. . ~. „_,---,„, , - ~ 7 : • --- -- - - - -.--., -. - • gtili'..4: --------: -.„ .-,- _- -,,--;-. _ . , -. 1 - ..1 -- 1 .., - : - •,- 1 , ' = J . -- -. :. ------ " - : - ??, ------ - 4' 1 "- , - t''' -..- ----A- ~-ie-ciwx•rir-,IP'-'", - 4 , - ;, ' , , ,. - ,:t---- -, P- .' 1 :0P-via' ' • , 44 7- ,t,. - , • - It,. . _ ...._ , L. • '•_.„__ ~. . -17.. -17." . . _ - - -- - -,' - f • ~, -0., .: - .23.-i: ::....3 z, 1 I , -.;.0 1 7 / 4 3.; , ... r) - "4-" ~, 1 1 .- ~ , = „ - ,- • - • .__ . - 1 !..71 - .. •J- - _.-., Lt . :1 , 1,?.. ~ b -.* '- t ---- - - _ .. ..-... . •..i•-• ....„ 2*_ . ~ _ _. ~._ :.,- ~ - --a -- , ' . -:.:' '•', . _ ' .:',. ~ ;I *4 .'_‘`:, - . _ . VOL. LXII. THE _LANCASTER INTELLIGENCER . . - . . 1: PUBLIBEILD ZVERT WIT.SDAY, AT 11 . 0. 8 BOBTiiliokz sigzzi, f '' • ' BY GEO. SANDERSON. •' • MEI SnxecairrioN.—Two Dollarepevannum, Payable In ad vance. No subscription discontinued until all arras'- , ages aro paid. unless at the option of the Editor. ADVißTlNSWENTS.—Advertisements,-AdVertittelDellta not exceeding one square. (12 lines,) will be Inserted three Newt' for one dollar, and twenty-five cents for each ad•litiethg inser tion., Those of ,greater length in proportion. JOE Pancriso—Such as !land Bills, Posters; Pamphlets, Blanks, Labels, Jrn , &c., executed with accuracy and on shortest notice. OLD AUNT HANNAH. Br W. H. ITOLCOICBS. • Let's wait a little longer. Tom! Before we westward : I - . Let's wait fair old Aunt Hannah's sake, 'Twould break her heart, .I. know. Look at her in her corner there, Her head is whibs'es snow; The last leaf of the good old tree--- ^We cannot leave her Ho! In this old mansion was she born, Her joys and griefs were here: How well she loved and nursed us all Through many a changing year! See how she's smiling at the fire, And whispering something low! She's thinking of our Christmas times, 0, long and long ago ! Beside you crumbling garden wall Our gallant farher lies, - . Our good old tuotherlat his side— Aunt Hannah closed their eyes! She was the playmate of them both, Some fifty years ego— To leave those dear old graves behind, 'Twould break her heart, I know. When the dear old soldier parceled out His treasures great and small, Annt Hannah he would give to none, Be gave her to us all. We laid his good sword on his breast, For he had charged us s.o— Whilst old Aunt Hannah knelt in tearkr— Ah! Tom! we cannot go ! Her failing sands will soon be out, The kindly angel come, 'And laud the good, old, faithful soul To her great Master's home. And when. we've marked her simple grave, And dropped a tear or so, We'll urn the ashes of the past, And westward gaily go! LEAF BY LEAF THE ROSES FALL , Leaf by leaf the roses fall, Drop by drop the springs run dry; One by one, beyond recall, Summer beauties fade and die; ,But the roses bloom again, And the spring will gush anew, In the pleasant April rain, 7' And the Summer sun and dew. ' , So in hours of deepest gloom, " When the springs of gladness fail, .1.111 And the roses in the bloom A 4 1, - Droop like maidens wan and pale, We shall find some hope that lies, Like a silent gem apart, Bidden far from careless eyes, In the garden of the heart. Some sweet hope to gladness wed, , • That will spring afresh and now, When grief's winter shall have fled, Giving place to ra , n and dew— Some sweet hope that breathes of Spring Through the weary, weary time Budding for its blossoming, In the spirit's glorious clime. THREE ANGELS IN THE ROUSE Three pain of dimpled arms, as white as snow, Held me in soft embrace; Three little cheeks, -like velvet peaches soft, Were placed against my face. Three tiny pain of eyes, so clear, so deep, 1,,,0ked up to mine this even ; ~ Three pairs of lips kissed me a sweet "good night," Three little forms from heaven. Ah, it ie.well that "little ones" should love us ! It lights our faith when dim, To know that once our blessed Savior bade them Bring ' , little ones" to Him ! And said Lie nut, "of such is heaven," and blessed them, And held them to His breast? Is it not sweet to know that when they leave us, 'Tie there they go to rest? • 'And yet, ye tiny angels of my house, Three•arts encased in mine! How 'twould be shaitered, if the Lord should say, Those a. gels are not thine !" CHARLOTTE CORDAY. AL Tale of the French 1t evolution. All of you have read of the first French Revolution. • All of you know something of the scenes of horror, of terror, and of dire cruelty, appertaining to that most ter rible time. A dreadful time it was! which, even if half a century is elapsed the world has not done shuddering at. Yet I perceive now, men, even great and true men, are busying themselves in finding palliatives for; and heroism in, the pitiless monsters produced by it. True, they were victims as well as scourges ; sufferers, as well as hifliotors ; and all self-deceived from first to last, in the mad hope of swimming through seas of blood to a promised land ,of liberty and happiness. As such we can pity the fated wretches. But oh ! had these great and good men who write history }ivied in that time, and seen with their own 'visible, actual eyes what outraged humani- . ty then suffered, sympathy with their kind would have caused them to cry out horror upon the cruel men of that dismal, dread ful time. It is of an episode (now rendered historical) of the first French Revolution, .• that I, an eye-witness of it, and now a rlray-haired man, have to speak. It was upon a sultry morning of July 39th, 1792, and all Paris was astir with •xpectation and excitement; for on that ;:; ay,fifteen hundred Marsellaise, journeying rom th 4: utmost south of revolutionary r 4 ranee, were to make their entrance into he city. Sum to with sinister intent by their ty, the young, brave, rash B. . : roux, under pretext of sharing at the e'deratinn of the 14th of July, (a day already passed,) the secret and unavowed object was that of placing at the disposal.. of the army of the Gironde an army of unscrupulous and reckless men, wherewith to overawe all opposing power, whether that of King, Assembly, or their bitter opponents and final conquerors and execu tioners, the Jacobins. Swelled and surged the tumultuous city and stormy populace, like an unquiet sea, as, marching rank and file, the Marseillaise entered by the quarter of St. Antoine. A grim, black-browed mass of men, with eyes of, fire, and faces bronzed by the southern sun, dust-covered and travel-soiled, and i strangely armed and accoutred. Scarcely ,t lone but bore a musket and sabre ; yet this 1,1 was not all, for some carried axes, some f! . :11 aythes, and many the pike--,the weapon 'N-iirthe Revolution. The sunlight fell on *gen boughs they carried, glittered p4ii-iheAetley a}-ay of p.rms, and shone on : iIW-4)l(erred liburty caps, of Phrygian itorn-by most, c f the band. A more Ilatai pnittimileutacie "ecwere hard to con cei.4, ‘''41 3 , 4, W eili-Pier ur , . rose the grim, ?- .. " 1 me • ! '' Imam 4 . t at h5: 13 4 or march of ; . z „c " : ' ~ i t h h e e s i i i i ;.; il4 . i - _ ,I i 6 84 0; t11 11 1 .0 eek flushud, and took its ~ame from uni t otion and excite -1 heart th . ro \ h'Vt* th , nient. Litt 0 thOtYght they. hen, perchance, 1 - follow the arrival : 1 1 ' l l tif the horfor B destilliS 0 I of thes • oen l --., li, 'Mn 'y much d ;':i sepf hand and 1 fi- li,niee embrheei and: ', ,Altin . `Welcomes f: n i,,,, i them ev wheiNto,l*,:y threngniF S.7 m : rough the crowdect tale, of tle i Q, - tier Saint atoine. Alk -plumed .on • , ; .eably enong save for oneftattirMident i "..-7 1 , • the one to whip I: owed my koMiledgii". .„'4,1 . the hero of in story. Gaging pn the marelhing: stood among the lookers4n, whonrotiSekveci the attention of one 'of the troop lain:toted towards we. Eyeing me - for a !3ectind'with a menacing stare ; he they whispered to his companion, and' immediately afterwards forced his way towards me, _Pointifig with uplifted pike towards my heid. It recoiled and the crowd' around' ' th'eirigaze on me some with wonder or: itupi& fear,i others apparently sharing in . the tingei' of, the blarsellaise, .' See you not, citizeuPeicliiinid one of the lAter, whatis tliamanse Cif the virtu ous indignation: of. oar :brothorpatriot 'l l Thou wearest: cdaokade, the infamous aristocrats whosemain among us; the enemies of. the Rev:lip:o4nd' the people !' Change it !''replace , . it • with woolen one !' growled the' mob. Taking the cockade from the d cap of the Marsellaise,extendedl# meson he point of his pike,l complied with' th general request, an thereby satisfied t Demo cratic purity of sentiment existis :in those around me. The Marseillaise: ent his bushy eyebrows, and bowing.l4 head in token of his approval, he passedlon. Citizen, who and what art - lion? de manded a young, man by my. Aide, girt round the waist . .by a' triLdolared sash, (denoting a deputy to the. National As sembly,) Ind whom I had remarked as being one of the first arid most' earnest in clamoring for the removal of thp.obnoxious cockade. . I am an American citizen!' said I rather shortly. An American !' _repeated he. Ah, had we known that, we should not have doubted the purity of thy republicanism. Accept of my apologies, and admit me to thy friendship. My name is Adam Lux. I am a German, and delegate to the National Assembly from my native town of Mentz. Now tell me of thyself.' Gallic enough, in all conscience,' thought I, to this sudden' proffer of friend ship. However replying with all fitting courtesy, I entered into cotiversation with him. In personal appearance he was hand- - some, had affair, frank, earnest fade, 'blight curling hair, worn long, with little or no beard. Ilis'eyes were blue; and gazing on them, you could read at once the excita bility and impetuosity of -his nature; Such was Adam Lax, and ,aa I - have marr4ted4 ; such was his-self-tuade j ba roduetion'tP nie. Our acci4int incetl. as: tattWeri ii -1 5 . ;, formed, continue• and ir ireascid, and `we speedily bdcande intiiiiites,'scareely - a' day passing without his visiting me, or -vice ' versa. 111.041 I found ilrhia politinaj senti- 1 ments to admire and sympathise with, and' much to condemn. A true child of the age, he had with others, hailed-the dayu l of the Revolution, as a light enianatingttfrom the heaven, and not as it would appear to have hereafter proved, a luridignus fatuus from the northernmost abyss, and carried Onward by the turbid stream of events, his sense of right and wrong had been so wrapped and twisted, that hp would fain have justi fied the ensuing ,horrors of September, under the plea for the necessity of punish ment for the ' eiemies of the pdeple.' Influenced primarily by the cold, sneering, Mephistophilian spirit: of, the writings of Voltaire, he belieldlin' the upper classes, the tyrants, oppressors, and irre concilable enemies; of the masses and the Revolution. - And no less deluded by the pseudo-philosophic Christianity of Rousseau, he believeclin,nothing less than the Speedy regeneraticad Ormankind—with the disappearaiMe htl social distinctions, the disappearance tday of misery and-crime. Bright, mad hopee'aitere - they; but then the madness was almotitchnivei•sal ; and who can wonder at the EA-headed • young - man of seven and twenty,Fith brain-and heart aflame with the lavalhought of that time, not being wiser thanbis fellows? ' I have said I font:im:inch to like in him; indeed, it was diffic4.t to know hind and feel otherwise, His faults of political creed springing m4,from his feelings, than reflec , iou; could nat mar his 'feelings of bravery and generoSity. I (and - the nar rator smiled) was RA then so hie! in favor with Dame Fortul•as I may now claim to be, and more ,tha onde bas Adam Lux divided with me;‘:ahe stipend his office as delegate to the Afembly, - procured him.