Lancaster Examiner and Herald |
Previous | 1 of 4 | Next |
|
small (250x250 max)
medium (500x500 max)
Large
Extra Large
large ( > 500x500)
Full Resolution
All (PDF)
|
This page
All
|
Loading content ...
¦mnmw W¥iW^^? wL.&m LMGMmR^H., WEDNESDAT, NOYEB^m IB, 1861 NO. 51. J. A HIESTAND, J.F. HUl^P, HECKKET, TnrM«"tai nrnii or HI£STAin>, HUBES & HXCS£BT, ofnoi'si MUK «nxBi mur. THE EXAMINEB & HBRABI> Xt rkWrtatf ir<ei4r, •» «" JHoBoTi « r««-. ADVERTIBEHENTB wlU bs ioMrted at.tha rata of gl 00 pet flqture, of tea Unea, for tfaree Inier.^ 1 loci or leea; and 26 oents per sqoaie for eaoh additional Insertion. AdTsrtliements exeeedins 10 llnerTlU he eittpi 6 cents per line for the 1st losertlon, and 8 canta per lias or Mch anbesqaent Insertion. Bosliiess AdTertlsemeaU Inserted hy the quarter half year or year, will be chained as followi: tnumtht. tmimtha. Unonlis OaeSqoare $8 00 Two 3(eo1nran . H " . 1 " .6 00 .10 00 .ISOO .80 00 ISOO 8 00 18 00 SSOO UOO »800 UOO SSOO 4S00 80 00 BUSIHBSS UOTICaS Inserted before Uarrlages and Seethe, donhls the legnlar ratee. S3'J^ advertising accoonU are coneldend ooUeetJi- hle at the explraUon of half the period contraoted for. Transient adrertlsements, oasH DBAD. An angel came for onr bird, last night, Leitt night, at tbe midnight moon. As we smoothed tha carle from the forehead white And Bang a low Inllaby tnne; And we thongbt she bad only fallen uleep. Warn oat with her torturing pain, And that eoothed by a alnmber so calm and to Bweet, She would wake and be merry again. But alas I In her Innocent heanty ahe died In thn chamhernp orer my bead, Tbe wane I'.is corer the Isngblnfc blae eyes— And they eay thet onr darUng Ie dead! Our own, and onr only 1 kind hearen glre na etrength I God Is good; bat the drifting winds blow— And bowed by the storm we are ollnging at length To the lore that hae chastened ns eo. In the years that are bound like Ibebeanliful Past, I hare pitied poor hearta that were torn By the death of s child ; but at laat, oh! at last I know what it la thua lo moarn. So not come to ma now with a elgb, a word Of cold sympathy—leave me to weep For the meaUog caress of the little white Bird That Ueth shore me aaUep. Yon are kind—bnt yonr kindness can ne'er liR ap Tee pall tbat is o'er my heart; And yonr hand cannot lake from my lip the dread cnp, Or from my wrung boaam the dart! 01 was It for thiB that I suffered and lored? For Ihis that I cherished my Jiower, Tin the strength of a mothtr'a wild lore I ha4 prored. And the charm of each ihrlce blessed hoar ? Ho, nol Godforglreme. if blended by tears, I see not hla ontstretchlng band, And the brow wbich Is linking theae grieMaden years. To the shore of tbe hearenly land. Forglre me, If stnng by thiB terrible woe, I walk in the darkness of night— And see bnt a lip, and a forehead of snow, Ao d a dimpled hand, stiffened and white. COUSUr FAISFAX. II was a dreary calehtation of my eighteantli birthday that on the morning of it I waa sum. moned betore a family oonolave to hear the nsnit ofits deliberations respecting my fntnis lot in life. My father's sndden decease, and the fact of bis dying intestate, had made a complete change in the worldly prospects of myself and my half-sister Mabel; and as I walked toward the room where my relatives were assembled, I was Btrenlhening myself to act my part firm¬ ly in the approaohing interview. I knew there was not one among them that loved me, or n onld be moved toward me with anything beyond a very moderate degree of decent- sympathy; nay, I knew that there wonld be a very general impression that I had fonnd my own level, for I was the child of a mesatHance, which had always been like smoke in the nostrils of my well-bom kinsfolk. On the other hand, my sister Mabel, who was the danghter of a wife of their own choosing, also a beanty in the bnd, and possessed of that kind of self-asstired sprightlincss which is generally reputed charming in a child, had met with no lack of kindness. There had been qaite a contention among annts and consins as to which should have the charge of her. They had been occupied for days past iu discussing what was tfae best thing to do with me, but bad deferred their ultimate decision till the arrival of my distant kinsman, Henry Fairfax. He was a young man of only five- and-twenty, but he had oome into posaession of his large estates early, was now member for the county, had the reputation of great talent and decision of character, aud from these cir¬ cumstances oombined was looked upon as the head of the family. I, who knew him inti¬ mately, knew tbat he was all they thonght him, with higher qualities to boot than they either anspeoled, or wonld even have approved. They were silting in gloomy state in the fa¬ miliar library of the fine old conntry manaiom where I bad reigned paramount for many a year, and surrounded by all the sooessories of refined Inxury in which I had been reared ;— they all knew that I had been the idol and darling of my poor father, on whom had been lavished every good thing that love oould suggest or intellectual ingenuity imagine. They knew bow I had been edacated ; they knew my passionate and ambitious nature. Nevertheless, they did not hesitate to tell me that they had come to the unanimous conclu¬ sion that there was but one career open to a girl of my capabilities and antecedents, name¬ ly, that of a governess. It was some relief to my feelings to observe that my Cousin Henry stood aloof from the. family conclave by a distant window, with a face clouded with anger and scorn. I had ex¬ pected some suoh proposal as this, but still the perfect heartlessness of it touched me more than I oonld entirely conceal, and I remained eo long sileut tbat my Aunt Mary Ann spoke again. " We fully appreciate your oharacter," she said, " and know that you oould never sub¬ mit to a life of dependence. Of oonrse you can stay with us for awhile, until you bave made yoiir arrangements." " I think I could have brooked dependence on my dear father's sisters, had it been offered me naturally and heartily," I replied. "As it is, I accept yonr decision that I must work for my living; but it must be in my own way. I shall not be a governess." " Not be a governess 1" was re-echoed on all sides, in every shade of intonation, from indig¬ nant remonstrance to contemptuous surprise ; and my Cousin Henry, turning sharply round, oame np close to where I stood, and asked in his tnm, " Thon, Milly, what will you do 7" " That is my secret," was my answer, " and I meau to keep it. I jndged rightly that I Bhould receive nothing from my frienda more substantial than their advice, and I laid jny plans aecordingiy. I have nothing more to say than that I pledge my honor I will never dis¬ grace you." ] I was going; bnt the clamor ot voioes ar¬ rested me. Amid sneers and reproaohes I heard some offers of assistance, some tardy assurances of good-will and affection. Heniy laid his haud gently on my aim. " It mnst not be," be a£rmed, with kindly author¬ ity ; "It must not be. The bare fact of your scheme being clandestine, goes to prove, not that it ia unworthy of yon, bat thatlt is Quix¬ otic and impracticable. You are flushed with a just indignation now, Milly; when you are cooler, yon will perceive the folly of a girl like you trying to fight your way alono and ~ unaided. If I had some woman in my house, you should be compelled to come home to it." "Perhaps, even as it is, Mildred inlght not find any insuperable objection to the arrange¬ ment," sneered one of my kinswomen, who herself waa known to have designs matrimonial upon Cousin Fairfax. The insult was so despicable that it scaroely brought the color to my cheek; but on Hen. ry's chivalrous sonl it burned like fire. I was oool enough to smile at the flashing eye and stem rebuke with which he annihilated my aasallant; but I was not prepared to sea him tum hotly toward me again, and seize my haad in a sudden emhrace. "Milly," he said, passionately, "she is in the right if it. There ia a way open by which yon may escape from all thia impending strife and miseiy. Become my wife i i ^111 cherish yon as your father would have had you cher¬ ished," and he msde asif he wonld have knelt before me. It waa a brief bnt a vejy powerfal tempts- tlon, for as he spoke I knew tbat I 'loved him wiUi aU my heart asd sonl, aodhad loved him loog^mMonsolansI^. Bnt at the auna .time, I •aw tbeie waa :nD Ient*a-;ao]ioitada in that searohbig ghmoe, no Inezpresiible tenderness la ths resolute olaap of bis bands. It was simple knlght^nanby. There, was nothing for It but ;to tnin away my atatlog lips from the proffered dtangM; my fate.lnilfs.was sot Ukdjr to. be ia..tba jrMy;f!Ub oit w^Ij^<UaiI«•. "Bodbl^ ;ron,':HBni3rIV I atonffllsdto aay tbnmgb the tear* whlob slmaat choked me, foi.I waa deeply moved by Ua goodness. ¦¦ I am glad yon have aatd tUs, becanse when I recall to^lay tt will only be to temember year generoeity. But beyond a pleasast mem¬ oir, yonr words can be nothing to me. With youxhlghnotlons, yon wonld sot have yonr oonsln wooed from pity 1" ' Asd then for a moment I gianoed at hbn with the passionate hope that he would dis¬ claim my words; but thongh pa wonld hava saorifioed his freedom to bis oompasaion, he would not Btafai the bright leoUtnde of his sonl by felse protestations. "Ifyon will tnut yont happiness to me," be aald," I am w> bent upon fnlfiUlng It, ao unspeakably anxious to save yon from sorrow and hardship—" "I'hank yoa, thank yon, but it is Impossi¬ ble 1" said I, intermpting him hastUy; for I oouid bear no more of these guarded phrases. "Magnanimity willnot bny me,neither will wealth nor ease, Imust find ont my own way of happiness; let ns leave the farther discnssion ofit till to-morrow." And so I made my esoape. Sat tbat v«7arternoon, whUemyldoswomen dozed in the drawing-room, and laj kinsmen sat over theb wine and wabinte, I left the house qaietly with a small bundle of olothes in my hand, andptirsaed my way tinmolested to that point on the high tnmpike road whioh I knew the evening mail muat pass, and takiug my place in it was irrecoverably on my way to London. Tliis was the prologue to the. little drama of my life, and so far I had succeeded. I relied npon being safe from disooveiy amid the teeming life of London, and npon preserving my secret till I should think fit to disclose It. My plau was—and lest the reader should think me a lunatio, I am bonnd to state I pos¬ sessed sn annuity of forty ponnds—to beoome an anthor, (of oonrse a celebrity.) and in the meantime to write for daily bread, or st least for so much of it as the above-named income failed to snpply. It was a oommon enongh tale for a man to fight his way throngh poverty and obscurity to the top round of the ladder, wbere Fame is sapposed to sit blowing her tmmpet and holding aloft her lanrel orown, and why migbt not a girl do the same ! Could not a girl lodge in a garret, live labo¬ rious days, asd cherish a purpose with equal tenacity? A woman's wanta were fewer, ber temptations incomparably less, and granting her genius was equal to tho prize, what in superable obstacle waa there to withhold her from running the race f I tried it. I cas look baok sow with astonishment, almost with incredulity, upon the girl of eighteen as npou a foreign individuality, and my heart yearns over her with pity; it was a hazardous enter¬ prise, a hard fight. If I wers writing my auto¬ biography it would behoove me to tell the de¬ tails of ,that sharp experienco ; but it would be Bnperfluous here. Enongh that I fonght the fight and wou the crown, which latter fact is, of oourse, the only one which oould exouse the bold attempt. At three-and-twenty I was famous, but I kept my incognita. I waa uot satiafied yet. I thought the blast sot lond enough to reach the ears I wished It to attain.. I wanted, sot to be told now and then that I was wortby of the crown, but to havo it bestowed by general acclamation. Bid my oousin Henry Fairfax— a name now continnally before the public^ wbose fame as a speaker and writer waa joined to the repntation of a philanthropy almost ohivabnns in its degree—did he read my books, share the admiration bestowed upon them, and wonder with the rest of tha world whence came the usknovra voice f I bad begun my oareer with astringent pur. pose of smothering this love of mine, but in one word I had failed. Ho himself made it impossible for me to forget him, for I knew he had never abandoned his searoh after me.— Morethan once he hadalmost succeeded in tracing me, and to make the task well nigh impossible, I had had, dnring the last two years, occasional opportunities of seeing him. Wheu Parliament was sitting, I met him con. stantly in tho street, and every stealthy glance I gave'him did its work in undoing tho efforts or montha. Besides, I lived a solitary .life, vivified only by the memories of the past and the dreama of the futnre; so so wonder was it that tbe girl's fancy grew into the woman's passios. At last it ooonrred to me to give up the struggle. " Why should I not love him f" asked Hope, snddenly grown daring. " Was my love imworthy ? ssy, was it a thing impos¬ sible that thongh he had not- loved the way¬ ward and eocentrio girl of eighteen he might love the disciplined, capable, and distingnisb¬ ed woman I" Ay, there was tbe etimulons I —it gave strength and imaguiation to the poem, eloquence to the novel. All the subtle graces, as well as graver merits, whioh my oritios, praised, gathered the delioate oharm, the life.like power, from my love for Henry Fairfax. I say it in so disparagemest of my sex, but from Sappho to Corinne, some personal paasion bas ever been like oil to the flame of a woman's genins. I BOW resolved to change entirely my pres¬ ent plan of life. I was then engaged upon a novel, whioh had occupied me for the last two years, but which I was still working at, inthe hope of making it more worthy ofmy ambition and strengthening genius. I would let it go I had giveu it all my power of mind and intel¬ lect. I had denied myself stringently eveiy distraction which conid Impair my single aim, aud now it seemed to me as good aa I could make it. If it bronght me the success I as- ticipalod—that was, if il established, beyosd cavil, my fame—I would declara myself, and renew relalions with my friends. Hetiry Fair¬ fax shonid kuow me again. Chance frustrated my soheme. I. met my cousin in the slreet and he recognized me. How it happened I know not; we had met thus often before, his eyes had even-rested npon me, bnt he had paaaed on. On the day in question hs made a stand, resolutely inter¬ cepted my attempt at escape, and oalled me by my name "Mildred Fairfax I" How it thrilled mel I had not heard it sinoe we part¬ ed. I trembled nnder the unexpected dis¬ covery as if I had been a culprit. Looking np at him, I saw from the hard scmtiny of his gaze and the flush os hig brow that he enter¬ tained the fear that in some sort I was one. " Cousin Honry 1" I replied, asd held ont my band to him. " Thank Sod," he said, " that I have found yon at last I Asd sow, Mildred, take me to your home." 1 was sot prepared for this commasd,bnt I perceived at once that he was resolved not to let me go. I had dropped the olue, and must bear the penalty. We walked along the streets side by side in silenoe. He had offered ms his arm, bnt I deoUned to take It, and to my sur¬ prise he asked me no questions. I had ohanged my lodglsg from time to time in order to preserve my tncognifa more closely, and my preawt abode was siinated at a point a long distance fromthe place where Ihad met my consin, and I ooold perceive he began to wonder how far we were going. " Are yon not tired ?" he aaid, at last; " wUl yon not taks my arm!" "Ho,"I replied;yon mnst judge that by this time I have learned to walk alone." He looked at me steadily. "I will not qnestion her," he said, smiling; " I am going to her home, asdahairthsre be able to jndge formyseU Not that I dare donbt you.'MIl- dred; it is not hitelleot and feeUng alone that ffzad my eyes npon yom tkce to-day—tmth and InntibeBceue'written tbere." ' I waa veiry glad not to ahare the oonfidence he expressed that my bome wbnld betray to himaainyMeiBti., ; stead cottage to whioli I gave that name, V'' wlthabeaUng heartl Invited my oonrihto follow me np'stiira. He did so. My landlady atepped outof her little parlor and gazed onridnsly after ns. It was the fint visitor I Jiad ever had. I saw her look sMlqtia md di^ejier head^itU a doabtful expreaaion. I perceived ihat the eager soUdtttde wilh whioh Henry anrreyed the little apartment audits few acoessoriea was-partly gratifled asd partly perplexed. There were at least no donbtfol luxries ; a UtUe worl^-table asd a vase full of wild-flowers, pnrohas'ed In the street, were the only approaches to any indi¬ cation, of taste or refinement; but on the other hand, there were no algns of any special em¬ ployment visible. I bad always had a par¬ ticular aversion .to all forms of literary sloven¬ liness; there was no litter of pen,inkor pa¬ pers. All the signs and implements of my pro¬ fession were hidden within the large escritoire which stood before the window. Upon this last treacherous piece of furnitare Henry fix¬ ed bis eyes and lighUy laid hie hand. " I guess your seoreot," he said, smiling.— "Ton are a writer. Under what nom deplume am I to recognize my oonaln f" • These words relieved my anxiety. I saw with a bound of delight that he was little likely to associate me wilh a name already celebrated, and 1 answered gnardfnlly. I told him I wrote for the magazines, wrote literary critioisms In a oertain daily paper, and prais¬ ed ths UberaUty of thslr managsment, for Ixla keen eye was noticing every Isdicatlos of oom¬ fort aronnd me. My explanation did not sat¬ isfy him. " I see," he said," yon do not faUy trust me. I do not believe tbat yonr ambition is ao limited aa yon wonld make it appear, or that yon havs lived these years with no higber re¬ ward than yon mention. However that may be, it is incomprehensible to me how a young and tender girl could have led the ardnons aud soUtaiy life that yours must have been. I see the effect of it writlen on that steadfast brow, asd is those dreamy eyes. Yon will snffer me, Mildred, to lead you baok into more accnstomed paths." "Hot at present," waa my anawer, shrink¬ ing back instinctively from the outstretched, friendly hand. " I am abont to make a ven¬ tnre beyoud anytliing I have tried before, and I will await the issue ef It before I renew re¬ lations with my kindred. If I come to them famoas, my aunts will forgive me more readi¬ ly." He smiled—in pity, I thought it seemed, of what he deemed my hopeless ambition, but I 1st it pass unchallanged. He asked me many questions ofmy past life and present arrasge- mests; and I, In my tnm had much to leam from bim. In spile of their nnkindnsss, I fouud that the sight of him, byquicksning all my associations, had awaksnsd a deep inter¬ est in my relations. I inquired particnlarly after my sister. "Is she what she promiaed to be 7" I ssked, and was' going on to explain my meaning, which wonld not have been altogether fiatter¬ ing to Mabel, when he inlerruptod me hastily. " She is.a sweet creature," he said, " bnt I fear her education has not been very judicious. Aimt Mary Ann has mads an idol of her." After some farther talk hs wsnt away, promising me at parting that he had no in¬ tention of waiting nntU I became famons be¬ fore be came again. And so il came to pass that my cousin Hen¬ ry Fairfax was my constant visitor. He was at this time in the full tide ot parliamentary saccess, by which I meau no peraonal notor¬ iety, but thst which had won the dsy for one or two social reforms, which he had taken np with all the energy of his nature. What a rare nature too, it was 1 What woudrons sympathy for the ' oppressed and poverty- stricken ! Ah I what wise, and yet, I fear, wbat Utopian schemes were discussed in my little parlor; what unfisgging enthusiasm an¬ imated his daily life. I had myself my crotchets and theories of amelioration, so tbat on that score alone I should have worshipped my cousin ; for his schemes exceedsd mine as much in tenderness and minuteness of his sympathy sis in mere praotical sagacity. And than ha brought to tbeh: advocacy all the charm of finished oratory, of higb position, aud unwearied perseverance. He oame tome better and nobler than eveu I had judged from no common promise of excellence. Bot enough of all this eulogy; the issue of onr renewed intercourse was, that I nol only loved him—lhat I had long done—but that every other hope paled, every other intereat in life grew insignificant in comparison wilh the strenglh of this feeling. "WillHenry love me!" was the qnestion boneath which every other anxiety was bnried. My novel was now in ths pnblishsr'a hands, so that I had a respite from my literary labois; and meanwhile, although he saw me almost daily, beard me talk on almost all topics, I found that my consin had no idea of my iden* tity as an author. Was il a judicial blindness J He sever dreamed lhat tho books be had read, nay, even tho very veraes he had quoted, had come from my heart and hand, aud would eveu ask me serionsly if the bope of obtain¬ ing such a measure of fame as has been allot¬ ted to tbese had besn my stimulus in my re¬ ceut thankless loil. "I often think," he one dsy said, "that yoo are equal to tbese things. When the time comes, how prond I shaU be of our kinship." This stale of things made my self-imposed probation almost intolerable. Bvery time we met the parting touched me more deeply, and deeper still the conviction sank and bnmed, that he said "Good bye" with spirits freo as air. " He will never love me thus," I said; "liv. ing in this humble attic, dressed iu this mean way, believing me the plodding penny.a-liner, a little above my trade. He might have done 1 ao, of course ; have discovered the trath for himself, aud recognized in daily aspect and daily life the ethereal genius of the unknown writer he holda so high. He might—ah I if he had I bnt work-a-day experienoe is not a romance." My soheme was romantic euougfa, however. Seoure of the success of my work, whioh created a perfsct/uror, and enriched beyond my wildest expeclatlons I hid myself from my oousin. I took a small cottage at Brampton, fnmished it with ecmpulons taste from my accumulated hordes, summoned to my eide a housekeeper, the dear nurse ofmy ohildhood, asd once more, with isflnite relief, wilh in¬ tense enjoyment, lived the life of a lady. Society fonnd me ont at once, and oalled me with uuited voioes into the oharmed circle of of feted and lionized existenoe. I was the idol of the season ; celebrated artists sketched my portraits; literary compssrs held ont friendly hands ; aristocracy ^took pleaanre in insisting on my descent. Precisely at this time some importaut busi¬ ness called my cousin ont of tows, aud I was glad of the coincidence. I had had one draught of almost delirious joy. I kuew ths rsview of my book in the " Bdinburgh " had been writ, ten by bis hand—written before he knew Mil¬ dred Fairfax wrote it, and I could not bnt be¬ lieve that the mau whoae comprehension of it was so minnte, snd his admiration so ar¬ dent, mnst leam without much difficulty to lovethe writer. Must leam 1—nay, I thought it inevitable that he sbonld do so. For ths rest, I was glad tbat hs was ont of the way for a time. I wished before we met to realize my position a Utile more folly, to estabUsh my claim more snrely. I wished to tide over alone the renewal of relationa wilh my kinafolk, thinkbig there would be awkward paasages. I was afraid they would feel nn oomfortably ashamed qf their past behavlonr. I might have spared myself any anxiety as tbe acore of their self.tespect;' they met me with peiftct ease, embraced rae with tendenuM, and reminded eaoh other and me how thej had iawaya propheatod; ttat HlUb«a ¦JronU Ann J diatlsgolali hnaelt -And, .Annt Haiy iltme ahowed a Utile oonadonsneaa. "My dear," she aald^ "if I had known how yon wonld tnm out, nothing wonld haye pie- tented my taking oharge ot both pf y on. How- ever^ yqn will own I have titon good care of yonraiaterf" Had yon taken charge of me, Annt Mary Ann, I sever sbonld havs tnned out thus," I said,-an^Ung, tnd looking with cpuBiderable Intereat at the lovely girl, who toher turn, re¬ marked: " Famons as Mildred Is, I would notchange places with her." Ton mean," said onr annt, " yoo could not pUy so high a part." Butl ksew the beanty meant ahe would sot barter her t>ce;for my repuUtion. I am fu from saytog she waa not to the right of It. Henry oame back to town, and now I felt my scheme was ripe. I stood on the same level witt him, admitted wbere bs went, and deferred to by his eqnals, as if I had been a a goddess. I wrote to him, and asked him to most some oelebritiea at my house on a oertato eventog, (I was become celebrated for tte success of my little reunioiu,) and fixed an earlier honr forhis arrival than tte rest. I promised my¬ self a deUdons totervlew, to whioh I would confide to him aU the secrets ofmy Uterary se- oioaion, and receive from him the assurances of his long-felt admlAttion and delight. I soarmly knew it,' bttt at tte bottom of my heart th'ere larked a secret expeoUtion beyond tbis, which bronght an nnacoustomed warmtt to my cheek, and brightened the light to my eyes. As I atood fnll-diessed befors my glaasi I was trembltog with tte excitement of tte occasion, and was bent on criticistog the re¬ fleotion preaented as rigorously as if it bad been another todividnallty. Did Ises aaythtog to myself capable to cap¬ tivate a fastidious eye—to aUure a heart whioh bowever noble, was, I knew, keenly sasoeptl- ble, to tbe charm of beanty? The best of men, tte most ethereal of philosophers, do sot faU on their knees and press tteir bnromg kisses on tte hand of anthor or artist, as euch, however divine tte gift; what waa my chance as a woman f The flgnie hefore me, taU and sUght, asd draped to black silk, looked to ms ahnost sla- toesqus to tts gracs and dignity of its outline, aud tte ans which showed so white to oostrast witt tte drapery was perfeot to shape asd proportios. Before to.day Hsnry had brought I confusion to my coiiBcions heart by an toci- dental allusion to my "lovely hani" Bnt alaa I here stopped the charm. Feeling, Intel¬ lect, perchance, might be traced In the Unes of my face, or the flexible play of my Ups, bnt there was so grace of feature; even my larga eyea hadao beanty, ttey were set too deeply bsnsatt browa too strongly marksd, and nndsr the Bhade of lashes of exaggerated lengtfa. The oheek had no roundness; the montt, not iU-ahaped, {lerhaps, was large : tha chto firm and sqnare. I was looking, too, my very best. I was not lovely, dsspils tte vivifying glow lent by ex¬ oitement ; nay, I was not pretty. I went down siairs toto my Uttle drawtog-room, to wait for my guest. I said to myself "I shall know from bis manner to-day wliat ohanee of hope I have." And I eat dowu and tried to quiet my restless heart. Ons smaU table near me was a heap of cards of disttoguished names aud letters of to- vltation—s.application and panegyric of all styles and grades. "•'I wonld give up all my fame for Henry's love," I said. Just then tte servant opened tbe door and announced my consto; and I roae op to meet him, thanking Heaven devontly for the con¬ stitutional self-command which enabled me to answer his greeting as calmly aa he gave il, Tet be was not exactly oalm ; his faoe was flushed, and there was an Intoxication of pro¬ found feeling to his voice as he congratulated me on my position. " When I think, Mildred, that I have known yoo so intlmalely for the lasl few months, and sever guessed the trulh, that yonr words have sunk iuto the very deptbs of my heart, and your spoken ones sever toncbad the same chord, it seems a stnpid blindnesB-a strange insensibility." " I do sot talk as I write," I said, smilling; " and I used to be overawed by your superior dignity:—that is, I could not get over my early deference for yonr authoriiy. I was sever quite at my ease witb you. Besides, I did not wiah you to guess." " Why -not ?" he naturally asked. "That I might b^ dazzled, oppressed by tbe revelation when made P I am ; I know sol how to ad¬ dreaa, how even to gazo upon auoh excellence. BhaU I bend the knee !<> Snrely onder any oironmslanoes tfais raillery was lll'tiined; as it waa, it was totolerable.— Hslf.kneeling before me, hia eloquent, stead¬ fast gaze searohing my face, he looked so much aa he had looked flve yeara ago, wheu also he had tortured my woman's love, that I could not endnie it. I drew baok from him, muttering a few todistinot words, whioh sounded aa if my vanity wers wounded, and tben hia depression obanged toto regret and tendemess. " Forgive me," he said," if I seemed to jesl_ Mildred; bnt, in trnlh, lo flnd you greater and nobler than ever I had imagined yoo would beoome—to discover to you the gified, high- mtoded geuius which had command jd ilself so iutimately to heart and soul—completely dis¬ concerts hopes aud schemes I havs cherished foryears. I oame here just now determined to brave it ont, to offer my homage as others offered it, and to go as otters went; bnt in¬ stead of that, I wiu tell you my stoiy." He took a few tnms through the room, and then, slopptog before my chair, be asked: "Do you remember the day you refused me, Mildred! I dared to insult yon tben by of- fertog yon a home and a husband's name with¬ out feeling for yon one particle oflove; bnt from the moment yon put bock my offar witt auoh sweet dignity and numffled deciaion, my hesrt went out to you. I oannot describe what I felt when I fonnd yoo gone. I have sought you for years, and wheu I fouud you " "Dear Henry," I said,"do not spare me| Too want to tell me that the MUdrad of fact did sot tally wilh tbe romastio remembrance of au exceptional scene. I kuow it. Are you BtiU so nltrs-cbivalrons as to feel yonrseU bound by an unexpressed and transient sensa¬ tion !" "I want to teUyon," be aaid quickly, "tbat in the toterval anew passion arose. I strag¬ gled with it, caUed it folly below a reasonable man, a crochet, an idea, a mania—what yoo wUl I Hard oames did sot cure il; reason was at fault—il conquered me in spite of my self- heart, brato. Imagination, all owned the sway." A sickestog conviction seized me at ttia point aa Henry paused agato-he loved my sisler Mabel I. Loved har I confirmation came baok npon me; had he uot praised her with a reticence more ccnolnalve ttan fervor itself, and pressed npon me witt reiterated anxiety his wiahea for oor renewed intereoorsa 1 So, then, waa it to bs I tte rosy Ups of a school-girl were to cheat me of my bliss—and worse, the selfish heart, the shallow mtod,un- gnessed at sow beneath tte radiance of her beauly, would make snre shipwreck, too, of Henry Fairfax's peace. Perhaps in my pallid face and straued self.contn<l Henry detected hidden struggle, for he came close np to me asd tonched, witt a sort of hesitating defer¬ ence, tte band which rested on tte arm of my chair. tLet me go on," he saldi "for if I speak calmly, it is only becanse I have wonnd npmy coarage tq ttis potot, an^tt la givtog way. I teU yon I loved an idea; a soul, a voice—I oate not how to describe it. AU tte excellence I held highest, aU the tendencies asd desirea of my own heart and totelleot, bnt touched with tte goiden glow of geiiins, I fonnd e^treased^ exalted,'ta'tte works of annnknownwiitei-. I knew it was ¦ womau; I felt ihe wai yoong, toanch genaiooaiador doaa not snirite ont tet youth, and I propMoi fo myaelf tte ro-1 mantio notion to dlioovei her, lo make myself known to her, to win her love It possible. I refer yon to some Impaaaioned articlea of mtoe to reviewa ofybni worki to ptovsio yon that I have Icivedyoa long,loved yon doiibly,IoTed yon aa lahall never love agato. Aa I ue yon at thia monlent,'iindrsd,'y<"> odcIobo to yoiu own pernon the donble passion of my llfs—yon prove mis faithless, yet'foittfuL One wordwiU Bofllce me; nay, gnat me bnt a glasce, MUdied; oan li ba possible " . Lst oil drop tte cnrtato over a lover'a rap¬ tures: Hy oareer as an author haa not been less aneseiafnl beoaoae'it haa been cherlahed and guarded by the sanctities of home. Hy marital experience, hltterto, has been like a dream, imd, thank Heaven, I dread no awaken- tog. Oim coomaY'B CALL. Lav down the exe; flioa hr the spade; Leave In ita track the toUInc vlow; Ihe Ille and ihe bayonet hlade . Ior arms Uke'yonre were liter now; And let the haade that ply the pen Qait the Ught lask, and luia to wield Tbe boreeman's erooked brand,- and rein Tho dharaer on the batUe fleld. - OarRonatryeallB; awajl away I To where the blood-etresio blots the green. Strike to defend.tho gratleet sway That time in all his coarse has ssea. Bee, ftom a thonsand coverts—see Spring tp. aimsd foee that hanat hsr tnok i Thoy nish to smite ber down, aid we mut beat Ue banded traitora back. Ho 1 stnrdy ai tha oaks ye cleave. And moved as soon to rear and light, Men of iha glad, and forest llsave Yoar woodcraft for the flsld offlght The arms that wle'd the ax most poar An Iron tempest on ihe foei . - . Bis lerrled ranks ehsll reel before The arm that lays the panther low. Asd ye wfao breast the moaotalo storm In grassy steep or Highland Uke, Como. for the laod ye love, to form A bnlwark lhat no foe can break. fltani, like yoor own gray cliffs tbat mock The whirlwind, stand in her defease; The blast as soon shall movs the rock Aaroshing sqaadrone bear ye thence. And ye whose homes are by her grand Swift rivers, risiag far away. - Come rrom Ibe depth of ber graen land Ae alghty In yonr march as they; As terrible as wnea the rains Hire sweUed them over bsnk and booms, Wltb saddea floods to drown the plalna And sweep along the woods nptom. And ye who throng, beside the deep. Her pone and hamletsofthe straad. In namber Uke tbe waves thst leap On bis long marmoring marge of sand. Come, Uka Ibat deep, wben o'er hie brim. He rises, all his floods to poor. And Hogs the proodest hsrqaes that swim A helpless wreck against his shoio. Few, few wera they whose swords of old Won Ihe fair land in which we dweUj Bnl we are many, we who hold The grim resolve to gaard it weU. Strike for that broad and goodly land. Blow after blow, tUI meo shaU see That Hlghl and Bight moro hand in hand. And glorloae most their triamph be. A STOEY FOB THE IITTIE POIKS. a]Mlagly;«nangh,'bnt;neTerBtirriag:.&«m its place. And poor Hero at last so o<fld between her nervons-teoor andthe damp, chiUy haU that sbe wu forced to creep back toto the niuieiy notwithBtandtog her dread of her mother'BqaeBtiona. Hec mother looked np from her Wodc aa she oame to, and aaid irith gome antpriae:— "I thought yon were gotog dows-ataba Hero. What has happened toyonT" for she saw to tte Uttle girl's face that ttere waa some trooble. Bnt ofcourae Hero did not want to teU, and ahe anawered: "Ohl ncthtog. I don't want to go down aUbrs now." " Why not!" aaked her mother. " Baoaose I don't," aaid Hero. « Tiiere la some reason for that," her mott. er said; " and I wuit to know what tbe reaa¬ on is. Ten me at onoa, Hero." Ihen Hero began to whtoe. "I can'f go down-stata," she aaid, mbbtog her eyes with the back of her hud, and hmktog very miserable. " AsdTrhy not!" aaked her mother. " .BrcaiHe—ttere's a great big black bug lytog bn the oU cloth, jost where I bare to pass I" whtoed Hero. . "Ahl" said hermother. "I thoogbt It woold be somethtog like that. A great big blaok bn; I and I suppose It Is at leaat aa largs as an ele¬ phant, witha month likea Uon; is it not, Herof" "Ho, it ian't," said Hero, ready to ciy; "but it la a big black bag, and yon needn't langh at me, either. Anybody wonld be afraid of such an ngly tbtog I" Aod she went ponttog baok to thewtodow to watch tte rato again, wishing angrUy that all the bugs to the world might be drowned to it. Eer motter Baid no mere, bnt ahe sighed aa she looked at tte enUen face of fhe child, made so unhappy by her own folly; and her wish was, tbat she might only soou flnd some way to cure her of these BiUy and oowardly feara. yon BhaU bo aarersly punished. •' iter mother | inslBted'.' ¦<¦ Too deserve tq be punished as it is, apd it ahall be done unleaa yoo obey af onco." So Hero no longer dared to refaae. She came down st^rs step by step, sblvertog to every limb, and her i^ce aa white aa tte waU. Her matter beld ont the bng aa she drew near.— "How look at it, and see what ybn have been afraid of;!' she said. And Hero, though she screamed at the flrat glanoe, was ready to die witbahame at tts next, when she did saffer hereeU to get a fUr look at ths tbtog. For afier aU, tte fearfnl creators that had kept her np-stalis all day, and cansed her so many torments, was—what do yon think? A snarl of black wood I l^hat was tte big blaok bng 1 Hero swallowed her dtoner to shame and ailenoe that day. She looked so miserably mortified that even Leonard, after his first great goSaw of laoghtog, nfratoed from teastog bet Aa for hsr motber, she said a few earnest worda to her ihat, for the first time, reaUy made an impression. Hero delermtoed, for the first time In her life, tbat she would heartUy try to conqoer her foolish feara. Moreover, she said her prayers over it, and aaked to be helped to har efforts to do right. Tou all know that when one aaks to that way, it la nevar in vato; and so yon wUl believe me when I taU yoo thatln oourse of time. Hero really ossssd to be afraid of bngs and spldets, and from Ijetog tbe great¬ est coward in the world, became a tmly brave and heroic Utile gfrl, so that ,her motter was no longer ashamed of having gives her the sams of Hero. EXAMINER ifc HERALD SVZLAjyC JOB PUmTlNG OrFICE, NORTH QTJEEN STIIEET, IiMTOABTEB, FA. BTEAM WEEKLY Between Sew York and Lirerpool, J ANDING and Embarkine'Paweiigeis iat ODMHSTOWH, (Tra. 0.) The LlTe^i<>ol,Harw tork KS! dphUSIeamshlpCom- ,d doQatc^g their The Big Black Bag. There was once a Uttls girl who had a funny namo; not so queer by itself, becanse it waa I an old olassioal name, and belonged to a per¬ aon that was celebtated to history; but veiy odd todeed, wben.considered as the title of this particular Ultle girl. JEfero waa the name; and anybody would imagtoo that ihat person who was oaUed by it should naturally be a very brave aud coura¬ geous peison. On the contrary, this Haro was ibe greatest litiie coward in the world; she was afraid of har ows shsdow, ss people say, and if Bhe saw a cow to the meadow, or a Strange Uttle dog to the yard, or even a poor old pnssy.cat sunning herself on the garden- fence, she would rash toto the honae asd cUng to her moiher, or any one she happened to meet first, trembling and shnddertog as If she had-seen some awtol wUd beast, AU this mortified ber motter dreadfully.— She hsd a great contempt for people who gave way to such silly fears; and she tried in a great many ways to ouie her liltle dangbter ot tbem. But her efforts were quite useless, to spite of coaxhig and'reasoning, reproof and punishment. Hero still conlinued to shiver at the Bight of a little red aut or a miserable cockroach, to run in terror if a spider or a worm crossed ber path, and lo scream tUl the whole house was aroused if she happened to wake op at night and find herself alone tothe dark. Yon may be suro ber mother was ashamed of havtog har oalled Hero. It sonnded so ri¬ diculous to be aaying all tha time: " Hero is sucli a coward 1" "There's Hero running away from a mouse I" " Hero's screaming be. cause there'a a caterpillar on her frock I " He¬ ro's afraid of her owu shadow I" People laughed outright when tbey heard the comi¬ cal nama, and ber brother Leonard, wbo waa as bold as a lion, never called her anything but " She-io," in bis contempt for her cowar¬ dice. One rainy day, wben tbe Uttle girl was about eight years old, she waa obliged to stay away from school. Ths wtod blew tUl all the win¬ dows ta fhe house rattled a(iBin, and the trees on tho lawn were beut almost double; the rain beat down like bullets ou the gravel- walka and on the tin roof of the piazza, and out to tte street there seemed to be a muddy river rushing along. It waa entirely too stormy to think bf going to school, and Haro was not at all Bony, for a holiday now and tbeu was as pleasant to her as it is lo asy other litlle girl. She Blood by tte nuiBery.window and watched iho treas; the willows wilh tteir long hair streammg wildly sbout as tha wind swept dowu upon tbem, tha horse-cbeBlnnis and the alms Witt tteu: great branches creaking and tossing to aud fro. She saw the tall dahlias beateu dowu by ihe rain, and the ohtoa-astera traiUng to the mud, and the yellow siream of waler that went rashtog down tbe carriage- road to meet tbat in the street beyond. Itwas all pieasaut to look at for a while, for there was no thunder or Ughtning, and Hero was not afraid of wind or rain wben she atood Inside of a warm nursery with her mother close hy her. Sbe grew tire i of it, however, by and by, and then her moiher said to her;— " Why don't yon go down-staiis. Hero, and stay with Leonard in the dining-room f He is pasting piotnres to his scrap-book, and you cau ask him to let you help him." " Oh I I will then," Hero answered, aud she started off eagerly; for she liked to play with Leonard, and to spite of her being suoh a cow¬ ard, he was vary kind to her. He lent her bia dominoes and his solitaire-board whenever she wanted them, and when he pasted to his scrap-book, he often gave her pictures aud showed her bow to pot them in properly. 'Whioh was all right, you know; but a great manybrolhera would have said, " Don't both, er," 0.-," Get ont of my way," and sent the Uttle sister off when they were bnsy abont tteir owu affairs. Hero kuew Leonard would not, and she ran out toto the faall thtoktog how nice it would be lo cut ont pictures, aud maybe be allowed to paate some in the big book. Her hand was ou the balustrade, and one was on ihe stairs, when all at onoe Bometbing black oangbt her eye at the foot of tbe stair-oase. The oll.oloth in the hall waa very Ught, almost, white to¬ deed, for it waa to imitation of marble ; so any- ihtog dark showed npon it very platoly. The tbtog tbat Herb saw looked extremely black by ooniraat, but inhai it waa sho could not veiy well see, standing as she did at ihe top bf a long flight of stafrs, while ttis lay at the bottom. Anybody bui such a Uiile coward would have gone oloser, and found ont if itwas any tbtog to be afraid of. But one glance was enongh for Hero; it was a blaok thing; it look¬ ed Uke a bug, and it Uy jnat to tte way wbere sha woold have to pass. She started back in terror, and notttog would hsve Indnced her to go down staira whUe the object lay there. At tbe same time she wanied very much to go down, not ouly because of Leonard and the scrap-book, but becanae she knew her mother would inqnire why site staid up suOra, and she vonld b« aahamed to tell the reason. So she stood.at the top of the ataira for at least ten intontes,;peeping over tte banisters every now snd then to see if the bng had mo¬ ved ont q( algbt. Bat BO; tUn It lay atlU on An hour passed by, very slowly aud drearily to Hero. There was no one to talk to, forher motter sat quite silent, stitchtog away witt aU her might, and Hero was ashamed to speak to her. The rato that had looked pleasant at flrst ouly seemed dismal now, and there was nothtog to do, for she was tired of aU the nursery books and toys, and only wanted to be down-Btairs with Leouard and the scrap- book. " I oan't stand this any longer," she thonght at last. "I'U go and see if tte bng hasn't crawled away." So Bhe sUpped out of tte room, went to the bead of the stairs, and looked caotiooaly down—only to start back witt a shiver tte next mtonte. Ths ngly, wooly thing was thete stiUI "Ohl dearl is it going io stay forever?" thought Hero. " ShaU I never get down-staira agrin I" and she went back to tte nursery more disconsolate than ever. Her mother glanced op aa she came to, bot she did not speak to ber; and anolher long time crept by to dreaiy silence. A pleasant, fruity odor reached Hero's nose by-and-by—the smell of juicy apples roasitog beforo the flre. She knew very well ttat Leonard was doing it; nobody roasted apples eo nicely ae he, for he had a knack of tytog a string to their stems so ttat it sever pulled ont, and fastening it np to the mantelshelf so lhat they saver tumbled down, aud givtog it suoh a peculiar twist that they always twirled round aud ronnd nntU all sides of the apple were most beautifully browned, snd it was tender all ths wsy throngh. She had vary little doubt that he waa roasitog oue for her as weU as for himself, he was always kind to her, and she longed to go down and get it. Eut how could Bhe ?— That wretobed bng I Sbe was sure it waa to the way slill. However—as the smell of the apples grew more sweet sud slrong—it wonld do no harm to go and look again. Accordingly Hero went, and found the blaok bug exactly to the same spot where she had flrat seeu it. Evidenily it waa in comfortable quarters, aud had no intention of moving ont of them. She leaned over ibe banister in great distrefls and perplexity. " I think lome- body might ooma and take tha thing away," ahe said to herself with a fretful sigh; and she had halt a mind to call Leonard and ask him to do il. But ahe remembered quickly how he slways laughed at and scolded her for such things, aud she kuew it would be useless to ask his belp. Tfae kitchen waa too far off for the servants to hear ber, and besides, her moiher would not allow lhem to assist har, even if Ifaey should hear. Sbe could think of nothing in the world to do,* and Bbe was just ou the point of bursliug into tears, whan tbe dining room door opened suddeuly, and Leo¬ nard came oul. . " Hullo,- Hero, Shero I what are you deing up thera ? Come dowu and get a roasted ap pie," he oalled out iu his boisterous way, as he oaught eight of her Uttle fo'rlom faoe peer¬ ing over the banister. " I can't," said Horo very dismally. "Wby not? Hsve you baeu punished?'' "No," drawled Hero. "Why don't you coma dowu theu f" aakad Leonard impatiently. " I don't want to," said Hero. Whioh was a very wrong story, as we all know, when slie wanied notttog else so muoh. But sho knew he 'would laugb at her so, that she did nol dare to tell tte trath; and consequently she had the mortification of hearing bim Bay, as be walked back to the dintog-room. " Oh 1 very weU I If you don't want to, it's nolhing to me. Slay ihere by all means. I oan eat the applea myself." Leonard was prond, you see, Uke most boys; and wben he offerad a favor, didn't like to hsve it refnsed. And as for poor little Hero, why, it served har rigbt, of course, for beiug such a coward, and telling a wrong stcry; but she waa very miserable, nevertheless, and this time sbe could sot help showtog it. Jnst as soon as she heard the dining-room door alam to, she sat down on the stair-step, and hid her face iu her apron, and cried to good earnest. For all tbat, the obattoate bug never atirred; and when Hero looked down iulo the hall again, after she had cried till she was tired, it lay there still. Never was there such a long mommg. _ The nursery felt Uke a prison, and Hero thought she should die of loseltoesa aud fatigue.— Twelve 6'olook, one o'oiook oame, and at last the dinner-beU rang. Her motter folded up her work, and put it by. "Come, Hero," she said. "I am gotog down to dtoner." "But mother, that bug's ihere stlU," said Hero miserably. " How absured I" exclaimed her motter.— " It's time to bave done wilh this nonsense now. Hero. I tosist upon your coming down- Btaire Immediately." She took the child by tfae hand, and drew her on to spite of har reluctance. Bat at the head of the staira Hero paused, after one shnddertog glanoe downard, and declared she could not go a step fnrther. ¦ " Where ia the bug f I see notttog," asked hermother. "There," oried Hero trembltogly, "down there I" And looking again, ber mother really saw tbe terrible object. She did sot stop to wonde r what it waa, bnt ran lighlly down the steps, stooped the floor, and the next mo¬ ment Haro grew cold witt horror, for ahe saw her mother actnally take tte tttog np, and lay It ont npon her open, bate hand. She laaghed aa she did so, and said:— " Come down. Hero, and tako a look at yoor "big black bog.' I only want yon to see what a wise ohild yon are." Bnt Hero screamed at ihe more Idea. "X oan't I dare sot I" she oried wUd wiih terror^ and started back as if to escape to the nnraery. "Gome down when I bid yon," her matter commanded sternly. " Come this moment, I say. Hero." " Oh, so, no, no I Ioan't,Ican'triorsam- ed Hero agato, Sales of Personal Property AKS BEAI. EBTATE. WB HAvn A LAsan tabutt or NEW and BEAUTIFUL CUTS, Neatest Disphy Type hi the City, >.) andFhUadelj r intend _. . ...powered CIyde.Ball£ Iron Steamahlpa, ae followat OLASCOW, Batoiday, Boy. sth. OITZ Of HBW lOEK, do do Wlh. EDISBOBO, do do Urd. aad .rerj Satiirday, at Noon, &cn Fler U. Horth JOiver Batea of Paasage: ylEgr OABIH »7J 00 do to Loodon..... 80 00 do lo Paris se CO do lo Hambarg 66 00 8IEIBAQE so 00 do toLondon as 00 do to Paris agOO do toHamt>arg SfiOO {^Passengers forwarded to Havre, Bremen, Bolter dam, Antwerp, Ac., al redneed Ihrongb tares. Persons wishing lo hring ont thslr friends can hny Ueksts at low rates. d^Por farlher Information apply al Ihe Company'a oflces. JOHH 0. DALB, Agsnl, IS Broadway, H. T. or BKSO, HoaBAHH, KBLLT & CO., Agenu, Lancaster marU (l)lj IS STBAIkl TO I0in)0in)££B7, OIASGOW, , AKO IiITHBf OOIi. SlHE MONTEEALOOJiAN STjfiAM- SHIP COMPAHY'S PIBST CLASS, foil powered deboUIBteamers;— HOVA SCOTUH, BOHKIUAH, HOBTH BElTOH, CANADIAN, H. AHBBIGaH, AHOLO SAZOH, HIBBBIAH. noBWialAS, CapL UcHuter. " Qraoge. " Borland. " Graham. •• AllOD. " BallaUoe. (How Balding.) A great phUosopher says, to one of his let¬ tera : "I have told yon of tfae Spaniard who always pnt on Bpectacles whan he waa abont to eat cherries, ttat they might look bigger and more tempttog. to like manner I make the most ofmy enjoyments; and ttongh I do not oast my cares away, I pack them in as Utile compass as I cau for myself, and never let them annoy otters." If there Is anybody nuder the canister of heaven that I have to utter excresence," eaid Mra. Parttogion," It is the tale bearer and slan¬ derer going about like a vUe boa constructor, circnlatlng his calomel aboat honest folks. I slways know oue by his pfalsmahogany. It seems aa If Beldabod had atamped him with' his private signal, aud everythtog he looka at seems to tum yaUer." And havtog uttered this Bomawhat eUborate speech she was seized witt a flt of congbtog, and oalled for some de¬ moleent drops. How barren a tree is he tbat lives, and spreads and cumbers the gronud yet leaves not one seed—not ose good work to generate after him. All cannot leave alike, yet all may leave somethtog answering thebr proportion and tbair kinds. He who Is paaaionate and hasty is generaUy honest.. It is your oold, dissembling hypocrite of whom you should beware. There is no de- capiion iu a bull-dog. It is only the our that sneaks up sud bites you wben your bsck is tumed. FOB THB BBTNTISa OF SALE BILLS, To wliioli. WA luTlta th* Atuntlon of posoiu aboat h1< ling tidt BEAL ESTATE, Fam Stock, Agtienltnral Implements, ASJ> HOUSEHOLD PUBWITXTBB CuTTlng the Canadian and liolted BUtes Halls. E3~0b« of the st«ainers of tha Uoe will sail from Ur- erpooteTory ThimAmy, and from Qaebao ererr Bator- dar.ealUngat X^adoaderry to tMeire on Iraud and land malls and pauengert to and ftom IreUad and Scotland. Glasgow puseagers are tumished wtth free passage tickets to and from Loodooderry. Bates of passage from Qaebec to toadondenr, Olas- gow or LlTerpool: First Class (accordiog to aecomniodBUon) - • $66 tt $B0 Steerage (foond with cooked prorisions) $S0 An experienced Sargeon attached to eachsteamer. Betarn tickets Uened at redaced rates. Certiflcatea isened for bringing oat passengers from all the prinoipal towns of Oreat Britain and Ireland, at the foUowlog low rates :— Londonderry to Hew York $30 00 Glasgow - " 32fi0 Lirerpool " " 33 00 From anr B. B. station in England 40 00 *• " " Ireland 32 60 From Antwerp, Bremen, Hambarg aad Bot¬ terdam, to New York 45 00 •Hckets Issued at redaced rates, per WASHiaaTOH Lira OF Saiuhq Packbth, learing Urerpool for New York weekly. EJ*For Passage, apply at the Office of the Company, 23 Broadway, New lork. SABSL & SEABLE, Geaeral Agenta, or J. U. WESXHASFFEB, No. *i North Qaeea Btreet, Lanoaater, Pa. aog 2l-7m-39 4 AU created auimals are oombined to man. Wisdom makes him an ark to whioh they dweU together ta harmony; folly, a cage in which they bite and tear esch other aud him. Many men die martyrs aud then have an impartial judgment passed npou their lives, jnst as tte poor whales ara kiUed first and tried afterwards. H .A. nsr ID IB X Ij Xj S FBISTEID IH From One to Tluee Houis' Notice. lAHCASTEE CODHTT BASK,) lioveinber fith, lesi, ( nPHE DIKECTOKS have this day de- I clared a dividend of FOUB per cent, on tba Cap¬ ital Btock paid in, payable on demand, no S-St-fiO W. L. FEIFBB, Calhier. CICHOMACKBB BOSEWOOD, 6i O OOTAVB PIAHO, lonis XIT, Style Jlne tone and ingood order. Will bo aold oery/ow. Apply to B. B. KILLIKBGLT, noS.StSO Parsdlae, Lan. CO., Pa. Seven and Thres-Tenths XTnlted States Treaaury Notes. rriHF UNDERSIGN liD are now pre- i pared to deliver at once, any amonot of the above STtes. BEEO, Sl'OKAHN A Co., oct23 4*t-<i3 Bankers. LaircASTBa CoonTT Base, Oct. 1,18S1. 4 N Election for thirteen Directors of x\. this loetltatiOD, to nerve darlotctbeenflaiog year, will be held at tbe Banklog Hoaaa, in the city of Lan¬ caster, on MONDAT. the 18th day of liOVEMBBR.lfiSl betwean the hoora of 10 o'clock A. M., and 3 o'clock. P.M. Oct 3.td-45 W. L. PBIPEB, Caahier. Onr feoilities for Priating CARDS, CIECniAES, BILL HEADS, OBDBR BOOES, COHSriTDTIONS, &. FOR SOCIBTIES, FBOGBAMMES, X>ostex-ai, Xmlsels, .Sao. are not anrpasaed by any estabUshment in the city J®-CALL AHD SEE SPECIMENS.-©J BISHOP BOWMAM-. FULL SIZE PHOTOGKAPH of _ the late BightBersrendaAMnEL BOWMAH D. . Aaaiatant Bishop oftbe Diocese of PennaylTaoia. Price 60 cents, al J. M. WESTHAEPFEB'S. Mo. 41 Cor. of H. Qoeen and Oranse ata. " The likenees is certainly agood one, and tho Bishop beins In ble clerical robee, ashle owa parlahonera were moal accnatomed to seeing him. It gives with great fi - delity that soft and ezpreasive amile which maiked bU featnrea in friendly converaatioo."—Ed. of Eveniog Ex¬ preaa. ang 3I.tf.S9 JOHN BAEB'S SONS, BOOKSELLEES AND STATIONERS, No. IK NOKTH aHEKN at., Lancaater. Have eonataoUy for aale at low pricee. School Books, compriaing the different klnda now in nsa:—Sander's, Bargent'e, Wlllaoa's, Tower's, Parker aod Wetson'a Beadera. Ultchell'^ Warren's, Emith'a, UcNaUy's Oaograpblee.' Davies', Stoddard's, Brock's Arithmetics. .Webatet'e and Worceatei'e Dlctlonariaa. Algebras, Qrammara, Hlatorlea, &e,, &c. Writing Paper, Copy Books, Writing Ink. Inkatands, Steel Pens. Lead Pencils, Gold Pens, Slatea. Blank Books and Stationery. For sale at the lowest prices. Wholeaale snd retaU, at tho Book atore of JOHH BA^'S EOKS. ocl 33 tf-4S NEW AMERICAN CyCLOPEDIA THIKTEBNTH VOLUME, MOW EKADY FOE snBSOEIBBES. PATABLE OS DELIVEET, AT E. BABB & CO.'E Bookstore. Bronze and Colored Wori DONE TO OBDEB. AMMOnMCEUEMT EXTEAOEDIMAET1 EUAS BABB & CO. SELL HABDEE'S BIFLE AMD LIQHT IMFAMTBT TACTICS, for »1. 25. GEM. SCOTT'S MASDAL, «3 10. Don't forget No. 31 OppoiUe the Cour House. may Ifi tr-2S jan 9 tf(l)-7 WM. AXrO. ATLEE, ATTORNEY AT LAW, No. 45 East King Btreet, oppoallo gprecher'e Hotel, Lancaster, loly4.Iy-32 •WASHINGTON W. HOPKINS, ATTORNEY AT LAW.—Office with M. Llghtner and Jamea K. Alexander, Dnke St., nearly oppoaite Conrt Hoosa. Jon 13-tf-29 the vUto oU-o^oth, lo<*ta8 U^ti^^ Notice to Tax Collectors. THB Tas CoUecors of the different Towasliip*, Wardit Bod BorooghB of the ConDty of LftDC&eter, are horeby aotlfied tbat tbey &ra reqaeated to colleet all >ha taxes dae opon their daplicateaby MONDAY, tba 2d day of DECBMBBE next. If any re main nnpald by that day,tha collector ¦will ba required to farnlBh a lUt of all dellnqneDts so that it may appear wbo are In arreara. TbjH meannre is absolntely neces- Biiry in conBeqneace of the beary drafts mada npon tho TrBa»ury by tae Kelief CommUtee, for the pnrpoBe of BDpplylng the wants of tbe families of those brava men wbo hava ToInateBrad In babalf of tba defence of their GosntTy. The collectors will also b« reqnested to pay into tbe Treaanry.all taxes an fa^t as they are collected. JAS. BOYERS, ) Attbbt, I.KVI S. REIST, CommUlonerB. JOHH DONER. ' oct80-tf49 P, G. KShLEMAN.CletlE.^ BANK NOTICE. "IHOTICE is hereby given that the X^ Praatdent and Directors of the Laneaatar Coanty bank, Intend to maka application to tha Legislainre of the Commonwealth of PennsylTania, at their next Bes¬ sion, for a renewal of theeharter, and an exiension of the prlTllegesoftha eald Baok, wltb an tba rights aod privilageB now enjoyed, fora term of twenty years, from the expiratioa of tha present charter, with the aama aame title, locaUon and capital of ft300,000. By order. W. L. PKIPEE, Jn 110-6m-33 Caabler Lancaater Co. Bank NOTICE. " VTOTICE is hereby giving than an ap JLl plication will be made to Oov. CURTIN for the pardon of GUmor HnH, conylcted of kidnapping in tbe Coart of Qaarter Sessions of Laacaster Connty. Novem bar, I860. qo 6-St*60 NOTICE. " QOTICE is hereby given than an ap- _L^ plication will be made to Got. CDRTIN for tbe pardon of Tllgbman B. ClemsoB, conTlcted of horee Btaalttg In the Conrt of Qnarto; Sessions of Lancaster Coonty, AprU Term, 1857. no 6.2t»fi0 ASSIGNED ESTATE OF GER- HARD BRANDT. Tha aaderslgned, aoditor, ap- pointed by tha Coart of Common Pleas of Lancaster Connty, to diBtrlbate the balance In tha bands of C. S. Kanffman, Aesignee. for tha beneSt of creditors of Ger¬ bard Brandt, among thoea legally entitled to the same, beraby glres notica to all persoas Interested In snrh dis- tribatton, that ha will attend for tbe pnrpoae of hla ap¬ pointment, In one of tba Jnry Rooms la the Coort Honae. at Lancaster, on SATDBDAY, tha 80th day of NOVEMBBB, at 10 o'clock A. M., wben and where thoy can attend. WM. AUG. ATLEE. noS tf.fiO E-STATE of JOHN B.PENINGTON j of Little Brlttain twp. dec'd. The nnderHlgned Auditor appointed by the Orphans' Court of Lancaater Coanty, to dlstribato tha balanca la tba hands of Sam, £. Falxlamb, administrator of tbe astata of taid dec'd.. to and among those legally entitled to recelra it, will maet tbe parties Interested In satd parpose on TBURS¬ DAY, the aiBt of NOVBMBBH, A. D. 1861, at 2 o'clock, P.M., in tbe Library Room In tbe Coart Bonse, Lan* eastar City. J. K. ALEXANDER, octS0-4t49 Anditor. •pSTATE of MARY WATSON, late I'J of ProTidanca twp , dec'd.—Letters of adminiatra¬ tion oa said estate baring been granted to the nnder¬ elgned, all persDDB Indebted tbereto ara reqnested to mska Immadlate payment, and thos* bariag eJaima or demands against tba same will present tbem for satlle¬ ment to tbe nnderelgned, residing In filartic twpl octS06t«49 HIBAM WATSON. TESTATE OF SAMUEL JOHNSON, )P^ lata of MarletU. East Donegal twp , dec'd.~Lat- tsrs of Administration on tald astate baring been grantad to tha ondarslgned, aU persons Indebted tbera> to are requested to make immedlata payment, aad tboM harlng daminds againat the Bama wUl preaent them for BetUemeat to tbe nnderslgned, residing In said twp. JOHFf W. CLARK, SIMON GROU, oct 3^6t-48 AdmlalstratorB. E"STATE OF BEBECCA SIDES, I lata of Martie twp., daee'd.—Lattera of Adminis¬ tration on Baid aeUt« baring been grantad to the on- derslgned, alt paraans Indebted thereto ara requeBted to make Immedlale payment, and those baring olaims or dsmands against the same will praseat them for settle¬ ment to tbe nnderslgnad, resldiag in said twp. JAM£S Bl UPSON, oct is 6t.4B _ Admlalstrator. ESTATE of JAMES FOSTER, late or Elizabeth twp, Lancaater connty. dec'd.—Let¬ tera of idminiatnitlon on aald aetata baring been grantad Co tfaa nnderslgned, aU persons Indebted there¬ to ar« reqaestad to make Immediate payment, aad thosa haTlsg olalma or demande agelnet tba same will preseat tbem for settlement to tha nuderBlgned, resid¬ ing at BaehmanrrUle, Lebanoa oonnty. Fa. oet23-ei»48 WILLIAM POSTBB. ASSIGNED ESTATE of ANDREW 0. BOWKB h WIFE, having by dead of OCTO- h&K Slat, 1861. aligned aU thaii esUta to the nnder¬ slgnad in tnut for the baneflt of oradUora, all persona Indabtad to said astata ara raqoaatad to maka ImmadUta payment, and thosa harlnc claima against tho sama will praaant tbem to the nndenigned aaalgnee, residing in East Hampflald twp. oot 33 6fr48 BENJAUIH BOWEBS. ESTATE OF WILLIAM KOCH, uu of CMmarron tirp., dac^d.-Letun tasU- mantarT: on aald «iit«t*-baT»tc baea graated to the asdarslffnad, all persona indebtad thereto are reqoeeted to Hike IsunedUta paymeat, aad those harlax elalae or demands afalait tha aame wlU preeeat them fot seU tUmeat to the ondexilntd, reeldlag in tald tvp. OotlO ftHI EDWARD BEILLT, A TTORNEY AT LAW.—OFFICE, J\, DUKB STBKET.adoorsNoitboftbe Court nonse, Lancaster, Penn'a. nor 2-tr-49 FERDINAND E. HAYES. A TTORNEY AT LAW, No. 402,LI- f\ BEARY STBEBT, Erans' Bnilding, PHILADEL¬ PHIA^^ aprii 13-lf.gQ To the Citizena of Lancaster County. THE GOVERN iMENT announces thut tbe supply of BLANKETS In tba conntry Ib ex- baneted. an'd Invites contributions, to rallero preeviog neceaBllies, from the anrplnn stores of families. jrj-The Sabacriber wlU cheerfnlly reeelre any good Bouud Blankets weighing not less than foar pounda, which may be entruated to him for tbat porpoae by tbe loyal and patrioUc cltlzanB of tba connty. and will take care tbat they ara promptly forwarded aad applied to tbe nse of the troops. THOS. £. FRANKLIN. oct Id-tr-47 Lancaster. A Bare Opportunity. TO any one wishing to engage in bu¬ siness, one of the most dealrable conntry vtora stands, in a thriring rlUage, in Laneaster co., for sale. Alao, a radneed stock of mdza:, and flxtores. For for¬ ther Information address A. B. 0.. aug 2S-tf-« Lancastor P. 0., Pa. 3POB EENT. A DWELLING HOUSE, Blackamith Shop, Shoeing Shop, aWsgon Maker Sbop, ^KbJ i and a Naw Stable and IJ^ ACRES OF LAND. A Ki good bosiness Is dona at the preaant time. Sltuat-j|ii|_ ed In East Hempfleid townahip. Apply to oct 30-tf-49 JOHN McGOVERN. STBAY CATTLE. CAME to the place of the Subscriber In East Lampeter twp., near Ssbteman's Mill, on thtf Tamplke to Strasborg, on the 17tb of OCTOBER, the following Stray CatUe:-A BLACK COW- -. wltb a wbUe spot on the baad.ands whlteK^^St legs; one DABK BLUE HEIFEE, Dnrbam^tcSt.* mixed, about 2 years old; a BBD HEIFER,¦'¦¦¦¦ abont 2 years old, wbiU spot on tha bead, and a little white on the hindquarters; a one year old spotted Heifer, with a black neek; and a two year old Steer, red spreckled and whlta on tbe back. Sa-The owner Is requested to prora his property, pay tbe expanses and take tbe said eattle away. Oct S0.3t*-49 WILLIAM GOOD. CAUTION TO TBESPASSEHS. THE undersigned citizens of East Donegal townsbip, Lancaster eoanty. Pi., bereby caution all perBons against trespassing on tbelr prem¬ iaes, by gunning, fishing or otherwaae, under penalty of tbe law: Samoal Redieclcer, Daniel Niesley, John M. WhUebiU, Darld F. Brobaker, George S. MUler, Christian Henh, Benjamin Gerber, Jonaa Mnmma, Sen., Christian K. Niasley, Christian Gerber, John K. Nlsslsy. Seth Eby, Jonas Mnmma. Dr. Nathaniel Watson. Andrew Armstrong, Michael Huber. £11 Hoffman, Jobn Q. Hoerner, John Gross, James B. Clark, Jobn W. Clark, J. E. KreybiU. East Donegal twp. oct 2-ly.45 Caution to Gunners and Fishers. ALL PERSONS are forbid trespassing upon tbe Elizabeth Furnace property for the pnrposeofhQntlDg.guanlog, flshing, or ramorlag stones, wood, or boop-polea.or trespasaifig In any way under tba penalty o( tbe law. " -^.-.—"—- ... aept 11 COTJET PROCT.ATVTATION. TTTHEREAS, the Honorable HENRY f y G. LONG, President; Hon. A. L. Uatbs and Fee- bee BanrtOiT, Esq., Associate Judges of the Coortof Com¬ mon PleaB In and for tbe coanty of Lancaster, and Aa- slsUnt Justices of tbe Courts of Oyer and Terminer and General Jsll Delivery and Qaarter SesaloBs of tbe Pasce. In and for the eonnty of Lancaster, bare Issued -their Piecept to me directed, requiring me, amongother things, to maka pnbllc Proclamation throughont my ballwlck.that aCourt of Oyer and Terminer and a gen¬ eral Jail deUrery, also a Court of General Qaarter Ses- slone of tbe peace and Jail deUrery, will commence in tbe Court Uoose, In the city of Lancaster, in tbe Com¬ monwealth of Pennsylraaia. oa the THIRD MONDAY IN NOVEMBER, IStb, 1861, In parsnance of which pre¬ cept, Public Notice is Hereby Given, to tbe Mayor and Aldermen of tha city of Lancaater, ia the aatd coooty, aad all tha Jostiees of tha Peace, the Coroner and Constables of the said city and connty ol Laacaater, that they be tben and tbere In tbeir own proper persons with their rolls, records and examina¬ tions, and inqulsltioaa. and their otbar remembraneea. to do those things whlob to tbelr offlces appertain, in thelrbehalf to bedone; and also all those who will prosecute against the prisoners who are. or tben sbaU¬ be In the Jail of the said eoonty of Iiancaster, are to be then and there to prosecute againat them as shall be Just. Dated at Lancaster, tbe 2£th day of Auguat, Isei. oct 30-9H9 B. W. P. BOYD. Sheriff. STEAM ENGINE FOB SALE. A FOUR-HORSE ENGINE in run¬ ning ordar^^r sale ebeap. Enqalre atthe Exam aae AVD Riia*i.T>haa«. SWAW HOTEL, CENTRB SQa.dRE, LJiNCdSTER, Pjl. TTENBY 8. SHENK respeotfully in- IM forms liis old eostomers and the pnblie generaUy ttist be has talien the afidve hopie, formerlr kept br Mrs. Eoalna Hobley and Kdward S. Hnbley, wbete he is altendsd to, and erery elTort made te gire 'utiafao'tion He reepectfnlly solicits tile patronage of the poblle. DBATH TO TRAITOBS! THE DNION 11 THE VSION POBBTEEI'I THB DHION AND THB CONSTITDTION IIM ENVELOPES AND LETTER PABER WITH ¦ THE ELAQ AND THE CANNON, may lS-tf-25 At No. 31 oppoaite the CoartHooae. THE BEST AND THE CHEAPEST trWION WBITIWO PAPBB UNION ENVELOPES, At £1,1 AB BABB & CO'S, may 16-tf.2S Oppoaite the Conrt Hone ooa wnoLB consTH—sa it was i S. S. EATHVON, lilerchant Tailor and Clotbler, Cor. ORANGB: and N. aUBBN Ets., WOULD respectfully beg leave to inform tbe pnbilo tbat be has on band, of hla own mannfactora. a large nnd well aelected a'ock of FJll m WINTUR ClOTHIXG for Men and Boya, which WiU be sold at prices to suit tbe preseat p-eallar utaio of lhe times;—alao WOOLLEN, COTTON aud SILK UNDBRCLOTHING, SHIRTS AND COLLARS, NECKTIES, CRAVATS AND STOCKS, HOSH AND GLOVES. HANDKERCHIEFS SUSPENDER? and UMBRELLAS,'and a rariety of olhor articles naoally kapt In Clothing and Fornlsblng atores. Hehaa also Joat recelred a fresb and choice stock of CLOTHS, CASSIMERES AND VESTINGS, saltablt} to tbe approaching aeaaoD, and adapted to all taatJts and pecaoiary clrcnmstancea, which will hs made to order with ekill and dispatch. In auy dealred atyla, and warranted to glreentlra Batlsfactlon. Thankfal to an appreciating public for paat patroa¬ age, and In order tbat be may be enabled, tn these try¬ ing timea, to continue employmentto a nnmeroos claas- of laborerswho are "worthy of their bire." be reapect folly eoUcIts and hopes ha may merit a raasonahla share of fntnre favor. Xl^ Don't forget the placa, at the late F. J. Kbamph'ii • old SUud, opposite the Hotel and Stage Offlcee of Em'l Shobsr, corner of Nortb Qaeen and Orange streets. oct8-3m-47 8. 8. RATHVON. CONSUMEKS. OF COAL, ELLMAKEB'S COAL TARD, Siia at the Old Place, Cor. ol Frioes and Lemoa sts., ons sqnat^ North of the Bailroad. 'T'HE most convenient yard in the city I roT Country Trade, being ont of sight of the cars, and frontingon two streets, C^Harlng procared ths serrices of JACOB EEINHOLD, for 16 yeara weU and farorably knowa to the people of this connty in coaaectloa with tbe coal bnal¬ nesa, and by giving bib entire attention to the baalne^s. the sabscriber hopea to m^rtt and recelra a Uberal share of the pubUc patronage. t^Clean Coal and full vxiglU guaranUed to aU. aprl7-ly.2I LEVI ELLMAKER, THE INLAND INSUBANCE AHD DEPOSIT COMPANY INSURE against loss bj fire on Build¬ ings, either perpetnfil or llmltod. Also, on Moichan- dlse,fornltnre and other pereosal property, at reasooabla rataa. X^'Sald Company also receire mooey on deposit aa heretofore, pay 6 percent Interest for ona monUi or longer, and fi>£ per cent on deposit made for a year. H. E. MUHLENBEUG. President. R. F. Bauch, SecreUry. mar 21-tf-17 BANKING HOUSEOF BEED, HENDEBSON & CO. f\^ the 26th of March, inatant, tbe \J nnderblgned, under the flrm of BEED, HENDBH- 80N & CO.. wtU,comraence the Banking Bnslnesa.in Its usnal branches at tbe offlea hitherto occupied by John K. Reed Jc. Co., at the corner of Eaat King and Doka Streets, betweea the Court Houi>e and bprecher's Hotel, Lancaster, Pa. They wUl pay interest on deposites at the foUowing rates: 6^ percent, for 6 monthsaud longer. 6 '* "30 days and Iooger, Thar wlU buy aud sell Stocks and Real EsUta on commlBBlon, negotiate Loans for otbeni, pnrehase and sflUBiUsof Exchange. Promissory Notes, DrafU, &c. Ac, 4c. The nnderalgned win be IndlridaaUy liable to tbe extent of tbeir means, for all depositee and other obli gatlona ofReed, Henderaon & Co. March IS. I860. JOHN K. BESD, AMOS S. HENDERSON, mar H-tf-lT ISAAC E. eiKtiTBR. JOO BOXES OBANGES, 25 Boxes I-nto,.. Jostreoeired^g^ro^r-gj^eap IMS Notice to Sugar Cane Growers. AN entire new and improved Sugar and MoUaaea Boiler, for m.klng Sorghom Sngar, direcUy from the Jnlee of the Cl.lne~i bnsar Cane. Aout.repieBanUsgthe eraporator, snd aamples of Engar and Byrnp can be seen "ADAM K. BABES Ag- rlcnltnral Implemant and Beed Warebonse, Eaat King street, next door to Laoe a Dry Goods Store, who wUl attend toall orders seot to him. Persons wlahlng to pnrchase State or Coonty Eighte will plaase addrese tbe sabacriber. W. J. WHITNET, Bole proprietor for the Sute of I'ennaylTanla. Jnl lMmJ3 Paetoryrille Wyoming Co, Pa. OAA BUSHELS PRIME VIRGIN. Jm/\J\J lAPEANDTS.tOOBoleeEalalne.SOODrom Irua. Jnst reoelred and for sale by fcl>J».e.ia JOHHD.SKIISS.
Object Description
Title | Lancaster Examiner and Herald |
Masthead | Lancaster Examiner and Herald |
Volume | 35 |
Issue | 51 |
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 | 1861-11-13 |
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 | 11 |
Day | 13 |
Year | 1861 |
Description
Title | Lancaster Examiner and Herald |
Masthead | Lancaster Examiner and Herald |
Volume | 35 |
Issue | 51 |
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 | 1861-11-13 |
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 828 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 | 11 |
Day | 13 |
Year | 1861 |
Page | 1 |
Resource Identifier | 18611113_001.tif |
Full Text |
¦mnmw W¥iW^^?
wL.&m
LMGMmR^H., WEDNESDAT, NOYEB^m IB, 1861
NO. 51.
J. A HIESTAND, J.F. HUl^P, HECKKET, TnrM«"tai nrnii or
HI£STAin>, HUBES & HXCS£BT, ofnoi'si MUK «nxBi mur.
THE EXAMINEB & HBRABI> Xt rkWrtatf ir |
Tags
Comments
Post a Comment for Lancaster Examiner and Herald