... • `-.---- . i . 4 . _ ~... . • 'III'IJIIN# . r . I . ..,... r . ~' . . •-` •4 - • !, ~.,-..,:::,_ L.- .. .... - ' :7 7 411 1/S li i : -„,„ : . ~... •....., ...„.....„,___.. .._ _•• ~.. . .., . .. , .. • ~,,,, . . , . . . . . . . , ~.„. . - VOL LV. LANCASTER INTELLIGENCER & JuuRNAL PONLISHILD ILVEII.4 TIMIDLT 1102.1111144 , BY GEO. SANDERSON. TERMS SURSCHIY'TION.—Two Dollars per asuauni, payable in advance; two twenty-five, if not paid within six month.; and two fifty, if not paid within the year. No subscriptiqp discontinued until all arrearagee are paid unless at the.option of the Editor.. A uvzaTimewits--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. • ion.Peirerisc —Hach as Hand B.lle, Posting Bills, Pam ph.eia. Pranks, Labels, &c., tsc.oxecuted with sc. curacy nod at the shortest notice. Lines to a Rose Bud tipon the fair :Intl truth, leavtts. frail flow,. Nor hide their Lyauty 1013 ral . fl . Ol/1 the da. oh: cooly and I,lossont Ise, but oar short hoor My hoirt is woary baste Sway In t.ontetttplatinn to that land whote sky. Dawns with 'write' atd light.—whose ftiv . rs nes, die Fa . I hat, tn•asures t h t•re in lint bright holing. FII,IIIIS who nonouninr non no ..art hic f..ur Fil r through the ether tit•l4l% 111.4 r spirits roam.— No .turn w-s:tils them thpr--tlit*. slid to tom,. Fur (h. ir ,orrous all an. 50one. :Ma t 11,V. rr , ,tl rr , a t toll, of 111, owr,• in ,•t•rnat lay Conn. dwd thy ;iv...4 piwfuulo around. fair tlow'r %Vbilo yot doe' 111)111, Sparkle on Illy bli g htin v 61urm linty withor . iii an lion: And swiT thy 11,1VeS Or prowl.- low : 'rho, a limo ror_tinio...ll ilso it ...I'll.. light of 1.1,4,1111 i ',MI Ml,' round 111 , V1111 I pi Ilek tiler` froto tby st.-111 Mid I . lkt. tlll, II) aU 1 r..t•l. I WI, 111).1 HI) bl,t . I hen %Ty IN filled 'with ment'ry. of the !isi:— Then- IN 110 ,trif, alootvi the htlds I n null tvkl love they drink I he sunmaer ...old I hitt plant tn.... on a well-known gray., whose Innamtl lis nun, the hi , t rt all the that thel in merry gay, pray 1, Mtn that no 11111 e 1,11.1 - Should assail thee, but that thy.fair hrms Might Away, bloom in promise :molt as now. For thou art emblematic of that friend. So pure. so linty, earth no elainis could have • On one Heaven its angels lend To 1,11.1110 6'i 02 . S .1/1 . 11 to: her • ih,d gave Ilex and n•wored nguiu • W siva,' that I n n PueL a,'shi• rlanisla4 only lire, uhtv, She died es thou will di.. fair H0t..., Just as her loveliness had reached its bloom: Not the hearts she ei3lllll4i as her's had is,w'r T. save her from the sold and dreary touch Vet oft at midnight still her angel voice, , Steals im my .ar and Lids wy heart rejoice. rot in that world where sin. dwells now. no storm Can ever i.ana.. nor wititta:inc tempost la.at. 'l'hrrn to no etti•rgylia, ori• IN•on shorn Wail its streagt IL . anti trtinitiliql by rud. No trthaing !wart It4.isTati.,l But lit:. and la,p, and pea., that world ativrii.. No home formken there, Ito blighted hearth NI) friend :ihnntlidnid, no dark sid - row's cloud So weary, homeh•s, wantrrer on the earth, N heart ,rrapnntt up in Inir..r2:, sail,. •rontl: There are no trig drop , hot life and lkin tawnita Jac nod ,n . nntnn all Ilk' Thither hear Lily weary soul, fait flow . . When all tie : ehequ,recl scones of life are e'er ih ' boa tny epirit 1(404, 11 . ill.ll An11.1..11, Cpeu lk.Art. to seek that peaceful sheen.: But taberuneled her.• hi this rude etas. I t.triri• inivain. for I 1,111 riot :11,1y Farewell. fair fl,r'r: perhaps when To take my usual moods. Where now I Thy bare just mriving to put Mrth their Ido,o 'Flty life, thy beauty. all will withered be. L - 1/- not be long behind Ch.., for a change. Weighs on toy spirit now, nith feelings Atran, A fen moreAfiy, of oad turmoil, and thou PP. eary hentl; ieion will the time „ .we ,r hen lYr :111 shall AlVp .L. 4.4 'llmtla the ground. and ;lie heed ...ail will lipid perpetual peat, lir Oyu height world NV lier,sormw,, all will — l..uuasiter.dune 3U, 195-1. JESSLE, THE FLOWER OF DUN- BL ANE The following sketch forms an interest ing episode in the life of the talented, but unfortunate Scottish poet, Tannahill.— There are few of our readers we suppose, but are familiar with the-beautiful poem, and the delightful music, "Jessie, the Flower of Dunblane :" • The fair objed of this song was a bonnie lassie in.Dunblane. Her family were of poor extraction,,and Jessie herself was con tented with a peasant's lot. When Talmo.- hill became acquainted with her she was in her "teens," a slight, dimple-checked, happy lassie; her hair yellow-colored and luxuriant, her eyes large and full, overflow ing with the • voluptuous -languor which is so becoming in young blue eyes with golden lashes. Tannahil I was struck with her beau ty, and as in all things - he was enthusiasti cal, became forthwith her ardent worship per. But her heart was not to be won.— Young, thoughtless, and panthig to know and see the. world, she left her poor amou rante "to con songs to his mistress' eye brows," while she recklessly rambled along the flowery meads of . Dunblane, or of an evening sang his inspired verses to him with the most mortifying nom.chalante.— This Issas a two-fold misery to the sensitive poet. ss A creature so sweetly 'elegant, so dear to him, so very lovely and innocent, and yet, withal, so encased in insensibility, as apparently to be neither conscious of the beauty of the verses trembling on her dul cet tongue, nor caring for the caresses of her 'lover. 'Twa* too much: to mark all this, and feel it with the feeling of a poet, was the acme of misery. Bht the "Flower of 'D - linblane" was not that unfeeling, un inmaginative being which Tannahill pic tured her. She Was a creature all feeling, all imagination, aithough the bard had not that iu his person or Manners to engage• her afiention or to arrest her fancy. The young affections. are not to be contrcaled. Love—almighty love—must be free, else it ceases to be love. Tannahill was Plain in his person arid uncouth in his manners, and felt and' ex pressed discontent at the cruel disappoint ment which it had been his unhappy fate to encounter. Jessie, on the contrary, looked upon the.ivorld as a brilliant spectacle yet to be seep and enjoyed—as a vast paradise full of the, beauty of heaven and of earth, where nick walked forth in the image of their Creator, invested with his attributes, and woman trod proudly amidst the lovely ereation, an angel venerated and adored. To express dissatisfaction• under all these circUmstances was to hei mind the extrav agance of a misanthrope, the madness of a real lover of misery, and a sufficient cause for her not to respect him. Both viewed the world through a fahie medium, and their deductions, although at variance, gave color to their minds and accelerated their fate. Jessie could not comprehend what appeared to her the folly of her suitor. She relished not his sickly sentiment, and, as all womankind ever did and do, she scorn- ed a cooing lover. The bard was driven to *pair, and summoning up an unwonted energy of mind, departed, and left his adoged to her youthful aberations. soon after this period the song of g!Jesse, the Flower of Dunblane," together with the music, was published and became a public favorite; it was sung everywhere, in thea tres and at parties: a world of praise was showered upon it from won;an's flattering lips, and men became mad to know the adored subject of the lay. In a short period it was discovered. Jessie Monteith, the pretty peasant of Dunblane, was the favor ed one. From all quarters young men and bach elors flocked to see her, and her own sex were curious and critical. Many promising youths paid their addresses to her, and ex perienced the same reception as her first lover. Nevertheless, poor Jessie became really enamored. A rakish spark- from Mid , lothians, adorned with education, being of tnlished manners, and confident from wealth and superiority of rank, gained her young affections. She too credulously trusted in his unhallowed professions. The ardor of first love overcame her, better judgment, and, abandoningherself to her love-passion, she made an impimdent escape from the protection of her parents, and soon found herself in elegant apartments near the city of Edinburgh. The song of neglected Tan nahill was to his Jessie both a glory and a curse, while it brought her into notice and enhanced her beauty, it laid the founda tionS of her final destruction. - Popularity is a dangerous elevation, whether the ob ject of it be a peasant or a prince; tempta tion crowd around it, and snares are laid on every hand. "Who would be eminent," said a :distinguished child of popularity, "if they knew the peril, the madness, and distraction of mind to which the creature of the popular breath is exposed ?" When the poet heard of his beloved Jessie, his heart almost burst with mental agony, and, working himself intorthe enthusiastic fren zy of inspiration, poured fourth a torrent of song, more glowing and energetic than ever before dropt in burning accents from his tongue. It is to be lamented, that in a fit of disgust •he afterwards destroyed those poetic records of his passion and re sentment. Ere three years had revolved their triple circuit after Jessie left her father's home, she was a changed woman. She was des titute in her splendid habitation. Her blue eyes looked pititul on all things around her. the oval cheeks were indented by the hand ' of misery, and the face and person the picture of an unhappy, but amiable be ing. How changed was the figure clothed in silk, which moved on the banks of the Forth, from the happy lively girl in ;Dun blane, dressed in the rustic garb of a peas ant! But this is a subject too painful to dwell on: let us hasten to the catastrophe. It was on an afternoon in July, a beauti ful sunny afternoon, the air was calm and pure. The twin islands of the Forth, like vast emeralds set in a lake of silver, rose splendidly o'er the shining water, which now and' then gurgled and• Mantled their bases. Fifeshirc was spread forth like a map, her hundreds of inland village and cots tranquil- ° ly sleeping in the sunshine. The den of the artizan,'s hammers in Kirkaldy and Quensferry smote the still air, and Dun fermline's aproned inhabtiants scattered forth their whitened webs beneath the noon tide sun. On the° opposite shore, Leith disgorged her black smoke, which rolled slowly in volumes to the sea. Edinburgh caste, like a mighty spirit from the "vast bleep," reared tier gray bulwarks high in air; and Arthur's seat rose hugely and darkly in the back ground. The chorus ses of fishermen, like hymns to the great spiiit of the waters, ascended over New haVen; and down from Grangemouth, light ly booming o'er the tide, floated the tall bark. The world seemed steeped in hap pineiss. But there was one—a wandering one; an outcast—wretched and dospairing, amidst all its loveliness; her bosom was cold and dark, no ray could penetrate its depths; the sun shone not for her, nor did nature smile around but to inflict a more exquisite pang on the unfortunate. Her steps were broken and hurried. She now approached the water's edge, and then re ceded. No human creature was near to disturb her purpose—all was qnietness and privacy; but there was an eye from above that watched all. Jessie Monteith—how mournful sounds that name at such a cris is. But Jessie set herself down, and re moving a shawl and bonnet from her per son, and taking a string of pearls from her marble-seeming neck, and a gold ring which she kissed eagerly, from her taper finger, she cast up her Upeaming eyes, meekly imploring forgiveness of heaven on hils, the cause of her shame and death. - Scarce offering a prayer for herself; she breathed forth the names'of her disconsolate parents, and, ere the eye could follow her, she dis appeared in the pure stream. The sun shone on, the green of the earth stirred not a leaf; the bell did not toll; nor did a sigh escape the lips of one human being, and yet the spirit of the loveliest of women pas sed (may.we not hope?) to Heaven. THE MISSING STEAMER—AN AFFECT STORY.—The Jersey Blqe has the fol lowing affecting story: During the latt4 part of our career in the Philadelphia Post Office, we became ac quainted, among the mass of human beings whose faces appeared daily at the ~Gener al Delivery Window," where we were stationed, with an intelligent, happy look ing Englishman, of about forty-five years of age, who came frequently to inquire for letters from home. He was a man of pleas ing manners, and evidently had been well educatedand accustomed to the refinements aneelegancies of really good society. Be ing a stranger on our shores, lie was glad to avail himself of an opportunity of conver sing with us, and spoke freely of his past and of his hoped-for - future. He had come over to Philadelphia, bringing with him a little son,' apparently about twelve years of‘age, to select a residence for the rest of hi'S family, which he had left in England, and to make all the arrangements necessa ry to their comfort when they should ar rive. He bad accomplished this—had ta ken and furnished a house in Philadelphia, and was expecting letters from his • wife, informing him of her sailing with their othhr THAT COUNTRY IS THE MOST PROSPEROUS, WHERE', EOR COMMANDS THE GREATEST REWARD.";--Buchanan, CITY OF LANCASTER, TUESDAY MORNING, JUNE 27, 1854. children in the steamer City of Manches- We handed him a letter—it spoke of er expectation to sail in that steamer, and he went away with such glad anticipations as might be supposed ba fill the heart of a hus band and father long absent from the Wife and children whom lie soon expected to meet and embrace again. A few days pas sed, and another foreign mail arrived, and with it a letter to our friend from his wife, saying that she had not been able to make her arrangements in time to sail in the Manchester,'but that she should certainly sail in the Glasgo'W. some time after this, letters came which she had mailed at the time of embarking in this ship, and now he •was unspeakably happy with the almost certainty of seeing his wife • and children in a very few days, for the _New York mail steamers generally make the passage but a few days sooner than our screw steamers. soon he, with many others, commenced going down every day to Queen st. wharf to look for the incoming steamer. But: who shall speak of the horrors to come? Day after day did he with the ma ny others on that sad walk, go down to the wharf and strain his vision to descry among the numerous vessels clown the river, the anxiously expected steamer. We saw ]tits when the vessel had been some thirty days out, and were startled at Ids appearance. • The plump, happy-seeming face of one month before, was hkgard as the face of Death, the eyes tiny( so shortly before we ' had seen dance in the light of inward joy, were bloodshot, wild and glaring upon us with a maniac expression. lie walked mopingly away, but his face haunted us Mill. A few days after this a steamer ar rived, bringing the report that a vessel somewhat resembling the Glasgow had been seen off the Bahamas; this report brought him to us again. Oh, how , that false hopehad brightened his countenance! His eyes had regained their expression of intelligence, and he clung to this baseless hope as a drowning man to a straw. We left the Post Office 4 few days after this. Yesterday we inquired concerning this wretched man, and was told that he had been for some time its 'the Lunatic Asylum a raving maniac. May God re ward him in eternity! Prow the S a 10 THE NAUVAISES TEREE OF \E- BR AS KA PART OP A LETTER FROM J. 0. WHITTIER The traveller who enters the Territory of Nebraska from the Great Bend of the Missouri, and takes the direction of Fort Laramie, aliiug the valley of the White River, finds himself passing oi-er a fine high prairie country, luxuriant with shorn grasses, and gay with uncultivated flowers. Suddenly from one of the ter raced elevations which slowly and gradu ally uplift the prairie to the spurs of the Rocky Mountains, the calm monotony of the landscape is broken by an abrupt de pression of from one to two hundred feet below the level of the surrounding country Before him stretches a vast valley, the width of which is estimated at thirty miles, and which reaches westerly to the feet of the Black Hills, a distance of nearly nine ty mild. lle looks t out, upon a dreary waste, scantily clothed with grass, and rough and ridgy with tall, irregular, pris matic, and columnar masses of rock, rising splintered and abraded, into every conceiv able form, to the height of from one to two hundred feet. It is as if, in sonic great convulsion of nature, this cast and dismal tract had sud denly sunk from the great prairie level, leaving its bony articulations of rock stand ing thickly over it, like the ribs of some gigantic skeleton from whicji, the flesh had fallen. Seen in the distance, these rocky piles, so tall, io vast, so multitudinous, intersect ed by labyrinthine passages, their turreted walls, truncated pyramids, and sharp,clus tering spires, rising into light from the black masses of their shadows—assume the appearance of artificial structures—a wild night-mare dream Cyclopean architecture, flanking buttress and lofty arch, shaft, col onnade,. and spire,—the Potrea of the Westel wilderness,—a silent city of the the dead—stretching out to the horizon's line on the right hand and ou the left, and westwardly in endless succession of towers and mural escarpments, to the grim back ground of the Black Mountains—a scene to remind one of the ruinous stony halls of Istakar, through the portals of which the mad Caliph in Vathek sought of the infer nal deities. "So thickly," says the geological sur veyor of this wonderful tract, in his report to Congreis,"are these natural towers stud. ded over this extraordinary region, that the traveller threads his way through in tricate passages, not unlike some quaint old town of the European continent. "One might almost imagine oneself ap proach some magnificent city of the dead, where the labor and genius of forgotten nations had left behind them a multitude of monuments of their art and skill. "On descending from the heights, how ever, and proceeding to thread this vast labyrinth, and inspect in detail its deep, intricate recesses, the realities of the scene soon dissipated the illusion . of dis, tance. The castellated forms which fancy had conjured up vanish, and around one, on every side, is bleak and barren desola tion." The whole region is, in fact, one of sav age and irrethedia,ble desolation. The curse of sterility broods over it,—treeless and pathless,—a maze of innumerable defiles, choked with debris, and overhung with ash colored walls of rock. For the geologist, however, this melan choly tract has no lack of interest. It is rich in fossil remains of animal races long extinct, and heretofore unknown. Grim secrets of an early world, unshapely and monstrous forms of rudimental life, present themselves in some localities at every turn. The enormous Palocotherium, which form ed a connecting link between the tapir and the rhindceros, the horse and the hog,— one specimen of which measured five feet along the range of its teeth; the Archioth erium, uniting in itself the - clicters of the pachydermous, plantigradM hy a d the . digitigrades, foreshadowing in its ar combination the hog ; the bear, and the cat, —the small rhinoceros .Nebrascencis, bear ing a marked resemblance to the living ba barousa and peccary, together witlimany . other remarkable and novel varieties of an imal life,.roamed over th4e lands at a pe riod so remote that the mind staggers Uri— der the effort of computation. Geology as cribes the date of their existence to a time when, of all which now constitutes Europe and Asia, only a few scattered islands, slowly rising from a wide waste of ocean, were visible; when Mount Etna and the plateau of Sicily were still .deep under the tertiary Mediterranean Sea: when the Alps and the Great sub-Himmalayan •range of Northernlndia were yet uninformed; whenl on the continent, the now far inland moun tain chains were the seaboard of the lantic, whose waves washed the great Misi sissippi valley, and beat against the bluffs; of Vicksburg. These fossil deposits are; exciting a great degree of interest in thet scientific world, and already, during the present season, three expeditions, one of them composed of European savans, haveti left St. Louis, to renew the investigation; of their mysteries, and decipher their mar-i vellous record of the history' : of our planet. The Mauvaises Terres„notwithstanding their great extent, occupy in reality but a small portion of the beautiful Territory of Nebraska. (lose around their waste and desolation, beitn-•u the nu 0.11. are In-attO tiful • liilll,,y bay, uf gras, ••via. ino and>hadotc lirhrbt t. 'tit luxuriant thtst,r, of and pa,Pit' pha-. Over Ih,•m uvandt•r 11,41 , and 11, I.lk. and Ihr - buck. 01..1 . them Ivauder the woke. aod the heel!, bf riderless horses. Fires that blast and and wind, that are Held of travel. And ON or all I. the .Icy. ih,• el.; rtystalline heaven. I,ik,• t lr protesting hand If Got inverted tthnve theta A Cow WORTH HANlNG.—folin W. Wilson writes to the Hampshire Gazette: "I have a cow from whose milk sixty pounds and five ounces of butter were made in twenty-eight days, in the month of December, 1853. The same cow in one week, ending the 26th ult., made sev. enteen and a half pounds of butter. The daily average of milk was fifty-one and one half pounds. Her feed was six quarts of equal parts Indian and I.oom corn Meal, and one pumpkin per day for four month's to come." Tyre Ch4lll)belsburg Volley Spirit 01 last week,- contained The annexed ;icicle ID i.g.iiit to the libeidied slat's which iia‘, sed liazersiown a ,hurt ticue ago, and who it seem,. ha; e qiidireo.d Iliedi‘edvos up , nr she pen• of he hoped .ti.o Weir inanuini,sion Eno) be the ear nes. of .1 happy ',future heridom, - but tie ttiiiik• our friend of tile j tin with ud in satin, thar•i. is to lieite i n e it these -fine able bodied young fellows' tvitl tiro fine nor as mile-bodied five year, heove io (hey di e now. In the Old Dominion. vilierice tie understand they came,ithey lived on an estate, I.:omit, from the trees and tempte(iiimi i,6 town, aihl were watched over by a kind mater and air tail A g ent mistress. All their wail:. in health sieve stii ri3O i ed, and in sickness they had all neeilltil medico( mum dance ahil careful nursing. Cone? old age, or come any ill that fresh is heir to. while they stayed there they were certain of a root to slit...diet thi-rn trim runt and sildw, certain io clothing tropic sufficient to her p them a,rruu and retrain nt torod PIIOIIEOI to revel every at.ack of nutiged. Now (hey are in \Vollstowit, the ' , Fn., ' of Cliambetsburg, their comnatiions the abaiiiiiihed wietche, who in•. lest that miserable quarter. There 'they will tress, daily and nightly, II:41 the iiiiihrent plantation amusements to which they were in-customer! at their old home before freedom came to rinse (heti", but the riotous mirth that (booglir by the ‘1" , ( 1 ) gives rise tin. Trues' will bare (4414144t.144tir heiore•them eX4.1111111e3 of 1441.112e4,4 11141 . 1 415)Ilete-t \ 1141 004 V will bre:1111e n 1110T411 41141111-li4iel 44 4.‘1414•11 Ccllllett 1.141 to 144t14111111 jolo,,ued 4.11 env. louts , her has been stated to lot at laity- —tete •Itherated by a gentleman and his .I.lllou, " i ,. .1.1ji1t4 Berk icy county, V.I. We give the gentlernan and the lady all the eietli^ that is due to grind intentions; but we tell them Frankly that we tediette they have inflicted an injury opon titt , tt itegroe, ht• set• tine them nee. And wino have ice g a ud,' by their addition to our pouul,llloo At !hot .me We Etta) answer notlon.Y., and when these ohjeets npnn tiring philanthittpy, alter imbibing the cites. rot tnttipating in the crimes and contracting oat. di-e,ts. es ot their [Jew Found companiuDs. InrnipL then quo}, d 1 inmates of our jad cud altn—itootte, tie au, ,Pr worse titan nothing:. ..\, qui.,Ti, , s on Turt, Sasiteilita -lit coma/el - tin:4 up...) the probability that negra r ,tr a r i have been re-aimed by our roveinment for Hie ncl quisitirat of the Sandwich islands, and ri n. purr:pert of their stiece--ariti termination, the Detroit rye n ess he ys: ",,h ub ld the adinthistiation neglect a tav,oahle opportunity to obtain these would be jitt.t.t Iv liable to the charge of a want of - wise loteca.t . ' We hare, hitherto :Mown that the islanders canntif long maintain an independent govenimen'—that, they :we dwindling away—that they will wi'huf comparatively a lew years. become extinct as a race. The islands inns: pass into the bands of ' some of the powerful ration, of the earth. Such being the case, whar is tae interest and duty ! of the United S'ates4 1, it to let England, or' France, or Russia p:iss•so them,and hold them asl a commandite; naval station. We apprehend wit. The day will come hen the eumuiercial iidefests, ol this country will be as peat on the Pacific as' they are on the Atlantic—when our trade will be, m ore v „ liable with the natiobs of the la, east !ban w i th th e ,'allots of Europe When 'ha! dty does come, the possession of the Sandwich viands - will be of the utmost moment, as affinding not only a position which will give us the naval supremacy of the P a cific. b u t as a depot luk coal lor our steamers. arid . 1 1 supplies lor every description at vevsels that will plough the great ocean, as a haliwar house betweoa America and Asia. • We have no tear that the administration will neglect its duty in this .elation. President Pierre: came into office with no triisgivutg,' as to the Con. sequences of aequisnion of Territork—Neh acqui sitions as must. in the natu,-e of things, sN'euglben _not weaken—US as one at the great pow of, Christendom. We believe his administration w iV be signalized as corf,ummating tn•o or' the nw•t important events of the age—the purchase of Cuba and the acceptance at the pi ofre,ed cession at the Sandwich Tj - . L. Hallowelng ; Franklin Cloth ' I mg Store. No. 202 Market street, above 6th, under the Rod Lion Hotel, Philadelphia, is the only place in the ity where Boys' Clothing from four years old and upwards can belpurchased. M E'rOs AND Boys' Ctortitka, Wholesale and Re tail, at the very lowest prices, for Cash only. Re member No. 202 Market street, above 6th. april 25 • ly-14 Estate of Bernard 11 ) Gonlgle, late of the city of ..ancaster, deeeased. Let ters testamentary on the above estate having been granted to the undersigned, all persons knOwing themselves to be indebted to said estate are request ed to make immediate payment, and those having claims will present them without delay, properly authenticated tor settlement. MARGAE.ET M'GONIGLE. wa 16 Bt-17 ' Executrix. GEibR E W..IIVELROY, ATTORNEY AT LAW. - OFFICE---E Orange street, directly opposip ,4 neriff s Office. Lancaster Indy 23 fatolls .k Black, Attorneys at 'ALAW. Office—oue door east of Swope's Ho tel, Pa.i. King Street, Lancaster, Penn'a. ' kinds 4crivening, such as writing Wills, Deeds, Mortgages,A.ccounts, &c., will be attended toni . !, , IrrellLlieSS ipril 1I 11-12 Renioval —ISAAC E HlEsTEß.—Altor hey at Law. Has removed to an office in North linke Street, nearly opputiite the new Court House. Lancaster, Pa. [april 11 6m-1`). D. Bachman, has !moved his oliire ti . to thange st., second doorfrom Fahnestock's store. [ap 11 6t-12 Dr. John Nl , Calla, Dentikt—Offiee No. 4 East King street, Lancaster, Pa. april IS t1:13 • LT.. B.t- Swar, Attorney at Law. I .—Office North Duke street, east side, a few doors north of the New Court House, and adjoin ing the office of N. Ellmaker, Esq. april 4 3in-I I Hairs McAllister, HOME 11 OPATAC PHYSICIAN.—Offi d re deuce No. 12 East Orange et., nearly oppositeth" 'now German Reformed Church. [march 7 tf-7 Cleo. F. Breneman, Attorney at .I_ll Law. Office in West King et., below Coop er', Ilatel. Lancaster, march 21 2m-9 J . go:we Stargeon [Midst con t) . tit piactme his profession in its various Branches en the most approved principles. Offica B. E. Corner N. Queen and Orange streets. N. H. Entrance 2d door on ()range street. n0v.1853 - . 1,ti444] nentistry.—The first premium, a superior caee of Instruments, was awarded to Dr. John Waylan, D. D. S., by the Baltimore College of : Dental Surgery, far the greatest proficieny in the ,tudy and art at Dentistry as taught in the Thoth an. Office No. 56, North queen street, Lan er. Pa. linov 8 et-42 1 )a re naker.--Attorneys a t rice Sr. LAW..:--Sainuel Parke and Daniel G. Baker,_ lit it,,,•! troterallip in the practice of r •reggio(l. • i i Mice, South Queen Street, west side, 6th door mtli of the Lancaster Bank July 19 VAT T lic 11 ail, Attorney at V V • LAW, Strasburg Borough, Lancaster co. la. une 14 Lf-21 tit infaßble core for the , Tooth ache a• the office of Dr. S. WELC UAGEON DENTIST, No. 34, North I oven street, Lancaster, Pa., direct 00;,,itte Sprecher's ifardware j All operations, upon the natural teeth are per ormed with care, and with a view to their preser vation and beauty. Artificial teeth, inserted on the most approved )rinciples of the:Dental prolession,•and for dura )ility end beauty equal to nature. I' ull satisfactidn in regard to his prices, and the pitegrity of his tslork is warranted to all who may place ti:einselves under his treatment. dec 6 Drugs, Plilults,. Window Glass & 1_../ Dye Stuffs. R....eh and Jersey, Zinc Palms, Pure White Lead. IVindoer Glass, eolored and enamelled. Superior Coach and Furniture Varnishes ; with a tirst-rate ,issortinent or fresh Drugs and Chemi cals, hr sale at ALFRED W.y.,TBERGER , S Drugh and Chemical store, No. 169 North lee ond street, Philadelphia. Principal Depot for the sale of Harlow's Indigo Blue, Steeling's Salve, Tattersall's Heave Powders, and Barber's Embrocation. Physicians and storekeepers supplied. (Nods sent to'any 0r Depots tree (,r charge. . way 30 I y-f 9 Valli and Wiener Clothing,---11'he subscriber has now ready for sale at his told stand, No. 31; North Queen st., between the iNa tional house And gpanglerts Book Store, one o the must elegant assortments of Fall and Winter Clinh ing, ever offered to the public of Lancaster cciun ty. " • The prices olClOthing at this house have Ij i cer, reduced to such a . very low standard that it is now within. the power oT all who wish to weal good clothes. The, assortment consists of Overcoats of every T description, Dress, Frock and Sack coats, a gl.eat variety of Brix coats, Monkey coats, & c . 4 operline i. assitnere pants, black and latic.3l Silk and Satin and a fine variety of Valen cia and other rests. Also shirts, collars, stocks, pncketthandkerchicis, suspenders,Gloyer, hosiery &c., and all other—articles generally I, ept in his line of business. All articles sold:it this establishment warradted what they are represented to be, se they. Are nitin ufficturcd undeT the immediate superintendence et the subscriber. fhG hollowing Is a le.,t of prices of 4orne nt ;the artichis OvercOais at bolo to t Itt Superfine- Dress Coal, 7 14 "i Frock •t 7 Cloth ',Sack 5 8 Satin Yeats, Valcucia, Szt . St' perfilli• i !ti !MCI e Pants 3 460 " bk. 4 i , Satinets ii 2 In 60 Aso a 'splendid ilSSOttnient of goodA in the piece. Superfine French and English Cloths find Ciasi meres of every hue and shade, Satin, Sill( and Va lencia vestings, Sattinetur, 4.e., all of which ivill be made to order at the shortest notice and in the, neatest and best manner. All garments warrant ed to fit. ROY'S lA/THING ALWAYS ON HAND The public are respectfully invited to call and examine the superior assortment of clothing at this establishment, sign of the red coat, No. 31i North Queen street, between the National Heim and Spangler , s !took WILLIAM HENSLEN. tf•42 (Dl. W. SHINDEL GEORGE BRYAN.) Bryan and Shindel, Walnut Hall, No. 57, North Quenn at., one door south, of Buchmullees Cutlery Store, and six doors north of Severs Hotel Lancaster. Have just received ian entire New StoCk of black and fancy colored cloths, cashmcretts, drab &Eta, Queens cloth and many new styles of goods adapted for summer coats, bilk and colored cassimerea, French linens and a gr'ea variety anew and fashionable goods for pants in a most superior and splendid stock of new style o vestings, stocks, cravats, handkerchiefs, suspen ders, hosiery, &c. 4 A splendid assortment of fine white and fancy shirts, collars, &c. Also a on tand a large assert. ment of READY MADE CLOTHING, cut and manufactured in a superior manner, which are of fered and sold at the very lowest prices for cash. All orders in the thilornag line executed in the best manner and at the shortest notice. B. & S. rettkrn their sincere thanks for the libeiral patronage heretoforel bestowed, and hope by strict attention :o business'to merit a continuance of the same. . Don , triorget the pl ace, No. 57, North Queen it La neaste. [aug 9 tf-29 LI . laves .1 &ales : : —The subscriber hiving t , taken :he agency for Brown's building .Slat s, is ready at any time to furnish Slate by the ton or by the square, .'.t. the shortest notice and on t e most reasonah' a terms. Apply at my Hardwire Store , . North : t hieen ,street.l marl 014; GEO. D. dPRISCHEB. United 'States Hotel, PHILADEIL PHIA.—qhis well known establishment, cel ebrated for its Tables, and re-furnished in Mcid ern style, with Ladies' Parlors on the first, floclor most centrally situated on Chesnut street—the fashionable promenade—opposite the Custr House, an., near Independence Hall. CAPT. CHAS. H. MILLER, whose reputatin as a host is well known, is determined it shall lo be nothing by his future efforts. The highetit degr'ee of satisfaction guarantied to all who may' favor him with their company. igr Families can secure a suite of Rooms by telegraphing a day or two in advance Philadeipnia, may 16 G-350,000 Artist's Union Enterprise, N.J I I-250,000 Gifts for the People. Statuary, $40,000 Oil Paintings, 10,000 Engravings, colored in 0,1, 40,000 Steel Plate Engravings, 41,000 Cash Loans for 100 years each, 30,000 Real Estate d 4,000 .. . Total, $250,000. The American Artists' Union would respectfully announce to the citizens of the United States and the Canadas, that for the purpose of the advance ment and extension of the Fine Arts, and with a view of enabling every family throughout the length and breadth of the land, to become posses sed or a gallery of pictures, many of them the work of master minds, and finally, for the purpose of giving a world wide circulation to Darlers Great Picture of Wyoming, they have determined to distribute among the purchasers of this work, Price One Dolly, 250,000 Gills of the value of $250,000. Marble st:•toaty, ti 440,000 100 elegant but oi I,oasbintoon, st *lOO 10,000 100 •• 4 , Clay, 100 10,000 100 " " Webster, 100 10,000 100 4 . .. Calhoun, 100 10,000 .vo Oil Paintings and colored : teel Engravings. 50 elegant oil paintings, in splendid Gilt Frames, size 3 a 4 feet, each $lOO. 100 elegant oil,.paintings, 2 a 3 feet each $ 5O , ::,000 500 steel plate engravings, brilliantly colored in oil, rich gilt frames, 24 x . 30 in. eat h $lO, :s,OOO 10,000 elegant steel plate engraving., colored in oil, of the Washington Monument, 20 a 26, each $4. 237,000 steel plate engravings, tram tint different plates, now in possessions of and owned by the Artiste' Union at the market value, of from 50 cents to $l,OO each, . 41,000 Real.Estate,' 084,000 1 elegant dwelling in 32d si. 111 N. Y. arty; 12.000 22 building lots in 100 and 101 ste. N. V. city, each 25 x 100 ft deep each $lOOO, 22.000 100 Villa Sites, containing each 11,000 sq. ft. in the suburbs of N. York city, and commanding a magnificent vier* at the Hudson river and Long Island Sound, each $5OO. 50,000 Lonna of Cash, $30,000 20 loans of cash, for 100 years each, without interest, or security 250 each, $5,000 60 r , 100 5,000 100 " '', 50 . 5,000 ~ 200 " te 20 5,000 20004 , ~ tr 5 10,000 'fhe holder of each ticket is entitled lust, to a steel plate engraving, (size 25 N. 30 in.) of die great American Historical Work of Art, ‘Vyornina, a copy of which may be seen at the . office of this pa per; and second, to one of tho 250,000 Gitts,which will-be distributed on the completion of the sale of the tickets. Tlfe purchaser of 5 tickets, ou the receipt of his order, will be forwarded, carefully packed, either 'one copy of the 'Wyoming,' elegantly painted in oil colors, or one copy of the 'Wyoming' plain and one copy of each of Our other engravings, equal to it in value, and is entitled to live gifts. The purchaser of more than fr tickets can have his choice out of 100 different subjects, from steel plates owned by the Artists Union, each picture being lb value equivalent to the 'Wyoming,' and is entitled to one gift for each ticket he holds. A list of the subjects van lie HMI at the Office of this paper. AGENTS.—Persons desirous ofbecoming Agents for sale of tickets, by forwarding [post paid] $l, shall be sent a Gilt ticket, a copy of 'et yoming and a prospectus containing all necessary information. It is confidently believed that the tickets will be disposed of by the Ist of July, when the distribu tion ul'gifw. will ba onixuatail to a Cum mitts ap pointed by the Ticket Holders. The steel plates front whin% the engravings are printed , eon be seen at the office o r the A'rtim.st UlllOll and coat 8100,000. Specimens of the Oil Paintings and Kngravings are also on rm., at the ronms• Referenetla ul regard to the properly. W. C. Barret!, enunkellor at LIPV, nt . N. Y. 4. re, iteai 1 1 8 1 111. 1 1'3, 80 NllBBBll 81. DJ All Ordets tot 'ltekets must lot ttltlrm,nd post-paid with tire money enclosed to 1 1 11105...1/.IVIZ & Co., iii s , renlion to their complete ,tack 01 Lido, and Genf.. Dress and house furnishing Goods; eninpriso• r . one or the best selected in the country, which for nice ty of styles—choice of colors, beauty of tashion and cheapness of price, cannot be excelled. A respectful invitation i extended to all - -1..ea1l and be assured oldie truth of the above as•-erbon. New a,nd desirable Dress Goods; in this branch we name rich add beautiful Paris Robes, silk Grene dins, striped and Plaid summerVilks, ('hallo De Laines, French Lawns and Organdies, Chilly tler eges, French Jaconets and Cambrics, Beregc De Laines, super wool French De Lames, pirilts,blues, greens, sc. ; plain glace silks, gro do riffles, gro de amrure, rich double boiled cblk silks, eagle brand, for 81,00 worth 1,50, white goods, swiss, mull, book, nansook, dc., linen goads, all quali ties Irish linens, Richardnons greys, Oar.., 3-4, 4-4 French - grey linens, table cloths and napkins, pil low case linens, birds eye, RusNia and Scotch Dia per, linen cambric i,dkls. all qualities for ladies snd gents.; cloths,cassimers, &c-, super blk col'd cloths of all graes, by the most celebrated ma kers, English. German and American; super 6-4 cashmareis, blk and all shades: bik cassimers and doe skin of Sedan arid other bent makers; fancy pant stuffs, drillings, nankeens, tweeds Kentucky J, one, farmers drilla, &c. Supe.r blk and fancy silk and ;,atii, i.est,rigt; sil lier French lace curtains,, from 52 to 20,00; para sols, parasols, plain linen, white and colored li ning, prices from 75 cts. to 54,00, French Ging nams, a large lot of beautiful cols and quality for 12f cts,, worth 25 cis , Lawns, organdy, Wk . and white Pb fared, 12 cis. worth 371. eta. But part of our inducements are above enumera ted. The kindest attention shown to all who wish to examine or purchase. 2 26 2 u The attention of those who bay by the piece, package or dozen! is invited to our W holesale De partment, as we have devoted one of our lame rooms exclusively for this purpose, and other ad vantageous arrangements, justifies ue in asserting, that we can furnish country merchants and pedlers, Milliners, &c., with goods as cheap if not cheaper than the New York or Philadelphia markets. T I OS. J. WENTZ & CO , Corner E. King and Centre square. way 2 tr-1.5 - - - -- 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 st., 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 or Rent.—The two.story Brick House, half lot of ground, in North Queen street, late'the property of Michael Ham- 2 bright, dec 3 d, is offered for rent until the Ist of April next. This is a desirable place for business, having two large rooms in front, which might readily be con verted into stores. There ate three rooms beside OD the first floor and a kitchen, and six rooms on the second floor. The let contains a large num ber of fruit trees—and there is a well of excellent water with a pump in it, and a large cistern. Possession will be given immediately. Apply to WILLIAM FRICK. 5 doors north of the property. tap 11 tf-1:2 Exclsange Hotel, No. 17 East King street, next door west of Lane's Store, Lancaster, Pa. The subscriber has taken the above mentioned well-known large and commodi ous Hotel, and has fitted it'up in new and hand some style. His BAR will be supplied with the choicest of liquors, - and his TABLE furnished with the very best the Markets can afford. The PAR LORS and CHAMBERS are large and well fur nished, and his STABLING is extensive. In short, nothing will be omitted . on his part to stake the "EXCHANGE" one of the best and most desirable stopping places in the city. His charges are mod erate, and every attention will he given to the comfort of the guests. . BOARDERS will Da taken by the week, month or year. Prom his long experience in the business, a flatters himself that hircan satiety every body who may favor him with their custom. A share of pub lic_patronage is respectfully solicited. , aprU 18 tISI WILLI.A.M T. YOUART. LIS P OF GIFT' .1. W. HOL131111(1h.E, 501., Hroodwar, New York. • 3m-11 THOS. J. WENTZ 4 Co., roruer E. King ai.d Centre ,quare Carktloll: Caution I tagtes Lightninftods. Bet and swindlers. In or der to prev the frauds so eztensillely carried two years, by a set t t o f seen over the country, an represent; * my agents, and in ma y instietce certificates of agencyla• Lnow gi my agents, carry with them prin, izing them to act as my agents, and acknowledged before Alder. son, ofPhiladelphia; they have a place of business on their wagon all to be strictly honelst, and fully the business of puttink up Lights they will do at as lows price as Wm. at the Factory. As mau been resorted to, to defraud myse i purchasers should be on their g have been grossly delieived by p articles in the shape of Lightnit pewter, load, copper,izine and or all of which are gold for nothii Magnet Lightning rods, have bel many of the most scientific men it have pronounced [heti' to be the they have ever seen, Which are ca lives and property froth destrbctia among these are Professors Ho James M'Clintock, Welter R. Jol S. Patenr Office, E. Ji t Carr, Dr. I many others who recd imend then terms of approbation. All orders tvholesal and retail, prompt attention. S ire rods ar to order. Cardinal points and all er vanes, for sale che Etr agent, Sam uel C. Wilt, self during the Summer of 1864, a Queen Street, Latteaso, Pa., and at Penns.grove, ,Property sections of the Country will do well T OMAS Al Vine et., 4 doors ;thorn T starch 28 - - .J KJ :amp , Mere] fl or and Clothier coper of Isl Orange ate., Lancaster Pa., respeC to call the attention' o r the citizet city and county, and the public in large and supetior 04 Of MOWS a and Summer Ready made Clothnl now on hand, and is from time to i HT, in a neat, substantial and fio ner, and from thn beat materials. v, Cloth, Cassimere, Cashmaret, Merino, Crap 12 1 >Ete, Alpachas, Qu ton Linen, Gingham and Duck; Dreg coats, Paletote, Sacks, }loxes, Donll Jackets, of various colors—plain, striped, mottled and figured. Cloth, Cassimere, SaiinctTweed, Duck Velvet, and COtonade Pants, ore, shades, figures and mixtures. Silk, Satin, Merincq Valentia, mere and Marseilles Vestings, Alai ped and bard, and of every variety i.,. or. Also American, Peach, k:ngl Clothe, Cassimeres and estings, ai adapted to the Spring nd Summe which will be made up a order, in um, or fashionable ins iner, with patch, and warranted t give setisfi Also, Shirts, Drawer . Collars, C Handkerchiefs, Fancy ies, Glove Umbrellas, Hosiery, & . Thanks and the public for past patronage, I confidently hopes that his future a, it a continuance of the +IMO. I ins Qtovek, Canldr 13The undersigned wo l tention of Merchants.a I of a first rate stove, fr their extensive stock comprising a greater as' at any other establishmi also invite the attention celebrated Buck Cook, for from.loo to 0001)01.61 Capitol do., Complete gar do., and a number o would do well to give purchasing elsewhere. EIZEETI , Ild respect lly cafithe at rd others w o are in want .r either w odow coal, to . if COOK . TOVE.B,- &c., sortrnent th can be found tin the CI s . . We would in of Hotel keepers to .thew 3 fliZrs, cap ble of cooking iina. Akio, tie Globe Cook, 40., V 0 ,16111 0., Ha d7' othet a. Pa l i - chasers it before them u :I Also, Cauldrons, With ing hogs, rendering lard Sole Agents for twee N: sueeensorii Pond & Co., N.k. corner nt 2,1 r. march 14 h,m ace au. lied for scald land boiling food for stock 'a Patent rtable Forges MAI, & W RNICK, iY ocum, 6; • , P. Hagar & Race eta Philadelphia, 3m•B filothlng;! Clot 'log t—Fi , Sign 01 the STag F.D Coal., Quern ntieni, Fast bide., near Ora n ca.clei, Pa. The siib,er berfiyilesiro' touring their thanks t therm nut I avail themselves of this opportunit at the same time reap tfully aim, friends and the public i i general, I now ready an assortrpe4l of SPIIIi MGR CLOTHING, thna for oxien j cheapness will surpass ;any stunk Lancaster. Their stock in all ot then ow,, in; embraces the latest stylhs of Cloth I the seaman and warranted to give Lion to purchasers sir to durabilit 1 workmanship. Encouraged by the patron. go 0 1 triunity,l they have enlarged their and made additions to their stock, ai ly prepared to supply a'll who lay, call, with every c'escriprion of Clot, lowest prim:. I Among their eVensisle assot Mier the following: I Superfine Dress and :Frock (~ t o latest fashions, of French and Eng! New style business coals, of blac olive and green cloths, plain and fi Coats, Linen and rotten Coals ; Lion, Double find tongie 13:teahted Silks, Grenadines, CaSsimetts, V I • meres, Superior Plain II blac Vests. Fine Black Doeskin and Fancy made in the haat style' i , and at ver the quality. Also, just.completed, pest rod cheapest assortment of B ING, suitable for the s pring and can be found in Lanca ster, eonsi Frock, , ack and Monkey Coats, of all sizes and qualities, to which Dona will he made during the seas , Also, 0 full assortment of whi Shirts, Collars, Bosomsi Cravats, kerchiefs, Suspenders, f,tocks, Glo • Umbrellas. duet received a laige !aseortmen fancy cloths, cashmerets, Drap cloth &c. suitable for coat's. lilac' fancy cassirneres, French linens andl of new and fashionable koods for pa, which will be made up pi order, -a in the latest fashion, ant' Zvi ho in terms. .Purchasers will please.reeelleet, lug sold at his establishinent is all make and guaranteed to he well ec The subscribers hope by strict a iness'and their endeavor to plea..c merit a continuance of phblic patro ERB United States c10th..14 Store r sig Coat, No. 42 North Qugen st . , east aryge et., Lancaster, Pa.! K - oniguaaclaer Baum ners and Carriers Si.ore, back ti erwell's Commission Mfarehouee, f Railroad and North Prince street. CI or approved credit. Constantly on j sr.ortment of all kinds Saddler's an Leather, of superior quality, includ celehrlted Sole Leather," also, L well stretched, s•titable for all kinds ninny length and width required, Tier quality of Leather, Furnace and Lacing Leather, Garden Hose, . Currier's Tools, Moroccos, Shoe p t All kinds of Leather bough' in tit est price . given for Ilitles.and Skint. i will be promptly at traded to. EAGLE ,HOTEL 4i. a D. aIE Ec Il , lr - ORM the public, that they hat ted up this old and well known Queen street, two doors south of Eh I first rate style, and that they are no entertain travellers and d . therein the ner. Their Ba'r..will always be sup choicest liquoisad their Table wit' the market affords. They also beg that they continue their LIVERY ~STABLE, where cad at all times be had, a go. Horse, Buggy, Barouche,Carriage, bus, ou the most reasonable terms all who may favor thorn ivith their c. effort. will .paired to !ender sattsl ninir 1 IThomas Arm i are of Impostors :nt a repetition of tn during the last i i e "who travelled .d themselves as I exhibited forged tls twice that all diorme, author -1 egally executed au Henry Simp -0 1 my'name and . I believe them acquainted with ng Rods, which they cen be ob, schemes 'have I and the public and ; thousands I rchasing useless Rods, having n points, either, 1, .g. My Electro n examined by the world, who only rode that !I culated to save by lightning -1,, ry M 2 Murtrie, I; neon, of the U. 1 . E. Waller and in the highest will meat with (d ecrolle made kinds of weath- will locate hlm t No. 21 North Augustus Cann, wners in those to call on them ' MITAGE. 011 h, Phila. tf-10 ant Tall , orth Queen and inlly 'raga leave a or Lancaatet general, to the ,nd boys' Spring ig, that he has l ime manufactu , hionable - man z: 'Tweed Habit, p een Cloth, Cro -8 Coats, Frock ey and Monkey mixed, barrel, Linen Drilling, f 4 different col alpaca, Canal figured, stn atria and eol ith and German d other fabrics season, all of a plain mall 9asonal:le dis iravats, Stocks, Ito Suspenders, his friend I' • J KRAMPH arts may mer .ch 25 3m-I0 Forges.- BEN & CO, 0. •12 North 6 turret, Lan lin of again ro.! leront, patrons I Ir, ti!, co, and tine° to that' hat they havit AND SUM. , variety and .ver reeled nwact r, arra ,g, adapted to afire aatisfae and superior a liberal corn establishment, d are now fel ,r them with a ' Ing at the very may be found b, made in the eh Clothe. I, brown, blue, lured Cegsimere f every demi- is of new :it'll' lentia, Cash• edir and satlr: lassimere Pont' lon prices for y far the lar. YS' CLOTH. Pummer ' that ( ling of Boys' nta , nd rests °natant add, n. ,e and .tiguted IPocket Hand-, [ eil, Hosiery & ol Black and • eta. Queens doesktn and a great variety to and vests abort notice. I st roasonatile I htit the Cloth ' of their atvi. heed. maim, to but, customers, to age. N & r °Film Striped side, near Or rp.p d tf- I an, Taft , . f Robt. Mod onting on the. .enp for Caah, and a full as 4 Shocmaker , a ~, I ng "Rouzer , a . alher Bands, f machinery, i de of a snipe. ellm,i, B an d iannor , a Oil, dings, &c. rough ; high. cash ; ardent 'Cab 1 ly-3 1 g p le recently fit tand in North '• Railroad, to • prepared in - ery hest mac lied with the the heat that ;lity. 1 stsio •=ti , aad genteel • lky,nr Omni They Rasura atom, that no , aTion. -1&-tf
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers