5e-$&-v 'i-v"- - v-,-1 -iT -Mfc ., f-i ', -jt- li: v!lvV'A- . . '- -tfl ,J A m - Volume XYII-Ne. 40. LANCASTER, PA., SATURDAY. OCTOBER 16, 1880. Price Twe Cent. i ', v. XEW A-DVEJiTISE3CEXTS. TkABOAIKS! BARGAINS I! SELLING OFF! SELLING OFF!! Rathven & IMer Offer their entire-stock el Ready-Made Clothing at and below Cost, with a view el discontinu ing the HEADY-MADE CLOTHING business, and devoting tlicir attention exclusively te CUSTOM WORK. CLOTHING mnrte promptly te order, and satisfaction in all cases guaranteed. A select line of Cleths, Casshucres, Wei-bteds, Coatings, Suitings. Cheviots. Meltons, Overceatings, VcstJngs, &c., nlwavs en hand and orders re spectfully solicited. Alse, a general line or Furnishing Goods. R ATHVON & FISHER Merchant Tailors and Drapers, Xe. 101 North Queen St., Lancaster, Pa. SPECIAL. These in want of Kcady-Made Clothing will consult their own interest by giving them a call before purchasing else where, as their Clothing arc mainly of their own laautilucliircand substantially made. ep'-.-lmd FALL OPENIM -T k gerharts irii Malsliiii, MONDAY, OCTOBER lltli, 1880. A Complete Stock ej Cleths, Suitings AND OVERCOATINGS, which for elegance cannot lit surpassed. The Largest As-nrtiiicnt el" ENGLISH AJMD SCOTCH SUITINGS in tills city. Prices us low as the lowest at H. GERHART'S Ne. 51 North Queen Street. CLOTHLNG! CLOTHING ! We have new leady ler -ale an Immense Stock et Ml and Winter, which are Cut and Trimmed in the Latest Style. We can give you a GOOD STYUSH SUIT AS LOW AS $10.00. PIECE GOODS In great variety, made te order at Miert notice at the lowest prices. D. B. Hostetter & Sen, 24 CENTRE SQUARE, 6-lyd LANCASTER, PA. 1SSO 1SSO Eall Season. The most attractive and Recherche Line of PARISIAN, Loudeu aud New Yerk NOVELTIES, -for MEN'S WE AE OPEN THIS DAY AT SM AUNG'S THE ARTIST TAILOR, 121 N. QUEEN STREET, OJtOCEMES. ReaAy-Haae doing TTTHOLCSALB AMD RKTAIL. LEYASTS FLOUR AT Ne. 227 NORTH PRLNCE STREET. dl7-lyd CLOTHING., Timely Advice en Fall Clethes. Yeu arc thinking of your clothing for fall ; what it shall be ; hew and where you shall get it. Come and See Us. Cenie and sec its, or drop us a line, saying what you want, as near as you can. If you arc here, you can see for yourself a great variety of things, try en what you like, and go home with the old clothes in a bundle. That is very easy ; and nothing can be mere satisfactory. Net a Strange Place. It isn't as if you were going te a strange place. The chances are you've been here before, and knew something of our ways. Perhaps your neighbor has been here ; and has told you it was a geed place te go te. Perhaps you've only read that we sell a geed many clothes, and say te people who buy them: Brfng them back if you don't find them every way te your liking. New this is really why we arc net strangers te anybody; because we deal with everybody as with a neigh bor; and expect him te come right back if he has cause of complaint. Ik yep Don't Come. But, suppose you don't come. Hew are we going te sell you just what you want te buy, without your seeing things beforehand ? Try ; write ; say about hew much you want te pay for a business suit, dress suit, overcoat, or whatever you want ; say what your occupation is ; say anything that has any bcariug en what we eugh te send you. It will net take us two minutes te guess what you want ; if we don't guess right, that's our less, net yours. Have Yetm Own Way ! Perhaps you want your clothing made te your measure. Did you sus pect that we make te measure a half million dollars' worth of clothing every year for people wc never saw and never expect te see ? Yeu may be very certain that we have a way of do ing such work without much risk of a misfit ; for a misfit, you knew, conies right back te us. "We are pretty care ful about making blunders when we've get them all te make geed. Our Way : Our way of doing business is te make the buyer welcome, at the out set, te all the advantage and all the guarantee he can ask for. WANAMAKER & BOWN. Oak Hall, Sixth and Market Streets. Philadelphia, Pa. EOUXltEltS AXlt JUACUIXISTS. -' ...-j--. j.. . ig-W-.-JSZ? X AKCASTER BOILER MANUFACTORY, SHOP ON PLUM STREET, OrresmcinB Locomotive Works. The subscriber continue te manufacture BOILERS AND STEAM ENGINES, Fer Tanning and ether purposes Furnace Twicrs, Bellows Pipes, Sheet-iron Werk, and Blacksinithing generally. 49-Jobbing promptly attended .te. auglS-lyd JOHN REST. ENGINES AND MACHINERY Ot all Kinds, repaired at Short Netice. IRON AND BRASS CASTINGS A! PATTERNS, MADE te eureu. BRASS BOXES, PACKING RINGS. GLOBE VALVES, Of all Sizes. All Kinds of BRASS AND IKON VALVES AND BEEU SPIGOTS REPAIRED 3-Foundry and Machine Shep rear of W D. Sprecher & Sen's Seed Stere, Grant and Christian streets. JOS. H. HUBER. al7-3mdS 1'RY LOCHER'S KEMmNKD COUGH SYRUP BOOKS ASH STATIONERY. s CHOOL BOOKS. SCHOOL BOOKS SCHOOL SUPPLIES for Lancaster City and County, at L. M. FLYNN'S Ne. 42 WEST KING STREET. JCUOOL BOOKS, BLANK BOOKS Fancy Stationary FOU DERSMTPH'S Ne. 32 East King St., Lancaster, Pa. aug28-4td SCHOOL BOOKS ren tub Schools of Lancaster City, NEW AND SECOND-HAND. At the LOWEST PRICES, at the Reek Stere of JOM BAER'S SOUS, IS and 17 NORTH QUEEN STREET, LANCASTER, FA.. CAMPAIGN UOOVS. -pOKTICAITS OF HANCOCK Fer sale at AND ENGLISH THIS OFFICE. I? LACS! FLAfiS! CASHES FOR PARADES, TRIMMINGS FOR SASHES, SADDLE CLOTHS, SHOUL DER STRAPS, 1JELTS, Ac. Neckties, Entirely New Styles. NEW STYLE COLORS. UNDERWEAR, GLOVES &c, &c. E. J. ERISMAN'S, 5G NORTH UUElSN STREET. CAMPAIGN IIEAUQUAKTLRS PREPARE FOR THE CAMPAIGN We have Large Chinese Lanterns. We have Muslin Flags et all sizes. We have Streamers in abundance. We have Deuble Portraits of Candidates 22 by 18 inches. We have Single Pet traits at 5c each. We have in stock different sizes et BUNTING FLAGS. We have a geed snprdy of FIREWORKS. We have (J reck Fire. We have Itadecs in Silk and Metal. We take orders and supply all kinds et Equipments te Clubs. D. S. J3URSK, 17 East King? Street. Lancaster. itjtvus, jtc. a'KCSSES ! TRUSSES ! t TRUSSES 1 1 1 Sufferers from Rupture will find the safest, easiest and cheapest Trusses in the world en exhibition and ler sale by ANDREW G. FREV, Druggist, Cor. N. Queen and Orange St, Lancaster, Pa. Call and sec. Alse, the only sure euro ter Piles, FREY'S UNIVERSAL PILE SUPPOSITORY. Never tails. Price. W)c. and 7c. a box. nlu-yd II UI.I.'S DRUG STORE. PRESERVING CIDER USE- NEUTRAL SULPHITE OF LIE. DIRECTIONS FOR USING WITH EACH PACKAGE. FOR SALIC AT HULL'S DRUG STORE Ne. 15 WEST KING STREET, nug23-lyd .LANCASTER, PA. HAIL 1'AfEKS, e. VI 7E AUK OFFERING THE 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 lit any or nary window by means of a thumb screw, and can be adjusted trem one feet te live feet wide. - They arc made of 4i Inch Walnut Meulding of a New Pattern, and we have them In eight different styles. Come and sec them. CURTAIN POLES In Walnut, Ash and Ebony, Ends, Rings and Brackets complete. ORDERS TAKEN FOR PIER AND MANTEL MIRRORS. OPENING FALL STYLES OF WALL PAPER AND SHADES. PHARES W. FRY, Ne. 57 NORTH QUEEN ST. Lancaster Intelligencer. SATURDAY EVENING, OCT. 16, 1880. MS OF THE VETERANS ON GRAM'S KECENT VILIFICATION OF HANCOCK. The Unworthy Werk of an ex-Fresident'and Fermer Brether In Arms Soldiers Sadly Disappointed Was Grant In Ills Nermal Mental Condition ? ORDER NO. 40. A Succinct Review of the Real inner History of That Grand Document V Fiat It Was. Ex-President Grant' VHIUcatlen of General Hancock. X. Y. Hancock Veteran. The veterans who nave hitherto regarded the name of U. S. Grant with high esteem have recently had cause te ba mortified and grieved. Tlicir idol has come down from its pedestal. The silent man, ouce the victorious gcncial of the army, twice president, and afterward the honored of crowned heads and thevgucstef trrcat na tions, has se far forgotten himself as te come down te vituperation and vilification, lie has descended from the lefty height where,serencly and like a demigod, he was enthroned, and has wrestled in the mud of partisan politics like a common ward poli tician, lie has caused himself te he inter viewed, lie has assaulted with passionate and indiscreet words his former brother in arms, General "Winficld S. Hancock, new candidate for the presidency. He has used harsh and belittling epithets about him. There was no ostensible reason for the at tack. The veterans will regard this occur rence in sorrow-rather than in anger. They regret it, net for General Hancock's sake, but for General G rant's sake and their own. It is always a grievous thing te have one's ideal destroyed te lind baseness and com mon clay where one worshiped imagined greatness of character and heroism. It shocks one terribly. Heavens! Grant de meaning himself with words ofblackgnard efblackgnard ism! Grant tlinirinir mud like a street Arab! Grant vitupcratinu like a Billingsgate ilsh wifel The veterans will And it hard te be lieve it, yet e it seems te be. The interview between General Grant, and the Rev. M"r. Pewler, published in the Cincinnati Gazette, and telegraphed te the New Yerk Times, and aftcrwaids modified in an interview with a reporter of the Chi cago Inter-Oecan, is remarkable as regauls its object, the means employed te cllcct it, and the material which composes it. The intention of the author was te injure Gen eral Hancock's prospects in Indiana and 4 Ohie. The interview occurred en the 21st of September. It was net published until the 5th of October, or a suilicient time be fore the October elections in these states te produce its desired eircct. It was be lieved that the great name of Graut would have equally great inllucuce when used te decry Hancock. " The use of Grant's name te injure Hancock was as evidently desperate as it was despicable. It shows that the managers of the game fear that the bottom is te be knocked out of their campaign. They see the hand-writing en the wall. The means employed for this business was also remarkable. An ordinary news paper reporter would net de. A Metho dist preacher is employed te de the dirty business. The Methodists arc perhaps the largest denomination in the United States. The Veteran has great respect for them as a body. It was desired te catch their votes. An ordinary sinful, perhaps men men daciens secular newspaper reporter would net attract attention. Such means would net insure republication in all the Meth odist denominational papers. A Metho dist preacher reporter would give truth fulness te the account. A secular reporter might lie, or be mistaken ; a preacher (?) never ! "Whatever is said by such means would be regarded as absolute truth. Se doubtless reasoned the men who "put up the job," and they made use of the Rev. Mr. Fowler. The Veteran is aware that the value of what a man says depends a geed deal en the means he uses te promul gate his opinions. A druken, mendacious reporter, ler the purpose of truth, would be no better than a half-civilized Hetten tot. But who is the Rev. Fowler ? He was educated in a little fresh-water insti tution, new extinct, known as Genesee college. He is remembered by his asso ciates as having announced te them when he matriculated, his intention te study for the ministry, that profession' offering the shortest and easiest cut te "fame and a geed living." The Rev. Fowler follow ed this short cut, and in time, duly brief, achieved ministerial honors. He was known vervr seen as a sensationalist, a i speaker of large elocutionary powers with out correspondent scholarship. One of his famous discourses was delivered in the old Wabash Avenue Methodist church, Chicago. He startled his fashionable au dience by begining in this wise : "As I was coming te church this morning I saw two dogs fighting in the street ; one was a large deg and the ether was a small deg, and the large deg had the small deg down. But, brethren, 'Ged is always for the under deg in the fight." And Mr. Fowler went en drawing his illustration from the deg fight, and, at proper oratorical intervals, clinching the argument with the grandly gestured sentence : "Fer Ged is for the under deg in the fight !" while a lipple of sensation would run through the audi ence. This will de for the Rev. Mr. Fow ler, who was selected as the medium through which General Grant, who had been general of the army and twice presi dent, should attempt te injure the pros pects of General Hancock, who had never sought te de harm te him. The object and the means were appropriately proportioned ti pneli ether. Butit is the matter set forth in tun in - terview that most saddens the men who have regarded with high esteem General Grant, while net the less loving and ad miring General Hancock. It seems in comprehensible te the politician who never J did. anything ler lus country out lccu en it, who never smelt gunpowder or faced death en the field, that soldiers will love and esteem their old commanders even when differing from them en political questions. Such men cannot comprehend the bend that is wrought in the furnace of men's souls when peril and patriotism feed the flame. Then politics pass out of sight ; men love each ether, agreeing en great things ; little things are forgotten the same soldier could admire Grant and Hancock. He regards them as great cap tains and brothers in arms. Te find Gen eral Grant going aside te speak disrepect fully of General Hancock makes the veter an almost believe that the former was caught in hia cups by the Rev. Fowler, who, having him in his' net, took advan tage of his condition. General Grant says that General Han cock received a vote at the Democratic convention in 18(54, which delighted him, and crazed him, and made him a presiden tial aspirant, watching, waiting, and plan ning until at last he received the nomina tion. If this were true, which it is net, it was unworthy General Grant's great repu tation te say se. General Hancock has never been president ; General Grant has been president twice, and admits that he would have accepted the nomination the third time. Bat General nanceck never called him crazy en the presidential ques tion. General Hancock is tee much of a gentleman te say that even of a man who had twice been president, and who was willing te violate all the traditions of the country, and be president a third time. General Grant admits that he would have accept 2d the third-term nomination for some absurdly insufficient reasons, but General Hancock has tee much gentle manly dignity te say that Gen. Grant has the.prcsidcntial bee in his bonnet. Gen. Hancock did net receive a vote at the con vention of 18G-1. In the convention of 1803 he received, en one ballet, next te the highest number cast, namely, 144 against leC cast for Pendleton. But suppose he had received a vote in 18G4, and suppese, in common with many ether men who have deserved well of their country, he wanted te become president : is it net a t noble, a laudable ambition for a geed man te possess? Arc net the children of the nation taught te regard the highest oflice. in the gift of the people as within the reach of any one who serves his country faithfully and well ? And is it a noble, a worthy thing te vilify a man because he wants te be president? Is it a noble thing for a mau te de who has already been president twice, and wants, as he admits, a third term, even? General Grant says that General Hancock is crazy te be presi.' dent ; that he is ambitious, vain and weak) that the Seuth can easily control him : This from the mouth of Grant! The veteran will scarcely believe it. He will prefer te discredit the Rev. Fowler, or te believe that he caught Grant in the toils into which he is known in times past te have fallen the toils of inebriety. General Grant says that when a com mander was wanted for the Army of the Potomac the government took up almost everybody, even went AVcst for etliccrs for that purpose, but nobody ever thought of taking Hancock. Suppose it te be true ; is it anything against him ? Suppose he never pushed himself forward for that place, never schemed for it with the ac cursed scoundrels who made traffic out of that great position ; suppose that General Hancock always went forward loyally do ing his whole duty, never questioning, never murmuring, content te be anything in the service of his country was net that a very noble, very creditable thing? Gen eral Grant, unconsciously, perhaps, casts a reflection en every high private in the army, if it is anything against a soldier that he is net promoted te something higher. Yen cannot make all the geed generals commanders of the army,, any mere than you can make all the brave pri vates corporals or captains. General Grant did net think what he was saying when he made that reflection en General Hancock. He forget that the same re preaclu would fall en every patriot who carried a musket in the ranks. But Gen eral Grant is wrong in his statement even. General Hancock, after the battle of Mine Run, was prominently discussed as the man for the head of the army. It is need less te dwell en the reasons why no change was made. General Hancock did net seek the place, but there are geed judges who believe that he would have finished the Avar some months sooner, and at a great saving of life en our side, had he been ap pointed te the command of the army. The subject, however, has no relation te- the presidency, for which he is new a candi date. The command of the army may be a necessary step for a Csesar who seeks te overthrew the I8crtics of his countrymen, but net for the constitutional statesman whose only ambition is te serve his country through constitutional methods. In the same spirit General Grant tells the Rev. Fowler what he conceives te be " the inner history and spirit of Han cock's celebrated Order Ne. 40." Accord ing te Grant, Congress was stiiving te prevent President Jehnsen from undoing the reconstruction laws. Jehnsen would find ways and pretexts te dodge around and breakthrough the laws, and Congress kept en patching up the breaches until it had taken all power from the president, excepting that of removal and appoint ment of district commanders. General Sheridan was put in command of Louisiana and Texas, and having caught, as he thought, the governor of Louisiana and three commissioners in an attempt te de fraud the state by borrowing money en levee bends, he removed them. Jehnsen ordered the reinstatement of these officials. Grant refused, and se Jehnsen removed Sheridan and appointed Hancock- The latter refused te listen te Grant's advice en the ground that " he was opposed te nigger domination." and removed the men Sheridan had appointed. Then Grant interfered te prevent the re instatement of the governor and commis sioners whom Sheridan had removed and General Hancock asked the president te relieve him, as, through General Grant's interference, his usefulness was destroyed. This is the sum and substance of Genera! Grant's account te the Rev. Fowler of " the inner history and spirit of the cele brated Order Ne. 40 !" It is indeed hard for the veteran te believe that General Grant was correctly reported in this part of the interview by the Rev. Fowler, or, if he was correctly reported, that General Graut was in a mentally normal condition when he thus incorrectly gave one of the concluding incidents of General Hancock's famous though brief career as commander of the department of Louisiana and Texas, as "the inner history and spirit of the celebrated Order Ne. 40." The facts of General Hancock's government of these states arc a part of our national history, than which nothing is better or mere clearly known. The president and Con gress did net agree in regard te recon struction. The Radical Congress desired te retain its held en the nation by making reconstruction impossible, ex cept in such a way as would Icpt j insure the continuance of Radical rule both North and Seuth ! 1 he states of Louisi ana and Texas were governed in a mere arbitrary manner than Russia. The mili tary commander deposed at will judges, county clerks and ether officials who were essential te civil government, and ruled the country by military commissions. The case quoted by Graut may be taken as one in point. General Sheridan knew, or thought he knew, that the governor of Louisiana and the three commissioners by borrowing money en levee bends, when the bends would net bring but a small part of their face, were defrauding the state, be he removed them by military order. It was in time of peace. It was an unneces sary arbitrary proceeding, whether the reason given for it was true or false. The reconstruction act had given the military commander of departments the option te rule by means of military commissions or te use the methods known te the civil law. General Grant and General Sheridan, acting in the interests of a Radical Congress, chose the former method. General Hancock who believed in the supremacy of the civil law in time of peace, chose,' when ap pointed te succeed Sheridan, the latter means, and en taking command issued his celebrated Order Ne. 40. In it he simply, in substance, said te the people of the two states that, although they had ence been in rebellion, although the states were net represented in Congress, yet, se long as they preserved the peace, abstained from violence, and obeyed the laws passed by Congress, they should have and wcre en titled te have all the right guaranteed te them by the common law, the writ of hab eas corpus, liberty of speech, the right te property and the right te decide the many civil questions that arise between men by their own civil tribunals. His predecessor had, by military order, instituted a test for a man te become a juror, which was un known te the common or any ether law. General Hancock revoked the order. In ether words, General Hancock told the people of these states te go en, obey the laws of Congress and in their internal af fairs te govern themselves just as the peo ple who have inherited the great privi leges derived from our English forefathers have a right te de se long as they are net undergoing any penalty for crime. The Southern peeple were net undergoing pen alty for crime, and they had full right te all that General Hancock tendered them in Order Ne. 40. Ne people but one just emerged from a bloody and disastrous war in which they had get the worst of it, would have submitted te rule by arbitrary military order, and General Hancock changed the methods and offered the peo ple their rights. Murder, which had been fearfully rife, stepped as by unanimous consent. Crime grew less, and the people started off en the path of reconstruction en common sense principles. The interfer ence of Grant in General Hancock's pre- pecdurcs, Graut having been given even greater power than the president, changed all this, and paved the wy te even a greater crime than tampering with the liberties of a conquered people the crime of stealing the presidency itself, which was the legitimate fruit of the continuance of government by the bayonet in the Seuth. And this is the inner history and spirit of the celebrated Order Ne. 40, and net the one-sided account of one of the closing incidents of General .Hancock's Leusiaua career as narrated by General Grant te the Rev. Mr. Fowler. According te the interviewer, General Grant ended his extraerdiniry talk by confessing that he would have -accepted the third term nomination for three rea sons : 1st, Ins esteem ler the character el the men who tendered it te him ; 2d, his belief that he could have broken up a solid Seuth ; oil, his belief that he could have caused the enactment of certain laws regarding commerce with people who use fiec labor, discriminating against these who use free labor, discriminating against these who use slave labor. It is enough te say regarding these astounding utter ances that they would justify, if anything, the election of General Grant te the ptcsi deney for life. Free Churches. Against "Auctions in the 1Ihi-.'j et Ged." In the recent meeting in New Yerk of the Episcopal Heuse of Deputies, the Rev. Dr. Cyrus F. Knight, of St. James, this city, offered the following memorial, with the suggestion that it be referred te the committee en canons : Pmr..ni:id,m., September 1880. Te tin' General Convention of the rrelestant JfpiscejHil Cnurch in the V. V. -1. The Free Church association, which in its membership new includes twenty-four of our right reverend fathcis, as well as a large number of clergy and laity, resident in nearly every diocese in our land, ap proaches your venerable body a second time, te ask your approval, as representa tives of the church in these United States, of the efforts that are being made te re turn te primitive and scriptural usage, as concerns the erection, consecration and use of church edifices for our several eongrcga eengrcga eongrcga tienals and parishes. At the outset we beg leave respectfully te call attention te the fact that the great scandal arising from the disuse and mis use of consecrated buildings, and the dis position of them for "unhallowed, worldly or common uses," by reason of debt exist ing at the date of consecration, led te the passage of the canon et 1808, " Of the consecration of churches," and its amend ments in 1871. "Wc claim that thcre is great hindrance, and possibly as great scandal, te the preaching of the gesr.el, and the whole work of the church as the keeper and witness of the truth, in the sale and rental of portions of the ccn.3c crated bnildinir. as in the prier lien of debt. AVhen a building is te bc.er has been, solemnly devoted te the service of Almighty Ged, and te be "His house forever," it is nothing less than mockery that individuals should retain or obtain in it the right of ownership te a part ; an ownership imply ing net only a right of personal occupation but also a right transferable in the market like secular property ; a right which may therefore be exercised by persons entirely disconnected with the church, or even by unbelievers ; as wc note in the daily papers frequently that pew Ne. in church will be sold at public auction ; Ged's heuse the house of prayer thus becoming a? matter of merchandise in the public marts. Surely it is bad enough that the privilege of exclusive occupation in ciiurcucs can ee obtained for a time by the payment of a stipulated rent, but far worse is it that such a privilege should beceme perpetual, enabling the owners of pews te form a joint stock company, whose capital is rep resented by the church property. If the title te the church property is held by a corporation, all the franchises of that cor poration rest in the pew owners and the whole management and control of the church is practically in their hands and frequently preventing the use of the build ing for its full legitimate objects. Wc suggest that the sale of pews is also, in fact, an encumbrance en the church property, and in most instances a violation both of the letter and of the spirit of the church canon. AVc respectfully ask, therefore, that this canon be se amended that no church shall hereafter be consecrated in which pews or sittings have been sold, and also forbidding the sale of peW.s or sittings at any future time. In support of our petition we respect fully submit that the best interests of the church demand a formal recognition of the principles : (1.) That our churches should be se free and open that all who wish may worship id them. (2.) That in them there should be no distinctions en the ground of wealth or social position. (3.) That when they are consecrated, ap prepriated and devoted te the honor and worship of Almighty Ged, they should be absolutely and unreservedly His, and in im sense the property of a limited number of persons who have bought their pews. Slightly exhilarated. "Re-fei-de Riddle I Hew well I Wei !" Chirped an elderly bachelor t'ether morning. "That Themas' Kelectric Oil seems te have cured my lumbago completely. I feel as if I were young again and believe lfll ask the widow te have me." He did se, was accepted and Is new the happy parent et a line boy. Fer sale by II. B. Cochran, druggist. Ne. 137 and 3 North Queen street. Lancaster, Pa. In th Dark. When in the dark her hand I pressed, what rapture Iendnred, Rut when the candle entered, all was cured. Fer he face was covered with blotches and pimples. I made her a present of a bottle et Snrlnjr Blessem, and new she's en red. Wed ding next week no cards, only testimonials. Prices : 50c., trial bottles lee. Fer sale by II. B. Cochran, drussist. 137 and 1S North Qnem street. Lancaster, Pa. 4 MEDICAX. CUTICURA Itching and Scaly Diseases, Screfaless Humors, Ulcers, Old Seres and Mer curial Affections enred when all ether unman agencies Tail. 1. CcnccitA Keseivejst purifies, strengthens and supports the systcln through the most critical stages of bleed, skin and scalp humors and disorders of the liver, kidneys and urinary organ. 2. Cvticuha. a medicinal jelly, arrests dis ease, allays inilaiumitien. itehin:; ami irrita tion, heals ulcers ami cats away dead skin and llcsh. 3. CcncuuA.MEDicrxAt.Seap, for the toilet, bath and nursery, cleanses, seethes, refreshes and hcautitics the skin. Cuticcua Siiavixe Se a i" is the only medicinal shaving soap. SKIN HUMORS, MILK CRUST, &c. Skix Ilrsien. Mrs S. K. Whipple, Decatur, Mich., writes that her frac, head anil some parts et.her body were almost raw. Head cov ered with scabs and sores. Suffered fearfully, and tried everything. Permanently cured by Cuticura Itcmcdics. Milk CnrsT. Mrs. Bewers, HSClinten street, Cincinnati, speaks of her sister's child, who was cured et milk: crust, which resisted all remedies for two years. New a line, healthy boy. with a beautiful head et liair. Tm-risa op the IIASD3. Elizabeth Buckley, Littleton, X. II., thankfully pr.ii.ses the Culi cura Kemedles ter a enroet tetter et the hands, which had rendered them almost useless te her. SCALD HEAD, ALOPECIA, &c. Scald 11k d. It. A. Uaymend, auditor F. W., J. Jk S. It. K., .Tackseu, Mich., wan cured of scald head of nine year' duration ly the Cu ticura Kemedies. Fallise of the IlAir.. Frank A. Bean, Steam File KnginuC. Bosten, was cured of alepecia or falling el'tlie hair, by the Cuticura Kt-mc-(lir-i, which completely restored his hair when idl t-aid he would lee it. Paxdkufp. Themas Lee,227 Frankford ave nue. Philadelphia, nlllicted with dandrun which fr twenty years hud covered Ids scalp with siiilcs one-quarter et an Inch in thickness, cured by the Cuticura lteuiedies. CuTicuitA KmiEniKsare prepared by WKKKS & POTTKK, Chemists and Dra;glHts,3 Wash ington street. Bosten, ami are for fade by all Untwists. Price et Cuticura, a Medicinal Jelly, small boxes, 50 cents; large boxes. SI. Cuticuiea Ueselvext, the new Bleed Purifier, $1 per bottle, cuticvka Medicixal. Toilet Soai i" cents. CUTieuiiA MkdicixalShavixe Soai 15 cents; in bars ter-Barbers and large cenumers, SO cents. lSa..-1f maileilree en receipt of jiricr. SANFORD'S RADICAL. CURE FOR CATARRH. One bottle Radical Cure, one box Ca tarrh Solvent, and one Improved In haler. Price for all, $LOO. Is or marvelous clllcacy for relieving violent attacks et Sneezing, te which many are sub ject, for cleansing the Head and Nasal Passages when clogged with the offensive matter, ler deodorizing and purilying the breath, for ren dering the Head clear, the Brain active, the Breathing easy, and every Sense in a most grateful and seethed condition. Beginning with the Nasal passages, it eleau-.es, deodorizes, seethes and heals. It ar rcnts the formal ion of putrid matter. It strikes at tin; very heart of the disease. This done, its constitutional action gradually and thorough ly removes from the bleed ami circulating llnids the poison that has been sucked np by the absorbents from purulent matter which had dropped into the .stomach and been in haled by the lungs. Ask your druggisUfer Saxfeud's Badical Cut:n. Ccncral Aat.s.. WKKKS & POTTKK. Bosten. Cellins' Voltaic Electric Wasters. Placed ever the centre of the nervous forces. Hie pit of the stomach, they Htiiuid.itu the 1.1 vcr. Stomach and Bowels, perfect digestion, cure Dyspepsia, Bilious Celle, Cramps anil Pains, and prevent. Ague and Malarial Dis eases. Fer Weak and Sere Lungs. Palpitation el tin: Heart, Painlul Kidneys, Bhenmatisin, Neuralgia and Sciatica, iliey are the best rem edy in the world. Ask ler Cellixh' Velvtaic Klectkic Plastkiis. Only i cents. il,t J-'UliXISHlSU UOOUS. TW'OTICL'. FLliNiN & BRBNEMAN: Would advise nil who contemplate putting in 1 1 K AT K US or making any alterations in tlieii beating arrangements te de se at once livfnn: the rush of Fall Trade begins. THE MOST UKLIAKI.K In the Market at the LOWEST PRICES. GKEAT STOVE STORE, 152 North Queen Street, LANCASTER, PA. JEWELRY. LOUIS WKIIKK, WATCHMAKKK. Ne. I.-.3M NORTH QUEEN STREET, near P. IS. K. Depot, Lancaster, Pa. Celd, Silver and Nickel-cased Watches, Chains, Clocks, Ac. Agent ter the celebrated Pantoscepic iccta cles anil Eye-Glasses. Repairing a specially, aprl-lyd Complete Bridal Outfits In Silver and Silver- Plated Ware, at Reason Reasen Reasen able Frices. Tea Sets, Soup Tureens, Ice Pitchers, Cake Baskets, Coffee Spoons Knives, Ferks, Spoons, Casters, &c, &c- AUGUSTUS RHOADS, JEWELER, Ne; 20 Bant Kins Street, Lancaster, Fa. UOItES, nVAXKETS, Jtt. s ION OF TIIK miWALO UKAD. KOBES! ROBES!! BLANKETS! BLANKETS I have new en hand the Larecjt, Bkst awi CMBArBrr AsHoireiinrr or Lined and Unllned BUFFALO ROBES in the city. Alse LAP AND HORSE BLANKETS or every descrip tion. A full line of Trunks and Satchels, Harness, Whips, Cellars, Ac. rKepalring neatly and promptly done."S A. MII-EY, 10H Xerth Qnttn St., lanrtuter. 25-1 jdMWiS " " " """ " 1 RAli SITKCULATIOJ jr In large or small amounts. $35 or 3,06O 3,06O Write W. T. &OULK A CO.. Commission Mer chants, 130 La Salle street, Chicago, III., for clr ulars. mas-iyd mm Flu & Breueiuaus I ?