- r ImtfE; Volume XVII--N0. CO. LANCASTER PA., TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 9, 1880 Price Twe Cents. rH H B' L -IzSmBKBBTJkcST Ci 3 ?J" i3 IB 9 H IB B H H BD m PW BB v Pft fin . Pi vnr noens. Wanamaker 4- Brown, SHALL WE There is in I'JiihulelpIii.i a clothing liouse which h?.s no double in all the world. The world is lull of clothing houses ; and it is a oed deal te say that one is unlike all the rest. First, in its dealing ; and it is &uiirisiiig that one house should differ much from another. Selling clothing is se simple a matter, that it is likely, one would suppose, te he done in very much the same way in Philadelphia, Xcw Yerk and Londen. But Philadelphia is ahead: and, curiously enough, r,ie heui-e in Philadelphia is ahead of all the rest. T be ahead in dealing is te deal en a higher plane, in a 1110:0 liberal way, te give the buyer mere well founded confidence without less of the nicr chant's safety. This Philadelphia clothing house .says te a stranger : " Wc want te deal with exact justice. Wc want what belongs te us, vis., a fair profit ; and we want you te have what belongs te you, viz., a liberal moncy's mency's moncy's weilh. Our ..iy te nriivc at this result is te mark a piicc en everything we sell, which i.rii :.; absolute ; and te let you buy what you like, go away and think the bargaii. ever, and conic and trade back, if you want te. "Wc find by experience that tl.'.s liberality isliarmlcKi te us. Of course, you like it. And it makes quick and ready dealing. AVe don't want you te bring back what you buy it would cost us money every time ; but we would rather you would bring back than L&sp, what you don't like. .Se, wc tryte sec that you get at fust what you will like the better the mere you knew of it. This is really the whole- philosophy of our dealings." Is it any wonder that no ether clothing house in this city, or New Yerk, or Londen, deals in the same way '.' Second, in its goods the amount and variety of them. Theic are ether houses where excellent clothing is kept, and a great deal of it ; but there is none, anywhere, that keeps se much. The dealing related above has wen the largest trade the world lias yet seen. Te supply such a trade great quantity and variety of clothing are required ; and thew in turn increase the trade, be cause everybody likes te cheese out of many things, rather than out of few. This is the country of ready-made clothing. Great Britain makes the most of any European ceuutiy; but there is net in all Londen any clothing business a qnailer as large as that of O.ik Hall. Xew Yerk has several large clothing businesses ; but no one nearly equal te that of Oak Hail ; Bosten Iikewii-e. Loek back twenty years ! Have we done yen geed service, or net".' But that is set what we had in mind ; wc weie thinking of the clothes you arc go ing te buy te-day. Shall we sell them '.' WANAMAKER & BROWN. Oak 11am, Sixth and Market. Pnii.Ai::i.iMiiA. SPECIAL INVITATION. WATT, SHAND & COMPANY ln ladies te examine larjje purchases ei Clearing Let at less than Auction Prices. COLORED DRESS SILKS, Reautiful Shade-, really werthSl, only CSc. r.i ACK D1!E:-S SILKS. Popular brand, S7, 1, 1.2.1, !..",0, l.T.l. WDF'i CLOTH SUITINGS. tf inches wide, all wool; importer's pries Sue; our- H!. ACK CASH MEIIES. Excellent Value, S7J,.X :. "1, 7c, $1, 1.23. LOltED CASH M EKES. Deuble width; new seniles 17c; new stddjit 2"e. ANN EL SC ITIXCS. Desirable Celers, :.(ic te ifl.-JO. MD I1C1S GOODS and NOVELTIES. Largest Assortment unrt Lowe-t Prices. "DIES' GLOVES. 200 (iez.en Heavy Lisle Cleves i" ; worth el)c. pe P.L CO Ft, i LA CLOAKS, SHAWLS, CLOAKINGS, AT POPULAR PRICES. NEW YORK STORE. BECAUSE BECAUSE BECAUSE AND BECAUSE Our Goods are Carefully Selected, The Designs are Artistic and New, The Colorings are Rich and Harmonious The Prices are Extremely Reasonable. Wi: ASK YOU TO VISIT IS WHEN YOU AKE IX WANT OP PAPER HANGINGS. J. B. lartin & Ce,, West King St. WATCHES, JEWEZUY, &e. ZAHM'S A new ream ami elegant Lancaster Watches, Waltham In Geld and Silver Cases, at the LOWEST Jewelry, Diamonds, Bronzes, Arundel the best in tlie world. OUR MANUFACTURING DEPARTMENT is as cv.iplete as any in the larger cities. Wc manufacture Kings, Masonic Maries, Society rins. Jewelry of all kinds, Diamond Mounting and any special or odd pieces in uuy desired style. MONO'.; HAMMING and Fine Jewelry and Wntcli repairing a specialty. All weik warranted. CaUaii'lc.-aiili:c our stock and leave your repairing with Zsihm'A Cerner, Lancaster, Pa. M Hail SELL THEM ? CORNER. stock. A full line of Watches, Columbus Watches, CASH PKICES. Iteantilul wedding gifts in Silverware, and French Clocks. Spectacles, - EDW. J. ZAHM. JEWELHY. LOUIS WEBEK, WATCHMAKEK. Ne.l.TOXOKTH QUEEN STKEET,near P. K. It. Depot, Lancaster, Fa. Geld, Silver and Nickel-cased Watches, Chains, Clocks, Ac. Agent ler the celebrated Pantoscepic Specta cles and Eye-Glares. Repairing a specialty, aprl-lyd SPECIAL ORDERS FOR FINE WATCHES Iteceive most careful attention. DESIGNS axd estimates submitted WITHOUT CIIAKGE. E. F. BOWMAN, 100 EAST KING STREET, LANCASTER. PA. LARGEST ASSORTMENT or LANCASTER WATCHES, AT AUGUSTUS RHOADS'S, JEWELER, Ke. 20 East Kin rr SI red, Lancaster, Pa. We arc nev. taking special order- ler HOLIDAY GOODS. Perfection in the quality of Dia monds cannot he-attained except by these who have had a long ex ex ex peiionce in selecting and dealing in the finest stones. This experience Bailey, Banks & Biddle have had for nearly half a century. The Diamonds selected for the present season's business have been chosen with great care and are un questionably the whitest and the. most brilliant te be had. They range in size from the small est te the largest, affording every purchasei an opportunity of being suited both as te size and as te price. The prices will' be found lower than these of any ether Diamond Dealer. BAILEY, BANKS k BIDBLE, JEWEI.EKS, SILVERSMITHS, IMPOItl'KKS, 12T1I AND CHESTNUT STS., PHILADELPHIA. sepitKhndT T&S HOOKS AXli STATIOXEltY. OCUOOL HOOKS. SCHOOL BOOKS A SO SCHOOL SUPPLIER for Lancaster City and County, at L. M. FLYNN'S Nu.-tS WEST KINO STKKKT. SCHOOL BOOKS Schools of Lancaster City, NEW AND SECOND-HAND. At the LOWEST PKICES, at the I'.oefc Stere or JOM BAER'S SOIS, IS and 17 NORTH QUEEN STREET, LANCASTER, PA.. UJtXlTUJt&. HBINITSH, FINE FTJKNITURE Asn Cabinet Manufacturer. All in want of Fine or Fancy Cabinet Werk would de well te call and examine specimens el our work. OFFICE FURNITURE i SPECIALTY. HEINITSH, 15 East Kins Street. TlXWAli, c- OTOVKS. STOVKS. llrick-Sct and Portable HEATERS and BANGES " -..at: Shertzer, Hnniphrevillc & Kieffer's 4J EAST KING STREET. EaiUaStrr t-ntclligcnrrr. TUESDAY EVENING, NOV. 0, 1880. I0NG ISLAND'S GREAT FARM. 2,-! OO ACKKS WITHOUT rENCES, YV.T AM. VNOEU CULTIVATION. Rew the Frnlric Purchased by 1. T. Stewart, and Supposed te be li.irren, is Tilled With the Aid of. Steam and Chem ical Fertilizers The Rotation of Creps and the Xicld Per Acre described by farm er Hinsdale. Xew Yerk Sun. That part of the Stewart property en Leng Island called the Stewart farm con tains 2,500 acres. It forms the bread biibmbs of Garden City. It is part of a tract of 7,000 -act-as that A. T. Stewart bought en September 13, 1S0D. lie had no idea of of making the purchase two hours before the bargain was consummated. Henry Hilten had been in negotiation for it, for himself, and expected te buy it. but an association which had been formed un expectedly put in a bid of $10 an acre and agreed te pay f-20,000 of the purchase money in cash. These were higher ftjnties than .Mr. Hilten at that time felt able te bid against. He talked the Tnatter ever with .Sir. Stewart, and the latter surprised him with the remark, " Suppose 1 take the land ?' 3Ir. Hilten described the ad vantages of the purchase and advised 3Ir. Stewart te make it. The icsnlt was that Sir. Stewart get the land, although lie had te pay ij.jj an acre for it. lie drew his check for 191,030: The .soil, which is of the same general character as that of the rest of Hempstead Plains, was Ions rcgaided as worthless. It is ail ue prairie, and bcfoie the prairies of the West were discovered it used te be visited as a c-urie-ity. The entire area of tiie plain is G0,0Q0 acres. The farm is about 100 feet above the se.i level. It is a table land with a southern aspect. The surlace is gently undulating from west te east. Sonic of the depressions have the appearance of dried up streams. In fact, en the southern borders of the plains streams of pure water arc found in the de pressions. The surface soil is a dark loam from fifteen inches te two feet deep. The turf en this soil is se thick and strong that, it is necessary te use a team of three horses te turn a furrow through it. I5e lieath the dark loam is a layer of yellow loam of equal thickness. Sometimes clay replaces it. IJeneath the yellow loam and clay, at a depth of from two and a-ha!f te three feet, is compact sand and gravel. At Garden City a dense crust of hardpan was found by boring through the gravel snventy feet below the surface. The gravel and sand above the hardpan form an inex haustible rcscrvoir-ef water. Garden City is new supplied with water by the Helly system of pumps and pipes out of one well, and the water in this well stands only twenty-five feet, below the general level of the plains. The well is a cavernous ev3ii'.- dcr of brick work fifty feet in diameter. Mrs. Stewart shows great interest in Garden City and the farm," and 3Ir. Hilten, as executer of her husband's estate, fre quently visits them. The farmer is W. . Hinsdale, general manager of the Stew art property en Leng Isl.md.llc has forty horses and fourteen steam engines te help him, although all of these steam engines arc net used for faint work. Four of them pump water from the well dcsciibed above. Twe of them are used in a brick yard, and three arc used in the cathedral te supply wind te the four organs that have just been put up in different parts of the,bui!ding, and te produce the mechani cal electricity which will enable one organ ist te play all of them at the same time, as well as te strike the chimes in the steeple. When Farmer Hinsdale wants te turn up his land he can hitch a twclvc-horse-pewcr traction engine te a gamr of ploughs. When his crops aie ripe lie unloads his wagons with the aid of steam power. Kars of corn arc shot fiem an aperluie in the bottom of a wagon by means of a bread, endless band, crossed with bucket beards, up into the top el the long cribs Grain is tlncshed and is stored away in the steam. A lead of hay is slack, a baibeJ harpoon is the straw barns by hauled te a thrns-t down tnreugu me nnuuic 01 tne le.t'i. and it is it iii 1 t ,. 1 if: lifted bodily from the wagon and swung up en te the stack. There is a grain ware house, in which grain may be sent up te any part of the building by a 100-horse power engine. The building is, in fact, a grain elevator. It lias appliances te lead and unload wagons. It also contains a grist mill. A small steam engine drives a machine used for grading grain. There are two portable engines te de miscel laneous work en the farm. Except for the two last mentioned engines and the traction engine, they a:e all driven by steam from the bank of boilers in the pump house beside the big well. Tha stream is distributed en the ilelly system all eve:- Gaiden City for heating purposes, and wherever a pipe has been laid it. may be tapjied for power as well as for heat. The 100-horse-pewcr engine in the grain warehouse, although it is nearly a inile from the boilers in the pump house, starts instantly when the engineer op:ns the valve. Te a man who rides casually ever this great farm, several tilings wiU seem re markable, lie may trot his hertc any where, in or out of the splendid reads, ex cept where the land had been broken up for crops. The meadow and pasture land offers no serious unevcniless te the wheels, and there are no fences te trouble him. He will only see two buildings that may properly be called barns, but cribs and well-reefed haystacks he will see all about him. He will sec 'sheep bat no cows. With the fieck of sheep he will notice a shepherd boy, sunning himself en the grass and attended by an alert deg. The sheep arc herded all day, and at night they arc shut up in a deg-proof corral. Farmer Hinsdale has strong opinions in regard te lenccs. He believes that the cost of then construction and repair consumes a great portion of the farmer's very narrow margin of profit. "Hut what will fanners He with their cows'."' he was asked. "Keep them up in yards and feed them en green stuff from the farm," was Mr. Hinsdale's reply. "They thrive well in that way. They can be kept mere cheaply that way, all things considered. There arc about a dozen cows in and about Gar den City, but you'll net sec them wander ing about ever the land.'' "But hew about line fences?" "I don't take the pains even te keep theso fences up. Each man must take care of his own cattle. I take care of mine. Seme of my neighbors called en me seen after I began here te .say that they had heard I did net intend te jnakc my half of the fences between them and the Stewart farm. I told them what they had heard was the truth. ' Well, said they, ' hew about the cattle ?' 'Oh ! there'll be no trouble about that,' I replied. Til take care that my cattle hall net hurt your crops. uut, said they, alter a spell ei wonderment and hesitation, ' hew about our cattle ? Suppose they damage your crops i" 'Oli ! that will net make any difference te me,' said I. 'I'd ju.st as lief sell a crop half grown as te wait ami sell it when it is grown. If you cheese te feed your cattle en my crops you can de se. That will be the quickest market I can have for my produce.' They didn't like it and some de net like it yet, but the ma jority arc beginning te understand the mat ter rightly and arc coming ever te my way of thinking. I have had very little trouble." A study of the natural jrrewths en the land showed that it chiefly lacked potash. There was a large amount of excellent vegetable mould, but it was chemically locked up by an acidity peculiar te it. The "open sesame" lies in the use of alkaii. An application of alkali makes it very lertilc. I here is a tough, unyield ing sod filled with strong roots and clothed with sedgy grass. The natural drainage is nearly perfect. There is no infiltration into the soil from the ocean, because the land is high above the sea level. It is es timated that three-fourths of the rainfall sinks into the porous soil. The subsoil of silicieus gravel and r-aud receives this water, but allows it te trickle slowly away with the southward dip of the ttnd. Mr. Hinsdale desciibcs his method of utilizing this land for cieps as fellows : When the tough sod is first turned ever buckwheat is sewn. Buckwheat disinte grates the soil. It grows rapidly. Its loots arc strong and piercing, and its luxu riance covers the surface and keeps it moist. The fertilizer used is pulverized bone. Twe hundred pounds per acre se cures a geed crop. Fer this land gener ally, the practice had been te apply leached ashes te a large extent, but it was found practicable te substitute for the ashes the refuse lime from gas works. This has ail the properties of the ashes, and it can be get for little ever the cost of transportation. The lime usually fellows the bone fertilizer. Great care is required in using chemical substances for fertil izers lest one should counteract the ellecfs 01 aneincr. inc next crop alter tne buckwheat is corn, which is planted with well composted stable manuic put in the hill. The crop obtained by this treatment is geed, the yield bcinj: about sixty bushels of shelled corn te the acre. The next crop in order, in the process of subduing the land, is eats. It is put in with an application of a chem ical fertilizer composed of muriate of potash, nitrate of soda, and a super super peosphate of lime. These chemicals are net found as component parts of refuse mat ter, but are bought from dealers hi chemi cals under guaranteed analysis. They are tested en the farm, and then mixed by steam power. The proportions were de cided upon after an experience with the soil, and notwithstanding the formidable names of the chemicals, the cost of this fertilizer laid down at the Garden City de pot is only $2 an acre. One leaseu for the .slight cost is that much geed judgment is used in the purchases, and another icasen is that very little of the fertilizer gees a great way. The machine which distributes the seed eats is furnished with many teeth! Each teeth is hollow. As a teeth is dragged through the soil it makes a furrow. while t lie eats mixed with tue lcrtilizcr, 1 which is in a form of a powder, are de- 1 posited through it. The earth at the sides i of the little Ittrrew falling back into it , behind the teeth makes a sufficient cover ing for the eats. In this way the small amount of fertilizer that is used gees precisely where it will de the most geed. The next crop in order is rye. It is sewn in the fall with timothy Seed and with an application of chemical fertilizer similar te that de scribed-in the case of eats. In the spring clever seed is sewn en the same laud. Sometimes grass seed is sewn alone, tlrXt is, without any protecting crop, as it called, of rve or wheat. In that case it sewn in the fall with a top-dressing compost, and is leady for the mower the following July. After the first sea-1 ten's mewing the meadow is top-dressed I each year with compost manure or with a 1 chemical fertilizer in which the nitrates ' predominate. In this district, se- near .New Yerk as it is, hay, Mr. Hinsdale says, , is the most profitable crop, and should be kept up as many years as possible. All , the ether crops described arc merely pre- ! paratery te the hay crop. Sometimes a farmer will manure for grass at the time , he sews it with its protecting crop of grain, ' fauicieutly as he thinks te last for several ' years. This Mr. Hinsdale believes te be an error. There will be an overgrowth of ! straw at the expense of tlse quality of the ' grain. The lir.-st crop of grass, also, will have a strong weedy growth at the bottom, ' and it will have many dead speais at the bottom te still further injure the market , value of the hay. The second crop of t hay will be of excellent quality, and probably the best of the scries. Frem this there will hs a falling off in quality and quantity until it is necessary te plough up the sod and go through another course of less profitable crops. By dividing up the manure and applying a due proportion yearly the quality of the grass is kept geed and uniform, and the land may profitably be retained as meadow for from five te seven years. Mr. Hinsdale was asked what the profits were en the entire capital invested in the Stewart farm, with a view te a comparison of his system of farming en a large scale with that of the smaller farmers en the Hempstead Plains ajid elsewhere in the state. He said that it was net geed busi-" ncss neficv te reveal one's business te the public. He could answer the question, ' however, as far as te say that the farm j was profitably conducted. There were j ether things he might say also that would J indicate te farmers the degree of success j which had been attained en the Stcwait farm. He desired te say first, however, that there were few annhauccs used en ! farm which might net be used en a small farm. In pleughing he generally used a gang of two ploughs with three horses. This en abled one man and three horses te de the work of two men and four horses. Steam engines could be profitably utilized en smaller farms. The method of applying a small quantity of exactly the right kind of fertilizer in exactly the right -place was within the capacity of any farmer. Xe farmer in that part of the country needed te narrow his profits by building and re pairing fences. The corn crop could be raised exclusively with horses. There would be found, he thought, a fairly rea sonable profit in these savings alone. The land he worked was excellent. C. L. Allen the llerist, late of Queens, new of Garden City, had cultivated many plots in flowers and bulbs, as well as in vegetables for the table. The results he declared te be bet ter than en any ether kinds of land he had ever cultivated. As te the acreage of the various crops this year, Mr. Hinsdale gave the following account : Of corn there were 4."50 acres, with an unusually heavy yield. There would be at least seventy bushels of shelled corn te the acre beyond a doubt.' Of eats there were 388 acres. It had net been a geed scaseu for eats, but the yield weuhl be about thitty-five bushels per acre. This was a Letter yield than would be found els3whcre in the vicinity, because the land had suffered less from the drought. Of rye there were 495 acres. Of meadow tlicre were 485 acres. One hundred acres of this were in Hungarian hay, with a yield of two teus and a-half te the aero. Of buckwheat thcre were 250 acres, with a yield of about twenty bushels te the acre. Of wheat there were thirty acres, with a yield of twenty bushels te the acre. Besides these crops there were planted every year from twenty te fifty acres of carrots, turnips, and sugar beets, which were raised with the ordinary methods of fertilizing, and with results that were at least equal in point of profit, te any crop of tue same kind et vegetables 111 that vicin ity. The abeve mentioned crops cover an area in all of about 2,300 acres. The rest of the farm is used as pasture. The fleck of 500 sheep new grazing en it is te be in creased. Frem the Azures given above, the fel lowing tabic has been calculated of the total yield this year of several of the crops : Oats 20..VS0 buslieK Cern (shelled) 31,000 buslicR JSuckwlient r.,000 busheK Wheat MX) bushel. The following were the products of the farm four years age : eats Indian com (s-hulled) Buckwheat Wheat Timethy grass xced Hunguiian grass seed Carrots Turnips Tota'ees Straw, stacks. Jtc, heu-ed.. .U.oeo ItusheN. . S,t 09 bushels. . 3,000 bushels. . TOO bushels. . 'J08 bushels. . 100 bushels. . ::,oeo bushels. . H) bushels. . 3."0 bushels. . ."0 tens. . l,00tens. cz.viiuxa.-r FALL OPENING H. QKRHART'S 1, MONDAY, OCTOBER lltli, 1S80. A Complete Sleck et Cleths, Suitings OVERCOATINGS. which for Largest ' elegance cannot be - ertment of surpassed. The ENGLISH AND SCOTCH SUITINGS 111 1 his eity. Prices as low as 1 lie lowest ut H.GERH ART'S Ne. 5i North Queen Street. CLOTHING! CLOTHING! Wc have Stock et new re.tily ler sale an Immense !Reafly-Mafle Cloleg FOB- Fall and Winter, which Style. :w- Cut and TrinnniM We can j;ive yen a in the Latest GOOD STYLISH SUIT AS LOW AS $10.00. PIECE GOODS In givut variety, made te eritur at fhert notice at the le'.vest prici-w. . ii Wetter & Sen, 24 CENTRE SQUARE, tM yd f.AXCASTKlC. PA. FALL AND WINTER OVERCOATINGS ! Te-day we dS-play a full linn of the Latest Novelties in Overceatings far the Fall Season, in all the Xew Coloring", with Silk Facings te mntcli; tiNoasunerierllncot Heavy Weights in Xew Designs. Fur Beaver, Seal Skin. Elysian Mentanak, Ratina and Chinchilla Beaver. Ileublu uiiil Treble Milled, tures. all tl'.e Xew Mix- Tayler's English Wintrys, In Plain and Fancy Hacks, Combination Col Cel ors, all made up niid trimmed in the highest Style of Art. SM ALI NG'S THE ARTIST TAILOR, 121 N. QUEEN STREET, CHAS. BRIMMER, CJtAYOX PORTRAIT AHT1ST, SIGN AND ORNAMENTAL PA1STIXCJ, sct29-lmd 4 WEST KHftt STKECT. GRAIN SFKCULATlOn In large or small amount. $23 or 320,000 Write W. T. SOUI.K A CO.. Ceiiiiulvlmi .Mer chants, ISO La. Salle strcet, Chicago, II!., ter cir 11'ars. m!K-ij-ii J'Oi: SALE. TKIVATK SALK. A Ur ntil XOVKMltKII 17. the tirn.lerv ItrinV- Ileuse. with kitchen attached. Xe. ItSEast inestreet. lettxtMiil trPimrjii etrmt ,- Slea, Peaches, and tJrape Vine en let. water, e. Inquire at Xe. is; Charlette street, Lan caster. Pa. oct7-cedAnovl7 FOB KEM. A Farm, one mile from the city et Lancas ter, en the Petersburg turnpike, containing about one hundred and llveaeres : thirty acres of which is new in fall crops-; privilege te pnt out two acres in teb icce. Knqnire at Xe. 33 Xerth Duke street or en the premises. oet7-10tdced -MKS. JOHX .MctSUAXX. OnrifAX's Ci.uiiT sam-:. On TIItriWDAY. XOVKMI5EU IS, 1SS. et a valuable Chester county farm of 210 ACHES Convenient. te railroads, "Uoed building. ale positive. Fer particulars address. S. K. XIVIX, Administrator c. t. a. ect-20-lmd I-andcnberg, Psi. PUBLIC SALK. n TIIUKSIAY, XOVKMBKi: 11, 1SSH, will he sold at public bale at the Cmnu hotel. North Queen street, the following; dc-scribed real estate te wit : A two-story briek HWKI.LIXt; llOUSKand two contiguous halt let of ground. Xe. 41!. 011 the north iile et Kast tvinir street, in the eity of Lnne-.i-iter, eaeii of aid halt let con taining in front 21 feet 2'( inches, and 21.1 teet in depth te a lt-feet wide nliev. to gether with 2 teet C. iuehe-i wide in front en wild Kast King street anil efthat width north ward te the distance of t" teet et the adjoining property en the northwest fur the ui et an alley. Possession will be given en April 1. 1SMI Part of the purchase mom may remain en the property for one year, tt'deshvd. Sale te commence :it 7 o'clock p. m. et said day. SAMI'KI.SIIOCII. llKSKTSuruEirr, Auct. e'2T-tsd ?U!.LIC SALK. On SATrUOAV. XOVKSIHKK '-7, 1SA, will be sold at public ssib- en theprcmi-ics. Xe. 3CU Seuth Queun street. Lancaster eity, the tol tel tol lewin;; described rial citate and personal property, late et Jane Kwlng, dee'd, te wit: A one-story ISrick Ouclling Heuse and Let or Piece of Creuuil thereunto In-longing, situ ated Xe.i'ffl, en the west .side of Seuth Queen street, Lancaster eity. The house is in excel lent order and the location desirable for a pri vate .residence or business. There is also a back building and .summer house. The let fronts en beuth Queen stieet 2i feet '?, inches, :mil i l'Ji) feet deep. This property will positively be sold. Pos session given immediately. Purchase money payable April 1, 1SSI, provided that pnrchaser give approved security. Sale te commence at 1 o'clock p. m. KI.IZAKKTH KLLIOTT, MAIM'IX H. KWlNli. I'LIZAHCTH SHOOK, SUSAN WILFOXO. HETTIK AXX SAYLOl:, Heirs of Jane Kwing, deceased. llKxr.r SiiL-r.Lirr, Auct. 118- TZXAPP S VILLA r.VKS: I-'Oll SALK. IV Tl 'lie xubscriber eilers fit private sale until November it. all that, line SUBUUKAN I:KMI)I:NC'K and farm known as Knapp-.s Villa, situate within half a mile of the city limits, iu Lancaster township, fronting en the Philadelphia tumpil-c, containing aheut '23 ACUKS, with line residence, never-tailing springs et waler.;a large varietyef choice fruit trees and grape vines, all in the highest state el cultivation, making one of the most deVir-ableeemtti-j-residences in the vicinity. Alse the well known TELL'S IIAIN PICNIC OUOUXPS adjoining abeyu and fronting 011 the Conestegaj-contalnilig about 'J ACUKS. If net sold before November 2e the sam.; will be etrered at public sale en the premises at which time about 1-2 head et cattle, hcitcrs and cows will also be sold. Alse the well known 31 ECU AXICS 'HOTEL PROPERTY, corner of Plum and Chestnut streets, near the Lancaster Manufacturing Company's Works. This property, if net cold befeie Xevcinber 21, will be ellered at th. Leepard Hetel en the evening et said day. Fer turther particulars emiuire of LAWRENCE KXAPP, 1!:: Ea-t King Street, mi-t-d Lancaster, Pa. 1HZUUS, JtV. ri'ucs SStS: TJUJSSKS!! TKUSSKS!!! SullRrrrs Irem Kupture will ilnd the salest. easiest and cheapest Trusses iu i lie world en exhibition ami ler Kile by ANDREW U.l'KEY. Cor. X. Queen and Orange Sts., Lane.. Pa. Alse the only sure run: ter Pi LI'S. Frey's Univcr-nl Pile Suppository never tailed. Price Ml and 7.1 cents a be v. T.OOHER'S 1 core A POSITIVE CURE FOR EPIZOO TIC AND DISTEMPER IN HOUSES. PREPARED AXD f-OI.D P. CHAS. A. LOCHER, YHOLESALE AND RETAIL DRUGGIST, NO. HAST KINO CTKi-.KT. el( tfd COUGH NO MORE ! l-fi! A Certain Cure Fer COUGHS, COLDS, SORE THROAT, And all Diseases of the THROAT AND LUNGS. Fer the relief orceniumptives in erthe Disease. Picpared and 10b! only at all HULL'S DEUG STOKE Ne. 15 WEST KING STREET, au23-lyd LANCASTER, PA. I'Al'Ell HAXUlXtiS, &r. TITK aici: epf.xiNM daily XEW PATTERNS OF PAPER HANGINGS. The Desisns and Colorings are beautiful. ainl we have a large stock te select from, in the lowest grade te the most expensive. DADO AND FANCY WINDOW SHADES in new colors. Plain material by the yard, in all shades and widths. Cardinal, Urccn, White and Hull HOLLANDS, Fixtures, Trlnges, Tapes, &c. We have a let of light color Cu rtuins. beauti ful styles, that will be closed out at the low price of .'J cents. These areailecided bargain, as some were sold ut $l.."') a pair. We li,ve opened a fresh invoice or Extension Cornices, among which arc two new patterns. Ebony Walnutand Ash Pele-", Rings, Ends, &v. Orders taken ter Fhie Mirrors. PHARES W. FRY, Ne. 57 NORTH QUEEN ST, tee