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VOL. XXXV. LANOASTER, PA,, JBI^pSI)4Y, SEPTEMBER 11, 1861. NO. 42. J. A. HIKSTAin), J. F. HUBKR, P. HECKEET vnuatXB nsM or HIESTAin), HtJBEIL & HSCK£BX oinai .Ul xoETX ftnn mxir. THE EXAMINER & HEBALP Is Publisiied Wmklg,et Two DoUars a Year. ADVERTZBSBCBZnS will be inaerted at the aU of $1 00 per equre, of ten Unea, fer three buer* lens or Ie*; mnd 35 oents per equate for euh additional Inaertlon. AdTertltementa exeeedlBK 10 Unes wlU be ebmrsed 0 centa per llnei for tbe 1st InaerUon, and S cente per llno or eacb anbseqnent InserUon. BoaieeBs Adrertlsameats Inserted by Uto qnarter baU yoar or year^ wUl be dialed as foUowi: Two ^ . X oolnmn , 1 S monfAe. 6 monfAe. 13 monUs »2 00 $6 00 »8 00 BOO aoo 13 00 , 10 00 J8 00 36 00 18 00 » OO « 00 SO 00 65 00 80 00 BDSINRSS NOTICfS Inserted before Uaxrlafies and Deatbs, donble the regtUar rates. {3"-^ adverUslng acconnts are cooeidered collecta¬ ble at tbe expiration of half the period contracted for. Transient adverUsemeots, cash PATEIOTIC POETBT. Since tlie progress of the ivar in putting tbis Slavery rebelUon tiown tbe poetical talent of tbe country^ bas not been idle. TVe present a few spociment: ALABTTH. Men of America, Dp from joor slombers I Da«h tbe thick mist away. Bach eool lhat caabsrs I Freedom Is yet alive; Wake, in ber oame to strive; bwarm, from eaeh. busy hive, Reafstless numbers! Were we not freedom born— I)ero-de«ceDded? When shall the bisn of acoro Oar fame have ended? Tbe sou of Washlogtoa Traitora efaoald harbor none— Tfaoogh all oor rivers ran With crimeoa blended, Oor realm Is balfa world; Oceio to ocean! SfaaU onr fiag now be forled 'JUid war's commotion? Nol let oor Chief's eommaod. Over hroad lake aud laod, Rouee every freeman's faand, Eacfa heart's deToUonl Up, up (or Liberty! The battle rages! Of our laud's history _Blood stains tbe pages. " Deatb may be welcome now; Tfaongfa culd the laorel'd brow, 21en to Us fame sfaall bow All throogh the ages. From caitiff fear or figfat, Oood Lord, deliver! By troce wltfa traitor might, Give oe peace, never! Rather go dowo to dost, * As in the end we most. Placlog lo God onr irost. Freemen for ever I FOSWAED. Forward! Lat Ihe word beglven; Onward to the tented plain ; Let the bolis of war be driven Bravely once more home agalo. No mor-> honeyed worda from traitors, No more coootlog oo tbe cost; Wait we yel, aud wait we loogsr? WaU we unUl all be lost? Forward! Let tbe word be given To the mlllione ofthe North ; 'Neath the f-miles of Ood aod Heaven Poor your coontless legions fortfa. No mora fearing, no mort doubting, Wbeo shall all tfais tnrmoll cease? Let the bollet'e twlft careering Be onr messenger of peace. Walt we for another morrow ? List we still lo treason's breath ? List we till tfae general sorrow Speaks an faouored nation's death ? Who shall rear again tfae etmcture. Wfao sfaall guide tfae helm of State T Who tbe priceless gem shall reeeae From the grasp of snefa a fate ? By the memories wbich clnster Boaod the fresh graves of oar elaln, Freemen, patriola. soldiers moster! Forward to tbe tented plain ! HALF-MAST. In memoryof Gen. Nathaniel Lyon, kitted at the battle af Wilson's Creek. August 10, 1861. Unfurl our flag bilf-mast to-day. In Borrow 'mid the clang of war, Bacfa crImeoQ stripe is toioed to gray, To black eacfa azure etar. Tba drooping breeze scarce stirs a fold. The birds complain with fettered breath, Tfae elouds haog BoUenly and eold. For lo, a hero's aeath 1 From far Missouri's prairie plain * Tfae echo of fals balUe cry Sounds and recedes, and souuda again, Hll Ufe-earned victory. Ofa, Lyon! oo tfay martial faier Tbe tears of gratefol mUlioos flow, And treaaoo weU way sfariok and fear Its fated overtfarow. For whereeoe'er tfay comrades staod To face the traitors, as of yoro, Tby prescient spirit shall command And lead tho charge once more. Then fling our flag mast-hlgh to-day. Triumphant 'mid the claog of war. And death to him wbo shaU betray Oso single stripe or etar I A PASTOR'S ELECT. BT TIEGISIA F. TOwrBKND. " How tell me abont it, \7eldon. I am bo anxions to hear tbe wbole stoiy, and it's such a nioe evening for it too. It is suoh a luxury to be all alone with yoa tbat tbe rain sounds really mnsioal as it drops against the panes.'' Sbe bad palled a low ottoman to bis feet, and throwing berself on tbis, lifted her aweet faoei set in its frame work of brown soft bair, to her brother's. " So you bave at last oaught me, and in¬ tend turning my confessor—do you, Httle ais?" smllingty responded tbe young clergyman, as he tumed his eyes from the anthracite blaze, where they had been dreamily fastened for the i Sbe'll be frightened, I'm gone so loug, last half honr, and a beaatifal, almost dreamy, tendemeBH seemed to drift into tbem as they Teatdd on his sister. "Yea; to think yoa are really engaged, Weldon ? What wonld yonr parishoners aay if lhey knew it, particnlarly tbe younger por¬ tion of tbem ? I am somewhat apprehensive their daily beqnegts of bouquets and fmits wonld be sensibly diminished. But aboat the lady—is she beamifnl, Weldon ?" " A ^woman's flrst query 1" and again tha^ rich smile went like sunlight over the grave bnt handsome features of tbe youDg pastor. *' I am not certain, Hattie, whether an artist wonld tbink her so. Her featiuea are not en¬ tirely reg;nlar, and ber cbeeka are less rosy than your own; bnt the emotions of her deep gentle loving natnre look ontof ber deep blue eyea, and tbere is a sweet heart-ohirograpby in tbe amiies tbal sparkle at times over her small and raiher pensive mouth." *'Yon are drawiog a charming Raphael pio¬ tnre, brotber mine. Sbe is yonng, of course?" " Hardly twenty-one." "And—no, I need not nsk if ber mind is well cnltivated, for I know your opinions re. specting woman too well to donbt thia. Bat ifl sbe intelleotnal—in short, a book worm 1" " WeU, something of one. The formation of her bead indicates a saperior mental or- gai^zation, but all the faonltiea are well bal¬ anced." " And—let me see—is sbe wealthy ?" " Only in the posaession of tbose great jew¬ els wbich are above all price." " Bnt bfer family—who are tbey ?" "I never saw but one member of it, and he was a beggar." . "Weldon!" The little fingers tbat had been playfully braiding themselves witb those of the young man's were anddenly withdrawn —the quick blood flaahed into the question¬ er's ebeeks, and a look of mingled astonish¬ ment and displeaaura filled ber brown eyes as she breathlessly ejaculated— ^ " Weldon, you are not in earnest ?" " Yes, I am Hattie. You know I would not Jest on snch a subject." ** Bnt yon took me so greatly by surprise. And—and—" The Uttle red lipa trembled a moment, and tben the tears brimmed over the brown lasbes and journeyed slowly down the cheeks. " And tronbled yon, too, Hattie f" inter¬ rogated the yonng man,' aa he leaned forward brotber; it wu hmrdly^vrwMkn^yfor he was all that God had left to her of ^e house¬ hold over whom the^ spring dutes had long spread their golden oovering; and fi>r a mo- ment she had looked with the world's eye npon his betrothal to the stster ofa mendi- oent.'Bnt her brother'B wozda had silenced the pride whispers In her heart, for Battle Harshall bad learned of Him who was meel and hmnbie in spirit. "I will do aa you ask, Weldon. Forgive me If I have done wrong," she whispered, drawing up closer to her brother, and laying her head in its old reating. place against his heart; for very tenderly did brother and Bis¬ ter love eaoh other. Weldon Marshall drew his arm around his sister's waist, and then, when the rain moan¬ ed and the wind muttered aronnd the windows and the anthracite fire mingled its mddy glow with (he silver astral Hght, and filled the par¬ sonage sitting-room with a dreamy crimson light, he told a story of the past, and his eyes grew darker, and his low earnest tones fall of pathetic eloquenoe as he told it. It is eight years next month, Hattie, and I was in New. York, engaged in my collegiate stndiea. Yoa see it was three years after our mother's death, and you were at that time with Uncle Harvard, attending aohool. It was a oold, wild, diaagreeable night—and I remember standing at the window of Taj sung sanctnm, and looking ont raefnlly into the darkness, for I had an engagement to meet several of my fellow students that evening in a distant portion of tbe oity. " Hear me, how tbe wind blows 1" I solilo- qoiaed, with a very feminine shmg of the shoulders, as I drew the cnrtains oloser. "I've half a mind to throw myself on the lonnge, whioh looks so provokingly comfortable this evening, and not attempt an encounter with tbe elements. It's absurd lo think they'll ex¬ peot me snch a night as this. In short, I will not tempt an influenza by ahowing ray face outaide the door," waa the conolnsion of my monologue. I remember that I wheeled np the sofa in oomfortable proximity to the flre, looated tbe lamp so that its raya fell softly upon the vol¬ ume I intended to oommnne with, and that I had setUed myself for a long quiet winter's evening. Bnt it wonld not do. My eyes wandered listlessly along the pages; they could not en¬ gage my attention. A strange nnacoonntable feeling of restlessness and anxiety seemed to possess me. At last I resolutely closed the book, and a few minutes later I was in Broad¬ way, mentally oensuring my folly in yielding to a feeling I could not resist. Ah me I looking baok throagh tbe eight years that lie between that weary night and the present, how clearly can I discover tbe great Father's love in it all I " Wbat is it you want here, little boy f"-1 see bim now jaat as thongh I had seen him tbia moming, and tbe light from the tall win¬ dow is falling on him jnst as it fell then, re¬ vealing his ragged dress and pale, pinched features, and the cold rain is dripping off his thick brown cnrls, just as it did then. It ia a strange, monrafnl picture—tbe dark ground in the back gronnd, and the litlle ragged boy, and tbe bnlliant ligbta, and the great store, with all sorts of rare confeotiona, in front. No wonder it tonched my heart. The boy started as I laid my hand gently on his shoulder, and looking up with bis wild, eager, bright eyea into my face— "Ob, sir I" he said, after a moment's eam- eat perusal of my features. " I was thinking if I only could carry one of tbose cakes home to Ellen; sbe is very sick, and—and (the lit¬ tle fellow's lips quivered) we haven't hsd any tbing to eat for two days." I did not speak another word; bnt I caught hold of the cbild and pulled him after me into tbe store. "Hand me down a plate of tboae cakea," I cried to the astonished clerk, who tnmed with more than ordinary alacrity to falfil my re¬ quest, I drew the boy into a small sitting room at one end of the establishment. "Kow eat theae as fast as you oan, and then tell me wbo Ellen is." His hnngry look, tbe strange avidity with whioh he grasped the food, almost wrung teara from my eyes. " Ellen is my sister—ray only ^aiater since the baby died. We are all alone now. Last month, just after they bnried mptber, ahe grew siok. I s'pose it was because she cried so much: and she's been growing worse all the time." " And there is nobody to take care of her now, but you, my little fellow?" *• Nobody but me—the money mother left is all gone, yon see, sir, and though I sometimes earn a sixpence by selling papers or cleaning sidewalks, I conidn't leave Nelly for the laat week, she grew so mnoh worae. O, air, how good theae taste I I can't thank yon, but I want to." " Well, yen needn't, my boy, I want no other thanks than yonr enjoyment of them." ^Bnt mayn't I take the rest home to Nelly? 0,sir^ if you'd only go with me I " I'll come and see yon and Nelly to-mor¬ row," I said, " if you'll tell me where you livei and now wbite you are eating the remainder of your oakea, I'll get something that Nelly will like better." I procured a basket, which I saw well stock¬ ed with a variety of fruits and confections most likely to tempt the appetite of an inva¬ lid, and adding to these all the money I had with me, I retnmed lo the ohild. " Go home to Nelly wilh these as fast as yon can," I said," and tell her lhat I will come to aee her to-morrow moming. Now, be a man, my little boy, and take good care of sister Ktlen till then." " And all these for her ?" said the child, as his large wondering eyes roamed over the bas¬ ket. ''And she has been moaning in her sleep after an orange the whole week. O, sin we will pray God to bless yon for all this, and he will, for mother aaed to say he would hold thoae in ever laating rememberance who for¬ got not tbe widow and the orphan," and teara of miogled gratitude and delight were shower¬ ing down the litlle fellow's faoe as we parted. The next morning, Hattie, I received that letter which sammoned me to my father's dying bedside. I had, of coarse, no time to fulfil my engagement with the little orpbans, in whom I had become so greetly intereted; indeed, the mournful circumstances which drew me once more to the bonae of my ohil- hood banished them from my mind. If you will look down to that time, my lit¬ tle siater, yon will remember that April was weaving her green carpet over the meadows before we parted, aud I returned to the city. to complete my stndiea, and then to enter that aervica in whiob, before my father's dy¬ ing bed, I had aolemnly pledged to spend all the life that God shonid grant me. I had forgotten the name of the boy's reai¬ dence, bnt I knew that I had made aeverai attempta tp diacover it after my retnm to the city, all of whioh proved ineffectual. It was sunset of a bright day in the early May-time, and even in the great oity looking fairer for the sunshine that plaited the house- tofls with gold, and swept in golden flakes and dimples along the pavement up which I was passing with some fellow students to supper. " Now, Maishall, remember to call for and caresBlUijly smoothed down the bright! ^ ^"°®* ^°' the lectnre commences at seven, hair of his Bister. " Don't look so sorrowful, \ ^°^ ^* certainly will be crowded," callod out darling, as though some great evil had chanced | °"® °^ ^^ companions, as we reached the cor- me. Bnt listen to what I shall tell yon, and |'i»«'^here oor paths diverged, then see if your own true and noble httrt,' ^ howed my assent and adieu, and was bur- unbiased by sooial distinctions and pMipipi* j'Ji^g forward, when my coat was suddenly does not commend my election, y^fpi mq^q - grasped, and an eager bnt timid voice said, tWs, Hattie, if not for my sake, for His who' ** ^^®*^ ^^i is yoar name Marshall f" aatd that the poor and the rioh were issk» in His sight?" ' " ;--"¦:: : Sweet Hattie Marshall I Her one. g^ 'fttfble I ttuned and looked at the speaker. It was a little girl, apparently about ten years of age; her long ciirls fallln'g in a bright, tangled m ass her la^e bloi^ eyes were fisstened with a Idnd ef panting eagerness upon my own. *' Yea, that Is my name. And what do yoa want with me, my little girl?" I qtieried, gT«atly siirprised at this singular enconnter. " Oj sir, do yoa remember a little boy whom yon met one evening last winter, who told yoa he had a sister Nelly, and " Thla mystery was at onoe cleared np. "Yes, yes, I remember it all," I interrapted " And yoa are Nelly, I suppoae ?" and I sur¬ veyed the child with enhanced intereat. Her ragged garments, her pale face, bore a very legible history—a history of aharp poverty and bitter suflerlng. "0,1 am so glad—so veiy glad, sir!" and the light that hroke into her little careworn featares was beaatifal te behold. "I was almoat sore it must be yoa when tbe gentleman called yonr name, and yon look just as Willie said yoa did. 0, sir, I have looked and watched, and w^ted for yoa so many days, that I had almost given np hoping.** *' Poor child 1 I have been out of tewn, or I wonld have oome to yoa as I pronused. But where is Willie now ? and what do you want with me ?" I was well nigh ashamed after the latter qnestion bad been asked, her poverty answer¬ ed it BO plainly. •* 0, sir, Willie ia sick, very sick; and his face looks so white and strange lately, I fear he is going home to mother sometimes. Yoa aee I got better after yoa aent me the cakes and oranges, and Willie bought some medi¬ cine with the money yoa gave oa, and we paid the rent six montbs, so the woman let US stay tbere. Bnt one day, a month ago, Willie was ont all day in the cold rain selling papers, and he's been growing worse and worae and he's so altered yon'd hardly know him. Bnt he wanted to see you so badly, and Jte telks about it all the time in his sleep, and for the last two or three days he's grown almost wild abont it, and so I've been keep¬ ing wateh for you all day; and I couldn't bear to go home atnight, for Willie would spring np in the bed and cry ont so loud, " NeUy, have yoa seen him ?" and when I ahook my head, he would lie down with snch a look that I wotild go off in one oomer and cry alone, it made my heart ache so to see it. Bat now Willie wiU be so glad! 0, sir, won't yoa go and see him V* I see, Hattie, that your eyea are growing moiat with tears, and if you could have heard the simple touching pathos with which that fair ohild told her story, you would have an- answered as I did." "Yes, Nelly, I will go now." * . * « • • • «Willie, Willie, I've brought him 1 I've bronght him I" The little hand which guided me so care¬ fully np the dilapidated stairs waa withdrawn as the little girl broke into the old attic cham¬ ber, her eager and joyous tones making the bare walls ring again. "I've brougbt bim ! I've bronght him I" The dying daylight looked with a sweet, solemn smile into the room, whose entire des¬ titution one glance revealed lo me. I had not time for another, for a child's head was lifted from a miserable mattress in tbe comer. I came forward, a pair of attenuated arma was stretched oat, and tbose large bnming eyes were faatened a moment on my face, as thongh life and death rested upon tbeir testimony. " Yes, yes, Iknew yon would come at last," and tbe little oold arms were wrapped around my neck. " 0, I have watched, and prayed, and hoped so long, and it aeemed to me as it yoa would never come; bull knew yon would come to-day, for last nighl mamma came to me, looking so beautiful, with the flowers woven all aroand her head, and a white robe flowing down to her feet, and she smiled so sweetly and said: "My little WiUe, he will come to you to¬ morrow, and bis coming will be a signal, for then I, too, sball come for you.'" My tears were falling fasl on the boy'a brown curia ; but a sharp pang reached my heart as he spoke these words. " No, no, Willie, yoa were only dreaming." I said, as I lifted op his head and looked at him anxiously. One glance into the rigid face told me enoagh—tbe mother had indeed come for her child. " Bend down, qnick," murmured the boy's, white lipa, " Nelly willbe alone when I leave her, for there's nobody to take care of her* yoa see, and I want to give her to yru. Yoa are kind and good, I know you will take care o[ her, and never let her suffer; and mamma will look down from her home in Heaven and bless yon for it; and maybe we shall come sometime to teke you to ns. Yon will prom¬ iae me this, wont you ?—quick, for I can't see you; and his glazing eyes wandered over- my face. " Yea, Willie, I promise it fo God, to yonr mother in Heaven, and to you," I answered Bolemnly. "Nelly, yoa have heard what he said—^he will l^e oare of you. Kias me once more lit¬ tle aiater. There, there, mother has come for me. Good-bye I" Tbe little cold fingers sought for onr hands and drew them together—a - smile wandered over the stark, rigid face, and Uie last h'ght of tbat May day looked into that bare attic, where the beaatifal child was lying on that oold mattrass, "O, sir, is he dead?" questioned the little girl, wilh her large, pathetic eyes wandering from his dead face to my own. My looks answered her, for my lips could not. " Willie, Willie, come back, come back to me I" she oried oat in a voioe, whose exceed¬ ing angniah will haunt my memory, will haunt my heart till it has grown cold as tbe one that then lay beneath me, and little Bl¬ len Evans lay aa senseless as her brotber in my arms. Two days later, in a pleaaant part of the cemetery, the May violeta were turned aside, and a child's coffin laid beneath them. For nine spring tides have lhey laid their crimsoned mantle over his bright head, and the shadow of a marble monument has fallen soflly over them. Upon this is sculptured a beantifnl child, and an angel with out. Spread wings is bending over him, and point' ing apward. Underneath is graven, "His mother oame for him at twilight." It was with me a subjeot of mnchperplexi ty where to place the lovely ohild, whom I al¬ ways felt that Providence had especially in¬ trusted to my care. I was all she had on earth lo love, and as time brought its sooth¬ ing balm to her heart, the whole affection of her deep warm nature was poured on me, and even then wilh the excception of yourself, she lay oloser within tbe foldings of my heart. For a little while I placed her in the coun¬ try among simple people, whoae curiosity would he readily appeased, for I was exceed¬ ingly desiroos tbat the world should not beoome cognizant of the part I bad bome in her life- history. I read well her sensitive nature, and I knew there might come a time in ber latter life when it woald cause her maoh annoyance and mortificalion if the world knew her secret. For this reason sweetest aud dearest of sis¬ ters, I did not communicate il to you till I had obtained her permission, whioh I sought in my last interview wilh ber. I oould, of conrse have reoeived thia at any time, had I ohoaen to seek it; bnl I thought it wonld be unfair to obtain her consent to this matter before her mature jadgment had ratified it. Aflermuchdeliberaticn, I resolved to con¬ fide Ellen's history to Mrs. Wbittlesby, the lad^ with whom I boarded, and in whom I placed entire confidence. She listened with intense interest, and her woman aympathtes were at once enlisted in be¬ half of my protege. Besidea, this ahe was a widow and childless ; and thongh by no means wealthy, her oinmmstanoea were such that slie oonld Borround Ellen with everythhig neoes' V«h„priaero,h«h.na«.™.,aife|j^ She propbaed to idbipt ba In th^ pUoe of tbe ohildren God had taken from her; and to tbls propoaition I JayfaU^ aaaented, for tbere tbe religlona, eoelal and home atmopabere wonld be all tbat I wished to be aboat mj £llen. I was aazions, too, tlut ahe shonid no longer be dependent npon me, for I thonght eren a time might oome wben I shonid ask hera qaestion, whose answer I wonld have in no wise regnlated by her gratitade for the paat. Ton have often, little sister, heard me apeak of Ellen BTans, Mrs. Wlttlesby'a radopted danghter; bnt yon little dreamed tfaat I had a Rreat personal Interest in all that pertained to her. Her oharaoter and person hare dereloped with more than all that rare loveliness whioh her ohildhood promised. The sister that I shall bring yoa Hattie, is an elegant, aooom¬ plisbed, talented woman; and more than all that—snd the yonng clergyman's eyes grew lostrions with the almoat holy light tbat beamed ont &om their darkness—my Ellen has tbe.omament of a meek and qniet spirit, whidh is above all price. Andnow, my Hattie, yon have heard her history, will yon not weloome her to yonr heartf I gnessd well tbe pang whioh the knowl¬ edge of my engagement wonld give yon; for as brotber and sister have seldom loved do we love each other, and I tcnow it mnst seem like bringing another to take yonr plaoe. Bntmy Ellen is very gentle, and she wiB never oome between ns. Sbe knows, too, tbe story of onr orphaned yonth, and of onr affeotion for each otber; and even now ber heart goes ont with great love for yon. "Tellher all," she said to ms at that last interval, " and tell her that withont her consent I dare not be yonr wife." When I retnm to ber, and her qaestioning eyes ask me if 1 have obtained it, may I tell ber yon are ready to love and to weloome ber to onr bome ! Ani Hattie Marshall lifted ber brown, tear- filled eyes to ber brother's face, and answered, " Tell her, Weldon, that my heart is waittog to welcome her to.a vacant plaoe—and it is the one by your tide. ....I KASSOGS. THE DISEASE kTsTDBOFHOBIA. How it Affects Ken and Animals. A writer in the Angnst number of Black¬ wood treats witb great minntenesa of mad dogs and tbe terrible disease of hydrophobia. He remarks that '* every one knows that dogs are liable to a terrible disease, which oan be com¬ mnnioated to other animsls and to man; a disease frigbtfnl in its symptoms and fatal in its effects"; and tliat ainoe cnre is impossible, prevention beoomes tenfold more important. First, however, let ns nnderstand that there are many vnlgar errors to be corrected. For instanoe, Sanson, a French authority in sucb matters, assures ns tbat in dogs, so far from a dread of water being an invariable symptom of madness, it is one which does not sbow it¬ self more than once in flfty cases. The faot is that a baming thitst ia one of the characteris¬ tic symptoms of ra&t» in its early stages; an>l hence tbe commonly received belief tbat if a suspected dog laps water be is not dangerous, is at onoe unfounded and unsafe. Believe tbe tradition, say that, your dog "drinks, there¬ fore there can't be danger,'' go unconcernedly on your way, and negleot shooting Fonto, and yon may make a terrible miatake. For we are* told, on the aame excellent French author¬ ity, tbat, although the mad dog does not hate water and tbat the word'' hydrophobia" can¬ not be properly applied to his madness, in man the case is wholly dilferent. Therefore, the dog. whidh nms mad may drink, bnt tbe man wbom he bites oannot endure the presence of water, and, still worse, when once bitten, can nevir be cured. Moreover, we are cantloned againat THE " nOa-DAT" FAU.ACY.'*' An other popnlar error attribntea the mad¬ neaa of dogs to tbe heat ofthe " dog-days." In July and Augnst all kinds of precautions are taken which no one thinks of for a moment in November and December. Oo the Continent a paternal police is minutely solicitous in snm¬ mer about the enforcement of its regulations. But the simple faot is lhat the "dog-daya" have no more to do with tbe rabies tban the moon has to do with Innaoy. Dogs are liable to attacks In every montb of the year; But it so bappens that July and Augnst are pre¬ cisely the montbs in which the fewest oases occnr. Against the loose estimate of popular opiniou we can place tbe exaot records of the vetemlary achooia of Alfort, Toulouse and Lyons,, and thoae show tbat it is not in the hottett montha, but in ttietoettat montlis, that the great majority of oases are seen. In April, November and Deoember the recorded oases ore donble or triple thoaa In Jnne .Tuly and August. Tbat "beat of the weather" is not the cause of rabies is strikingly proved by tbe faot that in hot conutries the diseaae is rare, and in some even unknown. M. Du ChaiUn notices that although "moat of tbe Weat African villigea are orowded with dogs, tbe natives do not know, even by report, ofsuch disease as hydrophobia," Dr. Watson remarks tbat rabies is unknown in the Isle of Cyprus and in Egypt. "I fanoy that South America is, or was, a stranger to it. It appears io bave been imported into Jamai ca after tbat island had enjoyed an immunity for at least flfty years; and Dr. Hemeker states tbat ours of Ibe most wretched descripUon abound in the Island of Madeira ; that they are afflloted with almoat every diaeaae, tor¬ mented by flies, and heat, and thirat, and famine, yet no rabid dog was ever seen tbere. On the contrary, one thouaand six hundred and sixty-aix deatbs from hydrophobia in the human snbject are stated to have occured in Frnsaia in the space of ten years." Having attributed the disease to the "heat ofthe dog-days," men easily came to the con¬ clusion that it was owing to intense thirst that tbe diaease oconred. Inaamush as this error has forced them to be more carefnl in attend¬ ing to tbe wants of dogs, and secured aooess to water, it bas been a beneficial error. But, viewing tbe malter scientifically, we aro for¬ ced to say that thirst, howover intense, is incapable of producing rabies. Doga have baen subjected to the crnel experiment of complete abatinanoe from water, when chained to a wall under a bnming ann. They died from thirat, butsbowed noSymptoms of rabies. Thirat will produce delirium in man; bnt de¬ lirium is not rabies, nor in any way related to it. Another popnlar error, almoat too absurd to be believed, is nevertheless productive of serious consequences, as an instanoe cited be low will prove. VICTIMS OV TEBBOB. It is very generaUy believed that if abealtby dog sbouid bite a mau, and at any subsequent period beoome rabid, the man wUl also become rabid—no mattor how many montha or yeara may have elapsed. The oonsequenoe of this absurd prejudice is that healthy doga are frequently killed in order to prevent their be¬ ooming rabid. Tliere was an example of thia ouly a few weeks ago fa London; and unhap¬ pily the bitten man died a viotim to the terrora of hydrophobia. It was qnite olear, from the symptoms, tbat he was not affeoted by hy¬ drophobia ; and tbe majistrate very properly expreaaed disapprobation at the folly of de¬ stroying the dog before it was evident wheth¬ er or not it was rabid. Tbe rule fa such a oaae ia perfectly aimple. If the dog is suspec¬ ted of being rapid, it shonid be kept^ chained up, out of the way of fajury, tintii the disease declarea itself. By thia.plan it may very soon be ahownwhethet ths Btu^don was illfonn- ded, and wbether the dog was or waa sot ra¬ bid. Snoh »" proof would-often geatly re¬ lieve themlnda of abitton man and his Ami¬ ly, and remove that tarribls uzlcitj iriiidh, fa spiteof eveiry sorgioal aid, must for sonie weeks assail them. Tbe origin of the disease has nerer been satisbctorlly explafaed, altbongh Mr. Ycnatt thinks that it does not sow occnr spontan¬ eously, and'that it migbt be thoroaghly extirpated if a well-enforoed quarantine oonld be eatablished, and every dog (let ns add, every oat) oonld be oonSned aepaiaUly for eight montha. We are certafa,~ bowever, of one pofat. Thera are absolute tests by which to prove the existence of the disease, and a carefnl obseivation of the premonitory canine symptoms will furnish timely wamfag of- the ' StOfiS OP HAnSBSS. One of the earliest signs, and one whioh ahould always arouse attention on the part of those fa charge of a dog, is a suUmneu com¬ bined with ajigelinesi. It may, of oourse, be dne to some other malady than rabies; bnt it is a symptom to be watobed. Wben it means rabies, he retires to his bed or basket for several bonis, and may be seen there curled np, bis faco bnried between bis bead and breast. He ahowa no dispoaition to bite, and will anawer to the call, bnt he answera slowly and snllenly. After a wbile he be¬ comes restieas, seeking out new resting places, and never satiafied long with one. He then retuma to his bed, bnt oontfanally shifts bis poatnre. He rises np and lies down again, settles his body in a variety of positions, dis¬ poses bis bed with his paws, shakfag it m bis mouth, brfaging it to a heap, on whioh he oarefully lays his chest, and then rises up and bundles it all out of his kennel or basket.— If at liberty, be will seem to imagine that aomethfag Is loat, and be will eagerly aearoh nund the room with strange violenoe and fa- deoision. That dog sbouid be watched. If he begins to gaze strangely about him as he lies fa bed, and if ffia countenance is clouded and snapioions, we may be certain that mad¬ ness is ooming on. Sometimea he comes to those whom he loves, and fixes on them a steadfast gaze, as if, according to Mr. Yonatt, he would say, ",I feel strangely ill; bave yon notbing to do with it!" Tbe observation of all veterinaiy surgeons proves that not only is there no great dispo¬ sition to bite manifested in the early stages of the disease, except by dogs naturally fero¬ cious, but that, on the contrary, there is an inoreaae of affectionatenesa often ahown. Mr. Yonatt speoialiy notices this. " In the early stages of rabies," he aays, "the attaohment of the dog towards bis owner seems to be rap¬ idly inoreased. He Is employed almost with¬ ont ceasing liokfag the hands, or face, or any part be can get at." Nay, even in the last and most violeut stages ofthe disease, some' dogs show no dispoaition to bite. M. Sanson expresses his conviction tbat if tbe rabid ani¬ mal was kept sequestered from all exciting provocations, it wonld gradually die withont onoe manifesting any of the fniy of madess. On the oltber haud, it should be remember¬ ed there are rabid dogs whoae ferocity knows no bounds. If they are threatened witb as tick, they fly at it, seize and fnrionaly shake it. Tbey are Incessantly employed in darting to the end of tbeir chain, aud attempting to crnah it with their teeth. They tear their kennel to peicea. The sight of anolher dog especially exoitea their fury. But altbongh the ferocions animal early manifests tbis fury, we mnat guard againat the common error of waiting for such a manifeatation. The early eymptoms of fidgetiness, sullennesa, anxiety, or affeotionate i-mportunity, are eqnally to be attended to. Ko animal goes mad, snddenly, Tbere are always several stages of premonitory aymptoma. Among tbeae there ia one not always abown, bnt generally, and quite conclusive, it is hallucination. Anotber early symptom, and eaaily recog- niaable, ia a violent acratcbing of the ear; and anotber is a depreaaed appetite, and here, also, ia a symptom wortby of remem¬ brance. If a welltramed, well behaved dog misconducts himself fa the rooms where, hitherto, he bas been perfectly olean, and if he is seen peraeveringly examining and lioking those places, be may at once be pronounoed mad. "I never knew a amgle miatake about tbia," aaid Mr. Yonatt. Tbe foaming at the mouth, of which we bear ao mncb, ia a aymptom only recognisable by the exparienced eye, and isalways less than is observed tban iu epilepsy or nansea. There is undoubtedly in rabies an inflam¬ mation of tbe salivary glands, bnt the foam at the ooroers of the month is not abundant, and never lasts many honra. The pawing at the comers of tbe month is anotber symptom, and a dangerous one, be¬ oause it ia so often miatakeu as a sign tbat there ia a bone aticking in tfae throat. " The flrat csre of thoae who are not auffloiently on their gnard," saya M. Sanaon, " ia to attempt to extract tbe immaginary bone, or to oall fa tbe aid of a snrgeon. One of our unhappy confreres, M, Kicolin, nnaware of this faot, perished a, viotim of bis ignorance. He opened the mouth of a littie dog to remove the bone; and waa bitten." The homan befag once bitten by a mad dog, becomea the subject of the most prompt and e^cient aotion. The poison maat not be permitted to mingle with the blood. If it does enter into the oironlation, tbe bitten-man is beyond the reaoh of surgery. It is there¬ fore an important thing to know WHAT TO no WHEN BITTBir. The surgeon «t once—that Is tbe plain com¬ mand in every snapioioua case. We bave only mentioned what ia the calculation of ohanoes, beoause it ia deairable fa every way to calm the natural terrora of tbe patient; tbeae terrora are aome times aa dangerons aa tbe actnal in¬ fection. To ehow how they may eflect eveu the mind moat familiar with all tbe symptoms of the diseaae, and the certainty of surgical cure, we may mention that the late M. Vatel, Pro¬ fessor at the Veterinary College ot Alfort, having oace been bitten by a dog, and faaving had the wound carefully cauterized, althoagh no symptom of rabies declared itself in tfae do^, and altfaongfa M. Yatel faimself remained perfectly well, so horrible faad been the shook of bis flrat terror, tfaat fae never fairly over oame it. From tbat moment it waa impossi¬ ble for him to see a dog unchained witbin his reaoh without a painful uneasfaess', whioh no effort of hia could subdue. Anotber veteri¬ nary snrgeon, '• aolidement trempe au physique tl au ¦morai," M. Bartfaelemy, was one day bitten by a mad dog nnder fais oare. In spite of immediate cautery be oould never after- Wards endure tfae aight of a rabid dog—nay more, he aufl'ered inexpreaaible uneasiness if tfae namo of tfae diaease was mentioned in bfs hearing. One day fa 1847, relates M. Eedanlt, be was passing along tfas Boulevard Saint Martin, wfaen he perceived a orowd ; on fa- qnlry he learned tfaat a child had jnat been bitten by a mad dog. Forgetting—or con¬ quering—his terrora, he jnmped fiom his oar¬ riage, ptnabed aaide tho orowd, took np the child in his arms (which tbe orowd had left sobbing on the ground, witbout venturing to its aasiatance,), and carrying her to tha near¬ eat chemlat's ahop he there tfaorongfaly cau¬ terized the many wounds. After this he con¬ dncted tfae ohild to its parents, prescribed wfaat was to bs done, and disappeared witfaoat giv¬ ing his name. " AU thia time," said fais ser. vant, " maater waa as pale as deatfa." Here is anotfaer pofat to be rememberd; THE SALIVA ASD THE BITB. Bemember that it is the saliva, not tbe bite, which is dangerous, and yon will nnderatand that it ia as bad to be licked by a rabid animal as to be bitten, if the part licked be a wound, or an open aurfaco, or even a muooua mem¬ brane. A woman onoe died from hydropho¬ bia after anfferfag a dog to lick a pimple cn her dun. Horses are said tohave died mad after ealing bay npon whioh rabid pigs had died. Ur. Qilman, fa his pamphlet on faydro- phobia, quotes the case of a man whoaa faoe waa licked, while asleep, hj a rabid dog; and he died, although the strictest aearoh failed to discorer the smalleftiacratohnpoD the akfa. [ On the iiUunluma, Hr. Youtt dwbtea, sai. the experience of every veterinaiy surgeon will confirm it, that no amoant of saliva on the nnlinken skfa haa the sligheat efiect— His ownfaanda have been repeatedly oovered with the foam of rabid dogs. It is trae that fa tha first of the oasea wa have quoted firom Dr. Wataon the skfa of the hand ia aaid not to have been broken, yet nnequivooal hydro¬ phobia ensued. There is, however, great doubt permissible here. It ia also possible that, wfaen the teeth of the terrier had stmck tha ooaohman's hand,. the pafa may have caused him, by a oommon and almcst ws.\o- matio aotion, to raise hia haud to his mouth. This much ia certain, that while nothfag ia easier than to inoonlate an animal by intro- duofag the saliva of a rabid dog into the wonnd, no one has been able to effeot this by merely placmg tfae saliva on the bare skfa. It Is not, therefore, the mere bite we have to regard. Many a man, and many an animal, haa been bitten by a-rabid dog withont harm. The; woolen olothea, or the thick coat of the animal, had wiped the tooth olean before it penetrated theilesh. The same is true of the aerpent's bite; fatal on the naked flesh, it is generally harmless throngh the boot or clothes. We must remember, howerer, that not only may the bite be rendered innocuous because the tooth may be wiped olean, bnt also because tfae organism of the bitten man or animal may be auch as to resist the poiaon. We kuow that there are human befags qnite faanaoeptlble of certain dlseaaea, who pass unscathed through the serereat trials. Tfaey take no contagion. They reaist faooulation. And tbia aeems to be tme of tbe poison of rabies. John Huuter says that he knew an faatance fa whicli, of twenty.one bitten persons, only one bad hydrophobia. Nay, even the dog which seems Bopecullarly liable to this disease, isnot al¬ ways ansceptible; many esoape sfter havmg been bitten. • « • We cannot too loudly protest agamat tfais motion of speoifio reme¬ diea, becauae, nnhappily, the only poaaible preventive befag one which ia verypafafnl and atill more alarming to the ignorant— namely, cnttfag or bnmfag out tbe bitten pat^ —there ia a natural tendenoy to shrink from this, and to take refnge in the pleasenter spe¬ ciflc. But now that chloroform beneflcently shields US from the pafa of operations, it would be madness to trust to anythfag abort of the surgeon's aid. Ffaally, we faave from Blacktnood this state¬ ment of the FBBlOn BETWEEN INFEOnoN AHD OUTBBEAK. *' The period that may elapse between the bite and tbe outbreak of disease ia, as we have said, fadeterminate; tbe age, condition, and natnre of the animal aocelerate or retard it.— The usual time is from from tiiree weeks to seven moiiths. In tbe dog,Mr. Yonatt has never aeen a oase of plafa and palpable rabies which occurred in lesa tfaan fourteen day's after tfae bite. In three months he wonld oonsider tfae animal tolerably safe. In his own experience, he only knew two cases when tfae period ex¬ ceeded three months. How greatly tfae period may vary, is evident from the followfag: On tbe nigfat of Stfa Jnne, 1791, tfae man fa cfaarge of Lord Fitzwilliam's kennel was mucfa dis¬ turbed by flgbtfag among the bounds, and got up aeverai times to quiet them. On each oo¬ oaaion fae fonnd tfae same dog quarreling; at laat, tfaerefore, fae afaut that dog np by him¬ aelf, and there waa no further diaturhance.— On tbe third day afterwards the quarrelsome bonnd was unequivocally mad; and he died on the fifth. Hereupon tfae wfaole paak was separated and watcfaed. Bix of the dogs be¬ came rabid; but at the following different fa- teivala from the Stfa of Juue—twenty-three daya, flfty-aix, sixty aeren, eighty-eight, one hnndred and flfty-flve and one faundred and eighty-tfaree days. The Co-mite Consultatif d' Hygiene Publique, fa ita report on this snb¬ ject, thns divides one huudred and forty-seven cases: fa twenty-six oases one month elapsed: in nmety-three tfae period ranged between one and tbree montha: in nfaeteen between tbree and aix months, and fa nme oaaes between aix aud twelre. Romberg eaya pf sixty caaes, tfae sfaoriest period was fifteen days, and tfae long, est from seven to nme monlbis; tfae average befag from fonr to seven weeks." NOTICE. Eeiis and legal Kepresenta- I 01irl.U.ii B.1r,-'].t. of Evl tovDahlp, oeuter coa.tr, F«.a.., dmiMd. Toa .r. ber«b7 notlBMl th&t hj .irtao of aa ord.r of IIO the Uves oi ( cuter coal the Orpbine' Ooart of LMioMler eoaotr, to me directed. 1 will itold .a Isiiaut to dlTlde, pkrtor Tslae tbe Beei Eataie orpbH>tlu_B>lr deceued, oa WKDHSSDAY, tbe latb diyof SSFTXMBSB, A. D, 18St. UIO o'oiook A. U., at tbe Hsaeioa Hoaee Ute of eeld deceaeed. (aow ocoapied l>7 Oeorge Beir) oa No. 1 of eeld Beei Eetate, wbeo .ad wbere Toa arereqaested to atteod. If yoa tblokproow. 8.-«V. P. BUTD. SherlS-. Bberire Offlee, Laacaster, Aagast 19, 1861. anj 21 4t-89 ATTDITOB'S NOTICE. ESTATK of JOgN "MYBRS, late of Rapho townsbip, Laacutar co., dee'd. I'oe anderalgned Aadttor, appolated by tbe Orphaas* Conrt of Lanisuter oonnty, to distribato tbe balance re* malatDSin tbebandeortUmnelB. Zng, Esq.. Admln¬ iBtrator of tbe tstate of uld deeeased, to and among tboee legatlj entitled tbereto, will attend for the par¬ poee of bis appointment, on FBIDAT, SSPTEUBEB 13, ISSI.atlOo'clook.A. H.,at tbe Library Boom, lathe Court Hooee, In the olty of Lancaster, when aad wbere all persoas laterested are reqaested to attend, tf tbey see proper. C. S. BOFFMAN, Aadltor. aag 11 4t-39 ASSIGNED ESTATE of SAMUEL SIUHOITS. Tbe andenlgaed, appolated by tbe Ooatt of Commoa Pleas of Lancafiter coanty, Andltor, to distribate among creditors, tbe balaace tn tbe bands of Morris Cooper, Asstgnee oftjamnel Simmons, of Sads¬ bnry twp.. in said coanty, hereby glTesnotlee tbatbe will sit for tbe parpose of bis appointment, In the Conrt Honse, iotbe oity of Lancaeter. on FBIDAT, tbe 20lb day of SEPTKUBEB, 1861, at 2 o'clock tn the Bftaraoou. BSNJ. F. BaSB, aog 28-4t-4Q * Auditor. ESTATE of JULIANNA JORDAN, late of the olty of Laacaster, deo'd. Lettere of Administratloa with tbe will annexed, oo said estate having been granted to the nnderslgned, all parsons in* debted tbereto are requested to make Immediate pay¬ ment, and those haTing claims or demands against tbe same will present tbem for aettlement to tbe under- atgned. residing at Spring QcoTe, Bast Earl township, eep 4-6t-41 WM.BOTD JACOBS. WaU Papers I Wallpapers! THECAJBCABGO MMDFACTURIN& COMPANY AVE now in store a large and ez- teoelTe aseortaieat of new asd beaatifal etylw .. Atili PAPEB. wbleh bare bee. earefuUy eeleeud for tb. SprlBs Trade, and -wUl b. sold at gzeatlr reda- oed^prlee^ nirS SOLD PAPEBS. TELVBT PAPEES, SATDt PAPEBS. QEODHDED PAPEBS, BLAIIEB, BOBDEBS, noniDINfig, DECOEATIOIIS AND STiTDEg. CtJHTAIW PAPEBS, FIRE-BOARD PRINTS. Transparent Windov Shades, WHITE, GEKEN and BUFF HOLLANDS, Cords, Tassels, Fixtures, 60. K3*We larite an examiaatloa of oar etock at oar Warebonse, HO. 20 EAST Kisa ST. ESTATE of JOHN GBEENLY, late of Warwick township, deceased.—Leiters taetft- mentary on said eatate bariag been granted to/tbe nn¬ derslgned, all persons indebted thereto are requested to make immediate payment, and those baTlng demands against tbe same will present them for Bettlement to theunderslgned, residing ta eatd township. anggS-fl't^Q f BTEB 8. BEIST, Kxecutor. ESTATE OF JOHN ESHBACH, late of Manor twp., deceased. Lettera of admin- ieuatlon on aald estate harlng been granted to the nn¬ derslgned, all peraona IndeBted tbereto are requested to make Immediate payment, and those baring claims or demande against the aame will present them for settle¬ ment to the nnderslgoed, residing In said townsbip, aug 28-6t»-« JOBM EBHBACH. Admr, ESTATE of PHILIP GROW, late of MoQQt Joy twp., deceased. Letters ot Admln- tBtrkdon on said eatate baring been granted to the un¬ dersigned, all persons Indebted tbereto are reqaeated to make immediate payment, and tboee baring claims or demands againat the same will present tbem for aettle¬ ment to tbe ooderslgned, residing In aald township. aug31-6l*-Sg JACOB BAE£B. ESTATE of JOHN LEHMAN, Sr., lata of Upper Leacock townsbip, deceased,—Latr ter« testamentary on eald eetate having been granted to the undersigned, all penoos Indehted thereto are re¬ qnested to make Immediate paTmeat, and tbMO baring claims or demands against the eame will present them for setUement to the undersigned, residlntc In said township. UIJHBT SHie'IBLy, arg 2L-6t«.ai ABBAHAM 0. SHEIBLT. TH& CAMARGO 'MANUFACTURING COMPANY Are now opening a targe and well-eeleeted asaortment of Carpeting, consisting of YELVET, BBDS<'iSLS, TAPKSTBT, THBKE-PLT, IHOBAIN, SUPEBIOR, COTTAGB, DUTCH, TENITlAEr, HEMP, BAG and LIBT CARPETS. White, Checkered and Cocoa batting, TA6LU m FLOOR OIL CLOTHS, Prnggets, Rusfs, BlaiU, HASflOOlca, Aa. ra-Haringa buyer In tbe Philadelphia and Hew Totk markets eontwually, onr facilities for obtaining tbe beat and most desirable atrles of goods are nne- qaalled by any other bouse In the olty. Camargo Manafacturing Company, 20 EAST KDfO STREET. Trade Sales I Trade Salea THE aubscriber having just returned from tbe Philadelpbia I^ade Bales, offars at i^\ loweat prices all kinds of books, embraelng Lair Wio- Uon, Medical. Bellgioos, Biography, MeobanleiU, and otbsr kinds. These books will aU be sold st tbe lo«r- eit prices, aa we had the adranlage and were the only Bookseller from Lancaster, at tbe Trade Bole, and m a oonsequence, we can sell lower than any store. A few of the hooka are here mentioned: WebsUr* Unabridged Dietlonary. Woreeeur's Unabridged Ulctlonary, American Ohristian Beoord, In and aronnd titamtnnl, Oolthold'e Emblems, Snrope&n Life, Legend and Landscape, FhotograpMe Albums, Rotes on Nnrsing, Soldiera Text Books, The Days and Waya of tbe Cocked Hate, The Bible and Social Beform. BIBLES Ingreat vnriety, from tweoty-flre centa to twenty'flre dollars, some of them baring tbe finest bindings and PIstao eT«ir recelred tn town. SDNDAT SCHOOL BOuKS—Methodiat, Lutheran, Splacopal, Presbyterian, AmerioaoTract Society, Amer¬ ican Snnaay ticbooi Union, SCHOOL BOOKd—Sanders, Towers', Sargent's, Par¬ ker A Watson's Keadera, Montelth's, Mlte&ell'a, War- ren'a, bmltb'e Oeoftrapbles. Aleo, Algebras, Arithme¬ tics, Qrammars, Histories, DLettonaries, Ac. Stationery, Copy and Compoeltion Baoliu, Cap, Nute and Lelter Paper, Blank Books, Slates, Lead and biate Pencils Pens and Holders, Ink and ink Utandn, Bnlers, Env- lopee. The best inks in the market are sold bere, riz: Maynard and Ncyea, Arnold's, Uourer'e, L'Aaghlli]gH& Biuhfleld's, Blackwood'a, etc.. at the Cheap BuOk Store of JOHaN SHEAFFKB'ti, Ifo. 32 2f oitb Queen at., Lancaster, may l^tr.25 REMOVAL. DUWCAH & STOWEB, Lately Occujn/ing the Centre Square Book Store, Hare remored their entire etock of BOOKS AND STATIONERY, TOTHE OLD ESTABLISHED BQOK STAND, Krampli's Ballding, N> ^aeen at. Immediately oppoeita Shober's Hotel, 11/HERE tbey will be glad to receive Yt all their old friends and patrons, and thepub¬ llc gener&lly. We bare added to onr already well ae¬ lected etock a flne assortment of fresh and flne books, porcfa&sed at tbe PHILADELPHIA TEADB SALES, held thia month, and which, baring parchaaed low, we will be able to sell at extremely low prices. We ehall contlnne to glre special attention to the 2fewapap63f and Magazine Business, and will receive suba crip tions ac the very lowest rates, to any Newspawr published in this County or abroad. S3-01LT FBAMES havlog heretofore formed part of onr busineaa, we shall continoe to make them to order At the Bhorteet notice, ofany aize, style or price. Also, GILT or BUSEWOOD Oral frames. DDNCAir & STONEB. oot 3-tf-45 Erampb'B Balldlng, N. Qaeen St. DEANER & SCHAUM'S House FurnisMng Emporium, NO. 7 EAST KtBTQ STBEET, LANCASTSR, PA., EXAMIITEB & TTTiinAT.T^ steam Job and Card Printing Office. HAVING introduced into our Offloe ooe of RUaGLE'S ROTARY CARD CUTTERS, togetber witb a large aesortmeot of CASDS—PLAIN aad COLORED, ire are aow prepared to priat cards of everj SIZE AHD COLOB for all wbo may favor as witb thetr patroaage, AT TBE LOWEST RATES. E}-The Tradefaraiahed with CABDS OF ALL SIZES at PhllAdfllpbla prieen. Oall Rod ... Kpoetmeae, ld.e Provide Youiself with Qood Fruit. JR. SDTEK, Agent, cau furnish by • the latter part of October, Apple, Fear. Piam, Peach. Apricot TREES aad Qrape yioes. All fmlt war raoted trae lo aame. Direet J. R. snTEB, aep4.2Ml Laacaater, Pa. SPECIAL NOTICE. HAVING- determined to sell goods for Cash only, 1 offer special Icdncements to cash bayera. Harlng a large stack of Ury Oood , Groceries and Queensware, I now offer all at greatly reduced prices. HUGHS. QABA, Lancaster, Eept. 3,1861. 66 East Eing St. sep 4 St-41 City Tax ITotice for 1861. ON all City, Tax remaining unpaid af¬ ter the flrst day of 8EPTBMBER next, an addi¬ tion of 2ii per cent will be added, according to resolu- tiona of Councils. HENET C. WENTZ, aogS8-St-40 Treasurer and Becelrer. "Water Eent Wotiee for 1861. THE Water Rent Duplicate for Water Bents for 1861, will remain In tbe handa of the Treasnrer aod Becelrer, until tbe let UONDAT la 6EP- TEUBBB next, "When and afler tbat time alt Water Bente not paid will be handed orer to tbe Mayor for collection, with eo<its,Ae., added. Per Besolationa of ConscUs paased Jannary 16tb, 1857. HENBT C. WENTZ, ang gB-3t-40 Treasurer and Becelrer. A Bare Opportunity. TO any one wishing to engage in bu¬ sineas, one ofthe most desirable conntry store atands, in a thriring Tillage, In Lancaater co., for sale. Also, a reduced atock of mdze:, and flxtures. For far¬ ther informatioa addresa A. B. C, ang 2S-tM0 Lancaater P. 0., Pa. IiOAIT OT $5,000. FOK the purpose of redeeming certifi¬ catea now due, the Board of Directora of the Com¬ mon Schoola of tbe City of Lancaster, will receire pro¬ poaals for a loan not exceeding PITE THOUSAND DOLLABS. in bids of 100 Dollars and npwards—redeem¬ able in 10 years from tbelst day of October next, with Intereat at 6 per cent., payable seml-annaally, and gnaranteed to be free from taxation for Btate pnrpoeea. The eald proposals will be receired ontil the let of Ontoberbythe undenlgned, Treaaarer of the Board, designating the amonnt wblcb will bs taken. A. L. HATES. Prenldent. PETER McCONOMT, Treaanrer. Lancaster, Sept. 3.1661. eep 4HAI THE PABTNEBSHIP, HERETOFORE existing under the firm of EENDBIGE A FLINN, for carrying on tbe Uoose Furnishing, Plumbing, Gas Flttlsg, Heater and Bange Basiness, waa dissolred by mutual conaent on the 22d inst. Tbe bnslness in all ita branehes will be contlnoed at No. 11 Nortb Qoeeo street, and all firm acconnts settled byA.C..PLINN. W. 0. KENDEICK, aog a8-tf-40 A C. FLINN. BANK NOTICE. NOTIOE is hereby given that the Presideut and Directors of tbe Lancaster Coanty bank. Intend to make application to the Legislature of tbe Commonwealth of Pennaylranla, at their next ses¬ aion, for a renewal of theeharter, and an extension of tbe pririlegea of the said Baok, with all the rights and prlTlleges now enjoyed, fora termor twenty yeara, from the expiration of tbe present charter, with the aame name title, locaUon and capital of $300,000. By order. W. L. PBIPEB, Jul 10-6m-33 Cashier Lancaster Co. Bank. Notioe to Creditors. THE UDdersigned bas made application to the Jadges of tbe Court of Common Fleas of Lancaeter cotmty, for the beneflt of tbe Insolrent laws of thla Commonwealth, and they hare appointed the Srd HONDAT of EBPTBHBBB, IS&l, at the Court Hanae.in the elty ofLaneuter, at lOo'clock, A. if., for hearing me and my creditors, when and where you may attend, Ifyon think proper. Witness, John £. Brown. hla GEOBGE JAUES M HENBT. aogai-tdai mark. NOTICE. TO the heirs .and legal representatives of Daniel Krider^ Iateof CarnarTon twp., Lancas¬ ter CO., dec'd. Ton are hereby notified to be and appear in the Or¬ phana' Coort of Lanoaster Coanty, to be beld on SAT¬ UBDAT, tbe aiBt day of SEPTEMBEB, 1881, at 10 o'clock, A. U.. to Bceept or tefose to accept the real es¬ tate of Daniel Krider, deo'd, at the raloatlon tbereof, made by an Inqoest held thereon, and eonflrmed by said Ooort, or abew cause wby tbe same aboold not be aold according to law. 8. W. P. BOTD, SberiC Bep4 at^l ATTDirGB'S NOTICE. niHE underaigned Auditor, appointed J. by the Orpbana' Conrt of Laacaster eonnty, to makd diatribuUoD of tfae money in the hands of Jacob Jameson, Admiotitrator of the Batate of John Spotts, late of CamarroB Urp^dM'd.^ to and among tbe ered¬ ltore legaUy. entlUed tberelo, wm sit tox the poipoee of hla appointment', nt tha Llbmy Boom. In ths Conrt Hooaa, in^ tfa* City of: LaMaitw, on. THUBSDAT, tfae 19tk of SEPTEMBEB, mt 3 o'eloek, F. H.. when and wk«m aU lBt«rMt«d may Attamd Uttiey ae* proper. ansSMt^O Avdltor, ESTATE of JOSEPH H. BAIR, late of Earl twp., deceased. Lettera of admlols- trM.tion on aaid eetate baring been grantedto tbe nn- deisigued, all pereons Indebted therato are requested.to make immediate payment, and those baring claima or demanda against the same will present tbem for aettle¬ meat to the undersigned. GEORGE BEAR, residing In Earl towaahlp. ELIAS WORST, aug 8-6l*3T reHlding In Saliabary towoshlp. ESTATJE of MAEY MEYERS, (wid- ow) Iateof West Lampeter township, deceased. Leiivrs testamentary on said estate h&rlng been gran¬ ted to the nnderalgned, all persoos Indebtei tbereto are reqaeated to maIco Immediate payment, and thode bar¬ ing claims or demands against the same will present tham for settlement to the undersigned, residing in aald townahip. JACOB HEUR, SOS 14 61-36 ESTATE of JACOB LUTZ, late of East Hempfield towDship. deceased. Letters tes- taii)«nury on aaid eutate baring been granted to the nnderalgned, all peraons lodebted ibereto are reqaeated to make immediate payment, and tboae baring claims or demands againat the same will preaent them fur set¬ tlement to the anderdigned,residing in aaid townahip. ELIZABETH LUTZ. ANOBSW BBCBAKEB, ang T-ef-ST Executors. ESTATE of MARY AMMON, late of Salitfbary twp , deceased.—Letters testamen¬ tary on aald eatate having been granted to the under¬ aigned, ali peraonii indebled thereto are reqaeated to make payment, and tboife h&ring claima or demands agaioat tbe aame will preaent them for eettlsment to the anderatgoed Execator, residing in aald townabip. jal31-6L»a8 HfiNRr AMJION, Execator. I^At this Satabliahmdnt tbe pnblio oon at all times be supplied witti STOVES, - OP EVERY DESCBIPTION, TIN WAEB, Sheet Iron Ware, <fco., AT THB LOWEST CASH BATES. tJ-raEIB UATEBIAL IS THE BEST Ilf THE UAB¬ KET, AHD THE EEPDTATIOH OP THS ES. TABLI8HUEST IS A SnBE QCAB- ANTEE OP THE SOPEBIOBITr OF THE WOEK. o ATiTi ..A.s>rx> szjx;. THE REGISTER'S NOTICE. THE Accounts of the respective dece¬ dents hereunto annexed an filed in tha Eegiaier't oiflce of Lancaater county, for confirmalion and allow- ance, at an Orphans' Court, to be hsid in the Court Honae, In the city of Lancsster, on the tbird MONDAT J in SEPTEMBEH oext, (16th,) at IU o'clock A. fil. Barbara Hertzler, MillersTlLle, Manor town¬ abip. B; Heory Fank, Admloiatrator da bonis non. William Qlrioh, East HempQeld twp. Gaard- lannnip aceouot. By John Bti.Icer,ga&tdt&a of Peter B Ulrich and Jacob Clrlob, minor children of dec'd, David High, Eaat Earl lwp. By Sol. Uigh, ButTlrlng admlntetra.tor. Heniy Mehring, East Earl twp. By George HUdebrand and John Swigart, Executors, Francis Cordes, Eulton twp. By Henry R. MoFonn, administrator with ths will annexed. Sarah Peart, East Lampeter twp. By M. P. Cooper, executor. John B. Pennington, Little Britain twp. By Samuel E. FairbAok, administrator. Benjamin Lessley, Brecknock twp. By John S. Lecieley,admlnletrator. Samaei Oood, Brecknock twp. By John B. Good, admiutatrator, Joseph Royer, Manheim twp. Guardianship Account. Ey John Svarr, guardian of Tobiaa Boyer asou of deceased. Abner Reese, Providence township. By John Strohm, adminiatrator. Eliza Kurtz, Saliabary twp. Gaardianship Account. By WiUlam Rhoada, guardian of Lydia A. Knru and Harriet C.'Swigart, (formerly Kurtz,) mi¬ nor cbUdren oi deceaaed. Elizabeth Kimmel, Clay twp. By Jacob Kim¬ mel and George Wecbter, execotora. Isaao Mandorff, 'Conestoga twp. By Jaoob Fehl and John J. Beed. administratora. Isaac Worst, Saliabary twp. Gaardianship Account. By Henry W. Eby, gaardlan of George Worst, mloor child of deceased. Lucinda Hershey, SaUsbury twp. By Chriat¬ ian H. Herahey, admlniatrator. Jacob Eahlemau, Paradise twp. Sapplemen- tary Acconnt. By Jacob Franiz, one of tbe Execntora. Veronica Snyder, Elizabeth twp. By Mosea Bnyder and Hiram Etb, Executor. Henry NeS, Borongh of Marietta. Sapple¬ meutary Account. By Abrabam N. Caaael, Adminia¬ trator with the will annexed, as to the ahare be¬ queathed to Elizabeth Butt, late of Manor twp., dec'd, for life, by the WUl of teatator. William A Brown, Dramore twp. By S, W. P. Boyd, and Lea P. Brown, Admiolatrators. Catharine Davis, Mount Joy twp. By John H. Zeller, Administrator, Jolm Zartman, Elizabeth twp. By Daniel Weidman, Adminialrator. Elizabeth Graham, Strasbarg twp. By Henry N. Breneman, Admloiatrator. David Banting, Colerain twp. By Hannah Bunting and WilUam t. Worth, Adminiatratora. John Stont, East Donegal twp. By John H. Zeller, Admlnletrator. Minervia Coulaon, City of Lanoaater. By Christian Sheaffer and William Gorreeht, Adminlu- tralora. Abraham Sherer, Mount Joy twp. Gaardlan- ahip Account. By Hen<y Btehman and Benjatnin gtehman, AdmlniBtratora of Darid Brandt, deceaeed, who was Qnrdlan of Eliza Holfman and Lydia Hoff¬ man, minor children of Lydia Hoffman,and grand- children of Abraham Sherer, deceased. John F. Steele, late paymaster nf the U. S. Nary. By Saiah H. Sample, Administratrix. Maria Sheaffer, city of Lanoaater. Cy Chris- Homp, Admlniatrator. George Ruj)ley, Borough of Washington.— By ChrlaUan Charlea, Adminiatrator with tbe will annexed, and Execntor of tbe laat will and teatament of A.nQa Funk, late of the aiime plsce. David Hoover, Earl townahip. By Daniel Rife, Execator. Owen Bruuner, Ephrata township. Guardi* 'anxblp Account.. By Peter Martin,Guardian of Ben¬ jamin Pranklin Brnner, child of deceased, now of age. Daniel Bitzer, West Earl township. Final Account. By Lydia Bitzer aod Beuben B. Bitzer, Administrators. George Appold, Boroagh of Colambia. By BeDJamln F. Appold, Admlniatrator. Henry Shertz, Paradise township. Guardian¬ ship Account. By Dr, Joseph H. Leferer, Guardian of James H. Sherlz. minor child of deceaaed. James McCIain, City of Lanoaster- By John J. CampbeU, Administrator. Martin Baer, East.Hempfield townabip. Guard¬ ianahip AocoonL By Jacob Bauamao uod Uary Bauaman. Guardians of Blartin H. Baer, minor chUd of deceaaed. Jacob Metzgar, City of Lancaster. By Chris> Uan Strnble, Administrator. Frederick Gram, of West Hempfield township, deceased. By Henry Copenhoeffer, Trnatee of Suaan Ulnnleh, now alao deceased. GEOBGB C. HAWTHORN, Begiater. BBaiSTBK'e Of?iob, Lane. Aug. 19, '61. aog 21-lt-Sd NO, JOHN DEANER, aog 28 Bemember, OLD STAND!! 7 EAST KING- ST. JOHN P. SCHAUM. ly-40 TAKE NOTICE I BANKING HOUSE OF BEEB, HENDEBSON &: GO ON the 26th of March, inatant, the aodertigned, under tbe firm of BBED, HENDEB¬ SON & CO., wUl commence the Banking Bnsiness, in Ita usual branobes at the offlce hitherto occopled by John K.Beed & Co., at the comer of EastKing and Duke Streeta, betweea the Court Hooae and fipreoher'a Hotel, Lancaster, Pa. Tbey wlU pay Interest on depositee at the foUowing ratea: 63£ per cent, for 6 montha and longer. a " " M daya and longer. Thsy will bay and aell Stocke and Beal Estate on oommlealon, negoUate Loans for others, purchase and ¦ell Bills of Exehange, Fron^ssory Notee, DraAa. &o. ko., ta. The onderaigned will be indlrldnaUy liable to the extent of th^ means, for all depoeitea and other obll gatlone of Beed, Henderson & Co. Uarch 16. 1S60. JOHN K. EEED, AUOS B. BENDEBSON. Biar31-tM7 ISAAC E. HIESTEB. THE INLAND INSTTBANOB ANB DEPOSIT COUFANY r«rSURE agunst loss by fire on Build- inga,dtbar perpetual or limited. Also, onMeichan- dise, foinitnre andother personalproperty.atreaaoaable ratee. U^Sald CompuLT aleo reeeive money on depoait aa heretofore, pay S percent Intereat for one mooth or longer, and 0^ pw eent on. depoait made for a year. H. X. HOHLXBBKBQ, fxeddent. B. ?. Saqox, Biontazy^ xur 914M7 GEO. CALDER & CO., HAVE lEt. :es tiOl o ¦\r :es x> THEIB Warehouse, Coal and Lumber Yard, PEOM QBAEPP'S LANDIHO, To tha Proparty formerly- occapled by Hoasra. P ^ Long k Nepheir, oa tha opposlta or aonth alda of tba Coaestoga, AND wonld oall the attention of tlieir old eastomars Aad all lataieatad, to their aaparlor STOCK OF COAL, Suitable for Steav, Lixb BcasiKa, Blaox SHtra and Fauilt Ubb, by tbe boat load or ton. Also, to their stock of LUMBER, OF EVXar DESOKtPTlOIT, COBSU^tBO 0? let aod Sad COU. BOABDS, let aod 2od COU. FLANK, CDLLINQ BOABDS. BAEB B0ABD3, CDLLIHO PLANK, PINB SHINGLBS, CTPBESS SHINQLES, EEULOCK SCANTLINa AHD JOIST. CABOLINA YELIOW FINE FLOOBING BOABDS, PLASTEHINQ LATHS, PAILS AND PICKETS, &o., &c., All of which la of tha best qoality, and will ha aold aa low aa eaa he parchaaed eiaewhere. J3-Wo hare tha beat Stoclc ot POSTS and BAILS la the city of Laacaater, cotulstlog of LOCUST MORTICED POSTS, CHESTNDT MOETICED POSTS, BOARD FENCE POSTS, AND A TABIETT OP CHESNDT BAILS AND OTHER PENCINQ UATEBIAL. Ground ilnm and Ishton Salt, ITJMP AKD GEOUHD PLASTEE. S3*RecoI]eet tbat we bare remoTed to the sonlh end of the Bridge, wbere we will be pleased to aee onr old friends and customers. Q. CAUSKB & CO., OFFICE IH LAHCASTEB, AS DSDAL, East Orange St,, second door from North Queen. )an 30 tf-10 OONSUMERS OF COAL, •rj9i.:ECX3 3M-OVXOX:: ELIiMAKEB'S - COAL TARD, StiU at the Old Flace, Cor. of Frinoe and Lemon sts., one square North of the Bailroad. npHE moat convenient yard in the city 1. for Country Trade, being out of eight of the oars, and fronting on two streets. Sil^HaTlng procured the eerrlcea ol JACOB BEINHOLD, for 15 yeare well and faTorably known to the people of tbls county in conaectlon with the coal bnal¬ neaa, aod by glTlng bib entire attention to tbe bnsinefs, the BubBoriber hopes to. merit and receire a libera] ehare of the publio patronage. li::;^CZean Coal and full loeighl guaranteed to aH. aprl7-ly-31 LEVI ELLUAESR. WENTZ BBOS. HaTO Jnat reeelTed MORE GEEAT BAEaAINS, Now oSettag at as IMUBirBB SAOBIETCII. 1 Caae beaatifal UDS. DELANE, oaly Ucta. 1 Case Fecood UoaiQlag UDS. DELANE, 12 eta Beantifnl Dreas Good*. OBEY LATELLA CLOTHS, oaly Oeta. Uore of thoee excelleot haodkerehiefa, oae yard aqaara only 13X CU., at WENTZ BROS., SAaT Eiaa AVD Cektbb Squabs. ang 28 ir.4o THE AGBICtTLTTTBAIi AIiMAITAC FOB, 1863. STTFEBIOB PEQUEA i-TWTi: FOR SALE. THE snbsoriber eontinnea to sell tlie beat qnaUty of WOOD BDBBT LIVE, at hla iUj|ia,4Bauidahalf mil. aoath of LaoipetarSqoara Onl OS lalt.t Spneher'B Hotel, U tha dly ofLucaa etatar. WUlb.promptly atteadad to. „.„_ ttb2M7.M JOBS W. MABmi. 2)k Jennfploonifc^e @(tlen&er fut 18 6 2* JDST PUBLISHED aad lor Sale hy JOHH BAEB'S EONS. aep 4-tMl Laacaater, Pa. BISHOP BOWMAH. A FULL SIZE PHOXOaEAPH of thelate BlghtBavereodSAMDELBOWMAN D. U., AaelBtant Bishop ofthe Diocese of PeaoaylTaola. Price 60 coata, at J. M. WEljTHAEFFBR'ri, No. 41 Cor.of N, Qaeea and Oraoge ata. " The UhaoesB la earulaly agood ooe, aod the Bishop belog la his clerical robes, as his owa pariuhoaers wera moat accastomed to sselog htm. It gives with great d- dellty that soft aod expressive smilu which mailced his fealoree la frieodly convers&tion."~-£d. of Kveoiog Ex¬ press. _ ang 21-tr-39_ ANNODNCEMENT EXTBAOBDIHABY i SUAS BABB & CO. SELL HABDEE'S BIFLE AND LIGHT INFANTBY TACTIC;!, for Sl 25. GEN. SCOTT'S MAHDAL, *2 10. Don't forgel A'o, 31 Oppoiile tlie Cour House. maylg tf-25 DKATH TO TBAITOBS! . THE UNION 11 THE DHIOH FOBEVEB i 11 THE UNION AND THE CONSTITDTION 111! eSVELOPES AND LETTER PAPER WITH •THE FLAG- AND THB CANNON, may 16-tr-2£ At No. 31 opposite the (.ourtHouae. ' THE BEST AND THE CHEAPEST TTNION WEITING PAPEB UNIOxV ENVELOPES, At ELIAS BABB & CO'S, may 15-tf-26 Opposite tho Court House. UNION NOTETanTLETTEE PAPEE. UNION ENVELOPES. THE largest and best aasortment in tho city, which wo sell at the lowest rates, (.'oantry Uerchaota are lavlted to call befure porcbasiog else¬ where, at JOHN SUEAPPEU'S. may 15 tf-SiJ THE VOLtTNTEEB'S MANUAL, CONTAINING lull instruction lor the recruit In the schools of >be soldier aod squad. by Lieut. Col. D. W. C. Baiter. Price 23 cents, at JOU« SHBAPFEB'S may I5-tr-25 Cheap Book titora, S2 North Qaeen St. steam: weekly Between New Tork and Liverpool, LANDING- and Embarking Passengera at QOEENSTOWJH, Clra- bind.) The Liverpool, Mew York and Philadelphia r-teamBbip Cum¬ paay Intend despatching their - full-powered ClyUe-Bnilt lron| Steamships, aa follows: OLASCOW, Saturday, Sep:. 7. CITT OF BALTIMORE, do do 14. EANGABOO, do do 21. and OTory Saturday, at N'oon, from Pier 44, Korth BlTer Hates oi Passage: FIRST CABIN $75 00 do to Loodon 80 00 do to Parla S5 00 do to Hamburg 66 00 arEERAQE 30 00 do toLondon 33 00 do to Paris 33 00 do to Hamburg 35 00 it3~Fas8engers forwarded to Havre, Bremen, Botter¬ dam, Antwerp, &c., at reduced tliroagh faree. Persons wishing to bring ont tfaeir friends can bny tlekets at low rates. t3*'Jfor fnrther information apply at tbe Company'a offlcea. JOHN a. DALE, Agent, 15 Broadway, N. T, or BEED, McOBANN, KELLY & CO., AgenU, Laneaster. maris tl)ly-1B STKAM TO LONDONDERRY, GLASGOW. , AND XiIVBEPOOL. THE MONTREAL OOEAN STEAM- SHIP COMPAMY'S FIRST CLASS, fnU powered Clyde built Steamera:— NOVA SCOTIAN, Capt. McMaater. BOHEMIAN, " Oraoge. NORTH BRITON, " Borland. CA^ADIAN, " Orahdm. N. AMERICAN. " Alton. ANOLO SAXU», '• Ballatlne. HIBERIAN, (Now Balding.) NUBWEOIAN, Carrying the Canadian and Lnited States Halls. S3>0ne of tbe steamers of the Uoe will a&tl from LlT¬ erpool erery Thoraday and from Qaebeo eTery Batnr- d&y, calling at Londonderry to receive on board and land malls and paEsengars to and from Ireland and Scotland. Glasgow paitt^eagars are lurniiibed with free passage tickets to and from Londonderry. Batee of pasaage from Quebec to Londonderry, Olaa- gow or LlTerpool: First Class (according to accommodation) - - $66 Jc $50 Steerage (fonnd wltb cooked proviHiona) $30 An experienced Sargeon attached to eachsteamer. Betnrn tickets Ibsned at redoced rateo. Certlflcale» Usned for briogiog oat piHssngers from all the principal towns of Oreat Brilain and Ireland, at the following luw ratea;— Londonderry to Hew York $30 00 GlasKOW " " 32 CO Liverpool " *' 35 00 From any B.R. station In Englaod 40 00 " " " " Ireland 32 50 From Antwerp, Bremen, Hamburg and Rut' terdam, to Naw York 4s 00 lockets Issued at redoced rates, per Wahhi.tcitos Li*fB or Sjliluiq Packets, leaving LWerpool for ^ew York weekly. IC^For Passage, apply at the Offlce of the Company. 23 Broadway, New York, SABEL k SEARLE. Oeaeral Agente, or J. H. WESTHAEFFER, No. 44 Nocth Qneen street, Lancaster, I'a. ang 21-7u 39 IrTsH STEAiMSHlP LINE. Steam between Ireland and America. NEW TORK, BOSTON AND GALWAY. THE following new and magnificent flrst-class paddle-wheel Steamahlpa compose the alwTe line: ADBIATIC, 6.8SS tons burthen, - Capt. J. lUrar (Formerly of the ColUna Line.) HIBERNIA, 4,400 tone burthen, Capt. K. Paowes, COLUMBIA, 4,400 •• « K. Leitch. ANOLIA, 4.400 " " NicnoLso-i PACIFIC, 2,600 " " 1. SMfTH. PRINCE ALBEBT, (Screw.) 3.300 " *' I. Walkbr. One of the aboTe ubips will leave New Tork or Uos- ton alternately evary Taeaday fortnight, for Oalway, carrying the gorernment mails, tonchlng at ±)l JoLns. The Steamers of this line have beeu constmcted with, the greatest eare. under tbe itaparvlsion of tbe govern¬ ment, have water-tisht compartments, andare uner- cell«d for comfort, safety and speed byany steamers afloat. Tbey are oommanded by able and experienced offlcera, and every exertion wlU be made to promote the comfort of passengers. An experienced Sargeon attached to eacb ship. KATSa or PlfiSAOB. Firet-claae frora N. Y. or Boston to Qaiway or Liver¬ pool, $100 Second Clft-ia, " •< « u .jj Filst-Clasa " " to St. Johna, 36 Thlrd-ClaBa, " " ' to Oalway or Llvar- ?30l, or any town In Ireland, on a Railway, :J0 hlrd-clasa pa&engers are liberally sopplled with provisiona of the beat quality, cooked and served by the servanta of the Company. RBTUEjr TiCKETa. Parties wishing to aend for thslr friends from the old couotry, ean obtain tickets from any town on a railway. In Ireland, or trom the principal clti&d of England and Scotland at very low rates. PMeeagero for New-York, arriving by tho Boaton Steamers, will be forwatdt^d lo New-York free of charge. For oasssKe or or fnrtner information apply to *^ WM. H. WICKHAM. At the office of tbe Company, on tbe wliaif,foot of Canal atreet. New York. HOWLAND & ASPINWALL, Agento. irp24 6m-22 I'OB BENT STORB ROOM and DWELLING, ait¬ uated tn a TlUage where a caah baslneis can ba done. Poeswaion can be tiad in the taXL i .M^ot partlanlan enoulxe at this offlce. imfl MB
Object Description
Title | Lancaster Examiner and Herald |
Masthead | Lancaster Examiner and Herald |
Volume | 35 |
Issue | 42 |
Subject | Newspapers--Pennsylvania--Lancaster County |
Description | The Lancaster Examiner and Herald was published weekly in Lancaster, Pa., during the middle years of the nineteenth century. By digitizing the years 1834-1872, patrons are provided with a view of politics and events of this tumultuous period from a liberal political slant, providing balance to the more conservative perspective of the Intelligencer-Journal, which was recently digitized by Penn State. |
Publisher | Hamersly & Richards |
Place of Publication | Lancaster, Pa. |
Date | 1861-09-11 |
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 | 09 |
Day | 11 |
Year | 1861 |
Description
Title | Lancaster Examiner and Herald |
Masthead | Lancaster Examiner and Herald |
Volume | 35 |
Issue | 42 |
Subject | Newspapers--Pennsylvania--Lancaster County |
Description | The Lancaster Examiner and Herald was published weekly in Lancaster, Pa., during the middle years of the nineteenth century. By digitizing the years 1834-1872, patrons are provided with a view of politics and events of this tumultuous period from a liberal political slant, providing balance to the more conservative perspective of the Intelligencer-Journal, which was recently digitized by Penn State. |
Publisher | Hamersly & Richards |
Place of Publication | Lancaster, Pa. |
Date | 1861-09-11 |
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 821 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 | 09 |
Day | 11 |
Year | 1861 |
Page | 1 |
Resource Identifier | 18610911_001.tif |
Full Text |
VOL. XXXV.
LANOASTER, PA,, JBI^pSI)4Y, SEPTEMBER 11, 1861.
NO. 42.
J. A. HIKSTAin), J. F. HUBKR, P. HECKEET
vnuatXB nsM or HIESTAin), HtJBEIL & HSCK£BX
oinai .Ul xoETX ftnn mxir.
THE EXAMINER & HEBALP Is Publisiied Wmklg,et Two DoUars a Year.
ADVERTZBSBCBZnS will be inaerted at the aU of $1 00 per equre, of ten Unea, fer three buer* lens or Ie*; mnd 35 oents per equate for euh additional Inaertlon.
AdTertltementa exeeedlBK 10 Unes wlU be ebmrsed 0 centa per llnei for tbe 1st InaerUon, and S cente per llno or eacb anbseqnent InserUon.
BoaieeBs Adrertlsameats Inserted by Uto qnarter baU yoar or year^ wUl be dialed as foUowi:
Two ^ .
X oolnmn ,
1
S monfAe. 6 monfAe. 13 monUs
»2 00 $6 00 »8 00
BOO aoo 13 00
, 10 00 J8 00 36 00
18 00 » OO « 00
SO 00 65 00 80 00
BDSINRSS NOTICfS Inserted before Uaxrlafies and Deatbs, donble the regtUar rates.
{3"-^ adverUslng acconnts are cooeidered collecta¬ ble at tbe expiration of half the period contracted for. Transient adverUsemeots, cash
PATEIOTIC POETBT.
Since tlie progress of the ivar in putting
tbis Slavery rebelUon tiown tbe poetical
talent of tbe country^ bas not been idle. TVe
present a few spociment:
ALABTTH.
Men of America,
Dp from joor slombers I Da«h tbe thick mist away. Bach eool lhat caabsrs I Freedom Is yet alive; Wake, in ber oame to strive; bwarm, from eaeh. busy hive, Reafstless numbers!
Were we not freedom born—
I)ero-de«ceDded? When shall the bisn of acoro Oar fame have ended?
Tbe sou of Washlogtoa Traitora efaoald harbor none— Tfaoogh all oor rivers ran With crimeoa blended,
Oor realm Is balfa world;
Oceio to ocean! SfaaU onr fiag now be forled 'JUid war's commotion?
Nol let oor Chief's eommaod. Over hroad lake aud laod, Rouee every freeman's faand, Eacfa heart's deToUonl
Up, up (or Liberty! The battle rages! Of our laud's history _Blood stains tbe pages. " Deatb may be welcome now; Tfaongfa culd the laorel'd brow, 21en to Us fame sfaall bow All throogh the ages.
From caitiff fear or figfat,
Oood Lord, deliver! By troce wltfa traitor might, Give oe peace, never!
Rather go dowo to dost, * As in the end we most. Placlog lo God onr irost. Freemen for ever I
FOSWAED.
Forward! Lat Ihe word beglven;
Onward to the tented plain ; Let the bolis of war be driven
Bravely once more home agalo.
No mor-> honeyed worda from traitors,
No more coootlog oo tbe cost; Wait we yel, aud wait we loogsr?
WaU we unUl all be lost?
Forward! Let tbe word be given
To the mlllione ofthe North ; 'Neath the f-miles of Ood aod Heaven
Poor your coontless legions fortfa.
No mora fearing, no mort doubting, Wbeo shall all tfais tnrmoll cease?
Let the bollet'e twlft careering Be onr messenger of peace.
Walt we for another morrow ?
List we still lo treason's breath ? List we till tfae general sorrow
Speaks an faouored nation's death ?
Who shall rear again tfae etmcture.
Wfao sfaall guide tfae helm of State T Who tbe priceless gem shall reeeae
From the grasp of snefa a fate ?
By the memories wbich clnster Boaod the fresh graves of oar elaln,
Freemen, patriola. soldiers moster! Forward to tbe tented plain !
HALF-MAST.
In memoryof Gen. Nathaniel Lyon, kitted at the battle af Wilson's Creek. August 10, 1861.
Unfurl our flag bilf-mast to-day.
In Borrow 'mid the clang of war, Bacfa crImeoQ stripe is toioed to gray,
To black eacfa azure etar.
Tba drooping breeze scarce stirs a fold. The birds complain with fettered breath,
Tfae elouds haog BoUenly and eold. For lo, a hero's aeath 1
From far Missouri's prairie plain *
Tfae echo of fals balUe cry Sounds and recedes, and souuda again,
Hll Ufe-earned victory.
Ofa, Lyon! oo tfay martial faier Tbe tears of gratefol mUlioos flow,
And treaaoo weU way sfariok and fear Its fated overtfarow.
For whereeoe'er tfay comrades staod
To face the traitors, as of yoro, Tby prescient spirit shall command
And lead tho charge once more. Then fling our flag mast-hlgh to-day.
Triumphant 'mid the claog of war. And death to him wbo shaU betray
Oso single stripe or etar I
A PASTOR'S ELECT.
BT TIEGISIA F. TOwrBKND.
" How tell me abont it, \7eldon. I am bo anxions to hear tbe wbole stoiy, and it's such a nioe evening for it too. It is suoh a luxury to be all alone with yoa tbat tbe rain sounds really mnsioal as it drops against the panes.'' Sbe bad palled a low ottoman to bis feet, and throwing berself on tbis, lifted her aweet faoei set in its frame work of brown soft bair, to her brother's.
" So you bave at last oaught me, and in¬ tend turning my confessor—do you, Httle ais?" smllingty responded tbe young clergyman, as he tumed his eyes from the anthracite blaze, where they had been dreamily fastened for the i Sbe'll be frightened, I'm gone so loug,
last half honr, and a beaatifal, almost dreamy, tendemeBH seemed to drift into tbem as they Teatdd on his sister.
"Yea; to think yoa are really engaged, Weldon ? What wonld yonr parishoners aay if lhey knew it, particnlarly tbe younger por¬ tion of tbem ? I am somewhat apprehensive their daily beqnegts of bouquets and fmits wonld be sensibly diminished. But aboat the lady—is she beamifnl, Weldon ?"
" A ^woman's flrst query 1" and again tha^ rich smile went like sunlight over the grave bnt handsome features of tbe youDg pastor. *' I am not certain, Hattie, whether an artist wonld tbink her so. Her featiuea are not en¬ tirely reg;nlar, and ber cbeeka are less rosy than your own; bnt the emotions of her deep gentle loving natnre look ontof ber deep blue eyea, and tbere is a sweet heart-ohirograpby in tbe amiies tbal sparkle at times over her small and raiher pensive mouth."
*'Yon are drawiog a charming Raphael pio¬ tnre, brotber mine. Sbe is yonng, of course?" " Hardly twenty-one." "And—no, I need not nsk if ber mind is well cnltivated, for I know your opinions re. specting woman too well to donbt thia. Bat ifl sbe intelleotnal—in short, a book worm 1" " WeU, something of one. The formation of her bead indicates a saperior mental or- gai^zation, but all the faonltiea are well bal¬ anced." " And—let me see—is sbe wealthy ?" " Only in the posaession of tbose great jew¬ els wbich are above all price." " Bnt bfer family—who are tbey ?" "I never saw but one member of it, and he was a beggar." .
"Weldon!" The little fingers tbat had been playfully braiding themselves witb those of the young man's were anddenly withdrawn —the quick blood flaahed into the question¬ er's ebeeks, and a look of mingled astonish¬ ment and displeaaura filled ber brown eyes as she breathlessly ejaculated— ^
" Weldon, you are not in earnest ?" " Yes, I am Hattie. You know I would not Jest on snch a subject."
** Bnt yon took me so greatly by surprise. And—and—"
The Uttle red lipa trembled a moment, and tben the tears brimmed over the brown lasbes and journeyed slowly down the cheeks.
" And tronbled yon, too, Hattie f" inter¬ rogated the yonng man,' aa he leaned forward
brotber; it wu hmrdly^vrwMkn^yfor he was all that God had left to her of ^e house¬ hold over whom the^ spring dutes had long spread their golden oovering; and fi>r a mo- ment she had looked with the world's eye npon his betrothal to the stster ofa mendi- oent.'Bnt her brother'B wozda had silenced the pride whispers In her heart, for Battle Harshall bad learned of Him who was meel and hmnbie in spirit.
"I will do aa you ask, Weldon. Forgive me If I have done wrong," she whispered, drawing up closer to her brother, and laying her head in its old reating. place against his heart; for very tenderly did brother and Bis¬ ter love eaoh other.
Weldon Marshall drew his arm around his sister's waist, and then, when the rain moan¬ ed and the wind muttered aronnd the windows and the anthracite fire mingled its mddy glow with (he silver astral Hght, and filled the par¬ sonage sitting-room with a dreamy crimson light, he told a story of the past, and his eyes grew darker, and his low earnest tones fall of pathetic eloquenoe as he told it.
It is eight years next month, Hattie, and I was in New. York, engaged in my collegiate stndiea. Yoa see it was three years after our mother's death, and you were at that time with Uncle Harvard, attending aohool.
It was a oold, wild, diaagreeable night—and I remember standing at the window of Taj sung sanctnm, and looking ont raefnlly into the darkness, for I had an engagement to meet several of my fellow students that evening in a distant portion of tbe oity.
" Hear me, how tbe wind blows 1" I solilo- qoiaed, with a very feminine shmg of the shoulders, as I drew the cnrtains oloser. "I've half a mind to throw myself on the lonnge, whioh looks so provokingly comfortable this evening, and not attempt an encounter with tbe elements. It's absurd lo think they'll ex¬ peot me snch a night as this. In short, I will not tempt an influenza by ahowing ray face outaide the door," waa the conolnsion of my monologue.
I remember that I wheeled np the sofa in oomfortable proximity to the flre, looated tbe lamp so that its raya fell softly upon the vol¬ ume I intended to oommnne with, and that I had setUed myself for a long quiet winter's evening.
Bnt it wonld not do. My eyes wandered listlessly along the pages; they could not en¬ gage my attention. A strange nnacoonntable feeling of restlessness and anxiety seemed to possess me. At last I resolutely closed the book, and a few minutes later I was in Broad¬ way, mentally oensuring my folly in yielding to a feeling I could not resist.
Ah me I looking baok throagh tbe eight years that lie between that weary night and the present, how clearly can I discover tbe great Father's love in it all I
" Wbat is it you want here, little boy f"-1 see bim now jaat as thongh I had seen him tbia moming, and tbe light from the tall win¬ dow is falling on him jnst as it fell then, re¬ vealing his ragged dress and pale, pinched features, and the cold rain is dripping off his thick brown cnrls, just as it did then. It ia a strange, monrafnl picture—tbe dark ground in the back gronnd, and the litlle ragged boy, and tbe bnlliant ligbta, and the great store, with all sorts of rare confeotiona, in front. No wonder it tonched my heart. The boy started as I laid my hand gently on his shoulder, and looking up with bis wild, eager, bright eyea into my face—
"Ob, sir I" he said, after a moment's eam- eat perusal of my features. " I was thinking if I only could carry one of tbose cakes home to Ellen; sbe is very sick, and—and (the lit¬ tle fellow's lips quivered) we haven't hsd any tbing to eat for two days."
I did not speak another word; bnt I caught hold of the cbild and pulled him after me into tbe store.
"Hand me down a plate of tboae cakea," I cried to the astonished clerk, who tnmed with more than ordinary alacrity to falfil my re¬ quest, I drew the boy into a small sitting room at one end of the establishment. "Kow eat theae as fast as you oan, and then tell me wbo Ellen is."
His hnngry look, tbe strange avidity with whioh he grasped the food, almost wrung teara from my eyes.
" Ellen is my sister—ray only ^aiater since the baby died. We are all alone now. Last month, just after they bnried mptber, ahe grew siok. I s'pose it was because she cried so much: and she's been growing worse all the time."
" And there is nobody to take care of her now, but you, my little fellow?"
*• Nobody but me—the money mother left is all gone, yon see, sir, and though I sometimes earn a sixpence by selling papers or cleaning sidewalks, I conidn't leave Nelly for the laat week, she grew so mnoh worae. O, air, how good theae taste I I can't thank yon, but I want to."
" Well, yen needn't, my boy, I want no
other thanks than yonr enjoyment of them."
^Bnt mayn't I take the rest home to Nelly?
0,sir^
if you'd only go with me I
" I'll come and see yon and Nelly to-mor¬ row," I said, " if you'll tell me where you livei and now wbite you are eating the remainder of your oakea, I'll get something that Nelly will like better."
I procured a basket, which I saw well stock¬ ed with a variety of fruits and confections most likely to tempt the appetite of an inva¬ lid, and adding to these all the money I had with me, I retnmed lo the ohild.
" Go home to Nelly wilh these as fast as yon can," I said," and tell her lhat I will come to aee her to-morrow moming. Now, be a man, my little boy, and take good care of sister Ktlen till then."
" And all these for her ?" said the child, as his large wondering eyes roamed over the bas¬ ket. ''And she has been moaning in her sleep after an orange the whole week. O, sin we will pray God to bless yon for all this, and he will, for mother aaed to say he would hold thoae in ever laating rememberance who for¬ got not tbe widow and the orphan," and teara of miogled gratitude and delight were shower¬ ing down the litlle fellow's faoe as we parted. The next morning, Hattie, I received that letter which sammoned me to my father's dying bedside. I had, of coarse, no time to fulfil my engagement with the little orpbans, in whom I had become so greetly intereted; indeed, the mournful circumstances which drew me once more to the bonae of my ohil- hood banished them from my mind.
If you will look down to that time, my lit¬ tle siater, yon will remember that April was weaving her green carpet over the meadows before we parted, aud I returned to the city. to complete my stndiea, and then to enter that aervica in whiob, before my father's dy¬ ing bed, I had aolemnly pledged to spend all the life that God shonid grant me.
I had forgotten the name of the boy's reai¬ dence, bnt I knew that I had made aeverai attempta tp diacover it after my retnm to the city, all of whioh proved ineffectual.
It was sunset of a bright day in the early May-time, and even in the great oity looking fairer for the sunshine that plaited the house- tofls with gold, and swept in golden flakes and dimples along the pavement up which I was passing with some fellow students to supper.
" Now, Maishall, remember to call for
and caresBlUijly smoothed down the bright! ^ ^"°®* ^°' the lectnre commences at seven, hair of his Bister. " Don't look so sorrowful, \ ^°^ ^* certainly will be crowded," callod out darling, as though some great evil had chanced | °"® °^ ^^ companions, as we reached the cor- me. Bnt listen to what I shall tell yon, and |'i»«'^here oor paths diverged, then see if your own true and noble httrt,' ^ howed my assent and adieu, and was bur- unbiased by sooial distinctions and pMipipi* j'Ji^g forward, when my coat was suddenly does not commend my election, y^fpi mq^q - grasped, and an eager bnt timid voice said, tWs, Hattie, if not for my sake, for His who' ** ^^®*^ ^^i is yoar name Marshall f"
aatd that the poor and the rioh were issk» in
His sight?" ' " ;--"¦:: :
Sweet Hattie Marshall I Her one. g^ 'fttfble
I ttuned and looked at the speaker. It was a little girl, apparently about ten years of age; her long ciirls fallln'g in a bright, tangled m ass
her la^e bloi^ eyes were fisstened with a Idnd ef panting eagerness upon my own.
*' Yea, that Is my name. And what do yoa want with me, my little girl?" I qtieried, gT«atly siirprised at this singular enconnter.
" Oj sir, do yoa remember a little boy whom yon met one evening last winter, who told yoa
he had a sister Nelly, and " Thla mystery
was at onoe cleared np.
"Yes, yes, I remember it all," I interrapted " And yoa are Nelly, I suppoae ?" and I sur¬ veyed the child with enhanced intereat. Her ragged garments, her pale face, bore a very legible history—a history of aharp poverty and bitter suflerlng.
"0,1 am so glad—so veiy glad, sir!" and the light that hroke into her little careworn featares was beaatifal te behold.
"I was almoat sore it must be yoa when tbe gentleman called yonr name, and yon look just as Willie said yoa did. 0, sir, I have looked and watched, and w^ted for yoa so many days, that I had almost given np hoping.**
*' Poor child 1 I have been out of tewn, or I wonld have oome to yoa as I pronused. But where is Willie now ? and what do you want with me ?"
I was well nigh ashamed after the latter qnestion bad been asked, her poverty answer¬ ed it BO plainly.
•* 0, sir, Willie ia sick, very sick; and his face looks so white and strange lately, I fear he is going home to mother sometimes. Yoa aee I got better after yoa aent me the cakes and oranges, and Willie bought some medi¬ cine with the money yoa gave oa, and we paid the rent six montbs, so the woman let US stay tbere. Bnt one day, a month ago, Willie was ont all day in the cold rain selling papers, and he's been growing worse and worae and he's so altered yon'd hardly know him. Bnt he wanted to see you so badly, and Jte telks about it all the time in his sleep, and for the last two or three days he's grown almost wild abont it, and so I've been keep¬ ing wateh for you all day; and I couldn't bear to go home atnight, for Willie would spring np in the bed and cry ont so loud, " NeUy, have yoa seen him ?" and when I ahook my head, he would lie down with snch a look that I wotild go off in one oomer and cry alone, it made my heart ache so to see it. Bat now Willie wiU be so glad! 0, sir, won't yoa go and see him V*
I see, Hattie, that your eyea are growing moiat with tears, and if you could have heard the simple touching pathos with which that fair ohild told her story, you would have an- answered as I did."
"Yes, Nelly, I will go now."
* . * « • • •
«Willie, Willie, I've brought him 1 I've bronght him I"
The little hand which guided me so care¬ fully np the dilapidated stairs waa withdrawn as the little girl broke into the old attic cham¬ ber, her eager and joyous tones making the bare walls ring again. "I've brougbt bim ! I've bronght him I" The dying daylight looked with a sweet, solemn smile into the room, whose entire des¬ titution one glance revealed lo me. I had not time for another, for a child's head was lifted from a miserable mattress in tbe comer. I came forward, a pair of attenuated arma was stretched oat, and tbose large bnming eyes were faatened a moment on my face, as thongh life and death rested upon tbeir testimony.
" Yes, yes, Iknew yon would come at last," and tbe little oold arms were wrapped around my neck. " 0, I have watched, and prayed, and hoped so long, and it aeemed to me as it yoa would never come; bull knew yon would come to-day, for last nighl mamma came to me, looking so beautiful, with the flowers woven all aroand her head, and a white robe flowing down to her feet, and she smiled so sweetly and said:
"My little WiUe, he will come to you to¬ morrow, and bis coming will be a signal, for then I, too, sball come for you.'"
My tears were falling fasl on the boy'a brown curia ; but a sharp pang reached my heart as he spoke these words.
" No, no, Willie, yoa were only dreaming." I said, as I lifted op his head and looked at him anxiously. One glance into the rigid face told me enoagh—tbe mother had indeed come for her child.
" Bend down, qnick," murmured the boy's, white lipa, " Nelly willbe alone when I leave her, for there's nobody to take care of her* yoa see, and I want to give her to yru. Yoa are kind and good, I know you will take care o[ her, and never let her suffer; and mamma will look down from her home in Heaven and bless yon for it; and maybe we shall come sometime to teke you to ns. Yon will prom¬ iae me this, wont you ?—quick, for I can't see you; and his glazing eyes wandered over- my face.
" Yea, Willie, I promise it fo God, to yonr mother in Heaven, and to you," I answered Bolemnly.
"Nelly, yoa have heard what he said—^he will l^e oare of you. Kias me once more lit¬ tle aiater. There, there, mother has come for me. Good-bye I"
Tbe little cold fingers sought for onr hands and drew them together—a - smile wandered over the stark, rigid face, and Uie last h'ght of tbat May day looked into that bare attic, where the beaatifal child was lying on that oold mattrass,
"O, sir, is he dead?" questioned the little girl, wilh her large, pathetic eyes wandering from his dead face to my own.
My looks answered her, for my lips could not.
" Willie, Willie, come back, come back to me I" she oried oat in a voioe, whose exceed¬ ing angniah will haunt my memory, will haunt my heart till it has grown cold as tbe one that then lay beneath me, and little Bl¬ len Evans lay aa senseless as her brotber in my arms.
Two days later, in a pleaaant part of the cemetery, the May violeta were turned aside, and a child's coffin laid beneath them.
For nine spring tides have lhey laid their crimsoned mantle over his bright head, and the shadow of a marble monument has fallen soflly over them. Upon this is sculptured a beantifnl child, and an angel with out. Spread wings is bending over him, and point' ing apward. Underneath is graven, "His mother oame for him at twilight."
It was with me a subjeot of mnchperplexi ty where to place the lovely ohild, whom I al¬ ways felt that Providence had especially in¬ trusted to my care. I was all she had on earth lo love, and as time brought its sooth¬ ing balm to her heart, the whole affection of her deep warm nature was poured on me, and even then wilh the excception of yourself, she lay oloser within tbe foldings of my heart. For a little while I placed her in the coun¬ try among simple people, whoae curiosity would he readily appeased, for I was exceed¬ ingly desiroos tbat the world should not beoome cognizant of the part I bad bome in her life- history. I read well her sensitive nature, and I knew there might come a time in ber latter life when it woald cause her maoh annoyance and mortificalion if the world knew her secret. For this reason sweetest aud dearest of sis¬ ters, I did not communicate il to you till I had obtained her permission, whioh I sought in my last interview wilh ber. I oould, of conrse have reoeived thia at any time, had I ohoaen to seek it; bnl I thought it wonld be unfair to obtain her consent to this matter before her mature jadgment had ratified it.
Aflermuchdeliberaticn, I resolved to con¬ fide Ellen's history to Mrs. Wbittlesby, the lad^ with whom I boarded, and in whom I placed entire confidence.
She listened with intense interest, and her woman aympathtes were at once enlisted in be¬ half of my protege. Besidea, this ahe was a widow and childless ; and thongh by no means wealthy, her oinmmstanoea were such that slie oonld Borround Ellen with everythhig neoes'
V«h„priaero,h«h.na«.™.,aife|j^
She propbaed to idbipt ba In th^ pUoe of tbe ohildren God had taken from her; and to tbls propoaition I JayfaU^ aaaented, for tbere tbe religlona, eoelal and home atmopabere wonld be all tbat I wished to be aboat mj £llen.
I was aazions, too, tlut ahe shonid no longer be dependent npon me, for I thonght eren a time might oome wben I shonid ask hera qaestion, whose answer I wonld have in no wise regnlated by her gratitade for the paat.
Ton have often, little sister, heard me apeak of Ellen BTans, Mrs. Wlttlesby'a radopted danghter; bnt yon little dreamed tfaat I had a Rreat personal Interest in all that pertained to her.
Her oharaoter and person hare dereloped with more than all that rare loveliness whioh her ohildhood promised. The sister that I shall bring yoa Hattie, is an elegant, aooom¬ plisbed, talented woman; and more than all that—snd the yonng clergyman's eyes grew lostrions with the almoat holy light tbat beamed ont &om their darkness—my Ellen has tbe.omament of a meek and qniet spirit, whidh is above all price.
Andnow, my Hattie, yon have heard her history, will yon not weloome her to yonr heartf
I gnessd well tbe pang whioh the knowl¬ edge of my engagement wonld give yon; for as brotber and sister have seldom loved do we love each other, and I tcnow it mnst seem like bringing another to take yonr plaoe. Bntmy Ellen is very gentle, and she wiB never oome between ns. Sbe knows, too, tbe story of onr orphaned yonth, and of onr affeotion for each otber; and even now ber heart goes ont with great love for yon. "Tellher all," she said to ms at that last interval, " and tell her that withont her consent I dare not be yonr wife." When I retnm to ber, and her qaestioning eyes ask me if 1 have obtained it, may I tell ber yon are ready to love and to weloome ber to onr bome !
Ani Hattie Marshall lifted ber brown, tear- filled eyes to ber brother's face, and answered, " Tell her, Weldon, that my heart is waittog to welcome her to.a vacant plaoe—and it is the one by your tide.
....I
KASSOGS.
THE DISEASE kTsTDBOFHOBIA.
How it Affects Ken and Animals.
A writer in the Angnst number of Black¬ wood treats witb great minntenesa of mad dogs and tbe terrible disease of hydrophobia. He remarks that '* every one knows that dogs are liable to a terrible disease, which oan be com¬ mnnioated to other animsls and to man; a disease frigbtfnl in its symptoms and fatal in its effects"; and tliat ainoe cnre is impossible, prevention beoomes tenfold more important.
First, however, let ns nnderstand that there are many vnlgar errors to be corrected. For instanoe, Sanson, a French authority in sucb matters, assures ns tbat in dogs, so far from a dread of water being an invariable symptom of madness, it is one which does not sbow it¬ self more than once in flfty cases. The faot is that a baming thitst ia one of the characteris¬ tic symptoms of ra&t» in its early stages; an>l hence tbe commonly received belief tbat if a suspected dog laps water be is not dangerous, is at onoe unfounded and unsafe. Believe tbe tradition, say that, your dog "drinks, there¬ fore there can't be danger,'' go unconcernedly on your way, and negleot shooting Fonto, and yon may make a terrible miatake. For we are* told, on the aame excellent French author¬ ity, tbat, although the mad dog does not hate water and tbat the word'' hydrophobia" can¬ not be properly applied to his madness, in man the case is wholly dilferent. Therefore, the dog. whidh nms mad may drink, bnt tbe man wbom he bites oannot endure the presence of water, and, still worse, when once bitten, can nevir be cured.
Moreover, we are cantloned againat
THE " nOa-DAT" FAU.ACY.'*'
An other popnlar error attribntea the mad¬ neaa of dogs to tbe heat ofthe " dog-days." In July and Augnst all kinds of precautions are taken which no one thinks of for a moment in November and December. Oo the Continent a paternal police is minutely solicitous in snm¬ mer about the enforcement of its regulations. But the simple faot is lhat the "dog-daya" have no more to do with tbe rabies tban the moon has to do with Innaoy. Dogs are liable to attacks In every montb of the year; But it so bappens that July and Augnst are pre¬ cisely the montbs in which the fewest oases occnr. Against the loose estimate of popular opiniou we can place tbe exaot records of the vetemlary achooia of Alfort, Toulouse and Lyons,, and thoae show tbat it is not in the hottett montha, but in ttietoettat montlis, that the great majority of oases are seen. In April, November and Deoember the recorded oases ore donble or triple thoaa In Jnne .Tuly and August.
Tbat "beat of the weather" is not the cause of rabies is strikingly proved by tbe faot that in hot conutries the diseaae is rare, and in some even unknown. M. Du ChaiUn notices that although "moat of tbe Weat African villigea are orowded with dogs, tbe natives do not know, even by report, ofsuch disease as hydrophobia," Dr. Watson remarks tbat rabies is unknown in the Isle of Cyprus and in Egypt. "I fanoy that South America is, or was, a stranger to it. It appears io bave been imported into Jamai ca after tbat island had enjoyed an immunity for at least flfty years; and Dr. Hemeker states tbat ours of Ibe most wretched descripUon abound in the Island of Madeira ; that they are afflloted with almoat every diaeaae, tor¬ mented by flies, and heat, and thirat, and famine, yet no rabid dog was ever seen tbere. On the contrary, one thouaand six hundred and sixty-aix deatbs from hydrophobia in the human snbject are stated to have occured in Frnsaia in the space of ten years."
Having attributed the disease to the "heat ofthe dog-days," men easily came to the con¬ clusion that it was owing to intense thirst that tbe diaease oconred. Inaamush as this error has forced them to be more carefnl in attend¬ ing to tbe wants of dogs, and secured aooess to water, it bas been a beneficial error. But, viewing tbe malter scientifically, we aro for¬ ced to say that thirst, howover intense, is incapable of producing rabies. Doga have baen subjected to the crnel experiment of complete abatinanoe from water, when chained to a wall under a bnming ann. They died from thirat, butsbowed noSymptoms of rabies. Thirat will produce delirium in man; bnt de¬ lirium is not rabies, nor in any way related to it.
Another popnlar error, almoat too absurd to be believed, is nevertheless productive of serious consequences, as an instanoe cited be low will prove.
VICTIMS OV TEBBOB.
It is very generaUy believed that if abealtby dog sbouid bite a mau, and at any subsequent period beoome rabid, the man wUl also become rabid—no mattor how many montha or yeara may have elapsed. The oonsequenoe of this absurd prejudice is that healthy doga are frequently killed in order to prevent their be¬ ooming rabid. Tliere was an example of thia ouly a few weeks ago fa London; and unhap¬ pily the bitten man died a viotim to the terrora of hydrophobia. It was qnite olear, from the symptoms, tbat he was not affeoted by hy¬ drophobia ; and tbe majistrate very properly expreaaed disapprobation at the folly of de¬ stroying the dog before it was evident wheth¬ er or not it was rabid. Tbe rule fa such a oaae ia perfectly aimple. If the dog is suspec¬ ted of being rapid, it shonid be kept^ chained up, out of the way of fajury, tintii the disease declarea itself. By thia.plan it may very soon be ahownwhethet ths Btu^don was illfonn- ded, and wbether the dog was or waa sot ra¬ bid. Snoh »" proof would-often geatly re¬ lieve themlnda of abitton man and his Ami¬ ly, and remove that tarribls uzlcitj iriiidh, fa
spiteof eveiry sorgioal aid, must for sonie weeks assail them.
Tbe origin of the disease has nerer been satisbctorlly explafaed, altbongh Mr. Ycnatt thinks that it does not sow occnr spontan¬ eously, and'that it migbt be thoroaghly extirpated if a well-enforoed quarantine oonld be eatablished, and every dog (let ns add, every oat) oonld be oonSned aepaiaUly for eight montha. We are certafa,~ bowever, of one pofat. Thera are absolute tests by which to prove the existence of the disease, and a carefnl obseivation of the premonitory canine symptoms will furnish timely wamfag of- the
' StOfiS OP HAnSBSS.
One of the earliest signs, and one whioh ahould always arouse attention on the part of those fa charge of a dog, is a suUmneu com¬ bined with ajigelinesi. It may, of oourse, be dne to some other malady than rabies; bnt it is a symptom to be watobed. Wben it means rabies, he retires to his bed or basket for several bonis, and may be seen there curled np, bis faco bnried between bis bead and breast. He ahowa no dispoaition to bite, and will anawer to the call, bnt he answera slowly and snllenly. After a wbile he be¬ comes restieas, seeking out new resting places, and never satiafied long with one. He then retuma to his bed, bnt oontfanally shifts bis poatnre. He rises np and lies down again, settles his body in a variety of positions, dis¬ poses bis bed with his paws, shakfag it m bis mouth, brfaging it to a heap, on whioh he oarefully lays his chest, and then rises up and bundles it all out of his kennel or basket.— If at liberty, be will seem to imagine that aomethfag Is loat, and be will eagerly aearoh nund the room with strange violenoe and fa- deoision. That dog sbouid be watched. If he begins to gaze strangely about him as he lies fa bed, and if ffia countenance is clouded and snapioions, we may be certain that mad¬ ness is ooming on. Sometimea he comes to those whom he loves, and fixes on them a steadfast gaze, as if, according to Mr. Yonatt, he would say, ",I feel strangely ill; bave yon notbing to do with it!"
Tbe observation of all veterinaiy surgeons proves that not only is there no great dispo¬ sition to bite manifested in the early stages of the disease, except by dogs naturally fero¬ cious, but that, on the contrary, there is an inoreaae of affectionatenesa often ahown. Mr. Yonatt speoialiy notices this. " In the early stages of rabies," he aays, "the attaohment of the dog towards bis owner seems to be rap¬ idly inoreased. He Is employed almost with¬ ont ceasing liokfag the hands, or face, or any part be can get at." Nay, even in the last and most violeut stages ofthe disease, some' dogs show no dispoaition to bite. M. Sanson expresses his conviction tbat if tbe rabid ani¬ mal was kept sequestered from all exciting provocations, it wonld gradually die withont onoe manifesting any of the fniy of madess.
On the oltber haud, it should be remember¬ ed there are rabid dogs whoae ferocity knows no bounds. If they are threatened witb as tick, they fly at it, seize and fnrionaly shake it. Tbey are Incessantly employed in darting to the end of tbeir chain, aud attempting to crnah it with their teeth. They tear their kennel to peicea. The sight of anolher dog especially exoitea their fury. But altbongh the ferocions animal early manifests tbis fury, we mnat guard againat the common error of waiting for such a manifeatation. The early eymptoms of fidgetiness, sullennesa, anxiety, or affeotionate i-mportunity, are eqnally to be attended to. Ko animal goes mad, snddenly, Tbere are always several stages of premonitory aymptoma. Among tbeae there ia one not always abown, bnt generally, and quite conclusive, it is hallucination.
Anotber early symptom, and eaaily recog- niaable, ia a violent acratcbing of the ear; and anotber is a depreaaed appetite, and here, also, ia a symptom wortby of remem¬ brance. If a welltramed, well behaved dog misconducts himself fa the rooms where, hitherto, he bas been perfectly olean, and if he is seen peraeveringly examining and lioking those places, be may at once be pronounoed mad. "I never knew a amgle miatake about tbia," aaid Mr. Yonatt.
Tbe foaming at the mouth, of which we bear ao mncb, ia a aymptom only recognisable by the exparienced eye, and isalways less than is observed tban iu epilepsy or nansea. There is undoubtedly in rabies an inflam¬ mation of tbe salivary glands, bnt the foam at the ooroers of the month is not abundant, and never lasts many honra.
The pawing at the comers of tbe month is anotber symptom, and a dangerous one, be¬ oause it ia so often miatakeu as a sign tbat there ia a bone aticking in tfae throat. " The flrat csre of thoae who are not auffloiently on their gnard," saya M. Sanaon, " ia to attempt to extract tbe immaginary bone, or to oall fa tbe aid of a snrgeon. One of our unhappy confreres, M, Kicolin, nnaware of this faot, perished a, viotim of bis ignorance. He opened the mouth of a littie dog to remove the bone; and waa bitten."
The homan befag once bitten by a mad dog, becomea the subject of the most prompt and e^cient aotion. The poison maat not be permitted to mingle with the blood. If it does enter into the oironlation, tbe bitten-man is beyond the reaoh of surgery. It is there¬ fore an important thing to know
WHAT TO no WHEN BITTBir.
The surgeon «t once—that Is tbe plain com¬ mand in every snapioioua case. We bave only mentioned what ia the calculation of ohanoes, beoause it ia deairable fa every way to calm the natural terrora of tbe patient; tbeae terrora are aome times aa dangerons aa tbe actnal in¬ fection. To ehow how they may eflect eveu the mind moat familiar with all tbe symptoms of the diseaae, and the certainty of surgical cure, we may mention that the late M. Vatel, Pro¬ fessor at the Veterinary College ot Alfort, having oace been bitten by a dog, and faaving had the wound carefully cauterized, althoagh no symptom of rabies declared itself in tfae do^, and altfaongfa M. Yatel faimself remained perfectly well, so horrible faad been the shook of bis flrat terror, tfaat fae never fairly over oame it. From tbat moment it waa impossi¬ ble for him to see a dog unchained witbin his reaoh without a painful uneasfaess', whioh no effort of hia could subdue. Anotber veteri¬ nary snrgeon, '• aolidement trempe au physique tl au ¦morai," M. Bartfaelemy, was one day bitten by a mad dog nnder fais oare. In spite of immediate cautery be oould never after- Wards endure tfae aight of a rabid dog—nay more, he aufl'ered inexpreaaible uneasiness if tfae namo of tfae diaease was mentioned in bfs hearing. One day fa 1847, relates M. Eedanlt, be was passing along tfas Boulevard Saint Martin, wfaen he perceived a orowd ; on fa- qnlry he learned tfaat a child had jnat been bitten by a mad dog. Forgetting—or con¬ quering—his terrora, he jnmped fiom his oar¬ riage, ptnabed aaide tho orowd, took np the child in his arms (which tbe orowd had left sobbing on the ground, witbout venturing to its aasiatance,), and carrying her to tha near¬ eat chemlat's ahop he there tfaorongfaly cau¬ terized the many wounds. After this he con¬ dncted tfae ohild to its parents, prescribed wfaat was to bs done, and disappeared witfaoat giv¬ ing his name. " AU thia time," said fais ser. vant, " maater waa as pale as deatfa."
Here is anotfaer pofat to be rememberd;
THE SALIVA ASD THE BITB.
Bemember that it is the saliva, not tbe bite, which is dangerous, and yon will nnderatand that it ia as bad to be licked by a rabid animal as to be bitten, if the part licked be a wound, or an open aurfaco, or even a muooua mem¬ brane. A woman onoe died from hydropho¬ bia after anfferfag a dog to lick a pimple cn her dun. Horses are said tohave died mad after ealing bay npon whioh rabid pigs had died. Ur. Qilman, fa his pamphlet on faydro- phobia, quotes the case of a man whoaa faoe waa licked, while asleep, hj a rabid dog; and he died, although the strictest aearoh failed to discorer the smalleftiacratohnpoD the akfa. [ On the iiUunluma, Hr. Youtt dwbtea, sai.
the experience of every veterinaiy surgeon will confirm it, that no amoant of saliva on the nnlinken skfa haa the sligheat efiect— His ownfaanda have been repeatedly oovered with the foam of rabid dogs. It is trae that fa tha first of the oasea wa have quoted firom Dr. Wataon the skfa of the hand ia aaid not to have been broken, yet nnequivooal hydro¬ phobia ensued. There is, however, great doubt permissible here. It ia also possible that, wfaen the teeth of the terrier had stmck tha ooaohman's hand,. the pafa may have caused him, by a oommon and almcst ws.\o- matio aotion, to raise hia haud to his mouth. This much ia certain, that while nothfag ia easier than to inoonlate an animal by intro- duofag the saliva of a rabid dog into the wonnd, no one has been able to effeot this by merely placmg tfae saliva on the bare skfa.
It Is not, therefore, the mere bite we have to regard. Many a man, and many an animal, haa been bitten by a-rabid dog withont harm. The; woolen olothea, or the thick coat of the animal, had wiped the tooth olean before it penetrated theilesh. The same is true of the aerpent's bite; fatal on the naked flesh, it is generally harmless throngh the boot or clothes. We must remember, howerer, that not only may the bite be rendered innocuous because the tooth may be wiped olean, bnt also because tfae organism of the bitten man or animal may be auch as to resist the poiaon. We kuow that there are human befags qnite faanaoeptlble of certain dlseaaea, who pass unscathed through the serereat trials. Tfaey take no contagion. They reaist faooulation. And tbia aeems to be tme of tbe poison of rabies. John Huuter says that he knew an faatance fa whicli, of twenty.one bitten persons, only one bad hydrophobia. Nay, even the dog which seems Bopecullarly liable to this disease, isnot al¬ ways ansceptible; many esoape sfter havmg been bitten. • « • We cannot too loudly protest agamat tfais motion of speoifio reme¬ diea, becauae, nnhappily, the only poaaible preventive befag one which ia verypafafnl and atill more alarming to the ignorant— namely, cnttfag or bnmfag out tbe bitten pat^ —there ia a natural tendenoy to shrink from this, and to take refnge in the pleasenter spe¬ ciflc. But now that chloroform beneflcently shields US from the pafa of operations, it would be madness to trust to anythfag abort of the surgeon's aid.
Ffaally, we faave from Blacktnood this state¬ ment of the
FBBlOn BETWEEN INFEOnoN AHD OUTBBEAK.
*' The period that may elapse between the bite and tbe outbreak of disease ia, as we have said, fadeterminate; tbe age, condition, and natnre of the animal aocelerate or retard it.— The usual time is from from tiiree weeks to seven moiiths. In tbe dog,Mr. Yonatt has never aeen a oase of plafa and palpable rabies which occurred in lesa tfaan fourteen day's after tfae bite. In three months he wonld oonsider tfae animal tolerably safe. In his own experience, he only knew two cases when tfae period ex¬ ceeded three months. How greatly tfae period may vary, is evident from the followfag: On tbe nigfat of Stfa Jnne, 1791, tfae man fa cfaarge of Lord Fitzwilliam's kennel was mucfa dis¬ turbed by flgbtfag among the bounds, and got up aeverai times to quiet them. On each oo¬ oaaion fae fonnd tfae same dog quarreling; at laat, tfaerefore, fae afaut that dog np by him¬ aelf, and there waa no further diaturhance.— On tbe third day afterwards the quarrelsome bonnd was unequivocally mad; and he died on the fifth. Hereupon tfae wfaole paak was separated and watcfaed. Bix of the dogs be¬ came rabid; but at the following different fa- teivala from the Stfa of Juue—twenty-three daya, flfty-aix, sixty aeren, eighty-eight, one hnndred and flfty-flve and one faundred and eighty-tfaree days. The Co-mite Consultatif d' Hygiene Publique, fa ita report on this snb¬ ject, thns divides one huudred and forty-seven cases: fa twenty-six oases one month elapsed: in nmety-three tfae period ranged between one and tbree montha: in nfaeteen between tbree and aix months, and fa nme oaaes between aix aud twelre. Romberg eaya pf sixty caaes, tfae sfaoriest period was fifteen days, and tfae long, est from seven to nme monlbis; tfae average befag from fonr to seven weeks."
NOTICE.
Eeiis and legal Kepresenta-
I 01irl.U.ii B.1r,-'].t. of Evl tovDahlp, oeuter coa.tr, F«.a.., dmiMd. Toa .r. ber«b7 notlBMl th&t hj .irtao of aa ord.r of
IIO the Uves oi ( cuter coal
the Orpbine' Ooart of LMioMler eoaotr, to me directed. 1 will itold .a Isiiaut to dlTlde, pkrtor Tslae tbe Beei Eataie orpbH>tlu_B>lr deceued, oa WKDHSSDAY,
tbe latb diyof SSFTXMBSB, A. D, 18St. UIO o'oiook A. U., at tbe Hsaeioa Hoaee Ute of eeld deceaeed. (aow ocoapied l>7 Oeorge Beir) oa No. 1 of eeld Beei Eetate, wbeo .ad wbere Toa arereqaested to atteod. If yoa tblokproow. 8.-«V. P. BUTD.
SherlS-.
Bberire Offlee, Laacaster, Aagast 19, 1861.
anj 21 4t-89
ATTDITOB'S NOTICE.
ESTATK of JOgN "MYBRS, late of Rapho townsbip, Laacutar co., dee'd.
I'oe anderalgned Aadttor, appolated by tbe Orphaas* Conrt of Lanisuter oonnty, to distribato tbe balance re* malatDSin tbebandeortUmnelB. Zng, Esq.. Admln¬ iBtrator of tbe tstate of uld deeeased, to and among tboee legatlj entitled tbereto, will attend for the par¬ poee of bis appointment, on FBIDAT, SSPTEUBEB 13, ISSI.atlOo'clook.A. H.,at tbe Library Boom, lathe Court Hooee, In the olty of Lancaster, when aad wbere all persoas laterested are reqaested to attend, tf tbey see proper. C. S. BOFFMAN, Aadltor.
aag 11 4t-39
ASSIGNED ESTATE of SAMUEL SIUHOITS. Tbe andenlgaed, appolated by tbe Ooatt of Commoa Pleas of Lancafiter coanty, Andltor, to distribate among creditors, tbe balaace tn tbe bands of Morris Cooper, Asstgnee oftjamnel Simmons, of Sads¬ bnry twp.. in said coanty, hereby glTesnotlee tbatbe will sit for tbe parpose of bis appointment, In the Conrt Honse, iotbe oity of Lancaeter. on FBIDAT, tbe 20lb day of SEPTKUBEB, 1861, at 2 o'clock tn the Bftaraoou. BSNJ. F. BaSB, aog 28-4t-4Q * Auditor.
ESTATE of JULIANNA JORDAN, late of the olty of Laacaster, deo'd. Lettere of Administratloa with tbe will annexed, oo said estate having been granted to the nnderslgned, all parsons in* debted tbereto are requested to make Immediate pay¬ ment, and those haTing claims or demands against tbe same will present tbem for aettlement to tbe under- atgned. residing at Spring QcoTe, Bast Earl township, eep 4-6t-41 WM.BOTD JACOBS.
WaU Papers I Wallpapers!
THECAJBCABGO
MMDFACTURIN& COMPANY
AVE now in store a large and ez-
teoelTe aseortaieat of new asd beaatifal etylw .. Atili PAPEB. wbleh bare bee. earefuUy eeleeud for tb. SprlBs Trade, and -wUl b. sold at gzeatlr reda- oed^prlee^ nirS SOLD PAPEBS.
TELVBT PAPEES,
SATDt PAPEBS.
QEODHDED PAPEBS, BLAIIEB,
BOBDEBS,
noniDINfig, DECOEATIOIIS AND STiTDEg.
CtJHTAIW PAPEBS,
FIRE-BOARD PRINTS.
Transparent Windov Shades,
WHITE, GEKEN and BUFF HOLLANDS,
Cords, Tassels, Fixtures, 60.
K3*We larite an examiaatloa of oar etock at oar Warebonse,
HO. 20 EAST Kisa ST.
ESTATE of JOHN GBEENLY, late of Warwick township, deceased.—Leiters taetft- mentary on said eatate bariag been granted to/tbe nn¬ derslgned, all persons indebted thereto are requested to make immediate payment, and those baTlng demands against tbe same will present them for Bettlement to theunderslgned, residing ta eatd township. anggS-fl't^Q f BTEB 8. BEIST, Kxecutor.
ESTATE OF JOHN ESHBACH, late of Manor twp., deceased. Lettera of admin- ieuatlon on aald estate harlng been granted to the nn¬ derslgned, all peraona IndeBted tbereto are requested to make Immediate payment, and those baring claims or demande against the aame will present them for settle¬ ment to the nnderslgoed, residing In said townsbip, aug 28-6t»-« JOBM EBHBACH. Admr,
ESTATE of PHILIP GROW, late of MoQQt Joy twp., deceased. Letters ot Admln- tBtrkdon on said eatate baring been granted to the un¬ dersigned, all persons Indebted tbereto are reqaeated to make immediate payment, and tboee baring claims or demands againat the same will present tbem for aettle¬ ment to tbe ooderslgned, residing In aald township. aug31-6l*-Sg JACOB BAE£B.
ESTATE of JOHN LEHMAN, Sr., lata of Upper Leacock townsbip, deceased,—Latr ter« testamentary on eald eetate having been granted to the undersigned, all penoos Indehted thereto are re¬ qnested to make Immediate paTmeat, and tbMO baring claims or demands against the eame will present them for setUement to the undersigned, residlntc In said township. UIJHBT SHie'IBLy,
arg 2L-6t«.ai ABBAHAM 0. SHEIBLT.
TH& CAMARGO
'MANUFACTURING COMPANY
Are now opening a targe and well-eeleeted asaortment
of Carpeting, consisting of YELVET,
BBDS<'iSLS, TAPKSTBT,
THBKE-PLT, IHOBAIN,
SUPEBIOR, COTTAGB, DUTCH,
TENITlAEr, HEMP, BAG
and LIBT
CARPETS. White, Checkered and Cocoa batting,
TA6LU m FLOOR OIL CLOTHS,
Prnggets, Rusfs, BlaiU, HASflOOlca, Aa.
ra-Haringa buyer In tbe Philadelphia and Hew Totk markets eontwually, onr facilities for obtaining tbe beat and most desirable atrles of goods are nne- qaalled by any other bouse In the olty.
Camargo Manafacturing Company,
20 EAST KDfO STREET.
Trade Sales I Trade Salea
THE aubscriber having just returned from tbe Philadelpbia I^ade Bales, offars at i^\ loweat prices all kinds of books, embraelng Lair Wio- Uon, Medical. Bellgioos, Biography, MeobanleiU, and otbsr kinds. These books will aU be sold st tbe lo«r- eit prices, aa we had the adranlage and were the only Bookseller from Lancaster, at tbe Trade Bole, and m a oonsequence, we can sell lower than any store. A few of the hooka are here mentioned: WebsUr* Unabridged Dietlonary.
Woreeeur's Unabridged Ulctlonary, American Ohristian Beoord, In and aronnd titamtnnl, Oolthold'e Emblems,
Snrope&n Life, Legend and Landscape, FhotograpMe Albums, Rotes on Nnrsing,
Soldiera Text Books,
The Days and Waya of tbe Cocked Hate, The Bible and Social Beform. BIBLES Ingreat vnriety, from tweoty-flre centa to twenty'flre dollars, some of them baring tbe finest bindings and PIstao eT«ir recelred tn town.
SDNDAT SCHOOL BOuKS—Methodiat, Lutheran, Splacopal, Presbyterian, AmerioaoTract Society, Amer¬ ican Snnaay ticbooi Union,
SCHOOL BOOKd—Sanders, Towers', Sargent's, Par¬ ker A Watson's Keadera, Montelth's, Mlte&ell'a, War- ren'a, bmltb'e Oeoftrapbles. Aleo, Algebras, Arithme¬ tics, Qrammars, Histories, DLettonaries, Ac. Stationery, Copy and Compoeltion Baoliu, Cap, Nute and Lelter Paper, Blank Books, Slates, Lead and biate Pencils Pens and Holders, Ink and ink Utandn, Bnlers, Env- lopee. The best inks in the market are sold bere, riz: Maynard and Ncyea, Arnold's, Uourer'e, L'Aaghlli]gH& Biuhfleld's, Blackwood'a, etc.. at the Cheap BuOk Store of JOHaN SHEAFFKB'ti,
Ifo. 32 2f oitb Queen at., Lancaster, may l^tr.25
REMOVAL. DUWCAH & STOWEB,
Lately Occujn/ing the Centre Square Book Store, Hare remored their entire etock of
BOOKS AND STATIONERY,
TOTHE
OLD ESTABLISHED BQOK STAND,
Krampli's Ballding, N> ^aeen at.
Immediately oppoeita Shober's Hotel,
11/HERE tbey will be glad to receive
Yt all their old friends and patrons, and thepub¬ llc gener&lly. We bare added to onr already well ae¬ lected etock a flne assortment of fresh and flne books, porcfa&sed at tbe
PHILADELPHIA TEADB SALES,
held thia month, and which, baring parchaaed low, we will be able to sell at extremely low prices. We ehall contlnne to glre special attention to the 2fewapap63f and Magazine Business, and will receive suba crip tions ac the very lowest rates, to any Newspawr published in this County or abroad. S3-01LT FBAMES havlog heretofore formed part of onr busineaa, we shall continoe to make them to order At the Bhorteet notice, ofany aize, style or price. Also, GILT or BUSEWOOD Oral frames.
DDNCAir & STONEB. oot 3-tf-45 Erampb'B Balldlng, N. Qaeen St.
DEANER & SCHAUM'S
House FurnisMng Emporium,
NO. 7 EAST KtBTQ STBEET, LANCASTSR, PA.,
EXAMIITEB & TTTiinAT.T^ steam Job and Card Printing Office.
HAVING introduced into our Offloe ooe of RUaGLE'S ROTARY CARD CUTTERS,
togetber witb a large aesortmeot of CASDS—PLAIN aad COLORED, ire are aow prepared to priat cards of everj SIZE AHD COLOB for all wbo may favor as witb thetr patroaage, AT TBE LOWEST RATES.
E}-The Tradefaraiahed with CABDS OF ALL SIZES at PhllAdfllpbla prieen. Oall Rod ... Kpoetmeae, ld.e
Provide Youiself with Qood Fruit.
JR. SDTEK, Agent, cau furnish by • the latter part of October, Apple, Fear. Piam, Peach. Apricot TREES aad Qrape yioes. All fmlt war raoted trae lo aame. Direet J. R. snTEB,
aep4.2Ml Laacaater, Pa.
SPECIAL NOTICE.
HAVING- determined to sell goods for Cash only, 1 offer special Icdncements to cash bayera. Harlng a large stack of Ury Oood , Groceries and Queensware, I now offer all at greatly reduced prices. HUGHS. QABA,
Lancaster, Eept. 3,1861. 66 East Eing St.
sep 4 St-41
City Tax ITotice for 1861.
ON all City, Tax remaining unpaid af¬ ter the flrst day of 8EPTBMBER next, an addi¬ tion of 2ii per cent will be added, according to resolu- tiona of Councils. HENET C. WENTZ,
aogS8-St-40 Treasurer and Becelrer.
"Water Eent Wotiee for 1861.
THE Water Rent Duplicate for Water Bents for 1861, will remain In tbe handa of the Treasnrer aod Becelrer, until tbe let UONDAT la 6EP- TEUBBB next, "When and afler tbat time alt Water Bente not paid will be handed orer to tbe Mayor for collection, with eo |
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