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VOL. XXXI. LANCASTER, PA., WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 28, 1857. No. 9. ¦ T5it3kH)BY EDWARD 0. DAKLINGTON, . QTTlOM.Ta XOETH QCTD BTUKT. The EXAMINK5 4 DKMOCRATIC HKRALD UpitbUab»di»Mklr.1UTwdlK)i.tAB«a7eAr.' ADVBRTISBBIENT8 wUl bo inserted *t the rate of gt 00 p»r aquare, of ten Hurt for thrw Inaer- ttoni or l9« tl AT4u9» CMUper aqnare for each odfUUonal InsartloiL. ..Buttaaoi AdTerUsemeota Inaerted by the quarter, half yefi or year, iriH be charged •»'«!<»»« : • ' •¦ ' ' sflwnfJU. ««wiU4».lamonlftf. On«Bauare #100 $ 6 oo $8 00 Two " X eolmnn • H T. —• & 00 .. 10 00 ISOO 90 00 BOO 18 00 25 00 13 00 25 00 45.00 80 00 BUSINSSS KOTIGBS inserted hefore Uorriogei and peotha, donble the regnlar rates. tJ^AH Edreftlriag ikoonaU are conaidered eoUeeta. ble at the cxplraUon of half tbe period eontraated for. TraiulentadTertitexaeaViCASH. From Chambers' Journal. EDrFH WAMIWGHAM. I grotesque and dreadfol covering. I passed them and repassed them. In looking at her, I threw an energy and fervor into my admir¬ ing gEze, which I thought In no way dis¬ pleased her. I sat down on a rock some two hnndred yards off and,.taking a volume from my pocket—not Sophoole this time, but Keats —I affected to read, bttt watohed their move¬ ments narrowl/. I saw her writing with her parasol on the sand. How my heart palpitated I Is it, I thonght, some tender sentiment, some gentle enconrftgement ?-7-does she ioBoribe her name, possibly add her address ? I was in a fever of expeotation. I sat absorbed, aa they may have thonght, in my book nntil they moved away some distance, when I followed to the spot where she had written, in large clear characters, Edith Walsingham. It was then Kdith. This then, was her name. How true my preaentiment I Had it been revealed to me in a dream ? I looked round to see no one was watching me, and wrote in large let¬ ters under my own name, Henry. I then hurried aftor them, that I might, if possible, see what the earthly abode of this goddess was. Everything favored my design: they never looked round once, but 'Rent directly up a hill from the sands, and entered the door of 17 Promenade Villas, Prospect Place. 1 returned immediately to the sands. How happy was I now! That morniHg, when I left my lodgings, all was doabt and uncer¬ tainty ; now, did I not know everything?— her very name and addresa ? " I felt so calm and contented, that I could have almost re¬ turued to the society of Antigone and Imeue for an hour or two, but I determined first to revisit the sea-sUore. I wandered back to the spot where I had written my Christian name under hers, and was hurt and disgust¬ ed to flnd that some mischievous and ill meaning person had scrawled under them, iu large coarse-looking letters, A Pair op Idiot$. This was the treatment which sentiment met with at the hands of the vulgar. I had al¬ ways boen a friend to education, except in my own particular case; Inow bitterly regretted that the masses, or any of them, could write. I looked around, bat to no purpose, for the miscreant who had committed this sacrilege. Not a bouB in his botiy should have remain¬ ed unbroken. I quiokly obliterated tho ribaldry that had been arlded, and left the two^names as thoy stood originally, until It occarred to me that I would destroy her surname, place my own opposite, and bracket the two Christian names togetlier. I then sat myself down ou the shingles, and watched the tide come in, rip¬ ple after ripple washing up nearer and nearer to the writing, until at last the two uames, still united, were submerged under tho wa¬ ters ofthe Atlantic; and, as the tide had nuw reached me, I woke from my reverie with my shoes and stocldngs wet. This evening I dined witii some appetite; it had entirely forsaken me during the three preceding days. With my cheroot, lattemp, ted Herodotus, but soon laid the venerable Father of History aside; took up Virgil, but with the same result. Even my favorite Horatlus Flaccns could not, on this occasion, be tolerated, but was exchanged for my pen, with which I wrote an acrostic on Edith Wal¬ singham. I went to bed reciting my lines, which at the time seemed.^a rery happy effort of my muse, repeating the euphonious name which had inspired them, and on the beauty of its enchanting owner. Next morning I .waa np betimes, loug be¬ fore tbe hideous servant had plied the string fastened to my finger. ^I bad now some ob¬ ject in life—lhat object was Edith Walsing¬ ham. I would read, ay, read even before breakfast, and divinity too; so for one hour I appUed myself unremittingly, and, after¬ wards, took my first meal with cheerfulness and appetite. Before I should commence my logic at ten i there was ample time for a short walk, and what conld better settle my mind for the day's study than one glance at 17 Promenade Villas, Prospect Place? When I approached it, there waa an untisual stir and bustle in the front of the house. Servants were run¬ ning aboat; the dining-room table, so far as I could see from the opposite side of the way, was covered with a cold collation.— Presently up dashed a earriage and a pair to the door, and out floated one of the young ladies whom I had seen with Edith on the sands, robed in soft India white muslin. A horrible suspicion seized me; I felt dizzy aud staggered, aa the thonght passed through my mind that Edith was to be the bride of another. Suspense was torture I could not endure, so I walked boldly over to the driver of the carriage and pair. "Is there a wed¬ ding here this morning ?" I asked. " Yes sir," answered the coachman. "One of the Miss Walsinghams ?" I suij- I3ISK&SE AKD CBIME. polled to murder some one, he is properiy Light is daily coming in upon tho world amenable to the law of the land, of mind, and by the help of clearly estab- It is no very difficalt matter for ordinary Ushed facta, arguments may be adduced mimls to per.suadfl thetoaelves as to any de_ which wiU have a stronger tendency lo com- sirwd cou.ao—that it is right; that there is \ pel men to take care of their hoaltU, than no barm In it; and that, if ihey uieant no any which have arisen from conscience, mon- harm by it, no blame oould be attached ; bnt, ey or duty ; tbat is, the argument of Shame, if for such Aims/ considerations, men are to Late Publications Heceived by Mur- | BEMOVAL. ray, Young & Co, /^ K(). ].\ BHKNEiMAN, Attorne\ HE FOllUM: or. l-nrty \ e:ivs in ¦ \J[ LHW.ha>.ramovodhlHofflcotoDorlb Dnko »l T J Full Practice at tli fani Brown. 2 viil>., m-i LAKK AGAMI; or, F..nr V wesifiD \fhica. ny Ciim iSmo,. cloth; witli an: Pl.i1nd-1])hl:i Bar rl"th. iri-' Wanderiuj?" •s -lutiii Audcri-i 3d ilofiT. nhiirp rh*- OiMirt lloofA, west •-\i\t. Ja 41-7 I A hi L9t men fully nnderstand tbat certain bodily bo excused from ponaUiea, there is an eud at 1 ^^'^^^%_ ^J^^^ c'l.oK"T"voi:,^i2u^o.Sh^^^^' affections tend to orime, and that crime thus onoe to all law and to all govemment. ' - .. committed confines to the Penitentiary, then The conclasion of the whole matter is this, may the community wake up more fuliy to Every man shoald bo held responsible for nui[[o and Intcresijrir ad^Jntrirp VltTOItl.*,; »r. the Worlrt Ovemdue By Caroline Clifl^Hbrn" 1 vol., l2mo .cluth. A houk ofa healthy, moral toni _ By Tugether with a fnll asHDitmeat »t Htaudard and iiiIh- cellanBon.s wurks, to which yonr attention, reader. Is la^pectfal'y larltod. Jan 2l-2t-S J. H. HOPFEE, b«..k.;fj QUKVKYOK, OIVIL KNdlNKKK, I lO^ONVHyAHCEB and DBAUaHTSMAN. Monut J.iy. ""^ "* ' i'«nn'n.—Town PlaoM, .Wapeof lar^e eataten oud Topo¬ graphical plauM or connty.MoatB, kc, neatly dra^vn I was always very romantic. At fourteen, I wrote verses of a dark and dreary oharacter, and was melancholy and misanthropical; at seventeen, I proposed to a young lady near¬ ly twice my age, who very wisely reftised me; audi waa so profoundly miserable, or thonght myself so, that I meditated for days about snioide, but could not deteYmine npon the exact form of violent death that might be ad¬ visable. Even Oxford, with all tho boating, and beer drinking, and cricketing, wine par¬ tiea, whist, billiards, and various boisterous diversions, did not cure me of my sentimen¬ tal tendenoies. I was all but plucked for my " little go;" becanse dnring the vacation be fore this dreaded ordeal, I had been flirting with a bine-eyed cousin named Ada, instead of devoting myself to Euripides, Horaoe and Euclid. In my twelfth term—this is, after abou^ two years and a half residence at College—it seemed almost time to maku some prepara¬ tion for my final eramination, or "great go;" and I was informed by a candid tutor at the close of the summer term, a few days before the glorious saturnalia of commemoration, that nothing would save me but very steady reading during the whole of the long vaca¬ tion. Whereupon I packed my portmanteau full of olothes, and an enormous deal-box full of books, and shunning my blue-eyed oonsin, I got into the train, and giving my¬ self only a two days holiday in London, I went forthwith to Sandhaven. Everybody knows Sandhaven and its dnll High Street, and its sands and its assembly- rooms, and its bazaars and bathing-raachines, and flies and young ladies on horses, and old ladies in vehicles and infanta in perambula¬ tors drawn by chubby maids; its billiard- rooms, eating-houses, suburban tea gardens ; Its steamers arriving daily and departing dai¬ ly ; its circulating librftries, not a novel less than ten yoars old; Its three churches and eight chapels; its wind, its heat, its dust, ita glare ; the terrific greed of its lodging-keep¬ ers; and, daring the seaaon, its generally nn- qoiet, unstudious cbaracter. What could have induced me to select Sandhaven, I know not; but the stubborn fact is—I did select it. T established myself in very expensive and uot very comfortable apartments. They had these reoommendations: there was a fine view of the sea; the landlady, a widow of about forty, was plain ; her daughter, a girl of seventeen, was still plainer; and the ser¬ vant girl positively hideous. I shall at least thought I, be safe here. Arriving on a Fri¬ day, I thonght it as well to see something of the place during that and the following day. If I set to work on the Monday, and made a fair start, it would be better than to begin before I knew anything of the institutions of the town or Its inhabitants. So on Friday I bathed and boated, and had a donkey-ride— and dropped info various billiard-rooms— rather astoniahing provincial pool-players by the experience attained at Oxford—and I also haunted the various bazaars, and I danced though with much decornm, ay, even solem¬ nity, at the assembly-rooms. On Sunday I went to church. FuU of good resolutions, on the evening of that day I retired to bed early; but before doing BO, arranged an elaborate maohineiy to enable me to rise early the next moming. j am a very heavy sleeper, and had not my a/ar, um with me; so I tied a string round my fin¬ ger, passed it under the door, and gave orders to the servant-girl to pull the string until I got out of bed. She obeyed me scrapulously. and at seven, despite various remonstrances, which I growled forth iu tones not by any means gentle, I was pulled oat of bed by my finger, and half an honr afterwards was un¬ packing the colossal deal-box, and arranging my library for the ensuing Uterary cam¬ paign. I waa to read only eight hours a day; this I thought moderate; in prospect it looked go; if necessary, this was to be increased to ten or twelve. More steam might be put on —that was the exact expression—as the dan¬ ger grew more imminent; but at present eight hours would do. ^y subjects weredivinity, logic, Latin com¬ position, four plays of Sophocles, the Odes, Epodes, and Ars Poetica of Horace, the first four books of Herodotus, and the Bucolics and Georgics of Virgil. The three hours in the evening were to be devoted respectively to Herodotus, Horacoi and Vii^il, all which I had read before, and was therefor only compeUed to refresh my memory by re-perusing them; with the as¬ sistance of au English translation and a Ma, nilla cheroot. During the early part of Monday my pro¬ gress was marvellous. The hour intended for theology was spent in unpacking; but at ten I assailed the logic h ith vigor; moved on to the Latin writing at eleven; and soon after twelve was absorbed in the woes of An¬ tigone. At one, or thereabouts, I heard the tramp of horses, and what more natural tban for one moment to leave the twin-sis¬ ters and that turbulent tyrant Creon, and rosh to the window to see who might be the passers-by? Would that I had never done BO. II Can I ever forget the witchery of that smUe, the heaven of that calm pale brow, tbe latent musio io those eyes, the poetry of tbat tiny foot, the glitter of those pearly teeth, the majesty of that arm, the tempta¬ tions of that waist, the rapture of those wavy ringlets? 0, Edith 1—no, not Edith either. What a perfect command she had of her horse I (To be sure he was daily over¬ worked and underfed : was that her fault ?) With what grace she sat in her saddle, and how fascinating was the tremulous vibration of the feather in her wide-awake hat I Can it be a matter for wonder that, after gazing on auch charma from my window, Imene ap¬ peared an insipid and pusiUanimoas time- lerver; Antigone, a strong minded, woman with a grievance, sadly addicted to vaporing »nd aenUment; Creon, au utter ruffian, and the Chorus abore? Before two my books were closed, and I was wildly aearching the streets and shores of Sandhaven for the lovely object of my atrong and sudden passion—in vaiu. That day at least I found her not—^nor the next— Qor even the day after. Not one line coald I read: it was utterly useless to attempt it. Friday ia usnaUy accounted au unlucky day.—Qtttntem/u^c. It is a classical super- Btition which the moderns have endorsed. I found it in my case the fortunate one; for after three days' vain and restless roving to and fro, in quest of the faultless creatures whoae beauties hadlured from my Sophocles, and desti'oyed my equanimity, on Friday I caught a gUmpae of her on the sands. She waa with two other yonng ladies, whom I look to be her eistera. They were amusing themselves in gathering aheU and pieces of sea-Weed. They were unaccompanied by any gentlemen. Each wore a wide-brimmed broWn ^X to..T-l hStol Shft-Edith I wa, blighted, I shonld be, if I did not «»d, »lso "Tenuauer that | goi»_nna gm-now roioautlo no more. the sentiment, HEALTH IS A DDTY, and tberefore, the neglect of its preaorvalion, a sin, which in the natural progress of thingt:, leads to loss of health, and life, and honor. In a recent trial of a forger, who handled millions of dollara In a year's business, the defence was that he was insano. Among the his deeds, uuleas they are clearly proved to bo the result of a physical, mental, or moral oondition which he had no agency in origlua- tlug, or exaggerating to the eriminal point. Henoe the prisoner was convicted. LITTLE JOKES. The following is rather a stretcher, but we evidence ofi'ered was that he oonld sleep only ^''anslate it from a Leipsio joke book, entitled three or fonr hours ont ot the twenty-fonr. " Who wiU believe it?" The very taU and In a previous number we atat«d, tbat a grow- somewhat short-sighted Count X. on a jour. Ing inability to aleep was a clear Indication of ^^^y ^^^ *.? «'««? ^^'^ f °^^^^ shorter friend approaching insanity, and on the return of ^n the doable bod of a country inn. Waking sloopfulneas, the inteUect became clear— «P soon after daybreak, he found his short There were other symptoms. There was the Wend drawn far down into the bed by his sound of trip-hammers in his ears ; black- ^*^«' "^'^ ^^^ ^ P**"^ ^^ "^^«^ ^^^^. ***°g^"8 smith's sparks floating before his eyes, and over the foot-board. He waked up the snor- there was pain in tbe head a large portion of ^°« ^^^^^ ™*°' *°*^ ^"^^^ " ^**^ ^^^^ 8^' ^°^^ the time. Tbese symptoms, lasting so long, ''^^'^ °^ *'°*^' "^^ ^'¦'«"'^' *^ y**^ ^^ "^"^ '^"^ bad at length so affected the brain, as to do- '"* ^°'^'' ^*'**'-" ""^^^ are mistaken." waa stroy aU perception, or comprehension of the , ^^^ "^^^' " ^^°'^ ^'^ ^^^^^^ ^^^^ '^**"" ^^^""^ effects ot crime; and when the organ of a i ^^"^•" "In^Poasible I" said the Count; "be man's perception is destroyed, he will plunge ^° ^ood, however, as to look once more, for headlong, and with utter recklessness, into { *^ ^^"^ aiatance I cannot recognise them." any kind of wrong-doing whioh circumstan- [ " ^^*' «e 7^*^ staring at, sir, may I aak P'» ces throw iu his way—arson, robbery, mur-I said an imperialed, moustached "blood "to der, anything ; aud. If not detected or pro-: * "Hoosier" on a Mississippi steauib-iat, who vented, the crime, whatever it may bo, will , liad been watching himas aeat walches a grow into a habit, and habit is second nature; ; "louse, for some flfteen minutes. " I thought consequently, he will revel in It, it becomes "o •" exclaimed the Hoosier, the moment the his meat and drink, aud he would rather do ; other apoke; "I said you'd got a mouth, and it thau not. Honco tho prisoner declared i ^ ^a* o"iy waitin'to be sartin about it to ask without hesitation, tiiat if he were released I 7°^ ^° 'liquor.' Stranger, what'il you drink? he would do it again ; that he rather likod or bad you rather fight? I don't care whtch^ it, and nothing could prevent him bnt cut-l "iy*elf " ting off his hand, if it came in the way, to forge paper. It was shown iu tho trial, that there was insanity on the father's and mother's side ; but no indication of it ou the part of either father or mother. It is well known, howev¬ er, that insanity, as well as personal featurps> In the oampaign of '44 Henry Clay was the Whig candidate. A Liberty party man, mak¬ ing a speech somewhere iu New Hampshire, objected very strongly to the gallant Ken_ tuckian on the ground of his being a duellist. This done, he began to glorify hia own party as small in numbers, but destined to achieve Ll Jan . CHISM, witb Aogiihurp C.iufB.Blon. For d&le by \ jan 21-tf-ft MUKRAY, TOnNO A CO. JREi? OF THE OLDiN TIBIE. juat received by Tan !I.ir.8 MDBHAY, YODNB & CO. KANSAS, EXTE ITS INTERIOR AND 3; by Mm. RnbiasOD, st BIDRBIY, YOONQ & CO'S. AMERICAN ALMANAC FOR 18.^7 can be hod at Jan 21-tf-S MURRAY. YOUNG k CO'S. WANTED, FKOM FIVE TO ElOHT PIUN- DRED DOLLARS by the iHt of April, on prop¬ erty worth 330(10 clear of all Incumbrance. Inqniro of ' JOHN Z BEOOME. West Kins at., ahove Charlotte street, jan 21 3*1-8 POR BENT. THB STBAM SAW MILL ^th adonble 2-Btoty DWBLLINQi UiiUSB.andexteQBlTelaQdlngH on thei Conestoga Creelc. now ia the occnpancy Jacob OOetn. Thla property Is eligibly! Bltuateil in the City of Lancaster, and capable of doing a large hudlneao. Eaqnlre of K. C. BEIQART, jan 14-lra-7 Lancaster, Pa. STOKE STAND 3POB EENT. THK old store stand ii> Annville, long iLQowa liS the" CENTRE STORE," belonglBir to Simon M. Crall. Is offered for Bent. In addition MA lo the Store Boom Is a WARE-HOUSE. Also 4 Muh Booma above the Store Boom, with a ssparateJUUL entrance, suitable for a DweUlng. JOSEPH B. HENHY, jan U-4t-7 Annville, Lebanon Co., Pa. BENJAMIN P. BAEE. AXTOKNEV AND COUNSELLOR AT LAW.—Officw with N. Ellmaker, E-tq .North Unke ktreet. dt^c 3 ly-l ! Loan and Deposit OfQ.ce, and Beal ev at 1 Estate Agency. »t"Pi, J A W. RUSSEL rcspcctfuliy f^ives J~\,^ nullce ihAl ha huu removed his office 10 Ceafre Hqnartt, next door in rhe Inland Inimrance Offlce, vhere he will alti-nd pi^rfonaUy to all businesH entriiHt<'d lo hi.4 care Will attend to^aln ofall klnda nf real enlam. A uuiii- b>ir or desirable reisidrnCRM now for ttalo. .K'.^o, h Urge nnmber of lota and land by the acre. STOCKS bought and sold on commlKnlou. CoUectiona mode on the moat favorablo ternit. Mooey received and Inve'iled In flrtt inuTlHu-A'r. in U Judgment Kecnrltlf>«. Interest paid on depoollH from 6 lo 6 pot ceut. acuo.- ding to time, Bj* Uncnrrent ni>>ney purchaned. dec 17-tf-3 A. W. RUSSEL ly-5 JAMES K. ALEXANDEE, ATTORNEY AT LAW.—Office with 1. S. Llghtner, Dnke etreet, neariy oppoaite Ihe Coart. Honae. Jnly 2-tf^31 WM. ATTG. ATLBE, ATTORNEY AT LAW.—Office No. 4£, Eoat King straet, oppoaite Bprecher'a Hotel, eept 28 _ ^^"^ [j. KIKKBAD. MAETIN-] DBNTIBTEy. MANTIN & KINKEAD, having as- eoclated together In the practice of DKNTISTRT, will endeavor torhnder entire satlNfoction In all operations en¬ tnuted to their care. Being prepared forthe HACiDFACTUBE. OPTBGTH, ire will be enabled to unit all ca«eR, with block; single gum or plate teeth either on Oold, BllVer or Ontta Percha. : Sr^OFFICE—Main Street, 2 doora east of Ecbter- nftcht's Hotel. Stranbnra, Lan. eo. N. B. [ take thin method of tendering thanks for the Uberal patronage heretofore received, and hope by tbe preuent arrangement to beenabled at all timea to altend to those reqalrtng onr HerviceB. , Jy 16-ly-33 _ J. MAKTIM TT ~ Dr. Si-T. PBIGG, SURGEON DENTIST, re- upectfulLy offers his professional services to thecltlzann of Lancaater and ita vicinity, aflfloring them that all operations entrusted to hia care, either In OPERATIVE OR MECHANICAL DENTISTRY wili be executed In a thoroughly Bclentiflc maun'ir. OFFICE—EaHt KingiStreet, lat Door Ea«t of Kli.g'M Grocery. J3*Befora to ProffiHaorH, C. A. Harris, A. A. Blandy P. H. Aauteu, of Baltimore College of Dental Surgery POT 6 Bm-i9 STOVES! STOVES!! JUST YccinvGd, rlirect from the 5Ianu- fac'ur^r^ a large aud heantiful a^nortnient ofall the laiwl and'uii).--! improved CnOK. I'ABLOll, OFFICK AND NIKR PLATE STOVES, now In market. They are the -xcluHire .\>:nula for the nal" of the celi-braied WILLIAM PENN nnd GALLAGHER'S Double Oven Morning Star Cook Stoves, lu which ihsy wuutd call particular altention, uod lu¬ vlte tliepitiiMc topxamluo th^imtock h'ifjre purchasing elftewhoro Mho, v. genHral aMorHnent of HaniWHr*", Cuilfry, I3.;;i.iiDf,* Mdt«rlal.T.>..N, SrtJillery and Coach- PINKEItTO.V it Sf.AVMAKEK, -Wt. ;t7 .\orlli UurtHPi St.. ab-ivc Orm overleaps & generation or two. Often a child graat things. He compared it to David going forth with sling and atone3 to combat with the gigantic Goliah. Piling up the elo¬ quence, he reached the climax at last, and oried out; "And then, then, fellow citizens, what did David do?" " Fit a duel, sir," came in shrill toues from one of the assembly. "Come here, my little Eddy," said a gen¬ tleman to a youngster of seven yeara of age, while sitting iu the parlor wbere a large com¬ pany was assembled; ''do yoa know mef"— " Yea air, I think I do." " Who am I ? let me hear." "Yoa are the man who kiased aister Angeline laat night iu the parlor." Angeline fainted. "No air: Mias Jones." I breathed freely. It was not my Edith ; but she would probably be a bridesmaid, and I should see her in all tbe virgin pnrity and whiteness of mtislin, light as gossamer. I was again happy and fall of expectation.— What would I have given to be invited tothe breakfast, and called on to propose the brides¬ maids' healths ? .. In another moment another carriage arri¬ ved, and this time two India muslin bride- I maids descended—one I recognized as of the | trio on the Bands, but not my Edith. When would she come ? I crossed the road again to Jehu'the second, and remarked in a very unconcerned way, that I believed Mr. Wal¬ singham lived here. " No, sir," he replied firmly ; " Mr. Jones-'i " Then Miss Walsingham ia on a viait to Mr. Jones?" I, by way of conjecture, ob¬ served, "Dare say she may be," said tbe charioteer; •'there's a deal of company in the house." Carriage after carriage drove np. I had now counted six bridemaids, and Edith was not among them. But, heavens! what is this?— Edith leaning on the arm of an elderly gen¬ tleman—Edith arrayed as a bride, ragtliug in glacis ailk, covered from head to foot with Brussels lace, and veiled. 0, Edith—Edith Walsingham ! I gazed for one moment at the carriage as it rolled away; I would have followed to the church, but had not strength to do so. reeled home, and threw myself on my sofa.— The plain landlady called her plainer daugh¬ ter; they held a consultation in the passage, and were sending off the very plain servant for a doctor, when I rose aod rebuked them, and then lay down again, I slept I soarcely know how long—I hardly remember auy thing more of that awfal day. Next morning, though I ate no breakfast, I tried to read the Times, and got as far as the supplement and the marriages, among which I saw—"On Satnrday, 17th, at Paul's Church, Sandhaven, by the Rev. Peter Jones, uncle of the bride, Mary, eldest danghter of Alexander Jones, Esq., to Percy Batkin, Eaq. of the Middle Temple, barriater-at-law." "Mary Jones, now Mary Batkin," I solilo¬ quized—"what could have induced her to in¬ scribe on the aand that other name?" Two hours after, I purchased a copy of the Sandhaven Herald, in which was the following paragraph: " We rejoice to atate that Percy Batkin, Esq., the celebrated author of many works of fiction, led to the hymeneal altar on Satnrday last, the eldest daugbter of our res¬ pected fellow-townsman, Alexander Jones, Esq. Mr. Batkin is, we understand, upon the point of giving to the world of lettera bears a atriking resemblance to a grand-pa' rent, without u lineament of parental fea¬ ture. The aota of the prisoner were admitted by his counael, and the que.=ition of guilt or in¬ nocence, reated on this—was he insane or not ? Tbe use which we wish to make of theae developements is practical, and is of high im¬ portance. A wise and stern medical treat¬ ment would bave deferred, if not prevented, the combination of events. And how ? The prisoner was under the habitual influ¬ ence of constipation, and au anodyne, which intensified this constipation every hour, while the principle of the medical practice in this case, was to let the bowels take care of them¬ selves—which they did not do. This indi¬ vidual was never seen by his business asso^ ciates without a cigar in his mouth; he smoked fifteen or twenty a day. The imme¬ diate effect of smoking tobacco falls on the brain, excites it; during that excitement he could''not sleep, aud the reaction went so low that he could not sleep; only a troubled re¬ pose was possible during tbe brief transition from ono to the other. During the excite¬ ment, the brain ran riot in the direction of the opportunity, and expended its energiea iu that direction, but during the reaction' power was uot left to carry on the bodily functions. The effect of conatipation is to thicken the blood, to make it more impure ; hence more unfit for healthful purposes. The more im¬ pure the blood ia, the thicker does it be¬ come, the slower is its progress, and if noth¬ ing is done to alter this state of things, stag¬ nation aud death take place. Stagnation means accumulation, for the moment the blood stops in any part of the body, the com¬ ing current fiowtng in, causes an accumula¬ tion, precisely aa in the closing of a oanal gate, or the damming up of a stream. Thia accumulation in the blood vessels distends them, causes them to occupy more room than nature designed, confiequently they must encroach on their neighbors. The neighbors of the blood vessels are the nerves; hence the nerves are pressed against; that pressure gives what we call "pain." As there are nerves everywhere, a point of a needle cannot be placed against the surface of the body without some pain, which shows the universality of nerve presence; hence, we may have pain anywhere, and will have pain if there is pressure. This accounta for the steady pain iu the head. The excite¬ ment of the day sent the blood to the brain too fast, the repose of the night was too short to allow of ita removal; besides the energies of the syatem had been overtaxed, and there was not power enough left to remove atnat- ural accumulation, let alone the extraordi¬ nary. But there ia a law of our body, whereby pressure from any cause not only gives pain, but may destroy the part pressed againati and couaume it, by dissolving it into a gas¬ eous and fluid substatice, which in this con¬ dition is conveyed out of the body. A band put arouud an arm of a foot in circumfer¬ ence, will, if tightened every day, iu a time not long, reduce the circumference to aix inches. Constant pressure cannot be exerted against any portion of the human body with¬ out impairing its structure, or caasingi its diminution and final destruction. These are principles of universal admission. They are first truths in medicine. From some unknown caaae, this accumulation and pressure was determined to a particular portion of the brain, where fearlessness of consequences ifi situated j and we believe, if the priaoner'a brain conld be examined this day, that por¬ tion of it, moat probably small in tbe begin¬ ning, would be found almost wholly wanting' having been destroyed by long continued pressure, or to be of abnormal structure. We believe that a medical treatment, which would have sternly interdicted the use o'^ the cigar materially at firat, and gradually thereafter, until its final extinction, together with securing a natural condition of daily acting bowels, with a plain and aubat&ntial diet—and kept him there—would have aaved him and all hia from the subsequent calami¬ ties. Artificial excitements, whether from tobacco, opium, or alcohol, if largely perse¬ vered, will work ruin to mind, body and soul. It is right that it should he ao. Om¬ nipotence bas ordained it. If a man is in a phyaical condition which impels him to do what is illegal, or if he be iu a mental condi¬ tion which impels him to do what is iUegali the question whether he is to be punished or not depends upon the manner in which he became aubjected to that oondition. If such condition be the result of birth, or by a falli or stroke, or other occurrence out of hia con¬ trol, ha shonld go free of penal suffering; but if he placed himself iu tbat condition by the unbridled indulgence of his appetites or his passions, he ought to be made to suffer a just penalty, whether he knew that such indulgences tended to such a result or not. It ia a man's duty to inform himself of phys¬ iological as well as civil law. Igsor&nce of the former ought not to work his escape, any more than ignorance of the latter does; oth.- TAVEBN STAIID POR BENT. THE subscriber offers for rent the Tav¬ ern stand, waii known ae tho STONE TAVEHN, uow in the occnpancy of Jacob Bedaeclcer, sitnate on the Walnut Bottom Hoad, aeven mllea weat of Carlisle. The property conHiats of a largo and commodlons STONB HOUSK, and Sta¬ bling sufficient for Blxty horsas, all in complete order, together withfeedl ing Lota, Orchard and Garden. Thei _ property la abundantly supplied witli the best apring water. Also for rent, a Wagon-maker's ahop, and Tenant House and Lot. Tbeuitnationfor a good me¬ chanic cannot ba snrpoBsed In the State. For termil, ap¬ plv personally or by letter to the suhacrlber, at Carliale Pn. JOHNSON MOORE. jan 14 lm-7 There ia a man out West so forgetful of faces, that his wife is compelled to keep a wafer atuck on the end of her nose, that he may distinguish her from other ladies, but this does not prevent him from making ooca¬ sional mistakea. "How to make Ieeche8bite,"i3 the caption of an artiole going the rounds of the papers. The beat way, says an exchange paper, un¬ questionably, is to present to them a first rate note at thirty days, with an offer of five per cent, a mouth. They will bite instantly, and never stop sucking either, until they get the whole, A new kiud of telegraph has been sugges ted—namely: to place a line of womeu at the diatance of fifty paces from each other, and then commit to tbe first the newa to be trans¬ mitted as ^profound secret. It is confidently thonght that there would be greater diapatch secured by auch a plan than by any telegraph now iu operation. We don't pretend to say how it would "work" though. The Albany Knickerbocker gives the fol- fowing recipe to deatroy fliea: Take a board¬ ing houae pie, cut it into thin alices, and lay it where the lusecta can have full access to it. tu less than fifteen minutes the whole coboodle of them will be dead with the colic." " Ma," said a little urchin, peeping from beneath the bed-clothea, " I am cold ; I want somecoveronthebed." " Lie still, my dear," said the mother, "until your sister comes from church ; she has got the comforter for a crinoline." It has often been remarked lhat children will ask questions, which even the wisest are puzzled to answer. " Mother," eiclaimed Charley, " how big waa I wheu you was a little girl?" Waan't that a poser. " What in the worid put matrimony into yonr head?" " WeU, the fact is, Joe, I waa getting abort of shirta t" Woman ia like ivy—the more you are ra¬ ined the closer ahe clings to you. A vile old bachelor adds: Ivy is like womau—the closer it clings to you the more you are ruined,— Poor rule that don't work both waya. Knock down that bachelor. I say, John, where did you get that loaf¬ er's hat ?" " Please yer Honor," said John, "it'a an old one of year's that Missis gave me yesterday, when you were to town." A " foine" young geutleman, turning swift¬ ly on his heel, ran his head against a young lady. He inatantly put himself in a position to apologize. " Not a word," said the quick¬ witted maiden; " it isn't hard enough to hurt anybody." The coxcomb frowned and sloped. " This ere animal ia of the real atock, mum, and cheap at thirty dollara." Young widow—"It's a sweet pretty darling—black and white—bat in my present bereavement you must procure me one entirely black.— This one will do very well in about six montha for half mourning." A clergyman, engaged in catechizing the village achool, asked a youngster, " What his godfathers and godmothera did for him." "Idon't know, please your reverence," re- j oined the lad; " they've done nothing for me yet." FOB BEWT. £110M the first day of April next, that large THREE-STORY BRICK BUILDING, M±^ erly cccupled as Hohley'a Hotel, In Centre Riii Square. 53*Enquire at the offlce of the Inland-JJllL Inxurance and Deposit Company, dec :il ^ tt-'i POB BENT, THE STOREROOM, WARKUOUSE and DWELLING, on the sontli-wetit corner "^" of Centre Square, Strasburg, now occupied by McCr.oy & BtACK, and for many yeara Kept by the subticrlher. Il Ih iu every way calculated for doing A good hn^tnexii.aDd la one of the best tttauda in the county. Also, A two-Story BRICK DWELLING, near the centre nf the town. WM. Sl'ENGEU. 83"Both the ahova proportieis are for sale, if porsona prefer bnying. ^ decSl-tf-Ji A Eailroad Property to Let. TIIE under.sigJied oH'ertolet, fora term of yearrt, their KAILROAD PROPERTY, locited in tbe city of Lancaster, on the Philadelphia and Co¬ lnmbla Kailroad, one halftsquare weut o f the depot, and adjoining property of Bitner k Bro'a. Steam Mill. The property conHlsts of A LOT OF GRODND. ISO foet deep by <>7 feet wide, havinfC thereon a OA'B A^D A HALF STORT BUILDING, 86 feet deep by .% feet wide, also a Railroad Siding, 162 feet in length, leaving nearly one half of the lot racani, irhlch Im of ea«y ac- ceuK for teama. The property Ih well adapted for a bualneuii requiring a Itailroad conTeoience. For fnrther parlicularM enquire of the enhxcriberfi, oa the precalftex. Jan7-lf-6 KONIOMACUER & BADMAN. CITY ELECTION. -vrOTlCE IS HEREBY GIVEN to j ^ the froemen of the city of Lancaster, that agree ably to law, an election will he held on TUESDAY February 3d. 18.57, at thepublic liour^e of Adam Tront, in the Norlh Weat Ward, for Urn persons qualifled 11 serre as membem of tbe Houise of Hepresentativee of thiH Commouwealth, to he members of tho Common CouncU for one year; and one person qualified to eerre of a member of tbe Senate of this Commonwealth, to be a member of the Select Council, for the term of throe ye&rd; andone person to aeira hi* City Constable for one year. At the pnblic honne of Anthony Lechler, In the North East Ward, for fonr persons qualified to serre aa jnem- berit of tbe House of RepreaeiitatiTeii of thin Common¬ wealth, to he member* of the' Common Council for one year; and on" pentoa qnalifiei} to servo as a member of the Senate of this Commonn-valtb, lo be a member of the Select Council, for the term of three yeare; and one perwn to eerve ai City Constable for one year. At the public houee of Mpt. Rachel Miller, in the South Eoflt Ward, for three pereona qualiSed to eerre ae members of the House of KepredenlatlTes of this Commonwealth, to he membera of the Common CouncU for one year; and one percon qualified to nerre an a memberof the Senate of tbla Commonwealth, to be a member of the Select Council, (the South Eaet Ward and South Weat Ward in conjunction, elect one member of Select Council for three years;) and one person to serve OS City Cootttabte for one year. At the public house of Lewis Urban k Son. in tbe South West Ward, for three persons qunllHed to serve as members of the Honse of Representatives of thie Commonwealth, to be members uf the Common Council for One year; and one person to serve as City CoDdtahle for one year. At tho same lime and places, will he elected one per- Hon to serve as High Constable of the city of Lancaster, for ono year. The membersof Select Council whoHe term of ofiice expires on said day of eleclion are Robert H. Long, Wil¬ liam Oorrecht and Ghftrlea Oillesple. J. ZIMMERMAN, Mayor. Mayor's Office, Jan. 10,1657. jan U-td-T CITY ELECTION. NOTICE IS HEKRBY GIVKN, that an election will he held at the public house of Adam Trout, in the Norlh West Ward ; at the pnbllc house of Urban & Sen, in the South We&t Ward; at the publlfl house of Anthony Lechler, in the North EaHt Ward; and Ht tbe public bonse of Mrs. Miller, tn the Sonth East Ward. Inihe city of Lancaater.on TUESDAV, the 3d day of February, 1867, between the houre of 8 o'clock in tbe forenoon and 7 o'clock in tbe aflernoon, to elect one Jndge and two Inspectors for the North West Ward; one Judge and two Inspectora for the South West Ward; one Judge and two Inspectors for the North East Ward; and one Judge and two inspec¬ tors for the Sonth East Ward, to conduct the general and other elections for the current year. The offlcera of the loat general election are requested to conduct the above electiou. Thero will also be elected in tho North West Ward, one Alderman, aud in tb^.' Nortb East Ward two Alder¬ men to serve for five yeara. At tbe Rame time and placea will be elected by the cititenn of LaQCsster, one Astessor ia each Ward to serve for one year. JOHN MYER, High Conslablo. La.vcAKTEE, January 10,1S37, Jan 14-tJ-62 . SOAP! SOAP!! SOAP!!! THE undersigned take this method of informing the cilizens of the City and County of Lancaster, that they bare, at a great expense, purcha¬ aed the exclusive right to tbe manufacture of a nowly iuTButed and patented LABOE SAVING SOAP, which, if used according to the directions accompany¬ ing each piece, will be found to exceed anything of the kind ever introduced tuto this eommuQity. Ia using tbis Soap the laborious and painful proc-iss of mbbing and wearing out clothes and fingers ou tbe wash-board is entirely obviated. Clothes washed with this So^p ueed no boiling, which amounts to a saving of nearly the wages of a washer¬ woman. Ladies talcing In washing will find it greatly to their advantage In every point of view, to Dbe our patent Soap. No danger need he apprehended as to clothes being Injured by using this Soap, as there is not aningredienl In it that has the l<>aKt tendency in that direction. We have made arrangements with nearly all the principal Orocern in the city for the sale of It, and as uoon At we can maunroctnre a rnfQcfent quantity we shall take measures to supply Country Merchants. For sale wholesale at the Manufactory, corner of Daks and Chestnat etreetti, LancaRler, Ps. Having full confidence In the truth of what wq ai^tuirt we ask a fair and impartial trial of tbe Soap, and we will risk tfae result. Remember, this Ik no htimhwj, jan M 6m-7 AMER & FAlHBR. DE. JOHN McCAItliA,-DENTIST, No. 4, East King Street, LANCASTEH. B<iuoBB, Feb. 18. I34P. JOHN MeOALLA, D. T). S., atten- ded twu full coursoH at Lectores, and graduated with high honors in the Baltimore CoU Lege of Dental Snrgery, and from his uotiriog energy, close applicatioa and study of tbe branches taught in Haid Inatitution, together with exhibitiona of skill in the practice of his profession, we feel no he«ltH(ioa in ro> commending him as worthy of public conSdencg and patronage. C. A. Hasbis, M. D., D. D S.. Professor of Princlplea and Practice in the BaUlmore College of Dental Sargery. C. 0. Conr, D. D. 3., Prof, of OperatiTB and Mechanical Dentinlry, Baltimore College of Deatal Surgery. BOARD OF EXAMINERS: E. Pahmlet, M. D., New York. K. B. Oabdette, M. D., Philadelphia. S. P. Hdlliqek, M. D., Wheeling, VirgiuiH. E. TowM8E>D, D. D. 5., Pbiladelphla. E. MATiroKD, M. D.. Waahington, P. C. sep 17 ly-42 DB. wT H. WTTMOB, OF THE CITY OF PHILADELPHIA, ~CX7^HKRE he has been iu successful T T practice for a number of yearn, received bis education at the best Medical College In the United States, aud had the experience and practice in tbe dif¬ ferent hospitals for several years; a member of the An¬ alytical Medical Institute of New York, and late Medi¬ cal Sorgeiia ofthe U. S. Navy, now alluiii himself to the public to attend any professional culls. The purest medlcinea aln-ayn on hand direct from tho bout Laboratories of our coantry and the Botanical Gar¬ dens of theworld. No patent medicines prescribed or recommended. Mediclnen used only which will not break down tho constitntion, hat will renovate the sys¬ tem from all injuries it has snstaincd I'rom mineral medicines. Chronic and difficult diseases must he treat¬ ed upon analytical principles; whiehls to know and ascertain wbat disease is. Its nature and character re< quire a knowledge of the chemical conbtituent. of every solid and fluid of the human body—the chauges thosa solids and flnids are capable of undergoing. To know wbat medicines to employ to cure dltieases, requires a kaovledga of the chemical constltueotn of all ageotn employed in m>idicinex, and if we are In posFeNsioa of this knowledge, il'is pusMble to cnre any disease—no matter of how long fitaudlog—and leave tfae patient In a healthy and perfectly cared coadition! DrsPEPsiA, that dtRtros.-)ing disease and fell destroyer of health and happiseu, undermining the constitution, and yearly carrying thousands to nalimely graves, can most emphatically be cured. RnevxxTisst, )q any form or condiiiou, chronic or acute, warranted curable; Epilepst, or falling sicli uesa, atl chronic and stubbora coseu of Female Diseases rad. Jcally removed; Salt Rhedm and every description of ulcerationn; Piles and Scbofulocs Diseases, which have hafQed all prevloni mndlcal skill, can be cured by my treatment, wben tlie constitution ix not exhausted. I do say all diseases {yea, CONSUMPTION) cau he cured. CANCER CVRED WITHOUT THE KNIFE. I will remain in my ofilcd on Wednesdays and Sittur- daye from 9 o'clock, A. M. to 3 P. M., to accoromodalB patients frpm a distance, and consult In the the Engllf'h aud German languages. Will make visits to any dis¬ tance if required. Maybe addresaed by letter. Prince Street near Orange, Lancaster city. pa. nov 5-ly-49 W. H. WITMOR. M. D. JOHN GYGEE & CO., Bankers, LANCASTER, PA., ALLOW Five per ceut. Iiiti;ru.-iL per annum on the dally balances of rttf^uUr dtipuni- tors; the whole or anyportlon of balance being SL'IJ- JECT.TO CHECK, without notice. Allow flva per cenl. Interest per annum ob tlnjir Cit- tlflcates of Deposit, issued for any lungtb of time orer thirty days. Depositors not drawing Interest, will alwavn li« ac¬ commodated in proportion to tbe vulue uf tboir accnunts. Stocka bought and soid on commlisntu only. Uncurrent money bought at lowe-t rati^H. Collections promptlymade.aud dr.tfli! dmwu uu I'hil¬ adelphia, New Tork and Baltiui-iri. The members of the firm ar>: iuaivldually llablH for all the obligations of JobL 0ygrrr i I'.n.. couninuug of JOHN GYGER. BENJ ESHLEMAN, DAVID BAIR. HENKT MUSSELMAN. RoBBor Clar«.-*(>.\, ('a-litt-r. uov a>:tia-.j2 ~ iiANCASTEB COtJNTY EXCHANGE & DEPOSIT OFFECK. Cor. of East King and Duke Streets, BET. THE COI;rt HOUSE AND Si'i:ECHEK*.S HciTfil, LANCASTER. CITY. JOlIiM K. KKKDA CO., psiy inlLiest on deposits at thti fullowiug rates :— 5^ per cent, for one year and longer. 5 fio. " 30 daya " do. a3~ALS0, buy aud aoll Rwal Est»l^ and St'-L-kn ..n couimlKMloD, uegotlate louus, kc , kc t3^he undcrslKnud an^ iudividually liablo lu ilie ertftiil of their estates, fur all the dt'|ni,.ii.i acd uthwr-h- Ugaltonsof John K. Reed Ac Co. JOHN K. REED. AMOS. s. UENDE(tH<'.\. DAVID SHUi.TZ. tr^.^A(: E. HIESTEK. ^dec^S _ _ _ __ _ ¦'-¦¦ Collectionof Powers of Attorney and Forwarding of Emigrants. JACOB ITKRZOa. the wcll-kiiowu Merchant, No. 61 ¦{, North Queeu ntreet, Lancaster, attends to I. The Forwarding of Persons from every part of Eu¬ rope to tbe principal Forts and also to tbe interior of America, on the most rea«0nable terms, which can bs ascertained hy applying to him. .3. He makes Paymenta and Collections in all parts of Europe and America, and negotiatei' BiIIh of Evcbiiuge for desired amounts and time on the priucipal commnr- cial places of Europe and America. I'owers of Attorney for anyconnty iu Euntpe execu¬ ted aud collected hy him in the most careful manner. Letters lo the German Laut;uage, wrilten by the ersigaed with promptness and despatch. npril 2-i.f-lR JACnn HEkZtVl. oct 1 __ tf^ll Stoves! Stoves!—Great Stove Depot THK uiidoi'.si-jiinrl ruspootfully cull tlio at ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦' -. - utlPiiiioi. iifihe public lu tiifir Inrge rt>t"irlineul of (JUOKINO STOVE-. 1'AKLOR, U.\K K')03I, vV-'t and NINB IM.aIK STOVES, whicti vra urr. m- Sf^~j .:.;iviugttl!;h_-i:iii,;. All jier*.ns wai.tlug.Stovert*^^^ Will pleasftcal! and lowkforthBiiiwclrea.as Ihey **' ^ wiil find tbn greMla^^ aiMjrltiicut uf f^rovos iu Ihe ciry. Wo have Ja^t ri Cooks: Warnick Glob^, Girard, Astor, Cliampitiii, Welcome, Wm. Peiiij, Empire Stat**, Banner, Keystone, Delaware, Sammer Baker, Great Republi.;, City Kauge, Eocbantre.^d, Liberty, Flat Top, Black Dinmoujl, Mayflower. Vernon. Hathaway ^•i a fn'l BUpply of the following Watches, Clocks and Spectacles. ^AHM & JACHSOiV ¦ ¦ lit their ^ No. ts North ^^, Dr. Waylan's New Drug Store, No. 60 North Queen Street. THK undersigned respectfully tinnoun. cesthathflhasopouedhis NEW DRUO ~ SIORE ESTABLISHMENT, with a vwy ex- tenbive and complete stock of Drugs, Medi¬ cines, Chemical*, Perfumery anl Fancy articles—all fresh and pure—which wlll he sold at the lowest market pricea. This stock embraces every article usually kept in a first class Prug Store, and neither labor nor expense has been spared In fitting up the estahlishment, lo insure the preservation of the Druga in tho best condition, is well as to secure the convenience and comfort of tlie cUAtomera. A complete assortment of materials used by the Den¬ tal Profession can also he had at tbe store of the sub¬ scriher. Au Improved Sodi*, or Mineral Water Apparatus has been Introduced, the fountains of which are made of Iron, with Porcelain lining on their interior surface, freeing them from alt liability to taint the water with any metalic poison, which hasbeen heretofore so great an objection to the copper fonntains. Those wbo wish to enjoy these refreshing beveragea cau do so at thiJi establishment without fear of being poisoned with del¬ eterious matter. The entire establishment has been alpced under the superiBtendenca of a most competent and careful Druggist, who boa bad many year>t of ex¬ perience in tbe l>rug and Prescription bnsiness, in firr^i class hoQses in Philadelphia and Cincinnati. The undersigned feela confident that he is in evrry way prepared lo give entire satisfaction to his cufttom- era, therefore a sliara of public patronage is fio^lcired. junell-tf-2a JOHN WAYLANS, D.S. Watch and Jewelry Sti , ,^ Queen street, Lancaster, respectfully inform 'ij- their friends and the public iu gitueral, that3;^j,_ they continue to keep a large and well nelected uncart meut of Ooo. b ia their line. They are constantly receiving additions to their stock, from tbe cities or New York and Philadelphia, and Hat¬ ter themselves tbat they paSMo^fs facilit'es whicb euable thflni to offer inOucemeuts uol often met witli out of larger cities. Theirstook conslslri In part of Gold and Silver Chro- notueter, DupIex,L ever, Lepine, Eugllr-li and Quartier Watches, Hunting Cotied and open face with richly carved and plain cases; Clocks, (8 day k2Q hour,) Brasn, Alarm, Lever andother kinds. A large assortment of Spectacles. Gold, Silver, .Sleel, German Silver and plated—both near nighted uod otharh, embracing every varluty, and sold by the dozen oraiu- gle pair al city prices- Jewelry, Gold aud Silver I'enclls, fiold Peas, (wltli or withuut Cased.) Ladies aud Geutrt Breaat PiU". Fingt-r RiugM, Ear Rings, Guard Chains, LocUets, kc SILVER WARK. Our stock of Sliver aud Plated Waro is the large<rl iu this city, and consists of Tfthla, Tea, Dessert, Salt and Mustard Spoons, Butter, Fish and Fruit Knives, Napkin Rings, Mugs, Soup Ladles, Castors, Fruil Basket?, Thimblef', ike, &c. ACCORDEONS. Eliony and Rosewood Flutinas, Polkas, I'ialu and Double Keyed, with Single and Double Basit. Sliver, Shell, Buffalo, Horn aud Gum Coui)«>. Plalu and Carved. Hair, Cloth, lufaut. Flesh, Tootb, Comh aud Nail BrQhhes ; Cutlery, Haiors, I'en-Knives, kc. A complete assortment of Port Monaiert, Poclcet Books, Purses and Money Belts. Deaiers and otber<i supplied wltli tbeabove, or any other goods in their Hue, ou Ib^ most accommodating lerms. Clocks, Watches, Jewelry and SiiftetHch'H ueatly re¬ paired aud warranted. aprl6-ly-*JU H. xTfe E. J. ZAHk'S New Watch, Clock, Jewelry and Spec- tELcles Store, Corner North Queen St. and Centre Siiuure. [losgesecker's old corner,] LANCASTER, Pa. THE .subscribers respectfully trail the attPDilon of the pultllc to their large and well i^e- leciwd stock of WATCHES, JEWELRY, t^PEC- -a? TA' LES, s^ILVER WARE, CLOCKis, Ac, which ^(^ they are prepared to rcH un the miitl rea^ouablc (»-* jb terms. Q^sSS All flue Watchon are regulaled hofore rtold, and are Warranted good time-keepers, or no sale. JEWELRV, of all lha nwhionable style;*—Cameo, Lam, Carbuncle, Jt:l, Enamelled Painting, kc SILVER WARE, standard, nud stamped as a gunr¬ autee of itn quality. Old Silver t.ikeu iu exchaugu for goods. Watches, Clock". Jewelry. &lC., repaired ueatly aud firomptly, aud Spectaclea re-fitted with gian^es to snit the eyes, Sj^Call and examine. All gondn warranted lo he what tupy are reprefentrd. EDW. J. ZAHM, HARRY L. ZAHM. oct 29 3m-43 Cresson GIol;e. Home, Crystal, GovtTJinr, Hoy 111, Morning Stnr, Lancaater Conk, Victor, Voung America, Victor, (complete) Portable Range, New ¦Wori.I, Pfi^mtum, Emporium, Star, Snow Bird, Great Weatitru. Etna, . Sea ShtMl, Vuicau, aud many other Pattern Couks, We have als.. a hHautifuI a.