(El) c Lancaster JntdluiciuTi: VOL. LX. THE LANCASTER INTELLIGENCER. PUBUBHXD IVEB7 TUESDAY, AT VO. 8 NORTH DVRS STREET, BT GKO. SANDERSON. TERMS CBBCRIPTIOS.—Two Dollars per annum, payable in ad vance. No subscription discontinued until all arrearages are paid, unless at the option of the Editor. Advertisements. —Advertisements, not exceeding one ■ square, (12 lines,) will be inserted three times for one iollar, and twenty-five cents for each additional inser tion. Those of a greater length in proportion. Job Printing— Such as Hand Bills, Posters, Pamphlets, Blanks, Labels, Ac., Ac., executed with accuracy and at the shortest notice. 12P The splendid battle pieoe by Schiller, as trans lated by Sir E. Bulwer Lytton, is invested with new interest, at this time, when war and rumors of war prevail. We find it re-published in a late Boston paper. It was re-published, also, in this country, several years ago; the translation was then errone ously ascribed to John Oxenford. There is probably no poetry of the hind equal to this, by the great German poet, in the entire world of literature.— There have beeq grand descriptions of battles in prose—some of which are superbly grand. One of these is by an American author. We allude to Hon. Daniel P. Ihompson, of Vermont, whose word paint ing, in the last part of his “Green Mountain Boys,” of the Battle of Tieonderoga, is equal to anything in the language. Here is Schiller’s poem : THE BATTLE. FEOM THE GERMAN OF SCHILLER. Heavy and solemn, A cloudy column, the green plain they marching came Measureless spread, like a table dread For the wild grim dice of the iron game ! Looks are bent on the shaking ground Hearts beat loud with a knelling sound; Swift by the breasts that must Dear the brunt, Gallops the major along the front: ’ And fettered they Btand at the stark command. And the warriors, silent, halt! Proud in the' blush of morning glowing, What on the hill-top shines in flowing? “See you the foeman’s banners waving ?” “We see the foeman’s banders waving!” “God be with you, children and wife!” Hark to the music,—the trump and the fife How they ring through the ranks, whioh they rouse to the strife! Thrilling they sound with their glorious tone,— Thrilling they go through marrow and bone ‘ Brothers,frod grant, when this life is o'er, la the life to come that we meet once more ’ See the smoke how the lightning is cleaving asunder ! Hark. the guns, peal on peal, how they boom in their thunder! Prom host to host with kindling sound The shouting signal circles round ! ’ Ay, shout it forth to life or death ! Freer already breathes the breath ! The war is waging, slaughter raging, And heavy through the reeking pall The iron death-dice fall ’ Nearer they close, foes upon foes, “Heady!” ’ Prom square to square it goes. They kneel as one man, from flank to flank, And the fire comes sharp from the foremost rank. Many a soldier to earth is sent; Many a gap by the balls is rent; O’er the corse before springs the hinder man, That the line may not fail to the fearless van, To the right, to the left, and around and around,- Death whirls in its dance on the bloody ground, God’s sunlight is quonched in the fiery tight, Over the host tails a brooding night! Brothers, God grant, when this life is o'er, lit the life to come that we meet once more ! The dead men lie bathed in the weltering blood : And the living are blent in the slippery flood ; And the feet as they reeling and sliding go, Stumble still on the corses that sleep below. “What! Francis!”— J Give Charlotto my last fare well.” As the dying man murmurs the thunders swell, — “I’U give—o God ! are their guns so near? “Ho! comrades!—yon volley! look sharp to the war! “I’ll give tby Charlotte thy last farewell: “bleep soft! where death thickest descendeth in rain, “The friend thou forsakest, thy side may regain’-!” Hitherward, thitherward reels the fight; Dark and more darkly the day glooms into night! brothers, God grant, when this life o'er, n the life to come that we meet once more! to the hoofs that galloping go ! adjutants flying;— horsemen press hard on the panting foe, neir thunder booms, in dying, Victory! lejrothaa seized on the dastards all, And their colors fall! the brunt of the glorious fight; And th day like a conqueror, bursts on the night! ;«™d fife swelling choral along, the trnijnjj already sweeps marching in song— r^tr6w6U.^li en brothers ! though this life be o'er, Ihere s w hich toe shall meet yen once •mart * From Dices’ jj ew Serial, All the Year Hound. The Crtuje of the Snowy Desert. Late in th\^ u tnmn of the year eighteen hundred and 'fty-one, Mr. Baldwin Moll hausen, a Pruq an traveler, pursuing his investigations V Northern America, had occasion to mak a return journey across the Rooky Moutains' to the Missouri.— He started with \ne companion only, and with three horses and a mule, for riding and for carrying thi baggage. Scanty fodder, Intan treachery and the fearful cold of those pgions, produced the first disasters of the Vavelers, by depriv ing them of the serves of all four ani mals. Their last hors\ was killed by ex posure to an ioy gale, aln spot in the mis erable wilderness oalled\* n dy Hill Creek. Here, now that their last Soans of getting forward had failed them, ihiy were com pelled to stop, at a peiiol of the year when every succeeding daj ni"ht be ex pected to increase the horrois of the cold, and the chances of death by \tarvation in the prairie wastes. They had a little Indian tent-vith them, and they set it up for shelter, ?hey jj a< j also a small supply of bad buffo 0 meat, rice and Indian corn. On this tl*. exis ted miserably for a few days, until the post from Fort Kearney to the Flat Rivet hap pened to pass them. With all the will td resoue boththe travelers; the post did not possess the pav er. It was barely possible for the porsois in charge of it—their own lives depending on their getting on rapidly and husband ing their provisions—to make room for one man in their little vehicle drawn by six mules. The other man would have no help for it but to remain behind with the goods, alone in the wilderness, and to keep himself alive, if it was possible, in that dreadful position, until the post could send horses back to him from the Catholio Mission, eighty or a hundred miles off. . In this emergency—an emergency of life or death if ever there was one yet—the travelers agreed on drawing lots to decide which man was to be rescued, and whioh man was to remain. The lot to remain fell on Mr. Mollhausen. The post resumed its journey at once, with the rescued traveler squeezed into the little oarriage. Mr. Mollhausen watohed the. departure of the vehicle till it was out of sight—till he was left alone, the one living being in the white waste, the Crusoe of the snowy desert. lie had three chances—not of life—but of death. Death by cold, death by the murderous treaohery of savages, death by the teeth of wolves whioh prowled the wilderness by night. But he was a brave man, and he faced his imminent perils, and his awful loneliness, with a stout heart. He was well supplied with arms and ammunition, and the first thing he did when the post left him was to look to these. His next proceeding was to make use of the snow on the earth to keep out the snow from the heavens by raising a white wall, firmly stamped, all round his little tent. He then dragged up a supply of wood from the river near at hand and pijed it before bis door. His fireplace was a hol low in the ground, in front of his bed of blankets and buffalo hides. The food he possessed to cook at it consisted of bnffalo meat and rice. He had also some coffee. These provisions, on whioh his feeble ohance of life depended, he carefully di vided into fourteen days’ rations, having first calculated that, in fourteen days at the furthest, he might look for help from the Mission. The sum of his preparations was now oomplete. He fed his fire, set on his food to cook, and crept into his blank ets to wait for the coming of night—the first night in the desert. After a time, the silence and the soli tude weighed upon hi m so heavily, that he sought some kind of comfort and compan ionship in trying to talk to himself; but, in that forlorn situation, even the sonnd of his own voice made him shudder. The sun sank in its setting behiud snow clouds ; its last rays were trembling redly over the wilderness of white ground, when the howl of the wolves came down upon him on the icy wind. They were assembled in a ravine where the travelers’ last horse had fallen dead some days before. Noth was left of the animal but his polished bones and the rings of his harness j and over these bare relies of their feast the ravenous creatures wrangled and yelled all night long. The deserted man, listen ing to them in his tent, tried to while away the unspeakable oppression of the dark hours by calculating their varying numbers from the greater or lesser volume of the howling sounds that reaohed him. Exhaustion overpowered his faculties while b<s was still at this melanoholy work. He slept till hunger woke him the next day, when the sun was high again in the heavens. He out a notch in the polo of his tent to mark that one day was passed. It was then the sixteenth or eighteenth of No vember ; and by Christmas he vainly be lieved that he would bo safe at the Mis sion. That second day was very weary j and his strength was failing him already. When he dragged up the wood and water to his tent his feet were lame, and he stag gered like a drunken man. Hopeless and hungry he sat down on his bed, filled his pipe with willow leaves (the best substitute for tobacco that he possessed,) and smoked in the warmth of the fire, with his eyes on the boiling kettle into whioh he had thrown a little maize.— He was still thus occupied when the dreary view through the opening of his tent was suddenly changed by the appear ance of living beings. Some horsemen were approaching him, driving laden horses before them. His weapons were at hand, and, with these ready, he awaited their ad vance. As they came nearer he saw that they were Indians of a friendly tribe re turning from a beaver hunt. Within gun shot they stopped, one and of them ad dressed him in English. They aooepted his invitation to enter his tent; and, sit ting there by-his side, they entreated him, long and earnestly, to abandon the goods, to give up the vain hope of help from the Mission, and to save his life by easting his lot with theirs. ‘ The wolves,’ Baid the man who had first spoken in English a Delaware Indian— l the wolves will give you no rest, day or night; and if the men of the Pawnee tribe find you out, you will be robbed, murdered, and scalped. You have no hope of rescue. Bad horses would not live to get to you, and the whites-of the Mission will not risk good horses and their own lives to save one man whom they will give up for lost.— Come with us.’ But Mr. Mollhausen, unfortunately for himself, put faith in the Mission. He was, moreover, bravely and honorably anxious to preserve the goods, only the smaller share of whioh happened to be his own property. Firmly persuaded that his fellow white men would not desert him, and that they would bring him easier means of traveling, in his disabled condi tion, than those which the Delawares could offer, he still held to his first reso lution, and still said, ‘ No.’ The Indian rose to leave him. ‘ The word of a white,’ said the savage, ‘ is more to you than the will and deed of a Red Skin. You have had your choice —may you not deoeive yourself!’ With these words he shook Mr. Moll hausen by the hand and he and his com panions departed. They never once look ed back at the traveler or his tent, but kept on their way rapidly toward the south, and left him a doomed man. For the next eight days snow storms raged incessantly and threatened to bury him alive in his tent. Although he was, as yet, spared the pangs of hunger (the friendly Indians having increased his small stook of provisions by the leg of an ante lope), his sufferings of other kinds were indescribable. He was so lame that he had to crawl on his hands and knees when he fetched his supply of water ; his head swam, his memory failed him, and he dared not close his eyes by night for fear of the wolves. Maddened by hunger, they came nearer and nearer to him. Howling and yelling, they circled round and round the tent, closer and closer at the close of every day. One night he heard the snow out ride crackling under their feet; the next, lo saw the teeth of one of them appear tirough the leather side of his tent. He ooild only soare them away by firing at then in the darkness ; but they returned to tie attack in a few hours, and they left him no chance of sleep, till the broad day light drove them baok to their lairs. He was just strong enough on the ninth day to make the ninth notoh in the pole of the lent. On the tenth he was power less. llis courage gave way and he des paired for the first time of rescue. He had a medicine-chest with him containing a small bottle of laudanum and a case of quinine. Without forming any distinct resolution—without well knowing what he did, he put the laudanum bottle to his lips and almost emptied it. A deep swoon fol lowed the draught—he remembered;taking it and remembered nothing more. When he came to himself again it was pitoh dark and his tent poles were rocking in a gale of wind. Thirst, and in a lesser degree, hunger, were his awakening sensa tions. He satisfied the first with half melted snow and the second with raw buffalo meat. When his fire (which had dwindled to a few glimmering sparks) had been relighted, he roasted the meat and recklessly devoured three days’ rations at a meal. By the morning he was so much better (partly through the rest whioh the laudanum had give to his mind, partly through the sustenance whioh the excess of food had afforded‘to Us body) that the “THAT COUNTRY IS THE MOST PROSPEROUS WHERE LABOR COMMANDS THE GREATEST REWARD.” BUCHANAN. LANCASTER CITY. PA., TUESDAY MORNING, JUNE 21, 1859. preservation of his life beoanse once more a matter of some interest to him. He tot- tered out, leaning on his rifle, to get a little exercise. In a few days he contrived to walk as far as the top of a low hill, from which he could look forth, all round, over the lonesome prospect. By this time his provisions were at an end, and the last faint hope of resone from the Mission had died out of his jnind. It was a question, now, whether the man should devour the wolves, or the wolves the man. The man had his rifle, his ammuni tion, and his steady resolution to fight it out with solitude, cold and starvation to the very last, and the wolves dropped under his ballets, and fed him with their dry sinewy flesh. He took the best part of the meat only, and left the rest. Every morning the carcase abandoned over night was mis sing. The wolves that were living devour ed to the last morsel the wolves that were dead. He grew accustomed to his wretohed and revolting food, and to every other hardship of his forlorn situation— exoept the solitude of it. The unutterable oppres sion of his own loneliness hung upon his mind, a heavier and heavier weight with each sueoeeding day. A savage shyness at the idea of meeting with any living human creatures began to take possession of him. There were moments when he un derwent the most fearful of all mortal trials—the conscious struggle to keep the oontrol of his own senses. At suoh times, he sang, and whistled, and extended his walks to the utmost limits that his strength would allow ; and so, by main force, as it were, held his own tottering reason in its place. Thus, the woful time—the dreary, lonely hopeless hoars—wore on till he had cut his sixteeth notch in the tent-pole. This was a memorable day in the history of the Crusoe of the snowy desert. He had walked out to the top of the little hill to watch the sun’s way downward in the wintry western heaven, and he was wearily looking about him, as usual, when ne saw two human figures, specks as yet in the distance, approaching from the far north. The warning of the Delaware Indian came back to his memory, and re minded him that those two men were ap proaching from the district of the murder ous Pawnees. A moment’s consideration decided him to await the coming of these strangers in a place of ambush which commanded a view of his tent. If they were Pawnees, he knew that the time had come when they or he must die. He went back to the tent, armed himself with as many weapons as he could carry, took the percussion caps off the rest, aud hid them under his bed. Then he put wood on the fire, so as to let the smoke rise freely through the opening at the top of the tent, and thereby strengthen any suspicion in the minds of strangers that a living man was inside of it; and he next fastened the second opening, which served for a door, tying it on the inner side, if he had shut himself up for the night.— This done, he withdrew to the frozen river of Sandy Hill Creek, about a hundred and fifty paces off, walking backward so as to make his footmarks in the > now -appear to be leading to the tent, instead of away from it. Arrived on the ice, off the high winds had drifted the snow up on the banks, he took off his shoes for fear the nails in them might betray him by scratch es on the smoothly frozen surface, and then followed the stream over the ice till he reaohed the winding which brought its course nearest to his tent. Here he climb ed up the bank, between two snow drifts, and hid himself among some withered bushes where the twigs and stalks gave him a sight of the tent, and just room enough, besides, for the use of his weapons. In this situation he watched and listen ed. Although the frost was so intense that his breath froze on his beard, and his left hand felt glued to the barrel of his leveled rifle, the fever of expectation in his mind prevented his feeling the cold. He watched for what seemed to be an inter minable time, and at last the heads of the two men rose in sight over the brow of a neighboring hill. Their figures followed in another minute. All doubts were ended now—the last day in this world had dawned for him or for them ; the men were Pawnees. After holding counsel together on the hill the savages threw back their buffalo skins, drew their full quivers before them, and strung their bows. They then sepa rated. One walked to the top of the hill from which the deserted traveler had first caught sight of them, to trace the direction of his footsteps; the other examined the track between the water and the tent. Both appeared to be satisfied with their investigations ; both met again before the tent and oommunicated with one another by gestures which expressed their conviction that the victim was asleep by his fire inside. In another moment they drew their bowstrings, placing them selves so that their double fire of arrows should meet at right angles in the tent. The man whose life they were seeking never felt tbat life so dear to him as at the moment when he saw them shoot /five arrows into the place where he slept. Still he watched and waited ; for his existence now depended on his cunning and patience —by his not-miscalculating by an instant the time to fire. He saw the savages pause anddisten before they ventured into the tent. One of them then dropped his bow, grasped his tomahawk, and knelt to creep under the curtained opening, while the other stood over him with his arrow in the string, ready to shoot. In this posi tion the skull of the kneeling Indian was brought within the white man’s line of sight, and he cooked his rifle. Faint as the click was, he saw that it had caught their quick ears, for they both started and turned round. Observing that this move ment made the kneeling man less likely to escape his eye in the tent, he shifted his aim, and fired at the naked breast of the man with the bow. The sharp eye of the savage discovered his hidden enemy at the same instant, and he sprang aside,. But it was too late; he was hit; and he fell with a scream that went through every nerve of Mr. Mollhausen’s body. The other savage jumped to his feet; but the white man’s weapon was the quicker of the two, and a discharge of buckshot hit him full in the face and neck. He dropped dead on the spot, by the side of the other man, who was still groaning. Although he knew that he had justifi ably shot, in self defense, two savages, whose murderous design on his own life had been betrayed before his eyes— althongh he was absolutely certain that if either one of the Pawnees had been per mitted to escape, the whole tribe wonld have been at the tent by the next day, the brave traveler’s nerve deserted him when he saw his two enemies on the ground, and when he thought of the terrible after necessity of hiding what he had done. With a feeling of unutterable despair he meohanioally reloaded his rifle and ap proached the place. First turning the dead Indian’s face downward, to escape the horrifying sight of the mangled features, he approached his wounded enemy and made signs that he would forgive him, help him, cover him with bnffalo skins, take him into the tent, and there do all that was in the power of man to gain his good will by preserving his life. The savage lay writhing and bleeding, with his teeth clenohed—with his eyes glaring deadly hatred through the long blaok hair that almost covered his face. Bat after a while the mercifni white man saw that his gestures were understood. A sense of relief, even joy, overflowed his heart at the prospect of saving the Indian, and of seonring a companion in his fearful solitude. The wounded man signed to him to come nearer and pointed with his left hand to his right hand and arm, which lay twisted under him. Without the slightest suspicion, Mr. Mollhanaen knelt over him to place his arm in an easier position. At the same moment the wretch’s right hand flashed out from beneath him, armed with a knife, and struck twice at the unprotected breast of the man who was trying to save him. Mr. Mollhausen parried the blows with his left hand and inflicted on the vindiotive savage the death that he had twice deserved. The rattle sounded in the throat, and the musoles of the naked figure stretched themselves in the last convulsion. The lost traveler was alone again ; alone in the frozen wilderness, with the bodies of the two dead men. The night was at hand—the night oame; a night never to he forgotten—never in any mortal language to he described. Down with the gathering darkness oame the gathering wolves; and round and round the two corpses in front of the tent they ciroled and howled. All through that awful night the lost man lay listening to them in the pitch darkness, now cool ing his wounded arm with snow, now firing his pistol to scare the wolves from their human prey. With the first gleam of daylight he rose to rid himself of the horrible companion ship of the bodies, and of all that betrayed their fate, before the next wandering Indians came near the spot, and before the wolves gathered again with the darkness. Hunger drove him to begin by taking their provision of dried buffalo meat from under the dead men’s leathern girdles. He then rolled up their remains, with whatever lay about them, in their buffalo robes, tied them round, dragged them, one after the other, to the hole in the ice where he got his water, and pushed them through it, to be carried away by the current of the river. Even yet the number of his necessary precautions was not complete. He had a large fire to make, next, on the spo't where ihe tw,o savages had dropped, with the double Object of effacing ail traces of their fall, and of destroying the faintest scent of blood before the wolves collected again. When the fire had dwindled to a heap of ashes, a new snow storm smoothed out all marks of it. By the next morning not a sign was left to betray the deaths of the Indians; the smooth ground was as empty and as white as ever, and of all that had happened on that memorable six teenth day of the traveler’s sojourn in the wilderness, nothing now remained but the terrible reoollection of it. The time wore on from that date with out any event to break the woeful monotony of it, until Christmas came. He was still alive in his solitude on Christmas day. A stolid apathy ■ toward the future had begun to get possession of him; his sense of the horror of his situation grew numbed and dull; the long solitude and the ceaseless cold seemed to be slowly freezing his mind, and making a new wilderness there, dreary and empty as the waste that encompassed him. His thoughts wandered with a certain sadness to the Christmas trees and the children’s festi vals, and that blessed season in his native Germany, but he was too far gone for any deep grief, or for any bitter pangs of despair. He kept Christmas day with the only indulgence he could afford himself, a pipeful of the dry willow leaves, and, as night fell, he lay on his baok by the fire, looking up through the hole in his tent at the frosty heavens, and fancying dimly that the kind stars looked down on him, as they had often looked in bygone days at home. The old year ended and the new one came. His hold on life was slackening, and the end was not far off. He was resting under his blankets—not asleep and not awake. Suddenly the sound of approaching footsteps reached him on the still air. It was no dream—a salutation in the Indian language sounded on his ears a moment afterward. He roused himself and caught up his rifle. More words were spoken before he could get out of the tent. It was the English lan guage this time. ‘ You are badly off here, friend,’ said a cheerful voice. c Had the white men of the post and the Mission remembered him at last? No. When the - tent covering was raised an Indian entered and pushed his five-foot rifle in before him. A savage looking man, with five savage companions. The lost traveler advanced to meet them with his rifle ready. Happily he was wrong this time. These savage wanderers of the prairie—these oharitaljle heathens, whom the pitiless Christians at the Mis sion wbrtf established to convert—had come to do the good work which his white brethren had, to their eternal disgraoe, neglected ; they had come to save him. The man who had spoken in English was a half-breed—a voluntary renegade from civilization. His companions be longed, like himself, to the friendly tribe of Ottoe Indians. They had gone out with their squaws on a hunting expedition and they had seen the smoke of the lost traveler’s fire two miles off. 1 You are hungry,’ said they to him, producing their own food —‘ eat. You are ready to perish—come with us. You are sick—we will take care of you and olothe you.’ These were the words of the redskins, and the friendly promises they implied were performed to the letter. On the next day every member of the hunting party, including the women and the boys, assembled at the tent to remove the forsaken white man, and all that belonged to him, to their own oamp. The goods (for the preservation of which he had risked his life) were packed np, the wagon abandoned by his fellow-traveller and himself, at the beginning of their dis asters, when their last horse died, was cleared of snow and made fit for use again ; and even the tent was not left behind.— It.was too.firmly frozen to the ground to be palled np, so it was out off jnst above the show, and was thrown over the rest of the baggage. When the Indians had packed the wagon, their wives and their boys harnessed themselves to it and drag ged it away cheerfully to their oamp. Mr. Mollhausen and the elder warriors followed. The Prussian traveler stopped, before he left the plaoe forever, to take a 1 last look at the lonely scene of all his sufferings and all his perils. The spot j where his tent had stood was still marked in the snowy waste by the ashes of his expiring fire. His eyes rested long on that last-left, touching trace of himself and his hardships, then wandering away away to the little hill from whioh he used , to look out upon his solitude—to the bank of the river where he had lain in ambnsh for the Pawnees—to the hole in the iee ; through which he had thrust their bodies. He shuddered, as well he might, at the : dreadful memories whioh the familiar I objects around him called up. A moment more and he was descending the hill, from the summit of which he had looked baok, to follow the trail of his Indian friends— a moment more, and he had left his home in the desert forever. In less than five weeks from that time he and his wagon-load of goods were safe —thanks to the Ottoe Indians—at a fur trading station on the Missouri river ; and he was eating good bread again, and drinking whiskey-punch in the society of ■white men. CARDS. WILLIAM WHITESIDE, SURGEON DENTIST.—Office in North Qaoen street, directly over Long’s Drug Store. Lancast-r, may 27, 1860. ly 16 ALDUS J. NEPP, Attorney at Law.-- Office with B. A. Shieffer, Esq., aooth-west corner of Centre Square, Lancaster. may 15, ’55 ly 17 JESSE LANDIS) Attorney at Law.—Of fice one door east of Lechler’a Hotel, East King street, Lancaster, Pa. ■fl®,AU kinds of Scrivening—such as writing Wills, Deeds, Mortgages, Accounts. 4c., will be attended to with correctness and despatch. . may 15, ’66 tf-17 Abram shank, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Office with D. 0. I-'shlemav. Ehq., No. 36 North Doke St., LANCASTER, PA. Edward m'govern, ATTORNEY AT LAW, No. o South Queen street, in Reed, McGrann, Kelly & Co.’s Banking Building. Lancaster, Pa. M>r6 tf 12 WT. DIcFHAIL, • ATTORNEY AT LAW, mar 31 ly 11 No. 11 N. Ddke st., Lancaster, Pa. Newton lightner, attorney AT LAW, has his Office in North Duke street, nearly opposite the Court House. Lancaster, apr 1 tfll RE 31 OVAL.--WILL lAM B. FORDNEY, Attorney at Law, has removed his office from North Quoen street to the building in the south-east corner of Centre Square, formerly known as Hubley’s Hotel. Lancaster, april 10 Removal.— dr. j. t. barer, hoh (EPATHIC PHYSICIAN, has removed his office to No. 60 East King street, next door above King’s Grocery. Reference—Professor W. A. Gardner, Philadelphia. Calls fiom the conutry will be promptly attended to. apr 6 tfl2 DR. JOHN BI’CALLA, DENTIST.—Office No. 4 East King street, Lancaster, Pa. apr 18 tf 13 REMOVAL.— H. B. SWARR, Attorney at Law, has removed his office to No. 13 North Duke street, nearly opposite his former location, and a tew doors north of the Court House. apr 5 3m 12 QjrOIUEL H. REYNOLDS, Attorney at O Daw. Office, No. 14 North Duke street, opposite the Court House. may 6 tf 16 CiIMON P. EBY, O ' ATTORNEY AT LAW, -OFFICE: — No. 38 North Duke strut, may 11 ly 17] Lancaster, Penna. Frederick s. pyfer, ATTORNEY AT LAW. OFFICE—No. 11 North Duke street, (west side,) Lan caster, Pa. apr 20 tf 14 RE 31 OVAL.—WILLIAM S. AMWEG, Attorney at Law, has removed his office from his former place into South Duke street, nearly opposite the Trinity Lutheran Church. apr 8 tf 12 JOHN F. BRINTON, ATTORNEY AT LAW, PHILADELPHIA, Pa., Has removed hia office to his residence, No. 249 South 6th Street, above Spruce. Refers by permission to Hon. H. G. Loxo, “ A. L. Hatzs, “ Perere Brinton, nor 24 ly* 45 “ Thaddeus Stevens. PETER D. MYERS, REAL ESTATE AGENT, PHILADELPHIA, will attend to the Renting of Houses, Collecting House aod Ground Rents, Ac. Agencies entrusted to his care will be thankfully received, and carefully attended to.— Satisfactory reference given. Office N. E. corner of SEVENTH and SANSOM streets, Bocood Floor, No. 10. fob 17 ly 6 JAMES BLACK) Attorney at Law.--Of fice in East King street, two doors east of Lechler’s Hotel, Lancaster, Pa. All business connected with his profession, and all kinds of writing, such as preparing Deeds, Mortgages, Wills, Stating Accounts, Ac., promptly attended to. may 15. tf-17 <fe CONVEYANCING, The undersigned respectfully announces to the public that he has taken the office lately occupied by John A. Hlestand, Esq., where he will be pleased to transact all business connected with the above profession that may be placed in his hands. 83?* Office No. 26 North Duke street, Lancaster, Pa. C. E. HAYES, City Regulator. feb 15 ly 5 REMOVAL .—We have tills day re* to oar new Banking House, in EAST KINO St., where the Banking Business in ail its varied branches will re ceive our best attention. Interest on deposits will be allowed as heretofore. Drafts on New York, Philadelphia and Baltimore con stantly for sale. Stock, Bonds, and other securities bought and sold in Philadelphia and New York— and information given as to their relative value and prospects. Uncurrent Bank Notes bought and sold, and premium allowed on old American coin. Persons entrusting any business to ns, whether money on deposit, or for purchase or sale of Bouds or Stocks, may depend upon prompt and faithful performance of all con tracts. The members of the firm are individually liable for all its obligations. JOHN GYGER, A CO robt. Clabebon. Cashier. National police gazette.—This Great Journal of Crime and Criminals is in its Thir teenth year, and is widely circulated throughout the coun try. It is the first paper of the kind published in the United States, and is distinctive in its character. It has lately passed ioto the hands of Geo. W. Matsell & Co., by whom it will hereafter be conducted Mr. Matsell was formerly Chief of Police of New York City, and he will no doubt reoder it one of the most interesting papers in the country. Its editorials are forcibly written, and of a char acter that should command for the paper universal sup port. 43** Snbscriptions, $2 per annum; $1 for Six Months, to he remitted by Subscribers, (who should write their names and the town, county and state where they reside plainly,) GEO. W. MATSELL A CO, Editors and Proprietors of the Nat! onal Pol Ice Gazette, New York City. \ oct27 tf4l 0)BTRNB TO THE PUBLIC! JOHN O’BYRNE, Southeast Comer of Bth and Race Streets, Philadelphia. He respectfully claims the patronage of the public. o*B. has constantly on hand a large stock of seasonable Goods, comprising HATS, CAPS, STRAW GOODS, BIDING HAFB, SOFT TRAVELING HATS, INFANTS’ TUB- JJ BANS, Ac., such as are usually found in a first class Hatting Establishment For the ensuing season o*B has purchased from first hands, an unusually splendid stock of FOREIGN and DOMESTIC Leghorn and other Btraw Hats "pud Caps suitable for Men and Beys; also Flats for Misses. O’Byrne’s widely renowned $3 Hats will be produced (br the Spring and Summer 0f1869, in most exquisite style, and unsurpassed excellence as to oaality and finish, so as to be equal to any in the market^ Remember, JOHN O’BYRNE’B Store is at the southeast oorner of Bth and Race streets. The Sign of the Lion, Tiger and Bear surmounts the'comer of his store, apr 86 8m 16 Howard association. PHI L A D EL PHI A . A Benevolent Institution established by special Endow ment, for the relief of the Sick and Distressed, afflicted with Virulent and Epidemic Diseases. THE HOWARD ASSOCIATION, in view of the awful destruction of human life caused by Sexual disease's ana the deceptions practiced upon the unfortunate victims of such diseases by Quacks, several years ago directed thdr Consulting Surgeon, as a CHARITABLE ACT worthy of tbeir names, to open a Dispensary for the treatment of this class of diseases, in all their •forma, and to give MEDICAL ADVICE GRATIS to alt who apply by letter, with a descrip tion of tbeir condition, (age, occupation, habits of life, Ac.) and in case of extreme poverty, to FURNISH MEDICINES FREE OF CHARGE. It is needless to add that the Associ ation commands the highest Medical skill of the age, and will furnish tbe most approved modem treatment. The Directors of the ln their Annual Report upon the treatment of Sexual Diseases, express the highest satisfaction with the success which has attended the labors of tbeir Surgeons iu the cure of Spermatorrhoea, Seminal Weakness, Gonorrhoea, Gleet, Syphilis, the vice of Onanism or Self Abuse, Diseases of tbe Kidneys and Bladder, Ac., and order a continuance of the same plan for the ensnlng year. Tbe Directors, on a review of the past, feel assured that their labors in this sphere of benevolent efforts have been of great benefit to the afflicted, especially to the young, and they have resolved to devote themselves, with renewed zeal, to this very Important and much despised cause. An admirable Report on Spermatorrhoea, or Seminal Weakness, the vice of Onanism, Masturbation, or Self- Abuse, and other diseases of the Sexual organs, by the Con salting Surgeon, will be Bent by mail (in a sealed envelope) FREE OF CHARGE, on receipt of TWO STAMPS for post age. Other Reports and Tracts on the nature and. treat ment of Sexual diseases, diet, Ac., are constantly being published for gratuitous distribution, and will be sent to the afflicted. Some of tbe new remedies and methods of treatment discovered during the last year, are of great value. N Address, for Report or treatment, DR. J. SKILLIN HOUGHTON, Acting Burgeon, Howard Association, No. 2 Sooth Ninth Street, Philadelphia, pa. By order of the Directors. EZRA D. HEARTWELL, President. Eo. Fairchild, Secratary. jan 18 ly 1 A LARGE AND BRILLIANT WEEKLY NEWBPAPER. THE CONSTELLATION. Park Benjamin, Editor. “A Constellation is but one, Though ’tis a train of Btara.”— Drtden. The subscriber has great pleasure in announcing that he baa made arrangements to issue on SATURDAY, JAN UARY 1,1859, the largest, handsomest, and most complete Weekly Newspaper ever pnblisbed. It will be a superb Folio Sheet, double the size of the New York Ledger! containing Nine broad Colamna on each page, 35 inches in length, and double the quantity of read ing matter given by any weekly paper now published— embracing tho choicest and freshest matter, selected and original, furnished from abroad and at home. It will be iu all respects A Living Journal— containing the produc tions of the most popular writers, In liberal quantity— Romances, Stories, Essays, Poems, ; Anecdotes, Sketches, Editorials, Notices of Amusements and the Arts, Ac., Ac.— in fine, all things which are new, beautiful, interesting, and attractive. Each Number will contain not only a carefully condensed synopsis of the General News during each week, bat all the very latest’information and Tele graphic Despatches up to the boar of going to press. “The Constellation” will not be an Illustrated Paper—as the picture sheets are—but it will contain beautiful Designs and Engravings, when they really illustrate and ornament & subject. The subscriber has already engaged a Corps of Contribu tors, “a Train of Stars,” unequalled for genius, brilliancy, and reputation, by those of any other journal now pub lished, no matter what may be its protensions. It is with no slight gratification that he announces his snccesß in engaging, after much persuasion, the able and experienced services of a gentleman, so long and so justly eminent, as Mr. I’Aax Benjamin. Connected for twenty years with the Press of New York City, and always successful in his liter ary enterprises, whether as Editor, Author, or Public Speaker, the name of Mr. Benjamin is an augnry of certain good fortune. The pnblic may rest assured that no means will be untried by the subscriber to- secure a grand and brilliant accom plishment of bis effort to establish the largest and best Weekly Paper ever published—since nothing will be left undone that can be done by talents, capital, experience, learning, and a resolute perseverance. “Tbe Constellation” will mainly recommend itself to a cordial and generous support from the very best people by Its observance of good and avoidance of evil. It will be an unobjectionable and perfect Family Newspaper—giving offence to no sect or party—the favorite alike of both sexes, of young and old. The subscriber, having had nearly a quarter of a century’s experience in the publication of daily and weekly Journals, and having now connected himself with such well known and invaluable Editorial aid as he h&6 herein announced, flatters himself that bis new enter prise will at once achieve a popular favor and success unparalleled in newspaper enterprises. Tbe terms for “The Constellation” will be Two Dollare per Annum each, when Ten Copies are sent in. one envelope to one address; Twenty-Eight Copies, to one address, Forty- Nine Dollars; Two Copies, Five Dollars; Five Copies, Twelve Dollars; One Copy, Three Dollars, including postage or delivery. All subscriptions to be Invariably in advance. Single Copies, Five Cents. To Newspaper Agents, $3,50 per 100. A late Saturday Evening Edition will be pnblished, and left early Sunday Mornings at tbe residences of City Sub scribers by regular Carriers, employed by toe Publisher.— Those, who desire to commence with the first number, should send in their subscriptions and orders as early as possible—since, owing to the immense size of the sheet, only such numbers tviil oe printed as may be ordered. All orders and letters to be addressed to tbe undersigned. GEORGE ROBERTS, nov 30 tf 46 12 and 14 Spruce street. New York. t\ PRIZE FOR EVERYBODY ! WHO SUBSCRIBES ?0R THE NEW YORK WEEKLY PRESS. A beautifully illustrated Family Newspaper. THE NEW YORK WEEKLY PRESS is one of the eat literary papers of the day. A large Quarto containing WENTY PAGES, or SIXTY COLUMNS, of entertaining latter; and ELEGANTLY ILLUSTRATED every week. A Gift worth from 50 cents to $lOOO,OO will be sent to each subscriber on receipt of the sobcriptlon money. TERMS—IN ADVANCE. One copy for one year, and 1 gift $ 2 00 Three copies one year, and 3 gifts 5 00 Fire copies one year, and 5 gifts 8 00 Teo copies one year, and 10 gifts 15 00 Twenty-one copies one year, and 21 gifts 30 00 The articles to be distributed are comprised in the fol lowing list: 1 United States Treasury Note $lOOO 00. 2 do. do. do 500 00, each 5 do. do. do 200 00, each 10 do. do. do 100 00, each 20 Patent Lever Hunting Cased Watches.. 75 00, each 20 Gold Watchees 76 00, each 50 Gold Watches 60 00, each 100 do. 60 00, each 300 Ladies’ Gold Watches 35 00, each 200 Silver Hunting Cased do 30 00, each 500 Silver Watches $l5 00 to 25 00, each 1000 Gold Guard, Vest and Fob Chains 10 00 to 30 00, each 1000 Gold Pens and Pencils 6 00 to 16 00, each Gold Lockets, Bracelets, Brooches, Ear Drops, Breast v Pins, Cuff Pins, Sleeve Buttons, Rings, Shirt Studs, Watch Keys, Gold and Silver Thimbles, and a variety of g, other articles, worth from 50 cents to $l5 00 each. & On receipt of the subscription money, the subscriber’s -g name will be entered npon our books and the gift for- g warded within one week to him, by mail or express, 5f post paid. All communications mast be addressed to -1 DANIEL ADEE, Publisher, 1 211 Centre street, New York. °ct 26 *y 4l BLINDS ? BLINDS : I—Venetian Blind MANUFACTORY. The subscriber takeß this method of informing the citizens of Lancaster county, that he still continues to manufacture Blinds of the most beautiful and fashionable styles, at the shortest possible notice, at his new establishment in East German street, (one door below the Public Schools.) Any person desiring to look at bis different patterns, can do so by eating as above, where he will at all times be pleased to wait npon them. He has received some beauti ful patterns from Philadelphia. Also, WALNUT BLINDS made to order, of which specimens can be seen at his dwel ling ; these blinds are warranted not to fade or draw. WINDOW SnADEB hung. HAIR, HUSK. PALM-LEAF, STRAW and COTTON MATTRASSES made to order and taste. Also, CUSHIONS, CURTAINS and all kinds of UP , HOLSTERY made and repaired. CARPETS cut, sewed and laid. All kinds of FURNITURE made in the latest Liahion and style. Old Fnrnitnre repaired and varnished to look as good as new. Orders can be left at Jaeob Kiog’s Grocery Store; Widmeyer A Barnes’ Furniture Warehouse; D. Bair’s Dry Good Store; Wentz’s Dry Good Store; at the Red Lion Hotel West King street; D. Herr, Columbia, may 3 6m 16J CONRAD ANNE, Agent QONSUMFTIVES DO NOT DESPAIR I CONSUMPTION »AN OLD INDIAN DOCTOR, UN CURED. CAS BRANT, while a Missionary among the Indians of tbe Rocky Mountains, die- CONSUMPTION covered a RARE PLANT, that proves to CURED. be a certain cure for Consumption, Bron chitis, Asthma, Liver Complaint, Nervous CONSUMPTION Affections, Coughs, Colds, Ac. Having CURED. now made his fortune and retired from business, he will send the prescription CONSUMPTION and directions for preparing the medicine CURED. free of charge to all who desire It, and will send to his agent, enclosing two CONSUMPTION stamps (6 cents,) to pay the return letter, CURED. with a description of their symptoms.— The Old Doctor has cored more than 3000 CONSUMPTION cases of Consumption alone, and hopes all CURED. afflicted people will avail themselves of this opportunity, as the Doctor wishes to CONSUMPTION do all the good he can before he dies.— CURED. Address all letters to DANIEL ADEE, Box 3531 P. 0., New York, oct 26 ly 41 Who is his sole agent. mar 2 tf 7 Look, out t good news for all The never-failing Mas. VANHORN is the best; she succeeds when all others have tailed. All who are in trou ble, —all who have been nnfortnnate, all whose fond hopes have been disappointed, crushed and blasted by false prom ises and deceit, —all who have been deceived and trifled with,—all fly to her for advice and satisfaction, —all who are in doubts of the affections of those they love, consult her to relieve aod satisfy their minds. Jn love affairs she never fails. She has the secret of winning the affections of the opposite sex. It is this fact which induces illiterate pretenders to try to imitate her. Bbe shows yon the like ness of your future wife, husband, or absent friend; she warrants and guarantees the single a happy marriage, and makes the married happv. Her aid and advice has been solicited in innumerable instances, and the-result has always been the means of securing A speedy and happy marriage; she is therefore a sure dependence. She has been the means of bringing many hundred hearts and hands together. Thousands of broken hearts have been healed and made happy by her. It is well known to the public at Urge that she was the first, end she is the only person who can show the likeness in reality, and who can give entire satisfaction on all the concerns of life, which can.be tested and proved by thou* sands, both married and single, who-dally and eagerly visit her at NO. 1336; LOMBARD STREET, PHILADELPHIA. All interviews are strictly private and confidential. Jan 18 * «a Thegenesee f a.» m eh.. The cheapest monthly Agricultural and Horticultu ral paper published In this country. SUBSCRIPTIONS received at Publisher’s rates In cltibe or single copies. Single - copy, one year> 60 cents; five copies, $2,00, 4c. We also receive subscriptions to the American Agriculturist $1 single copy, $8 ten copies. The Country Gentleman $2 single copy, (8 five copies. The Cultivator 60c single copy,*2 five copies. The Horticulturist $2 single copy, $8 five copies The Gardener’s Monthly „$1 single copy. In addition we have constantly on hand a variety of valuable Agricultural Works, all of which We offer at rea sonable rates. Every person interested in Ball culture should not be without one of the above valuable practlcle Agricultural publications, and for the sake of having them all read and have the advantage of them, we offer either at the publish ers’rates. JOHN SHEAFFEB. may 17 tf 18 Successor to Murray, Young 4 Go. Pianos: pianos: pianosi GOLD MEDALS IN THREE SUCCESSIVE TEARS At the Maryland Institute, besides premiums st Fairs In Philadelphia, Washington and Richmond. TZSTIMONIALS OF IZOIUIHOI FROM THALBEBG, STRAKOSCH, and G. BATTER. As also from some of the most eminent Professors and Amateurs in the country. WM. KNABS A 00., No. I, 8, 6 and 7, North Eutaw street, and No. 207 Baltimore street, between Charles and Light streets, would respectfully in vite the attention of the public to their well assorted stock of GRAND AND SQUARE PIANO-FORTES, ' which, for beauty of finish, power, and sweetness of tone and elasticity of touch, have been, by judges, pronounced unrivalled. Every Piano guarantied for five years, and a privilege of exchange granted at any time within six months, if not entirely satisfactory. Terms Liberal. A call is respectfully solicited before purchasing elsewhere. A liberal discount made to the Clergy and to Schools. A large assortment of Melodeons constantly on hand. Pianos taken In exchange, hired, tuned and repaired, jan 18 tf 1] WM. KNABK A CO. SEND A STAMPS FOR A SPECIMEN OF "NEWS FROM HOME." A complete summary of the latest Intelligence received from England, Ireland, Scotland, Wales and the British Possessions In every part of the World, and devoted to Politics, Literature, Science, Art, History, Ac., Ac. ENGLISHMEN, IRISHMEN, SCOTCHMEN, WELSHMEN, support your own family paper, and welcome the NEWS FROM HOME, which Is published every THURSDAY and forwarded postage free for Two Dollars for one year. One Dollar for six months. Fifty cents for three months. Parties getting up clubs are allowed 25 per cent, for their trouble. Postmasters and established News Dealers are authorised to act as Agents. TOWNDKON A DAT, Editors and Proprietors, New York. ly 11 T)AI7IiICK «3fc McCDLLEY'S X NEW iron and brass foundry, NORTH WATER STREET, LANCASTER, PA. The subscribers haring leased the Foundry recently erected by Mr. William Dnixa, adjoining bU Machine Shop, In North Water street, between Orange and Ghesnut streets; also- baring bought out the Strasbnrg Foundry and parts of the fixtures of other establishments of the same kind, and haring the most complete collection of Patterns in the City, are prepared to furnish Iron and Brass CASTINGS OF EVERY DESCRIPTION, (either light, or as heary as can be made elsewhere,) at the shortest notice, aDd warranted to be done in the most workmanlike manner. Both being practical workmen—one a Moulder and the other a Pattern Maker—they flatter themselres that, by doing their own work, and haring purchased their fixtures at rery low prices, in consequence of which their expenses will be less than any other establishment of the kind here, they can make Castings and finish them at more reason able prices than has heretofore ruled in this City. district attention paid to repairing STOVES. GRATES and CYLINDERS of all kinds and sizes kept constantly on hand. They hare on hand, and are constantly making new designs for CELLAR GRATES, RAILING, and all kinds of Ornamental Castings. 4®“ The highest price will be paid for Old Iron, Copper and Brat>B. We respectfully solicit a share of public patronage, and Bhall spare no pains to please all who may favor us with their custom. LEWIS PAULICK, Lancaster, May 4. may 4 WENTZ, WENTZ, WENTZ. ' White Marselles ODly 25 cts. White Marseilles excellent cts. White Marseillee beautlfnl 60 cu. White Marseilles splendid 62 eta. White Marseilles magnificent 76 cts. White Marseilles sublime 87 cts. NEW STYLES SILK MANTLES, JUST RECEIVED AND NOW SELLING at an immense sacrifice on cost of importation AT WENTZS’, East Kibg and Centre Sqnare. may 10 tf 17 Youth and manhood. Just Published, tbe 25th Thousand, and mailed in a sealed envelope, to any address, post paid, ou receipt of three stamps. MMshv A Medical Essay on tbe Physical Exhaustion and Decay of tbe Frame, Caused by “Self Abuse.” Infection, aDd the Injurious Consequences of Me-cury. By R. J. Cnlver well, M. D , Member of tbe Royal College of Surgeons, Ac. H 5“ Spermatorrbce or Seminal Emissions, Genital and Nervous Debility. Impotency, Loss of Energy, Depression of Spirits, Timidity, Disease of tbe Sexual Organs, and Impediments to Marriage, are promptly removed by the author’s novel and most successful mode of treatment, by means of which tbe invalid can regain pristine health without having recourse to dangerous and expensive medi cines. (From the London Lancet.) The best treatise ever written on a subject of vital importance to all, well worthy the author’s exalted reputation Address tbe Publishers J. C. KLINE A Go., Ist Avenue, comer 19th,-street: Post Box 4586, New York City, mar 22 8m 10 New spring goods. HAGER A BROTHERS offer for Bale a complete stock of new and seasonable DRY GOODS, FANCY DRESS SILKS, BLACK SILKS AND ROBES, POIL DE CHEVRES, OHALLEYS,- CHINTZES. GINGHAMS. EMBROIDERIES—(NeedIe work,) Collars, Setts, Hand kerchiefs, Edgings and Insertfngs. SHAWLS—SteIIa, square aud round corners; Crape and Cashmere. Cloths, Cassimeres and Vestings, Oottonadee, Jeans. Velvets, Ac. READY MADE CLOTHING for Men’s and Boy’s wear, made in the latest styles and of the best manufacture. HOUSE FURNISHING GOODS. Linen and Cotton Sheetings, Table Damaskß and Napkins, Huckaback and Diapers,' Linen Crumb Cloths, Buff and Green Holland, Window Bbades and Fixtures. CHINA, GLABS AND QUEENSWARE—PIain and Gold BaDd China, English Granite and Common Ware. FEATHERS, Hair, Spring and Husk MATTRASSES. mar 22 tflO THE PHILADELPHIA EVENING BUL LETIN, AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER, devoted especially to tbe interests of Pennsylvania. Con taining Important Telegraphic News, sixteeo boars in ad vance of tbe Morning Papers. Original, Foreign and Do mestic Correspondence, Editorials on all Subjects, and fall Reports of all tbe news of the day. The Commercial and Financial Departments are fall, and are carefully attended to. ■ftj- As an Advebtihing Medium there is no better paper in the State, the circulation being next to the largest in the city, and among the most Intelligent and influen tial of the population. TERMS, SIX DOLLARS PER YEAR, IN ADVANCE. ' CUMMINGS A PEACOCK, Proprietors, No. 112 South Third street, Philadelphia. THE PHILADELPHIA SATURDAY BULLETIN, a handsome, well-filled, Family Wkzelt Newspapib, la pnb lLshed by the Proprietors at the following unprecedentedly low rates: 1 Copy, one year,. 6 Copies, “ 13 “ “ 21 “ “ FURTHER INDUCEMENTS f THE LARGEST CLUB (over 100) will be sent for three yeare. / THE NEXT LARGEST CLUB, (over 100) will be sent for two years. Address j CUMMINGS 4 PEACOCK, Proprietors, Bulletin Building, No. 112 South Third street, Philadelphia. tf 46 Roofing slate. The undersigned hare on band and are regularly re ceiving fresh supplies of ROOFING SLATE, which they offer on the most favorable terms to consumers. Slate pot on by the square or sold by the ton. Having none but the best of workmen, all jobs done by us are warranted. As we have arrangements with the best and most approved of the Peach Bottom, York county, Slate Quarries, we are enabled to offer a quality of Slate that cannot be eioelled. Persons who contemplate building or covering their old Roofs, will do well to give ns a call. None of even the loferlor qualities in the market sold lower. Also a general sssortment of Hardware, Paints, Oils, Cedar Ware, Saddlery, Cutlery, Ao., Ac. GEORGE Si. STEIN MAN A 00., feb 15 6m 5] West King st., Lancaster, Pa. TO FARMERS*—Having been appoint ed by Messrs. Allen A Needles agents In Lancaster for the sale of their celebrated SUPER PHOSPHATE OF LIMB, we would call the attention of Farmereto this Fertiliser, it being superior to all others; and from the testimony of those who have need it for some yean past, we feel author, ized in saying it is tKcAst application for Corn, Oats* Wheat, Grass and which require a -vigorous and permanent stimulant, that has ever been offered to. the public. Apply to GEO. CALDER A, CO? East Orange street, 2d door from North Queen st? and at Graeff’s Landing on the Conestoga. CAROLINA YELLOW PINJB FLOOA* \j ING BOARDS. 50,000 Feet Carolina Yellow Pine Dressed Flooring Boards. 30,000 Feet Do. Undressed. 50,000 CYPRESS SHINGLES, No. 1 and 2. 50,000 BANGOR PLASTERING LATHS, Just received and for sale at Graeff’s Landing, on.- the Conestoga. Apply to GEO OALDER A Co? Office East Orange st? near N. Queen it? Lancaster «80 478 Newgbocbby. The undersigned has opened a new Grocery Btoro in West King street, next door to the Cross Keys 1 Hotel, where he offers for sale an entire new stock of GROCERIES, QUEENSWARE, FISH, SALT AND FRUIT, Wholesale and Retail, cheap for cash. All kinds of Coun try Produce bought or taken in exchange fcr good*. > ‘ JOHN D. p»Aing.; lanoaster, April 19,18 W. tf 14 NO 23. OAKBON M’CULLKY. tf 16 .$ 1 00 . 6 00 . 10 00 . 15 00 . 20 00 . 50 00
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers