"v- -' S ' t $ - gf r-i "; - f l .rfl lnate -huy '-v&h-s V I lAVV Volume XTII-Ne. 41. Jf-EIT ADVERTISEMENTS, T) ARGAINS ! IsABGAINSl! SELLING OFF! SELLING OFF!! Eathven & Fisher Offer their entire-stock et ! Ready-Madc Clothing at and below Cost, with a view et aiscontlnu aiscentlnu iiiff 1 10 READY-MADE CLOTHING business. anI devoting thctr attention exclusively te P- CUSTOM WORK. CLOTHING made prempUy te order, ana !! MJSU11. in ,al ca80S guaranteed. A select line of Cleths, Cassltncres, Worsteds, Coatings, timings. Cheviots. Meltons, Overceatings. Jnjfs.Ac., always en hand and orders re ecituiiy solicited. Alse, a general Iin of iirnlsbing Goods. BATH VOX & FISHER Merchant Tailors and Drapers, Ne. 101 Neith Queen fet., Lancaster, Pa. SPECIAL These in want of Ready-Made Clothing will consult their own interest by Kiving them a call before pnichasing else where, as their Clothing arc mainly et their own nuinufactuic and biibstantially made. op 23-1 md FALL IHIHI -AT H. GERHATtT'S I, MONDAY, OCTOBER 11th, 1880. A Complete Stock et Cleths, Suitings -MID- OVERCOATINGS, whiuh ler elegance cannot bu urp;ued. The Largest Assortment el ENGLISH AND SCOTCH SUITINGS in this city. Price nt low as the lowest at H. GERHART'S Ne. 51 North Queen Street. clethingF clothing! Wu liar: new ready ler sale an Immense Stock el FOtt Fall and Winter, ivliicli :m Cut and Triuimcd in tus Latest Style. Wc can give yen a GOOD STYLISH SUIT AS LOW AS $10.00. PIECE GOODS In great vat icly, tnadu te order at short notice at the lowest price-. 24 CENTRE SQUARE, Mjrt LANCASTER. PA. 4URXITUXJE. HBINITSH, FINE FURNITURE AND Cabinet Manufacturer. All in want or Fine or Fancy Cabinet Werk would de well te call and examine specimens el our work. OFFICE FURNITURE A SPECIALTY. HEINITSH, 15 J Kant King Street. EOVKDEB8 AND MACHINISTS. T ANCASTKR BOILER MANUFACTORY, SHOP ON PLUM STREET, Oitesits the Locomotive Works. The subscriber continue te manufacture BOILERS AND STEAM ENGINES, Fer Tanning and ether purposes Furnace Twlcrs, Bellows Pipes, Sheet-Iren Werk, and Blacksmlthlng generally. O Jobbing promptly attended te. auglS-lyd JOHN BEST. ,J. .s GIIOCEXIES. TTTnOLKSAfE AMD KKTAIL. LE VAN'S FLOUR AT Ne. 227 NORTH PRINCE STREET. dl7-lyd Tailoring Reaay Made Gletning B. B. Hostetter & Sed, CLOTHING.- Timely Advice en Fall Clethes. Yeu are thinking of your clothing for fall; what it shall be: hew and where you shall get it. Come and Sec Us. Come and see us, or drop us a line, saying what you want, as near as you can. If you are here, you can see for yourself a great variety of things, try en what you like, and go home with the olcTclethes in a bundle. That is very easy ; and nothing can be mere satisfactory. Net a Strange PiJk.cE. It isn't as if you were geiug te a btrange 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: Bring them back if you don't And them every way te your liking. New this is really why we are 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. Jf you Don't Ckmk. But, suppose you don't come. Hew are we going te sail 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, dices suit, overcoat, or whatever you want ; say what your occupation is ; say anything that has any bearing ou what we eugh te send you. It will net take us two minutes te guess what you want ; if we don't miess right, that's our less, net yours. Have Yecn 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 we never saw and never expect te see ? Yeu may be very certain that we have a way of do ing such work withent much risk of a mislit ; for a misfit, you knew, comes right back te us. We are pretty care ful about making blunders when we've get them all te make geed. Ouit 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. WAI.Ii FAlEIt8, &c XKTE AKK OFFKRINO THE ONLY PERFECT Extension Window Cornice ever manufactured. It is perfect in its con struction, simple nnd handy te adjust and very cheap. It can be regulated te flt any or er uary window by means of a thumb screw, and van be adj usted lrem one feet te five feet wide. They arc made or 4JJ Inch Walnut Meulding of a New Pattern, and we have them In eight different styles. Come nnd see them. CURTAIN POLES In Walnut, Ash and Ebony, Ends, Kings and Brackets complete. ORDERS TAKEN FOR PIER AND MANTEL MIRRORS. OPENING FALL STYLES OF WALL PAPER AXD SHADES. PHARES W. FRY, Ne. 57 NORTH QUEEN ST. GBALN SSMSCULATION n.JaIF5 or small amounts. 25 Or 20,000 Wrlte W. T. SOULE & CO.. Commission Mer chants, 130 La Salic -street, Chicago, UL, for clr nlaiB. m28-ryd KIDNEY PADS. lffi MEY FAD! A discovery which cures by the natural pre- cess ABSORPTION, all diseases of the Kidneys, Bladder, Urinary unpins ana nervous system, wiien neuttng else can. It Is comfortable te the patient, pos itive in its effects, and the flit cure for these painful and much dicaded affections. Diabetes and Bright's Disease, while its cures of Gravel. Droesr. Catarrh of me uiaacier, isrickiiust Deposit, Painful uri nating. High Colored Urine, Nervous Weak ness and Pain 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 and plasters, which at best give but temporary relief. It can be ue.l without tear or harm, and with certainty of a permanent cute. Fer sale 13' druggists generally, or bent by mall (fi ec of postage) en receipt et the price. Regular Pad. $2: Child's Pad (ter incontinence of urine in children), $1.30: Special (extra size), $:J. Our book, "Hew a Lite was Saved," giving the history of this new discovery, and a large record of most re markable cures, sent tree. Wri'.e for it. Ad dress Day Kidney Pad Company, TOLEDO, OHIO. CAUTION. , Owitiir te the tnanv worthless Kiduev Pads new seckimr a sale en our reputation, we deem it due the aniictcd te warn them. Afc for DAY'S KIDNEY PAD. and take no ether. sMvdeed.UW&F&w EASTERN AGENCY, CHAKLES X. CRITTENT0N, 115 Fulton St., New Yerk. $500 REWARD ! OVER A MILLION OK PROF. GUILMETTE'S. French Kidney Fads Have already been sold in this country and in Finiice ; every one et w liich has given pertcct satisfaction, ami has pertermed cures every time when used according te directions. We new say te the alllicted and doubting ones thatwewil pay the above reward ler a single case et LAME BACK hat the Pad faiK te cure. This Great Remedy will Positively and Permanently euro Lum Lum b.ige. Lame Back, Sciatica, Gravel, Diabetes, Dropsy, Bright's Disease et the Kidneys, In continence and icctcutieu et the Urine, In flammation of the Kidiiejs, Catarrh et the Bladder, High Colored Urine, Pain in the Back, Side or Leins, Nervous Weakness, and in fact all dlserdei sol the Madder and Urinary Organs wnether contracted by ptlvatc disease or etherw ise. LADIKS f you are suffering from Female Weakness. Leuceri hcc.i, ur any disease et the Kidneys, Bladder, or Urinary Organs, YOU CAN BE CURED I Without swallowing simply wearing nauseous medicines, by PROP. GUILMETTE'S FRENCH KIDNEY PAD, WHICH CURLS BY ABSORPTION. Ask yeuriIrus;gi8t for PROF. GUILMETTE'S FRENCH KIDNEY PAD, and take no ether. If he has net get it, send 2 and you will ic ic ceh c the Pad by return mail. Fer sale by JAMES A. MEYERS, Odd frclleuV Hall, Columbia, Pa. Sold only by G EO. W. HULL, Druggist, IS W. King St., Lancaster, Pa. aiigll-tiiiidfedM.W&P Prof. Guilmette's French Liver Pad. Will pesitlv ely cure Fever and Ague, Dumb Ague, Ague Cake. Billion Fever, Jaundice, Djpepsia and all diseases of the Liver, Stomach and Bleed. Price $1.'"0 bv mail. Send for Pret. Guilmette's Treaties en the Kidneys and LUer, tree by mail. Address FRENCH PAD COMPANY, Teledo, Ohie. iiugl!-GtiidcedM.W&,P jjJivas,AV. rpitUSSlSS! TKUSSKS ! ! TKUSSKS!!! X Sufferers from Rupture ill find the safest, easiest and cheapest Trusses in the world en exhibition and ler sale by ANDREW G. FREY. Druggist, Cor. N. Queen and Orange Ms, Lancaster, Pa. Call and see. AKe. the enlv mho cure ter Piles, FREY'S UNIVERSAL PILE SUPPOSITORY. Never laiN. Pi ice. fc. and 7"c. a bow nlO-id LOCHER'S i A POSITIVE CURE FOR EPIZOO TIC AND DISTEMPER IN HORSES. PREPARED AND SOLD BY CHAS. A. LOCHER, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DRUGGIST, NO. 9 KAST K1NU STKbUT. elli-tfd H ULL'S DRtti STORK. reu PRESERVING CIDER NEUTRAL SEP1TE OF LIE. DIRECTIONS FOR USING WITH EACH PACKAGE. reu fcALt; at HULL'S DRUG STORE Ne. 15 WEST KING STREET, aug23-lyd LANCASTER, PA. OAMVETS. TARGAINS FOR KVEItYKODY. RARE CHANCE IN CARPETS, Positive sale te Reduce Stock et 6,000 Yards Brussels Carpets, AT AND BELOW COST. Cull and satlsty yourself. Ale, Ingrain, Rag and Chain Carpetsinalmestcndicssvaricty .at H. S. SHIRK'S CARPET HALL, 203 WEST KINO STREET, LANCASTER, PA. Epatic Owe ai LANCASTER, PA., MONDAY. ftawaster Intelligencer. MONDAY EVENING, OCT. 18, 1880. Tbe Story or Jenes & Ce. I guess pa and ma were pretty rich one time, for when they came te Caliternia it was en their wedding tour, and cost lets came by the way of New Yerk and Wash ington and Panama city, in a steamboat ; and ma brought a maid te wait en her, and pa had a servant named Jim ; and when we get te California I say we. I'm only fourteen new, but I was net born then, though that don't matter, I guess pa had lets of money. I was born at the Lick house, and you ought te see my baby clothes. Jenes & Ce. haven't the kind of goods them was, because Maud has drag gled them all te pieces. Maud is the baby. Six years old, Maud is, and it won't be long before she will be a clcik for Jenes & Ce. First babies always have the nicest things. Ma says first babies are like sec ond wives. But I am getting away from Jenes & Ce. Well, I am of the opinion that after p.i went into his house en Van Ness avenue he went into stock, whatever that means. Going into stock must be a curious busi ness, and sometimes pa came home look ing splendid, and wanted te buy every thing, and laughed at ma for being se mean, and net getting better clothes, and then he wanted te drive in the park and go te the theatre. One day he came home with a brand new carriage and a span of long-tailed horses, and coachman and foot man. Then sometimes pa came home and looked very blue, and talked about stocks. and I began te watch pa, and noticed that sometimes when he laughed the loudest he looked as if he wanted te cry, and then he sold the horses, and then the house, and the furniture was sent te the auction, and ma felt very bad, and pa wasn't like himself any mere, and never told me sto ries nor kissed me, and once when Maud was asleep in his arms he kissed her and cried, and when I told ma she said she guessed pa did net feel very well, and then she cried. After this we went te a bearding house a nasty, musty bearding house. "Every thing was well enough, only a bearding house ain't like home. Then the baby came, and it died and ma almost died ; and I heard pa say te the man that kept the bearding house that lie was pretty light up, but was all coming out right ; and the next day pa didn't have any watch nor any sleeve buttons. I didn't seem te notice it, because I saw that maybe he had sold them te pay beard ; and I heard pa and ma talk away in the night, and sometimes ma cried, and pa would leek in the morning just if he hadn't slept a wink, and I don't believe he had. Once it was dreadful. Pa came home tips', and I never saw ma feel se bad, never ; and then they talked it ever, and finally ma went home te grandpa's in New Yerk, with Maud, and I stayed with pa te go te school. Then pa kept getting worse, and werue, and we went te live in rooms and cat at restaurants ; and pa stayed out late nights and I guess he drank mere than was geed for him, and I thought something had get te be done. Se I said te pa one day, "Pa, let's go into business and open a store.' And he laughed and said. What kind of a store ?" And I said, ' Oh, a candy store, or a stationary store, or a thread and needle store, just such as women keep and little girls help in." And pa laughed and said he would think el it, and when he came home that night I asked him if he had thought about it, and he said he had net, and I said he had better, and he said he would ; and that morning he didn't go out, but stayed at home and wrote ma a long letter. Se next day I went into a stoic en Polk street, kept by a nice old lady who had a bad husband, where they sold everything, and she said in French tltey called it " gerie. I did net knew what she meant, because it was French, and I asked her if she did net waut te sell her stere, and she said : "De you want te buy a stoic, little girl?" And I said: "My pa does." And she smiled and said she guessed the shcrill would have a store te sell in a few days. I said I would tell pa, because he knew Mr. Nuuau, the .sheriff. It was one of Mr. Nunan's men that bold pa's house ami furniture for him. And the next day I told pa about the store, and what a nice etic it was. and he had been a dry goods man once, and had had a large store, and sold silk di ess goods, and velvets and furs, and laces wertli mere than a thousand dollars apiece. I don't exactly knew what pa did, but I think something "turned up" a few days afterwards, for I heard him say he had made a " raise," and he showed iue mere than a thousand dollars in geld nud notes, and for a day or two he carried them in a side pocket aud mostly kept his hand ever them, for fear they would jump out and fly away ; and pa bought me seme shoes and a hat, and stuff for aprons, aud I inaae incm myseu, ami i never saw pa leek se happy since ma went away, and one day he said te me : "Vevie, I have bought the store ou Polk street, and you are te be my sales woman and partner." And sure enough, in a few dajs wc went into the store, and ever the deer was a great big sign of "Jeiics & Ce." and pa said I was the " Ce." And when I said, "And se pa, you are -Jenes?' he blushed, and I guess he didn't like his old friends te knew that he was selling needles and thread aud taps aud things. Wc had two snug little rooms in the back of the store te sleep in, and I made pa's bed and swept out the rooms and tidied things. At first pa shut up the stere when he had te ee down town en business, but afUir a little while I tended it, and when there were two customers in the stere I waited en one, aud it wasn't long before I could make change and sell things almost as geed as pa could ; and by and by when he went down town I tended store, and we had splendid times. Wc went out te a nice place across the street for our meals ; I tended stere when pa went, and pa tended stere wheu I went. One day pa came in and looked dread fully troubled, and then I said : "Pa, ain't I a partner, and don't partner's have a right te knew everything, and ain't you hiding something about Jenes and Ce?" And then I found out that pa had bought tee many things for the store, and that a note for $1,000 had te be naid, and that's what made pa feel bad. And then I thought and wondered hew I could get $1,000 ; and I kept en thinking ever every body that I guessed had $1,000, and every one I guessed had it I guessed would net lend it te pa. And then I thought of the richMr. Floed, and said : "I'll go down te his bank and get it, for he's get mere than a thousand millions ; and down te the Bank of Nevada the cellar is full of geld, and of course he don't use it all the time, and before Mr. Floed wants it I'll take it back and pay the interest." And then I jumped up and hurrahed for Jenes & Ce., took my best bonnet and put en my gloves, took off my store apron and comb ed my hair, and get into a car, went te the OCTOBER 18, 1880 Nevada bank, told the clerk, I wanted te borrow a thousand dollars ; and he laugh ed aud said he guessed I had better see Mr. McLanc. I asked who Mr. McLanc was, and the clerk said Mr. McLanc was the president and was in the back room ; and I went into the baek room and Mr. McLanc said "Well, little irl, what can I de for you ?" And I said : and dollars." I want te borrow a theus- Mr. McLane opened bis eyes and turned his chair around and looked at me, and said : " A thousand dollars," with as mnch surprise as though a thousand dollars was all the money he had in the bank. Then I began te get scared and cried, and then I told Mr. McLane all about pa and " Jenes & Ce.," and what we wanted te de with the money, and that I would pay it back te him ; aud he looked kinder puz zled, and asked me what pa's name was ; and I told him, and where the store was, and all about ma aud Maud, and hew the baby died. I guess that was net very much like business, and I don't knew what Mr. Mc Lanc wanted te knew that for. Then he looked at me again, and I guess he wasn't going te let me have the money, when a gentleman at the ether desk came up te where I was sitting en a chair, and 3Ir. McLane said : "Well, Floed, what de you think of this yeuug merchant ?" And then I knew it was the rich Mr. Floed ; aud I looked into his eyes, and he said : "Let her have themouey; I will en dorse her note." Then I jumped tip aud kissed him, and he kissed me ; and Mr. McLane made a note for ninety days, and I signed "Jenes & Ce.," and Mr. Floed wrote his name en the back of it. I took the money away in a canvass bag, that Mr. McLanc said I must bring back, and I took the money te pa ; aud didn't he leek surprised when I poured out the great big twenty dollar geld pieces en the counter ? Then I told him what had happened at the bank ; aud when I asked him if he didn't thind I was a pretty geed business woman after all, I guess he felt real ashamed. After this, I never see anything like it such lets of carriages and such nice ladies kept coming every day, and most all of them traded with me, and pa was just as happy as he could be. Jenes & Ce. was making lets of money. When I took Mr. Floed's money back, I just marched right through the bank, past the "big counter, into Mr . McLane's room, and I took very geed care te let cleric that laughed at me before see the bag. Mr. Floed was in there aud Mr. McLanc aud I opened the hag. Mr. Floed came up and laughed, and Mr Mc Laeo laughed, and I heard Mr. Floed tell Mr. McLane they would have the lunch te-day. Aud then Mr. Floed told me if I wanted te borrow money again, net te go te any ether banks but come te his and I thanked him, and Mr. 3IcLauc bi ought my note cancelled by a great blue "Paid" stamped across the face, right ever where I wrote "Jenes & Ce." Then I told Mr. Floed that when wc felt able te send for ma I should come ever and bor row some mere money, because I wanted te buy a house for ma and Maud, se that they wouldn't have te go into any mere nasty bearding houses, and Mr. Floed said I should have all the money I wanted. When we sent for ma aud Maud, grandpa gave ma the money te conic, and se we didn't have te borrow any mere; and we took a nice cottage, net very near the store for pa didn't want ma te knew abeu', Jenes fc Ce., though I was just eiazy te tell her. Fei-hever.il days we fooled her. She thought pa had a stoic down town, audi was going te school. I told lets of iiUs about being detained at school, going down town, and all sorts of stories te account for being home late. One day who should I see coming into the store but :na. -' Have you any pearl shirt buttons little girl ?" said ma. "Yes ma'am," said I. looking her right .square in the face. "Goodness gracious!" said ma. "Is that you, Vevie?" I said : " Beg pardon, ma'am, what did you want?'' Aud then ma looked at ine again. I had a store apron en, and a small cap like a French girl ; and because I wasn't very high pa bought me a pair of wooden brogans, with felt buttons, into which I slipped my feet, and they made me four or five inches taller : and ma stared at tne, and then laughed and said : " Oh, I beg your pardon, little girl ; you leek se much like my daughter Genevieve that I thought you was her." Then I heard pa snicker down behind the counter. He had seen ma come in and he hiil. Just as seen as ma went out pa jumped up and laughed, and said : "Snatch oil" your apron and cap, Vevie, and run round the block aud get home before your mother." I did se, aud when ma get home she was the most surprised person yen ever saw. We knew this thing couldn't last, and se that night wc told ina all about the house of "Jenes & Ce.," aud ma kissed pa aud said he was a noble fellow, aud "just as geed as geld," and that she "never was se proud of him in her life," and fell te kiss ing him aud te crying aud taking en .1 never saw ma act se foolish in all her life, aud pa said she was " making love te him ever again." Well, new the story is about ever. Ma came down te the stere te help, At lirst she looked kinder sheepish, especially when some lady came in she had kuewn at the Lick house ; but seen she get ever all that and began te make bonnets, and we had a millinery store, and then she insisted-upon saving the exnense of a separate house, and we moved te a larger store next deer, with nice rooms fixed te live in, and a nice show window for bonnets ; and lit tle Maudic is beginning te be handy about, and all of us work, aud we arc just as happy as the days are long, and have lets of money. I have never seen Mr. Floed but once since, when I went down te the bank un beknown te pa, and told Mr. Floed and Mr. McLane that any time they wanted te borrow $1,000 "Jenes & Ce." would lend it te them; and they laughed and said, "Couldn't tell stocks might go down." And then Mr. Floed said, "If all the peo ple he had given and leaned money te would pay it back as I had, he didn't think he would get busted in a long time." And then I saw the clerk that laughed at me, and I smiled at him and bowed ; aud since then he has been buying all his gloves at the store. I told him I thought he used a great many pairs of gloves, and he said they were out very fast counting money. He is dreadful particular about his gloves, and if there is nobody in the store but me, he is sometimes half an hour picking out just the kind he wants. Pa has bought a splendid geld watch a real stem winder; and wc "Jenes & Ce." have bought a nice large let out ou Governer Sanferd's new cable railroad and paid for it ; and if the times are geed this summer, as pa thinks they will be, we shall have a house of our own again, where wc shall live in peace, die in Greece, and be buried in a cake of tallow. Tbe New Yerk Battle. Democratic Unity en the City Ticket Af"; MUM. Grand Rally for Hancock. Special Dispatch te the Times. There has been some nervousness among the Democrats outside of the movements of the leaders about the purpose of Jehn Kelly te prevent a union between the Tammany and Irving wings en a munici pal ticket, and the apprehensions have given rise te all manner of absurd rumors about Kelly selling out te Arthur te give the state te Garfield. All such charges in regard te Kelly are utterly unfounded. He gave the most positive contradiction te it himself, and his friends have resented it as an atrocious slander en their Tammany leader. Kelly gave the emphatic assurance te your cor respondent te-night that the municipal ticket would be harmoniously adjusted en Monday and that both sides would then rival each ether in their efforts te carry the state and ether needed states for Hancock. It is new confidently expected that the municipal ticket will be satisfactorily set tled en Menday.and an address will then be issued te the country by the united leaders, that will electrify the Democracy and make their battle for Hancock one of un exampled enthusiasm, energy and determ ination te win. Kelly says that New Yerk is certain te cast her electoral vote for Hancock, and all the Democratic leaders are entirely con fident of victory in the state if the cam paign can be started with a thoroughly united Democracy en Monday. They un derstand that the battle will be one of the most desperate we have ever witnessed, but it is certain that Kelly means the election of Hancock and that he docs net doubt the success of the Democrats in his state. Simultaneous with the rally in New Yerk, there will a general rally along the whole Hancock line in New Hampshire, Maine, Connecticut, New Jersey, Penn sylvania, Indiana, Illinois, Wisconsin. Cel orade, Nevada and California, and there is great conudence lelt at democratic head quarters te-night that Hancock can be elected with twenty electoral votes te spare. The reports from Indiana are un expectedly encouraging te the Democrats, and the Pacific states ate regarded as mere than likely te be solid for Hancock, with the exception of Oregon. The contest in New Jersey will begin by the middle of next weelx, and a strong reactien in favor of Hancock is positively claimed. The alarm about the sacrifice of the tn: i.'t'te party interests is growing and the nxiie dispassionate protectionists be lieve that the only safety for their cause is in keeping it out of the present party strife and trusting te the friendly efforts of tariff men en both sides under the Eaten bill. Reports from the most active manufactur ing centres in New Jersey leave no doubt that the foolish business scare will re act powerfully within the next two weeks. Unpromising as it may seem, I am as sured that there will be a general and earnest rally of the Hancock forces in Pennsylvania. He is known te be con siderably stronger than his party in his na tive state, and they mean te contest it at every step te save congressmen and employ Republican money and visiting statesmen at home. Yeu may depend upon it that the struggle in Pennsylvania will wear a very different aspect from what it does new, a week hence. Maine, Connecticut and New Hamp shire will all be desperately disputed with in the next two weeks, and New Hamp shire is regarded as the most likely of the three te vote for Hancock, while the ether two will be contested with the determina tien te win them. Jenes is a host in New Hampshire, and his election as governor is net improbable, while Hancock is re garded as stronger than the stale ticket. Beth sides seem afraid of Maine .and Con necticut, and the party that carries them, or cither of them, will earn the victory bc- lore enjoying it. The Republicans arc confident of Gar field's election, but they confess te-night that the race will be a desperate aud close one. They admit that as seen as the Dem ocrats rally, the Seuth will be solidified for Hancock, and that they must carry New Yerk te succeed. It is noticeable to night that the certainty of entire unity be tween Irving and Tammany en Monday has gieatly sobered the leaders at Jewell's headquarteis, but they count en the India na tide te float them through, and still claim a solid electoral vote in the North for Garfield. VA. Ml' A HI A' UOOltS. "PORTRAITS OF HxVNCOCK Fer hale at AND ENGLISH THIS OFFICE. F AGS! FLAGS! SASHES FOR PARADES, TRIMMINGS FOR SASHES, SADDLE CLOTHS, SHOUL DER STRAPS, RELTS, 4c. Neckties, Entirely New Styles. NEW STYLE COLORS. UNDERWEAR, GLOVES &c, &c. E. J. EBISMA3SPS, 56 NORTH O.CEKN STKKET. "1AM1M1GN IIKAOUUAKTERS PREPARE FOR THE CAMPAIGN We have Large Chinese Lanterns. Wc have Muslin Flags et all sizes. Wc have Streamers in abundance. We ltave Deuble Portrait? of Candidates 22 by 18 inches. Wc have Single Portraits at Se each. We have In stock different sizes of BUNTING FLAGS. We have a geed supply of FIREWORKS. We have Greek Fire. We have Radues in Silk and Metal. Wc take orders nnd supply all kind of Equipments te Clubs. D. S. BUKSK, 17 East King Street. Lancaster. JtOJtES, BZAJfKETS, &C. OIGN OF THE BUFFALO HEAD. ROBES! ROBES!! BLANKETS! BLANKETS I have new en hand the Largest. Best aud Cheapest Assortment of Lined and Unllned BUFFALO ROISES in the city. Alse LAP AND HORSE BLANKETS of every descrip tion. A full line of Trunks and Satchels, Harness, Whips, Cellars, &c. -Repairing neatly and promptly denc.a A. MILEY, 108 North Queen 8tn ImnetuHtr, Price Tw Cmte. JMtT GOODS. LADIES' GOATS. Opened this day a large stock of tbe above geed, te whieh special attention la Invited. Silk and Cotten Yelvets FOR TRIMMING AND SKIRTS. BLACK AND COLORED SATINS FOR TBLMMING, fcc. BLACK SILKS Asn Black and Colored CashMeres. We have all the above goods In f nil supply, and te be sold at our usual Lew Prices. FAHNESTOCK'S, Next Boer te the Court Heaae. DRESS GOODS, CLOAKS, OLOAKINGS. HAGER & BROTHER have new open the latest novelties in French. English and American DKESS GOODS. FRENCH PLAIDS, HANDKERCHIEFS, SUITINGS, SIDE BANDS, CASI1MERE FOULE, MOMIE CLOTHS, FLAN NEL SUITINGS, Ac, Ac. SUES, SATDTS AI VELVETS. Cloaks! Cloaks! Have just, received from New Yerk Import ers a line of Cloaks, Delmans nnd Jackets In the Latest Style for Ladles nnd Misses. CLOAKING CLOTHS, Black and Celers, Plain aud Assortment. Fancy, lu Large WWc invite examination. STYLES ! New Styles or CARPETS. New Styles of WALL PAPER. New Styles of DECORATIONS. New Styles of OIL CLOTHS, New Styles of WINDOW SHADES. New Styles of QUEENSWARE. New Styles of DECORATED WARE. New Styles of FINE LAMPS. New Styles of GLASSWARE. New Styles of CORNICES. New Styles of CURTAIN POLES. An Elegaut Stock in all Departments. J. B. MAKTIH & CO., Cerner West King and Prince Streets, LANCASTER, PA. CHINA AND OLAMSWARX,. TAMFSt LAMPS I AT CHINA HALL. BRASS NIGHT LA3IPS, GLASS HAND atitl STAND LAMPS, FANCY PARLOR LAMPS. NICKEL PLATED SAFETY LAMPS, NICKEL PLATED LIBRARY LAMPS, NICKEL PLATED HALL LAMPS, NEW STYLE PARLOR LAMPS, At priaes te suit everybody, at HIGH & MARTIN, Ne. 15 EAST KING STREET. . ATTOMNMTB-AT-LAW HXHKY A. X1XJET Attorney and CounseUer-t-Law a Park Rew. New Yerk. Collections made In all parts of the United States, and a general legal business transacted Refers by permission te Stcinman A Hensee - -J.-, r&tJ&&'ltfrfafrr- ,-fi-VJl3?a';-i