NtlMlSOVattifitil geittiCit. BRIM FtNI SCHWEFFLEBRENNER. SCIILIFFLETOWN, AvositT der )L, 1869 MISTER FODDER ABUATIAM: De Bevvy wterd awfongs truvvelsom. Se is mer entirely tsu wunnertlitzich fun weaya unser ring secrets. Ich hob em George fershprocha kea wart tsu cars . tsu sawya fun weaya unserm set up, awer denksht se gebt uf ? No sir-ree. De Bevvy is cans fuu denna wciver wu for common ears, points macha—ousfinna was se wella. Un was koun kit du wann se mer doh kummt we se is forgesliter un sogt ; "No w Pit, du weasht we du noch cans fun denna Kitzelderfers fersuffenny copperhead loaf ers warsht ; du weasht noch we ich ols uf der morrickt hob gea missa in de shtadt mit oyer un tswivvella, un roat-reeva un kraut-kep un shtiuk-kase for an living tsu nutcha, un we du ols oily cent fersuffa husht in sell= demokratisha, loch dort; du weasht we du ols dort rum g'huckt husht un g'watchd for treats wann ols de polly tishners fun der shtadt rouse kutnina sin for leckshuneera for so shtutt we der little Mack under Glimer fun Reddingtown un seller Selmoyer wu shuld draw war das se der dei watch g'shtola hen ; du weasht aw noch we feriumpt du ols doh rum gelufTu bisht, mit grosse patcha uf em hinnerra, un we du ols korta g'shpeelt hushtt uu bensa gepitcht for wisky, un du weasht aw goot genunk dos wanns net for mich g'west wt r donn wtersht olleweil noch dreckich un ferhunpt un demokratish all ivver. Awer, Becht se, " was bight olle weil ? An officer unnich der United Shtates un aw noch gor a professer. Un weer hut dick so rouse gebrucht dos yusht Selly speech hut mich sheer gorly 'fetched. De Bevvy hut recht g'hot, un for a weil hob ich net g , wis.t was tsu sawya. Awer, denk ich, now is mei tacit eara tsu weisa dos ich awer aw an monn bin, un dos ich mich net rula luss unnich pettycot government. "Bevvy" hob ich g'sawt, "du husht recht, un awer ich konn der now net my secret gevva, for ich bin g'shwora—de rules fun ring erlawa's net dos ich ders sog. Ich gea mit em ring wells betzahlt. Ich gea mit em George weil er sei bisness fershteat. Ich bin ufs geld macha ous, un insist druf dos jell my eayener weg hawa mus derfore. " Awer" sogt de Bevvy, "we feel geld husht donn shun wmacht sidder das du in dem Duck ring bisht ?" " Ei" hob ich gsawt " ordich feel wann ich olles Brick was mer fershprocha is." "Well awer wwr hut der donn so feel fer shprocha ?" "Eider George" hob ich g'sawt, " wter donn sunsht." " Un noch a froke mus ich un dich du," secht se, "wu is donn del watch wu du kawft husht in plotz fun Belly wu de demo krata der g'shtola hen dort of der Seimoy er's convention in Nei Yorrick ?" Selly froke hut mich ewer sheer gorly shwitza macha, un ich hob g'feeld yusht grawd des wenn ich mich full heaser hulder tae g'suffa het un g'mixd mit tansy, katza-kraut un bebbermint. So an Croke hob ich any how uet expect fun der Bevvy, for ich war net prepared es tsu ansera. Awer de Bevvy war determined mich dorrich de ninety-fife tsu nemma, un sell, du weasht, meant dote odder leawa. Ich hob my beshts proweert de antwart tsu dodge, awer sell geat net wenn mer de Bevvy for sich hut for a customer. Tau letaht bin ich rouse mit der wohret, un hob er e'sawt dos ich se gepledged hob helm George his noch der leckshun, for, du weasht, der George hut mer fief dahler gevva un hut mei nawma in set blue book gedu, un ich hob agreed for leckshun officer wterra doh, un so de votes tseala dos der Shteamy, seller shined Duckter un let Wiley dort in Konnoy downship, un de onnery kondidawta, so about finf-a tswanich extra uf der return kreeya. Eb der George mer ewer do ftnf dahler gevva hut, hut er glmeant er mist so a wennich an garrantee hawa dos ich aw my duty du, un uf course, ich hob earn se gevva for se uf heawa for mich." De Bevvy hut awer amohl ordlich plain g'ahwetzt, un hut behawpt dos om end goats mer nosh mit meiner neia watch ex actiy we mit der alt. Awer ich denk doch net, for se meaya sawya was se wella, der George is anyhow ehrlich, un aw an truer Republican un votes gore; ticket, wain shun feel leitls net glawa well seller Packer so orrig feel geld hut. Der George hut aw noch nawma in seim blue-book fun was er de " low grade lisht " heart, on tswea un a holwer shtick, cash nunner un ohna koutinshensia. Selly Becht er, used er for so a wennich (13 dreckich serwat shoffa—so du weasht wenn mer seana doe mer an moon nimmy beeta konn mit ballet bona shtuffa un votes tseala, donn trotta mer de "low-graders" rouse for leeya uf kreeya un se tsu shlan dere. Seller shtock, Becht der George, is goot for ollerlea immertchensis. Ich het aw !loch kenna mei tewe dahler un holwer taeeya, awer, somehow, der nawma tsu haws tun "low grader" kent ich net recht shtanda, for es witr evva doch an. shond for an United Shtates officer un professer fun de sientifficle sistem of frinnollotchickel feiloprochennitiffnise, sich in so niddery bigness nei tau lussa. Nay, sell is tsu a kleany bissness for mich. Ich hob de tinf dohler, under George hut de watch, un hob aw de Bevvy oat-s -tied dos er se go:A uf hcabt for mich, un dos ich se aw widder tsurick Brick noels. der leckshun. Der negsht Mondog gea ich widder in do shtadt, un donn wa3rnt mer unser shiate fsertich macha. Ich weer heit gouge, awer der George hut a kawkus den owat, un om Dunnershdog hut der Shteamy saner in Littitz drous, for de nierdliche pollytisheners recht uftsu setza. PROF. PIT SCIIIVIEFFLEBRENNEIt. MORE GENUINE DEMOCRACY-BY THEIR FRUITS SHALL YE KNOW THEM. There now lives in New York city, and he has lived there for many years, a notori ous villain, known to fame as " Reddy the Blacksmith." The crimes of this monster ' range all the way down from murder to petty larceny. He has long kept a into den in one of the most lawless sections of that city, into which he has inveigled his victims, and after robbing and beating them he would thrust them into the street. He has been arrested several times, but always escaped punishment, through the interference of Democratic politicians with perjured judges and magistrates of that patty. Several months since " Reddy the Black smith," aided by a fellow ruffian named Howard, induced a passing countryman, under some plausible pretence, to enter his den of death. These two then set upon their victim, beat him senseless, and robbed him of several hundred dollars. The facts in this case were so plainly proven, that even the wretches who wear the judicial robes in that God-forsaken den of Copperheads, were forced into a show of justice, and held "Reddy,'' the principal villain, in two thousand dollars bail. Howard, being of less use as a Democratic ruffian, could procure no bail, and was remanded to await his trial. Of course " Reddy the Blacksmith " did not appear when wanted, and his bail was for feited. This was made up by the Demo cratic official thieves of that city, for it was not a drop in the bucket to the millions they arc enabled to steal yearly from the tax payers, through the support of just such mis creants as this " Reddy" and his associates. Howard was tried and convicted, and sen tenced to Sing Sing State Prison. And now, lo and behold I comes another actor upon the scene. The smooth and pious Governor Hoffman, who owes his position to an amount of perjured voting that might even make hell ashamed of the Democratic crowd that are wending their way to its portals, sent a pardon to the criminal ere the gates of the penitentiary had well closed upon his infernal carcase I Reddy the Blacksmith," the murderer, bltalgeomst, and highway robber, is in the pay and employ of such Democratic leaders as the Mayor of that city, the judges of the same, the pious Governor of the State, and the prominent scoundrels, generally, who reap the gains of Democratic ascendency. These tools of more polished villains lead gangs of armed ruffians from poll to poll on election day, who deposit thousands upon thousands of fraudulent votes for the Democratic candidates, and who will beat to death any man who dares challenge their right to perjury and fraud. Is not this a horrid picture ? And yet it is not overdrawn. We have seen it with our own eyes, and read the uncontradicted evidence that establishes these facts beyond dispute. —Treliton (N. J.) 44tintinel. DEMOCRATIC DEMORALIZATION Never have the Republicans of Pennsyl vania had a fairer chance for a great victory than in the present struggle. The Deinoe. racy are hopelessly demoralized. Beaten upon every point by the Republicans, they cannot rally against the fifteenth amendmen with the great body of the Southern De mocracy in its favor, and rushing bodily into the Republican ranks. If they talk about negroes in office, they will be pointed to negroes elected by their own friends. If they demand economy in the public service, the record of Geary and Grant, who have already paid off millions of the national debt and of the debt of Pennsylvania, will be spread before them. If they attempt to prove themselves friends of the protection of home industry, the free-trade platforms of the Democrats of Ohio and New Hamp shire will be quoted against them. Thus they are at once demoralized and sectional ized. They have lost their prestige by de feat on all the leading doctrines of their faith, and they have lost the right wing of their party, the Democrats of the South. What, then, is the duty of the Republi cans ? It is to close the ranks and follow the flag borne by General John W. Geary. No true patriot will be found idle or indif ferent in such a contest. Personal griefs, like personal preferences, should all be made to give way. When the campaign is fairly opened the faithful stewardship of the great Republican party will present a bril liant contrast to the rebellion, Inconsistency, and utter absence of all real statesmanship of the false Democracy.—Forney'a Pre's. HOME TRUTHS. In their anxiety to keep suffrage in Penn sylvania free from taint, the Democratic party, in their State Convention on the 14th ult., passed the following resolution : " That the Demosrratio party of Pennsylvania is opposed to conferring upon the negro the right to vote." Last fall, to carry the State, the leaders of the party resorted to a stupendous system of frauds. They distributed by the thousand bogus naturalization papers, and wherever an alien could be found willing to play the villain, he was promptly suppled. In this way probably not less than ten to twenty thousand fraudulent votes were polled for the Democratic candidates. Though op posed to permitting a decent negro to vote, the Democracy of Pennsylvania did not hesitate to organize fraud and recruit its ranks from the worst description of scamps, who for pay will vote from one to twenty times, without being entitled to vote once. The evidence is perfect that Sharswood was not honestly elected, and that he sits on the Supreme Bench through the frauds organ ized in the eastern part of the State. The negroes in Pennsylvania whom the Fifteenth Amendment would admit to the ballot-box, compare favorably with the great mass of Democratic voters, and are immeasurably superior to thousands that not only vote but are• potent iu selecting candidates, often from their own ranks. It would not be diffi cult in almost any locality to find good Democratic voters who are immensely inferi or in every:respect to the negroes concerning whom the party are so horrified. In any city or large community can be found ne groes who would be degraded by coming in contact with a class of the Democratic rank and file, who are relied on to do the straight voting for candidates whom they have helped to nominate. These things are known of all men.—Pittsburg Commercial. LITTLE ONEs•—Do you ever think how much a little child does in a day ? How, from sunrise to sunset, the little feet patter around—to us—so aimlessly. Climbing up here, kneeling down there, running to another place, but never still. Twisting and turning, rolling and reaching, and doubling, as if testing every bone and mus cle, for their future uses. It is very curious to watch it. One who does so will under stand the deep breathing of the rosy little sleeper, as with one arm tossed over Its curly head, it prepares for the next day's gymnastics. A. busy creature is a little child. SENTER'S majority in Tennessee is said to be about fifty thousand. THE PHILADELPHIA DEMOCRACY. One of the Candidates Presentiu, his Arguments. srietted. THEIR RECORD Forney's Press " goes for" AM, Packer and his party in this wise : "In 1563, when Chambersburg was smoking and the decisive lines were draw ing around Gettysburg, the Democratic party of Pennsylvania were in council at Harrisburg. Many of the very men in session last month were there, and, under the very bayonets of the Confederate army, they remembered the Union soldier by ad vising compromise—Qompromise when the colors of rebellion were profaning the soil of the State. "In 1864 the Democracy met in National Convention at Chicago. The fate of the nation was in the balance. Sherman was gone on his brilliant but desperate march to the sea. Thomas was battling in front of Nashville. Grant was struggling in the Wilderness amid the graves and defeats of successive campaigns. The Democracy met and remembered the soldiers—How? They explicitly declared the war after three years of trial to be "a failure," and demanded that immediate efforts be made for a cessation of hostilities. Is it any wonder that this shameful assemblage has passed into infamy and history as the "surrender convention?" " In 1865, when the war was just over, and the sodiers of Pennsylvania were coming home, tired and wounded, with their dead behind them, their business and occupations gone, to commence, perhaps, a yet more desperate strugg l e for livelihood how were they welcome by the Democ racy of Pennsylvania.? In conventinn as sembled under the leadership of Judge Black still an honored name in his party, the Democracy ofthisStAte delibe ntely and officially declared the history of the war to have been " debt, slaughter, and dis grace." That was only the emocratic remembrance of our struggle and sacrifice! "These platforms and resolutions,which make the blood of a soldier to leap and his cheeks to tingle, are all yet in full force and vigor. They are part of the creed of a Democrat. They have never been re scinded, repealed, or apologized for. A vote for Packer and Pershing is a specific endorsement of their every word." With this infamous record, the "Dem ocratic" party are fools enough to suppose they can win in October next! Did any body ever know of a more infatuated set of fellows? “GRAY-HAIRED PATRIOTISM.” When Asa Packer was dining and win ing the Ohio traitor, Vallandigham, before Pennsylvania felt a rebel invasion, he was displaying his true political colors as a rebel sympathizer. Then came McCausland's raid on Chambersburg, and Lee's advance to Gettysburg. Imagine the horror which ' thrilled every Democratic heart in the Com monwealth, when it was learned that the rebel troops were sacking and burning Democratic property with no more com punction than if its owners were Abolition ists, dyed in the wool. Copperhead sympa thies proved to be no protection whatever. The Democratic mind, throughout the State, was demoralized and "all tore up," by this revelation of rebel ingratitude. Then was seen a touching spectacle ! Vallandigham's wealthy entertainer, that warm-hearted friend of Southern rights, the Nabob of the Lehigh, became a "gray-haired patriot," and promised a continuance of wages to all his operatives who would volunteer. This is the substance of the latest Democratic electioneering novel. While the " wrinkled front of war" was so far off as to be out of sight from Pennsylvania eyes, Mr. Vallan digham's friend Packer felt easy in the in dulgence of his rebel sympathies. He saw the case in another light when a ruthless invasion trampled on Democratic property, and threatened his railways, canals, coal mines and banks with ruin. His "gray haired patriotism" lay then, as now, all ►n his pockets, and was never heard of, or sus pected by his closest friends, until these were threatened with rebel pillage. The less said about this matter, by the opposition press, the better.—Pittsburg Gazette. - REEF IT BEFORE THE PROW That the Republican party is the 'only party that ever existed in this country of sufficient vitality and character to reform itself by ejecting its plunderers, corrup tionists and hangers on from position. The excellent Legislative nominations al ready made in Allegheny, Chester, Phila delphia, Franklin and other counties, and those about to be made in old Lancaster, very clearly show that the party is all right. And whilst the Republican party is purg ing itself of impure matter which had gradually accumulated within its ranks, we see the Democracy sinking.yet deeper in degradation by nominating for office, as they did in Philadelphia,well known black legs, bummers, keepers of dens of the low est degradation and even jail-birds,as their representative men! The only thing in or about that party that may be called re spectable is Asa Packer's twenty millions. / Our gittit lokto. —Young ladies who play croquet are known " as maidens all for lawn.'' —The five great evils of life are said to be standing collars, stove-pipe hats, tight boots, bad whisky and cross women. —The printer who kissed his sweet heart, saying "please exchange," is be lieved not to have exceeded the "liberty of the press." "The blessed man that preached for us last Sunday," said Mrs. Partington, "ser ved the Lord for thirty years—first as a circus rider, then as a locust-preacher, and last as an exhauster." —Blue, of very intense shade, is at present a color much in vogue with the " girl of the period," who seems to be in tense in everything except economy. —An Alabama editor, in putting a grocery kept by a woman says " Her tomatoes are as red as her own cheeks ; her indigo as blue as her own eyes, and her pepper as hot as her own temper." --Two spendthrift young men were dis cussing the character of a close-fisted uncle. " Well," said one, "if his heart ever falls into his stomach, it is hard enough to give him dyspepsia." —Ladies are like watches—pretty enough to look at—sweet faces and delicate hands, but somewhat difficult to `regulate' after they ore a-going. —A correspondent suggests that the inebriated person who proposed to escort his girl to see " Crossington Washing the Delaware," should do so on " Birthing ton's Washday." —" Why don't your father take a news paper 1 1 " said a man to a little boy whom he caught pilfering his paper from his door steps. "Cos be sends me to take it," re plied the urchin. —A lady was knocked down by a veloci pede, and on being helped up said : " What's the difference between a bycicle and an icicle ?" Answer.—The one drips down and the other trips up. —" I haven't taken a drop of liquor for a year," said an individual of question able morals. "Indeed'. but which of your features are we to believe—your lips or your nose." —A lady was urged by her friends to marry a widower, and as an argument they spoke of his two beautiful children. Children," replied the lady, " are like toothpicks—a person wants her own." —A traveler stopped at an inn in a neighboring village, and finding the land lord and landlady fighting, cried out " Hallo, who keeps this house ?" The wife replied, " That's just what we are trying to decide." —" You bachelors ought to be taxed," said a lady to a resolute evader of the noose matrimonial. " I agree with you, madam," was the reply ; " bachelorism is a great luxury." —A Quaker of Bloomington, Indiana, who observed his wife looking in at the kitchen door while he was embracing the servant girl, thus addressed her: "Betsy, thou had better quit peeping, or thee will cause a disturbance in the family." —A New York dandy peered into the Cave of the Wads under the Falls of Ni agara recently, and when asked what be thought of it remarked, "Oh, its very pretty, but it's so deuced wet!" —A gentleman from Germany, on his first visit to an American Church, had a contribution box with a hole in the top presented to him, and he whispered to the collector, "I don't got my bapers, unt can't vote." —lt is related of a certain minister of Maine, who was noted for his long ser mons, with many divisions, that one day, when he was advancing among the teeNs, he reached, at length, a kind of resting place in his discourse, when, pausing to take breath, he asked the question : "And what shall I say more ?" A voice from the congregation earnestly responded, "say Amen !" —A correspondent writes of a California woman to whom ho showed a twenty-five cent note of our postal currency, speci mens of which are rare in that hard-money region. She turned it over and over with keen curiosity. "It seems very strange to me that this should be money," she said ; "it don't look like money." "What does it look like ?" " Well" (hesitatingly, and with the utmost sincerity). " it—looks —like—a label for an oyster can .' —"John Chinaman" is beginning to stand up for himself. A man asked a question of one the other day, and being answered, replied back, —You lie," and struck the Celestial in the face. —'John' was enabled to give him a good whipping, and then came out as follows: "You epeakee Chinaman lie too muchee; belly good; you wishee knock Chinaman down; you comee see meo, well—me likee fight; sahe?" The man made oil; amid the cheers of a crowd of spectators. Jewelry. ZAIIM & JACKSON, DEALERS IN WATCHES, CLOCKS, JEWELRY, SILVER AND SILVER-PLATED WARE, SPECTACLES AND FANCY GOODS, No. 15 NORTH QUEEN STREET, LANCASTER, PA. iffirREPAIRING ATTENDED TO.ifie no2o-1y) WATCIIES! WATCHES ! WATCHES ! CLOCKS, CLOCKS, CLOCKS. The undersigned keeps constantly on hand a large and full assortment of the GENUINE AMERICAN WATCHES, of different weight and finish, to suit all, which are sold upon the most reasonable terms, and guaranteed to give satisfaction. Keeps also on hand a good assortment of CLOCKS. Call and examine the goods before purchasing elsewhere. Thankful for past favors ,I solicit a contin.u ance of the same. HENRY F. ANDREWS, Jan l-ly*) Strasburg, Lancaster co., Pa. Books and Stationery. AT • RIDDLE & COCHRAN'S 7 HARPER'S MONTHLY MAGAZINE, THE LADY'S FRIEND, GODEY , S LADY BOOK, FRANK LESLIE'S ILLUS'D NEWSPAPER, HARPER'S BAZAAR, HARPER'S WEEKLY, FRANK LESLIE'S CHIMNEY CORNER, FRANK LESLIE'S BOYS & GIRLS WEEKLY, SATURDAY NIGHT, NEW YORK LEDGER, ARTHUR'S HOME MAGAZINE, PETERSON'S MAGAZINE, APPLETON'S JOURNAL, NEW YORK WEEKLY, and all the LATEST PUBLICATIONS -AT RIDDLE & COCHRAN'S 40 NORTH QUERN STREETS Two Doors North of the INQUIRER BUILDING, LANCASTER, PA jy23-tly H EAD Q UARTERS -FOR SUNDAY SCHOOL BOOKS AT FULTON ROW, WEST KING STREET All the latest helps for Superintendents Teach ers and Bible Students, new Charts with Ob ject Lessons, a new System of Rewards, mak ing every Scholar a worker in the interest of the School. I= SUNDAY SCHOOL. MUSIC BOOKS, LIBRARY BOOKS, RECORD BOOKS, CLASS BOOKS, acc. Common School & Miscellaneous Books, STATIONERY AND FANCY GOODS, HITCHCOCK'S HALF DIME SHEET MUSIC, BIBLES AND TESTAMENTS, AT PHILADELPHIA WHOLESALE PRICES t Call and see for yourselves. rnyl4-tf] D. S. DARE. REMOVAL. J. H SHEAFFER, BOOKSELLER AND STATIONER, Has removed Us large stock -01 , - BOOKS and STATIONERY, -TO NO. an NORTH QUEEN STREET, Opposite Shober's Hotel, FOUR DOORS NORTH OF ORANGE-STREET apittfl LANCASTER, PA. Coal, Lumber, &c. EHLER, BRENEMAN & CO., WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALERS IN COAL, OF THE BEST QUALITY. YARD—COB. WATER ST. AND PA. R. R. Ossies—NO. 9 EAST ORANGE ST., LANCASTER PA. [dee 111-15! LB. If /LATIN, HERM! THOMAS, JOEN YAWN. 5,000,000 FEET OF DRY LUMBER. MARTIN, THOMAS & CO ', COLUMBIA, LANCASTER CO., PA., Manufacturers At LOCK HAVEN, CLINTON COUNTY, PA., AND WHOLESALE LUMBER DEAL ERS• WHITE PINE, HEMLOCK, POPLAR, WALNUT, ABII, FLOORING, SIDING, H WEATER BOARDS, PICKETS, LATH, 1111112-Iy] BOX BOARDS, Ac., Ac. Varnishes, &c. AWL REINOEHL. JAC. RRINOEHL, JR. A &J. REINOEHL, MANUFACTURERS AND DEALERS D. 1 COPAL, WIIITH, COFFIN, BLACK AND JAPAN VARIVISHES, LINSEED OIL, TURPENTINE, &c., &o. NO. 109 NORTH QUEEN STREET, (In the Keystone Building,) LANCASTER, I'A. Also, Mahogany Boards, Veneers and Mouldings of different sizes and pat terns. All kinds of Turning, such as Bed Posts, Table Legs, Spokes, Ilubs, Felloes, &c. , t&c. Also, AXLES, SPRINGS, &c. [Jan 11-Iyr Profrss rt 1. O . J. DICKEY, ATTORNEY AT LAW. OFFICE: SOUTH QUEEN ST.,second house be low the "Fountain Inn," Lancaster, Pa. JB. LIVINGSTON, • ATTORNEY AT LAW, Orrice: No. 11 NORTH DUKE ST., west side north of the Court House, Lancaster, Pa. CHARLES DENUES, ATTORNEY AT LAW. Orinca: N 0.3 SOUTH DUKE STREET, Lan caster, Pa. JOHN B. GOOD, ATTORNEY AT LAW. OFFICE: No. 5C EAST KING ST., Lancaster, Pa J. W. JOHNSON, . ATTORNEY AT LAW. OPIPICH: No '2.5 SOUTH QUEEN ST., Lancas ter, Pa. D. P. ROSENMILLER, JR., ATTORNEY AT LAW. Orricr: With A. HERE SMITFf, Sollti Queen St., opposite the oilioe of "Father Abra balm," Lancaster, Pa. fir AC. REINOEIIL, • ATTORNEY AT LAW. Oaricz: \0.3 SOUTH DUKE ST., LEincar;tor JOHN P. REA, ATTORNEY AT LAW. 011PIC et With Hon. 0..1. DICKEY, N 0.21 SOUTH QUEEN ST., Lancaster, Pa. MARTIN BUTT, ATTORNEY AT LAW. OPITICE Of the late 11011. fIIADDEI7B STKVICN:i No. 28 South Queen St., Lancaster, Pa. A mos 11. MYLIN, ATTORNEY AT LAW. "":4- OparcE: No. 8 SOUTH QUEEN ST., Lancaster j K. RUTTER, C./_ • ATTORNEY AT LAW Oirriex: With General .1. W. FIFIHKR, NORTH DUKE ST., Lancaster, Pa. B. F. BAER, ATTORNEY AT LAW OFFICE: No. 19 NORTH DUKE Street, Lances ter, Pa. [dec 18-lyr Reading Advertisements. T_T MALTZBERGER, • ATTORNEY AT LAW No. 48 NORTH SIXTH ST., Reading, Pa JGEORGE SELTZER, • ATTORNEY AND COUNSELLER AT LAW. No. 604 COURT STREET, (opposite the Court Housed Reading, Pa. Sewing Machines. WHEELER & WILSON'S FAMILY SEWING MACHINES With all the Latest Improvemmits. ifii-The Wheeler & Wilson Sewing Machine was awarded the only GOI D MEDAL given for Sewing Machines over eighty-two competitors at, the Universal Exposition held In Paris, las 7 Machines sold on Lease Plan at the Cash rric..! MONTHLY PAYMENTS, ONLY TEN DOLLARS. PETERSON & CARPENTER General Agents, 64 N. Queen-st., Lancaster, Pa P. s.—Energetie Business Alen wanted to Bel: the Wheeler .1, Wilson :sewing Machine in town and country. Good inducements. [Jy2B-lm GROVER & BAKER'S FIRST PREMIUM ELASTIC STITCH FAMILY SEWING MACHINES, 495 BROADWAY, NEW YORK. 730 CHESTNUT STREET, PHILADELPHIA POINTS OF EXCELLENCE. Beauty and Elast of Stitch. Perfection and Si !city of Machinery. Using both tL directly trove the spools. No fastening of seams by hand and no waste of thread. Wide range of application without change or adjustment. he seam retains its beauty and firmness after washing and ironing. Besides doingall kinds of work doneby other Sewing Machines, these Machines execute the most beautiful and permanent Embroidery and ornamental work. Air The Highest Premiums at all the Fairs and exhibitions of the United States and Europe, have been awarded the Grover £ Baker Bowing Machines, and the work done by them, wherever exhibited in competition. sr The very highest prize, THE' CROSS OF THE LEGION OF HONOR was conferred on 1 the representative of the Grover & Raker Sew ing Machines, at the Exposition Universelle, Paris, 1567, thus attesting. their great superiority over all other Sewing Machines. For sale by GEORGE SPURRIER, North Queen street, Lancaster, Pa. my2 B - 1 y THE HOWE SEWING MACHINE. FOR EVERYBODY! As a Holiday Gift to a Sister, Wife or Friend they are unsurpassed. The Fanner wants it for his Family. The Dress and Cloak Maker prefers it. The Seamstress wants it, because its work is sure to eve satisleation. The Tailor has long ago decided it to be the best for his business. The Carriage Trimmer cannot do without it; and the Shoe Fitter finds that, after all, the /ROWE is the 'machine for him. Sooner or later, everybody will have the ROWE MACHINE: Every Machine is warranted. Every one may be the possessor of one of these unrivalled machines, as we endeavor to make the terms of sale suit all our customers. We earnestly Inviteall. whethe r they se purchasing or not, to call and get speo merus of the work executed by us on the HOWE MA CHINE, End compare It with the work done by other machines. We are willing toabide by the result. deo Il3.tf] C. FATE, Agent, Ing North Queen street Medical. - - does not, like the poisonous irritating snuffs and strong caustic solutions with which the people have long been humbugged, simply palliate for a short time, or drive Ilse disease to She lungs as there is danger of doing in the use of such nostrums, but it produces PRIM/LOT AND P KRA ANIMA' CORKS OF TEM WORST CASES Or CHRONIC CATARRH, as thousands CND testify. " COLD IN TM Y. HEAD" is cured with a few appli cations. CATARRH AL H NADAOHR is retie-mitt acid cured as if by magic. It removes offensive Breath, Loss or Impairment of the • ease of taste smell or hearing, Watering or Wm'. Eyes, andlmpaired Memory, when caused by the vio lence of Catarrh, as they all frequently are. I offer in good faith a standing reward f fol a case of Oatarsh that I cannot cure. FOE SALE BY MOST DILUGUISTS EVERY- WHERE. PHU'S ONLY 50 CIINTB Ask your Druggist for the ReMEDY; but if he has not got it on sale, don't be put off by se ceptuig any miserable worse than worthlers sub.stitute, but euclose sixty cents to me, and the Remedy will to sent yob post paid. Four packages V.lO, or one dozen for $5 La. Send a two sent stamp for Dr. Sage's pamphlA on Catarrh. Addrels Lha Proprietor 8.. V. PISRU E, M. D., Bughilo, N. Y. JA•nnl