Lancaster intelligencer. (Lancaster [Pa.]) 1847-1922, May 17, 1864, Image 1

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VO L. LXV
THE LANCASTER INTELLIGENCER
INNID NUM I,O7NDAY, AT NO. 8 NORTE Dull BUM,
'BY GEO. SANDERSON & SON.
Two Dollar; per annum, if paid in advance. $2.50, If not
paid before the expiration of the year. Allettbscriptions
are, however, expected to be paid in advance.
ADVERTIBLNEI DEPARTMENT.
BOBINTSS ADVSRTISESIENTI by the year, or fractions of a
year, in Weekly papers, to be charged at the rate of
$12.00 per square of ten lines. 10 per cent. increase on
the yearly rate for fractions of a year.
SEAL BRIAR% PERSONAL Paorearr and ORNSRAL ADVERTis-
LNG to be charged at the rate of Seven cents per line for
the first Insertion, and Four cents per line for ersry
subsequent insertion.
•PAzux MRDIOINZ9, BITTERS, AND ALL OILIER ADVERTISI
. WASS% by the column, halt, third, or quarter column,
to be charged as follows:
One column, yearly, a... $lOO.OO
One-half column, yearly, 60 00
One third column, yearly 40.00
One garter column, yearly, 30 00
Business CARDS, yearly, not exceerlioß ten lines, $10.00.
Business Cards. 6 lines or less, $5.00.
Ltaa, NOTICES to be charged as follows
Executors' Notices ..
Administrators' Notices, •
Assignees' Notices,
Auditors' Notices
All Notices not exceeding ten lines, dr less,
for three insertions 1.50
SPECIAL NOTICES, inserted in Local Department, to be
chargediffteen cents per line.
Btimmis —All advertisements preceding the Marriages or
Markets to be charged at the rate of ten cents per lint
for the first insertion, antlfwe vents per line to: every
subsequent insertion.
MARRIAGE. to be charged 25 rents each in the paper first
publishing the same.
'OBITUARY NOTICES to be ch verged at adreitising rate..
Tsmuns OP RESPZOT, RZSOLUTIONd, Ate, b. charged 10
cents per line.
COMMUNICATIBSS setting forth the claims of individuals for
Office, &C., to he char.4od 10 cents per line.
December 18th, 1863, the above &beanie or Prices v
unanimously adopted by the underincoml, Publkillers in
he City of Lanca6ter, Pa.
A PRAYER FOR PEACE
Give us peace in our time, 0 Lord,
From the desolating sword,
Fr. .m the devastating fire—
From wicked men's desire!
Passionate, senseless, proud,
The teachers of the crowd
Disturb the sorrowful air,
Crying Strike ! and do not spare !'
The preachers of Thy word,
Untrue to the trust conferred,
Defile Thy temple gate
With the blasphemies of hate.
The eyes of our young men glow
As the wild war trumpets blow,
And their hands deep crimson rain
With the blood of their brethren slain
" More blood!" the old men urge,
As the tides of battle surge{.
'Tis sweet for our country to die,
"More blood !"—the women cry.
And they go, the brave and strong,
For a right that may be wrong,
To feed the greedy tomb
With their beauty and their bloom ;
To redden the rolling flood,
To (e'en the earth with blood,
And poison the air's pure breath
With the charnel reek of death!
From the mountains to the sea,
Floats up, 0 Lord, to Thee—
To the footstool of Thy throne,
Tho long, low, trembling moan—
Of aiohildless multitude,
Tender, and fair, and good;
or mothers forlorri—i-furlorn,
Who weep for their early born—
And of widows forlorn as they
Whose hope, whose prop, whose stay
Lie low in the shallow grave
Of the unforgotten brave.
Give us peace, 0 Lord, in our time,
From all this wrong and crime;
From all thin sorrow and shame—
Peace peace ! in Thy holy name !
For the sake of the perishing realm
That our passions overwhelm;
For the sotto of the outraged laws,
And of Liberty's sacred cause—
Stay, stay Thy lifted hand
On our decimated land !
Hold back the avenging rod !
Peace! peace ! 0 Lord, our God !
THOMAS SEYMOUR
When freedom rung her first appeal
For trampled truth, it found him
A champion for the common weal,
With honor's arm round him ;
And like the Roman sage and bold,
He's found where danger rages—
Peer of the classic names of old
That ring through all the ages.
What though destruction sweep the land,
Nor may his efforts save her,
Still there are truths, however banned,
That men must hold forever.
Ay,.though corruption like a flood
May surge our mountains over, ,
Though we should wade as deep in blood,
Those rights we must recover.
traitors make the land a stiike,
In waging war for niggers,
Oar shaft a loftier aim must take,
qiainst clans and penal rigors ;
Though every rood of every State,
Where now destruction gathers,
Should go, we must emancipate
The Charter of the Fathers.
Nor longer rave, like whining dupes,
But seize time as it posses,
Nor talk like bibbers o'er their cups,
But stern, in ordered masses,
Leave plaint and sentimental staves,
And fancy, to the dreamer,
Leave tyrant chains to willing slaves,
And act Iike—THOMAS SErmona.
[Metropolitan Record
A MUSTARD POULTICE AND ITS CONSE
QUENCES.—The following story, whieh we
do not remember to have seen in print, is
now circulating on Change. It may be
old, but is received as new and true. At
a famous watering place, within the mem
ory of man, a gentleman was severely af
flicted with a pain in the stomach, which
neither gin cocktails nor other cordials
could remove. It was night, and he was
in bed. His loving wife, unwilling to '
wake the domestics descended to the
kitchen, and prepared a mustard poultice,
which she spread on her own handkerchief,
=and proceeded with it to her distressed
lord. Before leaving him, she left a light
dimly burning in his apartment ; but
deeply impressed with anxiety, she was
not as careful as she might have been in
noting the number of her room.
Guided by a light which she saw shining
in a chamber, and which she supposed was
the ono she had left, she entered, and gen
tly raising the bed-clothes, etc., laid the
warm poultice upon a stomach, but not the
stomach of her lord
Hallo, there ! What the are you
about V shouted a voice of thunder, and
the body and sleeves, whence it issued,
sprang out of bed.
The lady screamed and ran ; her hus
band rushed to the rescue from the next
room ; the waiters joined, and a small scene
ensued— much to the amusement of all
concerned. The poulticed gentleman had
indiscreetly left a light in" his room, and
this lured the lady from her path.
Her husband was so amused and excited
by the mistake that he quite forgot his
pains, but early next morning, with his
wife and trunks, left for parts unknown.
The poulticed man still retains the hand
kerchief—a beautiful cambric, with the
lady's name on it—which he considers of
rare value.-7raveller.
A sailor was called upon the stand
as a witness. Well, sir,' said the lawyer,
do you know the plaintiff and defendanty
' I don't know the drift of them words,' an
swered the sailor. ' What ! not know the
meaning Of plaintiff and defendant ?' con
tinued the lawyer;'a pretty fellow you to
come here as a witness. Can you tell me
where on board , ship it is that this man
struck the otho man r Abaft the , bin
nacle,' said the sailor. Abaft the bin--
nolo,' said the - lawyer ; what do yon
mean, by that ?' A pretty 'fellow," re
spondeilthe sailor, to come here as it law
yer, and , don't= know what abaft the -bin- .
nuW .
de
arm' rr ' •
REMARKS OF
HON. JOHN L. DAWSON,
In reply to Mr. Moorhead, of Pa., dn
Congress, .aril 29, 1864.
Mr. Dawson. Mr. Speaker this is the
earliest moment that I have been able to
get the floor, to say that the gentleman
who represents the district of Pittsburg
[Mr. Moorhead] has seen proper to make
my speech of the 24th of February the
subject of one delivered by himself on the
26th ultimo. I regret that I cannot char
acterize the gentleman's effort as an argu
ment. There is, indeed, very little in it
that rises to that level s I had scarcely
supposed it necessary to notice it on this
floor. It is profuse in denunciations of
disloyalty and of alleged sympathizers
with the rebellion. They constitute, in
deed, the staple of his speech. While to
me he disavows any intention of giving
them a personal bearing, yet by implica
tion they are regarded ,as personal, and
his friends, at least, have made the appli
cation.
In his opening remark, in the declara
tion that I had stated with great frankness
and clearness the grounds of my opposi
tion to the war, he has been guilty of a
gross mistatement. In common with the
party with which I have the honor to act,
from its first outbreak I accepted the war
as a necessity, and, while I have fearless
ly condemned the policy which governs it,
have never hesitated-to support it within
what i deemed the constitutional limits.
The Democratic party have acted through
out these trying troubles with a magna
nimity and greatness of purpose that no
other political organization ever exhibited.
They did try to avoid the war. War is
the greatest of all national misfortunes ;
a civil war is the worst of wars, and this
promised to be the most gigantic of civil
wars. They opposed abolitionism because
they knew it would bring war and desola
tion in its train. They tried their utmost
to bring all difficulties between the North
and the South to a peaceful and an honor
able settlement ; and they failed not for
want of will but want of power. , When
the war came, when die vindictive stub
bornness of abolitionists and secessionists
left no choice bat support of the Govern
ment by arms or submiskion to a rupture
of the Union, the Democracy offered their
blood and money for the Union freely,
without stint, without reservation, without
measure. All they asked in return was
that the party in power should conduct it
honestly and fairly, for the purpose of re
storing the Union and saving the Consti
tution.
My colleague falls readily into the trite
and well-worn style of reply which his
party leaders have taught him. If any
Democrat objects to an act of the Admin
istration, he raises the cry of disloyalty,
and insists that we should employ our
time solely in denouncing secession. If
we see the money of ,the nation squan
dered, the Constitution trampled upon, -Lire
laws disregarded, public liberty endanger
ed, the right of suffrage taken away, the
freedom of speech and of the press re
stricted and punished, the Union for which
we are bleeding laughed at as a thing of
the past, we must, according to my col
leagu's code of political morals, find no
fault with those who /o those wrongs, ask
for no reform, seek no change. The re
spect I have for my colleague forbids me
to say that this is the mere twaddle of the
demagogue. Such abject submission is
only fit for a slave, wholly unfit for a free
man. •
He pronounces a eulogy upon General
Cass. That great old man will be filled
with grief if he hears that an avowed and
open abolitionist has spoken of him in such
terms. It was heartless cruelty to. vex the
evening of that venerable patriot's life by
praise which implies that his whole public
career has been a false one. What has
General Case done to deserve such a
eulogy from him ? He claims the right to
speak of him because " he and I once and
again, but vainly, labored " to make him
President. It is true that while my col
league professed to be a Democrat ho also
professed to be a Cass man. After the
battle of Buena Vista, however, he de
serted his friend Cap and went over to
General Taylor. The Whigs of that day
were not willing that " Rough and Ready"
should be so unceremoniously appropri
ated, and my colleague early in 1848 came
back to General Cass with professions of
loud devotion, quite as loud as they are
now for Abraham Lincoln. After the
October elections of that year which indi
cated that General Taylor was to be the
lucky candidate, my colleague's zeal sud
denly evaporated, and at the presidential
election which followed he failed to vote
for General Cass:
My colleague has repeated what he al
leges was said to him by General Case. It
is not in good taste, nor is it by any means
a safe pi actice, to repeat private conversa
tions. The old-fashioned notions of society
which regulated intercourse between well
bred people always discountenanced the
practice. I know my colleague with a
manly bearing condemned the Stone
breakers for their private revelations in
the memorable contest, in 1838, when tied
and I joined hands:for the elevation of
David R. Porter to the chief magistracy I
of Pennsylvania. Bat having assumed
the responsibility to repeat, he has no right
to report him in a way which would make
the General seem falke to the faith of his
fathers. I tell my', colleague that that
great man for more than twenty years had
warned the country that the Union would
be destroyed if a sectional President
should be elected upon a platform which
ignored the Constitution.- After the elec
tions of 1860 had shown that all his efforts
to avoid such a result had failed, well
might we have said, "We are lost and
destroyed." And my colleague quotes the
language in which the patriot mourned
over the triumph of abolitionism as evi
dence that the patriot himself - was an
apostate to the unsullied record and noble
example of his life.,
If . the retirement of General Cass from
office in the winter of 1861 be construed
as just condemnation, how shall we con
strue that of `Mr. Holt, who remained it.
his palace as Secretary of War until the
4th of March, and gave his most earnest
support to the Buchanan Administration,
and at the close of it expresseu.l4 most
oordiaLapprobation of all the Presiaent
liad,,ckne, as well as , all he had forborne
to do.—.ln his letter of-the .12nd Marc/11;-
1861, filed in the: Ate , Periartznent, fer
signing-the'offiaci - W§Otetatt of - W*Sat
the 0°04'40/5kP44144i/A4/ lk tetide; i attestation Cl'63 .
"THAT 00IINTBY IS TEI MOST PIIOEIEIBO • 1 , 1 00 g . : 0 . .
LANCASTER CITY, PA., TUESDAY MORNING, MAY 17, 1864.
enlightened statesmanship and unsullied
patriotism of the President." Mr. bolt
has the confidence sof President Lincoln,
and holds by his appointmeneat this time
the responsible office of Judge Advocate
General. General Dix, Secretary of the
Treasury in the Cabinet of Mr. Buchanan,
now a major general in the Army, ap
pointed by Mr. Lincoln, in his address on
retiring from the Cabinet and referring to
Mr. Buchanan, declared himself , g im
pressed with the purity of his motives, his
conscientiousness, his thorough acquain
tance with the business of the Government
in its most complex details, and his anxious
desire that the unhappy questions which
distract the country may have a peaceful
solution."
not uncommon in struggles like. the pre
sent, when the country is in the throes of
revolution. The tenor of his speech is the
same which pervades a thousand speeches
since these troubles commenced.. Notwith
standing the evils which civil wars bring
to the masses, there are always some
dashing patriots who scout the magnitude
of the trouble, and flourish in the general
ruin, like the storm bit d which careers in
the tempest which is devastating the fosse
of nature. Those parties are ever ready
to impeach such as have the courage to ex
pose corrlffitTiOn, and labor in a spirit of
true patriotism for the welfare of their
country.
My colleague would like to make the
country believe that he is especially devo
ted to the preservation of the Union, and
to the prosecution of the war for that end.
How sincere he is in his professions ap
pears from his course on the following res
olutions, which I had the honor to intro
duce on the 18th day of January last:
" Whereas a great civil war like that which now
afflicts the United States is the moat grievous of all
national calamities, producing, as it does, spoliation,
bloodshed, anarohy, public debt, official corruption,
and private immorality; and whereas the Amerioan
Government cannot rightfully wage such a war upon
any portion of its people except for the sole purpose
of vindicating the Constitution and laws and resto
ring both to their just supremacy ; and whereas this
House, on the 22d day of July, 1861, speaking in
the name of the American people, in the face of the
world, solemnly and truly declared that it was waged
for no purpose of conquest or oppression, but solely
to restore the Union with all the rights of the peo
ple and of the States unimpaired ; and whereas in
every war, especially in every war of invasion, and
most particularly if it be a civil war between por
tions of the same country, the object of it ought to
be clearly defined, and the terms distinctly stated
upon which hostilities will cease, and the advancing
armies of the Government should carry the Consti
tution and laws in one hand, while they hold the
sword in the other, so that the invaded party may
have its choice between the two : Therefore
"Resolved, That the President be required to
make known, by public proclamation or otherwise,
to all the country that whenever any State now in
insurrection shall submit herself to the authority
of the Federal Government as defined in the Con
stitution, all hostilities against her shall cease, and
such State shall be protected from all external in
terference with her local laws and institutions, and
her people shall be guarantied in the full enjoyment
of all those rights which the Federal Constitution
gave them.
" Mr. Stevens moved to lay the preamble and res
olution on the table.
" Mr. Dawson demanded the yeas and nays.
" The yeas and nays were ordered.
" The'question was taken; and it was decided in
the affirmative—yeas 79, nays 56; as follows:
YEAS—Messrs. Allison, Ames, Arnold, Ashley,
John D. Baldwin, Baxter, Beaman, Blaine, Francis
P, Blair,
&mob B. Blair, Boutwell, Brandegee,
Broomall, Ambrose W. Clark, Freeman Clarke, Cole,
Creswell, Henry Winter Dave, Thomas T. Davis,
.Dawes, Deming, Dixon, Driggs, Schley, Eliot, Farns
worth, Fenton, Frank, Garfield, Gooch, Higby,
Hooper, Hotchkiss, Asahel W. Hubbard, Hurlburd,
Jenekes, Julian, Kasson, Kelley, Francis W. Kel
logg, Longyear, Lovejoy, Marvin, Mcßride, McClurg,
Mctndoe, Samuel F. Miller, MOO/7.83AD, Morrill,
Daniel Morris, Amos Myers, Leonard Myers, Chas.
O'Neill, Orth, Patterson, Pike, Price,
William H.
Randall, Alexander H. Rice,Edward H. Rollins,
Schenck, Scofield, Shannon, Sesith, Smithers, Spal
ding, Stevens, Thayer, Thomas, Upson, Van Valk
enburgh, Elihu B. Washbarne, William B. Wash
burn, Whaley, Williams, Wilson, Windom, and
Woodbridge-79.
Neva—Messrs. James C. Allen, Ancona, Augus
tus C. Baldwin, Bliss, Brooks, James S. Brown, Wil
liam G. Brown, Chanler, Coffroth, Cox, .Dawson,
Denison, Eden, Edgerton, Eldridge, English, Finch,
(Janson, Glider, Griswold, Hale, Hall,Harding, Har
rington, Benjamin G. Harris, Herrick, Holman,
Hutchins, William Johnson, Korean, Lazear, Le
Blond, Long, Marcy, McAllister, McDowell, McKin
ney, Middleton, William H. Miller, James R. Mor
ris, Morrison, Nelson, Pendleton,
Robinson, Ross,
John B. Steele, Stiles, Stuart, Sweat, Voorhees,
Wadsworth, Wheeler, Chilton A. White, Joseph W.
White, Fernando Wood, and Yeaman-56.
"So the preamble and resolution were laid upon
the table.''
It is thus seen that, under the lead of
the chairman Of Ways and Means, my col
league [Mr. Moorhead] voted to lay the se
resolutions upon the table. By that vote
he has declared that the war should not
terminate though the people/of the South
should lay down their arms and submit to
the authority of the Government. Al
though the war has lasted for nearly three
years, and has spread death and desolation
in its path, though it has broken up our
industry, burdened us with mighty debts,
shingled us with taxation, and demoralized
our people ; though it threatens the over
throw of our republican system and the
substitution of a despotism in its place,
yet he refuses by his vote to adopt the
only basis upon which peace and order and
stability can be again secured. His pol
icy means abolition, subjugation, and ex
termination. Fresh hecatombs must be
offered to appease his insatiable appetite
for blood.
It is my solemn conviction that it is only
upon the basis of those resolutions that
this struggle can be brought to a peaceful
-1 and successful termination. To this con- .
elusion we must come at last. Fanaticism
and evil men may delay this result, and
the country may have to be exhausted by
1 the fires of civil war ere it becomes a reali
-1 ty.
When the world, as related by the sacred
historian, was buried under the deluge,
and Noah and his family were the sole sur
vivors of the human race, it will be
.recol
lected that the dove was sent forth from
the ark for some token of the reappearance
of the land. After traversing, for many
days the waste of waters she found no rest
for the sole of her'foot, and returned again
to Noah. A second time she was sent
forth, and this time she brought book the
name !" olive-branoh, the harbinger of certain sub-
I have great respect, Mr. Speaker, for 1 sidence of the waters. A third time she
an argument, for statesmanlike views, and was sent for encouraging indications, and
for a candid and honest difference of o pi n - this time she returned no more, for the
ion ; but it required a great deal of assur- ! waters had retired to their recesses in the
anoe, almost the audacity of ignorance to . great deep, and the world was redeemed
from the curse.. Let the friends of coned
charge me with no expression of sympathy
for the soldiers who ' had defended his I tutional government derive encouragement
home and my home, when since the corn- ! from the lesson. The substance of the
menoement of the session. I have, been i resolutions may yet, like the dove, find
laboring in his amid the deluge of domestic troubles a presence in obedience - to i
the, united sentiments and instruction of secure resting place, and restore a nation
my o f party, and against the ;opposition from the grasp of dissolution.
him and his friends, to secure to the sol- I My colleague, in the couch:mien of his
dier a just compensation,for his services. : speech, says, ~ With the rebellion thus
The'soldier wants and is' entitled to sub- suppressed" this great country shall be
stantial 'aid, not mere expressions ofcome the " asylum- of the down-trodden;
-admiration ; and .sympathy,
_ ; but something . ' .
and oppressed of every nation." Here we
to suppljr,bis.physioal wants and comforts, ' join hands in cordial agreement. I only
-and especially those of his wife and child= I regret the memory as well as - the record of
au in iliitv abientie.' ' This' ' material ' aid- I the - loot that my, oolleague,: although - die
the'DeUlcklatic-pi)fty„utt '.O unit liftie . re- ', son - of an Irishman, joined' the Keffai-'
ieteatiadly,bffefeeen'thialiiier,,il4*.Ufteri ' ,lii4latileid . ge,. and engaged .in the;. era
-1t;. 11 " dell idi'i ' ''t ( ifir 6l "° l4 #lollErMeliOd.4 l 4o4o44 4 Wllll4loif .1664 4thii. A .
cannot forget, and if ne does frefir eitrsinnip 2 and oatholios of their religions
It is surprising that my colleague, in
his assault upon the Administration of
Mr. Buchanan, repeats here in his place
the stale charge that Floyd, the Secretary
of War, stole a large portion of the pub
lic arms and transferred them to southern
arsenals. The allegation is of little im
portance, except as far as it misrepresents
a Democratic Administration. My col
league `was a member of the 'Thirty-Sixth
Congress, and should have known that a
committee constituted by the House, of
which Mr. Stanton, a leading Republican,
was chairman, and of which a majority
were Republicans, reported on the 18th
day of February, 1861, that the southern
States received in 1860 less, instead of
more, than the quota of arms to which
they were entitled by law ; and that three
of them, North Carolina, Mississippi and
Kentucky, received no arms whatever, and
this simply because they did not ask for
them. I refer my colleague to the report,
which will be found in the second volume
of Reports of Committees of the House
for 1860-61.
It is stranger still that my colleague has
repeated that the Administration were
derelict in not arresting the progress of
the rebellion in its early stages. I re
assert what I stated in my remarks of the
24th of February, that the law of the 28th
of February, 1795, did not confer upon the
President sufficient power to employ mili
tary force to execute the laws and protect
the public property, and that Mr. Bu
chanan, in his message to Congress on tho
Bth of January,. 1861, asked for such au
thority. Congress failed to grant it. My
colleague was a member of that Congress.
It is a sad commentary on the degeneracy
of the times that he should stand up here
in the broad light of the heavens to revile
the then President for omitting to do what
he,a along others who constituted a majority
in Congress, failed to grant him the power
to do. This is a gross abuse of our pa
tience, to which the boldness of Cataline
would scarcely have been equal, and if he
had been blessed with Cataline's sagacity
he would have seen that it was useless.
The gentleman asserts that our financial
success has become the wonder of the
world. I agree with him that it is a won
der. On the Ist of January, 1861, prior
to the commencement of hostilities, the
entire circulation of all the banks, North
and South, was but a fraction over $202,-
000,000, while on the Ist of January,
1863, in the States known as the loyal
States, the circulation exceeded $238,500,-
000. Add to this the United St tes
Treasury notes, interest-bearing Treasury
notes, fractional currency, and certificates
of indebtedness, all of which circulate as
currency, and it amounts' to over $779,-
000,000. Put to that the issue of the new
national banks, which in the aggregate
'well the volume:of circulation to more
than $1,000,000,000, and he will learn the
magnitude of the Government issues. The
legitimate business of the entire country
before the war could be transacted upon a
circulation of a fraction over $202,000,000.
Now, with a divided country and with
commercial intercourse comparatively re
stricted, the circulation is increased to
More than $1,000,000,000, deranging the
measure of all values, one dollar in gold,
the constitutional currency, commanding
$l.Bl in greenbacks. Well may it be
pronounced a wonder. Prior to 1861, the
average daily clearances in the clearing
house of the city of New York were only
about $22,000,000, while of late they
have averaged over $115,000,000, and,
have even run up as high as $146,000,000
in one day. My colleague should read
much and relict more before venturing to
become a public instructor.
But notwithstanding the freedom with
which the gentleman impeaches the mo
tives of classes as well as individuals, I
look over his speech in vain for any cop
demnation of the usurpations of those in
authority, and especially for the slightest
reflection upon the miserable crowd of
sappers and miners—the contractors who
have fattened themselves on the blood
and tears and distress of the nation—
whose howl is ever fiercest for the war,
whose policy it is to prolong it, and who
denounce without measure all. who seek to
give it a proper direction or a speedy ter
mination. We in Pennsylvania have seen
these harpies feeding on the life-blood of
the State, and my colleague knows—none
knows better than he--the paralyzing
and consuming power of the frauds on
which he chooses to preserve a silence so
profoundly loyal. As a faithful sentinel
on the watchtower of the nation, why has
he never given notice that this same class
of persons are gnawing its foundations
away It was Madame Roland who,
when the cauldron of the Rev( ltition was
boiling over in France, weeping over the
degradation of society and the frauds that
were everywhere apparent, exclaimed :
" 0 Liberty !"—and I might add, 0 loy
alty !—"what crimes are committed in thy
him to the remarks whioh I had the honor
to submit on the I7th of February, the
occasion on which I offered a proposition
to increase the soldiers' pay and declared
that they had performed their duty with
noble fidelity and ze and that Antietam,
Vicksburg, Gettysburg, and Chattanooga
were monuments of their bravery and
patriotism that would bear their fame to a
a distant and admiring future, and were
at least entitled to our justice: I may
further say that on that oceasion I deolared
that wherever any part of that great Army
had moved on the water or upon the land
its ranks had been filled with thousands of
gallant Democrats, many of whom now
sleep in soldiers' graves.
But, Mr. Speaker, snob exhibitions are
liberties. The Germans, too, he aimed to
make the victims of his vengeance. But
the countrymen of Emmett and Curran and,
Grattan still live, and* are marching in
thousands by the side of the hardy
German, carrying the flag of the Union
through blood and fire to defend for him,
that home from which he would have
excluded them.
My colleague for the greater part of his
life has been a Democrat, at least in pro
fession. In those days abolitionism was
powerless and he was opposed to it. It
comes with an ill grace from him now, in
deed. It is a slander to say that the Dem
ocratic party has sympathy with the rebel
lion. It is a slander repeated by the low
est as well as those favored with position.
It has been conceded by members of the
Democratic party that there was provoca
tion for the rebellion but no justification.
In my remarks of the 24th of February, I
characterized secession as treason. I en
deavored to show that, as a legitimate re
sult of the State rights doctrine, secession
and nullification have no warrant in
the Constitution. Yet my colleague,
with great facility of conclusion, pro
nounces this the doctrine of John C. Cal
houn. He has sadly changed since the
days when he" was a Democrat and claims
to have been the friend of General Cass ;
the days when.he prbspered on the patro
nage of that great organization whose pol
icy and patriotism upheld this Government
for three quarters of a century, and which
is still willing to shield it and save it or
perish in the effort. Then he believed
that if ever abolitionism got the Govern
ment in its hands the country would rush
headlong to ruin. Now he gloats over the
fulfilment of the prophecy. Now he votes
to give this Ball for a British enemy of
the Union to lecture in, and assists to de
grade the nation by approving a eulogy on
John Brown, the traitor and the murderer.
When he bows down in homage to George
Thompson, the man who for thirty years
has been plotting the destruction of this
Republic., he should be careful how he ap
plies the word disloyal and make no refer
ence to General Cass, the patriot who gave
his . days and nights during all that time to
the safety of the nation.
Mr. Speaker, the motives of the Demo
cratic party require no defense. It has
ever been the party of freedom and of pro
gress, ever the defender of the Constitu
tion, the laws, and the Union of the States.
At the present moment that great old party
covered all over with truth, like the armor
of Achilles, may well say, "Thrice, is he
armed who loath his quarrel just." That
great party clings to the Constitution, and
does not change its principles nor its inde
pendence for the favor of a President who
is but temporarily in power. The one it
regards merely as a man, the sun of whose
official life is fast going down, and soon
there will be an end of his power and im
portance. The other, the Constitution, is
the Magna Charts of their liberties, in
which is stored the hopes of the present
and of millions to come after us, and in
the preservation of which is centered the
interests of the people of every clime.
A New Speculation.
The stock reporter of the Philadelphia
Sunday Times, a humorous and ready
writer, thus hits off the mania for specula
tion in all sorts of foolish enterprises now
so prevalent throughout the country:
For the benefit 'of our hot-headed read
ers, who are anxious to get in, and doubly
anxious to get out, we give below a pros
pectus of a new Company about being
opened. The books will be opened on the
7th Monday of April, S. E. by N. W.
corner of Fourth and Dock streets, at the
hour when it is hard to tell which is
t'other or which. We will not endorse it
or guarantee its truthfulness, but at the
same time believe it to be about as valua
ble as some of the stocks now being engi
neered. We leave it with our readers to
examine and determine upon.
The Orinzabeeze Mining, Manufacturing,
Railroad, Coal, Iron, Zinc and Oil Com
pany. Capital $100,000,000,000. 1,000,-
000,000 shares of $lOO each. This Com
pany is organized under special charter
from several of the States and' Territories.
The charter is entirely free from liabilities
of all kinds, and is of unusual scope, em
bracing Mining, Railroad, Manufacturing,
Digging, Boring, Hauling, Buying, Sell
ing, and Steamship privileges of the most
extensive character. The object of the
Company is the prosecution of operations
on the lands which it owns, under certain
grants whioh it holds from the Great
Tycoon of Japan, covering mineral rights
to 4000 square miles of land, with an
ocean front of 300 miles, and embraces
valuable franchises for Mining, Naviga
tion, Railroad, Boring, Buying, Selling,
Fishing, and the general development of
all the interests of the Company. Ex
aminations whioh have recently been made
by a large Scientific and Mining Corps,
sent out for that purpose, having proven
beyond the possibility of a doubt, that this
region is the riohest, not only where it is
situated, but in the whole world, or any
other place of which we have any definite
information. These examinations have
developed the existence of Copper to an
extent that has surprised even the most
sanguine, and it may be safely put down
that the yield from this source alone will
reach the sum of $100,000,000 per an
num. It is not alone in Copper, however,
that the great wealth of the land consists,
but Silver and Gold' have been found in
Such quantities as almost to stagger the
explorers themselves the latter precious
metal having been found cropping out in
pure solid blocks, similar in form and size
to those of the great "Giant's Causeway,"
in Ireland. The existence of gold has
been long known to the aboriginal party
residing on the premises, from the fact
that in a small lake in the neighborhood,
to which there are several inlets, but no
outlet, the only fish found-there are gold
fish, and the surrounding country swarms
"with gold bugs. With .reference to the
silver, the following analysis, which has
been carefully made, will show the won
derful richness of the ores on this property:
Silicia, - - - 120
Carbonic Acid Gas, - 5 10
Oxide Zino, - - 35 25
Silver, - - - 51 40
Lime,- - - - 1 70
Sulphur, - - - 305
Lead, Iron, Oil, Water and
Soft Soap, - - 230
. 100 parts.
It will.be -seen.. by the :Rhine, that not
only in its mineral wealth does its 'value
-BIJOHANAB.
consist, but the existence of CarboilioAcid
Gas,, offers fine indneiernents, Soda Wa
ter Manufacturers; 'arid Lucifer- matches
can be i readily" made from the sulphur on
the premises.. Many of the specimens of
ore brought home - by the exploring party,
have, however, been much richer than the
above, yielding in the proportion of, two
tons: of pure silver to the ton of ore. An
other, and. perhaps not less astonnding dis
covery,-has been made on our property ;
id holing for liquids, after the , auger had
penetrated' the solid root to the depth of
400,0001eet t , a rein' of fine sugar house
molasses qvas strut*, which runs 2,000
hogsheads per day ; and in another district
the exploring party discovered a mine of
fine brown sugar, that has been worked by
the natives for over 3,000 years, and ap
pears to be inexhaustible , and from indi
cations, in many of the tracts examined,
our scientific corps are confident of being
able to assure the stockholders that they
will shortly , open an egg mine of unusual
yield, and in a tract S. twenty-two degrees
W. of the shaft sunk for the above pur
pose, were discovered most' positive -indi
cations of butter which can be mined at a
trifling expense',- and, from calculations,
will yield about 20,000 lbs. a day, which,
at the present price of 55 or 60 cents, will
produce a handsome revenue to the Com
pany. We might mention other valuable
interests connected with this Company, but
enough has already been said to prove that
this is, without doubt, the most valuable,
and, at the same time, the most desirable
enterprise that any of our citizens can in
vest whatever capital they have left from
investment in other companies.
DON JOSE Y. FTGUARIO,
Presidents
0. BALDERDASH SMITH,
IMPORTANT REQUISITES IN A WIPE.-
A knowledge of domestic duties is beyond
all price to a woman ; every one of the sex
ought to know how to sew, and knit, and
mend, and cook, and superintend a house
hold. In every situation in life, high or
low, this sort of knowledge is of great ad
vantage.
There is no necessity that the
gaining of such information should inter
fere with intellectual acquirement or even
elegant accomplishment. A well-regulated
mind can- find time to •attend to all. When
a girl is nine or ten years old, she should
be accustomed to take some regular share
in the household duties, and to feel respon
sible for the •manner in which her part is
performed—such as her own mending,
washing the cups and putting them in
place, cleaning silver, or dusting and
arranging the parlor. This should be
done occasionally, and not neglected when
ever she finds it convenient ; she
should consider it her department.—
When older than twelve, girls should be
gin to take turns in superintending the
household ; making puddings, pies, cakes,
&c. To learn effectually, they should
actually do these things themselves,
and
not stand by see others do them . Many
a husband has been ruined for want of
these domestic qualities in a wife—and
many v husband has been saved from ruin
by his wife being able to manage well the
household concerns.
THELANCASTRIL INTELLIGENCER
JOB PRINTING ESTABLISHILENT,
No. 8 NORTH DUKE STREET, LANCASTER, PA.
The Jobbing Department is thoroughly furnished with
new and elegant type of every description ' and is under
the charge of a practical and experienced Job Printer.--
The'Proprietors are prepared to
PRINT CHECKS,
NOTES, LEGAL BLANKS,
CARDS AND CIRCULARS,
BILL HEADS AND HANDBILLS, - -
PROGRAMMES AND POSTERS,
PAPER BOORS AND PAMPHLETS,
BALL. TICKETS AND INVITATIONS,
PRINTING IN COLORS AND PLAIN PRINTING,
with neatness, accuracy and dispatch; on the most reasons:.
ble terms, and in a manner not excelled by any establish
ment in he city.
Air Orders from a distance, by mail or otherwise
proniptly attended to. Address
GEO:SANDERSON lc SON,
Intelllgencer Office,
No. 8 North Duke street, Lancaster, Pa.
IMPORTANT TO MARRIED . LADIES I
TRULY A BLESSING!
I will Bend, free of charge, to any Lady who will send
in her name and eddrees. directions how to prevent the
extreme pain of Child• Birth ; also how to have perfectly
healthy and beantiftil Children; also one other new and
Important Secret, the only sure and safe remedies ever
discovered.
My object in making the above offer Is to induce every
Is,dy to test my remedies.
Address MADAME DULENTAUX, M. D.,
feb 23 3m 7]
BARLOW'S INDIGO BLUR
Dealers and Conanmers of the aboved Celebrated Wash
Bine, will please take notice, that the Labels are altered
to read
The quality of this Blue will be the same in every re.
sped!'
It is warranted to color more water than twice the same
quantity of Indigo, 'end to go much further than any
other Wath Blue iu the. market. It dissolves perfectly
clear and does not settle on the clothes as moat of the
other. makes vlo. One Box dissolved in a half pint of
water, will make as good a Liquid Blue as any that is
made at one third the cost.
As it is retailed at the same price A. the Imitations and
Inferior articles, housekeepers will find it very • much to
their advantage to ask for that put up at Wiltberger's.
ifge All Blne'pnt up after this date with Barlow's name
oa it is eng Imitstion.„
The New Label does not require a Stamp..
AM-4ov Sale by Storekeepers generally.
feb 16 fina 6
C L AILIESON & BANK.tt:RS,
GOVERNMENT BECUBITIEB OF ALL DOM
INTEREST ALLOWED ON DEPOSITS
HO BT. CL &ANSON,
E. C. 111cOLIIRE,
apr 12
G ARD :P N L6WER, AD
SEEDS.
. . . ,
Ail deeds bought at our store warranted fresh
genuine.
AGRICULTURAL AND
• HORTICULTURAL IMPLEMENTS,
SHADE, FRUIT and ORNAMENTAL TREES ; FARM
AND GRIST MILL CORN SHIMMERS. STRAW
AND FODDER CUTTERS, PLOWS
AND CULTIVATORS.
Hanging Baskets and Vases in great variety.
Ake. A liberal discount to the trade.
/a-Orders solbsite I. and, promptly filled, at the old
eatablished
SEED AND AGRICULTURAL WAREHOUSE,
No. 805 Masan BTaxsT, PaIL&DZIPHIL.
em 14
EIVRE & LANDELL,
FOURTH AND ARCH STREETS, PHILADELPHIA,
Are Opening for Spring, 1884.
100 pc's. $1 Fancy SILKS. 50 pcs. India Silks, $l.
190 " Good Black " 200 " Ordered Plain
SILKS. LYONS Black Silk VELVET.
Brown 4-4
ULF), $6, 5,4, 3,2, 1, per yard
Black $6, 6,4, 3,2, 1, per yard.
bloke Antiques. all colors.
Magnificent Grenadines,
Magnificent Organdies.
Richest Chintzes and Percales.
Spring Shawls.
New Honeehold Staple Goods.
N. B. GENERAL A.SSORT6IB,NT OF. MEN'S WEAR.
mar 1 , r 3m 8
767 Broadway, New York City
INDIGO BLUE,
PUT VP AT
ALFRED. WILTBERGER'S
DRUG STORE,
No. 233 NORTH SECOND. STREWS, PHIL&DILPHIA.
.No. 121 8. THIRD ST., PHILADSLPIILL
71 , 110HASID AND 708 BALE.
STOCKS, BONDS AND GOLD BOUGHT AND
BOLD ON COSIMIBBION
OOLLZOTIONS PROMPTLY MAD&
GREATEST e a I ItIETT s.. OP PHOTO.
We would call the attention of persolue to on large
stock of
PHO TO H B Ulf .
We have the largest and best 'took everbrought to the city.
OVER 100 DIYPENICNT SWIM, VAIVIIIPIO IN P2lOl
PROM 75 CENTS TO 20,00 DOLLARS,
Call and see for yourself at
JOHN BILBLEWBBIB
Cheap Cash Book S tore, .
92 North Queen 'street, - Lancaster.
cot 14 fit:•miner. Unton ksid:Taqediar eopy.l tr 4o
ritAIL:TER-SALLL,S. PO 1W R
.Pawd•redatordiglAntimany, Rinsigrinn, 13nlytm
galtre, Addaftetida,Alnm, &a. Tor side at
apt 21 tll4 THOMAS Num.(
Drug and (Mondani Nom Wart Min
_
So Si E m El I ZUG:6*3V I
THE PATENT STAKKEIMAtING:AND POST-MARE
PRISSIRVINS ENVELOPE..
Thepreeervation blithe letter - Itself of the POST-MARS
and POSTAGZABTAMP, generally deetiOyed with the da
tachabover, has long been deemed a mailer of the first
Importance. This deildetatom lanowtriumphanily
by this Ingerdons invention. Many obvious tars=
must arise from the general use of thin envelop..
irtrrllncreeeed Safety by additional sealing rthe ;tamp
connecting the envelope and letter securely togetheir and
this is never liable to be omitted, though tbs. sticki ng of
the Asp Is frequently neglected or Impecdpettf done,
Second—Security . against Impertinifht Intruidont
letter and envelope being firmly attached by the thumps,
and inclamre - cannot be impacted even if the Sap he clan
deetinely opened.
Third--Safetyagainst- Abstraction of Valuable' ludo
spree. If. the Itsp - be lett unsealed, or opeutstafth *Uni
ons intent; ft - will be impossible to open the letter. nd take
thence bank notes and drafts without so mutilating the
envelope as to insure detection. --
/iburth--Security for the free payment of the Postage;
as the stormy when once properly placed in this window,
cannot be removed without its destruction.
/4„,l7+—Advardage therefore to the Government; by the
effectual destruction of every stamp in its first use.
Sizth—Facility to the Post Office Dperations ; by a uni
form location of the stamp In theArpper right hand corner,
which is the most convenient poiltion for the Poet. Mee
mark.
Sesenfh—Vedfleation of the Mailing; by Bemiring on the
letter itself the legaz exidevz of the time and place Hof It
being mailed. This has long been esteemed so desirable,
that many prudent persons are constrained to dispense
with the use of envelopes, that they may have this'post
mark on the letter; and others take the precaution to pin
the envelope again on the letter for identification.
Eighth—Certainty of the Date and Place on the Letter,
whic'h areso Irequently omitted by writers la carelessness
or hurry.
Ninth—Ornamentation; which; though some may think
of small Importance, certainly Meets laPPn?Talid all
persons of taste.
, • nenth-,Cost. Notwithstandlngthe many and unrivalled
advantages of the " Stamp riesling Envelopes," they will
be furnished at a very small 'adnee upon the prime of
those not having the benefit of 'this patent. ,
Can be had at . 11.19.118THAEFPIPS'
Cheap Book Store, Corner North Queen and Orange s Ste. •
nov 4 4B
. --- - 1
1
iron9rA. Di T TO '
1 4 ` A R ft 1 .16 RIR
GRO. D. SPEECHES'S
I .
GEIOULTURAL . IMPLEMENT AND SEED WARE
HOUSE,' . • .
No. 28 BAST ICING 801113 T, LANOASIZA,
Two doors West of the Cotirt Houle.
The undersigned having lately purchaitedfrom WM: D.
Sweatier his entire stock and interest In tbe'Agritnltural
Implement and Seed Ware Home, in Lancaster, : takea ibis
method of inviting the attention of Fannin" an& 43thers
to his large and well selected stock, which consists in, part,
of the following articles
FODDAR OUTTBRB--Telegraph Cuttertior fodder,; hay
or straw, 4 siyes Cemmings' Cutters, 4 sizes; Eureka
Cutters, 3 sizes; Harrisburg
.Car Co. Cutters, 4 Riles, I •
CORN SFIELLERS from to $2O. Also the large Kin
derhook Cannon Shellera. Sausage Clutters and Fillers of
all slices, Lord Presses, Farm Mills, Hay Presses, and Steel
mould-board Plows. Also on hand the New Jersey Self-
Reaping (ma Mowing Machine.
THE CELEI3ItATBD COOKLEY PLOUGH,
of the genuine patterns and castings, manufactured and
constantly kept on hand; and great variety of Plonghs
and -Castings, Sub4oll Plought, 'Machine' Belting, Bags,
Pulleys, Dopes, Tar and 0115 of all kinds for machinery.
Also - Harrows, Cultivator,, Platform, Scales, Farm Bells,
Grindistoum and fixtures, Shovels, Forks, Purlieu, Guano,
Bone Dust, Fruit and Ornamental. Trees, and Beads on
hand of every description..
'seer The tigheet cash price paid for Seeds, at the Ware
house, No. 28 Bast King street, Lancaster, two doors west
of the Court House--same side.
ROOFING SLAT.B.-4. fall supply of the beet and am
end quality Lancaster and York Clounty,Roofing Slate on
hand, which will be put on by the square or sold by the
ton on reasonable terms. Please give me a call.
WM, D. SPRECHER herewith returns his thanks to
Farmers end others for past patronage, and hopes the
same may be continued to his Brother,
ape l 9 15] GEO. D. SPRIECHER.
ADZES' DRESS GOODS.
HANDSONIE SPRIIVG DRESS GOODS,
Of NenDesigns and Materials
SPRING STYLES CLOTH MANTLES AND SHAWLS
CLOTHS FOE MANTLES,
Various Shades and Qualities.
We are receiving daily additions to our stock of the
stove Good;,and invite the attention of pu r chasers.
apr 12 tf 14] HAGER k BSOTHEES.
CLOTHS, CASSLHICRES £ VICSTINGS
HAGER k BROTHERS •
Have now open . and Ininto an assiginatlon of a fall and
complete stock of
READY MADE CLOTHING
Also, a Full Assortment of
Extra Quality French Coatings,
Fancy Scotch Coatings,
Black and Colored Clothe,
Fancy Cassimerea—for Salta,
Black French Doeskins.
GOODS FOR BOYS' WBA R,
In Great Variety.
/g- Clothing made to order In a auperioemanner.
apr 12 tf 14] HAGER et BROTHHERS
C ARPETS AND OIL CLOTHS.
Engdsh Brussels,
Superfine and. Medium Ingrain,
Venetian, Ramp and Bag CARPETS.
Draggers, Velvet Rugs and Cocoa Door Matte
OIL CLOTHS,
From 1 to 4 yards wide.
A complete assortment of
HOUSE—FURNISHING GOODS
apr 12 tf 14]
FaIIIBLISELED THIS DAY.
U. ANNETTE, OR THE LADY OF THE PEARLS,.
Dr 'ALEXANDER DUMAS, (tan Yonsess,)
Author of "La Dame aux Camilias," or Camille,
the Camelia Lady."
Translated from the French by Mrs. Wm. R. A. JohMons,
Esq., of Philadelphia.
ANNETTE! ANNETTE! AN - MITTS
THE LADY OF THE PEARLS I .
ANNETTE, or THE- LADY OF THE PEARLS. 'By
Ammerman Domes, the youngeromthor of "Camille, or
the 'Camelia Lady," and translated from the Freitah by
Mrs. Wm. R. A. Johnson, Esq., of Philadelphia,-Is, pub—
lished and for sale this day, complete In one large octavo
volcano, large type, double column,
and printed on the
finest and beet of white paper. Price Fifty Cents •
copy. .
The work is full of incident, character alai great Inter
est, and will have popularity equal to - any work that has
been issued-from the press for twiny years, and is equal,
if not superior to its predecessor, "Camille," by the same
author. For sale at
ap 21 tf 16
11034. 1864.
S PRINGt TR ADE.
No. 5 EAST - , KING STREET,
Invite the attention of Housekeepers and 'all others o
their extensive stock of
FOREIGN AND DO?dEBTIO DRY GOODS
now in store, which we offer at the lowest possible prices
BLEACHED AND UNBLEACHED lifilkiLlNß,
SHEETLNGS, TICKINGS, CHECKS,
SHIRTING STRIP'S,
CALICOES I CALICOES 11 CALICOES!! I As,
In nil grades and prices.
New and old housekeepers can save money by looking
through our stock.
DRESS GOODS.
As in past seasons this department Is anatirpaaseit
variety, choice and prise.
ALL 151 LATEST 811L19 705 575075.
SPRING DELAINES, BEAUTIFUL DESIGNS, Ao.
SHAWL AND CLOAK ROOM.
Great attractions for ladles.
HOOP SKIRT Room.
The largest stock to be found. Lathes' and Mises', from
12 cents to $3.00.
Remember
mar 8 tf 9]
PRING AND SUMMER CLOTHS.
, CIABSTAIEBEB AND. READY-MADE
CLOTHING.
AT S. S. BATHVON , EI ESTABLIBMIHNT,
. . .
Lorne; of North Queen and Orange atreets, (Hr►mph's
old stand,) immediately 'opposite Shober's
- LANCASTER, PA
Relying with confidence upon that patronage which his
friends and the public have heretofore. extended jowards
him, the subscriber, even in these equivocal times, has
provided himself Idth'.4 large stintdv of'seasonablw
BEADY—!SALDROLOTHING,
D. Y. JACKMAN
L. A. MACKEY.
3m 14
Clonesting of Sack, Brock,- and •Walking Coats; Pants,
Vests, Drawers, Under-Shirts, Woolen Over-Starts,
Collars, Neck-Ties, 'Scarfs, Stocks end
Cravats - Suspenders Hosiery;
Silk, Linen and - botton
Handkerchief', At.
Also, CLOTHS,
CASSIMPII32B,
" AND VESTINGS,
which will be made promptly to order for eiviihms or
military men; warranted to give satisfaction, and u low
as they can be gotten eliewhere.
As there is not, trOna present. appearances,- likely to. be
any diminutioa in the price of material, but rather an
advance, it Is-therefore the interest of all whowalit cheap.
clothing to buy them nosy. S. S. lIATEIVON
Merchant Tailor ant Clothier,
Corner Orange and North Queen street, Lancaster.
apr-26 Sm 19
swoar. RICAILOVED.
DRY GOODS AND OLOrIZING.
DM All id A - Poxts ,
Cheap Cub Store has been removed from N0..17 North
Qtfeen street to No. 66 West King street, between Coopiir'e
and ohenk's Hotel* lu the building rermorly:Ocoulded by
Dr: Wm . .13.7alikestoek, which the undersigned have pur- .
chased' and Sttad up Into large And convenient: laws; ifi .
which they will open by April' let; 1861, a large stook Of
Dry' Goods and Clothing - for -Spring- Balm' cousistiiig
part as follows: • •
• DADINW - DISAII GOODEfOr EvlrtY VARIETY, -
eiIAWLB. I BHAWLe I • - BRAWLS!
•LADals , ' OLOAXB 711: S PRING, colorn)
_ •- MOANING. :OLOTHS,,.; . •
aq - icoag, -Ginghems,
Table Dispers,limbrellastuniTherst 6ol 4 lo 49 64 T' l 6*.
fiftilfpUlT BEAKED:tiII F • ill I
. ' :Mx& /Mg : T.; I 1.; •
We wfilalici open in the Lune building g Jam stook a;
imor-mins
l aiti :Whigi bms=tl=lll7re abr rotr i ft Yll
yarDon't forget the place—No. 26 West
Le tar , Pa. BUSK
Apr 6
NO. 19.
lIAG ES k BROTHERiI
J. M. WBSTRAITEB'S
Oheap Book Store
WENTZ BROTHERS,
No. 6 East King Street, •
Sign of the Bee Mire,
WENTZ BROTH ES