SDtjje fetfa!te H Volume XVII Ne. 191. LANCASTER, PA., WEDNESDAY, APRIL 13. 1881 Price Twe Cents. CZOlUUfO. T EMOVAL.! REMOVAL OF Jehn Falek's Tailoring and (Jents Furnishing Establishment, Frem II, opposite, te 44 WEST KING STREET, Te the room occupied for many years by tile Lancaster Fiic Insurance Company. airS-lmd&2mw qiKMri OUAJIY KEMOVA!, AL. ROSENSTEIN'S ! Having removed te Ne. 14S North Queen Street, Twe doeis below my old Bland, and right next deer te Flinn & Wlllsen, where 1 propose te clear out my entire stock of Ready-Made Clothing Gents' Furnishing Goods, and Hats and Gaps BELOW COST, The bteck must b closed e.it bsiere MAY 1st, 1881, when I will louievo te the Elegant and Spa; ions Mere. Beem, . lTe. 37 North Queen St., Which i new being Remodeled. PRICE LIST: CHILDREN'S SUITS from........ SCHOOL SUITS Irem HOYS' J-L'ITS Hern YOUTHS' SUITS Irem MEN'S fcClTe treni REMEMBER MY $1.25 up $2.09 up $2.70 up $3 50 up .... $3.7ii tip is being stocked with New Goods evcty day. 1 employ none but First-Class Cutters and Tailors, and use the Best Trimmings the mar ket affords. 1 make suits te order ler $10, $12, 13, $14, $15, $U?,$20:ind upward. A Perfect Fit Always Guaranteed. Call and examine my Stock and be convinced t the truth of the above. ALROSENSTEIN, 148 North Queen Street. SIGN OF THE RED FRONT. raarll-lyd N TEW STOCK OF CLOTH1KH FOR SPRING 1881, AT D. B. Hostetter & Sen's, ' Ne. 24 CENTRE SQUARE. Having made unusual efforts te bring before the public a line, stylish and well made stock et BRADY-IADE CLOTH!!, we arc new prepared te show them one el the most carctully selected stocks of clothing in thi city, at the Lewest Cash Prices. MEN'S, HOYS' AND YOUTHS' CLOTHING! IN GKEAT VABIETV. Piece Goods et the Most Stylish Designs and at prices within the reach et all. 3Givc us a call . D. B. Hosteller t Sed, 24 CENTRE SQUARE, 6-lyd LANCASTER. PA. CUUfA AA'Jf GLASSWARE. mtm TORE Tmleipepmlin rUtSA HALL! Common Sense Stew Pan, FAB SUPEKIOB TO ANY COOKING UTEN SIL IN USE. They will net Burn or Scorch like an IRON or TIN Kettle. The Best, Cheapest and Most Satis factory. HIGH & MARTIN, 1 S CAST KIXTG STREET. CLOTHIXG. T IGHT OVERCOATS. A geed light Over coat for $8.BO of melten, a favorite.all-weol cloth; made for the pur pose and of course made just right in colors, weight and texture. We mention this particular coat because it is a favorite with our customers and because it well represents our ready-made work. Our lowest price in overcoats for spring is $6.50 ; and the highest $25. Spring suits ready also. -:e:- WANAMAKER & BROWN, OAK HALL, MARKET -AND SIXTH, PHILADELPHIA. 1881. SPUING OPENING. SPRING OPENING AT MTEE8 & KATHFON'S. We are prepared te stew the public the largest and th- tireatett variety of TIECE GOODS ever-offered in the city of Lauea;ter. Goods suitable ler tin: plainest as well as the most fastidious and irem the lowest grades te the very Hnest in textures, all et which we are prepared te tiuike up te order at the most reasonable price and ut the shortest notice and in the uest workmanlike manner. Our stocks of READY-MADE CLOTHING Fer Men, Youths, Beys and Children, are lull and complete ; they iiavc been gotten up with great cure ; they arc well madA and well made and well trimmed, 'the goods are all sponged and will be sold at BOTTOM PRICES. Call and examine our stock before you make your Spring purchase, and you will save money by pin chasing your CLOTHING of MYERS & RATHFON, POPULAR TAILORS AND CLOTHIERS, Se. 12 EAST KlXtt STREET, LANCASTER, PEX.VA. IROX RITTERS. rilON BITTERS. IRON BITTERS! A TRUE TONIC. IRON BITTERS are highly recommended ter all diseases requiring a certain and efll cient tonic; especially INDIGESTION, DYSPEPSIA, INTERMITTENT FEVERS, WANT OF APPE TITE, LOSS OF STRENGTH, LACK OF ENERGY, &c. It enriches the bleed, .