Lancaster intelligencer. (Lancaster [Pa.]) 1847-1922, August 01, 1854, Image 1

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‘‘ THAT COITNTRY IS THE MOST PROSPEROUS WHERE LABOR COMMANDS THE O.II.EATESI' REWARD:'—itErol. I.
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i '
VOL. LV.
tANCASTER INTELLIGENCTIR do auENAI,
PIHILISHZD WETLY TIMIDLY stozmis,
BY GEO. SANDERSON.
TERMS
sunscairrloN.—Two Dollars per amnia, payable
in :advance; two twenty-five, if not paid within six
months; and two fifty, if not paid Within the year.
No struscraption discontinued until all arrearages are
paid olden at the option of the Editor.
ADVERTlZEMMits—Liceompazied by the CASH, OM not
exceeding one square, will be inserted three times for
one dollar and twenty-five cents ler each additional
insertion. Those of a greater length in proportion.
/011-PHINTINGI —Such as Hand Bills, Posting Bills, Pam
ph.ets. Blanks, Labels, Ice., /cc., executed with cc
curacy and at the shorteat notice.
The Bridal Day.
EMEEI
She leans beside her mirror, in her old accustomed pia e,
Yet something unfamiliar is on her lovely tam; '
She wears a wreath, a snow white wreath, whirls yet she
It gives a palenesa to the cheek, unknown to it iwfore
Tho maiden goeth to the grove, and, of the flowers bo
neath,
She takes the illy or the rose. to bind her midnight
wreath;
But of one plant she gathers not, though fair its blossoms
Only the bride bath leave to wear buds from the orange
tree.
Once, only once that wreath Is worn—once only may she
wear
The pale white wreath of orange-flowers within her shi
fling hair;.
They wear, upon their soft wan lioom, the shade of coming
years;
The spiritual presence is around ~of human hopes and
fears.
Ay, let her soft and thoughtful eyes, upon her mirror
dwell, . •
For, in that long and tender look, she taketh her farewell
Of all her youth's unconsciousness, of all her lighter cares.
And fur a deeper. sadder life—a woman'.. lot—prepares.
She leaves her old familiar place, the hearts tied were her
The lore to Irhich she trusts herself is yet n thing un
Tho Ugh at One name her cheek turn red, though sweet it
be in hear,
Yet for that name she must resign so much that has tn•en
dear.?
It is an anxious happiness,—lt is a fearful thing.
When first the maiden's small white hand puts on the gel
den rink;
She passefh from her father's house, unto another's care.
And who may say what troubled hours, what sorrows wait
her there?
Ali! loin and life are mysteries, both blessing and both
blest:
Anl yet how much they teach the heart of trial and un
rest
Sweet maiden, while these troubled thoughts 'mid bridal
thneies sweep,
Well may'l4 tk , ou pensive watch thi glass, and turn aside
to weep!
GETTING , 4 FITS " IN A CLOTHING
STORE
Lewistowii Falls, Me., is a place, it is !
You can't exactly find it on the map, for
it has been located and incorporated since
Mitchell's latest, but it's there—a manu
facturing city, as large as life, with banks,
barber shops, newspapers and all the usual
fixtures and appurtenances of a locomotive,
go-ahead Yankee settlement.
_ .
Just about the newest thing, in the new
city, is a new, cheap clothing store that
"riz up" or "rained down," lately, on the
Jonah's gourd or Aladdin's pain.o p 5;....1
ple, and which, by the same mysterious
dispensation, became endowed with a coup
le of the cutest Yankee salesmen that the
Dirigo State ever turned out. T'other day
an up-river young 'un, who is about to for
sake both father and mother and cleave
unto Nancy Ann, came down to get his
wedding suit, and was, of course, "jest nat
erally baound" to find his way into the
new clothing store. Not that he saunter
ed in with the easy swagger of the town
bred searcher after cheap clothing; for the
vernal tint was tolerably fresh on him yet,
and lie stopped to give a modest rap at the
door. He had effected an entrance at the
grist-mill and at the . 4 Journal" office,where
he had been doing business,' in the same
unobtrusive manner, and the boys all
agreed that Mr: Nehemiah Newbegin was
from, "the Gulley," and was paying his vir
gin visit to "Pekin."
Nehemiah was let in ccimejitly," and he
was delighted at the cordial reception he
met with.
The proprietors were ready to, "forward
his suit" at once, if he "saw fit," or they
would "take measures" and "furnish him
to order" Nehemiah drew a hand-bill from
the top of his hat, and spread it upon his
knee for easy reference. It wa headed in
fat Gothic letters
"Winter Clothing at Cost !"
and set forth that, in consequence of the
mildness of the season, over five hundred
thousand dollars worth of ready-made
clothing was to be closed up and sold out
at an •
“Enormous Sacrifice !”
A list of prices followed, and Nehenfiah
running his stumpy fingers down the col
umn, lit with emphasis on a particular
item.
'Say !—v'ye got enny of these blew
cotes left, at five dollars 'nd five n'af 'nd
six dollars—got enny on 'em left V
'Smith, are there any of those cheap
coats left enquired the 'perlite' Mark of
his partner. 'We sold the last this morn
ing, did we not?'
Smith understood the cheap clothing
business; and answered promptly, 'All gone
sir !'
'Jest s'l'xpected,' iturmured the disap
pointed candidate, 3 darnation seize't all !
I told dad they'd be all gone !'
'We have a very superior article for ten
dollars'
'Scacely, Squire, scacely !—ten dollars
is an all fired price for a cote !'
'We can make you one to order.'
! but I want it now—want it rit
strut off—fact is Squire, I must hey 'un.'
cYoU'd find those cheap at ten dollars.'
`Dun know baout it ! Say, v'ye got en
ny of these dewrable doeskin trowses left,
at tew dollahe<ld them all tew, spect,
haint ye? .h mt none o' them left nether,
hey' ye ?'
Luckily there were a few left, and Ne:
hemiah was advised to secure a pair at
once. Nehemiah was open for a trade,
but acting up the 'instincts of the Newbe
gins, it must be a dicker.
'Dew yeou ever tek prodjeuice for your
clothing .V
'Take what V
'Prodjeuce—garden sass and sich—don't
dew it, dew yeou?'-
'Well, occasionally we do; what have
you to. sell_?'
"'Oh, almost anythin'; a leefle of every
thing, from marrow-fat peas down to rye
straw; got some new cider, some high-top
sweethlgs;got some of the all-161,1;11'1d
dried punkin yeou ever sot eyes on; spebt,
neow, yeim'cl like some of that dried pun
kin.'
Mark declined negotiating for the (dried
punkin,' but inquired if he had any good
butter.
o a-0 7 4a-d butter ! naow, Squire, I ex-
pect I've got some of the nicest and yaller
est yeou ever sot eyes on; got some out
here naow; got some in a sooger box, eout
in dad's waggin; bro't it daown fer Kur
nul Waldron, but yeou ken hev' it; I'll
bring it right strut • in here, darned of I
4loan't !' and with all. the impetuosity of
youth, Nehemiah shot forth to 'dad's wag
gin,' and brought in the butter.
On the strength of the butter, a dicker
was speedily contracted, by which Nehe
miah was to be put in immediate and abso
lute possession of a coat, vest and panta
loons, all of good material and fit,
'Now, then,' said Mark, 'what kind of a
coat will you have
'I reckon I'll hev' a blew 'un, Squire.'
'Yes, but what kind—a dress coat 1'
"Certainly, Squire, certainly, jest'what I
want a coat for, tew dress in.
'Ah, exactly; well, just look at those
plates,' pointing to the fashion-plates in
the window, 'and see what style you fan-
'Oh, darn yeour plates, daon't want any
crockery; speck Nance has got the al-kil
lin'est lot of arthen ware yeou ever sot
eyes on !'
'Yes, I see; well, just step this way,
then, and I think I can accommodate you.'
Nehemiah speedily selected a nice, blue
coat, and vest of green, but he . was more
fastidious in his choice of pants, those
crowning glories of his new suit. He seem
ed to indulge a weakness for long panta
loons, and complained that his last pair
had troubled him exceedingly, or as he ex
pressed it, ccblamedly," by hitching up
over his boots, and wrinkling about the
knees. Nehemiah delved away impetuous
ly amidst a stack of two or three hundred
pairs, and finally his eyes rested upon a
pair - of lengthy ones, real blazers, and with
wide, yellow stripes running each way.—
Nehemiah snaked them out in a twinkling.
He liked them—they were long and yel
low—they were just the thing, and he pro
ceeded" at once to try them on. The-new
clothing store had a nook curtained off for
this purpose, and Nehemiah was speedily
closeted therein.
The pants had straps, and the straps
were buttoned; Now Nehemiah had seen
straps before, but the art of managing
them was a mystery, and like Sir Patrick's
dilemma, 'requited a mighty dale of con
sideration." • On deliberation', he decided
that the boots must go first; he according
ly drew on his Bluchers, mounted a chair,
elevated the pants at proper angle, and
endeavored to coaxthe legs into them. But
he had a time of it. His boots were none
of the smallest, and the pants, though long,
were none of the widest; the chair, too,
was ricketty, and bothered him, but, bend
ing his energies to the task, he succeeded
in inducting one leg into the 'pesky things.'
He was straddled like the Colossus of
Rhodes, and just in the act of raising the
other foot, when a whispering and giggling
in his immediate vicinity, made him alive
to the appalling fact that nothing but a
thin curtain of chin+,
twenty or thirty of the prettiest, and wick
edest girls that were ever caged in one
shop ! Nehemiah was a bashful youth,
and would have made a circumbendibus of
a mile, any day, rather than meet those
girls, even had he been in full dress; as it
was, his mouth was ajar at the bare possi
bility of making his appearance amongst
them in his present dishabille. What if
there was a hole in the curtain ! What if
it should fall ! It would'nt bear thinking
of, and, plunging his foot into the vacant
leg, with a sort of frantic looseness, he
brought on the very catastrophe he was so
anxious to avoid. The chair collapsed with
a sudden 'scrouch,' pitching Nehemiah'
head over heels through the curtain, and
he made his grand entrance among the
divinitie's upon all fours, like a fettered
rhinoceros.
Perhaps Collier himself never exhibited
a more striking group of tableaux vivantes
than was now displayed. Nehemiah was
a 'model,' every inch of him, and though
not exactly 'revolving on a pedestal,' he
was going through that movement quite as
effectually on his back, kicking, plunging;
in short, personifying in thirty seconds all
the attitudes ever 'chiselled !' As for the
gals, they screamed of course, jumped up
on chairs and cutting board, threw their
hands over their faces, peeped through
their fingers, screamed again, and declared
'they should die, they knew they should'!'
'Oh Lord ! blubbered the distressed
and bashful young 'un, 'don't holler so
galls, don't! I did'nt go tew, I swan to
man I did'nt; it's all owin' to those cussed
trowsers every mite on't. Ask yer boss,
he'll tell ye how 'twas. Oh Lordy, won't
nobody kiver me up with old clothes, or
turn the wood box over me. Oh Moses in
the bullrushes ! what'll Nancy say 1'
He managed to raise himself on his feet,
and made a bold splurge toward the door,
but his a entangling alliances" tripped
him up again, and he fell "kerslap" upon
the hot goose of the pressman! This was
the'nnkindest cut of all. The goose had
been heated expressly for thick cloth seams,
and- the way it fizzled in the seat of the
new pants was afflicting to the wearer.—
Nehemiah riz up in an instant, and seizing
the source of all his troublea by the slack,
he tore himself free from all save the straps
and some pantalet like fragments that hung
about his ankles, as he dashed through the
door of the emporium, at a two-forty pace:
Nehemiah seemed to yearn with the poet,
for a lodgelin some vast wilderness," and
betrayed a settle purpose to " flee from the
busy haunts of men," for the last seen of
him he was capering up the railroad—cut
ting like a scared rabbit, the rays of the
declining sun flickering and dancing upon a
broad expanse of shirtail that fluttered
gaily in the breeze, as he headed for the
nearest woods.—Yankee Blade.
From Housghold Words.
MISSING A ➢TARRIED GENTLEMAN
The readers of Nathaniel Hawthorne's
Twice Told Tales will remember a very cu
rious speculative essay on the subject of a
gentleman, who took the strange whim of
suddenly absenting himself from his wife
and family, and remaing concealed for ma
ny years in the neighborhoad of his own
home, for the 'purpose of observing their
conduct after his supposed death.
It is an old newspaper story, and was
found, I believe, by Mr. 4wthorne„in an
American journal. A yeat, or two ago it
was, also related in a London weekly pa
per,
,the scene then beinkin the suburbs of
the nistiopolis;. and Iremember a fewyears
liaok to have Diet with it in in a French pa
per, .wherein•the circumstances 'were stated
of - recent oopurreneeCt!Le mysterious hus
band' beiig„_nO" other ',than our old friend
the SiCui X:, pro bac "vice, drp,per in the
~. , .
CITY OF LANCASTER, TUESDAY MORNING, AUGUST 1, 1854.
Rue St. Honore e The various versions are
evidently taken from one another; but the
original story, which differ scarcely in any
thing but names, is found in Dr. William
King's", Political and Literary - Anedotes
of his own Times." Dr. King was a well
knoWn scholar and a busy literary man, in
the early part of the century. His anec
dotes were discovered by accident, in man
uscript, about forty years ago only ; but
they were well ascertained to be genuine.
The story referred to appears to be authen
tic, and to those who have not yet met
with it may be found an interesting addi
tion to the stories of "Disappearances" in
earlier numbers pf Household Words.—
About the year seventeen hundred and six
I knew one Mr. Howe, a sensible, well na
tured man, possessed of an estate of seven
or eight hundred per annum. He married
a young lady of good family in the West
of England; her maiden name was Mallet;
she was agreeable in her person and man
ners and proved a very good wife. Seven
or eight years after they had been married,
he rose one morning very earls:, and told
his wife that he was obliged to go to the
Tower to transact some particular business.
The same day at noon, his wife received a
note from him, in which he informed her
that he was under the necessity of going
to Holland and should probably be absent
three weeks or a month. He was absent
from her seventeen years; during which
time she neither heard from him, or of him.
The evening before he returned, whilst she
was at supper, and with some of her friends
and relations—particularly one Dr. Rose,
a physician—who had, married her sister,
a billet, without any name subscribed, was
delivered to her, in which the writer re
quested the favor of her to give him a
meeting in the Birdcage Walk, St. James'
Park. When she had read the billet, she
tossed it to Rose, and said laughing;" you
see, brother, as old as I am, I have got a
gallant." Rose, who perused the note
with more attention, declared it to be Mr.
Howe's handwriting. This surprised all
the company, and so much affected Mrs.
Howe that she fainted away. However,
she soon recovered, when it was agreed
that Dr. Rose and his wife, with the other
gentlemen and ladies who were at 'supper,
should attend Mrs. Howe the next evening
to the Birdcage Walk. They had not bees
there more than five or six minutes, when
Mr. Howe came to them; and, after salu
ting his friends and embracing his wife,
walked home with her and they lived to
gether in great harmony from that time to
the day of his death.
But the-most curious part of my tale re
mains to be related. London is the only
place in all Europe where a man can find
a secure retreat or remain, if he pleases,
many years unknown. If he pays, con
stantly for his lodging, for his provisions
and'for whatsoever else she wants, nobody
will ask a question concerning him, or in
quire whence he comes, or whither he goes.
When Mize. I.:- -. uiey iivea in a
nouse ermyn-street, near St. James'
,Church. He went no further than to a lit
tle street, in Westminster, where he took
a little room, for which he paid six shillings
a week ; until changing his name, and dis
guising' himself by wearing a black wig,
(for he was a fair man,) he remained in
this habitation during the whole time of his
abseTtee., He had two children by his wife
when he separated from her, who were both,
living at the time, but they both die d
young in a few years after. However, du
ring their lives, the second or third year
after their father disappeared, Mrs. Howe
was obliged to apply for an act of Parlia
ment to procure a proper settlement of her
husband's estate, and a provision for her
self out of it during his absence, as it was
uncertain whether he was alive or dead.—
This. act he suffered to be solicited and
passed, and enjoyed the pleasure of read
ing the progress of it in the votes, in a little
coffee-house near his lodging, which he
frequented.
Upon his quitting his house and family
in the 'manner I have mentioned, Mrs.
Howe imagined, as she could not conceive
any other cause for such an elopement, that
he contracted a large debt unknown to her,
and by that means involved himself in dif
ficulties which he could not easily sur
mount; and for some days she lived in
continual apprehension of demands from
creditors, or seizures and executions. But
nothing of this kind happened; on the con
trary, he did not only leave his estate free
and unencumbered, but he paid every
tradesman with whom he had any dealings;
and upon examining his papers in due time
after he was gone, proper receipts and dis
charges were found from all persons, wheth=
er tradesmen or others, with Avhom he had
any manner of transactions, or money con
cerns. Mrs. Howe, after the death of her
children, thought proper to lessen her fam
ily of servants and the expense of her
housekeeping, and therefore removed from
her house in Jermyn-street to a little house
in Brewer-street, near Golden • square.—
Just over against her lived one Salt, a
corn-chandler. About ten years after his
disappearance, Mr. Howe contrived to
make acquaintance with Salt; and - at length
acquired such a degree of intimacy with
him that he usually dined there once or
twice a week. From the room in which
they ate, it was not dicffiult to look into
Mrs. Howe's dining room, where. she gen
erally sat and received her company; and
Salt (who believed Howe to be a bachelor)
frequently recommended •his own wife to
him as a suitable match. During the lastsev
en years of Howe's absence, he went every
Sunday to St. James' Church, and used to
sit in Mr. Salt's seat, where he had a view
of his wife, but could not easily be seen by
her.
After he returned hoine, he never would
confess even to his most intimate friends,
what was the real cause of such singular
conduct. Apparently there was none; but
whatever it was, he was certainly ashamed
to own it. Dr. Rose has often said to me
that he believed his brother Howe would
never have returned to his wife if the mon
ey he took with him, which was supposed to
have been one or two thousand pounds, had
not been all spent; and he must have been
a - good economist, and frugal in his man
ner of living, otherwise his money would
have scarcely held out; for I imagine he
had his whole fortune by him (I mean what
he carried away with him) in money or bank
bills, and•daily took out of his bag, like the
Spaniard in Gil Blas, what was sufficient
for his expenses. 'Yes, I have seen him,
after his returri, addressing his wife in the
language of a bridegroom. And I have
been'asiurea by some of her most intinnte
friends that he treated her, during the rest
of their lives, with the greatest affection.
Dr. 'King adds in a note, -that he was
well acquainted with Dr. Rose, and also
with Salt; that he often met them at
Coffee House,nearGolden Square, (Dr. :ging
was an active Jacobite, and Dr. Rose was
of French connections:) and that they fre
quently entertained him with their remark
able story; relating these and many oilier
particulars which had escaped his memory.
From the Bosttot Posit
PENNSYLVANIA, AND ONB OF HER OBITOES,
I
The speech of Hon. John L. Dawson at
the great Democratic gathering in Pliila-•
delphia on the 4th, was just the thing, for
the occasion—fresh; earnest, and happily
seizing upon the sympathies engendered by
that immortal day. A man who would
"get off" a dry disquisition in .Indepen
dence square, surrounded by an enthusi
astic Democracy, on the 4th of July, could
never obtain the thundering applause which
greeted Mr. Dawson's effort, and, in our
opinion, would not deserve it. On that
day the great truths and doctrines of De
mocracy may be "fresh remembered," but
they should rather be announced, likethe
sudden roar of cannon, than elaborate in
the tedium of a turbid oratory, playing ike
heat lightning in the distance.
The resolves passed on the occasion, and
which we have published, in accordance
with the spirit of freedom, denounced inre
ligious intolerance, and all secret, ro
scriptive, mysterious organizations, as of
in harmony with our republican - syst in;
but in speaking to these resolutions, li.
Dawson, who is a representative- in eon:
gress from a district remote from Philadel
phia, forbore any remark which might of
fend even one of his audience in that me
tropolis, in view of recent political ac'lon.
On the contrary, he thus giacefullyl
re
ferred, in the first place, to the act of con
solidation under which the late elecion
: "Appropriate for the ay
was holden
1 1 1
which hallows in our affection the unio of
•States, is a word of congratulation upon the
union of your municipalities. Auspieibus
of good for your future may be the act of
your consolidation !" He then, spoke of
Philadelphia as, excepting London,he
largest manufacturing city of the WO Id,
and as the natural market for the grea est
deposits of coal and iron upon the gl e,
i ,
which deposits she reaches by "those ne es
of iron," the railroads. Upon those vqins
I and arteries of intercourse; .Mr. Daw'on
naturally passes out into the CO):11111 n
wealth, which he eulogizes like a true . nd
loving son. He asks, and scarcely nth
exaggeration, -
"What find we among her sister Sta es
comparable with her ? With a happy i)o
-sition in respect to climate, which, while
severe enough to impart energy to Or in
habitants, is yet mild enough to present
Nature ih her most interesting and agree
able phases; her landscape presents evsry
variety of bauty and grandeur; and wllie
,politically the balance wheel of the confnd
, k___ ~.._..._ .______:"..2.a.% 7 ~_. .____.______:"..2.a.% 7 t, t,until CPI
the most commanding importance. Her
eastern border, washed by the waters of
the Delaware, and touching at one extrem
ity upon the great lakes; penetrated by the
noble Susquehanna and its north and wlest
branches, by the Juniata, by the Ate
ghany and the Monongahela; her surface a
tissue of railways and canals, she holds, at
the same time upon the west the keysl of
the Mississippi. (Enthusiastic Cheering.)
With the finest coal fields in the world,
her eastern Atlantic slope has a market
limited only by the seaboard, while that
upon the west extends to the gulf of Max
ico. The Alleghany range which divi es
her eastern and western portions, is rea ly
a mountain of iron, covered with exliau t
less forests of valuable timber, and wh se
soil even is richer than a great portion of
New England. It is also pertinent to he
occasion to remark, that upon these lo ty
summits the patriots, casting eyes eastw rd
and rejoicing in the commercial greatn ss
of the nation, and westward in her a,, •i
-cultural wealth, cannot but feel impresqed
with the conviction that here, in these iin
pregnable fortresses of Nature, the liber
ties of his country • will find their last (in
trenchments. (Great cheering.)
I have referred- to the great lines of In
tercommunication between the Delaware
and the Ohio. But similar works are ev
erywhere in progress. Tunneling the
mountains, or following the valleys in their
serpentine course, they form, together
with the canals, a-complete network intr
lacing your - whole Atlantic slope: while
the same iron arms are reaching out o
wards the lakes to grasp a portion of e
trade of those inland seas, br piercing e
most distant and inaccessible portions of
the State to draw forth from each, to t is
great mart, its peculiar products. ((Meals.)
But little inferior to New York in square
miles of surface—greatly superior• to er
in domestic resources—in the character of
1
her population she boasts a similar desce t,
and has the same retrospect in revoluti n
ary memories. The commonweaith of P• I u
inviting to settlement, by its foundation
deeds of peace, in charity, tolerance,
a
brotherhood, not alone the English,
Germans of superior character, and the.
venturous and enterprising of other E
pean States found here a chosen retreat
In the words of the lamented bard,
wrote so well that he has left us to reg
that he wrote so little—
"For here the exile met from every clime.
And spoke in friendship every distant tongue.
Men from the blood of warring Europe spruns
Were but divided'by the running brook."
And here,
-The blue-eyed German changed his sword to pruo
hook."
The patriotism of this varied populati
has demonstrated itself upon many a bloo
field. .While Pennsylvania presents.
Fort Necessity and Braddock the earli
scenes upon which the father of his cot
try exhibited his youthful prowess, ker
gallant sons crossed the Delaware, thid
participated in nearly all the battles of the
revolution till its final and triumphant
close. (Great cheering.) '
i i
This, even as we read it coolly in N w
England, sounds like true and hearty e o
quence. Addressed to the ears of Pe =
sylvani ans, it must have been cxceedinkly
effective, giving them a high opinion of he
speaker's power, good sense, catholicity
and patriotism. They will not fail to chbr
class of statl
ish his talents, as they applauded his Wor s.
Mr. Dawson belongs to the.
men whose career of usefulness is not et
accomplished, and who have the ambit on
1
to acquire further distinction at the ha ds
of their' fellow citezens by contintuld a
bors in their behalf. It has everbeen he
pride and pleasure of a Democratic•coreiti
tuency to advance ,those who, serve th•m
with ability and fidelity, las' Mr: - Dam: on
has done while in'Congress. He has b • en
a zealous and Intiform adveoate of all. he
Democratic measures, and has givenPresi 7
dent Pierce and his administration a cor
dial support. At home, in Pennsylvania,
his services-to the good cause have been
rendered without stint, and have met with
a generous appreciation. His exertions
will not, we trust, be relaxed in the ensu
ing campaign, during which the: efforts of
every real friend of the Union and the Con
stitution will be needed to .withstand the
onslaught that is to be made upon Demo
cratic principleS and men by the combined
factions of lhe opposition. Wishing Mr.
Dawson a.ndleiir'fellow Democrats of Penn
sylvania the sane success in the ensuing
contest which they have hitherto so often
won in popular combats with their many
headed enemy, we cannot' better close this
brief notice than by copying the conclud
ing paragraph of his address in Independ
ence Square:—
We should not suffer it to be forgotten
that here, in ;this very city, Franklin found a
theatre for the exercise of his extraordinary
genius. Here as a printer, he becaine the
fabricator of his own fortune; as a patriot
he wrote, counselled and struggled for the
independence of his country; and here, as
a philosopher, he disarmed the lightning.
(Cheers) Here Godfrey invented the quad
rant by which the mariner, upon the path.
less ocean is enabled with accuracy to de
termine his•position. Here West taught
the canvass to reveal the eye of fire, the
form of beauty, and the living landscape.
Ilere, upon the waters of the Delaware,
Fulton began those experiments in steam
which resulted in the perfecting of the
greatest of human inventions, (great cheer
ing;) whose mighty fruits are now seen in
the steamers which are crossing the ocean,
defying wind and wave—which are vexing
every sea, and threading the rivers of every
continent. (And here Rittenhouse found
the earth too, limited a sphere for his gen
ius, and the glass conducted him to the
heavens, where his philosophy had full
scope amid ,the splendour of a thousand
worlds. (Cheers) Within the city of Phil
adelphia—in that ancient and honored
building, under the shadow of whose walls
this mighty concourse of freemen is now as
sembled—American freedom had her birth,
[Cheers]; and this is the last spot in the
confederacy where that freedom will find
a grave. [Great cheering.] True to the
constitution and the Union of the states—
"sink or swim, live or die, survive or per
ish,—she will be the last to yield either."
GEORGE: w. H'ELROY,
ATTORNEY AT LAW.
—OFFICE—E Oraose street, - directly opposite
the Sheriffs Office. Lancaster.
may .3 :11S
andisS, Black, Attorneys at
I_4L.IIV. Office-011u door cast of Swopos
East King Street, Lancaster, Petinla.,
k}-Ail kinds of lerivening, such as writing Wills,
Deeds, Mortgag es ,A CCM] nts, wil I be attended
to with correctness and despatch
april I
_ -
Ljk emovai HIP:sTER--Attor
ney at Law. Has removed to an office in
North Duke Street, nearly opposite the new Court
House, Lancaster, Pa. [april 11 6m-I2
nr. John ll , Ca ll a, Dentist— 111
O , P
1.1 No. 4 Ea-4 King street, Lancaster, Pa.
april 18
TT II: Swart*, Attorney at .ILaw
._olTice North Duke strest, east side, a fey
doors north of the New Court Mouse, and adjoin
ing the rase of N. Ellrnaker, F,sq.
aprti 6 3m-I I
Dr. J. 'HMI'S 4 . 1. 5 HONTE•
°PAT , (111 PHYSIMAN.—OtIice and res
dence No. 13 East Orange st., nearly opposite the
new German Relltrined Church. [march 7 11%7 •
(4.111f),)re Sui*eon I.lq.nlW con
ty • tin,nns to practirle his prolosAon in its voriou
branches on the most approved principles. OM,
S. E. Corner N. Queen and Orange streets. N. I
Entrance 211 door on Orange street
'nov. 1, 1553 nr-E
nentislry.--The first premkrn, a vperiar
LI cam or In :trialients,.was awarded to (Pr. Jahn.
Waylin, D : D. S., by the Baltimore College al
tal Surgery, Bit the greatest prolidieny in the
t udy and art of Dentistry as taught in the
trait. Onini! No. 58, North goteen street. Lan
an ter. Pa. kIIIV 3 1.1-42
Darite ST, 11:tlinr.--tatorneysi at
t LNW.—Samnel Parke and Daniel G. Raker,
hi+ mttlrq I iat • , -:).artnerallin in the practive of
t o r •re,aeion
Orrice, South Queen Street, west ,ide, 6th door
south . olthe f.nneaF,ter Bank..
T • •nePiPilli. Attorney ot
sLAIV, Borough, Lancaster en.
I uno 11 tl-21
Vail and Winter Clothing.---The
.1' sultwrilwn. has now ready for sale at his old
stand, No. 311 North Queen st. 3 between the Na
tional House and Spangler>s nook Stbre, one of the
most elegant assortments ofFal! and Winter Cloth
ing, ever offpred to the public of Lancaster coun
ty.
The prices of Clothing at this house. have beet.
redttced to Such a very low standard that it is now
within the phwer of all who wish to wear good
clothes.
The assortment consists of Overcoats of every
description, Dress, Frock and Sack coats, a great
variety of Box coats, Monkey coats,.&c.
Superfine Caseirnere pants, black and fancy.—
Silk and Satin vests,.and a fine variety of Vales
oi other vests. Also shirts, collars, stocks,
pocket - handkerchiefs, suspenders;Glove:, hosiery
&c. ; and all other articles generally kept in this
line" of business.
All articles sold at this establishment warranted
what they are represented to be; as they are man
ufactured under the immediate superintendence of
the subscriber.
The following is a list of prices of some of the
articles :
Overcoats at from
Superfine Dress Coats
" Frock "
Cloth Sack • C' •
Satin Vesta, 2
Valencia; &c. 1 25
Superfine Cassitnere Pants 3
blk. << CC 4
Satinett e, 2
Also a splendid assortment ofgoodz in the F4ce.
Superfine French and English Cloths and (Instil
mores of every huo and shade, Satin, Silk and Va
lencia vestings, Sattinelts, 4-c., all of whicl will
be made to order at the shortest notice and iii the
neatest and best manner. All garments warrant
ed to fit.
y
'on
.s
in
,•st
BOY'S CLOTHING ALWAYS ON HAND
The public are respectfully invited to calk and
examine the superior assortment of defiling at
this establishment, sign of the red coat, No. 311
North Queen street, between the National House
and Spangler's Book Store.
non. 8
GEORGE BRYAN.]
F—
or sale .--$ 3,000 Lancaster City 6 per cent Coupon Bounds in amounts of $5OO °sett.
$5,000 Lancaster City 5 per tent. Bonds in
amounts to suit. . J. F. SHRODER &
J. F. SHRODER & CO., BANKERS.—This
Company will pay interests on Deposits as follows:
Deposits payable on demand 5 per cent.' for all
time over 15 days.
do. in 1 year per cent.
may 2 tf-15
rnamental; Shade - and Fruit
O
Treei, Evergreens, Flowering Shruba,.
.--
Plants,
Vines, Roses, &c. In great variety and size .,
suitable for planting the present season
Cultivated and for sale at the Nursery and .
Garden oft he .übscriber, and at his . standa in the
city, in the Market, below Sixth at., Philadelphia.
MI orders carefully attended to, and for-warded
with despatch. Catalogue furnished minpplication.
Address " S. MALIMY,
Rising Sun P. 0. Philadelphia.
;0-12.
ACard.—Dr. S. P. ZIEGLER, oilers 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 (Thema streets, where he can lie con
sulted at all hours, unless prefessionally engaged.
Calls promptly attended to, and charges moderate.
aprif 25 tf-14
Bryan and ShlndUl, Walnut Hall,
No. 57, North Quenn et., one door south of
Buchmuller , s Cutlery Store, and six doors north el
Sener , s Hotel Lancaster. r , Have just received an
entire New Stock . of black and fancy colored cloths,
cashmeretts, drab d 9 Eta, Queens cloth and many
new styles of goOds adaptedf
or summercoats, b'l
and colored cassimores, French Tines, and a grea
variety anew and fashionable goods for pants an
a most superior and splendid stock of new style o
vestings, stocks, cravats, handkerchiefs, suspen
ders, hosiery, &c-
A splendid assortment of fine white and fancy
shirts, collars, &c. Also a on hand a large assort-
Mont of READY MADE CLOTHING, cut and
manufactured in a superior manner, which are of
fered and aold,at the very lowest prices for each.
All orders in the tailoring line executed in the
best manner and at the shortest notice.
B. & S. return their sincere thanks for the liberal
patronage heretofore bestowed, and hope by strict
attention to business to merit.a continuance of the
same.
$3 to $lO
7 14
7 14
ladiesl Ladies! Ladies! FASHION
_l_ 4 l and iiress Making Emporiums, by Mrs. E.
GRIFFIN, No. 113 North 6th street, opposite
Franklin Square, and 188 Rico street, below Sixth.
The proprietress of the above establishments has
now the pleasure of presenting to the Ladies of
America the Spring Styles of the most admired de
signs of Parisian fatthions, in paper patterns, for
Dresses, Mantillas and Morning Robes, with a
large assortment of patterns'forChildrentsclothiug,
which cannot be surpassed I:4+ fail to please tbo most
fastidious ' at prices ranging, from 121, 25 and 50
cents each. A perfect drese pattern cut far 25 cts.
Merchants and Dress Makers are particularly in
vited to examine our , stock before purchasing else
where.
WILLIAM HENSLER.
V. 42
I M. W. SIIIRDEL
Mrs. Griffin tender's her services to ladies Wish
ing to have Dresses, Mantillas or Children's cloth
ing made.
Embroidery and - Braiding done. Pinking and
stamping for Embroidery done at the shortest no
tice.
Fancy and straw Millinery. Old Bonnets and
Hats,altered, bleached and pressed to equal new.
Mrs. G. also informs the Ladies that she
Teaches the art of Cutting: and Fitting Ladies'
Dresses, bp measuremertti for
_the sniAll sum of
$3,50, only two hours reqtrXred:p? bile learning.
Satisfaction given or money refunded.
Klarge - assortmerit Cligi t iCn's Clothing always
on hand. inlay 9.3m-16
•
States!. s l ates!:—The subriber
tiken the needy for Broiernlif building Staten,
ready at any time-to fdeaieh straie by trtrt ton or
by the.square, t the shorldet and on the
motel reasonab! a terms. Apply at 'tiay'Hardware
Store. North Queen Street.; • • •
m 7 04 4E0:15: HPREenzit
.
flold and .
.liVatthe, • Dla
moude~reivelry" and Silver Wire. The sub
scriber *mild call the attention of perm:Ms .- visiting
New York city to his'largetnd well irilected stock,
eomprishigin part ihe folldwing; which Le;
offers for sale at less than usual pricee,and: 41111-:
which will be forwarded to,all parts of the • 1 / 4 1V
United States and Canada.liy mail or express,free
of-charge :
Jules Jurgensen Watehes, • warranted perleet
time keepers, $l5O to 250.
Coopertil . atches," Duplex and Levers, $125 to
27(r. •
. • ..
•inAepenilent Second and Quarter second Watch
es for thriini horses. &c., $125 to 250.
:Chronotrieters, splendid pocket Chronometers,
perfect time keepers, $125 to 260.
Eight day: Watches, which run eight days with
once winding, $l4O to 15,5. j
cases,Ena 8 me 3 1 5 to i
Watc oo hes, for Ladies, some in hunting,
Djamond Watches for Ld'ilies, Borne in magic
cases, $55 to 300.
Magic Watches,•which change into throe differ
ent watches, $lOO to 175.
Watches, which wind and turn the hands with
nut a key. $B5 to 140.
All kinds of watches at very low prices,
Fine Gold Lepine Watches; ;4 holes jewelled, $25
Pine Gold Detached Levers, 30
Gold Enameled Watches for the Ladies, 95
Gold English Patent Levers, 35
Gold English Patent } Levers ; hunting eases, 58
silver Patent Levers as low!as 16
•
" Detached Levers, ! 14
Ladies , Gold Sets, carring4, pins and bracelets,
$l5 00 to $76 00.
Earrings 2to $25, Pins 2 to' $25,-Hrseelets $5 00
to SO 00.
Gold Locktes, one, two boar glasses $3 00 to
25 00.
,
Gold Guard Chains, . $lO 00 to DO 00
Gold Chatelaine! Chains, $lO 00 to 110 00
Gold Vest Chains, SO 00 to 85 00
Gold Fob Chains, 6 00 to 25 00
Gold Fob Seals, . 3.00 to 12 00
Gold Thimbles, 250 to 600
Gold Pencils, 1 25 to 700
Fine Gold Wedding Rings, 350 to 700
Gold Guard Keys, 100 to 600
Gold Fob Keys, 200 to 600
Gold Pens and Pencils, ; 3 50 to 16 00
Diamond Rings, - 7 00 io 250 00
,
Diamond'Earrings, ' 100 00 to 300 00
.
Diamond Pins, I 5 00 to 300 00
Gold Crones?
.
2 00 to 12 00
Gold Finger Rings, with stones, 2 00 to 15 00
Gold Sleeve Buttons per set, 2 BO to 12 00
Gold Studs per set, i 60 to 10 00
Gold Spectacles per pair, 5 00 to 9 00
Gold Eve Glasses, 1 75 to 6 00
Silver Teaspoonss per set, 5 00 to 9 00
Silver Tablespoons per set, 12 00 to 21 00
Silver TableforkS per set,"- ' 13 00 to 23 00
Silver Cups for dhildren - 500t015 00
Silver Napkin Rf i ngs-eacli, 150 to 3 60
Gold Armlets fori children per pair, 250t0 6 00
Plain Gold Ring 4, 75 to 3 00
Chased Gold Rings, 1 00 to 5 00
Silver Thimbles,isilver tops; , 37
Gold Scarf Pins,! 1 00 to 7 00
13E0. C. ALLEN,
Importer, wholesale and retail, No. II Wall st.,
second floor, nerir Broadway, New York.
jan 31 ly-2
r
Ilies. J. Wentz & Co., invite attention
to their complete stock of Ladies and Gents.
Dress and house furnishing Goods; comprising one
ol the best selectetrin the country, which tor nice
ty of styles—choice of colors, beauty of fashion
and cheapness of price, cannot be excelled.
A respectful invitation is extended to all—to call
and be assured of the'truth of the above assertion.
New and desirable Dress flOods; in this branch we
nunie rich add Lautiful P*is Robes, silk Grene
dins, stripthl and Plaid summer Silks, Clmlly De
Laines, French Lawns and Organdies, Chalky Ber
eges, French Jaconets and' Cambrics, Berege De
Laines, super wool French De Laines, pinks, blues._
greens, we., flain glace 6 ,0 to nines, gro
twit UM, nett double boiled blk silks, eagle
brand, for 81,00 worth 1,50, white goods, swiss,
mull, took, nansook, 4-c., linen goods, all quali
ties Irish linens, Riehardsons greys, &c., 3.4, 4-4
Trench grey linens, table cloths and napkins '
pil
low case linens, - birds eye, Russia and Scotch Dia
per; linen cambric hdklk. all qualities for ladies
sod - gents.; cloths, cassimers, &c-, super blk c 0 1 ,4
cloths of all grades, by the most celebrated inn
kers, English. German and A . merican; super 6-4
cashmarets; hulk and all shades: blk cashiniers and
doe skin of Sedan and other best makers; fancy
pant stuffs, drillings, nankeens, tweeds, Kentucky
J. nns, farmers drills, &c.
•
Super hlk and fancy silk and satin vestings; su
per French lace carmine, from $2 to 20,00; para
sols, parasols, plain linen, white and colored li
ning, prices from 75 cts. to $4,00, French Ging
nams, a large lot of beautiful cols and quality for
12,4 cm. worth 25 cts , Lawns, organdy, blk and
white colored, 12 cts. worth 27! cts.
But part of our induchments are aboveenumera
ted. Tim kindest attention shown to all who wish
to examine or purchase.
THOS. J. WENTZ 4-
Ciirner E. King and Centre square
The attention of those who buy by the piece,
package or dozen! is invited te our Wholesale De
partment, as we have devoted 011 C of our large
rooms exclusively for this phrpose, and other ad-,
vantageous arrangements, justifies us in asserting,
that we can furnish country merchants and pedlers,
&c•, with goods as cheap if not cheaper
than the New York or Philadelphia markets.
THOS. ..T WENTZ & CO.,
Corner E. King and Centre square.
tf-I5
la. L. Hallowell's Franklin
L.
Store. No. 202 Market street, above 6th,
under the Red Lion. Hotel, Philadelphia, is the
only place in the city where Boys , Clothing from
four years old and upwards can bepurchased.
MErr , s 'AND BOYS' CLOTHING, Wholesale and Re
tail, at the very lowest prices, for Cash only. Re l .
member No. 202 Market street, above 6th.
april 25 I 4
Donttrforget the place, No. 57, North Queen et
Laneaste. rang 9 tf-29
•
l i e
notion! C Whin I V.—Therein Arm it
Ctageis Lightning. Rods. ' ware of Impostors
xid swindlers., • li4 order e p event a repetition of
the frauds so extensively , arrt d onAtiringthiliuit
two - years , by a - slit of scoun d rels whn'traieficid
over the country,ied roping ted theinselves is.
inj agents; - and-in Many Japan : pas exhibited forged
1
certificates of age s cy, 1 owigive notice that all
my agents, carry vith -6 m p nted lornta, 'author
izing them to act a my a ant , legally'
,ezecuted
and acknowledged befarts Aid an Henry Sump
son, orPhiltulelphi • thoylhav also, my name and
,place otbq k ipess.o -their w tie: I believe them
all tote ,atrictly li est, apd. ully acquainted with
c l )
the business of put ing np Lig n ting Rods , will&
they will do at aal w a price s they tan' be ob."
taincit at the Fact ry. As y sChemes' 'have
been resorted to, t defined m seitand the public
purchasera should bo on: thei guard; thousands
have been grossly eceived b purchasing uieless
ii .
,- having
pewter, lead, copy r, sins and iron points, either;
articles in the she e of Lightning. Rode
or all of which are ood for no hing. - My, Electra
Magnet Lightning- ode, ha've been examined by
many of the
have pronounced t h em to be he only rods that
moskstientific men in the world; who
t
i a
they have over sere, which ar calculated to save
lives and property rom destru l ion by lightning—
among these are Professors Henry MiMurtrie,
Janice M>Clintock Walter•R. oblation of the U.
S. Patent O ffi ce, R. J. Carr; El i.; T. IL Waller and
litany y others who r commend em in the highest
terms of approbati n. 111
All orders whole le and roll
prompt attention. Spire, rods
to order. Cardinal points and,
cr vanes; for sale c sap.
igr' My agent, ame! C. Wi
self during the Su n nier of 185,
Queen Street, Lan aster, Pa., i
at Pennsgrovc, N. i ti. Properf
sections of the Cou try will dot
. THOMAS
doors abos,
t Vine st., 4
march 28
C .
lothlng: Ciottilug:
Sign of the . TRIPED Co.
Queen street, Et side, near
castor, Pa. The s bscrjbcrs di
turning their than s to their'
avail themselves of this opport
at the same time especefully
friends and the pu lie in gene
now ready an arise tment of Si
MER CLOTHING, that for e
cheapness will sur ass any sty
Lancaster.
Their stock is al of their or
embraces the latestistylcs of Cl
the season, 'and wa ranted to
tion to purchasers as to dural
workmanship.
Encouraged by tl
enmity, they have
and made additions
ly prepared to sup
call, with every de
lowest prices.
Among OM/ exte.
the following:
Superfine Dress
latest fashions, of k
New style supine
olive and green clo
Coats.
_Linen and
Lien
e patron, g:
enlhrged t
to their eto ,
ly e,ll who
iertption of
; , nil Frock
reach and
:a coati?, of
ha, plain an
otten Co
Double and Sing
Silks, Grenadines,
mores, die.
Superior Plain a
Vests.
c Breasted
Cassimerf
d corded
Fine. Black DOC
made in the latest
the quality. Also,,
gest r.nd cheapest a
ING, suitable for t
can be found in L,
Frock, Sack and M
of all sizes and qua
riona Will beMade
.Also, a full atm
Shirts, Collars, Bog
kerchiefs, Suspend)
Umbrellas.
Just received a II
fancy clothe, cnshi
cloth Sic. suitable
fancy cassiineres,
anew and fashion,
which will be made
in the latest radio,
terms,
in and Fa
kyle, and al
ust eomple ,
.sortntent co , '
Ile Spring o
neaster; el
nkey Coat
Wes, to wl
wring the
rtment or iwhite and figured
ome, Crate, Pocket Hand
re, Stocks , Gloves, Hosiery .&
age. assortinent of Black and
nereta, Drap de ete. Queeti.
jar coats. , )31ack doeskin and
Irendh linerul and a great variety
able goods fly pants and vestal;
I up to ortilr, at short notice,
ll,andon h r most reasonable
lease recoll i ect, that the. Cloth -
- it i all of their own
! d to be well sewed.
lup e by stritt attention to bus
aver to pl a.o customers, to
of public patronage.
thtBEN & CO.,
thing Store; sign of the Striped
Queen st.,least side, near Or
, Pa. [ap 4 tf-11
."-- -
Purchasers will
ing sold at hifi esta
make and guarante
The subsr,riliers
incite and their end
merit a continnane
United Staten CI
Coat, No. 42 Nort
align St., Lancaste
Ki -
onigniachier & man, Tan.
BRa nors and Curriern Store, back of Robt. Mod
erwelPs Commission Warehonse ' fronting.on the
Railroad and North Prince Kroh. Cheap for Cash,
or approved credit. Constant!) on hand a full ast
ssortment of all kinds Saddler s and Shoemaker's
Leather, of superior quality, including "Rouzer's
celebrated Sole Leather," also, Leather Bands,
well glretelied3 s•tit ble for all rinds of machinery,
of any length and kith requiril, made ore supe
rior quality - of Le titer, F'ur co Bellows, Band
and Lacing Leath r, Garden Bose, Tanner's Oil,
Currier's Tools, M roccos,'Shdo Findings', &c.
All kinds of Leal. er bought in the rough; high
1,
est price given for lides and S . ine in cash; orders
will he promptly at i tendedlet I [feb 1 ly-3
Exchauge Hotel, y
King street, next door we:
LancaSter, Pa.he subscril
above mentioned w ll.known la
nun Hotel, and Ita fitted it NI
some style. Ilis Wirt will be
'.s
choicest of liquors, and his TA
the very best the lVarkets can
LORS and cnAmoms are I
Malted, and his STABLING is
nothing will be ordue t ;
. on hi
‘‘ ERTH ANc , 2$ one of t hh hest
II
stopping places in he city.
1 .
crate, and every a tention wi,
comfort of the'guertte.
BOARDERS will 11 taken by
year.
From his long
flatters himself tha
may favor him with
lie patronage is to
april 18 tf-131
perience
he can eatti
heir wain
ectfully eu
wiLLTA
Drugs, Val
Dye Stuffs.
French and Sera-
Pure White Lea.l
Window Glass, e,
Superior Coach a t
a first-rate assortme j
cats, for sale at I
tg, Window Glom&
Zinc Paints
bored and namolled.
d Furnito Varniahes - ; with
t or fresh Drugs and Chemi-
. .
• :A FRED WI TBERGER I S
Drugh and Chemi al Store, i o. 169 North Sec
ond street, Philade phis..
Principal Depot ffppr the sale
Blue,Sterlinrs Sakte, Tattersall
and Barber's Embulcation
Physicians and
sent to any of Depo
may 30
iorekeepe
le free or ch,
United Sta
PHlA.—This
cbrated for its Tab,
ern style, with Lad
moat centrally sit,J
fashionable prome'
House, and near I
es Hot
ell known
es, and re
ea' Parlor:
meted on C
ade--opp,
ependenc
CAPT. CHAS. H
as, a, host is well kn.
nothing by his futur
of Satisfaction gua
him with their cont
OZ7 - Families can
telegraphing a day .
Philadeiphia, ma
MILLER whose roputation
wn, is dote mined It shall lose
p efforts. The highest degree
lantied to 'allivho may favor
I) any.
secure a suite of Rooms by
• r two in advance.
For Rent.—The
Stable and half ot of groun
street, late:the property of Mi
bright, deed, is of bred, for rec
of April iieit. • I
This is a desirabl
large rooms in front
reeled into stores,
on - the first floor an
the second floor.
her of fruit trees—a
water with a pump
PosiVision will ly
Ow for b
whiilrmig
I There are
a kitchen,
I he lot con.
d there is
n it, and a
given imm
I WIL
doors north
New Londik,
don, Chester c'
ion of thiilneliinti
Mdnday of May and
Acad
'Jolty, Pa.
, n will co
continue
TEAMS—For aim
nal extras for washi,
=DM
'MUSIC an
ruction in t,
in moat Ac
Sworn
to term;
I AMES R.
The course of ins
comprehensive than
The location is-hi
For particulars
addtess
sprii lI tt-123-
NO. 28.
il, will meat with
and enrolls made
11 kinds of v3oath•
I orin locate him
, at No. 21 North
nd Augustus Cann,
owners in those
ell to canon them
ARMIT4GE.
Twelflh;P_hila.
tf-10
,—ERBEN & CO.,
k, No. 42' North
t range atreet, Lan
sirous of again re
linumerous patrons
pity to do so, and
announce to their
al, that they have
RING AND. SUM
v tent, variety and
ieh evet_offered in
n manufacture and
lathing, adapted to
ive .entire eatiefitc
.ility_and superior
of a liberal sou::
ioir•tarnent,
and are now ful
-1 favor thern4ith-a
I °thing at the very
;ment may be found
'oats, made in the
nglieh Clothe.
lack, brown, blue,
figured Cassini*
to of every deaeri-
Vests of now style
, Valentin, Cash-
lack silk and satin
Caasirnefe Nola
very low prices for
ted, by far the lat.-
if BOYS , CLOTH
and Summer,
that
!onsieting of Boys'
Li, Pants and vests
hick constant addi
(mason.
o. 1117 East
or Lane's Store,
er. hhs taken the
rge. and commodi
in new and hand
supplied with the
E furnished with
L td. The PAR
jarge and well fur
axtensive. In short,
part to Make the
and most desirable
e charges are mod
-1 he given to the
o week, month or
the bushiest!, e
tply every body who
A share of pub-
bt T. YOVART
f Barlow's Indigo
'I; Heave Powders,
supplied. .Goods
rge.
'•I, PHlLADEL
stabliehment, eel
, relished in Mod
on the firat, (limn
ivnut street—the
'alto the .Custom
.ry - Brick House„
in North Queen
hael Hain-1!
until the lit
•
.siziess,having two
t readily be coa
-1 ibtr-rooms beside
nd six xet:o_l3 oro
ins a large nutli—
well of excellent!
,orge cistern. • '
diately. Apply to
lAM FRICK,
of the property.
• 13 - 1-r7Novr. Lon.
'he summer nea•
.enee on the thin
e months.,
$7O; erilli:th r e usu . -
oderelanguages:'.l
°rough,- and more
demiek.
le -in all'respents; r l
description, &eq..
.IcDOWF,LL,
:1