THE DAILY EViSlSihtt TEKEGIlArirawm v, isttt srinrr or otto rasas. BtWriaJ Oplalvaa af tha Iadls Jrala t7ta Carraat Toplee-llosnpllesl Kverf lay for the KTealac Telearapfc. THE DANGER OF WAR IN UTAH. Xrm the X T. WarUU The excitement in Utah over Mr. Gullom's till for the suppression of polygamy will be greatly intertilled when the Mormons dis cover the actual proytoions of the bill, a it has been amended by the Committee on Ton ritories. After describing and declaring polygamy to be a crime, the amended bill provides that, for the enforoement of this law, the President shall Bend a sufficient body of troops to Utah; and, to thia end, he ia authorized to employ the regular army, and also to raise twenty-five thousand militia in the Territory. It is further provided that the property of any Mormons who may leave Utah on account of thia law, or who may be Lmprirtoned for resistance thereto, shall be taken and used for the benefit of the families of such Mormons. ' This bill means war. Its terms and its pro visions are in the nature of preparations for war. Its execution will assuredly be fol lowed by war. Not only is the regular army to be ordored to Utah, but volunteers are to te called for; and these forces are to be placed under command of the experienced military officer (General Shaeffer) whom Grant has just appointed Governor of the Territory. As a preliminary to operations, Utah must, Of course, be placed nnder martial law. No jury that could be found there would ever pronounoe any Mormon guilty of the crime of polygamy. No jury, in fact, could be ob tained fitted to serve as a body for the en foroement of this law. Either the President or Congress has the power of putting the Territory of Utah under martial law; and if Grant signs this bill there need be no doubt that he will be prepared to exercise that pewer. Those who may be deolared guilty of poly gamy are to be imprisoned, and their pro perty is to be confiscated. We estimate that the enforcement of these provisions would involve the imprisonment of over five thou sand persons, and the confiscation of over fifty millions of dollars' worth of property. This confiscation is to be carried out under the Jiretext of affording support to the wives and amilies of the polygamio offenders; and it is to be carried out, whether they are inearoe rated in prison or fly beyond the authority of the United States. We pronounce it a mere pretext to say that the confiscated pro perty will be used for the benefit of Mormon wives and children. If the polygamio hus bands fly from Utah, their families will un doubtedly accompany tnem; if the polygamio husbands are imprisoned (which is an absur dity), society will be utterly broken up and destroyed. In either case, the confiscated property would fall into the hands of the Gen tiles; and this is doubtless the purpose of the hill. Will the Mormons fight? Will they fly? Will they give up polygamy ? Fifteen years ago, when the Mormons had lesA than a quarter of their present strength, they showed their entire readiness to fight for their system. They met GeneralJohnston's army in the mountains, harassed his advance on their strongholds, and, though matters Boon came to a point at which warlike opera tions were stopped, they gave proof of their power to offer formidable resistance, as well as of their willingness to confront any enemy. Previous to that time, when in Nauvoo, they frequently displayed a similar spirit and pur pose having their troops always organized, and standing always in the attitude of "saints militant and belligerent." In fact, the Mor mon Church and army have been "one and indivisibls" from the time that they were both organized by the Prophet Joseph Smith. We do not believe that any one who com- 5 rehends the system and spirit of Brigham oung, as he has kept them up for the last Quarter of a century, can doubt that the Mor mons are prepared to assume a belligerent at titude if the principles of Cullom's bill are enforced against them by military power. They will not give up polygamy, for they hold it to be as much a matter of divine reve lation as any other doctrine of Mormonism. They will not resort to flight in the direction of Mexico or elsewhere not, at least, until they have made an effort to hold their ground in Utah. Congress should understand this, and the country should be warned of these things, before the passage of Cullom's bill. There is danger that, after the circumstances of the case are developed, the Government will be compelled either to back down from Cullom's ground or to undertake a "bigger job" than most people have any idea of. If we force them intp a hostile attitude, the Mormons can give us a very disagreeable, a very wearisome, and a tremendously expensive war. Cullom's bill provides for the employment of about forty thousand troops, partly regulars and partly volunteers. The Mormons could give such a force two or three years' fighting, at an annual expense to us of not less than two hundred millions of dollars. The Government should not forcibly inter fere with polygamy or Mormonism at all. The pacific forces are now in action that will make it impossible for polygamy to exist any great length of time. CANADIAN INDEPENDENCE. Frrm th H. Y. Tribune. Mr. Huntington, one of the ablest leaders of the Dominion, will, we are advised by tele graph, bring forward the question of Inde pendence in the Parliament which meets at Ottawa on the 12th. With the Hon. John Young and others, Mr. Huntington has la bored to represent facts and figures the oonviotions of that large portion of the peo ple of Canada who are opposed to Confedera tion. He is identified with the doctrine that Independence with a Zollverein tor all North America would be a more natural and rational oondition for Canada than Confederation tethered to imperialism, and starved for want ' of reciprocity. A sharer of his views has even proposed that if the United States will consent to reduce by five per cent, its tariff on manufactured goods imported from other countries than Canada, Canada will conform to the tariff and excise laws of the United rotates noon the nlan of a Customs Union The Zollverein idea will probably form a part of Mi. Huntington's expected proposition. The titled managers of Canada will feel in duty bound to denounce Mr. Huntington's motion as an overture to annexation. But let Canadians consider whether any state of affairs can be so favorable to annexation as, one whioh has neither sound f aderaliiim mr honest imperialism to recommend it wlilr-h is neither a monarchy nor a republio, nor yet a satisfactory union of odds and ends. Nova Sootia denies thai confederation is worth what it costs, and votes it down. Newfound. land Ulh) its Government that both confede ration and its representative in authority are undeserving of confidence. The people of ' Prince Edward's Island hare discovered taut confederation in lfV.8 would have bronght I them AM,47 against 08,(WO taken from them, and are inclined to declare that it will not pay. British Columbia has petitioned for annexation, because the Canadian sohome fails to supply its needs. Winnipeg is ram pant Just for want of a certain indepen dence which Hudson Bay owners, ready made council, and lordly governors cannot give it. The gentlemen who come out from Eng land to settle the Bed Biver grievanoe, to urge confederation and a transcontinental railroad, and to bind up the general looseness of the Dominion, will have much to observe and to learn. We believe that they will find confederation in itself a failure too far gone td be galvanized into activity by counsels or promises from the mother country. Canada must find her genius and her destiny in her self, and begin to consider horsolf American, and not English. Bhe may send her commis sioners to England, or she may send her pioneers to the West; she may cling to the fmporial apronstring, or she may cut loose; she may depend on England to build her rail roads, to buy her territories, and export titles for her nobility, or she may find nearer help and more home-made men. In a word, she may go to a great distance to ob tain what in the nature of things she ought to obtain for herself or prooure near at hand; in short, she may depend on confederation, and if that will not suffloe, adopt Governor McDougall's anoient threat, and look to Wash ington. There can be no disloyalty in look ing, and Washington, whether in view of inde- Eendence or annexation, is muoh nearer than ondon. "ECONOMY" AT WASHINGTON. From the A'. Y. World. The friends of the administration, in reply ing to Mr. Dawes' charge of gross extrava gance, have made the threefold defense: that in preparing its estimates the Treasury Department perpetrated an error in its figures; that there were large unoxpended balances to the credit of the last adminis tration, in its last year, whioh this adminis tration has not; and that Congress is really to blame if the charge of extravagance can be proved. Mr. Fernando Wood, in the debate which followed the whitewashing remarks of the Massachusetts member of the Ways and Means Committee, made short work of these apologies. Certainly, the very confession that the Treasury Department is capable of such errors as those involved in the difference between $ 2i)l,0w0,000 and $321,000,000 con victs the administration of gross incapacity. It is Bemewhat significant, too, that the blunder was not discovered until after Mr. Dawes had preferred his damaging complaint. This incapacity in subordinates for footing up totals can hardly be regarded as a matter of surprise, if, as Mr. Dawes charges, the Presi dent himself admits that he knows nothing of any of the departments except one. There never before was a President of the United States who had been in office a whole year without becoming familiar with the various branches of the Government. The depart ment coming within the comprehension of President Grant is said to be the War Office, and for its estimates he in willing to be con sidered responsible. So much the worse, then, for his reputation as an economist. Some of the most glaring excrescences exist thereT For instance, the Prosident maintains a staff of military officials at the White House utterly unwarranted by law or necessity. He keeps five brigadier-generals about his person, at an expense to the Tressury of $4000 each, and the only . apparent duty they perform is attending the doors, delivering cards, and dancing attendance on visitors. Why does he not Top oJf this useless expenditure, if he iB so earnest, as hia friends claim, for fru gality? As to the second defense, it is only necessary to remark that Mr. Butler, in charging to the account of the Johnson ad ministration large unexpended balances, ex hibits his usual disingenuousness in omitting to state that there were provisions of law which took nearly every dollar of them to execute contracts. The attempt to transfer the blame of extra vagance from the shoulders of the administra tion to those of Congress does not help the radical party. That party has complete con trol of the benate and House of ltepresonta tives, and, if measures not warranted by the real wants of the country have their origin there, the responsibility rests with their authors and promoters. Mr. Wood remarks that up to the time of his speeoh nine hnn dred and eighty-five bills, embracing all kinds of scnemes and jobs for governmental favors, had been introduced in the House, and almost as many into the Senate. I his fact does not look like economy, and surely is sufficient in itself to refute all claim that the radicals may make to be the champions of retrenchment and reform. THE LEGAL-TENDER ACT INOPEUA TIVE IN PllE-EXISTING CONTBACTS. From the H. Y. Time. When the Supreme Court affirmed the validity of contracts specifically payable in coin, entered into before the enactment of the Legal-tender law, it whs evident that the decision indirectly affected tho construction to be put upon all pre-existing contracts For, prior to the act of February, 1802, cold formed the only legal lender, und promises to pay in "the lawful money or the United States" were as clearly, at the time they were made, promises to pny in coin as though that obligation were explicitly expressed. It spe cific coin contracts of a date before February, 1802, were not invalidated by the law then enacted, it followed, by a parity of roasoning, that all contracts of the sauie period were in effect coin contracts, since none else wore known or contemplated. Whatever legal tech Qualities might be found to obstruct the action of this interpretation, logically aud morally it appeared clear and decisive. The judgment pronounced by Chief Jus tice (Jtiaso is therefore not unexpected An obligation incurred in 18(, but not ma turing until after the passage of the Legal tender law, the debtor proposed to satisfy by payment in greenbacks at their face value, The creditor demanded coin or its equivalent and a Kentucky court sustained his demand on the ground thut the Legal-tender act was unconstitutional. This was the case decided on Monday. A majority of the Supreme Court hold that the act could not affeot the tenor of contracts made before its passage that it was not and could not be retrospective in its operation and, aa a consequence, that an obligation incurred before its enactment must be satisfied in the only money recognized when the covenant was made. This decision in no manner involves the constitutionality of the law itself. On that pointthe sole point relied npon by the Ken tucky court Chief Justice Chase and his colleagues are silent. They deal only with the equity of the oase, and with the limita tion of the period at whioh the potency of the Legal-tender law began. Inferentially, indeed, their conclusions, like those arrived at in the previous judgment , of the tame court, seem to concede it ooosUtutionaiity, There would be no need for limitations of the soope of the law in respect of time, if its constitutionality in regard to a period sub sequent to its enactment were not in effect conceded. Nothing whatever has been said, or can be fairly inferred, whioh warrants the opinion that the constitutionality of the law itself is impaired by this judgment. It is not neoessary to discuss the probable effect of the judgment upon unpaid obliga tions of a date previous to 1H(!2. Of course it will disturb some calculations and mate rially affect many interests. Bnt those who profess to see in it a pretext for repudiation, whether on the part of individuals, corpora tions or States, assume a position as mis chievous as that of those who would produoe financial chaos by decreeing the unconstitu tionality of the Legal-tender act. There will be hardship, undoubtedly, and, in some in stances, injustice. But the judgment of the Court rests upon an intelligible if not an agreeable or entirely defensible prinoiple; the promulgation of which constitutes another reason for the restoration, with all convenient speed, of speoie payments. When we get back to a hard cash basis, these conflicts of interest and Interpretation will cease and not till then. ' TOE LIBERAL PARTY IN THE CHURCH. From the roll Matt Gazette. Besides the bishops who are wise in their own generation, there is that Liberal party in the Church which resists the dogma for a dif ferent reason. All their sympathies are in the direction in which the spirit of the age moves so strongly outside their Church. Its characteristic is impatience of dogmas alto gether, as being chains on the truth and pro hibitions of free thought. Its tendenoy is to throw aside the Authority which speaks in creeds and separates men by theoretical dis tinctions, and to seek for unity by making the bond of interpretation more elastic and the exclusive tests less specific or binding. Strange as it may seem to us that a spirit so essentially Protestant should find an echo within the Roman Church, yet it is so. And those who feel this influence recoil from the prospect of the new dogmatic fetters whioh Papal infallibility would forge for them. They feel that not only would these be more than thev could bear, but that they would set a fatal gulf between their creed and the march of modern intelligence. All the thoughts, all the aspirations, which are just now the strongest motive powers in the world, would be made utterly and ' obviously irreconcilable with a Church which would speedily come to be built and compacted ot the straitest, hardest, most uncompromising theological propositions and the most absolute contradic tion to all human reason and its discoveries, The party which we have been speaking of could not remain in the Church under these conditions. Thev find the effort hard enough it would then become impossible. They struggle, therefore, that they may not be driven forth. Yet, even as the matter stands, the Church is in extreme dimculties. ihe council has been summoned, arid it must do something, If at the last moment the Pope and the Jesuits fall back from the programme, it will be a tin sco which cannot bat damage the Church. The failure to aflinu the infallibility and the syllabus will seem to the world the denial of both, and the great objects of Pio Nono's life will be made abortive A certain amount of ridicule, too, will fall upon Church which has gathered together a council from all the ends ot the earth with no practi col result except tho regulation of some trivial ceremonies. And the spectacle ol intestine division thus afforded will be a most serious thorn in the spirit to those who demand sub mission of schismatics on the ground that the true Church knows no parties and admits no quarrels, luit, on the other side, the prospect is still more alarming. France and Austria, the sole surviving pillars of the Church, have plainly deolared that Papal infallibility must not trench upon their rights. But can infallibility submit to dictation? The bishops will doubtless pro fess acceptance if they are beaten ; but with what heart can they longer strive for a faith at whose future expositions they tremble ? The liberal party in the Church will simply be cast ont. either at once or in the course of a very few years, by the pressure of the intol erable conditions to which their intellect will be subjected. A vast schism, in which the necessity of self-preservation will force gov ernments and people, the press and the uni versities, science and faith, to resist the de crees of the single mouthpiece of the Churoh, will sooner or later be the consequence of the imputing to it divine powers of enunci ating truths. There is no deubt, indeed, that the coming dogma is only the logical development of the doctrine on which all ecclesiastical authority is founded. There is no more intrinsic ab surdity in pronouncing the Pope alone in fallible than in pronouncing the majority of a council infallible. 'Ihe inspiration which breathes through the bishops must breathe in a still fuller influence through their spiritual chief. But there are some doctrines which survive and look reasonable so long as they are limited to hypothetical and coir plicated conditions, and to which logical development to a simple issue is suddenly fatal. And it cer tainly seems as if Pio Nono, who during his first years in the Vatican was the instrument of stirring up the national movement in Italy which has since cost him so much, has been in his closing years the occasion of a move ment which must either cast discredit on the pretensions of his Church, or involve it in internal confusion of which no man can see the end. VICE-ADMIRAL PORTERS USURrA TIONS. From tJie K. Y. Sutu The accession of Vice-Admiral Porter as chief of the Navy Department has already caused great detriment to the service. Until his voice beoame powerful at Washington a gratifying esprit de corps prevailed among naval officers, whether of the line or staff. Indeed, the distinction between line and staff was scarcely ever mentioned. In the ward room the family-circle of a man of war all was narmony ana Kinaiy ieeung. uur ves sels of war were models of discipline and effectiveness, because the officers worked to gether to promote the good of the service. Abroad they were regarded by professional judges in other navies as the most efficient ships afloat. But that is all past. Where once harmony And good-fellowship prevailed, dissension and discontent ' have crept in, and turned the pleasant ward-rooms into arenas for acrimo nious discussion of questions that would never have arisen there had not the Vice Admiral unwisely opened the long-settled subject of relative rank. His General Order No. 120, reducing the rank of the staff ofli oei-s, and unjustly discriminating against uiem in the matter of pay ana emoluments, as well as of rank, outraged the sense of jus tice of a large body of officers. The line was left untouched while the staff was treated with ignominy,,, Of course, this injiwtioe was not submitted to in silence. The relative merits of the two divisions wore Investigated and discussed; criminations and recrimina tions followed, until the line and stuff were engaged in open warfare. The families and friends of the parties now join in the qnarrel, ai 1 . a a ana meir social rotations are ireuuemir to tally destroyed. In addition to the wrong done the active offloors, Admiral Porter has injured the sick and maimed otucers on the retired list by usurping a power that belongs to Congress alone. The effect of his order has been to change the pay of a number of these offloers, who unfortunately belong to the staff alone. Fourteen surgeons, who received as captains on the retired list $1000 a year, now receive only $1(00. Fourteen paymasters and two chief engineers suner the same loss by being reduced from the rank of oaptain to that of commander. Ten surgeons have been re duced from tho rank of commander to that of lieutenant, and their pay has been reduoed from $1100 to $1000 per year. No line officer is affected by this order. Where Admiral Porter finds authority for this act we are at a loss to know; for Congress alone has the power to alter the pay of officers and men. While reducing the pay of old and faithful retired officers, be wastes millions on fancy engines and the silly altera tion of old vessels, and destroys the spirit and efficiency of the navy. How long is he to be permitted to indulge in these usurpa tions? SPECIAL NOTIOES. DSr OFFICE PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD COMPANY. PBlT.ADn.rKM, Jan. 25, 1870. WOTIOK TO STOCKHOLDERS. Th. Annual Meeting ot the Stockholder! of thil Com pany will bo held on TUK8DAY, the 15th day of February , 1870, at 10 o'clock A. M at the Hall of the Assembly Bnildinas. H. W. corner of TKNTU and OUKSNUT Streets, Philadelphia. The Annual Kleotion for Directors will bo held on MONDAY, the 7th day of March, 187U, at the Offloe of the Company, No. 238 H. THIRD Street. lSiillw JOSEPH LRSLHY, Secretary. Sf OFFICE OF THE LEHIGH COAL AND NAVIGATION COM PAN Y. Thrahvrt BitPAHTMmrr, Pnn.AIiri.l'HIA. January 81. IttJO.t Certificates of the Mortgage Loan ot this Company, doe March 1, 18711. will be paid to holders thereof, or tbeir legal representatives, on presentation at thia office on ana after that date, from which time intermit will oeene. . ouaniKUD. 1 VI mwflSt Treasurer. IST PniLADELHIIA AND READING RAIL ROAD CO., Office, No. t!7 8. FOURTH Street. PHii.irK.i,PHiA, Deo. 21, 1969. DIVIDEND NOTICE. The Transfer Rooks of the Company will be closed on FRIDAY, the Hist Instant, and reopened on TUK6DAY January 11, 1H70. A dindend of FIVE PER CENT, has bees declared on the Preferred and Common Stock, clear of Natioaaland Btate taxes, payable in CASH, on snd after January IT, 1870, to the holder thereof aa they shall stand registered on the books of the Company on the 81st inatsnt. AU psyableat this office. All orders for dividend must be witnessed and stamped. 8. BRATOKORD, 13 23 tUt Treasurer. I- NOTICE TO SHIPPERS THE CHR8APRAKR AND DKLAWARR CANAL will be closed, for repairs to s lock, ou MONDAY MORN INO, the 7th of Februsry, 1870, and opened for naviiration in a fow days thereafter, due notice of which will be siren. .'. KNKY V. LESLEY, Secretary. Philadelphia, Jan. 37. 1870. 137 dtl'JIT mSf HE WAS ARRESTED THE YOUNG man who determined to seise the Brut thins; that turned up has been arrontod for pulling another man's noxe. I did little joae 18 only aemiruen to unreal me arcon tifin nf our MutAn to tile H'.ilendid GOAL Bold b J. O. HANCOCK, northwiwt corner of NINTH and M ASTKK, All the most desirable varieties of Lehigh and Honuylkill axe to be bad of Mr. uancoca, oareiulur bc-eenixi una picked 1 i waui6vr THE PARIIAM SEWING MACHINE Company's New Ksmily Hewing Machines are most emphatically pronounced to be thut vreat desideratum so lonjr and nnxiouoly looked for. in which all the essentials ot a perleut machine aro combined. 1 ill No. 7U4 CHKSNOT Street, tj- QUEEN FIRE IN8URANCE COMPANY, " , s,t.T-i4-ki Alan T li; ii n. kr-. r 1 CAPITAL. X2.(K)0,I)()0. SABLNK, ALLRN A DULLKR, Amta, FIFTH and WALNl u r cut Streets. IfeY- COLD WEATHER DOES NOT CHAP orrongben the skin after uning WRIOHTH AL- COriA Tr li ULVCK.R1NK TABI.KT UJT KOLIDIIIKD GLYCKR1NK. ltsdsiUuso mikes the skin delioauly sou ana ueauuioJ. boia vj sli arutotiats. K. A U. A. WRTOHT, i 4i No. W CHK.8NUT Street. tfiy COLTON DENTAL ASSOCIATION oriptnutod the siwsthetio nse of NITROUS OX1DK. UK LAUGHING OAS. 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NOTICES T ETTERS TESTAMENTARY HAVING BEEN J J grsnlod to the subscribers upon the estate of MARY (tIMMONH, deceaxsd, sll persons indebted to the same will make patineut, ana mose Having claims present Uieut IO nanuM, uuuil, ROBT. H. MfOKATH, No. Ml 8. SIXTH Street, I Jwtit" Executors. "IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS FOR X. TDK CITY Anil COUNTY OF PHILADELPHIA, IXCINDA BAMNitTT vs. OHARLKS BKNNK1T June Term. 1869. No. 44. In Divorce. Charles Bennett, Mir i Vou will Dlease take notioa that a rale has bean C ranted on yon in the above ease, to ahow oeuae. If any you ave, why a divorce a vinculo matrimonii anould not be decreed tnereiu . net nnaable e AT U KDA If , ebrwury U, l7tl, at 10 o'clock A. M WM KNIGHT HRYOOK. ' Attorney for liheliaat. 1 flawtt IV IS W LOAN. City of Allegheny Six Per Cents, mEE or STATE TAX. We are offering a limited amount of thta Loan At SO Per Cent, and Accrned Interest. The Interest la parable first dava of January and mil, in rauaaeipuia, FKEK OF STATE TAX. We recommend them as an onaaeaUoaable i carity for Investment. The debt of Allegheny city being eemaaratlvelr Small, the security offered Is equal to that of the City of Philadelphia, the difference la ptloe making them a very aesiraoie ana cueap security. WET. PAINTER & CO., Hankers and Icalcr in Govern m ont Securities, No. 36 South THIRD Street, lecim PHILADELPHIA. B A IX It I N U II V 8 K or JAY COOKE & CO., Nob. 11S and 11 8. THIRD St., PHILADELPHIA. Dealers in Government Beoonuea Old 5-20. Wanted in Kxcbaoga for New. A Liberal Difference allowed. Compound Interest Notes Wanted. Interest Allowed on Deposits. COLLECTieNS MADS, on commission. STOCKS bought and sold Special ladles. business accommodations reserved for we will receive applications for Policies of Life Insurance in the National Life Insurance Company of the United States. Full Information given at our omce. 1 1 3m JOHN S. RUSHTON & CO., No. 60 SOUTH THIRD STREET. JANUARY C0UP0JTS WANTED. CITY WARRANTS 16 8m BOUGHT AJtD BOLD. pa S. PETERSON & CO.. Stock and Exchange Broken, NO. 39 SOUTH THIRD STREET, V embers of the New York and Polladelpoia and Gold Boards, STOCKS, BONDS, Bus., bought and sold 0B ooa mission only at either city l ss E 14 LIOTT w v nr at, BANKERS, No. 109 SOUTH THIRD STREET, DEALERS IN ALL GOVERNMENT SECURI T1K8, UOLD BILLS, ETC. DBAW BILLS OF EXCHANGE AND ISSUE COMMERCIAL LETTERS OF CREDIT ON THE UNION BANK OF LONDON. ISSUE TRAVELLERS' LETTERS OF CREDIT ON LONDON AND PARIS, available turoug-hoat Europe. Will collect all Coupons and Interest free of charts for parties making their financial arrangements wltaus. 4Ui D it i: x i: l st coM No. 34. SOUTH THIRD STREET, American and JTovoln ISSUE DRAFTS AND CIRCULAR LETTERS OF CREDIT available on presentation la an part of Europe, Travellers can make all their financial arrange, menu through as, and we will collect their Interest and dividends without charge. DaxiuWo,nuiorAC).,Daiiii,HaajS3 a Co., , . flew lock. I . , Parts. a FINANCIAL.. CITY WARRANTS Bought and Sold. DE HAVEN & BRC No. 40 South THIRD 8 1 root, ill raiLADirxPHiA. QUvDraniarci, dayis a no.. No. 48 SOUTH THIRD STREET. PHILADELPHIA. GLEfiDlflMNG, DAVIS AMORT, Ho. 17 WALL STREET. NEW YORK. BANKERS AND BROKERS. Buying and selling Stocks, Bonds, and Gold tm Corn mission a Specialty. phlladelphiajiouae connected by telegraphic wltk the Stock Boards and Gold Room of New York. U B. K JAMISON & CO., SUCCESSORS TO I. F. KELLY sfc CO., BANKERS AND DEALERS IN Gold, Silver, and Government Bonds, At Closest Market Bates, H W. Cor. THIRD and CHESNTJT St. Special attention Riven to COMMISSION ORDERS In New York and Philadelphia btock Boards, etc. etc 1 SAi CITY WARRANTS BOUGHT AND SOLO. C. T. YERKES. Jr.. t CO. NO. 20 SOUTH THIRD STREET, PHILA-DHLPHIA D. C. WHARTON SMITH & CO., BANKERS AND BROKERS, No. 121 SOUTH THIRD STREET. Saceessor. to Smith, Raadoljih A Oo. Kverj branch el the business will have prompt eUeatio as heretofore. Quotation, of Stocks, Governments, sad Gold ooa. tantly received front Kew Tork brpnWe rfr, (roes eu friends, Edmund D. Bandolpb A Oo. WINE8 AND LIQUORS. IHER MAJESTY: I . CHAMPAGNE. j j DUNTOXT & LU5S0U-. 215 SOUTH FRONT STREET. j THE ATTENTION OF THE TRADE 13 solicited to tha following vsrv Choice Winoa, eto for sale br DUNTON A LITSSON, 116 BOUTU i KONT BTRKFT. Gil AMPAGNK3. Amenta for her Majesty, Do. d. Montebello. Carte Bleue, Oart Blannbe, and (Jharie. Jr arre's Grand Vin Eugenie, and Vin Imperial, M K lea rn nn A (Jo., of Alarenee, bparkUnf Moselle sad BULNM WINKS. MAUKntA 8. Old Island, South fiirie Reserve. fcHKRRIl'S. K. Huilnlphe, Amontillado, Topat, Val letta, Pale and Golden Uar, Uiova, eto. POK'I B. Vinlio Velho Heal, Vallutte, and Crown. G1.AKICT8. Promis Aine A Via., Monti errand aud Boo deaui. Clarets and Kaotern. Wines GIN. "Meder hwan." HKAND1K8. Hennessey, Otard, Duptijr A Oo.'. various Tintaaes. 4 . c A R STAIRS & MoOALL, Not. 13i WALNUT sod SI GRANITIC Streets. Importers of BRANDIK8, WINKS, GIN, OUVH OIL, HTO., AND COMMISSION MERCHANTS tor the wis of PUBX OLD BYK, WUKAT, AND BOURKON WHI3. KIKfl. UL CARSTAIRS' OLIVE OIL AN INVOICE of the above for sale by OARSTATRS A Mod ALL, I MM Noa. 1M WALNUT and ill GRANITE osa. WILLIAM ANDERSON A CO., DEALERS la Via Whlakies, . Ato. I North BOOONTJ Btroat, PhUadeloei OENT.'B FURNISHING POODS. pATKNT SHOULDER-SBAU SHEHT MANUFACTORT, AND GENTLEMEN'S PTJRNIBHINQ STORE, PERFECTLY FrTTTNG SHIRTS AND DRAWER.' made Iron measurement at verr short notice. All other articles of GENTLEMEN'S ORES GOODS in full Taxlet. WINCHESTER A OOu 11 1 Ko. M CaiMMUT SUefc dVeTnO AND 6OOURINQ. JOSEPH f?I O T X E X, FRKIfCH 6TKAM DYKING AND BOOURINO, On any kind of Wearing ApuateL for Ladies, Gents, and Children. Patent apparatus f or btretohiuc Pant, hreaa Ou, to tire ioohoa, No. ft 8. NINTH Street. 1 194 Philadelphia. I OHN FARNUM & CO., COMMISSION MZK, (I chant, and ManafaoUuers of Ooaeste. Tiektnx. eta, s ans oatUiNUT Ittrswt. failnlslskla. lataat
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers