3 ,titit?atevittcttigetnzet. VOL. LXV THE LANCAS TER IN i ELLIGENCER MED tV.RY TIIEStaY. AT NO. 8 NORTH DUEL MUT, BY GBO. SAN VALSON & SON. Two Dollars per annum. If paid lo advance r.o if not paid be , ore the espditiou of ton y.ar. kll subscription. are, koavever erue,red to be paid In advant e. ADV , P.TIBINO DKPA.,TIIENIT BUBIN2BB 1.DV12,182.0111N1TS by the year Or fractions of a . year. in Wealth paper., to be charred at the rate of $l2OO per 1314215r0 of ten linen 10 per cent. increase the yearly rate fur 'l,4•rnors 34.444 r lieu. t:1-ATE, l'Eitso),J, i n. .PEeTY An I CiEtt2EAL A orEitTis. tie r 0 Da ch.sr4,l at lhr rs' , wren cent , per One I, the firer icon ttou and Four 0,11t4+ per hue for ever) subsequent in veil Int) PATENT q2D1C1164 HlTTeni, 000 ALL •rtlita ktiretirls.2 liair3. by the cOlunan. hot:, third, er quaver c4.lu.n. to be charged ea lOiIOWe Otte yearly, 1100'-0 Our half c unto .eaely, 000' 1 Ono third column. yearly, 40.00 One ipt trlor 4•44lntun. ettirly, 3 . 4 00 BUSINCSS CARDS yeer4y. not 4,c...din, fen Ours, V.) 00 itooneee Curd, 5 hr.... or lea-. f. 5 00 LOCAL NOTIC), to ho .bar,....) 04 101.- we: .2.).201 2, 0 1 Atiroinintre.tots' Notice, 20i Alrign Nottene 2 Pt) Auditors' Nntic.4 , 150 All '•tines 001 exceeding fen linen, or loon, for three ............. 1 50 SPECILL NOTICES, inserted to Loon) Deptirtittetit, to be rho-1.4441 . /121,n tar pet line. Bl2llOPn tern-I,i ofp• 1:4: the 1144.rrlegt, Nlaraete , 11,ig-d et in, rut- nI ten Pent, per :it, for the hest hoe, i or, Ifire 0 , 0 LA In vv",) subeeque , L in,,11. 33AE:M1.11, enerzeti in the pap, firet. g th OBIT,UIPY \•:T ICES at rntes TR , BUTE, Or RE,,YecT ItE,LE:II3,, I.) • dlsrg.d '0 p”r COhIMUNICATIoNs e,ttiuz lorth otil n, tr„.. 0. 1....•h , r2:- I 10 pvr De•eiti:ter •i•• ~• UrlartlLlD.Llsl) by the unthrritivnel. he City L.tica-te. It% Jtill. A 111 , S'IA ND ACn Pa:amine,. & I'l'' L k lii I:••"! , Jt i.litr l AU -.A N n1 , 1119,,ber. A WI .f H:. /: oy Tll'ill 11,7 , 11 dr -- - - LORD 11 ‘3.1 Corr Lord William we..ai a cottage ma.d, Amd ho [aid her his love 'heath the ireecheu shade The eky arid ititilight together were Le her deep Woe nyer u d tier gpidoti hair Back from her brow so high end Were pushed roe tolde of her droopteg veil No cottage tidu,ol,be. roomed to be. But n gracetui or (Ji g h degree He trgted, as he g •zed us her lie , ury rare " Were the L E.VIDa but half , fair He loved and w .oed, but yuuog E ieo strove With a alaadolft learn and a Lodided,i love, For she knew that the heir of halle end land Was uu suitur wee/ lvr a lowly ti,,d The wooer wont book to tot lighted hall W bare bit. lady wutber kept, lettivo.. An be trod tLe e.ith a tuoanure , l tread, Taere bent to Lte ward, a ~ atffiy head, And wished that the brew so high and fair Had been in rhe place of uuOT her (Were. Long yenta 11.4 passed, end "no tvititer bight As he eat in nu chair by the ruddy A pOddlita clime, to 11s dame To beg fur a maiden au huu, bie 6uroud For, 'neuth tho enow of th..t wintry ,ky A dorruwtul out, hod loin down to die. liar huutl.9 wore awned iu their quiet rut:, A korai:net piuued au hor rhape.y breast. The ulaidon :Awed, On that luovel,6s brow, Was but. bail so lair us List forehestl 1101 s. Stitched close 111 her ample b , deco, iu' re Wes the up of a plume lids luck ut Lair Aud gotielps said that. the brldieu plumb Full Mai Lae buuLlei 01 lordly groom, When the 8 icaltlay wind bore the prize away, Wnieh had waved u er much iueks un hin bridal day, Oa those castle walls tell a ,ilant gloom. Aud a daughter zul. In toe dur Seuud room The dark-eyed mother had passed away— The earth regard, cur her hebie °lay— Her childrou all, Ilk° the hipped bud., fell All bet [ho um, he h,,1 loved ee) uveli; For her eyes were b,uo, and her hair was bright As the di/wirier eky and ,he rice sunlight. Strange that the maiden, to young and fair, Sirutuut nn 1/Re the VIII: that lay saruuded When Lae gus.p, [ohd ul the lock and p oche ,That nod mudded tae brew of :he lordly groin Thy claugatur .azett un [eat altered brew, Hie calutlp nab 031111 115 au Illfsia'S ❑OW ; The pate had gout), arid dad left to true On that alga, pale turetead and ,auip' red face She bout low ou hie couch to catch his breath, lc had gout: ou the wlugs of the angel Death. His hands were clasped un a locket, tied By a guidon otiatia to 111 z vestaieut's side She opened cho clap—'[..ii,as a faro as fair As Liao out, cant o .and ou is wiimieriag there, Ana set around Lu the jewel's s;Jid Was a trans ILKe hers, iu a bilaeu laid AlttA! that Live, iu this world, should give But the deuisito heart tout disdatud to live Fur lhe inteiligezner PAT AND TILE YANKEE. Atter a riue ut eleven muss cu a small passage boat trout Northumberland to Dauviiie, on the north branch of the Susquehanna, where 1 went, up a few weeks ago to visit some ola friends in Montour county, I had just stepped on shore at the sigh of the bwatt Hotel, for merly kept by Mr. Joz,epti Durnelitsou, who %Nue tee tilet wale child tu Diu wile, the name given the place alter its founder, Dan Mokuitun, sit irt-latnan, who Settled there to Inc latter p'art, LA :he last century. The Swau Hotel bstog kepi by the (July sou of its former owner, a gentle man in every sense of the word, who re ceived me warmly by exclaiming, " IP the name of all that is wild and wonderful, what wind bits blown you to this quarter of the world ? ' when I was startled by :he nob Irish brogue, as General Scott would say, issuing trout the throat of a stow, rosy-checked son of Erin, whom I sup posed to be an ostier„as ho held up a bucket of water to a thirsty animal at the pump, exclaiming, "By yarrab, waother, it wasn't the wind that brought him here at all, at all, hut that long-legged, shape less piece of creation, wid its ears as long as its tail," pointing to the mule whit, was attached to the boat front which I had just debarked. There were a Lumber of gentlemen standing about, and, after the landlord and myself had exchanged courtesies, sup per was announced. The gentlemen re ferred to sat up to the table, whose stout oaken knees fairly trembled under its heavy load of sumptuous 000ltery. From the speedy disap rant: of the good things on hand, it was evident to au ob server that there were other craving ap petites besides that of your humble ser vant, which I must confess never was in better trim, and for fitieen minutes there was nothing observed but hauling forward and stowing away. Ours was not that kind of a company that Boats on grace saying, and diereforc we were soon en veloped in smoke, passing away the time in merry conversa,ion. Some were de scribing their different kinds of timber, others telling what prices they had re ceived, whilst others were comparing the present sales with those; of former years, and some more were w,ndering, if they . :Nvonld ever live to come on the same errand again. 1 satisfied myself of their being from Yankee town, or of that class of persons who come down the river every spring with rafts, and after disposing of their lumber at Havre •de Grace, Peach Bottcp,.Port Delposit or Columbia, they make their way home by the easiest_ beet means of conveyance within their reach, which °blip, many of them to oall at the tavern as they pass op and stay over night. Such were the persons to whose company I had just popped in, as Paul Pry would have it. I had just got my cigar in proper work ing trim, when I was addressed by a tall, good-looking fellow, who appeared to be far in advance of the rest in point of in formation, wishing to know whether I was from up or down the river. I told him my home was but a few miles down the stream, and knowing him to hail from further north, I began to enquire how matters were progressing about the head waters 2 There was a curl on his lip, he shrugged his shoulders, and taking his cigar be tween the fore and middle fingers of the right, hand, and wiping the ashes away with the•fore finger of the left, he looked me full in the face, and with a very dry kind of « Well, friend, I'll just tell you how it is amongst the hemlocks. Times are not so much to -be complained of as the actions of some folks that live in 'em. In plum words, my friend, our country has become several degrees worse than that of a crazy asylum, and us back-woods folks are beginning to see it pretty oleatly. A good many of our jackeens of torch-light notoriety up the valley have made a good thing of it, by being called on to fill offices during this campaign of negro-catching, for in propr terms it can be called noth ing else; these fellows we can always know by their down-cast look and lazy gate of going about and doing nothing but smok ing, drinking, telling lies and swearing. IT is all light and sunshine with them now, and the people's tool and negro-worship ping fool at Washington is again offering three hundred dollars to any and every man who will consent to go and serve three years in the national slaughter yard, and raps that in a short time he will be able to employ tour or five hundred thous and more. I guess he thinks that these three hundred dollars offered, and which are to be paid back by the laboring classes in the form of taxation, will cause the peo ple to forget that no less than a million of white men have already fallen on bath sides of Mason k, Dixon's line for his prat ification ; but it aint all of no use, for the people up in our wooden country are beginning to let him see that black wool don't smell quite so sweet to them as it does to him." I said where I lived every man was willing to be a soldier but the class of per sons to which he had alluded, of torch light memory, and that they were the only exception, but the cause of such a feeling was a thing of which 1 was per fectly ignorant. He then in his usual dry way, but giv ing it a little wore of the nose and with a half smile, halt frown, said, 4 , 1 don't know what. binders any one from being a soldier, but I believe this pine-knot knows what hinders himself from oeing one, and 1 can assure you, sir, it ain't fear, for that is one thing I have neveptknown, and I would rxither - buff r to be bit to death by rattle snakes than be called a coward, but it is bdcau,e I hate to hear lies and shudder at the name of a liar, for it was a lie being told to pt ,or Adam and Eve by the reptile, which caused them to eat the apple we read about. Now if one lie produced so much harm in Paradise as we are told it did, bat amount of evil may we expect to see visiting our unfortunate country from the effects of that filthy tide of lies and blasphemous perjury which is issuing daily from that overflowing cauldron of pollution, our Capital, prompted by the nocturnal father of lies. The ocean of abominable falsehood is hurled forth to a credulous and unsuspecting people by a monster in man's form, who entered Wash ington like a thief in the night, I am sorry to say it, but truth is powerful and will prevail ; he was the greatest enemy to American prosperity that ever set foot on her soil, and the day he was born will stand in the darkest corner of his eoun-. try's history ; if those who called him honest had put die before it he would have got his pro' er name. His perfidious con duct has made him the world's gazing stuck, and his blundering Proclamations have forever attached" to his name the would-be monarch at Washington. The first falsehood worthy of notice th it slipped through the teeth of the good-for nothing hypocrite was on the day of his inaugura tion, and in the presence of several thous tiei spectators, when tefore the high Court of Heaven, holding the. Bible in bis o3d, the contents of which 'he and his Union Leaguers resit, ot about as much as saint P,ul would respect Tom Paine's Age of Reason, standing in front of the Capitol with a taco bearing a most sancti monious aspect and his eyes turned toward Heaven, declared before his Creator, his Redeemer and his future Judge, that he would sustain and protect the Constitution of these United States, and as Chief Magis trate he would administer justice to the States, and that faithfully and truly he would guard against any infringement of the people's rights which that sacred code of patriotic wisdom secured to theta, call ing on God to witness his promises, and a tow days later telling us in public print that its oath was recorded in Heaven ; but that was about the last of it—he swallowed the whole thing, horns and tail, and then called for seventy-five thousand men to put down what be called a rebellion. A rebellion whit ti he and his party for over thirty years had been ardently propagating. In the proper sense of the word, there was no rebellion to be put dawn ; but having gut the long-wished for power he thought he would make his own use of it, and under the above pretext raise ,an army I matchless in the world's history in point of numbers and bravery, and after thus deceiving the people by means as fraudu lent as would be the cry of bad dog for that of mad dog, a mammoth army is set to work with prompt orders to put into full execution the many loud and alarming threats hurled forth by him and all other northern black wool lovers through their ambitious ravings for aggrandizement.— 'I hat is thearmy was ordered forth will full power to gave and protect the negro, to rob, plunder, butcher and exterminate the white people of the southern States, who by his own inflammatory and threatening speeches, his secret missionaries and a thorough sense of their own preservation, were forced to the unpleasant alternative of taking up arms in manly rosistanco to northern aggression, after all hopes of compromise had failed When every river in the land was red and smoking with the . heart's blood of America's hardiest acne, he had thestiarneless hardihood to laugh= the pe3plte to'tioOriri-'iind-tall -thaw -that- , there was no body hart,' and that tee at a "THAT COUNTRY 18 THM ROST YROBTIBOUB WHRRA LABOR CONIBIANDB THA OBJMTIBT RIWARD.'- BUCHANAN LANCASTER CITY, PA., TUESDAY MORNING, JUNE 21, 1864. time when the country resembled the Pascal-Night in Egypt, more than any thing elst, for there was scarcely a house wherein there was not one dead. He next sends fox a few _contrabands to visit him at the White House, and cajoles theid taro the belief that he had purchased 'a place far away, where I e would send item at his own expense and where they wetly be happy. Five hundr‘were thus se off at the expense of the white tax-payers of the North. Meanwhile the ebony Prince of Hayti came to his Majesty in Washington, remonstrating against any more being sent to that quarter, and it is only a few weeks since the only survivers of that party returned back and landed at Norfolk, to be fed and kept by the white tax-payers, thus making his stolen proper ty dead weight on the shoulders of the white man forever. At another time he swells himself up like the bull-frog in the fable, and sends forth something which he calls an Amnesty Pri olamation, the Most jejune and meaningless article ever offer ed to an intelligent people. It containted little else than sarcastic insult; it told the people that he would give them their rights with the exception of their proper ty. Every line, sir, of that so-called proclamation was the strongest encouragt ment to barbarity and the advocacy of robbery, plunder and devastation. Com ment is n tedless ; it chilled the blood in every honest bosom to read that the south ern man would be pardoned who had committed no crime, if he would only lay down his arms and tamely submit to being robbed of his property. Such sophistry was more becoming a man in a Lunatic Asylum than cowing from the pen of a Pre.+ ident of this great country. It caused every honest patriot in the north to shud der ; it steeled the heart and nerved the arm of every man, woman and chit I south of Mason and Dixon's lin and urged them to sally forth in all the dignity of men, proclaming to the world that it should only be over their dead bodies and through their hearts blood that they would relinquish those rights which the Constitu tion said should be theirs, and which the occupant of the White House had but a few days befcre sworn to . protect and sustain. That proclaimation only cooled the North and aroused the South to iesperation, and indeed if we are to judge from signs it turned the two edged sword of justice against us, and instead of bringing out from New England the thousands and tens of thousands, over which Greeley made so many wide mouths, it seems to have put the ['usual of destruction into the hand of the destroying Angel to sweep into oblivion the glorious name of once proud and hippy America ; for since we first started to run at. Bull's Run we have seldom turned our face to the enemy that disastir and retreat were not the result, the report of Loyal League Newspapers to the contrary not vithstanding, and in no case have our defeat been so disgraceful or so huruilia ting,as was that of Burnside of mud-stuck memory, and a few days ago in the dashing Butler of New Orleans' female notoriety, as well as the blundering Banks on Red River ; but, my friend, what were we to xpect from an army of generals whose politics are their qualifications Aud as for poor Banks, the only meritorious deed of his life was in taking the muskets from white men in his own city of Boston and putting them into the hands of Negroes and trying to make them believe that they were as good and even better than white men ; but all that kind of flummery, my friend, is of no use for it ,nighttjast as well be said that a keg of treacle and a treacle keg were equal, or a bottle of Yankee Rum and a Yankee rum bottle are the same thing." The speaker rose to his feet, saying, ,‘ look here friend, if the justice of God demanded that for a grievous offence com mitted against Divine goodness, the guilty person and his posterity should become black as a punishment for the crime, does it not follow that as soon as the same jus tice was satisfied the offender would be restored to his former complexion ; but so long as justice has not removed the fetters or color, it is proof conclusive that the criminal is the inferior of his race still, and never can be made white in a Union League Room. We must not let our selves be deceived when we hear these long, lantern-jawed, down looking negro butchers prating about Union, for they only use that word to make the world be lieve that they mean a reunion of the States when the real purport of their Word means a unanim ty of political action in their secret conclaves so that they may retain place and position as they have done,for some time under false pretences. And I swear by Bob Ridley's Wig (and it was a three-story one) if the people be green enough to allow a knave or a madman to fill the chair that was made for honest men longer than what they can easily get - rid of him, I do say they ought to wriV to Napoleon and he will send us a Prince at once." At this moment the ostler above referred to seized the hand of the speaker, swearing by the sandals of Solomon its yourself that can tell the truth, so it is, and oan tell all and all about the ugly mugged Cromwellian, the murthrin kid napper that be is, and by yarrah "its may be myself that don't forget everything either about' the Union rippers and the woolly trappers ; sure it is only about four years simile it was as commonly spoken by the dirty crew, as it was insulting to gen tlemen to hear it, that no foreigner be al lowed to vote sooner than twenty-one years. Bad Intik to them, sure they might as well have said till the age of XL:Abuse lah. And every scamp that could carry a lamp on his shoulder, or raise three hairs on his chin would tell you that they could at any time for three cents buy the votes of the likes of me and you," pointing to a Dutchman who had just came in ; " yes, sur, or for a glass of grog, but tli.t was all sour grapes said the fox when he couldn't get them, for they knew very well, and all the world knows, that the honest foreigners always loved the clean potato and voted for white men whom they knew would have some Bala respect for an oath when they would take it, and not like the-poor imbecile now at the White House, who has no mind of his own, bat is wound about by the whim and caprice of outside fanatics who have no desire but that of money to their purse and death to their bleeding country, and who after Galling on several committees to investi gAte,"the.,,Gonduet. of the wat which .he 13.11 . 4101t,..cFpst a d, 'after. three Pears of swindling, eontrailifig - itidtiticusistk gilt% over the graves of five hundred thousand patriotic, deluded and butchered ci•izens, over several thousand square miles of a desolated country, thr,ough the woes and wailings of two hundred thous and orphans-and one hundred thousand widowed coothers,.contrary to the will of the people, a large portion of whom are for peace, in the face of a crippled com merce and an almost bankrupt nation, and in the eyes of a world already sickened with sorrow at the madness of two bellig erent brothers plunging the dagger into each other's neck, and as it were cutting off their nose to save their face. "That same bugaboo who has so long dis graced the chair of honest men; gentle men, statesmen and heroes at Washington, has the shameless audacity to further, as far as in him lay the passage of a bill in Congress a few days ago for the eneourag ment of immigration,that so he might keep I up a regular supply in the field to enable him to carry out his unholy and murder ous designs, and instead of twenty-one, years he - offers to grant them citizenship one year after landing, and instead of get ting the likes of your vote and mine for three cents worth of grog, pointing to the Dutchman again, he is offering three hun dred dollars in the form of a bounty, that by commanding a large military vote in the fall he might be permitted to walk to the White House through blood for four years more under false pretences, so that his friends might revel in reckless prodi gality and fatten on the heart's blood of a prostrate nation. And it was for the ac complishing of that and that only that the name Union League was first adopted, and never for the union of the States as the sound is made to indicate. Yes sir, this is the man who aided the good-for-nothing, out-throat Banks, as you have just said, in taking the muskets from my countrymen and giving them to the Degrees in Boston; this is the man, sir, who called upon Little Mac to come to the nation's rescue ; and after he had responded and organized his army, marched on Yorktown, from thence to within four miles of Richmond, having asked for a reinforcement of some forty thousand men, and if th it was considered too much to try and let him have thirty thousand, and if that number co ild not be sent him out of seventy thousand then laying in and about Washington, he hoped they would send him twenty-five thousand, utterly refused to send him a single man, leaving 'him no alternative but that of re treat and fight his way as he did in the memorable seven days' fight through the swamps of Virginii, which was said by bolls English and French officers to be one of the ablest movements ever made since the days of Napoleon. And after the lit tle hero returned with his shattered army, I this is not only the man but the hypoori;i cal demagogue who ordered him to report himself at Trenton, New Jersey, and now, as tho,clection nears, this same scape-goat at Washington calls on alt his shoulder straped fluukys to go forth and scratch up nd bring out, whether by flattery, threats, conscription or otherwise, every , rag-tag and bob-tail, whether lie be while, black, feathered or woolly from the four winds of the nation, placing them under General Grant for the purpose of taking Richmond cost what it may , and let we tell you, by the sword of Samson, he is at this very moment calling on all the 'damned foreign Sans of b--s,' as Smflier was hollering the moment he was shoe, cn the 6th of May, 1844, to come up and help Grant, who has already lost wore men in front of Richmond then Little Mart had altogether. But it is all of no us- Rich mond is likely to he a maiden city when he will be no President. Yes sir, ne it at this moment calling on the lr , h and Dutch to come to his aid when his ISLICeS have begun to tremble, for he fears :he indignation of an outraged people. But as I said awhile ago, its all of no use and will end in a bottle of smoke, for his de feat is certain, no one need be alarmed to hear that confirmed ; and as his gong out of office cannot be expected to be a very clean thing more than was that of his going in, it's may be a little wholesome ad vice he would be the better of, and by the light of the day its myself that could give that same, and from good experience in the ould country where many a poor man's house and land was confiscated and given to some rich English or Scottish firmer to make a pasture field of. Now tell me where is the gentleman's wife in the City of London or Edinburgh that would like to see her rich husband coming home after a visit to his new Irish farm with the sad news that all his horses' ears were cropped, ; or the tails cut off his cows, or his sheep -; butchered in the field and some of them carried away, or may be himself shot dead by some person that he didn't know and never will know, and all because he bought the confiscated farm as cheat) as lie could. ‘‘ And now ni speak of myself and no one else living, because one don't know how soon it might come their own turn to be a president; and indeed if I had been made a president four years ago with an honest intention so far as the people were concerned, and had the rogue so deep in my own heart that I could think of noth ing but butchery and kidnapping, and was afraid to be seen walking the streets in open day, and fearing my intentions might be suspected and that I might get some thing that I didn't make bargain for, I would deem it p .udent to'go into my new situation like a thief in the dark, in clouds of the night wrapt up in an old scotch tar tan cloak, so that I might be taken for an oyster fisherman instead of a president elect, and so go safely into the chair of state with the exception of a bit of a false oath on my lips, (goodness save us !) and while I was there for four years had ;Wei like some clown on a stage or more like a fool than a wise president, and had com mitted and caused -others to commit all the horrible crimes of robbery, butchery, con fiscation and plunder, and was about to be drove out of office by the thunder-ery of an outraged people, I say if it was prudent in me to take care of my bones going into office I think it would require double prudence on ,t•y coming out of it, and by the sling of David it's a coat of mail I would have for myself, for I often heard it said that in Cromwell's war bits of lead were oonsidered a dangerous thing when there was powder behind them, and wid God's help, though I didn't deserve it, I would try to get home as safe as 1 could and may be a little sooner thin Dandy Dan the dancing master, who undertook to carry himself safe from Cork to Dublin wid his own two hands in a wash tub, and ye may beliove,me that this same chap didn't. long, in ;pie, world without laming to know as much as two fools and a madman." And so parte Pat, and the Yankee. For the benefit of your numerous read ers I ask as a favor the insertion of the;-, above conversation in your praiseworthy journal, which I am sorry to learn is to change hands on the first of July; .but seeing that the name of Sanderson is still to be attached to the paper, I have no doubr but it will be conducted in a man uer worthy the name, and give long and lasting satisfaction to the party it repre sents, and as much sound Democratic doctrine as it has done for many years under the senior Sanderson, who did credit to his profession as a journalist, who is an honor to his country, a friend to the needy and helpless, a true patriot and loyal citizen, and a firm and unflinching advocate of true Democracy, and who is about to withdraw for a season from the press, much to the regret of the reading community and to none more than my bumble self. May his years be many and their hours pleasant. THE BEGGAR BOY AND FLOWERS.—The following story,the origin of which we can not trace, beautifully illustrates the power of kindness : Go away from here, you old beggar boy ! You've no right to be looking at our flowers,' shouted a little fellow from the garden where he was standing. The poor boy, who was pale, dirty and ragged, was leaning against the fence, admiring the splendid show of roses and tulips within. His face reddened with anger at the rude language, and ho was about to answer defiantly, when a little girl sprang out from an arbor near, and looking at both, said •to her brother, How could` you speak so, Herbert! I'm sure his look ing at the flowers don't hurt us.' And then to smooth the wounded feelings of the stranger, she added : Little boy, I'll pick you some flowers if you will wait a moment,' and she immediately gathered a bequ,_t and Lauded it through the fence. His beighreued with surprise and e a d be clrnestly thanked her. Twelve years ~fie,r this occurrence the girl had grown to be a woman. One bright af ternoon she was walking with her husband in- the garden, when she observed a young man in workman's dress leaning over the fence, looking attentively at her and the flowers. Turning to her husband she said : It does me goc4l to see the people admir ing the garden, and approaching him she said, Are you fond of flowers, sir 7. it will give me great pleasure to gather you some.' The young workman looked a mo ment in her f 4ce, and then said in a voice tremulous with feeling : 4 Twelve years ago I stood here a ragged beggar boy, and you showed me the same kindness:: :he brigh, flowers and your pleasant words made a new boy of me, aye, and they made a min of me too. Your face, madam, has been a Light to me, in many dark hours of life, au" now, thank God, though that be v y is still an humble, hard-working man, he is an honest and a grateful one.' Tears stool in the eyes of the lady, as turning to her husband she said : God put it into my young heart to do that little act of kindness, and see what a great reward it has brought.' AN UNOALLED FOR AMEN.—A corres pondent of the Methodist Protestant relates the following story, which is too good to be lost : A very sensitive preacher in a certain village, not more than a hundred miles from Baltimore, was discoursing with great warmth on the uncertainty of human life, To give the greater effect to his remarks, after assuring his hearers that they might die before an hour elapsed, he said, 4 And 1, your speaker, may be dead before an other morning dawns.' Amen !' was the audible response of a pious and much beloved brother in the congregation. The preacher was evident ly disconcerted for a moment. He thought the brother misunderstood his meaning. Pausing awhile, he repeated the declara tion, before another hour your speaker may be in eternity !' Amen !' again shouted the brother before him. It was too much for the sensitive man; and stammering out a few additional re marks, he sat down before he had near fin ished his discourse. Brother— —,' said the preacher next day, to his kind hearted friend of the amen corner, what did you mean by saying ✓amen to my remarks last night. Do you wish I was dead ?' Not at all,' said the good brother, not at all. I thrAight that if you should die, you would go straight to glory, and I meant amen to that 1' THE FORCE OF HABIT.—In the Dublin University M,gazine we have a biographi cal sketch of Peter Burrows, the celebra ted barrister, and among the personal an ecdotes told of him is the following : A friend called upon him one morning in his dressing-room, and found him shav ing, with his face to the wall. He asked Why he chose so strange an attitude. 7he answer was, to look in the glass. Why,' said his friend, there is no glass there.' Bless my soul !' cried Burrows, I did not notice that before.' Ringing the bell, he called his servant, and questioned him respecting his looking glass. 4 Oh, sir,' said the servant, mistress had it removed siz weeks ago.' BREAKFAST AND DINNER.-A great fault in the dietetic system of this oour try consists in the fact that most people are supported mainly by dinner. Tbis meal is consequently too large, and from this un suspected cause muoh dyspeptic suffering results. Patients persist in saying, ' I cam never eat breakfast.' The fact is, the habit of eating largely at dinner has so grown upon them that they are virtually supported by that singly meal, and have no appetite for substantial food at any other time. Let the quantity a; dinner be resolutely diminished, and breakfast will soon be appreciated.—Dr. Lear. ^ POVERTY AND Rioass.—There is not such a mighty differenoe as some may im agine between the poor and the rich. In pomp, show and opinion, there is a great deal but little as to the pleasure and con veniences of life. They enjoy the same earth, and air, and heaven ; hunger and thirst make the poor man's meat and drink aspleas , tnt and relishing as all the varieties whioh cover a rich man's table ; and all the labor of a poor man is more healthful, and many times more pleisant, too, than the ease andlnittry of thi BE ON GOOD TERM WITH Yotrit PIL LOW.—The irtatant the head is laid on the pillow is that in which conscience delivers 'ts decrees. If it has conceived any evil design, it is surrounded by thorns. The softest down is hard under the restless head of the wicked. In order to be happy, one mast be on good terms with one's pil low, for the nightly reproaches it can make must be heard ; yet it is never so delicious, so tranquil, as after a day on which one has performed some good act, or when one is conscious of having spent it in some use ful or substantial employment. The celebrated portrait-painter Stuart, once met a lady in the sti eet in Boston, who saluted him with : 0 Mr. Stuart,[ have just seen your miniature, and I kissed it, beause it I. eked so muoh like you.' And did it kiss you in return 1' Why no.' Then said Stuart, citwas not like me.' 1)11.01`0GRAPII A.L1.31/11S. PaueouliAPll AL131.7 NI 8 Larg,3 --71,or:meut—Great 314rinty—Uneforpassnd to Bumaty. Sty!, -.ucl Finish. A F AR,IIER NEW PATTERNS, NEWEiI N . DINGS:NEW CE,A:APS PATENT HINGE BACK ALBUM. Hie larest and be kind, made only In Gentll_< ail others iu strength and durability. DASD PHOTCGRAPHS PLAIN, 10 and 12 cents—fl 00 and $1.20 per dozen COLORED, 45 rents—V.so per dozen T./AVE:AM AND 811iPPLEG SATOH/WS, WALLETS PURSES, POCKET BOOBS. ST ATIO VERY. WRITIMI PAPERS, ENVELOPES, PENS, &C STEYCILS. For marking names basntifully nud Indelibly on Clothing. HARBACIA 111.08.. Wholesale and Retail Dealers, 3a North Bth street. Phila delphia. tinny 1.1) ly 18 GREATEST VARIETY OF PHOTO GRAPH ALBUMS. We would call the attention of persona to ou Large stock of We have the largest awl 1)&4 stock ever brought to the city, OV NS 100 DIFFERNNT STYLIOS, VARYING IN PRICY NEOXI 75 CENTS To 20,00 DOLL &RE Call And F,l for yourself at 22 Korth Queen street, Lancaster. IA amoiner, Ueino and Inquirer copy. i tr 40 .ADZES' DRESS GOODS. HANDSOME SPRING DRESS GOOD O f Now Designs and Materials. dPRING STYLES GLOM MANTLES AND dIIAALK CLOTHS FOR MANTLES, Various Shades and Qualit ~..o. We ate receiving daily additions to our etiiel: of the atove t.iotl., and Invite the attention of purchavers. apr 12 a 14] HAGER ez BROTHERS. CLOTHS, CASSIMIERES VESWINGS HAGER BROTHERS Have now open and invito an examination of it lull and complete stock of Also, a Full Assortmeut of Extra Quality Frc,rich Cnutioga• Fancy Se,,trh Coating,. ;;Lic5.n1,1L;010,...1 Cloths, r.ltiry Islack F!..:2ch bc,41,1113. C.,othilm made to order in a auperior Clanger. apr 12 tf 14] HAGIIR a BROTH II ERS a lAH.P.ETS AND OIL CLOTHS %._,/ E.giinla Bruen,ls, Superfiun ;Ind Nlnuiluul Ingrain, Vout.tiant, Hemp and CARPETS. Ur ugets, Vnjnet Rugn end Cit,, , N Dour Matta OIL CLOTHS, rrom I to 4 yarde wide. A ,ompiste miortwent of HOUS.I3-I , LHINISHING G 001) apr 12 tf 14J COLL.M C. a COLEMAN. C OLEMAN & BILOTLIER, TAILOR 6 AND fi DOTHIERS, Have removed from No. 41 36, t • N 0.57 North queen street, Gil W. Shiudel's old stood.) next door to Bucliuniller'ii eutiery azure, sign of the Bid il au, where they have on hood we largest , and LK'S , assortment of Cs OTII d and READY—HA.Da CLoTIIING of any establishment in the rosy They respestfuily invite the Munition of their old frauds nod customers t 1 nu manedtien of the some, and request the patronage of all who wish the best of Cloth lug at the cheapest rates. The undersigned, having retired from business, rely. Ins sincere thanks to ills Mil friends and nu:duelers for their very 11 feral patronize and respectfully requests a tentinuance of the same to Messrs. Coleman , 5 iirothor. mar Iha ?.1 M. I DEL lILST Dii.SIGNAPED DEP 'MORI AND FINANCIAL At; EST By last...dem& fi our the iCelCretary Of the Treasury. dated March 26:.'h, lb A. rate Bank is authorized to receive tll.Criptlutis f.r the Nufloual TUTU Five per cent. Loan, iu ljoilpoll or ltegis•ared Bonds. This Loan, priaelpal and Interest, is payable In gold.— On Bonds of Saud and upwards, semt.aunually, (lot of March sad cep I ember,) and on those of less denom I lastious annually, (le of March.) ciobnLlbers can re twin Bonds with Coupons 1r ills March lec, by paying the iticrued interest in coin, or in levantl money by adding 51./ per cent- for pretul,..m or, if pro lerreS, May eeposit the priticipalibuly, and receive Bonds Ica CoupJus from onto of so oscriptmn. Registered [made will be issued of the denominations of $5O, $lOO, yaw, $l,OOO, ga,I.LL $1.0,000, and Coupon Bonds ut OIL $l.OO, $5,10 nod $1 00e. k or the greater f onveuiene.e of subscribers, the different Bunke also Books throughout the county are authorized to sot So sgeuts for ho Loan. As only $10.,000,.e0 of this Loan can be binned, we would urge upon per ous havlng - aurplun money, to mo st:rib° promptly nag ae•are the investment at par. The secretary, in presenting this new, to the pub lic through the National hanks, relies itOon the liberality and patriotism of our peop:e to use all honorable means and to make every exertion Kir its sale. It is hoped that Lancaster entity, having done so well In the past iu furnisning the Government means, will be equally prompt at Chic time. Luny 10 7t 18 . 1 A'dOS BOWMAN, Cashier. FIRST 6ATIOIIAL BA.lNift. OF COLUM— BIA. (Successor" to Detwiler ,k Br° ) CORNN.B. 6ECOND AND LOCCBT F'IREETS. COLUMBIA, LANCASTER COUNTY, PA. Capital $lOO.OOO, with privilege of inereseim; same to E. Lierehes P. Gensler, .1. G. Hens, A. Bruner, E. Hershey, President. A. Bruner, Vico President. S. S. Detwiler, Cashier. This Bank, having been anthoriskl to commence bust. nese under the National Currency Act, is now duly organ. isod and prepared to receive deposite.s, make collections on all accessible points on liberal terms. discount notes, drafts, dr., buy and sell gold, sacs"' and domestic exchange, and transact all business appertaining to a thoroughly organ ised Bank. OW-Interest paid on special deposits for 6 months o longer. 49T Ban Slag hours: from 9 a. m. to 3 p m. * Discount day : Monday, 10 a. m. of each week. owl.- Your patronage is respectfully solicited. may 24 2m 20] B. 8 DETWILER, Cashier. SPRINT. AND SIIMBILER CLOTHS, OASSI3ILRES AND READY—MADH b•- ) • • CLOTIIING. AT 8 S. RATEIVON'S ICSTABLISHMK.NT, Corner of North Qrrenii and Orange etreete, (Kramph's • ' " ' old staud,)inapadjaWy opposite 6bober's lANIOASTER, PA Relying with coolidence upon that patronage which his friends and the public have heretofore extended toward, him, the subscriber, even in these equivocal Limes, has provided himself with a large supply of seasonable BRADY-MADE OLOTEIING, Consisting of Seek, Frock, and Walking Coats; Pan Vests, Drawers, Under-Shirts, Woolen Over. Shirts, Collars, Neck-Ties, Scarfs, Stooks and Cravats; Suspenders, Hosiery; bilk, Linen and Cotton Handkerchiefs, Ae. • AND VESTINGS, which will be made promptly to order for civilians or military men; warranted to give aatisfaction, and ea low no they can be gotten elsewhere. As there is not, from present appearances, likely to be any dlminutloo in the price of material, but rather an advance, it la therefore the interest of all who want cheap clothing to bay thorn rime 9. 9. RATIIVON, Merchant Tailor and Clothier Corner Orange and North Queen street, Lancaster. apr 26 8m 19 CL AILECSON & 00., BANKERS GOVIOLNILFNT BNOUILITIBB OF . ALL ISSUES' INTEREST ALLOWED ON DEPOtiITS SORT. CLARKSON, B. 0. MoOLURE, Apr 12 PHOTOGRAPH ALBUMS JOUN SiIEAFFEWB Clheap Cash Book Sore, ItHADI MADE CLOTHING In Gr,,t, Variety ATION A 1.. C 3 A N -of- MARIETTA, PA. v.? TELE, UNITN,L) oT.S.TEth 10-40 LOAN. BOARD or DIRECTOES : Wm G Casa, C. S. Ksulfman, 1, Washington llighter J. B. Shuman, Justus Gray. Orrtcrus: Also, OLOTRS, OABO'IMER.EB,, N 0.121 8. THIRD BT., PHILADELPHIA POILONASED AND /OR BALI. STOOKS, BONDS AND GOLD BOUGHT AND BOLD ON 0035.3118810 N OOLLROTIONS PROMPTLY MADL CADPILTS, OIL CLOTEIN AND WIS. DOW otIaDES, AL the old established stand, northeast corner Of 2d and Brown streets, Philadelphia. • A hill assortment of styles are now uttering at low prices for cash only, consisting of ENGLISH AND AMERICAN TAPESTRIES. THREE PLY, INGRAIN, ENTRY AND STRAW CARPETS. Also, a splendid article of ki.,Ml and LIST OARPVTL OIL, CLOTHS in great variety. The assortment of WIN— DOW sIiADHS which I offw tor sale cannot be autism& imthie city, there being over two hundred' of the Wait and most approved designs and patterns, in all colony making an assortment very rarely found In any one estab listunent in this line of goods, all of which will be *old at the very lowest prices for cash only. Wholesale dealers supplied on liberal terms. CHARLES ORAGBELLB, Northeast corner 2d and Brown streets, E Philadelphia. may 10 Om 1S A LECTURE FOR YOUNG MEN.Just published, a new enition of Dr. CulverwelPs Celebrated Essay on the radical cure (without medicine) of Spermatorihas. Or Seminal erealineeta 'neeIMAM . , Seminal Lococo, Itnootenry, Mental and Physical Inca. parity, Impedimenie to Marriage, etc.; also, Consumption, Epilepsy end Fite, induced by self indulgence or sexual extravagance. rfS7r Price, in a sealed envelope, only 6 cents. The celebrated author to this admirable essay clearly demonstrates. from a thirty years successful practice, that the alerming consequences of self abuse may be radically cured without the dangerous nee of internal medicine or the applicativu of the iinife—pointing out a mode of cure, at once el tuple, certain and eitectual, by means of which every sulfur-r, no matter what his condition may be, may cure himself cheaply, privately and radically. e- ILis Irt,ture should be in the hands of every youth and every Man in the lend. under et's!, iu a plain envelope, to any address, post-paid, un ree.l, t 01 nit COOLS, or two post stamps. Address the publishers, CHAS. J. C. KLINE & CO., 127 Bowery, New York, Poet office box 4586. tf li L ADLES' DEESS GOODS. WENTZ BROTHERS Are now offering the largest selection of CHOICE DRESS GOODS they over had in store. The choice of the New York and Philadelphia Markets, at the lowest possible prices. Also, a traMacalOile stuck of SPRINU GOODS of every description, to which they invite a careful ex amination. A large varloty of LADLES' CLOTHS, AND SPRING CLOAKS AND apr .:11 if lof iIIPORT NT TO ID ARRIED LADIES I THULY A ELNoSlisai I I v, I Wend, free of charge, to any Lady who will send in her hates and address, directions how to prevent the extreme pain of Child Birth; also hone to have perfectly hcaPhy and hsautitill ; also one other new and Iniportsut :trrbt, the only sure and safe remedies ever discovered. My otdext in making the above offer is to induce every lady to tool my . . Address et 24 :Au H ISTO a I ON' THE PENNSYLVANIA ItEdEILYES. ELIASAAR 6, CO., respectfully announce that they have in preparation a history ut the Pennsylvania Re so, ye, from their organiz,tion to the expiration of their 'IL, History will contain the names of all the Officers and Pr, ate,. of the Coro—their promotions, casualitles Ault de.chargea—also, grant.: deacriptlons of their camp Jae and tater gallant acnievemente in the many battles m which they have taken part—all derived from official anti authentic sources. The Ilb,tory of the Pennsylvania Reserves will be 112 Une VuLU2lu of 600 pages, octavo elze, neatly printed on good paper, and subecaut.eilly bound in blaok cloth, COn testnhg a E oul ehgravtug 01 the lamented Reynolds, end one of lioveruor Llurtau, (who:first recummeculed the for mation ul the Puunsylvauht heeervo Llorps,) end will be bola only 0, buoscriptiou. it will be ready in August utzt. The Publishers Lel cordillera that the just prile which every Peuue,lvarann muss eusertain for the brave men whose gallant achievements and patriotic sell devotioa It records, wall secure sur •• The History" a generous and ap pr.Liaiivr reception. . . _ may lu a ISJ oAn fi n 11 W I TII ~'ATENT STAM.P-SEALING AND POET-MARL The preservation ou the totter iteeii of the POST—MARE and I'OL. , TAGE—STAMP, generally destroyed with the de [ached curer, O. long been doomed n mutter of the first imporbauce. Tins desideratum is now triumphantly secured by thie ingenious invention. Many obvious advantages 11111.1 St arise from the general 1.1. 01 this envelope. Pirst—luertusod Safely by additional sealing; the stamp coonectiog the erivelopo and letter securely together; and this is neter liable to be omitted, though the sticking of the dap is treenenely oegkeuded ur imperfectly done. Secerid—security agaiust impertaxent Intrusion; the leiter nun au vulupe being firmly attached by the stamps, and iuclueill, cannot bu mei/acted even it the flap be clan. Stoat nely opened. Third—oalety against Abstraction of Veinal/le .Inelet toren. it .ho Limp be left ousealed, or opened with feiehit oue Intent, It Witt be oupos.ibie to open the letter and take LI/OLICl: bank Doties and dru:ta without no mutilating the envelope so to nature detection. .bburtli—z,curlty ibr the tree payment of the Postage; as the stump, when on, properly placed in this window, cannot be removed .Itllol.ll. an anatrUctlOLL. • Fifth—Advantage therefore to the Govurnmont; by the unectual destruction of every stamp in its first use. Sixth—Facility to the Post °Mee Dporatiouti; by a mai. form location ul the stomp in the upper right hand corner, which to the erect convenient position for the Poet Offing Mari, .SeverithVeritication of the Mailing; by securing on the letter itself the beet evidence of the time and place of it btllng 1114liUlt. This hue long been esteemed so desirable, that many prudent pernunb are constrained to dispense with the cot, envetopes, that they ntay have the post mark en the letter; and ethers take the precaution to pin the envelope again on the letter for identification. Eiglah—L:truiluty of ebb Date unit Place un the Letter, which are Co frequently omitted by writers in carelessness or hurry. Ainra-IJrnanintation ; which, though some may think 01 email importance, certainly meets the approval of all pnrsuns ut Tenth—Cost. Notwithetanding the many and um - ivalled advittAnges of the •• Stamp .eallug Envelopes," they will ho turnished at a very small advance upon the prices of those, not having the benefit of tins patent. J. M. WESTHAEFEWB Cau Go heti at Cheap Book Btore, Corner North Quehn and Outage Sta. nov 4 tf 43 T 111.1.01trl.`AtkiT FA.B.2llEalill GEO. D SPEACHEICS AURICULTURAL 1511'LhALENT AND FINED WARS 1201 JOE, No. 28 EAST KING Gallia; LANCABILG, Two Doors West of the Uourt Hotukt. The underktigned having lately purchased from Wm. D. 6precher hie entire Mock and iate•nnt in the Agricultural implement and aced Ware Rouse, in Lancaster, Cake. this In timid ut inviting the attention of r armors and other' te nib large and we'd eelected clock, which comima input, of the tolluWlhy, arutlee r FOULED, I:UTTaltu—Palegraph Cutters for fodder, hay or straw, 4 sisal; Cummim' Lumens, 4 Bizes; .goxelta Critter, o Mr, llarrinborg car Co. Cutters, 4 slues. CORN ziLIALLEtte from $4 to $2O. Also the large Kln derhook LiaLil.ll4.l abetters. sausage Cutters and Pillars of all EMOCI, Lard Pres.'s, Farm Malin, Hay Presses, and theel mouul.board Plows. Also on hand the New Jersey belts Beeping and Mowing Machine. THE CELI.BItArKH UOCKLEY PLOUGH, of the genuine patterna and castings, manufactured and constantly kept on hand; and great variety of Ploughs and Castings, Sub-soil Piougtis, Machine Belting, Hag', s, Hopes, Tar and Oils of kinds for machinery. Also Harrows, Cultivators, Platform , hales, Farm Bel* Urindstones and fixtures, Shovels, orks, Purlieu Guano, BOOS L 41,4, Frei:. and Ornamental Trees, and Seeds OIL hallo of every description. 44 - The highest cash price paid for Seeds, at the Ware. house, d 8 mist 'Mug street, Lancaster, two doors west of the Court House—same aide. I3LeT.E.—A full supply of the beat and sec ond quality Lancaster and York Comity Roofing dlate on band, which will be put on by the square or cold by tha tun on reasonable terms. Please givo me a call. WM. D. SPILLOLIEft herewith returns hie thlUlkll to Farmers and others for past patronage, and hoped the Same may, be continued to his Brother, _ . apr 19 6m 16J EYRE. & LANDELL, NoUtaii AND ARCH BT.B.F.ETS,, PHILADELPHIA, Are Opening fur spriug,. 1864, 100 pcs. $1 Fancy 011.118. 00 pce. India 811ke, $l. 190 uood Bieck " 200 Ordered Plata &WKS. 4-4 LYONS Black Silk VELVET. Brown slidia, $6, 0,4, 3,2, 1, per yard . Black $6, 6,4, 0,2, 1, per yard. Moire Autlquea, eli cobra. ' • Slaguillcaid Grenadines, Slagutficaat Orgaucdes. Richest OhiutzeA and Percales. spring Shawls. • New Household Staple Goods. N. B. WINEHAL eaOa6T.II.IONT OP MEN'S WEAR.. mar 1 TERRIBLE DISCLOSURES-SECRETS FUR THE MILLION! A most valuable and wonderfal publication. A work of 400 pages, and 80 colored engravings. DR. BUNTBR'S VAUD MECUM, an and popular treatise on Mut , sod Woman, their Physiology, Functions; and 'Sem& disorders of every kind, with Never Falling Remedies for their speedy cure. Toe practice of DR. lIUNTRR bias long been, and still is, unbounded, but at the earnest . solicitation of numerous persona, he has been induced to. extend his medical usetulnese through the meditunat •• VADE It lea volume that should be m a ths• hands of every family In the laud, as a prevenllve 'of secret vices, or as a guide for thealleviation of one 40. . the most awful and destructive scourges ever visited mankind. One copy; securely enveloped, wil, be forwarded free 'of postage to any part of the United States for 60 cents In stamps. Address, poet paid, DR. HITINTBR, Division Street, Nevi York. may 24 AOTIVEI AND RELIABLE: ACCENTS are wanted in every district in Pennsyivania to .ovaiis for THE HISTORY OB TUB PENNEIZVAMA This work will consist of &brat . six httisdrad&s; octave, will be vary frill, perfectly and tui sold by subsariptknrexchatvety. Canvassers of the 111;41[414 ash*, hap 13sdr effortif fro this Work iisy - niiiriltiosittly... - Ay y itn te ly to ELIAS BABaka_ao may 3tf 1:41 • Lanssater, D. K. JACKMAN ti• 4 A C K ZY' am .14 NO. '24. EIDEEMO WENTZ MOTHERS, .No. .5 East Kiog street MADAME DULENT MIX, M. D., 767 Broadway, Now York Oity E LIAS BARE & CO., Publishers, No. ti Ewa King t3treet GEO. D. BPRF.OHEIB.