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»:•*' Vr^ V^OL. XXIX. LANCASTER, PA., WEDNESDAY, JUNE 13, 1855. NEW SERIES, VOL. XVII-NO. 28. PUBUSUKD BY EDWARD C. DARLINGTON, _ .1F1.10E I.N NORTH QUEFK ''^'L^^* „ „„ . r ,» The EXAMINER & DEMOCRATIC HERALD if. published weekly, iit two dOLUHB a year. Advkrtisemknts notcicecaing one square wUI be ius.TU.Hl Uireetime.1 for one didlar, aud twcntj Jve MnSwflUe clmr,i.-d foreaeh addil .maUn..ertion.- AhKi discount alIo«.-.l to tbo?o advertising hy the yar. ^^^___^__^_^_^ The World would be tlie better for it Iliiien oared le.s.s for weidtb and fume, Ami less for battle fields mid Rlory ; If writ in human hearta. a name i^i-emed better than in song nr .story ; If in.-u, instead nf uurpiug pride. Would b-am to bnte It nnd nbhor It— If more relied ...,- On l^vo to BUide,>.v-.%;^ Tbe world would be Hie better Tor it. If men dealt le.s.s in slocks nnd lands, .¦\nd more in bonds and dei-ds fraternal; If I.i.vo's work had more willing handc . Til link this wnrld to the supernal; If men .storeil U)! liOve's oil and wine. ,\ud nil bruised human hearts wnuld j^iur it: 1 f •¦ ydiirs " and •' mine " Would oiice eombine. The H..rU would bt- tbu U'tler for IL If uinre would a.-I tbe play of Life, Ami feWi-r f^puil it in rebearfal; If BiK'dry wnuld ^¦heathu It- knife Till (inod bertime more universal: 1 f rustnm. Kray wilb Jij;es ;:ronii. Htii) fewer.bliiul men In adore it— If tJilentsbono In Truth alone. I The world wnuld be the beitor for it. If men w.-n- wIm' in little Ibin^-'— .iffti-tine ler^F ill nil theirdeiilinj;*— ff besiits bad fewer riipti d strinR.i T.I ir-obite their kindly feelinpu; irmi-ii. when Wr<tnBlii-aT.sdnwii llu- Iti^ht, Would strike tnsetber and re.-tore it— If Itiiiht made Might III every tight, The wnrM wmild be tlie betler fnr it. THE .ORPHAN APPRENTICE A riTORY FHOM LIKK nv SIKTA fill.W. The liciii ]t:iil lu-iMi iiitoiisv ilurinj; the iiny, and now, iilthotiirli tht- sun hml sunk to rest, the :ilr \v:i:( siili .'|tiiiessive. Nut a leuT siirrud. The s]iy w:is oviTcutt, juni ditrk, portenlinus clouils threatened ;i coming storm Every¬ thing WHS jmrchpij and dry. The fldworjt drooped tht'ir head.s and hmUod williered. The cuttle hrr.lf.l lugntli.r uutk-r Iiu- .spreiiding branchr.<; of llie ^cnarleil •¦ak trfe, wliih' ihf fur mer, in liis sliirr -1 e. :¦.••_¦¦¦¦, '.v.h ijuielly resiin^r after tin: fntijim'^ui 111',- day, enjoying his pipe* and lo-'kiii-; ovlt the almiinac and up to the • sky, t'l f-ee vvlielhur rimy wcr*' (o liave thr wisl). ed f(ir rain- 'I'hi' thrifty wife was iriaking nil thing.s seeme iigaitirrt the coiuing storm. The busom iluigiiier was .'dinging gayly as she tripped lightly up the path, having fed her chicken-:, whih' tin; <»ld hfti walched her close¬ ly that .-tIh- might .li) her little family nu harm. The dn^ C-irlo pniitrd ami hipped ht.s lungiie a« he 3iietelii-d hini.«elf iip'-n tin' gn-i-ii swuid, aa thonjrii lii.-; !.<'rve..= hml la-en nn^irmig hy tin- intense h.al I.f lhe day. The .-lii-op. luu. were gather.-.1 hi^'fiiier e-'.'iiiy within their loJd A periecl .Mini n-iiriif'l. T\vilij;lit ha.i ne-uly deepenu-I iutu niulit. Nnt a souml wns Ih-ard, save vwyy imw ;ind Ihen the law rnuilil n;: of distant tlinmler, aeurimpitnied hy sharp Hashes of lightning iauildeiily the cleg Sitarteil up aud harked fu- riou^-Iy. Not fceeiug the cause of hia c.toilc- ment, the fariucr called out, **Dowo, Carlo, down," hnl the barking continued unlil the in- • trudcr came in sight. Then going up to his master's side, Carlo looked him in the face, as much as to say, "You now aea why 1 barked.'* The inofl'eiisivc cause of Carlo'.i alarm was a poor lad, looking almost exhauKicd. llis broken Btraw hat was in his hand, exposing his fine open counteimnce, which had become very much hurut'd by exposure lo the scorchingfjun. His dark hair waa pushed oil' his noble fore¬ head, and his fiue eye beamed with intelligence. His torn and soiled clothes could not bide bis straight, wril shaped" form. Hi.s feet were swollen au.l blistered, as he could boiist of neiilier .slioes or sloi:kiiiti:j. I!e approached Mr. B;iker—for that was the farmers' name— with an air of timidity, us though be feared him. The good old farmer laid bis almanac down, and taking his pipe out of his mouth aud after surveying tbe stranger from bead to foot he said, "My lad, what brings you here .-o • late'! Judging from your appearance you must have come from a distance. Sit down and rest, while you tell me where you are from and where you are going." The boy, feeling en¬ couraged by the kind word of Mr. Baker, sat down beside bim und told him hia name was Martin Heath, aud that be was an orphan.— He had been apprenticed to a blacksmith nam¬ ed George Warner, who lived about thirty five miles from Mr. liaker's farm, and wbo, ho said, had treated him so cruelly that he determined to make bis escape the first oppertunity he could geL It appeared from his story that he was mude a drudge for the family when at home and a butt upon whom lbe ill nature of his mus¬ ter found vent on all occasions when anything went wrong at the shop. Ue was not allowed to go to Suuday school like other apprentice boys in the town for fear he would learn to read, and then would not do so much work.— He bad been in thia cruel servitude for nearly a year, when an opportunity of escape offered, and ho had taken advantage of it. We find him, after two days' travel, a greater part of • the way on foot in the scorching sun, comforta¬ bly seated by Mr. Baker, telling him his trou¬ bles in aa much confidence aa if he had been an old friend. Mr. Warner, in trying to lift a heavy piece of iron, let it fall upon his foot, causing him great pain; and probably thinking if he would Tent bis spleen on some one it would relieve him, he called Martin, nnd whipped him se- Terely because he did not help him; then limp¬ ed home the best way he could to his wife, who examined hia foot, and thinking as it waa only bruised it would be well by the morning, he took no other steps to havo it attended to. But when the moruiug came he was in dreadful agony, and Martin was sent post haste after the family physician, who lived in the Tillage, some distance from Mr. Warner's. Martin jumped at the opportunity, as it would give bim a chance of escape. As soon as he receiTcd his orders, he stole slyly to the loft where he slept and secreted about his peraon a few little things he prized, then bidding a ailent farewell to the only spot where he had found one moment's happiness, started for the doctor, whom he chanced to meet ahout half way. After deliv¬ ering his message, he turned hia steps in a different direction, and was aoon out of hear¬ ing of the heavy fall of the blacksmith's ham¬ mer, and the scolding tongue of his master's wife. He was iu tbe green fields, away from the busy haunts of men, where the sweet notea of the birds and constant buzz of tbe bees that were sipping sweets from tbe fresh and fragrant clover around him, was all tbat he heard. One liltle bee in particular engaged his attention.— He watched it closely as from one flower to another it went slipping sweets from each, then darted before bim in a straight line. He determined to follow in the aame direction, which he did for a long distance, until he reached a large and venerable looking tree, whose spreading branches afforded a delightful "• shaded retreat to the weary traTeler. The wild honeysuckle twined itself around the trunk, and mingled its flowers with the leaTes aboTe. Here the road divided, one branch leading to the right and the other to the left. Martin sat down aud wondered which road he should take. He had never been so far in the country before. He had no money and nothing to eat, and the thought that he might get lost in the woods and starve made him for a mo¬ ment almost regret tbe step be had taken; but it was only for a moment. He roused his sink¬ ing energies and started up, and taking the path to tho right, he proceeded on his journey. It waa bnt a narrow opening through the woods, interspersed here aud tbere with clumps of wild flowers that remind one of the bright spots in the journey of life. There was noth¬ ing but tbe narrow path ahead-not a field or I a stalk of corn that showed si^s of habi- even i the thought of having to remain hungry in the woods all night was not a very pleasant one.— Ho approached the house cautiously, for fear of Ihe dogs, that eyed him with dis'.rust. One of [the farm hands, who had just come from dinner, asked Martin what he wanted. VI want something to eat—1 am tired and hungry," VYou will not get anything lhrri\ I cun tell you; and if Mrs. Sprigg finds you here she witl set all the dogs of the place at yonr heels until she clears you out." Martin being very hungry, determined to risk the c.iiisequeiice.s, and accordingly went to the kilclicn door and looked in. At the ta¬ ble sat the dri-aiied Mrs. Sprigg—ber sleeves weie rolleil up—hcr arms, such as yon wonld thiiVk made to wash bed-quilts, were resting upon the table. In her hands she held a chick¬ en Mrcass, whicii she was endeavoring to pick clean, so that uone might be wasted. Any one to look at her ihiok-set figure and full moon face, whicii "Wan aa red aU.l ruuud, and us I'al ^ .\ii a imlvU cii^ilii-m, aud redder than that,' might know that sho wasted nolhiug in the eat- iuR line. ,\s soon as she got a glimpse of Mar¬ tin's bend iu the door, dowu went her chicken and her touguo rolled out. "What do you want here, yuu dirty little .-(iragglcr? You are a same niiiHway. I'M warrant, and it you tliink thai I aiu going to hurhur you, you aro much mistaken, su gu away.as fast as yuu caa." "1 w.-int something tu eal—I do uot wish to stay here." "1 havrt noihing for the likes of you. Work for it, as 1 have to do." A litllf unrly headed boy who bad been standing by, said, * Oh, mother, give the poor boy soinethiiif; to eat. Don't yuu know the time 1 gut hisi in the woods, und a good lady found me mul gave luu itome oake to keep me from crying, then brought mu home lo >ou? I might bave starved in the woods if she had Ielt nil' to como Iiinne by myself.'* The iron heart was toncbfd by the artless sympathy of childlitiu.l, and iliauks to little Arthur Sprigg, Martin got i|uiie a niue dinner, and his pock¬ ets lull ttl eai llll the tvay, aiol alter resting awhile he once m»re started on his march. He continued straight along until night began to lower her stnr gemmeil curtain ot reposu over a Inisy world. He now looked around for shelter, and tound It in an old barn. Slipping in unobserved, he ihrewhimsclf upon the straw and was soon sleeping aoniidly. Betimes in the morning he was up, and feeUng somewhat rested, though his bones still ached, he wended his way Io the nt-itn ruad, aud ns he walked aloiiij, eat the hi.-;i;uii lie had left tVuin ihe day li.-f-iit-. During the day he Wunld gel .•iOiny llf ili« w.igoners to let Inin ride n.-j f:ir as tlicy wt-nl. nnd tlitiS accnnipliahi-il iii-nrty twice lui! .li-lance in- dt-i tht; day bL-fon.-. Ditrkiie.-s.^ 0!ior lunrc lu'giii to uVtT.-hadctw tli(^ L-arth, and the .^ky was htiavy with tlireateulng clcimls. su he turned up the lanu to Mr, Baker's farm, wli<t received him kindly, as we have seen, and listened attentively to hi.i story, and gave his consent for him to stay ull night. Calling his dinghter, ho requested her to prepare Martin some supper, and show him the little spare room lliat lie might wash his face and hands and comb his hair. The kind-hearted farmer then went to seek hi.s wife to si^o if shu conid find a pair of .shoes and stockings that would be easy lo the poor boy's feet. Martin enjoy¬ ed his supper, which consisted of home mado bread, fresh churned butter, and a large mug of pure milk He had not had audi n home like meal since he had lost his dear father and mother. The family bad been comfortably aeat-.-d arouud the door but a few minutes when the looked for shower descemlcd iu torrents, refre-shing the dry and parched earth, and cooling the heated atmosphere. Martin, plead- ing fatigue, retired to the room adsigoed him for the night. " Wife," said Mr. Baker, when Martiu was out of heariug, " how would this lad do iu the place of Jim Uunbar, who, io spite of every argument of mine, has determined to join tho volunteers ?" ".lu.Ht as you think. He seems a smart, clever lad. He is young, aud you can teach him to do things after your owu heart." " Jessie, what do you say ? You can teach him to read; he seems very anxious to learn." *' I am not goiug to teach a dirty, ragged, bare-footed boy as he ia. Hia head, no doubt, is as thick as that barn-door yonder." ** Well, we will try him for a while, and aee how he does ; when your mother fixes him up iu some nice clean clothes you tnay ch^mgo yonr opinion of him." In a short time family prayers were said, and the united family of tlie good old farmer were soon wrapped in balmy slut^p. Not MO with .Martin. He luoktd out upon the quiet stars, that, aince the storm had passed away, crowded the blue heavens; and then around the little room, with its neat car pet, made by the farmer's wife; tbe cot, with its Bnowy counterpane; tho neat dresser, with bunches of wild flowers on each end, and a lit¬ tlo bible in the centre. He thought how happy he would bo if he could only road the pages of that good book, and made a resolve to learn how, let what would come, He sat some time contrasting the little paradise he was now in with the loft and straw pallet at his master's, and the farmer's kind words with hi.s master's abuse nnd blows, and wished from his inner¬ most heart that he could make his home where he had received tbe first words of kindness since he had been made an orphan. His home! The words echoed back in his heart a mourn¬ ful souud. He bad no homo. He was like a wrecked ship upon the stormy ocean, without compass or rudder ; and would be driven upon the billows of life where tho ruthless waves would take him. Racked with contending emotiona, be knelt and broathod a prayer thot was learnt at a pious mother's knee, and put hia trust in au all-wise Providence for protec¬ tion. It waa not until nearly the midnight watch that the waves ceased to lash the frail bark, and it rested aa quietly upon the broad bosom of life, as if no harsh winds had cast it from its home port lo seek a place of safety amoug strangers. Bright dreams came o'er his heart. He is once more in the sunny homo of early childhood, and the pleasures that crowded upon life's bright morn are once more his; his dear sister chases the bright painted butterfly, while he is trying to make a horse of the large Newfoundland dog who claims him as his master; a smile of joy fiiea across hia sun¬ burnt brow, and be is once again his parent's happy boy. The aun has now risen, and falls full upon his face: it awakens bim, and he finds— " Alas that the bright vision was but a dream 1" He knew not now where he should turn his steps. He could no longer intrude on the kind hospi¬ tality of Mr. Baker, and tears stole quietly from hia brilliant eyes. He dashed them has¬ tily away, and, after arranging his dress, de¬ scended to the kitchen, that he might return his thanks for the kindness he had received, and be on his journey beforo the sun-became too hot. He found Mra. Baker and Jessie pre¬ paring the morning meal, while Mr. Baker was pruning the vines that clustered around the door, forming a fragrant archway of blue and white flowers. Martin haying thanked Mr. Baker, with the hope of one day having it in his power to repay him, was turning away with a heavy heart, when Mr. Baker eaid. "How would yon like to stay and leam to work on the farm? We are just in want of Bome one, aud think you will answer as well as ti man." With a faltering voice he answered in the aflSnnative, for his heart was too full to speak clearly. So tbe bargain was that Mr. Baker WM to clothe and board him, beside giving him a Email sum in cash every month. Martin's bright, happy countenance showed the;change wrought in his heart. The little room vas to be henceforth Jus; he h&d at last found a home where the soft word tometh a^T^y wrath. By Mr. Baker's ingenuity he Martin soon ingratiated himaelf intothe good -diys,-when.hft accideutaily overheard a con-1 Phtbioal Exebcisbs.—One of the prinoipal graces of all, and beacrae the favorite of the versation in the,Pension Office. A man of near- ' causes, if not the cause, of the attenuated and tation. He had not walked very far, when k turn in the road, to his great deUght, gave him a view of green fields once more, where the cattle were grazing lazUy. Further od were' fields of corh. .The littiefem-house stood outin boldreUefon:asUght eimnence..It^Wa8.bijta .sook: made'quite a respectable appearance* few nunutes wait across the fields/and iiisl ETATj^i; «toowiedged he was not so uRiy heart felt geUwed of a ooatidrotbto yi^^to|M[ ghi *r^ ^'H to U- ugly moans of imparting her limited education to unt: who could apprcciatf it so well. Life to them was oue bright dream; they heard musio in the loud thunder aa well as the whispering breeze, and wiuter with its frosts nnd snow, was as bright ami pleasant as lhe warm breath¬ ings of Bummer, with sweot scented flower.s. Veara passed ou, aud us Martin acquired knowledge and his mind expauded, he felt that hewaj uot boru to be an idler upon the face of tho earth. A few years work great changes, and in the handsome, intelligent mau you would not llll ve recognized the sun burnt, travel-worn boy .if .Htven 3'ears before. He nowfelta dc- siri: for a wiilerfield of actiou. Thegreat aud growing West witii its iuimcns« uxtent of terri¬ tory presented a plentiful harvest, and there Were ft^w to divide the toil uud prufits- Fame, tho bright object iu iho prospective of existence, he determined to pursue, and tha^ could nut be duno on Mr. Uaker'.t furm, even though there wns not a cloud to sully the sun¬ shine of existence, or a thorn in his Uowry path to remind hini that it waa not all sweetness. He fully determined to mif;rate tn the far West, and grow with ils growth and strengthen with itssirength. His earnings, carefully laid aside, were uow more than requisite to fit him uut I'nr his jour¬ ney, which in those days was far more tedious th»n twice the distance iiiiw, as ihey had no iron horses flying over Ihe level track at fifty milea an honr. Journey.^ were accomplished in wagons. Hia conveyance had two good horsea, in which was packed ull that wuuld bu needful for the journey, beside a few things to com¬ mence housekeeping wilh when thcy got then-; for yon must know that when Martin fully made up his mind to go, the hardest task he hail waa jiarting with Jci^.sie. He was nuj long, however, in persuading her to bec'iine his wife aiiil the slmrerof his joys and sorrows. Air. Baker ielt suiry to part with his children, for Martiu had become as a son tu liim. Hu kii(!W that at the heat he hail hut a few years of life, and ho felt .sati-li(-d to .see hi.s only daiiglitiM* united to one in wlmm he could place iiiiplicii ii'Mifideiiue. In.-^tead of losing his d:ingliii-r, he gained a ?un worthy of the trust that had been confided to him. Ho felt sorry to have her so far away, yetsacrificed his feel, ings for his children's good, and bid God speed them on their journey, which waa n tedious one of ihree week's duration. Thcy finally reached their .Icsiinution. It was a small town on tbe banks of tbe Ohio, overlooking that noble river that then could only boast of a few rafts aud flatboats, where now it is daily ploweil by stately steamers.— The town contained about five hundred inhab¬ itants. The new comers astonished a group of idlers who had gathered around the door of the only public house the town afforded As they drew up their wagons nnd fastened the horSes to the rack provided for that purpose. Jessie waa too lired to uotice the looks of idle curiosi¬ ty she attracted, and passed into the honse. Ali efl'orts to find out who tho strangers were and their busiuess were fruitless that evening) as Martin kept his owu counsel. It was some weeks before they got fairly and comfortably settled in their western home, which was a neat white cottage, made very cosy by their uuited cff'orts. Jessie's kind parents had not parted witb their only daughter without providing her with many little comforts that would prove luxuri¬ ous in Ihewesterh wilds. The nice new bright home-made carpet, with its red, blue and white stripes, and the wbite muslin curtains, with green paper shades under them, excited the admiration ofall. The garden in front of the house wus arranged tastefully ; the whitewash¬ ed palings made by Martin added greatly to its appearance ; whilst the rear garden was plant¬ ed with seed wbich was to provide their lur- nipH, potatoes, and com. Jessie at the firat felt very home-sick, but tbat soon wore off, as she hai] no time to waste in idle repinings; ahe had her household duties to perform, nnd it was a great pleasure to prepare her hus¬ band's meals just as he liked them, and she felt happy to see him enjoy tbem Jesse soon became a favorite in the town, and at the earnest solicitation of a great many of the inhabitants, was induced to open a small school, as the only schoolmistress the town alTorded was going further down the river to live. The children became very fond of Jeaaie, and soon ahe could count nearly all the chil¬ dren of the town in her echool, with the ex- .ception of aome few that thought city people only needed education, and refuaed to spend any money for learning, yet felt jealous if a neighbor's child knew more than their own. Martin aoon made himaelf very popular. His thorough knowledge of matters and things placed him at once among the prominent men of the town. He was one of the nature's no¬ bleman, and a true patriot, "What was for his country's good was for hia. He belonged to no party or sect.—Unbiassed by party tram¬ mels he acted from the dictates of his own con¬ science. His business prospered ho well tbat he sent for Jessie's father and mother, who, old as they were, aold out their farm and jour¬ neyed to the West to meet their children once moro thia side of the grave, and great was the rejoiciug at Martin Heath's cottage the day the old folka arrived. Y'ears have elapsed sinco we left Martin Heath and his helpmate rejoicing at the arrivaj of their parents, who have long since been gathered to their fathers; the littlo town has bccom'e quite a flourishing city, and Martin has advanced many rounds up the ladder of fame—he baa won the eonfldence of his brother laborers in the West, and been chosen by unanimous consent to be their representative in the halls of the national Legislature. It is evening. To-morrow he is to start for the Capitol—there to tako his place among the great statesmen of our land—hia family are gathered around him; and he is telling them the story ofhis escape from his hard master, wben a low wrap attracted his attention—one of the children says it is only a beggar man. "Let him come in, and give him something to eat.'* The mendicant was a miserable looking-being, wboBo head was silvered over with age, his form waa nearly double, and hia clothes showed aigns of abject poverty. While the children were getting him aomething to eat, Martin in¬ quired who he was.—To his astonishment he found his old Master George Warner, the man that had nearly made him a suicide, now begg¬ ing him for bread, which he had ofton refused his poor apprentice. Here was a chance for retaliation, but no such feelinga stirred the no¬ ble heart of Martin Heath. He forgot all the past, and kindly gave the misguided and erring old man the wherewith to rejoin his family, whom he had left in a fit of anger, and was ashamed to return. Giving himaelf up to dripk he became the miserable outcast Martin found' him. Martin left home and arrived at tbe Capital the day before Congress met. How his glad heart throbbed with gratitude to the Giver of all things as he fonnd himself enrolled among the great men ofthe conntry. He filled his post with so mnch satisfaction to hia constituents, thathe was re-elected sev¬ eral terms. When wishing to retire to private life, and settle in the midst of his lovely anti bltwming family, he deoHned a re-nbininatipii. Hif cqu8^ta^^,w^i^j5sp>Hvfeiq'iiff, and in' ¦pitfl of himwlf ie was elected. 'How did ij his own nge,'deprived by some means of one : pallid appearance of Americana, is doubtless ! the neglect, or rather the violation—the ha¬ bitual violation of the rulea laid down by Na¬ ture for muscular developement. The class of men- in this country whose occupations are such as almost necessarily lead to the forma¬ tion of sedentary habits is very large, large, perhaps in proportion, than that of any other commercial nation. Aod this will acconnt in a measure for the fact that the various com" plaints, generally the concomitants of insuffi¬ cient physical exerciae, are more prevalent here than elaewhere. Our young men become clerks at an early age, and being thua confined to the narrow limits of a counting-room at a time of life when the open air and couatant motion of the body are indispensable, it is not surprising that they should be in their man¬ hood so sadly deficient in muscular Tigor and exhibit so little of the athletic dcTelopement that are looked for in the sterner sex. With farm. "Often Mr. Baker would say, wtj ever do without Martin?" **^™» ^^ talking to the Commissioner of Pen- Jessie became his teacher. Every evening . aions.' He was trying for a pension for aervi- she would give him a lesson, nod something oes rendered to his country in which he met new waa gained with each. With every acoes- , with tho loss ofhis right arm, and having neg- sion of knowledge camo the desire to leam lected to keep his papers, had his right to ft pen- more, and with his book learning he also ; sioQ^isputed. His look was so sad that it at- loiirned to love his fair young teacher, whose i' traded Martin's utteution, and ho waited until mind assimilated ao nearly with his own. And ^^ left^to euquire hia name, when it was told bow was it with ber? Did she love bim ? She * ^'^i. Man, ns he, was, he could not check the did. though she was not aware of the state of i *ear of sympathy that sprung to his eye, for bor own heart. She fulfilled thrduties of the ; that man was little Arthur Sprigg, who many dny more cheerfully, knowing that when even- | y*^»™ "^EO had given Jiim his dinner, and the iuii camo they might, undisturbed, mingle their ! *>"'^'* ^«^' "po^ ^^^ waters returned after thoiighta together, and that she would be the i ™'*"y '*ays, for Martin lost not one moment in having his pension secured to him, through his pergonal exertions in hunting up his papers. Soon after this Martiu was obliged to resign his seat in Congress, to take the one of Gover- iior of his adopted State, to which he had been elected by an overwhelming majority. He still retains it with honor to himaelf and country, surrounded by all that makes life dear to him —a loving wife aud dutiful children—reaping the reward of honest industry. PHILOSOPHY OF LIFE. M 0 D E H -A. T,i 0 N. "Alodt-ratlon is not only wisdom, hut virtue." fi=a[)*"now shall muu live so as to IfUgthe-n Ilia .lays, and at the same time tu incri-iise bi.^ social and iutelleciual conifurts and enjoy¬ ments? This is a question that possesses vi¬ tal interesis to all, ami yet there are few who discus.-i it with thonghl, rcflt-ction and philoso¬ phy. Thi' niuliitnde live on, careless of to¬ morrow, and lis if they were to live forever. "All men ihink alt men murtal but Ihcm- selve.s." In youth, and when life is full of ex- cilenicnl, this, perhop.s, is natural. Tben the present aloue, is cared for and the future at least, Jias no gloomy forebodings. Fancy colors ovtryihiiig wilh ro.sy bues, hope is buoyant, the heart is impulsive, and care and anxiety, anil rcrtponsibility, have not yet influenced the mind and marked the forehead. But when youth has gone liy, nod the character has to a ceriain e-KtenC ripened aud maluri-d, tlie modes of lil'e. even with those who can afford to pause and reflect, are uot adapted to prolong human existence, and to increase its social enjoy- mtiiits. Thousands nnd tens of thousands per¬ ish annually, who might, hy the proper means, livM fur years aud years. They are the vic- tiiiis of fxces.-^ and imprudence, and aro, in fact, moral suicides. They cannot master their passions, they cannot control their tastes, they cannot restrain their appetites, they eannot re¬ sist their temptations around them. The true phihtsophy of life is moderation— inoili-ration, not only in eating and drinking, but in all indulgence.^ and excitements. The head shii'iM he kepi cool, the mind shonl.J be kept i-leiir, the heart should he kept true, and the c.iuscienco slioiild lie kept easy. These, o a vi-ry .onsiderable e:ttent, comprehend the duty ol mau. They teach him, notonly iiow to.live, but they prepare hiiu for the close of litV. The ancients, pvrhups. understood these Ihinns btftter than Ihe moderns Thcy recog¬ nized the intimate cotincxitin bi^tweeu the miud and tiic body, between tho physical and the mental mau, and thej'endeavored to make the- two harmonize. They lived not tbr the day or the hour, but so as to jirolong human existence, and at the same time make it ngrecnblo. But in modern days,.'all is excitement, nnd every¬ thing is up to feVer bent. We leap, us itwore, by telegraphic impulse, from one world to the otber. Moderation is ignored. Itis rcfjarded as out of place. The yonng rush on wildly and recklfssly, the middlc-nged strain and ex¬ haust themselves in an elfort to keep up, while the old gaap and groan, and sink into the grave. All live too fast. Tbe exceptions, at least, are few and far between. Even enjoymentis made a sort of madness, and nothing will now do, but the keenest and moat absorbing excite ment. And thus it i.i, that while with all our improvements nnd discoveries, with the won derfnl march of science, and the many triumphs of civilization, the span of life is rather dimin^ ished than extended. There are few who liu- ger ou the stage at three score years and ten, add the number, it may be feared, is constant¬ ly diminishing. The reason is palpable and plain. Wo neglect or forget the experieuce of by-gone sages. We disregard the teachings of wisdom. We turn a deaf ear n the admoni¬ tions of even death himself. The philosophy of moderation is constantly violated. We yearn, aud grasp, nnd clutch, and thus we strain and snap the springs of existence. How few are there among the sons of men who can praciico a spirit of content! How few who adapt their tastes and expenditures to their means ! How few who pause calmly at somo critical point on the road of life, and determine their future course in a spirit of common sense, not to say of enlightened wisdom ! All more or less shut their eyes to the truth. All yield to some de¬ lusion. All permit themselves to be self de¬ ceived. And thus it is that errors are com¬ mitted, that dilemmas are encountered, that suff^.Tiug is experienced, and that much of life itself is exhausted. "A sober life," according to an eminent author, "'implies moderation in all things. It constats in moderate eating, in moderate drinking, and in the moderate en¬ joyment of all tho pleasures of this world—iu keeping the mind moderately nnd constantly employed, in cultivating the affections moder¬ ately, in avoiding extremes of heat and cold, ami in shunning excessive excitement, either of boily or of miud." This ia the doctrine, the real philosophy. But how difficult it is to practice! The rich caunot or will not, for theJr means and temptations are soaduodant. The poor cannot, for they often lack the essentials and are com¬ pelled lo overtask as well he body and the miud, iu order to secure the actual necessaries of life. The middle classes wiil not, for they are constantly seeking and striving to be ranked among the rich. And ao, too, the ambitious, the avaricious, the selfish and the Tain. All are absorbed by aome passsion or pursuit. All aro discontented or anxious, and thua the beauty, the duty and the philoso¬ phy of moderation are neglected, disregarded, mocked or Tiolated. In ordinary afi'aira, a daily account is kept of the receipts and ex¬ penditures, nnd thus a sortof check aod balauce iu a financial point of view. But how seldom do we extend the aystem to the all-important matters of health and life, mental equipoise and social employment. In other words, how rarely, aa the barque of life floata or tosses along the sea of time, do we tako a thoughifnl observation, and so direct our future course that the voyage may not only be proaperoua. but tbe destined port be reached. On, wildly, blindly, on;! seems to be the spirit which ac¬ tuates tbe many, while moder.ation, we repeat, is contemned and discarded, and all its admira¬ ble teachings ure given to the wind. And yet the moderate man is not only the wise, but in a great majority of cases, ho is the contented, the happy, the prosperous and the long lived. many such tlieir lot is their fate; or is imposed as a necessity from whioh there is no escape, and for these there is some excuse for the loss of health und life. But what shall be said of those who make no efl'ort to ameliorate their condition, or of that still more culpable class, wbo from mere indolence suffer their bodies to waste nway, to sink into premature old age— actually paying a premium for crooked spines, humped backs, round shoulders, attenuated limbs and drooping head! Such persons are guilty ofa species of suicide which, inasmuch us it ia more deliberate, may be equal'y if not nitre criminal than when the "brittle thread" is severed iu an instant by the victim of mis- fnrtiine or delirium. Ill Germany (he old men thought that they saw the youth degenerating botb physically und HDciaUy» and after severe study and ma¬ ture reflection, recommended by eloquent op- peals through the public prints the adoption of vocal nnd gymnastic exercises as character¬ istics of the German race. In a short time, gymnastic and vocal socielioa were organized throughout the wbole extent ofGermany, which have reaulted in a highly favorable rovolution in the physical condition of tho peopU>. It is really necessary for proper and healthful exer¬ cise that one should be provided with parallel bars, &c., for there arc many things at hand tbat may be substituted fnr them which can be made with no expense or trouble cquallj' efficient. Flat irons, it is suggested by a con¬ temporary, can be used to develope the mus¬ cles of the arms and chest, and u r.ipe to serve the same purposes for the lower limbs. If auch simple exercises, were practiced daily within doors and in the open air hy the youth of the country, there wonld ^¦oon be a diminu¬ tion in the many defects which mar the appear¬ ance and impair the heallh of the people. JOB PRINTIISG OF ALL KINDS, From tbe Iiargeat Foster to the SmalleBt Cara, DONE AT THIS OFFICE, in the BKST STYLE, with groat dispatch, iind at ih. J^- HANDBILLSfortJieF&Ieof ItEALOr Pi;nflO>JAi. PnofEUTi, printed on from ONK to THUEK HOURS NOTICE. DOT 16-tf.50 JAMES BliAGK, ATTOKNBY AT LAW.—Office in Eaat Kins Btroat, two doors ahoTe the Lancaster Connty Hotal. [""ar U ly-16 INLAND INSURANCE AND DEPOSIT COMPANY, OJice—Corner of Centre Square and South Queen street, Lancaster, Pa. CAPITAI/, $125,000. C>l3L«'3r-tor I»on>o-txi.o-l- ''pHliS Company coQtinues to insure _| aga ust Loss by Firo, aud receive Iloney on De- poHit, lietti^ins interest as heretofore. DIRECTORS: Dr. H. E. MUHLENBERG, President. Tnoa. Zell, Jacob M. Loko, S. W. P. Botd. Jonx A. HiEsTASD, John Stver, HESRYMiLLKa, David Bender, Peter Martin, David Haktman, John W. Jackgon, Philip Arndt, Daniel Good, KUDOLPH P. KAUCH, Secretary and Treaaurer. Juno6 "^ Lancaster SAvi-foa Institction, > June 2d. 1865. i THE annual election for Trustees of tills loatitutioD, will ba lield nt tho Bankiug'^oufle on SATURDAY, July Vtli, 1855. between tlio hours of 6 and 8 P. M. CHAS. BOOGHTER, Treosnrcr. jnne 6 ^ tc.27 House, Slgrn and Oruauicutal PAIIVTIWG. West Orange Sireet, nearly opposite Moravian Chuixh, Laneaster. SW. TAYLOll, Agent, thankful for • tlio past favorti, respcctfuily informs bis frienda and tbo public iu geueral, tti.at baviug flulBhed bla cou¬ tract iu painting Uic Kew Court Home, be in uon* more fully prepared to receive, and execute all ordcrti for House fainting, ofevery dcscripttoo, vtitb debpntch, in a workmanlike manner, and, be tmnts, to tbo ealisfac- tloiiofall who may favor hira wilb a call. 23^ Having made arrangements Avitb Mr. JOHN L. EEFFEK, whoso capability b3 a Sign Painter are too well known to require comment, every deEcrlplion of Sign nnd Ornamental Paintiog will be dono promptly and well. 4ni-i:7 S. W. T. Who 13 SiiK?—"Who is alie?" in tbe etiriy morning gliding through the city's Btreete, with almost "flying fee*.," mid. just ere twilight, re- turniiif; over her morning path, but with sUiw er gnit. A veil hides her face, aud sbe may Vie heaiitil'nl or not She pauats not by the way, aud is ahnost ever compJiuionles.^ on that night lunl Uidrning walk, whicii she follows daily, and tor years—olten but a mere child and ?&]¦ dom olti. as if age was not vouchsafed to her— and all the paaser-by asks, if lie chance to oh- Korve her, ih, "who is sho?" She Is a "sewing girl," who.so lot misfortune or poverty has cast in a thorny and perilous way. Sho toils for a livelihood, and the wages ofher toil arc .small. Aye, and she toils for others, too—mayhap for the widow, whoae half orphan she le—mayhap for brother or sister, young, or fe?ble, or pros¬ trate on the bed of suffering and sorrow. Sho is a young toiler, and the sunshine of the pleas¬ ant days would be sweet to her on the scliool- path, or happily busied in a comfortable home; but it seeras only to mock her with its return of light, eummoning her to hard, ungenial tasks. Happier world'schild, or woman, or man, on whom peace and plenty smile, speak not harsh¬ ly of that sid-faced, toiling girl! She has burden enough to bear on this earth; and humble as she seems, her path at the end may be crowned with fairer rewards than fall to the children of fortune and pride. Who is she— and who ore they that "Come like «baJowd—sciy depart!" Behold their history and their epitaph.- AliDUS J. WEFF, ATTORNEY AT LAW.—Office witb B. A. SH.;EPi'EE,E8q., South "WcHt corner of Cen¬ tre Square, next door to Wager's Wine Store, I>anca.ster, Pa. may f)-ly-23 I. US. ELIiltlAKER. ATTORNEY AT LAW.—Office in North Duke nt, dlructly opposite tbe New Court ilou.HtJ. Luncuater. Penn'a , nov l-ly-48 JOHIV A, UIESTAIVD, ATTOBNEY AT LAW.—Office in Hast King Btreet, ouar the New Court House. majlT tf-24 D. W. PATTERSON, ATTOllNEY AT LAW.—West King St..Lancaeter. ALSO:—CommiB8io^l;rnI¦Deco^ Snd to taku Deposition" for Uie StRtcrof Ohio und Delaaware, jan261b53tf- JOHN B. LIVINGSTON, ATTORNEY AT LAW.—Office witb .ViithanielEIlraiikep, KBq., North Uuke atrec Jjancaatej, I'a^ . i^fabB-tf-lO J G! MOORE, SuEGEON Dentist, e contioue.x to practice his profession iu itH vari onjf brancben, on the mOBt approved priuciple. Ofllci- S. E. Corner of North, lioeen and Orange btreuta. N. B.'—Entranco 2d door on Orange Htreet. dec 'ilT ly-4 illa!iclpl)ia 'Mmtfistmtnls, TO FARMERS. WE respeotfully inform our cuBtom era that we have REDUCED THE PRICE ofour 15IPROVED3UPEE PHOSPHATE OF lIXIE. and warrant it to bo fully equal, if uot aupetior to any HOld by ua in furnjer yearu. It atford:! ua pleajiuro to Etate tbat the bigb nb&ractcr of thiit article Is WELL ESTADLianzD, and tbe testimony of l^ARMERd who boTO UBcd it, proves it to be the cheap¬ est aud moBt peniiancnl Fertiiiier that U now known. OurfrieuiU are iciiueuted to call and examine it, aad receive a paupbluL dedcrlptive of ltd qualiLioK, uKeu, kc, A liberal deduction made to DEALIiHB.—A 0 E N T a WANTED. GUANO. A full eupply of Ko. 1. OovEB^^^E.s¦T P£nirviA.f GujLto on haud. Also, Mexicam Gca:(o, Poeidiiette and Plas¬ ter for sale at the lowest Uarket rntcu. ALLKN ti riEEDLES. 23 South Wharves and 35 Soutb Water St., lirHt Store above Chesnnt St.. PhUadelphia. ICj'For sale by RUSSELL i: ItARR, Lancaster. " A. K. & A. L. WiTilEH, Paradine. Jan 31 6ni-e LANCASTER AND EPHRATA TURIVKaii.i:: road COi>I1>AIVY ''j'^HE Buard of Managers of s:iid Coni- _JL pany bave tbln day declared a Bividend of 76 cenlu ou each bbare of Etock, payable at tbu oillco uf Juo. K, Ueed k Co., in Lancaster, on or alter lbe ISib )n.st. JEj*By order of lbe Board, June6-3l-y7 HENRY SHREINER, Treas'r. Afotice to UuutcFH and Fishers. A LL persons mc forbid trespassing on ¦*^^ the lauds of the underiiigned, iu East Lauipctor townsliip, for the purpoBc of IiUQtiiig orlisbiug ; as the law wili be enforced Bgninst all ho fouud witiiout rea¬ ped to purriont!. Jobn Stoulfer, Henry 0. Kendig, I'eter Stouffer, Jobu Landi.s Amoa BuKhnug, Benj. Uroll", Benj, .M. Groll', Isaac Orofi", Johu Barlow, Jer. WhltHon, Br. Oibbous, Thoa. J. Swiugler. June 6-lit-27 JVew Mcnonilc llyniii Hook. MUBUAY & STOKK have just re- ceived direct from tliepublisborr:, a large supply of tbe new edition of tbe Menonlte Hymn Book. Tliis edition contains sixtoeu pages of Germau bymus more tbau former cditiuuii. I'rirt: 4u eents. June 6-tf-27 MDRRAY k STOEK. Sarc-Uarbor and Stifiqnehauna Turnpike-Koad Company. ^I^Hl'j Oomuiissioners appointed lo open \ hooks and receive Kubsjcriptiona to Ibo capital stock of the Safe-Hiirhor and Su.iqucbiiuua turnpike road Com¬ pany, will attend for tbat purp(J^e ut tbe public bouse ul A. y. Glllett, iu i;afe-EIarb.ir, ou Siiturdav, Juiirt lUtb, IMo, from 10 I" 5 o'clock, P. .\[. 2t-27 BV ORDER OF THE COilMIfeSfO.VEirS. Afoticc (o Farnies'sj. "^HK attcution of Farmers is called to McCOHMlCK'S l.MI'ROVED IIM.N BEAM REAP- I>'aAKD MOWING .MACHINE Fi'i; 1S.1J. Tbis Ma- cbiiie bas beeu lurnovKii uud udaptpd to tbe \k'itiiu ot thid coiiiinuiiUy, esiiecially iu niowlLij:, ibi: llug^r.-i beiug made of .lIuUeubLo linu and i'uiuied, s,i aa lo pi'iii-lrale tbo Onost and thickest gra??b ; warritutcd wilisfactory or tbe Machine cku be returued PRICE—fiiaS.UO cash, or $5.'..00 Oa^b, balauco at 5 mouths Willi Inierest, Farmers nic CAUTIONED ngaiust purclinsing REAP¬ ERS infringing McCormick's Paieul. a.** tbey are etiually IJttble ivilh Ibe inauurai'lurer, for ibc Puieut Fee. CASTINGS uud SICKLES always ou baud. ICJ'Apply personuilv or bv mail \o ' RICU.VRD T. ELKINTON, Nu. 63 SoHib Wbarve.s Philadelphia. n3"-\geutit wnulcdM.sell ibe vboveMachiue. iu:^J-4m23 HCMOVAI^. DR. S. WELCHENS respectfully an- uonncestohisMcnds and tho public in general, tbat having abandoned hia intention of leaving Lan¬ caster, he removed his offlee on tbe Ist of Apnl last, half a Bi;[uare farther north, in tba aame street, to the house directly opposite Plukertou tc Slaymaker'a Hard¬ ware store. In rcLuraing his grateful acknowledgcmenta to his nu¬ merous patruus anu friends, for the great encourage¬ ment beld uut to Uim to remain, and alao for the very dacteriug testimoulals otfered lu regard to tho integrity and beauty of his work, he takes ploosure In stating to tbe public ibat be has taken Into hia pracUce a new and improved method of MOUNTING TEETH upun Atmospheric i'lates of eitber Gold, Platina, or Silver, prices varying ac¬ cordingly, to anit the wanta and circum¬ stances of tbo patient. This mode of operating snnnonnta many cmbarra-'^fi- iugdilllcuUics aud disadvantages, witb wMcb dentiUi bave heretofore been obliged lo contend, in order to ren¬ der their vrork perfectly comfortable, aervicable aue pleuaut to tliotievfha are obliged to wear arttlicial teetb. I'leaae call at tbo olHca of Ur. ti. Welchens, Ho. 34, Kramph's buildings, aud cxamiue specimena of hiiplatt work, lo which he directs bis host oiforls. marHl tf-16 TO UOKJS£KEEP£RS. F. B. GILBERT, MANUFACTURER OF BEDDING, Hair, Moss, Huak, and every kiud of MATTRASS. A LABGB A5B0BTUSNT OP Mattrasses, Beds and Feathers, Alwujii on haod. Nos. 38 and 40 Ridge Avenue, below Callovi. hill Street, Philadelphia. march 28 3iq-17 |)i)Uat)£lpl)ia 2liiDertiscincnts. M^ 1.EAT1IER. FRITZ, HENDRY & CO., No. 29 North Third Street, Philadelphin. OROCCO jManupactuiikhs, <!i:i:- ^.^_ RiER.-) and Importers OF Fi:i:Ni:ii c.u.f .-^kin-, .ml dealers in Reu and Oak Sole Le.vtiii;r k Kic:-. fab21 ^^ _ _ ly.l-' REETX: li.KiVIGIST, (Successor to Hartley tJ- Kniyht.) Bedding and Carpet narclioirsr, No. 148 South Second Street, five door-t nhovf Spruce street, Philadelphia, WHERE he keeps constantly on h:in'l a full anaortment ot every arlic'li- hi liii Un- of bUBiUHEH. Featherfl, Feather Bads, Tateut Sprius .M.'iJin----.-. Curled Mair. .Mors, t:orn Hu-k andr^truw .Matlr.' - Be«, VelvetTapfiBtry.Tupfi.'itry. Briis?(.'lH..'t-i'Iv. Ingrain, Venitian, Liat, Hag itud lli-nip Carpetings. Oil Cloth.i. Cimtt.n at- tingd, Cocoa and Spanish .Matiiut;H, Floornnil (jtaif Druggets,flearth Uug:f, Uoor Mats, 'rabii-iind Pianfl Covera, towhich bp rfKpiiKtfull;/ invit.-.-' ib-'.t- tentlon of pnrcbaflers, u.-i 1 l;-'.! T Gas be aGentlemak.—Oneverj^ frequently bfciii's the remark made, tbat sucb»;anil aui;h a mfincanbe n genileman wben be pleases."— Now, when onr reader next bears the expres¬ sion madu uae of, let hira call to miud tbe fol¬ lowing : He who "can be a gentk-man wben be pleas¬ es," never pleases to be anything else. Cir¬ cumstances may, and do, every day in life throw men of cultivated minds and refined hab¬ its intothe society of their inferiors, but while, with tbe tact and readiness that is their es¬ pecial prerogative, tbey make themselves wel¬ come among those with whom tbey bavo few if any sympathies in common, yet never by ac- cideot do they derogate from that bigh stan¬ dard which makes them gentlemen. So, ou the olber band, the man of vulgar tnatesaiid coarse propensities nuiy sJmilate, if he be able, the outward habitudes of society, mpriikiiis with practiced iniomnion, nrni bow¬ ing witii well-studied grace; yet he \s lui more a gentlemau in his thought und fueling, ilinii i.s thu tinseled actor wbo struts the boards, tlu* monarch his coHtume would bespeak him. Thia "being the gentlemim when he likes," is Imt Ihe mere performance ofthe cbnnicicr. It has all the swell of the stage and the footlights uli'out it, and never can for amoment be niis taken by one who knows theworld. A cloak too large canuot be gracefully worn by a small man. I coi HIKAM K. 311LLKU, > Doineslic Attachmeul. vs. I April Term. lSJ:t. ADAM F. Dll'FEU.\Cn. ) >V. i:il. the Court of Common Picas for the couuty of Lanc.i5lcr.—JamcB M'Pbail, Henry Mu;.- Eolman and John K, Kcueagy, TniPtccM under tlio above writ of Domeatlc ait:ichuieui, did ou the 2Uth day of May, IMS, lilo In lho ullice of tlie I'lolb on otary of tbu' Baid Court, tboir Kepwit of di.'-trlbuliou. Notice is berebygiven tonll persons interested lu tlic said Keport, thai tbe baid Court bavo appointed the 27tb day of June, 1855, for the conllrnmtiou thereof, uuless exceptions be Hied. Attest, J. BOW.MAS, Proth'y. Proth'ys Oifice.Lun. may 2*} -11-^6 MiilwrigSit -^Vantctl. ''pWENTY-FIVJK MlLLWRKJIIT.S Will fiinl M. steady and constant employment for niue or twelve months, by aa early appiicatiou lo tho subscribera',resi¬ ding iu lbe boroufili of Strasburg, Lancaster county.— Liberal "Wnge-! will be given to conipi;[out uud stcadv meu. MATTHEW BAKT1I0L03IEW, ' may 30-4t- 2G JOHW McGAUTNKV. DU. ELY PARRY, Dentist, would announce lo bid patron-s aud tho public generally, that hia duties aa Pro¬ fessor iu tbe Pbiiadelpbia College of Dental iurgery only occupioa his timo from the Urbt of riovombur until the iirsl of March, aud from lbe llrat of March uutil the last of October be will devote bla time to lhe Practice of his I'rofcBdion, at hie re.>iidcnce, So. ati East Kiug street, Lancaater, und tbat be is well hupplicd with instruments, materiala and appli- ancea to tticilitute the peri'ormauco of the moat compli- caied Dental operations iu a satisfactory manner. His atock conslMta in dart of over thirteen thousand pivot, plate aud gum TEETH, of which ho ¦will iusori partial or full liCtii in the moat serviceable manner; and he olt'era lo aell Teetb by tbe hundred for the accommo¬ dation of others^ ^ "31-27 A CAKU. Dll. S. WKLOHliiNrf respectfully an- nouncea lo hia friends and the public generally, that be baa purcbased lhe eutire slock and interest of tho Drug and Medicine Sture, formerly owued by Dr. Zeigler, in >'ortb Uuei;u street, directly op¬ posite tho Fraukliu Ilouse. In cumbluiug the Drug husinesa with tbo practicu o. Dentistry, it is nut hia design to bave one interfere wiib tbe general interest ofthe other; but bythe employ¬ ment of n careful iiud judicious baud, bo loels thai a.io- periuteudaucG of tbe Intereats of tbe store can be reu- dered, aud yet the practice of bis profession strictly at¬ tended too in all its detail. He ivould therefore solicit a continuance of tbe liboral patrouage tbe sture lias herelofore bad, aud reBpecliuUy aak tbose of bis frieud both In the city and couuty wb^i may waut Drugs or Medicines to call. H is bis di.'sigu to keep a large aud well selected assortmeut of Uriig> aud Chemicala of every descriptiou, and warrauled l.i he ofthe very best the market cau atl'ord. Those who wish bis Deutal tserviceij, will plea.ie call at bis oilice, Ho. 31 Kmmpb'H lluildiugb, Sorih Queeu Blreet april 18-2U-lf ^ A CARD. FKS. H. OAKrENTEK, Survii>or and Conveyancer, haa opened an Offlco near the :5outb East corner of i'ortb Queen aud Orauge Street, oue doui east of Metzgar's Shoe Storo, Lancaster city, where bu cuu be fouud ut all limes, from G o'clock, A. M. to It o'clock, P. M.,'uuleas profeasioually abaeut. Ho llalter.- bimaelf tbut after muuy years practice, in tbo oilice u. bis brother, Wm. Carpenter, Kaci-, be will be able to dc any business entrusted to bim with accuracy aud des¬ patch. 33='-^ share of public patronage is rer^pectfullj solicited. . Lancaater. April 18,1855. 3"m-20, JuBLicea and WM. B. TAYLOR'S niES'S AIU BUYS' OLU'l'llING S'POBE, South West corner of Second and Docic Sis., PHlLADELl-HIA. ''PO TUE urnzENci oi,' lancas- Jl CASTEIi;—You arc respeclfuUy Invited to exam- iee tbe exicnsive and varied assortmeut of Men's and Hoys' Utothing, at tlio bioro of the subscriber, where may always be found a full supply of Ready-MaiJe Clo¬ thing, of uU siied, made by experienced workmen and of tLe very besl luateriul, lhe make, lit, and appearand: aurpoiiscd by no establishment in tbe city. Please pre- icrve ihis notice, aud give mo acall, and flt out your- aelves and sons lu a mannerworthy of you and them.— Kemomber lhe tioalb Weal corner of Second and Dock Streets. WM. B. TAYLOli. april 11 ly-19. Bnrloiv's IndJj^o lIluc. BARLOVV'ri INDiGO BLUE, is now well establiahed a.i tbe best article ever offered for liLUEixu Clothe.'). It Is entirely free from acid or any¬ thing iuJuriuBioibo linest articles. All Housekeepers who have uot uaed M wiU find it much cheaper uud leas troublu tban Indigo or uny arti¬ cle out. The great deuaud for il bus brought out aoveral Imitations. Storekeepera aud consumers will be careful [0 get BE.SJAMI.V BAui-ow'a, put up at Aiippup Wiltbeh- (lEB'sDitCG Stohe, Xo. 1G9 Sorth Second atreet, Puila- pELpniA. Storekeeperacan gettheir suppliesfrom lbe iJrocors and Druggiots they deal wilh, at prices that will pay tbem a good prori:. Drugs, Chemicals, Paints, Varnishes, Dye Stuff's, §-c., ^'C, Willi a tirat-rate aaaortment of everything iu ilic line, -lorekeepers. Physicians aud Manutacturera aupplied at reasonable mica. aLFKED WILTBERGEK, J>ruggist, ^o. 109, X'orlb Second atreet, Philadelpbia. apnl -l Gm-lS CUARLES B. KEEN.] [ALPBED TAYLOR. KEEN & TAYLOR, STOCK & EXOHANGE BROKERS, No. 101 WALNUT STBEET. i>aiEi.Aut:L.i'iiiA. SAIUVEEi ^r. PEPfi'EU, SUCCE8S0K to HENKY J. i»EI'- PKRSiSOM. ¦WatchcB, Jewelry & Silver "Waie, No. 175 Chesnut St., (opposite the Slate Houi.^, Philadelphia. ;,. iBliy 21 ly-'.;ti CARTExisG SELLINa OFF BELOW COHT. I'IIIE subscriber, detennined to clu.'io M. hia Carpet baslncss, olTera filatiog of all the new etylea of E.vi>L!sir Velvets, " Tapestbt, " buussels, " Lnobai-vs A-vd 3 r " \*KMTIA>*3. Together with an immenflc stock of Ingrain 3 i'ly .ml Vuuciiau C.\rpeta of domestic uiauufaciur-r, Uil i i'.-li 3talr lloda. Druggets, Shci:pSkiu-i aud Coc-:i, -M.n--. .\:.- tc, below cost, Ior cash. Now ia ibi; iiiii>; i-ir iMig.iiU' P.UBEKTD. WALlvEK, 100 Chestnut Sl., below eighth, soutb bid*.-, t-bil.'d'a. 1 Ibo I I Mad.; by tb';'.¦..¦lel-ra \. ted Jy|;u Iji-jial.'V .-. 3Plt, j Sous, Lii::l;iiiii. mar 11 1-1^ Cheap IVatclicH, Jewell')-, Al.c. '|»HE iiubseriber would most re.^iiei;tl"ul -^ ly ictorm hia frienda and ibi; |.u!i.ic k<'"-T'liiy thnt hu husrelitud hi.-rturitiu a miiLiii-r v.in.li i-uvc evidtnci-of bis dtjtermiiial.iiii tn kf.i. p:ii:i-Aitb tbi:i "Progrepeivo age." llf hopes by pirna .iii<:ii.ii.>i to bupi^e^a iu connexion wilb hisincrea.-tij i:,':iiiii>-t Ii.r gratifyingthe wanth of tbi; public, to m*:ji;i •-¦I'l.iiuu- ance of theirpatronage. which lia.-^ h.;rftiiH'M-1 i; .-o hberally bestowed upon llim. Hb ba.-. ju.^t .-.-(ii-ivfd a Dfff and c.\t<;n.-iv«: asKiTLiiifiit -! Witicliis. ...^.N J«wclry.SiWtr W'un-and Ki.iicy 0 i:. hliiib £t^ will be disponed ot at tb'.- loivst c^i.b |.ric'.H. CMlfc aud warrauted to render tiaii,-la'-liiit. N,Il._Watch.-sa(id.J''Wi-lry r<.'|i:iir''l an i •¦cirraui gd .I.A.\iK.'> i;. Hi.'i-KK Nft r2ri -indsL .ti.;:<.H .\J.irk.t. Ibibi July 20 Ij -•;: H E F E R TO TnOH. E. t'aA.vKLis, Esq., Samuel PAnKF., Es'i., Dll. J. W. llAMMO.YU, .1. W. WEiit, E^it., HO.N, N. IlKOW.fE, Tuo^. BlUULK &. Co., Tii"^. S. Taylor, Es't., W. \. I'ouTEB, Esq., Laucaater. . IlarrlFiburg. . Pbil.id'a. Gm-I3 Triniisiiii^s ! Trliiiniiiigs !! ^Pll E .subscribers cull the attention of To La-wyers, aciiveners. Aldermen. B L A i^i K S . IVoticc to BriUgc nuilders. SEALED Froposiils for building a Bridge across Beaver Creok, at or uear Banicl Herr's (Peiiuea) residence, iu Stnishurg township, will be received at the Commis.'iloiicra' Olilce uuiU '2 o'clock, P.M., on MCNDAYtbelllbday of .luuoue.^t. ^i^Tbe plau aud spccificaliuua cau he seeu al said of¬ fice al any time previous to tho leiliug. .lOn.N >L HIE3TA>'D, PHILIP GEIST. WILLIAM C. WORTH, may 23-ld-'25 Coiumiasiouor.-*. Soap Fat and Tallow Wanted. '^I^IIE higbcst prices will bo paid tor JL. Soap rat and Tallow, cither in cash or tnide, by the suhacribcratbisSoap aud Caudle Factory, iu Soutb Princesticci, near tUu Pactoricn. may 2J-ly-2J CHRISTIAN* A3I5TUTZ. Summer Stabled Horses. UoraPB which haTe nothmg hut dry hay nnd grain all the year throngh, must suffer both in comfort imd iu condition. Like other do¬ mestic animals they relish variety in their food; and the tendeuoy of such variety to im' prove the coudition of animalt; has been ao of¬ ten noticed as to have passed into the common proverb—' Change of pasture makea fat calves. Truths of this kind'seem to be very general¬ ly forgotten by some of those who have occa¬ sion to keep their horses in the stable throngh¬ out the whole year. Many eeem to forget or ignore tho fact, that while dry hay and un¬ bruised grain maj he the handiest and least troublesome feed for tbeir horses, these useful servants are thereby curtailed of comfort and prevented from enjoying that amount ofgood health and of ability to endure labor, which they might obtain by a somewhat different mode of feeding. Various methods might be employed to se¬ cure some variety in the food of summer-stabled horses according to the varying circumstances of their ownera. Boots, corn for soiling, grasses cut green, mashes and other things might be oobastonally introduced as agreeableand whole¬ some changes. At the present time, when hay and grain are so high, economy aa well aa the cotnfort of the horse might be consulted by some occasional change of food, and where nothing can conveniently be had but bay and grain, something desirable might be affected, both OS regards expense and the health and comforts of horses, by catting the hay quite finie and steaming it occasionally, and by grind¬ ing or bruising the grain. Hay cut and grain grttuod will go much farther titan in the natural state. ' We know that a horse may be kept in yotfd condition on a dally ration of three pecks of'cut hay and four quarta of Indian meal; and if the yearly amonnt of snch an allowance is Calculated it will be found that it requires abbut a bushel of com per. week, or fifty-two bushels per year, and one ton of hay (which ehjiuld be of the very beat quality) for feeding a horse dunng a whole year. This is economic ca// and if boiling water should be poured over apart of the bay occasionally and the meal with a little salt added to it, it would give a Tai^iy and a degree of anccnlence to the other¬ wise dried.feeilr vbiph .woold make it more rel¬ ishing and wholesome. ^ Wa think tbia hint, if practically applied, wiQ prove.of serriGe both to nujQ and beast-r^. boih:to Ijoraes and theirpwnfirs/",Wemay add Kei e.^'beiiig ftfrgotfen in.itA propel-'place/ that' ho|BeB will sometimes preferl^itM ti^hAi^'iit rata bigas toraw onM, ftnd hmI will make Thk Duties of a Mother.—Sbe should fae firm—gentle—kind—alwaya ready to attend to her child. She should never laugh at him—at what he doea that ia cunning—never allow him to think of hia looks, except to be neat uud clean in all his habits. She should teach him to obey a look—to re¬ spect those older than himself; she should nev¬ er make a command, without seeing that it is performed in the right manner. Never apeak of a child's faults, or foibles, or repeat his remarks before him. It is a sure way to spoil a child. Never reprove a child when excited, nor let your tone of voice be raised wheu correcting him. Strive to inspire love,not dread—respect, not fear. Remember you are training and ed¬ ucating ft soul for Eternity. Teach your child to wait upon itself,—to put away a thing when doue with it. But do not forget that you once were a child. The griefs of little ones are too often neglected ; they arc great for them Bear patiently with them and never in any way rouse their anger, if it can be avoided. Teach a child to be useful, whenever opportunity may offer. Duties of a Wiie and Housekeeper.-Youv first and highest duty is to make Home happy for your husband, aud how to make it so ahould be your continued study. lie always ready to receive him when ho en¬ ters the house—^youraelf dressed neatly—-the houae in order—the meal ready. Never complain or fret, but if aaything troubles you, aak advice in a cheerful tone,— not a u^oe-beffone, ahuiied one, as if life's trials had all been dealt to you, and everybody else was in comparison happy. To make Home happy, let the house wear a cheerful look and the meal be inviting. This will require no little caro and experience. Be frugal—and neat. Be ever ready to ^oblige him, even if it puts yourself to considerable inconvenience. Ilo may have found faults in you of which he nev¬ er dreamed, and a wiUing apirit will aid ma¬ terially in effecting these fromhis mind. It is your duty to make and keep friends. It may promote your husband's prospects in life and oan do you no harm ; whereas it will be of much service to your children as they grew older, and may ofteu be a source of con¬ solation and happiness for yourself. ON thu uudersigi c Oflice. next, the fl.iUncas1er Co., l^xclian: first Jiiy ut" Muruti igucd, under tho llrm of JOIliN K. KEKD, A will opeu uu otllci! at itiu comer of E.\ST KINU Jc DUivE lit., (near tbe Courl Uuiise) Lancanter Cuy, ior the purpose of receiviog deposited, makiug loans aad purchason, buying and selliug real estate, atuiiks, &c., lor uther:), cDllectiug claims, kc, &c. The cash capital of tbu Drm is $20,000, and ihc panics are individually liable for itn obligutiuus. Tbo UHual rftles of interest Trill be pabi by special agreement ou depeultes for'more Ihau 30 days. JOHN lv. KEED. AMOSS. HENDEUSOX, DAVID SUULTZ. jan 31 lv-9l ISAAC K. UlESl'liR. FOK SALIi:. AFIRST-RA'i'Ji H0CKA\VA1\ lor one or two borbca. Enguiro at LeamnuV Taveru, West King at., Lancaster. AliM- G. BliENA'ER. jan 24 tf-S E£.E€X10JV AOTIGE. AN Election for odc President and six Managers of tho Lancaster Gas Company, will be beld ni the ofQce of Baid Company, on aiOIs'DAV the Iltb day of JDHE, 1S55, betweeu the bour-s of 10 A. 5L and a P. M. C. HAGER, President. may 23 4t-'23 NOTICE. STOCK of Store Goods for sale, and Store Stand for rent, iu Morgan town, Berks county, on the Couc-toga turnpike, aud on tbe route located for the Cornwall and Pboinixvillo railroad. For particu¬ lars call on the subscriber. D. 31. BUCKWALTER. JIOBOASTOW.v.J^lay 21,1555^ 4»t-26 A COW STRAYED on the 23d inst., from the place ofthe subscrlher, in Salisbury township, Lan¬ caster couaty, about 3 miles uorlh of tho Gap.and I mile fioulU of the White Horse Tavorn, Tho said g——.-^^ COW Isof a red color witha wbite face; lsfi?^^S with calf, and 1» about C years old, llCittife ICl™-^ reasioflabla reward ¦vrill be paid by tbe**""***" undersigDcd owner for any iDformation, ibat Tvill lead to the recovery of said Cow. CHARLES MILLER- may 30 .^'i-^fi FOK SAK.E. KC\ SHARES Lancaster Bank Stui:k. f_}j^ 75 do, Lan. Savings Institution do. 4u shareb CoDcstoga Steam ^liU Stock. 12 do. Lnncastcr Couuty Bank do. J. F. SHRODER & CO.. _roay SO-tf-Si^ Agents. Inland Insurance and Bepostt Comp'y, OJfice in Centre Sqaare, fonnerly Hubley's Hotel. IN the Court of Common Picas of Lan¬ caster county. In tho matter of tbo Cb.ir-) Trust Book No. 2. Page 147; erof tbe Inland Safely iMu-V and uow April 30tb, IS.J^, tnal Insurance Company. ) petitiou of lbe Presidaut aud Directors of tbe lulaud Safely Mutual iUKurance Co. praying the Court to change lho Corporate namo, style and title of said Company, presented by Jobn A. Hies¬ tand, Esq., whereupon tfio Court grant aud allow said Company on aud after the 1st day of .Tune next to be named and styled tha "Inland Insurance uud Deposii Company, as prayed for. Siinic day petition filed. In testimony wberoof, I baro boreunto set my band and the seal of said Court, tliis firnt day of May, 1SJ5. may 30-3t-26 J. BOWMAK, Prothonotary. AT the New uud Cheap Book Store on the corner of Market and Ceutre Squares, will al¬ ways be fouud a complete asaorimenl of BLANKS, ai the loweiit prices, such as Parchment of all sizes. Parch¬ ment Deeds, Parchment Puper and Paper Deeds, Mon- gagos, Bonda and Warrants, kc. Dectanitiona of evory lurm and variciy ; Poweru of Attorney, Promia.-iyrj .Voles, Drafts, Landlords' A'otices, Justices and MjKia- ir^tes' Blanks, kc, kc. Our assortment of Letter, Cai. aud Xota I'apera Wu feel conHduui connot be burpaa:i,-ii as far as variety, tiuality and cheapness is couceiucd.— Parlicular attimliou paid to lbe selection of Ladle? Plaiu and Faucy Stationery, wbich we aro prepared l" sell as low as auy houso in tbe city. Wo aro just per¬ fecting arrangements lo mauufacture Picture l-'nimco o. llm iiio-,l d'-sirable patterna at low prices, aud ou sbor< uolicp. Uur varietyof Fino Pictures is allractiiig cou- piderahle atientiou. Thoae who bave a laate lur ibi beautiful aud rellued wuuld not go amiss by calliug auu c-xamining tbeir stock. We never cbarge fur a slglit ui our cultectiou. Therefore, all that admire, call aud Wi: We aim to plea--ie aud iu that plcusiug hud plejisure. HIHAM VOUXG & LO., may SO-tf-^ti Lancaster, Pu. THE PE01*L.E'ai I500K STOKE. ACUUiCE assortmeuE of new and valuable DOOKS bas just been received at tht- above well kuown stand, and are olfered at publisbcr- lowesi prices. Thauklul for past favors, the subacribci MMiild ropectfully a-^k a cunlluuauco of lho same, uuo aa cxauuuaiiou of his stock uf miscellaupou;- bogka, tt'hicb i> the largest iu town. Alt, Scouery and Philosophy iu Europe—beiujj fng- meul' -leleciedfroui the portfuliu of tbe lute LIuracc Dur- uey Wallace, of Philadelphia. Lectures on Euglii>h Literature—From Chaucer lo Teuuysou, by tbo late Proi Keed. The Liiemry Life and Correspondence of the line Cuun- lCh> of Blcsaiugion. By K. It. Madden, a moit rare and eutcrlaiuiiif; bdoji. Oniee Lee—A new book by Julia Knvanah. Auna Claytou ; or, Tho Mother's Trial. A lalo of xea life. Tho May Flower, and ether miscellaneous writings of Harriet Beecber Siowo. Ellon Norbury; or, the Trials of an Orphan. By Em¬ erson Beuuetl. Hubert Graham; a sequel to Linda, or tho Toung Pi¬ lot. By Mrs. Ueuiz. Tbe Slave of tbo Lamp; a posthumous uotcI. By William Worth. 3Iy Brother's Keeper. By lho author of DoUare and Cents. The Artist Wife and other Tales. By Mary Howitt. Men of Character. By Douglas Jerrold. I-irael Potter ; or. Fifty Years in Exile. By Herman Melville. Noctes Ambrosiana:. By Christopher North. Miscellaanca: comprisiugreviews, Icctupca and essays. By Bishop Spaldiug. Tbe Chemistry of Common Life. By Prof. Johnson. Truth and Poetry from my own life. An Autohiog- rapby of Goethe. Michaud'a History of the Crusades. By K. W. Bob- sou. Hisior>- of Spanish Literature. By W D. Ticknor. History of Horodotus. Translated by Laurent. Fine edition. History of Hungary. Finely Illustrated. Narrative of a Journey rouud tbo Dead Sea nud iu the Bible Lands,—with an accouui of the discovery of Sudum ; and Gomorrah. By F. DeSaulcy. The subscriber is agent for all tbo Magazines, both Euglisb and American, and for the priucipal literary papers. Buoks ordered at sbort nolice. Call or seud for anything you want in lho Book liue to may l(i-tf-24 W. H. SPANGLEK. North Queon tl. tlie public 10 tbeir stock of consistiui; in part of Br.-iidH. TassclB, Ribbon Trimmiug'*, Uioips Cord", Velvet Rlbbuus, Si^wiug Silk, Liueu Thread, Meiidiug Collou, Wnddiug, DrcKs Liuim^s, JJooks & EyeH. Skirt Braids, C-nib^ lltiirUil, Tootb Wash, Gloves, pool Cottou, Tidy Cotiou, French Working Cottou. " Stnmpi^d Collam, Whalebones, Buttons, Toolb k Hnlr Brusbc.-, Pearl Powder, Fancy Soaps, Hosiery, Yarni^, (niiiong wbicli aresoiiieplaincolors, suitable for Friends* wear,) Needle-worked Collars and SleeTcs, Small Ware, kc, at UTCUEU i COW.VRDS. No. 63 Norlb .Second st., above Arch, we-^t side, I'blla mar'Jl 3m-16 Saiu^l E. SluyiiiaUor, NOTE & STOOK BROKER, NO. 35 SOUTH THIRD STKi-JKT, tUflice wilb (aiiiliR.^ -v Dr.-.) l'lllLAD^.L^¦lilA. !^Hf p tl-2 ^Lf-4-.' T^ We ABE A Chocked Generation.—Children and youth should be straight. It would not te strange if to very many it had never occurred that not one man or woman in tea thousand is straight. A straight—an erect—man or wo¬ man a is curiosity. Henry Clay will ever be memorable in the eyes of all who ever saw him for this quality; and the same is alwaya par- ticulnry remarked of Andrew Jackson But how could it be otherwise tban a crooked na¬ tion ?—when, 'as the twig is bent, the tree's inclined V When I got into a school, and atay awhile, till after the first Btraighteniog up is over, the scholars seemed to me like so many branches of a weeping willow. Their backs are like the outer arch of a bow bent for use. How could it be otherwise when, with their soft bones and flexible muacles they are confined so long ? And where are their lungs ? Squee¬ zed into tfae smallest possible compass. Now, if bac three hours echool a day w^re had, and the aaholors never confined to the room but an hour at a time, all thla could bo changed.— The te&cber could explain perfectly the science of the matter, and by the mere hint, when necessary, secure compliance with the require¬ ment to sit **a8 straight as an arrow." The benefits I need not recount to those who know the human body has Inngs. ¦¦¦ "^ ¦ ¦ Lbg BaoKSH.—^Mr. £zra Commons, of West Whiteltnd; township, CbeBter county, an old >man of'over 60 years, had his leg broken on Friday, last, the 26th ult. He was on a soaff- oldicuitiBg down al forked tree, which lodged 'when ^falling,'^ When begot down fr&tn his 'tjinnold one of the limbs of the lodged tree broke, striking him on the leg with mon force Now ia tlie time for Bargains ! Cheaper than ever, at jVo. 10, lVe.it Kins St SA. DYSART & BRO., respectful- • ly inform their friendfl and thtt publie iugener- al, that they Iiave jutit returned Irom N. Vork. and Philadelpbia. with an entire new and fasb- tonabiestockof WATCHKs..lv.wKLHv.and Kancy articles, at the tollowiOR low prlceo : PullJewelled Cjold Lever Walebes, [from j-'Jo to iil50 Gold Lepine Watches, full jenelled. Irom Ij^-U to :^30 Silver Lever Watcht'S. fulIjewcUed. from $12 to $!*« Silver Lepine Watchen.jVwwiled, fnim ^8 to Jlf Gold PeuB in Silver cuiiea. from il to jioO Silvfr TeaSpoonfl, from J-l.SO to -(.a.UU per net. Clocks of nil kind.-'. irom -fl-Slito SlO.Uli ALSo new dtylep Ladiefi Dreact rhiB. K*r VAri^*. BraccIeCf. (Jold t'eucils. (.fold uud Silver Spcetauleti. Gold Keys. Tori .MiMii;is. Au. A larg I- Inl of .Accordfonh.Combs Fans, and other articlestoo niiwurouM lo mention ut-uallykt-pltn Wateti and Jewelry Storea, at leBKt"J5pi'r(;rnl. lower thuu any utht;r Store in the city. Wv iiiTiteall uur I'rie.udi, aud the public in general to ^\v-. u.-^ aoitll. "(^iiickSalefl and Small CroHts,'' ie nur mot Jamks r. UysAHT.] ISamup.l . N. B,—S. A. D. baviug; flni^lu-d bin trade witb uneof the hest workmen in the city of I'bila.klphia. heia prepared to do al Ikindti ot Wiiti-h.Ol'iek Aud Jewelry repuirlDgat the fhorteMt notice, aod warrauted for one ymror iio'irhnrcw, | Au. 13 tl-lO Turning! Turning! ' T^HE undersigned arc prepared to do all \ kinds of turniui; for cabinet miiker«. coiich mak em, butldcrs,and otbem, attbi'ir ^iteiun Nnwlng and Turning MilU at (jrHeff-u Lnudlnit. u>;at Lnncastur city; all orders lifit at lbe llardwuriiKtor': nt ti.M. BteinmaDor<r- D.i3pr«*ch>-r will bf promptlv attended ro A. K BOVVK.R.'^ t »:0. COMMDNICATION WITH "THE SPIRm." GNE of tlje "mediams" was recently put in commonieaUon with the spirit nf Dr. Frank¬ Un to inquirewi^eravft^ the best and moit. economical pl&de tb Imy Booka,' bTATiOMst. Xi'sw^J^em, JtSWODi- iCAdi, &o. Loud and dlitbA^lHnpsiipoii Bi6 la1>lo tHnr-' " bat prompUr ¦P«lt oot: B-l'-A-N-O-L-E-K-'-S, 3JI, OF the leading Book Publishers arc regularly received, and for saie at publiaber'^ prices at the Bookstore of J. BEAR k SONS, No. 12, Norlb tlueeu St. Tbe following justrccelvod: Family Prayers foreacb morniug and evening in the year, wilb references to appropriate Scripture Headii](r.i. By Her. J. Gumming. Cumming'a Signs ofthe Times. Aulobiography of Kev. William Jay; wilh reminl- scetic^ of aome distinguished cotemporaries, selsctiuut from bis correspondence, and literary remaiui. Tbe Footstcpa of St- I'aul. By the author of "Moruing and Nigbt Watches." The Itlcb Kinsman ; nr.Thc History of Rulli.lbo Moa- bitesB. By Kov. Dr. Tyug. Visit to European Celebrites. By W. S. Sprage D. D, Groco Loe. tiy Julia Kavauagb Tbo Euglisbwoman in Kussia; Impresaion of lho So¬ ciety aud manners of the Russians at home. Kenneth. By the authofof "Heir of RedclyCe." Tbe History of Switzerland, for tho Swiss people. By H. Zscbokko. Work ; or, Plenty to do and bow to do It. Tbo Great Journey. By the aiitbor of "The Faithful Promlser" kc. Family Prayers. By the t thor of "Moruing and Night Watches". Rich aud Poor, and other Tracts for tbo times. By Rov. J. C. Ryle. The Tricolor on the Atlas; or Algeria and tho Freuch Contiueat. By F. Puluaky, Thlw volume is oue of lbe most interresting works of the day, full of blirrlug inci- deiil.-< of Arab life and warfare. Harpor'.s L'nivcraal Gazatteer. Tho Life of Geu. Sam Houston, illustrated, A large assonment of School aud JllacellttuuousBook^¦ Biblesof every description from the small pocket Bible to the largo Quarto, Blank BookH, Writiug I'aper.'^ and Stationery, for eale at low prices at the Bookfitore of JOHN BAER k SONS, may 9-tf-23] No. 12 North Queeu Sl. JAMES S. EARLE, No. 212 Chesnut St, opposite the Girard House, I* 111 JL A u k: L. P U I A , HAS just opened his NESV STORE, with an entirely new assortment uf LOOKING GLASSES, fi^ngravin;,':^, FicUirc rraincs, AND A VERT i:XTK.vetrE GALLERY OF OIL PAINTINGS, From lbe best American and Kiiropeau Articta. A largo Collectiou of Oval, Pier, aud Mantle Mirrors, Of the moat Superior Des-ignb aud Wnrkmau-^aip. imay 9 3m-!i3 WM. HILLARY. J. MIJ-LK hUVl.tZ.V HILLART & SHUL.J.Z a GREAT WESTERN WHOLEsALK DRUG Ai\D CHEMICAL ;sXORi::, A'o. 53a Market St., bet. 10/A and U;ih, Nvrlh side, 0 doors abuve the ll'uatcrn .iLxchangc Hotel, Philaddidiia. "^HE subsi;ribers huviii^' gre:ttly in- crea.'^ed iheir luclliiie-, aii-i adH'.-.l la-f.-Iy i.i ti;.;;- ituck, are now prepared l'l lurui-b nil iirm*!-— in !t!ij. Kue al the lowcnt market pru.'-', iiud .m a~ rfji-uM.iM.- terma aa auy bou^e lu lbe tity. N. B.—TLeytake si-'aipk'ii-iirein r,'-p..-e'.:,illy i-T-liiu;; tbo atteniiou of city and e.iiimry L»rii:.':.-i>i-. .M.-nrl .mt-. aud PhyoicittUa, lo a list ol u.'- [¦^Il.-wci- ;irt;';i.> w.-mii comprise a amall purtiou vl' tb-ir-xi'-u-iv.; ei-ci;. v,/; Driign, Cbeiiiicnl-, lVrl'uiiir-|-y uii.l'I'- ;!.¦! ;m-;;i-1'--- ¦>; -v- ery de-cripil'iu, bmh fon.-iKii :iiiJd.iiii>-:io. .\'.~.>. .i v-iy exifUaiv.' aasiirtnii-ut of :Ue p.'j'iil.u l;iiini-. .U ..;i i;i.-, I'AlNTS.—Whit"! L./.id, Aiii.-iR-;i:i .lu-i ': v-wX. ..u.. I'alQlH, Wbil.;aud Bruuii. Wiiid->u-ii.;i.-, C ;iy. -.i,.. liH5 iiud lliickiug Kii:ve=, <Ji,i/i'-r.- I'l.iin.':..: - ¦- \:.-- '- -i qu;iliiy, I'amt Bru»b.- ol i-v.-ry il"->.i.i;: i.; •¦,. :!..:•„ colors uf every destriplioii, put iij. i ¦ ¦¦; ¦, ;i..;.> 1 pimuii, opwardr.; Furumir.-, ('.¦.ii.!;, .M-i;-, 'S.u.- lilu-&, li.: .Mar and Spirit Varm-bv-, :i:i.l .¦.-¦.\ ;..:. cle uppetliiining 1.1 tbe Drug and Clie!ii;i-,Ul.ii-iii-—. -.viiii.!. ibey are prepared to liiruirbou «- rt,-;i-.>:i;ii.ii; li'iiii. ;i- uuy bullae lu tbe ciiy. Returuiug ibauka ti> tbeir former fri-iui-iUi'l <-..-. Hi era for tbeir kind p:!lr.tn«ge, tliey li.>]•..- i.y -inc: .i;--:p- liou to tbe bupiues.-) in tiiiuiv.i.» mcin a iiutl;-r -i..v.- ¦.. public patronage. m.iy .; '-Iy-j'. Keapiiig aiKl Mowiii'^ Macliiues. ''I'^i.lE fcubst;ribers are nuw utt'cfin^r i'ui- I aale, the following REAl'Hi:^ ANU ,M"t\Vi:!;rJ,i.- iuga larger assorlmeut yf upprovvd ibieij.ue.-. IIhuli [o be fouud at auy oue t-.tabii.-.liiii'.-iu in (i,,- I'. >:,i:. ,. being sole .^feuta lui'Uiiad'a fur rev,i-jil ul it..-in. Alkius' R-aper i: Scll-Raker (lrL'ieiii.ul.l--,i.) sl-Vui.. McCormiek'o Loiubiued Ki.Miier \ .^l.nwr, 1.>.j.im Eurral'a Reaper aud .M-jw,-r. I:;.>.(m Ktttcbum's Reaper aud M.iw-r' i:i'i.ni Ketcbum'a ilower—'i kuive-, 11.'> .¦[) Allen's Muwer, do. l.i.-,..i,, - Hu^^aey's Reaper i; Mower.coi.ihiniiigiiuui ( , _ carnage aud aide delivery, ^ Jlauny's (Jouibiued Iti-Mpei- j; M.nv.T, abo;:' / ..,, . 1 depeudiug on terriioiy wliere u-.''I. j ' '" 33^*''"^I''*-*=' "' ''"-' -i""!'' in -V.I.: i..r 1 x.1,1;.: ;,; . I'A^CliAI.L .V,ui;i;i~ .v ' ¦'.. -Vgricullurut W:irehi..iiji-.iii'l -¦ ¦¦¦[ >:.i--. may aJ-tf-'^'J Cur. Tili .la.l .M.uk.-;. i-]..\.\. &01.l> A\U SIL,VE:R IVATCIIES. SlLVEIl mu A.VD JEWELKY. l^HE LaiL' osr. Fill o.sc au' d licr^t ripti<i. suluotcd 1 of Fiue auil f;ictur<'il cin It, which re. ¦\Cn of LiVfT- A Stock iu [be Citv. Every dc jgp ClHMp WAICIIES lliat arc man Y^h\ l'« obt.-iined at lbi> E?[al>li«bm jC-* jn'-'i'iv''- ib<-ui direct lr,'iii llie I'-ict. 'fVM*-g|- ¦¦¦I, Loinl.io aud Swiuerliind. and t- tberefor: ¦-¦Dal.lf.! l'l-'-ll a unuli .-nperior articl.! lor a less price [faaii any odnT llftatl >toi.; ia tbi?" City, l'er.--uiin wi-lii»g in piirclia.-e al WLob-inle or Retail are iiivite-l t-. rail -¦lu.t -.^-l liio ivorth of iheir money.— Some of tbi;;e Watches can be S'lld at itic following pri¬ ce.-, ; 'iold t.ovei> rullJcweled. 18 Carat Casos, $25 00 " IhiiUiu-.; C.i-e.fuilJeWelcdLever.s, 33 UL '¦ Lei-iii.: Waich.'-S " 20 Ol. Silver Lev.r " FuU Jew-ied. 10 of " Huuliug Case. " " 13 ot. " Lepiue Halebc!', Jeweled, 8 Ot, Aud -ume ?lill cliuapcr ib;tu tbeabove. iC^^Jewelry of every de^iriptiOB, Fiue aud Cheap.— Alao. Silver Ware, nnd Silver-l'lat-fd Ware of ull kinds. Walebes repaireil and WaiTnuIod, at LEWIS R. BROOMALL'S (Old Sta.vd.) No. 110 N. Secoud, 2d door below ILtea Slivei, mar7-ly-l-l ^ rhilaiiulphia. A A'KW AJflTICl-K. PATEW'l' VEiNl'IlAN liLlNDS. 'PHESE Blinds overcome the only ol>jee- JL tion to this highly u.^clul and urnMiit-ntal ;ip- pcndage to evory well fumi-hed bonSi:. Tht-y arr tt irruui;c-tj a- tu li:t nn-.v> fr-jni tin- '.0|i of Ibf window as wfil a.-'tit botKt up from thi* bi'ttum or etiu be '¦Mf- pended ar any poiut briwi.eii ::iving fif-'- :«cct!.'-!' tc light and jiir wben reijuired. .iiT nliiii^ .-vi-ry ippAriu uity of cbr.-.uin.: th> in Irnut lbt: lluur. I'lit-y are simpli tn arr.iii:.'.-!!!' ui a,n<l ii-:irlj- ii- rbfiif i- tb. iirdinarj Dlind. All I ti.-k. lethal yi'U i-iill ;in; ..xi.miiie then, before jji(ri-liii.-iii): TRANSPAi: KNT Wi.MlOV. .Sl! ADKr K.-eJ i;liod.s Buit Shades, 'iilt i.'itruict^s. llamir .iti rin;, Oil- Cll.to^.4¦c..J^¦e. LKfTKltKU SlIAUKS t.ir Store Windowh. |,.iiuted ;oorilfr. Win-eliiib ^^¦|lldl¦lwSe^el¦ll^ uimiulHuturird to order, bt-autifull \ landhcaped or plain. V Ki'KD. Wbolival.-and Retail l).nl..r. Nn -Jl South !-.ii:htb ^t •Zd ;I..iir h.-!iiw Muiliil. i'liilad.-lfitijjt j mn y J.'^-ly Weifjhias leds Wao. 2 1-2 Ounces. FOiiTII KCUIili01'' II KliNi.V OK IIUPTLHE ACKNOWM-niGKI) by the highest m.Jii'itlautli'irilus ul I'liibiiblpbiii. iue.inipai ably j;U[.i-rii'i lo imy otiin iu ii.-f. .Sulf-Terfl will bi- gratilii-il 1i> liMni llmt lbe ivcayioii now flfir.-t to pro- eurt-liotoiily tb.T/t;;''('Wu.t M •¦•ny. h\in\^dura- lilr a rru..p:i>. any "Mu- i>- livn <il tin- iiimht.iui <iphi aticiitnjorialilt- aiMc/'ii^umly si-ld. TbiTr i.n uo difll nlty ;itt'-udiiii(tbe littiiig. uud ted. it will i.-l;i i^.p..^iIi. German Vegetablo Horse Po^wder, FOH the cure of Distemper, ?Wr\ Hide-bound, Founder, Loaa of Appetite. tV>S Yolloff Water, Lowneaa of Spirita, ludauiatlou.-, luwaru Sprains, Fatigue from hard work or exercise, nl^o a uui- Ter.sal Condition Mediciue. HB&.V£J PO"WDER. This Is a safe and speedy euro for Heavea.SbortueKs of Breath, or isrokeu Wind, Cougha, Colds and all kin¬ dred di.seaaes origiuatiugfrom intlamnttouof thoniucou- membrane of tbe lung^i of Uontos. It ia a coinbioatiun of the most approved vegeuible iugrcdienta, audi a.- are well known audbaveb—*ii cuccessively u.sediigain=i he above dlaea-ie-t and is recommeuJcd to all who keep Horaea, as au elllcient aud aafe apeciflc. Q-eimau Vegetable Cattle Po-wder. Thia powder is celebrated for tho euro and preveutiou of all diaooaca to C?^S^wbich Oxen, Milch Cows, Sheep, .IttW^ and Hoga are aubjeut. For milk cows H is of the grcatOHt importauce,greatly incrcaaiJig lbe q^ualily and quantity of tbo milk, cream and butter. It Ib alRO bighly recommended for fattening atock cat¬ tle for market. A amall <inanlity given lu tbeir food once or (wtcft a week Improvea their condition by streD)ibleniug their digeativc organs, cniBtea solid flcih and lat. It will clfpctually prevent Hollow Horn, Murrain, ke. The above Powdera arc only prepared at CHARLES A HEINITSH'S Medical, Drag and Chomical Store, No. 13 East King Sireet, and for t*alo at tha otores in tho country, feb 9 6m-10 THOMAS SPERIWCS, UMBRELLA. MANUFACTURER, West Orange street, near Shober's Tavern, and Fahnestock's Store, Lancaster, TF you are in want of good aud dura- _|_i ble USIRBELtAS; and any thing in my ^r>K,^ lint, please give me a GaU,-aa aU my articles 4(-^>S Xiagood and cheap. ""^^^"^ H. B.—UmbreUaa and Paruolsooreiedimd ^^^>^ repaired with aeatiLMa aod deipatoh,aiLd at tttj low btT. c. II li:i inittii.4: /-Vr the .I.ml.ll¬ im; I.y r S'tiJfioris. imhii-iivj ry. I'.vs,... .ll.tHII iibl.' tl 'frU'H ^^Mll In Ih.lhni I-rr (111-PII witli iti.M<ui ¦• rnif ll wiil h.-.x.-li:.i iriiii-;; il :i: uno--. ii I.- .'Illy b. III- pad is loca i.nit fti.iiige, cull i-n tb.' liiib-cri ny ii.l'ltfj- by ri- il the bipi. n:.'d t'. -lli Illed. I l- itiu^ »t lit In- in :itti rj-r/u vru..:) N. liiH..irt'T. " vl.KU :i. N"l-.KIiLi:s. rH-lltb.'^ R;ie.--<IH.. I'l.ilud.lplii.i ¦.luiriiiit (111- l.ei.i'fit .if .Mniiun!,-.! > dentu^('iii.-iit ot IntiTiial (trt^aii.-. i)i-^'-t 111- Womb. Voenl. l'iiliii..iiii iviiiis :.iid Spinal W,!ikiii->-i.:ir.- In ii|nl.-iit iiiMl •-.tji.'ri.-nr.'d l.Ai.r wil i,t 111- H..oin>. I'i.t iivori Ji'r lliri lU ru'hl.FTH -St.. I.-i.l..i.rbel04 jii..e2.S-lv.30 DR. CHARLES NEIL. Ui:.\TlST, iVt*. :>0;i Wnfniil Street, Phdadii, Agrieultunil Fair, .¦.n.-.ln .-tll.VKI: .\|Kl>- hi-.-i :u.-.'"l !¦¦' ¦ ;».t'ibili-'ii ol [.kill in bi;- iiiii. ill- r-fi-r.-: I" iliiK i.ud to bi- already «-x- i.r.u-Ii .¦.:i[;ii:ir«.il.-.- li. all wb ¦ tiilMI f.T Ul^ -< ly ill his liiii; formed Ur. Nrll. ; AT the lato Statu b.-l,laU-i.ihi.l"liMn. r. AL. tb pri.iVs: lli- wi.ik and nrdiTs i-i-i i.l.li.-nlly :.i.d -kilfully pe FLEMING & BUO.HiiR, Pi'OduGo Coiumis^iuii .llc-rc-lianf.s ANU DKALEKS IN FINE G H 0 C E 111 E S , No. 40 South Water street, Philin.'iiph:... UAVKCONaTANTLV UN IlAM'. Cheese, Starch, I'me Oiuml ^u.i--,-^. Ijuiter, Sweet Uil, Lani, Ca:^litc Swap, Uiied Fruit, Olivo Soa|i, Cranlerriea, SaLuatUs, Eai. Colli;e, Fariua, iEj=*Ci.iiiuiry Mcrcb.iui.-' i. adii. rely on h:iviug ihe^ame 'inalii B.iiiL-r, S.,l.?:.dn. .iiiL .¦r.l.-i- L ..1 ,s--...d- . may Ju 1 price, 113 if ihey were peri^juiUly jn-' .rliUcrs* liOoR lo 3<iur liiE<>r<->tf JOHNSTON'ti i'aiuiit Lroii r.>i..-;-.v Bnm Du:<:er is warraa'.cd t.-. t.i Ico ..m.<-: tb- ¦¦:]'¦.. . every busbel of Wbe.it i^r-uud, irvin 1 :..-j-. il'-. ..i' -,.ii dard Flour, wbicb Cuiililu..tbf bulled ..-.u .', ....;.-.i..i lbe Eli'^ctrical adbenii-'U.'f ibe Br.iu. i.-.ni-. -1 i v ^ ¦, :,;,^ AlriO, all kind-uf.Mill.>Lii-l..u-jry I.T i:,.iii',. ¦! ..^i. 'J*lls ou baud and maiJi;l.JL.r.l.T a: WiMl'U'.V .;;'> .^i CHINE SHOP ANU liL'KR -MILL yr, >:>!-; .\i.\.M 1 :¦.<. i. RY, eoru-jr of Genuantuwu Ru.;.i.i:iil N-'-.v-.M-i.:,'.. -:i.. ivbove Laurel, rbibi-ielpliia. THUS B. WOODWaKD. i', i-iM-r. (T^-aLSO,—Sole Owner j.ud .M,i;.ii;;i.-;iii.'i ..i -.,i Joljnston't Patent Bran Duller, Lai: Hii.i -i..-.^]! i:.-,-; the Jlis^isiippi aud Obju Hivei-. _ m.iy jii...;'iii--j To Country SJtoi<iKct'i»t'i.s. HE subscriber has ou li:uia mI Iti T ownmanufactu.e, a l.ir^'e .-i--.-ir:iii'-iir -n' Ladies', Mi^se3', and Cbildreu::' Li-.tilier, Ki.l and Morocco uixus, siioii-; .\\i» CAtri'.R- of the bcBt workmanship an.l mni.Tini-. w!,i''}i fell at ns low wbolenab; priees* a- any {'¦¦'"-¦ii city. Buyers can get auy >i£-> hi lonk-' ny n--. wilbout baviug topurtbaie tbe .-iii;i!i- r .ir iii.i!' ..blo.'-iics. W.M. r.!>Ai:l, No. 01 North Sixth Street. b.-i.>w i;,ie,-, l'l; N. B. Gaiter Upper- reii.ly f.jv lb- J.i-t. -M try Sbf.emakers at low pric-'-. ;ii>i.l tl ¦.i.i-\.' '.r.lTSOX DEPL'V. I11.HH-: PLri'T J. S. 1>EI»S V &. >iO\>. .Vo. 223 N'or(/i iVro/irf Stnrl, i,!.iv C.iH.nrhiU. <i,\J ^ S. 11^. Comer Eiqhih and Si/ring r.urd' .i >>lrt..-!-<, - '< l'Hll.Al)t:Ll'llL\. ^ _ Would re.-pcctfully iuf.irin tlu-iri'inui-i .¦ii---'i:(..t-;"~ i^andolhors, tb;it they huv-; ju-i laid in :•. -i.;.ii.!-.l ¦.— Z. iiaortment of Q.^kphtj. t>iL i'i..>Tl!-, M.ii ;;-¦:¦. \\;-.-r DOW SUAOK, Door -Mat-;, ^pricea, WHOi.K.=ALr. A.vi' Rliail. -J T.iKE SO net:.— lis vill .'.t, asany otha-house of the. april 4 // or. Jt the "WM. H. FRENCH. ISM and Chesnut Strcrfs, Phil.ul'.fjdtiti. MANUFACTOltV uf evt-ry .it-crip tion of ARCIIITECTUR.IL PL.^STER (IK\.\;»1ENTS. for decoration of Biiililini:-. f.Mi-i-tini,' ..f I'u.'cn:!: I'r:: OCP, MorLPi.v'i^, K.v[:iiiivi:m- t-.) Ccii.m, r<. i'.\!'it..i- TiiL'p.-ini!. kc. N.-tv Uer.i.i;ii-i umdelbMl with c;ir.- .ii.l ;ie eiiraev to dniwiu;;. ''All or.i.T-'from t!i.>c.niutry piuw'tu .•cmutry ed to carry ^.if.-ly. r.-i.-ji-iv-i-: llll r witbib- j.ai.li. ritb tb.i' tvli. .-Ij.. hi Guano anci Super Phosphate of Lime '"PllK .-ulhscribtT.i are prL-p;iiing to sup iiaikel pr jily tbo above valuable foriiliirr- c.!s, in lot-s to .suit purebasiTs. hi st.ir.*, lODOBHLS. bUPKli PlIOtil'UATK OK LI.MK, warrauted eiiiial to any that i-* iii:ide. MtxiciA s;i .4.\o. The subscribers cull lbe all---iiiit>u ..f FAriii.'r:i aud Dealers t.. tbis (iuano. By eli.Mi. m1 ;iirily-.i- it i> l"..iiiui to contain a larger piopoiiiun .ii fin.si.liaielhan IVrnvl an Uuano. 2000 Bbls. laudiug. For siie by. .1. li. .\. k s. alli:n. f.-b 7-nin-IO T -^ 8 Souib Wbaive-. Pbilad'a. ricid, Fiowrr it i;ur«lcii Seeils. l^KK.^Il aNOUKNULNK VKOKT.^ Jo TABLE SKKUS fyr Oiirdeu aud Field Cultun-, Extra L.irlvrrincc Alh.-rt an.l many otb^r v.melie!. o. feii>.; Loug Orange aud yth-^r fari..i-: \'"--.i-, Turuip-. Bti.ib and Hule Bean-, many fiue v-iri.-ties ul l.'al.bagt-. rar.-uip', L'-tiuc.-, Radi.-li aud .iib-;r SC'-.l>, kv- BoXd-tot asflorle.l kiiidj. put up I'-r ci.uuiry <ioaleri ;il a liberal diacouut. P.V^^tJIlALL .MORRIS A C»>., Av-ri'-ulinral and S'-ed \Var«lio.i-e. " N. E. eyr. "lb i il.^itei. PUil;i<fa. FIELD tJEliU—Clo.in un.l free from noxiou:= weeda—ani.iug which are Ked. Wbite aud AlnikeClovee; Timolby, Herd, Rvo aud Orchard tJra^-Or.; KcniiKky Ijreeu or Uluo Oras-t ; Verual. Sweet Scented aud Fef-ciie Grasbci : Liiterue, Saiufo.u. Xc, Whole^iiie Jt Retail, at PASCHALL MORRIS Jt CO'S Warebuus.;—"tb i: Market. Philad'a. FLOWER SEEDS—Choice k Selectetl Plow- or Seeds, of tho btf?i Europeau and Amerieaii vnrteti.s, in siugle papers or hi>s.t:s of 21) llno kiurtri fur .Sl.OO, with directions fortheir culture. Soine uf these oiceutircly uew. E3-Seod, Implement uad Niir^ery C.^IaIugncefnrnlhh- ed on appiicatiou. PASCHALL .JloitRIs ^ CO.. Seed uud Impk-meot \\'ar.^lii.i\-i-. N. E. Corner oi 7lb aud Jlurk.^i Si»., mar7-lf-14 Pbilad'a. ^75.0001;?^ WA.N'l'KI) in vurioua loinvesL In flrsl rl:i.s Keal EsTaw Bocaritieaio ibe cily o! [¦hilaJt-lpto. Address or apply to ,\iti..l ..5ft,,',. Atf y«t L»wiuidCottTey«iicor, IDS Wa.an. ll., .-hUo. SAMUEL M. MBCUTCHEN, Xo. 53li Xorth Front Strut, iiimn: Muiilen, and X. E. Corner Front and Mnith n Sis.. PI11I.AOKLIM11A. MiU-Wiight and Burr Mill Ht.-.r.j Maii- ufactuier. SOLK PEOPIUETOK i.f .I..ii.n-.<o.n's highly approved aud much imi r..v ¦.; AWo, It'PROVEH Ikos Co.NV.-AVn I;i:a> P; -i. i:. ;1 ¦ I'i-m.- nm Macbiuo for Milb-rs; (•..mii,-.. M-.V «¦¦.:--. MM Iron-. Siuutt -Maebiue-f. Patent l.v-r M.ii r.i>-h v-.l SireiebedaudC-inmou Bfliiu,^'. S.|ii;ii. .M-n-d i:-n;n.: Clotb.-s, fn.m tli-- mu-t appr.iv.:-! in i:.'.: .. i-ri.'- irv;iy- on baud, m.-id--up-ind put on to [.rd-T, .-n-ip an.! -.v ¦,¦. ranted. apnl 1-;im-I-. ruit.viTUKi:! FuuMTLUi::: 4 T Nn. h'ji Soutli 2ud Street, :i1m\v J\ .^|.ruc-% east si.le, Philadelpbia.) Tbi- -i!l.-i;i,. . ,,,-.¦- n'.iuW r.-pfi-ilullv inr'.,nil ili-;¦¦-.;.:.i ?21iMJ«? of tbo Rxiiniin-'r i H.-r^i'-t. iu:.l :,- public p.-u.-rally, tb.H ii.- lia-.Ti ':..¦.: a runstaut Mipply ..f .¦l.>i:,iii'.:.i-i. . ahlean.l "¦¦•11 made Kiiriiitiin-. R.-iiiu- a ].i::.-.:<-f: i - cb:iiii'.'. and liavini; all bis (r.j.uiT. ni:inur;i.';iir-.1 m. !¦ i lii> .j«-ii-.iiiieriulendcni'", piirelui-'-r- iii.iy ply ¦ i. a.-i tim: ju>l such article^ a- ri:pr'--.-iii.-'i. 11.'invil.M attentiitn Io bis l.-nn:;.--iriii; r--Tii-v.iM.- iiriii^. AUo lo a now paH.'in ..f li.-.i .[.¦;iil. ?'r*l'boie wbo are :il...iu:i.'ii'g L- ii..iir..-!;.-.-l'iri.-v.-..ii!.i do well I., call, -"•"-^' .V.liM'l.t:. I,->7 -..mil -Jii.l M.n.ihi. N.!B.—Ail orders ib.i.-ikrnliy r.-c.-iv-.-d uu-I |'i,,„.,,.i- ttt-ad-.l to. m.iy 2-ly.Jj rarimers and Tliria.shfis Kt:.iu Tiirs: cCoimick'alnipiovedliuiiJbeamRcvip iiig and Mowing Machine, foi 1855 '^l^llLS .Muuliiuc is WcinauR'il tu i:ul. J_ i.-iiu lu ti--JU -Acre- III i li kin.t- ..ii.r.-'-L «.i.,,i, ;...,.,. Hir.,',lio; j,')U<.;;i.-U.ai.d [lir-.;il- i''in's "vATliN i T11 ll.-xs 1 i [:i, A.NU liOitSE 1'UWKl; ¦jt.ia >;:i.-bll.. :.-i <,t. W ti,-, !.¦¦ :, ml I: iJLKANi i; • •¦usl-.cl "1 \i. tl--ll per lii-u'.e — Trie ¦..-li.'.^iUi,. . ..i. .'. moi.:b-. 2LMMEU.\lAN'SrUiiA:<[lKli, UAt-H.^lii'.. 'rb.^ >i :c--.::-- *!il n.r.-U :iiul -'I.-. SLU lUl-ln-l: »1 VVb.-.ltl-i- l;.V. i ;..;.. i:>lii>.ier; <iiii; i."* \\ urri>.'i--'i.—' ¦¦. '¦ '¦ • JJll oil ; b.ill i":i»b. b.ti.»».'' ¦''. ¦ '¦"¦¦• Ic-oUbaiu :ioi-=.^ p,.«-,.t.-..-¦.; In: '-'.. l.-r^,Struw^ utlt-^s. Cof" :.!i'l ¦ -l'' ¦- .Apply LirrBiuully or hy m-il.:-- 53 South Wharvrf.i Mj .-outh W; .-ep iU r-iuy. II ; l.'LKANi: ;i: ¦_¦ ¦¦- - . 1 . I." >'.:.0, f.r .\i-ii. h .-i^.-r -'.:¦ ,-. 0. uiMs., I-ni JOHN TRUCKS & SON, \V H O L, Ji S A i. i-; O U O C i: K I s , ASD Dealers iu.CouiiTry PiotluCi.-. Xo. n NOR TII f 1F r II s ru eet Comerof CouiuiercL- Mr,-,!. 1»H 111 AUL JLI'I.l.i . JoHjiI»oaa.J [Wn. lEvcFf,
Object Description
Title | Lancaster Examiner and Herald |
Masthead | Lancaster Examiner and Herald |
Volume | 17 |
Issue | 28 |
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. |
Publisher | Hamersly & Richards |
Place of Publication | Lancaster, Pa. |
Date | 1855-06-13 |
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/ |
Contact | For information on source and images, contact LancasterHistory, Attn: Library Services, 230 N. President Ave., Lancaster, PA, 17603. Phone: 717-392-4633, ext. 126. Email: research@lancasterhistory.org |
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 | 06 |
Day | 13 |
Year | 1855 |
Description
Title | Lancaster Examiner and Herald |
Masthead | Lancaster Examiner and Herald |
Volume | 17 |
Issue | 28 |
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. |
Publisher | Hamersly & Richards |
Place of Publication | Lancaster, Pa. |
Date | 1855-06-13 |
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 908 kilobytes. |
Language | English |
Rights | http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/NoC-US/1.0/ |
Contact | For information on source and images, contact LancasterHistory, Attn: Library Services, 230 N. President Ave., Lancaster, PA, 17603. Phone: 717-392-4633, ext. 126. Email: research@lancasterhistory.org |
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 | 06 |
Day | 13 |
Year | 1855 |
Page | 1 |
Resource Identifier | 18550613_001.tif |
Full Text |
»:•*' Vr^
V^OL. XXIX.
LANCASTER, PA., WEDNESDAY, JUNE 13, 1855.
NEW SERIES, VOL. XVII-NO. 28.
PUBUSUKD BY
EDWARD C. DARLINGTON, _
.1F1.10E I.N NORTH QUEFK ''^'L^^* „ „„ . r ,»
The EXAMINER & DEMOCRATIC HERALD
if. published weekly, iit two dOLUHB a year.
Advkrtisemknts notcicecaing one square
wUI be ius.TU.Hl Uireetime.1 for one didlar, aud twcntj Jve MnSwflUe clmr,i.-d foreaeh addil .maUn..ertion.- AhKi discount alIo«.-.l to tbo?o advertising hy the yar. ^^^___^__^_^_^
The World would be tlie better for it
Iliiien oared le.s.s for weidtb and fume,
Ami less for battle fields mid Rlory ; If writ in human hearta. a name
i^i-emed better than in song nr .story ; If in.-u, instead nf uurpiug pride. Would b-am to bnte It nnd nbhor It— If more relied ...,- On l^vo to BUide,>.v-.%;^ Tbe world would be Hie better Tor it.
If men dealt le.s.s in slocks nnd lands,
.¦\nd more in bonds and dei-ds fraternal; If I.i.vo's work had more willing handc .
Til link this wnrld to the supernal;
If men .storeil U)! liOve's oil and wine.
,\ud nil bruised human hearts wnuld j^iur it:
1 f •¦ ydiirs " and •' mine "
Would oiice eombine.
The H..rU would bt- tbu U'tler for IL
If uinre would a.-I tbe play of Life,
Ami feWi-r f^puil it in rebearfal;
If BiK'dry wnuld ^¦heathu It- knife
Till (inod bertime more universal: 1 f rustnm. Kray wilb Jij;es ;:ronii. Htii) fewer.bliiul men In adore it— If tJilentsbono In Truth alone. I The world wnuld be the beitor for it.
If men w.-n- wIm' in little Ibin^-'—
.iffti-tine ler^F ill nil theirdeiilinj;*— ff besiits bad fewer riipti d strinR.i T.I ir-obite their kindly feelinpu; irmi-ii. when Wr |
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