--iortmerit of Parlor Cx.k-', Morning Glury Cotfk, Model Parlor Cook, Peuu Parlor Cook, Hot Air Parlor Conk, Boatman P-trior Cook, Ab¬ bott cook. Waruick Parlor Cook. Wf. have alao the ageucyforauoutirenew HADIATI.N'O PAKLOR COOK. Also, tho agency for thebest Alr-tlslit Cooking PloVO ^ ¦' out; it h;irf many advantagf* over llie chiuiuku Cook Stove?. Wc tliuf^f.tre call th.j at:em!..ii of tlm public l-". our asHurluieut of B'ovch, together with n full ji<-orl- ment of IL\KDWAliE. CVrLKllY. I'.Vil.Dl.Kff ',n. TERIALS, TOOLS, .'i.innLERV. P^fA r.V, ^c Call and Judge for yourselves. sepl7-tr-12 _ 0^0. D. SPRECHER .'^ liP.i'. TO FAHiffEHS. THK subseriburs respect i'uHy (."til tim atteution of all iLut-e iu want of t'orilii^er™. tn their Btoct{ consi^tini: of PERUVIAN GOVKKNMKNT GflANO. received Jiniitly from tlie g-'v,TLiti''iit ac-.ini^.uml hi nil casis WiUTrtnlcd to he geoiiin", WVsNn chII your »!¦ tentiou [-> ilie celphratrd PACIFIC OCEAN GUANO, This artlcin is eriteemcd fully eriual to PtTiiviao Ounuo OS evidenced i>y tLoanaly.ii-'and prjiClic;iU''.-lo' Farui' ern, and 1^ offered at a li.worpricd Ih.iu the I'cruvhiii COLUMlilAN GUANO, Thisarticf.' is alni a gond t".T(!li7i.T, i-i.-;;".:' '.i ;.¦.;-¦- and Hold at a very luw jiricn, Haviug lieen appointed by Mi'-^f. .\1!l[i k St:i,j;.;-: j th**irag*?ut:*f.ir thnxale of tliPlr w^II-kii'ivu I IMPROVED SUPER-PHOSPHATE Df LIME, \ we are now rcii.ly to lill urderN for tlie anrnf.. Vtuui tiit- testimony of (hose who tiavo u!-.-<I this Ffrtilizer for j some years pant, wo funi fully autlmrized iu siiylug iliai I ilirt til""Be-t ApplicAtinn" f.ir Wh.'at.O.irii. 0«lJ.Or.^^¦ and other cn>p>—wliich require a riiroroun iiml [it^niia- ueutKlimiihiui—lliiit im^.-v.-r i^-t-h ..'ff-^r^.l r.i iL.- imMiL-. ANo, crtuxianlly on hiiuii. PLA.'iTEti—ia Iho lump nud gi-.,i:ud. •VjlL'/'—Grouud Alum and Ar^iitou Fin.-. C'OjiL.—Wfl liavo alwaVK ou hsiiii a l.irgo niiirk nt a -¦nperior .(itKltty for LI.ME-IIV li.W INO nud FA.Vll.l' VSE, which we off^r at tlie Inwos't miirkft prices JCj^AppIy at thfl Warohou-ii at Gr;i.-'tl's Landiuii. .hi the Coaerti"^H Xavigaiion. ¦¦mt ih>-Ciinp-*ii>nH'rriiii>i'i-n aiiiin Ollice iu I„iiica-it(i, tnar m-tf-io 'Jt:'*. *;ai,iiHK u i'>> New Iron and Brass Foundry. THK iVoprietfirsofthi: Lhm-j caiter Lucouioiive Wurks, would s reKpectfully call tbe attoutiou of thi!v|J_^ public to tlia extenKivo Iron aud Brass itstj ' 'JpTVli'J Foundrieb conadcted with their cslab-ai&WS.—>--— lishmeut. We are uow prepared to manufacture S'l'ATJOSARY EXtilNK:-. MILL AKD SAW JHLL CASTl.'.'GS. CAR WHEELS, aud auy other descriptiou nf Ca^t irou woik, i' -i.-.r' notice and reduced prices. AIsi>, all kind- i-t BRASS CASTINGS, COPPER RIVETS, SOLDER A.Vn BABBIT 3IETAL. The eHtablifihmeot ifi ucdtr tht; SupTiuisuduucM oi Mr. JOHK BHaKDT, Seu., whu^^ ui'-cii luioa! i-kiil is well knowu Io our citizBoH,-inJ r.8 iinn» but tlie most conipctent and thorough wotkin.'U ai<r tiinii!i'y.,-il, vtp orecoufldont of givingenlire Maii-factlmi (o all ivhoni.iy nvor u» with llieir patniuiti;- [fi'i' -I tf-li pi)ilai)clpl)ia 2l&Dcrtiscincnts. GEOHGE W. Me'ELHOT, A TTORNKV AT LAW.—No. 140 ±X. Cbe,inut-j.ret:belo-.r Fifth, Pblladtjlplii*. Ji;Ji___^_ ly£^ Tx i??Pf ?Tement in Dentistry. teeth. tog..rl,rr wirh iy.^nu. 'iin.i'Ti,..r\,f u,. ^^^.tb he- lu^- ..uej.oiidi,iec«; th^ wi,„le being beuuiiruiw enam¬ eled Willi lliclr appropriate colore. The tetth am worn wuh pr-jut ciimfyrt. ihere being no tavitl«< t->r tho lodgment -if parllclpfl nf food, a.- there must alway,, bo in the old method of gold plate setiiug, howav*i- well il nmy bn i;Xecut.;,l, Amoug tim i.tany hdvAntag^s are cheapuMs, dumhlU ty, aud clealllil3P^.¦^ a.u,l utility iP ma-%ticallng. hp«l- mcus may bo examiunil. aud refer-ince'^ (riven at Pni. LIIKEA;* k LU03US" (Jiact. Ko. 'iiS AitCii5irKBtT.abu?e Oih, Philadelphiu. |I3*All opemtlons porforrn^ii in a skilful manner. n -10 |T.» FBEE OF CHARGE n TWO SPLKNDID PARWH KNGRAVINGS ENTiTbED '*Boltun Abbey in the OJden Time«,''»» iipleudid ricel engrtvlnfr, from tufl uetebrated painting Ity Laud^e>>r; and the-Depart¬ ure of tha Israelites ftom Egypt," a large and beautiful "ugrnviug from a painting by D. Rultt-rts, The retail price of the above engravings is 33 per copy, but will t>« seol free of charge as follown; Tli« :in1>Ticribern Iiave eslahliahed a —/^y..^>,ai BUuK4(itNt;tlLPhiladolphir.,aad will /^W/«l furuirth ai,y i,uok nr pui.licu,:ionBl thero-AiSjE^? Ull pnc«, iruu of pu»l«x«. Any personVlL«AacP' byforwardioy tliqKub.cripii«m.n<:eof any ofthe $S Maj;aiiue.i, r^uub as HupiHjr--,. (J.„l,-yX Patnam's, Ors- hflui^, trnnk U-.tii./.-, f.uM.i.m-, Uc . will leolve th» liiagazine.i for one y.^ir and ac.py .,r either of the ahovo |j«jHUti!ul engraviugs. frtioof cliarge, „c ii hubacribing to » §2, anda §1 M.iifurin^, .-.uth a-i IVterF.nii'„, wnd ChallHU'a Ladies'Chrirt^an Aiiu-jal, they wilt recelvo hoth mitgaiines aud a copy of ..-itliiT of thy abovi en¬ gravingi,. Every doacrilitlou yf Eni,'raving <iu Wood t^xecuWd with nes.in'^r.H ituddisp.itch. Vi«ii-Bnr BulMiu^s, Kewi- P^per JlHfuiiijga, Viswa ui" Mucbiuery, Book iUudtra- llon,4, LnJ-tt (,VrtirIc;it*;i, Bu-iun.^-. Car.!-*, kc Ail or¬ dera s"ui by mnil piomptly ati-^ndeJ to. Peraona wish- iUK vi«:v-or Ihflr Imil.liuv-i .¦iij;r;iv<-.i c-in i-^uil a Da- guwrrf^'itj-irs or itHlch of Ih-i htiiMlcg bv mail cr ex- IV J J'e ndi ¦] w II. .-sou, ill a i t ('. thyir. jUM ;:Ct J ¦J BYRAM. tiprii 16-20 ivn nil '.Vj lilt h;ivin»; utHiro to add ¦lit •IK I..r[i,^^ frtleahio e.-..s Uf- li^ -A tl arlicliB Wo-ii lObficriljer.-. u ^:aiie HVKA.n i PIEKCE, Thii.I rit . Phiiai T. «Iphia. Pa. MAT PIERCK. fch 13-ly-U JOSEPH A. NEEDLES SlA.Sfi'ACruttElL OF Wiro, Silk and Hair Clolh. Sieves, <^^(^r^|¦, iii^.liiiia liuJ QuH la me"h; large, midJlo-3iz« auil niuall indiauieter. .MKTALLIC CLOTHS OR WOVEN WIRK, of tbe IirtM iiualiiieti, Vrfriou« hizei. of nie:sh, fiom Hos. 1 lo >!} iiiuru-.iv.i, aud fruin oueiuw.x feel in width. Thcy aru uuUib-.-red .-o many «p4C-:, to a liueal Inch, and cut to anit. The sub-crlber alno l:*?"!.^ couitanUy on hau J Ior Coal, Sand, Ore, Limc, Grain, Grave., (iuun.. Sumac. Su^ar, SaU, Bone, Coffee, Spice, Druf^s, Dye- Stuffs, ^c,togtther wilh an a.tsorirneut of mUlUlT AiND AMNKALKD lUOX WIRE, All of th-- ahuV" „ Id wl,..l,^s}ile or leiall. by J. A. KEEDLES. liiij.; -S-Iy-il .74 K. Front St., Philad'a. FITRNITUBE WAREROOMS, ^~^UH u!uli;i-.-i;j.:n:i; lu.^pectfully informa JL ill.-. cuBioiuiTH ttud tbi public, thathe h.i-s;^ JOB PBiNTrrra ofall kinds, Fromthe largestPosterto the smallest Card DUNE AT THIS Oi^FICE; in the BEST STYLE, with great deitpatch, and at the loweatprlcee. EJ-HANDBILLS for the sale of Bkal or PBasoicAb Peofkbtt, printed on from OHB to THREE HOURS NO ICE. aovlS-tf-eo Alderman of the North East "Ward. I OFFER myself aa a candidate for re¬ election for the ofBce of Alderman of tbe North Koat Ward, aud respectfully aak the support of my fellow-citizena. jan ai-2»t-8 W. CARPENTER. Baker's Tetter Ointment, For the cure of Tetter, Ringworm, Itch, Scald Head, and Diseases of the Skin generally. THIS remedy is presented to the pub¬ lic with the fullest confidence in its curative pow¬ ers. It in not profeotied that It will cure everything, like most patont medicines. It will not cure Burus; tl will not cure Spraloa; nor do I olfer U aa a remedy for Rbenmatlsm or Consumption, or aaytblijg of the kind. All I claim for It Is, that It will cure Tetter, Ringworm, Itch, Scald Head, and diseases of a cutaneous character generally. It has beeu used Iu hundrods of cases with the most signal succeaa, and all I ask is to have It tried, as a few days' trial wlll tell the tale. EJ* Jilanufac- tored and for sale only at the Drng Store of the propri¬ etor. WJU. O BAKER, p»T 19-3m-51 K. E. Centre Square, Lanc'r CAKCER CUBED. TO the surprise of muny, another indi¬ vidual readily cured of Schirrua or Cancer, by Dr S. S. WEIST, Jr., of Schuineck, Laucaster county. In this case, about one-half of the lower Up was afi'ected with Schlrma or C&Qcer, extending to the hose of the Jaw, The cancerous or schlrrus parts were nicely taken out without much pain, and healod lu ten dayx lime, •aving «a*rc#Iy any d«fi>rmHr fool Hl-tf-ta CirYHALiTBBPECTORY, ~ New Oyater and Refreshment Saloon. THE undersigned having leased and fitted up the basement ot the City Hall Building OS a Refectory or Rofresbment Saloon, is now prepared to accommodate his friends and the public with PRIME OYSTERS, SERVED DP Iif EVEBY STYLE. To suit the taate of the hungry man or the epicure. His rooms being pleasant and conveniently arranged, Ib a central location, he hopes by close alteution to business, and a desire to accommodate, to receive a liberal share of patronage. fi3~ Families and partiu« itopplied with 0y»lers lu aay quantity ordered, jan 14.3t-7 WM. SHULER. Now is the Time for Bargains! Cheaper than ever, at No. 10 West King st SA DYSAKT .\: DUO., re.'5pcctfui- « ly Informa their frienda and the public iu gener¬ al, that they have Just returned from Now York .ji...- and Philadelphia, with an entire new and fash- i?\'"i lonable stock of Watches, Jewelry and Fancy Ar-^ .- tides, at the followiog low prlcea: ^SjCP' Full Jeweled Gold Lever Watcher, ffm $id to Sl J" Qold Leplne Watches, fuU jeweled. " 2o " 30 Silver Lever Walches. full j«we!pd. " 12 " IS Silver Lepine Watches, jewnled, " b " 12 Gold Pens In Silvor Ca-es, " 1" 2.60 Silver Tea Spoona, from $4,.10 to §8.00 per set. Clocks of all kinda, from $ l.SO to $10,00 ALSO, new style Ladies' Brea'^t Pins, Ear Ringf, Brace- lels, Gold Pencils, Cold and Silver .Spectacles, Gold Keys, Porl Moaaies, kc A large lot of Aecordeons, Combs, Pans and other ar- tides too numeous lo mention, nsually kept iu Watch aud Jewelry .Stores, at leant 25 per cent, lower than any other slore iolhe city. We iuvite allourfrleuds and the public in geueral lo give us a call. "Quick stiles and nmall proHts" is our motto. JaJCBS p. DV.^ART.] [SAJiOEL A. Dy.sart, S. B.—S. A. D. having flnished his trade with one of the beal workmen lu the city uf Philadelphia, Le ia pre¬ pared to do ail kinds of Watcli, Clock, aud Jowelry repairing at the shorto.'I nutlcp, aud warrauted for oue y»)*r>ir no charge. iiprii i;i-lf-l!) PRESH GARDEN SEEDS. JUST KKCKIVEI) a Iar«<cund genei-ai assortment of FRE^H GARDEN SEEDS, all war¬ ranted to be true to uame aud of tii^ gri)wtb of Is'iG, among which are the follnwlng, viz : Early York, .Early Frame, iEarly Sr;;rU't. Imperial. ;Cloater and Long jSalmou, Turuip, Philadelphia, !Green CucuMRtiu; jBlack and Whim Extra Early ) CapeBrocoU; |Wlnler RADIdH; Large York, ^ Purple Egg Plant; jEarly Flat Sugar Loaf, Asparagus; " ' Flat Dutch, i Cayenua aud J Savoy, Bell PEPPER; J Rcd Dutch, Sweet Marjoram; Cauliflower aud SAGE; Drumhead Early Curlud ) CABBAGEv Cabbage, J Extra Early, Br'n Butler Head, Rfd 'rurnip and Yellow Winter steam: sash i-ACTORY* AND FLOOR BOAPJ) PLAN'iNil MILL, North Water Street, belwern Wcil Kim: and Orange sts., and neur Troufs Western Hold. JOHN DITLOW re.'^pectfully inlonnS his old cu-'tomerd and friend-, a:)'! ihf citiz^'nt of Lancat^ter county in geueml, thnt he hii-* j-p*!3';i:™««w now in oponilion. ,— « Ji»|j*aiit A LAIIOESTJ^AM I'AOTOHV, fe^jj^J for the working "f Floor and Wgith'-r {ig^ nP^mTT? Roards.Pooriind Winitoto rrn:'.f.':.l)-)i>rs WtoEsrf?^?:^ minds. SlniJlrr.\,.V(7.»A.andtvcnj tiirm of Mouldings, and all Wood Work required in -lir riLCl in and completion of Public or Privale Ihtildimis. WOtMi TUU.N'ING nnd SCROLL feAWlXG. in all ilV r.TrioiH Wnuch-- ULMlly flnir.hed. J.i;..t, Plaint ;iii'I Ito^ird^ -:iw..,l i.> uuy ,ii7-: orihicknessref|nir.d. FioorluK and WVathor l^^jrj-i alv/avT: ,<h h;iiid,'.¦r worked to order All orders promptly altt-ndt-d to. aud finished ui the tlmo .tpecificd for. Il3"He ha.-* eueaitcd tiii;--'"rvir.'s i>f <>. C. Jt Caiuiis «»= Buperiuteudeut, who will furni-Ij phia . und •^pfcillci- llona for Public or IVivat.' Editli-.'-, JU;1.N DITLUW. april !i.if.]n i;ai-ii.)nt.T:inii Buiiil«r, u't thi public, thathe h.i-s;^ -lautlvoii li/iu.l :i jurtr^ ni.-urluiPUt of KASHI0NAHL1-: FUUNITURE, ill k\u<U. jiiauuV-icturod iruli .!»peci<I car«, 1 tiViu worktucu aud uuii'.-r hia own nupKrvlnijo. i-Vi£.^JM>-j lie al-r. rue jmiiieiid.i lo [bo publi-' Vgjl^igi^j^iffij his D>'w]y iuvealtfd and improved "''"-""- 3-or-'A BEDSTEAD & LOUNGD wtiicli i'ur C'iiiV--nlcnc>; ft'id I'li^w.Hiirpas^vs aaytljiuif ovoi Ui-f'l htjf.Tc. KiH prn:i::i hti: rcmflrkatili/loK,uud hn bj- licit- .1 nliaru ..f piiMii; pdiruuoije. JiHIX A, ISACEi:. I."i7 iouth 2il it.. uboVtf Spmce. april 3ii-ly,v-.i ' l-iiil«d.::iphia. EVAH3' Fire & Tiiief Proof Safes I Oil ;Mt;i-ohami. l>;i\vyer.s, Kanuer.-. aud oiliar^. It.ivls^- ii'tiikr, I'.tper-: -ir other Vtfltut- 1.1.;^ t.) pr.;-i-rv« l"i-..n FIUE .t lil'HliL.VKS. Pay & IJ^ewell's (Hobb'.s) Bank Locks. A CAJ:D.—TiiE-PiKK I'li.M)!' .•^AKK," iJj.d pn-.>rr.*-J Iliu- floiik:', t'apni:., .Vc. duriii;; ihe "iJreai Fir^ at llarl'n liuil'iiiigs,' Was purcii.i-';J ul' t>LivKH Evan.-, 61 S. Hnd S!-, ]'!iila.ie!p!,i3. OETZ i BL'CK. f -f^^a F- "llEFRI.IKKAT-"'!::' AMf W'ATnil f ri.rKR.^,"—Evaufi' Prd." minm Vfiilihiled It-fn^'Taior, l"i;( cmi.'taL'and prc^rv- inu- Mis.-il;;, Builer, Milk. Water and nil arliclo for culi¬ nary purpiMirs. WATKit Fn.rv.H-. for f-urifyiiiL' ni(ACKi:;n or mtdhv wa TKU, wlieth'T crt.-rl.'d l,v r.nij.-. lllij.--ti'Ut-, Uiarl or OthlT taiiscs; can If imd i-.i-.TnT-.)r atlrtiiiKd to ihe Refiig^r- :iior—-s -iiiflll <iuaini'y of :ce cooi-ac the who.e, in ihe WBrni«:-t VT-i>;t;lit-r. I'uHiAiJLS •ijR.WiHL IJAJU-, f.r ihe Ul.' of warm or cjU UMt.T. v.'ATEit Coni.KP.:', r..r H-.lel-. Stores and Dwrllinci slTi'Ki; TKrci:=. ior inoviui; B.>X'?^, B,ilc.-i. kc SK*!. pEIl-gS-J, Coi'VIN.i J.J., I>liCi..;l.^rdi>. (II.IVEU EV.\.V?. Xo. fil .South 2'i Sl ,2 d..nrn hpUiwr:)„.„iii,t. I'hila E^E-tiiblirh-.i lu ly.'.. .'cb 6-ly.i'J WM. B. TAYLOR'S Men's and B(^ Clothing Store, South We.'jt corner oJ Second and Dock Sta., PUILADELPUIA. TO TUK OITIZKX.S 01- LAXCAH- CASTER:—Ti.uar^r.-p.ctfiil!y iiiriiu.i to ^xam- ii.« (li'f'¦xfeu-ilreiiii'i orn'd .¦.r-firisa-al of .^len't and lioijs' I'liilhinn. m ih" i-i.iro i.f the iiib~crll)i-r. wh-rrs m:ty idwiiy-. iia I'.iuud ii lull -.opjily of Iti-adij-.ilade Clo- IJitny, >jr;ili>ji''-, i:i;t'l- by oxj'.-i i''uc.-d H-ifikto-'ti and of tbt' viry bchl uiateria', the make, lit, nod Hiipeamnc* surpJ-S3i;d by uo e.-iijibli-ijuieut iu thc cily. Piease pre¬ serve ibi>-U'Jiice, and givo ui>-acall, aud flt out your- -elvei and aoos iu a iii;ti:ui;r worihy <i( you Hud iht-m.— lli'incmber llj-South W-J-t corner .if S.;c-md and Dock Street*.. Wll. B. TAYLOR,' Hpr.l 11 iv-Q ( r-.i-iiKii'j SAMrICL y\ motU.td to iiifiT Forwarding and Commission House. JOHN^AKEB, (or THE LATE ?ia3I OF SHIRK U SAICBK,) Forwarding and Commiaaion Merchant, NORTH PRINCE STREET, LANCASTER, VA. THE Bubscriber, thankful for the pa¬ tronage extended to the late flrm, re¬ spectfully eolicitB a continuance ofthe same, j He will receive FJonr, Grain, Whlakey. and J all kindo of produce, and forward the Kame* another three volumed novel, under the at- ! erwiae. a man has only to get drank to ae- traotive title of Edith Walsingham," ¦ ^are impunity from any crime which may be And it was this, then, of whioh she was i oommitted in that condition; thns all penal thinking when X saw her write I Need I add I statutes beoome a farce, and anarchy rides that I at once left Sandhaven a blighted be- ' rampant through the land. So also, if a man perverts his moral tseusei »nd by a conrse of vicious reasoning per- fioadei himself that he ought to commit mur¬ der^ and thinks of it lo muoh as to f«el ixa- To the Voters of the City of Lancaster. I HEREBY offer myself as a candidate for re-election to the office of Mayor, aubject to Dem¬ ocratic rulea, and respectfully aoliclt the support of iny fellow-citizens. jan2l-3«t-8 J. 2IMMEK1IAN. CITY ELECTION. NOTICE is hereby giveu^ that :in Election will be held at the pubJJchao«Bof Axlaiu Trout, in the Uorthwedt Ward ; at thepublic houiie of John Urban, In the SoUthwont Ward; at the pubiic hoase of Anthony Lechler, In the Northeoat Ward, uud at the pubilc house of Mrx. Kaclml Miller, in the Sotilli- eaat Ward, in tha city of Lancaoler, on TUESDAY tbe third day of FEBRUARY next, hetween tbe bourjt of 8 o'clock lu the forenoon and 7 o'clock in the afiornooa, to elect one pcrNou (lUalifled to act » = MAYOR of thn city of Laucaater ftir two y^arn. J. ZIMMERMAN, Mayor. Lancaster, Jan. 16, 1667. jan 21-ld.S Lancaster I emale Collegiate Institute THE preseut session of this Seminary will continue without any vacation until abont the middle of July. Thorough instruction Ih imparted in all the nseful and ornamental branches of Female Edncatlon. Boarders and day pnpils received at any time. Termi moderate. Addrexs, HEV. W. E. LOCKE Jan 21-3*t-B Principal. - ttjbnpikjb dividend. TflE President and Managers of tlie Lancaster & Ephrata Inrnpllre Company, have this day declarer a dividend of S«Tenty-fire Centa on each share of stock, payable at the offlce of John K. Reed k Co., in tbo city of Lancaster, on or after the 24th' day of Janaary, ISS7. a£NaT BOaXINER, Treasarer. Juaary flth, 18ff7. jaa Sl-St-S to PMladelphia, BaUlmore and allotbermarkete, at tho lowest rates. All treight rent to 8. L. Witmer, 42^ Market street, I'biladelpbia. directed in rare of John Baker's cars, Lan¬ caater. will he promptly delivered in this city, oo the mast liberal terms. a3-Tbe hnsineBs of the late firm of SHIRK k BA¬ KBR. will be settled by the nndersigned. Jam-am-6 JOHS BAKER. Aurora Borealis, or Northern Light I CONCERT HALL DEMOLISHED !! THE sub.scribers take pleasure In sta¬ ting to thnir numerous friends und patrons lhat thtiy have moved into CONCERT HALL, Immediately adjoining their former location, wherH they are prepared with the LARGEST and MOST ARTI.-^TIC LIOUT In tbo city—A NORTHKEJf SIDE LIGHT—to take PATENT aMBROTYPES and ME- L.MNOTYPES at reasonable pHceal ICs^Persoud wautlnpf eltherof the aboye named Pic¬ tnre^, are cautioned agalhxt going anywhere else In the cily,—03 it Is nomatter wbatothers may have adverti- h^d.or what their abilities may bt»—ve say, and say It eitiphatleally, that none others In this olty DARE lake tha atorenaid Plctnrert, and we back the assertion with a REWARD OF TEN DOLLARS, for a PATENT AMBROTYPE made and sold In tho city of Lanca»ter by any other operator than ourselves. OBSERVE!—We have the largest and most arllBtic ligbt In tho city. We have the largest aod beat Cameras In the city- We have the EXCLUSIVE RIGHT, for Laneaster city, to the beat process In extence, and on for TAKING THE* BEST PICTORES, we leave tbe pnbllc to Judge for themselveB. tJ"InforIor Workmea are always compelled to work for the least wages. T. k W. CUMMINGS k CO., Rooms OTer Sprecher'o Hardware iilore, JX Queen itreet. Lancauter, dec 31 3ni-6 SUPEB-PHOSPHATE OF LIME. JUST received and for sale by the eub- Bcrlbera a lot of the above Taluable fartlUier lo Barrela. 6E0. GAXDBR A CO. Olllce SMt Oraue at., sa^ North Qoms. and OrMra LaB4lB(> •> tk* CeaMto«». JaMT KONIGMACHEB & BAinyLAN, TANNERS and CURRIEKS STORE, bock of R. ModerweU'fl Commission Ware-HoUHe, fronting on the Railroad, and North Prince street. Cheap fob Cash, or Approved Credit. Constantly on haud a full assortment of all kinds o Saddler'sand Shoemaker's Leather, of suporior quality. Including "Rouior'n celebrated Sole Leather"; also. Leather Bauds, well stretched, suitable for all kindM of machinery, of any length tnd width required, luadeof a superior quality of Leather: Furnaro BeiiuiVB, L'aa^ and Lacinif Leather, Garden Hor^, Tannar'n Oil, Cunler's Tools, Moroccos, Shoe Find ngs, kc, kc All kiodtf of Leather bongbt In ths rough ; highest price given for Hides and Sklnn In casli; orders will be pniinptly attendnd to. jnlv U-tf-33 Carolinayellow Pine FIooringBoards K(\ AAA FEET Carolina Yellow t}\Jm\J\J\/ Pln« DresMd Flooring Boards. 30.000 Feet do., Undressed. 50.000 Cypress Shingles, No. 1 and 2. 50.000 Bangor Plastering Latha. Jast received and for sale at Graeff's Landing, on tbe Conestoga. Apply to GEO. CALl>EH k CO., Offlce—Eaat Orange st., near N. Queen st., Lancaster. Mattrass Making and Upholstery. THE subscriber has comuienccd the above business, and intends carrying It ou at his residence In East Kiug street, Lancaster, half a square west of the County Prison, where he will have manu¬ factared all kinds of MATTRASSES, CURLED HAIR MOSS, HUSKS, PALMLEAF, COTTON, kc, of all quali¬ ties and at all prices, and of the best of materials, and OS low as can be had auywhere elete for cssh. He would Bolicit all who stand lu need of anything n his line to give him a call. EJ^Otd Mattrasses of all kinds r«-made, and all kinds made to order. ti^Ordeni can be left at D. Balr's store, C. Widmyer's furnitare ware A oom, H. S, Gara's store, or at the Conn- y Prison, which will be promptly attended to. r«b 27-tf-t.'l HBNRV HRRRH. .Bush aud ir*">u I J^QUASH liyirly White and Red Top I ti:kxip lEarly Valeuliue, jrfii Week and jLima BEANS; 'Extra E»rly, LougBioodBEET; aud Drumhead ^ {Burly Dwarf ExtraTurkish ) LETTUCE-.^ iProliflc, White, \ White Portugal,T JBiwhop's Early Seymour'BSuiierh,,:Jiiver Sliin and ( [And Royal Dwarf White and Red ) Rod Annual f IMarrowfat Solid CELERY; \ ONION :J IPEAS, kc, kt-. For hale Ht JOHN F. LONG k CO'S. Drug aud Chemical Store, No. 6, North Queen street. dtic 17 ^ _ „ ""'-^ COTTGH MEDICINE. Dr. Keyser's Fkctorai, Svkup Cukks Cnriiji.-;. Dr. Keyser's Pectoral Syrup cures Golds. Dr. Keyser's Pectoral Syrup cures lulluenzn. Dr. Keyser's Pectoral Syrup cures Bronchitis. For laryngitis take DrKeyser's Pectoral Syrup. For incipient consumptiou take Dr. KeyserV Pectoral Syrup. l-'or cold in the head take Dr. Key.ser':> Pecto¬ ral Syrup. Dr. Keyser's Pectoral Syrupcures sore throats. Dr. Keyser'a Pectoral Syrup cures Quinsy. Dr. Keyser's Pectoral Symp cures old coughs. Dr. Keyser's Pectoral Syrup cures all kinds of diseases of tho Lnugs and Breast. ^^ Toothache is in.stantly cured by a few drops of Dr. Keyser's Toothache remedy.— Sold at Geo. H. Keyser's, No. 140 Wood street, Pittsburg, sign of the frolden Mort,ar, al 25 cents per bos. ^'For sale by C. A. HEINITSH, Laiit^as- ter, and by druggists every where. dec 24 6in-4 JtClic 50,000 PIECES OF •XtV^^A-XjlM I»-A-3E*ISH.! Borders, Mouldings, Stationery, Kre- Board Screens, &o., now opening JkJTD WILL BS EOi.D WHOLESALE AND RETAIL, At unprecedented low prices, AT TUB Camargo Manufacturing Company, NEW IRON FRONT STOBE, No. 20, EAST KING STREET, Adjoining the Lancaster County Bank. C H. BHEHEMAN, for Company. Rep 21 IMS THOMAS SPKEING, UMBRELLA MANUFACTURER, West Orange street, near Shober's Tavem and Fahnestock's Store, Lancaster. IF you are in want of good and dura- hie UMRRSLLAB, and any thing la my Use, please glT« me » call, as oil my artioles •re good mad oheap. N. B.—UmbrtUu uidFaraaolicoTartdEnd rtmlna wtth mMt>M« ud dMptt«Ii,and at T«rT low HEBB IS THE PLACE! The Cheap Dry Goods Store in Lancaster. JSargains! Bargains! CHAS. M..EKBKN & BUOTIIKR. have JuHt opened alarge and ciuipltMi* Miock i>f Hew Spring Goods, which they aro prepared u> -.fil ort'u caaper than their usual low prices. Their stock compriupBa flue and full aKsorlmenl. f HOUSEKEEPINa GOODS! couHlflting of Super Heavy Ticlcinga at S, 10, I.l and IS CtB; Yard and a quarter wide Shee[i{i/?fi at 12}^; Bleach¬ ed aud unbleached MuKllnn at 6, S, 10 fit 12^^ ctn; uew style Calicoes at 4, 6, fi. 10 k 12>; ct.H: Cottou Tahle Cot- eringaat 12>tf, lSi( k 3.5 clu; Linen aud Cotloa TowUngB at6!>£, 10 2[12K; Saper Linen Damank & Cloth Tahle CoverH. Floor and Table Oil Clothif, ic. kc ALSO, a choice and denirahle stock of Drew Ooodn and Embroidery. Xew style rich Mous de Lainfl at 12>i and 25 ctn., cholco colore plain do. do. 6^. 12Jf k Z'i cts. do. do. all wool do. do. at37>£ ; French Worlced Collars, at G,»i, 12H. ip to $1,2.1, do. do. Dnderaloevos at 37*^, fiO, up to l.fiO, do. do. Spencers, HdhfH, kc, kc Kow iH the time for all thowe iu want of yood Goods at low prices, to call at our eKtahllnhmeDt, aud we will eu- dea Tor to please all who may give ua their patrouage. CBAS. M. £RB£N k BRO. Nonh Qneen el Nextdoor to Sprechars Iron Store. march 21 lO-t.f Paradise Foundry & Machino Shop. (F-.t-merhj knoien ax Wimrr'x Mill} M. ]JK1;A .teu.. take thin trm thoir frii-uJi and ih-i public in Reueral, that rh'^y have enlarcf^.l nud iiuprovel llndr Hhopi, and rcceflHy oiided an oxiHU-irb IRON FOIJNURY, to tlieir e»lablihhmi;nt, and arn uow aiiipiy prepared lo furnish aud mituufHctuiu nil k'lud^ of .llAClittKiry aud Ca-itiuK*. SiiJI and Siiw Mill worlc, Oi';tiings .ind Fix¬ tures, Threshing MiichiuPH, and lloryo I'owerHmade ou improved hlylc- ; Cwru ah.?ll«r^", hiid*-- UrJIJ- wiChO'i-.tfS Seed Sowerd attached; Shiiftinc, I'lillit's, Iliiucer-, to¬ gether wilh every duscripliou of Mitchiortry uiiide KUd dttcdup tt' <»rdpr. (;;t.stiutr^ .'.t Cjnj.-tr'M.',-;, H-"i-«-.,.(n'l Cellar Orates of the Utt-:^! -lyi."". iii:iut;i:ictureii uu ilit^ moat rea-sunahie terniH. Thoy eiHpluy noufl hui •'.vjjcri''uf"J (Dech?iii:c^. and Warrant all tlioir worli. iinciiiin'ry of all kiiid^ri-[i;,lr- ed ou ihe Mhorte^t uuiice aud uio-t rtjivsuunhle leriiis. The 8hop» will hi) uuderihe cDiiIro] uud >U|>i>rluitru- denco of Samuel M. Brua, wll.l^« mtiplo oKptfriem,; iu husinei's, with thn aid of Mliillt'ul mi^chaulcti, will r"ud"r entire liatii-raciion. De^iguerri and inveutor--* will fiiiil il to l!i>':r adv»n- tage to call at their e-tahllfhiiient lo have modelH nmd-^ and mauhiui^ry fltttd up. All or.lcrc l>y mail or iiUicr- wUe, addre-sxod tothe underMgnnd. I'anidis'S I'o-t ' "Uice, Lanca.tter couuiy, I'a.,oii:ill r<*ci-ire promp: ;tlt*iulioo. il3*niehent pritcrt piiid for UM ('ii-tibv^. aprll t)-Iy-I9 SAMUEL M. lillUA k TO. ' The People's Marble Works. North llucen. Street, near the lluilroad, third door north 0)" Michael McGrann's Wliite Horse Tav. em, icest side, in the yard formerly occupied bu Messrs. Ijonanf 4' Bear. LE'WIS HALDY, Marble Mason. ESI'KCTKULIA' inl'mm-^ ihc jm!.- Ilcthat he has tiiliCn tliealjuvi' yurd.auil ha- jo-i ..jueived a riup(*rb Ktocltof pure A.^lElilLAN .VAKtil.E, tocetlier with a beautiful ii<-.irlJiieiii o; Il'-ILIAN .MAllULE. audlhnthnUu^iw prnpaivd to -¦x.niit- in the hest utyle. Monuments, Tombs, and Cravc-Stoms, ."iJaiUles, Dour and Windotc Sills, Strpn. at., nf every vu- rlwty, cheai'er thna aud othor L->t.iljli-liincut iu tiiiiteiiy. Iliu facilities for rurui:>liiuK articles iu thc Mivrhle line, are unsurpassed by auy uiher o.iiJililislimtMit iatho cily, whileheas'iure.iHllwhoiUHy favgr him wilh their patruu- age, that his worit hbail he executed iu tht; very lif-! htyle. and i>ii liie ninft reasimalitf tonus, LEtTEltCUTri-S'.: iu tfiy/w/tuHii Gtrmiin, d..in- «i the shortosi notice nnd on the nmst ri-ifi-iiiilil.- teriii-. lie respectfully iuviies tlie piiliHu to call und his worlc, beiug fully hati^rn'd to lost lii-i-Uiiii patrouage upon its merits. Tliantful fur ihemauy favors ln'r-lowe.i upi-u 1:.ij> Si-? hopeM by siricl alteuiion to liuiiin-s 111 merii in.l re- ceivea sliare of Ihe puhlic'h p.itrou:ia.' Bep 3 l-Jt' NEW KAKBLE WOBKS, f.Vjyii I't'Hif Ivu laiijc .'liirhtr l.iiKin.) Tombs. M(intit5«. filonumonts. Grave-Stonos, A NJ.> ovt'iy liu.scriptiuu i»t" .Mauhi.k f\ aad Sa.vi' .'^ro.sKWintK. I^ executed ,a tho mo.-l benuiiful Kivle ;a llie Marble Worlis of "CUAULES M. HOWELL. Korth Queau rireet, east rflde, hetwc.-u * »rii.iit'»f iio.l ('tit-.— nut Bta., and nearly opposite to Weidb-r's hotel. The Buliscriber thaukfui for pn.-*! favDr.s, w..oldiiif.irui hiii irtcuds mid the puhMc iu geiuTfil, llnit Iii-'e.-.tnhii-h- mentiH now tipeued at the abo vf locution, where ho will he happy at ail times lo wait up.ju cu-tuunTs nud initu- afttcture to ortler overy tldngappertJitilui: !¦• hi-j lio»' ot hoainesH, in tlio luurit approved oiylo- uf the prures.ji'u and at tbe must roasonahle nite^. He is consl:intIyreceiviitsal hiri-Mtrlilc Work-« Tiiil supplie-t from the city of I'liiladelpliia, nf A.MElih'.Ay AND ITALIAN MARBLE, which is ^upiTi..r lo auv thing of ths kiud lu ihi.-. city. Letters in English aud (jerinau, euicraved In liie iinfl elegaut innuuer. His facil!tie.»f aro «ucli, ihal nil orders will Le nll.-.i with tUo greatest prouiptues-nud lu ihf he^l ajiprovcd manner. I'ersoni wi-hiug Slouiimeuls nre lufomi-il lli:i: JiN collection of desigus are »«w nud orli.'iiml nud ~n full and Complete that they Ciiu iiihk- a -electiou ^vith.-nt dilllculiv. llo invites the puhllc lu cnii nl liis- \V..rl(n, muI vi.-w the beauliful asr.irtmeut.'i .M.'UiiuivuTs. ie , uow tiu- ishLd. B3-Huildera nud iniier>, in wn..ii should visit Lis Ware-I'.o.'ins ai„l Htock 00 hand. ICj-SA.vn .S^.».^¦t^ fur mIN. St-ji... Liirimig, t.eiiie[.!ry purposes, aud front:- .if biiildiog-s. nl the U.we<^l lat.-ri. ITy-Ordrrs received fnr all kiu.l-nf Iron ILiiling. jTuT-ly-U OHAitLIlfi .M. lUiWEl.l. HOWAKD ASSOCIATION, PHILADKLPHIA. IMI'OIITA-NT AN.XOU-N'CKMENT—- To nil porsou-( mlUcteil wuh Jiexual l)inrn''eH, nuch \VcAi£j;c=a, Impotbsck, vice of OSASim 1 "i:^: : t-PKKM.ironillUl'.A. » UuSOl'.IllilKA ir.i.i-.'i.i'.v-f. The liuWAKH aSS0':IAT10>'. jj, vleiv of th.-nwfui de-ti;ic:iou ot human lu'r. cjo-od by ^exuril Di-ca.-..^. uud tbe dtceplinii, jir:i'.tihtd u[iiiu thr. uolnriuunte vic¬ tims ff Micii Ji^wf^ps by 'insel;:', hnve dir.>i;l.;il liidi l.'uUTiUltine .Snrgenu, a,-, n cli/int.tblr' net worthy of tb.-ir untne.tr) jjive luedienl ndvico viitATI^, i.i afl per-in-i- Ihus iiUiitie.l, wliu ;ti'i'ly by i^lur, wirh a d'^-ciipliou tf lli.;ire..u.lirioo, (:ii:tf, oci-i.|.™tt..ii.h:ihii- ..flir... ir..)-nJ ir: cn-f? oi' ...jLlr.-Kie ji.iV't'/ -iuil -usferiOfc', In funiiih mcdictne.-! free vf chnrrjc. The fl->tvnrd'A--.jtiMti.;u U ;t tjeiiorol^-ut iiistiluil.-.n ¦'.-.tulilisii.jd t,y *i.eci.il r-nl.jwui"0l,l\T ili«* relief or the -ick and d::.tress^'ii, iil!l-.iTt.?d wilh '¦ Viruieut nud Epi¬ demic l)iaeA>-t'-i." It hiis now a-urplu-ofuiiaii-. wbicli liie UircctofH Imvo v.ili:.t to exj'-ruil lu ndv.>iti>ini: Mm i-bove nolle;*. Il is ue-idle-s to n<l,i thrtt llit* A—.lemtinu coiuniauds lli^ h:t:lie-t nicdicM! ^^kill nf ih.t nire, an) wiii furuifh tho ^u'J^t upproveJ modern in-nluitfot. Jti=lpubii>bed,by thrt A-<wciiilion,n iteport on r>;i-r-. TualorriiiK.t. or Seuliual Weakuf-s, tLo vie-; uf Ounui-ni .llre.-ittirb.it'ou or Scil-Alui-t;, nuit other di—ns.-™ -f th- .Sexual Orgnus. by the Cousuiiiug iiurKeou, whicli witl lit) .sentby n];^tl.(iQ n sr-iileil cnr.-t.ip".) fKJ:i: <iy iHAKHR, Uii Dim tva-i['t of Iw.i ntiUii[H f.-r [inflMy^.-. Addrovs, itr. OEO. K. CALUnCN. I'-tiMiltin^ Miri:.'..u, Iluwnnl A:4-ocii-,:ioii. >'" H SnriK Xi.vTii street. 1'liil.t Jelp^-n, r.t i:yur,!.r.'r !/-• iKi-'i-r- ^¦/A:.\ I). liEAllTWELL, I'rcMd^nt. lir:", fAiK.[Mi.i', ^.•^¦^(¦t.¦lry. J-t 24 ly-; Leaf Tobacco and Cigars. DENSLOW & CO., 21 >TOiiUi Front Street. PHILADELPHIA. COMMI.SSIOX MKUCHAXTS. .*.vii wii"i.i>Ai.K rK.\j.tiis Iuall kindsof Lent Tobacco,Manufactured Tobacco and C'iKurs. AVK cnn.-?t;iiiilv 1HI h:njJ :iiid ioi' le loir, nil ki'i.|-.*i .('/A7.7<".J.V .tnd SPAN- I'ili LEAF 7'0/;.l(;ro-,^-'I-c:c,lwuh-peciai referecce n^iiiiiuiif.u-Iirrer"' i:-t. All nr(ic)—-iilfl. K-;irr,((il0'! tu I'e .^s repre-eut^d nnJ very ..;iji,.iiujiiy MtforJeii for (!3;iiiilnailon, l'iin.>i,.-.-r.. :vt ;nii-i;vncp c:iu-end tluiir orJpr-. aiiU .¦i.v iijiin h<,intf as r.tilhfully —rV.'d n- tf (h.jgiiarN iv-t.' P. H. SMITH, ~ Port Monnaio, Pocket Book and Dres¬ sing Case Manufnotiircr, A'. U*. cor. of fourth and C/iexnut ^7^^.7.^, I'UIL.VDKI.l'llIA, ALW'.VV.^ I'll iuiiid :i iiirmr Mini varied Wurk Box.w. C«li«.. TniTi'Iiai: Brt?;.. " ' u BJHrJ., h: ..f MAKBl.t Ma-NTi.t", ' ^pl-ndid BAGS. TO JULLEKS, Farmers and all othera who are In want of Bags of all niiea; can boiinp- piled at the Lancaster County Prinou, by the doieu where there la manufactured dally, 2 dozen, which will be warraoted to be madp »f Ihe bext material and well aewed. Bags of any »¦ ode to order at (ho shorter/ notice. AL30, for sale,-tOCOyardo of Cbrpff—from 26 to 60 eta. per yard. Also, 60 Set Nets and one doi. Sturgling Nets. Seines madeto order. JS^odh paid for any (¦.aautlly of Carpet Rags. OOTlfi-tf-Wl B r. V^nHKK. IC-np«r Tumingl Turningf THE undersigned are prepared to do all Unde of tornlng for Cabinet Makers, Coach Ma- kera, Bnlldera and othera, at their Steam Sawing and Tnmlng HUls, at OroeS'a Landing, near Lancaater city. K^All orders left at the Bjirdwore atorea of G. £1. •ImnanorO. D. Sprecher will be promptly attended A. E. BOWKBS U CO. taps tf-10 LII'E INSURANCE. Girard Life Insurance Annuity und Trust Company of Pliiladelphia. Oa.r>i-fca,l ^300,000. CHARTER J'ERPETUAL. FFICE X». l;i-' Chesnut .St., >lii>t door easl of the Custom Huuso, couiiuu-'-t.i lunK-e inuurancen on lives on tbe most lHvorui>Io terras. The capital heing paid up and iuvc-«ied, togelbur witb a largeand couslantly IncreaiiUR re-ierved fuud. The .0' I perfciA Kcurity lo ihBin.