— I loved him, too, ',Mr hie enthusiasm. At the mention of atsr deed of honorable dar ing, his eye woulti light' up and his face would flush ; whie on the -allusion to any act of tyranny - aid opPression, he would set his teeth togither, and for a second be capable of mord* from sheer sympathy. Nor must I fore to add that Jim imagi native powers his ill-regulated ',mind were as little fit. er his etintrol as - his so cial creed. Wi all the' skepticism's of the age, and .d sbelief iii what was then denominated pi - est-craft and conventional formuda, he yet possessed-a fund of super stition. At ti es the German bloods from I which he sprua , g would be -strongly mani fest in dreareit, half-morbid musings con : - cerning the spirit world, which, eschewing all revelationi he would people according to his fanny, how with bright, now with sombre imads. And this, you may im agine, had s.lso its attractions for me. But ehiefest of all, enthusiasm was his prevail ing nh ara noPristic ; all thoughts and im pressions ran into extremes. In days of great socialf chan g es and commotion, what acts both of good and ill, ate not such Ida _ tures capable of ? * * * If * * Twelve months had passed; twelve ter rible months for France. The land con vulsed qd terror-stricken throughout, anarchy.tidd horror everywhere. . Civil war raged rehud its borders, and fierce factions contended within. The streets of. Pans had run red { with blood, and the head of the hapless Louis (victim for the crimes of a generatit of kings,) had fallen beneath the guillotine at e Place de la Revoln-, tion. And now, as was then said,. 6 the Revoluttlike: Saturn, was devouring o , his own c ildren ;othe long-breeding and it inevitabl struggle between the'two par ties; the }irondins and Mountain, had vir tile-11y ended in the arrestment, of the for mer part:. 'Sornetaies unable to quit. Pans, (the attempt night have resulted in•death as a fugitive; suspet ') at others, straw as it may seen, unwilling to leave ;the: tleatre wherein was being enacted' a drama of such terrible interest,',mi L iPAnkaok with Adam Zug still continuech But wohatige, hadpope across his fevdreg - brain ,fuld agivatioi ; the ever , present sighk.ordeath had eh:stalled him r day slier av die-death dep.lurnbtils rolled dismally: by with heiedjoupseeg7 (b u atohes)yig. s lyr4To) to f.. Li I ;,.-. r " THAT 00IINTRY Ur TB" moor PROOPIROUB , LABOR 00 . tvi LANCASTER CITY, PA., TUESDAY MORNING, irtILY 2, 1861: . - the never-pausing guillotine ; And was thud the golden age of brotherhood and perfect happiness, he had pictured to himselfl-- Blood, nothing but Wood! Death every where—te the young, the old, the fair, the brave, the wise. What wonder, then, that men would Cry, 4 Vive le Roi !' as a pass yort of dismissal froin a world in which Such horrors 'were perpetrated 1 With this in my friend's, mind, ~would combine fits of despondency to the direst degree, insomuch that .I half fancied that his rea son would be-in ! the- end affected, unless, as I was endeavoring to do, I could induce him to accompany me in flight to my own free land. ,Ali how dear it was to me then, in imagination, when I felt that per chance. I might never see it more:! . It was upon the eve of the 13th of July, 1793, '(the eve of that day which four years ago witnessed the storming of the Bastile,) that I sat alone in my attic in the Quartier Latin. A sultry, oppressive day, bad been succeeded by a wild, blus tering night ; no moon was visible, and as I gazed forth from my garret window, the face of the heavens was all obscured by a heavy rack , of clouds, which moved rapid ly and continuously athwart the whole horizon. The winds blowing in- fitful gusts, made a dismal soughing and sigh- , ing among the tall chimney-stacks and steep roofed gables of the students' quar ter. I was all alone, too far up to note aught that might occur in the streets be low, even had it been practicable from my window. The rooms beneath were ten anted by a motley assemblage, chiefly of artisans and students, (or those who passed as such,) often disorderly , enough ;, but now, save an occasional tramping , up or down the staircase common to the house, I heard nothing ; indeed the rising of the wind would have,prevented it. My 'mind was unquiet as the element without.— Thoughts of my home across the wide waters of the Atlantic ; of all the scenes I had witnessed in the reVolationary drama ; of what would it end in, and whether I should live to speak and think of those things as by-gone ; all this and more thronged in my brain, till wearied out, both in mind and body, I sought in care killing sleep, a temporary oblivion from all. Uneasily I lay for some time, listening to the wind, and now driving rain dashing against the rickety easement, un 'til the monotony of the sound bad its effect sand %' t illiill h e a d . me to slumber. • _, '0 t vs4e.p.t.--trtrifiiiii or Mare Whew,: clamoring :at the door awakened me Open'—open to me, my friend; 'tis Adam Lux ! I sprang out of bed recognizing his' voice, and admitted hith. He half stag gered, half rushed into the room, flung. himself into a chair, and bade me secure the door. With words of inquiry'at the terror his accent betrayed, I did so, and with some little difficulty struck a light and ignited the candle. And then did I never see a more appalled countenance than the one presented to my view. His features were actually livid ; his teeth clashed together ; the muscles of his face were rigid ; his long, light hair, dark with rain, hung about his face ; and his whole form, wet also, shuddered from head to foot, so much so that the very table against which he leaned vibrated. It was some time before I could calm and reassure him suf f iciently to hope for a rational reply. Anticipating that he had been beset, or that his life was in danger from the Revolutionary Tribunal, I pressed him to relate what had occurred. Not that—not that !' said he, as 1 gave utterance to my suspicions ; it is not fear for life I have, nor for safety. Frank Be van, I have '—and here again he shud dered as if he was smitten by the palsy I have this very night seen, face to face, something which was not of this world !' I looked doubtful fearing for his sanity, and he saw it. Listen to me !' he said ; and after soy -eral attempts and failures of narration, each time interrupted by a paroxysm of of the same overwhelming horror he had manifested on his arrival, he, with frequent pauses, commenced 6 I had left the Jacobins. early, in the midst of all the tumult—Ha! you know not that, perchance ! Marat is assassi nated !' , i)larat assassinated !' oried I in wonder at the news. • . ' Killed, and, as we hear, by'a woman !' said be. Repressing my ~own astonishment, and a quick, burning feeling of fierce 'exulta tion at the death of so atrocious a monster, I let him continue, wondering the more at the apparent little regard he afforded to a circumstance which I knew full well would have affected him in the highest degree.— He went on : I left the club, my temples throbbing with a sick, mad headache, and, wearied out by the turmoil and my own illness, went home and straight to bed. There I could not sleep, and I lay hot and feverish and half mad till close on midnight ; a thousand hurried, incoherent, terrible imaginings passing through my brain with such rapidity that I almost feared delirium was upon me. At last they all merged into a strange, intense, fierce yearning to wander forth mid the rain and the night. So earnest and urgent was the impression, that it seemed as though some spirit were forcing, prompting me on to it. Combat 7 ting it in vain, I at last rose, threw on my clothes, and, obeying the impulse, issued forth. The streets were all dark and, wet the house-fronts stood out murky and black in front of the troubled sky; and the blustering wind-flaw swept fiercely down the narrow lanes as I hurried on, apparently impelled by no effort of voli tion, but, as I have said, constrained by some overwhelming power. The rain drifted against me with violence, slant wise, wetting me throughout ; still on I went, faster and faster. Few pedestrians are abroad in revolutionary Paris after midnight; what few I met turned and gazed after me in the darkness ; noticed it °not, but kept'on; unconscious whither my steps tended. - Suddenly I issued forth upon the Rue St. Honore ; I was' close npotu the Plaoe de la Revolution ! Was this the goal to wnich I was so irresilitably impelled ? . '6 Black and sinister-looking under the canopy of midnignt rose up the fOrm and frame -work of the guillo tine, the spirit of the Place. I I 'stood beileotti the scaffold, gazing fixedly .:upon it. The strong, uncontrollable itn 'Oise which had, brought me thither was :gone, and in its stead an appelledi , ) , agne • , terror of something about to, happen, which mud come, _and could not be shunned, had succeeded. Fear was upon me to. the last degree; fear of Lknew not what. Even as I stood thus gazing, terror stricken and bewildered, unable to quit the spat, . I siw, through the dark night and the rain, the figure of a man Appar ently issuing from a farther corner of the square, and ooming towards me. Deter mined by a violent effort to wrest myself from the nameless fear which mastered me, I resolved to speak to him. He drew nearer, passed swiftly by, close by my side, his face turned full upon me ; and' then, 0 great Heavens ! I saw—' 'What ! in Heaven's name My own features, facie •to face ! Alike we were in countenance and demeanor, save that in its face was fixed, rigid, awful stare, which 'bade my blood run dull. - 0 God ! the intense terror of that moment! But for a second and it, was gone, passed, vanished into the wild midnight; and mad, frantic with terror, fled on and on till I came hither to you, as you now see me!' * * Vain was the• attempt to represent to him that the spectre was but the result of his own diseased and excited imagination. His faith was not to be shaken and he regarded it as the forerunner of his speed ily approaching death. From sympathy, I entreated him to remain with me at least for some days, to which he willingly con sented. All Paris on the morrow resounded with the intelligence of the death of Marat.— Rendered a matter of history as it now is, I need not particularize the event more closely than by stating that on the' evening of which I have spoken,Marat, while sitting in • a slipper-bath at his own house, had been stabbed to the heart by the heroic Charlotte Corday, with whose fate, how ever, that of the hero of my story is so strangely blended. Adam Lux, sympathetic and imagina tive, was agitated with extreme, admiring wonder at the incident; his admiration mounted to enthusiasm. Therefore was it that, (three days past,) on the following Wednesday, we found ourselves struggling amid a dense crowd in the essay to enter the thronged walls of the Pnlais of -justice, wherein.the trial of. Um-lotto Ociiday was iit • progreu, of, aokooli ;nut, of rate and adinfration from tile ttioitable ,Papsititimittlimei as the .m9k,Ayraged - tovicPiffifiltiund the ave nues-to the building. Our attempt was a vain one, even when my companion at tempted to avail himself of his title of na tional deputy ; admission through such a crowd was impossible. The only resource, therefore, left to sstiiify our baffled curi osity, was to be present at the execution. . And truly the sunset of that day witnessed a piteous and memorable sight; one which I can even now conjure up clearand dis tinct, as though of occurrence yesterday. Fcrth came the dismal tumbrel from the Conciergerie prison -gate into a city all astir with expectation ; and there, clothed in ,the red garment of a doomed 'mur de'ress, sat the hapless Charlotte Corday. For she was very beautiful ; of a stately, noble figure ; and her fair, full, calm face, gazed upon by all eyes, spoke a thousand unutterable thoughts, but peace ful and dreadless all. And yet she journeyed to her death; she pot yet five-and twenty ! It was a spectacle of awe and pity —that young girl passing along so tranquil and fearlessly to the keen, cruel edge of the guillotine. The populace around were variously affected. Some with blanched checks bared their heads with reverence ; some wept ; others, forming the majority, yelled and shouted in savage exultation. Indifferent to all she seemed, and the cart moved on. She is very beautiful,' said I. Oh ! Adam, what think you of this 1 Is it not a cruel deed ? Greater than Brutus,' said he, is she, and it were beautiful to die with ? her !' looked at him, as with eyes sparkling and face flushed with enthusiasm, he spoke. You scarcely regard your safety in say ing it,' said I. loare not !' he cried 'follow, follow, in Heaven's name ! Let *s keep up with the cart !' Arrived at the Place de la Revolution, (I saw a shudder pass through my friend's body from head to foot, in spite of his en thusiasm,) the whole square was filled by a' moving mass ; even the house-tops and roofs displayed occupants. Yet that, fair, doomed face still wears the same tranquil, inexplicable smile. The last rays of the sun flashed brightly on the guillotine-knife, and shone like a glory on her face and hair as she mounted the scaffold. The crowd, till then.undttlating and murmuring, held their breath