fnlelligeit& j - f . , Yi- i.J. Volume XIX-No 6. LANCASTER, PA., THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1882. Price Two Ceate. (Kk 4 B TOBM S. OIVLKK CU'S PLUSHES, in all the flew Shades, VELVETS and VELVETEENS Black Cashmere Embroideries, Tubular Braids in Black and Colors. All of these Goods are NEW and having been bought for cash will be sold at the LOWEST PRICES. JOHN S. G1VLER & CO., NO. .25 EAST KING STREET, LANCASTER. JNO. 8. (1IVLEK. OWKKH & HURST. BLANKETS, FLANNELS AND AN IMMENSE STOCK JUST OPENED White Blankets, Scarlet Blankets and Gray Blankets, from very low price up to finer grades. White Flannels, Red Flannels and Gray Flannels at very low price. Cotton Flannels, all qualties, marked very low. Bargains in Hosiery for Ladies, Men and Children. We are offering Goods very low in every department. BOEE8 & HTJKST. 129 and 131 NORTH QUEEN STREET. - - - - LANCASTER, PA. M YKKS ItATHFON.1 Aeil - Iu the manufacture of READY-MADE CLOTHING wo observe three points : 1. The Selection of Stylish and Serviceable Material with the Best Wearing Qualities. 2. The Selection of Good, Strong and Serviceable Trimmings, Pockets, Linings, etc. 3. First-class Workmanship, Good, Strong Thread and Careful Sewing. In our CLOTHING you will find no raaehino-mado button holes, but good, strong, regular baud-made buttonholes. Our Cutters are the most skilled. Our Patterns are tho lest. MYERS & RATHFON, no. 12 east king street. DKV H AURK & BKUTHKH'j CAKIK A CARD. Lvncastkk, July 28, 1882. In anticipation of changes to bo niado in our Clothiug Department (arrangements for which aro now going on) wo desire to roduco our htock to tho minimum, and offer Spiing and Summer wears at. tho Lowest Figures. Light Weight goods of all kinds for both men and boys to bo closed out ; Linen and Mohair Dusters ; English Seer sucker Suits ; White Marseilles and Duck Vests ; Creole Check aud Alpacca Coats ; Linen and Cottonade Panta loons ; Cassimoro Suits, made skeleton ; Bine Flannel Suits and full lines of Summer-Weight Cloths, Cassimeres, Serges, &e., &c Yours, respectfully, IIAGER & BROTHER, No. 25 Went King 8trcet. N KXT IMIUK TO TIIK OOURT FAHNESTOCK'S. Blue Black Cashmeres, Jet Black Cashmeres, MEDIUM BLACK CASHMERES, LUPINS FRENCH CASHMERES, From the Lowest to the Finest Goods Imported, Now Open Direct From Importers. Wo invito attention to our BLACK SILKS at 90 Cents ; Also to our BLACK SILKS at $1.00 as being the Best Silks ever offered for tho mouoy. NEW GOODS OPENED DAILY. E. E. F A TTTSTESTOCK. NEXT DOOR TO OOURT HOUSE. LANCASTER, PA. bovhjb jFvnsisaimi hoods. JUNN WIIXSON. HOUSEFURNISHING ! FLDOT & WILLSOff. STOVES, HEATERS and RANGES for Offices, Hotels, Residences and Public Buildings. STEAM PLUMBING AND GAS-FITTING, SLATE MANTELS, CHANDELIERS. lqt. Fruit Jars Only 5ets. Apiece. JELLY TUMBLERS, TIN CANS, &c, &c. FLINN & WILLSON. (SIGN OFTUK TWO BIG DOUS.) PLVMHEK'S w IIOLKSALR UCfOT FOB Water Closets and Bath Tabs, Iron and Wooden Hydrants, Plumbers' Earthenware, Gas and Steam Fitters'' Supplies, Gas Fixtures at RedacedJPrices, Plumbers' Supplies, Tinners 'Supplies. SLATE ROOFING. SLATE ROOFING. NOB. U. 13 & 15 BAST ORANGE STREET. LANCASTER. PA. JOHN L. ARNOLD. DMT HOODS, r. VI.OTHISU. Vf a,cLe Garments. GOODS, HOUSE, LANCASTER, PA. HUMLIKS. GEO. F. BATHVON. UNDERWEAR. CLOTHING. SriCtNU ANI MJMMKIC NOVKLT1KS. AT H. GERHABT'S ilorii t NO. EAST KING STREET, 1 hereby Inform my customers that my btOtif ol SPRING and SUMMER SUITING, SPRING OTERCOATiNG & FANCY VESTING Is now complete. 1 have nor tho largest and choicest attsorlim-nt of WOOLENS. Kor Kino Tailoring In the city ot Lancaster. PRICES AS LOW AS TIIK LOWEST, and all goods warranto! as represented. I. GEMART. VALl. FASHIONS. PALL FASHIONS IN- MEN'S, YOUTHS' & BOYS' CLOTHING ARE NOW HEADY AND ARE NOW REING SHOWN IN WONDER- FUL AUK AY. I laving man u tact u i ci 1 for the last 00 days a more Select anil Stylish Stock of CLOTHING than ever before we aro nrcnared to suit llio most fastidious In Style, Jinking and Trim mings, and especially in Price, as "OUR LABOR IS OITR rROFIT." Note a lew Sample l'licc? : MEN'S UUSlNEbS SUITS, $3.50, $1.00, $5.00, and $6.00 MEN'S ALL-WOOL SUITS, $7.U, 8.00,t9.M, $i0.00and$12.00. MENVS DRKS SUITS, $10 00, $12.00, $14.03 up to $-211.09. BOYS' SUITS, In Great Vaiicty, Our Specialty. HOYS' SCHOOL SUlTSj $2.00, $3.00 up to $3,03. HOYS' ALL-WOOL DRESS SUITS, $1.00, $4X0, $5X0 up to $9.00. OUR CHILDREN'S DEPARTMENT is com pleto in every respect, and we arc sellinga Child's Suit lor $l.rn, fU) and $.1.00. An All Wool Child's Suit lor $3 HO, $1.0) $5.00, $0.00 and $7.1. OUR CUSTOM DEPARTMENT. Customers can select Goods from In tho piece and have them made to ortcr at a slight advance over our Goods on the counter. We make, to order All-Wool hulls for $12.00: Heavy All WoolCa-s or Cheviot Suit for 215.00. and Fine Dress suit lor $13.00, $20X0 and $25.00. Our Goods aw marked In plain and large ligurcs in out Two Commodious Windows, and a call on ns will convince yon of saying 1 rom 20 to 3J per cent. . L. GAISIAff & BEO., Tho Leading Merchant Tailors and Clothiers, 66 and 68 NORTH QUEEN ST., ..ighton tho Southwest Corner of Orange St. LANCASTER, PA. 1 he Cheapest House In the City. TK. McCOKMICK, GRADUATE IN MEDICINE AND 1'JJAIH MACY, J ( son ol the late Dr. D. McCormlek, or Lancas ter,) troats private diseases succcsslully with bis new remedies. Medicine is pleasant to taste and smell. No change ot diet aud conse quently no exposure. Cun bo consulted in person or by mail at his drug store and ofllce. No. :3tJ SOUTH FOUHT1I STREET, alfi-lind Philadelphia. s TOU1KS, STOU1KS. 1'ITTSKUKGH HTO- 1 gics. $l.ir per hundred at HARTMAV.S YELLOW FKONT CIGAR SIUltK, GENESIS 0E THE EARTH. AN ADDRESS TO TUK COLLEGIANS. Delivered at tbe Be-openlng of Franklin and Marshall College Sept. 7, 1882, by Kcv. John S. Stanr, A. SI. The origin of tho earth has been tho subject of inquiry and speculation among thoughtful men of all ages. Around it poetry has woven some of its most charming creations, and philosophy at tempted some of its loftiest flights. Pagan mythology gives us ono series of accounts. Christian theology, on the basis of Divine revelation rejects all these, aud substituted a cosmagony of its owu. Over against both modern science urges its claims, and proposes to lift the curtain which, like a gloomy pall, hangs over the distant past, and to allonl us, if not a full survey at least a good view of tbe process by which the earth came to be what it now is. As the world grows older, wo are told, aud szientiiic investigation more and more un veils the mysteries which surround us, we And that the old belief in an instantane ous creation cm no louger be entertained. The moie we become acquainted with the .structure of the caith, the naturo of the di detent substances that compose it, aud their relation to on'e another and to tbe earth as a whole, the more we see that the earth has a history autcdating the advent of mau, that it has passed through a process of development or evolution, fol lowing tho law of all developmeut as for mulated by Von Baer, fkom the general to the special, ft cm tlie homogeneous to the lut erogencous, that it has passed by a series of changes from the formless chaos into the abode of life, the home of beauty, which in its virgin freshness the Greeks very appropriately called Kosmos. Tho myths aud legends which abound in the literature of all aucieut peoples are now abandoned, aud however much we may admire their beauty and their partial truths, we cease to regard them otherwise than as the puerile imaginings of a primi tive u'ro. But the idea of creation, grounded in the religious consciousness ol mau, lefuses to be dislodged. Nor should it bo dislodged. It is very true that liOm the standpoint of science wo can only discern changes iu matter and force in a previously constituted order of existeuco. So far as the beginning ol that oider is concerned, we must confess that it lies beyond the ken of our observation. Creation cannot be demonstrated, aud it does not come iu the domain of science. Aud yet it is just as unscientific to deny creation as to claim to prove it. It cannot lw dispiovcd, aud we can safely say that it is the only reasonable supposition that will account for the origin of matter and tho constitution of a system of things based on the operation of universal law. Now what' reason cannot solve that we clearly discern by the higher power of faith. " Through faith we understand that the worlds were framed by the Word of God, so that tho things which are seen were not made of things which do appear." To him who is iu the right attitude diviuo revelation supplies the 1'iiU solution of tho mystery, and tho devout heart freely re sponds to the sublinio utterance : "Iu tho beginning God created the" heaven and tbo earth." But grautiug all this, it by no means follows that we aro disposed to shut our eyes to tho facts which science is con tinually biinging to the light, or that, accepting the idea of creation, we aro willing to throw geology overboard, and blindly accept what the Mosaic rccoid has been supposed to teach, viz: that God created the earth aud fashioned it to bo tho abodo of man by a series of 'instan taneous acts iu six natural flays. Ou tho contrary, wo believe that the genesis of tho earth involves both an act aud a pro cess au act by which the universe as a system of related forces was objeotivized, constituted out of tho inlinito fullness of tho Almighty Creator, and process by which this system of forces finally re: c'ics its-goal. Wo do not mean to say that such development is pure evolution in tbo souse that matter as such or of itself con tains or is "tho irjmise or potency " of all the mauifoldness that subsequently ap pears in tho woihl. The process is,one of involution as well as evolution ; that is, tho whole movement rests in the bosom of the Great Fountain whence it issued, and theio is a mutual relatiou of two factors which do not oppose but supplement each other, which aro uot apart but iu each other, so that as the one unfolds towards its destinod cud, tho other supplies iu greater fullness in the different stages what is needed for tho perfection of the whole. We are told sometimes that God could just as easily make tho earth as it now is in a siuglo moment, as Ho could make it any other way, and that therefore it is alto gether unnecessary to assume that long periods of time must have elapsed before the earth could have attained its present condition. In oue sense of tho word, I suppose God could have made such an earth iu such a way ; but really, we say it with all reverence, God could just as little have made the earth as it now is, in six days, or six years, or six thousand years, as lie could make iu a single hour the tree that has withstood the tempests of a thousand years, aud bears witness in the very fibre and tissue of its wood of periods of growth and periods of rest, of injuries received aud new wood deposited to repair ihc damage, of cell-walls thickened and wood hardened by prolonged growth and exposure to the elements until it has un mistakably becomo a very hard tree. Tbe marks and impressions which we find in tho crust of the earth must mean some thing. They are uot put there to deceive they are not mere sports of nature, or chance products of the aggiegation of mat ter. Fossils found in tho rock, the im pressions made by rain drops, ripple mark aud such like, constitute a record of past conditions and stages of the earth which no candid mind cau overlook. And if you grant this you have granted the whole question at issue ; you have admitted that the earth has passed through a process of evolution covering thousands, yea, hun dreds of thousands of years. The actual beginning of tbo history of tho earth is a mystery which science on the basis of observed facts will never un ravel. Our opinion of the nebular hypoth esis rests ou analogical reasoning, aud the weight of probabilities. Geology as a scienco must rest on facts, and facts only. Going back in tho history of tho earth as far as facts justify us, aud summing .up the results of our investigation, wo may regard the following conclusions fairly established : 1. The earth was once a liquid mass, a fiery ball, the gradual cooling and con solidation of which, under the modifying influence of external conditions, gave rise use to series of changes which have con tinued to tho present time, and which therefore embody the whole domain of geology. To account for these changes (tho phenomena of lifo excepted) we need no extraneous sourco or the operation of mysterious causes. They were produced by a few forces, physical and chemical, strictly belonging to matter in tho con dition which we have supposed. Tho first cbango naturally was a change of temper ature, a cooling process by which the out side surface became solid. Secondly, as the temperature diminished, the different elementary substances which tho mass contained, united chemically, so that tho whole constitution became more complex. Thirdly, as soon as the outside tempera ture fell to about 2123 Fahrenheit, water was condensed upon the surface of tbe earth until is was almost or entirely covered. Then secondary effects com menced. As tho crust thickened by cool ing, it contracted unequally, producing a powerful strain on the material of the crust. At the same tinio vapors collected underneath, and hence disturbances oc curred by which some portions were ele vated aud others depressed, forming the dry land and the ocean. Again, the ex posed portions disintegrated aud, worn down by atmospheric agencies, formed sediment in water, which in turn gavo rise to a new series of stratified rocks, and these, when elevated in turn, formed tho continents as we now see them. 2. The forces which produced these changes, chemical aud physical, terrestrial aud celestial (that is depending upon the relation of the earth to tho other heavonly bodies) are the same in kind to-day as they were in the distant past, and they have acted constantly and regularly from those early ages until the present time. 3. lint,- although the same in kind, these forces did not produce uniform effects in tho different ages. The effects produced necessarily depended upon the conditions under which the forces operated and varied both in degree and in kind. In, the earlier ages, as long as the crust of the earth retained a high temperature, it cooled rapidly, and the consequent euergy available to produce geological changes was proportionally great. The depth or water under whicp rock material was deposited, as well as other physical conditions, affected tho prevailing kiuds of lifo and influenced the formation of particular kinds of rock, whether sand stone, limestone or coal. For this reason the geologist cannot possibly tell how long absolutely the different formations weio in pi ogress. He can to somo extent ap psoximato the relative length of the differ ent periods, but he must needs speak with great caution. One thing is certain, though, and that is whuo the whole time involved in these changes is by no means infinite, it is measured by hundreds of thousands or cveu millions of years. 4. There are certain stages in the his. tory of this development of the earth at which new forces made their appearance, for the advent of which science has as yet utterly failed to account. Such are life and mind as potent factors in shaping tho destiny of the world. As to the origin of lifo geology cannot tell when or how it came into the world. But of tbe history of lifo it has au interesting story to tell a story that, takes ns into wonder-laud aud leads us on spell-bound by tho newness and strangeness with which wo aro con. f looted at every step. We may well say with Bryant, though in a different sense : 'All that tread The globe are but u handful to t ho tribe j That slumber in its bosom." This is true, not only i:i point of num bers, but also in variety. At first we have only the lowest kiuds of animals or in vertebrates, and when the higher forms appear they aro entirely different itr their appeal anco fiom tho forms with which we aro familiar at the present time. Thoy look odd aud grotesque in the earlier ages, aud only gradually, as you approach modern times, do they appear in their present forms. This stiikes us as cveu iuoro singular when we find upon examination that the higher animals now pass through similar stages in their embryonic develop ment. Manifestly there is hero somo kind of a law of development. Taking the whole movement we see a general advance in tho successive ages ; lifo passes from lower to higher forms. Where new genera appear, tho first are by no means always the lowest species, but rather what are colled compio'icnsivo types; that in, forms which combine a number of characteristics which afterward appear singly iu succes sive forms. And finally, tbo wholo move ment is stcnility toward a certain goal, and that goal is Man. Nature is literally coming to a head, As organization bo comes higher the nervous tissue increases ; tho ganglions aro concentrated to form brain, and brain grows until it comes to its maximum in mau. There is, therefore, a relation between the different forms which canuot be overlooked, and the law of development works from within, uot from without ; not blindly or by chance, but guided by intelligence, and directed towaid a given cud. Tho theory of de velopment by natural selection only is in adequate to account for the phenomena ; but there is cumulative evidenco in favor of the view that in bringing tho work of creation to its completiou aud establish ing the variety and harmony of animated nature, tho immanent Creator was work ing through thd medium of natural law by a process, tho nature of which we do not as yet wholly understand. But what shall we say of man aud the gcucMs of mind? Man stands in tbe natural oider and yet he is not of it- On the oue sido ho is allied to the course of development which wo have described, and he has much iu common with tho auiinal. But ou the other side he is sep arated from this order, abruptly exalted above ic by brain power and spiritual en dowment, breathing tho vital breath of tho creator, and made for communion and fellowship with ilim. It is a striking fact that with the advent of mau there is a sudden change in the direction of the world's development. Before his coming animal life had become monstrous monstrous iu shape, in size and iu strength. Bruto forco held sway, and rapacity aud unrelenting selfishness prevailed. But with the advent of man, mind receives the sceptre, aud henceforth room is made for the cultivation of intelli gence, mildness, generosity, charity. Agaiu the edict goes forth : "Let theto be light," and there is light ; aud tie gentlo spirit of love broods over the earth. But you ask, how we obtain a knowledge of theso facts V I answer simply by study ing the structure and composition of tho earth's crust. It requires only the inves tigation, collection, aud right interpreta tion of facts as real, as securely recorded, and as accessible as those which furnish the subject matter of any other science. What bearing do the facts with which we thus become acquainted have on divino revelation? Perhaps wo have bad too many efforts to reconcile the the Bible and geology injudicious efforts, some, no doubt, which only " darken counsel by words without knowledge," by assuming either that they need reconciliation, or that they can be reconciled as they are by finding in one the exact counterpart ot the other. I believe tbat wo have to do with two different things, two representations of tbe same transactions from a totally different standpoint, and with a different purpose in view. The account in Genesis is subjective from the standpoint of the Creator, and is intended to reveal Him to man ; the account found in the record of the rocks is offjecthe, from the standpoint of what is created, and deals with eflccts rather than causes, so as to show tho relation of the different orders of creation to one another. The former set the work before us as it developed in idea, enu merates the various momenta or factors as so many stages in the progress of the work, and makes thorn all equal in poiuto time, each a day's work, tho whole col' minating in the Sabbath which gives it a spiritual meaning. The latter does not separate these factors for us, bnt shows their practical effect in the evolution of the earth with all the forms of life that are upon it. Tho different momenta are all there, bnt in the actual unfolding of the Divine plan, so far as this record goes, we have an uninterrupted process, the result of which, the web and woof, the product of the great loom of time, is before us, but the Mystic Weaver that flies the shuttle sits out of sight, and we""cannot toll when He rests or how long. Let it be understood, once for all, that the Bible is not a text book of natural science, but the volume of divino revela tion ; that it is given not to reveal cer tain facts or truths of science, but a certain person, God Himself, and his relation to the world and especially to man. What of it, if as is is sometimes said, the author of Genesis supposed that he was describ ing tho process ot tno creation, ana thought of the firmament as a crystal sphere, and of tho sun, moon and stars as brilliant luminaries set iu this sphero to move in their appointed orbits ? If he did he but thought and spake as all the world did in his day. But his Ianguago and imagery aro only the diaphanous drapery through which the divine truth beams upon tho soul. And this truth is perennially the samo, untarnished and un dimmed ; it is only the drapery that is affected by the advance of scienco and the changes of human interpretation. Even it, as to its essential meaning, is in sub stantial harmony with observed facts ; and the more we learn, both of God's rev elation in the Bible and His manifestation in nature, tbe more we shall see that al though they are different they are in no wise contradictory. Pope says : "Lo, tho poor Indian! whose untutored mind Sees God in clouds' and hears Him in the wind." Shall we infer from this, as modern cul ture sometimes seems to do, that it is only tho untutored mind that discerns God in nature? -By no means! Culture should not eradicate, but rathef improve and exalt this natural utterance of tho heart, and tho profonndest philosopher may well I say with Cowper : 'God moves in a mysterious way Ills wonders to perform ; lit; plants his footsteps in the sen, And i Ides upon the storm." llhnriel'H Spear. One touch ot it transformed the toad at the ear ol Eve into his true Satanic simp and sent him away. The toail ot disease is silently is suing his venom, not at the car. but at the kidneys and liver ot many aman who "iceling out of sortu," does not know lust what is the mutter with him. JJy and by when the mis chief is done, and Iirighl's Disease or some other terrible malady has set in. lie discovers his malady only to despair ot its cure. Now Hunt's Kcmtdy Is as Ithnrlcl's spear. Its touch reveals the disease, in itstruesbape.and then dismisses It from the system. Even in the worst cases of kidney complaints, it is not loo late to cull Hunt's Kerned? in. It has snatched many from the very jaws ol death, Hepft-lmiktw Fine, brilliant ami clear lenses are used iu making thu Celluloid Eye-Glusse When yon buy a pair von may know that you are getting the best. For sale by all leading Jewelers and Opticians. a&Mwdeod Wnr wirx votr cough when Shlloh's cure will give Immediate icllct. Price, 10 eta., ." els. and $1. For sale at Cochran's drug store, 1 !7 North Queen street.. A true friend to the weak and convalescent is Iti-own's Iron Hitters. For solo at II. IS. Coehran's drug store, North Queen strcci, Lancaster. a2S-lwd&w SHILOHsT,'ATAIIUH ICKMBOY a pOSltJVO CIITO for Catarrh, Diphtheria and Canker M out n. For sale at Cochran's drug store, 1.17 North Onsen street. A Heavy Swell. Jacob U. Hloomer. ot Virgllle, N. V., writes : "Your Thomas' Ecleclrlc Oil cured a badly swelled neck and sore throat on my son in forty-eight hours ; ono application also re moved the pain from a verv sore toe ; inv wife's toot was alsO much inflamed so much so that she could not walk about the house ; she applied tho OH, and in twenty-four hours was entirely cured.' For sale at 11. II. Coch ran's drug store, 1.17 North Queen street, Jaii caster. Nobody enjoys thu nicest surroundings It in bad health. There are miserable people about to-day to whom a bottle ot Parker's Ginger Tonic would bring more solid conilort than all the medicine, they have over tried. Newt. sl-1 mdeod Aeo w bHiLoii's ctTRK will immediately relievo Croup, Whooping Cough and Itronchttis, For dale at coehran's drug store, 1:57 North Quen street. Noting the Effects. It. (ilbbs. or I'.uflulo N.Y., writes: "Hearing your .Burdock Blood Bitters favorably spoken of. 1 was induced to watch their cltects. and 11 nd tint In chronic diseases ot the blood, liver anil kidneys, yoar bitters have been sig nally marked witn success. I have used them mjvelt witli best results, for torpidity of tho liver: and in the case ot a friend of mine buf fering from dropsy.tlm effect was marvelous." l'rico $1. For sale at 11. R. Cochran's Drug store, i::7 North Queen street. Lancaster. Walnut Leaf Hair Keatorer. It Is entirely diltorentfrom all others. It is as clear as water, and, hs its naino Indicates. Is a perfect Vegetable Hair Restorer, it will immediately free tho head from all dandruff, restore gray hair to its natural color and pro duco a new growth whero It has fallen off. It does not in any manner effect tho health, which Sulphur. ; ugur of Lead and Nitrate ot Silver preparations h.ive done. It will change light or faded hair m a few days to a beautiful glossy brown. Ask your druggist for It, Each tittle is warranted. &M1TH, KLINE & Ctr., Wholesale Agents, Philadelphia, and C. N. CRITTENTON New York. Jun61yd.eo.I4w rAfJCJt MANttlltOB, Me. w K UAVK ADDKU LAKUKLY TO lOK Stock ol WALL PAPERS Within the last week, consisting of every de scription ot PAPER IIAJiGlNGt, and among them some ot the Choicest Styles in the Best Grade or Goods. These will be sold low in order to make speedy sales. REMNANTS are accumulating all the time In small lots, which are very desirable for Closets. Vestibules and Rooms, running in price irom Three Cents apiece up. WINDOW SHADES in new Dado Patters, Colors and Widths. Plain Goods In All WE KEEP AN ELEGANT LINE OFJ LACE CURTAINS -IN- WITITE ami CREAM, BED SETS, PIALO W HttAStU, TIDIES, LAMH11EQVINS, &c. Poles In Walnut.' Ebony, Brow, Cherry, Ash anil Pier and Mantle Mirrors. Phares W. Fry, 57 NORTH QUEEN STREET. 1 KNTLKMKM. we can vour attention to an wan apor nai rovcrv In onr practice which we nave found very successful in cases ot prostration arising from indiscretion. Those suffering from any of the numerous forms ot Debility arising from abuse or other causes, wm do well by sending a three cent stamp for further infor mation. Address, DBS. LA GRANGE ft JOR DAN (late Jordan ft Davidson), No. I(K!5 Fil bert street, Philadelphia. Pa. Hours tor con sultation : 10 a. m. till 2 p. m., and 5. till 8p.m. mar2J-3uicod MXltlCAZ. T)HOWN8 IRON HITTERS. MALARIA Malaria is an almost indescribable malady which not even tho most tal ented physicians are able to fathom. Its cause is most frequently ascribed to local surroundings, and there is very little question, but this opinion is substantiated by facts. Malaria docs not necessarily mean chilis and fever while these troubles usually ac company it. It often affects the suf ferer with general lassitude, accom panied by loss of appetite, sleepless ness, a tired feeling and a high fever the person afflicted growing weaker and weaker, loses flesh day after day, until he becomes a mere skeleton, a shadow of his former self. Malaria once having laid its hold upon tho human Inline, tho door of tho systen is thrown open to ncrvons diseases. The holy weak and enrccblcd absorbs no nourish ment, bnt subsisting upon Itself, the digestive organs no longer per form their tuncfons; tho liver be comes torpid, and oilier organs failing to do their routine work, speedily become disordered, and dissolntion anil death are art lo ensue. In addition to being a certain euro for malaria aud chilis and fever, BROWN'S IRON BITTERS is highly recommended for all diseases requir ing a certain and cflicicut touic ; es pecially indigestion, dyspepsia, inter mittent fovcts, want of appetite, loss of strength, lack of energy, eto. En riches tho blood, strengthens the mus cles, aud gives new lifo to the nerves. Acts like a charm on the digestive or gans. It is for sale by all respectable medicine dealers, price, $1 per bottle. Bo sure and set the genuine BROWN'S IRON BITTERS. Take no other, or sale wholesale and retail by II. IS. COCH RAN, Druggist, 137 and 139 North Queen street. Lancaster augll till Sent I5,d4 w 1 HOOKH AMD HTAI-IOXKK. DCHUUL BOOKS. ALL SCHOOL BOOKS AND SCHOOL SUPPLIES AT THE LOWEST KATES, L. M. FLYNN'S, NO. 42 WEST KING STREET. LANCASTER. ocnour, hooks. SCHOOL BOOKS FOR THE LANCASTER SCHOOLS. For Sale at the Lowest Prices. nv John Baer's Sons, N0S. 15-17 NORTH (JUEKN ST. 3"Sii:x of the nra book.- H EADQUAKTJSKS KOR SCHOOL BOOKS. THE LOWEST PRICES' -AT- Foi Dni's Mi Store. All the NEW BOOKS At INTRODUCTION PRICES, AND SOME AT EXCHANGE PRICES FON DERSMITffS BOOK STOKE, No. 32 East King Street. a31-tld STOCKS. TNCRKASE YOU1! CAPITAL. WHEAT STOCKS, $10, 820, 50, 100. Those desiring to make money on small and medium Investments In grain, provHlons and stock speculation, can to mo by operating on nnrplan. From May 1; 1881, to the present date, on Investments or f 1,4,00 to Cl.rmO cash profits have been realized and paid to invest ors amounting to several times the original investment, still leaving tho original invest ment making money or payable on demand. Explanatory circulars and statements ot f mid W sent free. We want responsible agents who will report thu crops and introduce the plan. Address, FLEMMINGr & MEREIAM, Commission Merchants, Major Block, Chl cago. 111. lulyd WNCKHTKATKD POOD FOR STOGK KOR SALE BT D. B. HOSTETTER. ELEGANT BOOKS iFCKK