-«urcd. The premiums may ho pniJ yonrly. li„lr vv..i:y .>T to ili.>in^iir:in- quarterly. The company add a Bonus peiiodii ceu for life. The first bonus appniprinted in UT-mlior, 18-16, and the necond bonuB in December, ISift, muouul to an addition uf S'iU2.50 to wvery $IiTO in-ured uu.l^r the oldest pollcie«. making SI26-.;.->0,^hichf.!inll he pmd when it shall become a claim iuv.«»d of Sl('i>|'ongiual- ly Insured; the uext oldest aniuuut^ to 4i-.i7.fin; iLe next In age to $1212.60 for every Si(H«; theollierviulhe aame proportion aecordiug to llie nmouul uf ume nnd xtauding; whicb addition m:il:-s au average of more than60 percent, op^m the luemiuuis paid Without io- creaBing the annual preinlora. ^ „ , The following are a few examples from the Heijlster: RouuH or I Aiaount of poUcy and h.- addition °'^" ^** ^^ Increased by adUltlon. J future addltiona. policy. Sum luHured. No. .18 89 27li 333 ic. $1000 SSOO 2000 6000 he. $262 AO 656 25 476 00 1187 60 &c. $1282 dO Sl.'iQ 25 2476 00 61S7 .W kc Pamphleta containiug table of raten andexplauatloDii, forms of application and further ioformation cau behad atthe offlce. THOS. RIDGWAY, President. t3~APP^lcstloa may also ha madeto SUDOLPH F. RAUCH, Agent for uid Gomp'T, retldtagla Lonooater. I'ArkcniJiiii f;hes7 I'ocliet Memorandum Eviolirt. t.'iKAr l')if.e>, }ic. ^¦(orliiipul of Kstii.Hn, KRf:Nt a rf:r,>p-- and C-ld _ ment ff I'uri Mouaies, I'.jcket I!c.,.kH. Bankers Ca^es. .\oI.( Ib.lders I'ort Foiins. I'urt.iblo he-it-. lH-'-iin: ¦'n-t-. j!j^^.\l.':o, il general ns'*orlii nnl t;i:iiM.\x Fa.scy liooh-s. Fiue J''ii:kei (^uilcry, Iluior-». I'eits. \Vli.iie>.tl^Secwiid nud Third Floor-. y n.:;.MiTri. ' X. \V, ci.ruer Fourth aad C'li-'smit st.-.. ri.il.i.l,. N. U.—Du tin: n-ceiiu of 51. tr"0|'-"'ior fi^Id I'ttu «i.l hcr-Ut to noy pL-rt 01 tt;e I'oit.-.l .-i-.I--. Ijy lunii ;—dt- jicilliiui: piii Ihu-: m.*>lioiii, tiv.nl. ur -oft. apiii 4 ly-ie- MarriagG Guide. YorXC'S (lUKAT iMiV.SIOU)GI- r.\h WORK, THE roCKKT .V.<.<Tl.M*\{.'% or hvu'jOw: lli^ Ovn Doctor.hy WJi. VtiL'.ND. 3[ P — 1: IS (rri'teit to pl.im lf>ui;oiiK''f-r liie veiii-rnl tr.t.ler, rtinl i- ili.i-trnle'i with tiptr^u.t, <.( t'ue .madt.-.i Kr.L-ta viii:is, Ai! Viioui; in:ir.ir^<l jii'.iple, or tlio-e c.inleintiU- tiu:: m^irriiii^.', uiiil Ijiiriijc tin- len-t 1iii[>^'i1iiiihii'. !¦. uiiir- rieii lilV, .-li.rti.'d r-ad lli:-) l..,i.K. It di-Ci.i-.- -.¦..¦.'¦^{i lhat <¦¦ vory oue^l^o^llJ bf KCiuitiuCed witii. »liM it l» rt i V. Iticil Uiii-l lie i^-'pt ii.-c!ie>l up, Htiii li'> lie ntmiit tbe h..ii-,->. ll inlth-' s-»t l'>;i»y<»u-"ii lI...r.-'.-('t ..inrpiify. uve ceul-. Ad.lre~s Dr. W.M. YUl.Mi. 1J2 Sl'ltCCi; stroet. nbfve Fo nli, MiiLtd.-Ii.Jii.t tJj^y^>rrnU iu L.^iic^il-T hy 3:'ll:K.^FiEI.D k CO., Kr.iiii[ih's Uiiw. jtfu ~-lyti NKW WIltil.ESALE ^ N. Sl'ENCliK Tao vH. tf\ No. -Z-i Siuith 2d St., P/i iitl lie ¦phia, ^ T«f.":ii:n..M.^.sfKA(rrritKi! \ i'!:-\i ra i> DRUGS, KEDICirJES, Chemiculs, fi.eids, Dye Stulla, Paints, Oli.H. COLORS WIHTK 1-KAD, KRKiN'ClI AND AMKRICAN WHIME YINC, WINDOW GLASS, GLASS WAEE, r.l JIS ISH ES. UR VSJlE.'i. UKOUND BPicEs, waoij; si'ick-s, Aud nil other art Icles usually k-pi liy ilrmriil-ts iucludiui,; Borax, Indigo, Glue, Shelluc, Pulush, ^-c. Ej*.MI orders by tuail or i'lhciwi«p. promptly ci-'i.- ded to. Cj'Country ileecliaut'i nre Invited to call and oxsm- iue our htuck before piircii.Tsinic tfiseirlierc. Oo')d.» -eLl lo auy of tlie Wii.irvc-. tir I'..iil llo.ij st.ttlon- I'rit- low nud g.ioils wnrmnled. mur.'•¦ly-l 1 'FIREMEN! TAKE NOTICE!! I7OR SAL]-: cheap, a superior UOSl-l - <^A^«i-^«^. -"^J^-^^Vif^r.-'i-Ti'JMrsoN, S. \V corner of I'r.>i,l aad Hhipjieu ureetB. or S. E. o.r- ner of lUrr^u aud ?oulii streets, abovo ^econ.I. rhfli delpbia^ J4n2l-4t.S C. C.VUWAi.r.AHCB. T. ALLMX.v. Jr., Et.A« WR.s>,i;R Cadwallader, AUmau, & oo., KLOUU. OKAIN. SKEUS. GE.VEKAL rKODUCE. Fonvarding & Commission Merchants. No. 113 Broad St., above Race Street, PHILADELPHIA. B3-Coii3l«om«iiW •ollolttd. Sfltornf quiokly made. n«aT »m.«
Object Description
Title | Lancaster Examiner and Herald |
Masthead | Lancaster Examiner and Herald |
Volume | 31 |
Issue | 9 |
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 | 1857-01-28 |
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 | 01 |
Day | 28 |
Year | 1857 |
Description
Title | Lancaster Examiner and Herald |
Masthead | Lancaster Examiner and Herald |
Volume | 31 |
Issue | 9 |
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 | 1857-01-28 |
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 916 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 | 01 |
Day | 28 |
Year | 1857 |
Page | 1 |
Resource Identifier | 18570128_001.tif |
Full Text |
VOL. XXXI.
LANCASTER, PA., WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 28, 1857.
No. 9.
¦ T5it3kH)BY
EDWARD 0. DAKLINGTON,
. QTTlOM.Ta XOETH QCTD BTUKT.
The EXAMINK5 4 DKMOCRATIC HKRALD
UpitbUab»di»Mklr.1UTwdlK)i.tAB«a7eAr.'
ADVBRTISBBIENT8 wUl bo inserted *t the
rate of gt 00 p»r aquare, of ten Hurt for thrw Inaer- ttoni or l9« tl AT4u9» CMUper aqnare for each odfUUonal InsartloiL. ..Buttaaoi AdTerUsemeota Inaerted by the quarter, half yefi or year, iriH be charged •»'«!<»»« : • ' •¦ ' ' sflwnfJU. ««wiU4».lamonlftf.
On«Bauare #100 $ 6 oo $8 00
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13 00 25 00
45.00 80 00
BUSINSSS KOTIGBS inserted hefore Uorriogei and peotha, donble the regnlar rates.
tJ^AH Edreftlriag ikoonaU are conaidered eoUeeta. ble at the cxplraUon of half tbe period eontraated for. TraiulentadTertitexaeaViCASH.
From Chambers' Journal.
EDrFH WAMIWGHAM.
I
grotesque and dreadfol covering. I passed them and repassed them. In looking at her, I threw an energy and fervor into my admir¬ ing gEze, which I thought In no way dis¬ pleased her. I sat down on a rock some two hnndred yards off and,.taking a volume from my pocket—not Sophoole this time, but Keats —I affected to read, bttt watohed their move¬ ments narrowl/.
I saw her writing with her parasol on the sand. How my heart palpitated I Is it, I thonght, some tender sentiment, some gentle enconrftgement ?-7-does she ioBoribe her name, possibly add her address ? I was in a fever of expeotation. I sat absorbed, aa they may have thonght, in my book nntil they moved away some distance, when I followed to the spot where she had written, in large clear characters, Edith Walsingham. It was then Kdith. This then, was her name. How true my preaentiment I Had it been revealed to me in a dream ? I looked round to see no one was watching me, and wrote in large let¬ ters under my own name, Henry. I then hurried aftor them, that I might, if possible, see what the earthly abode of this goddess was. Everything favored my design: they never looked round once, but 'Rent directly up a hill from the sands, and entered the door of 17 Promenade Villas, Prospect Place. 1 returned immediately to the sands. How happy was I now! That morniHg, when I left my lodgings, all was doabt and uncer¬ tainty ; now, did I not know everything?— her very name and addresa ? " I felt so calm and contented, that I could have almost re¬ turued to the society of Antigone and Imeue for an hour or two, but I determined first to revisit the sea-sUore. I wandered back to the spot where I had written my Christian name under hers, and was hurt and disgust¬ ed to flnd that some mischievous and ill meaning person had scrawled under them, iu large coarse-looking letters, A Pair op Idiot$. This was the treatment which sentiment met with at the hands of the vulgar. I had al¬ ways boen a friend to education, except in my own particular case; Inow bitterly regretted that the masses, or any of them, could write. I looked around, bat to no purpose, for the miscreant who had committed this sacrilege. Not a bouB in his botiy should have remain¬ ed unbroken.
I quiokly obliterated tho ribaldry that had been arlded, and left the two^names as thoy stood originally, until It occarred to me that I would destroy her surname, place my own opposite, and bracket the two Christian names togetlier. I then sat myself down ou the shingles, and watched the tide come in, rip¬ ple after ripple washing up nearer and nearer to the writing, until at last the two uames, still united, were submerged under tho wa¬ ters ofthe Atlantic; and, as the tide had nuw reached me, I woke from my reverie with my shoes and stocldngs wet.
This evening I dined witii some appetite; it had entirely forsaken me during the three preceding days. With my cheroot, lattemp, ted Herodotus, but soon laid the venerable Father of History aside; took up Virgil, but with the same result. Even my favorite Horatlus Flaccns could not, on this occasion, be tolerated, but was exchanged for my pen, with which I wrote an acrostic on Edith Wal¬ singham. I went to bed reciting my lines, which at the time seemed.^a rery happy effort of my muse, repeating the euphonious name which had inspired them, and on the beauty of its enchanting owner.
Next morning I .waa np betimes, loug be¬ fore tbe hideous servant had plied the string fastened to my finger. ^I bad now some ob¬ ject in life—lhat object was Edith Walsing¬ ham. I would read, ay, read even before breakfast, and divinity too; so for one hour I appUed myself unremittingly, and, after¬ wards, took my first meal with cheerfulness and appetite.
Before I should commence my logic at ten i there was ample time for a short walk, and what conld better settle my mind for the day's study than one glance at 17 Promenade Villas, Prospect Place? When I approached it, there waa an untisual stir and bustle in the front of the house. Servants were run¬ ning aboat; the dining-room table, so far as I could see from the opposite side of the way, was covered with a cold collation.— Presently up dashed a earriage and a pair to the door, and out floated one of the young ladies whom I had seen with Edith on the sands, robed in soft India white muslin.
A horrible suspicion seized me; I felt dizzy aud staggered, aa the thonght passed through my mind that Edith was to be the bride of another. Suspense was torture I could not endure, so I walked boldly over to the driver of the carriage and pair. "Is there a wed¬ ding here this morning ?" I asked. " Yes sir," answered the coachman. "One of the Miss Walsinghams ?" I suij-
I3ISK&SE AKD CBIME. polled to murder some one, he is properiy
Light is daily coming in upon tho world amenable to the law of the land,
of mind, and by the help of clearly estab- It is no very difficalt matter for ordinary
Ushed facta, arguments may be adduced mimls to per.suadfl thetoaelves as to any de_
which wiU have a stronger tendency lo com- sirwd cou.ao—that it is right; that there is \
pel men to take care of their hoaltU, than no barm In it; and that, if ihey uieant no
any which have arisen from conscience, mon- harm by it, no blame oould be attached ; bnt,
ey or duty ; tbat is, the argument of Shame, if for such Aims/ considerations, men are to
Late Publications Heceived by Mur- | BEMOVAL.
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L9t men fully nnderstand tbat certain bodily bo excused from ponaUiea, there is an eud at 1 ^^'^^^%_ ^J^^^ c'l.oK"T"voi:,^i2u^o.Sh^^^^'
affections tend to orime, and that crime thus onoe to all law and to all govemment. ' - ..
committed confines to the Penitentiary, then The conclasion of the whole matter is this,
may the community wake up more fuliy to Every man shoald bo held responsible for
nui[[o and Intcresijrir ad^Jntrirp VltTOItl.*,; »r. the Worlrt Ovemdue By Caroline Clifl^Hbrn" 1 vol., l2mo .cluth. A houk ofa healthy, moral toni _
By
Tugether with a fnll asHDitmeat »t Htaudard and iiiIh- cellanBon.s wurks, to which yonr attention, reader. Is la^pectfal'y larltod. Jan 2l-2t-S
J. H. HOPFEE,
b«..k.;fj QUKVKYOK, OIVIL KNdlNKKK,
I lO^ONVHyAHCEB and DBAUaHTSMAN. Monut J.iy. ""^ "* ' i'«nn'n.—Town PlaoM, .Wapeof lar^e eataten oud Topo¬ graphical plauM or connty.MoatB, kc, neatly dra^vn
I was always very romantic. At fourteen, I wrote verses of a dark and dreary oharacter, and was melancholy and misanthropical; at seventeen, I proposed to a young lady near¬ ly twice my age, who very wisely reftised me; audi waa so profoundly miserable, or thonght myself so, that I meditated for days about snioide, but could not deteYmine npon the exact form of violent death that might be ad¬ visable. Even Oxford, with all tho boating, and beer drinking, and cricketing, wine par¬ tiea, whist, billiards, and various boisterous diversions, did not cure me of my sentimen¬ tal tendenoies. I was all but plucked for my " little go;" becanse dnring the vacation be fore this dreaded ordeal, I had been flirting with a bine-eyed cousin named Ada, instead of devoting myself to Euripides, Horaoe and Euclid.
In my twelfth term—this is, after abou^ two years and a half residence at College—it seemed almost time to maku some prepara¬ tion for my final eramination, or "great go;" and I was informed by a candid tutor at the close of the summer term, a few days before the glorious saturnalia of commemoration, that nothing would save me but very steady reading during the whole of the long vaca¬ tion. Whereupon I packed my portmanteau full of olothes, and an enormous deal-box full of books, and shunning my blue-eyed oonsin, I got into the train, and giving my¬ self only a two days holiday in London, I went forthwith to Sandhaven.
Everybody knows Sandhaven and its dnll High Street, and its sands and its assembly- rooms, and its bazaars and bathing-raachines, and flies and young ladies on horses, and old ladies in vehicles and infanta in perambula¬ tors drawn by chubby maids; its billiard- rooms, eating-houses, suburban tea gardens ; Its steamers arriving daily and departing dai¬ ly ; its circulating librftries, not a novel less than ten yoars old; Its three churches and eight chapels; its wind, its heat, its dust, ita glare ; the terrific greed of its lodging-keep¬ ers; and, daring the seaaon, its generally nn- qoiet, unstudious cbaracter. What could have induced me to select Sandhaven, I know not; but the stubborn fact is—I did select it.
T established myself in very expensive and uot very comfortable apartments. They had these reoommendations: there was a fine view of the sea; the landlady, a widow of about forty, was plain ; her daughter, a girl of seventeen, was still plainer; and the ser¬ vant girl positively hideous. I shall at least thought I, be safe here. Arriving on a Fri¬ day, I thonght it as well to see something of the place during that and the following day. If I set to work on the Monday, and made a fair start, it would be better than to begin before I knew anything of the institutions of the town or Its inhabitants. So on Friday I bathed and boated, and had a donkey-ride— and dropped info various billiard-rooms— rather astoniahing provincial pool-players by the experience attained at Oxford—and I also haunted the various bazaars, and I danced though with much decornm, ay, even solem¬ nity, at the assembly-rooms. On Sunday I went to church.
FuU of good resolutions, on the evening of that day I retired to bed early; but before doing BO, arranged an elaborate maohineiy to enable me to rise early the next moming. j am a very heavy sleeper, and had not my a/ar, um with me; so I tied a string round my fin¬ ger, passed it under the door, and gave orders to the servant-girl to pull the string until I got out of bed. She obeyed me scrapulously. and at seven, despite various remonstrances, which I growled forth iu tones not by any means gentle, I was pulled oat of bed by my finger, and half an honr afterwards was un¬ packing the colossal deal-box, and arranging my library for the ensuing Uterary cam¬ paign. I waa to read only eight hours a day; this I thought moderate; in prospect it looked go; if necessary, this was to be increased to ten or twelve. More steam might be put on —that was the exact expression—as the dan¬ ger grew more imminent; but at present eight hours would do.
^y subjects weredivinity, logic, Latin com¬ position, four plays of Sophocles, the Odes, Epodes, and Ars Poetica of Horace, the first four books of Herodotus, and the Bucolics and Georgics of Virgil.
