-c- -. -"-"S" ' t -'V rjji-.i "V-CSetj-ww -W-i , -V-'-'J' J V T3 riXr-- n W . rtJ"V. VI? , 'T V tM ' i -A b m " "?-l ftiMligeit& Jm I Ik Velumu XVIL-Ne. 307! CLOTMNO. CORDIAL INVITATION! Is given everybody w'je comes te Lancaster, en business or otherwise, te call at Williamson & Fester's antl sue tliepicparutiensthcvarc making ler the Fall Trade. Seme Jew cases of CLOTHING & HATS have alieady comes In, :t:nl In order te make roeinlor:ill that U ceuiing OUK M'MMF.R STOCK has been overhauled and PRICES REDUCED te such figures u- te force everything. the Kale of neatly & ONE-PRICE HOUSE, 36-38 EAST KING STREET, LANCASTER. 1A. s .JFIU.NO OPENING H. GERHART'S New Tailoring EstahMHt, Ne. 6 East King Street. I have just completed fitting up one of the Finest Tailoring EnkiblHhmcnts te liu leund In tlih state, and am new prepared te show my customers asteck of goods ler the SPRING TRADE. which for quality, style ami variety et Patterns has never hern equaled in this city. 1 will keep and sell no goods which 1 cannot recommend te my customers, no matter hew low In price. All t;oeds warranted as represented, and prices as low as the lowest, at Ne. 6 East King Street, Next Doer te the New Yerk Stere. H. GERHART. N KV STOCK OP CMITHIKI1 SPRING 1881, D. B. Hestcttcr & Sen's, Ne. 24 CENTRE SQUARE. Having matte unusual efforts te In Ing before the public a tine, stylish and well made stock el READY-MADE GL0TH1G, we are new prepared te show t'.tem ene of the most carelully selected stocks of Clothing in this city, ut the lowest Cash Prices. MEN'S, 1J0YS' ANI YOUTHS' CLOTHING! IN GREAT VARIETY. Piece Goods et the Most Stylish Designs and at prices within ilic reach of all jtGivc us a call . D. B. Hostetter & Sen, 24 CENTRE SQUARE, e-lyd LANCASTER, PA. asthich uKO'a jutrnRiistsamNT. k STIUCU ItROTHKKS' LANCASTER BAZAAR, 13 EAST KING STREET. Welmvc made great reductions in every one of our departments iimlvcniB closing out our stock of Tirei Hats aid Bennets AT A GREAT SACRIFICE. Lace Trimmed Hats, one let at 23c. Anether let ei fine nuts ut euc. Bargains in Onibric Miartru Ribbons, Nes. 9, 12, 16, 22, 40, nt i5c, 30c. 3Sc. 41c and fiOe a yard. Large Shetland Shawls at "'. Fine Linen Dusters ai $1. HOOP-SKIKTS. 15 springs, 5 tapes 40c 30 springs, Stapes 45c 25 springs, 5 tapes Mc 20 springs, tape lrent GOc LADIES' UNDERWEAR CHEAP. CORSETS A SPECIALTY. PARASOLS LESS THAN COST. Mesquite Net Canopies $2, including all Fixtures Hamburg Edgings and Inscrtlngs in Swiss, l.nwn Hiiu AaltisOOK. Deep Flouncing at 50c, 75c, SI and $1.25 a yard. Laces of all kin-;s at greatly reduced prices. Lace Cellars for ladies and children in large variety, lrem 10a le 13.50 apiece. Lace Mils and Lisle Gloves greatly reduced te close eHt the stock. Childi,' Pink and Blue Ilesc, knit, seamles. fast colors, 2 pair ler 25c. ASTBICHBRO'S. VLOTHLNU. T 11K ItUSlKKSS OF SELLING CLOTHING OAK HALL Has grown te its present greatness because these points are faithfully observed': IN MAKING. Te Get the Best Material. Te Spenge it Properly. Te Cut it Fashionably. Te Sew it Thoroughly. The Steclr of MEN'S CLOTHING Is always kept very lull In assortment, even te the end et the season. ... .,,, .. In BOYS' CLOTHING the Styles and Trimmings are net approached by any Clothing Heuse in the Country. . .... , A cordial welcome is ready for all who come, and we expect te sell only when people arc satisfied In every respect. WAffAIAKBf& BROW, OAK HALL, Sixth and Market Sts., PHILADELPHIA. THE LARGEST CLOTHING HOUSE IN AMERICA. "1I.OTHING I Anveiic having neglected nrputeiructling will de well te call at CENTRE HALL, Ne. 12 MYERS & The LARGEST CLOTHING HOUSE IN THE STATE OUTSIDE OK PHILADELPHIA. We are ettering our Stock et Spring and Summer Goods At i educed prices, in order te make room ler our coming Kail Stock. If you want a Ready Made Suit you can be suited for a very small amount of money. it you prefer being measured and having a Suk made te order yen can find no better stock te select lrem and atsuch prices as will astonish you. Indeed the prices are se low that no one need go about in a shabby suit these days. Just think of It, we can furnish you with COAT, PANTS AND TEST te keep cool In, ler the the enormous amount of THREE DOLLARS. Yes, for a man le wear, and a big man tee. Call and see and be suited and save money. We employ the best experi enced Cutters, and we can guarantce satisfaction in every particular. MYERS & RATHFON. CENTRE HALT., Xe. 12 EAST KlSti STREET, LANCASTER, PENVA. JtRY "I IVLKR, IMMVKKS & UUItSTI BLAGUES! BLACK CASUS! LADIES, we are offering extra inducements in BLACK SILKS AND BLACK CASH MKItK?. We invite examination et these goods berere purchasing, us we tire confident we can save you money. We are also offering extra Inducements In a tew FANCY DRESS GOODS Te cle-e out. We aNe open en FRIDAY an Elegant Line or COLORED SILKS, In all I he Choice New Shades. Alse NEW DRESS GOODS In Oinbie Stripes and PluliR Mesquite Canopies at Lewest Prices. -:e GIVLER, BOWERS & HURST'S Dry Goods and Carpet Heuse, 25 EAST KING STREET, IRON TltON HITTERS. IRON BITTERS! A TRUE TONIO. IRON BITTERS arc highlyrecemmcndcd ter all diseases requiring e certain and effi cient tonic; especially INDIGESTION, DYSPEPSIA, INTERMITTENT FEVERS, WANT OP APPE TITE, LOSS OF STRENGTH, LACK OF ENERGY, &C. It enriches the bleed, strengthens the mnscles, anil gives new lila te the nerves. It acts like a charm en the digestive organs, removing all dyspeptic symptoms, such as Tasting the Feed, Belching, Heat in the Stomach, Heartburn etc. The only Iren Preparation that will net ulacken the teeth or give headache. Sold by all druggists. Write ter the ABC Boek, 32 pp. et useful and amusing reading sent free. BROWN CHEMICAL COMPANY, 123-lydAw Fer Sale at COCHRAN'S DRUG street, Lancaster. jioeriNu, ee. TTKATKKS AND BANUES. JOHN L. -CONTRACTOR FOR- Slate Reefing. M Boeing, Tin Boeing, PLUMBING AND GAS FITTING. Nes. 11, 13 & 15 EAST ORANGE STREET, LANCASTER, PA. faprS-tfd MISCHLLANHO VH. KLLMUTft LA1UKS COLLEGE M intiYe h it II. Princess Louise. Feundcraitd President. ThaRichtRev.I.lIcllmutU. D. D.. 11. C. L., Lord Bishop or Huren, ran x - ..w, - - .. .. spacious buildings, beautifully situated in a most healthy locality, about four Hours by rail from Niagara Falls, and en one of the principal through routes between the- East and west. The G rounds comprise 140 acres. The aim et the Founder et this college Is te provide the high- est intellectual and practically useful education. est l'KOTn-Sl'ANT nrlncinlcs. as the only KKENCH is the language spoken In the Tuition Fees, including the whole ceurse of isthenics. Drawing and Painting, use of Piane 300 per annum. A reduction et one-half ter the daughters et clergymen. Fer " circulars " and lull particulars address MISS CLINTON, Lady Principal Hellmuth Ladles' College, Lon - Len - uv.if V'humiv, nuuuu. AT IN SELLING. Te Get the Cash. Te Have One Price. Te Pay Back Meney if Unsuited. Te Guarantee the Goods'. SV W.OTHING! themselves a SPRING OK SUMMER SUIT EAST KING STREET. RATHFON. UOOlHt. HIVLKK, BOWERS Si H DUST I LANCASTER, PA. 111TTHRS. TKON HITTERS. SURE APPETISER. BALTIMORE, MD. STORE, 137 and 130 North Queen 1 HN HOOFS KEPAIKED AND FAINTED. AENOLD, .... . .- .. ".. . ,, Y rm opens w cunesuay, eepu zi. nauuseme ami The whole system Is based upon the sound. solid basis for the right formation et character college. M USIC a specialty. Beard. lAundrv and English, the Anclentand Mi edern Languages. Cal and Libiary, Medical Attendance and Medicine. ,-...--. LANCASTER, PA., FRIDAY AUGUST 26. 1881. Hancastet JjntelKgencer. FRIDAY KVEN1NG, AUG. 28, 1881. My Wedding Tour. I was only seventeen when Charlie mar ried roe, and I wrote myself for the first time Mrs. Charles Vail, jr., and saw the initials of the same emblazoned en the end of my new Saratoga trunk, when we started for our wedding journey. My wedding journey ! I can speak of it calmly new, but the time was' when it harrowed up my inmost soul. Te this day Charlie becomes wroth when it is mentioned, and says it is my '" blamed imagination ;" but he knows, and I knew well, that that is only one of these convenient little loop holes through which big masculinity can crawl en emergency ; and the facts remain ing unchanged and indisputable, I shall defy Charlie and state them te the world. Imagine then, reader or listener, who ever you may be, that the last silken train had swept itself out of Trinity chapel, and the last notes of the inevitable " Wedding March " shuddered themselves out of the groaning organ, and that Charlie and I are married. Alse, that the kissing and crying ever is achieved, and the voices of my hus band's sisters and my maiden aunts, hail ing down blessings en our beads, are happily lest in distance that the only sound we hear is the rattle aud rear et au express train eastward bound, and I am looking out into the golden noonday, watching the fields and reads and villages and woodlands race past us, and sweep back iute a stream like running water. There we sat, two blissful young feels but it isn't of our bliss or our foolishness either that I am going te tell you only of the singular adveuture of our wedding tour. Charlie hadn't told me where we were te go, and I rather liked being left i:i ignor ance, knowing no mere than that we were being swept away te seme little paradise of our own in might be te an island of the Ilesperidcs or Crusoe's kingdom, or Eden itself. We stepped at a geed many stations by the way that looked anything but pardisical ; but I saw everything through a glass, rosily, as I sat thcre demute and mute by Charlie's side. The shadows were growing short, and it was just neon when we stepped at soma " ville " or ether, whose long, low, strag gling buildings, crowding clese upon the track, aud the bread, dusty village street, branching oil" at right angles, are photo graphed upon my memory. Net for any thing instrinsically remarkable ; there were only a geed many teams and farm-wagons, and epcu carriages, and light carryalls standing about, with lazy horses rubbing their noses against old worm-eaten pests, under the row of drooping green trees, and plenty of people' en the platform, crowding together with greetings aud goed-bys ; it was a commonplace, every day picture enough, and net even a pratty one, except in fragments. There was a general exodus from the car, and a rush dinnerward, as we supposed, toward the swinging sign of some ' house " or ether down the lazy little cenntry street ; and Charlie, looking at his watch, said it was twelve o'clock and didn't I want seme lunch ? Of ceurse I didn't, but of course he said I must have it, and immediately started up. He wouldn't be five minutes, he said, aud 1 mustn't meve till he came back. I was te guard our two seats aud let no one come nigh them, and above all, I was te sit still, and net be led away by any possible warnings te change cars. We'rc going through," Charlie remarked, "se just keep the scats and don't pay any at tcntien." I nodded ebedience, and Mr. Vail marched out of the car, leaving me te peer after him in the crowd and catch the last glimpse of his straw hat vanishing down the street. I watched the crowd, wheu Charlie was out of sight, aud mused and wondered ever the faces, and built up all sorts of dicamy speculations upon thorn, as ene does in a crowd when they have nothing better te think of. Presently the deer banged open, and the voice of seme unseen functionary shouted, "Change airs for Bes ten 1" Everybody began te scramble their bags and bundles and caues together, and thcre was a rush among the few who remained my fellew-passegcrs. I watched them go without emotion, and merely settled my self mere comfortably for the solitary jour ney through which Charlie had indicated wondering a little where its terminus might be, but in no wise disturbed aud anxious thereat. I stared out at the pee ple for five minutes longer at least se said the fat-faced clock in the "ladies' room " opposite mv window, though I made it fifty, at least my mental calculation and then the deer swung open again. This time a head projected iute the car, reared, "All out !" evidently at me and van ished again. " I won't get out," I replied, defying the empty air. Charlie told me te sit still, and I'm going te. Oh, Charlie ! why in the world don't you ceme back 1" But no Charlie came te answer me, ana I began te stare out in the crowd with rather mere anxious eyes, and te grew a little het and uneasy, and te think, with certain unpleasant thrills running down my back, what would beceme of me if the train should start and Charlie should net ceme back at all ! At this awful point in mv meditations the locomotive cave vent te au unearthly screech, which I took for a premonitory symptom of departure, and I was se terrified that I started up from my seat just as the little deer swung back for the third time te admit of a last warning, like that of Friar Bacen's brazen head. This time the face reappeared en a bier, sliarrsrv suit of clothes some Bix feet high, and was a grim, net te say irate, visage. " Change cars, miss," said the person gruffly. "I told you te de se twice be fore !" "lam te sit still," I replied meekly. "I'm going through." I thought this was the right thing te say because Charlie had said it ; but it didn't have the right effect. " Change cans then there's the Bosten train ever there. This car runs back te New Yerk." I simplystared at the person in a dogged way that he seemed te take ill. "Cernel" he exclaimed, waxing im patient. " Yeu can't sit there all day, you knew. Where de you want te go ?' ' I I don't knew," I stammered. " I was told te sit still, and I I must wait till the person comes back." The man stared back at me new with interest. " Where' your ticket?" said he, extending a dirty hand. T tiimn't wnf. it" I answered in a meek and conciliating tone. " My Char at least, the gentleman who is with me line wn4- (linm Ttttl ' "The gentleman! Pretty fellow he must be I Told you te sit still, did he ?" I made no reply te this unwarrantable lack of inspect in referring te my absent lord, but drew myself up and looked severely out of the window. ' Well, you can't go back te New Yerk,' ' observed my tormenter, summarily. " The best thinsr veu can de is te get out aud leek for your gentleman, miss." Saying which he jerked my bag down from the I "'', "! w vfr"", """ """ 1 1 Charley bad inverted, back into its place, rack, turned the opposite seat, which and, by a species of moral suasion, caused me te pick up my shawls, parasol, etc., and fellow him in abject submission, te the deer. "New where did the gentleman go ?" he demanded, as he handed me out en the platform. " He went te get me some lunch," I re plied, almost ready at this crisis todis tedis grace my bridehoed and cry. " And told you te sit still, did he ? Well, you stand right here and keep a lookout for him. There's the Bosten train ever thcre, gees in fifteen minutes, and he can't get into it without you see ing him, if he ain't inside already ; and my advice is, stick fast te him if you find him, for he must need looking after." With which remarkable words the man set down my bag, and winked at a by standcr. "What's the row?" asked the perseu thus invited te participate in the enjoy ment of my woes. Theu they whispered about me, I suppose and everybody steed and stared at me. Poof little bride ! Then I steed, holding fast my parasol, with a shawl en my arm, my. own small satchel en the ether, and Charlie's bigger one at my feet, feeling like a very "lene lern critter" indeed. There steed three men in a knot, contem plating me, and any quautity of the some species coming and going, who all looked at mc as they passed, and then turned round aud stared again aud there was no Charlie visible in all the range of surround ing country. Dire thoughts began te be born within me, aud te turn me cold and damp with extreme horror ; the nightmare of my infancy " being lest " came back upon me, and crushed my seventeen years and the new dignity of Mrs. Charles Vail, jr., with a fell sweep. What was te be come of me ? Suppose there had been an accidcut, aud Charlie knocked down and fearfully mangled, or that he bad just van ished away, as one occasionally hears of re spectable gentlemen having done, and never would appear again or be heard of at all ; supposing I were just te stand thcre waiting, and the train shrieking away in the distance, and night coming en, antl all these strange men staring and- whisper ing? Pretty seen I should begin te cry, for I couldn't stand it much longer ; aud here I began te feel for my pocket book as a slight rcsource. I dived te the utmost corners of my pockets before I remembered that I had confided it te Charlie, with wifely duty, at the very eutset of our wed ding trip. At t'lis alarming discovery a cold mois ture brek eupen my frame. A night passed under the lee of the depet, crouched among my little possessions, new loomed before me unless I could deposit the same possessions or pawn my diamond ring and my geld bracelets for a niirht's lodging and a ticket back te New Yerk. I suppose the horror depicted en my countenance was a sufficient challenge for inquiry. I don't knew what an uxtreme it must have reached, but somebody appeared te find it moving, for a benevolent voice presently stinted my ears : " Are you waiting for anybody, miss ?" I turned around with a gasp of alarm, which subsided a little, however, when I met an elderly face, spectacled and be nign in the extreme. " Excuse me mi.s," said the old gentle man iu a sympathetic tone, " are yen waiting for anyoue ?" " I I yes, sir I'm waiting for " I came te a dead step. " Fer Charlie" should I say. " My husband" was a step beyond utterance just new. I only turned scarlet, choked and twisted the handle of my bag in silence. " Is there anything I can de for you ?" "1 don't knew where te go !" I burst out involuntarily. " They told me te change cars and I didn't extract te, and I don't knew what te de." My new friend looked bewildered aud came a step nearer, as he inquired, in a solemnly lowered veice : "Are you alene ?" " Ne, no," I said very quickly under my breath. " Who is with you ?" asked he, with a kind of confidential compassion that a lit teo confused mc. I did net understand it. " My a a gentleman," I faltered out. " He went out te get something and he told me te sit still and net meve ; aud a man came aud made me change cars and I don't knew what cars we were te take and and I I don't see him any where." Here I choked and foil te biting my lips and winking my two eyes hard te wink the teais down. "That train's ageing back te New Yerk," said ene of the last arrivals, grill ing. "Going through te Bosten, was you ?" "Ideu't knew where I was going," I answered very shortly. " A gcntlemau !" repeated my friend, suddenly. By this time two mere men had drawn near te listen. "Your lather?" "Ne." "Brether, then?" very mysteriously. "N-ae." I began te get very red and uncomfort able, aud te wish that they wouldn't stare se. " Where arc you going, my dear ?"asked the first Samaritan, after a solemn pause of seme minutes. "I don't knew," I answered faintly. " He didn't tell me ; he just said, when he went te get me some lunch, that I wasn't te meve if the man said te change cars, for we were going through ; and I told the roan se, but he made me change." " Let me see your ticket ?" sa:d the old gcntleman, feelingly. He had a compassienato way et looking at me ever his spectacles ; and he looked queerer still when I answered faintly " He's get it and my money and eh, why don't he ceme 1" Here I cast loose all ceremony and burst into tears. " Oh, don't cry new," said the old gen tleman, soothingly. " Don't new I it'll be all right you'll be taken care of. Where did he your friend where did hs go ? which way." " I don't knew," I sobbed from behind my handkerchief. " Went te get some lunch, did he say ? Well, new, can't you tell me what sort of a looking person he was, and per haps we can find him ? Was he young or old ?" " Yeung," I murmured, still behind a barrier of cambric. "W-with a yellow moustache, and g-gray clothes and a straw hat." " Pretty bad business !" ene of the men muttered aside te another. " Sharp fcl low '." responded a second. And -then there was some antistrophes of " What's the matter?" "It's a shame!" "Left her, did he ?" from a small crowd that had by this time started up around me. " Well, new, just ceme here and sit down, said my old gentleman paternally gatheiing up my bag ; " and compe.e yourself, my dear, and we'll see what can be done. JJen't cry, it'll only nurry. you, and won't de any geed, you knew. There, that's right I" Feri wiped my eyes with the remnant of a sob pulled my veil down, and was turning te fellow him when, beheld ! as I swept the landscape o'er with one last leek of desperation their appeared Charlie- gray clothes, and straw hat, and yellow moustache, and all, coming from the dim distance, with a brown paper parcel under each arm. "There he is?" I shrieked, dropping bag and parasol in my ecstasy and rush ing down the platform with extended arms. "There he is ! Oh. call him, some body tell him I'm here ! Make him leek this way !" " Where ? which ? where is he ?" cried half-a-dozen men quite excitedly. "Him in the straw hat, with the bun dles ? Hallea, sir ! Hallea ! Step him !" and the small boys and one man started in pursuit. Peer Charlie ! There he came, hurrying along in our direction, rather swiftly, it is true, when my four companions gave chase. And just as they uplifted their voices, and just as Charlie's eyes, sweep ing the surrounding scene appeared te light upon them just then did the loco motive behind which we had been sitting fifteen minutes before, and which manner of trains, chese its time te set up a shriek and a violent ringing of the bell, and go puffing off en its way back te New Yerk. And Charlie first stared wild, and then turned and chased the locomotive ; and the three small boys aud the man chased him, rending the air with shouts of " Step him !" 'But Charlie couldn't keep up with the train very long, and the impotency of his efforts seemed te break upon him suddenly after he had run himself very het and damp, and shed all the het buus, from his brown paper parcel for twenty yards along the track. He turned and faced his pur suers like a man at bay, and figuratively speaking, they all fell upon him. "Step there! where are you going? Come back after your lady, you scamp ! Ain't you ashamed of yourself?" shouted the small ;boy, iu ncstasy. " Wanted te run away, did you? Didu't de it that time, old fellow !" ' What tha deuce de you want ?" said Charlie, fiercely. "Where's Sarah?" Where's my wife?" "There she is !" reared a dezeu voices, with appropriate action of as many un -washed hands. "Ain't get rid of her se easy yet !" I will draw a decorous veil ever the em brace that followed and the compliments exchanged by the populace, whs evinced the wildest joy at what was supposed te be the discomfiture of villainy. I will merely ebserve that the whistle of the Bosten train cut short our little scene, and that I was hauled en the last car amid the cheers of the bystanders, greatly multi plied since Charlie's appearance en the scene, and speeded en my way by a part ing word from ene benevolent porsenago te " keep a tight eye en my young man, for lie warn't te be trusted as far as you could see him !" Alse that Charlie shed bank notes as well as buns in the excite ment of the chase, and that my point d'AIcncen parasol with an agate handle, the wedding gift of my beloved Arabella, is probably inarching around Blankville at this very hour, poised in the Lisle thread hand of seme village hello. Indigestion. The main cause et nervousness is indiges- tien. and that is caused by weaKness of the stomach. Ne one can have sound nerves and geed health without using ttep Hitters te strengthen the stomach, purify the bleed anil keep the liver and kidneys active, te carry off all the poisonous and waste matter el the svs tem. See ether column. aul5-2wd&w Jeseph Durrlnlurger, Broadway, Buffalo was induced by his brother e try Themas' Ec lectric Oil for a sprained ankle ; mid with halt a dozen applications lie was enabled te walk round again all right. Fer sale at II. It. Coch ran's drug store. 1:17 North Queen street, Lan caster. Kidney Complaint Cured. B. Turner, Rochester, N. Y., writes : ' I have been ter everu year subject te serious dis order of the kidnevs, and often unable te at tend te business:! procured your Burdock Bleed Bitters and was relieved before half a bottle was used. 1 Intend te continue, as 1 reel cenlldent that they will entirely curtfme." Price $1. Fer sale at II. B. Cochran's drug store, i:S7 North Queen street, Lancaster. Mr. Riffensteln, , Bosten, Mass., writes: " Your Spring Blessem has cured mc of dys pepsia, of four (4) years standing. I have re gained my normal anpetite, can sleep well and feci like a new man." Price 00 cents. Fer sale at II. B. Cochran's Drug Stere, 137 North Queen street, Lancaster. JJSWJH.BRS. VII.VEK JKWJSLKV. LACE PINS, EAR RINGS AND BRACELETS, NECK CHAINS AND HAIR PINS. STUDS, SLEEVE BUTTONS AND SCARF PINS OF SILVER. AUUUSTUS KIIOAUS, Ne. 20 East King Street, Lancaster, Pa HOOKS AN1 SfJL-llONKRi. "ajKW AND CIIOIUR STATIONERY, NEW BOOKS AND MAGAZINES, L. M. FLYNN'S, Ne. 42 WKST KING STREET. TOIIN I'.AEK'S SONS. SCHOOL BOOKS ASU Scheel Supplies, AT T1IK LOWEST PRICES, te all our customers. Wholesale buyers supplied at liberal rates. At the bookstore of JOM BAEBS SOUS, 15 and 17 NORTH QUEEN STREET, LANCASTER, 1A. COAJj. B. It. MARTIN, Wholesale and Retail Dealer in all kinds of LUMBER AND COAL. M f&rd : Xe. 420 North Water and Prince streets above Lemen. Lancaster. nS-lyd ' C0H0 & WILEY, 3SO NORTH WATER ST., lanctuter, fte., Wholesale and Retail Dealers In LUMBER AND GOAL. Connection With the Telephonic exchange. Krancli Ofllce : Ne. 20 CENTRE SQUARE. lODiawyu r1 TO REILLY & KELLER -TOE- GOOD, CLEAN FAMILY COAL, Farmers and ethers in want Ot Snperiet Manure will lind It te their advantagete call. vnl IT'irrfufiiinr Vikft. ) Office. 20WI East Chestnut street. aijl7-lt Price Tw Certs. XMtr GOODS, VNDKMWXAS, C. M KTZGER. CARD HAUGHMAN'3 NEW CHEAP STORE Have the Largest and Cheapest Stock et Black French Cashmeres In the city, bought at an Importer Auc tion Sale in New Yerk. BLACK CASHMERE3 at 121c BLACK CASHMERES at 20e. BLACK CASHMERES at 25e. BLACK CASHMERES at 37c. BLACK CASHMERES at 45c. BLACK CASHMERES at 50c. BLACK CASHMERES at 60c. BLACK CASHMERES at 75c. BLACK CASHMERES at 87c. BLACK CASHMERES at $1.00. BLACK CASHMERES at $1.12. BLACK CASHMERES at $1.25. METZGER, BARD& HAUGHMAN'S NEW CHEAP STORE, Ne. 43 WKST KING STREET, Between the Cooper Heuse and Serrel Herse Hetel, LANCASTER, PA. N KXT 1HIOK TO TI1K tWUirr UOU3E. FAHNESTOCK! DRESS GOODS REDUCED. DRESS GOODS REDUCED. DRESS GOODS REDUCED. DRESS GOODS REDUCED. We have reduced our Immense Stock et DRESS GOODS FOR THE BALANCE OF THE SEASON. DRESS GOODS at 10c., were sold at 20c. ami 25c.t KHe. nnd inc., that UMBRELLAS AMD PARASOLS REDUCED. FAHNESTOCK'S, Next Doer te Court Heuse. D UK&S GOODS, c. HAGER &15KOTHER Have still a Large Line et DRESS GOODS, In all qualities, including Choicest Styles of the Season. many ANe of the Black and Colored Silk. GINGHAMS, LAWNS, CHINTZES AND WHITE GOODS. HOSIERY AND GLOVES, All et which will lie sold at Very Lew Prices te Reduce Stock. S! FECIAL.! Fer JULY and AUGUST we have made a Special Lew Price for CARPETS, or which we have a Handsome Line of the Newest Patterns in BODY BRUSSELS, TAPESTRY BRUSSELS. EXTRA SUPER INGRAIN, WORSTED, WOOL AND HALL AND STAIR CARPET WITH BORDERS. Alse a Una of Carpets ut 23, 31, 37 and 50c. OIL CLOTHS AND MATTINGS Will be sold en the same low basis. We invite examination. HAGER & BROTHER. w ALL PA1KIC,"4C. WALL PAPER, WALLPAPER. Our Stock includes all the Choice Spring Patterns in EMBOSSED AND PLAIN GILT SATINS, FLATS, BLANKS, CEILING DKCO- RATIONS, FRIEZES, DADOS AND BORDERS. Te reduce stock we will make a SPECIAL LOW PRICE. We Invite examination. HAGER & BROTHER. ziyuess, JtO. fllBK PLACE reK geed curreKs J. Fresh Sugars, Pnre Syrnps, Best Teas, at A.Z.KINGWALT-S Old Wine and Linner Stere. I febllvl Ne. V6 West King Street. ill w jt -,1 2 4?5 -231 a it I XI -i V Si A I 3J
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers