Lancaster intelligencer. (Lancaster [Pa.]) 1847-1922, June 22, 1870, Image 4

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    Mutts to jfarmeto.
The Carel:Mo.
This destructive worm is the bane of
fruit raisers and farmers. Do what they
will or can, they do not seem to be able
to check the damage it does. Many
thousands of bushels of fruit and grain
are destroyed every year by it, and how
to counteract its mischief has puzzled
the brains of many for years and years.
Mr. William Young, Gardener, whose
flower and fruit garden is at 205 and 207
North Twelfth street, thinks the mis
chief done by the Curculio could be
very materially abridged, if not en
tirely eradicated, in a ve .7 simple
manner.
Ho estimates the ry
q - uantity
of. Curculio in a single quart of fruit,
at 400, and in a bushel at the enormous
number of 14,000. Mr. Young has used
his remedy in the case of a number of
his own fruit trees, and with great suc
cess. He picks up the fallen fruit, or
shakes the tree and the fruit infected
with the curculio falls at once to the
ground, and then he burns it. Fire is
the only enemy and destroyer of the
curculio that he knows of the infected
fallen fruit being left upon the ground,
thecureuliospreads and multiplies to an
Incalculable extent. His remedy is
certainly a very cheap and simple one,
and it will do no harm to give it a trial.
He has been engaged as a gardener and
fruit raised for many years, and
has made the thing a study. Last year he
lost about one hundred bushels of fruit.
Where he picked up the fallen fruit and
destroyed it by fire, those trees give evi
dence of the soundest and best fruit, and
where lie did not, his experience of
hornier years will again be the case this
season.
The garden of Mr. Young is well
worth visiting. Ile has every kind of
fruit and flowers, and takes especial
pleasure in showing and explaining his
many varieties to visitors. The situa
tion is a beautiful one, overlooking a
greater part of the city, and an hour or
two can be spent very pleasantly on his
remises.—Rcarling
How to Pack Butter
The melliod of packing butter in
common vogue on the Pacitie coast, as
will be SITU from the following descrip
tion, is very 'unlike our own. They
never use jars or kegs, but put it in
muslin sacks, make in such form that
the package, when complete, is a cylin
der three or four inches ill diameter, awl
from a half foot to a foot in length.—
These sacks are math, of bleached 111115-
1111, 2111 d the butter goes into them as
soon as worked over. The packages are
then put into large ca.ks containing,
strong brine with a slight mixture of
saltpeter, mill by 111101110 of weights
kepi always below thesurfave. Theeloth
integument always protects the butter
from ally impurities thatehance to come
hi contact with the package, and being
always buried in brine, that protects it
from the action of air; and it has been
ascertained On trial that butler put up
in this way Nvill keep sweet a long lime.
'These 'alter sacks are ranged upon the
counters of the dealers as readily as bars
of soap; 111111 when any portion of one is
wanted, the end of the sack is stripped
down and the necessary quantity de
tached, when the sack is replaced, leav
ing the remaining portion as secure ns
before any part was removed. This
plan might not be feasible in our climate
without the aid of ice in summer; but
the immersion in brine is worthy of
consideration on the part of dairymen
:111,1 butter theaters.
lIIIIUNICP or Trees upon Health
Dr. it tax von PM Mid:oiler, of i%lttnieli
(ermany, has [wen investigating th
sanitary itilluencies of forests far som
lime, awl Mc- jll,l 11111iiitilll•11 11 11111,4 1
information, gathered front witlely di
Precut imurces, Nvhich is of much ittipoi
tamet'. Tis gi,t of it is that forests hav
a very appmeialiltielhad in checking th
progress of cholera or other contagiot
diseases 11111 well NVOIIIII2II (.1)11111.1i,
01,111'1' things Laing equal, are the heath
icst, 111111 that inarlted sanitary cluing
sum to result from the denudation c
11.(1 . 11( 1 )1'y Ily rutting its trees,
by the planting of gardens and fore,
where no I rel . , exist. 111 111'1/01 • of the.
theories, Dr. Puttenitairicir has litany r
port , nwi, of I mud, st,..
ing Ilial jungle villages are moult le.
liable to to visited Icychidentand other
:Ind I 115 t villages densldy shaded wit
tamarind tars are remarkably wort
from the cikeit. , e,
t ions Through a 1111..; of years. Ti
statistic's of cholera in I ierniany for tl
hist forty years, also show I hat the
wooded l•n,vint•,•s have had a 111111
11)\Vi•r I%tle of mortality than the other
lienring upon the intimate, of trees mu
the general healthfulness of a count
are thii statements Or th:o h
.111 in•iy disapp,iiva from Cairo, liigyi
shit, Nlitliciiciet Ali transformed
swaittii; itrouttil hilt, beautiful garden,
111:111inti..11 4 ,:111111 . :111 ,4 1 great glitivC,
10 . uliera It, hi], the re
iititat it in of :he Ittintan 'aittituglitt nu'
unite:tit itit,s lia. liven u bully obi:limit!
ii.ittett I lie ittiNtiingi the .aired
NI I I.
Tilt' Cherry 11111.
et•ilai . chorry Lind,
vaned oil allomillt II his
6411 . that cmi,lll,ifity
141411;,• I 111.11 With r:ithcr a sttspi4.i,,tt.
eye, It, ii tol the Wimit., lie dt
1114111' II:11'111 ill:111g.”1. This is Ina,
Ile is among the lowa useful or th,
lil
tlo read...red ~iigs(ers, and ought to he
prolwawl. I!r.'l'rinii le, who has st
the halals and fowl of this bird says:
" I have given it a tilormlgli
gation. I have killed many ; more than
I ever kill again. In the sturnach of
0110 I 14111111 ',Vera' 11111 i iir \\'l,llllS,
perfect as to lie readily identified, and
Ihr Ill•:111 , wal:e thir
ly-six iu all. Thin]: of that! (hie
cedar bird taking at a single meal thirty
canker worn,. tar
a century 'wen a pen'ci'l scourge of the
apple orchards of a great part it New
England,- anal has tit tinies 'widow-13;
threatened other section, of the coun
try. This hills bird is a gross
and oouliuuos in Iliork, till near
iiiiilsuninier. Where insects appear in
great numbers, a, the canker and other
Np;un worm, snn~•linies 110, it kilt ruiuo
stitliltinly in large and feed tiara
day arttir day till the
titialltirld little friend of nal',
"Fall the birds—is sold
by lin:11,1, in this Market bulk fall and
spring, and no one not even Bergh, to
cry shame. In the stomachs of these
cedar loirdA I found nothing but cedar
and juniper berries—the peculiar swell
of the latter was very parceptilile in the
shoinachs or two."
We say then, don't kill the cherry
Li rd. The canker %Torn% may Iry 1111011
you holore you Itito‘v it, and von will
need all the cherry birs, and all the
other small birds you can have to help
lilt alter them and I:ocii them in
cheek.
Turnips Among Corn
It Is frequently the cast. that In pass
ing through corn fields in autumn, we
lied the space between the rows i:ccti
pied \vitli sturdy weeds; sometimes the
spurious vegetal ion cute pletely overtop,
themaife, and "casts it into the shade."
Now, I would inquire, is it not much
Letter and more prudent, in every sense
the Nvord, for the farmer to occupy the
soil itioniipolized by the exhausting
n•oedswithsnuu•cropthat \ill' contribute
toluis resources, than to have it titled
with such productions, and ‘vlii,.ll will
not only "sap the land " most •.crelch
tedly, but foul it by the disseinimition of
their minute and multitudinous seeds?
I'.ertainly no farmer can do u bt the af
firmative. By sowing the Purple Top
turnip slit :it ilu• last dressing of the
corn crop, and '• smiling" it ill, orsmv
lug just liefore a rain and allowing that
to cover it, Ile call hnt•ea bush
els of good turnips per acre, if the soil
he rich :mil well cultivated, instead of a
host of worthless and pestilent weeds,--
Geri/urn/own 7l 1. grvrlrh.
Kindness to Horses
We sometimes see men having the
care o f and driving a team of horses o r
mules, whipping, the poor animals be
cause they do not understand their
wishes. Many a time the leader horse
or mule is utonereifully beaten for no
other reason than that the driver's order
is not understood. If thedriver, in such
a case, should speak gently to the lead
er, pat it a few times on the neck to re
assure it of his friendship, take hold of
the bridle and lead it as few steps in the
direction he wishes to go, and all this
without ally excitement or anger On his
part, the leader will always do its best
to please him. In driving a horse to a
carriage, howevergentle and well-train
ed lie may be ; somethinl may happen
to alarm or frighten hint; this is no
fault of his—he cannot help it. All he
needs is a word or two of encourage
ment, gently spoken, to reaSSW . O Low Of
his Master's cave and presence, and then
all is right. There should be no whip
ping done. The driver should recollect
that he gels alarmed or frightened too
smuctimes, and would think hard of
being whipped for it.
EMI=
CONCORD, N. IL, June 14.—Senator
Cra
gin was to-day re-elected to the United
Staten Senate.
PROVIDENCE, R. 1., Juno 14-11.14 An
thony wan to-day re-olocLed United Slates
Senator for six yeatx, commencing March
/loot.
'Loral intelligence.
CENSUS APPOINTMENTS.—GeneraI E. M.
Gregory, United States Marshal for the
Eastern District of Pennsylvania, has ap
pointed the following Assistant Marshals
to take the Census in this county:
Ist District—lst, sth and 9th Wards, city:
David Hartman.
2nd District-2nd and 6th Wards, city:
Henry F. Swentzel.
3rd District-3rd and 7th Wards, city:
John H. Barnes.
4th District-4th and Bth Wards, city:
Jacob L. Hoffmoier.
sth District—Lancaster and East Lampe
ter twps.: John Johns.
6th District—West Lampeter twp.: J. D.
Shiffner.
7th District—Paradise: G. D. Slaymaker.
Bth District—Strasburg twp. and lyor. :
S. D. Skeen.
9th District Salisbury and Lcaeock
twps.: Joseph Umble.
16th District—Bart and Sadsbury twps..
John M. Rutter.
11th District—Eden and Colerain twps.
J. 11. Gilbert.
12th Distriet.—Drumore twp.: N. 11.1 len
se'
1:Ith District—Little Britain and Fulton
. ps.: Flues Pennock.
14th District—Martie tap.: W. G. Wentz.
15th District—Providence twp. : Albert
Thomas.
Pith District—Peq uca twp.: J. M. Ful toll.
17th District—Conestoga tap.: J. W. 11: r-
'all.
10th District—Manor tw p. and Washing
on bor.: B. F. Bones.
20th District—West Ifernplield top.: Ja
iob Oberlin.
20th District—let and 3101 Wards of Co
umbia: S. A. lioekius.
21st Distriet-2nd Ward of Columbia: 1/.
11. Richards.
22nd District—Marietta bor. and East
Donegal top. : Theodore 11 iestand.
23rd District—Conoy and West Dom gal
top.: G. W. Haekenberger.
2.lth District—Mount Joy top. and Eliz
abethtown ainl Mount Joy lairs.: D. 11.
Bratlv.
25th District —ltapho top. and Manhenn
her : T. 11. Hershey.
211th District—Warwick and Penn tops.:
E. S. Stouter.
'27th District—Elizabeth top.: Eli K.
II triter.
2.oth District -East Ileinplichl top.: 11.
Kern.
2lith District —Manheini top.: J. Hostel-
r.
:10th I)ktrivt Uppor Leacoel: [w p.: II
. NVeitller.
:Lint District -West Earl top.: S. I. Car •
',enter.
32nd District— Ephrata twp. : \V. IL
Spent.
itird District--Clap twp.: .1. W. Dm:liter.
illth District— , \Vest Uocalico twp.: J. P.
llihsh
District-- ]3 Coealico Ad
amstown bor.: Nelson Wolfskill.
311th District- -Itrocknock twp.: It. E.
Laush.
37th District—Earl, including New
Allrithani Suttley.
sid od-I..a.st 1.. rl and d.et oar% on
J. G. Rogers.
LIST OF Jtmons to serve in the Court of
Common Pleas, commencing Nlotalay,
August 2:2, 1070:
Thomas .1. Albright, East Donegal; A.
M. Brown, Fulton; Martin Brubaker,
Elizabeth township ; F. Bucher, Col umbia;
Jacob Busser, Penn; Jeremiah Cooper,
Bart; P. (;. Eberman, city; Samuel Eby,
Elizabethtown; Thomas Edwiirds,C.wriintr
voti; Jacob Gunther, Millersville; Levi W.
(;,“tr, \Vest Earl; Jtlllll-4 Gannber, West
I leniptield ; John t;reybill,jr., Upper Lea
ock ; John Hoffman. East ;
Chas. NI. Howell, city; NV. A. I lasting, city;
Joseph F. Herr, \Vest Lampeter ; John
!less, Conestoga; John NI. Jacoby, Clay;
Joseph Jenkins Fulton; Conrad Elrause,
Millersville; E. 1.. It reider, IVarwiel;; H.
E. Leman, city; If. 11. Landis, Alanheinn
twin.; Joseph Masterson, liapho ; Charles
McCullough, Colorant; B. P. Miller, city;
John Messner, Ephrata; Joseph Niel:lure,
Itntrt ; 11. NI. Falls, Providence; Jacob G.
Peters, Conestoga; henry Pownall, Bart ;
Cornelius Roland, New llolland ; Harvey
Fulton: Philip Shreiner, Columbia;
Jacob Swarr, Itapho; Delis Senn, city;
Richard Winters, Ephrata; Jac. It. Town
send, Sadsbury.
List of jurors inn serve in the Court of
Common Pleas, commencing Nloinday,
.\ ogust 29th, Is7th
Ilenry Arndt, Alainheinn borough ; John
Ilarr, Marietta; J. It. 'Miter, city; Elias
Manz, \Varwick; George Bentz, Eliza
bethtown; .1. It. Louver. Mount Joy bor.;
Dr..l. M. Dunlap, Nlanheint borough ; N.
Ellin:ll,er, Salisbury; It. F. Hox, pity ; Pe
ter reybill, East Donegal ; .1. 11. (lilbert,
Eden ; W. N. (lalbr:tith, Colorain ; Benja
min (lantlad, Nlatim ; Charles G. Hager,
, .
city; llobert Moog, Colerain; Joseph
I loan, Salisbury; I len ry eneagy, Stras-- I
burg; Sollinger, Fulton; Thomas
Labezins, I%lartic • .E. Iteattis
totvii; 1;eorgo IL Miller; ; !
Bar:Mara yfanu, Mauer, 17. W. :%lelialley,
Alarietta; James :\lcSparren, Fulton ; S.
W. Colts, Lancaster tAvp. ; .1..1in
.1110 bor.; hoary Shainlor, Ml. Joy
bur.; Scott, Fultuu ; I lenry S11:11111,
1;111;11i/re ; .John Slyer, New I ;
Henry 5111,411', city; .1. Smith,
; John Stelvar, East 1 leniptield ;
lienj. Suavely, rite; Isaac \Valk.er, Sails-
Miry: 11. A. Wade, Elizabethtown; Anuis
NV:1111.1, ; Dr. Weitlier,
; ; Adam Null,
city.
List of jurors to servo in All
Court or tluarter Sessions, eon:wench:gm:
Monday, September 1070:
Sinion Albright, It.S. Ilru
baker, Nets I 1011:411.1; “corge 1.. Bo y le,
City ; John C. !taker, West Covalico ;
Ilarncs, Druntore; .1. 11re:incr. lil
- Isaac lite:hong, Upper ;
Inure Commit, Ephrata; John A. Clarl:,
I:immure; NVilliani Case, Columbia;
James F. D o wney, Pity; John M. Diekin
son, S:dislinry ; :Martin Denlinger, West.
I.3111poler; Ilu“rgo. Diller, Salisbury; 11.
Eeliternach, :\..latostown ; ;101111: Evan.,
Carnarvon ; .f. Fiddler, :\ arietta ; It. lb
Flickinger, West Cocalico; II corge 'l'.
I Crider, Luiz; Edwin I:arrett, christiana ;
Martin CI rube, Christiana; Augustus
CmIlly; Laillpeler;
711110. I I allacher, \Varwiek ; ‘Vendell 11111,
.Ne 11: 1 lolland ; Samuel Hippie, Jr., Mari
etta; .John ; David
Kurtz, Salisbury; E. Kauffman, .Manheini;
.larob ; Abrithain
l'enn ; J. Nl..:%layer, Nlanlienti twp.;
.la4.NlcKeima,eity; Isaiah Lea
cool: ; John 'l', Metionigle, twp.;
Javol.:Macl:ey,COlll,V; Joseph Miller, .May
town ; It. 11. Miller,llruniore; Jacob ltutt,
\Vest Donegal ; llrisben Skiles, Salisbury;
Conrad Swartz, Columbia; John 711 Hier,
Marietta; John Shields, Marietta; J. 1 lart
man Shertz, l'ardclise; Henry I'. 'Fawn
send, Little Britain ; 1,4a140. Vogan, Earl ;
D.Lvid Weidler, \Vest' I lemplield ;
Young, Manor; Christian Zeclier, city.
THE TAKIN. Or' rlll-: CENSCS.—We pub
lish elsewhere the list of persons appointed
to take the census in Lancaster
They will begin the work at once. We
have published heretofore a full detail of
the matters into which an examination will
leade by them. They will want to know
all 011.1111 your ago, profession, place or
birth, number of children, date of marriage,
:old other things, in view of which it may
I.ceome necessary to overhaul the family
'Mile, and when found make note on; for,
however unpleasant it may be for retiring
persons to Menthe their family affairs
the ear Of an official who calmly notes them
and their habit: iu that comprehensive
schedule, it is a matter of national im
portance that tilt once all should be com
municative to strangers. It is a delicate
task for the census-takers, and it can be
made very unpleasant fur them as well as
11.1. those Whose statistics are taken; but a
line of thirty dollars impends over any
obstinately uncommunicative individual,
and it thus behooves one and all not to in
dulge In too great reticence. 'the Assistant
Miirshals, too, are sworn to keep intact all
the secrets which their duty compels them
Worel Ilia of bothered households, and
neither the tax-collector, to whom one may
possibly have represented his property 144
0111111' less than its value, nor the gossips,
l'rom whom one may have concealed his
age or his parentage, can legally share the
confidence giVell the census-taker.
DECISIoN RELATIVE TO STAMPS ON
I'll E v •g S.—Commissioner Delano Las given
the tuhlo leg instruetions to the United
States Stamp agents ooneerning bank
checks : . .
It was ruled by my predecessor in this
office, June 22, 1507, that a check drawn
by an individual upon himself, or drawn
upon a bank by its cashier in his official
capacity, and in the discharge of his official
duties, is in its legal effect "written or
printed evidence elan amount of money to
paid upon demand or at a time desig
nated," and should be stamped at the rate
of a promissory note—live cents for cacti
trine, air fractional part thereof (Int. Rey.
Record, vol. V., p. 106, Series 5, No. 10, p.
15r, and you have heretofore been directed
not to imprint a two-cent startup upon in
struments of this character.
You are instructed hereafter to treat such
checks, except when designed to be used
for circulation, like checks drawn by one
party upon another, except when designed
to be Sc) used, a two-cent stamp only is to
he required upon each one when drawn for
any sum whatsoever at sight or on demand
imon a bank, toucher, or trust company.
A like stamp is to be required upon each
for a sum exceeding $lO, when drawn at
sight or on demand, upon any other person
or persons, companies or corporations than
those above named. When such checks,
drafts, rlze., aro drawn otherwise than at
sight cr on demand, they are liable to tax
at the saute rate as promissory notes, live
cents tar each hundred dollars, or fractional
part thereof. Inasmuch as the amount of
tax varies upon time drafts, stamps cannot
he imprinted upon them, but the tax must
be paid by adhesive stamps.
11 EA Wl' IL nom it, for this week (dated
ilium :25th) contains the first of a series of
sketches entitled Jethro Tl u •oup's Fight
Thoughts, by John Thomas, who is no
other than Petroleum V. Nasby. The great
humorist will take an honest country boy
to the city, conduct hint through the usual
experience, and restore him to his home a
sadder and wiser boy, satisfied that the
peaceful, honest, and temperate life of the
limner is the best and safest life that can be
lived.
ItHwinu.—Lovi Barnett, of Oak Shade,
Lancaster county, offers a reward or V.O for
the recovery of a bay mare, which strayed
away or was stolen from his premises, on
the oth inst.
fEliscellantous
Radical Nominations In Philadelphia
Negro Delegates to the Conventlow,
Horrible Ron., and Most Dbisrareful
Scenes.
The Radical Nominating Conventions
which assembled in Philadelphia last week,
were mottled assemblages. Negroes made
their appearance bearing certificates of elec
tion, and they could not be refused admit
tance. The different conventions were the
scenes of indescribable confusion, and
fights and rows, inside and outside, were
the order of the day.
The Telegraph and Bulletin, both Repub
lican newspapers, give substantially the
same account of the proceedings, and we
aro sure that no decent Republican can read
the reports without feeling ashamed of his
party. 'Phe contest for Sheriff was very
bitter, and the following is the account
which Republican papers give of the pro
ceedings of that Convention:
The chiefest political centre of the day
was at National IlalL Hero it was that the
Convention to nominate a Sheriff was held.
The fierce fight for this high office promis
ed at this assemblage scenes of extraordi
nary excitement. It was known that the
Walton delegates were inimical to the
League party, and the latter just as
determinedly opposed to the former.
In the event of there being no show
of success to either of these prominent
candidates, it was confidently asserted tliat
the forces would join hands and 'yokes in
favor of lfinghain or Massey. ' At ten
o'clock the great crowd of delegates, with
a slight mixture of the colored element,
entered.
In a twinkling, John Lane (the Walton
party representative) jumped upon the
stage, and was directly nominated t'or tem
porary chairman. The nomination was
• ratified by a portion of the delegates. Mr.
Lane hurl not tapped the desk 'more than
twice with a gavel which he drew from his
pocket, when Wm. Elliott, a representative
of the Leeds party, was declared the tem
porary chairman, and he jumped Upon the
stage, followed by 11. 11. K. Elliott, who
seas pressed for the chairmanship by the
Berry delegates.
A scene of great excitement followed. A
struggle for the gavel was hotly waged. It
was snatched from Lane's hands Ity the
Berryites, and in a moment it was forcibly
transferred to the keeping of Elliott, the
1 1 Leeds' party man. .1 hundred delegates
crowded upon the stage, and a scene of
wildest confusion directly ensued. The
desk was overturned, and the stage chan
deliers were wrenched from their places.
No soon. r had the desk been replaced
and Mr. Elliott mounted it to declare the
names of the Secretaries, than L a ne rush
ed upon him, snatiming for the mallet. In
the contention which billowed, Elliott and
Lune and a dozen of delegates who were
hotly pressing, them on either side, were
thrown from the stage upon the tloor—a
disc nee of nix feet. Elliott, with remark
able alacrity, regained the stage, but to find
the back of his coat ripped to the cellar.
Stripping himself of the garment, he again
stepped upon the desk, and, in a momen
tary calm, announced Ire. Crowell and
Isaac Mcßride as the timporary Secretaries
and thus spoke:
"I desire to say that if it is the desire of
the Convention, that. 1 shall not preside as
the temporary organizer, I will withdraw.
I tell you that it is fur the interest or the
Reputdiean parts - the,' ,eenes of disorder
should cease. Those who want we for
temporary organizer say 'Aye.'''
A roar in the affirmative Was followed by
mt equally 1011.1 roar ilk the negative, :mild
the tight was again resumed, during which
the reporters' desks were overturned, and
the knights of the quill themselves - forced,
for safety's sake, into the stage-boxv,—
During the ate/cc Lane's hat was smashed,
and that gentleman Was seized by the arms
and legs, and dragged to the edgy Ill' the
stage, the intention indubitably being to
force Min °IL Ilappilv his progress oft the
platform was stoppeklLy one of the chan
deliers, Which huh been rtMlaced. lie
struggled out of the hands of Iris captors,
and, jumping upon a bench, oriel /JUL—
"As temporary Chairman of this Conven
tion, I nominate John W. Sayres and John
'lliontpsiin fur Secretaries, and I want to
Cries id" Put hint "Throw him tathe
stage, " Ac., and air uproarious boo-hoeing
drowned, to the reporters' ears, whatever
else he said. The Leeds party Men then
cleared the stage, forcing alt Lane and his
adherent,: in a twinkling. Thus the former
proved triumphant, and Chairman William
Elliott waved the baton of power with an
unchallenged—though not an undisputed
—right.
Ile then announced that he would Call
the precinitts of the several Wards in nu
merical order, in order that the delegates
might regularly present their .tretlentials.
In consequent, of the great confusion in
Lho 1,:111,:md the lar g o ,rttnib, pers.ms
in it not entitled to the privilege of the
fluor, it aura Blind impractieatile i 111,1,1•1,11
Until till. , halt !lad 1)1,1111,... , 1. The nni
persons then achnitteti were persona
the relitliAile alithority of u.vrlcnti:rl.
unlit h a ll'-post twelve o'elock the time
Was c•1/11:4111111,1 in the prernellt:lii , llll4 1.1-e
-doilliak, among which were six colored
delegates. Thu right of Jacob Purnell
WI/10M') In a seat from the Eighth divisim
of the famous Fourth Ward was denied.--
Nevertheless lie presented his eredentials
The thail•nian then aittinUneed I hat thi
roll wouffi be Called, and eatth delegatt
whose seat was Plllt utrrile , trd would ap ,
preach the se, retat•y's desk and reettivi
tickets adlins,i. , ki to the hail. As to th.
11 , 11211atl•S Ile WOlllll not adllli
thorn alter the re.•es , , sour 11l he had, IMO
tlur I:alaaditla . 011 1 . 1,• , 1,11rIalS had 111,111(4
W111,1111•1' hurl a right to the lloor 1,1
111 a. _ .
'Po this the defeated candidate for tine
elmirmanship, in the intcrc,t of the
delegate , , 11. If. I:. Elliott, interp,,ed a
strong objection. All the dolegatcs ho
said, woret,inal upon oth
10/I'lle limit I,
until the t ' eleillittel! on Ctollh , h ., l Sear ,
rendered it, rcport, and the chairman had
no right to discritninaie against any cf,•l c
g,ate, w host s..at was contested or not.
A nuunher ut dc•lcga.tes,
Vittli . lll 11101'3'6011S It, the
Chairman's plain, declaring that lie wanted
L. beat thew out ,Jithe l'onvention.
'l'ho Chairman's plan way ratified I
majority of doleoutos and the tiolcids tcurr
then (listrilmled:
As James 11. the first t.“hlred
delegate to reeeivea ticket, stepped out, Irt
N1:1-`i greeted kith
Alter the tickets had lwett ,Zices tin`
11,0 k. n rect,:i.
The Second fonwro.•lonol Phttrirt---fte
noothottion or Hot.. Charlen fr!leill
--Split in the (20.1•1•11tiOn•-•-.10 1 / 1 1
V. l'reeley Amohotted.
The eenvehtion or delegate,: for the imm
ination or a emendate llor the 01,111 t Ctl
g:essiolial District, a..scinhh•.l at 11l o'clock
this morning in the Assembly Buildings.
A temporary Organization wa,iellected to
the election of Willi:WlS. Stokley jr Pres
ident, and William King Secretary. The:
oommathom mot With Ileteelltilled opposi
tion, the opposite party desiring Edward
Cobb for President. The etliver,, however,
proveeded to receive the credentials of the
various delegates, but this was interrupted
by a rush made for the Secretary's table.
1)110 WWI grabbed nut the pile of certificate , ,
and a great confusion ensued, the plattluall
being ctowded with men. None of the cer
tificates were lost, however. The oppesi
tion to Mr. Stokley still continued, and
the proceedings were brought to a stand
still, the adherents of I\lr. Pohl, declined
to proceed with Mr. Stokley as President.
Tine interruption in the proceedings con
tinued up to within of few in Of one
o'clock. Mr. Stokley, in the meantime,
with a view to harmonize matters, propos
ed that Mr. l'obb and 11411 Sell vacate the
positions as president in favor of llcorge
Tolima, Esq. 'Phis was refused. At one
o'clock both presidents proceeded to elect
two organizations. 'rite organization of
which r. Stokley was president proceeded
to nominate immediately, amid the great
est confusion. 'rho credentials of the dele
gates were handed in in one earner of the
taunt, and the Secretary, Mn, King. an
nounced the result of the Vote to imp us fol
lows:
lion. Charles
John PH,
' John V. Greeley
l‘dr,. O'Neil was thereupon declared the
nominee, and the O'Neil party left the
hall.
It=
The anti-O'Neill party remained, how
ever, and effected a temporary organiza
tion by selecting Edward IS, Cobb as Pres
ident, and Win. M (Min Smith as Secretary.
Mr. Cobb announced that the regular
order of business was to be proceeded with.
A permanent organization was on motion
made, as follows:
President—Edward B. Cobb.
Vico Presidents.—Wm. Mifflin Smith and
Charles A. Thomas.
Secretaries—W. C. Whiteman, and I.
Ridgway Moore.
Committee on CredollolllS—'Thos. lallr,
John MeClinteek, J. Ridgway Moore, Wm.
I lodges, John Pole and S. Collins.
Dorkeepers—John Campbell and
Mellwame.
'line credentials of the delegates were linen
presented, mid after a favorable report by
the committee, the following gentlemen
Wore then placed Cal nomination : Charles
O'Neill, John Price Wetherill, John V.
Creeley, and Cornclins Walborn. Tellers
were appointed and the balloting con,-
enced.
The result of the first ballot announced
was—
free le,
•ther II
Liburn
It was found that the names of several of
the delegates had not been called. The cor
rection was made and the second ballot re
sulted es follows :
Creeley .
111
Wetherell 12
O'Neill
Total 49
On motion, the nomination was declared
unaximous.
The president then appointed a commit
tee of three to wait upon Mr. Creeley and
inform hint of his nomination. The con
vention then adjourned.
•
The Creeley party were orderly in their
proceedings, and they claim that as they
proceeded according to the code of rules
governing the Republican party, that their
nomination is legitimate and regular.
What the Republican Marniug Papers
Say.
The Pros gives a full account of the dis
graceful scenes in its local columns, and
concludes its editorial remarks as follows:
That the day has been a most inauspicious
one for the Republican party—that it was
characterized largely by the rowdyism and
lawlessness heretofore generally confined
to the Democratic conventions, and as such
that it evinced a retrograde in the morale
and standing of our organization, we do not
wish to deny nor hesitate to aver.
The Morning Post is very outspoken in
its editorial comment. It assails different
nominees. Some extracts will show its
temper
Register of Wills.
We refer particularly to the nomination
of William M. Bunn as Register of Wills.
This audacious politician has forced himself
upon a party which long ago abjured him,
and has robbed it of its rights. The Con
vention at Washington Hall was a mob of
men who were not delegates, who were
merely roughs and political outlaws, who
kept many legally elected delegates from
the room, and put Mr. Bonn's name on the
ticket by the power of the pistol and the
billy. That only five men were shot in the
attempt to nominate Mr. Bunn is astonish
ing when we consider the character of his
supporters ; the wonder is that we had not
another Roumania massacre. Nothing
could have exceeded the infamy and bold
ness of this convention. Its action is, of
course, not to be regarded. Mr. Bunn is
not a Republican candidate. That lie will
not be elected it would be absurd to say ;
but he does not deserve even to be bought
off.
The Legislative Candidate
The legislative candidates aro such as
might be expected from the manner in
which the delegate elections were conducted
The Post accepts the majority with a very
wry face, but singles out two reprobates as
utterly unworthy to be trusted.
Fatty Smith
The Post pitches into that notorious
rooster, 'Fatty Smith" in the following de
cidedly vigorous style:
It is too much, from the well-known
record of William F. Smith, to expect that
gentleman to reform his own wave or im
prove those of his predecessor, and if he
should be elected we look for a repetition,
in an intensified form, of the notorious ac
tions of Mr. Hong, whom public sentiment
forced to retire ignominiously from the
contest. Mr. Smith was regarded as the
warn: friend and backer of Hong all
through the legislative career of that gen
tleman, and Smith is held to be the partic
ular representative of the chagrined Bong.
'rho district will thus have a dual repre
sentative, Hong being the silent and advi
sory member of the limn. We very MM."'
mistake the sentiment of the people of
the Sixteenth district if Smith be an accept
able candidate, and are free to say that the
public interests will be better served, and
the honor of the Republican party more
assuredly preserved by his defeat than by
his election.
I=2
Charles Kleckner has been renominated,
and he is another beautiful specimen of
"all the honesty and all the decency of the
Republican party of Philadelphia." Ile
was marked as a "pincher" when he served
in the Legislature of 1569, and was de
nounced as such by prominent Republican
members on the floor of the Ilouse. The
Post draws his picturo in the following
and graphic , style:
Mr. Kleckner, of the Sixth District, is
also an exceedingly unhappy nomination.
Ile was a member of the Legislature dur
ing the session of ISUS and 1669, and the
reputation he achieved while holding a seat
in that body should have been sufficient to
exclude him forever from being trusted in
any' public position, and particularly front
being returned to a representative body
where he will have so many opportunities
to repeat his disgraceful practices and dis
honest tricks. Mr. Kleckner has not a sin
gle qualification for the place. Ile is a man
without education, destitute of even ordin
ary intelligence. and a stranger to those
virtues with which most men, to some de
gree, are emlo wed. His nomination is an
insult to common honesty and the intelli
gence of the Republican party, and no man
who has any regard for public morals and
official honesty can conscientiously vote
for him. The simple fact that be was one
of the original Rooster gang should of itself
lie sufficient to defeat him.
A Democratic Vie' of the Situation.
The Ago gives a full and very graphic ac
count of the terrible scenes of disorder
which occurred in the various conventions.
The details arc calculated to disgust all de
cent men. It lots the following editorial
amt ments :
The scenes of riot, drunkenness and ruf
fianism which marked the election of dele
gates to the different nominating Conven
tions of the :Radical party, were repeated
yesterday in many of these bodies, height
coed by the debauch of the intervening
night. Each candidate had his gang of
hired bullies and:desperadoes, armed, des
perate and excitable. No latitude of opin
ion was ul lowed. Words were followed by
blows, and the pistol, knife and black jack
substituted for facts, reason arid argument.
White inert contended with negroes;, and
negroes tilled to the lips with bad whiskey
stalked through the Conventions and
insulted, elbowed and jostled white
men in the must insulting inanner. There
was no decorum, no dove:ivy of behavior,
no regard for law, order or propriety in
many of the Conventions. Men shouted
1 and fought and blasphemed in the rust
1 sickening and disgusting manner. The
leaders in this wild tumult of greed and
passion looked only at the prize ahead,
and cared not by what steps the goal was
reached, While their tools:Li:angelus, select
! cd front the lowest class of our population,
I drained the drunkard's glass, counted their
pay, and trampled alike upon rights of
! person and rights of property at theft nias
tees' bidding. As the Most money is at
! stake in the nomination for:Meriti, of course
the rudest Hilt took place in that body.—
'I Here Lire Leeds and Walton chtuupious
crossed swords, and the contest. Was nurcely
waged. Two mien claiming to be Chair
! men of the Convention, mounted ft:est:and
at the same lime. Then commenced a re
gular battle. Itlows were given and re
ceived, clothing torn, tables and chairs
upset, gas fixtures demolished, hats mash
ed, pocket-books stolen, and all this to On
accompaniment of oaths, curses and yells
fearful to hear in a Christian land. After
the combatants exhausted the surplus
steam, something like order was estab
lished, and the Cody proceeded wilt the
three of making general thiminations in the
tante of the respectable portion of the
Radical party. A similar scene, though
not quito so disgusting in its surrounding,
occurred in the Judicial Convention. There
three men claimed the office of President,
and noise, confusion and wrangling ensued.
Appeals fur order were greeted with bursts
of derisive laughter, and the friends of the
different aspirants fir judicial positions
menaced each other, and prepared for per
sonal violence it sue,ss could be reached
by no other road. There was also a tine
exhibition of Donnybrook lair tactics in
the iSeeiind Congressional District Con
vention. Several ruts n ix were fought,
some, claret drawn, a few potato traps
damaged, and the pugs separated, each to
their own cribs. This is by no Means an
exaggerated picture of the field of battle as
it appeared in the Radical Conventions
yesterday. Plunder, robbery and associa
tion with degraded negroes scents to have
obliterated all traces of decency front the
, "111,e-sock ens of the Radical party and their
followers and hangers on. They care not
by what means all end is gained. They
bribe, bully, cajole, cheat, use any and all
: methods of bending the delegates to
I their interested purposes. Now, what aro
nominations worth made in such dens
of erifue and profligacy ? They are not the
will of the people, announcea in a just,
proper and decorous manner, nor will they
lc , so accepted. Ruffians, rowdies and po
i Ural gain blurs and adventurers may make
nominations, but respectable people will
not endorse them at the polls.
What nn Independent Newxpnper SI
TllO Pia , / r. Swayno's paper,
. .
'Yesterday tine city the seen(' of n
dozen more Cr exviting affrays in the
various politieal conventions hell for the
nottnituftion county and
city vandidates. Fists, pistols, knives,
-tubs, stones, brickbats, blackguardisin,
caterwauling. and other. uch "persurfsives
fvere brought into requisition by tine
friends of those patriots who %very specially
:tinNiotis to s, rve their ,•ountr . f:, and fel.,
would not be denied, It teas a "spirited
d:. - ;" the spirit of the occasion was NOON
hr.y, and "the spirit nnoved. -
\Ve commend the whole of this ehapter
to the careful perusal of Itepublicans in the
rural districts. It may open the eyes of
some of those who have heretofore regard
ed the Reim bliean org.nnization as a "God
:null Morality party.”
A gitesi lon by the Governor
Whit, lh•esidrut (:rant, wont a junketing
among the mountains of Pennsylvania, our
Wa s also taking a little
In company with Dr. Wilmer Worthington,
and Colonel NUFarland, the late Superin
tendent oftrphan Schools, his Excellency
has been visiting the Soldiers' (11.1)11,111
Schools and other charities in the Western
part of the State. We do not stop here to
make the pertinent inquiry in regard to
M'Farland still holding the position of
Superintendent of the Soldiers' orphan
School, notwithstanding his rejection by
the Senate, and the fact that his term of
office expired a month ago. We wish to
answer a question of the (b)vornor. At
Uniontown he spoke eloquently ,:us he
always does) of the sacrifices of the war.
In the course of his remarks he asked the
tollowing questions: " Who would take a
thousand dollars for his hand? What sum
would be accepted as the price of a leg?
Ask hint who has lost one. And vet
thousands did. More; they gave their lives.
What will a man not give in exchange for
his life?"
The Governor has answered these queries
himself. When he signed that remarkable
measure limiting the damages to be recov
ered front railroad corporations for the loss
of life and limb, known as the "Calamity
Act," he fixed the exact sum. For the loss
of an arm or leg Governor Geary ascertain
ed the precise amount to be three thousand
dollars. Ile signed the act prohibiting ju
ries front assessing the damages at a greater
sum titan three thousand dollars for the
mangled, quivering limbs of a fellow citi
zen. lio answered the question further by
fixing the amount of damages for the
destruction of a human life at jive thousand
dollars. Does he ask now the price of an
ants or leg? Let hint examine the infamous
Calamity Act signed by his own hand
and find the ready answer. Yet this is the
smirking enampion of the people in the
new war against corporations!—lfurrisbarg
Patriot.
The Democratic county convention of
Bedford, instructed its Congressional
conferees for Hon. B. F. Meyers, pro
prietor of the Harrisbug patriot.
Torpedoes Put to Good service.
The Philadelphia and Reading Railroad
Company use on an average thirty-five
thousand torpedoes annually on their nu
merous roads. These explosives are called
"fog signals" and are used in heavy weather,
when the signal lights on the towers can
not be seen from the engine. They are in
tended to prevent accidents and have done
very good service in that respect since their
introduction. To make them thoroughly
effective three are placed on the tracks short
distance apart, so that if one should fail to
makes report two would remain to perform
that service. The explosion of a torpedo
under the wheels of the engine is a warning
of impending danger, and the engineer al
ways stops the train in obedience to it.
CLOTHING
J UNE, 1870
EVERY ADVANTAGE
IN PURCHASING
EINE READY MADE CLAMING,
Can bo secured in the!
HIGHEST DEGREE,
THIS MONTH,
0 W S
; & BnowNs
OAK HALL
CLOTHING BAZAAR
(Yrrt AND MARKET sTREETs
PLAIN, COMFORTABLI•; cLoTifEs;c
For J&•n of Plain Thstes
STYLIi4a I, ELABORATE GARM"I'S
For the Fashionabl Inclined
STOLTT, WEAR-WELL SUITS
For Every- I)a' Sri-rice
GENTEEL. (;0(1);4,
For Sunday Suits and Dress Or
=MA
BOYS' CLOMING
(lEN'C'S FURNISHING GOODS,
OAK HALL,
SIXTH 47 MARKET STREETS, I'IIIIAI).
m:b- Dud
WANAMIKER & BROWN.
LEGAL NOTICES
L , XECUTOWS NOTICE.--ESTATE OF
Jj
Samuel riwelgart, lute of East Cocalleo t w 1 1.•
deceased, Le(tters Testamentary on said estate
having been granted to the undersigned, all
persons Indebted thereto, aro requested to
make immedlatu .ttlement, and those baling
claims or demands against I lie Sallie, will pre
sent them without delay For settlement, to the
undersigned, residing 111.1(1 township.
Al/AM (HULL,
Jels-11tw1,21 Executor.
USTATE OF WIECIAM BROWN. LATE
FA of Eden township. deceased. Letters of
Adminstration on said estate having Iron
granted to the undersigned, all persouslnd,•ht
ed
tiloreto are requested to matte Immediate
payment, and those having claims or demands
against the cattle Will present them Mr settle
ment to the undersigned, Administrators.
JOHN S BROWN
Residing In Drumore township,
WILLIAM J. BROWN,
West Fallowlleld twit., Chester vounty.
Jels-6tw•.24
VSTATE OF JOHN GTGER, LATE OF
114 East Limpet, lowmhip, deceased.—Let
ters of Administration on said estate having
been grunted to the undersigned, all persons
indebted thereto are requested to make pay
ment, and those having claims or demands
against the same will present them for star le
nient to the undersigned, residing In said
township.
ELIZABETH G. ESIILF:MAN,
in2.l-6tw9l Administratrix.
A SSIGNED ESTATE OF FIENRY F.
.1 - 1 Lied and Wife, of East Coe:Oleo township,
Lancaster county.—}[eery F. Leid and Wife,
of Enst Cocalieo township, having by deed iil
voluntary assignment, assigned and transfer
red all [heir estate and elli.ets to the under
signed,! or the benefit of the creditors of the
said Henry P. Loh! and Wife, he therefore glees
notice to nll persons indebted to said ai,-Ignor,
to make payment to the undersigned without
delay, and those having claims to preset t
them to
HENRY lIALLI , .II, Assll;nrr,
jes-rA AiiillnMtOlVl., Lancaster co
12vITIIE COURT OF.00:11 MON PLEAS OF
LANCASTER CO ENT Y.
Franni,Anna Brink,l
By her I irzt April ,„ 7.
..Tabu K. Eberlein e ' , '
N.
Stli)1..1111. lu Divorr,
Thormis R. Brink. I
To THOMAS R. Bill:NI:, the above named re
spondent
lon are hereby untitled that by virtno or a
Commission, Issued out of the Court of Com
mon Pleas of Lancaster tmulity, and to me di
rected, tile testimony on the part of the pet
Dotter In the above case will he taken by me
on SATURDAY, JUIY Unit, 1571, between the
hours of 1 and 10 o'elock, It., at the °Mee of
11. NI. North, Esq., 11l the Borough of Columbia,
when and where you can attend If you ore pro
per. E. It. N,IIITII,
Commissioner.
aw 2-1
FARM IMPLEmEsTs.
U NION AGIMICULTCIIIAL WORKS,
COIL. LEMON AND RATER STREETS,
(On Penn'a It. R.,)
LANCASTER CITY, I'ENN'A.
The undersigned announces that he Is now
manufacturing the
LATEST I NIPHUVED
GRAIN DRILLS,
with:md. without Guano attachment. Also,
PR ATI" S
LATEST IMPROVED JIORSE RAKES,
wlthWroughtlron Spindles and Woolen Hubs.
Also, Rockaway Fans, and Cider Mills for Lorna
or hand power, and warranted to grind 0
bushel ol.apples per minute by t e rse power.
CORN SHELLERS, Ac.
.63. All Machines manufactured at thle es
rablishment are Warranted to give sat Islae
tion, and are made front the best material, and
In workman-litre manner.
SAMUEL KEELER,
n12.3-31n2mvdTS.Ew Proprietor.
- -
BONDS.
U
BONDS
Bou., so. AND EXCHANGED UN
MOST LIBERAL TERMS.
GOLD BOUGHT AND SOLD
It Markel
COUPONS CA SiIED.
Pacific R. R. Bonds Bonalli lF Sold.
Forocli, hold on Comm!,
ftion only.
Arrountm rerrlvo.l And Intrrost allowed
dully halmie.-.,nmulnJecl
n.tvEN 0110.,
In Sonlli Id Street. Phlladelplin,
tel 22 10.10
I'L U.ll It I_V , ,t(
1 , ..1V ER a: PENNOCI:
P IX MBIN(
GAS AN 1) STEAM FITTINI
11Y1,TC.1.1"1.1C Lt.\ I.vATE[c
WIND MILLS AND PUNIPS
I'l'T IT IN A KI:IISTANTIAI, MANN :I
OIL CLOTHS, ,C.C.
ittmrs F. Hope. U. C.'.
MIMM
Trio . mns rorrnet. MON h.
MANUr•riIftERS of
OIL CLOTHS AND WINDOIT SHADES,
Flour OIL CLOTHS; Enamelled Mnollas,Drills,
and Dueks, Table OIL CLOTHS; Mahogany,
Rosewood, Oak and Marble OIL CUM'S; Stair
Oil Cloths and Carriage Cin - pet,
Plain SHADES and Shadlng, Plain and
Fancy GILT SHADES and Cords, Tassels and
FIXTURES of all kinds.
t=2MIMWIn
WATCHES AND JEWELRI
T no.nAm w. DAILY
IMPORTER OF WATCHES
No. 622 Market Street, Philadelphia,
Would respectfully mil attention to his
new and carefully selected stock of
WATUIMS, JEWELRY, DIAMONDS,
SILVER AND PLATED WARE, Ac.
/13 - Repairing promptly attended to and
neatly done.
A LLISON HUTTON,
ARCHITECT
533 WALNUT ST., PHILADELPHIA, PA
PLANS, DESIGNS, PERSPECTIVE VIEWS,
SPECIFICATIONS AND WORK
ING DRAWINGS.
- -
For Cottages, Farm Houses, Villas, Court
Rouses, Hulls, Churches. School Houses.
WILF.N CH ROOFS. lyw m 2-9
YYANTED IMMEDIATELY.-100,000
Good Split Hickory Spokes, for which the
hest price will be paid. Address,
PHILIP LEBZELTZER,
No, 100 North Queen ij
WEDNESD
AGRICULTUBAL
PACIFIC GCA_4O CO
CAPITAL, $1,000,000.
JOHN S. REESE & CO.,
GENERAL AGENTS,
OFFICES
122 South Delaware Arenne,
Philadelphia,
10 South street,
Baltimore
SOLUBLE PACIFIC
GUANO.
NO FERTILIZER INTRODUCED TO THE
FARMERS OF THE MIDDLE AND SOUTH
ERN STATES HAS GIVEN MORE GENERAL
AND UNIFORM SATISFACTION THAN THIS
GUANO.
THE TRADE. IN IT 11AS STEADILY IN
CREASEDLINTIL THE CONSUMPTION NOW
THROUGHOUT TILE ENTIRE COUNTRY
FAR EXCEEDS THAT OF ANY OTHER FER
TILIZER.
THE LARGE CAPITAL INVOLVED IN ITS
PRODUCrION AFFORDS THE SUREST
GUARANTEE OF ITS CONTINUED EXCEL
LENCE. THE COMPANY HAS A FAR
GREATER INTEREST IN THE PERMA
NENCEOF ITSTRADETHAN ANY NUMBER
OF CONSUMEILS CAN HAVE; HENCE IT IS
THE HIGHEST INTEREST OF THE COMPA
NY TO PUT THE BEST FERTILIZER INTO
MARKET, UNUSCALFACILL
TIES, AIDED BY THE BEST SCIENTIFIC
ABILITY CAN PRODUCE.
THIS GUANO IS SOLD AT RETAIL IfY
LOCAL AGENTs op THP, UI IMPANY
THROUGHOUTNEWJERSEY, DELAWARE,
PENNSYLVANIA, AND THE sot"rif EEN
sTATEs. AND AT WIIOLE.,,ALE BY
.101 IN S. REESE d; Co.,
Ceneral .12:ent for the Company
B AE 4 0
RAW .fION
SUPER PHOSPHATE OF LIME,
T RADE MARK
().
,
• -
FARMERS !
,1;N, poT.‘D)Es, w I.:.‘T (;1;.%
Add 10 the Fertility of Your Soil
ItN . a Jlltlitatali anti Ilf
GET THE VALUE )1 , I'4 THE
111i.ST SF:.ISI IN.
uISTAIN F 11.1.1.1 1, I'.S .% NI)
IIEAVIER l; ILA IN.
KEEP
WEEDS.
LAND I.EitiANI.:NTLY
liver SIXTEEN ye. ,f MI all
!lint It:ttwlt's
tilay Forincr,
Cu - II ighlll Imp, , , (tad St, )I,?te'd
reinted.
For ;:ale by .I , l,lll,llLind b,lyrs g,ll,•rally
BAUGH S: S N S
(Oi -No. 20 Soul h 101,1,1, _I ~tur
PH lI.ADELPIIIA.
B 0 w F It '
COMPLETE MANCP.E,
Super-Phosphate or Lime, Ammonia and
.1 PERFECT FERTILIZER FOR ALL CROPS
(ht tiecount of the reducetl cost of Ilene Mater
ials, lam enabled to sell Complete Ho
ore." at a hover price, and by the aid of meat
machinery, It Is improved 1111.4altilliell, :11,a iu
quality. ( Ir.trrunled free from adulteration.)
111.1NliN lit INVER,
Manufacturing CheiniNl,
Gray's fern' 'toad, l'hlladelphla.
This Manure contains all the elements 01
plant 6.4.1 ~ofehlebwili.
food for MA . 1...; lasting fertility to Lila ,oil.
Esp.,lone° In the use of " Complete Manlier
by tho best farmers ef Pennsylvania, Nell Jer
sey, Delaware, Alsryhtleb and el . ] he New Eiv4-
1.111 States, running thretigh a pi.ri4,,11)1 I hr,
years trial, has re.illbst vonlireting It 11, be
the but 11,)1(•
1)IX()N, SIIAItPLEss c()
1 , 1:1.AWA.111: EL.\
'WILLIAM lIEYNoLDS,
IIA1.11)1 , q1E, NI I ,
sa-2y W3l i
DRY GOOD.'.
ILT lionn4 AT COLD PRICES!
IL & BROS.,
WEST RING STREET. LANCASTER,
Are now receiving from New York. a r hole,
selection of merehamlise, which they on'or at
prices below anything known. ince Istla.
LADIES' DRESS 1101 /S—new material , .
MOURNING GOODS—lmpin's manufacture.
MEN'S WEAR—new style suitlngs.
BOY'S WEAR—plain, Malik and stripes.
LlNENS—table, sheet tins. and shirting.
WHITE (loODS—Piques, Nainzimks,Cambrles
DOMESTICS—ChIatzes, Ginghains.
CARPETS.
GREAT REDUCTION IN PRICES.
ItRussELS, VENETIAN, COCOA MATE N
INGRAIN, DEMI', CANTON MATTING.
FLOOR OIL CLOTHS.
wiNuow SHADES.
WALL PAPERS, DEO !RATIONS, BORDERS,
110,0 W PIECES,
ENTIRELY NEW DESIGNS.
11711 Th ENGLIsir 11 - . I RE,
PLAIN AND IIECoRATED.
DINNER, TEA AND ctiAmBER sr.rN.
(11-155 11' RE, FE. L Tlf Ens.
REA DY MA DE ('1,01'7115(;,
NEW SPRING STOCK.
MEN'S 11 US I N ESS SPITS,
M EN's DRESS
.SLITS.
111 S. Ow 12
c.vI(IN 11 - (11tliS.
I 31 ro nTANT TO COACII YEA
UNION SPOKE WORKS,
ANI) WATER sTitx!...r4
1t., ,
I,ANc. , +TER CITY. PENN •A.
/I,la
:11141,11 IIII•
\Viirl, nw ru
u r -
, o .aniv i in.:.:
:111
pia, and it iir
niino h.• will wiirran I lin in in
itt:: Al. I.: :tint
d
rirneti,i rind 1111 ink
114,11 in V
till , will iif I /ii• !rode, anti fi•isig
1111111.111 ih givllu, snl
of nil I:lnik :nit! T 111 1 ,11 1 ,1 fiir
part 1, 11.11 me i li .111 nil lirtnil in It,. riiir.k.
'rh' price Inn sI'I.IT
PK ES. NII EL
ED UC. I'l ON., L
Tiir, mut, 7 , , , t ,,,- ;. ( 1 , , , 1 ;t A, 1 31 lIL t 110 ARH
AN ENGLISH, DLASSICA L. NIATHEIATI
U.AL. , CIENTIFIr AN Al:Lis - Hu
I NsTyrt • TD ,N.
FiHt Vol'!NH; :II EN AN I, It,,Ts!
Pott•lnnn, "linnixemery Coonty.T . a.
The First Term of (no ninet , on I nnual
Session will common,. on \V EDN ). Y, t lo•
:ith day of sEPTENII4EIt next. Pupil:. received
at any Woe. F'orl'ireelar, 111411,5,
REC. GEO. F. Ni11.1.1.:11, A.
Prilnopal.
I P,EFERF:NrI , ... s:
:di:letter, Mann. Franth,
Selss, Muldenberg, n bevel - , Ilut ter , Stork,
Conrad, Bomberger, Wylie, St erret, Murphy,
l'rntksba C. V. C.
I logs.—Judge Ludlow Leonard Myers, M. Rus
sel Thayer, Ben 'hr. Bower, Jacob S. Yost,
H jester Clymer, Jrhn K Winger, he,
Estl.s.—Jaines E. Caldwell, C. S. Grove, T. C.
Wood I harvey Baneroft,Theodore G. Boggs
C. F. Norton, L L. ligmph, s. Gross Fry,
M I
ler Herr, Charles \Vanuemaeher, t unes
Kent,
Kent, Siantee & C o . etc,
WIZEIZ2
BOOTS AND SHOES
W ILLIAM MILLER'S
BOOT AND SHOE STORE
WEST KING STREET,
LANCASTER, PA.
Four Doors West of the awn, ft - uter and West
King :greet', and Nearly Oppou.lite the
King of Prussia Hotel. -
.
The subscriber hereby notifies the public tha
ho has always on hand a large assortment of
BOOTS AND SUES,
Oa.ters slat! kinds and sizes, for Alen and Chil
dren, which he will sell at the lowest cash
prices. Having a lung experience in the busi
ness, he hopes to be able to satisfy the wishes.
of his fellow-cltizens who may favor him with
a call.
After four years services In the army he has
returned to civil life and hopes by strict atten
tion to business to merit a share of public pat
ronage.
4ir Customer work of all kinds plomptlyat,
ended to. 4i-tfw
E DI SCHAEFFER,
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL SADDLERY
NOS. 1 AND 2 EAST KING STREET
an:10 ;LANCASTER, PA.] trw
- Y JUNE 22
FOE SALE OR RENT.
LHORT•HORN CATTLE FOIL SALE
HEIFERS AND
From Four Weeks to Two Years Old.
All pure blood, and out of the best imported
stock in the country.
Also, Chestnut Posts and Rails, best quality.
Apply or writ° to
OLIVER CALDWELL,
mlG3mw•ll Agent for G. D. Coleman,
Brickercille, P. 0., Lancaster co., Pa."f
FOR RENT.—THEIROO3I FORIIERLY
occupied by Amos Sourbeer, and more re
cently by Rise Sc Brother, in Safe Harbor, Lan
caster county, is now offered for rent on rea
sonable terms. Possession will be given July
ISt, ISM). For further information apply to
JOSHUA SOURBEER, Executor,
Columbia, Pa., or to
JONAS HARNISH, Executor,
.1°1540 - v24 Safe Harbor P. 0.
- -
PRIVATE SALE.
The large and valuable Mill and Wharf
Property, known as the Packerack Mills, situ
ate on the Schnylkill Canal and West Reading
Railroad, Reading, Pa., are offered at private
sale. The Mill contains a Gi horse-power en
gine and Scat feet boiler, with 5 new burr
stones, and all the most Improved machinery
in tirst-class working order for making nom
for the trade or for customers. The situation
of the mill is In every respect a very favorable
one. The City of Reading, with a population of
almost SA(h) inhabitants, forms a very desir
able market for retail business, while grain cart
be had cheap in the immediate nelg,hborlosal.
Attached to the Mill property is a coal yard
doing an extensive business, both by rail and
water.
Persons inclined to buy property of this kind
are invited to call and view the pretu'ses • a, a
personal inspection will convince any onv of
the tine opportunity here presented. Trrmts
easy. For t urther particulars apply to
BERN HART S KOCH,
Nos. T 2, Nand 26, North Eighth street.
my 18 2mw 20 Reading, l'a.
L AND AGENCY IN NELSON couvry,
. .
The Nelson county Farming, Grape. Mechan
ical and Mercantile (Incorporated; Company
have opened an office on their farm.; miles
northeast of Nelson Court liouse, Where the
President or Clerks of the COlllnany may he
found at all times. They solicit tairreSpiilliltinee
with persons desirous to purchase or rent lands
in Nelson or adjacent counties. Ailtiresa the
President at Nelson Court House, and corre , -
pondents will be promptl attended to, he is a
practical man, with large - experience. is a law
yer of 30 years practice, still nritclit•in Una
Watt a lanai trailer the War. Ile Fs well
acquainted with all the lands in Nelson and
adjoining country, anti will inVealigato the
title to an lauds we may sell. Nets,. county
will coil pare 111,W:114y for original fertility of
soil wills any county ill Virginta, ista•rlittps
the most rolling of any Num!) . east of the 11l tle
Ridge. The valleys and flat lands not surpass
ed try any in the State for farming and plant
ing purposes, and the south, southwest and
Shah, of her 111.1111;1in , and
it is thought, is unsurpassed in any part of the
world for the quantity and ex , ell,llcy of the
forest Grape.
Amd the abundance of pure spring water that
al.untis In every seetlon of the cintitly
tic with lice 111111101 n, water paver that I, l'aa.
tic of driving any amount of in.•lllnery I p Rat
may he tiesirt,l tor the most estrus! ye maim.
factoring companies, and last though not lett , t
we have perhaps the most saluhrhats el lm:ne
In the Wiililti. We liaVe at. least 1110,1.1 acrd ,I
lams 1111 0 1 s and tracts teem one :el ,
tyres, ranging from .92 Fdot per acre. We hal e
tract of hy,Mti uvrt - rt ail land her
sale.
Peritiant arc respeet
finny sir! 1. hell t.i i hs h c “rrp,et.lence
.I.II.I:x.FI es TZPATRICK.
President.
. . . .
.10,1,,t , Nl'lo. .1. Itolwrlsoln,
Slint•lt•N•i'ortl Fultz, V:It•u!1 of I
Ulti% 1•1,11 v of V irgium, 11,l I,ll‘ll
13",
A r,Ex. Frizp.vrturft
J ..,, 1 - I y wf3 Prositionl.
JLtVK/NG HO US ES
EED, 'feI:DANN at CO.
BANKERS
Execute orders prompt I> - ter the purl,,, , ntel
:tale of tiltverttnient, State :mil Ittttilrethl 'tenth.
:tAhl t-tteek . , ery Al,. ter t
vet'. sell tlntlts I I Ett,lttntl,
unit the Utottittent. Iteretve tleptt , lK Ntth,ttet
to cheek at).l oilolr intt•re,t tt. tellttst
Ft.r I:ttheit
C OLUMBIA NATIO NA I. NA N
Vfill pnv VIZ
I :old 2 1n..11i1, I 1,, ;It
1 , .)1 . 7., 1:1105Ohs
Dr 1,1, , ,t1,
11:ont11,
SA)ICI.II.SID , II
SA MUKI, A. W. F. Tll.Oll,
I )14:11AI11Y4 sl-15031P501.
ISA N1:1•:1.5 .\ ND BIZ(
DEA IN
AND RAII.IID
=MEM
GOI.1), SI IN El:,
kNI) NIA ILI:Sa':VILI•: SELI' !LIT!
No. 33 SoUTII TII IRI : , TREET,
I yv.-
L Ann sa.tr.n.t:vv4
WANTED
()I , WAR ()I , Isr2 MEXICAN WAlt.
FUREII;N ERN
MENT and otln, IIuNDS dIT
and
madt• inn a.I
DEPusrrs REcr:tv El).
No pains tvill he spared to svrve the Inter ot.ts
of tio”,. trio) to air ur wall Theo'
jI/UN S. itysirruN A CI 1.,
It:totters mot 111.1/ki•l,
No. 50 5,),,t k lirtt wt., Ittzlhorn.
FIRE INSURANCE
INAURA.7IIIrE
JAN CA ICY Ist,
CAPITAL. A\l, AsSF:fti, E• 559,101 15. ;
This Company cont I tICS to insure 11u11:1-
lugs, :slercha other prols•rty.,,,,iinst
los. :Old dam:tux by tlre, oil mill plan
eit her fur a cash prelmttni or premium :rote.
NINTH ANNUAL REPDItT
CAPITAL AND INC , )AI L.
AnCt of prtlniunk
Less an.unt vxplred ... 3q7,7N, 19
Cash receipts lesscotomissiohs tu'hs
Luaus
Due. from agars and itt hers
Asscssiment N , i. o, Ist Feb.
Losses anti expenses !Mal Is I , ',
Losses adjusted, not due
Butanue of C apital 111111 A,,els, Vet ,
1, 1:,+39
.1. S. (11tEEN, I'rc,l,:t nt.
St•l•ret :try.
u. M. S'rturnl.En,Treasurcr,
Di RE:C . I , OU';
R. T. Ryon, William Patton,
John I , endrich, M. M. strn•Olcr,
11. G. Min ich, (lco. ]'onus,
Sam'l F. Eberlein, Nicholas Mcl or Ll,
Amos S. Green, John IS. uuu l,
litram WILNon, Robert l'ranr.
For iuvurutra alrl other part icillar , :ipi.!y to
11E/111 dt. 111 FE.
Real Estate, Collect lon :13.1111st:ranee .lecn
Nu. a North Inllte hirt . ct. LatleaSter,
M US/CAL INBTRUM EN L'{.
WOODWARD'S
MUSIC STORE
I=2
NO, 22 WE ST K N S7' 1 I: K.T
Pianos, 101 . g.:111:4, N!t•ii,11,1111,
VIOIIII , , II 111,1,4, 1:1.11 1 Pao,,,
Accortitstns, PIM 111:1.,. '1 , P111 , 1j111.1,-,
T 11.1111,0 1 .111,1. Luta n, Itanios,
Ilsrounucas, laprtrs,
Drums, Fitoc,
Triangles, rootog Forks. ['hell
Pauccs, Ftt:itts M 1151 c Itooks.
Piano am! Mcluticon Covers, Pi:1110 111111
Bean Stools; Strings 11( 1111 Inds; Sl.cct
Nlosic Books, Music l'apc, 1111(1 cc cry lest tit.
Lion of Musical V to - eh:oohs,
A 1.1. ()1t1 , 1,1.5, illlCll promptly al Pc. 11,11.1
11 . 1.1e5, 11(111 Re terd Prico 4, .1,1
l; LA NTEED,
llfir Tuning tool Itcrtirint2 prompt socutl
ctl fu. A. W. Wt tit \VA !tit,
;22-1 (11.1 w N 0.2 W cat K Inv St.. L11.1112:‘,...Ler.
TRA I'ELLER'S ID I•
I . )IIII.ADIELPITIA AND IT ii.TZ110:11 . :
(1-:NTRAI,
I•llAN , if.: 11 , 0'1:-.
“zi r
..1 P. W.
I. It. 1Z......rta r topl
nv
p a r part It. 1....11, at 7 A.M.:111.11: 1 ...P. P.
par tt‘far.l, at 7 .\.I: P. :1,17 P. \I
1.),1 , 1 11. 11
7 .k. NI.. at. A. \I., P. NI., 1: P. )1.. I. I
r..1.1t at 7
t0••1.....1 Part I, 1... , 11 ItAitt
'fruit, It . , in, t. , :rar , l
ta a va, pa h
rt al." , It al . ..1
t rat . .l.l.lnalt ,1111 hie \Viltalta,...l ,
alai It...that, 11..A.1rat..1.
'AI., n. 1.1 P. M., ..11
trill
a t 6, - , A . 1.1. :Ind:, I•. M.
Plutcld's Fl Ord . L'.o, 1•. M.,
I. P P. M. fund 1•.'II.
511 .
ln• P. ,t It. (.. IL It. :0 7,1!).\. M., All.l 1 • . M.
P.5011.,1,111 , al 'XVIII 1,1 Wen .1 ,-
,mly .4
1.1,4g,..1.1 I Mg
/I be 1", , p0,11 , 1 , tM . :llil
la, t
for 111 , ,1111...
11).]:clt1' WO, lcut.
ATTO N E I'S- AT-LA 11
J. W. F. SWI
1.: N 4,111 Dukr.
B. C. UREA DY.
No. 21 East King street, •241 os
New Store.
EDGAR C. 'REED,
No. lt..N.,rth [t., I AuicAst.,
B. F. BAER,
No. 19 Nort h I hz I,:wagt,
FRED. S. PY ER.
N 0.5 South Duke St., Lancaster.
A. J. SANDERSON.
No. East In:; street, Lancaster
S.ll. PRICE,
Court Avenue, west oftourt House, feiurast,•r
A. J. IiAI'FFMAN,
Nu. ;SS Locust et reef,
L'olumbta, l's
dec22lyd&w
WM. LEAMAN.
No. 5 North Duke st., Lancaster
a. J. STEINMAN,
No. 4 South Quern Ut., Llncaa.•r
ii. H. :NORTH,
Columbia. Lanra.ster cnu DLy , Pll
D. w. PATTERSON.
Has removed Ills ottloe to No. GS East King st
S I31"" :07 : 7)11 EY -AT-LA W.
OFFICE WITH N. EL LMA K ER,
NORTH DUKE STREET,
525 LANCASTER, l'A.
VITANTED.—AGENTS WITH A LITTLE
I V Anoney—fur an article that cell by thous
ends, Send stump fur clreular or call on
J A.( 'OB It. lIERSIIOCK,
No. CO West Xing street,
tCP:_qrtie2l ::Lanuaster, ra.
CLOTHING, ,G C.
IN STOCK FOR IMMEDIATE
BUSINESS SUITS AT
DRESS SUITS AT
SPRING OVERCOATS, 841,
EVIINS &
Stre
thrt.t . t ions for
SATISEVTION GCARANTE
IS ST, WE POI: IMM EDI ACE
INCEL L. I NEO 'S
T II HEAT M I. DISCOVERY I
IV.\ Ell's
Le2.:11. I3it
MORE. TM lN 509 AX) PERSONS
They area gentle rant lye a% 11/ell 1.4
Tonle, pvcoliar 11.1 . 11
1 , 1 111 L! 111M 1 .111:
111 . 11:1111 111.111'111 ..1 :ht . I L
I tilt'
IN,1•1,11
FOR Ft:ll.'ll.E 4:0111 . 1. NTS. wht•ther
yomi, tn . okr st nul... ii11•11;\ WII
5v.k11,1111.,m1., l!to lilt t.I 111,—..• Tonic
I=l
IN=
Made Poo r Ittifft, Wlllm key, Prover
1ter11,11.41 I.lfitfor, ,eel , n, ,
:1,1t1N,V0.t.1,1011 to plru r I Ile 1:1,10. V:111-
(.11:1.1 tat Ipplcr 1.1 11.111,1.1es:4 litui
111111, hut :Ire true uu,111111., 111:011. fru!. the
nut ice hilt , utul free
I rota A1(.4,11011.. Fl Ira ta littftm. Th..y .at•
Ihe Ctrenit 11l I l'ifritier Itild Life t: ing
L'ritaelple. perfect. Iteuuvalor atel 1tiN•44•01,-
tor of the Syhtem, carry u,.; tal till puu..met:
matter, aukl rehlering the blood lo lit,tlllly
0111,111 1,1. No per , lll eau 1111, I IteNe Bitters
nueurthog Iltreei huts atul remain long un
well.
•
6100 will he given for any Inettrahle ease,
pro, tiled the bone, are not destroyed hy into
"r other lb.• v h.l or
gan beyond he polo of repair.
l'or Intl nuttuntory null l'ltronle Itheo
moll..., and trout. nytipepmla. Or Intll
w,tiott. Itemitleol. nod lttter
millrul Diwenst , of tile Blood.
1.1 ver. I 1 Id [ley n, o nil It tttttt le r, Ihrso Illt
lers hay, been mostsstril.
14141 , 51,e hr succe
!SI ttt I, which is
generally produced by del:to:dement til the Di-
Orl.tanm.
Cleanse the Vitiated It whenever you
lied its intim:ill litirstiteg t llrtitigli the idtni
ill Inniplys, Eruptions Or Sores ; cleanse 11
when 31,11 nib: it tilist titled ;mil sluggndl in HIV.
Vi•rilh; 011,11151' it tyre,, It Is loul, nutl your lyel
tiLts will tell tin 1111111. Keep tile blood pore
the he:tit:l id I lie syidetti
l'l\, 'f:\ PE, and other WtIItNIS, I,lH:hitt In
the stem ,ii litany 1.111,11,1.1.1i15,art ,
rllreln
ally ileidroyed and rettio%
lutiiruilltent Fev
ers, these Enter. have no uquitl. For lull W
t the el re 111:trnn , ll not r„rh
h,lll i t t i s ti i i,r[ l : l 7 , l . : l •1. 1 r , i;1 i t . i ) 1 , !..i
E ~r entill and
J. W.\ I,IC ER, Ilroprlet or,
ttil Commerce SI., N. Y.
It. 11. yl, lIJN,\ liD di CU.,:
tit - ter:o .\ gents, Still P . 1,11 1 .1, 1 .11
anti S:0'1 . .1.111.1110, Cilili01 . 111,I,Ill1(1321Illd 1 . .111-
tit., N.',:. jl-1N
SOLI) H\ A 1.1, 1 , 1C1'(;(11, - ; • rs S DEALEIN.
:11,“: ll' (OM II WILL A NII
loolrol to a perumitent
hiack or brow.. ll toolUkins /flax I. Any
onocan oNe it. tOo—wot by mail tor el. Addross
MAGIC ('OM II CO.,
ml7-3:n Springlickl, Mass.
GEI WANTED FOIL
" LOST ABROAD."
f.kr circlllll,. tOrlll,
S. M.li .1: 1
Jl-1W /11,111 , rti, l'ollll.
TEIFIS74 IS 30 111 - 11 f
- :15
ith color ttf cyon ,11,1 Lair,Yl/1/
klll I', 11\ I,llll'll 111:111, 1 . 4/11 . 11 • 1 1111111,
of your luturo 1.1 , 1 4.1.1 or ,vit.• 11,11,, ,•
chtO• II .
1 /11,V11 . X. Pull". Illy, N. V. JI
Ai Arc Ew K
\\* ENT 1' YV.AIN ANI4 , NG THE
RULLS AND BEARS
\\*ALL sTREET.:
It.ln Ih,• <ll rl,tlll st , to( asl.l ;4 , 11.1
:tllll 111, , ~ t unforluria,
1.,4•111:tti,.11, 115 k.
./11 trawls of i•twrlllors. II 11 11, 111,11 1111111. m.
r.• and :11111y. 5111,15 , 1 111,1
Y11111..1, 11 , ,W Ina., 111 grain
11. 11 Iv.ll. , 111•1•111 S, con
• 1 , •. 5,11 , 11,1111,1. \Vt• plty Frll4lll
\Vt 1 , ,s 1 , 11115.
9 ~V r:,;~n ~.~i
Lq u~
l l:.:ani ih~
EvErty WAY
'1"I' I: I N
1 . 1 I:1 mart• than
=EMI
EA') NIA INI
V..ly t• 1,1... t. tIII. I . V1•11 TI
=MEE
Il=
1211.11111
(... li ~~. 1 : ~,i
gEIIIIIII
.1 sv,il
BEN N ETT S CO.,
Mwer Mill
11A1.1'-WAY,LI.IWri:N
jet -3111
G II E .1T It Ell V it"l' 1 0
TEAS AND COFFEES
Ci,Nl,lOl - 1 , 1
PE.l(:li OF
ro•rclow.l Fug ilitll, to Club Organizers. Send
For Nuw 021,0
THE GREAT AMERICAN TEA CO.,
It .1:.0 Vesey St., New York.
r NT ED AGENTN-----TO KELI. TILE
y ,A:TAGuN :-,Ew ix( mAciiINE. It is
b.-cased, makes the •• Elastic Lock Stitch" Ilad
Is warrannsl far 3 years. Price $l3. A
machines wall an under-teed sold Mr 815 or Icss
are Inlringements. Address UtI•AGON SEW
INO l. 1)„ St. Louls, ito., lhlcagn,
111., Pittsburgh, Pa., or Boston, Mass. Jell -3m
W IIY DON'T YOL"FRY
WELL'S CARBOLIC TABLETS
THEY ARE. A SURE CURE FOR SORE
THROAT, Ccl,ll, CROUP, DIrrHERIA, CA
TARRH oil. IIoARSENF-SS; ALsO, A SI:12-
CF„'e-WUL REMEDY FOR KIDNEY DIFFI
cuLTIEs. Price 25 cents per hex. Sent by
mall Olt reeelig ut prier by J. Q. K ELLOGG,
Platt St., s
New York, Sole Agent for N. Y.
oLD BY DRUGGISTS. PA-8w
USE OE MNDE TO MEASURE
$l4, $l6, $lB, $2O, & $25.
$2O, $25, 330, 835, $4O,
SS, $lO, $l2, $l5, AND
LEA. C 11,
et, Pllila(l(.lpliin
Von , uromvnt , ent frco gat appliclll,l.
ED Olt CASH REFUNDED.
l's}; oit mADE To NI l•:A.$I' Itl•1
GENTS WA NTEII--RDI PER D tY--I
the AM ,:ItIC.IN MACH I
ito,toth Ma,h , or St. Louts. Mo.,
.1,11-
A ciEncrs W.4NTIED 1:111:1[1' WII I
NEW Itt 1K
Eu,invss cryb”.ly
. .
Months
Sent, for l'lroula, Nil 1 1 . 1:
01.,11151111t11 Si XEh Nt., 1.111/,1111,111.1. JI
$3/ PER DAV
KS=
\\'.\ RI) BEECIIEICS
11711:'_1'1' I' .11' R — llll , . It I
UN It IN" wllli w111).11 I. I V FIN .\\\'.\l
, upol I) :Ind ss)111)1 rt•11»mni))1,),I, M
1i • 11i/1'5i...111 11.11 4.N11 \ IN))
\V ASIIINIQ'()N.
The bi•Si rikpor 11,1,1 1•111 . :1,
.14ents repnrt "ni.kl,ng ;I; in I
illy. Sale , en,ler titan h.,n1; , ... aini
greater." %Vide a‘v:ttio
Clergymen ntlier4.lnztle nr female .11..
send 111 I/11, (111 . 1 . 11py parer an.l ntil pal
ulars ol This 1,1, , ,tied 1111 I
corn), mati.m, In v.hich Ilion. innie Ink
Man anything. nn , v „ll,' ~I.
.1. 11. II \ If P. Pliht,her,
Jot- 11%•222 PCl'lll,llllO el, 1'1,11:n1. 11. W
B OOR Ali t:11N ST .t NT 11/ 10U 1
Y NI , \I. I
tlII.1.1:1"111PN , -;
.11)1IN B. UOl (I II ,
Th, with
11111 tll nild path., 1 , 1111 1
t/iti 'hi' 111,1 h'llpit• I V 111I , 11) I
•• 11311 II I
Aoki.t
N. 4.:r!. Arch 1 . 1111;01, 11.111.1,
J.. 1
X lll
11:‘
L 1F1:174 cr.tit
!%1 YSTEIZ I ES 1(11: \I( )NI:4
le ri,:5,(1.:1:1,:.114,.\11:N .1 .V I 11l L.,.
Wit ha 1-11111111.1:11011,1110liktory ”f 11,)
MY allli t Mt.rttiott a.t• ,
the prottettl tlw
sltt.
wifit
cp.ath 71 ,i11 , 0111.t. , .. in lA%
11,11 • 111. 11 11r.1 tl:Lv.
st• 111 fior N Vllll
ItI.ISIIIN , I CI 1., I . lllllolciplint, 1%, 11
Prior, ST, It utak., dock SI ...At,"
nn both Aldus) mid IA the 1111
(1 . 1 . 1] S/11-11111 1 :i111 1 )11111 1 Slll6l I,hr
Licensed by Wil111•11,& in....0r& 11
mid ShiLLAr d: C... All
Ile 11.1•111ites sold for 11 . 1111 limn S.A. rtri. Infri
/111 . 11E1 1 1.11/11i 1.1.11er and us., 111.1.1..
.11.11N,..N, CIA ...
Isl t,gll, II
T D WAY
GREIT 111E111C1N TE1C0111)1
=MEM
°sell Ilia Ir .\ I , tsil.'l , l:Ens ar the
pees, that the Millip:my st•II lli iii :LI
Warcli.bii ,, 111 Nein' lint In. :\ fun
fri,lnest Nein n 'nein Teas ‘v ill lie lceint n-n.
all tithes.
All wssls warranted Inn give nn
Ile !honey refinninletl.
Mill MC prop( (.11,11.yort Irrin, the. Ihrod,rerr
Frntinn fins lin enniint ',hitt, ha% e
inuts•lnamlng lif this Chttninanny.
SYKI'ENI
annlng InLl,ltness, the I . OIISIIIIICr of T.... I.
alsnhi engin/ inre . fihr between the prep.
and )1111.1•11% tin cover as ninny interim
.1. B. 111'1111. CI,
Ilartl..l, C.)l
UNDER SYSTENI
Ow Groat Amerleall 111.1111 ml , T.
hi• c 0,11,11111,5, lllr , ol-01 11 , 1 r At;.•.1 ,, , .11
III.• r lltry, xt Lfrrttll Ihrw 111 iota @Mr
html bill II Vt.ry Ith 11
centagi• the 11.1..•15..• slilvs, in ill
nett lnf~' the Company, lif.y
rhrnin TI . II, lit ill• P 111111 1• lir t I
I,Jok to it...11011C ( . 111,t under tile olgIn:,sli•
G Tti, READ TII IN'
1 - ) 3207 PER ItY Ai
SELLINC,
110 ME OF IVASOINGTON,
lit, MITI INT AN I/ I N
TI , ,NS. by /IENNO.V J. .Vll, lA,
I rall"., tinted paptsr, bultas , oll , •ly I
1)111y book oil EVcry ins.] lip
a copy. 411111111)' by Sill,wl . l pc 1.,11.
end Icrn, Send 1.. r our I Hull ra.
etilstr, Ivy Mlr I•xtrit A.S. 1
(11.. liAltTliCMl), 0,45. it'l
\I LT nEicli EIS IF LA
lrn , as N•al . r.ll I VII 1.4,11:11 11, any .
'Hwy 1,1, Pro•pared troll, 11,/,,1/v, 11111
1 , 11111 , 1 bctto, it lullmany hf 1 11 , 1:
t hal aro vlllll. St sk 111111 ( ;for, or In
for . It Iwr g yr' s Et rwrlx
Itarlow's 1111l11;1111111.• Is, \dila.. t 111.111,
tt art trio , 111 the inarlcvl, rta
Ixlll rlllar 1110r1. Wider than J. r tins ,
w , lght 1,1111 g . ,, and 11111 , 11 In., lilt
u.a../1 bias tho Th.. 11,111/
Inc I, that 1111 up at A 11r , l1 %VII 1 Isaa,..r
:store, 5.,..2.13 Nur! ti,.. , 11.1 PI, 1
phla. Th , 1.ah.,1. have 1,..,111 WO 1,..114...."
11:1111 , 1,11I 1 / 1 - 111, “th , rt are re
Irtt Jelle by nsoxl r;,.,rers tine( ru
‘Villberg,vr's ludrllblt. 1 Ira/ be 10,
Ina/ le, br a per /or art aqe, Alway,, llll 11l
sale 111 rl,/N0111lble• 1 . 111 . 4. nmild
,14.11111... Moll 1,1,1e5, Clutaiola
Taphs . a, 11 11.1 all art 1 , 1.,
draw lino, 11l A ‘.l'l 1 1 1 , rna,
Nli. Sill Nl/I . IIISC/4111111 , J ,, 1,
111::5-1),
TIT T. TOI,N1)31 I !II I'ROV En T
.5:44 - Ty-Five it..11.1r rnlui ly ,•• • N, M:,.
Flr•A 11a.•11.)1.• ill I 111.
Lei. A r/r.,Asr YIPPiI. I.
C.. 1111111,11011
If.kNIII,D.N
(~ no•ral .Nget
70.) LIA.A nut
111111111MMIE
rEcrort A I. L'I'RE .% CO
1.110:7.. IX PECIVICAL l'O
(E%I.
lie cure thy ill
of :thu and I.l•Nut4, .welt
I ouglot, t routp„...Ntlittitt, Itronchillv, Is.
sore Throat, lioarstutes, WI oolung
and 14:1,11toNA try 't ttttst•M I. •••:. 111,111 ,
prepart.tt by Itr. Levi Itherholtzur of
deithm and lorsterly of Pluenix , lite,
although IL Ins only Iteen talered for fl, I
lord I hall 1111 e 1111111C/11 I/01114 , have it
tt., 54,111, tlllll the demand for it 1. incr
every tlay. Many of the It. util Itruggts
IL lit lots of live gross, 11 1 / 1 1 1101 a haw
Stttrekt•t•itt.rn try one gross at
Nearly every one that has ever sithl It I.
It, Its popularity, and nearly all who lit,
it. bear testimony to Its wonderful 1/11
curing Cough. K e e are cosithl.ont that II
ktiturn medicine of such great value
community it, the I t il/1•111X 1 . 14 . 011,1.
It Itws cured cases or the Till It paint%
tlktresslng t• 4, ugh, of years standing.
IL Las given Instant relief In spells of
g :phla, mtl, by
lII=I
ng
it
o t,
ug lilh c ! ‘ l , t u ti ,4 lLy
duritl
JlB .11rti.1.11 Street,
It has cured Croup In IL (I•Ne minutes.
Consumption haw been cured by It, wl
other remedies had balled to do good.
lloarsuess has been cured by It In a
night.
Many Physlcians reconnoltinied II
others use It themselves and winning ,
their pructice, while others oppose It I
It takes tawny their business.
We recommend IL to our readers and I
tiler particulars, would ruler tat yours
around the bottle where you wllr ni,4l
nun certilicates Oren by persons who hat
p II I I.‘l I , ELI' II 1A
It.
It Is so pleasant to the taste that child
for
IL is a stimulating expectorant,
strength nt the same time that It alto
cough.
The proprietor of this medicine has so
confidence in ILA curative powers front I
timony of thousands whn have used It IA
money will be refunded to any purchust
Is not gatisfled with the efteets.
It Is so cheap that all can buy It.
Price 25 Cents, Large Bottles
• It Is prepared by
LEVI OBEHHOLTZER, M. I
WHOLESS LE:DIU:au
No. LIS North Third Street Phlltulel
N. your nearest Druggist or Star
er does not have this medicine ask him
It for you, and do nut let him put you
sonic other preparat lon because he make
money on it; but go or send nt ones u
store where you knots it is kept, or sea
Oberholtzer.
Sold by A. Heinitsli, Dr. Parry, Dr
Long, Dr. Ellmaker, J. F. Lung & son
Locher, Mrs. McCormick, and W. 0.
Druggists, Lancaster and nearly eve
gist and titorekceper In Lancaster cou n
death (3
CLOTHING, <C C.
ISCELL A NEO US
Itl•:\". ALBERT B.\
1•op s'o
.1.11. 111.: \ F.. 111,1111. ',CA
10• p, rt
'l' HE NE \V
:17 VI?-I.:1 . 1-111'111
N W K
Z. Itl-NliW.\l.l
NPASTEP, PA
11ED C, L