)'1 lion ehould affect as lightly Mo&la?,V earnings and the living of tL gffi ffiyLf the people, iax laws, moreover, when ,,ro Jerly framed, must he fairly enforced, ho th it 20 PDe branch of labor or of profit shall l!n0(r Its burden upon others. And while wi can hardly expoct that Congress, at its coming session, will find time or inclination for any very thorough and complete revision of the whole system of taxation, there are one or two things which it must do, or else incur ? the brand of complicity with the most 11 v grant wrongs, or of incapacity to deal with a notorious and flagrant evil. The .. y iax must be collected, and the law must he o amended aa to make its collection possible and ceitain. T,"J w,ong does not lie wholly in the fact that thu one clung of men escape taxation Hit Ja the further tw that otlier classes are ..jji.j t.i. t,. turpa wmcn tner of taxation wuion ui n"11"1; dealer escape" raying, laus upon .u-. encf ned in other branches or Industry, ine lililileUB or taxauou r ujih Luted; and men are taxed Just in proportion .. i i i. an tuey ara nunem, iuu ubhiiuuijt nu w Government. And what is true or the whisky tax is true, perhaps to a leRS extent, of the tax upon other products and other branches of industry. Those which ought to pay the most really pay the least. The liepublicau party will do well to give this subject prompt attention. It has control of Congress and is thus responsible for legis lation upon it. It is the subject upon which they will be most vehemently assailed the one upon which the Democrats are alreidy phoweiing their heaviest and most telling blows. It is a practical subject, and comes home most clofely to the interest and feelings of every man who has an opinion to utter or a vote to cast. It cannot he overborne by any clamor against Executive treachery, by de mands for impeachment or struggles to estab lish negro rights. It must not be put aside or ovei looked for any or for all of these. While action upon them should be effective and judicious, upon this it muiit bo prompt and prudent. The public burdens must be male as light as prssible not by repudiation nor nny other dishonest resort, but by economy in expenditure, a postponement in the payment of the debt, and an equitable distribution of the taxation which the necessities of the com. try demand. Cabinet-Making as a Flue Art. From the N. Y. Tribune. As the result of the late election, it is again announced that the President contemplates an entire change in his Cabinet. So far as the functions of a Cabinet are purely clerical and ministerial, consisting merely in carrying out in detail the will of the Executive, in putting the Czar's ukase into grammatical language, and clothing the despot's passion and rant with the forms of respectability, we do not see that any Cabinet Ministers could serve the President's purposes better than those now in office. It seems a pity to turn out such pliant premiers, not for a failure to serve a President whom they despise and a policy they disapprove, but from a failure to serve it zealously, and to believe in it enthusiasti cally. Even the worst of religious despots allow their devotees to believe what they choose, provided they profess and do what is required of them. The President should make some allowance for the early education and life-long antecedents and associations of most of the members of his Cabinet. It an official like Mr. Seward, whose entire previous reputation had been won in the ser vice of freedom, has proved himself willii! to endorse a policy which would have restored slavery in fact after it had been abolished in law, a temper so convenient should be held in high regard by a President who needs toold of that stamp, and may some day want more of them than he can hud. If men of clear intel lectual acumen, who cannot fail to seo the folly of a policy, will silently ignore it folly, and speak and vote for it us often as called 11 iitiu . yvI4, nr mmmk 4,l I1 rm ilank alc ? lint the l'retsident dooe want meu of a dilloiHiit stamp; men who do not see through hi3 crudi ties, und are capable of sincerely believing in his blunders. A hypocritical delerence to stu pidity does not natibfy him; he must have stu pidily itself. We hope tlie change, if any, vi)L be square, flat-footed, and thorough. The abilities and seini-republicanism of his present Cabinet have sheltered the President from contempt long enough. Unless they stand combined with a firmness that will bravely cppotiu his errois, their accomplishments be come merely the sugar-coating to his fatal aud mischievous errors. Let him surround himpclf by men of his own trade if he would utterly unmask his own character and purpoHos. Let no states men, no patiiot.no sober man come iuto his ntw Cabinet. Lut him eschew tlie negative quantities, lllair, Reveidy Johnson, Cowan, Loolittle, Steedman, and the like. These men would say and do no more for Johusonism than his present Cabinet. What thu President wants to enable him to resist Congress and the laws are practical revolutionists ; Cabinet officers who will give opinions iu favor of turn ing out Congress ; a War Minister who will locate and order the troops to that end; a Sucre tary i the Treasury who w ill use the liuaucial ower in his hands to deleat the law-making power; a Secretary of State who will sign any required proclamation. Ftr these purposes ho ciin trust no reiiegaue Ivepnblicans Or cou Feivative army oflicers. None but Demo oats who had all the animus of the Rebellion but who did not participate in, and therefore were not cured by it, aie tiustworthy. Jere miah Jilack, of Pennsylvania, who thought it tieason to subdue the Rebellion, would prove as true as steel to any political villainy. He might not have the physical courage to take part in a coup Ct tat, but he would lack none of the nccoHtiary rashness. His lack of physical courage, as also that or other Cabinet ollicers, n ight be supplied by ordering several iron clads to some rendezvous in the vicinity of Washington, on board which the now Cabinet might take refuge and flight to foreign lands, in the event that any revolutionary policy that the President might inaugurate should miss lire. With a ready means of esoupa at hand, in case the policy ot "cleaning out' Congress should fail, it is impossible to fore shallow what prodigies of valor might not be accomplished. With Mr. lilack a3 Secretary of State, and an iron-clad on the Potomac to facilitate feccape from .all consequences of rashness, no n an icr ei creiary or war would be bo eligible as Clement L. Vullaudigbam. His Christian mime is happily expressive of the executive clemency. liis experience as an officer of the militia of Ohio, and his military observa tions within the Kebol lines, and at the Clifton House during the war, would be of vai-t set vice to our War Department. Never theless, tlie claims of MuClellan, R. li. Lee, and P. i. T. Jieanregard to this ollico should receive due consideration. Notwithstanding the average sagacity generally attributed to l evidential dispensations, we are comnellod to regard it as a great mistake that two so available Cabinet candidates as Vallaudighaiu and Pendleton Mhould comi from the same Bute. Whether this difficulty is to be got over by dividiug the State or tlie office, or by honor ing that State with a doublo appointment, we ne at a loss to advise. Lut certainly the Cabinet of Mr. Johnson could no more dispense with Mr. Pendleton than the "establishment" of Mr. Turvey h .P0iu 1(1 ',iK",nH with the "model of geu uemauly deportment." Mr. Pendleton has tio.Vni""iV,al Ul0,,e of maintaining the and tarira,t bjr 11 the taxes the hl W et'Hg, ami collecting the hole revenue of the Government from tlie holders of itti li i : i. ...... ,,.,,.1 i . 4i ,i "v"ui vtiuuu mil niiuuiy enable the Government to "live on tU latere it of what it owes." Hi.i. . ..!, ......i . hla apK(iutuient as Secretary of the Treasury and ImancUl Premier a foregone conclusion. r tii'U irn r i in . . . The Department of the Intel lor would be a more diJNcult pom to mi, owing to me great lumber or candidates whose claims are luiiy adequate to that position. There Is Mr. 1'ollard, late or the Confederacy, and author of the "Lost Cause," which Mr. Johnson is seeking still to save. A formidable competitor with him appears In the person of 'Jnick Pomeroy," distinguished for his pro phetic foreshadowings of the assassination of the recent Presideut, and his chaste, classic, and humane criticisms of public men and affairs. Mr. Henry Clay Dean, of Iowa, C. Chauncpy Burr, of New Jersey, and the Hon. John Monisfey, of New York, have claims, also, which the President will not lightly overlook. For the Navy Department no appointment would so adequately illustrate the desire of the Executive to let "bygones be bygones" as that of ex-Admiral Kaphael bemmes, whose nomination would be gieeted with an over whelming unanimity of congratulation and confidence by the entire Democracy. As Attorney-General, the great reputation and eminent services of Mr. IJinckley, a lawyer of more than six weeks' standing, seem to leave no room for doubt. Should it ever become necessary to establish the doctriue that tlie Constitution vests the pardoning power iu Mrs. Cobb, Mr. 15. alone would be equal to the tank. The Postmaster-Generalship might bn put up at auction, or drawu rs the next prize in Mr. Benjamin Wood's next lottery. A Cabinet thus formed would not be compelled to affect adherei.ee to policies in which it did not be lieve. By the spontaneous affinity which links together kindred minds, these would, of necessity, stand in accord with the Presidnnt. They could not avoid agreeing with him except where he was accidentally virtuous or inad vertently wise. The meetings of the Cabinet would be as harmonious as the orgies of a tap room, and the business of the nation would be despatched with an ease and celerity rivalling those of the youth who meet in the New York Board of Councilnien. By all means let the President have a Cabinet after his own heart. Tlie People to the Keacue! Frwn the N. Y. Herald. "Ho, boys, a final bumper, While wo all In chorus chant; For next President we nominate Our own Ulysses Grant I "And If usked whalHtate he halls from, This our sole reply shall be: 1'roin Appmniitox Court House anl Us famous H)ie-lr e I or 'twus tin re to our Uly8nes That l.eu Mave up the th'.hl; Nov, hoytl to Giant for President, Ana God defer d the right!" Here we have the true sentiment. Here we have that feeling which is only brought to the surface by the struggles of the country to free itself from political corruption. The people, weary and disgusted with the narrow views which govern Congress and the President, have patiently waited for change until the only hope remaining is a turn to those men who were not swayed by sectional views; men who belong to the United States not to the North, not to the South, but to the Continent. These are, to-day, the men for . the people. Those are tbev who will tive us harmony iu our national development, whie.h Is tlie one tiling now lack ing to lorc-H us to the very summit which ua tuie has, from our geographical position des tined us to occupy. Why btand quarrelling over a m.ifter already fought out already decided? Art! we to be lieve that all the reasoning power ot vbe country is centred at Washington ! Tln-ro may have been a day w hen Congress furnished ideas for the people; but that diy is prtss ' l, and it must now be understood that the people furuitdi ideas for Congress. Failing to heed the will ot the people, and shape their wishes into laws, Congress must give place to men who can appreciate our republicanism as it exists. Had ibis been done in the Presidential and Congressional efforts at reconstruction, we thould not now be tumbling and rolling about in this Black Sea of negroism. Our rulers, notwithstanding our desires to give them every chance to correct the abuses of a legislation which overrides every sound principle of statesman-hip, have evidently determined that the welfare of the country is of little moment iu comparison to the one absorbing idea of party power. Under these circumstances it has become a vital necessity to make a change from demagogues to states men. North and houth are btill awaiting the restoration of the Government to a healthy condition. To-day the leaders of parties are the only barrier which stands in the way of true reconstruction. How well this is appre ciated by the intelligence of the different States is shown iu the late electious of Cali fornia, Maine, Ohio, and Pennsylvania. Here the great Union element has, for the moment, retired from thu lists and holds its power in abeyance, that the radicalism of its leaders may receive rebuke. This pause foroboles evil to the demagogues; for it indicates that they have failed to meet the demauds male upon them and must give place to men of heavier calibre. Now the people turu to Grant, Sherman, Thomas, and Sheridan, and force them into the political foreground. Did the demagogues think that a little circle at Washington were to shape the destinies of a continent? Did they think that with their proconsular system in ten States they wore to forge tlie weapons which wore to give fanati cism another lease of power ? Their laws in dicate that such has been their feeliug. Bat the people think differently; and this is a quettion which essentially belongs to tlie people. The people l aid, in 1801, that the re lentless and unprincipled slaveholdiug power should not split the country into fragments. The Hag assailt d, we sprang by the million to its deft nse. We fought to preserve nationality, aud to complete tlie victory which we won wo destroyed the piinuiplu of slavery, which had cieated revolution. We did not light, however, for the purpose of picking up a secondary issue aud forcing it into notice as the primary cue. We did not fight to prove thut the negro should govern the South to the exclusion of the white man, or that the white should be debased by the no vation of the negro to a false superiority. INext to the safety of the Union, we desired that every man, black or white, should have equ.il chances to rise in the scale of civilization in proportion to its own intiinsio ability. We hvl little disposition to retrace our march, aud, saddling ourselves with the concentrated igno rance of three millions of negroes, to recom mence, with vitiated blood, reduced iutelll pence, and less brain power, thu toilsome ad vance of many centuries, in order to reauli the point we now oooupy. It was not in the Anlo Saxon blood to do this, aud our rulers have sadly mistaken the political problem In foist ing this upon the country as tlie great issue btlore which everything must kneel. This Issue Is the only one which, carried to success, will 1e the salvation of the radicals. Thu ques tion now iH, are the people williug to accept this as the future guiding star of the republic f It cannot be; (or, accepting it, we prove that we have lost our senses. There are other and greater is3ues at haul, but bo broad In their general benefits that our nemngogues cannot see thm. Our finances, our commerce, our agriculture, our railroad enterprises, our frontier unrolling, our Indian troubles, all call to na for a legislation which the President and Congress have proved their total Incapacity to provide, lliere Is, then, no other remedy but that which comes from a change of rulers. Let the great Republican element of the country still pause until the radical power, shorn of its lorce, appreciates the rebuke of a nation which feels Its curse. Then, at the coming Presidential contest, the people may step forward, and by the election of Grant or some- other statesman restore our national dreams, and give them that prac tical reality for which we are so earnestly struggling. 3TEAIYI ENGINE PACKING. Tlie modem ami extremely popnhir packing, called OIlI.l.Klt'N H ItlMC'ATIVi:, OB NOAT-STONE P ACHING, linn alrPBrly bppn adopted by over 20,000 Locomotive uml t-iutloniiry KiikIiich, anil Is lipyoml qiimtlon tlie piiMeht hi)li (I, the most durable, iLih cliPapet, anil vw'iirHthe inheliinery tlie leant of any fiti nm englue pin-king yet Intrmlncpil. It Is not liable to bum or cut, does mil ifinire oil, anil there In no watte In the iihe. hh ll lx Hindi ef all Hlzes to milt tlie boxes, from !i to 2 Inchr In diameter. All pprHonii lnler"sleil In the one ot the stiNim eiiume are particularly re'iuested to Rive Il ls pHcfclhga HhU. A liberal Ulscouul will be nui tic to oca era. nr. r.N tniKit, Mi, eao n 11 srniiKT, imiila. Bole Anon l for I'cniisy lvaoia aud Delaware. rto ctrlllicblc Deiow. 01(1: UK Til K SCI'l.IIINTKNDRNTnF MoTIVK " 1 miii. ) I'ilUti: AlSll fii AI.HINK.IIY. ltlllK KILWAV N.W York. Went. 20. lmw, My 1'kar fcjH: In reply 10 your Imiiilrlea In rela tion In the comparative economy of Hemp Packing, an conipHreil with LiibrlcaiiiiK Packing, I will say Unit Hemp I'ackli'B, utan av raifp cost ofL33 cents per pound. coHtH im jtlHU mills per mile, run.wbllo the I.nbi IcutlnK PackliiK conls, at an averKe cost of 81 2 x cenlH p" pouud, I 1-10 mill per mile run. We piopohelu u:e ft exclusively for all bteain btulUng ilcxea. Very truly youri", 11. U. iUtOOKS. Supt. M, P. t M. 1. B. The popular Jl VmtAl'LIC PACKING, IIib I.nbihalivo i'uckliiK, but ol dlflerent material, will he luiniHheU promptly any hi.1 from to InnliDi litul u 111 hn fitiiiirl a utmcrlnr anlfli fur ti na 1 21'tuUi 2ll!p M. C. H. WATCHES, JEWELRY, ETC. c. D. KITCHEN, JEWELER, Con; or TliKTH and CHESMJT AT BKIIHniON IN r KICKS. OIAHVMIN, WATCH KS, JEWEliKV, NILVEB-WABE, BUOMZIM, ALL GOODS MARKED IN PLAIN FIOURK3. WATCHES AND JEWELRY WKfTJUiY Bit PAIRED. Particular attention paid to Manufacturing all aril, oles In our Hue. 2Z1 tlum FINE WATCHES. W v lw wym on iiMud u MsorLuieiit of LAIII:M AI IiNTN' 'MSfE WATCH I-S' Ol the. best American and Foreign Makers, all war uuted to give complete Hatluiactlou, aud at fiKKATLY REDUCED PRICES. 1-AIUt & imOTlIKU. Importers of Watches, Jewelry, Musical Boxes. otc. lliidmu.iri.j i.'o, 321 CUENCT St., below Fourth, ((' cIkI utt. ntion pIvmi to repairing Watcben and Idumcul llnies by Eii.tei'l'-C1'A& vvorkuieu. LEWIS LAEOSViUS & C J., DlfifliOKD DEALERS AHG JEWELLERS, JNo. teOI CH1CH.NU1 K'XTtJLGlX. Would Invito the atteutkn of purcbaiors to their luryt block of bill's' ASil) LA HIES Vi'ATCIIi;, Jui.t received, or the flcetst European makers. Independent quarter, "ecoud, and sell-wludlng, In golu and silver cimi s Aibo, AMERICAN WATCH KH of nil sizes. Jilauiuhd tt-iH. Piuh, studs, RIuks, ete.t Corul, Malacklle. Oaruet, aud Etruscan Sets, In gn hi variety, 16 IS In MM. ID WI.VEltWABK of all kinds, lucluuluk- a larKoaHKCrtmoni suitable lor liridal Presents. pp, WATCHES, JEWEIiUY. W. W. CASSIDY, ao. la NOl'TII EtOKl MTBEET, lo'it'ot11 eutll8iJ' new au1 tnont carefully selected AMERICAN AND CIENEVA WATCHES JEWELRY, ' SILVER-WARE, AND FANCY ARTICLES OF EVER V DESCRIPTION suitable t on nmiAL on uoiauAY pbissgnin. An examination will show my stock lo be uusui punned in. quality i-nd clieitpnoH. Pat tlcniar biu-nuon paiu lo repairing. 81(1 0, C. RUSSELL & CO., jgv No .n ymln 8iXTi STKKKT, l'i'.l llimtOM: OF TUK LAIUKNT HTOCUH 09 FINE FRENCH CLOCKS, OF IIIEIHOWN IHrOUTAIION, IN THtf U TV. 6 2-i i jg-ANiCKICAN WATCHES. -ffiTiie bt-bl In the world, sold at Factory Prices C. & A. PEQUICNOT, MANUFACTURER!! OK WATCH CAHEa, No. 18 boutb HI XT 11 hlreeU 8 8 1 jtunultwUn-y, Au. fL H. ilfTH filrr, l. gTL'IiLINfJ SILVERWARE MANUFACTORY ISO. H I LOt I NT bTIlKKT. GKOllGE HHAltP, Puteutee of the Rail and Cube patterns, maijuliicm.es etiy inscription or fine bTKULIJNU BILVEK WARE, and oilers for Hale, wholesale and retail, a choice assortment of ikb aud beaulli'ul goods of new sty its at low prices. g 211 :iiu J.M.bllARP. A.RIM1KRTM. INSTRUCTION. 107 t Ji. 1.. JluoisHM, M, n . Detii Weuicul Faculty. TJOOFS. WALT.S, PCOKJ ETO-AMFRf -1 i nriiiHi,! .... l. 1 1 JObEI'U LEIiUi I J MKMCAI, DM'AKTM I'-NT-llcu KK-vslfl'V lM,:-es.-'l he renilnr I.uciun s Ol lilts r-chiiol will ou,ii' n.eiiteen MON HA V, iKMohi.r Hih, and eontPi iuui the 1HI of Muich. ieo fur Hie full course, tun" iron. leal. h.Io keep w. lis lr-H 0.u lau"iinis a id Ue M, ai.ks, cwu rns, and Inlnts of ev tv k u.d llu M d bolK.ins 01 (.h ps, do,, fro.,. .' J..!t' . i "'" thai u l.ilo Iha eai'ili sou id, I ' ' l" '"J trorn co.redlng aj:d decay lh, ftft t ' J f Kiuiil.cd. .raaln fit cans nr casks rlady lor lis. it ail ilu.es, sod sulied to an ciiiuat? ' y ' QMjElye WliisMes. THE LARGEST AND BEST STOUIi OF FINE OLD RYE 7 If o IC e O IN TIIE LAND IS NOW POSSESSED BY HENRY S. HANNIS & CO.. Nob. 218 and 220 SOUTH FRONT STREET, wnerrEBinEiAMETO the tbas in 1,0 tm OH TEST ADTASTA(l(ODfl TEB9M, Ttoalr tok of Bjr Whiskies, IN BORD, oaaiirlses sill tttm farerlt triaia itant. tad rnai tbrovgb lb vrloa Boitki of 169.'60. stud of tbla rw.Di! present date. ' Liberal eoBtrarts nd for lota to sirrlT at PaBBSjrl Yanla Railroad Danafti KrrlcssoM 1.1mm Hbsrf.or at Uoaded Wshdoihi, aa parties snayalact. H OARPETINGS, OIL CLOTHS AND DllUGGETS. IlEEVE L. KNIGHT & SON, S12tbslu2iu MO. 807 C'H EMSiCT KTBEET, flNANCIAL. BANKING HOUSE OF JayCooke&Gx and S.U So. THIIU) ST. PHILAT'A. D&alerB In all Government Seouxitie& OLD 6-SOs WANTED IN EXCHANGE FOR NEW A L1H1JBAE. PIFFEBEKCE AUOWCD.3 Compound Interest Notes Wanteds IKT1:IS1.T ALLOWED ON DEPOSITS. Collections mad. Blocks bongnt and sold on OommlBSon. Bpeolal bualneea acoommodauonereoerred for ladies. r9 24 8m KKTJI 311SS01KI BAILUOAD nnST MORTGAGE SEVEN PER CENT. BONDS. Bavin rnrchaaed a6UO,00 ol the FIIIHT MORT GAGK COUPON BONDB OF TIf K NORTH MI BOTJ1U R A 1 1AM A 1) COM P AN Y, BEARIN U H KVKN PKR CiTiT LNTKREST, LavlDg so years lo run.ws are now prepared lo seU tlie same at the low late 0 And the nccruea lnieiecif rom this date, tlias iiaylug the luveator over 8 per etui, lntertai, which In i.ay. ble reiul-anuunlly. This Loau la secured by a First Uortrsge ji)ion the Couii.iiey's Railroad, 171 mllea already i:(uniructeU iiu iu ruuuii g kruur, ana oi luuis aouilluiiul lo be oriuileli-d by IhehrHl of October nezt.rztei.dlnir from D.e ciiy ot bi. Liouls lulo Northern and Ceuuul Mis siiiirl. nii rnrtUiilsrn -will be given on application to either ol ti'e nniiemlgL,ed. n"ii K. W. CL.ABK A CO. JAX COUlifc A CO. VUEXEL A CO. P. B. Purili' holding otbur securities, and wlnl.lDg to ohankt uifiii ;or this iHian, can do su at I tie rnarkul rate.. b i sua N ATlOPAi HXMi OF TIIK BEI'IIBLIC, eC3 erd 811 OIUESNUT STIUiI3T, PH 1LAUKJLPKLA. I AT A L,H,MMHM,tMMWHMHI4)tt4t(gj ,wOv,00 i)iKi;cToita JOfeph 'I Bailey, NhiIiuu Jiiiin, Ren). Rowland, Jr., Dannie! A. RlKihani, iidward 11. orne, Mlllam k'rvlen, Onijood WeiHh, Frederick A, Hoyt Wax. li, lOiawu. WM. H. RHAWN, President, MuU Cuttier of (As Otnurul laCio: ttl Hank JOB. P. li t MFORO Cashier, 6 lij Late of (As Philadelphia tfatioiuU Bunk 7 3-lOs, ALL CONVERTED INTO lnr12-TVElSTIli:S. liOALM VEUVEBED XUMEDIATeiiT, DE HAVEN & BROTHEB lOtrp O. do H. Tllllin ITBKCTi Ua G. O ECU R ITI EO A SPECIALTY. CMITH, RANDOLPH & CO. BANKERS AND DIIOIIETIS, no.isa tiiibrthKo. a mamao rn Order I for Stocks and Gold executed in PhUar dtlyhia and New York. J8 a asisi iiiIihsiiiiii is an ii IT 1 ' 1 1 1 " rar m CLOTHS, CASSIMERE3, ETC. JAMES & LEE, HO. 11 NORTH SECOND STREET, Ml UN OF TIIE eOLDEIf LAHK, HATE J 1ST RECEIVED A LABOE AMI SPLENUIU AtSOUTHENT OF A PANTALOON STUFFS, X OF ALL DEMCBIPTIONM, UIIICII WILL BE SOLD AT THE LOW KMT PBICEM, WIIOLM1LE AKD RETAIL. 8 211 1867. fall. 18671 ! JUST RECEIVED. HEW STYLES FANCY CASSI MERES AND COATINGS In Addition to onr unusually large line of good aduptcd to ?IE'S AND BOYS' WEAR, MOMilS, CLOTHIER & LEWIS, CLOTH JOBBERS, 8 24 6m HQS. 18 AND SI H. FOURTH ST. CLOAKINC S. We call particular attention to a large asaortmen ot very dcsliable styles I.AIWEN' CLOAHINGS, Jnat received from New ork auction sales, In add tion to the S1L.VKR FOX, DIAMOND, HYDE PARK, and many other leading makes. MOBKIS, CLOTHIER & LEWIS, CLOTH HOUSE, 8 2 6m MOW. 19 AND 1 g. FOURTH ST. REMOVAL. f E W O V A L. C. W. A. TRUMPLER HAS RLKCVED HIS MUSIC STORE FROM SEVENTH AND CUEMNUT STS. TO No. 926 CHESNUT STREET a mm PHILADKLPniA, COAL. B MIDDLE-TON k CO., DEALERS FN 11 Al'Ll.lOH LElllOH and KAGLK VEIN LOA I. Kept dry under cover. Prepared exprnwtly fur lamliy Yard, No. 122s WAHJJXNUTOil Avenue. Oihce, Na 61 WALNUT Street. JU OIUARD ROW. E. M. NEEDLES & CO., Kltvcntli and Chesuut Straats. KCUSE-FLflKISHING DRY GOODS, Bought at the Recent Depressed Prices. PhlrtlrB. Pillow. Ph etlnif, and Table Lluens. Tuble ( liillis and Nai klun. to niau h. WlueClulhx. Doy Ilea. Towels and Towelling. MarHfillen Uullts aud Toilet Uvvers. RlankfU. Pi ii ii ey cum b, Lancaster, A llendale, Jacquard, aud other bp1 tads. DOMESTIC JITJ8LIN8 AND 8IIEETIN09, In all qualities and widths, at the lowest rates. AOM (IHVHIO QROWN'S PATENT C09IVINED CARPET-TRETCIIER AND TA CM-DRIVER. With this machine a lady can alons stretch and tack down at the same time her carpets as easily as to sweep them, saving back-acbts, bruised Augers, temper, time, and money. It will stretch all kinds of carpets without the lesat damage, better, quicker, and easier than any other Blreiclmr made, and drive from 8 to 2U-oa tacks with or without leather heads Is simple, enutiy worked, and will last a lifetime. Agents wanted. Liberal terms given. It Is a uloe niacin lie for ladles to sell. For Machines or Ageucles call on or address WILLIAM F. kl'HKIBLIi No. 40 a. THIRD Htreet, Philadelphia. 27lfr WILLIAM 8. OB A N T NO 88 b. DJH.AWAUK Avruue. i'hUde.phia, W. llaker A o.'s UiocoIMm. V 'Ruling Crock r Kr. A Uo.'s Vellow Moiai fcUi'" Rolls, and Nalis. . . , . - w n A V V. A I O FranHIn M....H.K Wl I. all kinds of x(JMif. Iiodk.and 1P ii.mr.iM uiuiIb loonier. t.lyt.lt T Icr .kii.. w.irkwl lo ""'I cuHliiiiieM. A Hei . w u nei-oi OlRAiiXI Avrnueau'd V'lJkNNA bl l
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