" rr- ' f" MWfTft-liVTritrMnmwawiTiwin "nr. -.r--f-.-- --.,-T. . , .,i.-.J,-... --'fc-T- V- (He Xmtelte fnteUiaene J 4 Volume XVINe. 156. LANCASTER, PA., WEDNESDAY, MARCH 3, 1880. Price Twe Certs. --' - .T" s i Li .A J n i? ii ItV I ic !! J," I J TJCJIMS. THE DAILYINTRT.T.TGENOEB, FUBUSHXD EVERY EVEWIKQ, BY STEINMAN & HENSEL, Intelligencer Building, Southwest Cerner of Centre Square. The Daily Ixtelligbscer Is furnished te subscribers in the City of Lancaster and sur rounding towns, accessible by Railroad anil Daily Stage Lines at Ten Ck.nts Per Week, payable te the Carriers, weekly. By Mail, $5 a year in advance : otherwise, $U. Entered at the pest office at Lancaster, Pa,, as second class mail matter. ?j-T1hj STEAM JOB PRINTING DEPAKT M KXT of this establishment possesses unsur lacd facilities for the execution of all kinds of Plain and Fancy Printing. COAL. I) It. MARTIN, J Wholesale and Retail Dealer in all kinds of LUMBER AND COAL. S-Yard: Ne. 430 North Water and Prince streets, above Lemen, Lancaster. nS-lyd COAT,! COAL! COAL! COAL! Ceal of the Itcst Quality put up expressly for family use, and at the low est market prices. TRY A SAMPLE TON. Be YAKD 1JIO SOUTH WATEK ST. iu:-1t-lyd PHILIP SCHUM, SOX & CO. J ust ki;ci;ivki A FINK LOT OK HALED TIMOTHY HAY, at M. F. STEIGERWALT & SON'S, DEAI.EI18 IN COAL ! FLOUR ! ! GRAIN ! ! ! FAMILY COAL UNDER COVER. Minnesota Patent Precess Family and Baker's Fleur. Baled Hay and Feed of all kinds. Warehouse ami Yard : 234 North Water St s27-lyd C0H0 & WILEY, " ;t.7W XOltTJl WATICK ST., Lancaster, Pa., Wholesale and Retail Dealers in LUMBER AND COAL. Alse, Contractors and Ituilders. Estimates made and contracts undertaken en all kinds of buildings. Itranch Office : Xe. :i XORTH DUKE ST. fel28-lyd COAL! - - - COAL!! OO TO GORREOHT & CO., l-orCeod and Cheap Ceal. Yard Ilarrisburg Pike. Otlicc UOJ East Chestnut Street. P. W. GORRECHT, Agt. .1. B. RILEY. elHyd W.A.KELLER. vreTici; te mi: ruitLic. G. SEXElt & SONS. Will continue te sell only GEXUIXELl'KEXJS VALLEY and YILEESBAIIRE COALS which are the best in the market, and sell as LOW as the LOWEST, and net only GUAR ANTEE FULL WEIGHT, but allow te WEIGH OX AXY scale in geed order. Alse Rough ami Dressed Lumber, Sash Deers, Blinds, Ac, at Lewest Market Prices. Office and yard northeast corner Prince and Walnut streets, Lancaster, Pa. janl-tfd HOOKS AXJt STATJOXJiltY. )APKTEKIE AND 1IIKTHDAY CARDS. IN GREAT VARIETY, AT THE HOOK AM STATIONERY STOKE L. M. FLYNN'S, Ne. 12 WEST KING STKKKT. JtOOTS AXJ SHOES. IT 4 Oir ItOOTS. SIIOKS AND LASTS jil5 X made en a new principle, insur ing comfort for the feet. 1 ( "T,0 Lasts made te order. ISlKJjLO MILLER, lcbl4-tfd IS! East King street. a 11 KCUM STANCES WILL NOT 1'EKMIT TO ADVEIITISE A 8MJCM I PICES, but we will de the next thing te it, viz : We will call the attention of our friends and customers te the fact that we have en hand a very Large Stock of BOOTS AND SHOES, purchased belere the late ADVANCE, which we will sell at Strictlv Old Prices. tv.Give us a call A. ADLER, b 43 WEST KING STREET -tirHOLKSALK AND KETAIL. LBYAN'S FLOUR AT Ne. 227 NORTH PRINCE STREET. tlll-lyd FINE GROCERIES ! FOR Canned Fruits, FOR Cress & Blackwcll's Pickles, FOR Extra Beef, FOR Lea & Perrin's Worcestershire Sauce, FOR The Tiny Tim Pickle, FOR Sardines, Fresh Lebster and Salmen, FOR Eagle Urand Condensed Milk, FOR Winslow, Baker or Excellent Cern, FOR French and American Peas, FOR Baking Powders, FOR Extracts for Flavoring, FOR Fresh Akren Oat Meal, FOR Tapioca, Farina, Ac, FOR Fine Evaporated Apples and Peaches, FOR Dates. Figs. Prunes, &c, FOR New Maple Sugar, FOR Michcner's Hams, FOR The Best Groceries, go te D.S.BUKSK'S, Ne. 17 KAST KING STKKKT. MAliliLIi WOltKS. WM. P. PRATLEY'S MONUMENTAL MARBLE WORKS 758 Nerm yueen Street, Lancaster, Pa. MONUMENTS. HEAD AXD FOOT STONES, GARDEN STATUARY, CEMETERY LOTS ENCLOSED, Ac. All work guaranteed and satisfaction given in every particular. N. B. Remember, works at the extreme end of North Queen street. m30I u SE LOCHEU'S HORSE AXD CATTLE i'uY Jjr.ua. CLOTHLXO. NEW GOODS FOB FALL & WINTER. We are new prepared te show the public one of the largest stocks of READYMADE CLOTHING everexhibitedinthecity et Lancaster. Geed Working Suits for men $0.00. Geed Styles Cassimcre Suits for men $7.50. Our All Weel Men's Suits that we are selling ier $9.00 are as geed as you can buy elsewhere for $12.00. Our stock of Overcoats are immense. All grades and every variety of styles anil colors, for men, bevsand youths, all our own manufac ture. Full line of Men's, Youths' and Beys' Suits. Full line of Men's, Youths' and Beys' Overcoats. CUSTOM DEPARTMENT ! We are prepared te show one et the best stocks of Piece Goods te select from and have made te order ever shown in the city. They are all arranged en tables lltted up expressly se that every piece can be examined belere making a selection. All our goods have been purchased before the rise in woolens. We are prepared te make up in geed style and at short notice and at bottom prices. We make te or der an All Weel Suit for $12.00. By buying your goods at CENTRE HALL,' yen save one profit, as we manufacture all our own Clothing and give employment te about one hundred hands. Call and examine our stock and be convinced as te the truth of which wc allirm. MYERS fc KATHFOX, Centre Hall, Ne. 12 East King Street. OPKCJAL N OT1CK. 66. 68. Mansman&Bre. OF OVERCOATS AND HEAVY SUITINGS. SPECIAL INDUCEMENTS te havers el Clothing in order te make room for a iarge SPRING STOCIv new being manu factured, and we are needing room. Ve offer well-made and stylish Clothing for Men and Beys LOWEB PRICES than overheard of belere, although Goods are going up every day. We will sell, for we must have the room. Loek at Our Astonishingly Lew Price List: OVERCOATS! OVERCOATS! OVERCOATS! for $2.00, for $..S5, for $5.35, ler $0.75. OVERCOATS ! OVERCOATS ! OVERCOATS ! for $7.7."). for $0.75, for $10.75. OVERCOATS ! OVERCOATS ! OVERCOATS for $12, $14, $1G and $20. These arc heavy-lined Overcoats, carefully made and splendidly trimmed. OVERCOATS! OVERCOATS! OVERCOATS for $7.50, ter $3.50, for $9.50, for $12. OVERCOATS ! OVERCOATS ! OVERCOATS ! for $15, for $18, for $20. These are Plaid-Rack Overcoats, equal te custom work. IIEAVYMEX'S SUITS ! for $3.50, $1.00, $5.00, $7.00, $0.00, $10.00. MEN'S SUITS FOR FIXE DRESS ! for $12.00, $11.00, $15.00, $10.00, $18.00 and $20,00. BOYS' SUITS AXD OVERCOATS ! ROYS' SUITS lrem $2.25 te $10.00. BOYS' OVERCOATS VERY LOW. We sell only our own make and guarantee satisfaction. Meney returned en all goods net found as represented. 2Please call, whether you wish te purchase or net. T Is stocked with the latest styles, which we make te measure at the lowest cash prices and guarantee a perfect lit. SUITS TO ORDER from $12 upwards. PAXTS TO ORDER lrem $3.50 upwards. D. GANSMAN & BRO., MERCHANT TAILORS AXD CLOTHIERS, 60 & G8 NORTH QUEEN ST., S. W. Cerner et Orange, Lancaster, Pa. (Bailsman's Cerner.) FUllXITUltE. A SPECIAL INVITATION TO ALL. Te examine mv stock of Parler Suits. Cham ber Suits, Patent Rockers, Easy Chairs, Ratan Rockers. Hat Racks. Marble Tep Tables, Ex tension Tables, Sideboards, Hair, Husk, Wire anil Common Mattresses, Boek Cases, Ward robes, Escriteirs. Upholstered Cane and Weed Seat Chairs, Cupboards, Sinks, Deughtrays, Breakfast Tables, Dining Tables, Ac, always en hand, at prices that are acknowledged te be as cheap as the cheapest. UPHOLSTERING IN ALL ITS BRANCHES. REPAIRING PROMPTLY AXD NEATLY DONE. Picture Frames en hand and made te order Regilding done'al Reasonable Rates at the New Picture Frame and Furniture Stere, T.i EAST KING STREET, (Over Bursk's Grocery and Sprecher's Slate Stere.) WALTER A. HEINITSH, (Schindler's Old Stand), ltOBES, 11LAXKETS, cc. QIGN OF THE BUFFALO HEAD. ROBES ! ROBES ! ! BLANKETS ! BLANKETS ! ! I have new en hand the Largest, Best and Cheapest Assortment of Lined and Unlined BUFFALO ROBES in the city. Alse LAP AND HORSE BLANKETS of every descrip tion. A full line of Trunks and Satchels, ' Harness, Whips, Cellars, &c. as-Repairing neatly and promptly done.-? A. MILEY, 108 Xerth Queen St., Lancaster. e25-lydMW&S&3mw CLOTHIXO. A RARE CHAfl CE ! The Greatest Reduction of all in FINE CLOTHES. H. GERHART'S Tailoring Establishment. AH Heavy Weight Woolens made te order (for cash only) at COST PRICE. I have also just received a Large Assortment et the Latest Novelties in ENGLISH, SCOTCH AND AMERICAN SUITINGS Of Medium Weight, for the EARLY SPRING TRADE. These goods were all ordered belere the rise in Woolens, and will be made te order at re- mark-aeiy low prices. Alse, at me Line et SPKING OVERCOATING, AT H. GERHART'S, Ne. 51 North Queen Street. SMALING'S " Grand Opening et SPRHG WOOLMS! Londen and Parisian Novelties,, THE LARGEST ASSORTMENT, CHOICE SELECTIONS, CORRECT AXD LEADING STYLES- Having enlarged room, extended facilities and increased light ler displaying the Hand somest Stock of WOOLENS ren GENTLEMEN'S WEAR ever offered te the public, forming a Grand PANORAMA or Beauty Taste, Talent and Skill. The Latest Novelties of the Season. All are cordially invited te examine our stock. Prices en plain cards as low as consist ent with lirst-class Werk and Trimmings. J. K. SMALING, ARTIST TAILOR, 121 North Queen Street. marS-lydS&W GENTKE HAIL j 24 CENTRE SQUARE. Closing out ear WINTER STOCK In order te make room ler the Large Spring Stock, Which wc arc new manufacturing. Overcoats, Suits and Suitings, Te be sold at the Lewest. Prices. D. B. HeMer & Sen, 24 CENTRE SQUARE- 20-lyd LANCASTER. PA, ATTOUXEYS-AT-LA W A. J. STEIN3IAN, Intelligencer Building, Southwest Cerner Cen tre Square, Lancaster, Pa W. V. HENSKL, Intelligencer Building, Southwest Cerner Cen tre Se uarc. Lancaster, Pa. UKNUV A. RILEY Attorney and CounscUer-at-Law 21 Park Rew, New Yerk. Collections made in all parts of the United Slates, and a general legal business transacted. Refers by permission te Steinman & llensel. CHAS. R. KLINK, Attorney-at-Law, Ne. 15 North Duke street, Lancaster, Pa. All kinds of Conveyances promptly drawn. marl3-lvdw TlXWAJtE, &C' CALL ON SHERTZER, HCMP1IRKVILLE & KIEFFER, manufacturers of TIN AND SHEET-IRON WORK, and dealers in GAS FIXTURES AND HOUSE FURNISHING GOODS. Special attention given te PLUMBING, GAS and STEAM FITTING Ne. 40 East Kins Street, Lancaster, Pa. Greatly Mrt Prices, Hamastct Intelligencer, WEDNESDAY EVEN'G, MARCH 3, 1880. Circumstantial Proof. Carious Cases In the History et Crime. The Celebrated Beem Trial in Vermont Instances Where the Innocent Have Suffered. Perhaps the difficulties in evidence direct and circumstantial, were never mere strongly shown than in the once celebrated case of the brothers Boern convicted in Vermont, 1819, of the murder of their brother-in-law, in 1812. It appeared in testimony that the latter, a half-witted fellow, and a burden te the family, was last seen in a field with the two men, and there had a quarrel, in which he had been struck en the head with a stake, and somehow had finally disappeared from the locality. Seven years after, some bones, supposed te belong te the missing man, one of his buttons and his knife, were found near, in an old cellar in the field, and the men were arrested Upen their trial they both confessed te the murder, and gave the details, and theii immediately appealed te the Legislature te commute their sentence te imprison ment for life. This mercy was only grant ed te one of them, but the interest of cer tain gentlemen being aroused by the case, careful search was made and the missing man found in New Jersey, brought back and recognized by all his old companions, and the men were set free. The explana tion of the singular conduct of the accused is found in the bad advice of their friends, who, knowing that public opinion ran strongly against, and thinking it would hang them, advised them te the confession in-order that they might get the lighter sentence of perpetual imprisonment. It was said that the French naturalist, Cuvier, from a single fossil bone, could describe the structure and habits of ex tinct races of animals. But bones neither lie nor mistake, while witnesses de both, and no court is infallible. The cases arc numerous en record te show that even the senses cannot be implicitly relied en, even when the veracity of the witness is unques tionable. In cases of highway robbery a man's face has been repeatedly sworn te from the glimpse get from the light of a gun or pistol flash, whereas accurate ex periment always shows the thing te be im possible. In a case of theft, a woman swore a certain gown was hers ; being asked by a juryman te try it en, it was found net te fit at all, and she confessed her mistake. The fact was, that the pris oner had stolen the gown from a neighbor, though this was found out only after the acquittal. Anether woman, being robbed, swore a certain black pocket-book found en a man arrested for the crime, was hers, which would have sent him te the gallows had net a countryman found another black pocket-book while reaping, and hast ening te the trial, the same witness find ing all, and her very money safe, confessed she was mistaken, and the accused went free. A signature te a certain deed was sworn te by respectable and honest parties as Lord Elden's, but Lord Eldencamc into court and swore that he never attested a deed in his life. In a celebrated Scotch trial, for forgery, intricate and far-reaching, and which involved the title te one of the best estates in the realm, half a dozen engravers swore that certain numerous letters were written by different persons, though the prisoner afterward confessed he wrote them all. His conviction was partly insured by a sharp lawyer noting that, in all the documents, certain words were curiously misspelled, and, en the prisoner being required, in open court, te write these words, he misspelled them as they were written down in documents purport ing te have been penned by many different persons, living even in half a dozen differ ent generations. In a murder trial, a piece of rope found near the victim was sworn te as the same kind of rope as a piece found in possession of the acecused, a bit of testimony which would have hung him had net a repemakcr examined and testified that one piece was twisted te the right while the ether was twisted te the left. A half dozen witnesses swore that they saw a cer tain person at a certain hour of the clock. Being asked te say what time it was by a clock in the court room net one of them could tell. This was a case of downright lyimr te prove an alibi. An eminent Eng lish lawyer swore positively te two men who, he said, robbed him in bread day light. It was proved that at the time of the robbery they were se far off as te make the thing impossible. Shortly after the true robbers were taken with the stolen goods en them. The prosecutor then con fessed his mistake, and is said te have given a money value te the men whom he came very near sending te the gallows. Besides, accused persons often behave very strangely, even when innocent. Seme run away, which, in old times, was held se sure a proof of guilt that, in England in cases of felony and treason, night carried forfeiture of goods, whether inno cent or guilty. It is new in proof that innocent persons, timid or ignorant, or ill-advised, when accused of crime often run away and de a great many ether foolish things. Daniel Webster, in the fa mous murder trial at Salem, spoke the fa mous epigram, " Suicide is confession," a very fine sentence, but very peer law, since even innocent persons, falsely accused, have often died by their own hand te escape further misery. Sir Edward Coke tells of an uncle bringing up his orphan niece, and had had her lands for fee until she came te sixteen years. "When eight or nine, her uncle correcting her, she was heard te say " Oh, geed uncle, kill me net." At this time the child disappeared and could net be found. The uncle, arrested en suspi cion, was bailed and told te find the child. Fearing what might happen te him, if he failed, he brought another child, very like the true one, into court. The cheat was discovered, and the man hanged. But the child had only run away into another coun ty, and been taken in by hospitable stran gers, and, at sixteen years of age, came back and claimed her property. New, proof, as defined by the lawyers, is only a presumption of the highest order. Cunning is but a sinister or crooked wis dom, while human nature in the court room often turns out te be a singular and fallible element in the attempted equation of justice. We cannot be sur prised, therefore, that se many innocent persons have suffered, and, upon the whole, the wonder is that se many of the guilty are punished. Yet, appearances may be very strong against a man, and yet he be innocent. In 1827 Themas Gill was convicted in England of stealing two oxen. He had just finished his apprenticeship te a butcher, and, after paying a visit te his uncle in the country, in order te save ex pense, was traveling en feet back te Len den. About 3 o'clock in the morning, he met a roan, riding en a pony and driving two oxen, who offered Gill five shillings te drive them te Londen, and agreeing te meet him en Westminster bridge. The young man, willing te earn an honest penny, agreed, and was arrested shortly after, with the cattle in his possession, by the owner in het pursuit. Arrested, he gave a false name te conceal his situation from his friends. He was pardoned as he was en the point of being transport ed for life. The simple fact was, that the real thief, hotly pursued, had taken this cruel way te rid him self of the cattle and the crime. In France, a young man was in the ser vice of an old woman and had a key te her house. She was found murdered, with a piece of his cravat near her, and a lock of his hair clenched in her hand. He was arrested and executed. But he was innocent. An intimate friend, who after ward confessed, managed te get an impres sion of the key, picked up one of his old cravats about the house, and, combing the young man's queue, had scarcely abstract ed hair enough te make the lock found in the dead woman's clutch. Sad as it sounds and is, the history of the law shows a list of cases where the innocent have died a shameful death through the mistake of justice. These legal disasters have had for ther basis net se much an unfair or heartless trial as a failure te weigh wisely the peculiar circumstantial evidence involved. But, en the ether hand, justice eftentime seems aided either by geed luck or the Divine wrath of the gods themselves, in detecting criminals. In 1830 the body of a man was discovered in England who had been murdered 23 years before. His widow identified his remains lrem the skull, his shoes and a carpenter's rule found with the bones. The murderer was then found and ex ecuted. In 1813 a Cornish peasant was found murdered, and his body dragged under a hedge. It was shrewdly surmised by the detectives that the murderer was a stranger in these parts, since a native would have been very likely te have concealed the body in some abandoned coal mine, many of which were in the same field. Frem this slight clew mainly, they arrested an Irish soldier whose regiment had lately come there and en him they found the dead man s purse. He was executed. Three ruffians, mur dering a peer Italian boy te sell his body, were largely convicted by their giving away some white mice which there was every reason te believe had belonged te the unfortunate child. A sailor was main ly convicted as an accomplice in a brutal murder in a Londen bawdy-house from the fact that the victim's hands were tied be hind him with what is known as a sailor's knot. Where a man was shot by a ball, the wad en the ball was shown te be half of a certain ballad, the ether part of which was found in the prisoner's pocket. Con victed. A man assailed by a robber struck him in the face with a key. A mark en the prisoner's face corresponded with the wards or divisions of the key. Convicted. In 1752, in England, a man and woman from within a certain house gave the alarm that some one had entered and mur dered an inmate. Thedowenthe grass out side the house was found te be undisturbed. The living inmates were convicted. In 1816, in England, a man was tried for the murder of another, where the strugglehad been severe. Impressions were found, in the clay, of a man who had worn breeches of striped corduroy, patched with the same material ; but the patches were net set en straight, the ribs of the patch meeting the hollows of the original corduroy. The ac cused was shown te have his breeches patched thus, and this greatly aided his conviction. Dew and snow have often helped te track the murderer, and many a man has perished en the gallows the pecu liarity of whose shoes, or the curious way in which nails are set in them, aided con viction. A man arrested in his bed, who claimed te have been there all night, was found with wet, muddy stockings en. The night was wet and the ground outside soft. Convicted and executed. One of Kaul bach's illustrations of Goethe's Beinekc Fuchs shows us the fox murdering the hare. It is a solitary place, a field and close by a shrine with its cress. But curious ly enough, the artist has put eyes into every head of the full wheat, which bends iu the breeze, and every flower at hand is made in likeness of a dim, human face, which beholds the deed with horror. The fact thus symbolized is that nature, in all its attributes of weight, size color and condition is, after all, the head detective of crime, and every secret murder leaves its mark behind it, which, rightly inter preted of men, metes out detection and punishment te the criminal. "Murder will out," because, in most subtle ways, the circumstance of murder being accu rate, when wisely interpreted, confess and denote with unerring finger, and "dead men de tell tales," with a hundred tongues. That the guilty sometimes evade detection docs net prove the con trary. Perhaps the old story of the mur derer, Eugene Aram, whose horrors have passed into English literature, assisted by the genius of Heed's shadowy poem of that name, best illustrates what has been said of the curiosities of circumstantial evidence in criminal causes. Aram was born at Ramsgill, Yorkshire, 1704, and, though the son of a gardener, was of an cient British family and brilliant genius. With scant education in youth, and serv ing for a time as book-keeper in Londen, yet he managed te make such progress in learning, especially in mathematics, that he was invited back as schoolmaster te his native village, and there married. His wife seems te have been a woman of easy virtue, and te have made his home un happy. But he devoted himself te the study of the classics Hebrew, Chaldee and Arabic and became se much of a philologist as te bestow much labor in com paring these languages with the ancient Celtic. While engaged apparently in such honorable undertakings, lie found time, Feb. 8, 1744, with the help of a confeder ate, Richard Houseman, te murder one Daniel Clark, a shoemaker, and conceal his body. His motive, as Aram alleged after his trial, was revenge en his wife's paramour, but it was in evidence that he get from his crime the whole of Clark's wife's dowry, te the amount of 160. In fact, Aram leeks, when viewed in the most candid light, te have been one of these hypocritical and cold-blooded vil lians of ability who sometimes appear te disgrace humanity. Fourteen years after the murder, a peasant, digging stones for a lime kiln in the neighborhood, found a human skeleton two feet below ground, with the frame se well kept together as te enable it te be seen that the body had been bent and buried doubled. As Clark had never been a seen alive since 1744, and as Aram's wife had formerly thrown out dark hints that he had been murdered, public suspicion was aroused, aud an in quest was held upon the bones. At this inquest she was summoned, and testified that she thought Clark was murdered by Aram and Houseman. When brought before the coroner, Houseman was in great confusion, trembled, changed color, and faltered in speech under examination. The coroner desired him te take up one of the bones before him, thinking te see what further results would fellow. Taking up one of the bones, he said: "This is no mere Dan Clark's bone than it is mine. " These words were se pronounced as te convince these present, net that Houseman believed Clark was alive, but that he knew very well where his bones lay. (If the reader will read Houseman's words aloud, with a strong emphasis en the word this, he will see a little what they might be made te mean.) After some evasions, he finally broke down and con fessed that Aram and he had murdered Clark, and though these were net his bones, they might be found where they were buried, at dead of night, in St. Rebert's cave, near where the ether bones were found, adding that Clark's head lay te the right in the turn at the en trance te the cave. Upen search, a skele ten was found exactly as described. Aram himself was arrested while acting as usher of a school at Lynn in Norfolk. Upen trial, Houseman was used as king's wit ness. Aram defended himself in a written speech full of fact and antiquarian lore, in which, with a skill beyond most lawyers, he probed into the weak points of the cir cumstantial evidence against him, urging the great uncertainty of its being Clark's body, since St. Rebert's cave had been a place of hermits, who were likely, accord ing te their custom, had buried there. He was convicted and afterwards confessed his crime. Failing in an attempt at suicide with a razor, he was nursed back te life sufficiently te be hanged and his body sent te ret in chains at Knaresbor Knaresber Knaresbor eugh, near the scene of his crime. Se perished one of the most learned criminals of the world. Crime comes and sometimes may strike very close te anyone of us. It is, above all, necessary that punishment also should he made swift and sure. Thisrcsultisreachcd by the careful and scientific study of evi dence, especially en its circumstantial side. Upen a wide view of the history of crime in this world, it may be safely said that punishment, though slew as sure, and of justice, what the old Greeks said of Ged, that he comes with leaden feet, but strikes with an iron hand. It happens very curiously that, just at present, English law circles are greatly ex ercised ever a pamphlet discussion be tween Lord Chief Justice Cockburn and Mr. Tayler, author of a standard treatise en the law of evidence, upon a novel deci sion of his lordship, by which, in a late murder trial in Louden, a bit of circum stantial evidence was excluded en grounds that attack all legal precedents. His lord ship, who is known te have both the ordi nary virtues and vices of a beef-eating, " by .jingo" Englishman in excess, seems te have lest both his temper and his case before the bar of the legal profession. At least, such is the opinion of American law yers who have read the pamphlets of both disputants, just in hand. Bosten Herald. JEWELEllS. B. F. BOWMAN, WHOLESALE Mies and Clods, 106 EAST KING ST., LANCASTER, FA. NOTICE TO CASH BUYERS. Expecting an advance in prices of the follow ing goods I liave purchased an unusually large stock, which will be sold at the LOWEST ritlCES. Watches, Geld Chains, Silver-Plated Ware, Silverware, Knives,Spoons and Ferks, French and American Clocks. 13 East Kins Street, Lancaster, l'a. AUGUSTUS RH0ADS, JEWELER, Will move toXe.20 EAST KING STKEET, en Ai'ltIL 1, 1SS0. WALL PAPJCJCS, Se. PHARES W. FRY, f Ne. 57 NORTH QUEEN ST., We are better prepared te meet the wants et the people than any season hcretotere, as our New Stere is larger than the old one, which en ables us te carry a mere extensive line of WALL PAPER WINDOW SHADES. Our room is tilled with the Choice Goods for the Spring, and has all the Novelties, from the Lewest Grade of Paper Hangings te the most expensive in Dark and Medium Celers for Parlors, Halls, Dining ltoems. Ac. In Window Shades we are prepared te meet any demand. Plain Goods by the yard in all Celers aud Widths. In Six and Seven Kcct Lengths. Fixtures of Ucst Makes. Measures of Windows taken and Shades hung In lirst-clas manner. Cornice Poles for Lace Curtains and Lambrequins, Gimp .Bunds, Tassels, &c. In connection with our line wc handle PIER AND MANTLE MIRRORS. Orders taken anil Glasses made of every de scription. Come and see our Xcw Stere. feblO-lyd&w FOVXDEltS AXV MACHINISTS. T ANCASTEK BOILER MANUFACTORY, SHOP ON PLUM STREET, Opposite ihk Locomotive Works. The subscriber continue te manufacture BOILERS AND STEAM ENGINES, Fer Tanning and ether purposes ; Furnace Twiers, Bellows Pipes, Sheet-iron Werk, and Blacksmlthing generally. 49 Jobbing promptly attended te. augls-lyd JOHN BEST. GJSXTS' OOOJtS. HANDSOME PRESENTS. OLATJDENT SCARPS, SILK HANDKERCHIEFS, LADIES' WORK BOXES, SILK SUSPENDERS, E. J. ERISMAN'S, 56 NORTH UEKN STKKET. Fancy Me ai Ely SMaes MEDICAL. CUTICURA REMEDIES Hat achieved the most noted suceeM of amy Medicines of Modern Time. Messrs. Weeks & Petter have never doubted the specific properties of Ctticura. Cuticura Ueselvest and Ccticuka Seap, for the speedy, permanent and economical cure of Humors of the Bleed, Skin and Scalp. They are, however, astonished at their universal success; for it was te be expected that in the hands of some they would rail solely from spasmodic or igno rant use of them. They are unable te say without fear of con tradictien that no remedies ever achieved In the short space of one year the number of won derful cures performed by the Cuticcra. Kxm- IDLES. SALT rheum; CeTerins the Bedy for Ten Year. Perma nently Cared. Law Omcx or Cbas. Hoceirroi. 17 Congress Street, Bosten, Feb. 28, 187S. Messrs. Weeks 3k Petter: Gentlemen I feci it a duty te inform you, and through you ail who are interested te knew the tact, that a most disagreeable and obstinate case of Salt Rheum or Eczema, which has been under my personal observation from its first appearance te the present time, about ten (10) years, covering the greater portion of the patient's body and limbs with its peculiar irritating and itching scab, and te which all the known meth ods et treating such disease has been applied without benefit, has completely disappeared, leaving a clean and healthy skin, under a few days of pretuse application of Ccticetia. 1 can and de heartily advise all similarly af flicted te try the remedy which lias been se ef fectual In this case. Very truly yours, CHAS. HOUGHTON. LIVER COMTLAIST And Dyspepsia Treated by the Beselvent Gains 5 1-2 pound en One Bettle. Gentlemen .- I have had Liver Complaint and Dyspepsia, with running sores en the side of my neck, for ten years. Doctors dill me no geed I liave been spending for eight years and it did no geed. Everything I ate distress ed me. I get reduced from 17U te 132 pounds. At last I tiled the Keselvext and it helped me right off, and en the bottle I gained five and one-half pounds, it is doing the business, and I am going for It strong. Yours truly, JOHN KOY. 414 Wabash Ave., Chicago, 111., Nev. 15, 1878. Nete. Cuticura is admirably assisted in cases et extreme physical weakness, or when the virus of Scrofula is known te lurk in the system, by the internal use of the Ccticura Reselvent, without doubt the most powerful bleed purifier and liver stimulant In the world. Cuticura Seaf is an elegant toilet and medic inal assistant te Cuticura in the treatment of all external ailments. Fer chapped hands, rough skin and tan, sunburn, and the lesser skin troubles, it is indispensable ; as a soap ter the toilet, the nursery and bath it Is the most elegant, refreshing and healing before the public. These great remedies succeed where all ethers heretofore In use fail because they pos sess new and original properties never before successfully combined in medicine. The Cuticura Remedies are prepared by Weeks A Petter, Chemists and Druggist. StH) Washington street, Bosten, and are for sale by ail druggists. Price of Cuticura, small boxes, .'j0 cents ; large boxes, containing two and one half times the quantity et small, 1. Keselveut, $1 per bottle. Cuticura Seap, 25 cents per cake ; by mail, 30 cents : three cakes 75 cents. ftl liVC In the Annihilation et gywity paJ1 au( inflttmnmtien, vtii WltlfMllftin the Vitalization of VOLTAIC jE-UWIW Weakt raraiyZed, and Pi mCV& Painful Kcrvens Parts WIS I fc and Organs, in the Cur ing of Chronic Weakness of the Lungs, Heart, and Kidneys, in the Absorption of Poisons from the Bleed through the Peres, and the Pre vention of Fever and Ague, Liver Complaints, Malarial and Contagious Diseases, they are wonderful. Get the genuine. IT X'S KIDNEY FAD. The enlv enre for Diabetes. Gravel. Dropsy. Bright's Disease, Pain in the Back, Inability te Retain or Expel the Urine, Catarrh of the Blad der, Affections of the Spine, and Diseases et the Kidney, Bladder and Urinary Organs. It avoids internal medicine ; is comfortable te the patient; certain in its effects. Sold by all druggists or sent by mail en recelpt of price, $2.00. Day's Kidney Pad Company. Teledo, Ohie. ANDUEWG.FUEY. Distributing Agent for Lancaster County. Agency, corner North Queen anil Orange Streets, Lancaster Pa. aprl'J-lyd nep nep nep hop hop hop hop BIT BIT BIT BIT BIT BIT BIT EICS ERS ERS ERS EKS ERS EBS nep BIT HOP BIT EKS ERS au HOP BITTERS, EKS HOP BIT EKS nep BIT EKS HOP ERS (A Medicine, net a Drink,) contain HOI'S, IIUCHU, MANDRAKE, DANDELION, nep BIT ERS HOP BIT ERS nep BIT ERS HOP BIT EKS HOP BIT EKS BIT EKS HOP BIT EKS HOP BIT ERS HOP BIT ERS nep BIT EKS HOP BIT EKS nep BIT EKS HOP BIT ERS and the purest and best medical qualities el all ether Bitters. They Cure All Diseases et flic Stomach. Bowels, Bleed, Liver, moneys anu urinary urgans. Nervousness, Sleeplessness und especially Female Complaints. $1,000 IN GOLD will be paid ler any case they will net cure or help, or for anything impure or injurious found in them. Ask your druggist for Hep Bitters, anil try them before you sleep. Take no ether. Hep Cough,, Cure is the sweetest, safestand best. Ask Children. The Hep Pad for Stomach, Liver and Kidneys is su perior te all ethers. Ask Druggists. D. I. C. is an absolutely and irre sistible cure for Drunkenness, use no opium, tobacco and narcotics. Send for circular. All above sold by Druggists. HOP BITTERS MFG. CO., a9-lyeed&w Rochester, N. Y. HOP BIT EKS HOP PIT EKS. HOP BIT EKS HOP BIT EKS HOP BIT ERS nep nep hop hop hop hop hop BIT BIT BIT BIT BIT BIT BIT ERS ERS ERS EKS ER3 EKS EKS K-W K-W K-W K-W K-W K-W K-W K-W K-W K-W K-W HDHEY 1ST! THE ONLY REMEDY K-W K-W K-W K-W K-W K-W K-W K-W K-W K-W K-W K-W K-W K-W K-W K-W K-W K-W K-W K-W K-W K-W K-W K-W K-W K-W K-W K-W K-W K-W K-W THAT ACTS AT THE SAME TIME ON K-W THE LIVER, K-W THE BOWELS, KAY and the KIDNEYS. kvw Thla combined action gives it wonderful power te cure all dls j.y eases. k-w Why Are We Sick? K-W Because we allow these great or gans te become clogged or torpid, K-W and poisonous humors are there fore forced into the bleed that K-W should be expelled naturally. K-W K-W KIDNEY WORT WILL CUBE BUimunesa, Pile, Constipation, Kidney Complaint, Urinary LHteaser, Female Weak neasea, and Xerveus JHterdert, by causing Tree action of these or gans and restoring their power te threw off disease. Why Suffer Bilious Pains and Aches? Why tormented with Piles and Constipation t Why frightened ever Disordered Kidneys T Why endure Sick or Nervous Headaches? Why have sleepless nights T Use KIDNEY WORT and rejoice in health. It is a dry.vegetable com pound, and one package will make six quarts of medicine. Get it et your Druggist. He will order it for you. Price, 1,00. Wxus, Richardson & Ce., Preps., BCRUNOTON, VT. (Will send pest-paid.) K-W K-W K-W K-W K-W K-W K-W K-W K-W K-W K-W K-W K-W K-W K-W K-W K-W K-W K-W lr" J r "I m i ' m M i: .' $ htl I 89 .Ml A i -J r Mi l! ( i ii