,r -- -i' f lpa$t mt VoliM XVIH-Xo. 278 LANCASTER, PA., WEDNESDAY, JULY 26, 1S82. Price Two Cfemte. JB' OWlSKM UUKST. BCWEKS. & 129 and 131 NORTH QUEEN STREET. BLACK AIL WOOL 1TOFS VELUM JUST OPEUED ! IN ELEGANT QUALITY AND GOOD WIDTH. BLACK ALL-WOOL. LACK HUNTING, only 23 cents ayaid ; onlya few pieces left of an immense lot. Elegant Llue of Pink, Blue and Creawi ALL-WOOL NIIK'd VEILINGS only 2.1 cents per yard. Elegant Line ot DRESS LAWNS from 0 cents up. Llegiint Line ol NEW DRESS PRINTS, PERCALES ami COMBINATION SUITINGS, in the New Styles, Ju-t Opsnurtand soiling rapidly. Extra Bargain?- In BLACK SILKS. Wo Invite Special Examination of our 81.00 and $1,25 qualities. Plcaeglvc us u call. XV. It. UUWKU.S, MYK filCS KATI1FON. lit Iho manufacture of READY-MADE CLOTHING wo observe three points : v 1. The Selection of Stylish and Serviceable Material with the Best Wearing Qualities. 2. The Selection of Good, Strong anil Serviceable Trimmings, Pockets, Linings, etc. 3. First-class Workmanship, Good, Strong Tin cad and Careful Sewing. In our CLOTHING yon will llnd no machine-made button holes, but good, strong, regular band-made buttonholes. Our Cutters are the most skilled. Our Pattcins aio tho best. MYERS & RATHFON, ihiy ts N KXT HOOK TO THE COURT HOUSE. FAH SESTOOK'S MADE TO OCR OPENED THIS DAY : 500 WHITE and COLORED QUILTS at $1.00. These Quilts are made heavier and larger than Quilts usually sold at this price. Wo are selling larjre lots of HLEACflEI) and UNBLEACHED MUSLINS, HEAVY STRIPED SHIRTINGS, HEAVY COTTONADES, CALICOES and GINGHAMS, all at much less than regular prices. Persons in want of these goods should not. fail to visit our store and see them bcfoie puichasiug clhcwbeic. Large lots of TABLE LINENS, TABLE LINENS, ALL LINEN, AT 20c. PER YD. AND UP AT R. E. FAHNESTOCK'S, NEXT DOOR TO COURT HOUSE. LANCASTER, PA. HOUSE EVRXIHU1XO UOUlS. TJH.INM ft WILSON. FISHING TACKLE, ALL THE LATEST NOVELTIES. Eods to Suit All Purchasers from 5c. Up. y REELS OF ALL KINDS. SNOODED HOOKS, GIMP AND GUT. LANDING NETS Silk, Linen and Cotton Lines. Cheapest Tackle Ever in the City at FLINN & WILLSON'S. SION OK THE 2 BIG DOGS.) LAWX MOWERS, AV. EWinT'S Palace Refrigerators, Water Coolers and Filterers. PHILADELPHIA LAWN MOWERS, PENNSYLVANIA LAWN MOWERS. HYDRANT HOSE, MOSQUFTO WIRE, GARDEN TOOLS, ADJUSTABLE SCREENS, WATERING CANS, STEP LADDERS. GEO. M. STEINMAN & GO, ni2S-3md&I,WAS PLUMBER'S ,w HUI.KSALK DEPOT FUR 'Water Closets and Bath Tubs, Iron and Wooden Hydrants, Plumbers' Earthenware, Gas and Steam Fitters' Supplies, Gas Fixtures at Reduced Prices, Plumliers' Supplies, Tinners' Supplies. SLATE ROOFING. SLATE HOOFING. NOB. 11, 13 & 16 EAST ORANGE STREET. LANCASTER, PA JOHN L. ARNOLD. HOTELS. rpMK LANCASTER COTTAGE. VIRGINIA (TENTH) AVKNUK, Ret ween Atlantic and Pacific Aienncs, A1LANTIC CITY, N. J. NOW OPEN FOR THE SEASON OK 1832. rieasanl Location. Airy Rooms, Elegantly Furnished. New and Complete Improve ments. Terms Very Moderate. MRS. M. J. KUNKLE, Proptictress. 1. O. Box 873. J un22-2tnd riutE MANSION HOUSE, ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. OPEN FOR THE SEASON OF 1882. Fronting Pennsylvania and Atlantic Aven ues, near both Railroad Depots.; TWO HUNDRED ROOMS, ELEGANTLY FURNISHED. EXTENSIVE PORCHES. NEW AND COMPLETE IMPROVEMENTS. LARUE BILLIARD ROOM, WITH BIX HEW VOLLKMDKK TABLES. Orchestra led by Brophy. Dancing under the direction of Prof. O.J. Gillespie. Main office W. V. Telegraph in the building. Union News Stand in onice. iiuerai Management. Jc22--inil CHA8. McGLADE, Prop. ISItECCA TOUAVCU AND CRIMEA Kotiu'h and Ready only 10 cents per plug, at HARTMaN'S Yellow rront Cigar Store. Jyl5-7md DBt GOODS, St. HURST'S NEW STOEE, BOWERS & HURST. CLOTUIXO. "Well-MacLe Grarments. NO. oons. OWN' OKOEU AND LANCASTER. PA. 26 and 28 West King Street. SUPPLIES. UOAJj. B. B. MAKTIK, Wholesale and Retail Dealer in ul) htiidf of LUMBER AND COAL. iWfanl: No. 420 North Water and Prince treets above Lemon Lancaster. n3-lyd UAL AND CM) KM. Pnro Lykcns Valley and oilier kind ot Coal for all purposes well cleaned. Rest Brand Uosendalc Cement at reduced price. Also Limestone Screenings for wnlka and drives; guarantee satlslnctlon. Hay ami htraw by the bale or ton. Yard and Ollieo : Harribnr pike. General Office: 20VJ East Chestnut Street. KAUFFMAN, KELLER & CO. aprl-lwd C OAL. M. V. B. COHO, 830 NORTH WATER ST., Zanmler. f.t Wholesale and Retail Dealers In LUMBER AND GOAL. Connection With the Telephonic Exchang... Yard and Office: No. 330 NORTH WATER STREET. tel28-l7H SAMUEL II. PRICE, ATTOICNEV. HAS Removed his Oflicv rrom 56 North Dnkc ireet to No. 41 GRANT STREET, Immcdi alely In Rear of Court House, Long's New Ruilaing. ml7-ttd HKHVi:V N. llCliST, 12 BAST KING STREET. mtr uoova. SIMtelNO OUT! AT AND BELOW COST. Aly entnoytoek ot DM GOODS, IMS, Etc. Ih FOR SALE AY ANI1 BELOW COST. This a rate chance lor GOOD BARGAINS. AS I HAVE AM- IMMENSE STOCK OF HOODS. On hand, which were all purcluised for cash. J. M. LONG, J21-U.I It NOltTII QUEEN STREET. H Aili:it k 1SKOTIIKK. U. CHEVIOT SUITS. FLANNEL SUITS. CASSIMERF. SUITS. LINEN SUITS. SEERSUCKER SUITS. ALPACA COAT.;. WHITE DUCK VESTS. STRIPED DUCK VESTA LINEN DUoTEllS. MOHAIR DUSTERS. SKELETON-MADE COATS. FINE SUMMER TROWSERINGS. LINENS, DUCKS, PONGEE, SEERSUCKER, SERGE Hager & Brother. X. R. Alter JUIA i, .. will cinsc &i tl o'clock p. in., (tiiimu' Hi--, siiiiinte: Ii! on I lis except SATURDAY PAPER HAXOIXU&, AC WALL i'AI'fclt ODDS AND ENDS -OF WALL PAPER Will be sold very low in order to close out. Anion;; them m e hnmc il the Veiy Rest Pattern.-. PLAIN WINDOW SHADING lly the yard in All Colors that were slightly wet on ends, will be sold cheap. We umLt' mako to order, at short notice, all kinds of WIRE SCREENS FOR WINDOWS, Ami put tliein up in the Rest Manner. Fine Pior and Mautlo Mirrors. AN ELEGANT LINE OF LACE CURTAINS, Extension Cornices. Poles in Rras, Walnut, Ebony and Cherry. Phares W. Fry, 57 NORTH QUEEN STREET. VAJtltlAtiUS, TC. riits ntanuauu cakkiagk work T OF LANCASTER COUNTY. EDGERLEY & Co., PINE Carriage Builders. MARKET STREET, Boar of Central Markot Hoiiaoa, LANCASTER, PENN'A. WemakeeveiytyloRugirvan1'. Carriage de sired. All worlAtnishcd in U'e most comfort able and elegant style. We use only the best selected material, and employ only the best mechanics, fror quality ot work our prices are the cheapest in the state. We buy tor cash and sell on the most reasonable terms, Give usn calL All work warranted. Repairing prompt ly atlendcil to. One set ot workmen especially mploved for that purpose. fu2G-tfd4w FAEM AND GARDEN- TIMELY HINTS TO HUSBANDMEN. Rural and Household HlnU-The Effect of Land Monopoly. German town Telegraph. The esthetic plant, the sunflower, in extensively grown in Germantoif n gardens this summer, and tho disciples ,of Oscar Wilde gaze upon it with i.ndiminished ad miration. If the heads of horses exposed much to tho sun wero protected with a " bonnet " during hot days, it would add creatly to the comfort or the animals. An arrange ment of this kind for shading the head was extensively used a few summers ago, but it is now only rarely seen. In warm weather the confined air of closets and refrigerators becomes un wholesome and seriously impairs the quality of milk, cream, butter ,and such other susceptible articles kept there. Charcoal is an important disinfectant, and a small dish of it kept in these conCned places will purify the air and presorvo the food in a wholesorao condition. A ficupr.ernoap grape vine in the Tokay vineyard, near Fayettesville, N. C, it is fiaitl, bears 100 bushels of grapes. There are other vines in the same vineyard which produce from 25 to 40 bushels. The vines wero planted twenty-five years ago. The former grapo is not adapted to the climate as far north as tho Middle states but in tho Southern states it is tho principal de pendance for wine, though scarcely, fit for the table at all. It is proclaimed that there has been dis covered a substitute for Paris green as a destroyer of the potato beotle, which unlike tho established destroyer, is entirely harm less. This is said to bo gas tar and water. Mr. S. H. Hart, of Brighton, N. Y., claims to have used it upon his potatoes with en tire success. lie puts two quarts of tar into an ordinary bucket and fills it with water. After stirring thoroughly it is left to settle, and then applies it to tho vines with a watering pot. It is easy to do, is cheap mid is harmless. Uxeu and Horaea. i A contemporary says : '"One of the many curious facts to be fouud in-the cen sus tcports is that the number of working oxen in use on farms in the United States has decreased 25 per cent, since 1870." On tho contrary, wo do not think that there is anything curious in this at all. If tho writer of theso quoted lines was a larmcr or teamster, lie would think differ ently. Wo regard tho oxen as entirely interior to tho hor.se or mule as draft ani imals, cither on tho farm ortad. We know that oxou are worth nearl as much for tho shambles at the end of six to eight years as at any other time ; but they can bo used only about one-half as long as tho horse or mule, and while at their best they cannot perforin more than two thirds to three-fourths the amouit of work owing to (heir slowness of moviment nd awkwardness in handling. ITcnceJiko Tiduc tion in tho pur eeutage in the ntitnber of oxen will doubtless continue to go oh as tho country progresses, without in the least degreo there being anything " cu rious" about it. i Incubators. Z' " A year or so ago wo were led ftd inquire wlwihcr any incubators wero iauccessful and profitable opeiation. As e' received no responso, wo suppose that nothing yet of any consequence has been found out of the knowledge that crs may bb hatched by artificial means. Wo aro the more in clined to believe that no practical use has been made of the idea to any extent, from aecing in the schedules of some otj our lead iug poultry exhibitions, handsome pie niuirusoli'cicil for successful incubators, while so far as wc havo been able to sec, no repoits of anything valuable being offered has appeared. Takiug it for grant eii, therefme, that to a considerable ex tent incubators havo been a failure, it is woith while inquiring why they should be so and whether something cannot bo dono to remove the difficulties. rf We know of nothing moro likely to bo piolitablo: for surely a regular'succession of good young chickens, through all sea sons of tho year, would bring with it a sine market; and unless the losses should be very laigc in some uuaccountablo way it could not but pay well. Wo suspect that tho trouble must be that the young chickens aro not raised as easily without as with a mother's care. Even when the chickens aro brought up by tho hens that hatch them, it is by no meaus a certain business. Very few .aro tho persons who can boast at the end of a se;iso!i of having raised all toe chickens hatched; while it is not at alr-i uncommon for people to lose a third or even a half ; and we suppose that under absolutely arti ficial treatment the loss would be greater still. Nevertheless, those who havo had experience in this practice could perhaps tell us exactly how it is. We like to hear the details of failures, as well as to have accounts of success. Very often when one reads of the failure of another, tho cause occurs t' him when it may never strike tho one who fails; and in this way tho one who tolls of what ho has failed to do, often does as much or more good than One who shows what he has successfully done. Indeed, it is more often than not that people think they can succeed where another faifs, and some even, who could never -think to try what some ouo else has done, will at once think they can do what no one else can. If incubators have anywhere proven profit able wo should like to know about -them; and if they have been tried, and failed, we should like to hear of the failure also. What Might be Expected. Wo notice that in certain parts of Cali fornia tho scarcity of hands Tor the har vest fields is especially felt, particularly in tho Sacramento valley. Wo are not sur prised at this. California has become dis Unfinished as a region of land monopoly, aud strange to say this has developed in its very worst form in the I creation of enormous farms and plantations where wheat crops are cultivated by machinery and where, for example, ono wheat farm has a fence sixty miles in extent. Of cour.se, such a state of things as this is altogether unfavorable to tho maintenance of the regular laboring population that can be called upon for extra service in time of harvest. It is also extremely unfavor able to tho existence of local trading vil lages, S3 that in consequence thereof tho plantations must .either burchase enor mous quantities of supplies of all kinds by wholesale in San Francisco and other commercial cities or else depend upon steam machinery for the greater part of their labor. Some years ago powerful efforts were mado to send to California largo nttmbeiB of mechanics aud working men as emi grants seeking homes in that state. But the capitalists and monopolizers of land systematically discouraged this movement, and took especial pains to appoint a com mittee to arrest the emigration and to pub lis accounts, for general circulation in the Atlantic States, stating that there was no field there lor tho employment of this class of emigrants. Such a state as things as this we have always regarded of wholly foreign to the healthful development of our free institutions, and we are, therefore, not surprised at the difficulty exper ienced by the land monopolists of California in obtaining farm hands to enable them to harvest the wheat crops. Machinery is undoubtedly useful to an immense extent in economiz ing the necessity for labor in agricultura pursuits. But, nevertheless, the farm la borer can no more be dispensed with' en tirely than the factory hand can be, no matter how ingemus may be the machines introduced. Nor, indeed, does it appear that the wheat farming of California is as productive in proportion to the area occu pied in the grain farming of Pennsylvania, Ohio or Illinois. The yield .of wheat per acre of these colossal wheat farms in California is very much in ferior to the average yield of wheat in Pennsylvania or Ohio. .Of courso we shall not undertake to say that this is on account of the diffcrenco in the system ; but we do mean to say that if the Penn sylvania or Ohio system of small farming were introduced into California tho wheat production would bo very much increased and would at tho same time furnish pro fitable imploymentto a much larger popu lation. Indeed, it is no stretch of fancy to say that the economy of labor has been carried to such an excess in California as to have caused a corresponding diminu tion to the average production of crops. How long this land monopoly is likely to exist in that stato we have at present no means of conjecturing ; but wo heartily sympathize with the vigorous efforts made by the voting population of the state to deliver California from the fatal grasp of monopolists of all classes. MARRIED -IU A NEGRO. A Tonus AVInte Woman Arrested for Taking a second IIusDanrt. A good deal of excitement was caused in Wilkcsbarre yesterday in certain social circles by the news of the arrest of a hand some young white woman, not moro than twenty, on a charge of bigamy, her second husband being a big, burly negro, as black as night aud ono of the most ignorant of his class. Tho charge was mado by the woman's mother. About two years ago Anna Seibert was wooed and won by a well-to-do mechanic named Morgan. Some' few months since Morgan moved to Pottsville, taking his wife with him. Tho latter used to come frequently to see her mother, and during theso visits sho met aud fell desperately in love with the negro, who was a common laborer in the employ of a tar-roofer. Tho darkey's name is Sam Taylor. He knew that tho woman was married, but on the 3d of July he induced her to go before a colored Method istpreacher named Evans, who married them. It is believed that Evans was not awarn of the previous mar riage of the woman. When tho matter came to the mother's knowledge she pleaded with her daughter to leave her second husbaud and return to her home. On her refusal to do this promptly tho mother had her arrested npon the charge of bigamy. Sho was taken before Magistrate Bulkley, but be fore any proceedings were had she repent ed and agreed t) leave the negro and go home with her mother. The mother is nearly distracted, while intense excite ment exists among the friends of tho daughter, some swearing vongoansa upon the negro for marrying her. The girl is yonng, pretty and intelligent,' and it is said that she will go back to her colored husband at the first opportunity. A TEIUUBLK CRIME. A Youuir Ulrl ArreHtoil for Muiilciliijr Her Stepmother Her Confession. A horrihlo crime has just coinc to light iu Frceporr, a small county town in Greene county, Pa., about fifty miles from Pitts burgh, whero a prepossessing young lady of 18 years of ago named Mollio Steams has been arrested and held for trial on the chargo of murder. The Stearns family has been a very unhappy one for several mouths past, on account of the father's matriage to a second wif. His two daugh teis,aged respectively eighteen and twenty one years, found it impossible to get along with their stepmother, and, after numer ous quarrels had taken place, they formed the deliberate plau to got rid of her. They procured some poison and administered it to tho woman on Monday or Tuciday, and the body was buried without creating any suspicion of tho crime. Miss Mollio found the burden of a guilty conscience too heavy to carry aud confessed. She was promptly taken into custody and search is now being made for her sister and father. The latter is suspected of being implicated. Human Prejudice. Some one h;n wisely said : "There is noth ing stronger th-m human prejndiee ;" and this is true. Especially aro pome minds picju diccd against" proprietary medicines." Ro cause Mime such medicines are shams, they leap to the conclusion that all are. As well say, because some physlcl-ins are Quacks, all arc. Vlicre are counterfeits of all good things, even o! gold coin and greenbacks. Rut there Is true money, and there arc true medicines. Among tho latter ts Hunt's Remedy, true and tried, and with the tc-timoniais ot hundreds who h ive been hcalud and saved Iroin the grave by it. For all diseases or the kidneys, the liver, the uilnnry organs, it stands with out a peer. Physic-inns prescribe it, and the sick hall it with Joy. Isn't it cheaper to buy a bottle of it yourself, anil take it according to dlrec.ions. than topay for your prejudice by receiving it at the hands ot your physician at ten times the cost ? ly'JC-lwdcodSw Enrich and revitalize the blood by using Hrown's Iron Raters. For sale at II. R. Coch ran's ilrit.5 store, 137 North Queen street, Lan caster. jy24-lwdw The invisible Celluloid Eye-Ulass frames havo reached the topmost wave of popularity without a competitor, defying competition, and the popular verdict Is that they, are the liandsomcst and best made. -For sale by all leading Jewelers and opticians. ' Iuckmictack," a lasting and tratjrant per fumc. Price 23 ami 50 cent. For sale at Cocn ran's drug store.137 North Queen street. Palpitation or the Heart. .t. M. Misrht. Svraeusc. N. Y.. writes: " When I first commenced using your Rnrdock Rlood Hitters I was troubled with 11 uttering and palpitation of the heart. I felt weak and lan guid, with a numbness of the limbs; since using, my heart has not troubled me and the numbing sensation is all gone." Price $1.00. For sale at II. R. Cochran'.-, drug stoic, Sl North Queen street, Lancaster. Walnut Loaf Hair Kestorer. it is entirely different from all others. It Is as clear as water, and, as its name indicate, is a perfect Vegetable Hair Restorer. It will Immediately free the head from all dandruff, restoro gray hair to Its natural color and pro duce a new growth whero It has fallen off. It docs not In any manner etlect the health, which Sulphur, fugnr of Lcid and Nitrate ot Silvnr mvimrntinna havo done. It will change light or faded hair in a few days to a beautiful I glossy brown. Ask your druggist for It. Each i bottle is warranted, sonxu, jvj.ia c jv.. Wholesale Agents, Philadelphia, and C. N. CRITTENTON New York. JnnS lyd.codftw Fob Dvspbtsia and Liver Complaint, you have a printed guarantee on every bottle ol Shlloh's Vltalizer. it never fails to cure. For sale at Cochran's drug store, 137 North Queen street. Despised. Rv the unthinking. Rurcock has been con sidered a weed, and its luxuriant growth, un pleasant smell, etc., has rendered it, to those " not knowing Its virtue." a nuisance, and yet the root has long been acknowledged by sav ants as moat invaluable as adiuretic, aperient and blood purifier. Rnrdock Rlood Rittcrs embody all Its good qualities. Price $1.00. For sale at U. R. Cochran's drii store, 137 North Queed street, Lancaster. A basal iHflBOTOB lreo with each bottle ol Shllol.'s Catarrh Remedy. Price 50 cents. For sale at Cochran's drug store, 137 North Queen I street. JOOX WAXJLMAKXWB 'KOXICX IV SUMMXM TOVRUT. JOB WANAMAKEB'3 ADVEKTISKIKNT. mm TO STT1DIER QUARTERS. Important notice travelers The courtesies of the entire establishment (in close proximity to the Broad Street Station for the New York, Baltimore, Washington and all Western trains) are freely extended. Beside the vast stocks of La dies', Gents' and Children's Suits, Dry Goods, Fancy Goods, Carpets and House Furnishing, there is a spa cious Waiting Room, Picture Gallery, Lunch-room and Toilet-room. The new department of public comfort, with wash-rooms, closets, new lunch rooms, for both ladies and gentlemen will be opened ist August. Bag gage can be left and checked while persons are visiting. Philadelphia is so cheap a place for shopping that there is often a saving of more than railroad fares. . John Wanamaker. Thirteenth and Chestnut and Market Streets, Philadelphia. MKMVJU.. IlKOWK'N tnON 111TTKKS. Strength to vigorously push a business, strength to stndy a profession, strength to regulate a household, strength to do a day's labor without physical pain. AH this represents what is wanted, in the often heard ex pies.ion,"0h ! I wish I hail tho stiength !" If yon are broken down, have not energy, or feol as if lifo was hardly worth living, you can be relieved and restored to robust health and strength by taking BROWN'S IRON BITTERS, which is a true tonic a medicine universally recommended for all wasting diseases. SOI North Fremont St., Baltimore. i During the war 1 was injured in the ( stomach by a piece of shell and have j suncrcu iroin it ever sinue. auuiil luur years ago it brought on paralysis, which kept me In bed slv months, and the best doctors In the city said I could not live. I suffered tearlally from in digestion, and lor over two years could not cat solid food and for a largo por tion ot the time was unable to retain even liquid nourishment. I tried RROWN'S IRON FRITTERS, and now, alter taking two bottles, I am able to get up and go around, and am rapidly improving. G. OKCKER. BROWN'S IRON BITTERS is a com plete and sure remedy for Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Malaria, Weakness and all diseases requiring a true, reliable, non alcoholic tonic. It enriches the blood, gives new life to the muscles and tono to the nerves. For sale at 11. R. COCHRAN'S Drug Store, 137 and 133 Noith Queen street, Lancaster. iv24-lwdw H LIQUORS, AV. TlNtlWAI.TS WINE, LIQUOR, ALCOHOL, XTD GROCERY STORE. No. 203 WEST KING faTKEKT. HUUSKAL. GO'S NEW LIQUOR STORE, Mo. 43 North Queen street, Lancaster, Pa. The very best and finest qualities of Foreign and -Domestic WINES and LIQUORS, con stantly tor sale at wholesale and retail. Straight Old Rye Whisky of the distillation of 1875. Pure unadulterated Custom House Rrandy. warranted ot the vintage ot I960. Kent especially for medicinal purposes. Pure Old Holland Gin, and other Whiskies, Bran dies an Wines to suit tho trade. febS-lyd HOU8EAL ft CO. BOOTS A SUORS. ptLOSINO OUT! CLOSING OUT ! AT GREATLY REDUCED PRICES. Having started a Shoe Factory, 1 am now closing out my large stock or Boots and Shoes at greatly reduced prices to make room for the enlargement of my lactory. 49Custom work a specialty, both machine and hand-made. F. HE3MENZ. NO. lOT. NORTH. QUEEN STREET. (Sign ot tho Big Shoe.) maoWAStt R AGS. BAGS. BAGS. Tho highest. Cnah Prices tiald for all kinds Ot Rap), Old -Rooks, Carpets, Woolen Cloths, Bagging Rope, Gum Shoes, ftc Ac. 1 will call on persons having anyot th; above articles it they will drop mn apjit card. " WM. P. HHNNBOKB, KO. 23S WEST KING HTBKBT. foli25-6md to families and generally. .- ZAXCASTKR WATCHES. D R.WICKERSIIAM'SLANCASTKUWATCH KEEPS IT3 Wonderful Record UNBROKEN FOR FOUR YEARS. Lancaster ! uno 1?, iss.. A. RITNEU, ESQ, Manager JMiicaster Watch Factory. DEAR SIS : IX THE SJTM3IRR Oh' WS 1 MADE A EUROPEAN TOUR TRA I'ELINU HOME KJMW MILKS. J CARRIED WITH ME ONE OF YOUR LANCASTER WATCHES. IT NEVER STOPPED AND DID NOT VARY A SINGLE MINUTE FROM THE TRUE TIME DURING THE ENTIRE TRIP. I IIA 'E CARRIED THE SAME WATCH FOR THE FOUR YEARS ' INCE THAT TIME. AND IT HAS MAINTAINED ITS WONDBKFUI. RECORD UNRROKEX, I AM AGAIN ABOUT TO START ARROAD FOR A PROLONGED RESI DENCE. MY FAITHFUL TIME KEEPER, WHICH HAS COME TO RE CONSIDERED A FRIEND, GOES IflTII ME, AND r WILL RE PROUD TO EXHIBIT IN ANYWHERE AS A TRIUMPH OF AMERICAN SKILL AND HOME INDUSTRY. Yours very truly, J. P. WICKERSHAM, American Minister to Denuim K. THE FIRST OF THE Lancaster Watcbes TO GROSS THB SEAS. FOR BALK. 1HEAP BUILDING LOTS FOR 9ALR Tho undersigned offers for sale on long time and ca5y iiayuiem FIFTY RUII.D1NG LOTS on Duke, Lime, Frederick ami New streets. Also an elegant lot, 70x210 feet, adjoining Prof. Stahr's, on West .Tames street. A good chance now fo get a cheap lot. Call at Coal Office, 22 East Kings! rcetand nee plan. A. W. U'.SSEL, Jy2l-lmd 22 East King Street. IJOK SALE.-TUE IINDEKSIONKD ' Special Committee or the shinier Steam Fire Engine and Hose Company, appointed by said company at their last general meeting held on the IStli Inst., offer for sale the follow ing property of said company, consisting of. First, a Lot or Ground, situ itcd on the west side ot South Queen street, between Andrew and Hazel streets. Irnntlnir on said Son Hi Queen street :t7 lect 10 Inches, more or less, and extending in depth 146 feet, more or less, ac (oinlng property ot Henry W. Shertz on tliu north and Presbyterian chapel on the south, together with a Two-Story BRICK KM; IN c: HOUSE there-on erected, the said house hi.v Ing a bell cupola thereon attached. Second, a bTEAM FIRE ENGINE, which Is a fourth class vertical, bnilt by Cole ft Brother, Pautuckct, K. I. The cylinder measures :i Inches In the bore, with 8 inch stroke, with brass pumps. The boiler is a good steam k-ii-erator, with 23t copper tubes ; can S'art In jour minutes after lighting the tire, and can throw water through an Inch nozzle from 210 to 220 feet, and has twenty feet of four-inch suction hose, with spanner. WTenehes, oilcan'. Ac. We guarantee this engine In flrst-claas condi tion. PETER B. FORDNEY, THOMAS ANDERSON, WILLIAM II. DO it IV ART' DANIEL E. AUKAMP, HENRY SMEYC1I, JOSEPH WILFONG. ALEXANDER HARRIS, Jy20 tfd Committee. EDUCATIONAL, SWARTHMURK COIAKOF. RE-OPENING IN RESTORED BUILD ING. Both sexes admitted. College and pre paratory school under care ot members of the Society ot Friends. The main building, destroyed by Are 0th month, last, has been completely rebuilt, enlarged, and fitted up with all conveniences. Thorough Instmctlon In Languages, Literature. Mathematics and tne Sciences. New Scientific Building con taining Laboratories, Drafting Booms, Ma chine Shape, and all appliances for pursuing a thorough coarse in Chemistry. Mechanical and Civil Engineering. Tne next term opnns 9th mo. (Sept.) 12th Apply early, as, other things being equal, places will be given to the earliest applicants. For full particulars, address EDWARD M. HAGILL. Pres't, Swarthmore Collage, Delaware Co.. Jane2&3md
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers