V""" -"v - W-'-y 'r" Vr-4-4' ---' miKM - 1 Velnme XYII-Ne. 42. LANCASTER, PA., TUESDAY. OCTOBER 19, 1880 Price Tw Carts. " . i"1' A- " - " Ik 1 JVJEW .AD VEUTISE3LENTS. TABAINS! UABCAISS!! SELLING OFF! SELLING OFF!! Eathven & Msher Offer tlicir entire-stock et Ready-Made Gletliiiig at nnti below Cost, with a view et uKcontiiiu uKcentiiiu infj the READY-MADE CLOTHING business, nnl devoting their attention exclusively te CUSTOM WORK. CLOTHING made promptly te order, and atbifacllen in all cases Kiiarantecd. A select line of Cleths, Cassiineres, Worsteds, Coatings, .Suitings. Cheviots. Mellen.-, Overceatings. Vesting. &c. alwavs en hand unil orders re spectfully solicited. Alse, a general line el riirniHliiiig Goods. RATH VON & FISHER Merchant Tailors and Drapers, Ne. 101 North Queen SI., Lancaster, Pa. SPECIAL. These in want or Keady-Made Cletliing will eensult their own interest by giving them a call before purchasing else where, us iheir Clothing are mainly el their own manufacture and substantially made. bcikSI-IiihI FALL OPEIIII H. GMtHARTS islalsieiii, MONDAY, OCTOBER lltli, 1880. A Ceiiipiclu Sfeck el Cleths, Suitings awu OVERCOATINGS, which for elegance cannot be surpassed. The Largest Assortment el ENGLISH AND SCOTCH SUITINGS in this cily. Prices as low as tins lowest at H. GERHART'S Ne. 51 North Queen Street. CLOTHING! CLOTHING! We have new ready ler sale an Immense Stock et Ml and Winter, which are Cut and Trimmed in the Latest .Style. We kiii give you a GOOD STYLISH SUIT AS WW AS $10.00. PIECE GOODS In great variety, made te order at short notice ;it the lowest prices. 24 CENTRE SQUARE, cMyd LANCASTER. 1A. FALL AND WINTER . OVERCOATINGS! Te-day we display a mil line of the Latent Novelties in Overeeutingti far the Pall Season, in all the New Colorings, with Silk Facings te match; also a superior line or Heavy Weights in New Designs. Fur Beaver, Seal Skin. Elysian, Montauk, Ratina and Chinchilla Beaver. Deuble and Treble. -Milled, all the New Mix tures. Tayler's English Mintrjs, s il-iiii -:nd F.iucv Stacks, Combination Col Cel Col ers.allinaaC "":' triiiimeil in the highest. Style of Art. SM ALI NG'S THE ARTIST TAILOR, 121 N.QUEp STREET, Hi - 07M. P. FRAIMrjrS MONUMENTAL MARBLE WORKS 7C8 Nena ittcen Streer, Lancaster, Pa. MONUMENTS. 1WXU AND FOOT STONES, uaUdkn statuary, cumktkuy ijetk ehclesed, &c. All work guaranteed and satisfaction gi en In every particular. N. 11. Remember, work Hie extrcme end Ol North Queen street- null hung RealT-Maae Clothing D. B. Hostetter & Sen, garb's mm MELTONS CLOTMIJfa. 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 Skk Uh. Come anil sec 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 old clothes in a bundle. That is very easy; and nothing can be mere satisfactory. Net a Stkanee Pi.aci:. It isn't as if you were going 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 find them every way te your liking. New this is really why wc are net strangers te anybody; because wc deal with everybody as with a neigh bor; and expect him te come right liack if he has cause of complaint. If veir Don't Come. But, suppose you don't come. Hew arc wc going te sell yen 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, dicss suit, overcoat, or whatever you want ; say what your occupation is ; say anything that has any bearing en what wc etigh te mmhI you. It will net Like us two minutes te guess what you want ; if wc don't cuess right, that's our less, net yours. Have Your. 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 withent much risk of a misfit ; for a misfit, you knew, comes right back te us. Wc are pretty care ful about making blunders when we've get thftn all te make geed. Otnt 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. WAWAMAKBB & BROWN. Oak Ham., Sixth ami Market Streets. Philadelphia, Pa. HALL J'Al'ERS, Se. w K AUK OFFKIUNU THE ONLY PERFECT Extension "Window Cornice ever manufactured. It is perfect in its con struction, simple anil handy te adjust anil very cheap. It can be regulated te lit any or nary window by means of a thumb screw, and can lie adjusted treni one feet tollve feet wide. "They arc made er4K Inch Walnut Meulding or a New Pattern, and we have them in eight ditrercut styles. Come and see thcin. CURTAIL POLES In Walnut, Ash and Kheny, Ends, Uinj;s and Rrackcts complete. ORDURS TAKEN FOR PIER AND MANTEL MIRRORS. OPENING FALL. STYLES OF WALL PAPER AHD SHADES. PHARES W. FRY, Ne. 57 NORTH QUEEN ST. "1KA1N WISCULATIOSI VT In large or small amounts. $23 or $20,000 Write W. T. SOULK & CO., Commission Mer chants, 130 La Salic street, Chicago III., fercir uiars, in'28-iyd nOP BITTERS. r? YOtJ ARE A MAN OF BUSINESS, weakened by the strain of your duties avoid stimulants and take HOP BITTEliS! If you arc a man eflcttcrs, toiling ever your miduight work, te restore brain and nerve waste, take HOP BITTERS! II you arc young, and sufTcring from any indiscretion ordissipatien, take HOP BITTERS! If you are married or single, old or young, hiiirering from peer health or languishing en abed of sickness, take HOP BITTERS! Whoever yen arc, wherever you arc, when ever you feci that your system needs cleansing, toning or stimulating, with out intoxicating, take HOP BITTERS! Have you dyspepsia, kidney or urinary com- 2laint, disease et the stomach, beivels, bleed, liver, or nerves t Yeu will be cured if you take HOP BITTERS! It yen are simply ailing, arc weak and low spirited, try it! liny it. Insist upon it. Your druggist keeps it. HOP BITTERS! It may save your life. It h;i3 saved hundreds. HOI HITTERS MANUFACTURING CO., Ue Chester, Xew Yerk and Terente, Ontario. BRUOS, &c. rpnussi:.s : trusses t : trusses : : i X Sufferers from ltupture will llndthe safest, easiest and cheapest Trusses in the world en exhibition anil ler Bale by ANDREW G. FKEY, Druggist, Cor. N. Queen and Orange Sta, Lancaster, Fa. Call and see. Alse, the enlv sure cure ter l'ilea, FltKY'S UNIVERSAL FILE SUPPOSITORY. Never fails. Price. 60c. and 7.1c. a box. n 10 y. I IiOCHEK'S A POSITIVE CURE FOR EPIZOO TIC AND DISTEMPER IN HORSES. PREPARED AND SOLI) P.Y CHAS. A. LOCHER, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DRUGGIST, NO. 9 EAST KING STREET. elC-tfd TTUI.I.'S IMttJU STORE. pen PRESERVING CIDER USE NEUTRAL SULPHITE OF LIE. DIRECTIONS FOR USING WITH EACH PACK AG B. K02 8ALK AT HULLS DRUGSTORE Ne. 15 WEST KING STREET, aus'23-lyd LANCAST1CR, PA. VAMVAION UOOltS. T)OKTRAITS OF HANCOCK AND ENGLISII Fer sale at THIS OFFICE. I.AS! FLAGS! SASHES FOR PARADES, TRIMMINGS FOR SASIIKS, SADDLK CLOTHS, SHOUL DER STRAPS, KELTS, Ac. Neckties, Entirely New Styles. NEW STYJLE COLORS. UNDERWEAR, GLOVES &c, &c. E. J. ERISMAITS, 5G NOKTU QUEEN STREET. flAMPAlttN UEADQUARTERS PREPARE FOR THE CAMPAIGN We have Large Chinese Lanterns. Wc have Muslin Flags et nil sizes. Wc have Streamers m abundance. We have Deuble Portraits of Candidates 22 by 18 inches. We have Single Portraits atc each. We have in stock diil'ereiit sizes et BUNTING FLAGS. We have a geed supply of FIREWORKS. We have Creek Fire. Wc have Kadccs in Silk and Metal. We take orders and supply all kinds of Equipments te Clubs. D. S. BURSK, 17 East Kin? Street. Lancaster. jVJtITUJl. HBINITSH, FINE FUBNTTUKE AKO Cabinet Manufacturer. All in want of Fine or Fancy Cabinet Werk would de -well te call and examine specimens et our work. OFFICE FURNITURE A SPECIALTY. HEIHITSH, 154 East King Street. anecmtiEs. -yfTHOLESALE and retail. LEVANTS FLOUR AT Ne. 227 NORTn PRINCE STREET. ' dl7-iyl EdlzedUg unre autl Hancastrr Intelligencer. TUESDAY EVENING, OCT. 10, 1880. NOT FOR WEAVER. A PROMINENT LAltOIl MAN REPUDI ATES HIM. An Intelligent Kc view or the Workluctnpu'e Position General Wearer the Teel of Republican Politicians Itrpnb licuitlitiit anil Impe rialism. WIT AND WISDOM. Current Anecdotes et Notable Public Men Mr. Julian en the Result in Indiana. Wrlglit en weaver. James L. "Wrijjht, of Philadelphia, the real head of the Grcenbaek-Laoer party of that city, has grown restive under the transparent betrayal of his party by its presidential candidate, General Weaver. Mr. Wright was the candidate of the Grccnbackcrs for secretary of internal affairs in 1878, wasdelcsatcte the conven tion which nominated Weaver and is a member of the state committee at this time. He was interviewed by a represent ative of the Philadelphia Times en Satur day last, and the following utterance is of value net only by reason et Jus relation te the party which is betrayed, but because of its intelligent expression upon the rela tive rights of employer and employee : " Weaver has all along been advising a straight-out ticket in Indiana,' he said. " We new see what he means. The ticket has been se straight-out that there's noth ing left of it for the Grccnbackcrs. The saine would have been the case in Maine if Weaver's advice had been taken. The difference was that the people of Maine wcre just a little tee independent te be dictated te by Weaver. They knew their business better than he did. By net heed ing his advice they get two members of Congress and the governor. If the Indiana Greenbackcrs had done the same they would have sent their men te Congress in stead of losing every Greenback-Laber candidate in the state. There is going te be a mighty change in things in the next two weeks. The real struggle is just be ginning. Weaver need de no mere, for he has done enough. The laboring people are net blind, nor are they feels. They are net politicians, nor government paupers, always crying out against a change and doing all they can te keep in power the old clique of robbers and plunderers because they happen te get the crumb:! that fall from the thieves' table. The laboring man knows nothing of political favor, nor docs he care te knew. He is net hungry after ellice nor has he any axe te grind. When the axe-grinding politician gees about the country making speeches and telling the people why his party ought te continue in power, the workingmen simply leek at his position and ak themselves whether he is speaking from ; disinterested stand point, and that settles it. The laboring man is net a political pauper, livery cent he gets, every piece of bread he puts into his month, he earns by hard work. There is nothing en Ged's earth dearer te him than his independence. Hew long can that continue under the present state of things ? When wc read of employers and capitalists using their position and their inllucnccand their money te force their laborers te vote te keep in power the rl I set of ringsters, when we read of the means employed, the threats held ever their heads and the warnings and intimi dations, wc wonder whether wc arc any longer living in a free country or a coun try of despotism. These arc facts and they speak for themselves. There is no getting around them. Politicians may talk about tariff and a solid Seuth and all that ; they may threw dust in the people's eyes in a thousand different ways; they may talk around the subject and try te lead the minds of the people off the real issue, but it will de no geed. There is only one great question before the people : Shall the country become a monarchy or shall it remain free ? Republican papers may laugh and ridicule, Republican politicians may sceft" and jeer, but this doesn't ex plain away or answer the facts. "De the politicians pretend te deny tint the workingmen arc mere under the thumb of the capitalists new than they were ten years age '.' De they pretend te deny that workingmen arc mere. at the mercy et capitalists new than they were ten years age? De. they pretend te deny that the workingmen have been and arc being coerced and intimidated into supporting the Republican candidate for president'.' Ten years age Bitch a thing as discharging a man en account of his political views, or of coming into the workingmen's depart ment and bullying them like cattle a3 I have heard a Republican foreman in a certain factory has done in this town ten years age such a thing was the exception, and if it had happened then as it did in this case, the workingmen would have re sented it right and left, and it might have been policy for that foreman te get out of the way pretty quick. " I am net talking for the sake of talk ing, nor am I talking en .theories or sup positions. The coercion of the working men by their employers, net only in this city, but clsewherc, are facts. The proofs are at hand and I defy anybody te deny it. Yet in the face of all this we have loud-mouthed politicians going about the country prating about a free country and the glorious privileges of the workingman. De they think the workingmen are stupid and blind and dumb, without sense or in tellect or reason ? De they for a moment think that they have no memory or under standing, or de they believe that laboring men arc of such an adaptable kind that they can suffer abuses and wrongs and slights for three years and six months and then forget all about them for the ensuing six months until the politicians elect and put in their president? " The politicians have made a mistake. They have talked as though the working masses were children, without reason or understanding. They have miscalculated the power of the labor clement. They seem te forget that two years age the Greenback-Laber party of this state polled ninety thousand votes ferjudge of the su preeo court. Half that many votes is enough te bury the Republican paity of Pennsylvania se deep that it would never be heard of again. Since that time the labor men have net been taking an active part in politics. They have steed off sim ply for the reason that Eome of the few members of the straight Greenback party have ignored labor questions entirely and gene crazy en the ene subject of green backs. This is a small question te the labor men compared te ether questions. There arc questions like the eight-hour law, taxing of labor-saving machinery, and above all, protection of men who serve a regular ap prenticeship and learn a trade against the interlopers who have never learned a trade. Wc have a great outcry against these quack doctors who never go through a regular course of study, but hang out their shingles and compete with a regular physician. Everybody is rejoicing that Dr. Buchanan's quack diploma factory is broken up. At the same time, all ever the citv, in the shoe shops, the tailor business and every ether trade, there are hundreds of quacks also. People ask why boys don't learn trades like they used te. The reason is simply that they have no protection from these interlopers after they de learn them. They want the same protection that the doctor, the lawyer and the preacher has. "But there is a great question which the working pcople sec se clearly that no politician can blind their eyes te it. This is simply the perpetuation in power of one party until that party seems te think they own the country and turn their backs en the working pcople and these who placed them in power. In spite of all that Re publican organs can say and in spite of all that Republican politicians can say, the workingmen sec that this country is tend ing toward a monarchy. They see a small handful of politicians, like Conkling, Cameren, Legan and a few ethers, as arro gant and pretentious as though they were the chief advisers of the Czar of Russia. They liavc no interest or sentiment in com mon with the honest, hard-working peo ple of this country. Success te the Re publican party simply means se many fur ther strides toward au aristocratic form of government. There is no hiding of this fact, there is no getting ever it. The tendency is in this direction and Conkling and Cameren and the rest of their crowd knew it. They would have put Graut in at Chicago if they could. They will rule Garfield like a child if they make him pres ident. The working people want no Conk Cenk liugism or Grantisrn. The struggle is narrowing down te a light between the two parties. After two weeks it is hardly likely there will be a third party. Gar field has sneered at the Greenback party's idea; he has pronounced some recent measure of the party, as the 'last spawn of a dying faction.' Garfield will find that the Greenback party is at least honest and will support honest men. The labor cle ment is net te be bought, in spite of all that Garfield has said against it, and this he will find out before he is a month elder." An Anecdote of Gladstone. The man is mere interesting than any of the parts he has been called te play; but wc come te understand the man bet ter by seeing hew he shapes and melds these parts. As an orator, his conspicu ous merits, beside his striking ceuntc nance, dignified action, and a veice full, rich, and admirably modulated, are fertil ity and readiness. He ccms te have al ways at command an inexhaustible store of ideas, reasons, illustrations, whatever be the subject which he is reported te deal with. Of all great English speakers, prob ably no one, net even Wm. Pitt, has been se independent of preparation. Even Fex, swift and rushing as he was, was great only in reply, when his feel ings were heated by the atmosphere of bat tle, whereas Mr. Gladstone is just as ani mated and forcible in an opening, or in a purely ornamental and uncontcntietts harangue, as in the midst of parliamen tary strife. Of the many anecdotes that arc current illustrating his amazing power of rising te an occasion, one may be given which has the merit of being true. On the afternoon when he was te make an important motion in the Heuse of Com Cem Com eons, a friend, happening te ca'l en him between two and three o'clock, found him just sitting down te make some notes of the coming speech. ITe laid aside his pen and talked for a while, then jetted down a few heads en paper, went down te the Heuse before four o'clock, found himself drawn into a preliminary controversy of a very trying nature, in which he had te re pel se many questions and attacks that it was past six before he rose te make the great .speech. He then discovered that, as he had left his eyeglasses at home, his notes were practically useless, put them quietly back into his coat pocket, and de livered with no aid te his memory, and upon that one hour's preparation, a power ful argument interspersed' with passages of wonderful passion and pathos, which lasted three hours, and will always rank amongst his finest efforts. Sr.rilmcr for Jfvtemlicr. lien. Geerge W. Julian 011 Indiana. "Hew did the Indiana Democracy feel ever tlicir defeat last Tuesday?" an Keen ing Express reporter yesterday asked cx cx Cengrcssman Geerge W. Julian, of that state, who is new in New Yerk te speak in that state and in New Jersey and Con necticut. " Very sick at heart," he replied and continued : "The first depression was chilling ; it was se unexpected and as tennding." "Hew de they feel new?" "In geed heart again, resolute and determined te win the state for Hancock, with a confi dence that they will de it." "Why are they stronger new than they wcrefest Tuesday ?" " AH side issues arc removed. Landers was net a strong can didate for a time when the paying off of personal grudges would seriously interfere with party success. The Grccnbackcrs had a score te settle with him, and they have secured their revenge. And wc missed it by net supporting De La Matyr. Wc did nothing te win the Greenback vote and it went against us. Thcusands of men who, voted for Perter will vote for Han cock." "What defeated the Democracy in Indi ana?'' " Wc were smothered with money. The state was sure two days before the election. Our poll showed it te be se be yond a doubt " "Did the free trade and tariff scare help much towards effecting the defeat?"' "Ne. It was net heard of in the canvass till a couple of days before the election." " But here it is generally believed that, next te vote buying, that scare was poten tial in upsetting the state." "It is a mis t ike, and I am astonished that se much is being made -of the tariff subject here at the East. Menoy was the chief cause of the defeat in Indiana. The tariff matter did but little harm. Fraudulent voting by imported negrees and repeaters did us a measure of harm next te the bribery." " Hew de you regard the tariff issue new ?" " It is no issue at all in this cam paign. Gen. Hancock's last letter lias set tled it just as effectively as he extinguished the rebel claims question a short time age. Free trade is an ideal of men of both par tics. Politically it has been a dead issue for about forty years. Why didn't the Republicans bring it in at the very begin ning, instead of the end of the cam it 13 paign, since they profess that of paramount impertance ? Free trade is tee big a question te be grappled with new. The tarifT is always a matter of honest difference of opinion, but I can't sec that there is any real dif ference between the Republican:, and Dem ocrats about it just new. Garfield himself and many ether Republicans, and strong papers of tiiat party as well, are free tra ders in theory, but have various ideas of protection in practice. Free trade is a thing of the future, beyond our present debt and generation," "Then you think the Democracy will regain Indiana in November ?" " Certain ly ; Indiana is willing and ready te vote for Hancock. The Republican purchases can't be repeated. Besides, the Republi can manipulators can t put all their lunds out in Indiana." A Wonderful sermon. We quete from Richard Henry Dana's paper in Scribner for November, en the late President Leenard Weeds,of Bowdoin college : " Seme thirty years age. it had been announced that President Weeds was te preach in what is new the parish church of the Advent, in Bowdoin street, but was then in the possession of a congregational society, under the pastorate of Rev. Dr, Winslow. The house was well filled President Weeds spoke apparently witheu even notes. He speke for nearly an hour and a half, of a warm summer afternoon, te a congregation which had been used te set tlicir mental chronometers te twenty or thirty minutes. Yet it was a case of " Contiatcrcemncs, intentiqueeratcnehunt," from first te last. There was net only at tention, but an excited glowing atten tion. His subject was 'The Delayed Justice of Ged,' tlie text being, -Because sentence against a evil work is net execut ed speedily, therefore,' etc. Fer hisspace of time, and his purpose, he was the mas ter of every one in the house, and Dr. Winslow, in his concluding prayer, was se carried away that he entered unconsciously upon a eulogy en the preacher, in thank ing the Almighty for the great privilege we had enjoyed that day. At this time, it was rarely if ever that a preacher of the orthodox sects took examples or illustra tions from elsewhere than the scriptures : but in this discourse, it seemed that, as was said of Burke, there had goue dutado dutade dutado crce that all the world should ba taxed. He drew his illustrations from all history, from all the known experience of mankind. As I have said, it is mere than t went -five years since I heard that sermon ; but I csn repeat, I think verbatim, many of its finest passages, and retain a clear memory of its thought and order.. After some years, happening te speak with a scholarly and thoughtful man en the subject of sermons, he said that the best he had ever heard was one by President Weeds, in the old meeting house in Bowdoin street, en the delayed justice of Ged, and he proceeded te describe it. Again, at New Yerk, at a gathering of men el letters, the subject of best sermons was started, and one of the number, a man of high repute as a writer, said that, chancing te be in Bosten of a Sunday, some years before, he went te hear President Weeds, at Bowdoin street, and there heard a discourse, en the delayed justice of Ged, which had ever remained in his mind the ideal sermon. Thus the only three persons I knew te have heard it, give it the first place ; and I doubt if any intelligent hearer en that day will fail, even new te acquiesce in this judgment."' Mr. Ernrl'x Figures. Dallas Herald. On the 2flth of September, in the Cooper institute. New Yerk, the Hen. William M. Evaits, a citizen of that city, but for nearly four years past secretary of state of the United States, made a Garfield speech, great in length and remarkable in its state ment of facts, designed te array the North ern against the Southern people. Texas was introduced and figures given te preve that Republicans were bulldozed and dare net vote. Three count irs were paraded te preve this, thus : reUNTV. HAVKfi. TI!.KX. Brown 1 2,525 Eastland ." 1,787 Hidalge 4 1,02!) Totals S 5,9-11 The official vote of these counties steed : COS7NTY. IIAYKS. Tlf.DKK. Brown 1 000 Eastland. . Hidage!.... ... 0 .'.13 188 Ml Totals 14 929 As Mr. Evarts mistakes the facts by ever six hundred per cent, in these official figures from three little border counties in Texas, in net one of which was therc.prob therc.preb ably, a single colored man in 187C, hew much credit can be given te his figures in ether and greater matters ? Jirs. Itarnlietrt, corner Pratt and lireadway, lia linen a sufferer for 14 years through Itlicii-iiiatl.-in, and lias tried every remedy she could hear of, but received no benefit, until recom mended te try Hie Kelectric Oil, slie saysslie cannot express the H:itil':iclteii she feels at baviiiK lier pain entirely removed and lier Klieuiiiati.-.ni cured. Fer sale bv II. 15. Cocb Cecb ran. druggist, 1:S7 and ISl North 'Queen street, I -an caster. 7 Tbe Mclnnciielly Dane. Iiiiiiilet Prince', of Deninarlc. would net have been ilnbbeil. the " Melanehelly Dime." ir lie had known Dyspepsia was all tint ailed him. and that all he needed was a supply et Spring Hlo-em. a sure cure ter Dysicpxia, llllious llllieus ness. Indigestion and ether diseases of that do de do serlptien. Price: S0c.. trlaf bottles 10 cents. Fer sale bv II. 15. Cochran', druggist, 137 and i:S) North Queen street, Lancaster, Fa. 8 VAltPJBTN. pAKUAIXH FOK KVKKVnenV. RARE CHANCE TN CARPETS, Positive sale te Reduce Sleck et 6,008 Yards Brnssels Carpels, AT AND iiEI.OW COST. Cull anil satisfy ycursclf. Alse, Ingrain, Rag mid Chain Carpctsiiialmestcndlcs variety .at H. S. SHIRK'S CARPET HALL, 203 WEST KING STREET, LANCASTER, PA. fO VSDEilS Ayii MAV111XIST.S. T ANCASTEIt 1 BOILER MANUFACTORY, SHOP ON PLUM STREET, orresrrBTHK Locomotive Weiuta. The subscriber continue te manufacture BOILERS AND &TEAM ENGINES, Fer Tanning anil ether purposes Furnace T-.vier.s, i:cl!v,-3 Pipes, Sheet-iron Werk, and luacksmithing generally. tf Jobbing promptly attended te. auglS-lyd ' JOHN REST. HOCUS, BLANKETS, AC. OIGN OF TIIK BUFFALO 1IBAD. KOBES! ROBES !! BLANKETS! BLANKETS 1 nave new en ham I the I.aiuibst. Rest and CiiuAresT AfiseKTMr.sT of I.lncil and Unlincd P.UFFALO RORES in the city. Alse LAP AN1 IIORSK ISLiAXKKTS of every descrip tion. A full line of Trunks and Satchels, Harness, Whips, Cellars, &c. 9Keputring neatly and promptly cloned A. MI LEY, JOS Knrth Qneen .Vf., iMntmttr. SSI j.JJlWAt. dry (toens. LADIES' COATS. Opened this day a large stock of the abeve goods, te which special attention Is invited. Silk: and Cotten Telvets FOR TRIMMING AND SKIRTS. BLACK AND COLORED SATINS FOR TRIMMING, &c. BLACK SIL.KS AXD Black and Colored Cashmeres. We have all the above goods In lull supply, and te be sold at our usual Lew Prices. FAHNESTOCK'S, Next Doer te the Court Heuse. DRESS GOODS, CLOAKS, CLOAKINGS. HAGER & BROTHER have new open the latent nev." Ities in French. English and American DRESS GOODS. FRENCH PLA1I1S, HANDKERCHIEFS, SUITINGS, SIDE RANDS, CASIIMERK FOULE, MOMIE CLOTHS, FLAN NEL SUITINGS, Ac., Ac. SLLKS, SATTJfS VELVETS. Cloaks! Cloaks! Have just received from New Yerk Import ers a line of Cloaks, Delmans ami Jackets in the I-atcst Style for Ladies and Misc. CLOAKING CLOTHS, iilack and Celers, Plain and Fancy, In Ijirge Assortment. JVB'Wi' invite examination. STYLES ! New Styles el' CARPETS. New Styles of WALL PAPEIt. 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 EjNE LAMPS. New Styles of GLASSWARE. New Styles of CORNICES. New Styles of CURTAIN POLKS. An Elegant Sleck in all Departments. J. B. MARTIN t CO, Cerner West King and Prince Streets, LANCASTER, PA. CHINA AND ULAHHWARK. AMI'S! lamps: CHINA HALL. BRASS NIGHT LAMPS, GLASS HAND ami STAND LAMPS, FANCY PARLOR LAMPS, NICKEL PLATED SAFETY LAMPS. NICKEL PLATED LIBRARY LAMPS, NICKEL PLATED HALL LAMPS. NEW STYLE PARLOR LAMPS, At prices te suit everybody, at HIGH & MARTIN, Ne. 15 EAST KING STREET. ATIOUNETS-AT'LAW- HKNKY A.KILKT Attorney and Counseller-at-Law 21 Park Rew, New Yerk. Collections made In all parts or the United States, and a general lejpil tiniiies tr-mvictet Refers by permission Uljiiiuittii X llehaeQ V. Hl -IT"