--truiigthcns the muscles, ami gives new life te i - - y " like a charm en the digestive Organs, removing all dyspeptic m"h"". nuchas Tasting the Feid Relchimj, Heat in ; stci.r, nearieunt, eta. ine r.nly Iren Preparation that will net nineteen tlie teeth or give headache. Sold by all druggists. Write ter the A B C Boek, 32 pp. el useful and amusing reading sent free. BROWN CHEMICAL COMPANY, I23lyd&w BALTIMORE, MD. Fer Sale at COCHRAN'S DRUG STORE, 137 and 130 North Queen street, Lancaster. LIVERY W MOVED. R HOUGHTON'S LIVERY, SALE AND EXCHANGE STABLES HAVE BEEN BEHOVED TO Ne. 221 NORTH QUEEN STREET, (Zccher's Old Livery Stand), where parties can lind First Class Single and Deuble Teams, Safe Horses, New Bug gies and Harness. Alse ill have a New Line of Omnibuses for Sunday Scheel ami Private Picnics ler this Season. Special attention given te Mevings. Alse railroad calls for passengers and baggage attended te. LIVERY OFFICE: 221 NORTH 0UEEN STREET. fl-Scceinl-IIaiid Muggier ter sale: have been run but. a short time. SLATE ROOhTXG. w fUOLESALE DEPOT FOR Wrought Iren Pipe, Brass Cods, of all Us HEATERS AND RANGES, GAS FIXTURES, SLATE Nes. 11 & 13 EAST ORANGE JOHN" L. JtVUKS AJfl STATIONERY. N EW AMD CHtHCE STATIONERY, NEW BOOKS AND MAGAZINES, AT L. M.FLYXN'S, Ne. 49 WEST KING STREET. TLANK HOOKS. JOM BAER'S SONS, 15 ted 17 NORTH QUEEN STREET, LANCASTER, pa Have ler sale, at the Lewest Prices, BLANK BOOKS, Comprising Day Beeks, Ledgers, Cash Beeks, Sales Beeks. BUI Beeks, Minute Beeks, Re ccipt Beeks, Memorandums, Copying Beeks, Pass Boekss, Invoice Beeks, &c. WRITING PAPERS. Foolscap, Letter, Nete, Bill, Sermon, Counting Heuse, Drawing Papers, Papcteries, Ac. ENVELOPES AND STATIONERY et all kinds, Wholesale and Retail. FAMILY AND TEACHERS' BIBLES, Prayer Beeks, Devotional Beeks, Sunday school Music Beeks, Sunday-school Libraries. Commentaries. Ac. K INVENTORS. W. H. BABCOCK, Atterncy-at-Law, et Washington, D. C, form crly an examiner in U. S. Patent Office, efibrs his services as solicitor before the U. S. and Foreign Patent offices. CarefuFwerk at tair S rices. Was associate et Mr. Jacob StaulTcr, el ancaster, until the hitter's death. HO-SmtUtw IGHT OVERCOATS. ritON HITTERS. SURE APPETISER. HTA.B1.JS. KMOVED. ROOFING, TIN PLATE. STREET, LANCASTER, PA. ARNOLD. rapr2-tfd rAVERUAxarsus, sx. CHOICE LINE OF WALLPAPERS FOR THE SPRING. FINE GILTS FOR PARLORS. Celer and Common Gilts, Uieunded and low priced goods of every description and Bcautl Inl Patterns. We have some Odd Lets that will be sold very low in order te close out. PLAIN WINDOW SHAIDNG, in Brown, Olive, Old Geld, Blue, Lavender, Smoke, Ac. Scotch and American Hollands, Fixtures, Leeps, Ac. In stock ever 1.200 pieces Window Paper ; which will be sold te Merchants at Factory Prices. Extension Window Oernice, Poles, Ends, Ac. Orders taken ler Fine Mirrors. PHARES W. FRY, NO. 87 NORTH QUEEN ST. GROCERIES. PURE -WINES AND LIQUORS FOB Medicinal Purposes, Fresh Groceries and Pure Spices at RINOWAM'S, NO. 205 WEST KIN STREET. feblMyd T I Lancaster intelligencer. WEDNESDAY EVBN'Q, APBIL 13, 1881. MRS. HARRIS IN HISTORY. Men who Never Lived, Thing thut Never Happened or Happened Differently, and Mets Merer Uttered. S. X. Sunday World. The preposition might at first glance be deemed a rash one that of any three pep ular versions of historical facts or sayings two would be found 'en examination te be fictitious, incorrect or unauthorized, but anybody who will take the pains te inves tigate the subject of historic myths will be prcpaied te admit its substantial truth. Ner would the dictum only apply te mc diteval or classical times. Ne man has attracted mere attention than Napeleon Bonaparte, yet the legend concerning him is in most parts fabulous and ridiculous. There were scores of observers at the Cen gress of Vienna who recorded the history of the slightest events. Ne two of them agree as te the manner of the teceptien and announcement of the news of the escape from Elba. Our own civil war is net se very far removed, yet within the week there has been an attempt te revise aud rewrite the history of the most im portant of its early battles, ou the ground that the contemporary accounts were in ventions. Ne political event during our national existence created as much excite ment as the counting-in of President Hayes. Hew many versions are there in existence as te the origin of the plan and the method e'f its execution ? Between the days when solitary chroniclers tat at their dusks and invented attributes, acts and mets for their heroes, and these when ten thousand journals make it their busi ness te " cast light" en the events of the moment, thcre is -really no difference a very little difference, se far as that unfor unfer ttiuate creature, " the average reader," is concerned, and he iiuds himself compelled te held te a sort et historical agnosticism, neither ncnying the accuracy of any state ment which seems incredible for fear that it might prove true, nor accepting the ac curacy of any statement which seems rea sonable lest it should prove false. All knew hew classical literature abounds in myths and impossibilities. The Egyptian Cecreps did net come from Egypt nor the Phoenician Cadmus from Phecnecia. Esop was net a hunchback any mere than "the famous French hunchback," Adam de la -Halle. The story of Sanphe's leap at Lcu- cadia is net elder than the period of the Epicureans. Leonidas's " 300 defenders of Thermopylae" really numbered 7,000 or 12,000. It is at least doubtful whether the tyrant Dionysius became a Corinthian schoelmastar, and Philip's letter te Aris totle about the education of Alexander was apocryphal. The tub of Diogenes was net a tub but a jar te say nothing of the fact that tubs, as Pliny tells us, were of Gallic- and net of Grecian origin and though theie were lanterns at the time, there is no evidence that he employed one in his famous quest, and that quest, we fancy, was for a man, and net for an hon est man. As for the earlier history of Reme, Niebuhr has riddled it sufficiently, from, internal. evidi't"" ---. --"'-' " .""'iv' bir Geerge Lerncwall Lewis, though ob jecting te Niebuhr's method and insisting that the only tiufetweithy source or test is external proof, is just about as deadly. " Historical evidence," he say?, " like ju dicial evidence, is founded en the testi mony of credible witnesses. Unless these witnesses had personal aud immediate pciceptien of the acts which they report, unless they saw and heard what they un dertake te relate as having happened, their evidence is net entitled te credit. As all original witnesses must be contempo rary with the events which they attest it is a necessary condition for the credibility of a witness that he be a contemporary, though a contemporary is net necessarily a credible witness. Unless, therefore, a his torical account can be traced, by probable proof, te the testimony of contemporaries, the first condition of historical credibility fails." Ne historical account of Reme or the Remans for mere' than four centuries after the foundation of the city fullills this condition. "The first book of Livy, con taining the regal period," says Ilayward, "can lay claim, when thus tested, te no higher authority than Lord Macaulcy's ' Lays." " The story of Lucrctia's virtues aud Tarquin's outrage is strongly im peached, aud there is a stout contention that she was guilty,and committed suicide from fear of judgment and reproach. Livy himself did net kuew te what people the lleratii aud Curiatii belonged ; their story down te the detail of the victor's sister being in love with one of the vanquished, and being killed by him, was current in Greece (Arcadia) at an early period. It is fairly doubted whether the earlier Brutus shammed idiecy,aud when he put his sons te death it was with brutality "rather than through strict justice and patriotism. The story of Scxveia's right hand hissing in the Tuscan fire told long age by the Greek Agatharcidis was an invention of the family te give them selves a particular erigiu.and explain their surname. It is probable that Appius Claudius iirtlic lawsuit about Virginia had the better of the legal question. (Talking of Reman law, it is curious that while the original agrarian measures of the Gracchi were net extravagant, but rather censtitu tienal and necessary, " agrarian " nowa days is popularly used as implying some thing revolutionary and a term of stigma) much as " demure " and "cunning" have come te convey insinuations, while "com panien" has risen from a term of reproach te one of honor. As for the she wolf that was the Little Buttercup of Romulus aud Remus, Curtius's leap into the chasm, Clcclia's swimming the Tiber, Horatius's brave keeping of the bridge, Corielanus's melodramatic career ! According te Pliny and Tacitus Lars Persenna took Reme ; Horatius Cedes, according te Polybius, was killed ; this same historian is significantly silent as te the combat of Manlius Terquatus, and as for Brcnnus's "Vre victis !" it was probably never utter ed, while Camillus did. net rout him aud se save Rome from paying a ransom. Romulus's story in every essential feature is a reproduction of the legend of Cyrus, and long before the Reman historians wrote the Phrygian traditions recorded the exploit 6f a Curtius. The heroic fable of Resulus is generally rejected and was probably invented te excuse the torture of Carthaginian prisoners, ine suicuie et Portia by swallowing live coals is another heroic myth an impossibility. Hanni bal's rctirement-te Capua is by many crit ics regarded as no fault, but rather a ne cessity, and it must be said that the latest researches into his record as a gen eral give him a higher standing than ever among the great captains of the world and show that with a very small force he ut terly routed the Remans, who were alike inefficient, corrupt and demoralized. His employment of vinegar te melt the Alpine rocks is a story that thcre nedd net be much compunction about rejecting, -though it is held by some very i expectable authorities that long before him the Egyptians possessed knowledge of some powerful chemical agent equal te the task of softening reckB, else hew could they have done se rapidly in se intractable a material the wonderful carving revealed en our own Cleopatra's needle. Talking of Cleopatra and vinegar, it will read ily be conceded thata liquor strong enough te dissolve pearls instantaneously would .net have exercised a bene ficial effect en the coats of the stomach. A precisely similar story is told about the magnificent Sir Themas Gresham. Scep tics have even doubted the story of Cleo patra's asp, attributing her death and the death of her attendants te poison. If the Germans are right, Helen was about sixty at the time of the Trojan war. Archi medes was tee geed a mathematician te talk moving the world with a lever were he given a fulcrum se M. Edouard Four Feur nier asserts, en Bulwer's authority ; but what is mere te the puroese. according tb Plutarch, Archimedes did net specify any instrument and asked for a place te stand en net a fulcrum. Belisarius's blindness is another romance, and the dying speech of Julian the Apostate our readers may cheese between , " Theu hast conquered, O Galilean !" and "Sun, thou hast be trayed me !" could net have been uttered considering the nature of his wound. (This remark applies co the " dying words " of Dessaix, at Marengo. " He was shot through the heart, and as his division fell back in disorder the Austrians passed ever his body. We are inclined, therefore, te accept the evidence of tWh Dukes of Ragusa and Valmy as against the declara tion of Napeleon at St. Helena te O'Meara. Apart from the fact that Benaparte was an accomplished liar "en general princi ples," we knew that one of his specialties was the manufacture of "dying words." He admitted te Mctternich that he was author of Lannes's last words, though Villemain and ether critics had already arrived at a demonstration of the unau thenticity of the commonly received ver sien.) As te the fables that encrust the history of Ca;sar, they must Be many, though we cannot very well say hew many. Napeleon and ethers have discredited ijiis exhorta tion te the pilot. "Theu carriest Caesar aud his fortunes," en the ground that the incident is net mentioned in the "Com mentaries," nor yet the voyage duriug which it is supposed te have happened an ill-advised and unsuccessful attempt te reach Bruudusiuui by sea. "Although the pilot recovered his presence of mind sufficiently te. mind the helm, the vessel was obliged te put back, and the entire adventure was one which Crcsar had little cause -te remember with complacency. " He is equally silent," says Mr. Ilayward "as te another rash expedition in which he ran eminent risk of being taken prsiener by the Gauls. If his mere silence is de cisive, we must also reject the story of his crossing the Rubicon, told with striking and minute details by both Plutarch aud Suetenius. According te Suetenius his words were : ' Let us go where the divine portents and the iniquity of enemies call. Let the die be cast.r According te Plutarch he cried out : ' The die is cast,' and imme diately crossed the river." Fer our own part, highly as we esteem Suetenius as the most trustworthy of the later historians of C.-esar, he wrote at a considerable distance from the events and sometimes relates in cidents demonstrably false, and Asinius Pnlln ,i." i " "" Jsi depended in great part) docs net always agree with his commander in relating what passed before their cye We prefer following Caisar where he speaks, but it is net necessary te reject anything simply because Cresar does net mention it. Cwsar rarely speaks of himself, aud was net given te posing. Freude rejects the Rubicon story as " un authenticated and net at all consistent with Ctcsar's character." The phrase usually misquoted was, however, a popu lar one, borrowed from the Greeks, and such' as C;csar might have used, if he nsed any phrase at all. (Painters have fro qucntly represented him as fording the Rubicon en horseback, but would net a boundary stream of such importance have had a bridge in that bridge-making day ?) The same biographer rejects the story about the pilot as " probably no mere than one of the picturesque additions te reality made by men who find truth tee tame ler them," following Alfred Maury, and he has even a better reason for de clining te belicve the story of Cicsar es caping duriug the Alexandrian .rising by swimming with ene hand while with the ether he held the manuscript of his "Com mentaries" above his head. As if a gen eral would carry his manuscript about him when going iute a action I We might be less inclined te pooh-pooh the story of his slipping and falling en his landing in Africa, and exclaiming "Land of Africa, I take possession of thee !" for if he was net superstitious his people were, and such an utterance would be useful as a jest at an ill omen, encouraging the by standers. But the same story is told about William the Conqueror landing in England and about Edward III. lauding in France, and we should net have been sur prised te find it in ene of last ycat's "Cam paign Lives." Every ene has read the story, by Voltaire of Cende, throwing his "baton of command" ever the palisidcs at Fribourg. What he did threw was his cane, the herd of histeriaus who ignored the fact that the prince never was a mar shal never could have been a marshal, converting it into "marshal's baton." Leng before that, Douglas en his way te the Hely Land with Brace's heart though Mr. Burten says that the king's heart was destined te be borne iu war against the Saracens in Spain and net te be buried in the Hely Sepulchre :whcn surrounded by the Meers in a skirmish cast it into the press of the enemy, and crying, " Pass first in fight as thou wert went te de, aud Douglas will fellow thee or die," followed it and died, an incident commemorated in the armorial bearings of many Scottish families. But fourteen centuries before, when C;csar landed en the British coast, the officer carrying the cagle of the Tenth, when the legionaries hesi tated en the decks, sprang overboard with it, calling te them te fellow if they wished it saved.. Fer the popular version of Cajsar's death Shakspcare is responsible, just as he is responsible for most of our views con cerning English history from Richard II. te Welscy, and has made the world accept Duncan as the victim of the treacherous and usurping Macbeth, though Duncan fell in fair fight and in a quarrel provoked by himself. According te Plutarch, when Casca struck the first "blew, Cresar turned ou him and laid held of his sword. "At the same time they both cried out, the one in Latin, 'Villain Casca, what dost thou mean ?' and the ether in Greek te his brother, 'Brether, help 1' Seme say he ODDOsed the rest and continued strufrfflintr aud crying out till he perceived the sword of Bnitus ; then he drew his robe ever his face and'yiclded te his fate." Nicholas Damascenus only mentions Casca as speaking " calling te his brother in Greek en account of the tumult," and Smtenius declares that Caesar fill pierced with twenty-three wounds, with a single groan, though, he adds, " some have hande'd down " that te Mar cus Brutus rushing en he cried in Greek, " And you, my son," or, " And you, my son, and you are one of them." Meiivale places no reliance en "such minute de tails," and thinks the whole statement of the effect of the sight of Brutus is a fiction springing from the " vulgar story," told by Suetenius, that Brutus was Caesar's son, a story perhaps strengthened by Cae sar's instructions at the battle of Pharsa lia, that Brutus, if recognized, was net te be injured, but which is much weakened by Brutus's deep attachment te his mother and his acceptance of many favors from Casar. The best Reman authorities, then, ignore Ca?sar's speech te Brutus, and the legend made him deliver in Greek, but Shakspeare picked the Latin out of " The True Tragedies of Richard, Duke of Yerk," en which he formed the third part of his "Henry VI." and "Et tu, Brute ?" became mere intimately asse-ciated-with C&sar's name than anything he actually said. " Yeu can't coma It," said a customer te a druggist who endeavored te palm en his own mixture when Dr. Bull's Cough Syrup was asked for, and Bull' he get. Price .3 cent a bottle. A Sere Sign. When you sec a man sitting; In an easy chair with his toot bandaged, and he can't bear any one te approach him, and hollers it you even point at it, the chances are he has the gout or rheumatism. Burdock Bleed Bitters wenld cure him. Prioe SI. trial size 10 cents. Fer sale by II. B. Cochran. 137 N. Qneen street. Glad te Get Out of Bed. James Durham, East Pembroke, N. Y., writes : "I was laid up in bed ter four months, and spent $50 en doctors, but they did me no geed. At last I tried your Themas' Sclectrlc ill. It gave me immediate relief, and one 30c. bottle cured mc." Fer sale by II. B. Coehran, iai -i. ijueen street. JEWELERS. 500 SETS SIE.TER-PI.ATEU' TABLE SPOONS. TEA SPOONS, MEDIUM AND DESSERT FORK?, DESSERT AND MEDIUM KNIVES, AT AUGUSTUS RHOADS'S, Jeweler. 20 East King Street, Lancaster, 1 a. T'UOLKSAI.K AND RETAIL. Watches and Clocks, -OF- ALL GRADES AND PRICES. E. F. BOWMAN, IOC EAST KING STREET. 1X7BDDLNG SHAVER. BAILEY, BANKS & RIDDLE, SILVERSMITHS, PHILADELPHIA. 1IEDDLNG CARDS. BAILEY, BANKS & BIDDLE, . s4kiw&ujjiiriiiA. w EDDING RINGS. BAILEY, BANKS & BIDDLE, ..JEWELERS, PHILADELPHIA. 7EDDING INVITATIONS. BAILEY, BANKS & BIDDLE, STATIONERS, PHILADELPHIA. Correspondence solicited expressly en the subjpet et priee. Uoeds sent en approval. BAILEY, BANKS. BIDDLE, 12th & Chestnut Streets, PHIL.ADELJPHIA. aprlleedM.W&F BOOTS ASJt SHOES. N JEW MOOT AND SHOE STOKE. THE NEW ONE PRICE BOOT AND SHOE STORE, Se. 80 EAST KlXti STREET. I have a large and line selection of Ladles' Cents', Misses' and Children's BOOTS, SHOES AND RUBBERS r In great variety, from the lowest grades te the very Finest Uoeds and the Latest Styles in the market. Don't fail te call and examine my goods and satisfy yeurselt before purchasing elsewhere. All goods te be as refunded. represented or money D. P. STACKHOUSE, al-lmd LANCASTER, PA. TOBACCO PRESSES. ri'OllAffO PRESSES. TOBACCO PRESSES, MINNICU'S LATEST ; IMPROVED BALING PRESS FOR FARMERS, AND CASINO PRESS FOR PACKERS. Warranted the simplest, strongest, most dur able, easiest and quickest te epeiate. Having Rolling Press Beams with which the press beard can always be-brought down level while pressing, one man can operate them and require less room. Are sold te reliable parties en trial. Uuaran teed te be superior In every feature te any In present use, or can be re turned at my expense. Send ler circular te S. B. MINNICH, MANUFACXUKKR. mart 2md Aw Landlsvllle, Lane. Ce., Pa. MOTETS. MISULER HOCS1S, (formerly Clarenden.) 113 and 115 SOUTlf EIGHTH STREET ( below Chestnut), PHILADELPHIA, Pa. On the European plan. Meals at all heurSjBt moderate rates. Reems. te., 73c. and 1 per day. "oteenena... Formerly of the Mlshlerlleuse, Reading, Pa. Fo'rSSyyef tnSfclHir, Atlantic City. ml2-3nnl MXDICAZ. DIRECTIONS. Fer Catarrh. Ilay Fever.Ceid In the Head Ac., insert with litUe finger a particle et Balm Inte the nostrils : CATARRH, COLD IN THE HEAD, HAT FEVER. CATARRHAL DEAFNESS, CAN BE CURED. draw strong breaths through the nose. It will be absorbed, cleansing and healing the diseased mem brane. FOR DEAFNESS. Apply a particle Inte the ear. ELY'S CREAM BALM, having gained an enviable local reputation, displacing all ether preparations in the vicin ity et discovery, is, en its merits alone, recog nized asa wonderful remedy wherever known. A lair trial will convince the most skeptical of Its curative powers. It effectually cleanses the nasal passages of catarrhal virus, causing healthy secretions, allays inflammation anil irritation, protects the membrunal linings of the head Irem additional colds, completely heals the sores and restores the sense et taste and smell. Bencilcial results are realized by a tew applications. A thorough treatment as directed, will cure Catarrh. As a household remedy for cold in the head it Is unequalled. The Balm in cesy te use and agreeable. Sold by druggists at 50 cents. On receipt of SO cents will mail a package. Send ter circular with full information. EL '8 CREAM BALM CO., Owego. N. X. Fer sale by the Lancaster druggist, and by wholesale druggists generally. 122 6meedAw CUTICURA Miracles of Healing Unparalleled in Medical History. CuTiceitA UcaeLVEST.tlie great natural bleed Euriiler. absorbent, renovator and vitulUcr, as shown its grand curative power iu scrof ula, whiteswellings. nicer, erysipelas, swelled neck, scrofulous inflammations, mercurial ul ul fectiens, old xires. eruptions of the skin, sern eyes and sculp all ect ions, with dry, thin and tailing hair; and when the Ccticcua, a Medic inal Jelly, and the Ccticdra Seap, prepared from it, arc applied te external symptoms, the cures ellected by the ClTlcritA. Remkies are marvelleus. Scrofula. Sckefcla. Hen. William Tayler. Bosten State Senater of Massachusetts, licriiiancn tly cured of a humor of the face aud s-calp that had been treated unsuccessfully for twelve years by many of Bosten's best physicians and most, noted specialists, as well as European nut herltics. He says : "I have been se elated w ith my succcsslul use of the Cuticura Reme dies that I have stepped men iu the streets te tell them et my case." RuRBiag Seres. KuNJUjie Sekks. Henry Lnndcckcr, Dever. N. II.. certifies that Aug. 23, 1877, he broke hit leg. The bone was set by a physician. Upen removing the splints sores broke out from the knee te the heel. Doctors culled l hem varicose veins, and ordered rubbersteckings. Paid $i for stockings, without any signs of cure. Bought Ccticdra Remedies and was rapidly and permanently cured. Certified te by Lothreps & Plnkiium, Druggist, Dever, N. J I. Salt RkeHM. Salt Rueum. Gce.F. Owen, dealer In piunes Grand Rapids. Mich., was troubled for nine years with Salt Rheum. Tried every medicine known te the trade, and was attended bv many physicians with only temporary teller. Cured by Ccticcua Remedies. & POTTER, Chemists and Druggists.SiM Wash ington street. Bosten, and are for wile by all Druggists. Price ler Ccticuka, a Medicinal Jelly, small boxes, 50 cents; large boxes. SI. Cdticcra Reselvent, the new Bleed Purifier. $1 per bottle. Cuticciia Medicinal Toilet Seap, 2S cents. Ccticuka Medicinal Sh avise Seap, 15 cents; In bars ler barbers and large consumers, 50 cents. V.Atl mailed free en receipt of priee. SANFOBD'S RADICAL CURE FOR CATARRH. One bottle Kadlc.O Cure, ene box Catarrhal Solvent, and one Improved Inhaler. Price ter nil, 91. Economical agreeab!e,saleand neve-raillng. relieving Instantly aud curing permanently, this great combination of medicinal agents eilers te the weary sutTerer from every form et Catarrh, relief and rest. It satisfies every de mand of reason and common sense. It attacks and conquers every phase of catarrhal disease. It strikes at the root, rleau-dng the nasal passages of purulent matter, te swallow and inhale which means destruction, sweetening tins breath, restoring the senses of smell, taste, and hearing te full activity, purifying the bleed of catarrhal virus, and cheeking its con stitutional ravages. Rny it while there is yet time. Ask for Saxperd's Radical Cuki. Sold ami recommended everywhere, ticneral Agents, WEEKS & POTTER, Bosten. L'eIUhs' Voltaic Electric Plasters. Oun Collims' Voltaic Electric Plaster, costing 25 centx, is tar superior te every ether electrical application belere the public. They instantly relieve Dyspepsia, Liver Complaint. Malaria. Fever and Ague, and Kidney and Urinary Dlfllculties, anil may be worn ever the pit of the stomach, ever the kidneys, or any affected part. Price ii" cents. Sold every where. H EAL.TU VS. HEATH. Health regained and happiness retained un der the OMNIPATHIC TREATMENT or DR. GREENE. Thousands of old long 'tandingdlscases have been cured ter $", even when the patient had previously spent large sums of money without any advantage. Why will you, if in pain or out of health, remain in doubt? A treatise en the eye, another en Catarrh, and a pamphlet containing the names of hundreds cured In this county given away (free) or sent te you. Over 1,300 patients, in It months, nearly all despondent in consequence of being previ ously unsuccessfully treated, all of them new well or improved, with a verv lew exceptions : all cured by external applications of medi cine ; no pills, powders, bitters, poisons or any drugs placed in the stomach. Many cured of long standing consumption, dyspepsia, rheu matism. Ac, ter $5. Consultations anil exami nations free. Come and see me. Hundreds cured of Catarrh for SO cents. The .remedy sent te anyone en receipt et 50 cents. DR. C. A. GREENE, (33 Years Experience), Ne. 146 EAST KIISO STREET, 10-tldMWFiSl Lancaster, Pa. O TOU EVER FEEL. AS ir THERE was an obstruction in you back, prevent ing you from straightening your form, and indicating an obstruction in Hie Kidneys? KIDNEYCURAwUI remove this. It Is a nat ural remedy, composed et roots and herbs, and made into a TEA. A pack makes four pint? or Tea. Try it and be convinced.: Fere sale at , KAUr31A.N' UKUU DrUBft, Ne. 11C. North Queen Street. DRSABFORFS LIVEE INVIGORATOR Only Vegetable Compound that acts directly upon the Liver, and cores Liver Complaints, Jaun dice, Biliousness, Malaria, Ceck tiveness. Headache. It assists di gestion, strengthens the system, regulates the bowels, purifies the bleed. A Boek sent free. Dr. SANFORD,162BreadWay,N.Y. Fer sale y all Druggist. 118-lvecd alteew..
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers