'mjtnam ww . VWft.t X.1 1JJ flT t amtf afteil ")n; Tolne XVH-Ne. 119. LANCASTER, PA., WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 19, 1881 Price. Twe ttfe 9b Mk CTJf- -x- IT - s --- IKmxeuxaeiaH: "R p MlVfv.vW . ii'.fBfTC " x w WATCHES, We call attention te a tew very desirable articles at unusually low prices Beys' Silver Hunting Cased Watches at $0.25 Beys' Silver Hunting Cased Stem Winding Watches 15.00 Gentlemen's Silver Hunting cased Full Jeweled Watches. 5.00 Gentlemen's Silver Hunting Cased Stem Wladlng Watches 15.00 Indies' 10 and It Carat (told Hunti'.ig and Hair Hunting Cased Watches at 18.00 We all attention te our fine Movements for Ladles' Watches Full Jeweled, even in centre pivots, which we will case te order in Handsome Bex-joint Monogram Cases or otherwise. Gentlemen's is Size Movements Cased and Engraved or Monegrammcd te order. A special new line of goods is Just received, censUtingef Gentlemen's Silver Boz-Jelnt-Cased Watcher, the Handsomest Silver Watches ever brought te this city. We Invite an inspection or these goods, feeling confident we can show inducements te buyers net te be found elsewhere. H. Z. RHOADS & BRO., Jewelers, 4 West King Street. - - - - Lancaster, Pa. EDW. J. ZAHM, Minu&ctaring Jeweler, Zahm's Cerner, - Lancaster, Pa. Things in our stock that make Beautiful and Durable Christmas Gifts. WATCHES, DIAMONDS, CLOCKS, SILVERWARE, SPECTACLES, JEWELRY, GOLD BRONZES, GOLD HEAD CANES, GOLD THIMBLES, SILVER HEAD CANES, SILVER TniMBLES, OPERA GLASSES. GOLD PENS AND PENCILS, HANDKERCHIEF AND GLOVE BOXES. GOLD BRONZE SMOKING SETS, FINE CIGAR SETS, BACCARET VASES. AL-L these and man meke at ZAHM'S CORNER. LANCASTER, PA. vrs CLOSING COATS AND -AT NEW TOEK STOEE. -:e:- LAD1ES' COATS reduced te i $2.75. $I.2j, $7 and $1. LADIES' DOLMANS reduced from $10 te JS.S0, $12.50 te $8.50, $15 te $10. 1-adles In want of these goods should all at once, sis they can't last long nt these prices. JUST OPENED A CHOICE SELECTION' OF HAMBURG EDGINGS AND INSERTINGS, Latest Designs, Ite.mtilul Werk, Lewest Trices. NEW YORK STORE. HOMER, COLLADAY & Ce, 1412 and 1414 Chestnut St. PHILADELPHIA. The general Improvement in business the past year, with the prospect of a very large in creased demand for all kinds of Dress Goods, induced all American buyers of Foreign Goods te place Immense orders. Tlds was universally Urn ease, se much se that, perhaps without exag geration, 90 per cent, mere goods were imported limn the country could possibly consume. As a consequence, there has bien a great break iu prices in a great inanv fabrics, which we 8'iall fully meet. WE SHALL SELL Fermer Prices. $0.25 $0.50 All Weel Armures French Flannel Suitings French Strincd Fancies (all Silk til 1.00 sad Weel) 75 French Shoedas (in all colors) 5 French Brocades (all Silk and Plain French Plaids 75 1.50 1.75 1.03 Finest French Brocades (in several deshrnsi l.ce 2.50 In addition te our offerings in the above goods, we have some lines of very choice goods of which It Is difficult te meet the demand, in which we have a very choice assortment, both in cloth and colorings. CLOTH SUITINGS: 41-Inch Cleth Suitings (very desirable 914nch Cleth Suitings (in all colors 1.10 H-lnch Cleth Suitings 1.20 FRENCH Our make of these goods we believe te be the beit in the market, and the asseitment et colors our own selection. 8-lneb French Shoedas $0.87J 40-Inch French Shoedas $1.12 FINE CAMEL'S HAIR: Our assortment et th'se beautiful goods is stiil complete, from 81.S5 te S2.50. We have Just received one case el Camel's Hair in Evening Shades in very beautiful quality. In Cream, Flak and Light Bine, ! Inches wide, te sell at Si .85. BAREGE DE VIRGINIE: We have J ust received one case or this very desirable texture for Evening Dresses, quality veryuperler. In Cream, Fink and Light Ulue, 27 inches wide, te sell at 80c. CLOTHIXO. GREAT SLAUGHTER IN CLOTHING. GRAED HARK BOWI AT GEfl TEE HAIL. Will be sold in sixty days TEX THOT SAND DOLLAKS WOETH of HEAVY WINTER CLOTHING, Without regard te cost. Xew is your time In secure n geed Suit et Clothing for very Utile tneney, Beady-made or Hade te Order. OVERCOATS IN GREAT VARIETY, Fer Hen. Youths and Beys. Men's Dress Suits, lien's Business Suits, Youths' Suits in every style. Beys' Clothing, a very Choice Variety,, 99" Don't fall te call and secure some of the bargains. MYERS & RATHFON, .Ne. 12 E1ST KINU STREET, LANCASTER, PEM'A. EOR FOE SALE CHEAP. A FIRST-CLASS THREE-STORY BRICK DWELLING HOUSE, WITH A GOOD STORE BOOM. Tlus Property is situated en the corner et Mulberry and Lemen streets ; with nine geed rooms and large cellar ; also het and cold water and gus through the house. This Property will be sold cheap or exchanged ter a small house or building lets. Alse, a FIEST-CLASS llltlCR STABLE in the rear of the lionse, anil occupied by Samuel Heeler, for hale new. Fer inrther particulars call en J3AUSMAN & BURNS, Or at HOUGHTON'S STOKE, 25 North Oneen Street JEWELRY, e. aoevs. SALE OF DOLMANS, THE - Fermer Prices. $0.65 $1.12 Camel's Haii- Stripes Itimrailn Vnveltles .73 2.&U French Fancies (very costly goods.. .75 2.75 English Novelties 25 .50 French Handkerchlets, squares 75 1.50 French Handkerchiefs, squares 55 1.50 French Novelties 1.25 2.75 French Novelties .50 1.50 51-inch Cleth Suitings $1.23 51 Inch Cleth Suitings... 51-inch Cleth Suitings 2.00 SHOODAS : SALE. Lancaster, jrntrlli&enrcr. WEDNESDAY EVENING, JAN. 10, 1881 Girl and Grandfather. Frem Temple Bar. The pretty, sleepy pari-li of Aspenkiik lay basking in the fervid blaze of a noon tide sun, en Sunday, early in June, some five-and forty years age. It was the hour of morning service, and the doers of the old parish church steed open, se that'the rector as he steed preaching in the worm- eaten pulpit, a commanding-looking figure iu his black gown could see all around him, net only the living fleck of which he was the shepherd, and who new sat ic spectfully hearkening te his accents, of rolling thunder, but also the quiet, grassy giaves outside, where the village fore fathers lay taking their rest under the daisies. I, tee, could see from the corner where I sat iu my grandfather's pew, a green patch of churchyard, with a butter fly skimming about the perch, which was very refreshing te me after keeping my eyes dutifully fixed en my prayer-book such a long, long time. Clese te the deer sat the workhouse childien, who also snatched a fearful joy as they sniffed the summer air, but wee te the wight whose roving eye, or gently protruded head was detected by the guaidiau's searching glance. Crack went the cane en peer wooden pate, te his grief and anguish, aud at the well known sound my heart would llfoefl fnr trnrwlpnnnte lc T tlimirrlif lmtxr sere his head would be next time he had his hair brushed. Our pew was a com fortable square box in the north aisle, well cushioned and carpeted with plcuty of high hassocks, en one of which I gen erally sat, my head resting en my grand father's knee. We were great allies, he and I, and braved my grandmother's leeks of mild disapproval On many minute occa ecca occa ciens, when her sense of propriety was ruffled by some childish freedom of gesture or breach of rules conventional. She was a strict disciplinarian and could net forget hew in her young days the maternal hand had held a stick when the hour of correc tion came, a vision which always made me rejoice iu secret that my great grand mother was safe out of sight and reach before I came into a world, where, as a rule, children were naughty. Xe reform ing finger had as yet been laid en Aspcn kirk church. The large east window, thickly festooned with ivy, looked beauti ful in my inexpeiieneed eyes. I did net knew hew hideous the whitewashed walls and great high pews wcie, but I hated old Rebbie, the clerk, who took se prominent a part in the services, and whose droll nasal performances, and self satisfied smirk, used te excite me te illicit smiling, which net all the cold severity of my grandmother's eye could control. Heavens ! what a performance was the " Old Hundredth " in these days at As penkirk church ! There was no organ, nor can I remember any tuneful voices, but I can still hear Rebbie, in high mono tone, giving out each line successively be fore it was sung by the congregation of untutored north-country voices at the full pitch of the lungs. One hymn-tune which was in use, and which, in spite of liaib.tr eus treatment, still haunted . my car and gave me pleasure, I never heard else where, till after many years, in a French convent, I found it again, and recognized in the old Latin invocation te Mary, chanted se pathetically by the nuns of Avranchcs, the identical melody that had charmed me in Aspenkiik church when I was a child. But this is a digression. ' Let us get eutside the church this glorious summer day, for the rector's discourse is ever, the first rush of Cumberland clogs has escaped into the churchyard, the lads and lasses are sliding off in company, the farmers gathering in knots for a gossip about the hay and ether rustic matters, and their wives and daughters are ex changing civilities and the little-tattle of the week, before dispersing te their sev eral homes. Through them all stiides the rector, in gown and college cap, tall, spare, and aristocratic. IJeb go the children, the women curtsy; he nods, pleasant and royal-looking, as he passes through them all flown the churchyard path, his eagle eye sweeping their ranks, and an indescribable effluence of high breeding and careless kind-heartedness playing about him like an invisible atmo sphere. "Ah! Mrs. Somerby," he cries out te ray grandmother, " what a line rose you have there ! Why have I none like this in my garden?" "Dear! Mr. Peathcrstene," she bays, "you have finer far than this, for certain," as she puts the rose into her hand. He steed smelling it critically. " Where will you match me a fragrance like this among all the apothecary's gums?" says he, in that deep, rolling voice that always sounded te me like the sea. He carried it oil with him as he disap peared through the deer te the rectory wall, and from that day the bush en which the ruddy rose had grown was call ed the "apothecary's rose." My grand mother's quaint-looking conveyance, styled the "minibus," was standing wait ing for us outside the churchyard wall under the shade of a great elm-lrec, but old Farmer may just go -en whisking Jiis tail at the flies for another ten minutes, for the meetings at the church gate are net te be scrambled through all in a moment. I sat down en a gravestone and waited contentedly enough while giandmamma gossiped. " Mary Atkinson " slumbered below. I began te draw mental pictures of Mavy Atkinson's past, present aud fu ture condition, who had laid here for fif teen years. Her natural body innst have been eaten by the worms long age. I wondered if her bones were quite gene also, and if the coffin was empty, and what was going en itiade it new ; and where Mary Atkinson's soul was waiting all this time, and if she were net rather tired of waiting, and feeling chilly without her old body ? Suddenly t heard a cracked quav ering voice cRe at my ear, which made me start up in apprehension. Mary Atkin son's voice might sound as queer as that if she had nothing but a few hours left ; but eh relief ! it was only Miss Betty Jeffer Jeffer eon, who steed looking curiously at me from under her long poke bonnet eccentri cally trimmed with a knotted bunch of worsted stay-laces. My giandmethcr's mere familiar tones saluted me " Letty, are you dreaming, child ? De you hear Miss Betty is inviting veu te tea ?" I steed up, confused aud properly over powered by such au honor. Miss Betty's girdle-cakes were the creamiest in the parish ; moreover, her cow, "Miss Story," was an old acquaintance, having been once a calf in our Helm field. Her garden lay in pleasant proximity te a bread aud silvery river, and there, en a bed of fine gravel, I could enjoy an unmolested half hour at the agreeable game of ducks aud drakes. 2 I demurely thanked Miss Betty, whose old, puckered, parchment mask took an additional crease of approbation. I was only a visitor at my t randmether's house, and was te return te my parents in Scot land shortly. I think Miss Betty some how expected te inhale, through my small personality, some impressions of the northern metropolis, as her sister, Miss Anne always dubbed the city of my birth. Of Miss Anne I was considerably afraid. She was much mere imposing than Miss Betty ; were a silk gown, and confined her hair by a very bread fillet of black velvet, which gave her an impressive appearance. She was generally spoken of in respectful tones, as " a woman of very superior mind." She was pertly in person, and condescending iu manner, but she had a displeasing custom of always coming down en me with a sudden public appeal en historical questions, which was sorely discencciting, and made me timid in her aucust presence. Only last week, at mv grandmother's tea table, just when the het buttered cakes wcre coming in, she bad startled nic by the abrupt question, "New then, Miss Charlette, what is' your opin ion of the character of Henry VlII. ?" Trembling I felt that upon the style of my reply would depend Miss Anne's opinion of the system of education iu the northern metropolis, and that my mother and my governess steed upon their trial in that dread moment. Grandpapa had somehow come te my aid, as he generally did in awkward emergencies, aud I was saved for the time. But new, again, I saw her steadily approaching. Surely she would net desecrate the holy day with profane antiquarian researches. There was no savin-;. I slipped eus at the churchyard gate, and raade for the "mini bus," where I sat, full of hopes and fears, a distinct hope being that royjjrandmether would net ask Miss Betty te Fairholm till after my departure, for the geed lady, having a nervous disinclination te sleep alone iu the yellow guest-chamber, had invited me, en a recent occasion, te keep her company there. Should I ever forget the vague, unutterable terrors of that night, when I, aiousedby some inexplica ble sympathy with Miss Betty s wakeful fears, opened my eyes in a pitch darkness within the hearsc-iikc bed, and heard iu the unearthly silence the odd, creaking voice or Miss Betty proclaiming nervously, " Jfew deadly still all is !" My grandmother joined me at last, and we drove home te Fairholm iu our usual jog-trot fashion, picking up my grand father aftcrwe had gene about a mile. There were two little cupboards in the "minibus," whence grandmamma always produced some relishing gingerbread cake te beguile the long drive, of four miles. What a pretty rural drive it was through the Aspenkiik plantation ! Hew fragrant the odors of pine and fir ! What a liberal margin of short, sweet turf bordered the park-like read en either side ! Here and tlicic we passed a cottar's cow, peacefully grazing en the roadside, followed step for step by a little heid-girl patient virtue in miniature for whom there was gener ally a bit of gingcibread te spare. Why does net gingerbread tase the same nowa days? Nairew grew the lanes, and mere tor tuous. The hedges and ditches hereabouts are all a tangle of meadow sweet and ragged robin. The home landscape is tame aud monotonous ; but in the dis tance rise the blue hills of the Berderlaud. And new we must cress Lyn Bridge. Hew black and sullen the river leeks en the one side under the cliffs of red sand stone, and hew brightly it ripples en the ether ! Then we turn a sharp corner, and descend gently for half n mile, through grandpapa's fields and plantations. At List we .siht our own pretty homestead, and Farmer, with no need of admonition-, turns into the courtyard, his labors ended ler the day. rilAI'TEK II. Header, let ni'j linger a moment ever the memory of Paradise, for such was Fairholm te me. The days I passed there were purely happy, the only days out of a long life that shine ever undimmed in memory's golden light Arcadian days, when my soul, like a bud, began te open softly te the morning sun, and no canker ing worm crept nigh the favored blossom days that rolled by blessedly uneventful, as I learned te read out of Nature's book, aud te lejoice in the operations of her hands ; te distinguish the notes of the birds, aud watch them iu the coverts where they reared their young ; te stand in the early morning, as the mower whetted his scythe, and smell the new-cut grass ; te hunt the mushroom ere the dew dried upon the meadow, and gather the eggs for breakfast from the cackling hens; te watch the cows, ever tins byre-deer, as they yielded their milk te the p til, and stand aside as they passed me lowing te the fragrant i a jturcs. Here T learned the names and properties of flowers and herbs, and wrought in a cor ner of my own with spade and watering- pet ; watched the bloom en the plum, as it swelled te ripeness en the sunny wall, and the chcriics reddening day by day be neath the net, among their pointed, glossy leaves. Down iu the hay fields, I played till 1 was weary, and read fairy tales underneath the geld tassels of the laburmfni tree. And moving through all, was the influence of a mighty affec tion, which tinctured everything in which I lived, moved, and had my being. Never have 1 loved any human being as I loved my grandfather. I loved my grandmother al.ii), but in quite a secondary way. She was less indulgent, mere impatient of the small mistakes and blunders of childhood. A little wholesome fear tempered my love for her, yet I liked well te lay my round young check against her soft, velvety old one, or te trot by her side as she visited the dairy and larder, and te watch her decant her clear gooseberry wine into the quaint old pint decanters, with roses wrought into the crystal. My first view of her in the day was always pleasant. She sat in a sunny window of the break fast parlor, which looked into the garden iu sober, black gown, a clean muslin kerchief folded across her besom, pinned at the threat by a little rose in garnets, the only ornament she ever were, a gift of ray grandfather in.his courting days. She was always reading the same little book, Bogatzky's "Gelden Treasury," whence she gathered, I fancy, her note for the day. I can sec her well-cut fea tures, her calm, sensible, spirited expres sion, and the little stiff brown curls upon her forehead, for she did net then wear her own hair. I new knew that the inis Ircss of Fairholm was a very handsome woman. My grandfather was net hand some a homely-looking, blue-eyed man of medium stature aud ruddy complexion. His smooth, bald crown I admired ex ceedingly. I was net the only person who paid him homage. Jehn Somerby was master wherever he stepped. An An other blight tint at the breakfast table was the china which lay en -the snowy cloth, with odd, unmeaning pattern in Chinese style, vermilion and blue. 1 have never seen the same again. Ner could you have easily matched the grim waiting maid in her large-flowered print gown, with forbidding countenance, the malevo lent loekinir old fairy of the house. She had but one eye, but nothing ever escaped the ether. Werk was as 'the breath of her nostrils. There arc no such servants nowadays. As seen as breakfast was ever, the psalms for the day were read aloud by my grandfather and me, faith fully, verse about. My grandmother listened with her hands folded en her knee, and always said the doxology at the end iu a curious accentuated way which impressed my imagination. Then my day began out of doers with grandpapa, if weather was fine, pruning and watering the vines, and convers ing with the pet toad, who never failed te come out of his corner of the vinery at our entrance, or spudding thistles in the Holmfield, or walking through the young plantations. Perhaps there was a sheep wasbtng en band, then a gloreus morn ing of excitement was spent at the river side, where, amid a babel of barking dogs and shouting shepherds, the heavily fleeced creatures were plunged into the river one by one te the men who waited, waist deep, te receive them, each newly washed sheep swimming off te the oppo site bank after the operation, as nimbly as though it had done nothing but swim through life. On market days I lowed te drive te the grandpapa's deg-cart. was sometimes a', cathedral town in , These were days marked by a white stone. Then the old man wenld teach me te drive, and I was seen initiated into the rule of the read, and the handling of the reins, and great was my glory, as at the close of the day, I would skillfully draw up in the courtyard at Fairholm, grandpapa sitting in appar ent indifference, his arms crossed en his breast, and a defiant -leek at gradmam ma, who was always.en the watch for our return' as much as te say, " Who says we can t drive ? lialzac writes somewhere of "the little blue flower of perfect felic ity." Seldom is it found upon earth ; but I gathered it, reader, at moments like these and were it in my besom. There was a curious erection in one of the plantations, an ingenious device of " Harry the Carpenter." A large barrel, set en end with a deer in the side, and a seat all areuud within. Here would my grandfather and I sit together, many a time, sheltering from a summer shower, he trolling out some old English ballad, which I repeated after him, verse by verse, till I knew all he had te teach, and could give "The Minstrel Bey,'' or "Dulce Demum" at a harvest supper, te the wondering admiration of the rustics. The old man was, I belieye, as happy as the child. Purer, mere legitimate joys were never marred by the trail of the ser pent. Jehn Somerby was a man with a story, all unknown te me in these sweet, early days. I learned it hit by bit long after. CHAPTER, iu. In a secluded Lincolnshire village, fifty years before I came upon the scene, there grew up a rustic beauty in her father's cottage by the roadside, known te her little world as Semcrby's Hannah. A fairer creature than Hannah at the age of sixteen, no artist ever drew. Greuze must have dreamed of her in some happy night, for in all the enchanting girlish heads that laugh or pout from his canvas, there is a fugitive glance of Hannah. Ne sheltered, pampered, delicate toy was she, but a playmate of nature, a creature kissed by breeze aud sunshine, whose healthful, innocent charm blossomed all about her, from the curling, golden head, te the arched and rosy feet that seldom were a stocking. Madame Boothby, from the great house, driving slowly through the village one summer evening, heard a fresh voice sing ing like a lark. "Larksden't usually sing se late," she suggested languidly. Then she spied the sengstress, ankle deep iu the stream which madam's horses must presently ford. A three-year-old urchin sat astride en her shoulders, his fat arms cuddling round her neck, whose white secret was half re vealed under the rumpled folds of a checked cotton kerchief. Madam's coach stepped, and she beckoned imperiously from the window. " Where de you spring from, pretty water-witch ?" she said, in a fine drawl. "She's neaii a witch," cries little Bill from his perch, with a strangling em brace, win ch sends the rosy color racing ever the girl's brew and besom, " she's just our Hannah." "Down, Bill, and held thy tongue, will thee, when the lady speaks?" And new Bill's check is laid sheepishly against his sister's leugh skirts, as she swings him from her shoulder te the dusty read. " I'm Ralph Somerby's Hannah," said the girl simply. " Somerby, Somerby," mused the lady, her large, black eyes scanning the girl curiously. " Eveiybedy knows Italph Somerby,"' said Hannah seriously. The lady smiled. " I de believe this is the child that I sketched five years age, Tamar," aud she turned te the small, prim woman who sat be-ide her ; Tamar Uec was housekeeper at Boothby Hall. " Likely enough, my lady," she answers quietly. "Hannah's a geed girl, anil comes of geed, honest folk. Her father My lady laughed. "What has that te de with it, geed Tainar? Why, the girl's a prodigy, Ja marvel of beauty. She has the pose of a nymph, and her coloring, 'tis a Galatea ! Oh that Gainsborough could sec her ! What have you been gathering, child ?" " Watercrcsses for mother's supper," said the girl, shyly proffering her basket, "but if madam will have them, they're tare and wholesome for the bleed this time e' year," and the ripe, pouting lips parted in a dewy smile. Lady Boothby put out a white baud for the cresses, en which flashed a magnifi cent sapphire. Hannah's eyes were caught by the sparkling jewel. "Your eyes are finer, child," said madam with a sigh, patting the girl's downy cheek. "Tell your mother te bring you te the Hall te-morrow. I must see you again." Then she drove away, and Hannah aud little Bill steed and watched her coach till a bend in the read shut it out from their sight. "Sing again, Hannah." cried little Bill: "sing 'Willow, Willow;' " but Hannah walked en and sang no mere that night. When she and her mother repaired te the Hall next day, they were very gra ciously received in the housekeeper's room where Mrs. Tamar Bee was occupied in arranging much fine linen in large oaken presses. There was a fragrant smell of lavender all about. The French windows opened upon a little garden, where deep borders, set with sweet old fashioned flowers and heibs, entertained the bees and butterflies en sunny days. A flagged pathway led down through the middle of the garden, overhung here and there by overarching apple-ttees, and a high hedge of hollies bounded the little enclosure, beyond which rose a murmur murmur ous pine weed, from whose cool depths came evermore the weed-pigeon's soft, crooning proclamation of love and bliss. The small, precise old fairy who bere rule iu this favored corner, was 3Irs. Tamar Bee, housekeeper sit Boothby Hall for five-and twenty years. Her mother had been confidential maid and companion te a deceased Madam Booth by, under whose eye Tamar had been trained and educated se perfectly for her present pest, that she naturally fell into it at the first opportunity. Boothby Hall was her world, and in hercyes no Boothby could de wrong. The present Lady Boothby was a dowager, an I au earl's daughter, who had spent much of her life in foreign courts, whither her husband had carried her en his various diplomatic missions. He bad died three years age at Flereneel and net many months after wards, his eldest son a delicate bat prom prem ising young man, had followed him te the grave. The present owner of the Hall waa youth of nineteen or twenty, new serving his majesty upon the seas ; nnder Admiral Redney, and the old family seat lay lonely and beautiful, waiting ter the coming of the master. Lady Boothby naa no daughter, and for female friend ships she had little liking. Her tastes and habits were foreign, aud her visits te the hall were rare. She dabbled in art, drew aud painted with some skill, and kept np a large correspondence with odd and emi nent people. She sincerely mourned the less of her husband, and regretted the po litical excitements from which his death had in some measure, excluded her. Whimsical anil eccentric, of proud, im-i peneus temper, she yet exercised much fascination when she desired te please. She had secluded herself new at the hall, te await tidings of her son, whose adven turous life at once touched her imagina tion aud awakened her maternal anxiety. She i.ew saw before her in this beauti ful peasant girl a source of interest, and kindling, as she ever did, at the presence of beauty, she insisted that Hannah should leave her father's cettase and come te the hall. The girl was nothing leth. She nestled under the wing of Tamar Bee, who taught her the delicMe housewifely arts whenever my lady was tired of her plaything, and seen grew attached te the docile, graceful creature, who moved about in costuraesof my lady's devising, gathered the lavender and rose leaves, washed my lady's laces and bieught sunshine and music into the quiet solitude of Boothby Hall. Old Italph Somerby fretted for his daughter ; little Bill, and an elder brother. Ralph. missed the pretty, soft-hearted sister, who had been at once playfellow and nurse. The rose was plucked from the home wall and the cottage looked dull without it. But gentle, unselfish Mrs. Somerby would net complain. The girl was better off, and learning what would lift her a step higher in life than her neighbors. The child was tee pretty for their rough ways ; and when Hannah would come in for an hour, blooming and tenderly loving as ever, with a cake for the boys of her own baking, and a compliment of tea from Mrs. Tamar for mother, geed Mrs. Som erby exulted quietly and took her double burden of household labor without a grudge. And the year were en. Public atfairs wi-re uiettled. England had proclaimed war with Helland ; and from the Ameiican shores tidings came of the capture of one West Indian island after unetlicr from the Spaniards. But no news from Mr. Boothby had reached his mother who grew anxious aud dispirited. One day in spring, as my lady lay en her couch, turning ever a portfolio of sketches by Mr. Hogarth, while Hannah hovered near, holding new one, new another, in this liidit or that, as she was bidden, the heavy silken curtain was parted which hung across the doorway of the chamber, a handsome, dark young lace looked in upon the two women, and, in a moment, with out further notice, Mr. Boothby was kneeling by his mother's side, kissing her hands. But the joyful surprise was tee much for the peer lady, who, with a faint cry, swooned away, Pale and terrified, a scared leek iu her lovely eyes, Hannah new te support Iier mistress, passed a round arm about her neck, and gazed speechless at the splendid apparition of manhood in all its bravery that steed be fore her. As in a dream she saw and heard all the wonderful bustle of the next few moments, took the distilled water from. Mrs. Bee's small, trembling Angers, and bathed the pale face whose eyes pres ently opened, aud fastened with a leek of hungry love upon her son. "Come, mother," cried a hearty, boy ish voice. "I never thought te frighten yen se. Don't you see it's your own ne'er de-wcel Jack, who is always blundering, confound him, instead of doing tilings soberly, like ether folk !" She was awake new, aud hanging en his neck with teats of joy. "Tamar, de you see him? Se like his father ! se changed in three short years ! Oh, my boy ! what tiles yen have te tell nic !"' Then the vision faded, aud Hannah was back in Mrs. Bee's room with a flnt tcringit her heart. Concluded Te-morrow. "There maybe some virtue iu all of them." lie said, -'but for actual worth and rapidity of effect, 1 knew that nothing made can excel l)r. Hull's Cough Syrup." lfreaklng Out. K. hcheutcnmullcr, Brooklyn, writes: Your Spring lllossem is Invaluable. I have had Scrofulous sores en my legs for a number of years, and occasionally they would break out en my face, I have taken two bottles of Spring lllossem, according te directions, anil new all the sores have disappeared and my skin is perfectly healthy. Price, 50 cents, trial bottles 10 cents. Fer sale by II. 11. Cochran, druggist, 137 and 13! North Queen street, Lancaster, Fa. Jacob Martzolf, of Lancaster, X. Y., says : Your Spring Ulossem works well for every thing you recommend it, myself, wife ami children have all used it, and you can't find a healthier family in New Yerk state. Oct. 5, IS). Fer sale by II. 11. Cochran, druggist, 137 and 131) North Queen street, Lancaster, Fa. L HOOKS AUli HTATIONEKT. TOK T1IK LATEST NEW BOOKS, GOOD STATIONERY, ASDTHE FINEST PAPETERIE, GO 10 L. M. FLYNNS, Ne. 42 WKST KINO 8TRKBT. " DIARIES FOR 1881, Giving Church Days, Religious Festivals, .Moen's Changes, lllanks for Weather Kcerd, and much ether useful Information, in styles, New and Nevel. Fer sale at the ISoekstore et JOHN BAER'S SONS, 15 & 17 NORTn QUEEN ST., LANCASTER, PA. NEW YEAR CARDS. A r Klcgant Assortment for sale at the BOOKSTORE OF JOM BAER'S SONS, 15 and 17 NORTH (J0EEN STREET, LANCASTER, KA. BOOTS AltD SHOES. S 4 C"V MOOTS. SHOES AMD LAST J'JAOJ. made en a new principle, lusnr ing comfort for the feet. Lasts made te order. MILLER, 133 Ktut King street BOOTS tebUftd MEDICAL. CUTICURA Bleed Haaiers, Itcklig aad Scaly Dis eases, Screfala, Scrofaleus Seres, Ulcers, and Swellings, pesitirely, per HtaacBtly aad economically cured. CcricCKA Keselvext Is the greatest bleed purifier in medicine. It acts through the bowels, liver, kidneys and skin. Ccticuba. n Medicinal Jellv, arrests external disease, eats away lifeless flesh and akin, allays inflamma tion, itching and Irritation, aud heals, cuti ctha Seaf cleanses, heals, softens, whitens and beautifies the skin. It, and the CL-riccni Siiay Siiay tse scir, the only medicinal liavlng e.ip, ait prepared from Clticcra. Salt Shcnm. Mrs. Asa It. Brown. Maiden. Mass., lmt Salt Klieum en body and limbs ler elirht years. Ne kind of treatment or medicine or doctors did her any geed. Limbs se raw and pjintul tint she was obliged at times te go about en crutches. Many et Maiden's best citizens can testify te her condition. She despaired of curn or even relief. Used ttie Clticck.v Ueselvkst internally, and ? Clticuka ami Cuticcka Seap externally, anil was cured in six months. Wonderful Cures. What cures of Bleed and Skin Diseases, anil Scalp Affections with Lesa of Hair, can com pare with these et the Hen. Win. Win. Taylyr. Bosten, State Senatoref Massachusetts ; Alder man Tucker, Itosten ; s. a. Mcelc, eMj ., Chi cago; F. II. Drake, esi., Detroit; II. K. Car penter, esq., Hendersen, N. V.: Charles Hough Hough eon, esq., lfosten. and many ethers, detail et which mav be had en application te Messrs. Weeks & i'etter, Husten. Eczema. Manuel Maniutz, New Orleans, La., writes: 'Ne ether can compare with the Ccticuka Ukxeuie. I have lined them In all forms for a severe case of wliat the doctor culled Kczemu, which was effectually cuieil In eight weeks." Ceticura ItMBDiraiuie prcpare.l by WKKKS X l'OTTEK, Chemists and DruggLsLH,3CJ Wash ington street. loten, and ure ter sale by all Druggists. Price for CuncuitA, a Medicinal Jelly, small boxes, .It) cents; large betes. $1. Ctmt'UlU. UKSOLVE.tT. the new Itloed Purifier, fl per bottle. Ctrricuuv Medici mai. Toilet Seaf, 35 cents. CuTteuitA MeuicixalSkavimu Seaf, 15 cents; in burs ler Harbers and huge consumers, SO cents. 1BAtl mailed free en receipt of price. SANFORD'S RADICAL. CURE FOR CATARRH. Insiantaneeus, Economical, stare. Kaillca Treatment fur One Dellar. Poisonous catarrh:. I mitter filling the nusul passages rels a.vay thi membranes t!?sncs anil cartilages, causing less et .Smell, Taste ami Hearing. The putrid iiceum illations drop during sleep Inte the threat and are swallowed. iaralyziug digestion. Taken up by the absorbents, the virus enters the bleed, weakening aud debilitating every organ, and generating fatal affections of the Lungs, l.ivernnd Kidneys. Strike at the roots et this gigantic disease. Cleanse, purify and heal the membrane lining the nasal passages, ami then, by constitutional treatment, neutralize the poison in tin; bleed aud ether fluids. Samtehd'3 Radical Cukk. with 1mireveu I.n halkk and CATARKUAt. SM.VMT, reaches every part of the a'fected system, cleansing, purify ing und restoring. It is radical and permanent. It is economical und safe. Try it before it Is tee late. , . Price, with Improved Inhaler. Catarrhal Solvent, Treatise and Directions, $1. sold everywhere. CeIHbs' Yelluic Electric l'lasters. The Electre-Calvauic lEattcry attached t Colliss Veltaiu ELEurniu PLASTERS is warrant ed superior te every $i Uattery hefern the pub lic, and is a positive cure ter Kheumntism. Neuralgia. Liver. Kidney and Urinary Dis eases, Nervous Pains and Weakness, Malaria, and Ague Pains, i-nlil everywhere. KIDNEY WORT. THE ONLY MEDICINE IN EITHER l.l(ii;il OK DltV FOKM That Acts at f lie Sainti Tlim- mi The Liver, The Bowels, and the Kidneys. These great ergiuis are the ii.itur-.il rlcan-i-rs of tlie system. If they work well, health will bepertect, if they Ik'ceijic clogged ilrrsn I ful diseases are sure te lollev.' with TERRIBLE SUFFERING. Biliousness, JfemlacJtv, JiyfjirHiit, Jdi-niluc Constipation, Pfles, Kuliic' Complaints, Gravel, Dinbetes. Rheamutif! 1'nim or Aches, are developed because the blofel is poisoned with the humor-, that ilieuM he expelled nat urally. KIDNEY WORT Will Restore the healthy action and all t lies'! destroying evils will be banished ; negl"el lln-in and yen will live but te suitor. Thousands have been cuieil. Try it and you will mid one mere te the number. Talie'lt anil health will once mine gluddLii your heart. Why suffer longer Irum the torment of ait aching back? Why bear such diitress from Constipation und Plies t Kidsky-Wert will cure yeii. Try II at eiicu and he sutlslled. Yniirdiugglil h.ts il. Price Sl.OO. tBf It is put up in Dry Vegetable Ferm, in 49tin cans, one package of which makes sit MST quarts of medicine. y-Alse in Liquid Ferm, very Concentrated aJer the convenience el these. who Miinet 47r:adlly prepan: it. It firt with equtt J(S" efficiency in either form. It ELLS, RICHARDSON Ac CO., i'rep's, Burlington, Vt. (Will semi the dry pest-paid.) dec27 lyilAU'l LOCHEK'S A Pleasant, Safe, Speedy and Sure Hemedy for Colds, Coughs, IIeareiM-bS, Asthma, Inthi- , enza. Soreness of the Threat and Chet. Bronchitis, Whooping Cough, Spit ting of liloed. Inflammation of the Lungs, amsill Diseases of t he Chest und Air Passages. This valuable preparation combines all the medicinal virtues of thexe articles u lilch long experience lias prevfd te possess the most safe and cfliciejit qualities ter tlie cure of all kinds or Lung Disease. Price -2, cents. Pre pared only and sold by CHAS. A. LOCHER, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DRUGGIST NO. KAST K1NU STltr.KT. elC-tfd INVALIDS TAKE NOTICE. NEARLY 3,000 PERSONS have placed themselves under my charge dur Ing the last three years in Heading ami this city. One-half of them at least were called In curables. Chronic cases of Dyspepsia, Con sumption. Bhcutnatism, and ether affliction. Nearly all reported the same story, viz : I Iiave tried many doctors and quack medicines, ami all in vain. I am discouraged. While ciWing the sick in these two cities ever 1.S0U deaths have eccarrctl in etherphysicians' practice, and net a half-dozen In mine. Won't you In person (at my offices) or by letter Invest fcatc my remark able cure. Men and women.-!ok ter years.were under my practice in a few days or weeks enred. Send or call and get a lz-imge pamph let (free), containing the names of people thus rapidly restored te health here in Lancaster. All cored by placingmy inexpensive medicine! en the euUide et the bony. Se poisons used and be drega, syrups, pills, powders, bitters, or ether such vile stuffs placed In the stomach. Consultation and Examinations Free at my effltt. Hundreds have been cured et Catarrh ler 90 cents. Cure Quick for Catarrh sent te any address In the United States for 20 cents. DR. O. A. GREENE, (32 Years Experience), Ne. 23(1 NORTH QUEEN STREET, 30-t!dMWFas Lancaster, I'lwgU'