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VOL XXVII. •isijcj -•.¦.a] l-''"--Vi^' f-iit-.q r.i '^im7.i'r.-- LANCASTER, I»A., iVEPlCESMY,; lEBtoARY 23,-1858. NEW SERIES, VOL; XV--NO. i% PUBUSHED BT EDWAKD C. DABLINGTON, OVFlCr IK WORTH qLM:r.5 BTREET. Tbc EXAMINER aSiSoCRATIO HERALD .hem .hrough <h. tree.. !« pubU-hed weekly, .t r-^o »»¦•"" ?J!"„„a,<, ,m te iUBertod ''-¦'ST. r.cr./diUon'SjSon Antl lhey went on and on logether, until ibey I Her husband made no dietinci answer, entered j: AK ABBBESSj . came lo very near the end of lhe wood; so near, ahe parlor, and edvancing to the nianile, reeled i ije//yj.„j before the rnember" tif Conestoga that lhey could see the sunset Bhimng red before hia elbow upon it, and leaned bis bead upon hia J Institute,'at Eden, iTanucrry, 1853. hand. H^s countenance wna clouded, yet more . bt c. l. n?ifSBCKER,.£SQ. Yet, once more, while he brokebia way among 1 in sorrow than anger. j Gentlemen :—You have eatabliabed a aocioiy tho branchea, the traveler lost bia friend. He ] " Dcareat George, will you forgive me ?" said for your aoeial, monil.and iutellectuual iraprbve- Chiistmas Stories. THB child's ITORT. TIliB Story ia one oi ihe most iruibful picturea of life, wc have ever seen. Mark how ihe child i6 lu-^t in the youth, how the youih merges into lhe man at ibc advoni ofiho preny Famiy, how life gathers interest aa children one by onc join the iraveihig pair, and then scaiicr m their aev¬ eral ways—how, i.i the auiumn. each go lo ibeir long home ; and the lone old man. juet at the selling ol his sun, brings them back to his re¬ collection, u perfect family, as beautiful as ever: Onco upon a time, a gnod many years ago, tbere waa a iravekr, and be set out upon a jour-ij ney. U wos u magic journey, and was to aeem very long when he began it, and very short when he put hali way ilirough. lie traveled along a raiher dark path for aome lillle time, wiihout meeting any ihing, until at laet he ca:iic to a beautiful child. So he saidio lhu child, •• What do you do here T" And the child £atd, "I um olwayaat play. Come and play with me 1" So he played wiih thnt child the whole day iong, and thcy were very merry. The sky was ao blue, lho sun was eo bright, lho water was to Eparliling, the leaves were so green, the flowers were so lovely, and they heard such singing birds, and saw so many butterflies, that every¬ thing was beautiful. This, wasin fine weaiher. When il rained, they loved to wai*:h ihc falling drops, and lo amell the fresh scents. When it blew, ii was delightful lo li^ien to ihe wind, and fancy whatii aaid, t.^ it came rushing from iie home—where was ihni, tliey wondered !—whist¬ ling and howling, driving the clouda before it, bending tho trees, rumbling in the chimneyff, shaking ihe house, and making the sea roar in fury. But, when il snowed, that was the best ofall; for th y liked nothing so weil as lo look up al the white iiakcs falling fat and thick, like down from the breastsofmillionsofwhite birds • and 10 see how smooth und deep the drift was ; and to lisien lo ihe hush upon the paths and roads. They had plenty of thc linest toys in lbe world, and the most astonishing picture books; nl! abou) scimeiors and slippers and turbans, and dwarfs and giants and genii and fairies and blue-bearda and been-staiks and riches and caverns and for¬ ests and Valentines and Orsons; and all new and all true. Uut one day, ofa sudden, the traveler lost thc child. He called lo him over and over again, but got no answer. So he went upon his road, and weni on fora litile whiie wiihoui meciing any tiling, uniil at last he came to a handsome boy. So he said to the boy, " What do you do here ?" And the boy said, " I am always learn¬ ing. Come and learn wtih mo." So he learned wiih that boy about Jupiter and Juno, and the Greeks and ihe Romans, and X don't knaw what, and learned more ihan I could tell—or he eiiher, for he soon forgot a great 'Jeal of it. But lUcy were not always learning ; ihoy had the merriest games ilnt ever were played. They rowed upon the river in summer, and. skated on the ijc in winter ; they were active afooi, and uctive on horseback ; at cricket, and all games at ball; the prisoner8' base, hare and hounds, follow my leader, and more sports than lean think of; nobody could heat them. They had holidays, too, and Twelfth cakes, and par¬ ties where ihey danced till midnight, and real Theatres where thcy saw palaces of real gold and silver riee out of thc real eanh, and saw all the wonders ofthe world at once. Asto friends^ they had such dear friends and so many of them, thai I want the lime lo reckon ihem up. They wero all young, like the handsome boy, and ¦were never to he strange to one another all their Jivea ihrough. Still, one day, in the midst ofall ihese pleas¬ ures, the traveler lost tho boy as he had lost the child ; and,,after calling to him in vain, went on upon liis journey. So, he went on for a Utile while wilhout seeing anyihing, until at lasi he came to a young man. So lie said to the young man, " Whal do you do here?" And the young mau said, "Iam always in love. Come and Jove with me I" So, he went away wjih iliat young man, and presently ihey came to one of the prettiest girls that ever was seen—jusl like Fanny in the cor¬ ner there—and she had eyes like Fanny, and hair like Fanny, anil dimples like Fanny's, and she laughed and colored just as Fanny does while ] um talking about her. So, the young man tei! in love directly—just as Somebody I won't mention, the iiral lime be came here, did wilh Fanny. Well! He was le-osed someiimea —just as Somebody used lo be by Fanny ; and they quarrelled s-imetimos—^just as Somebody and Fanny u?ed Iu quarrel; and ihen made it up, and sat in the dark, and wroie leliers evcrv day. and never were happy asunder, and were always looking out for one anoiher and preicnd- . -ng nui 10, and were engaged at ChriBimas iimo, and sat close lo ono another by thc fire, and were going to be married very soon—all exactly like Somebody I won't rae lion, and Fanny ! But the traveler lost them one day, as ho had loat the rest ofliis friends, and, after calling to them to come back, when ihey never did, went on upon his journey. So, he went on for a little while without seeing anyiliing, unlil at lasi he camo toa middle-aged gemleman. So, he eaid to tbe genlleman, " Whal arc you doing here?" And his answer was, " I am always busy. Come ond be busy wilh me.'" So, he licgnn to be very busy wiih that gen¬ tleman, and tliey went on through the wood to¬ gether. The whole journey was through o. wood, only it had been open and green at first, like a wood in spring; aud now began to be thick and dark, like a wood in Summer; some of the Httle trees thai had come out earliest, were even lurn- mg brown, Thc gentleman was not alone, bul had a lady of about the same age with him, who W-3S hia wife ; and they had children, who were with them loo. So, thcy all went on together ihrough the wood, cutting down the trees, and making a path ihrough the branches and lhe iallen leaves, and cariyingbTlrdenB,and working hard. Sometimes, tbcy carac to a long green avenue lhat opened imo deeper woods. Then they would hear a very little diaiani voice crying, ** Faiher, faiher, I am another child ! Slop forme !" And presently tl,cy would see a very lillle figure, growing larger as k came along, running to join them. When n came up, they all crowded round it, and kissed and welcomed it; and then ihcy all went on together. Sometimes, ihcy came to several avenues at ouce, and ihen ilicy all strod still, and onc of the children said, " Fatlier, I am going to aea ;" and unothcr said, "Father, Iam goiog lo India;" and anoiher, " Faiher, Iam going to seek my ioriune where I can ;" and another, " Faiher I am going lo Heaven !" So, with many tears at parting, they went, solitary, down those avenues each child upon its way; andlhe child who went to Heaven, rose into the golden air and vanished. Whenever these pariings happened, the trav¬ eler looked at the gentleman, and saw him glance up at the sky above ihe trees, where the day was beginning to decline, and the sunset to come on. He saw, too, thai his hair was liyning grey. But, they never could rest long, for lhey bad their journey to perform and it was necessary for ihem to be always busy. Al last, there had been so many partings that there were no children left, and onlylbe traveler, lhe gentleman, andlhe lady, went upon their way in company. And now the wood was yellow and now brown ; and the leaves, even of iho for¬ est trees, began to fall. So, lhey came to an avenue thai was darker than tbe rest, and were pressing forward on iheir journey without looking down it when the lady slopped. ^My husband," said the lady, " I am called." They listened, and they heard a voice, a long way down the avenue, say, " Mother, moiher I'' It was the voice ofthe first child who hadsaid, " I am gomg to Heaven!" and the laiher said " I pray not yet. The sunset ia very near. I pray not yatl'" But, ths voice cried •'Mother, moiherr* without minding him, though his bait was now quite.whiie,.and the tears w ;re oo his face. Then, the mother, who was already drawn into the shade ofthe dark avenue, and moving away with har armaslill aronod hia neck, Juased him, and Baid,;tf JMy-^earait, I am aammoMd, and I go!" . And aha wm gone.' And tha'trar- tlfr ud ha wart Itft ilona tosaihtr. called and called, but there was no reply, and when he passed ont of tha Wood, aod saw ihe peaceful Bun going down"upon 'a wide purple prospect, he camo io ab old inan ailiing on a fal¬ len trie. So, he Baid to thij old man, "What do you do here !*' 'And tho old man said, with a calm amile," I am alwaya remembering. Come and remember with rae !'* So, the traveler eat down by the side of that old man, faco lo face, wiih the serene sunset; andall his friends came softly back and stood around him. : The beautiful child, the handsome boy, the young man in l^"- ^^^ f«iher, mother and children ; every one of ihcm was there, ond be had lost nothing. S^, be loved ihem all, and was kind and forbearing with thera all, and was always pleased to watch them all. and (hay all honored and loved him. And I ihink tho trav¬ eler must be yourself, dear Grandfather, because that is whai you dolo us, and what we do to vou.—Chas. Dickens. the trembling wifo, while she twined her arma ment. You are alt ycung men just entering in bis and looked imploringly in hia face ; "will .upon the singo of life.. You aro alljustly proud you forgive my folly, ray cruelty." i;of your birthrighl. You are all Aiiiericfin citi- " Yes, Emily, I can do anyihing you ask of'zens. You ai;e inhabitania of a country greatly Both Sides of the Picture. " Ifl lhe boy sick?" aslved Mr. Lindley, with a look of anxiciy and alarm, as he entered the room and saw his young and beautiful wife sil¬ ting by the side of her sleeping infant, weeping most bitterly. " Is lhe boy sick f" "No," anawered thc affected lady, " he is quite woll." " Then whal ia tho matter, my dear Emily ? What occasions this fiood of teara ?'* Mr. Lind¬ ley sealed himself beside bis wife, and look her hand while speaking. " 3 am worn out with this perpetual confine- ment," answered Mrs. Lindley; "this unvary¬ ing round of dull domestic care." ''Perpetual confinement, my dear?" aald Mr. Lindley; did you not spend yesterday with yourniother ; and take a drive into the country thc day before ? Coma, dearest, dry up your tears, and llalcn to an inieresting book T have brought home with me, purposely to read aloud 10 you." "Your book would be but a poor eubstitote for society," aaid Mra- Lindley, who atiil sai with her head inclined, looking the very picture of sorrow and discontent; " I am Buffering foT society—suffering to mingle with the world as I used to do." After a momentary pause, she continued, " Sophia waa in jusl now, dressed so beautifully—on her way to WhitewcU's party. All the world wil! he there—poor I excepted '." A fresh gush of tears called anew for ihe use of her " kerchief." " Young ladies have little else lo do than at¬ tend parties," said Mr. Lindley ; " we, happily, have belter engagements, and more precious pleasures." '• iMarried ladiea seem no more confined than single ones," eaid Mrs. Lindley, who seemed to have heard only the first part of her husband's remarks. ".Mr. Bank and Mrs. Southwell, and indeed all ofmy friends are to be at Mr. While- well's to night. No one but myself is in bond¬ age. Every one beaidea me can have a nursery maid, and all else that is necessary to mako ihcm comfortable and happy." ^ *'Iam sorry that we cannot have a nursery maid since you ibink it would conduce lo your happiness: ihough, for my own pari, I would raiher ihat my dear Emily should have ihe charge ofour darling boy than lo entrust him lo iDe care of any hireling lhat could be found." ' Again lhe first part only of what Mr. Lindley eaid seemed to meet the ear of hts wife. Her voice was never harsh—never loud—but ii cer¬ tainly did not sound very sweetly as in a kind of low guttural she replied:—"Some gentlemen chooso lo think they can afford but very little to make a wife iiappy." Mr. Lindley dropped the hand ho had till then held in his, and rising walked the floor rapidly. He did not whistle—ho did noising—but hejust mnde thc notes of a lune audible, as he inhaled and exhaled the nir between bis scarcely parled lips. After some ten or fifteen minutes spenl in this manner, he suddenly seiied the volume he had mentioned, and seating himself near the lamp, began to turn the leaves. Meanwhile Mrs. Lindley neiiher spoke nor moved. Her head rested on her bnnd, and her eyes sought the carpet, bui no tear fell, for her feelings were too higbly excited to permit them longer to flow. The disturbed husband found his book a ain resource ; and after twirling the leaves a tew minutea ho left the room. The ne.xt mo¬ ment his wifo heard the street door close behind him. Then indeed came a fresh flood of tears.— " This," she exclaimed as she covered her face with her hands' "This is the sympaihy he feels forme !" Mrs. Lindley was now wrought up lo perfect agony. The infant at this moment awoke, and elapsing him lo her bosom, ehe cried :—" Yes, darling, your father's feelings aro sucli towards your poor moiher, that to avoid her society, he ia oven willing to leave you, dearly as he loves you." Wuh lhe unconscious infant cradled in her arms, the mother indulged faerselfin looking back on the gilded sceoes of her youth; or raiher her unvaried life ; for her youth was yet in all of its freshness and beauty. Her freedom from care—from confinemeni—the parties—the balls—the concerts—ihe drives—all come upon her ; " While memory covered wiib flowers, Reatored every roae, but secreted its thorn." " O, George, don't speak so coldly, so sadly. Alas! I havo mado you very unhappy." " You have Emily, for I fear your union with mo requires sacrifices you are unable cheerfully tomake." " O, pray do not ihink so, mydcarept hus¬ band ? for, notwiibstandiug appearances arc so rauch against me, it is noiso. Since you left me this evening," sheadded while a faint smile strove to chase away the gathering tears—"since you left I had amplo time for reflection—for ret¬ rospection. I have reviewed my married and my single lifo; and my cruelty, and my ingrat- iiude, my childish pervoreeness to-night have caused me the moslbiiterself-upbraidings. May you never know a pang like that which shot ihrough my heart when the ihought atruck me, that the great Dispenser of events might free me from care aa he had freed poor Ciiarlotte, by taking from me husband and child! I cannot forgive myself—but oh,say that you forgive mei"' "Forgive ynu, dearest Emily. I have nothing to forgive, if you will only be happy." " O, I am most happy—blessed in having such a husband. This bitter—bitier evening has taught mo all my joys cannot be crowded into one state or period; and I do think I can never rogrct the giddy pleasures ol youth, whilo in possession of those so much more precious.— Henceforlh tl shall bo my pleasure to strivo' to maka you as happy as you make me ; and^to ed¬ ucate our boy as much like his father as possi* ble. 0, say once more ihat you forgive me, for depend upon it, I can never ngain be so foolishi so cruel, so wicked." The husband bent forward and imprinted o long kiss on the forehead of the supplicant. She looked up, and his eyes beaming wiih love and renewed confidence, gave her perfect assurance that all waa forgiven—forgotten! In lhe retrospect, the piclure was all bright¬ ness : al] gladness ; and what washer present lot. How greai was the contrast? No variety; no pleasure : " all her days are twins;" a per¬ petual round of petly household cares, and a helpless infant always b> her side or in her arms How dark did a disturbed imaginaiion render the review! She thought and wepl until she verily believed herself the most wretched wom¬ an alive ; while at the botiom oi all lay a feeling of displeasure ogainsl her husband, as if he was the wilful cause ofall her troublea. For nearly ao hour Mrs. Lindley indulged her¬ self in these pretty aelfiah musing, murmurtngs and regrets, when the clock, in a neighboring atreet, striking the hour of nine, aroused her. " Where can George bc ? she cried. She fell alarm; and laying her ogam sleeping inlant in the cradle, she went to the window, and tbence to the door, to learn ifhe were coming. The street was quite still, not a fooistep lo bo heard ; and wilh conflicting feelings she reseated herscll beside her child. " O, he is cruel," ihoughi ehe ; " where can he be, in hia office or where ? Oh, that he would come." On the whole Mrs. Lindley was not onlya rational creature, but a reasonable and reasoning woman, and the period had now arrived for a revulsion of feeling. Other views began to pre¬ sent themselves to her mind. " It is I.imyseU, thai am cruel!" thought she, "how happy we might have been this evening had r not driven him from mc ! How tender he was; and how kind, to purposely read to mo ! He is willing to forego his society for my sake . and cannot I mine for his 2 And after all, what is there so desirable about a parly 1 Did I over attend one, however brilliant, however gay, where from some source or otber, there was not suffered as enjoyed ? Did I ever attend ono in which I did not see or hear expressed the work¬ ings of envy, or jealousy, or contempt, or ridi¬ cule J In tuch scenes did I not experience quite as much pain as pleasure, unless indeed I could secure the individual attenlion of George? And now ho is all my own. and I drive him from me? What did I not endure when doubtful whether he loved me? whether bo would ask mo to be his ? What wero my thoughis when he once said lo mo, "that wiih his present for¬ tune, he should not dare to ask the woman that he loved to unite her fata with hia, on account of the privations she must undergo." Ob, did I not think ihat wilh him for a companion, the most humble OBlahlishmont would be a paradisef and lhat do self denial would be severe ( and now that I ain Ms ¦wife,'! drive him from rao by cruel rcpioings. ¦ Oh where can he be V Again sho went to' the window—to the door; but in vain; no husband-wtsto be aeen or heard. How gloomy, how desolate, did her cotnfoiiabte and well furnished parlor appear, as she now en¬ tered it. ''Oh!" criod flbe* ".what Buoahine would hia smila ahed around ! bat I hsTO dis. pleased, grieved, wounded, aod forced him frotn- me?" Never had an hour, in Mrg. Liridjey'fl life drag¬ ged itself along ao alowly aa tho'prosent.; and ii was not until after the clock bad atrticlt ten that lho well known fooistepi ofher husband met b«r listening ear. With a boundijhe met himin the entry..'. .¦¦,¦ ¦¦ ""'¦ ' ¦-'¦¦ '.' ¦ ¦ ' *ii'^ d; Ihy aear '«*iwg«,' hbw^giad I mm ydu are coia«." Horals of Hanging-. Let the advocates of hanging read tbe following startling and terrible extract* descriptive ofa public execution in England, ivhich wo findin an old newspaper, nnd say if a scene of this do¬ scription is calculated to wean the spectator oi it from 0 career of crime or lo drivo him inio it.—. Child-hanging is now, however, nota part of Engliah justice: The Judge and the Hano.ma.v.—Did your lordship never aitend a killing time at ihe old Bailey 7 If not, pray favor me with your com¬ pany, not on the gallows, but staying in the street, amid a crowd that always assemble when I am at work for you and the sheriff. Perhaps il will add to the zest if you come when I have a young woman lo stiffen, supplied by yourself— Will the fiutterings ofher petticoats, as she swings in the wind, produce a pleasant sound in your ears, my learned maaier? Fai! noi to waich the people; the men, women and children—good, bad and indifferent—who have Eathered to be¬ hold tbe sacred majesty of the law. You will ¦ee such flashing ofeyes and grinding of teeth— you will hear sighs and groans,and words of rage and hatred, with fierce curses on yourself and me; and then laughter, such as Is of an unnat¬ ural kind, that lhey will make you start—jests on the deod, that ihey will make you sick ! You will feel—no—why should you feel any more than your faithful journeyman ? We shall go lo our breakfasts with good appetites and a firm conviciion tlmt every hanging but changes many pilferers into savage robbers, fit for murder. A few years ago I was called out of lown to hang a liulc boy who had been convicted of kil¬ ling wit Ii malice aforethought. Ifguilty, ho must have been in the habitof going to executions.— Ten thousand came to dabble in the poor crea¬ ture's blood. That was the youngest fellow creaiure I ever handled in ihe way of our busi-. nesf ; and a beautiful child ho was, too, as you have seen by thc papers, with a siraighi nose, large blue eyes and golden hair. I have no heart, no feelinga ; who lias in ourcalling ? But thoae who came to see me strangle that lendar youngster, have hearts and feelings as wo once had. Have?—no—had ; for what they saw was fit to make them as hard aa your servant, or hia master. They saw that stripling lilted, fainting, on to tho gallows ; his smooih cheek of lhe color of wood ashes—his little limbs trembling, and Wis bosom heaving sigh after sigh, as if the body and eoul were parting wiihoui my Iielp. T his was a downright murder; for there was scarce anj life to take out of him. When I be- t'nn lo pull the cop over his baby face, he pressed his small hands together, (his arms, you know, were fi^rded fastio his body,) and he gave me a beseeching look, just asa sheep will lick abutch- er'shand. But animals do not speak ; thiscrea- luro mutlcred, " Pray,sir, do not hurt me."— "Mydear," answered I,"you should have spoken to my maaier; I'm only a journeyman, andmusl do as I'm bid." This made him cry, which seemed lo relieve him, and 1 do think I should have cried myself ifl had not heard shouts from the crowd—" Poor lamb !—shame !—murder !'' " Quick," said ihe sheriff, " Ready," said I. Thc reverend gentleman gave roe the wink—the drop fell—one kick—and he swayed to and fro, dead as lhe feelinga of the Chrisiian people of England. The crowd dispersed ; some swearing ; some weeping wiili passionate exclamations ; some swearing as if hell had broken loose ; and some laughing while ihey cracked blackguard jokes on you and me and the parson and ihe dangling corpse. They had come for the sight; they would have come to see an angel murdered.— They bad come to get drunk wlih strong excite¬ ment ; lhey went back reeling and filthy wiih he hot debauch. Tbey came lo riot in the pas- sions of Iear and pity ; lhey went back, some in a fever of rage, some burning with haie, some hardened in heart, like me or you; all sunk down in their own respect, ready to make light of pain and blood, corrupted by the indccont show, and more fit ihan ever to make work (or us—tiie judge and the hangman. 0 wise law-makers ! who think tn soften the hearta of the people—to make them gentle and good—to give them a feeling of respect for themselves and oihers, by ahowing them a aighl like this. BiCHELORs, Atte.vtio?j !—" Solly Grubbins," of " fillndelfia," wishes to gei married. Her ' fnrd " speaka for itself: "A HxjSBAKn Wakted :—By a yung ialdeye of considerabul pursenai detractions and cdikn- lion. Sbe is under 50 years nge, and taul deli¬ caie finger. She has one very fine i, having los- ed the bother by an orful fight of the smnll pocks, her accomplishments consist of whistling with grate power and sweainess, and plantin pe- tators. She hoe bin takin lessins in boxln, and she is willin to sifT ampill proofs to hoosoever marrces her. ApIiatW? mareestreet, filladelfia." I>:5"There is a fellow in California so extrava¬ gant that he kindles the fire with bank-notes and skates on ice-cream. W Among the " strong-minded women ^' who met in convention lastweek in Albany, wan Mrs. Bloomer, ihe lady who goes in for breeches and buncomb. During her stay at the Capitol, sbe called on Sard, and got measured for three pair of cassimere pants. The lape with which be took her dimensions, is kept in a glass case, and exhibited lo bachelors et a shilling a eight. —N. Y. Dutchman. Too True, at least to mant.—A 'young couple went to Rov. Paul Davis lo gel married; Mr. D. ia something of a wag, and by an inno¬ cent mistake, of course, began to read from the prayer book, as follows :— '' Man that,is bom of woman is full of trouble andjhath but a short time to live." The aston¬ ished bridegroom exclaimed—"Sir. youaisiake, wo came to get married." •' Well," roplied Davis, " if you insist, I shall marry you, but believe me, my friends, you had much better be buried." «^ There is a famiiy of five persons residing in the town of Derry, N. H., in which, for the apace of forty-five years, thero has been no birth, marriage or dealh, nor hna there been any phy¬ sician called on account of aickness during that lirae. JKrCharlea Jonea, the preacher thiefi made an attempt 10 escope from Hartford jail on Friday morning. He waa caught, howover, notwith- ¦unding hie decIar&Uqn tiiat the Lord aaid he might $0. He had stolen a' bat'and coal Ixam one ofthe othsr prisonen before fftibiiiptbijf \& w* f«pi. favored by FrovideDce. . You are the recipients of free inslitutiona which have been reared and greatly perfected by yoor ancestors. The free¬ ing of eur country from foreign bondage, and the planting in our aoil of a republican govern¬ ment wae ibeir mission. It is yours lo assist in the pcrpetuaiion of thoae insiitoiions of goy¬ ernment, and hand them down lo future genera¬ tions unimpaired. Thetrustis an important one In a political point of view, as republics can only be perpetuated by the virtue, public-spirit and intelligence of their citizens. No greater right con be conceived than universal suffrnffe. No greaier duty than its intelligent discharge.— Should you be willing to let our republican in¬ stitutions which havo a world wide remiwn for their unparalleled benefits.sink like a pebble to the bottom of deep water, you must cultivate the society of none but the most benighted and they will assuredly fall into decay. But if you desire their peipeluaiion, as you undoubtedly, do, you iiiuat cultivate the society ofthe learned, whether in the Uving or in the works of the' dead, Our country has produced great m'sn in all the walks of Hfe. Tho ago that gave us Fulton and Morse produced Clay and Webster. Our popular instiiuiions are congenial to the propa¬ gation of genius, skill, enterprise and public spirit. There has been no age, no counlry, if history ia true, wherein greater mducements have been held out to virtuous aspiraiion than in our own. It is a matter of history that a king of ancient limes, during his minority, was fear¬ ful thai his father who was a great warrior would reap all the laurels, and that upon his accession to the throne nothing would be left for him lo do worlhy of one who was ambitious o( immor¬ talizing his name. I would not recommend such a morbid dlspoatiion lo you. Tho fifty-six signers of the declaration of independence, and Washington and Patrick Henry immortalized themselves in the cause of their country. Every one of us feels the most profound pleasure in re¬ viewing the lives of the illustriotis dead. Bul lhey did not reap all the laurels, tfaey left some to coming g<;ncralions. The age in which we live, the country we occupy, the free inaiitu¬ liona which havo been reared for our benefit furniah us a glorioua spectacle for tho occupa¬ tion of every speciaaof ambiiion and usefulness. Fears, such as bad possession of the mind of Alexander the Great, will not seize upon you— a betier era dawns upon us. The field ol cee- fulneas is apreading wider and wider every day. New fields of enterprise are opening frorn hilltop to hiihop, anrf from valley to valley, throughout the wide boundories of the Union. Our fathers, it is very well known, followed no idle speculations. But like the teamster in Esop put their own shoulders to the wheel, and brought out ol chaos a sysiem of governmeni unparalleled in the hisiory of nalions for its benfiis. The making of a free governmeni was their miasion, and that ihey performed it well is e.vemplified by the progress of our country in population, wealth, civilizaiion and religion. It is lhe mission of the people of the United States to spread civilizaiion, religion and libariy. Ourancesicrs ofthe post cenlury had neiiher lime nor wealth, though the inclination to atlend to the improvement of the inhabiianis of barba¬ rous nations, but they planled the standard bf freedom so firmly in our soil, that we under the protection of an efficient government, peaco and plenty iiave opened new and prolific fields of la¬ bor forthe social and inielloctualjmprovomentof mankind at home and abroad. That our institu tions are appreciated by intelligent foreigners who reside amongsi us, has no where been more fully demonstrated than in the conduct of an op¬ ulent China merckant ofthe city of New York, laiely deceased, who always gave free pasaages in his ships lo misaionaries, going out to China, and brought them back also free of charge.'*— This person had resided long enough in the greatest metropolis of our counlry to perceive the beneficial workings of popular institu tiona, and appreciate the bleasinge that lhe Chris lian Religion, coupled whh an intelligent popu lation, confers upon lhe naiion. This man waa not a more merchant of commodities; he was aomething more; he waa a man of enlarged views, who felt for the temporal and eiernal happiness of his kindred in a remote land. Young men, you have a noblo example in Sir Christopher Wren, the architect of St. Paul's Caihedral, in the great cily of London. The Inscription upon his tomb is in the following words, "Reader, If you seek his monument look around." Such was the charnclcr of Sir Chris¬ topher. His memory lives in his works. You will find by looking around yourselves in this land of liberty and law, that each of you will have enough tn do in making youraelves useful and beneficial to society. Free institutions more than any others give a stimulus to tho exertion of the intolligent for the produciion of new and useful inventions; and in proporlion as educalion, liberty and religion spread amongst the masses, so will discoveries, inventions, ^improvements and progress spring into existence. The objeci of our governmeni is not only to raise a fow great men who by their brilliant attainments may soar high above their countrymen, and look down upon ths illiterate muiiiiudo with mingled pity and contempt. But to raiae a multitude of men whose minda have been illuminated by education, and stimulated by the reward which true merit is ever sure to receive. I would not have you to believo that men who are designed for the learned profea- sions only ahould be educaied. True, their cal¬ ling makes it absolutely neceasary that lhey should be college bred. Educalion is useful in every occupation or position in life, and lot me encourage you hy oil means to acquire it. Watt and Witney and Franklin immortalized their names by their useful inventions. So will you, if you are true to yourselves, sharo the approba¬ tion of all who know you by following some pur¬ suit beneficial to yourselves and your country.— An idle man is a nalionat loas, wheiher rich or poor. Girard, Astor and McDonough. each was immensely wealthy, but they were not idle men. Girard, by his unremitting attention 10 bufc'ineSB, acquired an immense fortune, and lett to his adopted city an ample fund with which to rear one of the largest and most useful semi¬ naries of learning in ibe Union, for the educa tion of orphans. The object of the Girard College is not -to educate men for the learned professions, statesmen, diplomatists, military captains or naval heroes. But to afford whole¬ some instruction to youlh who in infancy wcro deprived of their parents, and fit them for the various pursuits in lifo. Edmund Burke, who was an erudite scholar, able statesman, and close observer of human events, is reported to have said that education is the cheap dofence of na¬ tions. The benefits resulting from an educated com¬ munity are seen in the general prosperity, peace and happiness of ihe people. Its influence ex¬ tends to aurrounding communities, spreads civili¬ zation and religion, law and order, peace and plenly. Education is the cheap defence of nalions, not perhapa in the direct cost of cultivating the in¬ tellect of the young in schools; but in arresting and removing temptaliona to vice and crime by systematic training of the risidg generstion; by good laws, an efficient government, the speedy Ond effectual administration of juatice, and re¬ ligious toleration, which atlend npon an educat¬ ed people. There are many potent reasons to believe that lhe pecuniary expense annually in¬ curred in our country for the education of the riaing generation is reaped tenfold by the nation, in its prevention of crime, and poverty. Nine- tenths ofthe inmates of the penal eatabliBhmentB of the United States, as well as in Europe, are upon their confinoaiont in those receptablea for their punishment and reformation wholly illiter¬ ate. Perhapa the amount annually consumed in the expense of arresting criminals, suataihing police deparimenle, conrta of jiutiee, the erec¬ tion nnd support of prisoiiBr penitentiaries, "and houses of refuge would awell to a aum'sufficient- jy large for the edueaiion ofall tbe youth in tho. a,literary,Hociety,for.your.mutual improye'ine Ypudjeajfeto inteiiec.tually improve yourselves by- comraunicatitig. with ,each other. . Perh6pa lho'.greatest benefit tp whijchyoursosiety will etimulatb your attention, will be.the perusal of good; books.' .By reading the be^l boplU you. will beTntrpduced into the society, as it ivere o^^ ,ihe ablest and beat minds the wbrl^j has produc- isdf The ((reat: atid good .lyho wrote their'thoughts live. in.their works. Therefore,'it isof import¬ ance that you exorcise great care in tho s&lection ol books. ' "Sonie.book's are Ilea fra end to end, SomiB-'great^rUefli' were n^yer Jjonned." * Let me see .the favorite books'of a person," says an abio writer, " and X will tell you his character." Live constantly'in ibo-iociely ofiho depraved, (md you are judged by the company ypu keep. Booke, Periodicals, ar.d newspapers issue from the press in eur couniry on all subjects in sapenibundance. The- quantity of reading matter thus given to lhe public Is large and at a price so low that the most indigent persons may procure some of it if there is but a will. Have a care as to tho quality rather than as to the ^uan'i^t/of your reading matter. .Procure the works ot approved authors on such subjects as aro uaeful to yourselves and beneficial to society. Expunge from your libraries every book and newspaper tainted with corrupting influences,and you will have erecicd a pedestal upon which you cen stand erect. Books have a siloDt aod powerful influence Jn the fbrmation of characler. Convicts have sometimes declared that tbe reading of vicious Hteraiure laid the foundation of ibeir crimea and ruin. While 9q iho other hand, the great and good men of our couniry who have left us a pleasing memento of their exemplary lives acknowledge that tbey ov/cd much of their uaefulneas to the characters drawn from the perusal of chastely written books. Individuals rise in the world and apread their influence according to the standard of their at¬ tainments. Daniel Webster and Noah Webster were endowed with wisdom to plan and ex¬ ecute noble works. They were educated men. Their names are imperishably written on the scroll of fame. Learned appreciation will ever refor lo them aa examples for all lo imitate. Knowledge ofscicnco inciiod Columbus tothe discovery ofthe New World. Wiadom in Wash¬ ington procured ua a republican government.— These "men were greatly endowed. But bow many lesser lights have shed iheir lusire upon lhe world. Their namo ia legion, Cadmus the inventor of letlers, and Fnust, the inventor of priniing, by tho power of knowledge, gave us benefita not to be calculated. Franklin taught the lightning to obey hii) will, and Morse brought about an invention lhat carries intelligence to distant parts of the country with a speed ex¬ ceeding that of the bird. Genllemen, but a few remarks more ond I will relieve you from furiher attention. And I would deeire in conclusion to draw your atten¬ tion to tbe fact that notwithstanding we Ameri¬ cans are so justly proud of our advancement in civilization, religion and llboriy, that even h ere '' Much learning abowa bow little mortals know." Mr. Rives, of tbo Congressional Globe, says thai ne haa seen the manuscript writings of mosi of the great men of ibis country during lho lasl twenty years, and not twenty ofthem could sland lhe test of the scruiiny of one half of the journeymen printers employed in hia oflice. If this piclure is true, and who may doubi it, it de¬ monstrates that we are not a tlioroughly cduca- IC'I people. But it has been said we are txn in- lelJigeni people. Got to be so by frequentiy meeting at political and other gatherings, by our commercial dealings, and by the energy and ea terpriso of the population gencraliy. Let this be as it may, I am sure of one thing ; that al¬ though the schoolmaster is abroad in thi? land, he has quite enough to do to make the risine generaiion belteradepts in scholarship than the present can boost of. ¦, JOHBT S. WA^I^ER. , A aSCOBNEYATLAW—Office, Xjl four doorfl nhove Swope'l^ Hotel, Eaat Kfng Bt. Lancaster. Fa. . ¦ ' ¦ rBopt'l-6ni ¦ Hew Mnaic & Inatrnment Store. Illieintiultk-atetf jn^^azineof Art, "W/^ASHrfTGTON H. EeFSBR PC-; ( NOW READY "pStpp QKni^wrrq :yy..: ^pectfully Informs his frieud.-, and tbe cltieenfl \ ^.^ hLt V ^^^,25 CENTS. of_ Lancaster generaUy, that he liiio takeO^the storp. I ^'1 UO lirSt. aUIIlD8r 01. tUc **IllUStPa- ' ~"" X teii MogBzlne of Art," tEc greatest monthly rauB- I No.' 6. kramph'a Arcade, East Orange flt.. TTh'crehe yill SOBXi B.; LiVINOSTON, i koep cDnatantly ou'hand u good'^o'rtment of New nffipfk with i -^¦Mloof New Vork, Bbstoo.^ Philadelphia and BaJtl- ATTORWET AT liAW, NathanielJElimakcp, Esq, North Duko street, liancaster. Fa. ' ^feb9-tf-^0 SAM17SL H. PRECS. A'T-JTbilNBT-AT LaW;—-Office With XJLJOHN L. THOMPSON, Proseontlng Attorney, )£,ast Kingst., a fow doors ahovo Swope'a tavern, Lr ca'Hter. ¦"" jan 26 1853 tr-8 p. W. PATTERSON, . ATTOKNEY AT LA.W;-^We9t KlDg St.. LaQcastor. ALSO i—CommlsiibuarorDeede; and to take Dcpoaltisna for tbi> States of Ohio and Delaware. tf-8 jan 26 1853 moro pnhlication, to whiph he would particularly in¬ viti^'the attention of the'lat'IoJt. His tlDcW ofBIujlcal Instramtruta will Ue.found f^ll; couGiBtiug of Pianos. VioIInfl. Flutes, Guitars. Olarlneta Jcc, which he will sell atthe lOwent ctty prices; : Italian Violin aod Guitar strings or the very hest Quality constantly on handj sfflected with particular care. , . , Also. Meytr'B celebrated Piano's, lor which Ii» has tha agency.- of all pricea. Having devoted the greater part of his time for tbe laet six years to Muoie generally, ho hopes that hU endeavtjur.s toauit allwill.noL prove afallury, and that the good oitirons of Lancastor will favor Jiim with a share of patxonage. .'.\i' ' " " R. B. GROPP. Attorney at law tSrOeneral Land A^ent MARENGO. IOWA CO.. IOWA. HiL attend to locating IiAJ^O) . . WARRANTS, PAYINQ TAXES. COLLECT¬ ING, SURVEYING and CONVEYANCINQ.and all bufllneas in the lIu* of his professlou. Juno Ifl 29 TIME! TIME! TIME HOMEOPATHY. T\r. J. Mains McAllister, Homeo- ¦ ''/ pathic Practitioner-OfSos anil Resldance, Kaat UraDgu fitreet. l^aQcastiir, a lev doors eaat of North QQGCn street. ' OlQcc hours, from 0 to B A. M., and ftomS to^lOP. M. _[Jan 5.18o3-3m 5_ A CARD. DR. 8. P. ZIBGLEB, Physician and Accoucheur Rrsldonca East Orange street oppoaite the Presbyterian Church, Lancaster. Dec 8 _ _ tf*^ DR. §. irEtiCHA9irS, OI^^CS—lai Kramph'a Boildlng;, NORTHEAST CORNER OF Orange and IVorth <{ueen Sts., Nefw & Cheap Watoh & Jewelry Store. SA. Dtsaht &Bbo., respectful- • ly. inform their frIond» and the pubUc In ggncr- al. that they have opened a WATCIf ANDO-—,^ JEWELRY STORE.iin West King gtrfl«t, ono^j||^ doorbelowthe Market Iiouse. where they willRiVra bo nble to sell goods In ttielr lioR at tha follow- ^uiK ing low.pricea : ifrom $25 to $90 Pull Jewelled Gold LeverTVatthea. 18 K. f.ase. Gold Lepine '^atcht.'fl. fuU jewelled, fr»m ?20 to $30 Silver Lever Watclieg; full jewelled, from $12 to $18 Silver Lepiufi'WatcheB. jewelled, from $8 to $12 Gold Fon-H in Silver coaua, from $1 to $'2'50 SUver Tea Spoons, from $4.50 to ?H,W per set. Cloekti of all kindi. (rom $1-50 to $10,00 ALSO—Ladiea and Gents Breast Pins. Ladles Fancy Ear Rings, [new BtyloB]. A large lot of Gold Chains. Oold rrncil.i. Gold fen Ca.ses, Cold and SilverSpecta- cles. Oold Keys, fort Mouaia, Aecordeons. and other articles too numerous to mention, usually kept io Watch and -Tcwclry Stores, at leajt 20 por cent, lowtir than any other Storo In the city Wu invite all our friends and the public Ingeneral to give una call. W« WiU not ohargtt any thing for looking. "Quick Salea and Small Profita." Is our motto. N. B.—S. A. D. bavlag flnlebed his trade with onc of tbc. best workmen iu the city of Philaditlphla, he ic preparedto flo all kindd of Watch, Clock aud Jf-welry repairing at thc shortest notice, and warranted for yi-ar or no charge. fjan 10 tf-T _ .Magiizlne of Art," the greatest monthly [Hub. ttated Magaxlfaa evar publithed. Ootitentfl of the February number,-Port IL: CONTENTS. Jtlng John and the Magna Charta t\ English Railways gj A Gofslp about Peru oc tho Aeronaut, by AdelbertBtirter. Translated by ' MaryiTowjtt. . 71 The Apollo Gallery at the Louvre 75 Thc New-York Herald 78 The Hippopotatnua 90 The Jewish feople 82 LorJ \niliaui Russell 84 Painting of Animalfl 88 Wavn UacrlR. the Softer Man 90 Indolence, a Foem ^ Thc P'rench Revolution. The War In La Vendee. S3 The Castle of Segovia 98 ADay attheCitySawMilla 93 Curious Cnp In Niello, preserved in the British Mueeum 105 iifiilatrclphK ISfBSjrctftemciTtn 105 . 108 . .109 . 112 . 116 . IIS . 119 . 121 Paee 61 JnlT 30 LANOABTER, PA. ljr-S5 CARD;—The Subscribep will at- tend to CoQveyaueing in its various forms. ro.ot- ing of Booka of Account, SettU-nientfl. AuditP. Tran¬ scriber or Copyist, Collections, &d. Ofiice In Kramph's Row, a aharo of the public patronagu la soliciiod. feb 2.tr-9 JAS. WHITEHILL. T. KIRK WHITE, PROrSSSOB of PBNMANSHIP,Pl.AlPf AND OliNA-MENTAL CARD WRITER, Stras- burg. Lancaater County, pa. .fi^All orderfl from a distance. Portago Paid, will receive prompt attention. Orders left at Murray 4- Stoek's Book Store, will be attended to. [Feb S-tf-O FOR SALE.—A large fire-proof <;HE3T. in good condition. 10 Sharea Farmers' Bank of LancaPtcr Stock 30 " Willow Street Turnpike Road '¦ lafi '¦ Lancaster Bank '¦ fob. lft^2t-llj W:M. CARPKNTER 300 Laborers Wanted—Three _ _ Hundred Wood CbopptTH. .Miners. Colliern, Furnace~Men, Teamsters, ^c, Wanted. -Al-so, Black¬ smiths, Wagon Makers, Coopers. S^c. wanted at Mar¬ garetta Furnace, to whom the highest wagci will be paid. So come on to Margaretta Iron Works, York county, and apply to fcb 16-tr-lll HIMES, CURRAN t HiMF.S. . FRANKiiN CottEGB.—A Special meeting of the Trustees of Franklin CollPKcwill be held at the College Bullding.on TUESDAY, thu Ii't day cf March ui*3t. at 3 o'clock. P. M.. for tho purpore of arranging the flnal translurof property to Franklin and Mnrwhal CoUegH. S. BOWMAN. Scify. Lancaster, Feb 9 Id-lU STRASBURG ACADEMY. THE Strasburg Academy will open Its next Seasion on tbu First Monday of May. 1863, uuder the supexviaion of the undsrsigned who win by that time have the entire building reStted and newly furaiflhed. with auch other Improvement: as will add greatly to tli c comfort of the Student? and to their mental, moral and physical progrops. Parents arc Invited to come aod examinud the sys¬ tem of instruction and govurnmi-nt pursupd in tbe Acfldemy afi»-r Che commenenient of its ncit se.'siun. Terms per Session of 6 Montha JOO, payable, onc half in advance, and the remainder at tbe i^nd oi tbe session. For references, and particulars, address JKSSE OREN. M.U..Principal. ft!b2 -301-9 Strat-burg. Pa. DIFl^ENBACH & KENEAGY TAKE this metbod of returning their thanks to the committee of esaniinerB hav¬ ing jurisdictjoQ over the Four-Horso Powera prusented at the S'ate Fair, lor the liberality eitunded in grant¬ ing a DIPLOMA to them lor the FOUK-IIORSK FOW- fcilt of their own conatruction there presonted. From the unfavorablo circumstances under which the ma- ohiuawan there seen, it wan .scarcely to be expected the commltttie would noiice it at all. Yet it Is tvident that ivhether in motion or not. the machine, in tbc judgment of a Dici;banic. mu:;t claim priority over all olber Hor.te Powr.^ for the farmer yet invented. It combines great strcngUi with the most :iimplti con¬ struction; darahility and economy. The amount of friction overcome la its peciilinr construction it equal at least to the pow«• of two Imr.-Jc—and the velocity or motion ot till! threshing cylinder i.s kept up to a prop¬ er height witiiout moving the horse.'' fa.'ster than their ordinary gait. A patent has now been applied for, and wo are ready to receive orders for pnwwrs, all of which arc warranted to prove .sati.irnrtory before being paid for. A numher have nlrotidy bnun disposed of and have rrnilL-red jjerfect .'¦alisfnptinn in every instance. Thopu who wish XX, fnpf-rior Horse Power would profit by call¬ ing to examine ours before purchasing i-lscwherc, ,6^ AllordiTs By m;;[l promptly attendi'd to. DIFFKNBACH & KKN'KA.(;V, Xov 10 tr-49| Str.i«Ijurg, Lanca.«tcr county, Ca. SfiARDWARE, STOVES, Cedar "Ware, Slc EussEL & Geiger having taken the long wUbli.^h'.'d Kwrdwar* Si"re. rt-ctntly kt^pt by R. S. llohrer. respectfully inform their fri'^ud^ and the public gi-uerally. that tbey are completely supplied with a large asBorlment of every arlicle io their liue. The latent improvt-nivnt in Cookin-;. Air-tight, Par¬ lor and Wood Stove.i oonr-tantly on hand. Persona wisbinc to oommnnce hou^-eket-ping. will be well compi-n.iated by culling on tho undersigned brfore ;)urcljflsing clsfwliere. na llit-y are determined toOjve Uurgiiln.'. Their stocl; i.^ eomposed in part of Stovi-':^. Crdar- ware. Loolting UlnshL-.". Knive.-^- Fork.i. Spoons. Lndles- BrusheB. Bed ropes Wash lines. Uellows. Shovels. TongH. Bread ;iiid linking Pans witli (-Tery a.ticlp wanted in our line.to complete the kitchen Furniture of ncw- bfginnera. Pleasu catl and gi-t bargains, lliijbest price givon (or I'lnverseed. Flax seed and old Metal HUSSKL \ GKIGEU. Formerly llohrcr"i;. No. S. K. Kin^ ft.. Lan'r. Fa. feb 'J 2m-y Palissy thu Pottei The Poet-5 Mission, by W.J.Linton ¦St. Paurp Cathedral, London Richard WllHoa. the LandBcapo fainter.: . American AntiquitlcB at the LouTte .Dreamland .Roman Ruins The Brother:* ILLUBTRA'fioNs! King Jobn relu-ilng to aiga the Magna Charta at Oxford in t'llb to face McConnoIVs Patent EipresBF.nginB.'.".*."" View of the City of Lima '..'*.'." Hut of a Peruvian Minor '.',* ".' ' Apollo GalifliT at theLouvraln which the'Senate conferred the Empire on Louia Napoleon Illppopotamns. with Nubian Keeper, in tho Gar¬ dens of the Royal 2oologiflal Society, Regent's Park, London Hebrew Captives Portrait of Lord William BubhcH Landscape nnd AnImaUfroma paintingbyTroy- Ruturning from the Fair, from a painting by Palizii ' \'iew ot Fontenay Veaeoe, Department of La Vendee to face View of thfl Cattle of Segoyia Frame Deal Sawing Machine Block DriUing Machine Block Morticing Machine Steam Tank for saturating Wood previous to bending TenBiagramu and Sectional Drawings of Machin¬ ery 102,103 Bending Dench. Clipping of Logwood, and Block Shaping .Machine 104 Curioua Cup In Nleho, preserved in British Mu¬ seum . - 105 Double BiKe of page View of Interior of St. Paul's Cathedral during the Interment of tho Duke of Wellington .to face 109 Portrait of Wilson, thc Landscape Painter, by Raphael Menga 112 Momingf from a Painting by Wilson 113 Nineteen Drawing."! of American Antiquities..110.117 Roman Ruin. The Sweating Boundary 120 Fountain of Ezeria 121 Each HUcceeding cumber wlU contain a groat variety of highly interesting original and selected matter In its various departments, contributed by the most pop¬ ular writer? of the day. No efforts or eiponse will ho spared to render the work In every respect worthy of its name, u .Magaiine of Art. and uecidedly superior to any pictorial Magazine ever published in tbi8 or any other couutry. Six ofthe mcnthiy portions, when completod, will form a volume which, lor interest, originality, value and beauty, will defy competition. It will not only be an latert;9llng family book, but a rich ornament for the drawing room table, and a pleasant companion for the htudy. TERMS, .Moothly Parts. 20 cents, or $3 per annum, sent post¬ age free tor 12 moaths, on receipt of $3. Clubs of 3 ot more Clergymen. Artists or Postmasters $2 per annum ALKXANDER MONTGOMERY, IT Spruce street, New York, and gold by all Booksellers. PARRISH & HOUGH, No. 4, North Sth Street, 2 doors f.bov. Marx. Street, Phila. Manufacturera. Importers and Wholehali-1><-:.!. r- !.,¦ Paper; ScUool Boofes, Stationi^ry, BONNITr BOARDS. PAPER IlANtJiMJS. \VI\ DOW PAPERS. FIRE B0ARD3. tcr.. ic.-. j^-Cotintry Merohants can receive CASI! i-Oll RAGS, or goods at Cash Prioci!. 13.2M Tons Rags wanted this .¦seanon JunaS __'*^""" KT AT THK OLD STAND, -S9 ClcxOt, Time-Piece, Watcli ai d Jewelry ESTABLISHMENT At hvt " Old Stand." A~o. 2'6S Alarkft St.. (beiween Ith and Bth, soulh side,) PHILADf:LPHLi. MY friends, old customers, and the public muit know that 1 a.m at ail limt'.* I'r.-- pared to furniah Wati-hcb. J rweLr-Y. F v<t v Autici. r «. atrratoa Goli> Vks% oI all kiods. wiih li.jld nnd Silti-r Hold»r9, in variety. Sec. at tbc very icwf-L Caiili Prlr.-i together with the best supply ot ¦iuj.tri'.r CLOCKS AND TI.MfcM'IKCK? 'iiT«roffored atthis '¦etablislimfnl. ' E.;H. being a practical Tiuie-Pieot. and Wivt^li .M;-- kor,,with an eiperlrncs of niitrly -lh \x-.i.r:' - lij y,.„r^ !,*•„ hlflTresBntlocatioD—Isat all timt^dtirei.iirfd to fur" nlBh. hy WHOLESALE & RETAJ L, -.v^Lrraimd - T, m, Kee-ers " of tbe very best quality, ccmprl-in^ Ki-!ir- Day aud Thirty-Hour Clocks und Time-riecc-.' .A pl.iiis aud highly ornamental designw. of all ¦'tyli-N. .-in.i a.Ini.i - edfor Counting Houses, Parlor.", Hall". t.'li-.irclMrs. F;ii- toriea, Steamboats. Rail Cars. fcc. Al.-^o A!;,rni Cl <i:k*. a moat desiroble articlu for "Sound r^lfjn r; "' ;ii,il!..; all whose buainess requires tbem ti. l,^ ¦¦u]i iu ihu morning Cftrly.-' (Jlocks.Time-Pitcoa, Watches and Ji;w>lry of i-r.-ry deHcriptlou Ucpaired with gteat care and wnrrrtrite! - Dealers supplied with CUcks and Clock Triiiiinin^-'. Bornnm'i mott* ig mym»tto.'-W« Studv tcVlt-^--." April 21 ' ly J- Novt RCAor. Parts I and 2, of Tilt: HISTORY OF THE PAINTERS OFALL NATIONS The porta will appear on the flrst of every month, at fifty cents each. I'art I. published this day, contains Albert Durer. bis life. Portrsit, and Specimens of his choicest works. Ttis. of which are separate plates .Part 11. will be ready i'eb. 1st, and will consist of \'cla!^qu«B,hl3 life, Portrait, and the choicest Specimena '¦•r hia work.-*. ALEXANDER MONTGOMERY, uud sold hy nil Bookficllers. 17 Spruce st,. N, Y. Si-nt postage free for 12 months ou receipt of $10 00 feb 10 Imo-U N*^ OTICE.—The undersigned would , resppctfuUy return his thanks Ii> his friend.' ami tbe public for the patronage bc.'itowed on hiin, and would ask for his successor a oontinusncoof their fa¬ vora. .-^L O.KLINE January 20 tf-8 s Maheiade.—Dr, ForbE9 Wisslow, speaking of marriage, says : " Nothing delighta me more than to enter (ha neal little tenement ofthc young couple, who within perhaps two or three years, without any resources but theirown knowledge ofinduGtry, huve joined hean«[xl hand, and en¬ gaged 10 share together the reEponsibilitics, du¬ ties, intercsis, trials, and pleasures of Ufe. The indusirioua wHo is cheerfully employing herown hands in domesiic duties, pulling her house in, order, or mending her husband's clothes, orpre- paring the dinner, while, perhaps, ihe little dar' ling ails prattling on the floor, or lies sleeping in the cradle, and everylhing seems preparing to welcome the happiest of husbands, and thn best of/aihers, when ho shall come from his loil to onjoy thc sweets of his lillle paradise. This ia true domesiic pleasure. Health, conientmont, love, abundance, and bright prospects, are all here. But it has become a prevalent senliment, lhat a man must acquire his fortune before he marries, that the wife must have no sympaihy nor share with him in tho pursuit of il, in which most pleasure truly consists ; and the young mar¬ ried people mu9t set out with as large and ex pensive an establishment as is becoming those who have been wedded for twenty yeara. Thia ia very unhappy ; it fi.ls the comraunitv with bacheiora, who ore waiting: lo make their for¬ tunes, endangering virlue and prompting vies ; il destroys the true economy and efficiency among females, who are expecting to bo taken up by a fortune, and passively sustained, without any care or concern on their part, and thus many a wife becomes, aa a gentleman once remarked, not a ' help-mate,' but a ' help-eat.*" ILYEK BOUGHT AWD SOLD,—2 1-2 _ percent premium given for Dimes andHalf Dimes. 2 pur cent, premium for all other kinds, jan I9-tf.71 J. F SHRODER ^ CO, Q Dirt Carts and Harness for Lar J WAN SHOJ _ SALF.,—Apply to tho aubFCTiber. al Christiana. Lanca-steroounty. JOS. C. DICKINSON. 19 10-7 Advertisement Extraordinary.—Tho inje- nuliy of advcriisera is ta.xed to ihc utmost in search of novel ways of aitracting the public ai tention. The following from the adverlising columna ofthe Louisville Journal, is good in ita way : Horrible !—The other morning jusl after din¬ ner, about (he time the people were going to^ed, a small boy about thirty years old, only daughter ol an old maid with ibiee orphan children, who live opposite the post-office on the same side of the way, (they don't iive there now) were alarm¬ ed by hearing a dumb man crying murder, and looking out tliey saw a blind man peeping into a window, where a no-armed man was beating his wife, when a no-legged man run in and kicked lho dog through theside of the house, alightlv killed two dead pigs, th.^t the hen hatched a day or two after lhat. The old man slaried ofi' for the doctor, who had gone to Webster's Daguer¬ rean Gallery, No. 476 Main sireet, to have the side ofhis face taken. Outrage 0« a School Mastsr.—The Bah limore Couniy Advocate says that on Thuraday last an outrage was committed at Price's school bouse upon Dr. Archibald Fullerton, woll known aa a teacher, by one ofthe scholars named An drnw Ensor, about 18 or 20 yeara of age, who, years ago, had heen severely chastised by thia aam» teacher. Ensor took hia slate lo thetcach er, t« show his calculations in arithmetic, which the teacher told him were not correct. At thi the scholar immediately struck him over tbe head with the slate with great violence, in¬ flicting a very seveie wound, and prostrating him to the floor, after which he beat bim in an unmerciful manner, »nd none of the scholars at¬ tempted tu reicue htm until he waa utterly pow¬ erless, weltering in his blood. Dr. Fullerlon ia probably aixty years of a^e. T E D—1000 JOITENETMBN OEMAKKRS tobny SHOK FINDINGS, at the old stand, directly oppoplte f'oopors Kod Lion Hotel, Weat King Street, M. H. LOCIItlt, THOMAS SPEiUlVG, Umbrella k Parasol Manufacturer, BAST KING- STRRET, (Neit door to Demuth's Snuff Storf, and oppoaite Sprecher's Hotel,) Lancaster, rF you are in want of good^ and durable UMBRELLAS. PARASOLS, " and anything in my line, please give rae a call. Oii all my articles are good and cheap. N- B.—Umbrella,^ and Pnrasol.i covered and repaired with neatness nnd despatch, and at vrry lnw prices. P. S,—Very thankful for past favort", fsilicit a con tinuanoe of thcsruao, fAugnsti—tf-WS Coal! Coal! ! Coal! ! ! THE undersigned having received at his Cool Yard, at GraefTs Liindiiig. on the Cou¬ estoga, his stock of BEST QUALITV COAL, carefully Bcreoued and selected for lamily u.«i!, 1^ now prepared to deliver the fame in any part of tbo city, at very low prices for Cash. -Mso, on hnnd and fot-snic. 1000 Sacks Ground Alum SaU. 250 Sacks fine Ashton Salt. 500 Bags Dairy Salt. 1000 Locust Posts. 50 Tons Soft Plaster 600 Bushels Philadelphi.i Sand SOO Bushela BaUimore Sand Apply at the Conestoga Navigation Olllce. North fiueen street, Lancaater. or atlheCoal Yard-nttiracfT's Lond- ing, GEO, CALDEK, .Agt. LaucaateT.sppt.32.1852. 6ni'43_ Ink! Ink!!—^Permanent Japanese Black Fluid Wrltiag Inkfor Bauk,-), Counting Ilou- ¦cB and Public Offices, I, Thin (nk cannot corrode Steel Pens, 1. Acids will not erase it. 3, Perfect fluidity, and a beautiful permanent j«t black color. 4, Deing cari-fully prppared exprr^sly for Ihe use of Bankers, Merchants and Public InsltuiioQii, pt'rmanen- cy of coloris guaranteed. Caro muat he taken 10 use a cli-an Ftand, and not to mix this with otlier Ink. For Bale, wholesalu and retail, ot the Clipap Uook Stor» of MtJRUAV t STOEK. February 6 tf-10 NO CURE, WO PAT. THE greatest Medical Remedy of theAg«, HoUoway's ArniCEi Plaster. Physicians dally preicibe them with more success than any other Remedy, and all who huve used thum ac¬ knowledge their great All Healing Virtnes. and say of Hollow.iy'8 Arnica Plaster."*, what ennnot be said of any other medical remedy before the world, that In .^n extensive sale for the last five years nn case has beea reported of tht-ir lailing to cure palns.wctknej'P, Rhuu- matism. Limibago. Goui. Sto, Prepared only by JOHXSTON t HOLLOWAY. Wholesale Druggists. 376 Market st,. Phila, oct 20 Gm-4 7 NEW AND CHEAP HARDWARE STORE. Ihe subscribers respectfully inform iheir fri'tnds aud the public in generiil. tbat they bave just rectived direct from tbe manufacturers, a fiplendid a3.=ortment of good^, to wbich tbey invite their attention. Persons commenclnic HOUSEKEEPING. will find a ciunpl'-te .n«,'ortment of Knive- and Fork:*. Table and T--;i Spoons, Waiterd-Looking Glaa-ed. Shor- tls and Tong."!, BRITTAJVIA WARE. Coffee Mills, lJru5he.s. Pots. Kettlu.j, Pans. *c. CEDAR WARE, Brewing and AV-»?h Tubs". Buckets. Churns. Standi. DuflicI, llatf Buahel and I'tck JL-.-ifures, H'oodeti Bowh. Ite COOK AND WOOD STOVES, of the most approved p»tti'rns, A general aFsortmeu tot BUILDING MATERIALS, Locks. Latches. Hinge,'!. Bolts.Screwn, Nails,Gla.S3. Oils and Varnish. A fnjKTinr article of Fire Proof Paints CARPENTER'S TOOLS, I'lancS, Hand, Paoi'l and Back Saws, Oliisil.'. Augers Urace.i. Bittfl, Spirit Xevels, llules. llatclu'ts, fcc , with a general ay.siirtmi-nt of warrantr-d Ertiti- Tuols. FARMING UTENSILS. Ploughs, Patent rilraw Cutters, rhains of nil dwcrip' tions. Shovola, Fork.-. Hol-^-. Mnttocks. fiC. SADDLERS AND COACHMAKERS, will find in Iheir ,'tock 11 complete assortuient of goods suitable to their tradi-, ull of which thcy nre offering ut greatly reduced price:', and reppectloily aolicit ftom dealers and con.'uiuersau examination of their Ftock. Thej hope by j:trict attention to bu.sincif>i and tlieir endiravors to pleasp custoiner*f. to receive a. share of public patronage, PINICFllTON &. SLAYMAKER, Between Shober and Sener's Hotels,North Queen street. Lancafiter. Feb 9 tf-lU KE TV M .V R B L, E WORKS, (SION* OF TWO LAHGK MATIDLE I.IO.\S.) Tom1>!^, Mantles, .^tuuiimCLit^ SPRING eOOOS, 1S53. WM. H. EjfoEPEBl, 99 "WUliam street. Ncw York. Importer and Jobber in FIlK.Vru. QER.MAN. ENOLlSH and DD.MESTH: GOODS for Tailors and Clothiers' have received by Inle arrivals, a large and well selected ."tock in Ger¬ man. English and French Cloths, of all grades nnd iiylea. Mohair Coating, Drap D'Ete, Queen's. Cloth. Alpacca and Worsted Coatings. CASH.\IKRETTE, Mixed and Clouded Zephyr Cloth, plain aud twilled. Fancy French and Bamsloy Drills, Brown aud Yellow Linens. Fnncy. Plaid and Figured Marseillgs, AVhite ane Blue do. do. Drab. Silk and Linen Coatings, togetherwith un ei- ten.».ive R.ss.artment ofTRlMiMlNGS and othergoods suitable for the CLOTHING TRADE, ou the raost favorable terms, Parlicxilar cash or Ehort-time buyers, and all who Htudy their ioteresti^. will cull and viamine hia gtock before purchasing olsewhure. Jan. 12, 1953. 01 S20 A »AY !! BOOK AGENTS WANTED, TOSELL Hayward'e Gazeteer of the U. Statea, Just published and now ready for canvassers, THIS work so invaluable to busi- ne.''.4 mun gives a history of the settlement, gene¬ nil .xurfac** oftho soil and st-itc of Agriculture, manu¬ factures and population ofevery town in tho United State.", with valuable fitatistical tahlee, a new map rif the United States. .J-c , tc. .¦\n Agent wanted for this County; apply immedi¬ ately to HORACE IVfclNTU'ORTH, 86 Washington St.. Boston. Masa. jan 26iS5J Sw-S NS.) ,Gr;ive-Titone TSew unrivalled Steam SKarcli> It has been fully tested and is found superior to any article of the kind heretofore in UBO. it starches whito, gives a better glo?R. and more stiffness than any other kind of starch. U is theretore confidently recommended to laundresses and familie.ta,'^ a superior, and at the same time cheaper artlcht than sny otber heretofore In n?e. Tbin article can uIbo be used for making all kinds of puddings. This nnw article Is manufactured at thc St'jam mill of S TOLL S: CO . in the t;ity of Lauca.«ter. Pa. NKW SUPiiHL.ATIVK KLOUR.—Superior to ony other, and cannot he beaten innny way. It was n- warded the fitet premium of the Pennsylvania Btato Fair, held at Lancaster, In 1S02. Thfl flourwill he found tho cheapp!>t that can he sued for household purposaH,—Saving twenty per cent., and naklng tbe most superior Bread. STOLL k. CO. Jjimmryia, 1863. " tf.fll lend. Gentlemen, let it be your-object, your aim. -and your efforts to fit youneWes for theposiiiono you will be called upon lo occupy iri society.- Peraons who haye imbibed a partiality for books and the socie*^ of the learned are generally in their BtudieBdurtiig lbe interyali ot biiiiness.— Tbe yotme man wh^thusdoyi^tes faiBspare.time is.n6c M«n Qt>.ieiorta foi 4wp*^it>pcvi^ aod enmii:---- ^-¦¦.u:^i•JJ ^il. x>i¦^^u-^ol-iii U Toor objMt il nest yniMwartby i« forming 5^ Two young men were fined SIO eacb, for diBtnrbing a Metbodist meeling, at Beverly, a few eveninga aince. Electioneerih* ik California.—Charles B- Ferguson, in proposing liimself for tbe ofllce of Constable in Calaverous county, California, laid do^n the lollowing as bis platform: "He is in favor of the next war—opposed to lhe Cholera—in favor of high salaries—opposed to uncurrent coin and poor brandy." Ho was elecied by a larfle msjoriiy. For th« Examiner lc Herald. To My Friend. How ihort ia life, bow fall of care aud pain, Each transient joy,—hoff flfletiuff, and how vain No atrctch of jiowor the flying houra can savo; llesistleaa aweepa time's ovorwhalming vraTe,— Vouth, manhood, age, arc but a passnga to thd , grave. A oheerleas rotmd of caro and vain desires, Love's turtnriiig fiame, and paailoo^a fiercer fires, Fcarchanog hope,i& wild, tumultuoua atrife, Rsnewad and ommgiiig ever;—sucU ia life: Earth'a gayest pBgeanta/glittoring bright to-day— Doahed.in ttie storms of fato, to-morrow posi away. Rofleetion thus the pensive thought will oaat O'er the dim ooean of the myatie paat; Call back tho b'uriedhopes ol hours gone by. Kindle fond longings, and niraka tbo sigh: Andstichafateismlne,—butyon, dear friend, From all the'siormsoflife, may heaven deretid ; In aweet oontent.may'aU thy daya be posted, Etyaiab fields recefre thy aoul at lost; Love'a radiant qaeeb,'attehdmg atill to bleaa, Direct and gaide thee to th» fount of hapnineas. ^93**^AiQBW«r to JEnigma of Uit waak^'f Bns- IBAL ttlOBU WASKZirCTOn." KONIGMACHER.& BAUMAN, TANSTEIRS & CURRIERS STORE^ Back of M, Moderweil's Commission Ware-' house, fronting on the Bail Boad and North Prince Street, Cheap for C'a«h, or approved Credit. CONSTANTLY onhand a fnll as- Bortment of altklnd.i Saddler's and Shoemaker'^ Leather, of saperior quality. Including '-Rouzer'a «J- ohrated Sole Leather," also. Leather Bands, well BttGtcbod, suitable for all kinds of machinery, of any length and width required, made of a superior quality ofLeather, Furnace Bellows, Bandand Lacing Leather, Garden HosB. I^nner'n Oil, Ourrler*5 Tools, Moroceos, Shoe Findings. Kc.&o. All kinds of Leather hougbt in the rough ; highest prioe given for Hides and Skina in esEh ; ordera will be promptly attended to. [Ju1yl4~S2 AND every deseription of Marble and Sand Stone Work, ih executed in the most beautiful Htyle at the Alarble Works ot CHAULKS M IIOWKLL. Xorth Queen iitreet, cast (-ide. between Orange nnd Cheanut sts., and nearly opposita to Van Kanan*.' Ilotel. The subscriber thankful for past favors, would in form hio friends and the public in general, that hi.-? c?tal)linluncnt i.i now opened at thc abuve location, whi'rehc will be happy atall time.t to wait upon cuf- tomcTK anil manufaefuro to order every thing apper¬ taining to hi.s line of business, in tbe most approved .-tyle of the profegfi.-on.aod at tb« most ruoi^uouble rates, ** Ile in con.stuntly receiving at his .Marble Works ful) puppliestrom tho city of Philadelphia of AMF.RICAN ¦VXD ITALIAN MARBLK. which is superior to an> thing of the kind iii tbin city, I-ftters in {!lngll6h and Uerman. engraved in tht •noat elegant manner, 'Hi:> facilities are such, that nil orders will be filloil with tiu: gri'ate.'-t promptuef.* and in tbe Ijest upprovccj nmnner, I'lTrtOns wi,>;hing Monumrnl'i an-infurn:ed thnt hi'' collfction uf dcpigu.-' an- uimv und origitiul and ho fuii and co.niplcltt that they can muke a Ruk-rtiou withnul diflicuUy. Hi! invites the puhlic tt» enll nt his M'r.rk.". and vie« the beautiful ass.irlnieut of .Mipnuments. rc<-., now flu¬ isb ed. jfti-Buildiira Rod others iti wntit of M.^rmLi; :,] w TI.KS should vi.iit hii» Ware-Kiiom.-i ami fsaniim- hif ¦splendid .-Jtcck on bunt! [D"S.tM' Sro.NC n.r Sill.-!, .Step.'). Curbing, (.em.'tery purjic=e.-i. and fronts r.f buitJinKa. at the lowest rates Ordrrjt received for all kind>* ul' Iron Hailing. _Jan7-ly-6_^ _ fllAULKSM IKUVKLL. MON DMENTS, TOiUBsT^^rANTELS HEAD STONES, &c.. Sculptured in KmMt;matic and otbi-r Lffisigni. JOHN W. WILSON, MarbleMa- tl Boa. takes this method toinform hisold friends nnd customers and the publie in jleueral. that he has t-r- inovcd his iMarblr V-^rd Irora Knst Kiug atreet to the stand so lon:; occupied hy the lato Daniel Fagan. hut more recently by Leonards; Boar, whorebeisfully pre¬ pared to manufacture every kind of Worti: In the .Mar¬ ble and Stone Cutting hiisinesR.such as ATonuments, Tomb Stones, Mantels if- House Wori of all kinds. Letter Cutting-In Kngli-h and German, will be at¬ tended to in the best and most modern t^tyle. at hi^ .Marble Manufactory in XOUTII QUEEN STllKKT, a fewdoorsnorth of Vankanan's Hutcl. In fact nothing will he Ipft undone to make this cstabll.ihment one p( the moatinvitinj; to the public, bothin regard to clieap- ne.'s. heauty of workmanship,and taste in de.-ign, in the city of Lancaster. [June 2a f-SO Tlie Peoples' Marble Works. North Queen street, near the Jlallroad, third door north of Michael McUrann's White Horne Tav¬ ern, West plde. in the yard formerly occu¬ pied by Messrs, Leonard li Be:tr, LevriB Haldy, Marble Masou, RESPECTFULLY informs the I public that he hs-t taken the above Yard.and bas just reciivfd a superb utock of pure A.MKIllC,f.N .M.-\ItBLK, together wilh a beautirul a^.^ortmont of ITALIAN .MAIIDLK. and that he is uow prepared to exccuti' In the b'lst styb- .^lonuments. Tomba. and Gravo StoHt'S,.\*antuls, Donr and Window Silis, Steps, iic.of every variety cheaper than any other estab- lishment in thiH oity. His facilities fur fnrnishing articles In tho Marhl* lino, are unsurpah'strd by any other establisbm«ut In the city, while heaSEureaallwho may favor hua with their patronagu, that his work shall bo executed In the very hest style, and on the most reasonable terms .KrLETTElt GUTTING in KNGLISH and GKR- M,-iN,dono at the shortest notice, and on the most reasonable terms. Ile respectfully invitc.i thc public to call and exam¬ ine his work, being fully natlafled to ttsthis claim to public patronago upon Its merits Thankfulfor thc manyfavors bestowed upon him he hopea byatrlct attention to bofinesii to merit and re- ceive a aharo of the public's patronage, feh '.i-tf-O 300,000 COPIES SOLD \ THE IVG^r CARMIIVA SACRA: TMPROVED Singing Book, byL. X MASON. Containing, 1. .\ Selection of the best Tuao.'! from all Mr. Ma "la's previou.i books. 2. Fir.'t rate compositions hy Ch. ZKr:^i:ii. 3, Appendix, containing New tunes.— The whole making "the most important book ol Church >lu.sic in the world." The sale cf Three Hundred Thousand CarminaSacra i"? sufficient evidence of its merits. Fifteen lotter- stamps pent to the publishers. Rice & Kendall. Boston, will command a copy by mail, lor examination. AIfo fnr s.alo hy K, & K., The Boston Academy's Collection ; The Csaltery ; .Mason-fi Large Musical Kx- ercLses for Schools ; Mason's Juvenile Singing Booka ; Thc lloston Glee Book (very popular;) Tbe Boston ,\cademy.3 Collection ol Choruses (put down to $4 per dozen); and other musical work.*;. December S 3m-li JAMES H. SPRAGUE, lyrOS. 33 and 35 North Fourth aL, Xl ImportHrof and Uealer in Torci^ju (JL.\S.^. ..i every description, and Agent for the principal Am-ri¬ can Glass Fttctories. ha-s for Kal.' Jloyans, Klooring. Ho; Hous© and Bulk WinJow Cl;uj.t f .-v-'ry -iei.-. u['t" -t feet wide by 12 feet long, and fr(-.n l ¦ffaninr'b [(-¦f.Tj inches thick. ZEVC PAIXTS, White. Black and Grey.Dryor in Oil Wbit<- Lea.l Varnishea of all kinds. Linsei-d Oil.Turp'-ntine I'ulIt Paint Brashes, Dyo Woods. l»oL nnl !'L-;irl .A.-IiI-.-j. .tr Fire and Water i'root Paint, Al.io eniibtaiitlv -.ii hand. a large assortment of freshly jmiK)rt*:d Urunsun,! %!<-.[; clnea. Nob. 33 and 35 North Kourth.-^t.- at,ov .-ij-Trv east side. Dec 8 _^ ly.i IRON! IRON!! WM. DE COU, No. 13, Noi (I* Water st., Phila.. Importer and I)ci,;,.r \xx i- ;, gllah^: American Iron, ("on-taotty on liinul ;-. Ut/. ¦ and generul assortment of Iron and Stci-1 in nU liii-:.- varieties at the lowest priced. oct 20 r„ii.4-; I>r. Barron's I^IcdEcal 01IK:e. jV. E. cor. of A'inth ^- Rnc^ sts.. Philu,!rlp-, ,-< TXTHERE ho continues to ti'eat al! *T privateand delftratw di-^n.-i-f. imm:; ^--n:!'-¦¦ CURE i:< AI.I. cisca, iai„Str;inger.-4 and rv.-'idi'nt'! an'invited l" llje ;''¦¦ tor's Privftte Rooms, wiiero hr crui alway.s liBi-'ii-iil!'"! confidentially, frei; of char;;i.. j^-Personarei^idiugut a <listancc.by en(¦^1^^ilJv'll]l¦.¦¦ dollars in- liletters post paid, stating sym[it"'ii-. wiM receive a bottle of tbe Doctor'.< Mngiiral l'rei.;i;i;ti'-Tt I'V return of mail. Officc Houaa—From bVi'ciock .\. M . ntilil It, r. '.-' Philadelphia, sept. 2-2. IS'i'J. ly.!:. lilGHXrVlIVG RODS. THE awful calamities that cvei-.v City, Town, Village, and Country Ull!* vir-.im i . annually, through the gro's n.-gl.>ct nl its inliabiLar.ti. Is beyond calculation. andespi-^Ully wh^n ili.' ri nii-.lv is so easy to obtain—tbi.'* ia fouuil in Armitage's Patent Magnetic Li^htiiiuc A'w'v and In thi.-'alone. This Hod Jia^ Iji-cn cv;iiiiin"d !¦ the most scientific GenlUria'.'iiin the wurl'J ¦ IT"!'-'-- ; • .McMnririe. Johnson. IV.tllor. ;tfjd iii.-mv '^-ii,-!-- f)i,! hare examined them, reccimni'-nd and •'{¦••¦¦.xk i-\ tlirin in the higbi:«t terms of iipj.rr.h.itii.n. :;ijil ijiv.- j>r ¦ nounced them thc only .-^af.'n.d-; n'.iv ill I!--¦ hi Ilil. any other Country, J''ur the- I'mtfrii..', .,, /,.¦,¦..¦ (.¦-,;' I'roperty. Om- ^dvaotajr- i.- :>. .l;vi:!c mnl :':¦.¦¦¦'!¦ 1 . a part 01 thetdt'ctric Huid htirtiili'-.-: V< Vxx- ' ii :¦¦*• il 1 i.^in tiun* of li .Strol;.- .-im; .¦-;:ii,j.-- r:;"ri't(-- r ¦r.li:.' that portion of Iluid that h-'loiii:i lr. :li-.-,i .:¦. . v.h-'¦.:¦ the.=IJghtf.''t dau(,-.-r t.t h'.-ivid- fli-- '¦¦,¦(.!. ¦: -.- 'l'.:'>- rod has many other ailTP.iit!i:;i-= I'vi-r ti:'- •¦'.". ¦rn'. t'li'- only place of maniilacturiiii; i'j jn \'i\,. fi\.. :; i'-i.'- iflOVE 12th. Pilll.AOKLfHM, TpVllen* all pi . :.'.'• \.- fpcctfnlly inviti'd toeall and examim; fur tl).'ir."--lv>-. Forsale Wholesale and K'tail. .My only ;;_":ii; iull.i- Stateare S.-v:\1U1-:L HOOVEK. and SA.-HUt:L ^VILT. Hartleton. Union Couti;'-- r,i W. ROSENFELD. Greencastle, Fraakl.M ' '-..u.-., JOS. D, FORRKV.for fifty mile? arnnn.I I'iLii^tir^ BEWAnC: OF LMl-OSTORS. Ma^-^y-28J_ THQ.-^ .\r.M ITA'iF. CHEAP DRY GOODS. J. C. PAYNTER, Nos. 73 tV5 NOHTH EIGHTH ST.. I'iHi.'.i . HAS on hand, antl is daily i-ceeiv- ing, goods from the N'ew York and l'iiil;idi>lj>hi;i Auction Morts.at ths most ajstonishindy li.w j.ri.:,.- in fact, it Id onlv hy calling and exaiuinin'.; iii^ i'r.ti-ii sive and varied stuck that folks cau saiiriiy th-in-i'lv"- ol the extremely low rates at which Ury ^i.:.l•.^-^ cm \-- BOld. Dress Goods of every ntyle and pri.-.-: .VbuvJ: i:i -s-ri-.x^ variety; ClothH. Ca=jim"re.i. Pa'.ii;. t--. Ji':;ii-.'i'-"'''''!- Woolens, l-binnt J.-.-, Kai;;c,«, (',mf,.rl:.)'!'-.;,;::i ':' •«!;¦ ets, TickiniTP, Crash, Diain-rr.'IJn^'i. .>'.¦•'¦;::;-¦-". ".':¦'.•'. hini-u^. Irr-h l.ini-n. AI-c rvrv i::;:'-ir. •.-.-¦iii; ¦..,¦.¦ price, of Uli-achi-J :iiid l.'TiMr,-..'.'.. ¦• ¦-¦i.iviir;; ;.¦¦ theetiugs: .Mu.-ilinj^: Tabl« Cuv.t-. !:':•.¦;;: .'^i:': ;mi.. Saucy Craval<; Ulnck Silk^. Ili^-li E.it-i:-,-. ::¦ i.. ?.'. 1. 175. AUo. lioiiibazine-fmish Ati'.-;;-;'-. V- :•¦ '¦'.' /n His e.Ttt:u^ive f.-ftaiiii^iniirrt li.i- :¦ ¦ fir.y :i::(':-..- ii t on.MdirrableaUcrii'Jf)nnndeii;;ir;4' u-.i x-.l. ;;iiil !' ¦:¦ >•.; ely, cbunpne.-'a. elegaiico nr i'lnr:ib;i;I.v, i;i- ¦Iti;i;r;:_- .s Compe:ition. Cioods at wh()lt.-iili' cii tli- m ¦-[ ail\.i;i- tageous terms. Country cu.^toiiu-ri^ iir,- v.-.-jifL-tirlly solicited to call und exaMiae.3 ptS. f,.;>i !1 CHEAP WATCHES, JEWELRY AND MLVER WARii. WHOLESALE and RciaiU ut Xo. 72N.Si^conilS[rei't. ,.i^i-.-ii.- Uk- -l'".,, Vernon Tlouse, Gala Lever Wn'.ch'- full jfis-- y, eled, 18k. cases, !ii23 00; Silver Lepine.-. j.-uuh-d. &',/7^ S12 00; Silver Lepim-F.jeweJ.-.I; ^1'(IU:-;i!l-.v.i;-- ttL'i ranted tokeep good time. Gold r.;ns rirul.Silv-rC.t^c. Sl 00, Gold P'.-iicIis. ¦i.i U»: GvM IV:k--: i-.ml J'.ti C.-< with good Gold Pens a."? biw au <3 2.'>. -'ci; Alao,alwoy-i on hand u gnorla-^iirtinim, i.;'rn>> i^ 1 i Jewelry. Gold Curb. Guard and t'td»' ;i:,ii,-: i;,.; ; v.--; Chains. Ladii;s' Gold Feb i:!i.Tin:;:ind Hi U rin< SilverTable Spoons, from ¦?M t't -J.!^. L'(-j.m". f" (-> $11, and Tea. $4 Tito <t;5lj pe;- ?i-t. .*:iri.-,:.^.-l 1 .lu.il;-. coin. All goods warranted v.'b,- ¥,-h:i: Uuv :^T^• ---M for. M, AVISK, Ai:.-;it .Vo. 72 V, rd .st.,oppr>*iU'th-M..U.iE: \'.Tii"ii \\i.<..*.¦ N. h.—Watches and-'ewc-iry r. ii,iir".l:ui'lwiiiT;iti'i-iI, Xffl^ All order.-* .-ifot by iiiail 1.7 n-.li.-rwi-.-. ""lU I-- unctually attended t-). !M.i;-i-ii:; -ly-l-J Brown's Essence or Jamaica GINGER.—A further aupply of this popular pruparation reoeived and for sale by Wai. <?. BAKER, Druggist, feb 2 No. 5, Centre Square. Lancaster, Pa. D' ,YB Stuffs.—Genuine Bengal Indfs«, Prima quality Coohineal, flne Ombro Madder, chipped aud Ground Logwood,, do do Fuatle Braillletfl, Also, AhimD, Copperaa, Blti« Vitriol, Aqua Fortip. Muriatic Add. Oil of Vitriol, together with many oiher articles used by Djora and Fullers, for aalo at reaBOOable rates hy ''•i WM. G. BAKER, Druggist, feb 2 . No. S.Centre Square, Lancaster, Pa. HamineU's SaaenceCoSee. The BUbscriber cantions the public and retailers partioularly, Bgaliuitanartielem»n. ufaetured and aold byoDe^^Ufiaf £ufflmeli, purport, iog to he the genuine HUMMELL'S ESSBNOE CQF. FtlE. ' The original and only genulneartlele Id mann. fsetnred lolely hy SAMUEL BOHLER & Co., and sold hy the nadcraigocd, who la the agent for Lancaster county, aod of whom retailers ean proeare their idp- pliaa at the proprietors' prices. WILLUM O. BAKER, . BmnUb, •eatre Scniare, Lanaaabsr. Jan 12.1863. " " t*ai Spongbs.-tA large assortment of fine and eoaise sponges for sale at ELLMAKER A BICHARDS' Drug Store, West King Street, Lancajter* T>uaE GBOUSD Spjkjbs, Cloves, Al- >E«( ftt«r«, Wfit Xlss H»ce,Laa^uter. Lancaster Agricultural ¦Warehouse AND SBED STORE. THE subscribers -would respeet¬ fully inform the citizensof Laucaptcr cicy and couuty, that they havo opened an Agricullural Ware¬ house and Seed Slore, ot No 80, corner of N'orth Q.uecn and Cheanut streets. Museum Building, Lan- caator.! when nnd wbero they will be prepared to furnish all kinds of Improved Agricultural and Hor¬ ticultural Implements, Vegetable und Flower SccmIe, tc. Couutry storekepera supplied with any of the fol¬ lowing at reasonablo discount to Fell again. Garden. Field nod Flower Seeds; Horse Powom and Threshers; Wheat Drill8,Bnd Seed Plantera; Subaoll aad SurlacB Ploughs, Harrows and Cultivators; Hay; Straw and Fodder Cutters: Grain Fans, Corn Shellers, Vegetable or Root Cnttera. Improved Oboma, Hay, Straw and Manure Forks; Oae Yokeaand Bows; Spades and Shovels, Hoes, Rakes, Grubing Hoes, Picks, Grain Baga, Garden Trowels, Weeding Forks,to- We have also made arrangements to furnish Fruit and Ornamental Trees and Shrubbery from tbo exten¬ sive Nursery and Green Houae af James D. Fulton, Pbl>.a.lphl,. BBJ^NEMANSMAUL, Agricultural Warehouse and Sesd Store, Lan'r. Pa, janW ljr-8 PLOWS ! PLOWS ! WE would call the attention of Farmera to thoaupetlor article of SUBSOIL AND SURFACE FLOW, manufactnred by C. B. Roy- era, end for sale hy BRENEM.A.N j* MAUL, Agricultural Warehouse and Seed Store, Lancaater. rebeuarj S tf.lO 100 Jars Ne Plus UltrA Mince Meat, Jnirtoreandfersaleby JOHN D. SKILES. iOft 'TORB's Haib Invigorator.—A _'further supply justreeeived, also Bakv's Taico- fHEoooB, CiAei.B5iAn Baui, Bt.i.K of CoLUUBiA, all ths above preperations are celebrated for'restering and beaotlfrlQK thefaalr.' Forsale at : •-- . JOHNF. LONO'S Cruff k ChemlMl SHere, No. i .^f. Quean it., Lan. Pa ds« 16 uSi ¦' XS-X CHERRY PECTORAL, For ttto x«pld Cur« of COUGHS, COLDS, DOARSENESS, BROIVCHmS,WnOOPINCM)OVGH, CROUP, ASTHItIA, ARD CONSUMPTION. TO CUUE A COLU. WITH Ht:AD.'^.CfU; AND SORE.NKSS OKTllE BODV.Take the Chcrht Pf:c- roRAi, on going to bed. and wrap up warm, toawcat du¬ ring the night. von. .\ '"Old AN'D cough, take it morning, noon, and evening, accordiog to directions on the bottle, ond the difllculty will soon he r^^moved Nonn will long suffer from this trouble when lhey flnd it can be no remlily cUTi'd. Perfions afflicted witha seated cough, which breaks them of their teat at night, will find, by taking the Cherbt PrciORAi. on going to bed, they may be sure of Kound, nnbroknn Mecp. and consequent¬ ly refreshing rest. Great relief from Buffering, and an ultim-ite cure, ia afforded tn IhiiUFands who are thua afflicted, by this Invaluable remedy. From itp agreeable effect in theie ca?es. many find themselves unwilling to forego Its use when thu ne- cpuslty for it has ceased. From two eminent rhyaicmns in Fatkttf.villk. Tun:*.,-April lOlh.lSa. Sir :-ire have given your CHcarr PkctOrh- an ex- ten-sivc trial for curing atfectiona of the respitOiy or¬ gan--. Drc.DlE.MiiR ^H.\31PT0N' TU SINGER9 AND PUBLIC Sri:AKEUS this rem. 'dy b-invaluable, OS by its action on tho throat and lungK, when taken In Bmall (luantities. it removea all Iionruoness in a tew houm.and wonderfully Increaaea the power and llexlhllity of tlie voice. ASTII.M.-V in generally much relieved, and often wiiolly cured hy Cuckkx Pccv0a.1L. But there arc Fome case,'* fo obstinate as to yield entirely to no medl- cint', L'jicaui- PEL'voUiH, will cure them, if they can he curfd. BRONCHITIS, or irritation of the throat and upper portion of tho lungs, may bo cured by taking Ciirunv pKCToaAi-in !<mall and frequent doses. Tho uncom* fortahle oppression Is soon relieved. Rev. Doct,-.LANSING, of Buookltn. Nkw York. slates ;— "I have Eeen the Cherrv Pkctoral cure such cases of Afilhmannd Bronchitis as lead-t me to bctiere it can rarely fail to cure thoso diaease.^.'' KOR CROUP. Give an emetic of antimony, to be followed hy Urge and frequent dosea ol the Ohkrit I'KiTonAi.. until It BUbdue,-) the di«a.>e. If taken in fif a^on. it will not fail to curo. WHOOPING COUGH maybe broken up and soon cured by the uso of Ciivrbv f'^rTonAL. THE INFLUENZA is speedily removed by thla rem¬ edy. Numerous in-tancc." hare b<-en noticed where whole faraileis were protected from nuy floriou.-i conse- qoBocefl. whiirt tbeir neigbbord without the Ciikiiht IV.cToRAi-.were Fuffering from the disease, Doct. J.C, Ayer ;^ Salkm, Onio,Ilth Juno I80I, 1 write to iufitrmyon of the truly remarkable efft-ct of vour CHKHItVTECTOItALiu thisplace,andin my own family- One of my daughters waa compl<?tcly cured In threo ilays of a dreadful Whooping Cough, by taking it. Dr. Means, 000 of our very hr.-it physicians freely utatci that he considers it the bept remedy we have fi>r jjulmonary dlReaaea. and that he ha.-^ cured more er.?x'S i't Croup with it than any other medicine ho ever administered. Our clergyman oftbe Baptist Cburch saya that dur¬ ing the run of Influenza here this season, hehas Fcen cures from yourmcdioinc he cnuld f^oarcely have b'.*- lieved without seeing. Yours respectfully, J.D.SINCLAIR, Deputy PoBtmRBter. From the distinguii'hcd Professor of Chemistry and Materia .Medlca, Bowdoin College. I have found the Cherry Pectoral, aa its ingredients show, a poweriul remedy for colda, and cough.i. and pulmonary diseases. P^rkkr Cletki.asd. M. D. Bni'.-cawifit. Me., Feb., 0,184". Dlt. VAI-ENTINE MOTT. The wlilely celehtated Professor o( Surgery in tho Medical College. Ne» York City, cays : -^ - It glvtiS me pleasuro to certify the value and rill cacy of'Oyer's CAtny Trctoral,' which 1 con'»id.r peculiarly adapted to curo disesjiea ofthe Tliroat aud Lungs." Curcaof severe diseasea upon the Lungs have boen eHected by CHKaav Pkctoral in such extreme case.n to warrant tho belief that o remedy ho.- at length been found that can he depended on to cure tho CouRh.-. Colds and Conaumptlon which carry from our mid^t thousands. It la indeed a medicine to. which the afllic- ted conlook with confldenoo for relief, and they should Jiotfailtoavail themselves of it. Prepared and sold by JAMtlS C, AVER, Practical Chemist, LowuU, Mass. ¥or sale In Lancsster.by JOHN F, LONG, a A. HEINITSH. DR. 8. P. ZEIQLKR, In Strasburg.by KENEAOY & BROTHER. J.. liadies Dross Tiimiiiiii^-. C. OJJiORTEUFFER, S. K. _ _ corner Ninfi r.tiil Mup!- sti-.'^ ;^. n'..,-.-^- (.-¦¦¦¦ I'tiiiadclpbiit. inviH"; !:'¦ L.-i-lir-'iJ' ib;.-:!_v u-.x-\ ¦¦¦f. ¦ try to cull and i-x'i iif lii-- ''.•"¦'i\ <•'¦ ; 1 i'.::ii.:i wbich has bf.-ii.^[.li.,.[,- 1 wii'.i 'It. i:!i:i. -: i;j; ¦ .Mr.O. licint: ••iialib-d. I'-.iu! l.i- .•.Vii-rl..,.-.•.¦ ::¦ i'. busini'.-;.'!. \; lak'-advanl-i ¦ '•: l!:>- '¦-¦ii ¦:¦ -:!),- :,i n ' ¦ i • - hie tOH.-Ui'-.slowasaiiy ulli-r i-.-;;,liIi-;h:ii, ,.; '.^r rii.s foriui-rly pr!n.-![i:tl I'.'uli:'';-'!' ¦''i'm- >'V'..M-i»- business "f .Mr. »". S. Hur.-:B.Ti', >"•¦. l.Jl ' !i.-.i! 1- and bid exten-iivr cjiHTii-iii:); •. ill ! •¦ n ^.-ii'ir::!- ¦ -¦) In- bJHly (Oi|OJll.-l!<Vr to bi-.-!'-I >¦¦.: ¦ ' li\ i--', . . . nri-estbe fi'llowiiig: ^ilk. U'*,- ; l, r.cl r.r<,.ii : tn l;iin Kriij;:f-. iliiiTlii!,:. ¦r.i--i'i. -.ii.l * .1,:. S".i|.- :¦ ; lUinddo.. Silk.lV....l.-;i :in.i x.-ix ., !:...¦ i-i v. ':;... - i;oinb.-'. Uru^hi'S. Sr.;i|:-;. l'.Ti:j-.il-rv. *-.-. V:',- ', :^ ¦ . (1 Kiiittitiu'and D.u-Liin.; V;iril. I -'i-..- ',-.¦.-..'¦- '- 1. nirhed Work llnx.-..^. l(rar.!.t<. ;,:,.; V.x:-.,-\ ,»:.,. L-raily. Call and cinmiiK- :'-'v y-mfiii • BOOT &. SS20B-: STORk:. THE subscribei' Imvini;; :t hirj^p ?up;>'.y nf nu'Ti^-'. wi.iM-r/- :i;ii i-n . ^7. ¦¦ ,:,.:. -md Sbo(.M,t'iyi.-l[iiT willt :ui i->;.-n-iv.':'--i'i--!,i ¦!.; ¦¦ Travcllinj; und ollivr Irun!;-;, ; ¦irii-t .J.i.;-. liiii School and other .s.ti^-ln-l--, imif- il;.' '-.f,'-';.-.-. farmer.-* aud citi.^''ii-^'if l,:i!ir:i-tiT ¦¦>'ii:i!>'.; > ^.-iv- ;i il call. IIi.^ Ktock bi'iiic hM'I- Jr.-rii :1.-(..-i ;:j:f :,.; nml workmanship and w:irraTili'ri lu uiti- -iiii-t-i.-: -¦11. willbe solil wlmlr^al,. :iiid r.-mil, Tt--: GfUt^i fine calf l(oiir.-;.sww'.-d ;iii.l H.'^:-.-J do do kip d-i *'... ,1 do coar^JB wix dn d^- .l-. Boya and Youths coar.e and flue I'.oou. Uo do .M-iriroi** Ladipii' tine Gaiter hool.'--, I-»die.v' Cum U.i.ds. lv \r, - do do .Morroce.i do du do la.-e )•¦¦.; do ht-avy leather dn do do Sbn.- .\Ii.«se»* :ind t:hildrun*'hoots of all kiinl-. Mii-^i^d and'hildruu' Gum ^hoeu, ainl h^,,- ¦ j -1, Muds. N. B.—\n aesortnwnt •f upp<ir2.ad -(at l-Miii'.- . .n stantly on hand. JK.SSK M W1I.|,i,v\!: 8d0 Market ilt...""d door wcs»(iri'cb 7:.'i t.'r... Oct 0 i::.i.-4 SOMETBH.-VC^ .1'?-:^-V. "[\/rRS. H. G. SCI'LKK, idViU'-^ lliC JAJLattuntiou of C^.urilrv ".:fr--:i:;-' . ;,ti.1 Mv... ,'daker-t.i her nnrival.-d :.^>,ifix,t.;tL -t I'aper Patfctus. forfnlE sized l.aifi--.' Orr--.-.--, .•^IcT*---. .^: in; (¦¦ .. i -. man. Miintilln;). l"a|"-s. ^rniii-^, s.u-k-. a:i- . :. r The Pattern-»r.-fiiibi-fid.-rcd in v;iii-:;: J.-i..-,. printed and rriu,;{''d.-iu'wiiig L-i,-.ctly li-.-,-!:,,. !¦: . willappL-ar wln;n mndL-. Beingln i-oii.«lrtiit cr.miuunl.'alioii v,t.>. i;.- I..-.; hou^e." of Liuiili'n and Pari.-', und tiirn:-l; ¦ i i.iTifMi;^ withertry m-w di'sfgn .nii .«(i.'n :i. i: jim.-Lr-. : h- )¦¦:!>'¦. rau alway.s dipi-nd on tlii.-i Old K^tabU-;livd V..-.:.i.,t -...,- lite mw>'t recht-reh^ iioveKie-' in drc-.; ,\.lw.ays on haud a beautiful a.-t^nrtuiun' ..;" Cliildrcii-s' Cli;tlliui;, ofthe newe.'^t style." and niaterial.-f. Medals Tv-fre awarded lier in 1H4S. la'.ii ;i::.! ; ,j -©"AsetotSIi Patterns will bu s.-nt i.i '. ivn.- enclo*ing Three Dollars, Mhs, Ii. G. SUrLKr.r; Childron's Clothing it Pattern Fi-.ii.. •¦-¦t ¦ ^i So-Mh-2dSl., f/u7<;A/; ,¦:/'. Phil'a J:tn "JGISSS ' ;;,„ . PERUVIAN GUANO. THE undersigned bej; to iuicMin the Farmers aud di-ab-rs in tin--Sl.i:.-. ;i^'' il: have made iirrangcwents with F. l!*f;nn *.; ! ¦. . .'... of the Peruvian CmvernmLut fnr tin- 1 \i-,-.i.i-..- !¦ ¦¦¦ tation of I'KRUVI.l.V GI ANd int.. Ux- i-.:v ¦ x' ¦ ' .' ¦ delphia. direct from thi; ¦Chincha" l-l;iit.!-! Megara. It.u;-i:i.A & Uno,, will in-.-;. < -.: handalargc depi.^lt of reruviim <;ir;M;i. .¦.¦.:: ¦¦ - meet all the d^mamlr; r f cfii-iii;;!' .¦-.>¦ '-.i-'i -.- ¦•'¦'' at the lowest prices, nnil in ;.'t-i m-ui: ti-i,.-ii - '• (.fL.vj.'I.N'.; .s; *-ii':i.^*ii ¦ - Sole aijents fnr thf )'iil" I'l IVr;:-.: ¦:. > '¦-•.n: ¦::''''.' No. 4SNorth Wharvc.-i, Mid'.'T .\'.;i:. ----'- "¦' '¦ • • January 2'j 111 Ilic itfl! CH4PIV & CO THE cheapest State's, to and frnm lili'"' -> " '• ¦ ¦-¦ '¦¦ ' iJo.ilun; iJ.-xlIin:!-'r.-. V.'iirhii;i;i_i ik ;¦.¦ r.^ ;;.. ;; .i!..;. ; ind I'f.ter.vbiirg: ( liari.-rti'i' ^¦. I- . .r.t-l .. .i.'f.ir ¦ ¦ (. HttBhurg, Pi'..Ciiiciui.aU-- (.'.. t.'Ui^-v.lh-. ;:;...;;; I.--; Lout.-(. llio. iJ^-Tho undiT.sigiu-d ar< v...ir j'r^ Iih-".',! t.. -..r.:.. .Merrlinndiz.'. I'ai'ku:,'.-.,. riirc-l:. S^.-.-ir nxx-.l h-I jf all kii.d.s with prinnpti!!--; and -M-i-.-r,'-, .:¦.•• - kati;3I-i:m iiia> ht a>v on.i.u II.h i'_. rartk-ularultiMitiiut p:tiJ (ii tb- ..!:.-.¦;-i:! .- ¦ . ¦. - (Jrufisandllill^. Ordi-r.-! pUnttiiji'.l.-C ;.ti. ;. i. .; i- (.'ood.s r<.-.-bii'f»ed tu any i-.trt uf tic- I '.¦¦.¦c ,> -: ¦.. K.urt.pu. nnd other couniriiv. UlJice Philadelphia. J5 .S. -i'.ii .-t. Nuw York, '^05 Ur.m.^rw. Baltimorit.3 Jaivi." iliiiidi!i, ;. \. ¦.¦'¦¦. .¦ - Wuchlsij;!""-«ornirr 1-; r..-Tv..vh ¦.•..\: \-. and4i t^;. .,i».!y • . Oro. LifriNcfrv. ^¦Vm. Ta.nrci: i'-i-' ^:. >; i. .. . GEOUGE LIl'P3.\C{*Tr K CO . HAYE coustanlly on hand u inli assortment of leos, Wities, I.IqiiiTs and (ir.n-ciM -. generally- No- K North_ W'st-^r Si North Delaware A January 2$ , rhiladeltdiis
Object Description
Title | Lancaster Examiner and Herald |
Masthead | Lancaster Examiner and Herald |
Volume | 15 |
Issue | 12 |
Subject | Newspapers--Pennsylvania--Lancaster County |
Description | The Lancaster Examiner and Herald was published weekly in Lancaster, Pa., during the middle years of the nineteenth century. By digitizing the years 1834-1872, patrons are provided with a view of politics and events of this tumultuous period from a liberal political slant, providing balance to the more conservative perspective of the Intelligencer-Journal, which was recently digitized by Penn State. |
Date | 1853-02-23 |
Location Covered | Lancaster County (Pa.) |
Type | Text |
Original Format | Newspapers |
Digital Format | image/tiff |
Language | English |
Rights | http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/NoC-US/1.0/ |
Contributing Institution | LancasterHistory |
Sponsorship | This Digital Object is provided in a collection that is included in POWER Library: Pennsylvania Photos and Documents, which is funded by the Office of Commonwealth Libraries of Pennsylvania/Pennsylvania Department of Education. |
Month | 02 |
Day | 23 |
Year | 1853 |
Description
Title | Lancaster Examiner and Herald |
Masthead | Lancaster Examiner and Herald |
Volume | 15 |
Issue | 12 |
Subject | Newspapers--Pennsylvania--Lancaster County |
Description | The Lancaster Examiner and Herald was published weekly in Lancaster, Pa., during the middle years of the nineteenth century. By digitizing the years 1834-1872, patrons are provided with a view of politics and events of this tumultuous period from a liberal political slant, providing balance to the more conservative perspective of the Intelligencer-Journal, which was recently digitized by Penn State. |
Date | 1853-02-23 |
Location Covered | Lancaster County (Pa.) |
Type | Text |
Original Format | Newspapers |
Digital Format | image/tiff |
Digital Specifications | Image was scanned by OCLC at the Preservation Service Center in Bethlehem, PA. Archival Image is a 1-bit bitonal tiff that was scanned from microfilm at 300 dpi. The original file size was 960 kilobytes. |
Language | English |
Rights | http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/NoC-US/1.0/ |
Contributing Institution | LancasterHistory |
Sponsorship | This Digital Object is provided in a collection that is included in POWER Library: Pennsylvania Photos and Documents, which is funded by the Office of Commonwealth Libraries of Pennsylvania/Pennsylvania Department of Education. |
Full Text |
VOL XXVII.
•isijcj -•.¦.a] l-''"--Vi^' f-iit-.q r.i '^im7.i'r.--
LANCASTER, I»A., iVEPlCESMY,; lEBtoARY 23,-1858.
NEW SERIES, VOL; XV--NO. i%
PUBUSHED BT
EDWAKD C. DABLINGTON,
OVFlCr IK WORTH qLM:r.5 BTREET.
Tbc EXAMINER aSiSoCRATIO HERALD .hem .hrough |
Month | 02 |
Day | 23 |
Resource Identifier | 18530223_001.tif |
Year | 1853 |
Page | 1 |
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