THE DAILY EVENING TELEQRAril HIIEADELPIIIA, THURSDAY", AUGUST 11, 1870. PUBLISHED EVERY AFTERNOON (SUHDAYB 1ICHPTBD), iTTHE evening telegraph building, No. 108 8. THIRD STREET, PHILADELPHIA The Price U thrte cents per copy double iheef), or eighteen cents per week, payable to the carrier by whom served. The subscription price by mail t$ Nine Dollar t per annum, or One Dollar and Fifty CenU for two months, invariably in advance for the time ordered. THURSDAY, AUGUST 11, 1S70. T The earliest regular edition of The Evenino Telegraph goea to press at lj o'clock, and the subsequent regular editions at 2, 3, and 4 J. Whenever there is im portant news of the progress of the Euro pean war, extra editions will be issued after this hour, and before the regular time for the early edition. THE TRIBULATIONS OF FRANCE. No country is so sensitive under an invasion as France. Accustomed to make war on the soil of her enemies, she becomes frantic when they cross her frontiers and win victo ries on her territory. The immediate occa sion of the downfall of Louis XVI was his refusal to consent to adequate measures for the repulse of Austrian and Prussian invaders, and the public indignation aroused by this unpardonable offense quickly led to his exe cution as well as his dethronement. While the first Napoleon was leading millions to slaughter on the fields of Italy, Prussia, Austria, and Itussia, no man could or dared make formidable opposition . to his imperial mandates, but the instant he was forced into a defensive attitude on the soil of France his generals and his subser vient Senate united in compelling him to ab dicate. So, too, after Waterloo, when he left a pathway open for a second invasion he found the French Chambers suddenly con verted from facile friends into implacable foes. The present war has precipitated a similar crisis in Paris. The Emperor has barely been able, up to this time, to maintain his ascendancy, while symptoms of a stern determination to overthrow his dynasty are multiplying on every side. The parliamen tary warfare against him opened immediately after the commencement of the present session of the French Chambers. The deputies of the Left, or opposition, submitted a proposition setting forth that "inasmuch as the incapacity of the Chief of State has brought France into peril,' a Committee of National Defense, to consist of fifteen mem bers, shall be placed over all existing authori ties, summon all citizens, and assume supreme control of public affairs. The announcement of this short and easy method of squelching tne imperial marplot elicited the indignant denunciations of his friends, as well as the threatening xe sponse that men who made such propositions should be instantly shot. In the midst of the excitement an adroit supporter of the empire managed to turn the current of rage, for the moment, against the ministry rather than their master. Ollivier and his asso ciates were offered up as sa crifices for being only too faithful in their obedience to Napoleon, in the despe rate hope that their ejection from office would temporarily appease the wrath of an indignant people. The new Ministry, if any reliance can be placed upon the consistency of French politicians, is composed of even more devoted Imperialists than its predeces sors, as will be 6een by a sketch of its mem bers which is published in another portion of to-day's Telegraph; and despite his defeats at the front Napoleon has apparently man aged to outlive a most dangerous crisis at the capitaL But, like his armies, he has merely gained a momentary respite. Ilis own dread of the future is indicated alike by his avoidance of the dangerous precincts of Paris as well as the reported transfer of the young Prince Imperial to English . soil for safety. The capital is seething with revolu tionary feeling. Armed forces are summoned to quell mobs, but already the National Guard is evincing a disposition to fraternize with the people rather than to punish them for their enthusiastio devotion to liberty and to France. Evidence accumulates that Napo leon is personally responsible for the late dis asters, and since the predominant purpose of the nation is to avenge them Frenchmen grow more anxious, hour after hour, to apply the axe to the root of their dilemma, by de stroying the Imperial dynasty. Another serious defeat will give this sentiment uncontrollable strength, and nothing can destroy it but a speedy change in the fortunes of the war. Napoleon has been warned again and again that the French would not submit to conjoined despotism and defeat, and his proved inability to cope with foreign foes will be a sure presage of the triumph of his domestic enemies. Meanwhile the French, though sorely distracted by political dissen sions, and though the enemy are thundering at their gates, do not seem to have lost their spirit, as a law providing for the national de fense, which embraces the enrolment of all unmarried men between the ages of 25 and 3.", was adopted yesterday by a unanimous vote of the Chambers, amid prolonged ap plause; and the exclamation made amid the ex citement, "Now, let Prussia look us in the 'face!" is fir indication 'of the feelings this aotion is likely to awaken in a land teeming with the recollection of past military glory and present humiliation. The roar of an angry people will be heard above the din of clamorous politicians demanding victory at any price. If the Republican loaders prove that they alone can secure it, the mantle of power will fall upon their phoulAersj if the Orleaniata demonstrate that they are best able to recapture and regild the French eagles, they may regain the throne lost by their father; and if Napoleon does not quickly reburnish his tarnished reputation he must share the fate of his dis graced predecessors. The great difficulty of improvising ,a new programme at this moment is to find a leader gifted with suffi cient genius to insure its suocess. Pablio opinion seems to point to General Trochu as the man most likely to fulfil the hard condi tions imposed by the triumphant advance of victorious Germany and the dissensions of distracted France, and one of the possibili ties of the thick-coming future is that he may be proclaimed dictator. If he shows in battle that his reputation is based on a solid founda tion, this probability may quickly ripen into an accomplished fact. The army is clamor ing for generals whom it can trust, and the grand chorus of the nation will give irre sistible force to this demand. THE QUEEN'S SPEECH. Thx British Parliament was yesterday pro rogued until the 27th of October, the minis terial document known as the Queen's speech being read by the Lord Chancellor in the absence of her Majesty, who we be lieve is enjoying herself at her summer resi dence on the Isle of Wight, and letting poli tics take care of themselves, so far as she is concerned, at least. The speeches of the Queen are not as a general rule particularly edifying, and this one is flatter and more un profitable than ever. The great topics of the day are scarcely more than referred to, and with regard to the great war that has broken out between France and Prussia, her Majesty has little to say except that she wit nesses it with pain and regret, and that her best efforts have been made to avert the calamity. The only really significant passage in the speech is that which states that constant and anxious attention will be directed to the strict observance of the rights of neutrality, and that every fitting endeavor will be made to check the operation of causes leading to the enlargement of the arena of conflict. This may mean much or nothing, but taken in connection with the announce ment that treaties identical in form, which will give additional security to Belgium against the hazards of war on her frontier, have been tendered to the belligerent powers, it may be taken as an indication of the deter mination of the British Government to keep out of the fight if it can, but to assure the neutrality of Belgium under any, contingency. The pro rogation of Parliament at this juncture is owing to the doubtful and uncertain state of mind in which Mr. Gladstone finds himself with regard to affairs on the Continent. The sudden outbreak of war between France and Prussia took the British ministry by surprise, and Mr. Gladstone showed a decided disposi tion to temporize and to favor Napoleon while the national sympathies were with Prussia, and an active policy that would make Eng land's influence felt on the Continent was de manded. The publication of the proposed secret treaty, and the moral certainty that Napoleon was the originator of it, forced Mr. Gladstone to make an advance in the direction of the public sentiment, and to take measures for securing the independence of Belgium. The Ministry, however, has to a great ex tent lost the confidence of the nation, and the prorogation of Parliament was determined npon to avoid the necessity of answering un pleasant questions on the floor of the House of Commons. It was a measure of personal safety, and it may give the Gladstone Ministry a few months lease of power; but if the tre mendous European revolution which now seems . imminent bursts during the recess, Parliament when it reassembles in the fall will be likely to demand that a man of quicker brain and firmer grasp than Mr. Gladstone shall be placed at the helm to represent the interests of England. PENSION FRAUDS. The Pension Bureau, if the reports from Washington are to be believed, has at last taken some active steps to procure the arrest and punishment of the "Honorable" Roderick R. Butler, of Tennessee, for forgery and fraud. It has now been some weeks since these performances of this model Con gressmen were brought to light, and it may not be impertinent for ns to inquire why he was not arrested when his guilt was first dis covered? The sale of a cadetship in his gift, which the House of Representatives extenu ated by letting him off with a vote of cen sure, appears to have been the least of his offenses, and the crimes with whieh be is now charged will in all probability put him in the Penitentiary for a term of years, pro vided he does not escape the penalty of the law by leaving for parts unknown. That he has not done this long ago is not to the credit of the Pension Bureau, and it can only be accounted for from the fact that Butler ima gines the influences which enabled him to escape punishment for selling a cadetship will 1 interpose between him and the penalties due for his greater crimes. The peculiar tactics of the Pension Bureau in this and other instances of somewhat similar character are not such as to inspire the people of the country with much confidence in its management, fn this very city we have the case of Colonel Forbes, against whom charges of a very grave character were made, and who by his own admission is guilty of discounting the claims of the pensioners on his pay-rolls at usurious rates. In defiance of the well-known facts Colonel Forbes has not been removed, and by permitting him to re tain his office the Pension Bureau tacitly en dorses all his actions in the past and grant him free permission to bleed the pensioners to the full extent of his desires in the future. It is very evident that something is radically wrong somewhere, and the publio have a right to know who is to blame for permitting wan ton violation i of the law to go practically un punished. Is the Commissioner of Pensions dishonest or merely incapable? r The announcement that the Prince Imperial has arrived in London, with the jewels and valuables of the Empress, is one of the most "significant of the hour. The flight of the boy who was accepted by the Frenoh people but a few months ago as . their, future Empe ror was apparently not known yesterday in Paris, but it will be impossible to keep it concealed for any great length of time, and it will certainly be taken by a large portion of the population as a precursor to the down fall of the whole Bonaparte' dynasty. London is undoubtedly a better place for the poor fad than Paris just at this juncture, but the con trast between his position now and that of a few days ago, when he was receiving his "baptism of fire" and picking up a bullet for a keepsake in sight of a weeping army, is somewhat pitiful. The maternal affection of the Empress un doubtedly triumphed over all considerations of state policy in this instance, and although the Emperor was willing to expose "Louis" to the bullets of the Prussians, his mother evidently dreads having him fall into the hands of the Parisian mob. Like most of the imperial movements of late, it was a mistake, however, from a political point of view, for if the Emperor expects to keep possession of his throne, it is absolutely essential that he and all his family should show themselves bold, resolute, and defiant in the face of every danger, and the evidenoes of panic shown by the Empress in sending her son out of the country will be almost as likely to damage her husband's cause as another vic tory for the Prussians. J. H. Stpheb, the Louisiana carpet-bagger, has been renominated for Congress by the Republican Convention of that State. Sypher, it will be recollected, is the individual who figured in the Congressional investigation last March with reference to the sale of cadet ships, having asked the sum of $2.00 for an appointment in his gift, and who only did not take the money because he could not get it. That such a man as this should be one of the most prominent representatives of the Republican party in Louisiana is a dis grace, and every honest man in the country would rather see a decent Rebel elected to the House of Representatives from the First Congressional district of Louisiana than a loyalist like Sypher, who considers his loyalty just so much stock in trade, to be disposed of for the benefit of his bank account. It is not to be wondered at that the work of reconstruction is difficult when such specimens as Sypher and Whittemore are the managers of the Republican party in the South, and the reconstruction can never be satisfactorily accomplished until the whole tribe of carpet-baggers are repudiated by the Republicans at the North. It is the support that these men have received and do receive from the North that enables them to obtain any foothold whatever in the late Rebel States, and we hope that the leaders of the Republican party will have manliness and sense of decency enough to decline giving any further countenance to them. CHARLES DICKENS' WILL. A Severe Criticism on the Great Novelist "The Pride Which Ape. iluutUlty." From the London Saturday Review. Mr. Dickens' will stands on different grounds, and as the world's Judgment has been Invoked on its merits, we must say that It strikes us as being rather a palniul document. The natural reluctance to say tins is diminished by the fact that the will was written to the world. Mr. Dickens' last charge to mankind Is of the nature of a solemn rescript, urbi et orbi, 'quite as much as a testamentary document It is a piece jus tificative; which implies that there Is something to justify. It is not the first time that Mr. Dickens nas Invited the whole world to survey his private and domestic concerns. His will is the complement of that strange document which Mr. Dickens pub lishedand which Messrs. Bradbury A Evans would not allow to be published in a periodical of which he was editor and they were proprietors when he was separated from his wife. As to the rights or wrongs of that separation, or rather what led to it, we pronounce no judgment, because we have no means of forming a judgment. Anyhow the Incident furnished a remarkable absence of good taste and, as most people thought, of good feeling, and all on one side. Mr. Dickens paraded his do mestic life to the world ; Mrs. Dickens from that day to this has kept a modest and creditable silence. That Mr. Dickens had wrougs we shall neither deny nor attirm; t,hat Mrs. Dickens had none, It would be hard to believe. One wrong she certainly had ; she was assailed by her huBband In publio. Mr. Dickens might have had justice all on his side; we do not say that he bad not ; but generosity on that occasion lie aid not display. And generosity he hag not displayed in his dying testament. With the worst taste, Mr. Dickens, when in the vigor of life, affronted his wife by making his married life public property; anl dying, he has repeated. the wrong and offense, l'ro luse and unctuous and stilted In his expressions of gratitude to his wife's sister, liberal in the provision that he has made for that lady, not forgetful of another lady, he has reduced his wife's Income by one-half after his death, with something of a self laudatory anuouueement that he has already been fur too generous to her during his life. He leaves to his wife, as an annuity, the Interest of 4000 coupled with the boastful reminder that he has since their separation allowed her 600. a year. We hardly call this "brave" or "earnest." If Mr. Dickens had been annoyed by his wife temper, or lack of sympathy with his noble nature, some lingering touch of the human kindness of which we are told that be Is the evangelist might have warmed his heart or his pen when he came to speak of the mother of his children with the word of a dying, man. Ilia heart might be ail charity and all love to the whole human race, but It was chilly enough to one dispossessed lady, that lady his own wife who, whether she has wrongs or Borrows, at least kept them to herself. To Miss Teruan and Miss Hogarth Mr. Dickens very likely has duties, and he has cheerfully receguized them by word and deed. Are we to believe that all his du ties to bis wife were summed up by giving her an annuity without a single word of recognition, or, If it were needed, of forgiveness and reconcilia tion? After saying this, which only a sense of duty, stimulated by the provocation offered by Mr. Dickens' worshippers, has extorted from us, we shall not waste our time in exposing the bad taste of what the illustrious testator inserts in bis will about his funeral. The ostentation of unostenta tiouBness Is as offensive as the display of the most exaggerated love of posthumous honors and expen sive obsequies ; and among the social vices which Mr. Dickens' works have exposed, the pride which apes humility is rather curiously illustrated In his death. HOL.ITICAU. F OR SHERIFF, WILLIAM B.' L E E D 8, TENTH WARD. (T 11 tf ggy- FORRBOI8TER OF WILLS, 19T0, WILLIAM M. BUNK, SIXTEENTH WARD. Late Favate Company F, T2d P, Y, IT 11 tf BPEOIAL NOTIOE8. JOHN WANAMAKER'S FINEST CLOTHING ESTABLISHMENT, 818 AMD 820 Chestnut Street. fr 8 T E I N W AS A 8 O N S' GRAND SQUARE AND UPRIGHT PIANOS. CHARLES BLA8IU8, SOLI AOKNT FOR THS SALE OF THE WORLD-RENOWNED PIANOS, AT THE OLD WAREROOHS, (4 IStMp No 1006 CHESNUT STREET. wxsr- WBST JERSEY RAILROAD COM PANT. Trbasurkr's Offics, Camdbn, August 10, 1870. f The Board of Directors have this day declared a semi-annual dividend of FIVE PER CENT, on the capital stock of the Company, payable, clear of national tax, to the stockholders of this date, on and after TUESDAY, August 16, 1810, at the office of the Treasurer, in Camden, N. J. The stock transfer books will be closed from the date hereof until Tuesday, 10th instant GEORGE J. KORBIXS, 8 11 Ct Treasurer W. J. it R. (QjT OFFICE OF THE DELAWARE DIVISION CANAL COMPANY OF PENNSYLVANIA, No. 303 WALNUT Street, Philadelphia, August 6, 1870. The Managers have declared a dividend of FOUR PER CENT., free from taxes, payable at the office on and after the 16th Instant 8 5 8t E. Q. GILES, Treasurer. jXf OFFICE OF THE DALZELL PBTROLEUM mw COMPANY, No. !18tf WALNUT Street Room IT. Philadelphia, Aug. 9, 18T0. The Directors have this day declared a dividend of FIVE PER CENT, (being ten cents per share) on the capital stock of the Company, clear of State taxes, payable on and after the 25th Inst. The transfer books will be closed from August 18th to 86th. M. B, KhILY, 8 10 14f Treasurer THE INSURANCE COMPANY OF THE STATE OF PENNSYLVANIA. Philadelphia, August 1st, 1870. The Directors have this day declared a Dividend of SIX PER CENT., or Twelve Dollars per Share, clear of United States and State taxes. Payable to the Stockholders or their legal representatives on demand. 8 1 lot J. H. HOLLINSHBAD, Secretary. jgy HARPER'S HAIR DTETHE-ONLY htrmless and reliable Dye known. Thii splendid Hair Dye is perfect. GhsnffM red, runty, or gray hair, whiskers, or moustache instantly to a glossy black or natural brown, without injuring the hair or staining the skin, leaving the hair soft and beautiful. Only 50 cents fora large box. OALLKNDKR, THIRD and WALNUT: JOHNSON, HOLLOW AY A OOWDKN. No. 608 AROlf 6treet;TRENWrTH,No. 6M CHESNUT Street; YAR NKLL, FIFTEENTH and MARKET Streets; BROWN. FIFTH and OHESNUT Sta ; and all Druggists. 631 tf 4p tgy- T. W. B A I L Y, w No. 623 MARKET Street,. Is dally receiving new designs In Diamond Work, fine Gold Jewelry, and Silver-ware; also, American and Foreign Watches, and has made great reduction in his prices. B. Watches and Jewelry repaired by skilful workmen. ' 7 13 lm WARD ALE G. MCALLISTER, itarnev and Goniuuillnr f Taw. . . No. 803 BROADWAY, Hew Vers. tgy QUEEN FIRE IN8URANCE COMPANY. LONDON AND LIVERPOOL, CAPITAL, 8,000,000. ABLNK, ALLEN A DULLES, A rents, FIFTH and WALNUT Street. M OL.OTMINO. UP! UP! UP! UP! Goes the mercury In the Thermometer I , DOWN! DOWNI ' DOWN!- 1 DOWN! Go the prices of the Superior Stylish Splendid. . SUMMER SUITS At the GREAT BROWN HALL- of ROCK HILL & WILSON. Opportunities are now presented, Such as you have never enjoyed , ' In any previous summer For the purchase or Fine Suits. Suits of Cheviot, Suits of Linen Duck, Suits of Casslmere, Suits of Drapd'Ete, Suits of all sorts. Cheaper than for a long series of years, Better than you can buy elsewhere, Satisfactory in every respect. Don't forget the celebrated Ten Dollar Scotch - Cheviot Suits. ' Remember to buy your Summer Clothes at " GREAT BROWN HALL. ; 603 and 605 CHESUUT STREET. CHARLES STOKES & CO., No. 834 COESnUT Street, : CLOTHIER. LARGE AND CHOICE STOCK OF GOODS FOR . CUSTOMER WORK. , ... . ALSO, 6 9Ttr FINK BEaDY-MADE CLOTHING. . - THE FINE ARTS. COLLEGE OF ST. B0RE0ME0. NEW PHOTOGRAPHIC VIEW8 OF ST. BOBRO MEO COLLEGE, For the Stereoscope 83 cents each Also, Larger, Mounted ts cents each THE BEST MAP OF THE SEAT OF WAR IN EUROPE. $1-60 EACH. s' ' DICKENS' LAST PORTRAIT. JAMES 8. EARLE & SONS, Looklng-Glaas Warerooms and Gallery of Paintings, No. 616 OlIKHNUT STREET, PHILADELPHIA. The Perfection of tlie Art P. HEVNEB, Sole Proprietor, for the State of Pennsylvania, of the 1 CELEBRATED "P. P." WHISKIEG, Nog. 246 S. FRONT and I 17 DOCK St., Phlla. It has been clearly demonstrated that all Liquors distilled by the ordinary methods contain a very large percentage of imparities; the degree of heat that must necessarily be em ployed, decomposing, disengaging and vaporizing all the baneful elements and noxious gases contained in the mash, which when condensed form the deleterious fusel oil so detri mental to life and health; but, when indulged 1 in to excess, the result is Brain Fever, De lirium Tremens, Apoplexy, Insanity, etc. Consequently Liquors, as ordinarily distilled, are ' apt, even when only used sparingly as a stimulant, to create Nausea, Sick lleadache. In flammation, and Kidney Diseases. The 4T. P." Whiskies, on the contrary, "stimulate and cheer" withdut unduly exciting the brain or injuring the coats of the Btomach. They are distilled from the choicest prodaot of the Cereals in taccuo, the pressure of the atmosphere being reduced from l.r lbs. to 2 lbs. to the square inch; consequently a temperature of only about 90 degrees of heat is re. qnired in the operation, The process is entirely mechanical, no ACIDS, CIIAKCOAL ESSENCES, EXTRACTS, DRUGS OK CHEMICALS OF ANY DESCRIPTION BEING USED hence the "P.P." Whiskies are not only delicate in flavor, but pure, wholesome, and innocuous as a beverage, retaining in simple purity the flavor of the cereals from whloh they were distilled. The "P. P." Whiskies have been tested by some of the most eminent of the Medical Faculty, by Analytical Chemists, and by the best judges of Liquors in the United States, and pronounced perfectly pure and wfiolesome, and especially desirable for Family use and Medical purposes. Members of the medical faculty, the trade, and the publio generally are cordially invited to call and inspect the machinery and process, and examine the liquors and the impurities extracted, at the Refinery and Warerooms, Nos. 24G South FRONT and 117 DOCK Street 7 80 stuth4itr p. HEVNEK. FOR SALE. MAPLE LAWN. Beautiful Country Seat at XZolme&burg. ESTATE OF GEORGE W. BENNERS, Deceased. Containing 8 acres ; large frontage. Part could be cut Into building lots. Good Improvements, conve nient to station, schools, churches, and stores. For sale on easy terms. Apply to 1 i:mvi ii r iTLEit. EXECUTOR, T S3 stuthlSt No. 23 North WATER Street. TO RENT. . RARE CHANCE TO GET INTO BUSINESS. HOUSES and LOTS wanted In exchange for Merchandise at wholesale prices. Address immediately, FINLEY, . 8 9 "Ledger" Offlce. ft T O L E T SECOND and THIRD FLOORS OF No. 29 North WATER Street. Apply to WEAVER & CO., S U thsmat No. 20 North WATER Street. M TO LET THE STORE PROPERTY NO. 723 CHESNUT Street, twenty-flve feet front, one hundred and forty-live feet deep to Bennett street. Back buildings five stories high. Possession May 1, 1870. Address THOMAS S. FLETCHER, 18 lotf Delanco, N. J. TO RENT THREE-8TORY D WELL- ISO, with back tmfldinn, situated in OONURKBS Street. No. 131. . between Front ana Beoona, , With all the modern implements. .. iff no. ssov P. sn v cm i a pireou TO LET HANDSOME DOUBLE HOUSE. i3 No. 8909 SPRUCE Street, West Philadelphia. re lot, with fine shade and fruit trees. Annlv to WILLIAM M. CHRISTY, 8 9 6t No. 127 8. THIRD Street. EXCURSIONS. 01D BETHEL CAMP MEETING, BARNSBORO STATION, On West Jersey Railroad. Trains leave Philadelphia from. FOOT OF MAR KET Street; at 80 A M., 11-68 A. M., 830 P.M., and 0-45 P. M. ' ' . ' RETURNING, LEAVE CAMP 042 A. M., 8-13 A. M., 148 P. M., 4-58 P. M., and 10-00 P. M. ; ..... . Excursion tickets, good during continuance of the camp, 70 cents ech. . ' 8 6 6t W. J. 8BWBLL. Superintendent. f-9 POSTPONEMENT. iH ' BECK'S PHILADELPHIA BAND, No. 1. The Fifth Grand Excursion around New York Bay and down to Long Branch, advertised for Thursday, August 11, will be given ' . j FRIDAY, August 12, 1970, Leaving Walnut Street Wharf at 7-s:0 A. M. Tickets Issued for August 11 will hi goad for .this Excursion. , It - - ART EXHIBITION. " . ON FREE EXHIBITION AT . CHAS. F. HASELTINE'S GALLERY, No. 1125 CHESNUT" STREET, BRAUN'S FAMOUS PANORAMIC VIEWS Of Berlin, Potsdam, Charlottenburg, Coblents, Heidel berg, Jena, Weimar, Erfurt, Ems, Baden-Baden, Welsbaden, Brussels, Amsterdam, Waterloo, Liege Ypres, Rotterdam, Utrecht, etc. etc . A complete set of the Berlin Museums, and Interior views of all the rooms la the various royal palaces of Prussia. Particular attention la drawn to the fact that In a few days loo views on the. Rhine and its fortiOca. Hons, as never before seen, will be exhibited. 11 10 w , - ',1 FINANCIAL.. " Dm B X 13 L fc CO., No. 34 SOUTH THIRD STREET. Am orlcan aud Foreln ISSUE DRAFTS AND CIRCULAR LETTERS OF CREDIT available on presentation la any pari of Europe. 3 revellers can make all their financial arrange ments through us, and we wllj collect their Interest ana dividends without charge, i D&xxxl, WotTHBOr Ca.lDankL, Hiajxs a Co., Kew York. I ' Paris. t QO'LONN AD EH O T E FIFTEENTH AND CUESNUTSTS., ENTIRELY NEW AND HANDSOMELY FOR NlBllED, la now ready for puriuaueut or transient guest. of Refining Whiskies. .. r. GROCERIES.- ETC. FINE. VINEGARS FOR PlCKUNG. LONDON MALT VINEGAR, FRENCH WHITE WISE VINEGAR, VERY OLD AND PURE CIDER VINE GAR, AT JAMES R. WEBB'S. 8. E. Corner WALNUT and EIGHTH, 0 81stnth3mrp PHILADELPHIA. "pO FAMILIES GOING TO . THE COUNTRY. " We offer a full stock of the Finest Groceries to Select Fromi And at the LOWEST CASH PRICES. Packed se curely and delivered at any of the Depots. COUSTY'S East End Grocery No. 118 South SECOND gft., 117 thsta BEXOW OHESNUT STREW. JEW No, I mackerel", IN KITTS. FIRST OF THE SEASON. ALBERT O. ROCKETS, Dealer la Etna Groceries, 11 TO Corns ELEVENTH and VTWK Btrosts. CLASS. WINDOW GLASS. A FULL STOCK, Larere Assortment of Sizes and Quail ties, for sale cheap by BENJAMIN H. SHOEMAKER, Nos. 205, 207, 209 and 211 North. FOURTH Street, 8 11 6t PHILADELPHIA OARRIAQESi GARDNER & FLEMING, CABBIAQE BUILDERS, Mo. 214 8. FIFTH Street; " BELOW WALNUT. In order to make room for extensive alteration and repairs to oar Warerooms and Manufactory, we are cloalng oat oar entire stock of T 8 tfrp Phsetons. Jenny Linda, . - Buggies, Etc., AT VERY MUCH REDUCED PRICES. 1 OAS FIXTURES. ' " CORNELIUS & SONS' RETAIL SALESROOMS, 821 CHERRY Street Philadelphia. CHANDELIERS, BRACKETS. Etc. or Superior Styles and Finish AT Wholesale and Retail. I WE HAVE NO 8TORS OB SALESROOM ON CHESNUT STREET. T IS tutha2m4p CORNELIUS & SONS. WATCHES. C. & A. PEdUIGNOT, CS, MANUFACTURERS OP ' v i i J . , , WATCH CASES, AND DEALERS IN AMERICAN AND FOREIGN WATCHES, Ho. GOO CHESNUT Street. MANUFACTORY, No. M 8outa FIFTH
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