The three hours in the evening were to be devoted respectively to Herodotus, Horacoi and Vii^il, all which I had read before, and was therefor only compeUed to refresh my memory by re-perusing them; with the as¬ sistance of au English translation and a Ma, nilla cheroot.
During the early part of Monday my pro¬ gress was marvellous. The hour intended for theology was spent in unpacking; but at ten I assailed the logic h ith vigor; moved on to the Latin writing at eleven; and soon after twelve was absorbed in the woes of An¬ tigone. At one, or thereabouts, I heard the tramp of horses, and what more natural tban for one moment to leave the twin-sis¬ ters and that turbulent tyrant Creon, and rosh to the window to see who might be the passers-by? Would that I had never done
BO.
II Can I ever forget the witchery of that smUe, the heaven of that calm pale brow, tbe latent musio io those eyes, the poetry of tbat tiny foot, the glitter of those pearly teeth, the majesty of that arm, the tempta¬ tions of that waist, the rapture of those wavy ringlets? 0, Edith 1—no, not Edith either.
What a perfect command she had of her horse I (To be sure he was daily over¬ worked and underfed : was that her fault ?) With what grace she sat in her saddle, and how fascinating was the tremulous vibration of the feather in her wide-awake hat I Can it be a matter for wonder that, after gazing on auch charma from my window, Imene ap¬ peared an insipid and pusiUanimoas time- lerver; Antigone, a strong minded, woman with a grievance, sadly addicted to vaporing »nd aenUment; Creon, au utter ruffian, and the Chorus abore?
Before two my books were closed, and I was wildly aearching the streets and shores of Sandhaven for the lovely object of my atrong and sudden passion—in vaiu. That day at least I found her not—^nor the next— Qor even the day after. Not one line coald I read: it was utterly useless to attempt it. Friday ia usnaUy accounted au unlucky day.—Qtttntem/u^c. It is a classical super- Btition which the moderns have endorsed. I found it in my case the fortunate one; for after three days' vain and restless roving to and fro, in quest of the faultless creatures whoae beauties hadlured from my Sophocles, and desti'oyed my equanimity, on Friday I caught a gUmpae of her on the sands. She waa with two other yonng ladies, whom I look to be her eistera. They were amusing themselves in gathering aheU and pieces of sea-Weed. They were unaccompanied by any gentlemen. Each wore a wide-brimmed broWn
^X to..T-l hStol Shft-Edith I wa, blighted, I shonld be, if I did not «»d, »lso "Tenuauer that | goi»_nna gm-now roioautlo no more.
the sentiment,
HEALTH IS A DDTY,
and tberefore, the neglect of its preaorvalion, a sin, which in the natural progress of thingt:, leads to loss of health, and life, and honor.
In a recent trial of a forger, who handled millions of dollara In a year's business, the defence was that he was insano. Among the
his deeds, uuleas they are clearly proved to bo the result of a physical, mental, or moral oondition which he had no agency in origlua- tlug, or exaggerating to the eriminal point. Henoe the prisoner was convicted.
LITTLE JOKES.
The following is rather a stretcher, but we evidence ofi'ered was that he oonld sleep only ^''anslate it from a Leipsio joke book, entitled three or fonr hours ont ot the twenty-fonr. " Who wiU believe it?" The very taU and In a previous number we atat«d, tbat a grow- somewhat short-sighted Count X. on a jour. Ing inability to aleep was a clear Indication of ^^^y ^^^ *.? «'««? ^^'^ f °^^^^ shorter friend approaching insanity, and on the return of ^n the doable bod of a country inn. Waking sloopfulneas, the inteUect became clear— «P soon after daybreak, he found his short There were other symptoms. There was the Wend drawn far down into the bed by his sound of trip-hammers in his ears ; black- ^*^«' "^'^ ^^^ ^ P**"^ ^^ "^^«^ ^^^^. ***°g^"8 smith's sparks floating before his eyes, and over the foot-board. He waked up the snor- there was pain in tbe head a large portion of ^°« ^^^^^ ™*°' *°*^ ^"^^^ " ^**^ ^^^^ 8^' ^°^^ the time. Tbese symptoms, lasting so long, ''^^'^ °^ *'°*^' "^^ ^'¦'«"'^' *^ y**^ ^^ "^"^ '^"^ bad at length so affected the brain, as to do- '"* ^°'^'' ^*'**'-" ""^^^ are mistaken." waa stroy aU perception, or comprehension of the , ^^^ "^^^' " ^^°'^ ^'^ ^^^^^^ ^^^^ '^**"" ^^^""^ effects ot crime; and when the organ of a i ^^"^•" "In^Poasible I" said the Count; "be man's perception is destroyed, he will plunge ^° ^ood, however, as to look once more, for headlong, and with utter recklessness, into { *^ ^^"^ aiatance I cannot recognise them." any kind of wrong-doing whioh circumstan- [ " ^^*' «e 7^*^ staring at, sir, may I aak P'» ces throw iu his way—arson, robbery, mur-I said an imperialed, moustached "blood "to der, anything ; aud. If not detected or pro-: * "Hoosier" on a Mississippi steauib-iat, who vented, the crime, whatever it may bo, will , liad been watching himas aeat walches a grow into a habit, and habit is second nature; ; "louse, for some flfteen minutes. " I thought consequently, he will revel in It, it becomes "o •" exclaimed the Hoosier, the moment the his meat and drink, aud he would rather do ; other apoke; "I said you'd got a mouth, and it thau not. Honco tho prisoner declared i ^ ^a* o"iy waitin'to be sartin about it to ask without hesitation, tiiat if he were released I 7°^ ^° 'liquor.' Stranger, what'il you drink? he would do it again ; that he rather likod or bad you rather fight? I don't care whtch^ it, and nothing could prevent him bnt cut-l "iy*elf " ting off his hand, if it came in the way, to
forge paper.
It was shown iu tho trial, that there was insanity on the father's and mother's side ; but no indication of it ou the part of either father or mother. It is well known, howev¬ er, that insanity, as well as personal featurps>
In the oampaign of '44 Henry Clay was the Whig candidate. A Liberty party man, mak¬ ing a speech somewhere iu New Hampshire, objected very strongly to the gallant Ken_ tuckian on the ground of his being a duellist. This done, he began to glorify hia own party as small in numbers, but destined to achieve
Ll
Jan .
CHISM, witb Aogiihurp C.iufB.Blon. For d&le by \
jan 21-tf-ft MUKRAY, TOnNO A CO.
JREi? OF THE OLDiN
TIBIE. juat received by Tan !I.ir.8 MDBHAY, YODNB & CO.
KANSAS, EXTE
ITS INTERIOR AND
3; by Mm. RnbiasOD, st BIDRBIY, YOONQ & CO'S.
AMERICAN ALMANAC FOR 18.^7 can be hod at Jan 21-tf-S MURRAY. YOUNG k CO'S.
WANTED,
FKOM FIVE TO ElOHT PIUN- DRED DOLLARS by the iHt of April, on prop¬ erty worth 330(10 clear of all Incumbrance. Inqniro of ' JOHN Z BEOOME.
West Kins at., ahove Charlotte street, jan 21 3*1-8
POR BENT.
THB STBAM SAW MILL ^th adonble 2-Btoty DWBLLINQi UiiUSB.andexteQBlTelaQdlngH on thei Conestoga Creelc. now ia the occnpancy Jacob OOetn. Thla property Is eligibly! Bltuateil in the City of Lancaster, and capable of doing a large hudlneao. Eaqnlre of
K. C. BEIQART, jan 14-lra-7 Lancaster, Pa.
STOKE STAND 3POB EENT.
THK old store stand ii> Annville, long iLQowa liS the" CENTRE STORE," belonglBir to Simon M. Crall. Is offered for Bent. In addition MA lo the Store Boom Is a WARE-HOUSE. Also 4 Muh Booma above the Store Boom, with a ssparateJUUL entrance, suitable for a DweUlng.
JOSEPH B. HENHY, jan U-4t-7
Annville, Lebanon Co., Pa.
BENJAMIN P. BAEE.
AXTOKNEV AND COUNSELLOR AT LAW.—Officw with N. Ellmaker, E-tq .North Unke ktreet. dt^c 3 ly-l
! Loan and Deposit OfQ.ce, and Beal
ev at 1 Estate Agency.
»t"Pi, J A W. RUSSEL rcspcctfuliy f^ives
J~\,^ nullce ihAl ha huu removed his office 10 Ceafre Hqnartt, next door in rhe Inland Inimrance Offlce, vhere he will alti-nd pi^rfonaUy to all businesH entriiHt<'d lo hi.4 care
Will attend to^aln ofall klnda nf real enlam. A uuiii- b>ir or desirable reisidrnCRM now for ttalo. .K'.^o, h Urge nnmber of lota and land by the acre.
STOCKS bought and sold on commlKnlou.
CoUectiona mode on the moat favorablo ternit.
Mooey received and Inve'iled In flrtt inuTlHu-A'r. in U Judgment Kecnrltlf>«.
Interest paid on depoollH from 6 lo 6 pot ceut. acuo.- ding to time, Bj* Uncnrrent ni>>ney purchaned.
dec 17-tf-3 A. W. RUSSEL
ly-5
JAMES K. ALEXANDEE,
ATTORNEY AT LAW.—Office with 1. S. Llghtner, Dnke etreet, neariy oppoaite Ihe Coart. Honae. Jnly 2-tf^31
WM. ATTG. ATLBE,
ATTORNEY AT LAW.—Office No. 4£, Eoat King straet, oppoaite Bprecher'a Hotel, eept 28 _ ^^"^
[j. KIKKBAD.
MAETIN-]
DBNTIBTEy.
MANTIN & KINKEAD, having as- eoclated together In the practice of DKNTISTRT, will endeavor torhnder entire satlNfoction In all operations en¬ tnuted to their care. Being prepared forthe HACiDFACTUBE. OPTBGTH, ire will be enabled to unit all ca«eR, with
block; single gum or plate teeth
either on Oold, BllVer or Ontta Percha.
: Sr^OFFICE—Main Street, 2 doora east of Ecbter- nftcht's Hotel. Stranbnra, Lan. eo.
N. B. [ take thin method of tendering thanks for the Uberal patronage heretofore received, and hope by tbe preuent arrangement to beenabled at all timea to altend to those reqalrtng onr HerviceB.
, Jy 16-ly-33 _ J. MAKTIM
TT ~ Dr. Si-T. PBIGG,
SURGEON DENTIST, re- upectfulLy offers his professional services to thecltlzann of Lancaater and ita vicinity, aflfloring them that all operations entrusted to hia care, either In OPERATIVE OR MECHANICAL DENTISTRY
wili be executed In a thoroughly Bclentiflc maun'ir.
OFFICE—EaHt KingiStreet, lat Door Ea«t of Kli.g'M Grocery.
J3*Befora to ProffiHaorH, C. A. Harris, A. A. Blandy P. H. Aauteu, of Baltimore College of Dental Surgery
POT 6 Bm-i9
STOVES! STOVES!!
JUST YccinvGd, rlirect from the 5Ianu- fac'ur^r^ a large aud heantiful a^nortnient ofall the laiwl and'uii).--! improved CnOK. I'ABLOll, OFFICK AND NIKR PLATE STOVES, now In market. They are the -xcluHire .\>:nula for the nal" of the celi-braied
WILLIAM PENN nnd GALLAGHER'S Double Oven Morning Star Cook Stoves,
lu which ihsy wuutd call particular altention, uod lu¬ vlte tliepitiiMc topxamluo th^imtock h'ifjre purchasing elftewhoro Mho, v. genHral aMorHnent of HaniWHr*", Cuilfry, I3.;;i.iiDf,* Mdt«rlal.T.>..N, SrtJillery and Coach- PINKEItTO.V it Sf.AVMAKEK,
-Wt. ;t7 .\orlli UurtHPi St.. ab-ivc Orm
overleaps & generation or two. Often a child graat things. He compared it to David going
forth with sling and atone3 to combat with the gigantic Goliah. Piling up the elo¬ quence, he reached the climax at last, and oried out; "And then, then, fellow citizens, what did David do?" " Fit a duel, sir," came in shrill toues from one of the assembly.
"Come here, my little Eddy," said a gen¬ tleman to a youngster of seven yeara of age, while sitting iu the parlor wbere a large com¬ pany was assembled; ''do yoa know mef"— " Yea air, I think I do." " Who am I ? let me hear." "Yoa are the man who kiased aister Angeline laat night iu the parlor." Angeline fainted.
"No air: Mias Jones." I breathed freely. It was not my Edith ; but she would probably be a bridesmaid, and I should see her in all tbe virgin pnrity and whiteness of mtislin, light as gossamer. I was again happy and fall of expectation.— What would I have given to be invited tothe breakfast, and called on to propose the brides¬ maids' healths ? ..
In another moment another carriage arri¬ ved, and this time two India muslin bride- I maids descended—one I recognized as of the | trio on the Bands, but not my Edith. When would she come ? I crossed the road again to Jehu'the second, and remarked in a very unconcerned way, that I believed Mr. Wal¬ singham lived here.
" No, sir," he replied firmly ; " Mr. Jones-'i " Then Miss Walsingham ia on a viait to Mr. Jones?" I, by way of conjecture, ob¬ served,
"Dare say she may be," said tbe charioteer; •'there's a deal of company in the house."
Carriage after carriage drove np. I had now counted six bridemaids, and Edith was not among them. But, heavens! what is this?— Edith leaning on the arm of an elderly gen¬ tleman—Edith arrayed as a bride, ragtliug in glacis ailk, covered from head to foot with Brussels lace, and veiled. 0, Edith—Edith Walsingham !
I gazed for one moment at the carriage as it rolled away; I would have followed to the church, but had not strength to do so. reeled home, and threw myself on my sofa.— The plain landlady called her plainer daugh¬ ter; they held a consultation in the passage, and were sending off the very plain servant for a doctor, when I rose aod rebuked them, and then lay down again, I slept I soarcely know how long—I hardly remember auy thing more of that awfal day.
Next morning, though I ate no breakfast, I tried to read the Times, and got as far as the supplement and the marriages, among which I saw—"On Satnrday, 17th, at Paul's Church, Sandhaven, by the Rev. Peter Jones, uncle of the bride, Mary, eldest danghter of Alexander Jones, Esq., to Percy Batkin, Eaq. of the Middle Temple, barriater-at-law."
"Mary Jones, now Mary Batkin," I solilo¬ quized—"what could have induced her to in¬ scribe on the aand that other name?"
Two hours after, I purchased a copy of the Sandhaven Herald, in which was the following paragraph: " We rejoice to atate that Percy Batkin, Esq., the celebrated author of many works of fiction, led to the hymeneal altar on Satnrday last, the eldest daugbter of our res¬ pected fellow-townsman, Alexander Jones, Esq. Mr. Batkin is, we understand, upon the point of giving to the world of lettera
bears a atriking resemblance to a grand-pa' rent, without u lineament of parental fea¬ ture.
The aota of the prisoner were admitted by his counael, and the que.=ition of guilt or in¬ nocence, reated on this—was he insane or not ?
Tbe use which we wish to make of theae developements is practical, and is of high im¬ portance. A wise and stern medical treat¬ ment would bave deferred, if not prevented, the combination of events. And how ?
The prisoner was under the habitual influ¬ ence of constipation, and au anodyne, which intensified this constipation every hour, while the principle of the medical practice in this case, was to let the bowels take care of them¬ selves—which they did not do. This indi¬ vidual was never seen by his business asso^ ciates without a cigar in his mouth; he smoked fifteen or twenty a day. The imme¬ diate effect of smoking tobacco falls on the brain, excites it; during that excitement he could''not sleep, aud the reaction went so low that he could not sleep; only a troubled re¬ pose was possible during tbe brief transition from ono to the other. During the excite¬ ment, the brain ran riot in the direction of the opportunity, and expended its energiea iu that direction, but during the reaction' power was uot left to carry on the bodily functions.
The effect of conatipation is to thicken the blood, to make it more impure ; hence more unfit for healthful purposes. The more im¬ pure the blood ia, the thicker does it be¬ come, the slower is its progress, and if noth¬ ing is done to alter this state of things, stag¬ nation aud death take place. Stagnation means accumulation, for the moment the blood stops in any part of the body, the com¬ ing current fiowtng in, causes an accumula¬ tion, precisely aa in the closing of a oanal gate, or the damming up of a stream. Thia accumulation in the blood vessels distends them, causes them to occupy more room than nature designed, confiequently they must encroach on their neighbors. The neighbors of the blood vessels are the nerves; hence the nerves are pressed against; that pressure gives what we call "pain." As there are nerves everywhere, a point of a needle cannot be placed against the surface of the body without some pain, which shows the universality of nerve presence; hence, we may have pain anywhere, and will have pain if there is pressure. This accounta for the steady pain iu the head. The excite¬ ment of the day sent the blood to the brain too fast, the repose of the night was too short to allow of ita removal; besides the energies of the syatem had been overtaxed, and there was not power enough left to remove atnat- ural accumulation, let alone the extraordi¬ nary.
But there ia a law of our body, whereby pressure from any cause not only gives pain, but may destroy the part pressed againati and couaume it, by dissolving it into a gas¬ eous and fluid substatice, which in this con¬ dition is conveyed out of the body. A band put arouud an arm of a foot in circumfer¬ ence, will, if tightened every day, iu a time not long, reduce the circumference to aix inches. Constant pressure cannot be exerted against any portion of the human body with¬ out impairing its structure, or caasingi its diminution and final destruction. These are principles of universal admission. They are first truths in medicine. From some unknown caaae, this accumulation and pressure was determined to a particular portion of the brain, where fearlessness of consequences ifi situated j and we believe, if the priaoner'a brain conld be examined this day, that por¬ tion of it, moat probably small in tbe begin¬ ning, would be found almost wholly wanting' having been destroyed by long continued pressure, or to be of abnormal structure.
We believe that a medical treatment, which would have sternly interdicted the use o'^ the cigar materially at firat, and gradually thereafter, until its final extinction, together with securing a natural condition of daily acting bowels, with a plain and aubat&ntial diet—and kept him there—would have aaved him and all hia from the subsequent calami¬ ties. Artificial excitements, whether from tobacco, opium, or alcohol, if largely perse¬ vered, will work ruin to mind, body and soul. It is right that it should he ao. Om¬ nipotence bas ordained it. If a man is in a phyaical condition which impels him to do what is illegal, or if he be iu a mental condi¬ tion which impels him to do what is iUegali the question whether he is to be punished or not depends upon the manner in which he became aubjected to that oondition. If such condition be the result of birth, or by a falli or stroke, or other occurrence out of hia con¬ trol, ha shonld go free of penal suffering; but if he placed himself iu tbat condition by the unbridled indulgence of his appetites or his passions, he ought to be made to suffer a just penalty, whether he knew that such indulgences tended to such a result or not. It ia a man's duty to inform himself of phys¬ iological as well as civil law. Igsor&nce of the former ought not to work his escape, any more than ignorance of the latter does; oth.-
TAVEBN STAIID POR BENT.
THE subscriber offers for rent the Tav¬ ern stand, waii known ae tho STONE TAVEHN, uow in the occnpancy of Jacob Bedaeclcer, sitnate on the Walnut Bottom Hoad, aeven mllea weat of Carlisle. The property conHiats of a largo and commodlons STONB HOUSK, and Sta¬ bling sufficient for Blxty horsas, all in complete order, together withfeedl
ing Lota, Orchard and Garden. Thei _
property la abundantly supplied witli the best apring water.
Also for rent, a Wagon-maker's ahop, and Tenant House and Lot. Tbeuitnationfor a good me¬ chanic cannot ba snrpoBsed In the State. For termil, ap¬ plv personally or by letter to the suhacrlber, at Carliale Pn. JOHNSON MOORE.
jan 14 lm-7
There ia a man out West so forgetful of faces, that his wife is compelled to keep a wafer atuck on the end of her nose, that he may distinguish her from other ladies, but this does not prevent him from making ooca¬ sional mistakea.
"How to make Ieeche8bite,"i3 the caption of an artiole going the rounds of the papers. The beat way, says an exchange paper, un¬ questionably, is to present to them a first rate note at thirty days, with an offer of five per cent, a mouth. They will bite instantly, and never stop sucking either, until they get the whole,
A new kiud of telegraph has been sugges ted—namely: to place a line of womeu at the diatance of fifty paces from each other, and then commit to tbe first the newa to be trans¬ mitted as ^profound secret. It is confidently thonght that there would be greater diapatch secured by auch a plan than by any telegraph now iu operation. We don't pretend to say how it would "work" though.
The Albany Knickerbocker gives the fol- fowing recipe to deatroy fliea: Take a board¬ ing houae pie, cut it into thin alices, and lay it where the lusecta can have full access to it. tu less than fifteen minutes the whole coboodle of them will be dead with the colic." " Ma," said a little urchin, peeping from beneath the bed-clothea, " I am cold ; I want somecoveronthebed." " Lie still, my dear," said the mother, "until your sister comes from church ; she has got the comforter for a crinoline."
It has often been remarked lhat children will ask questions, which even the wisest are puzzled to answer. " Mother," eiclaimed Charley, " how big waa I wheu you was a little girl?" Waan't that a poser.
" What in the worid put matrimony into yonr head?" " WeU, the fact is, Joe, I waa getting abort of shirta t"
Woman ia like ivy—the more you are ra¬ ined the closer ahe clings to you. A vile old bachelor adds: Ivy is like womau—the closer it clings to you the more you are ruined,— Poor rule that don't work both waya. Knock down that bachelor.
I say, John, where did you get that loaf¬ er's hat ?" " Please yer Honor," said John, "it'a an old one of year's that Missis gave me yesterday, when you were to town."
A " foine" young geutleman, turning swift¬ ly on his heel, ran his head against a young lady. He inatantly put himself in a position to apologize. " Not a word," said the quick¬ witted maiden; " it isn't hard enough to hurt anybody." The coxcomb frowned and sloped.
" This ere animal ia of the real atock, mum, and cheap at thirty dollara." Young widow—"It's a sweet pretty darling—black and white—bat in my present bereavement you must procure me one entirely black.— This one will do very well in about six montha for half mourning."
A clergyman, engaged in catechizing the village achool, asked a youngster, " What his godfathers and godmothera did for him." "Idon't know, please your reverence," re- j oined the lad; " they've done nothing for me yet."
FOB BEWT.
£110M the first day of April next, that large THREE-STORY BRICK BUILDING, M±^ erly cccupled as Hohley'a Hotel, In Centre Riii Square. 53*Enquire at the offlce of the Inland-JJllL Inxurance and Deposit Company, dec :il ^ tt-'i
POB BENT,
THE STOREROOM, WARKUOUSE and DWELLING, on the sontli-wetit corner "^" of Centre Square, Strasburg, now occupied by
McCr.oy & BtACK, and for many yeara Kept by
the subticrlher. Il Ih iu every way calculated for doing A good hn^tnexii.aDd la one of the best tttauda in the county.
Also, A two-Story BRICK DWELLING, near the centre nf the town. WM. Sl'ENGEU.
83"Both the ahova proportieis are for sale, if porsona prefer bnying. ^ decSl-tf-Ji
A Eailroad Property to Let.
TIIE under.sigJied oH'ertolet, fora term of yearrt, their KAILROAD PROPERTY, locited in tbe city of Lancaster, on the Philadelphia and Co¬ lnmbla Kailroad, one halftsquare weut o f the depot, and adjoining property of Bitner k Bro'a. Steam Mill.
The property conHlsts of A LOT OF GRODND. ISO foet deep by <>7 feet wide, havinfC thereon a OA'B A^D A HALF STORT BUILDING, 86 feet deep by .% feet wide, also a Railroad Siding, 162 feet in length, leaving nearly one half of the lot racani, irhlch Im of ea«y ac- ceuK for teama. The property Ih well adapted for a bualneuii requiring a Itailroad conTeoience. For fnrther parlicularM enquire of the enhxcriberfi, oa the precalftex.
Jan7-lf-6 KONIOMACUER & BADMAN.
CITY ELECTION. -vrOTlCE IS HEREBY GIVEN to
j ^ the froemen of the city of Lancaster, that agree ably to law, an election will he held on TUESDAY February 3d. 18.57, at thepublic liour^e of Adam Tront, in the Norlh Weat Ward, for Urn persons qualifled 11 serre as membem of tbe Houise of Hepresentativee of thiH Commouwealth, to he members of tho Common CouncU for one year; and one person qualified to eerre of a member of tbe Senate of this Commonwealth, to be a member of the Select Council, for the term of throe ye&rd; andone person to aeira hi* City Constable for one year.
At the pnblic honne of Anthony Lechler, In the North East Ward, for fonr persons qualified to serre aa jnem- berit of tbe House of RepreaeiitatiTeii of thin Common¬ wealth, to he member* of the' Common Council for one year; and on" pentoa qnalifiei} to servo as a member of the Senate of this Commonn-valtb, lo be a member of the Select Council, for the term of three yeare; and one perwn to eerve ai City Constable for one year.
At the public houee of Mpt. Rachel Miller, in the South Eoflt Ward, for three pereona qualiSed to eerre ae members of the House of KepredenlatlTes of this Commonwealth, to he membera of the Common CouncU for one year; and one percon qualified to nerre an a memberof the Senate of tbla Commonwealth, to be a member of the Select Council, (the South Eaet Ward and South Weat Ward in conjunction, elect one member of Select Council for three years;) and one person to serve OS City Cootttabte for one year.
At the public house of Lewis Urban k Son. in tbe South West Ward, for three persons qunllHed to serve as members of the Honse of Representatives of thie Commonwealth, to be members uf the Common Council for One year; and one person to serve as City CoDdtahle for one year.
At tho same lime and places, will he elected one per- Hon to serve as High Constable of the city of Lancaster, for ono year.
The membersof Select Council whoHe term of ofiice expires on said day of eleclion are Robert H. Long, Wil¬ liam Oorrecht and Ghftrlea Oillesple.
J. ZIMMERMAN, Mayor. Mayor's Office, Jan. 10,1657. jan U-td-T
CITY ELECTION.
NOTICE IS HEKRBY GIVKN, that an election will he held at the public house of Adam Trout, in the Norlh West Ward ; at the pnbllc house of Urban & Sen, in the South We&t Ward; at the publlfl house of Anthony Lechler, in the North EaHt Ward; and Ht tbe public bonse of Mrs. Miller, tn the Sonth East Ward. Inihe city of Lancaater.on TUESDAV, the 3d day of February, 1867, between the houre of 8 o'clock in tbe forenoon and 7 o'clock in tbe aflernoon, to elect one Jndge and two Inspectors for the North West Ward; one Judge and two Inspectora for the South West Ward; one Judge and two Inspectors for the North East Ward; and one Judge and two inspec¬ tors for the Sonth East Ward, to conduct the general and other elections for the current year.
The offlcera of the loat general election are requested to conduct the above electiou.
Thero will also be elected in tho North West Ward, one Alderman, aud in tb^.' Nortb East Ward two Alder¬ men to serve for five yeara.
At tbe Rame time and placea will be elected by the cititenn of LaQCsster, one Astessor ia each Ward to serve for one year.
JOHN MYER, High Conslablo.
La.vcAKTEE, January 10,1S37, Jan 14-tJ-62 .
SOAP! SOAP!! SOAP!!!
THE undersigned take this method of informing the cilizens of the City and County of Lancaster, that they bare, at a great expense, purcha¬ aed the exclusive right to tbe manufacture of a nowly iuTButed and patented
LABOE SAVING SOAP,
which, if used according to the directions accompany¬ ing each piece, will be found to exceed anything of the kind ever introduced tuto this eommuQity.
Ia using tbis Soap the laborious and painful proc-iss of mbbing and wearing out clothes and fingers ou tbe wash-board is entirely obviated.
Clothes washed with this So^p ueed no boiling, which amounts to a saving of nearly the wages of a washer¬ woman.
Ladies talcing In washing will find it greatly to their advantage In every point of view, to Dbe our patent Soap.
No danger need he apprehended as to clothes being Injured by using this Soap, as there is not aningredienl In it that has the l<>aKt tendency in that direction.
We have made arrangements with nearly all the principal Orocern in the city for the sale of It, and as uoon At we can maunroctnre a rnfQcfent quantity we shall take measures to supply Country Merchants.
For sale wholesale at the Manufactory, corner of Daks and Chestnat etreetti, LancaRler, Ps.
Having full confidence In the truth of what wq ai^tuirt we ask a fair and impartial trial of tbe Soap, and we will risk tfae result.
Remember, this Ik no htimhwj,
jan M 6m-7 AMER & FAlHBR.
DE. JOHN McCAItliA,-DENTIST,
No. 4, East King Street, LANCASTEH. B<iuoBB, Feb. 18. I34P.
JOHN MeOALLA, D. T). S., atten- ded twu full coursoH at Lectores, and graduated with high honors in the Baltimore CoU Lege of Dental Snrgery, and from his uotiriog energy, close applicatioa and study of tbe branches taught in Haid Inatitution, together with exhibitiona of skill in the practice of his profession, we feel no he«ltH(ioa in ro> commending him as worthy of public conSdencg and patronage. C. A. Hasbis, M. D., D. D S..
Professor of Princlplea and Practice in the BaUlmore College of Dental Sargery.
C. 0. Conr, D. D. 3., Prof, of OperatiTB and Mechanical Dentinlry, Baltimore College of Deatal Surgery.
BOARD OF EXAMINERS: E. Pahmlet, M. D., New York. K. B. Oabdette, M. D., Philadelphia. S. P. Hdlliqek, M. D., Wheeling, VirgiuiH. E. TowM8E>D, D. D. 5., Pbiladelphla. E. MATiroKD, M. D.. Waahington, P. C. sep 17 ly-42
DB. wT H. WTTMOB, OF THE CITY OF PHILADELPHIA, ~CX7^HKRE he has been iu successful
T T practice for a number of yearn, received bis education at the best Medical College In the United States, aud had the experience and practice in tbe dif¬ ferent hospitals for several years; a member of the An¬ alytical Medical Institute of New York, and late Medi¬ cal Sorgeiia ofthe U. S. Navy, now alluiii himself to the public to attend any professional culls.
The purest medlcinea aln-ayn on hand direct from tho bout Laboratories of our coantry and the Botanical Gar¬ dens of theworld. No patent medicines prescribed or recommended. Mediclnen used only which will not break down tho constitntion, hat will renovate the sys¬ tem from all injuries it has snstaincd I'rom mineral medicines. Chronic and difficult diseases must he treat¬ ed upon analytical principles; whiehls to know and ascertain wbat disease is. Its nature and character re< quire a knowledge of the chemical conbtituent. of every solid and fluid of the human body—the chauges thosa solids and flnids are capable of undergoing. To know wbat medicines to employ to cure dltieases, requires a kaovledga of the chemical constltueotn of all ageotn employed in m>idicinex, and if we are In posFeNsioa of this knowledge, il'is pusMble to cnre any disease—no matter of how long fitaudlog—and leave tfae patient In a healthy and perfectly cared coadition!
DrsPEPsiA, that dtRtros.-)ing disease and fell destroyer of health and happiseu, undermining the constitution, and yearly carrying thousands to nalimely graves, can most emphatically be cured.
RnevxxTisst, )q any form or condiiiou, chronic or acute, warranted curable; Epilepst, or falling sicli uesa, atl chronic and stubbora coseu of Female Diseases rad. Jcally removed; Salt Rhedm and every description of ulcerationn; Piles and Scbofulocs Diseases, which have hafQed all prevloni mndlcal skill, can be cured by my treatment, wben tlie constitution ix not exhausted. I do say all diseases {yea, CONSUMPTION) cau he cured.
CANCER CVRED WITHOUT THE KNIFE. I will remain in my ofilcd on Wednesdays and Sittur- daye from 9 o'clock, A. M. to 3 P. M., to accoromodalB patients frpm a distance, and consult In the the Engllf'h aud German languages. Will make visits to any dis¬ tance if required. Maybe addresaed by letter. Prince Street near Orange, Lancaster city. pa.
nov 5-ly-49 W. H. WITMOR. M. D.
JOHN GYGEE & CO., Bankers, LANCASTER, PA.,
ALLOW Five per ceut. Iiiti;ru.-iL per annum on the dally balances of rttf^uUr dtipuni- tors; the whole or anyportlon of balance being SL'IJ- JECT.TO CHECK, without notice.
Allow flva per cenl. Interest per annum ob tlnjir Cit- tlflcates of Deposit, issued for any lungtb of time orer thirty days.
Depositors not drawing Interest, will alwavn li« ac¬ commodated in proportion to tbe vulue uf tboir accnunts. Stocka bought and soid on commlisntu only. Uncurrent money bought at lowe-t rati^H. Collections promptlymade.aud dr.tfli! dmwu uu I'hil¬ adelphia, New Tork and Baltiui-iri.
The members of the firm ar>: iuaivldually llablH for all the obligations of JobL 0ygrrr i I'.n.. couninuug of JOHN GYGER. BENJ ESHLEMAN, DAVID BAIR. HENKT MUSSELMAN. RoBBor Clar«.-*(>.\, ('a-litt-r. uov a>:tia-.j2
~ iiANCASTEB COtJNTY
EXCHANGE & DEPOSIT OFFECK.
Cor. of East King and Duke Streets, BET. THE COI;rt HOUSE AND Si'i:ECHEK*.S HciTfil,
LANCASTER. CITY.
JOlIiM K. KKKDA CO., psiy inlLiest on deposits at thti fullowiug rates :—
5^ per cent, for one year and longer. 5 fio. " 30 daya " do.
a3~ALS0, buy aud aoll Rwal Est»l^ and St'-L-kn ..n couimlKMloD, uegotlate louus, kc , kc
t3^he undcrslKnud an^ iudividually liablo lu ilie ertftiil of their estates, fur all the dt'|ni,.ii.i acd uthwr-h- Ugaltonsof John K. Reed Ac Co.
JOHN K. REED. AMOS. s. UENDE(tH<'.\.
DAVID SHUi.TZ. tr^.^A(: E. HIESTEK.
^dec^S _ _ _ __ _ ¦'-¦¦
Collectionof Powers of Attorney and Forwarding of Emigrants.
JACOB ITKRZOa. the wcll-kiiowu Merchant, No. 61 ¦{, North Queeu ntreet, Lancaster, attends to
I. The Forwarding of Persons from every part of Eu¬ rope to tbe principal Forts and also to tbe interior of America, on the most rea«0nable terms, which can bs ascertained hy applying to him.
.3. He makes Paymenta and Collections in all parts of Europe and America, and negotiatei' BiIIh of Evcbiiuge for desired amounts and time on the priucipal commnr- cial places of Europe and America.
I'owers of Attorney for anyconnty iu Euntpe execu¬ ted aud collected hy him in the most careful manner.
Letters lo the German Laut;uage, wrilten by the ersigaed with promptness and despatch.
npril 2-i.f-lR JACnn HEkZtVl.
oct 1 __ tf^ll
Stoves! Stoves!—Great Stove Depot
THK uiidoi'.si-jiinrl ruspootfully cull tlio at ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦' -. -
utlPiiiioi. iifihe public lu tiifir Inrge rt>t"irlineul of
(JUOKINO STOVE-. 1'AKLOR, U.\K K')03I, vV-'t and NINB IM.aIK STOVES, whicti vra urr. m- Sf^~j .:.;iviugttl!;h_-i:iii,;. All jier*.ns wai.tlug.Stovert*^^^ Will pleasftcal! and lowkforthBiiiwclrea.as Ihey **' ^ wiil find tbn greMla^^ aiMjrltiicut uf f^rovos iu Ihe ciry.
Wo have Ja^t ri Cooks:
Warnick Glob^, Girard, Astor, Cliampitiii, Welcome, Wm. Peiiij, Empire Stat**, Banner, Keystone, Delaware, Sammer Baker, Great Republi.;, City Kauge, Eocbantre.^d, Liberty, Flat Top, Black Dinmoujl, Mayflower. Vernon. Hathaway
^•i a fn'l BUpply of the following
Watches, Clocks and Spectacles. ^AHM & JACHSOiV ¦ ¦
lit their ^
No. ts North ^^,
Dr. Waylan's New Drug Store, No. 60 North Queen Street.
THK undersigned respectfully tinnoun. cesthathflhasopouedhis NEW DRUO ~
SIORE ESTABLISHMENT, with a vwy ex- tenbive and complete stock of Drugs, Medi¬ cines, Chemical*, Perfumery anl Fancy articles—all fresh and pure—which wlll he sold at the lowest market pricea.
This stock embraces every article usually kept in a first class Prug Store, and neither labor nor expense has been spared In fitting up the estahlishment, lo insure the preservation of the Druga in tho best condition, is well as to secure the convenience and comfort of tlie cUAtomera.
A complete assortment of materials used by the Den¬ tal Profession can also he had at tbe store of the sub¬ scriher.
Au Improved Sodi*, or Mineral Water Apparatus has been Introduced, the fountains of which are made of Iron, with Porcelain lining on their interior surface, freeing them from alt liability to taint the water with any metalic poison, which hasbeen heretofore so great an objection to the copper fonntains. Those wbo wish to enjoy these refreshing beveragea cau do so at thiJi establishment without fear of being poisoned with del¬ eterious matter. The entire establishment has been alpced under the superiBtendenca of a most competent and careful Druggist, who boa bad many year>t of ex¬ perience in tbe l>rug and Prescription bnsiness, in firr^i class hoQses in Philadelphia and Cincinnati.
The undersigned feela confident that he is in evrry way prepared lo give entire satisfaction to his cufttom- era, therefore a sliara of public patronage is fio^lcired.
junell-tf-2a JOHN WAYLANS, D.S.
Watch and Jewelry Sti , ,^
Queen street, Lancaster, respectfully inform 'ij- their friends and the public iu gitueral, that3;^j,_ they continue to keep a large and well nelected uncart meut of Ooo. b ia their line.
They are constantly receiving additions to their stock, from tbe cities or New York and Philadelphia, and Hat¬ ter themselves tbat they paSMo^fs facilit'es whicb euable thflni to offer inOucemeuts uol often met witli out of larger cities.
Theirstook conslslri In part of Gold and Silver Chro- notueter, DupIex,L ever, Lepine, Eugllr-li and Quartier Watches, Hunting Cotied and open face with richly carved and plain cases; Clocks, (8 day k2Q hour,) Brasn, Alarm, Lever andother kinds.
A large assortment of Spectacles. Gold, Silver, .Sleel, German Silver and plated—both near nighted uod otharh, embracing every varluty, and sold by the dozen oraiu- gle pair al city prices- Jewelry, Gold aud Silver I'enclls, fiold Peas, (wltli or withuut Cased.) Ladies aud Geutrt Breaat PiU". Fingt-r RiugM, Ear Rings, Guard Chains, LocUets, kc
SILVER WARK.
Our stock of Sliver aud Plated Waro is the large |
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