THE DAIli m'ENING TELEGRAPH PHTLADELPHIA, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1869. SPIRIT OF TEE PRESS. BD1TORUL OP1HIOBB OF TUg LKADntO JOURNAM VPON CC&KKKt TOPICS COMPILED KTEBT DAT rOH TBI XTKStSa TSLKGRAFB. The New l)fiarture Mlial lu mibllcnnism Most l?o. from Vu IT. Y. Tribv.ne. It U amusing to ooutrast the excitement of Washington politicians with the patience of the people. The oity of Washington id an odd place. It Is a city without any of the elements ot a city; without manufactures and without commeroe. It has a thin straggling line of railway connections. It Is something between a caravansary and an almshouse. People go there to lire to serve the Government, and many of them remain to he served by the Gov Ternment. The atmosphere of Washington is footid compared with that of the country. Kvery other man lives upon the public trea sury, and so all eyes are directed towards the public treasury. There la no place on this globe where power Is more absolutely re spected. When President Johnson lost the confidence of the country to snob, a degree that he could 'hardly reoeire the proper re spect In the WeBt,VWashington embraced him and honored him, and formed Itself into de partmental clubs for his glory. This affection existed until it was duly announced that General Grant was the elected President of the United States 1 Now, In this busy city of Washington poli ticians are clamoring about the new Cabinet; unappreciated statesman are in agony because they are not "reoognized;" men who have suc ceeded in reaching ofl'ue by controlling cau cuses and conventions are moaning beoause they have not been "sent fjr." All former Srecedents are overlooked. General Grant oes not appreciate the prodigious statesman ship seething around the Capitol, and discon solately floating up and down Pennsylvania avenue. The eager, clattering politicians (and because everybody in Washington is a politician, everybody is clattering), leaving the country behind them as the least conoern of their .troubles, forget that the men who sow, and reap, and plough, do not care the value of a turnip about their griefs t The country feels that this whole Cabinet discussion is artificial and unnecessary. A Cabinet is simply What the President chooses to make it. Its members are the creatures of his will the ministers of his power. They do as he com mands with the Treasury, with the Army, with the Navy, with the Post Offloe. It they do not please him he can dismiss them In an hour, and put new men in their places. If he wants advice they will give it. With him is the responsibility, whether they advise or not. In limited monarchies the Cabinet is the re sponsible government of the Crown. If its members act unwisely they forfeit their office; but under our Government, Cabinet Ministers may be as mischievous and subservient as even those of Mr. Johnson, and no power can Teach them. They, are the irresponsible min isters of a responsible officer. All that the country asks from that officer Is the execution of the laws. This Bimple proposition is travestied into an assertion that General Grant is to intro duce the discipline of West Point into his administration, and that hereafter all the exe cutive duties are to be "by command of the President." We are informed that General Grant is nothing but a military man; that he will be controlled by hls.mllltary instincts; that he will probably nave a "dress parade," ana taps," and "re vellle," and "mount guard" around the White House; that he will insist noon reviewing Congress two or three times a week, and if ever the legislative body becomes as unmanageable as it was under jur. jonnaon he will send his veto messages by a squadron of oavalry. This is mere badinage ! General Grant is as thoroughly a citizen to-day. as perfeotly olvilian in his habits, as any man in the country, we can turns 01 do one in publio station who represents more fully the idea of the American gentleman. Unostenta tious. unassuming, brave; without ambition, forbearing, resolute in doing what he deems to be right, but never offensive in asserting himself, General Grant is a man of the people; ne in heart and feeling with the men who dig and plough and weave. lie is the "Gene ral' of the Army," to be sure; but what was that army f Not the mere fringe of the regu lar offioers and soldiers, who numbered, say, at most, 25,000! The army was the people. The millions who carried muskets in defense of the country are the men whose labor now gives the nation strength and prosperity. They had no better representative than General Grant as a soldier. We shall be mistaken if they are not satisfied with him as a oivilian. - For ourselves, we contemplate serenely the advent of an administration that will be inde pendent of politics so far as mere politicians are concerned. We have seen so muoh of the "caucus," the "delegation" business, the "making of publio opinion," the aggressive, eager rushing of incompetent men demanding in an imperious manner to be conciliated and honored, that the change will be for the best. General Grant can find no better model than General Washington. All we can expeot from him is that he will not take into his counsels men who have been diBloyal to the war, or . untrue to the principles of the Republican party. To entertain any other suggestion would be to doubt Lis honor. Beyond that we care nothing. The country will be abun dantly satisfied with the Cabinet if. the work of the Government is well per formed. We beg General Grant not to mistake the din, and clatter, and bustle of the Capitol for publio opinion. Publio opinion is quite content. It certainly does not intend to judge General Grant's administration before he begins it. . It will be quite reoonolled to see the "unappreciated statesmen" earning their livelihood by hard, bodily labor, aud the ten thousand anxious "Leaders of The Party" obtaining precogni tion" bv the sweat of their brows. lueK pubuoan party needs its best men in the ad vance. It has passed through the struggle of a mighty war. It has seen the overthrow of slaverv. It. has stutained freedom In spite of the treachery of the outgoing President. It has outlived corruption and shame in its own counsels. It has seen one great and trusted 1miW oarrv to the onnoaitiou all the weight that came from his splendid intellect and his great name. The issues that have thus far welded it together are dead. It Is a triumph ant army bivouacking upon a well-fought field, with nothing more to conquer. It has saved the nation now it must purity the Gov ernment of tbe nation. . And now we begin the new administration, trnsUni? that, so far as nepumicamsm is con earned, good men and strong men will be placed in position; that the tainted camp followers of the Johnson army will be dis missed from their positions, and that General Grant will rest upon a regenerated and mighty organization. The Republican party must how itself worthy of its triumphs, its desti? mea, aud its fame t . . Hoclal Scleu.ce Bromine N. Y. World. i ne American . BocUl announces a two days' Science session. Association At Albany, February 17 and 18. The meeting is a gene-i ral one, such as the association proposes to hold quarterly In different cities, and the meetlrg at Albany may be for the purpose of prpfflrg certain snbjeots upon the attention of tbe Legislature. In addition to the opsn irg add rets by John Meredith Read, chair man, papers are to be read by the following ptrfors: On "University Kducation," by Uoldwin Smith, who cannot possibly know less on that subleot than he does about mauy other matters upon whioh he frequently and publicly discourses: on "Model Lodging Houses," by Charles L. urae, wno nai brtn doiDg for many years the London Brother Mayhew business In this oity, aud who has a practical knowledge of the wants and woes of tlm poorer classes; on "Higher Education," by Dr. Eliot; on "Protection of the Ballot," by Charles Frauds Adams, Jr., a subject which will specially interest the mum mers of tbe Loyal J.eAgne in this city; on the "Supervision of Publio Charities," by F. 13. Sauborn. Besides these, John Stanton Gould will make an oral statement concerning the work of the cattle commission, and iloraoe Greeley is to make an address on a subject not announced, nor is it a matter of moment, t inee Mr. ureeley is a Denevoient "UivarA" who is ready to talk at any time upon any topic, anywhere and before anybody. It is to be feared that the most of the subjects to bo treated by the association at its coming me-ting are a little beyond popular compre hension at present. let this matter ot Social Science is of the highest interest to all classes of people, and the objects aimed at by the association are most commen table. 1 he?e objects embrace the discussion of all that conoerns every relation in soolal life; hygienio reforms, the treatment of criminals, relation of the sexes, how to live best for tbe least money and with the least work, and generally how to improve our social oondition. All these things are really ot more vital in terest than most of the political issues of the day, and as such they commend themselves to the publio everywhere. There is no reason why looal social science associations, or at least committees, should not be formed in every city in the country, to present and discuss local topics and to cooperate with the central association. The wider and freer the discus sion of the topics, the more speedy, praotical, and general will be the results. Our Commerce aud the Confederates. From the jr. Y. World,. Have we not had almost enough of the awful ruin inflicted upon us by the "Confede rate cruisers" and their outfitters, the British alders and abettors ot armed rebellion against the best Government the world ever saw? The potenoy perpstually attributed to these marine monsters by journals like the Tribune is a perpetual insult offered to the navy of the United States. Undoubtedly, the Alabama, the Shenandoah, and the three or four South ern vessels which contrived, in one way or another, to get to sea and keep there during a longer or shorter period ot the war, did intllct considerable injury upon our commerce. Un doubtedly the "Britishers," who helped the Southern adventurers to get and keep these vessels auoat, proved themselves, aa Dog berry says of the knaves who would not stand in the Prince's name, "to be no true men." jjniwnen the iriuunc. in this year ot grace 18U9, keeps on entreating its fly-gobbling readers to believe that "the decline in "our foreign tonnage is wholly the work of "Laird, semmes, aiaueicc uo., we respectfully pro test, in the name of rational journalism, that it is time, nauticauy speaking, "to belay." To believe such a monstrous proposition is to believe that tbe united states oruleers were as inefficient as they were numerous and that our merchants would nave Kept on sending their ships to sea, though they had nothing to send therein and merely out ot a patriotio devotion to the flag, had they not been frightened into common sense by scurvy half-dozen more or less formidable privateers wandering vaguely over the ooean in the commission of an hermetically blockaded and unrecognized government ! The war and the blockade cut down at one blow, almost to insignificance, the most im portant exports of the United States. It locked up the cotton and tobaooo crops, and In so doing naturally arrested the return movement of our importations from abroad. Hardly had these inevitable effects of the war begun to make themselves felt, when the radicals in Congress, finding their opportunity in their country's extremity, set to work tinkering the tariff in such a fashion as would o! itself have sumced, without any war at all to cut aown our commerce far below its just proportions to the commerce of other coun tries less richly endowed than our own. per naps, dui more wisely administered. All tne Confederate cruisers put together never drove one-fourth aa many American ships from the Atlantic as were thrown out of all profitable use to their owners by a single Vermont senator or a single Massachusetts Congressman. How to Settle the Alabama Claims. From the IT. Y. Berald. The United States cannot be responsible for British insanity. The fact that Earl Russell said mat tne escape of tne Alabama from England was "due to the insanity of the law officer of the Crown" has nothing to do with the case. It may be a plea for us to show mercy in our demands, and make them as light as possible under tne circumstances There should have been an addition to the expression of opinion of Earl Russell.' II should nave stated that the insane law officer was the best representative of England that could be possibly found during our civil war troubles, that oliiut-r represented lord, mer chant, bootblack. He was the exponent of English sympathy for tbe great republic, and of English neutrality whenever an ocean port was found large enough to give shel ter to any privateer that would fulfil the wish nearest to the English heart the destruction of American commercial supre macy. But we are willing to be gracious to a great people with whom we have so many traditions in common, and with whom we are linke l in ties of religion and language. We are beyond being satisfied with a few paltry millions of treasure as a salve to our wounded national honor; for the destruction of a few ships was not and is not tbe point with u?. We therefore propose that we shall do good for evil. Instead of pressing the Alabama claims through our gastronomio diplomat now iu England, who will be recalled immediately that General Grant takes the executive chair, we shall propose to Eugland, through a special commissioner, that we take Canada and the whole of British North Auoeiioa in exchange for all the injuries done by the Alabama and other commercial repre sentatives of English neutrality, and for all tbe grievances which bave from time to time been heaped upon us while yet Great Britain was in the zenith of her power. The far-seeing wisdom of Russia caused her to sell Alaska to ui. She saw the steady movement ot the United States to the west and northwest, and knew that soon we should be pressing upon tbe Alaska frontier. It would be good statesmanship if England could have the same broad view of the inaroh of events on this continent, and acknowledge their inevitable teudenoy to territorial oou- quest. - Thee events are completely beyond onr control. They are the movable foroe that send ns onward upon this vast wave of West ern civilization with a power that would swamp tbe repnblio were we to attempt to esist it. ir hngiand is still advised by "to nne law officers" she will cling to Canada tide ad of yielding it up to the United Ktates. If she cannot see that the very dements that bind ns together as a nation are elements that laugh at. aud strike out boundary lives, it will be beoause she will tot listen to the teachings of civilization and to our warnings. The whole of North America bus been taken possession of by the modern forces which the liberal genius of Germany, France, England, and the United States has called into action. Onr Southern States. clinging to feudal principles which had, unfor tunately, been planted upon their soil, tried Jo stand in the pathway of this modern giant. They were crushed by it. Our Constitution forbade the addition of territory to the old Union, and yet we went on addiog, first the valley of the Mississippi, then Florida, then Texas, until, finally, we debouched upon the I'acifio through California. Oar eyes now turn northward and southward. Canada is essential to us and we are essential to Canada. The times will have it so, and in stating this we simply recognize a faot. To England Canada is a burden, and a severe one, tot, in view of the present condition of Europe. Europe, with six millions of men under arms, stands divided against itself, waiting, as it were, for tbe railroad, the telegraph, and modern civilization to strike the twosiu which shall Inaugurate the great final straggle be tween the relics of feudalism, as represented in claps privileges and great standing armies, and the liberal progressive movement of this century. We can bide our time; but, we ask, can EDgland do the same f She has an Indian empire to take care of which keeps half of her cotton manufactories in motion, bhe has Australia and Ireland ou her hands both nearer to the United States by adoption thau they are to Great Britain by national ties. Is it not worth consideration on the part of British statesmen that, under the administra tion of Grant, we shall always be prepared to settle tbe Alabama aud other claims to our own liking ? Perhaps we may settle them ac cording to the example set us by the mother country, which, sometimes, in late years, has spoken with pi id of a people who are appa rently wedded to I'.ugUsh habits and customs. If we undertake this method, we promise to make old England very proud of us. Better, however, surrender Canada, and by making the amende honorable to ns prepare the way to friendship, whLh, in the coming European struggle, would be the only reliable foreign element upon which England could depend. Counting the Electoral Votes. From the iv. Y. l imes. We hope the recent experience of Congress will have the efi'eot of showing that body the wisdom and necessity ot making some further provision, by law, for counting the electoral votes, and ascertaining whom the people, at any time, have chosen to be President and Vice-President of the United States. The Constitution provides for this necessary service only in the most general way, leaving the details in this, as in most other cases, to be supplied by law. It merely prescribes that the sealed certificates sent from the several States, inclosing their electoral votes, shall be opened by the President of the Senate, in the presence of the Senate and House of Repre sentatives, and that the votes shall then be counted. But whether this ooming together of the Senate and House of Representatives snail be in convention, which becomes a distinct and independent body, and if so who shall preside over it, by whom rales shall be made for regulating its proceedings, how questions that may arise during its ses sion shall be entertained aud how deoided, whether each house may dissolve it by with drawing, or whether neither can do so, and it oan only be dissolved by its own aotlcn all these and many other points that are or may become of very great fmportauoe in con nection with the general object to be at tained, are left by the Constitution wholly unprovided for. All eminent commentators on the Constitution have remarked this de fect, and have urged the duty of supplying it. Ibis can be done by legislation by law, duly enacted by Congress. It is not a matter to be controlled or regulated by joint rules, for it is not in any. sense joint action of the two houses. The only special action enjoined by the Constitution in conneotlon with it is lm posed npon a single individual the President of the Senate and the only duty imposed upon the Senate and House of Representatives is that of being "in his presence" when he does it, bo as to be witnesses of his action. General Butler very properly asks what good oan that do, If they have no power to correct what they may see wrong in that aotion; but Mr. Shells barger very properly answers, perhaps it can do no good, but that is all they are empowered by the Constitution to do in the matter. The defect must be supplied by law. Neither the Senate nor the House oan adopt rules, aoting separately or by joint action, for the govern ment of a body diatinot from either, and yet uot organized by any law as identical with both. Those rules must be adopted by the body itself, or must be prescribed by law. General Butler declared that the joint reso lution declaring that the vote of Georgia should be counted, and prescribing the form in which it should be declared, was invalid because un constitutional; and in this he was doubtless correct. That joint resolution was not a law, because it lacked the approval and signature of the President,nor was it a joint rule ot order, as it had nothing to do with the order of busi ness in either house, nor in any body subject to tbe control of either. It declared what should be done with the electoral vote of a State. If Congress has control of suoh a ques tion as that, it certainly cannot exercise it in any manner less formal and emphatic than by the enactment of a law. Congress ought, therefore, at an early pe riod of the next administration to pass a law to regulate this whole matter of counting the electoral votes. It ought to define and fix the character of the meeting ot the two houses in which this ministerial act is to be per formed, and determine how it shall be or ganized and how rules shall be adopted for the regulation of its proceedings. We shall then be able to avoid such embarrassments and conflicts of authority as were experienced on tbe recent counting of the votes, as weu as other difficulties of a much more formidable nature which may arise hereafter. . The Constitutional Amendment. From the Chicago Tribune. The Senate, after a protracted debate, ha disagreed to the constitutional amendment as proposed by the House of Representatives, and has adopted another, containing three propositions: , . i 1. Prohibiting discriminations among citi zens of the United States ia the exercise of suffrage, on account of color, raoe, natiTitji education; property, or oreed. - 2. Prohibiting like discriminations among oitizena in the right to hold office in any of tie States. . 3. Transferring to Congress the power of regulating the manner ot appointing electors of President and Vice-President. Tbe third proposition Is to be submitted separately from the others, and may be rati fied or rejected npon its own merits. The other two are united, and must be approved or rejected together. The publio mind has been dtreoted to the question of sufTragn, and not to that of holding offloe, and while there is a general willingness to accept universal suf frage baaed upon citizenship, there is not the same popular agreement iu reierenoe to me right to hold office. The United States ought not to continue the existing anomaly of having its own constituency liable to be enlarged, abridged, or destroyed by another government, whether that government be foreign or do mestic, independent or subordinate. For the United States, therefore, to establish a nnifoim regulation of suffrage, and to plaoe it in the Constitution beyond the reach of ordinary legislation, is but the praotical re sumption ot a power and an authority inherent in all governments. It Is in faot nothing more than an exercise by the whole people of their unquestionable right to secure to them selves, beyond all Interference or control by the States, the privileges which constitute the life of republican institutions. Therefore tbe provision prohibiting any disoriminatiou among citizens of the United States in the right of voting because of color, raoe, nativity, education, property, or oreed, is not only wise ad ju-t in itself, but demanded by the national safety. No such consideration, how ever, prevails with respeot to eligibility to eflice. State officers are not, like voters, con stituents of the National Government. Their qualifications may be safely left to the people of tbe Mate. The constitutions of the several States pi o vide various qualifications for their oilioes. The governors of some States are re quired to be native-born citizens. Under each btate we have a variety of offices to be filled by persons having a knowledge of particular sciences; we have Judges and Attorneys-General; we have Proseouting Attor neys, State Geologists, and Surveyors; we bave bospitais for the lnsaua and for the treatment of other forms of dis ease. Why should not the State of Illinois rt noire that persons elected or appointed to these places shall be able to read and write ? that her judges and attorneys shall be edu cated in the law ? that her public physicians and superintendents of hospitals shall have a medical education ? Yet the amendment pro posed by the Senate prohibits the State from establishing any such qualifications, and makes eligibility to office co-extensive with the right to vote. All citizens, of all colors and races, whether they read or write, or speak the language, or hold property, are made eligible to all offices in the State. Can any person give any good reason for this pro position ? If it had been submitted aa a sepa rate article, tbe mistake of the Senate would not have been serious; but being united with the suffrage clause, both have to be rejected or approved togetner. We do not think that such an amendment oan be ratified at the present time. We do not believe that It will secure the requisite number of votes in Illinois, Indiana, or Ohio: we do not think Connecticut or Rhode Island or New Hampshire will ratify it, and it may fail in New York and Pennsylvania. The Pacillo States will undoubtedly rejeot it. The universal suffrage clause cannot carry itself and the office-holding clause also. It cannot persuade the people to give up their right to ii x tbe quaii neat ion of tbtir governors, legis latures, their state officers, tbeir assessors, treasurers, tax collectors, mayors, aldermen, and other local officers. That is a power in no wise necessary to be exercised by the National Government; why, then, should a practical, substantial, and neoessary measure, like that of equality of suffrage, be put in peril in the vain effort to force the people to accept some- mingeiser The State of New Hampshire exoludes Roman Catholics from holding offioe, just as Delaware aud Kentucky exclude negroes; this disquali fication, repulsive as it is to all reason aud justice, is nevertheless within the power of tbe btate. Knode island exoludes naturalized citizens not property-holders from voting, and also from holding offioe. These States will certainly vote against an amendment whioh takes from them the right to fix the qualifica tions of their local offices, though both would probably vote for the amendment prohibiting any disqualification from voting for such causes. The House of Representatives will very surely reject this amendment of the Senate, and we hope that the result of a conference will be tbe submission of an amendment confined to the simple proposi tion: That at all elections in the United States the right of voting shall not be denied to any citizen of the United States because of his color, raoe, former condition as a slave, or for any other cause not equally applicable to all other citizens. That simple proposition will meet the views of the whole people, will be promptly ratified, and the country will be relieved from any farther controversy on the snbjeot. : . BRANDY, WHISKY, WINE, ETC. ftAR8TAIR8.& McCALL, Kos. 126 WALNUT and 21 URANITE StSn IM FOB TUBS 07 Brandies, nines, UIii, Olive Oil, Etc. Etc., WHOLESALE DEALERS IN PUHE RYE WHISKIES, jy EOND AND TAX PAID. i 11 CLOTHS, CASSIMERES, ETC. QOATINC8I COATINGS! JAMES LEE HO. 11 KOHTU tECOSD ITBEB1, Sign of the Golden Lamb, ABE NOW EECXIV1MG NEW ITTtEl OT FALL AI WINTER COATINGS, TO WHICH THEY WVITE THE ATTEJf. TIOH OF THE TRADE AKD OTHERS AT WnOLFSlLK AUD RETAIL. 82m DRUGS, PAINTS, ETC. J-OBERT SHOEMAKER A CO., K.E. Corner of FOTOTII and BACK Stb, PHILADELPHIA. ' . WHOLESALE DRUGGISTS. JHP0BTEB8 AND MAS EFACTUEJLBU QJ White Lead and colored Taints, Putt Tarnishes, Etc. ' A6KNTQ FOB THE CELEBRATED FRENCH ZINC TAINTS. DEA LERS AND OONbUMKUA iHWkAT PRICKS YOB UASH, BCPPLIKD Al an FINANCIAL. UNION PACIFIC RAILROAD FIRST MORTGAGE 30 YEARS SIX YYAl CENT. GOLD BOTJDS, FOR SALE AT PAR ACCRUED INTEREST. DEALERS IN GOVERNMENT SECURITIES, GOLD, ETC., No. 40 South 7HIRD Street, 21 tt PHILADELPHIA. lOOO MXTE NOW COMPLETED OF THE Union Pacific Railroad. The Company will hare the entire line finished through to California, aud ready Tor this summer's travel. WE ARE JiOW SELLLNU The First Mortgage Gold In terest Bonds AT PAR AND INTEREST, OTIL FURTHER KQTICE. UoTemmeiit Securities taken In exchange at full market rates. WE PAINTER & CO. EA3KERS A'D DEALERS 13 G0VER5 KILM SECURITIES, No. 3G South THIRD Street, PHILADELPHIA. ANKINC HOUSE OP jArCooKE&(p. Kos. 112 and 1H Sooth THIRD Street, PHILADELPHIA. Dealers In all Goiernment Securities. Old 5-:0s Wanted In Exchange for Neil A Liberal Difference allowed. Compound Interest Notes Wanted. Interest Allowed on Deposits. COLLECTIONS HADE, STOCKS bomht und tola on Ccmmlnlon. Spec! btulneu cccnimolUon reMry4 for 141 . We win receive applications tot Policies of Lift iBturtncein tne Rational Lite Intnranae Company Of the rnlud State. Tall Information giTea ou effico. lism , GUMMING,. DATIS & CO., No. IS Soutb THIRD Street j PHILADELPHIA. -J GLEP1NKIKG, DAVIS & AMORY, No. 3 NASSAU St., New York, BANKERS AND BROKERS. : , Direct telegraphic communication with the New York Stock Hoards from, the Thlladelphla Office. u FINANCIAL. LEDYARD & CARLO W Have Kiniovcd their LAW AM) COLLECTION OFFICE TO No. 19 South THIRD Street, PHILADELPHIA, And will continue to give careful attention to collecting aud ocirliid CI A IMS throughout the United Btalen, BiIUhU Province, and Eu rope. . , Blgbt Drafts and Maturing Iaper oolleoted at Jankers'. 12S8fa 8UCCK380BS TO P. 1 KELLY & CO., BAKKKHS AND DKALKKrT IX Gold, Silver, and Govenimciit Bonis, At Closest Market Rates. K. W. Corner THIRD ami CIIESXUT Sts. BpecUl attention kcii lo COMMISSION ORDERS ID New York aud Philadelphia Stocks B tarda, etc etc. 1 II 3iu fimiMMBOlPIN Dealers In United States Bonds, and Mem bers of Stock and Hold Exchange. ReceUe Accounts of Ranks and Rankers on Liberal Terms, ISSUE BILLS OF EXCHANGE ON C. J. nAMBRO & BON, LONDON, B. METZLEK, S. BOHN & CO., FRANKFORT JAMES W. TUCKER & CO.. PARIS. And Other rrlHcImil cities, and tatters of i reuit ATailauIe Throngbont Europe. PHILADA. AND READING BR. 6s, rni:E fhom all taxi's. A tuiall amount for sale loir hj DliEXEL & CO;, ' No. 34 South THIRD Street. 212 2W PHILADELPHIA. pa 8. PETERSON & CO., Stock and Exchange Brokers, No. 39 South THIRD Street, Members or the Ketr York and Philadel phia Stock and Uold Boards. STOCKS, BONDS, Etc, bought and sold oa commission only at either city. 126 GAS FIXTURES, ETC. CORNELIUS & BAKER, MANUFACTURERS 07 ' ' cas fixtures, lamps) BRONZES, LANTERNS, Etc. STOKE,"" No. 710 CIIESXUT Street. , MANUFACTORY. , No. 821 CIIEKKY Street, I aOamwlm PHILADELPHIA. PROVISIONS, ETC. A M E C A ME. Constantly on hand ail kinds of choice Wild Game, Poultry, Bait Water Terrapin, Oysters, etc. , : - Private families, hotel-keepers, etc., supplied at lowest market i atea. at MAKTIN'H GAME DEPOT. No. 111.1 MARKET 8TKEET. N. B. We are receiving daily one hundred pair Live Qnailg. j 9 1 jt rp 3J1CHAEL MEAGHER & qoT, No. 223 South SIXTEENTH Street, ; WHOLESALE ASD BET AIL DEALERS IU rBovisioBK, OYSTJ-tiS, AKD MAKD CLAMS, IOB PAMIJLT USE. TEKBAPIR i PEB DOZEN. t8 LUMBER. 1869 fc.PRUCE JOIST gPttlCE JOIST, HEMLOCK.. Hh.Iii.LOUK 1869 1869 f EAfcC'NEB CLEAR PINE, Qnfx l-ticuNhU C LEA It PI WE. ' J.OOO I HOIOE fATTEKdi VISE. EPAKIbH tEJJAH, toil PAT KiCI) CEDAR. . IdOCk FLORIDA FLOORING, iDnn loby i.oiuiA jLooituNu. . ioby lAl.OLJA iLOOKIDiU. - vw V1KOINIA FLOOKIfiU. '" IifcLAWAKi: FLOOKiaa. " AbH FLOOK1MU. WaLAUT Jr'LOOKlNU. BAIL PLAjTk. ' ' " 1Gi;l WA1AUTBDS AND PUNK, I Ol'ii - WaLKUT PLAJVhL. -' . ' IGG TNLiKTAKItRB LUMBER 1 nr.r lOO J CiiUAIUAKJOuJ' LUmSaIl 1869 RKJJ ti-DAR. AV W WAUNCT AND PINK. ' ; ' 1 kAQ JB.AOXJ-'D POPLAR, 100 O ' feJiASOM-D tJHJtKiiY. 1869 "WBITJC CAE HAM and BOARDS. HlUAUilY. . IflftQ "(,iK BOX MAKH5RH'" I 1 Qfl . tPA&IfcJi CUbAR bUi BOA HIM. Oh KALh, I.QW. , 1 RAO CAROLINA BCANTLINa, , 1 Qftt AOU O CAlvOLiN a B . '1 . bU.Lb. lObU Mt J -WAV bCANTLIMJ. I860 t WDAR HH1ISULK8, - "i Qf( HAILK, BiUl II BK A CO.. Mo. M JU 1 11 Oiri4. IBKJamison&Co.