H!!BPPisp?SIH!PS3!P :; ?? Ml.? t k-A'J .f . '--, i!-. KwW ? v ' rJri-i-.S -'$ if , fc M-V -. , miepir,. .X' A . Velrae XYI-Ne.305. LANCASTERPA., WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 25, 1880 Price Tw Cmts. - ' ' .- i - . i - .. ; ! -, ,...- ... .... . - ,.,., . i ,. . i i CLOTHING. Spring Opening AT 24 CENTRE SQUARE. We have lei sale for the coming seasons nn Immense Stock et ! our own manufacture, which comprises the '.attest and Most STYLISI DESIGNS. Come anil gee our SEW GOODS win MEBGHANT WKM, xlilcli is larger and composed et the best styles te he tomtit in the cilj . D. B. istetter & Sen, 24 CENTRE SQUARE. K-lyil LANCASTER. PA AT H. GERHART'S Tailoring Establishment, MONDAY, APRIL 5. Having (usit returned Irem the New Yerk JVoeleu Alarket, 1 am new prepared te exhibit jne of I he Ileal Selected Slecks el WOOLENS FOU TOE Sk anil Hummer Trade, !! brought te this city. ?sle! Nene but the very ENGLISH, FRENCH AWIV AMERICAN FABRICS, all the leading Styles. Trices an low as the ewest, and all goods warranteil :is represent ,ut H. GERHART'S, Ne. 51 North Queen Street. SMALING, THE ARTIST TAILOR. Closing out our stock of cext te make room fop Light Wejglits ut Fall and Winter Stock. A Uirgu Line of English Eevelties. TROPICAL SUITINGS, SERGES AND REPS, ItANNOCKIIUUXS AN1 CKI.TIOS, GAM1IUOON l'AHAMATA AXI 15AT1STE SUITINCS. SEBUSUCKKIU, VAI.ENCIAS, I'AUOI.I': ANI MOIIAlIt COATINGS. A Splendid Assortment or Wiirerd's l'add Ducks in rialnuud Fancy Styles. A Full l.i l'added ne or Marseilles and M Mwj All the latest novelties. An examination of our sleck is respectfully solicited. T. K. SMALING, ARTIST TAILOR, 121 NORTH QUEEN STREET. UKOCEJUJSS. "CUrtJIT JAILS ! FRUIT JAKS I MASON FRUIT JARS, AT D. S. J3U11SK'S, 17 East Kins: Street, Lancaster. Ulewei; puts! plain, glazed and eunamentku FLOWEtt POTS, AT . BURSK'S. "DEACHESl 1'K ACHES t Daily receiving suitable for canning and preserving, ut BURSK'S. UKOCEKUSH. TTTnOI.ICSAT.K AMD BKTAIL. IiEVAITS FLOUR AT Ne. 227 NORTH PRINCE STREET. au-iyd 11RT LOCHEBS . 8IWF KBHGtrNED COUOII Ready-Maae CMm SPRING PEW VRY BARGAINS IN CALICOES AT THE NEW YORK STORE. 5,0110 m m dak ciiicei it 5 m. a yabu. lust opened :m elegant assortment of choice styles in Calicee, Cretonnes, ami Chintzes. MUSLIHS! MUSLINS! Standard Makes of r.lcachcd and Unbleached Muslim Treiii 10 te '3) per ecu t. below June priei-x. INDIA I.IXE.'. VICTOIMA I.AW.NS, WII1TU 1'KjUKS AXI C'AMI'.lilCS AT IM IT TOM 1MMCKS. att, Snand & Company, S AND 10 EAST KING STREET. DRY GOODS! HAGER & BROTHER, NO. 23 W. KIN STKEKT. LAN0A8TEK, Are HTt'IvingXew (iefuN in all Dcpn li:icnls. OUR STOCK OF CARPETS. PAPEE HANGINGS Fer the Fall Season will ceiiip: i-i-mine ceiupti'li' tliau ever bcieic. all the HAGER ir.iTCiins. ZAHM'S PJ-OPEEED POE BTTSIIESS. We are glad te announce te our li icmls thai wc haw rempleled tin allcralien in our main torereom ami new eiler a very lull and complete Meck ler their inspection, including Watches, Jewelry, Silverware, Spectacles, American and Pine French Clocks, &c. Aiming tlH'ililleivnt urikc-;er Watches we c.irrv wc call especial attention te THE LANCASTER WATCH atone of the lust in theiunikrt. T OiirSpec,icle Department includes thp Arundel Tinted Lenses, which nirerd innii comierl te I he eyes than any ethers. Special atlentimi given te fitting glas-t-e.t te weak and delect ive eye-;. Our f.ieiliiies ler business in our SAI.KS. MANUFACTUIilNt! and KKI'AIKINC depart nientiareiiiucli belter than tiiey riv, ami we leel reasonably sure of meeting the wauls el these who lavnrus with their trade. We extend a cordial invit.ltieu te all tecall, assuring them polite attention, lainlealhigaml low piiccs-. THTiTXT T 'ZA'CnVr T-vmvx1 n-n ' ' Zali id's Conier, Lancsisit-r, Pa. vi.eruisi:. GLOSM Oil! OF SPRffiG 11 SUMMER STOCK. In enler le cln;;c out. enr slecl: of Spring and Sutniucr Goods te make room for a heavy Fall Trade, we are eflerin great iiulureinenfs in Men's, Youths' and Children'.". Clothing. In our Custom Department we have a large let of Piece Goods, whieii must be closed out before September 1, regardless or profit. Iu e;ir Heady-made Depart inert we have an unusually tine steek of Summer Clothing, Sill of which can he purchased at very lowest, bottom lignres. Gentlemen, our facilities are net. equaled iu the city. It will cost )ou nothing te examine our stock. MYERS & RATHFON, Xe. 12 KAST.KIKti KTRKKT, LANCASTER, PRNN'A. VAJll'JiTH. At:iAiNs fei: i:vi:kvi:edv. HARE CHANCE IN CAUPETK, Positive s:iJe le Ceduee Sleck el is Carpets, AT AND ItKLOW COST. Call and satisly yourself. Alse, Ingiain, Uag and Chain CariicLs in alimisl endless variety, at H. S. SHIRK'S CARPET HALL, 203 WEST KING STREET, LAXCASTKi:, PA. KOIiUS, ill.ASKETS, SC. s J ION OF TIIK ltUFKAl.O lllCAO. ROBES! R0DES1! BLANKETS ! IIL.VNKETS 1 have new en hand the Lar.-;k.ht, IIi'.st am (,'hkavcst Assortment of Lined and Diilimd ItUFFALO ItOliKS in the city. A Ne LAP AND HOUSE HLANKKTS el every d rip- tien. A lull line of Trunks and Satchels, Harness, Whips, Cellars, &c. AS-llcpalring neatly and piemplly l(inc.S A. MI LEY, lOH North QaevH St., Ijanrnsttr. eiVlydMWAS ATTOJtNJSrS- AT-M.A If UENUV A. 1ULKY Attorney and Counseller-al- Uiw 5!1 Park Hew, New Yerk. Collections made in all parts of the United Slates, and a general legal business transacted. Itefers hy nermissien IxiSteliiinan & lleusel. REMOVAJJi. DIt. 8. It. FOHEMA3I, (PHYSICIAN AND SUUUEON), Kcmevcd Irem Ne. 18 Seuth Prince street, te Ne. 21 1 West Kins street, Lancaster, l'a. fin'2l-3uid AK. McCANN, AUCTIONKKK OP REAL, . Estate and Personal Property, Orders lull nt Ne. :15 Cliatiette street, or at. the llleck Herse Hetel, t and l North Ouecn street, will receive prompt attention. Kills made out and ttende leu te wn itheut additional cost. e27-ly HOODS. :e:- OIL CLOTHS AXI- littsl Deignq ami Colei'ln;;. and be Larger and & BROTHER. .jiwxlky, jtr. CORNER. V ' " MOW C1C1 . VJtNITVItF. HBINITSH, FTNE PURNITUKE -AHI Cabinet Maimlhctiircv. All iu want of Fine or Fancy Cabinet Werk would de well te call and examine .specimens el our work. . J OH ICi: FL'RMTUUK A SPECIALTY. ' HEINITSH, lff Kast Iting Street. VENTS' tlOOVS. ?en i.ini:n cellaics KUISMAN'S. J .Milt FANCY STOCK INOS OO TO . KUISMAN'S. jpeu .: SUSPEND Kits OOTO KUISMAN'S. L'lIU NEW STYLE LINEN HANDKERCHIEFS, OO TO E. J. ERISMANTS, SO NOKTI1 QUEEN STKKKT. EOVNDERHAND MACHINISTS. ANCASTEK 1 BOILER MANUFACTORY, SHOP ON PLUM STREET, OrresmeinK Iocexotivk Works. The fiiihscriher cenUnuiw te manufacture BOILERS AND STEAM ENGINES, Fer Tanning and ether purposes Furnace Twicrs, Kellews lMpea, SheeHren Werk- and Blacksml thing generally. $ Jobbing promptly attended te. aegXMydl JOHN BEST. ILanccistrr Intelligencer. WEDNESDAY EVENINO, AUG. 25, I88O. FEAST AND FAMINE. SOME KKFI.KCTIO.VSUPONMOUAl. AND rilYSIUAl. IM'ONUltfllTIKS. Vivid Centrastn Afirilfd by the Kccerrtft et Kieryiluy l.llc lath trem Uuiigdr and !:! Ill from (iliuteiiy SecIrN IMiilOHepliy. TWOSCORE AND TEN. Air. Ti iiu brMfse'HJLatcHt 1'ectn Aneciletrti et Ihuilel Webster. TWOSCOKi: AND TEN. Acress the sleepy, sun-Kin oil atmosphere Of the pew-checkered, siuarj old meeting house, 'through the high window, I could .see and hear The fur crews caw ing in the forest heughs- The earnest preacher talked of Youth and Age: " Life is a huuh, whose Una arcjlitlinyfmt ! Kueh word it moment, every year a page. Till, leaf by leaf, wc quietly lum the last." Even while he spoke, the Minshine's witness crept r.y many a fair ami many a grizzled head, Seme drooping heavily, as if they slept, Over the miipcllcd minutes as they nped. A hey of twelve, wit li l.tncles Iresh andstreng, Who found the Iv-.t no omiileu or repose, Who deemed thesli.-iti I sermon far tee long Mj-thoughts were i.i Ihe tree-tops with the crews; Or l.mhcr still I seared, upon tins had: Of while clouds sailing iu the shereless hlne. Till he recalled lije fniiii Uielr dazljug truck Te the eh( meeliug-Iieuse am high-hacked pew. " Teciiffer ehiUlhoed, ut it tiinix the leaf, IfeH letiff awl bright the vnrcml page up pears ! Jliil le the aged, looking lute!;, hew brief, Hew brief the tale of half u hundred years!" Over I he drowsy pews the preacher's word Kcseiimled, as he paused le wipa his hrews : I seem te hear it new, as then I heard, Ue-eeheing iu the heller imvt ing house. 4' Oer youth in gene, anil thick and tliiel.tr COMIC YVic hoary years, lil.c tcmpcsl-drircn snow! Flic fail, Jliesfait, life's wasting peiliilinn, Ami ever fatter as it shorter grett'V." My mates sat wondering weai My the while Hew long before his Lastly would come in. Or glancing at the girls across the aisle. Or in some distant corner playing pin. Hut in that moment te my inward eyes A sudden windowepeneil, and I caught Through dazzling rifts a glimpse of ether skies, Thedizzy deep., the blue abyss el thought. lieside me sat my lather, giave ami gray. And old, se old, at t woscere years and ten ! 1 said, " I will remember him this day. When am titty, it I live till then. I will remember all I see and hear, My very thoughts, and hew lite seems te me, This Sunday morning in my thirteenth year; lleu w ill It. seem when I am old as he? " What I s the work lli.it I s-hall II ml te de? Shall I be worthy eMiis houeicd name? Peer and ehsci e? or will my dream come true, Mysccict dream of happiness ami lame?" Ah me, the years betwixt that hour and this ! The aneieul nieeting-hoiire lias passed away, And iu its placva modern ediliee Invites Hie well-dressed worshiper te-d.iy. Willi it have passed 'the weli-rcmcnihercd laces : The old are gene, the boys aie gray-haired lien ; They tee are scattered, si rangers till their places ; And here am 1 at twoseere year.; ami ten ! Hew strangely wandering here lieside the sea. The voice or crews in yonder forest heughs, A cloud, aSahbath bell, bring baik te me Thai morning in the gairit e'd meeting house! An oasis amid t he desert years, That golden Sunday smiles as then it sini'ed1 I see the venerated head ; through tears I see niys-.cH", that far-oil' wondering clil'd! The pew, the preacher, and the whitewashed wall, An imaged book, with careless children turning Its nw In! pases I remember all ; My very thoughts, the iiuestiening and yearning; The haunting faith, the shadowy superstition That I was somehow chosen, the spuci.il care or Powers thai led me through life's change rid vision, Spirits and Inllucuces or earlh and air. In curious pily of myself grown wise, I I hink what then 1 was and dared te hope, And hew my peer achievements satirize The boy'sbrave drcamaml happy horoscope. Te see the Inline Hushed with morning lire, Ke.sy with ban.iers, bright with beckoning spears. Fresh lipids Inviting ceurage and de.-dre, This Is the glory et our yeulhrul years. Te leel the pettiness or prizes wen, With all our vast ambition ; tolieheld Se much attempted and se little done, Tills is the bitterness of growing old. Yet ,vhy repine Though seen we care no mere Fer Irinmphs which, IH1 wen. appear .'O sweel, They serve their use, as toys held out before Ilcguilcdenr infancy te try ids feet. Net In rewards, but in the strength te strive, The blessing lies, and ne' experience: gained ; In daily duties done, hope kept alive, That Leve and Thought arc housed and en tertained. Se net In vain the struggle, though the prize Awaiting mc was ether than it seemed. My feet have missed the paths et Paradise, Yet life is even mere bh-sscd than I deemed. lliehcs I never eug'at, ami have net found, And Fame lias passdl me with averted eye In creeks and hays my ijuict voyage is bound, While the great world without gees surging by. Ne withering envy et another's let, Ner nightmare of contention, plagues my rest; Fer mc alike wliat is ami what Is net, Iteth what I have and what 1 lack are best. A llewer mere sacred thai, far-seen success Perfumes my solitary path ; 1 And Sweet compensation In my humbleness. And reap the harvest et a tranquil mind. I keep some portion of my early dream : Brokenly bright, like moonbeams en a river. It lights my life, a fair elusive gleam, Moves as I move, and leads mc en forever. Our earliest longings prophesy the man, Onr fullest wisdom still enfolds the child ; And In my life 1 trace that larger plan Whereby nt last all things arc reconciled. Tliestormeleilyears, the years that howl and 1 The world, where simple faith seen grows estranged, Teil, passion, less, all thing that meld and chasten, Still leave the inmost part of us nncliangcd. O hey or long age, whose name I liear. Small self, half-hidden by the antique pew, Acress the years I see you, sitting there, Wondering and gazing out into the blue ; And marvel at this sober gray-liaired man lam or seem. Hew changed my days, hew tame The wild.swilt hepc-i with which my youth began ! Yet In my Inmost seiri am the samp. The dreamy soul, tee sensitive and shy. The breeding tenderness Ter Wrd and llewer ; The old, old wonder at the earth and sky. And sense et guidance by an Unseen Power, The.se keep perpetual childhood iu my liuai The peaks of age, that looked se hare and cold, These peaks and I arestill as tarapart As in the years when lllly seemed se old. Age, that appeared lar off a bourn at rest, Ucccdca as 1 advance; the fount of joy KIscs perennial in my gratcrul breast ; And still at filty I am but a boy. J. T. Trowbridge in the Atlantic Monthly. Feasting vh. Starving. Fer the Intblliubkceu. " Such is life" " Seme people arc feast ing all the time and knew net the pangs of hunger, while ethors ate almost starving in the back alleys for want of bread." Upen the great ocean of human events, it is wonderful te contemplate the multi tudineus episcdes of human life that are brought te the surface through the public press. They come sometimes in gentle un dulations, sometimes in liillcs, in boist erous waves and in bounding billows. Seme times they bring glad tidings, some times .individual achievements or general success, but eftcner, much eftencr, wails of wee, personal violence, or heart-rending disasters, New and then they seem te breathe the utterances of "angel's blest," but mere frequently the voices of " gel ins damned." The press, as a faithful chronicler of events, is net responsible for what it is compelled te promulgate, se long as it adheres te truth, any mere than the sea is responsible for,- the debris brought from its depths te the surface, by the cease less action of its waves. It is true, much may be brought te the surface that is hid cons te beheld and of little use, physically or commercially, te society ; but then, if it was always calm, we should never knew its composition and contents; for, wc may feci assured that it reveals nothing but what is actually there. Se it is with the press ; if it retlccted nothing but what is useful, beautiful and sublime, we should never knew that their opposite existed ; never be able te determine between geed and evil perhaps never specially embrace the one and resist or else eschew the ether. The lines wc have quoted above are the concluding reductions of a contemporary upon the case of a peer, but iiitclligcntand respectable woman and her live half-starv ed ami my-ciati ciiiitiren, occupying an oo eo oe scuro attic, in the city of "Getham." There are doubtless thousands of such cases all ever the country, but this scents te have been an especially aggravated one, from the respectable jiositieu the patties once occupied, and which was lest through the long and painful atllictiens and death of an excellent husband and father. Side by side with this distressing paragraph was another te this eilect. At. a meeting or the "Turtle Jlui a costly prize was awarded te a certain Mr. , who devoured twenty-one plates of turtle soup at a single "sitting." The second prize was awarded te Majer , who devoured seventeen plates. Others there doubtless 'wcie who devoured ten, twelve, or perhaps sixteen plates, bnt re ccived no picmium, simply because only two may have been eflered. Perhaps it would have been mere expressive of the act, te have used the terms " belted," " gulped," or " swilled," se nia.iy plates of tuttle soup, but these terms might have been regarded as tee inelegant te have been applied te gentlemen ; for surely the Turtle Club could net be composed of any thing but gentlemen. Hence, through the poverty of the English language, thejwerd devour became a sort of necessity. The German is richer than the English iu this respect; they have "cssen" and "fres scn," the former applied te human beings, the latter te brutes. Admitting that a man in rebu&t health might require six plates of turtle soup for a " square meal," this Mr. has transcended the norm al quantity by fifteen plates, an act which perhaps no brute en earth would commit, except a hog or a glutton. It is true there are numerous precedents for such achieve ments, and.in high life tee. Ancient Heme, as well as ether realms, had many illustri ous examples among their emperors, kings and nobility, but they were almost uni versally regarded as "mere honored in the bicach than in the observance" eftheln. These plus fifteen plates of turtle soup alone, or their pecuniary value, might have afforded the alimentary .stimulant te have saved fifteen human beings front im mediate starvation, or from compelled tazed that crime, ami one must be " am heaven's lighting slumbers," while such iniquities arc being perpetrated. Ne man has a moral or physical right te gormand germand ize, whatever his civil or political rights may be ; and for every tresspass in that direction, he is certain te be held physical ly and morallyjrcspensiblo. It was recorded some years age that a man in outward appearance at least en a wager devoured eighteen square ginger cakes, fourteen hard-boiled cirgsaud seven mugs of strong beer, and then lay down and died with his lioets en, " like another deg." His friends seemed te regret that he did net accomplish the ten, fifteen aud twenty before he died ; perhaps, in order that they might have wen their wagers en him, and he have left a greater reputation. Many such events occur and elicit little, or no comment whatever, and society be comes, as it were, familiarized with them, aud yet they involve the most vital princi ples connected with " life aud immortal ity." Probably, if the real truth were known,as many die from excessive catintr as from j excessive drinking, but very often the two extremes run piirunei. li, is euiy eecause intemperance in drinking has become se disreputable, that intemperance in eating is socially inconspicuous. Seme years age a peer destitute wan derer had traveled through the streets of a town about forty-eight hours without a mouthful te cat, and his stomach in a state of "grewlhijj mutiny and bold revolt." Seeing a crowd gathered around the deer of a gcntlcmans mansion, he edged his way in te ascertain the cause. He was informed that the master of the mansion had fallen down dead from a surfeit of eating. He convulsively smote his stomach, and im ploringly turned up his eyes, ejaculating "Oh, I wish it had been me." . Peer souls, it would be cruel te point them te Dr. Tanner and his forty days. Feasts and famines seem often te run par all I in this world, and the difficulty seems ie ue iu gutting tuu two lines te se con verge as te form a conjunction, 1. 1 iiw - vwuium,My,, lnilV some people are feastinc all the lime and kJw the fi hang JJg ethers are almost starving in" the -foelc alleys rer the want of bread." Sector. Daniel Weteter' at Mart et. When "Webster 'was, secretary of state and lived in 'vrhshinfften. he was his eWn I purveyor and was a regular attendant at Marsh market oil market mornings. He almost invariably were a large, bread brimmed, soft felt hat, with his faverc blue coat and bright buttons, a butTcassi butTcassi tncre waistcoat and black trousers. Going from stall te stall, followed 'by a set-raft tearing a large basket in which purchases' were carried home. lie u-mihl infan with the butchers, the fishmongers, and the green-grocers with a " grave droll ery of which his biographers, iu their anxiety todeifyjiini.hayeraado no uientiep. He always liked te havei friend or two at his dinner tabic, and in inviting them $aks ccremenie,, he would say in his dccp,cheery dccp,cheery veice. " Come and dine with me te-morrow. I purchased a noble saddle of Valla'v of Virginia mutton in market last 'week and I think you will cniey it." Or. M received some line cod-fish from Bosten ty tlay, sir ; will you dine with me at fire o'clock, and taste them?" Or, "I found a famous 'possum in market this morning sir, and left orders with Menica, my cook, te have it baked in -the real old Virginia style, with a stuffing of chestnuts and sur rounded by baked sweet potatoes. It will be a dish tit for the gds. Come and taste it." The prices at the Marsh markc t in March, J04i, were veiy reasonable, namely ; beef, six te twelve and one half cents per pound; mutton, five te ten cents per pound ; Iamb, titty te seventy-live cents per quarter; wild turkeys, seventy-live ecntscaeh ; tame turkeys, $1.25 te $1.50 ; geese, seventy-live cents each ; shad, sixty cents a pair , perch, twenty-live cents a bunch; butter, twenty te twenty-live cents a pound ; eggs, eighteen centa a dozen ; potatoes, seventy live cents a bushel ; corn, fifty-five cents a bushel ; meal sixty-live cents a bushel ; and apples, thirty-live cents a peck. .1 htntic ilentMy. N. McKac, Wycbridge. Ontario, writes : "I have sold large quantities of Dr. Themas' Kclcctieeil ; it. isusi-d for colds, sero threat, croup, &c, ami, in faet, for any affection or the threat it works like inasic. It is asuri: cure frr burns, wounds and bruises.." Fer sale by II. I!. Cochran, druggist, l.iTand V.U North Queen street, lmcaster, Pa. it Statistics prove thai iwenly-nve percept of the deaths in our larger cities are caused by consumption, and when we reflect that tilts terrible disease Iu its worst stage will yield te abottlcerLoehcr's Ucuewned Cough Syrup, shall we condemn the suTercrs ler their negli gence, or pity them ler their ignorance? Ne J East King street. Step that Nuisance. Wheezing with the Asthma, Bronchitis or a simple cough is Inexcusable when Dr. Themas' Kclcctrlc Oil banishes thuthreat-laecnitiiigand car-disturbing complaints, and averts the danger or Consumption. Cease therefore, te be a sufferer and a nuisance. Fer sale by II. J5. Cochran, druggist, 137 anil IX) North (jiiccn street, Lancaster, Pa. . 10 mtY noens. HOW TO GET almost everything below value. Every day during summer all sorts of goods remnants and goods that for one reason or another arc in our way aie picked out and put together te be sold at such prices as they will bring. They are undesirable for its 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, $50,000 ; and many thousands mere are going. There is something marked down at nearly every counter iu the store. Everything sold is returnable, if un satisfactory at the price. Jehn Wanamaker. Chestnut, Thirteeiitli, Market and .IuIper. PIIILADKI.PHIA. f.tlOKS AN1 STATIONERY. VKIV STATION EltY I New, Plain and Fancy STATIONERY. Alse, Velvet and Eustlake PICTTTRE FRAMES AND EASELS. AT I Ivl. FLYNN'S IH." AM) STATIONERY STOKE, Ne. 42 "WEST KINO STREET. JOM BAEE'S SONS, 15 and 17 NORTH QUEEN STREET, ' LANCASTER, PA., have In stock a large assortment of E00KS AND STATIONERY. Attention Invited te their FAMILY AND PULPIT BIBLES Teachers' lllblcs, Sunday Scheel Libraries, Hymnals, Prayer Heek, IIVMX HOOKS AND MUSIC BOOKS Fer Sunday Scheel!, FINE REWARD -CARDS. SUNDAY SCHOOL REQUISITES of all kinds CONGRESS HALlL, CAPE MAT, N. J. . OPEN FOR THE SEASON. EJ.4U.K. CRUMP, ) Of the Coteanade Hetel, K.A.UILLKTT, Philadelphia. Jytt-Mtdeed MLEMCAZ. CUTICURA BLOOD AND SKIN KM Kill HIS CuncrttA Rxsez.wrr purities the bleed through the bowels, liver, kidneys ami skint Cuticitra, a Medlcln.il 4c.lly, removes dead tlesh and skin, renders healthv ulcers and old sores, allays Inflammation, itching and Irrita- iien ei ine sKin una scuip. cuticcilv meuici meuici meuici nalToiij(tSeai restores whiteness and beau titles the skin. CtrricunA Shavise Se.w is the only medicinal soap expressly prepared ter sliaving. SALT RHEUM FOR A LIFETIME I have hail a most wonderful cure of Salt Rheum. Fer seventeen years I suffered with Salt Rheum; I had it en my head, face, neck, arms and legs. I was net able te walk, only en my hands and knees, tot one year. 1 have uet been able te help myself for eight years. I tried hundreds or remedies; net one had the least effect. Theilocterssrtldniyca.so was in curable. Se my parents tried everything that came along. I saw tlieailvertisementaml con; eluded te try CtrricunA Rkwcdies. The llrst box nt CtrricvilA brought the Humer te the surface of tnv skin. It would drop oil as it came out, until new I am entirely well. All 1 can say Is, 1 thank you me-t heart II v Ter my cure. WILL McHeXALH. 131T I!lttkrpieli St., Chicaue, 111., March 4, 1ST!). PSORIASIS. I have been alltictcd for nineteen years with Psoriasis, and have spent hundreds el dollars ter doctors aud stuff they cull bleed purifiers. I lectors did net knew- w hat te call my disease. I would scratch nights until I scratched inv selr raw: then it would dry and ierui Inte scales, which would all he scratched off next night and se en. I have been completely cured by thcCiJTiiuKA UtcMEniLS. THOMAS DK LANKY. C'omcekd St.. I'lrsTeu Mill, Mt-Mrius, Tunn., June Hi, IS?.). CCTicuin Rev-eons are prepared by WI'KKS k. runr.K, uiieiiitsis ami iiruggisLs,;aiii w usn ingieii si reel. Druggists. ISosten, ami are for sale by all MALT BITTERS. UNFEKMENTED MALT AND HOPS! DYSPEPSIA. Dyspepsia is the prevullng malady of civilized lite. It lies at the liotem of one-half enr misery. It is the rock upon which many of our business ventures have split. It clouds the mind, weakens the body, and prcysupe n the vitality. Where shall wcllnd renei irem mis ineruiu, meiuucneiy misery 7 MALTK1TTKRS! At once a medicine and a teod, this wonderful nutrient unit invigerant builds up enfeebled digestion, regulates the flew of the gastric jnices, dissolves and assimi lates every article of diet, and cures Headache, Dizziness,' Itllieus Attacks, Palpitation of the Heart, Nervousness, Sleeplessness, Melen, chely, and a thousand ether morbid tonus assumed by Dyspepsia. MALT HITTERS ure prepared wilhsvt fer mentation from Canadian KAKLF.Y MALT unit; HOPS, and warranted superior te all ether forms of malt or medicine, while free from the objections urged against malt Honors. Ask ter Malt Itirasia prciuircd by th- Malt IIiTTEits Cevpahv, and see that ever- bottle bears the Tkadk Makk I.AUKL.duly -Sni.NEDUmk enclosed in Wavk Links. MALT IUTTEKS are Ter sale by all Drug gists. - ivl-lliulW&S&W COAL. R It. MARTIN, Wholesale and itaiail Dealer In all kinds el LUMUER AND COAL. ij-Vanl : Ne. North Water ami Priucn streets ulieve Lemen. IjincusU-r. uiHyd COAL! COAL! COAL! COAL Ceal of the JSettt (Jmttity pnt up expressly for family use, and at the low est market prices. TRY A SAMPLE TON. 2" YARD ISO SOUTH WATER ST. iiixSMyd PHILIP SCUUM.SOX A CO. COAL! 'COALJ Fer geed, clean Family and all ether kinds of COAL go te RUSSEL-& SHTJLMTER'S. Quality and Weight guaranteed. Orders re siiectfully fjellcited. OFFICE: 23 EtMt King Street. YARD: 618 North Prince Street. anglt-tuprlSR riOALI COALf COAL!!! We have constantly en hand all th Ix-st gradesjef COAL that are in market, which we ure selling as low :ls any yard in the city. Call and get enr prices licferu buying else where. M. F. 8-.7-lyd STEIGERWALT & SON, SU NORTH WATER STREET. COHO & WILEY, 3SO NORTH WATER ST.ylMHrmstrr, I'm., Wholesale and Itcuill Dealers in LUMBER AND GOAL. Connection With the Telephonic Exchange. Rranch Office : Ne. 3 NORTH DUKE ST. febvs-lyd COAL! COAL!! QORREOHT & 0O., Will deliver cool at the following prices: II. D. Broken Egg and Nut $U5 Enterprise, Broken Egg and Nut 4ja Lyken's Valley, ltreken, Egg and Steve... 4.80 " " lent m All tirades Ne. 1 Pea 3.33 Weight guaranteed. P. W. UORRECHT, Agt., .1. B. RKILLEY, ang!7 tfd W. A. KELLER. CHINA ANIt O LASS tT ARE. fllUNA, OLASS AND QUEENSWARK. CHINA HALL. White and Decorated Stene China, Tea, Din ner and Chamber Sets, White, tJeld Band and Fancy French China Tea and Dinner Seta, Glass Sets, Tumblers, Goblets, Fruit Ik) wis. Pitchers, 4c. Fruit Jars! Jelly Cups!! AT TnE LOWEST PRICES, AT HIGH & MARTIN'S, Ne. 15 EAST KINO STREET. RINGWALT'S Fer Best 0M Rye Wkbkies, Best Syrnp. made eat of Sugar, Beat Coffee and Sugar in town, Rest Alcohol, Beat Bittern. . at Ha. 906 DMOl A.j?ufti rZ