THB BOT MABIOI aI, J O* » He Secret* of the Seal CHAPTER I. ' the prisoner of mid-ocean. "Late one snmiDer afternoon, a dozen years ago.a solitary white man stood ldolatrous temple on an lsl aHeV^ofmidd“;tall,'thlnand ™t7nf with rugged features andsor gsSh lyes, and* with every sign of *ssa‘ wm I Sfss. affS|J'=-SEx5 just finished, as was Indicateu ny tu mallet and chisel in his nands. .1 It is done,’ 1 lie muttered. An these heathen little Buspect that I have cut mv name and story into the base oi th He ran’ his eye rapidly oveMhe in scription in question. It was as 101 l0 "The Bth thenrmofLMW;*from Charles glnla, nailed SL“ rsjj, (Jape Horn, In the Kh^dulatroaiinhabitants made me a Xho , Ihoir temole and for more than riur ywira I bavejieen doing menial offices !Xd carving images. I have been chained «?erv night, and watched continually by Sot i hnt Ease nevertheless made three at temuta shall soon make an- W last, as I am resolved death to a lon mr eSrnlrtty. I therefore write these words K,™ PhUlSol o raying any one who may Inscription this 7th day of ftdy., 18 ”- For several miDUtes the prisoner con tem plated these lines in silence, and then aroused himself, looking warily “Three times I have tried to escape in a canoe,” he muttered, “and every time I waa caught and visited with tor tureß. To be caught again in Buchan at tempt will be certain death. T.t 1 will rlßk at the first opportunity that oflers. Thiß longing for freedom and my fami ly is becoming a poaitive madness. Oh, my God! what la that?” He gazed in perfect stupefaction to the eastward, far out upon the ocean. There, mileß and leagues away was a ship, her white sails gleaming as she lay becalmed upon the waters! “A ship! a ship!” cried Lester, sob- bingly. “At last, oh Heaven ! At last my prayer is answered l” THE PRISONER’S HOME. On the east bank of the Elizabeth river, just out of Norfolk, and overlook ing Hampton Roads, stood a beautiful cottage, the home of the wife'and daughter of David Lester, the prisoner of the lone island in the far Pacific. Near the dose of a lovely afternoon in May, Mrs. Lester and her daughter sat together upon their front verandah. The mother was a lovely, sweet-faced, sad-eyed woman of two and thirty I years. i The daughter, Amy Lester, not yet Jifteen,.wasastrauge compound of child and woman. “You are tkiuging of father, dear mother?” murmured the maiden, as she marked the lady’s longing gaze. “Yes, child. Your father, my hus band; where is he? Somewhere un der the sea waves, wrecked on a desert island, or languishing on a hostile shore ? It is five years since he left us on that fatal voyage to China. My rea son assures me that he is dead; yet, Amy, I cau only think of him as liv ing.” “It is so with me,mother,” said Amy, with a tremulous quiver of her lips. “I dream often that he is living —that he is coming home?” “We need him in a hundred ways, said Mrs. Lester, sighing. “If anything were to happen to me, Amy, 1 shudder to thing wnat would become of you. You have been brought up in luxury, and would feel keenly auy change to poverty.” “Are we not rich, then, mother?” naked Amy, in surprise. “I supposed bo, dear, until threeyears ago.” replied the mother sadly. “Your father was a merchant and ship-owner, a partner of Coi. Nichols. Buttwo years ago Col, Nichols informed me that the outstanding debts of the firm more than balanced the assets; in short, Amy, that he was on the verge of bankruptcy, his fortune and ours alike wrecked!” “ I don’t like Colonel Nichols !” said Amy thoughtfully. “If he lost all his money with ours, how does he live in such grand style? To whom do liia ships and great house belong?” ■ “To bis nephew, Ally Bell. Colonel Nichols is Ally’s guardian. The Col onel has nothing of his own, excepting a farm or two up-country which were not risked in the business.” Amy contracted her little brows re flectively, aud wasabout to reply, when ’ the garden gate swung on its hinges, and a boyish figure came lightly up the walk. " It’s Ally, mother—it’s Ally Bell!’ ‘exclaimed Amy, all smiles and blushes. “ I’ll bring him to you.” The young girl ran lightly down the verandah steps and met the new-comer, linking her arm in his, aud drawing him geutly towards the house. He was a lad of seventeen, an orphan, the nephew and ward of Colonel Nichols. Brightandgayandhaudsome, Allen Bell was also impetuous, ardent, ' and Intelligent —one of those noble, manly boys who mature early into grand and noble men. Boy as he was, he loved Amy Lester with a pure and chiv alrous love, which bade fair to deepen iu time into the great love of his life. He was the bearer of a letter from his uncle to Mrs. Lester, aud having deliv ered it, he strolled with Amy down the wide garden walks into the cool shadows of a grove at the bottom of the garden. “Dve been expecting you this good while, Ally,” said Amy, with charmiug frankness. “I thought you would be down here to try those scientific exper iments to-day!” “We’ll try them 10-night, Amy,” re plied Ally. “The blue lights show bet ter at uight. I’m getting along finely in my chemistry, Amy. I like it best of all my studies.” “I ain sure you do,” said Amy, earn - estly. “You are the nicest boy I ever saw!” Ally Bell laughed aloud. Amy’s childlike simplicity and outspoken truthfulness were her greatest charm in his eyes. “The sight of that brig yonder,” said Ally, “reminds me that I promised to meet Col. Nicholson board of it directly after I delivered that letter to your mother. I must go uow, but you may expect me as soon as it’s dark.” He clasped her in hia arms and kissed her. For a minute the youthful lovers stood at the garden gate, towards which they had slowly walked, andhere they parted soberly—Aliy to go down to the brig where he had engaged to meet his uncle, and Amy to return to her mother. She found Mrs. Lester, the open letter in her lap, silent and motionless as a statue, her attitude that of profound de spair. “What is it, mother?” cried Amy, in wild alarm, springing to her side. Mrs. Lester looked at her daughter with a woe-stricken face. “ O, Amy ! ” she cried, turning to that brave, childish heart for strength and comfort. “ Colonel Nichols writes me that we are beggars! He reminds me that ho has asked me three several times to marry him. Aud, Amy, he says he knows your father to be dead, and he oilers himself to me for the last time. He reminds me ofmy ill health, of your youth aud helplessness. And he says,” and Mrs. Lester’s voice broke down in a tempest of sobs, “ thaton the one band he oilers me wealth, comfort, and happiness, on the ( other poverty and sorrow. It I refuBo,him, he swears to turn us out of our home to-morrow !” “Oh, mother!” exclaimed Amy, with a sharp cry, as she hid her face in her bosom. CHAPTER 11. DESPERATE STRUGGLE FOR LlllF.R'l Y, Before Ally Bell reached tho brig lying at the wharf, his uncle, Colonel Nichole, had been there aqd arranged with the Captain, who went by the name of Hiley, to carry Ally off to China, for which service the Colonel promised to give the Captain the brig and ten thousand dollars, in case the boy never came back, Hiley was a murderer, whose real name was Sprouls, and Colonel’Nichols had robbed Mrs. Lester, aDd now wanted to rob his nephew and have him murdered, and Hiley knew, that, and resolved that Ally Bell should never see Norfolk again “ Where >b the lad ?” he asked as he and Colonel Nichols finished drinking success to their nefarious schemes, to which the Colonel replied: “ He should be here at this very mo ment. Ah, I hear his step on deck now! Here he comes!” Even as he spoke Ally Bell came hurryinglnto the cabin, his face flashed \ with pleasurable excitement, •' •* I’m just in time to see you off, Cap \ tain Hiley,” he said, not noticing the 1 guilty Tooks of the conspirators. “ The wind is fair, and the crew anxious. A good voyage to you Captain. Bring me - rarest* when you return. They are for a little girl’s cabinet, and most 7 aye, Mr. Allen,” responded the heartily. “ Adn’ty on see my coUeotion of shells In yonder state room? No? Ton are weloome to yonr choice of them all, sir-”. He advanced, ••and flnng open the state-room door. . Ailv bent forward and looked In. With a quick thrust, Hiley pushed him into the little room, and hurriedly *°With an exultant smile Colonel Nich olas said adieu, and went ashore. The next minute the hurried tramp ling of feet was blended with the songs of the stout seamen, as the brig moved slowly from the wharf towards the sea. Ally’s first thought, on finding him self locked up in Captain Hiley’s state room, was that the two men were jok ing—merely intending to scare him a little, and then let him out; but he Boon discovered that the Quickstep— the brig was so named—had left her wharf, and was standing down the Elizabeth river towards the ocean. The truth flashed upon him 1 “I see it all!” he cried, leaping to his feet. “Hiley is taking me to sea with him! Captain Hiley!” he shouted, pounding on the wall, “open the door, this minute! Let me out, or it will be bad for you!” No reply was made to him —no at tention paid to his cries. He saw that he was fast. For a moment he was stunned by the knowledge of his situation. Then he drew up his slight, boyish figure proudly, his eyes flashing defi- ance. , “The thing for me to do,” he mused, is to help pnyself. A boy who can t fight his own way will never be a man I drawing from his pocket a match, of which he usually carried a supply, he lighted the candle in Its box at one end of the Btate room. “I see," he mentally commented, looking around, in the light thus fur nished. “Here’s a whole dray load of boxeß and bundles. And here a a can non too,” added Ally—" a small one, which is expected, no doubt, to bring a big price from those simple natives in the South Bea. “ I can use this thing,” thought the boy, with kindling eyes. "A have plenty of powder in my pocket'.’ He had boeght this powder just be fore he came aboard of the brig, for the experiments he had promised to show Amy that very evening. j Without more ado, Ally set at worK t loading and firing the little cannon as rapidly as possible, smashing the door, and calling out for everybody to keep out of the way. The captain and crew were frantic with fear, as there was a large qnantity of powder In the state room, and the prospect warthattheship would be blown to atoms. Having filled the state room and cabin with smoke, Ally seized one of the Captain s revol vers, burst open the shattered door, rushed upon deck, and leaped into the “Thunder and lightning!” cried Hiley, startled beyond expression. “After that boy, all of you! Satan himself is in him! A hundred dollars to the man who first puts a hand upon him 1” ... With a yell, as of blood-hounds, halt a dozen of Hiley’s men splashed into the river,- incited by the promise of money, and sprang to the pursuit, while Hiley, hastily lowering a boat, rowed after his men, whom he soon overtook, one after another, and ordered into the boat. They then pulled on after Ally, who had distanced the men while they were in the water, but who could not compete with the boat. Arriving at an old sunken schooner, a long way from the shore, the boy climbed upon the topmast, and looked back at Hiley, who waß rabidly approaching. The captain felt sure of his prey, and was telling his men how to seize the boy, when Ally suddenly fell from the topmast, as if jShot, and immediately sunk from sight. ? “Thunder and lightning!” Hiley, “he’s gone! ” “Gone?” echoed all the men in chorus. “Yes, gone!” aud Hiley sprang to his feet, bending forward. “ I saw him go ! He fell back into the water, and went down like a bullet, without the least cry! Pull for your lives! ” The men obeyed. The boat was quickly beside ihe topmast. But no trace of the boy could be found l I’ll take my Bible oath,” said Hiley, “that the young salamander has not gone towards the nearest shore—or any other. A cramp or a shark has took him!” , , ~. The eyes of the scheming villain lit up strangely, almost savagely. “And such beiDg the fact, men,” add ed he, “we may as well give up the search.” . lt The men resumed theiroars, the Cap tain the tiller, and the boat returned in silence to the brig, with Ally clinging quietly to the stern—his head just far enough out of the water to enable him j to breathe—and there he continued to i stay until the boat returned to the brig. , And then, the boat being left in the I water, at the stern of the brig, it occur- , red to Ally to unfasten the boat from its painter, let it drift down stream some distance, then climb into it, and row away for Norfolk, which he at ouce did. For a miuute or two the boat contin ued to speed away in the darkness. And then Ally climbed out of the water into it, with a long sigh of relief, and seized a pairof oars resolutely. Crouching out of sight in the bottom of the boat, he began rowing shorewards —but softly, for he was still near the brig,aud the night was so calm he feared his enemies would hear him. There was only too much occasion, as it proved, for this caution. The boat had not been gone two min utes from the brig, when Captain Hiley, wishing to go ashore to see Colonel Nichols, made his way aft, and discov ering its disappearance at ouce sent a couple of men after it in another boat. | Ally seeing that he must again take to the water, took the oars along with him, aud went drifting seaward, with nothing but a pair of oars to support him. t , , The night had now fully set in and the tide ran fast. Cramped and chilled by his long continuance in the water, the boy was whirled along, growing weaker every moment; but just as hope was at its ebb, he suddenly beheld asaiL behind him, rapidly approaching under the force of a freshening breeze. “A brig, certain l he groaned, after a long look at the nearing cloud of can vas. “It must be old Hiley’s! The wind having come again, he is off for the Pacific ocean!” He regarded the brig, as it came near er, asking himself if he should hail her. “Let her be what she may,” he mut tered, “friend or foe, I must hall her! My strength is used up! I shall soon slip ofT from these oars aud drown!— Fortunately the brig is coming straight towards me. I will hail her!" He waited till the brig was near him, and then carried hie resolve into exe cution. His feeble call was heard and answered, the brig nove to, a boat was lowered, and he was taken aboard the stranger. The boy had only strength enough to learu that the brig was not Hiley’s, aud then he fainted. CHAPTER 111, MORE VILLAINY Captain Hiley, verily believing that Ally was drowned, went ashore to in form Col. Nichols of the fact. He found the Colonel just coming from Mrs. Lester’s cottage, where he had gone an hour before, aud stunned Amy by in forming her that Alley Bell, her lover and hero, was being carried off to Bea in the Quickstep , and that she would never see him again. The Colonel heard Hlley’s story about Ally’s disappearance with breath less interest, as they walked along the beach; after which the two villains congratulated themselves upon the boy’s being thus completely taken out of their patn. „ While discussing the matter, they heard the sound of oars, and soon saw a boat approaching the shore opposite a cottage belonging to an old retired sailor named Nicholas Collins, which was sit uated at the foot of Mrs. Lester’s garden. In the boat was a man, and aloDg with him was a female, sobbing convulsive ly. Col. Nichols, with surprise and alarm, recognized the yoice of the weeper as that of Amy Lester. She and her companion left the boat and eutored the cottage, from the windows-of which a light soon shone. Col. Nichols and Capt. Hiley crept beneath a window to spy and listen.. They soon learned that Collins had rowed Amy off to the brig in search of Ally, and that she had there heard of his attempt to escape and his consequent death by drowning. Amy was vehement in her denuncia* tions of Col. Nichols, and declared that if Ally was really dead, she would raise the whole country against his uncle who had compassed his death. On attempting to rise to go home, Amy found she was too weak to walk, and sent CoUins for her mother to come to her. As Boon as the old sailor left the cottage, Colonel Nichols proposed to Hiley that he should carry Amy off instead of Ally, and leave her on a plantation of his on the coast, down by Cape Henry, so as to silence her danger ous tongue, and also to give him a hold on her mother. The Captain agreed to this, and they entered the cottage, com ing upon Amy so suddenly that, in her weak state, she was bo completely over come that she fainted away. "So much the better!" said Nichols, stooping and gathering her in his arms. “ Now lead the way to yonr boat HU®?; On our way, you must overset ColUns boat, to make think she did it ber self in a wild mood.” . He hurried out of the cottage bearing his frail burden. Hiiey followed hasti ly, and the two made their' way to the spot where Collins* boat lay. It was but the work of a moment fbr Hiiey to push off the little craft and overset it. "There, they’ll think the girl got wild with grief, and was .drowned in an at tempt to search for Ally again 1” said the Colonel exultantly, tossing Amy’s white apron upon the beach. “ That apron will fix the matter beyond a doubt! The wind is rising, Hiiey. You had better take advantage of it 1 The two hurried to the waiting boat. Hiiey laid the unconscious Amy in the bottom, and then Beized the oars and rowed rapidly towards the brig. Nichols, full of exaltation, looked af ter the boat until it was lost to view. “My first plan was successful!’’ he muttered. “Ally is dead! lam a rich man! And my second plan promises a like success! When Margaret Lester’s heart is nearly broken at Amy’s loss, I will offer to restore her child on condi tion that she will marry me! The day of my full triumph is near!” He looked with gloating eyes sea ward, exulting in his evil success, until at last, nearly an hour later, the sails of the Quickstep filled, and the brig moved swiftly toward the sea, taking with her Margaret Lester’s only comfort—the distant father’s star of hope ! CHAPTER IV. LESTER ESCAPES AND HEARS FROM HOME. We left David Lester on his lonely island, planning his escape, with a ship in sight from the elevated point where he was at Work. He waited till night and until a priest of the idolatrous tem ple came to chain him in his dungeon, where they nightly confined him ; and then suddenly leaping upon the priest, he bore him to the floor, chained aud gagged him, disguised himself in his priestly robes, stained his face brown with dirt, went to the shore where the canoes where lying,entered one of them, and paddled out to sea in the direction in which he had seen the ship. He paddled for hours with all his strength, and had gone so far that the lights of the island could not be seen, and yet no ship had been found ; and now the wind was rising aud a storm was threatening. “Oh, God! Am I forsaken ?” he cried, in an awful anguish, seized with a fear that the wind would take the ship from him. “ Must I perish here ? ” At that moment when hope was dy ing, he beheld a sight that turned all his wild woe into yet wilder ecstasy. There, to the northward, was the ship, standing directly towards him, with all sails set to catch the rising breeze, and not half a mile away. “Yes, there she is,” heshouted. “she is coming this way. I am saved— -1 saved!” He raised his arms to heaven in a mute thanksgiving and sobbed aloud, N the glad tears streaming down his worn aud haggard cheeks. The ship came nearer and nearer. He redoubled bis wild shouts, his heart and soul in his voice. An answering cry came suddenly from the ship’s deck, and she drew steadily nearer—swerved from her course slightly, aud a rope was thrown from her deck, falling into his canoe. He seized the rope in desperate eager ness, and a group ofsailors leaning over the ship’s side drew him aboard. In an instant more the ship resumed her course, and was moving in stately fashion before the breeze. “Safe at lastly murmured Lester, leaningagainstthebulwarks, weak and nerveless as an infant. “Oh, the glad ness of this hour!” j Poor man! He did not dream at that moment that his adverse fate was even then relentlessly dosing around him; that he was on one of his own ships — the Cyclone ; that that ship was com manded by a bitter foe iu league with Colonel Nichols, who, on recognizing him would without remorse eousigu him again to the mercies of the Pacific iu his ludian canoe. Ou inquiry, Lester'learned that the vessel was the Cyclone, and in the light of the cabin lamp recognized her Cap tain. Tearing oil* his priestly robe, and wiping the stain from his face with its coarse folds, he exclaimed : “Captain Sales, don’tyouknowme?” “David Lester!” cried the Captain, turning ashy pale, and grasping hie stationary seat as though he had receiv ed a shock. Lester wiped his brow and sat down, he Captain taking a seat opposite him. He had so much to ask, that his emo tions choked his utterance, and pre vented him from observing the look oi deadly hatred with which tho Captaiu regarded him. But he finally plied his questions fast, and learned that his wife yet lived, that his daughter Amy had grown into a lovely girl, and that both wife and daughter had long mourn ed him as dead. He also learned of his wife's poverty. “Colonel Nichols settled up the firm affairs,” said the Captain, reservedly, “aud there was nothing left for Mrs. Lester. She has been living on his bounty these two or three years! When your interest in this ship was sold, I bought it. The Colonel owns the other half!” “But this is a base fraud !” exclaimed Lester. “The Colonel has been untrue to the trust I reposed to him ! I have had suspicions of his integrity during my long exile, but I, have never dared to entertain them. I’ll make matters straight on my return. I can prove my claims and bring him to justice—the dastardly villain ! My poor Margaret!” and he groaned. Lester’s threats concerning Nichols seemed to stir up all the malice of the Captain’s nature. He beheld his inter est in the ship, fraudulently acquired, threatened, and he hated still more the lawful owner whose right in the Cyclone he had usurped. “If report speaks truly,” he said, “Mrs. Lester need not be called ‘poor !’ Col. Nicholsjhas long been paying her attentions, and when I left port, five months ago, the story was that they were engaged. The Colonel told me himself that he loved her, and meant to marry her. No doubt by this time they are married!” This cruel thrust struck home to the poor husband’a heart, and uttering a great cry, he fell forward with his face upon tbo table, while the Captain re garded him with a look hatred and exultation. The New York Ledger containing the continuation of this story is for saieat all the bookstores and news depots. Ask for the number dated Sept. 18, and in it you will get the next installment. The Ledger has the best stories of any paper in the world. Pennsylvania State Debt. The Keystone State cannot boast much of her linances under Radical management. During tho last eight years twenty eight millions of dollars have llowed into ihe State Treasury, which under the sinking fund act ought to have been applied to tbo payment of tho State debt, and seventeen millions of tnxes have been gathered, mak ing the revenue of the Slate forty-live mil lions of dollars. With all this treasure only four ami a half millions of State debt has been paid. Tbo Democratic plan for paying oil tho State debt contained in tho sinking fund act or 1858 would have rodueed tho present debt to over ten millions, instead of thirty-three millions.— N. Y. Sxprc&s. IPIWfUSWntf. Jot to the Invalid.— Persons aillioted with any of the dieoanos arising from a disordered liver, stomach, notvous debility, dyspopsta or liver complaint, should try PERRY DAVIS’ “PAIN KILLER.” It seldom falls to effect a cure in a short time. No medicine has been more successful In curing Fever and Agne, and other diseases In cident to our Western and Southern climate For a cold It Is almost a specific Rheumatic and Neuralgic Affections give way to it when all other remedies have failed. It is eminent ly a family medicine, and by being kept ready for immediate resort In case of accldenhor sud den attack of disease, has saved many boursof suffering, and many a dollar in time aud doc tor’s bills. Sold by all Druggists. s7-4w mn/lA READERS AND SPEAKERS UUI/ WANTED, to buy the first edition of “11)0 CHOICE SELECTIONS, No. 2,” contain ing one hundred of the latest good things for recitation, declamation, school reading. Ac., lu po'-try aud orose. Send 30 cents for a sample to P. GARRET A CO., Philadelphia, Pa. s7-4w WANTED— ALL OUT OF EMPLOYMENT TO Canvass for anew Religious Work, of rare merit, peculiarly adapted to the young, but equally entertaining and instructive W all, and invaluable to every Christian Tamil); unequalled in elegance and cheapness; being being embellished with nearly 50 engravings. Ex perienced Agents and others wanting a work that will sell at sight, should seoure choice of territoiy at once. For particulars, terms, Ac., address P. GARRETT A CO., Philadelphia, Pa. s7-lw PniLOSOFirr or mahkiagk.—a New Course of Lectures, as delivered at tfce New York Museum of Anatomy* embrac ing the subjects: How to live aud what to live for* Youth. Maturity and Old Age; Manhood generally revived; The cause of Indigestion flatulence and nervous Diseases accounted for, Marriage philosophically ooualdered, Ac. Pocket volumes containing these lectures will be forwarded to parties unable to attend on receipt of four stamps by addressing, SEC RETARY, New York Museum of Anatomy and Bolence, 618 Broadway, New York. nublFd EBELY ESTT: ftflal Strtiflf. Estate of Joseph Kiu.un.n: Drumore township, deceased- Mtto*■tes tamentary on said estate having been Ktuud to the nnderalgned, all said decedent are requested to make immedi ate settlement, and those having claims orde ran-TiHa oiro<-nnt (tXB Bald estate Will pKUSt them without delay tor settlement to the nn dexslgned ALEX. SCOTT CLARK, Executors; or to their Attorney, UEORGE NAUMAN, sepl-61w35 Lancaster. Notice.- —is the court or com mon Pleas of Lancaster County. John D. Sensenlg ") Vend. Expe. to August JO vs. V Term 1869 No. 89. Hiram L. Thompson. J Execution Docket. Tbe undersigned Auditor appointed to dis tribute the money paid Into Court on the above execution, will attend for that purpose ON THURSDAY, OCTOBER 141h,1569,at 10o’clock A.M.,ln the Library Room of the Court House, In the City of Lancaster, Pa., where all per sons interested in said distribution may at tend. N. E. SLAYMAKER, JR., B*P 8 4tw 30 Auditor. ADBIHIMBATOVSSSTICR-ISTm of Jared K. Hiester, late of Lancaster city, deceased Letters of administration ou said estate having been granted to the under signed, all persons indebted thereto, are re quested to make Immediate settlement, aud those having claims or demands against the same, will preseiithem without delay for set tlement to the undersigned, residing In said city. KMILIE HlfciSTaK, Admm'lrlx, Or to FRED. 8. FYFER, Atl’y at Law. No. 4 S. Duke street, Lancaster. Pa. ug 23 6tw*2wd-Btaw ESTATE or JWBPH ITSCH, IATE of Fulton townthlp, deceased.—Letter* Testamentary . on said estate having been granted to the undersigned, all persons in debted thereto, are requested to make lmme- 4 dlate settlement, and those having claims or demands against the same, will present them without delay for settlement to the under signed, residing in said L?NCH ajunie e. morris, executors. au 18 BLw* 31 Estate of tbbmobb o. ebtdeb, late of Lancaster city, deceasedsLetters of Administration cum tatamento annexe on said estate having been granted to the under signed, all persona Indebted to said decedent are requested to moke Immediate settlement, and those having claims or demaeds against the estate of said decedent, to make known the same to either of ihe undersigned without delay. CHAKLES R. KBYDER, Adm’r. 121 North Third street. Philadelphia. WM. A. WILSON, Attorney, 53 East King street, Lancaster. fltw 33 Estate of geosmse ffBO, )LATE of the township of Ea* t Cocalico. In the Coun ty of Lancaster, dec’d.—Notice 1b hereby given that Letters Testamentary have been granted to the undersigned of the township of EaatCo callco upon the estate aforesaid, all persons knowing themselves to lie Indebted to said es tate are requested to make Immediate pay ment, and persona having claims against said estate will present them for payment. GEORUE B. HEIL, Earl Twp. ( URTI3 HEIL, CYRUS HART 2, East Oooallco twp. Executors of the last Will and Testament of George Heil, dec’d. 815-6tw 37 gailroart jontU PACIFIC BAILWAY GOLD L 0 A JS $6,500,000. Wo beg leave to aunounc* that we.Uave ao cepted the agency of the Kansas Pacific Railway Company For the sale of its NEW SEVEN PER CSNT. Thirty Tear eolcl loan, Free from Tai. This Loan amounts to 88,^.0,000 First Vortgage Ijtnd-Omnt and Sinking Fnsd Honda, secured upon the extension of the Railway from near Bhoridan, In Kansas, to Denver, Colorado, a distance of 287 miles, of which 13 miles are completed,and the rest lsander con struction. It Is also a Mortgage npon the Road, the Rolling Stock and Franchise of this first-class Railway, besl les now running through the State of Kansas. And in ftaccewifnl oparallan for -137 mies westofthe Missoni 1 River. «nd earning al ready enough to meet all ui its expenses and existing obligations, beUAee more Than; the .Intorcst upon this’new Loan. In addition to this the Bonds are also secured by a first mortgage ot the GOVEft EH ENT LAN* BBAHT OF three Huukioa aib», xtouillnglu alternate sections on either side of the track, from the 3SHLb mile poet In Kan sas to Denver. The proceed* of the sale oi these lands are to bo invested by the Trustees in the? p*r cent. Honda themselves up to lit) or in U. B. Bonds, as A SI King Fund for Ihc Kedcmptlon of the lionds Tho lauds embrace some of the rtuest por tions of the maguLficent Territory oi Colorado, Including a coal field aud pinery. The Com pany also holds as an asset another tract of Three Million* of Acres in Hie State of and although uol pledged uaa security for this Loan, thuir possession adds largely to the Company’s wealth ami credit, we estimate Value of the Company’s Property, cov ered by this Hort{t*tf«» at 833,000,000 net, while the Loan Is merely 80,500,000. The Bonds have THIRTY YEARS TO RUN, from May 1, IW9, a»d will pay SEVEN PER CENT. INTEREST IN GOLD semi-annually, on May 1 and Nov. 1, and are FREE FROM GOVERNMENT TAXATION the Company paying the lax. The prlnctpal of lb* Loan la made payable In Gold, in the City of Now York, but each coupon will b* payablo fn Prauhlort, Londos or New Torh, at option of the nolder, without notice, at the following rales: On 31,010 BoDd la New York, $35 (gold) each half year. , . ~ On sl,uoO Bond In London. £7 os. 10. each half y *onsl,ooo Bond in Fraukfort, OT fir. 30 krtza., each half year. The Agontsof the Loan, before accepting the trust had the condition of the Itoad, and the couutry through which it ruus, carefully ex aminou. they are happy to give the Loan an emphatic endorsement as u FIRST-CLASS INVESTMENT, in every respect sare, and lu some essential even Bettor man Gevoremeit Securities. The Bonds will behold for the present at 90, and nccrited Interest, both In Currency, the Agents reserving tn© right to edvaoce the rate. The attention of investors la Invited to these well-secured bonds, which wo recommend as one of the most profitable investments In the market. Gold aud Government Hecurties taken payment at their niarAot value, without eo missions. Pamphlets, with maps giving fall lnrori tlon, sent ou application^ DABSEI, MOEBAS Jk CO., Ho. Rxckangt Place, M.Y. a. k. TBsur as co., Ho. »3 PlnoStroet, H. Y aug 3 3mdAW iiaroi-su, Tib a w terra rbLAR xsbaits head has become very popular among tho peo ple. It is prououncwu genuine, .ana can svlll no seen in M. HABERBUSH’S WINDOW, SOUTHWEST ANGLJS CENTRE t-t±UARE LANCASTER. PA. Thoro 1h also ou hand to be seen, aud wil be made up to order, single aud Double; SILVER AND GOLD MOUNTED IIARKBSS FINE RUBBER MOUNTED HARNESS, PLAIN AND COMMON HARN Of Every Description. TK A M II Ait y ESS, LADIES’ AND GENT’S RIDING SADDLES ARMY SADDLES PLAIN AND FANCY, SUMMER HORSE SHEETS AHPREADS. LADIES’ & GF.NT’S.TWAVELING TRUNKS in Every Style. SARATOGA A SOLE LEATHER TRUNKS, FINE TURKEY MOROCCO SATOHELS. FINE RUSSIA MOROCCO SATCHELS, FINK VIENNA MOROCCO SATCHELS, FrNE ENGLISH A FRENCH MOROCCOGILT A fin* lot or AMERICAN HATCH BLH, In nil the Different Odors and Varieties AlAl, HORSE AND MULE COLLARS, WHIPS, *C. xar The undersign© 1 has the Sole Agency to hc!l the RUBBER LINED HORSE COLLAR. Warranted not to gall shoulders 1 f properly fit ted ; and In many cases will heal up sore shoulders wblio In une. m22-tfd«kw M. HABRRBUSH. JTVV4.S * ’£ JANUARY Ist. IK*. CAPITAL AND AblilTl 3, »W,IUI 15. This Company continue* to Lnsur% gelid iug-i, Merchandise, and other property, amlnst loss and damage by flro, on the mntnaTpltD, either for a cash premium or premium note. NINTH ANNUAL R2FOfi T , l CAPITAL AND INCOME. Am’; of premium notea. $954,58L 10 Lew* amount, expired - 307,7158 19 . •M 8.791 91 Cush receipts, has commissions in 'CB tf7Jj9l 01 Loadh 13,300 00 Due from agents auil others 3,592 03 Assessment N0. 9, 15t Feb. estimated 21,000 00 1 $752,077 64 .-*J CONTRA. Looses ami os por.rca paid In IStS Losses adj u.stcd, n ot one BAlaritT oi ■ * pitrlJand-Afißeta, Feb. $702,077 W A. 9 GREEN, President, UtsottGU Young, Jr., Secretary, M. M. Stkicklhk, Treasurer, DIRECTORS: R. T. Ryon, William Patton, John Fenrb-ioh, M. M.Strlckler, H. G. Min cb, Geo, Youna, Jr. Sam’l F. Lberlela, Nicholas McDonald #unoH H. Green, John B. Bachman, H Irani Wilson, Robert Crane, For Insurance and other particular* apply to HERR A RIFE, Beni Estate, Collection A Insurance Agents, No. 3 North Duke street, T An caster, Pa nov2 tfd*w UlßUbtaj) PwiriL -a-k. NO. 38 NORTH QUEEN STREET, (INQUIRER ‘.BUILDING,) DEALS IK UNITED STATES BONDS, STOCKS, GOLD, SILVER AND COUPONS, DRAFTS GIVEN ON ALL THE PRINCIPAL CITIES. COLLECTIONS MADE£PROMPTLT. INTEREST PAID ON DEPOSITS JOHN M. STEHMAN, JOSEPH CLARKSON, mar 22 6mw] SAMUEL BLOKOM, Bankers os Btehman, Clarkson A Co, OER, jittrtffgjmigwattog. GOD BATE THE OOMMOITWgALTH. BIUW PEOCIAHATIOS. g —r-jiooß Kbit, High sheriff or Isaucaater coontr. of Pennsylvania, ao I hereby make known and give notice to vne electors of the county aforesaid, that an elec tion will be heM in the said county of Lanca^r S&&AT. THE 12th DAT OP OCTOBER, lor the purpose at electing the several persona hereinafter named, viz: _ _ ONB PJEBSON duly qualified for Governor or the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. ONB PERSON duly qualified for Justice of the Bapreme Court of the Commonwealth or duly qualified for Members of the State Senate. . _ FOUR PERSONS duly qualified for Members duly qualified for Sheriff. ONB PBBSON duly qualified for Register. ONE PKBSON duly qualified for Prothonotary ONE PERSON duly qualified for Clerk of Quar- ter Sessions. _ , # _ ONE PKBSON duly qualified for Clerk of Cr- S bans’ Court. IE PERSON duly qualified for Treasurer. ONE PERSON duly qualified for County Com* TWOPKRSONS du'y qualified for Directors ot the Poor. , TWO PERSONS duly qualified ior Prison in* speclors. _ ONE PERSON duly qualified for Coroner. ONB PERSON duly qualified for Auditor. I also hereby make known and give notice that the place of holding the aforesaid election in the several wards, boroughs, districts ana townships within the county of Lancaster, are —Composed of the Nine Wards of Lancaster City. The qualified voters of the First Ward wUI bold their election at the put>» 110 house of Joseph Elder, In West Orange street; Second Ward, at the public house of Shirk sthl?is^rlct—Elizabeth township, altbe pub lie bouse now occupied by S. Engle, in BricK- ervllle, in said township. . ~ a flth District—Borough of Strasburg, at the public house now occupied by Frederics Myers, In said borough. , , ~ „ 7th District—Rapho township, including the borough of Manhelm, at the German school house, in said borough. _ . Bth township, at the pub llchouse now occupied oy John Mason, » hlte Horse tavern, in said township. . 9th District—East Cocalico township, at the public house now occupied by Henry Rhoads, in the village of Reamstown, in said township. 10th District—Being part of the township of East Donegal, at the public school house in the village of Maytown, in said township. 11th District—Caernarvon township, at the I public house now occupied by H. M, ttwelgart, in the village of Chnrchtown, in said township. 12th District—Martic township, at the house i now occupied by D. M. Moore, in said' town* I ah lJt*h township, at the public house lately occupied by John Hollis, in said ! township. , . 14th District —Colerain township, at the pub- I Jlc house now occupied by J. K. Alexander, in said township. A ... 16th District—Fulton township, at the public hoose now occupied by Martin Rohrer, in said District—Warwick township, at the nub llo house now occupied by Geo. T. Grider, in the village of Litis, in said township. 17th District—Composed of the Borough of Marietta and part oi East Donegal township, at the public school house in tho borough or Marietta, In said township. _ „ 18th District—Columbia Borough, at tho Town Hall, in said borough. 19th District—Sadsbury township, at the pub lic house now occupied by Isaac Albright, In township, at the pub lic house now occupied by W. Blair, In said 'Brecknock township, at the public house now occupiod by J. 0. Lshle man, in said township. , , „ 22d District—Mount Joy Borough, In the Coun cil Chamber, in the borough of Mount Joy. 23d District-Being part of East Hempfioid township, at the public house now occupied by H. 8. Landis, in the village of Petersburg, in said township. . . . 24th District—West Lampeter township, at the eubllo house now occupied by Henry Mil ler, in the village of Lampeter Square, In said to 2sth h l>iBtrlct—Conestoga township, at tho public house now occupied by John G. Pruts, in said township. _ , , 28th District— Washington Borough, at the upper school house in tho borough of Wush- Ephratn township,at Ibo pub lic house now occupied by S. Slyer, in said District—Conoy township at the public school house in the village oi Bainbndge, iu said township. , , ... 29th District—Manhelm township, at the public house now occupied by Henry B.Stauller, in the village of Netfsville, In said township. 30th District—Being part of Manor township, at the public house now occupied by John Brubaker, In Mlllerstown. in said towmship. Slst District—West Earl township, at the public house now occupied by GrabiU U. ror uev. in Earivllie, in said township. District—west Hcmptleld township, at the public house now occupied by Edwin Hopton, in said township. 33d township, at the pub lic honse now occupied by James Currau, in tho borough of Strasburg. 34th District—Being part of Manor township, commonly called IndlaDtown district, at tiie public house of Bernard Stoner, iu said town- Sh a3t’h District—West Cocalico township, at the public house now occupied by Daniel Misnler, in the village of Scboeneck, in said township. 38th District—East Earl township, at the pub lic house now occupied by Philip Foreman, at Blue Ball, in said township. 37th township, at the pub lic house now occupied by John b. Weaver, iu I said township. „ . « , , 38th District—Being a part of East Ileropneld township, at the public school house in the vil lage of Hemptielci, in said township. 39th District—Lancaster township, at the pub lic house now occupied by Wm. T. \ouart, in said township. . . . 40th District—East Lampeter township, at the public house now occupied by i.lias Buck waiter. in said township. 41st Britain township, at the house of John HarbisoD, In said township. 42d District—Upper Leacock townslilp, at the public house of Jacob Bard, in said township. 43d District—Penn township, at the public house of Jacob Busser, In said township. 44th District—Borough of Adamstown, at the school house in said borough. 45th District—Clay township, at the publio house of Aaron Eitnler, in said township. 48th District—Pequea township, at the public house of Amos Grotf, in said township. 47th District—Providence township, at the house now occupied by John bnyder, in said township. , 4 48th District—Eden township, at the public house of John Graham, in said township. 49th District—Being that part of Mount Joy township heretofore included in the3ddistrict, at Lehman’s school house, in said township. 50th District—West Donegal township, here tofore included In the 3d election district, at Rutt’s school house, in said township. 51st part of Mount Joy town ship heretofore included in the 22d district, at Benjsmln Brennemau’s school house, in said t^s2d S Dlstrict—That part of Rapho heretofore Included In the ~d district, at Striokler’s school house, lu said township 63d District—That part or East Donegal town ship heretofore Included In the 22d district, at the brick school house, in the village of spring vllle, in said township. _ . . , , 54tn District—That part of Rspho township heretofore Included lu the 52d district, at the fiublic school house in the village of Newtown, n Baid township. 55th District—That part of Manor towuablp heretofore included in the 26th district, at the public house of Jacob M. Brenneman. Every p<** -on, er '’opting Justices of the Peace, who shall ..(.!>) u..y office or appointment of profit or t->!si under, the Government of tho United States, or of this State, or of any city or incorporated district, whether a commissioned officer or otherwise, a subordinate officer or agent, who is or shall be employed under the Legislative, Executive or Judiciary depart ments of the State or the United States, or of any city or incorporated district, and also that every member oi Congress, or of the State Leg islature, and of the Select and Common Coun cils of any city, or Commissioner of any incor porated district, is, by law, Incapable of hold ing or exercising at the same time the office or appointment of judge, Inspector or clerk of any election of this Commonwealth, and no inspec tor, judge, or other officer of any such election shall be eligible there to be voted for. The Inspector and Judge oftlieelectlons shall meet at the respective places appointed for holding the election in the district, to which they respectively belong, beforo niue o’clock In the morning, and each of said inspectors shall appoint one Clerk, who shall be a quali fied voter of such district. In case the person wno shall have received the second highest number of votes for inspec tor 6hall not attend on the day of any election, then the person who shall have received the second highest number of votes forjudge at tho next preceding election shall act as Inspector in his place. And in case the person who shall have received the highest number of votes for inspector shall not attend, the person elected Judge shall appoint an inspector in his place— ana In case tne person elected judge shall not attend, then tho Inspector who received the highest number of votes shall appoint a judge iu nls place—or if any vacaucy shall continue In the board for the space of one hour after the timefixed by law for the opening of the elec tion, the qualified voters of the township, ward or district for which such officers shall have been elected present at such election, shall elect one of their number to fill such vacancy. It shall be the duty of the several assessors of each district to attend at the place of holding every general, special or township election, du ring the whole time said election is kept open, for the purpose of giving information to the inspectors and judges, when called on, in rela tion to the right of any person assessed by them to vote at such election, or such other matters in relation to the assessments of voters as the said inspectors or either of them shall from time to time require. No person shall be permitted to vote at any election, os aforesaid, other than a white free man of the age of twenty-one years or more, who shall have resided in the State at least one year, and in the election district where he of fers his vote at least ten days Immediately pre ceding such election, ana within two years paid a State or county tax, which shall have been assessed tft least ten days before the elec tion. Bat a citizen of the United States who has previously been a qualified voter of this State and removed therefrom and returned, and who shall have resided in the election dis trict and paid taxes as aforesaid, shall be enti tled to vote after residing in this State six months: Provided, that the white freemen, citizens of the United States, between twenty one and twenty-two years of age, who have resided in an election district as aforesaid, shall be entitled to vote, although they shall not have paid taxes. No person shall do permitted to vote whose name is not contained In the list of taxable in habitants furnished by the Commissioners, un less Firat, he produces a receipt for the pay ment within two years of a Stale or county tax assessed agreeably to the Constitution and give satisfactory evidence either on bis oath or affirmation, or the oath or affirmation of an other, that he has paid such a tax, or on fail ure to produce a receipt shall make oath to the payment thereof. Second, if he claim the right to vote by being an elector between the age of twenty-one ana twentv-two vears he shall de pose on oath or affirmation that he has resided \ In this State at least one year next before his i application, and make such proof of residence i in the district as is required by this act, and i that he does verily* believe from thoaccouht given him, that be Is of age aforesaid, and such other evidence as is required by this act, where upon the name of the person thus admitted to vote shall be Inserted In the alphabetical list by the Inspectors, and a note made opposite thereto by writing the word " tax.” if he shall be admitted to vote by reason of having paid tax; or the word “ age,” if he shall be admitted to vote by reason ot such age, shall be called out to the clerks, who shall make the like notes on the list of voters kept by them. In all cases where the name of the person Maiming to vote is found on the list furnished by the Commissioner! and assessor, or his right to rote, wbotbfflflbtmij tbejreon or not, la ob- SEPTEMBER jgfflrtamatfog, jeoted to by any qualified citizen, It shall be the 1 duty of the inspectors to examine such person m nrfth gg tAhfann«.Hfleatlons.andlfheclalms to have resided within the Btate for one year or more hfa natti «ha.n be sufficient proof there of but he shall make proof by at least one com petent witness, who snail be a qualified elector, that be has resided In the district farmare than ten dayß next immediately preceding snch election, and shall also himneif swear that his bona fide residence, In pursuance of his lawful calling, Is In said district, and that he did not remove In to said district for the purpose of voting therein. Every person qualified as aforesaid, and who shall make doe proof, If required, of the resi dence and paymentof taxes as aforesaid, shall be admitted to vote in the township, ward or district In which he shall reside. If any person shall prevent or attempt to pre vent any officer of any election under this act from holding snch election, or use or threaten any violence to any such officers, or shall In terrupt or improperly interfere with him in the execution of bis duty, or shall block up the window, or avenue to any window where the same may be, bolding or shall riotously disturb the peace at such election, or shall use any In timidating threats, force or violence, with de sign to influence unduly or overawe any elec tor, or to present him from voting or to re strain the freedom of choice, such persons on conviction shall be fined in any sum not ex ceeding five hundred dollars, and imprisoned for any time not less than three nor more than twelve months,'and If it shall he shown to Court, where the trial of such offence shall be had, that the person so offending was no ta res ident £of the city, ward, district or township 1 where the offence was committed, and not en titled to vpte therein, then on conviction he shall be sentenced to pay a flue of not less than one hundred nor more than one thousand dol lars, and be imprisoned not less than six months nor more than two years. If any person, not by law qualified, shall fraudulently vote at any election of this Com monwealth, or being otherwise qualified shall vote out of his proper district; if any person knowing the want of such qualification, shall aid or procure such person to vote, the person offending, shall, on conviction,be fined in any sum not exceeding two hundred dollars, anu be imprisoned in any term not exceeding three months. ■ .. If any person shall vote at more than one election district, or otherwise fraudulently vote more than once on the same day, orshairfraua , ulently fold and deliver to the inspector two tickets together, with the intent illegally to vote, or shall procure another to do so, he or they offending shall on conviction be fined in •>tmy sum not less than fifty nor more than five hundred dollars, and be imprisoned for a term not less than three nor more than twelve lonths. If any person not qualified to vote in t-Ixls Commonwealth agreeably to law, (except the sons of qualified citizens.) shall appear at any place of election for the purpose of influencing the citizens qualified to vote, he shall on con viction forfeit and pay any sum not exceeding one hundred dollars for every such oflence and bo imprisoned for any term not exceeding three months. REG IBTBY LAW. I also give official notice to the electors or Lancaster county that, by an act entitled 'An Act further supplemental to the act relative to the elections of this Commonwealth,' ap proved April 17th, A. D. 1889, it la provided aa °Bbct B ion 1. Be it tnaelcd by the Senate crtyi House of Representatives ofihe Commonwealth of Pennsylvania in General Assembly met, and it is hereby enacted by the authority of the same. That It shall be the duty of each of the assessors within this commonwealth, on the first Mon* day in June of each year, to take up the tran- Bcipthehas received from the oounty com missioners under the eight h section of the aot of fifteenth April, eighteen hundred and thirty four. and proceed to an immediate revision or the same, by striking therefrom the name of every person who Is known by him to have died or removed since the la9t previous nsssss ment from the district of which he is the as sessor, or whose death or removal from the same shall be made known to him, and to add to the same the Dame of any qualified voter who shall be known by him to have moved Into tho district since the last previous assess ment or whose removal into the same shall be or shall have been made known to him, and aIBO the names of all who shall make claim to him to be qualified voters therelD. As soon as this revision is completed he shall visit every dwelling house In his district and make care ful inquiry if any parson whose name is on his list has died or removed from ihe district, mid if so, to take the same therefrom, or whether auy qualified voter resides therein whose name is not on his list, and If so, to add the Hame thereto: and in all cases where a name Is added to the list a tax shall forthwith be assessed agalnßt tbe person: and tbe assessor shall In all cases ascertain, by Inquiry, upon what ground the person so assessed claim* to be a voter. Upon the completion of this work, it shall be the duty of eAch aasossor a* afore said to proceed to make out a list, in alpha betlcal order, of the white freemen above tvreuty-one years of age, claiming to be quail lied voters In the ward, borough, lownsnlp or district of which h«il8 the assessor, and oppo site each of said namesstate whether said Dree man is or is not a housekeeper; acd if ho is, the number of his residence, In towns where tue same are numbered, with the street, alley or court In which situated; and if in a town where there are no numbers, the name of the street, alley or court on whioh paid house fronts' also, the occupation of the person; and where he Is not a housekeeper, the occu pation, place of boardlngaud with whom, and Ifworkiugfor another, the name of the em ployer, and write opposite ea-d: of said names the word‘-voter;" where apy porson claims to vote by reason of naturalization, he shall exhibit his certificate thereof to theasssssor, unless he has been for five consecutive years next precedtug a voter in said district; and in all cases where tbe person baa been natural ized the name shall be marked with the letter “N-” where the person has merely declared his intentions to become a citlzeu and designs to be naturalized before the next election, tbe me shall be markod “1). I.;’’ where the dm is to vote by reason oMjeiug between the lines or twenty-one and twenty-two, os pro vided by law, tbe word “ag6”shall beeutered; and if the parson has moved into the election district to reside since the last general election, the letter “K. ” shall be placed opposite the name. It shall be the further duty of each as sessor ns aforesaid, upon thecompletton oftho duties herein Imposed, to make out a separate ItstofaLl new assessments made by him, and the amounts assessed upon each, and furnish the same immediately to the county commis sioner!, who shall Immediately add the names to the us duplicate of the ward, borough, township or district In which they have been assessed. S»c. 2. Ou the list being completed and the assessments made as aforesaid, the samouball forthwith be retained to the county commis sioners, who shall cause duplicate peoples of said lists, with the observations and explana tions required to be noted as aforesaid, to be made out as soon as practicable and placed in the bands of the assessor, who shall prior to the Urst of August in eacn year, put one copy thereof on the door of or ou the house where the election of the respective district is requir ed to be held, and rAatn the other In his pos session, for the inspection, free of charge, of any person resident In the said election dis trict who shall desire to see the same ; and it shall be the duty of the said assessor to add, from time to time, on the personal application of any oua claiming the right to votTe, the name of auoh claimant, aod mar* opposite the name “C. V.,” and Immediately assess him with a tax, uoting, as In all other cases, his occupa tion, residence, whether a boarder or house keeper ; If a boarder, with whom he boards; and whethor naturalized or designing to be, marking In all such cases the letters opposite the name, ** N.” or “ D. I." as the case may be; if the person claimtDg to be assessed be natu ralized, be shall exhlbltto the assessor his cer tificate of naturalization; and If he claims that he designs to bo naturalized before the next ensuing election, be shall exhibit the certifi cate of his declaration of intention; in all cases where anv ward, borough, township or elec tion district is divided Into two or more pre- clncts, the assessor shall note In all his as 1 ess- { menis the election precinct In which each , elector reside*, and shall make a separate i retnrn for each to the county commissioners, f in all cases In which a return is required from , him by the provisions of this act; and the j county commissioners. In making duplicate . copies of all such returns, shall make dupll- , cate copies of the names of the voters In each precinct, separately, and shall furnish the same to the assessor; and the copies required hr this act to be placed on the doors of or on 1 election places on or before the first of August ! Jn each year, shall be placed on the door of or ■ on the election place In each of said preolnct s. 1 Brc. 3. After tue assessments have been com* 1 ploted on the tenth day preceding the second 1 Tuesday in October of each year, the assessor shall, on the Monday immediately following, make a return to the county commissioners of 1 the names of all persons assessed by him since the return required to be made by him by the second section of this act, noting opposite each name the observations and explanations re qulred to be noted as aforesaid; and the county commissioners shall thereupon caase the same to be added to the return required by the sec ond section of this act. and a full and correct copy thereof to he made, containing the names of all persons so returned as resident taxables In said ward, borough, township or precinct, and furnish tne same, togethsr with the ne cessary election blanks to the officers of the election In said ward, borough, township or precinct, on or before six o'clock In the morn ing of the second Tuesday of October; and no man shall be permitted to vote at the elsottun ou that day whose name Is not on said list, unless he shall make proof of his right to voto, as herelualter required. Sec. 4. On the day of election any person whose name is not on the said list, and claim ing the right to vote at said election, shall pro duce at least one qualified voter of tne district as a witness to the residence of the claimant in the district In which he claims to be a voter, for the period of at least ten days next preced ing said eleotlon, which witness snail take and subscribe a written, or partly written and partly printed affidavit to tbe facts stated by him, which affidavit shall define clearly where the residence is of the person so claiming to be a voter; and the perton so claiming the right to vote shall also take and subscribe a written, or partly written and partly printed affidavit, staling to the beat of his knowledge and belief, where and when he was born; that he Is a citizen of the commonwealth of Penn sylvania and of the United States; that he has resided In the commonwealth ouu year, or If formerly a citizen therein, and lias moved therefrom, that he has resided therein six months next preceding said election; that he , has not moved into the district for the purprse of voting therein ; that he has paid a State or county tax within two years, which was as sessed at least ten days before said election; and, if a naturalized citizen, shall also state when, where and by what Court he was natu ralized, and shall also produce his certificate of naturalization for examination; the'salil affidavit shall also state when and where the tax claimed to be paid by the affiant was as sessed, aud when, where-and to whom paid, and the tax receipt therefor shall be produced for examination, unless* the affiant snail state in his affidavit that it has been lost or destroy ed, ur that he never received any, but if the person so claiming the right to vote shall take and subscribe an affidavit, that he Is a native born citizen of the United fcjtates, (or If born elsewhere, shall state that fact in bis affidavit, and shall produce evidence that he has been naturalized, or that he is entitled to citizen ship by reason of his father’s'naturalization;) antf shall further state in his affidavit that he Is, at the time of taking the affidavit, between the ages of twenty one and twenty-two years: that he has resided in the Btate os e year and in the election district ten days next preceding such election, he Bhall be entitled to vote, although he shall not have paid taxee; the said affidavits of all persons making such claims, and the affidavits of the witnesses to their residence, shall be preserved by the elec tion board, and at the close of the election they chn.il be enclosed with the list of voters, tally list and other papers required by law to be filed by the return judge with the prothonota ry, and shall remain on file therewith In the Prothonotary’* office, subject to examination, , as other election papers are; if the election officers shall find that the applicant or appli cants possess all the legal qualifications of voters, he or they shall be permitted to vote, and the name or names shall be added to tbe list of t&xables by the election officers, the word “tax” being added where the claimant claims to vote on tax, and the word “ age ” where he to vote on age; the same words being added by the clerks in each case respectively on the lists of persons voting at suck election. Sec. 5. It sha’l be lawful fur any qualified citizen of the district, notwithstanding the name of the proposed voter is contained on the list of resident taxables, to challenge the vote of such person: whereupon the same proof of the right ofsuflrage as is now required by law shall be publicly made and acted on by the election Doard, and the vote admitted or re- J ected, according to the evidence; every person claiming to be a naturalized citizen snail be required to produce bis naturalization certifi cate at tbeelection before voting, except where he has been for ten years, consecutively, a vo ter in the district in which he oilers his vote; and on the vote of such person being received. It shall be tbe duty of the eleotlon officers to write or stamp ■on such certificate the word “ voted,” with the month and year; and if any election offloer or officers shall receive a eeo- and Tote on tbe same day, by virtue of tbe same certificate, excepting where sons are en titled to vote by virtue of tbe naturalisation of their fathers, they and the person who shall offer such a second vote, Upon so offending shall be guilty of a high and on oon« victlon thereof be fined or imprisoned, or both, at the discretion of the court; but the fine shall not exceed one hundred, dollars in each case, nor the imprisonment one year; the like punishment shall be inflicted, on conviction, on the officers of election who shall neglect or refuse to make, or cause to be made, the in dorsement required as aforesaid on said natu ralization certificate. Sbc. 6. If any election officer shall refuse or neglect to require such 'proof of the right of suffrage as Is prescribed by this law, or tbe law to which this Is a supplement, from any person oflfiring to vote whose name Is not on the list of assessed voters, or whose right to vote Is challenged by any qualified voter pres ent, and shall admit such persons to vote with out requiring such proof, every person so offending, shall upon conviction, be guilty of a high misdemeanor, and shall be sentenced, for every such offence, to pay a fine not ex ceeding one hundred dollars, or to undergo an imprisonment not more than one year, or either or both, at the discretion of the court. Sec. 7. Ten days preceding every election for electors afJPrealdeat and Vice President of the United States, It shall be the duty of the As sessor to attend at place fixed bylaw for holding the election In each election district-, and then and there hear all applications of persons whose names have been omitted from tbe list of assessed voters, and who claim the right to vote or whose rights havaorigloated since tbe same was made out, and shall add the names of such persons thereto as shall show tbat they are entitled to the right of suffrage in such district, on the personal appli cation of the claimant only, and forthwith as sess them with the proper tax. After complet ing the list, a copy thereof shall be placed on the door of or on the house where the election Is to be held, at least eight days before tbe election; and at the election the Bame course shall be pursued, in all respects, as is required by this act and the acts to which It it a supple ment, at tne general elections in October. The Assessor shall also make the same returns to tbe couaty commissioners of all assessments made by virtue of this seotlon; and the county commissioners shall furnish copies thereof to the election otfioers In each district, In like manner, la ail respects, as is required at the general elections la October, Bsc. 3. The same rules and regulations shall apply at every speolal election, and at every separate city, borough or ward election, in all respects as at me general elections In October. tisc. 9. The respective assessors, inspectors and Judges or the elections shall each have the power to administer oaths to any persons claiming the right tcTbe assessed or the right of suffrage, or in regard to any other matter or thing required to be done or luqalred into by any of offloers under this act; and any wilful iaise swearing by any person in rela tion to any matter or thing concerning w hlch they shall be lawfully Interrogated by any of said officers shall be punished as perjury. Sec. 10. The assessors shall each receive the same compensation for the time necessarily spent In performing the duties hereby enjoin ed as is provided by law for the performance of their other duties, to he paid by the county commissioners as In other caseß; and It shall not be lawful for any assessor to assess a tax against any person whatever within ten days next preceding the election to be held on the second Tuesday of October, In any year, or within ten dayß next oafore any election fer electors of President and Vice President of the United States ; any violation of this provision shall be a misdemeanor, and subject the of* doers so offending to a fine, on conviction, "ot exceeding one hundred dollars, or to Impris onment not exceeding three mouths, or both at the discretion of the court. Sac 11. On the petition of lire ormorooltl zens of the county, stating under oath that thoy verily believe that frauds will be prac ticed at the election about to be held in any district, it shall be tho du‘.y of the court or common pleas of said county, If in session, or lfnotajudge thereef In vacation,to appoint two Judicious, Bobor and Intelligent citizens of the oonnty to act as overseers at said elec tion • said overseers shall be selected from dif ferent political parties, where the inspectors belong to dlfforeut parties, and where both or said inspectors belong to the same political party, both of the overseers shall,be taken from the opposite political party; said overseers shall liave the right to be presont with the officerelolthe eleotlon. during the whole time the same Is held, the votes counted and the re turns made out and signed by theeiection offi cers: to keep a list of voters, if they see proper: to challenge any person offering to vote, and interrogate him and his witness u . nd ® r i°^' in regard to his right of sutlrage at said elec tion, and toexamluohlspapersproduced ; and the officers of said election are requiredi to af fo d to said overseoreso selected and appointed every convenience and laclllty for the dis charge of their duties; and lr said election officers shall refuse to permit said overseers to be present and perform their duties as afore said, or If they shall be driven away from the polls by violence or Intimidation, all tbe votes polled at snch election district may bo reject ed by any tribunal trying a contest under said eleciion: Frovided, That no personslgningthe petition shall be appointed an overseer. hrp, 12. If any proihonotary, clerk, or the deputy oi either, or any other person, shall af fix the seal of office to any naturalization pa per, or permit the same to be affixed, or give out or cause or permit tbe aaine to bo given out. In blank, whereby it may be fraudulently u**d, or furnish a naturalization certificate to any person who shall not have been duly ex amined and sworn in open court, in the presence of some of tbe Juoges thereof, accord ing to the act of Congress, or shall aid in, con nive at, or in any way permit the issue ol any fraudulent naturalization certificate, ho shall be guilty ofa high misdemeanor; or if any one shall fraudulently use any such certificate cf naturalization, knowing that It was fraudu lently Issued, or shall vote, or attempt to vote thereou, or If any one shall vote, or attempt to vote on any cariltlrote of naturalization not Issued to him, he shall be guilty of a high mlsdemaanor; and either or anv of the per sons, their aluers or abettors, guilty of either of tbe misdemeanors aforesaid, shall, on con viction, be fiDed in a sum not exceeding one thousand dollars, and Imprisoned In the proper penitentiary fora period notexoeedlng three yeais. pec. 13. Any peraen who on oath, or affirma tion, In or before any court in this State, qr officer authorized to administer oaths shall, to procore a certificate of nalnraliutlon, tor himself or any other person, wilfully depose, declare or affirm any matter to be Tact, know ing the same to be false or shall in like man ner deny any matter to be fact knowing the same to be true, shall be deemed guilty of per jury; and any certificate of naturalization issued in pursuance of any snob deposition, declaration or affirmation, shall be null and void; and it shall be the duty of tbe court is suing the same, upon proof being made before it that it was fraudulently obtained, to take Immediate measures for recalling the same for cancellation, and any person who shall vote, or attempt to vote, on any paper so ob tained, or who shall In any way aid In, con nive at, or have any agency whatever In the issue, circulation or use of any fraudulent nat uralization certificate, shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and upon conviction there of shall undergo an Imprisonment injhe pen itentiary for not more than two years and pay a line, not more than one thousand dollars, for every snch offence, or either or both, at the discretion of tbe court. Bxc. 1-i. Any assessor, election officer or per son appointed as an overseer, who shall neg lect or refuse to perform any duly enjoined hy this art, without reasonable or legal cause, shall be subject to a penally of one hundred dollars, and if any assessor shall assess anv person as a voter who is not qualified, or shall refuse to assess any one who is qualified, he shall be guilty of a misdemeanor In office, and on conviction be punished by fine or impris onment, and also be subject to an action for damages by the party aggrieved: and if any person Bhall fraudulently alter, add to, deface or destroy any list of voters made out as di rected by this aot, or tear down or remove the same from the place where it has been fixed, with fraudulent or mischievous Intent, or for any Improper purpose, tbe person so offend ing shall Do gui ty of a higu misdemeanor, and on conviction shall be punished by a fine not exceeding five hundred dollars, or Im prisonment not exceeding two years, or both, at the discretion of the oourt. Sec. 15. All elections for city, ward, borough, township and election officers shall hereaiter be h-ld on tbe secoad Tuesday of October, subject to all the provisions of the laws regu lating the election of such oflloers not incon sistent with this aot; the persons elected to such offices at that tlmeshall take thelrplaces at the expiration of tho terms of the persons holding the same at tho time of such election ; but no election for the office of assessor tSr as sistant assessor shall be held, under this act, until the yearone thousand eight hundred and seventy. Sec. ill At all elections hereafter held un der the laws of this commonwealth, the polls shall be opened between the boars of six and seven o'clock, a. m., and closed atsevon o’clock p. m. Sec. 17. It shall be the duty of the Secretary of the commonwealth to prepare forms fur all the blanks made necessary by this act, and furnish ooples of the same to the connty com missioners of the several conn ties of the com monwealth ; and the connty commissioners of each county shall, as soon as may benecessary after receipt of the same, at the proper expense of tbe county, procure and furnish to all the election officers of the election districts of their respective counties coploe of sneb blanks, In such quantities as may be rendered neces sary lor the disekargo of their duties under tnls act. ■ Sac. 10. That citizens of thl* State tempora rlly tn the service of the State or of the United States governments, on clerical or other duty, and who do not vote where thus employed, shall not be thereby deprived of the right to vote in their several election districts If other, wise duly qualified. DESERTERS’ DISFRANCHISING LAW, As therein directed, I also give official notice of the following provisions of an Act approved June -Ith, 1806, entitled “ A further supplement to the election laws of this Commonwealth.” Wheueas, By tne Act of the Congress of the United States, entitled “ An act to amend the several acts heretofore passed to provide for the enrolling and ca'llugoutthe national forces and for other purposes, ’ and approved March third, one thousand eight hundred and sixty five, all persons who have deserted tho mili tary ornaval service of the United States, and who have not been discharged or relieved from the penalty or disability therein provided, aro deemed aud taken to have voluntarily relin quished and forfeited their rights of citizen ship and their rights to become citizens, and are deprived of exercising any rights of citizens thereof; and Whf.hfas, Persons not citizens of the United States, are not, under tho constitution and laws of Pennsylvania, qualified electors of this Commonwealth: gEcnoN l. Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the Common wealth of Pennsylvania In General Assembly met, and It Is hereby enacted by the authority of the same. That tn all elections hereafter to be held in this Commonwealth, It shall be un lawful for the jndgo or inspectors of any such election to receive any ballot or ballots from any person or persons embraced In the pro visions and subject to the disability imposed by said act of Congress approved March third, one thousand eight hundred and sixty-five, and it shall be unlawful for any such person to olTer to vote any ballot or ballots. Section 2. That 4f any such Judge and In spectors of election, or any one of them, shall receive or consent to receive any such unlaw ful ballot or ballots from any such disqualified person, he or they so offending shall be guilty of misdemeanor, and upon conviction thereof In any Court of Quarter Sessions, of this Com monwealth, he shall for each offence be sen tenced to pay a fine of not less than one hun dred dollars, and to undergo an Imprisonment In the Jail of the proper county for not less than sixty days. Sec. 3. That if any person deprived of citizen ship and disqualified as aforesaid, shall at any election hereafter to be held in this Common wealth, vote or tender to the officers thereof aud offer to vote a ballot or ballots, any person so offending shall be deemed guilty of a mis demeanor, and on conviction thereof in any court of quarter sessions of this commonwealth shall for each offence be punished in like man ner as provided In the preceding section of this act in cases of officers of election receiving such unlawful ballot or ballots. Sec. 4. That If any person shall hereafter persuade or advise any person or persons de prived of citizenship and disqualified as afore said, to offer any ballot or ballots to the officers of any election hereafter to be held in this Com monwealth, or shall persuade or advise any snoh officer to receive any ballot or ballots from any person deprived of citizenship and disqualified os aforesaid, such person so of fending shall be guilty of a misdemeanor, and upon conviction thereof in any court of quar ter sessions of this Commonwealth, shall be punished in like manner as is provided in the second section of this act In the case of officers of such electlonrecelYlng such unlawful ballot or ballots. CHANGE IN THE HODS OS* VOTING. An Act regulating the mode of voting at all elections In the several counties of this Commonwealth, approved March 80th, 1806: Section 1. B ♦ it enacted by the Smote and E(nue BepreitniaUv* of the Cbmmonwealih of 'O: fffttttffg jgrgffaMatiott, fensuplvanla H 1 FOR FALL ISO 9. HAGER & BROTHERS Are receiving dally from the New York aud Philadelphia markets Goods for Fall Sales aud Invite Inspection. FLANNELS—WHITE. REMAND OBEY, From Lowest to Finest Qualities. t'PKKA FLANNELS IN ALL COLORS. COTTON FLANNELS,! From Low Prleed to Extra Quality. 10,9. x) Yards New Style 1) a tK PRINTS at 12c. Also, a full aeeortmenl of STAPLE AWL FANCY DAY U-MIM, CLOTHS, CABAIMEREH, AND READY MADE CLOTHING, CARPETS, WALL PAPER A Q.U EE VS WARE, AT LOWEST MARKET PRICE' 1 , ftdttfJrttßMl. VTAZARWH HAM.. HOARDING SCHOOL FOR BOYS. The uext anneal session opens TUESDAY, AUGUST 17th. For Circulars apply to Raw EUGENE LEI BERT, Principal. Nazareth, Northampton co.,P*. References at Lancaster: Rt. Rev. David Bigler and Goo, K. Reed, Esq. Jeisi-Huawil rr\s6K HILL SELECT FAMILY BOAR#- I ING SCHOOL. AN EN3LISH, CLASSICAL, MATHEMATI CAL, SCIENTIFIC A"D ARTISTIC INSTITUTION, FOR YOUNG MEN AND BOYS! At Cotta town, Montgomery County, Pa The First Term of the Nineteenth Annual Besslon will comireuco on WEDNESDAY, the Bth day of SEPTEMBER, next. Puylls received at any time. For llrculers, address, REV. GEO. F. MILLER, A. M., Principal. REFERENCES Rbt. Dus.—Helen, shasller, Maau, Krauth, Selss, Muhlenberg, SUover, llutier. Stork, Conrad, Bomberger, Wylie,Bterret, Murphy, Crulkshanks, C. v. C. Hons.— Judge Ludlow, Leonard Myers, M. Russel Thayer, Beuj. M. Borer, Jacob S. Yost, Hlester Clymer, John KUUnger, etc. Esqs.—James E. Oaldwell, Jamu L. Cleghorn, C. S. Grove, T. C. Wood, Harvey Bancroft. Theodore, G. Boggs, C. F. Norton, L LA Houpt, S. Grots Fry, Miller A Derr, Cba ea Wauuemacher, James Kent, Santee A 0., •etc. Jy3B*lyw3o WORLD I LIGHTNING RELIEF. Tha world-retiowad Internal anil Kxiernal Vegetable Medlclu*. Give* roller ku moat case* In from to ‘2 to 10 minutes. Bold by Druggists and Dealers generally. WM. G. BAKER, Ceutro Square, Agout for Lancaster. J. R. lIOFFER. Asant, ML Joy. JOHNSON, HOLLOWAY ACOWDECf Agonls, Philadelphia. JulMOuiw M Psglrai lt»lrg«r«t]B, it. \P u “' gonmiiHG hew i WOODWARD’S PIANO FORTE AND OR GAN WARE-ROOMS, No. 20 East King Street , Lancaster , Pa The largest establishment'.of the kind {ln Lancaster, and one ot the largest In the Btate. The finest assortment of Instruments over of fered to the public la this city and county. Pianos, Orgaas Sheet Music,pintle Hooks, Ac., Ac, Chiokerlng & &m'i Piano*, Haines Bro.'s Pianos Mason A Hamlin’s Cabinet and Metropolitan Organs. Our facilities aro such that we can Dow af ford to supply our customers with instrument! at rates as low as they can be purchased of the manufacturers. Dur new Wareroams, situated at No. 20 East King street, opposite Sprecher's Exchange Hotel, over Brenner A Hostetter’s, are fitted up in a manner that we feel confi dent cannot fall to please the most fastidious. We shall always bo happy to exhibit our In struments to all who will favor us with a call, whether they wish to purchase or not. Orders taken forßheet Musio and all kinds of Musical merchandise. Call and see us. A.-W. WOODWARD, No. 20 East King Btreet, Lancaster, Pa. oct2l-tfw42 gtw fork Ladiis, if you require a reim bio remedy, use the best? IJk. HARVEY’S GOLDEN PILLS h&re no equal. They are safe and sure In ordi nary cases. _ PRICE, ONE DOLLAR PER BOX. DR. HARVEY’B GOLDEN PILLS, four degress stronger they are Intended for special cases __ PRICE, FIVE DOLLARS P*» BOX. Prirale circulars sent free. Enclose Slav* 1/ yon cannot procure the pills euclosa tbe mo is; and address BRYAN * (JO., Cedar street. Nav York, and ou receipt they will bs sent weL sealed by return mail. DRBOK «T TRUTIL Pi Young Men the sxpertsues of year*, h*e demonstrated the faut that reliance may be placed in tbe efficacy of BKLL’B HPECIFIU PILLS For tbe speedy and permanent cuts of sutnlual Weakness, tbe result of Youthful Indlsoretlon, which neglected, ruins the happiness, and un flts the sufferer lor business, social or marri age. They can be used without detection or Interference with business pursuits. Price one Dollar per box or four boxes for 5 dollars. If you oannot procure thessplllA enclose the money to BRYAN A 00., M Cedar street, New York, and they will be sent by mail, well sealed. Private circulars to Gentle men seat free on application, enclose st*mp. nKTABu tin D OR REJUVENATING ELIXIR, For all Derangements of the Urinary Organs It gives LIFE, HEALTH AND STRENGTH tc all who use It and follow my directions. II never fails to remove Nervous Debility,lmpo tence or wantof Power, and all weakneeaaris- Ing from excesses or Indiscretion, resulting In loss of memory, unpleasant dreams, weak nerves, headaches, m«rvons trembling, general lassitude, dimness of vision, flushing of the skin, which if negleoted, will surelylead on le Insanity or Consnmptlon. When the system Is once affeoted It will not recover without help. It must be Invigorated and strengthen ed. to enable the sufferer to fulfil the duties of life. This medlolne bee been tested for many years, and It Is warranted a eerteJn CURE, no matter how bad the case may be. Hundreds of oartlflcates ean be shown. Prloe. one Dollar per bottle, or six bottles for five Dollar* SOLD BY ALL DRUGGIST. If you cannot procure it Send a statement ol your case and enclose the money to BKYAN A CO., 64 Cedar street. New York, end It will beaeutyou On receipt of Tlve Dollars, a bot tle nearly equal to seven small will be sent to any express office In the U. S. chargee paid. Private clreulars, sent on application, (en close stamp.) eeefeWawdel y w £tiatB»gn-H-iaw a. c. * BEADY, No. 24 East King street, 2d floor, over Sillies New Store JMIAR C. RUUD, No. 18 North Dufcost.. Lancaster Bl r. BABB, No. l» North Duke st., Lemoeeter rxmm. e. riilk to. b South Duke «L, Lanweter A. J. tAOBTYSOS, No. 48 East King street. iAn^ter B. B. PRICY, Court Avenue, west of Court House, Lancaster A. I. KACTTHiI, No. 238 Locjubt Stm*t, OOLUHBIA, PA d*c23 ly aw) 6. W. UDJiTEB, No. 0 Bcrath Dap.* si., Lancaster* Wft. L**flAß. No. § Ncrt* DU* at. litaiMr i. e. cmAX, N*. I m*t Ormnc* at.. lauif for «. b. lokiv, < Columbia. Lancaster county, Pa ABBA* BUAkR, No. 39 Nortb Du* it-. Tanfilrr J. W, P. iWITT, H*. li Borin DU* il.. Lancaat*i D. W. PATTERSON, Ha* removed hi* office to No, 68 East King bU SIMON P. EBT. . ATTORNBT AT LAW, OKFIOE WITH N. ELLMAKKR, ESO., North Dux* Btxxm > , ■•ptM LANCASTER, PA. Ifw3B» T)o97ia« BLATK-Pltcia MBCOXO TV The undersigned baa wncatAntiy cm band* fall supply of Booling Slate for Mia at Bed need Price*. Also, an extm LIGHT ROOFING SLATE, intended for on Sblnaie roofs. Employing tba vary be*Cal*ten ail York la warranted to be ezeentad in tie beat msiner. Bnlldera and other* will find Tt 9 their Inter est to examine the samples at bia dMioultarml and Seed W Me rooms, Na al Eaat Einastreet Lancaster. Pa., 2 doors west of tba CourtHouse' We have aiao the Aibesto'a Roofing for flat roof, or where slate and shindies cannot be used. It la Car superior to Flaatlo or Gravel Booling. deomftUw &ptatlfo*ai, «r. pIDESHUU, HAY CUTTERS, CORN ftHELLERS, DOG POWERS, GLOVER HOLLERS, GRAIN BAGS, FANS and DRILLS, PLOWS, iBAUWAGONS. MACHINE BELTING, CASTINGS OF ALL KINDS, FIELD AND GARDEN SEEDS, AT THI __ _ IMPLEMENT AND SEED BTOBE, NO. 2i EAST KINO ST., LANCASTER. PA, Jy.2B 2mar. wk. D. BPitECHEB. JJ BEBELHAS, lit, A CO. (Late Bard & Qtnitt.vah,) COMMISSION MERCHANTS AMO DEAUCRS IS FLOUR, GRAIN, SEEDS, WHISKEY, 40 No. 129 North Broad street, PHILADELPHIA Prompt attention will be given to sales and a tpeedy return mode thereof. Parties can rest assured that the highest price will e secured for all produce entrusted to our care, may 13 'tfw 19 gOWE K * R COMPLETE MANURE, MANUFACTURED BY 11EN RY BOW ER, CIIE M IST PHIJ. A DELPHI A. MADS FROM Supor-I’hosphiito of Lime, Ammonia and WARRANTED FRBB FROM ADULTERATION. This Manure contains all the elements to produce largo crops of all kinds, and is highly recommended by all who have used It, also by distinguished Chemists who h&vo, by anniysls, tested Its qualities. Packed in Hags of 200 poumii each, dixon, anAUPLEsa* eo. 30 south Water a 40 South Delaware Avk. PHILADELPHIA WM. REYNOLDS, For salo by 70 South SI., Baltimore, MU. And by dealers generally throughout the country. [sep9 2ywM For infortnallou, address Henry Bower. Philadelphia. A tl O H ’ H It AOV no N K SITKR PBOSI’IATI OF 1,1 BK. trademark tSf STANDARD WARRANTED, We ofTer to Farmer*, the preeont Foil season. BAUOU'H Raw BONEBUPILK PHOSPHATE OF LI M R as being highly Improved. BAUGH'S HAW BONS BUPEII FHOB- I*H ATK la, as lta uamo Indicates, prepared by dissolving Raw Bones In Oil ol Vilrlol —4ant Is, Bodm that have not been deprived of their or ganic matter—the grease and glue— by horning or baking. It, therefore, proaeuti to the use o I the Farmer all the valuable properties of Raw Bones lu a highly concentrated form—render ing It at once quick In aotton aud very perma nent. 49- Farmers are recommonded to purchase of the dealer located In their neighborhood.. I n sentions where no dea!orltyeteital>llahed,|Uu* PHOSPHATE may be procured directly from undersigned. ijauoh a sons, MAFUFALTUHERH, OFFICE, NO. ai SO. DELAW AIIF. AVKNUK PHILADELPHIA. »iaw:i SUflttsi. £jl. FREDERICK’* UKEAT MEDICAL WOHDEK OE THE niLlI ! OR HEMORRHOIDAL TUMORS. Internal and External, Blind, Bleeding anil Itching, positively, perfectly and permanently CU RED, without pain, danger, instrument* or caustics, by W. A. McCANDLE*!, M. D., No. l*2fl SPRING GARDEN ST.. PHIL A., Vm. r who osn refer you to over one thousand of the bestcltlLenh of Philadelphia who hare been cured. A practice of IK years in this dUtaiu without a failure, warrants ms to guarantee a cure In all oan**. ssp lt-KJ-3mw“ jyj-ABSHAEL'N HI.IXIR. Dyspepsia and constipation aro the hourly foes of the restless, excitable American, amt with them come Inexorable headache, heart burn, and a train of email diseases. Marshall'* Elixir has been prepared with special refer ence to these constitutional troubles of so many of our eountrymen, and ao far the pro paratlon bar proved a decided succose. Tbo proprietors feol that. In recommendlag U now after the tried experience jf yearn, they aro but fulfilling a humane duty towards the gen oral community.— Famcy's Press. PRICE CNE DOLLAR PER BOTTLE. M. MARSHALL & CO., DRUGGIdTfI, Pbopuiktoils, LSM MARKET HT., PHILADELPHIA. Bold by all Druggist*. $1 AAA Reward par ait cask ®I,UU" of tho following diseases, which the Medical Faculty have pronounced Incurn. ble, that DR. RIOHAU’S GOLDEN REiAIA IBy will not oure. Dr. Rlchau’e Golden Balsam Vo. 1, will cure Svublllß In 1U primary and secondary stages, snob as old Ulcers, Uf eerated Sore Throat. SON Eyes, Shin tlons and Soranass or eating a Is eases and msroury thoroughly. Dr. RlchanV Golden Balsam No. 12, will cure the tulrd stages: end I da/y those who do suflbr from such diseases to obtain a radical curs witnoul the aid of this medicine, which does not pre vent the patients from eating and drinking what they like. Price of elthw No. 1 or 2, U. per bottle or two botiloe, If. Dr. Rlcbau's Golden Antidote, aaaioami rwy-. leal cure for Gonorrhea, Gravel and *JI Urinary Derangements, accompanied with full diroc tlons. warranted to cure. Price,B6 per bottle. Dr. Rlchan’s Golden Elixir d' Aunuur a radi cal care for General Debility in old or young, Imparting energy to three who have lou a me ol sensuaiily. price, 16 per bottle, or two bot tles If. On receipt of price, by mull or Bxprwo*. Uhihc remedies will be shipped to any place. Prompt attention paid to all correspondents. Nomi genuine without the namu of Dr. lUcJihu'm loiden remedies—D. B.Richards, sole propru>*. tor, Blown lu Glass of bottles. Addeaa, DR: D. B. RICHARDS, fg-oawdalyw No. ‘JUS Varlek st y ffew Voru Ofllce hours from •A. M. lofl P. «. Circular sent—-Oerrespondeats esswered. AItKAT RKRTOMIt SOIIKETZ’S CELEBRATED BITTER CORDIAL, This medical preparation Is now oflered to the public as a rellahlebubstltute for the many worthless compounds which now flood the market. It is purely vegetable, composed of various herbs, gathered from the great store house of nature, and selected with tbe utmost care. It Is not recommended as a Curb All, but by tte direct and salutary Influence upon tbe Heart. Liver, Kidneys, Luugs, Btomaob aud Bowels, It acts both as a preventive and cure for many ol >he diseases to which those organs are subject. It is a reliable Family Medicine, and can be taken by either Infant or adult with the same beneficial results. It la a certain, prompt and speedy remody for DIAR. RHCEA.DYBENTERY, BOWEL COMPLAINT DYSPEPSIA, LOWNESS OF SPIRITS, FAINTINGB, BICK-HEADAOHE, Ao. For CHILLS and FEVERS of all kinds, it Is far better and safer than quinine, without any or ltß pernicious effects. It creates an appetite, proves a powerful dtgesoer of food, auu will counteract the effects of liquor In a few inliu utea. ■ PREPARED BT J tole Proprietor, N. W. OOR. FIFTH AND RACE STREETS, PHILADELPHIA, PA. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGIST*. Xtw 1 S»ots, jroa. BllLEiri DOO 7 AND SHOE STORE, WEST KINO BTRE.ET, LANCASTER, EA. Pour doors west of the corner of Water and \ Wet King streets, and nearly opposite the “ King of Prussia Hotel." The subscriber hereby notifies the publlo that he has always on hand a large assort ment of BOOTS AHD SHOES. Gaiters of all kinds and slse. for Men and Children, which ho will sell at the lowest cash prices. Having a long experience In the bnsl aess he hopes to be able to satisfy the wishes of h/s fellow citizens who may favor him with ft After fonr year* service* In ths army he has returned to civil life and hopes' by strict at* tentlon to business to msrlt a share of pobllo patronage. 43- customer work of all kinds promptly attended to. sep 9 t jghiteflripfti* gMtotrtigmnrtg. BARLOW’S IHDIGO BLUE IS Ttti cheapest and best article in the market for BLUEING CLOTHES. It does not oontaln any aold. It will not injure the finest fabric. It la put up at WILTBERGEK'S DKUG STORE, No. 235 North SECOND Street, PHIL ADELPHIA, and for aale by moat of the obo uers and Dbuqqibt& The genuine has both Baslow’s and Wiw bebosb’s names on tue label; all others are cororraarirr. BARLOW’S BLUE will color more water than four times the same weight of Indigo, apr 28,1868, lyw-17. 1L SCHAETFEB, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL BADDLEST NOB V- AMD 2 EAST KING STREET janrEr ILANCASTBBCPAI tfW