Lancaster intelligencer. (Lancaster [Pa.]) 1847-1922, July 12, 1871, Image 4

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    Etc Sarin.
TO CORREAPONDENTS
Communications upon subjects of interest
to the farmer, the gardener, the fruit-grower
and stock-breeder aro solicited for this depart
ment of the paper. All such communications
should be addressed to ULnictt EITItIONLICB,
Agricultural Editor, Conestoga, Lancaster
bounty, Pa.
Thrash and Sell Grain Early.
NZ TEM 501102.
One of the largest and best crops of
wheat ever grown in Lancaster county,
has Just been harvested. From the re
ports in our exchanges, we learn that
the same is true of nearly the entire
wheat-growing section of the United
States. There are but few localities to
which the crop is reported below the
average. In consequence of this heavy
crop all over the country, the chances
are decidedly against an advance in the
prices of this cereal, and the probabili
ty is that after the new crop gets fairly
into market there will be a decline
from the present prices. If the farmers
of this county will profit by the
experience of the last two or three
years they will thrash and sell
their grain early. Invariably for the
last few years—as many will recollect
to their sorrow—prices were fair Imme
diately after harvest and when the new
crop first came Into market, but after
wards declined much lower. This has
been true Invariably for the last feW
years and is true In general, the exeep-
Lions thereto being very rare. Occasion
ally when crops are poor, or some unu
sual demand exists, so that the demand
exceeds the supply, prices will continue
to advance until a new crop is brought
into market. The wheat crop being
unusually large in this country, and
there belug 110 extraordinary demand
from abroad, there is no probability
that prices will advance, unless their
should be a demand caused from some
unexpected source, which is not proba
ble. We therefore think it advisable to
sell the wheat as early as possible.
There is an advantage In threshing
early, even if one does not desire to sell.
I t prevents the destruction try vermin—
mice, rats, weevil, etc. It Is calculated
that one-tenth of the grain is destroyed
by rats and mita, when not threshed
early. A granary may be !mule rat
proof, but a burn can not. We are well
aware that farmers put oil' threshing
until Winter, because it sults their con
venience better; after harvest they are
crowded with other work, while In the
Winter they have little else to do.—
Many farmers have not room in the
barn for the straw if all the grain is
threshed out early, and hence they
thresh out only as felt as they can use
the straw. This is one reason that wheat
generally is sold at a better priee immedi
ately after harvest than iaier, when a
greater amount is brote;lit into market.
Those who thresh and scl I ,a 1 ly areal') p
ly paid for their little incr,i; veinence. We
think it would be a good in vcstrnent to
build additional shedding to hold all the
straw, so that the grain could ell be
threshed immediately after harvest.
The Orchard.
Many farmers do not place a very high
estimate upon the orchard. To them it
has never been of ninth account, and
they cannot see much encouragement
for the future. To be sure, years ago
they net out several hundred apple-trees,
cropped the ground with corn, oats and
wheat, for several years, and t hen seed
ed the ground to clover and timothy,
and have mowed it ever since. This
they consider good treatment, yet their
t"eem yield but very light crops of very
Jaya' fruit. Indeed, they never have
but very" few apples to sell, and those so
small and gnarly that the price obtain
ed hardly pays . l'or the time required to
gather them. This need not be the cure.
The orchard may be made a ver , pro
fitable part of the farm. lint It will cost
something to have an orchard that the
owner may well be proud of and that
will pay a handsome Interest on the
time amt means expended. Many labor
under the mistaken notion that the or
chard should cost nothing except to
harvest the crop. This Is IL great mis
take, but a very common one. As a
general rule, If tell orchard costs noth
ing but harvesting, the crop will itot be
worth harvesting.
Many farmers who have no orchard,
make if mistake at the outset, in this
way. A neighbor is harvesting and
marketing a splendid crop of apples, for
which he obtains a great price. The
returns from his orchard are so great
that they make up their minds there is
more money In a large orchard than in
anything else. So they send an order
to the nursery for trees enough to net out
to , and sometimes many more
acres, without event once taking a
thought of the labor necessary to make
such an °reload a success. They do not
setm to take into consideration the fact
tuna those trees must ire cultivated
. 111,41.1 M
I . :lfeDilly as any farm crop—that the soil
should he made richerms a general thing,
and not robbed year after year by grain
crops, that takeoltthe very material that
the trees ough t to have. They do not think
dint with all that trash about their
trunks, during the coming wittier, the
mice will girdle half of them—that next
SUILSOII when they are too //tow to (akin?
to the frees, the tent caterpillar will strip
the leaves from the rest of them, thus
giving them such a cheek that they will
never whblly recover. They take no
notice of- the borer that is slowly but
surely cutting out the life of the trees.
Il' they had given these things, and
ninny more that might be spoken of,
that consideration which they deserve,
their order on the nursery would have
been \ much snuffler, which would not
only have been a good thing for them,
but also for the community, us there
would trot be so many large orchards
Hutt have proved failures, thus discour
aging many front setting event small
ones.
The foregoing discouraging picture
Deed deter no one from setting an or
chard—a large one if they wish—and
making it a success. The proper atten
tion given at the right time, will be fully
rewarded., It is better to guard against
girdling by mice, by attention in the
Fall, than to repair their damages in the
Spring. It takes far less time to dig out
j the borer as soon as he can be discover
ed in a tree, than it. does to plant and
rale( another in lie place. It takes far
less time to destroy the tent caterpillar
when in the egg or just hatched,
than it does after it has spread over
half the tree and badly damaged it.
Though the caterpillar moth may thy
from one orchard to another to lay its
eggs, yet it is not half so apt to as it is
to lay its eggs in the orchard where it
came into life; so that if the caterpillars
are all destroyed this year in one orch
ard, there will be far less next, year than
in an orchard near to it where they were
not thus destroyed. There Nan orchard
of several hundred trees in sight of w here
I now write, where they have always
been destroyed as soon as possible. This
season, thus far, there breve been but six
nests found, while orchards in the vicin
itywhere they were allowed toga towed,
are very full of them; more than six
nests can frequently be counted in a
single tree. Horses and cattle can de
stroy trees much faster than the damage
can be repaired. Without proper atten
tion, the orchard will prove a failure;
with.proper care, even a small orchard
will furnish a family with excellent fru it
the entire year, and make a handsome
return in cash besides.— ('w•.. Country
Gentleman.
Right and Wrong Way to Milk
The Irish Farmers' Gazelle publishes
the following from Professor Dick 01
the Edinburgh Veterinary College, on
the manner of milking:
" The operation of milking is perform
ed differently in various parts of the
country. In some the dairy-made dips
her hand into a little milk, and by sue
cessively stripping the teat between her
lingers and thumb unloads the udder
This plan, however, is attended with
the disadvantage of irritating more or
less the teat, and rendering it liable to
cracks and chops, which are followed
by inflammation extending to the rest
of the quarter. This accounts for the
disease occurring more frequently
among the cows under the charge of one
milker than it does in those under the
charge of another; and as this practice
is more common in some parts of the
country than in others, it also accounts
for the disease being more eommon in
these parts. This plan - of milking,
where the irritation is not sufficient to
excite the extent of inflammation to
which I have alluded, frequently pro
duces a horny thickening of the teat, a
consequence of the Cracks and chops,
which renders It more difficult to milk
than when in its natural state, and, at
the same time, predisposes to inflam
mation when any cause occurs to set It
up.
These effects may be, and are, almost
entirely avoided, by the most scientific
plan of milking adopted in ether parts
of the country, where, instead of draw•
ing down or stripping the teat between
the thumb and fingers, as I have stated,
the dairy-maid follows more closely the
principles which instinct has taught the
calf. She first takes a slight hold of the
teats with her hand, by which she
merely encircles it, then lifts her hand
up so as to press the body of the ud
der upwards, by which the milk escapes
into the teat; or if, as is generally the
case when some hours have elapsed be
tween milking-times, the teat is full,
she rasps the teat close to its origin
with her thumb and fore-finger, so as
to preyent the milk which Is In the teat
from escaping upwards ; then, making
the rest of the fingers to close from
above downwards in succession, forces
out what milk may be contained in the
teat through the opening of it. The
hand is again pressed up and closed as
before, and the milk drawn easily and
freely, without the tugging and wrench
ing inflicted by clumsy milkers."
The Correct AdJastment of Plows
A good plow is frequently denounced
as au inferior implement, simply be
cause the ploughman does not under
stand how to adjust the draft to make it
run to the desired depth and to cut a
furrow slice of the proper width for
turning easily and neatly. The various
parts of some plows are of such a pecu
liar construction, that it is not practica
ble for even the most skilful ploughman
to adjust them to run properly, without
a constant effort of the holder to main
tain the correct position. The mold
boards are of such a peculiar form, that
if the implement Is run deeper than
four, five, or six inches, it cannot be
made to turn the furrow slices neatly,
without an irksome andlaborious effort
on the part of a ploughman. The effi
ciency of the common plow depends in
a great measure on the correct adjust
ment of the draft-rod or dial-clevis at
the end of the beard. When the plough
man is required to make a constant ef
fort to keep the plow erect, or to hold it
from running too far to land, or not far
enough, he may rest assured that the
draft-rod or draft-chain, or traces, need
a more correct adjustment. In many
instances the point of the share is so
blunt, or has been worn off on the un
der side to such an extent, that the
energies of a strong man are required to
make a plow run at all satisfactorily.
The first consideration when adjust
ing it plow to run correctly, is to pro
vide a sharp pointed and polished share.
Then see that every square Inch of both
the mold-board and land-side Is polished.
Adjust the traces of the team to such a
length that the whiffietrees, when they
drop to the ground, will not strike the
heels of the animals. The desirable
depth at which the implement should
run, must now be attained by adjusting
the clevis,ordraft-rod. A plowman must
adjust and re-adjust by a notch, or small
space, at once, until the plow will run cor
rectly. When a cutter is employed in
ploughing a stiffsod, the point and edge
should besharp,and thelower end should
stand about two Inches forward of the
point of the plowshare, two or three
inches higher than the point, and from
one-fourth to half an inch toward the
unploughed land beyond a line corres
ponding with the face of the land-side.
Let a plow be adjusted to run correctly,
then attach a coulter to the beam, and
the Implement will usually Kaye to he
readjusted, as the coulter will exert a
wonderful influence on the correct
movement of the plow.
In many instances the double whlf
tletree is so long that it is almost impos
sible to make a plow run satisfactorily
correct. When oxen are attached to a
plow, the yoke Is almost always so long
that the implement will not run as it
should. If a ploughman is required to
make a constant eflbrt too keep the im
plement from running to far to land, or
not far enough, he will 80011 become fa
tigued and will not perform his task
well.
I went out of the city to test "Mead's
Comical plow," and after adjusting the
traces and clevis a few times, I travelled
behind the plow while ploughing eight
times around the land, without touch
ing the handles, except at each end of
tile plot we were ploughing. I simply
state this to show, that when a plow is
properly adjusted, the labor of holding
it will he very light.—rbr. Prrwtiral
Farnirr.
Thinning Fruit
Tlw test of a good gardener is to be
found in how he thins his fruit. Your
shoddy fellow takes all nature will give
him; he buys the largest trees .lie can
find, because they will bear " right
away," and lie expects not merely a
specimen or so of a kind, but pecks if
not bushels from newly planted trees.
But as he becomes among the refined
and educated in the pursult,he gradually
learns that nature loves best the patient
waiter. Ile learns that good luscious fruit
—fruit truly enjoyable—only comes from
healthy vigor, anti that this never fol
lows a tree which bears too much. Even
good gardeners often say that if a tree is
healthy, it may be permitted to bear all
it will ; but that kind of tree is very
rarely seen. Certainly half the trees
which bear fruit every year, would be
benefited by having h At the fruit taken
oil as soon as it is well set; that is after
they commence to swell a little. The
grape-vine especially suffers from over'.
bearing; two or three bunches usually
come out from each fruit-bearing
branch We should always cut away
one, the one farthest removed from the
main stein ; and in many cases leave
only one—the nearest one—to mature.
When this is decided on, cut away these
superfluous bunches at once.
Mill, rich color is always esteemed as
one of the criterions whereby to judge
of the excellence of a fruit. Sun light
is of first importance; but it is not gen
erally known that this is injurious
wile!' in excess. In a dry atmosphere,
with great sun heat, where the evapor
ating process goes on faster than the
secretive principle, what should become
a rich rosy blush in a fruit, is changed
to a sickly yellow ; and the rich jet
black of a grape becomes a foxy red.—
Some grape-growers of eminence, ill
view of the facts, shade their vineries
during the coloring process; but others,
instead, keep the atmosphere as close
and moist as possible. (/ardenvr'a
Monthly.
Suckers About Fruit Trees
Every orchard not carefully watched
is liable to become infested with suckers
growing about the foot of the trees, and
nothing gives a more untidy appear
ance. Young orchards must be exam
ined at least once a year, and have all
the suckers carefully removed. For
quite young trees this work should be
done early in Spring, as cutting away
any considerable portion of growing
wood and leaves has a tendency to retard
growth ; but unless the mass of suckers is
very large, it should lie done now, if
omitted before. From large trees, it is
always better to take off the suckers at
the present time, or while the trees are
growing freely, as the work may be
more effectually performed, and they
will be less liable to start again.—
The worst thing that can be done is
vatting the suckers off with a knife in
such a way that short stubs are left to
sprout a second time. If the sprouts
re small or only one season's growth,
they may be easily and well
removed by grasping them one at a
time with both hands, and then, with
a stiff row-hide boot, place the foot next
the tree soil 1)11 the sucker, and one or
two quick jerks will separate it to the
base. If this is impracticable, take a
small gouge and mallet and cut them
oil' closely. When it is thoroughly
done, they will not be liable to re-ap
pear, and the few that appear, sub
sequently are easily got rid of.—
A neatly kept, clean orchard, is better
and noire profitable in every way, than
One infested with suckers, weeds, grass
and bushes.—Counfry Gentkman.
A Nation of Good Farmers
A correspondent of Hearth and Horne,
who attended our Commissioners in
their visits to San Domingo, thus de
scribes the farming on that happy is
land:
"There i. - not a plough in use; even
to s are seldbm to be seen. The machete,
a lidig knife; is used to cut off the tim
ber, to digh les in the ground for seed,
and to remove the weeds, and to har•
vest the crop. Cultivation in our sense
of the term, hardly exists. It is diffi
cult to believe how primitive is the
condition of ire. In fact, with
the exceptio icco and a little
collee, scarce A cies are exported.
As a strikin ice. of the present
state of attah itheient to say that
we have been generally supplied during
our stay on the island, in sight of the
waving tops of the sugar-cane, with
beet sugar made and refined in France.
We have used condensed milk from the
United 6tates, amid savannas covered
with herds of native cattle, and upon
plains where a hundred goats have
been grazing by our side. We have
eaten cheese from Holland, Ina country
which is compartively rich in native
rrasses and have seen in the markets
adulterated indigo, imported from
abroad, when the plant is a weed every
where by the roadside."
Durable Drains.
A drain filled with charcoal could
never be choked except by particles of
earth carried in by the water that flowed
through it; superincumbent earth would
not fall .down, as it now usually does,
to choke the passage when the
bashes which supported It have de
cayed. Neither is it likely that moles
would willingly cross a drain filled with
charcoal; and, if so, another very usual
cause of the destruction of drains would
be avoided. In many districts of this
country, where peat Is abundant, this
substance, when charred, would proba
bly be found a most valuable material
both for filling drains and for building
hollow ones. The brick-like form into
which peat is usually cut, and the hard
ness and porosity of the same when
charred in a close oven would constitute
a light and excellent material, much
cheaper, and probably better, than either
bricks or tiles.
THE LANCASTER WEEKLY INTELLIGENCER, WEDNESDAY, JULY 12. 1871.
liftiscellaneous.
The Bottom of a Pennsylvania Canal
Several Coal-Mlnes Inundated
WILKESBARRE, Pa., July 4.—Disagree•
ablee of various kinds seem to invest the
mining business in the northern portion
of the anthracite coal-fields. Some two
weeks ago a caving casualty occurred at
the Empire Mines, near this city, and
caused great excitement and consternation,
when it was supposed that forty men bad
met untimely deaths by the accident. To
day we haves second edition of the phe
nomena which wee lately exhibited in New
Jersey at a point on the Morris Canal, with
the addition that not only has the bottom
of a canal tumbled out but several coal
mines have been rendered for a time use
less by the freak.
About six o'clock this morning people
residing In the vicinity of the Burroughs
Mine, on what is known as the plank road,
were startled by a loud rumbling noise,
and equally surprised to notice that the
water in the north branch of the Wyoming
Canal had begun to run up stream. It was
soon ascertained that a portion of the bot
tom of the Mill Creek level of the canal over
the Burroughs Mine had caved In, causing
a bole fifty feet longand of the width of the
canal and tow-path. The casualty Involves
the flooding of the Enterprise mine, of J.
B. Swoyer's slope and shaft, the Mitchel
mine, the mine of Elliot St Co., and proba
bly the works of Mr. lineman, as these
mines are all connected with gangways.
All the-water on the level poured into
the opening, and it may be said that the
mines'have received a quantity of liquid
two miles long and about four feet deep.
The accident occurred at a point over a
portion of the Burroughs mine which had
been worked out, and was caused, most
likely, by the robbing of the supports of
the roof, a practice which sometimes pre
vails when the chambers have been ex
hausted. The amount of damage cannot
be estimated at present, but will be heaviest
in the stoppage of the works—probably fur
some weeks. The canal will also be use
less for a time.
- • . •
Preparations for an artificial bottom of
the canal will be commenced at once, and
the mines be pumped out, The latter op
eration can go on while the repairs are be
ing made, ac the entire level is now clear
of water. Fortunately the event took place
to-day, when all the employees were cele
brating our national holiday. Great loss
of life must have occurred had the mines
been working as usual. AN it is we have
nothing but a vexatious delay in the busi
ness of that part or the valley to regret.—
An immense quantity of coal is being sent
to market now from this county, and it
looks as if another youvulmion would ensue
in business between tbis and Winter. The
heavy operators aro playing to raise the
prices.
Shot by , lll,4 . lletrothell:7:Att lumlitnee of
===2ls=
Tho remains of Mr. Charles Wallace
were brought to this city yesterday evening,
and taken to the house of Mrs. Latimer
North Cherry street. The circumstances
attending his death are as follows :
"He had been staying for some time at
the house of Mr. Jake Judd, his relation,
who resided near Ury Creek, twenty miles
from Nashville. Three-quarters of a mile
off lived Miss Anna Winharn, to whom he
was betrothed. 110 paid her a visit on
Tuesday afternoon, and while at tier house
volunteered to repair agate. A gimlet tie
ing required for the work, both went to
the shelf on which such things were usually
kept. Lying on the shelf Miss Waltham
found a loaded revolver and picked it up,
when Mr. Wallace remarked that it was
unloaded, he having, handled it before.
At that moment the Weapon was acciden
tally discharged, th 6 ball taking effect in
his temple. lie exclaimed, ' Anna, you
have shot me,' and fell to t h e floor. tin
realizing what she had done, Miss Witihrun
covered her face with her hands, shrieked
' I have killed him,' and fainted. She has
been deliriums ever since the occurremie,
and the only words she has uttered are, '
have killed him.' Last night she was in a
very critical condition, and it is feared she
will never recover from the shock. Mr.
Wallace never spoke alter he was shot, and
expired at about seven o'clock that evening.
It seems that Miss Winhain's brother had
previously loaded the revolver, a fact of
which she and Mr. Wallace were ignorant."
—Su.rhuille Danner, 11th.
A Tel.. Trotretly—A Man Ylltttnlttos 1114
Ville for n Ithrglar, and Cato II a, to
Fleet. {vltli n ktowle-itaaltr.
[From the Houutun Union]
A gentleman front the neighborhood In
Grimes county, sumo live miles from Na
vasota, where the saddest occurenee which,
we believe, we have ever t ecortied, took
place on last Saturday night, gives us HOMO
particulars additional to alciAo Wlll , ll have
already been published. We refer to the
accidental killing of his wife by Air. Briggs
Goodrich, a kind husband, as wo learn and
a sober, industrious, and respected citizen,
There were it seems, several robbers in
the house, and Mrs. Goodrich, hearing
them, had aroused her husband," and he
not being able to tied his pistol, hail taken
a bowie knife and was in pursuit of the
thieves, Ile Mid struck at 01113 of them,
and another had passed him inside of the
house, and he seemed to have hastened
outside and around to the window of his
own bedroom, which he knew to be lutist.
ed, with the expectation of intercepting the
escape of corns of the burglars.
It is said that chloroform had been used
by the thieves, but not suiliviently to pro
duce stupefaction. Yet it is likely that the
feeling of faintness caused by the inhala
tions. of the chloroform induced Mrs. (Mod
rich to rise from the bud where she had
been left by her husband and to go to the
window for air. There she was found by
her excited husband, and, as the night was
so dark that he could discern only the out
lines of the figure, he naturally imagined
that he saw one of the robbers about to pass
out through the window. Then came blows,
bearing all the human mind can conceive
of the terrible—blows by which a husband
took the life of his own wife with the knife.
We learn that he in distracted, and cannot
be trusted alone, but is guarded constantly
to prevent the commission of su hide. Mrs.
Goodrich is represented as a very accom
plished and noble woman, and it is said
that she died with words of sympathy for
her unfortunate husband upon her lips. In
the utter consternation and demulation which
followed the terrible tragedy we are inform
ed that the only child of the marriage,
which is still almost an inlaid, was seen
with its head pillowed upon the slain
mother's breast, begging her to awake and
grant it an evidence of recognition.
The Cleveland Leader speaks as follows
of Lieutenant H ugh McKee, whom the tel
egrams from Corea znention as having fall
en at the head of the storming party just
at the moment of the forcing of the citadel:
" Lieutenant McKee was the youngest
son of Colonel William McKee, who fell
in the memorable charge under Colonel
May at Buena Vista, during the Mexican
war. The death of the gallant Colonel left
fatherless his two sons George and
H ugh, both of whom were adopted by the
Government; the former having been sent
to West Point the latter to the Naval
School at Annapolis. Lieutenant Hugh
McKee, of the navy, was regarded as one
of the most promising young men in the
service. He was among the chosen crew
that sailed the vessel which carried Assist
ant Secretary Fox on his visit to St. Peters
burg, and on the return of that expedition
was assigned to the United States steamer,
Michigan, on Lake Erie. This was in
June, 1861), During the few months of his
service on the M ichigan,Lieutenant McKee
made many warm friends, who will feel
deeply the loss that his family and the Government have sustained in his death.
He was then attached to the steamer, Col
orado, flagship of the Asiatic Squadron,
and died, as he had often expressed a wish
to die, at the head of a storming column.
He leaves a mother at Lexington, Ken
tucky, and the brother already referred to
who is now a Major in the United States
Army, and stationed at St. Louis:"
oAx HALL
1122/c/J.Xa'FiCttta.
Jul} itfw27
TOBACCO AND EGABS
T HE HEST AND CHOICEST
SMOKING TOBACCO
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FACTORY NO, 1,
3D DISTRICT OF MARYLAND.
jar- See that' Every Package you buy
026 bears that inscription. '»c lyw
HOTELS AND RESTAURANT.
LA PIERRE HOUSE,
- BROAD AND CHESTNUT STREETS,
PHILADEXPHIA,
J. B. BUTTERWORTH, hPROPRIETOR.
al9 TERMELPER DAY 83.50.
Drops Out.
MEM=
CLOTHING
ROUPLANIPS BITTERS.
ORE MILLION OF LIVEN NAVEDI
It is one of the remarkable facts of this re
markable age, not merely that so many per.
sons are the victims of Lis spepsia Or Ind Igaition
but its willing victims. Now, we would not be
understood to soy that any one regards Dys
pepsia with favor, or fools disposed to rank. It
among the luxuries of life. Far from it. Those
who have experienced Its torments would
scout such an idea. All dread it. and would
gladly dispense with its unpleasant familiari
ties. Mark Tapley, who was Jolly under all
the trying circumstances in which be was
placed. never had an attack of Dyspepsia or
his Jollity would have speedily fordaken him
Men and women sometimes suffer its tortures
uncomplainingly, but whoever heard of a
person who enjoyed them?
Of all the multifarious diseases to which the
human system Is liable, there is perhaps no one
so generally prevalent as Dyspepsia. There
are diseases more acute and painful, tied which
more frequently prove fatal; but none, the
effects or which are so depressing to the mind
and so positively distressing to the body. If
there la a wretched being in the world it is
A CONFIRM kai DiftiPEPTIC.
But it is not our attention to discant on the
horrors of Dyspepsia. Tode.cribe them truth
fully is simply an impossibility, but it is pos
sible to point out a remedy. We have said
that Dyspepsia is perhaps the most universal
of human diseases. This is emphatically the
case in the United Cia es Whether this gene
ral prevalence is duo to the character of the
food, the method of its preparation, or tlyi
hasty manner in which It Is usually swal
lowed, Is not our province to explain. The
great fact with which we are called to deal Is
this
DYSPEPSIA PREVAILS
- _
almost universally.
Nearly every other person you meet Is a vic
tim, an apparently willing one; for were this
not the el.°, why so many su ff erers, when a
certain, speedy and safe reme iy is w.thin the
easy reach or all who desire to avail them
selves of it? But the majority will not. Blind
ed by prejudice, or deter red by some other un
explained influence, they refuse to accept the
relief proffered them. They turn a deal ear to
the testimony of tile thousands whose suffer
ings have been alleviated. and with strange
infatuation, appear to cling with desperate
determination to their ruthless tortnen tor.—
But says a Lyspeptic: What Is this remedy?
To which we reply: This great alleviator of
human suffering Is almost at widely known as
the English language. It into allayed the sgo
nies of thousands, and Is to-day carrying corn
fort and etaaJuragement to thousands of others.
This acknowledged panacea is none other than
Dr. 1100FLAND'S GERMAN BITTERS
Would you know more of the merlts of tali
wonderful medicine than can be learned from
the experience of others? Try It yourself, and
when it bus failed to fulfil the assurance of its
efficacy given by the proprietor, then abandon
faith In It.
LET IT BE REMEMBERED,
flrst of all, that H(.;II.I.,ANLYS ukrtmAN
13ITTEEN Is not a ruts beverage.
They are not alcoholic In any sense of the
term, They are composed wholly of tile pure
Juice or vital principle of roots. This Is not
mere assertion. Thee:Cruet- from which they
are compounded lire prepared by one of the
ablest oft iernmn chemists. Unlike any other
Bitters lit the market, they are wholly tree
from spirituous ingredients. The objections
which hold with so mach force against prepa
ration:: of this class, namely—that a desire fur
intoxicating drinks Is stimulated by their tt-e,
are not. valid 111 tile ease of the L.:mien Bit
tern. Pt, far from encouraging ur Inculcating
a taste ur desire f o r inebriating beverage, it
may be confidently as•erted that their tenden-
CV is In a diametrically opposite direction.—
Their effects can Ile BE: , ICIAL I , NLY
in all cases of the billary 5, stem. Hoollatud's'
German Bitters stand without an equal, acting
promptly and vigurtt , ly upon the Liver; I hey
remove Its torpidity and ...anise healthful lie
eret ion of bile—thereby supplying the idooilieli
with the most Ilidli i ipenstible elements of soulot
digestion In proper proportions. 'l' hey give
tune tot he stonnteria—stitmalating its functions,
and enabling it to perform its duties Os nature
denighed It should do. They Impart vigor and
strength to the entire sestein, causing the
iatient to feel like another being—lit lout, giv
ng hill] a new 'vane of ble.
THEY PURIFY TH E I 31,001).
cleansing the vital nuid at all hurtful Impart
tins and supplanti• g them with the , gements
of gennine healthfulness. In a word, there Is
scarcely a di,ase in which they cannot be
safely and benetleially employed; but in that
most. generally prevallent distre,ing and
dreaded diNeahe, Dyspepsia,
THEY fTASIt UNRIVALED.
Now, there are certain classes 01 persons to
whom extreme Bitters are IDOL Only unpalata
ble but who tied it Impossible to take them
without positive discomfort. For such
Dr. IIOOFLIND'S GERM.iN TONIC
has been specially prepared. It Is Intel] tied
for use where a slight alcoholic si 'umlaut Is
required In connection wall the well-known
1 properties of the i urn, tierinan Bitters.
Tills Turin, contains all the Ingredients It the
Miters, hilt so navot Our I as to relieve the ex
treme bitterness. 'llls preparation Is not only
palatable, butrominnes, modilled torsi, all
the Virtues of the lierman Ell tors. The sand
extracts of some of Nature's choicest restora
tives are held In solution by a spirituous agent
of the purest quality. In Clines 0' languor or
excessive debility, where l hr sVstein appears to
have become exhausted of Its energies,
=OE
nets with almost. marvelous rltOel. It not only
stimulate , the flogging 11101 wasting energle.i,
but itivlgorlitts and pertnationtiy suengtbens
Its action upon the Liverand :stomach through,
pez haps less prompt uuw 11w billet's, when
1111, Mallla gliallllly Is tulleu Is 111/110 the iess
certain. Indigusi km, Biliousness, l'hysical or
Nervous l'rostialion, yield readily to Its po
tent influence. It glN't, I.IIOIIIV did It. now and
stronger hold upon Ille, removes deprt ssion of
s
plrltsllllll inspires Pheerftlilless. suppl,,l.
ttile pain o(dt...sese with the ase and comfort
of periuel health. It gives st4englii to 511011
throws cleSl/011a. no . to the winds, and
starts the restored Invalid upon a new and
uladnunte career. But. 1,. I km 1111.1.10: benefac
tions to tile Miamu rnrc are not confined to
Ins ye:el/rated u l It M ANII 1 •1 " 1 It 7,
or his inealitable ToNy. Ila has PrePa l,4l
another metlicine, which is rapidly winning
Its way to popular (sum hccatuse of Its
merits 'l'his Is
EXCEESE=
a perlect substitute for Mercury, without. any
of mercury's eel] qualities.
'Three wonder!. Pills, which are Intended
to act upon the Liver, ure Mainly euniputted ul
lotlophylllll, Or nue
Via xi. PRINCIPLE OF TIIF. NM: LEE ROOT.
how we desire the reader In tilst Met 13 un
derstand that loin extract of the Maudrake Is
many t sacs more powerful than the Mandrake
itself IL Is the IntLiteltml virtues of tills
heal...giving plant In a perfectly pure and
highly concentrated torn, Hence It Is That
two of the Putloph , 111 11 I'l 115 constitute a lull
dune, while itity where six to eigull or a banditti
of of tier preparation:, of the Mandrake are re
lie l'odopit)ilia arie i/tecelty on the
firer, sal utulnting Its 10110101)s mid causing It
to Inane its inirtry neeret tom 11l regular anti
proper quantities. The tits results which
Invariably foilow lbe use of mercury is en
tirely at uided by thelr use. 11 .1 it Is not upun
the Liver only that their powers are exerted.
The eXt Met ol Matitiraßti rt,ntulued ill tiletil Is
nit illitli.y einTittineti will, four oilier ex trails,
nue of which iteti, upon the stomach, one tipott
the upper bowels, one upon the lower bit,. els,
and one ',revel., soy ttt hplng effect, tittle pru
ritic:lllg it pill !hal intillenceS the entire di...cs
tiVe anti aulmentary system, in an equal and
harmonious manner, and tin ztettou entirely
free !rum n iseit, vomiting and grlping pains
o
cmmon all other purg,.o.lves.
Puss ~ ngthesenmentlesirabiequalitits, the
initsillieS invaluable as
Eons=
NO household shortie be without them. They
are perfectly safe, require hut two tor tin tun,
nary dose, are prompt cud lent In pie Lton,
nud rotten used in connection with Dr. Hoof
land's (ierman Bitters, or Toole, may 13ti re
garded as certain specifics in all ether of Clem
Complaint. Dyspepsia, to any of the disorders
to which Ihe system is ordinarily subject. The
ONIMISM=EM
act upon the stomach (I.lld bowels, carrying off
Improper obstruetio., while the Bitters or
Tonic purity the blood, strengthen and invigo
orate the Ironic., give lone and appetite to the
stomach, anti thus build up the invalid anew.
Dr. Ithotiand having provided internal rem
edies for diseases, Into given the world one
mainly for external application, In the won
dent al preparation known as
This ii Is n sovereign remedy fur pains and
ashes of all kinds.
itheumatistn, Neuralgia, Toothache, Chil
blains, sprains, Burns, lain in the Back and
Loins, Ringworms, alt yield to Its ex
ternai appllcatlon. Tee number or cures af
fected by It Is astonishing, anti they are in
ci easing every day.
Taken internally, it Is a cure for Heart
burn+, K idney Diseases, Sick llcadneht s,
Dysentery, Cholera Mortals, Cramps, Pains in
he StoMath, Colds, Astlini
The Greeti. ail Is .411pOSUd elltirelY of heal
ing gums and essential oils. The prlncipal In
gredleot Is an 011 y mbstance, procured ill the
southern part of Greece. Its effects its a de
stroy, or Dahl arl , truly magical. howiands
lice been beneritted by Its use, and a trial by
those who are skepl teal will thoroughly roil
vines them or its mustlntattle value
These I eineilles NV 111 be sent by express In
an, locality,
upon application to the HU NCI
OFFICH. at the GERMAN MEDICINE
STORE, No. Gil ARCH. sTuEKr, PHILADEL
PHIA. CHAS. M. EVANS, Propels tor.
Fot inerly C. M..1AC1,3H.N
_
11141- lertnellies arr. pnr pit , by brugyi.v'l.
Storrlopers dl,lll dirt lie 1).,.• el, r.vecherr.
114,7) ..:11tw.1.4,2iit
FOR VICE
ArIENTION, flOKNE•liltk:Ell EELS
All owners of Mares daslrous of racing a
Choice stook of llorses,are respectOrl In
than the Celebroled Thoroughbred bbiltion,
M ASTE It L T F OUT.
Will Stand for the Service of Mares from the
111tH DAY Or APRIL Ito tot N. IsT uP SEP
TEM BER, 1871, at the Grounds of the l aocas.
ter County Agricultural Park. Association, in
the City of Lancaster.
StIO TO INSURE A MARE WITII FOAL,
MO at the tittle of service, the balance when the
mare proves with foal.
far- Any person parting with an Insured
more before she is known to be with foal will
be held responsible tor the insurance money.
All accidents at the riskolthe owners of inare,
Mares from a distance can he accommodated
on the tirounds of the Association. at
the folowing rates: Hay at 1150 per week;
and Grain, if desired, will be imulslied at mar
ket, rates.
MASTER LIGIITFOOT, got by the celebra
ted horse Lux iNdros. Master Liditfoot's dais
Miss Lightiont, by imported Trustee, hall-nis
, ter to the great race-mare Fashion , and also
half-sister to the gi eat inuring horse " Young
Trustee, the Urst, horse that trotted 2e miles
in one hour;" 2d dam Young Ludy Lig h tfoot
by Shark; 3d darn Lady Lightfoot, by Sir
Archy ; 4th data Black Maria, by Imported
`Shark; sth dam V ingt'un's, by Imported
Clockfust; Gilt darn Durwell's Maria, by Fitz
hugh's lambus Regains. (son oflinpurted Fear
nought, cult of Jenny Dismal); 7tll dam Bur
well's famous mare Camilla, by imported f• ear
nought; Hit dam lil Bre Imported Callsta, by
Forester; thh dein by Crab; illth dam by Hob
goblin; lit h, BaJezet's data, by Whitenose;
12111 dam by Locus; 13th darn a Barb mare.
MASTER LIGIITFOOT was bred by it, A. Alex
ander, of Kentucky. He IS a very rich dark
brown, 15 hands Inches high, beautiful In
form, and possesses In a remarkable degree all
the points indicating strength and action; Los
shoulders are deep, muscular and broad;
girths large; his back and loins cannot be ex
celled, wilds Ills body le well-ribbed, exhibit
ing all the engine er leverage Indispensable fur
speed and endurance In the running or trot
ting-horse, Master Lightfoot is a sure foal
getter; Is very gentle and quiet,
myl7-3mw.o MICHAEL hi CGONIGLE,
At the Lancaster Agricultural Park Grounds
ArrENTION HO ILSE-BBEEDERS 1
All owners of mares desirous of raising a
choice stock of horses, are respectfully Inform
ed that the celebrated fast-trotting stallion
IRISH CHIEF
Will stand for service, from the 10th day of
April to the let day of tieptember, PM, at the
Grounds of the Lancaster Agricultural Park
Association, In the City of Lancaster.
TERMS :—S3O to insure a mare with Foal. $lO
at time of service, the balance when the mare
proves with Foal. Any person parting with a
mare before she is known to be with,Foal, will
be held responsible for the Insurance Money.
Mares from a distance can be accommodated
at the Grounds of the Association—terms at
the following rates: Hay, SI ho er week; and
grain, if desired, will be furnished at market
prices. An accidents at the risk of owners of
mares.
IRISH CHIEF
was bred by Mr. R. Higgins, of Kentucky, and
was sired by the ceiebrated horse, HAM
BRING CHIEF, thb sire of the famous trot
ting-mare, Lady Thorne; dam by the re
nowned race-horse, GREY EAGLE• grand
dam, by Giltner's "Highlander," and great
grand-dam oy "Old - Whip." For further
particulars apply to
MICHAEL MACGONIGLE,
ap 12 Bmw /5 At the Park Grounds
LEGAL NOTICES.
VSTATE OP ALBERT P. CARSTON,
Ei late of West Elemptleld township, dec'd.—
The undersigned Auditor appointed to distri
bute the balance remaining in the hands of
Annie Careton, acting Adminlstratrixof said
deceased, to and among those legally entitled
to the same, will sit for that purpose on
THURSDAY, JULY 27th, A. D. 187; at 2
o'clock,_ P. M., In the Library Room of the
Court House, in the City of Lancaster, where
all persons interested in said distribution may
attend. A.BSAM SHANK,
.le-4tw2G Auditor.
ASSIGNED ESTATE OF EDWARD H.
Bryan and Wife, of Conoy township,
Lancaster county.—The undersigned Auditor.
appointed by the Court of Common Pleas of
mid county, to distribute the balance remaln•
log in the hands of Jacob B. sleckl•ty esignee
of the said Edward H. Bryan and Wife, to and
among those legally entitled to the same, will
attend ( or that purpose on WEI.NDSDAY,
the 9th day of AUGUST, A.D., Ig7l, tit 10 o'clock,
A. 5f., In the Library Room of the Court House,
in the City of Lancaster, where all persons in
terested In said distribution may attend.
JOHN KOB, Auditor.
N. ELLMA K ER, Attorney.
Ak Et 14 I NE D FATATE OF WILLIAM F.
Pickle and Wife, of Bart township, Lan.
castor county.—Having, by deed of voluntary
assignment, dated May Nt11,1171, assigned and
transferred all their estate and effecoi to the
undersigned, for the benefit of the creditors of
the said William F. Pickle and Wife, notice is
hereby given to alt persons indebted to said
assignors to make Immediate payment to the
undersigned without delay, and those having
claims to present them to
U. O. FITEACY,
Je21.6tw2.5 Assignee, Bart.
APINIONED ESTATE OF lIENRY E('K.
man and wife. of Drumore townshil.l
ncestor eouuty.—Henry Eckman and wile,
of Drumore township. having by deed of vol
untary assignment, dated June Id, 1871, assign
ed and transferred all their estate and effects
to the undersigned, for the benefit of the credi
tors of the said Henry Eckman, he therefore
gives notice to all persons indebted to Ma d as
signor, to make payment to the undersigned
wilhout delay, and those ha: lag clultus to
present them to
SAN VERY NfcCULLOCGH, Assignee,
Jun2l-titw.2.s In Drumore township.
ESIT4 FE OF MARY BrFNER, LATE OF
the Borough of Washington, Lancaster
county, deceased.—The unoersizned Auditor,
appointed to distribute toe balance remaining
lo the hands of Bernhard Mann, (farmer) Ad
ministrator of said deceased, to anti among
those legally entitled to the same, will attend
ior that purpose ou WEDNESDAY the 2d day
of ALI (IBS'', A. D., 1071, at 10 o'clock, A. M., In
the Library Room of the Court Rouse, In the
City of !Ammeter. where all persona Interested
In said distribution may attend.
AND. M. FRAriAltor
ESTATEOPMAHORKETFREYMOYEB,
late of East eomlico township, Lancaster
vounty, deceased.—The undersigned Auditor,
appointed to distribute the balance remaining
in the hands of Cyrus Hearn, r sq., Adminis
trator de boots non of Margaret Y reyrnoyer.
thscea.sed, to and among those legally entitled
to the same. will hit for that purpose on BAf
t:ltDA V. AUGUST 501,1871, at 103. ; i o'clock, A.
M,, ut the Library Room of the Lou rt House,
in the I thy of Lancaster. where all persons In
terested In stilt! distribution may attend.
E. 11. Yl.;:s DT,
Juiys-Ita Auditor.
ST l'rE OF Ii FORGE FAI'ST, LATE
ILA of Lancaster township, Lancaster county,
deceased.— • lie undersigned Auditor, appoint
ed to distribute the hal -.nee rennuning in the
hands of John Johns . , Atindnibtrator cum tee
tattiento annexe of George Faust, deceased, to
and among those legally entitled to the same,
will alt for that purpuseou FRIDAY, AL:GU:3
ith, 1,71, at 2 o'clock, P. M., lu the Library
Hoorn of the Court House, in the Ult,y of Lan
caster. where all persons Interested In said
distribution may attend.
E. 11. YUNDT,
Auditor.
ME=
T;ISTATE OFT HO RAS G. HENDERSON
Es late of Salisbury township, Lancaster
county, deceased.—The undersigned Auditor,
appointed by the Orphans' Count of Lancaster
county, Pu.. to (lb-tribute the balance remain
ing in trot hands of W. C. Henderson and Sam
uel J. liend,,on, Administrators of the estate
of said dec..- d, to and among those iegally
entitled to the same, will attend for that pur
pose on THI , ItsDAY, AUGUST 1071, at?
o clock, P. M in the Library Hoorn of the
Court House, in the City of Lancaster, Pa.,
where till persons InterOsted Lt raid distribu
tion may attend.
GEORGE NAI:MAN.
• Audaor
A s SIGNED E.TATE OF SAMUEL
Ill1114"leY and Wife, of Manor tuna whip,
Luneunter county,—The undersigned Auditor,
appointed by the Court of Common Pleas of
Laneasier County, to distribute the baltillt,
remaining In the hands of John Glpgrieh and
John Brenner, Assignees of the said Sam uel
Sink ley and Wife, to and among those
iegnilY entitled to the same, will sit for that
par puce on :. , ..1'n1(.1)A Y the Stn ninny of
A I:Lit!ST, A. I) , 1)71 at 2o . eloek, I'. M
' In the
I.lt,rary 141,i11111,r the Court 111.14 e, lo [he l lily
laneaster, where all persons Bak:rented In
saint dlNtrallltloll tong uttt•ti,l,
N. E. SLAYMAKEB., JR.
Julyre•llw - 7 ud hor.
A 10HUNEII ENTATE OF JOHN SENER
LI. and Wile, al township, Lancaster
count)'.—The undersigned Auditors, appoint
ed by the Court ul 03111111 On Ple. of Said COUn•
ty, to puts upon the exeeptions tiled to the In,
t•011i!L entilte,lll,l tu dlst.rihute the 110.'-
I,llla. remaining in the hands of Benjamin U.
(letz. and M'iniatt, ,Mclullen, Assignees, to
and among (111.0 legally entitled to me Sitille,
will nit for that purpose on FItIDAY AUGUST
11th, A. D.. 011 at le o'clock, A. \I., In the Li
brary Boom or the Court House, in the City of
Lancaster, w.liere all purhOlin interested In said
ex,.cptions and .11,trilmtlon may attend.
WILLIA,M LEAMAN,
Al/A\l J. }:BeLItLY,
1,11 . 1..1.N0t t
Auditors.
J 13 •11,,r"
3/ k.;/// GA L
THE "i LAY DIM:OVEHY
IN AND MEIIIC'.II. ENCE
Dl. E. F. GART - Lvs
SOLUTION AND COM POUNII ELIXIR
T _A_ R .
FiRsT AND ONLY SOI,ITTION ever niacin
in one inixlore of ALL TH E TWELVE vsluat
hie active principal's of the well-known cura
tive agent.
PINE TREE TAR,
UN EQCA LED In Coughs, Colds, Catarrh, ANtil
ma, Bronchitis, and couhumpuou.
CURES WITHOUT FAIL
A recent cold In three to six hours: and also
by Its VITALIZING, Pt•lilfl'lNG and STIM
ULATING etT)•cts upon the general tlystem, is
remarkably ellleaelous ou all
DISEASES OF THE BLOOD,
I mil udl lir. Scrof ilia and Eruptions oEthe Slain
I.yspepsla, Diseases of the LI ver and Kidneys
Heart I dsease, and General Debility.
ONE TRIAL CONVINCES
ALso, A
OLATILF. SOLUTION OF TAR
For INHALATION without application of
H EAT. A remakably VALUABLE discovery
as the whole apt araluS can he carried in the
Vest packet ready at any Hine fur the toast
etreet nal and positively curative use in
All Dlsenses:of the Nose. Throat it lungs.
THE. COMPOUND
TAR AND MANDRAKE PILL,
for use in connection with the RLIX llt TAR
I+ a combination at the TWO most valuable
ALTERATIVE Medicines known in the Pro
fe•siun, and renders this Pill v Ithunt eXeep
tine the very best evrr otri,ed.
Send for Circular of POSITIVE CURES to
your Drugalst, or to
L. F. HYDE & CO.,
Sole Proprietor , ,
410 F. 2-" :New York
MUIMISIMI
I'ILES OF ALL KINDS perfectly and perrna
ncntly CURED, IV ltltout pain , danurr,
(7141.01iCS or inStrU7llC/1/4 by
WM. A. McCANDLISS. M. D.,
NIL tle.ll ARCH STREET, PHILADELPHIA,
Who can refer you to over 1,204 cases cured in
Philedelphia alone. \V.: desire to say to those
afflicted, there Is positively no deception in the
care o; tliese It matters not h.,: lona
or how sccercly you have bees afflicted, toe can
rare you We also cure Fistula, Fissure Pro
laps us, Stile urea and Ulceration of the lower
COlne you that are suffering, we wilt
not dcrcire you. e huce patient,: from almost
every state in the Union and from Europe.—
I lave tr. Led these Isenses for t went) . years
without a failure. w 17
YOUNG MEN
Desiring a successful start In Business Life
attend Fast malt College—the oldest, best and
most reasonable practical School in the United
States, and the only one providing situations
for graduates. Address for Catalogue 11l d,OUO
lu business and full Particulars,
11. EAs'l'M AN, CT:. D.,
apr26 Poughkeepsie, IN. Y.
ILI: Hon vorATii
siehin and i-urgvon. having permanent
ly iiiented In the village of :sew Holland, oilers
his professional h. - vices to eitiestis ul that. vil
lage and vielnily.
olive on Main street, lu Isaac Wit wer's new
second floor.
E
PILES!!
PILES!
BINDER'S GERMAN' VEGETABLE
INTERNAL PILE CURE, -
CURES ALL CASES OF PILES.
PL:INCIPAL DEPOT73IN.SECONDSTREET
PHILADELPHIA,
&ND I U WEtir KING Sf
LA NrAtiThlL l'A.
=2=lMffi
OF MA RRIACIE.---A
I NEW COURSE OF LECTURER, as deliv
ered at the Penna. Polytechnic and and Ana
tomical Museum, P2us Chestnut St., three doors
above Twelfth, Philadelphia, embracing the
subjects: How to Live and What to Live for;
Youth, Maturity and Old Age; Manhood Den.
erally Reviewed; The cause of Indigestion;
Flatulence and nervous Diseases accounted for
Marriage Philosophically considered. Then
lectures y
will be forwarded on receipt
Pe of '4
cents b of the
POLYTECHNlCaddressing Secretary
AND ANATOMICA.L MI
SEUM, 1206 Chestatd.St., Palladelphia, P.
Ivl2 12rnri Frwi ♦
FURNITURE.
36 NORTH SECOND STREET. 36
FURNITII,RE
DIRECT FROM (THE MAX CFA CT CRERS
FRANCIS D. KRAMER A CO.,
CABINET-MAKERS AND UPHOLSTERERS,
NO. 36 NORTH SECOND STREET
Next door to Christ's Church,
PHILADELPHIA.
Manufacturers of and Dealers In Fine and Me
dium Walnut Furniture Parlor, Library, Din
ing H
Hoorn ann Chamber Suits oi the latest de
signs and beat workmanship. Also, Cottage
Chamber Sults.
03- Mattresses, Bedding, &c., of every de
scription. All Roods warranted. a33-3rnw
COMMISSION" MERCHANTS.
KNIGHT & JENNINGS,
(FORMERLY WITH KNIGHT tic naol.o
COMMISSION MERCHANTS.
NO. 116 SOUTH DELAWARE AVENUE.
EMIZEZECM
Particular attention given to sale or Green
and Dried Frults,Flour and Produce in general.
*a- MR. JOHN F. saßoahat, Salesman.
mylo-3mWl9.
FOB SALE OR RENT.
ZIORSALE.—TWO LANCASTER COLTS*.
U TY FARMS, Hest-class land, running
water, good Improvements, lOS Acres and Si
Acres respectively.
Threo•fourths of the purchase money can re
main charged on the premises if de,tred by the
purchasers. SAMUEL, EBY,
jete•ltdsftw Elizabethtown, Pa.
MARYLAND FARM FOR DALE!
The "Home Farm" of the late Judge J.
rder, one mile east of Westminter, Carroll
county, Md, on the Baltimore Turnpike ls_fOr
sale. It contains about
187 ACRES,
35 of which is excellent Timber. The Improve
ments are ample; Frame House, II rooms, large
Swiss Barn, oil needed out-buildings, with
never-failing Spring of choice Water.
The :arm is In a high state of cultivation,
and is worth the attention of purchasers.
Call on the subscriber on the premises.
• MRS. ELIZABETH POWDER,
Ono mile east of Westminster,
Je22-3tchkitw• Maryland.
AVALUABLE FARM
IN LITTLE BRITAIN TOWNSHIP
AT PRIVATE BALE,
The undersigned offers his valuable Farm,
situated In the township aforesaid at private
sale, - - .
CONTAINING 149 ACRES,
more or loot. adjoining lands of Nathan 'Haines,
David Christy, John Gibson and others upon
which Mouse,
a
a two-story Dwelling
a fine Bank Barn, 01x1(xl feet, (but recently
erected) roofed with slate, with Graneries and
Corn Crib, all complete. Two Apple Orchards
and other fruit on the premises, and all the
necessary out-buildings. Two good springs of
water, from which every field can be watered.
84 acres of the above tract is arable, and the
balance is covered with heavy timber. princi
pally white oak. The land is In a high state
of cultivation, under good 'once, convenient to
churches, mills, stores, schools, Sm. It is un
surpassed for productiveness, being as good
quality of land as the above township can
produce, divided into convenient fields. To
any person wishing to invest in real estate, a
chance Is here presented rarely tobe met with.
Persons wishing to view the premises will
please call upon David Christy, adjoining the
property, by whom the same will be shown or
upon the subscriber at Mechanics Grove.
sepßitfw37 DAVID EVANS.
F , Olt SALE---A TRACT OF' LAND, Str
ome on the Canal col Myer. in Liverpool
township, Perry county, euntalulug
J5O ACIA
more or less, having thereon erected a two
story Brick Double Dwelling House, elegantly
finished, a large two-story Frame Dwelling
House, and a very th, Frame Bank Barn, 1101
60 feet.
The above tract can be readily divided Into
several farms, which will be bold together or
k epn ra te, to salt purchasers.
Also, a,Pleee of Laud In the same township,
containing
30 ACRES,
more or le:s, partly cleared.
Also, a Tract of Land on thr canal and river
In Butlalo township, In the sa Mr County, ( , 11
tattling
More or les', nbunt the half Moore pored, tut,
log thereon erected two Log Houses mad a Log
Stable.
Also, a Lot of Ground In the Borough o
Liverpool, tp.lng o feet, lying between th
River and Lanai, and having therein erected t
Warehouse.
All to be sold on very favorable terms not
time given to suit the purely...r.
Tine above properties will be offered at prl
vale sale unmet ovroliKit '.2a. 1,71, and If no
cold before that time Will be sold at public sal.
on that day In Liverpool, when and where th
terms will be made Innocent,
Apply t
J027-Ithttfw
FOR suisscHinEß
fern fur sale his Valuable Farm, located in
Londonderry township, Dauphin county, sit
uated On the turnpike running trolls 1-ancits
ter to Middletown, 5 nines from the latter
place, 3 miles from Elizabethtown, half-toile
Dom the Pennsylvania Railroad Station, and tt
half-mile from the county line, adjoining
lambi of Martin G. Keller, ilenry Moyer, A
Butes t.rubb, and others, contain I t.g
1:133 AC ES, MURK OK LESS,
n n good state of cult Ivation and under good
e..res. The Inn provements are a Large 'lwo-
Story BRICK IBA'S b, containing It rooms;
Well of lixeelb-nt Water, s Large nwisser Barn,
Clog Pen. and all nevessa , y nut-buildings :
Young orchard or Choice Fruit Trees, In full
bearing; also Stone Fruit of every kind;
Never•fitiling Stream of Water running
through the pronlis., to which cattle can lone
access from every Meld. A hoist s Acres of the
above tract Is covered wifli Wood, tire balance
under cultivation
The 111 M VP buildings stand on an elevadon,
In a very Ilcu!thy Lmntlnu , near to
churches, rifill,rallroad,te. '1 hr Imuse lasing
many. Is still-ealculated lor a Public. house or
Store., anitunllon seldom to he obtained; well
adapted fora b u t lin nn
Persons wishing to see the ['rpm's., or final re
1 - 1111.11, 11111,1•111ILL.11 Wfill please call upon the
nuipwrlber, living on the pu u •e.
. . .
Information ran also be had be calling upon
George lt, sprocher, Lancaster, Pa Emanuel
I'. Keller, Mantwint tow.ldp ttr io ACilllll S.
Keller, Man hello township. my:!.l4.ntw2l
1'31;111,1CI.E OF 11E41, ES'lr.t'll'E.•-••
I The untlerslgneti...Executore of tlw Esiattt
id Henry Foust, will sell 011 HO. 211 114 y
ov sEpTENtr.Eit, 1e 1, It the premises, the
of .said deceased, contaln
ug almut
\v, vNI)III , ,j, AND TLVENTT ACRES,
and .heeded Moult two tulles Huth-oast of
Greencastle, tin the Gaul leading front Green.
castle to Lellersiturg, It Is only two tulles
from Ile Franklin 'tad Gaol, and MOVETIII lilies
Irons liagerstown. 'I lot tan'. Is the turst.qual-
Ity of LI MP:slit/SE I, L Nl', and le situated 111
tin o.svellent nelghborlattel, convenient to
churches and schools The Immo, moats
cooslst of as good WE.vrif Itlli,A 1[1) I lol'sE,
containing nine rooms and n Kitchen, well.
tinisinal and painted; a largeltanls liarn,Wagon
Shed, Corn t'rlb, mol all other necessary tan
buildings. This farm Is well-watered with a
Well only tw,lve heel deep, which for nine
months dorlog the year dotes over and rushes
a Rmbo: stream of water. There Is as or
vharkl of FRUIT on the farm, the
finest in the county, consisting of Apples,
('curs, Peaches,Grame,Mll4l ChMerles. 'The farm
well-tenced,a large portion of It being
poet and roll feil,e, anti t!..llVCruent ly dlcldrd
tWeIVO fielOS n t that the slur is can have
tweess to the water front all the ileitis but one.
farm Is under a good state of cultivation
A large portion of It has been lately heavi
ly Hinted A tort her tieserlption tne prop
erty is consttlered Imnecessatry, as persons Lit--
strolls ttf purehaslng can call upon 0111, of the
Executors, leek - ling upon heal.allll so. the
property. It will Ise said either dlvldvd or tin.
v Wed to stilt pun tossers.
The following are the conditions of the sale
which is posltlve: Unt• half Ut the purchase
money to lie paid on the fleet clay of April, 1572,
and the balance In three ctn.) annual pay
ments wlth Interest Irmo Apt it let, Fit
accordance with the will of the deceased, nee
thousand dollars can be lett in the litrill or paid
the pure! toner pleases.
_
Cl-11:1 , T1 AN D. LEIII ER,
SAMUEL FOU,T,
Executor,
F REDERIC li 0 U.N . TY LAND
AT IT
The subscriber will filler at public sale, on
the premises, on TliEsD 4Y , .11LY Y ,In, 1,71,
at o'clock, P M , the farm upon whim his
son - resides, (i - witted near the mouth of Mo.
noracy, Frederick vounty, on the One of the
Chesapeake and Ohio Canal, and the Metro
politan anti Pt. of Rocks Railroad, which will
be completed within the current year; one
mile from the contemplated depot, originally
a part of "Carroll's Manor.''
CONT -‘I,NINt.t 212 ACRES OF LAND,
more or less, ti Acres in Timber, ahnut lit) Acres
heavily' set in 'moot hy, t he remainder in good
stated' eullleatiop,ilivided Into four fields and
meadow, with Running Water In three of them.
This farm Is mostly river-bottnin, well adapt
ed to grass, and ht its close proximity by rail
to Washington City, would !sake a desirable
grazing or dairy farm. The improvements
consist or o Tirro.shiry Fralne WEATHER
BOARD/n:1/ HOUSE, eased with Brick; Frame
Stable. quarters,Siticike•house. Carriage-house,
and other Out-buildings, a Well of pure Wilt,
at the door. These buildings are all new,
haying been reveutly bola; there are sev. Ed
Excellent Springs on the limn, The Metro
politan Railroad plisses through a portion of
the tarot, and there Is on the farm about .1001
new Chesnut Rails to fence up toe same, the
rest of the fencing is in goad cond It lint, !host of
It new. This land cannot be eurpsais.l for fer
tility and productiveness.
Therms :—One-third cash, and the balance In
two payments of toe and two yeam,cured
by the notes or bonds of the purchaser, with
Interest from day of sale. When the whole of
the purchase money Is pall, a good and suffi
cient deed will he given; the purchaSer to be
at the expense 01 conveyancing, stamps, die.
Possession given the Ist. flay of Fd.otember,
'B7l, and the privilege of plowing, ike., at any
time alter the lot day of August, la, t.
311 son, C. 11, Tt unille, living on the r.rm •
will take pleasure In showing the property to
any one disposed In pnrelhise.
WATOHES AND JE IVEL R
BAILEY&O
Chestnut and 12th Sts.,
PHILAnET2HIA,
JEWELERS & SILVERSMITHS,
Have completed arrangements with lead
ing Maker, In Europe, Ly which they are
now enabled to offer
Fine Watches,
At very moderate prices
Sati.truction guaranteed in all cases.
Goods sent by Express on approval.
Strangers are cordially invited to vlsi
our establishment.
=MEM
Watches.
C " "
J. E. CALD WELL & CO.,
No. 902 CHESTNUT ST.,
PHILADELPHIA
Desire to Invite the special attention of pur
chasers and others visiting the city, to tnetr
unusually large and varied assortment of
NEW JEWELRY,
FINE WATCHES
OE MOST RELIABLE MAKERS
GOLD CHAINS,
ARTISTIC SILVERWARE
For Bridal and other Presentations
TABLE CUTLERY, ELECTED PLATED
(GOODS OF FINEST QUALITY,
French Clocks, Bronzes and Mantel
Ornaments,
Received DIRECT FROM PARIS during the
present season
Courteous and polite attention is extended
to all who may be induced to accept a cordial
invitation to visit their beautiful store,
Julystfw2f
!No. 902 CHESTNUT STREET.
CARPETS 1 CARPETS 1
CHOICE NEW DESIGNS.
ENGLISH BRUSSELS CARPETS,
ENGLISH TAPESTRY BRUSSELS CARPETS,
„IMPERIAL THREE-PLY CARPETS,
SUPERFINE INGRAINS,
WHITE-GROUND CHAMBER CARPETS,
FLOOR OIL-CLOTHS,
From 1 to 6 Yards Wide.
CHINA AND COCOA MATTINCIS
HAGER & BROTHERS.
WALL PAPERS!
PAPER HANGINGS
MANUFACTORIES ct IMPORTERS,
Will be sold at less than Philadelphia Prices
We invite an examination.
ale HAUER & BROTHERS.
B ROADWAY CASH STORE.
DRY GOODS AND NOTIONS
CLOSING OUT OF SPRING GOODS,
SUMMER GOODS!
DRESS GOODS!
POPLINS, MOHAIR LAIDS,
CHA WES, ALPACAS, GRENADINES
riQuEs AND NANSOOKS, PERCALES,
GENTLEMEN'S CASSIMERES S: CLOTHS
NEW STOCK OF LAWNS JUST IN.
21 EAST RING STREET,
H. H. MOSER,
M cell on I esbn rg, or to
J. M,.2t)ltNtlcK, JR.,
lionWißrg.
B U ILL 1 IN UTON
Ist Mortgage 7 Per Cent. Gold Bonds
This road it now In the dullest settann of the
year earning more than 1•2. per vent. net on the
amount, of Its mortgage ohligations.
Its 7 per cent. null bonds are equal for secur
ity to Uovernmon Loran) . Railroad Issue. They
command a ready market and we are prepared
to boy and sell them at all times. No Invest
ment In the market possessing equal guaran
tees or returns an equal percen Lane of
Interest. The Chle.go, Borlzuglon and (Olney
hes given a !ratite guarantee and obligates It
self to Invest In these bonds fie per cent.
of the gross earning derived from all business
from this road. This insufficient Indication of
the estimate of this enterprise by the largest
and most far-sighted Corte, at ou lu ills \Vest.
A dulled quantity still for sale by
HENRY CLEWS & CO.,
32 WALL STREET, N. Y.
a!MB=I
FOR SA.I,E ISY
REED, McGRANN R CO., LANCASTER.
HORACE RATIIVON,
BAIR .11 SHENK,
J. C. MI.7IILENBERU,
REEL .1: HENDERSON
STEIIMAN, CLARK s CU.
U. G. SWARTZ,
JACOB 11AUSNIAN
WM. L. PEIPER,
Of whom pamphlets arol informal it'll nuly be
0111.11.1111 . 11. lolf2.lich4w
A CUOICE tsECCRITY
NEW YORE AND OSWE(;0 MIDLAND
FIRST MORTGAGE
SEVEN PER CENT, GOLD BONDS,
The New Trunk Line front Now York city to
the North and West, between the New York
Central and Erie Railways, and many mile.
shorter than either tram New York to Butt, to.
Two hundred Wla twenty miles of finished
road already in existence, cost twice the
amount of bonds Issued; may fairly be called
the best character of real estate loan ; title per
fect and value constantly enhancing; Issue of
immix positively limited to 520,0410 per mile of
finished road; a very small loan per mile,
highly thought of by bankers, and, we believe,
a security of the highest, grade. The road Is
earning largely ; it a better investment limn
money in a savings bank. For sale by
GEO. OPDYKE t CO., BANKERS,
ONE OF Tin , . HEsrr iN VESTMENTS IN
THE MARKET.
7 PER CENT. GOLD BONDS
Issuod upon linlshrd road running Into St
Louis and doing a profitable buninens. Price
Inquire for particulars of
GEO. OPI)YKE cit CO
NEW YORK,
AND
STEL{MAN, CLARKSON A CO.,
cal LANCASTER. l'A. tal.sw
()THU W. TRUNDLE,
Pt. of Ro.:kg. Nil
MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS
G RAND TRIUMPH ! !
THE ARION PIANO FORTP
W:..4 awarded the
I=l
AVEItIc.IN INsTITu - TE NE\V yultK
After a. severe Test Trial with the Steil. %V II V.
:hiekering, :mil nUi. r pianos, wits ilis.l.lreil
heir Judges to he the
13 EST PI .1 Nu K.VO TO :Tll E 31.
It Is dllretenlly ennstruet ell from any other
plane no A' 11,. 1.. Send for Illialtrated Pamph
let, or call and see them.
IT.rnlrtrll
,279 J 281 souTH STREET,
ORGANS AND MELODONS,
00 DI frerent Styles from SW Upwards to $9llO.
Over 46,000 In use. Liberal discount for Cools.
my2l-15,21
ORGANS
BY ;314[T11 AND PELOUBET, PELT iN ,2 CU
5 Stops for 8100, 8 Stops SPA 7 Stops for
BY KNAI3E et CO., E. GABLER, CALEN—
BELLAH'S
lIIR FINDET BYMIR DIE RESTE, G RO
ESTE A USIVAHL, DE.V GROESTEN STOCK
BILLIGSTEN PREISE, AND DIE LEICHT
&STEN TERMS. ml-lyw9
IaOOFING SLATE—PRICER REDUCED
The undersigned has constantly on hand a
supply of Roofing Slate for sale at Reduced
prim', Also, an extra LIGHT ROOFING
SLATE, intended for elating on shingle roofs.
Employing the very best slaters all work is
warranted to be executed in the best manner.
Builders and others will find it to their inter
est to examine the samples at his Agricultural
and Seed Warerooms, No. 28 East King street,
Lancaster, Pa., 2 doors west of the Court House
We have aeo the Asbestos Roofing for Hat
roofs, or wY ere elate and shingles cannot be
used. It Le far superior to Plead° or Gravel
Roofi 2. t ng.
nlm&w gRo. P. FIPRIERFI R
DOR LISTS OF THE VERY FINEST
r South West Virginia beef-feeding, stock
grazing and dairy farms, and for information
and full particulars, apply to Edward Shelly
& Co., real estate brokers, Wytheville, Va
r3il
DRY GOODS.
WALL PAPERS !
WALL PAPERS I
3),000 PIECES
PLAIN AND DECORATIVE
All of the Now Designs of the Leading
HERNANIES, GENAPLNEA,
DELAINES AND PRINTS,
Large assortment of
SWISS MUSLIN'S AND LINENS
DOMESTIC GOODS!
I!=1
I=l
ItIIIIIONS, KID GLOVES
FURNISHING GOODS!
ROUSS, REED & CO.
Iwcl,*trw
==1:1
MINNESOTA RAILROAD
ON A COMPLETED ROAD,
FREE OF 1.7. S. TAX,
8100, 5300, AND 81000 BONDS,
NEW YORK,
AND
REED, McURANN et, CO
I=l
CON VEICTIBLE:
RAILWAY CUM PAN Y,
922 AND INTEREST
P R E if I U 1I !
ME=
=MMI
131=
PRINCE & CO.'S
SILO, dEe.,
PIANOS
BERG, FISHER, HALE, ctc,
From 8250 Upwards to 81500.
ROOFING .SLATE:
111ISOELL3NEOUS.
A GREAT MEDICAL DISCOVERY I
DR, WALKER'S CALIFORNIA
VINEGAR
BITTERS.
HUNDREDS OF THOUSANDEI BEAR nIBTI
MONY TO THEIR WONDERFUL
CURATIVE EFFECTS.
WHAT ARE THEY?
THEY ARE NOT A VILE
FANCY DRINK
Made of Pure Rum, 'Whiskey, Proof Spirits and
Refuse Liquors doctored, spiced and sweeten•
ed to please the taste, called "Tonles," i'A pee.
titers," "Restore. s," &e„ that Ivan! the tippler
on to drunkenness and ruin, but are a true
Medicine, made from the Native Roots end
Herbs of California, free from all Alcoholic
Stimulants. They are the GREAT BLOOD
PURIFIER and aLII O E-GIVINU PRINCIPLE,
a perfect Renovator and Invigorator of the
System, carrying str allpoisonous matter and
restoring the blood to a healthy condition. No
person can take these Bitters according to di
rection and remain long unwell, provided tine
bones are not destroyed by mineral poison or
other means and the vital organs wasted be.
yond the point of repair.
For Inflammatory and Chronic Rheumatism
anti Gout, Dysperw.la or Indigestion, Bilious,
Remittent and Intermittent Fevers, Diseases
of tile Blood, Liver, Kidneys, and Bladder,
these }Jitters have been most succossftil. Such
Diseases are caused by Vitiated Blood, which
Is generally produces] by derangement of the
Digestive Organs.
DYSPEPSIA Ott INDIGESTION, Headache,
Pain in theshoulders, Commie Tight ness of the
Chest Dizziness, sour Eructations of the Stom
ach, Had Taste lo the Mara It, Bilious Attacks,
Palpitation of the Heart, Intiammation of the
Lungs, Pain in the region of the Kidneys nod
a hundred other painful ny !upturns, are the MI ,
springs of Dyspepsia.
They Invigorate the Stomach and stimulate
the torpid liver and bowels, which render thorn
of unequalled efficacy in cleansing the blood
of all Impurities, and Impel Ong new life and
vigor to the whole
Bildous, REmitrEsr sod INTERMIT
TENT FEVERS, which are so prevalent In the
valleys or our great rivers throughout the
United Stat., especially those or the Minch.-
NINA, Missouri, Illinois, Tennessee, Cumber
land, A rkauenut. Red, Colorado, Brazos, Pearl,
Alabama, Mobile, Savannah, Roanoke, James,
and many others with theiir Vll,l tributaries,
during the Summer and Autumn, and re 1111 l rk -
ably so dunng seasons of unusual beat and
dryness, are invariably nerumpweled by os
tensive derangements of the stomach and liv
er, and other abdominal viscera. 't'hey are al
ways more nr Iron, obstructions of the liver, a
weakness and irritable state ol the stomach,
and great torpor or the bowels, tieing clogged
up with vat lated at...tonal loos. In their trent-
Illellt, is purgative, exerting a powerful lane
owe upon these verbal organs, is essentially
necessary. There is Ili, ndlnnnrtic for the bur
pose equal to Dlt.W A I.K KB:" Vinegar linters,
as they will speedily remove the dark cola
viscid matter with which the Bowels are load
ed, at the same time st !nub. II lig the secs edema
or toe liver,and generally restoring the healthy
functions of the digestive organs. The uni
versal popularity ot this valucble remedy In
regions nun)ret lo miasmatic influences, is
sufficient evidence of its power us It remedy lu
FOR SKIN DISEASES, Eruptlong, Totter,
Salt Rheum, Blidehen, Spots, Pimplen, Plow
toles, Dolls, Car be aloe, Slug- Worn., 14,141-
Head, Sore Eyes, Er) iiipelaN, Itch, Sourbi,
Uln
colorntluic Of the Skin, Humors and D 151.015014
of the Skin, of whatever nano; or nature, are
literally dug up mid carried out of the ;video.;
In a short time by the thew these Bitters. Une
bottle In hurl. eases will cony' ace the most lu
ereduloun of their curative etreet.
Cleanse the Vitiate', Blood whenever you
Quit its Impurities bursting through the skin
In' Eruptions or were,: cleanse II
when'
ilou and obstrucled and sluggish in
the veil.; teanse It when It is hall, and your
feelings will tell rout when. Keep the blood
pure 11115 the health of the system will follow.
PIN. nut{ other WIIIiyIN, luralng In
the system of su many thousanils, turn effectu
ally destroyed and reniieul. tell three
thins, read carefully the circular around each
bottle, printed 111 four languages—English,
Fretn•lu and sipanish.
J. WA I.K Eli, Proprietor. It. 1 - I. Nlcl/0 N-
A 1.1) R CU.. DrII,4INLN 1111,1 General Aaetits,
San Francisco, Cal., 111111 12 Lad Coininetee
Street, New Metlm
SOLI) HY ALI. IJILL'CiuJIS'I'SI JiNl) 1)F:A I,ltltS.
H E 11/EI.II:ATE A\ll ILE-
A. freshing fragrance ,el genuine Farina co
logne IV/tier, 111111 in lull /vv./mitt/Iv 11,
CU Lt; ATE'S EA U.DE Cu 1,()( Ni
the Tobvt bf every Lady br Geb , 14,11111.
by Druggbits and in Pcribbwry,
up :!ti 31.1 w
4' I, XY7 1r11„.1
h . gulfylng It.• pm, or Spina
ur zulthl, ;;;;;I Is too hush. ot lilt hunt/tit knowl
tutu°. l'sychotouney In hue title 01 allow work
of Jou paues, by Ilt•rhto t 11111111111 , 11, 11, A.,glvltig
lull lustful 11004111 Ille 'WIC., so;;;
ing awl 1..3;(•;;.,h , g l,. 1;o,, I li ex
ert 1110 wontlerfol sower over men or unthilds
lustuutuneously, lit v. IL It teltelles
llenlnrr-
Inm, low to lus•onte ;an, or \VI Illog Me•
;tooth, Sittrltuallsto, Alettenty,
l'h l b unophy 01 1 / 1 11,15 loot I qeotos, Itrtgliuto
Youttu • s Horton, tittlitt• In Morellure, Se. I hot
In the itttl, hook In the Ktiglinit Intottour prl.
resst hi; to telte It this oreull power null In tut
. sums 11.1IVitlItIl . 10 10 the .Nterrhant It; twilit,:
good t, the I.ltu•yer In wilottor llitteouthleheeol
Jurors, the I t hystellot 111 heolottt the ;dolt ; to
Lovers, lithet ttrluu lheutre. lions, ill the ;wilt,
mitt• sex, anti a. I neelt log ri hen or happiess.
Prier Iry JIM. I, !Ill:10111. &I. 81; pull, slit erm, :1.
W11111 ,, 1 Or 1111 S 110011, PI I vale :11,11,11
itrks, Peritonorv..le‘velry, Sc., who mull re•
Celve Noloulus tree. Atlttress
• •
Pithllrher and Pot hurry
I.
J.,8 O'CLOCK..
EIREE TO BOOli AGENT/4.
r We will Kew' Inindmotneltr,pet•ltt4tornur
New I,,virri,d P'ansitv Bade ei,IJI/titlllig ON,
2nll ,eripture !Huta,' mu,. 1.0 any Bung
Agent, Iree (A enlarge. Aildress
I'L'ltl,l , lllSli
Je2n-Ite Philadelphia,
01)1'; A :11ION'll'11.-- EX PEASE.. PA 11/
;) I t-/Malr or Felloilo Alront,—Horne and
uolOt luroodo.l. "N1011,.1 . 1 .
:Saco, \I o. Jo'24- lw
1111 IS IN NO II I:
eyeing
„ ENT,
with age, hiilght, color of eye,. nut hair, pal
will roads, hs retain instil a eorrer t ;avian. al
your titian. iir wire, v. ilh 111111
dale Or mrriage Xililreha \V. FOX, I. U.
No. a 2.1 .1..1.31tta1v Me. N. Y.
T IIEA-NECTAR
IS A PURE
BLACK TEA.
wyrit THE U SEEN TEA FLA YOH..
WARR NTED TO SUIT Al.l. TASTES.
FOR SALE EVERYWHERE,
And for 'ode Wlinleenle only by One
Great Atlantic and Pacific Tea Company,
P.O. Box, 5.506, 8 CH CHUB ST., N. Y.
SEND FOR THE Tll EA-NECTAR Cl R(1.11.A It
Je:l6-.lw
AGX/CULTUBALLETS
IMPORTANT To FARMERS
wilu USE
Mowing, Reaping and Threshing
NI AC IIINES!
-.40Z 4 N
(147 1 11.0.%)
C O *leak, 41, 1 ,5-t* .14cC
110111147 W
LW.; Niiperr to .Np , rrn and rt , ,r
r•iittr,l 'lv( It gum Mach
ItED Ex I'It.SSI.I" FOR Fan,/ EIVi . list,
Every lamer. slnre the Int reel net lun of Mow
ing trial Iteaplnu Machines, has ex nerlor red
great trouble and an nnyanee In their use for
the want. or II Lulaleator that usaild rnake
then, run easily, keep I helr Journals ruol and
ritoy the,a up with (pi
Inveln l Id, W,121. In every part leu-
II Is being used In the largest mnehine views
mid manufaclorles of all limois ID i City of
Philadelphia:Ll,' vicinity, Oil tligint, mill the
hesvlest machinery, wlth nor , sati:llietorY
results 1111111 from any Intirlealitr- - licrin
noll exemiti lois ever been tried. \V.•
ha,' the i.triolgtst testimonials from some or
h,rgest v 01114111,, cif lubricating oils lit
this elny and se ll elwhere.
/.b.vn'dine does not evawira. , excr'pt at a
very togh temperature. therefore machines
that are thon,glll, cleaned 11.1 oiled whit it
when put away at the end of I he hitrvest. Will
be,nent front ra , llm; uu , t till la: ready for use
the followinu seasaut.
The gums In grasser and grain., which rude
,01,11 col, beim:, dissolved by int., are
: , evenled from accumulating cat the hearings
of the nitchln.•ry and clouging them.
A single trial n 111,011,11/ 4 . .• any farmer that
It ha, all the merits Hahne,' for It. It Is pot
up In willrnl vans, null for sale•, wholesale and
retell, by the manufartorers,
•
E. F. li(XWITON
No. 121 South Fourth ,at , Pa.
Alm. for halt, at ll.e promlaelit Agt
Wareliou•a•s,
A Ilberal ilI eour. I by thr race (12 en.) to
inorelireponi. Who ILre no:lrltra to give It a.
ph", In their stork, Jot 1-111Lw24
ATTORNEYS-AT-LA W.
J. F. PRVEACIEr,
Attorney and Counsellor at Law,
f 9 lydtw• Columbia. Pa
1. W. F. SWIFT,
No. 13 North Dute 9L., har.,Aator
•
EDNA ki C. REED.
No. I 6 'North [Juke nt... Lan,..tmt
FILE/D. Y FEEL,
No. 5 South Duke CL.. L•btlChMtet
M. H. PRICE,
Court Avenue. West of Court ileum). Lancaster
No. Z3O Locust street,
Columbia, Pa
dee22 lyddzw
WM. LEAMAN,
No. 5 North Duke et_ Laucaeter
A.. 7. EiTEINMAN,
No. 9 South Queen et.. Lancaster
H. a. NORTH,
voturnblo.j..nanator county. Fa
D. W. PATTERSON,
Hav removed Me odtee to No. 88 Eagt Elm,.
SIMON P. A EFIY
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
OFFICE WITH N. ELLMAKER, ESQ.,
NORTH DUKE STREET,
LANCASTER. PA. IsA.B ly
PROVISIONS, FISH, &C
DAVID CARSON,
DEALER IN
GROCERIES & PROVISIONS OF ALL KINDS
FRUITS, SALT FISH, .to.,
NO. 130 VINE STREET, PHILADELPHIA.
Country Produce received and sold on com
mission. inStftvlii
FASHIONABLE HATTERS.
1871 SPRING f 1871
SHULTZ & BRO.,
FASHIONABLE HATTERS,
ECEMIE
NEW AND ELEGANT STORE.
NOS. 31 L 33 (NKW) NORTH QUERN ST.
01, I) Nu, 20{
SPRI NU STYLES NOW REA I) Y,
NOV E Es ob . 'HIE SEASON
Our selvellon fur the spring Trade surpasss.
In Elegance of Design anti Finish
anything heretofore f
hired to our pa
trons.
GIE:s;'FI,EMEN'S FINE
DRESS SILK HATS.
E.1.41' VENTILATINU,
12191111120 M
Nl't , art preparo,l to offer ',lt. Inklurvanonts
to:all telt, favor tot WWI
To CON 1 , 0101 To 11[E:1'1\1ES.
SH LT?, .1 131(0
NO:i. 31 ()ItT I I (41.11 , :EN ~TIIED.T.
132=121
LAND ASSOC/AT/ i),V
11' ' ' m E,,
I'ItENIII'M ()F f] IN! NWIE
NE \V STEEL EN(Ottk VINUS!
=II
wv ha,“ Imo
14,1lowIng euLtruviligs, wh.lt
luw Ilgurt.“ ul
8 . 8 E A II II
olthothth thoy ore• retilly wort h 01141
ThU) . are lOx9I Innohont, intuit .41 , 11 IM IL 141.111 ot urn
lt It I, Y !
A Legt•ntl of the it hlins A r:tulle
WI the nhorn of Illy rl ver,
rot•ltn urn the moat tlangennut, inol tvllll
sung inn' ellartint Ili. unwary sailors in
tun, hrr, when I lloy 1111,1 It tvattny thusr. Th ,
muhfli.l In lull or hie, lull of t•nuAltt, anti ,
ultopellwr it suct,sn.
11 DISiN RITE it
A young intLii, Ihrotwlt II ally
room.. ID his lonisch1)111, Is ileprlvisl 111 1 slisrt.
In Ills furlwr's htmse. liavlng hut s..rrow ns ,
Ills 1111., 110 111.11111 - IN. And Iroul nol. , ghloorlitg 11111
ho Ills lost look nod f5r01,71.11111111. , ....,15s
or Ills young, I.l.limit ler Mitts. 'I Ityl,rllrt TILls
wltllllrrll rim Lill. SUI/jk • Ct •
SVVii
A chlltl mtlllt Intm„n hotly tel 11,i., 1.1g1 . 111.
1n1 . 1., 1.1.1 111V11.! Up., In ruprriatittitil so Si, II
Hint wort ittannot hall Its w•rlli. Wt. 'to
not Illicit that Lily Int iirtivlng Ilan y a•t rl411•11,11
1111' vitt...lien., of thin, In bawl, lltot lithri
and 1111Ing It airily lu 11 high, world. Tlittoyo
never tints to look. 'rho !ultra II Iv mtent,
grottier the 11l look thrala nail again.
itorroct Lithograph I.llistintsit of
EN, S'cIiNEIVA .IAI7Ii,SIIN.
The taint, largittit and hatolsotilort over par,
Ilslntil,lllx2l Inrbov, worth Eroo, ,Vllll . ll Wl .
mill on Oat Sante litrtns, for 52,00. It In linty IL
goal of art.
A 1 uIT U N
=II
NV MI each entuttvl tot, !111 we ha', /Mill AMC
ei,leieu. ul vriii give FR1.:1.:, 0111 .
vial' ling eitt.llollll . l.llol.ler to 1,11 l of the tullow•
lug IR
Ite.ttol nn, and rommber, flint 'very t Ick
11.1411. r willpbtil I vttly get 11(11. in I ile• 14/1/(Millg
WI II Ist 1 . 11 ottlt.ll by tt cl ratt• log
THE LA PIERRE HOTEL,
DENTus,ml)..
rontit'ffing I weiity-itlx.
throughout, with till nutili•rinl3-1,
;thinly of outtbullillngit, tilutillng for r
tiornes Inuluillug nil outfit, ittotik,
11.4.1,00 u
„....
THE PICTURE 111 LL FARM,
(N.UN FY, A 1..,
a( 10:1 AUStErr, on the t'h. plank met . , baying
IL steamboat wharron It, with n good ncop.•
. 01/11trY to support. It; w•ltha Ilea• kiln, Stlasl.
halldl no, a !mg.. Varlets re a ye:111,1
to churches and netaalls, only six mil•n from.
I•:asiun, the largest hunt urns town on the
fl it
w'are. l'etilusttla 810.00...
•
THE COLD SPRINO FARM !
ni IA A l'ltEl4; one mllO from 10• Mon, 1)110 1011,
from stemmata) latellmt, ll , e nlllen from the
Maryland and Delaware Railroad; OOP thi.,
and pearls trues, Ilfly apple trees, choice earl,-
ties of strawberries, churl lon, plums, aptleole,
crat, apples, de arf pears, eplerand II.•W
I rigs, worth 64,0.0.
THE CA crEn FARM!
with NO ACRES; Ono orchard, good builiitogs
choice whoni land B.l,,tbuti
A DOUSE IN DEN'I'ON!
with one anti It half acre orchard, with the
finest va•lellea Of (Mill, 63,000.
:2.00 STANDARD SEWING NI WI INES
worth 1. um 810 to 0150.
LO NV A LTII ANi NV ATc 11 !
Each worth from 8.10 to 8100
FOUR PI A N().4.
TEN ORGANS AND MELODEONS.
oNE CASH SUM..
ONE CASH SUM
()SP, CASII HUM 1113011.
THREE ANTI 81110.
' , OUR CASH SL'Ms—EACII $5O.
19,1170 (nrrs eontilstlng of WA/thing Mat-
Haines, Wrintterm, Standard hook,. and Worktt
of Art ; hone of them ran he phreltiotetl, At re
tell, for ii•Sti than 31, while home urn worth
And more.
ro•rAL VA 1.12
Of the 50,000 Gifts sloo,otgt
The clrawing will take Wave, nn Mono na
gray ingn a iugh are Hold to filo:tribute the
Liek eta, before earn. e * ticket-beide!, an Offen,
to be prevent. and to no mob, their control.
We refer to
Thonoof 11. W ern p, Clerk ore:troll or Co. Court
Lleorge 11. Rosa um, ALL at Law, Denton, 51.1.
R. K. kileharflooon. Sheol If of the County.
Fell, Esq.. of Dent,e Md.
Manchu .t lieu., Acid Koff ate Ilrokorof, KILN
ley, Md.
aloe above gentlemen will net an Supervbfory
Corn on Mee.)
Ruler flint, to Charlet, Gootllng Eng 5-trwatt rr
of the Ltolaware Senate, uII the I\4 1 lig Mon.
the Pan its, ttaf Editor of this Paper, 1 Ito:
jr,o. of the Ponitt•ula, generally.
. ,
Wuwant. active men MP] women, every -
where to work for on, whom we Will
in lak e bend arrangetueulo, namely, alter their
ordering their sample engi ;Lying, we will give
them one engraving and one Lick, g
Fag, bit
every four 111“111, they vent us
order on Engraving, Nend lu In a
register,' letter, or by . 1.11 der, 'poi
we will send by return engravnig
and the ticket Fagg.
Seidl all your orderg for ongravlogs, olouey
and Era l.u, all , l all vorrospois.o.oce lo our go..
oral ollleo, addros.sod
CAROLINE Co. LAN I) ASSOCIATION
I=l
Tlt R L
NVill lie sent to all purchasern rantt for on
quarter on appiient 1011. 11 will given clef, Ike)
ac•ountof our pro reed Int:4 Ironi time to time
Newspapers wishing to ailvertise tor ill will
please send us theft lowest rates.
Denton, Cure/tat atunly, Md., February MI,
fenls-lyw-7
TRA V ELLER'N (i CI
DIIILADELPINIA AND BALTIMORE
- CENTRAL RAIL ROA D.
MSMOIMIZI
On Bud niter hUNDAY. JUNE 4th, Ib7l
trains will run as follows:
Leave Philadelphia, ruin Depot or P. W.
B. It. K., corner Broad street and Washington
avenue.
For Port Deposit, at 7 A. M. and 4:30 P. M.
For Oxford, at 7 A. M.. 4,3 U P. M.. uud 7 I'. M.
Fur Oxford Wednesday and Saturday only
at 2..:10 P. M.
For Chadd's Ford and Chester Creek It. K.
at 7 A. M., In A. M., 4:11u P. M., and 7 P. M.
Wednesday and Saturday only ut Ind P. M.
Train leaving Philadelphia at 7 A. M. con
nects at Port Deposit with train for Ball
Train,. leaving Philadelphia at 10 A. M. and
4:30 P. M. Port Deposit at 0:25 A. M., Oxlord at
0:05 A. ~connect at Chadd's Ford JUlllait.
with the Wilmington and Reading Railroad.
Trains for Philadelphia leave Port Deposit at
9:25 A. M., and 4:9.5 P. 51., on arrival of trains
horn Baltimore.
Oxford at 0305 A. M., 10:3.5 A. M. and 5:30 P. M.
Mondays at 5:15 A. M. only.
Chadd's Ford at 7:30 A. M., 11:58 A. M. 4:'.5.) P.
M., and 6:49 P. M. Mondays at 6:32 A. M. only.
On cundays, train leaves Philadelphia at 11:19.1
A. M. for Oxford; returning, leaves oxford Mr
Philadelphia at 9:40 P. M.
Passengers are allowed to take wearing ap
parel only as baggage, and the Company will
not In any case be.responsible for au amount
exceeding one hundred dollars, unless a.
special contract Is made for the same.,
HENRY WOOD.
a2B-lywl7 General Cluperinteriden L.
EL U CA TI ON AL
W' t'lt.T.Tilifl th
POTTSTOWN,
MONTGOMERY COUNTY, PENN'A.,
ENGLISII
CLASSICAL,
!SCIENTIFIC,
ARTISTIC,
COMMERCIAL
Location Admlrahlei Twentieth Annual Sen.
elonl Thorough Preparation for College or
Bualneas. ...11er For !nroulara address
Rev. GEO. F. ALLLLER, A. M.,
PrinclpaL
Earansurclu.—Rev Drs. Melo, lichaerra..r,.
Mann, Eranth, Baths, Hutton, eto,—Hons.Judge,
Ludlow, Leonard Myers, .1„ E. Yost, B.' M. Boy—
er, M. Ruud T •er *e