The Lehigh register. (Allentown, Pa.) 1846-1912, June 15, 1870, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    gagisttr.
Editor and Provridor
JOBT.IREDBLL, Ja.,
A.LLENTOWN, PA„ JUNE 18, 1870
DICKENN.
Wo resolved last weak a cable dispatch
of four sorrowful words, I Charles Dickens Is
dead."
Who is there amongst all the readers of
English literature, that will not Mel all the
painful beWilderment and sorrow, which
comes upon us at the intelligence of the loss
of a dear friend—Rß they read those words.
The pen that wrote the "death of little Paul"
and "poor Joe," and all the tender passages
of poor Sidney Carton's great love,
no more for us. The heart that could conceive
the noble life of John Jaurdyce, the simple
manliness of soldier George and dear old Cap
tala Cattle, and all those others whose maul'.
nes4 truth and devotion have made men bet
ter'and wiser for the rending—that great good
heart is still in death, and its, warm charity
and•brbtherly kindness, its ready response of
syrnikt,thy to'distress, are stilled with it.
The tielor and the needy, the sick and the
afflicted, the downtrodden and oppressed,
everywhere,have lost a friend in Charles Dick
ens who will not soon be repincetl. Mtn can
estitnate the amount of good that has followed
this man's life? In all the works lie hes
given to the world he has sought to elevath,
and has elevated, into, to a truer understand
ing of the nobility and greatness that good
nesii and worth bring to the occupants of even
the humblest stations in life. Into ninny a
,weary, despondent heart, his words have in,
stilled the Idea of thedignity of labor• and the
true happiness to be found in a life of honor,
rectitude and, truth. Mercy, gentleness end
koving kindness were the lessons that lie
taught, and he showed all vice and wickedness
En Its meanness and vileness so distinctly, that
age looked back on it with horror and youth
shrank from it In disgust.
As a public render, he attained a popularity
that has never before fallen to the lot of any
man, and thousands enjoyed the pleasure of
looking him in the face and hearing kis voice,
mid thus knowing him more practically, than
through the meditun of his books. lint, great
as was fits sneeess in this direction, it was not
his greatest iriumpl., nor was it the success
lie coveted and obtained. To lie admitted to
every household wherein the English lan
guage was spoken, to speak his words of
kindly cheer to the young 11114 old, the rich
and the poor, alike, to !urn the hearts of the
selfish and the priind towards the poor and
the needy, to make lie happy happier, to
cheer the sorrowful n u t ivi ary, and to be
known and loved by them, all this. was Ida
happy privilege, non by Imednnd persevering
labor in the professiom he unnubled.
The ...old, old fashion, death," the sweet
sleep that came to "little Nell' , has conic to
!tint, and helots " voile out on the great tide"
towards the everlasting sea. The tears of
sorrow will fall, as they have fallen for Tiny
Tint and poor wretched hungry Smike, and
in many a household the re will be mourning
for him who told then. of Mr. I'eggotty and
little Emily, and bound them closer together
by Lis Christmas stories, ever pointing to that
"blessed star, which led the wise men to a
poor abode."
Full of kindliness, gentleness and goodness,
his manly nature made hint always tender and
true to the sweet Innocents of childhood and
the weakness:and helplessness of age. Of a
nature uptight, conselontous and faithful, he
spoke ever in fearless terms against wicked
ness in high places and the perpetuation of
destitution and ignorance amongst the poor.
With the keen shaft of ridicule he would
pierce and destroy the " littlenesses" of men
and of governments, and with tongue and
pen he was always ready as the champion of
liberty and truth.
It is not a nation only that mourns fur this
man It*, it 1.. the " world" which bewails his
loss. -Wherever there are men who speak the
English language, the name of Charles Dick
ens is heard with veneration and respect, and
is spoken to-day with hushed voice and rever
ent air—for the great novelist is dead. Tile
" Mystery of Edwin Drood" will not be un
ravelled, for the greater mystery of the end
less sleep has come upon its author.
One by-one these men are fading from the
earth and are dying in the harness they have
worn in their hardworking lives. As we
watch them step into the darkness beyond,
we glance back along the road they have
traveled, and when, as in this case, we see it il
luminated by bravo hard work, honestly done,
by kindly generous deeds and loving faithful
words, we know that the "darkness will be
light about them" and that their rest
fromvill be sweet.
Charles Thtleens was the son of Mr. John
Dickens, who held a position under the British
Government in the Navy Pay Department.
He was born at Landport, Porti3mouth, Eng
land, in the year 1812. After the close of the
war with the United States, his father obtained
literary employment in London on the staff
of one of the, morning journals. Charles ob
tained a situation as clerk In an Attorney's
Office, but, his natural bias leading him to
wards literary occupations, he sought and ob
. Mined employment on the reportorial staff of
the morning Chronicle, which was then under
the management of Mr. John Black, who soon
recognized the ability. of the young attache,
and in a short time a series of his papers were
published in that journal entitled, " Sk . etches
of English Life and Character-" One of his
earliest efforts, was the production of a comic
opera entitled the " Village Coquette." Soon
afterwards he was engaged by the eminent
publishers, Messrs. Chapman & Hall, to pre
pare a serial story, and the result was that
wonderful world renowned work, "The
Posthumous Papers of the Pickwick Club."
Of the numerous works 'which followe,
there is no need for .03 to speak. On both
eldes of the Atlantic, he and his works arc
thoroughly known, and tens of thousands of
readers 'have been instructed, mired and
benefited by his wondrous delineations of
character, his wit mid his pathos. Loving
hearts will mourn for him,and eyes that nc'cr
beheld his face will weep that he is gone ; but
while the perishable body shall moulder In
the dust, the manly form be forever hidden in
'the tomb, his fame shall hist while his native
tongtie is spoken, a:standing proof that genius
is Winona],
LO, TIIE POOR INDIAN
The visit of Messrs. lied Cloud, Spotted
Tail aud•the other euphonistically surnamed
gentlemen, who :are at present wallowing, so
VI speak, in all the luxuries of civilization, at
Washington, brings prominently before the
peoipla., a, subject too often ignored, pooh
pookediormisrepresented.
Thdterrible idea of extermination, which is
unblueydn:gly promulgated by men not natur
lly bl6:44ilarsiy, and cruel, is the inevitable
• suit 4,&Oupertlclal observation of the Indian
.uestion,and a too ready belief in the " trench
,
•rous. 'lazy and sanguinary character of the
I .diatOace." To be patient under cruel
ronge and to bear oppression and cruelty
Ith silent humility, is not even a character-
Ulu of th'd, palatial with the tutored mind.
is no( fair to expect it from the " peer In
• Lan, whose untutored mind" cannot compre
:end the necessity for gratitude or love, or
• en a:peaceful disposition, towards the race
...t isigisdnally and surely driving him front
a latest refuge. •
Red Cloud . told Secretary Cox the other
y, In Washington, "the red man was the
t on all this great land. The Great Father
ye be is good to us. I can't see it." If we
I consider a little, fellow citizens, may we
not find a pretty good reason why this tinier . -
tunate fled Cloud can't see it. It would be
atm difficult to convince the American white
pep& of the goodness of some intellectually
supprior and more highly cultivated race of
people, who should drive them inch by inch
from any oil° tlf the mighty States of this
Union. The spirit of vengeance and wrath
might surely rise amongst them sometimes
and cause them to retaliate by any means in
their powerfor the American people are not
particularly distinguished for their meekness.
Dr...McCosit said,tho other day in the Pres
byterian General Assembly, in relation to ex
termination, that "it is not the law with re
gard to man as established by our Divine Re
deemer. Dis law is,that weakness should con
quer strength."•
There was something very mournful and
affecting in the words of these Indian chiefs
St Washington. Chiefs of once 'powerful
tribes, which not long since formed part of
the great and warlike Indian Nations, they
tend themselves powerless and helpless in the
hands bf the pale-face, and, with proud hu
mility, they ask that their people may not be
compelled to " die like sick sheep" in a climate
that is detrimental to health. Their helpless
ness appeals to our humanity and sympathy
In the affecting worde,)doubly affecting from
the lips of a proud Indian warrior : " Look
and see. lam poor. lam naked." To dis
regard the cry of the poor and needy, to turn
a deaf ear to their pitiful entreaties—in short,
to take menus to exterminate them, dare not,
be the course of a Christian nation who elect
to be the followers of Him who said, " Inns
muck as ye did it unto one of the least of these
my brethren, ye did it unto me."
mlivoutTv VPlit ESENTAT lON
A circular has been issued calling upon the
Republicans in minority Counties to get to
gether and take some means to give consider
ation to the plan of minority representation.
We desire if possible to draw the attention of
all the voters of this county to this pliurw Web
is about to be adopted in Illinois and has re-.
ceived the endorsement of many leading men
of both parties in different parts or .be coun
try.
.It cannot be denied by any thinking nuill
that connty business either in a Democratic or
Republican county would he managm,lhetter,
anti morn in the interests of al( the people, if
both pni sw. rc represented in the local
boards. in our legislative representation
there is mand reason to believe it would work
equally well. In some instances the minority
pay by fer the larger portion of the taxes and
actually have no representation at Harrisburg,
a fact quite inconsistent with the spirit of the
laws which govern no.
In Lehigh C o unt}' for inAtanco there is at
present no prospect for the• representation, of
the varied interests of the large number of
Remit)licun tax payers, in the Legislative at
Ilnrrislnn•g, and in Chester and Lancaster
counties it is equally true in regard to the
unrepresented Democrats. By a system of,
minority representation each of them would
have a voice in the management of Meal af
fairs.
Just representation and lair play is what is
desired all round and we are glad to see these
Piers advocated by the press in this and
neighboring counties. The duty of the Press
is to keep this idea before the people and, the
duty or he people is to act with promptitude
and diseretion in a matter sn vital to their in
terests.
'THE CIENSUN
Uf the importance of this duty, enjoined in
le second Section of the Constitution, the
eople ought to have it just Ippt•ecintion.
The Census of the United States has been
taken every ten years since the year 1790, in
order to equalize taxation and apportion rep.
resentatives according to the population of the
several States. At first all that was Ott cmpted
was to obtain simply the totals or populations
in the various localities ; b u t the great value or
the statistics to It obtained from a more thor
ough ins estigation into our condition as a
people,has of late years come to be more fully
appreciated, and the Census of 1870 will em
body statistics that will be of 11111111 . 11 Se value
to the political economist. The Census of
1790 WAS. a simple count of the people and
that in a population of 3,929,827 persons,while
at this. time the Census Bureau are under
taking the gigantic task of not only enumer
ating a population of forty millions, but of
ascertaining the name, station, business and
condition or each one. In fact the object or
the Bureau 1.• to have. a record of the whole
people of the United StateS in almost every
social particular,
(.)f coarse, much of the value of the Infiniti
elicit to he obtained will depend upon the tm
, curacy 31111 fidelity or' the Assistant Marshals,
but the public. can materially facilitate the pro
cess by doing expeditiously what the law re
quires them to dm It is the duty of every
good citizen, if he is the head of it tinnily, to
attend to his.matter himself, mid it should be
distinctly understood that any number of per
eons living together, in whatever mtmbers and
under what, ver circumstances, under one
roof, con:Ant:le a family Within the meaning
of the lair, no matter whether they are bound
together by the ties of consanguinity or not.
Therefore, it is easy to RP how each "pater
can 90 prepare himself as to facilitate
the Work of the A. , ,sistaat Marshals by getting
ready all the information necessary concern.
ing every Member of the family he represents.
'cite questions of the census taker will lie
very minute, precise and particular, mtit•will,
of course, be regarded as strictly confidential,
and the Marshals are instructed that no indis•
cretion can be graverthan that of divulging in
formation they may obtain in the discharge
of their duty.
The Marshals have a delicate and important
duty to perform, and will, we trust, discharge
it with conscientious litithfulness, but the
weight of duty is equally Onerous on each iv
dividual, to so dkeharge:the duties of citizen
ship as to aid the cause or science and do the
" State some service."
DICKENS' PLACE IN LurEnATunt
As a literary force, Dickens is at this nut.
ment the greatest in English literature. The
easy, popular king of the whole world's en
tertainment, lie dies -Nith the sceptre firm in
in his grasp. That he is not cultivated—that
he has no religion beyond a prayerless, tem
peramental good nature,—that lie contemns
the deeper problems of modern thought and is
ignorant or the leading forces of modern so
ciety, is probably - his strength. Only in his
half-divine, impartial ignorance—that igno
rance which was the might of Homer and of
Shakespeare—can the artist so possess his soul
as to do justice to his art creation. If Dick
ens were a philosopher like Mill, we should
•never have heard the exquisite non sequitur
reasoning of Mrs. Harris. If he had had, like
Matthew Arnold, the Academic spirit; he
would be still paring away at the faulty con
struction of Pickwick and Nickleby. If lie
had been born, like Tennyson, with the love
of classic calm, where would be his fair-scenes
in the Curiosity Shop,his tumult of low life in
Oliver Twist? It is not for the Philosopher,
for the scholar, that we are to look in Dickens.
By so much as he c slyould have educated and
polished himself, leSo much would he have
escaped from the grand popular audience he
was born to charm. It is as a man of the peo
ple, comprelarending intimately their wants
and humors ; as a genial and companionable
spirit, of which the world gets fewer to its
share year by year; as a common friend of
all that is whimsical, and good, and bright,
and kind in this century of turmoil—that
Charles Dickens appeals to the age and leaves
it darker by his loss. Eulogies of his good
ness and pleasant greatness will be written in
every language that has a literature; for he
has Interpreted his century to the wdrld and
to tuturlty.--Phaa.
MINORITY REPRESENTATION.
Our remarks on this important subject In
the editorial columns of the LEHIGH REOISTER,
(which was the first paper to call attention to it
In this part of the State), have been followed
by an amount of interest in the matter, which
shows how •readily the popular mind takes
hold of the idea. We are happy to have our
views endorsed by home of the most inlluen.
tin! journals in this section of the State, and
have no doubt that by a combination of effort
a successful consummation will result.
From time to time we shall quote the •opin-
ions of our friends onithis Important subject
CONVENTION ON TIIE‘ MINORITY COUNTIES
UALLED.-11l many of the-counties of Penn
sylvania the Republicans are in a hopeless
minority and can get nothing, in and from
them, by popular elections as now conducted.
Yet it is an established fact the energy mani
fested by the workers in these very counties,
the heavy. vote polled therein and the gains
thereby secured, enable the Republican part•
to carry the State in every important, ani
mated State and National contest. In spite of
this truthacknowledged and admitted
and acted upon by every State Com
mittee—or President, Governor and " all
others in authority," feign ignorance of the
existence of a Republican Party in the thirty
eight minority counties; and ill Eastern Penn
sylvania, the brave defenders of the faith, in
such counties as Montgomery, Berks, Lehigh,
Northampton,ete.,are almost entirely ignored,
whilst offices thick and fist are showered upon
the citizens of such cimuties as Chester, Lan
caster and Philadelphia. Our neighbor
Chester county alone has Dr. Worthington in
fat place ; E. B. Moore in clover in Phila
delphia ; P. F. Smith State 'Reporter ; Wayne
McVeigh on his Way to 'Turkey; Wash
Townsend in Congress; all the county offices;
three members of the Legislature„ and now
wants Old Montgomery's Slide Senator to
boot I
We propose a strike. Not an illegal and
unholy combination ;• not a cessation front
labor; but a convention, Ihr consultation and
co-operation—an We propose—to assemble at
the Uirard House on Ike VII day
. of July, A.
D., 1870, at 2 o'clock, P.
The Legislature, the nest session, will have
the important work of redistricting the State
to perform ; we will soon have another Gov
ernor to nominate—thank God ! there we are
equal—and elect; then a United States Sen
ator ; the Camn-Buckalew system of voting is
attracting the attention of the whole Nation ;
and a convention of the Republicans or the
minority counties will have the effect of seem
ing our rights and demanding our recognition
nt the hands of those whom we have elevated
or may hereafter elevate to positions of honor
and profit. Let there be aNo representation
of tim Republicans from all those counties ill
the State where the Democrats hold all the of
fices and receive all the patronage. Hereafter
we will give some important statistics. Mean
while, solitary and alone, we set the Ball in
motion.—No•r6Uoarn Independent.
lImIfITTImTT
tE2I3
)IlNottery CouNTws.—The work for a
party, in a minority county, is wholly a work
of love. We who exercise that quality, to a
considerable degree, could continue, were it
not known, that in counties, where the Re
publicans are in the majority, while the lie•
publicans are in control or the Slate and ma
tional offices, that there the work for a party .
is a work Of profit. We believe that labor
for the sake of ,prlnciple is better done . and
possesses more merit than work for profit,
but it is natural and human to love gain. It
is not possible to expect men of a party to work
harmoniously in a cause,When some are receiv
imr pay while others are out of pocket e..ntinu.
airy. The powers ()I' the Ilepublican party in
Pennsylvania have grown so hardened that
they totally ignore the wort. and o':. ms of
.those in minority commies. It .s ju dis
tricts like Northampton, Lehigh, Berks and
such darkened sections that the Democrats
yxpect the most, and throw their greatest
strength. To offset this the Republicans in
general have done nothing, but tell the real.
dent members or the party to do all with
nothing stengthen or encourage them. Ask
aid an d the central committee have said we
must do this and that 'for other places and
cannot aid y(m. Our roods are low, and we
can only send you a small amount, while to
cmuntice where the profit or local gain and
offices should carry the party through, they
send everything asked. Of us they ask the
Democratic majority ; they enjoin bard NV;lrlij
demand hard work and in no manner aid us.
.WI ten offices are to be filled men are chosen
from majority districts where the working
men in the party have been imply paid, while
those in minority counties are wholly ignored.
We have grown tired and heartily sick of
such. The work for the party is not onerous.
To advance the interest orthe party is an ar
dent wish, and a work oh love, but .while
neighbors are being probably paid and placed
in lucrative posilion.s we are not content to
remain wholly ignored. Let some distribu
tion of these gifts be made. Give men NVIIO
work equal honors, whether they labor with
the majority or in a minority.
MR. COMMIXSIONER WELLS
In no one scheme for influencing the action
of Congress, (and there have been many of
them), has there been so inuell money ex
pended as in the scheme for inducing Con.
cress to act in the interests or the Free Tra
ders. Once more every engine is being
brought to bear, once n u n•e large sums of
money lire being expended, in order to render
more secure the advantages bought by the
previous lavish expenditure. The object now
is to insure the re-appointment of Mr. Com
missioner Wells, who has so faithfully earned
the price or his unfaithfulness to his country
men and so willfully mis•represented them,as
to Im•feit the respect of every man who re
gards truth and common honesty. . •
We betray no confidence in saying that this
man invited the repre,sentittives of the iron in
terests or Pennsylvania to meet hint in' Phila
delphia before the publication of his infamous
report, and did there, in the confidence of a
friendly conversatiomobtain front them infor
mation,which afterwards,in a garbled and dis
torted form, he used to advance the interests
of his Free Trade clients and to injure the
business prospects or this whole State.
Icor did he stay at this. Some portions of
his report contained statements directly at va
riance tvith what Inc knew to be the fact, and
iu c, ontradiction to the statements made to him
by lie gentlemen he invited.
The promises he made there, and at other
places, to fairly represent our interests, were
entirely unsolicited, and were broken 'With a
coolness and imbhishing effrontery that are
sufficient evidence, if all else were wanting, of
the moral turpitude of this purchasable Com
missioner,
We do not deny to:him a certain sort of
talent in the routine duties of his olllte, but,
when thitt talent is used in a Mamie' detri
mental to the interests of the people; we can
not see in it anything more than another
strong reason for his being slit' out for ever,
trout an office he has disgraced. No amount
of statistical knowledge and mathematical
ability \Oil enable its possessor to fairly and
Itone,tly fulfil the duties and hold the office of
Conn iiissioner, (or any other oilier) Hit is tut
allied with that rectitude which Mr. Wells so
manifestly. lacks.
Unless his claims upon the office Of Com
missioner grow out of his services to the Brit.
ish manufacturer, we cannot see on what they
rest. The office Is not intended to subserve
the Interests of the Foreign manufacturers,
but to benefit American interests, and we
want a man to fill it, who has sufficient hon
esty to place loft above the reach of bribery,
and stifficient'patriotism to be truthful,in rep
resenting the interests of his countrymen.
The infamous Commissioner Wells does not
possess these requirements, and we trust and
believe President Grant will recognize his on
and appropiately extinguish hint.
R.
BUSINESS NOTICES
The Qttedion Seltled.—Th.c eminent.' men, Dr.
Jas. CI l'hy‘lcian to (inv., Victoria. uo.I Dr. lingin ,
Bennett, say Ilt.‘t coustimption can be cared. Dr. \Vista ,
knew this when 110 ilineevered Lin a iw" widely known
OF WILD ellellitY, end expet lance huts proved
Ow cur:prim...4 his opinion,
. llc ore Informed that SIMMS' WIIITC ^ .PULNIONIe
IIAI.+Av uctm prolllPtly lu citing all Ch route
Itlaranut affecting the throat, breaot and Hugo,. an In
Ilronelllttl Alfeellono, Soro Throat, Chronic 00. recent
Coaglt, Croon Aolltinu. Dronchttlx, Whoupluet Cough.
Shortnnos of areath, Spitting of Blood. hortunont of tea
Ilremat, Pain and 'natant,a+ lu tho Itreamt. Catarrh of the
llountoutoot. Caught At.
And 'lsm It 10 x powerful krpoctorectsi tu(th tonic
teraffo , B.ltut I/11 0410 e propertlro. and %laud* uttexcell
ed, If rarely equalled, In coring all dlooases of tho Throat
and Lungs—has cored Aollitutt, of tell yearn 'Wadi an. In
Croup It lo .ittto be a perfect opaclfic, uud that 110018 as
amnion) food, null will 1111111.1 up weakened nail owns Hied
constitutions. Price, CO cents and C. Sea Advertisement.
IVltaltoin he do with U.—People wondered what
Ir. Waniunnker Wanted to enlarge his Onk Hall for.
Lot thorn look in there one of these Ono mornings nod the
crowded salesroom will answer their question.
Ilall's Vegetable Sicilian Ilia'. Renewer will posl
lvoly reAtore gray llalr to Ito orlglnal color. Olve It a
flat. •
AN EXCELLENT ItEASON WHY T. 0. Kerna..
hen, of the old Allentown China, Glassware and
Lamp Store, can' sell cheaper than others, is that
he buys and sells exclusively for Cash, thus gala
ng all the advantage of cash paYnnuds ❑nd losing
nothing by credit sales.
I low to Look l'ooing —Sixteen. —Poiel. paint or
vile Hair lio.lurere, hot ettoply 'lily llagett'e Mug
u ilia Balm 111.1 your fact.. neck nnd !tomb., and use ty
-011.1, Inthalrun npon your hair. The halm makes your
unplexlon pearly, •oft and natorol, and you can't tell
what did It. It remove+ crook let., Inn, sadinwnnr•, I.olk
m:whet moth -patches. etc. and 10 liner ore roil, matte
fare. you hare the tumble purity ,tly an extittlttlto
to age A u • hit tont of perpetual yonth. Add
them elfecht to It SOl'lllllll head of hair preattred by thin
nthairon, and a lady has done her bent In the way of
ndoru:m•nt. Brothent will have no „pte.tee mate, t ope ' ,
these tatlelt, tot around.
The Living .11aehine. —lnjure the multi spring of
s wind, inni every portion oof the .troon k • becomes Minor
tiered. The Manual stomach Is to the 'lnman system What
that elastic piece ..f foetal Is too n chronometer. It Indus
Viler . . the the iiiher area,., and controls, to n
certain extent, Mon whole living machine. The ronipnri.
MAI ninny be carried further: fora , the weakness Inc other
imperfections of the main ~pning Is Indicated 1111 the face
or tine tione•plece, Ili.) IS the weakness or other dicer.
del lif the stomach Inetrayond by the face of tine 'lnvalid.
The complexion is sallow nr fooled, the eyes are deficient
in lost, and intelligence, and their I. R warn. anxious
expression In the 'whole countennontio which tell ns plainly
ins tvrittow woad.. could do, that the !Iron( nourPhilog nr
gen 010, otifro. It Is to minister to the Willa . . of the/MAY,
na.in 111111 relli•W lu , 1,1111.,
....., .
ditty. It rt lin' , 1,10,1 1 1 11, anal regniatiug, and to
cyopplisli this end 110slcitt•r'q Sll,OlOll littler , may to.
oly said to 101 //it , net, thin!, no' TIIII 111.11k011 main
dying of watch may 110 1,1031,1 lip a ne‘v one, Intl tin ,
tomaelt can only lo , topaity'l 1.1 1.111.1 110111111, and this
4 oat , of the of nit tin tam.. vegetable rektorative
which for eighteen pent , has w'tglag YncceSsfni
ante4t ty ill' lip pepsn la all rholatys. As a spee'lle for
1,1 1111,11111 it ',tat,!. Mon, When the resources of the
ph rinact.p. been ex 1.1.1.1, nu ithout, at hest.
doing more Ihlll 111 1 1 1,0 1 ill. 111 11 (111111/11. , at. a •unrxc of
this whole.only and Palatahl, pal I.‘Vecfnl. 1.
p, t' peril. wan coe In all cases of Ilya.
ply,. the liver is mote or 1.•4s di...Arced, 11 MI 11 11011 this
10001'111 In glllllll. On %yeti asap'. thn "stomach alai I.wels,
the Pitt., art w Ith ningular thsttactuees t'egolating um o
rcinYht..tating cOYCY , c OO- cl , vc 04 s 11 °C/°"° o oro°. nn
w !itch I.ollly 11 1111 1111'111 111 ill, i 11„1,•11111111.
Suit Rheum, Riau 'lnd re 0100
I",errrint , ert,o,l.—tievt..-thlort11111:— .
SAL.srItY l'olV tlet. 31, 1 WS.
It Is with n guileful feeling that 1 feel nine lo malte the
,lowing statement for the benefit of those who are suffer
,: from Srroftilitother rhumb. 111•enses. My wife
ad beim suffering for set eralfrom turners m•
~11111,N en her neck ti itch niter lane would gather
oil discharge !natter, le:tying a runtang sere. She hail
ism Dented for more 111.013 year by m oOt eminent physl
iais ithout rereiving nay ficrotallent benefit, her disease
erenitilg worse, until she bail live or these mining son`
u lwr neck, when I Umpl..yed Dr. 11. D. Longuker, under
vine , treallnioit she roulinene , .l w improve very fast, the
over , ou'lier neck le Beal, 111111 all her impleinnint unll Ms
greealde syinptonl4 gradually to tli•almenr, unlil her
walth was restmeil, milach was in about four mouths. 1
eel perlectly Justified, alter having tried the treatment of
law, physicians In recolguirnding ;ill those who are suffer , .
tig Irma Srpifula or Chronic Dlse.n.o. LO Dr. 1...ga1:0r for
edlcal Irel1t111 , 1:i. Willi a firm helix f tli:nt they will Ine sat"
sstied, benefited mid tonna thereby, as lily n they
hilt been.
!Signed. .1A.%1 1:S ER.
Dr. 11. It. loontnltor'...lllee Is oughe Nast 010111
between II:1111110m and ‘ViLliilll..thikt/to,vll.
.
41)ittiEill EN, AlrrEvirl4>s!
. .
ItEA 1) 'l'll )W I NG !
inv“hmbit• I. mmioni loy and
I.y WELLS. N. L.
.or. 1.111 am! Sioriag I . lllla.lolphia.
al.. in AlloaoLawn Icy 1.. SI H 11110116.1
3:u..1. (I. %VI Airy' dint I have
1 . ..11x 11. I..nia...at , 1/11111
111110 .4' for the
g. 1 .1111, UlllOll Co., ILaxinllllrrr :w Ml
.. have a ~I,l,..mmity tin tr., v and
11.1 N 11 ‘
in ;ill it Inv. I ran 1,1111-
111 , 11l 1111.111.111.1111 e 111 , 111111,1..110 111 11111 111/1,0
Pa••. llallway.
N y
For side lry Dr. W. E. li UN ES St t.41/N. LAWALL
SIS !CNN, and .101 IN li. SIOSEU.
p CCiai ::IntlCC,s
HALL'S VEGETABLE SICILIAN
II Al R RENEWER,
rr 11'1 Ll, PoSIIII'ELF 1: PS 7'U111: GRAF BAIL
770 17'S 01: 10 1N .1 1, ,Wl,Oll.
It will pivlit tho Halt. roan f:lllituz
in l it t„,
Itrelo—
b.,lllby, ....it and üb..^Y•
F. -al,. by all druguists.
11. P. Na•hrlik, N.
SANITARY AID . ASSOCI-
L - ATION.—For the Helier:tll Cure of the Erring
nd 17nrettottate. eh t'lsri,thtn Phllgothropy.
I , , , ey•oti tho Errors of Yoilth, and the POW, er Age. Itt
reletem to Iltlti SII , IAL
aid ler afflicted. S•tit 111 EllVl`lopi . .. Ail
,V.llt D .15soCIATRIN. Box I', Philadelphht.
I'm. feb
.
WORDS OF NVISI)()Nt FOR YOUNG
MEN. t 1:,111. V“. 1.11 and E. , 13"
%with SELF II ELI' A.l' II erring and unfortunate
Spill It, letter en V1.1.,110, lire of charge.
HOWARD ASMICIATI4 iN, II n P, Philadelphia, Pa.
Mal . 19.13' •
DEAFNESS, BLINDNESS AND CA
TARR!' treatad Plitt 1111.111010-t sacra.... by J.
I`tAACS, N. D.. mai Prot . ..sew of Dinr.o., sof ffh, rye and
('" 11)114 Ihr. .11,flicril College of r , it•
Aryl rmsiro, y), ft lir,. (formerly (if Leyaen. Hol
land.) Na. Arch Street. Phila. TO,illllOlllllS 1,11 be
...aat at lON onll.o. TllO al...kcal i'aralty are Invited to 110•
cotapatty (bait. patient, a. haa 110 .000.1.1 S hi- prac
tice. Artificial eye , sa , otted xvlthaut citatac
ror 00.0101101i00.
:7-.;rrou THIRTY YEARS.IO
I ) R Y DAVIS' PAIN KILLER,
11,.liovn 1,44 , 11 in every variety a ellinuo by
every nation known to American+. It 1. thel4lllllll4
001/.1.11111 . 01110111111111.1 1 / 1 11111 . •ffill111110 N . lOllllOl . nii,•ion
art :Ind the trivvil.r. 0 and 1111111. 11101 110 0110 1410111111
110,11111 0111 . LAN1 ., 111 .11
o.ll` , 1011 . 1100 r rr.
.
.p . oody 111,1.:,x• rem . ody for 1111111, 1.1•11111, cul.h
wognd , and variog• othor ihjai well a. h
d)...oritory, dtarrho•a, and lodrol thogidaints al . lll.rally,
31111 IN .1.1;141111y hie orory roc , ot iticn ou the faro
to globe.
Bo yon call for and got tho gognino Paig
malty worthh,s Batton not aro attegildod to to. hold 1111 1110
g 1 . 1 .1111 1 .1111111111111 of lint valuable tgoditogo.
air D3rortiogs accompany each loath..
l'Itlt:li 25 CTS. AN I) i 1 PF,I2 BOTTLE.
Sold lq 1111 Ml'lllolll l lioaler,.
Bow TO CURE CONSUMPTION.
- -
'IIIE 14111.0so1'HY OF 1)11. SCHENCK'S HICEAT
IF:IIICINES.—\\'III people never learn to know live n
disc sod liver and stomach necessarily the entire
system 1 Th,. plainest Principles of common sense teach
this, and yet there are hundreds who ridicule the idest, and
continue in the c mr o wldrk almost Inevlttibly luettlan
the. mein:Ml.ly 1., the crave. Living tar the utisluu.lY.if
it
do, ut the In wet of nuturo,
it nt , t lae apparent to all that, sooner or later. unhurt. wllfl
euge her,..11. Hence we itha that per...us who Indulge
li
In Nt i iing in the use of very rick or indige , tilile hoot or
Intoxicating drinks. invariably luny itlte.l , Y Penally in
Lllii C& The disorderusl nod refuses to
net; tie liver falls to perform its I . lllllllolln. tip:ll/.1 , 4u and
Its lutionulant evils follow, and still the sittferlng
uls persist in dinging to the thoroughly ekluloded uuloas of
the vast. 14. ore
to all , tich. They luring sure and cortaltYrelief ye herover
they :tee used tnr directed, and all that is neees•ary to es.
hilult-lo them reputation with every :tiling loan or
In the land in rain and Impartial trial of them. I.tit those
vii the skilitteal on this point.and ,‘ lot have pot - tattled
intero , trti Persons Pr...111E11 ,,
for (701141111111 - 41011, their prop,.
dittos, and he govern 41 by •11.. printuides ' , l' , ulliur
r00t... sense. If syniiiiii &Ulit! Win
It, In cares tint inn le
furl to it, and liver. To cleanse And invigorate
tit.. ' , loin:telt not to stimulate the liver to heathy :Let ton,
•
SCIIENeI'S )I.IN It I: 1: PILLS.—Thi• daily turroas.
hig ilemaid for the. Alinls the Bost ev idmiee of then'
I pon thottsidok 1.o5,•• : sold
daily. Why T You because they o the
et promlttlY tall
efficiently. Invalids who may not Mid It convenient to
cull ou Dr. Schenek lu por-on are Iliforiniol that full hid
r , llllliele lyelll.lolllllany elleil Piteliage of
the
MAN Pl:slf F. PI 1.1.5, PPLMON IC SYRUP AND 1414.1.
NV ELI , ll'.—These medicines will mire ronsomption
Ise urn no tar gone that pllt1011; Is ...Indy
beyond the leach of 110,1 ICal tenet.
It may he asked by those who urn lull futlllliurwith the
virtues of these great reined les. "'low do Iic.SCIIENCIi
enert their eines of colpoloipllon 1"
il•er htl/11110 TIWy the, wiit I; of
resterthlen by bringing the etionac9, liver and bowels lobo
simive 10,11 hi. eimilition. It is 10011 that yore- this for.
1111;1111/le SCIIENPK'S MAN li AIZI: 1.1. S act
on the liver auil monied, 1 , 1 , 111.11 Ik health) . eeretio,
In
the and' shine 111011 hoie tinted
them the Warily.. or torpid (.1,11111t0,11 1,1 ths, lorg.ltis, and
U na the system generally. Title. dugs's!) slaw ol the body.
U the
mitiseitheut licrumuoitlon of the unhealthy nubs
asnaini,l prevent the proper illgede. id (1,011 ; nu
a animal consequence creates iltscase, . hidi in
prostration aid (tautly In death.
Still ENCli's PULMONIC mingle
IUP and SEAWEED •I'tiN
IC, hen takett regularly, mingle iv Ith the heol, the
iligethlve organs, 'oak° a n Melt blind, old natural
vonseituence, give flesh and stilingth to the patient. Let
the faculty say what it .011 Y. iIIIS It only true core tor
consumption. Eglierlmice has Pruned It beyond the shadow
of a nod thousands aro le-taY olive anyvell who
a lei,. years since were regarded us hopeless hilt
Irmo were Induced to try Dr. SU 1 1E51.'15.'8 reimsdles. sod
Irmo restored to pet inait 111,11 It by their use.
One et the first steps the at Id take with is
consumptive patient Is to hods.... the system. Now
how In
tilt
to beilonet CertulnlV untby sly tag medicines
dint exhaust 1111 , 1 enervate—medicines that Itepalr Instead
of Improve the e dict of the digestive eigutm. Doctor
SCIILNCI4'S inediclues cleanse the stomach gad bowels of
all 111111.11111teli which are ealmilated to Irritate or weaken
them. 'rimy create an appetite—pro:now healthful diger
tion—moke good blood. and, ha rOnIlllqUellre• they In
vigorate Hull ,, 'strenthen the entire systole. and mum es
pecially Homo parts which, ere diseased. If this cannot
be dour, then the case must he regarded as a hopeless
If the I , lls,lc:tau Muhl It Impossible to make 0 PATIENT
NEEL ,lUNoity, It ;110 diseased person cannot partake of
good nouridung fond nod properly digest It, It is lln Possi
be that he can gala In flesh nail Strength; Mot it to
Impossible to Ming patient to this condition low; us
the liver Is burdened ivlth diseased Idle, and the Stottlarli
laden with unhealthy slime.
Almost the Hest request made to the physician by 11 . 01 m.
',myth° patient It that no wIII prescribe medicines that
will remove or allay the remit', night sweats nail chills,
which are the ,tre attendants. on consuintitton• anal,.th
sloalhl not be donS, on the roUgh Is onlY on oiron. or
to robes, Itself, and the night sweats aid chills are Cionool
by de:diseased hing•. Th,1,1111411‘,111-11111,111111.1..1,11 , ..11
di11...1.11111111 than TheY 9.01.1 f lho
the stolunch, 1111
I t o' 10,11111 dice-Don: mut tig4ttivate
rather than cure n o t hing e..
'Cheri. is, atter n like facts with . .. Welt to sub.
mantiate positlini, and it Is mum fart • that lirbielllthiCl4.
relics. Nearly all who have taken his
cordance with Ids directions have not ottlY liomi cored of
commutate, lint, from the :ac he
t that them medicines lab
With wontlertulpoiVer upon {1..11101,1100 ornans, pot kills
thus cured speodtly.galll Cleausli.g the system of
all thiparttles, they toy the. foundation for ii solid, sub.
etantial structitre. Restoring Ilieno glllOllO 11011101, the
0” , /i 0 uplietlte. Tile faiia Is properly Ur
niediallitted; thee
Is not only Iticreasmd, hilt Is made rich
owl strong and In the Intro of such 111,01/111i1 , 11. Of 1110 sys
tem oil disease must be banished.
directions ~ .cottipany ouch of the medicines, so
that It Is not absolutely soccssitry that patients should So°
1)r. 013 I 1 tiNCI persutiolly7 unless they desire to have
their longs examined. For purpose he Is at his prin•
cipal No. 15 North ninth Ht., corner of Commerce,
Philadelphia, every Saturday, frets A. NI. until IP. DI.
Advice Is given without charge, but for, therougli
aminatluti with the Ilemplronieter the charge Is
Price of the Ptilmoulc Syrup and Seaweed Toole each,
teatsper bottle, or
sale
40a half dozen, Mandrake Pills 2ti
n Lox. For sale by all drugglate. •
_ .
ERRORS OF YOUTU.—A gentleman who
It sullOrtal for years front Servo.. Dohlitty. Preina
tare Decay IMO/ the curb a youthful Indiscretion,
trill. for tbe sake of sulferinir lounitaity, send free to all
who need It, the recipertnil direction for making llie Mtin
pplreo fi w t ibeyd y O bwy
a w v h e c r h i sheer 'te a e t x l p u ereie.n c S ueffer edrso' t s r oi •bYn a
d to
dressing, laperfectcohlidence, .101IN u 1. ntIPEN,a
-{_Cedar St. Now Yolk.
TO CONSIT M alive rt r,
u baring linen reiitiiroil t,. health in a tow wool:, lay in
vory hitnedy, after having astrona' iiovoral yeas
ith n Ney..re tang nllrrtiun, rail that drinol
vninvilon,la anxious to iiiiikiiknoWn follow illiforers
the of care. To all whoili—lre it, he will :loopy
o r the heelNen , iif iiliargel, with Ow dlr..,
H will
for preparing and milag the w
ni a:'•l.a:'•l.mid a nano care for lihi
'rho only tkert of tho nil rertiner 111 'Wilding. Inn
Pre.rri N .
(1011 Ili Inn 11111I'llt Ilillkted, nail apron.' Infiirniation
whlrli lie cniirelvon hi IR' ill)3111.1141.; 111111 il.• lion , every
niiihiror will try a.. It will thoni nothing
null may pr,.
Partli , wishing Ili , tt
in:v. I:l,ll . .‘iti , A. WILSON.
William , Liirg, N. Y.
SUM M AC ET it
TUE FOUN FAIN HULSE
CRYSTAL SPRING
N,
Thin AOllBllll charmingly viegantly
furninhe.l AV till 1101 V 1.11110,i1Y illl . lllOll, 1111.11 , 111. w
every in
Z.
t I.lli I,lllVelliel/1,, 1111 0 11 far
the se:p.m).
I'IIE FOUNTAIN IIOt'SE
11 sinu,trd I. the suburb ., of City, at the Ery-till
Sprtnge. The., tip:ll,ga. which ti 1.11 forth 1,111 lII,' hit...
ol aoltlelllll and enmity the city of Alkaloid. woh the
be.tuilful water for which It II Wlllllll , , are •celebrated,
at 11., llo , tt not \ alley. la 11,11( the at,.
Ile . 111111 . 111111 h. wt.,. of the 1.1 4 11.11 et. el,. n Inch flow..
throng', the wooded Volley and
oounity for booting 3liii , p. , ..g
Ppp oud tt soliplied with the linnet a,II I, atol the 41 1444 4 1p1ee
If 1544410. WOW., \V 111 111,1 01 this Hotel all oat , o laallY for
Ind titivate!. lit tholf ite -.port. Iti looloallato
toogltborhooll aro to, he ...en thoso gigaolltt. 1t . ..1k.. el
Pittittre and mechanical sklll for which the Valley of the
Lelogh Ix famous. The nioneter work.. of the Iron Cont.
intnye, the tannin. Sir itelt•lnick Railroad till' 1111111,1 , 0
C.llO 1111111, rail all he inepis i ted by a rids in care or I,l' .
vitae, ththugh II cutout . ) . tinenru.1 4 .4 4 41 • 41 for 1.....tity 10111
grandeur.
The Fountain
Iliac is 130 fort in length I, 1 . In in width.
II MI four stortee In height. It vont:Lute AO chamber-,
dtaing roma ladies wirlete. sittiag room, har•
ber ealoolte, billiard thou], bathing tooth, Ai . : vl
Illation and all the improve...eat - which churn, write a
Bret class modern reeidence it 1 4 4 , ttettrpo-soll.
The situation of the lionee, the purity ot the air, the
"Went ., of Intere 4 4 in ill.. Immediate ninabot hooil, the
lovely ..cenet y which enrroonde It. with tte I.4thk groom!
of wooded hills .111 loreground ent 11010 valley and
rippling water, culminating at the Mae pealll of the
Nevenotik In the eouthweet. rend., it one of the nalet
•t ru t as ~'ell couvenictit
t h e hut the inval
id or the pleas., sea t, daring the hummer Ilona lin
Allentown is ili:tant trout tholadolphitt. to? — New
York, milt, — llaitimere. Ill! inili ,— Wothotiiton, 1 01
1 . 11 y train. to and front Allentown daily
Carriages n be eel, to the depot to 130 . 1 . 1 guest-, :tad
the FM1111:1111 I louse COILCIIt , ',or? . train
.1. 1.. 1 1 I,SE, Prourielor.
P. W. 11. Ilkslll.ltn, Saltoritittaideal.
A. K. II
II Is the
hair,
-V OTAIt Y PUBLIC .1 .VB CI 1- ENI:
'l'. B. LEISENRING,
INSFGANrE AGENT, LAUB, LIFE, AND ACCIDENT.
WlrriliAN & LEISENIUM.:,
Real Estate Agents and Scriveners
PARTIES desiring anything In onr line tvlll do ivell to
alto int iv mill. We have upon our books it thd
ilespoble property In this city. which will he at low
Nome, among which lire
Vacant lots varying In 07.0 and prim.
Dwellitig loinses of all grades mid prime.
Dank and Slam stork, nit 11.0,11,1-Oil
ITE PIQUES.
Full assortment of Striped, Figured and
Welt Piques. suitable for dresses and saeques,
and at great d&l lower prices than last season
to be had at
jeB-'2in KRAMER'S CORNER STORE.
t t • 11, ottpitt Ili.
• :.t itostt it
I.• • •• tit••tlei, grit. rittl . V.
• !LK. :••t
ExcapiesioN.
ISLAND PARK, 11 ; ALNUTPORT,
. TUESDAY, JUNE 21, 18;0.
ALLENTOWN CORNET BAND.
Au Excursion will loave Alliintown on the twinning ..1
Jinni 21st, m S ireliick, for via
high and Susquehanna Ecery proistriitiiiii will
bit :nada for ilia Plijilylnt.lt 1f thisio tithing imci ille i i x .
,•Orsiori. Menninger ' s String [land will hr trill. tho pad.
y, and the thinly danc°inli g platform wll lie put In condition lor
those who e Jobs In du i dance. Swing-,
nodes. etc., will In. provided.
For 1111. e Wild bring refre,lddent. with Ills., I wit:
in lilt' lVd./dn, wit& at the did,rein hotels
1110813 Who den ire .00111111 , 1datioll tt lli in' Cali d .
TICKETS, so Cl's.,
eau be obtalueil from nn) of the Ineetteor of the Band
The lixcht , lon in rxM•ctod to retort/ ILboot
A NEW ERA IN lIEAILTII-GIVING
TnE wommit OF"I'llE AGI
COMPOUND ON.YGEN
Ix a primparatlon of that wonderful clmanclit'w Welt 11114 atl
h.l ommilllVil ull 111 t mmananlamm boo, Plillomomplomr. and
Physician, that InOX Vii ES trould him found a power
mmilemohild to tint phymmilmal redmoodation of
A scimmiitillim Mid A1(1111 . 111 a,l alini•tration of It miiiriad four
cal c c
it. claim to bolng the mond
Inimical curative anent ccimr hymn ni.
That the Co3IPOUND ON: VliElf TREATMENT trill
promptly rare many mli•eamcm• afore roloidmmrmsl
nidn. CAN Ilk DEMiINstIIATED. Such aneural
I'IIIiSIONAIIT 111 A IMFES 07.1. NA Olt
OFFENSIVE CATAIIIIII, ion! SPEIIM.11 . 0111:11EA Of
yours.% IiTSPEPSIA and minor allincidin aro ,p....,10)
enrol.
Scud for a mdittennmut of Its nomdc of action amid r.ommiitmm.
1116 Girard Street , . Pltilatlelpitilt,
• Between Cheroot turd Market Sts.,
G. R. STARKEY, A. M., M. D.,
MEI
BLACK SILKS
LADIES' SACQU ES.
Just received a full line of Black Oros Grain
•Silks for Sacques at very low prices at
jeB-2iu KRAMER'S CORNER STORE.
•
EXAMINATION OF TEACHERS.
Tho exanilnallou of teachers 'or MU will luiheld as fel
lows:
Upper S.C., July 2, at Conperaburg.
Whitehall, July In, at Micklor , e•
lUeiwepper
Mi
r Milf
lfo rd ord , July 10, July 10,
at Sarinier,v eport. (Shafer'AL
Lower Macungie, J01y , 31, at Texas.
Ilialovor, July 21, at Rittersville.
North Whitehall, July 2 . 2 at Lanry•s.
!loath Whitehall, .Itily 23, at WalberCo Station.'
Upper Macougle, July 21, lOb
ge, Ilk (Correll's).
elsenberg, July at 11 yue11.1.11.,
1,700. July 27, Lynn vtlle.
Laixl,lll, July at Lyon Valley
Holdelberg. Jgly a). at haegeroylfie. •
Waidtington, Juiy 311, at David Peter',
Haliobury, August 1, 01 StlYd..r . e•
The clashes will ho formed at o'clock 11.10. on each day.
judo 8.31 v . E. J. TOLINII, C. S.
- -
BIIIII,E MEETING.
The Lehigh flaunty Bible Society NV in Ito annual
meeting on WILT-110N DAY, DRINK MI, In the Chairla
at Frietlensrillth tipper Mulct, towimillit. 'ritem tc dl ho
preaching at In o'cleek, A. SI., Delegatesgular Inmate.
meeting held lu the afternoon. of the Prive.al
cougregatenis in the Colllll6l i r i nbel , CVathi:O p igt , :a!i .
11. F. TIMXI.Ert, Secretary.
Ladies please examine our line of Dress Goods—Never Better.
/1/
• .•
.1. \
,
..- ~ ..;, ,I I 4 VW
• '
~..:,-
• „,;, ,\\\
„,
,D.
. •..:.
Our S
took
ll=
\,
f & Boys' Wear Complete --- Prices Very Low.
-itliocrllancotte ,
RAND, CO„,
12-1- NORTH SIXTH STREET,
PHILADELPTI
MANI' rA,,curß , AND DEALER. IM THE MOAT APPROVED
B111(1( SIT AND PORT ABLE
1-1 EATE 11,S.
THESE HEATERS FOR DURABILITY, SIMPLICITY
AND ECoNDMY IF FIIEL II AVENOSUPERIDRS. THE
RA 111 ATIND SURFAI•E IS MADE ENTIRELY 111 ,
?
WRDUHIIT I RDN, A.lll ALL ARE lII IA RA STEED To
II YE SATISFACTID. . WI: A LsO MANUFACTURE A
VARIETY OF FIAT' DP AND SIDE DYES RAND ES,
MA DE TD II EAT An iV s itt:: : ‘ I. lIDDMS, BATH BOIL
It -
EIcS, EHISTERS, YE. ' I LATORS, AC., AC.
......---
WM. G. HITTER Agent for Allentown.
Os.sEND Fon ci Itcl*l.An. my 18.1 y
TAM W. A. JEASSLER,
-A,'
Gradirate of the Afferson Jtetlieal College of I'Mla-
delphia
=I
JEFFERSONIAN MEDICENES
IN%quit I en, ' , lLl . ..lrian In the Northern Dispensary of
/9111.111V1P/113 10s two years %viten. tint...hands of rases of
all kiwis of Chronic illstst , es are pre , ented for frelitlllellt
alld are treated. These Med leille. Aro re-tlt try ex
perience and ol.ervations. haying not only prescribed
them In Ilit , pital practice, hat lowans!. Itttoy private
Vnu•lfco ICrelVi'd the honest and are cured.
A Physician', ntieslott In to relelve pain nod cure those
that al , -Irk. hieing aware "(the fact and knowing the
curattx o Sope , tie , that Illy medicine-. I intainot
ILO oiler it to the general public that I tong ornom
-1,11,1t Lily lui..iou and do the greats-t good to the grotto/it
untjenty.
(tSLY 0.. E .11E111,'INE 1 , 01: oXI IIISEASE I
It +t) that claim to
cure
it dozen dlllereid (dig . it idle bottle.
frier.
letfo,oulan Ilotlielue . for Ithootnatiem *l l
l i 4 tl
" for tho Blood t
" "• for N.TVOII,IIP,K ul.ll Debility, 1 It)
" •• for tili• Killlley. and Madder.. 1 00
" " for 1111` Si..111:1r11 owl Liver,— 1 lit
• • '' lor Cold. atot roughs 50
• ' " for Mart loci awl Dysentary, 10
" I.ln hoont for 11‘11,11/1i l'ain, Brain.
and Sprat. no
Sal xe tor Cut.. Barn. mat 01.1 Sore 60
" 31ealtainIll for Children 21
•• . •• for Colo. mad Cramp le the
Bowels :II
•' Medicine fa, NVorno• 25
l'orsona eau obtalit tho medicine; only at toy all,. Chow
street, ItotNeeen Filth alai S xtli, Allentown. Pit., or by
writing to toy whitens. AV 11 , 11 I .ball for‘veral by man air
expro•te, MI tectopt of tho nn
ALL CHRONIC DISEASES TREATED
EVERY SATURDAY AT MY
OFFICE.
Voi%ts of FI TS elortd. Cm, X., Mfg !)
W. A. HASSLER, M. I).
JUNE, 1870.
EVERY ADVANTAGE
• IN PURCHASING
FINE READY-MADE CLOTHING,
CAN BE SECUMED IN THE
HIGHEST DEGREE
• TI US MONTH,
W A AN A M A EERER I)RQWN:S'
:s;AMAIC jilto
OA K. I I!,t,
Clothing Bazar.,
SIXTH MARKET STREETS
ILAIN, COMFORTABLE CLOTHING,
FOP. MEN ,11 , PLAIN TASTES.
,STYLTSIT, ELABORATE GARMENTS,
Fon Tllll FASITIONAIIIX•INCLINED.
STOUT, ivreAn. WELL SUITS,
FOR EVERV•DAV SERVICE.
GENTEEL. BLACK GOODS,
FORS'N DAY SUITS AND DIrESS OCCAMIONS
BOYS' CLOTHING
AND
GENTS' FURNISIIING GOODS
.VK ITALL,
SIXTH & mARKET. STS., PHILAD'A
WANAMAKER -&. BROWN
w EED
SEWING MACHINES !
HUBER & Agtii., Allentown.
HEE WHAT WE CI.. IM THE' WILL DO
BEST SHUTTLE ,MACHINE OUT !
:f 1 ; t tl1 1 1 :::? - . 1 , v u. i i atako o :jtltolt Itko as both mltleAl
NEM ! FELL! DI ND !
COW/ ! !MAID I RIWELE I
TUC E I MOLT ! HEMSTITCH!
GATHER AND
T SEW ON AT
HE SAME TI3IE.
E •
AS lEST TERMS
INST ALMENTS 05 A MONTH TILL PAID
'llll.l4lllton to all 11114 thoy aro Equally Clo7tl for Fin o or
Hoary Work.
HUBER &
AOENTS FOE LEIIIOII COUNTY.
..3may
20.1 t
JrinanciaL
„, of the
t hes
°Peale and Ohio Railroad Co.
Thu tol vantagon stud ottraction4 of 111111 1,0• N, for lover(
Sul Purposes. tiro many nod Important
II I. Lard inw of Ow Groot TIIROIIa II LI
lIETWERS nn: SEABOARD AND me WEST.
Titr. SECIIIITY IS ALREADY CREATED, the ttroule
poet of the Ilne being In Imecetodtal running ofh`nt
3.—The Local Trolllc, from the Itnefro I feel Age fruit u•n?
r , (Minx tend Iron mad (Jul eleY.vilx atljeceol,
must 1/0 large awl profitable
4. — Tho onterpritio receive, IMPORTANT CoNCI:A.4I.NA ARO
PRIVII..IIO. from the Melee of Virginia nod Wont
MEM
5.. - / tinder the managetnent of ellteleut aunt a•et.t.-
I=l
for MN Easily COMPLETION MIMI SUNNIS/4d lIPONICIMI
I=
COUPON OR REGISTERED
rutin ; they Ititve thirty yearn to mu, both principal
and Interest being ItaTalk , la gold.
7. —They are of donoollnalloto. of
$lOOO, $5OO AND $lOO,
beating Intoront nt the rate of nix per rent. in coin
Intyable May lnt nod NuitetabOr Int.
From our Wilmot° itcdualotauce with limo mulatto. amid
condition of the Company, me know these tororit tee to he
pro 1 (arty Itreiroble: owl suitable for agfe employ•
?neat of Rory: us Capital, and ft/ acting of Gorernment
Bonnie, by Iny nature, Trustees of Estates, and others
who prefer absolute sera illy with reasouuble Incomo.-
Holders of United States Five-Twentles are enabled to
procure thede Bllad. bearing the 1111111 e role of interest
and hiring in longer period to run, and to realise a
large Increase of capital In addltlon.
lioudx and Stooks dealt la at the Stock Exchange, re
ceived to exchange for this Loan, at the fall' market
value, and the liond4 returned free of express charges.
PRICE 90
EYE
ACCRUED INTEREST IN CURRENCY
Pamphlet., Maps, mul full Inform:1110u furukhed uu
uppllentlon.
FISK & HATCH,
5 NASSAU ST., N. Y
.or 'al anb o TLft
420 BURIAL LOTS FOR SALE ....
The undersignedoder for solo gdO now C •
Wry lute linmediutely udjoluing the Union Cemetery, on
Tooth street.
The bits will lin sold by suligcrirtiou, and immediately
after the whole number mu disposrd of they will lm award•
ed by lot in the sumo manner us In the organization of the
Union d.o.oclotiou. Mots or Pious of the Proudness can be
t o it ottire. my 12 011151) &
TO F.—,l REASONABLE LEASE
J.. bo given on the Easton Slate Quarry. situated in
t ....n field township, Northampton county, l ' s., near
Stackenown. It consists of number ono flat•yein, blue,
never-holing slam, fully equal to the well-known Chap
man Slate, with a good wafer power and a full rigging of
pumping and hoisting machines. Persona dextrous of as
opportunity of this kind will pleaso egamino fur thetn•
selves. 111111/Wllly to Bonbon Koch, Shickertowir P. 0.
H
mar 1, 'Ol 0. L. SCREIBER. President •
FOUR HUNDRED FARMS FOR
SALE, ranging in price from $.B to Wiper acre, accord
to Improve...me, location So. Ou Hotgain! clirginiimato,
and near markets. Timm Carton ar od e
situ /. ate a d in Virginia
slid Maryland, mOlllOlll the 11111111 1 d11011 vicinity of Womb-
Ington said others from D) to 311 miles distant (rein tiro Cap
ital. Add rens or mill on J. D. 0 ANUWERE 4.1 S Massachn.
oath Avenue near Sixth street Washington, D. C.
FOR SALE.
A 110I5E, one story nod a hilt. and lot, ritual° on
a
Chew street, between Sixth and Seventh, about
feet frottramsnapdply lie
to fret darn..
For ter
Sixth Street, below
Mitt 21.tf
HOUSE FOR NALE.—TIKE NUB
'scriber otters ferrate his house and lot situntetla
oti SIXTH street, between TURNER and CII EMI. in
the City of Allentown. Thn house Ir complete with
all the modern convealeempt and is handsomely papore
throughout. The grouuds are Maternity Intl out and • d
well stocked with fruit trees. As the furniture was Le , tre
eunressly for this dwellitup the subscriber would Mit.lit
selling it with the house. For further tutor:natio Primer
nr a view of the hex. call on the nubscrlber n, torn , .
hies, between the hours of OA. L. uud P. M. die Pret ,
U. W.t'
ape 27 • North oth street, r• .• DSON.
.. .turner.
PUBLIC SALE • -
oF
MY. PROPERTY.
VALUABLE
Will be go 'd nt Public Sal.. n. LION
-
HAY, ALM CST bit, li4N, at . i e n . c i nc k c p . ,
M., on the prowls ii, Hut • 4nii. ....,.
Adz. .
..,
_ CROSS Y Fys
or lIA(inNBCCII'S P ( p - i ,„..1 nu.. ..
nu ,i - +•-"
the eeePer,," ( ,E lOll. ell and . HAMILTON streets, In the
"eliding. Ar e ..•?? . This Hotel Is • Threa.story Mick
"Witting. 't , ' le t ' runt on Hamilton sreet, by &I fret In
dertt.,‘", th Iltr . paid, utablex. shedding. rue ,
"th :- ^ TIV CEESTORY BRICK STORE HOUSE.nI
adjoining tie y tinsel containing lu front on Ilsioliton
tt"'t 'it ieet by lOU Let In depth, now occupied by C.
A. Burton (millinery).
/`„".,„ 3 . Also a THREE-STORY BRICK STORE , n
,tp-te .o ‘e adjoining No.d, containing lu fronton Ilatisoi.
,e lo ,,e, ^ l' eat 21 feet by UM feet lu depth, now occupied
by kat ,
.i.,,,,,,,, a nd 1,1,,wen, grocers. The necoud and t
c l o ,n) e . of the ebove stores are now occupied by the hotel.
ts, ' ,ti c o, at the sewn thele and place, four eligibl y located
liw .hilug lots fronting oil Tenth and Cordon streets. coll
ie:Wing each 1.11 feet In front ou Tenth street by 234 feet In
dep A th. - a
LSO, seven acres and ono hundred perches, more or
less, of ground elitist,. on the. Peet side of Tenth 'street,
bounded by lands of Cherie. Seagrestes, Ortab & Runk,
and ll,Schuurinan.
tieing the real ...tate of Jacob Ilagenbuch, late of the
City of Allentown, deceased.
'loons and conditions trill be mode known en the day of
sale by IL J. HAUENDUCH,
C. 11. HAHENBLICH
. • . :, GEORUSIMUEN DUCH,
, • Executor*.
Persona ilesirone of Howls`` the property will please
call on 11. J. liagenbnch, at the Hotel. Jell4n2
0
Eil
M
Dru . Goobo
SEAMAN &-• TRA Ec; ER,
NO. 17 SOUTH MAIN ST
B I LE LIE NI
DRY GOODS,
FANCY GOODS,
NOTIONS,
HOUSEKEEPING GOODS,
WOODEN WARE,
OIL CLOTHS
igIOCIRI ES
Very largo aysortmout In overt'
DEPARTMENT.
Goods bought a tho roil
LOWEST CASH PRICES,
and mold clinip
Tho•public arc requested to call and examine
SEAMAN & TUAEGER
iLcgal Notices
ASSIGNEE'S NOTICE.
Whereon David A. Smith and hit NON. of Upper
Macungie township, Lehigh county, by voluntary deed
tf assignment doted May loth, A. D. 1871', conveyed to the
he subscriber all their estate, real. personal and mixed,
for the lament of their cretiltora; Notice Is hereby given
to all persona Indebted to sold parties to make PaYtuent
to thesubscriber within six week., unit those having
°imbue to present the some duly authenticated within the
soma limo.
JAMES WEILER. AH.lgueo
Lell4ll Co., Juno UN
MRS. GU ERIN TAKES PLEASURE
In announcing that aho baajuxt received tho tom
cat a...printout of all 'dodo of FASHIONABLE HOODS to
her lino, nod would call particular attention to howl ,
•xxnruucnt of PARASOLS EAST HAMILTON BAC
a
4.ISTEY•
STATE OF JOSEPIUIIIUN'r
F
Late of Ile Mr (burg Township. r AICKEit
deem sed. —Nalco Is hereby given that -,thf gh County,
Walton In the above estate hove liven • anion lathemli
signed. All p e r Indebted to sal , denotedunder.
to make payment within nix we , 4 Estate nee' regnested
notice, and such who have an- Are from the date of Mho
theta, well authenticated, ' / legal claims will present
above specified Unto to our settlement within the
NATHAN HUNSICKER,
MARTEL J. HIkiTLEH,
Administrator*
OM=
WAT . ttENTS.—IIy an ordinance of
September, _Y or Allentown. appro ve d lho Ytth
.day 3r
poi to the' rente for th e use of water 00811 be
ror City T r easurer (Jonathan Reichard) at hi. of
"'"- - the 30th day of April: to all rent. remaining
on that day , there thall be added 5 per cent.. and
F Aa r'. . t re . gluing unpaid on {{ho first day of inn., there
p •
.11,73 added !Draw cent. Retire is hereby glean to all
mute still owing water rent that 10 per cent. will be
Added on all rent* remaining unpaid on the grit day of
June next.
May 24..1 2W•VI Owl By order of the Committee
NOTICE
CITY, BOUNTY AND DOG TAXES,
• By a supplement to the City Charter of Allontowd, ap
proved tho Ind day of March. IMO, the City Treasurer Is
made tho receiver of City, Bounty and Dog Tares. AU of
said taxes remaining unpaid on the Ist day. of August
oast, 5 per cont. obeli be added.
Notice is
lieiven that the City, Bounty apd Dog
tax for 1870 mill ..col red at my nter,
je2-21n JONATHAN REICHARD. Treasurer.
AGRICULTURAL MEETING. •', •
A meeting of the Executive Commitiro of the Lehigh
County Agricultural Society will be held on FRIDAY, the
lath day of JUNE next. at I o'clock. P. M.. at the oglee of
the Rocretury to the City of Alloutowo. for the Funnel of
preparing achedule Of premium. and lashing otuor
urraogomente for coot Annual Ex hibltiou. All members
of said Cunitnittoo aro roAportfully itirrited to attend. BY
order of SOLOMON 0 RIESE/41ER, PlOet.
order
STAntatn. Socrntary. jel-St
NEW'ARRANGEMENT. •
•
THROUGH. TICKETS
VIA
ERIE RAILWAY,
To Buffalo, 'Niagara Falls, Cleveland, Toledo. Detroit
' CHICAGO, ONIATIAi BAIC FRANCISCO, •
Cincinnati, IndlanaPolls. SL Lents, and all pripeiPal
Cities West, North, and the Canadm• Superb and unars,
Koos roaches designed for day and night Ilst, are a i t i tgrd
to all Express Train.. AOKNT H.11:•
D 1 4,741611'. I: c o ß italicro w • • apt V •
MABEE KNIVES, FORKS, SPOONS
1 COFFER MILLS. lc.. at C. F. WOMB:TVS Stott
88 Esti Hamilton Weal. asp lit.ty