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^SMm y-:s VOL. XXXIV. LANCASTER, PA., WEDNESDAY, JULT 18, 1860. NO.^#r I-TTB 1.1 ¦max) B-r J. A. HIK3TAND, J. F. HOBBR. P. HECKERT, D9DBR TEB MRU OF JNO. A. HIESTAND & CO. OrriCI IH BOBTH QOBES STEBBT. THE EXAMINKK & HERALD /• PublUhed trakly, at Two Dollars a Year. ADVERTISEMENTS wiH bo inserted at the rata of $1 00 per sqaare, of teu llnea, for three Inser- tlona or less; and 25 centa per square for each additional Insertion. Advertisements exceedlag 10 lines will be charged S cenls per line for tha let losortlun, and 3 cenls per line for each soboeqaent InserUon. Bosluasa Advertise meuta Inserted by the qnarter half year or year, will be charged aa fullows; S month*. 6 months. 12 montht. OneSqnare 8^00 $5 00 Twu " " "" ^cijlnmn }i " 1 •¦ BUSINESS NOTICES lneerted before Marriages and Deaths, doable the regular rales. ICJ-All adverUsing accounta are considered coUecta- tile at the expiration of half the period contracted for. Tranblaut adverllcementt;, CAsn. 6 00 10 00 ISOO so 00 8 00 18 00 26 00 es 00 12 00 26 00 43 00 80 00 AFXES SCHOOL. Tlie Fhadows have paesed o'er tbe dial's fare, Doiil four In tbe Hfternuon. Aod lbe c^ondt' bnve d >aied wltb pearly grace All day oVr the fields of June. Hovr lbe boor baa cume wben the bcbool Is ont. Ami the aicb'uH. wllh happy glee. Lexvtng their gramman* aud i^laies abont, Away Irum tbe scbuoLhi.usn See. Some linger uot for lbe twllighl shades, Bnt quietly homeward ko. While m^me hnstu im to the forest glades, Where bw««t wild blossomB grow. Charley apd Ned. aud mo^t of lho boys, Troop uff where the rhadowa fall. Tu May nuili dark with a merry noise At a b<dt>ieroa« gama o.'ball; Harry auu Georgu, wbo have qnarrelled all day, l.eap over the meadow barn Tu '¦ llKhl it out" iu the old fashioned way Till Ibe ^nubo.1^llHbr*ak io "Marw*' Their ardor crow* dim ; ihey bave "fought like men," Aud Harry hat* won the dny. And grxudly furgivi g each other then. There's nona to loving as they I Willie, thn dreamer, tlealfi off to the brook. Wbere the alders nnd Uax-is grow. And reads from th" leaves o! an aocleut book LeiEeud- ao-t tal«is of lung iigu; How blsb.>Him ihiuhH»t Ihe rhymes drawn out Froui depthrtof pasntua and palo, Anhlsthungui»d-won through maz a of donht. Which the pi«i malies clear aealn ; Then he cuunls Ais dreams un his flngers o'er.. In Chxu-«i*Hor (.pans rVruJe. And deems life's fruil batb yielded ils core, Ashe hopes, and rhymes, after scbool. Six lillle maidens fly off lo tbe woods, bbuaiiug and siuuiag suncs and glees. While ibeir langhter bahbles In rippling floods, Floallug np tu the rore>t Irew ; Tbey Iri.tuien the hara aud flie rabbit meek Fruoi tbeir haocln in lbe waviug grass. And bro-h the dew frum Iha wild grape's cheek, Wbeu it ki^^es them aa tbey pats; Carrie and Jenoie bit long in tbe gUde. Leaning uver the deep, clear pools. And weaviug lhe moss in a soft green braid TeU bluiiea of ghosu aud gboais. Bnt Llizle goes wandering duwn tbe lane. With a wiHlul luuk la ber eyes. Which are dewy and Mjft as tha sammer rain When it lalU from the tnmmer i-kles; And ber heart beatn fast as her flaps grow »low. For the p»sres. along hi-r way. Thu graveyard where dear onex are sleeping su— Father and mol ber. ihera they Uy— And the learo duw over her patient eyes, Wheio lbe ^baduw^ lay bruwn and cool. For there's no one to greet her with swaet snrprise In her lonely home after ^chool. Bnt t-lowly the daylight wanes away, And lhe chiidieu. with tired feet. Wenry of freedom and Iloi-hed witli play, UatiM tu the bome ligbln burniog swee'. How itdtd they grow as tbe evening breeze RubUing pleals ihroogb tba t-waylcg KraRs, Aid eiari ai- tbe sbadoWH fnll from the trees, Creeping over tbem ae tht-y pass ; A momen' tbey pause at lbe well Worn gate. Clicking its laicb In the i«-iiigbt cool. To shout a "good-uiLb " lu their cumrades Iale. Whu bave tarried too lone after schuul. lom ; bat ofcoarae we muat wait till our yaar of moarnlDg Is orer." Oar eyes met eaoh otber, and we smiled. We mado no confessions in words, bat the trnth oawe home to d3 both that we had Uved so long oat of the world, it would be a work of more magnitade than we had realized to go into sooiet/ and ohoose the hooaehold angel we both coveted, Aud 80 it went on for another year—the old hoaae qaiet and silent as ever; the old ser¬ vants; and "Smith Brothers" growing old together. Oar father had been dead some- thing over a twelvemonth when there oame to ns a letter sapersoribed in a female hani3. It waa a very nnasaal event, aud we speculate J a little as to its possible origin before we 12 oo ; opened it. It proved to be from a lady of \ whom we had often heard, as oar mother's '' most intimate friend. This was what it eaid: "I write to yoa, gentlemen, as snrely Mary Chelmsford may feel privileged to write to the ohildrea of Margaret Smith. Yoar mother aud I loved each other wilh a tendt'mess deep¬ er tbau sisters know. - Atl tbat one tvomau coald have done or ventared for anoiher she would have done for me, or 1 for her. Since ahe died I have aeen neither of yoa, bat I re¬ member the promise of yoar boyhood. You, AbsaluDQ, had your mother's smile, and you, Abijah, yoar molher's kind eyes. I will be¬ lieve that yoa both inherit yoar mother's kind heart. At any rate, this ia my only hone — Under Heaven I have no where elno to lurn. \ 1 am dying in a atrauge place, of alow decline | —going lo join my huaband. I havt* no near '. friemU or Riudred lo look to—ouly you. I : SMITH BROTHERS. A year passed away thna. She growing re-! oonciled to her loaa, and blessing oar home with her youlh and beautv. We, alas I Iconld not ahnt my eyes to that now, ioe loving her, loviug her both of ua, de-jperately, aeoretly, almoat hopelessly. There are flowers that blossom ouly once in a oentnry, bat fervid and tropioal in their late unfolding. Love waa slow aud late iu coming to oar two lives, bnt now its sway waa absolute. Aud yet we were faith¬ fal brothera aiill. I do not think either of as dared to indulge a heartfelt longing for a sno¬ ceaa overshadowed by anch blackness of deso¬ lation as it mast bring to the other. At length I resolved to speak. She conld bat refaae me. Better to kuow at ouce that the flaming sword gaarded forever against me the gate of my longed-for Eden, than to wait afar oflf in sucb intolerable auspense. I would try my fate. I went toward her eapecial sitting room. In the paasage I met my brother, going also in the aame direotion. In an inatant it flashed upon me that his errand was identioal with my own. Come what would, no woman's love ahould divide us whom Heavea had made brothers. I went up to him and laid my hand oo his arm. '* Come with me, brother," I said, opening the library door. He followed me in and stood aileutly before the fire. I went on : "I know what your errand was, broiher—mine was the same. It was impossible that we shoald not both love her. She was the womau about wbom WB had been dreaming all onr Uvea. am uot harrassed by auy anxiety for myself. ' ^^^ oame, aud we could not but w .r^hip her. My soul 13 at rest, for I know in whom I have -. _, ^ -n i_ .^ .-i. ht Mfewd. Il.B,epr.-per.y enongh to make ' y<"^ "¦"> I- BatwearBbrothers8t.il. No my laat dajs comfortable, anri to leave a pro | other tie can sever that. Let tl3 love eacb other vidion for my only cbild, my daugbter Mar-| whatever comes." garet, who was uamed for your mother. It is I ^^ ^^^ ,„„^1, ^,it„ ^,^11 tbink my brother in ber behalf tbat I appeal lo yoa. She is ! , . . , . ,_ , ,,. not much over iwenty, for I was not married { '''S """re <>' ""' "' ^'^ '>'''"™ ">»° I- ^'^ ^^^^ until late in life, some yeara after your mother j kindled, and he .luawerad with aa earneatness died. She has a genlle, loving uature, whiuh, j ^iii^U waa almost savage : TINDEE THE SOD. Beedsof beanty lie nnder the sod— Under tbe sod la the damp and gloom~- Ho oue paaaing thair low abode Dreams of tha bidden embryo bloom. BaindropB eoftly dowoward creep, - Bonshtne plarcaa thodreary nigbt. Till their bonds ara brokea. they wake from sleep. And. prondly nufoldlng. rise to the sight; Up from tbe sod, tho cold damp sod, Tbey spriug to the world of Ught. Onder the rod He noble deeds Ulddenln erohryo many a day; Ho one ever their glory heeds TIU the covering falls away. Tbey mnat Ile la their prison long. Down lu the seal tUl the night Ib past, Slowing expanding and growing strong, TUl tba chrysalis aside Is caas; Out of the sod. the cambering sod, Tbe deeda will blossom at last. Under the Fod tbe mlght-be Ilea, Tba posfihla Ufe of truth and love, WaiUng the honrwhen it may ariae Ont of the gloom to the Ught above ; Tbe beart'o sweet blossom must fa-la In the strife; For the frnit to come must the flower fall low : The BonFs deep straggle mu«t wake It to Ufa: Its tomb must be wat wltb tears of woe; When oat Of the sod, tbe dreary sod, The mightbe in glory may grow. Under the eod all tbinga we love Lte for a saaaon, hidden la gloom; By aud by thoy will spring above, By and by tbey w U bad and bloom. Under tha sod we live on eartb, Stmggllngnp to the sunshine bright; FaUenca 1 the day wIU at last have birth; By and by we shall leave tba night; Up from tbe sod, the parUng sod, We shall arise to the light. BLTTE EYES BEHIND A VEIL. You can read upon our aigu " Smith Broth¬ ers.'' "Smith Brothers" h-ads our advertise- j menta. We have always been *' Smith Broth¬ era" at heart, except for one brief space. We are iu tbe wholeaale dry gooda h"n«, aa our faiber was before us. When he died be left us hia store aud his busineaa, aud" Smith Brothera" took tha place of the old sign— "Jonathan Smitb." We were nol young when our fatber depart¬ ed thia Hfe. Absalom waa thirty-five, and my brother Abijah was thirty-three. Oar motber died wheu we were ij ere childr.3n, aud her last charge, aa they say in novels, was to lova each other, and try and console fatber. We can remember her very diatincUy, botb of na. She was a fair liltle woman, wiih a pale face, aud gentle eyes of a sort of brownish blue. Her voice w.13 soft and low, and she loved us aa no oue will love ua again. To tbia day I can recall ber cooing, mur¬ murous intouationa as sbf- called ua by a moth¬ er's thousand eudearing nam^-s; the warm clasp of hnr soft arms ; the sweetn-sa of her amilea; the delicaty of ber beaaty. So t-an Abijah. It is not strange that after her death, aa our livea dspau'led from iio-hood towards man- booii, our mother, aa we remembered her, be¬ came to our dreaming fancies the type of all that was lovely in woman. The futnre wife, of whom wo both dreatue^i, was always a Ht¬ tle fail creature, witb brownish blue es^^, sweet voii^e, aud lender smile. We used lo talk about her freely to each other, and the ono who found hia mate Srst was to marry a id take his brother lo live wiib him. It was a queer Hfrt whicb we led, all throagh onrboybcoil aud youug mauhood. ThM ser¬ vants who had lived wiih ua iu my mother'd lime were still with us at my father's deaib, two alaid, charcb-goicg sjiuaiers,aU lines and angles, a gray-hatred serving man, who looked like the very incaruatiou of the family re sped abilitv. B--3idea iheaH we bad no bou^ekeMper. My faiber did not like a fitratiger about the bouse, aud he himself bestowed upon the domeatio af fails the slight amouut of supervision neces¬ aary, until I became old enoagh to relieve him. We went to school nntil we were sis- teen, bat we were shy boys, and, besidea each other, made no intimaie frieuda. When we were aixteen onr father t >ok us iuto hia store. This pleased ua vastly better thau a long school life. We were contem- plaiive ratber tban comtunnicalive, aud we naed to like to sit, wben the day'a work ivas over, and look from an upper wiudow down the harbor aud watuh the ships coming homo, bearing to temperate New England mu-ks and spices aud essences; sbawls aud robes wrought witb many a strange Eastern device ; hims of accadas and ludian palma and dusky women uuder tbem. I apeak for us botb ; oar tastea were aa oue taste; wbat one liked the other liked alao. We used lo associate tbe geulle woman of our dreama with our orieutal fan¬ cies. She Phould wear tlia bright hued silks; fold her litile figure iu the quaint, ricb shawls; bear the odors of the spicea iu ber soft hair and tbe folds of her garmeuta. But when my father died and we had come along inlo the thii ties, we were no nearer tbe dream-wife thau in onr boy-hood. We saw no company save the people we met iu our basiness. Year in and year out, no female footstepa ligbter and quicker tban Jaue'a and Ilepsibab's «ver wandered np and dowu the staira, in and out of the rooms of our spacious, old-fashioned bonse. We dreamed of the fu¬ tare stiil, with the shy teudernesa of our boyhood. We did not at all realize that we were growiug old, growing a'vay from tbe pos sibiliiies of youth and beauty and tendemeaa. Onr lifa bad bean so quiet, so barren of events that it aeeifed short, uncouBcions of the hos¬ tages which time was leaving witu us iu the shape of gray hairs and wrinkles. It waa a sudden shock, rather than a bitter grief wheu oor father died. His heart bad been bttried, tweuty-five yeara ago, iu the ftrave of onr mother, and since tbat time, thoagh kind and just to all, there had been no snn to mell for bim the ice of life's long wiu¬ ter. We honored him, but we never got near enough to love bim. There waa a saddening seoBe of loss and absence when we looked at his vacant chair at home, or in hia coantins- Toom, when we saw "Smith Brothera" on the sign, in place ot the honored name wbich had hang there for forty years, but there was none of the anguish of desolation whicb rends tbe heart, when one is Uken whom we love, who loved as. *' It would not have been right to marry while father lived," I said to Abijah, one even¬ ing aa we sat by the library fire. " It would have pained him to bring a wife home here where mother died. Bat now " ** Yes, I think it U timo hqw, brothvr Absa- save at her father'a deatb, haa never yet been subjected to anyof the harsh discipline of : life. It is from thia that I beg yon to save her. She will not suffer from any bodily wants, l-ut do nut iet her eonl starve. Do not let ber feel heraelf friendless, lonely and; lovelesa iu iife. By thia time oue or hoth of j yoa muat aureiy have cho.^en some gentle 1 woman to blei^s your home, who will not re¬ fase a mother's whole welcome to Mary Chelmsford. I will not urge my entreaty. I know that to uame it at all to yonr mother's sons will be aufficient, ifyou bave itin your power to comply with it. I am able to write no more, but I hope to hear from you before I go hence. Address, Mary Chelmsford, at Oswego." We were of one mind and one heart iu tbe matter, my brotber and I. If Mra. Chelmsford wonld confide her to our care, tbe danghter of our mother's friend should seek uo further for a bome. I do not think tbe proapect. at first afforded either of us much plea mre. Ayoung lady in onr very quiet Imase would sadiy dis- luib our wonted qniet, especially if she were foud of gayety, and wanted to go into society. Bat neither of us felt any hesitation as to what was to be done. We resolved not to trust to the delays and chauces of a tetter. Oue of as would remain at home, to saperin¬ tend buaineas aud make ready for the recep- tion of the young lady and her mother, if we found Mrs. Chelmsford able lo travel. The other was to proceed at ouce to Oawego. iMy brother insisted that this latter duty belonged to me as the elder, and I began my jouruey the next morning. Wben I reached tbe village among the lakes I fouud the invalid more feeble thau I bad expected. She had evideutly not many days to live. I resolved to remaiu until all was over. She welcomed me with feverish eagerness ; entrnsled to my care all the papers which concerned her daughter's inheritance leaving the settlement of her affairs iu my banda. I had some hesitation in proposing to her that Margaret shoald reside, henceforth witb my brother and myself ; some doubt aa to wbetber she would not think us too young to receive such a war.!. I was glad to fiud that she saw uo impropriety iu it. I sappose I did not look, at thirty-six, very dangerously youtbfal. She accepted my ofier with tears of joy and many tbauka. It aeemed to have beeu the one pang of her death struggle tbat she must leave her daughter so lonely in the world. Now 6he waa ready to depart. " I kuow you will be a brother to her," she said, holdiug my hand the day she died " I have no more fears about ber, and I am very glad togo. Life is weary enough at best, aud ao many whom I loved have goue before —my haaband, the little boy, the firat child who died iu babyhood, and yoar motber, my truest friend. More are tbere than here." It was my place to console Margaret. She grieved for her mother, at first wiih au inten¬ sity of angoisb which no worda conld portray, but after the foneral waa over sbe grew calm amid her sadueas, and began, wilh serene pa¬ tience, to take up again her burdea of life. I remained with her at Oawego uutil I bad completed the settlement of her mother's affairs. They ha I beau badly managed, and I found that when they were reduced lo a system there would be scarcely enough left for Margaret to keep gloves on ber pretty bands I was very glad wbeu I made tbis discovery that I and no other bad charge of this basinesri. Now I could spare her from auy feeling of dependence. Every quarter I could give her an ample provision for her expenses, in such a manner that sbe should receive it as the income of her owu property. I would not have had her feel under a feather's weight of obligation to me. Wheu all our arrangements wer*'satisfacto¬ rily eompleted, I wrote to apprise my brotber of our coming, and we started for home. Abi¬ jah met us at the depot, *' My other couain !" Margaret said, pleasant¬ ly, aa ahe extended ber hand, removing all re¬ straint with her graeefnl, womanly tact. She had^called me "Consiu Absalom," from tbe first. I fouud that my brotber bad worked won¬ ders during my absence. Oar old home no louger looked a gloomy abode, even for ayoung girl. Fresh, bright paper wason the walls; carpets of warm, rich hues, covered the floors; tasteful farnilure was diaposed about the apartments, aud a room, leading from the little parlor especially desigued for our guest, had beeu transformed into a conservatory and waa already gay wiih flowers. With one consent we entreated Miss Chelmsford to assame tbe office of housekeeper, as neither of ua felt com¬ petent to regulate any longer the affairs of a housebold wbiuh was to number sucb a mem¬ ber. She promised, with her customary sweet- ness.to comply with our request, and presently our domestic arrangements put ou an order aud beauty they bad never known before. When we were fairly settled at home I had leis.ire to atudy Margaret Chelmsford, thefirst yonng lady with wbom I bad ever beeu famil¬ iarly associated. Until then, I had uot observed what affected me strangely now, her remark¬ able resemblance to my memories of my motfaer ; to the ideal I had so loog cherished of my future wife. Here were the little grace¬ ful figure, the brownish bine eyes, the low, aweet voice, the winning smile ; here, and my heart thrilled aa it had never thrilled before was lhe womau I could love. Thirty six begau to seem very old to me — Sixteen yeara between me and the young life I longed to Huk to my owu. I did not mention these thoughta to my 1 rotber. For the first lime in our lives there was a shadow hetween ns; a fiue, indefinable ice'of reserve. I think it rose, on my part, not from any auwillingnesa lhat be shoald read my heai t, bat from a secret fear, as bitter as secret, lest he also might rec¬ ognize in her the ideal we had both so long cherished, and love her as I loved her. Be¬ sides, I bad so littla hope, it seemed aseless to talk of it. She made no diatinction in the manifestation of her regard between my brother and me.— To us bolh she waa aniformly all that a young siater conld have been: the joy and brightness of otir home and our Uvea. Perhapa ahe came to me moat freqnently for advice concerning her aflFaira, wbich was but nataral, as 1 had takea them npon m« at flrat. " Brothers or not, no mau has a right to force me to give up my love. I will have her, ii I can, in apite of all the world." "So you ahall. Ifahe lovea yoa, she will marry yoa. I kuow hor well. No power would foreeher, neither waut, uor pride, nor gratitude to give her haud where she did not love. I only meant to pray you lo let nothing separate us. However she may decide, one at least of us will have bitter need of consolation. Qo you first; I myself thiuk your hope is better thau mine." He would have heaitated theu, but I urged him forward. Ifhe succeeded, she would uever know how my wbole being had poured out ita adoration before her ; if he failed, I could but try my fate also, lie waa uot thete loug. I was cool enough, iu themidstof my suspenae, to know he had beeu absent but a few momenta whfU be re opened the librarv door. His face was wbile with reprtssed suflTering. lie came up to me aud aald, hoarsely ; " Brother, she does not love me. I told her yon would come next. She aaid something in answer. I did not hear what. Go you in, now." I found her weepiug, bat she roased herself at the sound of my footstep, and cried pas¬ sionately : "Not you—not you also I Do uot give me the pain of thiuking that I must wound my best (rieuil. Your hrolher said you were comiug, aud I told him it would be of no nse. You would uot waut me wiihout my love. Oh, wretched girl thai I am, to have brought un¬ happineas to the ri'ottbat aheltered me, when X waa an orphau aud alone !" I fonud strength to answer her : "Do uot fear, dear Margaret. Yoa have brought ua moro good than evil. We are men. We will conquer ourselves like men.— You shall le our aiater whea you can forgive ua for the paiu we have cansed you.*' I went out to Abijah, who waited for me. " I have failed also." It was all I could say. His arms opened and clasped abont me io an embrace such aa those with which we had comforted eacb oiber iu boyhood. I bad loat Margaret, but I had found again my brother. I bave nothiug more to say about the suffer¬ ing tbat followed. It ia idle to dwell upon it. God aent it, aud we bore it maufnlly, I and my broiher. Tbe next day there came to us a little note from Margaret. It was such an oue aa it waa Uke her kindness and delicacy to write. She had choaen that mode of communication be¬ caase she thought it would be easier thau to apeak to ua of what so nearly concerned ber own heart. She wrote very tenderly, Ibank ing ua more warmly than we deserved for our kindneaa to her, a lonely orphan ; praising us far beyond our ponr merits, aud telling as it would havebeen acarcely possible for a girl wbose heart was free to bavo remained inaen- aible to our devotion. For herself, hera was , not free. Before she came to us it had passed from her keepiijg. She had loved and been beloved by the physician—a young man, poor but talented—who altended hermother in ber last illness. She had never knowu hia love for her uulil be bade ber farewell the day be¬ fore she left Oawego. Theu he bad told her all, and thomjb, becaaae he must be, for a longtime to come, too poor to marry, he would not permit Ler to bind herself by an engage¬ meut, she knew that he looked upon her aa hia future wife. She took great blame ti> herself for not hav¬ iug told us Ibis at firat. If there had been a Mra. S.uilh ahe was sure she should have con¬ fided all to her ; but, aa there was no actaal promise of marriage she oould not bring her¬ self to speak of it to us, particularly as ahe never supposed it posaible that sbe should po'i'eafl any bold upon ou/ bearta save the gene. \a sympathy which had opened them to ber. Sbe hoped in lime we should be far happier than abe could bave made eiiber of us. She kuew ua too well, alas I to think we had loved ber with a love to be at once con¬ quered ; but limo and ber abaence, for she must leave us uow, woald bring healing. We read tbe letter together, and as we fin¬ iahed it my brotber looked up, I " We have mtt-.;'i more thau euough for two aolitary men; let fu make her happy with halfofil." He had uttered the thought that was in my heart alao. He replied to Margaret's letter, for nature had made him more eloquent tban I. He begged her to remain with ua, by en- treatiea, that could uot be resisted; exculpated her from the faintest shadow of blame, and claimed her, in bebalf of us both, and for the aake of the tender love between our dead mothers, for our sister, henceforth. Iu the meantime I wrote to Dr. Wentworth, at Oawego, informing bim that circamstances had induced my ward to confide in me the relationa existing between tbem, aud hinting tbat her dowry woald be aufficient to make tbeir marriage prudent at auy time. Ia con¬ clusion, I begged leave to offer bim the advice of a man who had seen more of life than him¬ self, uot to delay bis happiness too late. It ended as we had forseen and intended.— We persuaded Margaret to remain with ns until she was married, and that was not long. Tbe dear child was very happy, thongh I oould see with what delicate tendemess she strove not to show ns ail her joy. We aee ber often, and we like lo think that she owes ua part of her bappiness. It is all tbe sweeter that ahe does know it. We live alone again iu the old house, with the old servanla. The paper ou the walla, the carpets on the floors, have grown dim, and time has softeued a little the memory of the sharpest wonnd our hearta ever received.— We have given up thoughts of love and mar¬ riage. We shall live together till Death pans us ; bat when that hour comes, aud they pall down the sign of " Smith Brothers," there will be no one to take our name or our place. Mr. Edge was late at breakfaat—that was not an nnnaual occurrence—and he waa a little disposed to be cross—whioh was likewise noth¬ ing new. Bo he retired behind his newspaper, aud devoured his eggs and toaat withont vouch- | safing any reply, save unsociable monosyllables to tbe gentle remarks of the freah looking little lady oppoaite—to wit: Mrs. Edge. Bat she was gathering together for tbe grand fiual on¬ slaught, and when at length Mr. Edge had got down to the last paragraph, and laid aside the reading sheet, it came. "Dear, didn't you say you were going to leave me a handred dollars for my furs to¬ day ?" " Wbat fura ?" (Rather shortly it was spoken.) " Those new sable, dear; my old affairs are getting shockingly shabby, and I really think yon—" " Oh pahaw I what's the use of being ao ex¬ travagant f I haven't auy money jast now to lay out ia uaeless follies. The old fura are good enoagh for any sensible woman to wear." I\Irs. Edge, good, meek, little soal that sbe was, relapaed into obedient silence ; ahe only aighed a aoft, inward sigh, and preaently began on a new tack. " Ilenry, will you go with roe to my aunt's tonight?" " Cau't you go alone ?" " Alone! How would it look ?" Jlrs. Edge's temper-for ahe had one, though it didn't often parade itself,—was fairly roused. "Yon are so neglectful of those little attentions yon used to pay me once—you never walk with me, nor pick up my handkerchief, nor notice my dross, as you once did." " Well, a fellow can't be forever waiting npon the women, can he?" growled Mr. Edge. " Yoa could ba polite enongb to Mias Waters last night, wheu yoa never thoaght to aak me if I wanted anything, though yoa know per¬ fectly well I had a headache. I don't believe y.m care so much aa you nsed to." And Mrs. Edge looked extremely pretty with tears in her blue eyes and a quiver on tbe round rosy lips. '• Pshaw 1" said tbe husband, peevishly " Now don't be silly, Maria." " And in the stage yesterday, you never aaked rae if I was warm enough, or put my shawl ou me once, while Mr. Brown waa so attentive to his wife. The contrast was very mortifying to me, Henry—it was indeed." "ldidu't kuow women were such fools," said Mr. Edge, sternly, aa he drew on his over¬ coat to eacape the tempest which he saw rap¬ idly impendiug. " Am I the sort of a mau to make a ninny oat of myaelf doing the polite to any female creature ? Did yon ever kuow me to be con¬ scious as to whether a woman had on a shawl or a swallow-tailed coat ?" Maria eclipsed tbe blue eyes behind a little pocket handkerchief, and Henry, tbe savage, banged the door loud enough to give Batty, in tbe kitchen, a nervous start. tight. Suppose Maria should he at the win¬ dow on the lookout for him>_ as she oft?n waa, how would she interpret th) matter I He; coaldn'l make,her believe tbat he only wanted to be polite to a fair traveller I Beaides his ^ sweeping declaratiooij of tbe moming—she wonld be sure to recall them. As he atopped at the right number aud tumed around to bid the blue-eyed a regretful adieu, he waa astonished to see her run lightly up the steps to enter likewiae I Gracious Apollo ! he bnrst inlo a chilly perapiration at the idea of Maria's horror ! " I think yoa have made a mis take,'Miaa,'» stammered he, " this can't be yonr home l" But it was too late,—she was already in the brilliantly lighted hali, and turning round, thraw off her dripping habilliments, and made a low courtesy. *' Vary muoh obliged to yoa for yoar polite¬ ness, sir 1" " Why, it—it's my wife /" " And happy to aea that yoa havu't forgot¬ ten all yonr gallantry towards the ladies," pnrsned the merciless little pnaa, her blue eyes (they were pretty I) all in a dauce with suppressed roguery. Edge looked from the ceiling to the floor in vain search for a loop-hole of retreat; but the search was nnavailing. "Well," said he, in the most sheepish of all tones, " it's the first time I ever was polite to a womau in the cars, and hang me if it shan't be the laat." " You see, dear," said the ecstatic little lady, , " I was aomewhat belated—didu't expect to be delayed ao loog, and hadn't any idea I sboald meet with so much attentiou in tbe cars, and from my own hnsband, too ! Goodness gra¬ cious, how aant Priscilla will eajoy the joket" " If you tell that old harpy," said Edge, in an accent of deaperation, " I never skall hear the last of it." " Yery probably," said Maria, provokingly "Now look here, darling," said Mr. Edge, coaxingly, " yon won't say nothing, will you ? A fellow don't want to be laughed at by all the world ! I say, Maria, you shall have the pretUest furs in New York, if you'll only keep quiet—you ahall on my honor." Tbe terms were satiafactory, and IMaria ca¬ pitulated—who woaldn't? And that ia tbe way sbe got those spleudid furs that fllled the hearts of all her female friends with envy; and perhaps it was what made Mr. Edge sucb a scmpalously coarteous husband ever after. her their siater. Waa she not an earth-angel? She had filled the heart of that Uttle forsaken ohild with joy; spoken kind words when oth¬ era would have frowned; and yet tbey said of her—'* Cold, proud and selfish I" Again she knelt there—again prayed, bnt not as before in agouy of spirit, Jjut calmly aud peaoefnlly, tbpnking tbe Giver of every good that she had sometbing for which to live —the happineas of others. And there, in the qniet starlight, she reaolved Iienceforth to live for othera; to devote herself to the pro¬ motion of tbeir happiness. Sarely the worid had judged her wrongly; her aeemiug coldneaa waa bat the reflection of its own ioyneas. She seemed proad, yet ahe visited tha poor and hamble—cheered aud forsaken. Thoy called her aelfiah, yet aba willingly denied heraelf and gave up her owu pleaaures even for thoae who treated her with oontempt. Theu judge not hy appearance, for it hath not been given to the world to read the thoaghts, and understand the hidden deptha of every.heart; and often the purest thoughts and warmest amotions are coucealed beneath an exterior seemingly 'odd, proud aud selfish.' oedee the wigwam editiotf. XjIncoxiW and HAMLIM". the regular campaign edition. "THE WIGWAM'EDrnON" OF The Life, Speeches, and Public Services of Hon. ABRAM LINCOLN, Together wllh a UFE OP HON. llANNIBAIi HAlllIi!, Bepublican Candidates for Presidant and Vlce-Prt>nldeut of lbe Uoited Stalea. Onevol. ISmo., paper covers witb a Portrait, price 25 cts. "THE wigwam: EDITION," NOW UKADY. From Itaeircalleaca axa Biography : (ha evident care In Ita construction; and the judlclonB-Falfictfoa of BDecches and extracts, the " Wigwam Edilioa" has already taken precedeuca among the livea of Lincoln and Hamilu. The publlsbera hava spared neither pufn*t nor expanse in lie preparaUon, as a glance nt Its contents will demonstrate. ICj-Llharal redactions from the ratall price of 25 conlti, will be made to BoobtellorK. Agentn nnd Clubs tbronghout the connlry, for the.<>e Popular Lives, rar¬ tleulars, terms, etc , may be loarned from ELIiS BiRU 3t CO., Pahlisb era. Jnn 6-tf-28 Opposite the Court noase, Lanc. I'a. DrVXDEND- AT a meeting of the Managers of the Lancaster Gas Co. held this day. a dlvldanj - 'ma dollar par share-was declared payable on and-«„ •1-8 lltb Innt. "— ¦n- .-wn t _*Her July 9.1360. OEO'S. EEED.Tre^;^ ^ Jal 11-3I-.33 TUHNPIKE. DIVIDEND. THK. Preaident and Managera of the Lancaster, Elliabetbtown, and Middletown Tnrn¬ piha Eoad bave this day declared a dividend of two dollari on each share of stock, payable on demaud. July 2d, 1860. J. M. LO^Q, Treasurer, jllly 4_ 3t-.'J3 TCTBNPIKE DIVIDEND. THE President and Managers of thc Lancaster and Susquehanna Turnpike Road Com¬ pany bKve d-iclared a aaml-annnal DIVIDEND of bix: Dollars and Fifty Ceatn per Share, payable ou and afler .Tnly 2d, ISOO, at the office of the Treasnrer. jv 4-^133 W.P. BRINTOK. Treasurer. PHILADELPHIA ADVERTISEMENTS. St. Paul crnahes vanity by reminding as o^ responsibility. His method is the trae one, for we cannot meet vanity by denying gifta. If we or our children have beaaty of person, have talents and accomplishments, it is in vain we pretend to depreciate, or to shut oar eyas to thsm. " Raining agaiu I I do beHeve that we are going to bave a second edition of the deluge," said Mr. Edge, to himself that evening aa he f nsoonced hia six feet of iniquity in the south¬ west comer of a car at the City Hall. " Go' ahead, conductor, can't you ? What are you waiting for?—Don't you see we're full, and it's dark already?" *' In one minute, sir," said the condnclor' as be helped a little woman with a basket on boari. "Now sir, move up a bit ifyou please." , Mr. Edge waa exceedingly comfortable, did not want to move np, but tbe ligbt of the lamp, juat Ignited, falling faU on tha pearly , forehead and sbiuing golden hair of tbe new ! comer, he altered his mind and he did move up. " What lovely eyes 1" quoth he mentally,' as be bestowed a single acknowladgiug smile. "Real violent blue I the very color I adtiiire i most. Blesa me 1 what buaineas has an old married man like me thinking about eyes ? wbat would Maria say, tha jealous littla minx? There—she's dravra a oonfoauded veil over her face, and the light is as dim as a tallow dip, but those wera pretty ayea 1" The fair possessor of the blue eyas shivered slightly, and sba drew ber mantilla closer around her shoulders. " Are yoa cold Miss ? Pray honor me hy wearing my shawl. I do not need it at all myself." She did not refaae; she murmured some faint apology for troubling him, but it was not a refuaal. "No trouble—not a bit I" aaid he, with alacrity, arranging it on the taper shoulders > aud then as tbe youug lady handed ber fare to the condnotor, he aaid to himself, what a slender, lovely little band I If there'a any¬ thing I admire in a woman, it's a pretty baud! Wonder what kind of a month she's got ? It must be deligbtfal, if it corresponds with the hair and eyes. Plague take that veil!" But "Plagne," whoever lhat mystical pow¬ er may be, did not take possession of tbe pro¬ voking v^il so Mr. Edge's curioaity about the mouth oS the blue-eyed damsel remained un¬ gratified. " Have yon room enough.Miaa ? I fear yoa are crowded. Pray, ait a little oloeer to me.'' ** Thauk you, air," waa the leply, coming from hehind the vail, aa Mr. Edge, rapturously reflected, " like au angel from the gloom of a dark cload." Aud his heart gave a loud, thamp, as the pretty shoalder touched his own shaggy overcoat in a nestling aort of way. " Decidedly, this is getting rather romantic, thonght be ; and then how.gallantly he jump¬ ed to pull the strap for har-by some 'favor¬ ing freak of fortane it happened to be at the very street whera he intended to stop. And under all circumstances we can hardly blame him, when the car stopped so suddenly that sbe canght instinctively at Ids hand for sap port, for the squeeze he gave the plump, anowy palm. Any man iu hia aenses wonld have done the same—it waa auch au inviting little lily 1 Out into thia raiu and darkness our two pil-' grims sallied, scarcely more than able to ateer their conrse by the glimmering reflection of tbe street lamp on tbe streaming pavements. "Allow me. to carry your basket, Mias, as long as oar paths lie in the same direction," said Mr. Edge, courteously, relieving her of her burden aa he spoke. *' And—and "may be you'd find less difficulty in walking if you'd just take my arm I" " Well, wasu't it dellghtfal. Mr. Edge, for, got the wat streets and the pttohy darkness too—he thought he was walking on roses !— Only, as he approached his own door, he be¬ gan to feel a little nervoas, and wiah that the lovely loeogBlto, wonld'nt hold on qalte so COLD, PfiOUD AND SELFISH. It waa a pleasant evening in .Tune, ona of- tbose calm, lovely eveninga wbich June only can bring. The earth wjis clothed in the greenest verdure, and flowers bloomed with a loveliness wbich seemed to vie with tboseof Paradise. Far as tbe eye could reach, the hills were orowned with golden grain, waving ¦ in the sunlight. Nature appeared to rejoice in her loveliness, wbile her songsters were tuning their voices tho departing raya lingered, as if auwilling to leave such scenes of beauty; ani playing 'mid the quivering leaves of a willow's graceful droop¬ ing brancfaes, they rested for a moment on the fair brow of a young girl seated beneath. She waa not called beautiful; bat had a stranger seen har then, aa ahe sat there clothed in pure white, her head resting on her delicate band, the aoft breeze playing throngb golden curls, aud the snobeams resting on her pale face, he would have thought himself, if not in the preaence of one of those beings we might call earth augels, wbo, like ministering spirits, chaae the gloom from our pathway, or make our happiest momenta stilt more bright. The sun's rays, ere they took their fiight, seemed to try to win her away from earth, as too pare for a world so cold and sinful. Sbe held in one hand a beautiful flower, and as sbe gazed on ita sttrpassing loveliness, she might have seen in it an emblem of herself— " a thing of beaaty" imparting joy to every beholder, yet so fragile, so sensitive, that one ' cold wintry blaat might blight it forever; tim-1 id, shrinking, yet shedding a halo of love aud | peace aroand her. As she aat tfaere, a group of joyons, happy scbool girls pasaed ; and aa tbey glanced to¬ ward her, she heard, in a balf suppressed whiaper—" Cold, proud aud selfish!" For a moment her lip quivered and her cbeek fluab ed ; but ouly for a moment, and she waa calm aud pale as before. ** Cold, proud, and selfiah 1" What a world of meaning in the words. When we hear them, involuntarily we picture in our miud one who cares not to make the worid better by living iu it; one who lives uncar^^d for and diea unregietted. But do they apply to Anuie Miller? Let na see. Her pareuts were poor. Her father waa a man ofthe world, who acarcely thought of hia family, except to minister to bis wants. Hermother, busy with her own carea aud duties, never lavished on her any of these eu¬ dearing caresses wbicb cbildren so much love, and whicb, to one of Annie's temperament, are ao essential to happiness. Often, on re¬ turning from a short abaence from home, ready to throw herself into her mother's arms, with all the overflowing of her affectionate heart, sbe \^ould be received witha cold in¬ difference, or thrust aside with a frown of im¬ patience. Thaa, from herearliest infancy, all the warmer impulses of her uature were curb¬ ed, and the overflowing fountain of her young heart's love checked, by those with whom all her bappineaa rested. What wonder, th^n, if aha should become " cold, proud and selfish 1" Alaa I how many young hearts are thus chilled I As she grew up to womanhood ahe aaw the marked indifference witb which the world re¬ ceived her, beoause ahe waa poor, and her sensitive heart ahrank from tbe cruel scorn of those around her; she became timid and re¬ served, and the world called her " cold, proud, and selfish." Straggling bravely against adversity, she at length obtained an educatiou surpassing that of many who would have pasaed her with con¬ tempt ; and then with a light heart she took on her the dnties of teacher, feeling that ahe could now become what ahe long wiahed, an accomplished woman. Thinking of this, she fjrgot the worid, bat the remark which she bad heard roused ber to a aense of her aituation; and resting her head on her hand, she seemed to watoh the gathering shades of nightfall; but abe saw them not, for darker shadows were atealing o'er ber sonl. The paat waa dark ; but dark and bitter aa it waa, it seemed happiness when compared with the future, into wbich she dared not gaze. Aa she sat there a soft voice mingling with the ricb tones of a harp broke the stillness aud fell on her ear; not aa music was wont to do, dispelling the. gloom from her soul and encouragiog her to press on, but bring to hej. mind her own ardent and seemingly hopeless desire that it might be hers to thrill the soul with snoh mnsio. She heard the happy, riuRing laugh of her ^ who had made her heart to bleed, and bowing her head she wiahed and prayed in the bitter¬ ness ofher sorrow, tbat she might die; prayed that she might he spared the cup of bi'tar an¬ guish the world aeemed to have in store for | bar, then as if startled at her own prayer, she I clasped her hands o'er her throbbing heart and marmared, "Not my will, oh Father, but thine only be dona I" A quick, soft falling atep started her; she looked up aud saw a ohild, approaching, h,-lding in her handa a white roae, Annie's favorite flower. "I broagbt it for yon," she whispered. Annie smoothed back the raven hair from her suabnint brow, and said: " Why did yoa bring it for me, Mary ?" " Because I love yon," she answered ; "yon are ao kind to me and do not tease and langh at me aa others do." - Annie kisaed her tenderly as she hade her goodnight, and she. ran home to dream of angels with annny oorls; that, she gathered flowenfor them^ and they 3Ei6&ed hot, oaiu^i MODEEN WONDERS. When a young man ia clerk in a warehonae or bank, and dre-'ises like a prince, smokes "foina cigara," drinks "noice brandy," attends theatrea, balls and the like, I wonder if he does all upon the avails of clerkship ? Wheu a yonng lady sits iu the parior all day, with her lily-white fiugens covered witb rings, I wonder if her motber don't make the pud¬ dings, aud do a good deal of work iu the kitchen ? Wben a mau goes three times a day to get a' dram I wouder if he will not, by- and-by, go four timea 'I Wheu a young lady laces her waiat a third smaller than nature made it, I wonder if her pretty figure will not shorten life some dozen years or more, beaides making her miserable while she does live ?— Wheu a youug mau is dependent upon hia daily toil for his income, and marries a por¬ tionless fine lady, who does not know how to make a loaf of bread or mend a garment, 1 wonder if he ia not lacking somewhere—aay towards the top, for iuatauce ? THE DANGERS OF INDOLENCE. Indolence ia one of tbe vices from which those whom it once infects are seldom reform- ad. Every o:ber species of luxury operates upon some appetite that Is quickly satiated, and requires some concarreuce of art or acoi¬ dent which every place will not aupply; bnt the desire of ease acts equally at all honrs aod the longer it is indulged is the more in¬ creaaed. To do nothing is iu every man's power; we can never want an opportanity of omitting duties. The lapae of indolence ia soft and imperceptible, because it is only a mere cessation of activity; butthe relnrn to diligence is difficult, becanse it implies a cbange from rest to emotion, from privation to re .ility. New Books, Good Books, Cheap Books, Standard Works, IN the greatest variety, all stylea of binding, and every department of slaudard and ele¬ gant literature, just received, fresh from the Trade Kales at DD«CaN it bTONEE'S, Centre Square. FOR HISTOIlICAL~WORKS, go to DUac&S it .-^TO.N'EK'i;, Ceatre Sqaarv. FOR BIOGRAPHIES, go to DUWCAN k STO.NEU'S, Centre Siinaro. FOR POETICAL WORKS, ESSAYS, Good Works of Fiction, Sclentldc Works, Text Books iu all branches of i^tudy, go to DUNCAN & STOKER'S, Centre Equaro. YOU WILL SAVE 2ol'ER CENT by buj-jng all ;oar hooks and htuUonery of DU.NCAN St STONEK. apr -l-tf-lO Contra Square, Lancsster. fMPO RT AN T Yo'l'AR¥erS^ Valuable Agrieultural "Works, From the Jate Trade Sales. JUST received at JNO. Sll 111 AFPER'S CHEAI' BOOK STOHE, Ko. 32 NOKTH QDEEN-Kt. The WheatPlani: Ita Orijjln. Col'nra, Growtb. Develop- meat, Compoailion, VarieUes, Dirteasas, aio., togeiber with a few remarks on ladlan Corn, lis Culture, etc. (Cue handred Ula-trations.) Grapes and Forage Plants: (Uloslrafel.) Downing's Fruits and Fruit Trees of America. Fanners' Eveiy Hay Rook: IIjw a Farmer can become rich. The Farm and thc Fireside: Being half houraLelcbeo of Lite io tha Country. By Kav. Jao. h. Blaka, D. I). Jiural Economy. Tlie American Farmer: By Rev. Jno. L. Blake. D. D. 'Ihe ATncrican Fruit Culturist: By J. J.Thomas. Saxton's Rural Hand Rooks. Djuming's Landscape Gai dcning and Rural Architecture. American Flower-Uardcn Hhevtory. Thc Fruit Garden; By 1* I'-arry. The Family Kitcltcn Cirdener: By Robert Bulst. A Complete Manuaiforthe CuUivationof the Strawberry. By E.G. I'ardee. Thc American Grape Grower's Guide. Youatt and Spooner on the Horse. Hints to Horse-Keepers. A complete manual for Horse- men. By Henry W. Herbert (Frani Forrester.) The Modc^ Horse Doctor. By Gao. H. Dadd, M. D. Dadd on the Diseases of Cattle. With, a large variety of tho best booka publUibed,— which will bo nold at lhe li>wt st possihlo pricea. JOUN SHEAFFEK'S CHEAP BOOKlJTUttE, KO. -A-l NOBTH QDEEN street. Next door to E::amiuer nud Herald OlQci. may 2.1 ti-2ti TEACHEBS WANTED. ^pHE lioard of School Uirectors of I Lancaster city. Pa., will receive applications for thesltnat'ou of Principal of the Lancaster High Scbool, nodalbofor tbat of Second AsRistaut In tbe Femala Departmant. Tbe Principal WlU ba rofinlrad to sland : an examluatioa in tha Greek. Lntln aad Frauch Lau¬ gnages, In MathemaUcs, and In the higher Branches of English. He will also be required to lectare weekly before th» nchool on »ome scientific eubject. Tbo Assistant in tbe Female Department mast be competent to leaob Music, Drawing. Freuch. Englleh Orammar, and hOch ather branches at may be awlgned lu har by tbe Principal. She mast also pass an examl- naUon before the proper commliit'e. 23-3alarles gSOO aud 9^^- Applicati .na received ap to Aogtutt 2d. ISGO. Address JNO. l. aTLEIC, July Il-St-3;i ChaJrmaa fiapl. Com. 10 TEACHERS WANTED. '"PO take cliarge of the Schools in J^ca- I cock School District. The Saperintendent wUl attend at Intereoarse Hall, on thfl Sotb lost, at So'clock A. M. where applicaatH for Schools are reqae-led to meet for examluatioa. Two or three teachera who aio qnaltfied to b<ach both German aud Engliah would be preferred. School term eight mouths. Salary, $27 por month. By orderof tbo Board. 'July II-Id 3.1 M03SS EABV, Secretary. 10 TEACHEBS WANTED TO take charge of thc l^ublic Scliools of Warwick towusbip, fur tbe term of six months lo commence on the lOIh of i^EPrEMBElt. Tba Hnp r- inteudant will hold an examioaUon at LlUz, on tha 4lh day of ADGUriT. where applicacta wlJl please at¬ tend. By order of the Board. G. E. BIEMESDERFER, Secretary, july'i2 3t.3H BATTGH^S BAW BONE SUPER-PHOSPHATE OF LIME, Maonfacturad from n&bomt Bonea, hj T=l A.TJCa-^ tSa so3\rs, WH0LEi«AI.B Of KICK ASD .=T0aH, No, ao Soutli "Wharves, 'betwAen Mitrlcet and GbeaCiiut bta., PHILAOI-^LPHIA- Cash price, §4-5 per 2000 lba, (2A eta. per lb.) A LIBERAL DISCOUNT MADE TO DBALEBS. IN the preparation of this Valuable ilanara. Dunes arc u%td in their raw state only.—' '1 uay hava never heau UoiLED or calclved. Theyare takan as natare haa mada them, crashed with power¬ ful machinery, and subjected :o aprocess, by wblch, while ail tha vicluu ol tue Bone is retained, a Fertilizer is procurrd. forai-iblug m a co.s-oexTaarzD asd aoloblr FOKU the two Indbipuunable iogiedlenta for fha growth of plants and enriching the suil, viz: PHOaPiloaio ACID and Auxu.NiA. ThOne two lngradiant3, by the use of- BAUGll'o ItAW BONB SUPBli-PUOil'UATE," are given lo iha-oU Inall i.tifsiTOftginal Strength and purity. They a«simllato at once wub ine eol', farnLshail tae neadfnl Ammonia for the grofflng crop, giving U ample luxarUuca, and leave Ihe land permaneotty beneStled to tbal Its prtsence caa be traced f^^r yeara afterwarda. CARD. TbeFteadtlyincroa!.Ing demand which.haa foUowed tbe introdacUon of oar Baw Bone Super-Phosphate of Lime In a marked proof that the Farmer and Planter are be¬ giuning to appieciate tbe vaiue ofsuch Fertilizers,aa uot only prouuce \.\iQ first crop bat also PuaMA-tE-iTLT iMfbuVE Till: ^11.; and on thm point we have ahnndant evidf ace from those wbo prefer lu use lu that of i*era- v;aii Guano. ilact the IntroducUon of our arUcle we have continu¬ ally dad-ed to fnrnluh a manure comblniog ALL the imporiant uonsutuents ot Rato Rones, and we bava ac- cotupliBUod Ihid by a process Otiginaling with, and nsed oaly hy onr«olves. BAUG I I & SONS, No. iil) HoallL Wharces, Philadelphia. ij-\f& recommand Farmers and Flautara to purchase of our Ageata. inly ll-3m-»4_ ALLEN & NEEDLES' I JI PROVED STANDARD SUPER-PHOSPHATE OF LIME. The old cstablislied article, in constant use by tliou- sands of farmers and planters for a number of years paU. Price $Jto per ".iUOO lba. C-i cents per Ib.) NINE TEACHEBS WANTED rpo take charjre of thc Public Schools JL in Paradise Twp. Applicants vrill pleasa meet tho Coonly Saperlateudent and School Board, for ex¬ amination, at the "Black Horse" School House, JDLV 23.-d, at 9 o'clock, A. M. Term—eight montbfl. To Teacbera giving aailsf-ictlrtn. $.«0 per month will ba glveu. JOHN B. V/ARFEL. Secretary. .17 TEACHERS WANTED TO take charge of the schools in Salis¬ hnry township. TheSnpBrintondent WiU heatth* Wnite Horfee Hotel on tbo 21tb lust., to examine teach- er-i, at ^hlcb time appllcnuti for fcchools will atteud. ScuooIb to mu 8 moulbs. jnly 4-3t-32 Notice to Tax Payers. ALL persons who wish to pay their fiisla. County and School Tax, can dnd the Col¬ lector at tho CommiB.douer'n Office. In the Court House butJdiog, from tbe 2d to tbo Uth oC JOLY, between the hourauf iio. m., aud 2 p. m. An abatement of 5 per ceut, wll. be allowej on lbe Stato aud School Tax paid In on or hef»re the IClh of Jaly. A. FAIKEK, July ¦I-2t-.S2 Collector. JOTTINGS BY THE WAY. Just aa the white light of heaven does not make all tbinga white, but the intenser it is, so much more intense becomes the green, tbo blue, or tbe red ; and juat as tbe rain of heaven falling on tree and plant develops tho vigor of each—every tree aud berb " yielding seed after ita kind"—so the Spirit of Cbrist develops eacb nation, sex and individnal accordiug to their owu nature, and not the natnre of another—making mau more manly and womau more womauly. He who haa never exparienced the affec¬ tionate bitteruess of love, wbo has never known how MrKtsHrouy and pasaiouate sar¬ casm may be the very language of love iu ita deepeat, saddest moods, ia utterly incapable of even judgiug lhia pasaion. If we ouly associate with tbose whom we think religions, we must decide wbo are reli¬ gious, and this becomea a habit. Now, foi | ihia judgment, we have absolutely no materi-; ala. And tbe life of Cbrist, at leaat, should. teach na that tbe so-called religious party are not alwaya God's religioua onea. The Fall waa a step downwards from inno- cence, hut also it was a slep onwarda—a giant step in human progresa. It made goodness possible; for to kuow the evil, and to conquer it and choose the good, ia far nobler thau a state wbicb only couaista in our ignorance of botb. Remember that love ia dependent upon forms—courteay of etiquette, gnarda and pro¬ tects courtesy of heart. How m.iny hearts bavo been lost irrecoverably, and how many averted eyea aud cold looka have beeu gainud from wbat seemed perhaps but a trifling neg¬ ligence of forms. There ie a wisdom that looks grave, aud sneera at merriment; aud agaiu a deeper wia¬ dom, tbat stoops to be gay as often as occaaion serves, and oftenest avails itself of shallow and trifling grounds of miitb, because if we wait for more substantial ones, we seldom can ba gay at all. Mauy a miniater, who has prided himaelf outhe numberof his liateners, will be strippt^d of his vain glory, if the characters which he haa produced be found wanting; if that whioh seema to be the soula won for God, turns out to be only hearts won for self! The man once accuaed goes forth into so¬ ciety never the same as before; he keepa bts poaition, he practises his profession, his frienda kuow him to he true and honest; but for yeara after, the oblivious world remembering only tbe accuaation, and forgetting tbe fulness of tbe refutation, aaks, " But were there not some suspicious circumstances ?" A philosopher who has studied out almost everything, says be ia satisfied tbat tbe reaaon wby girls are in the habit of pouting out their lips is becauae they are always willing that theirs sbould meet youra halfway. Tbe papera are bragging of an invention by wbich leatber can be tanned iu teu minutes. We have Been the humau hide, however, tanned, in five. Our schoolmaster used todo it occasionally in two. A coxcomb, talking of the transmigration of soula, said : " In the lime of Moses, I have no doubt I was a golden oalf." " Very likely," replied a lady ; " time haa robbed yon of nothing bat tbe gilding." Were the crawling caterpillar to feel wilhin himaelf the wings tbat are to be, and be haun¬ ted with instinctive forebodings of the time when he shall hover above llowers and mead owa, and expatiate iu the heavenly atr—^yet the wisdom of that caterpillar would he to remember his preaent basinesa on the leaf, to feed on green herba, aud weave hia web, lest, losing bimself in dreama, he ahould never become a winged insect at all. Why ia a married man like a candle ? Be¬ caase he sometimes goes out at night when he ought not to. Women are a great deal like Frenoh watches —very pretty to look at, bnt very diffioult to regulate when tbey once take to going wrong. A ahort time ago a man became so com¬ pletely *'wrapped in thought" that be waa tied up, labelled, and aent off on the " train of ideaa." Why is wheat like an unruly boy ? Be¬ oauae neither of them are much good nntil they are threahed. Wby is the letter M. like the first glass of rum ? Beoanse it is the beginning of misery. Why is a horse the most miserable of ani¬ mala ? Beoause hia thoughts are alwaya on the rack. Tranqail pleasures laat the longest. We are not fitted to bear long the burden of great joys. A crusty old bachelor aays he thinks it is toomon, and not her wrongs, that ought to be redressedi If yoti douht whether to kiss a pMtty gid/ glT» her tho benefit of thedoabt, and: go in. JOHN BAEB'S SONS, NO. 12 NORTJI QUEEN ST., lANCAS'/fHt, PUBLISUEKS OV THE "Voiksireuud and Beobachter," A GERMAN Ncw.spapcr haviug u larger clrcnlallou tbao any other newspaper published in the county of Laucaaier, aad therefore an excallent advertising medium. EKGLISH AND OEKilAM aLuIANACS. ENGLISH AND GEKMAN BUOKS, BLANK DEEDS. JUSTICES' BLANKS.ic. DEALEP^ IK SCHOOL BuOKi. BLANK ACCODNT BOuKs, WRfTINQ PAPEK, ENVELOPES, i;OL PENS. sti-:el i-ens. ARNOLD'S WRITING FLUID, Stc. R..A. BAER. C.R.BAEK. feb IS if-lsi Diamond Pointed India Bubber Pens WAKilANTEl* to po::suas ail the du- rabilliyof t:eOold Pen, comhiued wub the elasticity of tbe QaiU. At J. M. WESTHAEFFER'S No. 44 North Qaoen street, corner of Orange, may 2* ii-£o GOLD PENS. AN Improved article of Mortou it Go's manufiiclnre. soperior in qnality and dnra- hiMiy ty India Kabber Pens, ur any othor geld Peaii ia tbe markot.RndiastaH cbeap. Evury Pen la warmutpd. Every persou can ba t-nited wltb a good Pou that will last a lifellme, by calling st BAEK'-^ Booh Siore. juna g7-tf-31 No.12 North Queen Slr^pt. the THOS. J. DYSART, No. ii EASTORANGE STREET, LANCASTER PORTRAITS PAINTED from life or enlarged from Photographic picturea. NOTICE IS UEUEBY GIVJiN that the books "for receiving hubficriptlous to the Capital f^tock" of the " SfarieUa and .Mount Joy Taraplke K«:id Com¬ pany," will be opened at tbe Cross Kays Hotel, at tbe Croxs RoadH in tba t-orougbol Mount Joy. on tbe Sth day of August uext. At the Excbange Uolel in Moant Joyborongh, on thelih. At the Linden Hoofo, in lbe Boroughof ilarietta, on tba Sth; and at the Donegal Hoa-'e, in tbe borongb of Marietta, on tfae L'th aad lOtb of tbe same moath, when and whera CommisBioaerx will ha in altendanco for that pnrpose. July 4 _ 6l-:I2 NOTICE. TN accordance with a resolution o; _| Stockholdera of the GREE:J RIUGB lilPUOVE- MENT CO., adopted ou thd 2::d day of iSUy. iS'Ji), the Direciora ura prepared to receive proposdls for tho pur¬ chase of ono-half, or Ibaraabonls, (being tbe oatleru end) oflhe properly of tba companv. cont«itittng of about OOU ^CRES uf Ck.»AL LAND, mure or ]e>w, siluaied in Norlburiiberlaud county, in tha rotate of Peonsylvania, togelb. r with Coal Brokers. Miner's Uoosed, aod all the improvemeuLi of whatever kiad there may he thoreon. Said propowalrf will ha roc-ive"! until I'J o'clock .M. on tbe loth dky of AUGUST aext. ta the utiica of tbe Co., No. 5 M<'rchi<utri Exchange. Philadelphia. Any further laformallou ms-y be obtained ibore, or of tha Ageot of tbe Co., on tbe pramisoa, or at ait Carmel. July 11 4t 33 ESTHAYS. CAME to SFEKDWKLL 1-OHGB, in Elizihfslb Towot-btp. Lauca-ler C-mnty, on the Mlh day of .IUNE, TWO UED =TEERS,^.1_-. 3 years Id. oon with a white tail and wbileS''^^!^ bally. TiJDOWnur will coma forward, pi''>^a'uClStfc property, pay chartjoH and take them away,•"*¦'*' or tlify will be ^old according to law. Jnlyi 3n-:i-i GUANO. PERUVIAN. Recelvad direct from tbe Govemmen Storea. [farran^d Genuine. ICUABOH. This Is the old fahhtoned FiiATHEBTatfA.vo, imported direct. PACIFIC OCEAN QUANO. Aamalliia&ntltyofUilEtwell kuown arUcie, In nice order, our and vsax erraoau ALLEK fe^EEDLES' NEW JFEBTILIZEH. The low price and anperior qnallty of thl( ferUUzer la fast briaging it Into general ntie. Price S30 per 2000 lbs. (1^ cent par lb.) BONE DUST. Botton-makera Ytsa bo.ve scar and OEOCM) ItUKEa. LAND PLASTER. Warrautod pure. In barrels. !l3~-^ liberal deduction mada to Dealers on all the ahore article'). N. B.—Wu hava a large number of Ol>tlomas for Premlnms awarded bytho variona Agricultural Socie¬ ties, wbicb you are requested to call and examine. ALLEN & NEEDLES, 42 South Wharves and 4X Soutli Water St., (First Store above Chestnut street^) PPIll^AOKLPJrllA. _joly_n 3m-33 CABDS! CAllDS! I CARDS!!! PRINTERS' SHEET AiVD CUT CARDS, Cards for Mounting PhotographPictures OF SDPERIOB QDALITV A.VD AT LOW PBICES. Bluo ana 'WKIte and fine IVhIte Paste Uotira», tjlraw Boarils, Aic, ON HAND AND FOR SALE BY A. l?I, €OIiLIi\!^^ PAPEH ANJ) CAIID WAREHOUSE, soc 3IIXOR. ST.j^IPIIIIiADEIiPlUA. r Water Colors and ud according to tbe _ _ Llkeno-Mes wai muted. PWO'i-OGil^Pi/ScolorGdin Oj7 cetQUChed, In India Ink. Uepia, melbnd called '•Tinting." IVORYTYPESAaUhed iu tho highest slyla of the art and s.' the biwept poKflble prices. •S-JCA'S OF EVERY DESCRIPTIOS painted at luwor ralea ibuo caa be bad auy where eUe la tb»! city acl In he bent maner. ^^ juiy^7.Iy"-;i.'» BXAMIITEH & HERALD Steam Job and Card Printmg Office. e'AVING introauccd iuto our Oaiue ooa of KUOGLE'S EOTARY CARD CDTTERS, togelli«r wilh a lar^io a..t>or:mmit or G.\KU:)—l'LA12t' and COLOI'.ED. we are now pniitarctl to priut cardB ot overy SIZE AND COLOK for «ll who may faror OB with their patronaxe, AT THE LOWBST KATES. J3-The TradataraihhcJ wllh CAKDS OP ALL ilZE,- at PnilAdalphiA prhM.. i'...H uai a^.-pncimrto:'. i.i-c ^ E X C TI AN G E "u^oYlir.'r CHRISTIAN SHENK, Pomierltf of the FOUNTAIN iNN, ^'oiith Qneen i,L TT AVINC taken that large aud eouimo- XJL diouflHolclinEASTKING ST.. known aa TUE EXCHANGE HOTEL, laitily kept by Wm. T. Tonart, renpeclfully Holiciifl the patronage of his old iriendH. and uBBurca tha travoMIng public, haviug bunl uss iu Lancaoter, tbatno palnn will bu Kparad on hiapint lo iuhore their accommudalioa aud comrort. S^^^'^r&anldnl and permaneut huardori:accopimodnl(d on rwKonablejerma^^ may 23 If-26 STRAYED. STKAiTJ^lD front the subscriher, on or about May 25. a COW aud llfEFFER.^__^. Tnecowisb'Kckwith awhile fiice. ba^ IarL'fiS.?^^llS boros, both bored, and in itbout 7 year.i old.¦(^"W^ She had ii bell oa at the Ume oi le.iviny, aud^******* i>4 (-uppot-ed toba fpringlcg at the time. Thu baiffnri.^ hriudled audhpeckled. baar^tbera »>hort tail, and i^ ahout latb months old. Any infonnation of tbelr whereabouts will be thaokfully received and liberally rewarded. DAVID BESORE. July ll-3t»-3;i New Holland, I^i._ " piPTY DOLLARS REWABD. ON the uight of the 4t]i"inst., about 2 o'clock, lho carriage bou?e of the Kev. Daniel Uiriz. of Ephrata towntibip, Lnacaeler counly, was en¬ tered by some craven hearted villians. wbo cot the car¬ riage tup and cuHhIouft to pieces, and carried otf a uumber of valuable carpenter tooii. such as augure, hand sawt*. cbissel-), drawing koives. Sic, Stc, ¦sc, tbe property of bis houk. Calvin aad Elam. The tools were fouud abont 300 yards from the dwel¬ ling bouio. hcattered along tbo pnhlic road, broken to placea, ibe angora being driven into lho middla of the toud. The abave reward will be paid forthe arret and con¬ vicUon of the perpetrators of this diahoUcal outrage. CALVIN H. IIERT2, GEORGE REED, juiy II r.-t-a:! TSBDIONT HOTEL, NORTH QUEEN ST., Near tltc Railroad Depot. THIS old established liouse, now under the proprietoihbip nf J. H. V.'ATKINS, atfords every accommodaUon to :.~aveUerr', either Iraasieul or otbarwlae. To thoHe arriving or ddparting by Railway it alfords additional fncilliloa, being opeu boib hy day and uight. From this hotol daily biagaa arrive aud depart, to Safo Harbor ufo 2I!ll«r*tnwn. t'tacbb»ltom via Wiilowatreet, HiaklHowu via t>regon, lulircoa«. via Ooidouvilla and Parudihfi, aud to Straahurg Ufa Lampetar. N. B.—Lunch dally at JO o'ebtck. _ dec 21-tf-l SWAN ^ HOTEL, ' ~ CENTRE SQCJjIRE, L.dNCASTER, PA. e'ENKY S. SHKNK respectfully in- _ forma hla old cn«l<»merif and tb» public generally tnat ue bas takeu the above bouaa, formeriy kept by Mrs. Ro-lna Hnbley and Edward S. Hubley. wfaeta be is prepared to accnmmodale those who may ftvor hiiu witb Iboir custom iu a sallsraciory tnanner. Tho BAR, TABLE. BEDDISG aud -STABLING wil ha carefully attended to, and avery eflort mado tn hito oiilislactiou. He recjiectfully boUcU.- tho patrou.t,;.j of the pubhc. jau 19 tf-8 WHITE SWAN HOTEL, Cor. of East Vine ^ South Queen Sts., one Sqaare Soutk of Centre Square, LANCASTER, PENNA. /piIE UNDKRSlGNfiD having leased I the abovo commodlou.-! Houfo, aud had it thor¬ oughly renovated, is now prepared todccomuudalo ibo Iiubllc. Tb« ro~m>'arc htrga and airy, and tha wboln house provided wltb eveiy convt-nl.-nco In conaoc- tion Wllb tha bouHrtlsexiensivabtabltug, for tba accom¬ modation of Drovei, Had the locatioa baiug a cantnil ona. la deslrabla for drover^ haviu>r horree m e<). 1. Boarders. permifQent aud transieul.iviU ha accommo¬ dated on reasoaable terra-*. 0"A sbare of pablic patronage Is solicited. mar21.3m-l7 BENJAMIN MARTIN, Proprietor. Leather Store. THE SUBSCKiBEllS, haviug moved Into tbelr new elore fronting on North Priuce Btreet between Cbestuut and Walnnt streeis, near the Hailroad, west oflbe Passenger Dapot, theyare now fully prepared to supply ail caatomen^ with Leather, Belling, Hose, Morocco hklus, Shoe Finding-*, Lasts. OU, 4c., of tbe best qaalltieH, and on terms to suit tba times will make a liberal dedncUon on sales for cash. All ordert prompUy attended to Thay contlnne to pnrohuaa Hides and Sklus, aUa Leatherlo tbe rough. jan 12-1T-* icnwinMAcnKR .t BAnw.^N Owners of Horses Look to your In¬ terests. rnilK ORIGINAL Physic, Drafts and J_ CondUiou Powders, an manuf;iclured hy thelate Dr. J. D. ficovern. can he hud at tbe late residence of said deceased. West Cbesnut Street, Lancnster. ANN SCOVERN, lunn27-tr-3l Widow of J. ». Scovern. Head Qcabtebs, BamADiSK Gicvkkal'-s OFyice, } Laacaster, June lst.. ISBO, ( ¦^OTICE is hereby given th.-it tlie __l( -Military Encampment ofthe 2d Brigade. 3d Oi- vioionof 1'. M.,who were ordered tu parade aod encsmp on Monday, the-Ith day of June, Innt., has been poat¬ poued uaiil MMONDAY, tbe 27th day of AUGUST, and continae udUl SATUKDAV, tbe bit day uf SEP lEMCER, 1660. M. K, WITWEK. Drigadler Ganeral of the 2d Brigade, 3 Division P. M. jane 6 td-28_ FOB RENT. ALARGE T\TO-STOUY FRAAIK BUILDING, suitable for a work ebop. rear of Ibo Examiaer Bt Herald PrinUug OIHce, North Queen Sireat, Lancaster. tl3"En<ialra on the premieoi. juno 20 tf.30 EOB BENT. rpWO FINE ROO-MS, witli front cnti-y, _X. and Gas inlrodnced, over the Examiner it Heralii OUlce, Nortb Qaeea street. Poas-iMsion aiely. Enquire at THIS OFFIOE. Hera'ld ,ivou Immedl- apr 4-: f-l a FOB SALE—A BAEGAIN. THHKI'i adjoining buildiug lots, each 20 by 100 feet, beanlifnl locaUon on North I'rtuco Blreet, Lancaster. For Particnlara addret-s .S. D.McCO.NKKV. .^gt. mar 2l.6in-I7 Ko. 10-'» BaUlmore St.. Ball., Md. WANTED. /KLERKS, to cail and exaiuincthe i)ia- Vy mond Pointed India Rubber Pou, warranled for Elaatlciiy and Dui bility. n.t J. M. WESTHAEFFER'S, m-iy 23-ir-26 N.*. 41 N. ^'iMH-wt.. cer. of Oranc. BBOOKE & PUGH, Forwarding & Commissioa Merchants, No 1731 MARKET ST., PHILADELPHIA. EXCliUaiVELY COMMiasiOJtf. FOK THE SALE OF, Flour, Grain, Wtusfcey, Seeds aud (JOUNTKi^ PRODUCE. 83-Forwarders of Freight, per A. K. Witmer's Care to ParadiRO, Lancaster coanty ; Musaelman, Uerr & Co,. Cur-1'.' S'rabhurs, Lancaalor county. Pa. July 6 ly-32 Foil Salk Wuolksalk and Retail, BOHBEB & DAVIS' PATJ'jNT WASillNU xMAOHINE. BV its use a great saving is made iu Ume, wear and l-jar of cloihes. A week's wanh OI au ordinary'>ized family can be doae before break¬ fast. Il UeijUttI ia capacliy Iw four able bodied women, and a saving ofat Iciot 00 per cont. Hundredaara now iu Orio, ftnd toe dfiuAud coatluae:*. Calland examine for yourselves. For sale by PliOWAIAW & M.'BBIDB, ."7 STRAlVUERllY STltEE'i; PHILADELPHIA. tCj'All pdr-ouh are cautioned against Infringing opon itiH pateut iu I'ouna,, as thelaw will be rigidly entor¬ ced. Conniy rigbi>* forsale. may 30-3m.27 MOHGAN, OHK & CO., STEA.U ENGINK JiUXLDJiRS, IRON FOU.VDEBS iL\'D GEXERiL 11I,1CUL\1STS, AND BOILER MAKERS, KO. IS19 CAl.JLiO'WIIIL.I. STREET, P IX I L, A i> Kij P l-I IA . may IiJ ly-25 SILVER PLATED WAlRbT HABVEY FILLEY, JN'O. 1222 MAEKCT STREET, PEILAD'A., MAN U'i''AOXUi<KK of iiue KICKEL SILVEK, AXD SILVEK PLATER of l-'orks. Spoons, Ladled, iJut^er Knives, Castors, Tea Setts, Urns, Kettles, Waiters, Batter DisLos, kb ?it(!liers,,Cake Baskets, Communiou Waro, Cups, Sings, Goblets, &c., &c., &c., AVith a );..Qflrat astiortineat. compri^iDg no.se nrr Ttt ft Bt-'.T QtrALlTV, maJe Ulthu IDUTUATCRIALdUUdUHATILt rLATKU, cgurititutiDt; tlieiu K Dtirrlci;.il)ltttta.I tlaralilti ar. tide Cat tl.ji.lh, Stuambuatn aati Private Families. S^ OU \'fnT» ro-piatud tu tlid tx^t m&uatir. foil 23 lyl3. aUICK S4LSS 1 SMALL I'ROFITSI H. E. HALLOWBLL & SOBT, BOYS' C I. O T IX XN G AT \VnOLESAtfi A.\'I> HETAIL, KO. u31 JJIAUKBT STBKBT, PIIILA. ¦ iiPXiKXi!; AS60K'x\ui;.Na' of lOVS' A.SU ME.Ni' i;L0TUI.N-0 CO.VSTA.tTLV lliN HAXI). apr-l-ly-lg Drs. s. WAYLAN & SWENTZEL, ONTINUK to practice fJcntistry at _ Ibsir OQIcu Ko. til)!,- KOKTU QDEEK .STKEET. ball i^iaivre from tba I'. K. R. Dopot, Luacanter I'n. iBay !1 __ _ _ tf-2-(. ROBBRT MoKISSICK, D. D. S.' LL ALIj operations ttppcrt:iining to to ttin teotb. porrnniicd in a carnlui^ uiaDoar. (¦KS.vtsiiTosvii.i.K. nhoKtor Cn.. I'a. tho niar C.t-lyJls Superior Pequea Lune for Salo. THE SUBSCiUlSEK ofiers for sale in quantiUea to suit purchaaerB, tbe befit (inality of WOOD BURNT PEQDEA LIME, at bin Ktluit. oas and a half milea eouth of Lampetar tfquare. Ordera can be laft at Sprecher'a Taveru. Lauca-ter Pa. mar 21-flm-n JOHN W. MARTIN. PEQDEA LIME I TIIE Original Pequea l..inie constantly on band at tbe kllna of lbe Bubscriber. All or¬ dera lell at Conpor'a Hotel, Lancaatar, will ha promptly allanded to. liAHi^t. UEKK, apr- 4-tf-19 Pequea. I UAVE received at uiy Ag Implement and Seed Wnrabonse.finBu' BUCKWHEAT. ricultuial _.. —.. Buahela FRESH BUCKWHEAT SEED. EK(3LISH RAl'E OH COLESEED, TUlt.MP SEBD, So,, ic. F.irmora ara lovitad to call atid axaiulaa my .took. AUAU R. BAKR, Eant King 8t., next door to Laae'a Dry Goods Store. jona 20 tf.^'tu m9 Pequea Valley WurBerioa, 5* 2i2 Ona Miia Eaat oftStrasburg, laoo, Co., Ja. ^2 ¦WABPEL & HEBH, /^FFER for sale the most approved va- \J rieliaaof '^'^ FRDIT, EVERaEEEN AND ORNAMEKTAL THEES ANDSBRDB8, of larga aire and at raasonable rates. Jj-Ordera will iocaiva immediate atleatloti. ALBERT K. WARFEL. sepll4-ir-I2 CTHDS H. HERR. DK. WAYLAN WILL moot his engai^citients in this city, on MONDAY and TDESDAY next. ItJtb and lltb inat. Jalyll.ItS3 "WM. ATTG. ATLEE, A TTOKNEY AT LA^y, No. 4.T East jCjL King street, opposite Spraclior'a Hotol, Laocaslor, I'a. July-l.|y«ii Aculv liOYS' E. -W. SHESTK, A TTORNEr at LAW, OFFICE with XjL O. j. Dickey, SODTH QDEEK STKEET. Lancastor I'onii'a. dec U-ly-3 EDWARD BEILLY, ATTORNEY AT LAW.-OfSec JJnkc street, 2 doors Nortb of tbo Conrt Honi-e, Lanca* tar, i'a. nor 2.tH9 PEBDINAND E.HAYES, A TTORNEY AX LAW, No. 4U2 LI- XJL BKABY STREET, Eyans' Bnlldlog, I'HILADEL- FHIA. april 13.tf-£0 ABBAM SHANK, A TTORNEY AT LAW, Office with D. j\_ 0. EsbIoman,Eiq.,N0..16NORTH DDKESTKEET Lancaster, Pann'a, mar 2;i-l"yr-17 WTLBEHPOECE NEVIN, ATTORNEY AT LAW—Oifice No. 24 Kortb Qnean street, nearlv opposita Mlcbaal'a Uolel, Lancaster, i'a. april 4-tf-I9 Printing Inks IN kags and cans, of the beat qnalitv . eifoCoiMaaolMufiux aad Yauus ia poaad <uu toiiaUitUilfsan.' WASHINGTON W. HOPKINS, ATTORNEY AT LAW.—Office with N. Llgbtner and Jamos K. Alosandar, Dnlra St., n^rly oppoaite Court Honse. ^ jnn l.^.tf-S9 " EEMOVAL. SIMON P. EBY, Attorney at Law, haa removed hie ot&co from North Dnke atreet to So .l.lo Widmyer'a Kuw,Suuth Duke at., Laucanttr.Pa mar 21 tf 17 Bcrivening and Convoyancing. rnHE UNDERSIGNED respeotfuliy an- ,1 nonncds to the public tbat he baa takon the offlce lately occnpledby John A, Hle-taad,BMi..whorebB will be pleaded to irauAuct all buxlneaii conuected with tbe above profesEiun that may "be placed lu hiR handif. O" OBlce No. 2ti North Duko .Street, Laflca«tar. Pa. _ftbl6-ly-12 C.B.HAYfS^ THEO. W. HEES, SUKVEVOK; Conveyancer and Scriv¬ ener. OFFICii-Nd. -ii Noktu Dcke St.. oppohUb tne Coort Uoni-a .LASCASTgR.PA mar auiy-IV NO HUMBUG. THE INDIA KUBHifiK PEN posses.scs Iht eUatlcity of the qniUand tbednrabUllyof the Diamond Pointed Qold Pan. « «« i« J. M. WESTHAEFFES'S, Ko. *4 Horth Qoeaa Street, cornar of Orange, .may 33 ¦ -i tf-2Q ^WATCII & JEWELKY STOHEr O. CONBAD, Former Occupant, xo. 14:8 NORTH SKCON'D STREET, CORSEROF tiCARRY HTREET. fVMlE uudersigued has icascd thc above I promised, wbara ha will keep a large aHsortmant ol GOUD AND SlLVKR WaTUUES, of Americao, Eoglinhuud SwiHaiUanafactiiroof tbe moat calabraiad uiakors, iu uddiliua lo wiiich, wilt be lOtiud alwayi* oa haud and made to order, an OKtaurtivo v irleiy of Jow¬ elry, Silver, aud Silver I'latod Waro, togcth-r wltha. goueriil asiiortmast uf tiUch goodit an are niually kept lu a Hrft cla-(t> Walcb and .lowirlry Store. Thopalroaaof O. Conrad, and ibuaaof tho nubocrlber, together with tbo public gauarully, ara lutrlted to cali, whara thay wilt recoiVM a goi-d articia iot tbeir money. A.S I am doturiuiued to do etrictly a cosh hoalnei-'f, gooj^ will bd i^oUl very low, "Small Profits and (Iuick Sales," irt toe motio of tho KatabliMhmant. LEWIS U. BBOOMAIiL, (Voa-MERLY 0. COSKAD,) So. 113 Sorth Second Street, Corner of Quarry- PHILADELPHIA. Junes _ ly-23 " " CHa"s. F. HtTMPP, 113 NORTH FOURTH ST, PHILADELPHIA, ^ir THE OLD STASD Wholeaala itud Reiail Alannfuctnrar of Port MOQtiute:!, CabariaadPoraatf, Dreooiog Gases, Money BeItt", Keticnlec, Cigar Caaea. Baokar'B C«M.^», UalbarBa::B. WriUng Deslta, Pocket Booka, Port Folios, BIU Booka, Ste. aept -M ly-43 WESTEKn' HOTEll^ A'o. 826 MARKET St.. PHILADELPHIA J, C, MAXWELL, Agont. 'puts House has been refurnished with i eatire nesv furniture. Tho Hooma aro Ugbt and airy. 23"Tha Tahle will ba furOl»bed with the best tho market cao aiford. Tba Bar witb tbe cbaleent af Llqnorband SoKara. oet2&.tf-48 J. B. SHANNON, ilAANUKAfrrUKEKOP LOCKS, ilELL-UANGER, SILVER-PLATER, A.VDDR1LBRI.1 Building Hardware, Nails and Sath Weights, 1009 MAKKET ST., abovo lOth St., North Side. JC^ Bella repaired, Keya fltted, Stc. Porcelain Door- Piatea aupplied and put on. Speaking Tnbea pnt op. «opt 7 ly-11 W"^. WALL PAI'ER ! WALL P.tU'ER ! ! BtTBTON & LANING, MAsrFArrcKEBB A.VD Imported. NO GOS ARCH ST., PHIIiADEIiPHIA, HERE may be found tbe largest ^ , and handnoma^t aiisartment In the city. ICJ-Porchafiera from tba conutry will fiad lc to tbelr advaotage to call at onr xtore, wher<) they irlli bs bailed wilh u Kuperior article, ai ibe lowe^it prlca<*. Bpr25-3m-2i UUHTON Js LANINO, ' '~WALTEH'c7wHITE7VrAN," DEALER IN FINE GROCERIES, M. IV. Cor. IT &¦ ArcU Sta., Pliiladelphia. IMPORTER OF" CROSS & BLACKWELL'S ENGLISH PICKLES AND SAUCES. Particular attention paid to Selecting FINE TEAS AND COFFEES, FOR FAMILIES. SDGARS AIWAYS AT BEFEiER'S PWCES. Clidiee Wines. Liquors and Segars OF THE BEST BEAiWS, ALWAYS OM BAND may 8 VM
Object Description
Title | Lancaster Examiner and Herald |
Masthead | Lancaster Examiner and Herald |
Volume | 34 |
Issue | 34 |
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 | 1860-07-18 |
Location Covered | Lancaster County (Pa.) |
Type | Text |
Original Format | Newspapers |
Digital Format | image/tiff |
Language | English |
Rights | http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/NoC-US/1.0/ |
Contact | For information on source and images, contact LancasterHistory, Attn: Library Services, 230 N. President Ave., Lancaster, PA, 17603. Phone: 717-392-4633, ext. 126. Email: research@lancasterhistory.org |
Contributing Institution | LancasterHistory |
Sponsorship | This Digital Object is provided in a collection that is included in POWER Library: Pennsylvania Photos and Documents, which is funded by the Office of Commonwealth Libraries of Pennsylvania/Pennsylvania Department of Education. |
Month | 07 |
Day | 18 |
Year | 1860 |
Description
Title | Lancaster Examiner and Herald |
Masthead | Lancaster Examiner and Herald |
Volume | 34 |
Issue | 34 |
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 | 1860-07-18 |
Location Covered | Lancaster County (Pa.) |
Type | Text |
Original Format | Newspapers |
Digital Format | image/tiff |
Digital Specifications | Image was scanned by OCLC at the Preservation Service Center in Bethlehem, PA. Archival Image is a 1-bit bitonal tiff that was scanned from microfilm at 300 dpi. The original file size was 847 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 | 07 |
Day | 18 |
Year | 1860 |
Page | 1 |
Resource Identifier | 18600718_001.tif |
Full Text |
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VOL. XXXIV.
LANCASTER, PA., WEDNESDAY, JULT 18, 1860.
NO.^#r
I-TTB 1.1 ¦max) B-r J. A. HIK3TAND, J. F. HOBBR. P. HECKERT,
D9DBR TEB MRU OF
JNO. A. HIESTAND & CO.
OrriCI IH BOBTH QOBES STEBBT.
THE EXAMINKK & HERALD
/• PublUhed trakly, at Two Dollars a Year.
ADVERTISEMENTS wiH bo inserted at the rata of $1 00 per sqaare, of teu llnea, for three Inser- tlona or less; and 25 centa per square for each additional Insertion.
Advertisements exceedlag 10 lines will be charged S cenls per line for tha let losortlun, and 3 cenls per line for each soboeqaent InserUon.
Bosluasa Advertise meuta Inserted by the qnarter half year or year, will be charged aa fullows;
S month*. 6 months. 12 montht.
OneSqnare 8^00 $5 00
Twu " " ""
^cijlnmn
}i "
1 •¦
BUSINESS NOTICES lneerted before Marriages and Deaths, doable the regular rales.
ICJ-All adverUsing accounta are considered coUecta- tile at the expiration of half the period contracted for. Tranblaut adverllcementt;, CAsn.
6 00
10 00
ISOO
so 00
8 00
18 00
26 00
es 00
12 00
26 00
43 00
80 00
AFXES SCHOOL.
Tlie Fhadows have paesed o'er tbe dial's fare,
Doiil four In tbe Hfternuon. Aod lbe c^ondt' bnve d >aied wltb pearly grace
All day oVr the fields of June. Hovr lbe boor baa cume wben the bcbool Is ont.
Ami the aicb'uH. wllh happy glee. Lexvtng their gramman* aud i^laies abont,
Away Irum tbe scbuoLhi.usn See. Some linger uot for lbe twllighl shades,
Bnt quietly homeward ko. While m^me hnstu im to the forest glades,
Where bw««t wild blossomB grow.
Charley apd Ned. aud mo^t of lho boys,
Troop uff where the rhadowa fall. Tu May nuili dark with a merry noise
At a b |
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