14 . w. THE DAim is-fiNING TELEGRAFnPIIILADELFniAyTnUIlSDAY, MARCH 11,869 SPIRIT OF THE MESS. DITOBIAt, OPTNU'SS MADWfl jocnwAi upon coanis tofk compiled Kraar PAT FOB TftU RTFUIMfl TBLBUKAPK. The Drenk.iip of llic lurtlana legislature. JTrorn the A. 1'. Ihrutd. The proposed flUtnUu MnmJmeyl of the CoEBUiaUOD, t-nt out t. oilwr daj -from C on gress to tfa. Ktataud.dor8ed by Oe er.l Ursnt In Lis inaugural, P'0'"' th qJ! shall ba no abit.-gm-iit t. th United States or by any Stat, of the light to vow on ooount of raw, color, or previous condition of servitude," and tbat "Congrnsa shall have owr to enforce this provUou by appropriate legislation." This means Impartial suffrage to all male citrons abova th age of twenty one years wbites. blacks, Indians, and Chi nese, nalf a dozen States have abeady rati fied this amendment, and It was aboat to be taken np in the Indiana legislature the other day, when the Dmnooratio minority bolted, eot-ded, and went home, leaving both houses without quornno, aad consequently Incapa ble of any legislation at all. To meet the emergency the Kepnblioan Governor (Bker) baa issued a call for new eleotions to fill the vlacea of the eewding members in time for a new meeting of the Legislature on the 1st of April, the main Idea being the ratification of said fifteenth amendment. The Demoorats, in tti b act of secession, have been playing a ridiculous game. If they fill till these vaoaDoies tbey will be only whsre they left off; but the probab'lity is that from fear that if tbey have the chance they may play the same game over again, there will be a quorum elected to both houses without them. In atiy event, the Demoorats have been blundering again on the nigger. They ttill drtam of "the Constitution as it was" under Buohanan, when, by the Dred Soott de cision, a negro had "no rights whloh a white man was bound to respect." But sinoe that day two amendments have been added to the Constitution the thirteenth, abolishing slavery root and branoh, and the fourteenth, declaring, among other things, equality to niggers in the ma'ter of civil rights, and that suffrage and representation shall go together. Now comes the fifteenth amendment, giving to the blaok man, to the red man, and the yellow man, the everlasting nigger, the Indian, and tbe Chinaman uiuzenized, the same right of suffrage as tbe white man. General Grant, too, thinks this amendment will settle all this business, and so he hopes it will be duly rati fied by the States. This endorsement, there Is every reason to believe, will carry this amendment through; for, says Riohard, "the kiDR's name is a tower of strength." Why, then, will the Democrats persist in this folly of fighting the nleger, when they bare been almost destroyed In their suooesslve disasters on the nigger question since 185 f But for the stupidity of their Copperhead and Rebel leaders of the T .rummy Convention, they might have run even General Grant a tight raoe, and they might have secured a handsome majority in tbe present House of Representatives. Bat instead of recognizing the "fixed facts" 'before them, the stupid man agers of the party proclaimed the reconstruc tion aots of Congress "unconstitutional, revo lutionary, null, and void," and so they were swamped again in '68, as they had been under Johnson on the same issue in '66. Bo they are out in the ootd, watching and waiting for some providential Bmash-up of the Republican party, and apparently incapable of seeing any thing to fight against bat the almighty nigger. Be is to them what a bit of red flannel 1b to an enraged bull or a turkey cook an intolerable Insult, to be resented, reotuess or oonse qnences. . Mr. Stewart's tfrand Charity. JrVom th N. Y. World. We are sorry to see Mr. Stewart's proposi tion, to make a pecuniary sacrifice for the sake of seoaring to hiinsell the opportunity of bestowing Lis invaluable services as Secretary of the Treasury, treated in certain quarters as a kind of seoular simony. There is no traoe of simony in the transaction, for it has been expressly settled in the .English courts that "bonds given to pay money to charitable nses or receiving the presentation to a living are not simoniaoal." It is equally unjust to Mr. Stewart to say that his disposition to fling the superflax of bis vast fortune to the poor has only been de veloped by the pressure of the awkward di lemma into which be was brought by his own and bis Presidential patron's ignorance of the law. So far is this from being true, that it is now many years Binoe Mr. Stewart publicly entreatedMr. George Teabody not to deprive Mr. ABtor and himself of the pleasure and pri vilege of doing for the poor of New York what Mr.Peabody has done on so magnifioent a soale for the poor of London and for the cause of eduoatlon at the South. It is but com monly fair to suppose that the noble designs so long ago avowed by Mr. Stewart and Mr. Astor have ever sinoe been ripening to fulfil ment, and that their culmination has only been revealed, not preoipttated, by Mr. Stewart's anxiety to serve the State. This, which we repeat is, in our Judgment, a fair supposition, will be made a beautiful certainty when Mr. Stewart, relieved from the cares of Federal office, devotes himself &i a private citizen to the aooompllshment of the grand soheme of charity by which he has now once more commended himself to the favor of Providence and the admiration of his fellow-men. It would be monstrous to imagine that a man of Mr. Stewart's years and piety will not prefer, even to the homrof assisting President Grant and helping a national treasury out of a hobble, the enduring satisfaction of doing God's will in behalf of the least of these his brethren. No Nonsense. Prom lh4 N. r. Tribune. The gentleman who was Secretary of State fow Aura mo. but who holds that office no lcDger, has, upon the occasion of surrendering his nortfolio. civen to the land, or at least to all distinguished personages therein who are in danger of beiug dined, a valuable lesson. The neighbors of Mr. Seward, in Auburn, not to be out of fashion, were naturally desirous of signalizing the return of that gentleman to bis own hearthstone, aud of making a credit able exhibition of their own inestimable love and affection. Bat Mr. Seward was not to be caught; for, at his time of life, playing lion, and roaring to order, is, at any rate, a fatigu ing bnainess. So the retiring statesman wrote to Mr. George U. Peck, Secretary of the Re ception Committve; and in this epistle he guarded against an ovation with admirable and oomprehen&ive foresight. lie "absolutely deolines" ' 1. "Any Public Mmting." lie will undoubt edly be glad to get back, but he will go through the raptures in private, and refaae to be embraced even by the most joyful of his friends In the presence of ten thousand gaping Spectators. He will also refuse to make 2.' A Speech." lie has made speeobes enough. For years upon years he has been making speeches. For that matter, is there not a printed volume of speeches by him all eady made, wLlch those who hanker for elocution and rbetorlo can pnrnne in the re I tlracy of tbeir own uloseuf Mr. Johnson's I frightful example bas probably dosed Mr. reward's month, at least for the present. Moreover, he deoline to aooept 3. "A Dinner." Tim passion for eating is one wbivh we know, npon Scriptural autho rity, declines wi'h d-olinlrg years. "I am this day," said Brzil)al, 'eighty years old. Can thy servant taste wbet 1 eat, or whatjl drink f" Besides, It may reasonably be sup posed tbat another waining has been afforded to Mr. Seward by tbe eating and drinking career of another Mr. Johnson across the water. Moreover, at a dinner, it would be almost impossible, without a rude violation of every precedent, to avoid making a speech. "Gabbara," cays Rabelais, "was the first In ventor of drinking healths." Mr. 8eward will refute, also. 4. "A I'rocettien. When one remembers of how many prooesflons this gentleman hai been the central figure aid ornament, the reason of bis disinclination may be readily surmised. one of these triumphal inarches have conoluded at the coveted goal. Reduced to its simple eUments, there is but small en joyment in tbe honor of being cartel about in a barouche, with a brass band blowing its life out in front and another brafs band palling itfelf dmf behind. It is only in such a situa tion, with melancholy thoughts of the ooming cold in tbe bead, that the recipient of ringing cheers can appreciate the safety and the satisfaction of wearing a hat. Again, Mr. Seward desires no 6. " Ceremony." He shrinks from being treated like a Grand Lama, or a Grand Mafii, or a Grand Turk, or a Tycoon, or a Pope, or a Dcge, or an Imperator, or a l'ovtifex Maxl mns. He knows tbat he is mortal. lie feeU himself to be human. lie desires not "booing" and genuflexions, the salam and the ko-tow. Tbe primitive Biroplldty of shaking hands is enough for him. Finally, he objeots to any 6. "JJtmon.stration." lie will not be exhi bited, as if be had been caught by some hardy hunter five thousand miles from Auburn, and brought to that place as a curiosity. "Demon strations" are well enough in mathematics, but not being a problem, exoept in a figurative BenFe of the word, he bas no desire to have a "Q. E. D." tacked to his record. "Such things," as he truly observes, " are unneces sary." We cannot help thinking that In setting his face against demonstrative leonization Mr. Seward has entitled himself to tbe thanks of all publio men exposed to like dangers and subjected to similar temptations. The strong point is the dinner declined. The barouche refused was a great gain. The repudiated banquet is a positive blessing, and will be so considered here until Mr. Reverdy Johnson's performances in England are forgotten. The Secretaryship of tbe Treasury. trim the A Y. World. The Republican journals throughout the country have helped Gen. Grautdig the ditch into which bis first step tumbled him; and. what is worse, the Herald, 'J ribune, Times, and I'ost have persisted in inviting him BtiU deeper into tbe mire. Had Geueral Grant, inexperienced .himself In civil affairs, taken of experienced and able men in his party that advice which none of the most experienced statesmen, his predeoeg sors, ever disdained to invite Irom their con temporaries, be would not now be naked to the deiislon ot bis opponents and the con tempt of his party. Tbe hostile orlticism of the Democratic press, had it had some slight intimation of his designs to proceed upon, alone might have resected him from aocomplUhing his blunders. But these very organs of Republican opi nion fed fat the presumption aud the conceit which led General Grant to think himself superior to publio opinion. Tbey told him and they told the publio marvellous things that plain common sense would do. They cast scorn upon "politi cians," npon experience in civil affairs, upoa learning in the law, npen an acquaintance with the traditions and the practices of states manship. They added the Chief Magistracy of thirty eight millions or people to tbe nam ber of things which as Sidney Smith said ot driving a gig and editing a newspaper every man was entitled to think himself competent to, without experience or eduoatlon. They applauded bis reticence as if it were a sub stantial kind of power or a quality of genius which was going to help him administer the Government. They cooperated with General Grant's own Ignorance to Keep him from the knowledge which he lacked and the counsel which was indispensable to him. It turns out that publio opinion, which is worth a states man's beed, might have been useful also to General Grant, it turns out tbat a knowledge oi the jaws might nave helped him in dis charging bis promise to exeoute the laws. iiut why did these blind leaders persist in draeeing on their blind man deeper into the mire. Tbe 7 ribune bailed Mr. Stewart as the "financial Prospero," whom it is useless to try to match, and who, being Secretary of the Treasury, would "be as impartial and sternly just as an archangel" in passing on his own transactions as an importer. The fatnons and illiterate Beruld wanted the law of 1789 to be "submitted to the Supreme Court" (1), where it would at once be condemned as "feudal,' whatever tbat may mean, and "unoonstitu tional." The Units dbgraoed its intelligence Dy urging, ratner man "tbe repeal of the law.' the exemption of Mr. Stewart from its opera tion by joint resolution. The PoU, with due servility, declared itself all ready to applnud tue rresiaent's '"own deliberate judgment,' whatever it might be, and then advised him that a common law rmxtui controls a statute speaking in positive and decided language. Was ever such a chorus ! Now, the statute of 1789 is entitled to great weight SB mere authority. It was enacted, after deliberation, by the splendid statesmen of the revolutionary aud constitutional era of our Government Human affairs nor human nature have not since altered iu kind. If it was wiee then, it is wise now. Oar growth and greatness as a nation only add to the number and weight of the reasons for its esta liebment. As for Mr. Stewart, be Is the first man to whom its provisions apply, but be is also first and chiefest of tbat class and descrip tion of men now alive to whom it was meant to apply. Tbat provision of tbe act of 1789 prohibit ing the manager of tbe national fiuanoes from being at the tame time engaged in any private business whii h would give him a personal in terest that might bias his mind in his publio action, is founded on the most obvious and elementary principles of prudence and moral ity. It is tbe same principle whloh the law applies to all trustees and fiduciaries of what fcver sort: that they must have no interest wbh h Is or may be in conflict with tbeir duty. If the founders of the repnblio had enaoted no such law as the eighth section of that aot, it ought now to be enacted at once. If it were not the law, the principle upon which it is founded ought to be respeoted as a rule of prudence and a dictate of morality. Tbe unadvised common sense of which we have heard so mnoh has not been competent to this sense of decorum, of propriety, of morality; for General Grant appointed Mr. Stewart. And if Mr. Stewart at first accepted the appointment, no man can say tbat a Hfa- long training in trade, in tbe faonlty to hay cheap and dear, ehonld have fitted Ul n to appreciate the ludeoormn of that aot. But a Uwjer or a pnblUst, or even a "politician." anil.iar with higher .tauriardj an the mor- refined codes of houian aoilnn bad suob uif-n's advioe not beu eooiied as unorflinna might have forewarned theu of what they have now incurred. Nodonbt it would have beBn a serious prao cat difficulty that, it the largest dealnr with be Government, tt th largest imoii'tar. wt to represent the ooveruuiMtit at the had ot ts CiiHUotB, he would bavi dally to aot ouome n which he would be iuteiested adreritttly to li rinVfrtiiiiAnt. Hut lint mii,.kir u. l. j ----- ..... w.uirii ITIIUII , all that tbe Republican prxs ot thU city con sidered tbat txisobiet which the "arohangMlio" purity ot Mr. Stewart might lud-ed easily overcome was aoouttbtt leant of all the uiU- cbfets iucdeiit to the eituatlon. The unseen, iinttuided influence of him. tbe superior tiffin-r, npon his subordinated would have been utterly destructive to all the motives which are relied on to iuHnre the pro tection of tbe Government iu the daling4 ot men with the bead of the Treasury. Mr. Stewart might both be an archangel aud have angels at the head of every bureaa: but for bis clerks and agents, and for the G ivuru ment's appraisers and collectors aud cii'touis fhciale, he could not have drawn upon the angtlio host. The intrinsic, radioal, snd overrhndowlog evil ot the situation wa tbi: Tun SforeUry of the Treasury is not only required by law u advise Congress as to the measures it should pass to improve the revenue, as to the taxes it stall put on and the taxs it sha'l take off, and generally as to the li-oal aud fiuancial eelB'atiou it shall enact, bat ia the prautlcal adminirtratiou of his department so wile a limit of discretion is conferred , upon that officer, and so vast are the transaotlous of the Government com pared with those ofprivate business, tbat tbe secretary has beoouie the practical regulator aud controller of the gold market, thereby of the rates of foreign ex change, thereby of the cost of all imported goods, thereby of tbe prices of all our ex ported commodities wbeat, corn, Hour, to bacco, cottou, prtrolruin, beef, aud poik. lie has also become the controller of the money market. He determines the abundance or scarcity of loanable capital, tbe rate of inte rest, and thereby the prloeB of securities aud stocks as well a merchandise. Whether so wide a discretion was wise or necessary is not the question. Uuder the legislation of the last nine years and the growth of our debt, it esthts. Now, tbat Mr. Stewart, the importer who has occasion to buy moie exchange than any man in these States, should ooniinue to direct tbe operations of his Loose in purchasing gold or exchange and returning to pay for his ex ported goods; aud tbat Mr. Stewart, the Seo retary, should at the same time decide whether or uot the Government should sell gold, having on band, with authority to sell, a quantity si rust mat the sale ot a tmh of It would depress its prKe and make a ooavul- sion from Wall strett to San Francisco this, we cay, is an aosur an impossible situation, aot or no aot of 1789. But this aot, with Its charity for human weakness, marks aud de noes the absurdity and impcBaibility of the situation. iNenber Uenerai Urant nor Air. Stewart nor the Republican press of this oity (all alike ignorant of the law) exhibited the faoulty to perceive this obvious principle of prudence aud morality npou which the law was bawd But bow did none of them see, what is better suited to tbeir raouities to eee, that Mr. Stewart in so false and absurd a situation could not possibly have or keep the publio confidence r Were be, ad Secretary, to sell gold or adopt any measure which should deprtss the foreign exchange, and thereby cause, as so often has happened, a fall in imported or exported commodities aud an interruption in th courses of industry and trade cannot he see, cannot everybody see, tbat all men who were damaged in their interests thereby would have said that Mr Stewart was buying gold or exohange and trvirg to buy it cheap? If, ou the other band be were to allow the rate of exchange te rise, wourd not every man whose interest was ia its fall have felt and said that Mr. Stewart, having got hW ex change, was now putting np his goods which were yet to be sold r And though Mr. Stewart were to reap profits only from his business for the next four years, as it would be hard to prevent his firm from doing were he Seoretary of the Trea sury, and were he to devote those profits to New York charities, would his rivals fall to feel or fail to say that in those profits he, the munificent bes tower of tbem, bad an in terest, direct aodiudireot, utterly beyond wht be could have were the.y simply flowing into his private coffers. For, were those profits small, rival merchants would suffer by his under selling them, and be would draw a still larger stream of custom to bis bazaars to inorease mightily bis subsequent profits. The Tribune praised its own business sagacity a year or two ago in running its establishment a twelve month at no profit, and doubtless the policy was eacaclous. On the other hand, were the profits of Mr Stewart's business large and the sums b stowed upon our charities considerable, would Le have no interest, direct or indirect, in such a world-wide advertisement of bis liberality and wealth ? Six millions in four years, if it went to bis bank acoonnts, could neither in create tbe sum if his present luxuries or com foits, nor the pwpular awe before suoh opa lence. Bat thus bestowed, it would agcran dize bis real possesbious. and confer upon him something wherein no other hnmau being's "interest" could eaual his namely, a fame beblde whlcb John Jacob Astor's, Smitbson's, and Peabody's would pale, aud which he, like l'eabody. would be livlug to enjoy, wr, Stewart's "Interest" in his private profits for four years would be tnsign'tiuant beside his in terest in such nublio munifioenoe. Yet we wonld not dogmatize on the law of 1789. Mr. Stewart at least knew enough when bis trouble was manifest to seek and be guided by competent legal advisers, even if his letter to tbe President stigmatizes the disabilities as technical" which thev deemed iusuperapie, But Lis nomination was not fit to have been made, and General Grant bas been driven to perceive It, despite the journals which invited him from blunder on to blunder Our Foreign ministers and Consuls. Vom e y. Y. Tines. Our foreign ministers are pretty much all, like Barkis, "willin'." Mr. llle. at OUrtria, has made no bones of it (or, as Mr. Wade would say, "no butter"), and baa asked piumply to be kept In olnoe uuder urant. iur. Kilpatriok, late of Santiago, baa done the same. Mr. Uanoroft, at llerlin, bas paid the silent but Bleuinoant oomnliment to General Qiant of giving a grand dinner In honor of bis inauguration. Mr. Dix, at Pari", goes a step further, aud writes that be had been Vniovinn tbe Inxurv of silence." and adding, I know no greater nuiaauce iu the United Siates than speech-making, and my greatest ei joyment baa been my exemption troto.li, which certainly ouaht to suit General Grant's ideas to a T, and make him as well as the country regret tbat General Dix has already nuouiiced bis purpose to come home, where be can no lorcer nope to indulge his favorite I "luxury." 1 Meauwblle, however, nr. J nnnon, in Kug- labd, eays nothing whitter about Urant, or about keeping bid oIHjh. If ban tuiuti mIsh to do Iu talking to the cullers aul strav ptklters aud flsh monger, aud In keeping all hi c land lu a roar or goi humor, aud in innkli g kuomi that tbe. Alabama biuiuesit ia at last settled. We somehow fauoy, too, tbat be never bad any thoughts of retaining his ffi(-e, end thnt in any event, with hia aenstouud gallantly, be wonld "bow to tbe setting, not to the rining euu." In general, however, we may oonolnde that all our foreign tniuihters aud consuls are Mrorg at;d nu'spoken supporters of the new Hdm'iilel ration, an Is b lilting, and that all have been "original Gmot men" ever elooe laet Novem.be r at least. Our private onuvio- tiou Is, that tbey have aleo been "Washburn men" fioui tbe start, and that they don't care who Knows it. PAPER HANGINGS. ETC. PAPER HANGINGS WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. KAGLE, COOKE & EWIHG, LATK WITH Howell & Brothers, No. I2C8 CHESNUT Street. Trndp Supplied at Jlauufacturert' I'ricps JiQVJELL & URO&., Siaaufactiircrs mid Wholesale Dealers in PAPER HANGINGS, KEMOVKU lO So. ;i and O MX'ATUK Street, BELOW MARKET, I tltt Between Hth and Seventh street. Q A N & WARD, TLAIN AD DLCOKATIVE PAPER HANGING 8, Ao. 251 South IIUUD Street, BETWEEN WALKCT AND BPUCCK, PHILADELPHIA. COUNTRY WORK PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO. 2 1K4 LOOK I LOOK 11 LOOK 1 1 1-WALL PAPERS aid Linen VVlnuow UbeOes ruauultto luitU, the cheapest iu theclty.iu JOHN VION h LfrDol. No. 10 a it nPKINU UAKDEN HLreel. briuw E.evenlu. Biuncu. Nu. 3U7 lEUtli.VL elretl, lainuen, jxtw Jtihey. y 2d A HANDSOME ASSORTMENT OP WALL XA Fai em niio Window Bl)nUe. H. b Kai,. 1-ii.UblUN & CON. io. U2 bPKliSG U AKUEM GENT.'S FURNISHING GOODS. H. 8. SC. C. Harris' Seamless Kid Glovoa KVEUV IAlti WAKKAJMTEA. JLCXTjal VK AUS.DTTH FOB UEMTB' GLOVES 4m W. 8COTT & CO., gfcrp WO. Sl t'MBimiT HTMliBT. pAlENl BLOCLDBR.fi BAM SU1HT MANUFACTORY, AND GKNTLBMEN'S FDRNISUINd STORB. fikHFKOr UTTIJSQ 8HIKT8 AND DRAWJUtf rus.de from measurement, ai very .lion notice. All other article, of OJtN TLKM kn'm nnm C-00B la foil variety. , WINCHESTER & CO., US Mo. 7U6 CHJte)OT Street. CHROMO-LITHOGRAPHS. P IC1UEES FOR PRESENTS A. 8. ROBINSON, No. 910 CHESNUT Btreet, Bas Just received exquisite specimens of ART, SUITABLE FOR HOLIDAY GIFTS, FINE DRESDEN "ENAMELS" ON PORCE LAIN, IN GREAT VARIETY. SPLENDID PAINTED PHOTOGRAPHS, Including a Number of Choice Gems. A SUPERB LINE OF CHROM03. A large assortment of NEW ENGRAVINGS, ETC. Aieo, RICH STYLES FRAMES, of elega 1 new patterns) 3 1 HOOFING. READY ROOFIN G. ThU Kooncg la auapusd to all fundings. i. can be appueu to fcii.i.i- uu txir 1I4MI1S at one-half the expense of tin.' It id read My put on old bb Ingle KooU wlluou re moving l lie Bftlnglea, lime avoiding llie daing. IhU tif ctllinga uud lumliure while undergoing repairs. (Ho gravel n&ed.) PBIU'HVK TIHB TI3 ROOF WITH HiLiojiit iLtviic t-Ai.vr, Ipm alwaya prepared to Repnir and Pnint Kooib ai fcliort notice. Also. PALM' FOii NAl.E by tbe burrel or gallon, tne neat and chtupeblln the lunrkeL W. A. WKLTOI, 2 17? No. 711 N. NINTH bt., auovo Copies. FERTILIZERS. JJOR LAWIsP, GARDENS, GRKEN U0USE3 AND FARMS. 13 A TJ O li ' 8 EAW-BUMi HJriH WIO FdAlK OF UME irll ue full nil a ow.ilul MANUKK. It Is pr nupt lu Its action; it c iuUIi.h vt sneds ot no p'Blifcroin wrcu, and will pr.idnoe luxurlaut growlhn O-ass, F o ers, S rawbeilcs, u4 a'l U.vr Uen Venellle ana F'HDts. l.nl is upiill d by i n cargo, direct t:i m tbe wbarl Or i ha lu.nu'anti rv, on liberal txrun. Bend yo rauUren. aud procure It at, "Journal ot the Faxui," 13ATJQII & SONS, Vo. 0 Booth DHL 1 W A RK Aveuae. Tbls Ferttl'zer can be bud of a'.l Agrtnaiiura lewrii lu city or cuuutiy. 8 i tuummi " COAL. yiLLIAM V. ALTER, LEIIIQII GOAL, llpo I.oi berry and Locust Mountain. Depot, No. 057 Jforlh SIXTH Street, , Holow Girard Avenue, ltolUU 6fflce Cor. 81X111 and Sl'UlAU UA11UO. FINANCIAL. UftlOR! PACIFIC RAILROAD FIRST MORTGAGE 30 Y.KA118 SIX VTAl CENT. COLD BOFIDS, FOB. SALE AT PAH 1MD ACCRUED INTEREST. DEALERS IN GOVERNMENT 8ECURITIE3, GOLD, ETC., fto. 40 South THIRD Ctroot, 11 tt PHILADELPHIA. LEDYARD BARLOVJ Hare KemoTed their LAW AXD COLLECTION OFFICE TJ No. 10 South THIRD Street, PHILADELPHIA, And will oontlnue to give careful attention to collecting and securing CLAIMS thronguout tbe United States, British, Provinces, and Eu rope. Bight Drafts and Maturing Paper collected at Bankers'. 1 28 6m GLENBINHING, DAVIS & CO No. 18 South THIRD Street, PHILADELPHIA. GLEPMHG, SATIS & AMORT No. 2 NASSAU St., New York, BACKERS AND BKOKEKS. Direct telegraphic communication with the Men York Stock Boards from the Philadelphia Office. u BUCCE880B8 TO P. F. KELLY & CO., BANKEHS AND DEALERS IN Gold, Silver, and Government Bonis, At Closest Market Kates. S. W. Corner THIRD and CHESSUT Sts. Ppcclal attention given to COMMISSION OBDEBJ3 in New York and Philadelphia Stock. Boards, etc etc. 2 U 8m SMITMMHDOLPH Dealers In United States Bonds, and Mem bers of Stock and bold Exchange, KccelTO Accounts or Itanks and Bankers on Liberal Terms, ISSUE BILLS UP EXCHANGE 02f C. J. IIAMliKO & BON, LONDON, B. METZLER, 8. 80HN & CO.. FRANKFORT JAMK3 W. TUCKER & CO., PARIS, And Other Principal Cities, and Letters of Credit Available Throughout Europe. p O R 8 A L E, LEHIGH YALLEY RAILROAD CO.'S SIX PER GENT. MORTGAGE B03DS. Also Pennsylvania and New York Canal and Rill road Company's SEVEN PER CENT. MORIOAQB BONDS, guaranteed by tbe Lehigh Valley Railroad Company. THE LEHIGH VALLEY OLD BONDS, SUBJECT TO TAX, EXCHANGED fOS NEW IbfcUE FREE FROM TAX. CHARLES C. LOXGTRETH. ' 1 1 lot Treaniiter. pm 8. PETERSON & CO., Stock and Exchange Brokers, Ka. 39 South THIRD Street, Siembers of lite Ken York and FhiladcN phla Stock aud Gold Boards. ' BTOCKB, BON 1)9, KtO., boegbt and sold OU oomcalasloa only at el thtr city. 1 24 BKJAMISOIfCo.l ! FINANCIAL. Union Pacific Railroad. 1040 IVJLXITi: BOW COMPLETED. The First Mortgage Bonds, BAVING 30 YEARS TO RUN, Principal and Interest Payable in Gold, WE ARE KO'W SELIWU AT PAR AtvD INTEREST, Or excbanglDg for GOVERNMENT BEUUKI TlKd on tue lollowltg terrue: For $1000 1881b, wo ry dlflerenoe of.,.;....l8117 fiOOO 1862a, we pay a dlrTerenoeof....... 141-63 $11X10 18U4H, we pay a difference of....... 107-92 $1000 1865s, Ntv.t we pay a dlT. of 121-68 $1000 1040s, we pay a difference of.... 90 43 $luuO 18(t6f), July, we pay adlfforeace of 100 43 $1000 18(f7e,.1uly, we;pay adlfferenceof 101 17 $1000 lMi8e, J ul j, we pay adlffoience of 104-17 Or lu proportion, as tue market for Govern ment Securities may fluctuate. WH. PAINTER & CO,, BAMLERS JLM DEALERS 13 tiOYEILI KEiMTS, tiOLD, ETC., fJo. 88 South THIRD Street. 19 PHII.A DKLFHIA. 53 A NKING HOUSE or jAYC0QKESt(p. Nos. 112 and 111 South TUIKD Stree PHILADELPHIA. Dealers In all tiorernment Securities. Old 5'2Us Wanted In Exchange for New A Liberal Difference allowed. Compound Interest Notes Wanted. Interest Allowed on Deposits. COLLECTIONS HADJBL BTOOKS boagbt and told on OommlMlon. Special boalue.1 aooomntodatloni raserrsd Udlea, W. will ncelT application rot Pollolea of ! Inanranoe in tbe Nauonai Ufa Insurance Company of tba United Statea, FoU Information siren ai oa . offloai 1 1 laa BLANK BOOKS, STATIONERY. JAFelQS D. SMITH A CO., BLANK BOOK MANTJ ACTUBEA8, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. So. 27 S011U1 SEYENTU Street, IS 18 fmwSin PHILADELPHIA. 8 TATI O IV JE AtH . GROCERIES, ETC. JpRESH FllUIT IN CA2f3. PJCACHES, PINKAPPL IS. ETC., OH EN CuN, TOMATOES. TEAS. MTJ8HHOOM3. AUPABAOUa KTO. KTO AL.I1EBT C, BOBEHTS, Irvaler In F in Orooerlea, Cor. tLEVKHTH and VIHK btreet. 117Jrp PROVISIONS, ETC. jyiCHAEL MEA011ER & CO., No. 223 Bouin SIXTEENTH Street, WHOLESALE A-SD KKTAIL DBA.LKI18 IS rBOVlHIOKN, OYll:, AND SAND CLAIMS), TEKKAPIS i I'EB BOXKM. a TRUNKS. 1MFR0VEMEKT IN TRUNKS. ALL TMJMC3 KOW MAOJt AT The "Great Cfiitral' Trunk Depot, Have Simons' PutfUt aiet B(wp na B 11 , which if curtly lubi.u. 11. c l'niu. on bum rod. wild beavy lioli. .no In lb eiiir wiitt tbe ordla.ry loci. Positively to exir. ckaige. OKJtAl' t'i:.N l KAL TRUNK DEPOT, N. W. Cor. SI rMH and CH1SNUT Sts. TBAVKLLKK3. KOTXCK Pnrcbae your 'I' links wlib Simons' Trials Fatten, ns, beavy Jlolu: iw IWtr I ck brwVUK, AT TiJK OBrfAT CENlltAL, S 19 tan o. 101 CUJtiNCT Btrrat. JJ- K B B I C K & 8 0 N 8 BOTJTHWAKK FOUNDKT, no. owAbHLNarofi) ventk. rbitaaoiphia, WILLIAM WKIUSIT'S PATKNT VAUIAEL CTJT Ofi' HTKAM JCNOISK. Beeulated by the (J.ivriuot, MKKK1CH I4 trAfci if iiOlSUWU alAOHIIMtV FatenteO JuiiB, Ittta D.VlDJoy'b FA1KKT VA1.VKU1H HTKAU. AtAMiiljMt, I). M. WEalOM'O FATKNT BKX.F-i.iJi TfcUIKU, IS KLF KA LA CXdTIUit'CiAL bCUAJt-DRAINlMiUACalNK HYfiliO t-XTttun'Ott, F 3t Cotton or Wou. leu u aunxaotu -, f uuu n