rp.f -v vn,; i r .' a i m$$aSi VllVV f Velnme XTI-Ne. 267. LANCASTER, PA., MONDAY, JULY 12, 1880 Price Tws Cents. Ha V "- (M) Branldbn CLOTIIINO. Spring Opening AT 24 CENTRE SQUARE. We have fei sale for the -coming seasons un Immense .Stock of et our own iiiiinulacture, which cempiI-.es the Latest uikI Most STYUSI DESIGNS. Come ami wee our NEW GOODS which '. larger and composed or the best 9tyles 1 lie found in the city. 0. B. Hostetter & Sen, 24 CENTRE SQUARE. 2B-lyd LANCASTER, PA H. GERHART'S Tailoring Establishment, MONDAY, APRIL 5. Having lust returned from the New Yerk "Woolen Maikct, I urn new prepared te exhibit one el the l!et .Selected Slecks et WOOLENS FOR THE Sb ring, ill Summer Trade, Kx-er brought te this city. Nene but the very IiiM ENGLISH, FRENCH AMD AMERICAN FABRICS, in all the Leading St jles. I'liec-i as low ax the lnwe-t, and all sMid, warranted as irnreseiitr eil, at H. GERHART'S, Ne. 51 North Queen Street. J. K. SMALING, THE ARTIST TAILOR. opening te-day era large and select line el English Novelties fei: SUMMER WEAR. Trepicals, Serges and Rep Worsteds, I'.ANNOCKBUUN CKLTIC CHEVIOTS. GAMISKOON l'AUAMATA AND BATISTE CLOTHS. SKEIJSUCKEUS, VALENCIAS, PAROLE ANI MOHAIR COATINGS. Linens in Great Variety. WilterdV l'adiled Ducks in riaiii and Fancy Styles. A Large Amertiiicnl of Fancy I All the latent novelties et the season. The public are cerdiallv invited te examine our sleck, which we claim te be the handsomest and most recherche ever ettered for the het weather. T. K. SMALING, ARTIST TAILOR, 121 NORTH QUEEN STREET. "furniture. MM OF ALL KINDS XT SHORT NOTICE. My ai rrngements arc new completed te de Ueg'ilding hi 1'irst-cla.ss manner and at reason able prices. THE NEW PICTURE FRAME STORE, 15 East King Street. WALTER A. HEINITSH. EDUCATIONAL. THE ACADEMY CONNECTED WITH Franklin and Marshall College eilers su Serier advantages te young men and boys who eslre cither te prepare forcellege or te obtain a thorough academic education. Students re ceived at any time during the school year Send for circulars. Address BKV. JAMES CRAWFORD, ctll-lyd Lancaster. Pa. Realy-Me Clothing, SHH 0PEHIN6 rung DRY GOODS. WHO IS We de net want you te get the impression that great reduc tions are being made in the prices of goods elsewhere and net here. We are, as usual, below the market, and intend te stay there. The following list embraces enough of our stock te give some clue te the rest of them. We quote articles new in great favor as low-priced goods ; but in general they are net reduced. We have been there all the time. JOHN WANAMAKER. SILKS. SUMMER SILKS. Stripes, modest, medium and bold Jaspc checks and stripes Checks en solid ground Chene stripes, shaded "Mille Ituye," extra Quality Best impeitcd, 30 inches, great variety BLACK SILKS. Ores-irraln ncrsan and taffetas $0 4.-1 50 Ki IS .... 75 .... 1 00 .$0 7.-1 Fine or heavy cord gres-grain and persan. iw Six makes, tercign and American, jet or raven black, heavy and light 1 00 Cachemire finish. 24 incites, Itellen, Alex andre and American 1 23 Cachemire linish, "super" quality, 24 inches, foreign 1 SO Kill linish, high lustre,cachemire,24 inches 1 ." ISennet,24 inches 2 00 COLOKED SILKS. Ceeil quality, all colors $0 7.'i j.yens, extra lustre, neavy corn, au inciic. l hi Best, ler walking suits. 22 inches.. 1 25 1 50 Kicli anil elegant finish, 22 inches.. FOULAKDS. Showy Brilliant and lien .$e no 75 BROCADES. Muck, polka dots, etc Colored Colored, new designs Novelties .$0K) . 1 00 . 1 25 . 150 OAUE AND GRENADINE STRIPES. A large quantity just bought te clear an Im porter's stock, recently sold by us at $2.50, we are new selling at $1 00 SILKS are in next outer circle east from the Chestnut street entrance. BLACK GOODS. GRENADINES. Mexican, silk and wool 50, in, 75,85 Silkand wool striped. ...75, $1, $1 25, $1 50, $1 75 Lyens itamasses S5. 75, 85, $1 00 l'aris, silk and wool $1, $1 25, $1 50 Lvens, all silk dumasscs $1 S7y.,$l 50, $1 75, $2, $2 40, $3. PLAIN HUNTINGS. American, , $0 20, .25 .31 .37. American, i-4, $0 50, X5 .75. French, 2'1 inches, $0 31 .37. French, 30 inches, $0 44 .50 .2K .75 French, 40 inches, $0 85, $1, $1 fe. LACE BUNTINGS. We have nearly everything te be found in the markets et the world. it inches, $0 37 .50 .CO. 4f inches, $1,$1 25. Lupin's Paris, original color, and we believe almost the last in Philadelphia: 24 inches $0 55 40 iuclies 1 10 NUN'S VEILING (ler dresses). 13 inches 75, $1 00 let $1 se, $1 7i BLACK GOODS are in tlie next outer circle w est from the. Chestnut street entrance. But one thing we ought te remind you ef: We may appear te be at a disadvantage -when we are net, because of certain tactics sometimes employed, which we de net care te use, viz,, the pretending te make re ductions when none are made. We use reductions te clear stocks. That is perfectly honorable, and it is necessary in a large business. The losses thereby incurred, though sometimes considerable, are trifling in compari son with the benefit te remaining stocks. New then, anyone who will take measures te find out where the lowest prices are, compare sample with sample, price with price, will find we are net a whit behind ANYBODY, net even in a single item, se far as we knew; and that we are below EVERYBODY en almost everything. Samples sent when written for. JOHN WANAMAKER. Chestnut, Thirteenth, Market and Juniper, je7-cedlf SALE OP DAMAGED GOODS. II AfiKR & BROTHER will continue the sale of Goe.ls damaged only by water dining the recent lire en their premises.. WALL PAPER, CARPETS, Mattings and Oil Cleths, Muslins and Sheetings, Linens and Quilts, Woolens for Men's Wear, and Beady-Made Clothing, &c, All of the above have been marked at a very low price, as we are determined te close out the entire let. The sale is going en daily from 0 a. in. until 7 p. m. Saturday evenings until '. o'clock in store looms In rear et main store. As there was no damage te stock In main store room business there gee en as usual. H AGER & BROTHER, NO. 25 WEST KING STREET. GREAT CLEARING SALE OF STJMMEE DEESS GOODS AT THE NEW YORK STORE. All the New Shades in Twilled Cashmeres 12c a yard ; regular price 15c. All Weel Beiges 25c a yard. All Weel Memie Cleths 25c a yard ; sold everywhere at 37c. Special Bargains in BLACK SILKS, COLOBED SILKS, BLACK CASHMERES. Watt, Shand & Company, S AND 10 EAST KING STREET. UNDER ? DRESS GOODS. COTTON. Seersuckers, blue, brown and gray stripes, best patterns $0 12 Seersuckers, fancy colored stripes 15 Seersuckers, Yerk, lull assortment et stripes and colors 18 Zephyr Uinghams, choice, net te be ieumi eisewnere many price... 12X 20 Zephyr Ginghams, plaid and stripes... . Zephyr Ginghams, bandana 18 Dress Ginghams 11 Handkerchief Ginghams and plain col ors te match 25 Dress Cheviots 12 Tamise cloth, ecru, cashmere border..... 12 Chintz, polka dot, indigo, ler suits 10 Cocheco Cambrics, choice 10 Pacific Cretonnes, great variety... $0 10, 12, 15 Jacenet Lawns, Frerc Kerchliu 20 Pacific Lawns, great variety $0 10, 12. 15 Cambric striped lawns OS Jacenet lawns, fast colors 05 Lace lawns, white, tinted and solid col ored grounds 12 Memie cloths, printed 12 COTTON AND WOOL. Lace Buntings, all colors and black. Debciges, twilled Mehairs, plain Mehairs, twilled Mehairs, silk-checked Mehairs, silk-striped Mehairs, plaid Mehairs, English Mehairs, English, clouded Mohair lustres Cashmeres, coachmen's colors .$0 25 . 10 . 25 - 12 25 . 25 . 25 - J2 . IS - 12 . 15 . 20 I Suitings, English, lancy ALL WOOL. Lace Buntings, colors and black. .37, 50, Plain buntings of a new style, distinct Irem the old and decidedly better than any ether, all colors. 24 inches , 25 34 inches, double told 40, 50, oil. Dcbe'gcs, French, cashmere-twilled, 22 inches Debeiges, French, tatreta : 22 inches 32 inches, double lelil 42 Inches, double fold 45, Cashmeres, French : 32 inches 30 inches Sheila cloth, French, 40 inches Memie cloth. French $1 Crape cloth, French 1 CO 21 LINENS. SIX SPECIMEN PRICES. These are fair samples et the bargains we nave been giving ler ceks in I. mens : Huck Tewel, large ami heavv. .$0 25 . 25 . 12 . 2 25 12 Huek Tewel, German, knotted lrinji G lass Toweling, per yard German bleached Table Linen German Napkins, 34 per tlexen Star Linen, 20 inches, per yard Philadelphia. juvjtr Eaiuastrr intelligencer. MONDAY EVENING, JULY 12, 1880. A Gentleman of La Perte. Bretc Ilartc in New Yerk Sun. He was also a pioneer. A paity who broke through the snows of the winter of '51, and came upon the triangular little valley afterward known as La Perte, found him the sole inhabitant. He had subsisted for three months en two biscuits a day and a few inches of bacon, in a hut made of bark and brushwood. Yet when the ex plorers found him he was quite alert, hope ful and gentlemanly. But I cheerfully make way here te the terser narrative of Captain Henry Symes, commander of the prospect ing party : "We kem upon him, gentlemen, sttddent-like, jest abreast of a rock like this" demonstrating the distance " ez near ez you be. He sees us, and he dives into his cabin and comes out with a tall hat a stove-pipe, gentlemen and, blast me ! gloves. He was a tall, thiu feller, holler in the cheek ez might be and off color in his face, ez was nat'ral, takin' in account his starvation grub. But he lifts his hat te us se, and says he, ' Happy te make your acquaintance, gentlemen ! I'm afraid you cx-per-ienced some difficulty in getting here. Take a cigyar.' And he pulls out a fancy cigar case with two real Ilavanas in it. 'I wish there was mere,' sez he. " 'Ye don't smoke yourself ?' sez I. " Seldom,' sez he, which war a lie, for that very afternoon I seed him hangin' en tu a short pipe like a suckin' baby entu a bottle. 'I kept these cigyars for any gen tlemen that might drop in.' ' ' I reckon ye see a great deal e' the best society yer,' sez Bill Parker, starin' at the hat and gloves and winkin' at the boys. " 'A few Ind i-ans occasionally,' sez he. ' 'Injins !' says we. " Yes. Very quiet, geed fellows in their way. They have once or twice brought me came, which I refused, as the peer fellows have had a pretty hard time of it themselves.' "New, trentlemen, we was czyeu knew, rather quiet men rather peaceable men ; but, hevin' been shot at three times by these yar 'geed' Injins, and Parker hisself bavin' a matter e' three inches of his own skelp loose in their hands and he walkiu' round wcarin' green leaves en his head like a Reman statoe it did kinder seem ez if this yer stranger was playiu' it rather low down en the boy. Bill Parker gets up and takes a survey e' him, and sez he, peaceful like : " ' Ye say these yer Injins these yer quiet Injins offered yer game ?' "'They did! sez he. " ' And you refoescd ?' " ' I did,' sez he. " ' Must hev made 'cm feel kinder bad sorter tertercd their sensitiv' naters?" sez Bill. " ' They really seemed quite disappoint ed.' "'In course,' sez Bill. 'And new meut I ask who you be ?' '"Excuse me,' says the stranger ; and, darn my skin ! if he doesn't hist out a a keerd case, and, handiu' it ever te Bill, sez, ' Here's my kyard.' " ' Bill took it and read out aloud, ' J Trott, Kentucky.' " 'It's a poety keerd,' sez Bill. '"I'm glad you like it,' says the stran ger. '"I reckon the ether fifty-one of the deck ez as poety all of 'em jacks and left bowers,' sez Bill. " The stranger sez nethin,' but kinder draws back from Bill, but Bill ups and sez : " Wet is your little game, Mr. J. Trott, of Kentucky?" "I don't think I quite understand you," sez the stranger, a holler lire cemin' intu his checks like as if they was the bowl of a pipe. "Wet's this yer kid-glove business this yer tall-hat paradin' ? this yer circus foelin'? AVet'sitall about? Who are ye, anyway?" "The stranger stands up and sez he, ' Ez I don't quarrel with guests en my own land,' sez he. 'I think you'll allow I'm a gentleman !' sez he. " With that he takes off his tall hat and makes a low bow, se, and turns away like this ; but Bill lites out of a suddent with his rijdit feet and drives his Ne. 10 beet clean through the crown of that tall hat like one e' them circus hoops." "That's about ez fur ez I remember. Gentlemen ! thar warn't but one man e' that hull crowd ez could actoeally swear what happened next, and that man never told. Fer a kind e' whirlwind jest then took place in that valley. I disremember anythin' but dust and bustlin'. Thar wasn't no ycllin', thar wasn't no shoetin'. It was etic e' them suddiut things that left even a six-shooter out in the cold. When I kem te in the chaparral being oncemfortablc-like from hevin' only half a shirt en I found nigh en three pounds e' gravel and stones in my pockets and a stiffness in my ha'r. I leeks up and sees Bill hangin' in the forks of a hickory sap lin' twenty feet above me." "Cap," sez he, in an inquirin' way, " hcz the tornado passed?" "Which?" sez I. "This yer elemental disturbance is it ever?" "I reckon," sez I. " 'Because,' sez he, 'afore this yer elec trical phenomenon took place I hed a slight misunderstanding with a stranger, and id like te apologize !' " And with that he climbs down, peace ful like, and gees into the shanty, and comes out, hand in hand with the stran-. ger, smilin' like an infant. And that's the first time, I reckon, we knew'd anythin' about the gentleman of La Perte." It is by no means improbable that the above incidents are slightly exaggerated in narration, and the cautious leader will de wll te accept with some reservation the particular phenomenon alluded te by the captain. But the fact remains that the Gentleman from Laperte was allowed an eccentricity and enjoyed an immunity from contemporaneous criticism only te be at tributed te his personal prowess. Indeed, this was once publicly expressed. " It 'pears te me," said a meek new-comer, who, en the strength of his having receiv ed news of the death of a distant relative in the states, had mounted an exceedingly large crape mourning band en his white felt hat, and was consequently obliged te treat the-crowd in the bar-room of Park er's hotel "it 'pears te me, gentlemen, that this yer tax'in' the nat'ral expression of grief, and allewin' such festive exhibi tions as yeller kid gloves, as the gentleman en my right, is sorter inconsistent. I don't mind treatin' the crowd, gentlemen, but this yer platform and resolutions don't seem te keep step." This appeal te the Demes of every American crowd of course precluded any reply from the Gentleman of La Perte, but left it te the palpable chairman the barkeeper, Mr. William Parker. "Yeung man," he replied, severely, " when you can wear yaller kids like that man, and make 'em hover in the air like summer lightnin', and strike in four places te enct' then ye kin talk ! Then ye kin wear your shirt half-masted if ye I like !" The crowd assenting te this senti ment, the meek man paid for the drinks, and would, in addition, have taken off his mourning band, but., was courteously stepped by the Gentleman of La Perte. And yet, I pretest, there was little sug gestive of this baleful pioneer in his face and figure. He was loose-jointed and long-limbed, yet with a mechanical, slew rigidity of movement that seemed incom patible with alacrity and dexterity. His arms were unusully long, and his hands hung with their palms forward. In walk ing his feet "teed in," suggesting an aboriginal ancestry. His face, as I remem ber it, was cqualiyineffensive. Thin and melancholy, the rare smile that lit it up was only a courteous reception of some attribute of humor in another which he was unable himself te appreciate. His straight black hair and high cheek bones would have heightened his Indian resem blance, but these were offset by two most extraordinary eyes, that were utterly at variance with this, or indeed any ether suggestion of his features. They were yellowish blue, globular, and placidly starinr. They expressed nothing that the Gentleman of La Perte thought nothing that he did nothing that he might rea sonably be expected te de. They were at variance with his speech, his carriage, even his remarkable attire. Mere than one irreverent critic had suggested that he had probably lest his own eyes in some frontier difficulty, and had hurriedly re placed them with these of his antagonist. Had this ingenious hypothesis reached the cars of the gentleman he would have probably contented himself with a simple denial of the fact, overlooking any humor ous incongruity of statement. Fer, as has been already intimated, among his ether privileges he enjoyed an absolute immuni ty from any embarrassing sense of the lu dicrous. His deficient sense of humor and habitual gravity in a community whose severest dramatic episodes were mitigated by some humorous detail, and whose cus tomary relaxation was the playing of prac tical jokes, was marked with a certain frankness that was discomposing. "I think, " he remarked te a well-known citizen of La Perte, "that, in alluding te the argumentative character of Mr. Wil liam Peghammer, you said you had found him lying awake at night contradicting the Katydids. This he himself assures me is net true, and I may add that I passed the night with him in the weeds without any such thing occurring. Yeu seem te have lied. " The severity of this reception checked further humorous exhibitions in his presence. Indeed, I am net certain but it invested him with a certain aristocratic isolation. Thus identified with the earliest history of the camp. Mr. Trott participated in its fortunes and shared its prosperity. As one of the original locaters of the "Eagle mines" he enjoyed a c'ei tain income which enabled him te live without labor and te freely indulge his few and inexpensive tastes. After his own personal adornment which con sisted chiefly in the daily wearing of spot less linen he was fend of giving presents. These possessed, perhaps, a Sentimental rather than intrinsic value. Te an inti mate friend he had once given a cane, the stick whereof was eut from a wild grape vine which grew above the spot where the famous " Eagle Lead " was first discovered in La Perte ; the head originally belonged te a cane presented te Mr. Trott's father, and the ferrule was made qf the last silver half dollar which he had brought te Cali fornia. " And yet, de you knew," said the indigiuant recipient of this touching gift, " 1 offered te put it down for a five dollar note last night ever at Robinson's, and the boys wouldn't see it, and allowed I'd better leave the beard. Thar's no ap preciation of sacred things in this yer camp." It was in this lush growth and spring time of La Perte that the gentleman was chosen justice of the peace by the unan meus voice of his fellow citizens. That he should have exercised his functions with dignity was natural ; that he should have shown a singular lenity in the levying of lines and the infliction of penalties was however, an unexpected and discomposing dicevery te the settlement. "The law requires me, sir," he would say te some unmistakable culprit, " te give you the option of ten days' imprisonment or the fine of ten dollars. If you have net the money with you, the clerk will doubtless advance it for you." It is needless te add that the clerk invariably advanced the money, and that when the court adjourned the judge instantly reimbursed him. In one instance only did the sturdy cul prit either from pure cussedness or a weaker desire te spare the judge the expense of his conviction refuse te borrow the amount of the fine from the clerk. He was accordingly re manded te the county jail. It is related en tolerably geed authority that when the court had adjourned, the court was seen, in spotless linen and yellow gloves, walk ing in the direction of the county jail a small adobe building, which also served as a hall of records. That, after ostenta tiously consulting certain records, the court entered the jail as if in casual official inspection. That, later in the evening, the deputy sheriff having charge of the prisoner was despatched for a bottle of whisky and a pack of cards. But as the story here alleges that the deputy that evening lest the amount of his month's stipend and the court its entire yearly salary te the prisoner in a friendly game of "cut threat euchie," te relieve the tedium of the prisoner's confinement, the whole story has been denied, as incompatible with Judge Trott's dignity, though net incon sistent with his kindliness of nature. It is certain, however, that his lenity would have brought him into disfavor but for a redeeming exhibition of his unofficial strength. A young and talented lawyer from Sacramento had been retained in some civil case before Judge Trott, but confident of his success en appeal from this primitive tribunal, he had scarcely concealed his contempt for it in his closing argument. Judge Trott when he had finished, sat unmoved, save for a slight coloring of his high cheek bones. But here I must again borrow the graphic language et a spectator : When the judge had hung out them ar red dancer signals he sez, guite peaceful-like, te that yer Sacramento shrimp, sez he : 'Yeung gentleman,' sez he, 'de you knew that I could tine ye fifty dollars for con tempt of court?' 'And if ye could,' sez the shrimp, peart and sassy as a hess-fly, 'I reckon I could pay it.' 'But I ought te add,' sez the gentleman, sad-like, 'that I don't pur-pese te de it. I believe in freedom of speech and action !' He then rises up, enlimbers himself, se te speak. stretches out that yer Hand e' Providence e' his, lites into that yer serimp, lifts him up and scoots him through the window twenty feet into the ditch. ' Call the next case,', sez he, sittin' kewn again, with them big white eyes e' his loekin' peaceful-like ez if nethin' partikler had hap pened." Concluded tomorrow. EISANCIAX. JAMES BROWN, DEALEB IN STOCKS and Bends, 64 and G6 Bread way, New Yerk, Operations en margin and by means or privi leges. Information furnished en all matters connected with stock speculation and invest ment. mlS-lydTThas JEWELERS. LOUIS WEBER. WATCITMAKER. N0.1S9H NORTH QUEEN STREET, near P. R. K. Depot, Lancaster, Pa. Geld, Silver and Nickel-cased Watches, Chains, Clocks, Ac. Agent ter the celebrated Pantoscepic Specta cles anu i,ye-uiasses. repairing a specialty, aprl-lyd NOTICE ! Frem July 1 te September 1, 1880, Saturdays excepted, our store will lie closed at t p. ni. E. F. BOWMAN, 106 EAST KING STREET, LANCASTER. PA. SPECIAL NOTICE! AUGUSTUS RHOADS. Jeweler, 20 East King Street, LANCASTER, PA., Will close his store at 0 p. m., Saturdays ex cepted, from JULY 1 TO SEPTEMBER 1, 18S0. ROOKS AND STATIONERY. VTEW STATIONERY! New, Plain and Fancy STATIONERY. Alse, Yelvct and Eastlake PICTURE FRAMES AND EASELS. L. M. FLYNN'S BOOK AND STATIONERY STORE, Ne. 42 WEST KINO STREET. JOM BAEB'S SONS, 15 and 17 NORTH QDEEN STREET, LANCASTER, PA., have In stock a large assortment of. BOOKS AND STATIONERY. Attention is invited te their FAMILY AND PULPIT BIBLES Teachers ISihles, Sunday Scheel Libraries, Hymnals, Prayer Beeks, 11YAIN BOOKS AND MUSIC HOOKS Fer Sunday Schools. FINE 11EWA11D GAUDS. SUNDAY SCHOOL REQUISITES of all kinds WA1.1. I'AJ'ERS, &e. PLAIN WIRES Fen WINDIIW SCSEEHS, In Black, Drab and Green. Handsome Land scape sold by the feet in any iuantity. We make SCREEN'S te order, and In such a manner that you need net remove when you close the window ; u very great advantage. Where a Screen is made that mutt be taken out when you lower the sash, it is troublesome te handle, always in the way ami will wear out in half the time. We make them in Pine and Walnut Frames and cost you no mere than the Patent Screens, and are much mere desirable. A let of Ends et WALL PAPER will be sold low in order te close out. Ours ten; will close at 7 p. in (except Satur days) until the 1st et September. PHARES W. FRY, Ne. 57 NORTH QUEEN ST. COAL. B. B. MARTIN, Wholesale and Retail Dealer in all kinds of LUMBER AND COAL. 49Yard : Ne. 430 North Water and Prince streets, above Lemen. Lancaster. n.'f-lyd COAL! COAL! COAL! COAL Ceal of the Bent Quality put up expressly for family use, and at the low est market prices. TRY A SAMPLE TON. 49- YAKU 150 SOUTH WATER ST. n e-lyd PHILIP SCIIUM, SON A CO. 10AL! COAL! COAL!!! We have constantly en hand all the best grades of COAL that are in market, which we are selling as low as any yard in the city. Call and get our prices before buying else where. M. F. STEIGERWALT & SON, s-27-lyd 234 NORTH WATER STREET. COAL! - - - COAL!! GOTO GORRECHT & CO., Fer Geed and Cheap Ceal. Yard Harrlsburg Pike. Office 20& East Chestnut Street. P. W. GORRECHT, Agt. J. B. RILEY. 9-1 W. A. KELLER. C0H0 & WILEY, MO NORTH WATER ST., Lancaster, Se., Wholesale and Retail Dealers in LUMBER AND GOAL. Connection With the Telephonic Exchange. Branch Office : Ne. 3 NORTH DUKE ST. febtM-lyd ATTORNEYS-AT-LA W HENRY A. RILEY Attorney and ConnseUer-at-Law SI Park Rew. New Yerk. Collections made in all parts of the United States, and a general legal business transacted. Refers by permission te Steinman & Henscl. 11RY LOCHEK'S RENuwNED COUGH . SYRUP DMT 00018. BLACK SELKS Fer Trimming and Dress, GO cents and up, at FAHNESTOGK'S, Next Doer te the Court Hense. COLORED SILKS, GO Cents, at FAHNSSTOOK'S. SUMMER DRESS GOODS Of every description, at FAHNISTOOK'S. quantities et LADIES' SKIRTS, White and Colored, 50 cents and up, at FAOESTOCX'S, Next Doer te tk Court Howe. J. . Martin & Ge. LAWNS, GINGHAMS, WHITE GOODS, HOSIERY, UNDERWEAR, CORSETS, GLOVES. Largest Line of Laundried and Unlamdried Fancy Shirts in the City. NOTICE. Onr store will lie closed at 7 o'clock p. m., except Saturday evenings. J.B.MARTIN & CO. NOVELTIES SILKS DEESS GOODS! We have new open enr Importations of Nw Silk from Lyens, including Brocaded Satin Dc Lyens, Solid Celer Satin Be Lyens, Black Satin Be Lyens, Luisine in New Colorings and Styles, 11ICH KROCADES, In Celers te match the New Dress Goods In Dress Goods, a Great Variety of New Textures, such as SHOODA CLOTHS, IN THE NEW SHADES. Beautiful Silk and Weel Fancies te Match Plain Cleths, Plain Canten Crapes in an Celers, and a number of New Things impossible te specify ONE FACT we wish te emphasize. Se tar, the advance en our goods amounts te nothing, and a strict in spection of our stock will show that at all times wc are as low in prices as any, and often lower. A close examination of our goods Is cordially invited. Eemrt llaflaH Ce, 1412 and 1414.Chestnnt Street, aprlG-M.W&F PHILADELPHIA. ROBES, RLANKETS, JtV. s IGN Or THE BUFFALO IlKAD. ROBES! ROBES!! BLANKETS! BLANKETS!! I have new en hand the Labebbt, Bbbt aud Chkambt AaaeKnmrr of Lined and Unllnwl BUFFALO ROBES in the city. Alse LAP AND HORSE BLANKETS of every- descrip tion. A full line of Trunks and Satchels, Harness, Whips, Cellars, &e. jyRepalrins neatly and promptly done.-Ct A. MILEY, JOB North 0imm Sf ., e2MvdMWAS MARBLE WORKS. WH. P. FRAILBY-S ' MONUMENTAL, MARBLK WORKS 75S Nena yneen Street, Lancaster, Pa. MONUMENTS, HEAD AND FOOT STONES. GARDEN STATUARY, CEMETERY LOTS ENCLOSED, Ac. AU work guaranteed and satisfaction grtes n everyprticular. N.B. Remember, works at the extreme ea auiw muwu auwk STRAIN SPECULATION JT Inlarge or small amennta. or $99,098-WriteW.-r.SOULE CO.. Commission Mer chants, 130 La Salle street, Chicago, III., for rir culars. mS-rjrd