CSewJE -' - Egicay:-,-;. w:jw . -: v - j - v- -' v " r'c." e ' r : Volume XTINe. 197. LANCASTER, PA., TUESDAY, APRIL 20, 1880. Price Twe Cents. rvi j -xerJm lOTEfftlBiittBimM ifc .r TERMS. THE DAILYINTELLIGENCER, rUBLISHXD ETEBT KVXNIKO, BY STEINMAN & EENSEL, intelligencer Building, Southwest Cerner of Centre Square. riiE Dailt Ihtellieemcer Is lurnished te subscribers In the City of Lancaster anU Bur rounding towns, accessible by llailrearl and Dully Stage Lines at Tek Cents Per Week, payable te the Carriers, weekly. By Mail, $5 a year in advance ; otherwise, $6. Entered at the pest office at Lancaster, Pa., as second class mail matter. 49- The STEAM JOB PRINTING DEPART DEPART MEXTet this establishment possesses unsur passed facilities for the execution of all kinds of Plain and Fancy Printing. COAL. B. U. MARTIN, Wholesale and Retail Dealer in all kinds of LUMBEH AXI COAL. i-Yard : Xe. 420 Xerth Water and Prince streets, above Lemen, Lancaster. n3-lyd COAL! COAL! COAL! COAL! Ceal of the Best Ouallty put up expressly for family use, and at the low est market prices. TRY A SAMPLE TON. S- YAKI1 ISO SOUTH WATER ST. nrZMyd PHILIP SCIIUM, SOX & CO. rOXL. COAL!! REMOVAL!!! RUSSEL & SHULMYER liaTC removed thclr Ceal Ollice from Xe. 15 te -Ne, 22 EAST KING STKEET, u here they v. ill he plcaved te walten tlieir lricnds and guar antee full satisfaction. 43leu'l forget Xe. 22. apr3-lmdtaw JIJ.VT RECEIVED A FINIS LOT OF ItALED HAT AND STRAW, at M. F. STEIGERWALT & SON'S, DEALERS IN FLOUR, GRAIN AND COAL,, 234 NORTH WATER STKEET. C?-Western Fleur a Specialty. fs27-l.vd C0H0 & WILEY, .-,0 NORTH WATER ST., Utnraster, J'a., Wholesale and Retail Dealers in LUMBER AND GOAL. Alse, Contractors and ISullders. Estimates made and contracts undertaken tin all kinds of buildings. Branch Office: Xe. 3 XORTH DUKE ST. fel)2S-lyd COAL! - - - COAL!! flO TO GORREOHT & CO., Ter Geed and Cheap Ce.il. Yai 1 Han Nbnrg Pike. Office 20 East Chestnut Street. P. W. GOKKECHT, Agt. J. 15. RILEY. W. A. KELLER. nS-lyd ROOKS AND STATIONERY. VKW statiem:ky! New, Plain and Fancy STATIONERY. Alse, Velvet and Eastlakc PICTURE FRAMES AND EASELS. L. M. FLYNN'S BOOK AM) STATIONERY STORE, Ne. 42 WEST KING STREET. GROCERIES. XriIOLESALE AND RETAIL. LEVAN'S FLOUR AT Ne. 227 NORTH PRINCE STREET. dl7-lyd TABLE SUPPLIES ! CAXXED FRUITS, viz: Peaches Pears, Pinn Apples. Cherries, C.ilileiuia Green Gages, Egg Plums, Xectarincs, Ac. CAXXED VEGETAKLES, viz: Tomatoes Cern, Gieeu Peas, Ac. CANNED FISH, viz -.Sardines, Ftes.li Pal, men, Fresh Lebster, &c. CONDENSED MILK. Eagle Iirand. CROSS A HLACKWELL'S Pickles and Sauces, COXE'S Gelatiiie, MARGE FIL'S Ccl--ebrated Itniud Macaroni, Latest Importation. RAKER'S Urcaklast Cocea and Xe. 1 Prcm ium Chocolates. FOREIGX AND DOMESTIC FRUITS, viz: Raisins, Prunes, Figs, Prnnelles, Evaporated Peaches, Apples, Cranberi ies, &c. MISCELLANEOUS. Tapioca, Farina, Cern Starch, Heminy, Peas and Ileitis, Barley, Rice Fleur, Raking Powders, &c., at D. S. BUKSK'S, Xe. 17 EAST KING STREET. INSVItANCJt.. rpiiE OLD T GIRARD FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY OF PHILADELPHIA ASSETS : One Millien One Hundred and Thirty-one Thousand Eight Hundred and Thirty-eight Dollars. 81,131,838. All invested in the best securities. Lesses promptly paid. Fer policies call en " RIFE & KAUFMAN, Ne. 19 East King St.. Lancaster. Pa. 8-MW.lS6m.IK IfUKNlTUM-:. A Netice of Merest te AH ! NEW STOCK. NEW STORE. NEW AND INCREASED FACILITIES. Ry recent Improvement te my Ware Reems they have been much enlarged and impre ed, mid have just been tilled 'with a New and Com plete Assortment of Hand Made and ethci FUKtflTUKE, OF TUB- LATEST AND BEST DESIGNS. 1 guarantee all my work and will make it te your interest te call. Repairing and Re-upholstering at sheit no ice. Picture Frames made te eidcr, at 16 EAST KING STREET. WALTER A. HEINITSH. A TTOKNEVS-A T-LA II" HENRY A. RILEY Attorney and Couuseller-at-Law 21 Park Rew. New Yeik. Collections made in all parts of the United Slates, and a general legal business transacted, lie (V-.i by permission te Steinman A Hcnsel. TARCUS . SEHNER, HOUSE CARPENTER, Ne. 120 North Prince street. Prompt and particular attention paid te al -eratlen and repairs. sl3-lyd CLOTHING. SPEW OPEM H. GERHART'S Tailoring Establishment, MONDAY, APRIL 5. Having )ust returned from the New Yerk Woolen Market, I am new prepared te exhibit one of the Best Selected btecks of WOOLENS .FOB THE Sjrii mni seiiijr Me, Ever hieught te this city. Xencbutthc Tery best et ENGLISH, FRENCH AND AMERICAN FABRICS, in all file Leading Styles. I'lices ns low as the lowest, and all goods warranted as leprcseiit ed, at H. GERHART'S, Ne. 51 North Queen Street. Spring Opening 24 CENTRE SQUARE. We have for sale ler the coming seasons an Immense Stock of of our own manufacture, which comprises the Latest and Jlest STYLISH DESIGIS. Conic and see our NEW GOODS roil which is larger and compescdot thcbcs.t styles te be leund in the city.' D. B. Hostetter & Sen, 24 CENTRE SQUAHE. 26-lyd LANCASTER. PA intT a (tens. CHEAP CARPETS FROM AUCTION. Opened this day Lets et CHEAP CARPETS, ALSO Me.Gtt&FaiiCFlafc, AT FAHIBSTOCK'S, Next Doer te tlie Court Heuse. riVKB TO TUL' LADIES! Just received a Fine Line of DRY GOODS, Philip Sclium, Sen & Ce.'s, 38 & 40 WEST KING STREETS. Having added in connection with our Large Stock et Carpets, Yarns, &c, A FINE LINE OF ORY GOODS, such as CALICOES, IJLEACII P.l) AND UXItLEACHED MUSLINS, TICK INGS, COTTON FLANNELS. CASHMERES, IJLACK. ALPACAS, SHEETINGS. NEW STYLE OF SHIRTING, NEW STYLE DRESS GOODS, TAJ1LE LINENS. NAPKINS, TOWELS, Vc, which c are selling at 210 BERATE PIUCES. inl-Siud CII1XA AND OLASSWAICIS. c UUNA HALL. GRAJSTD DISPLAY AT CHINA HALL, THIS EVEINLNG, Ne. 15 EAST KING STKEET. HIGH & MARTIN, Ne. 15 EAST KING STREET. TUfWAKE, JtC- fXAJA. ONSHERTZER, HUMPHREVILliE O & KUSPFKB, manufacturers of TIN AND SHEET-IRON WORK, and dealers in GAS FIXTURES AND HOUSE FURNISIIINGGOODS.SpecialattentlengiTen. f PLUMBING, GAS and STEAM FITTING- Ne. 49 EaalKiMS Street, Laucatr, Pa. Beaay-Maae GlOlM Lancaster I-ntelltgencer. TUESDAY EVENING, APRIL 20, 1880. OIJD WORLD LETTER. CORRESPONDENCE FROM GERMANY. HAWTHORNE AND HIS WORKS. AN ACRE IN ONIONS. A FORTUNE FOR FARMERS. DOKNDOKt-ON-TnE-LAALE. A Picturesque German Tillage. Dokndekf-on-tiie-Laale, Tiicn-guia, March 24, 1880, Special Correspondence Istellieesceu. Here in my dear Derndorf home I write te you. The pabtorandFrauPasteritiWuttig have iust returned from a deliirhtful walk te the Derubury. We have crossed the bridge ever the Laalc aud walked by the mill of which Goethe speaks se graphically in one of his letters written from the Domburg. Se beautiful is the evening and se distinctly could we see the Kunitzburg, which lies lies between Derndprf and Jiua. On the summit are the ruins of the old castle. Seme ten years age a peasant by night went thither with a wagon and horse. Unknown te any one he removed a portion of the ruin, and with the stones built a house near the feet of the moun tain. Seme time afterward his theft be came known, when the government of Weimar ordered him te demolish the house which he had thus built with the stolen material. These-same he was com pelled te take again te the top of the mountain, and theie lc-eicct the portion of the tuin as it had been at a cost of four hundred dollars. This then is the ruin which you must imagine you have seen with me as I walk along the Laale with my friend the pastor and Frau Pasto Paste rin Wuttig. Over our heads rises the Domburg with its three castles, whilst flowing in the most graceful curves at its base is the picturesque Laale. The strata of the rocks in this old outpost of Tlntnu gian dominion in Sclaveic times, is very interesting geologically, as it shows the different strata of rocks se distinctly. The village of Derndorf lies opposite te us and I see the window of my loom as we walk. Frem the window of the Goethe Schloss? the Great Dichter leeks down upon you as we walk together, and we give him an American crcctins:. I trust you have en jeyed the sheit walk. iGECRGE Merle Zvciiav.ias. Hawthorne's Environment. llosten Herald. It is unquestionable that the fame of Hawthorne has steadily grown during the fifteen years since his death. Mr. Henry James, jr., finely says that " he has the importance of being the most beautiful aud most eminent representative of a lit erature," and, again, that he is " the most valuable example of the American genius," and, still agaiu, that he " was, en his lim ited scale, a master of expression." He says nothing in his fresh and, en the whole, fascinating biography of him a biography which, if meagre in its facts, is notably rich in the quality and justice of its semi-literary criticism which is truer than this : " Three or four beautiful tal ents of transatlantic growth are the sum of what the world usually recognizes, and in this modest nosegay the genius of Haw thorne is admitted te have the rarest and sweetest fragrance." Mr. James writes from the English point of view, but his praise never exceeds that of Mr. Hutten, the well known English critic, who says that " as a literary artist, if net in rough genius, he may safely be considered al most the first, and quite the highest, fruit of American culture." Mr. "V hippie has also clearly traced the thread of Haw thorne's work, "in intellect and imagina tion, in the faculty of discerning spirits and detecting laws," he says, ' we doubt if any living novelist is his equal ;" his style is "the sweetest, simplest aud clearest English that ever has been made the vehicle of equal depth, variety and subtlety of thought or emotion," and " his mind is reflected in his style as a face is reflected in a mirror." Again, Mr. Whip ple penetrates te the secret of Hawthorne's power when he says that " with his in sight of individual souls he combines a a far deeper insight of the spiritual laws which govern the strangest aberrations of individual souls." There is nothing new or recent in these statements, but they record the imprcsssen which Hawthorne's writings have made upon some of the keenest minds of our own time, aud every indication points te a larger recognition of the ability of the author of " The Scarlet Letter" in the near future. Even this romance, the first te give him fame, has just been illustrated by Mr. Darlcy, a man whose genius works in art iu much the same channels as Hawthorne's worked iu literature. It takes a little space of time te see an author sufficiently at a distance te measure his relative size, and we are hardly yet enough separated from our gi eat romancer te see the relative place he occupies in literature. He had the Shakspcarian element. Never exhausting himself in any one direction, always moving in the realm of the imagin ation, a poet in his sympathies, in the cre ation of characters, in the distillation of the subtlest essence of life into his work, his imagination always obeyed the inward law of his mind, and seemed te fathom the secret depths of life. His re sources were immense. He absorbed everything; he saw everything; he saw what the company he mingled in did net sec ; he saw with the creative eye of the imagination. It has been remarked that he had mere of Shakspeare iu his tempeia ment and habits than any man knewu te fame in America. He was certainly Shak spearian in his choice of companions. He shunned the snobs of the literary circles with instinctivedisgust,but,inthe company of a man like the late Win. D. Ticknor, or of men like the old-fashioned Salem ship masters,of the quaint specimens of humani ty that are still found in New England by ways, he was vastly at his ease, and never failed te de his part, whether it was drink ing wine or telling stories. When this ele ment is found in literary men of power, it is the sure mark of genius, and these good geed fellowships are the avenues through which genius touches the large humanity of man kind. Hawthorne has net yet been ade quately exhibited in his environment, in his methods of work, in the movements of his genius. Mr. Lathrop picked up essen tial facts, but failed te interpret the crea tive side of Hawthorne's life, and no one who has attempted te interpret him te men has yet shown the insights which Mr. Hut Hut ten and Mr. Whipple have used in giving us the real portraiture of the mental activ ity of this great master of fiction. Mr. James has done his work well, but he is a man cast in another mould, and the true life of Ilawthenie has still te be written. While every one can trace the marks et genius in Hawthorne's writings, but little attention has been given te the superb con ditions en which he worked. Mr. James sees what his environment did for him, but fails te interpret his genius by it. Haw therne is mere distinctly a New England author than any ether writer. Sylvester Judd's realistic fiction entitled ' ' Margaret " was an attempt te write the great New England story, and he came as near te it as any man can who mistakes quaintness and individuality for genius. Hawthorne from the first had the conception of what New England could furnish him. It gave him what the Elizabethan age gave Shakci speare the power that lies in demonology As a boy he amused himself with the "Pil grim's Progress " and the " Faery Queen," and these works net inaptly represent the two elements which run through all his works the Puritan and the poetical elements. Ne writer among us has given such e. traits of New England life; no one has caught, in the same uegree, tlie suetier impressions et that life which are only gathered by the imaginative faculty in its creative moods. Longfellow and Whittier are merely surface-painters as compared with Hawthorne. It is the environment of this quaint, rigid, austere, yet vividly human life of our ancestors that you find in Haw thorne's "Twice-Told Tales," in "The Sacred Letter," in " The Heuse of the Seven Gables," in the "Blithedale Ko Ke mance," and even in "The Marble Faun" you trace the same weird and mysterious power of haunted life. It is net only the Puritan atmosphere, but it is the infer nal side of Puritan life, its dealing with devils, its questionings of the soul, its witchcraft element, what haunts the residents of Salem te this day, that you trace in the turn it gave te his imasi imasi natieu. Hawthorne also grew up by him self. The boy who could "skate until midnight, all alone, upon Sebago lake, with the deep shadows of the icy hills en cither side," had in him the elements for for the making of no common man. Then the isolation of the literary class in New England in his early manhood, the fact that nobody believed that an American could write a book worth reading, the same forgetfulness of merit which caused the late Richard II. Dana te cease te be an author half a century before he died, had much te de in shaping the development of Hawthorne's mind. He called himself "the obscurest man of letters in America," and wrote less te earn his bread than te satisfy the instincts of his imagination. Bad as this was personally for Hawthorne, yet with a man of his power and tendency, if we were net totally discouraged, it was sure te make him concentrate his strength upon work that would give him reputation and the effect was seen when iu his forty sixth year. "The Scarlet Letter" made him famous throughout the realm of Eng lish letters. The quantity of his work is net large, though quite large enough, but its quality is precisely what a strong man, with his mind turned inward, and his .sur roundings such as gave one as much time for breeding imaginations as Woidswerth had, would be most apt te furnish. The sad, pathetic melancholy of the man, the inability te see things with tlie " upper eye" of spiritual joy, the power te touch the springs of life without touching Ged, had limited the fame of Hawthorne, and confined a man of Shaksperian power te the limits of one species of writing ; but no one can read his shorter or longer stories, or even his various essay.0, without feeling that in the realms of the creative imagination no one in America but the elder Dana has come into compari son with him. Peculiar as he was in h;s personal life, as able te de without human society as he was te enjoy it. net entering ' any sphere of life se much that he could net appreciate any ether, he was yet true te the instinct of self, throughout his en tire career. Wc have had no ether writer who has taken into himself se much of the New England of two centuries age, or who has bodied it forth in shapes of the imagina tion se distinct and startling that he has peopled English literature anew with the airy nothings of his own brain. Au Acre iu Onions. Few farmers seem te realize the fact that as much money may be obtained from au actc of land in onions as from a forty acre farm devoted te the usual crop. At present prime onions are worth $4 per barrel by the car-lead, and two hundred and fifty barrels may be", and net un frequently are produced from an acre of land. Let no one, however, expect te realize a thousand dollars from an acre of onions who docs net pay the best atten tion te the crop. Te begin with, land naturally adapted te producing the crop should be selected. Experiments made in the eastern states, where large quanti ties of onions arc raised for the southern market, show that there is no better soil for onions than that of a reclaimed beg. Of course the land must be well drained aud the surface soil decomposed by ex posure te the action of the atmosphere. Most of our black prairie soils arc suita ble te the production of onions if they aie rightly treated. The turf must become entirely retted and mixed with the earth below. Land that has been in pasture for several yeare is easily prepared for a crop of onions, as the turf is comparative ly thin, while the soil is quite free from weeds. That portion of a pasture in which cattle and sheep lie at night may be con verted into an onion-patch te excellent ad vantage. A field for onions should be very nearly level. If there are elevations in it the soil en them will be likely te wash away, car rying off the seed before it germinates, or leaving part of the onions exposed te the sun. A piece of land intended for onions should be entirely free from the seeds of weeds in the start, and there should be a determination en the part of the grower te allow none te attain any considerable size. Absolutely clever culture is essential te producing a paying crop of onions. Neglect in this matter will cause a vast amount of work, which will net, after all, insure a geed crop of onions. A field of onions can net be ne glected en account of a demand for labor en ether parts of the farm. Unless a far mer has help that can attend te his field of onions during the season of plowing corn, cutting grass, and harvesting grains, it will be better net te attempt te raise the crop at all. The care of onions, how ever calls for light work, which may be chiefly performed by old men, partial in valids, women and children. Persons who cannot perform heavy work en the farm may engage in onion raising te excellent advantage. It is useless te undertake te raise a pay ing crop of onions en land that is net very highly manured. Frem thirty te fifty leads of manure should be applied te an acre of land designed for producing this c:ep. It should be well retted and free from the seed of grass and Jweeds. Un leached ashes form a valuable addition te composted stable manure. After a piece of land has been prepared for onions it is best te continue the crop for a series of years. As onions are gross feeders it will, of course, be necessary te apply a coating of manure every season. The soil of an onion field should be well pulverised and the manure thoroughly incorporated with it. After it is plowed and harrowed a roller should be employed for crushing the lumps. Many growers empljy a hand-rake for fining the soil before the seed is sewn. About four pounds of seed are required for an acre. It should be the product of the previous season. The seed may be tested by counting out a certain number and placing them ou some moist cotton laid in a saucer. If geed, it will germi nate in three or four days. Tlie seed should be sewn as early in the spring as it is possible te prepare the land. Growers who aim te get the largest yield from a given amount of land allow only the space of a feet between the rows. There is a drill which plants two rows of onion seed at once. If sewn by hand one seed should be dropped every inch. In order te mark the rows it is well te drop a radish seed every five or six inches. The radishes will grew very rapidly, and will be large enough te pull before the onions attain sufficient size te be injured by their presence. If there is no market for rad ishes in the vicihity, cabbage plants may be raised iu their place. When of suffi cient size they may be pulled and trans planted. The cultivation of onions must be chiefly performed by means of hand tools. The shuffle hoe is the best implement for doing most of the weik. It should be of the best quality, and great pains should be taken te keep it clean and sharp. After the plants are about four inches high they may be thinned se that each has a space of about three inches in which te grew. Seme growers who seek te raise very large crops allow three onions te grew in the space of six inches. Of course they crowd each ether after they have become cf nearly full size, but this thick setting is neccssaiy te secure the maximum yield. Alter they aic thinned te the proper dis tance nothing is required by way of culti vation except te keep the soil light and fiee from weeds. Chicago Times. IlLiveseld 4(1 bottles of veur Dr.lTlienms Electric Oil in six week and every bottle gave satisfaction. Our people are better pleased with it than anything they have had. l'lease duplicate my order at once. C. 1. HALL, GisAYViLLE, III.. Jan. 30, 1880. Fer sale by H. U. Cochran, druggist, Nes. 137 and 139 North Queen street, Lancaster. Statistics prove that twenty-five percent, of tlie deaths in our larger cities are caused by consumption, and when we reflect that this terrible diicase In its worst stage will yield te a bottle of Lechcr's Kcnewned Cough Syrup, shall we condemn the sufferers ler their negli gence, or pity them for their ignorance? Ne 1) East King stieet. Netice. We were suffering the most excru ciating pain lreiu iiilliuuniatery rhcuniatNin. One application of Or. Themas' Electric Oil afforded almost instant relief, anil two titty cent bottles effected a permanent cure. O. E. COMSTOCK, Fer sale by C. 15. Cee. Caledonia. Minn. Sold by II. I!. Cochran, druggist, Nes. 137 and 130 North Queen street, Lancaster. UIS FIXTURES. BARGAINS GAS FIXTURES SLATE IANTELS, & 152 North Queen Street, LANUASTERY.PA. G.LFT DRAWINGS. ' THBPDBLIC WILL TAKE NOTIclT 1st. That the Postmaster General lias RE SCINDED his order against the delivery of Mails te this Company. 2d. That this is the only Lettery Company which has ever been declared legal by a United States Court. 3d. That United States Circuit Court Judge Urewn has declared its drawings notlraudu netlraudu Icnt. 4th. That Registered Letters will henceforth be delivered and I'esUil Orders paid as form erly, al7-eed&wta30 Authorized by the Commonwealth of Ky. and .Fairest in the World. 19th Popular Monthly Drawing OF TUB . COMMONWEALTH DISTRIBUTION CO. At Macaulcy's Theatre, in the City of Louis ville, en THURSDAY, APRIL 29th, 1880. These Drawings, authorized by act et tlie Legislature el 1SUJ, and sustained by all the courts of Kentucky occur regularly en the last day of every month (Sundays excepted), and are supervised by prominent citizens et tu State. The management call attention te the grant, opportunity presented of obtaining, ler only $.', any of the follewing.prizes i JlrlZC $ jJ(W J 1 Jlilii v lfjA.nJ X prize. .. u,wu 10 prizes $1,000 each 10,000 20 prizes 500 each 10,oue 100 prizes, $100 each 10,000 200 prizes 50 each 10,000 (M0 prizes 20 each 12,000 1000 prizes lOcach 10,000 9 prizes 300 each, approximation prizes 2,700 9 prizes 200 each, " " 1,800 9 prizes 100 each, " " 900 1,960 prizes $112,400 Whole tlckcls,$2; liall tickets.!; 27 tickets $50; 55 tickets. $100. AH applications for club rated should be made te the home ellice. Pull list of drawing published in Louisville Courier-Journal and New Yerk Herald and mailed te all ticket-holders. Itcmit money by mail or express. Address It. 31. Heard MAN. Courier-Journal lluilding, Leu i-.villc, Ky., or ut 307 and 309 .Broadway. New Yerk. rf28-TuTh&Sw FOUNDERS AND MACHINISTS. T ANCASTEU BOILER MANUFACTORY, SHOP ON PLUM STREET, Opposite the Locomotive 'Works. The subscriber continues te manufacture BOILERS AND STEAM ENGINES, Fer Tanning and ether purposes ; Furnace Twlers, Bellows Pipes, Sheet-iron Werk, and Blacksmithing generally. 49 Jobbing promptly attended te. auglMyd JOHN BEST. TRY LOOKER'S SYRUP. T.ENOWNED COUGH Flu Breneman s DRY THE GRAND DEPOT IS THE LARGEST RETAIL HOUSE in the United States, exclusive of New Yerk City. 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. SPRING D31ESS GOODS! SPRING DRESS GOODS! Ladies, wc are etTering New and Desirable Effects in Dress lateriaJs for Spring Wear. Wc arc new showing Silk and Weel Novelties, Colored Silks, Satins and Summer Silks. AEW SPKING LAWXS, NEW SPIUMJ PERCALES, NEW SPBINU GLNGH VMS, SEW SriUSU HOSIERY, NEW SPRING UL0VES. RIBBONS, CORSETS, UNDERWEAR, &c. We call Special Attention te our Large Stock of CARPETS and TAPER HANGINGS. J. B. MARTIN & CO. New Spring -AT NEW YORK STORE. WATT, SHAND & COMPANY have opened an Immense Stock of New Goods and with them etrer the following SPECIAL BARGAINS: . One Case Novelty Suitings 10a per yard, common price 12c. One Case Spring Ores Goods, lCc per j-ard, worth 23c. OneCa.se lireadhcad Alpacas 28c per yard. TIicme goods are w arranted net te shrink or curl when wet. Latest Novelties in French, English and American Dress Goods, Black Silks. Colored Silks, Summer Silks and Novelty Trimmings In Great Va riety. S-Nete New Address. S AND 1 0 EAST KING STREET. spkhstg det goods -AT- HAGER & BROTHER'S, Xe. 25 WEST KING STREET, LANCASTER. -s:- LADIES' DRESS GOODS! All the Novelties of the Season in the New Spring Shades. White Goods, Laces, Hosiery and Gloves. GENTS' WEAR. GENTS' WEAR. Spring Cheviots, French. English and American Suitings, and Clothing in Large Assort ment. Carpets, Linoleum and Oil Cleths. China and Cocea Mattings and Paper Hangings. A Large and Complete Stock in all Departments, and at the Lewest Price. 5Call and examine. HAGER & BROTHER! WATCHES, EDW. J. ZAHM, Jeweler, Zahm's Cerner, DEALER IN AMERICAN & FOREIGN WATCHES, Sterling Silver and Silrer-PIated Ware, Clocks, Jewelry it Mel Tinted Susctacles. We offer our patrons the benefit of our long experience In business, by which we are able te aid them in making the best use of their money in any department of enr business. We manufacture a large part et the goods we sell, and buy only lrem FIrst-Clasa Houses. Every article sold accompanied with a bill stating its quality. .First-Class Watch and General Kepairing given special attention. ZAHM'S COKNEK. CARRIAGES, 3. E. BAIL.Y. S. E. BALLY & Ce., Manufacturers of CARRIAGES OF EVERY DESCRIPTION! Office and Warerooms, 430 and 432 North Queen Street. 431 and 433 Market Street, Lancaster, Pa. We are new ready for SPRING TRADE, with a Fine Assortment of Bigi, Carriages, FMetens, Market Wapns, k Having purchased our stock for cash, before the recent advance, we are enabled te efler SPECIAL INDUCEMENTS IN PRICE. We will keep In stock BUGGIES OF ALL GRADES and PRICES te suit all classes et customers SPECIAL BARGAINS IN MARKET WAONS. 1 ve mn a eeil. All work felly warraated eae year.. GOODS. Dress Goods, Till .JEWELRY, c. Lancaster, Pa., LANCASTER, PA. PHAETONS. Sc W. W. BALT.Y and Dealers In Factory, " K a m m I i if. t& S3