with awe, There was a brief pause, during which, according to their custom, the executioner proceeded to bind her feet. At first she resisted this, mani festing indignation at the supposed insult; but on a short explanation being vouch safed, submitted with cheerful assent. Her neckerchief is then removed ; a flush' of outraged modesty dyes for a moment her neck and face with crimson; she is bound, placed beneath the fatal instrument and with a harsh jar the swift knife falls, and with it the noble, beautiful head of the slayer of Marat. ** * , Adam Lux. aeoompanied me hometards,. his enthusiasm amounting to delirium. In vain did I essay to calm him; all his talk was of her whose death we had witnessed. That night, quitting me, he hastened to pour forth the thoughts of his heated brain in an Apotheosis of Charlotte , Corday;' almost a hymn of adoration to her memory; proposing the, erection of her statue, with, for inscription, the words which had sprung spontaneously to his lips on seeing her— ' Greater than Brutus.' Heedless, reck less of 'danger, though warned by myielf and others, he determined on printing and publishing the fatal Aootiment. The sure, certain result, who has not anticipated 'I Its appearance was but the signal for hie arrest, and arrest and condemnation were one and the same thing at a bat where Fouquier Tinville was public utiliser. And now last scene - of all, my story draws speedily to a close. . A day in the early part of the month of Noveniber saW me once more in the Placa de la Revolution, bat Adam Li4.,,was longer by my Side. I had, MAIM at his request, to see him die. Aloft he stood in the death-oar with his fellow-iietims; their journey and life to ,end at the , grt4lotine. The long time he had passed in prison had, Tearfulljr changed - him ; - his be4y ! ilvaa emaciated, his lase . -haggard; his ars, •- • • bright with a wild lustre, not of . ieaeon., had heard - tfoi entrance to the ptiaon was. -denied me) that he had no-foollor three sleeks: Yet be recognized me,, and as lie btint his head in arms presenoe, (hisnrms being bbnnd ferbacle , othjpr movemekit;)ksaw and Itheitt invollin-- taxk, by the. strange, intense, meaning ghtime of his *yes, that , his 'mind for ik moufent dwelt .upon' that fearful night -of, the-iiirteenth of. July, the night. , wherein: he hikencountered or imagined the ap,. pears e, of hie Spied-ail self. The o cart reaoheA, the scaffold one - 443, leap•doun,ond mount to the , guillotine., He deol#red,that he • died kr Ch,ailotto CordaMand with_great joy,' and he -hoped, to join her in - another -World f.and then the' axe clanked down; and-head and life were sent away - together. A few bilef 'weeks - from, that ante saw me bounding over thaglad waters cif the Atlantic, mg face anitheart,turned, home- . wards, leaving Franc& and revolutionary horrors, far behind, never,never to return: Ho* to Cure Coma. , I do not tindenitatifi Why it is that Woman arranges her drese with so little ward to its uses. One would suppose , that in some of its parts utility and beauty Might be found to be consistent:. :lict theft: is not. a single article of clothing which - enters into• her wardrobe, froth her tumid to ,her feet, which is well adapted to. serye the purpose for which it is apparently designed. If she wears-a bonnet it is so constructed that it is of no use as a cover to her head. If she wears gloves they are so tight as to obstruct the circulation in her hands, and render their free use" impessible. If she wears a dress, it is so fashioned;to'hin der tho natural movement.of every muscle in the body. If she wciatirshoes, they are so poorly fitted to the feev.islo oiipple her in those organs and make it as rare to find a woman with a properly'shaliett:Aoot in the Christanized and 'highly . eoightened United States as in. China. Vir.hat , ever put it into the heads or hearts of women or men, or of both, that we are naturally so' outra geously formed or deforMed that it is "fiesi rable that every part of us eheijd by some . means, be gotten in to different 'shaoe from that in which it wairmitie,l cannot con _ °Live, 1'Vby . :00u111 tW114 . 103/s shoe be shaped like herfirrt.ci 1;, ;Mkt* 4f that; the shoes .to. a . sheihiaker's 'ideas,: and. tiketo.• There is .not iW. B 4 - ' 4 4, 1 14.0 . Of \otTfleY. th'iitleiit are one shoemaket,i4 td hulicrei cient good, slump.* shoe should,be wwide as-the fop , a will make the soli. a uarg half as wide as her foot is Itinittmit64ll,_ the Boer, expecting her to tread - of - CT upper -leather at each eide,i unless-it is so tight as to•broWd thefoot up, making it as much like a toad as like a beautiful and well-formed human foot. - - And this is the.way corns are made.— The shoe presses upon ,the joints, forming callosities which are often very sensitive and painful, and generally render the - foot unhandsome in form. The cure for. this state of things, then, according to our phi losophy, is for 'the person suffering to wear shoes so large tis- to remove :all 'pressure, and allow free circulation of the blood.— This is the scientific inede of treatment, and any treatment Whioh does not inoldde. this is quackish.. It is rather trying, I know, for there is many a woman who would prefer' extreme suffering with Corns to a cure by this means. Such should be permitted to suffer ; I would not relieve them if I could. But when persons 'repent and do work meet for repentance,' that is, exchange tight shoes for loose ones, they not unfrequently continue to suffer from corns for a long time. - In many' scioh instances I have'found the following treat ment to afford - permanent relief. Have two vessels one: containing- hot the other cold water, neither :temperature: need be extreme, but about as-bot and told as ;eau be comfortably l borneand dip the, affected foot or toes alternately in each, holding it in about five minutes, and continue, this process balf or three quarters of an hodr. In. some oases, one application of this sort will be. sufficient. In. other's, it may .be. needful to repeat it every - other day for a week or fortnight. - I expect somebody, now, will be calling me a hot-water-doctor, since I have advised hot applieationsin repeated instances, and for various difficulties, while it is sci_ocim mon to recommend cold water.: Butwhen I find a certain course hs produotive of great comfort and no harm, I wish others to be come acquainted with it,whether it is fash-_ ionable or not.--Harriet N..Artetin, M. I. - IF" Mr. Smith yon said you once, officia ted in a pulpit; do you mean that you preached'? 'No sir ; I held' the light for 'the man that did.' 'Ah! the courtimderstOodyoti different r. ly. They supposed that the discourse oame from you. • 'Me sir ! I only throwed a little ligh upon 'No, levity, Mr ; Smith. Crier wipe your nose and call the next witness.' ' • An Oldixichelor being ill,:his' sister presented him a cup 'Cf. medicine: 'What is it 1' he asked. She answered— tlt is elixir asthmatic, it is very aronmn tie, and will make yon,feel ecstatic." • 'Nancy,' he r . eplied;:.with a smile r Von. are very sister-matio.'. . 4 Go to grass !' said a mother to her daughter. : •• 'WeIl, then,l 'spose I'll have to:marry,' ejaculated-the fair damsel:::._ , Who so • inquired. the !sEltolllBl4Q4= mother. 'Because all pen are grass: -.Pip lady survived. • , - . „ PO" The man ..everybody likes is genei ally a. fool: : The:man. who nobody likes generally. a- knayo- 2 The msn,,who has' friends who would. die, for him,. and foes who would see .him , broiled sliver is nodally a man of some. worth : and: !brae- .117 - qdr., , Sigith,-yoglapi4.you-hatirded at the colpm,bia,Hotel giontha 4i4 yew . footyour 'No s ; ; thing_ the;landlord'footed,'me'.'`' bat hafaiggiintA,te'tleattfize,„ , " Verdiot - Toi'defendsit.' ' next . , zy • . , t& - A artim`theCwie ixfai 4, the On* on Yorktow n , , ,during•the ' : ll4Keintioliery War, as now iii•tlie' l,l64l a . i a rebel company from RoUr'eotuoj 11 - , .101 . , • MIM= AROre‘a COtizt--.Vdl After well knewn Elsorgia, solicitor general had administered the usual oath to 'the grand and petit •juries and' bailiffs, turnedhe to` the presiding jUdge and! re marlted ". So .—May it please your lion6i, I do not . .retietnlier forth tir an oath admin istered to the lobby bailiffs, but by :Your Permisaiiin; Y think I oan franie one {hat" *ill- istisfactory to . the - Omni - . , 4adge---Proceed, - Itr. Solicitor. :your of ,'the ,•bciok. Nimettpan-a tall, lean, vinegar-faced :son of Aaak stepped ,up and promptly irabbed the , book. . uolimmly swear, in pres -epee .of thie court, and us laWyers, that yonWill . tatce .yeur position in the lobby, and: there °remain with your .eYeErukinned during the - entire session'this :court.-.,- That not:sriffer any one. to spenk above alow'Whisper, and if any one shall daie bi`Clo 'lgo in presence of your royal highness' you will vociferously exclaim, 'Silence in the lobby !' and if order is not immedietely. restored,%you further swear that you b,rone ponderous blow of ,your fist, plan ed befiveen the peepers of theoffender, knock him` doWn. All of this you. will do to ihe _best of 'your skill and ;knowledge, so hell)" you God. The bailiff took 'the position - assigned him; and immediately after the court was or . ganiied,Tom Diggers, who looked as green as young gourds; Walked- into. the room wearing brogans • No. 11, and his hands thrust. deep in his pockets, and inquired ; ',8e110,.-fellows, where in thunder; .is Jim Snelliits . • 'Silence in the lobby P. roared the en raged:4(4l. Brogans—Yon must be an all-fired' foot, and ef ye jistOpen.that brea&trap'of yourqt again, your, tiiaroutiwon't knew ye. Whereupon Jim Jarvis, the bailiff,' let fly the dogs of War, and greenY fell flat on his back, with, his pedestals at an angle ,of forty degrees in the air.. He'grabbed greeny-by - Ahe seat of his , trowsers, end dragged him wrong end foremost into tie presence 'Of hi9Elcacir, 'the presiding judge, and said ' . ' Mr: Judge; here's that iufernal . -Toin Diggers, that wan't never in a can't house: afore, and'he undertook to run over this" chioken ; but coidn' to my - oath I fetched the tartlet:critter up standing; by giving him a jerleilitween the eyes': cordin' and now say,.the wordy and. I'll maul the dogwood' juice outer him afore you kin -wink yer eyes twice.' Judge—Turtt•lim loose, Mr. Bailiff and Lt the "their 'the- court for the 2_3!of your-official duties.- 41$ large at 3 .pronipt khteny 111 - 1111.,I.A.NCAST EH. IN TE'r;LAGEofoica. JOB PRINTING ESTABLISHMENT; No. 8 NORTH ,DUSE STREET,. LANCASTER, PA. The lobbing DePartment is thoroughly furnished with new and elegant type of every description, and is under the 'charge of a piactical and experienced Job Printer.— The Proprietors are prepared:to PRINT CHECKS, • ' - NOTES, LEGAL BLANKS, CARDS AND CIRCULARS, SL. IL HEADS: AND HANDBILLS, • PROGRAH.NIES,AND pOBTERS, PAPER - BOOKS AND PAM FILLETS,. • " . BALL.TICKETB AND INVITATIONS, PRINTING IN COLORS AND PLAIN PRINTING, • with 'neatneas, aoCitracianddiepatchTod tlielnoatreasons ble terms, and In a manner not excelled by any 00411113h ment in ale city. -• . , •.ORP. Orders from, a distance, .by rexil or otherwise, premptly attended - M. Aildress • • -• ' • , - • GEO—SANDERSON & SON. -.- Intelligence. -• Office, ' . Ili, 8 North Duke street, Lancaster,. •a. We beg' leave to "infotarour . friends and customers" TRIG,, I toll r ffErjr;s B 3OA ß . ir " that Wa still keep a.very, large assortment of our own moon, made out of the, bait of miterials. It consists of 1. • ' FINJLCALF AND KIP BOOTS, • GAITERS,. ." • -WALKING SHOES, . • - . • • . ',Mt:MAPES, : oxpoftVirrts. • • • Also, LADIES! GAT; 15101)F ALL RIND.% KID AND MOROGO B)OTTEES, MISSES:AIS-DiCHLDREN'S GAITERS AND. BOOTS. FANCY SHOES OF EVERY,DESGRIPTION. • All RIPS nihnired , for.nOthlug. •• In. Prices to.nult the times . • Neese give"tts a call, and don't forget -- the piaci—L*3.A, North-emit - corner Centre Square.-Lancaster. , mar ).2 & MARSHALL, ' ria /Hki TELADID . DAUBS ot I 1 The toibvcrib,r . ,.having Just returned from the Phila delphia Trade &feet offers •t the leviext prices all' kinds of Boolora, embracing .LAW, FICTION. MEDICAL, DELIC IOUS, BIOGIVAPHY, MECHANICAL, and 'sok other kinds. nest.linnkeLrill be grid at the lowest prices, se we had. the advantage and were the milk.Edoicaeller from Lineal:Ur at' theirriDeNales,.And,wa a co nsequence; we cab sell lower than any, other Store. A - few of the Books are here men; yiebater's Unabridged Dictionary, Worceater's Unabridged Dictionary, - • • Amertian Olireitian Record, • , In and Around Stamboul, ' I•'Gotttialtra : • European fife, Legend and Landscape, Photographic - • • • 'Radial's' Mixt irt : 4 - . • : • The Bible and Social Reforni,- Tee Daye and Waye of the Cocked Hats. BlBLES'great- trakiaty; • from.Twenty-Byes Cents to ,Twenty-ftveDollara, sonee,of them having the finest Bind ings and Ilinetrationileret readved. in town:.' • • • ' ' , . SUNDAY SCHOOL BOOKS—Methodist, Lutheran, EPia: copal, Presbyterian, American Tract Society, - American Sunday School 'Union: - " - - SCHOOL: BOOKS-.4Sanders'i Towers!, Sarilettrs. Parker &, Watson'e Readers. Monteith's, Mitchel's,. Warren'; Smith's Geographies: Also; Algebras, Arithmetics, Gram mars,: Histories, Dictionaries, antStatlonery, Copy , and' Comporition Boob% Cap, Note' ated:LettetoPaper.'• Blank Behlteritilletes; Lend and. /lisle Pencils.- Pens and.golders,l Ink.and Ink Stands, Rulers, Envelopes.. The islitehiks.in the market are stild; here, : Maynard Ciro - yes'. Arnold's, ,Hover's, Latighlinge & Blackwood's. etc.. At - thaOheep Book Store Or = JOHN IWITAYPER'S, mg 14 tilBl No. 32 North, Queen street, Lancaster. , [County papers copy.] . . • F'E'ATH'E'R BEDS, SPE ING , MATTRESSZEI: HAIR, MOBS; HUSE AND SIDAW 4ATTRPBEB, CUSHIONS, dm., ready made' ei to. de to or3er;'at lowest cash - klieg. 'f• ,•-• ' . QPILTPr• I. • • - • ' • ' OMF nTABLDS, : BL ve a e :CIIRON OthiBONS, on b aud irderkrgsllA; No. 4 t North ToothOrroort below IttraM PhThurs• " ILY ItH -" OSIESTEAD FOR SI6,A RO M E STEAD EOR: $lOO. Also, HOMESTEADS flir $lOOO. AND (WEB, ht a desirable, healthy country. , : eiHr , AGENTS WANTED!' Send for a Pamphlet' Apply.to . . - E. SADDEN Land Agent Port Royal, vs., •• I 4i to Col. iV:D. I IIEITtEIt, Agent, at:Landisville Lair F mt f a rg l ? °4 , , : - . 1.1a 1 Y 1 2.1 28 PAIV_r ,PALESIW "P r:EP T'. This neirly-discoreredinVention Preearres:thw ,uothat from being Baled, renders Nursing safe from Inerin';-' ',epicure, and is a great comfort to Mothers- and Nurses, .03r. To be-had STONES, and sent trey bylost, dirertfrom the Inventor, Um. ANNESINLD,44 • 512 Twelfth street; Witilthigton, mint* _the ,amount..-• • PRION,' Old ter.iti,Aß 7 EACH. • 1 :Xi:A-DIX:A . . Ct - E-1 1, 7S: W 2.T B 7° •• AMP/911pprel alhiivince made to the trade. :- ' • Oi :111 . A 1... T LE , P WD Zt.• - zk'frAi'TF•,.RBAVBHOBBE,.rO{Ii'DE.F•,„ . , -•.' 14,081 N , ",' • • , 1 • • Farm OtiltEßt r.,• • Z.: grifPllult.L• rive err : • • • - • CLIMAX TAilflt, PragAil4zoeo. kgProp:Wat KLug Lane's.. . . _ A . M ES EL...8 &ELS! S, `FANCY AND WINIMORAMaIf: MAUER, .N0,;,64% „Cast. Kipp street., Talfes - pleitinn, In inviting the.vabilete'eall lit-fite Warm,' rooms, and examine hIa.P.PAUTIRRI, 4 1 ,WF3Rlir. ?V, COAIRS OP VAS.IOIII3TXIVIMSI3. reeatirodiuut4mitoptlff Otetwitil to at.thf shor. notice,. None but'the beet workmen antepplqeer eitablishirient;haruasatienth:Ohairt titirehased at I,bbr honsaareAullx. must to way ankle sold.in itkoSostern.- Citleo. and essinhie forjoatiselvea:. =-Osto i tiir 0116 :Sonia* '`011; oil of krfitIEDE2WBFONE,SIO3ILA, sesaant" A 4 For sale at-TUOMAS ELMAKERF,' • • • :,.;: 111000...`n kerfl .11n4 pu ::":: " 411: 1 :1" . ..t.-CiAnitrr La° D a mn & 00, r n 4061) . ARo.o,lo4s9l424 "*M fo lgl i nwattiii.... ..+: -.4l,t f r!)-7.- --likftwirmadiatoybapenotair Un 4 1911 • • , ;4i ft :,'4l 1 7 • ' v`- 1, . % - ft - iff);> NOTICE, „W . A.111.1Z BROS . • ' •_ Ofterniney.poindble inducement to • OA. Eitt.:BrZigEr - vir DRY GO-ODS. Determined to tudninrne i relt, they BITE .000 D BE Ei • BECAUTIST4ANO SILKS. AE.3%, dophie the money. • GABARDINE ANDAERRGE GOODS, About ono-halt their.value, Mierr`inilety and • SPRING AND- SUNDER 'ARRSS 'GOODS. - BRAWLS, SILK AND. CLOTH i3LOAMS AID-MhIPYLIS, ` • FRENCH LACE. MANTLES, • . Pant; Shawls, Borno.no..Antenee. heath. mot .Chantiat Lice Goods in every witliontingaid - to• cost. .6-•1 aid 8-4 Super .Black MBIONCV - ABLE DELAINB't6r. Shawls.' - • SUN lIMBRELEAS AND .YikEASOLA, - MEN'S - - AND- BOYS' WAILB, . - Azusa min itia.kkof • lOLA G lit:1). 7 „:;,/i/v.MiN Eto -Widetiariciating onhat 1214 cegiht.:AM4l4ll' price. Great bergairdi InVOLLARIASnd.ELERYBEfroneAnction. Juno 189t•233. -, Q Jraellriossasi*Ceistris Square. C k NEW pEktqau.e.T/cts4:l3:o;i4l P A U N 1 0 19-." "T HE - -With a view to-meet a universally admitted Want s the undersigned will hssue asaMmiday, the let of July =tire Morning Penny Papers qt nalled. WHE lINWN." The'ftat Mission of the Dertiocratio' whkh hag ever Mood id dolled wark of 'the Union and,the Champion of the ConstittitiOn, render its MAUI, Unity , atia bald aid tudelti thielhour of National perU:e ximittaailittfta cow.' cern. The pending struggle le not less fur the mainfananue • ofa United Count?" ttihn , fort the 7 PertsitiaUW Demo. cretin Principles, as expoundegihy Jefferson Awl Jackeon. The mast momentonerestilts hang titan' the intuit Mae party gueetbons ere let Ufa gnie by , ooutufon ; consent ad , -1 . journed. The met ie'dead; saveln itilessone of eifsdrienes, The Detnocrio her - tatasauotssitismk - .frotegitiliir, share in the . responsibliittesand dangers of the etearkeney. They have rallied isitlinie wordlist tad , theitlrblard of our. common ,conntri. ditiLocnasiprOmpesea °that duties: 'The 'Government will demand'affd lidless the clrilPart of: ova*. Petrial,:, l otaegarts au yjodlcate the National liOnor and reassert the NatiOnat authority; but the Preservation of Constittitionid Elhutyi nati more with the people then with Convulse and. Cabinets, Vigilance and Unity are thersSire speelallfriqtrisiVian - thielent j • ' " the' tin:4;lTM - THE It is the ptirpora o rs o UNION," in ovary nesPeeklk , fillhoilfoilkkiVig The Democracy of the whole State fciei - the need or a V o ld and I' vigorous Metropolitan daily; dtk_noeffart will, benspared to render .!TIIE UNION" both popular and and efficient asst newspaper. rind• ee a OA:three' eseiiodent , great principles for which s the Democmatinparlyshave, ens coa -1 tended; and which rife nosy sO tildhappilyirdperilletT: . The. PrtinrletintTlitive.Peffsatell ff4Fhl/PIPRO•Actts as will place the enterprise, from the heglnninsupon a sub stantifithruilnekirbitebr,lwitlilibutulaul meamiltoolllake • Newepaper seemed in interest and ability ; to no other r in the `city ;.and While' the. pstor will heleitlesily Dethoetttio, t tu r 4l 3t4} gne to party e mency. ' . We look to the DEMOCRATIC MASSES for sapplirt, and shall labor to make "THE UNION" lu every•way worthy theirconfldanceanciltlxvral : Miyttunit, „ fresh, readable ;and Teailers'Jourrial. " t THRMB =Per 'ADlttim,,Thifieo.ollPreat rietit* by °ai rier / § ff. .; No.aBo,Bouth Mil.B;2l#ll4lBlettPat NEw. SPECIN(i .3i.ILLEN &VAX GOODS The subscriber half jest roturhed from Philddelphia and New. York) with &complete and well, s ,ptook of SPAINit AND SUMMER MILLINEET GOODS, which he; -offers to the public in general; at'wbtdesale and,istail, for the lowest cash . prices. My stook. consists in Silks of ,!flay , _ colors,' Crapes, lawns, Banilse,' Mode. tarlitih; 'Zito Linina r Dapenett, Jeanbiond, Quillinsor,Franchang • can Flowers, Silklace, Edging, Stra'wtimp; ••••,,,, bons of the newest , style, Wire,- Sonnet-lfrukelg . Bonnet-Blocks, Straw Bonnets, Meta and Shakers -.;,• r 4 • of all eiders, and the newest style end:skapet Ha* net materials, and Trimmings, of , all ,kludailr Notions, Dry Goods, and a great many articles one to m-ntion. Also, TRIMMED AND .R.NAG BONEETS all the time on handof the' verrlatiist which he offers cheaper than, he a:lemma:rt. The subscriber is thankful for put favors; and . continuance of all his old cuatomersand plentrpliew,„ 01186. • L. BRIM No. 81 NOkh Queen street, Istii&AW,* r 'mar. l9 - • r 5 I" , . . ......' o p assure .*. twanging th 4 ' 1 , -f P 1 1.49 , v,i1t -L,.' pared to dill Woe) tO those who litetkitl'ar espy Wan Rog ° 1 portant:nal* SVCitk, 61 the late.:DS. lifeteptok, entltheV- ..-,'' "Tgi tts ta44.l.lDl4 MEDICAL ININYUYANIVr pbellettetr ,:• 5 Et mama i warufacpx-ißtanglm aad '',..', eons yrho en eefrons. N 11176118 Debillty,..:Pophettiro Dr 1, &co, &a, - supplying-the mellow of-stilt curd." 'Tire wades* I irresistibly led to cosepsre.a.uset)iFllN with' a n i t Igo '.. aeath.-_ • - ' i'. ' N.,...,' - ;.,,,S Reader, lose dot d mOtElelit, hot senckYpor, vak t e tor ; A t : , ~ copy of this little work , iddiiisp the Publtiliers. ~ 4- ' . DR..lOEra B. DODZAI4:O;, is •i. 64 anaps John. pt., New T. a i . apr 30.6 p 16] SIGN QP-9rEIF. REM, COA,T PALL kill WINTER otorAl3KOX:m4rifli. EVER!! . g 4 - -RDA 4 trvxr:Aloe , ,-, TATLOR GLOT_ ' N 0.13 NOIIIII QUire Be; La 2 rUll: • armor" W: 'RAUB calls the;attention °LA's, , Lancasbr coupty, A n d cltY to his brge rind' uji r jr stock of Plea Gobdeand Ready lioada.yalif Clothing„ the largest and beat assorted in the ell* , • caster. S. W Raub would call plitticalailit • • f r ot k of, Ready Made Clothing , of W4.01,01;44' ,:e.vics. all warranted to be well &Wed and guatintsw entire eatinfaction: , , , OVERCOATS, fro no _ t B . BO 1 : 0 %. 9,!_lt tf.ACK FROCK COAT.% frOin ,J,LOCti...lttugnskrry, „ BUSINESS. COATS, • , 8.00 o 4 .1(21y , : „. MONKEY OATS, '' 44 - 1 2.40' Ta""M. BL4PK,ITANTB,• - +lO L '4 l r), FANCY CAW. PANTS, r. LOO " VESTS, alf prince, " 8; Boy's and Youth's Clothing at ail Pri'ces, and - wea • Also,.on hand a WO and eplendidassortmant,of English and American Cloths,' Over4datitigi , iiiat "*"" •meree4,and Vesting", which will. be Amin Ftpa„at, notice and low prices, cut and •made in theingtOg suott.varroitkri to give eathrintOel , cktreuTY, MARE Allp HIT. • Also on hand, 'a laigi.axiibrtsfelit: or-Shard y . nishing Cloods , Aooßoloting of„collora, , ghirte, If.ccrp Shependme; &a; .ko. 'Gentlemen' buying their9riss, • can have it made. j fashfunable possible prices, Air Gentleman afelrielted 4:9,1 and iTualne pnrchaaing ehrewheria - ARri ._4oIP-Ither the AP , 9 )C O g _ . -1 * 6 1 3 aiL i v e.6 No. 8 gorthillator ca is tt 4o) \ LOANS D 'RI AN kit gar Twa Every.hovelty,epthe slyteltti ct itte -7 1 11! the best wort!, And Mee; lower' 'ever; A all • ••• N 9.23 89 U t 4 41 1 . k, 4refA • oI T •0 11-04; T:0, I.2llwltil. No. 142 'South Bth &reef ? , PhiladekthiAleb Cloth- OloakoOtt i3n diens lutrieti 03111 t. 014110 NMI A„ r • tnitilf CY eri 'PAW, F'.dic'? l, 3t• tan to dety:cotopetttion. 'l3 0 ' NA I If you want Ayle nrollq ty,'gct to,thil • Store r 14. B. Cornur Bighth.aud IFjththt,itta, , SPLENDp ' largedt and Inotit faiNfotrablitStSclt'hd - thirel N. B. Corger .gtelth - .W. 1111 }9t AC% EMIT/ AV - YCLASAIB I .CLOhASIi cumaiirtity,fi Elogont Njilf stooe ;r Magnpiceop No. 29' Sou th -9th. Stree4-ifitali4ooi• • I: 'inas., 2 " . : 11 .4 1 /01*s,dlittut Actuiil63' CAP itaP:orli. A IX Iri:11 b•it'ogf.C. .7aT z iove r grg°l l . Zr.. o it.v.4 , ,4 LI L A kip n Ass,22l . o3rls 9.0.1 laVNTiserrON,, PriTd. P. 11. , divniofierstarye.l ;or!, ❑ s • Policies tuned sad fel:Lowed; 4we ettl i tr oi t and , Ocifie-lialtectiatair 40te rr i$ and ihP tlygt L • ' ' &FENT."' • • '' ' • an. , -0 ',. . 28 7 " ••' IPt TOL TZEL T . JIVICITOI4. II 4 ANT tinne the MERCHANT TAILORINGOIHILEM. NO. AIX, North wen C. - &Aft • • eat , MUNCH OlAMiHNl 4l l4.l l lflakii9N Nellsaone.flneat Cloths of .vartona col .orsi - • French Moiaidit CastintereeAtaboetaMo4ion; y,aiancip • and a largennortnient P . '" • NNTLE I 9. I I4suBITABW We reepictfaHy ask a °oath:wan& of Ha, • Mairally bestowedapon-"ant:WeetiONllNN strict attention to, loudness to few Ve - Ode bt the thin hoo Lad esttd&itribu tattgittl=o2:Prit-.4 Wilt bo oblo to. pets 2041.10,r0. RICAN' LIFE 'lt • Int& • • • • , ;.;.• , • , g u,s Toe 01114 11011.04'07 - • - 041.1.AAL ~37,00.8".•.5500.0 •,•• Canituies W Walntittareif,7 _ ; a . . 1 .M 1 113 13 R1#361111 Total "Abetpiencillatee, th e ow 2 a - •• • . f.,;!••;•ir.. - IVEDELLD • • • • 8. emu; tag:, zattaiiiii itr: emdzr ". 1:5 27 " 1 ,:ta 71+ rectod. ittd.sclivted ._ko the 44410 W of thOsolifierV presenKdi4,:b . „*lilltEUtlientel3nlted States llamTq 44 1;1 ikii. L W 11/ VW, Pf*. Ray..l4 It Nit_ N 0.44, clortor ' eon 11 ‘ . " . . / 1 7 , 4€ 11 11oget-11 1 13mli siuMbt . A alip Bog fir every one. ...838TRIt 8 autisteg Mid-mixt 26,41261111.40 P, IN - 0. 44; lxit t P l aty 001 4- Ounaßlitts' fo! 9 1 !".5e4 , - . • inirElonte dotta‘wittetoo ittousuon4' W. A 11 4c4 14 ,... 0 0,*„eti14 " e No. 44, conwoof Narctigia wirs , D4Li A • - easy44%llwmig . zuTraie pg utossialtataroSt .111,41ITtt . kiN9A%/ 1 33 . BovromltheinisifiistuWitf .r 4 CIUME; Alt;';:g.tv _.~~:4~, ..1 W=3:2l
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers