.j- tm .-J IsM -v a: i--,. t faatfatefi r . "M. K" lAvV Volume XVI-Ne. 183. LANCASTER, PA., SATURDAY, APRIL 3, 1880: Price Twe Cents. h uf TERMS. THE DAILYINTELLIGENOER, ruitLisncD EVERT EVEJtlWQ, BT STEINMAN & HENSEL, Intelligencer Building. Southwest Cerner of Centre Square. The Daily Intellieekcek Is furnished te eibseribers in tlic City of Lancaster and sur sur leunding towns, accessible by Railroad and Daily SUige Lines at Ten Cekts 1eb Week, payable te the Carriers, weekly. By Mail, $5 a year in advance : otherwise, $0. Entered at tlie pest efliceat Lancaster, Pa., as second class mail matter. -The STEAM JOB PRINTING DEPART DEPART JIKXTel this establishment possesses unsur passed facilities for the execution of ull kinds el l'liiin and Fancy Printing. COAL. B. MARTIN, Wholesale and Itctail Dealer in all kinds of LUMBER AND COAL. jfS-Vanl : Xe. 420 North Water and Prince streets, above Lemen, Lancaster. n3-lyd COAL! COAL! COAL! COAL! Ceal of the Best ijuality put up expressly for familj' use, and at the low est market prices. TOY A SAMPLE TON. S- YARD 150 SOUTH WATER ST. nr-3-lyd PHILIP SCHUM.SON & CO. JUST RECEIVED A FIXE LOT OF BALED HAY AXD STRAW, at M. F. STEIGERWALT & SON'S, DEALERS in FLOUR, GRAIN AND COAL., 234 NORTH WATER STREET. JCtf-Westcrn Fleur a Specialty. fs27-lyd COHO & WILEY, ::.70 SOUTH WATER ST., Lancaxter, l'a., Wholesale and He tail Dealers in LUMBER AND COAL. A1h, Contractors and Builders. Estimates made anil contracts undertaken en all kinds of buildings. ISranchOlllce: Xe. .1 XOUTII DUKE ST. tebiS-lyd COAL ! - - - COAL ! ! ae te GORRECHT & CO., for Geed and Cheap Ceal. Yard Harrisburg r Geed and Cheap Ceal. 1 aril llarrisui Pike Olliec 20 East Chestnut Street. P. W. GORRECHT, Agt. .1. 15. Ill LEY. W. A. KEI.LEU. a-lyd xienci; te tub public. G. SEXEK fc SOXS. Will continue te sell only GEN ULXE L YKKNS VALLEY and WILKESBA11RE COALS which arc the best in the market, and sell as LOW as the LOWEST, and net only GUAR AXTEE FULL WEIGHT, butallew te WEIGH OX AXY scale in geed order. Alse Rough and Drcsed Lumber, Sash Deers, Rlinds, Ac, at Lewest Market Prices. Office anil yard northeast corner Prince and Walnut streets, Lancaster, Pa. janl-tfd jtoer.y and shoes. 1 1 k r HOOTS. SHOES AND LASTS Jjj.Zl5 J. made en a new principle, insur ing com tort for the leet. "")"V'V"iJ La-.li made te order. iSUUlO MILLER, lelilt-tfd 133 East King street. C.K 1li:CUMfTAXCBS AVILL NOT PERMIT TO ADTEKTISK A 1DDCTM I PRICES, 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 liavg en hand a very Large Stock of BOOTS AND SHOES, purchased before the lat ADVANCE, which we will sell at Strictly Old Prices. S3,.Give ua hc:iU, A. ADLER, 43 WEST KING STREET GENTS' GOO VS. T ATKST STVLK Cellars aid Flat Semi IBEST FITTING SHIRTS, AT E. J. ERISMAJSPS, 56 NOKTII yiTKKK STKEBT. CARPETS. c AKPETS! CAUPCTS!! CAKl'IiTS ! ! ! H. S. SHIRK'S CARPET HALL, 202 WEST KINO STREET. Hai en hand ever 20,000 TABDS OF CAB PET, Bedy and Tapestry Brussels with Bor ders te match. Alse. Vcnitian Hall and Stair Carpets, Extra Three-Ply and Superfine In grain Carpets, which were all bought from the manufacturers belere the great advance in prices, and which he offers at the Lewest Liv ing Prices. Alse, a Larger Stock than ever or Bag and Chain Carpets, which he is prepared te sell at prices which defy competition. On hand a Large Stock of Oil Cleths, all widths. Counterpanes and Blankets et all kinds and Celer. Carpets made te order at short notice for parties who llnd their own Bags, guaran teeing perfect satisfaction. Give us a. trial, at 202 WEST KINO STItKET. EOUNltEItS AJfD MACHINISTS. T ANCASTEK BOILER MANUFACTORY, SHOP ON PLUM STREET, Opposite the Locomotive Works. The subscriber continues te manufactuie BOILERS AND STEAM ENGDfES, Fer Tanning and ether purposes ; Furnace Twiers, Bellows Pipes, Sheet-Iren Werk, and Blacksmlthlng generally. 49 jobbing promptly attended te. ang!8-ly4 JOHN BEST. JDJtY THE GRAND DEPOT IS THE LARGEST RETAIL HOUSE in the United States, exclusive of New Yerk City. It carries DOUBLE THE STOCK of any Retail Heuse in Philadelphia. Buyers are Sure of Seeing the LARGEST ASSORT MENT of Newest Goods. A System of Business is ob served that Ensures PERFECT SATISFACTION. A CORDIAL INVITATION is Extended te all who visit us. The New Stock for Spring is Just Opened. JOHN WANAMAKER, 13th Street, Market te Chestnut, PHILADELPHIA. NEW STORE ! NEW GOODS ! BOTTOM PRICES ! WATT, SMI & EtlrilY Havcicmeved teSTIRIC'S CHINA HALL IHTLDIXU, where they have opened an Immense Meck of DKY GOODs, FAXC Y GOODS and NOTION.-, at prices that must eeiiiuiaiid attention. XEW SPIUNU DRESS GOODS, SEW SPRING CRETONNES AND CALICOES, NEW SPRING HOSIERY, NEW SP ING GLOVES. 49-EVEKY DEPARTMENT A SPECIALTY, AT THE NEW YORK STORE, S AND 1 0 EAST KING STREET. CLOTHING. A COMPLETE RENEWAL IX OCB STOCK OF CLOTHING. NEW GOODS IJOUGHT FOU CASH MADE UP BEFORE THE ADVANCE AXO ObKER ED TO THE PUBLIC AT PBICES FBOM 25 te 30 per cent. less than pi:::si:xt cost of maxufactubk pbi:pabi:d ut A. C. YATES & CO. THE LEADIXG AXD P0PULAB CLOTH1EBS OF PHILADELPHIA, FOB THE 1SS0 8PPJjStG AND SUMMER 1880 FOB THE BEST AXD CHEAPEST CLOTHIXG CALL AT THE Ledger Building, Chestnut and Sixth Streets. THE TIXEST CLOTHING HOUSE IN AMEIUCA. IVATCHES, KDW. J. ZAHM, Jeweler, Zahtn's Cerner, DUALEB IX AMERICAN & FOREIGN WATCHES, Sterling Silver :md Silver-Plated Ware, Clods, Jewelry and Ami Tiiil Spectacles. W offer our patrons the benefit of our long experience in business, by which we are able te aid them in making the bestuseef their money in any department or our business. We manufacture a large part et the goods we sell, and buy only lrem First-CUss Houses. Every article sold accompanied with a bill stating its quality. t3First-Class Watch ami General Bepalring given special attention. ZAHM'S CORNER. CAMUAUES, S. E. BAIL.Y. S. E. BAILY & Ce., Manufacturers CARRIAGES OF EVERY DESCRIPTION ! Office and "Warerooms, 430 and 432 North Queen Street. Factory. 431 and 433 Market Street, Lancaster, Pa. We are new ready for SPIUXG TBADE, with a Fine Assortment of Bik Carriages, Flaeteis, Market Wapns, k Having purchased our stock for cash, before the recent advance, we are enabled te eiler SPECIAL. INDUCEMENTS IN 1'ItICK. We will keep in stock BUGGIES OF ALT. GBADES and PBICES te suit all classes et customers. SPECIAL BAUGAINS IN MABKET WAGONS. dive as a call. All work fully warranted eue year. WINES AS J) S. CLAY MILLER RESPECTFULLY calls the attention of his friends as well as the public in general te his Superior Stock of Old Whiskies ; Gibsen's, Dougherty's, Gughenheimer, Hannissville, Overhelt and Gaft's Pure Bye, from four te eight years old, which he has recently bought from first hands for Cash, and will sell from the original package at reasonable prices, at Ne. 33 Perm Square. MAllBLE WORKS. WM. P. FBATT.ETS 1 MONUMENTAL MARBLE "WORKS 758 Nertn yueen Street, Lancaster, Pa. MONUMENTS, HEAD AND JfOOT STONES, GARDEN STATUAKY, CEMETEEY LOTS ENCLOSED, &c. j AB work guaranteed and satisfaction given ' n every particular. ! N. B. Eemember, works at the extreme end i fNertkQaeem street. m301 GOODS. JEWEI.KY, Cr. Lancaster, Pa., LANCASTER, PA. l'UAETOXS. W. W. BAILY. of and Dealer I Z.IQ.UOHS. TEXWARE, &C- CALLONSHERTZER, HUMPHREVILL.K & KIEFFEB, nianulacturers of TIN AND SHEET-IBON WORK, and dealers in GAS FIXTURES AND HOUSE FUBNISIIING GOODS. Special attention given te PLUMBING, GAS and STEAM FITTING Ne. 40 East King Street, Lancaster, Pa. Hancastrr I-ntdltgcnccr. SATURDAY EVENING, APRIL 3, 1880. PURE ART. THE SERVANT OP RELIGION Hew It Has Become Degraded te Vice uud Krrer Through Uncltatity and Un truth Seme Fumeutt and Infa. meus Pictures and Statuary. BEATING THE RAILROAD COMPANIES A Tramp's Account of IIew it is Dene Dedg intc the'Conducter and Ilrakenien. The Untrue and Unchaste in Art. Itev. W. F. Cratts in Christian Mission. In a second visit te the great picture galleries of Europe I have often recalled tlnee art criticisms of clear-seeing, un prejudiced children. In the presence of one of the countless pictures of the cruci lied Christ, which have the unauthorized hale about his brew, a little one exclaimed, "IIew could they kill Jesus when the liht was shining all round his head !" The child, having no guide book te tell him te admire thcpictuie, looked at it in the clear light of reason and the hale became a blot of untruth. At another lime a pure-minded little girl en entering one of the galleries of sculp ture where the nudities of heathenism were exhibited without even a single fig-leaf of disguise, quickly covered her eyes with her hand and exclaimed, " Oh, hew vulgar !" In contrast with these two art com ments I often recall the remark of another thoughtful child, who steed beside her garrulous mother before the most famous and most draped of the Madennas, and after the latter had peuicd forth for some time a tide of thoughtless and wordy ad miration, the little one exclaimed in sur prised repieaeh, "Oh, mother, hew can you talk !" Thus the unprejudiced and uncemiplcd minds of childhood, as Geerge MacDonald has well said, "strike the very heart of truth at once," and while they feel the power of the noblest pictures and statuary te their very souls, turn with pain from the untrue and unchaste, which are allowed no small place in the great collec tions of ait. In this connection there is much signili eance in the following statistics which we recently made in the Ufiizi Gallery at Florence a fair representative in the matter refencd te of the ether great gal leries, seen before and since, at Paris, Munich, Vienna and Keme : Number of representations of the Virgin Mary in the gallery, 1G2 ; of the Virgin Mary holding the Christ-child (in all but one of which the human mother is made mere promin ent than the Divine Child,) 14e ; of Christ as a babe, 144 ; of the dying or dead Christ, :ti) ; of St. Peter, 13 ; of Mary Magdalen, le ; of the living Christ in his earthly ministry before the passion and the cress, 13 ; of Christ after the resurrection, 4 ; of Abraham ellering Isaac, 7 ; of Eve, .1 ; of Hercules and ether personifications of phys'Cil strength in athleties,21 ; of Venus, including the same idea of physical love in several Lcdas, 17 ; of Uacchus and ether personifications of physical appetite and revelry iii bacchantes, 10; of Mars repre senting physical conflict, 4 ; of Apelle, with chief emphasis en the leprescntatien of physical manhood, 9 ; of .Minerva, as the leprescntativc of mental power, :); and el June and Mercury, 2 each. The first reflection from the representa tive figures (whose relative significance would net be changed if all the great gal leries had been thus classified, instead of one) is that art has been greatly cramped by superstition into servile imitation, into the nauseating repetition of a few subjects, when it might have used the same time and talent in producing nobler and mere varied repiescntatien. Fer intance, what intelligent Protestant cares for any of the Madennas after the ten grcate.it, which ex press every phase of the miraculens motherhood and the Divine childhood, and leave te the lesser ones nothing te de, unless te mar and weaken the gieat mys tery'.' IIew much better if some of the time given te the thousands of unhelpful pictures of the Madenna had been devoted te presenting upon canvas Christ's word picture of "The True Madennas," as given in Matt, xii., 40-30, which affords far mere room for artistic talent than the usual monotonous representation of a mother and child, with or without Jeseph, Elizabeth and Jehn the Baptist. "When in Christ's life en earth men attempted te put mere honor upon Mary than upon ether Christian men and women, expecting him te step iu the midst of a gospel ser mon because his mother had come and wished te speak te him, "He stretched forth his hand toward his disciples and said, Hebeid my mother and my brethren ! Fer whosoever shall de the will of my Father which is in heaven the same is my bi ether and sister and mother." Above this passage, and with this scene as the background, let artists picture " The True Madennas" men and women who minis ter te the souls and bodies of the peer, the prisoners and the sinful, of whom Mary was but one of millions. " Blessed among women," but net lifted above them ; much mere net raised above her Divine Sen ami Lord, as the aitists have se generally and se falsely pictured her at the bidding of superstition. Instead of se many repre sentations of the Christ-child (few of which de net dishonor him in. favor of his human mother) hew much better if art had pic tured mere of his earthly misery, with all its inspiiatieus te doing geed. Instead of such an excess of dead or dying Christs would it net have been better te make equally prominent, as the Bible docs and art does net, his resurrection, ascension and present intercession in heaven ? If it be said that artists made what was demanded, we reply that genius has no meie right te utter a lie iu marble or upon canvas than in a history or a sermon, and the artists who for superstition's geld blessed what Ged had net blessed are as much te blame as the false prophets, who, for royal geld and popular favor, spoke "smooth" rather than true things and " prophesied deceits." Many of the great masters, whose portraits of human forms are se tiue and life-like that, like Michael Angele in the presence of another's statue of Mark at Florence and his own of Moses at Reme, we cxplaira, "Why dost thou net speak te me?" are inexcusably untrue in the representation of Divine persons and sacred things. There is a certain class of pictures in which a technical untruth is the deepest form of truth, as when Paelc Veronese,in the largest painting of Europe, represents as gathered about Christ in " The Marriage Feast of Canna," net the Galileans of that place but representatives of all parts of the world, who are being made one in him. "We have no reference te such allegorical pictures, but te these which assume te be historical and yet misrepresent the truth te the people mere seriously because mere vividly than a written history could jde ; some from carelessness in ascertaining the actual facts, but mere te support some error of corrupt religion by false testimony te the eyes of men. Of the careless sort is that picture of the amiable Fra An An gelice, which represents Peter as cutting off the ear of Malchus with a modern razor instead of a "sword" mentioned in the gospels ; and also his picture of Jehn the beloved as literally,net erientally, "leaning upon Jesus's besom," and that, te, at a modern table rather than an ancient triclinium. This latter is one of the least excusable and most common with lies of the " Great Masters " of mis representation, and produces a ludicrous difficulty when the woman who wished te anoint Christ's feet finds it necessary te twist it out from under the table into a very awkward and uncomfortable position before she can bathe it with her tears. Equally ncdless and provoking is the un truth is dress which is se habitual with ths great artists of the past, who generally ignore the real picturesque oriental gar ments of Bible characters, and cither strip them te a nudity which they would never have allowed in life or disfigure them with modern or monkish robes that, like Jeseph's bloody coat carried te his father te convey a false impression, arc unspoken falsehoods. Time and space would fail te tell of the ether falsehoods in the most famous pic tures David in a statue at Florence with a sword for Goliath that is hardly long enough for himself; Christ standing te deliver the sermon en the Mount, as repre sented in the Sistine chapel, when the Bible expressly declares that he "sat;" seven fish and seven fowl pictured in the capitol at Reme as being prepared by Mar tha of Bethany for Christ and her house hold of three ; baby Moses represented in Ufiizi gallery at Florence en a river bank with no rushes at all in sight ; hundreds of babies being killed by order of Hered, in the little village of Bethlehem, wheie there could net have been mere than a score of " two years old and under ;" Christ and his mother handling rosaries and wearing crowns or geld wheels or gilded horse-shoes en their heads ; Jeseph, Mary's betrothed young lever, pictured as gray or bal.d ; persons in the robes of nuns or monks in Bible scenes ; Jehn, the "son of thunder," with a woman's head ; Magi kis.iing Christ's tee and worshiping Mary en a tin one; Galilean fishermen just in from a hard night en the lake represented by Raphael, in his famous cartoons, in exactly the same togas and with the same cast of body and head as the gowned philosopher? of Mars Hill te whom Paul is represented as speaking in an ether of the same set of cartoons. Even that very lovely untruth of Cerreggio's his picture of the "Hely Night" when Christ was born which, unlike almost every ether representation of the scene, rightly makes Christ, rather than his mother, the prominent figure, conveys a very untrue conception of the incarnation, in making the Christ-child radiate light through the stable and upon his mother's and the shepherds' faces as evidence of his divinity. The Ged-given sign by which the shepherds were te knew Jesus was net a radiance or a hale but rather the sign of all ether children of that land, te share whose humanity he had laid his glory by: "Ye shall find him wrapped in swaddling clothes." The Bible picture brings Christ nearer than any artist's pic ture of unreal and untrue haloes. "In all things Christ should be made like unto his brethren," in pictures as he was in his history, and he is se represented in Thor Ther waldsen's matchless statue of Christ and a few ethers of the greatest Christ figures. Hew untrue te the Bible description of Christ also are the artists that never make a smile en his face ! IIew then could the children ever have come te him ? But hew can we characterize that greater blot en pictures and statues which is se painfully frequent the unchaste in art ? We may admiic the matchless skill which embodied the heathen conceptions and oc casionally rose above them in such sta tues as the half dozen noblest Venuscs, which might mere fitly be called statues of true womanhood ; but when modern aitists attempt le reproduce, in a Christian age, the unspeakably corrupt and corrupt ing legends of antiquity they lend their art te the downward forces of society, and that, tee, far mere culpably then these ai list whom they imtate, who had only the moral light of the heathen age. What city would endure a restoration of the worship of Venus? Why, then, should a city endure in its art galleries painted or marbel "portraits of sensual women as Venuscs V The same figures quickly pho tographed fromlife would net be tolerated. What new element enters into the case when an artist, somewhat mere slowly, takes the actual portrait from life and calls it Eve, or Mary Magdalen, or Susanna, or Diana? It is one of the strange things tee in this matter that the very persons who arc historically famous for ilccing from impurity are painted in such a way as te reuse temptations te impurity in these who sec them. It is a sufficient answer te these who say that nudity is necessary te the highest art that the most famous representations of classic and Christian subjects arc in many cases these which arc net fully draped. Ne ancient Venus stands as high as the draped Venus de Mile. Ne naked statue of Mars equals in artistic rank the fully clothed figure of that deity, in the beauty of his armor, which stands in the capitol at Reme. Ne naked statue of the ancient emperors is te be mentioned with that magnificent and fully clothed statue of Augustus in the Vatican. The statue of Diana at the Naples museum, which is counted equal, if net superior, te any ether figure of this goddess, is clothed te th j very nec'-c. The greatest of Madennas Raphael's ' lu chaise, in the Pitti gal lery at Florence does net leave even the shoulder or the babe of Mary unclothed. Artistic skill can prove itself even mere in copying drapery than nudity. Let ushave no less of art, but mere regard in its work te the true and the chaste, that art may net be, as of old, the servant of vice and error but of morality and religion. The Life of a Tramp. "I thought the tramps went Seuth in the winter?" "Seme of 'cm de, of course. But net se many as you think. Them fellers what's inclined te be sick'gcnerally docs. My lungs have been troubling me lately, and I've been thinking of starting for Flerida myself. I don't knew though. ; Seut'iern railroads arc awful hard te beat, and walk ing don't agree with me." " IIew would you proceed te the south from Philadelphia?" "I'd strike the captain of one of the freight beats going te Richmond for a free ride. If that wouldn't work, I'd .go en beard when I had a chance, and hide my self among the freight. The P., W. and R. read, running south from this city is decidedly 'N. G.' I've tried beating it once or twice, and always get kicked off between stations. The easiest railroad m the country te beat is the Michigan Cen tral. I tell you what I did once. There's an express train leaves Detroit for Chi caze at about eleven o'clock at night It steps at Wayne junction, Ann Arber and Jacksen. Between Jacksen and Chicago. I think it only steps twice, When the train pulled out of the De treit depot, one March night, in 1877, GRAND GRAND -OF LANCASTEB BAZAAE, Ne. 13 EAST KtNO- STREET, THURSDAY, APRIL 8th, 1880. ASTRICH WILL Ol'KX TIIEIlt ELEGANT AND SPACIOUS STORE, With u COMPLETE STOCK of everything appertaining) tetlie line of FANCY GOODS, NOTIONS, TRIMMINGS, MILLINERY, HOSIERY, GLOVES, UNDERWEAR, CORSETS, APRONS, WHITE GOODS, &c. CALL- AND SEE! I bounced en the front of the express car. The doers of the express cars en these big through trains, you knew, are always kept locked and barred. The mes sengers carry big sums of money, and arc afraid of being robbed. One time some men did get en the train and sawed their way through the front deer of the car, but the express messenger was up te snuff and shot one et the gang, liie ether two jumped from the train and escaped. Well, as I was saying, I get en the platform and rode through te Ann Arber all right. My racket was te get off the train when we stepped, and keep en the side of the cars from the station until they started up. At Ann Arber the brakeman must have seen me get en, for when l.e had pulled out about two miles the train stepped and I was put off. The moment the train started I jumped en again. They saw me, and by the time the train had stepped the second time the conductor and brake man were tearing mad. "If yen get en here again,' the conduc tor said, 'I'll break every bone in your body.' "I get en though all the same, but this time en the cow-catcher of the engine. As luck would have it they didn't see me when I get en. At Jacksen I went back te the express car again and lode clear through te the grand crossing at Chicago, without being bothered. It's terrible wearing en a fellow's nerves though that kind of business. "Engineers and firemen never give a fellow away. They're the best set of men all the way through I ever met. They al ways seem te like it when they see a tramp giving the conductor and brakemen trou ble. Many's the time I rode en engines when the fireman and engineer both knew it and wouldn't give it away. "Anether big ride I made one night was from Teledo, Ohie, te Cincinnati. I left Teledo at about ten-thirty en the night express of the Cincinnati, Hamilton and Dayton railroad. It was se dark you could net see your hand before you and it was raining like fury. When the train pulled out I steed en the platform of the second car from the rear and just in front of the Pullman. The conductor passed through and said 'tickets.' I told him I was going te ride out te the air-line junction three miles from the city, lie said: ' All right ; be sure yen get off there.' The moment the deer of the sleeper closed after him I get onto the brake, reached up, caught held of the top of each car at the end, and pulled myself up. Yeu knew hew a Pullman is made en top? Well, I just laid down flat, and holding en te the ventilators with my hands, I rode clear through te Dayton. There's a covered depot there, and I knew it. When the train pulled in I steed very innocent like en the platform, and get oft' with the rest of the passengers. When it pulled out I managed te get en top again before the conductor came through. In the morning I was in Cincinnati. Tramps call the read one of the hardest in the country te work. II. F. McCarthy. Wholesale and llctail Drug gist. Ottawa. Ontariu, writes: "I was afflicted with Chronic JJrenclntis ter some year-, out have been ceumletv cuicd by the use of Dr. Themas' Electric Oil, in doses of 5 drops en sugar, l nave also pleasure in recommending it as an embrocatien for external use." Ad dress all orders te II. IS. Cochran, tlrggi-t, 137 and i:X North Queen street, Lancaster. Statistics prove that twenty-nve per cent, of the deaths in our larger cities are caused by consumption, and when we reflect that this terrible disease in its worst stage will j ield te a bottle of Lecher's Itenewned Cough Syrup, shall we condemn the sufferer ter their neg ligence, or pity them for their ignorance? Many people make drug shops of their steinaclis. Iu the attempt te relieve a simple attack et liver complaints, when with a dose or two of Dr. Themas' Electric Oil, the complaint might lie easilyand pleasantly obviated. Celic, piles, hurts, lame back and swelled neek, are also among the troubles which it cures. Ad dress all orders te II. IJ. Cochran, druggist. 1.17 ami 1..0 North Queen street. Lancaster. GROCERIES. Y IIOLESALE AND RETAIL. LEVAN'S FLOUK . at no. 227 north prince street dl7-lyd fTKY THE FAIINESTOCK FARINA FLOUR. A Very Superior Article, at IJURSK'S. rpilE REST COFFEES. JL Always Fresh Roasted, at BURSK'S. MIC ICHNER'S EXCELSIOR 11AMS, AT IJURSK'S. A FULL LINE OF CANNED FRUITS AND VEGETABLES, AT BUUSK'S. s IIUMAKER'S AKRON OAT MEAL, AliffAlS J! 1U.SU. AT BURSK'S. SELF-RAISING BUCKWHEAT AND GRIDDLE CAKE FLOUR, at D. S. BUESK'S, Ne. 17 EAST KING STREET. Ol'ENEXG. OPENING THE- BROTHERS faprS-lytl MEDICAL. D A1"S K1UNKY PAI. The enlv cure for Phibetes. Gravel. Pieimv. ISright's Disease, Pain in tin; l'.iick. Inutility te lletain or Expel tin- Urine, Caturrli of the Illiid iler, Affections of the Spine, uml Diseases et the Kidney, Illuilder and Urinary Organs. It nreiils internal medicine: i-t comfortable te the patient; curtain in its effects. Sold by all druggists or sent by mail en receipt of price, $2.00. IMy's Kidney Pad Company. Teledo, Olde. ANDKUW U. FKET, Distributing Agent ter Lancaster County. Agenev, corner North Qncen and Orange Street.", Lancaster Pa. uprlH-lytl rpe THE SUI'IOSKIXG UUMAMTY N. LEWEST, M. D., Ne. 241$ WEST KING STREET, Lancaster, Pa. Di:. I.EWIX, who linsnccn n resident of Lan caster but a lew months, is a graduate of the University of Dorpat, ItiihSia, with u practic ing experience et t clveyears.in which period lie has been acting as Itcgiuicntal Physieian iu M. Peteisburg, and atterwards practiced in I.erlin, Germany, with great success. We call the attention of the suffering public te the fact that he sueeesstully treats EPILEPSY, RHEUMATISM; NEURALGIA, CATARRH, and all chronic disea-cs. The severest eases et Chronic Catarrh cured iu a short time. Kcfcrciiccs and testimonials lrem former patients can be seen at my office. Persons without means 'ill only be asked payment for medicines. Communications from a distance attended te bv mail. lull-lyil&w "I LAD TIDINGS ! TO THE AFFLICTED WHO HAVE LOST ALL CONFIDENCE IN PHYSICIANS AND I)i:UGS. Remember, under the Omnipathlc practice of DIJ. GREEN E.nearlyail formsefili.seaseare cured. Over -KM) of the most difficult (se-called) incurable patients, from the best lamilies in Lancaster, under his charge. ASTONISHING CURES te tell you It you'll call at our officer. JOHN GOODMAN, who has tested the med ical abilities of Lancaster's M. Ds. for 13 years, se cured in two weeks as toge te work. J ACOIt PAINTER, 430 Locust street, n sufferer for 11 years, all the time doctoring, cured in two weeks. Rev. JOHN HUNTER.fennerly pastor of Church of Ged, of Lancaster, is here recog nizing his friends with lii.s lett eye with which he lias been blind for KJ years. Several persons cured of consumption": one has gained 'SI pounds in five weeks. WILSON HAMILTON. :'! East King street, consumptive ler ten years, has gained a pound a day for ten days. CHRISTIAN ROOTV brought here, Jan. '-y,, in a earriuge, ami Feb. 2S, walked here withent aid. One of the best known citizens, who was unable, under the treatment et leading physi cians, te raise his arm ler 10 years, was cured in Itiluys. T.. S. KAUFFMAX.ef Millersville. led in blind Feb. II, with betli his eyes looking like dots of bleed, could see the paintings en his walls March 5. Xe pills or poisons placed in the stomach ; all the remedies placed en the outside of the body. Catarrh Cured ferSOeents. Consultation tree. IMS. C. A. GISEKNi;, 2SG North Queen St leet. mll-GmdTu.Th&S EOR SALE OH UEX'l. STOKE ROOM FOIt KENT, NO. 114 X. Queen street. Possession given January 1st. Apply at da-tfdl Ne. 112 North Ouecn Street. F OK RENT. Turn rnninc Vn 1'XIS Vnrtli Yln.n &. suitable for ihotegraih"gallcrv. new eccuniccf uy.i . saurmaii. iippiy 10 di-CJOtfil x:ii OS. IIAUMGARDNER. F OR SALE. AShullIe Ueaid in Geed condition, with lour sets of quoits, will be sold cheap. Apply te H. L. MISI1LER. miJ-tM 113 East King Street. A COLLAR FACTORY AND LEATHER STORE FOR RENT. A well Established Cellar Factory and Leather Stere for rent. Alse suitable for any ether business. Apply te JiTu,Tli4Stfd JOHN A. SHORER. F OJS RENT. Four Acres of Geed Laud with a Frame Heuse and Geed Rarn.situated en the Harris burg pike, within the city limits.. Inquire of II. SHUP.ERT, ni21-lwd Ne. C Court Avenue. F OR RENT. The fcceend story of Kslileman & Rath- von's Ranking Heuse, at Centre Se uare. and aNe a room en second story, opposite the Penn'a It. 11. Depot, en Chestnut street. Ii. F. ESIILEMAN. f23-2td&SU Atterncy-at Law 17IRE PROOF SAFE FOIt SALE. . A Fire I'roet Safe (Mesler, Rahman & Ce., Cincinnati make), 3ljnclies high, 20! wide ami 24 deep, weigiit 1,200 pound-, wltli" Sargent's Patent Night and Day Combination Leck, for sale cheap. Apply at the , Jan2-tfd INTELLIGENCER OFFICE. PUBLIC SALE. On WEDNESDAY. APRIL 7, 1SS0. will be sold at public sale, valuable HOUSEHOLD AND KITCHEN FURNITURE of the estate e Jus per Yeates Conyngham, deceased, at Ne. 2S Seuth Queen street, Lancaster, Pa., viz: One Viane, two Marble top Tables, two large Mir rors, Sefa, Invalid Chair, two stands et Min erals, dozen Stuffed Chairs, Marble-top Stand, let of Window Blinds, large and small Side board, one high Eight-day Cleck, three Lounges, lire Bedsteads and Bedding, three eases of Drawers, six Bureaus, eight Boek Cases, live Wardrobes, Washstands. Dining and Breakfast tables. Steves, Chairs, large Ann Chair, two Chests, large Fleur Client, Leeking Glasses, Settee. Tin and Queensware. about 300 or 400 yards of Brussels, lugrain ani Rag Carpets by theyard, and many ether arti cles net mentioned. The furniture is all of the best make, nearly all Walnut or Mahogany, and among them are valuable relics with his torical associations. Sale te commence at 9 o'clock, a.m.. and con tinue nntil ull is sold, when terms will lie made known by the nndcrsIgneiL A. K. WITMER, EMLEN FltANKLIN, IlKjntY SnrBEKT, Auctt Eiecutcrs. mar2U,27,31&an34Gd rpR T LOCHER'S COWGKSXRUF. s 1 61 m Kit 711 M m n i l'S i 'i stl HTJ 2 Vl i iji'l ai ! z .. ti E!3