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J?-! Tim$i ^m- jm^M^GL MNCASTER, PA.r WEDOTSfiMi MAI 18, 1864. 'm-^r - -EHJO . Jm PtabU&lied. owerr W©dn«iday. AT TWO DOLLARS AY^-^JAB, The Examiaer & Hera^ld U Fnlilishftd erery littniUy et $2.00 a Tear. dFFiCBKo. 32^ KOBTU QVEEK STBEET. JNO. A. HIESTAKD, E. M. KLINE, Editor* and Proprietors. j^^ AU'trndnen letters, ooountinleatlons, Jtc., ahonld bo BddrMeed to J. A HDESTAHD ft CO., Laacaster, Pa. ADVBBTISINa DKPABTMENT. Brans ADTxaranixm by the ye*/-« fractions of a rear, to be charged at the rate of $12 00 per square of toa lines. Ten per cent Increase on the yearly rate for ftacHona of a year. - SmoafAs. 6aumX^. 12inontA>. Oue Square. t 4.'t0 $ S.OO $12.00 Two Bquawe C© 12.00 2000 ThcMbqoares 12.00 20.00 26.00 BxiL EsTATX, PutaOHAL Prqpshti and Oimral Advib- mciu (vVavhatsed at the rate of Senen ceuts per Uoe for the firstitiBerwi™, .nd Jbur cents per line for erwy sabgequent insertion. PaTzsr ajjoaaiirs. butees. and aU otber Advkktb— KCTTS, by tbe column, half, third, orquarter coinmn, to be charged as follows: One columu, yearly, fiOO 00 One-half oolumn. y«tly, 00 00 . One-thlrd column, yearly -.-.. JO 00 0»e.qusrter column, yearly, 30 00 BofllNBSS Cards, yearly, not axceedlng ten lines, $10 00 Business Caem, 5 lines or iiss, $5 OO. I.IOAI. Noncxs to be charged ss follows : Kieentors'Notices. $2 00 Administrators'Noticefi, ".i 00 .Assiguees' Notices, - 00 Audltora'NoUces, I SO AliNotice*BOtexteedlDg/»n lines, or UsB, forfftree Inairtiona, I 20 LocAi NonCM to be paid for at the taU of ten centK per Uoe for the first insertion, sud Jiw cooLr per lino for every BUbsequent insertloE. Bisaops, OR Special Notices.-All advertiFementspre- c«iiBgthaMarri^«Bor Matketfl to ba charged the tame ratfs as Local Notlcuc. , , .. = . MaaBlAOSS to be charged 25 cents each In the paper 8rf>t pobliehlng th« samt>. Dtitra Notices Inserted without charpe. OaiTiJABT Ngiices to be charged at adverlisine rates. TRiBDTtsof lUsFxcr, Ba.'.oLorioNe, ^c, t*) be charged 20 eentii p^r line. CouMinttCAnvhM setting forth the clalma of Individuals foroffic*!, Ac., to be cbarged 10 cents per line. J3- The privilega of Annm.l Adverttaers is strictly limitodto theirown immediatt business; aud all advur- (laemonU forthe benefit of QtJ;ec penons, as «-oIl as all fdrortiaements not immediat<Iy connected witb tbelr ;»«D bueiness, aod all clossea ol advertUemcots, In length ar otherviaa, beyond tbe llmitb ongaged, will bp charge at the above ratea. : " But perhaps you would like solne re¬ freshments after your jourmey." "'Freshmerita? Oh, you mean suthin to eat ? Wall, uo, I'm obleeged to you ; I eat my supper deown to the tavern where I put up, and I never calculateto eat muoh lateat night, fiam't uo occa¬ sion for anything, now." So £aying. Cousin Jehosapath actually pushed hia way into the parlors, and stood there bowing and ducking, and smoothing down with one hand the lonjr blnck hair, the lovely haunts, by shore and dell, thiat wooded ine with all the winning grace by the golden September daya. " I love the place; it seems like a home to me," I said to Cousin Jehosaphat the morninjg I was leaving, " and I shaU long to return." Howlittle did I guess that it would one day be my home, and that, with a weary heart, longing for rest, I would seek its shelter. I entered the doors of my splendid cily shining with grease, that fell baok from . home with all the pride o! acknowledged his forehead. My father, who had been beauty and of wealth: That Fortune in a distant part of the rooms, now hur- could ever frown upon me was a thing ried up, and took possession of his impet- - j undreamed of. Secure io the possession urbable guest, whose salutations and com^ ofevery earthly blessing, I came home to ments were as loud and unrestrained es ! to while away the dreary autumn Uays if tbe scene had been, instead ofa bril¬ liant drawing-room, the middleof a ten acre lot upon his own farm. •'When did you arrive, Mr. Sweet ?", asked my father. Wall, about an hour ago, I guess. .1 with thoughts of coming triumphs when onco more the fashionable season should oompsence. A week from that day, ia sable but mocking emblems of n?y heart's desolation, I wept beside the coffin of my mother. She had taken cold at Newport only stayed to the tavern long enough to neglected her ailments at Brantford, and [Original.] "OHWAED TO VICTORY. ' The battle it vuTV^ludcd ichcn the enemy is fallen." The Battle Cry of Freemen, BT JAUEfl 8. -WATKINS. Oavrari! onvrard ! meet tbe foomeo; Eslly! rally! braves and yoemen; On to victory, fearing no man, Let yoor armor rattle; Then, onward! onward! bravely go, Sound, sound tho war-cry, meet the foe On tho Geld of battlo. Dlire, drivo the rebels from the field,— At home all eiicnn'e" wlU yield. Leaving Freedom's heirs to wield Their banners through the air; Then onward! onward '. bravely go, Sound, sound tha wfir-cry, meet the foo Scattered et^eryichere. Sea yonder 3tACK flag waving high. And let not yoor vigilance descry Whethbr it Is flaunting nigb To where your kinsmen fell: Tfaen onward! onward \ bravely go, Sound, 8onnd the war-cry, meet the foe With a triamphant yell. Onward! onward ! to the reeoue. Pierce their columns throngh and throngh. And Liberty's Bed, White and Blue "Will triumph o'er thetr graves ; Then onward! onward ! meet the foe, Bonnd, sonnd tho war-cry, bravely go Ye yeomen, Yaneek bbavss ! Baltd[0£e, Md., Kay, 1864. COUSIN JEHOSAPHAT. I wonder if anybody but me had a cou^ Jehosaphat ? I did not know that I was so blessed until I was eighteen years of age. Indeed, before that lime I was not aw.tre that I had a relative in tho world out of our own household. I had heard my father say that he once had a sister, who married and went out to India while he was still a mere boy, and that for more than a quar¬ ter of a century he had received no tidings of her, and supposed her dead. My moth¬ er never mentioned her home, nor made any allusion to parents, or brothers and sisters. We lived elegantly. There was no handsomer house than ours in the broad quiet street, sacred, almost entirely, to re¬ tired patricians. My father was still in business, but in some large, lordly way, and my mother lived only for society. X had a maid and a governess devoted en¬ tirely to my aervice, and the governess remained with us even after I had ceased to be her pupil—as a sort of companion and humble friend. Though a highly ed¬ ucated and accomplished ladj', of respect¬ able family, my mother never treated her as an equal. I had been the round of the watering places with my mother, and had seen something of society the previous sum¬ mer; but on my eighteenth birthday I made my debut in the fashionable circles of town, at a grand party given for the purpose of introducing me. ¦ It wasat this birthnight-ball I first saw Cousin Jehosa¬ phat. I was young, said to be beautiful, and an heiress. Society received me v^ith open arms. The night waa a brilliant ovfttion to my charms. The most distin¬ guished men and the most beautiful wo- mep surrounded me. My mother whis¬ pered thai my appearance wns a success— a triumph, far beyond anything she had dared to expect. Even my father's seri- eat my supptrand fix up alittle, and then I steered straight for here, straight as \ could 'cordin' to the directions of a mighty smart feelin' chap that stood in a little chubby house, thare to the. tavern, and acted as if he owned all oreation, and more too. I axed him if he was the tav- eiu keeper, or what? and he jist put a pair of little round glasses up to his eyes and stared at me through 'em, and says he, 'What, sir!' as fierce as the great IJIo- gui. I ditin't know what in the creatica meant by saying lie was a 'What;' but he acted so all-fired mad, that I concluded not to ask him any more questions then." " He was the clerk, probably. But were your parents well when you left home, Mr. Sweet?" " Father's well. But mother's been dead thesw three year.'i, and better. Poor old lady ! shedied awi'ulsudden. FU tell you all about it some time. But where's Lowisy 't I hain't seeu her yet. Js she here, or do you send her to bed when you have company? That's the way the old folks u-sed to serve me, when I was a sha¬ ver. " I had desperately kept aloof from this formidable stranger, but to escape him now was hopeless. My father oalled '* Louise !" ond I was obliged to hasten to his side, and undergo a presentation to this loud-mouthed, strange-looking man, who belonged to a species utterly unknown to me although' he addressed my parents as one who had known them well. " Wall, I never should ha' believed it! This ain't little Lowisy, is it? Mirandy's daughterl she'saplagueysight handsomer than her mother was, and I can remem¬ ber when the fellows down in Biantford used to call Miraudy the slickest gal in that town, to say nothing of Guilford, nor any of the adjoining towns. How do you do ? I've brought you some of the nicest red apples ever yeuu see ; and there's some sassingers and a whoppin' cheese that old Aunt Prudence Hull, that keeps house for father and me now, made and sent io your mother. Eemember 4unt Prudence Samwell \ She raust be sixty years old now, but she's just as spry and cricket, and keeps things so slick that we don't miss mother, none about the house¬ work. But, say, Lowisy, ain't you cold? It's a stingin' night, and your frock's aw¬ ful thin, and don't cover yeou up none too much. Hadn't you better put a shawl reound your shoulders ?" A suppressed though audible titter from the crowd here put a finish to my well- only reached home to sicken and die. I did not think it possible that I could live without my mother—we all have felt thus I suppose, in the early days of a heavy bereavement^^but tjje necessity was upon me, and I struggled bapk, at last, with something of the older cheerfulness. Of course I did not go into society tfie next winter. Miss Doming and I lived very quietly, even sadly, in the great rooms that were no longer brilliant with lights nor musical with mirthful voices. My father's serious fape wore an express¬ ion of almost bitter despondency. 3^ was very silent, but unwontedly tender too, upon whom he lavished, as it seemed all the aflection repressed for yeara by the absorbing business life he had led. I had always loped him fondly, but in this hour ofmiital grief we drew nearer to each otheri and I often essayed to comfort him in every way that my aflection could sug¬ gest. And sometimes he was cheered, but oftener he would put me from him, and gaze upon me so sadly, wilh suoh gloomy forebodings in his eyes, that my heart sunk with leaden weight beneath the atrange expression of the look. It was not till the warm weather came that be fell ill. We watched him through the length-ening days ; hut each took with its waning hours something of tl^e hope it offered with its opening ones. A week before he died the blow fell upon me whieh Uad already prostrated him. He was declared bankrupt, and I learned the reason of those mysterious business con- sulations, f^om which, during his illness, I had been excluded. Yes; the man whose ships Ijad been in every sea, and whose uanje a tower of strength in many Jands, had, for months p.ist, seen, hy a succe-ssiou of disasters al¬ most unprecedented, the fair fabric of his fortune undermined aod its fragments swept away. This it was which had made his grief despondency, and added the sharper sting to death. A week later I was an orphan, with a prospect merely of some small pittance to be saved fronj tlje wreck of ray father's business. Then it was I found myself deserted by all the fine friends who had sunned them¬ selves in the light ofour prosperity. Miss Deming clung to me faithfully ; and in the midst of my terror and uncertainty, when even my home was mine no longer, and I knew nol what roof was to shel ter me, came a letter from Cousin Johosaphat o^ering m^ ^ home at the old homestead nigh exhausted patience. I snatched | and proposing to come for me whenever away the hand that Cousin Jehospphat I was ready to remove to it, had been oscillating in his during this speech, and fled from the scene. Sly mother followed, and comforted me as well as she could. But ^I was over¬ whelmed with mortification, and it was with diihcuty that she could persuade me to face the guesta again. Alas! I was very new to the world and life ihen, or I should have known that uuder Cousin Jehosaphat's rough exterior and uncouthy manners there mi^ht Ue a heart so honest and manly as to put to shame the false¬ hood and moral cowardice of the glitter¬ ing crowd which gathered about to jeer him. The day came when this truth was imprfssed upon rae amid the saddest hours and the bitterest trials I have ever known. I only thought, now, that Cousin Jehos¬ aphat hud brought ridicule upon me, aod spoiled my birthnight party. I treated him with tho most chilling coldness dur¬ ing his stay, steadily refusing not only his spicy, fragrant red apples, but that which I secretly longed for much more, a ride in hishandsome country sleigh, with the beajtiful bays that were the pride of his honest heart. "Now, cousin Mir.indy," said Jehosaphat, the next morning he was leaving us, " I wish you'd come next summer and bring Lowisy, and make us a long visit. Cousin Samwell could come up every Saturday night, or oftener if he wanted to, and yeou could have agood time, all on yeou and get rod cheeks and sorae fiesh on your bonea. Iv'e got a fust rate boat, and yeou could fi?h and bathe, and I'd feed yeou up on sea-food and garden sass, and cus¬ tard pies, nnd all sorts o' fixins. Wont corae? Yeour mother and my moiher wns sisters, and they loved each other well as long as they lived, and I don't think it's rijiht for their children to be Lyndon, formerly merohapt of New-'if ork, to make themselyes known to the adver¬ tiser, a member; of a well-known legal firm ih that oity. Couain Jehosaphat wrote in reply, and wo soon learned that the objeot of the ad¬ vertisement was to put me in poBseeaion of a handsome fortune, bequeathed to my father or hi* heira by the eister who went 80 many years before to California. She had lived many years a childless widow, and only when the necessity of arranging her affairs beoame apparent, did she remem¬ ber the young brother whom, with all the associations of her early home, she had long neglected or forgotten. So the whee^of fortune, revolving once more, lifts me to ita dizzy heights. The unexpected wealth thus become mine has made m^ very happy, because it has ena¬ bled me to bestow benefits upon the friends who clung to me in my darkest days i aod, more thai) that, to beoom^ the wife of one who» but for thia anlooked-for good must have struggled wearily for long years along the path he had chosen, per¬ haps have fainted before tbe goal faad once greeted his sight. WHAT THE BZBSS SAZB. BT JOSir O. VHITTIKR. The birds, against the April wind. Flew northward, ilnglng u^tbey flew; Tfaey aong: " The land we leave behlad ¦ Has swords for oorn-bladei, blood for dew." *' 0 mld-blrd», flying from the Sontb, Wfaat saw and heard ye, gazing down ?'' " We saw the mortar's aptttmed month, Tfae sickened camp, the blaihig town ! " Iteneatfa the bivonao's stany Umps, We saw yoor maroh-woni ofaHdran die In ifaronds of moss, in eypiets swamps. We saw yonr dead uneoSned lie. " We heard tho starving prisoner'a sighs; And saw, from line and tronofa, your sons Fbllov our 5ght T^jth |iome-aiok eyes Beyond tbe battery's smqking gnne.'f " And heard and saw ye only wrong And pain," J cried, "0 wing-worn flocks ?" " Wo hoard," thoy sang, " tfae Freedman's song, The crash of Slavery's broken locks ! « We saw from new, uprising statea Tfae Treaaon-nnrsing miscfaief spumed, As, crowding Freedom's ample gates, The long-estranged and lost retnrned. " O'er dusky faces, seamed and old, And hands born-h^rd with unpaid toil. With hope in every rnstling fold, We aaw yonr atar-dropt flag nncoll. " And, struggling up through sounds accursed, A gratefal murmur climb tfae air, A wfaisper scarcely hoard at firat. It filled tbe listening Heavens witfa prayer. *' And sweet an^ &r, as f^om a star, I^eplie^ ^ voioe iffaiolf shall not cea^t, Till, drowning all thp nojse of w^Fi It flingi tl)« biassed songs of peace I" So to me, in a doubtful day Of cbill aod alowly greening spring, Low stooping from tfae oloudy gray. The wild-birds sang or seemed to slag. They vanished in the misty air, Tbe song went with tfaem in their fligfat; Bat lo.' they left the suoaet fair. And in the evening tfaere was light TAKEN" PUISONEE OUB face was lighted by one of his rare 1 strangers. We hain't got a grand city smiles; he, too, waa pleased that his jjouse, and lotsof fine cheers, and carpetS; daughter should be admired. Into the midst of this scene of light, perfume, beauty, grace and luxury, Cousin Jehosaphat fell like (to use a simile ap¬ propriate to these times of war) a bomb into the streets of a doomed city. "Engaged, ha? Got company, has she? Wall, I reckon she'll be jist as glad to see me, anyhow." I heard a strange voice, in a high-pitched, nasal drawl, saying to the servant stationed toannounce guec^ta "Yeou jist teli Miss Lyndon that her Cousin Jehosaphat Sweet, from Brantford, Ib here, and I guess you'll see." The crowd was so great that I could not see the speaker ; but at that moment I saw my mother upproaching, every bit of oolor gone irom her usually ruddy cheek. She made her way, too quickly for digni¬ ty, through the crowd, and approached the new comer, who stood just without in the lighted halL Her presence of mind did not forsake her; she held out her hand as gracefully as to the most honored of her guests— 1 "Eow do you do, Mr. Sweet ?" she said. "Please to step into the library; Mr. Lyn¬ don will join you there, immediately." "Why, I want to know 1 Is that yeou, Cousin Mirandy ? How are you ?" vocif¬ erated Jfr. Sweet, grasping the white jew¬ elled hand in his big fist, and shaking it furiously. How's Cousin Samwell and the Uttle gal—see, what's her name, now ?— Lowisy ? Sakes I 1 shouldn't ha' known yeou at all," " This way, if you please, Hr. Sweet," my mother said, a little impatiently the moment there was a pause, " Wby, I'd jiat as soon come in here.— Needn't leave your company- for me, I guesa, X come tb Tork to see the eights, and I guess I shan't see anythmg better'n aU these folks dressed .up as fine as a fid¬ dle." and things, as yeour house, butyeouknow how we live, and yeou've lived jist so yeourself. and yeou know, too, -that yeou will get a hearty welcome." I think something in this appeal touch¬ ed mother's heart through all the-varnish of worldliness that shut it in from genu¬ ine emotion at most times. She promised Cousin Jehosaphat that, if possible, we would corae to Brantford the next sum¬ mer. Returning from Newport, on a breath¬ less, hazy day of early September, we did actually alight from the csirs at the little station of Brantofrd, whero, according to agreemen t, Cousin J eliosaphat was waiting for US with those beautiful bays and the light country wagon designed to carry us and our luggage. I was utterly weary of the round of dis¬ sipation in which the summer had been spent. I entered here upon a phase of life u:! novel as it was attractive, one by which, for the first time, I was brought I into intimate association with nature, with no disturbing infiuences to mar the de¬ light of such contact. It was a happy, happy week that I spent there upon the Sweet iarm. In his house there w.as nothing ridicu¬ lous about Cousin Jehosaphat, nor were his manners incongruous with the quaint garniture and homely household ways of the old homestead. He was so hearty, honest and good that I could not help drawing as near to him as my dainty re¬ finement would permit, while his venera¬ ble old iather, with his silvery hair and patriarchal manners, quite won ray heart. Miss Deming, my ci-divant governess, declared I was really becoming spoiled, and my mother talked of sunburn, and detected two freckles op. the right hand side of my noae. They hurried me away before I had become acquainted with half "Father's been dead about two months," he wrote, "and I'm awful lonesome here. I want a streak o' sunshine, and I guess yeou'd bring it. .So I wish yeou'd come along, I know I'm an awkward critteri and the old honse is jist as humbly as a hedge fence, and I hain't got no pictures nor gimcracks to offer you. But yeou'U get the warmest kind of a welcome, and so will that goveruess-wom^n, jf she's a mind ter come along with yeou. Miss Deming vias not well pleased at my acceptance of this offer. But I was so anxiouf? to go, and she so unable to suggest anything better, that it wos flnal¬ ly decided. So, in the flush of early sum¬ mer, we found ourselves once more at Brantford. "I swan!" said Cousin Jehosaphat, throwing himself down beside me, where I Eat under a tree in the orchard, about a month after my arrival at Brantford, " I've got somethin' to-iay to you, Lowisy, and I dont know how to git at it," "That's strange, cousin; but I can't think why there sfiould be any ditficulty in saying anything to me that you want to. Suppose you begin now, and I'U help you if I can." "Will you, neow ? Wall here goes then, Miss Deming, she's a nice critter, but ter¬ rible old maidish, and she says to me the other day, "Mr. Sweet," says she, "I'm afraid it is scarcely proper for Miss Lyn¬ don to remain here, under your roof, you being a bachelor, with no protectress but a single woman like myself. I fear the world, may remark upon it." "'For goodness sake," says I, *'what do you mean ? Lowisy is my cousin, and I guess I'm about her nearest relation, and she's a right to stay here without asking liberty of the world, if I want her to." I " 'Yes," aays she, "she has nobody to counsel her, but I fear malicious tongues." "Wall, I was real mad.but I didn't waut to say anything harsh, so I came away. But I have beeu thinking on iti and I don't want yeou to be talked about, so, though I don't approve of cousins marryin', and yeou're only asecond coua- in perhaps 'twouldn't be so bad. If you think it's best for us to get married, I've no objection, I know I'ra almost old enough to be your father, but I think a heap on you, and " *' Dear Cousin Jehosaphat," I interrup¬ ted, "don't say another word. I don't think it'."? best, at all. You dear soul, you, is that what has made you solemn and queer, lately ? And Miss Deming— can she never forget that the world of which she is so afraid remembers us no more? But, cou.'?in, why did you not propose to her, if itis necessary tor you to marry anybody ? She is a gre-at deal more suitable for you," " Sakes 11 never thought of that 1 Do yeou suppose she'll have me ? She's a sensible woman, real knowing, spite of her fear of the world and prim ways, and good-lookin' too." '* You might try," I said, mischievously. Cousin Jehosaphat did try, and, much to my astonishment—for miss Deming was ultra regned, and very nice on all points of etiquette—he was accepted.— And my old governess makes him the best of wives, while she has exerted an influence upon hira which daily improves and elevates him in all that pertains to the externals of life. A bette'r man than he, in heart and soul, I have never known nor one that more richly deserves, by all the acta of an earnest, honest, aad godly with'a very emphatic little stamp of the foot, an<l he was,, as it were,, strioken dttpib. I' You ace what the irorld calls a rich men, Mr. Deane, You own rows of hou- life, the choicest of Heaven's. blessings. Two years after I went to Brantford, an advertisement appeared in the public "Ifo rent again this iqonth I 'phis ia the third time it has happened within the half year, I'llgo there myself and get the money, or I'll know the reason. why!" Mr. Mathew Deane was in a particular Everything had gone wrong. Stocks had fallen when they ought to have ris¬ en—his clerk had tippei over the ink¬ stand on his special and peculiar heap of paper— the fire obstinately refused to burn in the grate—in short nothing went right, and Mr. Beane was consequently and correspondingly oross. "Jenkins !" "Yes, sir!" "Go to the Widow Clarkson's and tell her I shall be there in half an hour, and expect confidently—mind, Jenkins, con fidently to receive that rent money. Qr else I shall feel myself obliged to resort to extreme measures. You understand, Jenkins?" " Certainly, sir." " Then don't stand tbere staring like an idiot," snarled Mr. Deane in a sudden burst of irritation, and Jenkins disappear¬ ed like a shot. .Tust half an hour afterw/ird Mr. Mat¬ thew Deane brushed the brown hair just sprinkled with gray away from his square yet not unkindly brow, putting on his fur lined overcoat, h-i walked forth into the chilly winter air fully determined, figur¬ atively, to annihilate the defaulting Widow Clarkson. It was a dwarfish little red brick house which appeared originally tohave aspired to two-story hood, but cramped by cir¬ cumstances, had settled down into a story and a half, but the windows shone like Brazilian pebbles, and door steps were worn by much scouring. N'either of these ciroumstanoes, however, did Mr. Deane remark, as he pulled the glittering brass door-knob, and strode into Mrs. Clarkson's neat parlor. There was a small fire^very small, as ;f every lump of anthracite was hoarded ih the stove, at a table with writing im¬ plements before her, sat a young lady whom Mr. Deane at once recognized as Mrs. Clarkson's niece, Miss Olive Melleu. She was not disagreeable to look upon, though you would never have thought of classing her among the beauties with shinning black hair, blue, long laahed eyes and a pretty mouth, hiding teeth like rice kernels, so white were they. Miss Mellen rose with a polite nod, which was grimly reciprocated by Mr. Deane. "I've called to see your aunt. Miss Mel¬ len 1" "I know it sir, but as I am aware of her timid temperament, I sent her away. I prefer to deal with you myself." Mr. Deane started—the cool audacity of this damsel in grey, with scarlet rib¬ bons in her hair, rather astonished him. "I suppose the money is ready 7" "No sir, it is not." "Then Miss Olive—pardon me, 1 must speak plainly—I shall send an officer here this alternoon to put a valuation on the furniture, and"— "You will do nothing of the kind, air." Olive's cheek' had reddened and her eyes flashed portentiously. Mr. Deane turned toward the door, but ere he knew what he was doing, Olive had walked quietly across the room, locked the door and taken out the key—then she resumed her seat. "What does this mean? ejaculated the astonished "prisoner of war." "It means, sir, that you will now be obliged to re-consider tbe question," said Olive. "Obliged?" Yes—yon will hardly jump out of the window and there is no. other method of egress unless you ohoose to go up the chimney. Now then; Mr. Deane,- will you tell me ifyou—a'Christian man in the nineteenth century—intend to sell a poor widow's furniture, because she is not able to pay your rent ? Listen,' sir I" Mr, Deane had opened his mouth to re- ses,.piles of bank stook, railroad shues, bonds aod mortgages—who knows what? My aunt has nothing—I .tupport her by copying; Now, if this case be carried inlo a court of law, my poor ailing aunt will be a sufferer, you would emerge unschath- ed and profited. You are not a bad man, Mr. Deane; you have a great many noble qualities, and I like you for them." She paused an instant and looked in¬ tently and gravely at Mr. Deane. The color rose to his cheek—it was not disa' greeable to be told by a pretty young girl that she liked him on any terms, yet she had indulged in pretty plain speaking. " " I haye heard," ahe went on, " of your doing kind Bcrt<»s when you were in the humor of it. You can do them, and you BHall'iU this instance. You are cross this morning, you know you are! Hush, no excuse, you are selfish and irritable and overbearing! If I were your mother and you a .-little boy, I should certainly put yoti in a corner until you promised to be good." Mr. Deane smiled, although he was get¬ ting angry. Olive went on with the ut- ipoft composure. "But as it is, I shall only keep you here a prisoner until you have behaved, and give me your word not to annoy my aunt again for rent, until sbe is able to pay you, then, and not until then, will you receive your- money. Do you prom¬ ise? yes or nol" "jf ehajl certainly agj-ee to Df> auph teriijs," said Mr. Deane tartly. " 'Very well, sir, I oan wait." Miss Mellen deposited the key in tbe pocket of her gray dress, and sat down to her copying. , Had she been a man Mr. Peane, woiild pro|3aljly haye knocked lier dQwn-:=as It was, she wore an invisible ar¬ mor of power in the very faot that she was a fragile, slight woman, and she knew it. "Miss Olive," he said, sternly, "let us terminate this mummery. Unlock that door." " Mr. Deane, I will not. " I shall shout and alarm the neighbor¬ hood then apd call a policeman." " Very well, Mr. Deane, do so if you please." She dipped her pen in the ink and be¬ gan oh a fresh page. Mathew sat down puzzled,and discomfited, and watched the long-lashed eyea and faintly tinted cheek of his keeper. She was very pretty— Vfh^t^ ^ P^^y ^he vfas sq obstinate. " Kiss Olive!" " Sir." " The clock hasjust struck twelve." " I beard it." " I should like to get out to get some lunoh." "I am aorry that that luxury is out of your power.". ¦ ¦ " But I'm confounded hungry." " Are you ?" " And I'm not going to stand this sort of thing any longer." "1^0." How provokingly nonchalent she was.' Mr. Deane eyed the pocket of the grey dresa greedily, and walked up and down the room pettishly. " I have an appointment at one." «» T»'i..»d, what a pity, you will be una¬ ble to keop it." He took another turn across the room. Olive looked up with a smile. " ^^ell, are yot} ready to promise ?" " Hang it, yes, what else oan I do ?" " You promise." " I do, beoause I oi»n't help myself." Olive drew the key from ber pooket, with softened eyes, and said : " You have made me very happy, Mr. Deane. I dare say you think me un¬ womanly and unfeminine, but indeed you do not know to what extremi Hea we are driven by poverty. Qood inorning, sir." Mr. Deane sallied forth witb a curious complication of thoughts and emotions struggling through his brain, in which grey dresses, long lashed blue eyes and scarlet ribbons played a prominen t part. "Did you get the money, sir?" asked the olerk, when he walked into the office. "I pity her husband," he thought, as he turned papers over on his desk. "How she will hen-peck him. Bythe way, I wonder who her husband will be?" The next day he called- at the Widow Clarkson's to assure Miss Mellen that he had no idea of breaking his promise, and the peit but one after that, he came to tell theyoung lady she need entertain no donbta of his integrity. And the next week he dropped in on them with no par¬ ticular errand to aerve as an excuse. "When shall we be married, Olive %— Next month, dearest ?" Do not let us put it off later." "I have no wishes but yours, Mathew." "Really, Miss Olive Mellen, to hear that meek tone, one would suppose you had never locked me up here, and tyrannized over me as a jailor 1" Olive burst into a merry laugb. "You dear old Mathew, I give you warning before band thai I mean to have my own way in everything. Do you wish to recede from your bargain ? It is not too late yet" No, Mather Deane didn't, he had a vague idea that \t would be very pleasant to bo hen-pecked by Olive. A Daniah Legend. Dyring went to a distant island and took a handsome girl to wife. They~Iiv- ed together seven years, and she presen¬ ted him with seven children. Then death came into the country and carried ofiTiChe wife, so fresh and sd'tosy;. Dyeing went to a distant island, married another girl and brought her home. But this one was unkind and hard-hearted. 'When she entered her husMnd's houae the sev¬ en children wept;* they wept and were anxious. She repulsed them with her foot. She gave them neither beer'nor bread, and told them, "You shall sleep on straw, with nothing to cover you." She extinguished the torches and said, "You shall remain in darkness." The children wept very late into the night. Their mother heard them where she lay uhder the earth. "Oh I" she cried, "that I could go and see my little children!" She prayed and prayed till she obtained permission to go and aee her little cbildren, on condition that, at cock crow she would leave them. So the poor-mother raised heraelf ou her weary legs, and climbed over the stone wall of the burial-ground. She traversed the village, and the dogs howled aa they heard her pass. She rea9hed the door of her former dwelling; her eldest daughter was standing t^re. "What are you doing here, my child?" she asked. "How are your brothers and sisters I" "You are a fine grand lady, but you are not my darling mother. My mother'a cheeks were white and red, whilst you are as pale as death." !!And how can I be white and red, after reposing so long in my coffin. She went into the chamber; her little children w.ere there with tears on their cheeks. She took one and combed it sinoQtbed'the hair of another, and caress¬ ed the third and fourth. She took the flfth in her arms and opened her bosom to it. Then, calling her eldest daughter "Go and tell Dyring to come here," she said. When Dyring came, she spoke to him angrily. "Heft you beer and bread and my children are hungry and thirsty. I left you blue cushions and coverlids and my ohildre^^ sleep on naked straw! J left you tall flambeaux, and my ohil¬ dren are in darloiesa. If you often make me thus return by night, misfortune will eome of it." Atthis the mother-in-law exclaimed, "Henceforward I will be kind to your children." And from that day, whenever the husband and wife heard the dogs growl, they gaye the ohil- drefl beer iind bread; and when they heard them howl and bark, they went and hid themselves lest they should see the dead woman come hack again. LBGAI, NOTICES. BXBCUTOE'S NOTICE. Eltatt of Jaoob Acker, late of Bapho towa- ihip, deceased. LETTERS Testamentary on said Es¬ tate having bwn graa'tfld to tha aadarBigoed.all panoDB iadebtod thereto are reqaeattd to make Imme¬ diate payment, aad Uioie baling demandB «K<lo6C the ¦tame will present them for settlementto the ander- ilgned. C. M. MiETIS, Monat Joy h.oroash. HSNBT AOKSB,- myll-6t-25 Bapbo towDBhlp. EXBenroE's notice. Estate ot 'WUUam KoBride, late of Eapho township, dMftased. LETTERS TestameJSy on said Es¬ tate having heen iBfOed to the nd^ertlgned, atl pereoOB Indebted tbereto are reqaeeted to make Imme¬ diate aetUement. and thoae baviag clolmB or demands against the same will present them -irltboat delay for aettlemeat to the aaderslgaed, residing In ftlottnt Jov ¦"goil^--- J"""" " K;™Tor. LEQAL NOTICES. notice. F\NNY OWIHB, «o., > Allaa snbpceoa for Divorce ¦ ' ot.- \ to April Term, iset. FRAHKUS OWSHB. ) No.S. ¦VrdTICB, Franklin Owens, you are iL 1' benby Mmmiitided' to be and' aniear In yoar Piap*rP*f*mbetora oni. Jndgea at liancaster at the (fottaty'CotiTt drcammoa Pleaii to be-heldln the raiRD MOMDAT In AUQIIST, 1SS<, to show oins., ir ahy you have, why the said Penny Ofrens ehall notbs divorced from the bouda of matrimony contracted with yon. P. SBITU, SherllT. Shezifl's OffloB, Uay, 18S4. mayll-4t 36 Of In the Cotirt of Common Fleas Iianoaster Coanty. WlUIam K. Lane, Hnbbatd B.-| Jannary Term. ISSl. -Taylor, and AUea T. Taylor, So. S3. Aprll IS, h]swire,Jdma)8.Lane,AlBX- 1801. Retora of ander H. Kltshle, Bebeeca G. OommUeloners pre- filtchlB, a minor by her next seated aod coallrm. frleod, James S. Idne, Uadl- ed. Same Ume on son T. Kltchle, aad FoUy y molloa ot Messrs. Bltohle, - Atlee and Fordaer, vs. by ooosent orConn- John N. Lane, James B. Lane, sel for plaUtlS's and and Elliott Bakrldge Lane, defendants, Gonrt Minors by their Qnardlan, grant a role on the Blehard8-Jenkins. J partlea in interest To eome Into Ooort on the Sd MuBDAl: in JDSS next. 1SS4, to accept or refnse the real estate describad in tbe report of the (3onualeslonBrs, or show cause why the esme should not bs sold—rule to be pabUshed la the LoolavUle Journal, a newspaper pabUshed io Loals. VlUe, Eeotnckj, and in the Lanoaster £caminer amt Herald, once a week for threa weeks. Attest: G. CLABKSON, for Prothoootary. (AOofj) [mylsl] F. SMITH, Sheriff. ACCOUHTS OF TBTJST AITD ASSIaiTBD ESTATES. THE Accounts of the following named estatee have been exhibited aad flled In the offlca of the Prothonotary of ths Court of Common Pleas of Lanoaster eoanty, to wit; Ohrlstlan 8. Orube, Assigned Estate, Henry H. Enrta, Asslgnse. MaUhew Henderson, Estate, Lvtle SkUes, Oommlttae. Wm. Seller. Assigned Estate, Jacob Eem]}er,'AsslguBe Osorge Morry, .issigned JtstaU, Jno. H. Hershey, -Assignee Aaroa 'Witmer, Assigned EstaU, John Q. Baldwla, Assignee. Abraham Ylager, Assigned Estate, Abm. N, Brene¬ man, Aeslgaee. Notice Is hereby givea to all persons tnterBstedln any rf Bald estatBK, that the Conrt have appoiated UOtv- DAT, 2Sdof Msy, isai, for tha coaHrmatloa and aUow¬ ance of aald accoauts, unless exeaptlons be Sled or eaaee sqown Why said account Bhould not be allewed- JOHN SBLDOMRIDOE, Proth'y. Pbothobotast's Ofpiob, April 23d, 1864. ap 37-<t-83 Dissolution of Copartnership. THB Copartnership heretofore existing between Geo, Oalder, \r., and Prancls L. Gaidar, trading as Gaidar & Brothar, has ihls day been dlaaolv- ed by matnal consent. The busloess of thB flrm wUl ba setUsd by Geo. Oalder, Jr. All peraons Indebted ti the late firm wlU please make immedlato payment, and those havlug claims preseut them for settlemeat. GEO. CALHSB. Jp. , F. L. GA.LDEB. ' The undersigned thankful for the pa.st libwal patroaage of the public to the old firm of Colder & Bro., would respsctfully solicit a oontUuancs of the same, andoffera hla atocli: of Goal, Lumber, Sait, he , st a liow prices as can be purchased lu the city. Jau27-tf-M GEO. OAtPER, J« ¦WANTED This coming season, 2000 COBDS of BLACK O \K BAKK, For -wllicll ths HIQHBST CABH PBIOB wlU b« paid, dft- livaredUBHIHKiBEDBiKBEl'STAIiNHEV.Blrd In- Hand Ballroftd Sutioo, liSncasUr coaaty, P«. JC^CaKBTNnT, SFAWIsM OAK and WHITK OAK aUo wanted. apiatf 21 WAl?a?JBD, FKOM 300,000 TO 500,000 CIOAllS PER WEBK. BT W- D. BPBHCHBH, WhOLBBALK BbALBH ih all KIHD3 Of ClQAHH, JC5= Offlc* ia Spteclier'4 iJMd aad loipleiDBut Ktor«, No.VS EaatKiag street, Lanouter, two doors wsNt oi' tha Coart Houm. uiar2-3mI5 BYE WANTED. THE Subscriber will pay the Mgheai oaah prlOK for Rye dellTerad at his SoastloK Ss- Utillfltiaieat So. 307, Saat K[ag-atTOtt., Lancaater, Tft. Ths Bye moit be of tbe beat qa-' Uv aa(rl:{-ly«3S \R. Mir.LEW. FINANCIAL], HOTICB. Ontas rULAVD IzrSITHAaOZ & I)KPMfT CokPAVT, I LA]rcAsnB,.BUT 9^^ 18M. . 5 . '^pHB Directors bf this InJatitution Lare 1 tUi^y.dftcIartdadlrldtn'd'orTwoWadoB* halt percent on HclietaanofBt«elc,«I«ar of BUt« and Nft- tlontl tixu payableNott ud afUrtlit IStU loit. . JOHH W. Ji.CK801f, lay n^t ' Trwwartr, Farmers Bank of Lancaster. __ LASCASTBB, May 3d, ISM. 'T^HE Directors have this day declared X aDiTldead of THSUS DOLLABS AND 7IPTT CKSTS per ehar* on the GaplUl SUxsk pftld In, betog :<EyKN P£B OEST. olaar of National and BUU taxes. aad_belnff the one hnsdreth Mmt-tniiaal dirldend de¬ clared and patd bv thU Baak. my4-3tM BDW. H. BEOWK, Cashier. Lancaster County Bank. T _ LAHCASTEE, Pa., May 3d, IBM. HE Directors have this day declared a DlTldeod of f IVB FBB CEUT. on the Capital Etook paid tn, clear of gut* and Dntlod BUUa taxea, peyable oa demand. my^t W. L. PBIPKB,Ouhl*r. First National Bank of Lancaster* DIJtEGTORS: TsouAB Soon WooDB, Paradise township. Datij> 0. BwABTZ, City. P«T»» B. Rbmt, Warwiclc towaehJp. IlKicaT BAnuajUDBXB, Olty. 'A. QxKR EHnn, CUy. MicHAH. H.'HooRB, Weat Hempfleld townehlp. ABBASAM a Babb, Xaet Lampetar townihlp. JOHS H. Moobb, Bapho township. JOHR GYOER, Prea't. HOBNOB RATHVON, Caah'r. tney, \ TREASTTRY DEPARTMENT. 0,Sict. of Comptroller of the Currency, WASHtSQTOlT, March 33, I86<, WHEREAS, by satisfactory evidence preseated to ihe aaderslgned, It has boea made to app ar that THK FIRST NATIOKAL BAHK OF LAHCA8TKR, tn the Coanty of LanoaaUr. and State of Penaaylvanta, ha-1 been dafy orgaDlxed nnder and ac¬ cording to the retinlrementi of the act of Congreaa, en¬ titled "An act to provide a National Corrency, aecared by a yWdgu of Onlted f^taUe stocke, sod to provide for the clrcalstion and redemption thereof," approved Febrnary 2C, 18S3, and has compiled with aU the pro- Tlalona nf aald act reqalred to ba coaiplied with, be¬ fore commtinctng the bnalasa'; of BankiBg. Now, therefore, I Hdqh McCeilloce, Comptroller of the Carrency, do hereby certUy that the First Ha- tioasl nank of Lancastor, Couniy of Lancaater, and State of L'saniiylvinlx, Is anthorlxed to eommenee the bnaineBS of Banking nnder the act aforesaid. In teatlmooy wht-reol wltneia roy hand aad nea] of Office the Twenty-third day of March. 18W. I SBAL OF THB C01CP> | J TBOLLBB or THB I CDHBXHCT. m^y i-'in'2A. ) UDOII MoOOlLOOU, Comptroller of the Correaey. CliABEBON Sc Co., BAXSKERB, No. 131 S. Third St., Phlluliilpbia. OOVKENUBHT SECDBITIES OF ALL ISSUES PUBCHJLBIO AHD yos aALB. STOCKS, BONDS AND OOLD BOUGHT iHD BOLD OIT COMMtSfltOH. INTEREST ALLOWED ON DEPOSITS. COLLECTIONS PEOMPTLY UADE. ' ROBT. CLARK30X, D. K. JACKUAll, £. C. MoOLUKG, apft-tmUL I.. A. HACEKT. WAWTED, OLD, SILVER of all kinds, and ,. DHITBD STATES DEUAND DOTES »»nl8d, for leh tha hlchut prtmlam wUI bn paid, at the Bank. iogHoqssof &KED, HKtlrignsu.v AGO. EDUCATIONAL. BXEOUTOE'a NOTICE. Eatate qf lifin Carotbua, Iiate of Uatiheim Townahip, dec'd- LETTERS Testamentary on said Es- tmto baTing bten granted to tbo nnderelgned, all poraoBa indabted to the aetate of aaid deoeasad, are re¬ qaeeted to make inunedlate payment, and thoee having clalme to preaent the eame for eetUement to the nnder¬ elgned. roeidlcg la Bald t'^wnehlp. , m74-et2t HENUY H. KURTZ, gre^ntor. EXECDTOE'S NOTICE. Eatate of John Hoak, late of Eaat Hempfield tovnahip, deceaaed. LETTERS Testamentary on sai4 Bs- tate havlns been panted to the Ttaderslgned, jU pereone Indebted thereto are reqoested to make Im- medlMeeattlemeBt, and those bavlogclaims or demaads against t • ^ ^ame will preaent them wlthoat delay for settlement to the onderslKned, residing In Moantvllle, In said tAwaBhlp. apiaS-fit^-aS JOUH M.OEIDSB.Execator. ^iicuTOR»s "notick Sstate of Samuel Hoover, late of SalisliaTy townilup, deoeaied. LETTERS Teatamentary on said es¬ tate having been granted to tbe anderBigned, all penont Indebted to the estate of eaid deceased, are r»- qaeated to make Immediate paymeot aad those having claims to present the same for settlement to the un¬ dersigned, residing In said townshin. apl6-fit*2l WU. UEKTZER, Executor. EXECUTORS* NOTICE. Estate of Abraham Herr, late of East Lampe¬ ter townsliip, deo'd. LETTEBS testamentary on said estate having beea granted to the anderelgoed, all per> sons Indebted tbereto «r^ reqnested to make Immedi¬ ate settlemeat, and thosQ having olatme or demands against the same will present them without delay for settlement to the anderslgned, FSTKB HEBB, 1 SOLOMOH HERR. 1 ii^„„,„,. ABBAHIM HBBB. r"="°^"- HENBT UEBB, j ap27-6*t-23 Enterprise P. 0. COIitTDIEBIA Classical and Military Institute. THS undersigned has leased for a term of years the property known as the Washing on In- Slttnto toc»ttf(] at Colombia, Pj.,)inaiflhiTtngU»UBre(J and put In complete repair for the pjjruoAe aljk.Rc>vMry iVAmV for aSoqlrlng a tUotougb and extended knowl¬ edge o( tboee stadles which coDStltutu a libifral educA- tloa-aprepartng yoang meo for College, iluslntittFi or I'eaoblng- Two evenings iu the week will be dtiVuteJ to Boi-K Keeping, which has beoome a moet Impnrtant, braach of a htudDRSs sducitlon. In order to s>;care a Wfll directed and p •polar system of exercUe, a UUltaty Department will be eonnaoted with the 1 Dsiitutlon, un¬ der lhe eaperrUI ja of Major Q Eckondorff, of Philadel* pbi«, who iff fXtaasWely Known aa a moEt accomplished and eacoessful .MlIttaTy Instructor. Thefirst seE.-lon or 3U weeks will open ou the Or^t Tuesday of May. Terms—$100 per &e<uiloa, quarterly tq ai^rance. Kor thin sam the student is entltlrd to UJardin^, Lodging, Light and Fonl, with tuition in Knglish, Matbematira. Latin and Greek- A ded^c'lon of $S will be utade to each student fqrnlshlng his qwq boil ^o<^ beddiog.— ^Vashin^t $6 par susalOQ. Tuition tox Day Scholars, $12,$t8, agd ^'25 per niisloo,aeoOTiJIng to range of staditia. Usual charges for lostructlon iu French. Mu¬ sic, DrswlDg, unitary Taciics, Ac. Kefert-ace is re- spectfollr made to the following gentlemen: Ber. W. 0. Cattell. Pres. Lafayette College, Easton.Pa James U. Cofiin, L. L. D. I'rof. do. W. H. OreeA. D D. S ^^^- ^'^^^"y- But, BLB.Qrler, Sdltor of Presbyterian, Pbila. Wra. Chaster, D. D.,Phaa. Rev. Thos. McAuley, "' K«T. U. B. Callaway, Colambla, Ph. lleT. C- Belmeusayder, " " Sev- B. A. Browu, " " VTm. G. Case, Prea. Beadiog aad Columbia B. B., Co lumbla, Pa. John MeClaskey, D. D.,Weat Philadelphia. Rev. S. S. ShrUer, Highstown, M. J. J. Myers Johusoo, Esq., PhUa. J. Alden, D. D., New York City. 1^'or Circniars contaliiiag.([uther partlcaiars. Address, Re?. II. .S. ALKXaMDEB, [marS-Smlft Columbia, Pa. THEASXTBY DEPARTMENT. Office of Comptroller of the Carreticy, \ • Washimqton, April 8, 18fi4. j WHEREAS, by satisfactory evidence presented to the undersigned, It has been made to appear tbat The First National Bank ot Columbia, in tba Coui.iy of Laocasier, and tilale ol Pennsylvaala, bas bees diaiy organized under and according to th4 re- qairt-menlb of the act of Congresf, entitled ¦* An act lo SroTlde a nallonal currencf, secured by a pludgj of Dlied States BCuck<i, and to provlda for the circulation aud redempllon tht-ieo','' approved February afi, 1883, and bas compiled with all the proFlaloas of Bald aet re¬ tiulred to be compltsd with bufore commencing the baBlnevs of llaakluK- aVow, tlierefore, I. Hogh McCnlloch, comptroller of the cuciuncy, do nereby certify that THK FIRST NATION¬ AL BA-K 0? COLUMBIA, County of Lancaster, and ^tale of PeDaiiylTania, la anthorized to c'bmmence the ba-loess of Bsnfatng under tlie acl iLforesald. t^BAL.] /" lestimony Whertof wltneas my hand and seal of OfHce, this eighth day of April. IPtU. HnOH UqCITLLOCH, apl 20-Jai-22. Comptroller tf the Currency. MEDICAL. FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF MABIETTA, PA» Hesignated Depository and Financial Aycnt of the United Statea. 10—ao xjo-ajnt. BY inatruotions from the Secretary of the Treasury, dated March Stitb, 1B6I, thie Bank la anthoriied to reoelre subscriptions for the Natioaal 10-iO Fire TM»r .-.nl Iwi.- '- '¦ This Loao, Principal and Intsrsst, la payable lo gold, On Bonds of $600 and upwards, aeml-aannsUy, (Ist of March and September) and on thosa of less denoml- oationa aonnally, (lst of March.) Sabaoribers can receive Bonds with Coupons from March 1st, by paying -he aecmed Interest In c dn, or In lawful muney hy adding fiO per cent, for premium: or, If preferrtid^may deposit the principal only, and receive Bonds witb Coupons from dale of anbscriptlon. Kl gistered Bonds witl be tseaed of tbe denomtnatloas or$60,«100,ftfiOU, $1,000, $&,000,}tO,000, and Coapon Bonda of $bO, $100, $500 and $1,000. Forthe sreater oonveaieaca of subsctlberF, tbe dif¬ ferent Banks and Ba'nkers tkrunghoot the eoantry are authoriied to act as agont for the Lonn. *As only $30U,OOU,OUO of this Loan can ba iesaed, we wonld urge npoa panaaii baviag earplns money, to sabscribe promptly and secure tbe laTeatmeut at par. Tha Secretary la presenting tfale nuir Loan to the pabllc through the National Baak», relies upon tbe liberality and patriotism of oar people to nse all hon¬ orable means and to make every exertion for its sale. It is hoped that Lancaster coanty, haviog done so well In tbe past la furolsbing the GoVfxnment meana, will be eqaally prompt at tbis time. ap9-tf. AMOS BOWMAN, C&abler. NOT A iiuM pifflNK:! A mfiSLI COICeiitSU'BDi .., „ VEGETABLE EXTRACT. A PURE TONIC THAT WILL RSL1E7E THB AFFLICTED AJID NOT HAKE BSXTHZABSS. DR. HOOFLAND'S German Bitters, PEBPABES BX DR. C. M. J ACKSO N.- PHILADELPHU, PA., WILL BTPEOXnAJiLT 4 MOST OEaiAINlT Oxure ctUL 331sie£uaea ABI8INO FBOU A DISOBDERED LTVEB, STOMAOH or KIDNEYS! Thonsanda of oar eltlisna are suffering from DyU'^ pepala and l4lT«r Dlaeasea, and to whom th foUowing qaestlona apply—we gnarantee Hoofland's German Bitters Will Cnw THEM* Dyspepsia & liiver Bisease. Do you rh» with a coated tongue mornlngB, with bad taste in the mouth and poorappetlte for break^tf— Do you feel when you first get up bo weak and languid yoa can scarcely get about? Do you have a dUalnete la the head at times, and often a dullness with head¬ ache occaelonaUy ? Are your bowels costive and Ur*- gular, and appetite changeable ? Do you ihrow up wind from the stomach, and do yoa swell up often?— Do you feal a folueas afUr eating, and ft sinkiag when the stomach Is empty ? Do you have heartbnrn occa- slonaUyr Do yoa fael low spirited, and look on the dark side of things? Areyoanot annaually nervoua at times? Do yoa not become restless, and o'Ua lay until midnight bafore yoa can go to sleep? and then at times, don't you feel duU and sleepy most of ths time ? laysorskindry and scaly? also aaUowT In abort, a not yonr Ufe a burthen, fall of forebodings ? HOOPiaJMD'S GEHMAW BITTEB wiLLCtras jvaBY case ofj Chromo or Nervous Debility, Disease of the Kidneys, and Diseases aris¬ ing ftom a Disordered Stomacli. OBSERVE THE^FOLLOWING SYMPTOMS Besultlng from Dleordenj of the Dijofftw Otsotm: OoBflUpa- tlo'n, inward PUes, Falness or Blood to tha head, Aridity of tbe Stomach, Natuea, Heartbam, Dlsgoat for Food, Fulness or weight In the Stomaeh. Soar Srnctatlons. Sinking or Fluttering at the Pit of the Stomach, Swimming of tha Head, Hurried and Difflcalt Breathing, Flattering at the Heart, Choking or Saffboating tieasatlons when in a lying posture Dimness of Vlsbn, DoU or Webs before the Bight Fevar and DaU Pain tn tbe Head, Deficiency of P«i spiratloa, Tellowneas of the »kla and Byes, ' Pain In the Side, Back, Chest, Limbs, &o. Sadden- Flushes of Heat, Barning la the Flesh, Constant Imaginings of Svil, and great Deprea- sion of Spinta. PABTICXTLAH WOTICE. There are inany preparations told uadet the name of Bittera, put up in quaH Bottles, compouTUted ofthe cheap¬ est whiskey or common rum, costiny from 20 fo 40 centa per gallon, the tatU disguised fry Anise or Coriander Seed. This clatt of Bitters hat caused and taill continue-t cause, as long at they can be told, hnadredt to die'.\i death ofthe Drunkard. Bytheir ajc the system it katt continually under the influence qf .alcoholic StimulaiUt of the w-rst kind, lhe desire for Liiptor it crealed and kept up, a :dthe rttua UaU the horrors dtavtanl woi* a drunkar. 't life and death. Forthose who detire and twUX bave a Li^'tor Btli tert, we publish t'le follomng receipt. Get On i Bot tie of Booflana'a Qermata Bittera and mi--- wUh3 ii^uitrts or Oood Brandy or Whla. key, onii the result wiU be a preparation thai vUl ta.T excel in medicinal mrtaei ami true excelienc' any of thenumeroud Liquor BiUert in the vaiket, and uriU coat mucli leaa, Vou will havt ttl tne virtues of Uoodaud'a Bittera m connection with a good ar¬ ticle of Liquor, at a much lets pnce than these inferior preparaliont will cost you. B££D, HENDERSON & CO. BAN KiijKS, Corner » East King and Duke Streets, ^ LANOASTER, PA. lan B jT-1 EXBCUTORB' NOTICB. Estate of Bavid Witmer, late af Edea twp., ;n t]}B eoanty of LancaBter, dac'd- LETTERS Testamentary on said es- tate haviug been granted to the aadereigned, all persona Indebted thereto ara requested to make Imme¬ diate payment, and those having olaims or demands against the same will please to present their accounts properly an then ticated for settlement to Johk STBOHM, Bxecntor, apl 37-«t-23 residing in ProvHenct* tnwntiblp. PROFESSIONAL. B. C. KBEADT, ATTORNEY AT LAW. OFFICK witll Hon. I. E. Hiester, No.:{S, North Dake etrect, Lancaster, Pa. marao-ij-m Hoofland's (jermaa Bitters WILL Givi: you ¦WILL GIVE TOt) STRONG HEALTHY NEEVBSi WILL GIVE YOU Brisk and Energetic Feeliugs, WILL ENABLE YOU TO AND WILL POSIMVELT PEEVENT Yellow Fever311iousFever&c THOSE SUPFEEINO FBOM Broken Sown & Delicate Constitatioiis From Whatever Canse, oither ia MAJLiE OE FEMAJLK. WILL 7IKD IN Hooffland'8 liierman Bitters A R ;E M E D Y.'. That will rutore Ihcuj mi their OBoal hamlth. Scohhu bHB ths eas« Is thDasaDdi ot Instances, md bnt a fair trial ts reqnlrsd to prors ths asseitlon. ADMINISTEATOE'S NOTICE. Ettate of Joieph Leaman, late of Eden town¬ sbip, deceased. LBTTl^^aS of Administration on said esutu haTing heen granted to theanilurelgsod, sll persons Indnbtsd thereto, are requested to make Imme¬ diate settlement, and thoee having claims or demands against the same will present them withont dela7 for settlement to the nnderslgned, resldlog In eaid town- ship. Jacob leaman, DABIKL LSAHAN, JOS&PH H LBAMAN, my 11 gt-25 AdminlBtrators. FOE THE UTTLE FOLKS. Fiisona and Birds, It is very pleasant to have singing birds in our houses, and few people tliink tbat the Uttle songsters might prefer the open air and the woods to the confinement ofa cage. But one wbo has been shut up in prison himself understands it, as the sail¬ or in tbe following anecdote: Soon after the close of the long French ;War in Europe, a boy stood on one of the bridges tbat cross the Thames at London, wi^h a number of small birds in a cage fo ' sale. A sailor, who was passing, observed the little prisoners fluttering about the cage, peeping anxiously tbrough the wires, and manifesting their eager desire to regain tfaeir liberty. He stood some time look- ingat the birds, apparently lost in thought. At length, addressing the boy, he said : " How mucb do you ask for yonr birds, my boy ?" " Sixpence apiece, sir." " I don't ask how muoh apiece," said the sailor;" how much for the lott I want to buy all hands." The boy made his calculations—they oame to six shillings. " There is your money," said the sailor giving the casb, whioh the boy received with evident satisfaction. No, sooner was the bargain olosed than tbp sailor opened the cage door and | let all the birds fly away. |' The boy astonished, exclaimed: i| "Why did you do that, sir f You have lost all your birds." ¦ I j " i'lLtell wliy I'did it. Iwas shut up three years iii a French priaon as a prison-! er of wapj and I am resolved never to se ^ AUDITOE'S NOTICB. Estate of John Helm, late of Straabtirg twp., in the oonnty of Lanoaster, dec'd. ' r'HB underaigned Auditor, appointed t to distrlbnte the balanoe remaining in thn hands cfDaoii;! Helm, Administrator J?eAJnti non Cum tatn- .meilo amirai, to and among those entltlsd lo the same. Will set for that parpose on VRIDAT, the 37th of MAY, 18S1, at If o'clock, A. U, In the Lihrary Uoom of the Court Honse, In tha oity of Lancaster, where all per¬ sons interestad In tfae ssid distribution may attend. ¦ apl 27-«»-lS JOUS STBOaU, Andltor. CLOTHINa & GENTS' f OENISHING GOODB. 1864 "FOR OUR COUUTRY." 1864 NOTHING demoustrates so clearly the adTsntages of an noqualtlled loyalty to the ((ov- eronieot of a oonntry ss the uoiform and orderly ex¬ terior of its inbsbltsnts; snd this state of things can only exist, and yield its n^oompanylng oomforts, wh,^o the people are well fed, well hoosed and well clothed. Wltnont Intending aay disparagemuot to other ealsL. llahmeDts, It la the testimony of many that at S. S. RATHVOW'S Merchant Tailoring and Clotliing ESTAB LIS Hil EN P, In Krsmph's Building, corner of North Qa^eo &ud Or&ng» streets, oppoHlte 8hob«r*B Hotel, LANCASTER, PA, avery Artlcla in tha Clothing and Fnmlnhing Une tor M-n and Boys ean be obt^lnad, tfaat Ib neceasnry to the elpsanct: and comfort ot the citlxen or tbe sotdlar. A tarjie axperlenea tn the mannraQtura 0/ MILITART AND CIYIHAW'3 CLOTHING, rendara tbisastablisbinsiit at onr-e reliable and econ omical. In addition to a large stook of atrasonable HElDt UADE CLOTHINQ h FHUNISHING GOOD? on hand, tha proprietor haa also a aeleet stock of no- cnt CLOTS::!, CA3SI rlKUS3. MELTONS, UNIONS and V1£&TIN0B, which vlU be made to order to ault tbe most faatidions taate aa well aa the mind of a plainer moald. BHIRT8 oy ALL KINDS,' COLLABS, SCARFS, TIKa, QLOYES, SaSPENDBBS, HOSK, nMBRKLLAS, he, alwaya on hand. Witb thanks "or past patronage, and a hope that the end of thla *' grnel wat" m«y ba chronicled within tbe prvHeut year, agalu "wa fling out banner to the breeze. S. B. BATUVON, Uarehant Tailor and Clothier, Cor. Oranga and North Quuun Eta., Lane'r. niar23-Siii B. W. SHENK, ATTORNEY AT LAW .—Office with 0, J. Ciokay, Booth Qnaan street, Laooastar, Pa Joiyaa ly-30 J. K, ALEXANDEK. ATTORNEY AT LAW.—Office in Dnke Street, opposite the Court House, Lancas¬ ter, Ps. may 28-ly* THEO. W. HEEH, QUKVEiOR, Conveyancer aud Scriv- _ ener Ofllce, No. the Court Uouse. t, opposite [rast'^l-Iy KEMEMBEB, THAT THESE BITTBES AEE Dfot Alcoholic, and Kot Intended as » Beverage. ASSIGHJEB'S NOTICE. Aasigued Estate of Andrev Barkley, snd Wife of Drumore townsMp, Lanoaster ooanty. * NDKEW BASKLEY, of Dmmore r\ townahip, haT.ng by deed of volnntary aaalgn- ment, aa^Knail and tranxferrad all their estate and ef¬ fects to tita aBdaralKQSd for tbe banatit of the creditors of the aaid Andrew Barkley, he therefore gives notice toall parsons Indebted to sail aaalgnor, ta make pay* meat to the nndaraignod wlthoat delay, sad those hav¬ lag clatma tn praaant them to BtiNJ. F. HOWE, Asaignaa. my 4-lt-31 lte: Idlng in Frovidone» twp. NOTicE. To the Heirs and legal BeprsBentatlTeB of Henry Lutz, late of Jfaat Cooalieo towuBhip, Lancaster ooontyi deceased. YOU are hereby notified that by virtue of an order of the Orphans' Conrt of Lancasrer eonnty. to ma directed, I uill bold an Inqnest to divide, part or valne the Baal Estata of Hanry Lnts, daa'd, on THDR3DAT, THB 2«Tfl DAY KfY HAY, A. D., 1861, at 10 o'clock, A. U., at tha ptfbUo honse of Henry Hhoadf, la tha Tillage of Reamatowu, Lancaster coanty, Pa., vhan and wbera 70a may attend, if yon think proper. P. SMITH, Bharlff. 8aBEl7F's Orrioi, Lancaster, April lltb, 1864. apl IMt. GROCERIES, FRUIT, PROVISIONS, kc. ^I^SE undersigned begs leave to in fl fonn his frienda and the pablie. that he has jutl received a large snpply of OROCEKIBS. VBDIT AHi, PK0VIt]IOI4B, whlah ha offera ^t the lowest inarket prices, wholeaale 01 retail, to whleh he woald,invite attention of the ptirchaaari. JOHND.BSILES. mar lI-tf-H Ho. 18 Baat King St. SAMTJEL H. PBICE. ATTORNEY AT-LAW, Office in S. DUKK STHBKT, S doors below Farmers' Eank oppoilLa Lntharas Chnrch. Janl, 6:-^tf EDWARD aEILLY, 4TTORNEY AT LA.W.—OFFICEj DCKE 6TEBET,3door«North cfthe Conrt Honae, ¦*t«r. Penn'a nov 3.tr.41» Bounty, Baok Pay & Pension Claims PROMPTLY attended to. Office No. C4W, East King straat, Lancaster. ¦ JAMES BLACK. Jnn t's T. H. POLI.Or.K. A. B. WITMEH, County Surveyor, Deputy Coroner, Jastlce of the Peace and Conveyancer. \LSO gives particular attention tu CLERKING SALES OF BBA,L AHD PKBSOHAL PEOPBETT, at any distance within the connty. Or¬ ders from a disUnce promptly attedded to. Offlca In Manor township, Lancaster oonnty, ona mlla north of Safe Harbor, on the Lancaster road. Address Safe Harbor Pott office. apgl91y*.'» The Proprietors bave thonsands of Lattars t^m thn most eminent OLEBaTiVJSN, LAWYKKS, FUYSICIAHS, Ajn> CmZSNB, Testifying of their own peraonal knowledge, to th* beneflclal effecta and medloal vlrtnes of thaaa Bitters. From, Bev. J. Kewton Brown. D. D , Editor ofthe RTicy* dopedia of Beltgious Knotoledge. Although not disposed tofavor oriaoommendF itenl Medicinea in general, throagh distrnst of their ingredi¬ ents and effecta. lyetknowof no anfflclant raasone why a man may not taotlfy to tbe beDsflta ha beliaver himself to hava received from any simple preparation, in the hope tuat he may thoa contrlbate to tha benefit of othera. I do tbls the more readily In regard to Hoofland'a German Bittera, prepared by Dr. G. M. Jackaon of tiiia city, becanse I was prejudiced againat them for many yeara, osdarthalmpresalon that tbey wvra chiefly aa alcoholic mlxtara. I am indabted to my Mend BolMr Bhoemaker, Esq., for the removal of thie pra]ndloe by proper testa, and for encoaragement to try them, when snffering from great and long coatlnaed debility. The nse of three botUes of thcHB BitUrs, at the beginning of tbe present year, was followed by evident rallaf, and restoration to a degree of bodily and mental vigor which I had not felt for alx months befare, and ha4 almost despaired of regaining. 1 therefore thank Qod and my friend for directing me lo tha nsaii them. Pbu.'a, Jaae SS, 1861. J. KK'tTTON BHOWHJ 50, BARRELS OUOICK WHITE _ AHD BEOWH SnaAE. ID HOQDS. FBIHE S. O.SnOAE. St BAQS OHOICE KIO COFFEE. 36 CHESTB QEEEN AND BLACK TEAS. JUBt reetlTed and for a&lo, wholes&le ,ad roUll bj mull-U-lt JOHH D.aSlLSS. AUCTIOKEEBIHQ. BENJ. F. ROWE respoctfuUy in¬ form, tho pabllo thKt ha will »tt«nd to Crying g«l«B of ^.t\ ind FtnQQftl proporty In »ny part of the eoanty. ThoM wishing bla Mrrlosa ar. roqaeated to apply to OKE1E0OTCI.AEES0K, S«q. at lha ProlhonaUryV Otaca, who will prnoiptly attend to lho matUr. LattarBaddraBsadtomeatBrnlthrllloF. O., Lanaai- Ur Connty, will ha promptly attandad to. •bl It MISCELLANEOOS. HOTICB. POUNDS EXTRA SUGAR, _ ^ CDEEDHAHS. 100 Bbla. half bbla. aad qnarter bbla of Ko. 1, 3 and 3 qACSESAL. JOO SACKS OBOmiD AlITO SALT. 60 SACKS ASUTOn FINK do. In atore and (or eala by JOHN D. SKILES, mar ll-tr-lfi No. IS Saat Klatt St. '{¦'HE undetsigned hereby gives notioe I to all pareona not to buy a note glyen by him to Jacob Hackman, dated Febmary 16,16M, payable nine - mar u-tf-16 montha aft«r data, for $180, aa he will not be lUble for 1, not having recelTed Talaa therelbr. JAOOB A. QETEB, np27-4ta23 QEO. 8. GEYBK, NOTIOE is hereby given that an ap- pUoatlon will ba made to the Farmara Hank of L^inuuter, for a renewal of cartlfloate of 71 ahazas of tta atooh owaed by Bt. John'a Choreb, Peqnear-aaid eertlfloate haying bean loet or mislaid. mT Il-2tg» Hotiae. EHAUNE BGROEB, ic, nc. JOHN BEBQEB. Alias eabpana for Dlyorei to April Term, 18t>4. No, 100. BOXES ORANGES. 16 BOXES LEUONE. eTBCBBELS FBA HUTS. AlBO, BASINS. FiaS, PKDNES, ALMONDS, FIL- BEETS,GBEAUNDTS,&c.,&e.. In stora and for sale, wholesale and ratall by " JOHH D. SKILES. SeWy( bbls. best qnaUty GOAL OIL. For aale wholesale and ictall. _ YOBK BOMIHT. CHOICE 0BAHBXBBIB8. 60 bbla OBOICIGBIBN APPLES. Jast raetlTed and for aat e by marll-tf'ie lOHN S SSII.IS. J. ROHRER. RECTIFYING DISTILLEBl ASD WBOLBSALB DSALSBS IK FRENCH BRANDIE S, hollind gibs, scotch and iei3h -whiskiks, Jamaica kdm, lOREION AND DOMESTIC WINES, ^c Mq. 66, Bast Kitfo STtiKar, Lancabtbr, Pa. Constantly on haod. Copper DlatlUed 0 Id Bye "Whie- kay, Apple Brandy, ite. niar^S-lt-lS DISEASES OP KIDNEYS AND BUDDER, In Yoxmg or Aged, Male or Female Areapesdliy lamovetl, and the patient lastoreC health. DELICATE CHILDREN, Thoaa snffering from KARASDIDS. wasting awa> wltb scarcely any Sash on their bones, ara cared In a very abort time; oaa bottle la soeh easaa, wlU hava a most sarprlslag affect. i» ja. H. JB Iff T s HaWog snffBrlng children as aboTe, aod wishing |to ralea them, will nsTer rogret the day thay commenced with tbese Blttars. LITERAET MEN, STUDENTS, And those working hard with their bralna, shoold al ways keep a bottle ol Hoofland'a Bittera near thnm, as thoy will flnd mnch benefit from Its aaa,ta both mind and body, InTlgotatlng ftnd notdepreeslng. IT IS NOT A LIQUOR STIMULANl And Iieaves No Proatration. zo» GROSS ESSENCE OOFFEE. CASES SOPOBAFIBB. Jaat recelTed and for aale by m>i-l-t(-U .' . JOHN D. BEILXS, printa calling upon the heira of Samuel jmonBttate, hut (MiveeiiforoBd'her words any thing in p^nron that'I ^^^^ NOTICB, JOHN BERGER, you are hereby commanded to be and appear In yoar proper parson before onr Jadgea at Lancaster'st the OoDstT. Qooit. of Commoa fleas, to be held on tha IHIBU MONO AT la AUGUST, 1884, to Ihow oaaea, 1( IBV 7011 baTB, wby tha aald Bmallna Bexgar akall Bot bo dlToreod from tha bonda of matrlmoay eontraoted ,rtBiyoiL • JP. BMITH, Blarlft i SharUTa Ofiaa, Kay, ISU. [ma7U-it-S6 DELAWAEE MXnrXJAL SAPETY iseasAsoE coupAimr. CAPITAL OVEE OHB JIILIION DOllAHB. Hake Insaranoe agalnet Losa or Dataafe by Flra on Balldia,;a, Marchmndlxc, Faraltnra, Ae. ALL LOSSES PBOHrTLT SETTLED AND PiJDi 3. ZIMUBBMAH, Afast, So. 7<i<oitb Quaa SL mar a0*ii.l9 UMaatar, Pa. LANCASTER LOCOMOTIVE WORKS, Lancaster City, Petmsylvania. JAMES A. NOUBIS. Havlng^ taken tha abova Works, Is prepait>d <> exeo promptly, otdara (or COAL AHD "WOOD BtrENIirG LOCO MOTIVES of boat class workmuBhlp. Also, every description of BOUJEBS, BIAIIOHAEY BHOIBBS, BBABB ABD lEOH CABIIHOB. Borglnge, Bhaftlng, Mill Oearlnr and BAIIiBOAD MAOHINEF' dec 19 - LIME ATTENTION, SOLDIERS ! ANP THE FRIENDS OS SOLDIERS. WecaU tha attentton ot all bUTlng . .mitooM ot friends In tha army to the fact that •• HoOFLAHD'S Oerman BlMara" wUl care nlna-tanlha of the dlasases lodnced by eiposarsa aad prlTatlons Incjdent to camp me. In the llKa.pabllsbsd almost daUy In the aaws. papera, o» tha arriral of the slclt. It wUl b. noHeed iSii »TerT lane proportion aiesnffsring trom deblUty. BT.r? cSof?h.?ldSd cao b. readily cored by Hoof fIS a»a«aJi Bmaw. We haTa no hesltatloa 1 sltlS« that, 11 those Blturs were freely naed amon oarSdlarsibaadteds ot llTss mlghl le saTed '"Th7p"prt°.»"ii°d"iilyr.celTlng thaakfal ^ fromsatsfer. In the army and hospluls^ who ha been restored to health by the aee ofliiase Bittera, to them by their frienda. BEWARE OE COUNTERFEITS i See that the Slgnatara of "O.K. JA0KSOH"U onth WBAfFBB of aaeb BotUej SITPEEIOB PEQ0BA FOR SALE. 'I HE sabsoribora will furnish the btst I doaUty of WOOD BURNT LUllt,:at thalr.Ellas, one and a half mllee eoath of Lampeter. Orders left at Sol. Sprecber'a Hotel, In the clly of Laaeaater, wlU be promptly attnaded to. marlJSljlS Price per Bottle, 75 Cen«», Or Half Doz- for 84.00. ov .,1.1 „.,„. n..r«it dl ogatst not baya tha artlole, do .ot h. ilt'"? by 1™ of * ' intoiicatm, prejanttlont fb« mS hi oB.'.d in 1" Pla«a. b>" "">* to na, Mid wa i^n f?^art. ~.»"lr P«k-i. by C.K.". Principal Ofiice A. Uaniifectorr, fTo. 631 Aroh St, Philadelphia, Jones & Evans, FEQTTEA T.TWTg I [ Snooeaaora to 0. M. JACKSON & CO., XHE Onginal Peqnea Lime oonsUntlj | Proprietors. .on.k»ad atthe Ulna of the "''''";!'!!5-.™„.w ! CrFoi B«la t)T DmnrisU wd Dedan In ^IjJta^Ooop«.sH...l.La.ea-uyrtU_b.^J^PttT ' .^^^"J^VuSSsUl-. an-«-tf-ii P«loa». , ^,jf UILLUE at EBSBER.
Object Description
Title | Lancaster Examiner and Herald |
Masthead | Lancaster Examiner and Herald |
Volume | 38 |
Issue | 26 |
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 | 1864-05-18 |
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 | 05 |
Day | 18 |
Year | 1864 |
Description
Title | Lancaster Examiner and Herald |
Masthead | Lancaster Examiner and Herald |
Volume | 38 |
Issue | 26 |
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 | 1864-05-18 |
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 808 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 | 05 |
Day | 18 |
Year | 1864 |
Page | 1 |
Resource Identifier | 18640518_001.tif |
Full Text |
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MNCASTER, PA.r WEDOTSfiMi MAI 18, 1864.
'm-^r
- -EHJO
. Jm PtabU&lied. owerr W©dn«iday. AT TWO DOLLARS AY^-^JAB,
The Examiaer & Hera^ld
U Fnlilishftd erery littniUy et $2.00 a Tear.
dFFiCBKo. 32^ KOBTU QVEEK STBEET.
JNO. A. HIESTAKD, E. M. KLINE, Editor* and Proprietors.
j^^ AU'trndnen letters, ooountinleatlons, Jtc., ahonld bo BddrMeed to
J. A HDESTAHD ft CO., Laacaster, Pa.
ADVBBTISINa DKPABTMENT.
Brans ADTxaranixm by the ye*/-« fractions of a
rear, to be charged at the rate of $12 00 per square
of toa lines. Ten per cent Increase on the yearly
rate for ftacHona of a year.
- SmoafAs. 6aumX^. 12inontA>.
Oue Square. t 4.'t0 $ S.OO $12.00
Two Bquawe C© 12.00 2000
ThcMbqoares 12.00 20.00 26.00
BxiL EsTATX, PutaOHAL Prqpshti and Oimral Advib- mciu (vVavhatsed at the rate of Senen ceuts per Uoe for the firstitiBerwi™, .nd Jbur cents per line for erwy sabgequent insertion. PaTzsr ajjoaaiirs. butees. and aU otber Advkktb— KCTTS, by tbe column, half, third, orquarter coinmn, to be charged as follows:
One columu, yearly, fiOO 00
One-half oolumn. y«tly, 00 00
. One-thlrd column, yearly -.-.. JO 00
0»e.qusrter column, yearly, 30 00
BofllNBSS Cards, yearly, not axceedlng ten lines, $10 00
Business Caem, 5 lines or iiss, $5 OO. I.IOAI. Noncxs to be charged ss follows :
Kieentors'Notices. $2 00
Administrators'Noticefi, ".i 00
.Assiguees' Notices, - 00
Audltora'NoUces, I SO
AliNotice*BOtexteedlDg/»n lines, or UsB,
forfftree Inairtiona, I 20
LocAi NonCM to be paid for at the taU of ten centK per Uoe for the first insertion, sud Jiw cooLr per lino for every BUbsequent insertloE. Bisaops, OR Special Notices.-All advertiFementspre- c«iiBgthaMarri^«Bor Matketfl to ba charged the tame ratfs as Local Notlcuc. , , .. = .
MaaBlAOSS to be charged 25 cents each In the paper 8rf>t
pobliehlng th« samt>. Dtitra Notices Inserted without charpe. OaiTiJABT Ngiices to be charged at adverlisine rates. TRiBDTtsof lUsFxcr, Ba.'.oLorioNe, ^c, t*) be charged 20
eentii p^r line. CouMinttCAnvhM setting forth the clalma of Individuals foroffic*!, Ac., to be cbarged 10 cents per line. J3- The privilega of Annm.l Adverttaers is strictly limitodto theirown immediatt business; aud all advur- (laemonU forthe benefit of QtJ;ec penons, as «-oIl as all fdrortiaements not immediat |
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