THE DAIln p-NING TELEGRAPH PHILADELPHIA, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1869. SPIRIT OF TUB mESS. fJMTJRlAL PIJtlOM Of tU LRlDlBd JOURNALS rrO CUBBBUT TOrtC COMPILED BTBHI DAT FOB TBI jTTMKM TFLKOBArB. The Tenure of Ofllce. uj JV. r. XrtUun: If there be thobe who supported the act or Maroh 2, 1807, w gulatlDg the tenure of oirll Offloeu, Blmply or mainly because Andrew Jonn on. then resident, bad proved a renegade and traitor, and was bent ou thrusting from offloe Chose who did not unite in hia apostaor, they may with perteot oonaiateuoy now favor the unqualified repeal of that measure; bat we ar not of them. We heartily supported that aot becauBe we believed it substantially just, benefloent, and lutended to arrest a bale ful praotioe based on an assumption of power unwarranted by the Federal Constitution. This 1b no new tjuestion. When General Jaokson olaimed the right to remove at plea sure all offloers appointed by the President, the Judloiary excepted, no matter whether faithful or unfaithful, and Insisted that the Senate had no business with bis reasons for so doing, and could consider only the fitnesa of those nomi nated ly him to serve their stead, we op posed him with the earnestness of profound, deliberate con viotion. We believed his assump tion as groundless as would have been a claim that he could at will absolve a oitizen from his obligation to obey the laws of the land whereof he was the Chief Executive. So ba lieving, we hailed the passage of the Tenure-of-Offioe aot as initiating a neoesBary and be neficent reform, which waa in no sense an en oroaohment on the President's prerogative, but a simple return to the doctrines and the praotioe of the founders and fathers of the Bepublio. That life-long Jackson Democrats like General Butler should take a different riew of the matter does net surprise us; but that veteran Whigs, like Garrett Davis and James Brooks, should "turn their backs on themselves," would be amazing if they had not already set all prinolple and consistency at ostentatious defiance. There was never any one who could sur pass a strict constructionist of the Virginia l)emooratio sohool in justifying the most mon strous Btretob.es of power. The Federal Con stitution (Art. II) explicitly says: "Seotlon 2. The President shall nominate, and by and with the advice and consent of the Senate shall appoint, ambassadors, other puO Ho ministers and consuls. Judges of tbe Hu- Sreme Court, and all other officers of tbe United tales whose appointments are not herein oUjerwUe provided for, and which shall be etilablUbed by law; but the Congress may by law Test tbe appointment of such Inferior offloers as they think proper In tbe President Alone, In tbe com 1 8 of law, or In the heaas of departments. "tteo. 3. Tbe President shall have power to fill up all vaoancies that may happen during the reoess of t be Henaie. by granting commis sions whlobshaH expire at the end of their aext session." Possibly, some one may deduce from these two sections a Presidential right to re move, in the recess of the Senate, ollioers for no other cause than their dissent from his politics and accord with those of the Senate; tut our eyes are too dull to deteot it. We cannot doubt the intent of the Constitution to limit the power of removal in the recess of the Senate to oases wherein the President fully believes that the Senate would conour if in session. And we hold the requirement of the "advloe and consent of the Senate" a shadow, a mockery, a sham, if the Presi dent, the instant the Senate shall hare ad journed, may expel from office those to whose Appointment that body has juat assented, and appoint in their stead men whom he knows they would not have confirmed. And when to this is added an assumption that the Senate has no right to inquire into the reasons for removal, but may only inquire and consider whether the new nominee is fit for the plaoe, the power of the Senate is so shorn and Shrunk that it would be more decent and de corous to dispense with confirmation alto gether, and let the President appoint and re move as shall beBt comport with hia own good pleasure. These convictions, we need not sav. were formed long before we ever heard of General Grant, 'and are no wise affected by the circum stance that he ia about to be inaugurated Pre sident. We have never asked nor cared what he thought of the Tenure-of-Offloe aot, nor whether he preferred its retention, its modifi cation, or its repeal. We are not accustomed to recast or twist our opinions to adapt them to the meridian of the White House. We have no doubt that General Grant's nominations for Cabinet posts will be confirmed by the Senate without hesitation or division, and that his nominees for less important positions will be aoted on as rapidly as even he can desire, and that, if any shall be rejected (which we do not exveotl. it will be for reasons which, if seasonably known to him, would have pre cluded their nomination. The endeavor by lying gossip to foment a quarrel on this head between the President elect and the Senate is weak device of their common adversariea, and will be treated with the contempt it de serves. Starvation as a Penally for Political , . Heresy. From the If. Y. T.mei. The proposition to refuse Commissioner Walls hia salary, because some of his views nn nuestions' of political economy do not suit the majority in Congress, shows how very nnnh below their places men In offloe can be The proposal came from a high protective tariff man of Pennsylvania one who la him lf Daraonallv interested in having hia busi nesB proteoted against competition, and whose sole cause of quarrel with Mr. Wells is because he does not agree with him on this point. That Mr. Moorhead should have made such m. rnnoaitlon does not surprise us any more than that Mr. Kelley should have supported If but that the House should have passed it would have surprised us, if we had not remem bered that it was only the recnaotment or a imilar indeoencv recently praotised in the of Mr. Harvev. our Minister in Portugal Ti.t rnntleman. during the early stages of the quarrel between the President and Con- nM. baa written a private inner vu mr. Howard, in which he had expressed, in per feotly oourteous language, his dissent from ti tIavd of Congress and his approval of the President's action. For this he had, aa a mat ter of course, inourred the displeasure of Con a nii as that body bad no power to re '..Jhim from offloe. the fertile genius of Mr. Thad. Stevens proposed to starve him out of it by Stopping niB aaiarjr, .uu uj . tTv.i 4in.tinn he procured the Bupport .of in this deliRhtful scheme. The lillllHICDB - - . . n ..i va itifttion. the benate conour il .5 Mr. liarvey has received no salary to The osviw is one capable of indefinite appli cation. It suggesta a cheap and easy way of out of ojfioe any man with whom Cm IressloaHigree, or whose parioiu. cerfuot rMowu,.n , winder that Mr. ISSraW have borrowed It for this special oooaaion. 1 He U r8 u" 7l.f inanulaotaxM of - Pennsylvania, and, Uke an the rest,,h, wants to t ."protected. ' Mr. Well spent last summer in Karope, oolleotlng facta aidKttiM which, would Illustrate the t fleet of protection on Manufacture the wage I of labor, and th general welfare of the people; I And In his report he publishes all the Infor mation thus acquired, and draws from it. the iefcrecce that the publio ought not to pay too high a tax in order to "proteot" Mr. M Mr bead and hia fellows. The Inference may, or may not, be sound, and the faota from which it is drawn may, or may not, be reliable. Both these are fair points for discussion. Bit Mr. Moorhead scorns all such resorts, lie has a shorter and more conclusive mode of "refuting" Mr. We 11b' arguments and disposing of his statis tics. He will stop his salary. He will starve him into belief in the doctrine of protection, and at the same time punish him for having ever doubted it, and for having said things which induce other people to doubt it. Aud as Mr. Stevens sucoeeded in at onoe gratifying his own resentment and in compelling Mr. Harvey to quit Portugal and come home in a state of starved admiration at the freedom of private opinion which prevails in thia oountry, bo Mr. Moorhead may fairly hope to drive Mr. Wells out of the Commiasionershlp of Inter nal Revenue, which he has made respectable and influential, and compel him to brood over hia doubta about protection, in solitary retire ment on bread and water. And to this the House assents ! We expect to see this plan of enforcing opinions applied to all departments of the Government. Why should a President who differs from Congress be allowed a salary f Why should a heretical Congressman (that ia t say, one who does not believe whatever the majority believes) draw pay and mileage and eat as good a dinner aa one of the elect ? There must be a stop put to thia sort of thing. There are some score or more of members who have become infected with Mr. Wells' notions: why should they not share hia fate ? Why should Mr. Allison be allowed to "defend the Special Commissioner," and still continue to draw his salary ? And why, above all, should Mr. Pike, of Maine, be permitted to support President Johnson's veto of the Copper Tariff bill, and still be allowed to eat and drink and pay for his dinner, like Christiana and other good protectionists ? Tiie Fortieth Congress on its Deathbed. from their. Y. World. This mischievous Congress is near its last gasp, and even its own friends do not regret that it is soon to be sent to its final acoouat. It has shown some faint symptoms of a death bed repentance, but they are quite unavailing. It haa not enough moral vigor to undo any of its wrongs, although some of ita frienda and heira have done their best to awaken its turbid conscitnee. General Grant and "the Grant party" have tried to prooure a repeal of the demoralizing Tenure-of-Office aot an aot which haa made the revenue service a national infamy, and bars the possibility of reform; but the desire of Senators to keep their cor rupt frienda in office preventa a compliance with General Grant's wiahea, aud will induet him into office aa a manacled and powerless President. On other subjects, thia ignoble Congress has not exhibited the faintest indica tion of repentance. This Congress fails to do any of the thingB which its own party acknowledges to be obli gatory. When the . present session com menced everybody admitted that our systems of finance and taxation needed a thorough overhauling and revision. Nothing of the kind has been done. It waa admitted that measures should be passed at this session to put the country on the road to speoie pay ments. We are left to flounder on precisely as if the halls of Congress had stood deserted, and their vacancy disturbed by no other sounds than these of nibbling mice. Of idle projects and propositions there has been no laok ; but no measure haa been passed, none has been even proposed, which would lift U3 a single inch out of the deplorable slough. We have a tariff that strangles industry; and although nobody undertakes to defend ita details, noth ing haa been done on that subject beyond the passage of the Copper bill a bill which is calculated to put money into the pockets of the ownera of the Lake Superior oopper stocks, to the injury of the prostrate shipping interest and of all industries which make use of that metal. Kverybody feela, and even the Chicago Convention acknowledged, that the rate of interest on our publio debt ia too high; but this Congresa haa done nothing to facili tate the substitution oi other Donaa roaring a lower rate. The bastard reconstruction, on whose triumphant success the Chicago plat form congratulated the country, is a failure In three including Georgia, in four of the most important states; and even on this subject Congress exhibits the same imbeoility it has displayed on all others. General Grant made a strong recommendation in his annual report in favor of the transfer of Indian affairs to the War Department, and although that recommendation was concurred in by General Sherman and by all officers who have had the best opportunities ior forming a Bound judg ment respecting our dealings with the Indiana. Congress says no, caring more lor the profits of knavish Indian agenta aud traders who share their gains with Congressmen, than for honest administration, or for the welfare of the Indians, or the peace of the frontier, or the wishes of the President-elect. Early in the winter General Grant denounced, with great freedom and emphasis, the profuse bounties to railroads; and Congress haa nevertheless wasted a great part of the session on projeota of thia kind. A bill was introduced for re forming the scandalous abuses of the franking privilege, but it baa been shelved. Another bill for reducing the army to the moderate dimensions of a peace establishment haa met the same fate. This Congress haa done the things it ought not, and left undone the things. which it waa incumbent on it to ao. The measure in which it has taken the deepest interest and debated with the most vigor. Is the proposed constitutional amend ment for establishing universal negro suffrage in all the States. 1 his measure lues directly in the teeth of General Grant's lauded exhor tation, "let us have peace;" an exhortation wbicb, if it meant auything, deprecated the introduction of new topics of strife on the negro question. It ia a shameless breach of the pledge, made in the Chicago platform, that the Republican party would respeot the right of the loyal States to regulate the suffrage for themselves. The party went into the election with this hypocritical promise, and before the President is inaugurated whom they elected on the faith of it, they perfidiously attempt to J force universal negro sullrage upon the whole country. The immediate successor of this scandalous Congress bids fair to inherit all ita worst qualities. Abler than the present Congresa it cannot be, for the leading members of the one will be also the leading members of the other. It will be just aa extravagant, just as incom petent to deal with the great questions of finance and taxation, as the expiring Congress. It will be just as fanatical, wrong-headed, and corrupt; but if General Grant should do his duty, there will be Democrats enough in the new House to make his veto effectual, which, though it may prevent new abuses, can do nothing to rectify those that already exist. . The prospect is gloomy enough ; but if there be any gleam of hope for the ensuing Jwo years, it come (roiu the. 'prospect of. spilt In the Republican party.' There ia some reason to expect that the word "Republican" as a party designation will presently beoome obsolete in our politics, and that within a year the chief distinction will be between Grant men and the anti-Grant men. In suoh a schism in the Republican party, if a sohism cornea, Democrats will support Grant so far as Le takes bis stand on the side of peace, in tegrity, and the Constitution. Th9 Republi cans are treating htm so shabbily that a split in the party will be for his interest, and can not be very repugnant to bis feelioga. Dining Uio Ili-bcl Chiefs. From the If. Y. II-raid. Tbe volunteer Cabinet-maker and general dispenser of the spoils for the Incoming ad ministration, finding his occupation gone iu that line of business, haa undertaken the rile of the late Mile O'Keilly in getting up fanoy dinners. The imitator, iu this aa in almost every other special -field of enterprise, falls behind the original explorer; but still in thia case he will pass. Hia latest effort ia pretty fair. It ia a fancy sketch of a dinner by the Manhattan Club to the late Rebel chief, John C. Breckinridge, at which it appears numerous other Rebel chiefs were present, sandwiched between the leading members of the olub. Genuine or fictitious, the grouping of these characters is consistent with their Democratic affinities, and we knew, too, that sinoe the war the Manhattan Club, in view of the re construction of the Democratio party, baa lost no opportunity to dine and wine, in a quiet way, every Rebel chief dropping into the me tropolis; and we know that nearly all of them, from Jeff Davis down to Mosby, have dropped in, from time to time, under the benign dis pensation of Andy Johnson. A gre.it haul of thefe Rebel big fish was made at the National Tammany Convontion of July last, and a great outlay in soft crabs and champagne waa cheerfully adopted by the Manhattan Club in doing the honora to these dibtiugnisbed guests. Cut bono t It waa for the same reason that a man plants a field of cotton or buys a bit of ground or dabbles in Brie. It ia all a matter of speculation. For instance, the New York engineers of the Man hattan Club laid and managed the wirea of the Tammany National Convention. They found in that Convention a Southern balance of power represented by the Rebel ohlefa pre sent, and by cultivating General Wade Hamp ton and hia assooiate paladins of the Southern chivalry, "the bloated bondholders" of the club were enabled to wind "the Pendleton es cort" round their fingers. Here, then, the mvsteries of these Man hattan dinners or suppers to these leaders of the "lost cause" la explained. It ia simply the George Sanders method of electioneering reduced to a regular system of a good cellar of wine and a liberal fund for the Washington Market. The Manhattau Club have lively hopes of a Democratio President in lisi z. They have been, since the fiasco of Tammany Hall, preparing for their next great opportunity. They anticipate the restoration, with the nig ger vote, of their old Southern balanos of power in the next national election, and they are laying their pipe abd wires among the magnates of the South for the convention, because the convention will settle everything. Thua the investment, in the kindly offices of fraternal hospitality, of a good feed ocoa sionally, involving a dozen or two baskets of wine and a few barrels of Saddle Rocks and Shrewsburys, in honor of some such returning Democratio prodigal son as Wade Hampton, Beauregard, Forrest, Magruder, Diok Taylor, Breckinridge, Captain Semtnes or Jake Thompson, may yield in 1872 the splendid dividends to the Manhattan Llub of the nrat pickings of tbe spoils of the succession. And why not? Ia there a more beautiful lesson in the iloly Scripture3 than that of the prodigal son and the killing of the fatted calf in honor of his repentance aud return home again ? Ia there an example of forgiveness that can be more worthily followed, especially if it can be made to pay better than a petroleum well or a gold mine? In this way and in thia view the Manhattan Club, like charity, has covered a multitude of sins, and still its wine ia not exhausted nor are ita oysters all consumed. Progress or the Revolution Ia Cuba. From the jV. Y. Herald. General Caballero de Roda is to suooeed General Duloe as Governor-General in tne Island of Cuba. Thia is the tenor of a short despatch from Madrid short but full of mean ing. General Dulce was the man for con ciliation, the man of the amnesty, iree press, free speech, and representation in the Cortea. Roda ia the man who put down inaurreotion in Cadiz with the cannon and deluged the streets of dissatisfied Malaga with grape shot. The two men represent great principles and give a fair picture of the change which haa oome over the dream of Spain in relation to Cuba. The progress of the revolution there has been so rapid and so great that a new policy has sucoeeded the old one in the Spanish Government aa well as in the Spanish population in Cuba. The latter at first scouted the idea that the Cubans oould or would do anything towards overthrowing the colonial government. Now they have done so much that the Spanish population in Cuba think that every Cuban should be at once tried by a military commission and executed to save the honor of Spain. Caballero de Roda comes to Cuba to fail more signally than Duloe has done, and Dulce has failed from the want of common sense on the part of the home government aud the Spaniards residing in the island. Had he been authorized to act in the spirit of the nineteenth century instead of th sixteenth, and to establish a Colonial Assembly, he would have preserved the island to the Spanish monarchy. There were not wanting Cubans in Madrid who urged these views uo ju Gene ral Dulce before his departure for Cuba, but he either could not or would not listen to them, lie now goes back with the simple satisfaction that he can say to Azoarate and Bernal, "You were right." The CabiUero de Roda comes to a different banquet a banquet of blood. From Cape Mavsi to the river Da- muji, two-thirds of the territorial extent of the island of Cuba, the Spanish Government holds only the ground iti troops stand upon or the guns of its ships cover. Instead of being able to reconouer the Central andhaatern De partments the struggle will now bo to hold the Western, for there the Area of revolution have caught at Beveral points. Thia, win. require inni-M trnons than Soaln can under any con tingenoy send to Cuba, and more money and material resources than Roda can possibly ga ther. lie may shed much blood, he may rival Murillo. of Venezuela, in Infamv. but the re sult will be the same-the Spanish element must leave Cuba or perish by the Bword they have drawn. In the early future a sore diflloulty will press upon our Government. When your neighbor's houseis on fire, the principli of Intervention is an admitted right. ' Not only may we Intervene to save ourselves from dan ger, but the voice of humanity oalla ua as well to save life and property. If the tenaut poseessed with the fury of a madman, iusUta Upon consigning everything to the flames, he may be controlled or even dispossessed. This madman's policy would seem to be that which iuspirua the bpaulsh element in Cuba, and ou Government, as the next and .strongest neigh bor, will be called upon to Intervene. We must intervene there, ihe a ay nat gone by when the madman of Europe can be permitted to repeat the atrooities whtoh the early part of the present oentury witnessed in every Spanish American oountry on mis comment, ine establishment of a free government in Cab i and its admission to the Union would be the beet solution for all parties there, and one whioh would save na infinite trouble in the future. The Jaoksonian polioy in Florida is the only one whioh will save General Grant from a host of Spanish flies, and he should be prepared to adopt it in his own behalf and that of the oountry. T n e ruiNciPAL Depot roe. THE SACK Of RBVKKDB 8 T A M P 8 Ho. 19 CUK3NUT BTHEET. UK3JTRAL OFFICES, No. 105 8. FIFTH BT tTwo doors beiow Cuennnt street). AND KO. 43-1 WALNUT HTUKET, (Pen i Building). K3TABLISHK D186 2. The sale of Revenue Stamps is still continued at the Old-Established Agency, The stock comprises every denomination printed by the Government, and having at all times a large supply we are enabled to All and forward (by Mall or Exprewa), all orders, lmuie diately upon receipt, a matter of great iinpor ance. United States Notes, National Bank Notes Crafts on Philadelphia, and Post Offloe Orders, received in payment. Any information regarding the decisions of the Commissioner of Internal Revenue cheer. lully and gratuitously furnished. Revenue Stamps printed upon Drafts, Checks, Receipts, etc Tbe following rates ot commission are allowed on B tamps and Stamped Paper: On S2S and upwards ............2 per cent. 100 3 800 " f - Address all orders, elo to STAMP AGENCY, No. 301 CHESNTJT STREET. PHILADELPHIA. UNITED BTATES POSTAGE 8TAMP8 Of all kinds, and STAMPED ENVELOPES, oon tantly on hand. PROVISIONS, ETC. ftJICHAEL MEAGUER & CO., tio. 223 South SIXTEENTH Street, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALERS IN PBOVISIOKS, OVSIKBS, AND SAND CLAMS. FOB rAILI USE. TERBAPIWS 910 PERDOZEN, 8 GROCERIES, ETC. THRESH riUJIT IX CANS. PEACHES, PINEAPFLKS, ETC., OAKEN CORN, TOMATOES. FBENCH PEAS, MUSHROOMS, ASPARAGUS. ETC. ETC. ALIIEBT C. ROBERTS, Dealer In Fine Groceries, 11 7Jrp Cor. ELEVENTH and VINE Streets. JEWELRY, SILVERWARE, ETC. ESTABLISHED 1828. HOLIDAY PRESENTS. WATCHES, JEWELRY, CLOCKS, SILVERWARE, ana FANCY GOODS. a. 77. JB USSELLy RO. 22 A0RT1I SIXTH STKKET, S28 PHILADELPHIA. BRANDY, WHISKY, WINE, ETC. QAR STAIRS & McOALL, Nob. 126 WALNUT Bad 21 URANITE Sts IMFOBTKK8 Off Brandies, Wliies, tiln, Ollie Oil, Etc. Etc, WHOLESALE DEALERS IN PURE HYE WHISKIES, IN BOND AND TAX PAID. 4 11 flILLIAM GROVES, No. 838 SANSOM Street, AGENT FOR YEA7 MAN & GBAHill'S 2 22 lm PUKE CINCINNATI CATAWBA' WINES. CLOTHS, CASSIMERES, ETC. PANTALOON STUFFS! JAMES & LEE, HO. 11 NOBTII SECOND NTBJBBI Sinn of the Golden Lamb, Have now on band very largs and choice asaort- metit of all tbe new stylos of Fall aud Winter Fancy Casslmerca IN THE MARKET, To wnlch ther Invite the attention ol the trade and 0Uicr. (lid w AT WUeLCJlLE AMU BETAIL. FINANCIAL. Union Pacific Railroad 1040 mixe?; NOW COMPLETED. The First Mortgage Bauds, iiayim; so years to uus, Principal and Interest Payable in Gold, WE ABE SOW SELLISU AT PAR AISD INTEREST, Or exchanging! for GOVERNMENT SECURI TIES on the following terms: For 11000 1881s, we pay a difference of 1131 17 $1000 1662s, we pay a difference of 14162 11000 18C48, we pay a difference of. - 107-82 $1000 1865s, Nov., we pay a dlff. of..;... 121-G8 1000 10-408, we pay a difference of...- 90 42 81000 1865s, July, we pay a difference or 100 42 SiOOO 18679, July, wepay adlfferenceof 10117 glOOO lbWta, July, we pay adlfferenceof 10117 Or in proportion, as tbe market for Govern ment Securities may fluctuate. WM. PAINTER & CO., BANKERS AND DEALERS 13 60YERH" KE3TS, WOLD, ETC., No. 30 South THIRD Street. 219 PHILADELPHIA. UN I OR1 PACIFIC RAILROAD FIEST MORTGAGE 30 YEARS SIX PER CENT. COLD BONDS. FOR SALE AT PAR 1N ACCRUED INTEREST. DEALERS IN GOVERNMENT SECURITIES, GOLD, ETC., No. 40 South THIRD Street, 21 tl PHILADELPHIA. FHILADA. AND READING RR. 6s, FREE FROM ALL TAXES. A fcinall amount Tor sale low hj DREXEL & CO No. 34 South THIRD Street, 212 2w PHILADELPHIA. LEDYARD & BARLOW Have Kentoyed their LAW AND COLLECTION OFFICE T3 No. 10 South THIRD Street, PHILADELPHIA, And will continue to give careful attention to collecting ant teourlug CLAIMS throughout tne United Btatea, British Provinces, and Eu rope. Bight Drafts and Maturing Taper oollected at Bankers'. 128 Am pm 8. PETERSON & CO., Stock and Exchange Brokers, No. 39 South THIRD Street, Members or the New York and ThlladeU phia Stock and Uold Boards BTOCK8, BONDS, EtoV, bought and told on eomailfls'.ou only at either oUy, ' lsgj FINANCIAL. 'bankers; co No. 35 South Third Street, PHILADELPHIA. DEALERS IN GOVERNMENT SECURITIES, STOCK, COLD AND NOTE BROKERS. Ai to tin rf'inU nf M&nk. t'lruu, nJ luJmJu.l. recened, nuij-d INTKRKSr ALLOW Kf ON BALANCKd. FOR PENNSYLVANIA ,4, ESH NEW or the OF THE SU. UNITED STATES OF AMERICA. Tlio National I.ipk Inmi'mani-h Company U or i "iruti(m rluir! i Iiy spi'dal Art of 1'ongrww, a or.)Vi'l J ; 1 1 y 2-", IS'. with u CASH CAPITAL, $1,000,000, FULL PAID. LllK-ml tornn o!Ti'rod to Auonts und Solicitors, who ro invited t npply lit our otllif. Full l'lirtiouliirs to lie Imd on iippllcntlon nt otiroffloe, loiati-il In the wioiul N'ory of our ltttnkiiiK llouno, vh-ro Cireulurs bikI I'liiiiiihlctN, fully rtcwrlbing tlw tdvantagiM oll'iTfJ !' tliei'ompiuiy, muy b tiad. IU . 4 I. All H A CO., No. 35 South Third St, RANKING H O U 8 B OF Nos. 112 and 114 South THIRD Street, PHILADELPHIA. Dealers In all tioyernment Securities. Old 6-208 Wanted In Exchange for New A Liberal Difference allowed Compound Interest Notes Wanted Interest Allowed on Deposits COLLECTIONS MADE. STOCKS boot und I0M on Commission. Bpeclai bulneti accommodation reserved rot Udlea. Wa will receive applications for Policies of UUt Insurance in tne national 1,1 re Insoranee Company Of (ho United States. Full Information given at ou offlot. llim GLEMNNING, DAVIS & CO, No. IS South THIRD Street, PHILADELPHIA. GLEMMING, MIS & AMORY, No. 3 NASSAU St., New York, BANKERS AND DK0KEBS. Direct telegraphic communication with the New York Stock Boards from the Philadelphia Office. u BMamisok&Co. STJCCESSOB8 TO P. F. KELLY & CO., BANKEK3 AND DEALERS IX Golfl, Silver, and Government Bonds, At Closest Market Bates. K. W. Corner THIRD and CUESXUT StS. Special attention given to COMMISSION ORDERS In New York and etc. Philadelphia Stocks Boards, etc. tuna TifitjnniDiJju k T( Dealers In United States Bonds, and Kent bers of Stock and Hold Exchange Becelre Accounts of Banks and Bankers on Liberal Terms, ISSUE BILLS OF EXCHANGE 05 C. J. HAMBEO & BON, LONDON, B. METZLEB, 8. SOHN & CO., FRANKFORT JAMES W. TUCKER & CO., PARIS, And Other Principal Cities, and Letters of Credit ATailable Throughout Europe DRUGS, PAINTS, ETC, ROBERT SHOEMAKER A 00. K.E Corner or FOCIUTU and BAC2 8ts, PHILADELPHIA, WHOLESALE DRUCCI8TS. OtPOBTEBb K1) MANUFAOTTJ&EBS OP Whit Lead uud Colored I'aint, Putt furnishes. Etc. - A0SKTS I'OK THE CELEBRATED FBEAL'li ZLNC PAlSIS. . DESLEKS Abu JL0WK8T PKIO i UUfiBU&IEIUi (Oil CAbH. SUPPLIED At J N T IAX 1 S DO X RATTLER. l or UwelllnuN, t sri, NteauiboaU, Etc. Preventa Rat' Dug and Httakln nt th win dows by tlie wl: u or other causes, Usatens lue batib eas ily aitachec, aud requires but a slnaia glance to juilue ol i;n merits, Call oulue UhjoimI Agttut, c. V . HOSE 727 JaYNE Street, Market au ) Ciiewnut, full !. pal. ' t . He l lltnw iu 7?U
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers