AILY POST. PITICSBUttIiIi AUNDAY, JASLAHY 1, )emocratic City Ticket fuR MAYON, JOSEPH It. HUNTER FJE 001iTEOLLIH, WILLIAM M. F.LotiAlt FO TREIABIIF EH FRANCIS FELIX. aIOCRATIC STATE CNT R A L CON. he Democratic State Central Committee are coated to meet at the MERCII ANIS' RO- L, in the City of Philadelphia, on V. I.;DNIIS .Y, the 13th day of JANUARY NE \I. at 4 Took o. m. CHARLES J. BIDDLE. Chairman. ITEMS • Them is no news from Chattanooga. An officer of Arsames command writes hat $5,000.000 will not cover the rebel loss by the late raid. Orders have been issued by the War De. partment postponing the draft until the 15th of February. A mathematician is engag ed in figuring up how much the plank of the Chicago platform have ccat our country per toot. Three notorious liare—the "reheable contraband," the "reheable gentleman," and the re/iesble refugee. Many persons write articles 01,d send them to editors to be corrected—as if an 'editor's office Was a house of correction. The Legislature of Maryland assembled at Annapolis the 61 of January, and remains in sessionuntil the 10th of March, the day limited by the Conatitution. Over $lB,OOO was collected in thy: Ro man Catholic churches of New York city onChristmts day for the benefit of Oath. orphans. En an FrEnETT has been trying to persuade the President to reverse his un just and outrageous decision in the case of FITZ JOHN PoItTEn. The Chatfield Democrat, Hastings item ocrat, and St. Paul Democrat, all publish ed in Minnesota, have hoisted the came of MCCLELLAN for the Presidency. The New York Herald Baja that \ ir- Virginia, long called the "Mother of Pres ideate," will be hereafter known as the "Groat Ramie Field. - On Saturday last the lady friends in Cincinnati of the wife of presented her a breastpin cut out of fl, :shell from the Little Miami River, The Kenosha, Rockford and PJ4 le land Railroad and everythirtr belon g in g thereto, will be sold at alicrPn, at Rock ford, 111., on the 7th 01 PauarY, to satisfy mortgages. On account o enormous amount of work to lois =Sly done, lien. MC CLELLAN' port cauriol.bc issued for sev eral v . ,t's yet, as there art to be twenty mar ., engraved for it. at is now posi!ively ascertained that nrs of those who paid commutation last fall, will tames - rrtat t, tip wheel, to be drawn in the draft ordered for neat month. A report is circulated at El.av,iti% that the Archduke MemstiLl.iis will accept the throne of Mexico only on the condi Lion that the restoration of the A M 1" ican Union is made impossible. Mr. MURDOCH, the tradgedian, has given to the Cincinnati Sanitary Fair a memorial relic from the Treaty Tree of PENN, the keel of the first vessel that carried the —tilseries.n flag, and the flag rope of the famous frigate Cumberland. The signs of the times indicate that, within the coming two years, oar laboring population most pass through severe trials. The prices of ail the necessaries of life will go higher And higher ; there is -legibility that wages can keep pace /lons and interesting discovery has .ily been made in California, of a hid very similar in construction to l'aptian pyramids, only very much er. Thestotie coroposingthe courses average six feet in length, and from one fnc.ito three feet in thickness are working hard to Ludd a new railroad to connect Richmond with \ the Gulf Pates, independently of the Wel 4 don and East Tennessee road. Its south ernsterminne will be at Greensboro, to which point they expect to be completed by July next. Measures will at once be adopted by our Government which will compel rebel an thorities to recognize Gen. BUTLER'S eta tns as an ofE2ar of the United Statce army ; until that is done no propositions relative to the exchangeinade by the reb els will be recognized. In scarcely any place west of the Rocky Mountains, except Utah, could the Mor mons have settled, where they would not have got upon a bed of precious metals, and where their powers for defensive pur poses would not have been a hundred fold greater than they now are. _-_fleneral MEADE has been i❑ Washington e:ty for a short time back, and it is cur• really reported in high circles, that at no distant day General HANCOCK 18 to assume I command of the Army of the Poto ao; He is now in Washington city, bat altogether recovered from the effects severe wound received at the battle of sburg. :SCE., of Ohio, has introduced a bill •reps for the establishment of a Military Justice. It provides , oic`rnent of a Judge Advocate ,cith the rank of a Colonel of , one of the rank of Major, and srks. Records of courts martial, - ,f inquiry, and military commis to be sent to this Bureau, .1 known Senator, will, on the reas• of Co&gress, offer a resolution - the President to nail out three onsand more men, on the ~ u mber obtained by an— our armies to a brrtiF, PITTSBURGII 'i.POST: MONDAY MORNING, JANUARY ,t, V TIO/S TO-MORROW The excitement attending the ho'idays, from Christmas to New Years, served to divert attention from to•morrow's city election the hoet day or two, however, have brought forth some little political canvassing. If to morrow should prc:ve a pleasant day there will be a moderate vote i•olled, but should the cold continue it will be unusually light. D6mocratte tickets 1, - )r the electiuu are rawly for distribution at this effivt. CREITED FREE AND EQUAL he Commercial, of the afterno3u ci Thursday, the last day of the old year, discovered that it had been mis-quoting the Declaration of Independence, and eu deavored to cover up its ignorance by an nouncing that it did not wean to quote that instrument verbatim, but to give ex pression "to a self evident truth"—that all men are "created free Eir. d equal." But our astute contemporary goes farther than this and knocks the brains out of its own Abolition digmas. Here i 3 it. conclusion: "We think, in all candor and honesty, that an individual possessed of an Intel lect sufficient to conduct the intricate and complicated machinery of the Post, ought to be able at least to approximate to the meaning and intention of the author, and see that he is referring to the rights of man, as they exist under the law of tie ture as distinguished from the law of man —or that he is speaking theoretically and not practically. And in this sense it i 2 True and always will be true, that all men are created free, or "all men are endowed, by their Creator, with certain inalienable rights; that among these are life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness... But a pigmy will be a pigmy—an Egyptian pyramid cannot be manufactur td out of a mole hill." If the Declaration of Independence merely gave expreesion to an abstraction when it speaks of men being "created equal,'' why have the Abolitionista Leer , 4,0 long torturing it in order to app!v practically for the benefit of an itli - rnor rack ' But the men of the revolutiou whu tramed the Declaration of I n dependence, were not speaking theoretically when they declared all men created equal. They were speaking tar t healaelves and their countrymen, the same blood ad those against whoa' tyranny they were about to revolt. They were about to risk "their 'l ves their lottunes and their sacred bon "ors,ta a contest for their Cherries , rw ast a Government whose tyranny. after years of remonstrance, compelled them to revolt. The Government they succeeding in establishing was a white mane Government, having no reference whatever to the African or the Indian. rind the men of the revolution included men of all all colors in their declaration of equality, or had they been 80 under— stood by Christendotn, they woul I have stood before the world the vilest cf hynu• (rites, because the colonies, then, all held and coutinmA to bold then lone after the revolution. From these observations we do not with thy. "gifted minds" of the Cbntntcr ciar to J 2 113 P rutnz crrn c c-r. ,rerr .- favoring our Anier.ean system of P e r we are merely giving expressioe to we'i. known }nits. Neither we, p^ tb " P-orIP of the South are reap, for that tuunn. It wag t i ru o. piauled upon cur 8011 lot .g before became a nation, and even & v iand did not find out its e „„,„ 3 . , Anti! after she had sold her s l aves s.r dollars and cents. Shortly after ,b e jean to appreciate the horrors of .u^slir.g in human flesh. The cenclu, , ipn of the Commercial about "pigmies and pyramids' . is given, we presume. by way of illustration; it is the pyramid, and we are the mole bill, which is but a new way cf directing%;ten• non in the existence cf . the "lifted mindi.•' to whom we have heretofore al luded. We accept the pyramid, as an apt figure of speech, designating the Co iossal and mighty intellects and "gifted minds" who have shone so luminously in the discussion of nepotism, through the Commercial's columns. But comparing our neighbor to a pyramid, is unnecessary: it is like piling Pelian upon Oven. We never look at it that we are not struck with its brilliancy and power, and reminded of what nn inconceivable thing is the mighty mind cf man, which enables "a gifted mind to soar into the clouds, and cross the " swollen waters of the angry dee; swallows fly the air. — The only draw back to this figure is that such mighty minds should be contained in such huge pyramids of frail, dross like mortality. SOUTHERN NEWS Desperate Legislation In the Rebel Congress. SPEECH Oi* SENATOR BROWN In the Confederate Senate, on Thurs day, Dec. 24, the resolution& offered on the 10th inst.. by Mr. Brown, of Miseis appi, indicating the measures which, in his opinion, Congress ought to pass—being the special order of the day—were then taken no. Mr. Brown then proceeded to address the Senate. He said that the two greatest needs of the country wero to strengthen the army and improve the currency. If the legiela- I branch of the Government and the Executive power will give themselves en tirely to the country, these results may in a short time be accomplished. The question which addresses itself most carnestly to our consideration i. sim ply this: "Shall the Confederacy stand or fall?" If it is to stand, the pedestal meet be built with all our hearts. All crimina tions and recriminations and differences between the different branches of the Gov ernmeut must cease. We must determine to stand together in the common defence, or fall together in one common grave. Our success is certain if the patriotism of the people holds out to the end. Oar ph,,d reliance in this contest is in the hearty and earliest patriotism of the ple At. the request of Mr. Brown, the Sec retary read ihe rcacAriti, - ..ns which he had submitted. Mr. Brown then proceeded to consider the constitntional objection which the op ponents of these measures may uree. He had this settled conviction, that when the States conceded the war making power to the control of Government, they gave every identical power to make the main power effective. The framers of the C 313- .nzion were hilly vindicated from the ' •v of getting us into a war and then ns so that we could not con- ly E2veral "t,y the -7,r I..l,.stiari c•nr.ti - J•i, it t , cs••-,1;,, , g arms Bhcald 1 , 4 I::: NLc No }! that , uh'.' Where we •, • v• u)r. been prepared atte^ • V wa,tr.l , t by c.hly -.• ge aE,6rNyv,. lily t: 7.1 - 1!) har. veal is ready tor the h,:tkle. Shall we gt. , n biutolering to the end of tt le ec.ncentrate oar milt tary ktfength fool hurl it lit.° au ava• lauu'oe against the urtemy" Is it not better t short specie wt.rk of the whole amatt:•r. this rystrot of killing, al' cur 1,1m,r, 111 - tAt rivers of blood have herr: by the error that we ivero have a short war. \ e now see the neces sity of t-nlmgiug a:1:1 shall we not say t -t tae;: of every profession. 'tlf you uiu capaL:, of taking up arms, you mut do ; . ..1 11 , would it - Alt:tie the Yres• ident. members o; Congress, and Govern ors fated 1a this Talk not of itlvaLlteg tll, , r;el - AE-• al the ti•atAs. — The beet mode otpreservmg the rozhts of a State la to Cletood the State from 3 rath• leas eat my. 13,ttcr Invade the rights of a Stat 3 by ca!hcg cat all of the arms beartugd:9l,3tr. ovar con stitau:hai quibbie,l wb,,e, the Yankee art,:y wr.,•tm the State from your 1,0t;1110e6101.1. Mr. itruwit nut unaware that rNA,3lonc Lnu,t t- produced, TLe tar.ty auu a , '. hone ...it:Rt be ted ut wttr 'inlet be y:•td ita..•e• taken •if . ..caring arm), how mut/ w.Julti btr iett to take charge of at: thoiie • calculated them by huwireds of tnoi. , whitis, and if they are not entbeichttoir , v on the nrceesary home hip ..:th proposition provided'. for th , ti e et such other persons as will be ttabieilute'y needed in civil pursuits. ,. H e ol4it ttrcivii , i'd to repeal all laws excreptt:ins :Ind allowing eubeti and he wunid take tecasion to ex rr~e, his thaLL , to if, H(, 0 1, of Itepre sentatices t :r making a Jean sweep of the Substitute law. wh•eti h.d iii•orn the seeds of discord and rlisscutien from the Po tomac to the Rio tilande. He t -r i•nt'.l , lg in the army t hose substitute gomleinim, nho were strutting about tic t3utitty in 1. - rrow•••1 plumage, knowitig no noire ep setting a Emuaki rug in : than a el instf.r. .Neat t., the substliute law, the exemp tion lAw hss plum mere istissaiiiitivetimi than atiy other meiserre ot Curgres. What cr:iwds the s , O, One, hri , k and theatre, boxes of r:-.1 hen l• gs, ,nd tike up a 1 the avow. , Gi ir.cVl with mail capable of beard.e !V by it , tat the s=reet:l of il.,tunc.:l-1 Ea , fly:dad wilt athletic young mer,' Why 13 it :su all over the ConfedrraQ . .' th , tatal error of Congress in pac—Li; these laws; second, the maladmintstr..snon of these laws. The remedy is in ew , ..rp;ng them from the statutP 1. 1 .3';•; it her exempta nor 111 ,, titt:tee. Do this and von elear the qtr ate, lore the theatre. inspirit and re• cstrt'h. army, and secnr. victory when" teed I tor I'at will , 3r gee trail in tt.- wave - 4.. triumph ,kNfuee to c i t ., ness , :hings, and the he:.rt, iio`Ts will grow weal. Mr. I;rtiwn me euge 4 t!' CiyEA lie expres , ed i re ce,-.104,1 Lon earrericein ;vs ; f the Secretary of War rEI he i e 111E7'17 , 3, ATTEI - Srptifti at P-:!71e Itngth eh, w t I.at (,o• estitrao. exist-d F;-twr en the gc.cernment rnithort -u . tistvirtc.z. tie rent 0.-camed his preposition rrr thi I'n- , r.t t tu 4P 'rirta idatlla Cot ii" f.reitti.rirs Up r !. • - yJntry in ='cry days. Nir R. 5, , t 4 .1-• Whilsr w, were 0 ü b uh d an ,., aid rissee p.ia : Ir. wire die..dvaritc.g. he wo- to their prcsel,ee. hut ties, h: .y are e r our our substance:, and, l.y the , ' snecnia'reg prceliviure, are deprecioitir.g bur currency. They were ot no earthy service to ios. In the contrary, their pr..s a,ce I.rre ....; of great disadvan tage knew of ar, intert:%•lonal law which tornA Ci irom saying to them, The 'rue hair. corns when we ran enter tain yen ro longer.' Shall we fail in do trig our duty to nurrirlves for rear some foreign power may take cffieurie Ir n.av he safely assumed that nineteen• twentieths ot these people are engages in traffic. They are the men who run the blockade. depreciate our currency, and appreciate the Yankee currency. The man who wce.B becret!y to New York'or any other Yanke. city. ar.d brings goods here knowing that in doing so he violates our laws, that man is not to be trusted in trinking communications to the enemy, HP would rather this day have a regiment of Vanke.es turned ;nose on this city than longer tolerate the presence of Ruch people. Mr. Brown next discussed at length the prrposition that the Government should r.rovide for the wives and children of des titute soldiers in the held. There wit', he said, ben Lurthen cn the Government if you enact wise laws. and have them faithfully administered. Bait if sou hesitate every time a little doubt as to power is raised, he would not he responsible tor the consequences. In the mdls, the wives and children of our foldiere are starving and their limbs are exposed to the blasts of winter. Will Congress arouse from its lethargy and ap• ply a -remedy ? How long will the farmers of Virginia he allowed to extort the whole month ti pay of a soldier in the field for a bushel of meal ? This is done by men who are allowed to remain nt home " that the army must be fed. - How long are we to tolerate this state of tEnga ? He would say to these farmers, Disgorge, you cannot Is allc.wtd to stay at home while others are in the army. and, under the plea of a ' depreciated currency,' wring from the soldier's families their last cent." Mr. Brown said he would commence by picking those tne'o and poking them into the army. This proceeding would, no doubt, surprise these grandees, who think they have grown too great to servo the country. Mr. Brown then discussed the currency question. If there is to be any substantial improvement of the currency let us stop this tinkering with it. No government ever yet established its credit by taking up notes that did nct bear interest, and issuing bonds that do bear interest. That is the j.roposition cf the Secretary of the Treasury. Never could he be brought to vote for any , ull. uropositi , in He (Mr. Brown) proposed the ri , nritcr rropoeition of lev7 f lng taxes upon the property of the country. Ilr agreed with the President that this deli, the debt of the people. It is growing int,' frightful proportions. and the has come tii t. omm,nceots xtin g fq IT tit" It r undertake to pay now $4O l l 0t.0,000 1n no•,•interEst bearing notes 'ham, $1 , .() 000,{H0 in gold after tbo war. prop ae.d to tax Treasnary notes about twenty five per cent., and the man who assessed should collect the tax. To avoid the concealment of the notes, he would appoint a convenient time and place for the notes to be present 'd. Let the agent retain one-fourth as a -1X and stamp the other three fourths. All notes not no stamped shonld, at the end of three months, cease to be currency. By this plan assessmentan_ A collection wlld b e • peons. sod] terteits would 'tie de , tooted, d what would be loft of • . rency would be ?% strehgthen the - , h;te male per °.., cdt• !unitary power of had been at Manassas, , • cd 'elan ended coon •. t year of the war by ~E. i./ the army. year GI the war tit ti -2 between the to day with by a • lii i.. 1: rprrSFLim (.;• , :arr.ncy, and the trathc should. th,7efure, ba prohibited. He found the p3artr tc , do this in the necessity of sustaining the public credit- It is non• sense to tell him that the framers of a piece of political machinery designed that ►t should run down like a clock, and none to have the power of winding it up again. Without a strong atm', and a Found cur rency, what is the Constitution worth? We are nut living ut.r a eanstizatLon which requires us to sacrifice our liberties. he had an oath to support such a Constitution, he would disregard it be— cause he believed there was no such C)n stitution. - He had sworn to support a Constitution which gave to the Gov erninent just such powers as would enable it to conduct the war to a successful con• elusion. I.3stly, he proposed to declare these laws war measures, and no.fke those viola ting them amenable to the military courts. He was unwilling to submit legis'ivion upon which hangs the destiny of th,s Con• federacy, to the judgment of every little petty State Judge, who, by his dec•ieinne, may turn loose the flood of Yankee des potiem to overspread the whole land. He believed that all of the laws he had advocated were absolutely necessary to sustain the country in its impenledpondi tion. In one State, they might be susTained by the enlightened judgment of the Court. In another, they may be overthrown. If the people violate them, he wouldn't trouble Judge Lyons' Court, but would make punishment follow rapidly upon the heels of the offence. We can't get along in the struggle much longer without re sorting to strong measures. Mr. Brown said, in conclusion, that unless Congress yes prepared to adopt such laws as these, the country would be brought to the eve of destruction. When the spirits of all the long list of martyrs who have fallen in this war, and the un• told thousands who shall hereafter fall shall cover this Capitol as with a cloud, and demand to know the authors of all this mischief, he, for one, at least, meant to say, •'1 did not do it: shake not thy gory locks at me... y of heart disease. Deiem or ''.b, 1 , 61 at Pemberton east:e. Richmond wiLLT A v CO: .T OT, on of Joseph Coltart, of Oak land. READER! If 7, - )cir .s turnlng they l• your becJuaing Thin I: y,ur Ilair is t,ecAning Llarsh aniDry Use line Rejuvenator, Wh,:h i 3 the meet set'eftwory HAIR RESTi,R -i R e rr hr,neht before the public. Pri,, One Ur!f•r. Fo- Bale by SI HON JOH N: 4 TOS; Jet_ Cerner of Smithfield and BEST No. 1 White Carlwo Oi Ls Kul retaith , at 50 CENTS r.6R GALLON, A g Jos. DRI STORE c o , 01 the Diamond and Market Ft: eet oi3o, Inas bo obtained a 1, rtie and 3U1 , e1 ivr as -s.lre toeot • t I.,.Quors for medicinal t or, 0803. ec ❑ outing ct the finest ULD BRANDIIit-,, a superior sabot. of BOLLANI, liIN, PORT and CHERRY of the tin est desoril.tions TnoBo havint ute fe: the art,cles wi,l eettsult. their own tate, t Lv P181.1 , 11111X Illy s' •b botere per: Lai Ito elsewhere. F. tech Ash toot ~.ani,J; ry excelled in quatite, always cn hand. Patebt Med,olnei and all the new Perfumeries ar,d !la.; Preparaueee of the day always on bar,t Ant, Dr. Murdoch's Burn Ointment, a most excelter, arti,le for Burns of Frosted Limbs ter at:l3olin,-; u, the Dee, I place, 411 , 14111r1P1 - 11r1:111 - N 3i 4i I . h'Cl► It C , rne , tto D,aolund ear, i Marc,k y.ect &11,->r ki !he Dulir Po.t. —Dear Sir —V. It ltrf T yerna.Aton t A - ien to s.dy to the rend ere of y or paper that I will 'end, hr rr urn mel all who wi..11 it ktree, , a litt:eit t. Ntt l h full .1. re: lions lc: making and us,ng a F e4e!.‘l; b.rn:, that will effectually remove, in ten day!. Illotches, Tan, Freckles, and all I :- .tee of the Skin, leaving the same soft, clear dmoott and beautiful. I will also mail tree to those having Bald Heads, or Bare Fa. es. simple directions and information that will enable them to start a lull growth o. Luxuriant Heir, Whither:, or a Moustache, in less than thirty days. All applications answered by return mail with out (urge. Resnectfully y..urs, THOS. F. CHAPMAN. Chemist. 611 Broadway, New York. STRICTLY PURE ARTICLES Low .erioes. PITTSBURGH DRUG HOUSE. TORRENCE & McGARR, A.POIL'II.:CA.JECIIif,F3 Corner Fourth and Market 5e7641, PITTSBURGH. DRUGS! DRUGS! DRUGS I MEDICINES I MEDICINES ! MEDICINESI MEDICINES ! CHEMICALS I CHEMICALS CHEMICALS I CHEMICALL DYES! DYES! DYES! PAINTS! PAINTS! PAINTS! PAINTS! PAINTS! PAINTS PAINTS ! PAINTS ! PAINTS ! OILS I OILS I OILS I SPICES 1 SPICES ! SPICES ! SPICES I SPICES 1 SPICES I SPICES! SPICES! SPICES 1 SPICES I SPICES! SPICEFI Soda, Cream Tartar, Eng. Mustard, &c. French, Ezglish, and American Perfumery, and Toilet articles. Brushes, Trusses, Patent Medicines, and all Druggist articles, Strictly pure articles. Low prices. 1131... Physicians Presoni•tioas aeouzately coin- Pounded at all hours. . . Pure Winea and Identre for medicinal use off. : ineasd f DENTISTRY.—TEETH EX (kelp tracted without pain by tho use of lit Ciadry'e apparatus. J. F. HOFFMAN, DENTIST. All work warranted. 134 Smithfield Street, PITIBBURUIi =II O.CORNWELL & liEll.ll CARRIAGE MANUFACTURER' SILVER & BRASS PLATERS, And te anufsoturers of Saddlery et Carriage Hardware, No. 7 St. Guth street, and Duquesne Way (near the Bridge,) FLOURING MILL FORSALE. The subscriber offers for sale the AL- LiteitENY CITY MILLS. situated in the:Fourth Ward, Allegheny City. This well known Mill has been rebuilt lately, and oontains four ran of French Burrs. with all the latest improved Ma chinery for mannfaotartng the best brands of Flour. Enjoys a good local as well as foreign CUSTOM. This is a rare ci ante for business men. and ,nvite at y who wish to engage in a profitabe business to call at the Mill, where terms will be made known. oc7l-3m daw J. VOKGTLY. Notice to Coal Men. rIIIIIERti WILL BE HELD TANTAR 1841, at the BOARD OF TRALE an acimrsted meeting of the Coal men. Ail in terested in the Coal Trade are earnest's urged to attend, as bUrillt'S of vital importance will be brought before the meet pg. dol9-Iwd A. P. MoGREW, Sea's. ..ISEASES New Advertisements. - G' ITAT EME\TOFTHECONIDITION OF X 77 Till, BANK OF PITTSBURGH. SATI'FIDAY 1 1 1 , .11NING, January '2, 1''3 , 34 MEANS Loan!, Bills, Discounts and U. S, Car titivates of indebtedness U. S. Bonds, a 0473-10 r•or cent. Real Estate and Ground Rent.. Sto , l, and M,scellanii Due bv Bank , .\ .. .... Bank e..ks Treas."_\ Lt.\ 11. Capital Stuuk Profits and Ean-.11,,,, Unpaid Dividend= ut.,e Acc't Due to other 13ank- Ctreulatun ...... Total '2.705,1 ,•• .caternent is correct, to the bei , t of knoivle ige and belief, JOHN HARPER., Cashier. to and subscribed thi. 2nd day of Jan. K,;l. before toe, X3l ITIT .a:t4 • STATEMENT OF CITIZENS' BANK PiiTSRURGET, JOD. 2.1864. Loans and Discounts . 693.675 5D cum .. .. ~4:10 C 5 Notes and Checks of other Banta C. S Legal Tender Note , U. S. z-eLuritie Due from Banks and Bankers Capital Stork si,tti,ooo 0 0 Circulation 953 GOO 00 . Depositors'o f . nB 32 . .... .. Due to Banks and Bankers 1.414 80 The above statement i