b . ,' . ..- .-. •... -- ':' . ''.4.:2-0t:: - ',... - :',: . ...t:4 - 4 . 4'; -- / : .'... - Elliti=nll VOL. LXI. THE, LANCASTER INTELLIGENCER POBLIBEND ETZAT4OI.IIDAT, AT NO. 8 NONTH DOBL EITSZIT, BY GEO. SANDERSON. TEILItIS &Menaivuotr.—Two Dollars per annum, payable in ad vance. No subscription discontinued until all arrear ages are paid, unless at the option of the Editor. Anvaartsaninqvs.—Advertisements, not exceeding one square, (12 llnes,) will be insetted three times for one dollar, and twenty-five cents for each additional inser tion. Those of greater length in proportion. • JOB PILENTING—Bach as Hand Bills, Posters, Pamphlets, Blanks, Labels, &c., &c., executed with accuracy and on the shortest notice. WELL ? !The following poem by Bnlwer—a bitter satire on fickleness—is supposed to paint his own expert. ence Midragb!„past ? Not a sound of aught Through that silent house but the wind at his . ,prayers. I sat bythe dying fire and thought Of the dear dead woman up stairs, Nobody with me my watch to keep, But the friend of my bosom, the man I love; And grief had sent him fast to sleep In the chamber up above Nobody else in the country place, All round, that knew of my loss beside, But the good young priest with the Raphael face, Who confessed her when she died. * l* * On her cold dead bosom my portrait lies, Which next to her heart she used to wear, Haunting it o'er with her tender eyes, When my own face was not there; * A , * * * * And I said, ‘"lhe thing is piecious to me: They will bury her soon in the church-yard clay It lies on her heart, and lost must bo, If I do not take it away." a ek * * * * As I stretched my hand I held my breath; I turned as I llrew the curtains apart, I dared not look at her face of death; I knew where to find her heart. I thought at first, as my touch fell there, It had warmed that heart to life with love ; For the thing I touched was warm, I swear, And I could feel it move. 'Twos the hand of a man, that was moving slow O'er the heart of the dead—from the other side ; And at once the sweat broke o'er my brow ; "Who is robbing the corpse?" I cried. Opposite me, by the taper's light, The friend of my bosom, the man I loved, Stood over the corpse, aid all as white, And neither of us moved. "What do you here, my friend ?" The man Looked first at me and then at the dead, "There is a portrait here," he began; "There is—it is mine," 1 said. Said the friend of my bosom : 'Yours, no doubt, The portrait was, till a month ago, When this suffering angel took that out, And placed mine there, I know." "This woman, she loved me well," said I, "A. month ago," said my friend to me; ••And in your throat," I groaned, "you lie!" He answered : "Lot us see." - We found the portrait there in the place; We opened it by the taper's shrine; The gems were all unchanged—the face Was neither his nor mine. "One nail drives out another, at least! The face of the portrait there," I cried, “Is our friend's, the Raphael-faced young priest, Who confessed her when she died.' IS IT A SIN TO DANCE ? SMOKING AND DANCING A man may puff his life away Upon a vile cigar; May chew the vile tobacco weed, Yet be a shining star; A chosen one, whose ample head Has felt a brother's touch, Compared with whom in wisdom ways A laymen is not much. But if a girl should spend an hour In whirling in the dance, Her star is set for evermore, She's sentenced in advance. They wait not till the judgment day, These more than learned divines; While hugging thoir tobacco box, They sweep away their shrines. They bow down to their idol weed; She dreams her dancing dream; The mote is in the brother's eye, The sister has the beam. some laymen, with curious mind, Tho' filled with little light, May see an inconsistency, And pick out wrong from right; To such, the dreadful sentence pasted, By learned and gracious seers, Upon a sprightly, jumping girl, In justice's rank appears; And one there is will yet defend And take the dancer's part, Whose only sin is to show out, The feelings of the heart. Be will maintain, tho' graver heads Should look on him askance, The scriptures in no part proclaim It is a sin to dance; But all who glance upon their page, These golden lettere see— That mercy I to others show, That mercy show to me, The Scriptures have no single word The smokers can advanoe. While they record the cheering fact, There is a time to dance. The incense from a vile cigar Must reach some idol throne, How keen our eyes to others' faults! How blinded to our own! THE CZAR AND THE SCEPTIC. It was in 1829. Government despatches affirmed that Diebitsch's army had achieved a'great success, and that Silistria was in their hands. But official news is not always implicitly believed when and where unofficial news mongers are gagged. g Holy - Russia forever ! the troops are in Silistria.' 6 Before it, you mean to say.' Before it ! inside it ; I say what I mean.' Inside it ! outside it ; under correc tion still.' Correction you may well say. I repeat it, inside.' And, I repeat it, out.' I have seen the despatch.' 'What? the government version ?' The government, to be sure.' 'Nothing less sure, I assure you.' What ! less sure than the government story All stories may be told two ways.' But one way is true, the other false.' Precisely, and I mistrust the latter.' But the real truth is, the troops are in. The real truth is, the troops are out.' 'ln, I say.' g Out, I say.' And so on, ad infinitum. In private saloons, in cafes, at table d'hotes, on change and on the Perspective- Neskoi, might such wranglings have been heard. In the Gastinnoi-Dv or, and in the vodki shops, there was more unanimity.— The black people's' wish was less doubt fully father to their thought ; with their unquestioning as well as unquestionable patriotic prejudice, holy Russia must have won, and Diebitsch must, for certain, be holding Silistria for the Czar. There was a French gentleman, Mon sieur De la Jobardiero, whose mistrust of official bulletins had, pertaps, not unrea sonably, grown with his growth. Russian Invalids, Northern Bees, or whatever may have been, in 1829, the accredited organs of the Imperial Government, were to his mind, so many miserable imitations of his native Moniteur, the feebleness of whose inventions, however, as compared with those of that great Gallic organ of men dacity, consisted not in the absence of mendaciousness. Monsieur De la Jobar diere was, himself, very much , spilt, fres repandu,' in certain social circles of St. = Petersburg, to borrow an image from his own.yernacular vernacular , and thus it came taros, that being gifted, as is not unusual amongst his fellow-countrymen, with a considerable flow of words, he was enabled to spill the ink of denegation far and wide upon the spotless page, of these same dis puted Government despatches. Hold it to yourself for .said, my good friends,' he would insist; 'your govern ment wishes to throw you the powder in the eyes. It is one canard, one duck— how you say?—this great news of Silistria. That poor sir of Diebitsch, he kick his heel, what ? outside still ; and the Turk be safe and snug inside, as one rat in a cheese, eh?' Now, De la Jobardiere had his entries in saloons' diplomatic,' as he would him self have said ; and was, altogether, a man who, chatterbox d he was, might yet be supposed to have access to certain chan nels of authe,ntio information, at which the vulgar of St. Petersburg might not easily slake their thirst for information. His constant and confident affirmations of the falsehood of the victorious intelligence were not without a certain effect within the radions of his own social effusion,' and perhaps beyond it. Monsieur de la Jobardiere was a precise and somewhat ornate dresser ; he was a I chilly personage, in spite of his longish residence in the northern capital; he was also somewhat of a gastronome, particu larly as to the quality and regularity of his meals ; he was, moreover, a sound sleeper. So sound, indeed, that the heavy boot tread of the feldjager, that, hybrid be tween a police officer and a government courier, failed to break his slumbers on a certain night ; nor was he roused from them till that functionary's rude hand had shaken his shoulder for a third time.— Thereupon he started up to a sitting pos ture and unclosed his eyes, which closed again with sudden blink at the glare of the lantern which the feldjagei's other hand almost thrust into his face. Look sharp, sir!' said that official, and come along.' Come along, indeed ! You are pleas anting, my-good fellow,' quoth the sleepy Frenchman. Well, then, if you won't,' retorted the ruthless invader of his slumbers, my orders are positive ;' and he transferred his paw from the shoulder to the throat band of Monsieur de la Jobardiere's night dress. Laissez donc, grand brutal !' exclaim ed that worthy. Let me at least get on my pantaloons ;' and he inserted his feet into the slippers by the bedside. 4 But, by fatality," as he always said, my cossack of a domestic, Ivan Petro vitch, had assisted at my dishabille, and had taken my clothes out with him to brush before I should rise of great morn ing' the next day. Let me nut" my do mestic, at least ?' he inquired of the stolid feldjager. Ring bells and resist authorities l' he growled : Come, come, sir, none of that.' And again his rough, red, hairy paw was busy in proximity with the white throat of the finicking Frenchman. Quick, march ! and not a word, or— 'But it is unheard of, it is an infamy, a barbarism, an indecency !' The scowl darkened upon the feldjager's unprepossessing countenance ; it was more than evident that expostulation and entreaty were alike in vain. Happily that I lose not my presence of mind in this terrible crisis, and draping myself hastily in the sheets and blanket, and eider-down quilt, I yield to destiny and follow that coquin of a feldjager down stairs, gentlemen ; my faith ! yes down stairs to the porte-cochere. There what find we 1 A telega, kibitka, tarantass, what do I know Some carriage of mis fortune at the door, with its own door open, eh ?' It was even so. The night was very dark and foggy ; the rays from the car riage lamps added to the gleam of the feldjager's lantern, gave but a dim light after all ; but such as it was, its scintilla tions were reflected from the steel scab bards, spurs, and horsebits of a mounted Cossack on either side ; and, dark amidst the darkness, the open carriage door yawned after the fashion of a tomb. Oh ! by example,' once more did De la Jobardiere attempt to remonstrate, turn ing round, here is what is a little strong. Do you figure yourself that I—' He had one foot upon the carriage steps already, and one hand on . the handle by the doorway ; a muscular grip seized his other elbow. In an instant he was hoisted and pushed forward in, and the tail of the quilt was bundled in after him ; and he felt-that some one had vaulted on the front seatoutside. Houpp la !' cried a hoarse voice ; and three cracks of whips, like pistol-shots, made answer ; and, with a bound and plunge, the carriage darted onwards. He could hear the splashing gallop, through the slush and mud, of the mounted trooper, on the right hand and on the left. I try the windows, on this side, on that, in front, and I am quits of it for my pain. No means ! I scream, I howl, I cry, I threaten that pig of feldjager that must bear in front. The embassy French shall have reason of this outrage ! " When I tell you that I am not one of your nationals, bet a F-r-r-rench, then I tell you, eh 1 Useless I—l pass to entreaty. Hear there, Ivan, Stephen, Nicholas, Sergius I my corporal, my sergeant, my lieutenant-of police ! here is one billet i gf bank—that is to say, not here, but there ; in the pocket of that pantaloons at home on the Morskara, you comprehend. A billet of twenty-five roubles—of fifty—of a hundred—say, howl' Again useless. Not a word—not a sign—he makes the 'deaf ear, that polis son de. la police' outside. _ It is stronger than me. I am trans ported again of rage, of despair. I strike of the fist, of the feet, of the head at last, against the pannels of that carriage atrocious. Derision ! My efforts deeper sting about to nothing. That minion of a despotism brutal mocks himself well of this agony. I have : disarranged my drapery; and currents . of air from the underneaths of doors give my legs trances of cold. There is no remedy. I envelop myself once more of my eider-down, and resign myself to my destiny. I comprehend at last ; all is lost for me. I see the Boule vards and the Champs Elysees no more. I Adieu, Belle France ; I share the fate of the prisoners of the Moskowa, the destiny ingrate of the Olds of. the Old. No means now. to mistake oneself ; I am en route for Siberia. •Unhappy that I am! " THAT COUNTRY IS THE MOST PRORPNROIIB WHIRR LABOR LANCASTER CITY, PA., TUESDAY MORNING, MARCH 6, 1860. If at least I could have come in pantaloons.' Even those that have traveled them under more auspicious circumstances than the luckless De la Jobardiere, have borne witness to the terrible condition of the Russian roads, between late autumn and early winter. Bolt and bump, and thump and crash, swinging to this side and sway ing to that ; with one wheel churning the liquid mud in a rut as deep as to the felloe, and the other apparently revolving in the empty air like the windward paddle wheel of a sea-going steam-packet in the trough of a rolling wave. Then a pitch and toss, fairly up and down, stem and stern, as if over a chopping sea, but petri fied. Endless were the miseries endured by the victim inside the closed carriage, on cushions of which the hardness did not fail to make itself felt even through such folds of the eider-down as could be spared from the protection of the lower limbs from the pen-knife-like currents of air which came through the door chinks. How the feldjager kept his hard perch out side was a marvel to the man in his custody. They must have strapped him with a leather, or corded him to the bench for sure, that detestable Cossack !' thought De la Jobardiere, when he could spare a thought from his own deplorable condition. How long this voyage lasted, he was never able to calculate. He lost all account of days in his excitement of agony and des pair. The same chinks which let in the mrial currents did indeed tell something of diurnal revolutions ; for at one time they could be seen to admit some light giving rays, at another time only felt, thanks to those keen draughts which they admitted. There were no stoppages, ex cept such momentary delays, fabulous in the shortness of their duration, as were necessary for the busy fingers of experi enced post boys to harness the horses, which were always to be heard neighing and snorting in readiness as they dashed up to the relays. There was a sort of a little trap or window—unglazed, however—in the front pannel of the carriage, through, which ,the red and hirsute paw put in a ration of brown biscuit, together with a little flask of vodki, and a mug of water now and then. It was messieurs, one terrible burning worse as the wiski ' of the old Ireland, eh ? Sometimes, of night, too, for it make a black of wolf, zin noir de Loup,' as we say in France, he just open, half open, the car riage door, this Cossack, and put in one bowl of stchi,' with a spoon. Do you know what this is, one 'stchi?' A soup to cabbage, but with such seasonment ! A ragout of barbarous, I tell you, to make a scullion cry ! Well, I so hungry, I eat it, I devour it, I lick the spoon. Imagine you, I De la Jobardiere, who was other times redactor, editor—what you say ? of the Journal of Gourmands' of Paris !' On, and on, and on, through the dark ness, mitigated or unmitigated by the', kindly admissions of the chink ; on and on, till all the reckoning of his time was utterly confused. But all things have an end on earth here ; and at last the carriage came to a dead stand-still, with its half-dead passen ger inside. It was at least as raw and as cold, as foggy and as disagreeable a night as that of the departure from St. Petersbnrgh, when, for the first time, the carriage door was opened wide. Right and left stood a tall figure, indistinct in grey capote, with flat muffin cap to crown it ; but the reflect ed light ran up the barrel of a burnished musket. In the open door-way of a house, whence a red glow as of a cheerful fire came streaming out, stood another martial figure in cocked hat, with feathers, and a green uniform with aiguillettes of an aid de-camp. He raised his hand to the cocked hat in question after the military fashion of salute. Deign to descend, Monsieur.' I am then at Tobolsk Of none, Monsiehr, to the contrary.' 'Where then ? at Irkutsk I'. Still less, Monsieur, Pray give your self the trouble to descend.' I am hardly in that costume,' objected De la Jobardiere, for that brutal of a feldjager—' Obeyed, I have no doubt, his orders to the letter. Pray, Monsieur, descend,' insisted the plumed aid-de-camp, with imperturbable gravity. This, then, is at last Siberia Siberia, Monsieur ! By no manner of means.' Bat where on earth, then, have I the misfortune to find myself—excuse me— the honor to make your distinguished acquaintance V I have the distinguished honor,' said the staff-officer, unwilling to be outdone in politeness by the Frenchman, to receive Monsieur at the grand guard of the head quarters of his Imperial Majesty's army in Turkey, with the enciente of the citadel of Silistria.' Peste !' exclaimed De la Jobardiere, I begin to comprehend.' Possibly,' quoth the aid-de-camp. May I once more trouble Monsieur to descend V This last word was in a tone which admitted of no trifling. With a mournful consciousness of the ludicrous appearance he presented that almost overpowered the weariness, the anxiety, the indignation which possessed him, De la Jobardiere stepped out of his flying prison van, and followed the aid-de camp into the guard-room. There, by a solid deal table,stood the feldjager, whose snub nose and scrubby red moustache were henceforth indelibly impressed upon his captive's memory. An officer, whose bearing and appearance would, without the stars and medals upon his breast, have given to the most careless observer indi cation of high military command, was reading a dispatch, apparently just handed to him by that functionary, the envelope of which the had carelessly- thrown upon the tablej ' . " A son Exc. " Le Mareohal Dieb—." was all that, in his confusion, De la Jobar diere was able to spell out. Monsieur De la Jobardiere, I presume !' said this officer with a glance of inquiry, but of perfect gravity. The same, Monsieur le Marechal," faltered the owner of the appellation. What officer, has the grand rounds to night?' he next inquired, turning towards a group of officers in the background. 'Major Razumoffski, of the Orenburg artillery brigade,'_ i answered one of their number, with the steetidomed'salute. g "le he mounted V And at the door, General.' Let one of his orderlies dismount, and let Monsieur De la Jobardiere have his horse.' But consider a little, Marechal, this costume—or may I say the want of it—' Is no doubt, a regretable circumstance, air ; but orders, sir, superior orders, excuse me. The grand rounds should be starting—you will be good enough to mount, and to accompany the major.' There was no help for it; that stolid feldjager was holding the dismounted trooper's nag at the door with unmoved countenance. Upon the less impassible trooper's own Tartar physiognomy, how ever, was something like a grin. A frown from the feldjager suppressed it, as poor De la Jobardiere scrambled into the sad dle, and endeavored to make the best arrangement of the blanket possible, to keep the damp night air from his bare shins. The quilt he clutchefl convulsively round him with his right while the left tugged at the bridle of his '-;rough and peppery little Caschkir steed. It has a.very wide enciente, that fortress of Silistria , and the major likewise visited several outlying pickets. He rode at a sharp pace from post to post, and the roads, streets, and lanes were execrable. Equitation is not my forte, yon know, my good friends ; and a Tartar trooper's saddle, that is something—oh ! to be felt is to be known. It was a long agony, that nocturnal ride.' I thought it that little thing near as as long as that deso lating journey of jolts to Silistria. ,Day Was begining to point, as we, drew up once more to the guard-room door.' The Frenchman shuddered on perceiv ing that the carriage with nine horses, harnessed three abreast, stood ready there as they rode up. The Marshal, said the polite aid-de camp, his first acquaintance, bids me to express to Monsieur that he is desolated not to have the opportunity of offering to Monsieur such poor hospitality as the head-quarters of a captured fortress can afford. But Monsieur will understand the importance of taking to the foot of the letter,' as his countrymen express it, instructions—superior instructions, he will comprehend. The military code upon such a point is absolute. And I have the honor,' with a significant gesture towards the gaping carriage door, to wish Mon sieur a bon voyage.' Bang! went that odious door again; again was the weight of the clambering feldjager felt to disturb the equilibrium of the carriage for a moment ; again did the hoarse voice shout, " Houpp la !' again did the three whip-cracks emulate the sharp reports of pistol-shots; again the carriage darted onwards ; and again might be heard through slush and mud the splashing gallop of the mounted trooper, right and left. Ist by let the tale of De la Jobardiere's misery be twice told All, all was the same as before. The bumps, the thumps, the bolts, the crashes, the • pitching and tossing, the swaying to-and-fro, the cur rents of air, the darkness and the strug gling rays of light, the bits of brown biscuit, the sips of vodki, the occasional bowls of stohi—all were repeated—all, as before, jumbled and confused together in sad and inextricable reminiscence. But when the carriage stopped again for good, and when its door was once more opened Wide, the portico was loftier and the staircase of wider sweep than at La Jobardiere's own hotel door on the Morskaia. It was night again, and it was again damp, and cold, and foggy ; but a clear illumination rendered unnecessary the lantern of the feldjager or the glimmer of the carriage lamps. Within the door way on either side stood in full dress uniform two non-commissioned officers of the famous Preobajenski Grenadiers. A gentleman in a full-dress cut-away, with black satin tights and silk stockings to correspond with broad silver buckles in his shoes, a chain of wide silver links round his neck, a silver key on his left coat-tail, and a strait steel-handled sword by his side, bowed courteously to De la Jobardiere, and begged him to follow him up stairs. Treading noiselessly upon velvet-pile carpets, he led the way through a spacious ante-room, into an apartment where all the light was furnished by a lamp with a ground glass shade, which stood upon a bureau strewn with books and papers, at which a stately figure in undress uni form was writing busily. Although its back was turned, the breadth of loin and shoulder, the length and upright carriage of the back,; the powerful but graceful setting upon the neck of the well formed head, all revealed at once and beyond a doubt to the astonished Frenchman in what presence he stood. The usher advanced, bowed, spoke a word at the stately figure's ear, bowed again, drew back, and left the room. The Czar wheeled round his chair, half rose, and made a dignified half bow. Poor De la Jobardiere folded his eider-down around him, and made a profound obeis ance. ' Monsieur De la Jobardiere,' said the august personage with just the least suspicion of a smile curling the corners of his imperial lip, lam informed that you have recently visited Silistria.' An obeisance, deeper and more dejected. Had you there, may I inquire, an opportunity of visiting the citadel, and of inspecting the military posts ?' A third obeisance, in the deep a lower depth. And found them in full occupation by our imperial troops I May I request an answer expressed explicitly ?' I found them so, your majesty' Ah ! that is well.' Not but what I myself have had full confidence in Dieb itsch ; buff people will be sceptical at times. Would yon believe it, there are rumors current that even now in certain saloons of St Petersburg, the taking of Silistria is doubted in the teeth of the dispatches V What could the hapless Frenchman do but bow down once again. However, I am glad to have unofficial and independent testimony from an actual eye-witness. You are certain the Marshal is in 'undisputed military possession?' 'I am certain of it, your majesty' Thank -you, Monsieur De la Jobard iere ; I will not detain yon longer ; I wish you a good evening. And turning round to his desk again, his august interlocutor touched a little bell. The usher appeared again, and with the same courteous solem nity _of demeanor shoired Monsieur .De la Jobardiere down stairs.. - TEI GIiXAMIST 1111911.RD.'3-81701EANAN. An aid-de-camp came tripping down just as the Frenchman's foot was on the carriage step. Monsieur De la Jobardiere ' he said, you are an old enough - resident in St. Petersburg to know that there are occa sions on which it is wise to be discreet about State affairs. Bat I have it in com mand from his Imperial Majesty to inform you, that as yon have so recently yourself had occasion to visit Silistria, there can be no possible objection to you stating in general society that you found the citadel, the fortress, and the city garrisoned by his Imperial Majesty's troops.' CARDS. FREDERICK 8. PYFER, ATTORNEY AT LAW. OFFICE—No. 11 Noma DUBE STREET, (WEST HIDE,) Law earn, Pa. apr 20 tf 14 REMOVA G S. AMWE, 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 T. BALL FOREMAN, ATTORNEY AT LAW. OITICE wrza T. E. FRANKLIN, Ea .. No. 26 Fan Kloa ST., LANCASTER, PA. W T. DiaPHAIL, ATTORNEY AT LAW, =Ally 11 No. n N. DUX IS IT., LANCABTIM, PA. W A.SHINGTON W. HOPKINS, ATTORNEY AT LAW. Office with N. Lightner & J. K. Alexander, Eggs., Duke St., nearly opposite Court House. [feb 7 6m 5 4 A lADUS J. NEFF, Attorney. at 'Law.-- L. Office with B. A. Shaffer, Esq., south-west corner of Centre Square, Lancaster. may 15, '55 ly 17 EDWARD M'GOVERN, ATTORNEY AT LAW, No. 3 South Queen street, in Reed, McGrann, Kelly & Co.'s Banking Building, Lancaster, Pa. apr 6 tf 12 DR. JOHN M'CALLA , DENTIST --Office No. 4 East King street. Residence Walnut street, second door West of Duke, Lancaster, Pa. [apr 18 tf 13 WILBERFORCE NEVIN, ATTORNEY AT L ATV, Office with Wm. B. Fordney, Esq., south-east corner of Centre Square, Lancaster, Pa. - [oct 25 ly* 41 CI ANDEL H. REYNOLDS, Attorney at Law. Offiee, No. 14 North Duke street, opposite the Court House. may 5 tf 16 DI A B . R A A T T S O H R A DA Y ' A T LAW, OSTICE WITH 1). G. ESEILESCAH, ESQ., No. 36 NORTH DUKE ST., LANCASTER, PA. NEWTON LIGHTNER, ATTORNEY AT LAW, has his Office in North Duke street, nearly opposite the Court House. Lancaster, apr 1 tf 11 JESSIM 'LANDIS - , Attorney at Law..-Of. fice one door east of Lechler's Hotel, East King street, Lancaster, Pa. pa. All kinds of Scrivening—such as writing Wills, Deeds, Mortgages, Accounts, kc., will be'attended to with correctness and despatch. may 15, '55 tf-17 REIVIOVAL.--WILLIADI B. FORDNEY, Attorney at Law, has removed his office from North Queen street to the building in the south-east corner of Centre Square, formerly known as Hubley's Hotel. Lancaster, april 10 REDIOVAL.--DR. J. T. BAIC.EYL, lEPATHIC PHYSICIAN, has removed his office to No. 69 East King street, next door above King's Grocery. Reference—Professor W. A. Gardner, Philadelphia. . Calls from the country willhe promptly attended to. apr 6 tf 12 JAMES BLACK, Attorney at Law.--Of bre in East King street, two doors east of Lechler's Hotel, Lancaster, Pa. Air All busiess connected with his profession, and all kinds of writing, such as preparing Deeds, Mortgages, Wills, Stating Accounts; &c., promptly attended to. m 15. tf-17 REMOVAL. --11. B. SWAIM, Attorney at Law, has removed his office to No, 13 North Duke street, nearly opposite his former locatiou,itud a few doors north of the Court House. apr 5 3m 12 SIMON P. EBY, ATTORNEY AT LAW,; OFFICE:—No. 38 North DukCstrett, may 11 ly 17] LAM ABMS, PENNA. JOHN F. BRINTON, ATTORNEY AT LANT, ELELLAHRLPHIA, PA, Has removed his office to his residence, No. 249 South 6th Street, above Spruce. Refers by permission to Hon. H. 11: LONG, A. L; HMS, • PEWIT= BRINSON, nov 24 ly" 46 " THADDEUS &WENS. JAMES H. BARNES, FANCY AND WINDSOR CHAIR'ILIABER, No. 6O East King street, Lancaster, Takes pleasure in inviting the public to call at his. Ware. rooms and examine hie BEAUTIFUL ASSORTMENT OF CHAIRS OF VARIOUS PATTERNS. 'Q ORDERS received and promptly attended to at the shortest notice. None bnt the beet workmen are employed in this establishment, consequently Chairs purchased at this house are fully equal.to any article sold in the Eastern Cities. Cali and examine for yourselves. [ang 16 ly 31. FkRUG AND CHRIIIIEGAI. STORE. _LI The subscriber Yawing removed his store to the new building nearly opposite his old stand, and directly opposie the Cross Keys Hotel, has now on hand a well selected stock of articles belonging to the Drug business, consisting iu part of Oils, Acids, Spices, Beeds, Alcohol, Powdered Articles, Sarsaparillas, &c., Ac., to which the attention of country merchants, physicians and consumers in general is invited. THOMAS ELLMAKER, COALS COAL 2 2 COAL 22 2 We would respectfully call the attention of the public to out. superior stock of . COAL, selected and prepared ex pressly for family use, which we'wlll re-screen and deliver in goodorder to any part of the city, at the lowest market prices. GEO. CALDER & CO. Office East Orange etreot, two doore from North Queen Yard—Graeff 's Landing, on the Conestoga. TRUSSES! BRACES! SUPPORTERS! I C. H. NEEDLES, S. W. CORNFR TWELFTH AND RACE STREETS, PHILADELPHIA PratGoal Adjuster of Rapture Trusses and Mechanical Remedies. Has constantly on hand a large Stock of Genu ine French Trusses,:also a complete assortment of the best American, including the celebrated Whites Patent Lever Truss, believed by the best authorities to be superior to any yet invented. English and" American Supporters and Belts, Shoulder Braces, Suspensory Bandages, Self Inject ing Syringes, adopted to both sexes, in neat portable cases, French Pessaries, Urinal Bags, &c. Orders and letters of enquiry, will Inset prompt atten tion. aug 23 ly 32 GRIVENING & CONVEYANCING, 17) The undersigned respectfully announces to the public that he has taken the office lately occupied by John A. Hiestitud, Esq., where he will be pleased to transact all business connected with the above profession that may be placed in hie hands. Air Office No. 26 North Duke street, Lancaster, Pa. . C E. HATES, illty Regulator. LANCASTER COUNTY EXCHANGE AND DEPOSIT OFFICE. Corner of East King and Duke Streets, ' BET. THE COURT HOUSE AND SPRECHER'S HOTEL, Lancaster City. JOHN K. REED & CO. pay interest on deposits at the fob lowing rates: 5% per cent. for one year and longer. 5 do. SO days " do. WAlso, buy and sell Real Estate and Stocks on corn. mission negotiate loans, collect claims, &c., &c. iKiroihe undersigned ars individually liable to the extent of their estates, for all the deposits and other obligations of John K.Reed & Co. JOHN K. REED, AMOS 8. HENDERSON, DAVID SHULTZ, ISAAC E Emma, dec 25 tf 49 piJILDING: SLATE.—The subscriber P has just received a large lot of PRAM( BOTTOM and YORK COUNTY BUILDING BLAME, which he will put on by the square or sell by the ton, on the most reasonable terms. He has also constantly on hand an extra light Peach Botthm Building Slate, Intended for elating on top of shingles. Please call and examine my PEACH BOTTOM SLATE, which are the best in the market, and cannot be had at any other yard, as I have made arrangements with R. P. Jones for the Lancaster Market. GEORGE D. SPRECHER, North Queen St., Lancaster, Penna. 'The above slate can also bebad at P. S. BLETZ'S Lumber Yard Columbia. This is to certify that we do not sell our beet quality Peach Bottom tanned Slate to any other pert son in Lancaster city than the above named. R. P. JONES, Manufacturers of Peach Bottom Roofing Slate. oct t tfBB CARDS I CARDS t I CARDS t I I • PRINTER'S SHEET AND OUT CARDS, Beat and Cheapest in the Market. CARDS FOR MOUNTING PHOTOGRAPH PICTURES, OT SUPERIOR queurr RAD AT LOW PRICKS, Blue and While and fine White Paste-Boards, Straw Boards, etc., on hand and. for sate by A. M. COLLI118; PAP&R and CARD Warehouse, .608 MINOR STTEJIT PHILADELPHIA ITONIGBIACHER & BAUMAN, TAN ners and Carriers Store, back of Robt. ktoderwell's Commission Warehouse, fronting on the Railroad and North Prince street. Cheap for Cash or approved credit— Constantly on hand a full assortment of ailkinds Saddler's and Shoemaker's Leather,of superior quality, including " Rouser's celebrated Sole Leather," also, Leather, Bands, well stretched, suitable for all kinds of machinery, of any length and width required, made of a superior quality of ' Leather, Furnace Bellows, Band and Lacing Lea&er, Gar den Hose, Tanner's OW Currier's Tools, Mmroms, Shoe Findns, &a. All kinds old Leather Wright in the rough ; Idevrt given for Rides and Bkinsia.mish; .006101 6141'01210- Ty attimilaito..; tab {ay 6 HE Palld DELPHIA EITENIN4BUL T LETIN, AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER, deioted espedally to the interests of Pennsylvania: Con taining Important Telegraphic Nears, sixteen hours in ad vance of the Morning Papers. Original, Foreign and Do mettle Correspondence, Editorials on all &Meets, and Inn Reports of all the news of the day. The Commercial and Financial Departments are fill, and are carefully attended to. Air As ea Anrzaxourra Maur= there is no better paper in the State, the circulation being next to the largest in the city, and among the most intelligent sad influen tial of the population. TERMS, SIX DOLL AAR PER YEAR, IN ADVANCE. 0131EMINGS & PEACOCK, Proprietors > _ No. 112 South Third street, Philadelphia. TEE PHILADELPHIA SATURDAY BULLETIN, a handsome, well-filled, FAMILY Wrests NEWBPA7I2I, is pub lished by the Proprietors at the following nnprecedentedly low rates: 1 Copy, one year,, 6 Copies, " 13 21 80 LC 100 CI di THE LABiEBT CLUB (over 100) will be sent for three years THE NEXT LARGEST CLUB, (over 100) will be sent for two years. Address . .. CIDEMINGB & PEACOCK, Proprietors, Bulletin Building, No. 112 South Third street, Philadelphia. ries 2:3 tf db FALL AND WINTER HATS 1 FALL AND WINTER. OAPS I FALL AND WINTKEt HATS 1 PALL AND WINTER CAPS FALL AND WINTER HATS I FALL AND WINTER CAPS I At SHULTZ & BROTHER'S, At BHULTZ & BROTHER'S, 20X NORTH QUEEN Strad, and nest door to Lands Store, EAST KING Strad. SHULTZ & BRO. respectfully invite attention to their ex tensive and varied assortment of HATS and CAPS, de signed for the coming Fall and Winter, comprising Gentle men's Dress Hats, of beautiful model and fabric, fully up to the progress of fashion. A beautiful Bilk Hat for $3,00. Soft Felt Hats, an en tire assortment, comprising every variety of pattern, color and quality. Gents' and Youths' Caps. An endless variety, for dress and undress, riding, sporting, traveling and evening wear. The undersigned respectfully solicit an examination of their large, varied and unexceptionable stock of Hats and Caps, feeling confident that every taste can be fully satis fied, as they have spared neither pains nor expense in get ting up. their present stock in the very latest and most ap proved styles, and of the best materials. Hats to suit all and at PRICES TO KITT THE Tans. JOHN A. SHULTZ Ilk H. A. SHULTZ, 20% North Queen Street, and next door to Lane 'e Store, rtAEOLINA YELLO IN PINE PL 00R kj LNG BOARDS. 50,000 Feet Carolina Yellow Pine Dressed Flooring Boards. 30,000 Feet Do. Undressed. 50,000 CYPRESS SHINGLES, No.l and 2. 50,000 BANGOR PLASTERING LATHS, Just received and for sale at Graeff's Landing, on the Conestoga. Apply to GEO CALDER & Co., Office East Orange st., near N. Queen st., Lancaster a3O .1175 SUBSCRIPTION DEPARTMENT 346 and 348 Broadway Now Voss, Sept. 12th, 1859. ELIAS BARR & CO.—DEAR Sias: We have the pleas ure of informing you that the Seventh Volume of THE NEW AMERICAN CYCLOP/EDIA will be ready on the let October, previous to which time we shall be glad to re calve your orders. As we do not, in any case, send this work on sale we must consider all ordered as actually purchased. Very respectfully, D. APPLETON & CO. The New Cyclopedia surpasses all others in the space given to our own country—its natural features and ro sources—and to American History and Biography.—From the New York Ev ang e lis t . It is a perfect treasury of knowledge, in all branches of the arts and sciences, in literature, history, biography and geography.—From The Boston Pilot. Pledged to abstain from doctrinal, sectarian, or sectional discussions, it presents, so far as we have examined its ar ticles, both sides of controverted topics with reasonable fulness and strict fairness.—/From The National Era. Several eminent medical and legal authorities, both in New York and Boston, furnish contributions in their respective departments; and from a large catalogue of writers, which we have been permitted to inspect, we are confidently of opinion that such an array of talent and intelligence hes never before been combined in a single publication of the American Prees.—.From, The Lancaster Exantin:r. Its freshness and genera thoroughness give it a decided advantage over any oyclopa•dia of its class, hitherto issued on either side of the Atlantic.—From The New York Times. It will be within the reach of all. Apprentices and merchants' clerks can procure the work as well as anybody, and with less cost to them (if they take it in numbers) than many of them expend nightly for cigars and beer.— Prom The Jamestown Journal. ELIAS BARR et CO., Sole Agent for Lancaster and York counties, Pa., No. 31 East Ring et., Lancaster Pa. [asp 27 tf 37 West King street, Lan 13/I.IILICIE & IIicCULLEY'S 1 NEW IRON AND BRASS FOUNDRY, NORTH WATZE1.43171./ZT, LARCASIXIA, PA. The subscribers having leased the Foundry recently erected by Mr. WILLIAM DILLSII, adjoining, his Machine Shop, in North Water street, between Orange and Chesnut streets; also having bought out the Strasburg Foundry and parts of the fixtures of other establishments of the same kind, and having the most complete collection of Patterns in the City, are prepared to furnish Iron and Brass CASTINGS OF EVERY DESCRIPTION, (either light, or as heavy as can be made elsewhere,) at the shortest notice, and warranted to be done in the most workmanlike manner. Both being practical workmen—one a Moulder and the other a Pattern Maker—they flatter themselves that, by doing their own work, and having purchased their fixtures at very low prices, in consequence ofwhich their expenses will be leas 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. 461r - Btrlct attention paid to repairing STOVES. GRATES and CYLINDERS of all kinds and sizes kept constantly on band. They have on hand, and are constantly making new designs for CELLAR GRATES, RAILING, and all kinds of Ornamental Castings. .-The highest price will be paid for Old Iron, Copper and Brass. We respectfully solicit a share of public patronage, and shall spare no pains to please all who may favor DB with their custom. LEWIS PAULICK, . . . EMMI SEND 4 STAMPS FOR A SPECIMEN OF "NEWS FROM HOME." A complete eummary of the latest intelligence received from England, Ireland, Scotland, Wales and the British 'Possessions in every part of the World, and devoted to Polities, Literature, Science, Art, History, &c., /cc. ENGLISHMEN, IRISHMEN, SCOTOHMEN, 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 la months. Fiftpeents for three months. Pedometers and established News Dealers are authorised to set aa Agents. TOWNDBON & DAY, Editors and Prop Odors, New York lv 11 AVATIONAL POLICE, GAZIRTTE.....This 1.11 Great Journal of Crime and Criminals fain 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 into the bands of Geo. W. Mabel' k Co., by whom it will hereafter be conducted. Mr. Matsell was formerly Chief of Police of New York City, and he will no doubt render 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. air Subscriptions, $2 per annum ; $1 for Six Months, to be remitted by Subscribers, (who shouldevite their names and the town, county and state where they reeldePlainly,) to GRO, W. .IdATBELL k'.00., Editors and Proprietors of the - National Police Gazette, New York City. oct 27 tf4l STEREOSCOPH.S-=These wonderful and urnercally adadrad, pictures, ; which appear -u mind and solid as aciapttued marble, are taken daily at JOHNSTON'S SHIAJGHpaALLSNY, maser et North. dee= and °pommels .Yips UM' sktisi taken to ths,kar view , LiziaidgraWni/x 1 1 311:4 , 1 1 :LV:eiellf;1 1 14. 4 : 4 4`14 1 / 4 t At SHULTZ A BROTHER'S East King Street THE NEW AMERICAN CYCLOP/EDIA, ITS AMERICAN CHARACTER ITS PRACTICAL UTILITY ITS 'IMPARTIALITY ITS FRESHNESS ITS CHEAPNESS HOUSEKEEPERS SOMETHING NEW . BABBITT'S BEST REDICINAL BALER Is manufactured from common salt, and isl prepared entirely different from other Sale ratus. All the deleterious matter extracted MI such a manner as to produce Bread, Biscuit,l and all kinds of Cake, without containing a particle of Saleratus when the Bread or Cake is baked; thereby producing wholesome results. Every particle of Saleratus is turned to gas and passes through the Bread or Biscuit while bak ing, consequently nothing remains but com mon Galt, Water and Flour. You will readily perceive by the taste of this Saleratus that it Is entirely different from other Saleratus. It is packed in one pound papers, each wrap per branded, "B. T. Babbitt'e Best Medicinal Saleratus;" also, picture, twisted loaf of bread, with a glass of effervescing water on the top. When you purchase one paper you should pre serve the wrapper, and be particular to get the next exactly like the Net—bland as above. Full directions for making Bread with this Saleratos and dour Milk or Cream Tartar, will accompany each package; also, directions for makingall kinds of Pastry; also, for making Soda Water and Seldlitz Powders. MAHE YOUR OWN SOAP, WITH 8.. T. BABBITT'S PURE CONCENTRATED POTASH, warranted double the strength of ordinary Potash; put up in cans-1 lb., 2 lbs., 3 the 6 lbs. and 12 lbs.—with full directions for mak-i ing Hard and Soft Soap. Consumers will find , this the cheapest Potash in market. Manufactured and for sale by B. T. BABBITT, Nos. 88 and 70 Washington at., N. York, and No. 38 India street, Boston . . June 28 Iy s 24 CASSON APOULLIIY. tf 16 racmr..E.asocromn. MAGAZINE. FIFTY-FIFTH VOLUME. LOUIS GAYLORD CLARK,- DR. JAMES 0. NOM EDITOR& The present number closes the tlfty-fourth volume of the Hatsummumans, and we thank our`patrons Ibr . . their past favors, we shall strive to increase their number by redoubled care and effort in every department' of the Magazine. We expect in our next number to be able.to announce a series of articles on Popular Astronomy, b the most distinguished writer upon that soignee in the y land. Stories and Pictures' of the Hudeon will be com pleted during the year, and the two volumes will contain the best sketches, tales, poems, eta., that Can be procured for the entertainment of our readers. PREMIUM POE 1860 In order to increase the already large circulation of the Eracxxasoczza, we publish this month .a splendid line engraving of Frith's picture of Merry-Making in the Olden Time,' which we shall present exclusively tolhe subscribers to the Magazine for 1860, whether old or new. The subject represents the pastimes of our ancestor% and is eminently of a genial, domestic, character. The .plate, engraved in England at :an expense of 2000. dentin, is entirely new, measures twenty-flue by nineteen and a half inches in size, contains thirty-nine figures, and is beyond comparison the finest work of the kind ever offered as a premium in this country. The engraving of Frith's picture of Merry-Making in the Olden Time, represents the humors of an English holi day in the county to those good old times when the men wore cocked-hats and knee-breeches, and the women stays and hoops—a costume not essentially differing from the corset and crinoline et the present day. dknost in .tise centre of the picture and a little to the back-ground Li a country dance on the green, with a bard-featured fiddler perched on a high seat, and another musician in a tie-wig standing by him, playing with all their might. On the right two bouncing girls are gaily pulling toward the dance a gray-haired man, who seems vainly to remonstrate that his ' dancing days are over, while a waggish little child pushes him forward from behind, greatly to the amusement of his sponse, who is still sitting at the testable, from which he has been dragged. On the left, under a magnifi cent spreading oak, sit the , squire and his wife; whom a countryman with his hat off is respectfully inviting to take part in the dance. To the left of the 'squire is a young couple on the grass, to whom a gipsy with an infant on her shoulder is telling their fortune. Over the shoulders of this couple is seen a group engaged in quoit-playing, and back of the whole is a landscape of gentle elopes and copses. The picture has the expreasion of gayety-through out and the engraving is splendidly executed. It is freak from the burin of Hoar., not having yet been published in England.' $ 100 . 500 . 10 00 . 15 00 . 20 00 . iso oo TERsl.l3.—Twenty-five cents per number, or $3 per an num, advance; two copies $5; three copies $B. The postage on the Magazine (twenty-four cents per annum) to be paid in all cases at the office where it is received. .93,- To every $3 subscriber for 1860, inclosing twelve cents extra in stamps, will be sent, free of postage, a copy of the new and splendid engraving of ' Merry-Making in the Olden Time.' Whoever shall send us the names of five $3 subscribers, and stamps, ($15.60,) will receive the linickerboker for one year and the Engreving gratis. ....... . . CLUB RATES FOR NEW SUBSCRIBERS TO THE KNICKERBOCKER: THE CHEAPEST EVER OFFER ED IN TEE COUNTRY. The Knickerbocker and N. Y. Weekly Tribune, Times, News, Evening Poet, or American AgriculturalrieW. The Knickerbocker and N. Y. Independent, N. Y. Evan gelist, or Christian Advocate and Journal, (all new enb scribers,) $3.50. i The Knickerbocker and N. Y. Observer, some Journal, Ballou's Pictorial, Harper's Weekly, (new subscribers,) or any of the $3.00 Magazines or Reprints of Foreign Periodi cals, (new subscribers.) $4.00. Any Club subscriber remitting us $1.12 in addition to the above rates will get, free of postage, a copy of ' Merry- Making in the Olden Time.' Families by uniting in these clube can procure the best Magazine, the beat Newspaper, and the beet Engraving of the year at less than half the ordinary price. The Knickerbocker ie furnished to teachers, poetmaatere, and all periodicals and joarnals, at the club-rate of $2 a year. Booksellers and Newsmen will learn the price per hundred, etc., on application to the publisher. AGENTS ARE WANTED in every part of the country, to canvass for the Magazine and Engraving. Back num bers and bound volumes on hand. JOHN A. GRAY, Publisher, 16 & 18 JACOB STREIT, NEW YOSX. tf 47 AMERICAN AND FOREIGN STEREO. BCOPIC EMPORIUM. E. ANTHONY, 308 BROADWAY, NEW YORK, After Hay Ist, 1860, at 501 BROAD WAY, two doors from the St. Nicholas Hotel, The Stereoscope Is the moat instructive, interesting, en tertaining, amusing, and exciting of modern Inventions. None are too young, none too old, none too Intelligent, none too uneducated, to acknowledge its worth and beauty. No home is complete without it, and it must and will penetrate everywhere. It presents to your view every part of the world, in all the relief, boldness, perspective, and eherpness of detail, as if you were on the spot. Photographers are everywhere exploring Europe, Asia, Africa, America, to search of the grand fitd the beautiful, and the results of their skill are constantly enriching our stock. . . We have an immense variety of paper Views of Scenes in Paris, London, England, Scotland, Ireland, Wales, France, Belgium, Holland, Switzerland, Spain, The Rhine, Versa Wes, St. Cloud, Fontainebleau, Tuilleries, Italy, Torkey,, Egypt, Athens, the Holy Land, China, - India, Crystal Palace, also Groups Historical, amusing, marriage scenes, breakfast scenes, pienics, statuary, dm., dux An exquisite assortment of Illuminated Interiors of Palaces, Churches, and Cathedrals of France, Italy, dtc., Are. The effect of these illuminated views is most remarkable. Every gentleman of wealth and refined taste should have in his drawing-room some of our exquisite views on glass, with a revolving stereoscope, showing 12, 25, 60 or 100 scenes. Nothing can be more Urinating, and one can offer no greater treat to a friend fund of the picturesque and the beautiful. Anthony's Instantaneous Stereoscope Views are the latest Photographic wonder. They are taken in the fortieth part of a second, and everything no matter how rapidly may be moving, is depicted as sharply and distinctly as it had been perfectly at rest. This gives an additional value, for to the beauties of inanimate nature it adds the charm of life and motion. The process is a discovery of our own, and being unknown in Europe, we receive from London and Paris large orders for Anthony's Instantane ous Views of America life and scenery. Among other things we have just published Stereoscopic Illustrations of the Scene of the Fulton Street Prayer Meetings, in which many hearts feel an interest. The particulars of this will be found in our catalogue. Our Catalogue of subjects and prices will be forwarded to any address on receipt of a stamp. Parties at a distance sending us $3, $5, $lO, $l5, $2O, or $25 can Dave agood instrument and such pictures as they may request, sent by Express. Views alone, (without instrument) can be sent by mail. Parties who wish to be advised of everything really valuable in the line that comes out, may send us their names to place on record, and we will keep them posted at our own expense. . . Men of leisure will find Photography a most fascinating and delightful amusement. We are prepared to fit out amateurs with everything necessary for their success together with instructions " How to take Stereoscopic Pismires." E. ANTHONY, Importer and Manufacturerof Photographic Material], Stereoscopes and Stereoscopic Views. 4a- Merchants from every section of the country axe re spectfully invited to make an examination of our stock, as • our discount to the trade will be liberal. To PROTOGRAX=IL3.—Erat class steremcopio Negatives wanted. Bend by mail a print unmounted, with price of Nemitivia. jan 10 4m 62 1101, EMOV I. .--We nave this day'va. "Into our new Banking House, in BAST HMG Bx.,,where the Banking Business in all 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 goth in Philadelphia and New York— and information given ss to their relative value and prospects. Uncurrent Bank Notes bought and sold, and premium allowed on old American coin. - Persons entrusting any business to us, whether money on deposit, or for purchase or sale of Bonds or Stocks, may Idoend upon prompt and faithful performance of all con tracts. The members of the firm are individually liable for all Its obligations. JOHN OMER, k 00 BOB?. CLLRZSON. Cashier. mar 2 tf 7 NA.TIONA.L HOTEL. RAGE STREET, ABOVE THIRD, PHILADELPHIA The subscriber is now the sole proprietor of this well known Hotel, and has it fitted up in first-rate order. His table is always supplied with the beet of every thing the market affords, and his chambers are large, airy and com fortable. Thankful for pmt favors, he hopes by strict attention to business, moderate prices, and a personal supervision of the entire establishment, to merit and receive a liberal share of public patronage. Terms, $1,25 per day. Roy 22 B 0 0 ICS AND WTATIONERY, AT WHOLESALE AND RETAIL ..... _ A LARGE AND WELL SELEOTED STOOK OF STANDARD WORKS, In every department of Science and Literature. Bibles, Hymn Books; Prayer Books, School Books, Children's Books, Blank Work and Stationery of all kinds, to which is invited the attention of Country Merchants, Commit tees of Libraries, Teachers and Purchasers generally, /la- AGENT for Potion's Outline,Haps, Franklin Globes, Holbrook's School Apparatus, Row's School Register, -Ban der's Readers and Elocutionary Chart. For sale all the Books used in the Public Schools, wholesale and retail. Also, Agent for the American Sunday School Union, Amer ican Tract Society, and for sale the Methodist,and all other Religious Publications. Publisher of the Keystone' (bi lectlon of Church Mimic, Guide to the Oracles, The Roeuet, Why Do You Wear It, &a. IMPORTER 011 STEEL PENS. We would call especial attention to our large assortment of Sunday School Books on hand, of every variety, wanted for the use of schools, and sell at catalogue prices : ' JOHN SHEAFFER'S Cheap Book Store, North Queen St. jai 31 tf 3 COAL AT LOWEST CASH PRICES. The undereigned having receiving their stock of PINE GROVE, . . . . _ BALTIMORE COMPANY, , LYKENW VALLEY, SHAMOKIN AND . Will deliver She Ibl.Mo to purchasers, care Sally soreeued, a TRENTON COAL S t the very lowest prices, for cloth. 43... Always on hand, Limeburners'and Blsokamith Coal. GEO. CALDER tr. CO., 'Office, East Orange, near North Queeft'stireet.:-Yard, at - Gruff 's Landing, on the Conestoga. ang 28 GAItROW BOOT, ASTOR OIL, T, SWEET OIL - BORAX, ALCOHOL, CAMPHOR,' ' • -SPI A CE , S, CALO LO MPEL GWOOD, ' , .: . SOD, . CREAM TARTAR PEARL BARLEY, • GGUM AELATLEB RABIC, HARTSHORN . , - J.IJAP RHUBARB, • RV SPONG = E, an -.,- , For gals st ! THOMABELTM ., kICERV spr zi tll4 Wog and Obenical Store, Weft Kinget. ji U. g B A-7 2Y p -11'i, • Looks, BELL-araiwou aualut-itaiiu 4 BUILDINCI' gtitilra p pr ia mis On, 1009 Markel *Me, abiontlol4,-sares 4i40, .PNagejoilaa. 8eir5 .1 4 4 64.34 - 114640iii. 4. 'Nolan Door 5u1144 . 1113 "6 " .. - i l l e ,e r gAt IV NO. 8. o. oesmerrr.