VOL. LX THE LANCASTER INTELLIGENCER. ; and first and chiefly on the State of Jlassa — __ i chusetts. She will have the doable tame aad built the ! tomb of a great nation. The Medean 1 tragedy of Euripides will be more than , eclipsed by the hand of a State that slaughters a nation. You will say that l Virginia and the South are unduly excited ! —that no such crisis impends. I tell you, ! honest men and trie, there is peril near— the abyss is opening before us. I cannot see but Virginia is fully justified in pre ’ paring for a conflict. Look at the facts : ' A body of men, insignificant in numbers, ; invade that State, furnished, armed, and ! equipped with a thousand spears to be put ! into the hands of a servile race, to cut the i throats of men, women, and children ; for ! this they always do when they rise against | their masters; and, what is the most j appalling fact of all, those blades were I manufactured and sharpened in New Kng | land, and paid for, at least in part, by con | tributions taken up in the churches. In that very Tremont Temple in Boston, where-se-reCeht of the piety of toe Old iSouth Church (the junior pastor) embraced jon the same platform the blasphemy of ! llalph Waldo Emerson—in that church a | year ago last May, John Brown received ; a contribution from the hands of Christian men for the purpose of murder and blood shed, under the thin veil of “ Kansas operations. 11 Now, they did not know ; that he would go to Virginia, but they did know that he was engaged in murder and ' robbery in Kansas ; and it is no worse to : murder men in one place than in another. I Then the aiding, abetting, and approbation ! after the fact, give fearful insignificance I to the contribution which preceded it. : The Old South Church in Boston, under ! its wise and devout senior pastor, has been j the central point of eonservatiism on the S subject of slavery in New England ; and ! now its junior pastor joins hands with the i most bitter revilers of the Church and the | nation, in order to glorify a murderer I simply because he commits murder upon | the soil of Virginia and in tlie name of j freedom. This same John Brown dragged : five men, the heads of families, from their ! beds and murdered them, as he would j dogs, by the wayside ; and yet one speaker j says there are a million hearts with John j Brown to-day. Why should not the | South be excited I why not arm and be j ready for a portion of this million of ready invaders f Then, it is notorious that many ! of- the leading papers of the North have 1 but a word or two of mawkish condemnation ! for the folly of John Brown, while they ! print whole columns of sneers and sar casms for Virginia and the South. This | state of things cannot last. Now, we of : the North commit two great mistakes : we : muddle when we ought not to, and we , meddle to the injury of all parties —the | slaves, the South, and the North. Some ot you will remember that seven years ago 1 told you some very plain aud wholesome truths on another subject, which you repaid j in abuse and condemnation ; but Time, 1 that infallible crucible, has reveaied it. 1 | told you then you were sowing seeds for a i plentiful harvest of lying and hypocrisy, aud now the State of Massachusetts is a laughing stock to the whole nation for having perpetrated, under her own name, and with the seal of the State upon them, the meanest and most cold-blooded frauds over put upon record. They have put poisoned drugs into the cup of the weak, the sick, the dying, and then divided the excessive profits among potential political partisans. The dark ages were stamped with the infamous sale of indulgencies ; but deadly drugs, instead of a wholesome I beverage, with a high tariff for the exchange of the pure juice of grape for nightshade and hellebore—this dose was never administered by one human being to another till it was done by the Christian hand of Massachusetts, and in order to complete a great moral reform. If this is their John the Baptist, what will his successorrbe '! If this is the baptism with MR. LOVEJOY’S ADDRESS. water, what will be the melting heart of National Hotel, Washington, D. C.,1 the fire that is yet to cornel Is not the November 25th, 1359. \ folly and the guilt of these universal re to THE PEOPLE OF NEW knglano. forms open and manifest, when one of Friends and Countrymen :-Sojourn- them has culminated in a Burnham and ingforafew days in this capital of the the other m Brown. One can hardly tell nation, I witnessed on the morning of the which is the more guilty of the two ; last Sabbath a scene which ought to make probably Burnham has killed the most us all pause for reflection. Gov. Wise j persons-and in a sly, underhand manner passed through this city with five hundred -givmpo chance for self defence. Would men, armed for war; not for war as of old , it not be wel to glorify Burnham as a against the scalping and skulking savage; ] martyr to an “ idea ” He has first rate not to repel the invasion of a foreign foe ; ! points. No man has ever shown more but for a civil war. It was* a State arming j “ game ‘ m his disposition ; fettered by to repel an invasion from its sister States, j scruples, bound by no law of honor, from whom it ought to expect kindly salu- j things sacred and profane are alike to him; tat ions and the most friendly relations. I he would cheat the communion table as These relations have now reached a crisis ' q™* as the sick bed ; when caught he where the whole tone and action? of; manfully and heroically throws all the the North must be changed, or a aepara-! blamo upon his subordinate Vby not tion of the States is inevitable. The South blend the martyrs and draw the portraits of is indeed excited, as well as it may be, ! Brown and Burnham’together, and then but it is also fixed and determined. One ■ make Tremont Temple echo with the shout, side or the other must recede, or a collision, j “ These glorious minds-how bright thgy a civil war, streams of blood and wide- shine 1 . . _ spread desolation must follow. Shall the j But, back again to the point. V e have work, the lives, the sacrifices of our fathers oo business with the subject of slavery. It all have been in vain ? Look over this :is out of our border—beyond our jurisdic goodly city from one of its many lofty tlon — States at nave it are the towers. Survey its broad streets, the only proper authority to deal with it. many homes of happy families' from all There is where the fathers placed it, and parts of the laud ; look upon the solid there the sons should leave it. grandeur of the Capitol, the majestic ; Whenever the laws of the moral or public buildings, all imposing and still physical world are violated a ferribie ven progrossive, showing that a mighty nation geance ensues. Tbo prostration of majestio are here laying the foundations of their trees m the forest does not more surely greatness. Abroad, and in every direc- mark the path of the tornado than moral tion, the railroads, the rivers, the cities, the prostration marks the footsteps of aboli fruitful valley and the teeming prairie, tionism in the North. Twenty-six years give evidence such as the world never ago 1 beard Gernt Smith upon the religious saw, of the fruit of two hundred years of platfonhs in New York. He appeared the well directed enterprise. Seo the thriving most accomplished Christian gentleman in happy millions that, welcome the morning the whole land. He undertook the impos at the shores of the Atlantic,, and keep sible- to alter what (rod had fixed, and pace with the sun, till his rays fade away Omnipotence was too strong for him. It, in the western ocean. -Is this inheri- will be strong for you. The mark of | tanoe nothing ? shall it be lost in a day ? bondage is written upon the brow of the Lftt the wonderful, harmonious machinery African by the finger .of Omnipotence of the Union, the work of our fathers and engraven there by the experience and of kind Providence—let it once be crushed, practice of four thousand years and it is and no device, nor art, nor wisdom of man vaao that the waves of excitement, can ever restore it to life and action again, which are but for a day, can think to wash Let the sword once be heard dashing here out these everlasting lines. Slavery is before the statue of Washington, and our P ar adise of the black man ; he rejoices ~ glory has departed. It needs no prophet’s * n edging to the white man as the ivy to voice to fortell that of these goodly build- oak, as ordinary man would welcome ings not one stone shall -be left upon soc i et y of angels, another that shall not be thrown down. * Well he may. His association with The genius of this spot will cry from men is the only circumstanoes known the air and from the earth; Call me no * D history by which he has been more Washington, but write Ichabod upon *° a condition above the beasts that perish, these deserted streets, and Ninevah and t^lQ f erfci l e soil of his own continent, Babylon upon these columns in ruin.” We propagates and rots. Not one path of shall hasten to an untimely end. Now, civilization, not one temple of Uhristiani- 1 on whom will this terrible guilt rest? tyj illumines the darkness of centuries—, Before Heaven, and from the deepest con- i° features, more black in the night viotions of my soul, I say on the North— which ages have wrapt around him. The TBRMB. ~ . . Subscription. —Two Dollarß poraunum, payable ID aa* vauco. No subscription discoutinned until all arrear ages are paid, unless at the option of the fcditor. Advertiesmznts. —Advertisements, net exceeding ooe square {l2 Hope.) will be inserted three times fur oue dollar, and twenty-flw cents for each additional inser tion. Those of greater leugth in proportion. Job Printing—Such as Hand Bills, Posters, Pamphlets, Blauka, Labels, Ac., Ac., exocuted with accuracy and on the shortest nutice. FIRST SNOW-DROPS, “Pearly beads of morning,” Frozen in tbe'sky, “Tearleta of the angels,” Crystalized on high: Frosty little snowlets; First that now appear ! Messengers that winter Quickly will be here. Hiding on tho storm winds, ■’ Sweeping o’er the heath — Blasting Autumn beauty With its frigid breath : Howling o’er tho villago, Fairy summer’s dirge; Plunging into winter, Whence they will emerge Soft and cool spring-breezes, Bearing summer hours, Dancing through tho tree-top 3, Murmuring o’er the liowers : Nestling in the dimples On the cheeks of girls, Breathing in their bosoms, Playing with their curls Singing songs of beauty With the little rill, Leaping over pebbles, Musically still: Snowlets change to rain-drops, Sparkling in their mirth, In the hue of rainbows As they drop to earth. But this fairy vision Now doth tloe away ; For tho wind is howling Through the night and day And the hills are sprinkled With the first of snow. Sirigs no more the stroamlet, For it is frozen now. And the loaves are falling From the swaying trees; Ah ! the hues of autumn Sadden while they ploase. Thus ’tis truly ever, is it not ' with life : Now in summer pleasure, Now in wintry strife. JIMMY’S WOOING. Tho wind came blowing out of the. west, And Jimmy mowed the hay; The wind came blowing out of tho west — it stirred the green leaves out of their rest, And rocked tho blue bird up in his nest, As Jimmy mowed tho hay. Tho swallows skimmed along the ground, And Jimmy mowed the hay ; The swallows skimmed along the ground. And rustling leaves made a pleasant sound, Like children babbling all around, As Jimmy mowed tho buy. Willy came with her bucket by, And Jimmy mowed tho hay; Willy camo with her bucket by, With her light foot as trim and sly, Aud sunburnt cheek and laughiug eye — And Jimmy mowed tho huy. And rustic Uuth iu lir.sey gown — , And Jimmy mowed the hay; t A rustic Uuth in linsey gown — lie watched her soft ebooks changing brown, And tho long dark lash that trembled down Wbonevor he looked that way Oh I Milly's heart was good as gold— And Jimmy mowed the hay ; Oh ! Milly’s heart was as good us gold ; But Jimmy thought her shy and cold, Aud more he thought than e’er ho told, As Jimmy mowed the hay. Tho wind came pattering down amain— And Jimmy,mowed tho hay ; The rain came pattering down amain. And under tho thatch ot the laden train, Jimmy and Willy, a cunning twain, Sat sheltered by tho hay. The merry rain-drops hurried in, Under the thatch of hay ; Tho merry rain-drops hurried in, And laughing and pattered in a din, Over that which they saw within, Under the thatch of hay. For Milly nestled to Jimmy’s breast, Under tho thatch of hay ; For Milly nestled to Jimmy’s breast, Like a wild bird fluttering in its nest, And then I’ll swear she looked her best Under the thatoh of hay. And when the sun came laughing out, Over the ruined hay ; And when the sun came laughing out, Milly had ceased to pet and pout, And the twittering birds began to shout, As if for a wedding day. : y “ THAT COUNTRY IS TUB MOST PROSPEROUS WHERE LABOR COMMANDS THE GREATEST REWARD.”- LANCASTER CITY, PA., TUESDAY MORNING, DECEMBER 13, 1859. ship that brought him to America was a star of a new day. He exchanges the bondage of brutality for the silver cords of civilization aud Christian kindness. He exults in the ehauge. His face is radiant with joy; and from the lonely cabin and the Christian temple songs of thanksgiving go up to Heaven from the and hearts of slaves redeemed from African heathen ism. There is not an intelligent slave in the South but finds there the happiest con- dition that his race has found since the curse was written upon the brow of Ham by the finger of God. There he is deliv ered from the heathenism, the cannibalism, the human, sacrifices of his own country ; there he is'free from the repulsive greet- ing that awaits him at the North-, written of, preached about as an equal, constantly treated as an alien and an inferior. At the South the theory and the practice agree. The African is told that he belongs to an inferior race, which'' is true, and meets his own deepest consciousness, the last court of appeal, as philosophers tell us, for the evidence of what is true ; they are told that service and allegiance are the duty of the black man ; protection and instruction the obligation of the white man. So perfect is this feeling, so harmonious the social system, gnwn up under it, that when a meteor, a comet appeared in their horizon in the person of John Brown, he fell at once like a star from Heaven, and did not disturb, except by his own mur derous arm, the peace of a single family, or the allegiance aud fidelity of a single slave. This one fact ought to speak vol umes to those who are clamoring for the freedom of the slave. The insiiocts of the bondman are wiser than the schemes of theorists. He asks for no intervention —implores no aid. “ To lie, contents hi 3 natural desire ” to be the approved servant of his mas ter accomplishes his highest ambition I speak of the great masses of them. . That there are individuals who crave an impos- sible good—something not to be found in this world —is very likely; but, as a body of people, they are as nearly satified as the same number anywhere upon the face of earth. Wiry should we travail iu per- petual pain in their behalf'* But you are told that the South are forever getting tho best of it in the National Government, and that the South ought to be put down— negro or no negro, white or black. Now pray look at it, consider for a moment, ask the pages of history and they will teaoh you. For eighty years have we not had the best Government on earth, prospered as nation never pro pered before, spread abroad, multiplied, and built cities; sub dued the wilderness; conquered the savage; bridged the rivers; made water and earth, and air and fire, tributary to our wants as no people ever did before 1 All the time have we not dwelt securely by our own rock or under our own elm 1 Which of your sons or daughters has been oppressed 1 which of them has set foot upon a foreign shore and has not found the American name a shield and pro tection! And yet, of all the long line of sages that have presided over the des tinies of the nation—from the Apostle Jefferson to the Patriarch Buchanan— which of them have not New England men in large numbers, aud Massachusetts, as a State, as a majority, almost uniformly and persistently abused 1 Has it become a disease ; is if chronic ; is there no medi cine that can reach it 1 Will this madness drive her to a fatal end; must the nation be plunged down the fatal precipice of civil war! With you Jefferson was a Jacobin and an infidel; Madison, at. whose death John Quincy Adams said: “ A spirit weut up to Heaven as pure as the Seraphim which he joined,” yet he was commanded ££ to the Island of Elba or a halter;” Jackson was a tyrant and a usurper; Van Buren was full of cunning and deceit; Tyler was a traitor ; Mr. Fillmore sold himself to the South; Mr. Pierce carried war and bloodshed into peaceful Territories; and Mr. Buchanan, whose last pulsation of life will be a wish and a prayer for the welfare of his whole country —he is a border ruffian, and guil ty of the blood and crimes of John Brown. Now does history anywhere picture the acts and motives of these men as they are made to appear to you ! Havenot the very winds and air around you been poisoned by the breath of slander ! If, in a matter so grave and important, -material considerations, selfish interests, can have any weight, they are numerous, urgent and pressing. United all these harmonize and assist each other. Your keels have carried the greater part of the one hundred and sixty millions of bales of cotton furnished by the South during the last year. They have drawn supplies of manufactured articles from almost every village in New England. How long will they buy of those who contribute spears for the hands of their slaves! They will not do it, they ought not to do it, and we ought no longerto put their forbearance to the test. And now, my friends, that most of you are sincere in what you have done and said on this subject, I have no doubt; but you are mistaken, your zeal is mis guided and your sympathy thrown away. The most enormous wrongs have been committed and the most terrible calamities brought upon communities by honest but mistaken men. God punishes men for their follies no less than for their crimes. The fire kindled by the hand of the maniac burns as furiously as if set by the most artful ineendiary. Our country divided, this spot, the central spot of ruin for contending States, have you ever thought how on that day the sun would be veiled in darkness, and the moon would be changed into blood, and the stars would lose their brightness and the earth would seem to tremble under our feet, and the fields would lose all their beauty, and all the, ties of nature would be forgotten, and the whole being of every man or woman that has a soul would be absorbed in one oonvulsive pulsation of anguish! We should no longer have Washington for our father, nor the ground around his grave to be pressed by troops of pilgrim feet. There is sorrow at the grave of a first born, anguish in the house that weeps a parent dead. I remember the touching lamentation of that ardent and impas sioned nature Edmund Burke, when he mourned an only son, the heir of his house and his name. You have all heard the wail of the King of Israel at the death of a rebel son, but no such sorrow is ever felt for the soldier slain in battle, or for kin dred gone down to the grave, as the exile feels looking for the last time upon las na tive home, or the patriot when he sees the soil of his oonntry crimsoned with fraternal blood. May our eyes never weep those tears nor our hearts be rent with that an guish. The decision is with the North.— Your country hang 3 weeping on your neck, and beseeches you by the memories of the past and the hopes of the future to stay this tide of reproach and crimination, and send healing waters along all the channels of social and political life. Save, Oh ! God, we beseech Thee, the land Thou hast planted, and this Thy people, which Thou hast multiplied. Your obedient servant, J. 0. LOVEJOY. A NIGHT IN THE FOHEBT. In the year 1852 a naturalist, actuated by that spirit of adventure which has characterized that class, made an excur- sion to Cape Manabique, in Central Amer ica, which separates a part of Cape Ama tique from that of Honduras, at the fur thest end of the Carribbean Sea. Leav- ing his companions on landing, he started alone on the line of the coast, the whole of which is bordered by a dense forest, walking for several miles through a burn ing sand, until he reached the dwelling of a young Englishman named Stevens, who had the direction of the gathering of cocoa-nuts on the whole territory of Man- abique, for which purpose he employs a small gang of Spaniards, Negroes, Tam boos, Indians, Llandinos, &c.—the gi eater number criminals who escaped from the pursuit of justice, by taking refuge in those, solitudes. Above 150,000 oocoa-nuts are annually collected here. Some idea of the arduous life Mr. Stevens leads may be gathered from the fact that he has to traverse, on foot, long tracts of untrodden forests, and to paddle alone in small, leaky canoes, along the coast —exposed to the assaults of the lawless workmen —to the attacks of wild animals, and to the con tinual bites and stings of numerous species of insects. Our naturalist rested here for a few hours, and then, after begging a few roasted plain tains, resumed his peregrina tions. How he passed the night in the forest we will permit him to relate himself : The beach, from this point onwards, presents a monotonous and dismal aspect ; it is fiat and sandy, and shows few signs of life. Now and then a broad pelican, flying heavily over the boundless ocean, or resting on some wave, and looking like a distant canoe, or a bird of prey soaring high above the neighboring forests, or a few small sand-pipers trotting along the pools, are the only moving things which divert the stranger’s attention from the mournful numerous remains of wrecks which are strewn along the whole of this inhospitable ooast. I traveled on for many miles, until, tired and sorrowful at heart, I sat down on a prostrate palm tree. Around me lay scattered the out masts of some large merchantman, with fragments of rope aud iron work still attached to them, broken barrels, boards honey-combed by the navy worm, fragments of boats, loose oars, and even clothes, trunks aud water-worn arti cles of toilet. It was a melaucholy picture of desolation. Before me was spread, far and wide, the expanse of the ocean ; not a sail was on it, not a speck blemished its immensity. Behind me stood the dark and gloomy forest, from whose shade echoed neither the song of the bird nor the chirp of the insect. Ail around me was vast and silent. It seemed as if I had left this merry world of ours, and had alighted on some abandoned or fallen planet, I felt so small and weak —such an atom in creation at this moment. I was the only human inhabitant on the coast, the only lord of the domain. 1 reigned, as it were, over the death of nature, and yet I felt weak and had no pride about me. For the first time during my travels I was lonely—l wished some one were with me. I longed to be elsewhere. My im agination, exalted by the effects of my long exposure to a tropical sun, would have its own way. I saw the noble vessel to which had belonged those noble spars, drifting on a stormy sea; I saw it over taken by the hurricane ; I saw the drown ing mariner cling to it until he dropped into eternity ; 1 beard the distant wailing of the mother for her son, who had never returned from sea, and the gnashing of the j teeth of the greedy sharks, as they tore to ] pieoes the lacerated body. And then the | weeds around me disappeared and were; replaced with fields of waving wheat, and the desert ocean was covered by the white sails of pleasure boats ; and 1 heard the sweet music brought to me by the evening j breeze. The scene was beautiful and full j of life, and I felt happy. How much longer I continued my revery I know not, hut 1 was suddenly brought back to my real situation by the distant rumbling of thunder. There was I, thousands of miles from home and friends, half savage, and half civilized; my feet and legs were bleeding, for I had worn out my last pair of mocca sins two days before, and had now to walk barefooted ; an old red poncho was slung across my shoulders : the rags of my tat tered trowsers fluttered in the wind ; the skeleton of a Panama hat searoe hid my uncombed hair ; my faithful rifle lay on my knees. Could this be II No, I was the spirit of a naturalist. Strange sounds now began to issue from the woods ;. the waves roared on the beach ; the storm was rising fast, and night was coming on. 1 felt singularly excited. I laughed and shouted aloud, for I was free, and a sense of unrestrained liberty, indefinably pleasant, buoyed up my hopes and energies. 1 looked around me for shelter from the storm, which was increas ing rapidly. By a wonderful chance, I discovered at a distance an abandoned rancbo. A walk of a few minutes brought me to it. ■ Cocoa-nut gatherers had built j this temporary shed some months previous, it consisted of sticks planted as A’s into the ground*, covered with 'half decayed leaves of the manaco palm. It was open at both extremities, and so low that I had to creep into it on my hands and knees. I lighted a pipe, and stretched myself on the threshold of my wild home, listen ing to the distant sound of the rain, which was pouring in cataracts over the forest, with constantly increasing tropical violence as it neared me. Thousands and tens of thousands of minute sand-flies, (simulin,) the true musquito of the inhabitants of Guatemala, did not allow a moment’s re spite from theii attacks. Swarms of them assaulted me on all sides, and made me half frantic with their painful bites, and by getting constantly into my eyes, nose and mouth. This plague alone would be sufficient to render the country uninhabi table to any whita-skinned man, I—BUCHANAN. 1 —BUCHANAN. Darkness came on. I was soon in the law. midst of the Storm, and was reluctantly No. 3 South Queen street, In Koed, McGrann, Kelly 4 forced to creep into the ranch. The rain Bttlld!PE ' LMMaster ’ Pfc tf 12 battered down with inconceivable violence, ldus j. nepf, Attorney at Law.- Flash after flash of the most vivid light- A Office with B. a. Shaffer, Esq., south-west cornet_of i , , i i i .. „„ | Centre Square, Lancaster. may 10, oo iy if ning rent the black 9ky \ peal after peal __ „ = of the most terrific thunder deafened the ilberforck ear and drowned the loud roaring of the ' offica W j t h yy m- r Fordney, Esq., south-east corner of rolling waves, as one after another they Centre Square, Lancaster, Pa. [oct 25 ly* 41 broke, in long phosphorescent streaks of ttt t. bcPHail, lurid light upon the beach. The wind was ’Aaiivii Pa. blowing a “chubasoo,” or stiff gale I OYAIi .„ WIIII , IAM B . FOR m¥v, Was Wet through in less than live minutes, Attorney at Law, has removed his office from North and felt chill and weary. Now did I think Queen street to the building m the south east comer of duu leto until .no woe J. Centre Square, formerly known as Hubley’s Hotel. witth regret of the quiet pleasures of the Lancaster, aprii 10 comfortable firesideot home, around which, TTe jiov al,.—dr. j. t. baker, hobi of a wintrv evening, I was wont to sit with lv iepathic physician, hue removed his office to , J . -.S’ „ L,,L No. r. 9 East King street, nort door above King's Grocery. those I loved. All was now gloomy, Doth Reference—Professor W. A. Gardner, Philadelphia, night and my yet darker thoughts. Calls from the country will be promptly attended t»- s The thunder, however, gradually ceased, “ pr k n f rain fall heavilv for SOIQC timo "D SMOVAL.—H. B. SWARB) Attorney but tne TAIQ leu ueavuy uuoiu biuw at Uw> bftB removed hU offica to No. 13 North Duke longer. Then, for a short while, nothing street, nearly opposite his former location, and a lew doors was heard but the dripping of water from north of the Comt House. “ the leaves of the forest trees, and the iyr. John m-calla, dentist .--office tuc Ktt»oo ' IJ No. 4 Knst King street, Residence Walnut street. hoarse voice of the billows. Uoe Dy one B(K .., ud door Weatof Dnke, Lancaster. Pa. [>vpr!B tf IS the stars peeped out from behind the t-,ym.e9 black, Attorney at Law.--of reccdiug curtain which had veiled them, fj lice in Kant ltiug street, two dours e.ist ot Leehlera 1 also ventured out of my retreat and lay connected with his profession, and mvself OQ the sandy beach to eat my sup- all kinds of writing, such as preparing Deeds, Mortgages, Uijaeii UU j j r wills, Stating Accounts, Ac., promptly attended tu. per, for I dared not sleep, through fear of . ’ 15 . g tf-i7 being picked up by some roving jaguar or - D M , EItS( I alligator. X heal estate agent, 1 Was absorbed in reflection, when sud- Attend to the Renting of Houses, Collecting House denlv I Derceived out in the sea, withiu and Gruuud Rents, Ac. Agencies entrusted to lm care QeDiy 1 putcivou D , wilt W thankfully received, and carefully attended to.— about half a mile of the coast, a largo g d tista.’tory reference given. Office N. E. corner ot black mass approaching towards me. I seventh and sansom streets, s„»nd kwr, No. io._. strained my eyes to pierce the darkness _!!_! Q which separated me from it anU clearly £ commission 'merchants, discerned a small light, or lan tern, moving : n».iWXMn stekt. v m u»a.nu. * reeularlv up and down. 1 knew by this Foa THE SALK OF that it must be some ship sailing fast to flour, grain, ani. (tAßfrntitinn Without losing a moment 1 Forwarders of Freight, per uo ° ‘ 1 AK. WITAIKK’r Cars to Paradise, Lancaster county. set fire to the rancho, and in a lew seconds mussklman, here & co’S. Cars to strushurg, do. a column of flame was towering high up in j July = the air, and casting a ray of light through- : a yello .v pine fioob out the surrounding wilderness. My sig- ino doahus. so,ooo Feet Carolina Yellow Pine nal was perceived, and the vessel soon g^ooo’Ct^oSMsMd. •tacked out of sight. Many ships have of |»;gSS^K?ra«ilSl 4 - late years been lost OQ this coast —among Juki received and for sale atGraelFs Landing, on the others, two Belgium vessels, the Constant Co..esto«. nMr and the Dyle. f have no doubt the cause , »sn •'“« of these disasters is the action of the -■ R u o and c ~ehi ica i. stok ii . mariuecurreut before mentioned, and which l ) The subscriber having removed hid .-tore to the uew is not marked upon the nautical maps in general use among seaman. . The coast being very low, cannot be seen Art j i;lt >. s saraapaniias, &<>.., Ac., to which nm attention of from any distance during the night; and country meveto-w, “ VaTbllm ak IrT* although exact observations of latitude, r.bstfi west Kini: Mm-t. Lsn. and longitude may have been takon during c;rtkei-uulic monthly. the day previous, the stream causes an ; sec o n i> v o i, u m k . unexpected deviation from' the point: mxuzn^iJ steered for, and when tne northwest wind ; Pe cun<i to hut n Ur t u tu«> c-.untiy. ins r*pi-iiy gaining should chance to blow, the saving of the lull'lbi’Kii" vessel is hopeless. When I returned to ~,^,,1,1^0. St. Thomas i lound there the bark Fro- „,.i iMmaMratiDm w«*imwiv*walT -iKthw. gross, from Antwerp. The captain had t noticed my signal, and by the use of his tiitsii comi «iities. glass distinguished me; he had come to, «•»:*• SuuVripii,....; un« the conclusion that I was one-of the native Oaribs, camping out for the night. I 4,ibnJt im'sm «n- a>«>n*i «Wr.-Hw.,« had, nevertheless, preserved him from ImJcanvasskbs'wanted, uwrni »r destruction. 1 heaped up some wood on i» Hm i n the fire, and determining on taking a few »nd tormni tin. n»...y t.> m. dniwifos & hours of repose, 1 cocked my pistols, rolled tl “ !ir tr, ’ ul ’ l '' olT ' r “ ol H! ’ ply t " mvself in my blanket and lay down. 1 ' th. Maonin. i» f.>r -ir »vwy*b.>r.% i.y »n »—» , , j ,1 in- 1 wliMi'-n!'* ami ivtuif. bo sent to had reckoued with the 9and-nies and noc- V v,; MishL . rB . turnal sounds. Everything at first was still. Tbe beautiful red, green and yellow fire-flies were flitting by thousands special assoocsiikst fro* through the air. (gradually a sort of \Z,oio y.-u>. and R« o u«i-n„w humming sound reached my ears, proceed- ' «ra*r M Dutrtoxbm. ing frOUl the depths ot the torest. it, fSg-.K m *w ami sure plan for obtaining Gi'LU nnd SI swelled and waxod louder as it seemed to ‘win w£'» approach me Ten minutes more and I un>,, .p, ; hc»u ; -.. fnm Wtl , lu fl . ul , guakan ! was in the midst of the most internal con- tekd to encb purchtufr. iiooouu iu Gifu h.»ve b.;**n <ii«* cert that ever fell on human ears. tfii*ut-d to my pntrfna wnhio ihe pant six ni.uittiu— .. .. , j• *150 1)00 to be distnhuf**'l iluruig tilt nt*xt six tiHM.«ns 'lhe din and uproar was astounding. « rllJi io»iuc«-ni-nt>« Thousands of tree frogs occupied every tree in mv vicinity, and probably for a i\, r nu* \k»t niuht vf.ira. my .*xperieuce «nabKH me t» cun hundred miles around me numbers 0 f da., th. oirt B n ..n,H« w„h «h. groat-t ««—,...« • enormous toads of various species were T “"' U crawling everywhere ; geckos (a species ot duane i.m.i^in. lizard) glided invisibly over my face and ; ““ s U,MI “- “ body; innumerable swarms of crickets, , - N , s gsasshoppers and cicadas covered every I N^‘'f'Tn’di'no *ro x ii. Diant of the Manabique territory. All, No" isos Mmket s'trmc. sbovs tsth, Somh si.i., * 1 . • , r j .» I’hilaclul pbiti. these creatures seem striving tO-OUtUO tue Constantly lu-pt „„ hand, a conernl assortment of Red others in the production of unearthly sounds. It was an immense accumulation y»iug3. Bindings. «mlii Kuuerftl :-.ssornneut ..I of singular and inharmonious noises—of ; wiU flt tbß croakings, pipings, bellowings, stridula- bastings and gallons. tions, saw sharpenings, chirpings, squeak- ott4 _ ... - ines, chatterings. Imagine to yourself a . .enu4 stamps for a specimen ok million of voices raised Simultaneously, A ' coU ,pt e u, Huiunmrv of th«- Intest recttivrd with every variety of intonations and with increasing perseveranoe, and you still have j, oriti( . Hi Ecieuce, Art, History. Ac.. *c. but a faiut idea of the discord which that enulisiimrc v night drove sleep from my couch. Krom time to time the shrill cry of some night bird startled me as it silently hover ed over me, and several times I distinctly heard the roar of a jaguar roamiDg along the beach in search ot the large turtles which at this season come to spawn in the dry sancl. Hosts_j)Jf sand flies and uius quitoes assaulted me all night, and irritated me by the hopelessness of getting rid of them ; scratching and slapping were of no avail, as those I thus destroyed with a soft of savage satisfaction were imme diately replaced by new myriads. At last the long wished for dawn and the sun rose rapidly above the horizon. The howling monkeys saluted its presence by a terrific chorus, which echoed far and wide through the solitary woods, and crowned the wonderful vocal performance of this memorable night- CARDS. S. PYFER, I ATTO K -N E Y A T LAW. OFFICE— No 11 Noam Duke street, (west bike,) lan- CASTER, PS. *t >r -° tfl4 RE M OV A L.— WILLIAM S. AMWEO, Attorney at Law. has ruiuove.l bis ln*iu “* lofinor piace intu South Duke street, nearly \ } l6 Trinity Dutheran Church. H P r s “ l ~ rp HAL L. FOREMAN, l ATTORXEi A V LAW. oTfil-e WITH T. K FTUXKUN. Esq , No. 26 K ast Kino St LANCASTER, FA JOHN P. BRINTON, ATTORN EY AT LA W, PHILADELPHIA, Pa., Hup removed hiß offlee to hla residence, No. 249 South Gth" Street, above Spruce. _ . „„ Kel'ors by uermwaion to Uon. H. G. Ix>NO, “A. L. Hayes, “ Ferqre Brixtox, “ Thapdecs Stivkxs. nor 24 ly*4s O AMUEIi H.UEVNOIiDS, Attorney at N Law Ofitce. No. 14 North Duka street, opposite the Court lloußo. 6 1116 Abram shank, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Office with D. G. Kshlkman. Baa., No. Hf> North Duke St., iJiVCMSr/J/i, Jt* A VBWTOK LIGHT NEK, ATTORNEY J\j AT LAW, has bin Office in North Duke street, nearly opposite the Court House. Lancaster, apr 1 1111 JESSE LANDIS, Attorney at Law.—Of fice one door east of Lechler’s Hotel, Kast-Klng street, Lancaster, Pa. S3LAII kinds of ScriYening—such as writing w Ilia, Deeds, Mortgages, Accounts, 4c., will be attended to with correctness aod despatch. may 15,’&& tf-17 SIMON P. BBT, ATTORN BY AT LAW, 0 FFICE:—No. 38 North Duke street, may II ly 17] Lancaster, Pbhna. UAK-MlTli * 00, 11-2 & i ‘4 William -tnvt, N. juti,- us it t-i\ IKIdIIMKS SCOTCHMAN. WKDHHMKN. Burp-rt vour own family paper. hu.l FitOM HOME, which is published every TIILKhDAY and forwarded postae* free for Two Dollars for one year. Oru> Dollar for six months Fifty cents for three months. Parties netting up clubs are allowed ‘l[> percent, fur their trouble. _ , ■ , Postm-oders ami e.-tabllshed Nows Dealers (ire authorized U. .°l £ V™- TOWSDROS 4 DAY. Editors and Proprietors, New iork ly 11 >tOTWITHSTAXDISG our large opening of SHAWLS aud DRESS GOODS lu-l wwk, u'b have now open another lot of UROCIIA SHAWLS, LONG AND SQUARE. WOOL, BLANKETS, Ac , “ VOICE OF THOSE RFXERSABLE SHAWLS, MISSES SHAWLS, LONG AND SQUARE. Our ►t«»-k of nh.iwlK in extremely largo, and ioc u-J«8 many New Styles. pureh-iMied at. late sales. \S a are deter mined to sell thotn at low p-ic c s- UI.ACK AND YAXCY SILEd, FltunNCll MKIUNOE3, I'OPLIN', and the at>ioi ot DKKnS GOOD?, in every variety WKNTZ HUO- 4 .. Corner K.tst Kintf and Centra S|unr«>. miv 1 If Atl 1 milF PHILADELPHIA EVItHUiB BI)L- I T imN AN IXDKPKNDBNTDAILY NKWSPAPKII, : devoted especially to the internals of Pennsylranie. tV.n -: taining Important Telegraphic News, alateou houra in ad vance of the Morning Papers. Original. Foreign and D e 1 mestlc Corre-poadonce. Editorials on nil Bul.J.cta. and full ! Reports of all ilia t.»i ol the day. Ihe Commercial and Financial Departments ara full, and are caretully attended ! 10 '*> as AX ADVcimslxu Medium there Is no hatter paper in tha SUto, the circulation being nest to the largest in the ritv, and among the most intelligent and inflnon 111TFIIMS bi'vDOI.DARS PF.lt YKAB, IX ADVANCE. ' ' UUMUIXU.S A PEACOCK, i Proprietors. No. U2South Third street, Philadelphia. THE PHILADELPHIA SATUUDAY BULLETIN, a handsome. woll-Mle-1, FxuaY Wkeiuy Newspaper. iipn>- lißhed hy the Proprietors at the followjug unprect^ntodb low rates : * i 0 0 l Copy, one year, - * ft 00 6 Copies, “ : i 0 qq y .. «oo „ „ 20 00 {Z .. .. «• <» FURTHER INDUCEMENTS! TIIE LAKQEST CLUB (over 100) will be sent for three y< THK NEXT LARGEST CLUB, (over 100) will be Bout for two yooro. *M™J Mllias 4 p BAC OCK, Proprietor,. Bulletin Building No. 112 South Third utreot, Philadelphia. -erasi pubs'! F « R sU , o F J ?f o l v 6 ®‘ ao * n * a REI R A & TBO M b UJy . 818 MARKET STREET, above BIUHTU, BOUtli »We, VIIILADE L P H I A . ?lto » nnenetl their elegant assortment of FURS, mao- SS S“their immediate aupervisioo from SUM selected with tha greatest of care from the largest stocks of Ihe European Market, embracing every variety and style of LADIES’ AND CHILDREN’S WEAK. Those purchasing early will hare the benefit of a larger selection. Besides the above goods, we have a fine assort SuVealo robes, ll^HßSa' PUB OLOVES AND COLLARS. The prices for all these goods are at a lower figure than the, can be bought any where k. g. city. THo jjg o jj i 818 Market street, Philadelphia- N. 8.-FURS altered and repaired ond r *Pf MXGtf made to order. L Delaware mutual safety in- SURANCE COMPANY. INCORPORATED BY THE LEGIBLAIUBE OF PENN- SYLVANIA, 1835. OFFICE, 8. E. CORNER THIRD AND WALNUT STS., FIRS INSURANCES On Merchandise generally. On Btores. Dwelling Houses, Ac. ASSETS OF THE COMPANY, November 1, 1858. Bonds, Mortgages, and Real Estate Philadelphia City, and other Loans Stock In Railroads, Gas and Insurance Com- 25,302 60 Bills Receivable 291,666 £® Cash on hand 12,067 36 Balance lu haods of Agents—Premiums on Marine Policies rerentiy issued—and other debts doe the Company ll $698,804 70 WM. MARTIN, President. TUOS. C. HAND, Vice President. Hinrt Ltlbobn, Secretary. J ZIMMERMAN, Agent, 74 North Queen street, Lancaster. oct IS 3m 40] AHEAP CASH STOVE STORE, 1/ Market Street, formerly Market and Thirteenth, PHILADELPHIA. SILVER'S GAS CONSUMER,.Improved by JOHN KER SHAW, No. IWO Market street, equal if not superior to the best manufactured in Philadelphia, and the most beautiful design for parlors, Ac., full 60 per cent. saved in fuel; also, GAS CONSUMING COOK STOVES, of the very latest and most durable pat- - terns; also, a very law variety of superior COOK and other STOVES, too tedious to mention, for churches, schools, i dices, parlors, Ac. flttl'Old Stoves takeu In exchange, thick and Castings alwayß no hand. A call is solicited. (Cut this out for nuv 8 2m 4-J JOHN KERSHAW. IMJRS l FURS!! FURS!!! 1 bAREIHA c£* THOMSON. ImikorterF, M trufucturers aud Dealers In LADIES’ AND CHILDREN'S FANCY FURS, of overy description. Also, BUFFALO HOB US, KUKltfiD GLOVES, AND COLLARS. No SIS MARKKT STREET, (above Eighth, Sooth aide,) PHILADELPHIA. WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. N. U.— Storekeepers, will do well to give ns a call, as they will tlud the largest assortment by far to seloct from In the City, and at Manufacturers’ Prices /'IARDS! CARDS!! CARDS!!! PRINTER’3 SHEET AND CUT CARDS, Bust mi-1 Chunpotß in tho Market. CARDS FOR MOUNTING PHOTOGRAPH PICTURES, Ok - bUPtKIOR (JUiLITT AND AT LOW PIUCSS, Blue and While and fine White Paste-Boards, Straw lirhirds , dr , on hand and for sale by A . M . 0 U L 1. 1 N 3 , PAPER aud CARD Warehouse, POO MINOR 3TTKKT, PHILADELPHIA . /'tASTOR OIL, ARROW ROOT, 1/ SWEET OIL BORAX, ALCOHOL, SPICES CALOMEL, SODA LOOWOOD, CREAM TARTAR PEARL BARLEY, OUM ARABIC, HARTSHORN, GELATINE. VIALS, RHUBARB, . jii SPONGE, Ac., Kor «t ’ THOMAS ELLMAKKK’B H pr 21 If 14 T)rra mul Chemical Store. Woat jlingjt^ XTKW AUCTION goods, HAGER £ BROTHERS llm o dow op,-., a laris- Nt.vk of swisouaMo i,il)S Rich Silks, Pans Printed MouseeUnw, Oltuimii,' H.iplli.s, I’i.ll JaCh-.rM. LUPIN’S Preach Mori docs. Chintz. A •, Ar. MuORNING oonDS—Bombazines, Alparcas, Crapes, ,tc. SHAtV"i.S-StnlU, Brnetm. Woolen and Thibet. CLOAK'—New Style Full Cloak*. ALSO—Ribbou Bound Blankets, Flannels, Damasks, Liiiriin. Cotton*, Diapers Ac. ~ , . CL >THS—SuiUhlo for Ladle*’ Cloaks. Embroideries, IlosicrV, Gloves. Ac. MK„Y ' S WEAR-. FRENCH ENGLIrII aud AMERICAN CLOTHS, 1 „ ' .. “ CASSIMBRB. V-U.-r, Sill; nod W0..1,mi Ve.-tin**, Merino Shirts am* OKN T S li A \V L S , KKADV MADK CLOTHING, A '" r ‘“uaXkK 4 BROS. NOW IS TIIK TIME TO SUBSCRIBE. L) Uy<’ A y .£• X TONER, CKN T R K 8Ql!A It K . LANC A 8 T K It, Receive «üb»rn|>tinns to the following MAGAZINES aod- 1 NE " S MnvniuK!>. 3KNII-MONTHUKS. I'rio- <j yw.\ J'rux a ytar. PeieisouN Monthly ;Peterson's SeraiMonth- Pnunterteit Deflator. $l 001 ly Counterfeit Dotec’r 2 00 . WEEKLIES. Fbloi gun’s Maga/.m0.... 2 Uh,*cienhHc American 200 Grain.□'* Mart’•/•■«».* 3 00, Dollar Newspaper 100 Ll.'iifohohl Words 3 O'lTlcuie Journal 1 00 Knickerbocker 0 uUiLondon Punch 5 00 Atlmtic M<m:Mv 3 ißijOnuutry Gentleman .... 2 00 wood'- Magazine 3 DOIN. Y. Albion 0 00 11 uu’’s Verchants’ Man 5 00, HerGd 100 Ar'lnn's H .i.i.. DW-. - uo;W,.„Uy Tnbun. 2 00 I'rnat? L slfe's Mug 3 00l Harpers Weekly 250 Frh--!i'- >UtiN7.i-'r ■'> Pictorial 2 50 ■ liallou’. M-gavdne 1 t)olUhisfVJ London News 10 00 : Anitnirtsl Airrlrultu’l... 1 0()| Lehlie's inwtt’ed News. 3 00 ! Banker s Mag., P.-st.-n . 3 (m| Living Apr* . b 00 i; .* London 7 MbPorters Spirit of the . Chamber*’ Kdiaburgh Times.... ••••••••••• J2l j. mrl . a l 2 so;3aturday Evening Post. 2 00 [|,.,-lkHltiinM... QUARTERLIES. Uiv U 1 |.niter 3HU 1-Mi.ihurßb l!o.i«» 3TO Lol.il.ili Lnucot o olljlA.ml.,ti Quurlarly.. 3TO 1 loudon Art Journal 9 OOlNortli British Review... 300 : Mioiog Moß».ino 6 OOAlWmlo.tor 300 l Hftr Remit the amount, per mail, enclosed In a letter, • |',,r whatever ones vou umv wish to subscribe for, to DUNCAN & STONER.Outre Square, Lancaster, i aud ymi will receive the mini' erk regularly afterwards. ! CLUB TERM.*'. —Large deductions from the above prices i will l e made to clubs of five. ten. lifteen oa twenty, and 1 in all MW ONE COPY WILL BE PRESENTED gratia, to : the getter up ut the club. [nov b tf 43 IN TIIE 'COURT OP COMMON PCEAS luf Lmnash-r county—in the mutter i»f the petition of til- Uimieburg, l'..rismouth. Mount Joy and Lancaster Railroad Company, to have satisfaction colored on the record of a certain mortgage of said Company — Octnhor iGili. it apjß*ariug to the Court, by the petiti' n of t}i.. Harri'-burg. Portsmouth, Mount Joy and Lauc.nti'or Kmlruad Company, that the said Ooaipany baa fully paid and satMh-d to the holder* thereof all the bonds of ih.> paid Company, secured by a certain mortgage executed by tho said Company to Johu Moss, Quintln Campbell and Frauds Howie Wharton, Kstis., Trustees for the said bondholders, dated the tlrst day of January, A D 151* and In tho Recorder's Office of Lan caster county, in Mortgage Book No. 9, page 026, Ac., and that no satisfaction has be**u entered on the record of the Bilid mortgage. the Court, ou motion, of Thomas E. Frank lin, Kwj., Attorney for said Company, graot a rulei upon aU parties interested, to appear in Court, on MONDAY tile )9th day of DKCBMBBK. A. D., lsf.9, to show cause, if an f they have, why Uulolin Campbell and Francis Itawle Wharton, Ksqs. surviving Trustees for the said bond holders, should not outer «=stisf*rtion ou tho record of the mortgage referred to in said petition : and direct notice of this rule to be given to all parties interested, by publica tion we-klt in tho f'rcz*. the Xorth American and Undid States Gazette, the L-mmster Examiner <£ Herald, and the ‘l.anc<t*ter hitrlUymcr.r. f»r four successive weeks iu each. Col lided froui tho record nriv H 4t 4 J] rrOYS I TOYS : 1 TOYS [1 I I The (iuhseribor has just rweivrtJ at his old establish nidlt No 14+ North fcocoml Street. a very large Rjsorh nielit'nt TOYS eud FANCY UOODS, FANCY BASKETS FIVES CANES. SNUFF BONES, BACK GAMMON HOARDS, CHESSMEN. Ac., which he will Bell whole-tale and retail, at very low pricee JOHN DOLL, Importer and Manufacturer of Klhrh aud Picture Alphabet Blocks, Ui North Be.-*ud Streel, Philadelphia, wp ->7 1 N TIIK COURT OF COMMON PLEAS I of Lancaster county—in the matter of the petition of the Harrisburg, Portsmouth, Mount Joy and Lancaster Rallr.m.l Company, u> have satisfaction entered on the record of a oertaln mortgage of said Company— ociubur mb. 18W-U appearing to the Court by the petition Of the Harrisburg, Portsmouth, Mount Joy and Ballroad Coropmy, Hint tho Bald conpuiy bn tully paid and sHliified to the holders thereof,all the bonds of said Coot pan y secured by a certain mortgage, exe cuted by the said Company to John Moss, Quintin Camp bell and Francis Rawle Wharton, K-q*.. trustees for the said bondholder*, dah-d the twenty eighth day of April, A. D.. IS3B, and recorded in the Recorder’s Office or ton caster countv, in Mortgage Book No. 8, page 365, Ac., and that no satisfaction has been entered ou the record of the Baid mortgage, thiCnnrt. on motiou of Thomas 15. Frank lin, Esq., Attorney tor said Compauy, grant a rule• opou aU parties interested, h» appear in Court on MONDAY the 19thday o' DECEMBER. A. D., 1859 to show cause, ir any : they have, why Quintiu Campbell and Francis Ba?rle I Wharton. Keqs., sarvlviog Trustees for the said bond- I holders, should not enter satisfaction on the record of the mortgage 'eforred to In the said petition ; nod direct notice ! of this rule to be given to all parties interested, by pnbll r-Htlon weekly in the /»««. Ih- iVorf/» A,aer,canand Untied States Gascon the Ismcader Rramuur A Herald, and the I+Lticasler tnUllujencer, lor four successive Weeks in each. Certified from the rocord nov 8 4t 42] A '” caps, FALL AND HATJH W(?JTER CAPB j; uii | and WINTER HATS I FALL AND wi. fall AND WINTER 0A pg| At SHULTZ A BROTHER'S, At anvuiis « BHIJIjCZ A BROTHER’S At SHULTZ ft BROTHER’S, •>ni' NQltill QirEExV Street, and next door lo Lane's Store, EAST KhVG Street. SHULTZ A UKO. renpeclfully-lnvite attention to their ex tensive uud varied HUKortment of HATS and CAPS, “ e * signed for the coming Fall and Winter, comprising Gentle men’s Dress Hats, of beautiful model and fabric, fully «p to the DrOitreas of fashion. _ .. , A benuUfnl Silk Hat for $3.00. Soft Felt HJt*, an, en tire assortment, comprising every variety of pattern, “Grab?audlfuuW Caps. An endless variety, for drew and nndrtws, riding, spirting, trailing and evening wear. The undersigned respectfully solicit an examination of their Urve varied und unexceptionable stock of Hats and £" r Sng confident that every taste can be lolly satis fled as they have spared neither pains nor expense In get- SSg up their present abxk lu the ver, la«t aIL proved styles, und of tbe best materials. Hats to amt aIL and at patcta to SUIT the times. arrnTT7 JOHN A. SHULTZ * H- A. SHULTZ, 2014 North Queoo Street, and nest dour to Lane a Store, Eaat King Street tf 40 OCt 18 - Furniture os* evert dbsch.ip« thro warranted aa good aa the beat, and clroaper than cbeawaS KBTCIIAM'S, Noam Huso, nun, op-, uoslte Sink’s National House, Lancaster. • * _ ' B To any one purchasing $5O worth before the first of November next, 10 par cent. wIU be allowod forCaxh. aog 31 NO 48. $ 71,203 2ft 297,066 60 Attest, W. CARPENTER, Prothonotary. Attest, W. CARPENTER, Prothonotary.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers