" - - THC NEW YOnK PRESS. 7nnrrIlIAI. OP1NIONH OF THB LEADINO JOURNALS KVKKI npnw CCHRRNT TOl'ICU COMT1LKD PAT rOK THB BVENINO TKLBORAPH rrtr Movement. 8outh-THe Rcpubll- ' cau Campaign. From f JVmrs. The ReruWii an Committee makes an appeal Air money to aid its etforta to organize the Ke (ftul)Ucan party in the Southern States. It rgea the necessity of sen-ling sneakers and documents to enlighten and influence the Uhlio mind, as well as of organizing the party for YigorouB and effective effort at the polls. The appoal will doubtless meet with a liberal epponse. It is in the highest degree desira ble that any great and powerful political party Vhioh holds or seeks political power, should lie national and not sectional in its organiza tion and character. The Kepublioan party is ow dominant in the councils of the "tl0 and it ought to have an organization Wonts in every State and in every section of Tlds'indeed, Is indispensable to its useful-jie;-s and prolonged existence. M sectional jmity can long remain in rossesaion of na tional power. Especially now that slavery lias been destroyed and all causes for sectional differences thus removed, will it be required f every party, as a condition of publio contt deiioe, that its aims, its principles and its t, entimenU shall be as broad a8 the Union, and tmbrace the welfare of the whole nation father than that of any particular section. And the best service the Republican party can Jiot render the country is to extend its organi se', ion into every State, and to labor zealously fo- '.he common good. 'i here is one thing preliminary to success in B, '.i an undertaking, however, which must ai, .i lie overlooked, if the Republican party iri t l leoome national in its action, it must be i, i.ai in us principles u no Buimioa, ill not answer to base its new develop ; on issues of the past; it must have a j.'ct Droeraniine for the future. ' It must li' no, 3-ia ly lor support anywhere exclusively or v on what it has done, but on what it i ' ea to do, for the publio good. It is not I . . . . , 1-1 1-1 II . A p"'i 1- li n ei li tnal it lias auonsneu slavery; it must make that abolition a blessing and not a to the nation at large. It cannot base 5t aim to power on the fact that it has made fivi. ge universal to the negro race; it must vi late that action by showing that the toi try has been benefited, not damaged, Hit 'by. And this can only be done by wise, Ix-n lioent, and judicious action by practical ji: -a-mres, and not by loud professions, and B'.iil less by clamorous reminiscences of the Jv.St. Nor can the Republican party rely for con l!i) :ed life and strength on the fact that it Bt' A by the country against rebellion that it t: ; iied the nation safely through the war. l i to the present time, since the war was fch jc 1, the Republican party has lived mainly ou 1 lie odium in which its enemies involved lb selves during the contest. That capital ;'. not he sufficient always. The people He , r keep a party in power any more than lh -y keep an individual in office from mo th of gratitude. In the presence of the fr li, new, and pressing issues to which the nc ssities of the time give rise, the past is nlwivya forgotten. The people liave no time Jr recollections; they demand action in the present and for the future. The Republican party must not count, therefore, on maintain ing itself in power by reminding its opponents Of their past transgressions and its own patriots conduct. It must 6how itself here After to be as much wiser, more just, more 1atriotio and trustworthy than its enemies, as t has been hitherto; and that must be done ly the superior wisdom of its measures and its policy. The Committee would probably meet with a Snore prompt and liberal response to its appeal for money, if the country knew a little Snore accurately what are the specific uses to Jjo made of it. What is to be the policy of the Republican party in the Southern States, s represented by this Committee f What are the measures that party proposes to carry Out t Does it second the efforts of the Hunni cutts in Virginia, and of kindred demagogues elsewhere, to plant bitter and eternal hatred Ijetween the two races in the Southern States ? Does it lend its aid and its funds to stirring Hp distrust and animosity among the different classes of Southern society f JJoes it preach connsoation as a Republican doctrine r We understand that a good deal of the money contributed hitherto has been used in the distribution of Mr. Stevens' confiscation speech among the Southern negroes. Is that the use to be made of the money asked for now f These are questions which it is quite as im portant to the success as to the character of the Republican party that it should answer. We do not believe the people of this country desire such a crusade of renewed bitterness and sectional hate as a certain class of Repub licans seemed disposed to inaugurate. No publio interest has anything to gain by it the whole country has much . to lose. The iinancial condition of our affairs demands the cordial, united, harmonious cooperation of all Elections and all classes of our people. We jnust cherish and promote the industry of all . sections not derange and destroy it. We need peace, concord a common effort for the common good. The Republican party can ; Secure this, and every consideration of interest nd of honor demands that it should do it. 2t should not sacrifice any interest or any light; but it owes it to the nation that the pactional resentments and hostilities which led to the war should no longer vex the publio peace or check the publio growth, now that the war is over. la Cballlu on the Negro' Destiny, from the Tribune. Nature is sparing of her precious gifts, and Jt is given but to few men to excel in more than one department of human action. Igno Mnnfl of this rule has often entailed the most lamentable, sometimes the most ridiculous, failures; but, in spite of these admonitory examples, it is impossible to convince certain anguine natures that they are not equal to everything, because they have been fortunate enough to achieve a marked success in some thing. Monsieur du Chaillu is evidently bo exception to the rule. This gentleman has achieved some reputation as a traveller. He Las explored 'Equatorial Africa, penetrating Into regions previously untrodden by the foot cf the white man. in jus journeys i!u1 larce collections of animals. he He as stuffed and brought away with him, be tells us, "more than two thousand UrdB, of which sixty were new to science." lie "killed one thousand quadrupeds, f which "more than two hundred were etnffHd" Lvliim and sent to Europe, "with mnr than eicrhtv skeletons." and "about Jhirt of these quadrupeds were new to THE DAIlF EVENING, TEL'EGHAFHPHILADELFIIIA, MONDAY, science. " And, above all, he discovered the famous gorilla, the nearest approach to the human species of that quadriinilnous ra 10 from whieh Home people think man has desoendnd, or of which man 1r, more properly speaking, Ail improved variety. When Monsieur du Cliaillu returned to Now York in 18!!, ho had to he informs us no fewer than "twonty one gorilla skin and skeletons, besides chim panzees, and collections of insects, reptiles, and shells." All this, we admit, is a very fair amount of work to get through in about half an ordinary lifetime, and we have no desire to detract in the slightest measure from the merit of this intrepid African traveller. We are not aware that his explorations have as yet resulted in any good, or any promise of good, to the race; but we are not of thoso who would measure the value of such enterprises as that which has given fame to Wonsieur da t'halllu by their immediate usefulness; and we do not doubt that his pioneer labors will in future time yield some substantial benefit to the human family, lint with all our admira tion of his intrepidity and endurance as a traveller, we cannot be insensible to the fact that he is in imminent danger of making him self ridiculous. Not content with the renown he lias achieved as an explorer, he must needs i?et himself up as a philosopher. Clearly, nature has endowed him in liberal measure with the faculty of observation; and in exer cising this gift freely he is on safe ground. But when he mounts into the regions of gene ralization when, from the plain narration of facts, he ventures on the difficult task of working up the facts in support of a theory, and that a theory which prediots the ex tinction of a race now numbering hundreds of millions of human beings it becomes at once evident that philosophy is not his forte. What, for instance, can be more untenable and absurd than the view as to the future of the negro raoe which he gravely set forth, at the conclusion of his leo ture last Tuesday evening, as his own delibe rate conviction f After reviewing the condi tion of the negro in his savage state in his native home, and contending that the Afrioan has no "power of progression," he prooeeded to say: "Of all the uncivilized nations, the negro has been found the most tractable and docile, and he has a number of good qualities that compensate, in a measure, for the bad ones. We ought, therefore, to be kind to him and elevate him. That he will follow, in the course of time, other lower race3, aud will finally disappear, I have very little doubt." Now, with all deference to Monsieur du Chaillu's superior knowledge of the negro, we make bold to question the soundness of this conclusion of his. Granted that the negro has "no power of progression" granted that he has for years reiuaiued in a savage state it does not follow as a consequence that he must "finally disap pear" from the face of the earth. With a cer tain class of ethnologists this theory of the dis appearance of the "lower races" before the ad vancing march of civilized man is quite a favor ite one; but there is nothing, we contend, in either history, or nature, or Providence to warrant the conclusion that such a catastrophe is inevitable. Inferior races, we admit, are disappearing in certain parts of the world, where the superior races dispute with the abo rigines the possession of the land; but this re sult is brought about not through the operation of any ordained law, but by the vices of a civilization imperfectly controlled by moral and christian influences. When Monsieur du Chaillu speaks of the final disappearance of the African race, he seems to forget, too, that lie ia coolly settling the destiny, not of a tribe, but of the whole people of a large continent. The negro race has an appointed location on this planet, and an appointed work to do on it; and it is impossible to dispose of them by the flippant philosophy philosophy so called which is so fashionable nowadays in cer tain very enlightened quarters. The equa torial regions are his habitat. He is specially fitted for laboring in the burning tropics; and in places where even Chinese and Hill Coolies sink under malarial influences, he retains his health and strength unimpaired. Will Monsieur du Chaillu tell us who is to take his place in the lauds of the sun when he shall have finally disappeared f Or are immense tracts of them to ne given over to ine wnoness or naiure r But facta are decidedly against the theory in question. It is notorious that in the British West Indies, since emancipation, the black population has increased very largely. The blacks in Central and South America are also om the increase, and in our Southern States there are no signs as yet, to say the least, of the final disappearance. Let us give our explorer a Lint. Your philosophical traveller is. eenerally speaking, an unmitigated bore. l'eople don't want generalizations irom travel lers; they ask for facts only, preferring to draw conclusions for themselves, wonsieur du Chaillu is entnrtaining enough when he tells us about his adventures with gorillas and chimpanzees, and cannibal Fetich wor shippers: he is simply intolerable when he begins to philosophize about the appointed late of the negro race. The Recent Farclal Attempt to TryJtff. Davis. JVotn the Herald. The recent attempt to bring, or pretense of bringing, Jeff. Davis to trial, was a solemn legal mockery run into farce. All the way through, this case has presented both a ridicu lous and most serious aspect at the same time, and has ended in humbiig and hypocrisy. Jeff. Davis was the leader and representative man in the attempt to break up the best govern ment that ever existed. He was the President of that powerful Rebel Cenfederacy which for four years shook the foundations of the Union, which caused the slaughter of half a million of men, the flower of the country, which has bur dened us with a debt, national, State, and mu nicipal, of nearly four thousand millions of dol lars, and which has plunged us into a sea of innumerable other troubles. More than that, he was one of the chief secession agitators originally, who bsought on the war. This former haughty Senator of the United States, army officer, and Secretary of War, and sub sequent l'resident of the most gigantio rebel lion, closed his career of horrors and power by being ignominlously captured when dis guised and fleeing in the habiliments of an old woman. Charged not only with the crime of treason, but with being an accessory to the dreadful one of assassinating the President of the United States, he is liberated without a trial, on straw bail, and lionized by a set of Northern politicians and pseudo philan thropists as a suffering martyr. Such is the unparalleled spectacle of high crimes, solemn legal mockery, and ridiculous farce combined, which his case and career present. But apart from these phases of the case as regards Jeff. Davis himself, who, after all, is a little, narrow-minded man, the whole action of the Government in the matter, from begin ning to end, has been disgraceful. Under the charge of A double crime of the most heinous nature, he was manaoled and punished with a severity of solitary confinement awarded only to the worst criminals after bwing found guilty. Without a trial the charge of complicity in the assassination of President Lincoln was aban doned, and neither he nor the country hns ever been informed of the reasons for the clinrgo or the abandonment of it. For two years he was a prisoner under the other charge treason, and yet during all that time he was not brought to trial, though the counlry was in a state of peace,' and though the Constitution guarantee to every one, a speedy trial. There always was sufficient cause and evidence to sustain the accusation of treason, and, perhaps, for con viction of that crime. President Johnson as serted and reasserted, officially and unofficially in the most emphatio manner, that treason was a dreadful crime, and traitors should bo punished. Yet, in spite of there repeated declarations, no attempt was made to try Davis. Undoubtedly treason, as Wesley said is the sum of all crimes, for the consequences are more deplorable and dreadful; still, the very man who was regarded as the chief of traitors was never legally acousod. After holding the prisoner two years the Govern ment virtually abandoned this charge also by releasing him on straw bail. The laws remain unvindicated, and the Government really avows by this last act either that there is no such crime as treason, or that it cannot be reached. If this be so, the Government rests on a weak foundation. Any wicked and reck , less adventurer may plunge the country into civil war with Impunity. The different departments of the Govern ment have endeavored to shift the responsi ; bility of keeping Jeff. Davis untried for two years from each other's shoulders. The Ex ecutive held him completely in its power, and did nothing. Chief Justice Chase would have 1 nothing to do with him, although it was Lis duty to see that no one should be held an un reasonable time without trial, and to vindicate the laws by seeing that no traitor should escape unpunished. Both the rights of the prisoner under the Constitution to be speedily tried and tlte crime or treason were unheeded. because one department of the -Government did not harmonize with the other, because one wished to embarrass the other, and all for political effect. The people hereafter will hold both responsible, giving, however, the greatest blame to the Chief Justice, because he could have demanded the prisoner and have tried him at any time. One of the most remarkable features con nected with the case of Jeff. Davis is found in the conduce 01 tne editor 01 ine radical organ in this city. He was the first to go bail for Davis. He had manifested an earnest, desire to do so for a long time previously. Under the pretense of humanity, and a sense of jus tice, he sought this notoriety. Inconsistent as is Lis conduct in this respect with his radi cal dogmas and radical alllliations, it is charac teristic. At the commencement of the war he advocated secession. Let the Rebel States go, he said. It is quite in keeping, too, with his "on to Richmond" vagaries, which nearly ruined the Union cause, and with the radical cry of on to specie payments, which would bring universal bankruptcy, and, possibly, repudiation. The course that he and such like radicals pursue weakens the arm of the Gov ernment, makes the law a farce, and threatens us with the greatest evils in the future. The effect is very bad upon the public mind. The people will naturally be surprised that the sacrifice of five hundred thousand lives, and the creation of a debt of three or four thousand millions of dollars to put down treason, have only ended in the virtual declaration that there is no such crime. . If the Government is to be conducted in this manner, they may begin to raise questions about paying an enormous debt that has produced no better result. We can only hope that the Government and politics of the country may soon be in the hands of more practical and conservative men, who will neither aid treason nor leave it unpunished. Tne Vote of the Southern Blacks, From the World. Since the decree of an omnipotent and in fallible Congress had invested the black race with the inestimable privilege of the right of suffrage, which seems, both in the Old kand In the New World, to be considered a panacea for earthly ills, it was well that those most closely touched by this great change in the political fabric should endeavor to turn the new element to useful purposes; that they should strive to eliminate its evils, and to extract whatever of good it may contain. The South is, of course, vitally interested in the matter. Both her social and her political future are involved in the working of the gigantio experi ment. The promptitude and the energy with which her leading minds have adapted them selves to the new order of things, and grappled with the difficulties and dangers so suddenly thrust upon them, show that they appreciate the gravity of the crisis, and give hopeful earnest of the future. They indicate an elasticity of mind and a firmness of courage which, rising superior to the pressure of hostile legislation and of financial and industrial pros tration, are alike admirable in themselves and a proof of the existence of those civio virtues w hich lie at the basis of all real, self-government. , , Yet, though most deeply and immediately, the South is not exclusively, concerned in the operation of black suffrage. The influx of so powerful a disturbing force cannet fail to be felt in the political dynamics of the whole country. For the common welfare of all the members of the Union it is, then, essential that the important functions cast upon the blacks should be used in the mode least detrimental to the purity'of our institutions. All con siderations of party gain or los3 sink into in significance compared with the existence of fundamental principles. The temporary ascendancy of one set of political dogmas will probably, in the changes of a comparatively brief period, be followed by the triumph of their oppositeB, and the mischievous results of one system of policy be corrected by the adoption of the remedies prescribed by the contrary school of political doctors. A per manent debasement of political functions, or social war between races, would admit no Buch cure, and strike to the very heart of our republican system. Utterly regardless, however, of all nobler considerations, and anxious only to perpetu ate their power, the radicals have effected the most sweeping change ever introduced into a political organization. To govern the whites of the South by means of the blacks, to array the two races in enduring hostility to each other, and to vest the control of intel ligence, education, and property in the hands of ignorant freedmen, manipulated by cunning demagogues, was the evident aim of the radical legislation, is the aim of the Re publican Committee in its address "to the Republicans of the Union," and the scaroely concealed purpose of the brawlers like Kelley whom they are Bending through the South ern States. Some, perhaps, were and are not conscious of such motives: but idan. tifying, as they do, loyalty patriotism, and "every virtue under Heaven," with fidelity o wieir pari, mey naturally looked with complacency on any measures iutended to pro. long its rule. . " There was great plausibility in the theory that the entire vote of the blacks would be st in favor of the radicals. It seemed, speciously enough, the bane.it ingratitude in tbe freedman not to sustain by his vote the party which had caused the war, and given him the double boon of liberty and the right 'f .suffrage, i Yet there wore-counteracting causes, which now begin to be vinible. The long-established influence of the whites, tho subtle operatien of social distinctions, so in grained in the very framework of Southern life, rendered it exceedingly difficult for the freedman at onco to throw off all dependence upon his former master and boldly enter the lists as his open euemy. Then, too, came the 1owerful operation of those long-subsisting tindly relations between the races, so purely incomprehensible to the readers of Mrs. Stowe, in whose credulous brain the whole Sonlli was peopled by ruthless Legrees and angelic Uncle Toms. Altogether, there is very good reason to an ticipate that the natural leaders of the South ern whites will prove to be also the natural leaders of the blacks. That the Southern whites should, as a general thing, direct and control the black vote, is obviously for the ad tage of all. The failure to do so, and the con sequent subordination of the superior race, would be so flagrant an inversion of natural laws as must inevitably result in continual discord and final anarchy. That the Interests of tho two races are identical is also manifest and actual residents are, therefore, muoh safer guides for the helpless blacks than unprinci pled adventurers who seek to enrol them into bands of concfottieri for their own selfish pur poses. The chances at present seem to be that while Wilson, Hunnicutt, Kelley, and their co-workers in the cause may sodace a considerable body of vagrant freedmen con gregated in the cities, the Southern "pea santry" of the rural districts will, as in other countries, lean to conservatism. So far from being overwhelmed by the magnitude of the change they have been required to meet, the Southern leaders have manfully taken "heart or grace." and are determined. If possibl. "out of the nettle danger to pluok the flower saiety." SUMMER RESORTS. SUMMER RESORTS ON LINE OF Reading liailroad and Branches. MANSION HOUSE, MOUNT CARBON, Mrs. Caroline Wunder, Pottaville F. O., BchuyllcIU TUSCARORA HOTEL, Mrs. Hannah Miller, Tuicarora F. O., Bchuylltill co. MANSION HOUSE, O. W. Frost, Mahanoy City P, O., Schuylkill county WHITE HOUSE, Mrs. 8u8d Marsdorf, Reading P, O. ANDALUSIA, James 8. Madeira, Roadlug P, O. LIVING SPRINGS HOTEL, Dr. A. Smith, WemersvlUe P. O,, Berks county. SO UTH MO UNTAIN HOUSE, H. II. Manderbach, Womclsdorf P. O,, Berks co. COLD SPRINGS nOTEL, ' , jbanonco..Mra. M. Bodermel, Harrlsburg P. O. B 0 YER TO WN SEMINAR Y F. H. Slaufler, Boyertown P. O., Berks co. YELLOW SPRINGS HOTEL, A. U. Boyder, Yellow Bprlnga P. O., Chester co. L1T1Z SPRINGS 8, Llchtenlboler A Bon Litis P, O., Lancaster co. EPHRATA MOUNTAIN SPRINGS, A. S. Feather, Ephrata P. O., Lancaster co. 3 6 2m SURF HOUSE, ATLANTIC CITY, N. J, Tbe above Bouse will be opened ou tbe 1st of JUNK, For particulars, etc., address WM. T. CALEB PBOPBIfTrOB, ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. 6 8 ti COLLEGE niLL HOTEL, POUGHKEEPSIE KtW YORK. '1'lils clfllghtlul hummer Hotel, under tbe manage meut ot WILLIAM PJiKRY. loroierly proprietor of the Collaniore House, Kew York, will be OPUNEU about June 1. Application may be mude to UKOKUU MOUUAJN, Propiletor. 8 101m COUNTRY BOARD. VERY DESIRABLE accommodations and excellent BOARD can be bad at Morrlstowu, N. J., tor a season ol twelve weeks Irom tbe 24ib of June. Relerences given and re quired. Address Post Ofllte ilox No. Ui.Morrttowu, IS ew Jersey, 6 lu lm SUMMER BOARDING. THAT SPLENDID, UealUiy, and popular plitce kuown as OllteNUTUKOVH rt Media (on the West Chester Railroad), Delaware county, Pennsylvania, la now open ior the rwoption ol guems INSTRUCTION. BUSINESS COLLEGE N. K. t'OBNEB FIFTH INI) CUES NUT 8TS lbtabllbhed Nov. 2, 1861 Chartered March H, 1WS. BOOK-KEEPING. I'ourse Of Instruction unequalled, consisting of prac tical nittbods actually employed In leading houses 1 this and other cities, as Illustrated In Fairbanks' R k-kteplng, which is the text-book ot this Institu tion. OTHER BRANCHES. Telegraphing, CammeroUl Calculations, Business na Oruauieulal W riling, tbe Higher Ma' hematics, Correspondence, Forms, Commercial Law, etc. YOVNO MEN Invlteaiovlr.lt tbe institution and Jndge or them selvfs ol lis superior appoiutuienbi. Circulars ou ap plication. L, FAIRRANH.B, A. M., President, T. Mjcecdant. becrelary, -69 THE GREAT NATIONAL TELEGRAPHIC AND COaiaiEBCIAI. lNKTITfJTE, . No. 7)0 ARCH BTRKET, PHILADELPHIA, PA. 1 his Institution Is now open lor Kducailoual pur poses. Tbe out til la perltcl lurnllure Uuougboul being entirely new. TIIK TKXF.UBAPIIIC DEPARTMENT Is under the control of Mr. Park tyring, who. as a most oomplele and thorough Optra tor, Is unqualifiedly endorsed by the euthe corps of uiauauers of the Western In Ion Telegraphic line at the mala otiloe In this city. Twenty -one lnsixuaieuui In cons taut opera tion. THE I-AD1E' TFEFUKAPHIC DEPART' MCJtT, In comfort and e)egance,eiuals any Drawing-room In the city. Opportunities ior study are here ailoxded Unit are unequalled. THE COMMERCIAL. DEPARTMENT Js uuder the especial care of Mr. T. C. Search, an ex pertenced accountant, aud late Professor of Accounts Id a prominent Busluess (Jullege of this oily. AJuil corps ! Teachers always lu attendance. UK PARALLELED OFFER. We vrlU refund the eullre charge ol tuition to any pupil who may be dissatisfied with our Instruction alter having given two weeks' faithful labor lu either Department. KEKD FOR eiRC'TLARM. TERMB PREVIOUS TO MARCH 1. 18CT. : Full Course, time uullmiled....,..mM.M..4al Telegraphing, three ui um ha... ...., WM... 49 fokiilons Guaranteed. , Day and Kveuiug Instruction. " llltuwf tut JACOB 1L TAYLOR, President MAY20, JL8G7. FINANCIAL Q A N K I N C HOUSE OF Jay Cooke & Co.. 1ISAKD.114 S. "THIRD T., PHILADA., Dealers in all Government Securities. OLD G-SOs WANT13D IN EXCHANGE FOR NEW. A LIBERAL DIFFERENCE ALLOWED. Compound Interest Notes Wanted. IKTEBIJIT ALLOWED ON DEPOSITS. Collections made. Stocks bought aud sold on Couirulbelon. Hix clal business accomiuodatloni reserved for ladles. - 3 24 Sin (J. 8. SECURITIES A SPECIALTY. tf, ITH, F AKDOLPH & CO. BANKERS AND DEOKEHS, AO. 16 THIRD KTM;MO. S SAWS AH ST., rUlLADKLFBia. Miff roax ! FOR MALE AT LOWEST PRICE. .' CONVERSIONS MADE OF, 7'30s WITHOUT CHARGE. . ORDERS FOR STOCKS AND HOLD EXE CUTED IN PHILADELPHIA AND NEW YORK. HI U C U L T 'S E V E N'T U 1 R T Y A 01 E S, CONVERTED WITHOUT CHARUF.; INTO TILE ";','. NEW FIVE-TWENTT GOLD INTEREST . . BONDS. I ,' .... i Large Bonds delivered at one. Small Bonds for n lifted as soon as received from Washington. JAY COOKK db CO., tUf He. 114 S. THIRD STREET. 7 3-10s, ALL SERIES, CONVERTED INTO Five-Twenties of 1865, JANUARY AND JULY , WITHOUT CHARGE. BONDS DELIVERED IMMEDIATELY. DE HAYEK & BBOTJELEK, 10 2rp MO. 40 S, THIRD STREET. 7 3'IOS SEVEN - THIRTY NOTES CONVERTED WITHOUT CHABttB INTO '. THE NEW C - O S. BONDS DELIYEBED AT ONCE, COW POTJND INTEREST NOTES wanted at da market rates, WM. PAINTER A GO.,! 8 26am ' NO. 80 SOUTH THIRD ST RATIONAL BANK OF THE KEPUBUO So. 809 aud 811 CUENJiiVT Street, FHILADJU.FHIA. '' CAFITAL; fOOO.OOO-FULL F AID. DIRECTORS, Job. T. Ealley, IWilllam Ervlen.lBam'l A. Blspnam, Eilw. B. Orue. Osgood Welsh, r red. A. Hoy t, Matbaa Utiles. IB. Jiowiaud, Jr..l Wu. M. biiawo, ; rBKSIDKMT, ! WILLIAM H. BHAWN. . , OABHICB J JOftEPH P. MUMKORD. (81 Urn QALEB PEinCE, NO. 109 S. THIRD ST., PHILADELPHIA PTOCKS, BONDS, and GOVERNMENT BEOURI Tlbti ot all kinds buuglit and sold on (Jommluston. UJSlTEW STATES BEVEJSUE STAMPS, of all kinds aud descriptions, kept constantly ou Land, and sold in any desired quantity. A. LIBERAL JJlbt'OUNT ALLOWED. It m Orders by mall or express promptly attended to. STOVES, RANGES, ETC. QULVER'S NEW PATENT DEEP SAND-JOINT IIOT-AIIl FURNACE. BAJfUES OF ALL SUES. ; ' Also, Fhllepar's New Low rresanre Bteam Heating Apparatus, ior sale by CHARLES WILLIAMS, B 101 No. 1181 MABKKT Blreet, THOMPSON'S LONDON KITClIENEIlt OR JCUKOPKAN RANGE, for KaratllHS, Ho. if is, or ruuuo lnsiiiuuous, in 1 WHfti I ulm EEKENT blZKH. Also. Philadelphia Kaiisi II ot-A tr Purnaoea, Portable Healers, Lowuowauralet Plrvboard Hinw, bain Ikiiiunt. but whole Plate Boilers, Cooking Moves, elo., wlioltwals and retalLbj the nianolauturers, - HHAHrK A THOMO!!, 11 17 siuttiwu N o. W N. bKOOtt D blreet. WATCHES, JEWELRY. ETC. AMERICAN VATCHC 3. yr W. CA8SLDY, KO. 1 MOTTII SECOND STREET, PHILADELPHIA ASKS ATTENTION TO HI8 . , TARIER AND EXTENSIVE STOCK ' OP ' ( OLD! AND KILTER WATCHES AND ' ' " KII.VFR.WARF. V Customers mav ba uonmii th nn hn .k. kl. - rticlcs. at reasonable prices, will be sold at nis store " "uo amurtnieni ot riATlDHAK E CONSTANTLY ON FT AN If WATCHLB and JEWKLRY carefully repaired. Ai Orders by mall prnrevtly attended to. (4 10 wsmilm , niAM0Ji CTt.um'A JEWELERS. Fa1CjI1:3 ar.d JtiWEL&Y REPAIBED. Have on band a large and splendid assortment DIAMONDS, WATCHES. jewelry and - ' hltrb-vabi ' 1 of all kinds and r rices. ' Particular attention Is requested to onr large stool of DIAMONDH, and the extremely low prices. BRIDAL PRiSENTB made of Sterling and Sts dard Bilver. A large assortment to select from. WATCHES repaired la me best manner, and wa! ranted. ll'4p Diamonds and all precious stones bonght for ca.n. ' JOHN CO V MAN, No. 704. ARCH Stress, PHILADKLPHIA, MANUFACTURER AND DEALER US SILVER AND PLATEDWARB. Onr GOODS are decided! tbe cheapest in the dtp ' TRIPLE PLATE, A WO. 1. r 1 WATCHES, JEYYELUY. A1 US rxacetnw N. IS SOUTH SECOND STREET,' Often an entirely new and most carefully telaoi stock of . , - AMERICAN AND GENEVA WATCHES, ' JEWELRY, ; SILVER-WARE, ' AND FANCY ARTICLES , EVEBY DESCRIPTION, suitable for , . ,' BRIDAL OB HOLIDAY PRESENTS. ' An examination will show my stock to be nninr. passed I quality aud cheapness. 1 Particular attention paid to repairing. tiff C. RUSSELL & CO.. w. mm m VA " mm.jm. A a 1 SS g. ISX, Have Just received an Invoice of FRENCH MANTEL CLOCKS, ' ' Mannfactnred to tnalr order In ParU, Also, m few INFERNAL ORCHESTRA CLOCff with side pieces; which they offer lower than the tarn goods can be purchased In the oltv. 1 S261 aiss. haiivu fewww C. & A. PEQTJIGNOT, Manufacturers of ' . Hold arid Silver Watch Ousea, And Wholesale Dealers In : AMERICAN WA Ten CO. '8, ', . , , HOWARD & CO.'S, And TRZMONT A.lLJHlTCA.-N WATCHES 41 NO. t SOUTH FIFTH STREET. HENRY HARPER. No. 520 ARCH Street. i Manufacturer and Dealer In . ', ' WATCHES,. FINE JEWELRY, i SILVER-PLATED WARE, AND 8H ; " SOLID BILTER-WARB Large and small sites, playing from t to IS airs, and costing from fo to Jou, Our assortment comprise such choice melodies as "Coming Thro the Rye." ' 1 1 ' , "Kobln Adair." . . ' "Hock me to Sleep. Mother." . i -"The Last Itoee of Summer." .. ; . . .. , "Monastery Bells." eto, elo,, Besides beautiful seleclluus from the rarlons Operas. ' imported direct, and for sale at moderate prices, by FARR A BROTHER, ' ' Importers of Watches, eta., II llsmthtrpl No. chesntjt St., below Fourth. PAPER HANGINGS, SHADES. ETC J. WILLIAMS & SOUS, NO. 16 NORTH SIXTH STREET, MANUJACTCBEBS 0 WINDOW BLINDS Ann SHADES. ' ; ; Blinds repaired; Shades Lettered; Trlmmlnmi and Cords; Bell Pulls .etc. ruiurrn; x mm cuauca UI all A.1UUSI flclure JasSHla: 4 lb uiwKiurp 1867. SPRING. 1867 WALL P A'P.EKS. ' 1 F. NEWLAND & SON, NO. ft NORTH NINTH STREET, efmw2m One door beioAii IT1 Ia O Xfc I S T ., . i AND ., ' , ;.' ' Preserver of: Natural Flower, A. Hi POVELL, ! , No, 725 Altcn Street, Eelow Eighth Boiiquets.-Wreatlis, Baskets. Pyramid, ot Cut t'iom rs Xuru IsUd to order at all seasoi, t J
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