Lancaster daily intelligencer. (Lancaster, Pa.) 1864-1928, April 17, 1885, Image 2

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The Daily gimMM&E&1k$&a&S
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ruDUBUa Every Evening in tna xesr
(HTKDAT8 lIOtrtlD)
By BTK1NMAN & HENBEL.
" INTELLIGENCE BtTILDINGi
B. W. Cerner.Centre Square.
IiAHCABTKR, Pi.
tore
DAILY Ten cents a win, Five dollars a
ykah en virrr ckuti a month. Postaej feii.
ADVERTISEMENTS rnen tk te rirrr ukjitb a
WEEKLY " INTELLIGENCER,"
(IOHTrABM.)
Published Every Wednesday Morning,
TWO DOLLARS A TBAR IN ADVAlfO.
CoRRbsreNDKNCB solicited fremuvery putt 'f tlie
ntBte anil country. Correspondents urn re
quested te wrlle legibly nml en one slde el
the paper only nml te sign their names, net
ler publication, but In proof of geed fnlth.
All anonymous letters will be Venali;ued te
the waste basket,
ADDBSSS ALLLBTTSRS ANDTKLKORA1IS TO
THE INTELLIGENCER,
LANCASTER, l'A.
$l)c CawastcvSntclligcwcr.
LANCASTEH, Al'lUL 17, ISWi.
Some Specimen Het.
As the child ought net te be put out te
a strange nurse, the aims and purposes of
the peeple who framed and secured the
passage of the "hygiene" school law can
best be gathered from the way in which
they propose te administer it. As 1m3 been
noted, Mrs. Hunt, the author and agitator
of the statute is also the author of a book
made te fit it. She has picpared,iu the
name and by the authority of the
National Department of Scientific In
struction of the Women's Christian
Temperance Union, of which she is
superintendent, eracle and apostle, a
book for which she lia3 seemed the en
dorsement of the authority upon which she
largely draws for its statements; and which
her publishers, with the characteristic med
esty of their race, offer te the thousands of
school lieards and tens of thousands of
school teachers who are hencefeith, under
compulsion, te teach and have taught te all
the scholars of all their schools, in all
branches of the subject, the hygienic ef
fects of a'cohel and narcotics.
Mrs Hunt's book, like her law, is spec
ially directed te alcohol and tobacco, with
incidental reference te ether branches of
hygiene and physiology. It opens with
the striking statement that " people de net
usually drink clear alcohol," as might be
inferred from her law ; but this is imma
terial in view of the great scientific fact
that " rum, whisky, wine, cider, gin,
brandy, beer, etc.," are simply " water and
alcohol with different llavera ;" alcohol
is a poison, and deaths of men, women
and children from poisonous doses of it are
common ; their number has been accurate
ly determined at fio,()eO icr year ; death
lurks in the cider barrel as well as sits
astridothe beer bung, and " it is a mistake
te suppose that because grapes, apples, and
barley are healthful feed, that wine, eider
and beer, made from them must also be
healthful." "Cigaiettes," this invaluable
book teaches, "aioeneof the worst pessi
ble pieparatiens of tobacco " and "send
mere poisonous fumes" into the system
than even the pipe or cigar ; " drinking
men are almost always smokers and
ehewers," and generally begin en the down
ward read, thu book mildly intimates by
picking " old cigar stumps out of the gut
ter." After that fucilia descensus Anrni.
Net satisfied with absorbing the subject
of hygiene and physiology, this official and
authorized text book of the new study
sears into the realms of arithmetic and pro pre
funda a number of neat calculations for
the youthful mind, such as the tamiliar
problems of hew much one would save in
ssven years if he did net smoke five cents
worth of cigarettes every day, and " hew
ljuicli will the expense of treating be likely
te increase the amount ene spends for
alcohol and tobacco." The teacher
who is directed te impress this de
partment of the work en the young
mind will be apt te be staggered,by having
poked at him the melancholy and perplex
ing example of se many who smoked and
grew rich, and of ethers who smoked net
and stayed oer ; but the bewildered peda
gogue will find no relief in this marvel of
scientific text books.
In order that the book shall meet the
strict requirements of the law, and teach
the baleful effects et narcotics " in every
branch of the subject," the chapter en
bones and joints is enlivened by
the observation that tobacco "stunts
the bones and dwarfs all the giewth
of the child ;" fend parents who have sub
stituted the pipe for the bOttle will no
longer buckle infants with nicotine when
the common school system lias been
leavened with this new inspiration. Cider
has about the same percentage of alcohol
as beer; and, like heme-made wines, is
no mere innocent drink than champagne
or pert ; the "poison" is there, "ready te de
its deadly weik;" and "many of these who
die as drunkards in this country, began
their ceurse at tlte cider barrel." The in
mates of inebriate asylums, it is taught,
have nearly all been "users of tobacco."
Uy the same token no doubt, they could
nearly all read and write, tee. Liver,lungs,
kidneys and "every branch of the subject"
are treated with the same "special refer
ence" te alcohol and narcotics ; and it is
related that 5,000 drinking men died of yel
low fever in New Orleans beforeit touched
it single sober person.
The awful prevalence of liquor drinking
is easily explained by the distinguished
authoress in America " only a few years
age " cider and rum " were found in the
cellar and en the table of nearly every
farmer," and no wedding, funeral or pub
lic gfltyeringtdiii sort was without its
frce .liquor." We have all inherited the
taate for the poison and are only safe from
an uncontrollable desire by refraining from
even " wine jelly."
Thls the ret that the authets of this
new legislation propose te have taught la
out public schools. It is ret, rut, het.
A Queer Cancer.
General Grant is dancing around his
house in a very lively way for a moribund
man. He has been down stairs te lunch;
u fact which his devoted doctors have
faithfully chronicled in their bulletins, net
deeming it, probably, a serious symptom of
the Intention of their patient te avoid the
funeral they have adveitiicd for him. Or
dinarily when a man gees down stairs from
hb sick loom te lunch he would be con
valescent ; but the eplthelic throatef Grant
Is cenflJently expected by his doctors
te trip him up notwithstanding his physi-
' 8
heth)miHiwv liw naerv.tlmi a.-fierp
I j1 " aWi PS "" i. I "HIT 4ltJLK 1 I
iiiruBv, ana uen. urmit, is or hk opinion r
We would net venture te say thaikjthe .doc-
were all wrong about the epitheliema 5
but is generally safe te conclude of thediag-
lio3lsefthedoclors,whoudveitlsothcmselvts
as the attendants and bottle-holders of dis
tinguished iati'ents,that they arc wronp,be wrenp,be
cause these pfllclousbleY-hards never knevy
much almut their vocation jllie Lord lias
mdtle modesty n necessiry quality of the
geed iihyslciiin, and there te net a Blireu of
modesty about the Shradys. Still some
geed physicians have looked at Grant's
threat and subscribed te the cpethellema,
and it may le there. The uncertainty
nbeut Grant's condition ought te boa les les
eon te people who are ill, te trust in the
Lord rather than in the doctors.
A Ilrekcn Reed.
Theio Lsbut peer ground for the expecta
tion that the Pennsylvania legislature will
pass an effective measure for the vindica
tion of the constitutional prohibition of
railroad discrimination. The majority are
se tender of railroad officers that they re
fuse te subject them te the perils of im
prisonment in punishment for a violation
of the constitution.
Whereas the fact is that a railroad offi
cial, who violates this mandate of the fuu
damcntiillaw, should be hung upon a gib
bet; he deserves death far inore than the
man who kills. He destroys the life of
the stale te whose interest he is a traitor.
He is a usuriter, who arrogates te
himself the iiewer of regulating the
commerce and business of the state,
as, only its legislature may. He commits
this wrong deliberately, well knowing that
the contsitutien of the state prohibits it,
and that the iiitetesls of the people are
sacrificed by it. It is a shame that the
legislature should seek te save from a felon's
cell such a wretch as this.
Ner will the legislature lequiie the rail
roads te publish the rates of carriage
which they piojeso te lequiie that they
shall make alike te all the iieeiile. Where
fore the publication of their rates
te se much mere effensive te the
tailreads, than the requirement that
they shall wake them, is a conundrum te
which the legislature seems te have found
a satisfactory answer, Other peeple can
only cenceive that they de net like
te pest their rates, because they de
net want te stick te them. But
this cannot be the solution of the liddle
which the legislature reached, as it could
net possibly be presumed te deliberately in
tend te give the railroad companies the
opportunity te evade the law they are
enacting.
Tiik Louisvllle Courier-Journal beads
one eflta news columns "Net rounded en
Fact." Keep the line standing.
Niaeaiia Falls is te be a trce jiaik.
will be cheering news te bridegrooms.
This
Tiu: young women who adept tlie stage as
a profession cry eneu show a reuiarkahle
conception or fair dealing with their man
agers. HUicMOHirens are net given just the
particular treatment lliey consider due them,
they fly Inte open rebellion at an Instant's
warning, 'lids disposition or actresses and
singers cry often causes a great deal of cm
harassment te managers and an ocean of dis
gust te audiences. The ethor day iu New
Yerk Miss Viela Allen, who had been en
gaged te play the leading feinule part in the
new play "Dakelar," refused te go en the
stage at the moment when the orchestra be
gan the overture. She alleged ns her reasen
that she was te be supplanted by another
damsel, and took this method of getting even
with her employer. The oxtrcme meanness
el a proceeding llke this hecomes apparent
when It is remembered that impecunious
actresses cannot be sued for damages with
profit. There was no charge by the young
woman that her salary was te le stepped, and
tbe theatrical director said that he was pro pre
pared te scrupulously carry out the pecuni
ary obligation ontered into. Such an exhibi
tion of temper should be an insuperable bar
tcfsucccss in the dramatic profession.
Tjik license question in this sutte Is caus
ing a pretty rumpus. A Philadelphia mem
ber of the Ilouse charges that most of the
Philadelphia clubs are nothing mero than tin
licoused saloons and gambling houses. And
thore Is a bread suspicion that there Is much
tiutlt in the charge.
m m
If the war cloud should blew ever and
Grant should get well
Tiik situation or Ferdinand Ward, living
luxuriously in the Ludlow street jail, New
Yerk, Is a romarkable ene in many respects.
He seems te be out of the reach or the federal
court His friend Mr. Fish, who was por per
hapa less guilty than the festlve Ferdinand,
has bocemo convicted of fruudulcntmisappll fruudulcntmisappll
catien of bank moneys. Ward Is detained
en civil process, und net all the power of
the federal government can Hullleote get pos
session of him until the state is through with
him. Meanwhile his counsel connive at all
possible means for postponing trial. Is it any
wonder that Shakespeare mentioueU as ene
of the particularly hard fardels te lear, the
"law's delay?"
If Kngland and lUt-wla ue te war, thore
will be great temptation for the latter power
te break the compact entered into in Paris in
1650 that abolished prlvatoerlng.
Tiik question of what Is n malicious proso preso prose
cutloii such as the law la willing te award
damages for is a very nice ene for judicial
decision. A case was reeeutly brought te the
supreme court of Pennsylvania in which a
stelen poekot-book was the bone of conten
tion. Plaintiff had laid It down in defend
ant's presonce, and shortly afterwards inlssed
It. Defendant having a shady character was
charged with the theft, but aeqnltted at the'
hearing. Dofendnnt then brought suit for
malicious prosecution, but the lewer court,
doellned te charge the jury that thore was no'
prebable ground for the original arrest,
Defendant, assigning ler errer this ruling,
took the case te tlie supreme court The lat
ter reversed the lower court, holding tlmtthe
probable cause which will justify a presecu-i
tlen consists in such a state of facts or clrcumi
stances as would warrant an ordinarily pru
dent and cautious man te entertain an honest
belief that a certain person Is guilty of a ceri
tain eriine known te have been committed 1
and the decision was eminently proper.
Skull Fractured and ltlglit Arm Broken.
Frem the llarrlsburg Independent
About neon Thursday a young man was
brought te the hospital sullering from n se
vere scalpwednd, fractured skull and broken
right arm. It was Impossible te tell exactly
hew the accident eccurred, as the man hiin hiin
seil' was unconscious, except for a few
inomenU ut a time. He said his
name was OetirKU Daring and his
home at lSaliibridge. At ene time he
sUted he was working putting In ties ut
Marietta and was struck by a freight train.
This Is net lielleved, however, nut it Is
thought he was stealing a ride en n
freight train und was struck by n
bridge near Hlghsplre, In the vicinity
et the White Heuse. The entire top of the
man's head was laid back, requiring twenty
stitches. It Is net known whether or net he
will recover as there Is a plain fracture 'of the
skull.
yjANCABTEB DAILY
flTREEPCNtl6.M-
COXHUHHtKV WITH JIKFKRXS t'T TOITB,
MOItALASVJSCT.
The Address Delivered by Her. J. Max Hark te
the l'ttplU of the Lemen) Street Secondary
Schools of this City Warm 1'Iea ter Tree
I'Untlus by a City Minister.
i
This day marks a positive and decided step
forward in the advance of our ntute towards
the highest civilization. Mnn's really Inimnne
Ufa; begins when he first tears himself from
out the Irasem or nature, mid stands forth
conscious of nn Individuality separate from
litij mether. That Is Its birth. lulls child child
hefrdand youth It still is blindly dependent
onjnature. filie bounteously furnishes loed
And sliclter and warmth, and man Unquos Unques Unquos
tleiilnglyaeeoptsltall, giving in icturn noth
ing but ungrateful disobedience and abuse.
WO have loe long nlready lingered In this
" naughty-boyhood" stage; tee long have
disregarded our loving mother'Hlas,uhu.sod
her gracious gifts, and wantonly dolled her
tolier very face. And In nothing mere se
thin in the ruthless und icckless waste and
dlstructionef her forests and trees. Therefere
has she eommeuced te punish us sorely that
by cliastoiilngslie mlglit bring us te a sense of
duty and obligations. Her dreuths destroy
ing our crops, tier Heeds sweeping away our
farms und Hinges and towns, her drying up
el our springs and water-eon rses, beating
upon us with the blazing raysef her summer
nun, and scourging us with her fiercest w In
try blasts, have taught us the avllefutir ways
and made us feel the ivenalty of our disobe
dience. The exercises of te-day throughout
this commonwealth uroapreofth.it like the
prodigal son of the Kirablc, we nt last have
" ceme te ourselves," te rceognle Hint husks
are net meant for us, ami that comfort and
plenty are lu stele If but we will retrace our
steps and bring forth fruit meet fur repen
tance. Welme arrived at u stage whero our
mether can demand our protection iu return
for all her gills and favors ; w here Indeed
the latter are no less needed and no less
freely gien than before, but whero the
strong seu must be grateful In letuni, and
must fulfill his duties of lull-grown seushlp
as well. More than this. As birth is separa
tion from thu mether, se truu manhood Is
their re-unien. Civillatien begins w ith sei-
arallen irem iiatuie, and it is ierlecled by
reunion with nattiie. lint thu lounien is en
a higher piano und or a different character
than before. And I knew of no ether means
that shall as fully and generally bring us te
this consummation us the planting of trees,
c(jccially by the young, and their constant
nurture. and demands iqien the intelligent
care und sympathetic attention of our boys
and girls. Uy this means will our mother
nature net only be enabled te held as clone
and essential u relation te us physically as
before, but the still mero subtle, prelnmul
and. tender spiritual relation, us IsHwecu
mother mid seu. will be consciously festered.
mm ii-s mutual nencnt-s umimiaiuiy prevcu.
Tlim.S AM) VIKIKTATION.
She will have her youth renewed, and her
leaiity restored and enhanced. Fer trees
and vegetation are the lungs or the earth.
Through them she breathes. Destroy them
und she fulls Inte consumption. Her Ital
lluldsdry up. Her fountains, springs and
streams disappear. Her soil becomes arid and
unpreducthc. Her tcmperatuie ticklu und
unequal. Her atmosphere stile, stagnant,
impure und unwholsemo. Ohe her plenty
of trees and vegetation and with new vigor
and ungrudging bounty she will tive us
health, comtert and wi'alth; iresii air te
breathe, plenty efwntcr te tlriiikuud te irri
gate our laud, shade against the burning sun
and shelter from the Icy storm, a richness
ami uiiuiiunncuei crew in net teeming Ileitis
and luxuriance e!'!i nil in clustering vines,
wayside grees nml lie.tvy-ladeu orchards
mid forests, that far outweighs In value nil
the products of our mines of geld, and coal,
und Iren, livery tree we plant and raise is
an investment maue in nature's bank that
will paj us comieuiid Interest even IT we ro re
gard tlie material returns alone, the value in
dollars and cents only.
Hut is It net worth something loe te restore
and add te the sum of nature's beauty ? Te
cover her buhl sKjt and hitle the scars made
by our thoughtless ingratitude, with onlure
and luxuriance? Te make her features
beuutlliil with the expression of lelly
thoughts und lovely sentiments? Such are
trees, 'they are thoughts of Hed expressed
in material form. They expressed his
Fatherly cure und ieresighl when iu the
beginning, uges ere man was formed, the
herd Ged made te grew out of the ground
" every trce that is pleasant te tbe sight, and
geed for feed " Tlie premised " .Sprout el
Jesse," and " the Hraiich" that should be an
ensign for thu joepe, expressed his
thoughts of salvation and blessing that were
intended for ull men. "The Vine" with Its
many branches expressed the thought of His
upliltlng jhiw or and iutimate union with all
who will ablde in Him. His thought of His
church en earth He expressed iu the
mustard froe which grew te be "the greatest
among herbs, se that .the birds of
the uir come and ledge lu the branches there
of." And liually when He would express thu
highest beauty of peaee and inliuitu Jey or
thu New Jerusalem, It was iu "the tree of
life which licartwelve manner of irults, ami
yielded her rrult every month; and the
leaves of the troe were for the healing of the
nations." Are thore net just as subllme
thought contained in the lefty oak, the
spreading sycamore, the whispering plne;
in the maidenly pear troe veiled in pure
white blossoms, and the matronly apple suf suf
fused with blushes sweet and dolicate iu
spring? hlse why does their malcstyover malcstyever malcstyover
awe and their beauty enchant us? Why In
ourdcepor moods, when joy Is tee full for
another even te understand it, de we llnd in
the silent society of the troes in seme favorite
groveusubtlo sympathy and glatl compan
ionship, a deep satisfaction, such as our fellow-men
could net afford us? Is it net be be
cuuse Ged's thoughts nre higher than man's
thoughts? Or why, when the heart is heavy
with grief, and the cup of sorrow tee bitter
te be shared by any mortal with us, de we
find relief, comfort, strength and peace, In
the shady solitude of the weeds, under the
outstretched arms of somegroat, pitylngtrce,
such as the noisy world without could never
giveus? Did net the Saviour of men him
sell feel it iu the hour of his bitterest agony ?
When all the world but misunderstood und
hated him; when even his ehosen disciple
could net enter Inte his heart's griel, then he
wiinarev mmseii, aiene, into me seclusion
of the ollve grove of llothscmaue.
"Inte the weeds my master went
Clean ferspent, ferspent.
Inte the weeds my master came
Ferspent w 1th leve and shame.
lint the olives they wciu net blind te him,
The little gray leaves wcie kind te him,
The thern-Uec hud u mind te him,
When Inte the weeds he came.
"Outef the weeds my muster went,
And he was well content
Out of the weeds my master came,
Content with death and shame:
When slinuie und death would wee him last,
from under the trees they drew him last:
Twas en a tree they slew hiiu-last, '
When out or thu weeds he came."
Ah, he understood the Father's thought in
the troes, ami they uudetstoed hini. That
we de net de se mero fully is it net because
se long we have looked at them only from
afar. Irem without; because we have only
used thorn, but net lovetl them? When
ence we shall have learned te care for them
mero, te nourish them, te feel for them, then
perhaps will they also roveal themselves le
us mero plainly, and bocemo our friends in
a truer senw than merely te supply our phy
sical, material wants.
MINISTKniNQ TO MAN'S Ml'IIIITITAI. I'AKT
Certain it Is that we mlsa their greatest
benellts se long aswe refuse te let them
minister also te tho'higher spiritual part of
us. And the latter they can" only de if we
take them into that mero Intimate compan
ionship which comes from constant attention
te tliem, watching, nourishing, caring for
them. It is through this that they ulone can
oxert their wholesome intluonce en our
minds ami characters, nn Intluonce far-i cach
ing arid ImjKirtaut en our individual, social
and natienid life.
Apar$ from the speclllu lessens iu practical
botany, horticulture, and agriculture which
overy child must deriyofrem the mere ex
ercise or planting, caring for, und training a
tree, hew largely it can ulse be made te
minister te the cultivation or Uie'a;sthetle
seusu and taste I Companionship with
beauty teai')i2s us In what tree beauty con
sists, and makes us leve the beautiful wher
ever found. And in all" the material unl
verse, there is nothing mere beautiful than a
healthy, woU-developod, symmetrical tree.
i
IKTELIJGgNgER, FRIDAY, APRIL 17, 1885
The study of Mich a tree is Itself a lessen in
art; as the planting of troes iu artistic com
bination and groupings, and with a vlew te
the larger beauty el the landscape lu the
highest application of the art, and a blessing
te thopresent and future generations, hi
mere senses than one, whatover makes our
land mero beautlltil, makes us lere It mere.
Thonrtlstleplntlngor treesls therefore an
act of , real patriotism. Net only
because In enricbat the country, nor
only because it beauti.les It; but because,
ns.I bellnve. it Is around the tiers nfeiir
homes und their early associations, almost'
as linuch its around the hearth and fireside
llsir. Hint our ulloctieus nre went te cluster.
The love of home Is thu foundation of the
love of country. And the love or home means
mdie than ullectleu for the house that shelters
us. As I leek back and try te think what
makes my heart cling se tenderly te the
humble spot I cul home, and '.what se often
nrpuses In my breast these strange pangs anil
yearnings we iiume "home-slckuoss," 1 llud
that It is net only, nor even mainly, thu
hotiselu which I Hiient my childhood days,
nlij- yet mainly the old barn In which we
boys used te play, but Just us much that
beaullful black walnut tree back lu the yard,
tall, graceful and wldu spreading, which
ivenly-llve years nge I planted there. Just
as much that grand old upnlu tree, nldcrlhan
the house itself, iu whose branches we used
te climb und jiercli and enjoy such rich feasts
orthe nevcr-lulllng fruit It Is these I want
te kce iigalu us much as the house Itself.
They belong te the idea or home. Without
them the houie would no longer be heuie.f And
scarcely less Integrally associated thorewilli
Is the memory of fully a dozen ether trees in
the neighborhood, which hud grown up with
me, Knew me wen, were my inemis wlieiu i
c.m never forget, whom I shall ever leve as
belonging te and helping te constitute my
boyhood's home.
We want iiieiu such trce-lrlemls and com
panions forthe hearts of our boys mid girls
te cluster around und cling te In every yard
nud garden, en overy roadside, anil iu uverv
Held, of our land, that this country may Imj Imj Imj
come mero and mere truly the home of its
Inhabitants that they may cle.ive tell, leve It,
lle and labor, ami If need be, light ami tlie
for it
a .merali.v wiini.KseMi: lixni'.cisi:.
Finally, the planting und culture of trees,
particularly by the young. Is a direct
training of their characters in u direc
tion sorely necded, and uever mere se
than at the present lime. Toe much el
the training gained by uxporlence In society
and business is ene that makes ler narrow
ness nud selllshness. It Is work for self,
quick prullts for self, ull for self, no matter
what lHcomes of ethers. It is most fatal in
its elleet en the character, tlwurlliig, ixiison ixiisen
big, killing, nil that Is generous, noble and
C'hrlstlike. Tree planting is net only ler
self. It is meru for ethers. 11 Is mett ter the
bcnellt of future generations. It Is n morally
wholesome anil much uexsletl exercise. Let
them therefere diligently plant and re for
trees, and learn from It that we have duties
te our lellew-iueti that must lj performed,
and duties vvoevve te thu lutureas well as thu
present; and that these duticsaru net Irk
some hut pleasant, and this work net useless
nut iue most nonie ami tii.in In l unit can be
done. If for no ether licncJlt than as a lessen
in practicing the golden rule te de unto
ethers as wu would have them tle unto us,
"Arber Day" Is te be hailed and encour
aged ; as a step tow arils that higher civ iliz.i iliz.i
tleu where this rule shall be paramount ;
and a preparation for thu perlecllen el
heaven where leve nud service el ethers is
the highest bliss ami thu glory of man ami
angels alike.
I'EKSOHAIj.
Jr Get i.ii'h weaknesi is ler s'psrmlnt
tsiudy.
Makiii S.miih, of Philadelphia, is
dangerously ill from pneumonia, at liKjiemti
in ruiiaucipma.
Hen. Geewjk II. I'k.viuxie.v, the new
minister. te Germany, was banqueted at Cin
cinnati Tliursday niglit by friends of both
pelilic.il parties.
Caitai.v Jehn IS. Munti.ii, editor nml
proprietor of tliu lleruhl nml Tureli, ut
llugerstew ii, Mil., tiled ul his liiiiue In that
city en Thursday.
J. Snui.iMii Moiiien, of Nebraska, Iho
well known Drme"rati) xlilici.iu, is the
author orthe Institution of "Arber I lav."
KonaterA. I). Marian, of t'eatesvllle, vvhe
visited Millersvillu yesterday, originated
the Joint resolution establishing Iho day in
Pennsylvania.
hT. Gov. III. At K has Im?ch presented ,v
I. Judsen ltai-clay, of Wheeler, Alabama,
with a case of pigeon-holes, which was for
many ycirs the pniierty of Themas Jeller
son. Itstoedlu Mr. Jellursen's Ix'd-ch.iiii.
lierat Mniiticolle, and the depository of Ins
most private and saensl p.tx;iH.
JasiksGouiien !ti;NM;rr Killed for Ma
deira, via llcrmudu, en the Nuuieima, mi
Ihurstlay. lie was accompanied by Travis
Van Isurcn und William P. Douglass, of New
Yerk, ami Kichard Peters ami J. P. (.ruiiil,
of Philadelphia, thu latter of whom gees te
St Petersburg as the Jlci aid's envoy.
Ili:Kciii:usays: " I don't think that tee
many Uenfedurate brigadiers have obtained
niyt.iiiiieiicr.iie erigaiuers n.ive enutluetl
ice. A Confetlcrale brigadier is Justus geed
a Nerthern brigadier. The heuth h:ts
me back Inte the Union, the war Is ever,
oince,
as
ceme
these men s.iy they want immcu, anil w hen
.Southern men eiler assistmce, and say thev
want te Imj peaceable, they won't let them.'
SKcmrrAitvIiAMAit appeared en horseback
yesierti.ty in vvasmngten, te tne great asten
isiimcui ei us citizens, uver tne eriimar
Inary
te all
suit el black, In which he Is familiar te nil
Wusliiugteuiuiis, he wero u heavy blue beav
er ovciee.it ami en his head n high silk hat,
while In his hand he carried a silk umbrella,
with which he occasionally guve his Moetl
an admonitory tliuiiip.
I'rFkldrutlal Mate IHniivra.
Though thu new executive did net tap that
keg el whisky sent hhu by an adnilierlaat tall,
he Is credited with the geed tuste te fellow the
time honored custom et having thu most cholce
llriuurs at atate dinners. A nnttut honor nheuld
ccrtulnlybu given Dufrv's 1'uiie Malt Vhiskkv
net only en account of Its absolute purity, but
because or Its vitlun In the pieventlen and cure
of pneumonia, consumption, malaria, pnlino pnline
nary dlsicu&csund fevers of all kinds Incident te
thu White Ilouxe locality. It makes thu weak
sUengund keeps the btreng lu the eiijeyment of
their strength. Sold everywhere; Ham per bot
tle. ai'JSVTAt, XOTJCti.S.
trilllum SrcKneir, 1SI Fajetln St., llallhimre.
Mil., says : " I bcllevu ' Faverltu Iteinedy Is v
geed medicine. It Is doing mu mero geed than
anything I ever tried, and 1 huvu tried almost
every'thlng, fur I am u suirercr I loin dyaiiupslii."
While "Fuveilte Hcmcdy"l8 a speclllu lu i-ieiu-nch
and Illadder diseases, it Is eijually valuablu
In cases of billens dividers, Constipation of thu
Ilewels, and ull thu class of His apparently In
separable from the cuustitutletis of women.
upitu-lmeed&w
JUlnie I'ieT
Somebody In wilting of this pie, has called it
" the devil's compound." The eflects of long
Indulgence In It uie such as sometimes warrant
this tltlu. Thu tee hisiity consumer of mince
net only of dyspepsia, but ulse of kidney dis
ease. DU. lltAZlKH'a UOOT ltlTTEIlS,
Fmzler's Heet Hitters nre net a dram shop
beverage, but uie strictly medicinal lu every
hciise. They act strongly upon thu Liver und
Kidneys, keep the bun els open and regular,
cleanse the bleed and system of everv Impurity.
Sold by druggist, II. bold by II. It. Ceehmn,
137 and l&l North Huceii street. (4)
FILES I 1'ILESll PILES!!!
Surucuie fur llllnd, lllcedlnguud Itching l'lles.
Onu box has cured the worst (sues of 'M years'
standing. Ne one need suirer live inlniitcs alter
using William's Indian l'lle Ointment. Hub
sorbs tumors, ulluys Itching, nets us poultice,
gives InsUiut Tellef. Prenuied only ler Piles,
itching of thu privutu parts, nothing else. Weld
by druggists uud mulled en lecclpl of price, 1.
Sold by 11. 11. Cochran, 137 and IM Neitli Queen
street. (1)
HHOWN'8 IIUUSEUOLD PANACEA.
Is the most effect IvePaln Destroyer In thu win Id.
Will most surely quicken thu bleed whether
lukcn Internally or applied externally, and
thereby mero certainly ItELIEVK PAIN,
whether cbronle or ncutc, than any ether pain
alleviator, and it Is warranted deuble the
strength of uny similar prcnaraUen.
Sore
,L
Klienld
be In every family. A teaspoeuful et the Panaeeji
In u tninbler of b' t water sweetened, If nn.
nirreii.j iukcii w, oedtlme, will DUE Alt Ul' A
COLD. 15 cents u bottle.
tnSl-lydM.W.PAw
AFTElt ALL. OTIIEItS FaTl7
COiBULT
DR. LOBB,
NO. 319 North r Jfteent h street, below Callewhlll
street. Philadelphia. Ciues nil Secret Diseases
of both sezeii. 0' wen ty Years Kxperlenee. Cen.
aulUiUnn by mall. NEIIVOU8 ANDBl'ECIAL
D18E.hh8. New bee? Just out. Boud fur It.
1'rlce 60c. Hours 11 a. m. till S p. ui., and 7 p. in.
telup.iu. HOOKBFUEETOTirEAlVLIcrED,
lfii'4rlyd4w
pie una snnear luxuries is guru, sooner or luter,
te be mulcted with dyspepsia, lint dyspepsia
will yield te llreuu'a lien Illtters, the gieat lien
Ionic. Mr. mid Mm l'addeck, of KuHlDelavnn,
Vls.. both testify Hint (lilsiiiedlpliinnuii iii.,m
ii cures pain in me side, jiacK or liowels,
jninai, jtneumaiMin, Twitbache nnd AL
ACHEM, nnd Is The Great ltcllever of I'ul
" lIUOWN'a HOUSEHOLD l'ANAOKA
MXDICAL.
xy ennITdyVremkdy.
$500,000 a Year.
Htateinriit ntllm Anirrlntn, National and United
PbUcnaiid Cnnaitn Kxirm Ceuiwtnlr,
, Trey, New Yerk.
ThnstreiiKth oflletnnlnynotluhriiiiiltltiidc.
nerltilur nmln luileii ilects. Tliritn were etc
Incut et AttriiRth.but hcrnrvcr-rnlllnitri"tirru
lay In the Kelf control mid discipline of llmnau
soldiers, iiixcipiinii 11 1 ii
tliu uiindiirriil im-niiliur iiem
IlUclpllne It In the vrry soul te nil
"velumn." llr. IJencdlcl,rTny, U 11 veteran
IIOPBT'HM'll vy IIIW TUIU
In tliOPxnieM tiiislness. "Thirty-Ultra yearn,"
he said te your reporter, " I've hIikmI ut this
lck." It Is tlie discipline or ) curs or ex perlimre
which irlM'K I1I111 Ilia portion lie holds In the
liust mid t-slr-em el thene tlnve gri'iit coipem-
HetiN. "Wn Tiuvfi 11 ttttnlnuflrt of
'p),iin n jeur,
nicu liardlv a
mid I'vnbenii ubnctit from till olllce liarill
month In all thai time, tiltheimti I must eenfrm
Unit iiiiiny times I've worked hcru Mhvn miner-
lint grrat palu, for 1 have been troubled nil my
life with lillletmiit'KS and dyspepsia. Myaystcm
has bccoineKti reduced and weak that 1 hnd no
appetite, and niy dlgrntleu wholly dUert'cred. I
have tiled various remedies, but almost two
vein nge I happened te lilt upon llr. Kennedy's
VAVOIUTi: II!mK1Y. After using only one
bottle or se, I began te feci stienger lu every
way. liiOKieaitiimcitiiy iiim eccn wiuiiiiy in
gi-Mleit, but Hilsseems te regtilnte It perfectly.
I nave, sir. great laiiniu nr. nennruys r avuii
lTi: ItHMKIir. I linvu bought and given n great
ileal eflt liilliii tienr around here t t hoe. Yeu
knew, wlinliavuue money te buy medicine or
liny kind, for Iheiu ure a great many troubled
with bilious diseases nndmiliereii without aid.
1 always keep FAVOHITK ItKJIKDY lu the
lioiiee. I consider It tliu best nicelelnu for thu
bleed In tlieiiiaiket. Well, I must attend te UiU
matter ler the wrMern imit of the city, hay,
en tell thu Docter 1 nm coming down te nomi
nal topcelilm lu Align!. I want te knew lilin."
1 left thevctcran, still at his pest, rejoicing In
health and gmtelul te Dr. Kennedy.
nprle-lnidced.tw
rltON MITTKIIH.
mm unit no vr w wr rut n "
it n it it e OWWWWNKW
nun mm i n wwww nnn
ii n it n e e ww ww nS
mm u n oe w w n km
HkhS
it nmt m w i
II II ltl (INN K
ii mm e ti n w it
II it It O O N NN
11 U U OO N NN
ii tttt rrrr ntn uitn Rsssa
T T V. H R 5 "
Ii T T KB HUB K8S8-
i! 1 T KKB It U B8SS
Thl imuilelnH. enmlilnlnir Iren with nure veee
..... ; . .--T---v - ,..,- , ,.,,,
6'
Inliln Oiti1r. nuleklv. and cenililetelv Cull
i-..',r.. :;..... i '..;...-t.uu,..' ,. t . i,t .
nu ctiiiiiuuteiy uhce
WKAKNKS8, IMI'UUK III.UOD, ClUI.l.s and
FKVKUnitdNKlMtAI.GIA.
Ily rapid unit therutigh assimilation with thu
bleed It reuclies uvury part of the Byslem, purl
lies and unrlche thu blissl, stiengtlieui the
muscles and nerves, and tones and Invigorates
the flystem :
A linu Appetlrer llest tonic known.
It will emu the worst case of Dyspepsia, iu iu
meving all dlKticwiIng Hymptems, sneh as Tat.
Ing thu Keud, llelelilug, lleut In thu Sleiimcli,
lleartbum, etc. . ,
Thu only Iren medicine that will net blacken
or Injitni the teeth.
It Is Invaluable for diseases peculiar te women,
and te (Ut persons w he lead sedentary lives.
An unfailing remedy fur discuses of the Liver
and Kldnuyn.
I'nrurtiiu uiiflnrlrii. from ttiHeffeeLef nverwnrk.
nervous tieubles, Itws of appetite, or debility,
nx)crlu'iiuiulck icllef and renewed encigy by
IU use.
Itdees neteiuiBH Headache or nnslutu Cuustl-
tmtleu OI'llKIt Iren medicines du,
It IslliDtmlyjiieparatleii of Iren that causes
no ItiltirfeilM
leeeuimeiul It nn the bes
euccis. l-fiyHieiuiin aim uiuKgisin
II iih the bent. Trv It.
Thu uenuliiti has Trade Mark and crossed red
lines un wrapper. TuUii no ether. Made only by
I1U0WN CIIKMICAL CO.,
11ALT1MOB, BID.
sepUllydilyw
-ia'EusiTh.
ELY'S CREAM BALM
-CI'KKS
COLDINHKAD, CATAKItll.UOSKCOI.D.HAy
KUVKII, DhArNKSS, HKADACIIE.
Kuhv tii uf. I'llt-e, Kic. I.ly Ilre.'H., Oiege
.V V., U.S. A.
Hay Fever.
I.I.VS Ci;i:.JI II.M..M Cleanser the Head,
Alleys Iiitlammalleu, Heals the Seles, ItcMeres
Hie hi'imei of Tacit) and Smell. A tpilelc and
positive cine, flueeiits ul Drugglsls. tl tents
by mall, legtsleietl. Send ler ciictilar. Sample
liy mall, 111 cents.
ELY BROTHERS,
matin tfdAw DiusglsU, Oswego, N". Y.
CONhUMITION 1 1IAV13 A POSITIVE
irmetly for the ubevu disease ; by lis uee
Iiensandrt of cases e( the worst kind and of long
titaiiilliig have been cured. Indted.ite strentr Is
my rallli in lisemcuey mai i win huiiu i n u
lleTTI.K' t UKK, together Ith a vul liable tica
tlsu en this disease le uuy bUlTeier. Cihe ex
piesand 1. O. addless.
Dlt. T. A. M.OUU.M,
niitsiideelACmw lei J'eail bU, N. 1'.
Gl KAY'H Sl'KCll'lU MKDICINR
T The tiieat Kngllith Kemedy. An tinlalllng
emu for liiiMiluney und ull Diseases tuatlollew
bass of Memery, Culveial Lussltiidu, I'ldu In
the H-tcW, Dimness of Vision, I'rcmuttirn Old
Age, and many ether dlsciu-CH that lead te In
sanity el CoiiHiimptlenaiid u l'lematiirulliuve.
full pat tlciilars iu our pamphlet, which wu ile-stiuteM-ud
In'uby iiihII te every' oie. Tills Spe
cillumedlclnuls sold by nil druggists ut 11 per
package-, or six package for K, or will lmsent
Irts:! by mall en receipt of thu money, by ad
dressing thu agent.
11. II. COCHltAN, Druggleole Agent,
Sim. 137 ami 13 North yue- meet, ljincastcr,
l'u.
On acceiintnt ceuntei felts, we have adejded
the Vellow Wrapper ; thu only genuine.
THE UUAV MEDlCINK CO ,
buffalo. N. V.
CJAKK
.Sl'llK AND hpi:i;i)Y cuhk.
l,J
KUITUIIE. VAIUCH.'KLK(ind HrECIAL DlSKAHBS
of either sex. Why be humbugged by quacks,
when yeiiean llndln Dr. vvngtitlhe only into.
ulaii Piiysiciah in Philadelphia who makes a
sK-elalty of the abuve diseases uud cckks them t
CuItKlUABATKlID. Aijvicb fbkk, day una even
ing. Strangers can be treated and return home
thu sumo day. Olllees private.
Dlt. W. 11. W1UGHT,
Ne. 'ill North NlnUi street, above Itace,
I'. O. box 7J. Philadelphia,
lan'il-lydAw
M
ANHOOD KESTOKKO.
IlKMEOr FRKK.
A victim of Youthful liniirudencM causing I'm-
miituru Decay, .Nervous Debility, Lest Manhood,
Ac, having tried in vain every known remedy,
hai discovered 11 BlnipluBelf cure, which he will
send MIKE te ma icuewauiicrcre,
AddresH.
1. 11. itr.r.v r.,
4.1 Chatham BU, New Yerk City
JlG-Iyeed41yw
JllSVELLAXEO US.
TON'T HE SATISFIED WITH AN
IN-
J fei ler article. MILLEIl'S IIOltAX SOAI'
the best
EMOvTvU
Dlt. A.J. llEltll
llaaiemeved his ofllce fiem seutliwest corner
l'llucu unit Chestnut utieels, lu Ids new resi
dence, senlliw est coiner Orange und Mulberry
btrct U. leb'Jii lmd
JUHTerENEI), A LA HOE INVOICE OF
PUIME 1'EllhIAN INSECT l'OWDElt,
Utiuninteed Quality. New well known as tliu
most eltlcleut Insect destiev er. ForHale at
HUllLEY'h DIHIU hTOUE.
Ne. it West King HI.
C"ATIi AT HErGAnT'8OU) WINE
hTOUE
-FOlt-
LISTON'S EXTRACT OF BEEF.
VIMK8T IN THE WOULD.
Eslubllshcd.KSa. II. E. SLAYMAKElt, Agt..
fubl7-tld Ne. 19 East King St.
FOH A GOOD-FITTING SIIIUT WITH
Patent Facings, Haud-Weiked Eyelets,
inaduef giMRl mateiialniid pilcu
ONLY ONE DOLLAIt.
Alse new Htylea Working Mil lis, spring ntylea
llesu and Fiirnlslilng UecmIs ler Ladle's, Gents
und Misses. All cheaper than ever.
Please call and examine tie tern you buy.
UENItY IIEC1ITOLD,
Ne. SJ North Queen Street.
1'. 8. Cholce building Lets, Mone and Maud
for sale.
R EMOVAU
Dr. Leugaker has lemeved from Nu. 13
East Walnut street, Lancaster, l'a., te Lebanon,
l'a., opjiesllo the postelllce, will bu ut the Key.
stene Iluuse, Ninth Queen street, Lancaster,
l'u., every Monday and Friday afternoons, tun
o'clock, p. 111. uiS0-2wd
N1
OTIOE TO TUESPASSEHS AND
OUNNEU8. All persons nre hereby for.
bidden te tiespuss en uny of the lands of the
Cornwall or Speedwell estates, In Lebanon nnd
Lancaster counties, whether Inclesed orunln erunln orunln
clesed, either for the puniose of sheeting or Ash
ing, us the law will bu rigidly onfeiced agulust
idltruspasslug en said lands of the undersigned
ufler this notice.
WM. COLEMAN FIIEKMAN,
It. l'EUCY ALDEN,
EDWAUD V. FUEEMAN,
Attorney for 11. W. Celeman's lietiu.
eetU-tfdAw
rplIIS l'AI'UK IS PK1NTED
WITH
J. K. WRIGHT &. CO.'S
INK,
Fairmont Ink Works, 2Clh and l'enn'i Avtnne
lenS-ly FIIILADELVUIA, l'A.
aAfiriTTiya,
- "
BHFNEMAN.
pLINN,.fc
''
1
FLINN
The Sotieen le new at baud for furnlahbig and reflttln? Homee.
Nothing adds mero te the furnishing of a houeo tbun bandBeme GAS
FIXTURES. A Bhert time uire Elegunt Glmndollero wero u luxury that
only the wealthy could enjoy, new the prices tire be low that FINE
GOODS are within the reach of ull. In the way of Common Goods
we have qulte a stock of elegunt Patterns, but net the prevailing
utyle, for which we will net rofuBe any roasenublo effer.
PLUMBING and GAS-FITTING promptly utlonded te. HEATING
by Het Ah or Steam. Estlmatca given en all kinds of work.
FLINN & BRENEMAN'S
GREAT STOVE
Ne. 1 52 North Queen St.
L'LUTJIINU.
pels
-. UL0VK8,
Te keep tliu hands warm
MITTENH,
Te keep the hand warm.
B0UK8,
Te keep thu feet warm.
KAll MUKFfci,
Te keep the ears wunn.
MUKITiKISN,
Te keui thu netk warm.
UKDKKWKAIld
Te keep thu body waim.
Ge te ERISMAN'S,
Ne. 17 WK8T KINO 8TIIKET.
s
iPIllNO CI.OTHIMi.
SPBIM CLOTHII&
-AT-
Burger & Sutten's.
Wuuiuellcjliig eiii sI'IMNU stuck of lit udy
Made CLOTHING
AT VERY LOW PRICE.
A cull will convince you that this Is the place
tesecuiea genuine bargain. e de net eiler
one or two lets as a ball, but w e eiler our en tliu
stcck at pi lies aw uy down.
Meu'b BuBiueaa Suita irern 87 te $12.
Men's Dresa Suits from 812 te $1G.
Yeuth'8 Scheel Suits from 84.60 te $7.
Youth's Dress Suits from 88 te $12.
Ohlldren's Short Pants Suits from $3
te $7.
These uic all uiirewn uiak and we de nut he he
llate teiriiaianleu the 111, stvle and weikmun-
shlp. Ourmottels i.UODI.OODS AND LOW
I'll ICES.
MERCHANT TAILORS AND CLOTHIERS,
Ne. 24 Centre Square,
LANCAHTEK. I'A.
ttavi: Ytir si.kn tiiesji;
$10.00, $12.00 & $15.00
ALL WOOL SUITINGS,
WHICH WE AKE MAKING TO OKDEIl?
If net, it is te your Interest te call til enie und
teellieni; they aie ceilalnlj Icadeis which :iu
stele can viiiul.
NOT ONLY TIIE-sh (.OOD-,
llut All tioeils sold bv us ate Kai the.tpei,
TAIilNti QIALITY I.S'lO ONMDEIIATIUN,
than uiu be leund chew hcie.
FOIl GOOD tiOODs tell LOW l'liltE-'
FOIt STILISH FITS' Feil WELL MADE
I.AKMKNTV
Wcleitaluly DeTuke thu Hi -I I'lace
IMMENSE LINE
-OF-
SPRING CLOTHING.
Gent's Furnishing Goods,
TRUNKS, VALISES, &c, &a, &c,
NOW CUMING IN. CALL AT ONU'.
-AT-
NEW STORE.
COltNEU CENTItE
QUEEN bT.
.StM'AltE AND N011T11
, LANC AST Elt.
FLOVll A sit rr.Kn.
Q
lOSlE AND SEE AIE
1IAVIMI Ol'KNEU A
Heur, Feed, Grain, Hay & Straw
WAREHOUSE,
At Nes. 35 and 37 Market street,
(Formerly occupied by HurryA.DIUer), I would
r,snii'tfullv itilerm mv Irlendri mid ltie tmldlu
lu general that I am new piepared te ttiruNh at
the shortest nollte uud LOWEVT I'USblHLK
l'KICES,
Fleur, Feed, Grain,
Hay and Straw.
Alse, constantly en hand a fully supply of
Machinery, Cylinder, Linseed, Crude and
Machlnery Olla,
WHOLESALE AND IIETAIL.
HENRY DRAOHBAR.
apiJ lineed
SVVVTAVLES.
OUPEUIOK
SPECTACLES
AND-
EYE-GLASSES.
Mlcroscejies, Field Glasses, llaieuictcrs, Tele,
scopes, Magla Lanterns, Thermometers, Druw.
lug Instruments, Philosophical uud Chemical
Apparatus. List nud Descriptions of our Ten
Catalogues sent FltEE en application.
QUEEN &CO.
NO. 9H CHESTNUT ST.
1'IULADELI'HIA
mara-lyajtw
s
AINT-ltAEIIAEL WINE
INFORMATION.
TlieHuliiUltunhucl Wlneli.LsadelleleiiH itaveur
and Is drunk in the principal cities of Uusslu,
tlermuiiv.
Aeriu aim cieuiu
America, limit
llntuln, India, nud se en. Thu tiuuuiity ex ported
annually Is sutltclent proof of Its stability and
staying powers, while lur the real connoisseur
thore Is no wine thut can be considered Its
llrltutn, India, nud se en
Thu tiuiiutlty ex ported
suite rler.
ij-TlieSalnt-ltaphael Wine Company, Valence,
Department of thu Droiue (Fraucu.)
H. E. SLAYMAKER,
flS-tfd Ne. 2J EAST KING 6TUEET.
HSU (I BMIirS
jtc.
ww
& BRENEMAN,
STOHC.
Lancaster, Pa.
VlMTIttXtl.
nKMOVAIi.
I. McCAULEY,
IBRCHAHT TAILOR,
HAS IIEMONKD FUOM
NO. I4G EAST KING STREET
NO. 134 NORTH QUEEN STREET,
(liuchmlllfi's lliilldbig),
Wheiu hu has en hand
ONE OF 1 UK FINEST LINESOF
FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC GOODS
FOIl THE HI'IUNU TItADE
EVEU SHOWN IN THIS CITY.
Cull und lake u leek at the goods and you will
1m sure, le have your ineasnie taken lern butt,
iil-tld
F
INlJTAII.OHlN'i.
1885. SPRING 1885.
H. GERHART,
FINETAILORING.
Ihe bulged aiid Ctmlcest Asseitinent of
FINE WOOLENS
IN '1 HI. CITY OF LANC ASThlt.
All the Latest Neveltlcti in
FANCY SUITING.
A CHOICE LINE OF
SPRING OVERCOATING.
THE VEKY 1JKST WOltlvMANSIllP.
I'llces in suit till und all goods wnrinnted Ha
iepieenleil at lilt new stoic,
Ne.43 North Queen St.
(OI'l'OSITE THE I'OSTOFFK E.)
H. GERHART.
B
.VKOAINS IN CLOTHING.
APRIL.
EVERY DAY BRINGS SOME
THING NEW!
10-DAY WE DISPLWTUE
LAHGrST, HANDSOMEST, LOff-l'llICEl) STOCK
-OF
CLOTHING
-lOU
SPRING WEIR
IN LANCA'sTLH.
ALL OUR OWN MAKE,
OFSL'l'EUIOK WOUKMA.VSII11', AND AN EX
CELLENT CUT til' VUANTEED.
W hat Is the value of n Hue piece of material It
It Is spoiled I u the making, und the sewing se
peer thut it rips with thu tlrst vveiiilugT Ne
such boning lieu1. We huve never had ntem-
plalullllielll rtltllll.V-bEVVKDCI.OTIIINO.
ALL THE NICEbT AND NEWEST THINGS
IN
Ready-Made Clothing for Spring,
Can be found here, and the prices se low that
they uie lu reach et eveiy one.
EXAMINE OUK STOt'K OF SCHOOL SUITS
FOK HOYS.
MYERS & RATHFON,
LEADING LANCAbTEIt CI.OTHIEUH,
NO. 12 BAST KINO STREET,
LANCASTEH. I'A.
L.
UANSMAN ,t 11UO.
NEW THINGS DAILY.
Our CUSTOM DEPAIITMENT TKADE is
opening for the seuseu vi Ith meie vim than ever.
OUIt l'Ol'ULAIl 1'UICE FOIl
SUITS & TROUSERS
Areuppicclateil. Yeu will de yoiirseirinlus yeiirseirinlus yoiirseirinlus
tlee if you de net leek at the NU1T8 we ure
Makfnj; te Meastnti ut fluce.m.nil, 15.(ie, l8,eu,
r.Utiundriv.iii). All Newest Choice Uoeds and
made exactly right le your eidei.
READY-MADE CLOTHING.
As vveuiemiiiiufactutiugull our Iteudy.Mude
Men's and Hey's ClethbiK, uud buy ter cash only,
vte uie emtbled te save veu lieui 11 te SO per
tent.
OUIt l'Ol'ULAIl ALL WOOL
MEN'S CORKSCREW SUIT,
I.V ULACIv AND llKOWN, FOlt M10.0O, MEU
CHANT TAILOlllNU MAKE.
L. GrAIfSM & BRO,
Fashlonable Mei chant Tnilers uud Clothiers,
Nes. 66-68 NORTH QUEEN ST.,
(llhjhteu theBouthnestCer. of Oiauge Btieet,)
LANCAKTEH, PA.
43rNet counectvd with any ether tlethlnu
steie lu the city.