THE DAIL5T EVENING TELEGRAriT TRIPLE SHEET PHILADELPHIA, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 11, 1SC0. nrin.IT or ins tilsss. Editorial Opinion, of the ltln J.nrnala Upon Current TopUa-Complied KvrrT lny for the ICvrulnff Toli-grnph. QUAKF.H'H AND IXHIANS. From Ih y. Y. lit'lei'dxlrit'. The BHHooiutioa of Frioml with Indians hi a tiweot traditionary fragrance that is likely to last. It 'loolcs ns if (reneral Grant had done a wwe tltiug in selecting comtuis Hioners from that body of Clirintiaiifl whoso name BngueKtR kindncsH, and whoso princi- Eles plodgo them to simplicity, sincerity, oneHty, and peace. These good men whose names are Benjamin llallowell, of Baltimore Yearly Meeting; Franklin Haines, of New York Yearly Meeting; John Dudley and Joseph Powell, of Philadelphia Yearly Meet ing have made report of their expedition to isit the Indiana in the Northern Snperin tendoncy in the State of Nebraska. There are six reservations in the State. The Taw ncea came first in order, their renerration lying but about one huudred wiles west of Omaha; next oanie the Iowas, Sacs and Foiea, who oocapy ground in the extreme bouthoaatem corner of the State; the Otoes aud Missourias lie to the west of these; the Santce Sioux ocenpy a reser vation in the northwestern part of the State; the Winnebagoea are on the Missouri river, iut a short distance from Sioux City; the location of the Omahas is adjacent to that of tko Winnobagoes. All these six agencies are under the care of Friends, each having an agent who resides on the reservation and who represents the care of the General Gov ernment. The superintendent of them all is Suinuel M. Janney, who lives at Omaha. Thoso men, Mr. Janney included, were ap pointed on the recommendation of the Indian committee of the Frionds. They went to work last May. Evidence outside of the report goes to show that these agencies work well. Mr. Janney has made two visits to all the reservations since his appointment. The influence of the new agents is already seen in the greater content of the Indians on the reservations, their increasing willingness to work, aud the disposition to adopt more and more the habits of civilized life. Drunkenness is diminishing, industry is becoming systematic; industrial schools for the children have been instituted and are found to succeed promisingly. The peaoe-innking agents encourage the arts of labor, in preference to those of war and the chase; and already the Indians begin to ask for implements of agriculture, in place of the guns, ammunition, and knives they required under the old dispensation. From the unstudied narrative before us we aio confirmed in the impression that maltreat ment of every kind and degree ou the part of Kcttlers and of Government agents has pro duced a good deal, perhaps the largest part. f the minery, dissatisfaction, and ferocity of the savnges. To the inquiries of the dale gates, complaints of knavery, thieving, vio lence, bad or broken treaties, were the in variable answer. What the red men wanted was an assurance of the good fuith of the overniuent. In some instances, ns with the PawnocK, there was an inclination to be stub born in their demand for something the agents had no authority to give, and were determined, if possible, to withhold; but they yielded at length, on being assured that every reasonable request should be attended to and the influence of the authorities directed towards their satisfaction. It was clear that the agents were gaining power over the sim ple creatures by their moral virtues. They were winning contidence; and, backed as they wore by the General Government, their words were believed. Truthfulness and kindness Lad been steadily making their mark, and were slowly not so very slowly either erasing the lines stamped ou the Indian dis position by suspicion and anger. Thus far the new experiment has worked woll. The press and correspondents of Eastern papers from Western cities bear their testimony to the good already effected by the Hew policy and its missionaries. Some of the anticipations may be too sanguine; the sweet Roulod Friends may interpret too generously the moral and spiritual manifestations that were exhibited to them, and build too much on superficial signs of progress. Their faith in human nature seems to be in advance of their knowledge of human character. But it is so delightful to Jiave any honest testimony in regard to the dispositions and capacities of the Indians, it is so pleasant to hear good men speak hopefully of them, that we are in clined to take their accounts literally, and be lieve that all they prophesy will come to pass. Surely, these fine Gospel methods will briug it to pass, if the salvation of the poor Indians is written in the book of destiny. DIVORCES IN OTHER STATES. FVom the X. Y. Times. The question of the validity of divorces obtained in another State has beon brought prominently before the public by recent cir cumstances. It may not be without interest to see what have been the rulings of our Courts on the subject. An early case is Jackson vs. Jackson, de cided in 1800. The parties were married in this State in 1800. They lived together hero as man and wife till 1802, when the wife went to Terinont, declaring that she went there to obtain a divorce. She obtained it by decree of a Court in February, ISO;!, and then came uj mm oiaie, ine nusnana continuing meanwhile to reside here. The decree of the Vermont Court, besides divorcing the parties, decreed to the wife $1."00 alimony, aud ou this decree she sued her husband for that amount. The Court, Spenoer delivering the f ic. mr-j irrro ihji CUUOU Upon to pronounce on the legal effect of the Ver mont divorce, but they would give the wife no assistance in the matter, becuuse it was a plain effort on her part to evade the force of onr laws, and thev i'vn i.,1o-miif. r ti. ,i T J O " ' bUO UO fendant. ; The next case was Pawling vs. Wilson. The divoroe was granted to the wife in this case by the Legislature of Connecticut, the Lusbaud, though living here, appearing there ana contesting the question. I he Court de , clined to , pass on the question whether the divoroe was obligatory here, but cpoke of the fact that the marriage was originally con tracted in Connecticut, as making a marked distinction between that case and Jackson vs. Jackson. The next ease was Borden vs. Fitch. Fitch 'married In Connecticut in 178 1. in ino7 the parties separated, and the wife, in 1H08, prp cured from the Connecticut Legislature a separate maintenance. In 181:1 Fitch pro cured a decree of divorce in Vermont, his wife having no actual notice of the proceed ings. In 1814 he married a MisH Bordun, in thin State, concealing from her the faots as to his divorce. In 1815, the facts being learnod, Miss Borden's mother brought suit against Lim for damages for debauching her daughter, aud obtained a verdict for $:(K)0. The Court frustainod the verdict, holding that the Ver mont divorce waj absolutely void, because Fitch's wife was not wilhin the jurisdiction of the Vermont Court. The nckt case was Brndshaw vs. Heath, de- I cided in 1835. Mrs. Bradshaw fluod for dower I as the widow of Thomas Bradshaw, whom she had married In 1813. The defendant proved that in 1784, in Connecticut, she had married Charles McDonald, who was still living. The plaintiff proved a divorce for desertion granted to her by a Connecticut court in 1 7!lf. It ap peared that MoDonald was at that time living in this State, and had no notice of the suit for divorce. The court held the same rule, but with a suggestion that the decreo of divorce might perhaps be binding on parties who acquiesced in it. The next cose Is Visscher vs. Visschor, de cided in 1851. The partios were married in this State In 184. In 184C the wife obtained from the Court of Chancory a decree of sepa ration, not a divorce. In 1850 the husband obtained from a court in Michigan a decree of divorce against his wife for desertion, the wife having no aotnal notioe. In 1851 he married again in this State, and his first wife thereupon brought a suit for divoroe for adul tery in such marriage, and the court granted it, holding that the Michigan decree was void. The next case was McGiffert vs. MoGiffert, decided in 185!). The parties were married hore in 18 In 1852 the husband went to Indiana, leaving his wife hore, and in May, 185.'?, he obtained from a court there a decree of divorce against his wife for desertion, she not appearing in the case. lie then married again in Indiana, and in October, 1855, re turned to this State with his new wife. The first wife then sued himfor divorce, charging that such relation was adulterous, and the Court grantod her a divorce. The most recent case which we have found is the case of Todd vs. Kerr, decided in 18(t. Mr. Todd living in this State and his wife in New Jersey, she procured in 1814 an act to bo passed by thi New Jersey Legislature divorcing her from her husband. He after wards bought real estate in Brooklyn. lie died in 18G2 and she claimed her dower in the real estate. The Court held that the act could not affect his interests, and therefore did not affect her's, and decreed in favor of her claim. The rule deducible from this series of de cisions would seem to be that our Courts will treat as void a divorce obtained in another State, unless the divorced party appeared in those proceedings, or was a resident of suoh other State. It is very doubtful whether the fact that actual notice of the proceeding was given to the divorced party would mistuin it without such appearance or residence. If this is the law, is it too much to expect of clergymen and all others who are called upon to marry a person who has beon divorced, that they will first satisfy themselves that such appearance was made, or such actual notice given, or at least that the divorced party resided within the jurisdiction where the divorce was obtained, lest they give sane- iion 10 a relation wnicn our courts must de clare to be adulterous? ; THE MODERN DICK TUltPIN. From t1i y. Y. Tribune. Gentlemen of the road have become demo ralized, we fear, since they betook themselves to city practice. We would succrest to the consideration of our too practical burglars the old stories of the chivalry of Dick Turpi n and ueniieman jacK. Alter tnose gallant outlaws had robbed a travelling chariot they always restored to the ladies their diamond rings, asking sometimes the privilege of kissin" the fair hand as they put them on. Very different is ine practice oi our modern Knights of the Itching palm. After the. late robborv of the Beneficial Savings Fund in Philadelphia, in their subsequent amicable traffic with the directors and police for the stolen goods, they not only demanded to retain all the cash taken, but twenty per cent, on the bonds and the diamonds. We do not scruple to say boldly that tno diamonds should have been returned. The rest was legitimate matter of trade, but a woman s gear : It was a little matter, but an opportunity for the gentle guua oi burglars to snow their nobility of boul, which unfortunately they neglected. Their admission into society of late years. too, renders it doubly incumbent on them to act in these matters with a fine sense of deli cacy and honor. Dick Tnrpin was liable to find a pistol presented to his head by the un- appreciative subjects of his light-fingered skill, and if caught was sure of Newgate and the rope. Our modern burglar, having gained nis spoil, calmly awaits a summons to friendly conference with the late owners of the bonds, detectives being present merely as mutual friends. The conference in the late Philadelphia case, we understand, was of the pleasantest description terrapin and a snug glass of wine not being wanting. The parties separated on the most amicable terms, in deed, so impressed were our grave Quaker brethren with their new acquaintances, that a meddlesome editor, who gave to the transac tion the name of compounding a felony, and censured the Grand Jury for not talcina cog nizance of it, was threatened with indictment for contempt of court. The same 'jury, to show their unimpeachable zeal, have just made on expedition into the Philadelphia ive Points to ferret out the keepers of ten cent lodeiner houses. ! The bush; ess is move profitable a woll as honorable thn lu Turpin's times. Twenty per cent, for tireu weeks custody of another man s bonds ia a satisfactory return for slight investment of , trouble. No money w reouired, and. as "e police eagorly assure them, no danger is ih ourred. : So satisfactory was it to the entW len concerned in the venture in Philadelphia. tllllt they have under taken several others sin. with equidly plea sant results. . The lutoht, y ' believe; is that of the Bovlston Bank- in Boston, hnd the directors have already publish. a tUt ir invita tionto a conference, where twt ntv P0: cent will be offered, and we suppose terrapin and tea, a more itsthetic drink than w in muting the occasion, tho ancient craft of burglary now having beon reoogni-d as one I ot tUe liberal professions. " , Still, we insist if there bo any jewt lrv ia the question, let it be returned. Begat u to these little delicacies marks the true gen. le num. Our friends of the drill and jimn. ,v may find their intercourse with society mon 1 profitable aud pleasant without attention to such tniies, but their' diameters will laok a certain desirable chivnlrie glow. It hangs about the memory of Turpin, alt hough,' owing to the dull Bgo in which he lived, he was not paid for robbery, and the man who traded with him would have been branded hh com pounder of a felony. The people loved him, though the law with the old-fashioned pre judice against theft persisted in giving him a rcie instead of twonty per cent, j THE RIGHTS OF CHILDREN; from the K. Y. Motion. , Eighteen years ago Herbert Spenoer wrote a chnpter on the rights of children. In this chapter, which was considered wild and, revo lutionary by some, in fact, a retlueiio ad ab turdum of his entire social philosophy, tho writer maintained that the law, "Every man hr.h freedom to do all thut hn willu nrnviiluJ he infringes not tho equal freodom of any other man," applied an inuob t tuo yonng as to the mature; that tho child had faculties to be exercised; that it needed sope for their oxei'cisr; that to obtain such scope it mint have oomploto freedom freedom coexten sive, and, consequently, rifzbts coextensive, with those of the adult. In working out the bearings of this principle Mr. Spencer dealt hard blows at the roccived doctrines of pa rental authority, rulo, and caio. lie more man impuea mat the best thing parents coum do for their children was to give thetti a good letting alone. This chapter hns oTtea. occur red to ns m connection with the reasontngs about women's rights. It would seem at first glance as if the extreme advocates of tho righta of women to share, and share alike with mon, in tho business affairs of so ciety, were carrying out Mr. Spencer's doc trine in good earnest. The children are to have a good letting alone. The law of liberty may bo trusted to look after their develop ment. Ihe nrincinal ritrht being the right to freedom of growth according to the natural bent of their dispositions, the new order of things will meet this requirement exaotly. 1 he parents being both out of the way, the "little individuals" will be allowed to grow in grace undisturbed. A doener elanco at Mr. Spencor's pages, however, discloses the fact tuat ne docs not propose to dispense alto gether with parental supervision, but only with certain old-fashioned, coarse, and unin telligent forms of it. He says- to tho parents, "Hands off. but he adds, instead of hands, hearts. In a word, he vastlv increases the responsibilities of mothers and fathers by insisting that their influence shall be more subtle and pervasive, and that, to this end, their care shall be more steady, more con stant, more intelligent, and tender. That to this end acain. their characters must be of finer mould, their culture more perfect, their manners more Gracious: all of which is dis couraging to the hope of foolish mothers, that thoy are at last justified by stern philoso phy in neglecting their children. What will the extreme advocates ot the rights ot women sav to this We aro aware that before now critics have raised the objec tion that the new reforms would, if carried into effect, result in the neglect of children, in their consenuont untidiness, nnruliness. wilfulness, and lcnorance; further on. in their viciousness and general demoralization; and, ultimately, in the defeat of civilization and the blighting of mankind. We are aware, too, of tho reply which has been made to such apprehensions, namelv, that they are ground less; that the proper care of children does not occupy nil tho time: that when other duties are done, there is room for those of the nursery; that women have brought up largo families of children, and brought them up well, "in tho intervals of business," they themselves bein physicians, or teachers, or artiuts, writers of buoks, editors of papers, or tenders in shops; that, m fact, tho mental freshening they got in this way was a help rather than a hindrance to the faithful performance of their domestic duties. To these arguments there are several things to reply, which, to say fully, our space forbids. We may be permitted to entertain a doubt respecting the truth of tho last assertion, if laid down as a rule. We take the liberty to demur in regard to the declaration that pre cedes it, having seen something of the households and of tho children belonging to these discursive and enterprising mothers, and seldom envyin? or desiring the same. Wo could very properly nr."e the old saying that, being exceptions, the women who achieve such feats in administration at home and abroad prove tho incapacity of women in general to do the same thing, liistinguishea ability furnishes no rulo for average, far loss ior under-average, ability. A reform like the one projected implicates all women and nil children, as much those who want to get rid of their offspring as those who want to nurturo their offspring; the careless us much as the thoughtful, the faithless as much ns the faithful, the incompetent as much as the competent, the vast multitude who need to be kept at home and held to their duty by every possible argument and inducement, ns much as the exceedingly small number who have faculty and spirit to spare for outside pursuits, society is interested in tho mass of experiences, not in a few special experiments. The special experiments may succeed per fectly, to the satisfaction of the most caption critics, without at all affecting our judgment on the main case. For all that appears thus far, that judgment rends adversely to the belriof that the rights of women, as interpreted by the EeovlvtioH, for instance, are compati ble with the rights of children to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. WINES AND LIQUORS. H ER MA JEST CHAMPAGNE. ; BuiJTon & Lussorj. 215 SOUTH FKONT STREET. V EE ATTENTION OK THE TT.ADE 18 solicited to the followinir very Ouott-u Winos, elo.. for sle by 1HTNTON A LUSSON, 215 SOUTH FRONT BTRKKT. OHAMPAtiNKS.- Agtiiita for lier Mjty, luo da Moutliellf, tjRrtc Bleun, Curtn Hlanoh. and (Jlmrlea Fsrra'H Uriincl Vin KuRenie, and Vin imperial, M. Klf mnn A Jo , of lluycoce, Nparkliuc Moxellu and KHiNiC WINKS. 11 A Dl'.IRAS. Old Ihlund, South Siiln RtrvB. KUERR1KS.-F. Rudolph, AiiKmtilludo, Topa, Val-lrtl-, 1'iile und (Suldcn lia, Uioun. etc. I'OR'IH. Vintio Veluo Real, Valletta, and Ortmn. C1.ARKT8. Promis Aine A !ie., Moultorrand and Bor deaux, CUrnt and Snutei ne Wine ; (IN. "Mpdor Kwau." , 11RAND1K8. Uonnenscy, Olurd, Dupuy Jt Oo.' riou vintniw. 4 6 p AltSTAIRS ,4 McC ALL, Noh. 12 WALNUT and 21 URANITK Btreeta. Importer of UHANDIKS, WINKS, UIN, OLIVliOIL, KTO.. AND ' COMMISSION MERCHANTS . For the aula of ' I'URK OLD RYK. WHEAT, AND BOURBON WH IS. K IK IS. r ATX STAIRS' OLIVE OIL-AN INVOICE of Ui above for aale by , . UlUlr 622p5 No.126WALM LNUT ud 31 (IRANI fit hu. YP. M. a Sharpen tha Appetite. v V V Hi. 'jti Make tUa Weak Robust. "Add tobtermof Life. . , ' Ia Unadulterated. r ' I superior for Miuce Ml- Y. " ''lakoBeatWhikjr Punch Ar M Curm Dyspopma. Y. ,"' ' thejfot In th. World. . 'APEFt HANQINOS.J OK 1 1 LOOK 1 ! ! -WALL PAPERS Window Bhade M"" iUrtJ ,J N blreet. balow Klnl Utwo. JJo. T OOK ! LOv ' and Lin. Olinapehi in ti:e h'i;lMJ UiHUt H I' r DhKALiiU iimdMn. Naur jaravr. - FINANOIAL. CENTRAL RAILROAD OF IOWA. ITS SEVEN PER CENT. COLO FIRST MORTGAGE BONDS, Free of Government Tax. At 95 and Accrued Interest. MANY TEIlSONa ARB SELLING THEIR GOV- EKNMENT BOND8 WHILE THE PREMIUM 18 STILL LARGE (as tho Treasury haj promlacd to bay thirteen millions in Deeembtr), AND REINVEST IN THE FIRST MORTGAGE BONDS or TliK CEN- TUAL RAILROAD OF IOWA, WHICH PAY ABOUT ONE-THIRD more INTEREST. THE TIME TO MAKE SUCH REINVICSrMENT U white the Trea- tury is buying, and Government are at a premium. THE ROAD DOES NOT RUN THROUGH A WILDERNESS, where It would have to wait years for population and business, but through the most thickly settlod and productive agricultural counties in the State, which gives each section a large traillc as soon as completed. It runs through the great coal fields ot Southern Iowa to the North, where coal is iiullnpcntable aud inuht bo carried. It runsroni the great lumber regions of the North, through a district of country which ia destitute of this prime necessity. The mortgage Is made to the Farmers' Loan and Trust Company, of New York, and bonds can bo issued ouly at tho rate of l0,ooo per mile, or only half the amount upon some other roads. Special security Is provided for the principal and for the payment of interest. First Mortgage Bonds for so small an amount upon road running through such a rich and already well-settled part of Iowa, can well oe recommended as a perf cully safe as well as very profitable Invest ment. Pamphlets, with map, may be obtained, and sub scriptions will be received, at THE COMPANY'S OFFICES, No. 83 PINK Street, NEW YORK, and at the BANK OF NORTH AMERICA, No. 44 WALL Street, and in Philadelphia by IS OWES J & FOX, JVSerc-ItaiiaM' Kxcliaug;e Ilnildlu, 13. Iv. JV31lHOlV aS: CO., N.W. Cor. THIRD and CHESNUT Sts., Pamphlets sent by mall on application. W. C. SHATTUCK, It 13 stnthlm4p TREASURER. COUPONS OP Union Pacific Railroad Co., Central Pacific Railroad Co., UrJITED STATES, DUE JANUARY 1, 1870, BOUGHT. GOLD BOlIGIir. DE HA YEN & BR0., DEALERS IN GOVERNMENT GOLD, ETC., SECURITIES, No. 40 South THIRD Street, 6 Hi PHILADELPHIA. A . DUNN. ELLIOTT BANKERS, NO. 109 SOUTH THIRD STREET. PHILADELPHIA, DRAW BILLS OF EXCHANGE ON THE UNION BANK OF LONDON. DEALERS IN ALL GOVERNMENT SECURITIES, GOLD, BILLS, Eta Receive MONEY ON DEPOSIT, allowing interest. Execute orders for Btooka In Philadelphia, New York, Boston, and Baltimore, 1 A Mi pU2NIIIVIVlNtit 1AIS Jc CO., No. 48 SOUTH THIRD STREET, PHILADELPHIA. GlENDINNING, DAVIS & AMORT, No. 2 NASSAU STREET. NEW YORK. BANKERS AND BROKERS. ISiiyiiis and selllnur Stocks, Bonds, and Gold on Coininuislon a bpeclalty. Phuadelpld. houne coum-cted by telegraphic with the brock Boards and Oold Room ot New York. U ut FINANCIAL.. tiii: FIRST MORTGAGE SINKING FUND 7 PER CENT. 40 YEAR GOLD BONDS r thb CMc DaiTills and Yincms RAILROAD COMPANY. rm. m . . a . - Al fVAA iiai amouni 10 e iiu-m, - OOOon 11 IWUenoritoad, (Extending from Chicago through Eastern Illinois to the Junction with the Evansville and Terre Haute Railroad, with which it forms the shortest TRUNK LINE to Louisville and the South), making the average ot Bonds about 1 13,000 per mile, and It Is expressly guaranteed that the bond Issue shall not exceed that sum. The Road traverses a country that assures a large and profitable business ; Is built and equipped from Chicago to Momenoe, a distance of 65 miles, and UPON THIS PORTION OF THB LIN 8 ONLY WB NOW OFTBR TUB BONDS FOB 8ALK. These Bonds are protected with extraordinary care by registration ana otherwise: ine interest npon them will be paid out of one-third the net earnings, aud the Sinking Fund, created and set aside, will provide ample means for their redemp tion. They are Onicially Registered and Transferred by the Union Trust Company of New York, who thus become the custodian of these Bonds. It ih coNFiPKNri.T bbi.ibtkd that no Bonds can bb madb mokb perfectly- bkcurb, or MORS ABSOLUTELY SAFE. It Ii a CAPITAL ADVANTAGE of these Bonds that they bear T per cent, gold Interest for 40 years; and compared with 6 per cent, gold bonds, the addi tional 1 per cent, at compound Interest, for thirty years, would give the owner of this Bond a profit of 95l -as, and for forty years, $2003 -49. Government Sixes might be exchanged with this result: 810,080 would buy (12,000 of these bonds, payable in gold, yielding a profit in hand, and besides THE GAIN OF I20OO PRINC IPAL AND THE AN NUAL 6 PER CENT. THEREON, WOULD, AT MATURITY, NET THE BUYER $24,04M0 ADDI TIONAL PROFIT IN INTEREST. Prices at present, 95 and accrued interest from October J. Pamphlets, with Maps and detail, and the BONDS may be had of us, or of E IIATUrV Jk, UieOTlIKK, Dealers in Government Securities, etc., No. 41) South THIRD Street, Philadelphia. Having personally examined this entire line of road, finished and projected, as well as tho country through which it runs, we offer these Bonds with every conlldence in their full worth and soundness. W. BAILEY LANG t CO., No. 54 CLIFF Street, New fork, Agents for the sale of tho Bonds. 18 S thatuGt B A N K I N u II O II 8 13 or JAY COOKE & CO., IVos. 112 and lit . TIlIKIt St., PHILADELPHIA. Dealers. in Government Securities Old 5-208 Wanted in Exchange for' New. A Liberal Difference allowed. Compound Interest Notes Wanted. Interest Allowed on Deposits. COLLECTIONS MADE. STOCKS bought and sold on Commission. Special business accommodations reserved for ladles. We will receive applications for Policies of Life Insurance in the National Life Insurance Company of the United States. Full Information given at our oulce. 1018m B. It. .IAMINO!V Jc JO., SUCCESSORS TO 1. '. UELLY .V CO., RANKERS AND DEALERS IN Sold, Silver, anti Government Bonfls, AT CLOSEST MARKET RATES, N. W. Cor. THIRD and CHESNUT Sts. Special attention given to COMMISSION ORDERS in New York and Philadelphia Stock Boards, etc etc 6 5 US 81 D It 12 X II I. afc C O., No. 34 SOUTH THIRD STREET. A ia o r 1 o u ii ami IToreifcru ISSUE DRAFTS AND CIRCULAR LETTERS OF CREDIT available on presentation In any part of Europe. , . Travellers can make all their financial arrange ments through us, and we wilt collect their Interest and dividends without charge. DUIZBL, WlKTOROP k CO., I DHKHSL, HARJIS & CO., New York. ' Vtala. - 8 1 JOHN 8. RUSHTON & CO., No. 50 SOUTH THIRD STREET. JANUARY COUPONS AND CITY WA11RANTS 1U 8 3m ' BOUUUT, AMD SOLD. FINANCIAL,. Burglary, Fire, cr Accident. The Safe Deposit Cotnnan a IK TUIIR .1 I New Fire and Burglar-Proof Building Hot. 329 and 3.11 CHESNUT STREET. The Fidelity Insurance,, Trus AX O SAFE DEPOSIT COMPANY CAPIT A I i,000,t DIRKUTORS. ff. I. Ilfwnii, I PflwaH W. Olarfc. ."r7:".,t: OUrk, ilnmiln Hnry ,".W'2i'' i . fkoptiwi A. ).U44I, Oharlo Mclir. inr K Tftr HrniTrD. Oibaoa. Prfidrnt-!. B. BROW N . Tic Prmidmit-OLARHNUR II. ULARK. SwrUrraa4TrMmfy-KOBRHT PATTKRNON AiUnigofianr-JAMKS Vf. UA7J.KUUR8T. Th OotnpanF bar provided la thalr RnlLli.. aJ VaalU abolat Kmrl asalaat to by flRK. BUU OI.ARY. r AOOI PUNT. and I RKOKIV1 SKOURITIM AND VALUABLES OS D FOHIT UNDER OUARAHTKK, tTpoa th following rate, for oa f aar or laa mmrinA GoTsrwnmit and all othar Uoupon Bnoari- Wra. or tans transferal)! by dolimtry. ,. .tl'M oat tlMi uorarnmiuit ana an otnor Beonrlliea rogia- tenta ana nncoUabl oaly by radonem. M mt IW (ioia uou r Bullion I 2 ot 1M Bilror Coin or Bullion ) ot par 1M Bilrar or Oold Flat, under anal, on owner' atitnaU of vala. and rat aabjeot to ad Jnatnumt for bulk I'M Dor 1M Jewelry, Diamond, etc j par loq Deed, Mortitace, and Valuable Paper generally, wh of no fixed raloe, 91 a year, eaoh, or aooordiu to balk. These latter, when deposited In Tin Boxea,ar ohanreq aooordlnu to bull, upon a basis of 14 feet oubiooaW4 city, B10 a year. Coupon and interest will be oollnoted, when desired, a. remitted to the owners, for one per cent. The Company offer for RF.NT, the lessee eiclustreli holding th key, SAFES INSIDE THK HUROLAK-PROOV VAOLTH At rate varyiiiR from $11 to (76 eaoh, per annum, aooord ing to Si Be, Depomts of Money Received, on which interest will Vt allowed : S per cent, on Gall Deposits, payable by Oheck at sight, and 4 per cent, on Time De posit, payable on ten day' notioe. T.-nllnMl r n . i . . : -v I : 1 -1. 1 j . ... .iiui.i uvvw.i. v . winiik luiuiMim, at iiaiiiu m w. part of Kurope. H This Company is aim authorised tout H Kiecatort Administrators, and Guardians, to reoeire and eseoni TtuhU of every description from tb Oonrt, orporaUoad or individuals. N. B. BROWNE, PRKSIJDEMT. KOBERT PATTERSON, 11 S3 tuths2m&p 8KORKTARY AND TREASUR A RELIABLE HOME INVESTMENT THE FIEST MORTGAGE. BONDS or mi Wilmington and Reading Railroad BEARING INTEREST - At SEVEN FEB CENT. In Curreno PAYABLE APRIL AND OCTOBER, FREE STATE AND UNITED STATES TAXES, This road runs through a thickly populated rich agricultural and manufacturing district. For the present, we are offering a limited amooo oi tne aoove Bonos at 85 CENTS AND INTEREST. The connection of this road with the PennsyleanlA and Reading Railroads Insures It a large and remnj neratlve trade. We recommend the bonds as tUa cheapest first-class investment in the market. 1 V7m. FaAXTITEXl 3i CO., J BANKERS AND DEALERS IN GOVERNMENTS No. 36 SOUTH THIRD STREET, t!9 81 PHILADELPrnA. FIRST BZOZVTCrAGZ2 SEVEN PER CENT. GOLD , BONDS OP THK rredericksburg- and Oordonsville Railroad Co., of Virginia. Principal and Interest Payable in Gold. Tliu. Pk. i l. . i n . moot i"jmi. o wvurau ujir imv ana miy jMorTjrajru on the entire real estat,road, personal property, branobiH u.j ruiiiuK kwr . oi Liio ooiupauy, given to 1 ne Jrarmon1 Loan and I'rust Company, of New Vork, Trnatees. . 1 be road is t miles in lenath. oonoeetm. FrednHca burg with OharlottosTille by wy of Orange Uouri Hous. paHhing through a seotion of the Hbenandoah Valley, the local tramo of which alona will snmuirt th ,iU ... part of th great through lines to th Southwest and West the safoty and seourity of th Company's Bonus are placed V beyond question and doubt. i W otter a limited amount of these Bond at aad I Interest from November 1 in currency. I Pamphlets, maps, and information furnish sd on applies I TArJNTSR & CO., No. 49 WALL BTRKKT, NEW YORK. SAIfTTJEI, WORK, 13 4 it No. !i5 8. THIRD ST., PUILADKLPUIA. REMOVAL. SMITH. RANDOLPH & CO, BANKERS. UAVR RXMOVCD TO No. 121 SOUTH THIRD STREET, A CORNER OARTKB'8 ALLK7. Opposite Girard Baak. lstf QITY WARRANTS BOUGHT AND SOLD. C. T. YERKEO, Jr., & CO.. NO. 20 SOUTH THIRD STREET, ' PHILADELPHIA P. S. PETERSON & CO.. Stock and Exchange Broken, HO. S9 BOUTH THIRD STREET, V embers of the New York aud PhUadolpiua and (Joid Boards, STOCK 8, BONDS, Elo., bought and ld oa onni miaslOBOniT at either city . lMf