s- -fcrW l ' 5-1 . retfagteti - : -t Volume XYI-Ne. 301. LANCASTER, PA., FRIDAY, AUGUST 20, 1880 ii Price Twe Gnts. . t I HHHte. OBf-: 4 V !,' . . - - sjmrcumcnccr. V CLOTHING. Spring Opening 24 CENTRE SQUARE. We have fei sale for the coming seasons ma Immense Stock of Reaiy-Me Clotting, tt our own manufacture, which comprises the litest and Most STYLISH DESIGNS. Come and see our SEW GOODS VOS MERCHANT TAILORING, srhlch Is larger and composed of the best styles te Imi found in the city. D. B. Her & Sed, 24 CENTRE SQUARE. O-lyd LANCASTER. 1A t H. GERHART'S Tailoring Establishment, MONDAY, APRIL 5. Haying ust returned ti-em tlie New Yerk AToelen Market, I am new prepared te exhibit me of I he Best Selected Stocks of WOOLENS FOB TUB SDK and Slier Trade, er brought te this city. Nene but the very 38tOf ENGLISH, FRENCH AYD AMERICAN FABRICS, all the Leading Styles. Prices as low as the ewest, and all goods warranted as reprcsent- H. GBRHARTS, Ne. 51 North Qum Street. SMALING, THE ARTIST TAILOR. Closing out our stock of Light Weights at cost te make room for Fall and Winter Stock. A Large Line of English Bevelties. TROPICAL SUITINGS, SERGES AND REPS, It ANNOCKBUUNS AND CELTICS, UAMBROON PARAMATA AND BATISTE SUITINGS. SEEKSUCKEUS, VALENCIAS, PAROLE AND MOHAIR COATINGS. A Splendid Assortment of WllferdV Padded Ducks in Plain and Fancy Styles. A Full Line or Marseilles and id Veste All the latest novelties. An examination of our stock Is respectfully solicited. T. K. SMALING, ARTIST TAILOR, 121 NORTH OUEEN STREET. CHINA AND OLASSWAKK. HINA. UL.ASS AND QUKENSVVAKK. CHINA HALL. White and Decorated Stene China, Tea. Din ner and Chamber Sets, White, Celd Band and Fancy French China Tea and Dinner Sets, Glass Sets, Tumblers, Goblets, Fruit Bowls, Pitchers, Ac. Fruit Jars! Jelly Cups!! AT THE LOWEST PRICES, AT HIGH & MARTINS, Ne. 15 EAST KING STREET. OKOOERIES. SPRING OPEMN XTTHOLBSALB AMD KKTAIL. LEVAN'S FLOUR AT Ne. 237 NORTH PRINCE STREET. diMyi MKMOrAZS. U (PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON), Removed from Ne. 18 Seuth Prince street te Ne. ail West King street, Lancaster, Pa. rmSfrtai I xjtr BARGAINS -AT NEW YORK STORE. 5,000 YDS. iff DAI CALICOES AT 5 GTS. A YAM Just opened an elegant assortment of choice styles In Calicoes, Cretonnes, and Chintzes. MUSLINS! MUSLINS! Standard Hakes of Bleached and Unbleached Muslins from 10 te 90 per cent below June prices. INDIA LINENS. VICTORIA LAWNS, WHITE PIQUES AND CAMBRICS AT BOT TOM PRICES. Watt, Shand & Company, S AND 1 0 EAST KING STREET. DRY GOODS! -:e:- H AGER & BROTHER, NO. 25 W. KING STREET, LANCASTER, Are receiving New Goods in all Departments. OUR STOCK OF CARPETS. OIL CLOTHS -AND- PAPEE HANGINGS Fer the Fall Season will comprise all the Latest Designs and Colorings, and be Larger and mere complete than ever .before. HAGER & BROTHER. WATCHES, ZAHM'S WILL BE Wednesday Evening, August 18th. -:e:- We extend a cordial Invitation te ALL te call STOCK OF GOODS. EDW. J. ZAHM'S CORNER, CLOTHING. CLOSING OUT OF SPRING Al SUMMER STOCK. In order te close out ear stock of Spring and Summer Goods te make room for a heavy Fall Trade, we are offering great inducements in Men's, Youths' and Children's Clothing. In our Custom Department we have a large let of Piece Goods, which must be closed out before September 1, regardless of profit. In our Ready-made Department we have an unusually flue stock of Summer Clothing, all of which can be purchased at very lowest bottom figures. Gentlemen, our facilities are net equaled in the city. It will cost you nothing te examine our stock. MYERS & RATHFON, e. IS EAST KINU STREET, JEWELRY. LOUIS WKHKK, WATCHMAKER. Ne.l59K NORTH QUEEN STREET, near P. R. R. Depot, Lancaster, Pa. Geld, Silver and Nickel-cased Watches, Chains, Clocks, Ac. Agent ter the celebrated Pantasceplc Specta cles and Eyeglasses. Repairing a specialty, aprl-lyd LanGasterWatcIies. We have Just received a second Invoice of the New Lancaster Moment te which we call special attention of anyone wanting a Reliable Watch at a LOW PRICE. B. F.BOWMAN, 106 EAST KING STREET, LANCASTER. PA. Ne. 20 NO USE TRYING Ne. 20 Te geta better WATCH for the money than the WEST END, Manufactured by the Lancaster Wai Cenpy. TOBSAUAT Ne. SO East King St., Lancaster, Pa. AUGUSTUS RH0ADS. JEWELER. TINWARE, & UirTKKN DOLLARS BUV8 A FIRST-GLASS REFRIGERATOR, With Enameled Water Tank, at SHERTZER, HUMPH RE VILLE & KIEFFER'S, Ne. se East Kins Street, Lancaster, Pa. oeons. IN CALICOES TUB JEWELXT, e. CORNER REOPENED and examine our LARGE AND ELKG ANT ZAHM, LANCASTER, PA. LANCASTER, PENX'A. FURNITURE. HEINITSH, FINE FURNITURE aki Cabinet Manufacturer. All in want of Fine or Fancy Cabinet Werk would de well te call and examine specimens et enr work. " OFFICE FURNITURE A SPECIALTY. HEINITSH, 1S Bast Ring Street. WALL PATERS, Jte. VIBE SCREE8S Made for windows and put up in such a man ner that you need net remove when you close the window. We have it in Landscape, Figur ed and Plain Celers, which will be made up as above or sold by the feet in any quantity de sired. PAPER HANGINGS in large variety. Seme Odd Lets will be sold very cheap te close out. PLAIN WINDOW SHADES, all colors and widths. Hollands, Paper Curtains, Fringes, Leeps, Fixtures, Tassels, Cords, Ac Patent Extension Cornice, the cheapest, simplest and best ever made. Will fit any window up te five feet In width. Poles in Ebony and Walnut. , ORDERS TAKEN FOR FINE PIER AND MANTEL MIBRORS. PHARESWFRY, Ne. 67 NOB QUEEN ST.' Haiuaster Intelligencer. FRIDAY EVENING, AUG. SO, 1880. Irani Mailer's Wife. " Franz, geed morning. : Whose philos philes philos pinesa, Kantz or pby is it new ? xlegeL. Dueald Stewart?" " Nene of them. I am reading Faust" "Worse and worse. Better wrestle with philosophies than lese yourself in the clouds. At any rate, if the poets are te send the philosophers te the right about, stick te Shakspeare." "He is tee material. He can't get rid of men and women." " They are a little better, I should think, than Mephiste. Come Franz,' condescend te cravats and kid gloves, and let us go and see my cousin (Christine Strembdrg." " I de net knew the young lady." " Of course net. She has just returned from a Munich school. Her brother Max was at the Lyndens' great party, you re- memeer r " I don't remember, Leuis. In white cravats and black coats all men leek alike." "But you will go?" "If you wish it, yes. There are some uncut reviews en the table ; amuse your self while I dress." " Thanks, I have my cigar case. I will take a smoke, and think of Christine." Fer some reason, quite beyond analysis, Franz did net like this speech. He had never seen Christine Stromberg, but yet half resented the careless use of her name. It fell upon some soul consciousness like a familiar and personal name, and yet he vainly recalled every phase of his life for any clew te his familiarity. He was a handsome fellow, with large clearly cut features and gray thoughtful eyes. In a conversation that interested him greatly his face lighted up with a singularly beautiful animation, but usually it was as still and passionless as if the soul was away en a dream or a visit. Even the regulation cravat and coat could net de strey his individuality, and Leuis looked admiringly at him, and said, " Yeu are still Franz Muller. Ne one is just like you. I should think Cousin Christine will fall in love with you." Again Franz's heart resented this speech. It had been waiting for love for many a year, but he could net jest or spec ulate about it. Ne one but the thought less, favored Leuis ever dared te de it be fore Franz, and no one ever spoke lightly of women before him, for the worst of men are sensitive te the presence of a pure and lefty nature, and are generally willing te respect it. Franz dreamed of women, but only of noble women, and even for these who fell below his ideal he had a thousand apolo gies, and a world of pity. It was strange that such a man should have lived thirty years, and never have really loved any mortal woman. But his hour had come at last. As seen as he'saw Christine Strem berg he loved her. A strange exaltation possessed him ; his face was radiant ; he talked and sang 'with a brilliancy that amazed even these most familiar with his rare exhibitions of such moods. And Christine seemed fascinated by his beauty and wit. The hours passed like moments; and when the girl steed watching him down the moon-lit avenue, she almost trembled te remember what questions Franz's eyes had asked her, and hew strangely familiar the clasp of his hand and the sound of his voice had seemed te her. "I wonder where I have seen him be fore," she murmured "I wonder where it was?" and te this thought she slowly took off one by one her jewels and brushed out her long black hair; nay when she fell asleep, it was only te take it up again in dreams As for Franz, he was in far tee ecstatic a mood te think of sleep. "One has tee few of such godlike moments te steep them in unconsciousness," he said te him self. And se he sat smoking and thinking and watching the waning moon sink lower, until it was no longer night, but dawning day. " In a few hours new I can go and see Christine." At this point in his love he had no ether thought. He was tee happy te speculate en any probability as yet. It was sufficient at present te knew that he had found his love, that -she lived at a definite number en a definite avenue, and that in six or seven hours mere he might see her again. He chose the earlier number. It was just eleven o'clock when he rung Mr. Dtremberg's bell. Mrs. Stromberg passed through the hall as he entered, and greeted him pleasantly. "Christine and I are just going te have breakfast." she said, in her jelly, hearty way. "Come in, Mr. Muller, and have a cup of coffee with us." Nothing could have delighted Franz se much. Christine was pouring it out as he entered the pretty breakfast parlor. Hew beautiful she looked in her long loose morning dress ! Hew bewitching were its numerous bows of pale ribbon ! He had a sense of hunger immediately, and he knew that he made an excellent breakfast; but of what he ate, or what he drank, be had net the slightest conception. A cup of coffee passed through Christine's hands necessarily suffered some wonderful chance. It could net, and it did net, taste like ordinary coffee. In the same myster ious way chicken, eggs, and rolls became sublimated. Se they ate, ana laughed, and chatted, and I am quite sure that Mil Mil eon never imagined a meal in Eden half se delightful as that breakfast en the avenue. When it was ever, it .came into Franz's heart te offer Christine a ride. They were standing together among the flowers in the bay-window, and the trees outside were in their first tender green, and the spring skies and the spring airs were full of hap piness and hope. Christine was arranging and watering her lilies and pansies. and somehow in helping her Franz's hands and hers had; lingered happily together. Se new love gave te this mortal an immortal's confidence. He never thought of Bighing, and fearing, and trembling. His soul had claimed Christine, and he firmly believed that sooner or later she would hear and understand what he had te say te her. " Shall we ride?" he said, just touching her fingers, and looking at her with eyes and face glowing with a wenderfnl happi ness. Alas, Christine could think of mamma, and of morning calls, and of what people would say. Eat Franz overruled every scruple ; he conquered mamma, and laugh ed at society ; and before Christine had decided which of her costumes was most becoming, Franz was waiting at the deer. Hew they rattled up the avenue and through the park! new the green branches waved in triumph, and hew the birds sang and gossiped about sang and gossiped about them I By the time they arrived, at Mount WUZSuZZ bnt he alwawcruXTdewn Vincent they had forgotten thef were m ti..M' . i mortal.. Then the rest in the shady gafi lery, and the subf&teace of, love's exalta tion into.leve!s silent, tender melancholy, were just as blissful. ' They came slowly home, speaking only in glances and monosyllables, but just be fore they, parted' Franz said: "I have been waiting thirty years for you, Chris, tine ; te-day my life has blossomed." And-though Christine did net make any audible answer, he thought her blush suf ficient; besides, she took the lilies from her threat, and gave them te him. Such a dream of true love is given only te the few whom the gods favor. Franz must have steed high in their grace, for it lasted through many sweet weeks and months for him. He followed the Strom Strem bergs te Newport, and laid his whole life down at Christine's feet There was no definite engagement between them, but every one understood that would come as surely as tbe.end of the season. Meney matters and housekeeping must eventually intrude themselves, but the romance and charm of this one summer of life should be untouched. And Franz was net anxious at all en this score. His father, a shrewd business man, had early seen that his son was a poet and a dreamer. "It is net the boy's fault," he said te his partner ; " he gets it from his grandfather, who was always mere out of this world than in it." Se he wisely allowed Franz te fellow his natural tastes, and contented himself with carefully investing his fortune in such real estate and securities as he believed would insure a safe, if slew, increase. Ee had bought wisely, and Franz's income was a certain and handsome one, with a tendency rather te increase than decrease, and quite sufficient te maintain Christine in all the luxury te which she had been accustomed. Se when he returned te the city he in tended te speak te Mr. Strenberg. All he had should be Christine's, and her father shenld settle the matter just as he thought best for his daughter. In a general way this was understood by all parties, and every one seemed inclined te sympathize with the happy feeling which led the levers te deprecate during "these enchanted days any allusion which tended te dispel the ex quisite charm of their young life's idyl. Perhaps it would have been better if they had remembered the ancient supersti tion, and themselves done something te mar their perfect happiness. Pelycrates offered his ring te avert the calamity sure te fellow unmitigated pleasure or success, and Franz ought perhaps te have also made an effort te propitiate his envious Fate. But he did net, and toward the very end of the season, when the October days, had thrown a kind of still melancholy ever the world that bad been se green and gay, Franz's dream was rudely broken broken by a Mr. James Barker Clarke, a bluster ing, vulgar man of fifty, worth three mil mil lient. In seme'way or ether he seemed te have a great deal of' influence ever Mr. Stromberg, who paid him unqualified re spect, and ever Mrs. Stromberg, who seemed te fear him. Mr. Stromberg's "private ledger" alone knew the whole secret ; for of course money was at the foundation. Indeed, in these days, in all public and private troubles, it is proper te ask, net "Who is she?" but "Hew much is it?" Franz Muller and James Barker Clarke hated each ether en sight. Still Franz had no idea at first that this ugly, uncouth man could ever be a rival te his own handsome person and passionate affection. In a few days, however, he was com pelled te actually consider the possibility of such a thing. Mr. Stromberg had as sumed an attitude of such extreme polite ness, and Mrs. Stromberg avoided him if possible, and u net possible, was con strained and unhappy in the familiar rela tions that she had accepted se happily all summer, and her eyes were often swollen and red with weeping. At length, without notice, the family left Newport, and went te stay a month with some relative near Bosten. A pitiful little note from Christine informed him of this fact ; but as he received no informa tion as te the locality of her relative's house, and no invitation te call, he was compelled for the present te de as Chris tine asked him wait patiently for their return. At first he get a few short tender notes, but they were evidently written in such sorrow that he was almost beside himself with grief and anger. When these ceased he went te Bosten, and without difficulty found the house where Christine was stay ing. He was received at first very shyly by Mrs. Stromberg, but when Franz poured out his love and misery, the peer old lady wept bitterly, and moaned out that she could net help it, and Christine could net help it, and that they were all very miserable. ' Finally she was persuaded te let him see Christine, "just for five minutes."; The peer girl came te him, a shadow of her gay self, and weeping in his arms, told him he must bid her geed-by forever. The five minutes were lengthened into a long, terribie hour, and Franz went back te New Yerk with the knowledge that in that hour his life had been broken in two for this life. One night toward the close of November his friend Leuis called. "Franz" he said, "have you heard that Chistine Stromberg is te marry old Clarke?" "Yes." u Ne one can trust a woman. It is a shame of Christine." "Leuis, speak of what you knew. Chris tine is an angel. If a woman appears te de wrong, there is probably some brute of a man behind her forcing her te de it." " I thought she was te be your wife." " She is my wife in soul and feeling. Ne one, thank Ged, can help that. If I was Clarke, I would as willingly marry a corpse as Christine Stromberg. De net speak of her again, Leuis. The peer innocent child! Ged bless her !" and be burst into a passion of weeping that alarmed his friend for his reason, but which was probably its salva tion. In a week Franz had left for Europe, and the next Christmas, Christine and James Barker Clarke were married, and began housekeeping in a style of extrava gant splendor. People wondered and ex claimed at Christine's reckless expenditure, her parents advised, her husband scolded ; but though she never disputed them, she quietly ignored all their suggestions. She went te Paris, and lived like a princess ; Reme, Vienna, and Conden wondered ever her beauty and her splendor ; and wbere aver she went, Franz followed her quietly haunting her magnificent salons like a wretched spectre. They rarely or never spoke. Beyond a grave inclination of the head, or a leek whose profound misery he only understood, she gave him no recognition. The world held her name above reproach, and con sidered that she had done very well te her self. Ten years passed away, but the changes they brought were such as the world re gards as natural and inevitable. Chris tine's mother died, and her father married, again; and Christine had a jWi ahd a daughter. Franz watched anxiously te see if .this new Jeys -would break up the icy MurlttiM -? lte mennAM SAmattmae ha Ur ik, nt &.k m-i ,-e.i. c iz ! . '. . ..zr. -rr: z tk: wretched passion. ' 'If Christine loved a flower, would I net love it also?" he asked himself; "and these little ones, what have they done?" Se at last he get te separate them entirely from every one bnt Christine, and te regard them as part and portion of his love. But at the end of ten years a change came, neither natural or expected. Franz was 'walking moodily about his library one night, when Leuis came te toil him of it. Leuis was no longer young, and was mar ried new, for be bad round out that the beaten track is safest. "Franz," he said, "have you heard about Clarke? His affairs are frightfully wrong, and he shot himself an hour age."; "And Christine? Dees she knew? Who has gene te her?" "' " My wife is with her. Clarke shot him self in his own room. Christine was the first te reach him. He left a letter saying he was absolutely ruined." " Where will Christine and the children go?" " I suppose te her father's. Net a pleas ant place for her new. Christine's step mother dislikes both her and the child ren." Franz said no mere and Leuis went away with a feeling of disappointment. "I thought he would have done something for her," he said te his wife. "Peer Christine will be very peer and dependent." Ten days after, he came home with a different story. ''There never was a woman as lucky about money as Cousin Christine," he said. " Hardy Ss Ball sent her notice te-day that the property of Rye beach settled en her before her marriage by Mr. Clarke was new at her disposal. It seems the old gentleman anticipated the result of his wild speculations, and in or der te provide for his wife, quietly bought and placed in Hardy's charge two beauti fully furnished cottages. There is some thing like an accumulation of sixteen thou sand dollars of rentage ; and as one is luck ily empty, Christine and the children are going there at once. I always thought the property was Hardy's own before. Very thoughtful in Clarke." " It is net like Clarke one bit. I don't believe he ever did it. It is some arrange ment of Franz Mullet's." " Fer goodness' sake don't hint such a thing Lizzie ! Christine would net go, and we should have her here very seen. Be sides, I don't believe it. Franz took the news very coolly, and he has kept out of my way since." The next day Leuis was mere than ever of his wife's opinion. "What de you tbmk, Lizzie?'7 he said. " Franz came te me te-day and asked if JClarke did net once lean me two thousand dollars. I told him Clarke gave me two thousand about the timed we were married." '"Say leaned Leuis,' he answered, 'te oblige me. Here is two thousand and the interest for six years. Ge and pay' it te Christine ; she must need money.' Se I went." "Is she settled comfortably.?" " Oh, very. Ge and see her often. Franz is sure te marry her, and he is growing rich every day. . It seemed as if Leuis's prediction would come true. Franz began te drive out every afternoon te Ryebeach. At first he con tented himself with just passing Christine's gate. But he seen began te step for the children, and having taken them a drive, te rest awhile en the lawn, or in the par lor, while Christine made him a cup of tea. Fer Franz tired very easily new, and Christine saw what few ethers noticed : he had become pale and emaciated, and the least exertion left him weary and breath less. She knew in her heart that it was a pitiful shadow of their first one ! It was hard te contrast the ardent, handsome lever of ten years age with the white, silently happy man who, when October came, had only strength te sit and held her hand, and gaze with eager, loving eyes into her lace. One day his physician met Leuis en Broadway. "Mr. Curtin," he said, "your friend Muller is very ill. I consider his life measured by days, .perhaps hours. He has long had organic disease of the heart. It is near the last." "Dees he knew it?" " Yes, he has knewu it long. Better see him at once." Se Leuis went at once. He found Franz calmly making his last preparations for the great event. "I am glad you are come," he said ; "I was going te send for you. See this cabinet full of letters. I have net strength left te destroy them ; burn them for me when wheal am gene. This small packet is Christine's dear little notes ; bury them with me ; there are ten of them, every one ten years old." " Is that all, dear Franz ?" "Yes; my will has long been made. Except a legacy te yourself, all gees te Christine dear, dear Christine 1" "Yeu love her yet, then, Franz?" " What de you mean ? I have loved her for ages. I shall love her forever. She is the ether half of my soul. In some lives I have missed her altogether : let me be thankful that she has come se near te me in this one." "De yen knew what you are saying, Franz?" " Very clearly Leuis. I have always be lieved with the eldest philosophers that souls were created in pairs, and that it is permitted them in their toilsome journey back te purity and heaven sometimes te meet and comfort each ether. De you think I saw Christine for the first time in your uncle's parlor? Leuis, I have fairer and grander memories of her than any linked te this life. I must leave her new for a little ; but lie does knew; that is my hope and consolation." Whatever were Leuis's private opinions about Franz's theology, it was impossible te dissent at that hour, and he took his friend's last instructions and farewell with such gentle, solemn feelings as had long been strange te his heart. In the afternoon Franz was driven out te Christine's. It was the last physical effort he was capable of. Ne one saw the parting of these two souls. He went with Christine's arms around him, and her lips whispering tender, hopeful farewells. It was noticed, however, that after Franz's death a strange change came ever Chris tine a beautiful nobility and calmness of character, and a gentle setting of her life te the loftiest aims. Leuis said she had been wonderfully moved by the papers Franz left. The ten letters she had written during the spring time of their love went te the grave with him, but the rest were of such an extraor dinary nature that Leuis could net refrain from showing them te his cousin, and then at her request leaving them for her te dis pose of. They were indeed letters written te herself under every circumstance, of her life, and directed te every place in which she had sojourned. In all of them she was addressed as " Beloved Wife of my Seul," and in this way the peer fellow had con soled his breaking, longing heart. Te some of them hehad written imagin ary answers, but as these all referred te a financial secret known only te the parties concerned in Christine's and his own sac rifice, it was proof positive that he had written only for his own comfort. But it was perhaps well they fell into Christine's hands ; she could net but be a better wo man for reading the simple records of a strife which set perfect unselfishness and childlike submission as the goal of its duties. Seven years after Franz's death Christine and her daughter died together of the Ro Re man fever, and James Barker Clarke jun ior was left sole inheritor of Franz's wealth. " A German dreamer !" Ah, well, there are dreamers, and dreamers. And .perchance he that seeks fame, and he that seeks geld, and he that seeks power, may all alike, when this shadowy existanee is ever, leek back upon life "as dream when one awaketb." A Hw of Mark. It is said that one of the bravest soldiers In the Russian army signs his name with a cress. He must be a soldier of the cress, and a man of mark, and no doubt would be glad te put bis mark te a testimony of the excellence et Pr. Themas' Kclectrlc Oil, la curing eats and wounds of every description, it be had a chance 01 trying' it. Fer Mle by H. B. Cochran, drug. gfct, 137 and 13B North Queen street, Lancaster. Statistics prove tnat twenty-nve percent of the deaths In our larger cities are caused by consumption, and when we reflect that this terrible disease In its worst stage wlU yield te abottleefLocber'd Renowned Cough Syrup, shall we condemn the snTerers ter their negli gence, or pity them for their ignorance? Ne 9 East King street. ' Mrs. Benning, cer. Vermont and 14th streets, saya : I have been a severe suffen r front pains in the back and have tried various applica tions, bat nothing has afforded me relief like Dr-'TBemas' Kclectric OIL One bottle has cured me se that I nave no return of the trouble. I have recommended it te etheis and have the assurance that it cured them equally quick. Fer sale by H. B. Cochran, druggist, 137 mad 130 North Queen street, Lancaster, Pa, 30 JtKX BOOV8. HOW TO GET almost everything below value. Every day during summer all sorts of goods remnants and goods that for one reason or another are in our way are picked out and put together te be sold at such prices as they will bring. They are undesirable for us te held ; but they may be as geed for the buyer as anything we have. We have sold already this summer net less than $100,000 worth of goods at irregular prices in this way for, say, 950,000; and many thousands mere are going. There is something marked down at nearly every counter in the store. Everything sold is returnable if un satisfactory at the price. Jehn Wanamaker. Chestnut, Thirteenth, Market anil .1 uiper. PHILADELPHIA. ItKY UOOUS. niAGK SILKS! 1ILACK SILKS! We call particular attention te our Large Stock of BLACK SILKS bought at Importer's Sales in New Yerk and Ph1 iladelphla, which we am offering at prices that defy competition, Alse, BLACK CASHMERES, In all Grades and Qualities. Our 50c. quality is the best ever sold ter the money. The attention of Hetel Keepers and ethers U called te a large let of SAMPLE TOWELS, which we are closing at Lew Prices. FAOESTOCK'S, CHEAP DRY GOODS HOUSE, Next Doer te the Court H NEW FALL PATTERNS Madras Ginghams, PERCALES AND PRINTS. SPECIAL. THREE GASES PRINTS, AT 4 CENTS. CARPETS, WALL PAPERS. J. B. Kartin & Ce. LANCASTER, PA. rOVKDEMB ASD MAClWfUtTH. r ANCASTEK BOILER MANUFACTORY, SHOP ON PLUM STREET, OnoMtiie Locomotive Wekxs. The subscriber continued te manufacture BOILERS AND tJTEAM ENGINES, Fer Tanning and ether purposes furnace Twlers, Bellows Pipes, Sheet-iron Werk, and Blacksmlthing generally. 4 Jobbing promptly attended te. auglWydJ JOHN BEST. WAtCtlT.- WQKMH. WK P. FRAILEY'S MONUMENTAL MARBLE WORKS 75S KertM uana 8fa set, Lancaster. Pa. MONUMENTS, HEAD AND POOT STONES, GABJMUT STATUARY, CKMKTEKT LOTS KNCLOSED, c All work guaranteed aad satisfaction gu en in every particular. N.B. BemeBaber, works at tke extreme end of North Queen street. mas TST LOCHBYS BENOWNED COUUH SYRUP. S' J . V-a ..',