,VOL. LIV. LANCASTER INTIILLIGENCYR & aulitiAL • 1 , 17/41/1111D ZYgIT rITAIDAT - BY GEO. SANDERSON. TERMS 911pstatirrioN.—Two Dollars per annum, payable in advance; two twenty-five, if not,paid within six months; and two. fifty, if not paid within the year. No suoscripnon discontinued until all arreatages are . paid finless at the option of the Editor. Anyttaviaxissurs—/.accompanied by the CASH, and not exceeding one square, will be inserted three times for one dollar, and twenty-five cents for each additional insertion. Those of a greater length in proportion. Jon•Pancrind —Such as Hand Bale, Posting Bills, Para ph.ets. Blanke t Labels, &c., &c., executed with ac. curacy and at the shortest notice. LISSETTE The following verses, (taken from a MS. in the possession of our contributor, Carl Benson,) have never, we believe, been printed. Can any one tell us who the author is I—Literary World. light Lissette, Is grave and shrewd, And half a prude, And half a coquette; So staid and set, . So terse and trim, So arch and prim, A something settled and precise Has made a home in both the eyes Of my Lissette. The measured motion of the blood, The words where each one tells, • Too logical for womanhood, • Brief changes rung on silver bells. The cheek with health's close kiwi' warm, The finished frame so light, Such fulness, in a little form, As satisfies the sight, The boddice fitted and exact, The nut brown tress so lightly curled, And the whole woman so compact, Her like is no where in the world. Such knowledge in the ways of life And household order, such As might create a perfect wife, Not careful overmuch. All these so moved me, When we met— I would she loved me, Trim Lissette. What if to-morrow morn I go, And, in an accent soft and clear, Lay some three words within her ear I thin.: she would not answer no.. And by the ribbon in her hair, • And those untested lips, I swear, I keep some Hide doubt as yet, With such an eye, So grave and sly Looks my Lissettest • What words may show, - Me yes-or no, Of my Lissette. The doubt is less, • . Since last we met; • • Let it be yes," ° My sweet Lissette: [Correspondeoo of the Baltimore Weekly Sun.] LIMA AND THE LIMANOS.. LETTER N. I Limn, May 20, 1853. Splendors and Beauties of the City of Lima-Rs Past and Present-Callao-Its Buried Ruins-Its Dena tionalization by Foreigners, and Dernoralizati4n by Earth-Scum-Its Fortifications d Prison- The Railway to Lima-Description of the Route -A Fine Battle Field-The Entrance to Lima- Reflections on its Ancient Characteristics-The, Aboriginal Peruvians and their Conquerors— The City's Magnificencelts Streeti and Papal°, Lion-Painful Contrasts of the Past and Present -The Great Cathedral'and other. .Churrhes-Sin gular Mechanism of the City-Exact Squares and Interior Gardens-Fountains and • Promenades- Politeness of the (habitants - The Private Court Yards-Splendor of the Mansions-Night Scenes -Spectral Processions-The Patriot Garazaldi, 4-c. " The living of gone time • Builded their glorious eitios by the sea; And, aviilb: in their greatness, eat sublime, As though no change could be.ii Eras and nations symbol themselves in the struc. 1 tures of their hands—in the cities of their erection. What Bagdad is to our ideas of Oriental pomp, and St. Petersburg to the icy splendor of the Muscovite court, is the city of Lima to the f:!!en dominion 51 the Spanish conquerors. Throned in the midst of I plains desolated by the tramp of the earthquake; teeming in her shattered temples, hocc...sved court yards, and gorgeous bazars, with the memories ot past grandeur, and oppression, and wretchedness; and undentified in our minds with any thing that a great and gay capital ot the 19th century should be —she stands alone and peculiar as the most faithful tppe of the barbaric splendor of the era of the Pi zarros and the Cortezes. You stand within the • shadow of her immense Gothic and Moorish piles, and before her interminable succession of faded! frescoes, as one in the midst of a, city of the dead. Around you is the ghost of the mighty past. You walk as one in a dream. You commune alone with the histories of long ago, and will not, cannot harmonise the anxious merchant, the thoughtful priest, the plodding Indian and degraded African faces on every baud, with irrepressibly visible han diwork of a solemn, departed era—the symbols of an epoch whose records are romance, whose philos ophy is fiction, vanity, nothing! Callao, the important seaport of the capital, far ther ~way in the plain, presents little to interest the r Ijourner, unless it be the vast portion of its buried fathoms down under the sea by the great earthquake, many vestiges of which ara still visi ble below the water. Like Valparaiso and many other of the South America coast cities, Callao has comparatively very little to distinguish it from the water suburb of an inferior seaport eleets-here. The influx of foreigners has denationalized it, and, what is worse, demoralized it, also, for low us is the apparent standard of morality in Spanish-Amer ican seaports generally, It is greatly tolerable when left to itsell, compared with its condition after the advent of the human scum from ull the penal colo nies, gambling El Dorados, " Points,' ",Water streete,' et omits mu/ of a rotten-ripe civilization throughout the world. Callao is•pecullarly favored in this respect. The rogues and ruffians of the globe have made it-a rendezvous, for which its po ' sition especially adapts it at this time. It has shared in modern days in most of the disasters of its great neighbor, whether of the earthquake or the sadder calamities of the domestic and foreign war. It still contains cne or two respectable fortifications, though- in evident disrepair, and which could never have been, alone, of much service in protecting an utterly it defensible harbor. Extending along these forti fications is a gloomy, grated vault, of several acres extent, used as a prison, in whose filthy depths may be seen gaunt cyclopean malefactors of every clime and country. . A railway extends from Callao to Lima, a die [ince, of about six miles. The cars are of inferior size, of London construction: and proceed very leis urely on their jolting way; behind a substantial en gine, manufactured by Norris, of Philadelphia.— The level plain through which this road winds, • comprising the seaside environ of Lima. bears ahun -1 dant testimony to the blight of its devastating vide . alludes, though often relieved, as it approaches the city,' by 'regular end beautiful chequers..[ verdure and groves of fe.thery palms. Every Where it is traversed and intersected by heavy and mostly de caying adolna walls, running with mathematical ac- -.curacy as far as-the eye can extend, with here and there a mctifresque Indian girl astride cd a dwarf- ish . donkey to redeem the picture of absolute death or lite. , This field has been several times the the atre upon which the fate of the two cities it embo soma has been submitted to the arbitrament of war. And nowhere can I imagine a more perfect ideal ot a battle-field. A thousand American riflemen, with the advantages presented by corltinually recurring artificial and natural entrenchments, could here die pate the entrance to Lima with ten thousand ot the best infantry in the world, and if not successfully, would at least pave their way with the slain foe up to the very walls of the city, without being at any one point exposed. to fire. As you approach the city, there ate several beautiful public and private structures, islanded in gardens of the orange, the pine apple, and the banana, and &Mooned with gar lands of the aborescent flower-growth of the tropics, The- entrance to the city is certainly unique.-- You doubt for a mime - at the fact that this narrow ledge ol.houses through which you 'ara. pain, tawdry and ;faded, can be the. grest.i4pital of .the i.i !.. ... •. .. .- -- - - • , .. . . • • . , . .. . . .. . , .. ::....,:.,. ...:7•• 1'...';':.. .-.. , . .. . , . • • , - .. , . . r, ~ .. dl E.— • t.. , . • • .:,,...:,,,...,,,. .. ~..,, 3., ...,...„..., .i.„.„...,„.. ...• ~..,..... 1 IS • ~.,i, • .r. . li• • •, r , i. ~ ~ ~.,, ~ .. .. ~,, .rfl , 1. i . r IpPr. ,S *1 e .. ... • • • ,1 _•.• , , . . • ...• .1 , . , • . ' • • —.• .. - 1 1 •."• .. • . •- . * :**. . ..'. • * ' " ', . . , ~ ~,...... •. . , ~ . . • ....,.. . • . . . . . . ... . .. . .. . . . , . .. . , . . ... ...•.... . •. Viceroys and the Incas of ecclesiastical splenthr and national degradation, of the piety of the congues tadores and thmenslavemenrof the conquered, of the death struggle between the Sun in Nature and the Sun in Heaven. But so it is. Partial civilization, gorgeous in gross materiality, and partial barbar ism, glittering in the porripof the sensuous symbols of its spiritual dogmas, here joined in a deadly con flict, whose stake was no less than the wealth, the domain, and the empire of a quarter of a planet l It is not for us to,pronounce upon the dread decrees of the Deity, the justice of which may date beldre the traditions of our language began: ' The origin of the Aboriginal Peruviiinn, and their twi-light civilization, is beyond our mental. vision; and so swill probably remain forever the swerving to the dark idolatry; which brought upon them (if we may credit their conquerors) so fearful a retribu tion. Suffice it to say, that the same reasoning which presumes so much of them from the,conse• quence which followed their course, might find something to point a moral-analogy in the present state of the usurpers. - And yet, Lima is a great city still. Magnificenta I in its sweep of glass like level, along , whieh shoot with arrowy precfsion its clean, narrow, panoram a is street, until lost—an interminable vista of vision —in the unobstructed - borizon seaward, or against the dark blue mountains looming in parallel and successively ascending ranges upon the inland side. Magnificent in its hundred thousand indolent, pious, pleasure-loving population, of every shade of color ; in its gaudily grotesque and arabesque, but much defaced, public buildings; and, above all, in the painful contrariety and contrast of the past with the present everywhere visible. This contrast is the first and must striking feature to the stranger. It is eloquent in the monuments of art, so elabo •rately and barbarously gorgeous ; still towering, with few gisible traces of convulsive casualty, but mouldering from very antiquity; repulsive to the chastened taste of our age and people, become im mutably the heirloom of a changeless past. Of this the great cathedral is a fair representation. Its colored columns and stuccoes, meretriciously traced in arabesque, present a Saracenic incongruousness peculiar to the Spanish architects, grafted upon the absolutely sublime Gothic interior of the building i c Here everything is lofty, swelling, magnificent, from the broad sweep of its mosaic ailes to Lie complicated graining of its almost countless arch es. And now, that the stupendous organ is groan ing its agony of anthem, accompanied by the voicet of the whole choir of administering priests,l real ize in its highest sense the imposing eff"ct of such a scene, so often described in "dim religions light." Twilight is closing upon the scene. Thesinking •un—Peruvia's burning-god above Peruvian clime —is flashing through crimson oriel and bay, and upon a score of lofty, glittering altars.. The Ti tanic vaults above are filled with mellowed reflec tions of his dying beams. Delicate white-robed boys are swinging smoking censors of incense, al most lost in the far perspective of transept, choir and nave. Pala ! They have robbed the cathedral of its charm. They are the most rapaciOus, cring ing beggars I ever beheld. The Metropolitan church of our city would be respectable chapel besides this stupendous building. I have intimated that this cathedral is a type of all those towering upon every hand gazing from the centre of the grand plaza, their spires and domes brooding far and near above the hollow square of sitpet b' bazars by which you are here surrounded. From this point you may comprehend the mechan ism of Lima. It is possibly the most uniform city in the world—a city of exact squares, for its streets all pursue the most rigid right-angles, Munificent in extent. It cavern, to the eye, as much ground as the city of New York, though it numbers a population scarcely greater than that of St. Louis. For this a reason is easily discerned. The squares are very large, and only walled in as it were by un interrupted rows of houses on their four sides, so precisely resembling each other, that but for . the color of the external plastering you could not dis tinguish one in a thousand. Thus the whole in terior of these squares is unoccupied, if that can properly be so designated which is thus converted into a paradisaic garden of fountain, parterre and promenade. Into these gardens it is impossible to get a glimpse, or even to witness their existence, unless through the ever prompt politeness of the inhabitants. The entrance to every house is by a lofty folding gateway into its own peculiar court-yard. Here, upon each side of what may be termed the sally port, you are struck with immense lire-size fresco pain ings, many still fresh, some perfectly new, but most of them somewhat time-stained. They are of rich coloring, but evince little more artistic skill ela an that of the merely domestic ornamental pain ter. The court-yards hr., with black spheri cal pebbles, set fast in a dark cement, and ornament ed wittra fanciful and unique tracery, and running hither and thither in flowers, diamonds and circles, of sfitall,bones, uniform in size and their bleached white color. Reader, some say, in many instances of human bones. Enough, however, that they are all composed of vertibral joints, about the human size, which may have given rise to the conjecture, though certainly the dark workings in times past of the terrible mita, which counted its victims by millions, and other causes, render such a thing by no means impossible. In the court-yard you are literally surrounded by the quadrangular residence, its single story protected all round by the portico, and embellished wherever space presents, with the same style of paintings that first greeted you. Into this court-yard it is considered no intrusion to penetrate; and, it a stranger, the probability is that some polite don, of whose imperturable hauteur, hospitable frankness, and love of display, the privi lege of his court-yard is typical, will bow you into the boudoir 41 his wife and daughters, and conduct you through the splendors of his mansion, into the disideratum of a view of the gardens beyond ; whence, at any point you please, ytiu will be able to elicit an exit by the same means that you en tered, - Night hue settled upon the city. Passing along .the still streets, for you scarcely see a vehicle or any animal save man, the rippling of the water that bounds and gurgles, fresh from the Prnountain stream, in little stone canals down the centre of the streets beats a cool and pleasant time to the pen sive turn your thoughts have taken. You think, as the crumbling wall of some additional edifice intercepts the round, white moon, upon the myste rerious and appalling agent that has in often deso lated the spot you trend. Imagination grows busy with the past in history and the probable in science, when a sudden angle of the street brings you again into Lima as it is. With solemn chant, and blazing waxlight, and swinging censer, move past you, in spectral procession, mitred bishops, stoled priests and surpliced neophytes, extending a mile away In the holy hour of the silent night they bear, clad in bridal white and (strewn with flowers, a modern virgin of the sun " to rest beside her browner sis ters who departed long ago. On Dit.—There is some excitement at present in Lima and Callao in regard to hostilities with Bo livia." A guerilla party is organizing here to wage predatory warfare. Garabaldi, the ex-Roman pa triot, is spoken as a leader. He is commanding a merchant ship on this coast at present. I saw him a for.nignt since at Coquimbo, an intelligent, fero cious little looking fellow, with a red moustache. Perhaps in this say so, the "wish is father to the thought." Respectful!), S. F. C. Povswrz.—What is poverty? Not ffestitution, but poverty? It has many shapes—aspects althost as various as the minds and cireumstancerof those whom it visits. To the savage in - the wilds, it is amine ; to the laborer in the cottage, it is hardship and privation; to the proud it is disgrace; and to the miser, it is despair. It is a spectre, haunting the man who lives at ease, with dread of change, such are its varied aspects; but what ie it in real.. ity ? It is really a deficiency of the comforts of lite—a deficiency present and to come. It involves many other things.; but this is what it is. Is it then worth all the, apprehension and grief it occa. skin? Is it nn adequate cause for the gloom of the merchant, the discontent. of the artisan; the forebo ding sighs of the mother,. the ghastly dreams which haunt the avaricious, the humiliation of the proud? These are severe sufferings are they authorized by the nature of poverty ? Certainly not; if poverty latticed no adventitious evils, involved nothing but a deficiency of thg, comforts of life, leavinglife it self unimpaired . lt.The life is more than, food, and the body tharizainzent :" .and the untimely eating lion of life itself would riot. mirth the, pangs which apprehended poverty. *rites. - , COUTRY IS THE MOST PROSPELOIJS, WIIBR CITY OF. LANCASTER, TUESDAY *ORNING, JULY 5, 1853. Soliloquy of a Pleasure Seeker " Upon your heart this truth may rise— Nothing that altogether dies, Suffices man's just destinies. , '--kitnes 3 'Six in the morning, and a beautiful sunshine?— Does the sun shine so early , ? I have seldom had an opportunity of observing, but such appears to be the fact. There is no sun slline in my heart, how ever. Pshaw ! that is sentimental. And yet, in veritable earnest, what is the human heart? Mine, if . I have one, has never been much occupied. Love, with me, has evaporated in a suc cession of fancies, add friendship has been the more -gregarious instinct. I have known many beautiful women, for each of whom .I have professed a per sondl- interest that passed.almost with the words. WVat remains of all the glittering frost-work of sentiment? Nothing. Not even a drop of water to appease the dying thirst. Last and least of that graceful band was Ella—the Ella of last evening. How charming she looked in her,exquisitely ar ranged costume! With what a queen-like dignity she carried her jewelled head. And yet her char acter is a blank. She has no positive quality, un less a gift of flattery can be determined such.— Whst doesshe mean by saying mine was a glorious manhood? It must have been some pretty phrase that she picked up accidentally. What constitutes the true glory of manhood?— Purpose, achievement, development. And I have had a purpose, to kill time. I have achieved it, too. My past life lies behind me—murdered—dead. A ghostly grin is on its skeleton jaws. Its vacant eye.sockets glare ominously upon my path. There is no gift in its hand, no vigor in its muscles, no pulsatidh in its heart. It is dead, but not buried.— That would be too great a blessing. The lesson it tailed to teach me in passing, it utters now, waxing eloquent in its mute worthlessness, in its emp , y and unpitying silence. And that cadaverous de formity is in manhood! Poor Ella! Yet it is a male to the womanhood, perhaps. Womanhood! That word is the embodiment of the beautiful ; yet what do 1 know of it? Nothing, except through my mother and Mary, sweet cousin Mary, who had the nobility to reject me. How well I remember the time? I thought her words were bitter. and I said, half sneeringly, "You should ere this time have unleart ed contempt. I have no contempt for you," she earnestly re. plied, " I think your capabilities are the noblest, the loftiest ; but forgive me if I say they are misdi rected—perverted." Dear, blessed Mary ! She was poor, and I had the effrontry to remind her of the advantages my wealth might furnish her. I shall never forget the quiet sailyiess with which she answered: "Dear Frank, I think much more of you than your possessions, and yet—good-bye!" I saw her but seldom afterwards. I do not think she was happy. I have the authority of one of her intimate friends for believing that her whole life was a struggle, which death' alone crowned with victory. Be it so. That is past. She is now a bright angel before the throne of the Eternal. She has drank of the satisfying fountain. She has now no lingering heart ache; no lite-long aspirations to trees and sympathize with a loftier humanity.— God bless her! Her delicate intuition saw in me the capacity tor .much that was morCgenerous and noble. Is that capacity wholly destroyed? Is there not within my reach some redeeming quality, regen erating influence that shall yet make me what I might have been, that shall restore to the some por tion of my nobler and purer 'sell? The lost angel of my youth seems etiea yet to whisper hope.— The dead past points with its shadowy finger to a living future. It shall not Point in vain. Highland Mary Highland Mary was Mary Campbell, from Canal belltown, in Argyleshire, and lived in Coljja field, in the humble situation of dairymaid to Colt . - tiel Montgomery. She also lived at one• time as nursemaid in the family of Burns' friend and pa tron, Gavin Hamilton, where he visited her. Mary had gone to the West Highlands to make arrange ments among her friends for her marriage with the poet, and on her return to Greenock—where it was appointed they should meet—she was seized with a fever ' of which she cited, a:few days before Burns ever heard of her illness. This was the cause of their sudden separation. Although Mr. Denham travels over some of the grounds touched upon by " Heating Jack," yet, as he relates incidents, many of them unknown to the general reader, we believe it will repay for the time lost in the perusal : " Most people, most rea soning people," writes Thomas Denham, "are more or less acquainted with the bard's two beautiful ell - fuslons—‘ Highland Mary' and - the address to Mary io Heaven.' Poor Highland Mary was a beautiful, interesting,; anti 1141/vcont ynt.ng nroaturA —for human loveliness, goodness and greatness. Can nestle in the lowly build, As weePs in castle ha'.' And though brought up in humble circumstan ces, Mary had charms which attracted many woo ers ; and says Allen Cunningham : "There was not wanting the temptations, &c., to allure.' But nothing nothing could win her young affections trom the peasant poet—they were betrothed. Mary was to go home to the western highlands to make arrangements for their marriage. ' And their adieu,' says Cromeck, an author, was performed. in a striking, moving way. The lovers stood on opposite sides of a small brook, face to face; they laved their hands in the running stream, holding a Bible between them; pronounced their vows, to be faithful to each other, and parted never to meet again !' By way of continuation, Burn's own words are: ' At the close of the following autumn, she crossed the sea to meet me at Greenook, where she had scarcely landed, when she was seized with a ma lignant fever, that hurried my dear girl to her grave in a few days before I even could learn of her ill ness.' fhe Bible they made use of on their final parting, was afterwards in the possession of Mary's sister, in two volumes, on each of which its inscrib• Pd a quotation from itself in Burn's handwriting,— Oh the first, ' And ye shall not swear by my name falsely.—l am the Lord,' On the second, 'Thou shalt not forswear thyself, but perform unto the Lord thy oath's,' There is something exceedingly touching in this phase of poor Burn's existence, and the pathos and deep feeling evinced in these two admirable poems can well attest how his sensitive heart must have writhed under the harrowing affliction which wrenched the tenderest, dearest cords. Long songs pall upon the ear, and 'tie customary to abbreviate them in singing; but I cannot see how one link of this sweet cnam can be spared without marring its beautiful symmetry. May Gad amend the taco that can mutilate 'Highland Mary.' Put Away that Novel. Dr. Goldsmith, who had himself writtfl, a novel, in writing to his brother respecting the education of hie son, used this strong language: "Above all things never let your son touch a no vel or romance. How delusive, how destructive are those teatures of consummate bliss? They teach the youthful to sigh atter beauty and happiness that never existed; to despise the little good that fortune has mixed in their cup, by expecting more than she ever gave; and in general take the word of a man 'who has seen the world, and studies it more by ex perience than by precept—take my word for itz..l say that such books teach us very little of the world. What unfits the mind for the realities of life, also unfits it for religion; for it is a practical matter of tact subject. The injurious effect of novel reading .is never fully known. It hinders doing and getting good, it also trains up and grows an amount of evil products which eternity alone can exhibit. It hin ders the mind from - receiving good instruction which might have-blessed results. "It is only a novel and only pastinie;" so says the frequenter of the theatre and bar-rnom. It is pastime! But, 4 alas I does a culprit who is under sentence of death, and only waiting for the day of execution, want something to amuse him, to .pass his rime? .Does a sinner who is already condemnejl, and who knows not but this very night the order:will come for his imme diate summons to the judgment bar of his offended God, there to hear the sentence of "Depart," or 'cast ye the unprofitable servant into outer dark ( ness,"--can such .a soul need anything to' pass his time? Throw. away that novel; give yitur thoughts to the realities; of your life, and. the solemnities of your death.' You have-have no spare time I use it! toe it well, and use it at once! If you would save your 804 have nothing to do with a =vet I SIMMI THE SILENT FAREWJLL.f BY H. T. TIICHEILISAN. When starry gems from Heaven are mkt The winds awake no knell, When rose-leaves fall before the blast Birds sing.no sad farewell; i When waves their sparkles cease to throw; - Upon the pebbly shore, When Sunset hues no longer glow, Aud green boughs wave no more, No words at. Nature's shrine are breathed' She'silently lays doirn The garland that her templed wreathed And takes the withered crown; I But in her mystic circle's range There lurks a quiet Where time and.beauty interchange ' Their eloquent farewell. And 'so when I am called to lose Communion sweet and dear, And feel no more its holy dews My weary spirit cheer, As streams that drooping willows shade From sunshine turn aside. Let me from joys thy presence made A mournful silence glide. SATURDAY EVENING. I How sweet the evening shadows fall, Advancing from the west; As ends the weary week of toil, And comes the day of rest. Bright o'er the earth the star of eve Her radiant beauty sheds ; And myriad sisters calmly weave Their light around our head. Rest, man, from labor; rest from sin;, The world's hard conquest close ; The holy hours with God begin ; Yield thee to sweet repose. Bright o'er the earth the morning ray Its sacred light will cast; Fair emblems of the glorious day That evermore shall last. - - - If I were a farmer it appears to me I would de vote my whole attentikn to the cultivation of my form, clothe and feed my servants well, taketcare of my stock, mend the holes in my fences, take a fair price for my produce, and never indulgead idle ness and dissipation. If were a lawyer, I would not charge a i poor man $5 for a few words of advice. f It I were a physician, I could not have the con science to charge as much as they do for fe-iling the pulse, extracting a tooth, taking a little blood, or administering a dose of calomel and jalap. II I were a merchant, I would have an eitab'ish ed price for my goods, and not undersell or injure my neighbors, I would sell at a model ate profit, and give good measure and deal as honestly as possible. If I were a mechanic, I would apply mysolf in dustriously to my business, take care of my family, refrain from visiting taverns and grog shopS; and when I promised a man to have his work' one by a certain time, I would try and be punctual. If I were a young man, I would not cut so many ridiculous capers as some of them do, playinglwitn their watch chains, flourishing their ratans, Strut tin.b and making a great noise with their highlheel ed bcots—probably not paid for—and makirig re marks on plain, worthy people. They render them selves contemptible in the eyes of the sensible and unassuming. It I were a lady, I would not be seen spinning street-yarn every day, ogling this young lellowy nod ding at another, and giving sweet smiles to a third. It I were a lover, I would be true to the object of my affection; treat her with tenderness', and never let her conduct towards another excite jealousy in my brea . sti but should she ever Speak of me in terms of disrespect, or treat me with cool ness, I would be off, like shot off a shovel,and all her arts should never again entrap me. If I were an old bachelor, I would make 'every exertion in my power to get married, or hang my self. And Mr. Printer, if I was of your honorabl l e pro fession, I would never refuse to publish piece like this. Letter from Fanny Fern. We take the following mirth provoking letter from the the columns of the Boston Olive Brinich: "Don't marry a wruman under twentylire; sbe has not come to' her wickedness before then. - -Blackwood's Magazine. Well—l It I knew any bad words, Pm hwful 'fraid I should use 'eml I lust. wiah I laud tlbld of the perpetrator of that with a pair of tong bottle him up in spirits and keep him for a terror to liars, as sure as his name is Kit North. Set a thief to catch a thief! How came 31 , 0 u to know when that crisis in woman's life occurs?— Answer me that. I'll tell you what my opinion is and won't charge you a fee either A woman comes to wickedness when she comes to her• bus. band!l—and if she knew anything good benne, it all goes by the board, then, it is no more use to her afterwards than the fifth wheel to a coach ! Don't you know, you wicked calumniator that thunder don't sour milk more effectually than mat rimony does a woman's temper. 'Come to their wickedness, indeed, snow flakes and soot! They'd not know the meaning 'of the word wicked is your sex were blotted out of exis tence! We would have a perfect little heaven upon earth, a terrestrial Paradise—zio runaway matches, no case of ---c---- conscience, no divorCes, no devilitry of any kind. In fact, millenium would be merely a nominal jubilee! because it would have already come. The world would be one universal garden of pretty, rosy, laughing women; no Olascu line mildew to mar their beauty or bow their, sweet heats, the blessed year round! Now you'd better repent of your sine, Mr. What's your name, far as sure as preaching, you'll go!where you have nothing to do but think of 'sin I—and you won't find any women there, either, tor theylull go to the other place I They do that, °mum() IT.—A well known.Methodistiminis• ter who was trateling on horseback through the State of Massachusetts, stopped one noon on a sul. try summer's day at a cottage by the road side, and requested some refreshment for himself and beast. This was readily granted by the worthy New England dame, so the parson dismounted, acid hay ihg seen his horse well cared for, entered the cot tags and partook of the refreshment whicb was cheerfully placed before him. For some tinie past there had been no rain, and the country iiround seemed literally parched up. The minister entered in conversation with the old lady, and remarked about ,the dryness of the season. "Yee," she replied, "unless we have rain soon, all my beets, cucumbers and cabbage will be good for nothing, and I think that all the ministers ought to pray tor rail"-The worthy divine iniormed her that he wasa minister, and that he should be happy to comply w?th her wish. • He accordingly knelt down and prayed fer vently that the gates of Heaven might be opened, that showers might descend and refresh thd earth. He then arose from his knees, and havingikindly thanked his hostess, bade her good day, Mounted his horse and departed. But he had not been gone more than hour when the clouds began togather and a tremendous shower of hail and rain descended, with such force as to wash the contents of ithe old lady's garden clear out of the ground. ••There," said she, "that is always the way with the:se tar nal Methodists, they never undertake to do any thing, but they always overdo it JNO. S. WALKER, AU 4 l..eaL r elialalr Law. OFFICE—Four doors above Stoopes Tavern, East King Sired, t LANCASTER, PA. I Sept?, 1852 sm-33 W. P. STEELE, ATTORNEY AT LAW SURVEYOR AND CON• LANCASTER, P All kinds of Scrivining: Doede, Mortgages, Wile, Accounts,' BM.,.exectited with proniptnesa and despatch. Will give special attention to the collection'of Pr ti. MONIS, and the prosecution of Military and other claims against the General and State Governments. i go- Office in Nortli , Queeia Striet, opposite the National Hotel. t [may 25 ly.lB 111M====MM LABOR CONIMBS iT It[ BRFATBST REWARD." If I were He. '--4uhanaL T. ARDIS & BLACK, . . L AT.LAW: • Cyfice—Three doors below the Lancaster Bank, ; South Queen Street, Lancaster, Penn's. Iltr All kinds of Scrivening, such as.writing Wills, Deeds, Mortgages, Accounts, &c., will be attended to with correctness and despatch. January 16, 1849 al. WILLIAM S. AMWEG, ' Attorney at Law, OFFERS his professional services to the pumic. He also attends to the collection of Pensions and the prosecution of all manner of claims again the general government. His residence in the city of Washington for several years, the experience derived from the duties of the office, which he had filled during that time, and the mode in which Claims otthis sort are most speedily adjusted, give the most ample assurance that business placed in hie hada will be attended to in such manner an can not fail to afford satisfactiOn. office in south Queeri streei, second house below the Lancaster Bank. Nov. 20. 1849. • 43-ly GEORGE W. MI ELROY, ATTORNEY AT LAW. Office in N. Queen street, opposite Ziegter , s "Na , tional'House,” Lancaster; Pa. Also, Surveying—and all kinds of Conveyancing, writing Deeds, Mortgages, Wills, &c., and stating Adrstrators , and E x cutors' Accounts, wit! be attend to with correctness and despatch. 0-13 Removal. --Dr. John McCann, Dentist, would respectfully announce to his numerous. friends and patrons that he has removed his Office from No. 8, to No. 4 East King 'St., Lan caster, second house from Centre Square, where he is prepared to perform all oper ations coming within the province Dental Surgery on the mostapproved I" principles. [march 22 Sin-9 April 19, 1853 El.emoval.—J G. MOORE, Surgeon Dentist IV of the firm of Dr. M. M. Moore & Son, will remove his office from the old stand, to the rooms, formerly occupied by Dr. Thomas Evans, Dentist, in the building situated on the South East Corner of North Queen and Orange streets, the lower rooms of which are occupied by Erben's Clothing Store and G. Metzgees Shoe Store, where he will .have great convenience, for waiting upon those who may favor him with a call. J. G. M. having had considerable experience in the Dental Art as mires those who are. desirous of having anything done pertaining to Dentistry, that he ,is prepared to give that care and ; attention which .the case de mands. N. B.—Entrance to Office, 2d door on Orange St march 29 tf.lo Dr. J. Mairs McAllister, HOIVIOE OPTIIIC PRACTITIONER.—Office, North Duke Street, Lancaster, a few doors below Ches nut. ' Office hours, from 6 to 9 A. M., and from S to 10 P. M. , Dec 14-Iy-47 ACard.—Dr. S. P. ZIEGLER, offers his Professional services in all its various branch es to the people of Lancaster and vicinity. Residence and Office North Prince at., between Orange and Chenut streets, where he can be con sulted at all hours, unless prefessionally engaged. Calls promptly attended to, and charges moderate. april 25 tf-14 D esnoval.--Dr. Sam'l. Welchens, :• - uItGEON DENTIST, Would respectfully announce to the public and his friends in general, that he has removed his office from v•••• his old stand in Kramphts building, t i r „... nearly half a square farther south, "Nalialia• to the house recently occupied by William Carpen ter, Esq., No. 34, NORTH. Queen ST.. LANCASTER, PA. Where lie has increased facilities, for the comfort and accommodation of all who may fa vor him with their patronage. • All operations upon the mtural teeth are per *formed with care, and a view to their preservation and beauty. Aruficial teeth inserted on the most approved priciples of the Dental profession, and for durabil ty and beauty equal to nature. Full satisfaction in regard to his prices, and the integrity of his work is warranted to all who may place themselves under treatment. march 1 tf-6 nr.' Ziegler's Drug and Fancy Store, No. 58.1. North Queen .Street, Lancas ter, Pa., is the place where there can always be found a full assortment of Pure DRUGS and CHM:fi nal-8 j Also, all the pOpular and leading Patent and PrOpriatory Medicines, with a large stock of Cheap and Fancy PERFUMERY, wholesale and retail; Also Zerman's Tooth Wash, Barry's Tricopherns. Stores Chemical flair Invigorator, Lyon's Cathai ron, Twin's Hair Tonic, Jaynes' do., Lr....icum do., and all of Jaynes. rreparattons. N. 8.---Dr. Z. will be in•attendance.at his Drug, Store from S to 9 A. M., 12 to 1, and 6 to 6 P. M., where Patients may avail themselves of ~ ledical advice free of charge, wish moderate charge for Medicine. lapril 26 0-14 Sign Painting TILLIAM E. HEINITSH, respectfully an- VV. nounces to his friends and the public, that having given up the Mercantile Business, he has turned his attention to SIGN AND ORNAMENTAL PAINTING, in Oil or Water Color. Signs Painted with neatness and despatch, on reasonable terms and no disappointments. The public are invited to call and examine speci mens at his room, No. (8, East King street. GILT BLOCK LETTERS—Having made ar rangements with the Manufacturer, he is now pre pared to furnish Gilt Block Letters for Signs, at short notice. • Political and Military Banners, Transparencies, Awning Wings,' and every description of Ornamen• tal Painting, done in the best manner. The attention of Merchants. and Mechanics is re puested to his Fancy Signs in Water Colors, for dia. tribution, now so much in use, in the large cities. 4. share of public patronage is solicitor; July 20, 1862. 2041 Mass Meetings! AGREAT Mame Meeting of the friends of good Daguerreotype Likeneedea,wlll be hold at JIIHN STONIS SKY-LIGHT GALLERY, corner of North Quoon and Orange Milani, every day until further notice. CO - No poetponement on account of the weather Laminar, June 22, 1852. A CARD• JHE subscribers beg leave thus to acquaint their filends and the public, that they've made such arrangements with a house in the city of Philadel phia, as will enable them to execcite.ordere for the purchase and sale of BANK STOCK, RAIL ROAD STOCK, STATE AND UNITED STATES LOANS, &c. &c., At the Board of Brokers, with promptness and fidelity and on, as favorable tsneas in every respect, as can be done in Philadelphia. The faithful and confidential execution of all business entrusted to them may be relied on. Money safely invested for individuals on Estates, in Bonds and Mortgages, State and United States securities, &c. &c. Personal attantion will be given to the proper transfer ' &c., of Stock, Loans, &c., and such generaPsupervision as will obtain for those intrusting f business to them the safest and most de sirable securities. . Also; the collection of Notes, Checks, Bills, &c., on Philadelphia, New York, Baltimore, and the towns &c. in this vicinity. Also,persons desirous of buying or selling any stock of the Lancaster Bunke ' Conestoga Steam • Mills, Gas or Turnpike Stocas by leaving the order in our sands will meet with prompt attention. JOHN F. SHRODER, GEORGE K. REED, One door from the corner of North Queen and Centre Square, Lancaster, Pa. Feb. 12, 1850. - • EAGLE HOTEL. do Do RIME, T lIFORM the public, that they have recently fit ted up this old and well known stand in Nor* Queen street, two doors South of the Railroad, to first rate style, and that they ate now prepared in entertain travellers and others in the very best man ner. Their Bar will always be supplied, with. the choicest liquors and their Table with the beet that the Market affoks. They also beg leave to state that they continue their LIVERY STABLE. where can at all times be had, a good and genteel Horse, Buggy, Barouche, Carriage; Sulky, orPmal bus, on the most reasonable terms. They wisely all who may favor them with their rinstoin, that tta efforts will be spared to render satisfaction. may 7 .. 1641 Eegant stock of. Goode !—THOMAS W. Eve.its & CO., No. 214 Chesnut street, opposite the Gitaid House;Philedelphis,lnt:Ve now opened a very extensive stock of entirely ne* and elegant GOODS; .which have been selected in Eu rope for the most fashionable city trade. They respectfully invite their numerous friends and customers in Lancaster and elsewhere, to pay them a visit when they come to the city, as they feel satisfied they can offer their goods as low as any store in Philadelphia. IN THE STORE ARE :The newest styles Paris. Mantillas. Shawls of every description. 10 Cases Paris Mensline de Leine's. - 5 Cases plain Mousline de Lathe and De Bege. 8 Cases elegant real Ftench Lawns. • • 2 Cases Paris Organdies. 4 Cases Broche , l3areges;entirely new. 2 Cases: eat checked Bareges. , 2 Cases printed and Plaid . Grenadine. '2 Cases plain Baregei, ill colors: • 2 Cases printed Baregeo.- 8 Cases English and:Preneh Chintzes. 4 Cases English and French Gingham. Epihroideries, Mitts, Gloves, Vella, Scarfs.' Parasols, Muslin4Flannels, Linens. k. Hbsiery, &c., Re. Also, 30,000 yards of SILKS of every descrip floe—Plain, Watered, Striped, Plaid and Figured, with a full stock of Black Silks. Also, 100 Paris Barege Robes, the newest goods Worn. [april 26 if-14 Franklin Ball ' Clothing Store.— One door South of Senees "Franklin Hotel," North Queen St., Lancaster ' Pa. Me era. COLE MAN GILLESPIE, take this method to Inform the citizens of Lancaster county and the people of the surrounding country, that they have taken the popular Clothing establishment known as Franklin Hall, lately under the proprietorship of Unkle & Coleman, where it is their determination to furnish a firstrate article of Clothing of every variety at the lowest cash rates. Their stock has just been replenished with all the new and latest styles o. Cloths, Cassimeres, Satinetts, Velvets, Vestings, &c., together with a new and fashionable assort ment of • READY MADE CLOTHING, of every description, such as Dress and Frock Coats, Overcoats, Sacks and Monkey Jackets, Pants, Overalls, etc., all of which will be sold cheaper than ever before offered to the people of this county. The uneeraigned have also a good supply of MEN'S FURNISHING GOODS, such ail:Press Shirts, Undershirts, Drawers, Cravats, Bosom's, Collars, Suspenders, Handkerchiefs, Gloves, Hosiery, and in short, everything required for a gentleman's wardrobe. Customer work will receive the strictest attention and eyery garment measured will be warranted in every particular. Don't forget the, place—one door south of Sa ner's (formerly Vankanan's) Franklin Hotel, Nord Queen street. COLEMAN & GILLESPIE. march Itf-6 • SURE CURE. BALTIMORE LOCK HOSPITAL WHERE may be obtained the MOST SP EE DY REMEDY for - - - - - SECRET DISEASES Gonorrhoea, Gleets, Strictures, Seminal Weak ness, Loss of Organic Power, Pain in the Loins, Disease of the Kidneys, AfThctions of the Head, Throat, Nose and Skin, Constitutional Debility, sod all those horrid affections arising from a Cer tain Secret Habit . ol You,h, which blight their most brilliant hopes or anticipations, rBndering Marriage, etc., impossible. A cure warranted 61 no charge. YOUNG MEN especially, who have become the victims of Solitary Vices, that dreadful and destructive habit which annually sweep to an untimely grave thousands of young men of the most exalted talents and brilliant intellect, who might otherwise have entranced lis tening Senates with the thunders of eloquence, or waked to ecstasy tht living lyre, may call with full confidence. MARRIAGE Mulled persons, or those contemplating mar riagre being aware of physical weakness, should immediately consult Dr. J. and be restored to per. feet health. OFFICE, No. 7, South FREDERICK Street, BALTIMORE, Md., on the left hand side, going from Baltimore street, 7 doom from the corner.— Bo particular in observing the name and number or you will mistake the place. DR. :JOHNSTON, Wernher of the Royal College of Surgeon*, Lon. ion, Graduate from one of the most eminent Col eges of the United States and the greater part of whose life has been spent in the Hospitals of Lon ion, Parts, Philadelphia, and elsewhere, has affect ed some of the 11109 L astonishing cures that were ever known. Many troubled with ringing in the ears and head when asleep,great nervousness, being thinned at sudden sounds, and bashfulness, with ireoucnt hitt.hiag,, attended, sometimes, with de• rangement of mind, were cured immediately. TAKE PARTICULAR NOTICE Dr. J. addressee all those who have injured diemselves by private and improper indulgeneiei. :hat secret and solitary habits, which ruin boa: body and mind, unfitting them for either husinus ur society. -These are some of the sad and melancholy el feets produced by early habits of youth, viz: Weakness of the back and limbs, Pains lope head, Dimness of Sight, Loss of Muscular Power, Pal pitation of the Heart, Dyspepsia, Nervous Irrita bility, Derangement of the Digestive Functions, General Debility, Symptoms of Consumption, &c Mentally.—The feartel effects on the mind are much to be dreaded: Loss of Memory, Confusion of ideas, Depression of Spirits, Evil of Forebo- Jing, Aversion of Socioty, Self Distrust, Love of &c. are some of the evils pro duced• NERVOUS DEBILITY Weakness of the system, Nervous Debility and premature decay generally arises from the destruct ive habit of youth, that solitary practice so fatal to the healthful existence of man, and it is the young who are the mast apt to become its Victims from an iguorance of the dangers to which they subject themselves. Parents and Guardians are often mis• red with respect to the cause or source of disease in their sons and wards. Alas! how ohen do they ascribe to other causes the wasting of the frame. Palpitation of the Hea ~ Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Derangement of Me Nervous Systutn, Cough and Smptoms of Consumption, also those s e ri ous Mental effects, such ae loss of Memory, Domes. con of Spirits ur peculiar tits of Melancholy, when lie truth is they have boon caused by indulging Pernicious but alluring premien, destructive to both Body and Mtnd. 'I hus era swept front ex istence thousands who might have bean of use to their country, a pleasure to their friends, an orris• mont to society. WEAKNESS OF THE ORGANS immediately cured and full vigor restored. Oh, how have hundreds of misguided hilly youths beet] ma e, who have been suddenly resto red to health from the devastations of those terrific maladies which result front indiscretion. Such persons, before contemplating MARRIAGE. should reflect that a sound mind and body are the must necessary requisites to promote connubial haApiness. Indeed, without this, the journey thro' life becomes a weary pilgrimage; the prospect hourly darkens to the view ; the mind becomes shadowed with despair, and filled with the melan choly reflection that the happigess of another he. comes blighted with our own. Let no false delica cy prevent you, blit apply immediately. He who places himself under the care of Dr JOHNSTON, may religiously confide in his hon or as a Gentlemen, and confidently rely npon his skill as a Physician • TO STRANGERS. The many thousands cured att this iliblitallol, within the last ten' years, and the numerous fin portant Surgical Operations performed by Dr: J.; witnesoed by the Reporters of the papers and ma, ny other persons, notices of which have appeared again and again before the public, is a sufficient guarantee that the afflicted will find a skilful and honorable physician. N. B.—Shun,the numerous pretenders who call themselves Physicians, and apply to DR. JOHN STON. Be not enticed from this office. V" ALL LETTERS POS'r-PAID—REME *WES SENT BY MAIL. bine 7. 1853 1y.20 Cochin China and Shanghai FOWLS. —A fine lot Cochin Chinas ' and - Buff and White Shanghais, have been received, and are now offer ed for sale, by the undersigned. These celebrated and superior Fowl, haie all been raised from the imported stock, and are not excelled by any in the country. Fresh Cochin China and Shanghai EGGS Will also be sold to those who prefer raising their own stock. -AIso;SPAAOLUD Ehamronaza and BSPAZIADI POOT. BEM ; Persons residing at a distance, by enclosing the amount they wish to - invest in these fowls, can have them carefully' cooped, fed, and forwaided, u per order. Addree •', JONATHAN DORWART, East Ring Sutet i .oppopite Handhoneie HAW, march 15 6m-8] Lancastar, Pa. Enlisted according triAct of Congress," - in the year by J. S. HOUGHTON, B1.D" in the derk/a Office of the District Court for the Eastern pis trict of Pennsylvania. ' s • Another Scientific Wonder! GREAT CURE FOR DYSPEPSIA I HOUGI viON'S The Trtt' Digestive . Fluid or Gastric Irtlee• PREPARED from Rennet, or the fourth Stoup. achof the ax, after directions of BACON LIBBIG: the great Physiological Chemist, by J. B. Howl.; ton, M. D., Philadelphia, Pa. This is a truly wonderful remedy rdr Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Jaundice, Liver Complaint, Constipa tion, and Debility, curing after Nature's own method, by Nature's own Agent, the Gastric Juice. Half a teaspoonful of Pepsin, infused in water, will digest or clissolye, Five Pounds of Roast Beet in about two hours, out of the stomach. Pugin is the chief element, or Great Digesting Principle of the Gastric Juice—the solvent oft food, the purifying, preserving and stimulating agent of the stomach and intestines. It is extracted from the digestive stomach of the,Ox, thus term ing an Artificial Digestive Fluid, precisely like the natural Gastric Juice in its chemical powers, and furnishing a complete and perfect substitute for it By the aid of this preparation, the pains find arils of Indigestion and Dyspepsia are removed, just as they would be by a healthy stomach. It is doing wonders for dyspeptics, curing cities of Debility, Emaciation, Nervous Decline, and Dyspeptic Con sumption, supposed to be on the verge of the grave The scientific evidence upon which it is based, is in the highest degree curious and remarkable. SCIENTIFIC EVIDENCE! Baron Liebig in, his celebrated work on Anima Chemistry, says: "An artificial Digestive Fluids analogous to' the Gastric ,Juice, may be readily prepared from the mucous membrane of the atom ach of the calf, in which various articles of food, as meat and eggs, will be softened, changed, and digested, just in the same manner as they would be in the human stomach.— Dr. Pereira, in his famous treatise on " good and Diet," published by Fowler & Wells, New York, page 35, states the same great fact, and describes the method of preparation. There are few higher authorities than Dr. Pereira. Dr. Combe, in his valuable writings on the " Physiology of Digestion," observes that "a dim. Motion of the due quantity of the Gastric Juice is a prominent and all-prevailing cause of Dyspepsiai" and he staies that ' , a distinguished professor of .medicine in London, who was severely afflicted with this complaint, finding everything else to fail, had recourse go the Gastric Juice, obtained Irom the stomach of living animals, which proved com pletely successful!." Dr. Graham, author of the famous works on "Vegetable Diet," says : It is a remarkable fact in phgeiology, that the stomachs of animals, mace rated in water, impart to the fluid the property of dissolving ye, .ous articles of food, and of effecting a kind of artificial digestion of\ them in nowise diffrfeent mro the natural digestive process." AS A DYSPEPSIA CURER, Dr. HOUGHTON'S PEPSIN has produced th; most marvellous effects, in curing cases of Debility, Emaciation, Nervons Decline, and Dyspeptic Consumption. It is impossible to give the details of cases in the limits of this advertisement ; but authenticated certificates have been given of more', than Two Hundred Remarkable Cures, in Pada delphia, New York and Boston alone. These were nearly all desperate cases, and the cures were not only.rapid and wonderful, but permanent. It is a great Nervous Aniidote, and, particularly useful for tendency to Billions disorder, Liver Complaint, Fever ar ... Ague, or badly treated Fever ana Ague, and tile evil effects of Quinine, Mer• cury and other urugs upon the Digestive Organs, after a long sicknegs. Also, for excess in eating, and the too free use of ardent spirits; It almost reconciles health with intemprance. OLD STOMACH COMPLAINTS There is no form Si Old Stomach CoMplainte which it does not seem to reach and remove at once. No matter how bad they may be, it gives instant relief! A single dose removes all the un pleasant symptoms; and it only needs to be repeated short for a time to make these good effects perma nent. Purity of Blood and Vigor of Body folldw at once. It is particularly excellent incases of Nausea, Vomiting, Cramps, Soreness of rho pit of the Stomach, „distress after eating, lbw, cold state of the Blood . , Heaviness, Lowness of Spirite; Des pondency, Emaciation, Weakness, tendency to Insanity, Suicide, &c. Dr. HO UGHTON'.S - PEPSINis sold by nearly all the dealers in fine drugs and Popular Medicines, throughout the United States. It is prepared in Powder and in Fluid form—and in, prescription stale for the use of Physicians. PRIVATE CIRCULARS for the use of Physicians, may be obtained of Dr. Houghton or hie Agents, describing the whole process of preparation, and giving the authorities upon which the claim of this now remedy are based. As it is not a secret remedy no objection can be raised against its use by Phy sicians in respectable standing and regular pradtice. Price ONE DOLLAR per bottle. O:7OBSERVE THIS !—Every bottle of the genuine PEPSIN bears the written signature.ol J. S. HOUGHTON, M. D., sole proprietor,Phil adelphta, Pa. Copyright anej Trade Mark secured. Sold by all Druggists , and - Dealers in Medicines. For sale in Lancaster by LONG & SC[IOENFELD, No. I, Bramph's Arcade, N. E. cor. North Qpeon and Orange sta., une door east of Krampli's Clo thing Store, Lancaster. sip 1fi.34.1y) Adams' Express. SPRING & SUMMER ARRANGEMENT for 1802 ADAMS & CO'S Express are now running their own Care accoltipanied byspeolal messenger, and iron 'alb. They aro prepared to forward daily, ;Sundays exceptadOwlth the fait mall trains Boxes,. Bundles, Parcels, Specie, &c., &c., to n il pplnts on the Central Railroad, via Lancaster, ColuSibla, York, Mount Joy, Middletown, Harrisburg, Nifty-, PPew MlMlntown, Lewistown, Huntingdon, Spruce Creek, Tyrone,Hollldaysburg, Summit, Johnstown, Blairsville, Greensburg and Pittsburg i—via Cum berland Valley Road, to .Carliale, Shippensburg, Chambareburg. In all of above named places aro regular agents who will attend promptly to the collection of notes, drafts, bine, bill, , &c. Goods will also be forwarded to most of the points on the Weet Branch of the Susquehanna. Persons residing in the interior towns off the main route ' can have package. forwarded with despatch from Philadelphia and other. points by having them directed to any of the above named places. Goods destined for any of the above piaci, are forwarded by the 11 o'clock train daily. Goods for Pittsburg, Cincinnati, Louisville, Frankford and Lexington, Ky., Indianapolis; and St. Louis, br the night train. Goods for the Ea.tern and Southern cities for warded daily by both morning and,evening trains. The undersigned,will give particular attention to filling orders forwarded to them by mail, (poet paid,) when they are foil goods to.be forwarded by Express. No commission will be charged. Offices: PHILADELPHIA, 116, Chesnut Street. LANcarrrea, worth Queen street; three doors south of the Railroad. J. G. THACKARA, Agents March 23, 1852 CHEAP LEATHER AND FINDING STORE, No. 155 North Second Street, &Mogen Race and Pint Streets, Philadelphia. SHOE'PEGS, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. D. EPPELSHEIMPA & SON, Aug. 10--4-29 Succoasorn to G. A. Yocam. Sea Bathing.—CAPE MAYGAPRISL AND. NATIONAL NALL.. The large, new and elegant Hotel ii now open fci..te season. The publto will this-.a first 'class Mule. 'lt is situated on-high ground, with.a large Garden in front, and affords . a .. otostleaplitcent, view of the Mr. P.M , Colsoarie engaged, and would to receive the calls of his trie.nda: AARON GARRRTSON, Proprietor.. june 21 2m-22] ISAAC HAIITON, WIIOLESALZ GROCER; 'Wine and Licinoi tdre, 1.36,,137bN0rtk Second . Street,:Phild,.- dolphin. olio 11, 1 4945-1 r ' NO. 24.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers