Ik svXWvCX' i, Volume XVI-Ne. 217. LANCASTER, PA., THUKSDAY MAY 13, 1880 TER31S. THE DAILYINTELLIGENCER, rtJIILISHED EVERY EVENING, BY STEINMAN & HENSEL, intelligencer Building, Southwest Cerner of tenire square. Tuk Daily Intellieenceb In lurnishcd te subscribers in tlic City of Lancaster and sur rounding towns. accessible by Railroad anil Daily Stage Lines ut Tex Cents 1'er Week, payable te the Carriers, weekly. By Mail, $5 a year in advance ; otherwise, $ti. Kntered at the pest eJliccat Lancaster, Pa., as t-ecend class mail matter. S-TI)c STEAM JOB PRINTING DEPART DEPART MKNTet this establishment posses-.-, unsur passed facilities for the execution of all kinds of 1'Iain ami Fancv Printing. COAL. CLOTUIXO. 1880. 1880. RATHV0N& FISHER, Price Twe Cents. Hancaster InteHtgntccr. PRACTICAL FASHIONABLE TAIIOKS. B. B. MAUTIS, Wholesale and Retail Dealer in all kinds of LUMBER AND COAL. S-Yard: Ne. 420 North Water and Prince streets, above Lemen, Lancaster. n3-iyd COAL! COAL! COAL! COAL! Ceal of the Kent Quality put up expressly ter family use, and at the low est market prices. TRY A SAMPLE TON. S- YAKI 150 SOUTH "WATER ST. msO-lyd PHILIP SCIIUM, SON & CO. JUST RECEIVED A 1'IXi; LOT OF HALED HAY ANDSTHAW,at M. F. STEIGERWALT & SON'S, DEALERS IN FLOUR, GRAIN AND COAL, 2.H NORTH WATER STREET. ta-AVestern Fleur a Specialty. fs27-lyd " TOHO & WILEY," :.-.( XORTll WATlZlt ST., IsuicLstr,; J'a., Wholesale anil Retail Dealer in LUMBER AND COAL. A1m, Contractor and liuilders. Estimates made ami contracts undertaken en all kinds of buildings. Branch Oflicc : Ne. :i NORTH DUKE ST. tchSs-lyd COAL! - - - COAL ! ! iO TO GORRECHT & CO., Fer Geed and Cheap Ceal. Yard Harri-burg Pike. Otlice iij East Chestnut Street, SPRING AND SUMMER CLOTHS, CASSIMERES, COATINGS, SUITINGS, VESTINGS, PANTINGS. TROUSERINGS, OVERCOATINGS, Made te order for Men and JSev in the prevail ing styles, and satisfaction guaranteed. Alse, Ready-Made Clothing ! AND ALL KINDS OF FUKNTSniNG GOODS At the Old Price before the Advance, at RATHVON & FISHER'S Practical Tailoring Establishment, THURSDAY EVENING, MAY 13, 1880. "Yes, aunt ; I only took the butter tLat I with trembling finpers tore open the sec- S lptr. in flip rlicli " I .i .. , "..'; r . . eau envelope, which was also addressed te was left in the dish. "Half a pound! Yeu go without butter r a xxraal- " for a week And I ran out again, and into the lane as fast as I could," continued Dorethy, apparently undismayed by this threat, " ler fear I might lese ceurace : and sten. ping suddenly before him, I put the bread in his hand, and said, I am se sorry for VOU ' ' nnfl ttlrnnrl i-r rim .,.... 1 t. seized my hand and kissed it " (Miss Le- as rieiA .is miirlrie " and said, These are the first kind words I ve heard since I came te this beastly country. Tell me your name, little one.' Dorethy Walde.' said I. -Doretlm Wal de,' he repeated, ' I shall never forget it ; ' and he raised his hat and went away. Dear aunt, had you been in my place, would you net have done as I did?" "1?" cried Aunt Lerinda "T earn.' 101 NORTH QUEEN STKEET. Iill-lmil SPRING OPEM 9-1 P. v. gerrecht, Agt, .I.B.RILEY. XV. A. KELLER. IIOOHS AXD STATJOXERT. "M"KV STATIONERY! New, Plain and Fancy STATIONERY. Alse, Velvet and East lake PICTURE FRAMES AND EASELS. AT L. M. F LYNN'S 00K AM) STATIONERY STOKE, Ne. 42 WEST KING STBEET. H. GERHART'S Tailoring Establishment, MONDAY, APRIL 5. Having fust returned from the New Yerk Woolen .Market. I am new prepared te exhibit one of the Best Selected block.-, of WOOLENS OI'KCUL NOTICE! AKCHEET ! A FIXE LINE OF ARCHERY GOODS, JUST RECEIVED. AMU FOR SALE AT THE HOOK STOKE OF JOII BAER'S SONS, 15 and 17 NORTH QUEEN STREET, LANCASTER, PA. EUMXITVReI rei: the ww er fU 1 Ever brought te this city, bcitef Nene but the very WALTER A. HEINITSH ENGLISH, FRENCH AMERICAN FABRICS, in all the Leading Styles. Pi ices as low as the lowest, and all goods warranted as represent ed, at H. GERHART'S, Ne. 51 North Queen Street. Spring Opening 24 CENTRE SQUARE. XVc have fei sale for the coming seasons Immense Stock of INSECTS TUK New Glass Reller INSULATOR OX ALL FURNITURE. TKY THEM 15 Eat King Street. Over High & Martin's, CARPETS. H. S. SHIRK'S CARPET HALL, 202 WEST KING STREET, Has the Largest and Cheapest Stock et all kinds of CARPETS in Lancaster. Over 100 Pieces of Brussels en hand, as low as 81.00 and upwards. Carpets made te order at short notice. Will also pay 10 cents ter Extra Carpet Hags. 49-Givc us a trial. 202 WKST KINO STKEET. EOUXDERS AXD MACH1X1STS. T ANCASTEK BOILER MANUFACTORY, SHOP ON PLUM STREET, OrresiTBiHE Locemotivb Works. The subscriber continues te manufacture BOILERS AND sSTEAM ENGINES, Fer Tanning and ether purposes ; Furnace Twlcrs, Bellows Pipes, Sheet-iron Werk, and Blacksniithing generally. 49 Jobbing promptly attended te. aug!8-lyd JOHN BEST. MARBLE WORKS. WE P. FRATLEY'S MONUMENTAL MARBLE WORKS 758 Nertn y ueen Street, Lancaster, Pa. MONUMENTS. HEAD AND FOOT STONES, GARDEN STATU ARY, CEMETERY LOTS ENCLOSED, Ac. All work guaranteed and satisfaction given n every particular. N. B. Remember, works at the extreme end f North Queen street. m301 Mmm Eiii of our own manufacture, which comprises the Latest anil Most STYLISH DESIGNS. Come and sec our NEW GOODS MERCHANT TAMI, which is larger and composed of the best styles te be leund in the city. D. B. Hostetter & Sen, 24 CENTRE SQUARE. 215-lyd LANCASTER.!' A OIET DRA WLXOS. AUTHOICIZED MY THE COMMON wcaltli of Ky., and the fairest in the world 20th Popular Monthly Drawing OF TUB COMMONWEALTH DISTRIBUTION CO. At Macaulcy's Theatre, in the City of Louis ville, en MONDAY, MAY 31st, 1880. Thec Drawings, authorized by act et the Legislature et IN?.!, and sustained bvall the courts of Kentucky occur regularly en the last day of every month (Sundays excepted), and aie supervised by prominent citizens el th State. The management call attention te the grana opportunity preM'iited of obtaining, ter only $2, anv of the following prizes 1 prize $3'),Wfi 1 prize m.iji)0 1 prize 5,oe(i 10 prizes $1,000 each 10,000 20 prizes .ri00 each lo.eou 100 prizes, $100 each 10,oue 200 prizes no each lo.eou G00 prizes 20 each 12 000 1000 prizes 10 each 10,000 9 prizes 300 each, approximation prizes 2,700 9 prizes 200 each, " " 1 800 9 prizes 100 each, " " x) 1,900 prizes $112,400 Whole tlckels,$2; half tickets. $1 ; 27 tickets $50; 55 tickets. $100. All applications for club rates should be made te tlie home office. Full list of drawing published in Louisville Courier-Journal and New Yerk Herald and mailed te all tlcketrbelders. ltemit money by mail or express. Address Ji. M. Board Beard MAN. Courier-Journal Building, Leu lsville, Ky., or at 807 and 309 Broadway. New Yerk. rftt-TuTli&SJtw A Slice or Bread and lintter. "Dorethy Dorethy "Walde !" screamed Miss Lerinda Cress (' cress by name and cress by nature," the children yes, and many of the grown-ups of the neighbor hood declared her), as she neunced unen the huge leaf of bread which she had taken S? m ,,ani aud from tlm r.vAn find rmt , !,, i.! e nnda wess became crock only half an hour age, justbefere she turned her straight-up and-down back en tne kitchen, te stalk te the garret after "that idle hussy. Melly "the maid-of-all-work "who had been twice as long as she ought te have been making the beds there." 1 said the huge leaf. I should have said half the huge leaf, for only that proportion of the newly baked bread remained. " Dor-e-thy Wal-do-e-o !" again scream ed Miss Cress, in an ascending scale, with an ominous tremolo en the last note. ; I cs, aunt," replied a sweet, fresh young voice ; and a pretty young girl came from the garden, with a basket of cherry-red currants in her hand. A tiny thing- she was, with round, dim pled, rosy face, innocent child-like blue gray eyes, and fair hair, some short tresses et which had escaped from the braid into which they had been bound, and were making a delightful use of their freedom by curling in the most charming manner about the low frank blew and little pink tipped cars. About "sweet sixteen," a stranger would have pi oneunccd her'; but Delly, as her youthful companions, much te the disgust of her Aunt Lerinda, called her, was elder than that by a year anda-half. An orphan at the age el twelve, she had been left te the care of the only relative she knew, her mother's elder sister a woman hard in speech and manners, and anything but soft in heart. This maiden lady soured irrevocably ou her twenty-fourth birthday, which should have also been her wedding day ; but at the very moment she was fas tening the orange blossoms in her hair, had come the news that her be trothed had eloped with the girl friend she had chosen for her biide inaid. Lerinda tore the bridal wreath into fragments and scattered it te the winds; never mentioned the false pair from that hour? banished forever all the womanly grace and tenderness she had possessed (truth te tell, she had never possessed much), and became the hardest worker of her sex that ever worked upon a farm. In a man's beets, coat and hat, early and late, het or cold, wet or dry, with set mouth, lowering brew and silent lips, she toiled side by .side with her sturdy old father, until the day he was struck down by the pitiless sun and died a few heuis after died just in time te be saved the pang of hearing that his youngest and favorite daughter was lying at the point of death, widowed and friendless, in a uir uw.iy ciby. xenuua euneu nernuiier if she wept for him, none saw her pro moted a man who had been long in his employment te the position she used her self te occupy, and started for her sister's bed.-ide. "When she returned te Feinville again, she brought dear little fair-haired, soft -eyed Dorethy with her, and some of her neighbors fancied that since that time she had been a shade less stern ; but if she had been, it was se slight a shade that it was almost impossible te peiceive it. True, she did less out-of-deer work, and devoted part of the time thus saved te teaching her niece te sew and cook and churn, and ether like accomplishments ; but never were the lessens accompanied by an approving smile or kindly word, much less a loving kiss. Even te the gentle, winning child, Lerinda Cress remained a cold stern woman. But Dorethy, Ged bless her ! was se sunnv in disposition that the stern ways and dark face of her aunt could net cloud her young life. And though shut out from that inflexible wo man's heart, she found the doers of all ether hearts wide open te her. The deirs. the cats, the hens, the chickens, the horses, the cows, the calves, the very geese, re garded her with adoration. The farm laborers blessed her pretty face whenever she came among them ; and as for Melly poer,hard-wokcd Melly ! she would have kissed the gre tnd the little feet trod upon. What wonder, the i, that Dan llewtlL the young sui-veye.-, who lived half a mi e away, in the old stone cottage, and whom she had known from the very first day of her arrival in Fcrnville (when he, then a tall, bright-faced boy of lifteen, passing her aunt's gate, and seeing the sad-looking little girl, in her black dress, standing by it, silently offered her the prettiest white rabbit she had ever seen a rabbit he had been coaxing Abner Brown for a month past te sell him, and which he new parted with without another thought, at the sight of these lovely tearful eyes and that sweet wistful face) what wonder, I say, that he " thought of her by day, and dreamed of her by night?" Hut te go back. Dorethy came smiling into the kitchen, her lips and checks as red as the currants she carried ; but the smile faded away when she met her aunt's irate gaze. " Did you cut this leaf, aud then leave it here in this het room te dry te a chip ?" demanded Miss Cress ; and then she added, emphatically, without waiting for an answer : " But of course you did. Ne one else would have dared te de it. And hew dare you, knowing that I never allow bread te be cut in my house until it is at least a day old ?" "I am very sorry, aunt," began Delly, " but he looked se hungry !" "He!" screamed her aunt, regard ing her with a leek of horror. " Yeu gave it away, then ! And te a ' he' ! A tramp, I've no doubt, who will come back some night, rob the house, and murder us all." "Please, aunt," entreated the young girl, "don't be se angry. He wasn't a tramp ; indeed he wasn't ; but a hand some young fellow with long golden hair " "A wig," snarled Miss Cress. "and the most beautiful blue eyes," Delly went en, "I ever saw in my life. And he wasn't near the house. And he didu't ask for anything. Oh, de listen, aunt, while I tell you all about it. I was en my knees in the path, picking up some currants I had let fall, when I saw him, through the hole in the hedge Brownie's calf made the ether day, coming slowly up up the lane " "If you had been looking at what you were doing you wouldn't have seen him," said her grim listener. " He didn't sec me, of course," said Delly, "or I shouldn't have looked at him se intently. And, eh, Aunt Lerinda, it was just like looking at a picture !'' "Stuff!" said Miss Cress. "He was se handsome, and se dusty, and se shabby, peer fellow ! And he sat down under the old oak tree, took a crust of bread out of his pocket, and began te eat it as though he was very, very hungry. That went te my heart." " Rubbish !'' said her aunt. "And I get up softly, and ran into the house, and cut a slice " "A slice!. Great grief!" interrupted Aunt Lerinda. "A piece big eueugh for the breakfast of a whole family." "And I Twittered it." "Yeu buttered it?" meals te a strange man en the public high way? I let a foreigner who called my country 'a beastly country' kiss my hand? .Ne, indeed; he never would have kissed my hand." "Perhaps net," said Delly, with a mo mentary twinkle in her eyes ; and then she added, pleadingly, " But don't be angrv any longer, aunt. I'll make another leaf e'f uread right away." " But that won't bring back what you've wasted," said her inflexible relative. "A pretty wife you'd be for a man who hasn't a dollar te call his own, giving away bread by the leaf and butter" by the pound," (Miss Cress had retained at least one womanly trait a slight tendency te exag geration, "te all the thieves and tramps who happen te come along." " Oh, aunt ! " exclaimed her niece he. looked like a prince." "A prince !" with a snort of scorn. "Your head is turned by that trashy poet ry you read. A prince ! A likely story in shabby clothes, aud nibbling a crust ! A disguised burglar, in my opinion. Buf burglar or no burglar," she continued, it must be confessed with some irrelevancy, "you shall never marry a man who hasn't a dollar te call his own, with my consent, and if ever you marry without my consent, you make a liar of your mother in her grave." "Aunt, I have told you again and again," said Dorethy, firmlv but srcnfclv. " that I never would. I have net forgot ten my mother's last commands." "Then don't be enceurariii? that Daniel Hewell te meet you every tack and turn ; and if you must have some one te walk home from church with you can go and come by myself, thank heaven ! there's Abner Brown, atid he has a thousand dol lars in the bank." " But, auut, I've known Dan se long, and he is away se much, that when he is at home I feel as though I mean, I wouldn't like te hint his feelings.'" "Bah!" retorted the grim maiden. "Men have no feelings. And as for knowing him a long time, I think" you've known him quite long enough." "But if he had the thousand dollars. instead of Abner Brown?" questioned Delly, with mere spirit than she had yet shown. "That would be in his favor, certainly. But he hasn't, and never will have, with that old father and mother depending upon him. A thousand dollars, indeed ! "Where would he get it ? The soenor you forget Daniel Hewell, and the sooner Daniel Hewell puts you out of his head, the bet ter." " There's no need for you te talk se loud, aunt," said the little girl, indig nantly ; and then, startled by the leek tf malicious triumph ou her aunt's face, Dorethy looked around, just in time te receive a farewell bow from Daniel Hew ell as he turned from the deer. "He heard me," said Miss Cress. "I'm glad he did ; 'twill save trouble." " Oh, Aunt Lerinda, hew can you be se cruel?" said peer Delly, bunting into tears. A year and a half passed away, during which, owing te his frequent absences and Miss Lerinda's watchlul care, Delly and her lever had met but three or four times. " It's hard," said the young man, en the last of these occasions, te knew that I cannot ask your aunt for your hand be cause I have net a thousand dollars of mv own, when I knew that there is plenty of room aim love ana everything ler you at the old stone cottage. Oh, Delly, if you would but brave her anger, hew gladly I'd make you my wife this moment !" "Dan,'' interrupted the girl, with dewy eyes, it isn't her anger though I feel that it would be most ungrateful in me te provoke it but the premiso my methir made for me in her death -bed. And if it had net been for that premise, Dan, you niust remember, I should have been the inmate of an orphan asylum, and we would never have met." Adding, the sunshine coming back again, " Don't you see hew much worse things could have been?" " Yeu arc right, my darling, as you al ways are," said Dau ; "but thiuk it may be years before I have ' the beud.' " " I can wait, Dan. Yes" with a mis chievous little laugh "I can wait until I am as old as Aunt Lerinda." "Ged forbid, love !" he said, catching her in his arms aud kissing her sweet lips. "And new geed-by ; I am going away again te-morrow, te be gene I can net tell you hew long. Oh, Delly, Heaven speed the time when a little wife shall be wait ing with the old father and mother at the stone cottage te welcome me home !" She raised herself en tiptoe, clasped his face between her two tiny hands, gazed into his eyes with a wealth of tenderness in her own, and said, ""Who knows? Geed fortune may at this very moment be en its way te us." And the very next day, January 3, 1880, as Dorethy, with a crimson shawl thrown ever her head, was out in the garden scat tering crumbs en the snow for the spar rows, she heard the jingle of sleigh bells, and Farmer Beers came down the lane with a sled-lead of weed. "Mernin', Miss Dorethy," he called, as he reined up at the back gate. " Here's a letter for you. They thought it might be important at the office, and se, kuewin' hew keerful I be, and that I was cemin' this way, they asked me te fetch it te you." And the old man tossed the letter ever the hedge, into the girl's outstretched hands, and drove off. "A letter for me !" said Delly, in tones of the greatest amazement. "Why, I never received a letter before in all my life !" Then she turned it about and in spected it curiously. The envelope was a common yellow one, and bore the printed address of a law firm in an adjoining city, as well as her own address, written in a plain legal hand. " Who can it be from ?" wondered Delly ; aud then opened it, te find her question but partly answered. A sheet of blue paper and a smaller-envelope were enclosed. The paper contained, in the same hand which had addressed the letter, these lines ; " 3fiss DoretJiy Walde : "Dear Madam: We send you the ac companying check, in compliance with orders received te that effect from a client in Europe, whose interests in this country we represent. Please acknowledge re ceipt. Your obedient servants, "FlND&PltOTE." "January, 1, 1880." Delly's lovely eyes opened te their widest extent. " A check !" she exclaimed, and her, but in a different, mere elegant hand ; and sure enough there was a check a c7ieckfer a thousand dollars, payable te the order of Miss Dorethy Walde. And en a slip of paper which had kept it company were these werds: "Iu payment for a snee a very large slice of bread and but ter. And that's all the young girl ever knew about it. Fer one moment she steed dazed with joy aud astonishment. The next she thought of Dan. Perhaps he had net started yet. Hew could she get te him through the deep snow ? Sleigh bells again. Far mer Beers ceminsr back without the weed. bhe ran into the lane. "Oh, de take me with you !"' she cried te the great surprise of the honest old fellow. "I must sec Dan Mr. Hewell, Inean. I must see him as seen as possible.'' " Jump right in my dear," said the old man, " and I'll have you at the stone cot tage in a jiffy." . Away they went, the gray mare making excellent time for her ; and as they near ed the house, Delly caught sight of Dan just leaving it "Dan! Dan!" she called, her clear young voice ringing en the cold air, and inatiiy waved her crimson shawl. Dan turned, saw the bright flag and her sweet face below it, and came bounding ever the snow iu time te receive her in his arms as she jumped from the sled. " Yeu couldn't no, net if you guessed for ever," she said, half crying and half laughing "you couldn't guess what brought me here this morning." "Whatever it was, Heaven bless it a thousand times !" said her lever. "It is leap-year, you knew, Dan." "Yes, new I think of it, it is. But it can't be possible you have come here te "Very possible, indeed," answered Delly, slowly and deliberately. "Mr. Dauiel Hewell, will you marry me ?" "Mr. Daniel Hewell's" only reply was te fold her in se close an embrace that, being the tiniest of maidens, she almost disap peared from view. "And has Miss Cress" he began, when the pretty blushing face, all dimpled with smiles, was again raised te his own "Ne, she has net." interrunted Dellv. " She knows nothing about it." But it's all right, Dan," carefully tucking some thing with her dainty left hand Dan held the right into the breast pocket of his overcoat. " Yeu may come and see Aunt Lerinda as seen as you cheese. Yeu didn't knew it, Dan dear, but you've get a thous and dollars. " Harper's Weekly. DRY GOODS. SPRING, 1880. WANAMAKER & BROWN, Gentlemen and Beys' Outfitters, OAK HALL, S. E. CORNER SIXTH AND MARKET STS., PHILADELPHIA. We respectfully announce the completion of the new stock of Men's and Beys' Clothing for the Spring of 1880, v. hich has net only the distinction of being the largest, but has cost us mere pains-taHnjr than any stock we have ever made. We aru net content unlust each year finds us iuinre and progressing, and 18) shows the result ofextraeruinary effort te excel. Te our long practical experience and commodious premises we add net only the advantage et showing our customer the very largest teclc, but the system or business originated ey Jilt. JOHN WAN AM Ah tit gives our customers every advantage in care improving making their purchases at OAK HALL BECAUSE, 1st, The qualities and defects of goods arc stated. 2d, One price and only one. 3d, A thorough guarantee given. 4th, Meney refunded if goods are returned. AI AIAKER & BROWtf. GBAKD OPENING AT THE NEW YORK STORE. Hail te the Chief among pulmonary reme dies. Dr. Themas' Eicctiic Oil, used external- It. ml ...... M.l.f iiin iiin.-iii.iny. .iiiis gr.mu preparation annihilates coughs, colds, rheumatism, neu ralgia, lameness, piles, kidney troubles, and remedies bores, cuts, burns, boils, warts and corns. Its cures are attended by the amplest aud inrst pe-itive testimony. Fer sale liy il. B. Cejlnan, druggist, 137 and 139 North Quidi street, i..uicustcr, l'a. 7 Statistics prove that twenty-live percent, of the deaths in our larger cities' are caused by consumption, and when we reflect that this terrible disease in its worst stage will yield te a bottle of Lechcr's Kenewncd Cough Syrup, shall we condemn the sufferers ler their negli gence, or pity them ter their ignorance? Ne OEast King street. When a child is suddenly attacked and threatened with suffocation by the croup, l)r, Themas' Electric oil is preei-elv the medicine ler the emergency, since it is nreinnt as well as eflieicnt. Every household should be pro vided with it, as it is a quick antidote te pain, as well as a specilic for the above anil ether complaints. Fer sale by II. 15. Cochi an, drug gist, 137 and le'J North Queen street, Laucas ter, X'.i. 8 1RY HOODS. IMMENSE DISPLAY OF NOVELTIES IX DRY GOODS AND NOTIONS. A CHOICE VARIETY FOU SELECTION AT QUICK SELLING PRICES. 01ecs, Laces and Embroideries, New Spring Styles iu 1'arasels and Sunshades. WATT, SHAND & COMPANY, S AND 1 0 EAST KINO STREET. HAGER & BROTHER CHEAP CARPETS PROM AUCTION. Opened this day Lets et CHEAP CARPETS, ALSO lite.Ctt&FaiicyMate AT lAHIESTOCK'S, Next Doer te tbe Court Heuse. Have new open Full Lines of Goods of Latest Style for GENTS' AND BOYS' WEAR. FKENCII WORSTED SUITINUS, SCOTCH CHEVIOT SUITINGS, ENGLISH CHEVIOT SUITINGS, ENGLISH CASSIMERE SUITINGS, AMERICAN CASSIMERE SUITINGS. BLUE FLANNEL SUITINGS, CASSIMEUES FOR PANTS, CASSIMERES FOR BOYS' SUITS, Which we will make up te order in the Latest Style and guarantee satisfaction. MEN AND BOYS' CLOTHING IN FULL ASSORTMENT. Gents' Hosiery, Gloves, Neckwear, Silk and Linen Handkerchiefs, Ac, Jte. 49-CALL AND EXAMINE. c AKI TO TUK LADIES! lust received a Fine Line of DRY GOODS, AT Philip Schum, Sen & Cevs, 38 &40 1VESTKING STREETS. Having added in connection with our Large Stock efCarpet.s, Yarns, ftc, A FINE LINK OF DRY GOODS, such as CALICOES, BLEACH ED AND UNBLEACHED MUSLINS, TICK INGS, COTTON FLANNELS. CASHMERES, BLACK ALPACAS, SHEETINGS, NEW STYLE OF SHIRTING. NEW STYLE DRESS GOODS, TABLE LINENS, NAPKINS, TOWELS, &c, which we are selling at MODERATE PRICES. ' m4-3md Wall Papers and Window Shades ! In WALL PAPERS we are offering a Large Line te select from In all grades, and at LOW PRICES. a I Mi WW HALL l'Al'ERS, &c. WE AIMS 1IETTEK PKEl'AKED TO Meet the wants of the people than any season heretofore. Our line is larger than usual, and iu PAPER HANGINGS we have the New Patterns ler the Spring in an endless line te select from. WINDOW SHADES of every description. In Cerner and Band, six and seven feet in length. Plain Goods by the vard In all colors and widths. Paper Curtains'te the trade at Factory Prices. PATENT EXTENSION Window Cornices, the Newest, Best and Cheapest Cornice made. Easily adjusted te fit any Window up te Ave feet in width. Curtain Poles. Mi. and 2 inches, in Ebony and Polished Walnut, Rings, Brackets, and Fancy Ends Complete. PIER AND MANTEL MIRRORS. Orders taken for any size at Lew Prices. PHARES W. FRY, Ne. 57 NORTH QUEEN ST. teblO-lvdaw ROOTS AXD 8UOES. T? QY BOOTS. SHOES AND LASTS XLlXlO X made en a new principle, insur ing comfort for the feet. T"MV,T'C! Lasts made te order. XHJUJL MILLER, e bll-tfd 1J3 East King street . rY LOCHER'U STBVP KtuvrNED COUGH WINDOW SHADES -AND- FIXTTJKES. Wall Paper and Bliades hung at Short Netice. O-Estimates made. J. B. MARTIN & CO. FOR THE LADIES. THE OPINION OP THE LADIES WE HOPE HAS BEEN FULLY CON FIRMED BY WIDE SPREAD EXPERIENCE THAT HOUGHTON'S Cheap Mllinery & Trimming Stere Is the Cheapest and Best Place in the city te buy lillinery Goods and Dress Trimmiiigs, And we will receive daily New Goods and all the Latest Styles, and ladies will And the Largest Stock and Greatest Variety et Hats, Bennets, Ribbons,Feathers, Flewers.Sllks. Satins, Fringes, Kid and Lisle Thread Gloves, Laces, Embroideries, Tuckings, Puffings, Velvet Neckties, Ladies' White Tucked Skirts 50c. 75c and $1.00 each, andtha Largest Stock of Funcy Dress But But eons in the city. We constantly keep the Finest Line of ENGLISH BLACK CREPES, Only Ceurtauld's Best Makes and at the Lewest Prices. Alse, Crepe Veils In all Sizes, Crep Hats and Bennets constantly en hand and made te order by the best Milliners In the city. M we keep no ethers, nor no apprentices te botch your work, at M. A. HOUGHTON'S Cheap Millinery and Trimming Stere, 25 K Queen St.