Lancaster daily intelligencer. (Lancaster, Pa.) 1864-1928, January 06, 1881, Image 1

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Volume XVlI-Xe. 108
LANCASTER, PA., THURSDAY, JAlSTJATtY 6- 1881
Price Tw Grata.
NnlH.
- w i
m
i3BMMB8fiafcSaaaat5awS
WATCHES,
We call attention te a tew very desirable ax tides at unusually low prices.
Beys' bilvcr Hunting Cased Wateacsat $ 6.2
Coys' Sliver Hunting Cased Stem Winding Watches 13.0U
Gentlemen' Silver Hunting Cased Full Jeweled Watches. 5.00
Gentlemen's Silver Hunting Cased Stem Winding Watches 15.00
Ladies' 10 and 14 Carat Geld Hunting and Half Hunting
Cased Watches at 18.00
Wc call attention te our fine Movements ter Ladies' Watches Full Jeweled,
cvfrn In centre pivots, which we will case te order in Handsome Bex-Joint
Monogram Cases or otherwise. Gentlemen' lii Size Movements Cased and
Engraved or Monegrammcd te order.
A special new line et goods is just received, consisting of Gentlemen's Silver
i!ox-jeint-Cascd Watches, ti.e Handsomest Silver Watches ever brought te
this city. We invite an inspection el these goods, feeling confident we can
hew inducements te buyers net te le found elsewhere.
H. Z. RHOADS & BRO., Jewelers,
4 West King Street, - Lancaster, Pa.
EDW. J.
Manufacturing Jeweler, Zahm's Cerner,
Things lu our
Beautiful and Durable Christmas Gilts.
WATCHES, DIAMONDS,
CLOCKS, SILVEUWAKE,
SPECTACLES, JEWELRY,
,'JOLD BROXZES, GOLD HEAD CANES,
GOLD THIMBLES, SILVER HEAD CANES,
SILVER THIMBLES, OPERA GLASSES.
GOLD PENS AND PENCILS,
HANDKERCHIEF AND GLOVE BOXES,
GOLD BRONZE SMOKING SETS,
FINE CIGAR SETS,
BACCARET VASES.
ALL THESE ANI MAM MOKE AT
ZAHM'S CORNER, LANCASTER, PA.
DltY
EXTRAORDINARY BARGAINS
AT THE
NEW YORK STORE.
WATT, SIIAXI) & CO. liave marked down
must effect a speedy clearance.
Special Bargains in Ladies' Coats and Dol Del
mans. These geed must be Beld at once, and
we have marked them down te pi ices ti.at u ill
sell them.
Special Bargains In Lndlc& Underwear, at
25, 33, i fle, my. and .c. These are excellent
value at the prices, and can't be beat in any
city.
Special Bargains in Table Linens, Towels,
Toweling, Blankets and (Juilts.
WATT, SHAND
8 AND 10 EAST
JUlLLINJiltY
NEW GOODS FOR THE HOLIDAYS,
AT
GTODAKER'S EMP0BIU1.
LADIES, Ter New, Desirable and Cheap Silk Handkerchiefs, Lace Ties, But But
eons of all Kinds, Corsets, Kid and Lisle Thread Gleve3, Hosiery, &c., call at GTJN
DAKER'S. A Full Line of Fancy Articles suitable for a
. NICE CHRISTMAS PRESENT,
offered cheap at GUXDAKEH'S. Alse, an inducement in the MILLINERY DE
PARTMENT, with a view te closing out the entire Stock.
Plush Bennets and Hats offered at a Sacrifice. -
Plush and Velvets all Shades, sold cheap.
Bennets and Hats in French and "Weel Felts, for 50 and 75c. .
ESTGivc us a call and examine our stock, at
GUNDAKER'S,
142 & 144 North Queen Street, Lancaster, Pa.
CLOTHING.
GREAT SLAUGHTER IN CLOTHING.
GRAM MARK DOWI AT CENTRE HALL.
Will be sold in sixty days TEX THOUSAND DOLLAKS WORTH of
HEAVY WINTER CLOTHING,
Without regard te cost. Xew is, your tiuic te secure a geed Suit of Clothing for very little
money, Ready-made or Made te Order.
OVERCOATS IN GREAT VARIETY,
Fer Men. Youths and Beys. Men's Dress Suits, Men's Business Suits, Youths' Suits in every
style. Beys' Clothing, a very Choice Variety.
49" Don't tail te cull nnd secure some of the bargains.
MYERS & RATHFON,
Xe. 12 EAST KIAtt STREET,
SLEIGHS, JtC.
Carriages ! Carriages !
AT
EDGERLEY & CO.'S.
Practical Carriage Builders,
Market Street, Rear of Central Market Houses
Lancaster, Pa. ' '
We nave en hand a Large Assortment el
BUGGIES AND CARRIAGES,
Which wc offer at the
VERY LOWEST PRICES. '
All work warran ted. G i ve us a cal 1 .
JVRcpatriug promptly attended te.
One set of workmen especially employed for
hum purpose. Lnai-lIUJcw
I
PAINTING.
All kinds et Heuse; Painting and G rainin rainin
dene at the shortest notice and in the b-t pe
Bible style. We have reduced our prices I
L7iPeii'"v Shep en Charlette r-treet.
ectlMmd ALLEN GUTHRIE & SONS.
JEWJCLKX, e.
ZHM,
Lancaster, Pa.
stock that make
HOODS.
all surplus stock and odd lets te pi Ices that
hpecial B:u-g.iininBlcarhcdand Unbleached
Muslins and Sheetings. Previous te the late
advance we made large purchases of Cotten
Goods, and can new sell them at less than
Manufacturer's Trices.
J,.r00 Yards Heavy Plaid Shirtings at 9c. a
yard, reallv worth l'-Kc
Special liargains ill White Blankets, full
size. $l.3'J a pair.
& COMPANY,
KING STREET.
LANCASTER, FEHJi'A.
HOLIDAY GOODS.
FLU'i & BREIEMAI.
GRAND OPENING OF
HOLIDAY GOODS.
A larger stock than ever. Lewer prices than
ever. Every variety of Mechanical Toys.
DOLLS! DOLLS! DOLLS!
BLOCKS AND GAMES.
Horses, Carts, Wagons, Sleighs, Velocipedes
and Bicycles.
USEFUL CHISTMAS .PRESENTS.
Elegant Carvers.Silver-platcd Knives, Silver
plated Spoons, Silver-plated Ferks. The above
goods arc Itedgcrs & Bre.'s best goods, bought
at a sacrifice, and will be sold very le .
HOUSE FURNISHING GOODS.
Tin, c hect Iren and Weeden Ware at Great
Bargains.
Flu & Brenemafl's
152 North Queen Street,
LANCASTER. PA.
' It A1N M"KCULAHO:N
VJ In large or small amounts. $25 or $20 000
Write W. T. SOULE & CO.. Commission Her
chants, 130 La Salic street, Chicago, 111., ter car
julars. m-xycl
DXT GOODS, VNDr.UWEAS, .
LADIES' COATS,
LADIES' COATS,
LADIES' COATS.
We would call the attention et the ladies te
our large stock of the above goods, which
have all been
REDUCED IX PRICE
TO EF1 ECT
RAPID SALES.
These in want should
before purchasing.
net fail te see them
FAHNESTOCK'S,
Next Doer te the Court Heuse.
SPECIAL YALUE
GLOVES Al UNDERWEAB.
HEAVY I)K1Y1.; tiLOVKS,
CLOTH GLOVES, KNIT GLOVES.
HEAVY ALL WOOL AND
MERINO UNDERWEAR.
OUtt 50c. SHIRTS AND VESTS ARE
CELLKNT VALUE."
EX-
Ladies' Coats and Delmaiis
AT PRICES TO CLOSE.
J. B. MARTIN & CO.,
Cor. West King and Prince Sts.
LANCASTER, PA.
Holiday Goods.
Holiday Goods.
Holiday Goods.
BAGER & BROTHER
Aic ettering a Large and Attractive Assert
incut of goods suitable for
HOLIDAY GIFTS
HOLIDAY GOODS.
HOLIDAY GOODS.
HOLIDAY GOODS.
OPECIAL NOTICE.
Business has been se lively at the
NEW CHEAP STORE
or
& Wmkm
J JU1U M. XXUUUUlUUl
38 West King Street,
Opposite Cooper Heuse, Lancaster, Pa.,
that they have already been obliged te le
plenish their large Stock of
BLANKETS,
which they had almost entirely closed out.
They have just received and will sell
1 Let White Blankets at $1 . 10 a pair
1 Let White Blankets at 2 25 a pair
1 Let White Blankets at 3.00 a pair
1 Let White Blankets at 3.50a pair
1 Let White Blankets at 100 a pair
1 Let White Blankets at 5.00 a pair
1 Let White Blankets at COO a pair
1 Let White Blankets at 7 00 a pair
1 Let White Blankets at 8.00a pair
Alse Colored Blanket fren. .1.50 te $1.50 a pair
Calice Comfertables from $1.00 up
White and Colored Counterpanes of all kinds.
SPECIAL BARGAINS.
1 Let Tickingl2Jc. regular price 15c, 1 Let
Best Feather Ticking 19c., regular price 25c.
Children's Weel Stockings from 10 te 15c.
Ladies' Merine Weel Stockings from 10 te 15c.
CLOSING OUT
Ladies9 Coats and Delmans Cheap.
Alse the balance of an Importer's Let of Pais
ley Shawls at Lew Prices.
METZGER, BARD & HAUGHMAN,
38 WEVT KING STREET,
Opposite Cooper Ireusf, Lancaster, Pu.
MRS. C. L.ILLER,
LADIES' IIAIKDKESSEK
Manufacturerand Dealer in Hair Werk, Ladies:
and Gents Wigs. Combings straightened and
made te order. Hair-Jewelry of all kinds made
up. Alse, Kid Gloves an d.Feathers cleaned and
dyed, at Nes. 225 and 227 North Queen street,
fear aoers above p. b. B, Depot. el-3md
MfitzeTRr
2Lawastrr Intelligencer.
THUKSDAY EVENING, JAN. 6, 1881.
COLLEGE MENU .
PROF. KEVIN'S ADDRESS.
The Celtic Element in .ngluh poetry."
The Spring session of Franklin and Mar
shall college opened at 10 a. in. te-day,
most et the students being back from
their holiday vacation and in their accus
tomed places. Prof. Win. 31. Nevin, who
fills the Alumni chair of English literature
in such an accomplished manner, and is
withal very popular among two genera
tions of college students was received with
applause, when he took the stand and de
livered the opening address en " The Cel
tic Element in English Poetry." After
the address the usual class announcements
wcie made and the Spring term schedule
of study begins te take effect te-morrow.
Following is an outline of Prof. Ncvin'g
address :
It is a wonder that 31. Taine, who makes
such account of race as an element of
national moral character, has made no
mention of the influence el the Celtic race
en English life and manners. Although
the meeting of the Briten and Celt was
one of deadly hestilty, some of the Celts,
upon the retreat of the main body into
Wales, lcmaiucd and commingled with the
conquerors. The Cymbry family of the
Celts were the ancient Uritens of Eng
land and Wales ; the Gaels were the origi
nal Irish and Highlanders. The Teutonic
Angle Saxons were better fighters than the
Celts. The Saxons were brave, albeit
cruel, loyal and honorable. The Celts
were mere imaginative and visionary, with
a mere observant oye for the beautiful in
nature, a mere tender sympathy for its
loveliness, a tasteful ear for music and a
practiced hand te awaken melody from
the harp. Of the three orders of Druids,
the prophet and priest passed away before
Christianity, but the bard survived. The
Celtic bard was, tee, a seer,and his susccp
tibilty of recovering past impressions en
abled him te foreshadow the foreboding
viriens of future events, In the Hebrides
or Western Isles the aged Celt in his soli
tude, was net infrequently endowed with
"second sight" a quality graphically
alluded te in Campbell's "Lochiel's
Warning," just before Culloden's fatal
day.
During the Angle Saxen period, except
in the Paraphrase of Canlmen, there is no
observable infusion of the Celtic spint.
The Angle Saxen poets lacked vivacity of
genius. They had their race characteris
tics and were serious and sober-minded,
earnest and energetic. The lazy, cor
rupted monk indulged iu deep cups, but
never took auy share in vain songs and
never forget his sanctimoniousness. But
even these bibacieus monks were few and
there were godly men and abstemious
poets, "who sang the deeds of heroes.
victorious edcs,dcath songs, epic poems, or
sitting in cloisters far from the madding
crowd, converted Hely Writ into Saxen
Chimes."
The spiiit of Celtic romance was im
ported into Brittany, France, thence te
Xoi mandy, whence it was brought back
across the channel after the Nerman con
quest. It passed from Welch into Latin,
thence into French, and only into English
after the three hundred years, during
which Latin and French were the polite
and literary languages in England. The
bold imagination of the Celt revolts
against the despotism of facts and glories
iu the freedom of romance. "The "History
if Rririsli Tv intra " hv AmfFrv nf 1tn-
mouth, a Welsh priest,' preduced
iu the reign et btepnen, was a
romance of history first exemplifying
the romantic spirit in English literature.
The "kings," their wonderful deeds and
succession, were ingenious inventions tak
ing en the form of authentic chronicle,
based en a book alleged te have been
found in Brittany. He first mentions
King Ar.hur as a here of national romance.
It was a popular work, despite the fact that
the veracious regular chronicler of the
English race was greatly scandalized by
the perversion of truthful history. The
church, te turn te account the popular
taste for the romantic, invented the poem
of the Sacred Dish the " San Grael,"
which held the bleed of the cress iuvisible
te all eyes but these of the pure iu heart.
Walter Map, a Welch arch deacon, in
his "Lancelet of the Lake," settled the
variance of the two races and harmonized
tiie sacred and profane legends by devel
ing the Arthur legend, and at the same
tune idealizing that bright animal life
which it had been the only object of pre
ceding stories te express. The Celtic
poetry, however, is never allegorical or
didatic, only satirical. Map se severely
satirized the corruptions of the church,
under Henry IL,that his Anacreentic songs
arc taken by many te be his own senti
ments. Fer a time English literature was se
pervaded with the French and Italian
taste and sentiment that there was no
place for the Celtic element. The genial,
geed humored pleasantry of Chaucer and
ethers, all that was net native, came from
Florence, Normandy or Aquitaine and up
te the refinement and polish of the Eliza
bethan era, these influences were due te
the revival of classical learning. The
Welch continued, however, te cherish Col Cel
tic poetry, eutbursting especially in patri
otic song whenever invaded by the Eng
lisli, and in sweet, erotic strains, as well as
martial rhapsodies.
An instinct of the noble, a discovery of
the weird charm of nature, a childlike
spirit of delicate enjoyment in the love of
woman, a playful delight in beauty, are
Celtic characteristics. The Scotch people,
of the Lowlands, sprung from the Britons
and the Angle-Saxons, inherited much of
the old Celtic ' temperament and genius,
and in Scotch poetry the Celtic elements
are the love of wild nature for its own
sake, the vivid observation and descrip
tion of scenery, the love ' of color, the
wittier, rollicking humor.
Sir Themas Mallery, of Welch descent,
in his history of King Arthur, suggests
what is developed in the " Idyls of the
King." Spenser, in his epithalmium in
the reijrn et Stephen.
honor of his Irish bride, caught the Celtic
fire ; and Dryden, in his "Ode for St. Ce
celia's Day " and " Alexander's Feast,"
rises high in ecstasy ; though neither they
nor even Gray, in " The Bard," reach the
native enthusiasm of a genuine Celtic
bard.
The truly Celtic element is net te be
traced in the Elizabethan age, nor in the
succeeding coldly classic peried.The mantle
of the Druid fell en a few in the later days
of the eighteenth century, when the new
Renaissance set in and poets adopted the
style of the earlier bards or caught new
inspiration from the world immediately
around them. Then was disclosed anew
the faculty of a complete surrender te a
vision upberne in melody. Keats and
Shelly bad it, but ie an eminent degree 1
Coleridge, whose "Ancient Mariner,"
"The Leve," first part of " Cristabel,"
" The Dark Ladie," " Kumbla Kabn " and
"Tragedy of Remorse" were all compos
ed in 1797 after his tour through Wales.
After his attention turned te German met
aphysics this divine faculty remained un
employed, the Celtic side of his genius
succumbing te the Teutonic.
Of contemporary bards, deduced imme
diately from Old Scotland and Ireland, of
native growth and derivation, the clear,
sweet voice of Campbell sounds like the
distant pibrech, loud and strong through
the mountains,or low and plaintive through
the vales, but divested of any harsh drone
or Jdialect, as in "Lord L lien's Daugh
ter," " Hehenliuden." or the "Exile of
Erin."
Illustration of hew much mere touching,
tragic and pathetiche Scotch ballads are
than the Englishes afforded in the ballads
of Chevy Chase. In the English the
death of Douglas is told iu a simple, un
impassioned strain; in the Scotch
the sad event is foreshadowed te
Douglas before, and, iu accordance
with the inherited Celtic nature, the repe
tition of the supernatural effect at Doug
las's fall gives a new charm te the poem.
The same superiority may be asserted in
general for Scottish songs. When Tem
Moere took down the harp from Tara's
walls the hallowed old tunes were wedded
te his charming social, amatory, national
and patriotic strans and his Celtic and
humor shone forth resplendent. Samuel
Lever's genial geed humor and homely
pathos, racy of the soil, are always in full
accord with the ebullient wit of the com
mon people. The charm of Irish poetry
is its skill in expressing lightness of heart.
It "throws the whole heart" into the sub
ject while touching it with combined ten
derness and gaiety. Ne literature shows
such combination of playfulness and sweet
ness. Lever's "Rory O'Mere " and
"Widow Machrce " especially prove this ;
and better still Alfred Percival Graves'
"Seugs of Killarney." In a higher de
gree is it demonstrated by Lever's song
founded en the Irish superstition that when
a babe is seen te be smiling in its sleep,
it is owing te the nursling's being wholly
taken up at the time and pleased with the
angels who are whispering with it.
"The Celtic bard, at his best, is con
fined te the lyric and when he ventures
lurtner ins virtue lersakes him. lie can
sear like the lark, but net sustain the
unwearied flight et the eagle. Frem Os
sian te Moere his attempts at the epic have
failed. Humer is net essential te the
poet. Spencer, Milten, Wordsworth and
Bryant were without it. Ner the accom
plishments of the musician, which Burns
and Scott lacked, whose best lyrical pio pie pio
ductiens came directly from their hearts ;
and beauty, the whole substance and de
light of our later agnostic poets, cannot
stand alone. The Corinthian column
around which ether poetic qualities are
the fluting, fillets and leaves of the
capital, is the firmly established principle
of virtue and moral rectitude,strengtlieiied
by assiduous self culture and severe intel
lectual training, se that the poet al length
becomes a living poem, te be read and ad
mired of all men. Thus he communicates
te his works that sustaining virtue which
is the supporting column in English liter
ature and belongs essentially te its Anglo Angle Anglo
Saxen or Teutonic side. "Weseeit first in
Cocdmen. then perhaps tee nakedly ex
posed in Laugland,and again suffused with
Gothic grandeur and Italian grace iu Spen
ser, and finally culminating under still
severer discipline and taste in the romantic,
classical and Puritanical Milten, whose
' Paradise Lest ' stands forth apprevedly as
the only genuine epic poem in the English
language and, en account of the sounder
Scriptural morality upon which it is
founded, perhaps superior te any in the
Italian."
The address teemed with timely quota
tiens and fragments of pDcms illustrating
its main thoughts. It was a very finished
and interesting paper and merits publice,
ftieQ ia N in t,ie Celle3e Student.
A TliicFs Flight.
Escaping With Mrs. Prentice's stolen Jew
els He Plunges Uwn a Hatcliway
and Is Fatally Injured,
We have noticed in detail hew 3Ir. Shel Shel
eon's house in Brooklyn was robbed of
$7,000 worth of jewelry, including his
daughter's wedding presents ; and, in
brief, hew the thief fell and killed himself
in his flight. The Herald gives sonic par
ticulars of the finding of his body and
booty. About seven o'clock in the morn
ing K. J. Watsen and several ether work
men, plasterers and carpenters, employed
en a four-story brick building, Ne. 40
Remsen street, which is in course of erec
tion, entered the basement of the struc
ture for the purpose of resuming work.
On reaching the parlor fleer they beheld a
man covered with bleed lying en the fleer,
just beneath the opening in which the
stairs are built. The man had fallen from
the landing en the third fleer, a height of
about thirty feet, head foremost. Se vio
lent was the shock that the beard upon
which his head struck was broken. By the
side of the man lay a sealskin sacquc, a
dress and a banjo. He was breathing heav
ily and was unconscious. Policemen were
called iu and the pockets of the in
jured man were searched. The efficcis
discovered diamond earrings, of rare value
and workmanship, a lace pin, a diamond
pendant, a cameo, a diamond pin, two
geld watches, a lace pin, lockets, coral
sets and fourteen scarf pins, a geld neck
lace, rings, pearl and geld studs and a
case of razors. The property thus re
covered was found te be that which was
stolen from Mr. Shelden's house en the
previous evening, and composed the wed
ding presents of his daughter, 3Irs. Pren
tice, for which $2,000 reward was offered.
There were also found in the man's
pockets a leaded revolver, several cart
ridges, a chisel, a pi eco of candle and a
box of matches. It is believed that the
thief secreted himself iu the house where
he was found en Monday afternoon, and
that after nightfall, while the family of
Mr. Shelden were dining in the base
ment of Ne. 44, he made his way te the reef
and effected an entrance te Ne. 42, which
he robbed. On returning with his booty
he removed the scuttle of Ne. -40 and de
scended the narrow, dark stairs leading
from the reef te the third story landing.
In stepping forward it is supposed that his
feet struck a beard that, was nailed te the
fleer, causing him te fall forward. Iu an
instant he was precipitated down the well
J hole, there being no banisters en the
stairs, and he struck the fleer thirty feet
below, en the spot where he was found by
the workmen in the morning. The in
jured man was taken te the Leng Island
college hospital. It was found that his skull
was fractured at the base. There was also
a bad fracture of the frontal bone ever the
left eye. His right arm was broken and
he was injured internally. . Upen his left
forearm, in indelible ink, was tatoeed the
name "J. Garvey." Detectives Felk and
Zundt, who visited the hospital, recognized
the man as a notorious burglar, known as
' Leng Jehn Garvey," alias " Jehn Whit
aker.' ' Several years age he was implicat
ed with " Jimmy Weeds" and ether burg
lars in a raid en a store at the foetot Canal
street, New Yerk. He was arrested in Will
iamsburg in December, 187e, and was sent
1 Sing Sing, where be owed the state
eight years service under a former sentence.
Late in the afternoon Detective King and
Ven Geitchen, of the central office, visited
the hospital, and also recognized him as
Garvey, the burglar. He escaped from
Sing Sing several years age, having been
sentenced te ten years' imprisonment for
the burglary alluded te above. He was
arrested en the extension of a house in the
Eastern district in his stocking feet, when
about te commit another burglary. As he
had a long unexpired term te serve he was
sent back te prison and was net prosecuted
in Brooklyn. He was discharged from
Auburn penitentiary last month.
m i
(Je North, young man, go North, and freeze
up with the country. Bat don't forget te take
a bottle et Dr. Bull's Cough Syrup along.
DKT GOODS.
NOVELTIES IN SCARF PINS.
THE "BERNHARDT" GREYHOUND PIN
UNDERSHIRTS AND DRAWERS,
E. J. ERISMAN'S,
THE SIIlKTMAKEU,
86 NOKTB CJCEKN STKEET
Givler, Bewers & Hurst,
Ne. 25 EAST KING STREET,
Are new tiering full lines ei l.IXKN
TOWELS and TOWELING at Bargain
Prices?. TAIILK LINENS and NAP
KINS at Bargain Prices. SHEETING,
SIIIBTING and PILLOW CASE MUS
LINS, large stock in all the best makes,
at specially low prices.
WHITE BLANKETS
wc offer at low prices, in GUAY
BLANKETS we are offering splendid
bargains. We call special attention te
these goods.
Bargain- in
LADIES' COATS,
te close out the balance of stock.
IS.u gains in LADIES', 3IEVS and
CHILDUEN'S MEKINO UNDEK
WEAIt. Givler, Bewers & Hurst,
Ne. 25 East Kin? Street.
GKOCEJtlJSS.
X.ff POUNDS riNE MIXED CANDY.
OUU ALSO WINES AND LIQUOKS.
PURE OLD RYE WHISKY,
Only 55 Cents Per Quart, at
RING-WALT'S,
Ne. 2(3 WEST KING STKEET.
200
, POUNDS
SOLID SWEET WHITE GRAPES,
24 CTS. PEK POUND,
AT BTTRSK'S.
TEW PROCESS BUCKWUKAT FLOUR,
11 A Very Superior Article ; also, Luzerne
County Buckwheat Fleur, Choice ; and
HECKEK'S SELF-KAISING BUCKWHEAT
AND GKIDDLE CAKE FLOUKS,
AT BURSK'S,
Ne. 17 East King Street.
A
GENTS POK
FAHNESTOCK'S FARINA FLOUR,
A Very Superior Article.
Sale only in Lancaster,
Give it a Trial. Fer
D. S. BURSK'S,
NO. 17 EAST KING STREET.
CHINA AND OLAHSWAltE.
CHINA HALL.
We tender Thanks te our Numerous
Customers and Friends for their Patron
age during 1880. Our Aim, during the
Coming Year, shall be te Please and
Satisfy all with Lewest Prices, Best
Goods. Courteous Attention. A IIAPPT
NEWY'EAttTO ALL.
HIGH & MARTIN,
16 EAST KING STREET.
BOOTS AND SHOES.
EASY
MOOTS. SHOES AND LAST
made en a new principle, Insur
mg conuert ier me leet.
"f t VTC Lasts made te errtr.
JCUJ.LO MLLEE,
leblt-Ud lEt King street
CZOIHIXG.
A RARE CHANCE!
The Greatest Reduction ever made in VINE
WOOLENS for GENTS' WEAK at
H. GERHART'S
in Tairii Mlisteat
A Large Assortment of Genuine
English & Scotch Suiting,
sold during the Full Season from S30 te I
A Suit will be made up te order ia the Bast
Style lrem 920 te S30.
HEAVY WEIGHT DOMESTIC
Suiting and Overceating;
Kcduc'd in the fuihe proportion. All goods
warranted as represented.
The above reduction will ter cash only, WbA
ier the next
THIRTY DAYS.
H. GERHART,
Ne. 51 North Qua Strait
CLOTHING!
CLOTHING!
We liave
Stock et
new ready for sain an ImsaeaM
FOB
Fall and Winter,
which
Style.
arc Cut nnd Trimmed te the;Ltest
.We can give you a
GOOD STYUSH SUIT
AS LOW AS $10.00.
PIECE GOODS
In great variety, made te order at short notice
at the lowest pricjes.
0. B. Hosteller & Sen,
24 CENTRE SQUARE,
iMjd
LANCASTEK. PA.
l'Al'JSR HASG1NUS, e.
EiiMi Mew CenlCB,
the Cheapest, simplest and Best in the Market.
Made el Walnut, Meulding three and fear
inches wide, and Xew Patterns. Wchavctbera
thirteen different wayx. and very low In price.
FINE EBON'Y AND WALNUT
CURTAIN POLES,
with Ilrav
Walnut and
lting-. Ends and Brackets.
m!i Pelcu complete.
All
Plain Window Shades,
All Celers and Wid;l3. Hollands. Paper Cor
turns. Fixture .Fringe-), Corde, Tassels, Leeps.
Picture NaiN, Tassel Heeks, 4c.
Opening almost daily New Styles of
WALL PAPER,
FOIl THE COMING SPRING.
PHARES W. FRY,
Ne. 57 NORTH QUEEN ST.
CAMPXTS.
nIGIIKST CASH PRICE WILL BE
PAID FOIt EXTRA NICE
CARPET RAGS.
Carpets made te order at short notice sad
satisfaction guaranteed.
Kurc cliances in Carpets te reduce stock et
6,000 Yams Brussels Cstmts,
AT AND BELOW COST.
Call and satisty yourself. Alse, Ingrair, Bit
and Chain Carpets in almost endless variety .ax
H. S. SHIRK'S
CARPET HALL,
203 WEST KOTO STBSKT,
LANCASTER PA.
t lAKPETS, COAL, cc.
PHILIP SCHUM,S0N k CO.,
MANUFACTORY,
Ne. 130 SOUTH WATER STREET,
Laxcabtzb, Pa.,
Well-known Manufacturers of Geaulae
LANCASTER QUILTS,
COUNTERPANE8,
COVERLETS,
BLANK4TS.
CARPETS.
CARPET CHAIN.
STOCKING YARN, Ac.
CUSTOM RAG CARPETS A SPECIALTY.
LANCASTER FANCY
DYEING ESTABLISHMENT.
Dress Goods Dyed either in the piece or la
Garments; also, all kinds of silks, Elbbeas,
Linen, Cotten and Woolen Goods Dyed. Gea
tlemen's Coats, Overcoats, Pants. Vests, JUx,
Dyed or Scoured; also. Indigo Bin Dyeing
done.
All orders or goods left with as wiU neatTO
prompt attention.
CASH PAID FOR SEWED
CARPET RAGS.
COAL.. GOAL.
Ceal of the best quality pnt op expressly for
lamily use, and at the lowest market rate.
TRY A SAMPLE TON.
YARD ISO hOUTH WATER STREET.
dSMyaBSl PHJL1P 8CHUM, SON CO
ReailyMaae
ClethM
'