THE DAILY EVENING TELEGRAPH PHILADELPHIA , TUESDAY, JUNE 20, 1871 fcuntj 'Siflfgtiijili PUBLISHED EVERT AFTERNOON (SUNDAT8 EXCEPTED), AT THE EVENING TELEGRAPH BUILDING, No. 108 S. THIRD STREET, PHILADELPHIA. The rrice is threecentsper copy double sheet), Ct eighteen cent$ per week, payable to the carrier by tohom served. The subscription price by mail is A'ine Dollars per annum, or One Dollar and Fifty Cents for two months, invariably in adoance for the lime ordered. TUESDAY, JUNE 20. 1871. Tub state Central Committee of the Republi can party of Pennsylvania will meet at the Logan House, Altoona, on Wednesday, June 21, at 12 M. A Ml attendance la requested, as business of Im portance Fill be transacted. KCSSELL ERRKIT, - Chairman. HepnMlcan newspapers please copy. -81QN8 OF THE TIMES IN EUIiOrE. 1 be latest despatches from the other Bide of the Atlantic indicate that trouble may yet be expected from the Communists. The leaders of the Communal movement have announced that tbey consider the affair of Paris as a par tial defeat only, and by no means as an anni hilation. The Paris correspondent of the London Times states that the International Society,' of which the Paris Communists were members, numbers 2,500,000 in Europe, and the latest Paris despatches announce that indications of a renewal of the insurrection are multiplying. The soldiers are insulted and attempts at assassination and incendiar ism continue. In Rome a plot for the assas sination of the Pope ia reported to have been discovered, and it is said that the execrable crime was planned by members of the Inter national Society in London, Florence, and Paris. In Brussels sixty-eight arrests of members of the same organization were made on Sunday night. Although it ia very possible that many of the rumors about the movements and plans of the Com munists are unfounded, and that the deep, laid plans of assassination and incendiarism exist only in the brains of excited officials and correspondents, there is really great reason for alarm, and the fate of Paris is a warning that cannot be overlooked. The question now is whether the rulers of Europe have the ability to deal with the problem before them; whether any real effort will be made to remove the substantial popular grievances hich give the Communist movement its strength, or whether they will deal with it in Buch a manner as to increase the discontent that exists among the laboring classes, and thus make the explosion doubly terrible and destructive when it does come. There cer tainly haa been very little sound statesman ship displayed thus far, either in England or on the Continent, in such efforts as have been made to mollify or to oontrol the ad vanced radicals who advocate the easily understood and extensively popular doctrine that the good of society would be advanced by the abolition of everything religion, government, property-rights, marriage, and all that makes modern civilization what it is and then having a fresh deal all around, on the principle that one individual is as good as another, if not a little better. It is compara tively easy to declare the Communists crimi nals and enemies to sooiety, but the execu tion of a few hundred such wretches as those implicated in the destruction of Paris will do very little towards crushing out Red Republi canism; and the real statesmen of the day will be those who will seek to discover what the substantial grievances of the masses are, and who will make some practical efforts to relieve them. If this is not done, it is not impossible that other cities may share the fate of Paris. A LAW TO MAKE PHILADELPHIA COMMERCE A PREY TO OFFICIAL 8IIARK8. At the meeting of the Board of Trade held last evening a law passed at the last session of the Legislature, but not yet signed by the Governor, was ventilated, which has for its evident object the grant of an opportunity to official sharks, and to future schools of office holding sharks, to prey upon the languishing commerce of Philadelphia. The bill has the innocent title of "An Act to establish a Board of Port Wardens," but the Seoretary of the Board of Trade states that it is "intended to legalize, and authorize to be collected by summary process, a fee of not less than one "hundred and fifty do'lars from every vessel, and every little shallop of over seventy-five ions burden which shall enter our port, and to compel . the masters of the same to make a pilgrimage in many cases of miles to enter his shallop;" the sole object being "the ex acting, under color of law, of unearned mo - ney by one set of men from another." It has hitnarto been considered that the height of meanness was typified by the con duct of the wretch who stole the pennies from the eyes of a negro corpse, but this distine- tioh should henceforth be reserved for the unscrupulous gentry who devised this scheme to extort money from the vessels plying to the port of Philadelphia, and their legislative ac complices. Time was when offices were created for the publio good, and when officials et bounds to their extortionate greed, but this period seems to be rapidly passing away in Philadelphia; and if Governor Geary signs the bill designed to gorge the maws of the sharks of our harbor, we may anticipate at a future session of the Legislature the passage of a law transferring the whole river front to a gang of rapacious speculators. TUB PUBLIC BUILDINGS. The Poblio Buildings Commission held a meeting yesterday and passed a resolution re pealing the former action designating the in tersection of Broad and Market streets as the site for the publio buildings. This yield ing to the clamor of a small body of property- Itoiuers wnose lmerems axe uuccuy aniago- nistio to those of the vast majority of the ciU tens of Philadelphia is very much to be regretted, and we are very sorry that those of the commissioners who do not own property in the neighborhood of Washington and In dependence Squares were not able to sustain the only projeot that would give as such buildings as we need, and such as would be creditable to the oity. If four structures are put up on Penn Square, or if the municipal buildings are put up there, and thekw build ings upon Independence or Washington Square, the whole business will be botohed, and Philadelphia will be an object of ridicule to the whole nation. It is well known that certain members of the commission are large owners of real estate in the vioinity of Sixth and Chesnnt streets, and also that they have expressed a strong desire to keep the munici pal offices and the courts where they now are, for tke good and sufficient reason that they the aforesaid commissioners will be losers by a removal to the up-town site. These gentlemen are determined if possible at least to keep the courts in their present location, and we doubt not that a great effort will be made to carry out the compromise scheme proposed last winter, which would place the municipal buildings alone upon Penn Square. An effort will be made in this direotion, if .nothing better for the anti-Penn Squareites can be obtained; but the Sixth and Chesnut streets property-holders hope, by continual agitation, to procure the abolition of the commission, and thus to open the whole controversy anew, with the expectation that it will be possible to entirely prevent the erec tion of new buildings unless they can manage to have them in the neighborhood of Sixth and Chesnut streets. The citizens of Philadelphia must bear in mind that the whole squabble depends upon this, and that it is Penn Square under any ciroumstanoes, and not the intersection, that is really ob jected to. There may be a few old fogies who would have opposed the erection of a handsome edifice upon the intersection of Broad and Market streets, for the same reasons that they have objected to the introduction of gas, the re moval of the market sheds, the running of street cars, and other improvements, but they would have had no influence whatever, and their opposition would only have been laughed at if they had not been supported by the cash and clamor of the Sixth and Chesnut streets property-holders. It is to be hoped that the commissioners who have no property interests to influence them will yet be able to put the intersection plan into execution; but if they are not, and if they remove the sole pretext for complaint on the part of the Sixth and Chesnut streets people, they should at least lay all their foundations, whether of two or four buildings, at one time, and thus prevent any further interfer ence with their operations after they have fairly commenced work. THE INDIAN QUESTION. Two phases of the Indian question are again being pressed upon public attention: first, a conflict of opinion between the Indian Peace Commission and the Commissioner of Indian Affairs; and second, a threatened outbreak of the wild tribes of the Southwest against the people of Texas, etc. All telegraphic reports relating to the con troversy between the Indian Commission and the Commissioner of Indian Affairs which credit the latter with extra regard for economy should be received with many grains of allowance. If there ever was a body organized in this country which was animated by pure and patriotio motives, and at the same time endowed with great business sa gacity and a high sense of commercial honor, it is the Indian Peace Commission; while, on the other hand, the Commissioner of Indian Affairs is, from the character of his position, and from its inevitable surroundings, neces sarily subjected, to a great extent, to the influences typified by the expression of the "Indian Ring." That "Ring" embraces men in many walks of life, including politicians of high standing, Sena tors and Congressmen, who are experts in the art of stealing the livery of heaven to serve sordid purposes, as well as hosts of speculators who have long fattened upon the spoils of the Indian camp, and who are determined to employ every possible expedient to prevent true Teform. The facts relating to one of the existing controversies (that which affects the transportation of In dian goods westward) are given in an article in our local columns, and similar disputes may be apprehended on other subjects, which find their best explanation in the determina tion of the Peace Commission to inaugurate a thorough reform, and in the disposition of the Commissioner of Indian Affairs to thwart it. The other phase of the Indian question which relates to a threatened outbreak on the Southwestern frontier affords a new proof of the inherent difficulty of thoroughly main taining peace and order in all portions of our wide-spread dominions. The Kiowas, Apaches, and a portion of the Camanches represent the wildest and wickedest tribes in our terri tory, and at the same time they have been subjected to fever humanizing or repressing influences than any other considerable body of the aborigines. The veteran in the play who expresses his astonishment at the sudden regard he has conceived for a man with whom he has just fought, had in him much of the spirit animating the Southwest ern savages. Scarcely a single tribe among them haa ever thought seriously of civiliza tion, or of repressing a natural love for white scalps, before it was well whipped by an American army; and the outlaw Kiowas, Camanches, and Apaches need this discipline before their rude natures can be subdued. One good campaign against them, however, will, it is to be hoped, teach them the folly of further resistance, and incline their stubborn and untutored hearts to permanent peace. , OBITUAUT. j George Grote, D. C. t., P. R. S. Oeorge Grote, D. C. L., F. R. S., Vice-Chancellor of the London University, who died on 8unda.v, was born In 1794, at Clay Hill, near Becknham, In Kent, Ms father being a partner In the banking-house of rretcott, Grote Co. He was educated at the Charter House, and at the ace of sixteen en tered the bank as a clerk. As a young man, he formed the acquaintance of James Mill, and threw In his lot with the phlUsophlcal radical party, studying history, contributing to the Westminster Review, and writing on the political subjects of the day. It was at this period of his life (1323) that the Idea seems to hare first occurred to bltn of that work with which his name will be prin cipally associated In the future. Struck with the an tl-democratic sympathies exhibited in Mitford's "History of Greece," he applied himself to the ex amination of the facts there brought forward on behalf of the author's doctrines, and so his own de mocratic history came to be written. But between conception and execution some time was al lowed to elapse, the excited political feeling raised by the first reform bill carried him along with It, and In 1333 we flmUhlra putting forth a pamphlet on the "Essentials of Parliamentary Reform," and In 1S31 he was returned as one of the members for the City of London. As a speaker be continued to advocate the tame advanced opinions, bringing for ward, like Mr. Berkeley In later times, an annual motion In favor of the ballot ; but on the triumph of the Conservative party In 1341 he retired from active political life, ani devoted him self to literary pursuits, the first two volumes of his "Greece" appearing five years afterwards, and the work being completed in lsr-6. Since then he has written on "P.ato and the other Companions of Socrates." During the course of his great work, he left ancient Greece for a time, to re-enter the lists of modern politics, pub lishing, in 1947; a pamphlet entitled "Seven Letters OB the recent Politics of Switzerland." Mr. Grose married, in 1S20, a lady of an old Kcntlsi family, Miss Harriet Lewis, who Is known as the author of The Life of Ary Scheffer," etc . NOTICKB. Fine Cuts! A History of Tobacco is shortly to be published, illustrated with fine cuts; you can buy It if you chews! But of all "fine cuts," the finest by all odds are the cuts by the cutter at Oak Hall. Every garment Irem our establishment Is cut to m exactly; Is CUT TO CITE comfort; IS CUT TO LOOK STYLISH ; Ia CUT TO SUIT THE WEARER, and prepare him to cut a respectable figure any where, and never to be "cut out" by any one, so far as dress Is concerned. Eleoant Linen and Dcck Surra. Good and Cool Alpaca and Drap D'Ete Suits. Comfortable thin Cassimere Garments. White Marseilles Vests; Or, if you choose, You can have your Garments made to order. A large assortment of the newest styles Summer Piece Goods in our Custom Department, Prices Modirate. Wakamaeer & Brown, Oak Hall, The Largest Clothing House in America, S. . corker Sixth and Market Streets. TUB NEW ORLEANS, MOBILE, AND TEXAS RAILROAD C03IPAN' Are building a first-class railroad from Mobile, Ala bama, to Houston, Texas, a distance of 475 miles. The stockholders have paid In, and already ex pended upon the work, nearly TEX MILLION DOLLARS, and two-thirds of the entire road has been built. It Is believed that no other railroad cor poratlon In the country has ever made so large an expenditure from its own means, before offering any of Its securities to the public. Among the leading stockholders are the Hon. E. D. Morgan, Hon. John A. Griswold, Messrs. Mor ton, Bliss it Co., J. & W. Seligman & Co., L. Von Hoffman &. Co., Iambs H. Banker, Harrison Durkee, John steward, and other well-known capitalists. The Company now offer for sale the Eight Per Cent. Mortgage Bonds Upon that part of the line west of the Mississippi River which Is considered so Important to Louisiana thatState aid to the amount of 3,soo,ooo has been granted or guaranteed to the enterprise. The Bonds are of two classes: FIKST MORTGAGE BONDS, To the amount of $12,800 per mile, and SEC0HD MORTGAGE BONDS To an equal amonat, the principal and Interest of the latter being guaranteed by the State of Lonl siana. The price of the two classes is the same, and subscribers can take their choice. The Bonds are only in the denomination of 1000, or 200 each, Interest payable Jannary and July, at the rate of eight per cent, currency in New York, or seven per cent, gold in London, at the option of the holder, at the time each coupon is due. Bonds can be registered, if desired. One thousand dollars invested In these eight per cent bonds will give the purchaser more than seventy seven per cent, greater annual interest than the same amount Invested In the new Government Five Per Cents. The Bonds are dated May 11371. The first con- pon will, therefore, be a fractional one, running from May 1 to July 1. The pi Ice Is 90, and accrued ln terest at 8 per cent, ennency from May 1 to date of remittance. Subscriptions will be received in Philadelphia by DE HAVEN & BROM No. 40 S. THIRD STREET, Of whom full Information concerning the Company and the road can be ootainea. W, B. SHATTUCK, Banker and Financial Agent, N. O., M. k T. R.R. Company, 20 tuths3t4p No. 23 NASSAU Street, N. Y JPI ItWITUKK AT COST. A. B A It L O W, No. 45 SOUTH 8ECOND STREET, Offers his extensive stock of FURNITURE .A. T COB T, FOR CASH, FOR THE MONTH OP JUNK. This U a rare opportunity, as his Furniture U of First Onal'tr. D.tterns new. and dea'rna beautl i - - J fui. so lotrp BEWINQ MACHINES X II B WHEELER & WILSON invnu machihb. Tor Bale on Easy Terms. NO. fiU CHESNUT STREET. I PHILADELPHIA. OUOTHINCJ. Light Diagonals. For your "Down Town" Coat, Sir, A Light Diagonal of Fine Texture, And little weight, Will be found Exactly the thing. HOCKHILL & WILSON Can furnish you with a Splendid Light Diagonal Coat. For your Summer Excursion You want a nice Travelling Suit, With neat Linen Duster, And a change of Vests. ROCKHILL & WILSON Can equip you for a journey to any part of the world. For every variety Of hot weather ROCKHILL & WILSON i Have every variety of Thin Clothe3. Come atd eee our Immense Stock Of elegant Ready-made Clothing. Come and examine our Custom Department, full of exquisite Piece Goods of every style. Fine Goods very cheap at the 8REAT BROWS HALL or ROCKHILL & WILSON, 603 and 605 CUES NUT STREET. fiffilMiGfliettSJSf J Chf 7(9 J, CHESTNUTS! vx-TIMrtvi-..-' v HOTEL PHUADELPHlAi PA TO BE SOLD All our stock of ' Heady-made Clothing, Which is to be disposed of to enable us to carry on solely a CUSTOMER BUSINESS. The sale Is Imperative, and the Reductions In Prices are startling and real, while the high reputation our READY MADE GARMENTS have obtained for general good style, elegance, fineness, and durability of both labrlc and making, cause the prices to which we refer you to be notable and extraordinary. Fine Light Weight Coats, S3 oo, f9-oo, $10-00, $1200, " " " Cassimere Pants, $3-00, IS 00, IT 09. ' Vests, $1-00, 11-50, fl-TB, UD0. Duck Pants, $3U0, $4D0. Duck Brown Pants, $2 00, $3 -50; Vests, II so, $180. 60 to 73 per cent, below regular prices. WESTON & BROTHER, TAILORS, S. W. Corner NINTH and ARCH St , PHILADELPHIA, A fall assortment now In store OF THE CHOICEST NOVELTIES OF THE SEASON FOR GENTLEMEN'S WEAR. A SUPERIOR GARMENT AT A REASONABLE PRICE. 4 8 8mrp FURNITURE. . CARD. Our closing Special Sale ef FINE FCH NITCRK will be held at the large Second, story Waierooma fM. THOMAS to SONS, No. 139 and 141 South FOl'RTH Street, on FRIDAY, June 3. " To those who have purchased at our pre vious sale we refer with confidence for the quality of the goods This sale will Include a much larger as sortment and goods of much better style. The sale, as usual, la peremptory, and we respectfully Invite those who do not get suited at the Public Sale, to call at oar tore, at THIRTEENTH and CHESNUT Street, where they w ill fiud a most com plete assortment, at very reduced prices. G. J. & J. A. HEHKELS. C IT stuth3trp STOCKTON HOTEL, CAPE MIT, NEW JERSKY. Capacity, 1200 OPENS JUNE K 187L Terms : $1 0 per day. 1.9-00 per week. CHARLES DUFFY, SO ltn Of Continental Hotel, Proprietor. TT O T E L. CHITTENANQO WHITE SULPHUR SPRINGS, MADISON COUNTF, NEW YORK, Is open for guests. Accommodations ior400. Gas, belli, and carpets In every room. Scenery, drives, and table are not surpassed in the country. Kates to suit the times. SO lu D. P. P3TERS, Proprietor. DELICACIES FOR THE TABIC.' Every variety of the CHOICEST DELICACIES for the table, lncladlng the finest quality of WINKS of every description, at the lowest Cash Prices, and wholesale at wholesale prices. E. BRADFORD CLARKE. (SUCCESSOR TO SIMON COLTON ft CLARKE.) S. W. Corner BROAD and WALNUT, 6 8 atnthtp PHILADELPHIA. DRY GOODS. REMOVAL. J. M. HAFLEICH Will Remove to No. 1129 CHESNUT Street,, Second door below Twelfth, North Side, MONDAY, Juno 19. IN OBDER THAT FIXTURES MAY BE TRANS. F ERRED TO niS NEW STORE, No. 1103 CHESNUT STREET, Balance of Summer Stock, LADIES' SUITS, ETC., WILL BE OFFERED At a, G r eat Red. Lie tion. 10.0C0 yards Black Hernani, 12)4 cents. 10,000 yards Broche Grenadines, I2tf cents. 6 IT 8t 1871. SPRING CAKOEN OTREBT SINCE 1853. " THORNLEY'S" CENTRALLY LOCATED DRY GOODS ESTABLISHMENT, ON THE NORTHEAST CORNER 07 EIGHTH and 8PSI2TO CrASDEX St. An Immense Stock of Goods. Prices very low Indeed. Everybody sure to get suited. The utmost attention to customers. No misrepresentation In order to effect sales. If purchases are not satisfactory we return the money. DRESS GOODS, SILKS AND SHAWLS, MEN'S AND BOYS' WEAR, LLAMA LACE SACQUES AND POINTE3, KID GLOVES, TABLE LINENS, tfUILTf, Etc. Etc. JOSEPH B. THORNLEY. 8 tbstnl MUSLINS, , FLANNELS, and BLANKETS At Old JPrices. Notwithstanding the advance In prices of the above goods, our retail prices are as low as before. , Families will save by making their "purchases at this time. CURWEN SIODDJRT & BROTHER, Nos. 430, 482, and 454 North SECOND Street, s;it St Above Willow. Ely, Hunsberger & Ely, No. 1126 CHESNUT 8TREET, Now offer at LOW PRICES a full stock or f WHITE GOODS, every description, EMBROIDERIES, LACES, LLAMA SACQUES AND POINJE3, In connection with our NEW and ATTRACTIVE stock of 4 11 tutasau Seasonable Dress Fabrics. 1 1 1 K -OUK OWN MAKE OF CHAMPION I U. Hoop Skirts, in all the newest styles, the best and cheapest In the market. Also, good Eastern-made Skirts, from IS to 40 springs, from 81 to coc. Soiled Skirts, quarter price. CORSETS, CORSETS 119 styles, and prices from 45c. to I6-8S. Misses' Corsets, superior quality. . esc. for French Woven Corsets: reduced from 85o. THOMSON'S Glove fitting Corsets at 11-85, 110 11-74. ii bo, is-N), I4-T5, and S3 50. MRS. JVIOODI'S Abdominal Corset, from HT5 to ja. MADAME FOY'S Corset Skirt Supporter at f0, tl French W oven Corsets, the cheapest in the city. EVERY desirable style of corsets at prices wtucn defy competition. PANlKlt BUSTLES. In 89 styles, S5C. to It BON TON BUSTLES, from 4Tc. upward PARASOLS at wholesale prices. LADIES' UNDER-OARMKNTS A complete assortment at lowest raies. Call and examine our goods, at No. 133 N. EIGHTH (Street, and No. 1113 CHESNUT Street. 5 23 tutharptf WILLIAM T. HOPKINS. WATCHES. Xstubllisned lu 1854. WATCHED. EVERGOINO STEM-WINDERS, KEY'WINDEUS, QUARTER SECONDS, MINUTE REPEATEU3, ETC ETC. ETO C. & A. PEQUIGNOiy No. 603 CHESNUT STREET, sm r Hir.ADsr pmA. DRY OOODS. Q RE AT EST BARGAINS OF TUB TERIOD IN DRY GOOUS. ' r ALEXANDER RICKEY; No. 727 CHESNUT STREET, ' In Victoria Lawns, Bishop Lawns, Plain and Plaid Nainsooks, 8-4 French organdies, Uaniourg Edgings, LLAMA LACE SACKS and P0IKTES, Black Ilernanles, Broche Orenailoes, Japanese Silks, Striped Silks, Black Silks, Linen Suitings, FRENCH LAWN8, And the greatest variety of beautiful styles in DRESa GOODS ever exhibited In this city.. THE 5, 87)tf, 50 and 75 CENT , DEPARTMENTS FOR TUB SALE OF Choice Dress Goods REPRESENT THE GREATEST BARGAINS OF THE PERIOD, ALEXANDER RICKEY, No. 72T CHESNUT Street. 6 8 thstntfrp 1000 riECES OF FRENCH LAWNS In new and beautiful effects, at as cents. ALEXANDER RICEEY. SPECIALTY IN BLACK SILKS AT 91-50, $175, and ?2 PER YARD. ALEXANDER RICKEY. rHE MOST REGULAR AND BEAUTI FUL MESH IN THE Fare it Silk and Wool Black Hernanlet Ever made for tl per yard. ALEXANDER RICKEY, No. 727 CHESNUT Street. 8 S thstutfrp rfftk PARASOLS, 75C, tl, $1125: LINED, 11-25, T$1 -50. 11-76: Silk Sun Umbrellas, oc., tl, tl-85, 11-50. at DIXON'S, NO. SI 8. EIGHTH St. B tf DRUGS, ETC. Genuine Olive Oils, FOR TABLE USE. COX'S SPARKLING GELATINE, RtOTAPIOOA, BERMUDA ARROW ROOT, SOOrCU OATMEAL, now landing and for gale by ROBERT SHOEMAKER & CO., IMPORTING DRUGGISTS, N. E. Comer FOURTH and RACE Streets. Elder Flower Soap. Just received, by the Flora Hulburt from London, an Invoice Of BEN BOW'S CELEBRATED ELDER FLOWER, WINDbOR, GLYCERINE, and HONEY BOAP8, ROBERT SHOEMAKER & CO., N. E. Corner FOURTH and RACE Streets, g 1 8m4p PHILADELPHIA. GENUINE CA8TILE SOAP. "CONTI" BRAND, BOTH WHITE and MOTTLED. 400 boxes now landing from brig Cuba, direct from Leghorn, Italy. ALSO, TUSCAN OLIVE OIL IN FLASKS. ROIIEUT BHOKHAUCR &c CO., Importing Druggists, - 6 12 lmrpl 8. B. corner FOURTH and RACE Sta. ' BAKER, ARNOLD & CO., No. TIO CHESNUT Street, Invite attention to their large assortment o GAS FIXTURES OF NEW AND BEAUTIFUL DESIGNS, FINISHED IN GOLD-GILT, ORMOLU, VERD-AN. TIQUE AND IMPERIAL BRONZE, Which they offer at prices Lower than Ever Before Known. 6 D lmrp TO X-i E T, STORE, No. 326 CHESNUT Street. POSSESSION JULY 1. APPLY AT 15 6f(p No. ,324 CHESNUT STREET. REFRICERATORS. A SUPERIOR ASSORTMENT AT Wholesale and Retail. All at Low Prices. P. P. KEAItNS Manufactures hl oixn. lief riser tors. No. 39 North NINTH Street, B 80 lm4p BELOW ARCH STREET. PIANOS. ffif-fl STK1NWAY EONS GRAND SQUARE AND UPRIGHT PIANOS. Special attention Is called to their PATENT UPRIGHT PIAN08. CHARLKS BLASIUS. Warerooms, No. 100 CHESNUT Street, PhUadel phla. ; 4 u tfrp PIANOS AND ORGANS. GEO. 8TECK & C0.S.T BKADbUKY'8, PIAN08, HAINES' BROS', ) MASON AND HAMLIN'S CABINET ORGANS. No. 23 CUKSNUT Street. 9. 1. eotrtD. wm. o. riscHsa. No. 1018 ARCH Street. 1 IT tf4p TRAVELLERS' CREDITS. Our Letter of Credit gives the bolder the privilege of drawing either on DREXEL, UAKJES & CO., Paris, IN VR-NCS, oa on Henri. A. B PETRIE & CO., London, IN STERLING, As may ba foond most convenient or arofltable, and Is available throughout Kuroixj. To parties going abjoad we offer special facilities, collecting their lo U-rent and dividends during their absence without Vharge. DREXEL & CO., Ho. Si SOUTH THIRD STREET, fHII.ADST.PHIA.