Lancaster daily intelligencer. (Lancaster, Pa.) 1864-1928, October 04, 1880, Image 1

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Volume XVII--N0. 29.
LANCASTER, PA., MONDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1880
iPrim Tire Geats.
'j
4 A1I&.1 tHHti A.LU mJirW 9 i
lb
.SHK Of . j Ml
'
1-
zr oeons.
LADIES' COATS.
Opened tills day n large stock of the above
goods, le which special attention Is Invited.
Silk and Cotten Yelvets
FOR TRIMMING AND SKIRTS.
BLACK AND COLORED SATINS
FOB TRIMMING, &c.
BLACK SIL.KS
ATCD
Black ami. Colored Cashmeres.
We have all the above goods in lull supply,
and te be sold sit our usual Lew Prices.
FAHNESTOCK'S,
Next Doer te tiie Court Heuse.
O FECIAL NOTICE.
FALL 1880.
NEW FALL AND WINTER
DRY GOODS.
HAGER & BROTHER
AKK 11LCE1VING DAILY
NKW FALL AXI) WINTER GOODS
IN ALL DEI-ATM ENTS.
NOVELTIES IX 8IL rt,
NOVELTIES IN VELVETS,
NOVELTIES IN FRENCH DltESS GOODS,
NOVELTIES IN ENGLISH DKESS GOODS,
NOVELTIES IN AMERICAN DKESS GOODS.
LYONS 11LACK and COLORED SILKS,
1ILACK and COLORED BROCADE SILK&,
TRIMMING SILKS and SATINS,
BLACK and COLORED DRESS and TRIM
MING VELVETS.
' BLACK CASHMERES.
plcndld value, 37c, 45e, Mtc, 07c, T.".c, S7c,f I ,l.i"i,
I'.LACKSILK WARl HENRIETTA,
FRENCH CREPE CLOTH,
MOMIE CLOTH,
ENGLISH CREPES AND KLACK TH1KET
SHAWLS.
Slisrnis, Cloaks and Cleakings.
LADIES' and CHILDREN'S HOSIERY
and UNDERWEAR,
GLOVES. LACES and RIKISONS.
CHI NTZES and CRETONN KS,
MUSLINS and SH EKTINGS,
TAKLE LINEN,
TOWELS and TOWELING,
TURKEY RED CLOTHS,
MARSEILLES QUILTS,
In large assortment, at very LOWEST pi ice-,.
3-C11II and examine
HAGE11& BROTHER.
j. b. msms & co.
CARPETS
xn
WALL PAPERS.
We are new -showing New and Attractive
Designs in CARPETS and WALL PAPERS.
All grades et
Brussels anil Iipiii Carpets.
'Our Uck is larger than ever before, and
.vil) beheld at
VERY LOW PRICES.
MATS, RUGS, CRUMB CLOTHS, &c.
WINDOW SHADES
Axn
FIXTURES.
J. B. Martin & Ce.,
Cemer West King and Prince Streets,
LANCASTER, PA.
Ll J
FURNITURE.
HBINITSH,
FINE FURNITURE
AND
Cabinet Manufacturer;
All In want of Fine or Fancy Cabinet Werk
would de well te call and examine specimens
et our wert.
OFFICE' FURNITUBE A SPECIALTY.
HEINITSH,
15 Bast KlBjr Street.
TRAIN SrKCCLATION
JT In large or small amounts. $25 or $20,000
Writc W. T. SOULE & CO., Commission Mer
chants, 130 La Salic street, Chicago, 111., for cir
la. mW-ryd
NEW ADVERTISEMENTS.
TABGAINsT BARGAINS!!
SELLING OFF! SELLING OFF!!
Bathven & Fisher
O.Ter their entire-stock ei
Ready-Made Clothing
at and below Cost, with a view et discontinu
ing the READY-MADE CLOTHING business,
anil devoting their attention exclusively te
CUSTOM WORK.
CLOTHING made promptly te enler, and
satisfaction in all cases guaranteed. A select
line of Cleths, Cassimeres, Worsteds, Coating",
Suitings. .Cheviots. Meltons, Overceatings,
Vestlngs, &c, always en hand and orders re
spect duly 'solicited. Alse, a general line of
Furnishing Goods.
RATHVON& FISHER
Merchant Tailors and Drapers,
Ne. 101 North Queen St., Lancaster, Pa.
SPECIAL. These In want of Rcady-Made
Clothing will consult their own Interest by
giving them a call before purchasing else
where, as iheir Clothing are mainly et their
own manufacture and substantially made.
hcp2a-lmd
H. GERHART,
TAILOE,
Has just opened a
CHOICE STOCK
WOOLENS
FOR THE
FALL TRADE.
r
SELECT STY LES and none but the best et
ENGLISH, FRENCH
AMD
AMERICAN FABRICS,
AT
Ne. 51 North Queen Street.
H. GERHART.
CLOTHING-!
CLOTHING!
We have new teidv ter vale an Immense
Stock et
Fall and Winter,
which are Cut and Triiumjxi in the Latest
Style. Wc can give you a
GOOD STYLISH SUIT
AS LOW AS $10.00.
PIECE GOODS
In great vat lei v. made te order at short notice
sit the low est prices.
D. B. Hostetter & Sen,
24 CENTRE SQUARE,
G-lyd
LANCASTER. PA.
JiltVUS, AC.
11RCSSES! TRUSSES!! TRUSSES!!!
. Sufferers from Rupture w 111 flndthe safest,
easiest and cheapest Trusses In the world en
exhibition and ler sale by
ANDREW G. FREY. Druggist,
Cor. N. Queen and Orange Sts, Lancaster, Pa.
Call and see.
Alse, the only sure cure for Piles,
FREY'S UNIVERSAL PILE SUPPOSITORY.
Xcver lails. Price. 50e. and 75c. a bev.
nlO-yd
H
ULL'S 1)11116 STORE.
FOB
PRESERVING CIDER
use
NEUTRAL
SULPHITE OF LIE.
DIRECTIONS FOR USING WITH
EACH PACKAGE.
FOR SAIK AT
HULLS DRUG STORE
Ne. 15 WEST KING STREET,
EUg3S-lyd LANCASTER, PA.
ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW
HENRY A.KDLKY
Attorney and Counseller-at-Law
21 Park Rew. New Yerk.
Collections made in all parts of the United
Slates, and a general legal business transacted
Refers by permission te Stclnman A Hensee
IttY LOCHER'B RENOWNED COUGH
. SYBUP
Ready-Male Gleflung
KIDNEY PADS.
DATS KBIT PAD!
A discovery which cures by the natural pro
cess ABSORPTION,
all diseases of the Kidneys, Bladder, Urinary
Organs and Nervous System, when nothing
else can. It Is comfortable te the patient, pos
itive In its effects, and the first cure for these
painful and much dreaded affections,
Diabetes and Bright's Disease,
while Its cares of Gravel, Dropsy, Catarrh of
the Bladder. Brlckdust Deposit, Painful Uri
nating, High Colored Urine, Nervous Weak
ness and Fain In the Back seem mere like
miracles than cases et natural healing. The
price brings It within the reach et all, and it
will annually save many times Its cost in
doctor's bills, medicines und plasters, which
at best give but temporary relief. It can be
used without tear or harm, and with certainty
of a permanent cure. .Fer sale by druggists
generally, or sent by mall (free of postage) en
receipt of the price. Regular Pad. $2; Child's
Fad (ter incontinence of urine in children)!
$1.50: Special (extra size), $3. Our book, " Hew
a Life was Saved," giving the history of this
new discovery, and a large record of most re
markable cures, sent free. Write ler it. Ad
dress Day Kidney Pad Company,
TOLEDO, OHIO.
PA TITIAN Owing te the many wertldess
UUUlIUit. Kidney Fads new seeking a sale
en our reputation, we deem it due the altlicted
te warn them. Ask for DAY'S KIDNEY PAD,
and take no ether. 84-lvdeedMWAFAw
EASTERN AGENCY,
CHARLES N. CRITTENT0N,
115 Fulton St., New Yerk.
$500 REWARD !
OVER A MILLION OF
PROF. GUILMETTE'S
French Kidney Pals
Have already been sold in this country and in
France ; every one of which has given perfect
satisfaction, anil has performed cures every
satisfaction, and has
time when used according te directions. We
new sav te the afflicted ami doubting ones
that we wll pay the above reward ter a single
case et
LAME BACK
hat the Pad falls te cure. This Great Remedy
will Positively and Permanently cure Lum
bago, Lame Back, Sciatica, Gravel. Diabetes,
Dropsy, Bright's Disease or the Kidneys, In
continence and Retention et the Urine, In
flammation of the Kidneys, Catarrh of the
Bladder, High Colored Urine, Pain in the
Back, Side or Leins, Nervous Weakness, and
in fact all disorders of the Bladder and Urinary
Organs whether contracted by private disease
or otherwise.
LADIES, if you are suffering from Female
Weakness. LeucerrhOBa, or any disease et the
Kidneys, Bladder, or Urinary Organs,
YOU CAN BE CUBED !
Without swallowing nauseous medicine-', by
simply wearing
PROF. GUILMETTE'S
FRENCH KIDNEY PAD,
WHICH CURES BY ABSORPTION.
Askyourdruggistfer PROF. GUILMETTE'S
FRENCH KIDNEY' PAD, and take no ether.
If he has net get it, send ti and yen will re
ceive the Pad by return mall. Fer sale by
JAMES A. ME VERS,
Odd Fellows' Hall, Columbia, Pa.
Sold only by GEO. W. HULL,
Druggist, IS W. King St., Lancaster, Pa.
augll-GmdcedM.W&F
Prof. Guilmette's French Liver Pad.
Will positively cure Fever nnd Ague, Dumb
Ague, Ague Cake, Billiens Fever, Jaundice,
Dyspepsia and nil diseases of the Liver,
Stomach and Bleed. Price $1.50 by mall. Send
ter Prof. Guilmette's Treaties en the Kidneys
und Liver, free by mail. Address
FRENCH PAD COMPANY,
Teledo, Ohie.
augll-CindcedM.WAF
HOOKS AND STATIONERY.
DCIIOOt BOOKS.
SCHOOL BOOKS
ASH
SCHOOL SUPPLIES
for Lancaster tflty and County, at
L M. FLYNN'S
Ne. 42 WEST KINO STKKET.
DCHOOL HOOKS,
BLANK BOOKS
AJtD
Fancy Stationary
A1-
FOIf DERSMITI'S
Ne. 32 East King St., Lancaster, Pa. J
ang23-4td
SCHOOL BOOKS
FOR TUB
Schools of Lancaster City,
NEW AND SECOND-HAND.
At the LOWEST PRICES, at the Boek Stere of
JOM BAER'S SONS,
15 and 17 NORTH QUEEN STREET,
LANCASTER, PA.,
EDUCATIONAL.
PENNSYLVANIA MUSEUM AND SCHOOL
of Industrial Art. The school year of 1880
81 will begin Monday. Sept. 13. Instructions
for young men and women In Industrial Draw
ing, Painting and Modeling as applied te the
arts. Send ler circulars te THE SECRETARY,
15 S. Seventh street, Philadelphia.
aug2-19teedAGtw
mBE ACADEMY CONNECTED WITH
L Franklin and Marshall College otters su
nerim- mi vnntiurea te vnimir men ana nova wnn
lesirc cither te prepare for college or te obtain
ceived
ait any time during the school year
Send for circulars. Address
ut
REV. JAMBS CRAWFORD.
ctll-JV'1 Lancaster. Pj
TINWARE, JtC-
GAS FIXTURES,
IN ENDLESS VARIETY,
AT
Suertzer,Huaiphreville & KieiTer's
. 40 EAST KINO STREET.
Hancasier Intelligencer.
MONDAY EVENING, OCTOBER 4, 1880.
"THE SOLID SOUTH."
WADE
HAMPTON TfcLLS
SO.
WHY IT IS
Solid for the Constitution ana Union The
Democracy a National Party ; The
Republican the Party of Sec
tionalism. WILLIAM TELL.
The Chapels te be Dedicated te the Memery
of the Alleged Mythic Swiss
Patriot
Why the Seuth Is Solid.
Frem Wade Hampton's New Yerk Speech.
The solid Seuth, with the Iliad of woes
it brings, is the one argument with which
the Republicans answer all charges against
their party. I have said that there is a
falsehood implied in this party catchword.
In what sense is the Seuth solid? Is it se
against the North? The Democracy of
Maine have answered in language net te
be misunderstood Ne, and the patriotic
Democracy of the whole North will seen
re-echo the noble response. Is it solid
against the constitution? Reckless as are
our political opponents, there will scarcely
be found one se reckless as te dare te
make such a charge Is it solid against
the Union ? Every act of every Southern
state since the war repels such an unjust
imputation. Is it solid in any proper sense
of the word? The large Republican vote
cast in the Southern states proves that it is
net. What justice, then, is there iu this
cry, the Sele object of which is te array
one portion of our common country against
another, te arouse passions evoked by un
happy civil strife, and te re-awaken ani
mosities which every patriot desires te see
buried forever? What would be said if the
Seuth should raise her voice in angry pro pre
test because the New England states have
been se solidly Republican until Maine has
broken the ranks ? With as much justice
might we of the Seuth complain of the for
mer solidity of the Pacific slope, or that of
the great Northwest, as that wc should be
denounced because wc cling te the faith
of our fathers and support the Democratic
nominees. Rut admitting for the sake of
argument that the Seuth is solid, and that
this is an abnormal and unfortunate con
dition of affairs, why did net our Republi
can friends, who affect te sec new se much
danger in this solidarity, point out and
pretest against the danger when the Seuth
was absolutely solid for the Republican
party ? If the danger te the country, and
the only danger that threatens it, lies in
the solidity of that particular portion of
it, wc surely must have been in great peril
when under the reconstruction acts, ad
ministered by carpet-bag adventurers, the
Seuth presented a solid phalanx of Radical
bummers and thieves as her contribution te
the wisdom, the statesmanship and the pa
triotism of the country. Ne Republican
orator among these who are new telling
the people that the solidity of the Seuth
means war, pestilence and iammc, and
the overthrew of our institutions, the
abrogation of the constitution, and worse
than all ether evils, the defeat of Gar
field, then warned his unsuspecting coun
trymen of the imminent danger threaten
ing them ; no stalwart organ called then
upon the loyal North te avert this peril by
becoming solidly Democratic because the
Seuth was solidly Republican. Then
everything was serene in the Republican
camp, and all went merry as a marriage
bell. Every office-holder was a Republi
can, and the country was necessarily net
only safe, but prosperous. Gigantic mo me mo
nepolies appropriated the public domain ;
lobbyists drove an unblushing and prosper
ous trade en the very floors of Congress ;
whiskey ripgs defrauded the government
of millions, while the chiefs of these rings
hob-nebbed with high officials, and Black
Fridays, Dc Golyer pavements and
Credit Mebiliers brought out in strong
light the incorruptible honesty of our
rulers and our would-be rulers. Thank
Ged, in these disgraceful scandals, which
should roake every honest citizen blush for
shame, the Democratic Seuth had no share.
But this digression, induced by my ad
miration of the consistency of that great
party which claims all the intelligence, all
the virtue and all the patriotism of the
country, has led me from my theme. Is it
unnatural that these in the Seuth who
have always been citizens, except when
disfranchised by the Republican party,
should new be Democrats? The answer
is te be found by reverting te the history
of parties in this country. Iu the con
vention which framed our present con
stitution the lines which still separate,
the two great parties were sharply drawn
On the one side were the advocates of a
strong government the rallying cry of
the Republicans of te-day while en the
ether were these who urged the establish
ment of a government of the people, for
the people, and by the people. Party
names have changed since these days, but
the great antagonistic "principles which
struggled for supremacy then still live in
the Republican and Democratic parties..
The former party still 'gravitates7 te use
a phrase of its presidential nominee to
wards a strong government towards cen
tralization, while the latter advocates the
ancient Democratic doctrine, a strict con
struction of the constitution, conceding te
the general government all its legitimate
powers, while securing te the several
states all powers net delegated by them te
the general and common government. In
the long contest between these antagonistic
and contending piinciples the Seuth has
been steadily and almost invariably found
en the side of the Democracy. Her vote in
presidential contests has mere than once
been cast against her own honored sons
because they were net Democrats, and
she has cordially supported Northern
men because they were. All the politi
cal training of her people, all their tradi
tions, all their instincts, all their interest!),
led them te be Democrats. They were
such by inheritance. In the old division of
parties into Whig and Democrat a min
ority of the Senthcrn people, strong by
virtue of their intelligence, their zeal and
their patriotism, was found in the ranks of
the former. But when the Whig party of
the North became merged in the Free-Seil
party, when sectionalism unhappily took
the place of politics, the Whigs of the
Seuth were forced by the instincts of self
preservation te enroll themselves iu the
Democratic party, or at least te act with
that party. The Seuth was thus again
made solid for Democracy by that fell
spirit of sectionalism which has brought
such unutterable sorrow upon our country,
and which, if net effectually rebuked, will
bring still further misery and ruin. When
the war came all party lines were forgotten
in the Seuth as in the North. Whig and
Democrat, Union man and secessionist,
were all alike drawn into the vast whirl
pool, and again was the Seuth forced into
solidity for self-protection. I am simply
stating historical facts, net expressing any
opinion en them, but leaving their discus-
sien te the philosophic student of his
tory. Following the order of events,
what was the condition of political opin
ion in the Seuth when the war was ended?
It is undeniable that there then was great
soreness felt by the Southern people te
wards the Northern Democrats. "We had
seen them fighting for the preservation of
the Union as earnestly and as steadfastly
as the Republicans. We has seen them
ettering tneir treasures and. their lives as
freely as these who had been their most
bitter political enemies, and there was at
that time but little disposition among the
Southern people te renew old parties. It
is a very significant fact confirmatory of
this view that in nearly every Southern
state at the first election of members of
Congress held after the war pronounced
Union men or old-line Whigs were elected
as representatives. My own state fur
nishes a striking illustration of this fact.
There the distinguished and venerable B.
F. Perry, who had opposed secession te
the last and who has always been recog receg
uized as a Union man, was elected te Con
gress, and Jas. L. Orr, another strong op
ponent of secession, was chosen by the
people governor of the state. This ac
tien en tue part el tne southern peo
ple certainly did net manifest a spirit
of stubborn or malignant opposition
te the inevitable consequences of defeat.
It rathfisdiewed a disposition en their
part tEMMftiB geed faith all these con cen
sequcnlMJPnm honest and honorable ef
fort te cencHIiate these who had fought
successfully te preserve the Union. This
effort, sincere and patriotic as I firmly be
lieve it te have been, was destined te fall,
and its failure was due solely te the Re
publican party. This party had absolute
control of the government in all of its de
partments, and if its patriotism and been
as enlarged as its power the country would
have been spared the shame of the recon
struction acts. I shall net speak of these
acts, for it is net my desire te reawaken
the sad and bitter memories connected
with them. They have passed into our
history, filling one of its darkest pages,
and iu the geed providence of Ged they
have recoiled upon these who conceived
them. The weapons intended for our de
struction have been turned against these
who forged them. The action of the Repub
licans when the Southern members of Con
gress presented themselves for admission is
in the memory of all men. Our represen
tatives were ignominiously thrust from the
seats te which they had been invited and
te which they had been legally elected.
While war was flagrant, Congress with
singular unanimity and in the most solemn
manner, declared that it was net waged
for the conquest or subjugation of the
Seuth, but for the preservation of the
Union, and that no state had the right or
the power te leave it. But when the Con
federate armies surrendered we were told
by the Republicans that these great states,
several of which had aided in no small de
gree te form that Union, had been obliter
ated from the map of the great
republic, and that they were but
conquered provinces, te be ruled
by military satraps. Seme philosopher,
with equal wit and wisdom, has declared
that "there is a great deal of human nature
in mankind," and recognizing the truth of
this maxim, you can scarcely wonder that
after this action of the Republicans the
Seuth became thoroughly united against
that party. Seme Republican papers, ac
tuated doubtless by their ardent love for
the Seuth, have assured the Southern
people that this conduct en their part was
very unwise. They have advised them te
enlist under the banners of the Republican
party and te join in humiliating and plun
dering these among whom they were born.
Seme few you can tell them off en your
fingers have acted en this honest advice,
and doubtless the coffers of the United
States treasury afford them ample compen
sation for the contempt with which honor
able men of all parties regard them. But
the great mass of the Southern people had
tee much of the leaven of human nature
in their composition te kiss the red
that smote them. .My fellow-citizens
of the North Republicans and Demo
crats put yourselves in our places,
and then say honestly, would you.
could you, have acted otherwise than
we did? I have given you briefly some of
the reasons why the Seuth has been op
posed te the policy, the methods and the
leaders of the Republican party, and you
may ask why, admitting the cogency of
these reasons, she should ally herself with
the Democratic party. The answer is sim
ple and plain. The Democrats of the
North, it is true, as I have said, opposed
us during the war with as much earnest
ness and vigor as did the Republicans, and
without their aid the Union could net have
been preserved. Ne sane man can deny
this. A Republican would hardly venture
te de se. But when the war closed these
Democrats who had fought us se persist
ently remembered that wc were still Amer
ican citizens. They remembered the pledge
made by the government during the war.
They held that the Southern states were
integral parts of the Union and net mere
conquered provinces. Unflinching enemies
in war, when peace came they were will
ing te recognize us as brethren. They ex
tended their hands in token of reconcila recencila reconcila
tien and we grasped aud still grasp these
friendly hands. Wc see the Republican
party new as it always has been, in all its
changes and under its various names, still
the party of sectionalism. We hail the
great Democracy as national. We pray te
be saved from the Republican party, as we
pray te be delivered from ' envy, hatred,
malice and uncharitablcness.7 Wc cling te
the Democratic party because it premises
te restore peace te the whole country and
te bring about harmony and geed will
among all its citizens. We have been
faithful te this great party in storm as in
sunshine. As we did net desert its ban
ners through all these weary years when
they were furled in defeat, we shall net
desert them new when they arc proudly
moving en te assured victory. We hopejWe
trust, wc pray, that this victory may be aa
wisely used as it will be triumphantly wen.
We believe it will be the blessed harbinger
of lasting peace te our whole country; that
it will bring back the government te the
dignity, the simplicity and the purity of
the pristine days; that it will cement the
Union firmly, and that it will make the
constitution what it should be, net only
the supreme law of the land, but of the
rulers of this land. The Seuth, if I de net
greatly misinterpret her feelings, proposes
in any event te stand by that constitution
and that Union. Beth belong te her by
possession and by inheritance, as much as
thsy de te the North, and he maligns his
countrymen who says that the Seuth is
disloyal te cither. This is the only coun
try which wc of the Seuth can claim as
ours, and by the blessing of Ged, we hope
te aid in making it prosperous and happy,
worthy te be for all time te ceme, the
home of freemen."
Tell's
Chapels.
The Paintings en the Inner Walls.
A correspondent of the Londen Time,
writing from Geneva, Switzerland, says :
" A writer in the Buiidatees some further
particulars concerning Tell's chapel en the
lake of the Four Cantens, and the paint
ings with which its inner walls are being
decorated. Se far as shape and dimensions
go, the new buildinj is a reproduction of
the old one ; but it is much mere solidly
constructed, the material for the most
part consisting of granite hewn from an
erratic block in the famous Rutli meadow,
where the three Switzers of the Four
Cantens Furst, Stauffachcr and Arneld
swore te free the land from the Aus
trian yoke. The reef of the building
reaches a height of 25 feet, and is sur
mounted by a small belfry, above which
rises the Swiss cress. The four mural
paintings will measure perpendicularly
about 10 feet. The maximum width of that
en the north wall, the ' Apple-shot,' will
be 19 feet. The width of the pictures
called 'Tell's Leap' and the 'Shet in the
Hellew Way, ' will be each JO feet. The
'Apple-shot' has te contain forty figures of
men and women, besidess horses, falcons,
hounds and the market place and houses
of Alterfas they appeared in the Four
teenth century. The grouping is said te
be harmonious and natural. Herr Stnck-
elberg has net, like most previous artists
who have dealt with the subject, chosen
the moment for depicting his here when
Tell confronts and defies the Austrian
Landvogt, when, in the words of the old
Swiss ballad, he exclaims :
'"Ne ! before that hat uplifted, murderer tell,
"'Bews no true-hearted man, bows never
William Tell V
But rather as with stern,
yet suppressed, resolve gleaming
from his eye he draws the second arrow
from its sheaf. Next comes the second
act of the drama. The trees en the moun
tain sides are bending low before a fierce
FeJtn ; the usually blue waters of the Uri's
bay are white with wind-driven foam ;
wild waves dash themselves ajjainst the
feet of the Axen. The Laudvegt's barge
approaches the rock whereon the chapel
new stands, and Tell, leaping .ashore,
hurls the beat back into the storm. Then
conies the third act and the last. Gcsslcr,
who has escaped from the storm, is in the
Hellew Way, by Kassuacht, followed by
his men-at-arms. An arrow, shot from
the rocks above, pierces his heart, and.
with the exclamation, 'That was Tell's
shot,' the tyrant dies. The first of
these scenes Herr Stuckelberg
hopes te complete before the be
ginning of winter, the two ethers in
the course of next summer. The fourth
wall, en which will be painted 'The Rutli
Oath,' will occupy the artist during the
summer of 1882. The three patriots
Furst, Stauflachcr and Arneld will be
shown standing at midnight in the Rutli
meadow, under the shadow of the My then,
swearing, with hands upraised te the starry
sky, te be free as their fathers were free
and te maintain with their lives the old
Swiss pledge, 'One for all, and all for one.'
The writer in the Bund is at great pains
te defend the chapel from the charge
which has been made against it of being
an historic anomaly, the Consecration of a
myth, and net be memorial of a fact. Al
though he docs net venture positively te
assert that Tell was ever an existent
personage, he mere than insinuates that he
may have been, destructive criticism te the
contrary notwithstanding. One of the
chief objections te the truth of the story
that surnames were unknown in the
14th century might, he thinks, have been
refuted had net the archives and commu
nal registers of Altorf and Fluelcn, which
were very ancient, been destroyed by the
French troops in 1798, while the registers
of Burglcn, a neighboring commune, de
net go further back than the 16th century.
The Rutli oath, despite the doubts of cer
tain historians, he leeks upon as historic,
and quotes in proof of this theory letters
written by the confederate cantons before
the battle of Mergartcn. Be this as it
may, he is probably right in the conclusion
at which he arrives that legend as well as
history has its uses, and that the one,
rightly regarded, is no less valuable than
the ether an idea that finds expression in
the following lines, freely rendered, of
Gottfried Keller, Switzerland's national
poet :
"'Of stubborn fact is here no question ;
The pearl of every fable is its thought.
The truth et every old tradition
Is in its hidden spirit wrought.' "'
COAX.
B.
It. MARTIN,
Wholesale and Retail Dealer In all kin. Is or
LUMBER AND COAL.
49-Yard: Ne. 420 North Water and Prince
streets above Lemen. Uiucnter. i)H-lyd
COAL! COAL! COAL! COAL
Ceal of the Best Quality pnt up expressly
for family use, and at the low
est market prices.
TRY A SAMPLE TON.
49- YARD 150 SOUTH WATER ST.
ncSMyd PHILIP SCHUM.SON &. CO.
"10AI.1 CO AM COALM!
We have constantly en hand all the bc-t
grades of COAL that are in market, which e
arc selling as low as any yard In the city.
Call and get 'Mr prices before buying else
where. M. F. STEIGERWALT & SON,
27-lyd
S51 NORTH WATER STREET.
CQHO & WILEY,
:. NORTH WATER ST., Lancaster, Va.,
Wholesale and Retail Dealers in
LUMBER AND GOAL.
Connection With thfi Telephonic Exchange
llranch Office : Ne. 3 NORTH DUKE ST.
feb28-lyd
COAL! COAL!
Fer geed, clean Family anil
all ether kind
ei cuaIj go te
RUSSEL & SHTJLMYER'S.
Quality and Weight guaranteed. Order 10
spectfully solicited.
OFFICE: 22 East King Street. YARD:
(118 North Prince Street.
auglMaprlSR
L
UMItKK AND COAL IIT TELEPHONE
The undersigned arc new nrcnarrd te ic
Tclvc erdew for
Geal, Lumber, Sash, Doefa,
Blinds, &e.,
by Telephone. Step in at the Exchangu and
de veiir own erderlna free of charge.
G.SKNEU&SONS,
S. E'
jin-trdsj
Cor. Prince and Walnut Street .
VA3WAIUN UOOVS.
c
AMPA1GN GOODS!
New Samples ! New Styles !
Clubs ami Committees invited te call and ex
amine our goods before purcliasing.
CAPES, COATS, HATS, CAPS, HELMETS'
TORCHES, BADGES, STREAMERS,
FLAGS, BURGEES, (Political
Lanterns very cheap.)
Bunting Flags of All Sizes.
Portraits of Presidential Nominees
en cloth, suitable ter Banners and Transpar
encies. FLASH TORCH.
Every Club ought te have some, even irthcy
de net have them for entire Club.
D. S. BUKSK,
17 East Kin? Street, Lancaster.
T
KY LOCHKU'S KB2VOWNKD COUGH
SYRUP.
MEDICAL.
Mrs. Lydia K Pinkham,
OF LYNN, MASS.,
Has Mafle fbe Bisceverr !
Her Vegetable Compound the Savier
of Her Sex.
Health, Hepe and Happiness
stored by- the use of
Rc-
LYDIA E. PINKHAM'S
Vegetable Compound,
The Positive Cure Fer
All Female Complaints.
This preparation, as its namu signifies, con
sists et Vegetable l'reperties that are harmless
te the most delicate invalid. Upen one trial
the merits of this compound will be recognized,
us reliet is immcdi'ite;nnd when its tfeuis con
tinued, in ninety-nine cases in a hundred. a
permanent cure is effected, as thousands will
testify. n account of Its proven merits.it i
te-day recommended and prescribed by the
best physicians in the country.
It will cure entirely the worst form of falling
of the uterus, Lcucerrlxua, irregular and pain-
im jucnsirnauen. an uanan Troubles, in
flammation and Ulceration, Flooding, nil Dis
placements and the consequent spinal weak-,
ness. and is especially adapted te the Change
or Lire.
In tact it has proved te be the greatest and
best remedy that has ever been discovered. It
permeates every portion of the system, and
gives new lite and vigor. It removes falntncss,
llatulency, destroys all craving ter.stlmulnnts,
and relieves weakness of the stomach.
It cures Kleating, Headaches, Xerveus Pros
tration, tlcncral Debility. Sleeplessness. Do De Do
firessieu anil Indigestion. That leclingef bear
ng down, causing pain, weight aud backache,
is alwayx permanently cured by Its use. It
will at all times, and under all circumstances,
act in harmony with the law that governs the
female .system.
Fer Kidney cemptalnts of either sex this
Compound is unsurpassed.
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound
isj prepared at 2Ct and 255 Western Avenue,
Lynn, Mass. Price $1. Six bottles for .". Sent
by mail in the form et pills, aNe in the form et
lozenges, en receipt et price, $1 per box, for
cither. Mrs. PIXKIIAM freely answers all let
ters of Inquiry. Send for pamphlet. Address
as above. Mention thli paper.
Ne family should be without LYDIA K.
PINKHAM'S LlVKlt PILLS. They cure Con
stipation, Biliousness and Torpidity of the
Liver. 2" cents per bev.
Johnsten, Holleway & Ce.,
General Agents, I'liiladelphiu.
Fer sale by C. A. Lechcr, 9 East King .street,
and t!ce. W. Hull, 13 West King street.
y23-lydeedJtw
HALL PAPERS, Jte.
WK
MiK OKFKKINt! TIIF. ONLY
PERFECT
Extension Window Cornice
ever manufactured. It is perfect in its con
struction, simple and handy te adjust and
very cheap. It can be regulated te fit any or
nary w Indew by means of a thumb screw, and
can he adjusted from one feet te live feet wide.
They art: made of VA Inch Walnut Meulding
of a New Pattern, and wc have them iu eilit
different styles. Come ami see them.
CURTAIN" POLES
Iu Walnut, Ash anil Klieny,
Kuds, Kings and
israckeis complete.
ei:dki:s takkn fei:
PIER AND MANTEL MIRRORS.
OPKNIXO FALL .STYLES OF
WALL PAPEE
a an
SHADES.
PHARES W. FRY,
Ne. 57 NORTH QUEEN ST.
GENTS' HOODS.
F
OK LINEN COLLARS
EKISMAN'S.
n
?OK EAXV.Y STOVK1NUS
GO TO
EIU.SMAVS.
I70K SUSPBNDEKS
OOTO
KiCISMAX'S.
POIt NEW STVLK
LINEN ilANDKEUCHIEFS, GO TO
E. J. ERISMAN'S,
BO NOKTII JCEKN STKKKT.
CHINA AND GLASSWARE.
N
TEW WAKfc.
CHINA HALL.
We arc constantly icceiviiig
and novel in
something new
Fancy Goods, China, Lamps,
Glassware, &c.
Don't fall te . them.
HIGH & MARTIN,
Ne.l5KAST KING STISEKT.
RORES, BLANKETS, Jit.
s
IGN OF THE MUPFAI.O HEAD.
ROBES! ROBES!!
BLANKETS! BLANKETS
I have new en hand the La no est. Best aud
Cheapest Assert jnrirr or Lined and Unlined
BUFFALO KOBES In the city. Alse LAP
AXD HORSE BLANKETS of every descrip
tion. A full line of
Trunks and Satchels,
Harness, Whips, Cellars, dec.
rltcpairing neatly and promptly done.-
- A. MILEY,
108 North Qtteen St.
25-lydMWAS
,Lmncwster.
AE. McCANN, AUCTIONEER OF REAL.
. Estate and Personal Brepcrty. Orders
left at Ne. 33 Charlette street, or at the Black
Herse Hetel, i and is North Queen street, will
ccive prompt attention. J Jills made eutancl
ended te witheutjadd Itienal cost. e-27-ly
KIDNEY Wenr FOR SALE AT LOCH.
era' Drug Stere, 9 East King street.
v .